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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-10-25 - Orange Coast Pilot7 .. • I ixon? • Soda Straws!) Bag County Assessor and Candles Defends Aetions -Bingo! A UFO O,n Nixon Estate ., THllRSDAY AFTERNOON, ·OCTOBER 25_, -1973 " YOL "' NO, .. t SACT"*" • ~uu ; • • .............--r-· ~ ' .IJFO No _More ' f ' • . * * * Marines . . 'IJ6h•·••l!f1 Won't Talk Coastal Mail On Alert Favors Nixon Dmlfr. P*t-Slatl ,.... SpOltesmen at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station and Camp Pendleton bad no comment today on whether troops at the two Southland bases were put M alert thls morning In response to the Middle East crisis. Thousands of elite U.S. Anny troops and large nwnbm: of Air Force and Air National Guard uni tr, including some nuclear bomber crews, were put on alert In what the Nixon Administration termed, "a precautlbnary measure." Maj. Sally Pritchett, public affairs oUicer at El Toro, this morning issUed a terse ''no comment" oo. the ale.rt situation. El Toro has a nwnber ol. fighter· bomber squadrons, totalling several hun- dred jet aircraft. The planes are the ...., F4 Phantoms and Skybawu being flown by t.raeli pilots In the Mldille East. U.S. senators and c ongres smen representing the Orange Coast earlier thls week were deluged with mail, telegmm and phone calls overwhelm- ingly favoring impeachment of President Nixon. But two Republlcan congressmen, in- dudµlg-the one whose district includes the President's San Clemente estate, said today the tide has turned and support is starting to flow ln. Local offices of Congressman Andrew J. Hinshaw CR-Newport Beach) and Clair Burgener (R·Santa Fe Springs) said that their mail volume on the impea~nt situation was heavier than usual but oow the calls and letters are swinging in support of the President. Burgener, whose district includes a coastal strip of Orange County from San Clemente to Newport Beach, reportedly only four phone calJs to his local office in Orange County -all opposing the President. "Several" pro-Nlxon caJls were receiv· ed in Burgener's San Clemente District office, according to spokeswoman Max· ine Green. From Washington, Burgener's con- gressional aide, Brad Hathaway, said, "I can't say that we've received a flood of telegrams." Hathaway said Burgener was receiving more mall on the MlddJe East war, the Environmental Protection Agency and gas rationing. He added tha t Wednesday morning, a definite trend in faV<>r of the President had begun to show up but be bad no record of percentages or volume. Hinsbaw's District Administrator Chip Cleary said hi! office had received "hun- dreds" of telegrams and confirmed that (See OPPOSmoN, Page %) JM A BIRD,. IT'S A PLANE? .. NO, IT'S A UFO Brl1n Col•m•n,,.13, D1'pley1 c.ndl..,.•Nd,->lr. 8ol'9o•\. A spokesman at the Pendleton public affairs office said he bad orders to, "issue-only tbe.standafd no comment." But · 9 did !IY It ' appearl!ll to him f) business was going 0 as usual" at the tq~~:. M~ ... ~ .. ~. ·'£ ~8: ;t'=:..:-;.:::g:: Challenged la County ·Assessor Defends Action ~ ty but is al9o a major embarkation Mystery U.F:q$:·Jifst1 ~anil1ks, Bag ~ir=?o~ { · ·The Strategic Air Command bases In 1.tar?· Secret enemy spy Olgtits? ' C8.llfornia ~re alerted, March Air Force On President's Estat;e · . By TERl\Y C()VltLE • ' Ot !ht IM41r , .... 'St•ff "Jt "as pulsating and It appeared to bave a r~ light .on one side. Thep there Waf .a bright. 'white flash,. like Hgbtnlh« but withOut fl?ise~ abd ·.I!;ihot stlaight up ana out ot sight , , . ., ·one mystified night watcher reported. ne mystery of the UFOs, at least lo Huntington Beach, has been solved. MetaJllc night gliders from a distant ~No. &>aa strawa, birthday candles and Base, .near Riverside, and Beale AFB , ear, pla!Uc dry cltaDlng bags. (See MARINES, Po1e ZI By CANDACE PEARSON ~Simple Items collected from a taco °' "" 0e11y ,11e1 s11rt lfend, a laundry abd' a s\rpermarket Jack Vallerga went to Inglewood ~t Into the mntnictlon phase . of lhe B , , VFO Wednesday to defend his assessment '~t, .orange dfics • ,sqplm ,KunUngtbn ring IR -al President Nixon's San Clemente estate Beach residents reported as UFOs Tues· while state officials were in Orange day nigbL · County challenging it. The spacemen who lotmeh them are And Get Cash Vallerga, the Orange County tax a g~o! hl&b ICbool fOtl!hs who live •-Ufied ~1o joJ , t· "'th• 1v· .. ·ta ·~nearsta•A~nue assessor,~ ....::: rea n meemg ur "'"'".,, • · • '· o( the AMembly Gommittee on ·Revenue and Edwards Street. CORVA!LIS, or.. (UPI) -A and Taxation and the Assembly Select KID NA.PING The tr spacecral~ about lhrte-feet tall CorvaUJs radio station, KLOO, 111)'1 Conmtlttee 00 Coastal Zone Retources. -"=~~----------and--Lwo-f-...w1d.e.--D7_on._a_slmpleL><•"'-,_,,_.ls"d_~ a 10 000 reward ( .• o.rrl-~lbl\,!J!SUJUect of the hearing In Inglewood CH ~RlTY ciple -the old bot atr balloon method. the lint penon Vii!' City Hall waa e !liaOI PflillO<ltll!n FOR 4 "We learned bow to make them In visitor from space lo the studio. 20, the !!712 coastal zone aCI, 00 property BOURNEMOUTH, England ~UPI) - Nude model Alison Smith was quietly posing for an art class when in burst nlne men. They grabbed her and dragged her 1Creamlng into a walling car. But she found out later It was all a 1ag -part of a school prank in which the men were golna: to hold her· fbr "ranllOfn" for charity. "At least they had the decency to cover me with 1 blanket,'' she a.aid. a tuih school science class," says Peter (Related Morles pages Sand 11). vatues and coastal county assessment WiemaJs, 16. Bob Houglum, staUon manager, practices. '1'lt does look like a fiery glow In said Wednetday the offer WU But Vallerga diverted from that slight· the sky," adds Usa a.gal, JS. "It flootl prompted by the rash of unldentJ. ly to deliver his . own volleys at the with I.be wind ,and from a distance rJed flying objed reporta from State Board ot Equalizatioo while its you can't tell what it ii." throughout the oaUon. memben were being hosted by the .. One 'Stayed up about half an hour. Houglwn said lbe reward wtll Irvine Company In Newport Beach. II was a clear night and the candlelight be paid lo the "lint penon who Claiming tbal the board Is righting reflected off the bag," reports Leo Stock . can brlna to the atudio 8 living 11& bltlle In lhe press," Vallerga said 17. "Thal'• the one that was ·reported thing, anTmal or penon, that ha1 \be bolrd 11 accusing him of "giving ln the papers." come from outer ipace and bu preferential treatment to a high officer 'nle balloons -or UFOfl If you pre.fer never been on earth before." ol thit country." (SH UFO, Plge !) Jfe didn't mention President Nixon ' • )• ' by name, but the reference was obvious. especially lo Assemblyman L e o McCarthy (r>-San Francisco), who ob- jected to Vallerga's using the hearing as a forum. Presiden t Nixon purchased about 2$ (See VALLERGA, Page Zl S11spect Nabbed In Three Rapes SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Police have launched a manhunt for a former convict they said nrped an 1 l·year~ld girl, sexually assaulted an airline stewardeM and tried to rape a 5eeretary. They identified him Wednesday as Wllllam Von Oiczclski, 34, who served lime both In California and New Jersey rr.r armed robbery and grand thefl. lie was quoted as saylng, "I must be crazy, I must be crazy" while raping the girl. ,, ' • • Precaution For Mideast -Kissinger WASIUNGTON (AP) -U.S. military forces were ordered to worldwide alert today. Secretary of Sta'te Henry A. Kis- singer called it a precaution prompted by uncertainty about possible Soviet in- tervention to police the Middle East cease-fire. But he said the early morning order was dlsAAtched because· of ambiguity in SovieLliitentloos, not in a great-power confrontation . "As of now, the Soviet Unkm has DAYAN'S OFFER TO QUIT REJECTED. Story, Pogo . 4 not taken any iJTevocabie· action." Kis- singer said. "It is OW' hope that no such action will be taken." Kissinger said the United Slates op- poses the use of great-power forces in the numbers that would be necessary to police an Arab-Israeli cease-£ire. But he said the United States Is wiUing to supply some personnel to an ob5erver team under United Nations supervision. The alert came before dawn and was understood to affect Army. Navy, Marine and Air Force units around the world. It was disclosed not by Washington but by military men who got the order. Kissinger said the National Security Council met at about midnight PDT (See ALERT, Page %) - Orange Coast • Weather ~fostly sunny Friday is the way the weatherlady sees it, with may- be just a taste of fog in the morn- ing hours. lilghs at the beaches in the mid-70s rising to the lovr 80s inland. Overnight loW"S in the 50s. 1~);1111·: T O !IAY President ·Nixon i-S c:r;pec(ed to face questioning on roU rWyed bv close friend Bebe Re bozo tn handling of cam raion c011 tributlon. See story, Page 4. L.M, •m It C1H .. nol1 l, 1', l1 c111111'9ol >+.n c-1u n CrH'"'11 22 DHlll Nolle•• \G llll!Ol'lal "•" .. , aA .. rtalll-1 H'·U·U ,l~IM• ll•JJ '" IM 111Kt r11 II -..-1t AM L.,....,.1 U Mtvl" H,., .. u I • Mut111I "MllCI• n N1lllMlll Newt. • OrlftW CIWl!tr " 'TA II s,rvi. ,...,.... • SPOrts 2J.lll Dr. SltlMl'9flll M Slocll Nl•rll•h ft·U Tt!llYIWlll ""·It Ttlff!'" H'•l .. 11 w......... 4 ..._ ....... f,.. w ... 111 HoWI 4 ~ 2 UAIL Y ~ILUI ~ ThundaJ, October ~. 1973 'Can Tapes Be Altered? Judge Sirica May Seek Technical Advice fo'rom Wire Services \\rASHINGTON -A apokesman for cttief U.S. District Court Judge John J. Sirica said today Slrlca is considering whether to seek technlcal advice to in- sure that Prl'5ident Nixon's \Vatergate tapes have not been altered. (Related edilori31 oon11nent , Page 6) • ;Experts. 1nf•a11wh.ile, disagreed over lfhcthcr it \\IS possible to m:akl!: changes In tht tapes that could not be detected- Tbe spokee:man 1ak! Slrica bas not decided "'btther he actually will lffk P.dvice. Numffl>lll pM"DlS have offered sugpitlonl, he Wd, and S!rtca bu told them to J>C'<''"' lhelr ldeaa In writing. Sirica will be out or hls cM:mbers until ~froday, so will not be able to hear the tapes before then. 1be White ~ ' Jiil 'Ai"'"'"""''""""""' ... "" ............ .. :· :-•we Want Hi111" f ! Youth Nabbed in Credit Card Spree • • ORLANDO, Fla. ! UPI I -Petite :polic!'wom<in Killy flutter thought it y,•as a routine bust in a stolen credit card Kong. \\'ilh many stops in between. Henson wa11 being held In lieu of $250 bond on charges of possessing a stolen credit card and possessing case until the teletype n1essages started \.\'Orthless check!, police sJld. pc.uring in saying, "\Ve \\'ant him. we Among Henson's belongings when ar· wanl him, we want him." rested wa11 a receipt for a $21,000 And with the bills still coming in, purcba11e of two diamond rings In Hone police said today a !IO(Wpoken teen·aaer Kong and a postcard he bought In Spe.Jn may have collected as much as $500,000 but had not yet mailed to hl11 mother, using a stolen credit card and bogus filrs. Clementine Henson in Baltimore. checks in a global spending spree. .II said: Mlchael Thomas Henson, 18, asked, "Dear mom: I had to run. Sorry "Is that alt you've got me for?" when but I had to go. Love Ptfichael." l\1rs. Hutter .~t a gun to bis back __ . Pol~id an Orlando man who uses ay at an Or" ando Howa rd Jotmson s tlie name "?i.· r. aYICf'~cSlnld--Hen and arrested him for using a stolen his h1aster Chargl!: card In New York &·laster Charge card . Aug. 6 to buy plane tickets to Orlando "\\'he'l he said that, I knew there for him and a girl companion. When "'as more to ii." the blonde detective Henson failed to return the card, the said. man reported It st.olen. lnv@stlgators said they later found Airline tickl!:I stub11 found ln llenson's evidence that Hensnn cashed $200,00 In motel room showed hew flew around bad check! at American Express offices the world on British European Airways, \n a month-long spree that stretqled Iberia Airlines, TWA, BOAC, Eastern, from Ney,· York to Lisbon lo Hong American and Delta. Trustees Study 'Deep Throat' Issue Tonight \Vhen trustees of the Huntington Beach Union H.igh School District discuss the ··Deep Throat" controversy torught they \Viii be meeting al r.1a rlna High School. -The school board meeting starts -with a sttidy session at 7 p.m., followed by the regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. 'Trustees will meet in the r.1:arina caleteria. An ezeculive session will be held later in the meeting for further investigation of the showing of the X·rated film "Deep Throat" during a dist rict admlnlstrators conference in San Diego. Superintendent Jack Roper declinl!:d comment this morning on the incident. "It's a per.90nnel matler in the bands of the board," he said. "I don't think it's appropriate to comment. 'I'rustees had n1et for five hour s in ('Xec utive session last Saturday in· tcrviewing nearly 40 administrators who had attended the San Diego conference. No :innouncement of any dl!ieiplinary action has been made, though tru stees indiC'3\ed that mighl be comklered tonight. Bo y's Hand Run In Meat Grinder NOGALES, Arlt. I A Pl -A juvenile court hearing y,·as scheduled today for a 14-year-old Nogales youth who alleged· I> jammed a child's hand into a com- 1nercia l meal grinder here. Police said the 5-year-old boy's hand \\•as ground off to I.he "'r\st. They declin- ed 10 identify either. , fnvestigato r11 ~id !be accused teen· ager and a JS-year-old companion were \\'nrking at a Nogales packing plant \11hen the viclim and a &-year-old friend w11lked in . When the youngl!:r boys refus- ed 10 leave. the 14·year--Old allegedly · grabbed the yow1gster and placed his hand ln the grinder, police said . OU.N .. COAST IT DAILY PILOT fft1 Or-• C•HI DAILY l'ILOT, wl"' Wlllc!I It e<><Nll-IO\I N...,...,.,...,, 11 ..... II ...... IY m. Or•"Ot CM\! P..o!\olllftt C-nf. "-• .... ..iltloM ••• _,,.-. ,......., "'"""""' Frlol•v. .... Co\!• MIU, ,,._, ·~· """lf<tt!tn ae•cl!JF°""l•lo! v olley, utwM llNch, 1 .. 1 ... 5•oldl-c~ 1"4 ~" ci. ..... 111 So~ Ju•n Cu1111n.... i. 11,,.i. '"'°""' ..ill'°" It PUlll(I ..... S•t.,.61,1 '"" 5'1r>OIYI rn~ ~rl<>c.,_1 lhllill~lflt ~lint 11 U llO W••I lov ~1rNt, CM!o Mn•, Ct litoon.11, '~M. ll.1\.1rt N. W11d l'•MW...t 11111 "vllllollt• J1cli I . Cv1l1y VICI l'•M-t t nll Ol rllfl l M_ .. , The,,.•1 Ktt¥11 Ed119-r T~o11ttl ,.. M~q1!.lftt Mt ntf\n• l!fl ... C~1.l11 M. l1111 lticlo,rtl .,, Ni ll At1lll1~1 M1,..11.,. ft;ltn Ctf11 Mtte: JJO Woll II•~ 51•11• N_,.,t llMJll UU-Nt w""'I loi.,.ln"IN 1,. ....... IMCJI. m ,.,.,,, ,.,....,,.. lrvii'!lio9*•l oijj\"; 1ll7I •ttO NoMv•N Mto C~: ., Notlfl t i Ct l'fl"" ltttl , .. .,.... f71 4t '41-4JJ1 Q$211Mf..t ~ .. , .. ,,. "'"' Ctfflfl "''"' ,... " utllM ...... 4'1o44Jt ' "'"''"""~~C-0_..... .... ,, .. (.Nyolfl!I. 1'7), 0..... C..tl .....,..,,""' (l'l'IP<Ollf N• ,...,, '""""' lll\ltl•lt""'>. ,.1,...i.1 "'""ff .. "'•"'"-" """'"' 11".aY " •-•Y<td •lttotvl -ltl M< lt'l!lt""' .. tNt"11"' ..,.._. s-t••n '"'t"• ••Ill •t c .. 1. MHO. C•!l..,,.lf JvflK"i.ri.io .,.. t•ffllr U U -~1'/ .... ,.,,11 u 11 ..,.,,!flt~, .... 11 .. ~ ,,..1111111t"" n." ,,....lfliy. ~· '*· Fl'OMPageJ VALLERGA. •• acres for the Western \Vhlte Hou.se com· 'plex in San Clemente for $1.5 rnlllion. It included a Cl-year-old, 8,000-square foot house, La Casa PacWca. Vallerga down-assessed the property in 1973 to less than $1.4 mUllori, al· tributing the drop to ProposlUon 20 uncertainties. This is contrary ·to trend.! statewide which show developed properties rising in va1ue, but Vallqa said WfJdneeday that about 22 to 2S acres· of the San Clemente complex. are undeveloped. lbe house anil Improved growida -take up only a small p«e<nlage ol !he land, be Ald. Tho Orll!(t Coonty lioord . 0 f Supmbors baa ulled lht 8oml ol Equalizatimt to review the coonty assessor's valuaUon of the property. .Board Otalrman William Bennet said the new appraisal will be "looking into a possible crime and that's a non- partisan issue." Val l erga, speaking to the assemblymen , questioned the credibility of the board aqd its staff ·and sald he has "little confidence the appraisal "''ill be independent."· His argumeflls focused on the board's assessment of 4.Sl mile!! of Santa Fe railroad right-of-way adjacent to the \Vestem White HOUie at less than $3,000 an acre. "11'1 very lnteresllng 1in<e I'm doing sucb a bad job," Vallerga said, that an adtacent piece ol "more deltrable" property 15 under-assessed. The railroad laM la belween the com- pound and the. ocean, below the bluffs. Assemblyman McCarthy questiooed the relevance or Vallerga's comment11 but the assessor said "lbls 15 a wlique property totally within the 1,000-yard area." The coastal commisslom established by Proposition 20 have pennlt Jmisdlc- lion wllhln 1,cm yards of the lldeline. Ronald Ylelcb, assistant ezecutlve secretary of board, later Wednesday backed up the $3,000 figure by 1aylng the rallroad land la ''restricted in- definitely -50 to 60 years -to use a.Ii right-of·\\'ay. It can't be anything else until Santa Fe is allo\\'ed to abandon it." And e\'en though railroad operation might be unprofilable, \V elch told the assemblymen, aballdonment Isn't nn easy proce6S. There are ao many federal restraints on tucb an action, he claimed, "much could be said'' for assessing the land even Jo\\·cr. Rains Linebacker Robertson Held On Traffic Rap T.os Angeles Rams llnebnckcr rsieh Robertr.on. \\'as arr!'Slt'd !'tirly today by the lfunHngton 8each police on a traffic \\arrant. A pollct spokesman said the football player paid the $88 ball and \\'8S releued rrom custody not Jong af~r hll 2 a.m. arr cs I. The y,·arrant. iuued from the West Orange County Judicial District C.Ourt, charged Robert.Jon wit.h two vehicle code violaUon.s -pauing on the right under unsafe coDditlons and failure to carry registration in hi1 car. Robertson was appartntly driving on Edinger Avenue near Goth.1rd Streel \1·hen he wu 1topped by Offtcer Keith !"Ric. Nale made a routine "'aTTanl thtck and when the 1rafnc warrant was discovered, he toot Robtruon into cus tody. •• Houle hN indicated It will tnOV• "e1· pedJllow:ly'' to provide, the tipes. Alter three ""'1thl of llUgatkln, Nixon agned 'l'uelday to turn ow nine i.pes to Slrlol for !he judge to lmpect and decide whether any ahould be given to the Watergate grand juries. The tapes deal mainly u·lth con- versations that could corrol>Orate -or knock down -former \Vhi tc Houae counael John V.', Dean Ill's testimony that Nilon knew about a Watergate cover-up by Sept. 1$, 1'12. In other \Vatergale developments: -President Nix:oo called off a na· tionally televised evening ney,•s coo- ference today which bad been ·expected to focus oo the Middle East Crisis 8nd hiJ handling of !he Walerpte amtro- vt.r!'J. It marked !he seCXllld time in as many day11 that Nixon abruptly 11witched signals. He originally planried to deliver a nationwide address to !he people on thl!: \Vatergate sltualioo Wednesday night. This was abandoned Wednesday in favor of the now cancelled news con- ference, set b e: PDT torilR)lt. · Deputy press Secretary Geratd L. War- ren said Nixon was eallln1 orf the meeting witb newsmen tonight so he could concentrate on the still-tense event! in the Middle East. Warren said the news eonlertnce would be beld_._J(llJ)f:ti~ __friday · at a time to be announced. - -"President Nixon is implicated in a list of felonies as long as my ann," Rep. Robert L. Leggett (D-Calif.), said today in calling again for impeachment proceedings-to begin. Leggett coauthored an impeaclunent nsolutlon whkb was· introduced this--· ·week by Rep. Jerome R. Waldie ([). Calif_)_ "Even if we ignore such things as the firing ol hiJ own prosecutor, the unauthoriled bombing of Cambodia , and the expenditure of governD¥!llt funds to improve his persmal properties, President Nixon Ul implicated," con· tended Leggett. 'The congressman sald the President was possibly involved In bribery in con- nection with the Watergate defendants, the Vesco transaction and ITT, wiretap- ping in the cases of ·newsmen and the Democratic National Committee'•· head- quarters, and tax evukm In the alleged Hughes political contribution. Frot11P .. eJ _, . OPPOSITION •.. after a wa\•e of anti·Nimn mail came In, !he tide hegan turning In support., Cleary aa!d crittciam of the Preildent was due m»tly to "confusion" on the part of the p.iblic. He aald Hlmhaw urged the President to go on televiaion IO()n after the "!t<lry broke over the Watergate tapes and the Co:z firing. "Tht congressman believes the people are entitled lo the full knowl edge of the situation," Cleary said. Con&re$man Craig Hosm@r (R·Long Beach), whose dlflrict Include! part of western Orange O:nmty, Indicated an enormous flood of sentiment against the President. Spokesmen in his office said no turning of the tide was apparent Wednesday afternoon. "There has been a constant stream ol phone calls and earlier in the week, we were literally besieged by telegrams, letters and calls," Ule spokesman said. There Wert!: no tallies avallable of the numbl!:r of calls but the spokesman said Ibey were In tht hundreds. DemocraUc U.S. Senator• John Tunney and Alan Cranston have kept more ac- curate aeoountl of the public sentiment, aroirdlng to spoi«smen at their Los Angeles Offices. "Through Wednesday, we have receiv- ed about 1,400 telegrams a day and countless phone calls," a worker at Tunney's office said. "The ratio agaiart the Presideflt is as-tounding." The Tunney spokesman said his office ha11 received one message favoring the president for every 1,000 against him. The story was much the same in eranston•s office where worktrs said more than 8,400 telegrams had been received through \Vednesday of 'tJich ll!:u than 200 favored the President. The spokesman said more than 100 ca1l11 an hour w@re also coming in. Burgener aide ilathaway said he thinks bis congressman's constituents \\'OUld support Impeachment as a means to get lnfonnaUon but not to remove Nixon from office. He pointed out that a Democrat, Hose Speaker Carl Albert. 11·ould become President. Hinshaw aide Cleary a~. saying. "I don't think the Impeachment pro- cel!:dlng1 would go forward, but the peo- ple just want to get at the facts." N e·w Delicacy.- The Rat Dog? CARDfFF, Wales (UPI) -Wor- rler1 aboul the cootenll of the hot doc may have a new fear to contend with -UM! rat dog. It may come to that, aald Dennis Bellamy, head of Cord I ff University's zoology department. He said the school w\11 begin rtsfarth to see whether it Is @conomkal to nlM rats for food . to be used In sausa11:es. En.Jill.sh meat pudding and In corned beef· 1tylc dlshu. FrowtP-.eJ ALERT •.. ( and unanlmously re<..'Onunended the 10- Uon. He said President Nli:on hlmae1f dkl not participate In the meet.Ing, bot concurred in their Judgment. By that hour, orders apparently b:id gone out to military commanders to go on a1ert. Kissinger termed im:oncelvilble the use of either Soviet or U.S. forcn In a military role in the Middle East. He said that would transplant the rivalry o( tbe great powers. The distinction he drew was between that of a military force big enough to enforce peace term11, and personnel assigned to observe the situation and report truce violations. Tw ice, Ki.s!inger Wll.!I asked whether therl!: was any link between Nixon's domestic problems and the crisis abroad. He reacted icily. "There bas to be a minimum of con- fiden~ that senior officials of the American government are not playing with the lives of the American people," he said . Kissinger said ambiguity about Sovi@t intentions led to U.S. moves he described as precautionary. He declared Oat U.S. op~ltion to the use of· Soviet or American forces to enforce a Middle East cease-fire. "We do not consider ourselves in • · conlronlation with the Soviet Unioo,f Ki11singer told a nationally televised news confereiice. "We do not believe at this time it is necessary to hav.e a con· fronfation ." Kissinger began with anJ account of U.S. policy since the Arab-Israeli war erupted Oct. 6, and with a word of caution. He said the United Slates and the Soviet Union as nuclear powers IV Hall .se rie Cor.o Hal the I s. ghost W8' Cc a va were Cana wind' li vin and "the Ha tic. with prns -cai)able -or annttdJal.iDg-mmUdftd-hv•e-----•--If "a very special responsibility" to keep • pilot their corifroolatiom within bouPd9 that the do not threaten civilization. "We are at one and the same time the adversaries and partners in peace," he for said. Kissinger specificall y rejected a ques- tion · about any pos!ible link between the alerts and President Nixon's prob- lems in the Wateragte case. He said the question itselr 111 "a symptom of what is happening to our country •.. " FN>m Pflfle l Beachfront Surp1·i~e . . UPl ~Ttl#Mlt " MARINES ... .. 4'-' -•· • Most folks who run into pretty Gloria Margarita tondor\'o ·on the beach at Miami would figure her for a model. T68Y,.-.yoW-a,.be pretty right. She's been a model-and.still dQBS-sometimes. bµt ~he likes her regular job better. She's a gas station-a..ttendant. near Marysville. At March personnel were told to stay close to home teleplx>lll!:I if not on duty -.;ci.yana,.---ailiW<rllly-calls-wltbln six rings. .. From Pagel "It's Jmt like any of the first-stage practice alerts we have all the time," one airman told tht AP. • He received a telephone call alerting UFO NOT A UFO ... him at 11 'p;m. 1 Duty olfi<ers """ cooflnne4 tile alert at other buel called It a ·~".and for the moat part would say only that all personnel were ordered to report to base immediately. -are simple to make. It lakt! a plastic dry cleaning bag, medium size, about a dozen birthday candles. four straws, a rubber band and one straight pin. All holes in the plastic bag are sealed. except for !he bottom opening. T\vo straws are stuck together. one inside the other, then th e other 1\.1•0 are stuck together. nre tandem straws are crossed to form an X and fastened together in the center with the straight pin . That forms the base of the balloon . The birthday candles are healed, squeez· ed. in a circle. then held together with the rubber band (or tape), and set on top of the pin. with the 11.·icks skyward. The banded candles look like a bar- rage of air·lo-air missile! ready to fire. Somebody lights the candles. E\·eryone helds hold the side of the bag to the ground and the hot air slowly liUs the bag. The balloon! have floated as hi gh as 200 feet , they say. The youths said they carefully watch \\'here their creations fly because of the cal'ld.Jes but normally, the candles are snuffed when thC'y finally fall. They did lt becaus e of the UFO craze and the nearness of Halloween. Lisa said they saw the blue dlsc, reported Swlday nigh! by a Huntington Beach resident, which was not launched by the Sol Vista gang. · "'Just the yellow ones are our s," she said. Peter added that the flights won't "'ork on windy ni ghts because the wind blo\VS the ho! air out of the balloons before they can be launched. "If you see one on a windy night, you're in trouble," he laughed. Ob yes, they do believe In UFO! but haven't seen any since Sunday. At Beale AP newsman Chuck McFad- den found the entrance to the base blocked by two air policemen. A aource told him a pass wu needed to leave the SAC base and that dependents living on the base were ordered to stay in their homes. Children were attending school, however. Another 10uree said Beale wu on alert at "Defense CondJllon 3." with many B52' flying low level holding pat- temo and SR71 re<onnaluanco planeo in the air. Base spokesmen had no comment. Guitarist of Stones eo1nddenb1Uy, today waa scheduled to be the base's annual readiness drill, code named "Bucbln Rider." It was Achuits Dru!!: Charges canceued. ~ Beale and March have giant 852 and LONDON (UPI) _ Keith Richard ol bombers and KC135 refuelers. All of March's B52s have not yet returned the Rolling Stones pop group pleaded from Indochina. guilty in court Wednesday to charges Spokesmen bad no comment at Travis of possessing heroin and marijuana and AFB south of San Francisco, a major illegally possessing a revolver, shotgun supply and transport base, and at other and ammunition. California bases. Jn San Diego, a spokesman for naval Richard , the group's 29-year-old lead air statiolll and carriers along the West guitarist. was fined a total of "$525 and Coast said, "I can't give you a yes conditionally discharged for 12 monlh.'i. or no, only no· comment." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-r I I I I I I I I I r. ---------------------· IMMEDIATE DELIVERY General Eledrlc FREEZER • 518 Lb. Capacity I I I I I I • Convenient Book-self Storagel • Foods Easy to Organ_ize, See and Select • Defrost Dra in I I I I I LIMITED 2 3 995 : QUANTITY • 90 DAY CASH WITHC~~::t"" : 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa-Phone 548-7788 I ~---------------------~ , l I I I isl aft e "I who thes said is at H ex tr bee al1n peH cha act -·s " it i oth Bu In dis p Al • er c w c • w ' " s O.i.ll 'V PILOT Ghosts Depart Fro111 Area Han·nted Honse \Vo11t to fi nd tJit rtcl ghoiti tl1is flallowec11? Thu ii tl1e second if1 a iicries of arUcll!I on 10l1eTt Orm1ge County's real haunta are located. By 1'0~1 BARLEY Of 111<1 0.HY ,llet lla4t ilallie rrost was convinced all tbro.ugh the Jong years that she lived at 4"3 S. Ross SL in Santa Ana that the ghost of her modest two-story home was hers alone. Certainly, it made itself known In a variety of manifestations when others were in the home. Melva Driscoll, the Canadian psychic, told of the "great wind" that buffeted her in the Frost living rom while she worked with Hallie and her family to establish oontact with "the presence." Hallie Frost's uncle . a confirmed skep- tic, spent a night there and agreed with his niece that a "terrible wicked presence" hovered near them. Expe1·t Believ es And family members who eonstantly tried to 1!11'."'"'1• yio stUl>bom spins"' to ~ave Ille """"' talked of "l>Mvy paws" J)owcing on lo the attic floor and of the noise of something moving the heavy boxes and trunks that MW Frost kept in 'her spare room. sur·wtrat~et':tlie unseen vltllor was. rrllu Frost felt ·tt and once told this writer that she believed its link in this wol'ld was with her. "l feel it most clearly when I am alOf)e and I believe l am meant to know that," she said. She was right. For Hallie Frost ls dead and her de3lh would appear tO have cleansed the Ross Street home of the spirit that affected il during her yean there. Ernest P.iendez, who took over the property from P.tiss Frost's nephew jll!t over a year ago, ha! heard nothing unusual nor have he and his family Space Visitors Are 'Bashful' By WILLIA~1 SCHREIBER Of lb1 0.H"f 1'1191 Sl•lf experlenced aay ol tbe sudden temions that were often Hnted by ifiss Frost and vlslton to bet bome. "I don't believe in that stuff, anyway," rtteodei aaid. "No one told me anything about it when I bought lfle property and it wouldn't have made any di,ference I! Ibey bad -that thld of U\1111: I:! for Halloween." l\luch of l\U.ss Jo~rost's furniture went with the property and Mendez U now the owner of a mirror that figured largely in a manifestation witnessed five yeal'I ago by Miss Frost, her sister Heiro and a family friend who was staying in Santa Ana for a few days. All were in bed on a night when the atmosphere in the home permitted only fitful sleep w.heJI they beard the sba!tering of glass on the stairway and tbe tinkling or smaller piece! of glass as they fell in the hallway. .. , wouldn't allow anyone to get up ," ~1iss Frost said. "But when I gol up, my sister took me into the hall. She didn•t say a word and she didn't have ••• "There was the mirror. quite intact, banging in its place is it always had. There It is loday aod you can see !here Isn't a crack or a mark on it." Ernest l\fendez. fortunately; is not im· pressed. * Nor was DeM.is McCarter particularly impressed when everyone told him that the ·home that had become the apple of his eye was haunted and had been so for manr years. 'Ille rea estate management oon· sultant just didn't care. In fact, he coined the phrase that still gets chuckles from the skeptics and canny rea\tors while it d(aws purse!! lips and raised f-ercatures-1m.m~r s ce are piloting lhose. UFOs being spotted around the world, they don't care to meet the human race face. to face -except for an occasional laboratory specimen. -eyetii'Ow frcfif-Ui&le ct-Oser tG tlle psychic world :. That's the opinion-of -Dr:-D. B. llannon, a top aerospace engineer at Mc.DoMell-Douglas Space Systems Div· ision. He spoke at UC Irvine Wednesday aftemon. (Related story. Page 11). "I'm sure there arc hundreds of people who wou1d love to get in touch with these beings for reasons of their own," said Harmon. "Bul I think whoever is Oylng the flying saucers just isn't at all interested in us." he said. llarmon is an admitted believer In · extraterrestrial space ships that have been reported hovering in the earth's atmosphere by m.any thousands of persons through the years. He said there is a statistically good challCe-that-·a few of the stories about actual meetings with men from outer space are true. "I would gue.8! that these beings have a missk>n to seek out and observe other planets," Harmon said. "And seen from space, earth is a beautiful sight for any explorer." Since becoming acquainted w i t h UFO's, in the mld·l940's, Harmon said he has concentrated his research en the photos that have been taken of the UFO phenomena -once called "Swedish Ghost Rockets." "In the ones I believe to be authentic, it is im~ible to have faked the per- spectives ind geometric accuracy," he added. Harmon said sightings starting in the early 1950s throough the latest ones have revealed a startling array·of UFO hardware. He said they include the more common dome-shaped craft, the "Saturn- type," lol>-Shapcd, cigar-shaped and othen seen only as blots of bright light. But he said even the blots of light on close inspection, yield striking features that distinguish them from phony UFOs or Seen a UFO? Let 'ern Knoiv The Aerial Phenomenon Research Organization (APRO) - is looking for persons who are sure they have seen UFOs but are afraid nobody will believe them. APRO field Investigators Edgar and Natlca Greer of Laguna Beach would like anyone certain of their sighting to let them know right away either in person at their 1406 Temple Hills Drive home or by calling them al 494-1636 or 49+ 1345. o.tl"f .. 1..,~s•aff .....,. ARE UFOS PILOTED? Speaker D. B. Harmon natural phenomena. lie referred specifically to one which appeared over a girls' school in Spain and was photographed clearly by two separate people over the hill from each other. Their photos showed a "cooking pot'' type or craft with unique markings on the bottom. As for sightings of the creatures themselves. Harmon said some stories have been im}X)Ssible to repudiate. "There is the story of a farmer who saw them in his field picking up dirt," Hannon said. "He asked them what they were doing and they telepathically said they needed soil nutrients. So he went and got them two bags of fertilizer \\·hich they loaded aboard and took off.'' Hatmon said he believes some stories of people who have been taken into the craft for examination. "I think from lime to time they take specimens for study." he said. "Most are under hypnosis and can only remember what happened when put under hypnosis again." HarlTl(ln said a study of all available UFO data reveals that there arc between five and eight types of creatures, in· eluding the type seen recently in Mississippi -tbe wrinkly ones \Vith claw hands. He says they range in height from 30 inches lo nearly eight feet. 11e said information from those 'vho have been •·taken aboard" UFOs in· dicates the pos!ibillty that several million creatures are on tbe earth stu· dying humanity and • that they come from a distant a>nme1'ation. Al~atraz ""Open~ Tourists Get a Piece of the Rock SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Alcatraz in Alcatraz's gymnasium-sized, concrete Prison, the infamous "rOC'k" that held cell block enclosing more than 400 nine- Al Capone, "r.1ach!ne Gun" Kelley and by-five barred cubicles, stacked in tiers, a g a 11 er y or the nation's biggest \Viii be bluntly evident to the thousands criminals, goes public Friday. of tourists expected to take the JO.minute The bleak fortress atop n ru gged boat ride to the island in San Francisco volcanic island in San Francisro Bay. Bay for a two-hour visit. :ibandoned IG years ago to the fog and Alcatraz was a federal penitentiary the seagulls, "''ill berome the first U.S. frot!' 193~ to I~, before the 8?,vernrnent "big house" C\'Cr opened for fuJJ.tin1e dec1~ 1l was ~ailing apart and too Inspection. expensive lo repair. . . And If the public's flrst walk through Debate ovtr what to do with 11 has the notoriously strict though not Wl· bee~. healed the ~st decade, a~ t~e ypical -U.S. pl'lsm\ fallrtu prove th1tt__Oecu1on to ow 1l to the. public_ LS rrinie doesn 't pay, 8 harsher exhibit a~.atte1npt to settle the question . 'II be bard 10 find. There ~ave . bt>en m;iny proi;><>Sal~. wi . rrom tearing tt do~·n and giving 1t For 1ne•apablc Alcatraz w~s designed back to the pelicans, to making It :i to ~use the t<roght1t, most 1ncorrlgible gambllng caslno or erecting statues tn conv.1ct! In lhc federal 1ystcm and w~s St. fo'rancis or the U.N .. " say• \Villlam a . v1rtul'll human kennel for society s J. Whalen, superintendent or the M.~ .... ·1ldest out\ows, acre Golden Gate Recreation Area , a Geor11c "Baby Fa~·· Nelson, racketeer National Park Service 1trm, now Irving "Waxcy" Gordon. Doc Barker. responsible ror Alcalrt1z. son of "Ma" Barker, end Robert Stroud . About t.000 visitnrs a day arc eipt"ctcd "fhc Bird ~fon or Alcatrar., '' were arnong to take the 9 a.ni. to 3 p.1n. $2 tourii: lhc nlOre. widely known occupanlJ. daily from Pier 4.1. leaving every 30 Just bow absolut (! was the conflnemi::nt minutes. "Ghosts don't move." "They don't," the burly AfcCarter grin· ned. "I wanted that old house so I decided to move it Ioek, StOClt and. barrel to my lot here at J1572 Cielo DA Opposing Questioyahle Police Group Orange County District Attorney Cecil Hicks, working with state authorities, moved Wednesday to halt what his offict! ducribed...as..a _flood_ of .soliciting letters from a "highly questionable" and self· styled police officers association. The Superior Court action taken against the National Polict Officers AS!IOClation and the Police Hall of Fame alleges lb.at the organization and its principals, Thomas Nastasi and Frank J. Scbira, are making a series of false claims in their letters to Orange County residents. Deputy District AtJomey Charles McFarland said his office's move against the association is along the lines of an action successfully taken in Los Angeles County. "It is my belief that the letters cur· rently flowing into Orange County are no longer being sent to Los Angeles County residents." P.tcFarland said. l\1cFarland said the Nastasi-Schira organization operates out or Florida and falsely claims to be devoted to the financial aid of the widows and children of slain police officers. "No such dependents in Orange County have received this advertised type of aid and it's our belief that they never "''ill be iligible for it,'' P.tcFarland said. He said the volume of complaint.11 filed with his office is mounting as the organization is apparently stepping up its mailing to this area. "We know that frnancial contributions have been mailed to Florida but we don 't kno\I,. yet just how much has been sent," he said. "\Ve plan to seek a court hearing in the near future at which time we will ask for a restraining order against tbe Orange County opera· lions of the defendants." San Francisco Quake Predicted By 'Amateur' S1\CR.MfENTO (UPil -State officials have alerted communities in !he San Francisco Bay area that a bi~ eanb- quake is being predicted by an amateur seis mologist who missed on at least 50 earlier warnings. Dan Bloxsom, president of Earthquake Techtronics. Pasadena. said the temblor would occur Sunday "give or take a rew days," according to a preS3 spokesman ror the California State Office of Emergency ServiC1!-S. The spokesman Wednesday said a notice of the prediction was sent to police and (tre officials in Snn Francisco :ind other communities along the Pacific <:cast. BloxMml said the shaker would register between 7 and 8.3 on lhe Richter SCAie. OGn Rodger s, a seismologist with the State Division of Mines and G1?ology. s:iTcl llloisom prt:Vioustr roret1sr·so ID SG'' quake!! but "liO far hasn't scored." lie added that Hlouom \l'AS "using a 9eismograpb be designed himself." The notice was sent A.!I a re~ult of a new stata policy to advise local or. flclals of such prediL1ions b y "professional '' and "reputable " ~rc<:3. the press aide said. . Attached to the. notification ~·ere opln· Ions from Caltech. c.s. Geological Survey. State Oi vsion or l\lines and Geology and lJC Berkeley. all disagree· ing wtlh Blouom's prediction. ·, DeU~ !'Ii.I Jl1ll ,..,.., 'UNEARTHLY SOUNDS AND VISIONS' ONCE FILLED THIS TUSTIN MANSION Denni' McCarter Didn't Care; 'Gho$fs Don't Move,' He Declared Place in Tustin and I guess the ghost drove off the more timid of the home 's \\'hotn lived in the classic, r.1ontert y· decided to stay down at Founh and visitors. Spanish style house ai \1·hat is n_ow Prospect." •·\Ye heard a thing or t"'·o going on Irvine Boulevard and Prospect Avenue Those £hosts had . certainly built up at the time v•e bought it and they "Ghos1s \l"On 't follow you ," ~~arter a fonntdab1i ,.ep:ita:HOhl>y-""'1he tim.--.,,,re'thlngs1tratiun--ean'H>e-ttplained:1"-!aid: '"-Thi~ one·didn 't.'.L-- t.f<:Cartcr looked last year at the house f\.1cCarter ·said. "A couple of the Slel'pcr isn't so sure about that. Sam Nau built more than 80 years architects I hired to plan the mo,·e •;rm only thinking about Sam Nau. ago. . had a few oddball things happen 10 the guy ... :ho built the house," Sleeper County historian Jim Sleeper's records them in the \\'ay of things dropping explained. ··•le died in 1939 and a little reOect tbllt the -61d Nau hotne-became wlthou~tarr.!tian-,nlti all that sort-------e+RttSe--in--htHMl·-wiH-and~~--- widely known for ill "unearthly sounds · of thing." 1night chan ge ~1cCartcr's mind aboul and spectral vi sions.'' Knockings, shuf-r.1cCarter couldn't care Jess. He ghosts following you." flings and hollow thumps, mostly speculates that 111hatever roamed the Nau. 11·ho may have had good reason emanating from the maids' quarters. house in fonner years is connected to to make the request. ordered that hi.~ constantly disturbed the occupants and the Nau or Preble fatnilics. both of favorite rine be buried with him. ~=========~====~~::;;;;;;;;;;;~ -·- It's that graceful, classic look. that tells how elegantly you live. • • v<f•°l, I \ • • 'f'.1!"'1' 1 i~'. : '~ l Here is the ma9nificente in furniture you ~e ek, but rerely find . Cameo II by Herite9e reowekens the rich, romentic mood of • Europe o!ll the he ight of iii treditional splendor withe masterfully cr11fted, su perb blend of French. Italian, Empire a nd Adam Brother!. motif,. Your fovori!e 111terwr dcs1g11er u:dl be l1appy 10 assis t 11011 I ! I "1' • ., B Or •uftr l Kon9 Btd H.J.G AI\1\ETT fllR NITLlRE PROFESSIONAL Op'" M". lllS HARBOR BLVD. INTERIOR DESIGNERS Thuro. & f,;. E .. 1. COSTA MESA, CALI F. I J SI ;q 00 15~~ oc sc;q' oo S 21~ 00 s '~' oo ·f~AIL V PILOT l l'l11nd•p' Octobtr 25 1~7l Link Seen Between Cox FirJng, Rehozo Probe ' ' . .'Prognosis Not ·:To Her Liking Nixon to Faee -Grilling PETERSBOROUGH, Eng 1 and (UPI) -Stop lhe preparations, .tbe vasectomy Is off, ?tlrs. Terry ,Bentham says. With that. abe dragged her hus- 1 biiod out of the hospital w1rd • eJ'f: he had been wailing far birth control operation .. rtQJn for her ch.s,nge of Wa!I what she saw when Yilited. her busb&Dd -women rdmates running around in see. nightgowns. "I was so •shocked that I decided I would •get Terry out even If he were .. under anesthetic," she said. . Suit Hinted • ~Y Soap Box ace Cheater KRON, Ohio (UPI ) -County ti'~outor Stephen ~f. Gabalac says t Robert Lange Sr .. who helped his J.,,11ew cheat in the Soop Box Derby, flee to sue oo his chargi?S of com· .. -ndes '>idatiom, but he-belie¥e:S erely an effort to dilute bis L ~ Lange, who agreed Tuesday to a $2,000 nee-judicial settlement" on a charge ~.tJD~ ~-~·~~~!1..9~. of rrunor, said'lie \VOU1u l<lAe sOine-Jf- rmalive action" against officials of fh e All-American soap box derby. { "I 11llNK HE made his statement E draw public attention fram him and s guilt and others involved with the ction." GabaJac said. "What he said as like 'I'm a crook, but there are lot of other crooks out there \vho idn't get caught'.'' Lange, of Boulder. Colo .. said his epPew, James Gronen , 14, \\'SS unfairly mg1ec1 out for cheat ing in lhe Derby. boy won the De rby but wa s deprived r. .the honor and a 'ifl ,500 scholarship hen it was found that his racer had equipped \vit h an electromagnet ~bat gave it an unfair quick s~rt. • "ntE Th1PLJCATION \\'AS that he CMAd file an action or actions in Summit ty that his nephew should not have disqualified because olbcrs who tW'fdly cheated were not di!quali!ied." baJac said. "The burden is on him. lie has the right lo come here and file a suit. ! ''But trying to imagine what he \\'Ould l>r.ay for is beyond comprehension. Since 't's a civil suit. he must pray for relief #rofu some certain situation, or money." ' Qabalac at one t 1me contemplated filing Lange and his nephew on criminal iichargcs, bul he later allowed the tcOtorado Court to settle the matter. t !Claims by Air !Conditioner lJust Hot Air? ~ WASH INGTON (UPI) -ln the first 1..;ettlement growing out of the Federal :Trade Comnlission's campaign to make 2big advertisers back up their claims. :an air conditioner manufacturer today tli'feed lo stop saying without proof •that its products arc the n1ost quiet !or efficient on the mnrket. i The cornpany, Rheem ~lanufacturing .Co. of New York, makes Corsaire and i Rheemairc Hon1e Central air coo· :ctitiooing systems. ~ The f'l'C ordered Rheem and other f air condi tioner makers to verify their ladvertising claims in August or 1971. :complaint, were later proJX>sed against t Rheem aod two other firm s -FeddeTs :and \\1hirlpool. The Fedde.rs case resulted :in a form al complaint against the firm :and !he \Vhirlpool case is still under : negotiation. t WASHINGTON (AP) -l'r'8ldent Nix· on "Ill probobly lace publlo questionlni ln his television-radio newa cooterenoe Friday aboo• his pr!V8'e relaUcmhip with Charles G. "Bebe" Rebozo, his closest friend, who bas emerpd as a major figure in one ol. the several post- Watergate investigations. In addUion to Nixon's decision .in the Watergate tapes batlle aod bill f~ of special prosecutor Archibald COi, newsmen are virtually certain to rabe lhe Rebozo I.me. Originally scbeduled tooigh~ Ille -f~ has been delayed u n t i I •·sometime Friday" be ca u s e ol developments in the Middle EasL THE QUESTIONING i.s expected to focus on suggestions by several sources that Cox's firing was triggered by his investigation of a $100.000 campaign con- tribuUon from Howard Hughes, which Rebozo reportedly accepted and kept in a safety deposit box lor three years * * * Butz Helping In Milk Fund Investigation WASHINGTON (AP) -Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz says bis depart· ment is helping the Justice Department investigate charges that a::o::es,dms were made to dairy farmers after laqe --~cooperati""" pled&ed •. 12 llll!liOO. contribution. to President Nixon's 1972 re-election fund. "' F11el Tank Wa1•p Cape Canaveral ground crews planned to pressurize t\VO fuel tanks in the Skylab 3 booster rocket today, hoping to repair damage and avoid a delay in scheduled Nov. 10 launch. The tanks buckled during fueling Tuesday. Butz, however, insisted that the Office oC Inspector G....-al in Ille Agri<ulljlre Department was not engaged din:ctlf in investigating the milk-fund matter. "My IMJ>ector General's office doesn't get into political cootribuUons," Butz told reporters. "If there's a prima• fade case, Jt goes over to Justice." BUT UNDER QUE.mONING, Butz conceded tbat some essistaace was'bting provided by the USDA. ••'J'bey are ~ating with Justice in this matter, I understand," he said. BuU also defended , as be bas previous. ly. his department's role in last year's tampoon Named in Su~t·~·--;:;~!~~~=~~~ her'ring." ' 0 Ch. o ddi" k Ad The question of polilical cootribUtiolls n nappaqu1 c :..:he c:u':Y!.~"'~ ; :n:: i: announco plans !or owrhauliog Ille From Wire Services NE\V YORK -Volkswagen, calling a mock advertisement recalling Sen. Edward · M. Kennedy'.s automobile ac- cident "tasteless," filed suit against the National Lampoon Magazine Wednesday for $30 million. The ad , part or National Lampoon's national encyclopedia of humor edition, showed a Volkswagen noatlng on water and a caption read ing: "If Kennedy drove a Volkswagen he'd be President today." Volkswagen charged copyright In- fringement in the suit filed in federal court. The ad was called "coarse, insensitive and cruel ... and a tasteless pubHcation of a tragic mishap." DAILY ~ILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Orll~rry of tht Daily Piiot 1~ g~arantrtd Mo•t••·'"'loill Yr II nu 't ntl ~0¥0 ¥1111' Plptt •Y J :lO -.m., <•II Inf your .... , .. 111 I< l ••••M 11 J•~. Coll• 111 11l1n until l:JO "'·'"· S1lurt1y 111<1 S""d1y: 11 JI• do not rt<t l•• YIWt <OPY I J ' 1.m. Sl!u .. ty, tf I 1,m, Su .... oy, (I ll 1nd t (ftpy w•ll IHI lot•Wlftt tt }••· Ctllt ••• 11_.., vnlll 1f '·"'· T rlrph onrs MOU o ...... C1wn1y "''''' ••••.•• 1<1·011 HO<llh•tll HUM1nt1t• •••<h i nt Wn!m•noltt .......... ,...Int )on C1<t"'tn11. C1,11T,.~• ltl<~, Son Juon CIPIUt l lH!, C1111 l'IOM, Stw1h l•tun•, l•t UIM N•tUll ...• •t1·H" e Veto Shomdomn Set \\1ASllINGTON -President Nixon's veto of Congress' war JX>Wers resolution heads for a showdown vote in the House next Thursday and a key member predicts it mJght be overridden. Rep. Clement J. Zablocki .([).Wis.), ( IN SHORT ... ) House floor manage r for the bill, said \Vednesday th e Middle East war and the weekend Watergate uproar may give him more than the seven vote switches he estimates are needed. e John Rhodes Groomed \YASHINGTON -If Gerald R. Ford is confirmed as vice president, Rep. John J. Rhodes (R-Ariz. ), will become the Republican leader in the House. His only remaining opponent, Rep. Leslie Arends (R-Ill .), withdrew from con- tention Wednesday. e Red Force on Jtlove SA IGON -An artillery and tank-led Communist force overran a government battalion taking part in a bogged-down division-size drive to retake the captllred base of another battalion, official reports showed today. The Saigon command said today that "due to heavy enemy pressu re, govern- ment troops have moved to another position," faling back to their regiment- al headquarters six miles \vest of Pleiku. government's peanut BUbsidY program. Officials who were asked later to clarify Butz' remarks said the USDA has given 1be Justice Depertment, Senate Watergate investigators and others documents and other inf'onnatloo on milk price support and import quota actioos. IT . WAS DISCLOSED Tuesday that the dairy industrY promlsed President Nixon $2 million in campaign oontrilJu.. tions two weeks before be lmpo&ed im- port. quotas on ice cream and some other dairy producis. The pledge was made in a letter to Nixon Dec. 16, 1970, by Patrick J . Hillings, then a lawyer for Associated f\filk Producers, Inc. Impxt quotas were imposed by presidential proclamation on Dec. SI , trro. Buti pointed out that he did not join the cabinet until December 1971, a year after the Hillings letter. Arrested in Murder SAN BER NARDINO (UPC) -A 26- year-old suspect was arrested Wednes. day in the murder-robbery of 44-year- old \Vllliam Schrewsberry in Jooe, 1972, police reported . Governor Richardson was arrested at the home of a friend and charged \vi th suspicion oI murder. GILLETTE Platinum · Plus 10 Razor Bl•d•s • • I Gilda Building Up Force Sale .99. rag. 1.99 • VITAMIN Rougli Seas Fea.red on Southeast U.S. Coast c with ROH Hips U.S. S11111r11ur!1 MIAMI -Rlh.IV•'""e<t trwlc11 •!Ct"' Gl\08 ><lrtwltO ovtr !M ""''"" ol !he >01JlhwH1 Notti\ Al11MI~ ~,:,."'".'.i.u11~1".'~ru0~ •• ~~1 '\"' (~~11:.:r 5Ult• !oo;llY wit~ Ion ·~•ltl:PCI "'I""• of Yl tc &a mllt l 111 hour. Sala .59 rae. 1.49 • bel<ft ttturnlnrl 11 10 HIJlbel w\r !his Y"r. (Relaled 1IO?)I. Pqe ~) White Home olllclall have d<oled lllY oormecUoa betweea COJ:'• Cllder, Joel bis inquiry into Ille flOO,Oj)O cootrl-. In- dications are that NI-I• prepared IO repeat thole denlals ·at his neW1 con- ference and to defend Reboio'• hlndllq of the Hughes contribution. THE WASBINGTON POST repon.11 toda,y that ·-cashed '81,IOO wwlh ol oloclc lifter be was told In UGI by an insurance invesU1ator thlt it was atoien. Ctling the lnvestipl«'t """" llate- ment and other records lD a Miami court file, the newspaper aald the seeurwe1 represented 300 of 900 shares of Inter~ natiooal Business Machine Corp. atock federal prosecutors say was stolen by Ille Malia lbat year r..m E .F. J!utlon &: CO., a New York stock broker. A Reboro lawyer acknowle<lled that the investigator villted Reboz.O but said 'Full Confidence' Rebolo "fiallY denies belna !old by the In~ ~ the otoct "" stolen, Ille-Aid. A-., to the newspaper, Rebo!\O gablod pouesllon ol the otock when it was offered as collateral for a loan. NIXON'& FRIENDSHIP wilh Reborro dates blct more than a deade. The mtlllooalre presld"1t or Ille only bmlk in Kty Biscayne, Fla., occupies the only ..,. ol ftve -Inside Nino'• 8e<ftt Se~ Fkrid• <"Ompound not used by olllclol per31)1111d. Ac:o:rdin( to aeveral sources, N}:l'(ll's relattooship with Rebozo bu -becauae the President finds be can relax around the chunky, well·lanned 60-yeu-- old .... of Cuban immlgranls. 1bese sourcts say Nixon and Reboso never talk about natimal issues or about pollUor. But, the Willie House ClOll(lnned 18'1 •-eek. the queotlon ol tbe f!00,000 Hughes conlribtuion WU d i • c u • I e d earlier this year during one of Nllon's Fl<Xlda vi.its. Golda Meir Turns Down ' TEL AVIV (UPI) -Israeli Del.,,.. . l\lllltary """""' have Ald tbll the Minll!er· Moobe -P.1an . olfmli ''Ills armod !orcea <!lfel, Lt. a.., Plnid re!lpa~ today In,.,_ to criticism EI-. pnlllOled to the gov.,,.-t wfor ,,.,. J~ -.. -and to the Arab -that !KN! -cG>dUct of tbe Middle EUt "iar, bui a pi.empti.ve llrlte, but tbe ~ ~minister Golda Mdr re~ It. WU'rejecled. ' ' . Mn. Meli liiuel •• ~ si,tnc Wllether liayah -~l -In slie hod ''full .......,...._ tn hi< ·..n uytng no Is not tnown; .lliit i<iitlmOot .. defense ~::m,. N!d lbal in the ..aJe --1s 1\mnlni lllch "queatfons, clarlll~ one! lllY lellOOI aptllll the -. to be learned """""""" Ille alarl. of With ·....nt olectlcm -""" ft>r the war or on matlen relaUoc to the Dec. IL u.e· Ji&bl·wtnc omlltlan •to war would bt" <Wiiied JolnllY In Ille prime D\ll1lltOt ~ M,tlr'I -0\111· c.binet at ail aj111rij>r1ate t1o1e and not tloq aJread7 liu "'«= utlnl 1illr tile ,_,.. -.. r. . preemptlve-irai.-ouL ' An elrlter en-' " :'"::'t...!::: JeanArtliut·-H~- , ,._ -for Dir-. • .. iald that "U Mr. Ch Dr n;.;J °"'"" cioes not -... : a~ ge · op~ ,., a,. . CIOllll'leto 1· D-.. -... ' . ~~ ot: t11t n ~g-Scrape· 7 prime -_"¥wet, be • ' .. will~bls-! . . MOJ• DAY,... i~.'' . I ~&1J;EM. N.C. (AP)...,. 'l1!e stalemeiJI ..ref~ -...... -... .... -. . Ing to the dmumd ohllllillco.MW'I •Ol lr.' "'"'*"·tbeaiHnoa~­ YoalDT Shinuhoa Shapl< llfil lie....,... :;.lorjoer° ·-aclreal J-~' '!be ._per -Rid ·-_ -cb.;...t wltb i,....,., ind was cr1Uca1 or 1.,ael'i _.,lor ~and~·~ the Oct. 6 EgypU&n and SyJ1an" oitacb. flie ~ had ~ <11jo4 by "mE MINISJ'ER of de(.,. Is • \neighbor wl1o ... Into ... li;)qMnt re-'!JOO'ible to the cabinet arid · the with Ml$s Ar!hur a!ler abe..npiiiWiy Kne>set (parliament) lor tbe .. •oed blq"GI ~Jilp d!c; of the Israel .defense , fonlll iand the Miu Arthur, a HoJ.ly.ftoil br fll, the mint.try or defense," Ille stat-Rid. lli80I and Jftllo, w., ...,Ylcte!l'liJ .. .(prU "He does not conaidef-blmie1t ~-wblle she wu on .... faculty ~ ••- ble to respond to 't\>O ~ deminda -w -or comments of lllY !ndivtdual <'&blnel North C1ro11na SdlOOI o1,lb0 ,Adi liar<. inem!>er," the sjalement aold. "U Mr. She bu lln<e moved IO Calllomla. Dayan does DOI enjoy Ille completo con-Judge A. .LtocolJi Sherk -..,,;,i llOi-= ~·~.~ler, he wtll lo pay fl& and couil' cooli ond pvo lnyan's spokesman wu not available ~ a three-year ampeodecl ..-e, for comment. His olfloe relused lo and Ille appealed.· elaborate oa the 1"""""1. j The alale'• mdence-ln. Diotrlet Coart ,... that Ronald I\. l"'f&lu, htt ~L WAS APPARENlt.Y calJiht ........... u~ ~-_,._ ... ~ by surprise by Ille oud>reak ol Ille .......,.. ' ca -~ ,...._ ~ 31 war on Judaism's holkst day, Yorn ,iaytna she persisted in oomiDg to hi! Klppur. I< began mobtllzaUon of the houae, P<ttini bis doc and cbuiitlng ....... •• ooly hours before Ille altackl him for mlatrttllng the '1oc Doog1aa came across the Suez Canal and ·in said be had told ~ to ~•ft · Ille Golan Hela)rt>. ' Policeman . Herbert 'l'l!O!nu IOI he Dayan laler Rid In a televlllon in· had -to MJss Arllllir•s ~en! tervlew he accepled IWl mpoollblllty . butldll>i: IO get her name lot a (fspass lor the ~ ol the armed w..,...t, and that abe i:urled him durlnc force s. a brief conven:aUon on the porch. WE QUOTE PllESCRIPTION PRICES llY PHONE RH ONE'S GUNDERSON DRUG 716 E. BAL.9A BLVD. BALBOA • PRO TOOTH IRUSlt S1l1 .49 reg •. 19 • TM N•lion1I Hu,.lc1~ Cenltr ,..,,.,. rri of rovri~ •e•• 1!0flll moil of Ill• ·~ulll«"I U 5 r .,.11 G•ll !orct winos 1xl...O .. ver1I '"'""'Pd mil~ 11~· lh ~nd w .. ! nl Int conter "'" K•• i re exfrfmely ~:t:." ""'' H•i• ••••·" tor1<1 11.,1 REVLON W1 ,...,.... tk rltM re n.tt .. ••""1t• •••~ 9'hl 11.1 NY9UIL .. , .. 004 fmt•ll<I rn~M()W ml"'°""·~...,,'~~ .... . - '• I ,.d;lr::r ~ 1':0 ,~~ •• 'r•:; ~~'vr·~:.1 llld bffch Or<>"'(H'I 11-!fie cOt$111 A1<tlo11.1 !tom V!t9lnl1 lo Gffntl1l ~r.r:i1~rd:rlJ~~~!'t" .:.:~~.~M! ... ~·. "'' ,,J-~ c~~ll.,1:v1l°:.~t fr~ 1~i":: Coastal We•l.laer F.;r 1'00fT, l1'Uftf""¥trftCllt ..... ,.,.,, flltlll I lle! lftOtllU>O houri Dl(.Qmlntl -~•Ir • IO u ~"°'' In ,11 .. ,_1 IOd.fJ 111\t FrldlJ, H~ IOClllY 11. C01tl1I .....,.,..,,!urn rtnot !tOftl ~I to 12. 111111\0 .....,,..-11\ll'U r11111e Ir..,, S1 ta to. W11tr ltmfltrlturt to. Sm1, 1llonn. Tides THUlllDAY 51<ond 1111111 •·H 1 '"· • • S1eono •-)·O 1.m, ... l P~IDAY Finl llltl> ....... . ,,,,•.I'll.. l-2 Firs! low l I, •.m. I I Sle-1110~ 10 ,. o.IT\. ~ 1 te<OllCI '°"" ~:u"'" ~.• ~u~ rh11 7 °" •.m ... h •·et~·'"· MOOfl r1 MI 6 • ..S t I!'. ltll S 41 D m . B1l11m &. Protein Flex Shampoo Salo .8.9. reg. I.SI • MAX FACTOR S1l1 SW9dlsh Formula Hand Crum reg. 2.2.1 MAALOX 12 OJ. till S.lo 119 7 rot. 1.19 • SCHOLL lxtrclM Slncf1l1 5111 8.88 reg. 12.U Night Time Couth Mocllclne Solo .79 rae. 1.59 • PREPARATION H 2 01. ointment S1f1 1.49 reg. 2.49 · 0 s . " . l .. -i V •ea.Ru• Tested. • • i Producl Doesn't Help Mice # .t J J .. BOSTON-{UPO -A teaffi culprit comes from 1tudies pneumonia that m 'iery or Harvard researchers bas which hav_e shoWn th a t resistant to antlbJotlc!,'' the tound the widely used Vicks i;hildren who swallow sifll!!F Globe article said adding that Vaporub suppresses • ' the cant amouots ot tufpenUne turpentine is one of the ln- natural imnlune defense. of ~ten , con~ract c;&Ses , o I gredients of Vaporub. mice, making them more .>....----·--------------~-­ susceptible to b a c t e r I iJ 1 pn eumonia." the Boslun ntobe QUEENIE B Phil lnterlandi has reported. ' . ,...._ __________ ..;.i;...;..;.;.;;..,.;;.;.;.;.;;;~:.... Result.s of the study con-" ducted the past two years In the infectious diseases division of liarvard's Ch a n n I ng Laboratory, "'ere lo be detail· ed at a nleeting o! the -· American College o[ Chest Physicians in Toronto. RICllARDSON -r.1ERRELL.. Inc .. t.h e manufactu rer of '(aporub, told the Globe that io 68 years or experienC'e wllh the product "there has never been any indication that the phenomenon ®'erved in mice ... in !act occurs in man.'' Dr. Gary L. Huber. bea.d , or Harvard's Channing Lab. said, "One cannot ever tot.allY extrapolate" results of ex· periments with mice lo predict what wi ll happen to a human subject. THE HARVARD team. the Gl9be said, found a · ''1l1,r significant depression in · the ability or the lung to kill bacteria" when Vaporub was applied to the animals cnests. or introduced inlo fbelr air supply by a~stea m vapori7.er. -.. The only clue to a posAlble . "Bring·in-thepapers on the Van Arsdale merger, the file ·o.Jl the Brewster Coinpany and my pruniog &hears." Manson 'Stays To Self' FOLSOP.1 (UPI) -Charles l\{anson . convicted master· 1nind of the Tate-Labianca murders. is a "loner'' who rarely leaves his cell at Folson1 Prison. a state Cor- r ections Department spokesman says. "Manson pretty much stays t•J hin1selr. He 's a loner , doesn't go into the yard too often." lhe spokesman said Wednesday. DURING HIS Los Angelt>s trial. Manson. now 38 v.•as described as having a Svengali-like influence over follov.•ers several cf whcm were convicted along with the cult leader. But at Folsom it's different. "He doesn't have any hyp- notic hold en any af these inmates" in the single cell 4-A adjustment center, !he taugbest lockup at Folsom, ac· cording to lhe spokesman. !\JANSON WAS canvicled of the fi ve bloody murders or actress Sha ron Tate and four others at her ho me and th1• slayings two nights later or weallhy grocer Leno Labianca and his wife. l\1anson was sentenced to die in lhc gas chamber l\1arch 29, 1971, but the death penalty was later ruled invalid. Th11r~~. Octt>W 25, 1973 DAILY PILOr • Re bozo, Daie Play •spite' KEY BISCAYNE . Fla. I AP \ -Jane Lueke. presidential 1..'0llfidanl Charles G. "Bebe" Jlebozo's steady date for 10 years, says they never discuss politics and usually spend their evenings watch 1 n g television or playing an ''idiot card game." ''Politics is not rny bag," says l\1t·s. Lucke. 38. "Bebe and I don't discuss poliMcs." 110\\IE\'Elt, THE gr~ y haired, blue-eyed mothe r of StjJJ1eiitt1es s 11 e n11d lier uaother pi"e Re bo:o pilu10 lesso11s b ecnuse 'It helps hlt11 rein .• ~.' or immoral." 1\.1rs. Lucke Mid. She doubted Rebozo would testify, however. ~tRS. L~KE \l.'Orks as a legal secretary tor Thomas Wakefield, Rebo!O's auomey why. He's warm and charm- ing ." P.!rs. Lucke, who grew up in \'enezue.la ~ speaks fluent Spanish. met Rebozo, the so:1 of a CUban·bom cigar maker, at a Key Biscayne party. and an officer of the Key SRI!: llAS BEJ::N to the \\lhllc Biscayne Bank and Trust C.:0.1- llouse several times and Is included in evcnls at lhe Niwrrl compound oo Key Biscayne , v.ilere llebow has a house .• But mostly. ~1rs. Lucke, ~avs. her life ro nsists or get· i ting up early, doing so1ne, housc"·ork ~nd going to thr ! office. l\'hich Rcbozo heads. , She says Rcbo2.o, 61, visits l * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * hcracouptco!Hmcsaweek * MERCURY SAVINGS at lhe home she shares with * her mother in Key Biscayne , * a short distance trom the Florida White !louse. Their "idiot ca rd game" is Spite and Malice. in which the stakes can go as high as $1 a night, P.1rs. Lucke says. Sometimes she and her mother * give. Rebozo piano lessons be- cause "it helps him relax ." "'*' "S TATEMENT SAVIN&S"·PRESTl&E Card two sons says she believes * Re bozo should testify before !\IRS. LUCKE, l\\ILCe divorc-* IUEMA PAM NDl"ClllY Savings Bldg .. Valiey'llew at Unco1n tile Senate Watergqte com· ed, described herself as a * HUNTlNITOJI IEACH Memwy Savings Bldg., &linger al Beacll * mittee and clear things up "package deal -I come witl1 * TUSTIN M11tetlf't Sa-I~ Bldg., IMne Blvd. al Newport Avt. oJi about the $100,000 cash con-a mother and !11"0 sons." u. HAIM-RRJ.EITOtl MercuySaviogs Bldg., Imperial ttwy.at Hftbor ·~ t~ib.utio~ he received from She says she had heard about * CAISDI M ~ ... -Bi.1n. Avalon Blvd al5an0i8!)0 ffwy. billionaire lloward llughes and R 00• t t * «cury-... 'll. ""¥'• * r .____ e 7.0S repu at1on as a a· *" l tXIY KNOUS Mercury Slvinp Bldi., Lont B!adl Blvd. •l Cima 5'. 1 kept or t1u"t.~ years. dies' man but ''that \\'8S before • Sources close to the com· my time. Although I can s~e * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *" m1uee have said lt is studying ljf•;i;-;;;.--,.--------i;;;; .. ..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,~::::======::::"~l Rebozo's bank records in an effort to trace the 1noncy. .. The. White House has said Rebozo accepted the $100.000 rrom a Hughes attorney "as a potential ca1npai1;n con· tribution" but lhat it. wasn't used and was returned to Hughes last spring. "My friend is smart and he would n't do anything illegal RION HARDWARE PRE- KOa ~ SAT-N-HUE l.4r INTERIOR LATEX " .VAHl'£ll'STH£ L4 TEX SEJ}f/ CLOSS f, ·LATEX Ml' H'All FIN!S/1 ~ .. SAT ~N-HU[ INTERIOR LATEX REG. 7.98 GAL CUSTOM-MIXED COLORS HIGHER GALLON ' . SAT·N·HUE Flat Latex covers most walls and ceilings in one coat. Thick and creamy . Non-driP. Leaves no lap-marks. Dries in 20 minutes . Quick: soa p and water cle an -up. Truly scrubbable and\• fade -resistant. 48 Decorator Colors and White ~ ~lRV£lU.$_lRE._ E-T " LATEX SEMI-GLOSS nn·., REG. 8.98 GAL iJiJ • I CUSTOM-MIXED COLORS HIGHER GALLON 1 Keeps rich satin sheen through fumes, steam or moisture -ideal for kitchens, bath, laundry, all • woodwork I Spreads easily, dries much faster ' than other type enamels. Excellent hiding ' power. Matches Sat·N·Hue . E·I LATEX WALL FINISH REG. 4.98 GAL . 3.97 ~·' Has Qood hiding and amaz ing washabilitY. One coat usually covers. Dr ies qu ickly to~ soft, dull fin ish. Ro llers, brushes clean u~ i. 1n soap and water. Your choice of white or ready.m ixed colors. M.2 t ...-'""!B/ack & Decker·-- .,. lt'~almost as important 4s physical therapy al F.ir<.t Heal thcare Centers.· Because~ kn?w that active J\?..nqs mean active minds. And activp minds are happier. fessi0na1 nursing care. We're accredited by the Joint Commission on Acctedita-' tion of Hospitals. ' But we know that people need more thaq ilUrsing cace. That's why we have spirits. We have crafts programs. bingo games, movies, and mu ch more. We know that laughter is very effective medicine. . ' ·' .. . • ·r I • Of course we offer co111plbte pro- ' a fu~jlC!ivity program to keep up the · After all, we have parents. too. .. •• . .. ' . • • ·"" + . . ) -;·et.me visit. 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Bu1nout p1oletled. 7510 HOURS: MONDAY -FRIDAY 9·9; SATURDAY 9-6; SUNDAY 10-4 I 1. I I 8 •• • DAILY PROT EDITORIAL 1111\GE Voice of One of the more encouraging facts to come out of the week's \Vashington turmoil was the \Vhlle llouse admission that It was the "firestorm" of public opinion Lha.L finall y persuaded the President to reverse his ada1nant stand and release t.he Watergate tapes to the federal court. lle~rcussions to the firing of special prosecutor r\rchibald Cox were "probably not very well visualized," \Vhite I louse chJef of staff Alexander M. J.faig acknow· !edged. Statislics on those repercussions tell the story. By the time President Nixon agreed to give up the tapes, Western Union had channeled more than 150,000 pub- lic opinion messages into the capital. or the first 100.000. 92,000 were adctressed to congressmen and only 8,000 to the White House -an indication that the people were turning to their locally elected representatives with their opinions. ln Los Angeles, the Registrar of Voters assigned six employes to handle the 400 calls received Tuesday from citizens seeking addresses of their congressmen -equalling the average volume for an entire month. The facl that the 'Vhite House failed so badly to gauge the temper or the people makes it depressiogly plain that the President still has not emerged from his pre-Watergate isolation. But the fact that public opinion and our court sys· tern emerged victorious is reassuring. Costly Commuting Orange Countians who read with detached inter- est recent news reports on parking surcharges to be im- posed in lhe Los Angeles area under new Environmen· Lal Protection Agency regulations may not be as Car re- moved from the problem as they assumed. the People ing next June and 25 percent a year later. But Orange County Transit District Director G. J. "Pete" fo'ieldlng warns the new rules may well be ex- tended further -Jn tact into Orange County. This would affect perhaps another 800,000 drivers. Point of the project is to raise money for stepped- up mass transit services, while encouraging the use of car pools and such transit Cacilities as now are available. But the EPA goal or cutting commuter trips from Orange County by 50 percent, would, Fielding estimates, require 2,000 busses costing a total ot $14 million a year to operate. And right now the OCTD has just over 100 buses. \Vhile many commuters/robably would be willing to patronize a well-organize transit system, they ob- viously can't be expected to give up their jobs until one is developed. Pending some substantial national funding to back up the EPA's admirable goals, it would appear the hap- less commuter will just have to figure on a heavy new price inflation dent in his budget. 20th Century Rxodus For the third straight year, Los Angeles County is undergoing a population decline, with an estimated 40,000 residents heading for new homes in Orange, Ventura and San Diego Counties. Biggest percentage oC the departing Angelenos will turn up in Orange County, says the State Department 'f Finance. For 1973 the county once more will log a popll· Jation growth in excess of 50,000, as it has in each year since Ute 1970 census. Second favorite destination in the exodus that will rob half or Los Angeles County's 77 cities of residents, is the city of San Diego1 say the experts. The estimated 150,000 who commute from Orange County to Los Angeles by car each day will of course be direi:Uy_atfecled..by J.he..surcharge'-10 percent sLark The lesson of the exodus is clear: It is a retreat from smog, traffic, overcrowding and the other blights that come from helter-skelter or non-existent planning. Let's Identified Flying Object not forget.lha _ __ Document Thief Answers WASHINGTON -ln response to our appeal, documents or "incalculable value'' stolen Crom the Library of O:>ngress have been mailed secretly to u,, in five anonymous manila packages. ;\ light-fingered scholar made off with hundreds of pages of irreplaoeable diaries, memos. let· ters and notes fronl the collection or the late Justice Felix Frnokfurur. It was perhaps the most seriOU8 robbery in !.he library's 173·year existence. The lhier stole with meticulous dis· crimination. carerully selecting Items of huge autograph value and others of historical inlportancc. Al\IONG 'MJE purloined items y.·ere personal letters to Frankfurt.er fronl President Lyndon Johnson and Chief Justice Oliver Wendell Hol mes, records of conversations ·,.,·ith Justice Louis Brandeis and intimate recollections on President l''r:inklin D. R o o s e \' e I t , Secretary or Staie Dean Acheson and Wesl German C."bancellor K o n r a d Adenauer. The library disco\'ercd its grie\'ous lo,,s a year ago and quietly alrrted the FBI. 1\ sccrcl search has been going on C\"er since for the literary loot. WE LEARNED :ibout the: theft in Scpteml>er ond pu b!Lshed an appeal to the master-thi('fs sense of history. The intelligence and taste y.·ith v.ti..ich he Appeal stole convinced us he could be persuaded ro share at least copies of the Frankfurter documents with history. lf he would get the documents to us, we promised to return them to the library, protect his identity and reques t Attorney General ElllOC. IUchardson to call off the FBl's natioawkle manhWlt for him. A few days ago, five brown manila envelopes arrived in the mail. Each contained a huge batch of copies of the remarkable paper s. Only the valuable Frankfurter diaries and a few other papers still have not turned up. FOR mE SAKE of history' the scholar-tbief has taken a considerable risk to copy and return lhe documents. We, therefore, are keeping our bargain. We have destroyed the manila envelopes without examining them for clues to the sender's identi ty and we are ap- pealing to ruchard..'"Ofl lo end his manhwit. Now we urge the thief to complete the restoration and send us the missing diaries. A small sampling from the stolen papers gives a hint of their value to historians. -ELEVEN l\10NTIIS before PeHrl Harbor. Frankfurler arranged for then Australian Ambassador Richard Casey to send a "Personal Secret'' cable to London fo r \\'inston Churchill's eyes only. Although it was a serious breach for Dear Gloomy Gu s Okay, grind up the Marine Band and the strolling viollns, dust otf the East Room, celebrate another Nixon victory as he hands over the tapes to the court! DEMOSTHENES Ill 01""'' GVI COll"llJ!Mft .,. 11,1llnllttld .-, nHel""5 •1111 1111 Rtt _..,.tr nntc1 1M ¥! .... $ It! , ... --· .... ..., "' l>ffVI i. Gloem, 0U5, 0./IJ" ,llot, a Supreme Court Justice to meddle in foreign affairs, Frankfurter urged Churchill to butter up P re s J d e a t Roosevelt as a means of bringing I.be U.S. over to the British side in World War IL Churchill immediately took Frankfurter's advice and tailored his famous January 9, 1941 speech to FDR's vani ty. -In intimate letters over the years, Lyndon Johnson and Felix: Frankfurter counseled one another on haw to take care of their cardiac illnesses. Wrote Johnson to the ailing Frankfurter: "1 have been sitting down here on my ranch watching the Pedemales . . . and cleani ng my gun for the quail and deer hunting season .. , The important thing is to keep yourself in shape .. · so you can gel back to work." -BRANDEIS CONFIDED in his lalks y,•ith the young Frankfurter more than SO years ago that he was worried about "rest rictions of freedom of speech." Brandeis also warned with great foresight again.st an energy crisis. -Fran kfurter, \\'hiie his letters soar .,,,,it h the grandeur of poetry and legal philosophy, was also an unrepentant gossip. Kee1J Your Electronic Finge rs Off Me! Protection from Computers A!Jsembly1nan Bill Bagley ttnd T are not \1·hat you v.'ould call political bed- fello.,1·s. His bunk is too lar to the left for me. Rut. Hagley has inLroduced a bill 10 protert ciri1f'ns from the intproµer use of co1npu1er1zcd information. And, 011 that one rm y,•11h him all 1he 1vay. His bi ll (AB 25.'lfi ) would guaranh~c our privacy· frnn1 elec· tr on I c intruden=. lbat is good. ll's not only gQO<! In this day fJ transg rr:!l- slon by transdu<:trs, It's t'!SeflUnl. Bagley. (It.San ll<tli"l<'lt \1'(101d require written assuranct' to thf indi\'idunl lhnt no improper use v.·ould be made of any inf'onnatJon given to 11 dnta bank. Nn beady ~Jectronlc eyeball could lltare into hiJ private 11ff11il""3 :ind blink out messages to same illlcit f.':'l\"esdroppcr. ....----THE u:GJSLA'nOi'W would also pennlt an indJ\lldual to Inspect his electronic file And to allltest 1he nccur .. cy or chat data should be tl\ink it to be in emir. That way, ' fella 'A'OU!d not be m.vked for ure just bec3U..'le .some typl.rt "' I t h an Excedrin hl'adache punched the wron~ key. Further, Bagley 1 blll l\'Ould allow the citizen IO know just when such com- poterlz.ed data wn1 being used, nnd by whonl. All or thJs would be v.1red logethe.r ••• ( RUS WALTON ) by penalty of misdl'n1canor : $500 fine and/or si:x months in the pokey for violators. Its a good bill. I r<'scnt the invn.sion of rny privacy by digita l maraudcr:i that siick their electronic fingers into ~rsonal affairs. There's l!!Ue differen~ between those transistorized sneaks and t"'"·o-legged peeping toms. TllOSE \VllO 1tlorify lhr. cornpuler nnd the data bank talk in tcm1s or t•fflciency and speed. \\'ell . too inany \'iolation.s of the indlvtd11,1l are co111· mltt cd in the narne of cfficiencv. Bagley's bill would ultack those lnvadirlg forc<'S on at lenst one front. AB 2656 will be heard Nov. 6 during interim meetin~ of the Assembly_ Com· mittee on EmclCncy and Cost Control . Jo~or our peace of mind 11nd pr lviicy. lhe commlUee should puoch ltis "go" button. • • • A BIG FAT B"flllnter from the seat of govC:mmcnt. Noy,• that the prict.•s of meat and fish and ~owl hav~ gone !ky·hl.Rh. a lot. o{ fellowa are taking to the rod and gun to gel ei:tra food for the family iable. For many brtadwtnners hunllnll'. and fishing is almost a mailer ot llOC"CS5· I 1ty. At least, !l's a ,1·;iy to put .something in the freezer beside macaroni and cheese. All of this upsets Ray Amell . .state 1hrector of fish and game. lte let loose the othe r day \\'ilh 11 blast at th e Y.'OUld-be providers. Called them "poachers'' and "meat hunters". They're not sportsmen, growled Arnet t. They're "slob hunters''. "11;e true spGrUmnn Is more in· tcrested in a chance to get a1,•:ay. to commune .,.,·ith nature, to pit hl~lf againsl the animal, to test himsell against tJ;e elements." So said Amctt. lit-.: llAS JUS sights on the v.Ton g end or the gun. T'd rather see a guy ~o hunting for food for his family thnn a pair or ontlers for his firepll1ce. Th e only defensible reason for bunt ing down and killing y.·ild animals: is either to 1,rotecl llvcstQck, or put food in the f:1mily pot or redress lhe balance of na1ur1?. Th.a bird -u:ho kills for the sport of killing, "'ho engages In si11ugh!er to s1ul!ly some enlOtional hang-op, he 's the poactK'r. He's a !'tlcb. Furthermore. If It weren't for the high cost or living and the heavy tax of govemmenl. a lot or those \\'Qrking men Arnett calls "slobs" could do their hunllng In the grocery store where n buck is :i dollar and not a malr. de~r. Wtwn n 1hlrd of your paych~k goes ror ta'<e:S. 1tnd when more of It gl>ts lo inflation, you can't spend ii for food . Spotlight Remains on Watergate Cox Too Close to Truth? WASHINGTON -COnlrlbuling lo the deepening crisis here Is the widespread be:Uef, bolb in C.Ongress and wilbio the Nlxoo administration Itself, that Prest· dent Nixoo fired Archibald Cox as special prosecutor because he was getting too close to unple{lsant truths. 'lba1 eocourages bipartisan supp:rt in, Congress, Including backing from some Republican leaders, for legi!latioo re- quiring a new inde- pendent prO!eCUlor ol the Watergate af- fair. Simultaneously, ,Asal Atty. Gen. Hen· q~Petersen, now in """¥< ol the cue, is under intense pressure to follow in- vestigative trails begun by COx. To block the legislation or harness Petersen would subject. Mr. Nlxon to new charges of cover-up. ( EVANS·NOVAK.) Department colleagues lee.I Petersen may ~ even tougher than r.ox' in trying to redeem his reputation as a career civil servant, somewhal tarnished. by the early-Walergate investigation. Moreover, the White House strategy of aligning Congress against Cox has (ailed. After Cox predictably turned down summaries of the tapes, lbe White House last Friday willaterally offered the same deal to Sens. Sam Ervin aod H~ Baker of tbe Watergate lnvestigatq committee without mentioning negotla· lions with the special pl'09eCUtor. Once the Senators accepted, the White House immediately, and incorrectJy, described this as a congresslonal-pres.ldenlial com- promise • with Archie Coic as the only dissenter. ' TIDS !USSHAPING of reality has been \videly rejected in Congress. There is bipartisan feeling in the Senate that the summary dismissal of Cox insulted a Senate which had forced creation or the special prosecutor's office. Conse· quenUy, the Senate must legislate a new special prosecutor to retain any self-respect. Finally, Rep u b Ii can Congressmen returning from the long weekend' gave jlwn re~ to presidential aides check- mc constiffieiit reacth>n. Many told the White House that voters who previously tboulbt Coo,gress was harass1ng the President now felt Mr. Nixon had un- oeceS.urily provoked a new crisis - exa<tly oppoolle to what the Presld<nt anlidpeted. But these miscalculations did not chasten the White HOU3e. ·11lere was now a a.atisfaction there that Richard M. Nixon was playing the hard-nosed politics he knows and likes best even if it magnified rather than diminished preoccupation with Watergate and further divided the coon tty, Congress and even hi:s own party against him. THUS, the President miscalculated in his lightning thrusts last weekend. Well aware of congressional reluctance to impeach a President (which remains basically unchanged), be felt be could get rid oC Cox and the White House tapes controversy in ooe move with impunity. But instead of putt Ing Watergate behind him, the &candal is spotlighted more than ever. La.st weekend's stumi.l:ng developmenU actually ortginated in Mr. Nixon's deep .-gret, encouraged by aJd<o who share his bard-line political style, that be bad agreed to Prof. Col.'s selection under dure:s,, last spring. Those aides con- sidered Cox a liberal Kennedy Democrat with a dagger at Mr. Nixon's throat. Even presidential coumelor Melvin R. Laird, a voice ot moderaUoo at the White House, regarded Cox's a~ pointment a.s incredibly bad politics. Sportsmanship Gives Way to Parh$anship TIUS REVULSION with Cox began bolling over about ten days ago when ~tr. Nixon instructed Atty. Gen. Elliot ll.iehard.9on lo offer a compromise on the surreptitious White House tape recordings that C.Ox could never accept. Jn the upper TI!acbes of the Justice Department, this was immediately recognized as a ploy to oonclude the U!.pes question while purging Co.1 and his whole operation. That it would also drive such independent voices as Rich."rdson and Deputy Atty. Gen. \Villiam Ruckelshaus out of government was viewed as an added bonus by \\'bite I rouse hard-liners. lfi gh-ran king Justice Department o(. ficia ls believe th&t the special pros- ccutoc's office, though run by Kennedy democrat!, was in no way embarked on a vendelta against the President. Rather, one hlgh·ranklng Justice Depart· ment official suspects the White ilouse fea red "Cox was doing too good a )Ob." Indeed, some lawyers in Cox's office had h.tnted they were close to startling b~akthroughs. M a term.is aficionado of long-st.anding (and running), I am " course delighted in the unprecedented tennis boom the U.S is now undergoing -a boom so enonnous that even the august Fortune magazine recently devoted an article to the new millions being poured into the game. At the same time, it worries me. For. traditionally,_ ten· nis more than any other game except crlcltet has observed not only the amenl· ties but also the spirit of that elusive I e r m , "sportsmarurhlp." With the ri se ol com- mercialism and professlonallsm (a nd the exploitation of the game by the TV industry), will the ancient and honorable idea or sportsmanship go the way or long white Dannel trousers? Well. there Is IOfne melancholy In- dication that this has already begun lo h!lppen. At Forest IDlls, a few weeks ago. when Nikki Pille double-faulted , (he crowd applauded. This ls a terrible thing to do, as tiny real sportsman knows. You are entitled to applaud your favorite when he ma~es a good shot: you are not entitled to di.splay your jubilation when his opponent makes 11n error. Would anyone c~r If an outc.;,1 COX'S .dcporture provides gr i m overturned at the tndlanapolls 500? satisfaction in Itself at the White Jtouse. "Thal nrrog11nt s.o.b. Cox had this wOOle 111ERE lS a floe. but OOflnltc, line little Kl'nncdy rlefdom, and naw he between sporlcimanishlp and p.artlMnshlp. doesn't have It anymore/' one prcsldcn-And I am afrald most Americans cross tlal aide told U!l, that Une 11ncarlngly . But expectallOM that much mart than A sport!man Is, first of nll, inlertstcd Cox wou ld be eliminated were dying in the excellence \vith w~ch. the game be.fore the weekend ended. t.tr. Nixon ls played . It ls the dC!d1ca11on to tht clc:irly eicpectcd Cox's dism1wl""""""WOold-game. Itself tbat._mDJ'.kJ l~ ~~de:d._ be fol.lowed by resignations of his top sportsman trom the siobbiab fan who staff. Instead, White House aldts were simply wants his team (or player) to stunned , Sunday altemoon when Cot'• win. The I.rue sportsman ia as r~~ press spok~an, James Doyle, an-to app,l,aud a superb shot by the .o~ noonced the Cot opt:rat.lon was staying ponenl ~s by his own favorite - intact to bring wateriatc's wrongdocn ~ause his love or excellence Lransctndl lo Justice his partisanship. · To boo an unfavorite, or (evco worse) TIIAT INTENStFJF.S prei;sure on to applaud his error. ls a desptcable Petersen in resumln& prosecution of act Lhnl violates and dishonors any \Vaterg11tc. Inherit ing Cox's army, he game. 'rhe experts and pro/eulonals facc11 Ins tant public protes1s if be themse lve11 are aware of this ; lhty feel c~nge.s direction. In fact, Jll'!liee a grtat bond or empttthy with lhe pl.ayers ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ ' . they compete against ; and however passionately they want to win, they ~·ant to do so by their own meri t, not through the errors, accidenl&, or Injuries of their opponents. 1 MAN'S NEED of sport is a release. rrom his ordinary everyday needs to work and sweat foward some mundane goal. lt is a 1,vay of paying respect to excellence for its own sake. of com- muning with the best that ia in us in the way of fleetness endurance, skill and agilily. The cont~st itself is only a means of bringing out these qualities; lhe end Is a kind of shared reverence for man's phy11ic11I capacllies. Jl is no accident !hat athletic contests began as a fonn of religious observance. But, like almost everything else, they have degenerated into a simulaCnun of war. where the only "e.xcellcnce" is winning by any means. OU.NOi . COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, Publisher TJioma.t Ketvil, Editor Barbara Krtibich Editorial Pogc Editor The edilorla.I ~ of OM! D#ily Pi.'lot .)lttks to infomt and r.tlmufAle rt:"adtn by present!~ on this Pfl.C• diverw•Commcntuy'on topic$ of in. . tere.st bY. o:ndlcattcLcol.u.mnlm ud ca.rtoonim, by Providinir a Corum for rtadn-s' vlf'WS and by ~ing th!$ ntwspaptr's opin.lont and kk!u on e:trrm!t !OptCL ~ f'dttot\al oplnlon:t of thee Dally PUot &Jll')ell' orily ln the editorial oolumn at tfle tnp of the pqc. Opinions expr"tUltd by tht col· umnistt and car10onlltl and. lellt!r writers tre their own t.nd no endonf'- mcnt of thclt ~ ... by 1h~ ONiy PUot thou.Id be lnfftttd. Thu rsday, October 25, 1973 th to in Cl by G .. too Ge "" tin lo as pos on w ne ln Ya me An fl A Nl " o! wa " tod on Un " " by Sta ls of bul " " lhe :. the u fly d ., or Yo "' ra Neighbor's View of Us A reader has ruggested that we reproduce the fol· l owi'ng etlitortal, broadcast in Ju11e over radio statio11 Cf'RB ;,1 Toronto, Cauada by Canadian ·11ewscaster Gordon Siuclair. "Tile Unilcd St.ates dollar took another pounding on German, French and British exchanges this morning, hit· ting the IOY.'eSl point ever known in West Germany. "It has declined Lhere by 41 percent since 1971 and this Canadian thinks it is time to speak up for the American1' as the most generous and possibly the least appreciated on all the earth. "As long ea 60 years ago, when I first decided to read newspapers, I read of floods German technocracy and you get automobiles. "YOU talk 8bout ,,merlcan technocracy and you filld men on the moon, not once bot several times ... and sa[ely home agaln. "You talk about scandals and the Americans put theirs right in the stcire: window for everybody to loot at. "Even their draft dodgers are not pursued and bounded, they are here on our streets. Most of them, llllless they are breaking Canadian laws, are getting American dollars from ma and pa at home to spend here. "When Americans get out of this bind . . . as they will . . . who could blame them if t!1ey said the hell with the (GU EST REPORT) in the Yello.w River and the rest ol. the world? Let some. Yangtze. Who rushed in with one else b uy the Israel men and money to help? The OOnds, let someone else build Americans did. and repair foreign dams or They have helped control design foreign buildings that floods on the Nile, the won't :shake apart in earth- Amazon, the Ganges and the quakes. Niger. "When the railways of "Today the rich bottomland France, Gennany and India of the Mississippi is under \\'ere breaking down through water and no foreign \and has age, it was the Americans who spent. a dollar to -help. ebuilt -them, When---t.-h e - Germany, Japan and to a Pennsylvania Railroad and the lesser extent, Britain and Ila-New York Central went broke. Ty. were lifted out of the nobody loaned them an old debris of war by the caboose. Both are still broke. Americans who poured in "I can name YoU S,000 times billions of dollars and (orgave when the Americans raced to other billions in debts. the help of other people in "None of those countries ls trouble. "Can you name me even today paying even the interest one time when someone else on its remaining debts to the raced to the Americans in United States. trouble? "When the franc was in "l don't think there was danger of collapsing in 1956, outside help even during the it was the Americans who San Francisco earthquake. propped it up, and their "Our neighbors have faced reward was to be insulted it alone, and I am one Cana- and swindled on the streets dian who is tired of hearing of Pa ris. them kicked around. They will •·J was there, I saw it. come out of this thing with "When distant cities are hit their nag high and when they by earthquake, it is the United do, they are entitled to thumb States that lwrrles in to help their nose at the lands that • • • Managua is one ol the are gloating over their Jn5e11.t most recent eumples. So far troubles. this Spring, 59 Ameri~ com-"I hope Canada is not one munlties have been ,flattened of these. by tornadoes -nobody bas "But there are many smug. helped. self-righteow: Canadians. ''The Marshall. Plan, the "And finally the American TnJman Policy, all pumped Red Cross was told at its billiom upon billions of dollars 48th armual meeting in New into dlscouraged countries. Orleans this morning, that it Now newspapers in those was broke. countries are writing about "This year's disasters -.. the decadent warmongering with the year less then half Americans. over . . . has taken it all "[ would like to 1see just and nobody has helped." one of those countries that!;:========:::;! is gloating over the er()l)ion of the United States dollar build its own airplanes. "Come on. le1 's hear it' "Does anv other t'OUn!ry in the world 'ba\'e a plane to equal the Boeing Jumbo Jct, the Lockheed Tristar, or the Douglas Ten? "If so, why don 't they Oy them ? Why do all lnt"ma- tional Airlines except Russia , fly American planes. Why does no other land on earth even consider putting a n1:1.n or a v.·oman on the moon? You talk about Japanese technocracy and you get Sunday, Wednesday and Friday in the DAILY PILOT Pat Dunn Gets it Done in At Your Service radios -you talk aboutl=========='I l ' Tnu,sd~y. Octobff 25, 1973 DAILY PILOT l • -----~ ... • , . ,, . .,, ., ..... r~ f, . ' I ., I ' , ' t, ' . l l ·~ •.' Jonathan Logan we love you. You have a whole new look for day and eve- ning. Soft, feminine. A look th at make s a girl really feel like getting into a dress. And what a choice! The one piec e with raglan sleeves. The two piece to wear in and belted or as an overshirt. Both in the boldest red or green. Dacron® VIII polyester. 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RETAIL 1.04 9&c 4 COLORS THUNDER SERIES · 91NCH RPLLER& PAN SET OUR PRICE 79C COMP. RETAIL 1.29 · SELECT FROM ONE OF THE LARGEST INVENTORIES OF ROLLER & PAN SETS -ANYWHERE !!r!~,~~o!:x!~~~~!!Y.~!ACES 119 COMP. RETAI L 1.79 OUR PRICE ALL WALLCOVERINGS OUR PRICE c -soc SO. FT COMP, RETAIL 1.04 ....:.:~= .... -~ COMPLETE SELECTION OF ROLLER COVERS AVAILABl rs s1 convenient locations in the west OPEN 7 DAYS & 5 NIGHTS · MONDAY THAU FRIOAY, 8 A.M. TO 9 P.M,· SATURDAYS, 8 A.M. TO 6:30 P.M .• SUNDAYS 9 AM TO 6·30 p S tA ..... M. an.~MAIN no u t• t Bea Long Beach 1 BLK.SD. 0 WAftN.EB IDELHll nun 1n9 on c ..... _ __,!40 TELEPHONE 17141546-4597 -' 1•· 1-.LONG.BEACH BLV~-H GBOOWAANER AVE. NEAR GOLDEN WEST 1% BLKS. SO. OF WILLO W TELEPHONE 17141 l424'86 TELEPHONE 1213) 427·3714 Anaheim CORNEA OF LINCOLN tL LINDSEY 1 BLK . EAST OF BROOKHURST TELEPHONE !7141 ~JJ.1507 8635 RS?!!n'-Y AT LAKEWOOD BLVD. TELEPHONE l21ll 1161-611l ··La Habra CORNEA WHITTIER 1 IDAHO • 2 BLKS. E. OF BEACH·HACl!NOA_ TELEPHONE 1213) •11.Jlot ' • • OL YPROPYLEN COMP'. RE TAI - GUAIAMTEED . ...... _.,, ..... ,..,,_,_ ... -.. ~--·•1 . ;4utUAM~1EEn l·COAT LATEX HOUSE 'PAiNT LASTS 12 YE.l\RS ! BRI GHTEST WHITE & MANY NEW COLORS! COUNTER TOPPiNG SPECiAL OUR PRI CE Ill COMP: RETAIL 4.50 OUR PRICE 29 Pa FT. . 120Z. ~1 AEROSOL m; ~ CAN .:·~;RE~~&OD . .. •USE ON ALL COMP. RETAl l;,79c ' . •TOUGH• DUR~BLE •HIGH GLOSS •FAST DRYING OUR PRICE 39 c PER , 120Z. CAN CERAMiC MOSAICliHt •PRE-MOUNTED ON Gfl\JZE •STANDARD SIZE SHEETS (APPROX. 12"' X 12"1 3 PATIERllS UNCIAZED COMP. RETAIL90c OUR PRICE 49~~ •PLUSMANY GLAZED PATIERNS .~~ 21s EXTERIOR WOOD •TOP QUALITY OURPRICE 99c COMP. RETAIL 3.50 GAL. EXTERIOll OPIGMENT~~R PRICE 139 LOG Oil REDWOOD, OR CLEAR GA~ COMP.RETAIL 3.50 PROTECTIVE COVERS 4 M ll ILACI VINYL OUR PRICE 149 COVERS 9'X12' EA. COPYRI GH T 197S ' •EXPERT SE RVICE AND ADVICE ........ . BY QUALIFIED PROFESSIO NAL SALESCLERKS •8400 PAINT AND DECORATING ITEMS •EV ERYTHING A LWAYS SOLD WITH AN UNCONDITIONAL MONEY BACK GUAR ANTEE •SER VING TH E PUBLIC FOR OV ER 34 YEARS =:::::r:.:::;;;:c~~ POLYFoAM PADS LATEX ACRYliC EXTENOR SlUCCO- MASONRY PAlt.1 CAN ALSO BE USED FOR AN EXTil~~ELY DURABLE l~lER!OR JOB • 1 HOUR DRYING •GOOD HID ING •CLEAN-UP WITH WATER •BRUSH OR ROLL WHITE AND COLORS ROOF COATINGS ,· NI CRACK OR RUN 5 GALLON SIZE BERED ASIESTOS PRICE "-. COMP.RETAIL&.25 429 •FINEST GRADE •BLACK ONLY ALSO AVAILABLE IN GALLONS ART Sb"PPliES 100% COTTON OVER PAt.lS \~ ~ I :~1¥,{:::ikJ;;:E R. 6 9c PAINTER.MECHANIC -~ Vit.'Jl LJ\TEX Sfl'Ai·CLOSS f~AMEL CLEl\N ll"'P Wif~ . .-=-=i WATER! { DURABL~CRUBBABLE4 -INTERIOA-•EXTERI OR FAST DRYING BEAUTIFUL FINISH SPARKLING WHI TE & COLORS OUR PRICE 99 GAL. COMP. RETAIL 7.50 SPFcTRUM 2000 VIVILCOTE CUSTOM MIX FREE CUSTOM ~~lNJi T_Q ~ ANY ONE OF 2000 COLORS! CLEAN.UP WITH WATER INTERIOR •EXTERIOR OMP. RETAIL OUR PR ICE 1'4'.i 5.95 3ee GAL AlUMiNUM IADDERS 4 FOOT ?.',~. 6 ~ COMP. RETAIL B..95 5 FOOT ?.11~• 8 ?! """ U.DOfJI CAAIUES UHDfRWl'llTEl'll U.IORATORlf.I LAllEL PER SHEET SOME STYLES SUITABLE FOR ~::!A BOTH WALLS AND FLOORS ILLUSTRATION FOR iTYLE ONLY ASSORTED COLORS c-.RETAIL 75< ~-SET :OU~~l:~RS i. ,,_., ./~~r· 16 FOOT .• OUR PRICE .. 11.88 EXTENDED LENGTH 13 FEET COMP. RETAIL 19.00 EXTENSIONS -SIZES UP TO 40 FEET COMPLETE UNE PHlliPPiNE MAHOGAt4Y 4~~1~8~~~~~-~K SHOITERS · & DOORS - ' MOVABLE HORIZOtmU. LOUVER PHIUPPINE MAHOCAllY HAllD SANDEii READY TO STAlll l9ll DOOR PAllEl BOTTOM CARVED ROD llOGll 15 X 80 IN ••......... 11 .89 EA. 15 X 80 IN .••• _ ••.. 14.99 EA. 16 x 80 IN •.•...... 12.49 EA. 1s·x 80 IN ••••••••.• 15.99 EA. 18X80 IN .......... 13.69 EA. 18X80 IN ••..••••.. 16.99 EA. • PHILIPPINE MAHOGANY • READY TO PAINT OZiTE ® PATTERN PRINT LEVEL LO OP CARPETING •FOAM BACKED CARPET OUR PRICE 3ee •DECORATOR COLORS COMP l.tNO PAD NECESSARY RETAiL SO. e 12 FOOT WIDTHS 5.95 YO, 1°'"' CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE . •J.PECIAl ORD ER • OZIIE _ ·56~~~·~· JdRCES ®TUF ®MUSTANC Hl·LOW BOlTERFiELD®SHAC 52% NYLON Pl LE COMP. RETAI L 7,95 • FOAM BACKED OUR 'RICE 595 12 FOOT WIDTHS 48% OLEFIN PILE •"'DAM BACKED T REE BARK TEXTURE 4s9 e 12 FOOT WIDTHS SO. YO. •12 FOOT WIDTHS COMMERCIAL GRADE OU R •OOO.TONli COLOR 100% NY LON •SUPE R FOAM BACKED BEAUTI FUL MUL Tl.COLOR PRICE SO, •MEETS FHA SPEC IFI CATIONS e OU().COLOR SHAG COMP. RETAI L G,95 YO. i •100% NYLON PILE ...---- OUR 'RICI. 3 ~!vo. I I J 0 DAILY PILOT ' • ~For the ' , l· :1 •, l Record Marriage Licenses " • OfERO • C.-.MPIELL -S.PI. If, ·: Mlf!utl OltrO, ll. o• w ••• ,.,1 ... , •• , • tna ~l,.trl LYnM C1rnpfl,9ll, ll. '. o1 Ger!I"' G"'vt . : bl<Lli.-.N -SIJLLIYAN -S.OI. ,., '! G1t<>ro• A•MllO McLt1n, "· "' ...... •, Ant. •f\d FIOl.llt ~~tli••n, ;t. ot •, \VM!mln•!•• : NEll.L-IROWN -~. lf, Jl"'fl 11.\lfllffl N .. I. 1t. of Cotll MMt, • •llO Ctroll,.. I. l •own, II, •, ot Spoil.Int, W1lh. , -t!ANO.COLICER -~I. Ii. Jt,.,lt ,• I , 1-i•nd. :W, 11'11 MMYI EllM Colkw, , ' :tt, 0011'1 of Nl,..poot! ltKI>. •'PRAn·8 UI -Slot. H , JO!'ln JtcktOO\ Pritt, 11, 1nd Cot 1nl 8111, :•, b<J1h '• of lrvlne -CiOE8EL·OOOL!nL£ -~1ot II, ; JOMph GIGl9'1 0.0.0'll, .II. 01 .,,,,..,.. Grew• tnO vt•oln•1 LH OOOlilllt . •J, ot Wtllmln>lt< C1en • .-.oc.p [ ... ACE -Stpl, n. LIO Clftl•k, 1.1, nl Wl>llll.,, •lld °"""' "••~•· S). "' Nool1!19lon 81..c:n. , LANE·W.-.AAENOER -S<1)!. IS. • Cilt<>rll1 LIM. f), ,tnd !111¥ AM Wl r• I -·· fO. t>olf! ot H""''M<i'°" 81 .. 1>. Thursday OtlOtltr 25, l97J Board Delays Lobb)·ist Control Bid ORANGE COUNTY SAN"r A ANA -Tile Orana• County noanl ol Superviaora again has dt layed a propoted Jobbylst control &llw In Utl!I fact of a C'hallenge tMt H be es- pandOO to Include restrlctlonl on county crnployes Q weU -including superviso r!. Several speakers suggested the law be broadened in scope lo require county officials to report any gratuities or gifts they receive frorn lobbyists Dry Period Loan Issue Co11tested In addl!iop to ha11lng lht Jot>-report any upenscS more gested lhat if any l&aw ls to bybsll register and report the than $25 intended to influence be a~proved, it should indude 1ihs they •ive. legislation. stipulations governlog gratuity SUPERVISOll Rflph Clark, CllUCK mNllOH of the repof't.11 by government of· for Qne, puahfd ta have the California '1 ~xpayer1 Auocla-flcials as well as lobbyh:ta. matter delayed WltU Nov. 7 tlon suld no law la needed to &Ive the board eQOUgh umc because It would add vut a.ARK SAID I ob b y 1 1 t 1 to digest the latest input in 11mounts of paperwork to the ~houldn't hc.ve to reveal total the oft~elayed discussion of job of representatives like incomes as suggested In Bal· lobbyist legislation. himself. ' tin's law but Battin refused C. Arthut Nissen of !he to change that stl I II The suggestion I.hat the Jaw pu a on. on lobbv. ists work both wa us Orange County Bar Associa· Battin himself tightened the 1 lion said the repo11 should law by· clos1'ng what he lied \\'as a new one and captured ca the interest of all the be s1n1pliried by eliminating a loophole that did not supervisors except R 0 be rt reporls of money spent by designate all f u 11 _ t J me firms for their lobbyists. representatives of compa · Battin of Santa Ana, the nies author of the inilial proposal. 1~;==Bo=lh=~'P"::':'':':'=':1:'°::::~'"~g~-='='=1'=b=b~yis=· ="=·=====:I The ordinance, was before the board Tuesday for another look after being delayed last week by several amendment suggestions. Battin Tuesday rejected all suggested change-5 in the Jaw SANTA ANA -Orange deadlock s Jn c e Supervisor and the board in turn voted County government may face David Baker had left early to delay again in light of the a drier than average "dry for a conference. new input at the meeting. The Mariachis are coming --to Pier1! period" this year unless Coun-Several speakers urged th e Nl'tlUCO#ANY IMC. lltl UtMHllA UlolYONtO.ti• LAOUNA •Aat IXTl!HOS •N INYITATIOH TO A HALLOWEEN ANTIQUE SALE '-tllt49f, 0...tMt.27, hM•Y• OctoMf ZI f c f t9 4:00 H ... lln ! k~( l~~~lti~ 'M Clllll'I "'" ,,.. '"' o ... t .. HJ9111 $11MI in Plll'I • THERE ARE • A,_il'I .... ~I • ·-CIHI lM A '""' ... 1111i Mirrtra . LIM U• Sllew lllfM T• YO<I • YOUlL FIND • W1in.tl t1M1t ,...... • Otk 1M Old Pine S-•• lt-Sl.rM "91X# Stripped Mftt ..... •Tll tfley 1111,.. • COME SEE • Tll1 It""" lt.t ~Ml """Y II ....... ......... ,_.... l• 1111 ... ,... .. lltl , ...... 'HO#ll 11...,7·1'U r---..::... ~GLOUER·W!LWN -Mpl, IS. Cht•lt~ , Glbton Cito•-· l S, tnG Vlc!,..lt 1• Vl•gln•• w11.....,. n, t>etr• o1 Hun- 1lngton 811c1>. ; C>l)(ON·H.