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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-09-23 - Orange Coast Piloti H1intington Man Shot: ' . Police See/a 2 Gun1nen l(ennedy Won't Seek oun Rocky .Sees No Conflict • . · DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * MONDAY. .AFTER NOON, SEPTEM BER 23, 1974 VOL. 47, NO. JU, 1 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES • • Ill rv1ne No Ide11tity Of Woman Presidency ·In Riches Shot in Head- .. BOSTON (AP ) -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, ciUng family tragedies, said today that he will neither seek nor acceJ>! the Democratic nOmination for presldeiifOrYrce pr~ideflt 1iii976. 1be Afassachusetts Democrat, with his wife Joan at h.is side, said, "This decision la firm, final and unconditiona l. There is atisolutely no circumstance or event that will alter the decision." The 42 ycar~ld brother of the late President John F. Kennedy and the lale Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, both of .whom were assassinated, said he weigh- ed his decision carefully. "One basic fact has become in- creasingly clear to me.'' he said at a news conference. ''From the cam- paigns ol my brothers before me, I know that seekir!g the nation's highest ornce demands a candidate's .undivided attention and his deepest personal c:om- mitment. "Aty primary responsibilities are at home. It has become quite apparent to me that t would be unable to make a full commitment to a campaign for lhe presidency. "1 simply camot do that to my_ \_wife and children and. the other mem.D{!fs or my family." Kennedy 's wife ha! been in a rest home twice in recent months and his son Edward Jr. lost part of a leg last November because of bone cancer. Asked what effect the Chappaquiddick incident of 1969 had on his an- nouncement, Kennedy said : ' ' T h i s decision ... would have been made ir- respective of the tragedy that happened in 1969. • . Were I to run, it would have been a factor that would have bttn raised." Mary Jo Kopechne, a former secretary for Robert Kenn<dy. was killed when a car driven by the senator went off a.bridge at Chappaquiddick Island , Mas.\. ''Regardlng Oiappaqulddick, Kennedy said he had answered all questions "quickly, candidly and honestly," in Massachusetts courts. "l can Live with my own testimony," (See KENNEDY, Page A%) WON'T RUN~PERIOD Son. Edw1rd Kennedy Huntington .Man -Shot Averting Holdup Attempt One HWlt~ Beach man was shot and four others threatened early Sunday during an attempted. residential holdup, polict reported today. The wounded man, Felipe Cortez Perez of 16161 Parkside Lane, was shot in the neck as he ran to warn his friends when two men came through the !root door, according to detectives. Perez was listed in fair and stable condition today at Orange County Medical Cenler. Police said they are looking tor two meq, one of whom reportedly carried a .22 caliber pistol. The men in the apartment did nol speak Engli3h, delec- tlves said. making.J I difficult to galher information until someone who spoke Spanish was available. After Perez was shot, lhe two intruders ran from the apartment, police aakl. No apparent motive for tho sbooling was listed. Catalina Reeord • L:y111ie Cox Does It 'Under 9 Hours AV ALON(AP) -A 21-year·old Los Alamitos swimmer ronquered-- the 21-mile Catalina Channel in rec<>rd time for a wom:urtoday and just missed the men's. record set by her brother. Lynne Cox reached Catalina Island after 8 hours 58 minutes, breaking the women's rerord or 11 hours seven minutes set by Greta Anderson now at Huntington Harbour, In 1957, spokeswoman for the swimm er said . Her brother David set the men's rerord of eight hours 50 min- utes In 1972. . ~11ss Cox , who holds tho rerord for swimming the English Channel, U-ied earlier this month to break the rerord but dense fog forced her to quit. I WASHINGTON (AP) -Nelson A. Rockefeller said today "it is a myth" that bis family exercises vast economic power and added that he sees no conflict posed by the vast fmancial holdings which ·brought him nearly $47 million in income the past 10 years. "There could be no conflict with anything because my sole purpose is to .serve my country." the former New York governor declared. He spoke as his vice presidential con- finnaUon hearings opened before the Senate Rules Committee in the vast Senate caucus room l\ttich a year ago housed the Senate ,_Watergate bearings. Rockefeller was que stioned by Chairman Howard M. Cannon (D-Nev.), about the potential conllict of interests which rould result from decisions he might make as vice president or presi- dent. He responded that the bulk of his REPORT GIVES GLIMPSE OF HOLDINGS-Story, Page A3 income comes from trusts over which he exercises no control, saying "this myth about the power which my family exercises needs lQ. be brought out into the open. "It just doesn't exist," Rockefeller said, noting that he doesn't "occupy myself lO even read the list of secur:ities" but leaves financial management "to lhe very able men" hired by his family to manage their affairs. Cannon described Rockefeller's declaration that public service is his whole goal as "a very laudable purpose,,. but said the committee nlust detennine the impact of "this vast economic power which you say you do not have." Asked by Sen. Claiborne Pell (D-R.I.), how he would vote on an issue - such as a government l6ran for Lockheed Aircraft Corp. -that would influence his or his ramily's holdings, Rockefeller said: "I would not be influenced in the slightest, frankly. by holdings. ..I am not infiuenc<d by ""'ailed interests, not that I have none,~• be said, adding: 11When one takes the oath (See ROCKY, P11e A%) ' SAILBOAT SE LLER GOT MANY CAL LS .. We got so many calls aboUt our sailboat we couldn't believe II." That's how a Balboa.. Islruid ....ident described !ho response to Ibis -Iiilly Plklt closslfled ad: LIDO 14, lllil po. Slllll, Used several times by a Lousy sailor on Lake Arrowhead. Many extras, cover. Desperate! Be6t offer! xxx-xxxx Let someone make you an offer you _,,t rtfuS<. Cell 64~78. PuV a few wonla lo work for you. fn !he Dally Pilot. UP'l~l9 Easy Pickin's Most of Texas may be under flood waters, but abundant Susan Rose of Corpus Christi says the water's just fine as she dives for hidden treasures off Padre Island. .'.ferrorist Groups Plan Bicentennial V wlence WASHINGTON (AP) -TeITOrists are ror ~be Hearst kidnaping, exemplifies plaMing to disrupt the United States' the new breed of educated. resourceful bicentennial celebration with acts of violence, Cslifomia Atty. Gen. Evell e and disciplined terrorists. The SLA, in Younger told a Senate panel today. carrying out that kidnaping, took a page "Bits and pieces of information, from a book )Witten by terrorists in however slight, are appearing in un· Latin America, the Middle East and dergroond publicalioDJ indicating that Northern Irelaod, lbe lbe attorney plans are already being formulated to general said. insure that the 200tb anniversary year And , be added , th.e .sLA ~ved itself of the United States is marred with to be a master at gaznmg publicity. dom~ violence, 11 Younger said. "From the day their first communique Younger. wliOse l!ate has ""been the-(See \110LENCE, J'age A%) center of terrorist violence in rcetnt months, including the kidnaping of Patricia Heant. told the Senate judiciary subcommittee on Internal security: Santa Ana Boy Dies The nude body ol a. young woman· who had been shot once in the head was found Sunday on a lonely SretCh road in Irvine, according lO 'Costa Alesa police investigators. The victim, described as being about 25 years of age, five feet !our, 150 -J)OOiii[s wilH re<IillShnalr ana Mui-eye>. has not been identified, according to the county coroner's office. Police said clothing that may have belonged to the woman was found scat· tered along the side d Barranca Road near the intersection ~itb Jeffrey Road, where the body was discovered. The artic les of, clothing Included a blue flowered blouse, blue sJacks and black and white shoes. Police were called to the scene at about 3 a.m. when the body was sighted by people in several .cars passing by. So far, investigators said, there are no leads in the shooting apart from the fact that it appears the woman was shot sometime Saturday night. This Record A Real Bomb TOKYO (AP) -A brave y0ung policeman rushed to a Tokyo parking lot and pulled oul what appeared lo. be the fuse on a cardboard cylinder marked "Danger -Dynamite." A small cloth pinup of a scantily clad popular singer burst out of the cylinder. iiBuy the Love Bomb, her sexy new nwnber," read lhe pinup advertising a new record release. · The outraged police have been alerted for any bomb since last month's bloody explosion at the Mitsubishi bui lding. They ordered the record company to scrap all dynami te-shaped ads immediately. Coast • We ather lt 'II be another scorcher Tue9-' day. but not quite as hot as today, acrording lo the y,·eather service. Highs in the low 70s at the beaches alter the fog lifts, rising to 84 in land. .. INSm E TODAY liitrricone-·ravaged t"l!sidents of Ilond1lron villages II.ave stlT• vived one CTisi.1i -only to be faced. w!U. anolhu. Deodlu viper snakes are swimming hi the floodtd toun1s.' See photo · and stor y Page A4. 11Each year it Is becoming less difficult for a terrorist, with a ppr op r i ate 1c:lenllnc-technical skills, to construct a ·chemical or blologleal device capable of mass destruction. The era or SUP"rviolcnce may be upon "'·" Younger said Il!e Symbloncse Libera· lion Army, which claim! responsibility OCEANO (UPI) -A 9-year-old Sanla - Ana boy was killed i;atur<lay when a dune buggy driven by his 17~year-old sl~tr plunged over an embankment at the Oceano ))Imes soolh ol Pismo Beach. Charle!! Kochanski Jr. "-as ejected lrorn U1e vehicle when It went over a $.foot embankment and overturned. Yfff' Slnokfl Al lfltl"' ., ~.M ... ,. · A1t C•llflFT11• .AS Clflt.illM 11,111 C.'"!c• I I Cronwe,.. l l DMlll Notl<n At E.itmal Jt-.. M En.!tl'llllltnfft .U '""""" Alf-All ~,_ If AAA L"""" 11 Mwlu M N•~ N"" M 0r .... (lllftfJ "' ....... . ..• , l"'11 ..... llKll Mlrttb A1t ,....,""" ,,,, ........ .. WMn. M ...... ..... .. l I I j j 1· • • • DAILY PILOT ST ' MOlld.tJ, Stplff!!btr 23, 1974 Kissinger Hits Arabs -1-n -2nd-Warning Shot • • . • • UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -In a _.unl warning to Arab oil producers, ~ of Slate Henry A. K!Mlnaer saiC! today a '""Id poised on lhe brink ol (..,.,al deprealoo cannot allord tur·, l'l!lit petn>leum prices, much !tis c:on- tinbing Increases. The pooror naUons, many of them tf10ng desperately to cope with food lhOrlag,., ""lld be overwbtlmed in a iieyerendl11g. lnll11iooary spiral, Ku.- Inger told the 29th seuioo ol the U.N. General A!lanbly. While oU producers are entitled to "a fa ir share," Ki ssinger said, "it cannot be ln the interest of any nation ·to mqnify the despair of the least developed who are uniquely vulnerable to uorbitant prices and who have no recourse but to pay." The speech followed President Ford's own warning to the ~neral Aasembly lllt week that manipulation of the energy er.is.is could lead to counteraction using food as a political and economic weapon. Arab delegates who detected a veiled u!Umatwn in that address will be fine. combing Kissinger's speech lor evidence ol a U.S. e!fort to turn sentiment, particularly in Third World countries, "ialnst initiators of the fourfold increase ln petroleum pr1..., Ibis year. Kissinger said the United States Ls ready to Join with all nations in a maulve effort to meet lhe world 's needs for doubling ol food production by the end of the century. Meadowlark Golf Club "We have an obligation to strive for an adequate supply of food to every man, woman and child In the world," he said. At the intematlonaJ rooct C1lnference in Rome on Nov. 5, he said, the United States will present a number of specific P"-11 to increaao, • lertilitor pro-" -'" Hit for Bundle in Theft : t ~ . 01 L NATIONS HEAR TOUGH TALK BY FORD Page' A~ duction, expaftd research programs and rebuild food reserVes against ' the vagaries of weather. • ' TllO "Os-k Country Clb In BIDI· immediattly availal>le bot ac:conluw to tin• -.-bit tor a "•IGll' to the pollOI log, Ibo> bl!tll!*i . toot ' lbe II.• ._ MrlJ todoy by two aien. rnon<'I' fl.om . tbelOla ~ ! a.m. .:..._ ... ~ poetlnc • •pllto! ...... ,,,., mer ~<roll "'" dub - --tbe (llllf club aale,........., keys lllloD ,~ ii •·~·al to ...... (lll(ky-'"' . :. tbe lllilaio af '(lllll ~ ... ~~ "At a time of universal -concern for justice and in an age of advanced technology , it is intolerable that millions are starving and hundreds of millions rem3in undernourished," Kissinger said. Fltlblllolla 0. tile ·IOllbery ,._. 11111 MurpbJ: '· , 1 · • Jn a gesture to the oil producers, Kissinger said the United States is prepared to accept substantial in- vestments of the oil-price revenues and welcomes a greater role for producers in the management Of international economic institutions. Martha Causes London Stir LONDON (AP) -M a r t h'a M.itcbell camed a oommoUon at "a I.oodoo airport when she m- • to -to I routine security .,cbect, 111 olll<ial ol British ,,Airways says. The ollldal said Mrs. Mitchell ~;::~::~ ~f r1~se~:n~ g!rll. In the eod, wbtn we told - btr she '""'1d not be able to fly 1 if she was not searched, she calm· .~ ed down, and we U9ed an electronic '.device to search her." .,.. • Mra. llitdiell, the mnnged wife "ol former U.S. Atty. Gen. Jolm MltcheU, boarded a plane for New ., Yort SUnday. Sbe had been in Londoo for a television appearance. " " ~ifeguards Save • ·Confused Deer At-Corona Beach " ; A oooltlled deer that wandered into the surf from Buel: Gully at Little Gorona beech Sunday allemoon was Jed tO lhore and aalety by Newport Beach Jlleguanl llntce Maclay. : Maclay IW8Jll .to _ the deer when it Was stranded near Ladder Rock reer lift.,. being herded baclr. towards shore by a -Patrol boat. ; When be reached the flowtdering ,..ima1, Maclay dropped a rope haltor -its neclt and tugged It to sbol'e. : A few minut.. before the lit.guard mm to the stranded deer crewmen . aboonl the patrol boat spotted it as ft .,..,. toward the open aea beyond the surlline. i Swimmlng excursions by deer that Jlve in the bills above the beach are Vol uncommon, according to Sgt. Harry Wright of the harbor patrol. ~ "Becauae deer can't see above swells, \)iey ollen beccme C<lOfu9ed when the ....,mds are blowing offsbcre as they were SUndly," aakl Wright. ,•4'Unfartunately, under such conditiom Ibey oltm bead to open seas becau1e tlie land --from Calallna Island c;onfUJeS them," be added. . • SUnday'1 swimmer was described as a "small buclt weighing about HO jounda." OUMMCOA.IT IT DAILY PILOT .,... 6-a..i: Dlllf Not, .... wfliefl II -.............. ,.._, -~ ..., .... °"""'" c..~~.s..... ....... .. .............. lllrouell '~· .,, °""" -.-.ort ............... °" .. ...._. -~.L.,..._,..,~ .... -~~Qi~.A ..... ,...... .._".....,.. &Murdors ltl'ld ~ .,..n..~ .............. "330W... ......... C-..... c.tDr-.Nt2t. n.:::. ".'::J!/"' o.IK H. "-Rid.od P. "" ----c.. .......... ...... ............ -~~ ................... ~­~....-1117'lhMll ....... a.ic:i...-:~b~fkill l:-111416CM1JI _a 1W u sslhM;••a.Nn ,....~ ............ ~ .... ....... ,,...,...er.,..~eon~ 141-lllt c:..iwc. ..... 0.... °""' ~ • ..... _ ..... ~ .......... It was not clear if anyone af the club was threatened at gunpoint bdt the police repprt noted that one of the men reportedly had a pistol. Employes at the goJf course located on 'Varner Avenue between Grand and Springdale Streets, would not comment today on the holdup. Polioe have not arrested any suspect>. From P .. e Al VIOLENCE ..• waa printed In full to the day of their sOOotout -live and in color -they remained a media favorite," he said. "All this publicity tends to romanticize the terrorlsls In the eyes ol the public and is imtrumental in attracting addi· tional aympathizen and ~." Younger added. Whatever they call tbem1elves , American terrorists are guided by the Marxist-Leninist doctrine .. interproted by Mao Tie-tung, YolUlger told the sub- committee. But, he said, there must be a "new understanding" between consumers and produt."ers. "The high cost of Oil is not the result of economic factors, of an actual shortage of capacity, or of the free play of supply and demand ° Kissinger said. • "Rather it is caused by deliberate decisions to restrict production and maintain an artificial price level.'' Kissinger said the result is an "un· precedented attack" on the world's economic system, poising it "on the brink of a retum to the unrestrained economic nationalism w h i c h ac· companied the collapse of economic order in the '30s. His Wife's Purse Packed a Punch He said their essential needs -arm1 and money -are easily obtainable. Weapcw are stolen from mlutary in· stallationl and cash is obtained from BATON ROUGE, La. (UPIJ -City sympolhiwa, bank robberies and thefts police were called to Baton Rouge of tted.lt cards, be added. General Hospital to investigate a com· '!'be most 1mpor1ant tooi in r.,iiu.g I p1a1n1 by a 2t-year .. 1d ma1e patient terrorian) ls inWJige!lce, Younger said, who. said his estranged wife came and but lltUe information is available at hit him with her purse. the local Jev_el. He said the purse had a brick in lie urged suggeaUons from medical, it. legal and other professionals 1•90 that Police said the patient told them he no stone remains unturned in our efforts was in bed when his wife came to to effectively combat terrorism." visit. He said that after talking, he decided to take a walk. Streetcar Leaps Tunnel Tracks SAN FRAN= (AP) -No one was injured, autboriUes say, when a crowded streetcar derailed in.side the Twin Peaks tunheJ. and . careened 200 feet before slamming into a pcllt. The streetcar jumped the tracks Sun- day afternoon after It -a piece or wood, the Municipal Railway said. Eastbound traffic through the tunnel was halted for 90 minutes. Police said the patient said that his wife went with him and, as he tried to go down the stairs, she then hit him from behind with her purse with a brick in it. Police said the man waa not aerlously injured. 3 .flee Road Camp BANNING (AP! -Authorities were continuing to search today for three e9Capees from the minimum-security Riverside County·Banning road camp. 'Ibey were identified. as Augie Lenna, 24, ol Coachella ; Manuel Arrejooda, 28, ol Placentia and John Uribe, 25, or Mira Loma. 'I'laer1're in Heave.a ........ , 7 ,.....,,.t .. ~ ---·--The nm Orlando, Fla., comic art convention was a haven to collect· ---... ·---ora of old comica and original comic art,J>ut th~ two aren't con· :.:.~.Ill!~~-;::.::=:!.; -.. _ cerne~ w!lh nostalgia. Robert Smith, 11, and hls sister Kimberly, 9, '---------~.J fusl dig comics, old or new and lhey .dig lllto the stack! he,re.--. - I f ~ Rocky's 1970 U.S . Tax? Zilcli WASl!iNGTON WP() -Nelson A. Rockefeller said todav he paid no_ federal income 1<!•...l!l 1970 _:- because the other tu:es he had to pay totaled more than his entire income for that year. ll came about, Rockefeller told the Senate Rules Committee, because there were "majo r shifts in lhe investment porUollo" of his more than $100 million trust. He has no control over how the money in the trust Is invested. . Because or the sales of a substan· tial portion of the holdings in the truft, Rockefeller bad to pay more tbaD $6 million in capital gains taxes. That exceeded his income for the year, which was $2.4 million. Thus, be did not hive to pay any federal income tax. From Page Al ROCKY ..• of office, from that point on you serve the people ... and put everything else aside." Ul'IT ........ Questioned by Pell whether he Would run for president in 1976 if there wes an opening for the office, Rockefeller replied, "I am anxious to serve my country in any way I can. I Would have to presume that would not preclude the, presidency." Cha111pion Ho1al~er Cannon also rai9ed the question of presidential pardons, noting that Presi- dent Ford declared at his vice presiden- tial liearings last year that the country wouldn't stand for such ap acL Terry Italia of Omaha .honked his way to the world championship of goose calling in the Missouri Valley of Iowa in the finals of this annual event. Italia, who collected a $1 ,000 grand prize. said, "I just tried to sound like· a bunch of geese calling other geese." He asked Rockefeller if he as president would pardon a president under crirhinat investigation. "My total inclination js to say 'r\o,'" Rockefeller replied, 1 Hearing Today in Little He added that he didn 't feel "I should say at this point that I will amend the Constitution of the United States," by saying be would take an actka .''circumstances of which I don't know." League Child Molest Case Rockefeller said : "I do not want to get into the box that my predecessor got into by being frank and open" and then finding changed circumstances upon ascending to the presidency. For an hour after committee members made introductory c o m m e n t s • Rockefeller read excerpts of a 72-page statement, crammed with financial data about his family's worldwide investments and tidbits of family and personal history. He prottiised that "should I become confirmed and should Congress request, I will place · immediately all my securities which I own outright" into a blind trust for the duration of kls tenure. Accompanied by his wife, Happy, Rockefeller arrived precisely on tii:ne for the 10 .a.m . bearing in the vast caucus room -scene of many other historic investigations over the years. In contrast to the Watergate hearings, only a short line of spectators was on hand. Some of the 200 seat! set aside for the public remained unfilled, while others were occupied by congressional staff members. From Page Al KENNEDY ... he said. "I think I wouid have been able to fOCU! the campaign on the im- portant issues." "I will not accept the nomination. 1 will not accept a draft," Kennedy said. He added that he will "oppose any effort to place my name in nomination in any sta~ or at the national con- vention, and I will oppose, any effort to promote my candidacy In any other way." Kennedy said he reached his decision after discuseions with his wife and other family members. The sole surviving son of the late Joseph P. Kennedy said he decided to announce his decision now "in order to ease the apprehensions within my family about the possibility of my candidacy, as well as to clarify the situation wit'hin my party." Kennedy pledged to work for the next two years for the Democratic party and its nominees. Kennedy said that a candidate who is Wlable to make the full commitment needed tor a presldenUal campaign "does a disservice to his country and to his pifty." He sai d he would be a candidate for re-election to the senate in 1978 and plans to do as much as be: can "to influence the direction of the nation." A preliminary hearing into child molesting charges against the Conner manager of a Fountain Valley Little League team and the team's sponsor was scheduled to begin today in west Orange ColDlty Mllllldpel Court. The manager, Gregory Woodard Groene, 24, and the sponsor, Edgar Herbert· Mohan Jr., 45, were to appear be£ore Judge Alan N. McKone. The public defender's olfice Indicated it might aal< that the bearing, expected to last two days, be closed to the publlc. Many of the boys involved in the alleged indd<!nt . would be called to testify. -The district attorney's office said Greene faces 3S charges ol child molesting, whole Mohan Is charged in connection with 12 incklents. 1be alleged cases involve boys aged 9 to 12 from Fountain V a 11 e y • Westmina:ter, Newport Beach and Hun- tingtoo. Beach. Some ol them were Koote11,ai Tribe To Start Taking Fee From Trains BONNERS FERRY, Idaho (AP) - Kootenai Indians planned to begin col· lecting tolls today from trains as well as cars passing through the land they have claimed in their nonviol.ent war with the United States. Tribal leaders have deferred any decision on £urtber escalation of their war until late today. They agreed to wait for answers from Washington, D.C. on demands for treaty negotiations and on a request that congressional leaders visit their area. · A spokeswoman for the American In· di8.n Movement said Kootenai Indians would begin collecting tolls from Burl· ington Northern trains tqday. Burlington Northern has a depot in the town and she said the railway ordered Its con- ductors to halt for tbe tolls. Spokesmen said the Koot.enais planned to staff their toll collection statlona on U.S. 95 near Bonners Ferry and U.S. 2C In western Montana qain today. Payment has been strictly vohmtary. 1be Kootenais have .asked for treaty negot(ations with the'Unlted States. 1beir demands include a 128,000-acre reserva- tioo and-additiooal cllh PoYment for ancestral Jandl, which tbey saY were barte<ed away without their knowredge when the otbtr tribes signed an 185$ treaty at He)lgate, Moot. Checks io Re,,_ Cross members of the team in the Fountain Valley south Little League . The investigation started after a ti. year-old FOlllltain Valley boy was found unconscious on the lawn of Huntington Intercommunity Hospital. Greene is being held in Huntlilgton Beach jail under $50.00ll bond, while Mohan is in Orange County Jail under $31,ru! bond. l\lassage Parlor Slaver Hunted ,, COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (UPIJ -Police are looking for "a wbUe male in his mld·20s" as tbe man "1lo killed the operator of a city massage park>r and .set her body oo fire . Anotbtr empioye· of the establislunent· had btr throat slashed. "We are working on a description given us by Elizabeth l.eeyond!a, 1 empk>ye at the Suezy Oriental manage parlor," said detective U. Arthur Dalton. A bospita1 spokesman sa.id Miss Leeyoncha, 32. was listed In "fair .. con- dition. Killed In the robbery attempt was Wun Cousin, 36, the operator ot the mas.sage park>r. Judge to Free Lt. Callev? OKLAHOMA CITY (UP!l -A federal judge v.1ll overturn the CilD- v1ction of former Army Lt. William L. Calley Jr.. ror the My Lal massacre and set aside his I~year prison sentence, probably this week, according to "well-informed sources'' quoted in the Dally · Oklahoman today.~ U$ Distrld Judge J. Robert Elliott in Columbus, Ga. is ex· peeled to hand down the decision based on grourds that Calley's con-- stilutional right to due pn>ct!u of law was violated by prejudicial pretrial publicity, the newspa-• said. . _.. The Daily Oklahoman said the decision also reportedly was fn. Ouenced by the Army's failure to procure evidence and witnesaes and the innuence of superiors over Ca.Jley's original court-martial. OC Aiding _Fifi Victims ' AmerlC$DS are responding to the and clothing which will be shipped to devastation in HondW'lla from Hurricane the Los Angeles Salvation Anny head· Flfi with money,. medicines and other quarters and then to Hoodura1. emergency aipplleo. More lnlonn1tion about' donltiono to. Jn Orange County, a spokeaman Ill the Anny may be obtained by calling the American -Red Cross Heedquartora 1146-7880. food and cloUting may be dro!>' In Santa Ana said calla have been coming p"1 olf at 4t0 E. Fourth Stree\, Santa In steadlly todl)I, _ -Ana, and should be ·clearly .marUd, The Red Cross-----clOes not setkt clothes "For HOJ\duru," a spokesman uid . or rood to the Ille of disasters· because Phone U... to the Honduras Consul of what is considered a prohibitive cost, In Los """'!es were clogged wtth c1U1 the spok .. mnn said. today. Inquiries about food or clothes do· "Bu~ anyone who wanls to help should natlona, or relatlvN may be made by mall us a check with 'Hurricane FUI' calling the consul at 2!3-m-11101. . or 'Honduras' wrlltt:n in the comer," Donationa may be sent to the Honduras she siid. "We'll rorward it to our •1embusies or consulates ln Allanta, Washington bureau and they make sure Boston, Los Angeles, Houston, Balllmore, II get> where It Is needed." New York, New Orleana, Mlaml and The-Salvation Anny Is ace<ptlng-Jood__..$an FranclliCG._ ' . A Honduran Embassy spokesman in Washington said the greatest need was for medlclne for 1urvivon of the bUflo rlcane, which left 5,0llt ·oonlirmed dead and an e.limated 150,000 homeleu. In Miami, Honduran Consul-Oeneral Antlonio Valladares said there t1 a need 1or almool t•erything •lone tbe country's deva~ted coast. 11We don't have anythlna:/' he uid . "We need evet'Ylhln.I, espectally -ica\ 1UpPlle1, antlbfoUc( fuel to boll water food and clotlUng.,. ' A Spanlsl>tanguage radio station In Miami collected more than l'),IJllO In hours arter luulng an appesl. New Otlean11 large community ol Honduran- born ruld<nls made donations at a hill dozen ttllol cenlera, \ i I WA Roclt G Se DE find to writi of kinds first decci in vol telll Yo what lint lines ml"' 17. at No D pub II had Pa Eut I but I ho $1.50 and Coul .. of I'm Co that or o llell to He! Cent o .. It flu .. fort Info re w D for Con 9eV fad rofu wal I a and has K wa CIU Aft Co to be the has Is B he bl• pll Co. All to v ca be pa lh di p b Rocky More Revealing • I Oi.l Stock Holdings Tot<1l $32 0 Million WASHlNGTON (AP) -Ne!Jon A. Rockefeller revealed today tbet hl1 f1mlly'1 oil stock!: are worth more than $320 million, but claimed the Rockelellers no longer control any of the giant petroleum companlet his grandfather founded. • At Your Service A Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday •~eaturt Of the Dally Pilot Got a problem? Thtn write Pat J>unn. Pat will cut red lope. gel the on.!We7'1 and action you need to , sofue inequilies in government and bu.!iness. Mail your questions to Pat Dunn I Al YoMr Suvice, Orange Coast Daily p;iot , P. 0 . ;' Bo% 1560, Cosio Mesa, CA 9?626. Jncludt your telephone nuntber. SeehlMg a Poem DEAR PAT• I have been trying I<> find a copy of a certain poem I want to use on lhe frontespiece of some writing I am doing. It fits the picture of my story which deals with many kinds of deception. AH 1 know Is the first line: "When first we practice to deceive ... " The rest deals with getting in volved In a \Veb of lies due to the telling or the first. A.C., Mission Vle1o Yon are probably referring to: "Ob, wbat a tangled web we weave, When flnt we practice to cleeelve!" These lines are from Sir Walter Scott's ul\1ar· mlon. "lntrodactloa to Canto Vl1 Stanza 17. Tbe full tei:t of tbe poem 11 available at the J\1.lssif)a Viejo Ubnlry. Not A lt'ord Beard DEAR PAT : Several months ago you published a letter from someone who had lost money on a company called Panel·Pak. in.eluding an address in the Eut wt.ere ieftmds could be rtq\leSted. l wrote more than six months ago, but have not heard one word in response. I have aeveral friends who al90 sent $1.50 to the company for merchandise and they also want their money back. Could you give me the address again so my friends and I can send copies of our letters and canceled. checks'! J'm responsible since I sent all these checks in to get a free panel·pak for my!elf! M.M., Laga"a Rueb Compas1mp Inc. aanoanced lart Mardi th.at it has no means of fulftlllng pending or new complnJnts lnvolviBg ttf0Dd1 or lltllverx or products. voa c1n try again to requHt these rduDCls by wrttlq to Helen Taylor, Compusamp Jae., D.C. Center; Ml!"CD9 lndqtrlal Part, P .o. Bex SOM, .Smlthto'W'l'I, 'N.Y. 11711. but tt has bttn reported that the ftrm'1 llu"clal lltatus bas not Improved 1DCI no refuDds or merchandise wtn be fortbromlng In the near future. If fm1her Information Is recelve41, It wtll be reported In A VS. WroMg Vendor DEAR PAT: I sent 119.59 in March for an attache case listed in the Consumer Buying Service catltloj[. After several letters. I was advised that the factory was out of them and told a refund would be mailed If I couldn 't wiJt until more cases were available. l replied that would wait only until a certain date. That date has pas9ed and neither the case nor my refund has arrived. E.8., Newport Betc• Kayce Britt, eastomer ~ e r v I c e representative, says your art.cite cue was erdertd from the WT11Dg vendor causing the excess delay la processing. After this error w11 d 11 e o v ~ r e d. Coasumer Buying Service w1s willing tn lnue a refaad, but this could DOt be done a!ltll Ille factory had conlltm<d tbe uqaHt to c1neel yoar order. Tbat 1111 beea accompllslled and )'Gar rtfuad Is being malltd immediately. ' Bard to Ffnd1 DEAR PAT: lofy husband has uoed Yardley "Black Label" cologne and shaving lotion for many years. It has been harder and harder to find and now no one is carrying It. We c1nnot find anofher scent he likes, so could you tell us where a large supply coold be purchased? J.K., Foulltaln Valley Yardley of London, Inc.'• Lot Aqeles lteadqnlrters e1a"t UftderAtand tbl1 pro- blem. llace 11Bl1ck Libel" 11 belag 11np. piled to Savn lll'1lc -· Sean, May Co. 11d Pe11My1t lttrft II bMll Lii Angelel and OrallJ!e c-mtes. Yo81' re· CHI problem lboald be alleYlued wffh tltrl lbtpmeats la prtl"!t•tloa fOr Cllrtmnu ohopplng, bat Yardley re- q1at1 tlalt you notify 111 otnce, .isis E. 181• 81., Loo Angeles, Calif. - -(Z1Mlll41'7), II Ibis ptOdllC\ ... u-· to be In short su)lllly. I Vegetable Parch111e11t DEAR PAT: The rtclpa I have !or canning hot tnmolnes c&Hs ror th em to be wro pped-In "vegelnble parChlDC"t paper," \Yherc can I purchase it?' 1 D.I., Costa Mell At almost any store where tortill1 1hel11 and otbtr Ingredients ror ~tedcan dishes are sokl. Vegetable parchme.Dt pptr Is a compllcaled ome for pack11· ed cora ltulb. A1ojave 11 ont. of aevt.ral brtods available 11 mott 11per111artdl. • ) Allhough Rockefeller's d e t a 11 e d dlsclosure_of bis holdings gave the public Its best glimpse of the family fortune In nearly 40 years, many qucstlors re- mained at the outset of congressional hearings · on President Ford'• a~ poinln)ent of Rockefeller to be vice pres!· dent. The former New York governor gave the Senate Rules Committee a list of all the stocks and bonds owned by him, his wife and two trusts of which he IJ the life benelielary. He also submitted the diversified portfolios held in trust for his wife, Happy, and their children. The total value of Mrs. Rocketeller's tru..-ts WM put at $3.9 million, and lbelr children's trusts and personal holdings were listed at $35.7 mllllon. The breakdown allowed t h a t Rockefeller's art collectloP accounts for more than half his $62.S-million personal net worth. He also owns tnore than $12 million In securities and real estate valued at $11 million . The trusts. set up by his father, John D. Rockefeller Jr., are worth $116.5 million and show a stl'Ol!.g co~nuing Interest in Exxon and Standard Oil of Calili>mia. But the vice president· designate uid dlveraificaUon of in· vestmerU over the years has reduced Rockefeller holdlnga in the Standard OU companies and the family's Chase Manhattan Bank "I<> nominal pereen- tages." "The Iota! boldlnga of all the llvlng d4"!Celldanls ol my father , both outright and in trusts, do not amount to more than 2.06 percent of the stock of any of theae oil companies," Rockefeller said. He cited family holdings of 1.07 per- {:{ * * llere's Rocky's Bala1ice Sheet w ASmNGTON (UPI) -Whal is It like to be "rich as Rockefetter"? Vice presidential nominee Nel!JOO A. Rockefeller provided aome answers to- day in bis opening statement before the SenalAl Rules Committee. Rockefeller filed a summary of his tu returns, and for jU!lt one year, 1973, Ibey showed• -He received a salary of $82,111 as governor of New Y o r k state. ~Dividend f""" stock holdings bl'Ollghl an Income ol 13,llOl,:i22. -When other miscellaneous income was COW>led, he made a !<ital ol 14,810,173. -He gave away $1,654,132 in charitable contributions. -His business expense total $914,033. -He paid combined state, federal and local ta•es ol Sl,093,822. ' ~IY rMM Stiff ,..... EXTENDED DAY DEAN Saddlobock's Wllll1m Jay Educator Named Associate Dean At SatJ,dleback William O. Jay, 39, formerly of Simi Valley, bas joined the administrative staff at Saddleback College as Alaoclate Dean of Extended Day and SUmmer Session. Jay will work closely with Dean of Instruction R.L. Platt on expoodlng the college'• ~lonal p r o g r a m • particularly in 'mended campus courses throughout the dlslrtct. Before coming to Saddleback Jay waa director of lhe Simi Volley campus of MOOQ?lri< Ccllele. New Saddleback SupeJ'lnt.OOeot !Wbert Lombardi at.o worked there. Besides his work In Moorpark's off. campus program, Jay ·began a one-day campus in Venturt where students who could attend coJlege only one day a week could 'Wl•ce<osl\llly <:emplcte the · rcquiremcnt9 for ~ Assoclate in Arts Del!J'ee. "Qill Jay will do • fine job for us in alt.as that arc critical to the college," Lomb•r<i\ sild. Jay Is a graduate of the University of Vennont, 'Where he earned his bachelor's and malter'• degrees, He Is complctlng -'< oo bis doctonte at the University ol Sovlbem ClltlomlL ' cent, or about $159 million of Enon: 2.06 percept, or $84 million, of Standard of Callfomll!: 1.75 percent, or 163 mlllioo, of Mobil Oil Company ; and less than cne percont each in Standard Oil Com- pany of Indiana and Marathon Oil °'""""'Y· .. Nooe ot the descendants or my father aerves ~°" the boards of any of the oil companies, and we have no control of. any kind over the management or policies of any of them," Rockefeller said. It was not clear from hiB statement, however, how much oil stock is owned by companies in which the family bas substantial holdings, such as Chase Manhattan or Rockefeller Center, Inc. Nor dld he mention the sizable oil holdings of the various Rockefeller foun· datiom in which the family continues to have a strong voice. The only time ·Rockefeller dominance was ever challenged, in a 1929 proxy fight for control of Standard Oil of Indiana, all the Rockefeller foundatioM, funds, trusts and perso,nal holdings were voted together and overwhelmed the challenger. Rockefeller said the family owns only 2.SI percent of Chase Manhattan's outstanding stock. He clid not point out that that share, worth more than $2<1 million, is the largest single bloc or that one of hia brotbera heads the bank, one of the two or three largest in the world. He cited accounts about the in· ten:onnection or Rockefeller interests decllring that "there isn't this network of control that IJ popularly Imagined." From the list Rockefeller provided , it was clear that the family diversified its portfolio comlderably since the last public examination of the Rockefeller fortune by a Senate ~ttee in 1937, when nearly all of it was in oil. . The former governor's largest single stock holding is in something called Malnar Ltd., an tmtraded company valued at Its cost to him of $4.2 million. Malnar presumably is a family holding rompany. . He al90 owns just over $1 million each in Dow-Chemical Company and Arsher Daniels Midland O>rp. stock and just under Sl million worth of Enon and International Business Machines (IBM), all based on their market value on Aug. 23. · Rockefeller and his wife showed smaller holdings in 38 other stoc.cs 11.nd · a half-dozen certificates of deposit and bonds. The largea trust from which he derives income was valued at S106 million, including Rockefeller Center stock worth $25.5 million , Exxon worth $20 million, IBM worth $15 million and Eastman Kodak worth $9.6 millio.n. That portfolio also shows holdings of more than $13 mHlion in state and ·municipal bonds and 12.s million in U.S. Treasury bills. The second trust, set up for his mother and which he inherited, is worth $10 million, about 75 percent of which is Enon and Standard of califomia com- mon stock. Rockefeller said he has paid $69 million in federal, state and local taxes during his lifetime, bas given $33 million to "various philanthropic and charitable In- stitutions and undertakings'' and has pledged to give $20.5 million in art and real estate "for public use." RockefeUer said he has given $15.5 million to members of his family, and his children will inherit the trusts from which be now benefits. He told the commlttee, ''I have caused a blind trust I<> be prepared to be administered py Morgan Guaranty Trust Company. Siamese Twins Remain Joined MANILA (UPI) -Male siamese twins were released from a government hospllal alter doctors declared them In good health and beu.r off joined than separated, hospital aufhorities reported today. . 1be twins, Abidnego and Silas Maooloto, were born to a poor Filipino family JWle 23. They were examined over the weekend by doctors at the Philippine General Hospital when one ·Of them experienced difficulty breathing. Dr. Gabriel carreon, the hospital dir~ tor, said Sunday the twins, joined at midhlp, shared a common respiratory and digestive tract and that Silas depends on Abldnego, who consumes lood and takea In oxygen for both of them. Abldnego Is the only one who can eat, cry, bear and smile, carreon said. 'Sirlian Friend' Slain in Prison • LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -An lnmale stabbed to death ln a Nevada state prilon had 'told friends here he was a confidant of Sirhan Sirhan at San Quentin and bad lbe Inside story about the Robert Kennedy auasslnatlon. Ronald John Wood, 28, was murd<red Saturday In the ttate prison al Conon City. He was ltabbed nwuerous times arid the body w•s found In the hobby craft area of the pr!ton by a patn>ltng orncer. Assemblyman Danny Demers (0.Las Vegas) ... Id last week he had a letter In his poaesslon from Wood which he wu turning over to Gov. Mike O'Call1ghan. The governor IJ chairman of the .i.te Prbon lloanl. ·- I Monda,y, Septembtr 23, 1974 s DAILY Pt LOT A :J .. • ·" I r .. ' .-: I • • • ' 0.11'1 Piiot Stiff PllM• ; , PIONEER PARAMEDIC PRbGRAM IN LAGUNA HILLS THRIVING AFTER ONE YEAR Lift S1ving Team Includes (From Left) Bill Dean, Mike McCoy, and Simulating Victim, Robert Moor Para1nedi~s ~ First Year ·• Co1intyiuide Pro grarn Fast Success for Team By JAN WORTH Of The P•ll'I Piiot Slalf "l am not a tree surgeon," Paramedic Fire Captain Revy Wilbourne said with a laugh as he pointed to the insignia of the Californ ia Forestry Department on his sleeve. Yet in their repeated emergency trips into Leisure World and other parts of the Saddleback Valley, during the past year, paramedics from the Laguna Hills fare station sometimes are mistaken for ruch. "People don't know if we're coming to take care of them or their trees," Wilbourne said. That's one of the angles to life as a paramedic in the highly successful countywide program's first year of operatioo. One of four pilot paramedic programs which began in August, 1973, the Laguna Hills emergency life-saving team has celebrated it s first birthda y and recenUy expanded to eight men from the original group of four. Designed to provide faster and more expert medi cal care on the scene of an emergency, the paramedic crews have made an average of seven <lr eight runs each day fro m the Laguna HilJs station. They have delive red babies, helped treat scores of cardiac arrests. saved lives threatened by drug overdoses, and perlonned many resuscitations. They have done the fi rst care on victims of numerous traffic accidents and ha ve administered expert first <lid. Their average arrival time is 2.7 minuie,. The paramedic team uses a wide range of space-age communications devices that allows them to work on the orders of a physician. A special tele metry system enables them to relay a p3t i ent's elec· trocardiogram directly to an emergency room doctor. All their conversations with the doctor and with specially trained intensive care nurses are tape-recorded and filed, plac- ing the responsibility for the directions squarely on the firemen's shoulders. The ori ginal,..four·man team at Laguna Hills had 1,<XK> hours <lf training - one of the most extensive paramedic programs in the nation. All firemen for at least three years before they entered the 'lJaramedic pro- gran1, tile emergency crew underwent an intensive medical o ricntalion iit Orange County Medical Center. They maintain constant radio com- munication with ?vlission Community Hospital and can take patients lo Sad- dleback Community. South Coast Com· munity, and several others, depending on the patient's preference and the loca· ti on and nature of Ule emergency. "Normally , we transport the patient to the nearest receiving hospital." \Vilbournc said recently in a speech to the Saddlcback Area Coordi nating Council. "But if the patient is conscious, we usually offer him or her the choice." The paramedic service is free <lf charge except for drugs adm inistered at the scene. \Vilbourne said. The only rost to lhe patient \\-Wld be ambulance delivery. Two local ambulance companies work with the pa ramedics, pro v id i n g transportation to the hospital after the pa ramedics have stabilized the patiertt. The para medic program has bt:en funded by the Orange County Board , of Supervisors, largely through federal : revenue sharing funds to augment the training program. , Eight paramedics now man the Laguna · Hills station -two on a unit, 24 hour:s · a day. Countywide, the goal of the paramedic . master plan is 26 units -one in each . city -so that there is an emergency : team within fi ve minutes of ~ percerit • of the popula tion . · "That's the best protection we can '. ask for." Barritt Neal. Orange County , Fire Department chii deputy fire warden. said. ; "\Ve also hope to ha ve ev~: coordinated so that there are no boun-- daries between uni ts," Neal said. "That way the closest unit · will resoonct: regardJe~ of which city it's in. • . ,,,!! "\I/hen it comes to saving lives, you can't get in your own ivory tower ani\ push all the others away," he said. ._• , Get Well~ Di~k •' Protest ~!archers Syn1pathetic " A group of students marching in protest of the pardon or former President : · Richard Nixon may have had ''a change of heart," the San Clemente chief of •. police says. \. i Chief Mel Portn er said about 50 students from Grossmon t College in El · Cajon marched past the front gate Sund ay at the one-time Western White .: House with signs protesting President Ford's pardoning of Nixon. .1 He said the marchers chanted "equal jus tice for all," and carried signs '. saying "Impeach Ford." ·,.' However, the march ended when a leader of the rally gave a get well -: card, addressed to Nixon, to a guard at the complex, Portner 'said. Nlxon ente red a hospital today for treatmen t of phlebitis <lf the left leg. ~: "l guess they had a change of heart," said the police chief. He said the marchers probably didn't belleve in Nixon being pardoned "bul they were '· sorry he was ill." "" The students traveled by ca r from their campus east of Sa n Diego and : marched only a few hundred yards around the area. The police chief said lhe · 90-minute rally concluded withou t incident. .. Mary Beth h<tS put her teans aside lor a free and easy outfit by Peggy Barker. Aa:essonzed wit" 1ewehy and her favorite hat. ifs a pretty way ·to go to schOol. parties. or that \f6fY special date. Going looks ""scnoo• and after are available al ' The Red Balk>On. l id. THE ,-. ' ·' ,RED BALLOON ~· · LTD. fA$Hl()H 1$lANO ---PASHION 9QUA'9:1 ~ ,,,,. (11 •ltM-M'I' tU.t1..clTON H""80Ufl {114) ... , ... ' ' ' I , ·' I I .) '. A 4 DAILY PILOT with Tom .-rrhine ~''1:1 .. The Devil's Workshop UPCOAST, DOWNCOAST: Today's blue Monday had all the earmarks o{ being ooe of thooe days whlch drive our coastal schoolkld! to frenzy, teachen to frustration and always causes me to question the wiscjom ol my falher. fr YOU could believe the predictiOM or the weather predictors, today wu going ki be ooe of those woblerful September dillies. Temperatures would soar into the 90s inland. Along our coastline, the memuy lVOUld flirt with 80 as Pacific waters danced under balmy breezes. You could fairly describe all this as super beach weather. BUT THE KIDS an! in school, the teachers are locked in with them, and the rest or us are wpposed to pretend \Ye are working and not really thinking about it at all. I am thinking about it. Also, this kind of "-"eather reminm me a Jot of my ]ate father, who made rules about days like this after school had started. As far as he was concerned, h:lt beach weather in September was the work of the devil. cunningly devised to turn the student's mind away from the work of' the moment. He had a mental switch which he could flip to tum off beach days. He flipped it about the same Ume the first school bells rang along this best of all possible coests. You could argue that the sun was hot. The surf was up. 1be breezes ,, .. ere balmy. It was , in fact, better weather than we had in June or August. His mind, however, was locked on the su~ ject. It was 5eP.1<mber and beam days were over. IF THE SUNNY elements seemed to press his point, however, Dad could then turn to the tempera!ur<s of the Pacific to underscore his point n.e water, he would note, was quite cold. You could catch awful shivvers and snifClt!s if you visited your body in lhat stuff in September. Cold September ocean temperature, he reasoned, was the Lord's way o( reminding us that warm beach sand in the fall was the devil's worbhop, devised to frustrate the good work of those instructing young minds in the mysteries '1 English II or Algebra I·A. TODAY, HOWEVER, we are in the age of the wetsuit and the surfboard. You may slip into rubberized coat and pants and be pretty well immunized from the shivers and sniffles. You might even just sit upm the surfboard, outside the breaker line, and not hardly get wet at all. Bes.ides that, it is considered socially ~cceptable today to simply go to the beach and ba.sk in the sun without touchlng the Pacific wash at all. You just go to play cards, kill arouro and enhance t.be summer tan. 1bus it is far more difficult these days to simply flip and switch and declare that beach days are gooe and forgotten until next Easter vacation. I CAN JUST imagine how my father Would have viewed all this. He would Bi~y figure that the e • l e rn b e r simply figure that the devil had refmed his 5epleiiiber worl<sboo. Jf this weather holds, we may find tbal worlcshop will have a heavy flow of customers. MO!dOY. Stott-23. 1974 'Tlie Dange r is Clear' J Ford Talks Tough at Oil Meet By HELEN THOMAS Noting lhat_nallons oUen have gone to v;ar over natural resources, Ford added that "no one can !or~ Che extent of the damafe nor the end of the disastrous consequences if nations refuse to share nature s gilts for the benefit of all mankind." DETROIT (UP!) -President Ford, in one o1 his harshe!t speeches since taking office, today warned Middle East oil producing nations Uult their ex· orbltant prices run the risk of creating ¥.'Orldwide depression and a military cmlroolatloo. . ''BECAUSE VITAL RESOURCES are distributed unevenly," he said, "n. tlons are forced to choose bct\\--etn conOlct and cooperation." "Jl is difficuJt to discuss the energy problem without lapsing into dooms- day language," Ford told the opening of lhe ninth world efierV conrerence. '"The danger is clear. Jt is severe." Ford who flew to Detroit after an early morning ''Montana Breakfast" meeting 'at the home of Senate Majority Leader Alike Manslield, pursued his warnings to oiJ.producing nations despite a rebuke from Venezuelan P~sldent Carlos Andres Perez after ttie United Nations speech. ELABORATING ON HIS warning brore the U.N. Assembly last week that oil must not be used as a "political weapon," the president sakt a global strategy was needed "to achieve fuel prices whkh provide a strong lncenUve to producers but do not seriously disrupt the economies of the consumers." ' Perez complained in a telegram that Ford was attacking Venezuel~. but a White House spakesman insisted the remarks were directed primanly at the Arabs. "We recognize the desires of the producers to earn a fair price for their "When nations use their resoure6 as political weapons against others, the resuJt is human suffering," Ford said. oil u a means of helping to develop their own economies," he sa.ld. "But ex· orbilant prices can only di!tort the workt economy, run the risk of worldw.lde depttS8ioo and lhreaten the breakdown of world order and safety." "'Throughout history, nations have gone to war over natural advantages such as water or food, or convenient pa ssages on land and sea. But in. the nuclear age, when any local conflict may escalate to global catastrophe brings unacceptable risks for all mankind." There were dozens of representatives of the oil rich Ara b coWltries among the 69 nations attending the conference. But he added be was "nevertheless optimistic" because ''the advantages of cooperation are as visible as the dangers of conCrontation." -· "Sovereign natiom try to avoid dependence on other nations that exploit their own resources to the detriment of others," he sakl. "Sovereign nations cannot allow their policies to be dictated, or their fate decided, by artificial rigging and distortion of world commodity markets." He urged that energy prices be approached with the same dedication that mobilized the United States to put a man on the moon. Pat Nixon's . Baubles Seen At $580,000 WASHINGTON CAP) -A cousin of Pat Nixon personally supervised the ap- praisal and insuring of an estimated $580,000 worth of jewelry al lhe White House from 19'10 to 19'14, lhe Washington Post reported today. The value assigned by appraisers in· trigued Watergate prosecutors because the total assets of lhe Nixoo. famHy totalett only $515,836 In late 1968, the newspaper said. The .. act ownenbip of the jewelry was unclear, the story added. It identified Edward 0. SUIUvan, a 4~yeat-old Bronxville, N.Y., insurance broker who has handled all or the Nixon family's insurance, as supervisor of the appraisal and insurance of the jewelry. Sullivan was mt available for coor ment. other sourees have disclosed that the Senate Watergate committee h a s forwarded the data it uncovered about the Nixon family's finances to special prosecutor l/:oll Jaworski for furtb!r inve!tlgatioo. Members of Ja¥."Orski.'s staff declined · to describe the value placed on the jewels by appraisers and Sullivan. One angle betng pursued by the pr<>- oecut0<. and a grand jury is the alleged role played by Nixon's close friend, Charles G. (Bebe) Roboro. in campaign fund-raising on Nixon's be ha If. l.nvestigat.ors for the committee say they traced left-over funds from Ute 1968 presidenUal campelgn to the eventual ·purchase of a pair of diamond earrings from a New York jeweler for $4,562. Exec's Girl Returned Safe BIRMINGHAM, Mlcb. (AP) - The 10-year-old daugtter or a General Motors Qirp. executive, abducted at knife-point from her bedroom Sunday, was back borne Wlhsnned Wday. Police Detective Lt. Ed OsUn said the abducter erUred the unklenti.fied ei:ecutive's $ 5 O , o o o home in this Detroit suburb and forced the child to leave with htm in his car. She was released without , injury about 90 minutes later oo a rural -hwe!t Oakland County road in Davisburg. Ostin said the intruder may have plarmed to bold the glrl !cir raruom. But he added, "At this point, there's no way of telling what the motive was." REFUGEES BEGIN TO FORD RIVER SWOLLEN BY HURRICANE FIFI, NORMALLY ONLY 12·FEET WIDE Hondur11n Officl11 l1 C1ll for More Helicopten;, Medical Supplies for Flood·r1v1,ed Villqe1 Jordan, Israel Fifi's Victims Trapped Blast Palestine In Snake-infested Areas Guerrilla Group . , \ From Wire Seniet• CROLOMA, Honduras (UPI ) -Hon-at least 40 more. He said 'every time 1 el Jo·-~ J d tod . d . . sra 1uir:u or an ay u1 e. duran army troops burned the bodies they heard my American accent they . E pt• and S . . . . . noWlClng gy 1an ynan recogru- of tmusands of v 1 ct i m s of Hurricane wo~ld ask" for helicopters and more tion of the Palestine Liberation Organiza- Fi!i today ~ sent out a desperate hehoopters. . . . . . tion as the sole representative of the appeal for 'helicopters and more ~.fost of the v1ctuns being airlifted Palestine people. Israeli foreign minister helicopters" to sa~e ru:i estimated 8,~ to safety were in the Aguan River Yigal Allm said the move ~"OUld be IM;rsons strandOO m villages swanrung Valley which includes the town of Ceiba , hannful to his country's exilitence. with deadly snakes. . third largest in Honduras and one built Allon, in a statement at the Tel Aviv A spokesman for the Nat 1ona1 b S ha f d . airport before flying to New York said Pennanent Disilster Coquni.Uee said the yidU. · n:;:. tnns, anbe _ Trur1lllo. 0 . ~e the U.N. General AS8Cmbly debaie on ~els of homeless victims bad not sa many . ies were mg oun in Palestine wouJd be the toughest lsrael eaten in three days and most of them the Motogua river which flows into tinging to rooftops, high points Guatemala from Honduras. and even treetops, menaced "There are still people in the Aguan *lance pit vipers driven out Oooda Valley who haven't eaten in three days," y -. " -~~ • a relief officLaJ said. "People there ¥.'ho ~ NATIONAL Emergency Com-are p..c;ychologically disturbed and injured m1ttee 'has reported at least 5,000 Persons are also looking for the missing and dead, 50,000 homeless and more than we are trying to help as fast as we $500 million damages in what Juan can." Bautista Vaca, a government civil defense spokesman, called "the worst moment in the nation's 15(1..year history." UPI correspondent Tim Berry reported from one of the disaster scenes that Honduran authorities had only six helicopters at their disposal and needed ADDING TO mE fears of epidemics were the hWldrecls or victims buried just tmder the surface by mu<blides. Rescue workers were forced to wear gas niasks because of the terrible stench as they dug up the bodies and burned them on huge funeral pyres. ['-_I_N_S_H_O_RT._ •• _. _) has ever laced, especially II the PLO is admitted to the world body. Israel has warned previously the debate oould undennine Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger's peace keeping efforU in the Middle East. "There will be an extremely anli-l!rael atmosphere at the United Nation~ General Assembly debate which v.·otdd da1nage errorts at achieving a Middle East solutinn," Allon said. . e Braniff FlHlt1g Texas State Waterlogged "They foWld bodies and bodies and bodies -so many they could not bury them," a government rescue spokesman said. "They had to burn them." Officials reported thousands o f poisonous green and black fer-de-lance Sllakes swimming onto crowded rooftops to attack families seeking refuge [rom the churning flood waters. DALLAS, Tex. -Bfaniff International planes returned to the skies early today arter the company and its pilots agreed to submit a labor dispute to a fact·finding board A 411-bour pilot strike was called olr \\'hen representatives of Braniff aod its 1.328 pilots sent the unre90l.ved Issue of wages and retirement benefits 10 a boanl to be selected by tho airline and the Air Une Pilots A-latlon (ALPA). El Paso .4rea Resitlents Evacuated Due to Flooding ' llGINO•-----. ,. ... ,1\1 l;~~t1$HOW ,,..,...,, ... . .. LGG!.JMO#lll ~ 110'# "Please, we desperately need .helicopters," the emergency committee said in an appeal to foreign newsmen in Tegucigalpa. ''lPlease send out a world SO&" DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Oellveryol the Daily Pilo t isguarantoed Maft<U.,.F•idoll• 11.0Udo MJll 111..,.. "f'Ot.I' NP" 1W J JG p m ., (all -.,.... C.Qflv ••II bl brou9"1 IO you. c.i" ... ,1.-enunlol I ,OQp,m. $.th1rdfi' 1ft0 ~,,. 11 Wiii de""' m.t111t '°"' <Olly lly • 1,M, S.1..-0.v, Of I • m , ~f. ttU -IC.OPYWlltbflll'OUQNIO'l'Oll Uil\9'1' .. "'111 lll'hl 101.M. Telephones HorO>Wt\t H11tth"V1,.,8e..Ch 11naw~'""'""~' .......... , ~•no ""'(~~ ... tR, ('"P'\lf-llof4o<ll, Nf!JM.o C<lll•~ll-. O.W ""°'"'· IW111 L.oq.,11•. LAQON t<tlo11.-1 , • ·~·Ult The agreement was signed on Sunday. Pilots struck at mldnlgbt Friday. e lapen Prote1t TOKYO -The Japanese Communist party, wbooe demonstnlors helped block the visit oC the late President Eisenhower to Japan in lll60, today announced It woold "....iutely otniol•" againlL the November visit of Presldent Fonl. An edUorlal in the porty'1 dslly newspaper, Akahata (Red Flag), callod on other opposition groups In Japon lo Join fonlff with tho Communiltl In barring Ford's scheduled vlllt Nov. 111-22. e lflllfc Charge WASHINGTON -s.n. Wlllwn Prox- mire (!