-.LE-&tpt. IS. Wlt111m ,,..,, -' C>lwon, It. of l'eunteln V1U1y, 11\d • Lino• Jtln Hn!t, 1•. or Wt•lm\n"'' •11(,IPP·CAOPP-Sfl)I. U. Rlc1>1rd Ott ty supervisOrs authorize the WITllOUT THE loan, the board to add some general "honesty in novemment" pm· nonnally ·routine borrov.•ing county could have trouble e T S d ' N Q • us00 to meet obligations until villion.s to the law, which in ry atur ay S ews UIZ meeting upcoming payrolls ·is t l Id I tax money starts flowing in. ,--"'."'-~~-------_;1~~cWT~~··-~0,'_m__l'w~o~u~~'eq_'.u~,~·!.'::=:":~~==================l_------,-----------------• IClpp, JI, ol S1n!1 ~01, And 5f>l<'vl , Lvnn (1'><>11. 11. ol (Otll M•••· , GltUZl·VAILLANCOUllT -Sept, 1~, • W!lll&m Eu{ltnt G"nrl, ~I. 11\d JlldlTh : M••lvn v .. 111~nc~r1. lJ, bo1h ol .. Hunrlno•on Btt<h. • AIJI Z·NAYA -S.pT, U. Al!rtd R"l1. • II, •nd Jeu(I 5'1tlt NIYI, 1,, boll> • or Ml!lw•r cur. : MGAG.-.NTE·SH.-.RPE -S1pt. 15, J1~ P, M"'111n1t. 17. i nG Dt bOr•h • Sf>trpf". 1J, t>atn of Huntlngtin f11cn. ' YOUNG·WITTIMN-Stpl, 1}, Jtc~ Rl'fT"Cl"d Young, I/, o1 Minion Vlt lo. •fld Gtrtrtud Wlttm1n, 3', of Foun11ln Vt11tY- • lll!!AVEA•MAllONI -54¢. U, J~~ -:--t.:-... .,., ' '17' Of ""'l'tcfl. tnd OIN L M1ronl, ll. of Ntwp0rl II Heft. SttAf4AfELt .pJIEHOEllGAST -59'11. , I" Kl'llll ·M-, ... ,..r11t, 12. of , , Sfn OOlgO. l l'd JIC_ll,,_ TherlW P•tnd,•gtlf, l'O. ot COiie Mnt. SZYMll.N SKl.CRDWLEY -Stpl. 16, "•Ill Ltnllot'I SrYf'llnJl<I. ,1, of S1n•1 A nt. 1/'ld P1mt11 C•-'IY· If, ol F011t1!1ln Vt!l•T· PDWER·GUST .. FSON -Sii>'. 16, Wlllitm J. p_.,, 3' 11\d 1Ct1Mrlne Gii"'"""· u. both or NI"'""'' S.tcf>. HUNlER·HARDY -$9'11. 16. Hor1c1 JI..,.. Hunter 5•. 11\d 11rt1ar1 MM H1rdy. 11, bolt> ot L~ Hlll1, HU8ER·LAN01N -s.iit'. 16, K"'""h P. 1-tutllr. 11. o! Ht•IW>f' Cltv, l fld Ltn• Loulu Ltl\dln. )I. o t W1•tml~s1tr. lllCHARDSON·ALLISDN -StPI-17, Ot.,. ForrM1 AlcnardM>n, 11. end Otbr• Ann AUIKlfl, 17. bcnh Df • Cotti Mtlt. W.tiRREN·ST.-.RICEY -Seti. 17, 01nll!"l' .-.. W1rr111, 21, uf Sewlvtd1, t n!I Stndr• Lynn 5t1r~ey, 11, of Wt•lmln•llt PE"iEAS·FELOM.-.N -Sfl!I U, wtLlltm ~Itri. Sf, 11\d Jt lMI M. Ftldmtn, tS. l>Olf> ol Soul!> L11111n1. WIRTH·OEVRIES -Sflll, If, Cht•lt• \ "'"'°" Wl!11'1, X, Ind Ja.n ,,..,1, l OtVrl ... 0. bofll of l'-ltln V1!11y. '"OVJANOVIC·LE 86.A.U -"""'· l(I, l t.,,k• Dul-le. 11, tnd Vldorle Mlc.r*lle l,duu. 11, both ot H-~ """""' hKtl. fR1T2-FOX -Sip!. 20, Ktnfltlh .-.. FrH<. to. 11'11 E,ll'tet' M11 l'o~. ~s. bOll> ot Fount1111 v1u.v. SORLAUG-V9:El!LAH0 -Sectt. 20, w1...,. l!""r-'t e ... INQh, ?t, ot S.n11 "'"'' 11\d LlllOI ,..,.... vr"t1nd. JI, o4 Hll"lllllllOn IMC!'>. SJOltk.·alCH -s..f. :IO, J.,.ry Cl.,,,. Supervisor R<inald Caspers this week questioned the prac· lice of borrowing n1oney like the county bas done for the past seven years. CAS PERS BLAJ\tEO it on poor investments of cowny funds. "You must have too much m'On·ey Invested:'' -he said . When Auditor-COOtroller V.A. lle:im told him no needed {Wlds are ever invested, Gaspers remarked. "Then ,the money is not being managed cor· rectly. ,. Hei1n said the county coffer needs to borrow $6 mill ion in hard cash to see it through until lax revenues start ar· riving in December. "Last year we had to ask for $15 million and in 1970-71, it was even more than that," Heim said . ''It is just a matter of meeting our ca.5h flow needs." llETht ALSO told Caspers that the county budget is $300 1nill ion and that the bills have to be paid from July 1 on. "For the first five months we don't have any tax funds to use." Caspers, \\'ho hadn't in· dicated he would vote against the 1oan, was joined in his critici.'!m by First District Supervisor Robert Battin. liort:. :io. 11\d ~tndl'• JH n Rich. 10, t>olh ot Hvnll"l;lllWI llNCJ'I, Battin said he ~·ould make Heim face up lo h is "responsiblities" and Io Id .,, Caspers he would give him i a chance to, "back up your convictions." Other Deaths SAN FRANCISCO (UPI\ - Dr. Thomas PhUlp Burton. father of Rep. Phillip Burton ( D-CaliL l. died \\rednesday := after a lengthy illness. He .; v.·as 73. ~Te also was th!' father of Cahfnrn1a asscmblyn1an ·, Jotu1 Burton. Ar.!BLER, P ;i. (AP) - Richard A. ~maker. art director for stage. screen and television and designer for the Temple Uni versity ~1 us i c F'esti\'al and Institute, dird Tuesday or cancer. lie "·as 5-0, Beotia Notiee.< ARBUCKLE & SOS ~'l:STCLIF'F ~!ORTUARY 421 E. rah SI .. C0810. ~IC!la 6·16-4888 • B.\LT7,..BERGERON t'UNt.:RAL llOi\IE Corona del i\1ar G1il·9450 Cos ta i\lesa &46-Z424 • BEi.i. RROAO\\'AY i\IORTUARl' 110 Broady,·ay. Costa i\lt'sa LI 8-3 .. 3J • l)JIJlA 't' HHOTllt:RS i\IORTUAHIES 1~9 11 HraC'h Bh·d, lfunlin:tton l\tu<'h 84t-77il '.!II ltedoodo A\'t , l.ong Dench 2 1l--43S.1 1~5 • !\lcCORl\llCK 1.AGUNA IJEACll i\IORTUAllV 1706 Lai:nna C11nyon ltd, 494-9~15 • 1'1\CIF'IC VIE"' \lt;\IORIAL PAHK Ccn1etcry i\1ortuary ('haprl 3500 P11rlflc View llrl\'f' Ntwporl fito!k'h . Ct11iforola &44-t•on • PEl::K FAl\111.Y COLONIAi. F'UNt:RAJ. 110\lt-; 7801 Bolsa t\ 1 r . \\'r~lmlnstl'r 89J.J5:S <I S\llTll'S l\IORTUARY 627 ,\ffl ln !oil . lluntln~lon Btacb 5.11...t.5.19 • The vole went to a 2-2 Heart Care Meet Set ANAHEIM -'!'he Orange CoWlty Heart Association's fourth annual Cardiac and Respiratory Care Symposium will take place starting le; day and running through Satw-day at the Disneyland Convention Center. 1be lhr~~ay event is ex· pected to draw a CfO\\'d of more than 1.000 doctors and nurses from 29 states. Or. Edward Diethrich, a 1('ading l'Xpert in hear t surgery, v.·i11 be one of the guest speakers. He w i 11 discuss latest advances in 1ransplant surgery and heorl preservation. Parties Slated By Adopters A:'<IA.llEL\l -The Orange Cou11ty Adop1ive Par c n l s A~'IOCiation \1•i l1 host t"·o l{allo"'cen parties Oct. 27 and 28, one ror adults and one for children. The aduh p.1rty \V iii lakr place Oct 21 at lhl· lnn of T1Jn1orn1w in :\ n a he i ni . H<'Sl'f\:l\1on~ tan be n1ade by calling 51!1·2448 . TI1c childrcr,'s p;ll'I} \\ill lak•• pl:ice the next d:1y :it I p.111 . at \\'t'slinghouse Eh>i•lrit' Cnrnpan~· 1n Orange. UT'S BE FRIENDLY 11 y(ll.1 h111 r lll'\\' 11cl1:hht)r:r; or know or snyon<' mo\'ln~ to our ar<'a. please l l'll us sn 1h11l \\!.' may c>xlcnd a frirndly v.elcon1'° Rnd hf'!11 1htm to b('romf' acq ualntrd in their .ne."· surroundin,1ts. So. Coast Visitor 494-4579 494-9361 Harbor Visitor ~0174 J\id~ Lif;e To A .~t. Andy and bil11. 1obbyists to re1l1ter and SOUTH 008ST ViLL8Ge WISHON · HARRELL STO NEWARE Tl/£ l'IUAGf: A COLLECTION· OF QUAINT SHOPS NOW OPEN A complete -P111t Shop. Over 10,000 p1irs to choose from. Ha~ Ten & Surf Line Shirti. ~ontalbo~ LET US DESIGN YOUI NEXT JEWELIY PIECE DESIGNERS-GOLDSMITHS WATCHMAJ(ERS fcompl• line ol urHqu. C.... ottd Con'in(l&t 556-7931 Tl/£ J'//,LAI;!: IS NINE RESTAURANTS WHIM SEY HDbbDW TIME LIFE BOOKS ARE AVAILABLE HER E . Single tille1 or c:omplett .. ,;,, -ithout 1vlncription. Come in •nd browM MERCHANTILEBLDG. ss1.J11s ""', fi:" CfJJ; hungry tiger R ESTAURANT 1>79-llHI Ol'F\ S:11urda~~ fur l.u!'l1'11 S1l!1(!1\y~ lu1 HnlrlCh • • Stonewo1re by Pfa1t1gr•ff • Antique nosl•tgia replius •Original Romertopf clay pots • Potpovrri of giff items • 516-7911 ilbo: c:ity plum trn, Ortngt1 'fl If: l'l t L ti; I\ IS OPEN 12·5 SUNDAYS SOUTH coasT ViLLaGe ~~~ 'fllE J'/L!AGf; Unique Sho ps and Fun Places To Ea t Specializing in: FRENCH RESTAURANT • House Plants •Fern • Tenariums •Ceramics • Mact•m• phone s PHITt R~lll 5 6 • 0 s 5 b Tllf: l'/LUGE MOST STORES OPEN 7 DAYS the lofty l•dy Tiff: l'ILUGE MOST STORES OPEN 10.9 DAILY 'OaL.e'S Your !=omplete \Vomen's Fashion Shoe Boutique ~7 141 979-925:! O 'Jle;J;' s j!;H/e · SwifyerlanJ, Alfi & cum a DELICACIES IMPOITID FROM SWITZIRLAND, DrRISSL Y fOI YOU. PHONI 557-6442 - UNUSUAL GIFTS ANO APPAREL FROM AROUND THE WORLD Tiff: f'IUAGf; CLOSES 6 p,m. SATUR DAYS WINE CHEESE ETC. • Ofll(;•J<Ul CO!ff:f~IS '"' •llOKIL lll~SI AllO COf'l'f.11 1:)00 t ~· """ W•~"' ':> 't"l "l~' !~n C~""'"''"'"' An3 ·~ t"1~11\l~'!•C P"'&'••" "''"'~"'0•1<•(•~~~!'1"1~1· \U ~~·! ···-~ ·~· .... ,,,,, •. "''"~"'"'~~·1 110"1~,!·{ f h~····· GIA\<W~•· n~•h•tl\d \etlc~· ~P'O<I' ""'~'"'"'n """' 557-2223 Antiques and Plants De Believes In ~e111 UFOs Are Re0;1., Says Nucl.ear Pliysicist MlA.Ml tlfPll -Stanton Friedman i! a 39-year..old nuclear physicist and space scientist who believes Dying saucers are real and are visiting rrom planets outside the solar system. Friedman says many col· leagues in the scientific com- 1nunity also believe in UFOs, but most Y.'on't adm1t it openly because of the ''laughter cur- tain" of ridicule surrounding the subject. "MOST PEOPLE w ho 1 refuse to acknowledge the ex· istence of UFO's as nlanned flights from outside our solar system do so because they don't want to bruise their egos." t'riedman said. Uf'I Tt.......,. 'THEY DO EXIST' Physicist Friedman Nucleon.lcs near San Fran- cisco. and Gtneral tlectric's aircraft nuclear propu.Won department at ctnctnnaU. He 11 a ~r of a number of professional societies. "Jl's ridiculous that a person who would make a perfectly reliable witness In court suddenly becomes unreliable and rldlcu1ed when be reports a UFO sighting, "IT'S 'nME we lifted the laughter curtain surrounding UFOs, get tcienllsts into the act and get tbe kook.! out," Friedman said. "~Ian has always fought the notion that he's not the master of the universe. and to admit surveyed believe U F 0 's the existence and reality of "definitely or probably1' exist. UFO's is to admit there is "I believe it's time \\'e mustered the top scientific talent 1n this country, spent some mooey and began a hard scientific study to prove the existence of UFO's as extra- terrestrial vehicles and ()btain lnfonnatlon of real use in the development of advanced pro- pulsion systems for use on this planet." a superior intel l igence "THIS CERTAINLY somewhere in the s o I a r disproves the notion that only system," he adds. Ht tie old ladies in tennis sbQes Friedman objects to the "unidentified flying object" label being hung on all strange flying vehicles. Friedman. a frequent UFO believe in UFOs," said Frled- lecturer whose 14 years of man. work in nuclear physics has He holds bachelor's and included the Pioneer I o mhster's degrees in physics Jupiter probe, said a 1971 poll from the University o t b y "Industrial Research" Chicago and bas worked for r.·Iagazine showed that 54 per-We s t i n g b o u s e in its --eent-of--the--!;700 professional--a!tronuclea aboratoey-at engineers and s c i e n t i s t s P~ttsburgh, Aerojet General 2640 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA I HUJri~}tl'S 540-5527 OPEN DAILY 9 -6 SUNDAYS 9.5 IT'S A SPECIAL WEEK . . . . ---A-HAllOW££N--TREA'l'-QF-SAVINGS ' NAROSSUS BULB SPECIAL ' • > Lovely, fr•gr1nt n1rclesu1 e11n be yours this 1pring. Grelt for Indoor-forcing. Chfnoso S.Crod Lily P1perwhlt• Grandifktra N1rci11u1 Solell d'Or Reg. $3.50 d0.. NOW$2.29 doL • IUl!lhed,. l•lbl .. tMIMll PLUS -TULIPS, DAFFODILS, RANUNCULUS, ANEMONES, DUTCH IRIS, FREESIA AND MORE. For SUN or SHADE· MIX or MATCH For sunny areas, over bulbs, borders, m•sses. !CELANO POPPIE S Long stems bear lovely flowers of 'hot' colors. VIOLAS Masses of low-growing color. PANSIES Delightful fragrance from fac~like flowers. For Shad y Areas CINERARIA Provides a riot of winter color. ENGLISH PRIMROSE Low growing 'mounds of vivid color. PRIMULA Beautiful flowers that ere sometimes fr1gr1nt. . 79 Pony Pok, Buy Any 2, Get A Third One Free! Mix or Match. • FTD fLOWll SHOI' DILIYERT Rl•YDAT FERN SPECIAL INDOOR OR IN THE SHADE OUTSIDE, A FERNS GRACEFUL GREEN IS OE- ~~-LIGHTFUL. Lovely cascading plants raedy to hang in your favorite spot. Reg. $8.95 NOW $5.98 Above apecials thru Wed,. Oct. Slat PUMPKINS ' Bri ng the kids to see our GREAT PUMPKIN DIS- PLAY. let them choose their own! Priced accord- ing to tlze. -coMHttt-SEE OUR "SCABECROW"! v ganda' S r:f~D~C=lt_e_c~kl1r::~~~;~T~-='· =°'"°':=' 25=·~1m::~===o:A11.:v :•tLOT::J5l:: Chief Got Sto11 Asked Message SAN ~'RANCISCO (AP) -A health officl.al says he ~'ants to slop man- datory venereal disease treatment given accused prostitutes at the city prison here . Dr. Francis C urry , health director for San Francisco. said that the system is unfair because persons arrested as pro- stitutes are eumined for- VD and given a precau- tionary shot of antibiotics before their guilt is decid· ed in court. Aviatrix Winner WIN THE GREAT 92 LI. PUMPKIN! • Dr1wing Wiii Be Held Sat., Oct. 27th. Free T ickets With Every Pur· ch11e. L1rge S•lectlon Of Beautiful Pumpkins. CITlU~ Sl'ICIALI n. v.ry bftt flOJW• 1114• llrer Seedlnt Whit• GRAPEFRUIT 10 ••• $7°0 Flnt •• tt.e ...... SWEn NAVEL ORANGES 6, .. /$100 SWEET YALINCIA ORANGES 10, .. /$1°0 FREE PUMPKIN wltti ...,.,,. SS.00 P'1rc;h- AV!. W•IOHT ' I.IS, ,, .. ,_, DeU.•r Fresh Broccoli 25', •. ,..,..... Ii .t1ky CARROTS 1 Iii. Mt HO. 1 BROWN ONIONS 2 , .. /15' LEMONS 2/15' LIMES 5'"· Shirley Cote of Newport Beach, flying solo, was the winner recently of the tenth annual Pacific Air Race in LAii.Gi SELECTIOH OF GOUIDS WHOLESALE TO REST AU RANTS DAILY FREE DEPVERY INGARDIA BROS. PRODUCE MART for liberal polic;les in proving race relations restricting tte use firearms. * im- and or Pat Nixon warmly greeted 6-year~ld ~tJchael Sb a n e Newsome of Louisville, Ky. with a big bug and told the 1973 muscular dystroph y poster child ''t.bings are look- ing-up:'~---- The youngster was ae- comnanied to the White HOU!le by Dr. Mlcbel de Bakey, lam· eel Texas heart surgeon and member of the lxlard of direc- tors .of the Muscular Dystrophy Associali~ t o publicize the annual fall fund- raising drive to continue research into the causes ol the disease. At one point. Mrs. Nixon knelt to look at a book oJ drawings that Michael's se- cond grade sent to her. Most of them were signed "love." * Actress Gale Sondergaard finally received her Oscar statuette, YT years after she was named best supporting actress b' her r o I e l.n "Antho.ny Adverse." Miss Sondergaard. named best supporting actress when the award was inaugurated in 1936. received the Oscar in a surprise presentation in lAls Angeles. She was given a plaque in 1936. and in recent years the National Academy has from time to lime ttplaced such plaques with the statuettes. * Rear Adm. Jeremiah A. Denton Jr., one of the senior naval officers held in a North Vietnamese prison , has been named commandant of the Armed Forces Staff OJ,llege in Norfolk, Va., the Navy an- nounced. Denton will report (or duly In January, the Navy said. Denton was a captain while in captivity and was promoted arter his release UUs year. 'One Wa y' Movement In Book The Jea\1$ People from the local Calvary Chapel and lt1anslon Messiah are the subject of a new book by Dr. Robert S. Ellwood Jr .. nn associate professor of religion at use. The book analyzes the upsurge 0 r fundamentalist Quistlanity amoog college- age yoong people during the late sl.xties. It carries the title ':0.00; w~ay/' _art~ th~ upward- pomting finger sign that became a popular slogan and emblem In the youthlul Chris- tJan movement. While researching for lhe book , Dr. Ellwood, an Episcopal clergyman, visited variow convcnUonal and non· conventional churches l n Southern CaUfomia, including Costa Mesa tlnd Santa Ana. ThP-boolt ts published under the PtcnUce-llall label. her single-engine Aero Com- mander. The field of 76 entrants flew YICfOlllA ' ! l , • Toyland is Open SMART SANTAS SHOP EARLY .•• STORES OPEN LATE NIGHTS SAVE '5 ON THIS WALKIE· TALKIE LMET ·k:li;;;' . '·i ~1 'f 4'<0ti1 ·--~Joi: 00 WALKIE-TALKIE 795 ••• 81 WALKIE-TALKIE HELMET ,,_ .......... Sends .,,., ·---.. 1no ._..... •~I. c.n i.. IMe<I ,..;"' S... '°-"°' w1u.;.-i.1k040. .O.llD.) """' ..... C.. 1PMCt9 m-16-IT. drllO 11rio. Ouic:lo-SIOO lwll<ft Cir •I flnrtrl. S.. 110 in-*· 81).1(01 IB JllOAD orvn. ftACEfll lEJ GENIE IOmE 995 295 IEJ DIGJT At COMPUTEA JUT ~l!HVC•Dff"'"'""'° 2895 do ,...1n c11<:ull!tOns l!IT'DIQy>n9 1N! b•na•v S'f!ilem,. p!'l!<:h<;I Wl!O!lll!<. t<>untJ<?w ot~· OP1!'flo0n$ 18-199 lGJ J>L.ANfTAAIUM KrT Fnc..,11"'9 hOOOy koJ, B1tll!•!>"~l!d ' Clltl,eotlOf shQw5 si.11 on Cl!>i<"9 Of wall Coni1!!4i.r.on Cl'l•irl'l onclu(IC<l. 8().1112 219 8 OPTICAL LAB ~IT Do -•l lOfl•(ll!"~ 1995 'Mll'I 11•·orl!Cf! OD!<•I ''l- 6u•ld 1eleK~. ~1.-1, m ()•r 2$-191! m AUTOMOBILE UB KIT c~•~•'' .. ,,,. s!l!('""<I. bl'~(! S'f'S!t'M. 51!1!-ltwll ""'"'"ll>On. 60-l2110 • 595 {ll AEAONAUTK:AL UB KfT C•l)lotl! ITll! wo<ld ot 1295 fk<jl'lt A 1>10D<J!soon. o..er· . 100 l!•ot'l•mie<>ls ••• bu•ld • ~htle< l'l!ll<Ojlt(lr, ........... 26-196 1KJ E'LECT,.ONIC PAOJECT KIT llJ AM TA ANSMlnER KIT El l •Tv •si.embled "•ad><> 495 ~ll!•on" bto.o<IC1•!s 1n1ougn 1ny AM ••d<O VO 10 :>!>'"IV. M't.etnch.lded, fi0.ll1• fit SLOT MACHINE GAME S.. tiow m1ny p0ont1 vou C¥1 score Ju•I inrU 395 11'9 It-In """'· PYWI btlt!O"" IOllDP 60-2111 IBJ AOUlETIE GAME l>t.ac9 M•~ ,,,..,., or,.~~ 11\f! 1111.i "'"'" ~nd "'"'rl'I tr.e ,,Qn1 "'"°'"" il<Ou<'l(l 11'..r "'""irl 1na stoo o" 1 """'""'· "'"'led •O\llt'lll! l•bl• l•r<>ul ·nc~. w.21J1 395 {QI COMPUT-A-otCE GAME Pfl!S1 I lf!'oPet Incl fWo .,fll!r ls •1•'1 IO roll. Sle>o •ul~""~l·c•lly -h()nl u111 "~" ~·<!>Cl! Qn Ille Kll!el\ t 0·2132 Oel~•I! W ?•\II •. 4 tlo 295 ALL STORES OPEN SUNDAY I BOJ Newport 11..i •• c .... M ... 18120 lf'ookhurst·Fovntoln Volley* (In fountalft Vall•y Plau) 8941 Adams Av•.·Huntinqtott leach 6991 Womer Ave.-Hvntlngtoft ltoeh 30132 Crown Volley Pkwy.•locJuna Nl9uel I A TANDY COAPORATIOf4 COMPANV Z70l S. Main St.·Sonto Ana 1441W.17th St .• Santa Ano (In HOM!' l'lua) 814 S. Comh110 Real·Son Clemente 13024 N•wport llvd .• Tustln 15llt lrookhunt·Westml"st« " OPININO SOON FUZZY, FLUFFY, FUNNY ANIMALS COMPlETE WITH AM RADK>S• 1;"Y IDl'I Ill IH'tlll9fl"I' IOve -SOii cudOly ta,. AM u dte> 1n·m~11. Sate lor PW- "1111! onn 10 II~•'° bt'd. ·-fl 1n •ltl'Kli¥1t ««MOIY lo• 1nr room. Im TEflfllt:ll flAOiO {S] CATlllADIO ID r<>OOl..l lllAOIC) Bil Pl:llNGt:I! ftADK) l'iJ lllACCOON flAOIO gos • 1195 g•s 11•s 11•s loot far T.liit s;_. .. Yow lffiiflNiofl ... J % DAIL"'I PllDl L. JI. Boyd Married Me11 Most Contented There'• thls thing calttd the contentment scale. The Natic.na l ()ptnlon •Research Center at lhe University of Chicago uaes It m· 1t.s surveys of people. Those Who regis- ter highest on it are married men. Ne:it, single women. After that, married women. And last, unmarried men. Clear reasons abound as to why married men tend to be so conWnt while siQl:le men don't. But explanations are less numerowi as lo· why sJ.ngle women eeem to be more content than married women. Can you cJear up that q).lestiOn? Madam, if you want to take a pic- ture of your cat kissi ng you on the cheek, put a touch of tUDafish oil on it. No, dear, not on the cat. On the che<k. Two ou t of every fi\'e hairpieces for men are eit her gray or white. QUERIES FROM CLIENTS Q. "Says here the condemned man in 17th Century England binuelf customarily paid I.be executioner to kill · him. How much?" A. Equivalent of $55 was usual. Q. "How many goU balls does the average pro golfer on tour use in a year?" A. Figure about 700. Q. "What's actress Ali ?lfacGraw's real name?" /t.. Alice. International code recognized by regular navies long o..held that t.be,JlylD&..oLLb!a~k__flag aboa~~p_ ~eant_ "look for no mercy." That's why the oldtime pirates adopted the black flag as their symbol, I'm told. lf the .typewriter keyboard is standard, it's known among !he office machinery boys as a "querty,'' ttlcse being the top six letters from the left. FAR EAST , True enough, going native in Japan takes a little get- ting u.sed to, sir. Upon entering a house, for instance, you take off your shoes, not your hat. Your feminine com· panion helps you off with your coa t, not vice versa .• The fish you eat is raw, but· your wine is heated. And you al- ways scrub yourself outside the household bathtub, not in it. Further, already mentioned footnotes are always printed at the top of boot pages lbere. ' 11 is the contention ol British ~tedical Association Re- searchers that most heavy cigarette smokers like a lot of sugar in their coffee. Out of. 495 tosses of the dice, the tosser has 244 chances to win, ~ 251 chances to lpse. -Don't-. call that car an-antique, sir, unless it was man• ufactured before 19'l4. Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Bo:c 1875, Ne w- pol1 Be~ll. Calif. 92660. State's 4breast Of Sex Changes SACRA ~tEl\'TO IUPl1 - The increase in sex change operations among Caliromians has C'ompelled the state to develop a procedure for fol- low through surgery on driv~ tt's licenses· A new paragraph has been added to the manual for d r i v e r s' license examiners spelling out how to alter the sex designat ion on the licenses of men who become women or vice versa. according to a state source who asked not to be identified. 11IE SOURCE said "suffi· cient requests" for the change had been recei ved to y,•arrant the procedure. But I h e Department of Jlilotor Vehicles said it had no figures on the number or men and W()Dten \\'ho hat•e asked that their licenSt's be changed to reflect thei r ne"' sex. The instructions in the ex- aminers' manual l!tate that sex chan ge r equests be for· HAD A MEDICAL EXAM LATELY? 'varded to a nearby state driver improvement analyst. The a pplicant is required to. provide a doctor's state- ment that the operation has heen perfonned before the change is "permanent" in the eyes of the state. rs THE MEANTll\IE, the person will t<eceive a tem- porarv license changing his sex designation from "F" to "h-1" or the other way around. ~Ieanwhile, one of t he state's other I i c ens i n g bureaus. the 'Department of Fish and Game, reported it had not made any switches in hunting and fishing license procedures for sex designa· tions. "The SC'X changes we·re concemed ll-'ith are in 1narine fish and other marine species \1•hich Change as a n1atter of growth develop1nent." said a fish and gaine spokes1nan. }-le mentio.ned shetpshead and grouper fish and sonic ocean shri1np as examples. DON'T HAVE A PERSONAL PHYSICIAN? SATISFIED WITH YOUR PAST EXAM? WANT TO CONFIDENTIALLY KNOW YOUR HEALTH STATUS? MMlc•I IMatno.tlc & C.tnl l.c: ll:ehriblllt1tlon 1 .. vkn •rt -••.U•Mto ,. flM .. ,., •• , "*lie. Wt """"' y..,. Ho ...,. Ml• flC!lttJ' 11 .. Mllflt•. ~ Mi i 'ltlll., fl_!_l'...,!!lllltli¥~1111 ~lcll¥1 ~ Mltn C: ...... tlMMW. 11141 U llMnltVI -1111 Kf_ll, ....... ll'lt lltllhk>f "" _, H'll~ ""'91ctf ~llltflllllc ""'"""'' IVlillb .. , llYtkill tllfwrll llft .......... Yt11r f.-f .... lftl l rt ... ld i. 11'41 Clflli• fillet 1M "'"""' .... ~ lfl ,..,,. l lolfl'lwiitl'lltll, Ywr 11 .. 1111 ,,.1111 11 .... l'i.wt.11 111111 11~IM "'°""" 1 ,_,_, '"'~' wllfl "" pny1lt!1"' 11 ... 1111 .. "*"<fl ,...tllltt ,_.""' frN'"""' "".., .._,. .. 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And lheie's enough $0iid state power tor o big. wide tieaulllUI $0Und onv wov vou won1 to hear ii On 1od•O On the 3-soeed BSR IUrntoble wilti cueing fe~r Or on the SONV S·lrack cartridge playef. SWilCl'l· Ing lrom !rack la !rock or from record lo record can be dona mon- vatly or 011 CJUIOn"(]tic !l's o biQ mree·wa-{ !.Ollnd housed in small. matching woodgrain encbsures $0 1! can fit 11'1!0 some prettv smoll places. There's a re- rno~e dust C0\161, the necessorv coo!rols ond connections tor more lope QI lor steppng up lo 4-cr"l()nnel sound. Us lhe HP-168. Come in and S•l6 it UD. SONY. PUTS IT ALL TOGETHER QUALITY P•ODUCTS PlOFISSIONAL SllYICI 275 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA 642-8882 CALL FOR SERVICE Hou n :. Dally 9 • 6 -Thurs. 9 • 9 ....... '"'' ......., .,.. s-. 1916 ·1 • ' • Doubleknit special. Suit yourself. • T,ie suil scoop you can't afford to pass up, Easy-wea ring, fresh-trom- morning-til·night polyester double· knit in blue or camel. Two-button styling, back vent. 38 lo 48 r.egular or long. ' Charge.ii on your JC Penney cherge card. BUENA PARK Beach at Orange1h0rpt 0poo Dolly 1:30to 1:30 p.m. Sunday to to 7 .. SANTA ANA 3900 So. Bn1tol • No. of So. Coast P1a.t• Open 10.t p,m. O.Wy Sundly to eo • I I • • ·~ f ' ' I , ORANGE City Dr. et Gordon Gr0<t !lMl. Open .... p.m. Doily s...y, 10 ".• \ ' l ' .. • . I : .. ------~----------------......._.1 FOUNTAIN VALLEY PLAZA VALLEY . . FOUNTAIN , • , .• rid you Cln IMll IT -~I-----,- (BROqKHURST & TALBERT) SAVE $78 COMPLETE COMPONENT REALISTIC. STEREO . -- MUSIC SYSTEM Regular Separate Items 'Price 289.90 211 90 • STA·18 AM/FM St1r.o R.celver for rich, clflr 1t1reo 1nt1rt1lnmenl. Features lilclucle 1ep1r1te bass, treble, balance control1, tape: lnput1 & outputs, tape· monitor awitch. Compltl• with $24.95 value walnut wood cau.121.11 •Two MC-1000 acouttlNUtPtnsion bOoklhetf speaker~· f•aturti a· woofer Ind 3• e-diaperalon tweeter, tnclottd In walnut wood Citiliiiti'S..-.oo~u: , . -' • labo12 tutomatlO tttreo chanoer ~ttl Ctiiitcm MOUnttd base hU 4-pcM motor tor exact '9ffdl and counterweighted arm fOC' ~" tr.c;kln;. lncludn f12.t5 value stereo c1rtrldQ1. 41.11 Stop By Any RADIO SHACK And Pick Up Your FREE Copy Of Our .. , . - ' . ., SAVE '10 ; .. PORTABLE CASSErtE RECORDER .. ' Reg. 49.95 SAVE '2 Mlc'RONTA® POCKET SIZE MUL TITESTER Reg.595 7.95 NEW 1974 CATALOG We Proudly Feature o SCIENCE-FAIR EDUCATIONAL ELECTRON/CS,,, CHOOSE FROM OVER 30 EXCITING KITS • REALISTIC~ LIFETIME TUBES ••• OVER 1150 TYPES. • FREE TUBE TESTING AT pVER 2.000 STORES ••• o ARCHER • ANTENNAS ••• PREASSEMBLED FOR EASY INSTALLATION ••• DO IT YOURSELF AND SAVE SAVE· •e FUN RADIO MEDALLIONS Reg.10.95 3995 • REALISTIC' DIAMOND REPLACEMENT NEEDLES 2.99 & UP,., 495 ... '""· Ml!Yefll-•, en1.it1ln'"•"" Ir. Oft• 11111t, M1lr1 yovr own 11p11 on JllM1i.11c• CTA·9 ''conltr. F11lu••• -IMhfdt t [KI lever, 1utom.clc level e«itrol, ltlput f1n ofT-111 ... Jr recorclln1, ... .,,..., .. betttrlN. 11rnot1 mlk9 lnlWdtd.1'•161 , .. SAVE •7 3-CHANNEL ORGAN. KIT , Reg. 29.95 ·2295 f11lly ••••mt>lld Ill! 111nil1t11 b111. tr1bl1, mldrent• lnlo ¥1D,.nl •wlr1h'lf t olott ol ri d, Dh,11, ''''"· Hl;h, mldl11m, 1nd low 1wl1<:h11 1111011 1dJ111t 11ch. eo10r iftdWld111llr. 21·137 Mer1'11 pro"11n Hlfof1111r. Vt re&ll!• !9"er for Ol'I t1'11 Job OI llon<t .. ot1111'1op. 11. .. 111 AC/DC llOl11. P11tur11 con,...nltnl 11\u'"b-11111•• •dh1tl1111n1: 111v to r11d 2-eolor. 1!11\lf, 1111f1Clfed Kiii lllUlll' '"urllt l'Mclll\fl: 22~7. • ' ' ~ .$AVE•5 REALISTIC® AM/FM DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO Reg. 47.95 4295 0 1ytlm1, 11101\ttlmt. w1k1-1111 tlm1. l•t'f"(eofMd dlQllll elock/r1dlo Cnronom.ile·tO<I. n11 11111hD11tton con(ro!1, AFC loe:k• 11'1 •1e111tlofl, fldlO/Dlllllf 1w!lth. W1ln11t wood Qt1ln Clll. 12•14&1 SANTA ANA .,. COSTA MESA o 1"3 WEST 171~ STREET t 1I03 NEWPORT BLVD. HONER PLAZA FULLERTON SAVE '10 REALISTIC® AM/FM STEREO RADI0/8·TRACK TAPE PLAYER Reg. 129.95 119 95 COM1rtm1t ... tl1l11•• ,.,Itel ll'U;t lc Cl fllff. Ll111n IO AM. ~M t t1r10 or l ·lfl Ck ''"'· tfl,...I• 1or r1co1d ch1no1r. outo11tt 101 111110· h11C1ohon11, 1101 "co•d••· Air 11111>9n1!1n 11>1tklt't ror fu l1·r•no1 r11pofl11. l11uUful .. 11n~t-llnl1hld woo Cl c1111n111. t 2·20lll LA HABRA e 1Sll WEST WH ITTIER e 1<66-i SOUTH HARBOR BLVD, o 210 SOUT,l' MAIJUT~E! - ANAHEIM • 21lD EAST LINCOf..M AVE. e !09 EAST KA TELLA -·o lll·l NORTH STATE COLLEGE BLVD. • 231 ORANGE FAIR MALL GARDEN GROVE ORANGE e 2340 NORTH ORANGE MALL e \Ot SOUTH GLASSELL AT CIRCLE BUENA ~ARK • am STANTON AVE. • 1321 KNOTT ·STREET e 13049 CHAPMAN HUNTINGTON BEACH · e 1941 ADAMS BLVD • e 6691 WARNER AVE. SAN CLEMENTE • 81-4 SOUTH EL CAM INO REAL ALL STORES OPEN SUNDAY Tiii 111tl"'111 Jr! 1r11t1n1 c1rd1. AM facllo wllll t ht tl1111ly '"'''''"to clloot• lro111, W11r .,,.,,, c1rry 't /l'I, •llnd .,,..,Colorful Cllff, llKlr Cfll lrt, 1tanc:I lnclud.cl. lloc~ 1i11 now lot all oeun1ot11. 12-2001 te 11.aoot -$30 Surprise . Pak ONLY • 149 A110rll d part1 lnt1l.Mlflll •flntM tlNYI bOUdl, Ill" 1r1n1for"''"· CI Ol tllort , •Mlt!Ofl . coM lorrr11. 1r1n11t\01-, rectlfltrl, 1n4j m11ch ll'IOfl . 270..111•1 TUSTIN • 13024 NEWPORT AVE. WESTMINSTER· e lS389 BROOKHtlRST BROOKHtJRST AT McFADDEN LAGUNA NIGUEL CROWN VALLEY SHOPPING CENTER FOUNTAIN VALLEY e FOUNTAIN VALLEY PLAZA 18120 IROOK HURST BROOKHURST I. TALBERT .® . ~. SAVE •4 LIGHTWEIGHT STEREO HEADPHONES Reg. 595 9.95 l 11loyabt1 tun ""'' 1tirr .. 11tanilioi1. COmfor,.bl1 2·1oa1~1r llt•dP"Oftll lor 1 new ••P1rlenc1 M'I !M1>111!1 1i.11nlnt. V1ny1h••db•nd1n4 10' collld cord. J3·101 2 HOME BATIERY CHARGER 495 c1•11ro114D1111rl1111 onc1. Utt 1ny 1r.~d"d AC 01111 11. !Not ror 111<111n1 ti.ltt Ult). Won1 OVl !Chl flll or Durn OW\, 2TO.l5~1 • • Q8Al..8,_ . look For This Sign rn Yovr Ne ighborhood IA TANDY COl\POf!ATIOM COM'ilNY ,...__,;. ______________________________ _,.~---------------------------'~ I ' I I l • I i I ! ' • 1 • • I I l t . • • • , • I i l I I I l I I • • • • . . . I ·• DAILY PILOT Tllur~y, Octobtr 25, 1973 Both Sides Blamed For Prop. 1 'Ads' From \Ylre Str\'ICt'I to defend it in the coor1s." said Younger, a 1 9 7 4 Republican gubernatorial con· tender. DELEGATES to a league COflvenlion in San Francisco voted 138 to 107 Wednesday to take no position oo Reagan's controversial tax Jimitalion plan on the Nov. 6 ballot. CALIFORNIA l(emper Describes Brutal Slayings SANTA CRUZ (AP) -Ed· rnund Emil Kemper Ill. oo trial here for mass murder, CilVered his ears with his hands at one poi11t while tape recordings detailing for police a series of brutal ki llings and nwtilations were played for the six-man. six-woman jury. In the state1nents made April 2-t in Pueblo, Colo., the jury Wednesday h e a r d Kemper tell of picking up Fresno State College c<>:eds ~1ary Pesce aod A n i t a Lucheua, both 19, and then pulUng a revolver. "AT TlllS time I had the full intention of kiUing tltem. I would have liked to rape lhe:m, but I had very little experience, very little ex· posure to the opposite sex," Kemper told police. where the heart wa.s. 1 struck," the defendant said as he told ol Afiss Pesee's slaying. "I just grabbed ber by !he chin, pulled ber head around and slashed her neck. It was quick," Kemper said. Then he ·!old police he tried to keep t11iss Luchessa, whom be said he had forced into the trunk of his car, from seeing his bloody bands. 11e .... 1r bock In tbe trunk and said 'Ob God. God.' "She put up a hell of a lighl," he told police. ··The reason lhal I cut tM heads off was that I didn't \\'ant this identiDcatlon thing,'' Kemper said. He said be buried the heads and bodies in different locatio.ns. Secretary or State Edmund G. Bto\\'n Jr. has charged that "mislead ing" radio fidvcrtising by both sides in the campaign on Gov. Ronald Reagan's tax inilintlve could discourage many Ca llfornlans from VOiing on the 1ncasure. Assembl y Spea ker B o b ~lorctti (Q..Van Nuysl, told the association in a speech 'hat passage or Prop. I "'ill shift costs or public services from state to local govern· ment aod "the burden of paying those costs will be shifted from higher to Jower and middle-Income citizens." Divers to Seek Treasure Kemper was cunfined in a state mental institulion when he was IS for killing · his paternal grandparents. He was 11 when released in 1968. ''In all these cases w)len I committed the act, I just kind of exploded. I pulled a knife. 1 poised the blade· over her back lryjng to figure HE SAID WREN be opened the Lnmk and she started to ell~ out be pul~a long-bladed knife. "l .~ 11\g '° end the 'g q'"'*'y, '001 it -off. Tbe ~ lime she saw. she knew what was going on. She threw Kemper. 25. has pleaded in· nocent and mnocent by reascn of insanity to the 1nutilatlon murders of his mother, Clara Strandberg. 53; Mrs. Sara Hallett , 59, and of six coed hitchhikers beginning in May 19'12. Some of the victims were shot, others were S!rangled, and most of the boches were dismembered. "TIIE RADIO 3ds deal with Prop. 1 as if it 'A"ere a bar uf map rather than a major Prop. 1 ta1 ~asure." Brown told a Los Ange les Sigma Delta Chi meeting Wednesday. ··Those commercials are likelv to incre::ise the confusion surrOunding this eleclion and I am concerned that many \'Oters may just thro\V up their hands in Frustration and stay away from the polls on elcc· tion day," said the 1974 D e m o cralic gubernatorial contender. The supervisors grou p has gone on record against !be measure. Jn other developments: -Gov. Ronald Reagan 'A'on a major battle in his cam- paign for Prop. I when the League of Caliromia Cities re- jected an earlier opposition stand by the organization's ex- ecutive committee. SAN DIEGO (AP) - A group of aquanauts \\'ho tried to salvage tremure rrom the sunken liner Andrea Doria plans to try aga in -this time exploring the! wTeckage of a World \\'ar I[ cargo ship "·h!ch sank off Nantucket, 1'.tass. THE CARGO ~ht be '\'ort'h $12 million. Christopher Delucch.l aays. He declined to · Docto1· Cl1arged In Abortion Try idenury the·cargo or the ship. !he new one, if salvage ap-- "The ship "'as returning to pears possible, will begin next summer. Boston from its maiden,-':;jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiii voyage to South Africa, whenl it "·ent down," he said. The vessel sank in 180 Feet ol 'vater after a collision with another ship in December SOUTB coasT fa1J.8('dl IS ; ... 1941, he said. DELUccm . %2, is vice prcsi· dent of Saturation Sys- tems. Ire, whose divers tried to salvage more than $4 million in treasure from !he Andrea Doria in August. The unsuccessful operation cost alxlut $135.000, "'·hieh his group hopes to recoup through television film s, Delucchi said. But since that ve nture. the 22-year-old former Na\'Y diver • • • Full of Monsters This Sotunfay & Sunday let )'OUr children vis il wilh "Pla net Of The Apes'• stars , •• Watch famous make.up men make mor\sters of yovr kids an lh• Village Green • , • 5pecitl Tr1phie1 nrafd1if to p1rticlp.111t1 '" Su11d11 , , • F•El 517 Menst1r Piiotos t.r E"""'" said. the firm received about Do 0 9 S 0 6 S l 2 5 Unique Shopping and Dining Brown. "11o opposes the Nov. 6 ballot measure. asked, "How con the votcr.1 si ft through the propaganda and unde!'lland \\'hat Prop. I "'Ill and will not do? These radio co mmtrc l a l s are ir· responsible, misleading and highly confusing." BAKERSFIELD (UPI) - Bakersfield obstetrician xa. vier Hall Ramirez bas been charged wtth sol:lcltatlon to commit murder after he allegedly ordered that oxygen be withheld from a nei.1'ixlm ._i'~Oio~f~~~,5~a~ro~u~nd~t~he~wio~'1~dl__~~!!lll~;~ly~l!!lllt~o~, ol. 1 10~~·!!111""~·!!111~1~0!!111!!111!!111!!111!!!!!!!!!!!!111!!!!!!!111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!111!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~ infant who had .sunrived an for similar operations. He said abortion. He said both sides i.1'ere to blame. Brown urged voters to thoroughly read the at.ale's Qf- ricial pamphlet on the ballot. 1l'hlch includes the initiative's complete text along with analysis and pro and con arguments. ME ANWHILE, Attorney General Evelle Younger, after addressing a meeling of the County Supervisors Associa· ion of California Wednesday in Redding, told a ne\vsman he has supported Prop. I from lhc beginning bul he wa!'l not going to make a big pubUc issue out of it. "I haven't attempted and will -not attempt now to ans\\·tr the opposition because if ii passes our job will be Sex Charoes " Face Educator SAN BERNARDINO fUPll -The county district at- torney's office \Vednesday fil· ed seven new sexual molcsta· tion counts against former Joshua Tree E I emc n ta ry School Principal George \\'illiam C1ouse. bringing to 11 the number or charges against him. Clouse-was ch'arged Wednes· day "i th molesting f i v e studenls \\ilo visited his home. Rainy Day Savings Now on Zip-out Liner Raincoats Rog. I0.00, ANNIVERSARY PRICE 42.90 Lustrous potyeS1er/cotton poplin lhat keeps you dry on ra iniest days with zip-in liner for extra warmth when the weather turns chilly. Single breasted, fly front styling. Natural, black, olive. Neat check pattern reg. 67.50, now 49.90 silverwoods The nurse involved in the case -says she refused the -- order and that lhe boy, ap- paret111Y born normal. has been released from the hos- pital and placed "i lh an adop- tion agency. Ramirez. 59. has practiced medicine here for 27 years and is chairman or the Obstetrics and Gynecology Advisory Committee al Greater Bakersfield Memorial Hospital. Jiis lawyer argued Tuesday that his client had con"Lplied with Cali fornia's Leg a I Therapeutic Abortion A ct . Kem County Superior Court Judge John Nairn heard the arguments of Attorney Zad Lcavey and rontrtiued the case until Nov. 2, at which lime he may rule on the motion. 45 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTER N EWPO RT BE ACH ' flltST QijAl.lfT CERAMIC TILE H•rd, bright '1lazt llntsh wipes dun e•sily! l0<1elJ dKOft!or colols! ... 39'w GENUINE CERAMIC MOSAIC TILE '" f '° '"''on o<1 u,,,_, ..,.,1k, ~O''"t"'~ 1"cp•G>. I "",, ,»...,..,, ----- lost week we mode o huge dent in ou r warehouse tile stocks--bu t we ore still crowded. Shop this final week ond sove with ou r low MIRROR TILE M•kts small rOOll'IS IOok Llr1er, d11H ,_,, looll39 , '''!hter l [ISJ,I U iltr u JO! 0 in. tiles. · $0l0 ¥t11f IUnofl Tit.O Ste U . la~ts 1 ltlellme• 0 BtautiJul llll tblt ct!ip llllttfl 111211 2 In 11!11. OAK PARQUET FLOOR TILE p,,_,,ni$11e~ 6•1zl6V1 ~. lilu. CWlllC TVt £DC[ Kif A ,..,., • ..i, •Mt •t• .. . ..._ ...... . ... 111 Jiit •• , '''"'"' '"· JM ltT llOUT CWIUl .... i·· 111'1•1 •• .11~ ''-'"' .i..11 '-1111! 111 Ptllf @m••"'"ll CUSTOM EXCELON TILE l2•l'i ;,,,.,;i., ..... , er-. oil.,&; CHld .,.;11lt...o<~\! Costa Mesa-2221 Harbor Blvcl. 645-1126 STORE HOURS' OPEN SUNDAY -11 a.m. • S p.m. THURSDAY, FRIDAY -8 a.m. • 5,30 p.m. MON., TUES., W•D., SAT. -8 a.m. • 5,30 p.m. ALWAYS PU NTY OF FRH PARKING Anaheim, 2607 W. Llncbln Avenu• ICorntr M·09nollal -.127·6200 - r I ' r ThUfsdaf, October 25, 1973 DAILY PILOT 15"- Kohoutek Century's Brightest Pigskin Pickeroo Bigger, Better The Pilot Pipkin Picl<eroo read'" to pick the wirulers win top priz.es in the Plckeroo. a """""' plllce prize o( l20 contest la lolnc Into the .ec-\n tome of each weei:'1 top Thul far, ln five weeks of in cash and third, fourth and ond hall ol itl bla;Ui 10-footb6.ll games. compeUUoo, women have won filth place awards ol $10 each. week ·aeasoo. •tvlth more_ en· two of the weekly contests. Auto dealen 001ponsoring triel, more dilferent winntn THE CONTESl' list includes the contest include Atlas each week and more prize all Preo and Jwl.i.or college ONE Ot.rr OF every five Cltr)·sler Plymouth, Bauer WASHINGTON (AP) -The lr''-1 mopey than .1n any previous games involving Orange c.oast winnen in the top five ol. Buick, Conn e 11 Chevrolet, most epectacular atellar-ahtht season. area teams. the weekly standings also bas Costa Mesa Datswt, Dave in more than 11 centurv wUJ Ljl ~:'t!:~il:l The reader particlpaUon Officials believe this may been a woman -five out Ros! Pontiac, Johns & Son '"materialize like the star <A contest is co-sponsored by tbe 'be ooe reason why so many of 25 for lbe first five weeks Lhlcoln Mercury, f1 I r a c I e Beth I eh em a r 0 u n d Harbor Boulevard of Cars women -many of them, of the Plckeroo season. · Mazda, Nabers Ca d 111 a c, The Mariachis are coming -to Pier11 Chtlstmas." the Na t Ion a J dealers of Costa Mesa and perhaps, mothers or retaUves The contest offers JI top Theodcre Robins Ford and AeroneuUcs and space l_~_J_ __ _:__l___'•!".he~D~a"t:ily>:_P~;~10'..:t a~n~d~cha~Ue~ng~e~s ~of'_l~oc~aJ_I !':Pl~•Yf0:'~"-=-'""~m~to'......1pr~l~re'_o~f~IOO~e:"a~ch'_W<e~k~._1p~lus~_l:U~nl~ve:'.:rs~;1!y~O~lds~mob~l~le:_. _ _J=~~~============~ Administration say1. . ,.! Known as Comet Kohoutek for the Czechoslovakian ast'rorlomer who dlsco.vered lt nine months ai:o, the object could be as br1ght as the lull moon. Its head will stretch across 60 million miles of space. Its tall will extend across MNLl.th of the night· 11nw· iki< , ' • THE COMING oJ the comet 1 has. stirred intefesl an"l()l'l,2 -.~~~~ ....... ~1 ' Rtad of _,, ~JJ •tret"h aero•• 60 tnlllion tnlles of •pace. Order Out On Crimes • MA NILA . Ph.lll pplne! (AP) -Presldeqt Ferdinand E. Mart'OS Ms ordered that off ens ~,J qalnlt foreign visitors De · heard t>Y a mll ltary • ll'illuNI Wllllln 14 llollrt. #'"Thi Otdet eovut sudh crime• as a:rave thr'~at1! rape, a c t IC'--o llllcivlousneu, Mductlon and ti alavery. HAllOl CINTll S* MtrWr Clllllol' C..11 Mtll, COllfOl'lllll -"· 17141 979·221) ,. ANAttllM 11'11 t, INtlillltrll II • ... ,,.., Cot, ""' .... 11141 1!1<11H •as .,~ ... .,. ' . '24" '. '1 , ••• '"' •11 H ,. 11Nlo4.lo, ~ . , ..... , . :i/J,~fU.111 C(IS i1StlP1 AmM • 1tHC••· ettrratH•, 00d1••· ,,.,..,..,; -., ~ .. -Vf'9f"'1 I I 1.71115 .. 1.15" 7.11115. ~2 7.11111 .• '2495 7.51111 ; .'2895 1. .. 1u .~3495 l7511U .539" i1 .. 1u•i44•! 1u1111u'49'5 ----~·~ .................... __ _ UNIROYAL BIG CAR TIRE5 'KIEIS · IE PREPARED! a@}? J;&o IDOUIU ACTION SHOCKS ~:4!~. • ol'l•IUIU ltM. ltlt 1••. ""· 1161 •••• ltM, lftt. 1•. 1911 78/14 s39ts '34" .,01/14 78/14 s41•s 36'' .,I S/14 ITS: 171/14 2.01 171/13 2.11 171/14 2.31 P71/14 2.SO 155/IS 071/14 2.67 16S/.1S 078/15 2.94 115/13 1471/14 2.73 H78/15 2.96 I I • M ., 2 W ee DISC "'4• UNCLUDINC LABOR & LININSl llAKI IEUNE .......... L j :':I ...... All 4 IUlf .... ! llC •11ii ..... 11000 ..... AU 4 nil cn.u. 2 CAUPHI .•..... •25•0 .e If PUCI AU lllllll I •1 •• · s ...... • 11111• IAllWAIE .. .. .. • .. • • .. • .. . 8 80 . •lfPUCI FIE nu SHU ......•••..•.•••••... s4oo . •200 • •• n llAIE n111 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • • . • . . . . ' •400 v •CUAN I Diii UCllllC PIATll ...............•... "'•li•ACI FIHT Wlfll IHlllCI I nu TllT .......... •400 IMllC.lt-WltUOJDOl.IU '83 "'°" • "" t1•u ,.., ,..., ,,aculll If PAIATllY !ITAL ¥ALIE a lllC&llAl-llUllOI G ,. ... , ••• -m1111>11 '"" GET f .YERYJHlll $4988 IAC1I. "ICIAt ,.... ....... FOR 0111Y ..... , ..... AIO'L •• 1.77 . 1.73 1.13 2.0• 2.00 2.22 2.40 2.•3 r-r MAGS SPECIAL COM,t.lfl CA'S f78/14 f78/14 678/14 E18/15 H18/15 ,,-, W eel Align. A t.UG NUfS AVAIL . 'WIK UM( • sins lllClUIOtC ,.,. II' rncu AYAIWL[ 95c SAYE 'J.00 2:$49 90 hpllf S7.tf 1llp9ttlt. ftll 11rt IJ. llfl ... •IU 11111 tf Hiii J llCt pt'INU ti! IH'4ilf11Mil I. ltf• ,,,. nu '1.•s mu WJCI Yr!ID 11·ll 1S llr c•1l1111tr ,..tlcy ii ts ttltr 1trTt ,o •. I r•• o•t o 19llt lllo11 COIKt'1li1tf ,,-e4•ctt •r l ffthtt rtll4ot-lf II YI•, ,."'. t oll Olli' Oir.ctw •' (IMW1910f" Affti", Mr. s. At'OllllNI (1121 170·1727 or 2•1 ·1211. If wt tho•li41 1111 l•t of y•wr 1ho, 1 "l1i11 Otoe•" will M h-41 '''"""' o letw ,..11.,.,., .. tltt o4•wti11f 'tt. "' l+r••M .. ~wtlh Hltll i ... tctll. +tNtwlM COSTA .MESA GARDEN GROVE LA HABRA BUENA PARK FULLER'TON ORANGE JOOS HARBOR BLVD. (comer of Baker and Harbor) (714) 557 -8000 1 14040 Brookhurst (Uf'fltr WH1mln1,.... and 8rookhwflt 17141130·3200 1 2000 Whittler Blvd. !comer of Whlttlor ortd lsoch) 674·3"96 2962·Lincoln Blvd. {corner of l irteol" •I'd l("°tt) 171<1 826·lll0 1321 South Euclid 11 blo<• Nertt. of Rlv~lth Fl!"ffwtyl 17141 110.0100 410 North Tustin Avenue 1114 1 63!·4321 I • ' - Custom Gas Water Heater ,_;m;, _;.,.;;; __ -S. ass 1na , udget PriU , ,y.et f41mily .si~~s. Anode ,rod -r as i st s corrosion, assur.es ---~ -ro~J8r life.-·Eiiy-·to-inSfalf:- . Natur~I 911. · $5999 JO GALLON GRT-5 Year Warranty,on Te~k RION HARDWARE WESTCLIFF PLAZA hwESTCL'" PLAZA Storekeeper 142-7011 "NEW" SERVICE-SEAFOOD FRESH-Ll'IE-MAINE Lobster • • • Rown In Daily WHOLE OR HALF 98¢ SALMON _ ··-·-· • FROM OUR "NEW" SERVICE DELI Deli. Party Platter !SERVES APPROX. 15·181 $1895 From Our Gourmet Foods . , . WON TON SKINS NOW AVAILABLE MARKET BASKET BOYS & GIRLS SLEEPERS --"2p;~ Snap.Fastened~ Heavyweight Brushed CARTER SAFE FLAME RETARDENT CONTROL LENGTH SHRINKAGE 1 OBS IRYINE -WEST'CLIFF PLAZA WESTCLIFF PLAZA MON .• flll. 'TIL t SAT. 'TIL 6 SUM. 'TIL S BUTIER KASE SEMI-SOFT PAltT SKIM CHIESI w. Wiii Cut Any ~1 .. s.i'! Ret. SZ.19 Lb. Thl1 11 only -01 meny qual!ty dleeMS In ou~ 110<1t. T11st1 JI lll'lt be- for11 pure"-•· .JUMBO SIZE Roya le , F A.CEL~E. · 2~PL Y TOWELS · W~ife·Pastel·Decorate• •one-stop' shopping · at.its· finest! .Ol'at<MONOAY & TlillJ.RSOA'(_ EVENINSS,.'TIL 9 >-• ~ ' - • ~~lID-ilA~·~Psrvu~~ ' . 17th & Irvine e N9wport Beach e 548-0460 ' Men's & Women's Alterations . · Westcliff m:atlo_rs · Fine CUstom Tailoring ' Westeliff Plaza e Newport Beach ' ' Anthon'! j , SHOE ·SER.VICE 10-6 Dally Ghosts & Goilll,.. WI.II Soon '• if.,. ' Re-~Yaur Boots Witlt-The Nlf Platform l10k -., wUTCUff PUZA '" '17•• & 1m-..N .. port ...... 5 CONVINl!NT LOCATIONS e CORONA D•L MAR ).40\ e. Coa•I Hl""f. • 74 "ASMK>N ISLAND Nl'll'J*'l lhech e #I irAIMION SQUAI• Sant•·J.IY -DRAPERIES IU.._.) 95' P'R PANEL · Llnod. $1.35 · ONE oi..v s1Rv1cE _ MONTGOMERY c~~:~~~' ' Wf,STCi.IFF PLAZA N•w Hours: Mon.-S•t .... 10 p.m. Sundty l..S Muhr Ch•rie ' .. .+ ... _ ... For other ·fine . service • . .... . " DARRELL --DEDRICK'S TUX SHOI' DR. LOU ROY ' EJD~R. Ol'TOMETRIST • WES ~LIFF, MEN'S HAIR STYLING . I • .. AT BARKER BROS ., HUNT INGTON CENTER r • " I 7 ' . / l\" ,... • --l • ... . ·• • . .. . FOR YOU -NEWS IN COLORS, TEXTURES, SHAPES AND FINISHES A GUIDE TO GRACIOUS LIVING. AT MAY CO ., SOUTH COAST PLAZA • - . . -.-. - HOME FURNISHINGS ADYEllT!IEME~T Design Story Judy \Valker gets explanation of full services avail- able from Gene Andrews, AID, head designer for Atta's Design in Interiors, 1500 \V. Adams, Costa Mesa. Alta's Design JV soon will open a showroom in Design Plaza at Newport Center in Newport Beach. Both stores will offer fine furniture, custom uphol- stery and accessories, in addition to design services. Broadmoor -- 1\lexica11 /11iports Dave Phillips. manager of Pier 1 Imports of Costa Mesa. discusses details of hand-carved dining room ensemble with a potential customer. The dining set is part of spe cial group of merchandise featured during Pi er's l 's current ?ilexican Fcslival. Pie r l is locatccl at 271 0 I-Iarbor Blvd ., Costa li.1esa. Coast Music Opening Second Branch in Fountain Valley Coast i\lusic :\u. 2 1vdl wclcom!' Vount;iin VnllL"v·~ 'i\Taror Ge'irl!.t' &11!1 nnrl .\liss Fountain \";1llc.1 1111<l hrr rourl llit· l.(r;u1d oprnin1; Jlt:'riod. Coast .\!usic i\'o. l has bccJl locatrd ;it !larilor a n rl :\rt,1•porl in Costa i\lcsa for close to 12 years and nn~·one \I ho has drivrn by the store will ren1r1nbcr seeing the tubas adorning its facade. lo Gr<1nd Openinl? c:rrcmon1t·s1 .-------------------- slated for Friday at ·I p rn. The Aztecs are coming to Pier 1 ! Furnishing Broadmoor Homes in Turtle Rock were furnished by Ted von Hemert Interiors. 1be design work was ac- complished by Jerry Matson utilizing many of the fine lines available at Ted von llemerl , Inc. The fine displays consist of many fine ines, such as Drexel, Hen r·e don and Heritage. In the Broadmoor project. there are fo.ur furnished models. They are furnished in Oriental, French, con- terl\JlOf'MY and Italian styles, respectively. On fuml!hing the Broad- moor condominlums. every consideration was given to proper scale to obtain the oor- rect proportions in the rooms that have special architectural features such 8.!I vaulted ceil- ings, etc. For Weekender Advertising Phone 6424321 ,. AOVEiltTl$1EMENT Onng• Coast Oolly Pilot, Thursd•y, Octow 2S Davis-Brown Feted for Service A long recon! of outatandlnl Region manager, dwin(. a customer service bas earned recoenlUon. dinner meeUnc national recognlUoo for the held recenUy in Los Angeles. Davts-Bn>wn Co., Frigldoln Ill making Ille aw a rd , dealership In Coata Mesa and Bolland pointed out that. El Tom. · Davl>-Brow)I had lo qualJly '!ti& Davis-Brown eo., bu for; a ~ ·•PIMl.ne at leaat won the top serviet award 15 yeus by meeUng rigid of Frigidaire Dlvtston -of • ltlll~ ~Qr a.PP I I a D c e General Molon, the ~ ~<:e e 1tab111 bed by Award of Merit fpr 18 years FriJidaire I er v I e e bead· of outstanding c u s to m er quarter& in Dayton, Ohio. aervlce. The award was made He explained that t be by John 1-lolland, Pacific Frigid.al.re Award of Merit for ' oulltllldlng custOroer seq1co d i s I r I c t lltadquartera la Ia· bued oo • nwnbu ol re--euskJmer servtC. ICtiyJtlel," qulr<ments. be aid. "'Die cfta.lera:bi~l -bave ·._ DaYis-Brown,. witb $tOr'tl the _.-aWllldo lo\'lard located at Ul E. !!th St., tel'Viet and cuatomers: ~ O>st Mesa; and 14 s 1111 lain a thorougb.ar.f conUrillOUs Rockfield Road, in El Toro, tralnlng pr o g r a m for has been a Frigidaire dealer ¥f'Vlcemeo: ma i O·I a 1 n ac-for 18 yean. curate ter\1Ce reconb; malfl.. 'l'be 'ettyic.e ·nfanager· of the lain adequate ~· abop flnn is Jai:k w.-of Coot• facillties; ·have ab adequate Mesa. He ~ads'~~~ staff tn"'°tory ol ll'rit1ldllre parts; 10! 17 applf.t!lco • ,... .... ctans, render out :.iot. w.amurty' 1eledronlc tOl;hnlclims, Ind in- itel'\l\ee, and ~rate with stallation peo'Ple\ ' The Great Si . ' r \ ' SAVING REE ENDS SATURDAY Brand New FASHION MATE• zig•zag &eWing macJline Offers ;i': the zig-ug acc.omplishments, built· -in blindstitch,and theexclusivc£_ngy• front drop-in bobbin. Pluspush~utton reverse con- trol, dial stitcil·lcnglh control, and fabric set- ting diill for a wide variety of fWic weights. :::--:::-~ ~"-' \,\~---~~&di ~-...h~~ ~ ~ ... il\ta "'° .oca·scaca SINGER Sewing Centerw and partk:lpatk1g ApprovedOealers For store nearest you, see the yellow pages under SEWING MACHINES. Sinter hu a llbertl t~de-ln po(lcy. Also, 1 Credit Plan Is .1v1Jl1bte 1t Sln~r Sewln1 Ctn1er11nd moany Approved Dealers. •A Trademark of THE SINGER COMPANY Copyrl&htCI 1973 THE SINGE.~ COMPANY, All Rl&hU Rese~ed Throu&hout the World. SAVE 20o/o ON CUSTOM UPHOLSTERED SOFAS LOVESEATS . AND CHA IRS ·SELECT FROM AN ASSORTMENT OF VELVETS, VINYLS, LINENS ~ND NYLON FABRICS ATT.(S DESIGN IV INTl!AIOR fl'UANl8HINGa The new music i<lorc is located in lh(' nrwly con-- structed Fountain V a I 1 e y Plaza. Refreshments \\'ill be served :uxl mu~ic by 1he Fountain Valley High School Stage Band. under the direc- tion of Frank Barnes. "''11 bt' offered lo the public along wflh orher surprises. I WE MAKE HOUSE CALLS A 1r!p for l\\O to Jl j1\.\·t111 And i;rx trips for lwn 10 S:ui rranclsco "'!11 !)(• ret1tured 111 L----------==:..:::_ _____ .J 1 • '• A.t.D. INTERIOR DESIGN "ILl~HDNC: ••&•1•11 , ' I RIVIERA HAS CONVERTIBLES 'FAR AS THE EYE CAN SEE' IN COSTA MESA At Lust Th1t's How It Seems in Big Showroom on Bristol Street Convertible Sofas Useful Items .. ""O\I EllT15EMENf i\1c1ke Ship Ashore . Here's an interior decor that's a natural for the man's wheel on wall, are all that are needed to get Orange Coast area. Just a litt~e imagination and a very nautical feeling into this cozy corner. The The convertible sofa is, un- questionably, one ol the best furniture va.Jues a v a i I a b I e because ol its unlimited uses. C.Onvertibles save not only ;pace bormoner. m -- di how elf M (. t ti electri• •·• p•oi·ect d-·ating ,·deas to the some authentic items, such as sbip's.1lantern (left wormy chestnut woodgrain paneling by Marlite ncr prou y· 5 5 8 a ic au oma c ............. cust' omer'.-v'ou ••em· ''led lo, __ fo_r_e!r_o_u_n_d_) _a_nd_'_'s_h_ip_'s_cl_o_ck_'_' _m_o_u_Q<_ed_in_h_el_m_s_-__ h_el_!'_S._too __ · T_h_e_se_a_v_i_ew_?_It_'s_a.!'_ai_·n_ti_n!· ____ _ Newlyweds on a sma11 budget can use a convertible in an aparhnent for both sit- ling and sleeping; families with children and limited space use convertibles for visiting relatives or overnight guesU; teenagers wanting a "living room" . in t be l r bedroom r i n d convertibles ideal fur entertaining. , ' The list ls endless; m livlng room s, guest rooms , b e droom s, dens and playrooms, the convertible sofa gives more performance than any .other furniture available. nie name "convertible" was coined by Riviera Manufac- turing Company 18 years ago. Riviera, in effect, became the ooovertlble specialist. Th e company was unique J .a y.ears ago. It's still . unique today -by being tbe ooly company In tbe world speclall%tntl In convertible IOfas. With 40 dea>rater lhowrooms I n CaJlfmlia, RJviera offers the public tbe largest selection of sizes, styles and fabrics on the market pill.! the highest quality constructloo available. Costa Mesa is the home d one of Riviera's largest showrooms -located at 3015 and most extensive showrooms -~located it 3015 S. Bristol St., next to South Coast Plaza. Owner Max Geff. 12,00l).squar&-foot showcasie of The Showroom also features ... •• ,- beautiful room vignettes and accessories, such as tables, stop in for a cup of coffee designs specially coordinated lamps, pictures, throw rugs and browse around the ex- and accessorized thal will er-and accent pillows to romance citing showroom and I e t <!it& any-room·~~<lecor with sales personnel Riviera present iLs finest to theme -whether for bome_:::ipr~epared~~~lo~coo~rd~·~Ula~l~e~~~~::'.:::::::::::::::::j-or office. _ -Geffner has an exceptional r..~~~~~~~""!"""!:~--"" I~ 11~ ~ld~dd~,~~i:n.~ HE-RE*-lle· · ~ :e; furnishings acc.ented by vast THERE ~"""'a Z~;"hlm asthe 8bes~.!,'; &.:. ~II~ =-~ specialist" to consult when one ~ ~ plans to decorate a new « ..._. old home, mobile !pne, apart-w HANG IT' ~ ment, oflioe or coovalesoent ~ • • • • M ·~ir Riviera concept· of~ Kilims and wall hangings ·fro m the looms of ....... merchandising also is unique. ~ the Polish master weave rs will give warmth ~· I Where the average department ~ and beauty to your walls and floors. or fumiture store will . offer a V selection of 10 to 20 COO-...... Colorfut, contemporery, ell wool, ...... vertlble sofas in one or two ,_.... ...... sizes and three or f.our styles, A large selection, 1i1es to 517 £l?2. Riviera offers a selectioo of ~ ~ lllO to 1,000 <!onvertible sofas ...... in seven sizes, 84 different ,_.... ~ styles an<1 hundreds ot fabrics A -ranging--fnim glove-soil ~ vinyls to easy care Hereuloos ...... to plush imported ve1...... -By offering such a vast ~ seledloo, Riviera provides im-~ mediate free. delivery instead - ol the wual waiting period. - 1be constomer does not pay sne, ~ more for all this and at special ~ . " ~ sale times Rlviera prices drop ....-. . , ~ ~ . -even lower. ,_... •· , . ...... Also included in the ruviera ~ . • · .. ~ C.OSta Mesa ShowrOOm is a~ ~ ~ ~ ~ vari~tY. of conv ertible ...... ~!'*!:~ .....,.. fumistnngs -corner groups, ~ __. ;,"'E;,~~~J:~EE 0110110110110110110 ., ~ • A beautiful arrangement for)Olr bedlOOtn Artefacts by Henredon ' I There's simply nothing to compare with Artefacts, Henredon"s brilliant collection of bedroom, dining room ond1oc.cosiooal furniture. If you love a contemporary look, yet value fine craftsmanship, this collection is sure to inspire you. Artefacts offers everything you love about .c~temporary design. The mixobility. Motchobility. Versolll1ty. But, Artefact s des igns ore also a solute to the hondcroftsmanship of the past. These bedroom pieces ore crafted from knotty oak veneer and solid ash, fini shed in Weothermork, a cool , mediurn brown hue. Chests, dressers, even a knee-hole desk ond on ormoire are designed lo bunch in the arrangement of your choice. To truly appreciate the se and other Artefacts designs, you must see them. Come in lodoy. We think you'll agree, it's a beautiful orienlolion. DREXEL-HERl1AGE-HENREDON-W000MARK-KARAS1AN ----- 7eJ ""'flfAle'i " • l~TERIORS WEEKDAYS & SA TUR DAYS t :OO to 5:]0 FRIDAY "TIL 9:00 NEWPOR t BEACH e 1721 WESTCLIF~ OR llo42 -2050 (Open Swnd•v 12 .S:lOI . LAGUNA BEACH e )45 NORTH co .. sT HWY IOpe11 S11nd•v 12 -5:101 494.6551 TORRANCE e 'll64t HAWTHORNE llVD. 111.111• -l\DJPg " ~ . . .'{} _., -COME SEE OUR GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION I RIBBON CUTTING . CEREMONIES WITH THE MAYOR OF FOUNTAIN VALLEY••• MISS FOUNTAIN VALLEY AND HER COURT WILL BE THERE TOO. REFRESH· MENTS AND MUSIC, FRlliAY OCT. 26th AT 4 pm. BUY NOW AND TRY FOR HAWAII!! Coast Music #2 Is open In Fountoln Valley and to celebrate. we're slashing prices and giving away a fr-trip for two to Hawoll 11 Just come by either store and take advantage af savings Ilk• th"• - DRUMSTICKS Wood Tip ' ' HOHNER HARMONICAS . ~ . ~" GUITAR STRAPS REG. $3.95 Bluesharp was $5.50 NOW $1.35 NOW $3.95 NOW $2,50 Morine Bond was $5.25 N'OW$3.65 (all keys available) CLASSIC GUITAR STRINGS REG. $3.30 NOW $1,50 All other guitar strings 20% off BUY NOW AND TRY FOR 6 TRIPS TO SAN FRANCISCO In addition to these savings and the Hawaiian trip , Coast Music Is giving away 6 round trip tic kets for two to San Francisco, courtesy of Air California. One trip for two will be given away each week of our grand opening sale. Come by and take a look at the savings "!'f• offer -like these - --ORGANS-· CONN ORGAN A tremendous value for· our Grand Opening. Brond new Spinet with rhytt"lm and ovthenlic orcheslrot voicing. See this argon immediately. We ore offering only o few ot this lantostic price, SUPER SPECIAL $679 .. AND THESE FANTASTIC GRAND OPENING SPECIALS 'ESTEY SPINET , le9. M9S.OO ...................... ., .••• KINSMAN CONSOLE, "01 ............... . 'YAMAHA ORGAN, le9. H9S.OO ....................... , ... , CONN SPINET, 1119.$795,00 ·············-·············· $ 299.00 $ 299.00 $ 495.00 $ 595.00 YAMAHA ORGAN , ....................................... $1395.00 Franchise dealers for: CONN, THOMAS , YAMAHA ORGANS --PIANOS i&oblrr & <!Campbell Heirloom 011;1/•ly Pianos Since 1896 For our Vrond Opening Special, we have selected on e11quislte Italian Provinciot Con1olette. Finiihed in Distressed Walnut ta enhance the most discriminoling home. •••· 9B2.oo NOW ONLY $699.00 •CROWN SPINET, ........... ···························· $ 395.00 GULBRANSEN SPINET, •••. ''"·" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $ 389. 00 WHITNEY SPINET, ........... ···························· $ 495.00 'SETT ERG REN GRAND, ::i~f.1::!·::d· i~~~~i1i~;,;.·4 ............. $1295.00 BRAMBACH GRAND, ::i~:.i:::·!:i•~~~~u~;.:.·4 .. .. .. ....... $1295.00 Check our large selection of new a nd used Grands from Semi·Concert to Baby Grands. We ore the most complete music store In Orange County and now we're In 2 locations. from beginner to professional we've got what you need I 10·6 Friday 10·9 Sunday 12-5 COSTA MESA-Corner of Harbor and Newport 646-011/ • FOUNTAIN VALLEY-Braokhurst and Son Diogo frwy .. across from the Fountain Valley Drive·ln. 963 -6733 •FOUNTAIN VALl,EY STORE ONLY Collectors Fighting 'Prefabs' • • -ti.ln,.WU.t may plll off u a l1i6j0cttht ln!tlnct, a lucky few ;~11111 H a lli~llme '"""""'"l· tol '\1te art of oollecUnc 11 an antidote to the modem world 'J 6f p.r e fa b, here-to-day-ion• ~tttomorrow Wltenct. If' i-Collecton, whether o f &f ven rugs or elgbta or old fireplace bt , have much in .fif .. common. One obs erver l mClaatned them 11 a group ' I tbirted by "enttmlum a tln tmm capodty for ~ '1filibtl a n!lued atlltude about order." Al a result, their ~ ;florna 1n1 deeply personll ~l 11111 lull ol lnterut. lttfh '!be Vlctori.anl, our first r1d:.nce1ton to grapple .with the ol. a technological -plzed the hwnanJ>. di Yilue of "thlnp." 'lbeir •1 =··· \lert warmed by a ~ ion of per1onal Ill · -abllla. 'lbe true oollector is always ••!rlt;n the look-out for interesting 'b1lfem.1 and objets d'art. A junk r'r' 1bol), a flea market, a house «i Nie, an e1cluslve anUqut ~! lfallery are all equally happy -,ll1tidnting ground! for hla or ~!!tW imaUable curios ity. ~"''"IDd In band with the col· ,.., J;dor'a pleasure ln the search ""ii-lili er lier j)leuure Ill ~fl~ay. A true oolledor does "'.~ !loard biJ posoeasloal. but ·>:-~ l!IYl!ll them .. vi.,,, '~10.: touch, -t0 talf about. Ar· t•i bngtng great and small flnds is often a swOOtem for novice .;i:~Oollecton. Kenneth R. Vols, -i~t dtsign director for Henredon ilrrllfluntiture Industries , suggests :,<itevenl guldellne1. · ~ i 1 Group similar ob j e c t 11 :t *tDcetber. Whether it's a col- nf rtet1on al pipe Of of majolica . china, putting like thlnp '"ll~eu.er enhance 1 the f'td"M!lpll'ate Items. Even If one ·J<1:.;ltem ls far more costly or i'ill!rve than the others, viewing ~1ct~ ell In rtlaUon to oqe f"T"dnothcr give! each individual trf ~ece an added dlmeosJon. ·;' '·'"Group together different i;'+"fj:ems with a unifying themt. 4:· l collection of glMs ob)tcta, ·r ff-r om Danish c r ys tal , candlestlc"ka to Vlctorlan sal t ~ ce.llan, could make an Ill:· ·~,. trigulng atTangement. 11lt ~It 't:Ommon bond of t h e i r l"!r.'tlinatfrlal -glass -would 111l'"hotd tbe grouping to;ether 1:-'~vlsually. , .,, ~ Choo,se a JrOminent dlsplay :;:pa. Henredon'1 glass-topped '· ;'1'"&1!9 1table, for examplt. :iit'~u1d be a natural lhowcase '~11tor a oollection of small ob}ets 11d'art like pi llboxes. Bookcase.II. '1· ch1na cabinets and etageres ""'1~1'·are other naturtil display ~; itnters, T•helhtr for a ool-1~ !ltctim of 1he\111, English china :"11or antique soldiers. ' . ·,,. Place dlsplays in uneipe~ed {.,1.platts. A basket coUect1on ~.:,•could be htmg above the sofa ~ ,:,ifatead of the usual artwork.. .,·1,Jtenredon's brass and wrought • .J ,.Jroo biker'• n ck would be an eyetatchlng spot f o r ~ • JiisplayinlJ a ttOCkery or ; .• 1\aDdmadt pottery collection. ;•.j,And 1 door should never be .,.,.j.gnored fo r framing a col· . Jectioo of braSI, of tapestriet, .•. '.¢old prints. Whatever the individual col· .,.,Je<:tin g penchant, it \Vi 11 ·~~automatically ~rsooaliie and " · .enUven a hom e. Saying "these ;.1,Ff! a few of my favorite I \hinp" goes a long way . : , towards llu manlz.lng any en- , virorunent. . ' Old Dowry Chest Now Reinstated At the turn or an earl!tr •.. century, the .seventeenth lo ,. be e:iact. in New England " Seaport towns a young girl's • ·•'. 1.engagement \vas celebrated by h:iving 1he men in her fam ily 'r1shlon for her a dollT)' chest. · Since engagements ·were as ~··long tis a year or so (the · .. •ltngth of voyages or the whal- ··: • ing <ind clippe r shlpel ghe had . amplP. time to fill the chest · 'with linens before her fiance • " returned home. • "1 This dowry chest became ·; the most Important piece of ' 1 ru miture in her new home. ~ ~it~ true Yankee thrift ii '•,f,'Sdapttd easil y to any room :i.•'Wlthln a oolon\al hom e . ·•' leywood-Wak:efield, !he oldest J•t'lfumlture manufa~turtr In the country under the samt faml- ~Y:~managtmtnl since ii.a foun· .. i ifll In 1128. has re-Inst ated ··~.. orlf{lnal Massachusetts t ,. dbwry chtM. for modem-day .... ~brides. Its dlmlnuitlvc stylin g provides lhrct d rawer s ;i.''leparaled by the traditional ... ,.,~r1lng r11ll." Fashioned of 1· 'deeply grained plnc. It h1' a heavily sculpted sallery 1-0p . • • \- I I ' 1 \ • • i I I \ I ' • \ l • l . \ • • • j \ ' ., ,. I • ' i . •\ . - \ . \ i \ I ' I \ ! ' ' .\ . ) ' ' • \. ~ • • ... ,..:: ":,. /)I> ' ' ~ . r • ' ·'It .. ' • •. f,\( ·, ~ . .. ,' ·t f;,,~ )r l;•r r,, . ' . . ._.,..;;..., ... country I ivi ng. Th is is the look, the feeling we believe in for fall. Come, wander through our furniture galleries. You'll see what we mean. Encompassing so much of that Southern California feeling you love -it's your environment ... warm,.casual, yet elegant. The mood of a country manor complete with a four-poster bed. Stately grandeur, inviting your creative talents when it comes to the bedspread and complementing drapery panels:- fiv1>-piece Henredon country English bedroom in solid peca n and seven-piece Henredon dining room in dark polished oak and .oak pecan veneers, includes lraditional fou r.poster bed frame, two night veneers, includes an oval !able, four side chairs and two arm chairs stands, dresser and mirror $1877 malching armoire $719 Henredon with upholstered seats and elega nt ca ne backs $1805 matching ri ch lovcseal in blue, yellow and while floral fo r a beauliful accent $793 dark oak cab inet with grill doors $865 luxuriou s matching buf.fel $589 Shop daily 10 a .m. to 9:30; Saturday, 10 to 6; Sunday, noon to 5 MAVCO • 1 • • Th • • • .. " ' • f i ' ' • • Thursd1y, Odobor 25, 1973, Oronr Coalt Dilly Piiot ! ~ I •·rzr.i ~ ._ ··' , Vf' Ut\. .,~ ;;i ·, fvtJ l I · \ • 3-p<. !IK!ional Bunkor Hill ~~-: ·t~ J =~~~1::~~ ~~!_~.....:__ l livlog room / .M.J V'\.'A<· Vim our lnteriOr ~ ~ sign SludioJ T' our. ~ho~­ grul •• , for wur , i.,.;,.. C:.11 Mi)' Co • 1 100.y or visit .1ny of Fumiture · Cil·' . . . ~ • ·t 'J •• " ., I Country dining with a traditional look. Richly polished oak-with cane accents and grill- work doors on the ·lcabinet to give dining a special elegance anytime. The country com- fort· of your living ;oom, from the natural outdoor feeling of weathered pine and hand- woven fabrics to the charm of a rnore formal setting filled with cotton florals and detailed occ,asional pieceS'. Each room a special creation ... reflecting your kind· of country mo9(1. furniture, avail. but not shown in all stores looking Forward for Fifty Years three-piec" sectional sofa in a beautifully designed hand-woven fabric imported from India, its neutral beige tones give a rustic country look lo any home $1215 allraclive accenlS include a large square cocktail !able in allractlve ponderosa pine $219 matching console $.229 .. Bunker Hill living room pieces are covered in a lovely co non floral of crea m. ru st and pale blue with a chair accent in rust moray velvet, sofa $479 loveseat $355 chair $299 lacobean siyled Counlry Engli sh occasional accents include lamp table $219 cocktail 1able $319 South Coast Plaza, 3333 Briltol St .. Costa Mesa -546-9321 MAVCO -• HOME FURNISHINGS lS Tableware Counts-.- In Buffet Elegance, pretUnea. femln- lnlty-it'1 the look of aU..OUt allure for clothes ttlia aeuon. And these marvelous new eye- catchers are both }oveij to look at and easy to wear. Today'.! hostess is llket; to find, for instance, that :her favorite evening attire ls a soft, floaty caftan with go- anywhere adaptability. ,She may dress it up £or the theater with jewelry, or wear it, unadorned, at home. Either way, it gives her t bat something-special feeling that characterizes fashK>n right DOW. And in entertaining, she's likely to adapt this look for her tables, too. Elegance "1th ease -a something • lpfdal atmosphere -that's the mood of today. And with easy-onrtbe- hostesa buffet entertaining ao popular, many a womaq Is newly turning her altaJUon to the tableware she •s for it. It might be said for ~et tables in particular that QIJ81i- ty, not quantity, count!!. In flatware, for instance., a minim.um of place pl~ is needed -and If there's any buttering of bread or tolls required. It's a job best done beforehand. Place forks for the main dish, dessert forks for the saalad or dessert, -~nd teaspoona for coffee -PfiJs, of course, any serving p;.tces required -can see ~sis through mo.!lt buffet meals these days. '· But if the number ol ~ace pieces required is small~ the effect is great! For notilng is more the center of focus on a buffet table t h a n flatware, usually 11 h ow n center-front and lined up Jn- soldiery rows. ~· The popularity of buffel enetertaining ls, lndeed one of the reasons why ao many women are acquiring sterling silver "mini-set!!" these d,ays. The place fork-dessert 1fork· teasp>On combination is , an ideal way for any woman to &tart the set of tolkl il/m that C8{l turn even tbe, pit .,,...Uy-\)laonod ._., ~· af feet\.W: occukm. , I Nowadays. loo, the, 1 ac- quisition of sterling 11, no longer the sOle prerogativJ! of the blrde-to-be. Every wpJnan loves beautiful things ....., ;and whether she's a care.er, ,girl furnishing a brand n e w apartment, or an older, mar- ried W()man wholle chfldttn are grown, she shares in ~~· mon the love ol beaiJ7.lfti1 tableware. ._ How doe! she acquire this treasure? With more and ·~ ' women joining tbe. labor f.Orce. the self-purchase of loUd silver is on the rise, adding to retailers· And even without the help of her own earnings. she'll find her set o( ste1"Hng steadily growing if she •Jet11 relatives and friends >:how she'! serious about c:olleCtlng It. A 111--ord to the wi9t': works uimders! Just as a new d re !Is transforms its wearer, the ad- dition of sterling on a table can transform its atmos~re. Unlike the dress, however. sterling'.! a fashion that Heve r goes out of style. A fitted black and White coverlet, a n embroldt.red fabric of nylon, can male 11 dramatic tab!~ topper. Repe:iit this on the armolre dooni for extra excitement. Make seat pads of brick colored wide· wale ribbed nylon for an im- portant color accent. Paneling Cut Down Tr you're planning your first major h o m c hnprovement project a:nd need all the-help you can get. consider a .. Tnini paneling" that is only ·one- third the size of a conventional 4' x 8-root panel. l\fost homeov.'Tlers c a n ' I q u 1 t e visualize themseh·eii coping wit h the large panels. so Marlitc's 6-inch -a.root planks make it easy for one person to panel. ln addition , these pre£inlsh- ed hardboard planks have tongue-and-grooved edges that simplify fitting . Special rQet111 clips and "'allboard adhesive are used to secure a strong bond over old \Valls, other solid backing, or new rnming. Jtarmonlz.lng moldings .also are available at local bullalng material dealers. Each earton of "mini p11n~­ ing" contain.! ste~by-step In- stalla tion instructions. ,Onl)• regular carpenter's tool1 11re needed -ham1ner, aaw and level. ~tarlite planks are avaUohte In a wide range of color", si mulated wood.eraln1, tex- tures and pattern•. , I nter11atio1111I S ettin;; ... OVt:llTISIMfNT mirror·is from Hasi Hefter an dthe glass and bronze cocktail table was imported by Bullock's from Inter· national Collection. They can all be seen at new Bull· ock's in South Coast Plaza. Bullock's Costa l\·Iesa put it all together in this room settin$ which combines sofa and chairs upholstered in quilted polished cotton chintz by Dunhill with pieces and accessories literally from international sources. The secretaire is by Union National; the ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-" -Purniture -S1zea-Up for Comfort Some chairs and sofas are shrinking to fit apartment and cond-Ominiun\ livi ng, while at the same time others are gro•'ing squashy and fat. In either case, all arc human scaled. built to sit in. One manufacturer of tradi- liorwl furniture shows scaled- down apartment-sized sofas that are five inches narrower alcxtg with chairs that are shorter as well as narrower. .A.nother, with concern for more comfortable seating. lo'A·ered its sleep sofas two iocfies. For greater comfort ~s .,.ell as durability another manufacturer offers four·\vay polydacron 'AT.llp, two \ayt'rs do ub le -wrap pt'd on a polyurethane core. Others offer big, flufry dacro.n cushioos and backs for super-con1fort , while some use comprl'~sed foams as upholstery fillings 1hat yield h.1xurious comfort. There are recliners with electric mechanisms and one that contains a magazine p ocke t at the side. Furthermore, smaller tradi· Uonally-styled chairs are ava ilable with swivel bases and rollers. 'I11ey look like conventional, formal chairs but be.have like rockers or recliners without the footrests or slayback mechanisms. Eighteen feet of U-shaped con\'ersational seating i s featured by one manufacturer that also often low slung 1nodular seating units. And. for ultimate comfort in dining, there ls a high-back banquette designed esptci.ally for the .dining room. Unquestiwbly, comfort is in fas hlon. hence the populari- ty oJ the squashy look and of fabrics and vinyls that not only look soft, but feel soft, too. TQ accentuate the reeling of softness, at least two grou~ ings Include g I a s s or laminated topped tables that 11re upholstered in suede-like fabrics. Traditional styles are more comfortable and more beautiful than ever before, as are contem.porary chairs and sofas that boast the natural look. Discreetly simple lines · emphasize beautiful fabrics, wood, plulics and metals. In fabrics the handwoven look is important: w hi I e stripes dominate in all periods and styles. Other fabrics are lush, soft and luxurious. All, including the new usable and abusable velvets are easy-t~ care far. \Vhite vinyl upholstery lends comfortable. elegant luxury to a room in a chair with con- tinuous chromesteel framing that has cork side panels. The American Indian look:, also. popular in uphol s tery materials, i s particularly handsome in a contemporary sofa with exposed stainless steel framework. Cane continues to b e popular. One manufacturer specializing in traditional styl- ing uses cane for the back aod sides of a wing chair and for a Cabriolet occasional chair. Dimensions in living Home Council's Theme The theme "New Di· to the changing tastes and mensions in Living" ex-needs of the consumer, the presses the phi1050phy of the Home Furnishings Council is Home Furnishings Council, making the consumer more which originated and is ex-fully aware of the multi-billion eaiting debut '73 as part or dollar industry's contribution a fi ve.year Debut program . lo his romfort and v.·ell-being. The theme relates lo In 1965 charter members, lifestyles, new designs . colors the Carpet and Rug Institute, or materials, new dimensions the National Association of in floor coverings and bedding. Bedding l\tanufacturers. the ~w dimensions in scale and National \Vholesale Furniture in other decorating elements. Association and the Southern ... oveameMl'NT Or•nf9 Cont Dilly Piiot, Thlll'ICNy, Octeb1r U, 1'71 Traditional Room Offers Warm th One of the strong contenders ror fa vor today among home furnishings scllings is tbe traditional room. In COCltrast to the p!aatic, metal and glass environment of our space age, tbe lradi· tional seltinl offen a vlsua1 warmth and re I a x e d at- motipherf: that is charming an increasing number, f r o m yq__ung ~ Lo seniors. To complement Us lllf- &ested room arrangement vt- ing acceuoriu that emphasize an elgbtttnlh ~ntury theme, 7.enlth Radio Corporation has tkveloped a campaign cheat ltyle co)or television tel - to aerve u the local point of the room, moclt the lllM ... !lttpllce. The campaign c h e • t , especially po pu I 1 r ln Napoleon's day, wu Ultd by French and Eo&llJb olllcen In far -lleldl · to -'""" ud · protoctper-.lelfteU. alone or together, divide and conquer • • • • -... • • • • • ... ' , . - • ".f-• •• • • -· . " • • • • . ~ • • .• at a very special price- At this price, it adds up to the Biooar YOluo of the yeor ••• standing head and shoulders · above the rest. Richly finished in black. with extra thick shelving, this wrought lron etagere can stand by itself to divide a room o·r on Ofea ••• as co.mbination ,..._through _ _;;,.boo_ kcaWjo_r spei:ial dis lay.!!.._ Wh_,..,',,,'-,,'=-'.,'"~--+-­ can you talte such a stand for et.gone• or only S 129? Stand1 78" high, 30" wide, 14" dup. I . • • • • •• -------AT AU 3 STORES!-------. SANTA ANA STORE 1110 N. Main St. Phone 547-1621 (ALSO PASADE.NA & POMONA} This year, as their energies F u r n i tu r e Manufacturers are directed toward improving Association. joined by leading the program, participating furniture mart buildings and manufacturtts and retailers l\\'O publicatlons, sponsored are becoming more consumer the firs! industry research con~ious. -~"'~o~jec;t~,~"~·h~;c~h~wJa~s~re~~~·e~wted~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Born of the need to make in san Francisco in that year. the indust ry more responsive ~-------------=---------=-=-=-=-=;;;;;;;i;;;;-=~~ ·l ' :~ ' ~ Fl 1\E FllH~ITllHE I Collections of Oriental Antique figurine,, c:abinels, alter tables, lamps, wa ll panels, ivory piec.e1 etc ..• An •ddition to our r•qular line of lop quality orient al furniture, beautiful screens, e11otic Tientsin rugs, unique home accessories and qifts . NEWPORT IEACH : Fashion Island H•11rt: "'••·I Fri. 'tit •:JO. Delly 10 '• S:lO Clffe4 .. u •• , ..... 4717. LONG BEACH : E. Hill St. at Redondo St. H•utt: Oally I 0 te 6. Cl ... d Sw11day. 597 ·1 JSt "'A.JOI CllDIT CAllOS ACClf'TIO ' beautiful walnut wicker tiffany lamps . stock for immediate delivery 1n A. B. c. D. FLOOR TABLE HANGING WALL WICKER WICKER WICKER WICKER LAMPS LAMPS I.AMPS LAMPS $3995 $2CJ95 ~CJ95 $25 96 ,..u_ I ..r111e1. •• 111¥J. BANKAMERICARD • MASTER CHARGE SOUTH COAST PLAZA I MALL OF .ORANGE Co1t11 Mesa Orange 540-7777 637-7777 MCDIYll!ii•R·-·FURNITURE .... I T 0 m gu I i d; sl In co of 60 i • sp du SI ;, bl A sh lh '• in p " B 0 n ;n of b " p; n i. I A " d g t p r " p ' • 1Nn.o.ty, N eu: fr oni Dretel The bedroom suite is ~aped Bishopsg~~e and. is one of the newest designs in the .Orexel line. This mag· nificently crafted deslgil of the Georgian era of r.:nglanct's "country gentry" is being shown at Chand· ler 's, 1514 .N. Main Street, Santa Ana.· ' I ,. . j . , ... 1 • ,_ ___ . ' I r < ~ I• ' ~ .l . : ' .. '-tl •"1 : ~ t" •·. l . l t ,: .t ...( •• ' • f ·t -' - • CUSTOM DRAPERY SALE! 20% OFF FAIAIC LAIOll AND INSTALLAT ION Our decorator trained expert will bring a full selection of samples to your home • never any obligation. HOME FURNISHIN~ 1 o SHOP AT HOME OR IN OUR DECORATOR CENTER PHONE 835-1936 ~~~NW ENTZ CENTER FLOORS !Armstrong •CARPET o DRAPERIES o UNOLEUM •TILES 1303 E. Edinger Santa Ana o COSTA MESA Qu~-n:-si~~d-BeJ5_,_.~=::::::_~ ~-3015 S. BRISTOL ( Corner of ) Bristol & Baker (-2-!l!;OCKS SOUTl'I Or:--SA~ DIEGOl'REEWAYJ PHONr-979·5040 . . ~ . -\ Get :Starring Role The master bedroom is measuring up to the bigger gueen-size bed with a new life sty l e and bigger dimensions. The growth or the main bedroom and Us romprehen- slve concept as an area to live Jn as well as sleep in is con· commit.ant with lhe popularity of the queen.i;ize bed. The 60 x 00..inch bed size bas been given a starring .role · this spring in the bedding in· dustry's "New Dimenisons in Sleep" program. It is featured in retail stores throu ghout the country as the modem dQuble bed. The last fiV! years which Ji.ave elevated. ~e qu~ 10 ·it::> current staUJS as 1HE' ddl!· hie bed for contemporary American couples also has shown a dramatic lhcrCase In the size of the 1n as I er ' 1bedroom·and how these rooms are used, -not just for sleep- ing but for leisure and privacy, adult style. A r e c e n t homebuilding survl!y ' show that master bedrooms in best-selling model homes throughout the country have added more footage than any other place in the bouse. The average mastCr bedroom is nine square feet larger now, mee.suring 196 square feel, ac· coriling to the Professional BuiJder r-.1agazine s u r v e y . Other bedrooms hav e re- mained more or less constant in s~ except that 60 percent or lhe new homes have three bedrooms now an d four- bedroom models have in· crC'ascd 25 percent. Homes themselves ha v c picked up 107 squa re feet, now averaging 1724 square Sil ver 1\1 11kes l-loJ11e Cr1Stle llome is his cnstle and silver is l'legantly :ippropriate for that castle and th(' Dad within . A s1\ve~·inc ta ster on a chain. \1 inc bottle coaster, barbecue dish and ca rving set gift the gourment. Ciga rette box, let· ter opener and litnited edit ion plates depicting everything from peace to lhc American lndi;i n arc pH rt i c u I a r I y personal an d unique ly special silver gifts. ·STOP ·1 SU~ FADINfi1 ~ INFRA·CHEM SUN SHEET ln1tall it yourstl~ 1t only 69 c sq ... ft. 1/J price of hiving if in1 talltd feet. and the biggest share of the Increase in total footage has been handed. to the master bedroom and the .number of bedrooms In a house .. '"Bedrooms now C4f11prise a total of SO percent of the en-1 tire house, reflecting pre!eren~ , ces of home buyers. ' . Other rooms have bad less benefit from the !act that homes are indeed, bigger. Builders have added?only two square feet to kitchens, four . square feet to family~, alld six square feet to dining rooms. They even h a v e deducted li square lee! from living-dining areas and living rooms as such have lost nine ~Ui\e I-al. ._ , It may he coincidental that uv· g rooms have been shorn o( the nine aqua.re Jeet that master bedrooms have gained in the last five years. But master bedrooms have taken on living room !imctions, seal· ed down of course, and grownups use them to gel away from all thi t domestici· ty and to g~t into a relaxed mood during hours of leisure. The master bedroom is the only place in the house where adu1ts -and their interests in music, television, and reading -are sacrosanct. ~ a result. the main bedroom now has evettything from flreplaces to SOias to dining areas ror two. And it all start· ed when the bedding industry came up with the queen and otbcr supersiie beds to sleep bigger Americans. The onset of the bigger bed got interior designers and home builders interested in the master t.Mroom's paten· tial and adult retreats for llV,· ing as Well as aleeping emerg ed . I This has jiven master bedroo(M;> bet'-r looks. ex· paod~ us~ ar1! more SP,ace. Conveniehces: iilso have been upped -more than three- fourths . now have adjoining batbm:Wns. nearly half have twin cl08els and one-fourth of the model home master bed· rooms come with dressing rooms· An even more opulent future is sha ping up for the master bedroom. Already. six percent have balconies or terraces and three percent have their own firtplaces. .~ I ,_ INFRA.CHEM SUN SHEET STOPS 91 'lo 51/H ;ADING AND'Ss,,, HEAT STOr IN POlt DIMO .. STlATION 2706 HARIOJl,_BLVp. f:OSTA MfA 55,•0tOO Dally "TH 6, Sot. 'Tll I Clo1td Suntlay Celebrates Grand Opening o§ Orange ALL 4 SHOWRO OMS JOIN IN TRIS CELEBRATION! o.fy Rl¥1ar• offar1 7 •I•••. t• style•r 2,000 f1brlcs, itla Rl•l•r•'• axclu1iv1 5" extra · lan9tt. mattra\1 for 1uprema 1l11pln9 comfort. Mori cu1torn f11tur11 plu1 Frff lmmadi•t• 01li•aryl • • • GIFT & REFRESHMENTS OPEN SUN DAYS 11 A.M. •• KING SIZE TIANS1TIONA.L LUXURY s1.·.p1 2, plu1 .n Rlvi•r• •xclu,iv• r.1tures. 9u~,ull.Y-wml EXTU. LIMGTH Wingb1ck colonial 1tylin9 with box pleeted flounc•, in a 111ty flor•I .,,,.. $199 Metchin9 ch1ir aYailabla · , •' " "' -J F R E E •DELIVERY •SET UP •WA RRANTY 5 P.M. • DRAWING FOR RECLINER A. CASUAL CLASSIC IN mRA LrNGTH 1 lr•n1itio111I fl1r1 in rich, wor 1 ry·$199 . free Hll'Culos plaid or •iny. • IC'ingJii:a redin.etf 2 polition with Yibrmor • A•oi1obla in 5 colon IUY' NOW for XMAS DfLIYfRY • 2 pOlition r.on.r cornpM+e o"!r.;;&:i with htot.,., W:irotor, rock• ·:~ $99 • 3 po1ition K'in;ti11 recnner with fitt&d •trap plow orrru ~r~'$t39 °'-" Hi-liser sleeps 2 to rnony . woy•! Puls ovt end up ' to become 2 , single b•ds > M 0 l\ double! . .,., .,..,,.., pric~ sss .•149 L'JX "BEDDING KING ~~ BONANZA" PE~::e I 1 .,..;,_ pdktw <a•e• I 2 k1"91""*""'1•• pillow• I !q .. ilted lt..t •f"•Dd • .....,,.,., top ANO MH""' .Mell {I "'J I Kinar'q,...1niae -1111 Ir-witll •a•rofl anlen I Kin 9/q.,..n1i1e blanket • ................... boo.cl QUEEN SIZE }{)() Posture Real $ The m1tttress supreme • wilh pre·bultt boraers, rigid construction and thicktv quilled lop. Firm bo•· springs have corner guards !or &II· round support. Includes 10·Piece Rlvil!ra Bedding Bonanza P21ekage. t PIECI CORNF.R GROUP 2 IOUTtllS-W ID!llAIT TlllE $120. Moiettic comfort, inMr firmness.. ~$ button-free, ridily quilled mattress. plus 2 stabllittd no-sway bo• springs, 10-plece Rivier1 Bedding Bonarui:i Pack;,ge. llYlera's Twi" or Full-Sile Set l•lllCn • S&lrt. hU!l- llr ., ...... • lrul rn• ~t• ll·IOU ·-· $120 W£EKOAYS, 9 30 TO 9.00 e SATUROA , 9 JO TO 6 00 I SUNDAY 11 TO S ......... ~ .. BUY NOW START PAYMENTS IN FEBRUARY 1974 -- 3015 s. BRISTOL COSTA MESA ORANGE 2l9l N. Tu•tln 998-4570 51\NTA ANA 127 S. M11 ll n ·547·6519 PHONE 979-5040 BUENA PARK 0531 Stanton Av•. 127·4400 J ~ • ' ·• ' ' l • Culligan~s Man Ser For Action CUIUgan InterRationa! <;om- pany " • worldwide orean!ta· -lion whose business Is water quallly lmproveml!nt. The company manufactures products and designs systems ror the treatment or water and waste water, specializing 'in potnt~f-usc waler treat- ment. "Hey Culligan ~fan" is the recognized c a 11 f~r ~istan<:! whert!ver water' 1s a problem. Founded in 1936 by Emmett J. Culligan. lhe C1>mpany is publicly owned and is listed on the New York Stock Ex· change. Water conditioning and treatment i n v o 1 \' e s the neau'tralization or removal of natural and man-mt1de im· jlUtities from water supPlies betOre they are used, in 01'dcr lo proVide optimum quality : willer for 'each . specific use and application in t ~ e household and in commercial or indUstrial establishments. \Vaate water treatment in- volves POiiution co n I r o I throUgh the removal or im- . pwities whi<;h ~~ve tieel'!, ad· ded to water dunng use. ' ·It may also in\'olvt: 'the : recovery or \•a\Uable , im· purities from waste n·ater, as ell . .ig prov!.lfe ~ef(ective ~ter co nservation through reei.rcula.tion and reuse oJ the treated y,•aste y,·ater. Products and ' s y s t·e m s . marketed by Cullif!an ind~ desalination, dcionization, l'f'- vcr.se o s m o s i s. chemical feed, and 1vaste y,·ater treat· ment systems: \\1lter soft· enen. fi lters. deal~alizer!i, ' a.nd clartfiers. T h e In ternational );lead- . quer.ters of Culligan is ~ated in Northbrook, Ill. -the com- pany h a s manufac~rlng •··facilities in Northbrook, Dt : :oakbrook . Ill .; $·&n Bernardino: Sheridan ·Park. Ontario. Canada ; ?i1ex!co City. ~fex,: Brussels. Belg.; and Bologna. Italy. : Eyerpure Inc. a wtiolly~wn· , cd subsiQ!Sry, 1ocatt<S· in . Oakbrook. Illinois. manufac- tures waler quality control equipment aDd supplies for the . food servict: industry. : · A,pplfcatlons include . c oin-operated vendJng machines. manual SQft-4ripk . d.lspemers, aod b e v. e r a g e preparatioii in .restaurants. school! a n d instituUOns. Everpure also leads in · the dc\'e\opment of water 'ecm· ditloning equipment for the iransportatlon field, especially fOr aircraft. Culligan markets Us water and waste "-ater treatment ' products and services thro.Cgh over t,000 dealer!J in the Ul\ited Slates and Canada. and distributors in more· than 75 , coontries outside the United States. Th.ls \.\'Orld"•ide organization : not only fr.O\ides engineering know-how and technlcat ski.II, but alJO pro\'ides cOntinulng service. It co1nprises lhe largest "'Orldwide service organiza· !Ion in the water treatment industry. operating in Europe. Lalin America, Africa. Asia, and Australia. The Culligan \Valer Institute ls an International authorit~· in the flelds of water and y,•astc \Yater treat~nt. lt i! a r~gnized source ft>r' public information in fhe arehS of y,·ater management and con· · scrva!lon, y,·ater pollution and pollu!lon control. and 11o·ater qualit'' improvement. A major service of the lnsl itutc is that of supplying ad\·isory and co n su lting ser1·ices and informational materi;:ils to educ a I ors . research er. s. editors. governmental agencies. and industrv. The institute n1 a i n I a i n s an&l)11ca1 and res ea r ch h1bor1tories. A comprehensll'e llbrar v. and detailed reference fa<.'ili 'ies . Its lahoratories hil\'f!: analy ted !amplcs of nearly ~ million w a I t" r supplie~ rrom all ov!'r the y,·orld. The Cull igan \\'atcr Com· pany or Oranj?c County is located Ill 1911 S. 71-lanchester. Anaheim . Frank \\'atkins is the GcnC'ral Sales 71-lanager. See the brighter side of life along the Orange Coast '" Orange Coast RounClu One of the ftalur!S that make Sunday raaDAr in the DAllY PllOT ' . ' J . ' . .. ru • I ·' . .. : t --1 I . - .. -·· . ' --...,., T""" ,, .J .; ' .. BUY IT BETTER AT BA'RKER BROS .• because -we havit4h'e know hciw 'to bring yo.u'sbtas with a special brllllance, ra1:.a fra~­ tion of what you'd ~xpect to pay! Our own made-just-for-11• designs can be yours in one-ofthe richest fabric selections ever assembled, irt 'colors lhat blend beautifully Witt'> e-iery- thing: lroln Traditional to Cohtempararyl Choose ·reg. $499 "Wilshire House'' design in tufte? back c'escent, .loose pillow back· quilted, and tufted crescent tuxedo. Or pick reg. $479. "Huntington House" design in· tufted tuxedo. tuttetl r.oll &•!11, or loose pillow back crescent styllngs. \Jee rout Barker Broa. FLEXACCOUNT •.• for shipping•cOnvenlence . .. ~ Expert delvery H\"llce and set up at no chtro• ConaUtt with our decor1.tti.g atln , •• sm~rt idea.s at no ch1rg9° ' "· ' . . . ' • •. ' • • ... ' . • Huntington Beach -in the Huntington Center, Beach Blvd. at Edinger_..,i 892-4405 Santa Ana -2522 North Main Street -547-7651 Shop Sunday 11to5, Monday, Thursday and .Friday 10 to9, Other Daus 10 to 6 ' 'I I ·- ' l ~ i I :to.. . • ,. ''·· • • c ' . ,. '. I •t-, . ~- .·{; ,, l • ·• ,r.. ,.. -1 ·-· , . .. . • ~ I . .... 1 .•· . . .. ., ' --' . ' 1 J i /.'! I • I I . , • I ; . I • • I . : , .. " . . ' , • • , -,. , •• .. ·'r . I ·f~; ,• • • I . ._ ~ ··~ ···.ii . . ·, / '·'·t, .. \ : ' ) i . • ! -•, \~; -" I ' . • t'( .... o¥ • • ,,. .. 1. . r:,,,~~-~i ···~~· for . bur . I ~~·~ttQflday ~l)iti'QJ~ • •'· ~f~~Y 1f ;~r';?~R: ~; ~AR~·~.~Jd.s ~eea~le.we · ~:~db"ib)Y hay~· the, lJ!qst,YiJi.l~iancf.) te!estin\·group j,pfiltnJn:g ·s~ts you 'll f\nd ; fjblrilt~' ry,fi{ieSt·niakersl . .~~ta' a'.~~re.-prlced set iibm'the-.. · st pop~l~r ',_;:g~j(~•-a~d 'th! pc~Jst 1 1n1she~! .• 1 ; ·'. ·~· ~it;;.,fi ~J;;!.m;.C~~g(of· ~arl~ American in ruggell,, reliable cou·~f.y piM five. ~if~·set. • v ' ·' . ' . •"" _ .... ~~;. ; Regularly $439, now $3W -_,......er • Matc~lng. 56", cliil\a· Reg . $399, $3511 ~:_2:,_:··~: -::::~~~, -~~~~~;~~~·:;:· :::::::-~=:-·~1K!d~ :t1ngfitness to limited space areas.,,, ,, •• "'~· ' ~ ,;; "l''!JbOt;! ~~s\~~~<i!tly 1~~.!l ri~ yellow, with . q~?ee~ yell~~ "'.'!.P'~,9., 5:PC:: s~t. _R~g. $495, now $439 ·' Meclltef....i'eilri i:reates ~randeull;n a compact setting. · Smooth pecan finish. 56"x38" table, 2-1-2" fills, three . '• ~ · ... '/side, ;one atjn·e(iaii,S· ueh"?Jst1r;~' 111j.!Jr.et~ velvet. S·pc. set. Regularly $439, S3ff ~ 1 SP,anllh ••• bol~ al)d massi,vely e~(Ved in a dark oak antique finish. 68"x40" trestl,e t,abl~. 3-12" fills, iwo arm and four side chairs upholstprpd in gold velvet. I Regularly-$599, now $4911 . . Matching' s4" .. .china. Reg. $399. qow $3411 c;uatonhllble ~ dU(ing Octobf~ on_ty, 20% ott • • ,. . : " • , ·1 Huntlilgton_Beach -In the Huntington Center, Beach Blvd. at Edinger -892·4405 5enta Ana -2522 North Main Street-547·7651 Shop Sunday tt to s, Monday, Thursday and Friday to to9, Other Days tO to6 I ~ ..... . .. .. • • • • • • • J HOMf-FllltNISMIHOS f Libera tea' Carpeting ': Derignid" Americana face ·• · ~ hia:ew lo a lot or tlilnis this yeai: ind ror '•the foreseeable h(hue. Hippl!f, not all or them falJ into \be category <Of hJ&ber prices. : • Among the io<:reueo· tbai are counted on lhe Pl\JI aide or tbe ledger i. tbe 1ocr .... in -·-lliai .. Amqlcan fam.lUea: -are a· iOYlnl ..,. 'or ..,. hope 'to enjoy . within a few lbort ,.. ... 'Ibis is leadinc to Ii boom amoni produceni or leisure:- tirne products and promoters of leisure-time acttvlltts. Commentlqg on tbls ·trend, Ian M~le<ldn, deslgntr for Burl1nl1<>n House Carpdi. cited two unlooked-for side ef~ feds of the tel!lure explosion. botb. ol wbk:h he conSiders hopeful portents for t b,e future. • t Mr. lifeMeetin. a raftµ1y man, notes that most leisure ~cUvities are family oriented. 1.e., camping is something you do with children. Rearraqed tivlni schedules with more time devoted in the future lo ~ aetlvtti.., wtU tend to streni1l;ten m.1rrlage as J.D. institution,' he feell. The divorce rate, wblch has been ctlMblnf"llMhircowtJy and abroad. shoold !evil off and poeslbly _begin to dedioe by the <lid of !be de<ade, ht pNdil"ls . • z.. Among the ltisure-thne activities most faYored by American women Is Q o t h9osekeeping, ?.tr. 1ttcMffkln notes. · "~ldom dOl!I ·one ·find ·.a gb'I. ,.who tnjeyl · • a t b 111' I 4ilhes," he said. "Mott people Uke· a.cJ!aJl, house, or at lust an orderly hi>use,-a h\iUiC that lpokl -cl~an. But:UM lea ttme t!fq .speod oa cteanJni,. waa· ll!I· furnitw-e, oi vacaumli!c carpe~ the betttt ·Ibey like u::·· ' .. · Pomilni t b l a · ·dlrpciloft. Bur"•"'-·-~"'• juat~"'l":""" . a ·eouem":n ol that "'des!-'-' ~.$1~'"~= al .ull • . • . ..,,... > •• ·~·6'!'­~ mainltnMCt by the ~wile," Afi". Mtbfeeldn s;qd. "We're wartfAr for llberauOn in anottier ·mean- mii!uf ""1· by lllviilfhtr bao:t AOhlt of tilt time ,that ahe •·ould have bad fu spenl:I car~ ~ for ~er carpet.I." When the designer, tint fQcused. 9'l ,~• . ,e • rp e.t i:naintenance are&, he 11'a. fi~ed Jbat• I dtii'1' aofUttoa woU!d be !Ounil lo an • ·t titioit al, . . e.isµ., d'jl e ~loiY-The act.ual oolu· tiop. 11 demonstrate-I In ti)< l)eW coll~ of easy.ate c~ts , bJ the oomp'any·; 'ts the tesidt ·of tnte.racUon ·of three prtodpte factors : an im- proved fiber. • major ~haote In --and awfaOt tA>tllre "' the -· ll)d .• new color treatment that com;. bloea many cokn b1' ·a tii'lglt carpet. Of the tbret, ·the color treat· meo.t ii most .dramatic and significant, ln 'Mr. 1.fc?iteetin·s estimation. •.:Atixes of color are three-.to- four Ume1 as lmportilnt a3 they were a few year3 ago," Mr. ?-fcMeekin said. ''Ttch· ri!ques of C'Ol.or ·planting and ·TA'.X-dyeing. in v.'hlch com- pute.r~trolled j e. t 3 ol dye.stuffs mo,•e acros3 the. surface of the carpet lo crt:ll\e appsrently random p1tte.ms, tet us create de.signs that look like lie-dyed fabrics or hand· knotted Scandinavian ruga. But for the. ltisure~rle.nled housewife., the. important thing to remember when sbe't ac- tually buying carpet is tbat mix-es of color hide soiling." "Eye. Pletz.in'" is a TAK· dyed shag that very ef- fectively demonstrates ~Ir. ?.fcl\tee.kin's poh\L Rich com- binations of aqua. turqoolse, and 3e.t. ire.en: sunset gold , burnished copper, and leather: and oyster. charcoal, teak, ind black art fa sh\onabk, ytt demonsti:-a:bly practical. The. change In con3truction and surface. t~ture of can:iet.s cited by tbe designer ia a second elemeat that hu t)le ~ffect .of bre.akin1 up 1 soUd surface.. Now, df'\lcate.ly form· ed Uile.3 of 'low, loop pile ere.ate a tracery dr.tii'\ that plafs •croes the fact cf ' 1 carpet. The. new plu3he5 art textured plushes. The new tlulg.s are lectured shap. Tbt result, once again. Is pra~ ti~al, c re at i a g altrattfVt . fashionable carpet that b\du ~1iP& tdd .. wtat. 1"t most algnlfltaht cbanre I!' the boJlc carpet fil>er to !><CW' re<tntly ind "' ,,. .... Ill ·thi· ~11 ·that •re ,,,. rtf l_!\C tn stc>rl!J ·l\ow Is an .lflcio'H. liJ ·brlQhlntH that II ~t l>tlhg built Into aomi'of tlie.'J\1-lon . . . -......... _, ......... _ Franz Pa/and Using nalural wool fibers, awa rd-win ning designers of Poland weave "kilims'' and wall hangin gs whieh feature human figures, floral designs, anintals and patterns with contemporary appeal. Reversible and Swin ging Sc <11e \Vicker swi ng frs1n outdoor~ can brighten up an in- door corner fo r an 1n1ag1nat.i\e decorator almost as fast as the zipry wa tl covering by Jame-" See· man Studie~. Inc. This rlesign 1s ra!lerl ''F'lower ~leadow" and it's part of the l·lere .t\nd 'No\V col- lection. BRANCUSI F 0 R CHROME 3 Gli'-55 lABLf5 e 01NfTTf5 8 f,o.R $T:.'.>O LS e WA.LL UNITS e BPASS Hf ,t.DBOAFJS O FUB MIRRORS e WROUGHT IRON e l TC BRANCUSI 181SS EUCLID ST .. FOUNTAIN VALLEY moth-proofed £or life, these pieces made from band ~pun and carded wools arc among excl.usive offer- ings of .. Jere & 'fhere in new South Coast Village, Costa Mesa. Plenty of Choice Interior view of Gold Key Furniture Warehuuse, , Harbor Boulevard at the San Diego Fre.eway, Costa Mesa, offers some idea of immense size of showroom which operates on what Gol d key calls brand new ''A .;.... \)" . mercbandisihg concept. More than 200 ·vignette~ individual rl>Om settings, complete with accessoriest . offer custoJne.rs a ehoiCF. /Of djscounted merchan~ d.ise with a "'decorator look." I MOVIE C*MERA BONANZA H CAMERA 5XCELLANCE AT A SAVINGS YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO MISS m .Sl . 602 e ASA Ran11 16-250 • Fait t/1.7 Lins Zooms l1om 7.Smm e Wide An1t. to i Omm T1 l1photo • Automatic CdS Eltclrlc Eye with ' Manual OY11rlde e El1clro°Fld1 l1ls You f"ade,Sc1n11 In & Out e Fast & Simi Mol lon e 81t111y R1char11r Included 144.95 MFG. LIST PRICE 224 .50 . Sl 802 • ASA Rani• 15-250 • Fast f/1,7 Lins Zooms l1om I mm • Wide An1l1 to 48mm Ttlephoto • Auto1111Uc CdS Eltctrlc Eyt with · Manua l Offirldt • fl1ctro·F1d1 Ltls You Fade Sct nts In or Out e Fast l Slow Motion • E11tt1r1 R1char11r lncludtd 176.37 lllF6. LIST PRICE' 279 .5 Sl 1002 • F11l f/1,7 Lens Zoowi1 'ffom C.Smm • Wide An111 to i5mm Closeup e E11cl10-F1dt Lets You f ade Scents In or Our , • CdS Automatic Electric E71 with Manual e Manual 0Ytrildt • Slow or Acctlt1al1d Motion Control • Batt117 Rtc~rftr Included 2a4.9s Mr&. LIST PRICE 349 .50 SOLIGOR AUTOMATIC LENSES ARGUS !l!!!!il!N~A~ KODAK AtORE POCKET CAMERA OUTFIT LITTLE CAMERA -BIS PICTU RES 19.76 OUR RES. PRtCE 24.95 T4 ·MOUNT .cam.eras et ceter1 snYANIA MAGI CUBES CARTON OF 3 ~ 1.19 SYLVANIA FLASH CUBES CARTON OF 3 ~- 79¢ AUTO 90 ·230 ZOOM f4 .5 • 11 El11111nt Zoom e An&11 27· IZ 154.97 KODAK AX15R ca mer as et ce ler1 KODACHROME FILM 9~ 135·20 EXP . . ~ 1.57 STL SINGLE LENS -REFLEX WITH fl.I LENS, CASE l ACCESSORY SHOE STL 1000 • P1oltt1loru.I Dlack Flnisl'I • lnltrc/'1111ct1blt Penta"' ..,111 Coil non ltn1 • Doubt• CdS Tl'lrw-lllt•Ltl'IS Mettllnc Sy1t1111 wilhtfllel•r L•ck Siritch e Metil Cop1I S~111 Shutter ·· J.•1/ 1000 S!IUll1t ,.H1 ,1111 ''0'' • Eltctienic Fl~sh Synch 11 J/UI Sic. 1 ;. • fff1ntl G1ound G\111 SPot F~111 in1 • I ,.~~es • Otlaytd AcUon Shulttr tltlia11 ! ~. .... e M-X S1nch Ou11tt1 Oft Sldt of C11ntr1 • Film in C1mt 1 lnllicai ·1 MFG.· ti , PRICE 249 .95 cameras et cetera KODACHROME 48. • SUPER 8 MOVIE FILM KEYSlONE STROBE 'wnH RECNAl~EABLE Nil:AD BATTERIES • GUiii• No. 40 I ........... , ... c •. Rteh•1•• In ZY.z Hot.Ifs e NtoD J'11dy Ll&Jll '*·25.95 OUR ,REG. PRICE $29.95 ;.rfl1 1 -·-· , • .,.?.r;,. ... f • •• ... ~ • . '· COM! 0.11 Piiot AOVEll TtSIMIHl I & .' KIDS IMAGINE ALL KIN DS OF THl~S LIVING WITH 'TOOBS' .,.. Par-Ollt..PUMilhl"" 0,.sig_, by tt.U. .D.L.E. A .. llablo Locally <· , I r • Village Siore Fe~turcs (Toovs)-. F{)'f' Environmenta~ Furnishing H.U.D.D.L.E.. Inc.. or Westwood Village, has opened its tecond interior furni shings showroom at South Coast \'illa;P tn Corta ~esa. , "H.U.D.D.L.E. dealg111 o/fer a rounded, peaceful alternative to~ sha rp-cornered harshness of traditional in- terior_ fu.nQtl.ing;!I_," ex~tn& JimiJiuU, the energetic young prelddmt and . founder of H.U.D.D.L.E. (short for Hull Urbe Design Development LabOratory, Etcetera). "~1 oJ. our ·interior tun.mliqs share the same rounded simplicity," says Jim, "wtiether their function is that or i chair, couch, table, bed, booWieU, room divider or p1ani stand. They come in 'vh.i.~ or neutral colQJ's, ac- cented with bright, lively oovalngs and pads. They have a kfild of timeless simplicity tha~ .erves as a per(ect com· plameot to the changing com- pleqty of the people \\'ho use them or the plants that sur- round them." "Jim's ultimate ambition is makes them virtua]ly im- to design and build full-scale puvious to scuffing, chipping, urban enviro.nments," says and moisture. Penny Hul l. vice president of "We're particularly proud of our 'TOO:bs'." says Jim. "It's H.U.D.D.L.E., and mother Qf 8 whole line of furnishing their two active children . "Our dexlgned just for kids. 'Toobs' interior furnishings were arc not only super tough and meant to be just a step along the lway ; something to keep super practical, but they dou· fOO<t on the ·table. We started ble as 'play 3CU.lptures' a5 OOt by taking orders du"-" well. Our bunk.beds, for ex· , the • day in o.ur Westwood ample, art/ much more than showroom, then building-our beds. Shaped by a child's im· furniture dw-ing the night in ' agination, they can bet'O.me a converted quonset hut. Now anything -• house, tralo, \l'e have two showrooms, a rocket.ship or whatever." .ni ce big factory and we're H. U. D . O. L. E . home shipping orders ;i.11 over the furni shings are available in country." i a wide range of colors, fabrics The Hulls have spent more and forms. For those who like than three yea rs designing, to actively participate in the building and rcfini.ng a whole creation -0! their living en· system of pate.Qt t ~ "en-viro~~t , a com~let.e line ol. v i r o n mental flirniShings" sem1-flrushed furrushlnp and which use ,fiberply cylinders cylinders is also available. made from recycled materials The n cw H.U.D.D.L.E. as their basia elemifnt. The showroom ls located across cylinders are then 'IT,jturatly Crom South Coast Plaza, reinforced with ~ special beneath the South Co. a s t plastic "'coating mater al which Village flagpole. "UST OPENED! I H.U.D.D.L.E. Round-About Bright en Rooms Every once in a while a comple~ path around a room. bright new 1l)·le emerges to 'Ibey are available in tWQ p.d new i.e.tt lnto the r;ou.Uoe brilJJant colorwaya : a com· of livlna'. btnaUon o! green, red and Round-Abouts, new w 111 blue, or mauve, orange and fashions, are IUCb a new style purple, both on w b l t • lhat they will be brigbleolng bacqroonda. '!be "straiiht" La tenon ror many yeua 'to and "curved*' atylea come ln come. They~• described u Z4-lncb oquano pane11• They a ''nifty new way '° pull 1 may be cut from the panel room togelhet' with sti'le . . • yoor very own style!" and placed q:alost a com- Only • ,.,. almpl< tool• .... needed to dttndl )'OllT Wl!IJ in hl&h faahlon, and these !