>-Wis.), Ii.as charged the &llowsy chain food ski"'5 with "r1pp!Ri oil" the farmer and the consumer by oVtteharglng for powden!d milk. Proxmire said Safeway's p.r I c In I poUctes were 0 fcedlng the fires of ln- llalion by pushing lhe rotall prloo o( ,nonfat dry milk through the rvol while lhe government pulcbaies lhe aame pro- dw:I at aurplua dlotms prt<fl." -- U,.I ~ KEPT DISEAS E A SECRET Writer J1cquellne Su u nn Cancer Takes Jacqueline Susann, 53 From Wlre Services NEW YORK -"! have no lntenllon of aging gracefuJly," Jacqueline Susann \\TOte in 1962. "l will go out kicking, screaming, fighting the battle of eternal youth." At the time, Miss Susann. in the mid.st of a career as a stage and television actress, already knew she had • cancer. But she went on to make a fortune with her lusty novels, ··valley of the Dolls,'' "The Love 11-facltlne" and "Once is Not Enough." "\'alley of the DoUs" sold 17 million copies and won her a pla<e In t1Je Guinness Hool of Rea>nls. SAroRDAY NIGHT, at 53, Jacqueline SusaM died at Doctors Hospital, where she had been a patient for seven weeks. Until recently, only her husband or 30 years, television-movie producer Irv· ing Mansfield, and t11ru close women friends knew or her illness, or that the "J:Xleuroonia'' and other ailments she had suffered in recent years were a recurrence of cancer. Even her son . Guy. and her mother. ?.trs. Rose Susann of Philadelphia. were unaware of the seriousness of her illness . Mi.u Susann's Jong.time publicist. Esther Margolis, said on Sunday that the authoress had a partial mastectomy (breast surgery) on Christmas Day, 1962, and the disease was in remission for many years. When she became ill again more than , two years ago, it was discovered thal the disease had spread to her lungs. At the end, it had affected many parts of her body. ~USS SUSANN saw "Valiey of the Dolls" and "The Love t.1achine" made into rmvies that also became "best- seUers," with the film version of "Once is Not Enough" scheduled for release next spring. She came to New York from her native Philadelphia an aspiring actress. She appeared in 21 plays, including "Ban jo Eyes," "Jackpot" and the road companies ol "The Animal Kingdom '' and "\\'atc:h on the Rhine" before turning to television as a dramatic actress. game show panelist and mistress of ceremonies on interview programs. Although she was best known for her 8exy novels about sometimes-thinly· disguised characters from show busil'le!S and the jet set, Miss Susann's own favorite work ¥.'as a piece o! non-fic-- lion -"Every Night, Josephine." She described it as the story ()f her life with Mansfield and Josephine, "the poo- dle 'il'ho owned us." A family rpokesman said funeral ar· rangements would be private and asked t~t donaliorui be made to the Jacqueline Su..ann Cancer Research l'und at Rockefeller University in lieu of flowers. Boston Cliildre11 Side-b y-side In Ei ghtli Day BOSTON (UP!/ -Black and while c:hlldrcn got of! pollct-<>COrted buses by the hundn!d• today and wallo>d Into racially troubled tlyde Park lngh School side by side, iwme chatting and joking at the start of the ciirtJth day cl ~ court orda-ed plan lo Integrate public sdiools. A minor dl.srupUon took place when IOlllO 200 Whflo youth> tried ki push their way in Michelangelo Middle Schoof In the north end. A 1.., wtndowl were broken. apparootly by thrown •kines, In the achoo! and In aevetal nearby bulldlnp. 'The group was large.ly made up of youthl from Bolton's Charlestown ,.c- tlon, who w.,. m1ing an anll-bustng dcll10n!tratlon, o((ieJal1 .. Id. Allor being 1'""1ed back by poll.,, they march<d throul)i 1 aection of llM. Pn!domlnantly Italian north end beloro being dllpmed. There ..-ere no lnjurlt11 or arrest•. A ll-}'eal'Ofd white yooth sutten!d a brol<en wrist In 8 nRht wtth Another d\JP!a!n.ld •ta bus pickup location In Jnmatca H 11.o was trea tt!d at O\Jldren's Olpitel. Pollet .. Id threo youtlu wore alTHted on d'l-ly l'Otlduct ehlrgea cfur1n1 • minor dlaturl>ohee-., nay Square . In Elll .lloMon. I r I So BJ By By Unll Fi ref lg full cont whipped blacken acres In 'f'he rlr in parch in a c some 30 Angeles. winds gu hour. Lo rlcgrt~ t firefighf At lea 11djoining evacual \\·hen n. ihem, b fH vorabl) con trol t eRo SAN Ca Ii ro Assembl Scnalc I lion of for vice During n1ceting voluntce n rl'SO IU 1'~ord h prcsidcn been cir the votlr na tion t TRA lxllloonls a ""'eeke 1'racy A County. A valv tioned air ball orful er ground. Saturda} Curley, Arthur f\olateo. Beaver, e Fl rm u b\acke v"alers Ventura Sunday threate About \fentura ment fo area ca nnd ha three said. Ei chemica ground e B l RED Asscmb Davis i I by a whil e c. lion on It wa. taken passerl> "·anted said. n left will e T BAK Seven mililar were d \vest of spoke lions di Twen 82-<:a r \\"Cnt o but th or fir munitio with spoke Southland lacl{ened y Fires Y United Press Jnternatlonal Firefi ghters worked toward JI contt'ol lOOuy of a wind~ hipped brush fire tha t cickened n1orc tflnn 5,000 ·res In Southern Cnlifomin. 'I'he fire broke out Sunda}' parched grass and brush a canyon near Castaic, me 30 miles north of Los geles. It was rannt'fl by inds gusting to 30 miles an S tate iour . Low humiditv and I~ iegree temperature han1r>ered relighting efforts. At least 20 homes in two joining canyons w e r c 1vacuated briefl y Su n da y hen fl ames licked towa rd icm, but winds s h ifted vorably and helped flren1cn ntrol that sector. Rocl~y Rffpped SAN JOSE (Al') -The a I i for n i a R c publica n ssembly has urged the U.S. natc to reject the no1nina· on or Nelson A. llockefeller r vice president. During a WC<'kcnd policy ceting here, the conservative olunteer organi~,ation J>aSSl'<l resolution s.'lying President ord had chosen a vice resid('ntial noniince who "has en denied hi gh office by te voting Republicans of our ation three separate times." 2 llf et1 Killed 'ffiACV I UP!i Two allooni sts v.•ere killed during weekend skv shov.• at the 'racy Airport ·in San Joaquin unty. A valve apparently malfunc· ioned on one of three hol ir balloons, plunging the col· rful craft 2.000 feet to the rou nd. Killed in the accident turdav were f\fichael A. urley. · 25. Sunnyva!C, and rthur R. Adams. 28. of San ateo. A young wom11n. Kathy aver ..... ·as criticoll.y injured. • Fire Halted PIR U CAP) -A brush fire Jackened 100 acres o f •atershed near thi s small entura County commwtily unday and for awhile hreatencd oearl>y campers. About 125 men from the entura County Fire Depart· ent fought the blaze in an rea called Rancho Penescal nd had it under control in hree hours, a spokesman Rid. Eight aircraft dropping hemical ret ardants assisted ound crews. • Billen bl/ Bear RED BLUFF 1API ~blywoman Pa u I in e avis ( D·Portoln I. \Vas nipped y 3 bear over !he week end hile campaigning for re-tlec· ion on Main Street. Tt was a pet cub bear being aken for a stroll by a sserby who apparently nlso anted to shake hands. aides id. But the bcar's mistress eft without being identified. e TrffiH f)crffllccl BAKERSFJ~:LD iAP) •ven railroad cars ca rrying military bo1nbs and shells were derailed 10 miles south· west or Bakersfield, a railroad spokesman said, but the muni· tions did not spill out Twenty other cars of the 2-car Southern Pacific trnin \vent off the tracks Sunday, but there was no explosion or fire because the nn1- munition was not equipped with det o nator !i, the spokesman added , Sunday is Fl1t1DAY' ' UPI Ttltllholo SOUGHT BY FBI Stephen Bingham Ne,vs Items Say Suspect Still Alive • NEW YORK (UP!) Stephen Bingham, a .. leftist la\vyer who disappeared three years ago when he was sought for the alleged San Quentin escape atten1pt by "Soledad Brother'' George Jackson, is alivi..'. \\'Cl\ and living un· dcrground. accord ing to an article in Sunday's New York Tiines. 1'he arlicle. written by llenry \Veinstein, a former l~nv school classn1ate, was based on two conversations last month in an undisclosed location in Canada, Oinghan1. 32, declined to reveal where he was living, whether he had a job, or was in contact with the un- derground "Weatherpeople," the Times said. !IE SAID he \\'anted the interview because the danger or capture had lessened and he wanted lo be seen . "Living underground has not weakened me -has not kept me holed up in a room ... and that's difficult to com- municate in a tape," Bingham told the intervie"·er. Bingham. heir to the Tiffany fortune , grandson of a former senator and nephew of Rep. Jonathan Bingham (D-N.Y . .), also has evolved into a Marx- ist-Leninist, the article said. IT SAID Bingham has spent the past three years eating natural foods and assessing his b.:'lckground in terms of the revolutionary struggle . On Aug. 21, 1971, Jackson allegedly tried to break out of San Quentin prison with a pistol allegedly smuggled by Bingham. one of his lawyers. ,Jackson, accused in a 1970 killing of a Soledad Prison gua rd amid charges hv some radicals he had been ffamed , was killed, along with t\vO other inmates and .three guards. Binghant, \\--ho was charged with fi ve counts of n1urder ::is an alleged accomplice, said he v.'as iru1ocent and Jackson was "too disciplined ... to th row his life away in a reckless suicide." W 0111an, 66, Found With 1'hroat Ct1t SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -An elderly woman was found murdered Sat u rd a y n1orning in a rural section of this city, police said. Ernestine C. Pickell, 661 of San Bernardino, was found tn the living room of her home by a neighbor who was looking in on her. Police said Mrs. Pickell's hands and feet were tit.>d and her throat slashed. Her house was ransacked, and a television, coin col· Jection and late m o d e I autontobile stolen, police said. Police are looking for two me.n in their early 20s seen ccirlier In the neighborhood. ORIENTAL RUGS at ASIAN ENTERPRISES in Design Plaza • 250 Bldg., 2nd Floor OonaltJ F. McDermott Jr .. owner TELEPHONE 644-11881 FASHIOH ISLAHD • i'IEWPORT 1 ' -- • f •• • MOftday, Stpttmbfr 23, ·1'74 DA!LY PILOT A 5 Watergate Backlasl1. VERNON HOWARD Fund Raising 'Difficult' author of "Mystic rat11 to Cosmic rower" Ir ot!Mr booll1 ......... 111. Three-Session Seminar LOS ANGELES IA!') -The Watergate backlash is hitting both political parties In the pocket books during the 1974 election campaign. Democrats as well a s Republicans decry the pro- blems in raising money in strikingly similar terms. Some traditional Io y a-1 Democratic contributors ate just saying no this year, said Rosalind Wyman of Lo s Angeles in an jnterview this past week. Others are con- tributing but not nearly as n1uch as ln the pa.st, she said. THE REPLIES to campaign fund solicitations often take this tone, she said: "I'm out of it. l don't want to have anything to do with it. \Ve don 't want to get on anybody's Jist. We don't want to be in- vestigated." OUt in ~1alibu on the Pacific Coast, Pepperdine University p,re s id en t William S. Banowsky says, ' ' Those businessmen have been trawnat,iied by Watergate, abrolutely traumatized." Bnnowsky, rhe Republican nationul committeenmn from California, said in an in· tcrview: "Those guys don't want to have their names on a list or in a ncws{Xlper." Both party activists stud the traditional big givers also arc being turnC?d orf by in· (NEWS ANALYSIS) cfeasingly detaiJed and coin. plex carnpaign fin a n cc reporting forms. This has caused something or a reaction against the cam- paign of Democrat J<:dmund G. Bro\\'ll J r., C11ifornia's secretary of state. for governor, said l\1rs. \Vyman, SHE IS the \\1idow of Eugene \Vyman, a Beverly Hills al· to111ey who Jong wa s con· si dert.'CI one of the most astute De1nocratic fundraisers in the nation. Mrs. \\'yman has taken over son1e <Jf her I a t c La1.vmakers to Decide Pension Bond Issue SACRAMENTO (AP I Democratic legislative leaders say a decision will come early this week on the date for California's lawmakers to return to face ,the issue of the $5.7 million legislative ,pension bonU1;. After the failure in August of one effort to eradicate the bonus for up to 61 lawmakers, several politicians said voter pressure has increased during the fall campaign. Citing that pressure and re· quests from colleagues cam- paigning f o r re-election, Assembly S p e a k e r Leo McCarthy and Senate Presi· dent pro tern James R. Mills called for the legislature to reconvene. "Frankly, at this moment, it is not a queation of whether ... It's ooly a matter of when and y:hat the details are," 1\-fcCarthy told a repart~r in Chio. Early October was being considered. or ~late said. The Dcinocratic l ea de rs made their decision less than 24 hours after the . GOP leaders asked for a special session. Police Tell Of 'Brtttal' Stab Death FAJRFIELD iAPi -The identity of the victim of what one officer called "the most , brutal murder I've ever seen" is still being sought. Solano County sheriffs of· ficers said Sunoay they \vere investigating the death of a neatly dressed man about 23 years old who wa s found in a ditch along Mankas' Corner Road early Saturday. He had ·been stabbed 17 times in the back and 10 times in the head. husbund's tundraislng chores. Banowsky said the state of llro~\'n, 3b. brought tough 100 st~k marltet has affected can1paign law cnforcCrru!flt to fundralslng, as well . the long-dornmnt secretary of '"f'hese guys are worth a state's office .and v.·as a. ...Jot less than they were a sponsor of the political cam-few years ago," he said. THEY ARE reluctant to sell "TME INllER AIMllTllllf IS EXCITlllG" Wed ., Thurs.. Fri. -September 25, 26. 27 7:30 evenings ·-°"'""'of Rollf-Scit_ ol ..._ - 20082 "-'° ~ AcL paign reforn1 act overwhelm- ingly approved at the June 4 primary elect ion. stocks at a depressed price LEAAN HOW TO: -end W I lftlli9t1 to raise the cash for political -dlMIONe '°"9Mne11 There is "no question" that lh.ey resent Brown proposing tough c a m p a i g n reporting lav.·s and limlts ::ind then, coming around to ask for funds, she said. But she addt.'d. "he knows he can't get cleete<l without usking for it. too.'' The Rcpubl ican nominee. ~louston I. flOW110Y, the 44- ycar-old state controller. plan· ned to go ,to Ne11• York last \Veek to solicit funds from associates of Vice President· de sig nate Nelson A. J{ockefcllcr. THE A1EETING was canceled because Rockefeller declared he \\'OUld not get in· volved in politics u n ti 1 Congress· acted on his con- firn1atiq.n. Flournoy did go visit the". \Vhite House \Vednesda y with hopes that President Ford would agree to address a campaign fundraisinf! affair y.•hen he comes to San Fran- cisco for a conference of editors and publishers Oct. 2. But Ford said he did not want to mix politics with a nonpoli~ica l trip and would have to postpone his California political efforts until the week before the election. BUT NO\V lS the crilical period for raising money, l:i rgely because television and radio broadcasting time must be booke9 and paid for in advance. Ca lifornia's two gubernatorial hopefuls have signed a fonnal agreement for si x debates and to limit all media spending to $900.000 ench -including $800,000 for radio and television time and production costs. The agreement was reached in the spirit of California's political reform act even though it does not formally go into effect until' Next January. d ti he 'd -UM!homindwlthfutl_I,.... ona ons, sa1 . Polls also have a bearing -lttrlel ~ •ll•ilf'I on fwidraising, Banowsky ad-1 ~::::::::::=:':-::·:":'·:"':'"=-===:":"'::"'::":':' ::::::::::~ ded. I· _ The Cl.lliforni.a Poll, taken ttte week Richard M. Nixon resigned as president, showed Brown leading Flournoy 50 percent to 36 percent on the basis of a sampling of about 1,000 voters. If the next poll shows Flournoy closing the gap, as Flournoy is confident it will , it would boost his fundraising ability at a critical point in the campaign T,vo Sisters .. Shot; 1 Dead In Robbery OAKLAND (AP) -Police say kidnap and robbery may be involved in the fatal shooting of a masseuse and the wounding of her sister. Officers said the nude body or Geraldine Boonifield, 19, who worked in an Oakland massage parlor, was discavered shot to deal}) early Sunday in the parking lot of Proviaence H o s p i t a 1 in Oakland. Her sister, Renee Bormifield, 22, wOO works in a Berkeley massage parlor, was found by a pa5.5trby sprawled on the pavement near an Werstate 80 offramp in Richmond. She was reported in critical con- dition at Brookside Hospital in Richmond with gunshot wwnds to the face. Officers said they had no suspects and did not know details of the brutal shooting attack. New Way Found To Stop Hair Loss, Grow More Hair HOUSTON, Texas -If But, ir' you are nOt already you don't suffer from slick bald, how can you be sure male pattern baldness what is actually causing your ' hair loss? Even lf baldness may yo~ can now s top your seem to "run In your family," hair loss • • • and grow this is certainly no proof of the morehair. ' causeofYOURhairlois .. · Hair Joss ctused by sebum For years "they s aid it could· can also run in your family , and n't be done." But now a firm of many other conditions can laboratory consultants has cause hair toss. No matter developed a treatment for both which one is cau1in1 your hair men and women, that ii not only loss If you walt until you are stopping hair loss . • • but is slick bald and your hair roots really growing hair! are dead you are beyond help. They ~on't even ~sk you .to So, if yo~ still have any hair on take their word for tt. They in· top of your bead, and would like vile you to try .th~ treatment for to slop your b1lr 1~1s and; grow ,32 days, at their risk, and see for more hair .•• now 11 the lime to yourself~ do something about it before it's Naturally, they would not of· too late. fer this opportunity unl~i. the· Loesch Laboratory Con- treatment worked . However, 11 sultants, Inc .• will supply you is impossible to help everyone. with treatment for 32 days, 1t The great m ajority of their risk, I~ the)' believe the cases of excessive hair treatment wd,I help you. Jutt send them the lnrormation fall .an~ baldness are the listed below. All inquiries are beg1nn1ng of more fully answered confidentially, .by developed stages of m ale mail and without obligation .. pattern baldness and Adv. cannot be helped. · . .1 NOOBLtGATtON COU!'ON To: l.nl'S<"h l.uhoratory l"nni;ult:.tnl s. Inc. Bo,; filiOO l . 33 11 \\' l'St !\Iain SI. Houstnn , 1\•x;is iiOOfl l uJ'l'l submitting the folln\\·ing inl'nrmutinn wlth the un· dl'1·s1:incling th .iit it \\·ill he kt'pt s11ictly cnnfi9ential oind thut I ;.1m under nn oh1i gal ion \\'h<itsne\'t'I'. I nov.· ~u,·e nr hU\'C hu.d the fnlln\\'i ng cnndit inns: . Oot-s ,. nur fn 1·l•head hecnmetiily nr &rt'U!t!o"! •.• , ••........•. Hn\1' sonn :.iftt•I' I\" ;1shing·~ . . . . ................ · .• · .. · • · · • ·. Oo \"nu h;.1\·e <la11dr11fr~. . , ....... dry or oily? ....•......... Otl(•s \"11\ll' scodp itt·lt ".'. . ... , ..... \\'ht•n! ................ , .. . l>llt'~ ~·nur hair pull nut t•usily? ..... , ....•. \\'ht•1·t•? •...•...•• Hn\r long h:1s rt1lll' hair ht·en lhinning ? .......•...•• , .•..••.• Oti \"OU SI i I\ ha \'l' an~· h:iif' Oil top of ~·our hcud ? , .. , .. , , . , , .. Jn spite of the limit, it still · Ho~\" lung is it ".' .......... , ................... · .. · • · • ••. Attoich ;111~· uthl'I' infornH11iun yo11 rel•I moi)' he hrlpful. X:\~IE . .. .. . .............................. . ADDRESS • ('11°\'.. . .. takes ··an astounding amount" ~ ' RABBln of money to run an effective ~,\· · ••---•MIOWllU• campaign in a state as . INSURANCE physically large as California '(£ 1914 Hwfter h •le'fellrd and estimated 10 million 548 5554 " uiz Challenge the News mE DECISION came after the early pension iss ue entered the gubernatorial campaign and several legislative races. \Vith its 21 million residents COSTA MHA & Q . voters, Mrs. \Vyman said. -~ · SGT. TOM LONEY describ· _ _.:.:_:::.:-_::..::__:_ _ _:_ __ _:_ _______ _:_==-------------------- ed the scene. He said the Houston I. Flournoy, the victim was apparently stab---------------------------------------------bed. then broke away and ran Republican nominee I o r governor. accused hi.-; Democratic opponent, Ed- mund G. ·Brown Jr., of ,;in- credible waffling" on the issue. "Mr. Brown apparently rides the charger or refonn when it suits his ow n purpose," the stale controller said. Flournoy said at Stanford University Sunday he would request the governor to call the session so as to prevent legi.slators from ducking the issue. Brown said Flournoy voted lo give the legislators the bonuses when he was an assemblyman in 1965. "l understand that hfr. Flournoy has now changed his position and acknowledged that he made a mistake when he first supported the retire- ment }?onanza," the secretary about 300 yards. w.'.lS probably hit by a pursuing car, and then stabbed again. A nearby rancher heard shouts about 2:30 a.in . after his barking dogs av>'akened him, Loney said. The body was found about 10 a.m. He added that there were car keys on the· ~dy but no identity. The vi in1 \.\.'as s.foot-8 and 170 pound . Cancer Craut LOS ANGELE:S (UPl l - The USC School of Medicine has received a $900.000 grant to sup)Xlrt training programs in the study of cancer . The award. by the National Cancer Institute to cover a four-year period, conl.inues a clinical cancer training grant whi ch has been in effect sinCe 1965. BENEFICIAL'S NEWEST OFFICES 23704 El Toro ltd., El Toro Phone: 581-181 l 3605-F So. Brlslol St., Sanlo Ana 556·3874 21172 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach 536· 1406 PlltSONAL LOANS UP TO $10,000 Something new has been added to the local scene! It's Beneficial's new office right here in town ··modern, comfortable, convenient ·· the latest addition to the world's largest system of affiliated finance offices ··· ready to give you Beneficia1's own special klnd of cash loan service. You are cordially invited to come and get acquainted. Mtet the Manager and hls Staff. You'll find that Benefici1I is a good neighbor, a good citi2:en, and a good pl1ci to oet money! C.11 up or come in today. 1 \ You're good for more 1t Beneficia l. · DBeneficial Finance ·Systen1 SANTA ANA SOt:TH COAST PLAZA P ulsar4', the watch of tocby, wi1h new cwo button design that tells rhc date and time. 'There are no moving pans. And it's accurate to wjthin one minute per year. 14 karat gold filled rue, $395 Stainless rue and bracelet,S29S Fine Jewelry MEET MR. BLACKWEll ... famous fashion and radio personality, u he introduces his new leather accessory collection for him and her, Tuesday,.September 24, 7:30 p.m. Accessories, Middle Le .. I SANTA ANA, 547-72 11 • SOUTH COAST PLAZA, 556·0611 I I I . I I. " ., " " .J ' " • ·\ • A8 .n.u ,y PROT E DITORIAL PAGE Among the !ting~ benef!Ls of Wat ergate, if the expression n1a,r be used, is the initiation or a substantial amount of Je~lation to protect th e public from similar politial marupulation. or particular interest is a bi-partisan legislative package just Introduced in Congress dcsi,ned to guar- antee the confidentiality of every Americans tax records. The legislation stems directly from the I-lou se Ju- diciary Committee's artlcles of in1peacbment, which charged President Nixon with misuse of !RS informa- -tion~and attempting to Initiate IRS audiLs of White House "enemies." Other abuses included digging around in wh ole batches of tax returns in certain occupational areas -farmers' returns by the Department of Agricul- ture, for example - ostensibly tor statistical purposes. . The propoesd law would make unauthorized dis- closu,re or receipt of tax information a felony. + It would restrict aceess to tax information to the taxpayer himself, his attorney, Internal Revenue Ser- vice officials and employes and the Justice Department, for the purpose of enforcing the Internal 'Revenue Code. This is the sort of confidentiality American tax payers have a right to expect and if it takes additional legislation to insure it, the law should be passed. Why tl1e llyphens ? Among the many bills signed by Gov. Rea gan in recent days is one requiring that school textbooks "ac· curately pprtray" the role and contribution of European· Americans in the developi:n~nt of the nation. Since the textbooks already have been taken to task for inaccurate or inadequate portrayals of black Americans, brown Americans and female America ns, we must presume that someone feels the European· American, also has been neglected-. However, this aeparently increasing emphasis on hyphenated-Americanism causes one to wonder what High Pay Not Buying . Quality ( EARL WATERS ) This is an Opell letter to two New York lawmakers who rectntly visited Calilomia to study our legislature with ! ~ view to improving their owu. At least the pair, Democratic , Assembly leader stanley steingut, who ~ expects to become 1 that state's n ext ; Speaker, and Daniel ~ Haley, a fellow as- semblyman, s a i d they were here to -listen and learn. Dear Mssrs. Stein· gut and Haley: It is an irony that i two legislators from · a state which, until rereitly, was more populous than California and which has been in existence nearly a century . longer than this state should look here ! for leadership. Dear Gl oon1 y .Gus It prison i.!l degrading to certain men "who have suffered enough," perhaps this is the time to take a hard look at how degrading and de- humanizing prison is for all other persons. 'We have the money. Do we have the brains, wisdojn ood will to find alternatives? (P.S. Add courage to the recipe). DEMOSTHENES JIJ Gi.emy Gk c~ .,. wlM'llrtt9d lly ...... n •1111 H Ml MCnurilr rllflKt ttlf "''-'' •I Hit _.,.,.. Setld your 1111 _..,. t. Gllomy Gua. a.fir ~llDI a "citizen-lef{:islature'' to a full time "professional legislature" are not nearly that enthused. Obviously, since you are the highest paid lawmakers in the nation , recei\'ing $23.500 lo our $21,120, you don't' need to come here to fi nd out about sal aries. But the question' is: does the paynient of high salaries improve the quality of legislation or even the caliber of' the me mbers? Some of us think not. ; PERHAPS .you have been deceived : by the various claims which have been ,' made for this state's legislature as being i rated the highest in the nation. You ; should look more closely at the ~ ~asurements used for such a rating. ~ And, regardless or that, you sho~ld •• examine even closer those who are doing i the rating. For it matters littl~ what ~ an orgahization which is funded by an ~ association of state legislatures thinks ~ of the califomia Legislature. What really AS FOR staffing, the growth of legislative aides in California in recent years from practically none to about 15 to each elected .member seems to have only added to the confusion. In most cases they create a lot more work for the members, often resu1ting in unnecessary laws, and they tend to sefve as a buffer between t h e representatives and the people who elected them. counts Is what the people who elect : that legislature think. At the moment the people ol California don't seem to have so high a regard ~ for the legislators or the quality of .. their performance in recent years. They are not only ticked off by the failure ; of their legislature, despite its lengthy ; full two year meetings, to find solutions to the many pressing problems of this ., state. But they are incensed by the • .. di9closures oC the compensations their ln the extreme they work in political campaigns ·a.00 sometimes even run against the members who gave them their jobs. If there is a lesson to be learned in Cali£ornia it is probably that too much is ~orse than too little. ~· lawmakers have taken for lhemselves 1 jn the way of fringe benefits. WE SUGGEST that. before you conclude your studies oo how to improve your legi slature, you take a look at a small state like South Dakota. Its lawmakers, unburdened by staff, meet brieny every two years. Being a citizen.. legislature they don't have time to dally. Besides they are among the lowest paid in the .nation. They have to get home t~ the harvelt or other business. Still the people ol that state seem w bave an adequate educational system; don't seem to be QPlftssed by· taxation.i and aren't starving. 'ntey also seem to be getting aloog all Tight otherwise. • AND WHILE you seem to have been ; impres.9ed by the "prolessionalism" of ' our lawmakers and their abundant staffs, .. those who have observed the transition •• ~ • ' -. " ' -. ·. ·. -• . • of CalU'ornia's lawmaking body from Sincerely, A CALIFORNIAN • • • • • "Vety good chaps, now we 'l/ tty it from the plane." j \ r Protectio,n ever became of the plain old American American -the proud product of ·the once-renowned 11 me1Ung ~t." This is not to denigrate the cultura l contributions of Americans of all racial and national backgrounds to the development of our society. It just seems that sin~ everyone -including perhaps the Indians -originally came from so mewhere else, this sudden pass ion for identifying hyphenated Americans is a little exaggerated. By now we have some truly wondrous mixes of race and nationality, and simply identifying ourselves as Ameri cans seems more than adequate. Or, in a couple more generations, can we expect to have legis- lation demanding better recognition of the special con- tributions of lrish·German·Norwegian·Greek-Japanese- Hungarian-Eskim~Hawaiian-Americans? (Editor 's Nott: \Ve nteant to recognize more natiO"Jt- alities, colors and creeds, but we ran out of hypJ1e1lS.) · Side Effects The fuel-saving 55 mph speed limit is having son1e side effects that weren't anticipated. Auto-makers report a marked drop in sales of such car replacement parts as fendj?rs, hoods, grilles and bumpers -items most likely lo be damaged beyond repair in accidents. This is attributed both to the lower overall accident rate and the fact that collisions at reduced speeds are less likely to result in irreparable damage -in short, more fender-benders, and fewer fender-destroyers. But perhaps the most extraordinary side effect of the speed limit law is a report that the reduction in highway fatalities has resulted in a shortage of kidney donations for transplant operations. So complex are the interactions of ·our modern society, it seems, that even the saving of lives and property is not without some negative spin-offs. J 'What's his handicap? His partner!' ,· Trapped On a Crazy .Spaceship Di11i Prospects fo1• Nov e111be1· ( ART HOPPE ) Help somebody! I'm trapped aboard this crazy spaceship. Nobody seems to know u•here it's been, where it is, how it got here, or where it's goi ng. There's no captain aboard. Nobody's in charge. Some of the nuttiest passengers would like to be. They're the ones with the bombs. And -there's no way to get off. Luckily, I'm in First Class. Most of the others are in Touri s t. They've really got it bad back there. Some of them' are starving. That's because this crazy spaceship is getting really over- crowded. So there isn't enough food to go around any more. We keep telling them back in Tourist to stop having so many kids. \I/hat's the good of them having kids if they're all starving? But they don't listen. Nobody listens. Nobody does anything. And there's no way to get off. ACl'UAIJ..Y, things aren't too bad here in First Class yet. The air's getting harder to breathe. And the water's beginning to taste funny. But we've got plentY to eat still. Ol course, we feel a little guilty eating so well when those poor ... But we don't talk much about tbat. We 're ruoniftg out of fuel, though. It lights our lights, wanns our cabins. powers our machineS and runs our television sets. The fuel was put aboard before the first passenger. It's almost gOTie. Us guys in First Class are using up twi ce as much as all those people in Tourist. But we hope somebody will firxi us plenty of new fuel somewhere. Nobody has yet. I'll miss television. BUT WHAT scarea: me most are these nuts with bombs. We've got a half dozen of them In First tiass. A guy in Tourist even made one. He's starving and be makes a bomb! "For prestige," he says. How crazy can you get? Each of these nuts in First Class s3ys he's got to have his bomb because these five other guys have got their bombs. '"Ibey can't blow me up,'' each ~ys with kind of a mad gleam in his eye, "because, If they do, I'll blow them up!" And the spaceship along with them. Yet each wants the other passengers to think he's the sanest and lbe right guy to run the spa<:eship. Talk about frllitcakes! But does anybody try w lake the bombs away from these nuts? Nobody does anything. Nobody ever docs anything, on this crazy spaceship. And there's no way w get orr . EVERYBODY KNOWS what we !llould do. Us guys in First Class should ration our food , have fewer kids, tum off our machines that are eating up our fuel and mucking up our air, and somenow get those crazies to throw away their bombs. Everybody agrees to that. Trouble Is, nobody wants to give up all the good lhings he's got unle.!3 everybody docs. M not>c;:Jy does. Nobody ever does anvthlng. 1 gutss It's because we've got Jt so good and we're going w get It .. bad. Sometim., l think everybody aboatd • thiJ~c,.zy 1paceshlp Is cruy. ' • Trouble INDIANAPOLtS -Here in tbe heart of what used to be Nixon country, President Ford's pardon of Richard t.f. Nixon has traumatized the Republi can raithful into ugly resentment against their new President and despair over their electioo prospects No'V. 5. A1though the old Nixon hardoore has diminished to a cor· poral's guard even in Indiana , the an· gry mood here goes not to the S1Jbstance of the Nixon pardon but to its political impact. From lop to bottom of the lndi· ana Republi can hier- archy, one Consis· tent theme is sounded : the uphill fight by ?1-fayor Richard G. Lugar ol Indiana- polis to unseat two-tenn Democratic Sen. Birch Bayh has been undercut by l'rlr. Ford's timing. THESE R E P U B LICANS are disappointed that ~1r. Jrord instantly transfonned himself from glittering asset to at least a temporary liability, But beyond that is deep resentment that Mr. Ford thought so little of the pardon's political consequences. "l keep asking myself: why did he do it now ?" says one county chairman. "We were just starting to get moving." Indiana is no isolated case. In Ohio the day after the Nixon pardon, one bard-pressed Republican c a n d i d a t e removed from his campaign brochure a letter of praise from Mr. Ford (explaining to us: "I just oouldn 't take the chance"). In New Jersey. an i n cu m b e n t Republican Congressma11 facing a stiff challenge scrapped a cam· paign Oyer because Mr. Ford 's picture was on the cover. • Ill GOP Country ( EVANS·NOVAK J The su rest test of ho1'' much the pardon denated Republican prospects came in Nixon-loving Indiana. When a fund·raising visit to Indianapolis Oct. 16 by the new President '''as announced in the midst of the Ford euphoria, Democratic Senator Birch Bayh's man· agers trembled. They toyed \\'ith the idea of counteracting the $500--a-ticket Ford reception ,,·ith a' $1-a·ticket Bayh rally here the next night. BUT TIIE pardon im me di ately undennined the Ford visit. "My husband told me he just doesn't u·ant to pay $500 to see the President oo\v,'' a party u·orker confided. Even though Republican leaders claim til'tets are selling briskly, few see the President's visit as a political bonanza. Neither do the Democrats; Bayh's managers have abandoned the $1 counter-rally. Bayh's own campaigning also has been affected . While last \Yeek's television commercials were crediting Birch Bayh as principal sponsor of the 25th Amendment , which made Jerry Ford President, the Senator sharpl y changed his tune last week. "It's surprising ho\Y fast a new Ford depreciates in value these days," a grinning Bayh cracked to a cheering Democratic rally in eoit.Servative southern Indiana. THE NE\V President \\'3S scarcely mentioned ill Republican r a I I i e s . Campaigning in southwestern Ind iana, Lugar ignored ~1r. Ford except v.·hen reporters or students questioned nim about the pardon. llis answers wt!re cautious and tentative. While suggesting the pardon \Yas an effort to get rid of \Vatergate once and for all. Lugar added dryly that the effort "may not ha\•e been SUCf..'Cssrul." The Nixon hardcore has so diminished in · his old heartlMd that lloosier enthusiasts for the pardon y.·cre hard to find. "I 11•as amazed." relates one county chairman. ' · how n1any Republicans wanted Nixou to ca t some Cr'O\\' before he was pardoned." ll0\\'E1."ER. hard·boiled leaders of the Indiana Republican organization are long past caring what happens to Richard Nixon. pardon or no pardon. Their despair stems from fearing t hat persistent dis.regard for Republican rortunes in the Nixon \Vhl!e House may continue In the Ford White House. Lugar ccnceded lo us he expects nothing of tenefit frcm \Vashington. but wistfully added : •·t hope I v.·on't get bombed from \Vashington every other week." tiigar·s campaign manager. national committeen1an L. Keith Bulen, is considerably less phlegmatic than his candidate. Angered enough by the pa rdon, Bulen \\'as absolutely outraged by las1 week's maladroit suggestion frorn the \Vhite ~louse of possible blanket Watergate pardons. \\lhat infuriated Bulcn "'·as continuing Oval Office di sregard for party affairs. \Vhat n1a kes the Bulens of the Republican party so frantic is that lt'lr. Ford's condul'1. as' Presi dent. from lhe appointment of ~1rs. Smith to tile Nixo n pardon fiasco. suggests he realizes no more than his predecessor that the Republican parly and the two-party syste m arc on the brink of destructioo. Their gn1n1blin g about the President stems from genuine angui sh that eve n the Fofd Oval Oflice may have forgotten !hat there is a Republican party. Nixon Psychiatric Study Prophet~c WASHI NGTON -The young Air Force psychiatrist who wrote the eerily pro- phetic "Prsident Nixon's PsychiatriC phetic 0 President Nixon's Psychiatric · so harassed by his Air Force bosses he wants to resign . Maj. Eli Chesen, chief of the Nellis Air Force Base. Nev., mental health clinic, has confided to congressmen that he has been threatened with court· martial, that his patriotism has been questioned and that his integrity has been assaulted -all liecause or the book. • So serious Is the alleged mistreatment, we have learned, that 13 plucky doctors at the Nellis base hospital have \Vritten Congress and the Air Force asking for a ''lull investigation" of . Olesen'r charges. CRESEN wrote his book whlle he was. on inactive reserve. It was based on Nixon's speeches, blogr8.phles, tele- vised appearances •nd writings. Frotn this gigantic: heap of material, Chesen shrewdly drew the conclusion that Nixon never would buckle from the' most criU- cal policy crises, but might dl~ntegrate from peuonal problems . The Air Force major finished his book al~t-a year· ago when the-wtirld sti ll believed in llle ~berant Nixon of the 1!172 election period. But Chesen accurately pttdlctcd tbat Nixon might become the present-day recluse of s.n· Qlemente, a lonely, tortured, Jn.secure mon. 11Jt Is in Lbe pe.rsonaJ context that I am most cmcemcd about• Nixon's st.ability under stress," wrote Chesen with dlsooncerilng foresight "The threat (JACK ANDERSON) of world war poses less of a vexation for Nixon than Uie outcome o f Watergate:" INDEED, Nixon's physician, Dr. Wal- ter Tkash, might well have been quoting from Chesen's uncany forecast \Yhen he said a few days ago that Nixon was "rav- aged" and broken in spirit. But Chescn's Air Force bosses apparently ore not Interested in the accuracy or the young psychiatrist's star-gating about Nixon. Even before Chesen came on active Air Force duty last February I he ran Joto trouble. he confided in a letter to several congressmen, including Rep. Wiley Mayne, R·lowa. Olesen said his future commander allegedly told aides, "lf Doctor Chesen gets even a step out ol line, he will be-courl·marllalcd." WlTBJN DAYS after he got to Nellis. he said, an Air Foree genernl at a m1all dinner party questioned .him about whether bis father wu born Jn Russia. "lilt questions to me Indicated a surprisini: t>enooat knowledge Jf my bectgrowid, including minor details about my wtre's medical problems," said Chesen. At the beoe, he. 118ld, a !]lCClal file was kept on him and was "sholl'n to discredit my reputation •. , my com· manding officer h .. penonally . . . In- formed the defense counsel on (A) case that my oplnloo was not reliable in view or my p.ut performance as •o euthor or a book of which ht dlsappnwea. Chesen. Y+ho had settled with his fantily in Nellis, also intermittently faced threats of rea~ignment. As a rf'.su lt of all this, he said, he wanted a release from active duty, even though his time is not up until 1976. FOOTNOTE: Chcsen refused comment . . saying, "I could get COUrt·mar11al~I." An Ai~ Fo.rce spokesman salrt a prelimi- nary 1nqu1ry has produced no evidence of harassment. but the Air Force, he t~ld us, has begun a thorough investiga· hon, O•AN•I COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wttd, PubU,htr Thomo.s Kttvil, Editor Barbara Krtibfch Editortol PQ(le Editor The rllltor1al ,paae of the Dafly Piiot lttkt. to lnr0rm and 1:tJrnula.te rndtra by Pl"t'llenll.ll;{ on thil pqe dlver.1hcotnmf'n1.11ry on toplC'll or \!l- lft'tst by synd~!C'd columnl1ta find ca.rt00ntm. b)' Pl'llVkflll!r ._ forum ror tta<Wrl' vk-w1 and b)' prntntlrc tt.11 ~wtJll.prr'• oplnlonf l.lld Sdeu on current toptca. The editorial opiokn ot lhe Dt.11)' t•lk>t 1ppear onl1 in the editorial oolumn lr the top ot the .. , .. Opln1oN ,.,..._ by tbe ooi- u.mm.tt and e111oon11it1 and Jeutr wrt1m •~ the.Ir own tnd no enttorte-- mtnt vr their vJcM.'S by ·'th0 Daily PIJo< thould be lnl"""1. Monday, September 23, 1974 • • QU \\ Inv hel pre pre can b<! me We In fir \re Br a ol w hi "' lo' ru t 0 , • • Monda~. Sepltmber 23, 1q74 ..iAILY PILOT QUEENIE By Phll lnterlandi Topless Issue on Ballot TAXI DRIVER AIDS BANDIT COCOA. BEACH, Fla. I UP I) !•ken . -Whether s unba t hin g "I'm happy to see it go beauties can drop their tops on the ballot." sail.I !\lary Jo on the nation's 1noonport Kitchen, 32, a receptionist fo1· beaches will be decided by t.,.,·o doctors. "The way it the voters in a strnw ballot reads now, girls will ha ve to in the November cl.:.-ctions. huvc their tops t:::d, and I The Cocoa Beach City Cqun· cil voted for lhe straw biillot ' Ci ty P e tition amid applause of a halr..ctooon girls who frequently go bare· RIVERSIDE (UPl J -The chested on lbc beach. Ri verside County Local Agc n· cy Formation Commissio n has think thnt will de(en t II." Such 3 rule would stop wo1ncn from untyini;: the tops of ihcir bathing suits \Vhilc lying 11n their stomachs trying to got a suntan on their ba1.:ks. !\'1rs. Kitchen. a di vorced n11>ther of a 14 ·ye3 r ·old daughter, ndded. '· 1· h c bcautlful ,,art (about the straw vote! is thp t we ca n get all those JS.year.olds registered to vote by Noven1bcr. '1 AN EARLIER VOTE in votod to allo\v the La Qui nta favor of permitt ing topless area to circulate petitions for sunbathing on a restricted an election on incorporation COU~Cll~~IAN 10~1 Doland area of the beach and Lhri as the county's 18th cily. The .,.,·on a J..2 approval or an '\V ilson Park was resc inded "On· propoSed newclty-\vould t'Over ordmance which would ha ve ti! after the straw ballot is 30 sq uare mil es. allowed topless sunbathing "A good executive delegates responsibility -you think about her ligure for me while I conduct lhi• meeUng." . Caneer Link? Blood Pressure ' Medicine Probed WASHINGTON (API -An Investigation of a 1X>5Sible link bcl \\'el'n a family of widely prescribed anti-high b Io o d prcssw·e drugs and breast cancer in older women is being made by the Depart- ment of Health, Education and Welfare. Officials said the drugs, reserpine and rescinnamine. have been used in the United S1ates for 20 years and ac- count for more than one-fourth oI the medicines prescribed for hypertension. Reserpine alone Is used by three million 10 four million U.S. patients. SEPA RATE STUDIES done in Bristol. England : Helsinki, Finland. and Bostoo, Mass. were published in Lancet, the British medical journal. The studies f0W1d thal among v•omen over 60 years old the breast cancer rate "·as as much as three times higher than normal for tOOse "'ho had taken reserpine over Jong periods of time. Officials of HEW said further investigation is necessary because the studies involved checks or patients' records and not clinical drug trials. A PRELThUNARY review of the studies has been made by the National Cancer Institute, the Nationa1 Heart and lJ.lng Institute, the Na- tional lmt.itute of Mental Health, the Food and Drug Administralioo and th e Veterans Administration. Charles C. Edwards, HEW assistant secretary of health. said the agencies have agreed to alert the general public and the medical profession to the findings. 110\VEVER, U~'TlL the U.S. review is concluded. Edwards recommended that there be "no general change or disru~ tion therapy" in patients with high blood pressure. He emphasized that the studies did not fmd a general increased eancer risk i n byperteosioo patients · nor an increased risk associated with other antl-hyperlension dru~s * * * * * * Highway Cancer Incidences ·Seen NEW YORK (AP) -Living in a house by the side of the road might hold the ri sk of having cancer as an unin- * * 2 Co1ivicted l 11 Laetrile Sales Case vited guest, a Swiss physician reports. Or. Walter Blumer o r Net.stal, Switzerland, said he had 75 patients who died of cancers over a 12--year period, and 72 of them lived within 50 yards of a state highway carrying 5,000 vehicles a day through Netstal. HE SAID TIUS meant the death rate from cancer v.·as nine times higher among those living close to the highway than among those l i v i n g beyond, and the rate might have been higher still if a REDDING (UPI) -A greater proportion of people Shasta County Superior Court Uved along the .highways. jury bas convicted two men Blumer's findings we r c of trying to sell an elderly published in the Medical cancer patient injection treat-TribWlC, based on an account menls of an Illegal drug some of Blumer's report recently believe cures cancer· to an InteniaUonal Medical ,, The jury deliberated six Congreas on Road Accidents tiours before c o n v i c t I n g in Utrecht, The Netherlands. Charles French, 42• a n d ON THE ASSUMPTION that Robert Hagstrom, 26, both of lead and other pbllutants from Central Valley, on charges of vehicles were causing some attempted grand theft and of the troubles, he treated conspiracy. 1· t •th I · edM•t Police arrested the men 1n . pa ien s w1 ca cium ~ e, April when Mrs. Beth Yegge, to remove any lead, plus 52, said they approached her Vitamins B and C. offering to sell 25 injections Blumer also reported that of Lactril~. The drug's use persons within the SO.yard is banned I for cancer treat. range were twice as subject m<nt in the United Stat.. by to headaches, sleep disorders, t h e F o o d a n d D r u g fatigue, depressions, digestive AdmlnlstraUon, but lt i.s ~ upsets, and nervousness as in !\1exico. people living farther away. 8lc~lroR tw~iR HOW TO DO THIM STIP IY STll' Anyane can ca<e tor 1 Brusl'I, a Slower tielr Style, Of' our oti,er cu rl coa11lng , tusa·free, hill tunctlon11 SCISSOR STVLES w1'1it1"111re at easy 'to do as luat atla n"UX>ol Our \amp cu ta, finger 1umble cula, curllng Iron cu1a, wasl'I towet <ftY, l)(ust'I 'n Uult cuta or •almple wasti and weflr culs are SClS- SORl:O, 111 lake-ca re-of youraell atylot. Good for any age. any tie.Ir. No leaslng, no rol1era. no pin&. l'IO POI.LUTING HAIR SPRAVS. ALSO: - iiiO SIT P'llMAHIMT WA.VIS, YOU MAY .-va WAMT TO SIT YOUI HAii A•A.14. JOSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLING Huntlnalon leach F"'"°'1 -tS64 ...... A.,., JOIM....._. .... 968-3535 879-31163 I A.M. te IDP.M.:s ... & S.•. f .. IP.M. ~~~~~~~~~~~ ' Warning , The Surgeon General Has Determine d · That Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. ' ) • along a l,Ooo.root stretch of beacti nt \Vllson Park. but the council later voted lD !J OVE . ENGLAND (UPll _ dclny taking u1> the ordinancl· until aftt!r the str<iw b:illot. Taxi driver John Horton , 72, The change of heart came ca lled police to co1nplai n that when Mr~. Lee c: a g no n a fare he took on a four·mile presented a petition with 1norl! round trip to a Brighton post than 700 slgnatun::s calling for u ban on toplcssncss. office ran D\\'ay without Cindy 11ills. 22 , :i ~o·~o payi ng. 1-~~~~~~~~~~ dancer and n1ot hcr of a 15· It wasn't as lhough the fare 1nonth·o!d son. told the council didn'I h<1ve the n1oney. poliCf Good Deed she: favored setting aside a said. The pa!:isengc r robbed rcstric1ed art•a of the beach make the scene for topless sunbathing . the post office of $1.200 \vhil e Sundays "II somebody gets raped or liorton dut ifully carried out something on the beach:·_ ~tl~ie:n~i=nst=ru=c=tio=n=s~to~w~a=it ~a~m=i=n=ul=•~· ~=-=~i1;1~t~tie~l~1f~,1~!\~·i~;~j(~1)~f~ 'A'C can call ii off," she ~d. 19 mg. "ta(', 1.3 mg. nicotine av. per c~a1ette by F1C meihai I l £18 DAILY PILOT By the Associated 1•rcss The rollnwlng urt' Uil lbourd's hol record hi ls ror · the week endingplcn1bcr 28. ~s they uppt.•a r in n Pxl . week's issue of llill00:1rd · maga7.inc. Monday, September 23. 197~ ("().L!.~TR \' S l ~Gt,t-:S I 1 '~1 1\ H1\'.\ll!l.l :'l\C; i\11\~ \\'uylon J t•nn111.:~. II I.,\ 2. I 1.0\'I': ~I\" FHIF::\I) l 'harht• RiC'h, Epic 3. J \\'OUl.ll :"l"J' \\11\i\'T TO LIV I·'. If' YO U DIDN'T '.~nl.:itr' lfoodt•n lntfitrn Sonny Sad in Solo r;ill'cl L'BS \':.tl'll'IY progran\ t•aJl t':\ltl;1i11 lhl' \\':~~ :--ot his lly J ,\\' Sll .\Kl\l'1'T l'o\clt•cl la ioil sp1·in~ \lihl'll ht• l>o.'npll' 11 1 th1• \\'h1.~l' n1:1~1 . N r:\V \'I ~HK 11\ PI /\Ill' lu·oli.t• up "'ith ( 'hl'I'. his \\'tfe :.iud \ it'l' , 1·r:--;1. \\ 1:--h ht• ti 1·1·ho;1..,1·d lhl' l:i ~I of i1 s Ill'\\" <ind shtni liiz i>a r1nt•r. ~ip· t'~IJl;1111 ht1\1 this silo\\' ~ol 'I'\' ~t·ru· ... 411 l't' lht• 11·1•1•k1•11d . fli.•arsJu~I ;is gl.id _to bt• ba~·k 11n th1 · ;111·. · ~:1k1a "o1lSatur1l:1~·1 u~h1. 0 11 'l'\I :i s \ht• s tud io II ha s to 1.ln \\ilh a 1utt•· S!nlll,\' f\111H1 ':0. l'h t•r lt· ... s :.udiente th,rl'ring his rl' l'!I· night ultl•1nplt·d IJurglury of ''S.111n ,\· l"1 1n11·d~· ll t'\llt'''nn Ir\'. ;1 slt•r1•11 ~1c1rt· in \\hit·h lht• Sunday. ll \\:J S no\ \\'Ii-it' tu ·11 (' nlakes ;i ft•\\' rt•ft·r<.•n · ~t o rt• 11\\'ll{'I" is rnortull~· ~·-~'* IUD IROWHE'S ' She'll co•• Ihe blues right out ol "GOING your heart. SUR FIN' II LU CY A UILLIAMT SUIFING MAMl DOCUMEHTAIT SHOWM DAILY 7:JO I t :JO HIT SING LF.S I. ROCK ME GENTLY AndY..K.i.m. f,;i1R,i tol JJ)\" F: ;\If~ !)011 \\'illi ;1rns, llol ; ~1·11•1\ht•t' 1110:-.1" C't's to lht• ••bsc!l('t' of Cht•r. \Vou111h•d during a scuffle "J\'.akia ," ;1hout 11 N(•1v stl('h :ts. ··'rhis is tht• nr:-t 11·1thlhl'rontpalL !"=====:-'---:==:==~ . !\lt'.'l:it·o tlt·pu~y :-hcri~r or timc• l '\'l' bt·t·n on tht• i-il:tj.:t' ~\ yoll:11g . lndia.n mu1~ m 2. I llO!llESTLY LOV" YOU Olivi a !\c\\'lon· John, MCA 3. NOTH I NG FROl\1 NOTlllNG -·Billy Prci\ton, A&"1 I. PLEASE OO~'TSTOI ) l~O \'.J :'\ G_~tl:: · f'nrlc.r \\':.goner & l>oll y 1~r<•slo11, HCA 5 . f\ON/\fl ,\R TE 'S HE'l'fl~:1\'I' G le n C<.1mp· \\'()(J{IC'n Inch a n slory. 1\nd ··N 1 1 , . , t n llo Ill\' 111\'11 ;1 1«1c\10 on t'l'l'Cli.t :.it tht• ~\01 l' • oiv 1•11 ' , . · .... bt•coin1•sthc pr11nt·sus1w<'I. MANN THEATRES I :'\LJl'aJ o ht;r itage. 1s a alon<.• in 11 .\l'ttrs._"' ;ind ._!·~t~(·cl 111 h1 s~frn11 tobl'.l; - -) i-ihOI\.', \\"USh Ill~ O~_n ~t~k ..... llis r;llht•r·ill la\\', a lrib:.ll , ( thl n1y ()\I'll tOil~Llll;_,anLI ('ld('r hl·lit•\t'S hinl g1Li lt.r IAICiAIMPllCIS"TIL2:JO ..,,, 'I'' R EV IE. W t·,·en 1~~y 01\ '.1 ~l~'l'p.111g . " . anti 1;nju~tly loin-lcuus huu ADULTS I STUDIMTS SI.JS 4. THEN CAME YOU -.. Dionne Warwick e And Spin- ners, Atlantic S. BEA CH BABY --First Cl ass, London 6. YOU HAVEN'T DONE NOTlllN' · ~tevic \Vonder, Motown 7. CLAP FOR WOLF· 1ilAN -Guess Who , RCA 8. ANOTH l-~R ·S,\1'Ult · DAY N I GHT -Ca t Stevens. A& 1\·1 9. HANG ON IN TllERF: BABY ---J ohnny Bris tol, MGM 10 . SWEET HOME ALA BA~1A -Lynyrd Skynyrd, MCA TOPLPS I. BAD COMPANY Swan Song , Atlantic 2. BEACH BOYS -En· dlessSum mer, Capitol ' 3. STEVIE WONDER - Fulfillingness First Finale, Motown 4. OLIVIA NEWTON· JOHN -Jr You Love !\1e Let Me Know. MCA 5 . ELTON JOHN ·- Caribou. MCA 6. BACHMAN -TURNER OVERDRIVE -Nor Fragile, Me rcury 7. J OHN DENVER - Back Home !\,gain, RCA 8. CHICAGO -Chicago VII, Columbia 9 . BARRY WHITE - Can't Get Enough, 20th Cen·. tury 10. ERIC CLAPTON -~l Ocean, Atlantic brlL C;1pilnl Ii . A 1\1 1 ES POS1\ CON A~IO ll --Sonny J an1es, Columbia 7. PLE1\SE OO N"l'1'E:Lt. ('r11sl1 l ,11111li11~1 ME 11 0 \V TllE STOil\' EN OS -Ro nnie .l\1ilsap, JlCA Sus:1n l >v~· t·r ashl'~ ht'I' 8. \\1Q~IAN 1'0 \V0~1A N J>l'i\';I\(' pl ;1 n L' in a ~ 'i'ammy \V ynettc, Epic cJe~u latl' pa rt of l\C'llY<l 9. I OVEltLOOKED AN ;1ncl is :tided h~· J·:)i-i:l the OllCllll) · l\lickt!y Gi ll ey , Jinnt.•ss t 11n1,:::h1 al R J>la yhoy o"cli~l·k i111 C l ~S. ('h;1nnt>I 10. \\'l-10 I.EFT TllF: 2·s··1t11rn l·'r t·t· ,. DOOR 1'0 1-IF.AV EN OP!:::\.:_:------------ l-l<.1 nk 'J'homps o n , Al1C EASY LISTEN IN<; 1. 4 LOVE YO U. JlONESTLY DO ·Olivia !\ewl on-John, l\lCA 2. Tl!': l\1AN, America. \\'arncr Bros. Cop Not /11 Script 3.1'~1 EN CA~lE YOt.: T UCSON, Ariz. (U PIJ - Dionne \V ur\vieke. Atlantic A l'uC'son pn tit· C' offi ccr 11·us 4. FREE l\li\N JN PARIS un un"•antccl C''.\tr::i during:. -.. Johnl\1itchell,Asylum r ecent fi l niing of the 5. 1SA\VA1\1,\!' AND llE t~!~l"isign seri~s ··Pcl1·occl- DANCED WITH' HIS Wlf'E ~ Cher, l\'ICA Film crev.·s "'er e v.·orkinc in a downtp11·n urea \Yflh <in 6. 'FEEL LIKE J\1AKIN' unmarked police car in LOVE •·· Robe rta Flack, front of u hank . 1'he ol'fil'er Allaptic :-.poltC'd the e a r \Yhile the 7, S.TOP AND Sl\1El;.L ca~1cra ~ 1\"l•r t .r olli ng: Tl-i'E"ROSES -·· l\1ac DU\'IS, 11()\ICl'd 11 \\';IS 1lleg <.1~l} Coliirrifiia parked. and s tarted (O\\TllC ·8. C•AREFREE ftlGl-1: out a ticket_-, \V AY -·· Gordoo Lightfoot, The policemen d id not \Varner Bros. · kno1Y thl• fi!m company h;1LI made spec1<i l arr;ing<'ffit'll· 9. I LOVE l\1Y FRIEND t s. 'l'he s(·quC'ne<: \\'as filml'd · Charlie Rich. Epic again \\·ithout the officrr. 1\hlle I IOI'(' \'ariC't)' shO\\'S , thl' only \'a l'i ety in lhl• Bono OIJl'lll'I' ('Om('S 1turing lht• cun1n1c1·c1al breaks. (h1l• nl·c1tn 't l'X i>t•ct 1nuch fron1 a cop s htt11·. hut I \\'as sor t nf kc•t•pitig n1y finger.i;; t·rosscd that ll o no's debut ;1); a solo Pl'l"f(1 r nll'I" \\'ould son1t:ho1\' l'll li1 1·n the llt'IY 1t·h.'11:.i1i n Sl·ason. No such lul'k. Jl is 11(•11• (•t'fnrt 111 ;.iy cast a p;1tl if it cnntinues a l its nun- patl'. SONN Y, WHOSE TV Time Ruling Hit \VASl~INGTON !APl -A ·group of major tcle\'ision produC'ing com p unics s<1 y they 11•ant another crack at supplying sho"·s for an ex- lra"'hou r of tube time each night. 1'he fou r-year-old Federnl Communi cations Commis- sion prime time access ruhng has railed and should be re pea led to free that hour. the companies said in a petition to t he 1'"'CC and at a ne111s conference. 10. I'M LEA VJNG IT ALL. =::::::======~-f-:========::1 t:P TO YOU -Donny and;: l\larie Os mrind, 1\1 G !\I · Dagon /JVre Ud. "K.....wD ,<l,M(llW;AH «>6Nfr Presents L A D I_[ S & G [ N T L [ M [ N .,. . ' Exclusi~ Orange County Eng•gement NOW SHOWING ........ , ..... UT.aM.1•·••••·t•·tt:e1 .... IMIMGKT IMOW UY. UNUMITID '1111 l>AlillCIMQ MOH . .fll. Ol'IN l 1H I UT. 6 Sl,IN. °"N l t lS ,.._ IMOW IJUTl If ?111 •.M. I l,INDll 11 ,Ill &~!& &N& L"'c•lfo '••· •••t ol llno:Ht 121 -'010 HARBOR BLVD ............ _ .. .... , ....... 531 -1271 0111\'I IN ............ S..ltfG.o•- c. ... ''"*''' Sl4-121Z OW:US MOHIOH UV~­ COLD SWEAT~ DEAD PIGEON JG IWO ICnON HIBi IOlln llDfOlt llTTl( JAUSS & llG HAl5Y 11111 TWO LANE llLACKTOP ,111 TWO ACnON 11nl1 tot1n lfDfOltD llTTll FAUS5 & llG HWY t11 TWO LANE llACKTOP <111 • YOU UIU "GIN'rtt' ..• lOlOS Of fUTIUSH fNl MNlll Mlf Of TWI UflUTIOI~ MACON COUNTY LINE !Ji HIGH l'LAINS DRIITTR m TWO ACnoN Mini IOOfn- llTI\llAUll & llG HAllT"' -.. .. DOIS n HUIT?" 1111 f YOf.I lltl ''Ol»nTr ... LORDS OF FLATIUSH "' P'UIS-1 MOT IOCI Of nil fmM ~=~~~~ro·~m~THI GOC:ID_TIMIS IOIL .. I O.lls llOitOK ....... COLD SWl.lh1 VALACHI ,A,.as .. ' ..,_,_ LAST ,ICTURI SHOW "' NI• 1 MC9l HOOLIOfl fASY a1ora,. • -SIAD/6M f I l •C.-Tawa••' ''THE UST l'tCTURE SHOW" -AU-5t,U "U.SY RIDER" IR I -'"Wt9I DOU n ....r Ill "CCM.DSWIAt"INI ........ 'WfOWN SATUIDAT MIMfr' ~ IOH• COMMICTION~ '"1MI MACIMTOSM ~M"' INI "'t'OTA•IOl-SIMIADM "aUIWATll, WHrTIDUTHw ''llG JAllM INI "S.P.Y .S." INI • "HIGH Pl.AIMS Dllflllw llo\1,1rd (o.s11J .ind SLJ ll). oulofthctr1b1·. Struthers \\'hl ~k on and oll 111 a Sl'l'il.'S oF skits lh<1l ;1p· 11t·ur 1I C'\'i);ed by the l:K'fucl · died. 'l'hc .l acksOn l;-i,·e sing onC' son,i:. then 11•it hdr:1''" 'l'hc sho11•. ,,·ri.u en by no l es~ than cighl 1vriters, is a one-hour ext:rtise in flop· ping about ;ii1nlessly ,1·hi1t· the' band pl<i~'S on. If lht• 111•st sl111\1' isn 't any bettc•r'. the band n1ay refu se to play :i I a 11. • 1\1\0l "I' ·r11E oth1·r AHt" sho\\·: 'l'ht• s \;1 r , Hnbt•1'! For- ~tt•r. is tr;1ppt•d :i s lhl· ~a\a\o ll eiHtlY Shl·riff \\'ho NAl\I,\, ()f' 1·1H1rs1·. ~1·!~ thini:s ri.l{hl ;ot he hl'lps 1h1· s ho1\' also l'X h ibi l son11· ~JH:'l'lat·u larly bea uttl ul J\'.(•1\' l\l cxico scenery. But 1he 1>llll is IJ<td, the <1<·t1ng 11'1'C'tl'ht•tl :nid !ht' s ho1r 11·orth I.Jul flnr "l:gh." 'l'h e Indian lad s ound s the Jll"PiJt!I" notl' \\'hi le il.1 jai l. talking things over \1·11h lht· r '"'·'"I ' dl·puf~-s herif. "1,;1,;1;1. ll' ;1:0.k ~. "llu11· (':tll \\'C' ~l't olll of lh 1 ~ th ing'.'" \Vt•ll. si r. 11·ht'n the Sup1.·r l'hit!r pulls into 1011·11 .. How Miowi., "1liE HIHE LIVES Of RU1Z THE CAT" ... ,_ ...... w...,_ "WHArs HEW, PUSSYCAT?" IRI PAPIWlll All J:OS ::::':~:·:· :·':'°:·:':"':::::':"'~' ~ CINfM. 7:15 BARGAh,f MATINEE fVl•TOAT 'fll 1:l0'·"'· AllW:AfS Sl.15 CHA1US UONSOH COLD SWEAT c•fl•=• IAl:lllA PAIKIMS CHRISTINA co.ft•=· MACOH COUKTT UHi IOBT llOfOl:D LmlE F~US BIG HALSEY ~-"9<.:Y.9'1f w ., -..1 4. '· J:M, '"~I . WESTBROOK . ,., " .. ·~ "'W•ZM SADDUS" Ill 'PUT rT A6AIN, SAM" "TWll.Yl CHAtlS" ~~·1 • ..-,llATRKIAlllltlll •~·1~'""',.... ALSO "' lllOll IO~OUS t~~hc music11 ol lflt: 1111' 1 Julie And11ws * M1~ Trl11 MDDll ·: ! ~ Ca~/ Channing , : 'Thoroughly Modem L~~·,,.11 ... 11~ 4' IGI DAILY MtLUI AT 7:00 . (Peopfe7 Quotes) makes Sunday MAME AT f :JO SUNDAY ONLY MtW1 AT 2:01).6:45 MAMIE AT 4:21).f:IO Sunday is rlltlt:lAY rl1Llt:lAY From the prod-W '1lhe Goclather" and the dirodor ol "Lady Sings Tho lluoa" You 're Going To lov• ROlllkT •DFORDas BIG HALSY llOlllTlllllfOiD lliliHia.J. POWID Little fCl!ISI .... HAISY MMmJL.-r~ .. --.U..""'9 ---1' LICIW-•~ .. ,, ·~· -~··· __ ..., .. "'9'11. .... (Mila.,... ... I.,.. _,,(AU lll!~£!J~•.t!!E~ol '.,. , . .,~. :·;~~~~ll~ ,, .... -.. -:-\1 BAY Seal~s;~~h 431 -9988 BROADWA Y Sanla Ana 542 4 737,:~.~j BUENA Buena Park 522·2816 CINEMA WEST #l Westminster 892-4493 CINEMA WEST #4 Westminster 892-4493 ~a., 11.. Newoort Beach 644-0760 CINEDOME 20 O"nge 532·3328 FOUNTAIN VALLEY #1 founta in Valley 839·1508 FOUNTAIN YALI.IT DllYMM Fountain Valley 527·2223 GROVE #1 Garden Gro~e 537 6600 LINCOLN Dri'le-ln Cypress 527 2233 SO. COAST Laguna Beach 494·1514 SHDWCISE Spring Valley 460·9781 Vlll~ Qra~ge 639·0066 ---" . ..,...a .......... •ti.-" "lo"r Si"9t TM 1kJM• You •• Gorn11 lo lo"' llCm'J llDfOIDasMG llAlSY IGll 11Dt8 lmCllAllJ.l'CIUID IJltlo ,.. .... llMSY __ , __ . ,.,.. .... _ _, IGll- "' ' ~··~ . -L----~-.-IMIL W'"I -·T~ CINIMAS ··•'"" 'CINIMAS J&4 1&4 -I ' N J•C den Rall tho Y« of H -Two llt .t11era, Me'"le .ill 01 Btll er 1:00 p in I., mt Bro.dW •1or1c1 St11ltm 11ng1on JOhft of of 811 Pr1~1tt M id Ir> Mow M , .... rt:: 8 811cn, 11 ,191~ 11•111• 1.i!11er, steporot 11r11111'" k 11nery Hurn. TUfMll V P1rk M, s1111111••1 IClr>g of of Haw L•urwll Mir. D Surv!v 01 Pera QI Ht •• w PJr~. l.\oflUlr Fronc11 Dart-ol "' " <11 Le u we•e l nlermt direct.a Don11d xi. 1914. by "''' Of Ml• BoD ol 6r1ni.cHT Cotl1 ~· ~ . ... Qrafld(h w .. , Morlu• Toro C bY Bell Maroa• Sept"" \V1tl1ct htt' nu Glorlt -.. C.M ,,_ .... rnrte Florida. ot New ~ '~ ,_ ,,.,., Hun ti '" '"'' " ' h'.orlu1 Co< Co Ho lo c • ' r DAILY PILOT A 9 • Class Loads S111fllle r Deatlis Elsew lie re For the Record College Attendance Soars • NEW YORK (UPI) -Allen mozz=----==::a Jackson Greenough, 89, pre,I· dent ol Ille Pennsylvani1t Hallrood for the decade before the I.inc merged with the New York Ceruial, died Saturday o! cancor at St. Luke 's Hospital. De ath Not i ces Jflarriage Licenses lltOWN·MAMIL TON -July 29, 0.111111 Mkh1tl, tt, tncl C1lllY Lyrt, 2(, bOtll OI NIWPOtl 811,h, lANOANl·RILEY -July )0. l(ourO!oh JI .. ~. 1nd L1ur1 A., 16, bOlh ol ,OIJftllln V1U1y. FVM.ANTl·MONROE -Julv ~ 0' Vl11e1n1 ,., It, of Hlbl:llng , Minn .. •nd J111lc:• a., fl, ot Coron• Dtl ,,.,,,. PATJtlCK WINTER -JlllV )I, Pm'Y Arclrtw, t7, of S•lbM, end Mlc:lltllf M.,lf. 2f, ot Cotlt Mfft, WJtlOHToHUTCHINGS -Jiiiy 31, G¥V Al•n. U. ot CoroM, •nd Su..,n Rtl'lfe;' 1 .. or FCl&lflltl11 Vtllty. HANEY·JtANALLO -Aug, 1, P11rlt11 L.. .ft, tnd Giii A., 27, DOlh of Cotlt M11t. MATTERN-NEFF -Auo. '· WUlltm R., )I, ot H~l"911'11 8Hc:t;i. Ind Jullf e., 31, of Cott• Mtw. COSSEY.CRUM -Aua. 2. Miit• Roy. t2, of Long Btadl. tnd LlnN J11n. 2S, ot Cost1 MtM. NELSON•ELLSWORTH -Aut. 7, Or\111• V1n1on, 47, of Foun11!n V1H1y, •nd RUii\ Ann, It, of ~den GtOYI, KOLVES.JONES -Aug. 2, Lttrv Cl1rk1, 32. tnd C•ncllU Lvnnt, 26. bolh of C~t• MIN. HOSEY•RISTAU -""""· 2, Tommv Ltt. )9, ind 81r~r1, .Q, both of H11<1ll119ton e.,ch. SMITH·WALKER -AUC!-)• Cut111 H., .q, Incl Glldya M., 33, DOlh of H1,1111!ngton e11ch, MAKELA-MAKELA -Auo. 2. Ch•r••~ J ,, JO, r1m1rrled Donr111 K1y, 27, DOlh of WtUmlnsttr. Eclton. :it, •nd K1t!\I"" /Mry, '°' llOlh of Wttlmln1l1•. WILSON.OUTIERlll:l!l -Aug, 11, Rtvt'nOllCI l r•lri. II, 11\d AOtllt1, 14. boln of H1111t1119ton l••d1. HATHAWAY.UANTIMllilN -A\111. 10, Robert Lff, 22, or lrvlne, Ind Gigi lrtnt, 1•, of a 1yer1lde. 1 PALMElll:·OllHL. -Auq. 12, O•n Moj1wul1, 36. Ind 81rt11r• M., 22, tloth ·ol Cotll Mt1• MASINGALE·IWAYNI!! -Aug, 12, lhtnnon lldWtrd, 2t, or Huntington ltt-c:h, •rid Elt1nor JHn. n, ol Anlhllm . HANSEN-01..ADE -A1111. 11, Gltrlrl Nell, l7, 11\d OorojhY c .. 33, llOtll Ill NvnHneton et1ch. OAICES.OSWALO -Aug. 12, airy Edw•rc:t, 1{1, end LIU Kay, It. tiolh of H11111ln91on 8Heh, Births SI. JOMpll N!llPllll A119111l 11 Mr. Ind Mrl. Rot11rl Mc.IC1r ... r1, h861 Genv1 St., lrv1M, boy. A111111t 22 Mr. tl'ICI Mr1. Ktrmll Good, 1216 8trmud1 Orl~t. LIQUrll I Hth, glrl. A1191nl 1C Mr. •nd Mr1. 111:-rt Scholtfltr • .son Do.note. lnlM, girl. AUIUll 2S Ml. •nd Mr,, W1vn1 Weirich, 1U22 B"rlt1!1 L•nt, No. 3, Huntington Bee<h, girt Alllll'll 21 Mr, •rid Mr1. 8111 81"11, 17'1t , Sa11 Fidel. Fountain V•ll•V· girl. ' A11t11sl 27 Mr. 1nd Mr1. David Mck.ie, ?4312 Via S1nla Ct1r•. Ml11!on Vlelo, 1wl'l ""'· Mr. •nd Mr1, Sltvtn Rven. 7111 olllhambre OrlYf, No. l. H1,1nlln.gton 8HCh, girl. AytUll lO Mr. and Mr1. T.W. WocdltV. 16116 Ctclles StrHt, Founllln V11l1y, gld. Autuil JI Mr. el'ld r~.,. Ger110 Kelly, 14971 Yocc1 AYtnut. Founl1ln V1lley, girl. ORANGE COUNTY Priso n Set For County Veterinarian SANTA ANA -Tu st in veterinarian JoM E d \V a r d Clements has been sentenced in Orange County Superior Court to a state prison tcrn1 of up 'to l5 years for the killing or his next door neighbor. .By HILARY KAYE OI Ille OlllV ~IOI Sllll Eilrollment at Orange coast and Golden West Colleges has jumped 22.7 percent this fall , including both day and even- ing students. The huge increase i s partially offset, however, by the fact that most students are taking smaller class loads. "We can be pleased at- tendance is up, but lt doesn't mean we'll receive that much more m o n e y , ' ' Chancel!Or Norman Watson said at Wednesday night's Coast Com· munity College District board meeting. STATE 1\-tONJES rei:eived by the di strict arc based on the average daily attendance (ADA) figures. ADA is com - puted on the basis of "student collt.act hours'', rather than the number Of students en- rolled In the colleges. Smaller class loads result in fewer student t"Onl;1Ct hours. Watson explained. -Aggressive recruiting cf· forts over the past fe\v years have resulted in the ot· tendance increase. \\1c're al:;o making ::ill attempts to mC<'l the needs of the students," Watson said. THE CHANCELWR WAS referrin g to the recently-begun flexible sched- Polltical Notes uling approach used at both colleges. ~lore sections or c\asse~ are opr!ltd v.·hcn the orginaJ SCl..'tions ure filled, teachers are allowed to have classes \\•iU1 overloads and ne .... · classes have been added, he eKplalncd. "We've budgctcc1 ex Ir l.l money 10 allow this ne\Y flex· ibility." he S<lid. Golden \Vest College in Hun- tington Beach, the newest can1pus in the i\\'O<Ollegc <lis!rict, shov.•ed the biggest growth this year in day students. n 27.9 percent in· crease over 1973. Orange Coast day students mcreased by 21.2 pcrc.i,_•nt. Water Measure Opposed ' By 0. C. HUSTINGS Of lht D•llV Pilot s1.11 Directors of tlle i\1unicipa1 statewide office also arc ex- pected to talk. Ji'OI\. EVEl'\'lNG c o 11 e I e students. Orange Coast In· creased 22 percent, , a n d Golden West showed an i~ creDse or 21.1 percent. At both sMools combined, day students increased 23.8 percent, while e ven l n g students jumped 21.7 percent. I The number of students at both schools, day and evening, rose from 3G,930 in 1973 to 45.289 this ~·car, an jncrease of 6,359. · In addition, there are 4,093 sl udents enrolled in television courses offered through Gol· den \Vest's Channel 50. ·rtie district's board of trustees. noting only slight in crc:iscs and even minor at· tendance drops at other com· mw1 ity colleges, said JheY ,,·ere pleased with the iJiltial enrollment fi gures. Motorist Se ntertced MILLER·WEISS -Aua. 2, Linc• W1yrw, 26, 11\d 8rtnd1 Joel\. ,., llO!h of COii• Mc-N. GAROINER·ROEOERER -Avg. 2, L1wrtn.c• WtyM, 29, Ind BOl'lrlle L .. 26, bOlh of H!ilnllngfon BNch. YATES·HILL -Aug. J, Robert Howard. Jt, of Huntington 8e1ct1, tl'ld Su11n Joen, 21, or Or•no1. BROWNING-SCHLEHUB,ER -Aua. J, Giry W•YM. 7(1, •l'ICI Reb9c:C:• Lvnn, 17, bOth or Wntmll'llttr. COYAN·WHITIEl'ORO Aug. 3, WllUtm H.. '°' •nd Ruth. I~. beth or cost• Mt-M. SINCLAIR-SCHOLTEN -Aug. l. Jlck W1yne, n. of (;1~1\ GrOYe, Ind J1nlc1 Cl•lrt, :u. or N~I et•clL CAMILLE:Rl·WINTEltS -A\IO. 3, Don•ld E.. 21, Ind P•trkl• Jtill, Dissolt1ti011 Of Marriage Judge Samuel Dr eizen ordered the prison term for Dr. Clements, 40, after a jury in his courtroom · found the defendant guilty of vc>tuntary manslaughter in the slaying last Dec. 29 of Ra J p h ~1arshall, 55. It ~·as testified t hat Water District of Orange County are opposing Proposi- tion 17 on the Nov. 5 ballot. The initiative measure is designed to kill the New Melones Dam project on the Stanislaus River in Northern California. Buddy Ebsen, star of the "Barnaby Jones" televisio n series, wil\ serve as master of ceremonies, Beckman said. Tickets for the event ca n be obtained by c a 11 i II g Floumoy's Orange C o u n t y headquarters at 556-3050. DE!\tOCRAT Den nis l\1angers continu.,es to hit the coffee klatch and cocktail par· ty circuit in his drive to unseat Republican Bob Burke in the 73rd Asrembly District. On l\1onday. fl·langers "·ill be at a 7:30 p.m. gathering at the home of Inge and C.~I. Knox, 6062 Larchwood Drive, ~luntington Beach. REDWOOD CI TY (UPl ) - A con1mercial illustrator has been sentenced to a year in jail because his car ac· cidentally killed a highway patrolman. Judge Gerald Ragan ex· plained the sentence to Gunter llagenow, 47, by saying, "Your sincere remorse and your record shows you to be a good person." ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLlff MOllTUARY 427 [_ 171h Si. Coi.10 ~o 646-4888 -·-BALn.IERGERON RJNEllAL HOME Corona d~I Mot Cosio Me\o -·-BILL BROADWAY MORTUARY t 10 Broodw.1.,. C ~·() )..'e"° ¢"4?·91~ -·-DILDAY UOTHIRS MORTUARY 1791 l Beoch 61...d H1m11n91on Beach 842.7771 244 Reoondo Ave. lo"Q Beoch (2 13)438-114 5 -·-McCORMICK LAGUNA BlACH MOllTUARY 179!:> Laguna Cony011 lld. 494-941 5 -·-McCORMICK MISSION MORTUARY '28837 Camino Copis1rono Son Juan Coo1~trono 495-1776 -·-PACIFIC VllW MEMORIAL PARK Morruory Chuptl :1500 Po._,i,c View Dnve Newpon Beoch, Cahforn1 0 644-2700 -·-PUK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 780 I Bobo Avo., W~rmin~r~ 893-3525 -·-SMITHS' MOllTUARY 627 ~ Hu11lington Beoch 536-6539 WESTMINSllll MEMORIAL PAIK (eme1rry MorlUO'y '"""' 1~801 B..cx.tdllvJ W11~1in;,.,.,1er, ColilcrOO 'iJI 1725 11, beth ot Huntington S...ch. LEE·8RUZEWSKI -Aug. 3, Jtmli E~. a. of S.nl• An•, •lld Jlldllh Lynrw, Jl, of WHlmlnattr. Gllll SON-OAIFFIN -Auo. l, Monte L., 3', •nd carolyn L., 32, llOlh ct lrYIM. DOWNEN.SUMMERS -Auo. l, Slt'lt!!, W., 22, llMI Toni JNO, 10, llOlll of W11lmln1ltr. CRAMER-COVINGTON -A119, 3, Mlolthew It., 12, •nd Cntrvl Rt1111, Jl, boln or Stn c .. m•nte. MORAN.SHEPARD -Auo. 3, Cflllrln E .. "'· or Lavun• HUii, ~ Aobul• E•rrlftlfffl, ~. of Lot A1191iq. PALOMARES.STACK -Au;.(, R•lph, Jr.. 20. of Hunt1r191on Sttcl'I, •I'd M•rd1 Eleln1, 11, cl Mlawiy Clly. J ORGENSEN-CLIFFORD -Au;. 4 A1nd.IU Olartn. 20, of Gardin GrOYt, Ind Lesl~, 1,, of S•n Cltmtnlt. SOUTH·81tUCE -Aug. 4 $111wn UoyO, II. Ind Conl'llt R11&, I,, bCllh ot Hunljr19t(lrl BNet'I. PAAkEA·STEVENS -Aua. S, S1tve11 L, n, end Lind.I, 2', both of "41,1nllno· '°" Buch. FOOST·DUGGAN -Aug, S. G"'VOrv Allt"n U M>d Mer';Jarel J. 24, bolh af H1,1n1l119I°" 8ffd'I. TUAK·FA.UIElt -Aug. S, Jottn, 79, IN! Qo.rls M.. 6'. both of Ll!lllM H1ll1. llLOCK·llESHEA -Aug, S, Wetter llrlen, 18, •nd Dureeri Pone. ~1. bOtn of Huntington lllelc:h. CARTEll-c.ARTEA -Auo. S, Llwtell\, Sl. OI H1wlhornt, r11TWrrlld Frt01 MM, S1, of (OJI• Mell. SCANLAN.CARR -Au;. S, l'r•nt H .. 30, Ind ( .. ucllnt A., 27, bOlh Cf lrYll'I. MARONEY-VAHLOICK -Auv. 5, Wllll•m Dow, 24 of P1bbl1 fllKh, Ind CllllrfOl'tt JI.tit, 19, of Huntlngtc.11 eeac:h. MECKLEY-LE SAGE -Auo. $, Wll!tr Edwin, 21, of S.nl• A111, •nd ~t1nle Lynn, 10, ol Huntlnflon Bffcn. ELLIOTT·BROWN -,\.ug, 1, Thom11 MJ!IO.ndlr, 45, Ind Mlc~lt G, 71, both of H.....,lnoton aucn. GREENWALT·ROWLETT -Auo. 7, Ec:tw111 Tomofhy, lS, of $1111• An•, 11\d M1n• Anri. ll, of (Ml• Mffll. LEE·TAYlOllt -Au;. 7, Oon~IO Rkllllrc:t, n, of Los ""°''" er.cl Oephlnt J, .ti ol Cor~ cltl Mer. CRAWFOltO-l.AltSON Aug. I, Uwrlnc:t R., 2'. tnd /Mry ltlld• LlllL1n, •'· both of WHtml111ter. STEVENS·SHOEMAICEA -Auo. I, AJ111 Oo!19l•1, 2:1. of LI H•br•, tl'ld 8tr1Mir1 Anni, U. of Hunti"!llon llleull LANNING-STtNSQfll -AUQ. t, OWl!el H-•rd, 19, Ind L•utl Flor.net, 17, bO!h of Cost1 /MU, MAXEY·WUIEREll -Aug. t, S!fYe Al1,., 11, of VlltJ P•rtl, end Vtronic• Tlt11nv. v. of Wflfmlnstt•. 9UAGE-MAISONO -Auo. t. Ron•ld l .. U , 11\d EltatlOI' M., lt, bOlh o1 Hunllnoton 8..ch. OASBURN·llEAG -Aug. t , L~I Martin, o. or S..n Cllmtnht, •l'ld Ctwlittnt, 16, of $111 J11a11 CtplJ1r1no. WANN-t!ILI.. -A119. 9, RlcMrd 8vr1on, 50, of H11nllngton BHCll, •nd M1r111rtt A .. 2''. ol LOll!I llltacn. HARMS·TSCHAPPA TT -AUg. 9, H1rold Deen, 30. of Wtttml~!•r, ind f11r1J.tr1 IC., 30, of Long 8ttch. MORGA N-CRAIG -Aug. 10, Jett1ey J01n>11, 21, •nd Christine Lou! .. , 16, beth or S.t" c 1em1n1e. WATTS.CAPLES -Aug. 10, Gtrte. :JO, 1nc:I P1rnel1 IC.. 21, both of Cost• MH1. CONOOs.GAISMER Aug. IO , Nlchol11 J1me1, 36, of HunllngtOfl lll••cl\. tnc:I Fr1nklt Ntll, •1, af COii• Mr ... TJING-MAlllK -Aug. 10, Utm Tlk, "" or N-parl BNCh, ano Miry, Ln . .CS. of Concord. HAAVEY·HARVl!!Y -Auo. JO, DIYld 0., 2t. rtm1rr1ed P1I~ Vlrgl11l1, ?9, beth ol HllftflnQl(lrl 811Ch. YOUNG·SANOERS -AUOJ. 10. lltobtrl a.rry, lL ind c~ E.. :n, bOtll ol COlll Miu. . . 8ACICEJl'.-MAAIN0VICH -Aug, 10, Richard E.. .51, •nd Rrbel::c• Lois, '°' bO!h o1 Fount•ln V•llev. STANF IELO..TE88ETI$ -A119. 10, Jemin Arlllvt. 2•, Ind P11mel• AMt, 20, llOlll of Cost• Mep. ZlkE·VOLQUARTSEN -Aug. 10, WllU•m OtEtt, )9, ol Faunt1l11 Vllley, 111\d l•Ul'•llllt C., :n, Of Nlll'W•lk. JACOlllS-HOMNOA-Aug. 111. Eclw1rd s.. "' o1 NewPOtt Blach, end K•r o .. JI, of S•nll Ant. AOGERS·OEVENBERG -Auo. ID, er1dleY °''"• 21, •"II Plmele. 17. botll of S.an J1i1•n C1pl1tf•no. MC. LEMOlllE-MEEHAM -AUQ. lD. Tllom11 Robtrt, lt, of Huntl1111ton Brach, 1nd Debi'• Sui, 11, of Pl1<•n!11. LAVENOER·8AGGETT -A119. Ill, Linden J ., )1, •nd l.1r1i::1, 1,, bclh of Ntwporl BMCh. SLAMA·HONTl -A119. 10, J•me1 !dwan:I, 2$. Of Buen• Perk, ano Su11n Kay, It, of Huntlnetan Beec:h. HUGHES.FERGUSON -All(I. 11, John FROM Fas hi on Island Newpo rt Beach • E~ltrH Alllllll 2' Oull1mel, Andrt A. •!Ml Lor-A. Gilll•Yfn, Lois 11'1111 WllU~m Otnnl\ L• M1rtllt, S.llV A. llnd NLch••d A. Anllth11<, Jton1ld Garc:ttn 1llcl Yo'o;o Miii n. Rtbtcc1 11nd Carlo' Rui.n EKobl<lo. /Mtlldi H. Incl li•lvtdor AIY1r11 Tlll!mpsor1, Dorothy Loclllt tnd Jolin •-rt Flg111ro•, a1mlro v111ncl1 1n0 Ju1nlt• flust1men11 Vi1!11Kl• Copt1y, 1111111 J1rw •nd Frlderlck •• Mtlllm1utr, Lton~rcl J . •nd Cercl A. S~hko41, H•lrn 11\d V1l1ntln N. sc.iv.,,1r, John Wtsl•V end Lyo.ttr Anlhony, J1nlc• A. •nd 01nnv C. Go!llnel, Oltn1 Ott l rld LloYd Al!'n Mll11, C•rof lflCI Wlllltm. Jr. McCarO, EdVlh1 M. 1no 1t1y L. 8llck, Marvis Lor1IM Ind Gl1nn Rl,htrd McFldln. P1trlcl1 A. •nd Gery W. P1g1, Llll•M 81r!NI ll'ld Oorlllcl AllM!rr Ruws. Elltln C. 11\d H•rl•n 8. Rlchtrcl1an, S11'1dr1 Lorr11M •l'ld Earl ....... 5c11Khter. M1ChMI o. •nd EltlrlOI' LtOD. 51-c>lltn W111lt0!< tnd P•tr1ci1 K•llllMn S•Y•t, DlflYlf' On11Ue •nd Elklll Ruin Wright, CJ1ren<1 E. 1nd Etnt1 MM Groen, Jin •nd Jtne! M1n1ll RHM, Lvnn ~ J1y Sfl.Otr, Terrv G-•nd M•rv Ann A.ndr-, Juell •I'd C•IYlfl JOMC)h Pllclltr JtluSl!i P. Ind Jofln C1IYln Whl11nur11, HlltrY An11 1nc1 01vld Nttl Goodm•11, J-c:quellnt S\OI •nd Wllllitm, ''· Nul1n, T11om11 C. 11'1d Sylvie E. M1Mlntl Gtru, Ju•n E. •ftc:I Ml•I• Al mt C1mp10-. EclWllr'CI Anoelo •l'ld Judy '" M1rtln, Junt L. •nd Lyle G. i\·Iarshall, who was Dr . Clements' neighbor and landlord, ~·as shot at point blank range after the t\vo nlen argued about property lines and back rent owed by the veterinarian. Dr. Clements' lawyers arc appe:aling the conviction. Easter Seal l\1eeting Se t ORANGE Th Easter Seal Societ y of Orange County will conduct its a n n u a I meeting at 7 p.m. Oct. 2 at the society's rehabilitatioo in- stitute here. An open house will be h<ld at the institute, 1800 E. La Vet.a Ave .. following the elcc· tion or officers. The institute operated by the society p~ vides physical therapy and rehabilitation to dis ab I e d children and adults. Among other reasons for de{eating th e proposition . direectors said, is that they believ e it to be an improper use of the initiative process. "The New ~1clones Dan1 concerns a localized section or the state. yet it hos been placed on the statewide ballot," observed D e n n i s ~facLain, general manager of the Orange County water agency. "Pas.sage of Proposition 17 could set a precedent which could affect Orange Coonty s~ dis in te rested and unkowledgeable residents or other areas could someday be asked to vote on one of our local i"'""5," Ma<:Lain sa\11· * • * . Stt nley, Barry JIJllUI ind S111o1n PllVlll1 --------------, ••kif', K•nMlll W•YM •lld C•lnv ,.. CAUFORNIA Senator Alan Cranston and Congressman Craig, Hosmer , who represents much of West Or a nge County, will participate in the Washington SummJ.t Conference on Infla· iloo Sept. 27·23. el11»r1 •r,rd, 0111-flgm1 end Jerry Alltn O .en, Donna M. Ind Cl inton 0 . N1ylor, BtYlf'ly Sue •nd RO't' Herbert, Ill. ' Rtyn, lll:IUI z. ll'ld Co•ufPCIOfl Ft . Kl!'lly, Jonn ROiier Ind BtWrly Ann Huunlntan, 811trl! Y. •nd Jonn11le '· Wiii, Jcwc• Mlktrtd illd Frtdlr1ck l rl1n Mlntily, EU11bllh Ind Prllf Gl"l90"1" Lo S1'111, J•m" p, 1nd Anol"I• Jotn C•tl.$(11'1, 8v<tOI< R•ymond, Jr .. •nd ,,,..rcJ1 Ot111n 1t1q11.11rlll. J••n Ann anct T110n111 Edwin Clbbiir1rn. Edw1rc:I l . 1nd P•mel• •• How•rd, Pemtt1 IC. end Frinkll11 W. Hlnktnl, DorOflly E. •nd Robert E. H1lr1, MDry L. •ncl G1r11d H. Prlce, Rlcflllrcl J•m" 1na Collttn '" ,1 .. 1 °"""' &1rker. Donn• Mer it •nd J1me' Fr1nklyn Hiit, Ancll Wllrlem Ind Mi di £111111 LuUI, Ruth Elltt1 •nd H1n1 Oltltr Whitt, Donni L" •nd Vunon Rol1nd Thom•1, Ktnnelh Rty •nd Anl!I Leui1e B1rt1lt, Loullt Ind AILtn G. . McDontlO, Otnnl1 Rkflllrc:I lflCI Lll'lll• AM JenMn, Rkhlrc:I W. •nd M1rle11 Ourqn M1cl•s .. TerHI G. and 8e1it10 Turntr. Aur1U1 end Ronald Lrw 'i'' Jlloo• 1. and Oonnlr J6Y L en, Glori• 1nd L1rry Douol•s B am, Su11n M. 11\d Jonn Roy ov11tt, Tlltrts• IC. •net R.obtrl Steven 8rc1k, Frtd E. 1nd Leooi1 E. M1:1en, Am~ro ind FronclN:o Den. Orbr1 Ann• •"d Oov11l11 J1m'1 Himp11'1!. Sllllrrv •nd Cr1l11 EtWOOd J1cob1, Wllll1m L1wll 1nd Brt!y Leu Rey1brook, M1rntt Lein •nd SIO!M!Y •• Hutch.Ison, Etltn P. 1nd Frecllr\ck W1yne Aucllsl, DI-L Ind Robtrl RocllltY H•ll, Jot.ton G. Ind Rlt• R. S.J5den Lee Ann Ind Ronald E. P11omt>I. M1rv•nn •"II 01vlc:t OlwnMI, Sur•n C. •nd 01vld A, Russ Priest l1iterred MOSCOW <UPI) -A Roman Catholic Priest in the Ukraine has been convicted of vi o I at i ng religious laws because he tried to recruit converts and I a p s e d Catholics. according to the Lvov n e w s paper Lvovskaya Pravda. The nc .... ·spaper said the Rev . Bernard V . Mitskevich. 44. was given "the punishment he deserved." It did not elaborate. but punishment in such cases u s uall y me a n 1 s confinement in a laOOr camp for several years. The newspaper a I s o chided Ukrainian atheists for not doing enl')l111:h to counter the priest's influence on young people. ' Demoaat Cranston is a member of the Senate Com· mittee on the Budget. Hosmer is the ranking H o u s e Republican on the J o i n t Atomic Energy Con1mittce He also is the top Republican on the House Interior Com· n1ittee. * * * A REPUBLICAN solidarity fundraiser {$1~a-plate l is set fOC' \Vednesday night at the Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim. Dr. Arnold Beckman, ch.'tirman or the event. sa ys the featured speakers will in- clude Governor Reagan and GOP gubernatorial candidate 11 ou st on Flournoy. Of.her Republican candidates f o r T . 9 ' ~ rl~i , 1 "'·'· DAILY PILOT El11nbllu. Don• L •nd Norm.n P. t~::::::::::::::::::::::::!~::::::::::::::::::::::~I e trtr•lld. S1nt01 E. 1nc1 Ooua"1s ,_~ McKlnlty, MICflMI C. •lld Jo AM Ll'PPO. e111111 s. 11111 w 1m1m o. Fntm1n, OtMl1t al\d Chrl11oQrtr R. Aobtltn1, Cindy LM •nd Jotepl'I EdW•rd weel<J, Gwtnclolyn Jo Ind John HOward °'°"""'"-"' Mora S.curlty Wllh FALSE TEETH Custom framing and mat cutting Water Post To Quigley SANTA ANA -:Former Irvine city councilman E. Ray Quigley has been named to the 10-member board of the Orange Cowity Water District. Quigley, 41 , or 18751 Via Palatino in Irvine, w i 11 represent the Tustin and Irvine areas on the board . A commercial airlir.e pilot. Quigley has served on the Irvine Ranch Water District board and as a member of the Santa Ana regional board of the California Water Quali- ty Control Board. On Tuesday. Tany:i and Vadim Greneqitz will hold a coffee k1atch for the candidate at their Costa ritesa hon1e, -3lfi{) Country Club Drive. It starts at 7:30 p.m. Then. at 8 p.m. Wedn csda;>, l\1angers \l'i\I speak to frcinds and neighbors of J ay Jones at 6172 Sydney Drive., Hun- tington Beach. " Il e \•rill be honored al another coffee hour at 8 p.m. Thursday at the home of B. J. Collins. 2116 Raleigh Ave., Costa hfesa. And !\1angers will be feted Friday at 8 p.m. at a wine lasting party. The hosts \Viii be Barbara and C u r t i s Leonard. 2702 Cardinal Drive, Cosll! ~esa. 11agenow 's car swerved out of control last June · on Interstate 280 Md collided \vith the motorcycle o f patrol1nan Ralph Percival, 44. P rison T erm SAN DIEGO (AP ) - A 39· yt'ar-old inan charged with ,,·ounding t"·o polic.'C officers has bt."'Cn sentenced to 20 years to life in slate prison. Peter ~tichae\ ~1ahone. who at- tended San Diego State last 'ear. was arrested. after the apparenUy unpro vok e d shootings in Ocean Beach Feb. 22. _ _. .. Free Safe posit Box • with account of $1000 or more at most offices Plus all the important free fi nancial services. • Free American Express Travelers Cheques • Free American Express Money Orders • Free Notary Service • Free Trust Deed and Note Collection • Free Check·A·Month Plan.s • Free Save·by-Mail Service for all rNe pay lhe customary costs ol these services for you.I Ci!... MIGHUT RATES OH IM!utl:l!D IAWINCIS COMPOIJNOEO OAILY -·-· --7.50% -7.79% 4Y~ • $10000R~ 6.75"' 6.98% 6.50% 6.72% 1YIEAR • $10000R~ 5.75% 5.92"'- 900AY5 • ~IOOOOll"'°"'E 5 .25% 5.39% REGULAR ACCOUNT ..... ttl AK* DAY·IN TODAY.QU'T' .... -... ~ ........ ___ ""'_"" __ . ""''·"-'"' .. """' ... ---~ At Any Time Afraid r11M tetth wilt drop at the •ronr thn11 A dtnture tdhtelve eth ht1p. J<'ASTEETtt• PotJdtr ii:lvu dentu"" a lon1tr, firmer, 1teadier hold, Why bll1mb1rr..-d? For more 11curll[ •nd comfort, u11 FAS · TEETI Denture AdhealYI Powdar. Denluftl th1t tit •N -1otl1l to 1-!th. Sit )'OUf dtlltlit rtrul&tl)". <¥n lill 9 Mon. -Fri. ,,. L'ACADEMIE ART GALLERY AND FRAMING ~·GREAT WESTERN SAVINGS Sat. till 6. Sun. till 5 IN SOUTH COAST VILLAGE ON THE TOP FLOOR OF THE MERCANTILE BLDG. ASSETS OVER $41'2 BILLION • COMPLETE SAFETY SINCE 1887 80 Fashion Island, Newport Center• Santa Ana• Buena Park• Laguna Hms I J '• STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR l I • I ., I ' A JO DA.IL\' PILOT Mood111, Stpttmb!r 23, 1974 TONIGHT'S Eateries Suffer Ripoffs TV IDGHLIGHTS R<~staurants Losi1ig C 01iclin1ents to Diriers AB C O 6:00 -Monday Night Football. The Dallas Cowboys lake on !he Eagles in Philadelphia in tonight's teJevi sed skirmish, KCET Ell 8:00 -A Tri bute to George Ge rsh· win. This special honoring the great American composer is presented b} the Pi1ormon Tabernacle Choir and lhe Mormon Youlh Symphony and Chorus. NBC O 9:00 -"Rachel. Rachel." Joanne ' Woodward stars as a lonely schoolteacher who finds fleeting happi ness in a love affair in thls ~ 1968 movie (directed by Paul Newm an). Es telle I Parsons and Geraldine Fitzgerald are featured. . ClllCAGO (AP) -lnOation -where the caper is costing has brought on the biggest thousu.nds or dolla rs a week cafe caper in history, says -it t.<ertalnly is going on a restaurant exec u t i v e . all over the country,'' sakt Customers arc walking off ....,..... ___ ~ __ with just about everything but ~ the ki tchen sink. '011e 1vo111a11 eve11 "People are ca lling ~or n1ore was • P 0 t_t e_ d .llJll. rolls. bread , butter a--n d crackers for their tables and Sf!re1ci119 t he caps are carting much of it away of salt a1acf pepper !n their. pockets, purses and sliak-ers a11d pour. in doggae bags," says Larfy I I Buckmaster. executive direc· • ''fl t 1e c OJI t e '''ts tor ol the O!icago and Illinois 111to e 11 velopes.' .. ~ .. , Restaurant Association . TV DAILY LOG BUCKMASTER SAID lhe takc-hon1e trend has been noted by many of the associa· tion 's 4,800 members, \Vho blaine the spiraling food costs. .. Jf It's happeoSlg in Illinois -----~--~--~ Buckmaster. He adds that lhe amount of lips also is falling off. ''Consu1nplion of sugar has risen 100 percent in the last year," he said. '1Sugar packets Yotll' Money's Wort.It are being taken from the tables by Ull! handful. One woman even was spotted unscrewing the caps of salt and pepper shakm and poi~· ing the oontcnts into cn-- velopcs. Another stuffed nn individual loaf of bread into her purse. Bread and cracker consumption is up by n1ore tha n 33 percent.·~ Buckmaster said several cafe owners outs marted ketchup bottle Cilchers by lea ving them unc:ipped . "THEY COULDN'T pour the stuff in their p ockets,'' Buckmaster explained. "It bas always been taken for granted that ash trays \vlll be taken," he said. "But Moncjpy Evening S!t'TEMBER 23 Geraldine Fitzaerald, Bltl1e Parsons, Kil• ~rrinatoft, krn1rd Barron, Oon1kl Moffat. Fri nk Corsaro, Terry Kiser, Ntll Potts. A lonely school· ttacher n11rin1 middle 111, finds IJIOIYlllllllJ' h1pplnm In 1 l~e ,Ford Seel;,s Inflation Help 7~8M114u1 .. Paftr 0 POLICE SURGEON-New * Action Drama Series affair. 0 ROOKIES-Jill HOLDS * KEY TO MURDER 0 (l!ij'! (j)J £ll GI 1'h1 R1o•l11 "Ktyw1t11ts.i" A1ou111 nurse and 1 marrl•d doctor witness a m1m:lu bllt r1h1s. to lnfOflTI pollct for lcar of eipo,ln& their ronuntiC" relation· ""•· liil-: (C) (21w) "lllo ..... (i'Usp) '63-Rod T17lor. By SYLVIA PORTER Imagine that you received a Jetter from President Ford inviting you to take the chair on his side of the desk and come up with so me nev.• policies to help curb today's price spiral. You have heard the eagle on the dollar screa ming m Dr•CMt our curren· U Cil MIVM: (CJ (:hr) "De.. cy's buying thi nking position. And then I thought about the consumer. In the anti·jnflation fight to date. the consu mer has bel'fl lectured, exhorted, patronizl'<l -but not enlisted. Yet. it is the consumer \Vho is bei ng squeezed by tight and ex· pensive C'l'edit, trapped by soaring · prices. battered by crashes in the securities markets. ...,. (dr1) '69-f'ttef llwford, Ira p 0 \V er has Funtenber&. Geor11 Gtntl. s hri veled. TffTS, I BELIF.VE. is an l~:t::'~ You have extraordinary oversight. I also t:JOI) @CD m Rll td 1 Rhoda's c omplained, , believe that con~umers are nltter smoolli rom1nc1 with Joe c riticized, _,rt;,, nO\\' as eager to help combat iets • littJt bumpy when he de· d "'-" inflation as \l·e were eager cidts tlllt ii ml~t be but ii the sprea v~ur ~ in \Vorld \Var JI to help com-two ol them btp• datina olhf:r rt e nun eta· II ~, '....;<:r; people tions across -.:--._ bat Nazism. The consumer I,..:.. the board -PollTER "'ants to be a participant in t~':!J:n= s.rles from the \Vhite House to (~on· this battle. not just a p<l\111. V'Mltt V'nitlllrin gress to business, labor. fa rm· TI1ere is a cry or "\\'hat can .,... ers and bac k again. Xo'v th e I do?" in the hear1s of millions IO:QDIJ @ (})~Mtclkal C.11bit'1he President has challen:;ed you: of America ns \l·hich the presi· Faces of Peril'' A JOUnc woman re· "Complai ning is easy. \\'hat dent can and should answer. fusa tG Pt Or. Gannon th• in· Th · h h fonn•tiolt tf11t woold lld bim in can you contribute?'' us. it is wit umility ditinoslnc the hi&hly cont•clous but with confidence that r tlisusl from wtilc:h Shi b suflennc. PRECISELY TH IS hap-speak to you. that J suggest wr,:, pened to me in late August to the President: B' "':,c. .. 111r 1"9 On \\'hen a letter came in from ( 11 \Vork should begin at tilt lst of Stptember, 1939, ti.. the President in\•iting 1ne to once on preparations for the Hui fot(fl 111 loou on Pollnd tll• attend as a par1icipant both Presi dent's call for COON>r<i-mOlf concentrated 11'111 lerocloua r~ assault ill hlstol)' ind Int 1 ntW the presu inmil. conference of lion at the consumer level word to Ille IMl1u11t, Blitzkleic. lh• b.1nkin~ and fi nafl('ia l leaders -vofunta~·. but '' e; y ~~ ; .. T~is.il~ r~n: in \Vashin,l!f.oo last Friday, and definitely cooperation. 'l'herP. wmis b tllt n1rr1tor 111c1 Ralph the sun1 mit on inflation its~lf need be no "stick," such :ls Stofy Is host. to bC held in \\'ashington Sept. rationing. And the "carrot " 0 Mett tilt .. .,.,, M•JW Tom 27·28. is implicit in the fact that. B11dlt7 1uest1. I lllftkti Marlcl Then came a letter from the consumer is d o i n t:: TM U•a1111111 Treasury Secretary \Villiam something positive to help hf1•111 at lD "Brink of lift'' g· · ·1· t b 't the lnim•r B•rcmin·a la mous film tmon 1nvi 1ng me o su mi ease squeeze. aboLtl three wornt• who rltw tlltlr a summary of my vie~·s. (2) Representatives of the 1pproad\inc mottiiitiOif from t n-Then came-a , i>hone call---"'ides! range of groups of con. tirtly difrerent points ol view: lear, frMn a Treasury official ask· sumers should be called to a.t08 IH)(I) Cl) l•••••k• "Th• 1nticipatlon, and compllte m1sun· GWll of Cibola Blllltl .. hit 1. '-"' dtrstlltdl111-ing that my stiltement be nleetings in \Vashin~on to be Rem (pest DototflJ Tustin). • 11fil)IM1111 devoted not to monelarv or informed of the plans and forllMI' Dodie Qty utoon owner. rnrM ltlt llnl Cl•• fiscal policy, or \vage-Price hopes. to be asked for policy 11111 Doc n PdnlfP'd bp I bind of · MM6t he outlas.. . .lounllf ti AMttwe fi nal topic on the agenda -wavs the -program should be and the like should be enlisted. (4) 'Mle program should he identified wit h the \Vhite llouse to give it stature and insure its duration. But this program is to be implemented at the regionaJ and local - not national -level. This is a key aspect of it. (5) After -the details ha\'e been carefully "'Orked out, the President himself should issue a major policy statement and kick off the ca ll for voluntary coo peration via a prime-time TV address. lfere are se v e r a l il· Just rat ions that come quickly to mind. There must be hun- dreds of others e q u a I I y va luable or far superior. Victory gardens both on a community and an individu al family scale, in d e n s e I y populated cities as well as outl ying areas . . . Recycling wit h the scrap collection and sale llllder the direction of communities themselves , .. Revival and maintenance of energy conservation measures by businesses, homeowners and individuals . . . Tnex- pcnsively printed educational pamphlets explaining t he many ways consumeri; can help hold living costs in all areas to be distributed at the regional and local levels. • ABOVE JS ONL V t h e briefest sketch of an idea that easily could be developed into bol h a-great-anti-inflation and consumer unifying force in what is now a battle for survival "\.\'hich we mu& win. Tell me, do I speak for you as \\·ell as myself? Copyrlrtit 1'74. ''"' Ellttfltm.t. Ille. cups, silverv.·are and platts are going now. "We have a report of one brazen cw;tomer s I y 1 y substituting old silverware for a new table setting. And we'd give anything to solve the pn>- blem of disappearing toilet paper rolls. "Restaurant men are begin- ning to cut way back on con· diments at the table and limi ting rolls and crackers. They say business Is up by 22 percent but profits are do\\n by 6 percent. "11f1S ADDEO e s: pen s e £rom the take-OOme cro¥i-d In the long run \vi i! just be pass· ed on to the customer. They can't keep biting the hand that feeds them." Oil Nations Investing No'v in U.S. WASHINGTON (AP) -The Tre'!,'ury Department reports that oil-prod\lcing nations have invested about $7 billion of their surplus revenues in the United States. Abo~t $4 billioo of that h>s been invested in U.S. govern· ment securities, w:ith moot of the remainder placed in com- mercial banks, officials said. Several hundred m i 11 i o n doll ars "may have gooe into corporate securities and re3l estate," Treasury added. Treasury officials estimated that the oil-producing natk>ns have accumulated $25 billion to $23 billion in surpluses is at best "a very rough guess." Of the funds nol mv.sted in the United States, officials said about S2 billion may have been in \'ested in Europe and S3 billion in the United Kingdom. Philco-Ford Gets Contract Con g ressman Andrew Hinshaw has announced the a~·ard by the Air Force of a contract to Philco-Ford d. Ne\vport Beach for the design, engineering, development. and produc!ioo of nose t I p assemblies for flight testing. The cootr~ct -·has a n estimated value of $1,332,481. wit h the Air Force obligating $730,000 at this time for the project. fonnef Conlederlll offlCltS tvmtcl IO:JOI Wirl tt ...._. controls, but ratlier to t . suggestions and for practical O SUSAN DEY AND ELSA 1111 CnbJ "Other Suggestions to Co1nbat caJTied out. All tvpes of * BAITLEWILDDOGS llcw.JCrib Inflation." ,l!'roups should be included.""..., ______ ,,..._._ ________ ...,'\ Of AFRICA-ON ::;111 CuHJ' Or translated. \.\'hat ne\v They may be broken dO'l\11 BORN FREE TONIGHT ll:ODfJ (})O!m"m ideas do vou have? "\Veil. so each meeting is small ..,ttet ii£ Sii'Mftl" Elsi •Ids 1 ltd If n111elll io myself as I ' put my feet have ~n this sort . ~f call Q QICillRll G ltttl '"' .. A I OO (lgl fil(i)Nrn vou asked for it" I n1u mbled enough to be productive. I ,..-n,.r, Ten:! NiN (ruesl SllUn • NYPD on tbe...desk ·in the traditional fO'!' action work magn1f1cently Dir) wt. au11a while flJiftl her · Mffit: "fllt ff'"1 IWMa" 1------, under far less critical cir· privite pllne ill dfOUIM·pllped (com) '62-Rex H1<rl$on. cum.stances. Ken,-1 m Allred HiWlcKll r....-11 ... : (2lr) .,A .... ti 1.M" W ~ht ClllelJ {d~) '6S-Silz• ... f'tnhett1, lflcl-(I?) hllf Cun11 fMI Oillun, Bel Ga.r:1rra. ~ lid Wiid West I lilst fl ...... (ijf; ())I Wanted: Dtld w Allw1 .....,., a.iol 11:30 U rKiflc Sollttlwut Tet1nb 1111 llN O..S CV Morit: (Cl "Mo11111bique" (dia) ....:it1 :,~ ~ :L ~ Vw.t '65-Steve Cocl'lran, Hlld111rd Nell. -~~ ·-· 0 Q) 00 ®l !ll ""'" ..... P'wfJt!i'" (dn) 56--0lldtoa HesioA. Md.tan Stevenson is 1urst ~ Anllt 8adtr. Gillert RCIJl•d. IJ fnctuud flickers ID A ,,.... " ...... ~ @Movie: "Double ktp11dr" (dra) r. Mormol Tebmeclt Otoir •nd ·~ cameron, Jack !(Illy, 9R 11om>n Youth ~ ·~ O Movie: (C) "Creatures If OU. a.. CllMblM for tllb 11*•11 hction" (hor) '68-las Tremayne. !3) 1'llE HELP OF pro- fessiona ls in the fi eld of public relations, advertising OllAMGE COUNTY AERIAL PHOTOS .. STOCI ACE AERIAL 830.2960 .._ • ~ cornpos11 ;••Mtrlust .... ~L 1 CJ) I]) CIS late Motle; (C) I .._. I l"Chltlf'a Will" (dn) '72 -~=======~~~~~;;;;;:;~:--------1l a..it 1llllt ... CW-(dr ) lie Crut. Jld! W1rden, E1rth1 ~itt. I 'G a-nu-... 1 le'C£~1tDFktio1TlM1trt U:tt 8 llffk: "M1ste1)' J1.u1ttlo11" .= '-'> 'Sl-$1dnty Taller, Barbara -...mm --• ..... ~tw-...i cll!•_lllMIC 1:118CD~llMe (CJ "'Lt. Stllllfo • ...,..._~....., ~ · .... _.. (4ra) 'n -lee Gant. -:~sr=·-111 ··-&• -!*ti . ....-111 ... Tllo,, ..... r.-•• · iJ' ~ ..-..: .., .,, «••f'J'I ""*' MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS -MERCEDES BENZ.- Sales • Service • Leasing 28701 MARGUERITE PARKWAY tt1; "-.. aa o • <-> ·sa g Ii£:".. ftCi. ..... Cltila, Sle· 4 5-1700 MISSION VIEJO 131-1740 ,..,..,.._ I ~~!!!'11 S.. °'*911 Fwy. to A•ery P'll•'f'· ••It, riqiht • M....,..nt. "" .... --(II>) ••• 1-~--.. .. c-m. ~..,........,. (41'1) ---AcM<t-.W ="iv$.:.-WhatDo~ Doctors Use ~ w;; t:;.i'tt' ·•-When They ~utter Pain And Itch ,;:"'t:;:/::t;".-; Of Hemorrhoidal '!issues? -Ell<lmi•• fornoull ti•ts prnmpt, ltmporary relief from Ill ~ -""l; .. ":f ..=' ...ii""" Incl i1ch in many cases. Helps shrink swtlling ~ --al htmorrfooidal tissues dut 10 inflammation. _.... ... , 111 1 Jw•fllfft'fltY,docton"tf91UlkMh many caw lrom pain. it.chint wr.t tlt-q ~ to ,.a_.,, •ut in hi!mnrrhoida\ tiuues. And il r------Ktd~;;;;:;;-------11 ~nft'ft ~ M•nY of the actuully helps 1hrin'lr. pnin(ul rfd to.,~ re,Otlinf Nie! th•)' ,_wf'lllnit: of8ut!h liA11ue1when ln- 1\ ' •tt tr tr•f' Ptep•r•tran JI ff'.'cit'd nnd lnftamOO. 'nl doctor· IMM""'lvf' "' itt 1hei r offi( lf'&l"Cll ,,,,.,,aralion II. There'• ~Nit' .,.. no._2!hl'r formu ln 1ikf' it. Aldrur hel)Al'ftf.nl'I ff pws prornpl, munlert rYICf)'where Oifltmitnl wW9"tt ry 1,.fl•I tor houra In nr a1,1pposltone.. • early Everyone tenS to Landers L. M. Boyd Mai·ijuana High Stays Witl1 You True, t.be science boys slill don 't know much about marijuana. But they do know that the drug therein is cumulative in the human body. It builds up. Steady usen, there fore, get h.ighcr quicker than those inei:perienced souls. Am advised it takes about a week for the body to burn out the active ingredients . NOTE THAT Mildred is listed oo one expert's roster of names moat disliked by American women. Too bad, il true. Social Security rolls show it to rank No. 9 among the most wide- ly used names of women. No. I amonr the most wklely used names of men is Frank. LIGHT EYES Medical specialists have verified the old contention that people with light gray, light blue Dr green eyes are more sensitive to glare than are people with bro'Ml eyes. They do indeed fita:ke better use of dark glasses. Q, "HOW LONG would it have taken the Pony Express ridm to relay race on horseback all the way around the world, pretending for the moment there were no natural barriers such as oceans and mo\Ultains and jungles?" A. About 30 days. THE NUMBER of female eggs required lo produce the next genttation of the human race could be contained within a hen's eggshell. I'm told. AJI the male sperm to fertllize said eggs would! amount in Iola! volume lo PO more than a grain or salt. Remarkable! ' THE HARD FACTS PlealO note, too, that three out of every to shotgun shells are fired al rabbits •.. HALF tht men and women who go Into sales jobs tither quit or get fired~ wtlhln two years ... IN THE TIME ii lakes you lo cooml off ~5 seconds, another car will bave crashed somewhere in this country. . UNDERSTAND nbout 60 basic appliances are now oq loo market. But only to were generally available back In Ille 1920s when your falhCT waa a lad. Ask tho old boy Co name same. He should list clolhes -washers, .ioves, vacu.!lfl\ cleaners, irons, tonsten 1 ret'r1gerators, bot plat.es, fans;itbhwa•oors and cloclrt, that's all. NO DOUBT you know that Downing Street In Lon· don i& Ille home 0£ the British government. Bui ...... you aware ll was na med after a member of the fil'll Harvard graduating class of 1642, Oeorgt Downing? Addrt11 "1011 to L. M. Bol/(I, P. o. Boz 1815, Ne JDo port Beacl• 11:1660. COt>llriOht 1974 L. M. 801/d ~~:o--~~~-I\_....,_...._ __ .._..,.__...~~ r I • "·. ,_ .. •• I • • •• I \ BRINGING REFINEMENT TO PRETZEL WASTELAND Lonny Feld Says 'Tho First On•'• Alw•y• Frff' Pretzel Plant Twist Dougli--1~ot Muscles HOUSTON (UPlt -Lenny Feld, a Conner chiropractor, has a new twist. The Brooklyn nativ~ is hr· in ging refinement to a virtual pretze~ wasteland throuo:h his Big Tex Pretzel Co. -"the only aolt pretzel factory in Texas." And to hear the former stu· dent, sailor and salesman tell It, bis ls the only such opera· tion from the Bayou City to St. Louis that actually makes the t wisted morsel on the premises. NOW 111AT'S SOFT pretzels, not the hard version, and there's a difference. "A hard pretz.el is baked longer." Feld said, standing next lo one of three red hot 0\'COS. "'Ibe story is that "!0- moone made a mistake a long ti me ago and let a soft protte1 b:ikc too loog. At least that's the lli'ay it's told." To clear up any confusion, soft pre tzels have the same crusty glaze as the more fantiliar one$, but they don't crunch so much in the middle. About 18 mooths a g o , regardless of the fact he had no eX'j)erience himself in the actual art of pr<tzel rooking. the 39-ycar-old Feld and a partner opened the factory and began educating Texa111 oo the finer points of the prelz.el trade. "At first our business was mo.stly Northerners a n d Easterners because they're tl!ed -to soft pretzels." Feld said. blending his "secret'' recipe or flour, water and yeast. "TO 111EM, IT'S nostalgia. When they're growing up. they have pretz.els on every street comer, e,·ery. school yard. We've met so many New Yorkers that we ha\•e a subway map on the wall for them because they sell pretzels in every subway sta- tion. "Thev all tell us the last lime they had one vtas on the subway. So we put the map up and they all mark otf where they had their last pretul." Feld estimates hair his custoplel'9 now are Texans. So .far, Feld has sold about 300,000 sort pretzeb t 0 customers at his s t or e , sporting events, s h o p p I n g centers and piai.ics. Those regulars and newcomers who come to the factory in an old suburban shopping center can watch the prelzef process from !he dough to the finished product. TllEY ALSO CAN laugh a lot \\'ith Feld and his wife , Linda -"I'm the twisting machine.'' "The first one is always on the house." he said. Coast Firm Gets Mine Hazard Bid Ultrasystems, I n c . of Newport Stach. anoounced that the Bureau of MlDC$ bas a\varded the corporation a $!39,608 contract to study the toxicity hazards which exist from materials used i n underground coa l m i n i n g operations . Studies ba\'e indicated that many miners ¥i'ho are killed in Wlderground m i n i n g dis.1sters die as a result of the inhalation of toxic fumes \li'lich are released from various materials which become overheated or are inl'olved in 1mdt>rgmund fires . The Bureau of ~1ines has intrnsified its r e s e a r c h progran1 in this area in 'an effort to evaluat~ the toxic properties of vemilalinn plpc-s, cable insulalioru. insulating roams, con'·cvor belts. 11.nd other materials used in the coal mines. Dr. Reinhold Kratzer and Dr. Kay P aci orek of U I t r a.systems profe53ional staU, who are directing the research program. arc two experts in the field of ftre safety and toxicitv. and both have been 1rorking on the problen1 of reducing t h e hazards to miners ror three years. Gas Supply l1nproves For Nation--Sawhill WASIIlNGTON (AP) -SUp- plies of gq>Jine have im- proved so much that price wars have broken out fn scat- tered parts al the country. But winter coal suppliers are precarious, federal energy ad· mlnlslralor John S.whlll says. The Conswner Price Index showed gaooli>t prices -oo • st.ally rise since the r ... 1 crisis and the Arab •mbargo last ytar.-dropped in AUi"'t to an average 55.4 cents for a fallon of i'egular lutl and if. !0< premium. That ropresented a drop ol elghNenth s ol I pemn! for rei'Jlar end slx·tenlhs for premium fuel. Tho Bureau of Labor StlUstics. report said prices for motor oil also dodlned In Augu.i. bot thal the cost of electricity and cool went up. Sawhill warned in a !<levlslon lnt•rvlew tho! coal "inventories arc at dangerous- ly low levels" and that "the consequences are going to be ve.ry diffiC'Ull" if the United !\1me Workers carry oot a threatened nal~nwlde strike this lall. On the other hond, he said, the home heating oil supply for the winter looks "quite good.'' In Piltsborgh, long lines o( motor ists "'ai tcd at llocco ?1-1inetti's Exxon gas ltation to fill up at 49.9 ctrits a gallon. Angry compelliors. •It h pr;lces 3-' mlich as 1.lx cents higoor , a gallon, tried lo disrupt l>lsinest by ollertn 1100 bUls !or II worth J gasoline and demanding bat. tery and oll checks and O(htr services, Dut Minettt Mid busiflt'SS Wi\s up 50 percent since he dropped prlc.~ Sawhill said thll~ tho FE~ bad reports or gas Price war1 north of Loo Angeles, In Ta,,,. pa, Fla . , and Dcnv~, Colo .. I- • 0 ( ! I .. , 12 DAILY PILOT Deprogram ' Expert Indicted SEATTI.E (AP) -A federal grand jury has indicted a man "'ho said he wanted to be pr;osecuted so be l!ou.ld explain tbe imporlanee-cf-tw.t--wor-k Theodore Roosevelt Pa trick Jr. of San Diego was charged with kidnaplng a member oC a Seattle-based religious sect known as Love Israel. Monday, Stptembtr ?:J, 1974 THE FAMILY CIRCUS By Bil Keane Dead Son Tried • To Quit "'."" Mother SANTA ROSA (UPI) -1be in a shallow grave on the mother of a Fiureka man Samoa Peninsula at Humboldt whose headless remains were Bay Nov. 11, 1972. found in a dlallow grave has testified Chai her son wu DISTRICT ATTORNEY trying to nee from the drug William Ferroggiaro said in culture just before he dlsap-an opening statement to the peared three years iago. seven-man, five-woman jury Aotrs. Susan Mtre,,eli was that Rombough's IS-year-old called In the murde!-trial o! girl friend, a runaway from Clayton Rombough. 41. Grants Pass, Ore.. would testify that she was with ~ THE INDICTMENT con-SHE SAID SHE last saw boogh When he made a visit tends he took Kathe her sm, Eddie Leon KinJ, to King's grave. Crampton, known as Dedica-._~--_ ... oo Nov. 14, 1971 and that Ferrogglaro said the girl tion Israel within the sect, he had about $800 on him told him tlujt Rombaugb to California in 1973 to when he said, "They won't returned from the grave site "deprogram" her. let me stay here. I've got with an item in a pillowoose Patrick, a former com-lo_ go." • which she later saw was a WE QUOTE PRICES OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME CHICKTHESISUPllSIJ.ISHCIALS-.._.._ 0..1 .. ,... .. ,..... LISTERINE: Anti septic. 32 oz. $2 .. 65 $1 .990 s:·~: KERI LOTION . 61" OL 2.40 2. 1 • BRUT "'33 "' Splash-on, 7 oz . 2.75 2.35 1.6;. Intensive Care BATH OI L BEADS ' 1.29 1.09 • 2700 E. Coast Highway at Fernleof, Corona del Mor mtmity relations consultant to "I ca n't take a nap today - Kittycot's usin' my bed.'' KJng's remalns were found skull. -~·-~~~~~-'-~-'-~~-=-~~~-,.'..~~~~~::.::....:..:::::==-..:..:::.::...:.:.=:=-===-~~~~~~~__:.:_:__:_.:._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ California Gov. Ron a 1 d ,- Reagan, claims deprogram-,......,.,,...,.....~...,,'""!'.11"''!1".~"'. -on!M'';g'!"'"!' ming restores the free will :I .. ()( a victim of "ESP mind control ," the indictment says. Patrick told the grand jury ESP mind control is .ia men- tal energy that comes from the brain waves out through the eyes and fingertips; ... -the government said . PATRICK THIS vea r wrote ' t.iir;:;T=i= U.S. Alty. Stan Pitkin that 11:·01,;i.~~'. ~ would wek:ome prosecution , as a chance to explain the imoortanee of his work. ~' Patrick qper .. tes a 4~ depro~~ center near 1 .San Diego. He says it is ~ 'designed to encourage • members of religious sects to t. ·return ~o their families. HE HAS CONCEN'111ATED his attentions on the Otiktren of God sect, the Tony and Susan Alamo Christian Foun- dation of Saugus, Calil., the Hare Krish1a Movement and the ·New Testament 1 Missionary Fellowship. Patrick recently was ac- QUitted of criminal abduction charges in New York and sentenced last June in Denver to..,,.. days In jail on similar charges. ' STIPPlllG . ·. ···' . • .-'' .... ?!!"!!-20'0 _...,,,... . 0111 ,_,......,__ . --·--..,.._..tL ALL SIZES! .. Leopard ~ystifies A_ttorney JALLSAU! DENVER (lie!) -Joe Taft's lawyer said be doe911't know why bis dient keeps a messy, antisocial, 81).potmd leopord nomed Taka around the &om.~ -. 111 guess he enjoys It," said Greg 'N>betts, "like some peo- ple liloe to Ii"'!> dogs." TIBBETTS IS representing :raft in a suit filed by tile Tafts' former I a n d I o r d s, Jooepb and Mldlael Cavalert The brothers are demanding $400 In boct rent and 13,344 In damages to a house Taft rent· ed in Coal Creek Canyon. Taft moved oot of the house witOOot paying the 1 a s t mort!h'• rent and leaving b<llllxl "use and abuse heyood normal wear ..and tear," ac- cording to the Sirtt. "I DON'T FEEL the suit was warnnted," 1lbbetts said. •'Taft said the house was ,, in poor condition when he got "Foll ls·Th• Tim• To " Improve Your Lown! ht Okho;Mlra IUPIR'BOllUS • (oolroh• ..... _,_ ...... .-ws. •---"-•61 'r, ·11P--2590so.n.·s129 5 llG. 115.tS for Gf'OIS LawM PLU52 _.. • ( .... els•a1l11i111, ......... , ... , NICOi.\.\' .;t.:.-.......... -- saooso.n. S 1495 RIG. '1'.95 there." ' Taft bought Taka, a female, J\!{--;--"'"-'7~m, while visiting fr~ i n • Florida, and tamed the animal him11elf. Last Oc!Dber, the 2·year-<>ld Taka Jeaped from a window while Taft was taking a shower and jwnped oo the hood of a passing car. Taft's neighbors pressured au· '4 ttmltles to get rid of Taka. · Bui as Jong as the leopard stayed in the house, officia1s eom;.i...i., r;,,;,hed BOSTON ROCKER o[ tbe Jefferson COunty at- torney's offlce said, the)• were powerless to act. . ____ ,..., .. 20 Cents For Call? ATLANTA (UPf) -The phone company has asked pennlssioll to raise the coat of a call from a pay phone to 20 cenlB, and to charge 20 cents every time a user has to ask !or a phone number he i!oetn'l kllow. It's part ol a requ..t by Southern Bell to the Ge!ni• Public Service CoouniOllOll rar 1n 181.5 mllllon rate lncre!se. I ' • ......... • ·~ts. •"""""'k••••"' MlfS .. ' ...... , .. ,,,.. ........ .~;526'5 J "Lets You Enjoy The Outdoors Year 'Round!" • 2•-..;,i, pnels -.-'"'patio & """it .., •• '"' .......... ,..., liYing ..... · • C.lorf.I '""""'."°"loss'"'' t• illshlH ond easy to IMinhlin. , • Fl'. llG. '4.lt ' ' 49 3 Tier Redwood HANGING PLANTERS • !J: liH rHw.M ,,....., -••ends••• ...... _..,. _ _,,. --L • lltW ........ w; ......... """"'- llG.$499 "·" PIANIS llOT INClUDIOI ID ff. llG. ''·" 49 121T. llG. 1t.4t "Just Alri'l•d - A Freslt, #ew Crop o' Grade A-r Germolns lulbal'' Special Soringst FALL BULB SALE! • Gt.•"4,. ., ••. • ,... ... MW fer I (tltmf .... .. ,d .... , .. ,,... .. 3 c IANUNCUlUS (a llG. S· • 9c 1 .. ...... lfr ... DAffODllS llG. ro• 49 WROUGHT IRON · GATES • • ~Mf.r "-'er.tiff.,..,,.. ir.._ ' M ...... """'' 91' ........ '1999 30" x 30'' RIG. '23.n JO" I 41" '2199 RIG. '26.n • 36'' 130" '2099 RIG. '2S.n J6'' I 41" ~2699 RIG. '31.n . ' sh th q ar M w le po he th • de I< co dr sh ln • ra ... wl m ~ ... . . • • Help Sought for Women's Shelter By LAURIE KASPER Ot lM o.u, POtl ~tf tr 11 place orrerlng emergency sheller to women were opened in this county, It would be run as quickly a s -the word could get around, according to Liane Meadows. The Irvine resident, a director 0£ Women's Transi tional Uvlng Cen· ler which is beginTllng to lncor· porate as a nonprofit organization, would like to see a shelter opened here as a pilot project. · One place won't be enough to fill the need, she said, but it will be enough to prove it. Then, she hopes, additional ~heltcrs W<>uld be established by and for the various communities in the county. Women whose husbands have abused them .._Ol' their children or lell them and the ehildren with no money would be among those fil· ling the shc lt~r. Ms. Meadows said. NOTUNIQUt: Although seldom heard or. bea tli1lS or wom·e-n and children •are not unique, explained Maureen Hardy. another director. Answers to a questionnaire they have been distributing have revealed some ''tragic situations,'' she explained. e ' Su ch situtttions are not confined to· lower income groups either, she said. It's just that when it Involves a "pillar of the community," the problem is kept quiet. A woman may s uffer through a sltuBlion, they said, because she has no whe re to go or because she believes she has failed in some way. But A.ts. Meadows believes that i( the woman were given a place to go with the children, it may help eliminate resulting problems, as juvenile delinquency, drug nbuse, and alcoholism, which later s ho\V up in police statistics. A shelter, she contends, wouldn ·1 be as costly, either in te rms or dol- lars or human values, as being without it. Victims or rape would also welcome a shelter, the women ~aid. Noting that m a ny women live alone, Ms. Meadows said a rape victim may not wa nt to return im· m ediately to her home, because s he fears the rapist may return or just because she needs to be with someone else. She asked, "'Where do you send this woman?'' bccuuse there is so little available inthccounly. CITE EXA~IPLE The won1 en use Pasadcna,!f Haven llouse as an example:-"dl' what they'd li ke to see devctopE!d'jn· this county. -· .• That facility has six cottag~s. each with a kitchen. Security iS As- sured and a counselor is on duty at all hours. It also has ·received ··ran· tasti c s upport" rrom the com· munity, police, politicians and a local hospita l, they said. Althoug h it ~·as c losed fo r awhile. i'la\•en i'louse reopened and was full within a few days. One of the ~·omen, who went there with several child ren. was from Orange County, Ms. i'lardy said. They envision a shelter here as being two two-bedroom houses and two three-bedroom houses. \\'om en would be allow1._'<.I to stay only three to four Wl'Cks. enough time to talk Yt'ith a counselor. seek a job or vocation<.1 1 training. talk to the welfare department and decide what other options are available to them. BEA ANDERSON, Ednor ......... ,.,..~ll,1t14 Ratlines are great for the im- mediate crisis, she said, but they o[fer lilUe in the way of "backup'' There would be a limit to the number or limes a person could return. "1£ a person comes b~ck three times , I think it's reasonable to ass ume this per son is not dealing with a lire ~ituation ," Ms. r.1eadows said. ' Group discussions help problem-solving. At right, G{nny Hughes (background) and Nancy Plevin , members of the Orange County Chapter of MOM MA , discover they are not alone in facing similar situations. Scotty Hughes (background) seems preoccupied as Chad Hughes (left, forepround) and Nina Plevin get acquainted. NINA PLEVIN (LEFT) AND CHAD HUGHES PLAY • I '· 'For many women, this would be the beginning of responsibility and it might be the beginning of not being totally powerless. The person would be there to solve whatever problems she has. She \\'OU!d have: to decide lo adju!it lo her situation or change it, she said. "For 1nany wom en, this would be the beginning of responsi bility and it might bf'_ the bt>~innin g of not b<'ing tot a I ly powl·rless." Neilhl•r uf these \\•orrien were aware of the need for a shelter a fc\v months ago. 1'hey "-·ere only :-cckin g a luc<.1tio n \\'hi ch would serve as a n1cctinE! 1>l~1ce for !he Orange Count y C:huptcr or the Nationul Ori!a nization for \\/omen and as a \\lo nlen ·~ center. DISCOVER ED INTEREST 1'hey soon discovered. however, "a great many of the \vomen "'ere not talking about a '''omen's cen· t~r." l\l s. l\leado\\'S explained. "'1'hey were t a lki ng about a sht'ller. After going to \·atious count,_· agcnciC's and organizc,itions. the~· learned therl' ,\·as no soch plare. ·r1n.•re are onl\' shelters fu r men. homes for prl"inant, un"•ed ~·oung \\'Omen, and rt-h abilitalion centers for drug addirts and alcoholics. But thC' women did di sco,·er ml:lny people \\:ere interested in their irJea. It's bet.•n suggested that they seek revenue sharing funds ttwo shrltcrs ha,·<' been opened in San llicgo thi s \Vay) or write a proposal fnr a grant . \\'hat they'd really J))te to rind is more support and pedf>l e cibl e and \\'jJling (O find £unding. · In the meantime, they will con· tinue talking and trying to help those women who come to them in search of assistance. MOMMA Embraces NeW Family Circle • I By ALLISON DEERR l)j IM ~HW Pll .. SU" Chad Hug tie s, 3. t earfully demanded a Band·Aid for his 1craped knee. His brother Scotty, 5, interrupted conversation sporadically with a drumbeat o n the metal book shelves. Nina Plevin. just a year old, slept Jn her mother 's arms. then padded around the room in her pajamas. They are children or single women heads uf households. The fact thaL the group meet..i; at all reflects some basic problems racing these women and many lik.e lllem. A nucleus or active members in the fledgling Orange County Chap· ter, MOMMA , Inc., orfcred their leel.,,gs on the problems OC women ralstt.1 children a lone. MOMMA ls open to single Women-separated, divorced , widowed. n ever mar ried. ,The majority at this mcetin~ are divor- ced, withal least one child. Karen Pence, Costa lrtesa, has a 3-year-old son. Carsten. ''I wanted to meel with women in the satne situation that I'm in, with the same kinds of problems." OTHER GROUPS She had been to other singles groups , but felt that the single mother has some fairly unusual problems. ' Ginn y Hughes, acting chairwoman or the new group, had one child a nd was pregnant with the second when she became single again. • She and Nancy Plevin or Costa Mesa, chapter secretary, listed " child care as the top priority. Vicki Davidson, whose childrcl\ arc 11 and 12. recalled the rirsl day she was single again. "J opened my door In Fountain Valley, looked across lhat expanse of green lawn ond thought I must be lhe only single woman In ihc whole com· · t>lex. - We have to do a lot of things we never had to do before, . . · 'such as car and household repairs ••• acquiring credit ••• ' •• Isolation, lack of child care, and the vicious cycle or work, home, work, home, with no chance to gel out is a common prob lem, the group asserted, Ms. Davidson, a UCI graduate . Student in _usvch-Olostv. explained that the OC cha pter hopes to develop a switchboard referral system to orrer information to county single women. "Orange County is so spread out, resources ate so scattered that single women .are at a loss as to where to begin. Other groups, such as the Nationa l Organization for Wome n, have offered lo help us as well." COOPERATION The Youth EmpJoymentSc.rvices and Big Brothers of Orange County also have been s upportive. "'E s pecially Big Brothers because they work directly with women who are raising their children without a husband,'' said one member. "BuL I feel that the community at 1arge is becoming more sensitive lo the pr oblem s or c hildren in one-parent hom<!s and what kind of people they are going to grow UJl to be." Goals of MOM MA, a. notional orcanlzaUon headquartered In Los Allgeles where. It was rormed In \ 1,1{ t.farch or 1972, a re: equal nglis~ and opportu nities for si n-g\lf parents throug h lcgis l a-tive change: education· of the public that the single lifestyle is viable and to be respected. Child care and related medical and legal support services, low interest gove rnme nt g rants for education a nd employ m e ri.t r esource centers are other objectives. ''We ha ve had a hard time' getting the group going." said Ms. •lughes. "because it is hard to get f n touch with many single mothers.'' ''Some a re just plain worn out al ni gbt. Dul we chose to meet in the evenings because most are working a nd tor going to school." added P..ls. Davidson. "They go to work, usually in a r'outine, tiring. low-paying job. then come hom e to the kids and the housework. Then, it's back to work again. "Snon they get so exhausted they hC1ve lo g o o n disability. then w Ira re, then back to work again. · SOCIALSTIG~IA Gi nny llughes, under 30, reels that m a ny s ingle women "'llh rhildren arc stamped with a s<>clu l sllgma: "Every man you mcel thinks, 'Aha! Another woman out to catch a husband.' l don't blame them, some wom en arc, but not all ol us want to remarry." I The g roup is looking £or a central meeling location, pre£erably rrce "ith adeq uate rooms. The next meetings \viii be held at the Yl\·ICA. Santa Ana. The~' are at 7:30 p.m. on the first and third A1ondays of e:1l·h month. Along with )('gal, m edica l, welrare a nd related information, the group. hopes to offer som~ practical help for single mothers. .. We have to do a lot of things we never had to do berore," said Karen Pence. •·s uch as car and household r epair and acquiring credit." "And ." added r.'ls. J.lughes, "£or a year :tfter my divorce my car Insurance went up. because l was a 'high risk."' Additionally. there are the problems or collecting child support. rwts. Pence, who was "'arried al 18 and divorced after eight years, n1entioned another tryin~ question -what do you tell your childrf!n when they com e home rrom school ~ind ask where Daddy is"? · DECISION·~IAKING For the £irst time. the group said,' they ure lhc derision·maker. While married. they did not, or were not a ll owed to, m ake important decisions . "Perh:lps the best thin~ we can do. together, I~ to make life easier ror ei1c h other,'' l'IBl d ttt s. Davidson. '1So many 0£ us , especially at the begi nning, feel so isolated, so alo ne. We don't think we'll be able to survive." OC ~TO!\ll\TA is compiling a non -sexist reading li st ror mothers and child ren. a nd hope£ully a lending library. r~uture meetings will offer lectures lo help members jn thei r par~rrting roles. · "\Ve hope, as we grow and get better organized, to break into regional groups, in cities and eventually neighborhoods to help each other out.·' There are at least seven million single v.'omen heads of households in the C()Untry, 11 nd the number has increased one million since 1960. accordinj? to the U.S. Census Bureau. Ourfng the same period, the number JJf divorced, separated and never married v.•omCn increased. "'hile wido"'s heading households declined. And, in that decade, median income ror the female he:id or household dee Hned s lightly while mean for the a\'Crtige head oC household rose. · ··w e hti\'(' to be recogni zed through legislation and we think that women, loi.tclher. can make it happen." l\tOA-1 t\tA o£ficers can be reached by calling 834 -3827, 64~9082 or 52!!·4767. or by writing MOMllll. e /o Nancy Plevin, 11118th 511-eet, Costa Mesa, CA. 92627. l I I ' • • .. • • I i DAILY PILOT Monday, Septembef 23. 1974 ! t • 1 .. Who's Real Loser? ' ~ O~:AR A NN 1.ANl)t,:JlS: ~I v : husband and I wl II cclt·hr<ih: nu'r : lpth J\'$i>dd1Jit annlversury in ''''o t months. i ( I can stick uround thut 1 long. ~ 1'he pro blem is his gambling. I eel like a \\'idow. lie is eitht•r out playing c :irds, betting the horses. ---"~t ll hoc:k~y gume.-or-il': roolhiJll. or hasch<1ll ;,inything where he can lu y dn,vn a hl'L \Ve ha,·c no lire l<igethtor be~ause his only interest ls gambling and I hale it. \Ve a rc sno\\'ed under "'ith hlll:,. I'm aJraid to ans wer lhe telephone f,)r the d oorbell. It's "cush only" at ~he grocer's now, ulso the drug. toilore and the dry cleaners wh ere ii.•c used to ha\'e charge accounts. It's humiliating not to ha\'C uny tredit. ; l\1y husband didn't gamble "'he n ,...e "'ere first m arril'CI.. It started itbout four years ago \1:hen he "'On ft the lr<Jc k und then he picked up $200 on°' world chumpionship fight. Now gambling is his "'hole life o.nd l'm a nervous "·reek because or il. .)..ly doctor says I have every ri ght ;to d\vorct> him. \Vho.t is your ud · !''ice? -ODDS AGA INST ME ! DEAR F,RI ENO: Appare nl ly ~ou ha\•en'l heard ol Gamblers OA nonymous. They ha\'e done a ;tema rkable job of rehabiUlallng I . ' . • l Ann Landers eompulsL\'.e..-gam bJe_r.s_w.bo _h_ad heen hooked for years. Al present (;A has 250 chapters in the V.S. and Canada and.around the world. Look in your phone book under Ga mblers Anonymous. U they are not li sted, "'rile lo the National lleadquarlers for ll leralure. G1\ has helpt>d many ran1ili~s through correspondence. The address Is: P.O. Box 17173, Los Angeles 90017. for "'i\'es whose husbands wori 'I i o -lhl"re i.'li Gam ·Anon, which I heartil.}' rl"commend. DEAR A1'N LANDERS : My gripe: Parents. Kids and Good· night Ki sses .. Our rriends ha,·(· three lo\'ely childrl'n. The mother in sists that the kids kis:it e\·cryone in the roon1 "good· night " before they go to bed. ll makes no dirference ir they arc S('eing th e people for the first limt.