>Nulle& an budget.priood oo you wm'l be havlnc an es:· pensive Oinl:. Your • I 11 c:overinc d""1tt CID provide co•tt lnlonnatlon about -.... kicky nil(-. Round Abouts from United· plementary colored wall or DeSoto's Bravo Collection, are pasted up in the 24-inch pleces. large-scale linear and circular · The wall ooverlngs are vinyl designs which may be ar-coated, scrubbable, pre-peted ranged Into lnitlals, words, and strippable for e a 1 y giant bull's-eyes cr travel a maintenance and installation. One dellgbtful room 1tttlng Clft dlspl13 WU de91&nod by Emy 1-r, NHJl'L, for United-DeSoto 111lng the Row>d-Abouts. Decoraton u- ed Danish steel wire furniture by FlilJ Hanten. a NI by Unlka·Vaev, and lamps by Luten Clarey S..rn. THIS& WALL DESIGNS ARE CALLED ROUND-ABOUTS , Feature COLLECTOR'S ITEMS Exquisite, exoric, exciting ... these arrfully fashioned creations from the deft fingers of old world craftsmen. Rare in every concept and characrer- isric ... and the kind of discriminat · ing quality you would expect at Chandler's. ! Hand-fashioned ob jets from oversea. Come feast your eyes ... ESTABLISHED 1892 THE STORE OF FAMOUS NAMES l~H NORTH MAIN• SANTA A:\A 541 .. 391 I HOURS: Mondoy noon Iii 9 p.m. • Friday 9 o.m. Iii 9 p.m. Doily 9130 o.m. Iii 5130 p.m. • ./. / • . , . ADVU TISEME NT •DVEATtSEMENT Otlnp CoHI Doily Pilot, Thurtdoy. O<tobor 2!: F-ro1n Cm1terb11ry Gr oup The three words that describe Henred on Furniture's Canterbury group: Bold, Architecural. Romantic. The chest above is all of those with its bold geomet- ric lines, its warm glow of pecan wood and brass door and drawe r pulls. Avail- able al J. H. Biggar, 1110 N. lt1ain Street. Santa Ana. the Canterbury collection' includes alt ·the pieces needed to reproduce faithfully an entire bedroom of 17th century England -but in modern materials and with the gieam o! to- day's fine furniture finish. ( TAKE THE SAVINGS ROUTE ... CULLIGAN WATER SAVES YEARLY P'US ·% of your Cleaning Time & Effort Soft waler pays for i11el f many limes over! The U.S. Government •!ll'Mies •nd various research 1ns11tu1ion:; sav t•·a1 ro the average family the cost of combating hard wa1~r is over $16 a rnonu1-they break. 1! down 1n this fasll1on: Fully Avtomatic or STATISTICAL AVERAGE Sa1p: L1undry, kitthen, toilet , ...... $3.00 Delergent1, lyt1, bltach11 ......... _ .1.10 Sh1mpoo1, hind lotions • , .... , •..... 1.50 lottl•d w1t1r ................. , , , •. 2.7S Coffet, 111, foods, condiments .•. , .... 1.2S f uel .. . . .. . . .. SO W11ll1bl1 clothing, linen1, towel1, •le ... l .60 Plumbing rep1ir1 ind 11rwitt calls ..... 3.00 And not included 11 the value to you of the benefits of health and well being1 IF I CAN'T SAVE YOU MORE THAN IT COSTS I'll ASK YOU NOT TO TAKE IT. YOUR CUlllGAN MAN. ''\aY 534-2233 CUllfGAN MAN!: CULLIGAN WATER CO., 1911 S. MANCHESTER, ANAHEIM 92802 [.;.IL-l Tonk f•cl!ono• '---' Mission Vielo--11 Toro-- Laguna Hills Area 830·3031 San Clomt1nt• Area 492-3213 Living Use living plants a s decoraUve aids in your home. Plants with rich coloring and textures often make the dlf· ferenct between an attractive room and an outstanding one. Certainly, growing plants create an air of vitality, and give a feeling of care to any room in which they are used. But more than that, they can also be used to emphasize <Jr soften certain things about a room . If choosing lhe right plantJ for the right situations hu Plants Enrich 1Il • Decor you puzzled, here are some suggestioru1 : NORTH fenbachia, WINDOWS: llief- Pepe.romla or * * * * * * Get Fl oiver Bttlbs Under Earth Before 1st Rains PLANNING TO llAVE a bright colorful garden in Lhe Spring, the pride of the neighborhood ? For g o o d results. flower bulbs must be planted befcre the winter rains set in. Bulbs should be~ planted at the same time. Whether bulbs bloom early or late In the Spring has no b.!aring on when they should be planted in the Fall. Philodend1"1l. 'lbeoe pi.nls do to try: Coleu~ Oieffen best away fro,m d.1 r t-ct Dracaena, Philode sunlJgbL Palms. tlOIJTll WJNDQWS: Agera-1· ftlE GARDENIA, a en- twn. coleus, LDles, Cacti. !al .,.,_ favorite, -.,, up Full Ugh! Is the moin requisite I into a dramslic 8lld bsod3omc for these pi..11. I cielll<rpiece, acconting to fl<r.11 EA8T AND WEST WJN· ~· Olher popular 8'" DOWS: Cala41wn, t:ena, rangements whic_b rfi Ferns, Fuchsi~~ table to shoulder In ter· ·If your psrllCliar d rating esllng doubJ..p1oy.tncl the situation will lm~ ~ con-_9 ~ caroatioo ' ::ill dltlool of 'temperature, light its l:r1lliant Shdaes, adl-1 hte or moisture, here. are some delicate yet commanding red, of tbe more rugged varieties red rose. ORTHO SLUMBER Alg.1311.H Superb 1leep cornrort and lllP'f'', nvlngs, ell in the same great Manre11 Set~ 11'• an Orttio-and th•t me1n1 comfort. aupport and a bergainl Complete with Mattrut. 2Bo• SP<s '2· O•th<>Pg•k ""g"''" 95': NOWONLt : QUEEN SIZE SAVE SSO W'itll lllttr•, lol.S,.111&. Ortllf.hk TWIN SIZE SAVE $50 W!U Mlttftll, lox ~l llDWll Bonn. Reg. $179.9'129 91 ..... -•24995 Aeg. . • $299.95 ' ., ORTHO BALANCE AIJO. S271.15 Orlho's luJturloLIS Mtiltl-OvUted co•er and CrOWtl Flex Center tor added auppo rt combine to make I his Orlho King , $ 2 1 dream to sleep onl Complete with Mattreu, 2 BoJt Springs, Ortho-Pak & Double Bon11s. NOW ONLY QUEEN SIZE SAVE $40 WMh M1tt1m , BoJ. Sprint Orttoo.Ptl .......... s199e5 Reg. $239.95 '""'""' 91111 -Moth" 1 ... ORANGE 244S N. Tustin Ave. TWIN SIZE SAVE S20 Willi Mathm, 8o1 5'rincl DMll llorM. 'S9·m5 Aeg. $119.95 IJ::. NOW ON!15 QUEEN SIZE SAVE $40 With Mlllhm, Btu SprlnJ, Orth!H'll .,,.,,_ s149e5 Reg. $179.95 ' TWtNo,FUU 8AVE$10 Wrth Mltlrm, 1111 Sprkll~Wle S.-. . s7915 Reg . $89.95 " KING SIZE " OR THO FLEX• "-f. t1H.IS Now the dream becofnu a reallty ... ""re'a a gr••I King within your budget: atrelch Ollt and relax! Complelewith MettreM, 2 Box Springs. Ortllo-Pak & Oo11ble Bonus. N0~1.2995 ONLY QUEEN 81~ SAVE $30 With MlllrtU, 8111 fill Or1i.Pllt ·--"0985 Reg. $139.95•1 ORTHO-PAK & Double Bonus With Every King or Queen, the Ortl'lo-P•k: Fieldcrest No-Iron Top and Fitted Bottom Shells & 2 PU1owc11u • 2 King or Outtn-tlzaPillOWa •Mattress Pad • Metal Freme on Euy-Roll Casie rs. Double Bonus With Every Manrm Set: King or Queen-Padded Vinyl H•adbolrd ANO QtJnted Btdtf)rlld. Twin or f ull -Headboatd AND Melal FrllTll on E11y-Roll CHterL TWIN or FULL SAYE$10 • Witb Mttt1na, lol Sjitlns • ~ Bo!-. ' •5991 Reg. $89.95 : ~ ... ' THE NATION'S LARGEST CHAIN OF MATTRESS SPECIALISTS SANTA ANA & Fountain Valley 161l1 Harbor Blvd. ANAHEIM 1811 West Linc:.oln Ave, LAKEWOOD 41431 Candl•wood Ave. o.., 50 Storts to 59t'Ye YOil In: •' LOS ANGELES MOOf!STO SAN l'llAKCIS(O Flll!SNO SAH Oll!GO OAKLAN O I.AN JOSI! ,.~6Nl,1t ' ) ' '• !1cro11 l,o.., Or1n91 M1!ll Phon~ bl7-058t lttwt111 E11c1id a11cl •r•okhunt Av111utt !corn1r of Edi1191rl N1i t lo Zodv'• Jutl ••II of ,,d M11rt C1iidl1woocl Shopi l1crou fro"' L1k1woocl C1nf1r Ph11111 614-261 I IACllMl!NTO 1'0C:SON STOCKTON ,llTLAN7.-, .' SALT I.AKI CITlfl t' Plic11111 IJ9·4S70 allia!lt"'on1: 716.tSttf I sof fa low ms !po '!>• OOV lea wit is i ge ~: l>ri co es b " ho to bu lit pa no Ja F qu vi wl lo .. aa i w lh a ar I ci -. . . AD\IERTIS£Mf NT On Smalt Scale Because ·of popularity o~ condominiums and. a~art­ menls in many fast.growing areas today, furwshin~s are being scaled down to fi l easily into space avail- able. The new compacts in home furnishings, how- ever are not giving up style fo r size. Here's a din- ing 'room suite, complete wit h china cabinet, to prove it could all be put together In a minimum of space. The pedestal table is 52 inches long, but can be stretched with extra leaves. The set ls produced by Stanley Furnitµre. .. ' . . .. THIS SOFA OPENS TO MAKE A QU EE N-S IZE BED ANY TIME NEEDED New Sofa Prof ile-- Low Loo] lf you're looking for a slee sofa with spectacular fall •7) fashion appeal, the stars auguer well, for you. Galaxy ) a unique collection of six Hidc- A·Bed sofas has been in- troduced by a major manufac- turer. Bigger and bolder, in tune with tbe fast growing contemporary market, these convertibles "are a c t u aJ I y lower and mo7i"" coffi!Ortable. made possi ble the low irofile look with soft edge cushions, .J....1ong llne and luxurious covers. Californian and Euro-\ pean antecedents are evident. The new height and greater comfort are made possible 1 t b r o u g h a teclmological development by the oompany, ~ Simmons, which contours the co.sh ion over the sofa's front edge. ·All Galaxy models fea ture queen siJe beds. The Ra msey two-cushion style.£>sho,vn 8 ~I tfiM_ ~li!tln ; _the aza featutes a skirt dropPed from beneaih.1·the seat rather than fron\ below the· front teame · Torino is oovered in w ~est tone olefin tweed: i' Mans has a Chesterfield ~ arm..and &ody In beige with coordinating racing stripes on cushions: Saxony fea t ures deep tufting in a chocolate leather-like vinyl, and Cordova with an all-foam block back is in vinyl calf. Flowerir,).'g ~ - ~~allcover j'opular .. -Every year, in fact generally several times each year, leading wallcoverings tlesigners and manufacturers king out new ooltections that fpnge aJI the way from the . !'>st elaborate brocades to fie wildest of supergraphics t!td geometrics. And yet, almost every time. there's a gfuup of designs within each collection inspired by Nature, especia11y by the flowers that bring us never-ending delight. The · reason is obvio1.is - homemakers love f 1 o r a I wallcoverings, and w I t h today's scrubbabillty, it takes practically no time or effort to keep them as fresh as the day they went up.. But . it's more than that -the fact is that floral wallcover- ings are so tremendously varied, and adaptable, that they can be used not only 10 set the tone of a roo!11 . but also to create some special little nook. solve s ome particular decorating need. That's proven again in the noral patterns presented by James Seeman Studios, Inc. For a starter. there's "Bou- quet", a gr:lceful, li~ht-as-air view o{ \ulips-and-fr1ends, ~ll ,vith a watercolor touch 1n four basic colorways that seem to span the times of Oay. And by using "Bouquet" J9: form a litUe niche framlng .c: noor-to-ceiling. difflcult- lhaped window, plus a deep- wood chest. a bit of planting, they've given that "lost" spot a life of its own . "Flower Meadow" has a more stylized approach. The blossoms, leaves, bunches are all seen as ovals, circlet, now~ Ing Jines -definitely Dowers. definitely imaginative too, In jlur basic colorw11ys that are itrong, alive, blooming. Another nice thing -florals are surely universal. WltJ1 today 's inter€st In, and e• citement about, the Far Eas~ Seeman shows "Cathay•' wit) chrysanthemums, leaves, bu~ ;ill delicate In line. large an· small, detailed wlth plnpoi grace, Jn four colorways o -.Warning, glowing gold o uver l\iylar. avls •brown SAVE NOWI • • • • FRIGIDAIRE! Oishmobile can .be built in (kit available at ,iftro chorg•I. FORMICA* brand laminate work top. 5 cycles arid 1 aption includi~g Rinse. and Hold, Super-Surge washing actio~:Ea~y front-loading. See why it's wortn the difference. ............... · Keep your crew looking great with an electric dryer" " SAY.E NOW! ,$139 95· FRIGIDAIRE GMINI ENGINEERED BY FRIGIDAIRE AND GENERAL MOTORS Operot11 on ordinary household current, wherev- er there's o seporote 15 omp circuit. Dries deli- cate fabrics evenly. "Sorting fing ers" inside d rum. open tum bling clorhes to flowing Heal fo r thorough drying, Toke1 little space. Perfect com. SAVE NOWI CALORIC ULTRAWAVE New from Caloric, Microwave Oven, cooks in vp to 7.j '/. less lime lhan conventioncil methods! Cooks QxH bec:ov1• only the focid is hecited. Cook on paper, gla11, chino serving dishes, Na messy poll & pcin1 lo scrvbl A real Wife SoYerl SEE MICROWAVE COOKING DEMONSTRATION t· SATURDAY, OC,T. 27 • NOON TO 4 P.M. • IOTH STORISI 411 E11t Seventeenth Streif ' Dally 9-9, Saturday 9.6 646·1684 Da ily 9-9, Soturdoy 9-6 837-3830 Delivery and Exp ert lnatallarlon ' " ~-~EE J:@ Ow .....,. ~..,,, tr.Jr.ff 11pert, dt ll"r '"" lflll•ll yout ~•· •P1tll1ttc11 Cl(~ordlt19 M lee,.,.., tptCllktllff1. .NEW TOLL FREE SERVICE PHONE NUMBER ZEnlth 7.3437 I • • · · 1)1}!J1!J11}R RAN EVER! BlGGEI\-~Dl'Jl-lfJ ~ ??nd Aiii11ial~. 'Oran~~iNCGeSCBOOL coo., . a Theatre al 9:30 a.m. S . Oct 25 al Ed,vards Ne,rpurtCC1nel1n£,·eni11<r Col lege 1-lome tart-o . · · (I' Or·tn•'iJ 0~1s 0 . C Home to 11:30 a.111., (~aturl111" dSol7thern CalifocniaEd1 son . o. . I Sandy Kro(J 1, an , Economts ' . 0 f Economist Carol H~mZ., Food! Ca ndy! Floivers. Fr ee Gifts . Ji· ·I urds Li1\o Market• cz;~~ ~~lZE DRAWEG ovEN FREE MICR0~~~~c •. Co11rte!ly , , S 15 k. rr sessions. No'. 1, ' Other dates for ro~ ·in o R. 1 rds Liclo f\larkets Tickets may he obtained al ic ia RCA WEEK! SUPIR SA VINOS! 19'' Diagonal . ! = t(l(lflltf .. • 100% SOLID STATE featuring fl~chisive AccuCircuit• Module• ' . .. . .. Color portable wirh everything -RCA's Xl-100 $419 95 I Wid1...,"tl1 110• pich1" lvlN 111okt1 ii 1 •% tli"'"'''· lro~t·to· l>otk t~on con••nlio""I l ''" diogonol ll'odth RCA Get RCA XL· 100 viewing luxury in a table model 21'' Diagonal • Ac<vMarlc1 color "'onllflf 11111l•1 tunln9 • 1nap • r •• 1 .. plug.in "'cc11Clteui1ll "'odul•• • •onobout 1tand Opllo ... I. ••Ira Cf1ssic com bination -RCA Xl-100 TV in be1utiful Spanish • f11ll ·"- Sponi 1~ 1tyling plu• 100';(, Solid Stai. ..;,,...;111 plN111ro • Ullra·bl'ifhl pic1 .. r1 1111te It!' 1pa•-llnt tolor. We hoYe buill our bv1ine11 on sotlt· fied, loyal c:usto. mers. You mutt be sati1fi&d or we'll moke it 9QOCI . I~ HOM~ FURNISHINGS • TONIGIIT'S TV HIGHIJGIITS ABC 0 6:30 -"The Collector." Terence Stamp as a collector of butterlHes and Samantha Eggar as part o! his collection in this 1965 movie. lOIJ D 8:00 -"The Far Country," James Stew-·~ art, Ruth Roman and Corinne Cal\let head the cast of this 1955 westen1. CBS 6 9:00 -"Guess \Vho's Coming lo Dinner. 11 Katherine Hepburn won the second of her three Oscars in this light dra1na with Spencer Traey and Sidney Poitier from 1967. •• TV DAILY LOG Thursday Evening OCTOBER 2' ...... (tlif) "CIMU Wllo'I C-1111 it Dm- Jlft" (R) (dfa) '67~nctr Tracy, ~1t11r1nt Hepburn, SidntJ Poitier, K1tharine Kouititon. A w•ll·IO·do couplt, lilelon1 libtr11s, find their btllels put to th• !tit wlltn tllt!r d1uftlltr 11tums from 1 holiday with 1 prosptttf>ff husband, 1 b!Kk. In low. B ~ Cll @l m lro1sldt "House Of Terro?' When 1 youn1 eoupll mp.teriouSl1 disappear from I 'Muftftd·house PclrtY" in In 1b1n· 6oMd 1111nslon, Chi1f Ironside stls hilMlll up 1s tfle n••I vicli,._ Sh.i- on Glm i nd Ruuetl Wluln& 1uts1. Cil TH lolll OMs 0 ON TOMA, THE COP * MASTER OF DISGUISE ATIRACTIVE CHICK -llADS-IO-DOPE HAUL o @rn m 1 ... ~s11k•o 11r Dtapit1 1 'ttlltcl w1min1 from In· .sl)ldor Spoontr, Toma 11kn °" 1 pMtntr to h1lp •e1p track ot 111 attiiCtl'lt )'Ollfll womtn wllo m11 lt1d him lo 1 million·dol11r stash or cocaine. Skye Aub1ey, Jarid M•r· tin 1Jld Don Gordon 1uest. I Hiltltrin M .,.,. J M1• r.a: 1'70 (R) Y1ritdlHI Ytfpl ''°'I mo c -... I!) .............. ..,..... "' ....,.. m ..,.., Dtnr, .. : (C) {21w) ...... "De• .. Wlf ~t (oom)lO:OOQ @ fi 1t1DIEJi'NICfollia S1m. '66-Dkk Shawn lido RI)' JafllU tll'f D1visJr.li )o1ntd bJ Don Mims. Collum ' ' Don Rickles, Frtnkie Avtlon ind Ill...... Micl!tlt LH. n.r • ..,u.r e, .... illf.a-1 Lew lllCY Cl) !iji:,~, 1 """'" 0 THE STREETS OF SAN m I-·•~··• * FRANCISCO-BIG HITI UiMfllllt . (J) Drltfft '3 !i1J (I) m Strffb ol S.n fllfl• Eifu l llllNil ctlm "Hartm" Rick Ntbon ruutt (f) ~ I S tfle llad•f of I rin1 of JOlllll -irPrlMI' AllM' prostitllhs, an runiwa,s. who 111 ,,_-Ttlt fta~bta llttbl killed If !hey 1rt <HJ! of line. KIJ SptM bctf le111, D1rten1 Cm 1t1d L11111tt1 J~lllar-Wtllff' Ct'lllt SPl~=l •"The M°'*'J't Ptw" Thi 11-t'D tlll f/11 1 c:untd paw 1!1tt rala .,. lf:JO T.a lid: tltar upon t11o11 wilt W19CM • TtlfiPlZ... ,..... t. U...,., wlHI ltk. ~ Ttd_.UM,_ CwHd: lttrs. lfll CllllJ ............... YWIS11C.--a. Jhw '*' h lltM Tes• flf ....,_ llttf 1llJ........ ..,., .. '"All "'It ""''Sportl '-"""'... """ Qfl!R!IHD•.., =I ~ll;t l'ne~ @ Nin 1 Till .. Tmtl Pm}' M11111 tllt n.i....... l'tlll D11'11h1N SllGllJ Qlclllt "Conftr111C1 on T1 Ttll th• Trull! tJlcall Sludlts'' Ctl S-1rt l (l)Jlmoy--mn.-~ W!Nrt iJiT'ld Kltdlc:od PnMWb '111 UM! '-nl ([) Trlils Wtd l::OO B 19 CJ) Tiii ...... ~Coe•· 11:15 m CiMm• l4 '9!1· .. • ....,llhy I~ suitor °'l ll:lOfl Qj(J)CIS lnl .,.. (C) '!Im• s, !»mes lo ~sit llt r 111d If· ., 'M • (d ) '10---Mt...._ n.•lnn rTYtS d'llttnl 1 ltmtlJ dlltmma °"' · · ra '"''" '<lw , the owntMlp of • slit pl;. Ptltt Ann-M1r~t. -, -~9 (}J ®i m h1111"' c.nt11 ....,, I INwil: {C) "TM r11tt1e1~ (com) CD Cl) WATCH FLIP DO HIS '4 &ob~ J1111 RllSS4H. * THING ON KERO-TV !!-~ ~.~~ ~1!: 0 @ CJ) dj S) Flip WMlll Ann"""'1ry S1!ut1" Wittl De1n H1ny aeT1Jont1 and tlM cOIMd Jonis u host tlld Frtd M.cMur11r. t11m of Burns & Sdir•ibfr 1\llSI. Buddy Ebwn. .lulit Arld1ews ind 0 Mtoi41: (21w) "ltfll c.ut" (dlt)I Annettt funiallo 1mon1 I~ suttts, ·u -R~•r~ lloon1, i 1r1 Mlla,j thi1 IPKi•I pro1r1m !'Vlt'lfS ~ Jaan Blondtll. years of Disn1y 1cc.om.phshment1 IM D l1}) rn tm bas f• ''Thi llfuio" th• 1n!trt1inment wortd. lilt superstITTOvs peop!t ol tht Iii m Alt1ed Hltd'lcoc:~ Pflstntl t1t town of Sin M1rtin 1r1 unll•r1 Q) Moorie: "Tht Stnnrt Did 9' thl spell ol 1 bnijo, I malt witch. Motp• Hitllf" (mys) '43-ludWil whost ~ry provides 1n unlqu11 Don1U1. d'l1l1tn111 to CtiM'I pllllosophy. 12'0Dii0n\Sltp llJOllll 0 lllllllWI S ....... : (C) (2)r) 4111 . • Titrlllci fir C-trr" (a<i'I') ·~s -:---Jtlllft Mewit: ""'1 Dt• Stcrettr(" St•••rt. Ruth Rom1n, CorinM Ctl· (rom) 'C8 -Klr• Oou1lt1, L111m1 'ltf. Dir I All~ H*hotck l'mtfth Ol .P'tlH DIMllu• Sht.-lol1nc fro• t1111 Olplpk lt Slnr• Mtn 1:00 ... , ... 0 ('['I '.21 /])""" Ml'rit: (C) (2tlrl .,._.,,., te 0 @l ~ m Tomotrow tlit U11k111W11" (drt) -Vt11 Mila. P1~u~1. l t .. ~lwtcel ClflYltl ..... ..... , (""' """ .., (rOlll) '42 -81!1111"1 Sllnllf)'tk. HMCJ Coltnl1n. UO m Mm CrfMI SM m "w.11 •oo D Qf CIJ cu""'""...,.. ltl Friday DAYTIME MOY(ES l:JDI .... Hip Pitre! · wa::/ Dtlf '' Atln All-fitlPt SIMnf: "1!11ln II tht Clt1J." "'flit H11fbrHd." "TM """" 1:45 0 MIM: (CJ "'Ptw11tt" (wts) 'SI -GIOflt MOCl111)1'1'1try, Lola Al· bri1hl, J:IO D Mrrir. "MirtrtJ .lot '""(' (dra) 'U-atn >ollnson, Terry MOO!t. IZ:lO m "Julil Miibtll1tts"' (com) '4S- Grttr Gtrtofl. ElizttH:tll T111or. 1:00 0 (Cl "fuq P1nb" (com) ':iG-- llotl HoPt. lUClllt Ball. 3:00 [))(Cl "C.I. l lllft" (mutJ '60 - !:DI .l'fl {Jj "Thi Ctlltffdt(' (dfi) 'CC-Oiis P111l1J, Juliet Pr0111s1, 8ui11r Cr1bbr, Arilnt Judp. ®I "Tiit Anl'J HUit" (dr~) 'S9 - t-.JO 0 (C) "lrittdoll" (mw1) ~C Robert Mitchum, Sl1nltJ B1~er. Gt"t lltllJ, '1111 Johnson. Cyd Chtr· ipe J:JO :iJ (I) (C) "Nltltt of tht ftlllwlnt 10:00 fll 0(C) .. Ft"Y 11 ...... KN(' ConcL o.;' (SU$9) '6!-Mtrlon 811n6o. (di1) '6\-C.urt lurtent. , 4:00 ft (C) "TM Thrlll ti II AU" (aim) 0 "ftllow tllt H1nllf" (adv) ~-1 '6l-Oori1 Dty, ,4me1 G11nt1. Cl\11111 Cl'ltplln Jr , Onslow Stm111 12:00 0 "Mtplfletllt fltll4" (dfl) '39-l 4!J0 (l1 S.1111 11 IOAM llttlftl LloJd Noltll. '1lij1<kl" (td'I) '!II) cw CJ) ~o.1y r .. CIR "•r" Cond. -Jim 01¥h. (COtn) '62.~llf $tlltrs. KOCE TELEVISION LOG J·OQ A• M•fl l""fl'H f( l .. C.tM•l~lly" -"\vtl'IOl!loQY <.eurM '"' cal~ (fe.111 J.XI l'r91Kf1 C""' CCl "Frtna> 8reK " -A p•lve•• ~uon "" -lo -~· '°"" -"""'" 8 tf.., 1111~ A ....... IC•fl II-•nd e<1111p. ,..,,,, I 00 M•-lfll 'Tl\lflft Grew ((I \•" 11111119 Mllf'd•v, (){1-r """· •I l JO 11 m •JO lrtdri< C-P•flJ IC ) Ftu•' ll·t• a1 l(lno •na GH1e•n (IO ""'"na• ,,.., to ,,.. " • tt•ll•"""' wht11 !t '""''' IP \t\f 11n9 lflf Ooodl•o > 00 •ISAMI Sfllllt ic1 Wl!M\I! ~riow!1111 It O•(•r ""'"' G«•11M """'" !>It 0""'" -ll~lfit>Q W(>•d• Ill•• IH9•" wl•h th~ le!•••· 0" t 00 0-llMI M IC.I C11t111•al, !llW'l•I. <(1•flN'lllllhJ, Mid tlOllllcol ,.,..,..,.. .,_..-i Or•~ '°""'" 'XI )411!°" ti .,, (! lt•-U "l(Oft•" 1 00 or..,.. C-IY •evi.w ~C) ,.ubllc: '"''" •lld lk •I •ven11 1rovM O•tnot: C-ty. 1"l0 Ao Mffl 8thtVtl !Cl lt•Jllfl 10 "C•••!l¥1ty" Pll't~J <W•M '"' 1ollf'9• crt<dll. I 00 Ffl'.~1 0 ••-COllfllJ ICl "Mt\r• •hQ•" -Set 11.rf"9 Suncl•J, OtlO!lt• ,1, •• t:lO :>.N'I, t .JO W"""" •Cl "f ht Ol<ltr W_n .. A wt .... ltfl .. .,,. CtlKUHkl<'ol "°''"° l)J ~·m~n!ht ~'" t 00 "'""' ll"'I fC I !nluvlfl"lll'\ Oii ,,,..1,,,.., • .,~1 '"olttlt ol (ur•..,, •~···~'! (ti) "'In) or•npt C011t O.lly Pilot, Thurac&.y, October 15, 1973 Fearless Foreeast 'Androcles' Opens;~ Shows Close The New Season: ' ' • • ' Haw They'll Fare Two ' • • ' . By JAY SllARBUTI' NEW YORK (AP) -Okay, ~ani::, time tor the Fearless f'orec3st of 1973, in which we predict whith ~w wetkly or once-a-1nonth TV show! will prosper or disappear from the lube. The forecast is m a d e without reference to t e a ~ O..W•ll , ... 11J1' "'' & M.llt °""' hU f.& ~.UDUW.IUNDGUNH ...... .,.1 ti Ltmoi\SI. 51S.JSH LITTLE 110 MAN ('°) OIUl ot~~ .... ,. MAN CALLED HOSISE ~ leaves, tarot cards, chicken entrails or . their equivalent, the weekly ratings that pro- vide network program chief- tains Y:ith ulcer material. IT'S SllEER guesswork and hert:' it is. I guess. SUNDAY -CBS: "The New Perry 1\Iason S ho w" ls doomed to a mid-season de- mise, having had a weak case from the start. 1.-IONDAY -NBC : "Lotsa Luck," despite a strong start, Is having severe line lrobles. There aren't enough funny ones. But it'll go a full season. "Diana" ~·on 't. TUESDAY CBS: "Hawkins'' Is iood for as long as Jimmy Stewart wants to continue it. ''Shaft" will soon be led ~ay to the home for retired g hoes. NBC: The only pla its "Chase" will lead to is the gate, and quick- ly. "Magician" will pull a fast disappearing act. "Police Story" will stay and thrive. WEDNESDAY -A 8 C: ENTERTAINMENT you cry. CBS: "Kojak," which aired this wee k. has a class look and will stay a season or more. THURSDAY "Toma" is in a coma. despU e a fair start. It'll be lucky to last a season. NBC: "NBC Follies" was aptly named, as It turns out , and soon will go the way of vaudeville. FRJDAY -ABC: ··Adam's Rib" is getting cracked by CBS movies, but it'll last a season. NBC: "Girl With Something Extra" w fl 1 survive, and a real shame too. "Needles and Pins" wiU reap what It haS sewn - disaster. CBS: "Roll Out" will roll in befoje January. "Caluc· cl's Dept." died at birth . SATURDAY ABC: "Grill" will be recalled by mid-season and put in a dark, quiet room. NOW, A FOOTNOTE to the Fearless Forecast. · 0"e opcnJna 1'nrt a Dair of closings comprise the sum total of live l~"afer 11ctlvltv along ·the Orange Coast this week in wh3t amounts to a ca;Jm before Novem ber1,. im· pending storm of new pro- ductions. The newcomer is "Androcles and the Lion," bowing in Fri- day at Golden West College for a two-weekend run. Wrap- ping lhings up this weekend are South Coas~ Reocrtorv's revival of "The Tavern" and the Irvine Communltv Theater comedy "\Vhat the Buller Saw ." "Androcles" marks the d!.re~to.rial de.bot of C~YC drama 'instructor R o b i n Huber, heretofore best known as an a~'ard-winning set designer (a function he also fills with this play). The George Bernard Shaw .comedy will play four performances, Fridays and Saturdays of this week and next, at 8:30 in the college's Community Theater. Tickets may be obtained at the cam- pus bookstore or at the door on performance nights. FINAL PERFOIU1ANCES Intermission Tom Titus • l . . ' I ) £or the George P.t. Cohan pro-John Layman ( E 111 o t l , dut'ti.on. Reservallons 646-1363. Graham Tingler (Fran\;Un Jr.) and P.fark liarri'c'on ALSO \VINDING up its (John). Gloria Soss portrays engagement after f o u r FDR's secretary and Oom- weekends is the lrvine Com-panion 1-1issy Leffa.nd. : munity Theater's wild sex Completing the Lido )sle farce, "What the Butler S3."'." cast are Jack Wilcox, G~rge Harris, Dick Steward Jr., Sam a play which is on its \Vay Osadacbe, Tom Tr 1 min, to setting a n~ box office Beanie Gilchr~. s b a r r j e record ~or the Irvme gro.up. Dorney, Joe Trankla, Wilber Ron Albertsen directs the • Rydbeck and Mel Grau. wacky goings-on in the Joe "Sunrise at CampObeUQ'' Orton comedy which involve will open Nov. 27 and ts Ray Scott, Martin Fuchs, Lois scheduled for a run of five f'arah~ Laura Black, Peter consecutive days, th r o u{g h McAllister and Alex Brett. Dec. 1. Curtain will be 8·:30 Final performances will be at the Lido Isle Clubho~se, given Friday and Saturday at 701 Via Lido Soud, Newt>ort 8:30 in the Humanities Hall Beach. Reservations are bting auditorium on the UC Irvine accepted at 675-0635, 673-2686 campus. Reser vat i o. n s or 673-6170. • 557-7297. * -· * BACKSTAGE CoS,ta "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice," goodbye, goodbye. goodbye, goodbye. "Doc Elliot" may be a weekly show by mid- season if its scripts heal. NBC: "Tenafly" had a bad start, but bas romi.se and THE LIDO ISLE Players Mesa's traveling Pacific Group have announced a large cast Theater troo'pe needs a c:OOple "Snoop Sisters," with llelen of "The Tavern" will be given of 20 performers for their actors and singers to com- ~yes_, isn't ~e on.Jl_f?C untj!_.,!.Q!!!g.!!!..._lhrough ~f at the ovember uction o l plet~ "'Dames". at 11y 1aSt a season. 0Love Story'' definitely wlll, even though It's· enough to make Nov. 14. But fflt's as good company's Costa Mes a "Sunrise at Cam o. ' Sea" _ .. one should be yfling as the pilot show, it'll be Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd. Herman Boodman is directing (18 to 30) with dancing ability; a winner. Robert Bonaventura directed the drama, based on the ei:irly the.other more mature (3$ to Two Networks Recall President Kennedy Era !he stylized comedy which life of Franklin D. Roose\•elt. so) ... if you fit, caU 8J8..345S features Rick Doyle in the Jay l\.1cCormick plays the for an audition. ', central role of th'l vagabond. central role of FDR \l:ith Also in the SCR cast are Paula Ertz cast as Eleanor Don Tuche, Gary Be l l , and Nat Michaud as-the·future Elizabeth Herbert, Reginald president's mother, Sar a . Rook , June Winslow, Sharon Patrick Brosnan will enact the Crabtrte, William Brady, Jeff part of Louis McHenry Howe. r..1acNeilledge, John Ellington The Roosevelt chlldren will ' Sinatra Show HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -CBS and ABC, noting the passage or a decade since t h e assassinatiOJl o f President Kennedy, have scheduled com- memorative programs for next month. He \vas killed Nov. 22, 1963. executive "talking about the and Stuart Duckworth. be played by Claudia Grau HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Fred Ebb, of "Cabaret" fa¢1e, will write the Frank Sinatra- Magnavox Speical which yrill air on tel evision next fall.•, major events of his ad· Curtain time is 8 o'clopk (Anna}, Don Soss (James), ministration." ,----------------------------------.- The one-hour CBS broad- cast, which will be .seen Nov. 11, is entitled "JFK: One Thousand Days -and Ten Years," and is described by the network as an examination of the Kennedy presidency. Because oJ television's con- siderable visual and spoken record of Kennedy , "almost ell of this .... report," says CBS, will be the late chief Leslie Midgley, executive producer of th e program, says the hour "will alsQ contain intimate portraits of John and Jacqueline Kennedy. I h e i r children and their life style,'' On Nov. 21 , the eve of the day that marks a decade since the assassination, ABC will offer a 00-minute late-night presentation entitled '·JFK - A Time To Remember." The network says that among those scheduled to ap- pear o.n the broadcast arc members of the Kennedy clan. interviewed at the family compound at Hyanni s, r..1ass. JAM SESSION Sunday a,oo to 11 :00 P.M. Plus Dancirlg with the Vince Howard Trio 4:00 to 11 :00 P.M. IW:SIAUfU\.N'T NEWPORT BEACH ~' 3333 W. Coast Highway Newport Beach 714-642-2295 I "HU.VY TRAfffC" rated (X) OPENING THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1 NIGHTLY • DINNER AT 6:30 •CURTAIN 8:30 A UNIQUE CALIFORNIA EXPERIENC ... presents live theater and a "'served" buffet. Wednesdays, ThorsdaVi. Sundays -$9.95; Fridays -$10.95; Saturdays -$11.95. Cocktai(s extra. No food or beverage served during the performance . • llrama lllitb !lour llinner Attendance by RESERVATION ONLY· Phone 714/492-995W a film about JIMI (•> HENDRIX Pl.US · JANICE JOPLI N "MONTfllY H>P" " ' Free Parking £r)WAROS I [\J \1\C t\l~lt '" "" .. ·~· .. ·· • "'(.. •'9 t 1t 1 PLUS · EOWARO (0)( fliif-1-. TBED&'l'OF TBEJACKAL lMl~(ltO) ~ ... ~·:~·· KIRK DOUOtAS. SCALAWAG ~-=:..,-PLUS-JAMEi C09Ull: '" "HAllT CK! INYOUll ltOCKO'' . '' ' " ,. '" .. .,, ,, ·". • Cl • <jil\ • .J ,., rt ;it. . ..; "'. i;.. o: ,.~ '- ·' lu " .. I • I I n< Th.ursc11y, October 25, 1973, Or•nr C011t D•ily Piiot I Burwn ·Turned Dick's Wife Off Dy MARILYN AND llY GARON~ Q, Didn't Jobnoy Ca"oll'j wjf• ipjleu hi the luellinl Burton.Lh Taylor TV &peclal1 , ' l>lvorce iUs and Divorce Hers"? -Mrs. ltnogu...K., Sacrameato, Cal. A. Nay. It was Carrie Nye, Dick Cavett's wife. Carrie didn't care very much about working with Burton. Citing her first day of filming, she said: "My chore was to be introduced to Himself and launch without further ado into a long, loud and boring scene during which I was to be 'll'f.,,---------------------... ~,' · ·'Glad You Asked That' •(JI " 1 obslreperous, a general nuisance, 'drunk as a billy goat,' All went as anticipated except for one detail. The star bad beaten me to the punch. Or, if you will, the stirrup cup. And so ended the first day. Also the second, third and fourth days, etc." l Q: I'm curious. How old Js Rad.Io CUy io New York? - Pat Abcl.11ltlua, Jersey City, N. Y. ''? . A. The m.noor office building in Rockefeller Center, housing the NBC studios , the Rain~w Room and the Radio ·City Music Hall, will be 40 years old in November. " .J'' :! ::i Q: I've beard tb;;.t, wbeo Shirley Te(Jlple was a child ~1: &tar, she wasn't permitted to eat candy. Any truth to "'~ " this? -ftfrs. PriscUJa Prlcbet , Tucson, Ariz. ~ •' ... , A: Yes. Instead of candy, her treat was chocolate Si•' 1 blanc-mange. Concocted with six tablespoons of arrowroot l:!:l' '· (instead of corn starch), one quart of milk, one cup of sugar, a half teaspoon of salt and two squares of grated cheese. ~1:. • Q: Why doe s Las Vegas brag it's the "live entertaln- J ' ' '"meat capital or America"? What about New York, Cbi- ·ri . eago, Los All.geles, Pttiaml an~ other night life cities? - , i: _ ADDe R., Norfolk fa. , ~ .. ,' A; It Isn't bragging -it's.just stating a fact. Without -;~-".'Nevada (Las V~~ ~cularj, SCOW olitars. -~ , .... ful of superstari, hundreds-of lesser performers on t ir ~, way up (not to mention musicians, showgirls, stage-bands, r;. ··bartenders, croupiers, stick men and technical personnel) would have their incomes sliced unmercifully. For. whether you blame it-on. TV. crime-in·the-streets or infla· tioo, night life elsewhere these 'days is virtually extinct. Here's a typical exampl~ justifying Vegas' claim to · fame. In just one random week. all these Big Names \\'ere paid astronomlcal salaries to lure visitors to the gambling ,) ~ resort: Bobby Darin, Jim Nabors. Frankie Laine, Riclt ·f·' L·Little, Buddy Hackett, Wayne Newton, Petula Clark, Don i!i •R1ck1es, Fran Jeffri es, Harry James, Frank Sinatra Jr., :· Phil Harris and Jac~ie Gale. POSTSCRlPTS F ROI\l l\1ARILYN. To Renda McN,, •Rlcbplond, Va., The Jlev. Billy Graham advises us that «stars like Norma Zim1ner, Ethel Waters, Anita 'Bryant, •etc., have never charged us any fee or demanded any financial remuneration for singing on the Billy Graham crusades. They sing on our programs as a labor ol love because they believe in what we are doing" . , . To R. E. Harrell, Torrance. CaL: "M•A•s•H" is short for ?iiobile ~ y Surgica l Ho!JP{tal •.. To Ajrs, C. R,, ~nixJ Ariz.: Sorry, you're asking the wrong column. We couldn't .:possibly tell you •'what actresses or female singers are bisexual." Andi! we .could -We wouldn't! ... To Lena ""S. Lines, Chandler, Ariz,: Tom Aiix was killed in an acci· dent near \Vinncmuca, Nev., in 1940. Born in 1880, tbe pioneer movie cowboy \va! a U.S, marshal who turned io acting and starred in over 400 low-budget Westerns ..• ,To A. Mitchell. \Vashlngton, D.C., No. 'Shirley Temple never appeared in a silent movie. Send 11our questio11s to fl11 Gardner, "Glad You sked 1'hat," care of tllis 11ewspqper, P.O. Box-11748. Chlcogo, Jllinois 60611 , Alarilyn Onct Hy GarQ11er toilt a11swer Of ma1111 quesiiClils as tlley c~11 in th.er C_?lu~n, ~but the voln1ne of 1nail makes personal replies tm· possible. ~ctlm~.~!~'~ _.,z.--.;:t. COllONA OEl MAil HELD OVER! MAlLON IRANDO 1 & 10114 ALLl!N FUNT5 "WHAT DO YOU SAY TO A NAKED LADY?" \fl( __ ...:'...:'''-•-··-· -- S111Wfay MallnH Coll TllHlre for Scll•dtl• Good Deed make the scene Sundays '" in the l10lijijllill • GCNlAIH C•NEMA CCI APOAIUION 0 ~OUNTAIN VALLEY '""'"~I • .-.... ;;<'.I~;;:;;;;~";,;-;;;;(; .. "rArEl MOON" IPG) "WHATS UP~ DOC7" (~J "GODSPEU" ll'GI • "LET THI! GOOD TIMIS lOU." l I Do NIWPOA! BEA CH lNTRANCE TO llDO ISli 673-8350 FROM Fash ion Island N ewport Beaen..---. Guess Who's Co11aing? Sidney Poitier as~s the blessings of Katharine llepburn and Spencer Tracy to marry their daughter in the movie •·Guess \\'ho's Con1ing to Dinner" tonight at 9 o'clock on CBS, Channel 2. •walto11s~ Solid flit Series Consistently High in Ratings By RICK DUBROW HOLLYWOOD (UPIJ CBS-TV's ''The Waltons," heretofore a surprise ratings bit, has suddenly become e\'en --niOre o · a senSattoii iillhe national program rankings, Until recently, the hour series about a depression-era mountain family had ama:ted video industry observers by establishing itse lf firmly in the ratings after a slow start and subsequent climb. But now, according to the weekly audience statistics, "The Waltons" has proven itself not just a hit, but a blockbuster popularity entry. It came in third in lhe national rankings for two consecutive rating periods -tbe weeks ending Sept. 30 and Oct. 7. Jn both tallies, it was beaten out by gnJy CBS' ''All in the 1'"'amily" and NBS's Sanford and Son." AND \VllAT is additionally and particularly impressive about the showing of "The \Valtons'' in this competition is that ratings were ideatica l for both weeks -and its share of audience nearly idcn· tical. What this Indicates is a consistency to be reckoned with. When ''The Waltons" first bowed in. it was considered a Jon~hol entry against the hcadro()ll competition of NBCs FAMILY TWIN CINEMA ~"~"'' "'" •. 1'" " '" I • •• 'r ~ " '""' ' ...... "·~-" ' ~--~~-----~ CINEMA I "Camelot" IGI ... "ROMEO AND JULIET" CINEMA 11 "MARY POPPINS" IGI ... "NOW YOU srr HIM, NOW TOU OONT IGI Flip \Vilson variety series. \\rilson lied for Stst place in the rankings for the wfek en· ding Sept. 30, and tied for 2'llh for lhe-period.ending-OcL 7. The ratings for the same l\vO weeks also confirm again the new big-bit.status of CBS' "l\1ASH" series, an offbeat con1edy about battle area surgeons in the Korean \Var, This show came in seventh the first week and sixth the next. IIERE'S HOW some new series ranked in the statistics for the period ending Oe\. 7: -"Hawkins." a jX'riodic CBS program with Jimmy Stewart as a homespun crin1inal lawyer, finished a solid 19th, -"Love Story,'' an NBC anthology of romantic tales, placed 22nd, -Another NBC anthology, "Police Story." y.·hich offers tales about law enforcement from a human angle, tied for 26th. -The shon· ii tied 11·ith 1ras another new NBC series, "The fll<igician." in "'hich Bil! Bixby stars as a professional 1nagician 1vho uses his skills to help fight b.'.ld guys and other dirty rats, -"ROLL OUT," Surfing Film Festival "REDHOT BLUE" by c, w. M 111alk1 Betty Boop Cartoons WIN A SURFBOARD!l On• GIYtft AWIY EK~ WeH [ COUPlll I 0111111 At Th ... trt comedy about two black drivers in the \Vortd War I[ Army truck unit kno .... •n as the Red Ball Express, tied for-§th. '·Toma .'' an ABC sho\v about a police detective \\•ho uses disguises lo h('lp solve crimes, fini!ihed-'56!h. -"The New Perry Masor.." CBS' offering about the fic- tional lawyer, was 57th. -"NBC Follies." a variely show featuring San11ny Davis, was 601Jl. "GRIFF," AN ABC outing with Lorne Greene - formerly of video's "Bonanza" -as a private eye, ranked 62nd, -''Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice.'' an ABC comedy based on the 1novic about two modern-thinking couples - with one couple more modern thinking than the other - came in 64lh, ID. a aeparate national overnight rating, the debut of "Doc Elliot," an occasional ABC hour with James Fran· ciscus as · a pbysician who gave up a New York career lo practice in Colorado, made a good showing. Tr•vor Howci rd Romy Schnefd•r '" "Yiscontis Ludwig" • "Elvira Madigan" "P'orllal" tllo 1t101t be.utlhrl mo¥1t I" tlli1tory" lo1h h1 Colllt' IRl "THE STONE KILLER" '"' "DILLINGER" fRI ''THI! SC HOOLGIRLS" (It) "TH E SCNOOlGlllLS OllOWINCO Ull'" 1111 "SWINOIHG WIVES" 1111 "GODSPElL" !GI .... "Ln THI GOOD TIMES ROLL" I PG I "THE GODFATHER" ! RI ... "DILLINWIR" "INTER THE OU.GOH" IRI ... "THE TIAIN lOBBERS" .......... ---·•-'•• --.. ~· ' HOME FURNISHINGS 15 Speeial Tonigltt An Era of Disney By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UP I> ~is year is the 50th an· niversa.ry of the \Vnll Disney organiiation, and it's surpris· ing to me that network le\evision has not presented one or those extra-long blockbuster document;1rics on the subject. For it is a fa ct that f~y.· organizations have h;id ;is much real impact on va lues and altitudes in thi s country as the Disney empire and its founding genius, the one and only \Valt. Y.ords l'poken b)' host-narrator l)ean Jones at t11c l'lld or the program: tor Woolie Rcllherman; pro- ducer Bill Yialsh; and Annf:lle Funicello, Jont.--s, the host, ha!! been a headliner in.a number ''I "'ONDER ho1v many of of Oisney fihns. us realize how much Wall For some 1elevlewers1 it Disney has mnucnced our might seem a bit odd thllt lives , our concepts of righ t a program about the Disney and 11·rong, of good nnd evil, achievements is airing so late our lyrical vi5ion of ron1 ance ;,ii ni~ht. And that's a and Our unshakable belief 111 lt.'gilin1atC' po int. But anyone happy endings," 11 ho h;is ever been to Those interviewed in the llisneyland has probably notic· broadcast include the presi· cd the rernarkable number or dent of Disney Productions <idul! visitors. Day in and dn y Inc,, Card \Valkrr : Julie 11ut, this simple fact is con· Andrews: Fred Ptlcfl1urray: tin uing proof of the unceasing Buddy Ebsen; produccr-direc--Disney influence. THERE HAS BEEN speciaJli--.,;;;;;i;,;;;;;;;;o..,...;"Oiii";;;;ii";;;;ii" ....... ~~.,;;;;ii"ii"ii"ii"~, video programming taking note of the Disney half-century year. but it strikes rne that the networks have pulled a 1 major boner in not con1ing I ~ Jbuth Coast Repertor.v MADCAP EVENING OF '°UREl'I' COMIC i'tOSTAlGIA "THE TAVERN" up with, say, a three or three· •v GMf11• M, coh•n and·a·half.tlour study Iha t 1~~·~.,~·~·~·~·~.,~·~·~· ~'·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·,..,~·-••-•.".'.'.'·"•'•0'.'··~"~'~'~-~~...,.·•~·~·...,.., could combine rl'al social 1~ comment with surefire en· tertainment. Jt's hard to believe anyone could have looked past such a project. The D i s n e y organization doesn't need the publicity; it's probabably more securely based than any network, Bul any network could certainly U:SC the pro- gramming, At any rate, one of vidro"s attempts to do just ice to the Disney half century comes up tonight as a 90-minute entry on.-ABC'.s _ late:night .::..Wide World o £ Entertainment" at 11:30 on Channel 7. lt's titled "\Valt Disney"""-=-a Golden AniliversaP' Salute." and there is some plain com- ' mon sense in Ule following &'1::.-"I':.' "Man of Ia Mancha" --!ml• WICDATS 7.9,XI l SAT. & SUN. l :•S-4130-711S-9t4J WlNNEA OF 3 ACAOEMY AWARDS! CAW&EL:~ TEC1'1NICOLOR~ llANAVISlONB ·--·· .. ·--=---c-.-. m~~!.~•11 ~~•-nn Kids Like To ·Ask And)· A film aboulJIMI HENDRIX ·AS ENTERTAINING Al>ll l'ITERESTING A MOTION PIClUE AS CAN POSSELY BE' MADE." -Pr.itlp Elwood, • ooc11ttt•1·•~ ,_ .,.,,,,.. -O··--..-cow ...... II .IOl •O'lo, :IOlffl MU.D, Tl• OMJ WflS N~llOll 2nd TOP FEATURE JANICE JOPLIN "MONTEREY POP" THI ONL T OIANGI COUNTY SHOWING '~ •• easily the best movie so far this Year'' -S1e111ten~~·b"' _ • NEW YORK: TIMES • ..-., . 'it*-" W'Nw'•wereyouin'62:? · ~ • WIDl.117 •.ll. fo,1.1,,-.1,. ~ II AGAIN AM" ' EXCLUSIVE ORAllGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT fllilR I IAIG ~"''"'~" .. ' ' _ , .,,.,, ... ,.1>0•1111 I M1rvln 011'9 & 1u1e Hit" _:;:;: "S4 YI THI!. CHllOlll N" • J1111 ••el 111 C.i.tl ;:::: "CElE&ll4TION AT lllQ SUit" (Q) •:,:: 111•11 f""I'• "NAKEO l 40Y" Ctlor CX) (, ChKJitr/C. l •rrv "LET THE GOOD TIMES llOlL" "DAY OF Tl'1E JACK4l" ~,'.',~.-.'. Sltv• Mr011-:'If "8UlllTT" ,•,': 8olh tn COlffl 111'0) STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR j I 1 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY BETWEEN JAMBOREE A"O MAC ARTHUR We Ceny I te Ell $11 . Of cow .. ~ou know your b.>by'•~~~hould ~t. But did yo... know 1..,·11 nttd ~..,.,,11 <l1flcr<11t kinds of ..!'°"-' CrffJ>mg. toddling ~nd walki11g. N ~ctuld'.• "'"I"' b..,ornc steadier. hi1 o;1..,.. should b«ornr>111!1Ji<T. w. KIVC }'OUfchild •he rigtu "'-· .,,;,h ti"' "ght f11, al the u~l11 ti,,..., We call it "Prugt~•on l'in1n~'".•• SI•~ from Bto ~:i,:i::. W~en YOU Want To Know Whats Happening In Fashion Dial 644-2400 for Gals 644-6500 for Guys Its not a recorded message The.lPok b';f A rlan :J.fauni 33 Fashion Island, Newport leach THE b~A9a9,! 1 ~ a 65 Fashion Island, Newport Beach FUR JACKETS RABBIT, FOX, LAMB, OPPOSUM PRE-SEASON 20% OFF .. Thurs., Fri., Sat., Sun. OCTOBER 25-28 OUR ENTI RE STOCK • REGULARLY $80 to $220 SORRY •.. NO LAYAWAYS e7 fASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT IEACH Optn Mon., Wtd., Thur• .. rrl. Evenlnp NOW PATTERN by et1Jt£Md ' . ' . I ' y · / ' y , ' i l : l . ' ). { I Yo u'll lose your,..heart to Caressa's stacked sling. lt'.'s saucy but' sim~le, and comes in camel, black, ·.navy, burgu'ndy or gray smooth leather resting atop a modesfstackeci sole and heel •• Reg. 25.00. 5 DAYS ONLY 17 90 •15 Fa;h•Ofl hlifltl, Newpo•t Beach . ,phone 6~4·441 1 lo\0tere'" lullur;ou.Jy ,,oft a>'d li~h+ Wei!!kt CO•duroy jacket . It's pil<-l;oed a"d ~a~ Q to11.J·tick.e+ r-i""3,, . .3 .z;ppe•«d poci<C~ ood ra.,,cvable. ~ood . !3ri~hr red, tob>Clo _:Jold, on4 c.rui'!.e>'" sr"'t . • Oro""' Cotti D1ily Pilot, Thursd1y, Oct-25, 1m GIFT BASKETS or. BOXES Auottm•nh 1'f11d1 to your 1)1dlici• tiont. " W1 h1v1 on1 of the fin1tt 11l1ction1 of Imp orted end Oom11tic Winiu , Liquori ind 81111. Aho, 1•• our com· pl1t1 n1w 11l1ction of 1i1ort1d 9lff. W1!"ut Win• R•c:k1, le:• luckt1h, lttr Mu91 •nd St•in1, Win• 01c•ffr1 •nd •uort1d 9l111w•r•. Fin• 1•l1c:tio11 ef Wilton Wirt! VIKINGS FOUR I w.E AJll! As C.1;_01E •s vou11 PHOfrl E I . ~Me~_..,,,.., 11 .... ..t:H .... fMtdoy, wec1-ay, n.in11.., • s.t.-rffy 10 e.tn. • 4 ,.-. -SMMlcty NOCMI • 1:00 p.tn. 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPO•T CENTll IOppotl,. lroodwor» M4-0ffl \·~·~,,'1; ' ~·:._~ .~·~ ~ FOR THE 'TWO OF THEM Make it a His end Hers gift by-Omega • Self·Winding 'watches in 14 ka~t y_!!low gold, with matching cushio.n shajled cases and textured bracelets. A. Ladymatic, $'495'.18. Man's autom~etic with swa•p 1ac.,nd ~and, ,750 , Do Something Beautiful.,.. SLAJ'ICK'S Jeweler&·Sloce -1917 ,.. · 11 Fe1hion lsl1nd e Newport Be1ch .• 644·1110 ' ' . p, f • ~ •.• '• G:ARE Unit Uses Varied Therapy • Team By ALLISON DEERR Of .. o.llJ l'llitt StaH One oot of every t drinkers is an akoholic. '!bat adds up to about 12 million Americans. "A good working derulition of an alcoholic," said Muriel Zink, chief tteraptst of lhe CARE unlt, "is anyone v;bo.,e drinking interferes with any major portion fl. his life -social, financial, family, health." Alcoholics Anonymous calls it "an allei'gy of tbe body coupled with a dependency o( the mind." Or, Mrs. Zink suggested, an alcoholic is anyone who cannot guarantee his behavior after one drink and "this doesn't necessarily mean he will get drunk, It just means he cannot guarantee he won't.0 Any way you define it, she asserted, alcoholism is a complex problem and must be treated on an individual basis. CARE UN!T Treats hospital \\.'h.ich provides facilities and auxiliary nursing staff. · Why treat the alcoholic in a general hospital setting? "Anywhere between 30 and 60 percent of general hospital admissions are alcohol related. A patienl normally is broug'ht in, detC1xified, and sent out again. "And, alcoholism is a medical problem . It's a killer disease that we rank even above cancer and heart disease. It's a progressive disease, getting worse and worse," the chief therapist added. :-:: Alcoholisrri~ ! : . dividualir.ed , she noted, a wide range "We make sure that each pa.Ueot of current therapy techniques, found to v.i>o leaves the unit has at least .one be successf:.I with alcoholics, are used. AA rontact in the community, mat~ 1.fODALITIES by ~~milar ~nteres:ts and ~c Those include psychological counseling, area, Mrs. Zink said. ..... • : : didactic lectures. varieties of group "And after a patient leaves, be;js therapy, individual counseling, sup-free to call the unit at any time--(qr portive maintenance and physical, oc-help. Any member of the teatn: is cupational and recreational therapy .· qualified to counsel them." The 21-day program begins v.•ith a An integral part of the CARE program lecture on the facts and fallacies of are mat'ilal and ram.Hy seminars, she alcoholism the disease. said. An important factor, Mrs. Zink em-'There ts· a great need for "'· phas.ized, is the individual's finding of derstandi.ng wtio's who in the fam:.U_y l\lEDICAL PROBLEM himself. "We all believe in alcoholism and that the alcoholic is recovei:ing "Many alcoholics have other medical as a disease and in restoring personal from a killer disease. Things chang~ problems, or double dependencies,·and dignity." a lot when there i~ an alcohoUc ~ nee<! medical treatment." Early in the program discussions deal the family." At the CARE unit , patients are admit· with the Individual and h>w he sees ted only on a volunteer basis, beeause himself, how others see him, how he ADJUSTl\tENTS they must milke a commitment to stay became the person he is. She cited, for example, the wife w~ with the program for the !till three-week FACTS lectures continue throughout husband took away all (If her Cfedit duration. . the three weeks. The steps are Finding cards, took over child care and ~ If a patient is admitted while in-Identity. Admitting Problem, Considering and the other duties she '!OQ!d b.ive toxlcated, he goes through an intensive Alternatives, Taking Action, and Staying normaUy done. . •1 ·; _ detoxification program supervised by the Sober. "With wooien alcoOOlics ~. medical staff. A complete physica1 exam, SESSIONS PLANNED there is a conspiracy of SUa.ce. The CARE (Comprehensive Alcoholic laboratory workups and p.sychological The v.·ell regimented program offers Everyone protects her, hides the feet Rehabilitation Environment) wlil, opened testing and evaluation are given be£ore an introduction to the A I coho Ii cs that she drinks. When she stops drinJpilg, in May at South Coast Conununlty entry into the unit. · Anonymous model without the fears and the family has to readjust." Hospital, Laguna Beach, is ' the first "We use a team approach," Mrs. stress of facing an actual meeting know· If ,.1 ;0 the husband who dnn' •··, his . _uniLOLJts..JtincUn th,e_,_COWltL\L._be_Zink..:.empha..sized. On the team are the in little about it. '"" A;J incorporated in the · general hospital set· chief therapist, medical director, sociai-ofte'°rctear"'a"re'"""°"grou='"p,--"te-"st'""g~.-':!~n:~it~v~::"'~q~~~~t:!---4 BEA ANDERSON, Editor T11111nc11w, Octobtr ts. itn "'" 11 Message By Hand DEAR ANN LANDERS o I'tl be 17 next month and the problem is my drama teacher. He can't seem to keep his hands off me. And I am not the only one. It's other girls, and even sorrie guys. He will walk up and grab my face between his hands and squeeze as hard as he can. Once he . pinched me in the side (upper leg, lower back area) and I actually haq a black and blue mark for a week. I wanted to klck him. But It's dumb to get mad because he does it in such an innocent way. One of my girlfriehds called him on it last semester and he said, "I love people and this is my way of com- municating." What's your interpretation, Ann? We are-BOTHERED IN N.Y. DEAR 'BOTHEREO: l don't bow what you consider "innocent" but ·when a man pinches a girl on Ule rump and she ean1e9 a black . alt(I blue mark for a week, I get a different Impression. I'm not saying your teacher Is a dirty old man but something ls oot of killer. He should be. told In plain language to keep his hands off, If be considers hi.R verbal communication In- adequate, suggest lbat he improve his vocabularly. DEAR ANN LANDERS : l come from a family that never allowed the slightest slur (Intentional or otherwise) to go unnoticed. Talk about making mountains out of molelillls 1 we were the champlolUI My neighbor and I got along fairly well until one day our dog got loose and "polluted" her lawn. She called me on the phone and spoke a few unpleasant words . As I listened my blood pressure mounted. I ·remembered how r smilingly put up with her five kids rrom dawn 'tll dusk. When she finished , I really blew my cork and hung up. J thought we'd never spcaJC to each other alain. Stressed Gestures Three minutes. Jater my ·phone rang. "Hey," she said cheerfl!lly, "Why don't we just forget ijle whole thing?" We did. And it was ao simple. I was filled -gratitude lbr her bigness. 1bat call made my life so much easier. Imagine living next door to a neighbor and not speaking! And that's what your reader should have dooe with her mother-in-law who phoned person-loi>erson to talk to "Son. ny.'1 A brief sentence: "Hello, dear, just wanted to bear your voice -and now I'll put SoMy on." 'lf,e secret Is to love the person who is not lovable. And my love to you, Am, if you read this letter all the W\IY tbrough.--OLDER AND WISER · PEA R o. AND W.; Not only did · I ~read It all tbe way througb, bat I'm printing tt as well. 'Jbank you, dear lady, for your answer wllicb 11 better than mine. DEAR .ANN LANDERS o Say what you want: about spinelesmess1 but I haven't the courage to tell this to my parents face.to.face. My husband and I have been married 10 years. We have a good marriage and don't need any advice from anybody. Also, we don't feel that we need to give -any advice. But what can we do when, in the' ~resence ol our children, my patents Use words like "kikes," "jungle bunnies" and "Wops"? Should we let it pan and tell our children later that their grandparents' ideas are different from ours? Or should we stop Mother and Dad when they use such words and correct them on the spot?--ONE FOR. ONE AGAINST DE4Jt ONE: l1'1 now 'TWO ior ud one qalmt. I'm with Ute one who ti ta favor ol _,., lbem dead hi lbelr tracb and eortectinl them en ~ 1po1. Even i.f drinking Is ,,. ihe "in" thing In your crowd, It needn't crowd you out. Learn the facts from Arni Landers' booklet, "Booze and You-For Teenagers Only." Send 3S cents ln coin and a long, sclt-addressed.1 atamped envelope to 222 w. 'B'ank Dr.1 Ch!~go, llllnoll llOl54, ting. and.clinical psychologists, social worker, psychotherapy, problem solving sessions family if his drinking caused bim _to It ls a cooperative ;effort between coordinator of community services and to ventilate pressures and stress situa· lose his job. the O:imprebenslve Care .~Q)t!p., which a specially trained nursing team. tions, exercises in communication and ,, _.<l>rovidea the tt~rapeuijc team..-and the While each treatment program is in-yoga sessions for relaxation. {See TEAM TREATMENT, Page U ) ·Chief therapist Muriel Zink (above l counsels one-to-one. At right, painting., walls in temporary quarters serves as one form. of recreatio.na(" therapy for patiant • . . ' ' ......... ;. . j I "f j; ' "<.. , I' , ,Q.IZAT H. i, t !~, , :n , .. ):J'() Various forms of group thera py and discussion a re utilized Bel ow, Susan Mardon, MSW leads group discussion • \_ I U !JAIL V' PILOT Just a Drop in the Bucket Des igner Not Hl p 'to Squatter's Ri 9 h t~ By ERMA BOMBECK No one has to teU me that the same man who measures off seats in the stadium bleacher is the same man who makes bicycle seats. I don't knQw his name, but I know he's a little weasel-fac- ed man in thick glasses who wat unloved by hi! mother, rejected by society a n d somewhere in a dark bar he b: sitting there I a u g h i n g hi~lf to death. U you are Impressed by figures, I want you to men· tally measw-e every backside Y® have ever known, add them together and divide by 18 Inches and you will air ·-prec:lat'e~how sadi.!ttc the .man really is. lt isn't only the Dl~cher From Page 17 AT WIT'S END seats and bicycle seats that are wider scrutiny. A few years ago, designers o f passenger planes made a significant discovery. When the human body is in a sitting position, the pressure causes the hips and legs to expand and brings the arms and elbows in a position o.n a level with the kidneys ol the person sitting next to you. (The closeness also sug- gests a courtship.) .. ' ., • • • T earn Treatment The CARE unit also offer.s a series of 10 followup sessions on an outpatient baais after the tl.-.e-week_.. ln lhe hospital. Families « funner patients are included. Mrs. Zink noted that a large ·corps or volunteen help within the unit, many of them former patients and the families of former patients. Participation in AA programs is en· couraged. is not known. An alcoholic is not guilty for having the disease, but he must be ff!~!\~ 4~re1trwm~~ the syi:pptoms fi!S~· then try to reach the underlying causes." There is a lot or talking, thinking, evalua ting and soul searching. NEEDS MEr "If a patient can't sleep at 3 o'clock in the morning, he doesn't get a sleeping pill, he gets a lecture. He has daily charge for other hospital treatment, and more and more flf'nlS, Mrs. Zink noted, are recognizing the need to provide -this care for their employes, Some grant medical leave and· many-Include ·tt iii insurance benefits. "At the unit we can deliver total health care for the alcoholic in the community hospital. Alcoholism is a com- n\unity problem, and that's where it should be treated, in the community." UR. LE SPO RT -Mrs. Gordon H. Glass, chairman of the annual Bon Marcbe nsored by the Newport Harbor Art Mu seum, shows off one of the many ms which will be up for sale in the underground parking garage of the Pa- c Mutual Life Insurance Building Saturday, Nov. 3, beginning at 10 a.m. Admissions to the uni& have averaged lS pet montb, most referred so far by Alcoholics Anonymous. But ~clans are becoming m:n aware of the unit, she ..... to talk out whatever it is 1 __________ _ that is keeping him awake. If he needs sleep, he'll get SEIF HELP it." '. Annua;I Sale Changes'· "The patients do a lot_ of therapy among themselves, without even realllin& 'it. For example, patients in the CARE wUt will visit 'patients while they are in lbe tpeeiaI unit for detoxification and tell them they'll make tit through. They know, becau9e they've been there." · •' Making the general public, and professionals who should already be aware, awar.e of the facts of alcoholism is a major goal. Recently, a weekend conference was given for the clergy because ''six or seven out of every 10 alcOOol problems are presented to the clergy first. \Vith a change of locat~ and a change of day, the' Newport Harbor Arl:1 useum's annual Bon Martha mises to be bigger anit ter than ever. r ~The underground parklnJ age of the Pacific Mutual e Insurance Building in' ~rt Center will be the le on Saturday, Nov. 3, , the annual sale. ~ginning at 10 a.m., a ety oI items will be i.ilab1e, ·according to f\.1rs. H. Glass, general fialrman. ;Flowers, plants and paint- • all r or sale, v.'il\ rate the main area and to the ambience of the Hailes-type cafe, "'hich And Lanz alway' add1 that spet.!1! touch like hands.1me bu\lon tab1 al the waist. Shilt of accla1e ~nd ni•lon 1.a1in crepe in natural. Skirt and ve11 of collon •·c!l·c,~ in vecn. red and blacJ<.' Site1 .S·lJ. Shirt, S2~. Skil't, S44. \'ctt, $12. • will offer French onion soup and aandwiches. A variety of dritlks will be sold by the museum's ~fen's Committee. , Various shops will include Pour le Sport, which "ill feature a Sabot: Les Antiques, where shoppers will find a h~-carved ooe-sevent.eenth life size Ven~lian gondola; Haute Couture, Gourmet, Les Enfants and others. For the first time, Orange Coonty art and antique dealers have been· invited to set up booth!, adding to the Flea Market atmosphere of the Bon Marche. Committee members are the Mmes. Robert Angell, treasurer; Richard McClure, assistant treasurer; L 1 o yd Aubert, checks and la-x receipts: Peter lliJl. ·~: Jane Todd, food, ·anc1 Jack Smock, transportation.' , -c ' Ot.hers a r e • the Mmes. Robert Perkins, sec u r It y; Winslow Lincoln ~ Jr .• workshop; Johnston Ballan!, press; John Hurndall, sup- plies: Frank Lewis, sorting; Spencer Richardson, graphics, and Jack Riley, installation. Booth chairmen are the Mmes. Richard Steele. Pot- pourri and Bibe1ots: Kenneth M. WasmaM Ir, La Gallerie; Walter Knox, Haute Couture; Warren Toman, Go ur met: Beverly Lane, Furniture, and Harvey Somers, Flowers and Plants. More are the Mmes. Bert Coffey, Books and Records ; George B. Harshman, Les Entant., and ROOert s. Dames, Men's Clothing, Allen 0. Smith is chairman of the Men's Committee. Admission tickets are $1 and may be obtained from 3ny museum member in advance, at the museum or at the door on lhe day of the sale. AJthlugh the unit Ji lalrly new, and still in teri'lporary' quarters while the ~ ex- pands, there Ls a fee!lng of unity and teamwork about the place. "We all work in concert, as a team," Mrs. Zink reiterated. She gives special credit to the nurses who ha ve to be "energetic, patient, and have a lack of prejudice and bias toward the alonbolic." 1be unit attitude ls "the origin or cure for alcoholism Junior League "lt is important for them to know what they can do and lhelr biggest role is to be roolivators toward recogni- tion of the problem and direc- tion toward some kind of treatment.'' Other groups to be reached include counselors, schools (there are a growing number of teenage drinkers), al· torneys, physicians a n d related medical personnel. Costs for the CARE pro- gram are in line with the Course Moves to UCI and &:. We See the Coastline. Each of the topics will be discussed by several Orange County people wbo are con- sidered authoities on the :sub- ject. A training "°""" designed to acquaint new members or lhe Junior Leagut of Newport Harbor with the goals, con- flicts and opportunJ.Ues within the community will b e presented this· year through the Program in SOcial Ecologylt~~~~~~~~~f I at UCL \l The public series, "'Ibe Com- mWllty ·13," will be presented on Tuesdays and Thursdays, Oct. 30 to Nov. 15, from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. In the Computer Done by Dunn Sciences Building, Room 111. Pat Dunn gets things done . Symposium topics Include 1 hrow her your challenge An Overview: History and .<1nd see how she h.<1nr1es it in Government. 1be Cultural her "At Your Service" col· Scene, 'lbe Business .Com- umn, now appearing every munity, The Special Cliild, Sunday, Wednesday and Fri· Welfare : Rigtt or Racket? day in The DAJLY PlLOT. L---~-----~~~~~~~~~~I The fabric store de1i9n•d for th• wom•n who cr•ves the unutu•I & dem•ndt ooly tho f;,,.1 SILKS , WOOLENS, COTTONS, IMPORTED FA BRICS YOU WON'T FIND AT ANY OTHER FABRIC SHOP. INTIRI STOCK VOGUE PAmRNs INCLUDING-Dt'l~Nli~S 1/J OFF CLOSING OUT OUR INTlll PATTllN DIPAltTMl!Nf To M .. • 1 ... ,... hclti .. New DesltllH F.brlu Butterick & McCa·lf 's 19tlre StMlt ht. to $1 .21 eoc• OVER $6,000 AT RETAIL MUST BE SOL D 49' IVllT llitteNl .. Mee.ti,..... ''"'" ....... OR 10 POI Sl.fl-lH. TO $1.JI UCH FABRIC BOUTIQUE 30 years there bas been a considerable Increase l n h~ body sn;, averaging a 20-pou,nd lncttaae. 11 A, lot . of people talk about the human anatolll)', but It is up to the public to: do something about it. I suggest we put togetfler a Sqµauers Bill of Rights. We want saddles to fit the flW' ... l\Ol lhe lime. ' ' cOunt<r 'otoolt lo fit tbe dlner •.. not the counter: · .. Special chain ln ol>s1tlr!- clans' offices 36 inches. off the Oopr tO aCCOl1U1lA>date the expectee instead of the decor. Mama and Papa size chairs for the first grade open house. Chairs without backs to be QUtlawed. At least it's worth standing up and talking about. HllNllfGJON .• LANE$' .. ~. HACH ·M.YD.," NO;~p $M!_t..,_. 963~.87 ~t .:SUPIR~ .PRO tMOP SALE! . ~ . ' ' ' ' . . "~ . BALL AND BAG ·coMiilNA'(ION WAS WHll.J . , • NOW : .$79.90" Im f1f:S8 . I , WEiKIND BOWLIN«; -... 35' A LINE . FRl.-SAT. AmRNOONS FRl.-SAT. MIDNITE To-3-A:t.. t.--•--1 SUN: 7-12 A.M. ' ~ 35~ WEEKEND BOWLING • COFFEE SHOP • COCKTAILS • SNACKS 35~ WffKfND BOWLING r-.1.1vroHT FlrAt'll f a,111cm hlind 01)Cn 1~1c mono.I•)' 41!lJt)' nlJh!· 11 llAltKll J ••~ton Sq11~r' "l>I'" l•t~ mnnday, th11r1d&y & f11J'y n1sht. J40J "9 LIH MON n.,. SA~7:.':..' '7J•ml ~.£kd" t:dk .. .,e ----.,,_kd,!:f~ . .#ft/M" ........ "_ ... _ .. _._.;,_,_,,_,_ .. _._; .. _, c_._ .. _,._. ___________ ..., ___ ,. ~ 41dltl~~ ~M ~.~"J;tu ' I . . . .. - ' >-1 ... ~-~·---· \ r . Sale Helps Scholar Inge Linhardt (left) and Lavergne Rosow load so n1e of the art wh ic h will be included in the Costa ?i·Je sa Art League's .i\.nnual Art Show at South Coast Plaza fro1n Nov. I to 3. Proceeds from the sale go toward scholarships to promis_ing art stu· dents attending schools ln Orange Cou nt y. Your Horoscope Tomorrow Arie's: FR IDA\'. OC.'TOBER 26 By S\'DNEY Oi\IAllR ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19 1: \\rhat seems like a ''sure thing" may be dccepti\'e and costly. Know it and· pull in money reins. Don't look for something for nolhing. Saf(it- tartwi, Gemini persons could be drawn into your sphere of activity.~ Aroid putting too much stock int o pro!Tlises. TAURUS (April 20-:-01ay 201: l\laintain , low profile. Lel others take initialil'e. Be a keen obscr\"er. Legal snarl in- dicated if .vou nish.. push. in· i::isl or attempt lo ski p details. Aquarius. Leo and Sco rpio persons could figure in plans. activities. G&\llNl ~ r..ta.v 21-June 20): h1uch that happens is •·played down ." There is undercorrenl of secrecy. One behind the scenes may be pulling strings. Know it and quietly prepare to protect you r interests. Check memos. Be aware of calls, meuages. CANCER \June 21 -July 22 J: Accent is on h o. m c . domesticity. Tauru1, Libra FIB! A Public Service MHSCHJe Brought To You ly I I nn Open 1 O·S Tuc.-Sun. NE WPORT BLV...Q, VI LLA WAY ~jg, ----- CarefUT With Money persons may be involred. c o u l d be \vlthholding in· Emphasis is on emotional rortnalion. You have right lo response to sudden change. assert vicv.•s and to be in- Persons \Yho knO\V little may forn1ed. Reject concept that c\ailn to knO\.\' it all . Family "big brother" knows best - member can become ally if instead be independent. in-you al'c diplomatic. LEO (Jul y 23-Aug. 22 \: Take quiring. Leo, Aquarius persons it slo w, easy. Remain cal'll could fi gure prominently. in face of "·hat might appear SAGITTAltlUS (Nov. 22- to be growing roadblocks. op-Dec. 211 : Pressinti: mattel's. nosition. Read between !he close to hc,.·!'e. ~hould take lines. Patience is a strcng precedence over olher affairi:. ally. Some wilO are in seats Don't duck issues. By facing of · authority may be trying facts as they exist. you create to tell you is om e I hi n J: · positive t1tinosphere. Hun ch Evaluate be(ore responding in could pay dividends. Believe <iualitics surface -and are appreciated. Recognition is due rron1 profe ssio nal associate. superior. PISCES (Feb. 19·!'11arch 20), Be diligent. Leave no loose ends. Put together puzzle pieces. Don 't be satisfied merely that something hap- pened -find out \\·hy it OC· curred. Do so1nc detective 1rork. !\lcssages tend to be ga1'bled. Don"t judge b y su•·facc indications. De I v c deep for real meanings. negative. in yourself. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): AQUARtlJS tJan. 20-Fcb.I ., ---SI Yoo may.be somewhat slowed 18/: You_ ~\·ill expand sphere ' UffELL7 down bJ respOosibilty. You of activttv. One \Y ho ha ve obligations and lo resent discourages ' ma~· lJP envious. 1 UPHOLSTERY them WQU!d be the . opposite KtlO\Y ii and heed vour ovm Wh•• Ye• Wartf of posillve. If you adhere to I So f . TH lftt principles. even though this counse · me 0 your tc:;t 1922 Harbor It.cl. means temporary discomfort.1~=========~~==c~"="=M="="=="='~·':'::"::~I vou ultimately will benefit. --- ~1essage v.•ill become in· creasing\y clear. LIBRA (Sept. ~Oct.. 22)' Finish wha't'1 you start -. deliver "'hat you)>romise. Voll' have chance now to gain prestige. Aries pt!fSOO, who seems to oppose, will be In your corner. Check tendency to chase "losing proposition." Know 1vhen to let go. SCORPfO IOcl. !'J-No1'. 21): One generall y close to you The Aztecs are coming tQ Pier 1 ! OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK HOURS: 10 · b FANCY RED DELICIOUS APPLES a lbs. FOR s100 WITH THIS COUPON LOCAL BROWN ONIONS a~ with thl1 coupon I COUPON PUMPKINS 10%0FF 40,000 lbs. TO CHOOSE FROM WITH THIS COUPON NAVEL ORANGES 10~ ltt S11H ... lnducl,. with thl• coupon 2016 NEWPORT BLYD.-COSTA MESA OHer Goocl U11tll ,.,..,, Oct. Jo.ti (NEAR BAY) Daily Deliver PHONE 646°5718 To Restqurants .. .. . . --.. ' .. Tbwid11, Oelober 25. 1'171 OAILY PILOT :I .1 .. .· on all the great fashion looks •• . 1,.. I BUENA PARK Belich al Ori!ngethorpe Of>tn Dilly 9:30 to 9:30 p.m. Sund1y 10 to 1 .. ORANGE Ci ty 01. at Gi!rcH!ri Grove Blvd Open 10-11 p.m. Deity Sund1y1 10 to & SANTA ANA J900 So. Brislol · No of So t::oas! Plaza Opon 10·11 pm. O.Uy SuncWy 10 to & I ..... ' 30 DA.IL V PILOT Thut~ay, Ottobtr 2S, 1973 A Mystic Looks Ahead to-New Age of Peace BY 1.AURJE KASPER 01 ""' 0•11• 1'1111 ,,.,j "New Hgc'' ,,,as son1e1hing Elaine P~ick referred to .several times in her con- versation. She spoke or the "ne1v age )'OU!h," "new age healers" nnd ··nt•\V age think· ing groups ... So what is the "ne\v age·!" . "It's the Aquarian age that's coining in ," she said. "lrs spoken of in the Hihlc as ~he ti1il!ennium ." But the Bible depicts the f\tillenn1u1n as l,000 )'cars v.•hen holiness prevails and CHRISTMAS WOltKSHOP DAILY • The U11111w•I ,, C9rrhhnn A S'-'tllf11I of l._forCllmt ... • Werbllop Delly N•C'-te: • Jesu:s Christ \I llJ rcinn on earth. Se veral things musl happen before it comes about. However, l\1rs. Peick. a new resident of Laguna Niguel, knows lhot 1he Aquarian age ,,·ill be 2,000 years of peace, beginnlng ln the year 2,000. ''NE\V AGE" PEOPLE "New age" people are like those youths who fill her metaphysics class at Palomar College, San l\1a rco:1, and the housewives in a similar course at her home one evening a week.. "I grew up in inctaphysics. I never had any orthodox church training," she said. But 1nctaphysics, which n1eans "above the physical ," is more of a philosophy than l!i religion , she said . It is based on the occult classics, but not the negative side of the occult, as automatic handwriting, crystt1l balls or Ouija boards, which open up to th e IO\\'Cr plains or the occult. These !hings \\'Ork, she said, claitniug to know from \VOrk· in g \vith youths \vho bave been pos~sSl'd . Using Ouija boardcs, she Pr· plained, a person voluntaril y opens hhn or herstlf up 'for someocie to tnter without knowing who they are going spirits 1nighl have been drug addicts or alcoholics during their life on ea rth who now need to use another person to fulfill !heir cravings, sbe said, "It's really quite easy to get a contact but it's not so easy to get rid of," she added. DEEPER MIND Rather than this side of the occult or other phy&ic things \\'h.ich a person can develop 1hrough metaphysics. ~1rs. Peick said -she prefers to "work for lhe world and a cleeper mind." ~1ost of this she does through meditation ... "look· ing ~ithin for your own God contact." She does her meditation at the :1ame lime and location every day because she bulld.s up "sort of a rhythm" there. First, "he explained. she inakes contact with "I call it my soul which is the God spc'aking in each or us." Then, she chants "0~1 " three tim es to bring her three bodies, the physica l, emotional and spiritual, into harmony. NEW AGE PERSON El•lne Ptlck Finally, she stills her mind, using a yoga technique of watchlng her breathing with her eyes closed, and lifts her consciou.sness to the highest point .she can. "You just feel this closeness October Agendas Full with God or your hl&ber 1elr or whatever you feel it: rl&bt (to call It)." Sbe said sbe asks where to serve and then feels the .love, returns It , feels it again and sends It out to the world. She described this as "kind of a flowing thine. THOUGHTFUL POWERS "Thoughts do have power," she explained. "If. you 1end out feellnp of hate to people, tbey really do have an affect on tbe perJOn.and you, too." Her classes, she said, do healing \\'Ork because "we believe in sending energy to a person 's soul." But people learn from their problems and experiences, she continued, so they just aend the energy to help the person rrieet the pro- blem. Some ot a person's pro- blelTL'I, as a disease, may be due to a Karmic reasoo. This Jaw of Karma, she explained, says, "as you so\v, so shall you reap ..• what you give out yourself, comes back to you." She adds, "in some life it will." ESTATE AUCTION to be held In tht Appr1ntice1hip Building, Del Mar Fairground• Del Mar ' :i;~iu:~~~~0 J:-Food-. Fa---r1-Fa-shio-n Scheduled. going about their own things / / lll)pllft ltema 61 Dtrr1 UJ1tll ! Wednttd•y &-1'.hur5day-E-Yenlng1, ___ -I -·~ _ •--- IMIN Tiit eNrtwll-Ct~let 'HUHTIHOTON allACH Ul41 ALGONQUIN 11 WARNER 14'-n11 as they should be." Such wl1en ls VELVET FOG HAIRSTYLING 8466 INDIANAPOLIS AVE. HUNTINGTON BEACH, 536-8829 NEW LOCATION Same Great FREE Cooking School Every Thursday, Oct. 25 thrv 9:30-11 :30 A.M. Nov. 15 EDWARDS NEWPORT CINEMA, Newport Center (Across from Fashion Island) •Prizes •Surprises •Gifts Worth More Than $2,000 ?\lore exciting and profitable than ever before, the annual Cooking Sc hool returns to the Orange Coast area for it s 22nd grenl yea r-but in a ne\v locatio n. E:d\vards Ne\vpo rt Cinema in Ne"•'POrt Center (across from f'ashion Island). You're in· vlted to attend free and to co111pete for prizes including a l.itlon Electronic Oven, Amana Radar· Range, Electro·C:rill ·rabletop Ba rbecue and 1norc -national brand natnes ainong prize ite1ns in· elude General Electric. F'rigidaire. Oster and oth- ers. Plan no'v to attend the area's greatest cook· ing sc:hool ... Co · Sponsored by Richard 's Markets, Lusk Homes, Davis-Brown Ap· pliances, Edwards Cinem.,, Southern California Edi•on Comp•ny, Or•nge Cout D•ily Pilot, Coul Com munity College Di<lrict (Or•nge Co•<I •nd Golden West Colleg es) October Fest i\tike Roy, an illustrious Southland chef, \.\'ill be in San Clemente Sunday, Oct. 2ll, to judge a cake-baking contest "·hJch will be held in con· junction with an October Fest pl anned by Our Lady oi Fatima Church. The conte.st is open lo the public and monetary prizes will be awarded to the three best entries. Also taking place on the ch ureh grounds will be danc- ing. singing, games and other contests. Gennan food will be served. Fashions Expectant mothers, cur- rently enrolled 'in H o a g Hospitars prenatal education and exercise classes, will model fall and winter materni- 1.v clolhes from Page Boy in Robinson 's, Fashion Island. The showing wUI be at 10 a.m. l\londay, Oct. 29, and PAMELA LANCE Betrothal Revealed ~Ir. and ?.1rs. Oougla S Cockcroft Lance of Laguna Beach have announced the engagement of their daughter, Pamela Howell Lance to HOO.nty Froom Emery. ~1iss Lance attended Wcst ridge and Polytechnic schools in Pasadena and UCLA \\'here she \Vas af. filiated \\'ilh Delta Delta Delta. ~fer fianc e, ~n of John F. E1ncry of La Jolla and Mrs. Betty Emery of Fullerton , Ls a graduate of the Uni\'ersity of Southern California and is a member of Kappa Sigma. w ...... .,,. ..... , . .,.., .. e N•nno• Wl•tt e A.11111 SHOi i Nm nil'""° Cl°"· S11111d•lf proceeds will be used to purchase lifesaving equipment for the hospital's labor and dellve1·y rooms and t he newborn nursery. Hedesseh Newport Chapter (!,! Hadas.sah will hear a panel ~iscussion on the November tax initiative when members meet at 11 a.m. Monday, Oct. 29, in the Versai ll es Clubhouse. Democrats Democratic Women o f a.nt~ Mooday. Oct. 29, in· the Wolt'..an's Clubhowe, Orange. Open to the public, the event is being sponsored by Pl Unit, CalifQm.ia State Association of Parliamentarians. Alumnae A fund-raising tea and retrospective showing o f Florence Arnold's art is planned by Orange County litllls College Alumnae, The event will be at 2 p.n1. Fullerton Library. Proceeds go to the College Scholarship fund. CFWC developing ari Orange C<Junty Arboretum at California State University, Fullerton. HV Gardeners H~rbs on a Broomstick Will be the entertaining t a I le pre!e.nted by Mrs. Robert C. \Vylder for Harbor View Hills Garden Club. J\trs. Lawrence l\f. Jones will h<lst the meeting in her home at 12:30 p.m, \Vednes· day, Oct. 31. The speaker. who co· authored "An Herb Garden of Verse$," will talk -aboul witches' herb!, pest and present. October 24th & 2Sth at 7:00 p.m. . Four EStates and Three ·Private Collections ordered sold to the highest bidder comprising ol Important JADE & IVORY CARVINGS, Old Pawn and INOIAN JEWELRY, Antique ORIENTAL, AMERICAN & EUROPEAN FURNITUltE, Per· sian and Chinese CARPETS -objects D' Art. Jewelry comprising of OIAMONOS, EMERALDS, RUBIES AND SAPPHIRE RINGS, 8RACll.ETS, and EARRINGS. conduct9d by CONTINENTAL of San Dle10 212-7494 Orange County will attend Prof. l\1 a r g a r e t Holtrust's political science clau at Golden West College at 7 p.m. Monday, Oct. 29. Six districts of Area D, C~llornla Fedttatkrl. oflii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ \Vomen's Clubs will attend ali l\fembershlp Spree for 73 at 8:30 1.m.. Tuesday, Ott. 30, in the Alrparter Inn. CRT Recent changes in insuranee policies issued by the National ReUred Teachers Association will be discussed by Carl Finer for the Orange Coast group of CRT. Members will meet at I :30 p.m. Monday, Oct 29, in the Neighborhood Congregational Church, Laguna Beach, Economists •lome EcQnomist:i in Homemaking, Orange County will have a boutique sale at 7:45 p.m. Monday, Oct. 29. in the Westminster home cl 1'1rs. Myron G. Heavin. P erlie mente ri ans A parliamentary procedure seminar is scheduled at 9:30 ORT Orange County \V e s t Chapter, \Vomen's Amtrican ORT will have its annual paid- up membership luncheon Tuesday, Oct. 30, in the l\lerc\U]' Savings and Loan, All members who have crafts tor . sale are welcome to display their materials. LB Gardeners A Halloween luncheon and card party will be sponsored by the Laguna Beach Garden Club at 11:30 a.m.. Wednesday, Oct. 31, in the Women's Clubhouse. Proceeds will go toward Hall-Sizes SIZES 12 1/2 to 241/2 Break into print for that great go.everywhere dress. The one that takes you to meetings, shopping and lunch w ith the "girls ." Ella Nor's features the kind of / easy·going, easy-wa.shing polyesters and jerseys you love from $22.00 Sunday Shopper? fvlt.<1011 & H1.111lir>9t0f'I S.och Ope11 12 to S • (<:f~ ~ ... I 117311 REVIEW Stlltl. Cillts W11th1r THE OFFICIAL ASSOCIATED PRESS ALMANAC Fin1ntH Sp1c1 F011ign R1l1tlons Aw1rds. Elnh HI~ ' Industry Diu111rs CMI Rlghta Sports l1bor Edutllion il , .'· ' Crime Religion leisure Tt1t11f10rtllioti Fiscel Afflirs Hom11 H111th World N11lons Geogrephy Ans Science Communicltions • Whatever you want to know ~bout any of th• above subjects- •nd many others-can be found In this valuable refarance book. Th are ar• mo,. than 1000 pages of instant information combined under the direction of the world's largest newa organiz1tlon, plus • map section of the United States and· Caneda. e color section of flags a.nd a complete .chronology of the Watergate scandal. It's • big ba;pain at only $1.76, plus 26 cants fot handling. Send for your copy now/ FILL OUT AND MAIL THIS HANDY COUPON TODAY! ~--------------------------, I APALMANAC { -Oran1• Coast Dally Pilot I P.O. lox 022 l Teaneck., N-Jersey 07666 l Enclosed Is . Send me copies 1 of AP Almanac. I Heme ____________ _ I Add.-------------1 I City Sttll Zip _ I J 2 Pt' boolt i1H:l11dt$ Pf>,lttJft a11d hondl/111. I /.ltti..11 tllttl1.1 l'tt)'ll/Jft to Tltt A"MKf,11td f1t .•t ~-----------------~--------~ • A Sa I he cl Oil St by by In Ri th •h I Ii bu Sh Ca Ri co he to N thi th ho ca Ri Jo th ho e be m ga K k R pr wi ni Sa to I ,, Ho be i• Ha tu by 31. dri I to .. ,, hi pr f; M ,, to • Coed's _Family Learns A New Chapter of Life EAST LANSING (AP! - A ·few weeks ago Paul and Sally Richards deposited their IS.fear-old daughter Joy ce, he.-stereo, her bicycle, her clol;hes, most of her worldly ~esslons and some of theirs on .the campus or the fl.fichigan SU\le University. l'he campus is only 75 miles by car and 20 cenl!: per minute by telephone from their home ln Southfield. But to lhe Richardses, the figures are irrei.va.DL They are going through a biltersweet ritual shi,.red by thousands o f faq:tilies who have :sent their first child' to· college. "She's only an hour away but it's like a milliOn miles. She might as well be in California·,~· said Sa 11 Y' Richards, who' never werit to college and wants wlUt an her ~art for her daughter lo · ~Y~ this opport~lly. Neveriheless, she sus~ thin-· will never again tie the slme. · \~ thi'.Richards returned borne from the Michigan State campus last month, hirs. Riehards Went at once to Joyce's room and tumed on the ligh t. 'I1lere was a huge bole where the stereo h ad been and the desk had an empty look. It v.•asn't 1Qng before she stacked some magazines on the desk .• It ga~e the room a lived·in look. KEEP BUSY Mrs. Richards has a lot to keep her busy. Their daughter Susan, a junior in high school who is convalescing from an illness, comes directly home fron1 school each day. Even· tually she plans to get a part- time job. Jn m~y respects th c Richardses know they are lucky. \Vithin three. weeks Joyce had already wrilten them twice and phoned once. They are not worried about her living in a coed dormitory OI" becoming involved with drugs. Still, the tri·level house seems quiet without Joyce. The phone does not ring as much. liofrs. Richards .!till forgets occasionally ana .puts an extra place mat on the table. Sometimes she <;atches herself speaking of Jay~ in the past tense. Paul Ri chards, ~ e g ion a 1 director of industty relations for a public finance company, has begun to experience a new feeling of camaraderie with his business associates. "I'd say my daughter started at 1\.1.ichigan State and they would say, 'Oh, yea, you're go!ng through. that now.' \Ve always talk about how much it costs and what it will cost," he ·recalled. CHANGED Richards was the first of the family to see Joyce aftrr she officially became a freshman. lie had a business trip to Lansing just tbree days later and stopped by to deliver Joyce's winter t'Oat and take his daughter out to dinner. In just those 72 hours he round her changed. "She was just bubbling over and. talking ." he said of the daughter he alwa ys thought was a little too shy and serious. "It took us nearly two hours to have dinner. She talked about the parties and the kids . she met and the great bunch or people. On Tuesda y she met a boy and they talked about having to. _buy books. Wednesday rooming he called and he wanted to kno1v if she wanted a ride to the book ·store. Here she's been there ho days and a '?oY called her and picj;d her up in a ~ar. It was all new." ' The object of all this paren- tal concem is a slender girl v.·ith a doc.like face. honcy-col- ored hair and green eyes. In · the shorts and T-shirt she wears o~ warm d9-YS. 'Joyce look! like a 12-year-<1kl on her way , to Cir! Scout camp. In the pleated slacks and. red ~leneck sweater she w.ore for her first visit' to a college pub, she looked as if she had just stepped from the pafeS &r Seventeen magaziiie. ' In high l!lchool Joyce ranked eighth academicany ln the cljls! of 664. She was on tile ~ior board, a stu d ent ;oi::ganization that p I a n n e d 'school activities, and an enthusiastic men1ber of the f!riP, team. By her own .description, she tended to be too serious and reserved. - Studies .Personalized By AJ..LISO:'ll OEERR Of lllt Deltr ~lltf S'911 Limited classroom space. a growlng student body and the need to pool resources to meet individual student needs gal'e birth to the learning center at St. Joachim's Catholic School. Opened a yea r ago, the center is staffed and supplied by Parents Guild and fund s raised through student paper drivei. The church's parish hall, often in the daytime not usod. '"as converted for school hQurs to a learning center. When the school day ends, 311 students in charge of various areas put materials away. Sister Ade.le ~1arie, the pr in· tlpal, t:Xpialned thal the cenler "allows the nl8terials available to be used by all gradCs rotheT than just one classroom. "Stu~ts ·don't just UJe m~ala designed for their OlflJ grade level. Some work at a •lower pace than th& class, sonic al a fasterrpace. Thls way. \l"t' can offer a gr,a.ler .span of reso urces." SUPPL~t E!\'TS ~t:erilJls in the center mafch -each class· cur· riculu.m, she said, plus sup- plemen1ary materials for each unit of study. Students are sent lo the ccnler by teachers on an in- di vidual basis. some with specific ass1gn1n"nls. others free to browse or work on extra material alone or 111 small groups. The center Is used by childrtn in all grades, one through eight, at the same lime , supervised by mothers who volunteer their time. •·The cenlt>r \\'Ou ldn'I be possi- ble 'A"ilhout 1h~n1."' Sisler Adele :\1aric said, Rcrercnre t'l'nlcrs are set up by subject -religion, reading. 1nath. social studies, science -and a \l'idc array of audio-visual cquipmClll, which the children learn to operate. is a\-a1table as well. "The students expressed in- terest in having animals in the center to obser\'c and Tommy Fratitr, J01n Hood and Clare Romanus give their attention to a hamster, Bible story vjewer and cyclo-teacher (lift to right) while students at a listening center concentrate on tape recorded lesson. I learn abou t." So, special audlo--vi11ual aids Inc lude a rabbit, hamster.i. guinea pigs and their offspring, donated or discowi ted by a Co!t<i Mesa pet shop. SUPPi.JES DONATED Bookshel ves \\' e r e coo- structed by a school staff nlcn1bcr, art boards h y ft1!hers of students. anrl largl' <·lectricnl 111rc spools donatl·d bv one f.:ithl'r and paintl'd hv nl<-n1bcrs of the parJ!'h - Othl'r n1:.i!t·rials ca1nc fron1 a faculty pooling of resoorct's, clearu1~ classroorn cupboards, l'\'en ··scouring garage sales and using Blur Chip Stamps," Sister Adele explained. The center's ntatenals con· tinue to grow, she added. There are cassette t a p e rt'l'fJrde!"S with ea rpt>ones for sn~all groups, filmstrip pro- jector.s, rock and stamp col· lections as well a.s visual ' mn1cr1als on many subjects. Students also wanted a place \\'hl"rc they coold work and stud.v priv;itely, something nol poss1tile in the regu lar ch-is.sruom: a place ,,·here II 1.; t/U!<'l find niany resources arc al'ailable. · 11lt·rl' art· so n1all}' thing~ opt>n to 1hen1 ." Sister Adele .'-.'1:.irie addt'd. "The nicest part l or it 1s. the children v.·ant 1 to come here.·· Added one ,·olwileer, •·The ehi!dren thi nk the center Is run. ""hen you can eo:nbine fun and learning , you·l'e got it nuide." .. •, 1 Parades, Parti~s,. Films Mark Halloween AREVALos PTO' Mrs. Boo Ronnan will prcsont cash prizes to membership drive winners al the back·ICHchool night meeting tonight at 7:30 •• 1 carnival is schedult'd Satwday, Oct. 7:1, from 12:30 to 4:30 p.m. followed by a spaghetti dinner from 4:30 to 1:30, Featured booths include hoolagan, neighborhood arts and crafts and sponge thro\v. Hot dogs and popcorn will be sold. Mrs. George Rennie is chairman ol the event ... HaUoweon parade and cos· tume contest will be sponsored by the unit Wednesday, Oct. 31. from 3:U to 4:30 p.m. CJRCLE VIEW PTA: Paper drive is scheduled tomorrow from 7 a.m. to noon. Ticket to a movie in the learning center will be presented to each student who brings a stack of paper at least 3-feet high. Prizes also will be presented lo the class in each grade level that oolleet.s the largt.SI amount of paper. Dan l\.foss L"I chairman of the drive ... Unlt-wlll collect aoup cnn libels until Frlda,y, Dec. 7. to obtain n projector for the school. delivered center. Labels should be to the learning COLLEGE PK. PTA: r~an1i· ly roller skaling party ate J1arbor Roller Rink f\.fonday, Oct. 29, from 6:30 to 9 p.m. Tickets will he on sale during the noon boor tomorrow and Monday. Adults are $1 and , children 50 cent! plus skate rental or 35 cents. CORDILLERA -CARRILLO PTA: Halloween spook fihns \Viii be shown from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Wedneoday, Oct. 31. AdmilJs lon of 10 cents will 00 charged to view Legend of Sleepy Hollow~ Rip Van \Vlnk\e, Tim and Tom, Bug.s Bunny and the Road RUilDer. Also fea1ured will be live friendly monsters • • . Block parent first aid courses M11 be held from 1 to 10 p.m. Thursday, Nov . 1, 8, and IS. Ron Head or the sheriff's department will present lbe program and nil interested pArents are invited to attend. For further inform;itlon con- tact ~trs. Haymond f\.1cBrirle . COX PTO: Learnlng festival will be n special feature of back·tMchool night nctlvtttcs· lon!Rht at 7:30. On sale at the festival will be educaUonal games, models. to~ and science kits priced from 50 cents to ~- Cd:\1 llIGlf PTA : Open rnecting will take place at !l a.in. Thursday, Nov. 1. in !he faculty lounge. Dr. Robert llughes, assistant principal v.·iJJ moderate a discussion by the elected officer!! ol the stu · dent body from the student government leadership class. C:\t 111Gll PTSA : Back·lo school night at 7 tonight. in the boys' gy1n. Bob Packer. principal will welcon1e parents and introduce this year's homecoming queen 's court and fore ign excha n ge students. A1embers of the Pep Club wlll be 'stationed about the campus to help direct parents to conference «ntarii. The evening will concludel wtth refreshments served in the cafeteria. Parenl..'I who have not joined the PTSA mt1y do so during the t\'Cning. Those \lt'ho have already joined mny pick up their n1e1nbcrship Cllrds there. EASTUUJFF PPO: Dicycic rodeo and licensing under the direction or Mrs. John Czaja, health and safety chaimu111 will take place tomorrow from 9 to 11 a.m. • . . Thursday. Nov. 15. has hcen .,ccte<l for the paper drivc -'\111th. all bundles to ·be tied or baqed <1nd placed by the students' classrooms. Class securing the highest percentage will be awarded ·a picnic party ... Safety kienlification bracelet~ are being offer.ed al $1 w1til Monday, Oct. 29. EL CA~1INO REAL PTA : Dedication ceremonies for th ti El Ca mino Real School will be followed by 11 g a 1 u Halloween progr::in1 featurin g mus\e and dance 'f'uc.sd3y, Oct. 30. Stan Corey , Superintend<-nt of th<: Irvine Unified School District 1Yill a!· lend alons with n1embcrs of 1hr sthon! board . ad· ministrative staff. 1nen1bcrs of the Cily Council. principals and sttirf n1crnbcrs frorn other lrvinc !!Chool s and rcprescn· tativrs from rtlc ~rchitccl 'i <1nJ builders. Fl:.iJ: tcrrmon ... "ill be conducted by the Y·lndt<in J\1aidens. ESTANCIA lllGll PTSA : Back·to-school ni ght wi!h 11- ml nute clasSC! wLU take place tonight. Jee crcan1 social i~ scheduled in th{' Commons fron1 6:30 to 10:00 p.m .... A eook book i! being prcpnrC'd and rcelpc~ rirc needed. ~!rs. Itobcrt Snnk l'Y 1s collcclLng lhcm. GISLER INTl!:H .. PTA : !;nit will sell candy apples to Gisler and Sow.ers students after school :'l!onday, Tuesday and \\'ednesday, Oct . 29-31. llARBOR COUNCIL PT A: :'llrs. James Sch.:ifer, president \\'ill conduct th e presidents' roundtable at 9:30 a.n1. :\Ion· day. OcL 29. at Harper School, Costa J\lesa. HARBOR VJE\V PF'O: ?llrs. Ronald Robison, president cxtC'nds an invitation to lhe con1 muni1y to nttcnd lh<.' ~­ nual HatloWCt.'ll cnm il'nl !o l:ikc pince frorn I J .'.1.n1. "10 3 p.n1. S.iturday, Oct. 17. Spccinl fl'alurcs ,,·i n include :t frC'1· l'n,i.:1nc ride. spook hou~c and a costume parade with ii;pcc1al a"'ards. Other attractions will include mo\'ies, plant sale. games, ba ke salr nnd hol dogs. ?llrs James R. Pint , chairman. also anooo~ th at the>re will be hand picked pumpkins rrom lhc gr<'nt J'umpkin Pa1ch and a Spl'c1ul swcntshirt booth. LINOBt:RGll PTA : School plC'turC's 11'111 br l3kC'n lo1nor- row lialloween roo1n pnrties will t:ike p I :i cc \Vcdncsday, Oct. 31. l'LA\.'AN PTO: Un it ,,·111 C<'lcbratc the schooJ"s first l1irlhday at general n1ecti nr. !onight at 7.30. l'rn~tan1 \\ill include a stutlcn! 1.1lcn1 shrnv. and ill'rns fro1n school clccll\'c proi;rams \\·ill br on rlisp!a\' Hcfreshmcnts ,,·ill be scr\'i'<I . .. Parking lot sale \\ill take pi nce Saturday. Oct. 27, fron1 ~ a.m. lo 4 p.n1. Display t<ihlrs are availnble for rent. and donations :ire ,.,. c I com c . Furt her infnrn1ation can h1! obtnincd hv cont act ing :\l rs. Joseph Noblr. ROBINWOOO Pt'O: ltll'tl· tificar1on tags 1\·i!I br S-Oll.i b_y the unit for St each through Snturd:iy, Oct. 27 . . ~1cmbership dnve will Ix' t'On· dueled lhrnughoul Oclolx>r ChrlslmRs b a z n a r workshops will tnke pl:1ce weekly untll Of' r c ni Ill' r . Specific da\l'.s can be obt:11n1,>rl by contar!lnJ: \I r~ Hob<'rt Ulslt-r. l'hc•1nnrtn .. \olun· ICC'l"i 11•ill Ix> nr<•ff,,1 to .~i'r\'C 11~ roorn 11101hrr-. 11 .. ~('hC'ts aidl'~ and block 1no1 h~·1,. S'r. .10 11\1 AUX: .\\\:ird of ~afcty p!aqur for :in ~1\'· cidcnl-frre ~car \\'tll b c pr1·,,·ntcr1 b~ a Costa :'11 esa fl'1l1('{' ofl1<"rr nn ~londay, Oct. 2:1 lie \\"1!1 lhf'n speak to Iii(' f1r<;t gr:ir:lt' r l<l'•"l'<; on lhru· polite frtcnd-; and looking oat l•1r 1hl.'lf Jr •"'d<: when 111 !roul·lr .. , !1·11!ov•cf'n party 1, .i11 rl"'l~!\1t1u· p.iradc will takr pl.'h"l' \\'t•dncsrla,·. Oct. 31. 1.."l ""~ p:.irtir!:> ha vu bern ar· r<in!;l'<l b;. .\Ir:-<. Anthony Br ·kc·r :"lnd ~Ir<: l·:mesl Oc!dr,, >lr-s. ('J;irt'llCC (.:la rke "'ill lead !11•· c11.;turnt• p:lrlltlc. P:irents :nirl pri>'-choolcr~ arc 1Ycl,·ome 11i a\1•·11•1 S (,; II H fJ I~ I) I~ IL r 1' A : llal!n11{'1·n rn··t~111e par:1<'e nil\ !<1kr p!:1t'" \\"ednl'sday, f~t. :11. fturn 3 .-;o 10 4:30 p.1n. Pl"17('S "ii) l){' a1\·arded 1n f'ach ~;.Hie k•\'l•I for lhe funniest, mo<.\ original and prt lt ic~t ro~tumcs. J\tr~. Ed "'a rd \\ orrl'Slcr is ehalrmnn. \\ 1 1.~(l:\ PT1\: 1\nnual co1.n· tr1 ~!•1r•' \V1\1 he ht>ld fro1n 1u· :1.111 lo J p nl. Satur<iay. IJ< t. :1 . 1n !hi' 11111ltlpurpo\C roo.111 l•t•11turl'd \\"111 l'I<' nand 111:1d(' 11cn1~. <':lllnl'd and bilk· f•d good~. rtunmri~r :ind :in :uittlon t;:nnts \\•ill ti e f!',1111r~'d for th1· ch1 ldr<'n. • h I " ., 'I• I I 22 DAlLY PltOl Tnur1da~. Oc.tOOff 25. 197 ) AMBLER TUMBLEWEEDS PLA'( 'iOLJR CARPS RIGl/f, BIG-fELJ.oW, ANP l'LL CON51PER vou' FOR A SPOT' IN M'( ~N11JLJRA1ie WHIW I ~ECDME. AN IN1);RNATIONAL. CELe&RITY. MUTT AND JEFF RGMENTS . DIDN'T I HAVE \tXJR Bl:OTHER: IN mis Ct.Ass LAST )'E!\R ?! NANCY ' . ' M'LDVE. WOULD YoU MIND I~ JEFF CAME rouVEWLTM us? 1 THINK THE PooR GUYS BEING EVICTED FROM HIS RooM.' $20 FOR A SECOND- HAND DRESS '? PEANUTS TODAY'S CRDSSWDRD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Small 1uitc11e 5 Se1pant1 9 Sprin~le 14 City on th• Tib11 15 Mexican hot 18UCI 49 P;ece of lurni1urfl 50 Slip-knots 52 Bowling l~OflS 54 Rouse to action 56 Go! under woy Ye~ttnday's Puizle Solved: S C 0 T S A 0 A by Doug Wildey ... TI£ GUfrM CASE 1t> C'AAAV"" PUP!ONlME eusr....,., ~AL.I CAN'T USEANEW'TY 6UITAR~.I by Tom K. Ryan 1~-~r; DOOLEY'S WORLD GORDO AA• YOU SUIC" "fNIS ,s GONNA ~JC, PAOf'SSOR ? _ , __ _ by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller NEW ?-··SHE'S SEEN WEARIN~ IT, HAS~'T SHE ? Ai<f. lHERf Ni:K£ BAD l'EOl'!.E INlHE~ORME~ MORE \:)l..\.r\.f PEOPLE ? MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS 10·25 by Charles M. Schulz I WIU. !! 59 ~~~~e,ian 62 Smell ,.. I\ JUDGE PARKER 16 No matter which by Harold Le Doux 17 lnft.,anced forcibly 19 Allan·-· Robin'• 1riand 20 Braek up I sentence 21 P1ohiblt 23 Roman data 24 E~prts.sed disdain 27 Time of day 29 Commerciel fishing gear 31 Hil hard 35 Sp11n!sh coin: Abbi. 37 Daf11a11 narrowly 39 Cotutal veuel AO B1i!osh thle <42 Po51· Chr1~1mas e~ant5 A4 51Jb1ad uge A5 Northern 1:011~1e!la1!on Al \\';nter phenom1l'lon ' 1J emo1.1nt 64 Went g1eatly 65 Are 67 -----·--sex 70 Modify 7\ Braon 1•ssue 72 Limited timf! pe<ioct 73 Full ot tal! grasses 74 '" .... A Rosa"' 75 Movie pooch DOWN 9 Waie11,odv 38 Ooies 10 K1ndoln1eal: 41 Regarded 2 words with 11 Made a study contempt OI 43 T l'l1.1a1er unit 12 Man's name "Ii Serial; Abbr, 13 l1:1ne1• 48 Precipita· 18 Verv strange tion QUll\lity 22 Per~on of 61 Sorrowful wealth: Slang sound 25 Termina1e1 53 Printing 1 Stagehands: 26 French mlste~e$ SIRng painter 55 The sam e 2 Kind ol 28 Stupid 57 Turn holiday pe1son 011twardt 3 Enterwin-30 Dupes: Slang 58 Skin: Prefiit men! spon,or 32 Underwrites, 59 Great···· A East lnd•llfl in a wily l 11ke sect member 33 Gof'hc 60 Au!o p11rt 5 Mornings: lnnguage 61 Stone· Suffix Abhr. 3<1 Torill'<I 63 Ne~t in tin1e Ii "Mfy Dav" 35 Scheme 66 Attempt 7 Freshman 36 N11w Zealand 68 8uolding wing 8 Car Hae 69 Mt1thod 7 ' ' ' I 1' MISS PEACH DICK TRACY SOY, ARE WE MITTING PAY DIRT. ME"s PIKE!; P,ii).RTHER.. BOTM, ARSON SUSPECTS. ~...-" WHY 5HOUJ..P l TAl(E. .AFTI" MY FATHE.I'? He.~ HIM, AND l'M M6 .•• by Mell -.AFiflt ALL, AMt A 10N/ oc .. ~INOFF ? ' • by Roger Bradfield •"'1!~­.... ,GIJT' l by Roger Ballen s::xi ! T>iOsE lllERe"' \\)l~D TIMES" THE GIRLS \" DENNIS THE MENACE '· f• ,. • ' I l . . ... ... ,_ ......... -. ..... ... .J d1ur\dly, October 25, 1973 llLV PILOT %%£l FULLERTGN 1 MUSIC FOUNTAIN VALE"Y . . , . . . .ON EUCLID--JUST NORTH OF SAN DIEGfWf .,. We May a. Craz y ••• But We Think The Best Way To !nTI:"odoce Our Bran d New Store To The Peop le Of T1lii1 Communi.ty • ,. • Is To Place The Entire St~ck On Sale ! ! Put The Merchandise Out AT SALE P·R.ICE.S SO ·LOW .•• At Barq ain Prices So Fanta stic ••• THAT YOU CANNOT RESIST COMING IN TO,Q-tECK IF WE ARE FOR REAL ! l ! Consequen tly, EVERY ITEM In Our $400,000 Stock Has Been Ruthlessly Price Slashed .,, To Rock-Bottom Levets You Would Ordinarily Expect To Find At A Liqu id. etion -~4 1e Instead of A GRA ND OPEN ING! Come In And Se e For Yourself , •• You Can't Lose. _ lf'YOu" ...... looking For s ••• clili9ht1, f, •• G •• d.niat, !l•tloon 1·.f~:n.. Kiddi11 And A Cha ne~ On A Dr•wint For A S1• of Ch11~ _!il~1r~ar1 , •• THlH THIS SALE IS NOT YO~l IA!.lliiht· !h1"'0th1r f:l~nd ••• If Yo u Are lnt1r1.t1o:I in Guitar• & A1npl11l1r1t P1Mot. ... Or91n1, D111m1 & Drurn Sill, M1111cal Accettorl11 ·i N1c1111f111, Etc., Etc .••• THIN WI HAVI EXCITING- .AND DUil.AiL.i THIN6S FOi YOU!! W1 Hav1 A lar91 Skclt Of Nationally Ad.,arti1eo:I "N•m• l r111o:I" \t1m1 tn Thi Mu•ic· Participation C1t19ory ••• AT SENSATIONAL INTlODUCTOlY SAYINGS. Corn• Ano:I Look Aro uno:I ..• Comp••• Our S1 l1 Pric11 And Chi cle Our Liberal Cr1o:lit Po lici11. Onc1 You H1ir1 lion E•po11o:I To Th• G•nuin1 Adv1nt1911 To 81 G1in1d By Purch11in1 Your M111ic1I N11d1 f1om U1 •• , THEN WE'YE WON A NEW 'CUSTOMERll ' 0 181~ 0 EUCL'D AVENJE CORNER OF CON~AYE. Just North Of San ~ Fwy •. LIBERAL CREDIT TERMS New Hammond PIPER ORGAN 'l:iiw •i\ bto an indant 1ucc111 1Y1n If ' yo.11'v1 "'"'' pl1y1d 1 rn111ic1I not1 .•• Mu1t 111 thi1, m111ic1I m1rv1I •• , H.,.J·.H -11111 you pity popular !uni t · MslJ.y, on your ow11. -:i :~~= ... _ ..... ~_ .. s-595-- "YAMAHA" New 2·1Ceyboard SPINET ORGAN l11119in1 1n 111tom•lic thyihrn th1t pl1y1 wilh you • , • you ctn p,..11t I lflllltit11d1 1f ind r11-nh ano:I 1troduc1 r1t.li11ic 1011nd1 • • , with touch ti • 1pon11 ¥ibr1to, chimes, a nd 1111ny, other Y 1m1h1 f11t11r11. A rOSITIYI SUP'El ~s YA.LUI AT $2MI T77 NOW ONLY .. -.. ·-·-.. --. . OH IASIEST TOMS Th• LOWREY SATELLITE A l>rltht Star Ill H°'" &tll'tfll•ll9fft H1r1'1 1,fwo kt.vbo,.,rd, 13 no t1 p1dal- l:oo1rd $pln1t tdocl1I Hom• Organ al 1 pric1 within tl11 r11ch of 1v1ry1n1"1 bud111t. ' :!~ ::r~. -............ -... s395 New Wurlltter The OPTIGAN M111i1 1111k1r aet u1l1y pity• 1111 1011ndt of pi1nos, b1njo1, t11it1r1, dru rn1 i nd doi1n• of indr11m1nt corn· bin1li•n• with jult a pu1h of 1 butto11. •. We Hcmt Many USED ORGANS PllCIO 595 flOM ....... -·-·- Used Hammond M·l ORGAN Lik1 n1w , • , 1 f1voril1 with profit• 1ion1 l1 • • • 1 d1li9ht to th1 b19inn1r WORTH USED 'A95 Stt5 ...... NOW ONLY ...... ·-··-······· ON EASIEST TtRMS Lowrey 1'Lincolnwood'' I Used I ORGAN A v1r11ti11 in1lrurn1nt with f.11ndr1d1 of combin1tion1. Built to 1111 for $1200 wo•:r.~sro s195 NOW ONLY -·--.. -.. -··· : ...................... . Used Klmball,2°Keyboard SPINET ORGAN ' / "Deluxe Swinqer" • • 2-k1ybo1rd1, 1u1!1in1d p1,..11uion; • ORGAN 1lid1 control for H1w1ilan G11it1f Rh[thm i nd· ln1trurn1nl Or11rn1. Cym• bt , Bru1h11 111d many oth1r 1xclu1i¥l f11t11111. Wurlitzer l·Ktyboord ORGAN Thi ty11th11 i11r ••vbo1rd yo11 c1n pr•• sat. R1•li1tic h11trum1 nt 1ound1 includ · in9 81nio, Vib1s, Pi•no, Chime~, .•le. ••. Th i "F11nm1 k1r" with unl1m,t1d 1fl1ch. ~. Tr1n1i1!orh1d • Bit Or91n Tc1molo ty1t1m, 1111tain p1rt,1111io11, magic lon• 11 l1ctor pl 111 11unt . 111cli11i•1 Kimbt ll f1atur11. WOITH USID ~--' S69·5 Sl2tS NOW ONLY' ....... -.......... . Another Fine Used Kimball SPINET ORGAN Many 10111bin1tion' , , , ton1 quality for th1 mo1t di1crimin1tin9, finl1h1d in cont1mpo. W1 ln11t W0~~~5USID s29·5 NOW ONLY ....... -.. -·-··· TERMS TO SUIT NEW GUITARS ! The Finest Instrume nts of Their Rind Money Ca n Buy , •. Featuring The Newest Acoustic ancl Clas sical Models •• , in YAMAHA, ORLANDO, ORPHEUS, FRANCISCAN',· TAKAMtNEf·end many others , •• Selections that have the Un ique Combination of Craftsmanship end Reasonable Prtcesl -=~~o:':us -$1--9-8f :.~~ $""68 ':.~r,, $l)ft81 Sil! PllC! --Sll! PRICf_.___ L 7 SAL! PRICE ·-~ 7 BETIER GUITARS 6 and 12 Strings ••• Including Elec. Models For Looks, For Sound, For Acti·on, for Big league Performance ••• All Famous Brands , , • Now Going At The Most Incredible Savings During Our Giga ntic GRAND OPENING SAi.Ei ' "llRRfliA" s59sa "YijRI" $79'' luill by fender . RO~ ·1111.15 • let-$135.15 Sil! PRICE····- "FEMOER" $99 Rr9. 1119.!5 Sil! PllCE ·- Sill PRICE PROFESSIONAL GUITARS 6 and 12 Strings , Inclu ding Electric Models.,, Creations by MARTIN, f£NDER, OVATION, GllSON, GUILD, SicJnotvre YAMAHA, and many others .•. All Going At The ' Most Incredible Sbv ings· During Our GRAND OPENING SALE! "YlMIHl0 $ "fEMOER• $1 "MIRTIM" $ 89 !19. S!Zl.!S 119 !19. 