•. l::\'eryhody ha s to get slobbered on. One kid doesn't c<:ire much for kissing a nd it 's a lv"ays a hassle 1.0 g~I >tl.m. l!1J!o i I. 1'he olher l \l.'O use tl ~s a stulling tt•r hnique .-- \Vi II yuu pl l'Ull l' shal'C' l'our thoug hts on thl·~ subjcet '! A GAINST FREE ·FOHM OSClLATJON J)F.AR AGAINST: I think it's sweet whe n children kiss tht>ir 11arenls goodnight, and an,.ont• els(' lht'y feel like kissing. llut to hassl(' the little darlings lo kiss slrangtrs tor C\'l'n re lall\·!'s l if they don't fel'I likr ii isn't a good id l'a. .\s for those o\·ertimt> smOO<'hC'rs "'ho are t rying to stay up latrr. they should ht> told, "One kiss only -and orr to bed.'' Pt•riocl. f)o \'llU ll't•I ;i\\'k\\·~rd . :-it•ll'·Cflll · :-.c·1ou:-' lont.·I~"~ \Vclcon1t• tn tht• 1·luh . 'J'ht'rt··s hl'IP for \'OU in ,\nn ·Landers' booklet , "The Key to Popularit.v." St•nd 35 cents in coi11 \\'ith ~·our l'l''I Ul.'St <1 nd u lon g. sl ~n1 · pcd. self -a ddrt•sst•d en\'elop(' to t\nn L.:1nders. P .0 . Box 3J.16.,2'l2 \\'. Bank Dr .• t'hir;.1go. 111. 6065-l I I I Nuptial Vows Recited ( • ' : . " • GREEN-VERNON Susan Ann Vernon a nd Roger Green were married during riles performed by t he R ev. Dr. Charles Dierenfield in St. Andrew's P resbyterian Church, Newport Beach. T heir pare nts are the !\tr. and l\1rs . Arvin Bruins of Windsor , \v as attended by Kathy Bruin s. Be st man was Rick Harrod. The new l yweds will reside in Bellf!Ower. She is a graduate of Warren l·ligh School. Downey. Y.'hile he is a n a lumnus of Ne"'port Harbor ~ligh School . Sails To Go On Sale ' Another rummage sale. ho hum . But wail. Check the list of dis cards that \viii b(' awaiting ne\v homes. This isn't a rummage s ale but a bargnin ba sen1 e nt for boaters. 'fhat·s the message the UC l Sailin g Associat ion hopes to get out before the Suturday and Sunduy. Oct. 5·6. s ale begins at the sailing basin. 1801 \V. Coast l·li~h ,va y in NC\\'port Beach. A mo n g th e more in · teresting items, according to Carl Reinhart. are an 18· ro'ot Aus tralian racing I t I r. • I I din g h y named the 'l'elegraph <.ift cr its rornlt't' s ponsor. no Aus tralian ll C\\'spaper; 60-80 ca~ of antifoulin g 1>a iot: Dar ron s:lils: nc11· t1,·o-n1an in· flatab\e llf!' rafl s: a sex· tant :~c o mpa ss : ll·foot plastic paddleboards and ~ boatS\\'a in 's chair. Thert' ure also a hand printing press. \\'Cl suits, a f>O\\'C'I' drill. ski boots. h;1nd tools. stop "·atch and other items fo r tholle not so n auticall.v minded. For t hose interested in the more ll'aditional kind of rummage tdi:i;hes. knic k knacks and clolht>s). there "·i ll be 1n erl0 hand 1se l o c hoos e fro m, R t•i nhart promis('d. Sale hours are 10 a.m. to5 p.m. both days . A nyonl~ \\'ishing to don:1t e ;1dditional it en1s n1ay call th t: s ai ling association at 833·5846 for pil·k·Up. All proceeds \\'ill bC' chan· neled back into the sa iling prog ram. \\'hlch includes in· st ru c t ion. r eC'rt>ational sailing a nd the \'arsity team . \\'hic:h is ra ted fifth in the nation this year 'f he Ul:I s ailor s \\'e re l>~cific Coa st champs in 1973 <ind 1974 <lnd were nauona l champions in 1972. ;l · Richard Colmon Vernons of Newport Beach and the J oseph Chester Greens or Costa Mesa. The bride , a 1968 Children's Home Society debutante, is a graduale or Newport Harbor High School-and attended Orange Coast <::'ollege. GARNE R-BESKE J a mes Raymond Gamer, son of the James A. Garners of Newport B~ac h , claimed Shaunee n f\1 arie Beske as Clothes Ma·ke the Land • rl· his brJde du~g a garden Suiting Everyone, an wedding ceremony conduc· exhibit tracing 200 years of ted at .t~e Pomona home of American clothing, Opened theP~1~1pSwansons. Saturday, Sept. 21, in the Something for .Everybody a nd earl~ versions of Eli presents the variety or· \\'hil aey 's cottq,n gin. good s offered in t~e past 50 v.·omen who did so much to make American clothing a t r ademark around the world." h' •. Her husband is a graduate of Tustin High School and the University of California, Santa Barbara. Orf1c1ant was the Rey. Smithsonian 's National Donald ~hock~ey • chaplain lttuseum of History and In· years. Srdithsdnian costume curator Claudia Kidwell ! ,. • MRS.GREEN MRS. PRINGJ..E Honor attenda nts were Mrs. Robert Lewis and Michael Roane. ~.the Un1vers1ty of Redlan· dustry. Thebride,daughteroflhe The exhibit, which \\'ill Art.hur R . Beskes o f t our the country. nex t Upland , was attended by s pr i n g, is a multi - lt1rs. Swanson. disciplinary effort, the Other displays feature said, •i ''Jlbe social as "·ell as tools of the textile industry economiC ev...olution of. the including Samuel Slater's United State~ can be traced original spinning machine j n1 large mtasure through ~, , . ·I fastjion, and, Production· \ technique1 of the ~nation's A catalog supplementing the exhibit can be pur· c ha sed through th e Smithsonian Bookstor(' and the U.S. Government Prin· ting Orfice, t itled, Suiting Everyone: Th(' D e m ocratiza t ion o f Clothing in America. Others were the Mmes. Kenneth Schlocker, Milton Reimers, Donald Craig and . J.1ichael Kuhn, Ann Storch, Connie Green, Hilary Crow, Jack Tompson. Geofrry Best man was David Hall res ult of two years or and ushers were Swanson research by the institution·s and Richard Beske. curators of cosl\Jm e, lex'., East Indian clothing it!jlustr~. · . • •·our exh1b1l is a tnbute tu the thousands of men and • tiles and mili~ary history. Materials iWho's Who ' ' Now? . Cronk, Richard Vernon Jr .. The bride is a graduate or Upland High School and the Universit y of R e dlands where she earned a music degree. The foUr -part display ·E'· b. b ; · d features dolhing galh!~ed · X _ J .I te .. -60NDON (UPI) -When ' v•idow Isabel Johnson wed v.'idower Tom Baillie the family relationships were complicated. T"·o of Mrs. Johnson's sons are martied lo Bail· lie's two daughters. So she will become mother·in·l<iw to her own sons, he will' become father-in-law lo his own daughters and the : couple's children wil l become step·brothers and step-sisters. "\Ye're sti ll trying to work out where· it leaves· other mem be r s o r th e ramily,''they said. Your Horoscope Schlocker, Robin Hanvelt and Rnhflrt 1.ewis. PRINGLE·BRUINS . Pace E. Pringle of Bel· !flower, son of Mrs. William Callaway or Costa Mesa. claimed Diane Bruins as his bride during nuptial rites in Las Vegas. The bride . daughter or H e r husband i s a graduate of Newport Har- bor Hi gh School. Orange Coast Co llege and the U or R where he also received a music degree. They will live in Redlands . from Cal1forn1a to Maine on a nationwide appeal. Part one , Clothing for Somelx>dy, cOntrasts elegant 18th cen· tury wealthy costlimes "'ith the more utilitarian garb of the masses. The next t"·o sections. Eas·t lndiap designer Douglas R am Samuj "'ill present a collection of hand· crafted fabrics Thursday through Sunda y,.Sept. 26·28 from 2 to 4 p.m . in the Bui· lock's, South Coast Plaza. Virgo: Be Diplomatic Clothing ror Any body and Clothing for Everybody, trace the ready -made clothing industry from 1800 to 1920. On display in the fabric department "'ill be silk, chiffon, velvet, voile a nd "'ool challis in a \'ariety or colors and prints. LPHA EXPLAINED Tuesday, S~ptember24 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES <fi1arc h 21-April 19): Conflict could exist bet· ween career and home. Key is to be inde pendent, not ar · rogant. Express love for those who depend on you. But also insist on being yo urself . o f u ti lizing creative abilities. VIRGO IAug. 23 ·Sept. you wait for other shoe to 22 ): Frie nds dis ag ree drop. ~1edical appointment among each o ther. Don't · could be on agenda. You ·get caught in middle. Be. also ~·isil one confined to calm, diplomatic. lmprove home, hospit al. MEW CLASSES MOW FORMING !! • Peace of Mind• Prosperity • Success • Motivation• Re18.x ·All you t •tr w..tff to kHW ORd ask: disco•tr yo ur own d omestic situation. PISCES (Feb. 19·March · this txcithMJ. wbjKt; .,_,. altotit it MOW!!! LIBR A !Sept. 23 -oct. 22 ): Be selective. Refuse sec- ond·best -stick to quality. Security is highlighted -· you find way to close loopholes. SCO RPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. ••• TAU RUS (A pril 20-~tay 21): Refuse to be part of 20): J-lold off on unne~s· wild goose chase. Stop scat· sary journey. F a mily com· tering yo ur ~rforls. Older m l t m en t s h o u Id b e individual will lend benefit ·seriously cons idered. Some of e xpe riellce if you are concessions are in order -receptive. l m ake them without aban· · 201 : You may be confu sed about supposed emotional commitmen t . Ney is to socialize, to relax from r outine , to accept in· \'itations. to change µa ce and scenery. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIR· TflDAY you are repetitive. sens itive, ha\·e a bility lo teach a nd possess compel· Hn g voice. \'ou become more in· dependent and have outlet for cr eative abilitie s . Taurus, Libra persons pl<iy significant roles in your life. ·You could gain joy through ·music. • Meditation with Control • Healing of Self..:..Project to others • Develop a positive attitude • Mental Houseclea ning 8 WEEKS • 545.00 • 1 P.M. & 8 P.M. • MEW MATERIAL EACH WEEK • \ M....,Hlnl fr.., CHRIST CIRCLE CENTER SUITE 223 Ph: 642 -2320 & 979 -6644 488 E. 17th St. (above beauty shop) COST A MESA cloning princ iples. SAGl'ITARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): F inish rather than i GEMI NI (~1ay 21·June begin -find better \vays of J 20): Highlight \'ersatility. advertising, d istributing J There are some \\'ho get product . ·Money picture is rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~;:~4~~~i~i~ii~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~ii~~~=~~fl not what it appears on sur· jealous when you laugh. face . Additional infor· 1Continuetoexhibibtsensclo! mationis requircd . NO MORE PAIN • 1 f.Jhumor. Refuse to e bul ied AA' r._.tntoemotional s ubmiss ion. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22. DUE TO ZIN . -Cw. .., Jan. 19 1: Cycle is such that IR CANCE R (June 21.J uly yo u you overco me ob-ARTHRmS, RHEUMATISM 0 BURSITIS! 22>: Patience becomes all y.: stacles. including those in NEW/ l'OWERFULI EFFECTIVE/ AMAZING I PAIN RELIEVING DISCS WEAR IN SHOES! If you .don't k now, do lega l area. You may find l nothing . Heavy r~s pon· that partner, mute has com· Yes. it is true. you cin now get rellef from the everhday pain. stiltneu and sWe111ng due to sibility should-not be cause plaints. Mhritit. Rheumalism ind Bursitis. No Pills! No Shols! No Lolionsl All You do is wear our for 1loom. Take t ime to p:JMWti; ZIN-COP t.m. metal disc:s! Many people gel rellel in 2 weeks or less! ~betome familiar with in· AQUAR IUS (Jan.20-Feb. ~tric11tedctaits. 18l: A1uch that occurs is • quiet. subdued in sense that LEO <July 23·Aug. 221: Changes in ba s ic procedures are indicated. cre.t messages could be· n agenda . Som eone is rylng to Impart message in bt.Jeway. " " ,.,.,, ....... ~•4f.l7tl .................... J7to • ' A ,, , cmon'S SPORTSWEAR DOCTOl'S REl'ORT OM RESEARCH! "'A conuolled group ol 38 patktnls, 111 prevloualy diagnosed as having eill'ler Osteo Arthritis or /Jo.l.e Rhellme!Oid Arthritis. were instructed to wear Zin-Cop dlsca. Of the 38 patients. 29 reported good to excellent response In the remission of the Arthrllle smyptoms. I mu.st ll!Y tta I know of nothing that has produoed or can produee•tM aignilleant results shown in tn1a ,._,a.,.._ Doctor report & lest senl on reque_t!. nSTIMOHIAL! Arthf'itia had greattY impaired the use or my knees. I have used Zin-Cop diacs lhe past 3 m::intN. Improvement was felt after the first 2 wHka. I felt it was wishful thinking. bul after 3 rronthl of ute. I know now Iha! the metal disca are wnolty responslble for tne 1mP1iatie ~end relief in my knees. J.D. lrviM. C.111. 30 DAY MONEY IACK GUARANTEE Ma 00" I*! .... t 11,1 ......... e.111. J'MIOflll• MCI t'A wi.111~ °'9cllt MOftltY'Or!lln ~, NdC 0 o:" PkM9e rush me your Zin-Cop Discs _,pt. $6.00 -2P<. 510.00 . I , ... c., ,,o .... ,. . I ._ • .i-.c.111.tu25 '"°""~-~~~~-~~-­, ...... ·~~~~~-~~·-~-I City ----Sla!•---·-Zip ----., _____________ !"' ___________________________ ~. J FABLED FURS for fun, fashion and decorating Sew them yourself and •ave. Ask our Fabri c Con•ultanb for easy ..wing and foshion tip•. lAMB·LIKE SHEARLING .... to 5.00 2'! SpMW LOW price .. Wfli Looks like curly lamb wool. Sew 1 f'leety jacket or cape • trim your gloY8s and hat. l ine a Crushed Velvet COii. Mechine-washable Acrylic oife- Cdton back. 60 .. wte. FG·a reg LOW prioe3.98. SEAL SKIN LOOK Values to 7.00 5t1 yd . Ready for fashion -ready for fun! Sew 1 sltek t0ft COit lor fall. Decorate Your f1mllv room. It'• machine Wllhlble Acrylic pile-Cotton Nck. 80" wide. FG'1 reg. LON price. CRUSHED VELVET Values to 5.00 Sew a awir1ing ·cape or blttte Jtcqt and tine with ~Ing. lt'a great for reuphotttetlng furniture, 100. Med'li"9-W9Shable 50% Poty-50% rayon, ••C91tent eotor -... --.FG'oregLOWPRJCE. • ' LAGUNA BEACH • NEWPORT BEACH . JOF<o•ltlo- 271 Fenti•••· Open Mon .. Fri. 10-9:30 p.m pen Mon.-Sal. 9-5:30 Sal. 10-6 p.m. l Sun. 12·6 p.m. I • Got. ·IT'S FOtJ IJLJA • MIXED SINGLES G<ILL'f'. COAC~·! ·IT'S Tl-IE FOul1TH (JUAl1TEIZ ... ~?.T~i'.:-= *%$f (l;1;:?iir·~~r TUMBLEWEEDS MUTT AND JEFF HEY, DON'T I KNOW YOU? RGMEHTS ..... ''"" .... ~·-·· NANCY .. "' ; . ,,,A~O we o«Vt~'I tVc~ SC<llllP o~ G~et~ llA~' ' ' "f AIN'T YOU1HE BLOKE WHAT -OWES ME TEN BUCKS LASTYEAA? H EY P IO< UP THA'. BA"IAN/" PEEL TODAY'S CIDSSWDRD PUZZLE ACR OSS I Powderw ~ll•ChtS 6 o.mit(le 10 Smge• r.1;1m.- E11tor 14 No1 de~o J<j Woouniau• Comb lo1n1 16 "I camt, · 1 cono .. ereo" 17 Van '"' · US pres10cn1 18 Ser ~e 19 Goldie Hawn ••• 20 Love• £J Renuus- 24 lmm.g,,nl 26 Narrow raised SlllP S 27 W'i61t 30 Consumed 31 free lromdtrt 32 l 11Ck1119 flil\1()1 37 ConsteMation J8 Briele. 40 Achess ··· Scala 41 Sodium nitrille 43 Snake'• weal)Oll 44 Cul ol mea1 45 Areas by the oce1n 48 MtNe active 51 Nor Sj>Oken 52 Arbor 54 Wise 1eac~r• Si Suo&nest moneHtr, un11 59 Un•nterest•no 61 Supern11ur11I s cr11a1u•e ~jfiltil:tJ 4Hrn!rli+.1'"1 67 i:ntre· L:! Pli11 mt~<> Ii• 6l 1nt1111n linguage 64 [thvl ilCtllill~ 65 [x1inc1 66 Aller Aug. 67 Commi1111d la•ceny OQWflj 1 Sheba s A11boc n11mt 2 t1gn1 .. ,•,1igh1 meurl.Abb: 3 Ro11ung. ""''"9 Ill craft· lniOfmll 4 Wisji gh.111on 5 Pefll•nlng 1oold i!Je 6 Alric11n native 7 Pi1t1 of .. 10 be" 8 Payment toru:ie 9 Preti<f!I O\ltr 10 Fo111ess 11 "Wilh ·····in Mv Heart" 12 Heal1h· French 13 0 ).t [uropean nation 21 Kn•gnt s t11!e 23 Gunpowdeo mg1cd1ent 25 CIO!:il!il on s.pace 21 Reson cen1crs 28 Em11na11on 29 Ru1>51an lo~tr 33 Small WlllCICOu!'t 3.t M ilt1 oath 35 t.1a1h quan11fV 36 Hanos loosely 38 B••ker's bn• 39 Island group nea1 Scotland ' ) L r C •1 ,\,;1101eu 43 t.10~1 ph~s1c.i11 , ~"' 46 H1gn Cil!O 47 Scorches "8 V1luabl1 \liolin lnlo1m11 49 Sum o•van '" some1h1n9 50 Lanai Var ~3 No1 wiwe11n9 S!I Awa•c ol lnfOfmal 56 LOU•$···< Can. 11bel teilder 57 Wlthe1od VO> 60 Facial feature by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson !'Lt BfT fl.ll SU5PtN5l IS ~ILL/NG THfM by Tom K. Ryan by Al Smith by Dale Hale by Emie Bushmiller IT'o PEOPt..E LIKE YOU WHO CAUSE ACCIDENTS Ii: I PEANUTS 00 '-10.J u.~-..'." 10 .._EAR SJ,,·,C: 8A5CaA_: ACCOROii\6 TO ,\\'!' F16J.\E:::i AS OUf\ P1TCrt:R i+GJ..iADANE~RNED RV"' .l.\~R~ Tl-0!5 -It~~ OF EIG>lT'f' RUNS PER Q~:.:: ' JUDGE: PARKER MISS PEACH TOl>AY 15 TMf ENO OF SIAMMElt ANI> TH~ STAlrT OF A"4TIAMN, Ail:T><!Alt ... GE& . WIL.L l'f SL<OOl!NLY ANO AllW!Al'l'l Y CHANifol SfASONS? -· I I '"· DICK TRACY OM, NO ! THf CHANGI IS VERY 61rAC>&.tAL. ! ' \ DOOLEY'S WORLD ". \ ,r-'C" "'"'. q."' :.}</! \ q.u \ I . ,_ Dr,_SMOCK GORDO POPO' 010 • '°" KJJOW THAT CHeMISTS 14,A.Ve COME LIP Wt TJI Ali!11f:!ICtAJ.., FA1 F/ftEE VOJ.fl:S! "·t> I-... ""'"',._ (, \ \ I ,_ .__ ~~ YOU SAY _eeoPl.-S: -=-~i...1.. C>O¥o!N t..AU6HING UPON HS'AR1P-JG w~A'f YOU 00 i;QR J>. L..IVING ~ /. MMM . 50 WHA.,.-15 YOUR OCCUPA.,..ION . MR s-rvi...es ~ . . ,, . . .. ... . MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS PEOPLE il'oe.r DO/l'r FIE"° ENOOaH 1RE6E 1:>'£1$, DODO ... ,..,,l'ECP=-::. :-:LE::-,l'"'~"'~e=ee=co=-111e:-:::.i TOQ Ll.'&Y TO i<~D ! T"EIR IMAGINATIONS I ARE EOIN<a TO 1'>EED. r"et.> mFER ro sir AAD LET eoME • P~ODOCER DO AU... i>E WORK! by Charles M. Schuh ______ _..; STATISTICS DJN'i L.!£. ;i NO, 5VT i H£V SURE. SHOOT OFF" Tl-IE!R MOLJTM A LOT! CHARLIE 6ROJIN " ' . . ..,, by Harold Le Doux YOU'RE NOT MAKIN(; A BAD JOKE, ARE YOU. GLORIA ? HE WA$ FOUND IN TME l16RARY OF HIS ~CME .. $HOT IN THE CHE$ T ! You LIU ,.,.,y WRITING ? 1 I t i • ' l , J ! 0 ;: SIGH'~ HAPPlilJS EVEl!YTIME i nuww,., GU'ITl'.11 flf\IL ~~'D .. h by Geol'C_le Lemont· ,.,,~ N~I< A1TACKS 1HA1' OO l)5 '"'' • by Ferd Johnson ,ACTUALLY, I W.AS 1.ALklN<:i .. ,._·~····· ... ..... .,~-- by R09er Bollen ••• "Dear, I wi.'h }'Ou'd itil'e up teaching and try 10 iet t"ktled If) ('onitrns-lhen )O u could 11'.il'e your bl"ain a nice long rirsl." '' '1 (" ',,. . . • ~·,,I f by Mell •OI< everv•ODY / '"*' IT'S WlfADtAAL .:. by Chester Gould DENNIS THE MENACE 'I Ul<E..WfSBEmR . I 1' t l • : I 1 •• I I 1 8 4 DAILY PILOT Mond11, S.,tembt< 2l, 1974 LA Up by 41h In Title Race LOS ANGELES -"It's aU over but the champagne!," said Los Angeles left lflclder Bill Buckner. "I look for them the Reds to give up/' said Dodger catcher Joe Ferguson. The two Dodgers waved the red nag in front or Cincinnati Sunday, but it was not the Cincinnatl pennant the Reds are used to seeing. It was, instead, a statement o! Oir limism as a Los Angeles victory and a Cincinnati defeat ope11ed the ·Dodgers' margin over the Reds to 4¥.z games in the National League West race with only eight games remaining for the Reds. I The Dodgers edged the San Diego Cold Weather Gets Credit For Golf Win MASON. Ohio (AP) -Milltt Barber got a break in the vteather -it turned bad. "It was cold -tough playing out there today," he said Sunday after his front-running, three stroke victory in the Ohio Kmgs Island Open golf tooma- ment. "ID the position I was in, leading by tine strokes, ~ like playing when coodltions are rough. The rest of the field has to catch me and when it's cold like this, It just mak"' it that much toogher for the other guys to calch up." , • The 43-year-old Barber, who led from the second round on, won with a final 72, one-over.par aod am total. Padres 6-5 Sunday \Yhllt in San Francisco the Reds ·were bow1ng to the Giants &-0. And from San Francisco, a sombre Sparky AnderJOO, the Reds' manager, said "It hasn't been a very good week . 'nle' Padres and Giants both played well against us." When the Reds ten Los Angeles last Dodgers Sl•te All .. _. .. KA.IC t1") Stpt. 'll All1nl1 II LM Ari;elei 7:2j p.m. ~t. U Atllnll 11 LOii Ario.in 7 :~5 p.m. Sunday, Anderson said Ci~nnati would have to win 12 of its remain.mg 15 games. But his team lost five of seven to San Diego and San F'Tancisco, two of the division 's lesser lights. That record enabled the Dodgm to boost their lead two games and reduced Los Angele! magic number to five- any combination of five Los Angeles victories or ClnclMati defeats insures the Dodgers or the West Division title. Still, most of the Dodgers 'veren't throwing out any challenges to the Reds, remembering perhaps that last year the Reds overcame an 11-game late-season Dodger lead to win the division. •'I'm not going to say that they1re choking," said Davey Lopes, the swift little second baseman whose three-nm homer played a key role in Sunday's victory. · " ... It's like last year. We didn't Jose it· tbe Reds woo it. I'm not going id say aoything derogatory about the Reds. They're a great ballclub. In fact, I'd say the Dodgers and Reds are the two best clubs in baseball." "Five ... Five ... Five ... roared an enthusiastic Jimmy Wynn in the Dodger dubhome. "Now let's gel it down to zero!" SAN Dl•OO LOS ANO•L•S ·~ , " 1111 EHIWlr!d?.11 ' 1 I I L0pt5, 21> McCCNtY, Ph l 0 1 I 8~. If Almon, pr O 0 0 0 W'(M. cf BeckKt, 2b 5 0 1 0 Gltvt)', lb Jseott. pr 11 a o ,. wcn1wton:1, rf Toilti, rf S 0 0 I MlrWl.lill, p COlblrl, lb 5 1 1 1 Ftr11-. c Wlfifleld, II ' 0 I 1 C-v. Jib OTl'lorflu, ct ' 1 2 0 R1,1sMll, s.s HUIOfl, 3b 2 II 0 0 Dllwnh111. p Gru~. pll I o o o J0511ue, pt\ Cl!'ilt•ro. c 2 I a 0 At!Odln. II Turrwir. pll l 0 I I P-.clorllil:, N Kericl11H, c I 0 0 0 Gr11f,p 2 o 1 o Loctcle1r, p11 1 o o a Tomun,p 0 0 0 0 , 1 G111lon, pl! O 0 0 0 ·~ , 111111 l I 1 3 ' 0 1 0 l 0 1 0 ' 0 0 0 ' I I 0 0 0 0 0 ' 2 J 2 3 l 0 0 ~ I 0 O 0 0 0 0 O I O 1 2 11 I 0 0 0 0 0 O.Robr!S. pr 0 1 o o , T011li lll 5 ' 5 Tot1l1 29 I t ' Sin 0!11911 :uo ooo cm-s LOi Anolln O«I OD2 0011-I E-Glrvey, 11,151111 2. L0~1n OllOO t, LOi °"'llM 4 f!l-Blld:n.r, E. HemendL HR-l.o9n (,), F8fl1l>IOll {16), S8-E. HtnllndL COio.rt, Hiiton. SF-Jooihue. ii-M R •R II SO Grtlf CL. t-lll 6 1 I t ' J Tomllr1 210001 Dawnl11111 2 •3001 Alleden (W, 1.0) ' 3 I I l • M11rlh1tl 1'11102 HM"~ Mll'~ll CG11!0fl), T-::U. A-2f,U1. Comparison Made. Dodgers Have Big Year, But Not as Big as '62 It was 1962 and the Dodgers were doing something no other major league baseball team had evl'!' done before, or since -they were putting together a season attendance record of 2,755,lBf fans. This yea r they'll come close to that mark, having gone over the 2'h·million mark Sunday afternoon. With Hank Aaron and the Atlanta Braves in this WHITE WASH . OLato• WM•T• city tonight through Wednesday. another 100.ooo figure to pass through Dodger Stadium turnstiles. "!be Dodgers, beaded !or .J>061 season play for the first time s111Ce 1966, bave a shot at recording the second bJghest: season • aUendance in their history. The current No. 2 is 2,617,029 set in 166. Everything has gone in favor of pulll.ng iD big crowds this year, what ";'llh the club leading its division neatly wire-- to-wire. yet it faltered enoogh to make it a clme race just when it seemed rans mtgla be getting bored with the ...,.,.... f Aaron was popping ln and out o town with all the notoriety surrounding his home run feats and announcement "*8t tills is his final year as a player. Abd the Dodgers had individual at-- teaclloos, llllCh as lroo hor!e Mike Manhall, Jimmy Wynn, all-star game MVP Steve Garvey and a pitctolng staff second to none before Tommy John and Jim Brewer ~·ere lost to lnjuries. Additlooally, LA put out nifty pro- motiooal efforts to bring in more paying cu.!tomers -helmet weekend, two Dodger posteT nights, Aaron posttt night, ball night, etc. Yet, the Dodgers still weren't able to match the giant turmut.s of 1962. What was so special about 1962? The Dodgers had just tnoved from the C.Ollseum to their new stadiwn in '62. Team publicist Fred Claire feel~ that was one of the major reasons that record was set, but be adds several other substantial cootributors: Sandy Koufax and Don Drysdale were pitching for LA. DrysdaJe won 25 games and strudc out 232 batters and Koufax was just com1ng into his oWn, leading the league in earned run average with 2.54. Reller pitcher Ron Perranoski was the Mike Marshall of that era, tolling in 70 games, high in the National League that year. Too, veteran Johnny Podres of Brooklyn·LA fame was still with the dub. And another Brooklyn carryover. Jim Gilliam (now a coach) was still playing. There "-'ere more enticements. Maury Wills was on his way to becoming baseball's greatest stolen base artist (til Lou Brock came along this: year) with 104 steals, erasing the mark held by immortal Ty Oobb. Tcmmy Davis. was on his way to copping the rbl title and a big moooe home run bitter named Frank Howard was helping bring fans to the new stadium in Cbavez Ravine. Yoo might say, then, that eveTY(hing went the Dodgers' way In '82. Almost everything, that is. Tiiey were tied with San Franclsm for first place when the regular sea90l1 ended, then lost the ensuing piayofl l!elies to their bitl<!r enemies from the Bay area. . - ARCHIE MANNfNG RUNS INTO A HORNETS ' •. , OOPS, A RAMS' NEST OF TACKLERS. Chargers Nab Upset Victory; Fouts Sparkles CINCINNATI AP -The monkey's of! the back of the San Diego Charg~s. Scarred by a drug scandal that trig- gered a massive facelift, the Chargers buried the past Sunday with a confidence-buoying 20-17 upset of the Super Bowl·minded Cincinnati Bengals. Terry Owens, an obscure nine--year veteran, said it best: "Right now I'm so excited I can't wait for practice to start next week so we can get ready for the ~fiami Dolphins." Losers to lowly Houston 1in their season opener, the Chargers showed no resemblance to the weak sister entry which has fmished last in its league the past two years. Spearhead!ng the victory was cool. young quarterback Dan Fouts, who calf!l· ly marched the Chargers 98 yards 1n the final quarter ror the winning touchdown. He dove over on a sneak for the score. His passes to Gary Garrison propelled the attack all afternoon. "I've been here nine years," said Owens. "I've seen it all. But now we' all believe we can win because "'e're Wortting as a unit.,. Owens was among a no& of veterans who tried to get away from the despair that wracked the club. "I asked to be traded. But coach Tom Prothro changed my mind. Things are really changed. He has us really organized and believing in ourselves," said Owens. Field goa1s 0£ 22 and 28 yards by Dennis Partee and Ray Wershing proved vital. The Cll.argers' first touchdoY.1l came on a game-opening &S.-yard drive capped by Glen Bonner's two-yard run. The victory, only the Chargers' ~nd since mld·season last year, was preserv-. ed W'hen Cincinnati kicker H o r s t A1uhlmann missed a 34-yard field goal with 1:17 remaining. The Bengals had forged back on a 10-point third quarter to take a 17-13 lead. Muhlmann had kicked a :J4..yarder that gave the Bengals a four·point spread, but the kick that would have tied the game sailed wide, ending a consecutive kick streak of 11. That tied the West German's career high output. Sen oi.11:1 7 • O 7-10 Clnclnn1ll O 7 10 G-17 SO -11.onntr 2 nm P1r!tt kick SD -FG 72 Parlff Cln -El11~1116 run Mulllm•nn kick SO -FG n Wtseh1"9 'I" -Cl1rk 12 rvn Muhlm1n kick C n -FG )C Mulllrnln so -i:out, 1 rvn P•rlM klcll A-Sl,Ut 2,999 for KaJine MILWAUKEE -·Detroit nt;rs superstar Al Kallne collect(d one . hit in four official times at bat agamst the Milwaukee Brewers Sunday, liaving him one shy of becoming the 12th player In major league history to amass 3,000 hit!! In a career. Detroit won the game &-5. Rams Romp, 24-0 Plunkett Up Next As Manning Falls LOS ANGELES (AP) -Coach Chuck Knox ol the Los Angeles Rams seemed pleased and apprehensi\'e at the same time. His club whipped the New Orleans Saints but now must face the W'lexpected New England Patriots. The Rams, as expected, are 2.0 _in the National Football League race v•h1l c the Patriots have dooe the unexpected in beating Miami 's Super Bowl champs and the New York Giants on successive weekends. With a tremendous defensive effort. some solid running and a pair of Time Called, Ear Soi1ght PLYMOUTH. En gland AP -A rugby match was stopped for half an hour Sunday in search of half an ear. Two teams and hundreds or spec· tators vainly combed the field for the piece of the ear which belonged to David Rodgers'. 28. and was bitten off in a brawl for the ball. "I knew \\'ho bit off hair my right ear but rm not saying." said Rodgers. "It was a savage thing to do but there's no point in stirring things up. "! scarcely felt anything. Just a quick chomp and it was over. '"You expect to get that kind of thing in a tough game like rugby." Rodgers. an engineering equip- ment salesman , was taken to a hospital. Doctors said he would be patched up by plastic surgery. touchdov.'n passes from John Had!. the Ram s blanked the Saints 24--0 on a hot Sunday afternoon. '"They have a great defensive club. especially that J ack Youngblood." declared losing Coach John North. "\\'e \\'ere never in the game in the second half." Archie l\fanning. the h a r r i e d quarterback of the Saints. Y.'as sacked five times for a net loss or 40 yea rd s. ··vou have to give the Rams defense full credit. They had great pass coverage. Our plan was to establish a good running game. but you can't Irick the Rams. 'Mley have solid person- nel in every position ." Although Hadl said his timin g v.'3s of( on his passes, he did complete touchdown shots to Jack Snow on a play covering 30 yards and another to Harold Jackson for five. l-le wound up \\"ith 10 completions in 22 attempts for 150 ya rds and wasn't sacked . Asked about the defensive charge, f;ar. ry Brooks said. "MaMing being the rollout type . our ends were applying the pressure \vhich allowed us the chaoce to get in.'' Brooks, in the mann er of Knoic . looked ahead to this Sunday in Massachusetts. saying, "Jim Plunkett will be just . as rough a quarterback as MaMJng although he"s a different type." Knox also pointed out that the former Stanford star. Plunkett. will not be the rollout perfonner but has been a sharp passer for the Patriots who upset Miami J.i.24 and then beat the Giants 28-20. LA -81ktt 1 r11n R•v kick LA -S-:JO P,t!~ lrom Hlldl ll1y klcll LA -l"G Rav 10 LA -Jl(kJOn $ P8!! lrom Hlcll R•v kick A -64'178 IMDIVIOU .. L LE .. OERS RUSHING -New Orlnn:i, Manning 2-l3, Ml~'°" 6·29 ~renier 9·10, MCNl111 S.11. LM Anoel", McCu1cheon 16-lel, 81!ftthe.i 1!1·31, Brv1n1 J-10, Bftkll<' &-rn. RECEIVING -New Orlra!'i:i, Newl1nd s..!S. Parkrr 3-46. Lo. An<itlef,, Renttcl 1..-, Jftkson ).J.C. Snow 1.:io. MtCutcMon 2-11. PASSI NG -N~w Orletni, M111nlnQ 11-19-7, 170 v1rcl1. Los AflOel•S, Hacll I0-2'l·l, UO; H1rrls 0-1.(1, o. LADr~ws • 21h Million; Bids Okay A crowd or 29,152 saw Los Angelcs'I 6-S victory over the San Diego Padres Sunday and txiosted the Dodgers' horne l attendance fo r the seum over the 2.5 million mark. The Dodgers became the first team in the n1a}or leagues to draw that many since the New York Mets in 1970. The Dod gers have drawn 2,521 ,649 for 77 ho1ne dates this season. e Fltud Pla11s ~IILWAUKEE -Final plans of the cities of Los Angeles and Lake Placid, N.Y .. to present bids ·for the 1980 Oly"!"· pie Games to the International Olymp1c Committee were eodor!ed SW1day by the U.S. Olympic Committee. The bids. from Los Angel es f~r the summer games, and Lake Placid for the winter events, were not expected to be accepted by the international group. \\'hich meets OcL 23 in Vienna, Austria. It was expected to award the summer games to Moscow and th~ winter games > to either Vancouvcr-Gar1baldl , B.C., or Ch.1 monix, France. e Klt1gs Lose, 4·2 LOS ANGELES -Second period goals by Blake Dunlop and Henry Boucha overcame a 2-1 Los Angeles lead and gave the Minnesota North Stars a 4·2 exhibition victory over the Kings. • FireJHflH Killed BARCELONA. Spain -A track fireman was killed and three drivers slightly injured during the Z50 « ra:e. in the Spanish ~1otorcycling Grand Pr1t Swiday. track officials said. . The fire1nan. Salvador Font Jaen. died in a hospital fron1 injuries received \\"hen he was involved in a t.-ollision on U10 track \\'ilh a cycle driven by Katazumi Atayama of Japan in the 27t h l::i p. . Officials said the fireman had gone onto the track 10 clear av.·ay p..1rts of a motOrt1'Cle ridden by Bernard Fau ste Briefs Page 85 UC Irvine 3rd; Crow11 to Cal The UniYersity of California at Berkele\' surcessfully defended its tit le in the UC Irvine \\'3ter polo tournament over the \\'eekend . defeatin~ the host school. 4-2. and downing UCLA. 7-4. in the · champion.«hi p round Sunda}' at Newport Harbor High. Coach F.d Newland's UCr Anteaters finished third after dropping an 8-7 verdict to the UCLA Bruins. Berkeley finished ·with a 4--0 record , UCLA \\'as 3--1 and UCI 2-2 in the final standings. Jn a morning game. the Anteaters battled Berkeley to the final gun before losing. The score v:as at J..2 until the final shot in the last 10 seconds of play made it a two-goal \\'in . Sophomore Ja~n Wheaton scored both goals for UCI. The Bruins, paced by former Corona del Mar star Garth Bergeson. \\-ho hit four goals. came from behind to defeat the Anteaters. 1 After UCI led 3--0 and .i. t. Ikrgeson hit the go-ahead goal at s.4 and th e Bruins never again trailed . Tim Quinn had five for UCI and Bret Bernard l\VO. Quinn and goalie Guy Anlley v.•rre named to the all·tourney team. along wilh Bergeson and Kurt Krumpholz, another former CdM star. i,y it h• Berkcley·s Doug licaly the most valuable player. Solo111on Collide ;LOS ANGELES (AP) -Harold sbfomon gets a chance to do tonight 'llhal no °"" at FOl'COl llill• or Wimbledon aould do: beat Jimmy Connors. l"I cloo 't tbinlr. playing him will annoy nie. either because ol his reputaUon ,.-bis court bebavtor," Solomon said Slndlo1 ol O>Dnors, the world 's No. I ~. who Is rapidly becoming tt. No. 1 .._,,,.,,_ .,.I've play!<! Nula9C and Tiriac so oothlng would surprise me.'' eonDors won't worry much either On T¥ T-lgltt Cft•nnel 2 at llz:JO about the matdl. loGight at Los Angeles temis club. 111 gave up ¥i·orrylng about matches a Jong time ago," he said. Connon continued bis c I u t ch performance In tiebre•kers and Solomon e1ploded In the llnal Bel Sunday, u the two won their oomtnnal malches. Connon wm hJs fourth tie-breaker In stx sucb ga-during the tournament to whip Andrew Palllson ol Rhodesia 7-6. HI. with Solomon played a beetle two ..U Tom Gorman tired. Solomon won &-2, g.7, 6-0. l ' DllHY i-lltf '""' -, L .. ,,,.. -UCl'S TIM QUINN <n UNLOADS.A SHOT ~H !CH IS BLOCKED BY UCLA'S RICH C~YLE. l • s 4 Pitts engineer drives t tie with that cou quent 1 period. This w in Nati require Turner tempt th lhe flflh The St to win · play. Ro field goa Chavous "They Steelers proud ol being do El sew SAN The San o( inter minutes held on Atlanta In all ove r six with the The 4 a 2'h·m Reed's 1 and the by San F An To- Mf a Calif he lost T\\'inS at Met Three Srot. l t C SrPI. 2~ C S.pl, '' c $ftll ,, ed. but mered extra in the the r The 1h ga in the string ended cul! Vfc CA >,1.Hrtll•. c H11lw . 10 OOovlt, V&lentlM, 811lat, II 8o(lilC, If Ll..,t•. II~ -l &houd, d EIRdrge1, Ch11lk. 3b St<1nlon, rl Howeul. 1 Oon~v. t11n"n1• P Figuer0.11, Total' C•ll M' .. • Mo~ay, Stpttmbtr 2l, 1CJ74 teelers, Denver Tie; 9ers Stop Falcons Pittsburgh quarterback Joe Gllllam glnecred three second-half scoring rives to rally the Steelers to a S5-3S e with the Denver Broncos Sunday at could not be resolved in a subse- ucnt 15-minute sudden-death ovcrUme rlod. This was the first regular-season gaml!: National 1'"'ootball League history to uire an extra session. Denver's Jim umcr missed a 41-yard field goal at- •mpt that would have won it late in c fifU1 period. The Steelers also blew an opportunity win as time ran out In regulation lay. Roy Gere la attempted a 25-yard eld goal that was blocked by Barney vous and Bill Thompson. "They got off to a very fast start." teelers coach Chuck Noll said. "I wus roud oI the way we came back after ing down, 21-7." Elsewhere in the NFL: SAN FRANCISCO AT ATLANTA c San Francisco 49ers turned a pair f interceptions ln the opening five inutes into two touchdowns and then Id on for a JS.IO victory over the tlanta Falcons. In all, the Falcons turned the ball ver six limes, three on interceptions 'lh the same·number on fumbles. The ~9ers' twb touchdowns came within 21h-minute span, the first on Joe 's 13-yard pass to Dan Abramowicz the other on a one-yard plunge y Larry Schreiber. San Francisco is 2-0 and Atlanta 0-2: NEW YORK GIANTS AT NEW NGLAND -Jim J'lunkeU flipped lhrec ouchdown passes and New England used he weaving dashes of Mack Herron nd power drives o( former USC star gels Lose o· Twins, 6-2 ~11NNEAPOLIS -Frank Tanana tied California club record Sunday when e lost hls 19th game as the Minnesota ~·ins beat the fumbling Angels, 6-2 I ~1etropolilan Stadium. Three of the Twins' runs were uneam- Angels Slate All o-D11 KMJ'C mil I. ,. (o\llt<wnla II Kl llWl City 111. 2j C.1lilornl1 11 k•n••• Cllv ot 16 (11lifornl1 11 Kl ll»I City I 11 MlnMto11 e t Calllornl1 S:'l!i p.rn. 5:15 om. i :2S 11 m. 1 :~ p m , , but the rookie left-hander was ham- m~red for nine hits, three ol them xtra base hits, before being removed the sixth inning. Oyde Wright set record when he Jost 19 last season. The Twins, who suddenly are only 1 \.-.i games behind secor,d·place Texas n the AL 's \Vestern Division. had their string or six straight complete games 1dcd ~ Billy Campbell had to res.-c vrc AJbury in the' seventh. CALl,ORNIA MINNllSOTA AA~t11h, cf H11,e. 2b DDoyl1. 1111 llMllne, U B1la1, II 8ochl1, II L11n11, di! L•houd. dll EIRdr9e1, C Cl!ol•, ~ StantO<t, rl !WWlfd, lb o.;.11..-iv. p11 Tlrwtn.t, 11 Fl1111l!t"1>11, 11 111 r h rt.I J 0 1 I T..-rrtl. IJ 4 0 I 0 car-. lb I O 1 O Olrwl", rf l 1 2 O K llll!tlr~.lfti l 0 1 O SOCltrMrn, lb ' Cl 0 Cl Hi1l1, tr 1 o o I Br vt.cl 1 0 0 0 K~1i(k, lb J 0 0 0 8•!111'14"·' 4 0 2 0 AIDurv,p J 0 1 0 BCrnpblll, 11 l I I 0 1 0 0 " 0 0 0 0 , .. , h .... s 0 0 0 4 ' ' " • 0 0 0 4 0 1 I ' 0 O D ' , ' 0 ' I 4 I ' 0 , 2 • I 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 101111 C•lllor"la Ml~oll 0 0 0 0 15 2 1l 1 10111~ J7 ' 11 4 011 000 000-, 000 l!J lC~-6 IP H R Elt 99 SO T1"1n1 fl., U·lf l j 2/l 9 4 1 2 S Flgllt'fOI 21/3 2 2 I 0 J AI011rv \W. \-0) ~' l I 1 0 1 e. c~mpOell 2 111 J o o o WP-1 OM"I· T-l.Dl. A-4,019. FINAL DEMO CLEARANCE 131 '72 DEMOS TO CHOOSE FROM 72 CORONA 4 DOOR ~ ............ Ct1141lllrcll .. 73 MAU II 4 DOOR 1¥,....-..•CIOflOl.J'.&.. ............. ·-· 53277 • 74VOLYO 144 "'6, ,. .... J'.t., •• AM,.,.. --u.llW .... w.Jw._. ...... ,.....,.(tnol 56377 ALSO THESE FAllUl.OUS USED CAR BUYS 7J COIONA WACK>ie .,.._.,, ~ ,_.,, (GIJM't'I 52877 '73 C&ICA 4 ................... ... 53377 7J MX WAGON ~-~AM ...... ndl.Lo--'""""" 53477 Sam Cunningham to overcome rut im- proved New York Giant:s offense with a 28-20 victory. The game drew n paid crowd of 49,267, the second straight week of Jess than a Ml house at Yale Bowl. '_I"he P_atriots put together the winning drive rrud way through the third period. Herron returned a punt 20 yards to the Giants' 34. Five plays later, Plunkett lobbed a pass to Cunningham on a 14-yard scoring pla y with 10:34 left ln the period. KANSAS CITY AT OAKLAND -Ken Stabler regained his passing touch to throw three touchdown pa~s and lead the Oakland Raiders to a 'f/-7 victory over the Chiefs. Two of the passes were lo rookie Dave Casper and the other to Mike Siani as Stabler threw for 195 yards. touchdown, but It was enough for Min- nesota to defeat Detroit's Lions, 7-6. Foreman's score finished oft a Min- nesota drive that had started at the Vikings 42 and the defense made the touchdown stand up, limiting Detroit to a pair of field goals by Erroll Mann. The Vi.kings tried repeatedly to give the game away, Detroit recovered two minnesota fumbles and blocked a punt, but couldn't turn any or the breaks into a touchdown. GREEN BAY AT BALTIMORE - MacArthur Lane scored two Green Bay touchdowns and Chester Marco! booted field goa ls of 39 and 52 yards to give the Green Bay Packers a ~13 win. Marcol's 52·yard boot tied the club record £or the longest field goal. ·. Skip Thomas made two key In- terceptions for the Raiders. The result left both teams the lead in the • American Conrerence's We stern Division rl'<:ord.s . tied for Football with 1-1 The Colts, 0-2, finall y ended a string of 17 consecutive periods without a touchdown on a seven-yard pass from Bert Jones to Bill Olds in the fourth quarter. GOLF WINNERS -Low ne~victors in the Kathleen Lenahan memorial member-guest tournament at Ir· vine Coast Country Club were Edoa McHugh, (left) of Big Canyon Country Club and Helen Fait!-Gross winners included host Dee Dee White and Lucille Paddock, (right) of Mesa Vedde Country Club. ST. wurs AT WASHINGTON -Two big plays that turned the game around gave the st. Louis Cardinals a 17-10 upset victory over the Redskins. On the last play of the first quarter. defensive end Ron Yankowski picked up a Washington fumble and returned it 71 yards for a touchdown . Two minutes later, ruMing back Terry 1'-fetcall raced around his left end for 75 yards and another score as the Cardinals defeated Washington in the nation's capital for the first time since 1967. NEW YORK JETS AT CHICAGO - Despite Joe Namath's pin-Point passing, the New York Jets nearly blew a ~point lead and needed Bobby Howfield's 39-yard field goal for a 23-21 victory over the Bears. The game was marked by a wild fi~ish in which the Bears were charged with three successive unsportsmanlike conduct penalties to move the Jets from midfield to the Bears nine. Checking Gals' Golf For Coastal Area MIMD AT BUFFAW -Stalled by New England in its opener, defending wor!d champion Miami got untracked against Buffa lo, converting a pair of Bills turnovers into touchdown passes by Bob Griese for a 24-16 victory. Doug Swift and Jake Scott recovered rumbles by 0 . J . Smpson and Jim Braxton and Griese made the Bills pay for the mistakes with sco ring passes to Jim Mandich and ri.1arv Fleming. .Garo Yepremian's 22·yard field goal with I :06 lert , closed out the scoring. rt1JNNEOOTA AT DETROIT -Chuck Foreman's ll·yard run in the second period provided the game 's Ione After Howfield 's field goal mid wa y in the fourth quarter, the Bears struck 33 yards in five plays for a touchdown on Jim Harrison's one-yard dive with 4: 24 left. HOUSTON AT CLEVELAND Cleveland's Browns played opportunistic footba ll , forcing six Houston turnovers and beating the Oilers, 20-7, with Greg Pruitt running for 89 yards and Mike Phipps passing for 141. The Browns oPened the scoring with Don Cockroft's 27·yard field goal in the first quarter. . After the Oilers went In fron t, 7.J, the Browns look command for good when Jerry Sherk recovered V i c Washington 's fumble to set up a Bro\\lls scoring drive. Pruitt ran the fmaJ nine yard>. Dee Dee While and guest Lucille Paddock won the low gross award in the annual Kathleen Lenahan memorial member·guest tournament at Irvine Coast CoWltry Club over the past weekend. It was a combined partners eclectic event with a lull field or 144 golfers competing. Helen Falt and E d n a McHugh won the low net com· petition. JIJ!ssion V iejo Frankie Durst was next at 391h:. Ann Pappas and Ann Van Cleave tied for the next spot at 40. In B night, Phyllis Stafford was the winner with 38, follow- ed by Cleta Del.ong (38'k ), Sue E"·ers (39 ), M ax in e Strickland (39lf.i:) and Erma Haven (401h). Lee h1erkel captured C flight with 38lh, followed by Betty Brown (40), M . Thatcher (401h), Marie Maynard (42 ) and Marion Darlirig (42\\). BRIEFS FROM SPORTS ~ . . Nadine Maze won low gross honors in A flight with a 51 in a four pars tournament for the women's club at Mission Viejo Golf Club last week. Score was recorded on four- par holes using half handicaps in net action with Jerri Hassan winning ln A flight ~·ith 481h. In D flight, the winner was Ann Keenan (35\\). followed by Chris Janarick (381f.t), Phil Goepper (391h), Kay Leutwiler (401 and Betty Ziegler (40\\). Continuecl From Page 84 Sunday until an accident forced the or France. who had fallen on th e previous A st · t f he ltllle Square Fountain Valley Mile Square Golf Course Staged a four pars tournament last week with Erlene Angs1 adt winning A flight with a score of 30. lap, lillghtly injuri ng his leg but badly u r1an ou o t race and gave Fit- damaging his y amaha. ti pa I di the Grand Prix or Canada. Atayam3 's Yamaha was going at more As top qualifier, Fittipaldi held the than 62 miles per hour when it struck pcile position in' the ~mile race but Honey Carroll was the B fljght winner in gross with a 63 while Ruth Jenkins ca~ lured net honors with 50. the fireman . Officials said the fireman's Lauda 's Ferrari jwnped into the lead Je_g was sc"·ered and ~(forts to revive on the first 1 ..... whil the B azlli , Second place · went to Barbara Stencel with 31 Y.i:. followed by Xarsha Stortz. at 32. him al the scene failed. Atayama's . ""¥' e . r ans machine dragged along the track more car remained seconds behind for most In C flighl, Sheri Eastman was the gross victor with 68. Sharon Lewter and Sallie Meyer finished one-two ln net action with 51'1.ii and 53'1.ii. -than 30 yards aner thecollisioo. -__j!l_if::n~~ib -onJy 12 more laps to go, e lleld111an Upset Lauda spun in sand on the track and ~·as out of the race. Jean Kulm was the B victor with 30li2, followed by VL Thompson and Ruth Schonert at 34. ORLANDO. Fla. -Czechoslovakia·s Martina Navralilova stopped fourth·seed· cd Julie Heldman 7--6, 6-4 Sunday for her third straight upset and claimed the $10.00) first place money in a $50,000 "·omen's tennis tournament. The 17·ycar-old uru;ecded 1\1 i s s Navratilova had beaten scventh·seeded Laura DuPont and second-seed e d Rosemary Casals lo enter the finals. · e Fittipaldl Wins l\10SPORT, Ont. -Emerson Fittipaldi trailed Niki Lauda 's car for 68 laps . e India Tops l!SSR POONA . Indi a -India. led by the Bonnie Baker \\'on D gross honors with 63. Buff Locke and Shirley Lee tied for the net lead at 61 . Amritraj brothers, advanced to the Davis Seacliff C flight winners included Carol Lott at 30\\, followed by Carolyn West and Jo Wood· bury at 31, Rose Biekman at 32 and June DWlcan at 33. C.up tennis final by completing a doubles · A full field competed in the v1clory and scoring a singles triumph monthly low gross ]O\V net over ~he Soviet Union Sunday. . golf tournament 'tor th e Incha took an un~.table J.~ lead 1n women's club at Huntington. ~leadotclark the bcst-o£-five sem1·f1nal senes when Seacliff Country Club recently It was a T & F tournament Anand Amritraj beat Teimur:iz Kakulia Gerry Hege was the A flight for the women's golf group 6-2. S.~O, 4-6. 6-3, 6:~· Earlier, Anand low gross winner with 88. Pat-at Meadowlark Country Club and his brother. V11ay. ~pleted a ty Schottmiller won net honors of Huntington Beach last lJ.15, 7·5. 1~1y, 6-3 dou~le~ Vlctory over at 72, followed by Ginny week. Alex Metreveh and Vladimir Korotkov. Lambert at 74. Helen Moulton was the A Baseball Standings In the second night, Carolyn flight winner with 361f.i:, follow· Clark was the gross wiMer cd by Ann Williams (371/.i:), with 97. Net victors included Pat Eorio (3811.z) and Kai.by Shirley Cummaro (76) and a Bransford (39). tie between Rose Erickson, In B flight , Rose Erickson June Fittin and Vi O'Gara was the winner with 36. Vikki at 79. Wallace placed second at 38, AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L Pct. GB New York 84 70 .545 Baltimore 83 71 .539 I Boston 78 7~ .513 5 Cleveland 73 79 .480 JO NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis Pittsburgh Philadelph ia Montreal East Division W L 82 7l 80 75 72 Pct .536 .526 .490 .474 Fran Somerville won third followed by BoMie Nuccio and flight gross with 100. June Gloria Boland at 381f.i:. GB Doyle was the .net victor with Polly Myers was the C night 76 while Pat Penewell and winner vdth 37 and Fiona Betty Peterson tied for second Moore was second at 381h. II\ 7 at '78. Betty Kretz captured D 91h Gerry Watson followed in flight with 401h and three Eichhorn, Vi Leslie and Rita Mcintosh tied for second at 41 \\. Costa ltlesa Mary Zimmerman was the winner of a mystery tourna- ment at Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club with a score of 46. Other winners in A flight included Sybil Foster, Frankie Durst and Barbara ~1orton at 48 with Kay May at 49. In B night, Norene Grady was the winner with 47. A tie resulted for second at 48 between Rosemary Skillion, ~1axine Strickland and Carolynn Walbridge. Phyllis ·Stafford and Ginny Stasko tied at 51. · Lee Merkel was the C flight winner, followed by Phil Goep- pcr (47), Greta Ianelli (48) and a tie between Rae Mil· chell, Eleanor Green and Bet· ty WallJtall at 52. . Betfy ~ Blakemore won D flight wilb 50, followed by Kay Leutwiler (51) and Pat Lackner (52). In a T & F event, Mary Zimmennan was again tlie winner in A flight with 38. In the fourth flighj, Kaye Temming was the gtoSs victor with 101. Pat Lackner cap. lured net honors with 79, followed by Petie Qu!t (80) and Pat Hawkinson (81). Big Canyoo Coontry Club hosted the weekly team com- petition Tuesday wilh Irvine Coast defeating Santa Ana Country am, StHO 1n the A division. Laguna Beaela It was a net plus five tournament for the Laguna Beach women's golf associ.&- tion last week. In A flight, Dee Craig and IdaMae Schoemaker tied for first place with 83. In B flight , Lil Marks was the winner with 81, followed by Val Morton (85) and Martha Beaumont (86). In the C flight . Mary Lou Yager was the winner with 90, followed by Jean Griffin at 9f. fl.iilwaukec 73 80 .477 101h New York Chicago 69 &I 72 78 80 83 .454 121L second place with 38\iz and players including Florence n J ___ ..:._ ______ _:__:_ ___ _::_ ____________ _ Detroit 71 82 .4&1 West Division Oakland 86 68 .558 Texas 81 72 .529 Minnesota 80 74 .519 Chicago 75 78 .490 Kansas City 75 79 .487 Angels 6l 93 .396 Sll!IH't''' 01mt1 Nn York 2, Cl~elal'ld 1 aa111mor1 7, BMron 1 Mlnf'ln0f1 6, Ce!ltoml1 2 Ch1U90 l. O.ll:lllld I Tt111t ~. K1nw1 Clly 3 0.lro{t 6, Mllwautt. .S THIY'I G1mn Mll~IUll:ff !Colborn f •11 end ICObel C'-Ind (I01m1., 1""4 Ind Kern 0·2l, 1 Otlly Olrnet IKlllO\lltcl l'MMIY'I 01mn_ 81111111'1 at New Yot•, 1 ' Cl!Jc::i;o It Tmiat. t Dllr at Bait mol't' M11n•111:ir 41 c11Yt11nd C1 OHi & 11 K111w, Cll't' Mll'lllltOI• at Ollllafld 12\1 ~\I 6 IO I> II 2S •·131 .. • 88 West Division Dodgers Cincinnati Atlanta lfouston Sa n Francisco San Diego 96 57 92 82 84 70 78 75 71 84 56 99 llHMll•Y'• a.arnn New York •· PllHliul'Clh O SI. Loull 6, ChlullO S Houston 3, ... uanta 2, I• ln.,j~ Phll10tllllll1 ).S, Mollt,...I : .. Sin Fr1111:1Ko '! ClflClmMtl O LOS AllOl!fl "-In PllOO 5 ToclaY's 01mts .42l .627 .597 .545 .510 .458 .361 17 \\ 41\ 12\1 18 26 (I PfttltJUfVl'I IRoolltf' )j.1\1 11 SI, Loltll (MtGlolllerl 1 .. 10) Alllnl• (IVIOl'to!I 16-lOJ •• Los AllOllK ($1,1110., 11.t) Onlv .-mn Khtd\lltd TlltMl't''I Glntn Monlrtal 1t Chlc:IOQ. 1 Nn Y0111 It J'hll"'lf)llla i>IOUSIOll ,, ClnclnNll Pl!hbvrQl'I 11 SI. 7:!" An1n11 II Lot A ff Stn 1"r111el1KO ti n DlttO . - Long Beach Airport is an easy shot from Or~nge County. And from there. i(s easy going. Two round trips daily, Monday through Thursday and Saturday. Three on Fridays.and Sundays. • Call your traVel agenl or PSA. They know the way PSA 1lues you a lift. Gabriel, Cowboys Square Off .· PHILADELP!llA (AP) -• Philadelphia Eagles' quartert:>ack Roman Gabriel,< i~'t too fond ol. the Dallas Cowboys. '. "I'm not too food ol _.ie · who don't admit they modo a mistake and don't admit they're beat<n when you beat. them. 'Ibey always have a million excuses.'' The 34-year-0ld Gllllriel, a -, veteran al 13 years In the , Naliooal Footbell League, bas ' -----------. On TV Tonight Channel 1 at 6 bad many cmfrontatloos with the Cowboys. Generally speak. Ing he's bad good .._, And he gets a special pleasure •. In downing Dallas. ; It won't be -d!Hemit ~ tooight when Gatriel'a Eagles. ; and the Cowl>oys led by ; ·_ quarterl>ack Roger -. meet In the National Foolball - League's televised pme. Gabriel reca1!s that -.. the Eogles beat the Cowtoys: here laat year :J0.16, Dallas players delcribed it as an ac- cident. "Playing on national 'IV Is a tremendous Un!ntive," Gabriel said, "Wt t h e r e should be enough Incentive just playing Dallas. The Cowboys are a ccmistent win- ner, bl& the things they do and say should get us ready ent>IJib." Ga!xiel wasn't upset by his ... perlormance In last Sunday's .• opener as the Eagles loot 7·3 , to the St Louis cardinal&. "Adually alter watching the ., films, I called the game ex· peeled ol me," Gabriel said- "! threw the ooll well. But ' people lroke down. We had , people rlllllling wrong pat- terns, fwnbles. I'm not behind selledule. 1be offense bas to cut down on mistakes. We have to go out m1 hit people. We let St. L<:>uis hit us." As for the Dallas game being a must for the Eagles, Galri.el said. "I think each week is a must game. We've made a Jot of progress. A lot ol people are writing us df after only one game. AJl we need is a little push, in·. spiration. The OOme crowd · should be a factor." , Gabriel feels that the Eagles in their unfortunate opening loss made mistakes teams att·: apt to do In an opening game:'; He said he coold recall some·· good Los Angeles lA!ams male· ing as many mistakes when ., he was "'ith the Rams. "The offense will have t,o.1 wake up," McCormack said. ''li we play the same -~.-ay: · as we did ngaimt St. Louis,'• 1''e'll be embarrassed, run out · of the ball park." McConnaclt:. added. '*""-,..,... ... •tt.0....ft.,...t ..... e."""' 2 ... l ,..., •n..&_,--. ......... Cootedlht i.-bporlsel HARBOUR YW ' ~ ";'. f DAILY Pl~OT MOflda)t, Stpttmbrr 23, 1974 Checkered Flag WITH HOWARD L. HANDY •. ·' •" .. , _ When Mickey Thompson presents the AC.Oelco -Id cbam- plonShip off-road races at Riverside International Raceway . this """kend, the Orange Coast ar<a will he well represented. 4 1 Among the top participants will be Bill Rush of Newport Beach who will enter a four·wheel drive Ford Bronco in the race. Bill began his off-road racing career in 1961 when two Or his employes returned from the first Baja 1,000 filled wllb exciting stories of the race. They coovJnced Bill to buy a \>lrecked Bronco which he helped-them prepare for lhe 1968 race. ·· ln 1969 he entered the Mint 400 and drove the car himself and was hooked OD the sport. Jn high school he was an outstanding star in football and received a scholarship to Brigham Young University but a knee injury ended his gridiron career. •• Desips Tubul•r Cftulls • '· He tuned to boi:ing and woa 11 of 7% fights u u amateur : .before Mnging up Ids g&ove1. la IJ7% loe joined the Bill Stroppe racing team aad dn>ve the ··-Btonce Paraelll Jones baa m.ae famous. He liter baUt his own tababr chants dellp •nd added ~ Jogr..wbttl driYe. ..:.. la Ills first race with the new car, a broken drive line ,,,~limlnated hlm In I! race at Riverside a year ago. Since that 'J•dme, however, Bill has won tbe modllied four-wheel drive class :;'Jn two of the three major races staged -tbe Ba)a 1,0IO and tbe Delco Baja lntemacional. He will be facblg Jones, Gary Gabelldl, Bobby" Ferro and • ;;Rick Mean ameag otben 8l Rivenide dt1s weeteitd. Hookefl WhUe Fl9lllfJ Another area resident c:ompettng in the Riverside race is rvA1ark Steele of Huntington Beach. ;. Mark was flying an airplane in support of the Mexican -1,000 in 1970 wbeo be became interested in competing. ' The next year he was sitting on the starting line waiting for ···the green flag in the No., 3 car. J', "My engine went south SO miles off the starting line. What • .. an empty lee ling. Alter realizing what had bappened, I knew I ~:'Was done racing un)ess l looked around for aomething that -s'might solve the problem. ~-. "I found some spectators, a man, hi.s wife and daughter, ~·;with their Volkswagen siUing along the road. l asked him if -~,be would sell me bis engine. At first he refused. . 1~ "I talked for awhile and he sold it to me and helped put it ~ .. ·in the race car. ·•·• "It worked until I down shifted with too many rpms and that engine also went out. I paid the man $7lO !or il" Steele is a real estate salesman who lives with bis wife Kay and two small children in Huntington Beach. He will drive a single-seat Fuoco VW dune buggy. ' J.-,,lne'• Lowe Seek• No. I Randll Lowe of Irvine will race a llngle .Ot VW dune .. baggy m tile $171,• nee on tile 1llert ceane and be'1 deter· .~ mt.ed • able die 1tatas u No. z man Ill tllat type Of nchtc. Lowe Cllmlllly bolds oeeoad place In the SCIDA poinl battle ~ won't be affeded at Riverside llDder a different aanc- tioalac body. •• 1 Be earaed tbe status at Ascot Park In Gardena, Coro11a •• -llaeeway ud Soalli Bay Speedway la Saa Diego where artl!lclal , ·~off-road tncb offer compeUtio• for amall ptheriag1 of ta· • _ • lf.llaslastlc fam • .','. : Lowe bopes Ida uperteace on die c• qaarten Of tbele lrlcb will give blm u ldvnlage ol Rtvenlde. Muy Of the • · dune boay drtvt" are afomlllor wlllt this type ol nclng. . Lowe ii a pabllc rtladcm• executive for lite Florida eltrn ;: po....., oort of the eqalvxlut ol a refrigerator salesman In •:· AJuta. . •; :, He II a former 1wlmmer and football player .. d gradaated ;. ·'from Orul' CoOll College. He has aloo rated ~Jes 111 · the i · ama. · -- - Other Are• Entr•nts These are but a few of the entrants from the Orange Coast area. . .-. 00gg~~~u~~~~inhn:n ~ra~~.v~u~1~:r:: ...,. Lowe.' Norm Batchelder of Costa Mesa in a Hi-jumper; Carl ::: :Post Ot Laguna Beach in a Funco Bandito; Gale H. Pike of :; ' Laguna Beach in a Bronco. . . ~ Also, Jotm Mooney of Foimtain Valley m a Ford pickup; "'-'N:-D~and DennisMcNuUy_o!_ Costa Mesa in a VW. sedan; Bobby ·. '~ R. stooe of Huntington Beach iD a-m-ja-Bug with co-driver ~"Darrel R. Arndt of Huntington Beach; Jon Kennedy of. Costa •' Mesa and Greg Stodd of Fountain Valley in a VW sedan; and : ; Bobby Neth o! Costa· Mesa in a Funco SS. .. Tripp Wins 10th Rftte '· THE GREEN..FLAG -R!H> "Sleepy" Tripp of El Toro won his lotb main event of the season and his ·rirst at Ascot Park- in Gardena recently in CRA midget competition. When the world's top motorcycle racers vie in the Champion spark plug cl888ics at Ontario Motor Spee<iway Oct. 6, they will be running counter-clocr.tlse on a 2.9-mde course. Pro G~id Standings •• NATIONAL "()oTIALL L•AGU• AM••ICAH CONF•a•NCa anten; DIYllllll W L T Pd. ,.,., 0, NIW £ngllnd 2 0 0 1.00D 62 " Ml•ml 110..50ll'850 N,Y, Jiii 1 I 0 ,SOO 39 .U Ct'f'f! 8\lffllo I 1 0 .500 :J7 4' 99fllmor. 0 2 0 .CICIO 13 ~ · Clllfnl DhllliM ,,..,~ l"llflburVh 1 0 l .7'11 u 35 Clnc1nlllfl 1 I 0 .JOO 51 27 ... ~, Houlton 1 1 0 .SIXI 2t :W Cl9¥tiM!d 1 l 0 .'80 17 .. "" ........ Df'lttl• Olkl•nd I 1 0 .SIXI 47 21 ''" M .51n OMgo I I 0 .SOO :W 31 K-1 Ctty l I 0 .50Ct 31 a Otn.....-• 0 I l .250 15 52· "ATfONAL CONll'•••MC• ~.r. • ..... Dl'lt9*1 ..._.:,. St. Louis 2 O O 1.000 2' 13 i..-,, • OIHIJ I 0 O 1.000 24 o .\ 1 WashlllDfOll 1 I O .SOO 23 27 • P~ll90llpfll• 0 1 0 .ODii 3 7 -J4,Y. Gl.nts I ! O .000 30 41 C ...... Ol'ltlllll -:. Ml-*• ;I 0 D l.OOC> " 2l Chic• 1 1 0 •• 31 32 GrlWI .... 1 1 0 .JOO 17 45 "·'•-Detroit O.tJ o .ODO JJ 24 -W9lfWll Dl'tf$1 .. LOI ~ t o o 1.000 41 lo •:--.:: SM ll'r..a.c. 2 O 0 1.000 U 23 ••• ,._ OrlffM I 2 0 .000 13 Al Atl•nl• D 2 0 .000 10 «I S"""'Y't G1rrtn Stn Fr•ndlCO 16, Atll1n11 10 Miami 24. autl•lo 16 s.n 01'90 20, Clnclnn1tl 17 CleYlllnd 20, ~ton 7 Mlnl!flOtl 1, Dth'olt 6 New England 21. NtW York Glints ~ Sf. LOI.lb 17, W••Mnoton 10 Gt1en Ill y 20, B•lllll'Kll't 13 N-YOl'k Jtls 23, Chlc.lllO 21 Plttlt;vrvh 15, DtnYff 35, Kt 1wrtlt111 Lot A,119eltt 24, NllW Orlnn1 0 Olkllfld U, K•11111 City 1 ·----0.llU at l"tlflldtlDhfl SlllURy, s.t. 2t H-York Jib 1t tuttato Loi ...,.._ 11 New E119lllld At11nt1 11 New OrMns B1llfmort 11 Pl'lll&cftlphll N.w Yotk Gllnll 11 011111 Pt~I YI, Grllft llty •I MllwMIMI K•nu. City •I Houlton , Cllkt00 ti MlflllllOfl Cl•¥ef1nd •I St, I.Ou!• Oallltfld ., '"'"llivrfh Miami •I SM! Ol'IO Clnclnn1u 11 Sin Fr1ncltc0 Ml!lfly, ...... OtnYW •I Wlll'llnglon . ::. . ~.· "" Water Polo Results ." .. ..... .. .. ~ .,, ~· ' ~ Baseball's Top IO AMl•tCAN l•AOUa PllYtr Ch;t 9 A• a H P'cf, High.light,s of Europe Trip Recalled by SoCal' s Peak C1rtw Mln I.. 513 16 :IOI .:Mol Drf1 Clll llf "' 13 157 .111 MClll:11 KC 1•1 Jiit ,, 1.11 .)Cll, Mlddo• HY 1)0 4.o 11 l:l.S .301 Phtl1ll1 NV IJ.I <lf4 ff \JI .:)06 ll:MICIM Tl.I( 1.. W U l!lJ ,30.I 0.Al/911 Clll 131 "62 14 \,, -'01 8 urr01111ll• Tix 1•7 UI ll 160 ,n Ydnn,.11.1 8111 144 m n lft .!tt Cl"""911tflt 0.k 130 JI) 71 ISi .M4 ,,._._ 0. Allin, Clllc_, )2; II:. JKll.Mlft, Oakl111d, ?t llurr0U9111. T1•11, 1s1 01 ....... 1n, Mll'IMIOll, 2<11 Tin I CI , OalU..icJ, 11, It-•11tfll 111 lhwrOl,llllu, T1J111, 1151 ll1ndo, Oakltnd, 102i lllldl, 0 111.land, f5J ICHtn• W-, Cl'llCtfO, 931 0.rwlPI, Ml,,_ nno11.'3. Pllctil11t OJ DKltlto111l CueU1r, 81Ulmor1, 21.10, .1>n1 HIH\lff', Otkl~l U-12, ... 7; JtTll<.lni, Ttllu, 1+12, ."11 FlltmOl'tls, K111M1 Cl•r· 1111 .'67l o. P.rry, Cl1'1t11ncl, 2Q. I, .'451 Hiiiei', Ottrolt, 17·11, .607; fllATIONAL LIA.GUI: ~.,.,. Ci. 0 Aa t H PCL Gtrr Ari 136 17' 7' 204 .3S4 G•rvt! ~ UI •12 93 lff .320 A. Sm Ill 5tl. IJS 4' 1S 1Sl .31S •utk,,... ~ I» 54'1 n 111 Ji• ZIU: 1"911 139 506 n 1.ff' j" A.OllYW ,.II~ 137 573 • Ito , 14 Mc8rl(te SI L 1'3 "3 76 167 U ~ock SIL 1.U 601 101 1• :l" Gross Hin 147 m n in 11 M~lock Chi llt 413 .ff' 121 .310 HMM llllM Sdmlldt, PNIMMIOl'll•, 3'1 Wynn, Loi Aneelet, 32; atnch, Clnclnn.tl, 311 T. Pwn, ClnclnnaH '171 CMlflo, Houston, 2S. 11-1111.. •• , l tl'l(l't, ClflclnMtl, 122; SChmlcll, Pllll.citlpftla, 1151 Gtrvey, Los Angtttt., IOlt; Wyfltl, Los Ano-I•, ll»i T P.,..,, Clnclrw11!1, t7. ,.tlcN111 OJ Dedlielltl John, LOI -"'lleln, 13-J. .Ill; C•ld-11, Sfln Fr•nclKo. ''"'-,11'; Meursmlll, LOI Angelt1, 19.6, .7¥J; C. C•rrotl, Clnclfltlall, 11·5, .6141 • Big Canyon Golf News Tommy Thompson holds a four-stroke lead over Kurt Johansson in the men's club championdllp after two rounds ol play in the 54-bole event. Thompson has c a r d e d rounds of 7~74-144. while Johansson is in at 72-7&-148 with 18 holes to play. Dick Oark is third with 71-79--150 . In the club championship for couples over the past weekend, Harry and Marie Whittaker finished with a gross score of 75 for first place honors with Charoltte and Maynard Franklin second at 76. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Geller won net honors with 59 while Jackie and Bill M c C I o y finished second at 61. By DOW ARD L. HANDY Of ttte ~•r '"''°' 11•ff Finding a hamburger house In Holland gave 11 Southern California College basketball players a new Jease on lire and geoer&ted added en- thusiasm for continuation of a 29-day European t o u r ret.'ently . The lJ players, along with · coach Paul Peak and assistant Jim Munnerlyn, r e tu r n e d home to Costa Mesa last week, a tired but bappy and satisfied group of athletes. "When they found that hain- Wrget" ouUet, they . really gorged themselves," P e a k says. "It was the next best thing to corning home and by that time, we were all getting pretty tired. "Anothef' highlight of the trip was the game with Ra.alt in Dellt, Hlilland. We beat , them, 86-78, and they were the same team t h a t represented the country In the Dutdl Cup toornamenl. "Our players were also im- pressed with the receptiveness of our Armed Forces. In a polite way, our players called them their fan dub. "The purpose of the trip was to acquaint our players with the different cultures and the way people live. "In evaluating the situation , I don 't really know if it helped our recruiting this year or not. It's difficult to say because each of them had to raise $450 oo his own to make tbe trip." Peak took only unmarried players and had only three lettermen from last year's squad with him. The others included a red-shirt player from last season, Al Carlson, a freshman and four junior college transfers. First stop was in Brussels, Belgium where SoCa1 College, a Christian church school., has a sister school. They stayed in dormitories and ate in the school cafeteria tha t first week. PAUL PEAK Then it was on to The Hague , Holland where another sister school exists but was in the midst of moving to a new site and promised dormitories were not available. "We stayed in a hotel and ate our meals out and this really put a dent in our budget," Peak admits. "But after every game, they would have a social and invite our players and those of the other team. "We played a game against Leon Wandel's team in Brussels. He is the general secretary of the All-European team. "OJr game wa s played in the basement of a larg~ fac-- tory where they had glas,, Fish Report DANA WHAlt,. -?27 1ngltr1: m wnd bass, 12 blrrKud1, 94 bonito. 1' hlllbut, " y1llowt11I, tJ rock '"'· Nl!WPOllT fDIW'('I LOCklr) -11, 1ngltr1: lJ bonito,, 1.10 WllCI tl.111, 3 nllowl1ll, 215 rock cod. (Ari's unl1111 -,.. 1na1 ... ,, 13J calico bass, <I02 rock cod, ,.. bonito, 1 y111owt1H. 1 rn1ckfftl, 1 lwll!IMlt. MOllltO aAY (Vll'f'I Ulldlfll) - 70 111111 ... 1: 20 11r19 cod, 1112 rock cod. tlrffn' u ... 111l -76 angltr1: 'V 1tblcort, eo rock cod, 11 cow 'cod. 2 blUlffn tvnl. backboard> and m a n u a I I y operated scoreboards. It was standing room only because they had no seats. "After the game we weN! invited to this mansion and they fed us a huge meal. The klds put away 211 litres ol Coke, along with the meal." Peak also recalls th e souverur hunter&. 11The kids in other countrles all wanted something from us. Our players each had 150 cards made up with their own picture and a short testimony fl! their faith before we lelt and they gave all of these out. · "They also wanted socks, shoestrings and anything else they could get for souvenirs. "The European coaches look up to American basketball coaches and Jim and I spent ntany nights talking with op- posing coaches until 2 or 3 in the morning . They wanted to talk and talk." Included in the list of players making the trip were lettermen Ted Bergerson, a 6-5 junior forward; B i 11 Skradski, a S.10 junior guard; and Randy Kumpe, a 6-0 senior guard. ~ Freshmen included Steve Shaw of Aviation High, a 6-8 ·center; Jeff Malstead, a 6-4 forward from Ambassador High; and David Barroo, a 6-1 guard from Ventura High. Transfers included Charles Johnson, a 6-5 junior from Los Angeles Sout hwest College; Jeff Kesslar, a 6-3 sophomore from Santa Ana College; Ken Kile , a 6-3 sophomore from Golden West College; and Tom Watkins , a 6-1 junior from Cypress. Peak will add Larry Rose, a 6-3 sophomore lettennan forwanl; Billy Helm, a 6-1 ~ior letterman guard ; Doug Posey, a 6-8 junior transfer from Moorpark College ; and Bill Leavell, a senior at 6-5 who Ted-shirted last season with Carlsoo. medium car sizes: THE ECONOMY TIRE WITH A WXURY RIDE. Tt>s l<e l1Y0S )<)II oor a smooth nde. The specially designed trEl<(d .pottem pioOOes goodlrocllon Qld IOOd hOldrg. lw:J. lhe 4-ply f.>ciYesler cord odds strenglh and sfobili1y. Give vo.x ca a kw'! ca ride. Plctc LP the Cullom 1.cr9 Milet E78·14,-F78-14. G78-14, F'Z8·15. G78-15 plus Federal Excise lax o1 S2 24 to $2.63 and trade. $23 for smaller CCII sizes: A78-~3. 078-13. 878-14. C78-14 plus Federal Excise toxot S1.78 ta S2.07 crdtrade. $31 lor rc.oer car Illas: . 1178-14, H7&-15. J78"15 crd t78-15 plus FeOOal Excise tox ot S2.77 ta S3.13 crd 1RJde.. lliaCkwalts 52.00 fess at! sizes. power express truck tire · I lube and oil ·special s25 fa6.101ISplui.Fed.&.1a~ al 12.36- CO'tipudile SOYings on other small truck sizes. s3sa We 1 ?Ohmionotty lubricate )Oii' ca and odd ..., 10 SCfDl'of ~ol .Pteioo call !ot ..,,.;nttnont B. F. Goodrich Store· 2049 HARIOR--BLVD. lat bayJ COSTA MISA ~~ji_;. HMIO· ...................... !"""_..ALSO A~------.. -----------------. ·-· I. F. GOOOltCH STOii 618.2 UHCOLH CYPRESS 126-4010 I I I. F. GOODlllCH STOii 524 W. UHCOLtl ANAHEIM 774-7571 • •• f. GOOoa!CH 0STOIE 200 SO. MAIN ST. ' SANTA ANA 547·71$5 PRIZES WORTH 't5DD00 WIN ;J'I'!"" TV w..kfy Pigsld~ Piclceroo '74 winnen will M owar· ' · cltd pria., by A.IC Color Tel...,lsioft of Huntlnvton leacfa. fint place winlWIJ will ~lw o $91.al ~ 12-inch, dioeonal meawre, block and whhe pmtable television Qt, Se<ond pklc• winners get o $16.95 Z.nith table model raCiio and third place priMS ON Zenith "billfotct'' por:llet ponable rOdios worth $12.95 uch. All priz" .,. volYed according to monufocturar'1 sug~t.d mail prices. Entriel moy be de~ted until lhunday aftetnOIJN' at tt. A.IC Color Television Pt.kin Piclceroo '74 ~uarter1 °' at Dally Pilot offices In Hvntlngton leodi, ~ hoc:h, C0tto Mna, Loguno hach or San Cl.mente. w..kly winnen will be notlflH by mall and IMY pidi up their prizes at AIC Colot Teltvi1ion 19046 lrookhurst l lvd. Huntington leach Watch for this Pigskin Picbroo '74 pScryen ferm tach WMk in the DailT Pilot sports MCtion. Cittl• tt. Nam you think wil '#in in Heh palrin.1 in th• It.I ol 30 games and Mnd in the player's fOrm on. ~ Wank or o reasonoW. faaimile. Then watch tho Daity Pilot 1pons pa ... for Heh wook'• list of th,.. ..;...-. AJ the conclusion of the t 0-wHk eom~trtion, ~ will invito first place winnen to try for the Owfall grand prizo; a Zonith color television. Tho 11Mndt, diagonal measure table model colot Mt is valued -at $291.11. It I"' to tho Pigskin Pickot'OO 74 contntant who best Dr9dicts the Htcome of Mlectod prof"sional kotbalf fl!"'" the weekend following the close of r.gular p1cketoo contnt. To ba oUgiblo for the grand prizo, you have to win one of the wookly Pigskin Pictioroo '74 com• pot;tioM. lolow aro the Nies, tho list of 141mes ft entty blank. Good luc.k. RULES ............ ......., ................. ,. .. ,,.... '-""•.,. .. ...... .... ......... ....i ..... ii "9fiM4 -- ... _. 4up1; .............. _. .. .-ifwin "' ............ .. Mall,.. I""'""· n-. _..kh . .,. .. _,_ wlH M .......... 2.,.... ii ... PKOIGN PtemOO, 7 4,""""' D111Jfll .... , r.o. ... 15'0. c..t. ..... CA. t262•. 1 0.,. -......, ,... ,.,_ ,.,...;t,. .......... C.: •••••• -....... ftwt _.., tMcleh _., i-.._ -tff~ ....... ,_ • a1,..i. ......... alftf .. ._........ ..... _,, ..... ity .,,., Nfkttlleiut _ ...... trt" thw ............. . ~.,;.,,..... ............ _.. i.. _,...... _ "-' lty ell www ........ u . ... ..... _. i.. ,..._.... ""' -.., ,.._ n...-lrt A.M. • ......... ,,__... .. tt. Oltily Pllet eff!GI lty 6 P.M.. nu-. .... ......... 11 •• .,...... .... tt.lr ...... , ........ Deily N.t .. , ... ,_ d ftt.ir ifir I ..... '-*"" ·-ft9t ~ N -· 6. TII 111M11 ILANI MUST M ftWD IN 01 INTIT IS YOtD. • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • : ENTRY BLANK : • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ...,._ __________ Zip ___ _ • • • • • • • • • • "'""'~~~~~~~~~~-Se• : a.de-teom& you think will win this we.k's gamet : Rams al Hew Enc)land Miami al San Diecio Chicago al Ml1111esota Oakland al Pittsbun)h Detroit al Green Bay Mich. State al UCLA Texas A&M al Washi114Jton USC al Pittsbun)h Tennessee al Auburn Purdue al Notre Dame Navy al Michigan Penn Stale al Iowa Anny al Cal Holy· Cross al Ha"ard • TCU al Minnesota Wisconsin al Colorado Sadclleback al San Dlecio CC Orange Coast al LA Harbor Mt. SAC al Golden West Esper.za al Dana Hiiis Mater Del al Santa Ana Warren al Edison Canyon al University hmtaln Vahy al Estancia . Rim af World al Lagwa CdM al Newport Harbor El Toro al Gahr Marina al Huntington Costa Mesa al Mission Viejo · Cypress ·at San Clemente 111 llWll -My _9uo11 on tho tofal numMr .t,........,.. in all 30 fGINI is • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • : • • • • • •• • • • • ................. 1•·····························••1• .. • • • • ' • u • • • -.. ' • ' • ' : • ·! • • • • ' ' ' • • • . ( B Bal olde was day fare, rem duri at I only Co licia high1 Nav rem Faas F. sail fro and 0 Pe Fl jack and Fl ro-s and T CB \ Sat 1 Vog For CB WC A • • • • • • • • " • . ' • • " .. . • • t • ·! • • • 1 • • • ' , ' ' . , • " • O•trv Plltl Stell ll'llolt Monday, Stptember 2.l, 11¥74 DAILY PILOT 8 '1 SOfllmer Weather PUBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE IUl"l•to.t COUi t Ofll' (AL,U10llMIA. ,.ICTITIOUI IUllNlll ILP.7UU COUNTY o• o•ANl l •••• 7M C .. ll Clllttf' Ort'#t Wttt, ITATEMllllT llOTIC:I TO CltlOITOll I ... AN. Cell..,.. ""' TM folloWIPIO Pfftoll• ,,, 40lntl su••••o• COUit Ofl TNI • C.UI Nl.IM••= tutl ... u 11; ''"'' 0" CALll'OltNIA •o• CM""4 l"AUL KAPLAN CO., 2001 Ou.I! TNI COUJITY Of' OftANOI SUMMONS (MAltllAOI) Sr .• N-1 ••acfl, (.a~ nt6Cl. .... A.""74 Diii ''"' ~ c....,i.i• Ir• "•"" ICIPlt<\, 10322 IMl\efl ~--'· °' STEPHEN p A. l Is I( A lrt re 1M mtrrl• of Jl'.tlt10Mt L• Ot .. H\lflfllt(ltCNI leMfl. C•I . .,.... °"""""'°' GA.llRIA MAI! COOL!'!' •!Id ltHpondtnf: llktoerllll I(, Col•m.1n, 171 1.0Ul1 friK,TICIE IS HE1tl8Y GIVEN to ttt. 204 Skippers Vie In Fall Regatta ALLAN GEORGE COOLEY Or .. Newbury Jl'1rt. C•I. credltort of IM •~ "'""" de<edtnt TO ttM lt'9pondtnl! The SNllllOflff' Thl1 b\ll.IMU h CO#'olllllldtd by I OtMf•I !'Mt •H ptr-t 11t\tl119 cl•hnt eotl'J't 11.11 lllff , Ntmof1 eonc"'111111 your Ml'fMr.,.ip. tM N ici ~I ''' requlrtd ti Ille m•ITf•~· Yeu mw tit• • wrllttn Ir• P. IC.1pl1n ltlefn, .,.,h ""' "*f, .. ,., voucfttl'1. In r-H WITll!n JO d•Y• OI the cl•M Tl'lh 1111-nl WI) fllff' wltl'I the ,.,. Ollie• °' !I'll Clerk °' "" •llCNe fll•I flllt t11m~ I\ WfYltd on you. COIHlty Cl1rk of Ortnge CwnlY on ffllllled (Olltl, ., lo pr111nl !hem, wllh Balboa Yacht Club and New port Harbor Yacht Club call it the Fall R egatta. But for the 2M skippers in 15 classes who turned out for the Salurday and Sunday feature, the weather was more like a summer regatta. Bright sunshine and light a I r s prevailed both days on boU1 inside and outside courses. NHYC handled the outside races whii:h dre\v 41 boats in five classes. On the imide courses BYC rode herd on 163 boats in IO claues. Largest turnout was in the Laser A class with 25 entries, and the Laser Bs drew 22. Trophy winners; N H Y C outside classes: ,, you 1111 IO tlt• • wrllttn ''"'°"" $1J>ttrnbtt "' 1t14. ,,.. MC"H''I' YOl.l(lltlt. to ' h. wllMn iweh tlrM, "°"'' lllltflvll ml'( -Jl'-Mtl 11111111trtlOMC1 -•I the Llw ottl<.t ol l'!MJL, HOST·l3 (5) -I, Andy Lar-tie tnltrH 1nd thl covrt m•v intlf' Jl'11Dlllht<1 Or1..-1 Cot11 OlllY Jl'Uot. MA.STINGS, JANOl'SKY L WA.lit.Ell, sen PVYC 1 ll.ICl9mtM cool1lnl1W 1n111nc:tl\lto or otlWr S1pt1m1Mr 9, 1•. n. )0, lt1• '336-14 1711 DuPont Dr,, Sit. t, lrv111e, C•H'-1• ' ' orlltf'I concernl"ii dNl1lon of 11r11t1trtv, ~...... wlllcl'I 11 Ille plMt of bu•l"flt• ~Ml WllPO<I child c11tlollllY chlllll PUBLIC NOTICE of th• undlrilontd 111 111 metftrt SABOT A (IS) - 1 Jack •• .-..1 ,11,.,n1,'.1 ,, ,, ,.,· ,.~.. "''•lnlnt to th• 111111 °' ••lcl citcecl•n'· • •¥.,.... • 11, co1 • """ within fOllr monlh1 111., IM ttr1t Franco LIYC· 2 Wally Ger· otl'llf' rtllef •1 m•v bl "''"led by ou1:111c111on ol t11b no11c1. ' ' ' Ille tOl.lrl $LP·74'U rie. NHYC ; I, Steve Rados, II .,.. 'wflll ,. ..... '"-H vlc• •• NOTICI TO c111 01T011S 0•~ ... ~~~T';'~L1ik.J'' NH'YC; 4, MJke Spain NllYC; ,•111 -"-' 1111 -IM• M•""" .,.., MM'"• 'IT"',,•0•J0•,• ,••,•,'0'1,•111.-T,•0 •, E•1c11tr!J'. Clf ll1t v1111 • Su S I C e llO ,,_,, Y to tl'lft YWt wr 111 ALl .. 01 '"' 1b<lve 111tMCI dKldtnt ... zame pang e,r NHY . relpo!IM, II •11y, !MY .. lllelll •II TM• COUNT'I' 01' OlANO~ PAUL, HASTINGS. JA1401'S1CY SABCYI' B (12) 1 Jennifer llmt. Ne. ... ...,. • wALic•• -, • Otllid October 10. 117( l'.Jl•M of ELIZA.8ETH R 0 0 T 2JU OUl'Olll Dr,. Sl1, I Martyn, BYC; 2, Kir k 1\lppan, wrLLIAM E. sT JOHN, c11n 11.oc1tWELL. DK11Hd. 1r..i111. c1Mtw11•• """ NHYC: 3, Karen Faber , RONA...:., ,~U,..~~'· O.wtv u~~~E ofis,_:e::o~: n~~~N oi!:.o~ J:,'t!:.,..U,3;2!~ l.111<1itrti BCYC; 4, Steve George, BYC. 111 ._.,.,... Or1NC1• ltlllt .ti '"''°"' 111iv1111 c••lms 119•/nst Publlltlecl Or•-.e cu11 D•llv Jl'llOf, SABOT C (~) I 1 " • • .. ci.-1111, c.11..,.. ""' "" Mid oec.O.nl .,. requlrecl lo flit S.pltmblr , .. n. lO. •111111 October 7. "°" -, u:iiUMe 171•1 412+111 llWm, with Int ll«ttlll"I' YOIKhefl, In 1914 l'11·7f Clary NHYC· 2 Jeff Doder A.It_., ,., Pellti..r Ille offle• of 111.1 cltrk o1 tri. 1bov• ------------- Byc,'3 u •• ..:. ())' h syc.' Pllblll~ Orlr!ff CMtl Dilly Piiot, enll!ltd COi.ir!, or to prtMnt t11m>. with PUBLIC NOTICE , • UC\;a1 Iller, , Stpllfnblf 1•. 2l. JO, •nd OCIODtr 7, n. 11ec:nwry YO<Xhfflo to '"'1-------------4, Jon Pinckney, NHYC; 5, 1•14 )4tl-74 uftllertlollecl 11"" uw Ofllc. o1 Kll~OEL l'ICT1T1ous I USIHl'SI Will Bents NHYC P UBIJC NOTICE AND ,1.NOElSQN, 1020 N 0. TH NA.Ml' STAT•Ml:NT • • BllOAOWA.Y.. SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA The foH-tno l)tr10lll •r• dOl"9 '2102, wlllcft II lhf: plt(e of 1:11.111111$1 l:l!nlMIS 11: of Ille llfleletsl;ritcl In Ill ,,.,.tllr1 MISSION TlllE CENTEll , 111'! l'ltTITICIUS IUSINl'SS pertelnlng lo tlW esl•te of s1lcl dee~!, MirgU'trll1 .. 1rkW•Y• Mls1IOfl Vll lO. NAMll ITATl'MaNT wflt'lln lour rnontll1 tlttr the ''"' Ct llfornl• Thi lollowlng p41r10n 11 doing b111IMtl p1,1bllctllon of tl\ls notice. COLLINS ,lltESTONE, l~C. t B H l 11: Otlllcl Sftlltmi:i.r 4. ltH C1Ulotnl1 corpor•llon. 11 n G1rden1 Mark Set Y e l'RESTON SAILS, 111 Hlh SI.. SUSAN PAllKER Blvd .. G1rc1t11•, Celllarnl• 90241 , J) ey Newport B11cll, Cl. t26'0 E•tcv!TI• of ltl• wlll Of Int atiovt Tllll busln11s It concklclecl tiy t Cot• C1tvln J. Prt1ton, 213* T1b100 nemllcl deceden1 portllon. PHRF (16) -I, Mt.y Be, SAN DIEGO !AP) -George Pl., co111 M•1•, c1, n62• llCINDl'L AND .1.NDl'llSCN COLLINS 11111esTONE, INC. H k Th Thlt buslne11 11 being conclvclecl bY lnt Nertll •rlllllllw•Y Oonald R. SOdtrberg, Pr11loent an ayer, NHYC; 2, Lark, Henley of Seattle has set two .,, 1~1vic1u11. 1111t• A.n, C:•llftr111e t21e1 r11ts 111tem1nt w11 11111c1 w1111 '"' "'--Rafael BCYC· 3 Quad Id d Cilvln J. Pre1ton l r\41 Dl-7111 CounlY Cterk of Or•nu• C011n1Y on 1uu1 ' • ·• -wor records an gathered This 1111em1n1 tllfd with th• cou11ty Alter!llY• ,., 1:11ec111r111 sii:it. 11, 1,14• riga, Corey Myer , BYC, and another 1200 points in his race Clerk of 0t1111• county on s.¢em11tr P111>111Md Or•nge Co•111 0111., Piiot, ,.1,,u Burleigh Brewer, NHYC: 4, (or the ' 1974 Un 11 m ited 6. 1'7'-l'J1'Jt 5ep11m111r t. 1•. 23. lO. 1t7• 3402·7• PubllJl'lecl Or•noe O::GA1t ~:11."'4• ']~~! Impetuous, Cliuck Glasgow, H PuDl1lh.O Or•noe c:°''' O•llY Piiot PUBLIC NOTICE sii:itember :u. 30· tobl'r '"'·'• BYC·. S, Revei"lle, Robert ydroplane c hamp ionships. k-Pt•mllel'"l•. 23. JO. 1n1111octOblr 1, 1,,,,1 ___ .:_::=::::...:.::.::::= ___ 1 ___ -;;;;;;;;-;;;-c;;;;;;;;;;;:--;- Sho t Bye Henley piloted Pride of :w1•·1•1· sLP-rou PUBLIC NOTICE r · · Pay'N Pak to victory Sunday 1110T1c:a TO c111'DtT011:s SHIELDS (8) -I, Pru-1'n the San Diego Unl1'm1'ted' ---~P~UB~Ll~C_N~OTl:..:.~CE=--SUP•ltlOll COUllT 01' TH! MUNICIPAL COUllT 01' CALll'Oll NIA., d M Schry BCYC 1· STAT• OP C:ALll'OltNIA l'OR COU NTY 01' OllAHOI ence, arc er, ; Regatta at Mission Bay, set-1"1U1T1ou1 1us11111:1s TH• COUNTY 011 011A.N01 4?tl J1mllor'el 11.i, N-..rt 1t1c11. 2. Tornino, Bill Martin, NA.Ml ITATSMl'IT Nt.. ,....,. c:.111.,.111• t2"' NHYC: 3. Jean, G 0 r 'd 0 n ting a world record for a TM tollowlnu '**' ls CIOll!I 11111ln.11 E11111 of JOHN c. DOUGLASS, HA11teo11 JUDICIAL DIJTlllCT t>mile beat of 114.942 miles •1: O.C••Hd. cA1 1 NUM•111 1•11 Marlow UCJ Sailing Associa-SUNOANCE WEST, 1'92 No. 1 NOTICE IS HEl£1!1Y GIVEN lo the SUMMONS CIN C:llDSS COMPUINT f per hour and another for a M•Plt, Coste Mt M, Cl. creclltor1 of Ille 1bcr'le !\tmed cleceOe11I IN INTl'llPLIADl'll BALBOA YACHT CLUB· RECOMMISSIONED IN GALA NAVY TRADITION Capt. Char les E. Faas Compliments Yachtsmen on S..i Courtesy ion. 4~mile regatta ol 110.859 mph. I(,. Allen PM!trstn. 111S Newport l'hll Ill lll'floOl\I Mvlng cl1lm1 111111111 Pltlntltf: ADVANCED ENGINEERING ETCHELLS. 2 2 (5) -A.w., Cost• Mew, Ct . thl wld clectdenl ,,. requlrtcl lo file a. SUPPLY COR,.., 1 C.illOfnfe corpot• Ba Thll bl.l1lne11 IJ btlng tond11tl.O oY fllem, with 1111 n«•u•rv vovc:hotrs, In !Ion nanas, Leroy Sutherland, PUBLIC N01'1CE •n lndlvld1111. Ille office °' Ille clerk ol 1111 1tiow Oeflftd~ts: E. o. II O OE FF E Jt. NHYC· 2 ~aparral Pa"t1-------------l I(.. Allen P9ClerHll lifllltltci court, or to prnent tlWm w1tto llODEFFElt IN V EITMENTS . • ' ' '-'II ' SLP·7-U. Tl\I• sltttrnenl llltlll wl!h Ille Ccunly the' MCKtlry Y011Cller1, le 'I ht r;orpor1tron, Incl DOES 1 l'hrOUlllh J Ayres, l\'HYC. SUPllllOll COUltT Cl' THl Clirrl< of Or111119 County an S.plet'l'IOer llnclerl.lonilcl 11 t11t Ltw Olflc. o1 EDWIN To the o.terde"b : A dvlt c~lnl >-0-5 (5) -l, LlVl!! Wire, STATI' 01' C:ALIFOll.NIA t'Dlt '· 1•7•. w. CHAFFEE. P.O. "ox Soll, SAN hll bttn Ille<! ll't '"" pltlnlllt i19lln1t u~ s· . THI: COUNTY 01' Oft.t.NOI! l'PMI CLf MENTI!, CALIFOll.NIA tun Whldl you. II ro!J Wltl'! to dlteflcl 11111 l1w1ul!, ,........., Jostedt, CBYC: 2,' The No. M U ii Publtlhecl Or1nge Cotlt O•llY Jl'Uot 11 tlW place of bu•lneM of ttie u~l9ned vou mull fllt 111 1111• cOllff • wrtlttn World ls Flat, Alan Johnson, DllOEll TC SHOW CAUSl Sirptff!lblr ,,, n. lO. Ind OClobtr 1, 117• In •II fM!ftr1 per t1l11lng '° Ille tllltl 1>leedl119 In "''PGltM to the comp&.,lnt :Dff.74 ~ ... .._ ..... _ {or • wrlttt'n or ore! p!Ndlng, II CBYC l'Cll CHANO li 01' NAMI! \-----------=-=:!'"' H"' ........... 111, within four monl'hs • Justice Court) wlltl!n JI d•Y• titer . 111 1111 M11t1r 01 ttie: Altt11u11on °' PUBUC NOTICE ,11.,. the t1r1t ll\lblk1tron of this 110tlc1. thli summons ti ••rvM on veu Balboa 'Recommissioned' Balboa Yacht Club, second oldest in the Harbor Area, was "recommis.'iioncd" Sntur- day with traditional Navy fan- fare, climaxing a year of remodeling and refurbishing during 1,1,·hich the clubhouse at 1801 Bavside Drive was only partly Usable. Commodore !)ave Lang of- ficiated at the ceremonies highlighted by music by the Navy band and laudatory remarks by Capt. Charles E. f'aas, representing Rear Adrn . F. B. GilcbC90n of the lllh Naval District.. THE N A VY also sparked the ceremonies by b ringing a PTF high speed patrol boat alongside the club guest dock for inspection by the several hundred club member's and guests. Also on hand was Assemblyman Robert Badham who presented Commodore L.1ng with a resolution from the State Legislature com- plementing the club on its 50th anniversary. STAFF COi\1i\1000RE Car· roll D. l-ludson presented a plaque dedicating the Com- modore's Gallery, a new fea- ture of the clubhouse remodel- ing. Vice Commodore Ken Ross was master of ceremonies. eve was first started in 1924 in a small bungalow on the Balboa Peninsula, later moving to quarters on Little Is land. Jn l!Hl the original clutnxlse was built on its present site and ha.s been remodeled and e n I a r g e d several times. RHODES • 33 (7) -1, :.L~~!~e A.0~G~1s~s "R NTISS, JR. O..ttllllJ~~·~bl~tci~ss JR Ofll•rwlH, YIKH' Cl•l•ult wlll w ent-4 lmpulse, Oscar Celvidenee J r., ... J'c.~~~EAss. k":::tf~l:•'jon •I WllllAM l'ltT1T1aus au11M•s1 execv!W °" ttlt w11i " ~ c=~~~ en\':'r ~'J'ucl~~:11!o.rnn11 NHYC, 2 Silver Serpent U P , R lor c111n<;it NAMI' STATl'MINT o1 1111 •bo~• 111mec1 Oecldtnt you tor '"' ~ or otN r rtllef • • of n1m1 has bM11 duly !!lid w11h T..__ l•I I I of ·• l'OWIN W. CHAl'l'l!I ~ .. I •-I I Robert Law BYC· 3 Folly Ille cl1r-of this Court incl It tpfftrlng ,,. tHt no i>erlOll I Cl 11111 bU .. Mtl ,. o llll w r1que11""' n ''"' comi:i • nt. • • • ' II: ' • If YOll wttl'! I• -II thl HYICI ., II, Blair Barnette BYC trom 11ld •PQUc1tlon th1t .i1ld 1POllce11t A.l l!RT SOFTENEll SERV ICE a. s.11 c1emt1111. C•lll1rnl1 n1n 1,. hml 1 tM ""-" ttioultl • de1lre1 to ht~• hl1 n1mt cf11119td lo REPAIR co .. , .. , E. Wtrller, Stnli 1710 492 .. 111 -'1oe !. ~~ .! ""'' •;~;....., .... Ille pr09054d NllM Df PETER l EE Alll , C..UI. t'll'M. Atfttllt'I' .... a1ec11tor If •ny, 1111, .. fllff M 11-. BYC INSIDE CLASSES PR~~TISS. E 1 HtrV•Y C1rroll H1wkln1 111, .ot ,.11bll1htd Or•ngt Co111 01l1y Piiot, 011.0 Ftb 11 1014 SNIPE (8) -1, Ken Steele, or:.,..s :~E~~:g:ci 'thti ~.~ ::.: :t11ce. l ong Be•cll. c1111. tetl5 SIP!tmw 9. 1•· n, 30. 1'7( ~ M. H'•mi1n. citrk CBYC; 2, James English, lnlH111ec1 In tM uld m.ttttr of cllil11111 hld~!f1111~'1"'1' It conlllluc!ltcl bY •n PUBUC NOTICE (SEALlev Vlrolnle Ge!ldle, DtPUIY CBYC of ne!M ePOHr befor• •boY• entlllltcl HtrVf/'Y C. H•wklM 111 CUNAll:O. AU.UITINI & CCX . C011rt, In D.,.rtme11t ~. tMrlOf, loc•tlcl Tiiis •l11tmttt1 w 11·~ with 1•-•-lJ~l" (24) , J D 11 100 Civic Celll1r Orlwi Wut, S.111• 11 ,... .,. l'ICTITIOUS IUSINE,S1 ,,......,.•I Lew ..........,.. 'I.Mo -' ave Allll. Ct lltornl• an ...... ·s111 di ol COlll'llV c .. rk Df 0.IJllll County on NAM• STATl'M•NT """ Suitt ttl tnlmalli BYC: 2, Bill ?o.fc-0t10blr. 1t1o&. 11 111.1 ~ °' ~o:oa A.;'.::~.:.i 19~~1-eotit o iuw PU... ~lie to11-1111 person b c1o11111 b1.11Jne1• ft!!!!=-• •,,"":,.., Cord Bye 3 G ed S Ith o'clock AM lMn 11'1111 there lo ll'low . ..,.. r "''It. ·-P""• ' ; ' ar m ' ctllM .,· ;,.y tl'llY llilw why IM ,.,....) WESTMINSTER J EWELRY L lOAN, 014) ...... BYC· 4 JoM 1borne B YC 1pp1k.t1on tor ell.Inge of ,;1m.1 ll'loulcl s.ptembM' 2, 9. If. :tJ. 1t1• JU+.1• 1W7 8rooll:llUJ1t SI., Wntmlnsler, C1lll. Aft-Y• fer °"""""'' llM ' ' ' not bt lll'lnled Curtt1 l" Ch1pm111, 1011 Ml11Jo11 Crw Com•lel11MI 5, Argyle' Campbel\, BYC. IT IS FUllfMER OROEllED 111.11 1 PUBUC N011CE Dr .. Cott• Mete. C1Ht. m2' Pllblllhld or.,,.. Cotst Dilly Pllof, LJ~l4B (22) Deen ~'I' of this order bt p1,1bll•lled rn Tiii• butlnet• II conc11.M:I~ bY' '" Stpttmblr 2. f, 16. 2l. 1974 1119·74 • ""' Ort!IM Cott! Dilly Plltl, • -l'ICTITIOUS IU,IN•ss llllllllvldUll. Hope, BYC: 2, Gastoo Ortiz, ,_,. of ..,,.,,, clrcul•llon. prlnttd MA.Ml STAT•Ml'NT Curtis l . Chepma11 PUBUC NOTICE BYC· 3 Wes George BYC· •111111 PUbllshecl 111 tlM cl!Y ot Coste Mew, TM tollowlng Pll'loOll b doing l:llllln.tti Tl\lt 11,1ement w11 tllecl with tMi-------------, ! ' ' CO\lntY o1 Oren", St111 of C1llforfll1. 1s; C°""'ty Clirk ol Dr111ge COlll'lty on fteTITIOUS aUSIN•ll 4, Debbie Brown. MBYC: 5, one• Mell wtt4t for tour 14) JUCCtulv• •.. Al'llll SOFORTH, as »Ill .st., S"'ttmlMr lt. 1'14. N-'M• STAT•Ml'NT Ted Hinshaw LIYC wtek1 prior to the Gilt •tlOYt a.et tor Newport a..c:h, c.i11ornl1 t2"0 l"nlU TIW !Ollowlng per.or. 11 clol!'lll tMlnnt ' . ""' i-lrtu of Hlcl •PPllC•llon. C•roly11 AM Rllty, 11611 Slll\lol• P11blfslltd Or•noe c .. 11 D11ly Piiot, IS: LASER A (25) -1, ~fark Dared s111temblr 4, lt7•. Trff Line. lrvlM. Cllllorr\11 92~ ~timber 23, lD, OctGDer 7. 1.(. lt7• MAllGIE'S HOUSE OF MAN Y Gaudio NHYC· 2 Mark Fl A.NK DOMENICMtNI Tllll bu$1,..,. I• condll(lltcl by •n l.flP.14 THINGS, '"° E. COii! Hloh••r· • • • · Jl,ldoli o1 tl'te SliPlrlor COUl'I llldlYllllluel. c~ dtl Mtr, c1/lfonll• '2QS Rastello, BYC; 3, Ty Beach, ATKINSON ANO OlllOM C11olYn A. 1111ey PUBUC NOTICE Mrs. M1ror.. J, Wlhler, •nt Bye , St R b t nn s. WalllllflM AvMlle Thi• a111-1 w1s flltd wr1t1 tlle Dordll'ller Rd, eoront 1191 M.,. : ~. U 0 er S 0 n , Wlll"I••" C•ltlorlll• tNl2 County c11r11 o1 Or111119 Counly on Celltornl• '2l2S • ' ABYC· 5 Larry Brown Ll YC. Alt......., tw ""111-s.¢9mber J. lt7•. l'ltTITIOUs IUllHlSS This hllllflHI 11 conductecl by •n In. ' ' ' T1l.,MM (l lU 'ff.ffll l':NfH NA.Ml! STATl!MENT dlvldull. Defiant Captures Top Honors Defiant. skippered by Sbe:ldon C'r0Uson of Seal Beach Yacht Club, emerged a s the overall vtinner in the Interna- tional Offshore Rule d i\'ision of Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club·s c~ht-race Cabrillo Serles. 1'he finlll two races were sailed Saturday and Sunday from CBYC to King llarbor and Return. Overall series 1,1,inncr in the Performance l-landicap Racing Fleet was Ted Issacs' Black- jack'. Long Beach Yacht Club and the ri.1idget Ocean Racing Fleet winner was \Vesterly 11 ro-skippreed by Ray Corbett and Don Meeks, CBYC. TROPHY WINNEHS in the CBYC to King llarbor race Saturday: !OR -I. Cohort, Marty Vogel, LBYC: 2. Grasshoppe<. Bob Hatch. CBYC: 3. Defiant, Sheldon Golison, SI BYC. PHRF -I. Mirage JI, Howard Hartry. CBYC: 2. Force Seven , Ted Zellmer. CBYC: 3. Figaro, Bill Hunter, WCYC. l\iORF -I. \Yestcrly ti, Ra.ce Wo1i By Waltze ~1ikc Waltze of Newport Harbor Yacht Club was the \vinncr Sundny of the \Vindsurfer A s so ci at ion Newport Beach R e g a l t a • Other trophy winners: CLASS A -1. Mike Waltze, Newport Beaoh: 2. Doug llal$Cy, Los Angeles ; 3. Toni. SieWart, Long Beach: 4. Mnc Coombs. Newport Beach . CLASS B -I. Jorja Stewart, Long Beach: 2. Brynn Larsen . Newport 1Jo.1ch: 3. KI m Baldwin. Palos Ve rdes. JF YOU WERE llOBBED TONIGHT . • • SERI N [NGS P11bll1tollcl Or•nue Ca.at Dilly P!lol, Publl1hld Orer199 COlll 01Uy PUol, Tiie IOll0¥1h19 PlflOlll ere doing Mrs. M1rjorle Wt hler COrbett and Meeks, CBYC; FINAL ES STA D : LASER B (22) _ 1, Paul *'""''-' '· 1&, n , 30. 1914 3401.14 seotembft 1•, :a. 30, •ncl 0c1oto1r 1. b1.1sl1M1u 11: This stetement w•• t11t1111 wllh 111e '°""'" 2. Sola.ro. Brown a nd FaUtens-IOR I. Defiant; 2. Marshall, NHYC; 2, Betsy P UBLIC NOTICE lPt• J.M-74 cJllTHT:EMf.tffJ>eE~~TfL°t_~~~~~~~) ~. c.i;;,~ of Or1no1 caun1y on s.p1emblr tcin. CBYC: 3. Magic, St.eve Dulcinea, Ray Wei t k am p , Andrews, BYC: 3, B ruce PUBLIC N011CE TttE NEWPOllT·MAReoR coTll · ,.ni.s /\1ulhollen, ABYC. CBYC: 3. Gras!hopper. C rary NHYC· 1 Jeff Scott l'IC TtT1ous sus1N1n ~~oRNJi'A c~~"o1 Sf'~T~~'~'~' c:;,•· ,,.",,'m"~ .... °''~' ,.5~ D•llY1 •11101, ' • • • NA.Ml! STATIMINT NOTICI INYITIN• SIDS NtWPOrt 8Hcll, 0.l!toml• 92"° • ""' -_, """'""'"' 7• " "' ri.tULTl HULL -Taku II. PHRF -1. Blackjack ; 2. LIYC; S, Peter Vande Verg, TlW fou-11111 p.er110n 11 c1a1119 11v1.1ne11 NOTICE ts HEllEIY GIV~N 11111 1etJ11T MARTINE, 1'30 A.1111011• w1y, 3521'1' Lee Griswold., CBYC. Ma Jolie; 3. ?o.tirage fl ; 4. SSSC ••: ,..11c1 prooow11 w111 i. rKe1vecl by NftPOrt h t1;ll, c1111om11 926'0 PUBIJC NOTI r.·~ F nk na· CBYC " · clel1c011rlt. 117'5 !'Cllrigtr Ave .. In. City o1 cost• ,..,... el 11.e ofllcl SUZY MARTINE. 1'30 Mtrou• W1y, CE vcl:x11;1, ra ir, : "· METCALF (8) -1, Harry Foun11ln v111ey. Cl. t2l'OI of the cttv Cler-et "" cltv Mtll, Ntwporl Beecll, C•llfoml1 t2"0 1-------~----- KING BARBOR TO CBYC. Force Seven, Ted Zellmer. Bourgeoi's, BYC. Roblrt E. s11ht. 161T.I S111 Jt1;lnlo." Fllr or1w, COil• MIM. c1u1or1111, 1_!'1.~ .. llvllM» 11 conc1uc1.c1 by •n • .en:2 I 11 Fou11l1ln V1Hey. Ct. n1oe untH the flour of 11:00 1.m en Ocloblr ""~ ... u... . •OT1C• TO Clll'DITORS IOR -I. Cohort; 2. Defiant; MORF -I. Wester Y : ~===========;;; Tr.!1 1>u11,_, 11 conllllucl9d by an 14 lt7"-•' wlllcl'I tll'fll 11Wy w111 bl s11rr Mtrlll'll: SUP•1t1011 cou•T 01' THI: 3 G ssho 2. Pop 'Nus. Peter Kent. 1 lndlvlcl1111. ~ Pllbllcly •nd rHd 11ouc1 In 111e Tiil• 1t1tement w•1 flltllll with !he STATI! oir CALll'OllNIA FOii · PHRra F _ _.1.· F-Seven·, LBYC·, 3. M~i·c, Steve JOE CARLOS ROl>ert e . s11111 Co1.1nt!I Cl'llml:lefs tor FUllNISHING ALL .,.c°"".!!.,.c~rt191ot Or•nee counly on THI COUNTY OI' OllA.NO• "''-" ~I> Th!1 llelemtnt Wll !UICI wllll IN lAIOR. MATERIALS, EQUIPMENT, '""' r... ( .... A•IJ 2. Blacki'ack, Ted Issacs, Mulhollen. ABYC: 4. Sweet PLUMllMG CO. ClllHllY c1n. °' Orlllll' County "'TRANSP<>lTATION AND sucH DTHER PllblllMcl 0 l'-liMI E1111e of EOMUND L. WE I Ell.. CBY Uc. N 21~~ S.pl1mller 11, 191.(. FACILITI ES AS MAY 81! llEOlllRED f tflge C:O.it Dtlty Piiot, DK.tt Hd. LBYC: 3. Ma Jolie, Peter Pea, Norm AJerpin. C; 0 "'"'1 FOR THE INSTALLATION OF PAT· Stt>temti..r '· ''· n. lO, 1'74 !ll2·7• NOTI CE IS HEREIY GIVEN to thl Eber CBYC 5. Malihini, Ed Zimmerman, ,._.,_ P11llll1htd Or•nve <:Ms! Otlly Pllol, TERNEO CONCRn E AN(I CONCllETI! crllclllors of lht •llov9 "'"'" lllltcedd Ulg, • 545.5559 S.ptemlMr 16, 23. 30. end October 1. MAINTENANCE STRIPS IN VAlltOU.S PUBLIC NOTICE rllill •11 per1011s h1vl111 cl1lms .,111111 MORF -t. Joint Venture, CBYC. 197• Mff-7• MEOIANS IN THE CITY OF COSTA "" Mid clectcH!ttl .... requlrllcl to fll• Ge oil SBY C W~ 1 ~1ULTIHULL _ Taku II. 1675 Superior MESA. •.,,. 1 n.m, wtth "" 11CHs1rv YouclWn. 111 rry N • ; 2. =1.ef Yl pmmmmmmmmmmm•I C.os1a Mesa PUBLIC NOTICE A »! o1 pl•111, speclllcellOl'lt •111111 ND'TtC• TO CRl:OfTOllS tlW oflic1 °' "" clert. °' !he •bO'W 11. c.ocbett and Meeks, CBYC; 1--------------lotlllr contr.ct documtnll mev M -1UPa1t1ott COURT Of' TMIE entitled c1111rt, or lo prtMllt ll'llm. wtr11 3 Lu T · Del Ki d CBYC ltpioce-Nflt l'ltTrTIOUS •usi1o1ass 111MC1 111 ""' o111c1 o1 ""' °'91rtmtnt I TAT• °" C:AllPoa.NIA l'OR 1i.. MCtuery Y011Cilel'J, 1o thl 1111o ' pe a 1, e n ' . LI.A.SEA '74 DATSUN P.+1 NAM• STAT•M•NT of LlllWI ServlcH, ,, 1"•1r Drive, TN• COUNTY 01' ORANGE ditnlOO'led ,, 1111 , ..... olti.:-(II SIMON.r MULTIHULL _ Talru 11. ...._ s-.,t-.. Thf: foOowlno ptr.ori Is dolno 1:11.tilntU CO$lt Mt.., C1lltor11l1, '"'°"' rectlpt .... A<llllJ SHERIOAN, MURPHY, THORNTON AND • 610.onty '99" MO,. ..,._ r--•-•1 •i : of • MnrlfU!lcl•IH9 fff of U.ot. Elllt. of RE ID 1. CRANE, elso k-.i MINERFELD, 610 HIWPOrt Cenltr Orlv1, • +T•l•-O.U. 118CO DISTlllBUTORS, 26101 Gelty E•ch tile! WU bl mMll on tN llf'OPOllll •1 lEID ISAAC CJtANE, ~et«!. Sult. IUS, N~ 8uch, C..lllornl• .COST •M•s•o•TSU.... Or .. lt<;llllll N!ouel, Cl . '2•T1 form •l'ld In Ille""""" prOYldllcl In NOTICE II HEREBY GIVE N to.,.. '2"° inn: Alty J•mH A.. Hump!\ ... ,. ,.. ~ ,.. ,.. " chirft or A lcrtti hi Styte -0onn o Morion nm CNiwtld !ht contrKt doclll'Mntl. •nd Hllll bl credltor1 of IN ebov. htmllcl cllctdent Jr., which II IM pl.ce or tlvtlMlt Ne'v Boat Design Success 2145 HA.1101 IL VD~ C.M. Dr., Ltgun•' NIO!J91, (1. mn K tomflll'lled bY' • urtltl• ., ceahler'1 1111! 111 perlOflt ll.I Ylll!ll cll l"'1 toil nil o1 1M unc11r1lonec1 In •II m1tl9!'1 P'"' . SC0. 6410 ond for Re-ol quick Stt•k• Thh bll5lnt:SI 11 condllCted by en check 1111' • 1110 bonllll lor !IOI t111 the Hid Mtecllflf .,.. requfrtcl 10 1111 l1lnlng to II• e1f1I• of ••ld cllctdt11r, l ~~~~~~~~~~~~~_!__'~G:;:•:•:":J:••:':' :•::•:lof:':' ====~ 1 1ndlvlelllt1 Ill.In 10 PlfCflll of Ille em1111nl ol lhf:m, wll'h !tit l'llCHMf'f vo...c11trs In within tour month1 1tt.r the flnt p1,1bllc1• ~ o . Morion • !he blcl ~ pey1bl9 to IM City °' lllt office ot lllt clerk of th• ibove tlon. of thl• 1111tlc1. Thlt 11 t t t llltllll 1111 1M COii• IMM. lftlllltllll court 01" to -.it IN I Otlld S.1111mbflr lt. 1'74 County c~.~~"'or w~r•"ff c:nty on NOT ICE IS FURTH ER GIV EH "''' '"• ntcllM,y YOUC::;~.. le ~~ w ! SOUTHERN CALI FORNI.\ J>au1 Cook o! Atherton. driv-,: ing a radical new OOet design, i captured the San Francisco § Offshore Pov.'tt Boat race, l running away from 13 deep-V I hulls that have dominated the l. sport. ~ The 35-!oot tumel hull, Kudu • 11 has an engine and two { crew seats in each pontoon. It set a new race course j cecord of 79.2 miles per hour I in the 156 statute mile course. It was only the secoo:1 1 outing for Kudu 11 which had f finished fuurlb in tts firs\ I race, the Hennessy califomia "' CUp on Aug. 24. The boat I has a 496-cubic in c h MorQuiscr engine in each ot lls pontoons, developing a total or l,21111 horsepower. These Premises Protected bv THE'rtLEPMONt" COMf"AMV Of' CALtFOANIA I W"979-1234 J ITH OU~LIT'I' Rare Pleasure We found away to bottle iL To end the day or to start the evening. T o share with Cricnds ata party or with a rricnd, alone. The joy of Scotland. Distilled and brought toperfcclion in c11cry boulc of J & B Rare Scotch. Sepffmbtr ,, lt1•. IM City COllllCll of Nici Cltv II.It Hrtloned el trit Trust ~rtmenl ol FIRST NATIONAL BANK. Pfl'tn Mretofor9 fll•l:llbtlllcl I prev•lllflll r1I• UNION eANIC, MIO WllJ!llre &oulev•rCI, lly: RIJPll F. PtlQI, Pubtl1ltecl or11111• Coe1t Dtlly Pllof, •nd Kele °' w1911. In •CCotdlnce with Post 0111« •o~ 21n, Los A.•!n, Tru11 Olllc•r September 16. 23, )I), Incl Oclobtr 7, l1w, to M Jllllcl In IN conslruttlon C1Utor"l1 f0051. which II Ill.I pl.tel Specltl Aclmlnl1lr•lor with lt74 J.660.74 ol IN •bo"' enlltled lmPl'-mlnh. of butln•st of tlll und9"lgned In 111 G111tr1I Power• ol Ille n 11re , ______________ ,Tiii! Mid ''" 11'11111 tc•I• Wl l "9plld mt ltl>rt pert1l11l119 to thl •ll•t• of flt tlW •bovl 111.,,.0 dtctdent P U BLIC NOTICE tit' thl City Council by RH0111llon No. .. ici cllc;ecllnl, wtlll four montlll eller JAMii ,I.. HUMl'Hlt l'Y, Jll. -------------l7•1 on tl'le hi d•Y of J•11uery 191.&. tM nrsl publlcellon of lhlt l!Olltt SIMON, SMl'lllDAN, MUl,.NY, ''CT'Tl.u •• u.ONISS c""'i 11 on Ille 1-1'1. till office of 1119 Del9d Stpltmbtr 20 1974 . THCltNTON AND IUNl'Jtll'l.!LD ty Clerk of NI Clly, Tl'lll Hkl UNION IANK' '11 N ....... Clfller Ori••• N,1.ME STAT•Ml!'IT ,.,. •nllll IClll 11 l'l«•ln relerr..s to • .,. JDflrl a M Ur01 Sllltt !ISi The followl1111 per.or.• •r• clolng end ldotloted In tlll• nollct u tllough ._,;1,11"' vice ~rnldtnl Nl'llfl'IHll'f hKh. CeUlenllt t u.M b\ltlntll 11 : fllll'I' •1'11111 com11l1t1ely Ht forth Nre!11, E "'"' of IM Wiii ol T•h 1no .-.Sit NOSTALGIC GLASS WOlKS. IUIA •ncl Ill.II Mid ...:tie, 11 ldOpttd bY' i...: or Aft-VS lot SPICll l 811Kock, Cos!• M1111, Ct. t262• ,.Id rtsolllllon, 11 mtcl9 • p1rt ol .I.DAMI, D=.• .~'1fu~.;1:"~ Mmhllstr•r w+!ll .. ,..,.. ,.._.,,, R09er ••v Rl!odftlb•llVll. :mn Mllff 11111 l'IOlk• by refertnc•. m ... Sllltfl StNet P11l:lllll'lecl Or•noe COii! D•llY Piiot. A.Wf'llle. El Toto. C1. '2'30 TM ContrKtor t111ll, lrt I "'. ~· .......... Cllfftonll• Ml\ s~mb« 1l. lO., OC!ober 7, ,, 1974 Oe1n P•rt•r ICllpptrl, 102T.I Wembf'I' pilrforml llC9 of tM -ic •ncl Im-Tlh (nil ... ,t. l5'l-1• Circle, W•1tml11tter, C.. '2613 ,.,_,., contonn to thl U bor Collll• .1.""'-'n .., .__,.., U rry Ot1'19 Fr1k11. 5'11 Mlddltcoff of 1111 Stet. DI C•llfoml• end otlllr Publl.._ Df•• coett Otlly Pllof PUBLIC NOTICE Ori..,., M1111llnoton lffcll. Ce. '2UI lews of tM Sl•I• of Celltornl• •Pl)llcatlle s.,h. 191 23,. 30 OC1lobtr 7 14. 197',l---.,---,,,.,-..,,=,----Thl1 butlNff I• CO!lcl11tltd bY • OIMf'•I It.Alo. with 1111 ft(l9llell only of " • • ' lSn.7~ t'ICTITIOUS aus1N•St 111rtntr1hlp. MICh verltlt0111 11 mey bfl required MAMI' STATl'M•NT R.R. llhodt11b.t119ll , 11ncttr tM 1pec:lel 1t•tvt. Pll!'llll ttl lo PUBIJC NOTICE T fof'--' I clot .... I Tll!1 1t.t1men1 w.1 tHtcl With !tie wlllcll oroc..0!119'1 ~ •r• t•klfl 11: hi ...,_,ng Plf1011 1 fll ""'1 "''1 County Clerk of Dr•lllltl County Ofl •1'11111 which hfyt !IOI bfllll t\llMfMdllcl GLOllA'S HAVEN, nns Forlllna. Auoust 2', 1914. tly tti. provlsl-ltf IM Llbor COd•. • 4't19 Mls.110" v11io, C11. tt•n ,.,,...., Preltrenc• lo 1tb0r 111.111 M "lwn anl~ SU,.IRIOR COUllT 01' THI: Glorl1 EUtn SCh11llz. 22ns Fortun1. P11bll1hecl Dr•lllll COl$t 0111Y Pl$0!, In Ille m•nntr 11rcwtdtd by lt w. ST.l.T• 0 1' CAlll'ORNIA FOii: MIMIOO Vll lO. Ctl. 9U7J Slpllmblr 2, t, 16, U, 1914 32N-74 No bid 111111 tit con1ldt!rlcl un1H1 TN• COUNTY DI' (Ill.I.NOE Tllli t1111!11111 Is cond11Cltd by .., P UBUC NO'nCE 1~1·1~111tu:".: ~:.~: ':.':..'"'~:'-:! "n'if",.~ .... ;r;,~:.:.tr ::~IT~g: IMlvlclu~lkirlt Ellen Jchullr -------------I""°' In ICtonlence Wllh Ille Pf'OVlllOM LSTTallS TaSTAM•NTAllY Tll]J llllMnlnt Wll llltd Miii Ille DEJl'AllTMIMT 01' TltANS,.OllTATION of the pr!ll)Gltl nq1,1lrell'llnls. Eitete of J IMMIE J(IVCE GIBS0'4 Counly Cltr• of Orange C<Mlty Oii NOTICI TO-C:OMTRACTOR.S E•ch blekllr m11tl bl lk111il'd Incl OGDEN •II• J IMMIE JOYCE OGDEN SetiltfTlblr 17, 1'74 s11ltd propol•lt w!tl b9 rtc:tlvfd et etso preciu•lllltd II requlrltcl tit' l1w. DKM.-4 ' fl472• IM olfltt of tlW Still HlgllWr;' Engl""'· TM City COllllCU (II '"' City °' NOTICE IS HEllE8Y GIVEN lllfit P11till1l'ltcl Or•no• Ca.st O.!ly Piiot ._, ""' Dl•ltkl Tr•nlf>Ol'l•llotl Cost• ,,,,... re ......... the tlthl lo r•fMt TIMOTHY J SAL YER 1111 tllld htr•ln Slp!I~ 2lt 30, OCIOblr 7. lo&. '"' 1111!1dlng, 110 SOUth S11rlno s""'· l ot •nv ot 111 tildt. t p.ttlfton for Jl'roDet• °' Wiii ,rid 31"''• A!lfll41lo C1Hfor11I&. 1111111 2 o'clotk IEllteflCP. ~hllllllY for lu 1111nc;1 of Ltti.rt Tnt1m1nt1ry~l-------------~i~ C:.., Ck=r .,!' :!fbt1c1:• = Pullll~ o::',. coest Dilly ,.llof t• the pe1111_,-r1r.r.nct to whlch01 ____ P_U_B_IJ_C_N_OTl __ C_E __ _ IM rtH Ill lloom 2 of Mid llullcll119, Sfl)ltmlMI' 23, 30, lt1C "'3-74 I~ ,mtcte tor, lur!Mr ,.rflc~·r~--~rid ''""'."' ••••••n ror conllr11Cllon on Stitt M,h..,•V 111 tnl the I "" •111111 pl-"' ,....,, llO icCOl'dlncl with 1119 111*.llk•Uont tlltr• PUBLIC NOTICE tilt Mnoe l'lt1 tlffn Sit for OCtoblr NAM• STATIEM•NT tor, lo wlllch lOKlll retlrence II m10t. I, 1'74 11 t:JD e.m .. In the COlolrl,_,.. TM '?'kM'lnt Plf'l>OllS 1r1 doing bllM-•• foll_.. of ~rlment No, i of Mlcl [Ollrl, M" 11. Or•n9• Counfy. In en•• MIH. PtCTITICUS IUllNllS ,, 100 CNIC CenlRr OrlW WISl, In L.A. ltll.lb 11. 12•1 GWdfn GN¥e trom a 1-mlle !'!Orth of ltout9 SS to NAMI STATl'M•MT ""' CltY of S.11!1 ,l.1111 C1tllornl1, •IYd., Gl~dlfl Grow. C911tornle ""'1 · O.ttd ~i. ber 20 1t1• Urtwlll Rtcon1trvcllon Corw•l!en. • Rout. .tQS 107-0r•7'-'tl.7/R7.I), tree-Tl'll follow!flll IMlllOll 11 delllf WtlMU wiL"LI~ L in JOMN Clllfotllil corpor1llon, 1151 s. s.it...w. Wl'I' lo bl' COflt.ltUCtM ll't' 9r11C1lng •111111 11: Covn!Y Cit II • llYllll lot Af'1911H C•lllomlt tOOolJ lllYlllO wllll pOftlll'llll c.-i conct•lo WOOO'l'I GOOOYS, MO ''"" SI., t .l.LT•• ,I.NO ,.[Yllt wiiter N sc:Mildl 1"517 Pot--C9-l.ftNlltcl blM •nd e~lt COlfl Mew, Cll n'2• . I ' 1 cOl'ICrele onr tlllll'~le b,tle •1'1111 ( ,...., , -·I ' _,1 UGI .a w..tc\I" Drl'll, Ne. Jt1 Slrftl, V1Hlld1, C.I forfl • tUU tw\c191• IO bl conttrvcltd L...... ~ M "' •mt. w . .....,.,. -..di. Ctl/tlrltll ""' Tiii• 1:11.tslllf:ll It cenllllltlllcl w • cw- llcl• 1r• reqlllred .0.. tM Mllr• S~• Ave.. Ht. "· kilt• "'"'· I•h ("4J ........ oor111on . _.k deterlbd llertln. Cl. '2701 ltlfMyl f1W1 "'lt!Mtf Urll«I R~trvc1'oll C.,,,_ Plins. IOICltlc•Hons. •ncl """'°""' Thia b\lsl111st It eonducltd .., •n P11bl1t!Md Ore/1119 Cottt Ot!ly Piiot. Willer K..kllmlllllt, A.•'t V.JI', torm• for bllkllnt 11111 prolecl c•n only tnc11'1M11· L Wiiii St$11emtllt n . '"' JO, 191• U7•·14 Thi• •l•t.meflb ••• ftltllll wu11 .,.. bl oblelllllcl •I thl office of !he s1e1e l Mt · 1m• C011n1Y Cler• ol Or•fllll c.utitv on MIOhWlf l!i 11 ' 1111 , r , Trentpoi'lltlen Thlt 1t1ltmtnt WH lllellll with Ille PUBUC;NOTICE Septlmbll' 11, 197.C. 811fldlfl1, SKT•m.nto, C~l~e, llld COl,lnl'/ Cl.,k ol 0!'1"'9 County °"o ---=-,,=--""'C".'"""0:----1 '""" lftl'I' tit Mf11 I.I !ht oftlc:lt of 11!e Sitt• .l.IJllUtl 2f, 197(. r PIUlTIOUS IUllMl l.S P11llllSl'IM! Ot1"'9 Cot11 Dt!ly l'llol MIOllWIY ISmp nMr •I IW•ll'ltl'lto, end Jl-NUI Nm Tl"ONT S111i.mblr 2). :ID. Ol::lober 7, 14, ltl• WQULD YOU BE IN BUSINESS TOMOjlROW1, ' UL "°"1 ... ~ .. , !ht Olttrkt Dlrtelor5 ol Tr•nffloGl'ltllon Putlltsltecl OJtntt COit! Dtll'I' Piiot, ...... ITA ... ua-14 ti L.111 ""°''"" S•11 ll'reMltco. •1'1111 $1p1tmi..r 2, t, 1•. 2J, '''' 3'l.S.S·1• TM lll'How'lno ptr-i re Oolno1-------------1'!fJ11~~~c:•~k~:;"~~.11f 11~r3; P UBLIC NOTICE ""~Ti S~cURITY • Siii.ViCE COM· PUBLIC NOTICE • """""' tloncl Incl I Ptrlorm•nc• MUNICATIONS, ., J03ll South lltd l---====..,,==~--bOnd Hiii Av111111, S1nr• Alie, C11ltorril1 l'ICTITIOVt IVSINIU ,..,;1111nl to Section 17XI of lhl Ltbor ,ICTITIOUI I VllN•ss '1705 NAM• STAT•-"'•'" ' COft, IN CtpirtrMnl 1111 11ctrt•lntcl N.t.MI ITATaMl'N T MOl'litomer'I' 01!1 Sy11tm1, Inc ., )0)0 TM fo!IO'IOlllO per-11 doing bUllMtt tl\lt °"'"'I prev1nlno ret1 ol ~·1 Tri. IOllO'lfrlfno IMltllOll 11 00!119 bl.ltlllt$1 SCNlh Red hlll .t.v1nu1, s1nt1 ... .,., •1: In "" county Ill Milch flll' W(lrk It Iii Citltomll t170S DIAN£ I A.tlOC!ATt!S, 2'112 Vie IO bl d-. to bl '' llttlcl In lhf: CLASSIC Dl!$l0NI. '°' VII lido. 1hl1 !wtintlf " tOl'lcl\ltl.0 •Y Sen s-..11.,., laoun• Nl911tl, C.I. PROTECT YOUR PROPER NOW! -SILENT" ALARM SYSTEMS-. -LOW MONTHLY SERVICE RATES~ CtnlnJI S101cn /\IOfm Monitoring S«vice tn.1vsl<iOI ond RISit~hol Aknn $Qr\/(t: ' The Telephone Company of OranQe County, Inc. • ~001 Red Hlll, Bld9. V1·107. CosTa Mesa 645·9494 c.n;;~~~r~lce 979· 1214 DtNtlr'Mhl of Trll\tCl(lrltllon publlc1tlon NtWflOl'I let<l'I. Ct. 926'0 MO!lltomll'Y Dttt Sytlll'll.. Inc., • cor· OllM JM11 Coflma11, ttl• W~ S.11 t'!'llll~ I!~ llt11ltl .,tt1111 end ' JKk Cl•Y •v~. 10l VI• LIOO. l*'ltlon. lttittll•ll, l•tullll N\9"'4, C•llf . Gt'l!lrtl Pr1v1IHf11 W-tt Ritts. dlt.d Newport 811<t1. C•. t2UO /1/MlCttAll O. SCOTT lllll MIMM 11 conclllelellll W ' .,. A119u1t, lt14. Tllh bu'llMll 11 concl11Cttd .-, In S4<1'tl•'Y 11111\'tlcluPll. O..lltcl A119u1t S. 1174 llldtvld111I, Tiils 111t1,,,.,.., ""'' tllfocl with lhf: 01•111 JMn Ceffrn111 Dl""RTMINT OP: Jtck c. EVllll COUl'llY Cler-ol Or•• c"""' on Tllh lletemtnl .... flltd .+tti ltw 111.1.NSJl'Ol\TATION Tlll1 ll•!l!'fll:lll w•t f11M wllft llW 5191. 11, ltf.C. CDll!lt'f' Cltr .. ol Or.,.. c-ty lfl It J, DATIL c111111ty C"'11 of OJll'IOI Covnly on 11'1 5"•tl'Nltr le, U1A Slit. Hltl'rll1y t!"lf""' $tpltlftflllt 4 1114-• f<J1161 fl..inti 1-'Qll P4'1M llllblllMf Dt•119t Caal 0.lty Paot P~ Or..... C-11 Delly Pu.I PUtllllhld Clr•l"tOf Cotll Dlll'I' PllOI, ,ubllll'lellll Ott• COit! 0.lly Plltl,'"""1btr D. lO. oc.-r 7, 14 1t7• S.plt111Dtr U. JI. Ottober 1, 1 .. lf1• S1911111blt' 1" n. lt14 l0•1• StOltmtltl' t, M. U. 30. ltJ• ~,, lll1.J4 »61& l I I J, 8 8 DAILY l'ILOT PVJILIC NoriCE PUBLIC NOTICE - 4 .2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y ·p I L 0 T , c L A s s· I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ' . -,, St-. Zl, 1974 ' The Blcgest Marketplace on the Oranee Coast Employment & lltltOltS: Adwrtlswt lhMlcf chock their ads dilly & report •rror1 lmmed l ately;The DAILY PILOT a"""'" lleWllty for thO first I nc.er rect inlOt'tloofl .... h •ot• ......•• 11100.2999 Rentals •.••....•. J000."499 lu1lnt11, bwt1ttntnt & flnoncial .. ' •..... ' lOOO·S049 Announc1mtnt1, Pttsonol1, lost & fM!d •..... 5050-5'99 S..kos & Repctlts 6000-6099 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ' ,,_.,Ion . . . . . . 7000-719' Men.-........ ---··- .,.17, You Can ~f lt, Find It , [~6-4_2_•_5_6_7_8__,) Trade It With a Want AD . j5 . One Call Service Fast Credit Approval i. Ip Mini •••••••• -- AlltotM~lll 1 & ....., Tronsport-.... 9100.'"9 . j=~"'~.,.:!;':•:l:R:.IE:;;;:· ==1=002==Ge=ne=r=a=I =R=.E.===1=002= General R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 3 BDRM, l,6 BA. VA or conVen11onal. Ov:nl'r \\·ant.s quick aale at only $30.500. l.'-'IQuail ~ liilPlace P1 oplll'tl9s · ··. 752•1920 1400 QUAii.iT. NIWH>tn alACH BIG· OVAL POOL TWO STORY $40.950 is a steal for this spacious pool home. It's a swim•afie pool too! Also has liPfitic lantlly F I es t a room. Hwitington'g best buy -call TIO\V tG see '847-6010. Bkr. MESA VERDE 2 Story Exec Family Home with huge separate family nn + pool. David Bourke Rltr. f>46.9950. [~lrtlEX) I-* .. I~ HOUllS for Sale ..•..•••.••..•••. 1000 FOR THE BUSY FAMILY ... in the beautiful 51uUs on Vista Laredo, overlooking a lovely "greenbelt". 3 Bdrms .. 21h ba. home. Cozy {rplc. Just a "turnkey" situation --the maintenance crew takes care of everything but the patio. Only $74,500. 336 CHERR·Y TREE LANE Extra lge. residential lot on quiet cul de ;"Jc street in Newpon Beach. $25,000. }\,\)' <111,1 l\l·:.\('l I REALTY CALL 675 ·300-0 A~YTIM[ General R.E. 10026tnoral R.E. 1002 WESLEY N . TAYLOR CO. HEALTORS since 1946 THE "BLUFFS" -$74,950 & $78,500 Lusl1 new landsc in the ONLY NE\V 1-story "Lindas " ·left. 3 BR .. 2 bath beauties \V/ dream kitchen. Cust. drapes & cptng. Pool. ALONG THE SOUTH COAST SHORES S~cluded lake by SoutlLCoast Plaza. New of· fering of cluster homes and Unique kno\vs of the cutest one! 3 bedroo1n. beautiful colors, draped and floorin g. Deligh tful patio. It's all perfect !or the South Coast executive. Sure to appreciate -and be appreciated. At $61,500. UNIQUE HOME, RHl1ors, 546-5990 2850 M•u Ve rde Dr., Cost1 Meu Gener1I R.E. 1002General R.E. 1002 WALK TO SOUTH COAST PLAZA VALUE PLUS in 'th is hig hly upgraded Costa li1esa. 4 bedroom, 2 bath home. 2 Years young \vith lots of rich wood paneling, lush landscapin~ & plush carpets and drapes. Per- fect condition and ready for your inspection. Call 546-S880. - ~o ~,.. HERITAGE . . RE LTORS 546-SllO Open Eves. Molin. Homes ior ui. ......... 1100 2111 S J . H·11 R d Ac""-fDr ai. ................ 1200 an oaqu1n 1 s o• 1 :::r;::"~~1~.:.::::::::::~: NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 64-M910 Gener•• R.E. 1002 Gener1I R.I!. Cemetery Lon..crypTs ......... UOO !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ~::::;;:,~,~.=~•:::::::::::: Genor•I R.E. 1002 Gener•I R.E. 1002 1 ABANDONED "ABANDONED 1002 · ::::::-;;•,::•.,:;:. ::: ::::: :;: . BEACH GIANT VILLA" SPANISH i:::i~ .. r:-;·::::::::::::1: M'AGNOLIA ASSUME 7°/c VA 'wALK TO BEACH. Giant 538 950 Liiia for Mia .. · ··· ...... 2200 LOAN 2 stO'"". H 11..., bed1'00ms ' Mobll• Homa·Tr11fx Prks •. 2)00 ·.; -~ 2 STORY "OOL Mouflt•ln, O.sart, 1te10rt ..•.•. uoo plus u n fini sh e d area. _,.... Or•,.11• Co. Propartv ........... 2511(1 STREET WALK TO BEACH Con1plete to suit )Ourself. BEACH Ovt ot Sl•ta Pr0perty .......... :HOO 2-1 H niaster suiL 2 bath, - lt•nc:tia1. F1trms. Grave1 ·•·•· .VOii 4 &d1ooms. cat he d r a I llHt Esff11 E~d'lanoa .......... aoo .11 1 .1 . h dining room. Bui It· ins. Formal double door en...., Genonl R.l. 1002Go.neral R.E. GARDEN ROOM DINING ... in a formal dining r1n ... glass enclosed on s sldes. It's an exciting experience to dine among the · flowers in this lovely 4 bdrm., 2Ys"bath home, in a prestige location (Ca- meo Highlands). Property realistically priced at $125,000. -RlTIREMINrHAVEPr This restiul 2 bdnn.-or one huge :l>drm . .i. convert. d~n home, has charm galore. Prop-. erty locat<!d in Irvine Terrac&-handy to beaches, tennis club or Irvine Country Club. Only $64,000. Y•AR BAY Af\ID BEACH 6715-3000 8407 •·COAST HWY. COAQNA DSL MA .. General R.E. 10020-ral R.E. 100i * lalboa lay Propertln * BAY AVE. 4 untls $79,500! Weterfront Duplex Pier/Float, $85,000. 675·7060 EASTBLUFF Super clean 4 BR. home Hu ge fam./din. rm. NeY:ly redec. Owners a n x i o u s! $70,500. 640-8484. NORTH COSTA MESA Family home, 4 BR, lge. ki tchen/family are a. Lge. fenced yd., nice trees, quiet street $41,950. 642·7491. NEWPORT SHORES 3 Bdrm. 2 ba. Close to ocean, pools, tennis. $56,000 -You own the land! 556-8800. REALTORS 4 Local Offices To Serve You 111111 ESl•le w1,.lad "" 3 ••• r II ''" "" a1n1 y room \\'ll F' I p -I .• , · · · · · .. · · ·· · i:><.-uroon1 -+ l'\111 y room trep ace. a. •Y P a I o . to spacious living room with ~ 1,hl•··I It-" rustic ivoodburnin gSe t··• I boa G IRE 1002G IRE 1-• ______ _,l,a " u "p ace oca""' near gerate '!'R ""'area or t floor to celling fireplace. ener• • , •ner• . . _,, ~~ •1 Del School \V'll 11 fireplaL-e. step saver kitchen ~ N-~ r 1 ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,~ I -.. ater . 1 se or camper. """ as t Formal dining is sen•ed by VA d od I l overlooking extraordinary · , R ·11 CASA GRANDE no own a pay pons. possession. ent l1 yours. huge garden view kitchen TWO STUNNERS FUii · j 1 backyard play gro und . A~ 1 · 1 t I HOUHI Furnllhad .............. 3100 ~1u Urttwllllhad ............ nix. HDlllH Fur" or V"f ............ 3300 pnce us ~sume 01v in eres oan. \1'ilh breakfast eating area. $28,500 Assu1ne existing VA '°8.n Reduced to $42,500. Call Fiesta pa..n. room with IN BIG CANYON Y"ith payments of S2S1 per tod 962-5585 • •.; 1nonth including plinciple, ay · commanding view of lus.h l\fa n11noth entry. S unken parlor. Cathedral ttilln:s. }~orn1al banquet r o o m . Delightful country sized chcf'i> kitchen. Separate entcrtalnmenJ cenler. Huie playroom. Giant master !luite. Bonus yard Y1itb COl'erro lanai. 2 story ex· t.>t>llenc.-e "·Ith 3 car gara~ at 1 STORY PRICE. HUIT)' caJI. s-l2-t.>l:i. (ondomlnlr.m'ls Furn ..•...•..•.. )oll)O Condamlt1h,1rr .. UMwn .•.•..•.•. :LQS Tow,.housls s,,,rn ............... uoo 2211 Newl'O!! II. interest, taxes & insurance. lerTace In walled courtyard. ~.900. Huny _ ca ·11 S"'eeping stairs to separate TOwnhouMI U"fllrn ............ JS2S DllOllkH Fur" .. . .. . . ......... :US. 64~.'."s'Si'i ~&-2313. 1naster suite & chlldren's 1ving. Ro1neo &. Juliet balcony. Hurry! 963-iSSl. [)uplekH Unl!,11'" ·., ............. 3'0ll Apart,..,..,b Fwn ............... l10D Ol'fN TIL i • IT'S FUN TO BE NICE/ -'Pt• Furn or Unt ............... 3900 !.II ltoari'I• .......... dlO Sun/Eves. 675-7018 ltoom &. INrd ................. «ISO Ap.at!me{lb Unfvrn .....•...... llDO !I' ' '. ' , 1 Hotal1, Mot.11 ................. '100 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .... !!!!!!!!""' ::~~.;s·:.::::::::::::::·!~ COUNTRY ".'.:=~~~:::~~~:: V.atJan lterrt1l1 ............... •:ucr -4 DINE POO •.""''" ''"' ...... ···· ···"" LIVING --L THE REAL ESTATERS G•r~ for R.nt ............... .WO =~an~;!.,,·:::::::::::::: .. !: Over ~ Acre/spta\vllng ASSUME $24,500 1rwtu5tr111 Acintar ............... 4500 1\1X>d panelled, \\'ood bean1, Giant 2 story by the se.a. S~aa• ....... · .................. mo ranch house. pool. Three 4 huge bed-m,. 3 bath. llltn1als w,ntld ............... 4'00 • ...., ... OPEN Tit 9 • rrs '°UN TO 8E N1CE/ A~H~~::.~NT , [!11lli$ill1tl .~~~~ i\fesa Woods thal is -4 j OPEN S1\T & SUN 1·5 years new -squeaky clean :l079 PLATTE. C.~t. -super floor plan 3 br OWNER converted to exquisite Spacious 2 &. den, pool, spa, custom entry fow1lain, traditional decor, r i d1 crptg. Only il.2'5,(Q). Gracious 3 bednn, 2':i be.. 01·cr 10th green. H u g e llviOJi!! rootn & n1astcr suite \\•/Italian ~larl>le b a th , dining nn, dble \vet bar, great f or entertaining. oPlfl Tit 9 • IT'S RJN ro BE rJICE' $160,000. Buyer niay ler.st> ! I 1. option or o\vner \\'ill Clill'Y I t , J 1st T.D. at 9~ •,ti. I 1 ' THE REAL ESTATERS _; Misc.II_. lt•nt111 .......... 41.SD other furnished houses on family room. massive property for r c n ta I !I , flrepla~. Library with wall relallves or servants. Zoned of books. Wrought iron stalr for 7 more wiits. $129,950. case to guest quarten;. ~I ~--· ~llil Shown by Appl. Only ::·========= ... 1e,.v;n" ...... N. eo,1a YOGEl & BABBITT Ocean View n1aster -suite plus 011e. DESPERATE Spanish decor will appeal to tJ1e n1ost discrin1inaling. Jdelll location near So. Coast Plaza. Call J.4&-2313 imnlediately -firs! tin1e of· J\leSk. C'lose 10 schOOL'i. Aiv From Laguna Btn.1-t'.>pforlll"llY ......•.... SOOS u: I ""''" w••"' ··· ........ ~.. Quail ~ Tcaky patio. 1''ree fonn pool. Exotic plants, sassun1c $24.500 VA Loan. $Z-;iO pr. month pays all. Hurry 8SM521. ' sume 6f,~ loan on conlract of '44-605' Be:.utilul J bedroom. 2 be.th sale or pay 10~· dn. BelO\\' "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I hcnne ,,. it h out.litandlni: .,..,.,,"""' Oppo(f'v ........... 5Cll5 Iii• ltrYt•tnWn• W•"'90 ... ,. . . • • 51121 Plac• n1.irket at $41,450. = ocean view . This JI I.Quail ~ LOW-LOW ;mm .. ·ulato hom• Is only fered! MoMt to LDI" .. .. .. .. •• ... 51125 • MoMy w.,.,.. . . . . . . . . . .so:io Prap.rt1n · · '· ~ Tr~t ~ :.··· · ms 752-1920 . I ~ lf'itll '400QUAILSt.Nl~TllACH Plac. DOWN 2 years ne\\' and has a spacious 1850 sq. fL A . . High on a Hill P1 ap11rl:ies ·. ·"· JOG TO BEACH n ... 1 ... and beam .,.u;,,,.,. 7.S'J•19'JO • accent this true Lagw\a A.nnouncem•"!f ............... !100 1400 QUAil ST. NIW..oll IEACH 51!~ clo1111 buys thls. l\1am-value priced at $62,500. n10th living 1"'0'"· Exposed C•ll Today ..... 7211 C1r Poot• .................... DSO Overlooks bean1 celllnp. Oversized I [SJ Blue Pacific: A CllllWW. IA*ER CtllliiANY LMt.,. -I . Private and quiet Panoramic iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Lt9-1I Hotlcat ................ . * * * * John Nardine of )'ard. Country kitchen. Family &ized bedrooms. Very close to beach. Call now. 842-2535. LIDO ISLE 40 FOOT lot; quiet end isle. 3 BR. 2 ba. $89,500 TRlPLE.X, waterfront, 3 BR. ea. Le11.sehold. $160,000 CORONA DEL MAR /Jn NI C[l E!AILEY & ASSlJCIA I ES . view of Pacific. Courtyard ~====::; entry. Lorge kitchen. Fam;-* BEST BUYS * I ll•l ly ' room. lfUGE LIVfNG l'9r$onal1 R00!'.1 WJTH A BREA rn Indian \Yells Condo, $29,~ ~...,..,_ ___ _, TAKING VIEW. Large exchg for beach propet1y. Losl a. l'ou11c1 .. , ............ S30D bedrooins. Covct'ed patio. 3 "".:R, Eastsicle $36,!0l ,.e,,_ll · .................... 5350 Pri..,.., I eco.n:n 3 BR, Mesa Verde $38.900 Sod•I Clutts .................... SAOD 1.-.:u at on Y ~.::Vu. 2 H Lo ,., Tra .... r .......................... $.UO Owner will finan<.<C. Call to omes on a t '"°• 750 r:z=l 963-6767 Owner anxious, sub offers f S.W.·~ .... 1~ :,..Tll~· ~FIJNTOl1ENCEI 7 UNts Long Beach $59.500 iNa = ... ·· 1[!j ~ 1Jilll1ll 9=1'21 "'"'" • '""~"m .......... ·"" KNOITT PINE 1797 Orange, C.AI. 642-1771 4901 Hell Huntin;ton Beach You are the winner o( 2 tickets to the Recreetion Vehicle & Boot Show a t the An1heim St1dium October 2..fi Please call 642·5678, ext 333 to claim your tickets. (North County toll free nwnber is 540-1220) * * * * JUST LISTED Most wiusual home I n · Duplex. Both with bay vicY1•! See it & you will buy it! $125,000 LIDO REALTY 11··1 •• 1 •. 1. 'll *67J·7JOO * HEART OF ••. Corona del Mar. Lovely home, close to beach. on 1~~ lots. Owner will arrange nnanctng. 0 l f e r ed al Sll7,500 Corona de.I 1\1 a r . 3 """""!L"o~~"!S!"T~O!"'""" I bedrooms, den, large family W room v.1th 1~·et bar, dining ~"-"-''''_'•_• _lliJ \ FAMILY ROOM -· TERRACED Jab Wln!H, Mata .............. 7025 9:f21 Jotl W•,.ltd. Firm•ll ........... Ml GARDEN Jobi W1,.11d, M &. F .......... 1t1S ASSUME VA 7010 room. lovely pat;o. Can be 1: T\VO b11.chelor units. For those Yl'ho Jove priv8.cy. Full prl~ just $3'1.T;JIJ. Super MinimUm yard maintenance l_._ .. _a_"' __ ._~_• _ _,ll~.1 !.!':~tti)~!itt~a~=n~ n~ ~f~~~:a:Ot~~~ ~C~·~ve.;:;; R(°~~~: I Hllp w.,.,ed. M 1o F ....... nocr CORBIN-MARTIN Realtors _ . V room Is a d1-eam con1e true. to beach. Better huITy -Call 673-8550. Mtlc!llM ....................... • For $39i500 it's going fast! best buy in town! Call now * 644-7662 * Apptlal'IC• ..................... 11¢10 Call now. 847~10. Agent. 847..QIIO. Agent. Clf'EN'nt. t. ITS FUN TO 8E NICE/ g$.'.~T~S": : ~1;0-;::=:ra:1:R=.E;;;;. ==:1:002;;;;=G:e:":·:'a:1:R=.E:·===1:00:::2 ~JlllilJl\ll OCEANFRONT Fr" Ta YOll ........ .. ...... 111)(5 Furnltvr1 ..................... .OSO Garqt $11• ................... ICSS • HOl'JIS .. • . .. , 1060 H~ Good• ............... 111&5 Jt ..... lry . • . .• .. ... .. . ... . .. I010 Uva1tadc ................. , ..... ws Machlrttrf ..... , ,. • • .. .. 107J Mbc•I""-.................. IOIO Mltcfil-1 Wa"t.d ....... tOtl M111lcal l111lrllmlf'lll ..•........ IOl3 Office Furnl!\lrt a. Equip , . . • . U5 "•ti ......................... 10'1 .. ,.~ .. °"'"l .. .. . . . . .. .. "'° 5"!119 Mlldllfllt ............. '°'3 SPOrtll!ll Geod1 . . ... • . .. .. . 1094 Stare. It.....,,.,,,, aar .••... I09S \~"'.;fO"HrF1~'S1i;.;.; ·:::····=I [ -~'4"-1~1 lianafll . • • • ' f(tlO I loll!• Mllnt. &. Slt'vlc• . . . • 90'20 ao.ta; M•rlM Equipment .... f03D lolit$. POMr • .. ............. 90lO I 1o1t1r. lttM/CMrllf ....... ,. tOSO fOtl• S.U / ,. · · · " " •" • f060 ...... e Doc:ltt .. • • ....... '°'° tol!J. &. Ski ............. tOIO aotll s ... .. . .. .... 9090 I ~ . ., .. -liJ Aircraft ...... .' ............ rno C1mw1. 5111, llltnl ......... fl20 Ellclrk Cert ................... tl)O MObllt H-l .............. ,fl .. Mo19rt1d1$/Scoattr:1 ......... '1JO f\lotqr Homa, S.1•111tnt ....... f1H TrlJlft'a. TrtW( ............ ,.. tl1'D Trtlltr1o UHIJIY .............. tlM i~' =~: ····"ir~i GaMral .............. t.SIO AtltltWn • C:ltt.iu ............ l'SJI ftttrNll-1 Vff'l!tltl " ....... Pm ~ Wl'llff DrlVtt •. •• • • .. . • • • ft5D ff\llCQ ............... ••••• •• fS6' "'"' , .................... ,m AlllO lt1sl111 ..... ,.. .. . • " tSlll °"""" WM191f ..... ,... . , ••• tlfO Autot. llllfilOrtf'f .... ,.,, .• , ,. t1Ct Au• Haw .................... ftoe fll Coldwell " Bonker EASTBLUFF VALUE Freshly painted 4 bedroom home. Delightful patio and gardens for outdoor living. Only $69,900. Call now. CONVERSATION STARTER Immaculate 3 bedroom condominium with . delightiul conversation pit, fireplace and large Jiving room. With in yards of shopping and community pool. Tremendous buy al $68,500, or lease it at, $475/mo. EXCITING UP-SIDE DOWN DUPLEX . $120.000 b11ys near new 3 & 2 bedroom du- plex. Both with fireplaces. Walk to bay and beach. Rent one, live like a king in the sec- ond. · SPYGLASS SIX BEDROOM Gracious Lu k "Southport" model. Dining roorit, famlly roon1, bonus room. Pool ana jacuzzi. Charming gazebo. Some ocean view. Glorious nigbt view. $198.500. COUNTRY FRENCH-WARMTH Big Canyon 4 bedroom and family room sur:ken conversation area ; on large terrac· ed lot, with plans for pool. Decorated In s11nny earth tones. $175,900. QIAL '44-1766 2161 San J°"""ln Hiiis Rd., N.B . A COLDWEL L BAf'!KER CO. I ll>trta. Rae., lllactt .......... ,fWO .-.vros. UMd ., ................ ,,.1 1.-------------------·" BEAUTIFUL NEWPORT One mile to ocean. Channing 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Heavy btick firepl ace. Best buy in Newpon Beach. Ask for No. U721 Call 545-9491 Walker& Leo Real EstafC 4 Bdrn1.~.. 2 IJuth~; chalet st)'I<' "'Ith be an1cd ~ilings & loft. On R-2 lot: could be t.'On\·crtctl lo duple. ... Owner \l'Ould like 10 trade up. Prlc· ed at $140,000 Call: 6~ 613--MSS Eves. associated BROKERS-REALTORS 102~ W Balboa 1>71 l~I,} OCEANFRONT RYE BIG BEDROOMS J ust tistod , • Sup orb I y de c orated ptidc or TWO STORY u11·1tersh!p duplex. 3 BR 2 BJ\ and 2 SR I BA. O\rner Giant size family 1'00111. I \\•Ill catTy contt'llct. \VIII fl.C- Huge master suilc \\•Ith cepl condo111lnium in ex· private patio e n t r a n e e . change. $169.riOO. Lovely m anic ured !£ IQ II~ land~apini;. Located on e ua gorgeous h-ec-llned street, Place 0,,1, !05.ooo< ean 11ow Praperl:... . . , 847-6010. Agent. 752..,1920 , DUPLEX COSTA 1400 OUAILSt. NtWl"OIT llACH MESA EASTSIDE INCOME This beautiful duplt:< ruu T\\'O doll houses on one lot.' new carpels & drapes. JBR, 2QA with dbl IM' ii: Three btdroom and two 2Blt, ltll\ with dlll gur. bedroom unl11 •. Honie I< in· Seven )Tll. old. Xlnt buy. come. All of this «mlll'l?~ll?' 0 1vner \l'lll carey S'?i, Call VA loa.n. Ll1tlng No. Ul.21 PRESTIGE JtOJ\.IES for In- Call 5&-9-191 furmaUon and d e 1u 1111 W.,lk•r & l ee. &I~ Real Eltaie -THR"'E'°"E'""D"'N~O"'N'"'E'""'"LO"'T=' JLLNE~ forcn sale of high •Mti 950 r ti I M ti led d-·-3.96 11"1 ... , ond L-ulf • ....,t:-v 11 pr r..-e.. 0 va ....... • ... .. "" scuer ha1 alttady purcha ... AlaO CaUL pines "llCl'e ed o!Mr properf¥. Here I" 96&-1979 your chQnct to live In and SOUTH OF HWY. colleet ,.."' lroin other 2 OUPLtX.. 40' lot, nr bch. honet. Betltt hurry. Co.JI Ownr w/flnance. ~,500. M>.9491 Call OeniMI<! I Awe. Wolker & LH en.nu -lltaf Estale OPEN Tll. II • IT'S F~ 10 BE. NICE/ l-."", 1 ~ Would You Belltvell '°/• A1sum1ltle loan South of l-ll°ghway, CdM duple x.Com pletely LOW PRICE Bargain priced 3 BOID.I on a large lot. This Select pro- perty is fully air conditioned l"f!modeled. Quiet dead·end street. Shw•s Income of $525 a month. Possible VlEW by building up on rear unit. Call lot appomtrnent. '44-n10 and has been r ul I y redecorated. P r I c e Is !