1341.15 49 Reg. $495.15 1 Sil! PRICE ··-Sil! PRIC! ·-· Sil! PRICE ---· ' , ' Offers valued to $650. Greatly Redu ced A-LL ACCESSORIES lncludin g Strings, Mutes, Reeds , Mikes, Pitch Pipes, Oils, Polish, Drvm Sticks, Amp. Accessories, Mi1c. Perts, Et~. Etc., Etc. V2 PRICE DURING OUR GRAND OPENING SALE! ''Hohner" HARMONICAS 0·MA1 INE I AND' $295 l EG. SS2S SALE Pl lCE ....... -....... "ILUESHAIP" $325 l EG. SS.SO SALE PllCE --.. --·--, NEW SPINET 11.t •nown bra"d fc•n't rn1nfio11 rum1! full 88 nol1 k1ybo1rd, fi111 conctrt hilt 10111 111,J 1ni1rtly d yl1d l ~tl m•k11 it 1 w1lcorn1 additjon to many d1cor1, ;!tr :~r~E ................. _. S 395 A POSITIVE SUPER VALUE! STUDIO UPRIGHT I l y 0 111 of Natl•'• ...,._., Mokan) An 011h ltndin9 pia110 tli1t far 1i- c1t d1 tli1 mo1t ri9id 1chool 1p1cifi· c•tion1. "YAMAHA" CONSOLE A truly prol111 ion1I favorite for 100~1, lot tone, i nd for tctjo" ;!~E ~~~~~ .................... $695 "Rudolph Wurlitter" CONSOLE AMth1nlic1lly 1tyl1d by a-ward win"i119 de1i9ner I(. Gun"'' 81n1on, f11lijrin9 th1 Rua'.olflh w .rlihtr Our1phonic S1undbo1rd. H11 lhr11 workjn9 ped1 l1 • , •• I 0 y11r watt•nly covtu th1 1n· the piano and ltni1hl "Taber" !Used) GRAND ::J~~::~··········-······~395 New BABY GRAND A. concert h1 1t font for yo•r livin9 room • , , by "Ktmball" Wl;ENT ' P:>S ROCltGANS GUITJ AMPS DRUIMIKES P.A. 'sMS •. Etc •. I . /IS BARGAWALORE! F111o:lar, Plu1li, r, Shur1, Gibson, R1 nd..,11, Vox, ,11a~1y, 111d ma11y olh1r1 ~E"i :~1u:..'u 53988 ONINOU• s59aa I EG-. TO S200 ...... , ONI $lOUP 1-Wftll llG. TO $400 ---T 17-- "Slljaad" 4-Pc. on oumTs Sn1r1, 8111, t1d Toni, Floer Torn, plu1 1ticl Oru1h11 ltG. SSt5 s295 SAL! Pl lCE ........ . ''Sliland" 5-Pc. DR OUTFITS Sn•r•, l au. 11t1d Tomi, Floor Tom, plu1 1ticltu1h11 l (Ci. S72S $389 SALE PllCE ... --. USED ANOS $69 PllC EO FlOM ....... ... · USEliPINET WOl:~so USED s195 HOW ONLY -· USE CPINET LOOKS GCLAYS GOOD ::~i~uLs:~ ..... ~295 . l . ' I I ' .. ' l I '" ~· ., "' " -;; ,, -· ·' • . ... .. . , . , ... . . . . . ' . ~ ~ .... ;;:~fl \JAJLY PllUt Water Management Panel Gra nt OK For Sewer Bike Safety Law Sent Back For Irvine Panel's Revise Pushed by OC Districts Lagwia Stach has been given a further grant o! The propoood clly ol Jrv!ne tilt sub)od ol the compoolUoa, dint eyd1ltl !rem tlla city .,9,1111 !« constructloo o! bicycle safety law Iw been to be cbooeil by tho pO!\ot Iloenllni lee. By FRED SCHOEMEllL 01 "'-Del., ,."" ... ti lnttrest Is mounUng lll'nOng Orllfl6C County water dl.nrlctl and c1ues for formation ol ·an "umbrella" a1ency to oversee the dlstriboUon and reclamation o( local water. To date, 12 agencies have passed resolutions support!ng Flood Control Supe1-visors Okay Barranca Chrumel Construction of the Bar· ranc& flood contra! channel from Tllslin into the Irvine lrdatrlal Complex '"' ap- Con struction Firm Sues Hills Hotel , I A eonstruction company that claims it is UDderpakl by more than $500,000 in the building Qf.....a new-Laguna Hlllrbot.el has sued the group with whom it negotiated the Sl.354,400 contract for more tb&n $1 million in damages. Named as defendants in the Orange County Superior C.ow1 action filed by I.be F. E. YO\lng ConstrucUon Company are the Hot~) Develapfnerit Compony, tho La Pu .. Hotel Corporation and the United Callfomia Bank. lodivldual defendants are G. L. and Bertha L. Harbour, J.H. and Maria n L. Overholser, Wayne E. and Ann M. ,Johnson and Emmanuel J. and Carol A. Voda. 'lbe Yoong company claim.! the defendants aulhMiud Its eonstructlon of the n e w Lquna Hills Hilton lnn nt La Paz Road and the San Diego Freeway and the hotel wa1 completed June 26, tm. proved this week by the Board of Supervison. C.arl ro.1elson. Orange County Flood Cootrol Di.strict auls- tant chief engineer, said Tustin had applied for a grant of $175,000 toward construction of the needed flood control facility and it seemed likely that it would be granted. He said that delay in con- struction would jeopardize the grant. He admitted that the item did not have top priority but added. "Only 15 percent of the prnjecb needed are budgeted each year because of a ~rtag~ of flmds," elson said the project would require $385,000 1n local funds 1n addition to the grant. '11le cost will be shared by the district, the I r v i n e ,nduslrial Complex, and !he cities of Santa Ana and Tustin. Lllcien Truhlll. chairman of the Overall Economi c Development Program. said constrnctioo of the channel would attract new industries addint 3.600 ta 4,200 jobs in a five year period. Mo.st of the cost, 68 pereent. would be borne by the F1o00 Control District and the Irvine Industrial Complex. HOME Unit To Discuss 39 Freeway formation of the Oran&e eoun.-Works No. 4 (San Juan impn)Ved aewqe treat· sent brick loQ the staff for cblef, may be 111rTtlevanl" ~ by ttduced fee ty Water Management Agency Caplstranol, Stnta Marruertta mtnt fldlitlta at the city 'Ibo ccmmltttl augettl the or other melDI to recognize tOCWMA). More 1upporl ii Water District, El T oro plant. arewrllebycltyoou.ncU.men. law rnlCht restrict tu c h. cyclista whQ UM their bikes in tho offing. Wal<r Diatrtct, Loo A 11a 01 The l""'l !rom !he Ono thing delervtng at-peaalty ~II to m.ty, to oommJlo to ww\. OCWMA originally was pro-Water District, Santa Ana Environmental Protection ten.tion. Blke Trails Corn-or blcyde ufett topics. -Where bk'ycle lanes or posed in February by the Pllountains County W a t • r Agency brings the total m.lttee members feel, 11 the Morrl!on'• (l(l'Jlmittee aJao pathl are made unsafe by Orange County water Dlstrlcl, District, East Orange COunty that tt-.e agency ha• reqUlrement that, as a looked at 1 variety of othtr abwle by farm equipment or the AJiso Water ManagelYWlt Water District and the Yorba btatowed on the city for penalty, violators of the law accumuJatkla! ol glass or Agency (AW~tAJ and tbe Linda County Water District. remodelin& of the 19'4 be requlred to write a 200-minor naws Jn the propoeed other truh, UXllfl rupoasn~le Irvine Ranch \\'ater District. Three of the county's oldtst plant to Sl54,3SO. Total word composiUon. draft ordinance they said they must return the trtll to its CARL KY!\.ILA , chairman cities. Santa Ana, Fullerton coat of the project is Carl Morrbon, chairman of intend to auPPQrt. ortginal state. of AW!\.tA , is serving as dlalr-and Anaheim, also are con-$280,000. the ad bQc citizens commlttee, Among the committM•1 coo--Bike llcemu sbQuld be ol man <A the fledgling OC'MW l.. sldering jolnlng OCWMA. points out that the present ceins are the following : the llick-on, eeml-pe:rmancnt board of ~tors. DESPITE 11IE g r ow In I ,_ ________ _, draft of the law provides that -A need to es:empt non..resl-type, aueh aa the tags put The purpose of the coW\-supf(lrt, OCWMA still is not GO auto Heeme plates rather tywide agency would be to an official body. It has no than a metal plate variety pl'0\1de Orange c oun t y staff, DD lawyers and bas s ddl h ck Sh Et bing which requires bike owners ...,;dents aod iodustry witb relied chiefly on Kym1a to a e a ows c . s to -• bolder !nm• to the be3t possible w a t e r , seek members. Kymla ~ained. Kymla said the organ!zatklll the bike. Tb!• probably will illvolve woold bold of! on formal joint Collndlmen dlroded thal construction of one or more powers agreementa until all The etchings of May H. sister and wire of physicians, UCI Extenskm School. the conunlltee work with the large dlminer.allzation plants water-oriented a(eDdet and Lesser will be on display in is the resident artist of the The exhibition is open lo city staff to amend the pf'<>o ~,;~~ :ii: '::uidoti: ~v~'-e C::: ~~ U>e Saddleback e»uece library :.=~fur;~rn: ~f"~~:, a~~fo :~~ posed dran Jaw mt return removed before the water is until everyone who wants In through Nov. 2. School ' of Medicine. She abo A1onday through Thursday and with it for later c:cunell .ap- used by homeownerl and 1D·. gets bt" be explained. Mrs. Ltsser, the daughter, teaches graphic art the the 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday. pro.val. dusuy. Ir"'===';;;;~;;;;;;;;;:;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;::=;:;;;~~~~:;;;~~;;~~~~;;;~~====:::::::~;;::~;;;;;""=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::; I Kymla listed the following factors in support of the um- brella agency: THE NEED for a uniform Orange County water program has been apparent for a lq time. -There ls a need for better coordination of p r o g r a m 1 operated by the variou&-wa\lr districts, sanitary dlstrlctl and clUes within the county. -Pending state legislation, if approved, will provide money for constructlon of demlnerallzallon facilities. -There Is increased interest at the Office or Saline Water of the U.S. Department of the Interior in constrtdioo al demineralization facllitie!. -SINCE THE Initial forma- tion of the OCWMA, It bu been .._,ted by t he Mun!clpal Water District ol Orange C o u n t y , Trl-CIUes Mwiiclpel Water D ls tr 1 c t District Ora!!ge Coonty Water BEFLECl'IONS "' Reyn Sheffer ARTEXP0'73 TODAY THRU SUNDAY We've tumed our beautiful, new air-conditioned molf tnto on e)(citing ort 9,0ll~ry filled with a variety of ort forms. More I hon SO of the Sou th~ land s f1n~st professional artists ~ill be displaying their w orks. Art E•po '73 is produc.ed by noted Southern Ca lifornia fine arts promoter AnclyRawn. ' ,_ Repealed demands ha v e failed to ~ 1etUement ol the ....wxling ba!lnce o! '5(11), 939.15, the ~te state!. West 0 range residents I.------, Candidate To Face Councilmen Trvine councilmen adjourned Tuesday night's meeting to 3: lS p.m. Friday ln city hall 14·here in \easL one more can· rlidate ror city planning direc- tor will face an interview with the full council. ~layor John Burton said to- day recent lri~ by City Ma na ger \\!il!iam \\'oollett Jr. were "fruitful'' and one ap- plicant for sure \\1U be in- terviewf'd . A simi lar session last Fri- day "''as canceled for Jack cl. lnttrest in the city or Irvine job by applican1s believed to. have been coming for in- terviews. With the end of October loomtng, Jt will have been rive months since the council .renewed Its search for a city planner, For the last four 1oonths the planning staff ha\'e worked under the direc· tiQn o( UK! city n1anage r end Mike Harris. an aS30Ciate plaMer \\-ho has the highest senlori!y in the city planning department. interested in t h e proposed dlange of the Haute 39 Freeway a re invited to a public meeting or the Hun· tington Beach HOME Council at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the City Council chambers, Sth and Main streets. Gary Stevens, a n en- vironmental p~er from the state Division or Highways, will explain the possible changes in the frtt\.\'ay and will listen to suggestions from the public. The route 39 Frtt\.\'ay. sometimes referred to as the HuntinRlon Beach Freeway: is currently scheduled to parallel Beach Boulevard b et w e e n Beach and Newland Street. The cities of Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and \\'estminster have asked for :i rou!e s\.\·itch south of the &in Diego F'ree\.\·ay. so the new route v•ould come south along Gothard Street in Hun- tin uton Beach. The state highway rom- mission has agreed to reopen hearings on the route, in· eluding several p u b I i c meetings in west Orange Coun· ty to find out hO\\' the genera l public feels about such a move. The J-1 0:-0fE Council is a coal ition of homeow n ers .1ssociatiol'IS throughout llun- tington Beach. "He It rk h .,,. poM' •Cconl. Int to whet M I•, not M· cordlnt to what he Ms ••• " --""'" Rlchrte1is Is not best meas- ured In terms of money or an accumula.tion ot material things. It \ s fairly common- place lo !Ind people rich ln a monetary sense, but pltl!Ully poor In love and trlendshlp and the respect or those about them. W e must take care not lo !~ore U1e many personal r1che11 . . . friendship, per- sonal integrity and a con- 11clence "'Ith which we can remain on speaking tttms. Tbe~e are le~ spectacular riches. bu t without them, amassing all the sold in the \\·orld \\·011ld represen t a barrrn and empty victory, Our thoroui,:h understand· ing of people's nttd!I, gain~ through many years or ex-perientt. rnables us lo serve you as you \11ou1d be served. ~~~!!°~R 91111 SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY LAGUNA IEACH "'"·' 5]5 SAN CLEMENTE J5 J3 NORTH El CAMINO IEAL 4!2·0100 WANT A THICK GREEN CARPET OF "BAREFOOT GRASS?" ~UJrl S[Jiflrl[Jfl WI LL' !. ANALYZE YOUR LAWN EN VIRONMENT 2. FERTILIZE. 3. AP PLY INSECTICIDE. 4, APPLY WEEDER 5. APPLY FUNGICIDE. 6. OVER SEE D ~~~~~~~~-; ~~~~~~~~~. INTIODUCTOIY OFPll INClUDIS IVllYTHING or CUSTOM AN NU AL PROGRAMS FROM $49.60 Yr. SCOTTS raooucn ut10 .............. ,.,... • w ... UClUSIYILY TO 6n llD OP • , , • • ..,. ,,... ..... c.koP • f"ltysk .. l ,_, 0...,. N-I• Tk n-T· TWll Y •• , Yw4 ,.,. A Lad 0-•N C•-.._., I 12131 594-021 3 ,J~t:t,, IN DUSTRIAL., COMMlltC:IAl, lfSIDINTIAL e FREE e 20 POINT TUlf AN ALYSIS o/~';f~,;;,'f,. ""'"'lt"'1:VJ. LAWN CARE SERVICE 1ttfjf}f(,'fft},f;i l/iifi,;/,1flffitr\ .. • At the Inter.eel ion of El Toro Road ond the Son Diego Freeway 5' SloMt plus S.et'I, luffu•ns I Alp Ila leto Owe r 3,000FllE P'orkl119 Spa cos >Jwo,1 A Comfo,.abl• 72l • Moll Hours: Monday-F<tdoy Saturday Sunday • I 10:00-9,30 10,00-6,00 12:00-s,oo t 1· I I • / I I I Argentine Definitely . . On Beam ~-. .. • ~·· Ro~k Dis~ J~~keys Hit Bunt Trip NE\\' YORK (API -"Get fron1 such pop niusic heavies luds off jwUt and that's The record, produced by "A little music oomes up off.'' f~lr folks under 30. often ut. Bingo Starr, Alice Cooper, strictly where we 're at." J'rry Longden, another KLOS and then he comes back and n1ea11s to get stoned on drugs, the Grateful Dead and Grand stafrer, Isn't being sold tQ the says, 'If 1 catch any of you \Yith the emphasis these days JCu"k. LADD. 2S. a tlttj:.iy at KLOS public. Its antldrug numben on hard drugs like heroin and " in Los Angeles, heads the IW<>-run 30 and 60 seconds. each using hard drugs I ' 11 OAIL'V Pll • .OT Ban Off Ori Hair barbiturates. 'fhe deeja} s gol help from year-old National Associa hon intended as a "public service" personally con"le ou t lo your By DICK WESJ' ll has ooocerned a group lbe record industry. rocked or Progressive Radio An· message. house and sli' your puppy's of rnck disc 1'ockels so much last June by allegations " nouncers-(NAPRA,, which One by Allee Cooper U!e!I throat.' " r-,f A NILA. Philippines (AP 1 -One or Manila's major uni versities bu lift ed the ban on Jong hair for male students and perm lts women to wear pants-suits again. WASHINGTON (UPI\ "p"yola" and "dru.,.ola." bul be~• the project a year ••o In · J he · th;lt the~· launche<. a n!ltiona! " .,-. -shock humor many adul ts terest1ng y, t campaign The more you think about "Get Off" campaign to COO· tht'" t'1nphasi~ tht' ca1npaign and now Is promoting it. won't dig at all. attacks only hard drugs, not it', the more likely you are vince young listeners that :~ N:~~h.0\\'11 idea from start The group claims 5 0 0 the so-ca lled "soft " drugs like The bans at Manila's Uoivel'31ty of the East were effective during a year or martial law by the government of President Fenlinand Ma rcO!. to conclude that the Argeft· hard drugs bring an extremely members at 160 radio stations "'WE'VE HAD a lot of calls marijuana. Why'! bum trip. "We aren't trying 10 polish where the format emph.asizeiS on that one, I can tell you," Ladd says it's s im p I y tines do it better. ~ ,., .• their (record companies) im· jazz. rock or both. They're Ladd said. "He comes on and because a large perce ntage In Argentina, \there Gen. ·~ TIIE PROJECT in volves 10 age," says Ji m Ladd . ~etting the album free, as says, 'Of all the ways to. get of young A1n.ericans laugh at Juan Peron recenUy was in· ;;~ · brief TV spots and an album spokesman for the d i s c \vill other stations requesti11g off nowadays, hard drugs is any suggestion marij uana is s1alled as president, they don't ,.'°':·::::·::::::'.'.'.:::".".:'.".:':~~~-·~l~a'.'.n:'.'.\i".-d'.'..rn:'.'g~son'.'.'.".gs'...'.:o'~w:_•:m.'.'.'.'.;n'."g:_• _,_ioc:::.:k::;•Yo:'::.· _"_::W~e_'.· '.'.'.'.'.'oo:::.:k'.'.;n'."g..'.''.'.' _•g:•<:_::;':_· :'.:'a~y~s_:La~d'.'.d·~-----..'.''....".P''..'.'".:"'.O'..'.''..'.'":oP::ld:_::ch::•'.'.k~e':_.' ___ .'.'.h:"'.'.m'.::f::'.ul::_. --------'============' have problems of the type that arise ln Amerlca wtth respect to the vice presidency. 'Mle main reason they don't have' such problems is that the vice president is Mrs. Juan Peron. THERE CERTAINLY Is no gainsaying that the fim part of Presid ent Nlxon's second term would have been less beetle with Pat as vice presi· d~nt. t· 'The advantages of having \ a First Lady vice president 8.te immediaely evident. For oDe thing, it solVes the prob· -iern of finding something fur: the vice president to do. The vice presideat presides over the Senate and irons the President's shirts. ADDITIONALLY, IN event of a constitutional cr1 Sls brought on by a confron tation with Congress or the courts. the new s mmgement would reinforce the principle or ex- ecutive privilege with the legal precedent that prevents a wife from testi!y1ng against her husband. This Is not to say the Argen- Une system iS '1 ideal. Were the vice president to die in office. selection of a l'luccessor c .ould ~ec om e ra th e r awkw'f". . It is one thing to ask con- grellional leaders to submit three nBmes fqr conslde~alion as the new Vice president, •rNlxon did In rep!adng Spiro Agnew. •BUT IT IS quite another fling to have congressional leaders participate in picking the president's new wife. Congress would tum from lawmaking to matchm aking. And I doubt their suggestions "WOUid form the "more perfect union" or insure the .. domestic tranquility" men-UOned In the preamble to the , Constitution. If the president and the vice president got a divo.rce. the situation would be even more sticky. Jt could create a con· tretemps sim'ilar to the one that arose when Maryland Gov. Marvin Mandel and his wife separated last summer. WE MJGl\T have the vice president living in the White House and the president operallng from Bachelor digs at Camp Da vid. And what If the president remarried? Would his second wife also be second vice president ? In any case, once the presi· dent made hls choice , the next step would be to ask her father for her hand in mar· riage . Th.en, assuming his pn> posal was accepted, he would send he.r name to Congress for approval. 11JE NEXT question to be resolved It: which comes firs t., the confirmation or the con· sununatlon? Hubby Asks Divorce, Alirnony CARSON CITY. Nev. (AP) -Calvin J. Sandau b asking 1n a divorce action for $250 a wee k allowance and fS,000 in attorney 's fees from his: wife Nellie M. Sandau. But hi s9ys that isn't asking too much because hls wife's brothet is doing a booming builness. An accounting of Mrs. San· dau's Kit Kat guest ranch near hl!re. supplied the court by Mrs. Sandau'• attomey1. showed a 23 percent net profit for 1972 or $31.406. Costs came to $105,340, which Includ ed $1 .568 for adyertl11lng Mid $26 ,0'11 tor "labor." Ntncty~ne percent or the illCome was listed a11 being from "auests." OUR HG. 1.99 • S•t l11clu4•1 Chr•lll• / pl•t•4 ~uty ,.__ 1iltl• r•tth•I, • .,.,,.,, 14 -t.;m, 2 ••l•n· 1len lter1 , nut ! .... :r1·r1·· EA. No. HT91 . ··oz1n·· COLOMY POllT CARPET • f•alll padd•4. • ••""'rienert ...... ltl• luh airpel. • Wen'! raval . • Savan c•la11 •• ..._ ....... ou•!!,l[lll . llG. 3.69 UN. n . Ho.1012/41' WI llSl l \111Hl llOHl TO UMlt QUANTITltl - l'OIHOIMAL NHONAL UIAOI. MAGICOLOR LATEX :wALLPAllT • Gu•r•"l••cf ••1h· •!tie, fada and 1tokr '""''"'· • Drin I" 20 mlnulel • • W•lff cleen-up. CUSTOM '1REPLACE SCREEN 60 LB. BAG COi CRETE MIX • ..... i.· ..... "luti!hr ...... , • J111t ecl4 _.., •'"' ..... e 11'1 lutt thcit limpl•I ' FT. SECTIOIS WES TERI RAILING • "llralllv• wreu9hl 1 ...... ..... t0l•ty , • .,. ... he-. • ...... IKDCk fittllh. \ 235 POUND STRIP SHINGLES •Ir JotlftGMonvllla • 2J' llt. • J celon. • J buttdiM per 100 lq, fl, ou• ~nn llG. 3.99 BUNDLE 122~ I . OAl\llY J IM«ll 1&.lt M ' • WOODIAND HlllS 22t40 VICTO•Y IL\ID. aCIOl5- Jau.lllCIOll loOUUI ·~ ·--.... -· PENfzDtl .... ... ~y.. ~OTQR Oil PEllZOIL MOTOR -01L -/ eJOwe1th1. e He.yy dVty ,......, eil SUPEllOI ELEmlC HEUER • 1120-11 .. •U.htw.I. • ... , ,. rwry. -. - •u.. '" 1rn.. -· ""'""'• 'Itch•": llerii,..,.., ., -"· '"'"" ~~· il1nn ~ --.. · 9.lt #:.• IA. ·. NO. 627WITH THl!RMOSTAT 1':!711 11u.. • foam filled pad on back and Hat . • Hea~·1 chrome Plcitod. •""Fo1d1 flat for easy, compact ·storage. OUR REG. 6.99 GOLD VEii MIRROR TILE ••Int )"'alUy. • 12.1 16"1112·1/16" 1q11•r•1. lSOWATT CLEAR PAR IULB . ,., •" ..,,._ _. • tuy n•w •IMll -•I LAUAI SHELVllG • IM'r I• finlth I• pur ch•lca •f 1t•ln1 er pelntt. I l "Jr24" Slll ·~·'•¢ 1.1 9 a::1 41NCH BEIDER BOARD • rv• ''''" ltikknn• ... ,. ,. 14' i-.1h1. • lettt "'""' c.flf...-. nla IHw-'. n~ .. ou•4 REG. 69c GREAT BUY! HG. If OU R n· le Sll Co\UfOINIA'S GIEATlif PANIUMG SllECTION JlllSTOMI ll\10 01 51UOllAKl• Ill!! HU Ol Ill ltl,.U PRE FINISHED RIO BRAVO WALNUT PAIELllG • 4 h .•• h. 1hffh. •v-.'" ... .i. 6 ~J NO. MIUS NIJ..l l!Otl ..... :J:JO't SO. l llSl Ol l• 11.U.HO Of IOUll> (0111 OV.1• • GARDINA •GARDEN GROVI • WHITlllR lJ ... SO. WUTll H 1,,,, l:JSS\ CHAPMAN A\11, lll.IOllAPH ll:D, Nil! I 10 <:M•Pftl MT l•llOf 1 -ot•I tau M l "fQ.Of toM<tl.NS • .......... Of MAI\ UN.". 2''x4''x6 FT. FIR STUDS • Ulility ond IMtt•r. 6 FT. PECKY CEDAR FENCE • ,._ Irle!....._ • 1~1 "•6"•6k.hdr(C ... Mcttd.: 2·2"114"•1 ft .... 1-3"•4"•' ft,'"'· OUR 11 •• HO. &fo::I 2.13 LIN."· )14 Ol AJllGI SNOW 10. 1 OJJ I MAONOUA Mtwtl,. WI I \1 At .ot1NOM UCI lollQWl+f•O l•1t••Ul\ HUNTINGlON BEACH LONG BUCH 1100 fDINO I• 1:3171 KlUfH ST. OHi NOC• •tlf OIMloCM 11119 - " ;,s. 24 DAILY PILOT TlusdoJ, 0c.-2S, 1973 r· "' ' 1ls it okay to pray before the test if I don't do it .out ~ '"l'd?" .~· Cigarettes,Not !'•:J,· ' ' ' • ... ·i •r, 11111! I ~ "! ·r; ....... •'! ... , .. .,.)., !·-'··· i1" + ''"'l •,:111• '•·if·, '"~.-: I! .,if'" " ' . '''• ' ' I " .'I • '. "' , .. , ,, l1iii . <I I ".,,. ''.·'I ,, 'I ....... "' "~· ,,. ~ '1. )il/tn .... .;.···· The Only 1\iller By DR. STEINCROHN DEAR DR. STEINCROHN' My husband, 46, ha.cs had a bad cough for five years. He seems althy otherwi se. So much so he hasn't been to -, doctor. DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE He has good habits. Doesn't smoke cigarettes. I admit he has a pipe in his mouth prac- tically all the time. but I know that cigars and pipe aren't supposed to be bad . Why should his cough hang on so long? -Mrs. E. O»fMENT: Shall we scare him into an examination? Re- mind him he may have a tumor in his lung? That he may have emphysema? That someUmes heart disease is overlooked as the reason tor chronic cough? Santa Ana Bookkeeper Sentenced SANTA ANA -A "'Oman "·ho defrauded a Costa l\lesa company of at least $5.000 immediately after she bad been convicted of an .almost identical offense in San Diego County has been sentenced in Orange County Superior C.ourt to one to 14 years in state prison. Judge 1~erbert S. Herlands orde~ the maximum term for Judith Waters. 44. who is now serving her sentence in the ·Fron tera State Prison for Women. l\1rs. \Yaters was fou nd gu ilty or forgery after ex- eculives or the Robert Fish marine equipment company, 671 W. 16th St., Costa Mesa. told police that a number of unauthori zed checks had been cashed by Mrs . Waters. Tb e secretary-bookkeeper was on probation in San Diego County for an identical offev,se at the time she was hired by the Fish company. ooUrt action disclosed . 1 _ J J ORDER But why do that? Most of us know cough may be a symptom of serious disease. Fortunately most of the time , it's due to something not life shbi'feJilrt]'. Here are some guesseli. Is he allergic to someth.ing-t:ha causes the irritation? A cough that hangs on in an otherwise healthy person is often due to uru>uspected allergy. Only a doctor can trace the cause. Does he have a postnasal discharge that produces the cough? Does he have chronic bi,:onchitis? · I know-of one case in which a cough of longstanding was due W the fact that piece of hard wax was pressing on an eardrum. This cough was a reflex cough. When the wax \\'as removed, the cough disap- peared. THERE ARE SCORES of possible reasons. But let's not forget a common one : smok- ing. You, like many others, have the mistaken idea that only cigarettes are the enemy. Not true. Some doctors say, "Better give up cigarettes. They're bad. tf you're going to smoke, use a pipe or smoke cigars." I disagree. Such advice gives a patient the impression tobacco taken by pipe or cigar is harmletis. It isn't Have your husband try a trial run, ii possible. Have him quit smoking his pipe a monlh. If the cough still hangs on, then it is really time for him to visit his doc- tor. DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: We hate the name "Senior Citizen." It brings to mind a person as .helpless as a vegetable. Whoever thought that one up has performed a disservice to all of us. \Ve arc alive. 'Ve travel. We enjoy life. So Jet us be the opposite of teen-agers . Call us sen-agers. We still have the desires for sex, life and travel. -A Sen-ager CO~P.ifENT : I also dislike ''Senior Citizen" as a dishonest euphemism. But "oldster" is the opposite of "youngster" and chances are you "'ouldn't like that either. Just forget your age no matter "flat they can you. 1000 ~eautiful Stick-on YOURS ::.\ LABELS / TODAY! ... Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For Younelf or a Friend· May be used on envelopes as return addrest lebels. Al10 very hand y as identification leb•ls for m•r~i ng pers on•! items such "' boo~s. records, photos, etc. Labels stick on gl•1s •nd may b111 used for ma r•ing home c•nn111d focd items. AU labels •re printed with stylish Yo9ue type on fine quality white· gummed paper. ' ' I Budget-Save-rs Indoors and Ou ,t SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH OCT. 31, 1973 -. . ' ' .. 12" Cork. Squares • Dec.9f•t•1 <irk ell 111.iillit fn-Sink'":~fl>r® Garbage·· ..,,,"' · . 1 ""' posa ' . Amber Glass Swag With Diffuser • Elq111t A111lttt Gloss gltlt1 • l r1ss diffvs1r 111 jusl th11ithl li9hl • Ah1n1iW.l1in111n 11 1111by 9aa Sylvania 40-Watt Ruorescent Tube • filt 41 i11<h li.1:tv1• • lt1111micol I• •t• • P11\'U1t tl•r•lr11 li1ht 69c • Milk• Mlletlll Mef1i1, w '' • l11111l•tri'. '"' 77' Pkg.014 • r.,,.~._. •"Ii ........... • U.t""""· 2,'jaa 25' Drain Snake} • G1ridi W •Y " ,,, ~ • <l .. 1.treiinwi._t .. st. L-~· I •l/f "(I • ,.._Kii *i'~ii' Sturdy Plastic Shag Rake • ll:•qs ,..ir shit """tiful, • Str1111y1t1•tl1 • R1is11 fili.,s -4 ellltwS WHf 1 .29 Vigoro® 6-in-1 Dichondra Food • f11dt, w;tt11...i cllllff•h Mls1et1 • lat11i1Hl.rMil • Od11l1s1 s;oo,~. 6 99 'Shreddies' Cut Foa,n • Multi-u11W 1-nMier • Stvtf plll1w1, 11,1, 111011! • 1011• 1b1il .. 39c Wiss® Rower Shears • D11""'4 ftrt"-<~ttl111p.r f1w11rH1 ll'"-s ' • W11t'l .... 1prtriohplem 2aa ~ -·-~ ._· ... Osterizer® 8-Speed Blender • .hist stlect 1.spffl-4 5'1111 • 5-tup pltstic Clllhli- • JIO won •'" • ,_ .. 11 N1rvt1t 1-944 9 .. Pc. Nut Drive Wrench Set -- .,...,.. .. _ . . . .. . . .. " . Thllt~J', Octobtr 25, lCJ71 DI.IL v PILOT IS , Finl~y Keeps, 'em .. , Upset by Holding Willianls . , calcAGb (AP) -Charlie Finley cld •f oeafu. \ J -'1)& controVersllll owner of tbc "uld By threatening 0 legal action. Finley. who nearly stole the show at the World Seriee with the firing of his second bueman, mJY have started enoth<!r hi!! way to Detroit as manager. ··J'm surprised," said Williams from his home in Florida. •·1 have high regard for Mr. Finley . I-le never wenL baek · cbMnpion OakJand A's says be woo't let go of bis manager ~ VOJ.11- without a fight In court, lf ~. "U I do lei Wlllil\ms gci, 111 have to be compcll.'8ted. And ..._,..led )landsomely," said Finley W~­ HO added he haa no intentlm -of tilVtna Williams a free hand to nqoti>le .i..ruckus inv.olrtng the New York Yankees Md the J?etr<iit Tigers. wnuaim, Who has a contract with Finley through 1975, annOWlCCd his rtJlgnatioo as Oakland manager Sunday just after the A's tron the World Stries. He was ~y headed to,the Yankees to ttpiaOe Ralph Hook, wno was on on his wont before." , . . \VilJiams d~ribed Finle)''s acuon as a complete aboutface. He sal~, he· had received assurances from the O'lliillCt' that Finley "'OU!d not block \\lilliarm' l~vil)8 . with aJl04\ler club. Ethiopia's Olympic Ace Dead at ·46 :ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia -Abebe Btkila l!:tbiOP..i,'• ·gtt:at two-time Olym· pie $rat'htii diampion, died today in an amtf hospital at the age of 48. ' hlo . 'Bikt1a a naUona1 hero In Et p1a where~ ha4,"been,a captain in Emperor Haile Selassie's rrnperial Guard, had been paraJyt.ed. alnce an automobile ac- ckient in 19119. • " • ·Jie was repOrted mtlcally ill and was to· have been nown to Loodon today fOr emergency treat~t at a Loodon hoopital.~ tbe ~ W.rld in l!IM by wlnlll!JI ilie0lymp1c _ marathon_~! ~-flliintng ba,.root -oter ·the cobbJfoC6i"'•· ol' the Appian Way and fmlslllng w1Cler' tbe li&ht& of tl\e Colosseum. ~ 'In Tokyo in 1964 he repeated thet feat. tb&t time wearing ahoes! and became the first man ever to vnn the grueUtng 26-mlle, 385-yard OIYll\Pk: lost . twice. Blkila had been in a coma since late Saturday, but the army hospital did riot dlsclo.se the cause of death. It was suspected that death may have been c:eused by a brain hemorrtlage caused by complications of his paralysis. He will be buried Saturday with full mJlilary honors at the cemetery reserved for heroes, tbe army announced. • BUiie le.,. Pl•11• ·HONOLULU -The leading lady of proteuional tennis, Blllie Jean King, meets: Helen Gourlay ol Australia tonight in the single finah of the Hawaii Women's Professional Teonl.I Tourna· -ment.. . -;, ~ 1'Irs. King easily downed Marcie Louie, 6-01 6-2, and Mrs. Gourlay overcame Kerry Melville or Australia, 7~. 7-5 in the semlfinal matd:les Wednelcliy. e Kl .. •-1'4'1' LOS ANGELES -Center Vic Venasky triggered a rour-goal outburst in the !econd period with a pair of scorea to power the Los Angeles Klng.s to a 6-4 National Hockey League victory over the Atlanta FlameS Wednesday night. Venasky's line paced the attack against F1ames' goalie Phil Myre as left winger Randy Rota scored one goal and added fJI assist while right winger Frank St. MarHille set up three tallies with perfect j>a!ling. • Smida to Pro• LOS .ANGELES -Steve Smith, the \\'orld lDdoor pole vault record bolder, says be turned pro!esslooal to avoid the bypocri!y of the Amateur Athtetic Union, avoid Illegal payments and "make some real money." Smith signed with the International Track Association Wednesday and said he "wanted to make more money than t could as an amateur and Increase -my longevity." • Da.,I• Cup Here LOS ANGELES -The 1974 North American Zone Davis Cup finab wlU , be played at Rancho Mirage, near Palm Springs, the U.S. Lawn Tennis Assoc!a· lion has 'annOonced. • Walteri. ~~E1ock, ~!dent of the \JSLTA, said Wedne!dayi the fmals are lcheduled Jan 11, 12, 13 at Sunrise Countcy Club with th~ United Sta• expected to face Metlco. The I97S Davis cup !lnall .,. 9dtedul- l!d the end or Norember Ind the fif!t ~f December in taevel&nd but the 1974 tliminaUons begin in tM rnSddle of ll6t month with the United States drawing a bye until January. '-~l<!Cutcloeon Back : LONG BEACH -Running back Lawrence M<Oltcheon. is back In prac- tice sessloru! wlth the Loi Angeles Raw but the awift fullback la still unable io run at full speed. McCutcheon auffered a pulled muscle -·th•~ prevented him from playing last Sunday when the Rams ran their record to &-0 with 1 victory over Green Bay. Williams said he has not talked with the Yankees nor have the Yankees c:on· tacted him. UPI Tll•P1191• THE LAKERS' · JEJtRY WEST (441 THREADS '.TtiROUGH TRAFFIC . .,_kers Wl11, 92-91 Coach Blames Travel For LA's Flat Effort OMAHA (APl -i.we \Vere flat," conceded John Barnhill, the Los Angeles Lakers assistant coach. "We had a bad day because we travel- ed here from Houston and when you tfavel all day like that. get in around four o'clock. it just takes a lot out d you," Barnhill said. The Lakers wearily plodded through the first quarter against the Kansas Qty-Omaha Klhgs Wednesday night, sccfing just 20 point.s, then staged a f Iaye,i,: Given Boot at Rice; Blacks1 Uneasy HOUSTON (AP) -Dismissal of a black player from the Rice University football -team 1pparently bas brought Unrest among other Negroes on the squad but they were reluctant to talk to newsmen abqut the situaUon. 'lbe black Players have held at least two meetings since split end Edwin Collins was dropped from the squad ?tfonday by coach Al Conover arter Collins cursed. the coach. Collins has since apologized and asked to be reinstata!, but Conover apparently is not ready to lift the suspension. 1be blacks ,inet Tuesday night in I.he: room of middle guard Corneliu s Walker end again in the girls' gym prior to . Wednesday's practice. McCoy McLemore. Rice assistant 'basketball coach. and brain coach .Jack Alls~usc jolned in the Wednesday tiog, apparently as peace makers. comeback that lasted most of the game for a 9'1-91 victory. ''It looked like all those guys out there took unlil the second quarter to get pl aying." Barnhill said. Los Angeles scored 24 points in the second quart er to 18 for the Kings but still trailed ~8-44 at the half, an improvement oYer the 13 points they trai led by in the opening quarter. Finally two free throws by Jerry \\lest "'ith £our seconds lo play gave ttM? Lakers a three point lead that provided enough cushion for the National Basket- ball Association victory. Bill Bridges had 13 rebounds and scored 28 points. his best as a Laker, to lead Los Angeles while \Vest scored 20 and Gail GoodMch had 27. Sam Lacey topped Kings scoring with 24. "Bill is reaUy playing extremely well for us," Barnhill said. "I i;1,•as glad to see him in the offense more tonight. but then aga in he's been ori the boards and he's been playing well for us every night." It was the second victory in t\\'O nights fur the Lakers and gave them fir st place in the NBA Pacific Division with a -S:2 mark. Barnhill said the Lakers have been trying to work on their learn defense. ~1 •119.in 1'11 • • ..... KC-OITMllM !fl I 8rkl0t1 (Ol/nll Goodrkll H1tr11ort lDVt Prke E, ~m!tft Wn> ••• 10 , .. '~ ... ' " , 1·1 ... ' 21 81!><!n G Sloct< 21 D' .. n!nl I Durren ' Guokt1 ' Koli1 • 1 1Comve1 20 L.cty Riley N. Wllll1ms TOlll$ ll 2'-ll! 91 Tolal1 • ' T • 7-l 11 1 G-1 1 S M 10 ... ' • 1·1 11 2 O·O ' ' .. ' 9 •·• 1• I 1 1 J 5 00 10 Cl 11·11 " Loi AtlOlln 'tO 1~ 'l 75 -'1 KC.Omal'ta ID ie U II -•1 Foule<i out -None. Tot1I ~I\ -LOI Ar19oleos 1J. Ktnldl Clty.(lmo- 118 i&. 4: -S.34' Finley aald he stunned Yankee offidals al an American League meeting in Chicago Tuesday "''hen he denied them permi83lon to talk to Wiii iams about suctecding Houk, \\'bo had announced he already signed "'itb Detroit. The practice of seeldng peml.issioo to talk oonlract with a prospective manager Is usually a mere formality among club owners. "I said 'absolutely no ,•" Finley recaU· ed a conversation with George Stein- i..-. Vanke< board chalnnan, and Gabe PauJ, Yankees president. "There was qui1e a pow·\\'OW bel\\'etn the Yankee and Tiger offici als after I made it plain 1 wasn.'t going to let \Villlams 11:0 for nothing," Finley said, "1 wam't in on the cooversation but Steinbrenner told me the Tigers never did ask permission to talk with llouk, \\'ho also had two years to go on his contract with the Yankees," .said Finley. "Don't be surprised if lbcse things wind up in court." Jn New Vert. ~ Vonlrees said Houk teclmlcally 1Ull rit their manager. •• Paul said the club has nol g1¥Gi" lfouk I.he standard release form on tfMi rest of ru s contract or promulgated· It through the league office as of yet. . As thin&s sU.nd now, then, WUJiantl is still with the A '1, Houk with the Yankees and Detroit, whkh fired man- ager Billy ltlartin, is out in the cold. Commission Approves , Coliseum Remodeling LOS ANGELES (AP) -A $2.3 million re1nodeling plan for 50-year-old l\femorial Coliseum was approved \Vednesday by the: Coliseum C.Ommlssion. Jn a special meeting the COin- missioners voted approval on a project that woo1d improve and boost seating in the stadium and to ask the city and/or the county for the money to carry out the proposal. "\Ve look the Action so the Los Angelt>S Ran1s, University of Southern California and University of California at Los Angeles , our three tenants, will all know that the commission wants them to remain," said Los Angele Chunty Supervisor Ernest E. ~. president of the commission. • "Th.is special meeting was called for lbe reason of malting eve ry effort to remodel the stadium as soon as pos,,i· ble," Debs added. lie said that the plan, ''is conUng~t upon agreement of the three major tenants tO a schedule of payment$ from additional revenues generated by the" new seating. to repay the Joan at no cost to tbe taxpayer." Debs said the Coliseum ';has aJ"'·aJ'S paid its ov.n "-ay. Th!!re bas never ~n a dime or tax mooey go into the Coliseum. il has al""·ays been se1r- •uppot1ing_J111<LwlLllilelld...Jouep...JJL--l that way." The basic concept is to lov.·er the B • -P-1 N d d playing field by 14 feet, elimhjattng lg ay-' De Q tbe Tartan numing track installed onl:t ... ,;.-' ----~ -.. '7 --· --tW<> years-ago, B!ldlng 18-l'OWll of leAta clOStt to the field. That will create To Defeat Irish LOS ANGELES (AP) -Big is the word coach John McKay of Southern California uses to describe this weekend's classic football battle with Notre Dame. ''This is the biggest collegiate ln- tcrsectional gam e of the year," hicKay said . ''It always is. Jn the 14 years since I've been coaching here eight or nine times the team that .won this game could wln lbe national cbampionship." Southern Cal has a· f>-0-1 record as the defending national champions. The Trojans are ranked sixth while Notre Dame is rated eighth with a 5-0 mark. McKay said Wednesday that his Tro- jans "'on't win unless they can make lhe "big plays" against the Fighting Irish. "Even as big as we are, they 're bigger. We can't try to slug it with them," he said. ~1cKay said that "beating Notre Dame is always one thing -you must niake big plays. You cannot beat them by ball control." The coach cited two kickoff return s for tou chdowns by Anthony Davis last year and touchdown catches by Edesel Garrison the year before. Southern Cal goes back to South Bend with three straight victories over the Irish. •·tt's a great game and we're emo- tionally charged," McKay said. "I'm not underplaying the importance of this game but if we win it will not help us go lo the Rose Bowl. If we lose it will not have undermined our goal of the Rose Bowl ." . "National ranking, yes, if you're silly enough lo worry about that. We could beat Notre Dame and go up to number three but lose the next week to California and not go to the Rose Bowl," McKay sa id. McKay said reports defensive tackle $1 Million Suit Thro,vi1 at Feller CLEVELAND -A hfichigan man who claims Bob Feller stole the l(l\'e of his wife has filed an alienation of af. fections suit against the former Cleveland Indians' star pitcher in CUyahoga County Common Pleas Ccurt. The plaintiff, George \Volf of Benton Harbor. 1\1.ich .• seeks $1 million in com- pensatory damages and another SS00.001 in punitive damag('s. \Volf claims in his pet ition that hi s \1•ife. Eleanor. nlet Feller ''on a frequent basis" from 1967 through the early part of this year. !·le says he and his wife were married in June 1946 and divorced last Feb. ts. Feller could not be reached for com· ment on Uie suit. Glenn Byrd had quit the team were inaccurate. The coach said the junior had an ankle injury and would not play any more this year because of it. He did confinn defensive end Ed Powell, who lost his siarting job two "''eeks ago, had left the team. "Powell demanded to play more." said 1'fcKay. "Playe rs are not running this team, the coaches are. We have no union !or pl.ayera here. If Anthony Davis came to .me and sald the 1ame thlng, he'd be of! the tea m." l\fcKay said linebacker James Sims continues to be plagued by M ankle injury and prob.ably will not play against Notre Dame Saturday. Another Owens Set to Follow Big Brothers Mli\li.11. Okla. (AP ) -Ste\•e Owens thrilled Oklahoma football rans with his bulldozer4 type running in the late 19605. Th is year his younger brother, Tinker, is getting the cheers !or his pass catching and speedy running. And a third one is coming. J im Owens. Miami high school senior \1'lngback and sa£ety, isn 't as heavy as Steve, the 1969 Reisman Trophy win· ner """ho now is with lhe Detroit LiOT13, nor as fast as Tinker. But he is a good prospect. "I always wanted to play football, and Steve and Tink set a pattern that made me want to be even better," Jim said. "I want to make all-state and go somewhere to play football after I get out of high school." And the University of Oklahoma is where he is looking. "I've liked it dowD there (Norman , Okla.) since Steve was !here," he said. "They always have a "'inning team. T'd like to play on the same team \vith Tink again. I like to watch him run, and it just feels ~ to ha\'e '"'O brothers out there again." Jim is light -only about 150 pounds. But he is averaging about 10 yards per carry from his ""·lngback position and his coach, L. 0. Bains, savs on passes he "catches anything near him." Jim has added 10 pounds since last season and believes he can gain more. "I'd like to weigh 175," he said. "l'n1 more Tlnk's style," Jim said. "It used to be you just heard about Steve. but now it's Tink you hear more about ." nearly 14,000 new seats. Also 11 ,850 new seal! will be built in the now open east end of the Coliseum for what officials say will be a tot.al cf 25,232 newly constructed seats, gfl of them closer to the field. The added scaling will increase capicl· ty to 88.639. making it what a spokeaman said woold be the largest "first class seating" stadillm in the nation. All seats in the facility would be of the anncbalr type. The changes. however, would eliminate track and field at the Coliseum. Rams ov.ner Carroll Rosenbloom had said he either wanted the Co\i.5eum im- proved or the team might seek: betteo quarters elsewhert. Seating for Ram! games is currently around 80,000 with the open end not used because it is considered too far from the field, For college games, however. the Coliseum's full 101,0Ckl capacity is apcn for use. Officials said if the Joan is available and the three tenants agree to repayment "'Ori: could begin after the end ot the current football season. Suggestions by Rosenbloom for an im·· pro\'ed press box, VIP suites and Rams office .facilities were not discussed but "·ould be considered at a later date, a commission spokesman satd. The Coliseum was built in the I~ refurbished for the 1932 Olympics then remodeled about 10 years ago \\'ith new armchair seats in most areas. I'll Q11it UPIT ........... For1ner heavyweight cham'pion l\'luha1nmad Ali says he'll quit boxing if he loses to J oe Fra· zier in I.hei r Jan. 27 fi ght at l\taclison Square Garden. Ali c1uickly added there was no wa y Frazier could beat him this lime. He wu considered "poeslble" for this Sunday's 1ho#d0Wh With the Mlhtiet0fa Vikings, the only other, unbeaten team in the Nallooal Football Leai\le. 1 TV TIMES GIVEN ' ... nie black@" disbanded after about 20 ·minutes and ttJ>Orted for practlct'. , Walker said' a decision had been re11ch- td "tut no commM1, rlgbt now.'' Mcl.emore .could not shed any llgtit on the meetinp. New Deal for Padres Rapidly Fading FOR GRID BIGGIES Qronge eoa.t .... [oolball ,.,,. will have ooe of their bll&l'lt wm.nds of. tbe ylll' waldllng televlslon Sllurday Md_.,_ " Ftnt, ll'• the USC TroJam and .. - Dome'• F)ghtlng Irish CXI t1wincl 7 at 10:45 Saturday. Sunday, ChllMnl 1 wm bring the i..o Angeles Rama and ~tlflnaota Vikings to area home& btglnnlng at 11 a.m. Tho Ram.t Md Vlkln&• art undefeated alter 11$. aames. ~-- He saJd the word "boycotl" wns never mentioned b:rt McLcmort, who also Is black, didn't role it out. "t didn't think we used that v.·ord a1'17_ " Id JdcLemore, who ~d- mtttedJle f in M both !<Uiona. ''lbtesU I haven't given them any ~i!.· .~ sa id. "I'm not going oter Al's ts. This Is Al's progri.m." COIUns fl• taking extra sprlntJ as a~disdplln.iri1measure for missing Sun· da~•a1 rtmNng session \1·hcn a ~11outing ma""' ~· between the playe r and ~e · · ver told Collln.s to turn in hi• eqa cnt. • . ' LOS ANGELES tAP) -The San Diego Padrt!:s still !iQUnd hopefu1 but lbe lawyer for race-track heiress Marjorie L. F.v~rett says chances are dimming tlult she will come to the financial r~e of the troubled baseball franchise. "I would SAY the deal ls awfully cold,'' attorney Neil Papiano said Wednesday night about possibililie11 that fl1rs. Everett would be1:omc a partner in lhc Pnrtre,;. "If It's not de!;id, ii'!! sure on oxygen." raevt s. prcs{dcnt Dv,z:de Bavasl ttifd, however, tha~ be bud talked to her .. Rn hour earlier 1n the evening "ancl · she was just all enthuslllStic as she's ever been. I hope it's not true because I ttilnk she·s a flne uset to the game.·· There was no word from Padres owner C. Arnholt Smith. But his daughler Carol Smith Shannon, also a Padres owner, sAld Tuesday she was "99 percent surt "'e'll ge t cur horses togelher" with l\1rs. Everett. "l\farge ha!t lndicatt'd i;he "'-ill take part, from one percent to 00 percent ," Mrs. Shannon !laid. f'•pi ano sal\ Mrs. Everett "uld she wa! interested. that's all. She still is. J think she slill hopes lht>y'll stay in San Diego v.1h<!ther It's \\·Ith her or by some other method:' }le said, "It 's ju~t Huit nolhlng has proceeded {)8St the initial discussion stages." The allomey said the problem \\·as nothing by Itself, bul "a :;erles of very com plicated problems.·• I-le said to the best of his k11(1\\•ll'dge S1nlth'a: personal problems had oothina to do with the dc:il. Smlthlf U.S. r\tilional Dank "·as declared insolvent last "'·eek 8nd W~nc. day he agreed lO rtslgn as chalnnall of \\'estgate-Callfomla Corp. as part d a i;etUe.mcnt of • Securttlts Exchangt Commission action. Tuesday the Internal Revenue Servi~ i;lapped Mrs. Shannon with R S2.9 mllliol tax lien, payable immediately J)e()all&( the IRS said S111llh had l~ansferl"f( certllin hmds to her. The lien is part of 1118 aclion 11ccuslng Smith or owi n( l22.8 n1illlon In bnck laxes And lnterd' on his 1969 inco1nc.. I OAJL Y PILOT J C Grid •• A~es r Unbeaten Tars Duel Dangerous Anaheitn r BRETT WHITE l;olden West-Offense o~- BI LL MADDEN S.ddleblck-OffenM JERRY WILL IAMS Golden West-Oefens.e BRIAN HESTER Saiddleback-Oefense Newport Harbor H t g h , unbeaten and rat.eel $th In tha CIF, hat beeu held below four 1oocbdowns 1n only one game this year. Anaheim Hlgh Ml scored more than lwo touchdowns ln ;u.,t one same this ~ en r@IC lO A 2*2·J ~- On peper, too.lghfa •o'clock Sunset League footbatt con· frontatlon figures to be a mlsm.atch. But the crucial game at Anaheim's La Palma Stadium could be a lol closer than the records indicate. "Anah<im bu loll two games by a total of four points," says Newport'• Don Len!. "Lall week they just killed Westminster, a team we outscortd 34-!1. Anaheim not only shut them out, they allowed mious y a r d a g e rushing. '.;The team hu lhe .mart of all Claro Vanlloon>beke teams. He may not be the coach any lonaer but his in· lluence as athletic director is felt. The assistants a n d everyone else is still there. "It'll be our moot crucial test yet." ~nt &ays b1I club will come ""' doing what It does best -run and pass. He au!petts Anaheim, however, will stJck mmtly tq the run. "We've had success panlng so yoo know we'll throw the ball agalnat Anaheim," says Lent. "They e1pect It. We'll also try to move on the ground because In order to make the passing work, the ground iame has to be there." Ste\•e Bukich, the hlgbly- lo.Jled Sailon qlllr1<tback. w1U be ll'ytJli to llnd his favorite rece:Jver, V I n n I e Mulroy, In addition to handing df to speedster Brian 1btrtol and the hard -runntng fullbacks, Pete Brown and Tom Saftlg. Anaheim counten wtth a quarterback turned running baclt, Mike • Coleman, who gained 113 yards against Westmirulter last we e k • Quarterback M0<ri1 Bledsoe also rushed for 79 and ls rated an adquate passer U the sltua· tlon we.moll gofn& W the air. The big 1u.nglb ror the Colonists, 1-1 ln the league but winners of their last two, la the defen sive line, led by vetenmJ John Lopktt lllld Jeff Hctnrlch. "SOii, NeWJ)Ori Is the be&t defensive club I've seen this year," says Anaheim's BOb Salerno. '"Ibey are big and qi.tick. When the other team has scored, It's usually ~ siven the ball In c)ose." "A11 ol Newport's games Ad1nlts Coach Bucs Look Los Al Solid, Hard-h .itting GWCMay Be Looking Ahead To Passing Upswing Says Fountain Valley Boss Having already bt to one "Loi "1amitos lacks the balanced this yui." Dick Tucker doesn't feel his: of the Irvine League's ~ great lndlvldual talent and "They'll thr ow from On paper, Golden West C-Ollege figures to handle San- ta ~lonica CC with relative case S.11urday night In the1r Southern California Con· fcrence football tilt at Orange Coast. Or~e Coast College football defeated teams, F0tu1-breakaway akllls that Santa anywhere on the field 00 any ready, they won't play." tain Valley High's Foot.ball Ana Valley baa, but they'll . ed team is jumping from the !quad i! slTi"" up another hit u hard or harder," down. I wouldn't be surprts Meanwhile, the Rustlers are .... <& ed thro th well on the way to rewriting frying pan into the fire this one in Los Alamit06 for this Pickford says. "Los AJamitos if they trl to w e their record book. Friday night against invading week's game. , is a very solid, fwxtamentally bomb on the first or second San Diego Mesa, but he does And Fountain Valley coach sound team. They've always play of the game, and we•n t ''ltblooksk like we'ro/ef goi.ng think ••e Pirates are in lor Bruce Pickford says there's got a good nmning back and have to be ready to stop It." o rea every ensi\'e w one major dilferenee between wllh their pestng combination Fountain Valley's on!y Joss record we've got. We've bttn another t.ough scrap. the two team.'!. they are really a lot more of the season came to Santa But Golden West com:h Ray doina a good io· b controlling , 1 H"& The Pirates, blown out by Ana Valley two w«ks ago, Shack.Jeford doesn't think it'! the football. We culminated be a breather for his Rustlers. five drives last week wtth tough Fullerton 2'1-3 last week while Los Alamitos is un- ln the South Oout Olnference H ll d s ks s ) •. defeated in five gamea. It ''\Ve're hoping our players scores (four field goals, o,ne opener, face a mUSt·win sltua· 0 an ee 0 u IOU would appear that· Saturday's aren't looking ahead to Rio touchdown." tion if they want to stay alive ' . game at Westmlmter High Hondo next week, but we're Golden West has rushed for in the ctreult title chase. could decide !eCOnd place in , ____ ,,,.Id they probably will be-ov ... -1.100~,--in-il.s--Six "1bls-wtll l!'e ·-•ery .... l'p.,..,.-0 Sto piin-g-S-" Vall""' the-leagu<-ot 1 ... ~ (providing It's i n e v ita b I e , '' says games and needs another 600 portant game for us. We're .I. U p ft . -v-. y Santa Ana Valley goes through Shackleford. in its remaining four tilts to ce.rtalnly not oot of the con--undefeated as el]>ectedJ but .,. __ .., The Rustlers ~oaCh is ·aoi1 break the current mark._ f ·• but "I p · kl rd ~ •t vinced r ,. ·-40-----------_ _;,er;;;;eore-iace -¥~ we 1 Corona del Mar Higb's Sea Abel Fausto, nanker Gary 1c o ~n con o -lcary:of-Santrt.t-~a..: laoeto'"WirrthiJ one to remttn Kin-8i-e faced wi~+l·D.a+·k•-~1h~•~I::--:--:--- GRANT GELKER Orange Co.st~fense ~~~~~~-pl~~,~ ~r~-~:ins~--. = ------.. , ---iO:~!~~~~~:: 1:<ei;ts chaii~ge ol undefeated Santa :1Js ~a:!reu0~~Uand says t1·~~~e~~·s dill"::en~ ~~!~ Cypress (a 43·21 loss 1. then MUS l Halt quarterback 100 p e•r c e n t Ana Valley Saturday afternoon "You have to g i v e Los Alamitos, Corona del Mar played a good ga inc against healthy now, so I have a hunar-at-281 ... Siiira-Ana-Bowl 1n somethin& up," says Holland. and ~fagnolia, th!'!: nei:t three Rio Hoodo (21·14 loss). La.st Edi ' we'll see more passing out Irvine League foot.bell ac-"White breaks for big plays. teams on our achedule. This week against Los Angeles City •SOil S of tbem Friday. Santa ~ tivJty. He'a not consl!tent, but you is just the big game at the College everything went wrong got e lot of break1 and capi-The obstacle Is· formidable can-cooirt on him for thrte moment," PiCtford says. for them <a 50-7 lo.ss). t&11zed on them in wiming last as the Falcon.t of Santa Ana or four plays that he'll bre.ak. Containing the running ot. "'They have two super wide· Lo G • week. Valley are the No. 3 team You've got to keep those plays Los Alamitos hal fback Louie receivers and they have ng run Tucker Is hopeful of in CIF 4-A rankings and bav' doWn with good pursuit. -Ortiz and the pass~g com· played some good defensive upgrading bis passing attack SCXftd. at I east five "But t1'e 1Vhole key In my blnation of f.1ike Ollvu te> games. Defensively, they're this week after a 12·for·29 touchdowns in every game. l mind i,-Famto." add 1 ' Brian ncehurst is the primary very big." says Shackleford. Fountain Valley High' s performance (104 yards ) No Qf'le haS stopped lyfyron Holland. "He teems lo be the concern for Fountain Valley. The Rustlers coach is Barons took the meaaure of against Fullerton. White the impres.1ive jwtior guy that h!b on the pass The Barons wilt be without hopeful of getting l\\'O key Edison recently, but Estancia "We're working hard on for Santa Ana Valley, and or run on thlrd and Joni:: the services of linebacker Jer· starters back this we e k . foo tbaJl coach Jim Hemsley the piwing game all the time. Corona del ~1ar coach Dave yardage. We think he's the ry Grundy, who broke a bone s Weekend Linebacker La rry Grady and says he's more worried about If we're going to win, we've Holland saya he doesn't thlnt leader and the one to stop." in bi.! foot over the weekend , tight end LarTY H_irt are ex-Edison than Fountain Valley. go to throw the ball. And anyooe's going to. Santa Ana Valley hu tradi· but have poss I b I e peeled lo return after sitting His Eagles meet F.<lison we do have good receivers. Despite that part of the tionally been a thorn In CdM's replacements in Homer or out the Cypress game last Saturday night at Newport in We bave no qualms about Falcons attack and the ad-side, winning three of four Henry Hanna, Kent Yomoglda Riverside Races Attract Donohue By llOWARD L. HA.NOY Of 11M O&llr .. 1101 Sl•ll _,RIVERSIDE -M a r ' ~noliue ha s not parted com· pany with Roger Penske bul for the first ~ime In eight years he will be driving a race car that hasn'l been ~pared by Penske. tilTunohue. \\'inner or this ... ,ear's Can-Am series. \1ill ,4rivc in the International Race C¥ Champioos Sa turda y and unda y at Riverside lnterna· : al Raceway in conjunction th the 16th annual Times nd Prii:. • ' Two or the Race or Ch:im- ~ events will be cootested ""bturday and the third will •t.ftike place Sunday alon g with llha Grand Prix and a spccin l ~W C'.old Cup Jeries race for iA:>rmu la Super V..-cs. .!lr'Tbc Pen~ke-Donohuc com· l.imne v.·as form ed in 1966 and .. was an almost instant success. ri,tark finished sCCQnd in thr ~a' Can-Am stand ings that .;-ear and came bnck in 1967 to win his first U.S. road rac· ,.Jng chan1pionship by taking -stx of lhe eight races. Hr ha s alrrady v.·on five or the eight races contested tltis year to ass ure the O\·erall cllampionship and would like ·'"to post a sixth win Sunday ... in the 125-milc Can-Am finale. I llis success over the years •"has broadcr.ed to USAC chan1 · ~ •.pionship races as ·wrll as ).o SCCA endurance rompctition. j". lie fini~hcd St'l'OT\d in l!liO al lnd i:-tnapolis and v.·as the \ i('tor in 1972. "'i Hl' also won the flr!il POC'Ono !nternal ional R acc~·:i.v 500- inlle 1'acc in 1971. i 1\lark started thr 1 !17 3 ~ season on o winning note by ;, driving a ~1at:idor to victory ~ in the \Vest rm 500 stock car 5 1·acr :it llivcrlidc. r. ~1ncc his victory in the stock j ~ar con1pelition. Uonohuc· ha.~ ~ dominutc<l the Ca n a d 1 :l 11 • MARK DONOHUE An1erican 01.allenge Cup Se- ries \\"ilh the latest Penske· Pori;che 917. One race that has escaped Donoh ue however. is the 'Tin1cs Grand Prix and he has opt_·nl y expressed a desire to win lhili one along with the H.ai.'C cf Champions CQlll· petition. lJonohuc \\·ill be tea1ued with Gt'Qrge f'olltn('r <ind Peter Jte,·son on the SCCA road rtlc· ing t<'an1 in the Race of Ch:in1- pion.<:. If any one group should be Fa\·orcd, this is lhc one \vilh their e~ricnce dn U 5. road circuits . 1"y.-u of the ra~ ,~·ill bl' run Saturday at 12:30 and 4 o'clock. S11nday·s racing program \1"i\I begin \\'ilh a SUper Vt-c ,~·:innup at 9 :ind Grand Prix 11 annup al 10. The Super Vee Gold Cup ~2.1 lnps. 63,5 miles) is scheduled for 11. The Grand rnx sprint for can·Am cars is ;it 12 :30 and is 30 laps or 75 miles. Tho third Race or Chnm4 pions t:1kc~ place :il 2 130 laps, 75 rniles) and the Grand Prix i!~rlr is ::il 3:30 ove r -i9 l;ips or 12~ miles. week. Grady had an anJYe Irvide League battfe. throwing." ditional threat of quarterback tests. and Doug WllJon. injury and Ritt was nursing A week ago Estanda ex-1----"---------------.:...-------------------=-------- a knee inju,.Y. tended F91Jlltain Va 11 e y ' s Starting defensive tackle Barons before falling, J.M. Gary Jennings is doubUul with "F..d~ seems to be so a knee injury. much faster defensively on the "\Ve're going tq watt and line. It's gong· to cause a see about all three of them. big problem for us \\'ith the If they 're not 100 percent pass rush." surmises liemsley Weel<ly Grid Fare as his team seeks its f i r s l win in six tries. Hemsley also says &iison poses a severe problem for his secondary. "I can't see how we can key on anyone in their passing game. They've got receivers running difficult patterns - straights, ins, outs, hooks, comebacks . "They're going in all direc· ti~ and Joe Troxell is pro!J· ably our No. 1 v.'Orr)' fo: the long situation. He runs a good pattern and has ex· cellent speed and quic~." The containment of the long gainer is the key to Estancia's defensive Success according to the Eagles mentor. "We feel if we can stop the lon g gain we'll be right in there with them. But this is a big if . . . Edison has a very potent passing game," says Hemsley. The Eagles run a lot of razzle-<lazzle offense b u t Hemsley promises no ad- ditional surprises for F.dison. "\Ve'll just go out and try to run the same game plan as against Fountain Valley. The kids are up and we think they'll play a good game. "We were happy with our team's effort against Fountain Valley last week . \Ve were hurt on three plays which netted about I'll) yards. Take away t~ three plays and we did a fine job," says Hems· ley. Cbanges in the Estancia lineup include Daryl Ross and Dave Gibbs at the ends. Wa ter Polo l"IOSl4-SOl'lf wmrnr111htr 2 ' s l-16 Lll Jord•n 000 '1-I WntmlMlitr Scol'I"' -..-0.llft•r ), &•!!Kl< J. H~Wllff t. Mllltr 2, Klrov111vro 2, H1rrl&. E&$!tHlm, D«.k••· WlllpOI•. We would like to show you what ...... made of. All·welded steel box Thrifty, yn, but gutsy too .•• Courier 11 englnMred for durablllty, long life. Hinged ant back, behind·ltll storage space. ta 74.5 lnchea IOng end a widt-62.2 Inches. Roomy cab has 1lyl1. visibility. Insulated Under the hood: modern 1800-cc. ovemtad cam tl'lgine. Aluminum quiet. Foam aeat OpHonat air cond lliOnlng. alloy' head. lndtpendtnl lfol'lt 1uepen11on. Bio ooH aprlnga. Stabm1er blr. Fully aynchroni1td 4·spetd u1n11m!u !on. Automatie opllonal. Long, W1d1 8·1ell $9tll'lg$. Doubtt·lctll'lg lhoeks 111nd1rd, front •nd re1r, _..cytinder el'lglne has 5 main be1ring1 lor rigidity end attel"lg1h. Dual cytlnder brakea ,., ••Ch whul has not 1, but 2 brake cyl1flder1 !Of sure 11op1. Rugged 7'f"09smtinbtr frama. BoK·l~.tllfl, 2,515 lb, C\lrb welghlf P1ylOld·tM• 1 ~II C:IPIOity•1,400 lbt. • Long 10.t.3-lnm __ .. ,.. ttnOO\h .,... ride. ·Mus t Stop Mi~klin: Henigan Ford's Courier· the little pkkilp. Courier 1h0wn wttfil opOonel atflplng. Wheel covara andmlrtOJ&. ~fnrina ~llgh's ''aritily loot· they tnke !he fiC'ld there wilt bell team coul'llinues to Im· be only five plfl)'~ billed to Prove .u the season goes along 1tart both offensively and dtrl'mlvtl)'. and a rnaj(lr !!hare of the LinflTlen Jim \Vcndell. \\litlt crcttlt must i::o to the tvo\ulion S.irlcr. ~lark Nichols, CharlC! uf more startc:r!. T1'·tet1y nnd Andre Lopei The Vik inf(s of ,\f;irlnn co<1ch op<>rate both '\\'ays. but tht ~tike Jlen1gt111 clash wllh h.irkfield gels tl breather. district rl vnl II u n t I n gt o n ~l ork Longneck('r a n d ~1ch Fridny nlijht at Nelson Mti t!!ukawa nre lhe re-z~\\\·stminstcr lllgh and ll'h('ll malnini: b.1cks b c hin d -i ·'/' qua rterback Gregg Foster, enabllng Mark Unk, Rick ~ferlgotd tnd J lm Str1ube to optrale on dcfe~. lfenlg1111 sa.ys his fot Frld~y night mtrrors his own In defensi ve tccMIQ\le. He al&o rntes his offen$l ve guardl ori a pt1r wlth Httnlington Beach. "lfuntlngton Be11c.h !tee.ml! to be ~ very good football ttam on film and It hns nn explosive ... offense,,. says Jfenigan. The ti.1arina coach u ys hil team must perform heller agatnrt Huntington Beach than It did 1g11inst Newport Harbor last week. HWe played our worst eame or fhe year defensively 1golnst Newport,·• say& Henigan. ''But Nl!wport contributed to that and Js .-very gaod team. FORD .COURIER FORD DIVISION ... We've no excute11." 1---------------------------------------------- " -·- ---__ ...... _______ .,_ ·--·----· --. -~ Organization Under Way In New South Coast Loop Tbt ftrst organizational steps are being taken for what Is now being called League E in the ClF Southern Section's releaguing of high schools. There are several other rtaaons why AOme coaches are not in favor of a three-round league schedule and there'll be much discussim on the matter at an upcoming league meeting. The league, whose members include El Toro, Dana Hills, Mission Viejo, San Clemente, Laguna Beach and University High 1ehools, has chosen Dana Hills principal \Valt Spencer as director. Already tentative 1974 football and basketball schedules have been drawn up by Dana Hills athletic director Del Tanner. • • • South Coast attt f&111 ••bo are looting forward &o the coming balll:etball season will be able to 1et their rut with tv.·o &oumameals wblcb will be mnnlrlg almost nightly from Dtt. 11.ZZ. First lt'1 the San Oemente KJwanls tourna- ment. nee. 11-14 and then the Laguna Beacb tournament I>«!. 18-Z!. , • The league football openers next seuon pit El Toro and Dana Hills, San Clemente Opening round palrln1~ la. the San Oemente event find Paclflca taling on Costa Mesa and Saddleback cballeaglag bolt S a n Clemente in games the eveniAg or Dec. IL El Toro v1. Mission Vlejo and Estancla- Dana Hills game1 will complele lint rollDd play lbe lollowtng nJ&ht. HANK WESCH -----·~ • Finl round losen play afttmoon games on the 13th with the whmen playing that night, and the finals wU1 be held at I p.m. on the 141h. The A-ttsslon Viejo-El Toro game l\ill be and University, and Laguna Beach and of special significance 1lnce It'll be the Mission Viejo. tint meeting of vnntty team• 1ince the In the second week it's Dana Hills-Laguna dividing of J\lllsloo Viejo and formation of Beach, El Toro-San Clemente, and University-El Toro. * * * Mission Viejo. · Tanner says there hasn't been any trouble John Vigil, a sophomore at Dana llllls with the football scheduling, but there've IIlgb, looks like he'll provide a real booi:t been some grumbles when it comes to neit lo the Dolphills wreltllng team "'hen the y&r's basketball schedule. season starts next winter. The six-team league will play three rounds Vlgil, who'll wrestle fn the IS.pound class, against each other. In Utt. final two rounds, went to a recent tall:edown tournament In a team will mett the same opponent in San Diego,. .bad six bouls and took fourth back to back games, however and that's place from 15 wrestler• in bll weight class the sticking point. at the event. r, pie * * * ~•uxam ' --... b • tball If EL Toro bas played Dana Hills in the FOrmer-tlfm!t~ Beach ml§.. asae opening round, the two teams v.ill meet players Stefa Garner, Danny Collen and on a Tuesday-Friday or pcissibly Friday-Tues-~Tom . Anderson are-all attempting to embark day basis in one v.·eek for the nexi:' t\\'O on collegiate hoop careen l'itb l'arytng t---..·,nml!'. ---detN*okuel!e&&, 110"Qrding to.Ar:llst.u:na The arrangement has been met less than Jerry Fair. enthusiastically by some coaches, the main Collen Hgures he'll make the squad at argument being that Jf one team dominates llumboldt Stale College, Garner is trying the league the opposition can look forward out for the Orange Coast College team, to lopsided losses two games in a row. and Anderson bad hopes of making lbe And the prospect of such losses isn't pleasing UC Irvine freshman squad until be wa1 to any coach. sidelined wllh a knee injury. Weakest Gauchos Have Been Improvement ls the .goal of coach George Hartman this v;ee.k as he prepares his Sad- d1eback College Gauchos !or a ~fission Conference outing at Riverside Saturday night. ''I don't feel like we have improved each week like we should be doing," llartmao aa ys. "We are still making mental mistakes, things like fumbles, pass interceptions 8Dd pend!ties at Cruc!aJ timfti .;. coming us yanllige. I "Rivenfde, even though It hasn't won a game, potentially can beat any team. "I feel they have the most outstanding quarterback in the league in David Cadena. And they do an outstanding job of protecting him. · "Ri~rslde has the ability to score at any time and we •ACIA'f DISTltlltt CO. N. Y. C, .W!i!W 'Ml!SUY-.111.UO. 85 PllOCI. $5.39 '4 /5 OUAkT have had tro.uble with them out there. Two )'ears ago we had to stop them on a two- point conversion try to win 26-25 and last year we were tied at six in the fourth quarter." Although the Gauchos will nearly be at full strength fo.r the RiveMiide game f«" the first time in several weeks, Hartman is concerned about depth. "I feel this is the weakest our team has been. Our deptll is the thinnest we have ever Prep Footbad had and we have been inept on of!ense." Asked which quarterl>ack he v.'ould start this w e e k , Hartman lndicated it would probably he [reshrnan Marty Mikkelsen. In comparing Mikkelsen and sophomore John Springman, llartman says: "I don't think either one has played to his potenUal this year. Both ot them are really freshman quarterbacks in spirit and they are making that type ol ml.stakes. "I really wish I had the ability to name a starter. .. Neither ooe has outshone the other so far this year." Harfman will welcome back fullba ck Joe Jooes a f t e r limited service a g at n s t Southwestern. He had an in- jured ankle last week. • er. It's .a11;tumn. And time for cider. Only this autumn, tt'1 time fol' the "Seven 'n Cider." Just mix fresh cider \vi th Seagram'• 7 Cro,vn, 0\'er plentr of ice. You'I get a crisp, clean taste of what autumn'• all about. Sa1r11m'17Clown. ll'l~'-ltc. Tfte St•ttt '11 CWer:To a mur or tlll 1lua fl lied with ke. add 1 i/t 01. &.t.rram'• 7 Crown. FJJI with lfcth, 1weetapple cider .. ' ' ~ • -. • • ! • 'hursdat. October 25, 1973 • OAJLV PILOT •' • Prep Polo ' CM Line Star Out Pro Scores Results Football fortunes for the 1973 season at Costa J\fesa Hnd J\fagnolia h.lgh schools have run remarkably similar cours~. The ~1ustangs ot Costa r.1esa split a pair or tough pre- season games and since lhot time have IGSt three straight in league play. J\Tagnolla's Sentinels won both early tilts then hit a dry &pell in three league en- counters. Both squads have !aced two or the potential powers in the circuit, Santa Ana Valley and F.<!ison, and Friday night's game at Newport Harbor High figures lo be a test of en· durance for one or the other. "~'lagnolia is a solid football team with good speed, size and an outstanding defensi\•e unit," Mustangs coach John Sweazy says. Sweazy also points out the size of the starting ~1agnolia tackles -both in the 6-4. 22-0-pound range -and says his own squad will have trou· JERRY SCHEPENS ble handling them. "}.fagnolia v.·ouid probably v.•in most leagues around here," the Costa Mesa coach says. "They beat Garden Grove leader Santiago, 14-0, and they have played close games with Edison, Va11ey and Los Alamitos In league.'' Complete Brake -------THIS WEEK ONLY. .. ul 1. Install NEW heavy duty lin- ing on all 4 wheel1! ___ 2-RebuiJd.Jha..c..ylinders oru.I ·wheels! 3. Bleed brakes -install hea- vy duty brake fluid 4. Inspect brake raturn 1prings 5, Turn and true all 4 brake drums. 6. Repack front whffl bear- ings. 7. Adju1t brakes and check emergency linkage. 8. Road test your a.utomobila Reg. $70.10 Extra Charge for disc brakes, larger cars, and addltJonaJ parts if needed. STANDARD & COMPACT AMERICAN CARS RADIALS For Imports & s·ports Cars General SPRINT .JET •Easy handling radial ply conatructlon •Long mUeage Dur899119 tread rubber •Aggr-.lve European treed pattern AS LOW AS 2FoR '4990 SI.hi 146SR-13 tube1 ... btackwan, ptu. tl.'41 FM. EJr..Tu:alCh, srzu TO m OVU soo IMPORT CARS STEEL-BELTED RADIALS . General Calibrated• DUM.-STH\. AADIA'- • Posl!I~ h1ndllng radial ply cont tructlon • 2 Steel b9U• under the .... ONE OF THE STEEL GENERALS TAKE YOUR PICK! USED TIRES AS LOW AS LOW PRICES llow about lhe Mustangs? "('m not sure lf Jerry Schepens will be able to play this week or not. He was hurt the other night and has been getting treatments this week,'' Sweazy says. Schepens b a starting of- Censlve guard and defensive Collete Soccer tackle and a mainstay on the 541/f,,.,,,.. cc 2. c..111w1111 11Dt1~1 Costa ~lesa forward wall. c~·S:w.1111; 111ck ,.,,,,_ t. Even if he misses this week's -~=="-'====-­ game, he will be back later. Not as fortunate are Paul Desmet and Brian 1'1cCormick. Both are out for the year with knee injuries. Sweazy also reported that he may spell Tony Martinez. the 155-pound tailback and defensive linebacker this week. "He had a hard time going both ways last wee k with his size," the coach points aut. "We may use him only on defense and move Dennis Delany back to 1.ailback v.·ith Dirk Whitaker starting at fullback." General DURA-• JET" o Strong4-P1y Construction • Easy Steering Contoured Shoulders """ 11.n 1"911. I"•. Tu POOL TABLES $39500 -.---:-...;;.: and up CHUCl'S Ci)OWUNG QIWAIDI, '11• "',..., ....... '"' ..... .,...... c .. 1. ,,.... o.....,. .... ,... .... , .. SIZES' 8 ONLY 10 ONLY 10 ONLY 3 ONLY 8 ONLY 8 ONLY 10 ONLY 560x13-560x14 590x 13-600x 15 DISCONTINUED TIRE VALUES E78X15 Belted s1295 Blackw•ll ... _ ... ... 885X14 Blackwall s1496 ... 855X14 s13ts Blackwall . . . . . . ' ... G70X15 Blackw•ll $)~ ... ' ... ... F78X15 s1500 Whitewall . . . . . . . ... 600X13 SJQ96 ........ ••• F70X15 Whit•wall s1aoo ... """· •x. T•• ,,_ 11.tt,. n.11 W~ corr.ct C.itltf, c.._, fo.-111. To-wt ,. yot1r c•r 11101111fCKtu,.r'1 .,.eiRc.ti .. 1 . . . Set.ty c.hed: _. .,_ l••t yo11r 1...n111t SHOCK ABSORBERS For Safer · Smoother Rldt1 -Shocks for All Cars. 1.1.. 5-lce C:ll•rt• hr Ctn Wiii! Air C1P1C1ltt...l11, M" Tirnlloll '"" ~rgoltatGenoralU..R3 •m Don Swedlund COM~LETI CAR CARE SINCE 1959 COAST GENERAL TIRE 585 West 19th Street, Costa Mesa 646-5033 540-5710 HOURS: 7,30 to 6:00 DAILY la DAil Y Pb.DI ~. Octobfr 2S, 1971 What's Doing Outdoors JIM NIEMIEC Duck huntin& Is showing signs of improving in Southern California as the first storm oC Lhe season raked across the Pa- ciftc Northwest, wtlh lhe southern edges touc:hin& I.be Southland. New flights ol sprig, mallard and widgeon were reported by many clubs this put weekend aad more are arriving dally. Shooting ii .Ull slow, but usua lly lbe first couple weeks of the seuon don't produ~ many limllS for the average hunter. Omer Lona of Newport Beach aa:id there as as many birds \\'Orking the priv11e clubs around the Salton Sea as there have been foe the last few;ears. !Ats of sprig are aC'CCKllting for limits and near limits waterfowl. Heavy pres&ire at Big Bear and Baldwin lakes in the San Bernardino f!10WJtains is lloldina down tbe number of birds baged, but hunters report a fair population of waterfowl at the two adjoining la.i.es. Northern and Central California sca ttergunners enjoyed a good opening under a«my sltios ..Ub most popular lbooting areas being productive for pallerit hunters. • · Vail Lake 111 Rivenlde open$ltl gates to bun1en: three.days a week. Hunters can-shoot on a daily basil or leate blinds for the season. VaJI has been a refuge for diving ducks and geese over the yean and abw.ld ptOduce 1ood ahooti.Jla: during stonny weather. • ,,...u Seuo" l\'e•r• Hnatlac .-... lie pod ror quU. la all of CallfMnia Ulil ......... -.,.., _,. ..................... Satarday .,... lq.. Coveys are 1.ar&e Md birds •·II pod •II.ape. A lost l111.11t-tac ln Ora111e Ctl.llly Ir • prMte pnperty, hat un&ttat-bcd ltaten worUlf U. ecf&a ef Utt Oevela.H N•Ooaal Forest .-uJd do well. Tf-•C €U.le Set An instructlen tlai& dt1icne4 to teach angters how to catch trout has been let at Anahdm' ·Lllt for Nov. 3. The clinic is co- sponsored by the W.O.N.. Sport$ CliDk: pnicrau1, Trout Unlimited and Anaheim Late. _ _ 1---~The·ellrdnr'@ltlf"tll l:veryone~ age-orJO years. be.it ..;n be limlted tJ/ the first * applic..... lldplng m the iD· structlon '4i ll be tackle companies, tactle reps ._ professionaJ instructors. , '· . S.lt w.i.r Aetl-SlotD• Vny llWe ecu.. 11 lllkflc place .. t.lte salt 'fl'attr Kent as ~ waler W fwctcl mott of Ute nrface feeders away from CMlhl w•lerl. A few t.arce yellowtall are still btlog caught In Sa Diep wMln .. Wl8 11 by Ne'<fport Hara.r boats, but the -••• .... .,.coy. Mlrn BaJ It IUll WIDr tcbools of albaelre .,.S wilta they are ltc8&edrM C»aDtl julp. But lbe boat. are,~ Ume to flll ... ,.-~ lor nek cod wbeo tbe alblil ..... , 1bow. u.cn-_.. Ii raied • ldt ., mils propolftha wWI wldter H11111 t. ud 1c.rm1 aeu ja1t around the corner.' A plJeBe call .. Hvuce • "'" .... , trip. Rock '941 cMdtel co•tblle le be the best entJcer for party Md aqlen. Good catc:ltel .re being tGlaled a\ the docb daUy ••an--.... Bay ftlMar II ai.. 1tartln1 lo pick up with some nice c~ ef Ill)' .... ud croaker being checked Jn at Art's and tM PavtllMi' '.l'ro11t FldalM!J Ltmlted Very few· q1ers are braving the high country lakes and streams and therefore catch reports are skimpy. 'l'bole lakes beinl stocked ia Southern Califomla are only offering limited •ctlon. Big Bat LU~ is tpe best bet , but wealher will determine catches. Anglers should try working the rocky shorelines v.•ilh 1poons, Fishbllcka and Dave Davis rigs, ~hile bait fishermen using cheese, 1.e.kes and salmon eggs should be able to string fair numbers of bows running to 11,-1 pounds. Bass fishennen are finding the bass uncooperative in most lakes. Action Is being restrfcted to !hose fishermen working deep v.•ater v.i th rubber worms, deep diving plugs and spinner baits worked o(f lbe bottom in heavy cover. &ports from all popular baa lake,, ts the same. as no one ).ake appears to be getting a break on any ntQ.ber of bass. , Ne"' ffaMfllH>olc PulJlbhed A new Uaeoek lw )••t been pPtlslled by Remington Arma wlUell lbottld help wa\erfowlers ill ldeatifylac tllieir ducks. The budbelk ii made of a plastic costed material deslpe:d to llold up under wet condltlont. It It l.n full color and 11bonld be a part of every llutert Ubrary. The book ii available for $2 from Remlap11 Arm&. Brid&eport, Conn. S1COrfltl•h ,Ualn Tarvets Even though there are very few (tshermen in the channels, those ge1ting out are hoo king into a good number of swordfish, report!: Whitey at Anglers Center. Monarchs, Two More Out Hepatitis Hits llqswe~ r -11'!19 .. '• _,. ~ · ~ Leooor11. olb • Amat Vie Tonight Dolphins Again Saxons . , ,To · Club ·j~. Mater Dr.I Hlgh'a Monarchs When 1 football tea,; ii held '! ~ ~ • ---•• ' and lbe rival Lanor:n of Two more. football atarten runrun, back Bob Spiers and to ~ minus aeven yarda ~ Bitbera Leonard Is the !'fW Club or Laguna Niguel. Bishop Amat collide tonight have been sklel.ined with defensive end Frank Cassidy rushing, and the name of that club champion at eo.sta Meta In l1nt round & ct 1 o Il • at Santa Alla Bowl lD Angelus hepatitis at Dana. Wlls High, as players unavailable for du-team 11 Westminster IPgb. 'Goll aod Country Club follo.r· rDl!dallrt Kay Hom w • s League football artlon. Kickoff bringing _ the total to four ty for at least two wieela. you'd expect the Lions to In( ~ 1$.stroke victory over defeai.d by Marion Al.WletS, is at s. Dolphlng standout$' who wUI .. It doesn't look like we'll rome back · atrong uit next ~hrflp recently. Mr s · 3-and-2. ~ unable to play Friday night !Ole any more kids,,, says week ' teonird f I n,I ah e d with Other first round resulta In· And for coach Gary Ca rr's against Valencia. ch Ton ' --b . I . I 1-0. Mrt. Leonard won over clwJed: Nancy Dlugberty Monan:M then are maw 008 Y i.cun, 0 vtous Y "Our team attitude has been Ff'an'1e Durst (lri8) for the over Ann Teele, S.and-2; ,~-Steve Wonnser, ,vbo replae-Cf'OSSing his fmger1 changes in the starting lineup ed center lltik.e Tamer in last · particularly jiosiUve (ti i 1 ·coveted title wfth Connie Muriel Gair over Ola.rile with An~ re•··-..... Jim week.'1 41·14 setback. l o "We bad a good practice wee•" says Westminlt8'.foot.. t.oorra:an coppiGs the 1ow net Kramer, 1-upon,Jbel>thholc. "'"'"""" Monday and with a fuJJ wetk · "" tward 1n the ~ .. -.v. hi Marion Meooe over Doris Ga rdea and r e turn 1 n g University, has been stricken to prepare for the loss of bJU COldl. Bill BolweU. wbo bigbt. .. ..... ...,.~ p ~ 1~· Lee Ginder quarterbact Steve Martindale u tw end Steve Miklos, who those four starters, we should isn't used to belng ~ , ... ·n-ni.mt -uti· l defeated Pit~. knd·l: WIS Wll ble to play a week be '-'-t nd b Frid " ..., u£-''"6'' ........ ...,. ~ .... absent from the starting uw-Y sou Y ay. barrul;ed. t ~· Lewis was the. v!clor' ~line linpey_ dvet Bionda lineup. a~ t'l\'O seniors join starting Oea:pite the Jiiw of two "But the team we 1s .tp; 1'*. grma competi\k!n ."ft!J YoUnl 4-and-il.i~e Howell Carr has Inserted 150-pound starters and seven players Joad-:.l ,_, ----"·•t IP -'tb.' Fallyn ~ WiD-(JYtr Mllllf W.UDUT, ~: junior Jim Wigmore at who were questionable going w. ra..,. l.AlrAf•··~ ntng'tQe., hOnon with Dt and 1 and Bet b'LQjestrom ov e r quarterback and 1S5-pound into the lopsided loss last Anaheim and N~ Hlifticr Cleta DeLoog s~ at !27: Eileen Bradwelf, Z.and-1, sector Greg Viviano at Um" Still week, Leon refused to we in this league 11 o:utstan'lmc MulDe 1 AllmUs was the Play continued today with tailback m an attempt to lhat as an excuse. ddenlive teania. We11 DrM ~ fttcht gross' victor with first round losers in a con- bolst.er the Monirchs attack. "When ycu don't hit when to do a lot of. tl$p: dif!eredtiy a whll~ ,Nofeoe Grady .won , 90lation bracket . 'Ibe eVent Gardea ran for 221 yinis ID Clouds you don't tackle and 1 when thiS ~eek." . · t net with,_,., foUDwed by Ginny . will be concluded on 'fuesday In the Mater Del optnu you make a lot of mlstakes," , The Uont, losers of Stask'O wtth 234; · -/and nut Thursday. against Santa Ana, but has he say.s, "It doesn't make any Jasf two and winners oJ. ,t PhyJ!js Barnes won the third netted only 80 yards in 23 difference if you're healthy • one game this season, ·blleJe flight gross .,~ with 307 · Itle•a Verde carries the past three Jaues. lJefTy Redman admits the or not. Loara Friday night at La while Nina ~ was the It wa:i guest day at Mesa The l\fater Dei passing at· exhU'aration of the eilrliest. "Give Unive rsity s 0 m e Palma Stadium in Anaheim: net vi~ witb US and Elbe Verde Country Club wtth com· tack has been intercepted nine footb'.'aU victory in the school's credit, they took it to us ." According to Bos we I} { 'Stipes ~ M 233. petition· ori a partner 's times and has clicked on 11 hiltory hasn't fully died down Because of University's sue-loara's Saxona are Mry tii I ' R'•taeJao S3 aggregate' basis. of 3.1 passes in the past two af University High. ceas running against the as good, if not betttr, than 1 Maxine Strickland defeated In low gross competition, games for ti.fater Del. But he's also quick to point Dolphlns, Leon expects Valeo-the Anaheim team ~t blaiik· Sally Q;wiley, l·up, for the Dora DonaldJoo and Dee Dec Wholesale changes in the out it'll take some doing if cia, 2-1 in the league alter e.d the Lions' offense ~cb 1~·s cup champk>nsblp % White of Irvine Coast CC delense are also evi~t with . the Trojans are going to make suffering a 23-0 blanking by had averaged 21 polnta a It ~Bancbo Sari Joaquin Golf posted a U for top honors. K e v i n P e g 1.n , Mi t e it two wiM in a row when Brea last week, to run right game. _ l ·~ this wee.. Others in tlie gross com· Beeuwsaert and Hector they tancie with Brea Sahlr-at Dana mus. •'ln order to stay with Loltt ,--Jfttfw,,'Vk:t Dl'eltdent's flight, petlUoa ~ed Lucille Plld- Delgadillo inserted in the.line day ._Digh1 at Mission Viejo. "Vale.Dcia fullback Ralph we · just can't make t! aeam-;1 Griffin defeated dock and aufiat..-_gla.ioc.Mcllon and-Dave NajeQ' ht t n--111;ll. -GOettsdie rilnb near the top number oNiuatates-we ~~-r-Up-ronop O~at 170. dary. IA two previw.t se1sms ot tber league in rushing and lut week," s&ys BoeweJ!, 1 hcmon. Marton' Keeler won , Also M.ar(t Rayes and guest Carr is bopefuJ the changes against varsity competitioo, J've always felt Paul Laborde ~ _c~ -ls one aetbaci r over VI ~· S-1, in U.-Vltginia Frueling~ ~Ana in his team's attack will be University had never woo is an outst a nding away fiom "'tying the all-time 9eeretary's Oiihf. and Lou CC at 177; and Shirley Kinder enough to offset the Bishop before. the seventh game. cl quarterback," says Leon. "I loss marI for., Westml.nster Willey 'Nb the winner over with guest CoMie Kinsey or Amat obstacle, which features the season 'Illat all ended can't Imagine them beitlg football team. Bev Corn we 11 in ilie Santa Ana at 180. . the passink of sophomore Paul. last "'eek with a 41-14 victory shut out. "Prior to Jut week we had treasurer's flight, 3-1. In low net competitl:on McDonald, the running of Ter-over .Dana Hillis which leaves. "To counter them we have been able to move the ball ConsolaUon winners included (Sff GOLF, Pqe !t) ry Carrigan and the nilty pass University 1-4 this year. to get· iougher up front. We pretty well. But our ml1tates \ Margaret DeBach tn the ir:=========::; receiving of Brian Kelly. "We're sti.lJ up in the also need to establish a run-and the play of Anahelm's Prealdent'a flifht; Viv I an Ill THI NOi A sidelight to the encounter clood1," Redman says. "Our ni.Dg game with Mark Foster, defense forced us to bog Troutman, vice president's; DATSUN B-210 is the presence of fonner running game has been ifn. DarTYI Ho we and B 111 down." Lu OJT, secretary's; and .Mater Dei coach Bob Woods pnivl.ng lmmensely o.ver the Sprin«man moving the ball. I Specifically, the Uons will Eileen Yracebum, treasurer's. AT in the Amat coaching ranks. last fi ve weeks, a rl d think Bill played better last have improved on 'their pass--El Niguel COSTA MHA DATSUN Woods is a line coach fOI' everything went right last week than the game before. ing attack to open up the President'• cup action has 1145 "s:.";,,:'J;·· C.M. the Lancers after tutoring tbe week. Don't forget, he's just in hil running game led by Tony ,~begun;;;~~a~t;;E~l~N~tgue~l;.;C.OU~n~try~~;;;;;,;;;;;~;;;:;;;;;;;;;~ Monarchs for seven winning Redman says he waill't too thirdgameslnce comingback Accomando, the 11choo l ll ------ years. surprised by· an excellent off an injury which means ~ record holder. OUR CAR IDLE ? 1 Wigmore hu played in only. performance from running ph ysically he hasn't even "We ll have to h a v e WE two olher games for 11-fater back Murry Graham, "·ho started league pl11y.'' balance," says Bos we 11 . START HARD? CAN Hl!LP Dci, completing five of eight picked up 191 yards and four Leon admits Valencia has "Loara, with Dave Wa1ker's GIVE POOR MILEAGE? passes roe 47 yards. touchdowns last week. The •f· a strong team but feeb his running and Max Bacon's THE CARBUROOR SHOP \'iviano, "'ho usually spends fort catapulted Graham to the club has a good chance for passing, ls an impressive of-IHI NAltlOll •Lvo .. COSTA MISA ...... All w.rti ........... ' ..... ., ...... most of his time in the secor>--(See <LOUDS, Page 3t) an' upset. fensive machine." dary at safety, bu C8Jtitd the ball seven times for' 16 •""•••-yards ln two games. Amat ent ers tbre fray lfttb a 3-2 record , including a h-o pas ting of St. Anthony in Its loop opener last wttk. P.1ater Del is 1-3-l overall and is 0-1 In league standings afte r losing to St. Paul, 21·7. ·/.r * ·'-tr JC Water Polo FALCON. BUICkj FOJIO, CHEV, MEJICUJIY, PLYM...t COJIVE T~ CAMAllO, MllSTAl"G. DODGoO PAUii.AH~. lllVIEllA. POl"TIAC, VW & V LVO. "IJIEalllD, Mm;1 CAllS. . 2 ... 29 95 2 .• ,33 95 or $17.IS ea. SIZES FITS Ml•U ...... .... u HI-PERFORMANCE HEADQUARTERS CARS. TR.UCKS ~2.!.~ftf-1,G ... MES ·••ru You c.M't _....... SHAKES and SHIMMIES LET US TRUE& BALANCE YOUR TIRES NOW MOST CAllS 395 '"" PLUS WllGMfS -----------------REPACK BEARINGS & GREASE SEALS Al Carlton. owner-skipper of the sport(isher El Tigre. ad ded his fifth billfish of the season to the angling books at the Balboa ll Cl b hi k nd ,,_ .., °"•"•" Ang ng u I. s past Y.'ee e . ~'!.~'· Monie• o o 2 0-1 2···38 95 U.S. & Cr.a.gar MAGS : ~M~~~7I~;r.~ 3sa Sf1•1U',14 • 1J , ~"' k[vlct I ,,_ lwH• <•••· On1y a couple of marlin \~ere caught this past week and both Goi:;: w:~, Kori .... ' -1 Wn~~d were taken in San Diego waters. Two marlin were hooked and t ~';:!;-l · ~::ii::"" 1.1• :.iif:'"'l Jost in the outer channel, but sklppers report spotting very few ...::.::-::.:;'·c_ ______ _ fins in the ocean. Only acatlered reports are coming from below the border as they are In between seasons at the popu lar resorts arourw:I the cape. Act ion should pick up again in the Sea ol Cortez dur- ing November when the big blues and blacks begin working the calm wa ters. Sall "'aler party boat angler!"" are still enjoying fa ir to good yellowtail actioo around the Coronado Islands, Loads are light and fish coont.s are shoy.·ing that anglers are averaging about two ye\lov.•s per rod . Filling out the catches are rock fi sh both for San Diego landings and our tY.1> Nev.·port Harbor based sport· fishing fleets. Albacore hnve mo\•ed ou~ of reach of party boats running out of ti.1orro Bay and from all ind ications !he season bas drawn lo a cl~. Lei's hope that nex1 ye ar is more productive. '-~~~~~~~~~~~~-1 1 or $21.tS ea. SIZES FITS G1l114 GJlolf l.lhH 1.U•lf 40,000 MILE GUARANTEE LININGAND LABOR GUARANllF n.. "'"'"~--......... --.. -...... __ ....... r ------CLIP THIS COUPON --~---. ., ~ .. -:::~-=~~.:':.:'.'':.;:.:'".;.':...,~ .. "': ~-............... -..... -............ -... -· I SAVE $52J2 11 .. T.:;;;~ R=u--=cK:::::..·---cA_M_P_e_R II ATI A1S BA·· 11:RV ' •• MOTOR HOME l'\ILK f'\ 1f SAVE10.00to30.00ATIRE I BARGAIN COUPON I I Use this coupon and save on the purchase of an Atlas or Ch evron Ballary at I I S1 and ard Stalions and most Chevron Dealers. Present it and receive~ I I SS 00 otl 1~e s11t1011 prtCt of 1n AtlH .. PHO'' Bl!lt11 $2.00 off Ille 11111011 11r1t1 of an Atl1s "A" Bltttty SJ 00 of! t~f ~l•t1on p11ct ot 1 Chevron .. CPJO" B1Her1 SJ .00 o!I !ht \1a\1on llfict of an At11s '1('" 8111111 I I Sl 00 ort tht 1r~t1on pnct of"' AUis ··pA"81tttry I I Offe1 and st.1t1on prices mfty vary at pr1rt1c:1pa11ng Chevron Dealers. Pu1c:hases may be made by using your Chevron National Travel card. Budget 1erms availab le. I 1565 S1tl~11 BIG SELECTION OF SIZES SIZE PRICE •70..15 ......... 21 .95 700..14 ........ '21.95 70!)-1• ......... 2'.95 ?S0·1• ........ 3 •. 7. SIZE . PRICE aoo-,6.s ...... .n.t5 17S-16.5 .•.... 47.16 tJG.16.5 ...... S6.75 10·16.S •.•. , • 49AS 12·16.5 .. , ... St.IS F.E.T. 2.14 to•.41 or $24.95 ea. SIZES FITS "'l•H Hlt1n l.fSJM l .UK1S llfftllll!t ~ IMtllct BIG CAR SPORTSCAR I .,,,,.,.,,..~ .... ~ I br1•11. Jitters mHlllllM, , SPECIAL· J ~=~~~ rtbwlll II ••ltl o~.~"~ ~~n<oJ• NEW RADIALS DOUBLE BELTED ,~----~----------- :"' 1 LUBE & OIL CHANGE WHITEWALL TUBELESS • 40,000 ' 1 . •M ,.... '"'1t111 .i1,, ALL SIZES 529· 11· .... '"'"'" ·-... ·4aa· S I I ,~ ""k• I.cl_, q M J MILE I , · 1l _.mt1-..1111,.i1. • .• ~~l~,w:~·~T~.. I "'-li•u.t INIM Plllh •. ••·111111~" ----------------- 30,000 Ml LES ·:~~: 34s5 l,,Jf.lJ ..... UJ.11 P: .•• T, HJ.JI • Guaranteed 4o,00o miles 1 LIFESAVER • srm RAOIAL Atl Slits on S.I• ----\ 34 9 --~·!,.~'!,\\ 5 __.,.,.. '."':·--~"' ll ,.. -,..... • '-"';; ,.,. ,.,.,,. ""'I ..... ...,,., -~.p ·.............. ' -""" ........ .,,,. """'"'... \ \-;_::::. ... ·~';!~·;..---REouu., \;:'°.:~--VALU~ Ml.tJ N~ .,_,IJ I' .E.T,1.1• 14~'"' MeAVYf::T181-~~~~;;-----2-4:~~~ .._ '" BATTERIES I SUPER WIDE l--.::~:·_!A:~=~~!~- "60" SERIES !: WHEEL c 55 14''TiR~s 15"1 AUGNMENT Jc RA.ISED , f REG. VAL01stJs MOsrc•11s ' WHITE LETTERS . f--------'f-------- 2 59, : AIR REG. 1750 FOR J SHOCKS v~~.~E ••. '·'-'·"''r-DELCO &/HI JACKER$ ' I Thi.. c.ouoOl'I 9oocl on1r 101" ou•cl\tlHI l'l'l•cle dunri~ 1111 oe11od 11om Oc100.1 1. 1173 th•ouoh I Nowemblr 30. llrJ. On•v on• "llPO" ~ti. vstd '°' •teh bt1t91}' fWf et'ltMd Tittl coupori rt W11(11 I wh1r1 fl'Oh•bllld l~•lld or 011'191wlM '•llllct•cl Ctsh value 1120( fl'or t•d•mpl•on,m1ll c0\loont 10 I St1nd11d Oil Comp1ny or Ct U!ornlt , Wt11t1n 0 P9••l•ons, tnc., ,0 , eo~ H, Concord, CA 114"4. I l r1dt ""t rli "Atl1t " Aeo u S ,.11 011 At111 Suoply Como•nr. 011Count1 111own tboYf 110 nOl t pptr I ooi 1n l dtut llfl•n• 01 ,,, A1111 01" Ch•VJon 1>11191)' I . ..,.., I I Standard Stations · Chevron Dealers ii I ''1191 ~ JONES TIRE SER~YICE Phones . -J """"' • 2049 HARBOR IL VD... ~ , HI _~""ii rirh;, L----··•••••••••••••~ 646·4421 "°•m ·~,•¢ COST( AAT SAMY) EIA ALL M~ 540·4343 t · CREDIT CAR~ HONOREO ( ' l ' llf'P-...., 11.m. 6 ',.m. Moncl1y thru 'rld1y Sai1urd1y t 1.m. to .s p.m. " -. ! ' .. .. ~: •' . . • ' > .- .. ' • .. < .. '• •. .. ·= . • • I . ~ •. • ' . • ) • • • . • • '• ' • t .• hnpetiis Buildi ng For MV • To hear Bob Hlvner tell It , the opponent this week for his MJssiM Viejo High football team ls aboUt as colorful as a desert N!xi storm -and just about as destructiv,e too. "Foothill lso't a,fancy team, they just keep coming at yoo play after play,'I Hivner says. "1bey •aren't exception.al in any one phase of the game. but they do ,verylbiq! fairly well. '"lbey're ~t spectacular at all, ju,,t welkxlacbed, sound fttn<lamjlntally and they cloo'l make' too'many mistakes.'' The sum total of those statements doesn't add up to an easy game for Mission Vie- jo when the two teams tangle Friday night at 8 at Mission Viejo. And the fact the Diablos are coming off a big win doesn't change matters much. "We have some momentum ,built up from last week," Hivner admits. We got a great running game from Ken Robbins and the line did an excellent job. We'll have to run that well and get another good game from the line to repeat." .,. - Thursoay, °''obit ZS , 1973 DAILY Pi~.., with a big 24 month guarantee • .. • p • .1 \If' 'U'"' ll'f I •' . ~ .. t "•.:!"• . ~.,,. "I II" 1-11 ... ~j ' ' ""' ..... ..... Robbins zipped for 155 yards -1l""-'week--in-Mis.1ton-ViejoTI-----, ·' , Diii' Pllet Slaff PMla CllSSIE LAMB,RIS (431 OF OCC VIES FOR A LOOSE BALL,. Holland Paces Win Over OCC WOMEN'S GOLF • • • (Conthu1ed From Page %8' Alyce Hall , Dottie F 1 e er Phyllis Smith and guest (Irvine Coast), Gladys .Bemis Virginia Gool (Old Ranch) tied and Irene Kaye (Irvine with J,une Studdert and Isa Coast ). Carroll (Yorba Llnd3) at 147. At 140 were Phoebe Conley, ,/illother tie resulted for sec-Gabby Bailey (Big Canyon), ond at 151 Wit ti Barba»l La Veile Spicuu.a and Anita Malick ~d guest ,Lucille Erickson (Big Canyon). Also Angie Holland scored five Copeland '{West~m H i'l is,-)-Stella Foster, l..ooise 'nschler points in the first minule and together and P~ggy Maull with (Alta Vista ), Jane P.lartin and '8 half to give Golden West Carol Ano Ruoft (·Santa ArlPll Jeane Brown {Big Canyon ). ' on the other squad. . Three teams Ued at 141 in- ; College's Rustlerette:s girls At 152 were. ~le ~rown eluding Marge Stocker, Ruth ._ basketball team an early lead with Bee Frebfain (It-vine Poole (Irvine C.oastl, Winnie ~ host Orailge Coast. never Coast) and Mary Fo~r~ll Weber and Virginia Brown >'~.-,d ·W t-d-11 ead a.y af. with Bonnie GOOisby {Westr. cvfctorta Y: Susie S tewart , :~ tenioc:n ·.-. · ~ -iq.:,Hills). 11 •1~ · ;-vii"ginia Forbes (Big Ganyob), ~ . · ., · . ' · t.; Kay Farley and guest 1'e y Jean Hendericks and Peg ..;-:~ . ~ ~erettes poste . a Henderson (Irvine c 0 !\s i ) Plegler (Irvine Coast ); and ~·· 37·26 O>ast Le3g\le vie were aloDC at 154. Harriet H~ Marc e 11 a ~''."1th Angie leaclipg all iicotlni At lSS were . .Bette ~Ya . Keller (Irvine Coast), Vlri~a , .. , with .17 points. , and 'Marcella Ketter (Irvine 1 McCartney and •Jelen Larkin ~ ln additioa to her. sharp Coast) with Mary Ann Holt 1 (Irvine Coast). :. shooting eye. shE; IRaS iall over and Phyllis Tmaladge ($fin!$ In a meeting day low ball ~ ·t!'! court stc4llng 1he ball Ana); ' .. of foursome event, a team ·: on deren~e. ~dt!lg and: · In ai low ~l;oJrnet.cVeni. or. Jean Randa11, LaVelle ~ bi:tnging the ball i£ibounds Jlnd for members, .. ~·&)~ Spicuzza, Wanda Baker and • dOwacolili She. Was' tb8 point was the ~ !ktor wi . • Grace Manley won with 62. ·' In the GWC fast break. in A flight..'Cdi Heth · . Jn second place at 14 were Ser oounter1)art, c a s s I e net with 75 followed by arge Mai-}' Crary. Doris McCoy ~ Lambris of Orange Coast also Hayes and Joan Chamberlain Betty Fletcher and Sandy ~ opened with a flourish, scoring at 77. · 1 , Mestyanek. ! six pointl in the first quarter, Jn B flight, Barbera M !ck In. a stroke play event, Edith ~ but Wa! forced to the sidelines was the gross victor wi~4. Robinson won gross honors in '-when she sprained her right Three player! tied for net ith th~ A-B filght. L a V e 11 e ankle in a .!ICramble for the 75s including LoWse Rob n, Spicuzza woo net followed by ball 3:14 into the second Bernice Johnston and Kelly Net Graham, Rosalie Harl, period. Adams. : Jean Hendricks, W i I m a When Miss Lambris lett the June studdert wOo gTO$S in Maypole and LaVeme Hall. contest, It was 15-8 in ravor C flight V!ilh 190. Mary · Seflt!lfff -· of coach Judi Ga r m a n • s Fothergill was the net *1dt" . , Ru:!tlerettes. cassie had just with 75. Wini£red Nichols had It was a match vs. par. recovettd from a b a d I y an 81 and Bette Gony lied tournament• for members of spcalned left ankle that was Ellie Kitson at 82. the ~mens go!~ group at in a cast for a month. , Huntin~ Seachff Country The game had a Uttle or S anta A tta Club this w~k. . everything including a shot Members of the women's In . the ~1rst night. Te~ ;. at the wrong basket by an club at Santa· Ana eo,mtry Cam1llo, Gumy Lamt>t;rt ana •· Orange Coast player Club staged a mibi-ruesf. ~osemary Erickson bed for fortunately, for the Plrateers, ~ament recenlly vfi t fl fiut with Joan Weaver i;iext. it didn't connect. scoring on a two low ·balls In the second f.Ugh~ it was 1bere was clock trouble to of foononle basis. Nancy ~y the winner foll~w· start the fourth period that Winning the event .,.were ed br Shirley Cumrnaro. Alice ; delayed the game five minutes Fran Dye; Kay Bra~El Acklin Laverne _Pe~erson, ·• and a double-foul call had Niguel), Marge Finle 8 n d ~ Carolyn Clark and V1 0 Gar.a. everyone colifused including Doris Keyes (Irvine t) .Olah M?tgan won the third .., Miss Cannan and OCC ooach with 132.. flig~t with Pa~ Penew~ll. · Johnnie Brooks. A tie.,resulted at 136 with Mar100 Oeall .and Pauline Cheryl Maxwell too'k up the Virginia Fruehling, V i c k Y McMahon followmg . ~ scoring slack for Orange Coast Gary (Jhri'ne Coast), Barbara ltlission Viejo when Miss Lambris was Ltmacher and M a r II a r e t Members of the Mission Vie- .· • sidelined and scored seven Kost.er (~ig Canyon) oo one Jo Golf Club women'! goll points, au in the second half. team .. On the other wefkFran group staged a unique wet Schmid, Florence Let' (Los holes only with half handicap Coyotes) Marge O'Ketfe and tournament this week. Jane Schaefer (Irvine Coast).. Winner of A flight was Lucy Another tie at 137 included McDonald with. 36 followed by LaRue Harrison, Doris Lyn.Ch club champion Nadine Maze (Yorba Linda), Fran "Carter at 37. and Ann Holstein (Big Cstt-In B , fllghJ it was Jean yon); also, Gwen. Sayefs, Iacovoni (39) and Ruth Eleanor Rose (Big Canyon), Jenkins (42) the winners. Jean Pat Cox; and Kary d;Wald Grubaugh was the lone victor 17--0 victory over Saddleback, the top performan<;e of the season for a Diablos running baek. Foothill has a running game of its own, for which Hivner has g r e a t respect. rt centers .on tallbach l\fike Waldron and Tim lJnnftey a- duo who have over 600 yards rushing between them. They're both good runners and they've got several good linemen up front," mvner says. Paul McGuire is a very good taclt1e and two or Uree other linemen do a good job for them." Defensively, Foothill has been fairly successful also, giving up just 23 points in three league games on the way lo a 2-0-1 record. They used to stunt a lot but they've been playing it pretty straight this season." 'Hivner says. ln several games they've really stacked players inside and been tough agaiMt the running game. "'lbat's one thing 'we look for them to do against us." ·Do or Die For SC It's .do or die week for the San Clemente High fQOtball team. Allie Schafl's Tr'itons tangle with undefeated and league leading Sonora; and Schaff ad- mits that if the Tritons are to harbor any hopes of an- nexing the Orange League title a win is imperative. Game time is 8 Saturday night at La Habra Hi.gh's field . "We've got a shot at the title if we can get to these people this week ," Schaff says. "But this one is a must." San Clemente. picked to finish high In the league stand· in.gs dropped its first two games by a total of eight po'inls before bouncing back against Laguna Beach last week. A victory w o u Id con· sidetably scramble the Orange League title picture and put San Clemente back in the thick of things. But Schaf( admits it's easier said than done. *'We'll have to play near perfect defense, especially against their running game," Schaff says. "I think their running game is stronger than their passing but theY do both fairly welL "I think we'll score against them, and I think it'll take mon! than one touchdown to win the game." Schaff's latter statement is important, because so far this season no team has scored more than once against (See DIE, Page II) •. (Irvine Coast). ·1' in C flight with 31. At 139 were Connie ~inzie, Shirley Kinder (Mesa Verde), ~~~ E> .Hom&~'P~ . • ' ~ ~.,.. n aw1rttr1 Virginia Colling and Edna Sf.~. 1!::!1 'l 2 Z 1l:3I McHugh (lrvirie C.oast). Also !~-----------------~iiiiii~ , • • • • ' • '• " ' SAVE 30.% FACTORY DIRECT PRICES -AUfOMAllC-GARAG DOOR OPENERS I• l llt lUICHEOI . SP l •Snp ~s.m1m­..... ..... 11 ... tll,.. E)-H,~a6'Piu. 4-~ $13900 INCLUDU , INSTALLATIO/'I .............. ,.,,, .