>l.000. Call 55&-2660. c;::; SELECT 'T" PROPERTIES REAL ESTATE aMOCiate, l\lacl Cooper is averaging one saJe per \\·eek. She needs help. Lots of Door time, leads and referrals: RED CARPET, REALTORS. 640-8672 l-Nl:'l""ew __ po_rt~ls.,.IG·n..,dr- Delu•e Duplex 5BR Upper Unit, 3 BR Lower, Ne ar Pvt Park & Beach, Gd. Terms wlth Assumabl~ Loan. it25,<m. By Owner 6Ta-l665. General R.E. 1002 .. macnab / lrvlne realty IR'vlNE TERRACE-4 + DEN On quiet stree~fiered by original owner! An excellent buy at $88,500. ;?rom Queen 644-6200. (Q59) NEW-UPPER .BAY VIEWI 4 bedroom + familY. room home on lg. lot -$69,450. Ow ner w1U carry 1st TD in the amount of !Ml% of selling price; 9.5% in· ter·est per annum, amortized over 30 yrs no points; note shall be all due & payable in 5 yrs . or upon sale of property. Carl But. ler 642-8235. (QOO) EXCLUSIVE LINDA ISLE Great view location. 6 bedroo ms + family room. Beautiful tile floored kttchen-formal mirrored dining room reflecl4 all cHannel activity .. '275,000. Cathy Schweickert 642- 8235. {Q61) POOL + YARD 4 bedroom, frunily home w/access to private Ueache~ready for redecoratin~-reallstic:· ally priced at $85,500. Martha Macnab 642-3235. ( QS2) tot DOwtt D!i"9 14:1·1 .15 1M4 MetAf'thur 144·1200 Ntwpoft ltech, Clfl,.,.,... llMI • I . I pl ni R no I B B 14: .. J OAJLV "LOT 1;0..;;;··~ .. ~r·;;';R;;·;e;;;.;;;;;;;1;;002;;;G;-;;;';·;I ;R;.E;·;;;;;;;;;;1;00i;;;;;l -·'_._, .. _,_._1 _R_.l!_. ____ 1_002 c~ 11.1 Mar EASTSIDE TRll'LEX I L$)W INTEREST 1mc .. taMMa P.ICK A I' .AIR OF 4-l'LEX TAKE-ONE ~R IOTH DupluM Unit ~r .. I• 1100 elllCED T<UELL B!iCAUSE IT'S: Close to LOANS everythlng, very nice condition. T2l 2 bca· AVAILAI' r I YR WARRANTY INCLUDED I YR W .\RRANTY INCLUDED CDM DUl'LlX room unl{s one 2 bedroom •ncl den unit. ~ f 'lrcplace. b!tns, a lovely ~ard and asking r <>REST o Ls EN BIG f'AMIUES COIY COTTAGE . IN. NEWl'ORT HEIGHTS-' $34,500 "°°m.Y 3 "Bn~2 BA ownm wilt with jire:place and -dinilli Ind nw!y brand new 2 br i:araiie apartmtnt with be a m cellln:s and covtrtd patio entry only $91.500. Call ""' '1211. I •69 90() C '"'" REAL TOllS, l NC . AN· on y • ' • "" to ••• ,. 1151 . NOUNCEO TOO,\Y THEY SNEAK " E IE J-IA\'£ 0 B ·r A I N ED A R v w SPECIAL LO AN COM· THIS RUSTIC IASTSIDE CHARMER in its MITlllENT THROUGH ITS secluded quiet location. 3 Bedroorn 'vith large AfFILJATION \\IITl·I COL[). I _,, f t \\!EL L BANKER. S eY"own amJly room. O!( street pa~ldng CERTIFIED MO!<l'CAGE /.Jn NICEL DAILEY f. ASS U[IAffS for boat or otl1er recreational vehicle. This co., t'OJ-t GUARANTEED 1! the home you have been dreaming about, l\10JlTCAGE LOANS AT A hurry It can't IHI 10119. Call 540-1151 . COST TO THE BUYER ~'Alt BELO\V THE GOlNG 1----::---::-----------.. I ]~fARKE'I' t NT ERE ST 11 RATES. ANY U.S. RES!· E::NT IS ELIClBLE FOR TllE LOANS \Yl-llCl-1 flAVE VER Y LO\\! 00 \\'N YMENIS, LOANS ARE ERITAGE lncom• f'reperty - E'ALTORs-AVAlLABLE l''OR F1.JN-COVINGTON l:~;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;I o TN G 1 l\tl\t F:D IATE LY \Vl-llLE THE SU PPL Y LASTS. FOR l\il 0 R E Ganoral R.E . 1002Genera1 R.E. 1002 DETAILS CALL &l:HJ303 Foll!' bedrooms, 5 u n k e n fainily roon1. great kid ai·ea, community pool, aiant patio ai'(a. Just listed. $86,495. .r.l'LEl.C $93,500 Just 3 yrs old I: one of Covilllttorui fu}est 4 plex areas! One ' • 3 Bdnn Ii. three 2 Bdr. units. owner \vill finance at 90,~. Pride of ownership. Close to majol' shopping center. Call 00\V (n4) 752-1100 DISCO)IER EASY LIVING Tty a delightful 2 BR. 2 BA Townhouse com· plete with secluded patio. \Valk to pool , ten· nis and shopping. Easy to buy at $43,750. GRUBB & ELLIS R11I Estate 675-7080 General R.£. 1002Gener•I R.E . 1002 LIDO ISLE Like new 4 BR. & lge. family rm., 6 baths. Pier & float. 3-0 Ft. lot. $260,000. Bay view from 4 BR., 3 ba. single story home on 60 ft. Genoa lot. $155,000. WATERFRONT LOTS 40XOO Ft. $250,000 3-0XI05 Ft. $165,000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J.l J Buy.,1d1· Dr 1v1· N B 675 6161 General R.E. 1002 I General R.E. 1002 I,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 2 STORY . llG COLONIAL BARGAIN + ? S'l'OR\• HOt.:IE for lea11<" POOL \.\'ith S bl& bedl'ooms & 3 baths. Vacant and ready $28 500 501 now at $450. per mo. Cnll • -/O DOWN Bi:.'":'l'\\'EEN 9 A.1\.1. & 8 P.l\1. 7 DA '\'S A \VEET,. MEDITERRANEAN VILLA IN CORONA DEL MAR \Ve have a truly delightful ho1ne located In one of Corona de.I l\1ar's nicesl areas. Situated on a large corner lot. Surrounded by tall Cypress ll'et'.'s. Privacy, µlus spal-e to exi1and. T\VO large bedrooms. 2 baths, large living room v.ith lireplace and a garden roon1. Priced at $67,500. Call 673-8550 for showing ap. pointn1ent. 01'&1nL.9 • "'S FUN TO BE NICE/ THE REJ\L ESTJ\TERS ECOLOGIST'S ... ... dream -a half acre ol gardens. Fabulous private home of a nationally known b uildt'r, in Coro n 1:1 High.lands. 4 Years ne11<, -t BdmtS .. 4 balhs, pool. Ask- ing $145,500. HARBOR REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 SPYGLASS Authentic Spanish styl e 4, 5, or 6 bedroo1n potential. BeautituJ Oles, ~-allpaper and landscaping. $149,900. 29;;;> Harbor Blvd . BA YSHORES Ope1> Eveo>i1>gs The largest Jot Jn BayshOres. 5 BR, 3 BA ~ + , rwnpus. F' bed fi bah Try $33,9:>0, A l so 1ve room. ve t • l'eposses.slons, cull fur ad· and . rive car . garage. dresses. A&t 546-7T39 or Tropical pat.lo ar e a . ~97$. · $195,000. ,._ =-'-'=------- IA YFRONT 1,E=a=•'b=1~u1~1 ~~-'1~0~30 Ol?,er five bedroom. home. 2 BR condo split level, plaza, 45 on the bay · pier a.nd o'looking park $47 000 O\vnr float. owe lat. T.D. Asking 532-4543 or ' 838-9367 $250,000Cali G1S-'122S 3 .BR. 2 BA condo, plaza. $ii2,txXJ. 01V1ier &,, v• • '" • '"" ' ', .. ' o ,, I \ \IJJ•:) HE.\LI'' A BERG ENT[RPR!SlS CO 532-4543 or 83$-9367 Fount•in V1J)ey 1034 Has Dramatic Flair NEW CUSTOM Ne~· carpets & drapes, I··~· dramatic bayside v i e \V , ~-vaza.-oven~ed bedrm" boat <lip ,· ' ' Loads of gla1111, rustic ~·oods, . available. 2 other model~ --- peck)• cedar, heavy 11hake, ~an VleY.'; lge. 3 bdnn., a\·aUable. Call for details. STAGE COACH LIGIITS!! 21:: bath custom home ; VISION RE•LTY 5 Spacious BR's, 3 baths. ready for occupancy! Has _ "' ' ALL PROFESSIONALLY. lie. livih~ & tan1ily rooms 67T8600 ANYTU.IE Tl~DE UP decorated \\'/model honle \\1th beanled Ceil. & frplc. OCEANFRONT TO 10 exlra1. Custom drapes + Lge. yllrd, room fur pool. DUPLEX carpets; bit,t fam r m ~lature naUve trees. A short 4 BR. & 3 BR .. '.? ba., frplc., CM·ner has 10 UN r T S, w I c r a c k I i n i: b r I c k v.·alk to beach. lOo/o Down each. Beb1 rental arta. Eastside C.OSta f\leaa. \V lll fireplace. House & Garden makes this an xlnt buy at Sl69,500 lra~e do\\11 to 4 or S uhlts. kitchen and patio. BETIER $87,500. NEWPORT BEACH I 1 I RUN ON THIS ONE, only . Quall l $52,900. Op<n Howoo "'" • REALTY 675-1642 p•-- week<nd. Bkr 962-5511. ~ti CHARMCIODNG CAPE . ._.. • P1opwli•• · llWARD ROOM Balboa Pon Bay Front ""' ou~r.·,t~:~~•H.•<• HU&e 2 story, 3 baths, on 494-5671 '4tf.2100 5 Br, .( ba, lovely garden -~-~-----1 corner lot. Beauty loaded entry. Dock for boat. 011.Tier * * * * ~ith extras and the owner ~ \vill finance. $ 2 4 O , 0 0 O . John Newton Don't Call Me ... doc• "'" TownhollM!. ; ~.1P •ith the !inane""'. Sl'ANISH !Nsn-.,.!!"'E B. LUFF · . 1640 Sunset Rids• Dr. A D I 11 Bed1'00ms, 1ormal dinlni ~n S-brand ne~· L•g!Jn• -Beach up ex.. "''\\'el bar. push button I' Contemporary,. & tast~ully Condo, u~~ed cpts, 3 BR You are the ""inner of I'm a dellght1ul 2BR and den kitchen. covered patio. Uni· de:1igned. Your entranct: ls t.: 2% ba:, formal dine & 2 ·tickets lo the oo·ner!'I )'('Sicl ... ce "·iU1 beau-quely decorated ~·ith used fU.4471 ( :J 14MlOJ of ltaJlan tile, complimented fam rm. \Vrap around patio. Recreat~ Vehi~I• tiful private grounds brick, paneling, mirrors and by ruat carpeting thruout. On large ~n belt, close PLUS 11.·rought iron. GREAT i """'"!'~~~~!!"!!!!!• This 3 bdrm.; 2~ bath home to pool k tennis. $73,CW, &. S..t Show AS.SU~lABLE 71~% LOAN. TAKE OVER boasts 2,440 sq. ft., I.: ii; by owner, GM-6183' at the A char1ning lf : rental ~·ith For an appointn1ent to Stt GOVERNMENT LOAN ti;:uIY an ideal family home. NE\l/PORT Shores, Immac An•h·eim St•dlum private yard r.urrently Pl'lr call 3 & -4 BR homes in all $•9,500 3br, 2b11., 2 blocks to ocean, October 2-6 ducing 2'l5/mo. The Real Estate F.ilr areas. No qualifying. For ~ tennis courts, near propo&ed ?lease call 642-5678, ext 333 ALL 139-6133 or S3•255~ morelntormationcallBKR., I,,,,,_ ma.rtna, niust se:ll, try any lo claim your tickets. on a generous 47xl18 Jot in1\.,..,.,...,..,..,..,~;_,,., 846-3377 0/ltt&li~ Offer, s.tS-5940 (North.County toll ·frtt the be•t •<mth-0f·hwy loca· Huntinvton 8Hch 1040 ..:..O"-""------REAL ESTATE Newport Height1 ·1070 number is >IQ.J.220) lion. $89.500 tlrn1 -Hunt. Harbour 1042. ··-------.,__ * * .. * * Call S«-7211 !nJ Glmne)Te .St. . 4 Blocks to OcHn BY OWNER. 3 Br, 211 ba. 49+9+73 519--0316 NEWPORT HEIGHTS $59,500 3 UNITS on SOxlln/i R-3 To~ouse •. Inc. boat slip. ~'""~""'~'""""'""'~1 10% do\.\-n or O'.l.Tier 'will car· FOU. R·l'LE. X S • • thl 80% finanCUli: avail. BLUE LAGOON VILLA ry . at 9o/a. 3 BDRM hon1e t lot. Income $440. l\lon Y· $67 cm. 846-T:M Prime location, \"ie'o\·, 2BR, that's had lot.5 of love and CO~IPLETELY renovated I ~ COATS c & WALLACE W REALTORS -54'-4141- (~ Eveni"t•I ~~~~~·~~~· ~~I No 1,racancy factor. ONE ~~· ~=~~~~~~ NEWLY LISTED OF A KIND. ~~";a). ~lake BY OWNER 3 BR, 2 ~: 2Y.i BA, all appliances, care. $51 ,SO O. Call and painted! EarnsS610mo. IXIU"i<" -D\'TRA Sl-IARP C · · d I M D I RENT-BUY otter. ~ ba, Townhouse, Boat Slip de\.'Ol'ator furni shed. Serious PREST I GE H 0 ~IE S , Perteet cul de sac, location .. _ 2 siory bargain! Pride or ona e ar up e• .,A,. ""A" 3 ,__,_ 2 2 •-• of oii·ncrship a b 0 u n cl s . \\'TU~ ~EASE op T Jo N . 842-7411 Eves·: ffl.1171 inc. 80'10 finan a v ll i I . 9e Uer-First time offered. ~ ~vum, · • u.:uroom Ii. Decorators delight ,vith !.'Old Charming Cape Cod house, $67,000. Call 8-i&-l:M Only $69,500. terms. REDJ'"'""'""'~!""""'""''""~ l·l ~i:oom. Excbani" or ,·eined n1in'Ored 11.·a ll s.1 2 bedroontS + d!>n, A~ QR JRAO[ BRASHEAR ll'Yine 1044 ~m.~~TOR S Newpo~tShores 1072 H!.r~~41~~:~t. Sparkling blue pool & BBQ ne"'·· large bachelor unit. REALTY· '"""JERALD BAY ......... • LEASE/OPTION lll'f'a. Lnclosed r't'd brick C..'ute and clean. Prlt.'ed lo .&:.1.• .. ~ ~ patio ,vith bu b b I l n g sell at $77.500. Opportunity to tu:quire-p1;1ne Calling All Kids BR 3 b&. home ~·/ni~ . . . Or contract sale. GORGEOUS 2-STORY-'''atc11311. Sl ,425 do\\111 10 644-7270 C.D.i\I. Pl'Operty! Crackling Here's one just for ,you! 4 OCEAN Yq}WS, ~·alking A-t'ra~.,, u~11.ded & buy. Cent:rnl beach to"'>ne ~~.P11~.c,~, P~!~~p'at~rcn~ WALK TO IEACLI Bdrn1S"., 2 baths, utility and· distan"-e to ,tennis courti>1 .~m~ac .. • B.R . .,\.; clen, tpl,., location. Take advantage of "" " n sto~e upstairs. ~laster park, POOL.S, &: beach, !"· area .. W~k to beach. tills ba.r1:1$. Call 963-6767. for details: 4 Bedroon1, 2 bath home suite, large family room financini: available S185,000 S52,500 -· 1..::::;=:::::::==;::::===:r I~• pcivale den. -4 .Spat•. BR'&, unique CO\!. patio. G:.is BBQ. Very v.·eJI localed. $45,00}. OPEN1U.t •h:S~UN 1011ENICEI VISION REALTY ion conier lot. Fine area with firepl ace,kitchennook, LINGOREALESTATE CAYW~REALTY i · , 67:r8600 Ai\:Y'Tl~IE of ne~·cr bcHnes. Bllns, living roo1n and formal din· 4.9f...8006 4~1397 *...,.._12'0 * Century 21 Realtort '35-5511 -~··,. ' ' E I s' e List• crpts, clrps, 2 car attached ill!: dO\\'ll: A great functional MONARCH BAY S•n Clement• , . XC U IV lftCJ pr., gate for canlper or hoine ~·1th a 1are touch , · ,i---~· ----- 11 a UNITS l'oal Home ~t. \l'ol.k <o Elem & ot beaoty. 189.iiOO • Bdnn• .. lamlly nn., lom>al WANT A VIEW? -=!§:i;;;~~~~~~~ t\11 2 bedrooms . in good Echson H1. Good Io a n CA.LL 552-7500 dmlng rm., pool & lo\•~ly . . 1002 Genoral R.E. 1002 shape' • buU t ins. close 10 90/0 Interest ~ssumption. Ca 11 for • VISION. • ocean view tron1 the \\'OOdsy See forever from th i s 1 · Brok ""~"' o""'" setting. $139.500 talented .f ~'R. + bonus rm. 1----------'---------'-'-:..; &ho1>ping. Good financin.;t Call us locluy about this 8 K>wing, ·er,~. TURNER ASSOC. home. Pleilty ~ of extras! General R.E. Where else? And nothing south ol Sea Ranch's boldness to compare it with. But then it does defy comparison. Deep courtyards. balconies and decks everywhere; spacious. accommodating residences for uncommone1s. W<:XXJ sheathed. clipped eave, saltbox architecture. Defies description. must be walked about to be appreciated. Motor up Superior Avenue from the Pac~ic Coasl Highway to eight smashing models. From SSl,tol ard wo<th every penny and lhen some. Oonl sniff et Newport Beach. either. Yoo might get a lungful of flesh sea-borne ail'! ll\'ELilable. ,\ g 0 0 d in· delightful 2 BR &: 2 B .. \ . u= N r<---H '~-·.... $69 m LE FERGUSON HESTER master suite on 60xl 00 n DIFFERENT 4~117 ---.ra• Plac ""tn>ent at sm.ooo. pool home .. ·ith I a r g e SOMETHING REALTY ~ . ~t • .,. .. ---• . GEM EIQuail l a red hill company · PORTAFIND ·l~ ~.._.,.11n Ave., N.B. • ' -loi, "·alking distance to TI1is 4 BR beauty offers the · p ,, C · -MrJ; • ""' Univ. 8'• enter, Irv"" . 3 Bn , 3 ·•-th&; • ~. llv: n~., ~ns .. "". "23 Pf'-. -1:.lea · ... p1·h·atc beacl! access. ultimate in family living. '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I n. Uil. _,.., ~·•v ~ '!""II"..-' Re•ltors, Inc. Only $69,500 Huge Tri-level in a prime In The Ranch rm. w/open beamed ceil., BY OWNER • ." ?.lovln&': mw;t 752•1920 1-IOl Dove St., Ste. 220 l»B" neighborhood. Priced to sell, Terrific home! HM «ntral frplc., din .. nn., modern sell almost new 3 BR, l ~ ct'JAllST.-NIWl!<»Y llACH Call 10< more !nlo. sn.J584 kitch. Only 173.iiOO. ;32,100 II BA custom .home on cul UNRS-UNITS! Newport Beach air conditioning. Lavish 83J..9781 I I ' • agt. carpeting &: drapes. All Loan avail. at 7% int de aac .. Ctpts, drps, fncd. , • OPEN HOUSE modem kitchen. L arge MISSION .REALTY 49-l--0131 -$45.000. 12 Ave. W. Junipero. .10.lo/o -T~b_l ___ Do ____ Sh _____ k_ 87' ON WATER R-3 IOCl.ll H1!~:~ ~~ 4 BR. ~ri~'ilis~it:~~tly 32\,;~a:,; Oiff~~ ~~El :al\~~~ =A:. 4 • 1479 lOIO -SPENDAILE Um 8 WR ac in Corona del r.Jar. Vac. land Fam-rn1, Oen, 38 ft. Sunsel old. $48,500. Call. 6#-8750 Home \\'/nice view ftoo\ , Ten freshly painted Wlits. on hillside. Vu forever! pool and extra large yard. !\faster BR $115,!0l VETS, 3 Br, approx. $3900. All 2 bedroonw. Earns $1.iOO In Nev.-port 1-leights. Large Nea.r J:tty. 8 Units or Con· O\\iNER TRAN~FERRED. ['9A81lJaL] ER $115,001. Moves You Iri. $272. mo. rm. il'OU· F\tll price only level R·2 Jot, nice trees, dos OK. $300.CWXI. Priced to sell. $57,000. CaJ\ I ~O LINGO REAL ESTA'T'.I ~132~. ~,500~·~'¥1~·~· ~56&-0411~~~~ 1 SU),,CUI! Cap. rate just $27,500. Co1ta Mesa Realty Realtor, Paul Coad. 962-6142 . ~~CJ . 494-8086 499-l397 under U%. Excellent loca· PETE BARRETI Since 1958 * 541-7711 REl'OSSESSIONS 3 BR, den; 2 lrpl., patio, I ~. =. ~,!U~ -REALTY-AFTER 6 P.lit. Call s:>7-4617 For information and location 600 Ne\.\-porl Center Drive lril: deck,\ru, \Valk to beach. ~_. veatm~t bargain. Call mw SHORECLJFFS, 3br, 1;~ba. or these FHA&: VA hon1es Open Ev·enilJ,iS \\'inter. $375 Mo. -• (714) 10>2-1700 642-5200 675-4060 Rock frplc, J.Iahog paneled contact _ ' UNIQUE TURTLEROCX NE\V dramatlC oceanfront, ----tam-rm, lg• yrd, .trult b'ee•. KASAllAN HOME lN ~10BR, 3 ba. Winter. $800. Mobile Hon\oo l •llJ1o,,'l t ulll1 ' ft.I •• 1 ~EREA L . BLUFFS CONDO By ~'Iler. Prine. only. R IDEAL LOCATION Pt>2:. Allen Rltr. 494-.1""78 for ule SINGLE LEVEL lr5:.~o li&i'o loan avail. HI E•t•t• "2-6644 Loaded \\ilh extras!! Loft, " TATER S 1100 ~ fountain, intercom, a i r O Il!l GREENLEAF S Stllr Bonit.a model In th<' original JocEAN VTE\V, C u s lo m A MNTIONll cond. jacun in atrium!L -"-=-u-·n.;;a;..N"-'li:.;ue..;.;..1 _....;1.;;:;52;1 adult park ' beautifully "'=="',,;::o;;;,.,,,,,,,,~,,.,,,,,I se<:uon of the Bl~~s. 3 Bed-honlc, 4000 sq. tt. $155,000. •• Upgraded thruout. -4BR. -ded Z4'x60' 2 B 2 T.WO -TR•LEXES rmic .. formal c11n111g 1 !ll"('_a, ree .. ,/5 Bclrnis, }'am-rm, VA BUYERS! Bcautltul 3BR 2BA. tam. rm. formal din-UbJ>llraa. ••·/'-· •-n A'mustr, .• ,. ' ' ----~ exrvwe<I beamed cei Ing• ' I horn ul • -lkti ~ ' ........ u.: • ' 'C'-h · h I ,,..~ . · Rtt-rn1 Pool. O , ... 11 e r poo e on a c ....... e-sac. ing; quiet Interior street one ~ ·Call: Pi.Ion thrU FT! aft , 6 ..,..c \\'it O~'l\en un t • End unlt, o,·erl~k1ng \\'Id~ 67a-5033 Xlnt IJnanclng Super clean. door trom park. pools, ten· £fS' "'' &t2-3806. firepla~. Close lo sh•i greenbelt. l\'laxin1un1 pn· AGT. 847-3584 nis cts. Only $66.900 incl. ·or Sat/Sun all day . ht Newport Heights. ~ C vacyf. S10C,OOOI. h Costa MeH 1024 I and . SEE FOR SPECIALIZING IN 642-3806. uch .. • • 0 eswort y POOL SPECIAL YOURSELF!! Call v1s;on . . RE ·LTDRS ... -o COLLEGE PARK Rambi'"-lSt~<BRPool Red Hill Roalty, 552-1500 LAGUNA NIGUEL VIEW WANTED: M~bile h•m· 1e1Qu'all l "' _, 3 BR, 2 ba ~1· t dlt' .. ._ ~·~ PROPERTIES mlnimwn 12 wkle. Will II • 3 IR 2 IA Sparkling ·poo:n con ~ Home just listed and priced BY OWNER, New 4 br., SEA TE1ta•cE comider 24' wide depend~ ~ surrowi a t $46.950. Call today 847-2 ba., Colle .. Park home, ""' ri """ """"" p l:'-by lush lndsepg. Gara.. 3584 a~ lrpl -mm··-•ty 1 lo HOMES ' on P ce. "~"'"I Dp91N8 · '1 $69,950 finished on inside ~·/exttiiil "~"'°'•:::··~-~-~-·· '"V llUJ poo ' w Ask .,.,_..:... ., ••<• •-see. lutlneu Pr-rty 1400 7S2•1f20 Jight.1 & "iring. Owner \\ill ASSUI\.IE 7% VA loan dwn. $52.!0> or I~. opt. .~ .... u .w -,--'4000UAH.R.NIWH>llTllACN In a very nl~ north or finance. $49,500. w/$12.CWXI. dn. $193 mo. pa.y& 1 ,_,1425=--~~6~~~-= 1) VACANT 4 BR.. ·Owner SOt.ITHWEsr CORNER 11:-.. •-- h\gh\\'3.Y I01...1tlon '"it h EASTS I DE all. 3 BR, 2 BA, luxry shag, NEW 4 BR, .3 Ba.·DEANE sa,ya SELL, LEASE/OPT. KNOTI' Gt CERRrre>S ~ ,rvurP,lex Hunt P941ch duplex potenlhtl Ca. I I Doll House; l-lgc bdrm., bltn~. prof .ldscpd lawn. Home,. 'Univ. Park. By Or LEASE NOW! .• S,::S,000 Ownr. 6t5-4363 Fix &. S1vt 644-ttll. din rni hdwd fin: fpl Chnce H.B. loc. After 6 Owner. "D" Plan. Only Lge 3 bed + 3 z · ·• PLUS · · pm, call 846-7319 $16,S. 64M149 ~!~2!, ~ve l·C~o~m~-~';;ie~rc;l;•;;I Pr;;;p;ty;;;;;;1;600;; I bedrooms, bl~, c t 0 s ~ d rJn NI GE L ElAIL[Y 0. A55lJCIAT[S OJ.te 2 BR. rental; all on Just 5% 00\\'n. Land lease 3 ,;W;.:ALN:,::;::;;UT;,;.:SQ,:.,:,U;.:ARE;,,.,,~Twn-hs-e, * \1 • gar., S\\'i.tn pool. Income +" a lge. lovely lot \.\'1th many bdrm. 2 baths, blt-tns, FA Air Cond, Refrig, highly 2l BEST OF THE GARDEN FOR .LEASE OR SALE tax shelter. beaut. trees. $46,500. heat. Ne \v I y decorated. upgraded. $32,flOO. 64MS87 HOl\iES. 2 or 3 BR. Drive COMMERCIAL ILDG. . Only SSf,fSO RIVIERA REALTY 530,950. bkr. Cal l 1142-2561 att 6 .t wkn<h. by 23861 Taranto Ila¥· Call 1115 Park Ave., CM Fl~st Pi-r Realty * 642-7007 * 1::::::::::::::::;:::;::::;::;;:~===~! 10< •PPt. ~~ •-uon··•or '"" • .. -1. 142-4421 • Balboa Peninsula 1007 ~~""'""'""'"""""'""''"'II ~ ~ -v - BACK aAY-$39,soo. • S©\\.Jl\'\-&"E~S· I EnJoy~.=·Llf• ~~C:~=~c~!d:: ~ta ~r;:~~Oca~. ~J! Ba lboa Penln1ula Lg. 4 Br .• den : 1 blk. to bay Open Sat/Sun. t-5 424 Belvue Lane 675-4600 POINT. cute 2 Br, Cape Cod, large yd, room f o r exr,ansion. priced for quick sa e. 645-7721 eve, & wkends. OPif:; ~~1Y.st,1,;!Pm That Intriguing Wort/ Gome with a Chudl• MAKE •N OFFER I Call Naomi Jonlan &li>-0882 l:;,.,~~~~:"l:·fo.. A~ 3 Bro., 2 batb, sep rumpus ___ .....;_ lhlltM., QAY a. POU.AN ,.. ~3'21 .Eves: MS 1112 in,·eston. Don't \\"I.it Call rni. lrg lot, many mature Owner transterttd and must l'IO\\' for nwi:e information. trees, 2 g r ee nhouses. o •eorrong• i.tters of ,.,. ,-... I have lmmedlatt sale. 3 MILLER REALTY Lochenmyer toolJhed S..8-Q new crpts '·---'°"' Krombltd -:-ds ': Bedrm., ahq: cr;its., tplc., GU-481\ & paint'. As1u~t1.ble loan ..... _. to lcwm four ilmp wor • pool ¥iied yard, sreat C1pletr1no Beach 1011 -BY OWNER: Sha.rp, lt'I 3 Br w/oc vte1v. No tight money here! Assume VA . wllo dn. ~500 or lse/opL ~~r1l:.~11. 6 4 2-127 2 1 C E E 0 A D I :.ml~ ~~761. Alkini:lz~=== NEWPORT RIVIERA I I I I I' I • •-OR LEASE: 200 Feet on Uptraded 4 Br, 2~J Ba L•k• Forest 10S4 Harbor Blvd. Cothpletely Rt.·,1ltor 2 )T old 30 Unit-turn ll.Pts in Sai1 Clemente w/fan- tastic rtntal history. $9(0'.I CltSb ""'"'-pun:haae put of lhis "al e;state partnmtllp. Xlnt ~'< sheltered incorne -i\L\NAGDIENT FREE . 49'1.-271J,. • f,'l,J:i ~~'.· pu~ i::k I H ·A O O R I ~ t I-------·--~· Good oUice bulltllnZ. lo"""" & much more. Enjoy I' I I I ! . 2-STORY • Roy ·M.c::':'itto ltHltor '°""try club Uvlng •1 a . . . . f COUNTRY SIDE 1110 Newport ll•d., CM Corona del Mar 1022 tow. low price . '9&-4757 *OC'EANF'RONTt 5 Unit Apts .;,.;-.;;.o....;;o;;-"'"';;__;.o.o;; MILLER REALTY LAKE FOREST 541-772' CUSTOl\1 deluxe duplex. So. ~2-4811 I H Y S U K I i My wife th ink & •h•'1· fool. e LAGUNA BµCH e of hwy. l yr oW. \\'nlk l\lESA VERDE North. 3 BR. 4 I I I I ing me by serving meat tl•ir ~w ihopd" F,lni· t l\Cti unit 3 2 Ba, Ftun·rm, be a Ill . • . _ . sfitute1. lke other nig'1t I wai1 DI", ul na, f'rpl c. Loaded ill k ba·· II . h . b nd , ... /extrn•. Take over sgs,OOO ct na • .,tun en .. ., re e•trng am urgers a 11most In loans at 9~i% -$129.500. pll. $:).1,000. 0\\1lel'/Aaenl. I L E S K E H 1-Ol't·• pit. ~·t) Spartlna Real Ellate 979-l'Jl4 """ -~J A suME $16,100 t,iA 7r; I I' I' I I G eomoi.i. tl\to thud:l1 quot1d °'~" . . . . . . . by flllln; In fti1 tt1iWll9 wotd \'OU WIU.. LOV'E rr1 Ne\\' 2 BR to\\rnho115C·?l1csa Verde, you d..,1lop ffOl'll &11p No. J b1lol". w1u.111al Duplex, 1~ BR. 3 fron.t unit. patio, pool. Ba. , ,., Br.. 2 Ba. "'ood ua.:m. 0\VC 2nd. ~.. e Ptl~~57~rt~S lfTTlRS IN 1. I' 1) I' 1• r 1 rillllCllt1a, 11ta.int'Cl 'I~ s s. 3 on ON Bi r .... LOT. "'Ith . . . . . -. rp\c's. Btnch t'oot~ 1 ttnln.I air condltlonlng. In a. UNSOAM8lE A90VE lfTlftS 1 1 I 1 1 I 1 Slk. Rtady IOOf\, 4 21 prime locatlort Prk'l'd low v 10 GET ANSWtl ASinJJue 1% FllA loan on • ~ Dn Finan A\l&D , , this buuUful. -4 BR, 2 full Condom1nium1 $).97,500 OWntr. ~ baths. Shai: carpels, blt·inl. for Nie 1700' BY O\\'NER. 1 or 2 TRl· Dillbw11.lher. Gora: e o u • • PLE ••1 ~ --~ custom drapes. Large crx· "QUICh'." Low interest "-'ES. .., ·"""· ,.,_, .. , or poaed 8.iKftg&le pallo & ~xp\reis: 11.B. F 1reti 1•1 , ~t otter. Near Staci'! .t: v.•allru'l.)"I. lt'1 a rt a I sp\r:ll 11WN·&.l--., \\'et bani:. Schools. ~ -YTll old. $36-«00 BARCAJ~ at $ 4.C, o o o. bca111 ctll'.K.. db1, bkf:!t aft. 4 pm • •tknd&. ~ Prlncipal1 only. & lndt1" m11. Ne\\·, 1pac:. ja· SAVE TitOSE i\ Pp LE - -cuni. aaw1a pool. l'rom PE!;LINGS and boll ln Newport IH~h lOH S:OAillnGOO dn. Mo,·e bi a!Wl1lnum pans Ind pob. Belbea Penfn1ul• . ~7~1 Brtt'.:e Wlate. ~~~ ": .~~~ Gold'"'1Jd, -o.m...1bullder _.i -4ll. . C.11 5;&-2Gi(I :....---~~--_:~~'---~--•..:::6'I0-69'Jl£::~Princ~·~1~~~~M~~~·;... ~B~K~R------·'--'-SC~RAM,:.:..:""'·L~E~T~S~A~n~1w~ff""-el~n~C~la~1~1tt~l~ca~t~lonc:.:..:IOtO.:.::..:;..... Butna Vista bt.yb'ont. pier. r:otidlt\Cn. tia\' ~ S'20S,OO>. ~ ·wfflnanet. Ott.Sllf\ed adi eeU be \lem., eeU.? Utt a y Pl1ot AJ:t, 6n-.4600 tnlllll item. or an)' lteut. Qust(kd Ad. OtU 1 • • • ' • ' 1 .. . ' '· . 8 J D41LY PILOT MondlJ, StPttmbtr 2J, 1974 U urn 1 ••5 A I I I d Ap•rtmt•I• •fur•. Apartme•I• Un um. Ap1rtm1nt• " :_ -lots for ule 2200 n urn th.cl UHi Un urnl1h.d I HouMS Unfu1nt1h9d Dupl1xt1 Furn .u p•r mtn • urn • • _ 9 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;. ' N rt Beach 386 !•PR.ICE REDUCED a..-._ I 3202 Coate MHe 3224 1 L1gun1 l'lfguel 3252 WINTER O<~•nlront 3 Br, Newport Beooh 3769 Costa Me.. 3824 Hu•ll•glo• BHcll 3MO ewpo -· 2 Ba. $30ll. Nt\\'JXlrt Btrtch. -~-----------------· DRIVE BY tilts ~ R-t -.ALA ltENTAtS l BEDROOM, 2 bell!. !omit !BR. 2 bA. Sea T'""" li1Hti31i WINTER-REN1'AU1 NO INFI.:ATIONI I 2 BEDROOM-deluxe Condo. OCEANFRONT I ,., I 1'oom, All 6llnt. nrePface, T~·nhoose, ocean vie"". pvl Duplexes Unfurn 3600 Steps to Bel\ch CouunUtllt.Y almOll new. 2 BR. l! bo, !uni S1lXI \Vntr o, t'ICXt IO 363 Eut;l .~11< WI utc.1.&un ~ Wtvi« double caruiie and ltlri.;e gu rdtn & patio, beach, I--'--------Small 1 Br furn apt.l pel"50n Down to l:!arth ranch for Hltns re.big yoor own 2 I • 7 bll. \lo'IJ1tl!r. $300 s,t,. '!,w~.:.. mll!~..,ae.1!~ ~take yard. E:xcellent t.'01xliU011. tennis, pool Sc clubhou!iO. 2HH, sml gar. t.lurrtcd cpl $185 121 $200. L&e furn heD,,enJy llvlne. choose \\'l'l8her k drY°er, OW. pool STEPS TO BEACH. -ed 1 ~~.'!II "'' ~ r-..,,....::,... ..-... you •• want to live in. * 01, •. $~. -. Ask far e-• 2 HR, l ba. \\ ntcr. AR. o c •• ""'"""'· ~.._... f fiit HOVSll Vut't\nt ond re1u.ly tor oc-security. Wate.r & duet paid ~"t•. $150. <.ml ""'I ok. ,..,~ .... Vic\\' 2 Br opt. Id-' which part of our 1t11rdeo and clubhouse. 2 Children i1 $23 1 • ] CU•",',·,, cupancy. $375./mo. L.ocel )y ov.•ner. .-. per mo, No Childrtn. lC.l\t.) 548-5933 for c~upte or 2 .. i~ .. 1 ... 13" 2 ~· ··-.. RONA DEL M Real Estate Exchge 2800 _ __ at 936 Conmado, Casto Jt>Me. 64+1757. A 1 1 F 1 b d Utll pd, lJt & la':t mo + 3 a:., Ba, Larxe ltoonu1 or Dnle 963-4567 CO 1~ rnl !\-1 r I t 11 p1rmen1 \trnse '* lnalde /Out1lde . 4BR.unf.boui«>. u.m. ' MAGNIFICENT ~lW~T a llAT, c.M. ••2·131J M!;.';·24.0r :::i~~~en So~~h Mesa Verde 3263 Cle11nlng dep. Call l\1r. Entertainment Areas * Pvt 2 STORY, 2 br., condo.., [uJJ 2 00 W:iO 1$l' or 1v-1opt. LAKE TAHOE BAC11S, all types, tliieii: Cout Brokers. SUPER SHARP, 3 bedroom, B•lbo. Is land 3706 Pnnlaon tor key. 642-3698. PnUoa, rtreplRce, un1ple pool & club privl'p., gar. NEWPORT CREST $10011145 •··h ··-• & C'[ closets * Putti .... Pool & & 11tor., nr, Hunt. Hrb. 2 Bl'. 2 1,., Co•''''· •0·0 New 3 Bi·, 2 ',~ bu Lux . po. ........ 1'' DREMI hou$C, •k:,' Ute, lofl, $340. Avail Ocl. 15. Qin AND BAY VIE\V Party ' •·ea. ·~l·n ,, n •hop"g. ctr. ,• oc ........ 1• No \ " .,._, Condo H N b NICE I lln lip'' Cd'1 $17' I 5 YEA.RLY 2 br.. lg. putio, OCEAN •u '" ,......,. Om.' Caf' v ' " " llpd 1B $17 be see<• rui·•-e. ""111 d k S ( %16 at ' , U<ll Id h ........ ut r J• '" "'\r newly dl"e'c:I .. S2GO from isun ec · te~ to Inc om par ab 1 e nclll'· pets. 213) 592· '1 t. ;,i, ,..,_,_ .. ,.. C••lno, ~u. tc.nnlll. pa • as ga._ ... now SINC •'s. fun',11,·,,·, n1·. l1•cd '"' be h Del 3 bdr 2 •··th S 1~· d ho~", 1;ij1 .... , et-tshtng. UNIQUE l Br ho~e CdM d ~ 1 $l!l0 .. ,.. 675-5666 ac · uxe . utt • everythlnglocatlon.Chlldn!:n at • .,..n ays. -•-1•·· Pvt ~ ..__ ..._d lUdden in trtt&-singlea .Y ' gnr, pat o, . 2 STORY 2 Br, den, 2 Ba. AH new furniture. $.350 lst over 14 wek.-omc. }'ro1n WALK TO BEACH -..,'.Ii· ucac .... -.,., .... e NlCt 2 BR tri $16.5. Avail SINGLES. kldll, f)t!I, I Br, yd, Newport S.1ch 3269 Yrly ........ or winter $2'75. n111l l11~t tuo. ~1,ua:t aee 10 $225 car So. Cul prop, TDIS, etc. Chld & pet. pottio & ears.re gar, $Ul5. 124~ Garnet 673-3215 appreciate. 675-521).J --'nm VENOOM£ 1, 2 &. 3 Br, crpt, drps, 673-.3262 Pvt. p11:y. MOVE in 2 Br house $185 Homtflndtr1 * 642-9900 RAOIS & 1 BR'• $1001$195 -,::;.~=:=c.o.c=c=-=:=1=="='""'"="'="'"="'7:'= fl.845 Anaheim 54~ ~"M·ls~ar. s'f11~~l~~tgii I ~;;;;i;;;;~;";~::':;"'I Real Estate Wntd. 2900 Cpl & child, nice yd&: 1:a.t El Toro 3232 1~~~E4~Ru°!. ~e~v~~ Balboa Peninsule 3707 *STEPS TO OCEAN* Corner Center St. CoKta Mc!Jl Bch. 847.3957 ·• 11 Vista del Mesa EXISTlNC VA '{1)2 hand!(•ap ~tire!:~ s~'!:: ~": 4BR 3•--~·· Lak• Fo-"t '¥' ,swcdiJ;h F.P .. deck, 2 BAYFRONT ~,:~03 ~2~ .• 1~en.llwne·ar~ Off The Beaten Path CHE8234Z OAR}? __ APTS ADU'T GA"DF.N 1-1or-.1ES d •• ,_~ home. CALL US TODAY ' ..,..., ,,.... ,.,.. 111ng CS 301 Ed t t Co .... n~-'-uo.uta .. '"' ~·-· Cond T ts 51\t , •-gewa er a '''"llUU• sundeck, f .... I., dshwshr., JRV!N"" AT ~lt:SA CAI.I~ ~ ALA Rentals 642-1383 o. enn ' ' wun, 2 BR sin comple.x $1~. Jlts 3 Bedroom, 2 b n I h' \\'l\Sh/dry., ·;butters. Wint. Adults • No Pet11 1,2 & 3 BR. Prlv gar., pool, "' F WATERFRONT LOT I inc.Id. $360 mo., 644-07fiO J1catcd pool. patio, gar fireplace. garage, luundry, $350. &15-SlTI * Luxurious. shaa: carpets wallher, dryer. Close to N&~~-.1~";~~~11~r<&111;; LANDLORDS' Huntington &each 3240 '.?BR house $250 yrly, Plltio private beuch, no pets, top , * Blt·lns incl DlshWA1bt:r beach. 5J6....0n6. 1 B"n" $1!10 2 Hf< SZ:'il \\'8.ntt'd. &14--0'.116 ' . ~"'rplc, part. turn. available loce.tlon. walk to shopping, OCEANFRONT 4 Br.. 2'il.i ~~~~~~~~ \\'~ Specialize in Newp:ir. 3 Nice 3 bedroom. 2 bath, MORE, MORE -CAU.. US lib'""'"", S400. Also 3 Br, Ba, trplc, gar.. \VI 0, * U'g Pool & Gas BBQ's E.\.'EC. living over 40. 2 Std Dny & Night Se<:urlly, Pool = ik-ach • Corona del )far • c"'• "-. -ilo. walk to ALA Rentals 647.•••3 .... 3 d h J r nt tennis courts 1 BDRl\l Sl7o. nns. Cust crpt, dbl drps, Jacuui, Rec. BI d IC ·1 II &I & • ·-·· Our Re ... Se ,,... ..... .,.. .... o.xi 2 Ba $275. s v.•si · , $600. J BDR.A1 To11o•nhoU!e $250. wash/dry, crptd patio, rec. w/C)m. Bllllords. Color! ,_, --.; ... ,a. n1.&1 r-achoo! and shopping. No ree. Nelson Robinson. Rltr Adlts, no pets. \\inter · Gas & \Valer Pd -Gnragt! fucil beyond compare. $?l5 ....... ..~a. Apt . ha .. •1 N1~~v::wfREE to You! Try ~$27Dn:e~ i~. °;';~ NEWPORT BEAOJ, truly 200 P..1aln St, Balboa 6~8120 5;;n~i;i0. Yrly, 6/a-9873 att LA MANCHA APTS. fl"o. 545-2151, 960-1160. di;h\\'nlihl'I', l'('ft'\J!. sh11i.; \:Pl NU-VIEW RENTALS mo. beautiful setting • large 2 BDRM., shag cpt .. drps .. ·~=wK UP 1 .,,._ 2 R ?18 Scott Place, C.l\-1. COl\1FORTi\BLE 2br, nicely &. pvt 1w1tio or bulc'On)'. ==~==~-~~ 3BR, ran1lly room, polished c•-rt, v.·ashrm., •', blk. ~ · .......... :1. 645-6318 carpeted. d•··~. encl--~ e '1· 1"'··1 • 673-4030 or 494-3248 BRAND NEW dlx duplex. wood Ooors beam cen; .... e _,.... -. );: Bach Color TV maid ,..., """"" » . ..-'"'o:;o,..,=-1 ....... Hou5es Fur n ished • ~· to bay or bch . .,.1J n\O. ' . ~ ' HACIENDA OE MESA g1u'age, $11);) n1onth l 'Y -PARK NEWPORT General 3102 SINGLES. kids, pet. Util. pd. 3 Br, 2 ha, nil bltns, lndcy Years Lease $575.00 mth. yr. lse. lllS \V. Balboa serv. pciol. THE l\1ESA, 415 60 V \I'll C ,.11 . 536--08'16 1.;;.:;:.;;;..;..:._ ____ .....;..c 1 Hr. $175. Newport rn1, cloiSC<l' gar. \Valk to C'.ole of Nev.'POrt Rltrs 673-4526 N. N('Y:port Bl., N · B · 1 \ · fOO, ·•· · . eves APARTMENTS ~/$115 UTIL pd Sachs at bch. Ideal students. Laguna $150 UTIL pd, sml rear cot· tage, yd, p11tio, Corona de.I Mar · S155 UTfL pd oceanfmnt bach. full kllch, putlo, N.B. $170 UTlL PD l Btlr. pvt fncd yd, child/pet Laguna $200 lITIL pd oceanfront 1 bdr, be"ul. local.Ion Laguna $250 1 + DEN 11,2 Ba, ftpl, patio, l Hi blk Newport $275 3 BDR. ~ Ba, trpl, patio, gar, % blk ocean N.B. NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 or 494-3248 l BR house SUO. Util pd. H.B. 1 BR mobile, walk to beach, H.B. 1 BR $150., Bal boa Island. 1 BR house Newport Beach. kids ok. 1 BR holl!le Laguna Beath, kids, pets. 1 BR, walk to water, Newport Beach. Agt. Fee. 979-8430. H.UNT. Beach 2 Br, $2(l(J. bch. 522/524-16th St. $350. 675-5511 . 646-9681. BEAUTIFUL GROUNDS $170. LARGE 1 BR, single, Bachelor J or 2 Sedroon1.s Pool, kid ok. nr. beach. nio. $150 sec. Va cant. Call 1 '7="'~"'°'~;"'"'::"'7== 2 BR. LCE Kit ch c n ' Adults -No Pets story, beum celling, blt·ins, I and TO\\'nhOUst'!I Cdl\-l 1 BR duplex, garage, Max or R.ny, 846-1371 Bkr. 1: Balcony, nr beach, shops. 3 DOORS TO BEACH 10 minutes lo ocenn. Large l crpt, dt·ps. 2043 \Vallace Frl. rl'.!.J.50 Open £1.ij Dt1llY YEARLY Dplx., 3 hol.L9es Utll tncld. $250. n10. 642-3519 1 Yr Old, Furn or Unfun1. BR. Sl?S., Gas & Water inc .. Ave. 646-9243 646-8882 Sru1 ~"· Pools Tl•nnl~ Hutil pd1 .. $ndl75. Appln64s. 2 9900 NO Ssnog QUIET new \\'ell fron1 bch, 1·2 br. unit $2~ \\'"INTER brand new upper <!BR $400 Mo, 2 BR $300 lvio. Drapenes, carpets, g n 8 , A•,-...,· •• l•-•n , ... ~hlon lslan.d ome I ers * • scrubbed 3br Townhouse, & 1-3 br. & den $375, ea. onlt. 3 Doors 10 heh. 3 Br, 2 114 46th St NB. 528·1010 heat, gus stove, air LGE 1 Bit, 3 !Jlks b'On1 "'~ v "" ''RENTERS I I'' shaii crpting, pvt patio, \\•/lrpL, gnr. 673-4099 alt. conditioning, swim m Ing oce1~n. Util pd. Stm;.e & at ,Jan1borce on San Joo.quui pool. $285mo I ease. 5. ba. $350. 1213) 695-4791. DUPLEX-Lower. IBR, upper pool, rec. room, washCl'S rcfng. $195. mo. 831·9950. Hills Road. You Get All The Houses 5.3&-0687 TJ.IE BLUFFS, spotless, LO"'ER 2 br. oceanfront. ~C·~~ \v/ocenlun vieRw., Senior & dryers. 2 BLKS. beach; 2 BR .. l* (7 14 ) 644-1900 available tor rent in 0 UR gor.. patio. \V/D. park'g. . •.tu:ens fl y. es req. be p tlo lndry -9 BULLETIN UPDATED 3 BIKE to beach, 2 Br house, barely used; 4 BR., 3 ba., no prob. S200 642_3850 675--000'J NEW 3 BDRM, 2 BAT.H &ci'..l~ ~Iu'' · ..,,.,,,. NE\VPORT Arena Apts. ~I tlmes/v.•eek. singles, families. Also 2 Br fparri. ho'!'~,:.,~;. ~l.t $550 2 BR 1 ba steps to bay Spuclous house size npt.s w1tht=,=~~~~~~-~ Buyslde Di'. Outstanrh/ll: Homefinders * 642,.9900 Newport Beach & Costa er mo. ~ ~~n LARGE 3 br. upper, ocnfrnt.. • · large fenced yard, frplc, dbl EXTR.A lrg 2 Br, 2 Bn dlx \\'aterfronl art. 2Br. 2Bil .. Mesa. A.gt. Fee. 979-84:11. BACK BAY AR.EA, 3 br. ideal for 3 sing. girls & ocean. Frplc. Patio, bbq. gar, cpts. drps, dishwasher. poolside avt nr beach, adults Jrg !iv rni., din rm & dt•n. FREE l32 Cabrlllo, C.M.FREE 3 & 4 Bed?'l.llAl1, 2 bath 2 ba .. 2 frpls., bltns., crpts., or Iam. $375 642-3850 N51°. P'6.,!s~~ly lse. mo. 38lh 2 chlldren OK or all adult only, no pets. Sl65, 5J6..8362 Fully crptcd & t.lr~ped, xtrr1.' bo -t "~ •-k f d 2 ar gor w/beaut r-• 200 ·~~ ·-lrg dc<·k. w-rnt v1<'11o1', ~ 1P •Prof __ , ___ , ., __ _.__ mes. 'f4"'" o -.... ...., or rps., c · · 3 BR, 2 ba, • .,.c, new, b Zb bldg avail. No pets, .., .. J . 2 BR near 11 u n ting ton r xi *LA,N~DLO~R~0~~5*e Barbara at 531·5800. No fee. garden. $325 541·9134 ft. to ocean. Yrly, $385. OCEANFR~NT .3 r. a., 2675 Eiden, CM. 642-4905 llnrbour. Adults. $2lO. ~;'~II, ,:,;~·nc~10.'.ra~~he~ ~ 3BR. 2ba. Calif aaulc, boat BACK BAY, E./lrvine Ave. 673-3758 . ~15• a '!~~·n~:~~ntal CASA VICTORIA APTS 846-4360 TIH73:84!4 or TI4-675--RGS9. Homeflnder1 * 642-9900 gate, lrg yrd, cvrd patio. to!~ 2~y~~ O~: FURNISlfED \\'lnter or yrly. \VATERFRONT 3 BR, fitt I 'Adults. 1, 2, 3 BR \\'/ patios 2 BR large, gar, cpts/drps, California's Largest $350 mo, 846-1728 aft 5:30 &t~7221 Lg 3 br, 3 dool'! to ocean, D 1 w· te yrf • P'rom S169.50 No Pets convenient loc. $145. No pets. PROMONTORY POINT e Rental Service!• 2 BR New Condo. E.xpcnsivet--------~-view, carport. fi75.987S. ~kex .. 1 16is.fils9~7~ Pool, rec rm, elevators Call for appl. 968·0712 APTS I --"=='-"==c=..--decor for owner. Nr. HH 2 BR, singles or couples, WINTER RENTAL Jgc 2 BR avaJ · Sec. gate. Gas & water pd luxury Adult Apt$ Balboa Island 3206 $250 mo. Bkr. 8f6-J648. $195. Also 2 BR houses at 15th St. $210. m~ Incl util. San Clemente 3n6 525 Victoria. Cl\11 642-8970 Laguna Be.-h 3848 ~-ta M & H ting! n -., 1-mn1 S.150 3 BR, 2 ha. frplc, patio. ~ esa · un ° 675-5800 Bkr-No Fee CHARMING 4 BR, South No pets. $325. 16642 Rhone Beach. Agt. Fee. 97S-8430. -'"'"-""'-..OC'--~~---l f A N T AS11C wll.ite\\'aler 1 Br Unfurn $150 WIDE ocean views. Close 200 Promonlory Dr.. \\'est. I:ayfro:-t. Garden, Pier' l.n H.B. 833-1103 or 675-2018 THE BLUFFS spat. 4 Br .. , Corona del Mar 37i2 view, hid pool, 2 BR, 1 Lots of blllrui, pool, walk to beach & shopping. Acres Nev.X7!'1e1~~1~~ ~7~ yearly. 213-761·7196 llC' TI4-Irvine 3244 3 Ba condo. Nr pool, --------~ BA. 10 1:hopping, '!J mi. beach. of gardens, estate living. 1.,!!!!!;,;,;,!!!!!..,,; ... ~~~~I Balboa Island 673-7611 greenbelt. Lse, refs. $525 DUPLEX. winter, 2br, lba, * 498--0487 * sn \V.19th St Pool & spa. Unusualp ON THE WATER 3106 644-0782. upstairs, bonus nn & por~h, Apartments Unfurn; 548--0492 privacy. Separate g u e 1 t Balboa Peninsul• 3207 * RENTALS * LRG Bluffs o:inao, part. l ba dwnstn>, gar, pnt10, housed al · 2 bdnnAI. Dh~hwu2hBer, New uni! never lived In. :l Llrn..E ISLAND, for Vill l U -Pk hil~ I no pets, % blk to ocean. Balboa Island 3806 CLEAN. quiet 2BR. Cpts, u ovenl'i. so uge r, e -+ den. fr'nlc, 2 Ba, all discriminat;.,,. tenant. 2 OCEANFRONT, Qiarming asre ' niv. • furn.. c \llt:n, Pe s · $350mo. 645--0387 drps, blt·itt«, patio. Adults, 2 Ba apts. High ceilings, ·r -~ R. 2 b 1 ··-'"·-2 BR., 1 bath , •••••••••• $.nS.. Inuned. occup. 752-1430. 11 bah OK N d fonnal di Ing rocnl .,_ bltns incl. tmsh compactor. story, airy light, 2 br. 2 4B a, Wll or wuuiu., 3 BR., 2 baths •.••.•••••• $350 4 BR. 2 BA beach house., 2530 SEAVIE\V: Lrg. 1 BR. YEARLY lg. 2 br., lg. patio, ~ma & Y pd A 0 ii ogs. 1 & n th • •;1· Indv. lnunclry rm. Bc!nuL ~fu. tam~ mm::· df:d o~P~ ~~ r°~1rf~.J~~~all 3 B~l112~ ~ Univ. Pk. $425 winter $350; Yr round $400; ~to~:-6fll Irwin ' ~-~me furn. avull. orate~~r:as Oct.' 7~a $1~~ ~e~~ SJ6;1~~y s°soo~r = rn: ~;"~9·;~i $100. ino. 833-0567 rden/ ti h ·• · ••• •••••• · (213)791-3077 or 645-7573 646-0791 eludlhg utilities. No\v deco-~ter pa txb:m.~ ~~c~lip~ Corona del Mar 3222 3 iµt., ~~·f:>!iU:,····$450 \VALK TO BEA.QI $250 PER MO. yrly., util. Balboa Peninsula 3807 •Tropical Pool• rating, choice of colors & DR'S, A'IT\'S, EXECS monthly or winter 675-8215 4 BR 1 3 be 1575 3 BR. $275/$375 yearly pd., quiet married cpl., no papers Mature adults Open dally 10.5. Plush, new Or •••'l76S ' $175 UTIL pd 1 BDR. stv, ·• am, ••• .. ·• ., !290 pets. no chldrn. 675-35U. OCEANFRONT Y EARL\' :! BR, crpts, drps, bltns, 4s.f.4653 . J Br viey,• apt on hny. itu!:l -~~-~=-----refl"lg, nu crpUdrps, patio The Te.rrace ~·ood Realty 548-2 BR fur 1 88 lrpl llo 3BR, 2BA. fpl, crpts, drps, spiral staircase. r e a I " · . see to apprec. Pool. pvt DEl.JGHTFUL country CdM 2 BR., 2 baths •••••••••• $375 3 BR, 2 ha, Back Bay. Avail. n, . • c, pa • bltns; lBR, tpl, crpts, drps, fireplace refrig li::e patio 1 BLK. to V1ctona Beach. balcony, slip avail. $425. Apl decor. Spac. 2 Br, 2 Ba, ~ UT1L pd. lge bach, frpl, 3 BR., 2 ba ••• , ..... $400/425 Oct. 1 to March 1. $400 oceanside highway $275. bltns. 675-1536 gas & \V~ler pd. '54S-ll6.S ' ~anvlew .. 2BR.. patio. 102, 310 Fernando, BA!bon. trp!. Adults. 121 Apolena patio, sml pet OiM Greentree liomes P..1o. with gardener. 644-7901 547-0093; 496-1981 SPACIOUS 2 ·Br St 1 NE\'"Y d ed 2 B nice. All ul1J. pd. me. cab!('. INr. Pavilion I. 675--17>20 or 675-2157 or 675-9889. 2 Bdr 2 BR 1 bath $315 C t M 3724 · ove. .y.., ecorat ' r, No pets. Thru June 15. S300 6-," ""I. $225 CllANNEL front , ·• '·· •• •• ••· PIER, Bayfront, Pvt Beach, 1 ;;os;;;;;';;;;;•;;'";;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;I blk heh/shops. Ad.Its, no new crpts, gnrage, \\'Iller mo 494-0-108 Owner 497-llU .roJJ Corona del Mar 3122 ~.boat sllp avail Newport lBR ·2 ~~75 /gdnr Lrg 2 or 3 Br Duplex. \\IW 1, -pets. $225, Yrly. 6T:N.l72, paid. $1!1>. 2526 "F" Santa Ag\ 2 & 3 BDRMS nc1\·ly $240 2 BDR, frpl. beams, ·• · •••••· w turnish 673-6640 Ambassador Inn 6i3-ll62. Ana A\'e, can be1y,·een 1·5.l=o'=c· ===---co--,-decorntl"d $250 & S350. mo. LUSK HARBOR VIEW O..otilUI lour bedroom, pool, view bome. $625. SHORECUFFS CD.M's .ftnest. Winter rental -two bedrooma, private besch. $651), • WATERFRONT Uke new three bedroom townhouse -private boat slip. $600. Furniture op- ilonal. BAYFRONT Magnificent Buena Vista area. Four becJroom1, sandy beach, large pier and slip -best rental tn all Newport. 185D. CHINA COVE One of a kind beach cottage on the water. 2 bedrooms 1% baths. $215. Call 67>''1225 . ' . ... ' ...... \ \ IJ J·:)· HI ·: \LI"\ A BfFIG [NTEFIPFllSf~ CO OORONA DEL MAR 2 Bedroom. Lunal, big patio. Top condition. Near beach. $435.00. 9 month lease, Includes gardener. Cole of Newport Rltn 67.S.5511 CHINA Cove 3· Br. 2 Bu paUo, deck, 1 blk bell CdM College Park . . ~120 TO\VNHOUSE new 2 br. $275 UTIL pd, secluded & 4 BR., 2.'iii ba .•••••••••• $450 1-BR., 1 bath. Attached BRAND NEW 3 BR, 2 ba. frp~c. ne11·, ~ ocean view, \\'alk to beach. 124 & 1241·1 00 St. C11.ll unique 1 Bdr hse, yd, deck, Park lI garage: yard . Near ft lo ocean. Wmlcr rental $110. 1 BR duplex. Quiet fam. rm., \\1bar.. cpls.. 88+-1858 bt.-twC<'n S f'I :i CdM 3 BR., den, 2 ba. •..•••• $475 iohopping. $180 Mo. 644-15.54 $34.50 & Up $375. 673-3758 court: Non· smokers , drps., frpl., tile patk>!I. $400 11•kd:iys, or l!T':K'IS31 l\'knd.-., $335 3 BDR, 2 Ba. !rpl, 3 BR .. 2 baths ••.••..••• $t50 4 BR, 2 ba, din & fam SINGLE STUDIO APT BAYFRONT, exciting "i ew, mamed coople. No pets or 294 296 \Vave St 847-48TI 6la-32!H llnytime. -ilo gar, 1 house ocean 4 BR., 2% ba ........... $450 rm. fpl, dbl gar, no pets. SPECIAL WEEKLY RATES 3 br. 2 ba., patio, lrpl, children 972 \V. 17th, 548.0358 2 BR. l Ba "'. w blt'"s DELUXE 2 br., 2 ba .• 1 ~ ~ c·~-JI & Sa •••1~"·' , oceanYle , .,, N.B. cu......-n omes $350. eve t. ~Wt 2271 H&rbor Blvd. dshwshr. $395 673-5TI.9 • EU.t GARDEN A.PT'S t.!5J & $265 walk to beach. block to ocean. $~ a mo. $425 4 BDR. 2 BA. frpl, 3 BR., 2 t:~·h1~·······$375 3BR, 2 ha, fncd, Lidll Sands, Costa P...lesa 645-4MO ON THE BAY, big tux. apL Unturn. 2 BR apt in family 494.2339 yrly. 675-3126 evt'S. kids, pets welcome, CdM Blk lrom bcb. $425. mo. \\'OOd beams. ftpl., patio. section. Pool. no pets. 1771-""-'=-------San Cl•menl• 3876 NU-VIEW RENTALS 3 Bit. 2 ba .•••••••••••• $500 Call 77&-1998. El Puerto Mesa 4 br. 2 ba. $550 rm.on• E. 22nd St .• c.M. 642--. Legu•• Niguel 3852 -------- 67l-'030 or~ 4 BR., 2 ha. • ···••' •· ••• ~ $275 3BR 21 ' ba f I SHARP 2 BR, 2 BA. CALL 552-7500 Newport Heights 3270 1 BR FURN. Corona del Mar 3822 1• • 71 ' gas r:r' c. NR. BEAGI TENNIS GOLF 1 _, 'd s 2 BR, l'i9 ha, pvt patio, s ON $l65 All Utll P "d bl? t in .Frig. O<:enn . v1e\v, SIDSJ40 per mo. No lease Recen1 y , ... "'l"f'Or . n1 compl etely mlecorated • VI I • • al WANTED-Quiet bachelor for cpts/drps. U30 Victoria. To newlrgdlxvie\v 2&3 bdrm., child ok; no fK'l:>1. \V:i.lk to blClding crpf&, d rps' COTIAGE 2 Br, 1 Ba, big! No Children, No J?ets unique lbr apt. V.'/frplc, see call 97!l-5099. 211 Ba, 2 pool•, cenl:nll beach, shoppini:;. $ 195. Washer, d"""r, 1 blk to yard & patio, gar, avai Pool & Recreation i;ome ocean vu. $200 per EX~RA I 3 b 2 b nd I I 2 • 8 2 I 49&--0911 ; 492-4'1'95 af\1 •r 6 .,. n REALTY Now S265. mo. 645-6625 1959 M le Ave C M · ·• g. • r., a.. alr co .. P · " beach. Yrly or winier. ( 4) ap ·• ' • mo, util incld. 6i3-0797 cpts., drps., bl!ns., chldrn. Hillhurst Or. {oH Crown I o"'="'=·=~=~-o~-- 673-1853; 213-244-1653 or a red hill company Newport Shores 3272 $30 WEEK & UP Costa Mesa 3824 OK. Acrs. front CntlYJlic Valley Pkwy.) 2 children FANTASTIC \vhi!C\\·atrr 21J-243-6914. Unlv. Park Center, Irvine R. 2,, Ba e Studio • 1 BR Apts. Sehl. 559-8177 sm pet considered. (714) vie"·· hl<I pool. 2 l~R. I JlA. 2 SfORY, 4 B r.i , "" 49." "I '7 3 BR. 211.i Ba, contemporary bi.JI, Spanish tile. Pool, e TV & MQUI Service Avail. 1 BR, Crpts, Drps, Blt·ins, 1 BR. APT .. pntlo, cll>l't': •19:>-tiGO oUice, if no ansv.·er '-=-*~-··~--'-*---• home, patio, gas S.8-Q, WE HAVE RENTALS tennis & beach. $450. yrly •Phone Servlce-Htd. pool Pool. $145. No pets. 675-5800 10 shop'g,, all utils. lnclc:I., 49!3-1625. • Nl-.:\V 3 OR; nr ocn: rrpts. gar, part furn. Days: Ali Well as a fine selection 645-1531 e Children&: Pet Section Bier-No Fee no pets, mature adult or 3 Br, 2 Ba, Condo, Golf drps, dsh"·shr. !:1v: furn or 644--6400 or 640--0767/Eves: of beautiful homes FOR 1------~--~ 2376 Newport Blvd., CM 2 BR. cpts drps fenced yd epic. $175 645--0991 Course view, all extras, 2 unfurn. $.125. 492-893f. 644-6404 SALE! Let us solve your ~'tc;.Uf' :lk~r. !e1:'~.' ~ 548-9756 or 645-3967 garage, i child. no pets'. APT l\1GR for 14-2 Br. Min. car gar, Call 87~1UW 9am 1 ~s.-.~l~B~.-.-,~h---~3~88~4'' NR OCEAN, 3Br, 3ba, den, housing needs. \Ye're here 1 642-3361 * EU..I GARDENS APTS Refs. 61:>-3022 I duties. $80. oU rent. Pool, to 6pm, 87!r-8204 bl be il to ~· mo.-yr y. d I din rm. tM, am ce, Baa PETTIT 5anJuan FllR!'l· 2 BR apt in a ul EXTRALrgdeluxe2Brapts, Adlls, no pet!. Prefer older Lido Isle 3856 LRG. 3BR 2ba + !ini::-1 gor. frplc, $475 lse. 673-3477. secuon. Pool, no pets. 177 crpts, drps. bltlns, No pets, 'voman. 642-9:>20 _..;_-------·I 2 blks 10 bch . s:no nio. NR. OCEAN 4 hr, 2 ba, REALTOR Capistrano 3278 E. 22nd St., C.M .. 642-3645. Sl!IO. 64&-ll8l 1 BR, l Ba, ne\v shag crpt, LRG 3br, 2ba. bltlns, crpt11, 2 1 3-592-S.ill/71+-S46-133i· putio/bkyrd., stv., frig., U~~r~~ Battle 551£_~~ NEW townhouse n car EASTSIDE lge Iurn. 2 Br LARGE 3 Br 2 Ba near new drapes & freshly drps, 2 car gar, Ad.Its. $400 Westcliff 3896 furn uvitil. $4Ii 6T~7 M . Bltns, t drp at poolside. Bl~. Adults, OCC, upper,' crpts,' drps, painted. Nr. Newport H ighl ~l'"'""'""O:·i,675~<>-~3967"!!_ __ __,_,,, I ::-:;:;;:-:;;;~:;:--;::=:::;;: Cost• Mesa 3224 __ ..;D:::A:::Y::..cor=-N=ITO'E'--~-1 co':n~~· pool. ~ts, ieS.:e no pets. $200. 642-9520 bltns. $220. 557--0356 Sch. $175. mo. 646--0919 Mesa Verde 3863 * '.?BR, 2BA. Nr . \\'cslclilf 2 BR Condo • ••• $%35/mo Lse reasC1nable. 493-3381 or 1 &_ 2 BR large, $175. & 2 Br. apt. cpl/drp. No chldrn S~1AL.L 1 Br house $140. mo . shopping. Small pct & child SEVERAL 1 BRs. students $115/SIGa, furn & unfurn, FIX ME 1 Br house $180 Util pd, stv/relNiingles MOBILE home 2 BR $135. Mature only, furn-close in NU PAINT 2 BR house S200 OiUd & pet, fncd w/garage PHOTO Lab 3 Br, Fr 2 BA $325. Covd. patio, 2 car TOO MANY TO LIST ALA Rent1l1 642-8383 2 BR Condos·····=~ f~ 493-8746 $22:>. Ideal for bachelors. or pets. $175 546-9280 2257 ulil incl, Adul!s only, See • HOl\lE ATl\:IOSPHERE OK. ll.:!8-42 Rutland Or. 3 :R ~ndos • $300 $325 $335 3 BR, Frplc, Brick patio, adults. 1993 Church 548-9633 Apt. ''F" l\iaple St. Mr. Derman, m l'ear 2241 Deluxe 2 & 3 BR. Rental Ofc. &12-2152 3 3 BRR H~:: •• $360·,1375,' $395 2 car gar, nr beach & 1 BEDROOM Backbay pool Orange Ave. 3095 !\lace Ave. M6-l0l4. Apts Furn/Unfurn 3900 75 2455 l in l\l ' A t' LARGE 2 BR. near OCC . 2 BR Con<I h l d 4 BR Homes .•. $335,$395, $425 marina. $325. mo. lease. $1 :l, tv e, gr. P · & shopping S17S + uLil SPACIOUS new Easts1de o, s ag Cl'P • rps, RANCH REALTY 493-ii960 "A", 548-7476 557-8372 · 2br, lba, gar, lnurld fac, d~hwhr, blt~s. Pa I Io MESA * 551 -* LG 2 B I cl to ;el S22S ••• 3533 garage, pool. 546-3416 •#AJVU Spacious 4 Br, 2 ba. cpts/ . r urn. ose SHARP 2 BR, Bll·ins, Patio, c"l!"!!':!:._• ~o_._:~~::!:!!.---,-,.,lo;'l::;:~';:;-ii:::':-;;-'"'-...-<o RANCH REALTY drapes, bltins. dbl gar. $325 shopping. Adults, no ii:ls. Frplc. Baker St. near Eastbluff 3830 Newport Beacn 386! GARDEN TU~~TY mo. Call 645-3222 lnq. 1'1914 Rochf'ster. rear. J.lnrlxlr. $170. 494-87!13 I NEWPORT TOWERS APTS * 832-Slll * Hses Furn/Unfurn 3300 COMPLETELY furn. l Br LGE 2 Story 2 Br l'l Ba e DELUXE e 0 E 8 apt, adult!! only, no pets. lnd;·y rni. p~Lio, yiU-d.'-Encl: 3 BR, 2112 BA apt for lease. N TH A"':f 2 & 3 Bdrn1!'., crpls, drps, NE\V 4 BR., 2 ba., College * * * * $135. 131 Flower, 646-7883 gar $l9!l mo B46-ll03 lncld spac. master suite 2 BR., 2 ha., furn. Slip avail. utilltfc!I paid. BI t In~. house, ocean vu. $425. mo. O\V?>o"'ERS Unit. in triplex, Wintertse 544-6130; 673-7838 ground floor, 2 Br. 2 Ba. Dana Point 3126 plus Hobbie or 3rd Br, 2 Pcoamrmkuni~u opOOm r · •. ,,!rap~'. Mrs. Harold Ness OCEANFRONT APT. T br. 2 B~. 1. ha . newly dC<..'Ot. din rm & dbl gnrage. Aut0 ~~/yrly lse. 642-8931 :~~ry y,•/~·.~li!~?i;1e. R ~.'~,· ' -3092 C t Cf b Winter rental. $190 per mo. N hildl 1• $200 tloor opener avail. Pool &l~~""===~i='F'°' ~ "" or lse. opt. 645-8916 oun ry U utils. incld. 548-1930 ° c pe s. . per mo. Recreation area. Adults PARK NE\VPORT, Jnvcly 2 roonl, sounu. nool. bb.r. CULVERDALE sparklin~ 4 Cos ta Mesa . 5484691. 317 Cabrillo. only, no _pets. PH : 644·!0io:I br/2 ha, excf[lisile harbor IU't'n. Adult" only, no l>f'L<;. Spacious 2 BR,Apt. B 25091 La Cresto, inquire 1030 S. Coast Hwy, Laguna Beach --3 BR. 1 BA; drps, crpts. Walk to marina & bch. $325. +util. 831-0447; 495--0205 Hunt. Harbour 3142 OCEANVU Condo. 3 hr. 2 ~ be., fr., patio, pool, ten· nis. $450 J..se. 532-&170 L19u•• Beeoh 3148 g-.i.r, elcchic door opener, priv patio, lots of storage, near all shopping, 300 Rochester, Avail ll/U74, $275. mo. Adults No pets, .J)Crlcct for retittd couple with hobbie. 642-1264. CLEAN 41>r, 2ba., + real \\'orkshop, oould be 5th br. \Vlk to !;hopping & schools. $:® 1st & lat;I. + $100 sec. dep. 904 \Vest 19th St., 531·7853 Br, 2 Ba, epts, drps, blbns, You are the \Vinner ot Huntington Beach 3740 2 BR DPLX, adlts only, no e $322 e V\\', Sundk, spa, pooli;, gar. 2881 Bristol. Costn i\lf'!a, pool club. $350. RED CPI' 2 tickets to the BEAUT turn. apts 5165 & pets, S210. + $75. refwid 865 Antlgos Bay, NB SoclRI activities. Security 1 ::54~;.;;;7;00;=.::;:::::::I RLTRS (Arlene) 893-1351 Recreation Vehicle $1l5 Spanish style building, sec. & clg dep. 6~389 l\lanagcd by guards. $379 mo. Days 4 BR College Park Home. & Boat Show pvt. er.closed gar, pooJ, UPP~R 2 BR, cpt/drp, rnge, "rJLLIAJ\i WALTERS CO 833-&tl3. Eves 4g.i..1386, $380. Pvt pool privgs. Nr. at the sa1 . .ia., laundry, adlts 173d1 fanuly onl~. no pets .• S150. Huntington Beach 3840 NEWPORT BAY &: ~·~J park & llChool. Avail now. Anaheim Stadium Keel.son Lane 1 blk \Vest of 758 D Shalimar. 548-0358 --CATALINA VIEW ~ U:ll IU'; 778-0701 or eve 64().1538 October 2-6 Be& ·. off Slater. 842·7848 BR APT. bltns, disposal, 2&3 Bcdroom·carpet, drapes, Bayfronl boot slip. Sp11.c. £XCITIMC MEW cotfClPT ! Laguna S..ch 3248 Please call 642-5678, ext 333 1 BR apt, $135. + util. l crpts, drps, lrg pvt palio. built-ins, !rom $155 to $219. 1Poo"'·,· n"~A 2 bBld'g· 2 2Baear' t.•,r;:· ADUlT UMCSID£ llYlM' $l!i0 UTIL pd, lge bach full !North County toll free pets. ~2746. BACl-1 house unfum. ulil pd, 2 BR, 1\1 Ba. closed garab"C, arey, • •Bochtl;:•,uo kitch. fndcd yd, pet or child number is 540-1220) Laguna Beach 3748 SUS. mo, avail 10/J 35S Mng· near Rhopping. $185. Owner, ACROSS from Ocean, dlx \\'elcome, canyon * * * * nolla ~21.82. 842-2671 ur 67:;......J869 lo\ver duplex, 2 Br, 2 . Ba, • I BR • 2 ~R to claim your tickets. blk from beach. Pool. No No petR. $175. Ph 557-5080 842-0389. C · 675...sssJ · '· --~ I.MAH 1'115 $175 NICE 1 Bdr in town. BALBOA ISLAND ROOMS, SfUDIOS ' lrplc, dpatlo,5400•1ecSet. kbollch, •2 BR & Oen 2 BR house, singles, familles patio, clll'(>Ot'.t + storage & l-BDRM. APrS., crpts, rps, as re. From $1 75 • $435 g~·w AP~ 1 2 8BeR~c~use: $195 1 BDR No. End, big South Bay Front \Vinter rent a 1 5 • Some SEEK & FIND!I \. H~!d'1t!~~~I 64(}.-3059/644-5133 EMERALD BAY lncd yard, child/pct 4 Br, 3 Ba, fam rm. \Vinter permanent. SlOO To s2;,o a ,... ELEVATOR building o n MeJaV.rdeEast&Adams ffouse well furnished. 3 Br, Huntington Beach. A.gt. Fee. $:t30 2 BDR ocean/city view $700. Yrly $900. 675-0025 month. Ocenn I-louse. ~ A 8 0 9 T beach. Pvt balconies. Pool, 540-1800 21~~~1:~t1vl6ow9 , beach 1 .,,91!J.=84=30,;-.~co-=:--c:-=-li~t.2BBltOnRs. f!:1age ... 3DR, Townhouse N.B. 211.i ba, * 494-8541 * P CA L CU E S A N 0 P !!eeurlty, adult Uving, bltlns. l jjiijijij~~iiiiil souc • .-v.u1.>-, EA~SIDE 3 BR. 1 BA."'':> ,,.,,,oceanv1ew, 2cargar, boat slip. Furn OCEANFRONT 1 &. 2 BR UUHA..EDNLAS PAL&GNG E£ Ba.ch. 1·2 BR. 5.515 Rlver11 $395. 2 BR, 2 BA, lovely frplc, 11creened pallo, encl. child/pct So. Lngu1na fro t $525 unfum $450. 646-2700 ,,_ 2 BR STUDIO. Part. furn. Ave, 642-2566, & unusual. 546 Catalina St, yard. 36G E. l!)th St. $300. S3l5 2 8 1 Dlt ardfrp c, 1. n •A••oll. -·"'· 1:~<! 11371 G N I G E L A G F L T T P 9 P N M U p CLEAN 2 BR. 2 ba, bltln11, '" -nr ocean. Adults. no pels. No pea. 547-6791 hOW1e, b tns, ;y ' pa lO Condos Furn 3400 • .IV.. ~ .'IQ\ re v 1213)._._'"""' $400 lfl'lL pd, 3 Bdr, 2 Ba OCEANFRONT .1·2 Bft & T A S B 0 T S A 8' 0 T T 8 U I ff 0 N G t:IO!le to Ocean, _,., mo '[1 l 4~2.:m; ,_..,.,,J eve BEAUTI1'"1JL new 4 bdrm. frpl, beama, 60' deck LAGUNA NIGUEL 2 BR 2 2 Studios. Part. furn. Avail yrly l1e. no pets. :n.8 Cedar. . ,. "f':'r~$_- Lido Isle 3156 Near sciJol?ls. F.R., frplc. $450 NEW, custom trllttvel ba overlooking beautiful golf 5.)6-0321 H S T O C K I N G G T BT G N N 0 HT 6~6"'8106 or {213) 332-5176. · J...~ • -~ blt·hll. $450 month. NO 3 Bdr 2 Ba. trpl vi~• course, clubhouse, tennis noiv. ' G R 8 t C LT BAYFRONT 3 Br. 2 Ba on 2 BR FEE. bkr. Call Ml>-17al. NU-VIEW RENTALS beach all {(lcilities, Cully Newport Beach 3769 · 0 B O 0 T S G 0 B R 0 N main bay, pvt bch. w/pier · To\\'nhousc, fr11lc, ~.~ w.~0r3~~: $300 mo., 4br, 2ba. ltg fenced 673-4030 or 494-3248 equipped Water & garden PLUSH Oc•antront A........ MB R 0 G Air O 0 f WE A R)U G A A 8 979-1935: 644-4510 ~~ ~~~ls~R, ;;:mtlnelnl~tol. 3 ~ yrd, 2 car + gar. 548-4009 H .... care incl for graciou.~ & .-.. • · 1,,,&14-4895"-='-°'"°=548-;=_9470---0-=-;:I alt 6pm &: wk.t'nds NE\V, Large ome, ~AK happy living $390. Phone mtnts. 3, 4 & 5 Bdnn'g, GR I p A.INTO LE.LG Op S G LO L YEARLY 2br. 2 b a., breakfnst. Scpar.ito famUy Newport Bffch 3169 cpts, Ocean & Canyon View, owner 495-4.556 \V~l Nev.•port. Yearly. 675-Newport Shores. 2 blks. sectt0n. Cose to thoppin,;: --'--------4 ·eR, 1%. Ba. Ow. patio, Plltio, Frplc, dbl a;ar, to 14(}l. S A C A p O N L A C L G A I T E It N E ocean. $2liO 548-8348 I: fine beach. 644--2611 LIDO '"'e, 'Ian n~ .. ..i ..... -. bltns. cptS. drps. 8 3 9 cotiplc 0 .. 1 ... $350 a month. Condos Unfurn. 3'25 LIDO u.~L •-3 Br ~ ·~-~~ '~" S&J\tlago $340 rcls.515-m!I ·~ BEACHFRONT. 2 br, 1\0 A T L N A L O S p L A 8 G S U L S A. X ~-~ "• ' f.rplc, paUol, 2 car gar, · · 4W.Q2 &. 562-n78. LAGUNA NIGUEL 2 BR 2 ba. Furn. Bltns. Winter or 2 Ba, will fum, $500.mo. TIIE EXCTMNG $325. Sept.Juno 213-799-3319 4BR. 2ba lrplc. lam nn. dbl 2 BR 2 be fzl>lc, OCEAN ba 0,~rlookiJlg beeutilul golf annual 675-Tm or 8."IS-1491. N J O T N c H E A N N L A 1 C K U S A "-613-8886"'"-'"~--~--~ PALM MESA APTS. n .'"'6'73-5261-car gar~1~!w~~od VIE\V, \\'Olk lo beach $300 counl(', clubhouse terutis YRLY 2 br, l hsc to heh. DA C 0 T S T 0 0 8 D B C A L A p R l SPAC. 3 br, 2 be., trplc ~UNUT~ TO NPT. BCll. B£AunFUL 2 Br house nn new crp'"16' •• 2 BU. 1 be., VU."'W, walk bcnCIM'!!I all facilities 11.va.U. S2'J5 Yrly Lux 3 br, 2 b3, C1oRd in patio. 1 Blk bch. Bach, 1 & 2 BR, from $157 lhe btlacb, winter rental, 3 BR. 2 BA. huge back YllJ'd, to beach $2SS 49J....i686 $350 \Yater It garden care tum Or untum. 675-5085. £ c n p o p A N T o O K C E 8 M R. 8 H $350. mo. yrty. 645-'MM Adults, No Pets. utll pd $775. 673-2282. 10:1 fi~placc. $300. mo. Call 11 BR J 11-b..i. deck. loflt inCI. for ...,.aclnua k ha DUPLEX. ~ 1•· f.'"'mi 1561 Me11 Dr. $46-93!.~ ' n •· E VICTORIAN gue<t L S N E T N A P N A T T A P U D N A S •m, ~. ' fl blla ln>~m Now-M 91.J .) 615t St. OCEAN. CANYON VlE\V Uvlng Phone Owntr hou&f', for ilng. lady. Sl35 recently redecorated. $ .,..., vu PV. bm~Lldo S.nM·f'urn 3 FOR ICO.!IC 3 Br, 2 Ba. $311. Prlv. roo0 dT,S l!'~ t.,! lnsl 2 BR condo. 1'-1: Ba, den + utUs .. 6'1:'>4829 o M R. L t N C LO B L g S PM 8 B 1! N 644-6800 or ~7326 BR. 2 bA. !pl , _pool priv. mo. Elec. gl\J'age door opnr. $325 AD L ~,,, w/wct bar, pool 1 ml bch. NEW 3 BRi 2 BA. steps *LA PARISIENNE * Blk lo beh. Oc/11ld~ hwy. No pets. Sprinklers. 646-Gm 3 BR, 3 BA, fenced y11rd, No childrtn or pets. $285. Stn. t BR. Pnrklng, lfltlfn1dk111J: Tht frlkWtft 111lfttf lllff.S btkrfi' :r. (f.'ftard, $340 2 Br furn. All ~lt.'ctrlc. J.~lt't!o \Ybt.Wr $450 mo. 645-2963 • * MESA VERDE 4BR 2UA. lfllntge, 0<..'tan vu, .$45(). 1no. + dcp . llunt. Be11ch. slttps ;·131.s~ be•ch. =~~p ... 't:'itln ::s::'!~ ~ dis ,. ~ fl"4 •di to ~an. 67~38 ploC"t. llcnteLI Pool. Adults. 1 BR. TRAILER. right Cle.110 ~ avail No pets. 497~105USU-0177 96~-7411 aft 5 3 Bl' 'pl, wlgllJ·~c. \I Blk puu !HI OCEAN vtew, )'tnrly 2 Br, f2M. & up. 11aor.t St. rrom B:ly. $1().) Ag'l/Dkr., 540-7327 lanuna N i11uel 3252 N•:\V 2 BR,· l BA condo. \ '' V G7L"""" BROGAN ~CE080CITS ,,,,..., :! 1 & duplex. $275. nw. 979--1268 n mo. UUl. In Id. Call Tlm 3 nn 1-toww. \Vest.side, lit )'ff, • • ORh\\'Shr, blt·IM. po o l . ~~.1f~1~~r ' "11""" ~Mrus ~~~Jt& ~:~81l ... ~ da)ls, &U-3639 ave. ACl'Ols rrom fiU course ~ 2 kld~l pcl o.k. $300 NEW il Br 2 Ba, \\'Blk 10 patio. n1&J\Y f11tj,I. No pets . .::c_..:.:::..;:..:.:,,.~;.,,,--.,..,-1-1 GAIT!R PA'rrEN 'MJONCS ~ UNTtJRN Apl!i, 2 Br, 2 Bo. fF,;;;jl!<ll3;=;2i;'San;;f'fta'-'::n:ia:.,A;;V<7!-._,I WtNT£R 642-!1581 bct1.r:h &. pool. Frpl, ltnnl' San Juan Capl!trano. OCEANF RONT·Winter, dj} x, l,--.,-----,,._;";."'°;::'"':::.:"::.'"K';l'~'':-''::'~8"'';:"'"~'-;::~c;-:::;::~I WestclUl arta, snn\ll net f"ltOM $139. 1,, ml lo br>ach ' Br. S03 3Rfh St .. Npt Is .. y d 'I need a gun to ct1Ur\-'. Sec. puard,;. Avail * 495-l~ * 2 Br, 1 a., ~.2mAd ti, To ordrr 1111y vr all or !ht ticp111dtd .. Sttk • find'" book~. OK. call 642-2152; &JS.-9060. ~r~1~~~~~ir,~1iJ'vN~ K.B. l ·2JJ.37T""6«1, ·~won fut" when W111 10-1 $450 83l•l4J3 or 400 28 3 BR 2 bl\ CONDO on El no pctta. $250. 6 numbtn ~ 1hn1u1h 7, .end 60 «nt1 for ttch, makin1 thtd1 2 •-Iba w IU! Pia PATIO G ~ BLUJi.,.-S Condo. 3 BR. 2 Ba. plAce en ad In lhe DAiLY .1 BR.. r~nced ynrd, i&ra~. Niguel Golf Co 11 r~ e, .NtiV wlnl~ 4 BR. :I BA r,•>•bl~ 10 ""Sttk l find ." Sttr·Ttlt1r1m Syndk•11. Add"'" uo, nr estc . ut, •·uo·n Aiits. Saw111i ~. Pool It Pullo. Winter PILOT \Vant Ads! Call now avail Oct. 1, S375. leflM! di!hwa.Jlhtt, _prbag~ disp, $375. Alto 3 8~.l ~F ertrn In tart of 1hb ntwsp•pct. f.rplc, c~rps, Adults. no ~iJii f-l~nt l:'°ion 1~~1~ ...... ·· . '™ _ . §4H618. optlun 4~Hll77 2 ct>r gu, $3lO !:!1,.91J14 rvt. \!o blk to OCWL "~·~ p<L<. 64 , • • • A pis L VE Al Pool • I:. JQ Acre J'ount Clu Total lnt B1ohe fro 37 Room OOUB rm•I bom• PRO \\'Ol'k \\'t.'Ck an area, Call 4451 ersfi I Anl Long \\'Ork ;n tor med" ....,._ R00' 'Ba Sch. lndiv ~18- FEP..1 & 675 FEM to mo. OCE \Yan sha FEM •PL Ava Ger n jani & 557 150 \'IE\ Le OF tn In to 0 ne Al A Re tlo d L f • Apt• Furn/Unlum 3900 Office Rentel -.;.._.;.;;.....;.:;,;.~_....;.:;; CHOICE LAKE FRONT LOCATIONS ·vtR-SAILLES ON THE LAKE At St ulh Q:>ni;t Plain. WESlCLIFF BLDG NtWPUH 1 UlALl1 ~"'" , ... ,, ... ''"' ·-· '' ''·' •l•1• •••c•tlYt efflc• • All .. C<ill Mr HowJrd (,45 6101 Pool • AcapulL'O Aqwi Bar ~ Jacu:tzl. Spcctucular 8 Aero , l..ake \V/Towc1·ing Fount"lns_ • YI ~1Ut1w1 Oolliu: Onbhou.~, Cym, Snuntt, -,---,--,~--~~---1'otal ScCur! ... ,, · Jmn1«1\nte Occupancy ADULTS S>rry, No Pell B•chelor, 1, 2 & 3 Br's. from $175 per mo. Sant• An• 3700 Plaza Dr. 714-556-0'66 Rooms Lott .... _ Lost & FO<lnd 5300 C•!J'!nler 6015 BEAT INFLATION EARN 35% ON YOUR SAVINGS' lnteresl checks Pftld monthly. ~tlnlmum $5,000 1 yea;· term. (TI4 ! 990-0981. REMODEL. add.on, g a. r conversion cu.st & new ct1n~t. 25yrs exp draw plam;, tree .est. 645-3439 tip Wanted, M 7100 Help F 7100 BASIC/FOUR CORPORATION EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES • • TEST TECH NICIANS TECHNICIAN TRAINEES •' OAJLY PILOT B 11 Help W1nted, Htlp W1nttcf, F 7 DO .. Delivery-Sunday Only OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE- QUIRES THE USE OF A LARGE STA- TION WAGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR. BENTON WILLIAMS. 330 WEST BAY STREET, COSTA MESA. TELEPHONE 642-4321 FOR APPO INTMENT . *GARDENER* HOUSE.KEEPER f/tlme for !lml\JI conv. hospllal. n ex. hn. Good bf'nel!t1. Ap11ly In person. Clenhaven ol Newport, 1555 Superior Ave, N.B. 'II' • - IR.VlNE PERSONNB. SER\/ICES•AGENCV Bookkeeper ~ Cust Servicc/C. Ofc $550 Seereta:ry/Bkkpr, Spanish EDP Helpful lo $900 S...-y/RE-Lcgol to $850 EDP \Vorking l\1gr #00 Bkkpr/Mort Banking to $700 ReCl'pl/Set..Tetary to SG50 G. Ofc/llfe ins exp $.'125 Typist to $500 f'igure ·clerk $•150 l-ligh Fash Sales $2.50 hr + 488 1-:. l7tt) St. Cat Irvine) C~1 Suite 224 642-1470 "' JANITORIAL Parttime men, \Von1en and rouples. Steady \Vo r k . Con1petltlve \\•ages. l\1ature onl y, How·s: Sun S to 12 an1. f\1on thn1 T hu1'S 6 to 10 pm. Apply in person. 1226 \Ye!'t 5th St. SA J AN ITORIAL, local, even- ings. Ex-pcricnc:ed ndultz on- ly. Positions avail. for janitor, & \vorkt n g supervisor. 979-3923 J ANITORIAL Experienced only, over 21 548-5687 JUNIOR SALESMEN Age lf}.15. Earn $20440 per "'eek getting new customers for the DAILY PILOT alter school and Saturdays. You must be out of school by 3:00 pm and be able to work at least 3 dayM per week. No deliveries or collecting. Transpor1ation prov l d ed. C:i ll 968-4812. Equal Opportunity Employer * * * * Phillip Ostrom 2233 Republic Costa Mesa You are the winner of 2 tickets to the Recreation Vehicle & Boat Show at the Anaheim Stadium October 2..6 Please call 642-5678, ext 333 to chlim yoor tickets. ~North County toll tree number Is &10-1220) * * * * LADY compankln, live in light house work, & cook, no cans after 1 pm. 642-4630 Be yo'.;.l' own boss! Part or f/time. Your own area. High Income. Guaranteed Customers. Earn Now. Pay Later. LEASING HOSTESS Part-Time hostess needed for attractive apt complex in Newport Beach. Individual must be willing to ~m-k weekends & have adaptabll' chedule 1 year pub I ic contact exper. neccess. along w/p l easa nt a~ pearance & personality. 