• , ...... • (714) ' CALL 835-0505 NEWPORT BEACH, 3110 NEWPORT BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH, 9791 AOAMS .FOUNTA IN VALLEY, 16155 HARBOR BLVO. ' • Front end al ignment 5.88 Our experts set caater and camber, adjust l~in and 1oe-out. No extra charge tqi cars with.air • conditioners or tcriion bar. . The smooth-ride ReliAride® tire. D 78 series styling O 4-ply polyester cord construction o 24 month guarantee with 6 month 100% replacementallowanceperlod • A78.l13 plus 1J3 kd. Ex. Ta11:. No tradll·ill needed. ... ..... S ir. ,111 Jlrk• IE._l•IC SI•• ,-"9 Plb [.I.Tall: A7Ul3 600x1 313.97 1.ISJ C71•1' &951<\4 16.97 :!.GI C71x1 ' 735•14 17.97 ,,22 F11•14 775•14 18.97 2.JT G7111' 125•14 19.97 UJ G78ll~ 115/125~15 20.97 2.60 H78115 ~•15 21.97 2.90 Prices ~t.own art lor blt cl<wt l! 1ubele•s li•e:i.. Mo l•.M4n Jllld•d. Wllnt.,llls lwat SJ more. Our RellAr\de• Cus1om Poly ii ..ur own nllllfl and o:llHlll no! re!l,ect 1ny nat1onwid111tndard olqu .. il)'. W1111 t"" p11rctllst ot Ae!IAriH 1!f;re• ~011 gtl: 1. fl'lfl l••l•ll.t11on or II•••· 2. FllEE lu• 1otatll>I' ''"7 5000 mll"- lllLIAlltDf • Tlllf l'llOTIECTIOH GUAllANTE£ Your At>ll•rhl•" 11,. prottc.110<\ 911••••'•• co"'' 111 AtlJ.ride" pas· •••9H u ••• l••<•P1 IP<t<••I t pphc11ion h••• wit/I ••P•••le Vlllflft• \ftlf 0911nsl all rold M111d or OtltU l1•:11r1s, You ••• pro•tCltd tor ii. tnlue tllltd "'ontllt of II'"''""'· 11 1ou1 In• 11lll dutinQ Ille 1u1<1n1•• l>'l•lod, relu•n ii lo u1 1n<1 we will, 11 our opfion, repair 1our lh1, Of m1k' 1n 1!10•1nc1 Nff<I on 1M orl9in1I pu•c""•• p•I«, 11ch1dln9 f1ller1I [1cl11 T1•, loword tM pure""'' of • new 1;rt . W1 wlll 1110• 100% 1111111 orl9ln1I pu1cM•• pric•. •1d11<1;n9 1ptt1..:1bl1 -ftidlral loci.. Ta<, durlftt llll lhll! 100~0 1llow111c1 ""'"'"· TIW••· llltl•, "'' wlH 11111"' 50•.,. llf 25~ of tM origln1I purcM" !Ifie•. e•• elucljn9 1pplk:11>11F1de11111c1 ... Tt" 10.,11<1 ,,,. purcPll•• or 1 '"'"' 11,., f1oM11I f1ci .. l•• 1<1/u1l"'1nt 1llo••M t •»I be"'""'"" ll•t b11l1 of 1M parc1nt 11 tllt 0<i9in1I !•11<1 re"'1lnin9. TPt11 9uu1Mn I• 1t<>I tr1n1ltfllll1. 11 11 only for pn,..I• J>llHn911 u.11 01 p.llH~r "''''"" ••llOftl. Tllf.1.0 L1Ff l'llOTfCT!OM Wt ""''" Into ••try ll1llAud1Jo !!fl 1111 l•1cticn in<lic1lc1t. 1'-tr 1ig· ,... """" your "" tl>OUl<I to. 1tpl1c1<1. I! your 1iN ...... our {l •CtPI kif i<lcou•cl fl •t""''"t) wf ,.m ""'• 011 ol!o•o!>C.t 11111<1 on o"''""t ""'"'"' ptlc:I , •oclu<l•"9 1ppt.c11t!t F10.r1! f1cl11 Tor. !o .. arcl tflt purc""H ol 1 ,..,. Uri . W• will 1llow •, du•inq tt.. fo1t ""Ito•'• ""''"' IM "c<>n<I J\&ll ol IM ol1l1d ""'"IN ol 9111r1nHo_ f1oM t1! E>CI .. T•• 1d1u111Mft\ •llo••M • wl!I ... rn•d• 011 !lie bllll 01 '"- pcrcenlol l'-1orl9•ftlf 1111<1 rl"'""'"'· ., ~·· 0~11•'"• "'' I'll~ .SANTAANA ' rf\>1'•) '""'" ..,.~· ""~''"' ' 1111.: ,..., 'Jfttll'; .1!!llfl }fl .rt I ,,,,,, ,, .... I .. ~. ' ..... ' ' / .• U•-~ /lf~li ..unw.. 1 '111.f ' 'J'in'· ·!•tr.'W -~ 111-rti: ~ 1111::r -.i!'I' ~ib11 '"' ml"lll . ' ... 1•., " ,, 111 .. ' " ":1'} • ., . .. I I i I I I I BUENA PABK.___ _ ORANG E --C1iv o~:&iGifdlin-(jiQVe Blvd. Open 10·9 p.m. 01.1y Sunday 10 log Be•ch •t Oningethomt 0,...Dllfy 1:30to1:30 P·"'· Sund•Y tOto 7 3900 So. Btislol -No. ot So. Co.st Plaza I Vpen 10-1 p.m. O.lly Sundey 10 to I I • • • • • • 1-11/h IJ, ( .. II ~M £ • ,..,... ....... :~I. •• , ..... -.JI. J ...... 1'1""7 , ............. ~MIM•I c.... ....... ,1 .. i..t: -·· e.. r, °""'-." J, WIMI I. "-ll•tW '· ,,_..,.. ."""' """ ... c ... ....._ 1 c;#• ~ ~ ... l 1!"'9"-· c. 1. -·· ''*'' .. ...,..., ~~~.!tt ~ : ? ~:! ft T•o WOf'h<it; C.. $Ir•"" 4 "'twllle J, Ill. Jiit"" I, Cru,_ I. ..... ~ w.. ......... 1, La JOf'tlitl '· w ....... ,.,_. KOr .... : Mllll'!lrf 1, T ........ 111 1, !Ctn! l. Hyroott1 I. Jl!Mw VWWfY WftllN"'Nt IO. LI J,..4., &. ·-"""lfo'lllO .... It. LI "-"'i I. JC Grid Bill ,_....._ s...c .... c w S... Dllofll -ltt ~ (..ot,t.I Mo"""""'• .. _ t.-"' (Mtt (I JI W • '~•I Cer•'- ML ... M'-41 "' '-'--........ (........,.~ "°'"4 ~· v• ~ Wn l It "'' •i.t ,._ f t LI< ..,.,,,,......_ LA M••-•I L..M:C c,...•M •I E•H LA M~ C•,.._C. lM$-'" ltlvtiro!Ot ... _, ,, i .... oi ... cc (1 '·"'·) C.llr11t 1• Groo..._t ..... ·-·dltoo •l *"""'"""""' _,,...... .. c .......... L~ I M<ft C.C 11 I I C--0M a.un.11.N •I U. \t.tlw l"i.oi•t "'--,, ... ,......_. c_.....,..t.H.n~tc C:oileet 1111 C-1 1t c;iw.cs.11 ...._,,,.,._ ,, ....... L.A >-di ·-·• 11 Vtflt...-1 Dt-'C....,_ ...... -'" "''· »" J<l(lf<il• ( .... el °""""' ., II.Jn Ctltlo ............ t i 1-1•1 V•"'" --USC '"""ti C"""" DIE ... fC.I fPn.ha•l Soaon. 1n r1<1 u. -. hil\·e glven up ool y 12 pctuls all 9'1U011 • "'111ey "'110lly jump &rouod but ml Ull doi11& tbe -1hlng esch tlme on ckrense." Sthatf says. "But they ha,·e a k>t ot overall quicknd& 111\d they do execute very vi·eU. "'''lbey'll be smaller in tbe linet than we, but 1rilh their quickness it doesn't ttally mailer.'' San CJemmte comes Into tlle pme Ln gO(ld sha pe pb)Wally. Tho only player doubtful of play1ng ; • sophomOre ballback Br I a n \Vood, who is out with lill knee injury. COSTA MESA DATSUN Praaants • FOOTBALL FORECAST 6IO. ZIMMllMAN ........ TMN't M ........ -flf ... -...i~ le ""' ....... lJ~M Cele,_.. "'""' "" ....... """ ........... -........................ ..,. ._ -....... c ......... --. ........... -.... ,,.,.....,., .................... ... ....... ,.... .... _,.. ....... ,,.. ....-. ......... _Dt..J,,....~ ~~-... ... • ·-..,. Ollll1••· .. ~ ......................... ......... .. .................. .__ ........ ... .................... ._ .. ........... 194 ........ c.e. ............... ........... o.,... .. .....,.._.., ........ -. M,_..,...,........__ ..... WI . ,_,"' ......... ,_ ... --....... .. ' II tltoe Mt I Caa"4 I ....... Nii9 .... .... fllf .................... """. ...... ,.,..,..,~~-­ ~·· .... ....., M, tlley ramlf11I ., .... """ ......... --It ......... l&f I._~ u.feo1111 .ti Mfi..et I• ,.., • ,......,, wUI "" .., 4 ,..... Ir ..... t. !tit,...._ eht iii., r. tlie llw T• ..... .-........ ,.,,.....01t11 ·---~ -_.... ..... , ,.,.... ..................... ...., ......... - •• 111 1t'1 ..... • Ne '1' J ..... n. I iftit-. .. az.-. JJ ,.._......., ,._ N ........ -. -' ... Wwf-· , Mi .................................. Uttt. .......................... ..,.27. AM ....... ~ ... 11111111#1 I .... ,.. ..... ""' ...... .,... -,... s..."' HentM. n. c........, Nllltl4 a12, _ .. ,,.,,.....,94_ .... ,...,_ .... ...w ... _....., Wt ............... "f9. '"""' -.... ..,. .. ,.am. s-,,.... .............. 17 ............... ,, """ ... wt ..... "" ""' ~ •"" ,. • ....., ,,.. ............ j."9 .. , ...... J ........ "1ic--...,.. ........ ..., .... v.,,... .......... -1 ~ •••••••••• r7 ""'""~'· •••••••••• 10 c_.,•..,,...., ,...._ •,...,. ..... ..-"'""' -.. ...._..., ....,.. ..... -C..'*-TMt .. -.._.,....., ,...,_.....,.,. __._ w llJOlfn •••.•••••• 14 ..... ~ ··········' .,•-IM Mr_. .... m leff .-t .. ~Wt """'• .ell •IMI'' 1111 '"IMll, s.tllft .. .,.. _,,..... ;.~ tt ...... MPC .... dMlllll' llltll Mllp ,... ..... ..,._, • i .................... ,. .... ................. ,, -....,.."" ..... M"' ......... WI IMt ............. ...U, --.i ffMf"f ..... Ill Ut ~ .. Al'C •nf ,., _... ... "" .............. ..... .r &.................... .. ................ 19 .. •,-ai1 " .... -IMI Ml"L ,_. ....., ...... J1111bttlc ...,._ ... wffl .... 119 ....... Wt """" llffMN wtn ,,,.,._., .............................. ,.c ,...,...,., ,....,i ... .. ... .., •••...•... 1l Detfelt •••••••••• 11 ,_..,. '"' ......... 1•11. .... ,,,, _....... 11111 ,..., ............ •11<tr. _. .... "'""""" rtll•li.. ..... ,. ...... C ........ ,,..,....,..... ""-.. ,... ... ltlHt .. .......... o.l'-41 .......... 27 ... ti~ ..••..••.• ' .,...,.. ,,_ .....,.. -.. !Mir .,._ ltll1 y"6r •tr'I "CllM ,. tM "'"I.'' Tlllt -"""" M 1 ,.,""'"'"'•.-•t••' ... .............. LNb .... _...... .... tw c.tti.. c ................... 21 ,... Diet• .•••.••.•• 14 • .._ -"""' .. "" ~ .. AK C..tnl tt• .....,, ... Jflil tMWN 11111 _..,. WI• II 1 '"'· CMrten will Ila•• ....... ~---c: ....... ..,_·-If-. New, ... ~ .......... 22 tr. """ •......... ,, Olll --· llllt , .... , ........ ..., -r-. 9K ............ .i. ..---........... ,...., .. .. -•• , ............. """"" ·-,.. ...... ,.tk. ~ ..... Saturdly, Oct. 27ttr -M•for Collt&tl °"""" '' \llHNt1rton 1c, ~--.. '• 17 S.Ml Cl•ra ~ 0 ................ ,.. 22 Princeton ]1 ~.!.~~.... JI L.llMt 17 .._ Slrit la W•t Vlr&lnis t ·---J4 ' ,., ....... .-.. .21 ""~ " ............ ~ V.l".I. ,...,_..,, s-.. t ·M-S19ta .0 OfttD11 SW U l"Wrdue 11 M pn ... . .,.,..,..., n Twl.. 20 Jtk l'lrnOnd 2a NE Loulli•N 0 Mlnl'Ofl 21 SW Leultlaftl i Rtiltalrl 11 Coll.lll'lblt l IOIAOn °""'" u vui..-. l s.n Oie.,Sbt• 17 flOIWI St.ta 10 1ow11 Gr. JI M.,.,,.lt l so.rtl'lem IUinoi• 27 Akron 21 . -:"~. v....:.. .20 WyOftllnl V T1mp.t .21 Norttlerft Mldllpn 0 lS-1-0.J 21 rrnno State I Ten-.22 T.c.u . ' 27 APCWllK-hltn 21 Teus 20 Rle.e ' 1J lli;knell 14 TIU. A &. M 11 81'/tOf l orMO llMI 214" U.T.U. 7 T1•11 Ttdt li S.M.U. !~ I '1'111._ ll Twl•ne 21 c.w.lt Tecft - on 11 °'*-' U.C.LA. "' Ctllfornl• 1 QI .2Z T..,...ple 11 Ubh 24 Mront 1t ' '"'rn•'n,. .22 eaet Tf~ 20 Vlrllni.9 20 W1kt ,_.t 11 , 0eo,.;.. u tc.ntuc.kr 17 W••hlnftO!\ Stnl n s~nlofd ts ~ Iii,.,,.,., t6 O."'""°"'lJrl 7 Wnt Teus 20 Wl~lllU 17 Hoty c-26 Army '° .We1tern Mlchlpn II OhlO >J I Hooi.ton 20 A.,.,_ 10 WiUl•m .. Ml!')' 2'J V.M.I. ' . IUIMO• 21 '°""' 10 Wileonlln n lnol•nt ll 1ttn11• 21 ,_. 5tal• J.I Koefll 5ute 20 Utah SU.II 1 Lona 8udt 21 Rl..-.nld4 lZ L.S.U. 21 SollU. Caroli"' 12 .... , i ·-· 2, Louh¥Hi. 11 ClnclnN tl 16-~ uu .. ran . • Ei:,.,...M 2' Dllkt 10 c.ntrel Wt snlnetor'I n ...,..1, ,... n SJrKUM ' ci.r.mor11 25 .,ro! IO!llot 11 Totedel t Ol•ii 11 ~lchlpn M Mlnnetom l Olt•m Norw Muico .22 M151inlool 21 V111dert>llt 14 Entem 0rTP'! 21 MllMlulool ,.,. :n 5ovttiem MhllMIP!)I 14 Elsttrn W11tllnaton 21 MIMOllri · 11 COlorldo 10 fwllerton 21 MCMUone ltttl n ldl ho 1 H1yw1rd 2"1 '4<10raskt IJ OW!t tlo!Tll Stlte I Loi Nlp>les 2"7 ..... Mulco 20 S.n .-e Statt U He¥.c!t !U s Vtps) 24 Mlliol Slatll 20 Notti\ TUii II Northern M-21 C.1911,.. 15 C.st C..Glnt 21)> l'Klfi< L.lltNran 20 Clrolln• "'~ 2J c ..... _ Peclfi< U 21 NOfltMm llilnolt 11 1Ut...,is SUll!t U Pu .. t Sollftd JI Hot,. 0.11111 2l Southem C...I 21 Redll ncb I~ Ohio St.Ill II Notth.,..•ltrn 1 S!mon F!11Mf 20 OllMhoml JI K41nlll $Uta 1 Whltllrorth 16- Other Q1m11-F•r Wnt READY FOR DELIVERY TODAY ! BRAND NEW '73 DATSUN PICKUP J>I~• m .. ,,, & L,...,.., licono1n y Ne'Ver Look.eel So Good CL01:JDS... PlllUCNOTICZ ~= <o -·r 'iw.P+•l ..... ~=~ HACM ~:i := :...= ._ of tbt i-._ _...,._ UMlf'l80 ICMOOL. DIS111t<T Ml W.-or.. Ill ltfl• _,.. ----•-.... ... ~· ll:tl ~dedl .... " .-tt. ~.... , •l•"dks. .. , ... "' .............. 1m. MkMef ... ~ ,.,, ........ 1--~ fll Mel It.._; °""1cf ........ A ...... UI,,.,...... ~ ..... .. Murry bll alwtys been ''°"""' .... .._. ,, ... &....-J ........ ,... • .., ....... OQd • be juat .... c..11......... ~ (~ ...,,.,...... tllCft. c....,,.. :..'tu:. ':a.:··nmtfl op-:;$'-~~ .. J:.lcMll ~ .......... ~., ...... ... -~-'1IC9 ~ -.. fltitl ~ ~ ... '°"""" partm:ilty," Redman ..,.. ....,_ OlllCi9 .... ._.. ''". Tllltlft......,_..,~ .. c-- "We havtn't bkded \Nit wt0 ~r-r.-c:.':atv ~IVIM tlllt ~el°'""" ~ M °"'*"' t, For NB Cyellst Broken BoMS No Dewrrent 1-t.:-~_. 1-.-. ~~ he ... ' 11111"' lltll'lld kfloef Dl•lr'lcf .. IUMK Bt l]()WAJU) L. HA.NOY ...,. u.u..u.. --·~ or._. C#lfr, c..11,...,.._, tet111t "' ,,.... Of n. Datty f"ilet ttal'f ~ IOnl! _ho.,. room " ... lllnltlillll tta ~ ._...OCT" l'\ltlllllfMof .,_... C••I °'"" ....... 6"" ........... • .......,...,.. rtMrnti11 '-• "t>t•TR • OQ1Mr 4. 11, 11, U. tm -....n "Broken collarbones aren't n.......-L,-__. .... 1-... ,...... • .., ~ "" leW "*"----------- rtlcul I ·~·"~-but °'~ naa a ,......,_ ru ....... .,. ............ """' ... 1.,, ..__ ,_.,. pa ar y veuau.-u•J: attlet J I'-.... boftfft, .. ~ ., • C111Mr1t1 ..., "" •llDW PUBLIC NOTICE bn>l<en ankles hurt like beU." w Y ..-1------=,,-- Thal 's ... ~ __ ._ .... ......i .. 1on and tblt ls what is cat.chlnc -'""' ......... ~ 111 ... ,.itce ,..CTmOUS •USIMlll we ...,._,1u1u1;1u............. ~ ....._ ..... .,_.. 11111 CIPlfl"'I • ...,.. ITAT111111•WY of speedway mototcycle rac-Redman'• lDt.ttest at the~-' "'*'ld'r ...., ....,.. '' .._ ...,.. Tiii htlowt"' ,...--• ,,.. .._ · pert ~--II ~-'·'t 11t"" 11 ... _. ,,_ 111#1-... mg u __...... Cruu.... meat. n-e wlll .... lllM ...... ,.,.... T I L. e .• 0 NI c " R 0 T. CTIOH' 8.1 be prepares for Friday '-rtJey fW NCfl ... Oil Ill' .._.. fl l'l"l'TliMS, THI UNWI N MIJl:KrTllllJ rUgbt's Nat Ion a 1 rham--don't have an::::":. Z,. "::, ~ C::,.'1: COMf'flNY. um 1..-•~ .. Mte piooshlps at t.be Orange c.oon-~tstandiDc pa11 t nr ~ T .. "" """"' ~ _. bt 41~.!,"':."J~*'t;.m~~ Lift Mor.I. 1y Falrgrounda tract u one bin.at.Ion llke tbeJ Md 1IR 1zc..,•"'"" c:t11tratt .-n. -;::: -=... la Vlt u...... cl. 16 participants. 1be races )'Mr. But tbeJ"q sat an W.:~ :::,_•i."'::':':S.,:. ........, ~~ ........... start at 1:1$. ouMl'Dlfiril nmner tn stew ::r:a::.~ ., ........ Oil prOPWd ~:--• ?t•-11" .. l .. ht ..... 'u r r. r. d ·--~ ,_ .. ,,,,_ -........... le Crelt s. J-u..:n .. u•g u= -an:I, kJtl (If lbl fttwn.. ...;. _, ;:• .;1-..;.; .,. .;-_,_. Thi• dttemlnf Wit fllelll ~ t1'1t C..... broken hip, back, an k I e, Ing.. Redman aays.. .,'Miey _ .,...rm. .. lo!filNnlln. 1n ~etart: .. °'...,.. Gw1#J'" ~ •· finger. toe. ann and other . • --. .,. In .,. ~ ,...., .. ~--· ,·n "· body dunn· g a wiD pus, bu& we kDiciiw" we've Tiie OllTRtCT "" ... """* "" -Orenclf c.ni Da11y PllOt UU1i= ~ oN tC) ..._ • .......,_ -.... 1 .... .....,.. ,........,. ,_,. et ,... dle!ft .......,,._. I' speedway racing career I.hat a-......,. IUCll" .... ......,. 'ftlll:f '" 111e M.tllt'I' 1e Ollflkll lfll• OdDl:lll' 11• 11• n. Mii flD-n &ame. ~ " .. "' ,.,....... tar _..,""------------began at Orange Coonty SUMNER McKNIGHT "We've •--~ -the O'lfl .,. 1'¥1" "' wwlllNln ..-.a '°'' Fairgrounds in 1970 but is ~ ""'-........ -"'d. n.... '''-'"' PUBUC .NOTICE ooe or those riders who re-put three ~ &bat na : :,, .. .:,.,::, =~GtM~,1-----==,-----matter bow wtU we defense .m1. ~ ll'lllY ... .i11nM .,, ,....,.., IU'·I• ~ to the track as soon as enough points to ride in the the ~-If ...,· ~~ atop A "" .. ._ ttfet 1111111 -. ,...., MOTtc• TO c••DtTOU _ .. Ible !" ..--:-~ ' .. "" ... ..... .u .. ••IOll COU•T Oft TM• ......,... ' qua u)'tng rattS. the ru.rmmg pme against any The ............ ~ tlf p.r "'""' 'TAT• DI' Co\Ul'04llNIA l"O• "lt bothers me a lot Ill "I WU the first --·and ·---~In ·--1..1.... ..... ....... ""°" I -'tlnr •• .,. TM• COUNTY°' HMO• the t•-· ·1 ha "be a ......... • K:&Ju we.-ic: l(VUUllC'. of el9llt 111 """'"'· Tiit r•tt w holld•Y .... A7"11 l-lll'C I ppen!, S ys. _,,, had "des O •~•s .._.._. .~n he _. -""" ~ ....ii .. at M111t Ed•ll rtf OOAA M. Vlt.&UE, 0.-"J hate being hurt." ... ...,, aeven r1 to 1 UID S.lVJ-Wl.U -.. Why then does he continue tor those who qualified but without injured defensive end ~ ::1. ~m!nc..tory UJIDn the CON· 111 Hcr1c:1E IS HIRl!•Y OIVI .. " ""' Ken Morgan, who becomes the TitACT<* lo wtooom lhl contrKI 11 c....:iltors of r11e 1tioYe nelTlllll ~ to race on the short track I mnn,.aed tQ get IS points . . .. ....,..,. enc1 -.,,., t11t1con1ttc:tor t111t 111 ..,._ tiewtno c:t.llnl ..wiet .. ~-e ' fourth Umveni.ty starter to .,,.... t11,.., 1o ,..,. .. ""' t1M10 lhl wld oececs.nt .,.t AIOlll'" t• fl1e """'· speedway ovals at Orange enough to make the Nationals be 00 crutches and sidelined wld ~ ,.... 1o •II -ic""" with !ht ,_....,,. "°"""'" In lhl. Oll'l'ln County, Irwindale. Ventura field." .,..,....... ,,... tiwn In ,... t uc1111on o1 t111 cllrt ot,,,. '"°"" .,,1111M oowrt .... for the seuon. S t e v e at ,,. <'Ofllf&c1. 10 pnt11n1 111em, .,,."' thl '*""""' and Bakenfield. four nights Friday night's program will Goodri-i.. 1 11 "' .....,.. .,..., wttMnw "'' 111c1 • _,,.,,, 1o t11e ~ " ,.. '-a week? eomi!t of 20 heat races with -...... P r ma r Y a • f*ioltl " ..,,, 00 ,,.,.. .,,., Dffl(e of ,._ Ll!E AOAIR, 1Jt1 w..kl1t1 defemive end who made his ... .,... •..,. ..,. 1!1"11111 ., ""'~ 0r .. u11 m P+-:" ~ eattt .. ~hasni-bem"'a death-flKIJ""rtders·trreach bea~ :;.r.;1.o~~ ,.,,,.,...,..,._..,. ,..,,.,,,111_ '""'di-"-..._~ ~ .. °'' __. ~ h" r la all U<:UUI •• ~ .....uug ~ WJUll btnll wlil bt ............ ...,W fO txliCllllofl ~ '" Ill ........ ,_ • on u.: .. ...,.,..way ,.., t l9 eoun-are our-p airs. a ?~yard touchdown effort .. ,..... _....ac1. Tiit ,..~ ton11 "" ..t..,. "' ...., ....,,_,, ~ ..,. try yet," be e r p 111 I n s . ~ rider wLU go apinst last week __, __ u-~ ..,., .. 111 "" """ "' '°"" 111 _.. .-"" 1\1.t ''Because ol the short track every ocbtr rider during the ' .... i---_,,...,.. ,..:. """o::.::. •:=-. ~~ s.t. 25, tm (l·lOtb tJ. a mile) and relative-............ and the ooe with the .., o. D. W!Hdl•iPlll JOHN v1LIEUI! ,.. ~ "'*""""' OraftOi' c-.t 0e11y l'llol Eucvtor of ""' win , ly alQwer speeds. )'.OU break most paina at the en:I will ~ 21 IM .,_....,. 1. 1m1 na.n • 1t11 .._.. Mf'Md ........ bones but no serious injuries ~ the winner. s P1JBIJC NOTICE :;_.L~1~ .. Mt1i1 na occur. And It's a lot-of fun." Does placement make a dil· ports ,.ICTTftouS evsHfns ......, 11eM11..c..t1t.""' • Perhaps the ctuhes that ~ ference? NAM• ITAT•MmMT !~41,:,S:-__, cur more frequently on the "lt certalnly does. The one CaJ d T1'M fol"""""' ..,_ "' *""' l:M.lllnus l"ubll•lled Or•!>O' cGHt o.rw "11e1 . shorter tract ll'e the thing 8nd four positions are best en ar M : PROTECH, 21H ~I Or., Sulll 6 ~ °" ll, ll,:U, ltn JOO.JI that attracts the cro\\·ds. and two and three are tr~•~·11~j,i:: CM191f1J, 1nc., PUBLIC NO'l'ICE --·· a ·~ -body -ml bl y ha t be ,,...,. loet .• , ,,., OllfKlnl Dr-.. Suite '" lrvlM, ~....... """"-~ .......... sera e. OU ve 0 C•Hf«nl• '2"'4 JllCTITKM.IS IMlllNftl tact fn these Ca~ than On a Vef'Y fast starter to get Ollt C._ ~ -Ml. l1n Anll'.lllla Tiiis blltlMU Is. 'onductlll bV I '"°" MAM• ITATU•lfT -" mil I ch • -~ ol ,.._ ...._ .. ...i ·~~ _.... .. " ll!'At"'-1 1Golooffn wnt S.ddlliMct "''fl"" T1111 tDl!owtng penons ,,. a "1'4" e ova IU 88 ""4,.Vl UICI" '""' CLUU wuee ............. Or-.. C-*1 • • l'flOTE:CH PU•LISK1MG co.. INC. 1111!.ll'let.1 11: Park ln Gardena. ,aays McKnight. w.-""'° · ... ..,, ., ......,.,,.'°" wi111 ... J, IUn"t'Oll Jotso DOMl,T1c 1NTl!•NATIOfr4AL. Mc"•'""! -· a home In "On the ·-·,·de,~·-· push --"-.......;;, Hll1ior " ,.oatl>lll "'..iotrlt . O'aA.IEN Jl2AL ESTATI! 1~-:.·T· ,.....,.., ..,.,,_ ".Ill ./ "-,.....,, """""""" .. '#fttmiMftr NlllM..; '115'7 MENTS, 17111 Olk Trte ~. 1 • .., .... Ne-1:1-..1. ls involved -.. 1, outr-the pole " vi.•· _. ••-"• -·· ,..,· •• ,, Tiii• ''"""*" -ftled 1111n."" coun-ctni. l'2"4 "t"" • .............. Y""'Y' ,,,..,. • T...;' {.. If "'j.\j, 'Gd.i.,, W t I i.,. 0.-of Or .. c-IY Oii Oelctli«" 1. Wlllord O. O'Sflen, 17111 Oek , .... in at leut four business VPJ!o The ooe--time rodeo cowboy e"' LA ,.. · • " • 1rn t.-•, 11w1ne, c1111. ra.w.i tures, Including owning his who says he was "too chJCken 121 '""1' ,.,,._.,ct " ~.._., h!Mllllld er-.. c-r ti.11'1' "'°'· S/llora'I 11:. <>'••ltn. 1n11 0e11. TrM -·~··· ·-· I hop F._H -MMnoll• £:1 Mew Oeklllw 4, 11, II, lS, 1m Xllt·1l L-. lrvlne, C•UI. t26" .... .......,.., enu motorcyc e s to ride bills" may retire from ,, H~i . H•l"flor. lf' Jo .,... TN• o..ln.u i. Nino ~ bf •" in C.OSta M~ but still finds cycle racing in the no:t too ~t~ hltf> •1,'' ~~~;,,. ... '~!!!:.!1.'i PUBLIC NOTICE 1"'1<Mwti~1,.d 0_ O'ar1 ... time tor ... ~-· I di .. t fu•·-but not ~-"••Mb ~':!. ~;-vtrericl ....... ~N Tiii• •llttll'•••ll ntlld """" ""' Count"f .............. ,c es. s n 'Wl: -11"\llll M • _,, .._."'""" flCTITIOVS IUSINltJ Cl..-tl c~-Oc.'I .. 1973. An undergraduate nomad, . '-ftC: ........ Mt •t ·w .. 1m1"'"'· 11.w• STATWMIHT of Or ..... _ ...... : • "wm McKnight attended Boston r~~ reach a stage on short C~1c!u..:."l =•1. Mew ti 0r._ .. "!"' fdl""'1no ,__ 1• dcllno 11u1i,.,.u l"Vtotl.., ar.nve CoW o .. ,.. ~In!. Un I v e r 1 l t y , Ha rvard, tracks when your rea.ctlorui PUBLIC NOTICE · ,,.l!C1AL. MARJ{ETfCOHSUI.. TAN Ts Oct. IL 25 1114 ~. 1' "71 3111'2-n American Univenity and ....,.; .. to slow down." the 24-• ~" w_:~"-.. ""'*" kolc:i> PllBUC NOTICE ....:po• HO'ncl OIYln ... llOI ' · ~ ;:,. ColllM. 1.2. ,._,. ,..,,,,_,,, ---===~===,----Georgetown University with year-old 18)'1. "The Ii-and Nofke .. '*'"" .._ tMt IN ._.. ~ htdl. Cellfcnl• twl .,. •ICTTTIOUS MllllUI time out foe a stint with the 21).yt8Nlld kids do the belt." Oil Trwl-"' ""' Conl '°"""""lty Tlllt b\lllMU la ~ ..., Ill 1... .. ...... STATIMl:llT P ~ __ , du •-lndi C-oollt0e lMPrkt of er.,,.. ~. dl'lkftlll. Thil to11ow1no ,..._ • ...... .,._ teeewo..,.llWU tyu1 ·a. His thinking envisions a c111~W1• r.et1 .. _, ... bld• 11e1 ... Ge-..L.Colll• ,,, From February to July, future in --i .. t car n,.;ncr. ~.,,n :GD •"'-· T"lllndtty, ~ ts. .n&.. .:a.r-1 ... HMod w1lfl,.. cown-A.I(. 11'\.UMllNG. • I.. .., 11r911, "'··---, ...,....., -,.."•"""Jlurdoulno Dept. of ·ui.1 ,.,.-tiiri: .. °''"" C"'1flfY"' Octlllotr t, CCIII•-· c.111ern11 nw OUlW.ICI" spent time racing on "When the time CCJ1\e1 to 1e *tied 11 1w .-..."" 1rn ,..,.,. Allan C••'*"' .., 1:. _.., the longer v-.usb track• k the -•·-· I ha the A-c.t• MeM. c.tlfwftl., •t· wtaktl ,...,, ''""· eo.11 -. c1lltoni1• ""' ....,'& ... ma e ........ '6~• ve ffme .. .,, Mott Whl -. """"'cJr ..-t .....,....,.. °"'"911 ce.tt Delly ~kit, 'Bl• """"-i. ~ • an lfl. "Nobody makes money racing cont1ct1 to get into 1~t car fM •Md ""' Ll!ME WITH OPTIOH Otldllr 11, , .. 11. ,,.. """9mller 1. 111-Nva1. I En_,_, It Ir pri rily I " he TO "°"CHASE ON• V.CH O'l'MAMIC 1rn ,..,.n ,...... .tJltll C.ree.ln n &---ma ar racing, Uy!I. • ADD•l!U TRAMM.ATION (!>A.Ti ' Thi•"''-' ••• lllld ....... nw Cowl'> the experience OJ1 the longer He doesn't say he will make ·~r~ ,,.. ,. -. 1., e«orHO'IC• PUBUC NOTICE ~llfk of or....'-"' "'~ a. tracka. M speedy a recovery in the with c.wtt!kln, lneh1olctkin1 • n d ll"WN "Style! are complelely do"( -'-t h d'd •-J h Spl(lflullOlll Whk!I ••• -tn 111, '''TfTlovt: •ustM•'• """''-"-' Ortno1 caett O.llY Piiot, ~ s.,.. .. , can l.S e I Ul 0 an· -'"' t!llY tll MCll'ntd In ""' efllet NAM• IYAT•M•WT ferent on the longer trac ks. nesburg, SOuth Africa last "' n.. ,.11rcNtMne """' • wld Kl'IOol Thi 1o11ow1..,. i-r-1r• '°'"' Odatllr" u. u. U. lm .,._,., --bik dl•ll1d, Ml-1 II: · 11111;: es we use here a re year. J EKh bldckor 1111111 1.,.1, with hi• JEM•N1.11•"' .--•1'4. s.n11 PlJBUC NOTICE 500 cc aingles right out of "I was with a U.S. team bid • c,.......,, el>l(tl ur1111e11 d'ltc1I ""., Ctitt. nm -~Io--\.:A or tilddlr'1 bo!W -PfYlitle ta .,.; Ambtor A-9enrd, llOI Rldlen iant12 Cz,...;uUll • ....u. and they bum and In the finit race, 1 cracked onlll' of nw CeMt C"""""'tly Cotlaot JI,, l!I Tara, C•ll:f· m30 'UP•••O. CCM.IRT °'" THI fuel." up and broke my ankle and Dl1lrlct ......., of Trw!-Iii '" tl'nlll,lnl """"""NotGltlle Ikard, "'431 ltlldletl ITAft °' CAl.lfCHlMIA ~ flOI Me 11Wi 1'1w pwcwrt {S'!lol Gf ''·• l!I Tero. c.llt. fMaO THI COUlllTY O" OIU.Jf•• McKnight is in the final back." ,,.,. ...,.,, bid t• • r,:i'""'" 111111 tt.. Thi• 111111ne11 11 ~ ...,. 1 .-11 ..... """"° round of 16 Friday night by In j··-~-w-~ be bklde!" wtll entw ftto "" '"""°"'° ,.., .......... ,. e111i. "' ~N J051!.l"H CANl"•l!.LL, ""' ui.,..., ~, '""''"'' ir tf'>e .. ,,... 11 -•,,,_, to Alntler A. 114..... 1kt JOHN J . CAM,.•EU.. O.C..sld. virtue of personal dcttnnina-strapped hi1TL1elf up and went lllm. In tlll •Wnl ot t•l1Yr1 ... tnler Tiii """-"' ••• filed with !hi NOTICE IS HERE•V GIVEN ta '"' lion or herculean proportion . back to racing. 'lllat'1 the i111o wc:h contract,. ""' procM• "'cowm.,. cltrt Oil °"._ C6'.lnt¥ Mi cm1111r1 "' ""' •bowl ne""'6 oMe-.it !fie critct "'II llf forfflfed, or In thl Odober 21 1'7> ""' •ti penon1 l'lllYlnt dellftl eplnlt 1111 "I wasn't supposed to be competitive spirit that is im· <••• of • tlllnd, "" 1..i1 w m ,,.,..."' ,..,,.1, u 1" da(9dlftl .,, rlQU l!lld t. n1e ""'"'· hoed In the __ of Ne•'""""' .... 111 be f>ll"feftlid ta ulcl ICftoOll dl1lrld. PllllllJ!wd Or.,,.. Cont 0.!ly "''°'· wllt> "" fl«fHl1Y ......a....., In lhl etlk• ln it because I didn't return ,....... ,,,,... "....,.. • ,.., llldde~ ......,. wrtndr1w 111. bid fW ~ u. 11111 '"""'"" 1, 1, u. o1 1t11 Nr1I of "" ,,. ... Ol'lll11M t1111r1, 11t1 from En gland in time lo get Beach's Swnne.r PtlcKnight. • .-lod of torty·llw 1u 1 4-T• ~ 1tn J1H-1l to present !him. wtlh n.. ,_..,,,.,. "" dllie Mt f« t1ll top1111111 "111'"1111', VOl.IChiln. lo 1111 llllOtr ........ 11 Ille "'1« TM ... td .. Tnn"" ,....,..,.. the PUBIJC NOTICE rtf """ 1!"fclrfteys, LACKMAJll •nd P""l"'ltOI of r.t-.dl"' ....,. -&ti wo, LACKMAN, It PIM A-, Wtl 20t, Akins Still Optimistic Despite Dismal Start or ta ...iv. -l'"""'ltrlff«s .,. lfl-,ICTITIOVS •tnlNISI lJwlO •Mell, C.Ufamll mJ2. ,wflldl 11 !ht lonnMltla In •fl"I' bid .,. In ttw ""901.... NAMI ITATaMlllfT Jll«e el ~ of Jfll 1111de11l..-111 Ill ()pM: ,._,.. 15. 1'11•11:00 1.rn. Tiit hllllWlno ...,._ I• ... I'll Ml--nilnt Pll1""'"' "' 1111 etf1!e rtf NIG ~ .._,. ts; dsudfnl, Within fDllr ll'Olllhl tttw ltll •Y H04W.AN •• WATION 11.AO<.W>R• •U:CT•tc co~ lnt ftnt Plltolkllton ., """ llO/lk e. s.cnt1ry "' 1111 ~ Twrac.. c.11 M-. CeMt 0.ted Cklotlw t, 1'7> llo..-d Oil T"""-9162' " GERTJIUDE M. CAM,.ll!:U.. c..i ~ty n.m.. wn •1tctmoor.. 111' Mmlnlltrlf11x ~II Cofle'll'I Dbtrict Ole'!Nlllol T..-r.c .. Cools Mnt, C11!1. _.., of !tit ••l•le .. """41111111 Ortnee eo... c.ny 1'11at nm ,... tltioci¥9 1111M11 ~ Oct-tl Ind ,,_,.I, 1m 1141·1l T ..... MIMts ,, ~ b¥ In LACKMAN '"' l.ACJ{MAN --~-":..::=::=:..:::..::::_..=:= 1"61't!Cwl, It ,.1111 A-,. 14111e .. Injuries, mistakes and youth have combined to make this a trying .season for Laguna Beadl High football coach Ital Akins. He hasn't let it get to him despite a I~ reconl with the four losses roming the last four weeks. "I guess I'm an optimist, .. says Akins, whooe club battleo; co-Orange League favorite El Dorado Friday at 8 p.m. at Valencia High. "I think we have the players to put it together and test anyone <n Our schedule. E1 Dorado lool:s lo he :he roost balanced team in the le.11gue so if we're going to put It together. it would be a cood week to do it" The Injuries have hit st.and· ootl like noting becks Pete Cottam and John ca.rlson, u well as the team's No. 1 lineman, Dave ltlartln, who will miss this week's an. COUTiter. The mistakes were never more evident than last WH!:ll when Laguna was ahead 9-7 at the half and then fumbled twice within a minute on the way to 1. 27·9 sttback to San Clemente. Youth "''as a prohlem Akins pointed to at the 1t11rt of thl!l stason on the offtnSl.\•e and defensive lines. "We Md hopc<I by "'" the lhlel would have Jelled but It ltill Jetn\I there is !JOf1lC conlusion among the plaYtn.'' he says. "I can't erplaln IL The ln)url" on the line Mv1I forced us to shuffle peopl• around. too, which h u r t • cohesion.'' Akin!! says El Dorado thlil wee.It will present h11 ttam wltb a maJvr challt'rige. 1lM'J twiccHlcaten Golden Hawk.I ~re ' ba.J&nced club bth:I lhc p&Alng 'f Bob Jlura ~1 of s•· Ad nd PUBUC NO'llCE Thoone• w. •ltcllmon LMt •"""-C•llf. ~ ru.,. .. ng i.cve ams a Tilt' ,,1ttmtnt ...,.., 111111 with ""T.i1 11111 CJ-ua Da'' Plckenn· g The team h., Cowntt c:1ertt • Or•noe c.wn ... ..., A""'-" fir Mlnllllm•ll1• CTA · •11'1• 0c111t11r n 1m ·• Pllblhhad Or•na• Co11t D•ll"I' ,.Ital. allowed just 11 poinUI ln the IUl'••iott COUJtT °" 1"·1'111 OtlOMr 11, "· u. Ind ........ Mr I, TMa STAT• 0111' CA.Lll'Olt.NIA "'*""'*' Ol"OllOe Cicll•I Dilly l"llol, lf7) '1,._1J last three games, all OrangP •o• TM• COUNTY °" OJtA ... • Oc!Wtr u '"" NoYem111r 1, 1, ts. NOnCa TO c••DtTOl:J .,,, .n1._13 PUBUC N011CE League wins. 1110. """* /--~=-==:,cc:.:::.::::. __ E1l111 of J051i~H FJIAN<:ISCO toU?A. PUBUC "We'll h a v e Couam tn JllO ~ .. JOI: , .. SOUZA, DN:Mlld. NOTICE NOTIC• IMVITUIG •IOI ,~ H .. -••~, "but h NOTICE IS HEltE&V GIVEN i. tt>t "urw.111 lo ~ llw County Ull;lo;:_, J<> n.r.Itlll' e cr111rior. of ......... M1Md dlCldtfll lfOTKI TO CR•DITOfll ...-.it-"ofl Dh~ " °'""" c-ty. · · ed the .. , .. ,~ ,,_. 11111 •• '*"-,........_ dtl--o•lnll llil ru"••M)ll COt.IJtT o" TKt c111""'"· wtH r101lw ....., llkt• ""'"' telD]UI' an11.1e on II.la 11'~ uhl o.e.dtnt .... reqo.llrM lo n11"""" ITAT• Oii' CAL.lf'OttMIA "OR w ........ .,.. ,.......... '· 1m. •I u •• In the •-~ and wtltl 1111 nec"lffY YOllCfWr1o 1n t1w ~ THI COUNTY DI' Dlt.Mt•• I.I'll. Bids tn111I De •-I* •I "'-carry -game ., "" ti-of !tit •lliirle .ititd _, or MO. A·1"m e>111rlcb' Adm1n11tr111 .... Off'I~ bf '"' isn't really 100 percent. lo '"'-' "'"'" wtll\ "" ,_;.,.., 1!:1l11t of IA?U.I: J, LOUMAGNE. d1t. ll'Mtl tt...... hertolntbllwe ... "'""" """"""-to tl'lt ~ II IM>'Pffl~ 0.C....S. ti 'lll'llldl """ lhW ""II bt ~ti¥ "I may also use John Wil of GEORGI!." J JEFFRIES -,,.....,.. NOTt(t IS HEJt••v OIVEN "' "" OC>tntd -flC•mll'IH •I IM olflCI • Cftllll' 0,1.,.. lvllf 6$5. N~ ...... ~ ..... ot n.. '"""'-flelTltd dcld4ftl " !NI Dl1lrlt11. IOM4 Ems A-. lette a little more at quarter-c1. HMO • ...:.Cti 11 ,... Jlfac• "' IMnlnnillllll Ill. ..,._ tie...i..,. "•lnu ~1ttt1 F0111111ln. v111ey, c.111om1., f« lfll "' llw """"™9Md '" •A m•fttrs ..,. ,... MN dac:w.t!! ••• rt11ul1*1 to Iii• lllllow1"' back, Kelly (Akim' sin) just .. ,Ill .... lo ""' •ltle ., uld Otn6tnt, • ...,.,.. wllll ""' l'lk"ftllry VObdwnt, '" TWELVIE f11) IEACH l lK·INCH ··-'t ·-hitting on his wtn.111 fDllr monltl• 9tler lhf ffrtt ll"'t>lklto .... tlflc• of .... elwrlo: ol ,,,. .-. VEllTICAL $1!.WAOE ,.UM"S AHO 1-. Ul.'al tlon of lfllt noflct -enttttlol to\11"1, .,. to ,,,_, lhtn'I wllh Al"l"UJITENAMCES ~-and Will·"· ·-· three 0.1111 0c1-;, 1m "" _.., VOllCliff1, to ~ ..,... '"EC1F1u.T10N NO. E•n.ft r--e>>.e: "'""' LYNN MASON lliltlC&: eera1.-. ti ""'-el'flee of 1M!" ttton.r,, l ldl mllSt bt "*"""ad on the "'""' f f . hi Jast Eucvtor of t111 ""'" LOUii A. AU Oaf, fl""""'r ti Li..,., ll/l)plltd tit> ll'le Ol1tl'kh In llCCOrN~ or our m s game. o1 "" ·-ntlMll .....,,. 1911 w11..,.... •iw.. L• .t.netl••· w1111 e11 Pl'W'ri•lon• M n.. ._111c111on1. "I Ullnk we have aome _....... ••Oil•• J, J.,.,.IUll C•llt•lll• tCOIO. whkt> It ""' oltc:• I Spe(lfk•ffOl'llo bid bltnkl •l'ld 11111-l!i ....... "' ........., c..ttr Drt-. .. Wll!itt1 ot "" ............... 111 111 ntllrn\tltton m1y lot 11t1!1I,.... t i "" playcrt on thla team. They '"" w <Mii•• ,..-111n1nr to ,,. nr1te of •"""' 100,... '~ Hl:1411 .,. put It •-·"-· d ha 111...,.., hedl. C• nue uld iHic«ltM, Within ICM "'*""' en., WCl-'HIO. can """cun:1 an v e CTMJ ......_ tt1t ""' Ji"iblk•lfcin ., ""' Miik•. '· w • .,.,,. '"""'"" a good flnlsb, but they'll have A""11rf i.. hac•ter Deltf ~ n, 1tn *"11.-Y of "" lotrd ~~ ·-• lhnJna P'llblllhld ,.., • LOUISE LOOMAGME OI DlrKlan lo work w,.~ aa-.1 e te ..... t,.. co.st o 1" "1"'· e .. 1o11.111 " "" wm "' l"ue111Mct Orlll9• CM1t o.11y ~11t11. ml •••• ~.· •• r ~ 11, 11, ts. •"" .. _,..,. 1, "" ..._. ,..,,...,, dtcedlftt OdObll' JJ. 1tn zm.n \.&ac:I '1> l11J.J) LOUii ._ AUHT -~~PUBU:,;;;:;:::;C:,,N:;O'll.;.:.;;CE;=;,~-:.,~ ~ IU"8IOR COUJIT Of' TMI La ......... C•ll ...... 1 "'" "fCTITIOUS I USINltt STAT• OP CALlllOlllllA "Dll Tiit ('liJ) »Mf41 NA.Ml STAT•MtlllT THa CD4Jtn'Y 01" OU.Me• A""""" ler 1"'"'111 T ... lollowl"(I !*son It llolnm lll.lllMtt lllO A....,. hlllllllltd Ottnoe C..tl De!Jr "lie!, 11. NOTICE °" H1ARING 01" ,,IR$T Ott ...... u 11'111 "°'""""'" '· •. u l!QUITV Dl!::O-ll.Ol"¥ElNf co .. 1 .... AND l'IN.AL ACCOUNT flHO REllOftT im DI0-1l Nitc:Ar1flllr •iv.t •• No. -lrvtne, Cl. °' IXaGUTOllJ AND P'ETl"JIOH FOR '2107 AL.LOWANCIE 01" 5TATUTOJIY ANO PUBUC NcrrJCE Ah'lfl "'-'''"""'· 1U t4\ICllOtit IKTltAOROIN.A"Y CO.loWIUION' TO St., C•ll Nituj Ct lll, "'2t EXl:CU TOfl ANO TO ,AY '"'IJllOR COU•T .0 .. TM• Tllh M l ..... I condlltl-.t W .,. Kathy Oeettm Jolt a one-'TATUTORY AND IXTJtAOllit>tNM:Y 'JTA.Y'I °" CM.1""-••A "" ll'ldlvldu11. ATTORNEY'' ,l!l!S AND 'OJI A,-. TMI COIJ~ Of' DllNI•• AMn Ill. e""'"' hltttt, S-0, but the A11111on ,.OtNTM!ENT 0, TtlUfTl!e UNDl!JI MO. •·m•t Thl1 1t1tmenl ... fltlll wilt! ,,.. Vle)O' Salnta ---·· IOlthall TEITAMENTNIY TJIUIT, ANO llOR wonc• °' ..... ," °' AMINDI D c,-.11 Clert. of Oftnoe Cownly an~ '"vun:.11 l"IMAL DIST1tl•UT10tot ,ITITION POil l"RO•ATI 0" WILi. !,. lt71 team canw "back to win the '-".,. Oil OA.\'ID JIOTHMAN. o.e-MOt. ..... N• LnT••• 0 " AO. p .... n I• :f,Jh t CI p, • •, Jn I NOTICE II Mliltl8V GIVEN ""' MlltllT"mATlqN WITM•TM•-WtLI. AN· "ubllstwd Qrantl CO." Di iiy P! .. I. """ aANC. °" AMlllCA NATIOfrtAI. TlltU•T 1111.Uo. Otlobl• 11. u . •nd ..... I'll..., I, ,, doll eheader Sunday wlth El AND SAVINDI AHOCIATION "" llltl• " IDA E.. WE&Cllt .... IDA lrn Jltl•1' Mon•-, flltd fltreln 1 "ff1toft tar "ll'tl .N:t ri,..1 IMMA Wl!.llEJI.. 0-...,, . · ' •• PUBUC NOTICE ...:;, ""-1 llMll ntHIT et fllKV!w/ IN ,..._ HOTICI II Nlat:•Y GIVl!.N t11e1 Alter ~ICOl'tlea In the Han !or •11-•nc• ., tlltlllery Ind -MAJllAH IUU.IS IM• "'" ....... 111/---=:;,:c.==:::.:::: __ _ opener' ''-la ~~ed to lrlOr'Olnll'r ~ ...... t. e!ilCllter ..... .,,...... petition lor "' ... " If Wiii l'ICTITIOUI IUllNIS' """ ~ lo ,_..,. tll'fwteno -.. Ir_""'"' It-""" fill 1_._ ot l.lflef"t of NA.111111 ITATIMIWT" a J-0 advantage ln the ant""""' """ 11111 ,.. ..c1k111M1it ""'.....,,..,..,,"""" w111MM-W111 _.., " Thot ,.._.. ""91\1 ., • ..,,.. 1,.,,.111 Ulllw T ... llNflitMY Tn1t1, tnd !er "'9 IMft"-l'"ftlilrww;t te Wlilcll i. MlnfM .. ! fnnne d the n:.llhtctP and """" ~ ,.....,_ .. Wl'lkfl '' _. "" """"" wtk\111no .... 1t111 w.c.ll. M•R1CAT01ts. , .. caii. 04 were never headed. · ~ tor fW""" fN''~ w """ "" .. tlfl'lf ~ Mt .. hffttnt "" i.-NIOl>rlM, u11 ctamen,., c .... nm --·-1~-.... I Hl!ll ln4 ,.. " hMfll'l9 "" ...... "" """ lltl Mtn ... ..... "-Mf" 12. Wiiier c. ~ ....... f.QO Ctll'llftl ~ 11111: ..,. u~ ~y lft ID-Men ... lW N_...., t. \"1, ti fii lt7' al t :lll '''"" 'n IT-. ~ P1r ..... C«h6MI, Celli. '200I -•nt doublehuder Sunday '·"'" In""_,,..,.., .. °"""-' Ne. ol ~I .,._ S If "" '-°'' AlelM A. bfllfo, -"II ClmlftS N t"'' -· ... Al ,, .. ~ _,, 11100 CM(; c...., °""'if ,.. 09lc CtftW Drt'l'I w.t. I" ......... , Ctrlso.d, Gtllt.,,. wlth I.he Anaheim UUold Sol Wltf, '" .... °"' ol Sll'lta Aftl, ClllfWflle. fllf Clt't' .. ""'' """ (lllfWlll•. w. -0.Y'M • ....,.., m ,, L ...... ~lh ••• wlnn-mov"!f lnlo Da""' Ottebtr 11. irn °''" °"'°"'" ~. irn ...,, .,.., <:eMt. tlOM 1'1'1 i.llC! "' Wll.1..IAM I , IT JOt4N, WILLIAM I . •t JOt4H, Tfilf M l-it ~-1W 1 -· undllputed ~n 0 fif"llt Cwnl'J Cler-COlllnlV C..,._ H~a. Pl-In the 11~ .. ~l""-1r1 ......... JI.MIU w._HOOICIT•AnlM '""UL A. 11.utNA" w. CIMIOn llttltrt .. _. -...u.ui.., l lJIJ Atl#M'I' II l.nt • .. "'"'"' If Ll1f fills ltll!M'Mnf -f41M wllft 1f14 Anahehn n,ld Is located al· .... """' .,,. .. Slfltt "' •• ,, 17111 ,,,. County C~k .. Orenp COlll!IY " 8-·~·-t ll!d N·~. UI Aflfll•· C•tlfarlll• ,...,. C9'1• ...... ( .......... ...., Ot1IMI' ,,, .,,,, 1\11,.1111.U\U• lllrr\111\1 T"' UIQ ...... Tell 1ru.1 ........... ,..., Tbe Stfntl' lflUOG record Alter'ntY IW ._..._ Alllf'HT fw ""'"""'" Publllll'lllf Or ...... C-t D1Hy ~ ·~~tlled Ora,,,. C1b1 Ottrt ltltol1 ,llO!hil-Or.,.._ C.111111 Dt11¥ ~0:· Ckltolw 2$. '"' NMfmDW 1, f 1 b DO'f t-2. ,. -.... "'· tm \ rwi Od. Itel ......... '· ~n ~ 1'1) P\JBUC NO'llCE MV Girls Split Pair ·' • • .. ... ..,, Of this ... "" ow ... , ..... '· T,11111 '"'. .. "' '"" ·~· ....... "" ' ... Ml Al . """ ""' "'" 111•1'111 '"" , .. Mr ""' , .. ,_ .. "' " ' ... '" , .... '"" •• ""' , .. ,,, ... ., ..... ..., ·~· Srelt •• , ... .. . .., • •• "' '" tn .. .. - CL "' M• " "' '"''" " ,~, " . .. • L I "t ,.. ,,., .... I• h ... .. " .. •• .. "" ... '"' .. .T .. 1 •, "' . -----·. PUJIUC NO'l1CE Smith Resigns 'Post PUBUC NOTICE .... tlOTfCI 0, INTINTtoM TO C•U.TI llCUll:ITY INTlltllT NOTICE IS Hi'.lll:l'f GIVEN '9 1'- Cr9dlton. c4 Jef"Dme J, MOft•ft lflll P9""1' t.. MOfNn, cletl,.,..., wllGle 1*111Mt1 l dlftl II 17" ,..... H...,IW, N......,or1 1.-c:h, C-IY of Or11>99, SltM of 0111om11. I'll.I I I MC..,rlty ltlllrllSI •• 1oout to ba crt•I• Dy o.blor •ncl 1r111ttd to ll-lcl leilWaru, S«urto!I ,,.,.,, ""-"""''*' •&cl""' h 506 ~o. &1¥ Fron!, e11toot lllffld, CounlY ~ Ori,._, Sti lt of Ct lllornlt. TM pr-rlY In wllld> !M s.tcwtly ln~t wUI lit' tl"ltltd 11, In ~r11, 1n n~rn 1rid 911111-nt, l'llf'11lhll't llf'ld tur11lihlng1 ol Qtoblor COWl'llllll prl!O" ... ,., -lot9twd t i 506 So. I t'( Fl'1ltll, 81lbN l1llflll, Cwnf'r OI Ort~. '''"' ef C.lllOml1, '"" bu91M'll kllfW1I 1 ''WEE CAPlttH l lle •~Id NCWllY tr....-C"°" wm .. ~ 1111 .... n. "" '"' ~ o1 N_,.., 1'7J, t i 10!00 ,,,,,, 11 OROVElt EKROW CORPOltATION, 111 k. uuroo11. AMl'ltl""' C1t1lornl1 ntGS. In lntltll,,,.,.11. $0 11r t s k-10 tM Stc~rtcl Pffty, t !I W.1111'11 N l'l'IH and fddl'-1 \IMd 11'1 Ille Deb10I" fOI" tM lftrM .,..,, 11.i ,..,, .... l!lf .. lfl4! 0.1«!1 Oef*' t , Im 11.0f-IALD MOFFATT S.CWIMI Ptrtv Olt0\1111: IJl;ROW COltPOltATIOtl UI 1 .. lllhMh, AMlttlM, c.iu..-nl• ,_ ate ........ _... PvtllltlMMI Or•"" CMJt Dall'I' "llol, Ottoet« u. 1m SU1·n PIJBlJC NOTICE PICflTIOUS •USINlll NAMa tTATIMIMT Tiit follOWll!I .,.,._ It dOl"ll bul1Mll '' 1 Ell. TORO MEDICAL WEIGHT CLINIC., »Wl I.I Toro l\Md. No, 111'. El T-C1Ufen>lt '7t# l ldlll"' l •rf Illlkafl. M.O., lt'n M•lftn e1rc11. Hllftlltt111o! ..-en. C•lllot11lt .... Thll bull,..._ 11 CO!'Cll.lei.d IW •" llldlvldlt1I. ltlCYl,trd 1!1rl ?lllkltfl Tiii• "''"""'"' -· l'llecl Wllll tM COUlll'I' Ci.r• of Ortl!ff CNlll'I' .., 0Ctot:l9r n. 1tn. tr,A6u~ 9352 \ Learn Jo cut, oew, flt u •-lO"-l.l.lL the experu do with our In .. ..-JI&.~ n In cant &wlnJ Book! Over SOO "'1 -tfT ••• ,...,~ 1tep.by-11tep pictures teach Ill...._ tll"" quick, profe111ional way to lf!W a dreu today, wear It OIOOSE THE ING tomorrow, to choose the right WAY -thia euy with pattern!, much more. double tab trim Is eel REVD'TY·n '\'l!i <zMTS or parties and for each pt1ttern -lldd 23 ttlebraUons. 0'°°5e cents tor each pattern for t~nted Pllttem 9352 llalf Air Mall and Special Httru.11- Sltea l~, 12~. 141,\ 16~. ~~ve:;~tte iJ.!rd= 11\.t. S111 t41Ai (buat 37 ~· 'A<eeka or moni. SCnd to 2 318 yard• Sl-tnch. I AIJoo Broob. the DAIL y llEVl:1"n·t•"t!i •NTS PILOT, t M, Neod1ecn.Jt -(Dr each pattern -~ 2S Dept., Box 1113.. Old OM!lsen. PUBUC NOTICE ccnt11 for each pe.tt~.,!.tor Statk>n. New York, K.Y. Air Mall.rid SOeclall..~· 100ll. Print Name. .t.&l.n!lll'i su,•••o• s~~rT o .. TM• t,~~i!'eau:jjtm Zip. Pattem Member. STATI 0111 CAl.ll"OllMIA 11101 delJvtrY Will tab 0"'9e N' !: E 0 L ECRAfT Tiii COUJffY 0111 OtlA .. GI ..__._. _ -. to Crochet, knit, etc. .,,, ..... .... "''"" "'-""-... .._.. dlnetlonl. ~-flOTKI OP MIA.11 .. 1 OP PITITION Marl.an Maritn, thf, AILY "'9tut ~ 8961t. FOtt ,.•o•AT• Of' w1Li.. ANO Jl'oa 232 Wn t 18th St New t.ITT"llll TllTAMSNTAIY y rk N y lif1 &Ai~, fAncy knoll, J)J\l• 111•"-., CLARA '· 1.1'''"'"· n • • • nt 1m 11, st.oo. °'«•ltd· NAME, ADD i)iriwl'ilih fllttaet <hdtet Rook - HOTICI IS ttr•e•Y GIVIH tMI ZIP, mil and • --~ .. ~·-•. -•• )MIY J IANIETTli Wit.DI N1 11111111 !fUMBEJL MSU 11 ._, ... ,..., r ft "'"''" • ""'Ion .., l'TW.N "' "'" SEE ~o•• I k Wnl. SJ, ,.,.., "" , __ or ~"9t"t T .. llf'l'lll'lt.tn "' ~ U a Complete 1Mtut Gift lteofr teo .... Mf!llofW, ,....,_ i. Wf!IUI h ltlloN a.nd ddiie ore --....... 100 ~ •• It ~ fW f\lftlltr ,.,tlaffto, .... U -......._ .,..,.., UIAH •• ...... "* TltM .,.., JOIAC4 ol llMflllO pa "" -UUQ 011:r $LOO. "'9 "PM Ms -.., "" Hoot. ,,,, SPl'tne, ~°r#m~ Ca'*.. AU n--.t.. ... «.. ... 1IOGll .. ltlJ. '' t :OO .:-;;:.:;i Ill IM fM""'°'" lfna i.M:. f ~ ..,..._ ,. or °'fl«'-' Ho. J °' Mkl uvri, INSTA SEWIH" D00K St.OD. •I 790 'Cl'11( Oftltr C>mt Wnl, Ill 1.t I• lltt)' ltlllf Booil:• • 50c. W. City ti' $tllf• AM, C•ll-.it. _.... toda.y, wttl' tprMIOW. Book •f U ..,... j,f ........ ~!.cl (l(t. n. 1m. ft 50c. WIU.tAM S. St'°"... INSTANT FA I 111 O'f, · <-ounh' C1trll Q9UI Boot l • 16 patterns. ICIMDll l. ANO .t. .. a1110N BOOK -ff1lnl... ,I SO<:. I Y1 CAll:t. MITCH•t.t. fL~hfon ftefl. ~· Af--.m A.Ht ..... 1 .. IM ffO, llOAOW.t.Y , n.-~ -~·· ,.. .. TA .... A, CM.1111. rntl UIW to f :I 'I ......... Teh tn•l *""" j._.!"""'!!"!!!<f!loe!!"!!!!"!!U!IM!!"!!!O! ... !!"!!JOU!!"!!l!!"!!Qol!!"!! .. for Teda.(• l.lfl"f • ~ tw1 """Mmlr .' If" l"t;fllltMlll Or.,. CMll Dtlt't f'l'-t. 1 Oct*' "' if. ,,, tm mw> OFFlCIAill of the utility told the commissk>n they have alternatives to disposing of the water. Other testimony centered on the planned new tmil't 400-foot smokestack, supposed to be more effective in dispensing sulfur.bearing fumes. Assis- tant carlsbad city planner Paul WUllams told the PUC lt shoul d encourage the stACk's removal once the plant starts burning cleaner fuel. .-: • &. DOJLV PILOT OVER THE COUNT ER NASD Ll1Hng1 lor Wed-y, Octow :r., 1973 " • He• Yortt -IA.TON 6 •IYSTO..I: C..,, 11 .l~ lowl119 11 • lkt MCIW.t.10: Cini 8 1 11. .. tt.11 so.c.. SI . .).4 l>lcl •f'ld Hlotd prl .. ,II Fd IO.CIO "·" Cull et "·" Jl.V SU•o 0111': CIH "" M&ltu. Gwl:ll F U,tt 16.l1 Clftl M 1.4 t.~ M G<or t.Jr~.- Fund1 .. 'l"'°'ld II Ill(-'·" •.n Cusl IC1 l.l 1 1.111 "" tllC 117' .a. .... NAM) Inc: SclK!I F l.H •.JI (lftl IU l.JO 6,91 Ad tl'IS 1.m .It ~' stc11 Fd o.n u.M Cuu s1 n.a 11.01 cm c,. '4.11 .14 Cklo«tff 2• ,,,, EDU! So 14,01 u.os Cuu Sl 11.«:I 11 •9 lfl( Fcla ~°' "·'' ., Ali! l!gr~ GI U.ll t•,M (""I Sl t.M t.U 5"' ~w 4.lto--A.llO AdYIMr 4,40 •.11 f.lf\ln Trt 11.ll 1. C..st Sol •.ll S.21 llCUltllT 'Ill.I Ael.._ Fd t.11 10.U £me<"I 1,1)1 t,'7 ..... IO S.11 S . .:J Eou117 n"' Aet... 111 ll.U "·" lllt•!'" lt.i.oi 11.ilol Fro!Ms 4.0I •.1l 111...es ,... .W Allllllf"I 11.:t5 '1,)1 ftlrf cl t.02 t ... ltlllc~r •.tt 7.U Ullt• F 1.1' .W AGE Fd S.1t 1, fm e-10.0I 10.06 ltMir Giii I.SI t.llO SILICTIO AUMt. IJ.M 1'.n ~cl .... t.ti ..• UIOn'lrll-I.sot a.lt .A1'1-111£_L! .n Al ..... Fd u.• 11,11 ,IOIUTT . Ltn• Fd •.oo 1.00 9Jt_p F1I lO: .IO Amc"9 F 1.H •.OI OltOUI': I.IX G"°UI': 5"' ~ IJ. .tt l Am l lrlll t.1110, 8M lltt:I t II t ,tt . CP Ltdr 16.l! 11.11 iotntl'WI 11.jl .11 -ii\' t .60 10.f'I c..tll 11.11 IJ.J1 Gfwtl'I 1.01 1.11 k l'll•_y t: 14:W ,., Am qly 1.16 u C.....t•• lO.M ... it.vcn u.n u .11 IMA1'1HLO •• ~ AM Xl'llSI C.. Ss.te; 7,M t.trJ l.lbty Fd S.11 S.tl C-O• S.Jl'A.11 l'"UNDS1 0.11 l,M ... Llfl! lll!w t .IJ t.tl Entr.... -.tl'4o.0 c.tpUI J.tl 1.11 t:n•• '°·" ... u nc: CH r.n 1.0 Fl•t fd <l.d ... U J ll!Qftl l.t2 t . E.,.<.C 11.l6 U.1' LOOMIJ t4•r1w J.IJl>f.'1 111"11"' I 16 t , F.....i ll.U l&A5 U.Y~llr U<lal L '·ll>!·M Sotd t:tt t .OI l•1irll11 t.t2 10.14 Ca-p D¥ U.tt IJ.tl P•(t f<d I.~ •. U ~ $leek 1.11 I . Sai.m ,. •.It 1.0S MlllWI IJ.11 IS.II t NEAltSON • 1 A ... 0•111 •.OJ i..61 l••lld n .... n .11 l..OltO A••: AflOt( 70. .N A .... ..,.n J.11 s.•1 PINANCIAL A!IUU 1.lO '·"' lnc:om 11,"/J .llO 1 A"' t11wst J.t.oi S.t.oi lll•OOIAMS~ Am But l .11 ).«) tnwen 10,1S .Qt Am M"I •.H t . .1.4 Fin 0..... 1.IJ 4.IJ 811d dtlt 10.U 1' 16 S.. 0.M IJ,11 11 AmNI Gr t.l6 1.IO Fl11 lf'ld t.0 4.41 Lllltwtn 11.1' U.M s;.,. Fd ,,.... It AMC~ f<i" '"' t.IM 1.IM L"""1 tn t ,:U t0.20 SIGMJ< 'UN~· I GltOUI": \lffll 1.0 4.tJ "'-Niln 1.02 4.lt c •• SN 1.n . • A nnel G11llty c..tlt•I J.ilol J.tl ljlfd Y• 11.41 ll.'1 _,,CO: lnw 11 I. n •"'D Flld 1nt 1.00 I.II PlltST Fr""' I SI t .llO Trsl I 06 1:11 Grllrtll 1.541 ,,., IM\llSTOltl: INtp F • ,, • 541 Yen!~• •.n "·" MARTINEZ (AP) A •~om .,_,. '·" Olw. Fd l.M 1.14 """ F 11.00 u.u Snl•tll a 11 •111.•1 Coo l d ha t V•111ur •.• s I0.541 Grtll Fcl '·" I.I• MASS l'NQ.: sa !I Gr 11 '°11,KI 1 54.lperior rt u ge s se Wt "-II 11.U lJ... 111(0... f.4S t.i. Ml T 11 II IJ,Jl So GenF IJ,1' 1>.n No'· 13 f(lr sentencing of ont All•1111 •.:Ii '·" stoc.' " '·" •.1• MIG u" 14.tJ s..,.1 1nw 1 '° '·" ""'"• F l.M ,, ... Id Mull! I ... I ... lttlO 1J M 1•tl ~lnw G •IS 1,lt of seven Hell's Angels accused AXIi F.,,. ..,. 11.6' 11.M 1111Fo 1'.1111.0 Sow 111 n Noll 4t "GVeN'TOM: PORUM GllOU I': MCD 11.11 H:.1.4 Soectr• I '4 S 11t' of killing two Georgia c:yclists Flllld A '·'° t.13 to0 f<lld 11. .. 11 ... Ml,., It 1.11 1.11 up 1110 1.s.~ On La bor Day In 1~1. '""' • ''" ,_.,. 101 ...... I .II I.II M911oe• 11.01 lt,01 n.l.Tll ••o G '" • "' 51eck '·" t .11 Col-'·" •.n 1111111 ,.,.. J.6t t n c om Fo J.11 .. P ul Fr ·5 Mumm •7 A1e s.:1 '" 1.11 u ,,,... •.w .... MD11v F11 11u 1140 oiwe.u s4o· • a anc1 • "• lllC c.111 11111J.11 Flln Gr •.eo 1 ,, MSfl F11 11,:u IJ-lJ Pro0rs 1.u •fl t \\rcdnesday entered a guilty &tbwn 11.0111.01 l'OUNOl 1tS Mu anG 101• 11 n st'"' Gr 1.10 s.10 !' ••vroi; 1.U l.U GltOUI'( MIF RI •n 1"1 $1 "'Inc: •.12 '--" plea In Contra Costa Superior &ayrti. r.' '-" •·• Grw111 s.u ll)I M1F Gro 4" 1l't Slat• sir ••.1'"111tl "·urt"' charges of bei"" an 9'•c11 I '"'·" 111<11"' 111)11.llM"°""" SU l~STl!A OIMN l'"DS:' vu "'ft .. K ()I\ 11 :M ll,:M l'Mtwl t:M1011 M"'°"'(n tl••OOol Am lnd l•S,~ l t lb mu~.,. ..r,\llr 4 l't .... F SDl'<H II JO 11.JS Mu! SM• It 11(11 .. 40 Ano Fcl I ft f,ft accessory o e , ... · lloftOstt 1os s.n i<.voq F •.11io ••Mu11 r,. 1•1 1•1 1n"'" 1."M'·" fl°'! '""' 111TI 111' P•ANICUM NII lndu 11It1116 Ck•l ll f Jti'Ail,, PSA F ligh ts Cut; 300 Laid Off flrown J.41 J.IO GIOUI': NAT SEC FOS: ITt:IM IOI", • 9r11.,.,, 11.1011.10 ONTC I.» t,J! !Ill.,.._ t.OI t ilO 11•1•"' 11.0I ... CAI.YIN lllUNOS: Gwlh Sr I.II I.SI llonG St 4.IJ 1.91 Ct11hl 1!,11 1l.1• 111111 Fd 1•.11 U.n f<r l'lftn 1.9S l.14 Dl•ldn l ... 1.1!11 Stoc• 16,0l It.IQ '""' P11 n.o n .• , us Gv s '·" 10.ri ... , Slti. I.SJ J 11 SIS G.OIJ,, Div w l.U l.tl VIiii"" ! OI S.Sl lri<:o"' •.I! 1.:IO c ...... 11 1.n I .JI. ,..twa 10.01 II.to .. , c.. ! 16 1" Sloe' SI' I.JI l.tl l"Com • " ... NY 'nll lt.IM ll.11 fbEqty 4.11 J.01 Gtwll't J.1J I."' $morto1 •N IO ll"I CG f" ...... IO.M II.lb Fti.1 ~ll!q 11116 II, .. MIW 1:110 L': TecMI t ti 1 M C... Trln u .n 1j·" Fii Ml OP '·" •.• EQll!tv 11.Jt 11 tD ~.-.ev F 10.11 11·"1 ""'' S,,, 14.401 .14 FUNDS IPtCP Gr'w!l'I 11.11 11,U SV'KrO G l f'I '" CMANNIMO OltOUI': ~lie 11.tt 11 •• TMR Ap t .M .. ,, l'"UND5: COll'lm t \1 100! NEA Ml t."IOOt ff"'DI G 1 41 •it S.!ri<:d 10.IM ll.t! '""'K 1.,1 •.l!~u Ctnl IM !M T-r C ~.tl : •• a"" Fii t ti 10.ll lf'ldut " ,, 16 n" l'fl'""11'1 10.1' •O ,, Tr~ C•P ..... II (om $!l l.'161.f'I PllOI l .1J t (ll Ht""on !S371'"l'iv1Eq 11.t6 tttl £qty Gr l.'16 t ,,.Gtttwy 1.\.4 I O N• Pert UIOitHT..cior H n .tS111J Eq1y .... ).ti ).SI C.E s..s i->Ill ......... Wiii 11 70 ,, • 70\h CG l .n , •s. F"" A1!1 l .U I.II O.~ SK I DI I.DI N1c111.. !I It ti .. lOlll Ct 4.• 4_1Q SAN DIEGO (AP) Groot~ S.1' 6.11 O"°Ul'SIC: Hf'' 1"1r n1111.11 u.o111e11 t .1&1001 1~(11"' l.CIO I IS Allt• F \I~ • tt CloN9' I XI l .'1 l)nll\IM l .U t ,J:l Covcmmcnt order' to Sa\•e Sflot(I '" t.11 aai '"d I Qt I II 0 Ntl1 Id 1l Oii 1J.(le UNION l lf.111¥1 l/11111w 10.Jl ll.Jt C°"" Sil 11 "1 ll.lll ~ Win 11.,J tl.'1 OI OU,: fuel will rorce P a·ctfic CNAJ IE Gtl'IFArn 4 10 J.HOl',l!NHMl'O; 8rll 5lY •-·lb"-st A 1 r 11ne 1 10 •osTON: Gr•n 1"11 11" 11.t1 oo AJ"' 11 .11 11.~ N•u ,11., _. "" Ff'ld h •.tt 10,IM Gw.t•ll U.JJ ?S,l! Op f M I I I U U11 C..,. .llmlnate .boul 24 daili· flights Ff"llfl CJ I.Oto •.61 llA""LTOfol O•I': Op ,_ tu 'If WMll• $.llfr II\ J.U ,.Iii P-4..)1 l.l'"I OfC ~c I .11)11 11 Ufi lTaO a d l ay Off more than 300 '-'' •.ti .-. °"""' '"' r ... ...,._ • t.t.J Acc-n ni"' Fii 11.U lt.t.li lfl(""' '·" I.I I h .;I .. w f.11 l'n "" l'"d employe.o; ntxt week. the 1.0N1A1. ..,,_1 11.d 11 ., "'""''" 1.,. .ti c...i .., UNOS; Kt•• Lw t ... t,W 1'91111 loll 1.t) •• C...1 {ftC alrlino says. ~ •• 10.11 ~ 1.•1 t.11 ,.11n $Ct r.11 '·•' ••-1 !'SA ~-1d-Willi"..., R '·"' 111 Hitor, •.loO ·;i.: 11t1111 Fd '·'° 1.t1 t(lfflt r1U"1 \:>" "'" ' -10.lt 11.lt Hio•I 01 1.01 I .JV PILO•IM 0 ': Y~OCI , Slilmp .. Id Wtdnesday the Grwt11 '·" '""°'"' 11.t1 io.• c..1101 i1t •>4 ~''t, ' Ill(-tll 10.'4 1"'00'1 CP 10.1111 .11 lll(;Of'PI 1 0)4 ••u 0 ¥t 1 t11l rllne hasn't d~ wtilch ve111..., l.~ 1.a 1 ... , a. '·• 1., 11111, • .., 111 , .,. v Lui 0, h•• ·11 be ,1_,,,......,;t u ni. CotUf'l't 0 IS '4 11.M Ill( fOA"' fl.» i..S. 1'11'111 $1 \Q,1Q 1G 11 Ytl ..... 1g ... Wl "'"'t'.,_.-.... V U"' COMMOtf'#LTM I""'""""' , .. •.H Pin r-. Jll ... y .. I~ ... Vlou.ly lb. CUI••••• ••JI be TRUST: 111._... C1! I•! l"IOfillll:I '0; Ltw F • • """""" "1 .11.1. • t 11 t.n 111 1nw11 11 '1 u n l"ion En 1,ie 1 " v.1 00 lht n 1ghl! wl\l :h B!'e tJ\e C I." 1.tl ln"'"' G 'JI '·· l'iol Fd 111111.IS Y~Ji( I .,,. ,_A "d !§'f. 1.1)1l ... l~wCo A14,1)11).lt PIOl\•11 11,IJ IJ :IO SAlfOllS• 1 ;,. ef!Sl \J~CI'\ Ill:: S:ll • p I 16 t.~I lftw O~d I 9'I 7.tt Pl..vwl .... 10 It lnvtll '1 51 1..,. f\.1os l of those lald off will P c1 'M •.• 1nv 1""1' J" , . PL• 0 1110 11.111•.Js v\ com 1 !ID 1 '° • -•II 10,•tlO lt lnw tlo' 11)oll1Jt l'lt1CI ltOW'I ; SPKI I K t(ll he stewardesses. pilots. fllJthl con,,,... 11111111 1Mv11sr G.rw111 u .11 1111 ..,...,rt>', ,:,, 11i , (11\lft fWIOol l6(1 C0UlfSIL -E••ll .. U16\l..,on:1 1•1 !5"41 eng~n. mal nl en a nce ConM11n 1 n 1 :n c • .,.,.. 1•1 t l'tl -...., 1on1ossv1nf 10t0 1.a. • -rker• and -me tcrmlnnl Cont•y c ud11 J1 c .. 11 1w l ,1s 10 Pro Ff 1..n l.'1 "''r~ 1 '" •)J nv . "" Cf"IO.ll 1t0 11o1c...i1S11 •10 6 ... l'f.,..111t 1 n •6t 1t11,t196tl~'~ empto.-Shimp said A clRS.'1 c-0 1w 1to •M 11tv1sr GltOUI'; -..,., Gt '"tin w•n$•"" " 161 ~.....,,, .• 0.Ut\ J.SI , 10$Gth IN. .l'!"lillSIPlO tt l10IW-.~M1.1110011111 of 25 stewn.rdes~ trA1nees was o.a.1(1Q 1.11 • ~1 1os ttO •.a 1 ~ l'VTNAM Wtlt1t ,q 11n11 11 ·'• he d OI UW•lllE 10$Pr •II • t1 l'"UNOt: WI LLlllGTOll db rnlssed Wedne3Utty, a • 0111ou1t: lillllt ... , ut , .... CMw• 11,M 11 * 0 1110u •1 d....i 0.ttl SffC.' M.lftl,10 ~-.lty t ,IJlO I• .... t4•ft1' t.."1. •101111•1 kltU •£lie. o 1t.t1 1ll 1.,.;11 't.1'1111 The federal 1mvemment told 091• " io.es "n Y•• ""' •. '" .. 111· 11.•• , " ""'°'"' 1 : .. u. e~ 0.lta T 1.K '·' lft., "-' I ~ .. IO'I( 111 I .. l (lll\lv Jt Airlines ()ct. 12 lO CUt fuel dt\lt otl tl.'4M. I Si: i-..... "'°" Tfll*I 1 •,rr1I pt'· Jo im le•ols Otecf co 1.:1:1 5.M Q.rwll't •.Ill • 11 vi.ta , 11 .,. u ~ .,,,.,11.1, "·" 1 1 con.sum l\ln . ~-'1.,'•" 1no:""' '" "''* ..,.,~ 11 u 'l.ll w-11111 11,11 1 Shimp ~aid the order -um •••1 1 1 .n •0.11 trtt U'1 '·" ... -. .... ' r..11 ~ tt.1-411. .~,· ···•ui II' T•tl Pl 0 !011.IO lt+llltl n .n ... WllllSV l l) PSA to save about 12 000 ~ ,d n ,M 11J1 1'"1 """ n .u '''·°' ~IK 1:11 •.~ '~ ""'" •Ml 1'u ti ' Q!y ~· 1,1\ '·'° "I Fllftd '·'' ,,tS ttlf 'i "'"It Gr '!1 . gallons o f fuel a fT\OAlh And "'L' u ... ,,.a J o.,..it •tt tJ-= ...... "" • m;• •·tt f ft<fuce Olghl9 i., at ptretnt ~1~ ,:;; 'f: 1:': 11: ·~,D',:!t u~'l. : k ':...l:'' 1 • tind persoMel by tO perttnl. I!:.': ttt .-: =:,., ,tf,~ti •":-,,.... lt:Oitl: ~;;;r.: \ '. • ·- "" • .. , . • ·~· ·~· ·e: "" '"' .... :: •• ... ... .. Bf~ , J'l'"d ... ... .... i:~t •I" "' " ~ = !i· '"' • t • t ,J I ' ~J :=~ l ' ' . ' . .. . , STQC.K EXCHANGE ' • t /. ,, . ' ' · '' ~ ~ ' I ' · ,. • ~ l • • ' .. " }>. I ,. ' .. .. " , Ocl0btr1. l " <. f S'. ., -. : • ' ..... ' .... ,, .. .. ' ' .. ~· • J " . ' ., ... t' , j. • 'J . ;,i..' O• I \i... ~ .'. ·, 'i I ' I ' \ OAl~Y PU;(1" · • ~ ~ .. ' .. ; .~ '· ., .... .. DAILY PfLOT q...:. ...... _ .. _._,,_ ... _ _J I .e IL ~......,...___-..,....-_____. t!.RRORS. Advertisers should ch•ck their ~ds d•lly & repcrt errors 1mmediately. The DAILY r:atLOT •11ume1 li•bil ity for the first incorrect insertion only. 1-;,,... ................... ~·~.,...~ Gan1ra l . «4tbeS~~ t4A 1 ~Mo ~socmEs lnJ REALTORS I CTmiiTI] 1• CHARMING HAR BOR VIEW HOME Step into the 1'panlsh til e entry & then in to ~-he beautl.fully decorated li ving room with plush matched carpeting & wallcoverings . :Formal dini ng roo1n plus large,..ea ting area 1n the buiJti n kitchen. 2 Bedrooms. 2 baths, den, large coverl!d. palio \\•it h professional landscaping. t-:ntert.ain here & view Big Can- yon . Churn1 al it "i best'. $69.500 . Wt,en you llst with us, YdUR HOME Is •dver- tl;sed in Home for Living IT)•gazlne in more than 9tO areas -and custom· e,;s are sent to you as re- f-~ri1l1 from our over 770 •fflll•tes of NMLS. 644-7270 2828 E. Coast Hiway t-.. Corona del Mar " ' •• ... I, ' ,, " I A U,_.l()UI: ti()MI: ~(lN SHORECLIFFS-Unique Home i~ this I Unique area! 3 bedrooms, shake shingles •ver board and batten exterior, used brick I 1ireplace. Walk the t~ee--lined streets_ tC? a .private beach. Charrrung! $99,500. A listing ·of J erry Lumbert. UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 675-6000 ~·· 2443 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar he test draw In lhe West. Need a "Pad"~ Ptaoit all ad ! CIJ'.a Daily Pilnl Classified Cnll 642-5678. 't"•r•I General SA VERDE NORTH t DOLLHOUSE 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, fireplace, 1tuge family room/country kitchen combina· Uon. In new section. See this one for sure! .Asking $39,900. CALL 540-1151 ... :ovERNMENT REPOSSESSION 29,500 -3 Bedroom , large double garage, Jlardwood floors + pool. near Newport Back Bay. Fantastic value -bids close soon. Call us fo r lull details. ft ' . ~ 540.1151 Open Eves. " OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 2-6 ,Q.018 Santi ago Drive , L>over Shores. 3100 sq. ft .. 5 bedrooms, 4 b~lhs. Separate master _suite and living roo n1 . dl·n and dining room. '!\.l.1:-;ilnu1n privac~. :S l2.5.000. OCEAN VIEW CLASSIC , Open Sunday 1-5. 4 bedroon1s, family room in love ly Ca1nco Shores. Reduced to $1 15,000. .4533 Tremont . ' " BAYC REST OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 202 1 Comniodore 3 bedroo1n attractively rlc<"oro.tcd home. 1'"'a1n ily room overlooking .putsu. 2l:.: baths. J•:o1 ting bar in kitchen. Hooni Jor bo~1l or trailer. $68,000. HARBOR VIEW HILLS ~p~1·inu..; :? hc(lronn1 ho me. FamHy room \1 ith f11L'p\:.1l·t•. $\\ i111111ing pool. ocean view. Q\\ ncr \1111 11.::1::;(' option. 3 car garage. ~g!J 500. HARBOR VIEW HOMES l'n1·10£inu n1odrl. .\ h1·drnn1ns, family room, lu111u" r1)flm nnc1 111/1 f;rc:t t for teen-agers, · 1t +o!ln·r 111-ln11 ur 1•11\ert::1i11ing. J ust bring ~1111r p1111l 1.,hll•' ~Gl '.J;tll. CHOICE EMERALD BAY :1 \ t>:-1r 11ld Spani .. h : heriroo111 charn1ing r t.11'11:11 Jia1 hL•q1H~ l-':1nu1 ,1n11c \"iC\1', Use of 't c11n1~ court~, pt111l, .111d private beach. .'S:!i5.00U. CAMEO SHORES Occ:111 \ iC'\I'. \'crv l;i rg<' 11vu1i; room and mas. tcr brdr·oom \1·i1h ll1>aut1fu\ parquet floors, hean1rd ceilings. 4 h1•ctrooms. :l baths. $115.000. LIDO ISLE BAY FRONT Ope n S.1turctav nntl ~11nd<1~· 1·5. 844 Via lido Nord. 1~1unr loc;111on. 4 bedroom, 4 hath • ho1 ne. Sep<1rate <hnin ~ r0{1111. 40 foot lot. ~295 000 FOUNTAINS & REFL ECTION POOLS "'In lJ11 , pr1\ alt' ~.1rdl'11. P<'i:l!cll hard111111d fluor". true l.J~11nn c·l1,1r1n :! or :l l>cdroorn , fnn 11t·. t1Jon1, \ 1• , };;: JW. 644-1766 Co ldwel l, Banker I 2l(r l S11n Jooquin Hil.Rd., N.B. ·------- CORONA DEL MAR LUXURY DUPLEX Enter thru a dr<Jn1atic parlor to massive wet bar in co111b1ncd furn . rm, kitchen din. r1n which opens to Spanish court-rd. The enllre 2nd floor is th e niaster suite with niezzanine study. 2 BR, 2 BA in main resi- dence, 2 IlR1.-. l ba in unit. Hurry. $149,500. ti08 MARGUt.RIT E OPEN DA ILY 1-5:30 ., 1"" HERITAGE . • REALTORS --Open Eves • PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES Linda Isle Waterfront Custom 4-bdrm., 4th bath home on lagoon. Full)'.' equipped island kitchen, waterfront family room, billiard room . . . . . . $245,000 For Complete Information On All Homes & Lots, PINH Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 B1ysldo Dr., Sulto 1, N.B. 675-6141 Generi1I Generi1I * BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * OCEANFRONT New deluxe triplex. 4 Car parking. Will trade for oceanfront home or - ? $225,000. 675-7060. HERE IT IS 3'h Lots in Newport Beach. plus 13 units, 1 blk. to beach. $1.I0,000. See them now !! 673-742.0. NEWPORT HEIGHTS Reduced! Spanish 3 BR., 2 ba. split·level. Extra lge. lot. Owner extremely anxious! Call & submit 642-7491. DPEN HOUSE Sat/Sun. 214 34th St., N. B. Furn. duplex, 'h blk. to beach. Lower unit has frplc. & bltns. $76,000, 556-8800 * BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * 4 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU Gener ii BIG HOME NEEDS FAMILY ASSUME., 7% LOAN General IORISI I: Ol~O\ l?CAlTOR) 2299 Harbor Blvd. You can fi t then In here. T\yo stones. Large lot on end IJ! cul-de-sac. Well kep( yard 11ii'd1 sprinldel'1'! front nnd rear. 4 big bcodrooms · including private master suite. En1.cr1:ainer's llv1ng room. Try to ma!ch tf\ia laf'g(' 2 story bcouty for $39,00>. CaJi 842-2535. RENLTORS SINCE 1944 673.4400 Huge 3 BR. 2 BA units. Best rental area. Walk to achoola, shops & chW'Che1. Llve 1n one almost rent free. H!Jtt)', wun't last $48,950! ! Submit on exchange, Call 64.>8400. Z CfflW $Et!W,G J'OOl OJ'0 ti. I l•V.[:~~) associated BROK [RS-RE AL TORS ?02) W Bolboo 67 l-J66J OWNER T·RANSFERI VERY ANXIOUS! Beautiful 5 BR, 4 BA pool homl'. Supremely con- 1tructed and decorated for ele&aZlt llvlng. C h o I c e Newport loca.tlon, Pr Ice l'ft\UCl'd to $135,0C(I. &U-72n, Eves. ~ 1733 WESTCUFF DR., N.B. WHAT IS? A Corona !lei. Mar dupl~x with 3 BR 2 BA owners unit and $Z5 renral \\•ith over an acre of. grass th1lt y1Ju never HARBOR have to n\ow? Give up'r It's HIGHLANDS across front a park llet 'cm V·aca.nt. Qxt\·entcntzy }oca.'led take care o1 th eir own lawn). to Mar ineni Parle, sdlOOl I. ONLY $89 SQQ library • e>coll""' hunlly ' netgbbomxxl. 4 Bo<!room• CALL 644-7211 8hurp 2 bdJ1n., 1\a baths I--------- borne in beaut. Irvuic. El~. ABANDONED ! ! ! hit-ins. wiU1 dirU'nvshr., l".A. NMvly decot.11.ted 3 BR 2 BA hear, carp., dryi~ J: ~ut-clPlii.=ht. Shng cpts,' wer· tl!rs. L~. existing V.f\ .. oo.n 51;1,NJ gar on large ITT.>e Jot. can [I{' assumed. Offcn><I for !!:."""Cl' ov.ilf"!" asking ~ 500. Ol'f:N TIL ~ • IT'S FUN 10 BE MCEI -----_ 5~~'1--1 1'' 500 ·~ . ,,,, MoRGAN REAL TY cau &i>s.aoo. 673-6642 675-6459 ~'!-""l..lU""'-:tJl.11.!ml.!!J...!,• 'Jl.1,1 :}~ No dO\\·n G.I., lov.· down all Jifulj ·~ othc-rs on this i1nn1acul~te Realtors Any day is the BEST DA YtO run an acl! Oon't delay. , <'all today 642-5678. V. E. Ho,..nl & Co. .... ._ ...... ~II I $26,5~ bdrms & Don JI· ~~~-~-~-~· ~--~·~-~-~1 3 lxlrm, lo1·cly garden·hke ;..;-· s<!Ulng. Co\oered pA.lio. Pic- Llke ro tnl.de'!' OU1 Trader'• lure v.·LruJov.·s. 540-17'l0 . Paradise column Is f1Jr )'OU! TARBELL, Rei1lto" Like to trade~ Our Trader's PRIME OCEAN VIEW General Pan.dlse column ls tor Your PROPERTIES General General 5 lines, 5 days for S b11ck1. FOR SALE General B'i SfATE OF CALIF. HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH C'lose to beach, 5br, fam Lofted living rm ceiling, rn1 formal dining area frplc, wet bar, pool ja-. thJ ' cuzzi tennis . 4br, 2th ba , 2'1 years old . AU s for NC\V Celery & white shag only ~39,500. I carpeting throughout. OCEAN VIEW WE'RE MOVING 1)ffice for lease. lmmedi· so rapidly. That we've ri le occupancy Still reduced beautiful up. il\'a1la blc. 360 sci ft, 500 l graded condo. $2000._ Our ~q fl & fiOO sq ft. f o s s Is your savmgs. $21 ,500. 1\lt squa red away ne\v \Vall to wall cn rpc:ting In living room, hull & master bedroom, 3br, 2ba . $28.500. Please call or stop by for coffee & con· versation about any Roal Estate prol>- len1 or question. 1714) -962-17-87 ., MACNAB IRVINE "HIGHLANDS"-473,950 lnlmaculate 4 BR -immediate occupan- cy! BeauWully landscaped w/partlal ocean view & private beach. Jack Cuater 642-8235. (Q39) FAMILY COMFORT Lovely 4 BR, 211 bath home w/nlce yard. Excellent Harbor View location. f74,995. Charles Arnold 642-8235. (Q27) LINDA ISLE Channel view. Lg. master suite w/fir~ place & dressing room. 2 family size BR's hobby room . Pier & slip. $255,000. OPEN TillS WEEKEND 1·5 p.m. '65 Linda Ille. (Q51) --..... [Irvine I .._..,._inw......,c1 0111 tQJ 00.r DrWt _.U•IJSI '"' MacArthur "4·· 1201 N1.,ort ._.. C..IHONlta I ll ' . Ask for ~1r. West 17131 62D-l7CXI Linda Isle By Owntr /Bulldtr $2$0,000 Eicrellent Terms l\Tay lease opllon 673-T182 • 6T3·778-I The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S lea djng Marketplace CLASSIPIEO HOURS Advertisen may vlaat their ads by telephone 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday ·thru. Friday 8 to noon saturday COSTA MESA. ·omCE 330 w. Bay 642-!16'18 NEWPORT BEACH 3333 Newport Blvd. 642-5678 HUNTINGTON BEACH 17875 Beach Blvd. 5'0-1220 LAGUNA BEACH 223 FOftlt Ave. •94-- SAN CLE~'!ENTE 305 N. El Camino Real 492-4420 NORTH COUNTY dial tree Mo.1220 CLASSIFIED -DEADLINES Deadline for copy A kill• is 5:30 p.m. the day be· fore pUbllcatlon. except for Sunday ' &: Monday EdlUons when deadline is Saturday, 12 noon. CLASSIFIED REGULATIONS ERRORS: Advertilen 1hould ch@Ck their ads dally & report erron immediately.. THE DAILY PILOT anwnes liability !of the Unt ln- cotttct lnierdon only. CANCEU..A"nONS: When Jd1llng an. ad be sure to make a NCOrd of tm-KD.L NUMBER &ivtn YoU by your ad taker u receipt of your cancell ation. This klll nwnber mU1t be ere- sented by the advertlla' In C•se of a dlapute. CANCELLA.'nON 0 R CORfUX:TION OP' NEW AD BEFORE RUNNING : Every ettort Js mad& to klll or correct a new ad that hu been ~ but we cannot JU&tl.h- tee to do so until the ad hu • ~peoared bl the pa.per, DIM&-A-UNE ADS: These ad• art atrtctly ca.<1h In advanoe by mall or at any one of out of· lice" NO phone ........ Dol\~llne : 3 p.m. Fridt.y, COllt& M'cu. office 12 noo'l -all brtfich Of• Uett. THE DAILY PILOT re. M!rwfi the r1abt to dal-!.lty, edit, ctntor or ,.. fur;c •n.v •dwrtitemenl, And to cbanp IU rat• l l"'CJU)t.tkw without prior notkt. CLASSIPllD MAILING "ADDRESS p, 0 . Bole 1560. Cost! Mesa 92626 ' f'1Jr ol '°" Rt surr ••• .. 1 •\l ' • Thl#'Sday, October 1:5, 1'973 I * TWO * Hunt11111ton Beach'• REDUCEDll NEWPORT oo. LAGUNA.~""""· RED CARPET ~ ,~ L_. ....,, Co...,,. .. 1 r• ·~ Colorful Cott-Moot Papular lloollc •""" • 11uo 3 BR., "'" c!Wm cot· ~ '""' ..-.,. ol ocean llde 2 Bdrm '°"""· 11> ,...,.. dett, 2 """"-w,,.. 11n.. DUP~X 7°/o tac•. 2 BR !rplc ,500. EXCWSIVES suo . $ll6 • iico Utll pd. LOVELY 2 BR nomo. fr1>k. of the hwy . ......,y of 2 -. Freody ._,_, whh )'mldl "°"" ., ...... ASSUU & •LE VA 496-l!IG6 m M• ~.-2 ~ I ba ........., """ "'°"' • elcc. oyo ,.._, ~ ".!' Coron• I •r HuntlnQton Bue Lagunm leeCYI '.::!:!:!::!:~:'"':::..--Sou L•pune ncome Property " um ""'" houaet on one Jot; live in tutieUly ~-.:i rotr. CreatJewty'U°d\\'hhsnall wuut Tustin ~":'iot.'~~~·rnco~ lu1lneu tw'n. • ly, no pin. Yea r ly one, have income trom the t'Ol'l'd ~ ~. phllb tbfl pxw:t. Mtly tnde. Now 8Ultd u ~ in "Btach" 13.m>. Yearly now &1'd relltl ~rtunl!l_ 200 P'.15 • Ltc l Br r*:dy turn, $2"15/mo. G4 odier. First time ottered, &t wa11pt.pered dlntlW area. onJy $63,500, piope:1t)i. Siiarkt1ne ownen AS$Ul!ABLE VA LOAN, need raialnt. Cttat• w 1 • ftplc, l&n.Ct', )'ard Ii: IJlltkl, Ave., Cd.At. 673-Glt..,... STt,500 shag c:arpetJ & CU&!om wiit pl.111 tt1U'p meat Min ~ North Tustin 'Br, nrst Ume Jnwstor starter W tla Water Rout• $Xi'.> • 3 br 2 ba. trplc, 2 BR. 1 B&. Flrepl.act, ;;;a CORBIN-MARTIN dr~. ~ PMtf:V nl'(l\ia.oe. New p&tnt. ~ formal Dtn nn., pool homl!'. unit•. Own your w'TI bor~ wi.te1' dbl pr, atrium. l.owf¥ • dnpu $275 ~r mo. -Cii Re altor s '41-7"2 area, neu ~ v.•alklng ina, '"'er ~. "300 IQ. Walld.na dLstance to J'oothlll 152.950. Beach Tr 1 p 1 ex . rwle, ~·lH l1'&ln if qualltled. ocieen Wow! 673-M ca-f13...6U1 -J dlft.uoctoHuntina:ton ft.ExorAtontftM.al.:hed'Ule-High. Prlnc. Onl.Y: call L.owest prlced triplex tn ~OranpCo,&l'ffavaJ1. NU·VIEW RENTALS Cotti Mele 11 ~ C0tt1 MMe OEner, SM1mrni~ pool and Call 546-23'.lS 1or dtet&U.. ~ Newport Beach on '' block Will adJu.Yt route 1\Y.e to tit 673-4(0) or ~ j ::"'Y -.~are~ ~ ""81,._t-eA.WJO •Nat Westminster to bee.ch. Great b-invest· :;:;r ~:...~~umoonlimlt~ OCEANrnoNT $SOO MO. ./ VACANT. blc. ~ ~ • CUSTOtit HOME MOVE-IN CONDITION $2.l,t ,.....,...., ~ -·-•• I ment, appttclatkln and . · .-..,.,_.,........ '""' PLACE REALTY BR, fa.Ill mi. J 1",., 2 fSikit. .. ~:cH Lovus ~ ltVljli "e~t.t~·% i!f.~!:'~~~0\'\:!' ~~~=·"· '*"~ _ ,,_:. =.-.iw,":ia. ... ~_H, $36,950-1 YR. OLD Leguna Hiiia --Sharp 3 bedmJnl mm. ln fourplexo1. 10% down. WW PRIDE OF = =~ 00 peta:. $170. I VANCANT .,.....RIO .: ~ ~ustM~lf= ~=:; U:!~ r.':i. 7°:; 1NoJV 1 0 u AL ROME, GRAND OPENING = ~bca~. ~ =~nnal. fl.~~~c'on ~.;o: OWNERSHIP Licl9 l•I• 4 BR, J!!:'· tpic:-,. ·2wlvr .-U·School. 4 Bedroome, 3 BR.s.lncl.abigmMttt~. Le~ World. New l BR, Newport lky Tower• f:el"e9t 1oan wi1h total Pl'Y· S600 pernionth. ~.re= · -=-·=·~~ = Baths. Den, Family Room. Glass glU"den kltchM w/ 2 bas, Central lo.IC, Kltchen l I: '2 m:DR.()()lt • menta ot ooly $183. JH!I' $59,850, Fourples. 2 brm. 1 De!lt k>cation in Stanton Te WINTER lease, bellut. So. dtnw 1ndd ~ ~M ,_,,' Bree.Ida.st Bar. continuom cl~1*1g oven, fully equip'd, ~. drpt, 2 CONOOMJNil)M HOMES mortl'h, Anxiotw owner haa ba. Back& on aott oourtt. rl!lc potential br cimeil hAyfront home; 4 Br. 5 &, I BIG t&bulous 3 BR, facn any uud trees. Ottered for ooklt'-tooed appl~. SteP car g_ar. $58,500. By owner, llayfrorlt Hom.ea bol.lgtrt anolher horM. Only 10% down. Will l!ll on con· manager Priced rl&tit at beaut. furn. Sandy beach. nn, 2 ha be&.tfd p;xJI f1tJk. $'58,700. cau COL.WELL dn. llv. ~ Jam. np. wtth 213-691~ Boat SUps $32,950. tract or convenUonal. $8').COO. AUlltin Smith Gor Pitr A: float. Sl,650 Month RIO oW W/D w/W ~ 641)..005:5, roertn; ftftplace. POol-siud Full Security Hlghrise ~ $63,000. Four 2 brm. 1 ba. m.i,, ft.e.attors 644-'TlrO. · Bill Grundy Rltr. 6l5--il6l mv.'. pat\O. poot 'tatte. 2 cm tot. N~ exec area. TERMS ~·a~ Nltu.I sPrit..iva&te"'"e·•crecom"ttconstructJon , houses on a lot big enou&:h *LIQUOR LICENSE~ RUSTIC CHAltMER, pr, tend )'d. $liO.. TO StnT1 Bkr. 962-!iill. ~~.,...,......,,. 1 '" .!or one more hou&e ot 2 ~-...... 2 IX' 2 bf. beam ,/ HUGE wcant t br, 2 ~ ~vin"" pct' VA loan. 2 garage spaces per unlt. -more unita. F..uUlde. WUI Orange ~nty o n -a a , e ci.~ n"u'& ..,., &: .-~. ,.,__ bi*, R 4 o, DW, w/w ~ Mo Ho Pacesetter home, 3 BR + Root top aund~ trade for 12 or more unit& 1enel"al. NOW PRICED • ..,.,,., 6'B-1Zll ~~-dcps 2 Car p.r f.cd )'Cd, DEL ME Fam rm. frptc, new decor Unusual Opportunity to Pur-or oonventional or contract. TO SEU.!" Save $$$. Mr. _.,.,, • · ~ind..~ Plll'k Place ln Huntington I· yd. $4.5,000 Owner, ch.ue Bayfront Property in 10% -15% down. Rents Whuton Coll~ ( 213) Newport ... ch J VACAt-.'1' H~. ·dean_ :\ Beach. Orey 2 left. All the 831-2148 Newport Beach. . are _low at $663. per month. 27Z-4249. br, tam im. 2 i.., haaf.ed extnts, beautifully land· Lido Isle 310 Fernando Rd., N.B. ..... ...._ $85,850. Meaa Verde Pride GOOD plum bills r ep a i r ~R Reon.ta!, Newport PJOl razve own d:iah~·ub· -~:;'.;:;:~;:;:~=;~-I scaped. 675-1551 · of Ownership 4;>lex-SOLD business in Newport Beach enin. ~ bUc from bay. er 'w!w ~ ~ I*kl I' ', A FAMILY HOME LA. RGEST -452,950 FOUZ1l'lexet:. Hundreds of good TI!lulai-2 BT, llv nn, Irg-kit, frplc, 2 ~ar pr meed yd. $X6. · HOLY SMOKE! Q£1!1illafilil1filll 4 BR., family nn., 3 ba. with !'or detailed lntonnation on customen. Te I e p h 0 n e nlc. patio t! ruest house No ·Adv .l"~ Sellers burned $MOO ott. -. ,62,447-1- 1 -·-,- 1 - 10 -Jge, natio, Via Lido Snud. BIWARD ROOM Moblle Homes these and other unit.a call number will be )"0111'1 to wl1bt. %. h /d. Se-rvtce rm ALAN R.t;.ALTI ~ iop in fantastic priee ~1 '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!"!!"!!!!!•;.,,.,..,J.I $122.000 For Sile Don Berman Broker .and take ow:r excel lent "' waa ry . (TI41 ' • dUotion on "''' neat Ea"· r• PIER & SLIP !WEST OF' l,S unlu '""'~' -~·· """0"""' ..,_.us, =. l2l3l 6'6-'963. m<J * Pt--Help! * '. 11lde home! Want a \.a-In? H ti ton H L-.. 4 BR 3· ba "'"0000 \Vil! MINNESOT'A Ree.ltors6f5.8(ll8 m E. 7th COLD STORAGE 4 fretll.Jli ext. 39f WE NEED This is a steal & ;;;-;~""'~ un ng •ruuur iease"wuh ~:,'.ptlon: M Mobile Home 1972 St., Cmt& Me&l. buslneu in ca Pi at r a no rREE Re-nt-1 Br to manage 2 BEDROOM HOUSE'' tire to move aome lucky _.. LIDOLOTS 8(j)~·pft Ot3~enJoy:Z 12x54 TR.a.EX FOR :e.i~-~iree"::i:J'!: ~':;:-~~~Bhou~ orlBRwtthprare . , ;11cUXl1'tfa.Z~vT.IME e '?;H*·' 57~1~;t=~;:,a~1~1. ~~~e -OOI;i:'.~. INHJGHLAND,CALIF. TRADE ofwarehcnme1t;,mce·1pW!, ~·~··F 41 !~·cF.M .. '%~~e~~~~· 646--• OR ... ~16 1 pa~ •1•.""· •• Ft. -,... in bay area ct Newport SAN BERNARDINO 2> · Sl0,500 Can &ll-OilO or acan • c ean. "6'· ee. tta.lned 4 obOOi ' "7-_...._ ,__,.., " F." ,.}J '"''"' Beadi Take the and CO TY ~-~~ ... \C>._to'*-~1!. wknd1·49:J...0015. 979--8.iJJ MA1'U"~"'RKJ·NenGt?J . ,l OCEAN .VIEW COJ'Tler {40 ft, buildable site) c··" .,M,1111 cue UN • LOVELY 10 .... ...., w~• .. --.....,...., 3 Br 2 Ba ~ Wv Lachenmyer -= 000 ~ -· x 20 COVERED PORCH TIU may be .......,, .. anr.w!r: ' ' n.:ar Newport OOUPLE ......... • OPENrJLll ·IT'S FUNTOBENICll Top ~-'&ta Mesa • Liquor Lie. m SeM Harbor Yacht Cub, Bay VERY RESPONSIBLE! ' m11• r11 11~$1ll1r1 ~~}~~~~~i~~~ a~~ i ~E5;Yr ~::,~i~~f~~1~~~~._ SUPER Sharp Hile ~re" HINTING100HARBCU1. * $ tl,500 * ~ '·-·-"'' MOBILE PARK ,,_, Cal <DLWD.L, HOLLAND BUSINESS ,.,.__or 137-<J1ll ............... '1881 =~~to~: ~ 4 BDRMS. ,Plus maid's. 4 Ba. VACANT ! ! ! · &ti«ro. ' &C>4170 SALm ~ Houle• Unfum. XS (Jl..90 max + depoait • Rcc11tot Hard 'to Jx>lleve but only S30.900 full price. Sit on your deck, watch the boats & en. joy the good life. ... ~--\!V -· 11214<ll -HWY ~~Ciill~! ~~. ·-;,~N·~.~ .5!16-Jl135 !!ft..!.em * COFF$1El.~HOP * ft---•• 1 ht and ..... ) rm, mlm>"" dining mt, . G --~--, _, ··~" •--~.,..·E-~PTl-...,--walk 1o schools &: ..Mly (714) 84&1384 & (213) 592.2845 ---EM H""'"'-·-.. _ n..-..... ..._ ..... ....,. ~ v _,. ..,., "'6""" ~a..,.-,. "-'"'""'"' lOX.43' flamingo. Q u a I i I Y Setts .... Ideal ...... Owner tr"an!lkne.d.. 6 mcd!W ~~ ~~~~~-;1rv;;;;1";;e;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;JRE1!tfur Ave.,~ $!{5oo.5~~. ofter. =· ~P:n~.~:=· ·~Vil~~fu~ r.:.~ ~nii".:.""" .. "',..,""~ By Owner, 1-fesa Del Afar, 3 T"'RTLE ROCK. MeN"Verde . rt $60., New awninp 1r; 149 ~Y. C.M. .11 .. 1.:;..roomw'ilfl..&.·-a...a.:.-,, becboorn,2bath,lli ....... '·With v ~--·"~lK-On1 OU~ ·-1001 ..... _E -· ~-_, 0 . .V.E.U-.~-&c. -···~·· Y~· -·, -~ .... .... .......... ,....,."""".I family room. fireplace, BR ADMOOR OUR FINEST • ... ._ ...... ....,,.~ · Amf'!r'tcan ~7-9390 ON~·-~--·• L 1qu 0 , 9el.t..cleani~ ovm. 1311'5 -.• covered Piii.do. Professionally Why :not live in lhe fMrte-st 912 ~ =-~· Jard9Caped yard $37 l MODEL ~. 2 BR. Llctnae. Transferrable, By mo. Of' malut otter. Owner ~ Call 549-1036. ' ·"'°· ~~'-... ..!!~:.-·...:: 5 BEDROOM 'BA,-t&n un, • ..........,,, 2 ON 1 Nov. 1, 1973. By o .... r. W.11 .. COfTAllllA """°"'A""""'' . ""I.JV~ r"'""LY Pre5tip Mi!9l\ veroe. '111.is BA YCREST • dishwasher, etc. Adu1t Park Ph. 968-5077. $139 • Nice 1 BR furn apt. l•rwln r••lty Inc. , ( 3 BR, 1% ba. Brick tpl., proxlmity to Fashion Island, homi I 3 baths Family in Laguna Hilla. Just redi» Two, 2 Bedr\Jo.tn hOmell RP' GARDDlING Route. l 4: U't1.I pd. C.M. Ml 4405 (24 hrs) I lg. !.R. J"5! paint... U.C.l, earn,..., Irvine I~ roorll ~ room, '"""' NEWPORT BEACH ""to Sl.\"10.......... ....... by • ~ pool. I Furn ~-· u-~ $27,00l cMtrial Oxnplex, Orange ~1 Newly_,..._. trm:le Great family home • <t bed. Mom Excel!ftf: ooncti'Cbl, East· cuatoml!l'I plus equipment 150 . Bachelor apt. ·1.,,.,~-!!--!!!·~-~·~°"""''1!!!!9' ...J Fortin Co, Rltn 642:-mXI County Atrport & a bonoa of _... .. .,... LE Home-Budser Ex· side c ~t Waik to~ $1.70. Costa "Mesa, ~ Util. l ha from beach.1= 2 BR T--~ .. -. ni,... ·--" rapkl --..... .... i.-. in .............. . $57,950, Call COL-mtm · 2% baths • very PMdo ln park nr beach. ...__:. ..._ oKtlo u.n ~·; eve. View al oceen. Newport GRE&NBROOK ""'"~• -· ,_ .. , -•:~-.. •••y WEIL-Jurictlom1 -• meny Newpt B<h. 6 46-27'8 , rocm~·-=-· -~ garage, pool, $23,500. ~ w; •.r have 2. award-winning , krVely featurte on quif!'t 642-31.!8. ~ lnVMIHMftt SI~'i.ri 2 BR apt. Unfum. 12::. Nr:i. ~eenbl:...::: ~ down, $250 mo. 557"'6.1&5 Pi.an-4'1 on the nwket Seti. = : ~.~ !_: NEW 2 BR, 1 BA living rm. FANTASTIC FUTURE ~nlty 220 ~ ct'PI&'. Yard. Olild Ok. 4 ml-. $3$ rier mo . ./oe:~ouSE 4, BR. By :Wedi~~~ ::b. n; ~. Call trfi.nn. ~~ i-1Ut.D wt = Three older units oo ~ x a * Sllv•r au1i1on * ~!:House 2 br untum. Gar. -l•rw5in r••lty Inc. aw.. I South rommerdal zoned lot near 999 + FINE BARS 835-m> Yard OTildren ._ _,. ok (24 hr1) r. yearnu,nr. errtertainotfers. Ol'fNTtlt •nAAroatMCEr NEW 2 BR, l BA living lfuntinatonSboppblrCenter. Mon L c,1 · • ,... ..... E.qualHOu.ing:Oppty, Coast Plaza. I: Sch. dbl gar, Call• for «implete detaE8 . II rm, ..Adult park w/ private Buy row and watch ttie •Y to Hft 240 rm. · H • B ..... _ N 4BR E U--" ;29,500, 557-83>7. <bl'.t make the-miltake ~ beach. -$16,500 54()..3672 value "°""' while the ten-G . ouse ., r "'"'""'"''" u xec. nvnt9 BY Owner Sharp 3 Br 2 w~ • delay com: ~ SAC. dbl wide $8500. Udo atlfB pay ott ho mo~. 1st TD Loans c ~· Yard. Kids & pm ok. Entertain ln 30' Fam rm l Ba. W/lrg yard, must aee lars. water front park. Pool. Owner will can;' ht. Tl'U&'t LANDLORDS PREE :;!ardeia:se· ~ctlrt!o I· o::.P:Oi~':'· 642-1291. "'issien Vl•l• .• WATERFRONT • c.ove~ ~~ooo . F ~~a:% down. Priced UP T o 90% WE NEED 5484isu. , l NR MARINA, 2 BR, frpl.c, t'· $33,500. EZ care 1:1¢ Rt11ltor, 4gg.;.Q] Fount•ln Ven 51f20/o LOAN SPANISH tllod polio to your 1.,45 ·~'" urn. ~ 8~% INTEREST 1 BEDROOM HOUS& FREE Re,. lor 1 B•" '" own pier ,\ slip, Spacious pool, clabhoute, adults, no 2 • TD l manaa:• unit& lddsi~ cA:, rAuNA VIEW 'BY.~ Ba....,,y ....... ,.., ..... l39(10. 646-11'0, N.e. n oans "'l llR --AJ .. ""'· ..:.. i120. ,, w/plush gold c r Pt' g INVUfMINI DMStON with huye tenced yard for 2 BR. btke to ~ $150. c-111111 I 11 lid. ---I :,,1111111' '.MESA VERDE, thnlout, Incl. Armltrong I Ii ...._,,.~ Low11t rate• Orange Co. =A-~ ::Jien~7)el.J Agt. }~ec. 97'9-8C30. "SINCE 1946" REDUCED $5 000 Spanish tile in kitchen. Liv "::...'-:-9 UNITS Sattler Mtf. Co. MATIIRE \roRKING 3 BR pl u • irz-Jam rm. ht w ... ..,, Bank Bldg. o nn hac gluo windows ll' 642-2171 545-Mll · <DUPLE cow -.,. --........ OUS Unl.wnlty Parle, Irvtne Specious 4 BR 2-«ory wi1h high &: beaut. noor to cell. COSTA MESA Servlna Harbor An!a 2'I yn, vmY RESPONSIBLE! ~ted lnaide -.:;;;, out, NJ L= D•Y• 5$2.7000 Nights ~~~ui::: ~. R-2 lot. $97,500. tp..=rrtycl•I 151 9unltcomplcx.Very •harp. MoneytoLNn 240 ~e~horne:rrpely good $265.~~Famlly,nopeij. GRACI CALIFORNIA .._ __ .... h .. __. 1 ta.st nook, tiu:ge family room, 675-2445 • -r-Sooth Costa Meaa. Nlc-e <Older home areat') v ~--2 ·~~ul~ GOLDEN GLORY f \built ln bar, wood burnine N. BLUFF BAY VIEW home detached from 8 unita. DON'T BORROW J>1eea eaU ' n'Y ... _,, BK. '2Z. FbCd ird:Jor.outdoor living. wfth a.~ of blue and a \ti:replace• fmnal dinln& Brand new 111-level condo. *SCARCE ITEMS* low vacancy factor, pride "TIL YOU CALL USI y,wlcenda ;-nmd YIU"d.~1Dci.Snib c*. SUpor ....,, 3 -tOY1o wet bar ln wtrob at .gmtua. ~ ·room, 3 full balhs, temlZo Prhne location. Huge To buy choice commercial or of cwmership, ooly '128,cm. Bonow on )'Olll' home equity ($'190 max +. deposit • =:,~,.~~I built in book ~ went 1ntD the l'T/lry foyer •. ~ 2 car master suite, 2 BR, den, ~~ properti~J(~ CaU now. b' any pod purpoee. Sov. __ _;lst~~and~l!"ut.~l ___ 1,;;;;~~=""==~~ wi1h extra:s bJ!' In fumd -· 1m'Com two beautiful ' Turlierock Ter· ~ ui:m~oco.~ 2~ ba. lA te&t kitchen, frple. Mm tr Su1if van , ·Brier, INVE~~MSJON ina" Loi Anples County tor -ALA RENTALS-LRG llv nn. frplc, dlh 90n.'ened • trl race home to make it en& d.. ...,..., wet bar, elec gar. Pool. 540-4429 "'-'""' fNl!r 21 yevw and NOW in cen bet U !Ind U..t "'" ' ~ Woodland l<:h1 acy w!J1 ~ the finest in the area. 4 545-ZD.3. Sale/Or Lease 0 pt Ion. ......, .. me. ~-~ County! P e. Ha:rtior Hi. sz 1"""' room, """""'· bl .. -extra:'J. Assume bdmu., ~ baths, 2 fire.. $74,500. Open Sun 1-4, 2951 NEWPORT BEACH fJllllil!f'lJll SIGNAL MORTGAGE 00. ~ ~c.~· New-1 ;".-:::;;:~·;-;;r..--;;;.,--:::~ i,00°tS35.~. ~:.C~.f=~~ks~~ ~~a&~1~.~bfui}~ 1~1 ~:~ JiLI@ . ~~~~~.N.n. 1~«>w~~idmn 3~~~- . a fOt'C'Vcr view. Truly a I ii'iitt:04~133iii;loiir.i640-0800iiiiiiiiii'iiiiii• I Bill Grundy, Rllr. 675--6161 ~~~;-~~-~-~· ~--~~-~'!;;Mo~rt::go~~·~e~ .. :;;:'=~~· Uttle yeHow hie $l'15 0.f pool. $ 3' 2 SI mo. completl! prlv n1any m~ this 7'k VA W Sale price $50, ~ borne of elegance, Sl00,500. I 1 Condominiums i Trust Deed• 260 nu ql(S, .t. drps. mn pet. J~"'""'~ijf10~· ;;;4ii.-;;;;;;;;;~ ~ CALL 552-7 500 ========-~~~~F:~~ for Hie 160 LIVE RENT FREE 2 lk ..... 114'1!55 ... 01BRAND now 4 er _..., VISION Nowaorl Beech Bd F II R Airer normal_, paymont, PUT YOUR MONEY ""'· ltV/,.... """'· ror. $200. Doubl• ..,..., " . -e FREE LIST Gov't I~ nne have pooll Md homes, ~:J .. ~me no """''""' obllptlon. <bwn pymt, v A pymt:s, No Equal Hooling: HERBERT OpportunititS HAWKINS REAL'I'ORS e 1139-1600 Huntington Beach ON l/4 ACRE TO CH CLOSE BEA Red -mo8t beautlM with Ute litnd.scaplng , new !hick Tbi3 won't in IO'.vn, 3 pattos ehq. 6hake roof. last • Only $37, "10. I' 111.121' R~. 11 fst~te HM471 (:;: )54W10J e red hill REALTY REALTORS Univ. Park c.enter;'Jrvine i;_. 3 rm, •m Y oom, NEWPOR! fttst co n do _you can live nmt ttte. De-3 St 2 Ba ~. SA .l CM Peta, ldcb. cau Da • 8~% IOln av•H-. ---30R.-7'.-> ba., Jilan . MW luxe OiVtilitOri ~ ,..SOR-Y.OUl -2.Ba.,-$Z15i~~~'-f;!ll~~~~~~;;,;.}----& vae. Te-nnls. J'!OQI, aauna, fourplex near GoldenwM E&m 10% or more on well-3 Bl' 2 bl fJ.Yj CM I: FV 4 BR. 2 BA, HU' po:>t. BROKER l3S-07IO acroA& atreet, xlnt fin. avail, Ch!lege, lfloppinc and frtt. secured 2nd Trult Deeds on 3 Br, IV'R,. ~OM. HB lot. J3Zi per mo. Avail MW otr. Owner. 6Th-8n6 ways. caH now. Onlna"e County real estate. 3 Br, 2 Ba $300 HB, NB JUDe 1Sdi.. REt> CARMEL MODEL N•~rt He1th!• ___ 1 Duplexei/Un1TI ~ SIGNAL MORTGAGE OJ. 4Bl',FIR,2 Ba.$325CM,FV RLTRS ~1351 JOLLY GIANT Hie 161 tnll !l06-0I06 3 Br FIR, $3411 . 350, -DIST!NCTlVE 4 Br 2 '500 Campus Df'., N.B. CAIL 9--6 &mi nxre. ho 81._ -1~ • ..-1 1 NEW LISTING now! me. ....., u..-.... A..,.a • WALNUT SQUARE CORBIN·MARTIN Large custom built home, DUPLEX -Sharp Santa Ana ~ S65,000 i.t TD on 1 ac ALA Rent•la Very clean. $ 3 2 s J mo, Xlnt buy m Harbor' View Homes · oonly $69,960; 3 BR., dinina'. le family roorrtS; load- ed w/extras. Actult occupied & ~ter than new! Call Alr cond. 2 bdrm. le den REALTORS 644-766'2 12 rooms; 4 BR. 2 ba, huge Heighta:. Pr!ncipal,I mnly. downtown San Juan e '42.a313 e 831-473 or 542-1218. end unit: lleautifuJ patio, I """"""""""""""""~ rec. & fam . rm.. utility Terma. $37.500. 642-3 ~ ~R~ a.A ~~~J Capiltrano. Due in 1 year, LANDLORDS! $ZiO . 3 Br 1 Ba, yard, pool &: park grounds. Of· H•rbor View Homes & llldun~ .. rm1.,, •, oUice Income. Pro1'9rty 16' 10% inter, di• count drps, children ok. lert"<t on! $33 500 or en. -.e. v ng rm, BA. Name your terms -714--831-U!O We Spec1allze in Newport Monrovia. 64&-1145, CORatBINy-MA,RT.IN IC.d.~f.J Palermo $73,roC!. kitchen w/all blt·tns. Many, TWO TRIPLEXES Will carry pape.r -No polnt11 "'"',000 ·-TD o" 11 u-•1 Beach • Corona de! Mar • 2 BR To·-~·,., .,·---~ By Owner . Fee Lot • 4 BR wlchannlng .frplc. Lge, or ex~slve Interest. etc . .,.,.. ia• •u A 1 --·-· Our Ren ..,.,..,..,..., ..... T ... " Re•ltor1 644-7662 Nexl to pool 1c green belt, 2 maJ1¥ extraa. A&klng S68.~ WALK TO BEACH Submit trade for down. motel w/fwy exposure nr vi .._ ... -. tlll Ser-1ar., pool, child welco(M. frplc'&, c~, family rm, bar, or wlll le~ptlon. Only 1% yr. okt Bl& JiuSi $275,COO. Art/OM\. GU-2221 \\''es~ ~te Hou.e. $650: N~v::W~ tD You! Tty $235. M7-s385 tevn.) tJ~· P~833n:a.rn~OOJ: ~~ •. 675-1473 CAL£$~ ,4,.1,.14 :.1'.~~~ ~ ~m:,:-,-o!...rt ~. ~~i:· All due NU-Vli!W RENTALS 3~t~~la:bl!;t.f~hl .~""""'~~-':'"'-·"i'--='-·--1 * BAYCREST*, ~ -· Rllt>ti 174 WILLBuyhtand2"dTD"m..... "' '"'""' <d.$285.6<>-'356. L_o_,p,_uno---'-lle-"-och'-'-----15 BR .. 31Ai battia. Fenced N -.-!ALTY 0 SCOJ!_. ~~L TY l ·N-E-AR--M------.-~----1-2-')> •'° PM$100,~. c.IT ·'· betwn9 ·~~ ~ Jl~~-~n Tu"'w•tln3ABv,Ril •• ~F~o=un~to~I~n;;V;•;l;;;;:;;:;;j MAGNIFICENT VIEW poql. ....._, ....i...., ·-""'. Many ••I' ••lll'p•rt Pett ffltl ...,......,.....,. ....-wa . .._,llLlll• ng ar: v• ..,. ....... ·~ ~ ~ i'"V ~-.. BR hou8e. E-Z m&lnl. 644-COll NfN. 111. Gardener lncl. No Beautifully detailed 3 bdrm amenities. Newport Shor• 11 Unit., room foir 3 more. Fenced yd. Frplc. Cpl, Aak· ..... '\', ~--.. -•J.~--' •-· pets. 544-flOU I HUGE, vac:ari.. dean wlth magnificent Or11y ,fll7,500 ~t · 1 &: l BR.,Gl'OU $187"'.J/mo. ""' uoao.; ... .,.. _.,,;u•~...,,. BR I '~ ~· •~1063 ~-c only. •-· 181 E. ~-1 Ing $33,500. G. A. l\iev.it, $63.677 bal,· .......... ,.,,,..,. m~ A'ITRACTIVE-Clean 2 Br ow' am/ nn, rarwe, (Wf!l"I unobattuct ed view! ,......,,.,.., .....,... BLOCK TO OCEAN ,-... , _..,. 6.L8 Rltr 49&-5112 ..-..... ...,.., w w cptg drpe 2 F t f ! I y rm BA YCREST b 2800 st, E/lilde C.M., or call · · incl 10%; all due 1978; Bx home. $150/~fO. Pref('I' tar' ~ ya.nl • ~ • ea ures am • • Y ov.'11t'r, 2-Sty. A·Frame. 3 BR .. 2 ba. OWner, 642-1960 2Bft..2BA home, Lot 120 x 3, Apple Valley, n.J-242-3144 ref's. CAU. 549-26-U, ' N .~. >' fireplace. Dining rm, chef's Mt· tt. 4 BR. fa.nl rm, Newly decOI'. in 4 out, Incl. 1~ •ftlli doll VI 0 '"-"'· eie. kitchen. Pool-sized yard. form din rm. 2 trplc11, 2 n~ carpeta & drapes. TAX Shelter - 5 X Gros• c~~ f~ s~lng. 'ireautifui S51~ 2nd1 1TD 3tar Mle $4d160, B•lboa Penlnsul• ALA.'l flBALTY, 6J6.9EM Seti to ~Bevel $59,500. ha. lrg slate toyer, kitchm ••n 500 34 Unit• -$005,cn>. L.A. 1 11 Own u-,o n .. yrs ue. 4.~3. \v/blUns. dlb oven. $79,500. c"::vw· OOD RE'LTY area, Will trade for Orange area 0 re re . er S3:"'1'·1129: 546-97":>1 ev~. BAY View from 3 •t;y new 3 BR,'2 BA, frplc., bifnl, 2 ca~ !"""""'""'"'! TARBELL, Re•ltor• CBIJ lor appt, 548-6125, open ""'* ,_1_ ~* County. Agent. 366-22.01 or 365--23$9 3 br 3' bft huge •undeck, gar, patio, Jddt OK. $ ~:-· :: 1920 s. Coast !twy., L.B. ~ Sat/SUn 1-5. _. .&YY 67a.-4630 IJ40..011i6. Sell idle ltema •..•.. MH;678 lntel"C'Om. wetbe..r, bltns, dbl mo. No fee, qmt 342-tai ~: ~Y PRJCED RIGHT NEWPORT HEIGHTS -I -11 ..... 1 ~=.;.n~>.=-27lll. Huntl on hech LUXURY 4 BR, ~· d~lllJ! • II CAI' heated g Meadowlark 2 l>edroom "own your own 4 Br, 21/2 b•, close Cltr.Ji"'O B\"1t.. ( _ f)"C ~.Q.. e . . 1 "OLD CORONA" harm Al..\IQSr nu 3 Br 2 U.~ 500. Oxner t1p! .. " cl~ to~ llhop-to •II schools. $60,950 ~~ J.'-Qtl ~~ ~ P(/~ p ••••••••• · c Ir Fiun RM , lhort wa1 t 16501 Los ping "' beact'I. m.:iw. p I c ••2 -11 Th-' I f • • w J G plore! Step• to beach 3 I() bch & kit. lor into c c'lrpd, papered, titlras. Near Goll Club, $56, 846-4621 BY • • • --ur n r1gu1ng ora am• with a Chuckle Hou••• Furnished 300 bedroom11, 3 b&thll. $400. ruch 842-9371 Real Eata.t · ~/IZJll, PIER & SLIPS ....,.~C14Tl.POUAN------Gener•I 22G::;.~l~~t~t ~llify;;•.,1::.cV;:•::y:C.-;:::-.-;::--:JI 5tWll \V. Htll a Verdes Ln. OWNER. REPOSSE SSIONS l'"or lnformeUon and location v~ homes. o! these nJA A contact· KASAB IAN tf2""44 ART R••I Ett•t• HEADST S\lrf Sltle condo W/1\11 pp. e 3 Br. 1~~ r. \Vall( to nir. $27 ,500. ~l&ncesr Dt!lux , Ntw 11e(.'O btach & 800ppl cau De11lson Assoc . REAL ESTA':TE 00' Bayfront with 3 bt', l Q l:IOtl'Cl'lge a.n.. oA th. ,,.-";~:;:;;:-.._.,,........, ;::.;::.;,:;.:.: ______ -close to school. ssso. FREE rent for 1 br If"' ha .+ gueitt apt. Consider four Kto...bled WOf'di b.-( $LANDLORDS$ 3. Uke new -bayiront • mAnage unit& H. 1190 GI St $1~,())(l. Call o en 11 on 5ow to'°""' four lllmple W<lf.. I.II us rent UR --'e11-. private slip • 3 bedrooma. K\da/peta. Alao 2 Br. enncyre • . Al~. G73-731l. W• lll'T'Vice all t~~~ Newport Bddreu. $495. RU. ~nglea, k1d11, pets okl 494-9473 549-0016 -I I ..l""" & ~-~ 0--Co. BKR. 67>72Zi Fee. 979--8430 j ' EM ERALD BAY N PORT CREST CONDO B A Y G I M ... u ·~~ ·-·· l --lo 1 Iv ~;hWe $10,000 under JI 1• I I I IT.E F'R.EE. $8.\-e Time A$$ ROOMY one bedroom duJMex BR. 2. BA, newty dee ln , I '"" hotm": r t ll' act e t price. 4 Br. ftan\ $ ALA RENTALS $ ttnll acroM from park and out. Nr. beach. &tC1i · family. 4 Bdrm• .. h~e din· 3 Ba 1 1 . &42-11."\83 tennis • comer 9ep&J'tlte en-welcome. lAe $270. t83-CJ..5t. I Ing rm. w/l_rplc. gnrden ....,,,:,C!I' &42-Tras~ • tenn 11' Nev.-& Ba)·. o..r frtlnCt' • KUB~ J:m/mo.• ;;;!162-4<~;;;.n:;,·~~~~--1 roon1 w/h'plc. O<lcan view. C"~-·"'-':::.::="----~-,:-'n--_,:...;,~1 lf 644-ntl A.gt 1(1. Walking dlat. to 1:111 thl' BL{fFFS x Ph1n, $60,(KM), 3 c 0 T I s . Ba lbo• Penln1ul• . F:AN 3 an. l w..I Crptii;" \ recreaOonal f a c 11 , or Bit 2~ Ba, 1 yr old. 301 I J' I T f ;:;:.::c:.:.-'-';:;;:.:::;::;:. __ I NEAR Beach. Vl""1 3 BR. drp•. bl tin atove It. CM\'nr Emerald Bay. Sll:i0.000. 1 , a Tntchtl. Owne r I · CLEAN: ~mall I Br. re.r 21\i bA., a....'flr'• unl1, c:t111t dt1h/wi1h, Pfttio, $285~ TURNER ASSOC. ~iil090~.ifl'"=-(;;;:;;(TS,:: · · · · -house . Nr sl'JOP'I A. bay. duplex. beam cina-, pa11ott, 96J....3395 I 1105 N. C>ut 11·!1'., t.:a&una \1 ~ (;real 3 Br., i-rT-'lr-_!-i~-'~MI I• 41628 1 1 E.121n3•)y6.,,., A~I Sun tpk-, ra-1100pli, $315,. 67~, ~ BR. 3 b«, frJ:Kc, 3 ~ I Have lo 494-1177 fat1:UJy home. Cose 1Q • • 10/ or •-.:JV"" IRVINE Terr. vie.. 141?. lat, no lellMI rtqUlred. S400i. ,_. ly 5 BR ---------0op1/•chool1. Pool. I I I 14 Ovttheordi ...... , wry BAYl"RON'r ~ Bdm1•. 4 3 BR., 3 ba. Avail. Nov. mo. 960-1248 Owner/broker;., 673-7311. TR.ANSF&RREO. burbla Park. OCD~APNLl!VXll!llWS !!JrSOO. 64&-1676~. ~=~~:;;:~~:;;:'......, aupentltious, In o fight, he lil\thS, pier, fl-Oat. Winter or 1. Uase Ol' mo. ~. NE\\' 2 Bedroom adult ' , nr. belleh. u · TtUDE Nf!W'l)Ol't Bell c h a lways pull a hor ... hoe _ yrly. 61J.-'.m9 &31-27311 condo. Pools, tennlt, f!tc. hools, te1n'1l11, Extensive use of wood & tile; ~· for Out-Of.JI'l;)wn I I hr.--.• 1~ ·I BR, 2 BA. beach!ronl .. JSt:! OlARltlNG Cd~t home>: 2 $275 Agent !;48... AaWrne 69'tt VA 2 BR. eftch unit. First t1ICt' Prop. Birr, 714/673-:n:;8 L E V T E V \\',Oceanfront. $.100 per rTl(l bdnn11., 2 bathll. Ocean 3' BR, 2 BA near beic-I 000. 962-<n86 ~lailO'I'\ avaY. LUXURY 4 br, 2'-' bn, 1, I J I' I J' I 0 c..pi..,. tt.. thudJe quot.d tll June 1Slh. t-775-tTa.'i. cme. l3Z> Mo./yeulv & achoo\1 ~. ~lo. After F 5 BR CORBIN.MARTIN faO\ rm, huge. ma11ter suite. • . • . . . by f\111119 In tM ~ """"" Cotta M... BOYD Rf'allon e'is-:>930 6 pen, 538-71!9 ~ pgradetl erpt.s, REALTORS 644-7662 Aeerrt/l'tw'T'll'r, 64()..()J66 VOll ~ frM np Ne». f bi.low. 3 BR. 2 BA, patio, garage, 3 BR. Condo. Frplc, 11~ e.,_ rm & unfln DOPT EX $6J 500 2 BR. Mobile Hom<". $125. All rlcl\n A 1pacloo11. $42j/n'IO. KKl.1J &. pet,_ ok. S23Nm<t' own c r . * OCEAN VIEW * ~tiles i.:.~:i:a11oi-util r-1. Si~ ok. Ytarty lea1t . 6"1·1-.o0611 ~Ca'="ll,.::<ll>o;:::o"""""---~~-au1LT ON 2 LOTS fiT.J-856.'\ ~Hf'~ l~•"'J'f Rent11.l Air~' llAR.non ViC'I\\' 1-fomeA-3 br, 3 nn .. f11r1\ly roo1n 1%. ~ Ur, 2 &. 2 BR., li,J ~lh11. fr'rplc. Homeflnd•rs SC7·f'41 b1m nn. Pool, tennis prh'. ept~ ,(, drpt, bltnJ.' ~dft:~ n t ... B. trr Prtt.'f'tl Ill $42.000 "Weed U A IWp" \ ~·at r>ronrli attJi'l:>d when --14~/tno. MFtn!I.--!t~OK. S29e:-S3&- xlras: Mus1 Buyer aaumes Dood11: From lr'('t1ure1 to tn1h )'1'.111 lit'll thmut::h n11utt41fet· LUSK 3 br, 2 M. ram ·nn. VIE\V tJJ'(lperty 3 BR. A. k. a MISSION REAt.TY -Turn !Item mlo cuh SCRAM-~ ANSWERS IN CLASSIAC &'910N 700 tlpg Dally Plloi a ... ",.. A, .. 11 . Nov '" ""' ""' ""' '°'' l'rllnkJort. 'im mo. c. _ _.;_ ______ 1 __ .::C::ALL~_:D::'f;f!...'.Pl_,,lot,,,__ . ______ :=;;?l_....;,._ ___________ -<:.C>--"..:'..:..:.".:_::.:._:.:._:..:._ Ad~. ~ Is~. GLU'd Incl. &44-1$1l 11fter 3, 536aT63i , .. n our love t:rl-lewl In Su Great nelghOONI &hopping, .. ~ tratl. lOAn, only s:'i6, SEA CLIF Poot jacurtl, u wnn paper, f11m bonuL' nn. Oy "16-2002. BY Ownf!r -3 Drtarn home I p11tlo A n1a~ e M!ll•U:\'~ c-al S.13,(0), 892-4801, OAJlY PJlOT Thursd111 Oc-lobtt 25. 1,73 oUMt Unfum. 30 Mo-U:M:S Un urn. 305 :H::ou:::,::••~•2.Q~E~~;:__:_:_J~sfji~~·:iee};i~ ... ~:!!::•~~il~~ur~n~.:_:_}:!!-~~~~u§r~n~. ===~~~t~.ju~n~tu§r•~·==:J365~ I Apt. UnfVm. 365 Apt. Unlum. 3'5Apta., Fu rn. or Unfum. 370 U;,tt1ngton hach Cigun• Beach Newport Beac:h HunthtpHt leech Dana Point Cost• Mua Huntington hKh VACANT, bi&: IUl)('T l.'lcan 2 BR.. 2 tm. We:tlOOttd ,I VACANT IU()tt lbarp 2 Neat 1 BR. $125. Cl~ to BR, 2 BA, rt1b, OW, ''"Iv.• ~lni,:I~·. Ufxitltl-d, Jlcar k bdrn1. & Mn, R.&0, Cpla. l'Vt"cyU\lng. Kids/peu Ck, ~. dtVfl. patio, 2 rar JlU'.. 111.'C the 11w-L Htl1unJ1, pantl· & dri>S, 2 cur Ktar. fe.nl'Cld Clllir1 ~ RentaJ A,gcy 6lttd ylU'd. $2M. tnii. !rplc, br1t.ke•I pulioll, ynrfl. Pool & 1en nI11 Homeflnders 5'7-9641 • 8IC •-,• 4 m• 2 llA ,,_, Jrlvacy. Pt-1~/chllcl lac:ilitif'll.. 2 blk.11. to beach ·~· · ~ " \, · ' Newport 8.Mch }'(), \VW t-n!ti d rpic, 2 tlir 0.K. S Mu. R!lr ~9-rTs::il $3-0 ..... o ndv. tee. Al.AN ·~;,;;.:;;;;.;....:;;;;o,;:;;_ __ _ .,. flE.1\LTY, 6JG.005Q. • .ltit. fni:d yitrt. $215. CllARA·llNG 'l Hr. pa11 lun1.1 '!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!""!!"'"' NEAR new 3 BR. 2 BA. clos-~VACANT. l>W. d fWI 3 Ult, frpl<:. garagt". Jllt Ii hillt, ed a-ura.iie. YtW'Jy, 6U-3188 rm. l BA. JVQ, WW .,;!295:::0··~·~1'~1-~·~·~IL,_ ____ PRESTIGE community 2 br, or 642-1914. tila:. ctrps, '2 car ,.:u-. tN.'d L Hill 2 ba, Ii;. fam rm, nil elect t -~=~~----- ant sm. ~·;g~u~n;•;;;;;;;;;;'~;;;;:=:;~~ [Jk~'~'·~·~· i~d~, ~";n~v~. ~oc~·hi. ~!<='='~'"=.· Duplexes, ~IG, tabulou. 4 BR, lam • 524-3413 or 548-55!1 Fum. or Unfum. 25J , 2 be., J't/O, I)\\'. V.'/v.• ./ BIG, vacant, elean 3 BH, Newport Shor•• 1----------t,Jit1,1:, ctrpg, Pff.t\O, 2 tar j,,'\lr, 2 liA, tilJij,;t>, oven, DW, \\W I C~~;.;..;...;.....;..,.. ___ Laguna Beach h'ic'd y&rd, $300. Cptll1 tll'Jlfi, i car jpU'., frk.'ll ./ BTC, benul 3 Bil, 2 1111, faro $:.!75. n.10. WW cpCg, ~. 2 c.iu· No Adv. Fe<>. J{&r., tl'1C'd yru'tl. $279. AL.'u'J nt::ALTY. 636-5650 ' J llUCE, clt"t1n, 4 BR, fnm I !!-..,~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!• nn, 2 BA, RIO , v.•11' 1:1-itv. Laauna Niguel " 2 car gar, me~ yard :1: ' I I I · 11 :111' .. 11i1. t · ---··1 L·ullo r "SINCE 1946" ht \Vestcrn 81\1\k Bldg. Universi!y Park, Irvin~ D•ys 552-7000 Nights I' Bedroo1na, Nl--...' •••••• S3l5 2iBR.., 2 OOth.s ..•..••••. S.'fZI I 2 •BR .. 1 ba1 h .......... $315 I j BR, 2 ba, d~1,_ ale .• sm 1 BR .. ?1v 00 ..... $3851·100 : UR., 2 balh.'> .......... $AOO I . BK. bonu ... l'OOll\ ••.• $450 ~R., 3 halhs ., ........ $425 ' ' - 1 5 BR. 3 ha, N'pt Bch ... $575 ;: CALL 552·7500 VISION _, THE SHORES *Brookwood Menor* Secludtd, 2 BR. apt. ln 1*riC like •tmosJlbere, l\l1ll!Y 4 l'pttt..ioul, $160 ID $180 De· lli;ned for family Uvin&. En· cio.ed ~nd, a chikt's dmun.. trki. Wa. I.ow cost pa utU's. Bi.tna, crpt1, drpl. No pel&. Nmr Beach Blvd. 4 Warner Ave. -· VI~ YQ"'A I n4jaa.t622 t, 2 I ~ Bc1•Urub S1%J, Sl+I, $164 a ¥,0. stoVe, l'e!rl&, ul} Incl. t.lodeiite Income . j\pplit,;&titw Wei· t..vnie. ' . --~------'-$75 OU lat Mo's Rent Brand new d()luxe l lc. 2 Br garden apts. Frplc's, d.shwhr 's, etc. Walk to OOachcs & shop'g. Adulta only, oo pet1. $115 & Up, SJ6.~7. 536-0036. 8282 Atlanta Ave. New 2 br, 2ba. view upts. trplc, gar, $325. Call 830-9001 2 BR, 1 bath, ocean view, Blk to beach. ~· 494-3.183 or 494-2339' Ntwport BNch RESORT LIVING FROM $155 C..I•- * CASA VtCTORIA * I, 2 .l 3 BR . Furn & Unf. Carpclll, drapes. D/\V, "f'I/ ant. Pool, etc. 525 Victoria St. At ltarbor, CM. 64W9'10lal Ask aboUt oor apec Great Recrcatkm: Swtmmin,g. Mov.-Jn Allow!inct. salllW'UI, 2 health clubs, sanct,,H~un::•:.:l•::V~;•::•::•c.;::e:.-:;;.;h;__ volleyball, tennis, tennis pro1 · & pro shop & tree Jes90ns, DELUXE adult po o 11 kl e billiards, lndoor golf driving garden bunp!OW, nr ocean, range, color TV theatre, ele-ttpl, lrg patio, 6 pools, pnt party room. sauna. tennis. 846-{l'l59. FUn Activitieti: full-time acti. Alsc 1 Br. Fl'l)m 1135' vity dlrei.10r, oompl.imentfl.I')' Leguna Beach SWlda,y b".'lnch· Weekend New l BR $300 & 2 BR, BBQ. Pulles. Trips. Lee· •A= ~1• · n~ach. Spec-Ull'eli "'a mo. "run ..,.., , · tacular viev.· . .$4-0066. Beautitul Apartmenta: Sin· San Clement• gle11, l & 2 be<lroon111 fur· I:;::;...:,:::;:;::::;;:....;. ___ I nlsbed & unfurnished. kents 2 Bit, nr bch &: Del Mar. from $155. Sorr)o, no pets or enclOfled gar, lndly rm. 1 l.iilldren. MOdela open daily child OK, No p e t s . 10 to T. $1TO • ..J18). mo. 49l-161D. OAKWOOD GARDEN APARTMENTS Rooms 400 ROOMS ;ro wk up w/klt $30 wk up aptJ. Clilldren &: pet seeHon. 237G Newport Newport Beach North Blvd., CM. St8~9 7 55 , lrvlne & 16th 1""""'5-396.=c.7-,..-,.-== BR to rent In Freedom 64S-05SO Home. Working lady, shlll'e Newport Beach South Ba & kit privileges 548-4603 16th al Irvine ROOM, kit privl. Pool, ten-642-8170 11ls young person prefd. 963-5878. $25 wk. F.qual Houslllg Opportunity FURN. Room, pvt bath, $35 per mo. Euclid at La Palma, Anahein1 675-3613. PARK NEWPORT NEWPORT Bch room In pvt APARTMENTS home, lovely area. $100 mo. Bachelor 1 or :.! Bedroon1s 1,;Ca:::::ll~G<.l-o.::_;'502=----= I and Townhouses Guo1t Homo 415 Fr. S-194.50 Open 9-6 Oaily.t.=.=:.;.;==---..;.;.; I Spa Pools Termis LARG~ Private room Across from 1''ashion Wand w/nurslng care. good food at J amboree on San Joaqwn & laundry. 6>12-9278. Hills Road. Rent1l1 fO Shar• 430 ZIJJ..444.llGO-·I·' =="""--""""-'---" PRESTIGE OFFICES Fountain Valley, Beautl· tul new building, gTOU11d Door, 3,000 square feet. will divide into amaller offices. 50c per IQ\1Aft' toot, includes carpet.I, drapes, all utilltiea, jani-tor aerv:lce. Call Marll)>n Stovall (714} &U-SHO. 3600 "' Wh• >11- 1300 W/ doo CM ove ':t1 * ' 2 -' -,4-wi m ""' v Will "' •W 'I Jn ' Bel pm WO In ''" Spi pm 312 Cle oa hn PR II pre tio Fo FO ON 1o m YO R a m. FN Sh • Rd YO '"" Hu YO Ila G FN Ao FN VJ FN Sh LA .. .. , FN '" • .. --· -- . - ==-----ne1p "•ntld, '"A F "Ot11lp w•nted, M & F 1 10 "e'° Wanted1 '" at" 110 Help "entM, M & ~ 1 1Y1ne1p ntn•-, m & P" 11~1 ntlp "' •• OFFICE ~ nr Orlna:e Jo1iD: B1k 1. trhlte tnU doc OlUVEWAYS r• rn o v e d , Co. Airport w/vleW~ -Bllndinl•~.Vlt.Outp. tldp&oader "radf:n¥, l.rff• Ca.rpellD.(, d1'lpcl, air, 460 n~an btwn Gilbert 1. ,._ttimmed, hauilng, mlac. Sq. Ft. al 41c per Sq, Ft. ~I.a in ~ Gr\llV'r, 9T9-883T 55&-fOlO or~ ~· LOCAL-~;,;~mov-,-l .. --,•"'1hl"""uU"".,.--,--by Delivery-Sunday Only ELECTRONIC TECH JMP.tEDIATE OPENlNCS Test, Align t'XJI. :Z..30 t1-ncz New,~~ Teller * * * Mk..........,""Ml~MgrEl"""""'" . Comn\~lliOns equip, 2n<1 Pease ...... tact ... ., Clht phone pn1. A5lt for Ke)'itone Sa\'\np &: Loan Hob Steele, P1J Electronks, 4.301 MacArthur 'Blvd., NB EIKtrOnic Con\ponmta ,, l\KIMU 1tllftia• 445 FOUND ama.U female Irish .student. i..rre trudr. ReaL Sena-on 1.Af:tJtaa Cartyoo Barry. 5.1+1846 or 613--0647. Rorut, Lqi.iria B f!a ch , SKJPLOADER 1.. dumP: tru'°IJ. OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRlERS. R~ QU IRES THE USE OF A LARGE STATION WAGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR. HARRY SEELEY, 3:JO WEST BAY STREET, COSTA MESA. TELEPHONE 642432l FOR AP- W~m=~~ Blvd.,liiiiiiii..0833-030'1iiiiiiiioiiiiii..,I MACHINISTS :@!~.nt=f!-n FOR ta..ie all or part ol 28(1) Sq. f't. dlvld<d ll!to lrg """"'· ........ tor ~hearial .• pace .mt141c or , art '"Work shop acrou the st. fl'Oin Newport Center 523-30>I POINTMENT. 4~ ~tit. Concrete, uphilt, Lost 555 aawlna, breaking. 8f6..TI10 HoUMCtHrtlnt EXCEU..ENT INSPECTION .Ex~s;:; to OPPORTUNITY INSPECTOR & G61 Friday Lariie curp. haa outatandlng Tax Seeretary oalort<d ""'" """""'' '" A'°"""/1lllllna LOS't: one Iona bair·Stamese a Ml.lea trainee. lndivklual Gt>neraJ Office Oranae neutered male. One w/n1anagerlA.I ubUity, am-l.A'pl ~tary to fem.; ooe IJ(!n1i-lona: hair J ntWit be local resident Detail MACHINE R~~llt FOR leaae Taco Tio tr.rid. liLrge ~ Abort hatr An Equa l Oppor tunity Employer biUon & R I! dlclpllne. Cirt Fr1 , Buena Pk to w!.11 remodel to 1ulte fo.r ne-utered male. Mt I' In a: li u •In e Is 0 r g a I es Machine Parts Ct1ll Jeannie Slsoo • , t~t food service. Bwi:y lrocn '146 Summit Dr, Oct. f0J1 background helpful. Please OPERATORS •NSE;oWHoP~Tan ', comer. 597 W. 19th st. Dayt ~th. Reward. 494-41986 Help Want.cl, Ma F 710 Help W•nt.d, M & F 710 call 6·10-))()23 bet~'~n 9 111n1 ....... • 6"6-0033, eve. 646-0681. 1,c=~""'~'-'"'-~'--~ & noon for 11. confldenH&.I ·-SQ LNt black & white lg. cock. • " _.. " _.. _ _,...._ BUSBOYS intl'rvlew. A..J< for 1'.tr. 3rd Shift, 11pm-7am P1.-.onnel A8MtcY \ '°""' ·ft. lndustrial &hop, a-poo-Jamie I black bee.e:le • • • • ' --..•-~-•-·•-G lit 1 t Shift 7 3•30pm • ll3 Dover Dr~. N.11 \, J?251mo. Aleo 300 ~ft. or-' dobennan mix-Fred, Vic. • Dining room cxper. Apply I ~"'"'"''"'w"'.==~~-' , •m· . Experienced ..,-3110' . · .. . flCl!J S95 CM. ·646-21 • ' ot' Ml.u.ion Viejo. 83().3593 HOUSE of CLEAN ~=1R E Tros to 12K Hungry Tigft', 353 E. Coo.st EXECUTIVES lns1iec111 manifoldjr. pl9(Qflg, '7HE Factory" ku a 11'11: Reward. • Olli 'Ma· ~~-m' P Hwy., N.B. $1$,000 to $75,000 sl('('\•es. crank5 & machine ~ •'! 1•-1 t ~=---~----Prof. care (or home 01· ore. ce n...,. ... ., Se·" -~ I ·1 ••iuP av.., . ......, mo. n LOST, nlAle B I u e p 0 in t Budgels &: inventory CONSTRUCTION Supctin· 111.1 reswne or caU TODAY parls 0( mnnum t'OfllP CX1 Y ca,,,,.NB ,!1 ~q-e 425 64 ,. ~ St.L Siamese. Owne.r in boipltaJ, Carpeu, uphaliilery le (lool'I. Ex('(:. Sec'y/Financial $800 tl•ndent req'd lmmed. Jor 1 !or conlldential NO COST 10 blueprints. finaJ inS"p('('· · •.:r-..v ot .......uu. pleue return to 33752 546-5745. Aecounllng ~rk to S750 4.~ unit condo proJet.1 in execullve interview. tion reports &: vt>rbal in- lndu1trlal ftentll •SO ' Granada, Apt 2, Dana l•ndtctplf?I Ex. Sec'y Lega.1, R.E. $750 Rivel'!'llde. Resume req 'd. EXECUTIVINECSERVICES, s_1ructhaio<d•.tooUI~ 11.l~ ... lnspec· Point, 496-4164 I ----'~~----51.'c'y/tJte sh to $62S Call Frllllk \\'llliam.s, 979--1070 • j oon n s &: m ..... es 01•.-n LANDSCAPE Desl,gn & Tech/St 1) · ~ 888 N. ?.lain, Santa Ana i;e-tups to t:heck pa.i.1s. CM·n NOW LEASING LOST: Female Bmcet, lawn. Const., g .,..,. ex .. r. Sad· at ·pist to CONSUMER LO•N -==i'c-""'~' ;;"°''0:·962>==~ basic hupection tools tt· Vic. TeWinkle Parle &. J•~ Payroll Ckrit to $550 A Huntington BNch CMHS. Reward !or info dleback Valley Landscape, Keypunch S50R PROCESSOR EXEC. SECRETARY quired. NEW M--1 leading to return. 5§CM'i690 83?-.3856. Ship/Rec. Oerk $3.25 hr ·Fee Paid. $750. E."clting 940 Sq. Ft. 6 UP Alt. 2:30. Masonry CALL TRISH HOPI•aNS .j Experienced career for sharp person Apply Mon thru Friday 8;30AM-4PM ltamilton t.i; "'"viand St. JERRI WJJITTEJ\tORE w/contractor con\ pan y. 960-1970 POODLE, am. whL male. SLUMPSTONE, block walls, Xln't Benefits. Also Fee Th -• E I Immediate Openings For Experienced MACHINISTS & MACHINE OPERATORS Needed Immediately. 15 GENERAL LABORERS \ ' vie. The Ranch, Irv. planter. ~pertly ins1alled. IRYINE PERSONNR UNITED Posltiora, Call Ann Christle, 1 urM11ey ven "9 2nd Shift 3PM·11PM ~!w~. Call Mr. Severy Specially priced, Bob, SERYICES•AGENCY CALIFORNIA BANK 556-8505. control Career Interviews 5pm·9pm 3rd Shift 11PM·7AM VOLT 4001 BIRCH, NB ......-voo>V 645-4930. Employment Agency, 3400 lnst•nt Per.onnel 3600 8q. ft. l5c per IMJ ft LOST 12 KEY S ON ·-•bl• =~~~-=----1488 E, 11th St. {at Irvine! cr..1 201 Avcnlda n....1 ,,,. I . Bl d NB BERT EA T 0 ' below going re.le, lt. mfg, wire ring-, Vic. 1::ip;"nru WILLIAMS,& SON MMOnry. Suite 224 642·1470 San CIPn~te • rv1ne v ., . . 0 perGte Temporary Servi~ , \ll"h'1e, .vhu. Baumgardner I N t Bch Lie. No. 283046. Brick, 492 5123 EXPERIENCED 0 l f ice 3S48 Cam'('.IUS Dr., Suke 1 541·5m2. "." 51111 ng•. P ' eve blOck & s!,pl'le. 586-ti3TI, ~ • Mnnagt!r w/so1ne relnil Milla Chucker Newport Bead1 546-4 G73-4856 Pointing • buokk~pl"g h•lpfW. Xlot CORPORATION EnglM lithe """" ()ppm'. E>nployor 1300/lroSQ. ft. M-.. 1 space LOST smaU black Lab/9lep P •-1 ASSEMBLERS Equal Oppor, Employer opl)Ortunlty ror right person. Turret Lathe w ut offic<? c re:ar mix dog, male. Well train-l -"'-'o~pe='~~;;;;;n~g~n~g,_ ___ 1 . '!!!!!"!'!!"!""!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!'"'!!!!""I Sa 11ry open. Build & Gro\V, door. Sl.80 mo. 1793 Whittier, '00. So. Cst Plaza area. COOK WANTED ·University Park Center, N/C Drills Grinders NEWSPAPER mom. autc CM. 646-5033 day1 ; 646-0081 642-5087 or~ ~~OFN ~covering statlj Openings on •II three Apply ODIES RESTAUIViNT Irvine 552-fllOO 18001 Von Karman Sunnen Hone roule w/the Regl1ter l1 •ve• FEMALE l"ah Selt•r 9 moa. tc. o. 14, lnsut., a 212 E. 17th St. F'E'lALE •«< I t . Irvine, Calif, Coata 1o1eaa, Nwpt area. Aj Rantal1 Wanted 46;0 old, ans. ~ .' •GI n g er•• ~-of paper. 114 : j:~~':· h~~!:i:Y ~:':; Costa Mesa • 64G-430l a~mbly ;;;k' for ~aJ1 833--1424, ext 294 TOOLMAKER !:°~n:h!'e, tiy ~. * .......,,Reward. vie. CM. Parl<. 