534-7-117 or 534-3144 • PLEASE CALL THE IRVINE CO. 644-3389, 9am.Noon Equal Oppor. Employer I I B 12 DAILY PILOT • p W1nted,M 7100 MAINTENANCl!: A1AN General main1. v.·ork on pl.nnt equlp. &: bldga. BA 1 I c l.:nQ<>,-1~ or mt-thnn!Cj lhmc welding, plumbing & OOrptntry v.-ork. l\tust ht- biah 8Chool grad. f'.qual Op- J)Ortunity Emplo~r. Ca.11 Llnda: 56-1101 MAINTENANCE MAN FUil llme. EmPha1is 011 bnt1l & dOC'k Clll')>Pntry. \Vl'lte CIQ.88Uled Ad No. 252, !)Rily Pilot, P. O. Box 1560. C.Osta Me~a. Ctt 92626 MANAGER TRAINEES . -. MOflday, Septem~r 23, 1()74 Help Wonted. M&F 7100 op Wantad, M&F 71DOHelp Wented. M&F 7100 .. - NEW FACTORY Branch outlet~ just ()pl.'nlnj; io RT1'3 nreds I.he following: t.lgmt Tl'Tle $185 wk ,S(>rv1nt'n (2) S3 hr Sil lesn1cn Open All Ucnc.lits. carrtr positions 494-1065 Ne\\'!tpaper Carrlet'll· BOYS & GIRLS 10 yrs & Older DAILY PILOT DELIVERY-SUNDAY ONLY OF DA ILY PILOT TO CA RR IERS IN EL TORO, MISSION VIE;JQ.LACUNA NIGUEL AREA. REQU IRES lliE USE OF A LARGE STATION WAGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR. llAHRY SEELY, S30 WEST BAY STREET, COSTA MESA. TELEPHONE 642-4321 FOR APPOINTMENT. ' An Equal Opportunity Employtr Help Wanted, M&F 7100 Help Wonted, M&F 7100 NURSING ASST. SAIL l.Att hand work & Has Routel Open Exper. In acute ho11pltul only. eutllng. Irvine. AJI shiftll. f'ull .~ Pltlmc. Call 540--3684 Dana Point >.'OE. c,,,,,,, .. ""· J'""'"· SALESLADY, EXPER Costll ~1l'sa Memo r 111 I f~/tinie. I.a.dies rca<Jy to torlu, Costa 1'1esu. bencfils. Capl.strano ·Beach ""'I>"•" 642-mt, :lilt vie. "'"" rov pay, fringe Full & p /tlme ~URSES AIDES SILVERWOODS rntervif'wlng Now for San Juan Capistrano run 1111,e. 3_11 ihut & part No. 45 Fashion 1s1anc1. NB Positions In Orange Co. time 7.3 5hU1. for small See tt1r. Scane .Must be o\·er 21, bond.able & c th gOod physical cond'. Jlave CALL M l d 0 n Y • H 0 11 P · APP 1 Y SALESPERSON car & telephone. Go to Tic r • OW er Clcnhaven ol Ne,,..•po1'f, 1555 t.take $200.·$400. wk. Trade Toe f.farkcl nearest you or 492-4420 !upcr1or, NB Sho\11 adverlising & space, telephone our oUlces. , • -------'-----I PBX OPERATORS, Expcri· sornc C'xpericnce req. {714) (n'1) 835-1417 Newspaper Carriers; encc prelerrecl. \\!Ill Tro1n. 5-13--0700, 1\1r. Tyler. For lnlormali<ln GIRLS & BOYS Al~ .. 11hifls open, l.aj,'Una iSALES LHdy, p;\rt time, 8:30 TIC TOC SYSTEMS Bc.tch. l'l3l·0090 • to 1:30 ~Ion thru Fri. '\/ill Equal Oppor. Employer 10 yrs & older PBX Answering Service I !rain energetic person . $14,000 DAILY PILOT PJrime days or eves. Expcr. Re-arll St11.1ioncrs, l S 03 pref'd. EOE. a-10.1962 Ne\\·port Blvd, C:-·".::·~=~ S/ILES THRIFT STORE Costa Mesa, 40 hr. wk., Opportunity Management Trainee Close sµpcrvlsion for One Year. 0.vn Boss titter one year. Retail oullet. Prefer retail experience, cnn n1cc t the public, over 25. nia.rriC'd, desires 01vn business. Cnll ~n for personn I Ullervicw. H as r outes open in San Clemente PLANNER SCHEDULER I n1usl 1vo1·k Sats. !\1atutc. Apply: 410 E. 4th St. Snnta Ana MANAGEMENT TRAINEE Are. you dynamic, w/rcccnt sales background-r This Cast paced co. needs .YflU. J ason Be st Agency 17400 Brookhurst, F . Vly. Suife 213 963-ti715 MAN AGrn Gilt & Ca.rd shop, sal. + bonus. Seren- dipity. So. Coast Village, Santa Ana, 557-2702 CALL Mr. Hyde 492-4420 To plun, schedule & iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiol coord inate Pr oduct Ion NEWPORT Personnel Agency Newport Beach 642-3870 NIGHT AUDITOR, phases for Ille manuf. ol sn1nll plastic n1olded & machlncd parl<1. \Vork fron1 blueprints. Send Resume To : Classif.ied Ad No. 234 C/0 Daily Pilot P.O.Box 1560 Costa Mesa, Ca 92626 Equal Oppor. Employer PRESSMEN SALES, needed hours. Balboa Beach 2 sharp salesgirls, to work flexible 615-8410, 2301 w. Blvd, Ne\vporl Secretary Ex. For corporate ofc o I computer firm. lmmed. opening for exec. secretary to V.P. of t ec hni ca l operations. Good ofc skills req'd. Ability to interface 11.·/vendors a necessity. Xlnl co. paid benelits. Call Kathi Foster bewt11.-n 9-12 for intervie11.•s, {TI4) 833-9530, ext. 2·13. BASIC 4 CORPORATION Equal Oppor. Employer MGM1' trne 21·30 $150 wk guarn st. College prf"d. Mr. Richards, 114/84&-5455. We need expcr'd offset press- men for small presses on 2nd & J1'd shills. \Ve \Viii pay lop wages if you can operate A/i\I 2615 (Double Header/ or A/~I 2850 {Auto) or a Chief I7. Ca!! Mrs .. Fleming, 54().9112 for appt. Mon·Fl'i Apply: Mn. Baltazar, Hotel bc tivn 8:30 & 6 pm. !!!~!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ~';.i.m1So. Coast H\vy .•. 1P,,:Rcoo=-o=-u"cr=='1°'o=N"'o°"1=',E=R°'A~T=o=RS~ Secy Jr. Purchasing .0.0.iiiiiOOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioltttust be High School grad. Rnpidly gt'O\vi.ng sailboat MA T'L MGR $2SM assist lead man 111 setups, mfg. needs mature, hard Deg + 10 yrs exp In mnt'I NOJE CLERK operation of equip., mixing Y,'Orking, \veil organized & prod. control. Multi plant resins, molding compounds, secretary w/xln't typing. opr. &>me travel. Report h -me ..,.k exp. preferred. Mu.st enjoy pressure, hard I Co f In 0 \Ve presently ave a position ,,., • k & · ty Ba ,,_ nd o pres. rp o c rg E,ccl. company be n e 5 • 1vor · va.ne . C"l5•vu Co o . · .. Id co pa•'d open In our Note Dept. Neat· · h · t k . vo::ne i.... E q ua l Op p ortuni t y in pure as1ng, or soc pension plan. ness & accuracy a must. Employer Call L 1 n d a ; control desirable, but good Angus Gordon P('nionnel Must like to work w/f.igures. 549-llOl gen'! ofc exper. most Agency 64U120 Please Call For Appl I..:=..::;~~~==~--important.· Xin't fut u re 333 E. 17th No 15, CM G;eg Newland PRODUCTION w/young, energetic people. Bank of America FOREMAN Call Michele, 642-521li. li1ARKET R E SEARC H Ney,rport Center Office Silk screen & light assembly WESTSAI L CORP INTERVIEWERS wanted. Fashion Island responsibllltles. Aggressive. Experience required. Call Call 836-350a Exce ll en t opportunity. SECRETARY l~Be~Jtytrc644~~-8650'.J-~·~S::-'~~1 .. ~E~q~u~al~D~p~po~'~· ~E~m~p~f~oy5e~',..1 ;Dcs:ig:n:'~in~Tii.'m~c~-.--.,-· I Free! Fabulous opportunity MEDICAL Recpt.. Bkpr. 97S-200L to be in charge of ofc & exp'd. female, over 35 & NURSERY_ MAN PRODUCTION Needs spec· grow w/great co. Also Fee ro pegboard system. Send Exper. or Hort 1 cu I t u ~ e tors, packers. u ti I i t y Jobs. resumes lo: Classified ad back~und. Yng & tn· workers, 557-3460, ask Jor J ason Best Agency No. 106, Dally Pilot, P.O. dustnous. 842-8866. Doug 17400 Brookhurst, F. VJy_ Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca.lit. NURSES Aide, all shifts. 1 PRECINCT workers: Dennis Suite 213 !J63..6775 1~9'6267'~==~=""=:--I Yr exper. req'd. Xln't Jl>.1angers. Democ r atic MEDICAL FRONT v.·ages & benetits. <;:ome campaign. $2.00 hr. 848-lll3 OFFICE ASSISTANT visit Park S_u P e r 1.0 r REAL ESTATE BROKERS ASSISTANT l-lea!lhcare, 144<> Supenor, ''Lie." Indu s tr ial , com· Typing from dictaphone a N.B. mercial, residential, con· must. Insurance & billing N U R S E S A I D E S & solidate your Independent or etc. for appt. 833-1626. Orderlies. Call Bct\vn Sam· small brokcruge -business 4pm, 548-5585, l\1esa Verde into a growing, Irvine-based , ~~fil~E~& Conv, Hosp, £161 Center St, Broke rage-Development F/Ume. Clean shaven. \l+'ell C~1 Firm. Pre'stigc offices v.·ith groomed. Bondable. Must NURSES Aide, Orderly 7-3. identify: Associated Broker have drivers lie. Some hvy Exper. or trainees. Jl>.leSll or Broker-Salesman Rela· lifting. See Steve Smith, Verde Conv. Hospital, 661 tionships available. \Vrile Ba.nit of Newport, Dover a t 1 _ec::;,;"~'~"'c;:S=t,=0~1~. -=~~ brokers P.O. Boie 15107 San· 16th, N.B. CLAS.S SELLS -642-5678 ta Ana, ca. 92105. 1;::=::=======::::::::::::::~1REAL ESTATE I 1 SALESPEOPLE. \Vhy not wor-k In the hottest W.'e3.S, Huntington Bench/Fountain Valley? Let us train you. Call Phil ~lcN.unee 9fi3.4567 Village Real Estate. RECEPTIONIST *Sec'ys, Boo1<keepers I-lave too many to list Liz Reinders Agency 4020 Birch St., Suite 104 New;x>rt Beach 833·8190 Dial A Job 833-085S No Charge To You Established 1965 SE.CY /G.EN'L .. O.FC Expcr. nn dictaphone & must be very good typist. Sh not req'd. but helpful. Small mfg firm. Pleasant v.·orking conds. Good co. paid benefis\. T apmatic Corporation 18.11 Kettering St Irvine 979-GOSO SECRETARY Part time/ Penn:rnent Insurance Office-Irvine ~.565.'i SECRETARY . Helo Wanted , M&F 7100 I Help W a nted, M&F 7100 1 Antiques • 8005 Furniture 8050 Miscellttneous ·BOSO THE BEST JOBS ARE AT AA MES 100% FREE 6ureau of En1ployment Agency NEVER A CHARGE TO YOU COMPANIES PAY ALL FEES * GERDA'S \\l~lITE P1'0v111Chtl 8('{\room · TEAt'Hf;R AIDE:S f''umltW't', Cnnopy B t' d, !RC'2Uhtr & Subliti1utt11 $3,1'7'.l ANTIQUES * drt.,~r. ctcsk. ~Int i.·ond. J\'OON DUTY AIDES Cr\ld Otik Grandfather Clock, $125. &IS.3:XiQ. pt.•r hr. t2 hrs dail)'I Sup<.'r-Ro 1 e wood Crandfather G S I \'liK·s noon nmc acllvltlt'! on Clock. Crvd Vlc&orh.u1 t..o1,1e aragi • • 1 ltci;ut.ur ,t. Substttute) $.1.136 Scat & Chr. Drop.leaf dining 2oss 1x:r hr <2 ltn; dally/ Super-Ible, Oak Chino. C t1 b, BASfil..l'f Kin~ or. ql!('('n !17. ViM.'ll 110011 time 11('tl\'itlc>s on ()f'T\lllC'ly curved oak desk, lledroom lie~-Om~ rn1 school pln)1,,'1'<1Und. J1isplv.y Cab, Carved 11!de v.•/ChlnA t.'tlbll'K'I,,;, llercu on C'LF.HK TYPISTS tble. v.·ttll & mfitlfel clocks, o~ velvet l!Olas & l_ovCSl.'alb. (R.l'~lnr & Subs Ii tu 1 e) Jllt'IUI\'IS, c h and e Ii er s, llide-a·bcdl!I & ch1urit Ui;OO $3.297 l><.'I" hr. (4-8 Ju~ de.Hy I lt1n1~. nUrrorK. Br as I.I" for Di3pl~y onl;Y;0'~\ Coast Kl'<JUircmt-nls: 40 w.p.ni. ret;i.<11ers. Muster chnrgc,1-'Co~n~'~tftl~c~I ~·n~._,~::::,.;:c.;_= typin~. 1.;11 o v.· l "d l:<' nf ~nnk Ainerlcard, Lny·a\vuy, Horses 8060 modl'rn ofr proccdurt's. Conaignn1ents 1v e I c o m e . Al'PLY JN PETtSON Opt.·11 7 days 9:30 to 5:30. %' QUARTER Jiorst· Colt. A1 Fountain Vullf•y School >IS2 El Ctt.mino ReRI. Tuslin. 6 1110 old, $250. ~:ugllsh sud· District, Nu. 1 Lighthouse 832-4932, 835-l189 die ,'-'. Bridle $100. 642-:.!203 _ Ln, fo'ountain Valley (corri.:>r * * * * Jtwelry 8070 o( N<:ll'land & Talbt:rl) \VE D 'd OI . A.RE AN EQUAL OP· a vi ney PART OF PRJVATE COV r•ORTUNITY Er>.!PLO\'Elt 166 Mapnolla LEt"'TION or ! NI> I AN l'.>E:ADLlNE: \VED. SEPT. Costa Mesa JE\VELR\' f'or Sale: EX· 25Tii, 1974. You ttl'C the ,1•1nner of Tll.EMELY F'lNE ~IUSEUi\l ----2 tlcke._ to the QUALITY & CO!.LEC'TOltS Recreation Vehicle PIECES. Sonic signt'd p!t"c·i's *TEMPO -* Needs You Now! * File Clerks * Secret a ry Jr & Sr * Typists * Accounts Clerks Your time is valuable. lnvei1t it \\'isely 11·/high hourly r..ites. Call Sandy. 54(}-4450. NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO Tl•n11:io Tcn1porary Hrlp & Boaf Show by kno"'n artL<:.ts & ral'\~ 11t the pawn lUnotU!: l'Olle<>tion. No Anaheim Stadium it('n1 unde1· $100. Ple11S(• call Oclobcr 2-6 for ppt. (2131 373-5653. Plt•aSt'..' call 6-11-561~. ext 333 WANTED t~ clnhn your t1t•kcts. TOP CA.Sil DOLLAR PAID !North O>l._1nty t~I free ~"'OR YOUR JE\Vt:LRY. nwnber is f>.11).1.2'.llJ) \\'ATCHES, ART OBJECTS, * * * * GOLD. SILVER SEl\YICE. l \\I ANTED -Old oveti>tuUed FINE FUl'tN & ANTIQUES. C'USy chair to curl up <u1d 1 _,1"~~~2=200"'-------- l'f'Hd in -C.ol one? 613-4266 • 8080 aft. 8PM or n1o rns. Miscellaneous Appliances 8010 WANTED ' TO\V Tru{'k Driver, ex~r. I C:!:!:.;;.;::.:.:.:::....-----'1 r/tin1c. Top pay ,!(: fringe FREIGHT DAMAGE SALE TOP C~Sll DOLLA}l., ~Al~ benefits. Apply G & \V New llotpoint n.cfr\gcrators, F'OH. ~ 0 U It Jl.,\\E!-ft~_, To..,.•lng, 17111 .~. Irvine, N.B. \Vas h c rs , Dry c r s, \VATCl·IES, A~T 0,J?JEC'I S, ·1 TRAINEE Dish\vashcrs, NC\\' C!OLO, SILVER SERVlC~~· ASSEMBLERS \Varranty. Credi!. B or ;\, FIN,E FURN & ANTJQUES. 36'13 \V. \\'nrner. Sanu1 ;\na,1-.0&1~5-e:.:;tlOO~==~==--- l'niull ('O. \v/big ro. benefits ncal' 1-Iarbor. 979-292L DECORATOR * * * * Austin Owing . 16801 Barbon Huntington Beach \'OU tare !ht' 1\·\nner of :! lll"kl'llei IU lh€' Recre1tion Vehicle & Boat Show 111 \ht• Anaheim St adium (lc·tolx'r 2-U Pl,'t1~' 1·;111 642·5618, l'Xt 333 [(l t·lahn your t\rk~111. tNu111i County loll free 11uu11J('r !s ~>-10-1220) * * * * SCRAM-LETS I ANSWERS Decadt· -l IOlird -lfusky - Shl'kC'I -C.1 !OKED !\ly 11 Hl· think11 !<>he's fool· In~ tllt' hv st'r\'lng nlt'flt sul>-1>1itul~. "J'll(• uthl!r n~t I \1:4s 1'11!111f:: h:unhul\,""<.'l"S ·a.nd ahuost l'JIOl\J:D on n 111!. ---Girl!t l11k1ng-bnots, shoe sk;•!CS. 10 i>pe<'!I bike IV/ lit.•s. ALSO: slid.: proj., !>pc;1k1•rs, \;111+.' rl'CClrdl'ni, r·l'r<1rd:; IGnun rnovie 1t~ns. 1," 1·orording 1111><'. srn11ll appl1nr11i's. llB 1not(lr, 10' " 14' c:n·J)C't, rnisr. l'h'c. n1nhJ1~ unrl 1nort•. 12 yn:. nct·l1111ulntio11 of ''ju11q11c'' !llUSI ~O llf'[Orf' S..•11L 30th. L<\ST Cl IANCE! 6ll-S1tr.i. I BUY!! Goo<l. u!«'rl lurn1turt' & a1111lb1111·es or \viii sf'll for yQU MASTERS AUCTION 646-86a6 o• 833-9625 afl. 6 or Su1ul;1y 8J!)..O!l1 l I looking for 1 sharp person Billing Clerk $62.8 to train as ru1 electronic l<ENMORE \\';i.shcr & Gas DESIGNED MURALS \Vant to ,\·ork 111 Irvine assembler. Dryer S50 each, Uuly Ken-1-landpainted in Acrylic,>:: Oil Misc, Wante d Coir.~les? No more long 866 \\I. l6lh St, N.B. 1norc auto \\•nshcr $85. Guur Cull 11011• for an Original \\'ANTE!)_ Old ni·l.'r;.;tuffed 8081 d.,·"'·ng 00,,-. •v" 1,m,·ng LARK ENGINEERING & de!. ~72 Christmas Girt. 552-7Th7. • '" " "' " 1•r1i.1 !·h:iir 111 c·url Ufl ;nld & good at dctnil. Check 866 \V . 16th St, N.B. Rent Wa s hers/Dryer' <\ BAil SI'OOLS tx>nil in -C:o1 Ofll'" 613··1:.\iti invoice cxtl!nsion & Dis· &t2-92ffi $2. \\!k. Full n1aint. SIO a piece aft, 1'-J':i.1 0r 1110111.<1. counts. Xln't s:tlary & TRAINEE * ~1202 * 18!\I ELEC T\'PS\" :IT~B. ------,-8-0-8-3: I I k I en FREE Pli'i·up . R•I'• •I ,vrs old: S25 Musica l In strum ts ""'·'ro'n"m"·nt.wor ng . PRINT SHOP '-"' -.. " Appl's & Scr:1p ~!eta!, S.1n ~letnc~ci .. • ~lalurc indiv. to be traitl('d Call anytimt' Si~5:la8 * 492-8785 aft 6 pm * on cutting machine. Good ~ CRlFICE 3 File Clerk to $475 progression rais~. Apply T\\'0 dryel's gas and elec. SA ' pc corner If you 11•anl to he ar..~iated Nat\on;.11 Systems Corp, 4:161 Irie. $10. & $90. sectional. 2. L:OUC'hCs & rabl(', I r 0 C I. · t S N 8 "~" -~'"' N tTI4) "'" "~"" Oleg Casstn1 C<l sh 111 l' r c w one o range oun 1cs Birc 1 t. .. ..rnr-1....,.,. ti t'. .,...:r-o.JU., spot·tscoot, sz 42. Kingsize finest firms & vnriety i:;; O.C. Airpo~l Bicycles 8020 bed, &l0-1856-----~-your desire lhis divC'rsified l;;ii;iiiioi;iiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii - job is 11•aiting. Filing, PBX TYPIST /CLERK SCJl\VINN CONTIN~::Nl~~ 9 P IECE Drexel Din Rn1 relief. xerox & t e 1 c x Call 842•5663 Set, _ l\lng~~\'OX st c re o, FE:'\l)F:H Bno;:;n111 n !lead Solid :-itatr, Xlril ("ond. \\'lth f'("[l't'I". SIOO (() firn1. (.'111! :H!J..1600 ·"---~~-1.L'l)\\ JU llr11111 ~·!., J\.1\1.~I sell. ('nnip!C'IC'. E.'it't'I. C'ond. S-lfi-6701 Ok.""""°F _u_m_._&_E_q_u -ip-. ~80-8-5 1 n111chincs. Jlurry! ; A k f . G·, Spanish Kin,.-: $Z BR Sl't, l.J \1 .p,tn. on TB~\ Selectric. s 01 a _-Y n1isc antiques. 53'1-'"J643 3M Ory Copie r-209 + ap!ihulc ror math. Sonie Cameras & Equip. 8030 4.1 213 "DS n""', ,1,1 .. , 1:1~kini,: s:..10. rnflk(·. offt•r. Person Friday $600 The 1vonder!ul l\1lrld or Ad1Tr1ii;i11g! Closr location! Need an indiv. l\'hO is self n1oti1·at!'CI & can motivi:itc others as \\"ell. No sh req'd. Just a sharp n1ind & typing abllity. . S•cy/Bkkp• S600-S700 Fantastic Newport Center location. Jr you have a pro- fessional a11itud;:o, are v.•ell groomed & seeking n career position. you h:ivc found it. You'll need typing & book· keeping cxpcr. & ahility to iftterf:ice Yl I i n1 po r I a nt clients. ofc t'X()('l"J~Jl('l' needed. • ~n '" I KODAK f.170 Super s ~1ovi c<U-l/<'I, aztrc &old shn~. G e~te tner Dup 1cator Apply in Personnel Dept. Jl>.londay th1·u Fridny 9-llam PACIFIC MUTUAL 700 NC'\\·po11 Center Dr .. N.B. an equal opportunity c111ployer p · t Zoo Lens Sloe Reg. $11.9!1, now S9.7J yd. nskuu: S!OO. nr:tke offer. 111~{~.0~skingm$J5. 551_~ 6•16-5815 I ~lr. ~h~.,-~.7;-....,_'60() anylirnt' l :)'TYLING chair Sl2i Bcflu!i· SECY 1·hr!1 $8/2-1 Exe(' !.;\'VI Cats 80 s c!:in chair $_75 .. Antique desk c~I" s1;,123, ~k;, $Li up P\:\IPER y at u , S50. Re(.'('ptton1~t t•h.nr $10. P11•r('f.' 861 '' l!J, Ci\1, Thrire \\'cckl~~A~A-BO~ 673--0218 1 l>l'.!-:;.lll~ ---=---t Scivice. Phone 61.$-6217 VITA:i.1INS 111 bulk. T11p .\~S..\PllONE PERSL\NS & Hl!\tALAY \NS <Ju HI it Y. \\"('\! hclo\\ L'SNI ren1•ttc & 11on-ren1ole. + General ofe (or N.B. CPA CF,\ rc~Lo;tcred killcns: S50 v.·holesnte. 64-i-1579. Cwi:. ! Sa1·1n~-Tt•m1~8.'ft-7732 firn1. ~lust be matul'C', able & UJ>. 6i5-88lO IRVINE Coast Counrcy Club :i.tl:."'T.\L OUil'r !){>sk & Chr •. to accept responsibility. t.I be hi f ! Call :U" uo s-· !'alary commensurale II'/ Dogs 8040 ~1~~s ~71~r0:3~2"1.'\I: :-.. .. i;1~~1617 nbihly & f'xper. \Vrite ----1 ('Jns.·H.ficd ad no. 235 c/o e PUPPY WOft.0 e PINBJ\LL f.1achincs t2l $00 11~\I :-;. l1Tln<' ll t'fA.'"'l'ttt>r. Daily Pilot, P. O. Rox 1560. Bull Terrier. Lab, \Veimarn-& s.;r,o. Pvt pnrt~. Call B1·:+rnt 11('11 Pne•·d to M·ll. Co:>ta l\.1e~11, Ca 92626 ner. Bull cl~s. Pekingese, S·Hi-1227. 213/59'1·17Si' Gl:J.9_,_.-,~-' -----=~ TYPIST/CLE"'=R~K~-ChihuHhuas, Tiny JloodJes. NE\\' Bn1nswick pool tRhle Pets 8017 Pit Bulls.· Cock11poo. 100 4 1 ~ x 9,' slate top, :,'l'{'('nfclt, -----------1 fast accu rate tv ... isl·\1·ill l\flXED PUPS Stud Service ace Incl, 96.l-6893 :-r,.10·>.:i· i·hn1n link Ci'"C/w G I Of $55 0 train on IBJ.I ty~scttin" .... enera c cquipnu~ut. ,,,... --e f.lost Bc-eeds. Roller Cflnar· SAUNA Bath, all elee 220 l'h:iin hnk Tl)p. SW. Local Urm nreds your 1vill· ies, Reptiles & Turtles. Open Volts, Incl S\\'eat house. & I "''"""=~~J:{-.1711) aft 6: :10 ing altitude,'\:. conscienlious LAY OUT/PASTE UP Eves. 531-:,027. all fixtures $300. 642·3~~ CL\SSIF'!F.D ivl!l ~II It! mannC"r. Du1ics i 11 c I u d c rcrord keeping. purchaf;f• \1·ith basir typing skills for 2 OUTSTANDING Afghans, orclcrs. radio disputch & s1nall print shop. Call l\1r. 1 6mo ft'm, 3yr old n1nlc, help w/scheduling. Av.1: l\lcCarty S.1~1 1 6~ ~lust Sacrifice, best olr. · be n ·Ill -"====-__cc~=~-6-12-4560 aft 6p1n 1yp1ng ok. !\lust cx1 c TYPIST, £:\:PER. & <ible to "'ork on your P/titne, your honie or 111y GRE,.\T DANE-Beau. Brin- OV.'ll. ofc. P. Q. Box 6258, dlt' Bitch, Championship Anahci1n. ca 92806. Lines, 17 mos old. Sho1\•dog, Transcriber $600 WAITRESS has been shOl\n. 642-5665. Fast growing large <.'Orp. Exper :?need. Q\"cr 21. AKC reg. male and fcmalC' w/xln't benelil!!;. Your 1yp-Jl>i('xican food & cocktails. SL Bernards. PO or ix-st ing mus! be 75+ & you Appl; daily 10:30 :in1 to l ~o~f~rc~'~· ~83~9~-5544~-~·~~~~~I need rcccnt dictaphone ex· 11:30 an1. &· 4:30 pm to per. If you cnjoy typing 5:30 pn1 . ~11 CASA [I all day & have nn xln't i\1EXICAi.'J REST,\Ufu\.:\'T. '-------~] s command of spelling & 296 E 17lh. C).1. free lo You . grammar. you can go to -"'"70.C'o"'=o'~~=~-"~'' immed. '"' "" w AITRESSES outstandin't co. Opportunity J::xper Neat Appearance Is unlimited. Apply Su:! & ... Sirloin F ree To You 8045 59:10 \'-i. Coast H11•y., NB A C0NvtNl£NT SHOPPING ANO S£WINC CUIOC FOR THC CA.LON THE CO. For an ad Call Peggy in Woma n's World 642·5678, ext. 330 Crochet a Skirt! FIND YDVB NAME WIN TICKETS WORTH $4 \Ve are seeking receptionist w/min. 2 yrs exper. Jl>lust be able lo work wi the public, h:ive p leasa n t uppearance & telephone pcl'sonulity. 60 w.p.m. typ- ing, diversified duties. l::X· cellent eo. benefit s. P/time. Exper'd. Top nolch. E x. Secretary $800-$1000 \\'1\ITH.ESS, ExpcriC'nce<l Sc.-e N.B .. f'ashion Island. S4 per Anaheim firm desires nn J\.liss i\lc ClouU,. Ben hr. J an, 644-4810. outstanding exec. sec · y ! Bro\vns. '.~1106 S. Coast J-lv.-v, 2 GRO\\'N CATS. mothel' ,(: son, 11101n spayed. To gd lun only. Aft. 7:30 f m. 642·55~ furniture 8050 It's easy. Check the classified section for "ads" listing winners' names. If your name is among them, just call 642-5678, extension 333 between 9 a.m. and I p.m. We'll arrange for you to pick up your two tickets at the nearest office af the DAILY PILOT October 2-:6, 197 4 Orange County's Only Fall Show •• • YOU 'LL SEE ... Motor Homes & Campers • Shells • Trailers • Vans & Van Conv ersions • Sail Boats• Catamarans t Sk i Boats t Motorcycles t Off th e Road Vehi- cles t Camping Equipment and hurrdreds of other Exc'iti ~g Ex- hieits. Weekdays • Noon • 1 I P .M. Soturdoy • Noon • 9 P .M. Sunday A GEORGE COLOURIS PRODUCTION r THE IRVINE CO. 644-3389, 9am-Noon Equnl Oppor. Employer SECRETARY. part time v.•/abovc avg: ~ldlls. ability 1 Sou!h Laguna ' pcrn1. 4 hrs daily Mon thru to _contmunicatc \YCll .'~ \\';.\JTP.ESSJ-.;S / \\'l\!TERS _ C'HI~ESE t.10dl'm ~fagn;ivox }>"'ri. Experienced on I y mottv~le others, Leadership Cocktail and food. Apply !-.lerl.'O console, Glass dining 642-52Jl quallli~s ,JI'('. o must. ~ii5 NE\\'PORT BLVD. room S(.'f $100. Bedroon1 st•t SECRETARY-Legal Tr;iince. Grooming, skills ~ past ex· 752-1999. S1J. ~mingron 1-_; J (.'<:Ir i c per. are n1ost unportanl. ·-''-'~'7."~=~---1 · $200 •1 · t bl ty ...,, 70 WPM, fite dicttl· _.. -\\',,ITEi\ ypcwrilcr -. !• lSC u cs .--If ,·ou're career orient....... & h 21~ E Q Bl lion. Start "ASO mo. 831-0670 f · "' · ot er. •;1 • ccA.n . ,,.. potenti11l he.re is xln't. Ful time. i:.xperien('(' serv-Balboa Pcnin Point Beal SEC'Y LEGAL. Christian, in~ Canlonesc food. &&55.JO. !he Cl'O\\"rl Sun !l/22 thru RECEPTIONIST ~~~~-airport area . CHOICE WAXERS Fri 9/27 545-0.IOl n.ftcr Sun Never a dull moment. Varie-I iiii.iiiii.,.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii i Necdt'<I immediately, \Va,!?Cs KINGSlZE Bed, new ' ty of duties. A nice smile C R $2.fil hr and up. Ex· matlres~. box springs & & personal.tty is needed. SE U ITY Keypunch to $650 IX'rienCt'd only. Apply in frame. Slil\ p<ick:igcd, xtrn J ason Best Agency OFFICER Legal Sec 'y $S7S person. 1226 \Vest 5th SL firm . $175. tworth $421J YI Loan See'y to $600 SA. Queen $155, llr.rcuton comer 17400 Brookhurst, F. y. 1 7.0=-,,===~== II°' u ·"J ho Suite 213 963-6775 Sec'y/Recept. to $6SO \\'l-10 \VAl!VNETS YrO \VORK? group ~-suw Y n1e, * CCU1S Full p-tlme. 3-11 & 11·7 Excellent BeneUts Good \\'Orking conditions COSTA MESA Memorial Hospital 642-2734 EOE RN Med·Surg. Wlil 11·7:30AM shift, !/lime, Xln't benc.::ts. EOE. Cont.act l\trs. Jensen, Costa ~tesa Memorial HoapitaJ, 30.1 Victoria, 0.1 642-2734 RN's/LVN·s 3-11. Full or p/Ume. Medications. Mesa Verde Conv. Hosp, 661 Center St, CM 548-6585 RN & LVN/Wknd relief. l Wk:nd or all. 466 Flagship Rd, N.B. 642-ii<>t<. RN SUPERVISOR F/llme 11·7 for large SNF. fo"'r\ & Sat nti:hls oU. Call 516--&t56 bel"'n 9 & 3 for Opportunity for public rela· t DR A AB' inclds dclil·cry 8:s'2-:MS8 lions etc. Military or law P /t Ge~ Ofc to $3.25 hr CllOOSF. your ~~. work l ;~;,i;;;~;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;; en f orcement background Vet Assista nt $400 for youi'SCU. be your Oll'TI A RESSES IK!CeSS. boss. Men or ''"omen. Can M n . . .. Apply in Personnel Dept. ttlonday lhru Friday 9-11am. PACIFIC MUTUAL 700 Ne1vport Center Dr., N.B. nn equal opportunity emply. SERVI CE Station Salesman, expcr. preferred. Da.Ys & eves. Full & p-time. Apply ShC ll Station, 17th & Irvine, N.B. (21 SERVICE Sta. men, Isl Class. Top wages + eomm. Apply R:l.y Carey Chevron Station. fi04 S. Coast l lll•y, Laguna Bch. .SERVICE Sta. Attendants. Expcr. Resp & respectful. Call for intef'V\v &15-15.12 Reilly's Arco, 1 9 t h & Newport, C.!\1. SERVICE Sta. Attendant F\IU & Part-Time 9'JO E. Coast Hwy, N.B. STORE CLERK, full & part time. 3 P~1·11PM. Must be 18 or over. Apply 7am-2pm 1515 Gisler. C.M. ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISION Accountant .... 700-$800 Degreed A'ccountunt w/IJtc expcr. Dut ies I n c I u 'I c general ledger. p n yr o 11, pulling financial stn1ts. Prod, Tech to $5 hr Need several ~ expcr. in !l1n3JI machine re1n1l1· or assembly, plastics specialiUcs. assembly nr fabricaUon. Pre.fer 2 yrs college. • be slightly ha11dicappe<:! MATIRESSES Neat · Clean AppeMancc. • • • Vts., ret.ired . Age 25 to 70. Queen, Full & T\Vln Sets Supplemer.t your lnrome. PRICED 'fO l\10VE NO\V! ! Drive a f''l.b 6 hrs or more n 1 ,..,.."~&-,..8686,..~&,..8:!3-~',..9625,..,..!!I <lay. Apply m qerson, Yellow Cab Co., 18S E. 16th ALL nt!\V rouch, n SO, stereo, St.. Costa Mesa. $30. Kingsz mattress w/ \VOMAN who needs $500 + box sprngs & t'ramc $100. n10 st. Sales oriented. Mr. 2 \lvln."' compl, $!10 ca. Other odds & ends. 642-2565 aft Lyons. 714/84&-5455. 5 WOMEN 9060 a.ta "" 11f..,,;..., 1lf..,,-r-l\.1 EDITERR A NEAN P11rt lime jani.J.orial. S2.10 Group'g, Sofn. 2 m:itchcd ""r hour to slurt. l\11lture ch•• Got·' !col c•"' tbl I'~ • •• \,.I IU " 8eW" Ule lllW", lpor\Jv,, 9°' only. Apply 1226 \\11!..'ll 51h Cnfl tb1., like new, bcsl 11h11Ue&ted look-t1oncballu1t SL SA. o{l'c.r. 499-2116 c•rdlg&ll , V -neck 11111101·cr, YOUNG ~1un to train in f.lOVING Ot.rr OF SI'ATE: ~~~~=ll~~·~;tre~lc~~ cq_mhined l\'OOd & metal Decorator designed C1J.ia:ton1 •nd 111t.1U 1.n. 1oi.11.11. rcpair-faclltties."MUSThave furnishings, 1 .. mps, Printed P attern tOIO: mechanical aptitude &. be paintings, houschOld ltenis, Ml11n' Btiu I, 10, ll l t, 11, Printer to S6 hr reliable. 5-l6-0000. and mBny misc. Items. JI. l'•~e11 tn pattem. · ld ,...._ 613-SlCft Send Sl.00 for each p11tet11. E x p c r • w I U e e ""' ~· -"''"-"""'---~-~-·I Add u «ntt rot ttt'h patten'I Ctwndler Price. AB Dick [ II ~) DINING Set. Walnut, 4 chrs. for first~l111 m•il and 1pec-ial of!Sct, Co. located In Irvine. Met'chandiJt · · Ncrmnr !able top. $15, Sofa, handlln•: olberwist third· ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;iiiiil I 1r. 1~~rcu1on plald sri0. t1au delivery .. 111 tut three Call Today 002·196>. _..0<mo ... &nd to M•rlon Mutln, 4'2. lhe OaU.)' PilOl, Antiques 8005 •'.OVESEAT & Sofa CusTom Pattern Dtpt~. 232 West 00 BIG DOLL SALE URCd, usually hm, 968-7910 PrinlNAME.ADDRESS.ZIP, •PP•· Telephone Sales --RQ\ll'E SALES --- 556-1100 madc e \"er)'gd.qual,nevt'r St., New York. N.Y. 10011. SIZE •nd STYLE NUMBER. 45 OcolcrS. Bisque ·to vhiyl. DINING ROOM, breitk!ront, ONE t"REE PATI'ERNofyour ~1t ::l.:10 nm tq_ <l_pn1, lan1ps, oil like new! call choice to 1f.ndfor.ooefreep11t· \\'ill Train, SaJary, Comm, Costa M tsa Area Bonus. Vehicle F'um. A!J Exp. Pd. &ia:tnb. bus & Work From lcrrltory. fllorl. covern~e. y H r->rofil Sha.rt. Retire nt 57. our om• No Str"Jct', 1.A.vortt 75 y~. Top Commissiont 549-31JO, Mr. 'l'uckcr, 7·9P1\t * 558-73U * E:qunl Oppor. Entetorer B_gual Op~r. Emrto~r lfnve somcU\lna you want to I 1t1U? Ot1llllfled ads do It Sell Idle Ile.ms with a Dally ... n • call NOW 6IU678. PUot Cluslfled ad. - ' 2706 Harbor Bl. !1881 O.rlley Wny lolf Tntll 1.,'•e:'""';o;.,:;64~4089~· ""----,-.,.--I tern Inside NEW-SPftlNO-Vllla Park, City ol Oran"'<! nA'M'•N f 1 1 s U M M E R PA TT ER N _ ~ ,...,, '' ove seat, c 10 rs, CATAl..00 .1001tyles,all1I•••· Suite 207 Coste !!'1sa PORTABLE Pn.rl(iur Pump cht.•sts nM 2 pe. comer M!I. free pattern ('1)Upon. lkfld 'lk Orgt1n, xl.nt cond. $j00. VC!ry unusunl. Ca.II r.45-0081 now. SEW + KN IT Bool wttb 600 No. Euclld 642-7137 ULUE VELVET SOFA, Iikt' bl&lctl11uepauem •.•. .,Sl.25 --,P,.,.,"'NT=""'•·"""'V'°'•=R~N~lst=l,--1 "'"", """Ullf"', 11••. l'nit1M f'uttlonlkdt ····1100 Ana heim Cell 776-8120 *· AJ ~ ,., 1 re-'"'w ~"A"~"""~ ~ntSewln18ook .••• 1.00 mo\"al wood or nlct:ll. Anti· IJ'KNO(Mi IJUC!'I our SP£cllllity. 557·2733 1 ~H~TD~E=A~B=E=D;.::,Rl;:o;Ol;;.e-.,.-.""QI= ... -,. Tht! rastc!I! draw 1n lhe Wetl. id7.e .... •mc-rculon tnbrk', Ulm ••• A Dally Pilot CIMSilicd IJ<W, II~. 6'15-3818 , For rlty, ro11ntr1. <'lim11u•- .1h11 •klrt'• n •11r<:f't8: Th11 ~ KOr? •klrt -ntiwe1l "'-'Y tn •Wl nr lhr11 \he •f'n• 110n•! Crochelp•ntil1111111.nite- 11 Jn S ll<llor•. then Jolo. 11~ won.l<:d. l'r.llorn 724&: di~· llnn•. wal•t 11• .. • 21-30~ Intl • n CENTSFOrf•ch p1tttm°7 Add 2:5 «nl• for tath p1t11":rn kif nl'lll-tl•si mill 11nd a PH la I h1ndlln1; olherwi1• third· tlHll dt!lh·e~ will l•k• lhr" ~ or rnof'&. Strid tll Alk• Brook1. 14», Iha D•fly Pilot, Nete1~r11n r:>.flt •• &JttQ,Old Oltlw• S11tlon, Nt• York, NY. 10011. l~nt N1mt. Ad· ~1.lp, P1tttmNum~r. Hew! l~ moat pop11l1r deli•1111ln01.1r111' Ntedletr11\ 011.&loll All cr1rt.1 THREE rtttdul1n1h111dt ........ nc Newt Se•+ Kn" Book •• • BNlcTtu~ rau-.... st zs· Nrw! Nftdlepllint 8ook •• st.GO Now! no-..r<.'l'ottlel Uk 11 .00 ll1ltpin Crochct Roi* .• ,. 11 .00 Jl!Mant~hf!t Doo11. ........ s1.oo IAA11nl Maer1mt1 H-•• , .Sl.00 lMtant Money lkiok ..•. 1100 Olmplelf'G1f\ J\ool ...... $1.00 Oompl .. teAfghenill2 •• 51.00 t1PrllfArth•n1112 ...... aor: fb)ll 0'1fQl/1llJt •I .. . .... SOii Ol'.uwvm~llRollillS .... lk l)Qt.nlU. roh'odiy IS ..••.. ~1 lkdoltlJ1ffyfl.11p ······* • • 121 CA • ,.. h a u n 0 21' f 0 Sc T 1974 LUY'I 21 TO CHOOll PIOM •91: •91::.m.. '_.ii, .... ~ Ml-111111. 1111<. ft OH. " .......... -llol. "" .... -.. It .. , ........... ~-· ..,.., ....... '"''' .... ,.. ~ • MOM, TMllU NI. t AM TO 10 l'M •I • SAT. & SUM. t AM TO 6 PM • GROTH CHEVROLET 11211 looch ll•d. H...+l"'llOft l.otli 847-6087 549-3331 NEWPORT IMPORTS Chry1lor/l'ly,,...,1h Open DRll)' Ir. Suri. 'til 10 PM 29'l9 Harl»r Blvd., Colt& M.11& 5,4 .. 1914 1974 VIOA'S -OVll 1 o.o./O,lomllf IN•OlllcOn 51 TO CHOOll PIOM •14: •84::.... 4 1pttd1 rfdlo. Ul'\ted gtess, di•· bumiter1, whUwtllls, 11~. 11101. . ''"'·" 11 ''" '"'"' ···~ "'~ liiil~;:~"' "°4· hlt•rotl 1rMtut l1 .. 11·>1MI. -I '.i !MIOll .. .,,,,, ltlo .. -.. -...... .•.• . .• e MON. MU UI. I AM 10 11 M I e SAT. & SUN, 9 AM TO I PM e GROTH CHEVROLET 11211 ... chll'l'CI. """'' ...... a..cJt 549.3331 ' • •' I I . ! I • • J'j.f IWLVPILOT · -. Monoay. September23, 197• I o s , • l ( • • ' I , VO aty and their years will be to the The with K R The lJ)'ing shorta . 01 T B tlesn San poli neig At c j ' .. San Clemente Capistrano VOL 67, NO. 266, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ·-. • EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • . . Today's Final N.Y. Stocks MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1974 TEN CENTS Clemente, San Juan to Meet on Dump Access By JOHN YALTEJ\ZA Of Hie hltt r1ttt lhlH Clty cooncthnen from San Clemente abd San Juan C'..apistrano will meet 1n their flrst official encowiter in several years WOO...day, and the prime tsaue will be the controversial maUei of accem to the county's new dump. The 7 p.m. session set for to begin with dinner at the Wind and Sea restaurant. was agreed upon several weeks ago. It will be the lint Ume tbat the two councils have come together in such a capacity in at least three years. The access matter affects each city slgnlftcanUy and in recent weeks San Cletpente councllmen have given in- dications that they might be wlltlng to yield to the use of A venlda Pico as a secondary route, but only if another enne Ki,ssinger Rips High Oil Prices UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP) -In a. blW1l wanting to Arab oil producers, Se<ntary ..,r State Henry A. Killinger said today a world poi.sed "" the brink al general deiresston annot &fiord cur· rent petroleum prices, much less con- tinuing Increases. The poorer naUoru:, many of them trying desperately to cope with food sbortageJ, toold be overwhelmed . ID a . OIL NATIONS HEAR TOUGH TALK BY FORD P.,. A4 never ending ln!latkinary spiral, Kiss- inger told the 29th oesslon ol the U.N. GenonI, Aasembly. route is established as well. County officials, wbo have tried to find a compatible route for more than a year, stress that some agreement has to come about soon, because the existing dump at Focster Canyon can accept no more refuse after the start of next summer. The concern to San Juan officials is the plan to use already overburdened Ortega Highway as the main route to Prima Oesecha canyon in inland hills. If Pico were to be opened as a second route, it would mean that dump traffic could be significantly reduced through San Juan. Although they have not given any official blessing to the Pico idea, San Clemente officials have said the concept deserves some serious thought, because the road could open up the back country . C.Onnecting it to the dwnp site would . U,I~ provide local resident! a good access tO recreational areas· whi ch will be developed in conjunction with the disposal project. Pico was built during the term of fonner Orange County supervisor Alton Allen and was the subject of lengthy controversy because of the costs incurred by the city and county. The dead-end highway leads to the gates of TRW Systems, an aero5pace ' Cites Need To Be Near His Family . ) ' BOSTON (AP) -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, citing famlly tragedies, said today that he will neither seek nor accept the Democratic nomination for president or vice president in 1976. 1be Massachusetts Democrat, with hls wife Joan at his side, said, "This decision ls f1m1, ftnal ard Wlconditional. There is absoluteJy no circumstance or event that will alter the decision." The 42 year-old brother of the late Presidept John F. Kennedy and the late Seb. Robert F. Kennedy, both of whom were as.58SSinaled, said he weigh- ed bis decisloo careruUy. "One basic fact has become in- creasingly clear ·to me," he said 8t a news conference. "From the cam- paigns of my brothers before me, I know that seeking the nation's highest office demands a candidate's undivided attention and his deepest personal com- mitment. . While oil pn>du..,. ..., eolllled to "a fair share," Kissina:er said, "it c::amot be in the inten!lt of any nation to magnify the .despair of the leaat denloped wbo are uniquely vulnerable to exorbitant prices and who have no recow. but to pay.,, VICE PRESIDENT-DESIGNATE NELSON ROCKEFELLER CHATS WITH RULES COMMITTEE MEMBERS From Left, Sens. Howard W. Cannon, Jamel Buckley, JacOb Jiivlfs-With Rocklfellir "My primary responsibilities are at home. lt bas become quite apparent to me that J would be un8ble to nlake a full co'mmitment to a · campaign for the presidency. The speech followed Pr<sidenl Ford's own Miming to the General A!ae!nbly last week that manipulaUon of the energy crisis could lead to counteraction using food as a political and ecooomlc weapon. Still Loves Liz , · But Incompatible~ Burton Declares Rockefeller Sees No "I simply cannot do that to my wife and children and the other members of my family." Arab delegates wbo detected a veiled ulUmatwn in that address will be nne- ccmbing Kissinger's speech for evidence of a U.S. efiort to turn sentiment. particularly in Third World countries, Conflict Wi'th Wealth Kennedy's wife has been in a rest home twice in recent months and his son Edward Jr. lost part of a leg last November because of bone cancer. Asked what eflect the Chappaquiddick incident of 1969 had on his an- nouncement, Kennedy said : • 'This decision, .. would have been made Ir· respective of the tragedy that happened in 1969. . . Were I to run, it would have been a factor that would have been raised." (See ~GER, Page Al) Tliousands Visit ' Beaches Along Southern Coast Balmy weekend weather along the Sooth Coast lured thousand> of penons to area beaches and the same factors apparently brought out the snakes from Inland bills as ftll. San Clemente lifeguards said air readings were In the mid 80:! each day and the water temperature was in the bigh 60s. Despite crowds on all the area strands, few rexues were repon.d. The warm weather also brought rat· Uesnakes from their normal hauMs in San Clemente, and in two separate cues police olricera killed vipers In residential neighborhoods. Al the home o! Arthur Glib, ll70 Camino de los Mares, officers killed a rattler on the front lawn on Sunday. A short time later a small rattler was reported In the street at 1401 C.lle Neblina. It, too, was killed. By ROBERT MUSEL LONDON (UPU -Richan! Burton said today he loves Elizabeth Taylor and she loves him, but their divorce last JW1e was the final burial rite o( the great romance and there will be no reconciliation. "Unfortunately, we're lncompaUble,'' he said. "We love each other but we can't live together." Bur1oo said this across lunch 'In a crowded tavern. He was asked If he WASHINGTON (AP) -Nelson A. Rockefeller said today "it is a myth" that bis family exercises vast economic power and added that he sees no conflict posed by the vast financial holdings which brought him nearly $47 million in income the past 10 years. "There cou1d be no conflict with REPORT GIVES GLIMPSE OF HOLDINGS.-Story, Page A3 had beard the reporu that Ellubeth anything because my sole purpose is woukl marry her constant companion to serve my country," the former New these days, Henry Wynberg of Los York governor declnred. Angeles, the man who moved lo wheo He spoke as his vice presidential con- be moved out . __ ~finnaUon hearings opened before the Up to that point. Burton enthrantd Senate Rules C.Ommittee in the vast his Junch companions with the fine flow Senate caucus room which a year ago of anecdotes for which he is famous. ~ the Senate Watergate bearings. He told of bis meetings with Sir Winston Rockefeller was questioned b y OlurchiU, whom be will portray in a Chairman Howard M. cannon (O.Nev.). forthcoming television production based about the potential conflict of interests on one of Churchill's books, "'lbe Gather-which could result from decisions he Ing Stonni'' aOO scheduled for broadcast might make as vice president or presi- (NllC-TV) Nov. 29 -the eve of dent. Cburcbill's looth birtlJlay. He responded that the bulk of his But at the mention of. Wynberg, the income comes from trusts over which 49-year-old actor's face hardened. he exercises no control saying "this "Wbo Is he?" Burton uked, staring myth about the power which my family stralgbt ahead. exercises needs to be brought out Into 0 Ah, well,'' be added after a moment, the open. (See BURTON, Pq:e Al) "It just doesn't exist/' Rockefeller said, noting that he doesn't "occupy Catalina Reeord mysell to even read the list of securities" but leaves financial management "to the very able men" hired by bis family to manage lheJr affairs. Lyn1ie Cox Does It V-nder 9 Hours • Clemente High Hit 2nd Time by Vandals AVALON(AP) -A 2l·y•aN>ld Los Alamitos swimmer conquered the 2l·mile Catalina Channel In record Ume for a woman today and just missed the men's record set by her brother. Cannon described Rockefeller's declaration that public service is h.is whole goal as "a very laudable purpose," but said the committee must determine the impact of "this vast economic power which you say you do not have." Asked by Sen. Claiborne Pell (D-R.I. ), how he would vote on an issue - such as a government loan for Lockheed Airt:rart Corp. -tbat would influence h.is or his family's holdings, RockefeJler said : "I would not be influenced in the slightest, frankly , by holdings. "I am not influenced by so-called interests, not that I have none," he said,. adding : "When one takes the oath of office, from that point on you serve the people ... and put everything else aside ." Questioned by Pell whether he wou1d run for president in 1976 if there was an opening for the office, Rockefeller replied, "I am anxious to serve my ·country in any way I can. I 'would have to presume that $ou1d not preclude (See ROCKY, Page A2) Rocky's 1970 U.S. Tax? Zilch Mary Jo Kopechne, a Conner secretary for Robert Kennedy, was killed when a car driven by the senator went off a bridge at Chappaquiddick Island, Mass. Rogarding Chappaquiddick. Kennedy said he had answered all questions "quickJy, candidly and honestly," in Massachusetts courts. "I can live with my own testimony," he said. "I think I wouid have been able to focus the campaign on the im- portant issues." "I wilt not accept the nomination. I will not accept a draft," Kennedy said. He added that he will "oppose any effort to place my-name in nomination in any state or at the national con- vention, and I will oppose any effort to promote my candidacy in any other way." Kennedy said he reached his decision after discussions with his wife and other family members. The sole surviving son of the late Joseph P. Kennedy said he decided to announce his "decision now "in order to ease the apprehensions within my family about the po~ibility (See KENNEDY, Page A%) SA ILBOAT ..SELLER GOT MANY CALLS WASffiNGTON (UPI\ -Nelson A. Rockefeller said lodav he paid no federal income tax in 1970 - because the other taxes he had · to pay totaled more than his entire income for that year. It came about, Rockefeller told "We got so many calls about our the Senate Rules Committ ee , sailboat we oouJdn .. t believe it." because there were "major shifts That's how a Balboa Island residen t ln the investment portfolio'' of his described the rt!pOOSe to this Daily . more than $100 million trust. He Pilot classUied ad : has •no control over how the money In the trust JsJnvcstect, • µoo II, llaU no. 3708, - ·· ~iJtt of llle~lesor·aiaubslan·, l/sed ocverai Umes by a Lynne Cox reached Catalina Island after 8 hours 58 minutes, breaking the women's record of 11 hours seven minut .. set by Greta Andersen bow at HunUogton Harbour, in 1957, spokeswoman for the swimmer said. Vandals struck for the second weekend in a row at SM Clemente High School, damaging the offices of Principal Darrel Taylor and rifling deSks in th<\ 'adllcGc department. ' f Police said the damag '!<! Taylor~ • otrlce was reiaUV<ty ml!lor, Md in the nthieOc building 'tO!ll.Onl ·~ through • uAi pOrtJon'of>ljie,.)loldings In the :--LolisY 1allor on Lake Arrowhead. · tmst 'ROcWcfeller'~ed to pay more . ' · Many extras, cover. Desperate! Her brother David set the men's record of eight hours 50 min· utes in 1972. Miss Cox, who holds the record lot swimming the English Channel, tried earlier thlJ month to break the record but dense fog forced her to quit. ), a window, ransacked locker~ )nd, maM ofl with $lll In asb from a ~•k dtaw er., Similar acts were reported at (be cam' pus a week ago. 1 , - • tbln $6 mtlli9JI in capital gain! Best offer! xn:-xx1x taxes. Tb&t exceeded his income-' ror the ,:yean\ which was ~.4· Let someone make you an offer you . million. Thus •• he did not have won't reruse. C.11 64N678:; Put I rew I to P:ll' lfl1 tedaral income tax. ~rds to work tor fOU· In the Dally r.. • " ' test facility in the hills. At present it is a dead-end road. Besides discussing the issue of the access to the new dump, councllmen from each community plan to bring up matters of mutual interest in each city. No set agenda has been worked out for the sessioo , officials at each civic center have said . ace ... _ WON'T RUN-PERIOD Sen. Edw•rd Kennedy Woman's Nude Body Discovered In Irvine Area The nude body of a young woman who had been shot once in the head was found Sunday on a lonely stretch road In Irvine, according to Costa Mesa police investigators. The victim, described as being about 25 years of age , five feet · four, 150 pounds with reddish hair and hazel eyes, has not been identified, according to the county coroner's office. Police said clothing that may have belonged to the woman was found scat· tered along the side of Barranca Road near the intersection with Jeffrey Road, where the body was discovered. The articles of cloUtlng included a blue flowered blouse, blue sla cks and black and while shoes. Police were called to the scene at about 3 a.m. when the body was sighted by people in several cars passing by. So far , investigators said, there are no lead! in the shooting apart from the fad that it appears the woman was shot sometime Saturday night. Coast Weather It 'll be another scorcher Tues- day , but not quite as hot as today, according to the weather service. Highs in the low 70s at the beaches aft er the fog lilts, rising to 84 inland. INSmE TODt\ Y HuTTicane·ravage d r tsidl'nts of Honduran villages have sur- vived one crisis -onl),4 to be faced with another. Deadly viper tnakes are swi mming iti the flooded IOW11$. Stt photo and story Page A4. Al Yow Stf'rif:t A, All11 l.notn 11 ... llM &J MIMH Al l,.,M. _. 1AI• HtUonal N.WI M C'aJUOl'llla AS Ot•llM CMtltr Af ,CIQtlfl.. l•lll "'"'-11•11 C*nltt ll lffrti t ..... Ct911WtN II Slld Mffkl11 All DMtll W.tkff Al T_...lllerl Alt NIWIM !tut A& TMti.n Al 1nttrtt111MM1 Al w .. lttotf' M Pia.not Al•All Wwlrt Hf'lllt M --11 - J • I .I. • I ' I A DAILY PILOT SC Monda,, S•pl•mbtt 23. 1974 Checlis to Red Crosfl OC Aiding Fifi Victims Americans are responding to the d.,...Mlo!l In HmdUM\11 from Hunlcooe Fift with ..-y, medicines and other emergency sus>Pues. ...J lo Orange County, a spokesman at the American Red Cross Headquarters Jn Santa Ana said calls have been coming in ltudlly today. The Red Cross does not send clothes or lood to the site of disa>lers beCJ1tise of what 15 considered a prohibitive cost, the spokesman said. '.'But anyone who wants to help ahould m•U us • abed; With 1Hurticane Ftfi' i-~--.or....!HoftdUrat'-wrlUen l.n the-eor.ner ;u she said. 11We1ll forward It to our · Washington bureau and lhey make sure it gets where it is needed." 'llw Salva\10~ Ar)ll)' ta accepllnl food and clothing which wili be shipped to the l.Al6 Angeles Salvation Army head- quarters and then to Honduras. . More Jtdonn1Uon about donat10111 to tho AtrnY may be obtained by calling 546'1880. Food and clothing may be drop- Senate Warned ped oil ot llO E. Fourth Sjroet, Sonta Ana, ud shoUld be cleartY ~. "For Honduras, '1 1 spokesd)IJl. aald. ~ llnei to the llobduru CGntill ln11M Anples were clolncl wllll calll toaay. Inquiries aboilt !Oail' or clolbM do- nallons1 or relatives rnny be made by calling the consul at 21S-6D·t!04. J)Qpatlons may be sent to the Hon<kttas embassies or C<Wulates In Atlanta, Boston, lns Angeles, Jtouston, Baltimore, New York, New Orleans, Miami and San Franclsco. A Honduran Embauy spokesman In Waslllngton. said the !ll'eolesLlleed was for medicine for survivor! of the hlll'· ricane, which left 5,000 contirmed dead ,and an estimated 150,000 homeless. In Miami, Honduran Consul-General Antionio Valladares said there Is a need for almost everything along the country's devastated coast. ••We don 't have anything," he said. "We need everything, e!lpe!:iaUy medical supplies, antlbiotlcs, fuel to 0011 water, '• ....i and clalldal.u • A S~ledplge l1dl6 staUon " Mllihl colleded more than J20,llOO ID """"· ofter )osulng !Ii ~· -OrletM' i.r.o·cammGli!IJ m rtataerili'IPdt doil.UOO,, a • 11111 dozen retlef centers. . Countian Shot In-lluntingtan Beach bv Pair " One HunUngton Beach man was shot and four others threatened early Sunday during an attempted residential holdup, police reported today. The wounded man, Felipe Cortez Perez; of 16161 Parkside Lane, was shot in the neck as he ran to warn his friends when two men ca.me through the front door, acc<lrding to detectives. Terrorist Groups Plan ·Bicentennial Violence Perez was listed in fair and stable condition today at Orange County Medical Center. Police said they are looking for two men, one of whom reportedly carried a .22 Caliber pistol. The men In the apartment did not speak Engli8h, detec- tives said, making it difficult to gather informl!tion until someone who spoke Spanish was available. WASHINGTON (AP) -Terrorists are planning lo disrupt the United Slates' bicentennial ce(ebnltlon with •cl• of violence, Cllllornla Ally. Gen. Evelle YllllllCet told a l!enale pone! tqday. "Bila and pleee1 of information, -• alight, In! appearing in un-d....,.liod pubilcation• indicating that pl... are already being formulaled lo inailnl u..t the lllOth aMlversary yeor of the United St•te• I• marred with domiltlc Ylo1ence," Younger said. Youn1tt, wh01e state has been the center ol terrorld violence ln tecent montlll, Including the kldnaplng of Patricia Hearst, told the Senate judiciary ..-Utile ., Internal security: 11Each 1ear It I.I becomln1 1eu d.UOcult for 1 lemJtlat, with appropr i at e octentlllc-tec.'lrllcol oklllo, to conotruct a chemltal or blologlcal device capable of mau dell:ructlon. The era of ...,....1o1ence may be upon ua." 'launser aald the ·eymbtooese Llbeta- llon Arm!', which clalml responJlbUity for the HW'll kldnaplng, exemplllies the ..., breed ol educeted, ,.oource1u1 11111 dladptmed terrorlltL The SLA, in curJiD1 out that lddnaplng, took a page from 1 boot written by terrorlJIJ in Lalin America, the Middle East and Nortllern Ireland, the the attorney general Aid. And, he added, the SLA proved ilself From Page AI BURTON ... -·---~ "Eliubeth Is such a moral pet900 that unquestionably she will marry this chap. She's not a laJabout. If she goes to bed with eomeone, she marrl.e1 them. So I've no doubt she will marry tbla ... Mr. Weiaberg." Ht emphasized the mispronunciation. 11Are you in touch with her'?" 11 Qb )'l.I. l'm very food of her and I love her very much. And that's reciprocal. And I admire her very much. She's a very lovely and laving womtn. I'm perfectly convinced she will marry samebOdy. Presumably this f~llow." BUrtm and Mlss Taylor w e r e 11tpat1ted ln July, 197!, after 10 years ol. maniage and several attempts at recmclllatlon. Miss Taylor obtained a Swiss divorce lalll J\ine. • • "I will, of course, naturally worry about Ellz.abeth," Burton said. "U she's Ill or something, I'd be there like a fiaah. We swap our babies bad< and forth. one minute I hove mine then hers, and then the has mine. Ab, she's a very delightful and remarkable womM." Burtoo wu relieved when the subject WaJ changed. OUMHCOAST ac ' DAILY PILOT Ti. Clnl'I09 CoMI (ltjfJ Pilol, wll'I 9ftldl II -.._ I!.. N.........._ ii pytJlltr.d !Ir "" Clrin99 CD.i fllllcilltNrlt ~.,.....Millich ... pu1111""9CI. MOftlla)' ll>IOU!lh l'ndly. lot Coll• Mt.a. N'-Ooll a.ach. Huntlr!g!OA lludtl'«in- teon V~. L*~' INM;b. IM ..... ~ "Ill &tr! Cit!MMeJSell Nill ~~-A lintlt ~ tdllloll it pUbllll'leO ~ arid s.,,.. ~ TM prino;lotl ~ pill,_ ii al 330 Well 8111151....i. Cott•"""' c::tlitPmol. 12fi2t. """"°'~ ....... .._, ..... ~ H. LOOl Rlckird r. Ne' A_t .. ~EoMt.n l to be a master at gaining publicity. "From the day their first commun ique was prlnted m full to the day of their shootout -live and in color -they remained a media favorite," he aakt. "All this publicity tends to romanticize the terrorists in the eyes of the public and is instrumental in attracting addi- tiooal 1ympathliers and rupport.en," Younger added. Whatever they call themselves, American terrorists are guided by the Marxist-Leninist doctrine as Interpreted by Mao. Tse-tung, Younger told the sub- committee. He said their essential needs -arms and money -are easily obtainable. Weapons are stolen from military in- ~allations and cash is obtained from sympathizers, bank robberies and thefts of credit cards, he added. The most important tool in fighting terrorism is intelligence Younger said, but little information ls aval1able at the local level. He urged suggestions from medlcal, legal anCi other professionals "so that no stone remains unturned In our efforts to effectively combat terrorism." From Page Al KENNEDY ... of my candidacy, a1 well as to clarify the sltbaUon within my party." Kennedy pledged to work for the next two years for the Democratic party -and its nominees. Kerinedy said th.at a candidate who ls Wl.Bble to make the full commitment needed r.r a presidential campaign "does a disservice to his country ana to hls party." He said he would be a candidate • for re-election to the Sen3te In IM& and plans to do as much as he can "to influence the direction of the natlon." Kennedy said bis announcement 11will permit others who have been interested in gaining the nomlnatl<11 th,e chance for exposure during this campaign." He said, "11te ~1 question before the people Is who's golng to come up with some solutions to our· economlc problems." After Perez was shot. the two intruders ran from the aparbnent, police said. No apparent motive for the shooting was listed. Perez was first taken to Huntington lntercommunity Hospital then transfer- red to Orange county Medi eel Center. The .shootlng took place about. 1 a.m. From Page AJ KISSINGER. • • agaiMt initiators of the fourfold lncrea!e in petroleum prices this year. Kissinger said the United States Is ready to join with all nations in a massive effort to meet the world's needs for doubllng of food production by the end of the centlU')'. "We have an obligation to strive for an adequate supply of food to every man, woman and child ln the world ," he said. At the lntemational food conference in Rome on Nov. 5, he said, the United States will present a nwnber of specific propOsala to increa5e fertl1lzer pro- duction, expand reseai'tb program11, and rebUlld food · reserves against the vagartes of weather. "At a time of universal concern for jU!tlce and ln _an age of advanced technology, it ls intolerable that millions are starving and hundfe4s of millions remain undernourished/' Kissinger said. In __.1__gesture _ l;O _ th~ o_!_l ~roducers, Ki"inger said the United Slate& · is prepared to acr:ept substantial in- vestments of the oil-price revenues and welcomes a greater role for producers in the management of international economic institutionJ. But, he said, there must be a "new understanding" between consumers and producers. "The high cost of oil is not the result of economic. factors, of an actual shortage of capacity, or of the free play of supply and demand," Kissinger said. "Rather it is caused by deliberate decisions to re11trlc.t production and maintain an artlflc'ial price level." \!Pt Te~ .champion' Bonker Terry Italia of Omaha honked his way to the 'world championship · of gook! cilllng in tho l\lissourl Valley ~I Iowa ln lbe finals or this annual evenL Italia who collected a •1,000 grand prue, said, '1 -,Just tried to sound tlke a bunch of geeso calling other geese." • ,, I , . ' DtllY flli.t Sltff l'llttt Lif eguai·ds Pull Deer From Surf • A contused deer thlli wandered Into the surf from Buck Gully at Little Corona beach Sunc;lay afternoon wa• ltd to shore and safely by Newport J!eech lifeguard Bruce Maclay. Maclay swam to the deer when lt was stranded near Ladder Rock rtef alter being herded back towlrds shore b~ I l!&rbllr Patrbl boat;. When he reacheci me fiounderlnl -Alififlil, MltdlY dropped-I rope halter around its neck and tugged It to -e. A few minutes before the lifeguard swam to the Jtranded deer crewmen aboard tlle patrol boat spoiled II as it swam toward the open sea beyond the surfllne. Swimming' eicu~ons by deer that llve in the hilll above the beedt are not uncommon. according to Sgt. Harry Wrl.oht of the harbor patrol. HE SPENT PART OF HIS VACATION ON AIRCRAFT CARRIER Paul Hughes Thinks Navy is a Good Place to Visit ••Because deer can't see above swells, they often become conl\Jsed when the winds are blowing offshMo II.! they were Sunday," said Wright. "Unfortunately, under such condltloM they often head to open seas because the land scent from Calallna 11iaM confuses them," he added. San Juan Boy, 14, Stays For Week on Air Carrier By ·PAMELA HALLAN Of nii. OtJIY flll•I Sl•ff Like mnsl boys, Paul Hughes played baseball this stimn'ier, but he didn't do it on a dirt lot or a landscaped playing field. He did it on the deck of an aircraft carrier. The 14-year-()Jd San Juan Capistrano resident spent a week of his summer vacaUaon on the U.S.S. Klttyhawk, participating in a program the Navy called Operation 11ger. Each crewman was allowed to invite one male retatlve over the age of 12 to travel from Hawaii to San Diego. Paul'• brother, Seaman Bob Hughes, Invited him. "The ship wa1 coming back from a nlne-mool h cruise ln the lndlan and Pacific Oceans," · aaid Paut. who 11 an eighth grader at Marco Forster Junior lllgb. "It stopped one day In ·Hawaii. That's when we got on." Paul Wat impressed with the slr.e ol the !hip -larger than three football fields -and had to get used to stepping over the batches, doorways that are elevated from the floor. He wa1 a!l!llgned to bis brotber '1 duty station, the ship's print shop, but wa1 fee to wander over the entire ship. '0I'hey print a dally newspaper, the f'rotn Page A.t ROCKY ... the presidency . ., Cannon al!IO ra!Jed the question of presidential pardons, noting that Presi- dent Ford declared at his vice presiden- tial hearings last year thal the country Y.11uldn't at.and for sucb an act. He asked Rockefeller if he as president would pardon a president under criminal investlgation. :•My t.ab.1 tftctlnaUon ls to say 'oo,' " Rockef'eller replied. He added that he didn 't feel "I should 1J1J1 at lhls point that 1 will amend the Constitution of the United States," by saying he would take an action ·'ci rcumstances of which I don't know .'' Rockefeller said: "I do not want to get into the box that fny ptedeces90r got into by being frBnk and. open" and then finding changed circumstances upon ascending to the presidency. For an hour after committee members made introductory c o m m e n t s , Rockefeller read excerpt.s or a 72-page statement, crammed with financial data abolll his family'• worldfoide inveJtments and tidbits of family and per90nal history. He promised that "should I ~e confirmed and should Congre" request, I will place immediately all my securities which I own outright" into a blind trust for the duration of his tenure. day's plan, change of command forms. They're busy all day long," he said. At night he slept Jn a room where bunks were stacked to lbe celling. Hi• was right under lhe fillilt deck and once when the plane• toOll olf and lhen landed the entlr11 room shook. "It wa1 like having a cenlrolled crash on top or your roof," he aald. Hl1 sleeping quarters weren't exactly the Hiiton. "The bunk was like· sleeping ln a bureau drawer, or maybe a cof!ln. The mattreu wa1 as thJck a1 the A volume of the encyclopedia. l had to sleep curled up ," he said. The food and the long lines were equally unlmpreulve. But he aald the candy and aofl drink lnacbines dld a landslide bull .... Standing on deck was an Interesting exr.:rlence. 'You couldn't tell you were movtni. It "" like otondlna oo top of a dam waleh1ng the river «o by/' he said. ' During his journey, lhe '°" of Mn. Robert Hughe• was taken on ruJded touro and partlcfpaled in recreallon pro. grams, wlnchJncluded baseball, football. ping pong, and welghlllltlng. Once !he crew had a barbecue on the nJgbt' deck. On another occa11\on a deulctvnent or Marines gave a rifle demonstration and the guests were each allowed to hre an M-14. 11lt has a re al kick to Jt " said Paul. "A couple of guys lost their' balance." He recalled that one perton got Jost and the ship n~arly turned around , think- ing he had fallen overboard. But the elusive guest was located. :aul made himseU useful during the tnp by volunteering for trash duty. And be sat through a few recruitment nlms but they didn 't convince him. ' ·•Everyone kept asking me If I was going lo join lbe Navy," be said. "I enjoyed the trip and I'd Like .to do it again. But only as a guest." Rites Conducted Fo1• Mary Gulick Funeral rites were held Friday in JnglewOod lor .Mrs. Mary S. Oullck, ~. a re!ident of qiplstrano !leach who die<j Sept. t6 In a convalHC..t hespl!Al. Mrs. Gulick, ;,hO lived with her daughfor, Lotilse lAFond, at' 111 Calle Casita. moved fo the SOUlh Coe&l lour years ago. Services wen held al Pierce Brothers •nd Snyder Mortuary in Inglewood, followed by burial at I n g I e w o o d Cemetery. Besides hor daughler, Mra. Gulick leaves two IOM, W. c. Dannedcer or Anaheim and J. M. Dann.Cker of COloraao; 1tx grandchndrt!o lbd sht great.grandchildren. Sunday'! 