1 . COOK: Graveyard shift, 6 ma n u ! ac t u re r near or 133-1425 Xln't -·-p/"--.t"·-. Pl"-e Help! * FIRST c ass pain-n•cas11ry, $2.TS ~r 1 oc Al rt ,. h 5 E I Opp E I .,.....,.. ...,...,. ..... , ~ """/paP'~--~ng. Ex 1. n tes a week. Company paid . . rpo . ....., rs I qua , mp oyer ('" -tn) ~ ·~ ·~ WE NEED MALE JHsh Setter, Vic: fut' Alrl~7i>~. Free Est. hour to start plus 1 ift fringe benefits. Apply in days a wk. 557-7283. ...,,, -2• •..nN•·ITE~A.UDITOR ' 2 BEDROOM HOUSE Harbor Blvd/Ray School, 979-52!M differential. person. Jack ln the Box. FIBERGLASS Gun op r INSTALLMENT LOAN Long Tenn Employment or l BR with garage . ~_Bernard. Apt A PAINTINt;: inside. and out. Apply In p~ At: 1200 Baker St., Calta ?.1esa. Wanted. Pay dimmenrurate . & CREDIT DEPT. With History Of Hotel or ell.lb exptt, ~~j ...... with largeJenced yam 1or-2 ~ ... &m.i jobs-roo. Lo-e-a·I -COOK,-E-XPE... ~~e""'~ltlp 0E~1~g _ NO-lAYOff ... S--~~,- mfttiwn siU!d ~ (well U'.>ST blk kltlef! w/yellow refe~nces. Call GU-035.'i AVERY PRODUCTS Apply HWlgI'y Tiger, 353 u.strics, · · ' \\'e have 2 openlna1 lot' clcri-· F/time. SM Peti0it1rd MIP'l' I 1 11 v; G Pl CM E C H N B Poston, Ariz. 85371. <602J a -Ibo • -r1ub • MATURE WORKING RE\VARD 548-7508 PA~, hfghly qualified, CQOK ~ call for in· key &: credit vcritylng ex· n ' 1221. W, Cout llwy., N.B, tra ned &: ver:v o eol!) ,1 ro ar 1c rove . after 5 p.m. . oast \\'Y., . , 622-4326 cal positions. ~ing & 10 1 our l\fanutacturing Area ~ • -Y ~ .- 1 COUPLE LOS'I': Slame1e.,cat, altered eltl.cltnt, wouJd Hire "'""' Con1umer Division terview 10 AM to 12 noon, FRY c 0 0 k · expcrJe1u.-ed per. desired. E xcellent Workirwr 2 VERY RES'flONSIBLE' A' I"" ___ _, ..,.. """'" .,-.,,.. ·2620 S. Susan M ~ 6<"7880 preferred. lJ:30 to 2 pni ··• NOTEI Wilt tak · m .... e. &..>. rewouu . ...,.....,__, businellS. Reason.able , on-.. ,,, ~ i?) Mon llu'u Fri. Salary Pl Cor. C~ition1 . '. t care o1. ~;:rcmf!!3 good evenings. 642-3158. Santa Ana, Calif· Counter & Kitchen" Help open. Dick church · s ~ sm~~ct . Company P.•ld S.neflta Reel Etflf!t StlnnMlll IOI_.. __ home -•I'. I * PAINTTNG ·& STAINING ' Need enthusiastic people 10 H.cstllurant, 2698 Newpoct UNION BANK li you have a Ucenae ot wan 1re1: ··~ Equal Oppor. Employer n1 /f I t • Th -• P ~"--~· Pleil/IC call evefi, and l· ~ -·-I~ INT/EXT. TRIM, ACCOUS \\/Ork mornina:s & eves. Ai>-Blvd, C.M. 610 Newport Ctr. Dr. n 1rv1ew1 Ur:tUay one, see eg ....,...,.co. Wttkends. 548-7881 FREE Esr. Jim 979-8186 ply in pet'SO'n, McDona ld's, GAL FRIDAY Faahiol} .Island Evening SPM to 9PM C~f,°~1#.1~~. {$190 max + depo8it • INT. &: Acoustical celllflf$ ASSEMBLY l6866 BE'ach Blvd., Hunting. Fast growin&: local co. seek· Equal Oppor. Employer • lst and last) pa'·t·'. r--1 •lean!"•. Cl bi "· I ton Beach. I ·" indiv I BERTEA u 1""' .......,t"" .. ''ft ean asem y wo'" or men ng .... arp • w avg NURSE-LVN, exctUna pot;~ WANTED: 2 Bl' untum hoµ.~e Baby1lttlng 642-7059, 548--3574 &: women. Day & 51ving COUNTER Girl for dry typing & lite general ofc INSURANCE SALES tion for qualilied permn~ Jn Colt&. Mesa. w/pct. PROF. pa.inter, honest work, l!lhifls: No exper. necess. 18• cleaning plant, 8.S!lembling, exper. Xln't starting salary work In progTffalve Below $150. 979-3396 aft 6 BABYSITIING reu. Int/ext, tree est. &: over. No Oiarge. bagging, checking exp. Must & cu. benefits. Good pot.en· CORPORATION valeacent hospital. Patl@n pm. ~ My Home, C. Men Refs. 548-2159, &tz.3913. do minor sewing, 6 dll)'S. tial for adv!lilcemeont. No f!"P nee., eam while you eare oriented ope~ WOULD (Ike .. m . h·' Xlnt r~• I "" • Office Apply in person, Five Jason Best Agency learn, part time, eve1 I Xlnt --•. f"""• - I " .ho LS ""-' room care. UUU<.i uncu<=S, ~~'!~~e.r, Patch, Repeir Points Cleaners, 18641 Main, 17~ Brookh F VI wknds, full time when qUali-~-~ ''•• n p1·1vate me near food fenced play ya:rd. Call any. --• rl d Huntington Beach, MT-246&. ......, urst, . y. tied. 18001 Von Kermen Apply or send ~sume ~~~re..!·,,_ must ' be n ca t . time, s:.6-4514. -* PATCH PLAS'I'ERING * OVe OQ Suite 213 963-6775 Irvine, Celif. 1445 Super\Qr Ave, Ne ' "'~ UC DAY CAR.&-1.ty home All types. Free fflimale!! COUNTER Girl & Mnli! Help GIRL FRIDAY Fuera~~~roup Beacb or call 64'62tl.O YNG ma.rrled cple seek 28R _ Mon-Fri. Good care, Lge Call ~ 3723 BIRCH STR EET wanted. Apply 14 pm, Ken· I l.1an Ottice. Ute bookkeep. 133-1424, ext 2M NURSE'S AIDES. Exp ~; hse , r•r , qu iet play area1. n!as-rates, CM NEWPORT BEACH lucky Fdcd Chicken, 2929 I or 133-142.S 7 to 3·30 full time~~ nelghbotbood. $200, in CAI, nr Falr Dr + Fairview. Plumbing 557-00bl E. Coast Hwy., Cdl-1. ~r:1~~y~/~= .,..~~N.~~ ..... SALESMAk ~.'.._ Equ•I Opp. Employer Manor. Conv. Ho1pl tat, 592-Zl>S 54lHl706 ' COUNTER Girl ; Ex p 'd & but 6 br day ""'."-'""'.....-...pa-Wtt w.,.... Laguna Hilll. ~ II~;;;;;;;;;;;;!~~~~~:;-;~\!]~ L.R.. OTIS PLUMB1NG ASSEMBLERS pref'rd, but will train. Over con~der =ti~.~ re: mg alter school and Satur-MAIDS for motel wkdu on-NURSES id all ·'"-1_, BABYSIT my hOme day-Remodel& It. Repairs. Water 20, 1 .. ~ ... ~ HiUs Cleaners, days selling new subscrlJl" 1 1 m-• ...._· A•" N a et, ...... ,.. nights-weekend. By hour day Sold~. mechanical usem-~....... sume: lion& for the DAILY Pn..O'I'. iy, 1-.o1, ... na ., .... ~s. 'LI' • Convalete@nt HOlpltal ' or ~·eeldy play room-fenced heaters, disposals, furnaces, bly or drill preu expct. Alpha Beta Shopping center. Write Classified ad #97"3. Thi.a is nol a paper route Coast Hwy, Laauna 4%-8521 * &U-0598 * • lliiiiiiiiiii-iij~iiiiii~LJ.1~·~ l ~y~a=nl.~~N~"'-,.~Ea,.-,d~o~r-,-Scboo,-.,,l dshwashn. 6t2--ii263 Ml~ & hdpful. Cote Instrument COUPLE. \Vork full thne, Oaity Pilot, P.O. Bmc 1560, and does not lnclude de-?.IA.I.OS wanted experience , . ~ 968-Di5 B/A. Complete Plum ing Ox,>., 2M3 Placentia Ave., manage 62 unil &pl romp\ex Costa Mesa.. Ce.I.ii. 9'£26, liveries or coUecUng. Open-not~·-~ Rodeway 2 OFP'ICI:. GIRLS • MO"IltER of 2 Will bak.-;t, Servi~. Llc. 273l94i. C.M. 642-!la!O. Equal Oppor. Costa Mesa. Salary &-e>m· GIRL FRIDAY l.ngs in Costa A!eu., FOWltain tnn.140 s. E. Bristol, CM. Nl!IDED :-1 "T "',,.r PLUMBING REPAIR Employer. fortable new 2 BR, 2 BA Vall and So th H tln 1 Part0n•ll l 530 l--5 yn, old. Xlnt care. No ~ too small apt. Mr. Phillips 64544u Manager of div. i;eelts in· er u un g on Radio telephone dl-s-tdl 1: PULLY • lJCt.'NSED * SPUUTUALIS'I' * Spiritual readln(s 1D am-10 pm. Advlef! on an matters 312 N. El Camino ReaJ, San Clemente, 49U136 -192-9034. LIFE OR DEATH. Let. our babies live. ~or n.l· tematives to ABORTJOO, call LIFE LINE 501-552'1, t-1 hn. PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con- fident, • y mp a thetic pregnancy co_unseling. Abor- tion & adoptlona reL APCARE 642-4438 MeaJs, fenced &l')...6547 * * 642-312.8 * * ASSEMBLERS dividual w/acrun.le typing Beach. Apply ntrN by calling M • '!wit be 25, ablll to dd • Cabinetm•ldnt Sewlng/Alter•tlona F:o ::i:r~ ne~=-~~t DA"i!iy~~l'30~~P wanted. :potl~te C~~i a::: v~~~ ~~·Oppor. Employer a1ntenance y,ttt.:~ CABINE:!'S & FW'nitur. -..-''------1 """"'"" """"" Work days. ANCIENT MARINER -· eo .. ta1 p,.,.,,,,., KEYPUNCH 5'96 or 9610 Mechan1"cs •UI .,, -a.ta, Remodeling & Boatwork A:lteratlont-642-5845 Apply Early! ?.01 North Tustin, Santa Ana Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd., exp. Penn p/time nites. Patios. 646-52l9 Neal, accurate. 20 )"!8"' exp. ECHO JOB AGENCY DENTAL Receptionist. lrui. CM. Sys :r oper. exp pn!f. ;::dd~:1R~I&. , Corpet Servl'• BEAUTIFULLY D e ta 11 ed Hunll;;;;,.~Be~~e ~1439 & clerical exper. GOOd GIRLS Needed -Apply in _546--0=="='~~-----A & C to $5.25 , bn: flexible. Dressmaking, your fabric or · 9'"' w/childten. 84.7-2566. person, Port Theatre, 291)1 KITCHEN lle)p, 11 tu dent for appt. 540-3280. 'i JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery ~ mine. ·Call . before l.hn.t ASST BOOKKEEPER E. Coast Hwy ., CdM pref'd over 21, part time NEVER A FEE PART TIMa , Drl Shampoo free 'Scotch· special occasion. 645-2695 Fee Pak!. Beautiful modem DEPARTMENTAL weekends, from 8 to 2. Call COUNTER GIRL -.j gard (Soll Retanlam,s). Televlsion Repair atfice 'ln Irvine romplex. CLERK GUARDS for appt. The Golden Bear, D•rtnell Personnel Y Degrea.sers & all color Must have kooY.rledge o[ peg. Variety of duties Include in· Immed., cn1pioyment f/time 300 Ocean Ave., H .B . Service Agency Over :n.• Apply ln ~ brtghteoers & 10 minute COLOR TV RC!palr, expert, board sy,tems. WU! be in· ventory & prod. ""nlrol ,1 1 "' k 536-9600. only after 2:00 PM, ~ 1·~ · IR & ···-'! "u or p11me. n,.rue wor · Shef Oelicate11err bleach !or white carpetii. reasonable, most in home. vo y.,._, in A .,..,, .. ,. . recon:ls. pro cc s s In g \\'ork any shift. Urrlfcrms LEGAL Secretary exper 500 Newport Center Dr. 1 S1tve yOur money by Sllving Free estimate, H.B. N.B. ~ aA~~typJi~ Startc U cngi~eeri.n~ change orrlcrs, furn. N.B. & C.M. area. Call mature for_ ~er in :i Newport Beech 64Q..8470 ~r:~~~-&: Adamt. H~j me e,xtra trips. Will clCl'ln & C.M. Bert Gallemore, ...,..,..,. .,,., r= '-""'• a ma 1 ntam1ng engineering Lou Vickery, 833-0600, ext man Jaw firm. Neer O.C. +1 Uvini rm., dining rm., &: ;968-~~2'18.1=~· ------Helen Muon, 540 -6 0 55, master filt's on bills of 2165 9 arn·l Airport. 833-3622. MAINTENANCE PART time Stt. accurate hall $15. Any rm. $7,50, Tile I Coastal Personnel Agency, matcrin.11 & other n1uter pm. LYN-RELIEF ~·ell groomed. A&:e un1111~ BilJ.., Aulder Helde is alive couch $10. Chair SS. 15 yrs. 2790HarborBlvd.,CM. documents. Prefer in-HAfRCUTTERS &: eslist, MAN portant. nexlble hrs, niciil &. ""<ell &elling p'ropcrty In exp. Ls what count&r not CERAMIC TILE NEW & AVON MAKES I dividual "'fl yr expcr. in chance for adv~nrement , 3 Days 3--ll, 2 Day111·7 mUlil be (amtliar w/plumt>-ottice. Send ruume &~I~ GraN Valley, Calir. \\lrlte method . I do wor'i< 1nyself. remodel. Free elll. Sm jobs CHRISTMAS THE SEASON 1 related activities. nia.le or .F~m. he. G. T; NURSES AIDES 7.3 Ing, electrical & general ter. Write C1aulfied &d: 12"9 &ate Hlgh~·ay 20 Good ref. Ml.--0101. wekotne. 536-~. TO-SEJOLLY --1 ~nctiort-Modules, Joe:--..Bcnz...mo11•n abead 9'Z'!b9M5. -Xln'l ·Pf'Y w/merit..incre8sc.. carpentry Hotel exp er DaUy Pilot P. 0 . Box ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. C•rpet Cle•nlng T So'I Eam extra money far &ifts Irvine 83J..831 4 HOSTESS Cashier. over 21. F'riendly relaxed atmo.'t-neces.s. See ~I Man-Costa Mesa, ca. 92626 ' Phone 542-7217 er writ~ Floor C•re & Windows op I as an AVON Representative DISHWASHERS mature. Exper. Apply aft phere. L?'W patient load. 7 ager . -Pffime Eves &: Sata. tde4 P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa. •c""' . ~QUALITY* In tim. r.n ·th . 2:30 pm. See Mr. Hagen, Paid holidays A: lnl!. Belboe Bey Club for sludents. Hrly w1ge -14 Dutch Maint. Serv. p! . .._ .,. your spare e. '-AL.I: IVl experience, ma!Url", 0 Miss Oine Hamburger Ca.II 549-3061 1221 \V. O:>aat H"''Y-. NB bonu.sea. C.all S9'J-22S8 6t ~ W~ a d4te7 $.1 • 100 lidW!s STEAJ\l CLEAN CARPETS * MULCH & TOP SOIL * 5'JD..7!ML ~lish speaking. reliable .I'am!et 1.545 ,,\da.mf; CM. to choose troin. 41).gS" vrs. 586-6930 AUTOMOBILE BKKPR rrten. Apply berwn 12 &: 5. • ' MAINTENANCE man -835-0566. ' ~' f..8 ;m. I 1nsu,r~1Jti ... 1 *int. Trff Service Parts &: service. Accounts ~bro6ia, 5f!1·30th St., Bal-_HOSTESS, p_~S MACHINE Must have e.xperience in llte PART time "'uit ln ~3 r ec c Iv ab 1 e ,'Exp et. uua Pen, N,B. Rear En· Petite Auberge ~ ..... urant, repair wurk. Apply to c~ your cwn ~ ~l1l1 Clubs rSJS 1.Cre_me_~n_t,~'-C_o_n_•_•_•_te ___ TREE work. AH kinds. You automobile girl only. We trance. 3800 S. Plaza Dr., S.A, OPERATORS manager, Hotel Laguna, 425 ML15t have car, 552--ITT.40 , ' . tried the re.11t: Now try the \\i ll lrain you on our new DRAPERY manuf11.c1urer 556-(656. So. Coait Hwy, LB. PBX answering 1 fl r V l c • 1 · ~m~~:e:. :.:.~ PATIOS, mlks, drives. Saw, bet:V Reasonable, in11ured. automated I it ton book-needs experien c ed or HOTEL desk clerk/cashier. MANAGEMENT graveyard. Mis1ion VIU. riage? "Partner'~ 836-1271 ~~lei:e~&for1:~~ce 847-1791!~-~~~~~~~ keeping equip. Salary open. trainees tabling & n1achine !\1usl know NCR 4200. Con-. . Progressive animal hospital area. Exper Pr e '"" I.! or 543-1479. 5 days, 3-5 pm. Phone Bauer operators. Goorl pa y . tact Dick J-lannan, A.lrporter Sht:ter ~ Coater Machine. organization. N.B. seeks 837-7Ta5. \, I~~!!~~~~~~~~ I CEMENT & Block Work. Lill Buick. 979-2500. Mrs. holidays & vacallons. Beach Inn Hotel. Phone 8J3..mo. Will train on our machines, ellt'1'i"tiC manager to over· PERl\fANENT Part ti~ 1; Walls. pallos, sidewalks, I ~!Milt 111 Cameron aft 10 am. Drapery Service, 900 W. HOUSEKEEPER, chi I rl hut mechanical . aptitude ~ operat~ of l rapjdly employme'lrt, nights only in: I I~ etc. By hr. or job. 646-£915 I . . f' BABYSITTER needed Tues· 17th Sl. CM. care, live in, O\\TI Br & neces.'lar)'. Paid. insurance, pVWl.ng ofct. Exper in per· eluding weekend1. Maturt Lon Md Found CUSTOM Cement Work,! mjiiiiiiiiiiiiliJ!ij Frl., & Sunday nites, var-DRAPERY \Oo1lrkroon1 help Ba, non smoker, some r:cel:le~ be~ri~.M Apply lll>IUlcl &: ren'l olc manage. & dependable. Over 21 mal• ~. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;·;m,; Dr\Vf!s, Walkll, Pi"ltios Llc. 'Job W•nted, M.-le 700 led hrs., my home your needed Cost l>1esa area. English nee. cd salary 11 A. · or • · ~ e-ssentlal. Sa:! + In· or female. Apply PauJt -~ No. 255915. 642-SS14. trans. Call Donna. 646-6.359. 979-1671 83()...0050 • AVERY centivc. Corp. benefits, pror. Drive-in. Costa ldeiia. Mae F _, ff d I '50 SCRAM LETS sharing. Send rt>Sun1e 10 thru Thurs aft T PM. OUvw rff • S .J r ~ntrector BAB-YSITTER needed for OOMESI'lC llelp Geo r ge 1-IOUSEKE'EPER wanted to Cl "f"ed d 9ll l 1-----------• preschooler &: infant Must Allen Byland Agency. lai-B li\'e in Laguna Beuch, 3 ~'5I 1 · a no, c 0 PRODUCTION FOUND SUAf OF MONEY JACK T ·"---I E 16 h s s A "'7 ·~-lid P" & b h PRODUCTS Dtuly Pilot, P. o .. Box 1560, GIRL FR1o•y -~ •,-,~ u' ;._elp..!.....!:., 'ANSWERS be at least 25. 646-5262 aft . I t., ...... ....,,,.,:i, ch ren, .,v rm al ' Costu Mesa, Cahf, 92626. "" ON July '4th. Please call renl\.IU, a . c u-.......,,.. . 6 pm. DRIVERS wanted. !or full salary open, l\fust drive Help u.s build tic.uttful. 11,W,.\ to k!entity. 673-7489 or My Way Co 547-0036 494 7258 n4:~l4G2 ' · BABYSITl'ER for o Ider or part tin1e work. l\1us1 -Consumer Division MANUFACTURING boats. \\'e r.:ed a younc but YOUNG f'm.I' Lab-'·r BldgG~~wt, CKAdd.lt .so~ __ _. Bigamy_ Stole -Toxln -children ~-mNBy ~Ame, 7.9 h.ahoovo 1own _;~-i~111,;1ob.bro1r HOUSEKEEPER 2020 s. SUsaJi ENGINEER matureL!_M'rsolik n, ~tallw·~jl' •muu ...,.,. · n.c'"'"' Veivet -JN h.15 GWVE am. l\.fon-.-• 1, .... s-5980. IC or *""" JO"'· <'XI e Laguna Niguel area, 2 da!. Santa Ana, callf. 91704 urea 11.·,,.., es "" · v~~ Re tr lever. \Vestmlnster State Lie. 81·1143:21 n..-~-'-"He'• v....., hours Ask for Dan Leon k -~o E ~ ,1. 5 . "Y &: ha.rd~'Oric, & ean.w Ml ho vv-c111<="111u ~·., BABYSMTER ~·flnted full · ' aw · .. ~. ;qttal vi'.,..,. Employer r.t '1 "1n1mun\ yn M<pcr. in area. s.ses me very 67J..ro4l 549-2170 su-itiol.ls. Jn a n""t he 11 0 __ 1 A H 1 h at 1920 Harbor, Co~ta ?.lesa 1. . · mcchanlcal '-•-. prod""· 5(1+ acruraiely. WI!' much. Call S.~ Ge·•-1n -•w":::,"p,•-'a .__...!.'.:..:. "N me ""''a na cg ts. or call 643-9452 after 3 HOUSEKEEPER, ive in '"""-·· ... )'OU an inlerestina job w/rt/J .. ~ ... ' .... """'" .. '""'"''""""' LI can eve1 557-2971 Lovely home. adults, work MACHINIST llOn SUppol"f, manutactunn~ I ·~ F'ND red &: black !ml Pt. hia GWVE." EARLY momlng r o u t e r.1oo-f'rl, 675--8248 documentations & as.sembly xln't futw't! n A YoWl& f'Ua Shephenl w/Oea collar. PROFESSJONAL ~ener, BARMAID wanted Knotty delivery, 3-5:30 am . Call Short Run Production &: Sin-operations ror small electro-hani11.'0ricing eroup. To~ about 6 ~ old. Vic Kings tree work. Pru n 1 n g , AtrrO Mechanic Wl\nts "'1ll'k Keg, 21.25 Harbor Blvd 536-4T72 moms. ~15 gle Pan Operations. mechanical dcviC'"l's. .Uk tor 9"", &t2-8961 . ., Rd&: c;lllf Dr. NB. 548--0416 IPfinklers, cltanup jobs, in evea. Can all.Ye YoU car Coflla t.1e!l8. 646-991.0 eves. ru..USTRATOR \Vork on tnteresting materials Cnll ~9-3041 Rl-:AL ESTA1·r; SALES· , YOUNG Slamll'tlC male e&.t I and 1 c a·p In a:· George, owners moooy. Call 646--33!9 BARMAIO.WAITRESS ELECTRONIC T h • I using medium tQ large size Equal Oppor. Employer !)1JCCESS CAR&ER fouOO Huntington & Allan\4, 646-5893. a1t 6· Wanted 646-9478 TECHNICIANS ec n IC a lalhes, mill!! & driU1. i""~~--~ ........ ._...,.I ~:~or experienced. J oln tM Huntington Beach Ca 11 * Creative G1·•·nln9 * MUSICIANS · Duo desitts MASSAGE TECH \Vorld's \a...,e1t and futnt 536-1365 evei. Winter aeanup A ~Jng. ~~lfil:-"· Call John Ol' Bill, B1'~~~Te~~E~xi::'ra~:ci: Jmmed. posiflon11 av11.ll. In ,1 day • 40 hour \\'t't'i< with TRAINEE • growing .:;:.1e crpnlq.b. FND Siamese cat . younlf ft.ye Grau & lo1alnt. Spmkln: Call affC\' 1 pm, 496-9003. ~~nu1a~l~l~l.'l ~fps~t~ ~; tt! 111 ustrator :.:ime on an SS l'Cf{llired Young lady (13-281 ~·anted with a network of over v> fml. Sunflower • 1'~alrv1cw lnsl & Serv. MS-1012.' Jef! W•nted, Fem1le 702 Dave. art miniature iuh· · for legltlmate full tlmc posi-~:her ~our ~a.J Area. 979-7211, . EUROPEAN Gardene r. YO'""r.. Moture ~·xeculive-BILLING CLERK assemblies. Some exper. In W• have an imme-Day or rright ~hlrt openings. tlon. No t'Sp. nee. We send Club. Multl-m!IUon dollar suru·EiOAfitS · Maintenance • Landscaping. ~'!'1-8.d!11tnls~t1~ a~lst Greot entry l~t>l position for either, analog or dlgltal dl•te opening for lo .11cbool, earn while learn. advertising program.= 1'"'0U}!2· \ 1'ab..,.le. R04'!i'.53°'!1· !!!",, ~n.. avafla~e Nov. 1. In depth lndlv. w/1lte lyping skill!l circuitry i.s req'd. an e•ceptlonally Appi_v In JX'l'80n l\1ondi"ly-Apply in person Any aft. or guarantffd llctnslng ~l)~W:tl · ~ ~ '°' !;YI; experience in mar1certng, ad-I: 10 key adder. Start S."lOO. Function 1.1odules, Inc. h 11iursday. eve. 2930 \Y , Cst, Hwy., Eiteelient ult• tralnl , YvlcOUNNG Dobcrmtfln rtn~~r, FASI'l NEED t..1 ""ea<""l ttRlodayh r ·" ~~c _; 9.!11 Kl ayp \Vin!:_. 54A()..6(65, hvine U-U Can1pus o m.8314 ;,~l!~~~~~~l~t::fo; 2t01E~~ ~~{~:;o~n~ach ~cMwpoE•Ot BeBaAchC.K OFC \Vh&t l!s Y""'kl!cenlf! ~ ewport ~~ • ......,.,ta or omotTOW c : ~ "'"· auu ...... a!la eraon,..,,. gcncy, p bl' I Acros.~ from Orange County , to you Chtc our monuuy Mesa. Call TI4/882-2022 l!.Xpcrt &. deQlllldable. Fl'ff ed ffetdl. king dial· 2790 Harbor Blvd., CM. Electronic Technician our u 1c1 t ons ,\irporr ,.~l'e J~l\kl. 0ilt' a f th" best bonu1 program which mear111 FND young niale Blk I.Ab e«t . 67'".NJOO. I~ a: !'\!!'Warding oppor. BOOKKEEPER F/C 2 yea.rs .chool -+ 2 year~ Dept. We are 1•1k-';:;::;:::;::;::;:;;;:;;;:;;;::;-J prn.t1.cr.i11 y,i:'vc 11~ In the SS$ to you! Pleue cd • Well tm:I • Vlc Brookhurst MOW Ir mGE ~nit)'.-All replln held In Gtt¢, co. oflc.n x\n't OPPOr· experience de~lr"blt. Will Ing a re•l 1elf-1tart· 11 me<l1cnl f\e ld, Gel tn on 1~ Vit]lnlll Jonc1 835-4811. I. Adams 11.B. 96)-87%7 CL.EA1't tlPs nfldtnce. Reply to Bux tuni1y for sh!ITP lndlv, \\'/ nui~t ilevelopmcnt Seo~ er with he avy •er~ Plano K"round rloor of ne\\' rlink" Rrll ESTATE SALES' FNO big black alley cat Vic. • ~1" • 992• c/c D1.Uy P'iot, O:lst& 110me ~per. Xln't future, =~:I 1:''Bi:t~aml~s space background A.bto fee Jobs. Call Sa 11 )' U. llamlllon A Magnolia· 11.B. GREEN TR£E G~m/ ~ 92G26. bottl In 1al.uy A ~iltr. I I d i · OUt Of fUn• f !Ian. 5-U>.fiOM Coutal Pt>r· Green eyes. 962-9605 -tnVExt. ~ m.1 h.. )if.fD help Al home? \Ve Jaaon Bes t Anency fll(:., 17542 Armstrong /\ve, nc u ng engineer· .£.:\ e K.f.lo !IC•nnt'l Ag,!nt::)', r.oo llarbor New ofrit-e in Lllg\1111\ ~ t~-~n........_ __. 6_..:_ bliY eldn nuraea • tntlne.Calll. i ng conceptua l Ulv11., C1\I. Mui;t ht' lit!f'n.tcd. bu! F'ND male Delao 9ln&RY 11u8: ........ ...,._.,..,.. r::• ,......._,-1-• ...,. ' • ' 17400 lirookliUl'll. F. viy. ENGINE ERING TECH draw i nns , a ir , J':"~ -ME-0-ICAL RE-C-EP-T consider eqer, ne"'· uJ _ Vk: M•rie.n Way, a.nta lll-QU""'"""",',;LO~ ~ t.••e~l'ian._ compMiou. Suite 213 96.\.677!i • J • ,-• p1 •t d 1 ' ""' ........ ,. '\· Jt rn e--k er 1 u .. w... scNIOR bru•ht'n• otc I 11 • E•p'd bu<y ~-·0-0 11·•·•. f'('ol") I". '' anv A van a~., Ana, 534-37JS. Statf! Uc. No. .,~ .,.,.,..,.. 8QO~EPER. full-chnf1'C, • •• · .,,, •1 ...... ·• ,., UU<:"• "' ~ Contect: Dorl• Smith • ••• u•l101 ••• ffji' I f L--3 or ntte yn e;i1JX"1". In II'~· ·'"' .1 PND Y'l'""'" If")', mil.le c11t. _. -Yt __. M • • '710 ma" or mn. ,.._ ... vy expcr. 1 1 "--1 In P erson • ArTM le nHom R h of: Vi c N~ 1'1tIsh11 Generel S.rvtce1 , p.,.,ent-, "' ,.. W/CPA pr..ferred, x In I Ing .\ troub ~t na e>I ~ y ( ?.1GRS. 'Bf'&I lnfl11li<>n. Ill( ~ • e e• ' ~" ... ..., • u.lary I bene.OlJ. For appt. dlaital circuitry In C"OTe 3333 Ha rbor Blvd. '-only proven lllf'tnod. t'BTn 875 N. Cat. _111\')'., L4law'la ; .,..,.-_,_, "nrINGS" 1by MooH Gen·i I 1Adverti1int Siles e&lJ 638-nrr---memory S)'lltl:ms or l'Olleac nlQN' money. ~'.1.63 ~-• 4~-l-1001 • MAN'S bllocl\I gla1ae11 , ~try. Jtepairs.'Plum-Former. yellow poao or BRIGHT ea&cr lo leiu·n l~i tr81nlng In 11.u1c ell.'C· Co1ta Me••• C•lif. REAL ESTATE br\'IWn tramn. Oi'anfte Av~ .Jblft& El.ec. Rem ode I In C 1MaUiM sptCll! 1 ~per . matunl ftin~e for R#rden tronlcs IAA decrtc:I. Re· AIOTEL MA.ID \VANTED SALESMEN 1*t ?.feM Drl\-1!. 543--7685 &42:ki:\ ~=v mly. ean for nursery n!quiring ~om I! r,blllty lncludl"8 ancm· l l I I wlll tr&.ln, afrply in l'Crsc:>n \\'h . . m the hol1ut F'NO blk Lib • Ma.y Co. i'faullng ....,.,,, ~. physlc•I labor. Nol arrnld Y. 1t~I .i:: evAluation ol I . COlll.'I Ml'~~-,'\Jt. ~ 1 ! ·'O:i.inrton !Wich :. $hpna Ctntor, 96l-G.'169. "'A/Reailv•ble 0111 Of h111'tl Wtil'ft. Jntett ... flnir; ~~t:° & cor~h11~tn~ 0 I for CWslRed Ad [MOTHERS helfl('r w11ntNI nfl r o nlQlzt VN.Jey. Let up. U.RQfo::: Siamese m11le, Vtc. 32 t-r. FTJRNtTURE Van 10 key by touch, ?T'S A & challr:ngtna nppor. Apply l'ftU!pmt'nt. Submi1 r~unie ACTION sch -'" wkends, n"11 !Nin~. nitn ~11~1. C3ll Ph\\ P..11> Mi.gnol\11. .\ Garfield, 1-'oun-for local lurrl heul11 It Qtn'I MUST. Typlna. tT'S A In pcr1on 111, 2'121 F'(iirvlc\v or ttpp1y Stnr'IMrd M<!nl· I Call F.4-i..().125 I Nanice, VILLAGE REAL l&.l n Valley 968-M.,15. ,ha.ull'.'f!. M3-186l,,S5T-..2736. !\IUS'f. }..1nt po.ltlon fol' Rd, CQl\ll f\,h!!!I\ . oril"ll, Jn(•. (Subsldhl.ry or -A DAILY PILOT !• ri.IUSTCIAi'\S lff>kt11i,t !or l:SrAT.49GJ.~. ·1 FND: 2 tml rtd king hair, V,A\JL I NG-Ru.bbl&b or .11h"l"J) lltLI• !\111411')' Of)('n. OUUJ)l-~f\"S lln.rdwru'<' C:o. ApPl!rd ~ll\1t:flr.tiC'!I Corp.1, 1-~qual Oppor, EmplnyM' n1 I AD·YISO K ~ r:n~1thlc maruifl't fl<'f'•. Jl~'AL E11tale Ww11 shl-ltggcd dol• Vic Harbor f\inttura • ~mall br ln.m I 841-1229. In Npt. Bch. S<'<'kln11:.o an Zll1 S. Amil' S1 , Sunl(1 /\n.11, >tla j ~16ll Ca 1 Joh n or lll 5~i7·~1 !11, I E~-ptr IJ(WJCt but rlOt ~· J il Wll!!nn C.A1. 642'-1647 • r11~ for C11Um11.lt, 646-1458 Cl81'81fied NI• ~· •••• MUAIT'll. lo learn bt111IN'b ~J#...JGI Calif. 92101, l.1V'Sst._'1£0 •.•.•. IH2"$m 1._ __ ..,;; ____ _., NHd a "P11rf'~ Pl ,. 1•""" Dun1. Point Ofc 491 ..... I '<1 Thuriday, Ottobrr 2'. lit73 ~!!!~~~]:fi'!i~~?::::J~m~~i!:!!!!::::J!f[G~~~mi>tU;~-~J~~~~~~~:=~~~§¥=;;:;~~~u~to~~,..,~1~c~•,~P~a~r1~·~~ W ant ,;;,...-F"'7"o""H"'•"p-w=a.,-nt"od::;,""'Miiii&F7 10 olp Wanted, M & F 7 10 'A:::;:•t:;:lqi;uoo:::, ___ _;::;:: II fie• Fu rniture/ 824 h , S. I. -Equ1p. [ J{ I OP..SM'RATE mUAt s" 11 , ltEPLACD\ENT &: nux· i: REAL ESTATE . -. STOC1' Bo)<: fur Art ~lal"f', FRI & SAT 9 TO 7 FULL size ponl t.111.Jli:. 11"11.~· IBM SELECT RIC r,. bi YGlll xln't 8· Fll~r asllboa1 b1o Ular)' p11 tanb. plck...ipa:, r . .:CC1 Pt:.,)1ilt! \Vho A.re Expcf'. SECftE'I'AJ?IES Kliln 12 hr. ~f' 17 10 21, E\'f;flTllING MUST GO: ntck, aw.JI, brush. <.-ut• ta1.'.JI., ,_ ---------'· elude• 2 '811.a. Only $195. 4 whl drlvet. vans &: motm' ... , \Vhi.h T" \\lork Al Th<'ir Hvland l..'lbont.tonelC has lm· 1\111ily 100 s. C11W1t Hwy, Crci:it M\1ngil on tumltUtt, Sft'l~c ~~ v;ry~:I ~ i.ypewrlter, llke nt'W. Elltt' 675--61ll6 honit'fl. 89'.l...&114 fu,10,...n PtH'l' , ' • ' Nev• Offil''" m.\.'Ctilltc "'"'~nl1-.i,;:1; and in· l.ni;un:\. Pr1mith,.,~. & coUeoetabl4!!1. chub·1' "'I each, l bluck, 11". P'Vt pty, C ll l J ( 213) 3 Line1, 2 Times, $2.00 36' TRL,IA RAN Sailboat, CHRYSLER '72, 318. Yully Mlll &U-4203 .. _., AUTlfF.NTIQUE.'S • 59'1·3071 n'C!I Ot' v.·kodi, und•· -·•'"'"lion hull•. l..""Ul........t, ..... 1dtemator, I l'r 1t•rvlN·11 lll't! pt1'.~:1~tly ~ lij( T HE BROADWAY "I"" Nt'\\...,..rt Blvd., Costa l yellow. }'orrnlcu coffet• , ,_.., _ , ..... ,., "'"'"u r-.,.. _ Olte RECEPTIONIST £'00du<:to.-d l() fill lh JoUGrw· v •• •1 .. ',.· .• ,;-Olli. I.Able iud 11tep table $11 NEW S1ulth ~na J>000ctaCbl•11 YOUNG male ca t to gen!le pllutS & ha.rtlware, $900 etc. '72,~1.:ns 11io"i'!!-i1•" """ilion11: HUNTINGTON BEACH "~ ..,. !or bolh. ?.ll1e. cofft.>e elec. l.ype~Tller, $1 · a couple with no t:lilldren. film . 6734l)U or 66-5580 trtlM. M..,.e o er . .,_ Plrfu1flnt peMtOna llty. 11hari .... .,...... G ~ 9'71)..8237 5'l3-4580. 1961 ll.PPMU'1tt1C'C & H\"I: typln~ ADMINISTRATIVE I~ AC\.-eptlng ApplI1:0.tlo11s Appll1ncet 802 :,'W'i.9~11 .. ~1~fe d-Nk.\~t~ EXEC swvl chrs •l5t2.5 Sec . Boets, Slips/Oock1 910 196Fa'l-i~Alf'~~s~tick l':llt r•ut yuu In thl" bi.-.a.utlful u • ,.. ~ •law ofrt(.'f.'. Lite r•x·i·p1. <'X· SECRETARY ·GUARD FRF.tGfIT DA!\fAGE SALE stand. ChnntteUer. S1.nu t'!r chn $8/:U Deska $~190 JIB WANTED Slip for 30 • transmlsaton. 968-4971 •l'J("r. hf•lp!ul. G1i:11I iturtlnI 70 ".11.n\. typtus, SO Nt•w Holpoint l' e t r I g, 5 • table. 963--21.8'1. Piere., 86'1W.19. Cl.1642·34~ r.tl ... ..,.. .,.., sailboat, Newport &ach. 1973 DODGE tires & whem, salo'ry. "''.1i.nl. i;honhand. l A:\1·10 A':\1 )1on lht'u sat di~hwnshers .t,. rang: es, GE conibo refl·tg, 12 cu ft, $1.00 to $100. desks, . Call sn..8'135. used very little. J eson B11t Agency GENERAL ''JlJllY h •Mnni·I 0c111. wushen & dryers, factory while $45. Philco 21" blk creden:aa.~. file cabinet!, Bo t S Md & Sk' 911 642-71U IT«>O OrnnkJ1uo;1, F. Vly SECRETARY 3rd tbr '-''IUTanty. & wht consol(' tv S,10., 1' misc.&~. Pets, O.ner~I 850 a s. P 1 Sulk' 21.1 96.1-6175 00 w.p.111. 1yp1ni;, 80 Jnlo..1vi.,'\Oo'lni; Jlrs 1().12 BEAOl CITY APPLIANCE couch & loveseat, blue & , 15' Al..LEN Flat Bottom, 40 Rl.'STAUFtANT w.p,n1. i;nur11uu1J. f.lon thru Sal ?.&"23 w. \Varner. SA r~5-0'1/IO gold $30. 7' rouch gold S20., Pltnos/Orgar.a 826 FOR sale '!Mle Capuchtn hOrse power eng. $650. SR. GENERAL 1117 E<l'""P .. , flunt, JX~h. 2062 N. Tu1tin, Orange b;tby bed compl ll'/nlatt. monkey with cage. All * e-. ,,, ·• * • St'1!k~ \\'Uilf('li§(~. bu~lioys, ' VO& • .... tl<\O_t r"'" 11" ~• "'90 • Pl NOS "~ I CLERK '1CJ<rJl)J<} ~. ~ • A 1ho!A. Great pt"I. sm. Dave 14' n bo t ., h M•-" dl.'lh1\'a11hers. ('<)Ok& k n 11'.' Eq 1 0 c·, I M hi 816 "venlng, -"AA...,~., , ... wu• u, .. p, '" portl!r. Evr ,;h1rt. PleilSl' [hc<t<i1lh<lnr. lA·ne~·aJ. vf· ua PPor. ""npO)'('r DRYER Fo r Sale . _•c nery • ORGANS c"-----------,-1 & trlr, sacrifice! $600.G I 950 Autos for Sal• 1aRlly in p.;.•r.r.11n, ~1011-f'ri, 11rc cx1w:r1._11cc 1:cqu1.n.'<.!, 1-'rlgidalre. EI e c · Cop. ·-Ceti 852 557-5731 aft 5 PM. •:00:.::.•~•:;_ ______ ,J ,!t,'. '!'or nf 1he rtoyol, 71h SU'OOll ugure u.putudl". TRUCK DRIVER pertonr. '\'orks i;:ood. $35. AIH. Impact \l.'rench $a5 Cost FULLERTON MUSIC ·n TORONADO, •n Cad l'1nor, Royul $n\•lni::~ ,t_, PURCHASING CLERK ·'1 u~t huvl' nlin. 1 yr e~per. 96~. $120, SC i':lec. ofc ryprlr, Our Newest Loca tion \VANTED!!! [i] Devllle Cpe. All XtrWt. C.a.ll Lonn Ai;llOC, Didi;:, El Tom. 55·00 ""J1.1u, t:xpcncn.,...,..d dn\·iiig i;..·iru & dun\() lruck. '°w"l~ll~H~LP~OO=L-,-,.~,~h~oc~.-:g::'.'ll!I $8.5, botll per!. a.is-723'! 18191 Euclid, J-'ountaln Vi.tlley REX KITTEN I 1-97!l-l809 1\t'l. t11 1':111 J)u.•i;:t1 Frv.·y. J.>L't!ICfl\.'rl. C1 .. ~<.u>.;_j 1 l~~;n8e\l,'olSl Ul{!,_ ~~~~. drver $-100. Ne'v three ye11rs DELTA \Vood LaUll", 1.vn1· 1 Blk. No. ol $an Diego f'l't:'C· * 979-5117 * Tr.,.,..UUon .. • 953 ~gunn Hills 58G-GS66. ACCOUNTS CVU3't::l l~sol\iKJ ;,:;, ai(i. \Viii sacrifice at $150. plete with tools. \l.'liY at Euclid. DDog~~:'.'.'.:-:c--::-~~8~s~4!l ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jjjjjm~ Antlque1/Cl1s11es RN & 01oti..-c Nur~l" PAYABLE CLERK Z100 i-111.tOOr Blvd., ('i)l. _T::•c:.1_:&"14-'-"'7'":::1:__~--,-,~ 1~~~,__:'63::=.c·2ccJ28"----c= 557-4836 ": s •35 PLYMOUTll 4 1-'/t.ime :-11 shill 10 Kl'Y addt'I' wttl ck.ICU· RCA \Vhir\pool 1natching Mi1c•ll11neou1 811 Rentals from $5 • PUPPY WORLD • Camper•, S•le/ Rent 920 sedan, .~~--· • Sl7-li13 1atorrto.iuircd. TYPIST~RECEPT. wru;~r .9,, elec. dryt>r, SlOO. Eng l ish Bul l Dogs, vw-.tMN fiOITT~: ~Inn wi1h 1•le:111 Vkn . Occ1denta1 Life has an Im· Good cond. Ph: P~1's, *PLEASE HELP* Chihuahuas, Tiny Poodles, '69 VW Camper. Pop up top, ---''-'-::..:="'----I - p1~rt or full lhnl'. Call 121:?1 AJiply lJl Pt'rsun 1nedlate opening in l of 642--2426 e Pianos & Grands A1ner. Esk l Sp l t z), uew. eng, exb·a heater, Recreetlonal , 87~7076/afler 6 t ; 1 I f Ur ..:au •he nicest localions ln N.B. t'°1'~R;.=.Sa""f,-,-,11~00~v-,-,-:cU~p~,,~gc:h, 2 BEWDREOONMEEHDOUSE New spinets from $495 Dobernllin. Pit Bulls, Bull relrlg & sink. Mint concl. Vehicles 956 • 4~5738 DON,\ LJ::V.8.RETT We 11ecd a girl w/a v C 1 / 1 5 styles and Dnishes Terrier, Cockapoo, Irish 540--0990. _.:..:;;.;;;;.o;;,._ ____ _ •,·; •.• ,: .. ,,, .. , • ., ", .. ,.1111,.,. in ('il~/ ;;.io.;tJuO, l'Xt XiJ Pll'asant Phone nianner to ta~(~~.·~~ts, ~e~;I e rco~ll~I: wHh large fenced yart.I Joi· 2 \Vurlitzer Grand Strauss Setter. 100 :P.UA'ED PUPS!! '72 CHl:.'VY Van Camper, bl lL> " '"6 ' '"• ' "' \\'Ork !1:30-11,!lt ;, days a · · -' ,.,_ I ll 69 St d Servi M I B d """ ··•'""'' of SJ0.000 11.nnually. HYLAND Xl11t cond. $45. 5;>7-8612. n1ed1un1 &.'U<-"-' uugs we Upright piano .......... S u ce OS · ree s. bubble top. 1 ton, auto, """ ,,. \vk, Pl~asc con1ac1 Evelyn · ed. & olJe(f n11 J w Sp' $145 Open Eves· 531-5027 v...s · 1 4 4 WHEEL DRIVE '73 JEEP •Nlf.!lonnl Co. cstahli11hlf1J.: in ilaniilton, 6H--5600. E(JUaJ l"OR Sale: Hotpoint Electl'ic train very 1e · eaver 1net ••••••• ,, • , rur, sps , oven, · !'fin1u1t·ln~ p1•ivttle \'0t'ri tion11l LABO KA TORIES Oppor. Employer. Dryer. Large tub. C.op· ltlATURE WORKING Player pianos ..•• lrom $999 COLLIE Lnssie pups, heater. $4200/0ffey. 842-2984 V.fl , .j speed, roll bar, .tot>. :..:hools throughout the U.S. pertone finish. $50. 842--560>1 COUPLE • al Grands in stock, New. Gorgeous healthy red '65 ECONOW.NE Caniper. Liu'Ome \\.'heels & wide~· •Needs 3 repre!l"rllntlveli to l.\00 Hyland Avcun~~ TYPIST. lnvoicing., Sales & Alt. S. VERY RESPONSIBLE! Used and rebuilt. Plice<I sables. i7S up. ( 714) Reblt 240 6 cyl new clutch, locking hubs. s{l('('ltd pault visit \'arious citil"s & in· Cost.a M~-i;a. l'.aliL ll:!ti2G Markeling Proposals, Let-="='"""~-~~.,.,.--,-\Viii take extremely good from$395. Yamaha-Knabe 8~1. brakes. MUST .SELL! $375. & low milcs. Beautiful! lervie\v qu!llil_ied sttcccssful lC1's. 0th e I' Secretarial SEAR'S Portuble Dishwash· care of home! Please caU -1\fa.'°n -Hru.nlin -\Vui·-SCHNAUZERS, rare black, :ms3 Stale St. CM M&-3l97 (()43JITNl. ., ... ,.,,,.~. nien as ""'lf'n tiaJ .An Eqtutl Opportun ity Tasks. Univen;ily Olli('c er;· gtl()(i condition S.W. evl'!>:. and weekends 548-'1881. Jitztt -Story & Clark -1 ·" . . 10 I $3795 vu • 0~ t;m"io""f rnt1Jt",Jen1a1c L" 1 1 l'"" N 1 -·i~• 1,~ l "-wru· _ •-.,,· .. -y _ Cablo s uu service, g r oom 1 n g CA1t1PER She.II $100. or best n y , "t' h 0 0 I adni!hl~lr1itors. -... ~',.;.'-'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,..~I o:.CJU pmcn . .,,,, ewpor ooo-"""' \ UJ" 1nax. n<> .,,., ~·· t 8718182 """''"""' ,. be "! H!vd CM 616-891il Mr c Nelson _ Ki11Caid _ Cable enns. · ; ""'vo.tVV a,. offer. Days 64&-2243, eves 'Repre.sentalives n111st Sbl'ttt."l'i\J{Y / HKpg·Ac<·L~ " · • ' • · DOUBLE Elec. Oven. op· NO UE 5. 548--7062 ~ ..... AtJIAMflA. • matUI't". netil in apf.l('aran!'r, ltl'C. & l'ayable, pa,yi'Oll. Lynn ~r. ~liding cover, timing • • • • • • • -Baldwin -Ol'ickering -AKC D lm . ~ .,,.~_.r' ~~e0,_:1°,, t':,~1~1, &I f'';~j 2 Kiri ofc. $450 per mo. I•---------selector. s2oo l7l 4J ~1. I BUY!! eSohOm.;!0· n• or sho!. ;!;:::i ;ps_. 'Aff:~ Cycle1, Bikes FORD businessml"n. Young growth ......,... ..., r · --• d • a e m.......: urru ure • 100 to choose b'Ol'.ll .,m w ys • ..., -J. ooters • vu.115 5111vtHG SAM c~IM..,,.. ""' ..... " ~'"ll'". URGENTLY \\'ESTINGHOUSE h'Ost Jree Good I 1 ~-1 1 ·1 & ·• 6" kd ~7 270 Sc 9lS 'Co' mu"h ~,, tor •d· S''CRE-AR" B""""· plt•'n•" re rig, turquoise, g......, con ' appl>'ance· oe ••II for you" SILKY T · 2 V.nc'm''nt S~ y,•eek draw ~ p1'0f~i>Sio~W ;,'(.'Hrs llcx~&l __ rK~™-----~~= ~ ..._ .. New. Used and Ti·ade·lns No reaso:Sbi:1!Her ~fua;:~: * BICYCLES·* ',."."c~N!lll CAliilNQ UA.1117' ·~ NEEDED _ ,, oR . '"" MASTERS AUCTION 0 ,,, • .,, ................. m ~ .n. 1iaai~t liberal 1:ommisslon JI.ill'. l2131 59&-4.Ja3. K'ELV!1~AT refng ...,.. 20751,.J Newport, Cl\1 &16-8686 Hammond w/rhythm •. $695 Call S.12-9422 or 644-6178 New ltalian 10 sp ..... ~59.95 1 --~c:--..--.,,...-- to slart. For appt. call C714l S ECURITY-GUARDS Packard Bell console stereo 83~0'.l74 a11., 6 or Sund~ Kimball Swinger ....... $795 AKC MaJe Keesh>und, 2 S~t?U.r Eq Coloi .•.•• $89.95 BAJA SAAB 956-1360 is y~an> & up 25 THAI.NEE unit $75. 642-7458· Behind Tony s Bldg. Mat!. \\'urlitzer 3 keyboard , • $1195 years gd w/children Nishiln 10 sp ..•. from $99.95 ~ ~l'...~ Many lVlllpw1y benefits. 1-,REEZER 30 cu ft, Sears, TREADLE se.w.iog_rnachlne. J..o.wrey_Holiday_~····~··~SA951-'--'o-644-166Fii Used·blkes-•••••• -1rom $15.00 ·10 fac team specs. colif. --SAl.E>----~·Pt-nons-'frJay apply-betwet<n -----t ·Hhl'IO!! brand·-new;-$325. $35., lirmps-$4. & up, kitchen Conn Caprice .......... SJ9;> YORKSHIRE Terrier stud {V~r~'f>aneudS/EDoiled81·c·y··c~ ple'll>:ly'eqmpped 1000 , race"~! ORDER CLERK !I & :i, 3'.tti So. t.crnon, Nu,. ASSEMBLERS Call 6-12-1805 aft 5:30. table & chairs $20., bar Thomas A·l Spinet ••••. $179 service .. 'nny 3 lb male. Bea h 8 . 1 """E Balboa fOI' Mexlcan •. ..-a Must be able to co1n1nunicate heun. l-'crsons hu\.-d to wo1'K Rent Weshers/Dryers stools $7. ea. :P.fisc. USED' Hammond-Baldwin-Conn Call 968-.iJ'33 c icyc es,""" · British Motor Ser\l'ice, lS5S 11.icustom('rS tiy fl'lephone. 111 L.aguna Niguel. VOLT $2. ,Vk. Full ma.int. DSABLES 2560 Newport \\i'urlitzer-L<l\\'l'Cy-l(ilnball Blvd., Balboo. 675-7282 Laguna Quzyon Rd. Laguna Q\10le prit'ftl t: delivery J:.quaJ OJlpo1·101111y cn1ptoyc1· * 639-12l)2 1' Hlvd. Costa Mesa. ll::J-0 lo Yan11tha-Gulbransen GER:l\olAN :,iieJ!iei•d, male: 2 * BICYCLES * Beach or call 71~10. -'-T I o-•--• -· --Instant Personnel 5 Tues thru Sat. FULLERTON MUSIC, .6~-~~~d. AKC reg., S50. n-.,·,gh R--..... 1·~.95 0 , "~5m att 6 or v•lmd:s ...... ~, YP,I" sa cs ',,.._ .. ., St;ttVICE suuion Assistant GAS DRYER·, $50 'U"'"" '""" ...... vlll'> ,,;, ........ tiuott'S. G<-OM"lli offh:'' cxper. ~lgi". start $lj().-i-.-iSe ttJ 'J'cmporru·y !>t'J'\ll(:l' fi75.l4."ii JOHNSON Commercial 1 & 122 N. Harbor, Fullerton · \Vhilc Suppllei; Last 49?·11l!IS. ~pful . ~.tw+ per \1'k. )"-'cn1i, :lii~S Can1p1is Ur., Suite 1()) 1,z l·l.P. Conlpressol', S 871-1805 ENGLISH Bull dog, AKC. Other models from $64.95. lc0~U~N~E=B~u-g-gy--w~t~ro~U,--°"ron CUii 549-'.UMl t/tinic. day shifl, unllorrrts, N,•11·port 8c11ch 5'W-471H S.\lALL fl:"lrigeTa1or not use<I C.F.~f .. Quincy :13 Gal tank, hrs: Open Nights 'til 9 shots. Free to good honic. ~eu~t In all sizes & colors. cage~ 1964 1300 v.w eng. Equal Oppor. E1nployt"r lit& & vac. !\.-Just k110w luo..: Equal Uppor. £111 ploycr hy present O\Vner. $100 or laetOJ'Y v.·arr. Sears 10" Sat. 'lil 5:30, Sun. 12·5 847-1129. Ch I' 1 s l mas lay -a -\\lays Ready to run. $399. 646-5696 buy & dally report. 32342 1:M'st otter. 546·0479. ' table Sll\V, W/l'XIC11i>ion, be-1-,0R Sale Airedale Terrier CYCLE WORKS LTD SALESMEN 962 year old Industrial Sales mpany. Advancement op- 'portunlties, protected ter- ritory. ellJ'Jl up to $1800. Salary + co1nm. No ex· -= needed. Will train. Coast tlwy, So. l..agW1a. fore noon. 642-5677. Free Organ Lessons reg. call aft 6 Pl\1 1B82 Newport Blvd, Costa Trucks 4:J'J-4141. WAITERS Building Materials 806 AUNK . Am i't:tuming to * 556-0875 * Mesa. 548-5783 SERVICE station a ttendant. with exper1enCe tor rn?W Con-Hawaii. won't need my long Fish 855 BMW-R 75/5, Thee. Grand *SPECIAL* JuU tinie, clean cut, day tlnenta! J{£'Staur.un, Euro-e Surplus. Building beaut. stole. Only 3 yrs olli As Long As You Like! ----------1 Tciuring, absoJutely ne"'· & evening shilu. Lorin'b pean trained young men ~fATERIAL. 1000's cil NEW & lowly. How about $150; Non·players & players \vel- AQUARIUM 28 gallons "'Ith cood., 1600 mi. Sll!S5 days, ;u·co, San Diego Frwy & pre1. Apply bel11'Jl 12 &. 5, ITE~1St Doors, lumber, ply. cost $800. 832-9514. come to attend Tuesday wrought iron stand. $35. ~eves, 646-1997. *Of the Week SALESGIRL for Mens, Womens, Ski & Tennis .,ootfws & SportS\\'tar. Full .~me. part tin1e & Chri~tm~s •tlr-lp. Exp nee. Apply In ·person Getaway, Sou I h "(bai1t Village 556-8276. SALE5~1AN & l\tanager , snale & fe1n. $82.l & up monthly guaran . ii quolified'. No exper. f!f'CCSS. ·t_l r. Lee \2t3i 710-1154:?. SALES Girl roc fabric s\IOp. Npply in pers:m. HarborHhcd, Coi;ta Mesa Ambrosia, 50I·J0Ui St., Bal-1vood. alum abeetinf, mold· SEARS dishwasher needs night at 7:30 PM. We want Very nice. 84Ui445. ·n KAWA"Avl, 500. Fast, boa Pc-o, N .B. Rear en-Ing wtn•-.. -etc t J to I ~ 2 SERVICE St.a. Attcndanla. • 'iv"'"· · motor make ciffer. 1-ten's evezyon" o earn P 8Y HorHs 856 eng built ' Flllrons $400. in 1 1-uu & 1 p/tlme. Lile trance. BUILDERS SURPLUS Schwinn 3 speed $10. Rex ~organ! All materials ---------1 parts. Charnberi. SJ&--3406, '72 CHEV VAN mech. exper. Apply l.a!,,'Wla w _.._itre1ses, Cook1 2406 So. P.fain St., S.A. baby carriage $20. 2700 ished. 'VESTWOOD Farms all new $625 Tim. Chevron, t;iW s. i..:oast ""'Y, P/Ume, 1-':t'ime Da)'s. l\ton thru Sat 10.5 Peterson No. s.qs, C.M. Tom Dieterich· in charge. facility. Engl!sh & '\i'ester n•l •• ~711;;'=~3"1:;c"~Y~AMA""~H;;A-;-~E~o~d~uro=. -Lagwia Bench. Apply in person n4: 546·1032 REFRIG. GE oo Jt'Ost 14.7 Phone 642·2851 lessons. Begi.n~ers to n<l· Dirt ready alSO. Many new SEH.VlCE Sta. Attendant 3-5 pin Tues thru Fri Cameras & tu ft. avocado, 3 yrs, $150. COAST MUSIC vanced '!8-1nmg, Aft· extras. $475. 646--0430 Islands only. 6:30 a1n-9::iu CARLS JR. Equipment 808 \Vasher & dryer Kenmore, Newport Blvd. al Harbor 5r>m-6d2-3059 or 968-9964 '69 TRlUMPH 500. Complete. $2699 C. Abbott'• Fabrics 3il0 E. Co8$l fl"''Y" ODJ Secreteriea & Typists Looking For Temporary Work? Be Choosy We Are Too fillg your skills ,V pe_rrona1· ily to Off1tt 0...C"rload. ·Choo!<t-~·011r nme, your IU't"a t ~·oor jobs. \\'e 1·11!(10111 hi llur j.\hs 10 ~our schedull" So l'hari::f'. • office •overload 3723 BI RCH ST. NEW PO RT BEACH 557-00bl SECRETARY-SR. \\"ith n11n. or 3 l rs exp\'r, 1vill 1,.. S11PJlUl1il\i:t , 1111' ~n\c-; 01anogl'r Sr pt~L n1an<iL:<'r 111 lull nrr:.iy tJ! ~·rel1u·1f1l rl11tir11. l\htsl h11~' 11h & i:!'':O-l 1r p\ng skills. ,\n .-xe1!111~ JVIJ ii\ ii ~ 011!11;'., SU! ·cc,;,«f!il 1·oinpuh~r orit•nlL'fl' co. Sf'nrl l?llt1n1t• or Hpply, Stt1nd11n1 i\1enwrll's, lnr·. ,:;uhsl(!IRt)' ol Applied l\1agnctir's Corp.t 222'1 S. Annr SI .. Santa Ano, Calif. !J270.1. Secretary to $650 f'~ Peid. Flls1 11101·111$:' "!<'<" + 'Q"k"BJ lirm llft't'!S dt>l)('1lClflil!<' l11divklua\ 11· ~~~l ~kill~ f•1r am.. Neat appear. Apply 279 E. 17Lh S1., C.ri.1. gd con<l, $50. Twin bed Costa Mesa TRAD~ New Singl!l' Zig Zag Jy chopped. $700. or best n»ntS. %190 Newport Blvct, ----;W~A"""l ;T~R~E~S~S.---OLYMPUS ITL 35mm t~l.4 y,·/hdbrd, $15. ~1'>55 ;~-:;~~~~~~~; Machine !or good Western offer . .r.1usl sell. 548-l02S Ct.t. Jcnse. Bcseler 23C II color COLOR TV ~ 1 St saddle, Call 963-6998 ·~~~---,-== £'<(>Cr. Dependa.We, Mat~ : ..... nso e ereo PIANOS -ORGANS ;;;;"";--;=="""· =::::--::: ·n HARLEY Davidson 350 SERVICE Sta. Attendanl & Neat. ~\pply in ~ri;on, enlrgr. Many access. !or bl.tin di.sh washer, antique New & Used. Great.selection. QH-TB !-f.ARE. Jumper, ex:-Sprint. Immaculate. $400. t·u11 time, eve shilt. EXPC'J'. Sut1 & S\rlou1, 59:l() \\/. Coas1 both. 54S-80M. desk, sewing machine. 963-per ndl"r, 642-508'1 or Pho-67,7703 A 1 :l590 S R 5368 Competetive prices. Open c...,.. A""" ..... .,... Neat appear. pp y, Ill\')'., N.B. UPE 8 movie camera E & S nd Tl be ......,.....,,.1, Newport Blvd, CM. -~~~W~A~l=T=R=E=ss~--1~/zoom lens & Kodak pro. s IT browu & gold couch, v~s. u ays. ie st 3,,,~.--oy=nc-:cl~d,-,,So=~i""Gc~l~d~'"'!'73 HONDA 500~.brand new! CE S · ll l F"'i 1·ector like nu. 1 150. ""nlempor•-'1Y""", L>'k" de s are always at: o'2 0 ~ ing. Sacrifi~ -make otter! SERVI taoor1 e P· "' Exp'd. Apply in Person .... u -.J .... ,., ... W II' h " · C'f reen broke. $200. Incl tack. 8'l2--l904 or p/linic. 990 £. Coast TJ{E VILLAGE INN 962--0742. l'll'W. $00 or trade fur a IC s MUSIC I y 847-1418 1~~~=-,,---,--000--- HW)'. Newport }kh, 121 Marine Avl". Pen!ax Spotma!ic iree;;er. 531-2304 eves. South Coast Plaza 54().2830 ~~~~~~~~~~i 1972 Honda 500 SERVICE Sta. Attendant. Balboa Jslru1d. y:ith l\facro Lens HOFFMAN easy vis.ion for ~~~~"'!'~""~!" ... ;. xlnr cond., $800. Over 24, ncal. No e.-.per. WAITftESS for (vff~ shop, 496-4164 sale for parts has good pie· BABY Grand Kawai. Beaut. ·a.ttw JI• lf J SlJ-ml nee. No Sat or Sun. ai.1J West coast ,High""'RY· Furniture 810 ture tube best otter 646--0992 black ebony. Like new. Mlrh EquiprMnt 1'. '73 YAJ..1AHA 125,700 miles Ovcrti1nc + prolit sharing. N.B. or t'ail &12-S-175. eveninp l\foving, must sell. $2500. ';iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~;; Mu:o t scll-$475. sec Stan l\1on-F'ri, Sheil, YELLOW vinyl & Herculon UNLIMITED CUlllgan Soft See to 11.pprec. 97S.7579. ~ 548-5186 :l801 E. Coast Ii\.\')', CdM WANTED 8' sofa. Queen sz mattress \Vater only $2.75 per 1110. t-IAA1MOND t.13 orga n. Boats, General 900 1968 250 J\.1X Husky. X'lnt SHA!l1POO assistant, t.lw;t Boys or girls l(}..lJ years cild spring set. Both used only 3 nw Trial offer. can valued at $750 sac. $450. BOAT & tra'•lor ,,,., .......... ~~,;,J,350· Call 847-3759 or have CaliJ. cos1notologist 1 DAILY p '2 nios. Older bunk sets, 557-0098. Call behvecn 8 & 11 JlM 80c ---~" 1~01 or !LOT paprr lan1ps & misc. Spyglass I~==----~--586--0349 space. per loot. Monthly , license Apply in person 1 rou tes in South San1a Ana, Hill, Corona del Mar LIMED oak chest cif drawers rate. 342$ Oohl"ny Park Rd '69 KAWASAKI 3.iOCC \\'ei;clill Ur .. Ne"'' po I' 1 bcl\\'l'Cn l\laiu & f'arview, 644-l!l66 $2.i •leavy lock·cha.in, new PIANO WANTED 493-5883 'Low mile, Good condition Bcac ... h~. ~=====-\\'aroe1· & San Diego l"wy. $10. Round playpen $5. (7141 992--0259 \'ACH'i' IVAXING $250 After 5Pl\1 646-9251 SH."IP/RECEIVING fH2 . .J.:J:n COFFEE table, Italian mar· 536-tml L"'m C•~><xin ble top, $75. Jtandsonie -~E~ED=c'='n°"-,,--~,~.,...--,1,---PLAYER PIANOS & t'Olls, D. Restore Weathered gel coat HSONDALi'.73k -250X0L,1 M180001o F~ Pakl. Hapi(l1y b'lU""'in~ .J' --.. 1 N • 1 e wee .. uays t'Om Dupree 2940 D Gracl" Ln to hi-lu5ter 97'9-l451. pol't. e new. n Y t:Osla Mesa fl11n. So1ne fork· Dl~trict i\tanagcr , \\TOUght iron hanging amp Laguna lo Santa Ana & Costa ~lesa s.I" "'~" n1L $600. 979-7579 l I Ill al be ao. Equal Opportwii1y Cmplo""r Hand cut b1'ass Ir PI c F k .......,,.,,_, Boats Ma Int / ltl 1,.-.,..:pcr. v !lO .,~ plaeque. Tu·in b o Is t <'rs . back. Shr. l"xpenses. ran ' WEBER Cherry \V v o d , '· • '67 MONTESA SCORPION 11\h :,10n1c driving. Must be WANTED "'alt res 8 es, "-A8-27ll. 83:)--0911, 8-3. . h Pl ·"-d Service 902 "~ ""'. "Ch•-· -nd." s $<133 \I d · .,.. upr1g t ano, .uut con , ......-........ ••::r ._v t:lea.nc ut. tart · • so 1 sh \I' ashe r s, counter ,cco=-cc~-~_,-,--,--,,-ASSISTANCE League Thrift $3.)0. 64&-2055 IS y-ur botlom d'~"'· H•ll $375 Call: 842-7990 ~·1·e Jobi>. Call Ed '\'olJ. personnel, full or part time. 8 FT brown & gold couch. Sho """b 0 , s"" •ial " ·v .. .., aMJ.60;JJ, Coastal l"ersorutcl Swensen's Ice Cream Fae· Contemporary styli:.f,; Like P ..... Y ay .,..c · FISCHER Consci!e, x I tt t cleaning for 30C' per water PENTON 72 l\1 et t c o ho B d $50 •-1 CloU1es & funliture. Sat. _.,,..., 11·0, tt. &l;,__1?1<> P"'""~. K·•· Jdt. XJnt •'1::e111:y, 27~ H1u· r lv ., lory, 217 Broadway, Laguna ~E"W. or "'" or 1o-2 505 32nd St NB cond. ,$615. Call 544.....,u. cir .,......,~ .-.~ .,.,.. C.1'1. Beach. 49-1-9344 lree1.er. 531-2304 eVC'S. • " 833-8416 BOAT Owners. tired of hl cond. $500 aft 5 962-4!¥.li SHIP/REC. CLERK \VANTED p.1rl time exper LOVE seat, quilted, av«ado, PDOL table (or sale, fUll PIANO. SpinllC't, c he rry ma.int. cost? ReJinlshlng &.1 Practically new Tan<lein h' Near new $50. Four Dox· size, good condition, $J.50. 1valnut. Good co ndition. 1nonthly serviL't?. ~1320. Bike $75. To $.J.:{) hi· ~xpcr. cas 1crs & sales ladies. Ap-.. _. __ .. k l lO 646--0'14S evl"s. ~, «• WESTCLIFF ply &l·k Street. La<lil"s Ap· bury cuuirs, n ....... wor . $30Cl., 492-4291 Boats/Marin• 55 -6'1<N parcl, No. 2:-i, 1-'asltioz1 f'a, Antiques, 493-2287. * KING SIZE BED, brass Sewing Machines 821 Equip. 904 350. YAMAHA R5. ·n. 4000 '72 DODGE V2 TON PICKUP !'1'733.lLI .$3299 '73 CHEV 'h TON PICKUP & CAMPER (2967!i'l) $2999 '71 FORD ~ TON CAMPER SPECIAL 12211YlKl $3599 '72 CHEV. V2 TON PICKUP 11'.l032L) $2999 '68 VW CAMPER CXYG8'17l $1999 GROTH CHEVROLET Prrsonnei •'bi 'llt'Y ]t)j.l !!:. k:dll\l:L'!', S.,,, 1illa1 k Ill L<'1lh't'I 5 l~·l'IS.:6 Island, N.B. l\fOVING, nlUSt 8<'11, stove, headboard, ,~IOOU.!9* OPAL >>U xlnl cond •. ,...., ring $7j, 6·..,-' ' _,.,. \VAJtEHOUS!'.:i\1Ai"IJ, leading $175. sofa $40. anlique trunk ) pd b'k PORTA.BLE Sears Se1\·ini; \VANTED Evlnrude or * 642--2710 * 18211 BEACH BLVD ~ledical dislributors 0 I S."'.5, bedroom set n;:.D, l\Iisc A<tUST sell 12 10 s 1 es. nwl·hh1c & canvi. 3 Yrs. Johnson hont conlrols In gd e .'73 YAf..1AHA, 360 End.·"'" 847 , •• 7 •-•••J ---~ Sl'ATIO~ Snlt•snian, lull li111e, &-1 f'1\I, l\IOr)-t·ri, Sulary + Con1 ni i s s1on . llurllor 1"'11lr Shell, Zi12 Mnt•bor Blvd .• C.i'lt. e STENO e PROMISES! PROMISES! PROMISES I \'·11· -I I" I I' iten1s, 5?.4-3213 $50 l'a. Plus heavy dt"sk E'"c"li•••I ••• 817 21~ -nd II t d 11 1 nd -~~H , 1 l('Ja \H ney supp U:"S, ~.-" • ~~. -.N ... , • wi ra c or 5C with extras. X Ill co Ilion. HUNTINGTON BEACH nl"C"ds n1an fur 1!elivcries l\IAGNAVOX Stereo eonso!e. chair. $50. 979--07'i·l Sporting Goods 830 Mercury control. 644-6510. 548-6280 & general \ra1-chouse duties, 1-~rtgidaire nuto 1vasher, Of· 1-'or Sale SURF BOARD Bo t p 906 l '69 FORD VAN inc, opcra1i011 o! forklift, lice desk, all like new. 1843 ca11 Don K-2's 19J with Marker bin-a s, ower HONDA. SL 350• in ~ooc CONVERSION t'Xpt'r , in n1e1tical rirld 1 ~A~·~,.7he~l~m~,~A'Cp=L=l=5~A~, =CM'f--.,. 84.2-2998 alt 7 dings. Good cond. $70. SABRE.Craft •n 23 ft. con~~43 or S49-l206 6 cyl, H.D. Shocks, L Ton helpful but JlUI nee. Good DEL u X E v.· ate r bed, SMAlJ.. upright piano, jlliit O'Brian water H k is, Cabin 225 Hp O~fC J/O Oiassls, Cain~. Paneled, physical1_ cond. & ple~o,nt kingsize. Leather tran1l', tuned, $185.; Clarinet $.)(I. Competition 71), brand new, sips. 4, gall~y." ~a.' sis: Rareeo,~~n::af1117~hin Large nre$211 !~}lEUJ. IX'NIOna tty a nHJ1'1, ·"' nt heater'. ...,.,,._. Like new. 492-3821 nltl"r 6:00 PM. 11ever use<!. $50. 6'15-2144 comp Low Mui'$ Like ne " ., _,. working con<l . fringe txn. ~~.,., . · · · w. Call 9'm-3733 OUSTAPSON ,, --•a..., Appl E 'k 67:?-&153 * FIRl:.'\VOOD * TV, Radio, HIFi, N pt. shp. $6,COO, 93S N ""' • .,. Y n a -'· 836 213: 623-3189 9 to 5 PM Mobile Homes Llncoln·M•-".u-· . Uistrlbuton1 Inc 1&19 \V. * SOFA & LOVESEAT * \l/TLL DELIVER & stno.:n. Stereo 6800 '" •v Ccillins ,\\'e. Orange or call nevC'r used, $155. 646-9234 ------·----1973 Skipjack 24 fly b~idge l\tOBILE Jlonie, 1968 1-lornet· 1 1_1 111~:~~na~er 9!17-2850 for nppt. 968·7910 C,B. ANTENNA, STAR· ZENITH, RCA & Sylvania. cruiser. T\v!n 170 l'ngines. le 12• x: 4~·. PartJally furn. 842.884.j * {2l 3) S92·5M4 ,.-~11ll i1~'y. l<ni.:1111":rln1t ! Some compenies mak1 1erou11ology ho•lr•ful. Grl.'31 I . k •'fl, \}{'ll('fil ~. Xln 'r u•h':uw» promises. we ma e • n11•11t r-:itf'111iaL 1'1~ 1-.C',.. offer s. \\,.. I k' r I I l FOOT Sofa. Gold, avocado, DUSTER, likl' 1lC'W $25. TV & stereos. priced legs Deluxe tandem traill'r. i\1ost I I I TV Like ''II I th "-arc 00 ing: or l'rnp ~1Y1.>t: than tne discounters. With fu lly equipped boat in area. "' co or conso e · · omr o <' Viking" people S<.·ekins pnrr l11nc & bronze plaid. Like new! • • * 642-9775 * :I yr. picture tubes. 1 yr l\11nl <.-ondition. $12,500 firn1. new cond. Fl nan c I n g, 7 2 I NTE RNATIONAL 1ncon1f', hulld your 01vn $95. C311: M4-45!l8 ~lf'igh 1soo·~ Antique pru1s & service. /I 11 8:.IM-1 !39 available. 842-7701. Travl"l-Atl. Except. cond, ll11slncss "'/l\O con1p!"li1\1111. UNI,.,UE round <.'Of!N! lahle ONE llORSE OPEN n'·ail•ble .......,1 .. ls in stock \ I H Pl< p/b · • pd II Johs. Jeson Best Ag ency 17~ Brnokhur1't, I-', \'ly. $uite 21~ 96.1·6ii:i SECRETARY VARIAN DATA MACHINES 1he hig 1·on-tpan:y !n sn111ll toniput~·r.~ has :111 ht\· n1Pd1ntc op<:nu1i; for 11n in· dl\•idual 11·1!h "'-"'«ell•·nt skd[ll \\'r 11 re Tookfng for a !op \1y pin1: 60 \1p111 shortlwnd notch !ll'Cl"et11;ry 1(1 l('nrn !hi• !i(I "'pnil ;:111<l ;i quick nd h\1. It ytltJ ! a k 1' l!'.'11nier. '1'011 111u~\ 11·a111 a ~1101rth11nd. l)'Jlf' r:i.~t & UC· I \'111'iCIY or rl11t1es :ind ]_11• · 1·uratch· & v.'()11hl like n nhl t> '1•i 11ci1·k ll'itli littl(' 111allPn,· "· ""'"·'' Cla11111 fi('d · 11 ,, .. , •. ''"" Ad 110. 961 rfri DnUY f'i!o!, I ~U]'K'l'\.'t.~iou. yu "'° 1 '" I ori;n111lt'd n11d r11C'CI lhc~ P.O. Rox 15fi0, Costa 1\lesa, ciuali(ii;nlinu.~. y(JU n1ny lll': l .,r~'.,'~".,",,.· ,..,..,~~!!!!!!!!!!I 1hc one 111• u1·t• h.:11ik111i; fo1'. SECRETARY I \Ve ork·r. F'<-" r 11111. ei•·fli 1 ........ n• .. ·11~ * EXCELLENT .~hnr11 ('O('i'li•t:iry \\ hn .... l':I· BENEFITS rcr·r ro1·1.-n11''1 & 11a1i1:< F• l'l!<o'Olll>' inv~·h <"I. !t:ipi.11 * MODERN 1111111'.'I, ;\l!O• F 1·1· .Jul~. Srnn fACIUTIES $.1.'11, f"11·n1 l1~·H t.·U 111 r>r ..,,, ... C•d l ""'"" '"'""· * COMPETITIVE W-O:'ii\ i ·.,a,c;!11l Prr'Qllnll• J Al."'ll~'), 21!:1() 1111.rbnr Hl\'11., I PAY (',\J Cull today tor intc1'\1c\v ""( Ofler s:ll-337-1 ''""" 2 2 ~ ' INBOARD/Outboard '' 0 or omes · · · air, " 8 • a lil'1J 9:16-i720 $20., cnmplct<' Sin1nwns dbl .~ on displuy. '73 models Vanson TR. 70 hrs. New Sale/Rent 940 th~ goodies, but no fancy ='=""='l50""-='~7~3-=1~583"o=-,,.-, tAi,eell1neous priced lo clear. Cash 90 101,, ne\\I floori ng, cl('p!h triin pk.gs to cost extn \\'8W~:n. Olt.~AMENTAL BREAl~F'RONT $19.). Pair Wanted 820 plan or terms to 3ti 1nos. findt>r & h('ild, lli gal tank. e SALt:S e money. Priv party will 11ac. lRUN l::XP . l..J\GUNA l'nd !ti.hies $20 etich. Both 1----=-------ABC C.olor TV, 0021 Atlanta, lots mol't'. r-.1ust sell, Pri e SERVICE e for S3<nl. 54<r8Gl·I. 494-6376 n1nhognny. 640-1951 ORIENT AL RUGS or lfl0.J6 Brookhursl, l-IUn• pty. Firm $.1495. 919-0922. 19fi(l JNTI,"'RN ATIONAL 1 T. \Vl \O d~~TSA 'W~~ORK! Slip for 24' or 2)' fibcrgla.<,:s PRlVATF. PAHTY NEEDS ~n~,Beach, 968-3329 or 20' CHRIS Craft Mahogany • RENTALS • "'/tluul whla & Sl'rvioe bod. !I.ail hoo.!. Nf'v.•port Harbor S>-'VERAL USED RUG<. Ski Boat. 385HP, verv clran, New eng $..• tires. :\1nt. CHOOSE i·our hour'!1, 1-•k !"" s~ ·~ · Gurr \R Amp 1,-I•' er •, ' shn"" $1100 Cali 979-~~ "v "" mo. ,,,.,,;r.,... 6445326 * • * 67~8773 ' "' ma ny xlms, cust. tandem .. .,, · · t:JQ.N for yourselJ, be your oivn 6 'BJ..:Atrr11'1JL Dining H.00111 CHILDREN'S play h 0 u. c Arnpc-g, l.:.ll ivaus. R,\!S 412• rrler Ph 832-9514 1970 EL CAMTNO. P/S, hoss. l\fen or wo1ncn. Can " Alice lansin"s. Special af· ,..._IB I I I I d ,_ II hll h d' -· Cha•'c• L"· .. n..,., ... ,,,.... I h • 19' CE'~'RY lnbO·"cd, r • ar. \IJIV -....., Vn" uc s g y an 1cap"""", '" "'" 0 ' """' "· wanted, JJ cuse p one. fecl.<1 w/oover & dolly, xlnl ,, • u .,. 30 "' ·1 ' ·-Ne a t.C!enn Appearance. S25 otu:h. 675-12&> 5"4-lm4 cond !ln-9091, llam-l()prn l\1at'!Ogany utility boat, """' 11~ e!, OC'W tlt't!S, Xlrt VI _,,·,~1 A -to -o O ,.. II lb! h• t 11• ·k ' ci"an, xlnt !!arbor boar, con<I. S.<.l!Y.5. 67:".-1658. ~. ,._ '' · ge ~ 4 • 1 "' ( ll · c "s "i< Musical lnatruments 122 AKAJ tape deck, uutci, rev., ~·~ 00 DODG • :-iupplen1c11t yv11r incoml'. l'Oll1b, br sel . TV. antiq. JO" reels. RIC. $800 'in· J't\T'V""'1 • --; •4, 1h Ton. Clean. !)1·i ve a t·ah G hrs or more a lan1p & thl. 615--0922 RENT FOR ONLY $3 vestt!(f, Sell SJ:O. S4&-80t l 17 Ft. CHARACTER 73 LANDAU. Brand new 25 V-:t1. Auton!.1tlr, New tires. d11y. Apply in peraon, 11-1 AT c 111 N (; b r 0 1v n OR BUY WTTll NO'n·IJ NG TUG BOAT $900 ti.I o to rhome. Heoullfully $1.000. ~ f lrtn, Pho n ~ YcU.'J1\I Cab C'o., 186 E. 16th nRugahyrll' 7• rourh & Chhlr, IX)\VN. Drum, PA'.~. ~likes, C II 497 1232 ' equipped. Close out lfale.1~"'~·2-829~~·~·~-~~~- St • Col!11l ~le8a. likfl t\CI\', $100. 5<16-3007 Guilnrl'i, Ami)!!, Roc•Ol"gans 1 • 11 • • Rcducl"d over $4000. l\1u11t 1967 Chev. VJ Ton \\'0 !\IAN :1,(l or O\'e r lor Joh VIN ING tl~bll' & 6 chair.~. I:. Pia.nos, all brands. Frte to You ~ 17' l,INIF .. twin Ev\n 33'11, ~~11. Sec tit JohnliOn & Son $100:i. Call 673-.8120 ext 52 pl:11·1•nil•n1~. Nt'\"IJOl'I Oft·. ,12 .. round 10 6. oval with l'l'o Rltf' linilt, 110 parrot nee<l· . xlnt. $1295. or trade Jor I.111<.'0ln Mrr1.-i1ry. 2 6 :I 61;,~~.'--,,.o-""'-~Fl)cdco_:=:..o::"-"~-= sA -II' 11r :Jp,.] IJ\ \\'tiulrf ~ 0 1 4 t'IL ()PEN NJC;!ITS i'ILL 9, ~-------car Mn1e value. 963-ot36.'l Harbor Blvd., Costa hlc1a. ~ ·• ton truck. ~· tn1in h1"xpct. Jtl nun. w11i..:"· 1<'11f, $50, 493-. I a ter . ~AT.1'lL 5::W, SUN.12·5. 3 Lines, 2 T.lm es, $2.00 30' J.fUN'fER, xlnt cond. !>ID-56:!0. M;\k~ oUr5 ,; ~~lllrclf. C'nll 111r-10;1 h('l\1•111',\ ... IP. Ga rage Sal• 812 Now TWO Convenlint !•••••••••-Newport Slip. $4 200 . •Dnlc'.oc:\1otorl-lun1e R.-ntnlti. . , ··· . \\'Ol:l\ING l\fon1 111•1•(!.'I lu•lp, L t' S y SF.AUT-pu>\• wl>llc G-nn 64&-6115!1 or ; .. 'i&-();i()(J '73 11-26' 1\1.lf. & Minl11 71 r;A !'SUN, new tires ~HUI' C'llilrl ok, ."116-6-187 nfl 5' luu·l\·l~n~:~~ ~~l~~CEcl'le~I . oca 1on1 to t rVe OU Shcpil· VU Jl, 12 ~~k'11 . ~· PACKE'T St,Yle Bli.)'F'l'Ci•ndl(!JI Dti19, ~ Pillnl. ~1\t/~'M. l 11d d e ~·~"~'"~"'~"~"~"~·,~· ~~~~!!!: 42" l\.1arblt'.' IOll lhl, y,•f1ron ,F~L.LE,,~T.~N M, uvsn1,c, Ptu'C'bn:d, no ])flllCni, 19'Jl~~ Launch. $2500. Rl::CREATIONAL Vl-~HICLF. vrnck, .Sl&OO. 644-2199 1$1.il .ue "· ountll n "'cy Meye' Pl, CM. &l"l'~ RE~, A' BUREAU •n• 963 I' 11ntlQuc hH!!I.'. f.1i~f' 1\laplc t lllk N "' 01 >' -......., ,, ' .... " . .,.u1 c~ J'\\'Y· * 11A: 842-9922 * SECRETARIES & KEYPUNCH OPRS f'l('i,i<e :ipply in Jlf'l'<-011, t'11nh1 rl: 11 11~1 /urn, lx.'<lrni ~r1 , ,\11.~ o!hi't" & EuC"lld, NE:EDS love, dark grey & BOAT 12' Flbergla!l.'I, Nylox, '67 DOOCF' VAn lllU&f !U'll or ~ · ru1'!1, hon~illl:'. l u n1 P ~. e 557'"'4836 e vrllow kitten 1 wks fem Seagull motor, trail(l.r, $395, FREE \VEEKEND Inst! 0c1'1 ott'cr• 6 o s· . i<p<>rt1rni; item~. gd rlothes. 122 N. Harbor Fullt'rton \VIII pay 1~ 'thf.: neUterins{ 64()..1786 ReereaUona) Vchk:le Rental ,M;"l~•OJl~•ny~·~Wl"'cs~t~m~l·n~•~le~r~,~' I.rvinc 510·..\-l.!rO lil\02 ."ky Park :-tF:VJ.:H !\ ~-E t: AT TF.'.\JPO T"tll lYI T('n1P"1·1ny 111·!11 VDM ' liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii .'l!tt 9 & 16, o1h"r gli 1 1rm~. • 171 1·805 • rtt 546-5392 Bo I •·11 909 Burenu. <ii~) 842-9922. 1••-10.5 on 26th, 2itJ1, 28th, 617 '" a S, ~ .59 INTERNAT'"L 20 fl 1'14!W n1.1 F(JRD Su(Wlr Van. V-S I' AntiqUtl IOO 17th St . HR. 5 SI I Banjo GERMAN Shepherd pup, 4~ • 8UIO lrllJlll 1o mtlci 10; :e $$ mot1 old. Good w/Childrcn. 12' Cnta.mann. Ftisl. $600 nr brks, new vnlv~ Job, ntW 962-1634 41.fl ~nm " r ;(1~~~k ~~~:i~ ~~~~~ ... i:e: I-~~8rr}~~~{ly, s~~;.~.le hn'i~; Call 645--0240. Cl.vde ~o Good home. M5-m1s afl ~r~~.Call BUI G'15-3128 after ;~;i~~:~:~·,:~ 945 ·~~!An;.~ N•i"'·.· ,'!"', 1~!? Kr l1rn. tnt1~1r tnx 494-1652 iltmN, hoal lrlr. V\\i' Bug. An•iquc Victcirlan uprl"hl pi· SS •"""' ..,, .,,., ter . ......, Odds & t'nr!'I, fi1:µi7.1~ n!'fti. fl.lakt' cifrer. 3 '"EAR Old white mate Af..'C ALBATRO 22' • .,.. -ARCo Al.-,~ 1 1 6,.,;;•m..,,,,_1"r,s"3'------I S.c·'ys. G iErideys V•rl•n Data M•ch,'nos A.~1·rQt 't: ~nlrtll IC'ti box.1 ~"-"""--.,'-"'""-"'-'--= Slln\O)'fd Ill goocl home E I Sh 1-1100 ks.ms 1• .... • .... u I un ax C! •1; Bookk epors ,'lSxl.i 11''" 1011 Joadl n~. glass 416 Pro!IPf'1-·f fin allf'y) NB. 499.7339 · ~x • • &pe • 1 tent tralk>r, t~!nllt."t\Hy 1-"0R 1111\0 '00 Chevy Va I 'ti!J '.'ll!'h•·l~in Drl\•' iihrh"N( Oia.>abli' fi-t').4.'171. &12-164R . .Shot iun lonrlrr, Office Furniture/ !)t()-J&IS. SANTA'NA 21, f1tlt.•f r.hntnp controll('d lw>Alf'l', r~nrtn· xlnl t'Ond, In & out, cal FREE F R £ FREE Ir1111•', Cal l! '1'2li6I "MllkC' l«iom !"Qr Dti.dd)''" l1crl, fl•11 hr11, t11y11, hl»n•h•r, Equip . 824 l YEAR old mo.Ir. nrulC'n~ o .n .,. trh" rllx lntt'l'lor. ix>lti , wnnlrulx-, 2 hul&llll 900-19.18 u.ft 5 Mot 1.11. Rrhuli ro;; ,\i:1•no')' 'I 'il•I! l!.i3--:!.\lltl ••• t'let1n1 oot the! 541u1i."-e rhr"fl , lnt11 m(t)'''" S111 10-4 1 --~~------~~~':'ntlc. older couple. many t'irlnis $.'J200; s.n~um tankM. ~ bailC'I')' for i•lfl<'I 1-'111 Pmlil I• i!.llttlr'IM ~ II'' \\·'•t•>·ly "'l111·c , . , . turn th.i Junk Into c•11h A1VT'IQUES, hnl....-ilt•tn,, 'tc. IBM s 1-;UX"rllIC II I-':.:;;..;;;;"'-:---,,=..--l.Etll\1AN 12, 4 Alllls, trlr, ll)'lllem, u!ICd onll).i;wknrl~. )'OU M'll throu'C; 1"JUll . ~ ' r ;jJl f'lpl~• ••Pr•ll'llUll ) .. ·~ T F Kitti I nd p r ( d • 10 '' JI ·~11 ~1 S1uie ll!i, NH ll.'13--!11!l0 rmpl1iyrr• nt/f with a Ouily.P ilot Clauitied L~l & 13:>71 r: 11 fi i r I I, 1~" C11rriaJre. I.Ike new! wo ree es new cover, ~ nt C() • er ec con • · A ng v11. 'I I· t Oass ,Estubll.'>hcd l!!Ga """"'""'""'""""""'""'""'' -•'-'d=. -'C"al'-1 =114'-'""618..--=----. -'I"'=".:~.;.· .;.'':.:''.:&:_S..::::ot.:.fl.O..:·:.J· \...__ a,,<::2"'106G;::::::_od:o"""'--'644-0;;,;;::;1;:;09'-"E.-..=•, -'--.:Cai=l=f.M.'--"&llltl""'--645-21!J811 4 Pt.t · All11. 642-MTS I \ .. \ I D 0 TO Call ... ... H II! ... Col Mo s . ·-- 1.;.V.;.°"-''------''"'63 4utos W•nt.cl '69 DODGE SPORT VAN Wl: ISUY IMPORTED AUTOS BEST PRICES PAID! 0.•n L•wl1 Imports CAP RI 910 Autos, lm~rted 970 I Autot, Imported 9Jg I Auto•, Imported DATSU N MASERA,11 MERCEDES BENZ ~A-;:;U.:;I•;;•::,• ,.;l;:m;ipo::;.•;;lod::::.._..;.:..::O Autos, 1 mpor1ed ~-T~O~Y~O~T~A=---i-~_::.BU~l~C~K~~l~-"D~O~D_G~E~~~t1 ! -------- v-&. a\li;ml.dc trammlalSon, p:M'U ""1.1.nr. " l'Wll ...... (XXAOO<). '71 CAPRI 196& llartxr, c.M. 646-930:. 4 speed, radio, hi.'vtt'I', virnl 1973 DATSUNS 3':lPE~i:.xi~~'."' ... l!l 50 USED ALL MODELS -""'· lo ml, xln<"""" MERCEDES '69 Landc:rulser REMOVABLE H.T . SACRll-'ICE Liiie ·~ Buick J9(1.q OOOCE PolAnl, Jll : R l\•ler1-J..01uled, A~t/fo'~! PQV.'t'r, fac air. x!nl CO::S- 11Tl'rt'O-'i 1pkr tape. Auto $'71'.lO, Jl\'t ply 321..J'7(• ! only S4000, will trade far IN STOCK late model a u to m ot I c ON DISPLAY Only ·Sl695 BfPORTS WM"TED top It mg whc.'C!llr. UJ.14 <>ninee Cowity'1 BMZJ. TOP s BUYER $1995 BARWI CK IMPORTS loclu1. Tnal\li1torized is· ~ n111on, m.ag whff.I•. $129'5. 01967::;:;.o;.oo:;coo"""==E~D'"ort.-,-..,V,._,,.,-.,.=.._ ! • ' \\'h&.-1. l>liv.l • Radio aulomoh!le. Don l.Jshtnrr Sharp New Car eves 67>-10'7 dt.)'I ~1 Trade-ills t•c•ae&~ 6'4-1253 )(\~ rond. t!JOO. ' "62 UUICJ( t:lcl·tra. Hrbulll !)tg.-0726 • l"(f.'ater e 2 &>is nt TLN'S BlU. MAXEY 'I'QYOTA 33375 ean,ino C.ptatnno 188Sl Bud> BJv :. l~~ I San Juno C.platnm ...... !!!'! .... MINT'S US NOlnt a CA19t0 ltW . SAM a.a.NT! 492°1117 :·u:~lmpon:· "1~ pciley ;& "·n~o~~°'TSU'°.="-N°='.;!e;::-:,~==up",'-,-x1n1 cond, Cl\U eves ALFA ROMEO * .,,__ * '61•QIBVY van, iood cond, ---------~4021ifarguerlfe PnrkWay FIAT wry """'""''"''-11400. or * ALFA ROMEO 83l-20~ M"'~ Vl•Jo 4---------trade· for DaUun Sta \l/gn. Betit deal always! Berlinas USE AVERY P\VY. EXIT 60-3985 eves or 645-4528 fro1n S3795 (Ser. •0288J. ·n 'DODGE, V-8, cust.onl '72's lt '73'11. Complete se.-'72 CAPRI, V6, 4 speed, fully -,,_ .... ..__ fu"· •·rt I · B I equipt, 10,000 m.i. ..,... ... ,,.,....,., ""' .u ., ecuon now. uy or ease * 540--0842 * maaa, slen'!O, x t ra s I lrom ~ ----~~--- --J im P•rkl.-'• CORTINA '12 Flat, 850 Spydcr. xlnt cond. Xtra pipes, 13,000 nti, $1900. 6001 SelLShore Dr, NB JAGUAR '12 DODGE SPortsmnn Van '55 JAGUAR X.K 140 f\IC SIB eu. In. Radk> & ~aler CORTINA GT '68 ti!BroOn, Rdster. Wire "'his, 475 mi. 8-tn.ck tape, carpeted. Rear tape deck, radials. gd cond, on nu eng. tm.rui & brakes. teat % ton '2.91Xl. 89J.-0820. 536-2319 Xlnt cond. 644-4141. Aut" Wontod 968 ..,_ "' 640-6406 CRICKET ·n XJ 6, 28.ooo mi. Good AUmN AMERICA ---------~~~~"'-"'-'_'"_.,_...,_-_"_"'-TOP DOLLAR PAID '72 CRICKET 1967 JAGUAR XKE, xlot '69 Austin America $375 • &tU622 -I door, automatic tral\$J'lliS-cond. $1750, private pnrty, sion, radio, heater &. lo1v 827-844{) or 892-5822 miles, (940FNFJ. -.=.64~XKE=.~.'-"c=00~,~-=Ll-.k-,-~-., IMMEDIATELY BMW $1395 radials, hardtop, $ 14 0 0. 67:h'809 FOR ALL CREVIER BMW 1=:: I FOREIGN s.1 .. • s.rv1"' • c..,ing WECA~~SIN I""' us'Ei)AiMw":S"n . ~ JENSEN DESPERATE NEED '73 BAVARIA (DEMO} 2840'.! Margul·rilc Pa1·kway 1--------- '71 JAG XJ6, Xl.NT CONO. * 842-3250 * 0F GOOD, CLEAN '71 BAVARIA !\fission Vi<'jo YOUR NEWLY FOREIGN CARS '69 1600 •<1-2010 e "-''"'' APPOINTED TOP DOLL.AR-PAID '67 2000CS-COUPE USE AVERY P\VY . EXIT JENSEN FDR DR NDTI '69 7002 DATSUN Call or come In to iiee us:. '68 2002 HEALEY DRANG""E~c=ou=NT=v~·s WE'RE HERE NEWPORT IMPORTS OLDEST See us at -9 ~tacARTJfUR & JAMBOREE , _ -B-IG-''"ii:~ ON !1DC' W. Coast Hwy., N.B. Pickups -6.ft..MO! ExceUCnl'SelectiOn of pre. 6lO's TOP CASH price l'f'-<'V:alualion models. tor c~an late model cars ~~':~c~tc:EASJt-;G ~IL"'llJ~~r and trucks! OVERSF:A.S DELIVEP.Y lVl,;,, ,,.\It( How!'rd Chevrolet ROY CARVER, Inc:. DATSUN MacAfthur and Jamboree 234 E. 17th SL 888 Dove Newport Beach Ne1>i'j)Ort Bch 833-0555 Costa Mesa 546-4444 833-1300 Open Sunday ~WE=P=A~Y~TO""'P°"oo'=ILA~"'R,--""B"o"b"M ... c"L"a"ran .... "B ... M"w ... ' 1 ·12 DATSUN 4 door. sedan, FOR TOP USED CAftS 4· speed $1500, good shape, U your car ls extra clean, c-~1 eo. Inc, Le 496--8769 see us first. -..es • ~rv~cc • asfn&: "Weed it & Reap" BAUER BUICK 850 North Beach Rlvd., From treasures to trash 2935 Harbor Wvd. La llabra Turn them into cash Colta Mesa 979·2500 l7l4) 879-5624 CAU. Dally Pilot Motor HDml'1 S•l•/Rent • I 940 Motor Homes S1l1/R.•nt 940 Motor Hornet Sale/Rent 940 DEALER IN NEWPORT BEACH Featuring the full line of -JENSENrl~tEY JENSEN-- INTERCEPTOR Large Selection of Colors Imm ediate Delive ry FULL SERVICE DEPARTMENT NEWPORT , IMPORTS 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. 642-9405 Motor Homes Sa le/Rent 940 MAZDA '73 MAZDA RX-3 WAGON Auto 'l'rlult, Air COOll. Vlnyl Top, 41PRe Ra,11:, Sterro, Mag \\l'htd111, Or~. 12,14H mil1..-s, (28&111'WJ. $3799 BILL MAXEY roYOTA lSSSI BEAOI BLVD., S.7~ I rUNTINGTON BE/\01 * Mazda '73 Rotory * $46 MONTH 36 Pi>IONTHS OPEN LEASE \Vill accept trade-I& CALL MR. FRY 842.-6666 Hunt. Beach MAZDA 17331 Beach Bl. 842-6616 MERCEDES BENZ JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS MERCEDES BENZ AU'JlfORIZED SALES & SERVICE Jim Slemons Imports {\Ve'rl" top buyer for any wed ].tercedes Bcm.J -:JJllLQuail Ne-.vport Beach 83~9300 E!\"TE'R. l'"R.OM MaeARTIIUR NOW OPEN Mission Vi•jo Imports re:1tu1·ing MERCEDES BENZ & FIAT Con1plcle Sales & Service Visit Us Soon At 28701 !\targuarite Parkway Mission Viejo 495-1700 (USE AVERY P\vY. EXIT) 1958 MERCEDES S500. Call 6T.l·4.139 Motor H omes Sale/Rent 940 THE SEARCH IS OVER! » .. <;-~~1,)1~>~ Explor~r of Huntington Beach announces the expansion of their SERVICE DEPT. to service all makes and models of Recreation Vehicles. '" OUR EXPERTS Will BE HAPPY TO SOlVr YOUR RV SERVICE PROBLEMS-CALL NOW! ON ALL '73s IMMED. DELIVERY --, -~,.-'-"--'.-r' I ·"-'-----· , , NEW '74 llEWPORDR ·- SAN ll#ION COHYIRSION Equipped with bubbl1 top, Dodge chassis, v.e1 1utom1tlc & much 11\0ft. (S.r. #16'7125350 $77.21 MONTM $539·5 .. "_ .. _ .... -· "" .. 1c. 1 .. c1. -• 11 .. -1. WOt.1.1. !).! ...... ,.1 .. 11 ,,~J.41, ~ ....... ~·-.... It,,, .... ,... 0. .... ....... ..-41•. '73 EXPLORER 20' FULLY SILF CONTAINED with stove, oven, shower, toilet, tinted gl•ss, overhN d bunk, windshield curtain, on ' 1 Ton Dodge th1uis, hoU! & c1rrier plus piuch more. (2607n $•1.77 MONTH NEW '73 VIVA MINI MOTOR HOM! ruuv Sf\t OOlltMU. """' ·-· -. ..,. ._,_ ,.... ..... , ...... __ ,...,_(Wm! EXPLORER MOTOR HOME CENTERS * Complete Servi~• Facllltlts Coml"I In Ev.ry Day Ask Ai.out Our UnJq.,. UMd M.rcff•t L••s• .'pl•ns House of Imports 8982 Manche1ter, Buena Park on the Santa Ana Frwy '2>-7250 $2195 1ZNL937J l=::J tr11n11. 28,000 1111. on rcbulll FORD · .· 1 V·S. Good liN>I. Needs botJy work. Reliable ll'&nsportn.· ---------1 lion $175 or bei;t offe1·. '69 FORD L"' _: 5'111-1711. ,, .,. 1 '6.) BUICK 300 l'U i11 V-&. 2 DO<?R H.T •. lac1 11.h', HU\o. Ne"' r adl;ils. V·ll, automatic lraNimlSl!IWl, , $3:,0. S<a--67J9. l"JO'l'l..,. t.1ef'ring, & air <IOCl ' ctitlOninst. Pri<'P(I low fc r\lqt I Ula'.! :O.lar\,'lll'l"llll Parkv.'HY CADILLAC i.'OOd! tZNW-iJ J, I MB '69 -sE 1 / '"~~· Vto;o Only $129S :" , ' "-"'I ' ilU O, JI .~. 831-2()4() • "95-4949 p/b, llhr Int. xlnt rond. USE' VER TODAY 'S "~ ' B7>7TJ6 -A -Y /'\VY. EXIT ~,,..-. .4tdMIA: • ·~ J.tERCEDES 220.S Wan. 'iJ COROLl..A 5 i>1>ced, F~I SPECIAL ~ ~~, : Mechanlca.lly sound. •1100. radio, radi:lls, 28 n1.p.g. $75. FORD ''°~ . • .. 'LO.P. 002-237'! '73 FLEETWOOD " . Call 6"2-5766 M '+'I.MS UilMMO 1oU1 c~aMI~ • 'ti7 MB 2000 36 mpg. ilick. ·~ TOYOTA Cou1K'_ for sale D'ELEGANCE SJS NORTH n c.utMO ...._ . AMfF!tf, cll'an. Lo 1ni. I xlnt sha~, $l~l0. Call Padded fop, ll•lher intl'rior, SAN CtamHrl 4f1.11b ; $2650. 638-2254 l).16-R2'Jf; or ~l l;> dull\ rom!ort i;ea1:1, f\Jll l=--=~~----1 OPEL TRIUMPH riow<"r, factory air, A,\J-~'7\1 ·70 !i-tAVERICK, lo mt'•. , ----------i stl'reo und · tap._• playl'r, a/oond, p/r., r ~ h, i:OJd 1----------Cruise Control. t'\"M)' con. tires. $1400. 548-l&;il , · '68 OPEL., SPORT ('DUPE, '67 T R SPI TF IRE l"l'ivable luxury 01>1.'on. In1-·71 t'ORD LTD lo mile 102 hp, one cr.vncr. $600 as is. Needs little v.'Ork. 1naculatc. <13-6131. 1 A't 8 642-4293 £"?ill 6~:>-1791. 17'.? t:. Wll80n $69ff ~~t'"Ys:~ ean. c, 1970 OPEL GT. new Pirelli , St., Costa Mesa . 0\'er SO 1'"ine Used Cllrs to '65 FORD 6 cyl. •·Gas : tires. Xlnt bu:Y nt $1650. il TR....i .. green "''/1an int., $(-lee! ~Turn, Sa , .. XI t corxl"tion' * 586-55..13 * 2S.OOO rm., Cass tape deck, Nab(>ni: Cadillac Sa '!:'r1 · • .. !!.... 1 "'.;, .., •• ; 6iJ"-1655, eve'I; 9 7 9 - 9 6 7 6 AUTHORIZED DEALER cnf ce, ,µ;JU. ~ • PORSCHE -------'70 914-4, Kllnis, At.1/Fr.1. 11pp. Grp, chrn1 whli;, mint l'Ond, rorqp. s I' t' V I c e rr.cords bst oCfr, Priv Jlly, 64!)...1418 PORSCHE. 'T!, 911T, Sepia Brown, xlnt cond, must sell, bcl"t oller, 497-2917 RENAULT RENAULT ~~,_,,NEW _ R-12 4 DOOR Automalle Transn1ission SALE $2499 Dick Miiie r Motors 120 \\1• Warnrr, S.A. 557-2132 SAAB *SAAB Best deal always. ComplC'le selection l'loW. Buy or i('asc lrom Jim Parkinson'• ---~h\trh Jhnpu11~; +\o!' '"' ,, ... , ... ., • ,, • ' t.1; f>.l•,,, 645-6400 or 645-6406 Orange C.Ouuty"s Newest SAAB Deal~ CLEARANCE SALE 'Tl SAABS STAR'l'I1"1G AT $2995 up to 24 miJes per gallon Dick Miiier Motors U> W. Wainer, S.A. 5.57-2132 SUBARU Olive /\ SUBARU al Dick Miller Mo tors Sales & Service Visit Us Soon At I~ \\'. Warner, S.A. 557-2132 TOYOTA '67 TOYOTA Au to nl at i c transn1is:;ion, radkJ, heater & atr t:ondi· tioning. Ccm.JDL l. $699 1=::1 2840'i Margueri1·c Park1vay Mission Viejo 8.11·21}10 • 4!l:i·4949 USE AVERY P\\'Y. ~XIT JUST ARRIVED '74 TOYOTAS New Mod<"ls . NC'w Colors SAVE S ON Rl':J\tAI~l;\G 73's k Dl::..\IOS 1111.Ptu.LWiA wP TOYOTA 1966 Harbor, C.r>I. G46·930."J '69 TOYOTA rlays; ask for Chnr!ie 2SXI 1-IARBOR BLVD. FORD 19TI G~laxie, • , COSTA MESA R/H, 36,000 m1, gold, ., : VOLKSWAGEN ID!HOO Opt'n Sun<ley vinyl top. Oean. 499-3664., , • '7 1 E:L DORAOO, n/cond, '62 F'AIRLANE Ford need"; '71 VW KOMBI an11tn1 !ilt.>reo Hit v.•hl llhr work to make n1c run, , e Custonl Paint uuer, J)Jb, 1u S, p .w, 6' 1>i'8y1 ~"'-~2~1"~------1 • Hadio IK'al. Xln't l ire~. pain!' & JEEP e Hca!r r body. i\lust sel!. Best oUer. '' : • 'J \\IL-~ (114) 6#-7475. • "ag '""-'Is ,7. . • \\'ILLY 'S JEEP, 196.l ' e Tuned Exhau."t 3. CAD SDV, ~1ke nu, 4500 4-ii•h&'I drive-U cyl. reblt . $2395 me, fully equip. Pvt pty eng. New tires, radio. XW $6450/or O!r. ~73ll eve. eond. Ideal for camphrc;, IE::J 673-1010, 1·3. fishing or dune bugo .. CADlLLAC '72, coupe, v.1tite, 1'~inancing av a i I ab 1-.;. T~1 alr, stereo, full po\11er. Best 842-1701. :•:, ~ ~"":_to~'~1 ~"-_ME__ICURY _ ,.., ,,,.., • . '67 CDV 13,000 on lac nu "-HV .. l\1arguente Parkway eng nu tires. tiuy· ho J.972 MERCURY :P.f~l,l ~fissk:lo \11rjo m~t sell .,1A,,,. ing makeme, Brougham, loaded. $3895: 8.11·20-'Q e 495-4949 ' ~ ...,.,. or &f:i...tXO ask for John or USE A \'ERV P\\'\'. EXTI' oUer, aft 4 pm . 557--0803. Dan. ~.1 '72 VW ·70 S.O. M!Ul sell, very '71 MERCURY Colon ;:::5<_ clean, .Jo ml, loaded, bst , Y ~ offr over \Vhlse 774-71~ \.'ign Beaut c.'Ond. Acee>'!'" 7 Pass. Bus 'TI E reasonable orter, ~ \\'hile Ol'cr blw tlnish, 17,000 vrrtilll~, p~~)~~~st ~~ '7:! t.iARQl!IS Wagon Fllll n1iles {53\.fo"""l'P). Xlnt t'Ond &14-2336 P">'l' & air, Very cla .. $2999 191 • · 114--&l&-25n l SED~N DeVille, loaded, .. , .. o-"·'°'1ra"=cu~R"'Y;;--:;T=,,--.=.~I BILL MAXEY 24,000 miles, perfect cood. •• · rans ..._. $<695. >18-3519 No bait lot id rood . ....ut TOYOTA pot JOb. Off"-67>-3430. '- 18881. 'BEACH BLVD .. g.17.s&;S CA MARO '64 Mercury A!ontdair·, HUNTINGTON ·BEACH Jant ~ndttion. Xlnt tn.DI· -"====c..===-1 ·11 Camaro auto pis p/b portat1on. HXl. * Gtl-70p. '12 SUPER BEETLE ·,~,,~" .. , · .,,,.,: $2°180: .. MUSTANG ·'·_:; 22.cnJ miles. Am -F'm. Sun-,.,..., "" ~· ~~m.b4-~~-. $2'.!00. CHEVROLET '69 t.IUSTANG. V8, 2 dr 1----__:.:..:_:::::.;. __ I Hltop, liuto trans, air road, '66 and '62 V\V 's sunable ,69 v.·ide \\'his priced to §di for d un e bug g 1e 11 , C.llEV ll\1PALA CUSTOt.1 830-!:686 ' -, reasonable 847-Dtl'J all 6 2 Door llanltop. 350 V8, -"'"~""'="'""-,.--,-,--,,-I PM au t on1alic trahsmission "66 MUSTA."l'G, 6 cyl, autn. pov.·er steering, tinted gias.~ R&H, mint cond. NN '70 BUG RIH, mng wheels, complete. Strato h u c k e 1 engine. Under warrty, $95(1, immacula1e. $1450, set1ts, vinyl top. i''actory air 962-5744 551-4193 rond. \ViJ\ M!ll for Kelly1 , . .,~--co=NVE==R~TJ=a71"'.E~--w,=,-_, 1 '73 VW. SUper Bealle. R/H. blue book w b o 1esa1 e, P/b V-8 tfl 000 mt Gde;d Sunroof. 9.300 nil. Priv. Ply. 6#-4687 cornf. $600 Ii~. 64Mss-t. • ~ $2500. 52.6-28-12 fl-!ONTE CARLO '73, black, '65 Mustann $500 · * 1969 V\V Bug, xtra A/C, P/\V, 6 1vay scat~ till * 645-:z486' * • • CLEAN, xlnt running car, v.·heel, Cl'uisc conll'OI, ins t. t xlnt tires. $1350. :>57-8151. group, etec. door locks, E'lcc. OLDSMOBILE -... '13 Sqback. Orange, black in-t:nn:ik release, sp. "'hls,1---------"' tcr, perfect. $.1000. lirm. ww s •. dual mlrro~, extras, Sales I: Se!'VI~ 546-6261 lo iru. $4400. 6 7 3 -4 6 4 2 OLDSMOBILE 673-5213 '69 V\V, 111ust sell , am/fm, ,72 KINGSWOOD E 1 1 GMC TRUCKS' sunroof, good cond. S9..JO or W n 8 t> a c HONDA CARS bE-st ofr. 645--0479 bcf Spnl br~ • win::· rr;r :Ctzi: UNIVERSITY OLDS '72 VW convertible, xlnl AM/FM rruHo, Comfortron 2850 Harbor Blvd • cond. lo oiileage. air & hell..! romplete travel ' ' ·' K-13-3110 trlr hitch ' package. Jtack. Costa Mesa • '63 V\Y Bus AM/Fr.1. rebuilt In good cond. Sacrif! $3450. '68 OLDS }'-85, 2 dr, 6 ~I, eng. Good tl?"f's. s:>!l5. 644--6014 auto lrans, R&.1~. PIS. o~. •646.-0605• FADED Dcni1n blue '63 O\\'nT, good con1l. 968-1514 '69 V\V Bus, Xlnt l'onclllion. CllCvy Bel Alf 327, 4 dr ... ~""~-;2,ll""~-"--c--==7'=~ Sec 10 appn..'Ciate! $13.iO. runs b'Ood. Po"·er !rain and '65 JET·Star, i;d ooncl., orie. fiT.l-7261 body need some 1>iurk. CJet111 owner, $39:>. 894-3T33 or inside. 497-l&J.3 v.·heneve1·. 897-42!0. * NEW '73 BUG * Driven 8 wks, perfect! '68 l\tALIBU, P/B, P/S, PINTO 67J.-8re9 aft 5 pn1 A/C, auto, V-8. Very goodq----------1 '68 VW BUG $900 cond thruoul. l\1u.st sell $100. ·n PINTO. Sharp! O..itom \VaJTe!\ S48-l1R2 or best ;H!r-2824 intcrklr. Air/cood. Vlnyl 1971 CHEVROU.1 Pi>!onte top. Low mileage. Eves '69 V.W. BUS, nev.· engine, Carlo. air, bucket scats, "'eekend!i, 5.52--0217. ,,_ camper ti r es, E.-.:ceUent vinyl roof, lilt Wheel 38,cnJ ·n PINTO auto air cond eond. R.11-2148 nil, $2950. 67:!-1901. ' ~any xtra~ 12000 ni\. .,· '69 V\V Bus, rehlt eng 9 '68 C.liEVY nl'w tires, p/s, * .S l7-6358 * p~ss. xlnt cond, SlSOO clran. Runs perf~t. !\lust * 837-:i566 * sell! PLYMOUTH "6:> V\V 13ug $600. or ? Good $650 • 900-11»1 r·ondi tion Call 536--3519 Hunt '70 Chev Inipala custorn '70 Fury Ill Bth. cpe, lo rnl!<'s, Xlnl cond. 2 DOOR HARDTOft "6•1 V\V Seib~, l 0 ll'\\' tires, palnl Sacrilic.-e. 493--0:io7. \'.ii, au1onialit;: 1ransn1lS8ion .. ~ 9 b!'ks. Xln t lransp. Call '72 Cl~V Jmpalu, .2 dr !IT f'O\\"('r :;;!('rring, a11· c."Olldl~ b·1~-•01L Red, air contl, Orig O\\'ll<'r 1io11ing, ('1~·. ,\ •·!C"an q111• VOLVO $1975. 499-~ pdrt•d unclt'l' v.ho!<'Mtc. ___ c:_::.:;:;:..::_ __ 1'73 LAGUNA 2 tloor H/t•)p, 1A:'\Vi!l01. '74 VOLVO'S HERE NOW nuto, air, x!nt l"Ontl, lo 1111, On ly $1495 l.:: $.1400 f11111 &12-0IDI C'\"t' ~--.. .,~· '72 CllEVELLt:, :r.o auhl, ~ ~ a.ir, p/b, p/s, l1111dau, S:i, ln1n1{'{lin1<' Drlivery 8-16-5TJ()/J36-S:lfiii FORD 011 All l\lndcl1 s.\VE s ON 1tr.~1A 1 :o;1NG '6.i Et c,\J\11.\"0, :;21 \'.:-1, ".,, .... ,,, .... ,NG , ... 11 cl'"'''"': 73's .!: DEJ\10$ 11uto ll'llll!I, p/s, 11/b, elran, S)5 NO•TH n CAMINO •IA.L <I\ l . Sj9j, Sl2-637J or 96249:}-t SAN ClEMlNTt 4,J.1 1J~ • Ult tl0\4 '70 ~fontl' C111·1o, air, .-.,, P'\"'J. SI• ll'n•. N--•' Volvo Lo nHil'Rlo:<'. :-ln1 t'(Uhl "'' .. " ,.. ~"U.ll e Sta tion W agon e $'2100. * • • \!k).6 115 1•01·k. $12:"1 or IX'~l otf"t•c\ 4 speed. rnliiu, hl'Str1· \\'ILL takr I 1·a1·at. 't carat, Phonr Sl:Z-ll2i ~, t579ABE I 1!!66 llarbor. C.i\L &16-9?.03 3 t'al"a.l dianiuntl in 011 trad1! * ·~ PLY:'\IOlM'll, \~; $1095 I '12 VOLVO 142t:. auto, lo Jor 1~1v 1:11r. ~'2-11'11 fl/~. IH1to_.~0xln! ~ly, ru~ ~11. ~::300 only 8 n10. old, '&;CHEVY \';111, grl()(I t·ni::in(' I~ rl~·1·t, S:H.1. 91;o-c_1_••-'-~1 \=:: 1 -"1"-'m ""'~'"' • '"''"'"1 '"'·I PONTIAC . * '61 VOL\'(), Sf fl! in 11 or bcsl offl'r. fl7!l-~11.i.!l 1 ~ ] ~~·agon. 21.000 n11!c~. $1200. CHRYSLER (·12 PONT. Grnnrlvilt<', z ·dr f fr:x::.. .i".6-l 4M !11~ttp, ull 11\1'!', H.ally \\1)1~, '----"'-='-"-=-='-'=::::J I nn1/fn1 ~!crt~). ;(11-162161 Autos, New 980 '69 CllRV!'LEP.. NE\\' ,\ftrr Ci pin. ZS.102 Mnrguc11lr l':1rk\\il,Y YOHl.;:l':I{ ------ S.'U-20 IOMlssk>. Vii•,1n·l!r .. 4M9 1 1 CHEVROLET •I Dr. hartllnp. Full p\11•, T·BIRD rill rxlras, 1\1•11· paint, fnct.1--------....a USJ<; ,\VEltY J'>\\"Y . EXIT HR.AND NE\V '74 11.lr, Sl ,(60 filfl..-O:f.lf, '69 T-BIRD '68 'fQYOTA COJ'l)Hll l'LIJI" 1,'<I, EL CAMINO CLA SSIC -' ' . . . needs minor 1111rk $.'l:J(). t' \C..fOH\' PHICt:: CONTINENT AL (\ .-.:. n111.:11nala' tran~n11~i. !"'36-2710 ' S'I']'\. full 1•J11 r•r ,Ii; 1nr ronitlllQll\ OT ---1 '72 &dan, •llj.·,o !.'Ol•l '1/li!k ltlJ.: ,\ un•11t l>t1\'~ t9lfiCP\'1 'i2 TO):' t\ l' :1 j" i n ;.1 ' 0UJ$:317'81l41CE ~ .• Only s·169c · . A~t/f"r-1 1te1w, ..:•w1>1! r:a.~ lt•o1hcr & 1111~1. ;111', 11111'.. • nlilea,e xlnl,.,.. J 4 II \tll.i , ,\\I ~',\I ~1•·1'~•. ~11'1 t'<1ll!1ul • · .:::-no • ' --( 1111 :\hu •Ph1·r~1n C'ht"\'l'Olrt ""l 000 1111 ftl:l· l"'1• Jiii Ii ~-·-'69 TOYOTA m:mi • ""·11" • . . .• -' -· -~ 4-t~· 2 Door H.T. Au101, Used 990 COUGAR FORD · ; /\ 11 Ill Ill I\ I j 4' l1.1n.,n1i .... 1,,n. Olnr C11ip Au1n f'3lr• 'f,7 ('(llj(;,\f! Xlnt t'Onc1 it '+'lot.Ill $a•Yll'ta JAA' CLI_""', mdio. heftl'1'r, C1u·tnrv 101:~· ! l!lf.9 Ponth1c Ftn::blrd, Riii, PS/PB. rilr, inp;., ~nl \'-l{, SJ~ Na.TH n CA.ti.INC llAI; condillontt'llt S.· \ln~I I 1 n11_ro rrnn~. 11/i'>, ntr/t"'OntL n•'l>i' tlrt·~. SID.lll. ~1()..--"'""°"-'-I SAN CllMIHTI 4'1·11J1. (XfTI}70). SIJ:1() full ClUih pl'lce. ' --.- $1395 1967 Ford Country S«lan lo 67 COUGAlt Xl.7• good 'i] T Hird l.11111;111 f11Uf -1 1 1•1 tln.-1, rebullt trans, R &-, 1 ·11 ' .. u.. m1 ea~e. 1kt" n~w. l/ I, 11 IUOO/lkst ofter 962-385.1 rqu1pJX 1: ·' np1111n11, ._ IE: I auto trans, pl~. 11lr/c..'\'lrxJ. ' n<'\1 , Sl!J,10. li1'.!·~7'i'1. I hive IO !I('{' tn lll'lll!\tt'. '69 COUGAlt 3 spd manual '6f; T-ltlllll-~rl•·•~l -onrl ~ 1969 F'ord I.Ti) Chupr, Riii, tren•, A.r.1 /F'M. Vt>ry cl('un, P\1 pt I'll ' ~tukr ~Nei·'. ~ fr.X: ~:~~:, trnn•. plii, 11h•/rond S.1195, 8.tl-12lf> ffi3·0071 1 '· 1 - -· 11~;~· '1:lr11" rn. f11lly <>quipprd. DODGE ·w 'l»Blli.D. '211;<\02 l\llU'J.(U('l'!t1• 1'11rk11·11y $:\h:'rll. ~'1111 !•'11rr SA:-JO • • mMon \'lr?o I 1 .. 1.1.: .. 11Uo1·ni~l.l.On call '1.1 C:Jll\l!G.l::Jl IJf) i\Iui.:.iiuJn .. '.•11~ \'11~'-nr 1•1. c,,~1 11 ~to . ..a. 831·2010 e l:t~1··l!!.\\l I M.'h1!~ l11k1• 01·~r puyn1c.nls. An~1 lhty ,,.; the liE:;T DAY to 1r ... r: ,\\11·'.lt\ !'\\'\',~~:SIT 111 \\'r11t f\11.v :-;1, C'o,111 'lr•r1 • !'l21lf!!'7 • rt11, ~n iul! flt'tn't <lt<lf1,v, i • • 40 DAILY PILOT Thursday, Ottobtr 25, }q7l Trapped .Miners Cool ·Pair; Come Out of Shaft Smiling DOWNIEVILLE (UPll - Two prospectors trapped in a century-old gold rush mine 'by a violent mudslide near Clllfomia's historic mother 1ode were freed alter 33~~ hours imprisonment. Both "''ere in good condition and ooe predicted Wednesday the lure of "geld fevtr" would send them back Into the mine. -;;;;;:;;:;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.; He's Bae k : : Mr. Charlie, a 135-pound silver poodle who wears prescription glasses was reported missing Monday by his master, dog groomer Harold Nash (top). The Albany, Calif. poodle began to lose his eyesight seve.raJ. years 11go ag_d w~ fitted. wjth the glass.es'"" Later, the dog wandered home -but didn't say where he had been. Stude11ts 'Spy' On Salama nde r ~ ~ ,, SACRAf\.iENTO (UPI) -University of California students ~Jll act as "peeping toms" on the long·loed salamander of ~nta Cruz County. ~ The state Fish and Game Department announced this ::~week that the students, with lanterns an(l _flashlights1_ will hide :>--:near the Valencia Lagoon this winter en rainy nignts to ob- ~serve the sex life of the salamander. ~ ~. The lagoon, near the Central California coast, is one of ~~he two places in the world where this type of salamander ~lives. The agency said the purpose of the spy system is to ol:r serve the migratory behavior of the am hibian durin spawn· 1ng. first dug in the Gold Rush Days of the 19th century. • ERRQL CHRISTMAN 33, and Richard Brooks, 28, were cold, hungry and filthy but in "'Up top" shape, said Sierra County Sheriff Sam Doyle, who headed a rescue team. "I knew sooner or later they'd g~t us out. It was just a matter cf whether you could stand the freezing cold,'' Christman sakl. Air compretSOrs bad been used to pump oxygen into the Brush Creek ~line, four miles west of ·this gold mining town in an Isolated corner of the Sierra, while rescuers dug through the mud. TllE SIERRA'S first winter storm sent tons of mud crashing over the shaft open- ing Monday. 'Ibe miners were digging 2,000 feet deep in the shaft when the slide hit. However, their fate was not discovered until Tuesday when a caretaker noticed t h e mlners' cars in front of the shaft and the entrance sealed with mud. "We thought it was a smatl earthquake," Christman said. "Five-tnch steel rails and timbers were all collapsed." DESP.J1E_THE_ {> [ d e a 1_1 Christman of Grass Valley, said both would return to work the shaft: . "Oh sure, thel'e's gold fever," he said. "It's just the· same '8S aome · people being· . crazy over baseball." · ·. Workings at the mine, he s'ald, ha:l (l'aduced some gold, which is now worth $100 an ounce on foreign markets. · "We'd be foolish to quit now," he said. CHRISTMAN, WHO descril:r ed himself as a professional gold miner since the age of 15, said the slide was ·the third · accident to strike-the .t old shaft. 'The first occurred ' in 1881 and tlle next in 1923 when one person was killed. Christman and Brooks, who lives near the mine in a tiny t'!ommunlty called Coycttville were preparing the quart2 shaft for an all-out gold mining effort in the 11priDg. Sheriff Doyle said rescuers · v.·ere encouraged by the tap- ping !IOUOd1 of the miners' digging. Wbeft the pair emerg- ed fro m the mine, "'They really didn't say anything - just pretty happy to get oot," the sheriff said. RE!UJE WORKE R S estimated that they removed nearly 300 tons of mud from the front or the shaft and about 35 feet ot the tunnel collapsed. Workers were aided by a giant front loader and 6aelili0etraetor. -. -. Introducing the Coast Federal extras. ""' l·r1.te1•n, ('h.,,, ... ~. 11'"0<:" Cl~!>. we11 give you a free cheding accounL And a free sale deposit box, too. \\'ith a $2500 balance in a Coas t savings account, \ve 'll give you a personal checking accoun't at a maior bank. also a safe deposit box. Absolutely free! we11 pay you the highest interest in coast ft'derals history. No\v Co<tst's ne\V interest rates are 1he highest in ou r his1ory, and remember, inte rest is con1p<;>unded dai ly. Ma~imum flexibility, no minimum. Annu;al R.ate Annual Yield 5.25°/o 5.39°/o On existing and new pa ss book accounts. You'll fin d eve n higher ra tes with Coast's many d ifierent savings ptdns. we11 give you l?illion dollar Coast ft'deral ~rity. Coast has over ohe billion dollars in assets, \Vith Convenient offices throughout California. Plu s, you r deposits are insured up to ~o.ooo. we11 help you spend your money as wisely as you save it. With the new Sl.000 Insiders Club. \V.int a ne\v car, .ipp!i.1nce, color TV, tickets to 1op entertain1nent ~At spec ial lO\'•' "ln~iders" prices. Also free n1oney order~. ircr notary ~ervices, free note (O!lection ~crv!res. Jusl open an accounl al Co.1 ~1 f(lr $1,000 b;i!,1nce. \·Vc're open <.rx d,1y~ tl 1\·eck. 9 a.n1. to 4 p.m. Fridays all 11U1ces except do\vnto\vn are open ti1 fl p.m. Sa turdJy 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. (Except Civic Center). - COAST FEOERAL SAVINGS we want your mane)( And we11 do more for h. . ~-- A'"" ti""' Ont &illion 0o11,,, th.1nlin11ton 8t.1<h Offic r : 91 tluntongttin Ctn!('r fjl I\ 897·10'*7 • L". M.1in Of/l(t: 'Ill'! & Hill, 1'21·1))1 I ' ... ' .. ' .. ,ct,619 s11· gB }:-,· 1t",'P -. ' ~I , ; . ~ . ' . . . . QlJART . HALF 'GALLOt·H . . ' . ' I • . . .. • -• -. - San (;lemen1e -Today's Final .. ..---~. ,--..... '"! is1rano EDITI O N I veL 66, NO. '98, 4 SECTIONS, 58 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1~73 TEN CENTS • ; ' Vallerga Def ends Nixon Estate Assessment By CANDACE. PEAR80N Of ... °""' '"" ,, ... Jfek Vallerga Went to Inglewood w-.y to defend hi! • ......,ent ol Prealdent Nimn's'San Clemente estate whlJe State alficlalt Wffl'l in Orange County challenging ll Vallers•, the <mnge Cowlty tax aaHacR-, tesUfied before a joint meeUng ol tbe Auembly Committee OD Revenue and . Tautioo and the Assembly Select Committee ... Coas1af 1.oDe Resoortes. ; • • The subject of the heorlng In Inglewood City ijall was the effect of ProposiUon 20, the 1972 coastal zone act, on property values and coastal county asses.mlent practices. But Vallerga diverted from that slight- ly to deliver his own volleys at the State Board of Equalization while Its members w~ being hosted by the Irvine Company In Newport Beach. Claiming that the boanl b lighting "a batUe in tbe press," Vallerga said • I , the board is accusing him of ''giving preferential treatment to a high officer of this country." He didn't mention President Nixon by name, but the reference was obvious, especially to Assemblyman L e o McCarthy CD-San Francisco), who ob- jected to Vallerga's using the bearing as a forum. President Nixon purchased about 25 acres for the Western White House oom- ple:r. in San Clemente for $1.5 million. itar You,igBoys Run V essel Boo~lnakiflfl Case. Vital Decision Onto Shore On 'Print: Due A pair ol ,.otMiil pliates -one of um :no 'oldtr than II -are being aougbl . by autboritie;! in two cqunties loojjly. after· 111ey· llOle a ct1bJn· cruber lo ·1.ang Beoch and theo«ll-It aabore ·at San Onofre. '~t:-'!111!<1!. ~IOP II· San , , ~ _.1JtilllliY,C.W'?u tiJi ...... ,. 1118> .... day by~ cmn -~~~lllei.....,.~ ........... 111.t"".I ~ ~ ~ .,..,;.,'Wt: .. ' "an- .w,r• out "' .\llmltoa· Bi1 "tedl1 rulCIUI ol 1uo1i • l Their dad. Ibey said, hail l-!or ~ arid Ibey ....... to -!or By TOM BARLEY ot .... o.llY .. ,, ... /.. ruling that could prove vital to the proaeo.1lion's case agaiMt Sad- dleback College Trustee Alyn M. Bran-°"'. and ' his co-ddeodanl ~y be f 'ak ih.Nab&ed .-,:t ... '' !. Jtt, $500,000 Credit Spree Rancen came back later, hover, ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI) -Petite and found Mlther Vie "father" W tbe policewoman Kitty Hutter thought Jt was two younpters. ,. a routine bust in a stolen credit card The pair ol youthful brigandf weni case until the teletype messages started Jonc.pne. pwriDg lit saying, "We want him , we One wu DO .more than 10 YUf'I old, want him, we want him.•• ,..,,,.,. said, the otller, perllopl U )'eln And wllb the billJ still coming In. Old'--~c---o-=-:---::---paijce>llid today a-.oft'<pGkenteon-ager The boat received DWe cfamtlf' lluring may have o.>Uected 111 D'IUCh as $500,000 the lntenllooal ~. but~ Rod using 1 1tolen cr<dlt can! and bogus Grtlfttb wu ~ witb a Jbaili' bill checks ln a global spending spree. !nm the llrm wiildi )>a•I' ,to ... rere..s Mlcbael 'fboma1 Henson, 18, asked, apd ~-doWp-~~1tt1t1 "IJUiit_ill_JOu've gOt m.~ for ?" when parlt to drag the ._1 aioog the llnd Mn; Hutter put a gun to hb back to 1 •lltinl tlVC$ l:od trailer. Sunday at an Orlando HOwari! Johnson's The ~ apparently -Into and .,,..,ied him !or using a stolen the Grtllllb Pnle' near ibe boot'• allp Master Charge card.· ud stole ·ooty the keys to the es:pemtve "Wbe-1 he said that, I tnew there craft. was more to it," the blonde detective Oftce ,board the boys headed IOUlb, said. pllotln1 the' creft through the nlgbt, Investigators said they later found finally ditching the cruiaer ln northern evldeoce that Henson cashed. $200,000 in San· Diego County. bad c:heclcs at American Express offices 1be craft was the second to run in a month-Jong spree that stretched ~at San>Onotre this week. Early from New York to Lisbon to Hong in the week a far-leswxpenslve craft Kong, with many stops in between. fetched up and eventually broke apart Henson was being held in lieu of ln &be Mt after, U. "owner decided $250 bond on . charges of possessing a the flOO salvage bill wasn't worth It. (See SPREE, Page II Coast Legislators Say TUl:e Turns for Nixon U.S. senaton and•eongre11men representlng lbe Orange Coast earlier this well were delUled with ,mall, telegralns ond phone calls overwbelm· !nclY la..,rlng Impeaclunent of Pmldent Nixon. But J"6-Republkian OOngJ ..... <n, In· eluding the one whose dislrlct Includes the Prelldent'• San Clemente eslate, said todfY the tide bu lurned and .. pport ,, -to flow In. Local -ol ~And ..... J. lllnsbaw (R·Newport Beachi and Clair Bu'lenor (R-SUta Fe S!Jrlnp) llld that tht1r mall volume oo tbe linpeacbment 111..UOO WU heavler than UIUli but now the calls arid letten are mnglng In "!PP"l't of the "'"'1dent. BUriener, , WI\oN dllUlct Includes a coaltlt llrlp~ ot. brarwe COUnty from San Clemente., tO 11-rl • Beach, reportedly only ((lllr pl)one e1U1 to his local office In 0ra.,.\ County -all 0-">1 the Pre91dent. • "Several" pro-Nl:a:on call.I Wtrt r«tlV· ed In Burgtr1tr'1 SID (l..,..,ta Dlllricl otnce1 according to apokeswoman Max· Int Green. .Fi'Om Washington. lkltleoer'• CM-Jt"""'l~nral aide . Brad R•t&away, 11ld, · .. n ··1 say lhat we'Ve received • ' •le;ranu." ~ .. 11111Jd 'Burgener"'" l'flCtl.ving more mail on the Middle East war, lhe Envinlrunental Protection Agency and gu raUontng. He added that Wedne!day morning, a dellnll• trend In la'°' of the President had begun to· show up bul be had no record of percentages or volume. Hi.n&haw's Dlltrlct Administrator Chip Cleary oald hi! office had ....ived "hun· dreds" ol telecrllDJ and c:onllnned that after a wave ol antl-Nlmn mall came In, the tide began 1"'11ing In support. Clury said ertUcimn of the President WIS due molllJ to "confuskm0 on the part of the public. He llld lllMblw ur1ed the President to go on teJevt.mn aoon alter lbe story broke· over the Watergate tapes and the Co• flrlng. u~ congressman believes the people are enUtled to the full knowledge of lhe lituaUoa/' CJ!tiry said. Congressman Craig Hosmer (Ro-Long ·Beach), whose dl.atrlct Includes part of weslem Oran1e County, lndlc!ated an eoormon flood of sentlmtnt agai.Mt the Pruldenl • Spokermea ln bis offlce saJd no tuTning .of .tbe Udo• wu apparent Wednesday alten!Oon. "'l'bere hu been a constant atream of phor:\e cans and ear1Jer_ ID-the-woo1c,~ (See Ol'POSITTON, P••• II delivered late today in the Orange Coun- ty Superior Court boolonaking-estorti<D trial of the two men. U. Ernest Nash ended five days ol testhpony on the cootroversl.al voioeprint technique that has become an issue In the trial l af!d *1!1ed the -stand too!I¥ ,. 1bt ,r.ecu"-'1, .......... wl-In the pre.trial ~ Distrlcl Attorney'• lnWOtigator Don Cal' U • ' ,. . "'-'"'tor W'illlam Evans said Cal' roll'I •t""'DMJ will let the seal OD Nasb'i cllllll that tbiri can be no doubt that used car salesman Robert Emmett Kelly telepboned a patrcn In Brannon'& alleged $25,tm.a-weei: b o o le m a t I n g business in the Harbor Area and wamed him to Jmmedlately settle a $2,800 gambling debt. 'Ille perfume salesman who recieved the taped call said be was told by a voice, "Bet.er make out that will, baby; you're a dead player." At about that time, Evans claims, (See BRANNON Page Z) Transit Board Completes Study Of Bus Routing By JOHN VALTERZA Of flit O.Uy Piiot It.ti Members of the staff of the Orange County Transit District said today they have completed a preliminary plan show- ing all the new bus routes they hope to launch next spring along the South County. And the plans already have been tested with a spare district bus, added Tom Albert, a spokesman for the agency. The plans call for three separate pat- terns with connections spanning the Sad- dleback and Capistraao Valleys. The systems woold link the com- munlUes of Laguna Hills, Laguna Beach, Mission Viejo, San Juan Capistrano, Capistrano Beach, Dana Point and San Clemente, he said, using m a J <> r (See BUSES, Page !) Woman Injured As Rock Shatters Train Window A northbound Amtrak passenger trsin pa"lng through San Clemente Wed· oesday night was·hi1 by a !mown rock, and glass from a shattered window in· jured a woman passenger. Railroad agents r.Jayed the In· fonnallon to poUc:e after the train made lt5 next stQp in Fullerton, but by the Ume officers could be dispatched, no one wu In sight ln the area. Reports said the incident occurred at 6: 19 p.m. at a spot 200 yards downcoast of the municipal pier. The •tone was.apparently thrown from the Inland side ol t1le tracks. Olndab did not ldentlly the Injured woman, but said bu lnturles were ap- parentlv minor. It marked lhe first time tn HTenl mont M that a train stoninc has taken piece In the clty. A rasll of tueh lncldentl O<CUn'ed during the aumnier months. .• lt included a 43-year-old, 6,000-square foot house, La Casa Pacifica. Vallerga down-assessed the property in 1973 to less than $1.4 million, at- tributing the drop to Proposition 20 uncertainties. This is cootrary to trends statewide which show developed properties rising in value, but Vallerga said Wednesday that about 22 to 23 acres of the San Clemente complex are undeveloped . The house and improved grounds take up only a small percentage of the land, he said. " The Orange County Board o f Superyisors has asked the Board of Equalization to review the county assessor's valuatio n of the property. Board Chairman William Bennet said the new appraisal will be "looking into a possible crim& and that's a non· partisan issue." Vallerga. speaking to the assemblymen, questioned the credibility on • • IT'S A BIRD, IT'S A PLANE? .. NO , IT'S A UFO Br~n Coleman, 13, Displays Candle-powered Hot Air B11 lloon Kids Make Own Mystery UFOs Jrist Candks , Bag By TERRY COVILLE Of tM 0.11Y Pffet II.ti "ll was pulsating and It appeared IQ have a red light on one side. Then there was a bright, while flash . like lightning but without noi!le, and it shot straight up and out of sight ... ," one mystified night watcher reported. The mystery of the UFOs. at least in Huntington Beach, has been solved. Metallic night gUders from a distant star? Secret enemy spy flights? No. Soda straws, birthday candles and clear, plastic dry cleanlng bags. Simple items collected from a taco stand, a laundry and a supermarket went into the construction phase of the bright, orange discs som«: Huntington Beach residents reported as UFOs Tues· day night. The space.men who launch them are a group of high school youths who live In the Sol Vista lract near Slater Avenue and Edwards Street. Their spa.cecrart, about three-feet tall and two-feet wide.. Oy on a simple prln· ciple -the old ho·t olr balloo n method. "We learned how to make them in a high school science class." says Peter Wiemats, 16. "It does look like a fiery glow in thti sky," adds Lisa Regal, 15. "II Ooats with the wind and from a djstance you can't tell whet It is." "Ono stayed up about half an hour. It w1s a cteirlr nigh: end the cAndltllghl reflected off the bag," reporta Loo Stock, 17. "That's the one that was reported In the papers." • .. The balloons -or UFOs lf you prefer -are simple to make. It takes a plastic dry cleaning bag, ml'dlum size, about a dozen birthday candles, four straws, a rubber band and one straight pin. All holes in the plastic bag are sealed, except for the bottom opening. Two straws are stuck together. one inside the other, then the olbe~ two arc stuck together. Thie tandem straws are crossed lO form an X and fastened together in the center with the straight pln. That forms the base or the balloon. The birthday candles are heated , squeez· cd in a circle, then held together with the rubber band (or tape). and set on top of the pin, with the wicks sky ward. The bandl'd candles look like a bar· rage of air-UHiir missiles ready to fire . Somebody lights the candles. Everyone helds hold the side of the bag to the ground and the bot air slowly ftUs the bag. The balloons have noated as high as 200 feet, they say. The youths said lhey carefully watch where their creations lly because of the candles but normally, the candles are snuffed when they finally ran. They did it because of the UFO c:rau and the neame!S of Kalloween. Usa sold they saw the blue disc, reportOO. Sunday night by a Huntington Beach resident , which was not launched by the Sol Vista Rang. of the board and its staff and said he has "little confidence the appraisal will be independent." His arguments fo<:used on the board's assessment of 4.St miles of Santa Fe railroad right-of-way adjacent to the Western White House at less than '3,000 an acre. ''It's very interesitng since I'm doing such a bad job," Vallerga said, that an adjacent piece of "more desirable" (See VALLERGA, Page %I ert' Reds Force .Precaution ht Mideast BULLETIN UNITED NA'nONS, N.Y. (AP) -'1'1le SoYlet ·--to tloe Uatted Nations llld today tloe Soviet U.loa -Id agree lo the crHtloa of a U.N. peatekeeping force ln Ute Middle E81t wltboat Soviet, Amf:ricp or Mftr bis power troops. • WASHING TON (AP) -U.S. military forces were ordered to worldwide alert today. s.cr.tary of Stete Henry A. Kis- singer called it a precaution prvmpted by uncertainty about possible Soviet in- tervention to police the Middle East cease-fire. Bu~ be said the early momlng order DAYAN'S OFFER TO QUIT REJECTED. Story, Pago 4 was dispatched because of ambiguity in Soviet intentions, not in a great-power confrontation. "As of now, the Soviet Union has not taken any irrevocable action," Kis- singer said. "It is our hope that no (See ALERT, Page l) * * * Camp P endleton, El Toro Silent On Troop Alert Spokesmen at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station and Camp Pendleton bad no eomment today on whether troops at the two Southland bases were put on alert thi:9 morning in response to the Middle East crisis. Th>usands of elite U.S. Anny troops and large numbers of Air Force and Air National Guard units, including some nuclear bomber crews, were pat on alert in what the Nixon Adntinlstratioo termed, "a precautionary measure." Maj. Sally Pritchett, public: affairs officer at El Toro, this morning issued a terse "no comment'' on the alert situation. El Toro has a number of fighter· bomber squadrons, totalling several hun- dred jet aircraft. The planes are the same F-4 Phantoms and Skyhawks being (See MARINES, Page !) Orange Coast • Weather Mostly sunny Friday is the way the \\'eatherlady secs H. with may- be just a taste of rog in the tnorn- ing hour!. l~ighs at the beaches in the mld -70s rising to the low 80s inlanQ,. Overnight lo"'S in the 50s. t:\S I DE TODA l' President Ni.xl'Jn ii e:z:pectfd to face questioning on role played by close friend Bebe Rebozo b1 ll.a11dli11g of campaign contributions. See story, Paoe 4. l.M. ...... ll C•Mfe,.,,l• J, U. Jt Cl•illlllol >+tt c""1n n c,...,_. n Dffltt Nl'llttl • It ..,..,Ill ,_ .., • .. ~ .. 11-1 ..... , .. u ~ftJilt(f ft;JI ""' tl'l9 ltKm It ...__ '' """" L.lnft., , , MW* MP'-14-U y Je_041L Y fllU>l SC __ Tl\ul'tdiJ, Octobrt 2'S, 197.) ' . . It's Legal: 1 Meeting Pei· Weel{ Dy JAN WORTH 01 lttt ~llr "II" ttt•t ,\11 actlon to rneel once " n1onth in· $1e1'd of h1·ii·c w:is 1n:irle lr,:::il b.v !hf" bo.'-lrd of the S11dd!ebat'k Community Col!tgc board of tn1st('('s 1\J('sdny after toe lrustee 1aid lht' original vote was ~·'· ;,nistec Hans Vogel of Santa Ana iftid he left an execulivc 1 closrd) se.ssion ~o 1,reeb a~o. .'.llong with trustee f'trirk B<ackus of Dan:i Point ofter ticY had betn told by Saddleb11ck fuperintendent F'red Bremer no more Jiusinc$s ~mail'l\.'<I , ~ "Then l'A'O days later I received a Golicc Ill the mail saying the bo.ard had voted +-0 to go back lo one-t-montll lneetings," Vogel said. "1 chcfkcd with the roun!)' counsel and he said the acllon was illegal ." According to state la"" meetings of public officials can be private only \\·hen diY"Uss.ing personnel matteNJ, Trustee ~ticlulel CclUns, an attorney, s3id be made the motion ln executive session to change lht frequency of board meetings. •·r didn't realize it was illegal ," he said. "I didn't mea n to seduce the board into an illegal action." Vogel objected to meeting less fre- quently, even if the action waJJ taken legally. A proponent for the change last spring which began the tv.-ice a month mee:tings. Vogel said !he need (or cammunication among board ----,,;..mben ill no different now than ii \vas then. ~ "We still face many serioU$ problems. and need all the time in the ~·orld to discuss them." he said. Board pres.ident John Lund said he felt 1tbe reason for t~·o meetings a 1TIOflth dwing the summer was to handle fiscal problems in finishing a new budget 11nd approving sa laries. ··By next April or May we'll probably have to go back to two a month again," he said. Last spring, board meetings were frequently running to midnight. Deapite Vogel's objection. the board \•oted 5-1 to reinstate the one meeting a month calendar. The next meeling ·\Viii be ac 8 p.m. Nov. 12. · Before the Ii.scat pressures developed, Collins pointed out. board meetings often 'o'-'ert over before 9 p.m, ··11 seems seoseleM to bring together all the trustees and administrators, the public and the press. (or litt!E!' more than an hour." he said. Tuesday's meeting lasted to ll:l:> p.m .. despite a new agenda format suggested by Vogel y,'hieh Is designed to speed discussion of district bu.!iness. The new format include! a CODlfbl . calendar, through y,•hich various item~ wftich usually do not involve di3CUssion can be pused wlth a sJngle vole. Any trustee can request lhat any item .on the consent calendar be removed lor discussion. f'N>t11 Page I VALLERGA. •• propcr1y is undcr·aJJSessed. 11ie railroad land Is between the com- pound and the ocean, bcloy,· the bluffs. As!lemblyman li-lcCarthy questioned 1he relc\·ance of Vallerga's cr>mments hut the assessor sa\d "this is a unique properly lolally 'o'-"ithin the J.00().yard area." The coastal commissiona establi&bed b}" Proposition 20 have permil jurisdic- tion within 1.000 yards of lhe tideline. Ronald Welch. assistant executive secretary of board. later Wednesday backl'd up !he S3.000 figure by saying the railroad land is •·restricted in- definitely -SO to 80 years -to use as right-of-way. It can't be: anything else wit il S11n1a fc !s allo11.·ed to abandon it.,, And e\'cn thou~h rRilrood operation 111ight be unprofitable, \Velch told the :1ll~t'1nblyn1cn, ab<lndo111nent isn't an easy process. Th~rc i1re so n1any federal rrslraint~ or1 such an action, he claimed. ··much (.'OU!cl be said" for assessing !he land even lo~·er. OIAN&l COASJ DAILY PILOT I • • ............ .). Bring ui UFO A11.d Cet Casli CORVAWll, Ort. (UPI) -A Corvtllit radio 1tatloo. KLOO, - I) It oftertq 1 $10,000 nw&Je for Ille !lill -lo iu.,1 Uvla& vltilor' f""'1 ·-JO'lho -.. (1WIUd ...., .. ~ S and II). League Endorses Stat~ .. Bea~h . Aid ntrodlfclag Tlte Zmikie Nl!:W YORK (UPI) -A c-u• 14< ti. Proopect Park .,.. J •.n.nr, a ""*"·.it precnant by i.uay strlte, a zebra. 'nte ollsprlng, txpoclld In March. wiU be caUed a Z..nlde. ~T .. ouch action wW be llttll." · Kllabtgtt llitl Ille Uttlkd Slato op- -lbe .... ol great:power r ...... • ID Ille llUIDhtll that would be •"'"'"'1' lo Pollot. -.....e.it....1111 be llitl lhe United. Stato Is wtUlng to 1upply some penormol' to an observer team undu United Natlool 1ttpervl!Jon. Bob Houglum • .station mnnqer, said \Vtdnt!sday the offer "'·as prompted by IM rash of unldenll· fied flying object reporti fftlm throughout the nation . Houglum sald the reward will be paid to the "first person who can brlng to the studio a living thlng, animal or person. that has come from outer space and bas never been on earth before ." San Cle111en te Open-canipus Meeting Set State legislation that could save Orange Coo.st beach clUes millions' or do11ars annually won .a near-unanlrno~ endorsement from the CaJiforuia League o( Cities \Vednesday. The league , meeting in San Francisco, backed a Newport Beach re.90lut.ion call· lng for state aid to defray the costs or services that include beach main- tenance and eitra police protecUon need· ed to handle summer tourists, N~wport Beach city officials estimate local taxpayers ,shell out $1.S minion annually while the return from items such as sales taxes and parking meter f'ro•P-.el BUSES .•• thoroughfares in all the communities. Two trustees of the Cepistrano Unified Buses to Santa Ana also art planned. School Dlslrlct will meet for the first One loop, already tested last weekend lime with a student panel next week with a spare bus. w.oW.d serve San to seek a sol ution to fhe open-campus Clemente and Capistrano Beach. dilemma at San Clemente High School. Another longer network would begin Supt. Truman Benedict said late in Mission Viejo, travel through San Juan and finally end in Dana Point, \Vednesday thiit he had arranged for th us linking !he communities with Sad· the Initial meeling for Tuesday eve ning dlehack College. when trustees Willian1 Enquist and Still another would serve Laguna Hill s Gordon Peterson -bo th. representatives and parts of Laguna Niguel, Albert sa id. of San Clemente areas -would meet Transit district directors will receive \\'ilh the Triton open-<:ampus committee. the route proposals from the staf{ next Benedict forecast a progress report \lo'eek, be added. on the negotiations_ at .!!!Lboard's neit The service depends entirely on the fonnal .session Nov. s. ----receipt o new &aches-Mdered"by-the The issue surfaced several weeks ago distriot, and thus far the delivery dates after a hamburger chain tiegan ron· appear finn, lhe official said. struction of a resta!J!.ant near the Triton "We're pretty sure that the enUre campus. . pl.an wW be implemented in April and Students nquested the bfUng of a May -just in time for the surrimer ban on wa1king oil campw during the seaai'.,n," he said. lunch break. . Albert added that tentaUve plans call Although lhe pupils decried reports ror .blending the bus scheduling wit·h that the new restaurant was the lmpetus pos&ble new passenger train stops at f~r the campalgn, Benedict and ~rustees the San Juan Capistrano station -i! smce have characterir.ed the situation Amtrak brass concurs wilh the plan as the strongest test or the closed<ant· to restore passenger service lo the aban· pus rules since the district unlfied. doned station . Of prime concern lo the school offi cials "We're willing to shift some scbeduJ- 1s _the large numbers of pupils they Jng to accommodate the new trains believe would congregate at. t h e u they really come about," Albert said. restaurant should the ban be lifted. Thus far the district bas beard nothing They face yet a~ther dilemma If from Amtrak: offices in ·San Diego about the curr~nt rule slays m effect. the proposal to cut two stops Crom Benedict said that enforcem~t of a the schedule in San Cle!Mftte and place closed campus ~d be a definite prot>. them in San Juan, instead. !em . and to do 1t adequately ~Id The recent move by transit dlltrict reqwre new conun.itmeots of di.strict dlre"tors to shift policy and "lnltall the funds for proclors oc the CllllpUS. · . _., Trustees fint dilcwl sed the item early South Cotmty bus service bas beta uo1led last week and agreed wU.h Benedict's by many groups along the ~uth Coun~. · -~•·• board · San Clenwtte city councilmen praise ~~r. a comnuttee meet the efforts reeenlly declaring that tlley "11.b >'IC swoenta · ' , -"'""""°" .u.' wlU be:.JOUIJ>l trom had woo a major vic1'lry . repi:eieijlljV"9Vo! ·u.e bulliool c•l •lhe That group bad planned a l"!'"fltY center ·fl the Jasue • ' lobby campaign to convince the disfrict Benedict sild One rtpresentltive of that buses were needed, and was close the chain recenUy told the district staff to appropriating ftmd.9 for a locally that no majOt problenlJ were forecast spon:;ored ~ilot bus project to show the if" Triton students were allowed to district off1clals _that the city woold pattonbc the"" business at the 45-minute support such .service. _ bre.ak. "It was a short campaign, but -it Four other restaurants aJso exist must have been effective," City Mana~er within walking dlstanct of the campus Kenneth can-sald on the day folloWJ.ng and students said °'ey hoPe to patronize the district board approvaJ of the plans. them as well ii allowed to leave the campus. Dozens of pupils already leave the school despite the rules, often using a huge storm drain beneath the San Diego Freeway as the actea route. When administrator! catch the of· fenders, detention is the lniUal punish- ment. Repeated offenses, officials said, can brlng suspensioo. Rams Linebacker Robertson Held 011 Traf fie Rap Los Angeles Rams linebacker Isiah Robertso!"I. was arrested early today by !he flunttngton Beach police on a traffic woirranf. A police spokesmRn said the football player paid the $83 bail and "'BS relea3cd from c-ustody not long after hls 2 a.m. arrest. The \\'arrant, issued from the West Orange County Judicial District Court, charged Robertson \.\'ith two vehlcle code \"iolahorui -passing on the right under unsafe condilions and failure lo carry rei::istralion in his car. l~obertson \\'as apparently driving on Edinger Avenue near Gothard Street 11·hen he "''as stopped by Officer Keith l\'3lc. Nale made a routine \lo'Arrant check and 11•hen the traffic \!•arrant 11-'as d1scovcrcd, he took Robcrlson into cus tody. Police Capture Murder Sltspect SAN JOSE (UPI) -St111nley Bautista 26, ~·as in CUAtorl}' today ro!Jowing ~ Sll\y1ng, an appa.r.ent sulckSc attempt and a night-Jong 11ege in which hf: al· !csed ly held n:irmbers or his family 1n 1helr home with .i rifle. P-01icc SJld thf: body of Kay Ann Knudson. 20, was foond Wednesday on a matlres~ In a apartment she shared \\"lrh Aaufisl11, an elcctronlcs assembltr. 1'hf' \.\"Ontan had been shot in the head "4.>m~time during the wee kend, the cor· one r it office reporlcd. f\autlsta was rrcovi:ring today from :in opparcntly self·lnfficlcd bullet wound in the chest. f'rot11 PffiJ_! I OPPOSITION . • • we were literally besieged by telegrams, letters and calls,'' the spokesman said. There were no tallies available of the number of calls but the spokesman said they were in the hundreds. Demx:ratic U.S. Senators John Tunne y and Alan Cranston have kept more ac- curate accounts of the public senUment , according to spokesmen at their Lo& Angeles offices. "Through Wednesdaf, we have receiv· ed about 1,400 telegrams a day and countless phone calls," a worker at Tunney's office said. "~ ratio against !he President is astounding." The Tunney spokesman said his office has received one message fa vori ng the president ror every 1,000 against him. The story was much the same in Cranston's office where workers said more than 6,400 telegrams had been received through \Vednesday of 1 hich less than 200 favored the President. The spokesman said more than 100 calls an bour were also coming in. Burgener aide Hathaway said he thinks his congressman's constituents would support impeachment as a means to ge~ Information but not to remove Nlxon rrom office. He pointed out that a Democrat, Hose Speaker Carl Albert , \lo'Ould become President. l{lnshaw aide Cleary agreed, saying, ··1 don't think the impeachment pro- ceedings would go forward, but the peo- ple just want to get at the facts." From Pager SPREE ... stoltn credit card and possessing worthless checks, police said. Among ltcnson's belongings when Or· rc!le<I "'"' a receipt for a $21,000 purchase of two diamond rl~• irt liong Kong and a postcard he bou t In Spain but had not yet malled to ia rnotbtr, ~1rs. Clementine llcnson ln BalUmore. It sak:I: "D.:!nr mom; T had to nin, Sorry bul I had to go. Love Michael." Police 1t1ld an Or lando man who use! the narnt "Mr. Xavier" loaned Henson his ~laster Chtirge card in New York Aug. 6 to buy plane tickell to Orl11ndo for him And a aJr1 companion. When llcnson lailtd to return tho card, tlw: 1nan rePortcd ll stolen. fees is only $500,000. 1'bat's a net to.u of $1 million a year burdening local taxpayeni, city officials say. lluntington Beach officials estimate they lose f750,000 annually while Seal Beach says It loses about $150,000. FJgures Crom San Clemenle on Its costs were not immediately available and Laguna Beach has not yet tried lo calculate costs versus its revenues. Newport Beach Cily Councilman Corl Kymla first proposed the cost-revenue study. When councilmen diacovered the amount o( money involved, they irn- mediately asked for and received an Orange County League of cttles en- dorsement for stale assistance. Meanwhile, Huntington Beach cily of- ficials did a study of their own and Immediately asked Asemblyman Robe.rt Burke (R·Huntington Beach) to introduce state legislation calling for a state study of ways and means to aid the cities. Newport Beach city officiafs hailed the passage of the league resolution and Councilman Milan Dostal explained that, while the endorsement was nearly unanimous, it came only after a com· mJttee had tried to water lt down. '"l'hey wanted it to as k only for state funds for preservation of beach area ,'' Dostal said, "but we were successful in st rengthening it before the final vote wa9 taken. "The resolution now calls for state aid for 'breach maintenance' as well as 'preservation.' " he said, "and that's a big difference ." --r>osratsard beach-maintenance costs include things like cleanup and the extra police and traffic control needed to ban· die large crowds, as well as costs for lifeguard services and sanitary facilities. Dostal credited tbe assistance of HlDl- tington Beach delegates to the convention with providing needed · help to get the resolution adopted. From Pagel BRANNON • • • Lucky Strike wa1 k>nely afler the death of his mate last year, lhe spokearnan said. 50 he wp,i moved ln with Jemy "for com· pany. nle next lhlng we k:Mw, Uley had ma1ed tmd Jenny was pregnant. Jl is au very unusual as tar u we know." Dogs Can Run Off Leash-- Under Guard By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of lfM Dfil"f "' ......... Dogs may run on Three Arch Bay's beach off leash as long as they stay by their master's side and are under his verbal command, Three Arch Bay Association dJreetors have been in- formed. ~ The statement is contained in a two-- page letter to the association directors from William Sherfield, the attorney who represented m1nifll 1)1agll8te G. Dominic Shelton in ·the recent 'I1lree Arch Bay dog leash' Jaw trial. · Sbelton, a residen{ of the private com- mun;ty for 13 years) was charged with 31 viol.atlons of the county Jeai!lb ··Jaw *mmlnt~rly_~~it of running his two· dogs on ~ ~p • './l#Wi returned guilt)' verdicts 111 llllly tlrei of tho 31 counls. They· ,_ Shelton Innocent Of 18, other ·~ed vioiattons and could riit reach a dtdsion on· JO counts. Ooly one of the giillty verdicts involved charges PTeS3ed by 110tne oI_ Sbelton.'s neighbors. The remaining two guilty verdicts related to incidents with county Abllnal Control Department otncen. "I conaldei' thJJ a ,complete victory for Mr. Shelton," Sheffield cOmmented. The attotliey nOted that · Judge Blair Barnette, who presided over the trlal, an elght·inch hunting knife was hurled .. defined "ronn.int at large" as "beyond into tbe victim's front door to press or without restraJnt.1' · home the demand fot' immediate set-· Resµ-aint comes •ln, many forms - tlement of the gaming debt. "leash, ~ 1Qlls'or words,'' Sheffield Nash is widely regarded as the nation's teuoned in hls':1etter to association foremost expert in lhe Want science directors. ' ' of votceprints. 11Mr. Shelton ma:Y nm his dogs on He regards the technique, which uses the~ beach without a leuh as long as visual impressloos ol shading ol the tho>< dop.are,not beyond bis restraint human voice for ldentlficatloo, as equal or cootrol. 1 believe that means be to the mOre (amiliar fingerprint tech-must keep his dogs within a reasonable nique. · distance from hiJ person so that he If I.he voiceprint tapes displayed by might be in a position to exercise Im-- Nash in the pre-trial phase' of the Bran· mediate verbal command lhould that non-Kelly case are admitted to evidence become necessary," Sbe.ffl.eld wrote. it will be only the third time that The letter urge!I associatloµ directors such elvldence ha s been permitted in to act on a request by 243 Three Arch a Cali£crnia court and the first time Bay residents to reirultate "dog houn" Tbc alert ca.me before cbwn ahd wu uodtntood to affect Arfny, Navy, Marine and Alr Foret unlta around the world. lt "was disclo,,ed not by Washlngton but by military men wbo got the order. ~ Kissinger said tbe NatlolUl.l Security Cowtcil mel II about JlJl<lnlgbt PDT ud. unan1mous1ii;.:mtnded Ille ... tlon: He said · t Nixon hlrMell dJd JlOI pertldpato In uie meetJni bul concurred in their judgment. ' By that hour, orders apparently had gone out io mnttary commanden to go on alert. Kissinger termed incoocelvable the use of either Soviet or U.S. forces ta a military role in the Middle East. He said that would !fansPtant lhe rivalry of tbe great powers. , The dilltinction he drew was between that' of a military force big ~ to enforce peaoe ~terms, and perlOIJneJ assigned to ~e Ule situation and report truce violaUons. Twice, Kissinger was asked whether there was .any link between Nlxon '1 domestic Problems and the crisis abroad. He reacted icily. "There 'bas to be a minimum of con- fidence that senior officials or · the American government are not playing with the lives of the AmerJcan people," he said. ' Kissinger said ambigulty about Soviet intenliom led to U.S. moves he described as precauliollar.y. He declared flat U.S. opposition to the use of Soviet or American forces to enforce .a Middle East-cease.fire. __ "We do not consider ourselves ln a coolnlOtatioo wllb tlte Sovie! Union " Kissinger !old a nallllltally televiJed n.,W conference. "We do not believe at tbit time it is necessary to have a con- frol'JtaUon." , - Kissinger began wilh an aCCCKmt o! U.S~ef'wlnce-ttte-Ara!>-U-wa: erupted Oct. 6, and wtth a word o! caution. ·He said the United States and the · Soviet union as n~ear powert capa~e ol aitt)lhilalillg l)lllllklnd have "a very s~ial respooslbllit.J" to kee'.1 their confrootallons within bounds tha: do not threaten civilli.ation. ••we· are · at·'Ule and the 5Ame tlm~ adversaries and Partner• ln peace," he said. Kbslnger sped/Jcally "'jected a .CIUO'- tion aboul any poulble llolt betw.,, the alerts and President Nixon's pro~ Jems ln the Wat.eragte cue. lie l8id tho question lla<ll 11 "a tymptom of what Is bappenlnf lo ou: country , •• " " * *'' ~,.....P .. el MARINES.,. in an Orange County courtroom. on the beach. Such a policy would allow Vol~prlnt Is becoming increasingly dogs before 9 a.m. and after 8 p.m. ~ ~ Israeli pilots 1n the Mlddlo recognized by law enforcement agencies Three Arch Bay had Such a policy as an anti-crime tool and Justice Robert until lhe late 1960s. A 'apotesman •t the Pendlekln publlc Gard I N B Is aflalis office said be had O<ders to, ner o ewport each one of "issue only the standard no colnment." a growing number of jurists who ~ut be did say Jt a-.... .. .....a to him recognize its merits. G p ,,....~ Justice Gardner recently ruled in fa\•or en. 0ggemeyer business was going "as u11ual" at the or the science from his Fourth District tprawllng base ln northern San Diego Court of Appeals bench and allowed T County. · the technique to be u.<ed in a ru""'ide o teave ·Duties-·Pendleio•-1• primarily• trainlDg.t.cili· County trial. ty but 4 also a ma~ emblrtatioa Lawyers for Brannon, 42. and Kelly, point fOli West Coast Marines. Nuinerous 35. o! ll.15 Seagull Lane. Newport Beach, At Pendleton ': .. lko.J!"..:::r u:.d armored unit! say they intend to cbaDenge a favorable """ fte--strategtc Atr-eommand-bases ht ruling by Judge Everett W. Dickey with Marine Corps ~laj. Gen. Herman Ptlg· California were~· March Ait.Fcnu testimony of their own on the voiceprint gemeyer Jr., camp Pendleton's com· Base, ne41' Rlvenlde, and Beale AFB, technique. mander since early 1972, will move onto near Marysville, and Cutle AFB near They have stated that they will call a new assignment next month. h-lerced. al least five witnesses principally fro m Gen. Poggemeyer, 57, wtll report Nov. At March persoonel were told to slly the fitld of phonetic science, to challenge 21 to Okinawa , where he wUI command close to horn~ telephones if not on duty the statements of Nash and Carroll if the Third Marine Amphiblou1 force. today and to answer any calls within Judge Dickey seems inclined to admit The generaJ will be succeeded at lix rings. the voiceprint tape as evidence. Pendleton by Big . Gen. Robert L. "lt'a just like any ol the flr1t-ttJi1e Borrowing of tbe voiceprint evidence Nichols, who will leave a command practice alerts we have all the Ume " by the judge would mean that the actual position at Camp Le Jeune, N.C., lo one a.lnnan told the AP. ' jury trial of Brannon and Kelly could become the head of the largest U.S. He received a telephone call alerUng open 1'1onday. military base In the world. him at 11 p.m. • r---------------------• I I I I I I I I I r. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY General llectrlc FREEZER ·' • 518 Lb. Capacity I I I I I • Convenient Book·aelf I Sloragel • Foods Easy to Or9ani1e, See and Select • Defrost Drain LIMITED QUANTITY 239 95 • .. I I I •• I I I I 90 DAY CASH WttH,;m.,°'n' I 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa-Phone 548-778.B I ~---------------------~ , ' • A ' ~. Al ~. 'I' ~. "' "' '" II ~ f • j : • : • l • • • • _l : I • • i ! l • • • • j • ~ • ( r \ I .• f II . ' :I I , .. Tl"'!"'1. -;:r.. l97J : -.. ' .. I ' ' '' ., ~-~W YO~K STOCK E.X~HANGF;:-:· ,, \ \ sc; .. ~ \, . . ~· ' • '& Tlltll1dJy, Octobtr 2S, 1973.-:------~==,------=--;r------,=-:o;--------,:-=.,------.,..,,-..... .,....-----=--,.....----......, C{tMrel neral O..ra General 1 O.n1r•f Genenl Gwr•I OAll Y PILOT JI .el[ _H,~.... JI .el * * * * * * =A:;;LP:;,_H_A_•n_A_ 1==----Lu:~~i:c:'l'&OM•'iii!§iiiicoiiili•Miiiiii'l,_ EV!D"u:r~~~N A Ji__..;E~R~R~o~R~s~~~;:d~"";~;-~,-~;-~1t~;~.-:-~;;,~;:;~,;--::c~h~.-~;k:-~tt;~-:.~;~-~ ~AYLOR (0. * ;.~~~~~~ ~~~l~ff RENTALS ft:.£~~~1·,~~ 4ld1 ct.Uy & repcrt 1rror1 imm•dialely. The ~ I Mlf lot $99,!'IOO • arou is be a.ch. P~ Jllll). $58·,5'0 }tecf ~..:::. Re:'tt~;; DAILY Pl LOT a51um11 liability for tile first Ovt?r $12.000 and O\\'C al 8%. ~ Seacllrt oorUon of ~(~ eveniftet). tftcorrect insertion onty. CORONA DEL MAR LUXURY DUPLEX 4 NEW mlPt.£X£S H..,un~~.°' .. ,..~~a1' •-i•·o' Isl-~ -~ Enter thru a dramatic parlor to maasJve Sparkll ail 1 CHOICE _.. ~ l.fKQC lnt ·Zone C-2. !IO' x 246' wUh ---- 1 b . bi ed I m k'tchen d' na ntW wt fll one cellinp. Bennuda •hUtters awn»ctmat~)' '500 911. ft. Ganer al ·I ND ISSOCIAHS REALTORS CHARMING HARBOR VIEW HOME Step into the 5p~u1ish tilo entry & then into the beaulifully decorated living room with plush 1natcherl carpeting & wallcoverings. Forn1al d111i11g rou1 11 plus large eating area in the built1n kitchen. 2 liedrooms, 2 baths, den. large covered patio "'ilh profess ional landscaping. Entertain here & view Big Can- yon. Charm at its best! $69 .500. •• . . ~~ • i'. ·'IN SHORECLI F FS-Unique Home in this Unique area! 3 bedrooms, shake shingles • l over board and batten exterior, used brick Iireplace. Walk the tree-lined streets to a "t>tivate beach. Charming! $99,500. A listing ' of Jerry Lumbert. UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 67~ 2443 E. Coa&t Hwy., Corona d•I Mar \VC ar u1 com n am. r , t in. three bedtoon111 and two two and CUlfom wood buniliw ot buUding. Present lncome * Re:DUC•D * rn1 \Vhich opens to Spanish court-yd, The bt>d!OO!na, .11..11 .,..'kh tltfo. CONDOS fln:pl,.ci. 3 BR, 2 BA • 111 k>w at $SZ Pf'I' mo. Who'• NOW $119.900 :. entire 2nd rtoor is the master suite with places and 1% balh. 0'4·ner lavi&b ltvtnc/d1nlna area, llntt' vacant duplex plu aue•t 1 mezzanine study. 2 BR, 2 BA in main resi-will carry 80% at 8\.i'k * RARE 3 txtrm. "Bluffs" u well as Jll"ge kitchen room. &lptt renovated . deuce. 2 BR, 1 ba in wilt. Hurry. $149,500. ~h.500 ~;;;t .... ~di~~~ Cilided ~16'':· :' .... level~ wtth ha own dtnlne ape.ce. N.Wport boat moprinr, fUnllahed, I, C IT E OPEN DAILY 15 30 -· ........ ...-Encloeed a&rden entry A _,.1 xlnt parldns. Sttp11 ti> 608 ?-.lAR UER !. • : n1on· than one triplex. belt.. . ,900. 2 car 1ar. All exterior •• beach.owner~ ''1ell" "Our 21th Y•1r'' C.o .r.t. COMMERCIAL * LARGEST 3 Bdrm. I main111· P1 r ~.~1 d,~_d1.: .. ~; 1'1lrv5-w Open dally~~~ P!!'1Lll3St. Co R Ito Rare opportunity to have fanrily rm. In "'Blut!t." mun y ea ....... ua;....,. ..... A&f:. 615-01.... Q'W""" WESLEY N. TAYLOR ., ea rs .._ ot = 1acU1 ... lncld& MUil! li·'·· n:; PAR.KING AND A BUJLD. }IUil' patio w/lhulfleboerd ___ , -"v pool ·-··, 2 BR, lge ~ .. ,. rm, e, 211 1 Si n Jo.1quln Hlllt Ro1d ING in "Old Corona". 72Xt' court. Pro!)el"ty In ~ant ;-~:·'won't iut ... b;'i (inytlme) completely redMe on% I, i•Ov•rlooklng Big Canyon Country Club'1 building· "·1th pertiapc paric-cond. 176,500. Located In BeachW&lk, otl Balboa Island, 491-3622 NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 ~~·,;;;; ':,ili ,!..~. c.u. P LEASE CALL Gold•mw•t. Only 14<>,•xl. DANDY DUPLEXES lolboo hnl-So G I G I 67s 3000 Donald M. Blrd and A.uoc. en•r• •n•r• Call 675-7Z!5 -• Sales Agent n4:536-6M1 2 Bedrooni units on tarae HOME _ OFACE lots. lO'ro down. Only: PRESTIGTW A TER'FROl'lrROf;fES Lindo Islo Watorfr0nt · Custom 4-bdrm., 41'.i bath ·home on lagoon • Fullr. equipped island kitchen, waterfront family .room, bllllard room . . . . . . '245,000 For Complete lnform1tlon On All H..,,.. & Loll. PINM Coll: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boyslda Dr., Sullo l, N.B. 675-6161 * BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * ASSUME 6°/o VA LOAN m II.\\ ,\ Ill: U'll 1u: u.1 ' 1.\I'. 1s·1.,; '''lO'~, SHOULD A HUSBAND TELL HIS WIFE THE SCHOOL BEW * 59'x290' LOT * C-1 ZONE £.Z TERMS * Corona. del Mar DUPLEX -$68,500 * 4 Bedroom home (huge master BR) + ia.rnilY room + den, 3 be.th&, many ex· tras. Quiet atreet $58,100 * C-2 Property • N~ Blvd. with 30' x 30' building. $36,000. Roy McC•rdl• Re1ltor 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. 541-7729 /Jn NILEI UAILE Y 1, A551JCIATE'i NEWPORT HEIGHTS WITH POOL $36.500 or """" 60 ft °'\"' be"" BEACH DUPLEX """"'"" -..,.. lw LIKE NEW ............ Ex""1ml lnvfft-ment at 167.500. 3 Bedroom & 2 Bedroom. Pac:lflc PrOfNrtln unlta, 1 block to the beach. 6Mn2 or M8-IT96 Co m pletely redecorated. New carpets, drapes.. 10% Ori9ln1I Bailbe.t down.. Has betn making money Jcr $76,500 ..,.,m 1'1'91 Orang-e Ave., C.M. Ontu~ ~21 GI REPO-. $26,500 REDUCTION Price jU&t cvt on this quality- bWlt s & s harm!!! &mml living nxim. Fann.al dining area.. Hu.ge family room wtth parquet Coor. 3 large becl:roomli. Now priced a1 "3.900 • a did value on toda.y'a market. Better hut· ryl Can 842-~. Of'fN71l a• IT'S {UN lOA ICll yell.I'll, le;t it m&ke 101De fol' you! 14 Onita, fl!S,000. Prine. Only, 615-1513 Bkr. Corona chi Mar NEW DUPLEX Extraordinarl.ly attractive all l!lhtne:le conWuctlon wttn large three bedrooin units • sxrth of highway • $S300 a year in-. Miring $lllt,950. Call 61$-TA;_ The tutest draw 1n the West. Need a "Pad.'? Pia~ an ad! OCEANFRONT NEWPORT HEIGHTS , .a Dally PilM Classi fied ~C~al~I ~642c;-5'111""'~·----· I CUte 3 BR, 2 BA DoU llotae with H&F pool, eu bltn1, fpic , fam rm, deta.ched dble garart with alley entrance. 1''ull price $41,500. Call Real- tor ......... ~ New deluxe triplex. 4 Reduced! SpS?iSh 3 1~°"~";0';;";;1;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:G;;on;;;:•:':•l;;:;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;j Car parking. Will trade BR., 2 ba. split-level. I• for oceanfront home or Extra lge. lot. owner M£SA VERDE NORTH 'DOLLHOUSE 3 Bedroom, 2 Batb, fireplace, 'huge family room /country kitchen combina- tion. ln new section. See this one for sure! 'Asking $39.900. CALL 54G-1151 GOVERNMENT REPOSSESSION ';29.500 -3 Bedroom, large double garage, : hardwood floors + pool, near Newport Back , Bay. Fantastic value -bids close soon. Call l1S for full details. 54G-ll51 Op.n Ev••· OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 2-6 2018 Santiago Drive, Dover Shores. 3100 sq. .ft .. 5 bedroon1s, 4 baths. Separate master suite and living room. den and dining room. l\i nx ilnum privac~·. $125.000. OCEAN VIEW CLASSI C Open Sunday 1-5. 4 bedrooms, family room in lovely Cameo Shores. Reduced to $115,000. 4S3J Tramont. BAYCREST OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 2021 Commodore 3 bedroo m attrac tively decorated honie. fo'amily room overlooking pat.io. 21,,:.i baths. Eating ba r in ki tchen. Jtoon1 ror bo<lt or trailer. S68 .000. -HARBOR VIEW HILLS Spacious :1 bcdroon1 ho1ne. 1-·amily room with fireplace. S\vim 1ning pool, ocean vi e\•:. ()\,·ner \rlll lease option. 3 car garage. ~~.500. HARBOR VIEW 'HOMES l' .. r!ofi n11 tncxh·I. :1 bcdroon1s. farnily roo m, honu~ roo1 n fl tl{l loft. (;reat for teen-agers, n1 ntht>r·111·Jn\v or rntert aining. Just bring .11.11 r po~11 1,1 iJll'' ~l !Jfl(l . CHOICE EMERALD BAY :l ~ 1o;11' old !-ip:1 n1"h 4 bedro{lm charming J ,;u1:11 b<i l'bC(j UL' I' d!l()fi]JTII(' \•iC\\', l 'se nf IPJHU~ ( uurl i'. po11L .u1rt private beach. Si 75.000 CAME O SHORES f'l<.·e•in \ l\'\1". V('I'\' l;1 ri;:t' li1·ing roon1 and mas- tt•r bedro11111 11111 1 IJ~·u11t il'11 l parquet floo rs, bc:1 med t:\.'lit11 g.~. ~ hc clrnoms. 3 hilths. ·$115.000. LIDO IS LE BAY FRONT Open S.1turr1av an d Su nday 1-5 844 Vi a Lido Nord. l'r1n1c IJJC<111on 4 hcdroom. 4 ba th ho1ne: Scpu r;.1lt· d1n1111.: rDOrtl. 40 foot lot. $295,000 . ,, FOUNTAINS & REFLECTION POOLS ~In tin:; pri\-a\C' ~cu d l•n . Pcg~ed hard\vOOd fl oors. tr11c L<1~una ('harn1. 2 or 3 Bedroom, • rnm1ly roon\. , 1•:11 :-.i~.~- ' /• ' . ~ 644-1766 Coldwell, Banker ~ 216 1 Sa n Joaquin Hiiis Rd ., N.B, -? $225,000. 675-7060. extremely . anxious! • Call & subnut 642-7491, HERE IT IS OPEN HOUSE 31'.i Lots In Newport Sat/Sun. 214 S4th St., Beach. plus 13 units, N.B. Furn. duplex, 1h 1 blk. to b e.a ch. blk. to beach. Lower $150,000. See them unit has frplc. & bltns. now !! 673-7420. f/6,000. ~ * BALBOA IA Y PROPERTIES * 4 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU G•neral 15 ROOM M"NSION EXCLUSIVE private meet-In Back Bay. Secluded park· Hke grounds sunuund huge 2 story colonial. 5 bedrooms including view mnster suite "'Ith dreuing rooru, GlJEST FACILITY and bath. &r\. qui!! formal dining. 30' country kitchen. n· rumpus room. Family room over· w lk O L .... ,,,. , ,...,, and ,........ a er u ee rear grounds. Only ~7.500. _::C=:':"::'::'::";:'::'::"'=:::::'.'. ="" HURRY! call FAMIL y ASSUME ., 7°/o LOAN IOl/l\I I Ol\O\ /.'tAilOPS. 2299 Harbor Bh·'d. Sharp 2 bth111 ., Pi halhs -------- 1 home in tx-aur. ll"\llne. Elec. ABANDONED ! ! ! bit-ins', 11·ith cl1sh11•shr .. F.A. !\'{'iily rtecoratrd :i BR, 2 BA :i{'al, caJ1)., .dr.ajX"S & ~hll!-rlell~lil. Shal( ~·flfl, over- ers. l..gc. el<1s11ng V.A. ,CN1n i.i~Ml i.;nr on lrir;:;e lrt.'c lot. ~~ ~ assun1{'(l. Offered lor l::al(('r O\llK"l' :i~king $3'J,500. Mo RGAN REAL TY Cau !i4~r."-lfXI. 673-4642 675-6459 ~~<i.ll<Bl'.l!/li.l!l!l!Lf!J:ti"!!!"~' Any day is the BEST DAY to run an ad? Don'! delay, call today 642-5678. V. K llo.•ro & Cc. .... .,_ ......... EXPANDING? HUNTINGTON BEACH Close to beach, 5br, fam rm, formal dlning area, 21f..: years old. All this for only $39,500. NEWPORT B'EACH Lofted living rm ceiling, frplc, wet bar, pool ja- cuzzi, tennis, 4br, 2~ ba, New Celery & white shag carpeting througboul. OCEAN VIEW WE'RE MOVING office for lease. lmmedi-so rapidly. That we've ate occupancy. Still ' reduced beautiful up- available. 360 sq ft, 500 I graded condo. ~. Our sq ft & fiOO sq ft. 11 o s s is your savings. $21.500. All squared away I • ne\Y wall lo wall J>lease call or stop carpeting In Ji vi ng I by for coffee & con- roon\, hal l & master versation about any bedroo1n, 3br, 2ba. Ilea! Estate prob- $28.500. len1 or question . (714) 962-7787 SMALL WORLD ~ii BAYSHORE • Imm••ili.t• 2 *OCEANFRONT* Bodroom "°""'· llcht • DIJPLIX cheery. Inner pa& tor prt. ~ • 3 BR., 1 ba.. ~ vacy cozy U9ed lrlc:k fire. unit. Si&l*f!r) totwena,tla\ pl~ ........... ~ pie-pit ... ~. ~ bal<ony; View home w/gret.t income on tt&r, on Ooemt Blvd. $189,500. 615-400. DUPLEK corner, charmbla:, by owner. 500 Poinlettia, Open 1-5 dally. 8%% Int. .... windows, ........... In ....... 11'"<>· -double~. e,ooo. g&ft.le ··,..1~nul0dt.te 4 IP-------.,1 PETE BARRETT ~· ,:·..,10!0 .,..,._ -REALTOR- 642-5200 Huge 3 BR, 2 BA unlt1. Beat rental are1. Walk to schools, shOps &: churches. Uve In one almost rent free. HWT)', wo1l°t lut $48,950! 1 Submit on exchange, Call 6'>-MOQ, z PffW S£m1HQ yew om rn • t•v.~~c..j MACNAB IRVINE "'H I G H LANDS"~73,950 Immaculate 4 BR -immediate occupan- cy! Beautifully landscaped w/partial ocean view & private beach. Jack Custer ti42-8235. (Q39) FAMI LY COMFORT Lovely 4 BR, 21> bath home w/nke yard. Excellent Harbor View location . '74,995. Charles Arnold 642-8235. (Q27) LINDA ISLE Channel vie,11. Lg. ma3ter suite w/fire-- place &. dressing room. 2 farnUy slze BR's. hobby room. Pier & slip. $255,000. OPEN THIS WEEKEND 1·5 p.m. '65 Linda Isle. (Q51) [Irvine j ........ .,__,,._,,,.., I I OI OowtDJIYt 142•1111 1144 M•MrttW "4··utl .... ,..,.. a...ti, C.Uftml• Hiii -· associated BROKERS REALTOPS 2 02 ~ W Balboo 61).)66' OWNER TRANSFER! VERY ANXIOUS! Be1utlful 5 BR, 4 BA . pool home. Sup r eme ly con- 1tructed and decorated !or elegant living. C ho i c e Newport location. P r I c e reduced to $135.0XI. 64&-1221 , Eves. 548-a594 1733 WESTCUFF DR .. N .B. WHAT IS? A Corona dcl 1'.lar dupl.!X v.1th 3 BR 2 BA owuen unit and $225 rental v.ith over an acre al irasa that you never have to mow? Give up? It'1 acrou fro1n a park (let 'em take cllr(' of tht>lr O\vn !a\vn). ONLY $89,500 CALL 644-nll /Jii:NIGEL BAILEY & AS5ll[ I AT LS Linda ls[e By Ownor/Bulldor $250,000 Excellent T1'rm~ ~lay lease optkm t-i'J. Tl82 • 673· 771J.I The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S CLASSIFIED HOURS Adwrtilera may Dlace their ads by telephone '8:00 a.m. to :5:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday 8 to noon Saturday COSTA MESA ,On'ICE 330 W. Bay 642-'5678 NEWPORT BEACH 3333 N.wport Blvd. 642-'567!1 HUNTINGTON BEACH 17875 Beach Blvd.. -= LAGUNA BEACH 222 Fort1t Ave, 494-9466 SAN CLE?t1ENTE 300 N. El C&mlno Rell 492-4420 NORTH COUNTY dla.l fl'ff M~l.220 CLASSIFl!D DEADLINES Deadline for copy A klllt Is 5:30 p.m. t he day l)e.. (ore pUbllcaUon, except tor Sunday I: Monday Ed!Uona when deadline is Saturday, 12 noon. CLASSIFIED REGU LATIONS ERRORS: Advertiaen should check the.Ir ad• dally &: report elTOrt Immediately. THE DAILY PILOT wumet Ua.blllty for the flnt In· correct lnlertion onlf, CANCEILATIONS; When kllllng an . ad tMi •ure to make a record or the KILL NUMBER given you by your ad laker u receipt of your cancellatlon. Thia kill number must be pre. sented by the advertl.Nr In case of a dlllpu~. CANCELLATION 0 R CORRECTION or NEW AD BEFORE RUNNING : Every erfort J1 ma.de to kill or correct a new ad that hu bffn ordered, but we cannot auaran:• tee to do so unUl the ad ha• apptattd in t h e paper. D1M£.A·UNE ADS: 'JbeH ad• a.re strlctlY cuh ln advance by mall or at any one of our ot-rteet. NO phone orders. Oea4Une: 3 p.m. ~.i Coeta Mesa ottb ~ noon -all branch of· r1ce1. 11-JE DAILY PlLOT re.. lervtt lht 1'1aht to Clu· ,\fy, cdl!, censor or re-fuse any a.dvttt!Jemtnt. and tt> chanre Ill ratH .l rcJuh1tlnna wlthO\lt lead"1ng '"'°' "'"'"'· Iii CLASSIFll D MAI LING ADD RESS Marketplace l ~··=c~.=·~=:1~=5·60=. ~1 ) ' I l I I t • • -· . • • -. . -· __ .... • Lagu11a Beaeh EDITION Today's Ff••I N.Y. Steeb VOL 66, NO. 298, 4 SECTIONS, 58 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1973 TEN CENTS Coast Legislators Say Tide Turns for Nixon U.S. l!Mton and congre11men repr-llng the Orange Coal\ earlier this week were deluged with m&il, telelP"ams and phone &alls overwhelm· lngly favoring impeachment of President Nizon. But two Republican coogres.vnen, in- cluding the one whose ·district includes the President's San Clemente estate, said today the tide bas turned and support Is starting to Dow in. Local offices of Qmgressman Andrew • • J. fflnshaw (R-Newport Beach) and Clair Burgener (R-Santa Fe Springs) said that their mail volume on the impeachment situation was heavier than usual but now the calls and letters are swinging in support of the President. Burjener, whose district includes a coastal-strip of Orange County from San Clemente to Newport Beach, reportedly onJy four phone calls to his local office in Orange County -all opposing the President. • I "Several" p~Nixon calls were receiv- ed In Burgener's 8an C!emente Di.strict office, according to spokeswoman Maa· ine Green. From Wa.shlngton, Burgener's con- gres!lonal aide, Brad Hathaway, said, "I can't say that we've received a flood of telegrams." Hathaway said Blll'gener was.receiving more mail on the Middle East war, · the Environmental Protection Agency and gas rationing. itar • * * * He added that Wednesday morning, a definite trend in favor of tbe President had begun to show up but he had no record of percentages or volume. Hinshaw's District Administrator Chip Cleary said his office hlid received "hun- dreds" of telegrams and confi,rmed that after a wave of anti-Nixon r:Dail came in, the tide began turning in support. Cleary said criticism of the President was due mostly to "confusion" on the part of the public. He said Hi nshaw urged the President to go on television soon after the story broke over the Watergate tapes and the Cox firing . '"The congressman believes the people are entitl ed to the full knowledge of the situation," Cleary said. Congressman Craig Hosmer (R-Long Beach), whose district includes part of v•estem Orange County, indica ted an enormous nood of sentiment against the President. on Voiceprint -1-ntFoducing The Zoiikie .. --Like1962 ----------..-·-·-~~-...... ~ ..... ·- Ruling Set On Brannon B1. TOM BARLEY Of lie NY """ tlllfl If n>llng that coWd prove Yilal to the proaecuilon's case q:alost Sad-- -Coll .. e Trualee Alyn M. Bran· "'!II. ...i bta co-djlendallt may be ~ late today in the Orange Cow> ,,...,.....Court~ ~-:[th. 11'! -. ~~=..=:i -.. ' 11111 . . biCalne Ill - In the . !ljll 7llldM Jiit - -i.-to the prwculimi'9 -wi-la the in-trtol ...... -Dllilllll AlioroiJ'a bmlllplrDID CIJ'o roll. -Wllllam Enns llld Car· roll'• lesUjnoay will set the seal ... Nash's clabn that \here can be no doubt that used car salesman Robert Emmett KeUy telephoned a patron in Brannon's alleged $25,000..a-weet boo t m a k 1 n g bu!iness lo the Harbor Area and warned him to Immediately settle • '2,8» gambllng debt. 'Ille perfume salesman who redeved the taped call said he wu told by 1 voice, ''Deter Diake-ooi .tbat wtu. baby; you're a dead player." At about that time, Evans claims an eigbt·inch hunting imife was hurled into -the-vlctlm!a-froal---to press home the demand for immediate set- Uement cl the gamllJg debt. Nash is wlde1y regarded as the nation's forernoM expert in the infant science ol. voiceprlnts. He regards the technique, which U!eB visual impresai!IOS of shading of the hwnan voice for identiflcatlon, u equal to the .,.... familiar fingerprint tech- alque. ll the volceprint tapes diJplayed by Nash in the pre-trial phase of the Bran- non-Kelly case are aclmltted to evidence It will be only the third time that such elvidence has been permitted in a caJUornia court and the flnt Ume in an Orange County courtroom. Voiceprint is becoming increasingly recognized by law enforcement agencies u an anU-aime tool and JusUce Robert Gardner of Newport Beach ls one of a growlng number of Jurists wbo recognize Its merits. NEW YORK (UPI) - A spokesman for the Prospect Park Zoo says Jenny, a dookey, is pregnant by Lucky Strike, a zebra. The offspring, expected in March, will be called a Zoakie. Lucky Strike was lonely after the death of his mate last year, the spokesman said, so he was moved in with Jenny "for com- pany. 1be next ti$g we knew, -tl)ey had mated and Jenny was pregnant. It Is all very unusual as far as we know." Youth Na,bb~d .. . lll $500,000 Credit Spree ORLANOO, Fla. (UPI) -Petite policewoman Kitty Hutter thought it was a routine bust In a stolen credit card cue until the teletype messages started pc;uring in saying, "We want him, we want him. we want him." And with the bills st.ill coming ln, police said today a soft-spoken teen-ager may have collected as much-as-$500,000 using a stolen credit card and bogus cbect.s in a global spendlng spree. Mlchae.l Thomas Henson , 18, asked, ~..that....all ~you..'ve got.me for?'!......when. Mrs. Hutter put a gun to his back Sunday at an Orlando Howard Johnson 's and arrested him for using a stolen Master Charge card. "Whe-1 he said that, r knew there was more to it," the blonde detective said. Investigators sald they later found evidence that Hensoo cashed $200,000 in bad checks at American Express offices in a monlb-loog spree that stretched from New York to Lisbon to Hong Kong, with many stops in between. Henson was being held In lieu of $Z50 bond on charges of possessing a stolen credit card and posseMing worthless checks, poUce said. Among Henson's . belongings when ar- rested was a receipt for a fll,000 purchase of two dlamond rings in Hong Kong and a postcard be bought in Spain but had not yet maUed to his mother, Mrs. Clementine ffen.900 in Baltimore. J'.hallenged In Coonty Assessor Def ends Action On .President's Estate By CANDACE PEARSON Of ,... DI>!" ........ Jack Vallerga went to Inglewood Wednesday to defend his assessment rJ. President Nl.J:on's San Clemente estate while state officials were In Orange County challenging it. Vall•rga, the Oranae County ta1 usealOI', teltlOed btfort 1 jolnt meeting of the ASlembl,y Committee on Revenue and Ta11tlon and the Mlembly Select Committee on Coastal 1.one Re80\ll'ces, The 1Uh)ect of the helrlnc In lnglelfOOd City Hall wat the effect ill PropoolUon 20. the 1m coastal 1qne act, on property wluem and ooutal countJ wemnent practk.'Cs. But Vaiierga dlmted from that slight- ly to deliver his own volleys 1t the State Board ol Equallzatloo while Ill member• were btln& holt.ed by the Irvine Compony In Newport Beach. ' Claiming that the hoard is lighting "• batue in the pre11," Vallerga said the boml ii accustng him of "giving preferential treatment to a high officer of this country." He didn't mention President Nixon by name, but the reference WB! obviou!, eSpecially to AMemblyman Le o McCarthy (J>.San Francisco), who o~ jected to Vallerga's using the hearing as a forum. Prealdent Nizon purchased about 25 acres for the Western White House com- plea in San Clemente ror ,1.s mllUon. It locluded a 43-year-old, 6,00G-tquare foot house, La Cua Pacifica. Vallerga down-llleSled the property ln. 1973 to lea than •t4 million, at- tributing the drop to Propooition 20 wtcertainUes. nu. ls cootrary to trends statewide (Ste VAU.ERGA, Page I) -Jackson From Wire .Sen1cel Sen. Henry M. Jacaoo (0.W,sh.), compared the "liddlo Eut siU.Uaa to- day to the Cuban rm.lle crisis of IC. But a House DemocraUc leader wbo attended a While House brief'mg de.scrib- ed ~ent N'wn's..attitude u "op- limlsUc." Jsckoon told newsmen IN~ Am~r ~-'· Dob\'1$ Secretary of state lllpry A. a "'brulal" note ~ tllat · troops would be !Mld!'In on a peaee- ing" mission for the Mlddle F.ast -r if tlle United stale! -to go along. 1'We're right at the brJnt aga~" the Senator sai4. He was not among a bipartisan group of Holl3e and Senate leaders who at· tended the White House meeting with Nixon and Kissinger during the morning. House Democratic whip John McFall (D-Calif·,)1 woo was present, said the attitudes of Nixon and Kissinger were ''opt.imisUc rather than pessimistic." A senior Egyptian official said today in Cairo it is "an iffy question" whether Egypt woukl accept Soviet troops to help pollCe the Middle East cease-fire without the involvement of U.S. forces 1n the same capacity. Ashraf Ghorbal, an adviser to Prest· dent Anwar-Sadat, was commenting -at a news conference on the Soviet state- ment at the United Nations Wednesday night that the Kremlin considered cor· reel Sadat's call for U.S. and Soviet troops to help secure a cease-rire between Israeli and Egyptian forces a1ong the Suez Canal Meanwhile, Egypt said Israel carried out tank, artillery and air attacks against Suez city today and was pouring more men and armor across the Suez Canal in preparations for resuming a general offensive against Egypt's 3rd Army. It blamed Egyptian losses on U.S. support of Israel . Dogs Can Run Loose on Beach If Supervised By FREDERICK SCllOEMEBL ot llM D9itY Piiot 111" Dogs may run on Three Arch Bay's beach of{ leash as long as they stay by their matter's side and are under hls verbal command, Three Arch Bay As9ociatlon directors have been in- formed . '111.e statement Is contained in a two- page letter to the association directors from William Sherueld, the attorney who represented mining magnate G. Dominic Shelton in the recent Three Arch Bay dog leash law trial. Shelton, a resident of the pr1vatfl com- munfty for 13 years, was charged with St vlolatloos of the COW>ty leash law stemming from his early moming habit of running hJs two dogs on the beach. Juron returned guilty verdicts on only · three of the Jl counts. They found Shelton Innocent of 18 other alleged violations and could not reach a decision · on 10 counts. Only one of the guilty verdlcls involved charges pressed by some of Shelton'• neighbors~ The remaining two guilty verdict.I rtlated to lncldents "1th county Animal Control Department o!flcus. "I consider this a complete victory for Mr. Shelton," ShefUeld commented. The atlomey noted that Judge Blllr !8!' DOGS, Page I) IT'S A BIRD, IT'S A PLANE? .. NO, IT'S A UFO Brian Coleman, 13, Displays Candle-powered Hot Air Balloon Kids Make Own Mystery UFOs Ju.st Candles, !Jag By TERRY COVILLE Of JM DliiY Piiot Slllff "It was pulsatq,g and it appeared to have a red light on one side. Then there was a bright, °'hite flash, like lightning but wlthout noise, and It shot straight up and out of sight ... ," on e mystified night watcher reported. The mystery of the UFOs'. al least in Huntington Beach, has been solved. Metallic night g1iders from a distan t star? Secret enemy spy flights? Bring in UFO An.d Get Cash CORVAWS, Ort. (UPI ) -A Corvallis radio station, KLOO, says it is offering a $10,000 reward fo r the fll'St penon to take a tlving , visitor rrom apace lo the studio. (Relaled stories Pages 3 and 11 ). Sob Houglum, station manager, said Wednesday the offer was prompted by lhe rash of unldentl· tied fi ylng object reports lrom throughout the nation. Houglum said the re.ward wi11 be paid to the "first person who can bring to the i tudio a living thing, animal or person, that has come from outtr space and has never been on e•rlh before." • No. Soda straws, birthday candles and clea r, plas tic dry cleaning bags. Simple items collected from a taco stand, a laundry and a supermarket went into the construction phase of 4'\c bright, orange discs some Huntingt6n Beach residents reported as UFOs Tues- day night. The spacemen who launch them are a grou p of high school youths who live in the Sol Vista tract oear Slater Avenue and Edwards Street. Their spacecraft, about three-feet tall and two-feet wide. fly on a simple prin- ciple -the old hot air balloon method . "We learned how to make them in a hlgh school science class,'' says Peter Wicmals, 16. "It does look like a fiery g1ow in the sky," add.s Lisa Regal, 15. "It Ooats (See UFO, Page ZI Laguna Fans Busing To El Dorado Game The Laguna Beach Jaycees V<:ill spon!IOr a rooters' bus to the La guna Beach ll igh·i':I Dorado football gn1ne Friday ni E:ht . The bu~ l''lll lcnve the Bank of Amrrlca parking lot. 299 Ocean A\'e. :it 6:30 p.n1. Round trip CO!ll is $2. l''urthcr information can be obtained by c11lling Kc.lly Boyd, -494·9494. The a p.1n. ga1ne will be played at the El Dorado lligh School ca mpu!ll in Placcnlin. Spokesmen in his office said no tuming or the tld·· was apparent Wednesday afternoon. "There has been a constant stream or phone calls and earlier in the week, we were literally besieged by telegrams, letters and calls," the spokesman said. There were no tallies available of tbt number of calls bot the spokesman said they were In the hundreds. Democratic U.S. Senators John Tunney !See OPPOSITION, Page I) ert' Reds Force .=;....;::.....-~-"c ------· h1 Mideast BlJLUl:l'JN tJNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -'!'be ~ Softet am .. ss1i1r 19 a.~~ : .. llld·Way ... ·-~ -·--to u.e Cfttldll or a ;u.N. ~ •JJ 1 . , .... "' ... -Elal .. -8"lel, • A-"•atr.a.Wcpower ....... , 1 WAsmNGroN (AP) -11.$. ~ _, ..... ,111 ...... to_. ............... '*'·~"'"~~Xii llllpr-llid It • jM"ocautlon >- by uncertllnty about possible Soviet in- terventioo to polJce the MiddJe East cease-11r.: But be said the early morning order DAYAN'S OFFER TO QUfT REJECTED. Story, Page 4 was dispatcbed because of ambiguity in Soviet intenUons, not in a great-power The alert was the U.S. 's largest since the CUban missile crisis of 1982. "As of now, the Soviet Union has not taken any lrTevocable action," Kif. singer said. "It is our hope that no such action will be taken." Kissinger said the United States op- poses:· the UBe or grear;.power farces in the numbers that would be neressary to police an Arab-Israeli cease-fire. But he said the United States Is williDg to supply some personnel to an observer team under United Nations supervision. The alert came before dawn and was Wlderatood to affect Anny, Navy, Marine and Air Force units around the world. It was disclosed not by Washington but by military men who got the order. Kissinger said the National Security Council met at about midnight PDT and unanimously recommended the ac- tion. He said President Ni1on himself did not participate in the meeting, but concurred In their judgment. By that hour, orders apparently had gone out to military commanders to go on alert. Kissinger termed inconceivable the use of either Soviet or U.S. forces in a military role in the Middle East. He said that would transplant the rivalry of the great powers. The distinction he drew was between that of a military force big enough to enforce peace terms, and personnel nssigned to observe the situation and (See ALERT, Page Z) Oraage «:out • Weather Mostly suMy Friday is the way the weatherlady secs it, with may· be just a taste of fog in the morn~ ing hours. Highs at the beaches in the mid·70s rising to the )ow 80s inland. Overnight lows in the 50s. l i\~1111·: T OD-\ Y Presiden t Nizon Is expected to face questioning on role plnyed by close friend Beb6 Rebozo in handling of campaign contri b11iion.s. See story, Page 4. l .M. tnlll \t C1Mr.l"fll1 t , 14.11 CllHlfi.tl 14-lf Ctfllk t JJ c ••• _. n Dt•lh "'"''' u Efl)Wl.i 1'1" 6-1 E"ll1rt .. 11-I Hl'"·ll·IJ F .. fl"'9 114.1 , .. "'' • ..,... lt ...,..,._ 1' AMI l ""'" 11 Mt'tln Mil'"-14-11 Mvtv1I ~"'"'' Jt M1HclMI foltwt '4 Or-"""" ,, l'TA J1 Syllll1 P1f'11r tt S-11 U-. Dr Slelr111;"4ltl ti Slodi M1r•1i. 1).Jl Ttl1¥ltlM HP·14 TIIMlitn Hfl..1 .. lJ Wl>fll"" 4 W-.,0'• NIWt 11·• WWN M"'1 I )'oungBoys .- Run Vesse l Onto S hore Netc Delicacy- Tlie R at Dog? CARDIFF, Wales (UPI) -\Vor-- rien about the contentl of the hot doe m11 have a new rear to alll1eDd with -lbe rat dol;. It may come lo lhll, uJd Dennl1 &u.my. he.ad " c " d tr r University'• r.oology department. It's Legal: I Me eting Per Week . A ru:iir or youtJ1rul pirates -one lie said the school will begin By JAN WORTff .... rcwarch to see •·belher It Is 01 "'' 0111, rw , .. " of them no older than JO -arc being economical to raise rau for food, An action t-0 me.et once a month in· sought by .authorities 111 1 .... ·o counties lo be u$Cd In ~ausage3, English !tead of twice \l'aS made legal by the lod.1y after lhey stol(• a c<.1bln cn1iser meat pudding and in corned beef-board of the Saddleback Community 1n Lllng Beach and then drove it a.shore slyle dl.ahes. COllea:e board o( trustees ~y after atSan Onofre. one trustee said the original vot.e was :.:rbe vessel, which fetcl1ed up at San Illegal. ,;....fre state Park Tuesday , finally v.·as FroM Pqe I Trustee Hans Vogel of Santa Ana .,.... said he left an executive (closed) session mi(iJCf! off the sarKI liHC \Vednesday VALLERGA t\\·o weeks ago, along with trustee ~ s.1lvage crev:s hirt'd by the O\\'ner. • • • Patrick Hackl.ls ol Dana Point after ~ boys successfully "cooned" park they had been told by Saddleback ~gers after the ~&citing by saying which show developed properties rising Superintendent Fred Bremer no more *Y \\'ere tra\·eUng aboard with their in vaJue, but Vallerga said Wednesday bl1Siness remained. ftthfr when ihe 31·foot cruiser "Cin· that about Z2 to 23 acres of I.he San "Then two days later I received a • Clemente complex are undev .. 1 .. ......1. notice In the mail saying the board ipbar'' out of Alamitos Bay assertedly ~ had voted 4-0 to go back to one-a-month at.n out or fuel. The house and improved grounds take meetings," Vogel said. : Their dad, they said, had gone for up only a small percentage of the land, "l checlted with the county counsel he said. S:asoline and they plarulCd to wait for and he said the action was illegal." The Orange County Board or According to state law, meetings of him . Supervisors has asked the Board of pubJlc officials can be private only when Rangers came back laler. however, Equaliiation to review the county discussing personnel matters. and found neither tht "father" nor the assessor's va luation or tht properly. Trustee Michael Collins, an attorney, i\\'O youngsters. Board Chairman William Bennet said said he made the motion in eiecutive The pair of youthful brigands were the new appraisal Will be "looking lnto session to change the frequency of board Jong-gone. a passible crime and that's a non-11 ' One was no n1ore than 10 years old, partisan bsue." mce ngs. rangers said, !he other, perhaps 13 years Va J le r g a , speaking to the "( didn't rtali1.e it was illegal," he Jd assemblymen, questioned the credibility said. "I didn't mean to seduce the 0 111e boat received little damage during of the board and ils staff and said board into an illegal action." the iatentional grounding . but owner Rod he has "litUe confidence the appraisal Vogel objected to meeting less fre- Griffith was faced with a major bill will be independent." quently, even if the action \Vas taken • The Great Buftalo Ro11nd11p • Some 1,700 head of buffalo were rounded up on the 72,000-acre Custer State Park in the Black Hills of South Dakota. The annual roundup by park em- ployes is aided by National Guard helicopters. four- wheel drive vehicles and cowboys on horseback. The. drive is made to corral the animals so they can be vaccinated and branded. Marnie Spol\:esmen Sile11t On Mideast Troop Alert League Bac ks N e·wport Bid For State Aid I ·from the firm wh ich had to send crews His arguments focused on the board's legally. A proponent for the change and machinery do"'" to the rugged state assessment of 4.51 miles of Santa Fe last spring which began the twice a Spokesmen at El Toro Marine Corps park to drag the vessel along the sand railroad right-of-way adjacent to the month meetings, Vogel said the need Air Station and Camp Pendleton had El Toro has a number of fighter-State legislation that could save bomber sgu@dtQOS t~g seven.I bun-Qr.ange Coast bcac.h~cities-millions-Of.. area-jet airera!t. The planes are the doTiars annually won a riear-unanimous 10 a waiting truck and trailer. Weste.nLJ.V.hit.e. House at le" than $3,000 for coinmunication_amoog_ bo a rd no comment today on whether troo-ps -The young!ters appamttly-broie--tnto-an acre. members is no different now than it at the two Southland bases were put same F--4 Phantoms and Skyhawks being .l-----t.f th Calir · Le 1he Griffith garage near the boat's slip "It's very "interes.itn11 since I'm dolng was then. . _ on alert this marnlng .Jn J2CSpoDSe to and stole only the. keys to the c1pensive such a· bad job," VaUerga said, that "We ·still face man~ serwus problems. the Middle East crisis. flown by Israeli pilots In the Mli!dle en......._,uen tOm e orrua ague E · of Cities Wednesday. ast. craft. an adjacent piece of "more desirable" and need all ~ ~ in the world Thousands of ellte U.S. Anny troops Once aboard the boys headed south, property is under-assessed. to dl.scuss the!'1> be amd. . and !arge numbers of Air Force and A spokesman at the Pendleton •pUblic Tbe league, meeting in San Francisco, af£air:s ofOce 5aid ha-.bad~-t::;u>..b.acked....a.J.ie.w..rort Bpacb reso}J1~alk.----~~cm9.n.lbr9Uill.J~"'~ .. -~J.-:,~ the com. ... ,,.---»oa.r...d presideo.LJ.9hn.J,~S:l1d . .he.. ---Air Nation:d'Guarctunn:s~ mcrparng some fifiaJJY-dilcliing the cruiser In northern pound' and the ocean, below the bluffs. Ieu--the · reason for two meetings a nuclear bomber crews, were put on "issue only the standard no conunent." ing for state aid to defray the costs But he did 'say It appeared to him of servic(!s that include beach main· ·San Diego County. Assemblyman McCarthy questioned month during the ~r was to handle alert in what the Nixon Administration n1e craft "'as the second !() run the relevance of Vallerga's comments fiscal problema in finishing a new budget tenned, "a precautionary measure." business was going "as usual" at the sprawling base in northern San Diego tenance and extra police protection need· ed to handle summer tourists. aground at San Onofre tl\ill week. Early but the assessor sald "this is a unique and approving 8:818rles. ~laj. Sally Pritcl\ett, public affairs in the week a far-less-expensive craft property totally wHbln the l,000-yard "By next April or May we'll probably officer at El Toro, this morning issued County. fetched up and eventually broke ainirt area." have to go back to two a month again," a terse ··no comment" on the alert in !he surf after its owner decided The coastal commissions established he said. Last spring, board meetings situation Pendleton is primarily a training facili· ty but is also a major embarkation point for West Coast Marines. Numerous helicopter gunships and armored units Newport Beach city officials eslimale loca l taxpayers shell out $1.5 minion ann.ually while the return from items such as sales ta1es and parking meter fees is only $500,000. 1'hal's a net loss of $1 n1illion a year burdening local taxpayers, city officials say. the $400 sa lvage bill "'asn't \\'Orth it. by Proposition 20 have permit jurisdlc-were frequently ~g to midnight. ·..I(. tion within I ,000 yards of the tide line. Despite Voge~ s ob Jed ion, the board 14 From Pagel :P FO ... ·.'ll·ith the "A'ind and from a distance You can't tell \\'hat it is.•· "One stayed up about l\alf an hour. 11 was a clear night and the candlelight ·renected off lhe bag ." reports Leo Stock, > l,7~ "Tbal's the one that was reported .ip the papers." The balloons -or UFOs if you prefer ~ are simple to ninke. It takes a plastic dry cleaning bag, medium alze, about a dozen birthday candles, four 3traws, a rubber band and one straight pin. All holes in the plas tic bag are &ealed1 ·except for the bottom opening. Two Straws are stu ck together, one inside the other. then the other two are stuck :r,ogether. The tandem straws are crossed . to form an X and fastened together . in the center with the straight pin. ' That forrn s the base of the balloon. . fhe birthday candles are heated, aquetz· ed in a circle, then held togelher with the rubber band io r tape ), and set on top of the pin. \\'ilh the wicks skyward. The banded candles look like a bar~ rage of air-to-ai r missiles ready to fin.•. Somebody lights the candles. Everyone helds hold the side of the bag to the ground and the hol air slowly fills the bag. The balloons have noated as high. a!'i 200 feet. the y !lay. The youths said they carefully \\'atch \•:here their creations fly because of the candl('S but normally. the candles nrc snufft..'<i when they finall y fall. Thcv did it because of the UFO craze and the nearness of Hallo·ween. Lisa said tl\cy saw !he blue disc, 1·eporll'."d Sunday night by a Huntington Jl~arh resident. '"'hich was not launched by the Sol Vista gang. OUNct,1 COAIT " DAILY PILOT r,.. Ot-• CMll OAll T ~tlOT, •ltt. wl\l(lo " <Ol'lbl!lld "'-"'-·~--. 11 -llVltd ev ~ O<•"'I• c ... 11 '""ll•hlftt c-~v. s.oio rU• tdll'°"" •ro -'hhtd, M-IV lllroutll F•ICl•v. """ C..•• M•N, "' .. _, le-.:~. H'"'""''°" 10-.:h1•.....,11111 Y•ll•~. u"""' ltoKf\, lrvlftot/S.,,..leNot .... &Mo ci._,,101 s~n Jv•n l'•Pl•tr-. A 1!"'1/.f ,._~I M•1 -h -•'>htd S•lunl•¥1 •rd ~""'"'· T~• p•«><• ... I _.l ... lflt Pl•nl 1, 11 llll w.,, I•> SI'"'· Cot11 Mtu, C.i•!ornl•. l?tli ltobtrt N. w,.d .... 111 ... , '"" ••1>11>"•' J•<~ It. Curl1v V><• P<t1IOM! •'14 i:o.oorot Mon•g'' T~o.,ut K11vll £d•ll .. i~om 1 1 A . M ••P~ino Mtn•tlng fd»o• C~•rl •• H. L••• 11::.~11<1 '· Nill Aul1t1n! M•Mfll"' !dilO<• l..t••• IMcJi Offk• 222 Fer•1I Avtnuo M1ilin9 A<l<lr•u : '.O, lo••••. 92•5? "'""'-" '"'" M-: no wou ••v 1!•"1 ,,.....,...., 1-h· UIJ Now..., lll\llt•trt "''"''"'"'It•<": 1'111 tlt«fl hlll"'••d i.n ,_,., J» ,,._ l!r c .... IM 1 .. 1 , .. ~ (7111 "42 .. JJ1 ~RM A4-ti1ktt 642·1671 L .... • ....... All De,..,.......,; T...,.._, 494-9466 c..-,rlfl\r, 11/J. °'"""" C•ut '""n"'"" ~, Ng _, lll<'ft. 111 .... 1,11-1. 9'111'0l'l•1 ..._!tor .. N vtrl"-">11 -•Ill tlMV ... f .... OfvtM "'!"'-"! >M<I•! - ... i..-..i "' ~ ..... 1111"' -· ._,,. ,i.., -••71 ....... '°'" Mfo••· C1!1..,..le ... """'"'*' o. w"lot< n .t-1 1-lfll'I"! ~ "'"' II !I -1hlYI ... 011.,.. lllc•llNllMI U . .S ,.,.,.l~l~. • . ; Ronald Welch assistant executive voted 5-1 to remstate the one meeting secretary of boird, later Wednesday a: month calendar. The next meeting backed up the $3,000 figure by saying will be at 8 p.m. Nov. 12. the railroad land Is "restricted in· Before the fiscal pressures developed, definitely --50 to SO years -to use Collins pointed out, board meetings often a.s right.of"·way. Jt can 't be anything were over before 9 p.m. . else until Santa Fe ls allowed to abandon "It aeems senseless to brmg together it." all the trustees and adminlstraton, the · And even thou&h railroad operation public and the press, for little more might be unproCtab&e, Welcb told the than an mur," ~said. _ . assemblymen. abl.ndrlunent lm."t an eaay Tuesday's meeting luted to 11:15 p.m .. process. There are 10 many federal despite a new a1enda format sdli!lted restraints on such an act.km, be claimed, by Vogel wblcb ii designed to !Peed · ''Dalkib 'Oolild ·bil i&id" for 155"slng di!CUS!ion of district business. tbl lad mm lower. · The new fonnat includes a ~t ;~, ....... Jr! ~ calendar, through which various tt.ms M~~t-..&I;'tdmltW -JIB' had which usually do not involve di5qlSSS:On never <.'CJrDplaJnid In fl'ritm, about the can be passed with a single vote. railroad' appraisal. Any trustee can request that any Item From Pagel DOGS • • • Barnette, who presided over the trial, defined "running at large" as "beYond or without restraint." • Restraint eomes in many form! - ''leashi chain, walls or words," Sbeffiekt reasoned in his letter to a.s.soclatlon directors. "Mr. Shelton may run his dogs on the beach without a leash as Iona: as those dogs are not beyond his restraint or control. 1 believe that means he must keep hJs dogs within a reasonable distance from his person so that he mlght be in a position to exerel!le im- mediate verbal command should that become necessary," Sheffield .,..TOie. The letter urges association directors to acl on a request by 243 Three Arch Bay residents to reinstate "dog hollrs" on the beach. Such a policy would allow dogs before 9 a.m. and after 6 p.m. Three Arch Bay had such a. policy until the late 1960s. Laguna Co u11cil Voles to Oppose Proposi tion 1 The Laguna Stach City Council has taken a positk>n of opposlUon to the controversial lax limitation initiative proposed by Gov. Ronald Reagan as Proposition I on the No\'. 6 ballot. The council voted unanimously -with ~1ayor Roy t-Iolm absent -to ''go on record" Jn opposition to the measure which v.·ould place a celling on state income lax levied. (Related i;tory, P11ge l·l l. /\t the same time, lhc. SGuth Laguna Sanitary Di strict Doartl of Directors l\as taken a non eommital stance on lhc proposition but St<lted that its passage would not harm the sanitary district . "The South Laguna Sanitary District Board of Directors detennines that l'ropositlon No. l is eonslstcnt with pre \'lous policles of this board ond will not interfere "'ill\ 11\e oprration of !his district." an official .statement of the bosird stated. A ~ta1ement w11J1 signed by Board Pre~ident Clay N. ~lltchell. a staunch !!upporter of lhe go\•1·mor and ,. Reagan appoint.et 10 the state lloerrl of Edut11tlon "'hich also voted to support the pr()\>- osilfon. on the consent calendar be removed for discussion. Gen. Poggemeyer To Leave D11ties At Pendleton ~1arine Corps Maj. Gen. Hennan Pog· gemeyer Jr., Camp Pendleton's com· n1ander since early 1972, will move onto a new assignment next month. Gen. Poggemeyer, 57, \\ill report Nov. 21 to Okinawa, where he will command the Third Marine Amphibious torce. The general will be succeeded at Pendleton by Big. Gen. Robert L. Nichols, who will leave a command position at Camp Le Jeune. N.C .• lo become the head of the largest U.S. military base in the world . Poggemeyer, who took over at Pendleton following the retirement of his predecessor, formally assumed coin· mand In January of 1972. Base spokes- men termed his new assignment !he •·top job in the Pacific." His successor is a 52-ye nr-old nati ve of Rhode lsland who joined the ~tarinc Corps in 1939. As an enlisted man, Gen. Nichols saw battle in the Pacific and Atlantic theaters and received his commission in l!H4. He holds degrees fr()m the University of Maryland and George Washington University. Gen. Nelson's duty at Pendleton will be the second tour there of l\is career. Previously, he was sta· tioncd at the reservation from 1954 to 19&7. l{ams Linebacker Robertson Held On Traf fi e Rap L-Os Angeles Rams linebacker Isiah Robertson, was arrested early todaf by the Huntington Beach police on a traffic warrant. A police 11poke11man said the football player paid the $88 ball and was released from custody not long afler hia 2 a.m. lllTtst. nt v.•arrant, lsslled from the West Orange County Judicial District Court,• charged Robertson with two vel\icle code violations -passing on the right under unsafe conditions and failure lo carry rcf!'.lstratlon ln his car. l\obertson was apparently driving on Edinger Avenue near GothJird Street when he wu stopped by Officer Ktilh Nale. l are also stationed there. -~rom Page 1 ALERT ... The Strategic Alr ComnJand bases in California were alerted, March Air Force Base, near Riverside, and Beale AFB, near Marysville, and Castle AFB nea r ~ferced. Huntington Beach officials estimate they lose $750,000 annually while Seal Beach says it IGSes aOOut $150,000. report truce violations. At March personnel were told to stay Twice, Kissinger was asked whether close to home telephc>nes If not on duty there was any link between Nixon's today and to answer any caJls within domestic problems and the crisis abroad. six rings. Figures from San Clemente on Its costs were not immediately available and Laguna Beach has not yet tried to calculate costs versus its revenues. lie reacted icily. "It's just like any of. the ftn:t-stage "There has to be a minimum of con-practice alerts we have all the time,'' ~dence that senior officials of tb.e one airman told the AP. merican government are not playing He received a telephone call alerting ith the lives of the American people," him at 11 p.m. F rom Pagel OPPOSITION. • • e said. . Duty officers who confinned the alert Kissinger said ambiguity about Soviet at other bases called lt a "recall" and and Alan Cranstori have kept mote -.SC- intentions led to U.S. moves he described for the most part would say only that curate accounts of the public sentiment, as precautionary. He declared flat U.S. all personnel \Vere ordered to report according to spokesmen at their Los opposition to the use of Soviet or to base inunediately. Angeles offices. American forces to enforce a Middle At Beale AP newsman Chuck McFad· "Through Wednesday. we haye recelv- East cease-fire. den found the entrance to the base ed about 1,400 telegrams a day and "We do not consider ourselves in a blocked by two air policemen. A source countless phone calls," a worker at confrontation with the Soviet Union," told him a pass was needed to leave Tunney's offices~. Kissinger told a nationally televise d ne"·s the SAC base and tha t dependents living "The ratio against the President is eon!erence. "We do not believe at this on the base were ordered to stay ln astounding." lime it is necessary to have a con-their homes. Children were attending The Tunney spokesman said. bis office fronlatlon.'' school, however. has received one message favoring the Kissinger began with an aC'COOilt of president-for evety I,000 against him. U.S. policy since the Arab-Israeli war The story was mucll the sa me In erupted Oct. 6, and with a word of Halloween Carnival Cranston's office where workers sa.ld caution. He said the United States and more than 6,400 tel egrams had been the Soviel Union as riuclear po"'ers received through Wednesday of 'fllch capable o1 annihilating mankind ha ... e Set hy Laguna You th 1ess than 200·ravored the President. "a very special responsibility" to keep The spokesman said more than 100 their confrontations within bounds that A Halloween Carnival complete with calls an hour were al.so coming in. do not threaten civiliza1ion. spook house . costume parade and car· Burgener aide Hathaway said he thinks "We are al one and the same time toons will be held from 6 to 9 p.m. his congressman's constituen~ wou1d adversaries and partners in peace." be Tuesday at the Laguna Beach Boys' support impeachment as a means to said. aub. 1085 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna ge~ infonnation but not to remove Nixon Kissinger specifically rejected a ques--Beach. The event is sponsored by the from office. He pointed out that a tion aboul any possible link between city recreation department, the Boys' Democrat. Hose Speaker Carl Albert, the alerts and President Nixon's prob-Club and Girls' Club. would become President. !ems in the Wateragte case. Prizes wi11 be awarded to varying Hinshaw aide Cleary agreed, saying, He said the question itseU is "a age groups for costumes, and pumpkin "I don 't think the impeachment pro- symptom of what is happening to our carving. Further information is available ceedings would go forward , but the peo- country .. .'' by calling 494-2535 or 494-1124, ext. 47. pie just want to get at the facts.'' -----·---------------------· I IMMEDIATE D~LIYERY I I General Electric I : FREEZER : I • 518 Lb. Capacity I I I I I r, ,_ __ _ I .. • Convenient Boo k-self I Stora9el • Foods Easy to Or9ani10 , See ond Select • Defr ost Drain UMITED QUANlTTY 239~5 I I I I I I I I 90 DAY CASH WITHc~::""0"0 I 1815 NEWPORT Bl YO. Downtown Costa Mesa-Phone 548· 7788 I ------------------· • • \ \ • • I ' Saddleha~k Today's . Final N.Y. Stoeks · VOL 66, NO. 298 , 4 SECTIONS, 58 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1973 TEN CENTS Councilwoman Vows to Boycott Secret Meet Irvine Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryor said today she wlll not participate ln Friday's planning director Interviews - U the City Council convenes in secret .... ion. Citing a recent tendency for every Issue facing the City Council "to become politicized", Mrs. Pryor said, "this Is not the time to bave an executive seg,ion. "Executive secret sessions in recent • • -- wee.ks have proved to be a place where competing councilmen draw o u t another's views and then pervert what was said by making public statements. "Executive sessions are becoming a time when we tend to get off the subject and on to discussions of city policy matten which must be discussed in public sessions and ought not to be taken up behind closed doors," Mrs. Pryor said. • I "Things are coming out of our ex· ecullve sessions all distorted. They wouldn't be subject to distortion at all if they were said in public in the ftrSt place," she added. Councilmen Tuesday adjourned to a 3: IS p.m. meeting Friday for the purpose ol. interviewing planning d I r e c to r applicant!. Mrs. Pryor was absent from the 'I'Ue&- day council meeting. She Is the city's delegate to the League of Cities and itar g@.~.Jlismissed- State Court Ousts Jurist for Miscond1ict SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Qil. lfomla Supreme Court today, for the fint time In !Is hist«y, ordered a Judge removed .from the bench -Los Angeles Municipal °"1rt Judge Leland W. GeUer. He was ordered discharged from office for "willful misconduct in office and conduct prtjudicial to the administration ol juatlce that brings the judicial cllice into ~te." 'Ibo on!Or; effective lmmedlately, notes u;t Goller'• <llllduct -not amount to -...,....., _., .. ""' ruplion, an! lhlll ht will be pennllted to pracUce law if othenrile amlifled. The court'• onlor lollowe6 Ibo reoon>-mtnd81"' of the .....,,,,,,._ COID• mbllon on Judlclal Qaallfl-an ag91cy wllh autboti!Y to lnveltlpte unfit Ruling on V oiCe Recor(ling Due In 6ouri-6ase By TOM BARLEY Of Ille D1tnr Pit.I ltaff A ruling_illl't cooJd l!!'\lVe vital lo the prnoecuUoo's case agiliiSt Sad· - dleback CoJlege Trustee AJ.yn M. Bran- non and his co-defendant may be dellven!d late today In the Orange Coun- ty Superlo< Court boolanaklng .. itortloo trial or the two men. LL Ernest Nash ended five days of testimony on the controversial voiceprlnt tecbnlque that has become an issue In the trial and yielded the wltnen .stand today to the prosecution's .second witness in the pre-trial hearing - District Attorney's Investigator Don C8r· roll. Proeecutor William Evans said Car· roll's testimony will set the seal oo Nash's claim that there can be no doubt that used car salesman Robert Emmett Kelly telephoned a patron in Brannon's alleged $25,000-a·week b o o k m a t i n g buslnes! ln the Harbor Area and warned • him to immediately setUe a $2,800 gambling debt. The perfume salesman who recteved the taped call Hid be was told by a voice, "Better make out that will, . (See BRANNON, Pare ZJ Orpge Coast • • We ather Mostly sunny Friday Is the way the weatberlady sees it, "'.1th may- be Just a taste of fog in the monr Ing hours. Highs at the beaches ln the mid·70s rising to the k>w ll)s Inland. Overnight lows in the 508. INSI DE TODA 't' Pre1tdent Ni%on U ezp«cted to 1~ quc.tttoning on role ptaved bv clo1< frlmd Bebe Reba.lo m handling of campaign. contribvtion.t. Set •toru, Poat 4.. • or disabled judges and to recommend dOCipline. The commisslon began formal pro- ceedings last year following investigation of charges that Geller (1) engaged in crude behavior, (2) used vuJgar and profane language in dealing with court officers, including employes and lawyers, and (3) arbitrarily interfered with the attorney-client relationship b e t w e e n public defenders and their clients wllo came before him. At the commll!loo •1 11';Quest, the Sujireme °"1rt 111med thiee special masters, all Los Angeles Superior Court Jud~. to take evidence and report to I~ '!be masten beld 21 days of hearings an! beaid 73 wltnes>es whose lesllmony covered 1,113 pages of lranscrlpl. They Time to Vote: It's the Law SACRAMENTO ( U P I ) California employers were remind- ed Wednesday that they mu.st coo- spicuously J)O:!lt notices inlonning workenl that they may be.-entitled to paid time off to vote Nov. 6. Secretary of State F.dmund G. Brown Jr. noted state law allows an employe to take up to two in.rs from work without 1055 of pay to vote if he cannot cast his ballot outside office hours. The law requires employers to post the notice con.spicuously 10 days before the election . Workers mum notify the employer at least two days in advance of the election that they will need time off io vote. Equalization Panel Hosted By Irvine Co. By JOHN ZAILER Of ,... D9ltJ ...... '''" Irvine Company officials Tuesday serv- ed as hosts on a ferry ride around Newport Harbor followed by dinner at tbe BalOOa Bay CJub for members of the State Board of Equalization. Botb company and boiard spokesmen described the feativlUes at, "a gesture of friendliness." • Tbe state board hu been holding a M!rles of meetlnga at Newport Beach City Hall. The Board of Equalizalion ls charged under state law with review- ing property tu assessments throughout California. Last yw, the Irvine Company paid '9.7 million in property taxes on the basis of assessments made by the Orange County Aaseuor'1 Office as su~ Jeci to audit by Ibo Sia le Board of Equalization. · ·~ere'a really nothing unusual at. all a.bout being taken out to dinner," said John Lynch, who ' repretent.s Orange County on the state bo&lrd. "It ts very common for local btWMssmen or the Chamber or Com- merce to~ like us out to dlMer when we come to town. "ln lh11 area:, I guess the Irv1no Company la equivalent of tho!t groups," (See HOSTS, Pogo Z) I re"commended Geller, 58, be censured !or conducted prejudicial to the ad· ministration of justice. But the commission concluded Geiler was guilty of additional misconduct and by a 7~2 vote recommended to the Supreme Court that the judge be remov- ed from office. The court reviewed the masten' record, the commission's· findings and also heard oral ar'guments and conducted .. lndependen! review of Ill own before reaching a declSioD. The oourt concluded that the com- miaion's findlngt were proper and adopted them. These ooncemed alleged crude behavior, ~ar languqe, tmcoutb references io bodily functions &Dd Justful and profane remark! by Geller. Irvine District Drops School Property-Suit By WILUAM SCHREIBER Of .... Dlltt' ,llot ltafl lrvine Unified Sch-Oot Distnct-trustees Wednesday night decided to drop their condemnation suit against several land-owners who refused to sell property for a school at the high appraisal value. The board revealed after a closed executive session that the district had settled out of court on an agreement to pay .$310,000 for the 9.4-acre future campus site at Jeffrey and Sanla Fe roads. " The eminent domain suit was leveled two weeks ago when landowners Max l:loeptner and Leonard T u r b a ch , Hoeptner's son-in-law, refused to sell the property at a high appraisal price or $33,100 per acre. They were holding out for a reported $40,000 an acre, even lhough they charg- ed a nearby private land developer only $35,000 an acre for another chunk of property, The settlement revealed Wednesday night would work out to about $32,900 per acre. There are actually two parcels In- volved, one of 4.6 acres, owned by the Hoeptnen' daughter and soo-in-Jaw and another or 4.8 acres owned by the Hoeptnera and containing their old home. The tow appraisal total for both parcels came out to $279,500 and the high figure at $.'110,300, according to Robert Harrison of Newport Beach and Robert MclnnJs of Tustin, two independent appraisers hired to detennlne fair market value on the land. But the Hoeptnera, who now live In San Diego, aald the appraisal was wrong because the value of their home on the property wa.s misjudged. They upped lhe price to ff0,000 an acre to make up for It. Al the time of the dispute, it was feared the opening of the new elemenlary school would be delayed again , past the September 1975 date It has already been pushed to. Originally, a· fall , 1974 opening was planned. The ag~ment rtacbed this week calls for a stlpulaled judgmenl which eliminates lbe need for an scrow period and allows the di.strict to t.ake LlUe as aoon as finandal arrangemenll are complete. Preliminary designs for the school for 660 children will still come before the trustees Nov. 11. The dltlrl<I Is al'° ""!'ting wlih the !See SCHOOL, Page Ii f was attending the 8Mual conference in San Francisco. She said today she believes it Isn't necessary for the council to call a "big secret meeting" to interview planning director hopefuls. She DOted that city law provides that the city manager does the hiring, subject to confU'Ulation of the cooncil. She believes councilmen might meet in- dividually with applicants and then take a final action on the city manager's hiring reeommendatlon in a public meeting. "f just won 't participate in any secret meeting. I think the public is very suspicious of us right now and that suspicion need not have occurred ." Mrs. Pryor was the council member who nearly two weeks ago "rounded up" an audience to observe Ute council's public action following a private. ex· ecutive session decision to fire the plan- ning commission. on ' IT'S A BIR[), IT'S A PLANE? .. NO, IT'S A UFO Brian Coleman, 13, Displays Ca ndl•powered Hot Air Ba lloon Kids Make Own Mystery UFOs J ust Candles, B ag By TERRY COVIlLE Of IJI• DllllY , ....... ., "It was pulsating and it appeared to have a red light on one side. Then there wu a bright, white flash, like lightning but without noise , and it shc.t slraight up and out of sight .•. ," one mystified night watcher reported. The mystery of the UFOs, at least in Huntington Beach. has been solved. Metallic· night gliders from a distant star? Secret enemy spy nights? No. SOda straws, birthday candles and clear, plastic dry cleaning bags. Simple items collected from a taco stand, a laundry and a supermarket went into the construction phase of the brlght, orange dlscs some Huntington Beach residents reported as UFOs Tues- day night. The spacemen who launch them are a group of high school youths who live in the Sol Vista tract near Slater Avenue and Edwards Street. Their 3pacecrart, about three-feet tall and two-feet wide, Oy, on 11 simple prin- ciple -the old hot alr balloon method. "We teamed how to make th em in a high school sti~ce class," says Peter Wlemals, 11. "It does look like a fiery glow In the 1ky.'' adds Lisa Regal. IS. '11t noats with the wlod and from a distance you can't tell what it is." "One stayed up about haH an hour. tt wos a clear night and the candlelight reflected off the beg," reports Leo SloNc, 17. "That's the one that was reported in the papers." The balloons -or UFOs if you prefer -arc simple to rr.~ke. It takes a plastic dry cleaning bag, medium 'Slze, about a dozen birthday candles, four straws, a rubber band and one straight pin. All holes In the plastic bag are sealed, except for the bottom opening. Two slrav!'s are stuck together, one inside (See UFO, Page Z) Bring in UFO Ancl Get Cash CORVALLIS, Ore. (UPI) -A CorvalUs radio station. KLOO, says it ls offering a $10,000 reward for the first person lo take a living visitor from space to the studio. (Related stories Pages 3 and 11 1. Bob Houglum , station m11nager. said Wednesday the offer was prompted by the rash of unldcnti· fled nylng object teport5 from 1hrou~hout lhl' nat ion. llouglun1 snid 1h~ rcw<ird w · he p<1id to lhe ··first ptrson wh n ean bring to Ute studio a \lv1n ~hlng, ii nhnal or· person, that ha come from outer apace and has llC\'er bt.-en on earth before." That action never came to (ruition. Public scrutiny of the proposal revealed that the reappointment of five of the seven members would have led to loss ol the "wrong" commlsslooers. Those intended to be removed because of their ''abrasive" relations with councilmen and city planning staff appeared destined to be renamed to the commission as the council considem:I the law in public a week ago last Tuesday. · ert' Rens Force-I P r ecaution--·- hi Mideast BUILETIN tlNJTED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -Tbe Soviet ambauador io die United Nattou ukt today the Sovtet Union woald agre~ to tbe crealloo of a U.N. peacekeeping: foree In tbe Middle East without Soviet, Amertcao or other big power troops. WASHINGTQN (AP) -U.S. military fo rces were ordered. to worldwide alert today. Secretary of State H~ A. Kis- singer called it a precautloo prompted by uncertainty about possible Soviet in· tervention to police the Middle Ea.st ceue-fire. But be said tbe early morning order DAYAN'S OFFER TO QUIT REJECTED. Story, Page 4 was dispatched because of ambiguity in Soviet intentions, not in a great-power The alert was the U.S.'s largest since the Cuban missile crisis oC 1962. "As of now, the Soviet Union has not taken any irrevocable action," Kis- singer said. "It Is our hope that no such action will be la ken." Kissinger said the 1Uniled States o~ poses lhe use of great·power forces in the numbers that would be necessary to police an Arab-Israeli cease-fire. But he said the United States is willing to supply some personnel tp an observer team w>der United Nations supervision. The alert came before dawn and was tdlderstood to affect Army, Navy, Marine and Air Force unit! around the world. It was disclosed not by Washington but by military men who got the order. Kissinger said the National Security Council met at ahout midnight PDT and unanimously recommended the ac· tion . He said President Nixon himself did not participate in the meeting, but concurred in their judgment. By that hour, orders apparently had gone out to military commanders to go on alert. * * * Camp Pendleton, El Toro Silent On Troop Alert Spokesmen at El Toro Marine Cor~ Air Station and Camp Pendleton bad no comment today on 'A'llether troops at the two Southland bases "'e re put on alert this morning in response to the Middle East crisis. Thousands of elite U.S. Army troops and large numbers of Air F'orce and Air National Guard units , including some nuclear bomber cre1.~1s, were put on alert In "'"'ha t the Nixon Administration termed, "a precautionary nleasure." Maj. Sally Pritchett, public affairs ofrlcer at El Toro, this morning issued a terse "no con1mcnt" on the alert si tuation. El Toro has a number of filithter- bomber squadrons, totaling several hun- rlrl'<l jct aircraft. The planes are the same F'-4 Phantom.'! and Skyhawks being flown by Israeli pilots in the Middle F.11st. A spokesman nl the Pendleton pub11c Affairs ,.ffi ce said he h:id orders 10, l!S ue only the standn r 1 no l'ommr.nt." But he dll'l say H ·1r1x·arl'fl to him !li ne!ls was ROlng "il!I u~unt" at the -;prl!lwling bn se in nnrl tw.•m S:>n Diego County Pendleton ls prlnH1rlly 11 training facill- 1) but i~ ul~o 11 n1ajor ii:mbartaUQn , '-.. \1 'ltl \ f·:~. P1ui:e tl • 2 UAIL't PILOI I ~ IS Assessment ;. Defe11ded By Vallerga By CANDACE PEARSON Tllur'scfe', ~ 2', lt7J Introducing Tlw Zonkie l'ifle '.l'aneit!fft Coastal Mail New Delicacy- Tlie Rat Dog? NEii' YORK (UPl l -A CARDIFF, Wales (UPI) -War- apokrlman for the Prmpect Park rlan abcMU the content& ot tbe 1 1.oo l&Y'S J ea n Y. a donkey la F N • bot dog may ha•e a QeW .fHt r~~=·i;, ·M~~: --a:vors IX 0 n to,~,!~d~ .~ :.~:~1'cl",;.nn1. wlll be Called a %.onkie. Bellamy, head Of C a rd 11 f Like 1962 All Over -Jackson Lucky Strike wa, lootly after University's zoology department the death of hl.s m.ite last year, He said the school will begin w•-•--• the spokesman said, 80 he W.IS U.S. senal.ors and con gr ea J men h<ld begun to show up but he had research to see whether it Is From "e ..,., •• ,ces moved In with Jenny "for com· representing the Orange coast earlier no record of percentngea or volume. economical to raise rata for food, sen. Henry tw1. Jackson (O.Wllb.), Jack Vall('rga went to Inglewood pany. The nexi thing we knew, th11 week were deluged with JTIAll, Hlnshaw's District Administrator Chip to be used In sausages, Englilh compared the Middle EMt situaUon ~ }Vednrsd:iy to defend hl.:-1 :1ssessment lhry had n1attd 8nd Jenny was telegrams and phone calls overwhelnl· Cleary s11ld his office had received "bun· meat pudding and in corned beef~ day to the Cuban missile crisis o( 1962. ol Prrsidcrll Nixon's SM Clemente estate pregnant. It is all very unu.su11I ln1Iy favoring impeachment of President dreds" of telegrams and confirmed that style dishes. But a Howe Democratic leader who Oilc stitte officials v.'Cre in Or1tnge ~$far as we know." Nixon. aft.er a wav e of anli·Nixon mail came attended a White House briefing describ- '-:·nty ~anenglng It. But two RepubUcan (\Ongressmen, in-In. the tide began turning In support. /-ed Prelident Nixon 's atUtude as "op-~ "'11 cludlnt the one whose district include• Cleary said cr1tlclsm of the President timistic." ::Y:illerga, the Orange County tu the Pmildent's San Clemente estate. was due mostly to "confWllon" on the FroM P .. e 1 Jackson told newmien that Soviet ~-Ssor, testified t>cforl· <l joinl meeting Youth Nabbed sa.ld today the tide has turned and part of the public. BR Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynln handed et 1hc Assembly Co1nmillee on Revenue support Js starting to flow in. lie said Hinshaw urged the President ANN Q N Secretary or S~te Henry A. Kissinger ~ TaxatJoo and the Assembly Select Local offices or C.OJliressm.nn Andrew to go on tel evi sion soon after lhe sl.ory • • • a "brutal" note warning that Soviet cbnmittee 00 Co:i.stel Zone Resources. Ill $500,000 J. Hinshaw (R·Newport Beach) and Clair ~~kCoe ov11e~-the Watergate tapea and baby; you're 8 dead player." ~roops .wouJd be sent ln onddla peace-keep--Burgener (R·Sanla Fe.~lngs) sald that u..: x ruig. 1ng mlSSion for the Mi e East even •......... s.ubi·-1 of the hearing in Inglewood ....... _ '--1 · •• I At a•···t that t•"me E"ans cl · :1 ... u s ··-·• ·'·· , 1 rit: ...... their man vol11me on impeachment 1 uc congressman IA' 1eves u1e peop e uvu • • suns, u we nited tales ref~ to go iUUi.lg. Qity Hall was the effect of Proposition situation was heavier than usual but are entitled to the run know ledge or an eight·lnch hunting knire was hurled "We're right at the brink again," >!.the 1972 coostol :zone act. on property c d •i s now the calls and letters are swinging the situation," Cleary said. . into tbe victlm's front door to press the Senator said. ralues and coastal county assessment re J, pree in support of the President. C.Ongressman Craig Hosmer CR-Long home the demand for Immediate set· He was not among a bipartisan group practices. Burgener, whose district includes a Beach), whose district includes part or Uement oC the gaming debt. of House and Sena te leaders who at· : But Va\lerga dive rtc<I from that slight· coastal strip or Orange County from wes tern Orange County, indicated an tended the White House meeting with Jy to delh•er his own volleys at the ORLANOO, Fla. (UPI J -Pellte San Clemente to Newport Beach, enormous flood ot sentiment against the Nash is widely regarded as the nation's Nixon and Kissinger during the morning. ,state Board or Eciuali:zatlon while Its policewoman Kitty Hutter thought it was reportedly only four phone calls to his President. foremost expert in the infant science House Democratic whip John McFall members were being hosted by the a routine bust In a sto len rredlt card local oUice in Orange County _ all Spokesmen in his office said no tW1tlng of voiceprlnts. (0.Calif,), who was present, aaid I.be Irvine Company In Newport Beach. ease until the teletype messages started opposing the President. or the tidti was apparent Wednesday He regards the tcehnique. which u~"s attitudes of Nixon and Kissinger were Claiming that the board is righting afl ernoon ""' " r · r th th I · r " " battl . the p""'·~ •. Vallerga sa•·d fllitlring in saying, "\Ve want him, we "Several" pnrNixon calls were receiv· ''Th , h be I t t visual impressions of shading of the op imis ic ra er an pess mis ic. a e in '"'''" ed In Burgener's San Clemente .District ere as en a cons an s ream A senior Egyptian official said today the board is accusing hin1 of "giving' want him, y,·e \fant him.'' office. according to spokeswoman Max· of phone calls and earlier in the week. human voice for identification, as equal in CairO it is "an iffy question" whether preferential tre atment to a hi gh officer And with the bills still coming in, ine Green. we were literally besieged by telegrams. to the more famllilll' fingerprint tech· Egypt .would accept Soviet troops to or this country.'' police said today a soft·spoken teen-ager From· Washington, Burgener's con· letters and calls," the spokesman said . nique. help police the Middle East cease-fire lie didn't mention President Nlron may have collected as much as $500,000 gresslonal aide, Brad Hathaway, said, There were no tallies available of the If the volceprint tapes displayed by without the involvement ol U.S. forces by name, but lhe reference was obvious. . 1 ed .. 1 can't say that we've received a number of calls but the spokesman said Nash in lhe pre.trial phase o1 lhc Brnn· in the same capacity . . Uy to A bl Le 0 using a sto en er it card and bogus th I ••-h '-ed K cspeeia ssem yman fiood of telegrams. 11 ey were n ull;:' unu.i s. non· elly case are admitted to evidence Ashraf Ghorbal, an adviser to Prest· r.tl'Carthy <O.Snn Francisco ), \\'ho ob-cbec k:o:; in a global spending spree. Halhaway said Burgener was receiving Democratic U.S. Senators John Tunney ii will be only t.t;ie third time that dent Anwar Sadat, was commenUng at jected to Vallerga 's using the hearing )fichael Thomas Henson , 18, asked, more mail on the Middle East war, and Alan Cranston have k~pt mo~e ac-such e1vidence has been permitted in a news conference on the Soviet stale+ as a f~rum. . "ls that all you've got me tor?" when the Environmental Protection Agency curate account~ of the public sen~ment. ~ California court and lhe first time ment at the United Nations Wednesday l>res1dent Nixon pu rch~sed about 25 a.1rs . Hutter P.Ul a gun_to his hack and gas ratioru.mt. accon:ling to spokes men at their Loo m a~ Ora!lge County courtroom. night that the Kremlin considered cor---n~ for the Western White H~e ~ SUnday at an oflando Howard Johnson 's He added that-Wednesday morning, A~~eles offices -voi~ s-bet:muing ncttasingly-rf( SadaL's calL!or U~ Soviet pie:< ~n ~~lem:;te fo:Jl5 ,m:_oo. and ar rested him for using a stolen a definite trend in favor of the President d T=ghl ~";~ay, we havdarece~ recogn~ bf law enforcement agencies troops to help secure a cease-fire It me a year . . • 1quare a.Jaster Charge card e a l · e eg~ 8 Y a as an anti~ tool and Justice Robert between Israeli and Egyptian forces --'''"f°"-;;~ house. La Casa Pac ifica. ___ ._ -~· ~-»Jd -1.bal,._ I knew_.tlJert • ....__ ______ ._ _ .... _ counU~ p~ne .calls, a l\'orker al Gardner , of Newport Beac~ is one or along the Suei Canal . I I 1 I I \•allerga do\.\1l·asSeSS@"ttiC property was more to it," the blonde detective Coll l"('r bn -~.:;;r.Af~.Sil~---:'-----8-1Jr0llil!l8•rilllmber. ol Jurists . who f\.1eanwhile. EgypLsa1d lsrael camed 111 1973 to leS.:!1 than $1 4 million, at· said. ege J. e8 g ral,1~ against the President lS rec.Ognize its meri~. • out tank artillery and air aTiaclti against .. -----mt>O~ •me drop ~-Prcpo,srtiJ1t1t"i&--'lminttgaUSH·"latct1ltfJ latet ftJinltt--""'-· '~·-~--.-..u:i1a.--... ~~~~fil!".;o -keltml'rr"Slltd·MS"'btfit~ • Juati~y oded la..favor-Suc-~today anQ ~·M pouriAf-more -- uncertainties. evidence that Henson cashed '200 ooo in S S d . " "...., . Of. the science from his Fourth District men and armor across the Suez Canal '~his is contrary to trends .state:"·~de bad chtck.s at American/Express Ornces et atur ay has .received one message ~aVOM:ng the Court or Appeals bench BDd allowed in preparations for resuming a general v.·h1ch sho\Y developed properties r1s1ng in a month-king spree that stretched prTeshident, for every l,OOOchag?~st hlll1. 1 the technique to be used in a Riverside offeru;ive against Egypt's 3rd Army. It I II "d W-"---..1ft e s ory was mu i.ue same n Co 1 tr" 1 . 1 s Ill va ue. but Va erga sat CWK-':>\UOY from New York to Usbon to Hong A v· . T Cranston 's office where workers said -un y 1a . . blamed Egyptian osses 00 u .. support that nbout 22 to 23 acres of the San J<ona, with many stops in between: t JeJO, OrO inore than 6,400 ' telegrams had been Lawyers for BraJU\()n, 4.2, and Kelly, or Israel. . . Clemente complex are undeveloped. Henson was being beld in beu. of received through Wednesday of , hich 35,.of 835.Seagull Lane, Newport Beach, An. Egypti.an military corrunand oom· The house and im roved grounds take $250 bond on charges of passesslng a A -liege t_est which can lead to Jess than 200 favored the President. sa)'. they inttnd to challenge a, favora~le muruque S81d the Israelis at nooo (3 P stolen credit card and possesslng ,. ..... w The spokesman said more than 100 ruh~ by Judge Everett W. Dickey with a.m. P~T) i:-esumed attempts to storm ~: ~~iJ a small percentage of the land, worthless checks., police said. =~:Pfo :10~ frv~ts!:OO' :i$ calls an hour were also coming in. test1n:iony·of their own on the volceprint Su~:z ctty ~th tanks and artillery. lt . · Among Hen.90n s belongings when ar· and El T High School Burgener aide Hathaway said he thinks technique. . sai d . Egyptian forces e~~aged the . The . Orange County Board of rested was a receipt for a $21 ,000 Mlssion°~lejo studen~· will be given his congressman's constituents would They have staled that they will call Israelis. destroyed 11 tanks and forced Supe~1~s has aske_d the Board of purchase of two diamond rings In Hong the National Merit Scholai'lhiP Qualify-support Impeachment as 8 means to at le.ast five. wiln~~ princi pally from the .rest IG ~etr~t for the second lime Equahza 1 1ton to, rev iew the county Kong and a postcard. he bought in Spaln ing test in the school multi-purpose get information but not to remove Nixon the field of poonetic science, to challenge outside the oty: . assessor s va~uahon o~ the property. . but had not yet mmled t~ his mother, The S3 f should be 'd t from office. He pointed out that a the state.ments of Nash and Carroll if The, .commuruq.ue thus mdlcated the Board ChalrJ!lan Yl'.111\am .. Bennet ~d ?.fra .. Clementine Henson 1n Baltimore. !f:~udent store.ee pat 3 Democrat, Hose Speaker Carl Albert, Judge Dickey seems inclined to admit Israelis have. tw ice actua~y penetrated the ne~ app111~sal will be l~king mto It .~aid: El Toro students should pay their \\'ould become Presldenl. the voiceprint tape as evidence. ~Ide Suez city -:-somethin~ ~e Egyp- a possible crime and that s a non· Dear mom: I had to run. Sorry fee to Barbara Walker at the El Toro Hinshaw aide Cleary agreed saying Borrowing of the volceprint evidence tians had not previously ad.nutted. panisan issue." . but I .had to go. Love ?.11cbael." admini.straUon office. Their test will be "I don't think the impeach~ent pro: ~!'the judge would mean that the actual Israel reported Ila war frontl quiet Va 11 e rg a . s_peak1ng to . t.he Pohce said an Orlando man who Wies given in Room 524:. ceedings would go forward , but the peo-Jury Jrlal or Brannoc. and Kelly could today! the second day of the M!dclle assemblymen. que st1<:""ed the credlbil1~y the name "Mr. Xavier" loaned Hec..son '11le lest will laat three hoUrs. pie just. want to gel at the facts ." open a.tonday. anything. ~ orders are to fire only of the board and its staf( and satd hls Master Charge card in, New York sporadic fU"Ulg en the Egyptlan front. be has "little confidence the appraisal Aug. 6 to buy plane tickets to Orlando Participating students not only become It said its war machine is ready lo will be independent." far .him and .._ girl companion. Wben eligible for scholarships but are able Front pnne 1 Loe } A • f~t again if at~ck~. " .. His arguments focused on the board's JfeD!OO-falled to return the-· card.i the to familiarize them.$Clves with pro---D a 11ists Tbe pressur~ IS ~till ,on,, a military a~essment of 4.51 mi!C"s of Santa f'e man ~ It ·~· J •-cedum ol the College Board 'E:t· UFO spo~sman said. We re ready for railroad rlght~!·\.\'ilY adjacent to the A.l.lti tfcbt aa:abl found· !n Hinl&iris aminatlon be(ore Cfltering a coUege. · • • • ~~ing. Our orde~ are to .. flre oo.ly \Vestem White Hoose at less than $.1,000 motel room showed hew Dew arotaid Two sections are included: a vdf>al Display works If fired upon, but we re ~ady. an acre. t.be -Id on Brtllsh Eurorwu•n "-·oys pa.rt including sentence completJon, h h h h "-r--a.." • analogies, antonyms and reading com· I e ot er. t en the ot er two are stuck "(;:( * 1f "It's very interesitng since I'm 'doing Iberia Airlines, TWA, BOAC, Eastern, preberlsion ; and ·a· mathematics test. together. Thre tandem straws are crossed I L such a bad job," Vallerga said. that American and Delta. Flnancial need is not a.. factor in lo for m an x and fastened together 11 agtma Mall From Page 1 an adjacent pi(?(e of "more desirable" the selection of scholarship winners, Both in lhe cenler with the straight pin. property is under·assessed. rour-year scholarships to the student's That fonns the base or the balloon. Frot11 Pqe l SCHOOL ... city of Irvine 01nd the adjacent pn>pert y de\'eloper, \Vanninglon Construction Company. on plans for development or a 3.5-acre community pRrk next to the SC'hool pa rcel. The condC"mnation aclloo was the first , taken by lhe gchool district slnct it • unified. The old San Joaquin di!lrict ·once filed two suits, both of whlch were similarly settled out ol court. Other action s taken by the board at thei r Uni versity Hig h School meeting mcluded: -Approva l or :i new schedule of school start ing times and school days V.'hic.h 1••11 he ln no later 1.han Nov. I. -A decision not 10 take a form .a l stnnd on Gov. Ronal d Re.agan·s Proposi· lion One. 1hc tax ru1d spending limitation amendn1C"nt on lhc Nov. 6 ballot. -Hr11cra!ion or a school policy permit· ling rcle;tscd tinw. for s111dents to partici pate in rell~lou.s or moral training. .. DAILY PILOT '"• 0"•1111• (0•11 O.t.tlY Ptl OT, wllh w~lc\I " <Dfftb•-"'~ Ho,....P,_, h Pl<bll-t~ lht 0.•"'11• (ll<IU P~ll\11)"'1 (-nY $tt>o• ""' "'lll(ln\ ,,. -II•-, M-•Y '"'-" "tollov. IO>t tcnla Mtu, +lt"'POrt ... tit.. lh1nt!,..1.., 9r~h<F-.01n Vi lltV. l -t l .. c ... l••-.'~-l•boo'I -!HO (lo ..... "1•/ )•n J......, C••""•no. " 11"(11• '"io..-1 111•!'9!1 " -l""td $•1V•d•YI ..... i ........... fl'>t P'•~<IHI ""ftll1~ .... •II•• II •• JJO Wtll B•v ~·r .. 1. ("''' M•~. (l l"O•"I•. tl'i.. ~ob••• N w •• 11 ., .. "'~"' , .. ., l'~bl••~ .. J o e~ R C~rl 0, v ·~ ,,,,..,...,,•NI r."""'' Mtofo .. Tho"''' l(,,.a £G,•e• T~o,,.11 A. M ~rr>h•~• 't-•~•'11•~ l<l"•I C~.rt., Joi Looi R,chull '· tl1U "'"I'•"' M,1u .. Ql"'1 [41'9<& OHien '"'1•M•·• J'olY.ol!R•y $1!o•t Nf"'l">C'I ~ ... ~. llll llow119t1 ltvlt •l '<I l ~O""' ft••<~ 117 «"o•n• .-• ..,.,. H""l"'G-ll••t h llllJ Btkft 11ev1.,..,d $•" (1,,,,... .. lill ... or!" El ta,.,,,,. llt•I , .. .,.. ... 17141 '4.2-4121 Cl .. tlfle4 A.fNl1fll .. Ml·S•7t H11 Ci.-1• AN DtpM•.,.: t .......... l ...... Jt C.Hv"11.1, •tt1. a._. ten! ~""""' (.-"V N• ,....., 1 ... ln, !ll1111tet-. .. l'O•ltl "'"It• .. --n-..... in ""'• "" r-uttd .ii....,. ,_i.1 -rn101o<1 •• tonti911• _,, Transit Board chosen school and one-year $1 ,000 awards The birthday candles are heated. squeez· are available. ed in a circle. then held together 'A'ith the rubber band (or tape), and set Completes Study From Page 1 ~~Y\~~d. of the pin. with the wicks The banded caodles look like a bar· Of Bus Ro11ti.ng ff OSTS • • • ~~~ ol air·to-ai r missiles ready to Somebody lights lhe candles. Everyone helds hold the side of the bag to the grouoff and the hot air slowly fills the By JOHN VALTERZA OI tilt Diiiy l"lllf Stiff ?.1embers or the staff of the Orange County Transit DI.strict said today they have completed a preliminary plan show· ing all the new bus routes they hope lo launch next spring along the South County. And the plans already have been tested \~ith a spare di.st rict bus. added Tom AlbC'rt , a spokesman for the agency. The plans call tor three separate pat· ll'rns \\'ith connections spnnnlhg the Sad· dlcback and Capistra no V:llleys. The systems \\'ould Jin~ the com· muaities of l.aguna Hills, Lagwia Beach, Mission Viejo, San Juan Capistrano, Capistrano Beach, Dana Point and San Clemente, he said, using major thoroughfares :n all the communJUes. Buses to Santa Ana also are planned. One loop. alread y tested last weekend \\'ith a spare bu:o:;, would serve S11n Clemente and Capistrano Beach. A.r101her longer net\\'ork would begin in lilission Viejo, travel through San Ju11n and finally end in Dana Point, thus linking the communities with Sad· dleback College. Still another V.'OUld serve Laguna Hills and pans of Laguna Niguel, Albert said. Tr:insit district directors will receive the route proposals rrom the staff next week, he added . The service depends entirely on the receipt of new coaches (lrderrd by the dist rict. and thus far the delivery dates appear firm, th~ off icial lloid. "\lle're prell y sure !hot the entire plan \\'ill l>c impl ctnente<I In Apri l and ,\l ay. _j11s'. ln li 111e for the surnmcr scAson," he said. Albert added that tentative pl nns call for blc11dtng lhe bus srheduli ng with possible new passenge r train stops at the San Juan Capistrano station -if Am trak braS! concurs with the pJ:'jn 10 restore passenger ser\'ice to the aban· doned station. "We're v.'illing to shift some schedul· Ing to accomroodate the new tralna ir they really come abou t." Albert said. Thus far the district has heard nol hlng from Amtrak officl's In San DieRo 11hout the proposal to cul tv.·o stops from the schedule in San Clemente and place the m In Snn Juan. Instead, Lynch said. Tile dinner and harbor crui~ .Yo'as hosted by Lansing Eberling, Irvine Com· pany \'ice president of finance . "It was not a case ot the Irvine Company off.ic.lally taking the State Board out to dinner," an Irvine spcikesman explained today. "Eberling is an old friend of three members on the four-man board and wanted to get together \\'ith them ," the spokesman said. In addition to the three members of the board known by Eberling, 10 members (l( the staff of the State Bonrd of Equaliwtion also were Invited 10 dirmer. "Eberling told the board membe rs they could invit e their friends i( they wsnted to," the Irvine Co mp a n y spokesman said. The three members ot the State Bo::ird \\'ho attended the dinner and harbor cru ise were Lynch or the second dis trict. George Reilly of the first district, and Richard Nevins of the fGurth district. \Villiam Bennett. chairman ol the board from the second district, declin ed to attend. "I didn 't want to take a meal from the Irvine C.Ompany," he said. t.ynch. serving his fourth electi ve ter m .1S a board member, maintained cm· phatlcally that there is nothing wrong "'ilh accepling free meals from the Irvine Company. "Until re·dlstrlctlng recently put the Irvine Company in my district. I had ncvtt:r heard of th em," Lynch s11!d. "Thtll sho\vs you how much interest ·they have \\'ilh the state board. Both tynch tlnd the Irvine Company spokesman said the lr~e Company docs not have nor anticipate havlng cases before the lJoard of Equalization. "The dinner was purely socl:il. We didn't even all sit at the same table,'' Lynch said. Teen-ager Killed bag. The balloons have floated as hi gh as 200 feet , they say. The youths said they carefully watch where their creations fl y because of the candles but nonnally. the candles are snuffed when th!y finally fall. They did It because of the Uf'O craze and the nearness of l{alloween. Lisa said they saw the blue disc, reported Sunda y night by a Hwitinglon Beach resident, which was not launched by the Sol Vista gang. I I I I I I I I I r, Local artists Crom the Saddleback Valley and beach towns are included in more than 50 artists exhibiting through Sunday at Art Expo '73 at the Lagwia Hills Mall. Hours or the show coincide with the li1all shoping hours : LO a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, 10 a.n1. to 6 p.m. Saturday, and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. William Hamilton, Mission Viejo oil painter. will be the honorary judge for the show. Award ribbons and cash prizes were scheduled for presentation today. Local artists Include Robert Trent, Arlene Williams, Joy Krull. S. S. Stevens, Olga Stearn, Vaughn Miller, Henry RE.mirez, Mita White and William Hamill.on from Mission Viejo. Also exhibiting are Jean Bolt, Rusty Johnson, and Joan Steed of El Toro ; Judy Whitelock of Laguna Niguel ; Michelle Purcell of Laguna Beach: Cylene Carr of South Laguna; and su. zanne Ryan of Dana Point. MARINES •.. point for West Coast Marines. Numerous llelicopter gunships and annored units are also stationed there. The S_trategjc Afr Command bases in California were alerted, Mareh Air Force Base, near Riverside, and Beale AFB , near a.1arysville, and Castle AFB near a.Jerced. At ~larch personnel were told to stay close to home telephones if not on duty today and l.o answer any calls withia six rings . "It's just like any of the first·stage practice alerts we have all the time," one airman told the AP. He r,eeeived a telephone call alertlng him at 11 p.m. Duty officers who confirmed the alert at other bases called it a "recall" and tor the most part would say only thal all personnel were ordered to reporl to base immediately. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY General Eledrlc FREEZER • 518 Lb. Capacity • Convenient Book-self I Stora gel • Foods Easy to Organize, I See and Select I • Defrost Dra in I • Door Lock I I 23995 I UMITED I 9UAN11TY I 90 DAY CASH wnH Amom I CUDJT 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa-Phone 548-7718 j ~ (Il l! ••ll QI ... ~ ti (lt\lt /11 .. 1, C1ll'°'""I' t\'tlK"t.i_.. ~ u,,"1 H 11 ....,.,lftl•l Dv ..,olt U U ,,_,._,,; 111IM1.,, *"' ... ,_ 11 1) ...,11110 The recent £nO\'e by tran1ll district dire"tors lo shift pollcy and ln1lall th~ South County bull 5ervlce h11s been hailed hy many groups along the South County. MARYSVILLE (AP) A M•rysvllle leenager was killed Wednesday when ace tylene gn.1: he had swallowed explotlcd inside his body , Yuba county sberlff's deputi es reported Wednesday. They $4id [)Clln Antrobus, 16, inhaled the 6ploslve gas Tuesday in a Marysville Union High School metal shop class. ~----------------~----~ I t • I ( I 7 to th •tr m In ,, lo w io th w ol w b e M i • • pl I w Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL 66, NO. 298, 4 SECTIONS, 56 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1973 TEN CENTS ·straws!I Bag!I Candles Bingo!I a lf FO By TERRY COVIU.E Of .. DaltJ P'llllt ..... "It was pulsatllll and it appeared to have a red light on one 1ide. Then there was a bright, wpite fiash, like lightning but without no~e. and It shot slraigbt up and oul of alght ... , " one mystified night watcber reported. The mystery of the UFOs, at least in HunUngton Beach, has been 110lved. Metallic night g1iden from a distant star? Secret enemy apy Oigbts? u .. s. No. Soda straws, birthday candles and clear, plastic dry cleaning bap. Simple-items collected from a taco stand, a laundry and a supermarket went into the construction phase of the brtgbt, orange discs ~me Huntington Beach residents reported as UFOs Tues- day night The spacemen wbo launch them are a group of high school youths who live in the Sol Vista tract near Slater Aven~e and Edwards Street. Their spacecraft, about three-feet tan and two-feet wide, Dy on a limple prtn.. ciple -tbe okl bot air balloon method. "We learned bow to make them In a high school science class," says Peter Wiemals, 16. , "It does look like a fiery flow In the sky," addl Lisa Regal, 15. "Jt Ooata with the wind and from a distance you can't tell what it ls." "On~ stayed up about half an hour. It was a clear night aod the candlelight reflected oU the bag," reports Leo Stock. 17. "Thal'• the one that was reported in the papers." The balloons -or UFO! lf you prefer -arc simple to ir.ake. It takes a plastic dry cteaning bag, medium size, about a dozen birthday candles, four straws, a rubber band and one straight pin. All boles In the plastic bag art sealed, eteept for the bottom opening: Two !See llFO, Page I) on Alert 'Precautionary Move,' Kissinger Explains WASlilNGTON !AP) -U.S. military such action will betaken." II wanllSCiosed-not-by-Washlngtm but Tl>e.dillhtd!on be.mw_w~- forces were ordered to worldwide alert Kissinger ~id the Ul!_lted States o~ by mil_itary men who got ~e order. that of a military force big eoougb poses ,the use of great-power forces Kissinger sakf•·tbe-Natioaa)...~ty -·lo mfor'ce peace terms, and peraoone1 today. Secretaey of -8tate ~eney A. Kls-in the numbers that wo~d be necessary Council ~et at about midnight Pot aulgned to observe the sltuationi-all<t~ -.. -.Alngar·c:all'fl Lt.~("WP'lhOG prnmpted .,~~c.r-a1i'ttnlb>l!raW-ccti:i~-"l":.irl -un&BKD&U8~~~ ---_:..iitc.lh...!_· -· --·--by uncertainty about possible Soviet In~ ---tion. He said President NiJon nlmself report trUce vw1HUWS. - tervention to police the Middle East DAYAN'S OFFER TO QUIT did not participate in the meeting, but Twice, Kis!inger wu asked whether cease-fire. REJECTED~ Story, Page 4 concurred in their judgment there was any link between Nixon's But ~e said the early morning .o~er By that hour, . ~rders apparently had domestic problenu and the crisis abroad. was dispatched because of amb1gwty he said the United States is willing gone cut to military commanders to in Soviet intentions, not in a great-power to supply some personnel to an observer go on alert. He reacted icily. . The alert was the U.S. 's largest since team under United Nations supervision. Kissinger termed inconceivable the use "111.ere has to be a ~um of con- the CUban misslle crisi.s ol 1962. of either Soviet or U.S. forces in a fldenet; that senior officials of ~e "As 'of now the Soviet Union has The alert came before dawn and was military role in the Middle East. He American government are not playing not taken anfirrevocable action," Kis-tJ1derstood to affect Army, Navy, Marine said that would transplant the rivalry with the lives of the American people," singer satd. '.'It is our hope that no and Air Force units around the world. of the great powers. he said. OC Official Backs Nixon t Assessmefl't BJCANllACE~ ...... ...,,.. .. Jack Vallerga went to Inglewood WedneodaY to defend his . usessment ot. President Nixon's San Clemente estate while state olfidals were in Orange County challenging it. Vallerga, the Orange County tax assessor, tesUOed belore a joint meeting of tbe AMembJy Committee on Revenue and Taxation and the Assembly Select Committee on Coastal Zone Resources. The subject of the hearing ln Inglewood Cit)'. Hall was the effect of Proposition 20, UifT9'72 coiital iOliea-ct;-onlX'OPCrty values and coaatal county assessment practices. . But VaDerga diverted from that sllgbt.- ly-to deliver hb -Own volleys_ at the State Board ol Equalization while Its members were being hosted by lbe Irvine Company in Newport Beach. Claiming that the board Is fighting "a battle in the preM," Vallerga said the board Is accusing him of "giving preferential treatment to a· hi.gb officer of this country." He didn't mentk>n President Nixon by name, but ule reference was obvious, e.spedally to Assemblyman Le o McCarthy (0-San Francisco), who ob- jected to Vallerga'1 115lng the bearing as a forum. President Nixon purchased about 25 acres for the Western White House oom- plex ln San aemente for $1.5 million. It included a 43-year-old, 6,000-square foot house, La casa PacUlca. Vallerga doWJHJSessed the property ln 1973 to Jess than $1.4 million, at· tributing the drop to Propoolijon 2D uncertainties. This is contrary to trends statewide which show developed properties rising (See VAUERGA, Page I) Orange • Weather Ceast I Mostly sunny Friday ls the way the weatherlady sees It, with may- be just a taste of fo11n the morn- ing hours. Highs at the beaches Jn the mld·70s rising to the low 80s inland. Overnight lows in the 50s. " .. Prerident Ni%on ti t%ptcted to ,_ 'l'"'llionhlo "" •ol< pl411ed b11 close friend Bebe Reboi:o in handlina of campaign contrlbutk»u. Su 1tory, Poat 4. 14..0 Vote U.N. Force to Mideast Without MaJor Powers BULLETIN UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -111< U.N. Seeurfty Couocll voted today to send a U.N. peacekeeping rorce to the Middle East without Soviet, American or otller big power troops. Tbe vole was 14-0, with Cltlna not par1lclpatl.ng. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (APl -The Soviet ambassador to the United Nations said today the Soviet Union would agree to the creation of a U.N. peacekeeping force-in-the Middle East without Soviet, American or other big power troops . Ambassador Jacob Malik told a special Security Council meeting on the Middle East crisis that he would vote in favor of-a-proposal to dispatch a U .N. force without big.power representation to supervise the cease-fire. 'lbe dispatch of such a peace force powers was a point advocated by Secretary of State Henry A. KiMinger In a news conference in Washington earlier In the day alter the United States ordered military forces around the world on a state of alert. The alert was described as $ precau- tion against the possibility that the Soviet Union would dllpafdl troops lo tbe Mkl- d1e East to help aecure a eeue-flre.. Kissinger said the United States opposed big-power military intervmtion in tbe Middle East crisis. The Chinese ambassador told the coun- cil that Ollna would not participate in the vote, thereby assurtog against a veto that would scrap the resolution introduced earlier in the day by eight nonaligned nati<11& In voicing his approval, Malik said that the plan for_tbe_peac .. keepingJorte was sponsored by the majority ol the counci1 members. A vote was expected. later In the day by tbe 15-nation councll. The United States.J the Soviet Union, China, Britain and France are the five permanent members and they can ex~ ercise the right of veto ol any resolution. The other 10 members are nonpermanent and while they each have a vote, they do not have the right to veto. Under term.s of the D01381igned coun- tries' resolution, none of the five permanent members would be called upon to commit forces to the U.N. peace force. Court Disniisses Judge From Bench for Conduct SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The CaJ. ifomid' SUpreme c.ourt today, for the first time in its history, ordered a judge removed from the bench -U>s Angeles Municipal Court Judge Leland W. Geiler. He was ordered discharged from office for "willful misconduct in orflce and conduct prejudicl3I to the administration of justice that brings the judicial office into disrepute." The order, effective bnmedlately, notes that Geiler's conduct does not amount to moipl turpitude, dishooesty or CO!'- ruplion~ and thus he will be permitted to praciice law U othenrile quatmed. The ctiurt'1 order follQwed the recom· meDdaUon of the nine-member com- mission on Judicial Quall!icatlons, an agency wit.h authority to Investigate unfit or disabled judges and to recommend dlsdpline. The commission began formal pro- cffJdin.gl last year following lnvesUgaUon of charges that Geller (J) engaged In crude behavior, {2) lUed vulgar and profane language In dealing With oourt officers, including employe1 and lawycn, and (3) arbitrarily interlered with the attorney-cllcot rtlatlonshlp b e t w e e n public defenders and their clients who came before him. At the commission's requ~t. the Supreme Court named thrco special • masters, all Los Angeles Superior Cow1 judges, to take evidence and report to it • 111.e masters held 21 days of bearings and heard 73 wttnesses Wh0$6 testimony covered 3,193 pages of transcript. They recommended Geller, 58, be ceMW"Cd far ,conducted prejudicial to the ad- minisltaUon of jlUtice. But the commlssion concluded Geller ·was guUty of additional misconduct and by a 7·2 vote recommended to the Supreme Court that the judge be remov· ed from office. The court reviewed the masters' record, the commission's findlngs and also beard oraJ arguments and conducted an independent revitw of Its own befort1 reaching a decb:ion. The court concluded that the com· ml.a.Ian's findlnga were proper and adopted them. Theo< concemed alleged crude behavior, vulgar language, uncouth references to bodily funct'6ns and lmtful and profane remarks by GeUer. The eourt said these occurred in public court hallways and offices and in the judge's chambers. It said they Involved a deputy public ddendt:r, a court com- missioner, the oommissloner'a female clerk and remale attorneys. ., ' Tide Turns; Mail, Cal'ls Favor Nixon 'Q.S. 1en1ton and col.1re11men ...,._tin( die OnllilO Coat! earlier thll week were deJQpd with tnail, telegrams and pitone ciiut overwhelm- ingly favoring Impeachment of President Ni1on. But two Republican congresmien, in- cluding the one whose district includes the ~sident's San Clemente estate, said today the Lide bas turned and support Is starting to now In. Local offices of Congressman Andrew J. Hinshaw (R-Newport Stach) and Clair Butgener-(Jt.Santa Fe Sprinp) said that their mail volume on the impeachment situation was beavier than usual but now the calls and letten are swinging in support of the President Burgener, whose district includes a coastal strip of Orange County from San Cementa to Newport Beach, reportedly ooly four pilooe calls to his local office in Orange County -all opposing the Pruident. "Several" pro-Nixon calls were ~iv­ ed In Burgener's San Clemente District office, according to spokeswoman Max- ine Green. From Washington, Burgener's con· gresslonal aide, Brad Hathaway, said, "I can'l say that we've received a flood of telegrams." Hathaway said Burgener was receiving more mall on the Middle East war, the Environmental Protection Agency and gas rationing. He added that Wednesday morning, a definite trend In favor of the President had begun to show up but be had (See OPPOSmON, Page %) Trustees Study 'Deep Throat' Issue Tonight When tnistees of the Huntington Beach Union High School District discuss the "Deep Throat" controversy tonight they will be meeting at Marina HJgh School. The school board meeUng starts with a study ICSSion at 7 p.m., folJowed by the regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. Truslee3 will meet in the Marina cafeteria. An executive session will be held later In the meeting for further Investigation of lbe showing of the X·rated film "Ilecp Throat" during a district administrators conference ln San Diego. Superintendent Jeck Roper declined eomment UU. morning on the Incident. "It's a per'IOMel matter in the hands of the boArd," he said. "I don't think It's appropr1ete to comment. ' Trustees had met for fi ve houn: in execut!ve session last Saturday In· terviewlng nearly tO administrators who had attended the San Diego conference. No aM:>Uneement of any disciplinary c.cuon baa been made. though truste:es lndlC3tad lhlt might be OOllllidered tonight. " Dllllt' l'fW "'" ....... IT'S A llJRD, IT'S A PLANE? .. NO, IT'S A UFO Brion Colemon, 13, Dlsploys Condl•powerod Hot Air Balloon Cities League Endorses State Subsidy to Beaches S!!,_~islation that could ,save Orange Coast beach cities millloris of dollars annually woo a near-unanimoWI endorsement [rom the California League of Cities Wednesday. The league, meeting in San Francisco, backed a Newport Beach reaoluUon call- Introducing The Zonkie NEW YORK !UPI) A spokesman for the Prospect Park Zoo says Jenny, a donkey, Is pregnant by Lucky Strike. a zebra. 1'he orfspring, expected in March, will be called a Z.Onkie. Lucky Strike was lonely after the death or his mate last year. the spokesman said, so he was moved in with Jeriny "fo r com- pany. The next thing we knew. they had mated and Jenny \Yas pregnant. It is all very unusual as far as we know.'' ing for state aid to defray the costs of services that include beach main- tenance and extra police protection need, ed to handle summer tourists. Newport Beach city officials estimate local taxpayers shell out $1.5 mlDlon annually while the return from items such as sa1es taxes and parking meter fees is only $500,000. 1'hat's a net lGS.'1 of $1 million a year burdening local taxpayers, city oUicials say. Huntington Beach officials eslimate they lose $750,000 annually while Seal Beach says it loses about $150,000. Figures from San Clemente on i~ costs were not immediately availabfe and Laguna Beach has not yet tried lo calculate costs versus its revenues. Newport Beach City Councilman Cart Kymla first proposed the cost-revenue study. When councilmen discovered the amount of money involved, they im· mediately asked for and received an Orange County League of Cities en- dorsement for state assistan ce. i'.1eanwhile, Huntington Beach city of- ficials did a study of their own and immediately asked Asemblyman Robert B11rke IR·Huntington Beach ) to introduce state legislation calling for a state study (See BEACHES, Page %) Policewoma11 Nabs Youth In $500,000 Cl1ecl{ Spree , ORLANDO, Fin . (UPI ) -Petite policewoman Kitty Hutter thought it was a routine bust In a stolen credit card case until the teletype messages started pc.urlng ln saying, "We want him, we want him. we want hi111." And with the bills still coming tn, police said today a soft.spoken teen·ager may have collected as much as $500,000 using a stolen credit card and bogus checks In a global spending spree. ~1ichael Thomas Henson, 18, asked , "Is tb~t all yoo've got me for?" when ~1rs. Hutter put a gun to his back Sunday at an Orlando Howard Jchnson's and Arrr:sted him for using a stolen Master Charge card. ''Whc."l he said that, I knew H'ICre was more to It," lhf: blonde delective said. Jnvesti.gators said they later round evkiencc that Hen.~ cashed $200,000 in bad checks nt American E~prcss orrices > • in a month·long spree that stretched from New York to Lisbon to Hong Kflng, with many stops ·in between. Menson was being held in lieu of $2511 bond on charges of possessing a ~tolen credit card and possessing worthless checks, police said. Among llenson's belongings when ar· rested was a receipt for a $21,00G purchase of two diamond rings in Hong Kong and a postcard he bought Jn Spain bul had not yet mailed lo hls mother, '.\!rs. Clementine llenson in Baltimore. II ~aid: "near mom: I had to run. !llOrrY hut I had to go. Love t.1lchael." Policr said an Orlando man who U9C! 1he nam!' "Mr. X1H11cr" loaned llenS0r1 hl s ~!aster C..harse cal'd in New York Aug. 6 to buy plane ticket s to Orland<) tor hin1 and a girl compruUon . Wheti Hen~ fadtd to return the card, the n1:u1 rf'portf'rl U stolon . \ 2 DAlt.'1' f'ILOI H ~. Octoblff' 2S, 1913 -~--=--~-;::::::=====-~-'Voic e print .Ruling Set On Brannon From Page 1 OPPOSITION ••• ·no rerord of percentages or volume. J-linshaw's District Administrator Chip Cleary said his office had received "hun- dreds" of telegrams and confirmed tb8.t after a w.lve of anU-Nixoo mail came in. the tide began turning in support. Cleary said criticism of the President was due mostly to "confusion" on lhc... part of the public. He said Hinshaw urged lhe President to go on television soon after the story hroke over the Watergate tapes and the Cox firing. "The congressman believes the people :ire entitled to the full knO\\'ledge of thr situation," Cleary said. Congressman Craig Hosmer (R·Long Beach l, whose. dist rict includes part of \l'estern Orange County, indicated an ;enornoous flood of sentiment against the ·President. Ol ANGI COAST "' DAILY PILOT 1•• O•~"GI Coit! t>AILV it llOt wlft'I Wl!!Cll >1 ~~"lbi1'1.,;f ftl1 lollWl•P"H, II pUl)liMleG by •~• OtM•Q• c.,..i ""1>'l•hi<lg c_.nv. S•~ ••'• 11<111,a·, ~·• puD•n~H. M•nd~V tnniug~ ~ .. d.•Y lo• (OITI Mo .. , lol-rl 6~1(.1\. .... M'"~!O" e ... ~,,OUM·"" Vnlltf. l•UVM fl•o(n, ""nt•S..<><11•""<' •"9 San Clt:mln!t/ S10 )VI" (l~'>rt•n() A tll'llt" rt11i00>" ..._,,, oo " l>UDI••""" S•lw<d•Y• 1od )un<J~•• ,~. P'"'~' .... I PuD•t\"•"'J ~l•n• ••• JJO W•1t &It ~""''' (c1•1 M"•· '""'0'""' '11i.. Rob1rl N. Wtt<l l'r~kleot •"" Pu~'"'•' J1cO: R Cv,le1 ~.,e "1•1-! '"" V•~•l'"fl' M1 n·1~"' Ttiom11 K1e•i1 fg~~· l hom11 A., M~rph.n1 M•,.~Q)n~ l'a"O• Ch1rl1• H. Looi Ri,htrd P. Nill Aull!l1'11 Ml~IQl'IO fiU,tO• I T1r<Y Cov!!I• Wn! OrlP'IOI CO\lll!J f"~ll(lr H•i.tl"f'Oll '-• Offko 11175 lt1th lowl 1•1rO M1il("9 .Addt1o r P,0 . l o• 1•0. '2•4t Othr Offlc" ~"OY"• ll•~cn l n ~orn! "'"'"""' '°''' Mtto 1)0 Wiii Ill~ l"tt! loltwPll'• f111cn: lUJ lolt'WOOfl 80..•ovtrd 11' Cit..,.,,,,. ):I' ~Ori~ I I (1mlt1Q 1!11! Tole,tlo11e 17141 642-4)21 Cl•lifltd AllNttlslflf 642:-1671 r 11m N11!~ Ort""' c-•T C1m••u1 .. 11~ l 40·1J20 (ofy•IQM, lt/l . 0,...,. to"' P\lllll'IMng tom~~• ,., n1w• ttotln, mu•!•t!-, •lltorl•• """"'' ~ •1•11'11\_.., .,_..,~ ln.1 M rtprOOll<M wlli.o.ot lPOClll "'' ...il\illn Of COPr•ltM _,., l •co .... ('111 ""•Of ""' 11 Cot!I Mtu, t•lltor~••, 'ublC"llOl•Ofl Dr ,.,.,"' U d me111Mr. ~· m1•1 Sl IS mori1M,1 mlllltrv -'1Mll01'lt U.tJ ....,..1~1~, Bri11.g i UFO And Get Cash From Page J BEACHES ... of ways and n1eans to aid the cities. Ne\vport Beach city officials haUed the passage of lhe league resolunon and Councilman ~1i!an Doslal explained thal. while the endorsement \Vas nearly unanin1ous. it came only after a com· millee had tried to water it down. "They wanted it to ask only for state funds for preservation of beach area." Dostal said, "but we were successful in strengthening it before the final vote \\'as ta ken. "The resolution no\v calls for state aid for 'brench maintenance' as "·ell as 'preservation,' " he said, "and that's a big difference." Dostal said beach maintenance oosts include things like cleanup and the extra police and traffic control needed to han· d!e large crO\\'ds. as "'ell as costs for lifl',!)Uard services and sanitary facilities. Dostal credited the assistance of HWl· lington Ucach dclei;:itcs to the convention with pro\·idlng needC'd help to gt t th e resolution adopted . Police Seek Dog In Valley Atta ck A F01mtain Valley stnct sweeper operator faces a serit'S of inoculations against rabies unless n dog that hit him can be found by Friday. City officials said Peter Duran, 33, \\'as hittfn 'Tuesday at 4 a.m. by a s1no1\ dArk dog u·lth lonJ{' hair. Al the time of the ·attnck Duran was ln tbc city yard on '\'ard Street south of Talbert Avenue. The dog mny be pa_rt J)OOdle and had tither brov;n or black hafr. City officials urge anyone with in· formation about the dog to call lhc potict' department. 9$2.-4444 or the county animal shelter, 532-7301. l'N•P.,eJ Valley District Candidate Backs Out of Running One of five candidates for the Fountain Valley School District Board of Trustees Stephen Held, dropped out of the rac~ at the ft.rst candidates' night meeting Tuesday. Held, an educator from Huntington Beach, told the other candidates and an audlence of less than 30 that he \\'as quitting hls campaign because of ''personal oomhlitments." A S«"Ond candidates' night , J\1onday at 7:3() p.m. at Plavan School, 967S \Varner Ave., Fountain VaJley, is ex- pected to be better attended -and more explosive -than the first. Plavan School is one of two hot spots of the year-rou nd school controversy, along with Wardlow School and parents on both sides of the Issue will qui z the rema ining candidates on their year. round school views . Opinions on unification and other educational viewpoints will also be aired at l\.londay's meeting. , Candidates for the Nov. 6 election are : -Karen Ackley. a housewife and presi· dent of the Superintendent Parent Coun· cit. -Kris Roggenkamp, a housewife. -Helen Schoelzel, a hospital ad· minlstrator. -Donald Frank, a management con· sultan!. F ire Hits 'Ol ympia' OXNARD (AP) -An explosion and rire \Vcdnesdny heRvlly damaged the ocean dredge Olympll'I, whlch \\'M in the area to remove !!and at the entrance to the Qha.nnel lsalnds Harhor, 0Ulch1ls report. 'The 10.man crew steered tiw $4 million vessel to the nearby beach and escaped without lnJury, the C011st Guard stated. On Traf fie Rap Los Angeles Rams linebacker Isiah Robertson, was arrested early today by the Huntington Beach police on a traffic \\'arrant. A police spokesman said the football player paid the $88 bail and was released from custody not long alter his 2 a.m. arrest. The warrant, issued from the Wes t Orange County Judicial District Court, charged Robertson with two vehicle code violations -passing on the right under unsafe conditions and failure to carry registration in his car. Robertson "'as apparently driving on Edinger Avenue near Gothard Street \\'hen he \\'as stopped by Officer Keith Nale. Lectm·e Tonight On Family Life The third (liscussion in Jbe Fam!ly Life Education series sponsored by Foun- tain Valley School District will be held tonight at 7::W at Lamb School. Fathers with sons in filth and sisth grades are invited to hear the di!ICuss.ion concerning "Biological Factors of Grow- ing Up," led by Alden Esping, youth counselor. Families are invited from Lamb, Wardlow, Arevalos, Bushard, Gisler, Moiola, Newland and Oka schools. Lamb School is at 10521 Yorktown Ave., Hun- tington Beach. A second discussion, on the same topic, \Viii be held Nov. 7 ror families from Plavan, Tamura. Talbert, McDowell, Fulton, Nieblas, Cox , Fountain Valley and Jlarper schools. Sirica Mulls ' Advice .Bid ·over· Tapes Man, Girl Hurt In Huntington Traffic Crashes A Htnrtingt.On Beach man and a Row- land Heights girt are both hocpitallud today after being injured in separate traffic accidents Wednesday. Joseph Donofrio; 29, of 815 Calllonrla St. is . listed in satisfactocy COQdi.tion at Pacific Hospital with injuries sus- tained when his motorcycle struck a telephone pole when it ran Jlff of Gothard Street near Ellis, Avenue. °'l Pol.Ice said· Donofrio apparently lost C<>ntrol ol his motorcycle on the sharp curve near Ellis Avenue causing the 4:30 p.m. accident. About three hours later, two cars collided in the intersection of 17th Street Md Pacific Coast -Hlgtiw:fy,~re!Ultlng in the hospitalization at Pacifica Hospital of Renee Whitford, 18, ot • Rowland Heights. MW Whitford was a passenger in a car driven by Kjrk Owen;J, 25, of South Gate. The second car was driven by Karyn Panneton, 21 of Walnut. Owem, Mrs. Panneton and her two passengers, Roger and Shawn Panneton , 9 and 8, wer~ all treated for minor injuries and releas- ed from Pacifica Hospital. ----r---------------------• I IMMEDIATE DELIVERY I I General Electric I : FREEZER : I • 51 8 Lb. Capacity I : • Convenient Book-self Storage: I • Food s Easy to Organize, I I See and Select I ~ ·~~d~i" I ~ I I I I I UMITED 9UANT1TY 239 95 I I .. I I 90 DAY CASH WITHc~::",,On• I 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Com Mesa-Phone 548-7788 I ~-----------~---------· • 1 ... ,... Orange C~!!' Today's Fl•al N.Y. Stoeks VOL 66, NO. 298, 4 SECTIONS, 56 PAGES ORAN6E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, I 973 N TEN CENTS Coast ·Legislators . Say Tide Turns for Nixon U.S. senatoni and congressmen re""°"'ling the Orange Coast earlior lhis week were deluged With mall, telegrams and j>bone c.al1s overwhelm- ingly favoring Impeachment of President Nb:on. But two Republican congressmen, ln- cluWng .the one whose district includes lhe President's San Clemente estate, said today, the tide has turned and support is starting to Dow in. Local offices of Qingressman Andrew • • DeltJ .......... """"' 'JUST FRIENOL Y DINNER' Tix .Offlclal Lynch Equalization Panel Hosted By Irvine . Co. By JOHN ZALLER Of JM Dlltf' '"" '''" lfVllii company Official! Tuesday serv- ed as hosts on a ferry ride around Newport Harbor followed by dinner at the Balboa Bay Club for members of the State Board or EquaJization. Bot.A company and board spokesmen de9Cflbed the festivities as, "a gesture of friendliness." Tbe state board bas been holding a series of meetings at Newport Beach City Hall. The Board of Equaliza.Uon Is charged under state law wilh review- ing property ta1: assessments throughout California. , Last year, the Irvine Company paid '8.7 million in propet'ty taxes on the basis of assessments · made by the Orange County Auessor's Office as su~ ject to audit by the State Boaro ol Equalization. "There's really nothing unusual at all about being taken out to dinner," said John Lynch, who represents Orange County on the ·slate board. "It is very common for local businessmen or the Chamber of Com- merce to take us out to diMer when we come to town . "In this area, 1 guess the Irvine Company is equivalent of those groups," Lynch said. The dinner and harbor cruise was hosted by Lansing Eberling, Irvine Com· pany viCe president of finance . "It was not a case of the Irvine Company officially taking the State Board out to dinnert'' an Irvine spokesman explained today. "Eberling Js an old friend of three members on tbe four-man board and .wanted to get together with lhem," the spokesman said. In addftion to the three members of the board known by Eberling, 10 members of the staff o( the State Board of F.qualir.ation al.0 were invlted lo dinner. I •1Eberllna told the board membtrs th<y could Invite their friend• U th<y wanted to," the lrvlne Co m pa n y spokesman Mid. The three members of the Sta\e Board who attended the dinner and Niirbor cruiM! were Lynch of the aecood district, Goorge Reilly ol th< !Int.. district, and Richard Nevins of the fourth district. WllUam ~tt, chairman of the boanl from \he oecond dl1trlct, declined (Ste HOSTS, ""&• II ... I J. llinshaw (fl.NewPQrt Beach) and Clair Burgener (R-8anta Fe Springs) sald that their mail volume on the impeachment sltuaUon was heavier than u.sual but now the calls and letters are swinging in support of the ~dent. Burgener, whose district Includes a coastal strip of Orange County from San Clemente to Newport Beach, reportedly only four phone calls to his local office in Orange County -all opposing the President. • I * * * lJ;N. Aetion "Several,, pro-Nllon can. were recejv. ed ln Burgeoer's San Clemente Diatrid office, according to spokeswoman Max- ine Green. From Washlngton; Burgener'• COD· gresslonal alde, ~ad Hathaway, said, "I can't say that we've reci!lved a flood pf telegrams." Hathaway said Burgener was receiving more mail on the Middle East war, the Environmental Protection Agency and gas rationing. itar -No -'B-ig -Powe~~-·= In Peacekeepers BULLETIN UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -'lbe U.N. Secarlty Coucil· voted today to send a U.N. peacekeeping force to the Middle East wttltoat Soviet, Amerka.n or olber big power troops. The vote was 1u. wtdri China 110.t participating. IJN!TED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -'!be Soviet ambassador to the United Nations: said today the Soviet Union would agree to tbe er.-If I U .N. peaceteepl.n,g force In the Middle East without Sovie!, American or other big power troops. Ambassador Jacob Malik told a special Securlly° Council meeting on the Middle Eas! crisll that he would vote In favor of a propo3&1 to dispatch a U.N. force wit.bout big-power representation to supervise the cease-fire. 1be dispatch of such a peace force powers was a point advocated by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger in a news conference in Washington earlier in the day after the United States ordered military forces around the world on a state of alert. The alert was described as a precau· lion against the Possibi!Jty·that the Soviet Union would dispatch troops to the Mid. die East to help secure a ceue-fire. Kissinger said the United States oppoted · big.power military intenention ta the Middle East crisis. The Chinese ambasaador told the coun- cil that China woWd not participate in; the vote, thereby usurinC agalnat a veio that WOllld ICnp tba ~ Introduced earlier In the day by eJiht noll3ligned nationl. In voicing bi1 approval, ~ ml that \he plan for the peacHeeplJW lorie was tpc>llflOred by Uae majority of the council members. A vote WU erpected later Jn the day by the IS.nation council. The United States, the Soviet Union, China, Britain and France are the five permanent members and they can ez· ercise the right of veto of any l't!.SOlutlon. The other 10 membera are nonpermanent and while they each have a vote, they do not have the right to veto. Under terms of the nonaligned coun- tries' re90!ution, none of the ave permanent members wou]d be called upon to commit force• to the U.N. peace force. Court Dismisses Judge From Bench for Conduct SAN FRANCJSCO (AP) -The caJ. lfomia Supreme Cowt. today, for the first time In its history, ordered a judge removed from the bench -Los Angeles Municipal Court Judge Leland W. Geiler. He was ordered discharged from office for "willful misconduct in office and conduct prejudicial to the admlnistralion al. justice that brings the judicial office into disrepute." The order, effective immediately, notes that Geiler's conduct does Dot arnowit to moral turpitude, dishonesty or oor- ruption, anct thus he will be penTiitted to practice law lf otherwise qualified. The court's order followed the recom · mendatJon of the nine-member com- mission on Judiclal Qualifications, an League Backs Newport Bid For Stat.e Aid State JeglslaUoo that could save Orange Coast beacfl cities millions of dollan annually won a nea.Mmanlmous endorsement from the catlfornia League of Cltles Wednesday. The league, meeting in San Francbco, backed a Newport Beach resolu tion ca11· Ing for state aid to defray the costs of services that Include beach main· tcnance and extra police protection need- ed to hanclle summer tourists. Newport ~ach cily 'officials estimate local ~yers shell out $1 .5 mlltlon annually· wh.lle the return from Items such as $a les tax~ and parking meter fees is onl)' $500,000, fhat's a net lw 0£ $1 million a year burdening local t.axpayen, city official! say, Huntingtoh Beach officials estimate th'Y I* $750,000 a.nnually white Stal (Ste MILUONS, Page Ii -l agency with authority to investigate unfit or disabled judges and to recommend discipline. The commission began rormal pro- ceedings last year following investigation of charges that Geller (1) engaged in cru:le behavior, (2) used vulgar and profane language in dealing with court officen, including employes and lawyers, and (3) arbitrarily lnterfe<ed with the attomey<IJent relationship b e t w e e n public defenden and their clients wbo came before him. At the commission's request. the Supreme Court named three special masters, all Los Angeles Superior c:ourt judges, to take evidence arxl report to it The masters held 21 days of hearings and heard 73 witnesses whose tesUmony covered S,193 pages of transcript They recommended Geil er, 58, be censured fQr conduct prejudicial to the ad. ministration of justice. But the commission concluded Geller was guilty of additional misconduct and by a 7·2 vote recommended lo the (Bee JUDGE , Pa1e Z) Introducing The Zonkie NEW YORK (UPI) A spokesmnn for the Prospect Park 1.oo aa11 Jenny, a donkey, I& pttgnant by IAtcky Strike, a zebr11 . The offspring , expected In March, wi ll be called a 1.onkie. Lucl<y Strike w.. lon!ly after the deolh of his m8te la11t year, the spokesman said, so he wu moved In with Jenny "for com- pany. The next thing we knew, \hey had mated and Jenny ·wu prngnant. ll I& all vtry unusual as far u we know." ·- He added that Wednesday morning, a definite trend in ravor of the President had . begun to show up but he bad no record of percentages or volume. Hinshaw's District Administrator Chip Cleary said h.is~fflce had re<:elved "hun· dreds" of telegrams and confirmed that after a wave of anti·Nixon mall came in, the tide began turning in support. Cleary said criticism of the President was due mosUy to "confusion" on the part of the public. He said Hinshaw urged the President to go on television soon after the story broke over the Watergate tapes an~ the Co:r: firing. "The congressman bel"ves the people are entitled to the full knowledge of the situation," Cleary said. Congressman Craig Hosmer (R·Long Beach), whose district includes part of western Orange County, indicated an enormous fiood or sentiment against the President. on IT'S A BIRD, IT'S A PLANE? .. NO, IT 'S A .UF.O Brian Coleman, 13, Dlspl1ys C1ndl-.powered Hot Air Bllloon Kids Make Own Mystery VFOs Just Candles, Bag By TERRY COVILLE Of' the n.11y l'llOt lftff "It was pulsating and . it appeared lo have a red light on one side. Then there . was a bright, white flash, like lightning but without noise , and it shot straight up and out or sight ... , " one mystified night watcher reported. The mystery of the UFOs, at least in Huntington Beach, has been solved. Metallic night gliders from a distant star ? Secret enemy spy flights? No. Soda straws, birthday candles and clear, plastic dry cleaning bags. Simple items colleeted lrom a taco stand, a laWldry and a supermarket went lnto the construction phase of the bright, orange discs some Huntington Beach re11denll reported as UFOs Tues· day nlglll The spacemen who launch them are a group or high school youths who live in the Sol Visla tract near Sater Avenue and Edwards Street. Their spacecraft, about three-feel taJ\ and two-reet wlde. Oy on a simple prin· ciple -the old hot air balloon method. "We lea rned how to make \hem In a high school science class," says Peter Wlemals, 16. "It does look like a fiery glow In lhe sll:y." add! Lisa Regal, 15. "It floats with lhe wind and from a distance you can't tcll what ll ls." "One stayed up about half an hoW°. tt wa1 a elear night and the candltllght reflected off lbe bag," reports Leo S10clt, 17. "Thal'• the one that was reported in the papers." • The balloons -or UFOs ir you prefer -are si mple to rr.:ike. It takes a plas tic dry cleaning bag, medium size, about a dozen birthday candles. four straws, a rubber band and one straight pin. All holes in the plastic bag are sealed, except for the bottom opening. Two straws are stuck together, one inside the other, then the other two are stuck together. The tandem straws are crossed to form an X and fastened together in the center with lhe straight pin. That forms the base of the balloon. The birthday candles are heated, squeez· ed in a circle, then held together with the rubber band (or tape), and set on top of the pin, with the wicks skyward. The banded candles Jook li ke a bar· rage ol air·lo-air 1nlssiles ready to fire. Somebody lights !he cand!C':s. Everyone \See U1'~0, Page Z) Newpo1·t \Vou1an's Auto Destroye1l A broken fuel line was blamed for a cnr fire that destroyed a Newport Ber.ch'& woman's $3,000 car near her new home 'Vedne!dny. Firemen wtre unable to ~avt the sedan owned by Betty Rogers of 15 Wild Goose Court in the: Cire .which occurred on Superior Avenue at Tltonderoga Lane. I ., Spokesmen in his office said no turning of the tid·• was apparent Wednesday afternoon. "There has been a constant stream of phone calls and earlier in the week, we were literally besieged by telegrams, letters and calls," the spokesman said. There were no tallies available of the number of calls but the spokesman said they were in the hun.dreds. Democratic U.S. Senators John Tunney (See OPPOSmoN, Page Z) ert' Reds Force Precaution --- In Mideast WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. military forces were ordered to worldwide alert today. Secretary of State Henry A. JCl1- singer called it a precaation prompted by uncertainty about ~ble Soviet in- tervention to police the Middle East cease-fir<. BUt he said the early morning order was diapatcbed because of ambiguity In Soviet inteDtlons, not in a great-power '!be alert was the U.S.'s largest since the Cuban missile crisis of 1962. "AA of now, the Soviet Union bas not taken aa,y Jn-evocable action," Ki> llJ>ger Aid. "It ls our hope that no such action will Ile taken." JClsllJt(er said the United States op- poses the use of great·power forces in the numbers that wouJd be necessary to police an Arab-Israeli cease-fire. But DAYAN'S OFFER TO QUIT REJECTED. Story, Pago 4 he said the United States is willing to supply some persoMel to an observer team under ·uruted Nations supervision. 'Ibe alert came before dawn and was understood to afied Army, Navy, Marine and Air Force units around the world. J t wa.s disclORd not by W asbington but by military men who got the order. Kissinger said the National Security Council met at about midnight PDT and unanimously recommended. the ac· tion. He said President Nizon himself did not participate in the meeting, but concurred in their judgment. By that hour, orders appar~nlly had gone out to military commanders to go on alert. Kissinger termed inconceivable tbe' use of either Soviet or U.S. forces in a military role in the Middle East. He said that would transplant the rivalry of the great powers. The dislincUon he drew was between that of a military force big enough to enforce peace terms, and persoMel assigned to observe the situalion and report truce violations. Twice, Kissinger was asked whether there was any link between Nixon's domestic problems and the crisis abroad. He reacted icily. "There ha s to be a minimum of COib fidence that senior o[ficials of the American government are not playing with the lives of the American people," he sa id. Orange Coast • • Weather Jl.1o.1tly SUMY Friday is the way the weatherlady sees it, with may. be just a taste of fog in the morn- ing hours. Ilighs at the beaches In the mid·'10s rising to the low 80s inland. Ovemlght lows in !he 50s. I NS lltt: T Olti\ \' Pre!iident Nixon is ezpected to face q11es!ioning on role played blf clos e friend Be~ Reboio ;,l hrn1d/.in g of campaign con tributions. See story, Page 4. LM. ikTd 11 e.i1..,ot1t1 1. , •• 11 CltnlllH Mon Comln n c ... ,_, n Dnl!I Mtlkfl 11 Ed!l.,..ltl P'ttt •. , liftltrh lftl'Mftl Hl'•U•U Flft-t 114J l'w -. Rtctnll 1t --" AM """"' 11 Ml'flft Hl'·J~U I ·we Want Di111~ Assessment Youth Nabb ed in Credit Card Spree Defended • ORLANDO. Fla. <UPI) -PeU!e poll~~·oman Kitly Huu~r !bought It was a routme bust in a stolen credit card case until the teietype messnges startt'd pc..urlng in $8yini, "We want hinl , we wan\ htm., wa want him ." Aod wilh the bills :nill coining in, poHce said today a soft.spoken teen-ager rnay have colli .. >cted as much 11s $500.000 using a stolen Crl<d!I c11rd and bogus ~<:hecks 1n n global spending spree. :: Michael TllOmas Henson, 18. asked. :.:"ti that aQ you've ~Ol me for~" when :,:1.1rs. Hutter put a gun to his batk :•:Sunday at an Orlando lloward Johnson's :;and arrested him !or using a stolen : .. ~1aster <;barge card. :~ "\Vhe.'1 he said that, I knew there ·! "'a!I more to it." the bkmd e detective :: said. •. Investigators said they later !OWld :: evldeoce that Henson cashe4 $200,000 in • bad checks at American Express offi ces Ttvo Injured In BalbQa \ . 4.uto Crash In a Jl'lOlllb.iooJ spree lhlt 1\retcbed from {New York to Llsbon to Rona Kq, '1rith many stopt In between. HtnlOO WIS being held In lill!U of $250 bond on charge• of posses.~ing .11 sti.>ltn credit card and pos:reulng worth.less checks, police said. Among Hen~'s belongings wheo ar· rested was a receipt for .11 '21,000 purchoise of l'>''O diamond rings Jn Hone Kong and 8 po stcard he bough~ in Sp;iin but had not yet malled to his mother, ltfrs. Clementine Henson in Baltimore. It said: "Dear mom : I had to run. Sorry but I had to go. Love J\1ichael." Police said an Orlando man ""ho uses the name "Mr. Xavier" loaned Henson his fl.faster Charge card in New York Aug. 6 to buy plane tickets 10 Orlando for him and a girl companion. When Henson failed to return 1he C3rd, the man repo rted h stolen. l'romPqel OPPOSITION • • • By Vallerga By CAr\DACE PEARSON Ot 1M 0.HJ' f'lltl Sr.It Jue-Ji: Vallerga went to Inglewood \\'ed.nesd:1y 10 defend hi s assessment of President Nixon's San Clernente eswte ~lie state offlcials were in Orange Cfounty chnllenglng it. Vallerga. the Orange County tux assessor, testified before a joint meeting of lhe Assembly Committee on Revenue and Taxation and the Assembly Select Committee on Coast.al Zone Resources. The subject ol lhe hearing in Inglewood City Hall was the effect of Proposition 20. the 1m roastal wne act, on property \'alues and coastal county assessment practices. But Vallerga diverted from that 6light· Jy to deliver his own volleys at the Stale Board of Equalization y,•hile its members '>''ere being hosted by the lrvine Company in Nev.'JIOrt Beach. Claiming that th e board is fighting '"a baltle in the press," Vallerga said and Alan Cranston have kept more ac· the board is accusing him of ''giving curate accounts of the public sentiment. preferential lreatment to a high officer according to spokesmen 111 1hcir Los or thi s country.'' Angeles offi ces. He didn't mention President l\ixon What a Mess::: Truck dMver Harry B. Arnett, 26, of Garden Grove. walks disgustedly away from his 20·ton dirl·hauler after it flipped over in the middle of a left turn off Bristol Street onto Newport Boulevard in Costa ~'lesa about 10 a.m. today. Arnett suffered only a I 0.11, """ l'llflt i., wun-1c11n1• minor head cut in the ru~ver which police at the sce ne said was caused by an 'off.center load that pulled the truck over when it turned. Damage to the big rig was described as moderate . j A chain·reaction car crash involvi ng "'lltrough \Vcdnesday, we have receiv· by name, but the reft!rence \Vas obYious, ed aOOut J,400 telegrams R . day and especially to Assemblyman Leo 'M s f' thrl't' vehicles on the Balboa Peninsula ro untJess phone ca ll s.'' a worker at McCarthy (0.San Franci sco), who ob-OnSter Ur \\1ednesday sent one vehicle careening Tunney 's office said. jected to Vallerga's using the hearing through the wall of a nearby CQmer ""The ratio against the President is as a forum. Fla ,ttertS Out house and injured t11.·o persons in the astounding." President Nixon purchased aOOut 2ii cars. poli~ reported. The Tunney spokesman said his office acres for the \Vestern \\1hite House corn· ~fa}or damage resulted to the small has :eceived one message favoring the plex in San Clemente for $1.5 million. Al C , hll pol ' said the ho president for e\'ery 1,000 agai nst him . It itlcluded a 43-year-old, 6,000-square 0Jtg OQSt , foreign car, w e ice me The story was much the same in fool house, La Casa Pacifica. Ne,vport Police Prepare Bookmaking Charges on 4 ar!0.41 40th St., -was also badly damaged _eransion:,._of:fice_ where_ workers said Vallerga down·assessed the property · a~ong the south wall whe~ ·the car mor~ than 6,400 telegrams had been in~19?3~to essIMn $1.rml~J?fi:-S.l· , ftfonster_ s.urf J.hat wa_s_pounding_th_e_Criminal complaints _th.auh;!L.[®r "And tberQ .. &ell than-a two pmst hit. received tbniugh Wednesday or \ ·hich tri buting the drop to Propos111on 20 Newport Beach shorelme Wednesday alleged principals in a highly profitable payoff," be added. Accident investigators said the SJ>:'l'C· Jess lhaJ) 200 favored. tbe President. uncertainties. morning flatttened out in the afternoon. bookmak' g ti that N • t He said the e;lder Towner and Mlrttill. _ __,,~e•e'Y~•b ocn1rJ'.ed....lihen.Jhe.m!gn ·'.t'he..spotes™-Uid...mor.e..Jbaa...100.,,, ..... Thi! is . contrary to t~nds statewide \\'ithout causing any major damage, life- 1~ o~a on ewpor are free $10000 car dnven . by Sharon \~o~an,. ~-calls an hour were al.9o coming In. ~iCJfSlioweleVe~Jf~!'Rfnfrtlnn~-guaRrsrepoffid-tOl!'aY. -· -·~~~~~·m ~et-;;led'='=l"1o-''':OOO".c:"";· wi'C'lle'-'k'--lMOJncs..-lTiO;pplt"::o..i.11 .. ~~.~~~-1'air<--_ of 23991 Via ~rona, Mission V1eJO, _Burgener aide ~athaway said he ,thinks 1n value, but Vallerga said Wednesday .. 11 \Yas a real short storm ," 'said in horse race wagermg alone were being 00youngil, er Towner was freed on $!,OOO struck a second in the rear; his congressman s constituents would that about 22 to 23 acres of the San Lire ard Ray Garver "Surf was six prepared today. Ba~ ~:anrd ca~lli;~sU:3.d ~~ sup~t lmJl'.l'acbhment , as a ... ,means to Cle mente complex are undeveloped. 10 efght feet ttinh in the moming and Investigators -w·ho com pleted a two--A widespread series of gambling raids • get 1n1ormat1on ut not to remove Nixon 'The ho and · d ~ d 1 k e. • month probe in ol ·ng s 11 took place in the Los Angel r. 1 driven by Helen \llillis. 75. of . 308 from office. He poin ted out that a use tmprove groun s a c i( there had been any wind. we v:ou\d . v vi evera aw agen-over the weekend but Sgt. sfmo~:idy R~heslC'r St.. Costa l\1csa, the officers Democrat, Hose Speaker Carl Albert, up on_ly a small percentage of the la nd, have faced some serious be~ch erosion c1es say tile alleged ring used a Los they were unrelated. said. would become President. he said. . Angel~ County ~elephone number but H Glancing on the Willis car. Mrs. Hinshaw aide Cleary agreed sa in 'The Orange County Board 0 f ptoblems. . that its customers were heavily con· e said the series of three local Worseman's vehicle !hen sideswiP<d a "I don't think the imP<ach.;ent yp! SuP<rvison has asked the Board of "Bui by aflemoon, the b>g surf had ce.~lra!ed in_lhe Harbo' A«a. cracrdowns climexed a lwo-inooth probe third car driven by Deborah L. Adams, ceedings would go forward , but the peo-Equalitation to. review the county moved o~ S? ,;-'e never ~l!i have any We re g01ng to get about 40 counts,'' tn~o v~ a~tsl from the Orange County 22, of 2221 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa, pie ju.st want to get at the facts." a~sor's valuation of the property. tro~b\e with it, Garver said. . says Ne~port Beach Police Vice Sgt. ~ , fr gees County district at· then hit the house, they added. Board Chairman William Bennet said Lifeguards reported no swimmer or John Simon of the cases being prepared omeys 0 lees, Los Angeles County Hoag Memorial Hospital spokesmen the new appraisal will be "looking into surfer rescues due to the pounding surf. against a Hwrtingtoa Beach · man and SheriJ:'s Office and police from Newport said today the Worsml)h woman was Eront Page 1 a possible crime and that's a non-''Most of the people out in it were ·three other suspects. Bea • La Ha:bra and Fullerton. treated ror injuries and released, along partisan issue." surfers who knew how to take care Newport Beach poUi:e were in· with a passenger in Mrs. Willis' car. UFO V a-11 erg a, speaking to the of themselves," Garver said. alrumental ln the lnltlaUon of the gambl· identified as her neighbor, ~trs. Pauline ,., 1 • assemblymen, questiooed tFie Credibility int probe which also involved other Jasper, of 310 Rochester St. or the board and its starr ·arid ·said law agencies as it.s scope expaoded. Ethel Hunsaker, Newi)ort Woman, Succumbs at 88 Bal Isle Meet holds the aide of the , bag to the he has "little confidence the 'appraisal Frmn Page .I Tbe suspecta: are free on bail pending ground and the hot air slowly ·fills ~e will be independent." arraignment in Harbor Judicial District bag. ~ His arguments rocused on the board's JUDGE Court on charges or conspiracy to com· Speakers Slated • .Tb..!, f!alloons have floated is high assessment or 4.51 miles of san1a· Fe • • • mil bookmaking. P! lM •. f~4lleY •X· t · railroad right-or-way adjacent . to qie They are Patrick A. Towner, 16, of ,, I ~ .......-USd-Jhey cartfUIJy watch Weslem White House at Jess than '3,~ Supreme Court that the judge be remoY· 15425 Golde;n West St., and his father, . er~.f:L~ autions ay bectfuJe of an acre. ed from office. Michael E. Towner, 45, of Pico Rivera, Ethel Hunsaker, m o t h e r and homemaker for 70 years, died in Newport Beach Wednesday at the age of 88, apparently of congestive heart failure. Ne11.'J)Ort Beach City C o u n c i I m a n Richard Croul and zo ning enforcement officer J im Sinasck will speak at a meeting or the Balboa Island Improve· ment Association tonighl at 8 at the · Community Methodist Church, 115 Agate Avenue . Croul has been a leading proponent of a citywide crackdown on bootleg apartments and other Illegal building uses and Sinasek has the. job of carrying out those orders. Balboa Island garage apartments are one of the primary targets . 1'he association ~'ill also present Its annual beautification awards for the most impro\'ed resi denUal and com· mc.rcia\ properties on the island. ~earc h Continues RIO DE J A~Etno ({'Pll -Police and U.S. diplomals admitted \Vednesday "!he situation look s Jess promising" but kept up the seal't'h fo r an Indiana in- dustrialist 1:1$~ seen trying to swim ay;ay from a plane \\Teck in Guanabara Bay. A spokesman for the U.S. ronsulate in Hio said that the search would go on until Gordon Duerr is found, but that chances of finding the missing businessman ali\'r \vere brcoming In· crcasingly dim. OlANGl COAST • DAILY PILOT l"r O<••gr COO\! O•IL~ P1~01 ""'"' !Ofll{~ ,, <omn•""' 1110 N••" P••••· ,, r•D'"-""" "' I~• O<on9• (OU! P.111 .. ~ ...... (om"nv StP• •••• t<I "'"' ••• ...,no." .... Mono•1 '°''""'I" ~010•V, I<!• (O>!• M•·•. ,..,,..,.,, 800(11, "uM•"Q'"" 8••<ll1J"ou••••" Vol·rv. L .. ""' A~··"· I<""' So<ldltOOcl •• a S•• '"""'"'" S•n h1~n Cop111ft 'ID ., , •o'• '"°'"""I t<I ''°" ,, ouoi.1-soru·o•i• """ S•--Jl 11 T"t P""''Dtl 11</ll••"'"Q P'O"I > t i l.10 V.••! B•• S"ttl, Cflll IJJI<, (ol.!t'"·I, lll)I RoD••I N. w •• ~ Ptf•!Clont ll\CI l'•O"'"°' J•,k It. Cu1!t y ••<t "''"'""' '"" C.rnl'tl M1n1qt1 11111"1 •• k'tt•il [O•IOJ lllo..,11 A. M~r!'h·~• Mtl\lil~t £~"0' l. , •••• I(,,., ia .. 110n a.,,~ L·" LO 10· Nt,.pert ltKh OHie• lJJJ Nt ,..pod l owl,•e•d l>Ao •l•~, 11.dd<tu · ,,0 . l a• 117S, •l6t) Otl!.' OHkH (""'• Mtu UO ""'" I•• '""I L .. un• a, • .., tn •o'"" ....... ~, """''"II""' ••<t<~ 1 •'11 ltl(~ lovttvt,. ~" '""""'' JOj No•"' I!! (•1¥11,.. ll:ool r ... ~ 11141 642-4J21 ClllMln.4 Ad'f9'Thl .. 642-llo71 (."'''•01" lllJ, 0-1~,1 Co.ilt li'ubll"'•~D (-.. ~· HO ,....,, .lt>r••" 111\11tr•!l9n•. ••tttfM'lol """f' .. "ll""'"lf--tin _,. "'° "ttl'MW.. .,.,,_. -YI ... .... .,., ti ,...., ....... ·-· il'H'l'll <l<llO _,.,. ui., •' c..it ililf'\t, c1u..,~I•. Wl!t<•l•TI.., ~' t1tri.r nu 'Mfltn1.. "' ,,..11 IJ 1J -•~1¥1 101lht1rr ~··""''kt"' .., u ,._.,,h .. _ 1~ bul The court reviewed the masters' Fr k M M II I u,.. ~ normally, the candles "It's very interesitng since I'm doing an . arce a, 39, o Alhambra ate snUffed'when they finally tall. such a bad job," Vallerga said, tb.at rcrord , the commission's findings and. and Ada J. Tipton, 30, of Cudahy. ~ey did it because of the UFO craze an adjacent piece of "more desirable" also heard oral arguments and conducted Newport Beach Detective Vice Sgt. and the neatness of Halloween. property is under·assessed . an independent review of its own before Simon asserted at least three separate Usa sal~ they saw the blue disc The railroad land is between the 1com· reaching 8 decision. gambling operations were knocked out repcrted ·Sunday nJght by a Huntingto~ pound and the ocean, below tbe bluffs. The court concluded that the com· by the succession or raids in Orange She is survived by her five children ' 10 grandchildren, and 13 11"8'grand· children. Beach resident, which was not launched Assemblyman McCarthy questioned mission's findings were proper and and Los Angeles rountics. by lhe Sol Vista gang. the relevance of Vallerga's comments adopted them. These concerned alleged The Tipton woman's home served ·as Weapons Stolen At Coast Home A burglar who entered mfsterlously somehow in the past few months has stolen an arsenal of weapons rrom a Newport Beach home, leaving no clues to when or how he entered. Shi rley J. Obersteln said the S2,053 \\'Orth of 11·eaponry vanished from a hall\\•ay closet in the hon1e at 211 Nata Dri\·e. The loss. \rhich included some cash and coins taken from a dresser v.•as ~iscovcrcd while thC' family \\'as p~par- 1ng for a hunt ing trip. Items taken include :i .308 caliber rifle, a .300 caliber rifle. !hrce 12 gauge shotguns and lined cases for each weapon, f'ro111 1•age J HOSTS ••• lo attend. "[ dldn'! 11ant to take a mea l from th!' lr\'!llC' Contp:in_\'."' he ~id . Lynch, ser1 ing his fourth eleC'ti\"e term as a board member . maintained en1- ph.11ical!y rhat thC're 1s nothing v.•rong 11·1th acccp11ng free nieals from the lr1 inc Con1pnny. '"L"nhl re·district ing rccl!nlly put the lrvint' Company in my district. J had ne\"er heard of them," Lynch said. "That sho\\'S you how much interest they have '>''I th the stale bo11rd. Both Lyt1ch and the Irvine Company spokesman said thr Irvine Company does not ba\'C nor anticipate hevlng cases btrorc the 1Soard of Equalization . "The dinner wn s pt1rcly social. \\le 1.\c~~~ ~fc~. all sit al the same t<1ble," Guitarist of Sto11c ~ Admits Druµ: Charµ:cs 1.0'\()()'\ rl'l'l l l\cllh nich::ird of thP HollinR Stones l>OJl t::roup pleaded i;:uitty in court \\'rdnesday lo rhargt'~ or po<tsess1ng h~roin and mArijuana and 1llC'gnlly pos~css1ng a revol\•i-r . shotgun and ammunition . RlrhArd. tht grou1>'~ 29-year-old lelld guitarist. was fined a tDtal or $"5 and conditlonalty di scharged for 12 months From Pnge l MILLIONS ... Beach says it loses about $150,000. but the assessor said "this is a llllique crude behavior• vulgar language, uncouth headquarters for the action involving property totally within the 1,1)()().yard references to bodily functions and lusUul the Towner father-son team, Sgt. Simon area ." and profane remarks by Geiler. alleged, in addition to Marcella. The coastal commissions established The court said these occurred in public "We took off a 'phooe spot' operation by Proposition 20 have permit jurisdic· court hallways and oftlces and in the where they take in your bets. We also lion within 1,000 yards of the tideline. judge's chambers. It said they invo1ved raided a 'back offlce' and a home Ronald Welch, a~sistant ezecutlve a deputy public defender, a court rom· where there was a type of back office secretary of board , later Wednesday missioner· the rommissioner's remale having only to do with football card backed up the $3,000 _figure by saying clerk and female attorne)'3. action," Sgt. Simon said. the railroad land is "restricted in· A back office, he explained, is where defin itely -50 to 60 years -to use the major work of a bookmaking as right-of·\\'ay , It can't be anything Fi.t·e flits "Olympia' operation occurs, y,•here cash, customer else until Santa Fe is allO"'-'ed to abandon records and other incriminating evidence it." OXNARD fAP) -An explosion and may often be fowld . fire Wednesday heavily damaged the Investigators assert the operation that ocean dredge Olympia. which was in came to their attention involved only the area tO remove sand at the entrance placeme nt of telephone bets. '>''ith a to the Channel Isalnds llarbor, officials once·a·week payoff program . report . The JO.man crew steered the Simon said in the case of the football $4 mill ion vessel to the nearby beach card action it funnels bllllons of dollars and escaped withoul injury, the Coast annually into the treasur ies of organized Guard stated. crime. Although her offspring are scattered throughout the 1 Wt:St Coait, Mrs. Hunsaker bas spent summers in Newport Beadl since 1926 and lived here pt:rmanently since 1939 at 125 26th Street. She was widely known as the oldest ~ember of the Fairview Baptist Church 1n Costa Mesa. She remained active in church circles throughout her yeafs in Newport Beach and has wrltteo a considerable volume of poetry for church publications. &'be is survived by four sons, Walter and Robert of Lu Vegas, Harold of Long Beach, Perry of Victorvitle, and one daughter, Mrs. Helen Stoneman of Irvine. Services will be at 11 a.m. Friday at the Bell Broadway Mortuary Olapet in Costa Mesa wlth the Rev. Richard Doss officiating. Figures from San Clemente on its costs were not immedlately available and Laguna ·Beach has not yet tri~d to calculate costs versus its revenues. r ---------------------· Newport Beach City Councilman Carl Kymla fi rst proposed the cost-revenue study. \Vhcn rouncllmcn discovered the a1nount of money involved, they im· mediately asked for and receivM an Orange County League or Cities en· don;c1nent for state assistance. . ~l ean\\'_hile. Huntington Beach city of- f1c1a ls did a study of their own and immediately asked Asemblyman Robert Burke IR-Huntington Beach f to int rod uce slate legislation calling for a state 111udy of v:ays ano means to aid the cities. ~~ewport Beach city officials hailed lhl' passage of the league resolution and Councilman Milan Dostal explained thllt. y,•hlle the endorsement was nearly unanimous, it came only after a e-0m- mittee had lried to water it down. "'They wanted it to ask only for llta te fund 11 for preservation of beach area," Dostal said, "but v.•c were successful in st rengthening il !>(>fore the final vote "'"'as taken. "'The resolution now coils for state t1id for 'brcarh rnflintenonce' flS \\·ell as ·pre.strvatlon.' " he said. "and lh11t's a big dlrferl"nce.'' Oogtal !illid beach ma1nttnancc costs 1 1nclud(' things llkc cleanup and the extro police and traffic con trol needt:d to hon- dlt large crowds, as we.II as CGSts for llftsnia rd services and sanitary facilities . Ooslal credited the assistance of Hun· lington Beach delegates to the convention with providing nttdcd help to get !he rl!:solutlon adopted . - I I I I I I I I I r. CA t 5 DP IMMEDIATE DELIVERY General Eledrlc FREEZER • 518 Lb. Capacity I I I I I • Convenient Book·•elf I Storagel • Foods Easy to Organize, I See and Select I • Defrost Drain I • Door Lock I I 239 95 I LIMITED I QUANTITY I 90 DAY CASH WITH AmOYID CUDn 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Me~one 548·7788 ~--------------------- • •• ;1 Today's Flaal VOL. 66, NO. ;m,, 5 5ECT'9NS, 64 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1973 c Straws'!J Bag'!J Candles-Bingo~ a By TERRY COVILLE Of ... IMltJ '""" "9H "It was pulsaljng aod It appeared to have a red light on (Ille side. 1ben there wu a bright, white flash, ~e ligbtnlng but wtlboot nobe, and It llhot straigbt up and out of sight •.. ," ooe rnystllled night watcher reported. 'the mystery of the UFOs, at least In l11111tlngton Beach, bas been solved. Metallic olgbt gUders from a dlltant start Secret enemy spy flight&? No. Soda straws1 blrthday candles and Their spacecraft, about three-feet tall clear, pla.!tlc dry cleaning bap. and two-feet wide, Oy oU" a simple prtn- . Simple items collected from a taco ciple -the old bot air balloon method. stand., a laundry and a supermarket "We learned bow to mile them In went into the construct.Ion phase of the a high school science clasa:," says Peter bright, orange discs some Huntington Wlemab:, 16. Beach ~ident.s reported as UFOs Tues-"It does look like a fiery glow in day night the sky," adds Lisa Regal, 1'-"It floats The spacemen who laun·ch them are with the wind and from a distance a group of high school youths who live you can't tell what lt ls." in the Sol Vista tract near Slaler Avenue "One stayed up about half an hour. and Edwards Street. -I~ was a clear night and the candlelight reflected off the bag," reports Leo Stock, 17. "That'a the one that was reported in the papers." The balloons -or UFOs if you prefer -arf: simple to rr..ike. It takes a plastic dry cleaning bag, medium size, about a dozen birthday candles, four straws, a rubber band and one straight pin. All boles ln the plastic bag are sealed, ei:cept for the bottom opening. Two (See UFO, Page !) Military Alerted U.S. Put on Mideast Stand-by WASHINGTON {AP) -U.S. military he said the United St.ates ls willing gone 'out to military commanders to forces were ordered to worldwide alert ... 1 .... ,. .......... -.. l to ...... ._ ... _,... 110 on alert. :::;_today~of--State~Henry A. KJ;,;_-'team"'-""~:!n, ~~liij:Ulef'.M"eii"lnCOrfeetva1lle-~'"Us singer called it a precaution prompted The alert bel da and of either Soviet or U.S. forces m a Dll" 1'1191 Slett ...... 'JUST FRIENDLY DINNER' Tax Official Lynch Irvine Fihn . ' ' Hosts State Board Panel By JOHN. ZALLER Of JM o.I" Pllet Staft Irvine Company officials Tuesday serv- ed a11 hoata on a ferry ride around Newport Harbor followed by dinner at the Balboa Bay Club for members of the State Board of Equalization. Both company and board spokesmen detcribed the festivities as, "a gl!!ture of-friendlinesl!I." • The state board has betn ,holding a aeries of meetings at Newport Beach City Hall. The Board of F.quallzatlon ls charged under state law with review- ing property tu .....,.,, .. throogbout califotDJa. Last year, the Irvine Company paid $9.7 million In property laxes on the bui3; of usessments made by the Orange County Aasemr's Office as sub- ject to audit by I.he State Board of EQualizaUoo. "There's really nothing unusual at all about being taken out to dlnner," said John Lynch,, who represents Orange Qruhty on the state board. "Jt i1 very common for local businessmen or the Chamber of Com· merce to take us out ·10 dinner when we come to town. "In this area, I auess the Irvine Company is equivalent of those groups," Jqnch "'1d. The dinner and harbor cruise 1ff.1 bosl<d by Lanalng Eberling, Irvine Cotii· PenY vice presldeot of finance. t.. "It wu not a cue of the In0e Company oWclaOy laking the -Sllte (See HOSTS, Pqe %) •• or .. 1e • . . lfeat•er MosUy sunny Friday ls the way the weatberlady sees It, with may· be just a taste of fog in the JPOm- lng hours. Hi&hs at the beacttes In tho mld-70. rlsiog to the low ·llOt Inland. Ovtrnlght Iowa In the 50s. INSIDE TODA. Y Pr1ri<Unt Ni:ton it ezpected Co foct que1ttonfng on roU plor<d ;y clon friend Bel>f Rtbozo In llondllng o/ campoiQil conlrib""°"'. St< •lori!, Page 4. -~ Meflllljl ..... --. °'-c..., 1t PTA ft •1"¥ ... .....,... n ·--DI', ............ "' ltMfl ~ •• T~ Mll'·M ,,........ Ml'-1•11 ... ...,. 4 W.-'I ...... 1Mt --. by uncertainty about possible Sovlet in· came ore wn was military role in the Middle East. Re tervention to police the Middle East lillderstood to affect Army, Navy, Marine said that would transplant the rivalry "':u~~;;~-early mbming order° DAY~N'S OFFh TO ~If of::~e,.~"w.u between was dispatched because of ambiguity REJECTED. Story, Page 4 that of a military force big enough in Soviet intentions, not in a great-power lo enforee peace terms, and personnel and Air Force units around the world. 1 ed t bse th ·t ti and 'lbe alert was the U:S. 's largest since ass gn o o rve e s1 ua on the CUban missile crisis of 1962. It was disclosed not by Washington but report truce violations. "As of now, the Soviet Union has by military men who got tbe order. Twice, Kissinger was asked whether not taken any irrevocable action," Kis-Kissinger said the National Security there was any link between Nixon's singer said. "It is our hope that no Council met at about midnight PDT domestic problems and tbe crisis abroad. such action will be taken." and unanimously recommended the ac-He reacted icily. Kissinger said the United States op-tion. He said President Nilon himself "There has to be a minimum of con· poses the use of great-power forces did not participate in the meeting, but f.ldence that senior officials of the in the numbers that would be necessary concurred in their judgment. American government are not playing to police an Arab-Israeli cease-fire. But By that hour, orders apparently had (See ALERT, Pll(e !) * * 14.0 Vote U.N. Force to Mideast Without Major Powers BUU.ETIN UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -The U.N. Secarlty Cou.ncU voted today to aend a U.N. peacekeeping force to the Mlddle tAst wltboat Sfvlet, American or otkr big power troop1. Tlte vote wu IM, wilb China not parlfclpotlng. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -The Soviet ambassador to the United Nations said today the Soviet Union woold agree to the crtation of a U.N. peacekeeping force in the Middle East without Soviet, Americaii or other big power troops. Amtiiliiador Jacob Malik told a special Security Council meeting on the Middle East crisis that be would vote Jn favor of a proposal to dispatch a U.N. force without big-power representation to supervise the cease-fire. '!be dispatch of such a peace force powers was a point advocated by Secretary of state Henry A. Kissinger in a news conference in Washington earlier in the day alter the United States ordered military forces arolDld the world on a state of alert. The alert was described as a precau- tion against the possibility that the Soviet Union would dispatch troops to the Mid- dle East to help secure a cease-fire. ~ssinger said tbe United States opposed big-power military intervention in the Middle East crisis. The Chinese ambassador told the coun- cil that China would not participate in the vote, thereby as.wring against a veto that would .scr~p the resolution introduced earlier In the day by eight nonaligned nations. In voicing bi5 approval, Malit said that the plan for the peace-keeping fon:e was sponaored by the majority of the council members. A vote was expected later in the day by the 15-nation council. The United States, the Soviet Union, China, Britain and France are the five pennanenl members and they can ex- ercise the right of veto of any resolution. The other 10 members are nonpermanent and while they each have a vote, they do not have the right to veto. Under terms of the nonaligned coun- tries' resolution, none of the five permanent members would be called upon to commit force s to the U.N. peace force. Court Dismisses Judge From Bench I or Conduct SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Cal- lfornJa Supreme Ciourt today, for the first time in its history, ordered a judge removed from the bench -Loa Angeles Municipal Court Judge Leland W. Geller. He was ordered discharged from· office for "willful misconduct in oUlce and conduct prejudicial to the adpilnistrallon ol justice that brings the judicial olllce into disrepute." The order, effective lmmedJately, notes that Geller's conduct does not amount to moral turpitude , dishonesty or cor-- ruption, and thus he will be permitted to practice law If otherwise quatilied. The court's order followed the recom- mendaUon o( the nine-member com~ mlsaion on Judicial 'QuallficaUons, an agtncy with authority to investigate unfit or dlsablad judges aocl to uoomm.00 dllclplioe. The commistlion began formal pro- . oeedlnp lut year followini lnveatlg•tkwl ol c:barg., that Geller (I) engaged In crude behavior, (2) used vulgar and protane language In dealtn1 with c:ourt ol'ticeri, looludlng employes_aod.lawyers, aocl (3) arbitrarily tnter!crec! with the attomey-cllent rtlatlonshlp be t w e e n public defenders and their clients who came before him. At the commission'• request, the Supreme Court named three special masters, all 1J>S Angeles Superior C".ourt judges, to take evidence and report to It. Tlie masten held 21 da)'I of hearings and heard 73 witnesses whoee le!Umony ·covered 3,193 pages of transcript. They recommended Geller, 58, be censured. for conduct prejudlclal to the ad- ministration of justice. But the commission concluded Geller "" guilty of additlooal mltcooclucl and by a 7-2 vote recommeoded to the Supreme Court that the judge be remov· f!d from ofDce. 'Ihe ~urt reviewed the masters' record, the commission'• findinp and also heiu'd oral argumentl and conducted an independent review of its own ~ore reaching a dedlion. The court CODCruded that the com-- mlmon'a findings were proper and adopted thtm. These concerned alleged crude behavior, vulgar language, uncouth releren<es to bodily funcilw and lusUul and prof ... remarlts-briletl'..,..· -- ' .f Tide Turns; Mail, Cfllls ~ Favor Nixon U.S. senators and co ngres smen representing the . Orange Coast earlier this week ,were deluged with mail, telegrams and phone calla overwhelm- ingly favoring impeachment of President Nixon. But two Republican congressmen, in- cluding the one whose dlstrlct lncludes the President's San Clemente estate, said today the Ude has turned and support ls starting lo flow In. Local ollices ol Congftssman Andrew J. lllnsb.aw (fl.Newport Beach) and Clair BUt1ener (R-santa Fe Springs) said that their mail volume on the linpeacbment situation was heavier than usual but now the calls and letters are swinging in support of the President. Burgener, whose district includes a ooastal strip of Orange County from San Clemente to Newport Beach. reportedly only four phone calls to his local office in Orange County -all opposing the President. "Several" pro-Nixon calls were receiv- ed in Burgener's San Clemente District office, according to spokeswoman ?.1ax· lne Green. From Washington, Burgener's con- gre•slonal aide, Brad Hathaway, said, "I can't say that we've rece ived a flood of 'elegrams." Hathaway said Burgener was receiving more mail on the Middle East war, tbe Environmental Protection Agency (See OPPOSITION, Page !) Masked Bandits Hold Up Market In Costa Mesa A pair o( masked bandits held up an all·nlght Costa Mesa market early today, escaping with $40. Martin W. Brazney was on duty at the Tic Toe Market, 1515 Gisler Ave., about 1 a.m., when the pair stalked in wearing stocking masks and black gloves, "When he saw the masks, he assumed he was going to be robbed,'' said Officer Gary Barwlg, adding that Bramey then asked the palr 11 they wanted the money. Brandishing a small , dark-colored handgun, ooe of the two bandits con· finned to the market clerk that was indeed their lntenUon. Brazney was ordered to lie on the floor behind the counter untll the gunman and his partner could escape. He got up as aoon as the electric eye on the door signaled their elit. Police arriving on the scene said one emJHoye of another nearby business told I.hem he 11w a green, late model sport aed1n spttd out of the area with its lights out. ' °"" ........... ,..... IT'S A BIJID, f1'S A PLANE? .. NO, IT'S A UFO ·Brion Colemon, 13, Dl..,,.ys Ca,.i~ Hot Air llolloon I Policewoman Nabs Youth In $500,000 Check Spree ORLANDO, Fla . (UP I) -Petite policewoman Kitty Hutter thought it was a routine bust in a stolen credit card case until the teletype mes,,ages started pc.uring in saying, "We want him, we want him, we want him ." And with lbe bills still coming' In. police said today a soft-spoken teen:eger may have collected as much as ~,000 using a stolen credit card and bbgus checks in a global spendlng spree. Michael Thomas Henson, 18. asked, "Is that all you 've got me for?" when Mrs. Hutter put a gun to his back Sunday at an Orlando Howard Johnson's and arrested him for using a stolen Master Charge card. "Whe'l he said that , J knew there was more to it," the blonde detective said. Investigators said they later found evidence that Henson cashed $200,000 in bad checks at American Express oUices in a month-long spree that stretched from New York to Lisbon to Hong Kong, with many stops in between. Henson was being held in lieu of $250 bond on cha rges of possessing a stolen credit card and possessing worthlesa checks, pol.ice said. ' Among Henson's belongings when ar· rested was a receipt for a $21 .ooo purchase or two diamond rings in lfong Kong and a postcard he bought in Spain but had not yet mailed to h.ls mother. ~1rs. Clementine Henson in Baltimore. It said: "Dear Mom: I bad to run. Sorry but I had to go. Love Michael." Police said an Orlando man who uses the name "Mr. Xaviei:" loaned Henson his Master Charge card in New \'ork Introducing The Zonkie NEW YORK (UPll -A spokC'rman for the Prospec t Park Zoo says Jenn y, a donkey, is pregnant by Lucky Strike. a zebra. The offspring. expected in March, will be called a ?.onkie. Lucky St rike WB!I lonely llflei: 1he death or his ma te l:ist yc:ir, the spokesman said, so he V.'B!i moved in with Jenny ··for Mm· pan)'. Th~ next thing 11•c knew, !hey had mated and Jeaoy 1\aS preg nnnt. It ls al! very unusual as far as we know." Aug. 6 to buy plane tickets to Orlando for him and a girl companion. When Henson failed to return the card, the man reported it stolen. V allerga Bae~ His Assessment Of Nixon Estaie By CANDACE PEARSON ot trte 0.111 r 11ot '"" Jack Vallerga. went to Inglewood Wednesday to defend his assessmen~ of President Nixon's San Clemente estate while state officials were in· Orange County challenging it. Vallerga, the Orange County tax assessor, testified before a joint meeting of the Assembly Committee on Revenue and Taxation and the Assembly Select Committee on Coastal Zone Resources. The subject of the hearing in Inglewood. City Hall was the effect of Proposition. 20, the 1972 coostal zone act, on property values and coastal county assessmftlt practices. But Vallerga diverted from that slight~ ly to deliver his own volleys at the State Board of Equalization while its members were being hosted by the Ir\ine Company in Newport Beach. Claiming that the board is fighting "a battle in the press," Vallerga said the board is acrusing him of "giving preferential treatment to a high officer of this country." He didn't mention President Nixon by name, but the reference was obvious, especially to Assemblyman Leo McCarthy (D-San Francisco), who ob- jected to Vallerga's using the hearing as a forum. President Nixon purchased about 25 n<'res for the Western \\'bite House cun-- plex in San Clemente for $1.5 million. It included a 4J..year--0Jd, 6,0IJO.square foot house. La Casa Pacifica. Vall,rg3 do.,.,n-assessed the property in 19';3 to less than $1.4 million, at- tribuling the drop to Propo11lUon 20 uncert :untics. This is C'ontrary to trends statewide ""hich ithO\I' developed prope r1iet rtstng 1n value, but Vallerga said Wedoolday tha l about 2:2 lo 23 acres of the San Clemente complex are undeveloped. The house nnd improved ground1 take tSee V1\LLERGA, Pa"ge !) • { .· ;· • • • • . .% OA.i~t l'ILDl c _____ Th~a1, Ottobtr 25, 197J ' • • , o.itr ,llol S1All '""' IRVINE THE APE PREPARES FOR TRIP ABROAD R1r• Slml1n Appe11rs Angry At Prospect of Jet Flight to Mi te Ir vine the .4pe-She Sirica Mulls Advice Bid Over Tapes from Wire Service& \VASHtN GTON - A spokesman for chief U.S. District Court Judge John J. SJrlca said today Slrica is eonslderlna: whetber to seek 1echnical advice to In- sure that President Nixon's Watergate tapes have not been altered. (Related editorial con1ment, Page 61 Experts, meanwhile, disagreed over whether it \\'as PQ6Sibl.e to make changes in the !apes that cou1d not be detected. The spokesman said Slrlca has not decided \\·hether he actually will seek advice. r\umerous persons have offered suggestions, he said, and Sirica has told them to present their ideas in v.·riting . Sirica \\'i ll be out of his chambers until l\fonday, so will not be able to hear the tapes before then . The White House has indicated it will move "ex- peditiously" to provide the tapes. After three months of litigation, Nixon agreed Tuesday to tum over nine tapes to Sirica tor the judge. t.a inspect and decide whether any should be given to the Watergate grand juries. The tapes deal mainly with con- versations that could corrobarate -or knock down -former 'Vhite House counsel John \V. Dean Ill 's testimony Iha! Nixon knew abaut a 'Vatcrgate rover-up by Sept. 15, 1972. What a Mess!!! Truck driver Harry B. Arnett, 26, of Garden Grove walks disgusledly away from his 20-ton dirt-haule; after it flipped over in the middle of a left turn off Bristol Street onto Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa about 10 a.m. today. Arnett suffered only a minor head cut in the flip-over, which police at the scene said was caused by an off-center load that pulled the truck over when it turned. Damage to the big rig was described as moderate. Ethel Hunsaker, Fl'OlllPqeJ OPPOSITION. •• ,.,.__Can't Find Her Ty pe Newpo11 Woman, Succumbs at 88 and · gas rationing. He added! lhat Wednesday morning, a definite trend in favor of the' President In other Watergate developments: -President Nixon called Off a na- tionally televised evening news con- rerence today \\'hich had been expected to focus on tM Middfe--Ealrt-crlsis and had ~un to show up but be .... bad Uninvite d Guest Booked in Me sa On Burg lary Rap I his handling or the Watergate cont.ro-Eth el Hunsaker· m o . er no reoord of percentages or v ume. -X-COitaresa cOllege Coed'WHOlifi&'M By GEORGE LEIDAL with males of a family oI Hylob&tes versy. homemaker for 70 years, died Ill Newport Hinshaw'• Di.strict Administratot Chip repeat~ knocU at her door, believing 01 ,.,. 0.111 P11o1 111tt klossii in the Basel Zoolagical Gardens. It marked the second time tn as Beach Wednesday at the age . of 88, . '" tt WU a aalesman, calJed police Wednes- lrvine is a lovely, looely petite ape. Lion Cowltry zool.ogists believe ~he many days that NiJ.on abruptly switched apparenUy of cong~tive heart failure. Cl~, said his office had received bun-day morning !fbeo the visitor. aDtg• At age three and one-half. the five-Cllafl:ces of prese~1ng the dwindling signals. H~ri~~al!.¥ planned _\9 ... "t!i!~~. She is surv\y~~-liY~"-dred! 5 of t~~~~th@t, .. ly quit mrl1°C ~B.QCLhf.~kL-heL .. __ ~..._-.pou"-fia;-d1rK beAOty-rHM"t·~-fiP3el.M et -:41;iie.....wijl...1Je~-br--a-nationwt a resi to the peopie--0nIG grandCliilared;-an-d 13 great.grand-a ter a wave .of anti-Nixon mall came apartment the company ol a male ~·ha is quite sending Irvme abroad. the Watergate situa tloo Wednesday chlldren. in, the Ude begM tumlna in support. VLsJting Ulng Branch, N.J., carpenter her type. It makes more sense to send Irvine night. Although her offspring are scattered Cleary said crlUclsm of the President St.even B. Clayton, 22, was su~uently Her type , you sec, is rather rare. to join a "stable family group'' . in This was abandoned Wednesday in throughout the West Coast, Mrs , was due mosU~ to "tonfusion" on the ~ed and booked on suspicion or Switzerland than to break up the Swiss fa\'Or of the now cancelled news con-Hunsaker has spent summers in Newport part of the public. burctary. Irvine, once thought to be a gibbon family of two males and two females feren<:i!, set for 6 PDT tonight. Beach since 1926 and lived here He said H1nshaw urged the President Susan. C. Wystrach of 2.111 Elden Ave. monkey like those with whom she by bringing ~ male to Callfornla, Lion Deputy press Secretary Gerald L. War· permanentl y since 1939 al 125 26th Street. to go on television eoon after the story told Offi<:i!r Roscoe Broad she dem~ed slipped into Lion Country Safari three Country President Harry Schuster said. ren said Nixon was calling off the She was widely known as the oldest broke over the Watergate tapes and to know what Clayton wa~ doing In years ago, is no gibbon. Irvine came to Lion Country three meeting with newsmen tonight so he member of the Fairview Baptist Church the Cox firing. her .apartment . and he replied he was She is one of a rare species of ape years ago. She was packed with a ship-could _concentrate on the stlll·tense in Cosla Mesa. She remained active "The congressman believes the people 10?,king for a f~ie~d nam~ .. Dooald. fivea 0~Yi!e~~~d k~~s~l~p~rye 2a;yew::::! ment of black gibbans or Siamangs who events 1n the Middle East. in church circles tbroughout her years are entiUcd to the full knowledge of S~~ldlddoo0l11~1ve heBre. dshethsnappedbe. were shipped from Singapore. Warren said~ news conference would in Newport Beach and has written a the sltuaUoo," Cleary sald. . 0 . icer roa ~t s in the world , :wologlJts at the wild "She was put on an island with the be held somellme Friday at a time considerable volume of poetry for church Congressman Crai,r Hosmer (R-Long recogruzed the mtruder from ~av.mg con~ animal amusement area point out Siamangs," said Bill York, vice president to ~ an~ced. . . . . . publlcaUons. Beach), whose di~ct intjudes part of fronted . him t .... 'O nights earlier with a On Monday, the tiny ape named for for zoology. --:-President. Nixon 1s implicated 1~ She is survivl'd by four sons, Walter western Orange County, indicated an compl8.1nl about loud stereo noise. the city in which she was "discovered" "Ho.,.,·ever, we noticed she was not a hst of felonies as long as m_y arm; and Robert of Las Vegas, Harold of enormous flood or sentiment against the P~~~man 1BroaCI d contacted an ac- will jet ta Basel, Switzerland, for mating owin st the same rate as the others." Rep. ~obert _L. ~ett (~Id.), said Long Beach, Perry of Victorville, and President. . quam ...... ct! o ~yton, at 2323 Elden gr The g d.ff othe.r h . today Ill callmg agam for impeachment one dau ghter, Mrs. Helen Stoneman of Spokesmen in his office aald no turrung Ave., and. as.ked him to tell the suspect re wer~ 1 erencts t an s11e proceedings to begin. Irvine of the lid•? was apparent Wedneaday to meet him m front of the apartments. between lmne and her ~ Island Leggett coauthared an lmpeadunent ~ices "''ill be al 11 a.m. Frida afternoon. The canny la~ then ~ailed behind mates. She -never grew a throat pouch resolution which "'·as introduced this Cb Y the apartment wtead of m front and such as Siamangs are kno\\'n for. \\·eek by Rep. Jerome R. Waldie (0-?t the Bell Broad~ay Mortuary . ape! "There has betn 3 constant stream claimed he nabbed Cayton as he climbed Study of the anfrnal detentliMd he C l"f 1 Ill Costa. !ofesa with the Rev. Richard of phane calls and e.arller ln the week, out the rear window. __ ,. , th 1_1.._ s .. ~.1 • • • • . Doss off1c1aUng. we were literally besieged by telegrams, was ~tew.,to e wild Hy~tes klossu Even 1f \\'e . ignore such thmp as letters and calls ," the spokesman said. \ !¥ li>bablt tbe MeritawQJ Is!ands off the firln~ of his .own prosecul~r, the Thue were no tallies available of the \ Sumatra. . , . unautharized bombing ol Cambodia, and 'M S f' number of calls but the spokeiman said From Pllfle .I TClNIGlIT F'OOTBALL -Ne\vporl Harbar at Anaheitn, 8 p.m. ' OCC LECTURES -"Tax Shelters," i\lichael Gcrtocr lecturer. CD~I High Lil!lc TI1eatcr , 7:30.9 :.10 p.n1 . "Family Estate Planning ." Paul l\larx h .. >cturcr. Eastbluff School. 7:30-9:30 p.n1. "Tl-IE TAVERN " -Sooth Coast Repertory Theater. through Sun. 8 p.m. F'RllJA Y, OCT. 28 OCC LECTURES -"Backpacking, Escape to the \Vildcmcss:-Gary James lecturer. OCC Sci.cnce llall, 7:3o.9:30 pm. ..The Restless Land .'' (Geology of Orange County!. George i\fason lec- 1urer. &ien<:i! L..c-cture I. 7-9 p.m. "A (:cslalt Approach." r.erhard Kohn le<> turer. Science l....>C'ture 2. 7:30-9:30 p.m. FOOTBALL -C)U; \'S. San Di£'go i\lesa. LeBar1I St:idiurn. 7:30 p.m . Costa ~lesa lligh \"S. ~laguolia, Oa\"idson l'icld. 8 p.1n. PIANO CONCERT -La 7.lo Lak. OCC l\tusic Studio i'\o. 1. 3 p.1n. Ad1niss1on $1.50. FRIDAY NIGHT F I L~I S -"Por tooy's Complaint" OCC Forun1. 7 p . rn . Admission SL MOTORCYCLE SPEED\~',\\' HAC:J~G -Fairgroun<ls. 8: 15 p .. m. ORAMll COAST <• DAILY PILOT Tfle Ot ..... (N•I D,.ILV l'tLOT, w\111 '""let! " ~-.... --"~· It ,...,..,,... .., Fdll•Y. t-.r Cn11 MHt, Newpe<1 ''"'"· ..... li ... !Ofl lh1C"IF"""""' VII....,, LOii""" IN<1', lrvl,..1WddT1bt''-....,, ,.., Cll""'e<'1!1 / r ... P"nc!.,..1 ..,r.1.,11~ P''"' " •• llll w~,, 1•¥ Sir"'· CoU• "'"' C•l"o•nl•. 11111 Rob1t1 N. w •• ~ !'rnicl•n• """ !'u(ll""e• J•~~ R. C~rl•v Vol o Pr~•'41~n! ,,,.. Cl'"''"' ... ,,,...,..,. Tho"''' K,,.,1 li•"o< Tho,.,•• A. 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Ct ll ... ~I• S\lf>K>•tflon ... ~'"" IJ,N ~''' .,.. ,...1, U 'I _,,,,.,, ,.,111•••• .. llh ... l~I 11 1J mtnil"Y Only a few s~re rl:!mtlUl a!Jye 1n the expenditure of government funds onster Ur the I the hundred.I the natural habitat . and they ·are to improve his personal properties, ~=~at~c u.s Senator's John Tunney VALLERGA. ~tened with ~xt1!1Ction due to lo~g President Nixon is implicated," con· Flatte l'S Ou t and Alan cranst~n have kept tn()re ac-~rattons there, Lion Country offic1a\s tended Leggett. " curate accounts of the public sentiment, rpted. k t th 1 Los up only a small percentage of the land, •• Thus. the jl?t· flight to Switzerland according to spo esmen 8 er he said. a~ hopes Irvine will n\alC. From Page l Al c t Angeles offices. . The Orange County Board 0 r d tape has mad e the maternity Ong OQS "Through Wednesday, we have receav· Supe isofs has asked the Board of ion difficult to arrange and for ALERT ed about 1,400 telegrams a day and Eq . tioo to review the county me U.S. officials we re believed about • • • }.1onster surf that was pounding the countless phone calls," a worker at asses 's valuation of the property. to ~fiscate Irvine beca use she was Newport Beach shoreline Wednesday Tunney's office said. Bo Chairman William Bennet said belnl kept without a permit. wit h the lives of the American people," th al "The ratio against the President is . morning flatttened out in e temoon astoundm' g." he said. a possi le crime and that's a noo· Woman Injured In Mesa Crash; Driver Ci ted A yowig Costa l'\1esa wo1nan suffered n1ul!i ple injuries \\'ednesday • evening, v.·hen her car was rammed broadside and overturned by a sports car whose driver told police he appa rently dozed of! at the \vheel. Ann Taylor. 24. or ~45 Fair Drive, 1\·as almost home to he r apartment Mien the accident occurred near police head· uaners. h1i:ss Taylor "'as treated at Costa 1'1esa Memorial Hospital for multiple face lacerations and a fractured 1vrist suffered in the 5:30 p.m. crash on fair Ori\'e near Newport BoulC'vard. Orange Coast College instructor Larry B, \\rood, 40, of 841 Amigo Drive, Ne11·port Beach, told OHicer Gerry Kochcndorfcr he only rcmembC'rcd cross- ing the painted cen!er strip. i\liss Taylor. 1Yhosc European car sus- tainrd 1najor damage. :;aid sht S\\·crved 1n an effort lo avoid the accident but 11:1s hi! broadside. \\'ood \\'as issued a traffic citation accusing him of making an un safe turn- ing movement f'rom Pnge .I UFO • • • ~rr:tws :ire stuck togelher. one inside the olh£'r. then the other two are s1uck togrthrr. 1lre tandem strn~·s are crossed to forn1 :in X and fa sl£'ncd logethcr in the CC'nlcr \\'it h 1he straight pin. That forms the base or the balloon. The bir!hday candles &rl' hr!ilt'd. squecz· l-rl 1n a l"irclr. then held lagcther ~·l1h lhe rubber band !or lilpl:!). and set on top of the p111. "'ilh the wicks sk}.,..·ard Thr h:tnd<"CI candlt'.; look like a bar- r,1gc o( alr·lo-alr 1nisslles l't'ady to f1rr. Somebody lights the c:iocile!i. Everyone hold s the side of the bag to the 1-tround and the hot 1lr .slowly rills the b<J)! • Kissinger said ambiguity about Soviet without causing any major damage, life-The Tunney spokesman said his office parti.san · ssue." intentions led to U.S. moves he described guards reported today. has received one message favoring the Va 11 r g 8 , speaking to the as precautianary. He declared flat U.S. ''rt .,.,,as a real short storm." said president for every 1,000 ~ him. assembl n, questioned the credibility opposition to the use of Soviet or Lifeguard Ray Garver. "Surf was six The story-was much the same in ol. the._ bQlrd and its staff and said American forces ta enfor<:i! a 1'-1iddle to eight feet high in the morning, and Cranston's off~e where workers said he has "little confidence the appraisal East cease-fire. if there had been any wind, we would more than 6,400 telegrams had been will be uldependent." "'We do not consider ourselves in a received through Wednesday of 'hich His arguments focused on the board's confrontation with the Soviet Union." have faced some serious beach erosion lets than 200 favored the President. assessment of 4.51 miles ol Santa Fe Kissinger told a natlonaliy televised ne~·s problems. The spokesman said more than 100 railroad right-of-way adjacent to .the cooferenei!. "\Ve do not believe at this "But by afternoon, the big surf had calls an hour were alS<l coming In. Western White House at less than $3,000 time it Is necessary to have a con-moved on so we never did have any Burgener aide Hathaway said he thinks an acre. frontation." trouble with it." Garve r said. his congressman's constltuents would "It's very interesltng since I'm doing Kissiflger began with an account of Lifeguards reported oo swimmer or support Impeachment as a means to such -a bad job," Vallerga said, that U.S. policy since lhc Arab-Israeli wa r surfer rescues due to the pounding surf. ge~ information but not to remove Nixon an adjacent piece or "more desirable" erupted Oct. 6, and with a .,.,·ord of "~1ost of the people out in it were from office. He pointed out that a property is under-assessed. caut.ion. He s8id the United States and surfers who knew how to take care Democrat , Hose Speaker Carl Albert, The railroad land is between the com· the Soviet Union as nuclear powers of themsel ves.'' Garver sa.ld. v.·ould become President. pound and the ocean, below the bluffs. capable of annihilating mankind have p - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ------ -'·a very special responsibility" to keep - • their confrootations within bounds that I IMMEDIATE DELIVERY I da not threaten civilization. "\Ve are at one and the same time adversaries and partners in peace." he I I sa;d General Electric Kissinger specifically rejected a ques-1 I lion about any possible link between the alerts and President Nixon's prob-FR E IZE R lems in the \\'ateragte case. I I He said the questian itself is "a sy mptom of what is happening to our 1 I country • 518 Lb. Capacity Fro110 P age 1 1-IOSTS ••• I I Board out to dinner,"' spokesman explained today. an Irvine I "'Eberling is an old friend of three members on the four-man board and 1\'anted to get togethe r with them," the spokesman said. In addiUori to the three members of the board known hy Ebe rling, 10 members of !he staff of the State Board of Eq:ialization also were Invited to dinner. "Eberling told the board members they could invite their friends if t~y \.\'tinted to,'' the lrYlne Compa n y spokesman said. The !hr~ members of the State BoArd \\'ha attended the dinner and hru'bor cruise v.·ere Lynch <1f the second district , r.eor11:e Reilly of the first distrtct, and Richnrd Nevins af the fourth district. \Villiflm nennett. chairman or the b/:lard from 1ht second district. declined 10 Attend . I r • Convenient Bo ok-•elf . I Stora ge l • Fo od• Easy to Organize, See and Select • De.fro•+ Drain LIMITED 9UANTITY 239 95 I I- I I I I I I 90 DAY CASH WlTHct~0"0 I 1815 NEWPORT Bl VD. Downtown Costa Mesa-Phone 548-7788 I "I didn't want to take a meal from the Irvine Company," he said. ·----------------~----~ I .. ,....,_