1wimmer was described IS a "amall buck wel!lhing abollt llO pound&." Koote11ai Tribe To Start Taking Fee From Traim BONNERS FERRY, Idaho (AP) - Kootenai Indians planned to begin coJ. lecting tolls today from trains as well as cart paMinf through the land they have clalmed ln &heir nonviolent war with the United States. Tribal leaders have deferred any decision on further etcalation of their war until late today. They agreed to wait for answers from Washington, D.C. on demands for treaty negotiations and on a request that congresaional leaders visit their area. A spokeswoman for the American ~ dian Movement eald Kootehai Indianl would begin colle<:tlng tolls from Burl- ington Northern trains today. Burlinlton Northern hu a depot in tbe town and she said the railway ordered lt1 ceo- ductors to halt for the tolls. Spokesmen said the Kootenals planned to statt their toll collection st.allonl on U.S. 95 near Boonen Ferry and U.S. 2C In lt'ettern Montana again lodly. Payment has been ltrlctly voluntary. The Kootenais have aalted for treaty negotiations with the United Stale1. Their demal\da include a lJt,000.acte resena- tion and additional cash paymmt for ancestral landJ, which they aay were bartered away without. their knowledge when the other tribes signed an 1• treaty at Hellgate, Mont. 1-Iis Wife's Purse Packed a Puncli BATON ROUGE, La. (UPI) -City police were called to Baton Rouge General Hoapltal to investigate a com- plaint by a %4-year-old · male paUent w!lo said hla estrlhged Wife wne and hit him .. uh her puroe. ·He said the purae bod a brick in it. Police said the patient told them he was in bed when his wife came to visit. He said that after talking, he decided to take a walk.. Police said the patient Mid that his wife went with hJrn,-and , u he tried to go down the stairs, she then hit him from behind with her purse wtlh & brick In It._ Police said the man was not seriously injured. Santa Ana Boy Dies . OCEANO (UPI) -A &.ye1Mld lllN& Ana boy wu kliled lllturday when a dune buggy driven by hio l7·1ear4d sister plunged over an embankment at the Oceano Dul1<& ... th of P11mo Beacll. Charles Kochanlki Jr. wa1 ejected tram the vehicle when it went over a 3&-foot embankment Ind overturned. Accom panied by his wife, Happy, Rockefeller arrived preCisely on time for the 10 a.nt. hearing in the vast caucus room -scene of many other historic investigations over the years. Apple Bobbing? Jn contrast to the Watergate hearings, only a short llne of spectators was on hand. Some of the 200 seats set aside for the publi c remained unfilled, while others were occupied by congressional atalf members . S. Coast Y~ICA Signups Slated Registration for tall south O>ftsl YMCA ·classes opens Wednesday at the Lat1una Niguel CommllD~y Center, !tOOO Crown Valley Parkway. Holirs are 9 a.In. lo ! p.m. lhrough l"rtday. Classes begin nell Monday. Classes include hydroponic gardening, belly dancing, tumbUng, gymnastics, children's creative dance, babysitters training, ladles gymnastics, ladies ex- ercise, heart condlUonlng. yogn , crtiatlve sewing, beginning bl'ldge and guitar. Y 01itlu to Seek Sane H aUoween A clolegatton of San Clemente lli8h School students has won a blessing from city councilmen to find some aort of youth iicllvlty In !be !ioJ1ot 1!iat IMual llallOllten melffs wlll not reeur late next month. City councilmen earlier this month pondered polslble met~ to aasO, whdl ha!I bt«lm! an e•er-increulng lne1, ot ro,}Ydy behavior in several neighborhoods. wt yaar police amlltad jlcm!nt o! youth! 1rter 1 r1rnpa1e In tht Riviera district, a traditional H•IOWeen trouble spot. Preliminary pia.. coll !or a •roup led by snr Clemente High 8<hool Presi- dent Apr\ Dean lo organize en evening or Jive rock music end surf fihm at an open spot In the city. City councilmen promised city help In ora•nlzing the evening of ni:Uvtty, hoping th.at enough teenagers coilld be • IUO!d away from their lradilicnal Halloween haunts. Miss Dean stressed that lpo1110nlnp anil cqailzlUon Ile left up lo the l!udcnt gniup. "If we sponsor something to take place at the high school," she predicted "nobody "1U come, because lhal's tllt wa\> llUtlento '"' these da)'t." She aaid tbot the city's North lle.ach WOll!d Ile a llltel; IPOI for such an activity. • Mayor Thomaa O'Keefe , w h 0 participated in lniliol planning meettnp with tho high 114hool d~leg1Uon, "'1• phaslzed th.at the problom has woracntd In recent year.. "Halloween to a bight that lbould bt lun for yoong children Jn the community. It's their night , and I would hale to oee It marred by a bad perfonnance bJ oldet yollths," he said . ' . Moriday's. Clo 11lng P rices NEW YORK STOCK· EXCHANGE I . ~ ' • J -. \ ' OA!l.'f PllQIAJ l Ye ar's H igh-Lows Appear Evf'.ry Saturd ay Prime Not Cut, Investors Cool NEW YORK (UPI) -The stock market closed mixed Monday In light trading on the New York Stock Exchange. Investor optimism for a prime rate cut, which sent priCes higher for several days. was dampened, producing caution in the market. The Dow Jones industrial average, up at the outset. lost 7.04 points to 663.72. Advances, how ever, held a slight lead over declines among the 1,760 issues traded. Prices were slightly higher on the American Stock Exhcnage. Analysts said many investors were disappointed First National Bank of Chicago did not lower Its prime rate fro m the prevailing 12 percent level, whicK is a record. • ' • • ' • -~ . A 12 DAILY PILOT Deprogram Expert Indicted SEAT'IU; (AP ) -A federal grand jury has indicted a man w!b said he wanted 1'> he ~ed so he couJd explain lh .,. .. ""1ce ol his ~- ~~~~-!<. Jr. "1.:lon lilfl'go -char~ witb kidna~ a member ol a SeattJe.bUed rellgi~ sect known as l'.Ave Is1'ael. • • Monday, Sept.ember 23, 1974 ~ THE FAMILY ORCUS • ~ ' By Bil Keane Dead Son Tried To Quit-Mother SANTA 1\0SA (UPO -The mother of a Eureka man v.-hose headless Temaim were found in a shallow grave has testified that her son was trying 1'> flee frt>m the drug cuJture just belore he disa p- peared three years ago. ~trs. Susan Mtreveli was called in the murder trial of Clayton Rombough, 41. ' In a shallow grave on the Samo8 Peninsula at fl kit .. . Bay Nov. 11 , 19Tl. .. ' ' DISTRICT ATTORNEY '\tilliam Ferroggiaro · said in ~-. "!' opening statement 1'> tile sevtm.~, five-wO"\M jury that RiJmbough's IJ'year-old girl friend, a runaway from Grants · Pass, Ore., would testify that she was with Rom- THE INDICTMEm' con-SHE SAID SHE last saw hough when he made a visit tends he 1ook Kathe her son, Eddie Leoo KinS', to King's grave. Crampton, koown ns Dedica--~ oo Nov. 14, 1971 and that Ferro"iaro said the girl lion lstael within the sect, -==...-:-. he had about $800 on him told him that Rombaugh to Cattfomia in 1973 to when he said, "They won't returned from the graYe site ltH.n..•..:-"deprogram" her. -'·-~-let me stay here. I've got with an item in a pillowcase Patrick, a fonner com-to ~o." . which she later saw was a 2700 E. CoMIHighwa ' . Alriftl PARKING tH RU.I H.n-t:l 0·6:00 P.ity c,.,.._,._._..,. t F&rnleal.; Corona del Mar ' ~7575 munlty relations oonsultant to "I can't toke a nap today -·Ki ttycat's usin• my bed." King 's rem.aim were found skull . ~lifomia Gov. Ron a ld·----------------'------=---------....:.---------------------------'--------- Reagan, claims depn)gram-1'":'.!';::'l:o:;:;:""'-'-'""'),....-r"'"'l''r..,....,..._.:':"':ill ming restores the free will ,., of a victim of "ESP mind control." the indictment says. Patrick told !be grand jury ESP mind cootrol is "a men- tal energy that comes from the brain waves out through the eyes and fingertips," the government said. PATRICK 11US year wrote U.S. Atty. Stan Pitkin that he would welcome prosecution as a chance to explain the I~ of his work. •Patrick operates a ~ ~. ":'~ '~ Ah•• H~· designed 1'> encourag e f ;=~:..:t;~::::W~--~=Sejie~,;;·,;,;25;;;,;i..;;;,m--members of religious secls 1'> return to their families. HE BAS CONCENTRATED his attenUoos on the <llildren of God sect, lhe Tony and Susan Alamo CbrisUan Foun- datioo of Saugus, Calif., lhe Hare KMlna Movement and the New Testament Missionary Fellowmp . Patrick recently was ac- quitted of criminal abduction charges in New York and sentenced last June in Denver to seven days in jail m simtlar cbargea. LeoJXJrd Mystifies Attorney DENVER (UPI) -Joe Taft's lawyer said he doesn' know why bis client keepi a messy, antisocial, 80-pound leopard named Taka around the bouoe. "I guess be enjoys it," said Greg nlibetts, "like some peo- pl:.::E:lt-: ®:~ Tatt in ~ ~t filed by the Ta.lb' former landlords, Jooeph and Michael Caval&L 1be brothers are demanding ~ !n back rent and 13,344 !n damages to a house Taft rent- ed in Coal Creek canyon. Tait moved out of the hOOse without paying the I a st mon!li's rent and leaving behind •iuse aOO abuse beyond normal wear and tear," ac- cording 1'> lhe suit. 111 DON'T FEEL the suit was wammted," Tibbetts said. "Taft said the house was in poor condition when he got there." Taft bought Tak.a, a female, while visiting friends i n Florida, and Wiled the anlma! hhmelf. Wt October, tre 2-year-old ~ Taka leaped from a window • while Taft was taking a shower and jumped on tile 1 hood of a passing car. Taft's n e I g h b or s pressured au- Umities to get rid of Taka. But as long as the leopard • stayed in the house, officials ' ... of the Jefferson County at· tomey's office said, they "-'ere powerless to act. 20 Cents For Call? ATLANTA (UPI ) -The phone <OIJlll8llY has asked permission to raise tbe cost of a call from a pay plme le 20 cents, and to charge 20 cents every time a user has to ask for a P,hoo• number he doesn't know. It's port ol a request by Southern Bell to the Georgia Public Service Commission for an 181.5 millloa rate Increase. Jlis ~ .. ·--·--.. """" 64J..171J • STEPPING . . . . '' ... .... ~!~~?-20010 . ~..:~c.cr.... Off! ... , .. ...., ........... ::,..-.-. ALL SIZES! FALL.SALE! "Fall fs The Time To " L '" lmpro•e rour awn. ""' o;chond ... 5UPERBONU5 . c.-•··· ... ~'· ........ ' .~_ .......... ......... 2500SQ.fl. $4129 5 REG. '1S.9S I for Gt-011 Lawns PLUS 2 a. • <•"-'' ••••'•'· &itilM ._,,, filtf• L sbni • ;;:.-._, ................. !ft. sooosa.n. $ 414 9 5 REG. '16.9S I • plu5Z IOICO .. l\.~ Completefy Finished BOSTON ROCKER • •·••llhtl .... fWsli -'"" .. .. .-. . !::r"'·-.. ·- ..... 11 ···"" ........ -.. • "Lets You Enjoy The Outdoors Year 'Round!" -• 26" wide panels ... to'ver your patio & tum it into a year 'round outdoor living area. • Colorful corrugated fiberglass -easy to install and easy to maintajn. 6fl. REG. '4.lt 3 Tier Redwood HANGING PLANTERS • l NII sire rffwoH ,,.,.,.,, _ , "-'•••• 1dditlon to your gar49ft .-lndeors., tutllotts. • Held logttfter with Mtvral lt.thtf strops. R!G.s499 '9.99 "ANTS NOflNCtUDIDt 1on. llG. ''·" 49 Special Savings! FALL BULB SALE! • G•rantff4 rt gr•w. • "-nt 'em ,..w fer a ct!.rful Sllfi"I ,., .... ft<olo10G;,., 3 c IANUNCUlUS ( RlG. S· a. ·u.,aiho4" ac DAffOD!tS llG. IO• (a. I ' I nn. llG. 'l4t WROUGHT IRON · GATES • le11tlfwlty ,_.,.., ... wr-.tif w.._ "Usett...-..,,.,..,..._,. lO'' 1 30" REG. '23.99 30'' 141" R!G. '26.99 3''' I 30'' REG. '25.99 36" I 41'' RIG. '31.99 •1999 •2199 •2099 •2699 • • 7 • VOL UNI a. blunt Sccreta said ol gene rent tinulng The trying shorta never inger t Genera Whil B T s A 2 an by I The map r The plans with with wild pl -A Hotel to co -A and Hi walk to be club. c A car viol reel I si . -- Laguna ·Bea~h Today's Ftiial N.Y. Stocks EDITION VOL. 67, NO. 266, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES TEN CENTS • Kissinger Gives Blunt Warning on Oil PriCes UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -In a. blunt warning to Arab oil producers, Secretary of State llenry A. Kissinger sald today a world poised on the brink of general depression cannot afford cur· rent petroleum prices, much less con· tinulng lnc.reases. 1 The poorer nations, many or them trying desperately to cope with food shortages, could be ovuwhelmed_ ln a never endlng ihnationary spiral, Kiss- inger told the 291.h session of the U.N. General Assembly.· While oil producers are entitled to 11a fair share," Kissinger said, "it cannot be in the interest of any nation to magnify the despair of the least developed who are uniquely wlnerablc to exorbitant prices and who have no recourse but to pay," The speech followed President Ford's own warning to the General Assembly last week that manipulation of tbe energy crisis oould lead to cowiteraction using food as a poUtic.al and ecoMmic weapon. Arab delegates who detected a veil~ ultimatum in that addres. will be fine- combing Kissinger's speech for evidence of a U.S. errort to turn sentiment, particularly in Third World countries, against initiators of the fourfold increase in petroleum prices this year. Kissinger said Ute United States is OIL NAT IONS HEAR TOUGH TALK BY FORD Pogo A4 ready to join with all nations in a massive effort to meet the world's needs for doubling of food production by the end of the century. "\\le have an obligation to strive for an adequate supply of rood to every man. woman and child in the world,'' he said. At the international food conference in Rome on Nov. 5, he said, the United States will present a number or specific proposals to increase fertilizer pro- duction, expand research programs, and rebuild food reserves against the vagaries of weather. "At a time of universal roncern for justice and in an age of advanced technology, it is intolerable that millions enne Bluebird Tract Site Study Set A 21~me tract proposed for the upper Bluebird Crutyon will be reviewed. by the Laguna Beacb Planning Com· mission meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tueoday II city ball. Tbe development Is opposed by aeverat community groups. 1be commission wlll bold a publlc bearing to determine If an enviroruneotal impact report filed by tbe developer Is odequa!L Tbe staff bas recommended the tract map for the development be denied. Tbe planning staff charged that the plans .for development are not consistent with city general plan sections dealing . with natural drainage c h a n n e I s , wilderness areas, geological hazards and increases in trafftc. 'Ille 122-acre area involved resb betweeo Arch Beach Heights and Morn- ingside Drive below Top of tbe World. Other action to be considered by the plBM<l"S Includes: u,,,......... VICE PRESIDENT-DESIGNATE NELSON ROCKEFELLER CHATS WITH RULES COMMITTEE MEMBERS Froift Left, Sens. How11 rd W. C11nnon, J •mes Buckley, J•cob J11vits With Rockefeller are starving and hundredS of millions remain undernourished," Kissinger said. In a gesture to the oil producers, Kissinger said the United States is prepared to accept substantial in- vestments of the oil-price revenues and welcomes a greater role for producers in the management of international ecooomic institutions. But, he said, there must be a "new understanding" between consumers and producers. "The hlgh cost of oil is not the result o! eoooomic factors, of an actual ' Cites Need To Be Near His Family BOSTON (AP) -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, citing family tragedies, said today that he will neither seek nor accept the Democratic nomination for president or vice president in 1976. The Massachusetts Democrat, with his wife Joan at his side, said, 0 This decision ls firm, final and unconditional. There is absolutely m circumstance or event that will Blier the dedslon." Tbe 42 year-old brother of the late . Presf<lenl John F. Kennedy and the late Sen. Robert F •• Kennedy, bolh of wbotn were assassinated, said be weigh- ed his decision carefully. "One basic fact has becpme in- creasingly clear to me," he said at a news conference. "From the cam- paigns of my brothers before me, I know that seeking the nation's highest shortage of capacity, or or the free play of supply and demand," Kissi nger said. "Rather il is caused by deliberate decisions to restrict produ..:tion and mainta in an artificial price level." Kissi nger said the resull is an "un- precedented · attack" on the world 's economic system, poising it "on the brink or a return to the unttstrained economic nationaJism w h i c h ac- companied the collapse of economic order in the '30s. ace· UPI~ WON 'T RUN-PERIOD Se n. Edw11rd Kennedy office demands a candidate's undivided a11enuon and hi• deepest perSona1 com-Worn. an's Nude mltment. "My primary responsibilities are at home. 11 has becom• quite apparent Body Discover ed -A change of zone for the Riviera Hotel, 82ii S. Coast Highway, fronrR-3 to commercial. to me that I would be unable to make a full commitment to a campaign for -------------:---:------"the~~id rcr-=;;-:::cr---.J--1--..:~~ -" ·re---" sim y lliat lo my wile .a.a . J. ""l'Ille-ft -A pennil to allow the proposed Wind and Sea restaurant, 199 N. Coast HighWQY.., io extend a mf Qver public walkway. Speech Problems Rockefeller Sees N 0 ~r<1,,1'11!i1~::""1 1be other members The nude body or a young woman Kennedy's wife has been in a rest who had been shot once in the head -Permit Riddle Field access drive to be used for a private recreation club. club. Aiaed in Lag una borne twice in _recent lllOlllha and J!j_s__ w~ found-Sunday-on-a-lonely.-streldl----''-1 son Eawan:l Jr.· Jost part of a leg road in Irvine according to Costa Mesa C fl • t w "th w lth last November because of bone cancer. . . , ' School Program on lC l ea ..=:,:i0;~~1e0~!~~:· po,: ~~e:,·,g~~:ibed as being about secretary Ron Nessen .while in Detroit, 25 years of age, five feet four, 150 Cu stomer Not Al1vays Right A San Bemanlino man visiting Laguna Beach over the we6end caDed police to report his car stolen by his girl friend . Police arrested him. The visitor reported hJs expensive English sports car taken, but when of. ficen an-ived at his motel, the car and companion had returned. A records check, Initiated by the sloleo car report, sbowed two old vehicle code vlolallono with outstanding wamnb. The recipient of Laguna hospitality was re- 1.....t on Piii bail. Bridge Jumper Diei; SAN DIEGO (AP) -A 61-yeaMld man leaped lo his death Sunday from the San Dieg<>Coronado Bay Bridge, authorities said. Officials said John Page Jr. of San Diego became the 19th person to fall to his death from the bridge slnce It was opened in 1969. By JACKIE HYMAN Of 1fM Dtilty 1"1111 Shift A new program f0< Laguna Beach kindergarten and ' primary s c b o o l students wilb speech problems is ex- pecled lo begin within the next moolh, school officials said today. "We'll start the program as soon as we can find a third speech pathologist," Dan Sekulovich, district s p e e c h pathologist, explained. He said the state-mandated program, part of a new master plan for special education, will concentrate on teaching yomg dilldren body movement and motor coordination through dance and on building up their vocabularies before they start reading. O!ildren will also ixactice singing and chanting with racords and will be "inun- dated "wilh 90Wld," Sekulovich said. "U a child can't talk well, be's guing to have trouble reading," be explained . The program, which ls financed by state funds, was tried experimentally this Summer With 35 students, including 20 pre-ochooler~ Tbe children, selected after speech iestlng, attended clas,,es at tbe district's Speech and Language Laboratory for two hours each ·day during Ole six~weck , (f!ee SPEECH, Page A!) Catalina . Reeord Lynne Co x Does It Und er 9 Ho urs AV ALON (AP)-A 21 ·year-old Los Alamitos owlmmer conquered the 21-mile Catalina Channel In record time for a woman today and Just missed the men '• record set by her brother. Lynne Cox reached Catalina island after 8 hours 58 minutes, breaking the women's record of 11 hours seven minutes set by Greta Andersen now at Huntington Harbour, In 1957, apokeswoman for the •wlmmer said. Her brother David set the men's record of eight hours 50 mln· utes in 1972. Miss Cox, who hold• the. record foj swimming tho Engli sh Channel, tried earlier this month to bAak the reconl but donse fog forced her to qull • I ., WASRJNGTON (AP) -Nelson A. Rocke£eller said today "it is a myth" that his !amily exercises vast economic Power and added that he sees no conOict posed by the vast financial boldings which brought him nearly $47 million in income the past 10 years. "There could be no conflict wiUt REPORT GIVES GLIMPSE OP HOLOINGS-Story, Pogo A3 anything because my sole purpose is to serve my country," the former New York governor declared . He spoke as his vice presidentlal con- firmation hearings opened before the Senate Rules Committee in the vast Senate caucus room which a year ago .housed the Senate Watergate hearings. Rockefeller ·was questioned b y Burglar s Even Get Kitclien. Si1ik iii Laguna Laguna Beach burglars s t o I e everything -including tbe kllcben sink -in weekend cnme, a coohnuation of a wave of burglaries in the Art O>ainnan .Howard M. Cannon (0.Nev. l, about the potential conflict of interests which could result from decisions he might make as vice president or presi· dent. He responded that the bulk of .his income comes from trusts over which he exercises no control, saying "this myth about the power which my family exercises needs to be brought out into the open. "It just doesn't exist," Rockefeller said, noting that he doesn't "occupy myself to even read the list of securities'' but leaves financial management "to the very able men" hired by bis family to manage their affairs. Cannon described Rockefeller's deelaration that public service is his whole goal as "a very laudable purpose/' but said the committee must detennine the impact of "thiS vast eeonomic power (See ROCKY, Page A!) Rock y's 1970 U.S. Ta x? Zilc li Colony. · . Susan Kesl<lyre ol 1212 Temple Ter- race reported the . theft or a kitc:ben sink and cabinet Swlday from her • · residence. · John Erdmann, 464 Gncoland, Sunday, reported the theft or a $150 Ill-speed bicycle from his home. The (J'Ont door had been IO!'<td open to-gain eiltry~ WASHINGTON (UPI) -Nelson A. Rockefeller said today be paid no federal income tax ln 1970 - beclllUle the other taxes be had , to pay totale,! more than his e11tire )ncomellor !hot yea"· it came about, Rockefeller., lold lbc Senate Rulel Comm II t ee, tiecau1e tbefi were •1major shifts in tho 1nve~t portfolio" of•his more than $100 million trusL He )ias nd control over bow Lile money Charles Sunday, oIB9 ,G r a cc I and reported the toss of $130 In ·~pes , lrid other Items taken Sallirday. Richard Ensign, '313'1 All.a Lo3UM rcporied the loss of 1313 in cash Satur- day. Pollce believe entry to the residence was.. by a bathroom window. R. P. Poyton ol '125 Mystic Way told- officers Saturday a ''Staghom" plant worth $W was Iaken !rom his borne. r/ ;"!Ji lhc !flist la \n9eiled. ,,.,-r,- J t Secause ar the s11u or a sutftan- U1I• .portion of tht boldlngll in the ' ltuat, 114cl<efelltr ha4 lo pay ll10l'e than Ii mi)!lon In capital gains taxes. That excetded his income for the year, which was $1.4 .million. Th•~· he did , noJ.J!!lve to pay any Ccderal income ta1. • io ' ' " where be addressed the World Energy pounds with reddish hair and hazel eyes, ~~~~Y a reporter for bis reaction, has not been identified, according to Foni shook bis head, said nothing, and the county coroner's office. gr~~ 1::f1~ffect the Chappaquiddick Police said clothing that may have incident of · 1969 bad on bis an. belonged. to the woman was found scat· nouncement, Kennedy said : • • T h i s tered along the side oC Barranca Road decision. , . woutd have been made ir-near the intersection with Jeffrey Road, '.espect.ive of the tragedy that ~ppened where the body was discovered. 1n 1969. • • Were I to nm, 1t would The articles of clothing included a have been a factor that would have been raised." blue no\\·ered blouse. blue slacks and ltotary Jo Kopechne, a former secretary black a.nd white shoes. for Robert Kennedy, was killed when Police were called to the scene at . a ~ driven by t~ s.enator went off about 3 a.m. whe'n the body was sighted a bridge ~t Cbappaqwdd.1ck. Island, Mass. b people in several cars passing by Regarding Olappaqwddick, Kennedy Y • • • • said be bad answered all questions . So far, investigators S81d, there are "quickly, candidly and honestly," in no leads in Ute shooting apart Crom Massachusetts oxats. the fact that it appears the woman "I can live with my own testimony," was shot sometime Saturday night. be sald. "I think I wooid have been able to focus the campaign on the im· portant issues." '~I will not accept the nomination. I will not accept a draft," Kennedy said . He added that be will "oppost any effort to place my name in nomination in any state or at the national con· (See KENNEDY, Page A!). SAI LBOAT SELLER GOT MANY CAL.LS . "We got so many calls about our sailboat we couldn't believt 1~" That's how a Balboa Island res.idept described ·the T<5p6nse lo this Dally Pilot dasslfied ad : • LIDO 14, sail oo. 3708, -U~ several times by a Lousy sailor on Cake Arrowhead. Many eltras, cover. Desperate! Best orre.rl ux-uxx Let someone make you an offer you won 't rcluse. can 641~8. Put a lew words lo work £or you. In the Da1\y Pilot. - • Or aDge Coast • Weather It 'II be another scorcher Tues- day, but not quite as hot as today, according to the weather service. Highs in the low 70s at . the beaches after the fog lifts, rising to 84 inland, INSIDE TODAY llurricane-ravaged · reslcU!ntt oj Ilonduran villages 11avt sur· tiived one crt&ls -only ·to be faced with. another. Dtadl.y vipn snakes are sWlf\lmi'11g hi the flooded towns. Sec phoro and story Pa ge A 4. At YtlR' ltnlc:e o\J ... 11'" 11 L,M. h v• o\lt Ctlltw'lll• •1 CltMlftM ... IU Ctfllk' II C,.11weN 11 Dff1'• Jrotollcn Af ltll!Of'lll ,.. ..., lnttrttl-t Al '1•11-Al .. All --" • • AM l..,.. 11 _,.. ... N•liMal N... M °''"" C•M'I' At ,..... 11-lt ...... .. i/Mlo Mltflth A Tttwl\ltll A• 'flleltlWI M w .. tlltf Al Wtf .. "'" A4 ' -. .<\ % DAILY PILOT LB Monday, September 23, l!l74 Lifeguar ds Pull Dee1· From Sud A . conlll!f'd deer lhal wanderl'<( Into the surf froro Buck Gully at Utile Corona beach Sunday artemoon was led to shore and safety by Newport .Be~ch lifeguard Bruce Maclay. !Qcloy swam to the deer when It "'Bl"" •anded near Ladder Rock reef after 'beinf herded back 'towards shore by a Harbor Patrol boat . When he reached the floundering animal. Macla y dropped a rope haller around its ileck and tueged it to shor,. A few minutes before the Jifeguaid s"·am to the stranded deer crewme11 aboard the patrol boat spotted It as it swam toward thQ open sea beyond the surfllno. Swlmmina e1cunions by· deer that live In the llills •bove the beacll are not uncoinlll!ll), accordin& to S&t. H!U'l'Y Wright of tbi harbor patrol . "Because deer can't 1ee abOve swe111, they often become confused when ihe "inds are blowing offshore as they were Sunday," said Wright. .. Unfortunately, under such conditions tife.y. often head to open seas becauae the-land scmt from Catalina I1l1nd confuses them," he added. Sunday's swimmer waa described u a "small buolc welghlnc ~ 110 pounds." f..ountian Shot In Huntington Beach bv Pair ,/ Ono HuntiJlil<n Beach man wu 1hot and four OCl1orl threatened early Sunday durlJIJ an attempted residential holdup, Pol1*e, repqrfed today . 1flei wounded man, Felipe Cortez Perez o! 11181 Parklldo Lane, was ohot In •the neck u he ran to warn hi1 friend• w1lm two men came through the front dcior, ac'cordlng to detectlveJ. Pem wu lilted In fair and stable caadtt!on today at Oranae County P4!ldtcll Cen!<r. :. Pollce ulcl they aro lookin& for two -, ..., of whom reportedly carried a .D callber pillol. The men In the ~"':'}. !!Ji1 not apeak Engll.th, detec-ljWI , .ji>akin_a II dl!ficull to gather iillonnatian unUI 10meone who opoke Sl)ll)ilb WU available. Allar Pe~ wa1 Qol, jhe hf• lntniders r111 from !Iii: a~t, police 111d. No apP,arebt: motive for the shooting was .listed. Perez was first taken to Huntington Interconununity HOlpital Ulen transfer- red to Orange Coonty Medical Center. The shooting took place about 1 a.m. Indian Guides Set lnfomiation Session Sooth Coast YMCA Y·lndian Guideo will hoMt an information. night from 7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Room U ol Laguna Beach High School to t------.acq"""'ua11 nt1>11tmUal members-with lhe- lather-son organizalion. The Indian Gulde progrljlll is open to boys slx to eight years of age and their fathers. The program ii baled on an American Indian theme. One hour meeti!'l&i are held twice a month . For further information , call the South Coast YMCA at 831·9622 or 49!-0453. I . Driver, 19, Killed SAN BERNA!l.DINO (UPI ) -A 19- year~ld Buena Park man was killed early Saturday when his car jumped a curb and rolled over, ejecting him. Charles C. Monahan, an ainnan etationed at nurby Norton Air Force Baae, was :pronounced cfead on arrival at San ' Bernardino Community Hospital. .~ DAILY PILOT T"' Ol'lll'lllt ~ lllMT Pilol. wlfl '<Oflicll ii _.. boftld ~N-~•~1¥fNOtllllfll eo..i l"ublit""'Q ~ S..-tl• ..i~-... DUO!ost>N. ""°~ tl'«lllUb f114r/, lor eo.11 M11M. Newpotl' 8"cll, Hun!ll'IQIOll &elCll/F°""" 111111 V ..... l .... • llfo.c:J1, IM~­ l'IM ~9/S... ~ ~-, A ..,._ l"'9i0NI --II llUflk"*' S.0....,,..,, -$,,"· -The pnt'l<'.1(111 ~ Dl...i ,.._, llO ·~.11 8q S~MI, C<llil1 ......._ C.~""""· i2&26 .bc\-R,C~ V"9P,...._lflda.nw•M ..... """""'•-i ""' • • UPI TfltPlltfl (;ha11apio1a Ho1aker Terry Italia of Omaha honked his way to th~ world cpampionship of goose ealling In the Missouri Valley of Iowa lq the finals of this annual event. Italia, who collected a $1 ,000 grand prize, said, 111 just tried to sound like a bunch of geese calling other geese." Terrorist Groups Plan Bicentennial Violence WASHINGTON (AP) -Terrorists are plannin& to disrupt (he United States' bicenteMial celebration with acts of violence, California Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger told a Senate panel today. "Bits and pieces of information, however sllgfit, are appearing In un· derer<>und publications indicating !bat plans are already being formulated to insure thai the 200th anniversary year of the United States is marred with domestic violence,'' Younger said. Younger, whose state has been the center of terrorist violence in recent months, includln& the kldnaplng ol Patricia Hearst, told the Senate judiciary subcoJ!JIJlitlee on tntemal ,ecurtty; "Each year it ts becoming less difficult for a terrorist, with appropriate scientific-technical skills;to construct a chemical or biological device capable of mass destruction. 11te era of superviolence rnay be upon us.'' Still Loves Liz ~ But Incompatible~ Burton Declares By ROBERT MUSEL LOND.Q!LUJPI) -Richard Burton said today he loves Ellzaheth Tay)or and she Joves him, but their divorce last June was the final burial rtte of the great romance and there will be no reconciliation. "Un!ortunately, we're if1(!()mpatlble,11 he said. "We Jove each other but we can't live togeth er." Burton said this acroSI lunch In a crowded tavem . He was aaked if he had beard the rePorli that Elizabeth would marry her constant companion these days. Henry Wynberg .of Lo• Angelea. the man who moved in when he moved out. Up to that point, Burton enthralled his Junch companions with the fin$ flow of anecdotes for which he ia famous . He told of his meejing1 with Sir WIJiston Churchill, whom he will portray in • forthcomin& televl1lon production based on one of Churchill'• book•, ''The Gather· ing Storm ," and ocheduled for brOadcall (NBC-TV) Nov. 211 -the eve of Churchill's llltlth birthday. But at the mention ol Wynberg , the• 49°year-0Jd actor's face hardened. · ';Who i1 he?" Burton asked, 1taring straight ahead. . "Ah. well ." he lldded after a moment, "Eli...abeth ls such a moral person that unquestionably she will marry this chap. She'• not a layabout. If ohe goer to bed with someone, she marries them. So I've no doubt lhe will marry this ... Mr. We.il:l>erl." ..__ He em phasized !he l!lispronunctaUon. "Are you in touch with her?" "Oh yes. rm V"1 fGnd of Jior llld I love her very' much. And that's reciprocal. And I odmlre her V"1111ucb· She's a very lovely and lOYing worn& I'm perfectly convinced she will mqrry somebo<ly. Pr"wna~ly !ht• fellow." Burton and · Miu Taylor \'ere JC~rated in. July, 1973, after 10 years ol marriage and teveral atlempts at reconciliation. Miss Taylor obtained a Swl!S di vorce !alt June. "I will, of course. naturally 'lorry about Ellµbct~," Burton 5l1id. "If she's Ill or sometblng, I'd be !here like a flas h. We swap our babies bacl< and forth . One minute I have gilne then heri, and then she bas mine. Ah, ohe's a very dellg~([ul and remarkable woman.'' Burton was reUeved when lhe subject was changed. YoWlaer said the Symbione5e Libera· lion Anny, which claims responsibility for the }Jearst kidnaping, exemplifies the new breed of educated, rc&0urceful and di&eiplined terrorists. The SLA, in carryini out that kidnaping, took a page from . a book written by terrorlata in Latin America, lbe Mtdale East and Northern Ireland, the the attorney general said. And, he added, !he SLA proved llaelf lo be a maoter at gaining publicity. 11From the day their firat commWlique w11 printed In lull to the day of their shoolollt -live and Jn color -they remained a media faVorlte," he 1ald. f'rom Page A l ROCKY ••. whlcb you 13Y you do no! !)ave." A1ked by Sen. Claiborne Pell (0.R.I.). how he would vote on an issue - such as a government loan for Lockhetd Aircraft Corp. -that would innuence his or his family's holdin s Rockefeller said;" oura not 1nnuenc in the sli ghtest, frankly , by holdings. "I am not influenced by so-called interests, not that I have none," he said, adding : "When one take• the oath or ofrice,-fr-om that-point on you ser-ve the people .•. and put everything else aside." Questioned by Pell whether he would run for president In 1976 If there was an opening for the office, Rockefeller replied, "I am anxious to serve my country in any way I can. I would have to presume that would not preclude the presidency." Canoon also raised the question of presidential pard ons, noting that Pre&i· dent Ford declared at his vice presiden· tlal hearings last year that the country wouldn't stand Cor such an act. He asked Rock efeller if he as president would pardon a president under criminal investigation. "My t.ota1 ftn:tination i's t.o. say 1D(),'" Rockeleller replied. Ile added that he didn't feel "I •houfd ., at Uits point that I \vill amend the Constitution of the United States," by saying he would lljke •n action 'fcircWDStanccs Of which I don't know." Rockefeller said: "! do not want to ge\ ·into the box that my predece"°r 1101 lnlo ~r belna frank a,nd open" and then finding chonaed circumstlll)cea upon ascendin& to the presidcnC}'. Lag un~ Building Tukes Sligl1t Dip; Yea1·'s Total Up -~ Building activity In Laguna Beach In Au111st was down tllghtly 1rom the oame monlh IAli year bul building llCllvity for the year hal bicreued, city ofllctala report. - Lui month, 35 building permJts valued at N ,511 w1rt l•ued. ln AUIUlt, 1973. thtre· wera 61 building permlll valued at 1717,717. How .. er, '° far \birytar the city has Issued 441 building permilo valued at 111,540,888. In , the fll1t eight months of 1'71. Lapna Beach lssl!Od Ut permits v1lued at 17.111,419. U.at month'• l'!rmlts include11 Ii for slnfl' • family dWtlllng1, v1!ued al W ,793. Thera were al10 13 permits lot addiliOlll and alltrationt and 11 for eoo1tnicUon o/. IUch ll<m$ at fen cea, swimming pools and garages . UCI Fall A~tivities Beginning 'l!1e nnt ifOUPt or 1tudants who will attend UC Irvine when Ill loth year or Wtruction be-gins next week began arriving today for a wtt!k of ori111tetion. A total of !,811!> studenll ar, expected to attend toe unlvertjty thl1 year, up 400 from lall fall . About one third of the total will be entering fres hmen and transfer students fro1n other institUtiOJlS, The Vt'ffk's actlvitie1 are 1in1ed largely at eJvina the new students a chince lo bocoine ..familiar with !he campwi, locllte their cla1se1, and get acqualn~ with the variety of actiVIUes aVallable at the 1rv1 .. camput . M06t of tlje n1w ttudents wUI live in aparl!11ents off cam~ or with their • parents, and a new comm14ter student Prt>sram lJa'1 heen formed lo flCt them involved in campus life. Regiltration and. infonnation packets given the students Ust a number of activities aimed at getting the commuter students together. Thrtt! areas \vhere a large number of co m mu t e r sUudents live have been identified as placea six off-campu8' UCI !Judenl advisors will set up centers of activity In their homes. The area1 are Balboa Island, Balboa Peninsula and tbl Costa Mesa-Santa Ana Heights area . Other activities set for the week are speeches by UCI scientists, a camp out in the track and field area of th e campus, and a fair in the campus park. The week will end Friday with a noon debate between pbematoriaf can- dldatet Houllon FIOIQO)' and Edmuncl G. prown Jr. f'ro1n P .. e Al KENNEDY ••• ven1ion, and I will oppoae any ef(ort to promote m~ caodldacy tn any other way." . Kennedy oaicl he reached hi• decl1lon after -with hi• wife and olher family memben. The IOfe ourvtvln& ton of the late Joeeph P. Kennedy uld he decided to announce hi• declolon now "in order to eaee the apprehenllcnt wllhin my fam!IY about the poulblUty of my candidacy, 81 well u to clarify the 11luallon J!'lthln my j!lrty." ~nnedy pledged to work for the uett two years for the Democr1Uc party and Ill namlnets. , Kennedy ,.Id tbal a candidate who Is unable to make the fuU oommltment needed for a pretldentlaf compol111 "don a dlnervlce to bis C<!W\lry and to bit party." . He oaid he would be a candidale for r ... 1ect1on to the -te tn 19'11 and plant to do 81 much u be can "to lnlluence the direction of the nauoa." Kennedy aald ht. arw>uncement ''will permit others who have been interested in gainini the nomination the chahce fur exposure during th.ls campaign." He said, "The real question be.fore thepeop:!e~lrwho•s:-going-to rome-up with some solutions to our economic problems." S. €oast ¥1\fCA- Sign11p s Slated Registration for !.all South Coast YMCA classes opens Wednesday at the Laguna Niauel Community Center, 31000 Crown Valley Parkway. Hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. through Friday. Classes begin next Monday. Classea include hydroponic gardening, helly dancln&, tumblln&. gymnasUcs, children's creative dance , babysitters training, ladies gymnastiel,. ladle! ex- ercise, heart conditioning, yoga , creative sewini, beglnnlni bridge and guitar. Orchei>tra in Veuice VBNICE, Italy (UPI) -Venice today weleom,cl the Loo An11ele1 Pbllharmonic Orchestra, bore !o try to help uve a tiny bit of this ancient Ind dying city. The orchestra, coQducted by Bom- bay-born director Zuhan Mehta , wl!I give a frtt concert tonight in solidarity with employes of the debt-plai!.!cd 18ht cen· tury La Fenice opera house. . ........ , Ul'I Ttl.,_... They're i1a Henve1a The first Orlando, Fla., c9n1ic ilfl convention was a haven to collecl· or1 of old comics 1n4 orjginaf con)ie art, but these two aren't con· cemQd with nosta111ia, Robert Smith, 11, and his sister Kimberly, 9, just dig comics, old or new and they dig Into t~e stacks here. Driver Arrested In Laguna :Beach On Gun Charges Llflllla Beach Police arretted 1 '!.- year<>kl Maywood man Saturday follow· lni 1 trafllc accident when the inv.,ti· aatinJ officer fow1d a loaded .~ auto- matlo plltot on the lloorboard ol hit car. · Maurice A. Kelley, a factory worket\ w11 booked for poueaolon of a loaded weapon, po11euion of a weapon with lit Mtlal number fil•d olf, for allepcf dnmk drlvln1, JlOllOI,... ol a 1wlt· ctiblade knife and fll' tnvmta.iiotl of an armed robbery. Kelley'• dacrlpt!oo ma!chod that ol 1 man wanted lot 1 robbery In Newport Qeadl. However, he hi• been checktd Olli and cleared, Niwpiirt detoollvea teld today. • f.1!111111 Beaeh poUce,arrelled the man altar a car ·"'11Clt 1110 portiad oars oa•lou\b Cout llflhw1·lltuiGa1. Kooteriai Tribe To Start Takirig Fee Frorn Trains BONNERS FERRY, Idaho · ,IAPl - Kootenai Indians plaMed to bl&in eol· lectilfg tolls today-from tratnsr as-well as cars passing through the land they have claimed In their nqnviolenl wer with the United Stales. ..'J'rihaLlead .... -have-defel)'ld-.any decision on further escalation of , their war until late today. 'Ibey agreed to wait for answen from Washington, D.C. on demands for treaty negotiations and on a request that conareUional leaders visit their area . · A spokeswoman iM the Amedcan In~ -dlan l\fovement said Kootenai Indians would begin collec!lng toil1 froin Burl· ' ington Northern ttalns today. B1trllngton Northern has a depot i~ the ~n and lhe aaid the railway ordered Its con- duclors to haft for the tollt. , Spokesmen said the Kootenals p!aMed to stall lhetr toll collectkm •tationt on U.S. 15 near Bqooero Ferry and U.S. 2C tn -ern Montana apln today. Paymen t hu been atrtctly voluntary. The JCootenais have asked for tre1ty negot1•1on1 with the Unit,cl Stale!. Their demands Include a IJl,000-.cre reterva· lion and additional cub paymenj /or oncestral landt, wblcb t!IeY iay were ·bartered awsy without their knowledge when the other lrlbes signed an 185S treaty at Hell&ate, Moqt. ' Today's First Day of 4utu1nn WASHINGTON (UPI) -Today is the first day or autumn for those of us who Jive in the northern hemispllert. It began offictally at 2:51 a.m. PDT when the sun was directly over the equator on the boundary of Uganda and Zaire in Afri ca. This Is kpown to allronomers as autumnal equinox, the time when the nighttime is equal to daytime. Frf!m P .. e A l SPEECH ••• summer sclx>ol . "Soma cblldren ~ill stlll have ~ PfObleQIS '.bpf fl>ty've ~ Jjv!J, an or1l break," Sekulovich told school trostees last week when be rt-ported on the summer program. At pre<e11t, Sekulovich and Barbara Wrtght, the diilrict's other -'1 patholoiist, W!lrk with small &rQUp& ol children with hearlni and s~ pro- blems for baU-bour ..,.Ions 'tWIC. a week. Sekulovlch said !here are wa itjllll list. for the speech pathology J<OiflJI'. He said as soon as a new patholoeist is found, he will lake charge ol tho early cbildhood education program. Ctirbs on Scuba Classes Sought Scuba diving classes will be restricted to certain hours during summer months on Laguna Beich strands if a law under consideration by the city council Is pass- ed. The measure received preliminary ap. proval by the council. A locond reading of the measure ls schedu1ed ror Oct. 2. The Jaw would ban scuba di viiw classes from the beach except betwetii 7 a.m. and 10 a.m. JWJe 15 through 'Sept . 15. LalUJll Beach lifeguards will attempl . to more closely monitor such clasaes. The city may impose new controls oo the diviriC cla sses followini a state and county probe into the subject. Ford With MansfieJd WASHING TON (AP) -President Ford held a '!"et!tlng tt;>dal wilh Senate Democratic leader 1'-1ike Mansfield and three senators at ~tansfield's hom e. The President went. by moton:ade from !he White House to M11nsfleld's modest brick home in northwest Washin&ton. Cheek• to Red Cro•• OC Aiding ~if i "Victims ' Americans are rtspondlng to the devastation in Honduras ,from Hurricane Fifi wllh money, medlclne1 and other emergency llUPPll.._ Jn Orange ·County, a rpokesman at the American !led Cross Headquarters In S.nla Ana said calls heve been coming In alesdily todoy. The n.ct · C'°" doei t10i-ocnd clothes or food lo the Ille of dlsa1lers beca'l"' · of what Is considered a prohibitive cost, the •Pokesman said. "But anyone who wants to help sl)ould maU us a ehcck with 'Hurricane Fifi' or 'Honduras' written ln the corner1" she satd. "We'll forward ti to our W~lhin1ton burea~ and !hey make 1ure. It &et.I wbero II Is needed." The salvation Army Is acoepttnc food and cljl!bln1 which will be •hipped to the Los Angeles Salvatkm Army head- quarters and lJlen to Honduras. More inlonnallon about donal!n lo the Army m•Y. be obtained by calllnc I 146-7880. Food and clothing may be drop- ped olf 't "o II:. Fourth Strffl, Santa Ana, and 1hould be cle1rly marlttd, "For. onduras/' •-spokeinan 11ld.- Phone llnt11 to the Hon<111r11 Con14l In Los Al\ielet were clog1ed with calls todly. lncjulrteo al!out food or clotht1 do· .nations, or rel11Uvtt may be made by callln1 !he """"11 at '11-fU-1804. Donations may he S<IIt lo tho Honduras embaliiOI or ~Oltllulatu In AUan(a, lloiton, Lot An&1ltt, -!loutlofl, Baltlll10\"e New York , New Orleans, Miami a;;d San Francloco. .· A HondUl'llll Embessy opokesm,;. II Washington said the greatest need wu for modlclne for .survivon of the huri rlcana, !l'bich left s,ooo confirmed deal a.nd an estimated 150,000 homeless. In Miami, ~tonduran Consul-Oenerll Antlonlo Vallo~1ra1 eald thert Is a neoj for 1lmoot overythtng alon& !he coun1ry•1 devutated co11t. , "Wa don't have anythlni," he sait "Wa neecl evorYihlng, elll<clany medic~ •pJll)llOI, 1nt1bfo!IC1, !u•l to boll wat011 food and cloth Ina." A .8panl1h-lanaua1e radio station u MlamJ collected more III.on !20,000 ij houl1 •lier 1,.uln& an nppeal. Ne-I Orlllnt' l•l'tl• eommunlty of llonduraq born residents m•de dona~°"' at a hel dozen relief centers. ., J. VO I Nea up to for a Tuesd heco The at cit The I who was roa poli has the p bel ne wh bl bla m pl de ad re ov di sy di a Saddlehaek Today's Final N.Y. Stocks EDITION Irvine Town Center Plan Headed for Council By DOUGLAS FRlmCJIE ot ,,.. o.lt~ Pl .. I Sllfl Nearly IS years of planning have led up to the Irvine Company application ror a wne change before the city council Tuesday for 250 acres intended to become University Town Center. The 6:30 p.m. meeting will be held at city hall 4201 Campus Drive. The proposed deve lopment is on a crescent shape plot between UC Irvine and William Mason Regional Park. The Irvine Compnny plans to build to~ and apartment ; residential l units at the tips ol the crescent, with density increasing toward the central area. The core area has been described by the company as having a European atmosphere and will contain a mix of commercial and residential facilities. Some building.. in that area, the com- pany pro~s. will cootain shops on the ground floor, offices Oli the second and apartment; at the top of a three- story strUcture. Approximately 10,700 people arc ex· peeled to live in the development. Two primary concerns with company plans listed by planning and other com· missions whlch have reviewed the pro-- posal are housing and the amount of land to be set aside for parks. The city bas been trying to develop a method for providing homes in Irvine for people earning less than $15,000 a year. The planning commission in approving the zone change application, stipulated that 10 percent of the housing in Town Center be priced in a range that moderate--income families wit h incomes bet~·een $80,000 and $15,000 a year can afford. The company has also proposed that the standard 4.5 acres per 1,000 popula· lion park requirement be cut lo 3.5 because of the urban atmosphere of the development. The Town Center area has also been eyed as a source of housing for stUOents al UC!. In a leuer to the city council, the company outlined Its plans. Of the t,000 to 1,100 homes ' in the area, 2Q percent will be priced in the $27,000 to $31,000 price range, 23 percent enne NutkBody Found Snot In Irvine The nude body of a young woman who had been shot once in the head was found Sunday on a lonely stretch road in Irvine, according to Costa Mesa police investigators. The victim, descn'bed as being about 25 years of age, five feet four; .... 150 pounds with reddish hair and hazel eyes, has not been identified, according to the county coroner's office. Police said clothing that may h3\'e belonged to the woman was found scat· tered along the side of Barranca Road near the intersection with Jeffrey Road, where the body was discovert'd. The articles of clothing included a blue flowered blouse, bl1,1:e slacks and black and white shoes. Police were called to the scene at about 3 a.m. when the body was ·sighted by people in several cars passing by. So rar, investigators said, there are no leads in the shooting apart rrom the ract that it appears the woman was shot sometime Sat urday night. Semple Named To Water l Jnit William ·M. Semple has been named the new director or operations for the Jrvine Ranch Water District. Semple, who has been an assistant manager for the district since May, re- pluaces Lars Andersen. Anderson has moved to the engineering department where he is working on advance planning for the district's water recycling system. Semple will be responsible for the overall operation or the 70,(1()()..acre district. The district operates a two-level water system, providing potable water to homes, reclaiming the sewage, aJ!d distributing the reclaimed water for agricultural and landscape use. Orange C:.ut • Weather It'll be another scorcher Tuea· day, but not quite as hol as today, according to the weather service. Highs in the !Ow 70S at the beaches after the fog lifts, rising lo 84 inland. --INSIDE TODAY Hurricane-ravaged resident8 of Hondura1i 'Vlllag'es have sur--_ vtved one crisis -ml.l11 to be faced witll onot114r. Deadly viper snakes arc swimmb111 i~' the flooded towns. See p1ioto ond storv Page A4. Al Yt\lr StrYICt Al INlllll 11 L..M. h'ff All C•Hlenll• t.t Cl•11ltltll u.•11 Ce min I> C,.,,..,.. IJ 0.1tll Hotlut Af •t11i.ritl I'... A• •1t1trl1llWMl!t Al fllNllCll A1•Al1 HtrMCffll II Allll L•ndtn 81 MOYltl . Al fllOl~1t Ntwt Al Orlllfe Cw11ty At ..... cl·•• S1«1t .. 11 lfldt M1rkel1 All TtltYlllM All TllNltn M WNlflor M W«M News Al ' UPI,...... VICE PRESIDENT-DESIGNATE NELSON ROCKEFELLER CHATS WITH RULES COMMITTEE MEMBERS .From Left, Sens. Howard W. Cannon, James Buckley, Jacob Javits With Rockefeller Rockefeller Sees No Conflict With Wealth WASmNGTON (AP) -Nelson A. Rockefeller said today "It Is a myth" that bis family exercises vast economic power and added that he sees no conflict posed by the vast financial holding.. which brought him nearly $47 million in income the past 10 years. "There could be no conflict with REPORT GIVES GLIMPSE OF HOLDINGS-Story, Page A3 anything because my sole purpose is to serve my Country," the former New York governor declared. He spoke as his Vice presidenUal con-- finna Uon hearings opened before the Senate Rules Committee in the vast Senate caucus room which a year ago hou.ted the Senate Watergate hearings. Rockefeller was questioned by Chairman Howard M. Connon (!).Nev.), about tbe potent.Jal conflict of interests which could result from decisions he might make as vice presideslt or presi~ denl. He responded that the bulk of his Trustees W eigl1 Guard Proposal A Jll'OPOS8} to make the Snddleback College campus available for occasional use J>y tbe camornla Army National Guan! Is one o/ the Items to be diocussed at a regular boanl ol trust ... meeting tonight. Also on the agenda for the 7:30 p.m. meeting In Room 211 of the library arc : · -Report oo the campus veterans ~ gram. -screening of a mm about Saddleback wblch has be<n llhown al local ''"'vice groups and clubs. -Enrollment rep()rl for the fall quarter which began sept ll -Di!CUsaion on lntcnllslrlct tuition billing and the nursing .cholarshlp pro- gram . • income comes rrom trusts over which he exercises no control, saying "this myth about the power which my family exercises needs to be brought out into the open. "It just doesn't exist," Rockefeller said, noting that he doesn 't ''occupy myself to even read the list of securities" but leaves financial mahagement "to the very able men" hired'by bis family to manage their af£airs. Cannon described Rocke£eller's declaration that public service is his whole goal as "a very laudable purpose," but said the committee must determine the imJ)8ct of "this vast economic power which you say you do not have." Asked by sen. Claiborne Pell (l).R.J.). how he would vote on an issue - such as a government Joan for Lockheed Aircraft Corp. -that would influence his or his famUy 's holdings, Rockefeller (See ROCKY, Page A!) Rocky's 1970 U.S. Tax? Zilcli WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Nelson A. Rockefeller said today he paid no federal income tax in 1970 - because the other tBJCes he had to pay totaled more thrui his entire income for that year. It came about, ROckcfeller told !he Senate Rules Com m I lf ee , because the.I'& were "major shirts Jn the investment portfolio" of bis more than 1100 million trust. He has ao control over how. the mooey in the trust is invested. Because of the. sales of a substan- tial Portion or the holdings in the tru5t, Rockefeller had to pay more than $6 million In capital 119ins taxes. That exctedcd bis income for the year, which was $2.4 million. Thus. he · did not have lo pay any federal income tax. Cycling Officers 'J' o Be Disci1ssed By Irvine Panel The possibility of bicycling policemen is among the items to be discussed at a special meeting of the Irvine Bike Trail s C.Ommittee tonight. The 7:15 p.m. meeting will be held in the fifth floor conference room of the Irvine Company's offices at 550 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. C.Ommittee chairman Juanita Moe said the meeting, open to the public, will be held at the Irvine Company of£ices to give the committee a chance to look into the kind of research the com· pany used in dtaf'iill.J its trail system. At a previous meeting, she said, the company invited the committee to re- view the infonnatlon. PriricipaBy, she said, the committee is interesfM in detennjning where people using the trail system will begin and end their trips. With the city police force scheduled to begin operation next September, she said, the committee will consider en· couraging the city council to initiate a program of bicycling policemen. Other items to be considered are a bicycle safety film and policy statements for the master plan of bicycle trails. J u1tior Women Sign Up Voters lrvine Junior Women's club represen- ta tives will be at the Irvine City Hall to register voters for the Nov. 5 election during the week before the Oct. 6 rogtstration deadline. Deputy "'8lstrars will )le at city hall sept . 30 throug~ Oct. 2 from 10 a.m. and Ocl. 3 and 4 from 9 a.m, to 5 p.m. 1· Persons unable to go to the city hall during thllt!e llOurs sbould call the Git of lrvlne at 833-3840 !or the names of deputy regls!ran they may contact \.for other •rrangem~ts to register. Quesll<ils te(8nllng registraUon wilt be answered by the city or the Orange County Registrar of Voters Office at 834·2244. , in the $32,000 to $35,000 bracket, 23 percent from $36,000 to $40.000 and the rest from $40,000 up. No specific area has been planned for students , the company sa id , but 45 percent or the apartments in TO\Vll Center are planned to rent in the ~150 to $200 a month range. The company letter emphasized that the prices are based on summer 1974 rates. "~iaterial, labor and financing rosts continue to rise, of course, along \Yith everything else. So these figures are, ' Cites Need To Be Near His Family BOSTON (AP) -Sen. &!ward M. Kennedy, citing family tragedies, said today that he will neither seek nor accept the Democratic nomination for president or vice president in 1976. 1be Massachusetts Democrat, with his wife.~oan at bis side, said, .. This decision Is finn, final and unconditional. There Js absolutely no circumstance or event that will alter the decision." Tbe 42 year-old brother of lhe late President John F. Kennedy and the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, both of whom were assassinated, said he weigh· ed his decision carefully. "One basic fact has become in· creasingly clear to me," he said at a news conference. "From the cam- paigns: of my brothers before me , I know that seeking the nation's highest office demands a candidate's undivided attention and his deepest personal com· mitment. "My primary responsibilities are at home. It bas become quite apparent to me that 1 would be unable to make a fWI commitment to a campaign fo r the presidency. "I simply cannot do that to my wife and children and the other members of my family." Kennedy's wife has been in a rest home twice in recent months and hls son Edward Jr. Jost part of a leg last November because of bone cancer. President Ford learned of Kennedy'i amnmcement from White House press secretary Ron Nes.sen while in Detroit, where he addressed the World Energy c:oruerence. Asked by a reporter for bi s reaction, Ford shook his head, said nothing, and grinned broadly. Asked what effect the Chappaquiddick (See KENNEDY, Page A!) SAILBOAT SELLER GOT MA.NY CALLS "We got so many calls about our sailboat we couldn't believe it." That's how a B3lboa Island resident described the response to this Daily 'Pilot classified ad: LIDO I(, sail no. 3708, Used several times by a lousy sailor on Lake Arrowhead. Many extras, oover. Desperate! Best offer! xxx-xxu Let someone make you an offer you ~m't refuse. Call 642-5678. Put a few Y.'Ords to y,·ork for you. ln the Dally Pilot. at best, hopeful estimates." the letter said . ~Iuch of the land the coinpany pro· poses for use as parks y,·111 not fall into the usual pattern. Of the total 37 .2 acres set aside for parks, 16.5 acres would be in malls, plazas and walkways, 13.7 acres in greenbelt parks and seven acres would be landscaped slope banks. 'The company contends that, because or the nearby regional park and the UCl ('ampus, less park acreage than usual y,•ill suffice. ace UPI~ WON'T RUN-PERIOD Sen. idward Kennedy Kissinger Raps A1.'ah Oil Barons On High Prices UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -In a blunt warning to Arab oil producers, Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger said today a world poised on the brink or general depression cannot afford cur· rent petroleum prices, much less con-- finuing increases. The poorer nations, many Of them trying desperately to cope with food shortages, could be overwhelmed in a never ending inflationary spiral, Kiss· inger told the 29th session of the U.N. General Assembly. While oil producers are entitled to 11a fair share," Kissinger said, "it carmot be in the interest of any nation to magnify Uie despair of the least developed who arc uniquely vulnerable fo exorbitant prices and who have no recourse but to pay." The speech followed President Ford's own warning to the Geaeral Assembly last week that manipulation of the energy crisis could lead to counteraction using food as a political and economic weapon. Arab delegates who detected a veiled ultim atum in that address will be fine. combing Kissinger's speech for evidence of a U.S. effort to turn sentiment. particularly in Third World COWJtrles, agaiq..st initiators of the fourfold increase in petroleum prices th.is year. Ki~inger said the United' States is ready to join with all nations in a massive effort to meet the workt's needs for doubling of food production by the (See KISSINGER, Page A!) Catalina Re~ord Ly n1ie Cox Does It Uride r 9 l;lorirs AVALON (AP)-A 21 ·year-old Los Alamitos swimmer conquered lhe 2l·mile Catalina Channel in record time for a wo1nan todav and just missed the men's record set by her brother. • Lynne Cox reached Catalina Island after 8 hou rs 58 minutes, breaking the wo1nen's record of 11 hours seven minule set by Greta Andersen now at Huntington Harbour, in 1957, spokeswoman for the swimmer said . Her brother David sel the men's record or elght hours 50 min· ules in 1972. Miss Cox, who holds the record for swimming the English Channel, tried earlier this month to break lhe record bul dense fog forced her lo quit. A DAil Y PllOT IS Monday, Septrmber 23, 1974 Terrorists to Disrupt Bicentennial Revelry ) WASHINGTON (AP) -Temrists are planning i; disrupt the United States' bicen~ennlal celebration with acts of _w.ioICQCe._califomia Atty. Gen. Evelle Y-r told a Senate panel today. ' B ti a.nd pieces ot lntormaUort, however 'Slight, are appearing in W1'- derground publications indicating that plans ;ire ;a1re,.ty being ronnulaled to iqsure tbat the 200lh anniversary year of the United States is marred with doMestlc violence," Younger said. YOWlger, whose state has been the center of terrorist violence in recent monl111, includin& the kidnaping or Patrlci1 Hi,nt, told the Senate judiciary subconunittR oa intem1l HCU.rlty: "Each·ytar it i1 becoming leu difficult for a tetJWJst .. with appropriate 11Cientlli~icol &kills, to C011Jtruct a chemical or bioloeical device capable of mass destruct.Ion. The era or superviolence may be upon us." Younger said the Symbionese Libera· Uoo Armf, which claims responsibility for the 11 .. r11 kidn1ping, e1emplllle1 the new breed of educated, rtSOUl'(e:fuJ and disciplined terrorists. The SLA, In from a book written by terrorists in carrying out that kidnaping, took a page Latin America , the Middle East and Northern Ireland . the \the attorney general said. And, he added, the SLA proved ·itself to be a master at gaining publicity. "From the day their first communique was printed 1n full to the day of their shootolll -live and in color -tbQy remained a media favorite," he said. · "All this publicity tends to romanticjae the terrorists in the eyes 9' the public and ia initrum9ntal in attracting addi· UP1T.._.. Claatnplon Bonker Terry Italia of Omaha honked his way to the world championship of goose calling in the Missouri Valley of Iowa in the finals of this annual event. 1talia, who collected a $1,000 grand prize, said, "I just tried to sound like a bunch of geese calling other geese." . • t.1onal sympathize.rs and supporters,'' Younger added. .Whatever they call th em selves, American terrorist1 art guided by the "3i'i:1it-Lenlnlsrdoclrine as;nterproted by llao T,..lq, Youn1er told the aub- commlttee. He said their essential needs -arms and money -are easily obtainable. Weapon• are stolen from military In· stallations and cash is obtained from sympalhlaero, bank robberie1 and the!ls or credit cards, he added. The most important tool in fighting terrorism is intell igenceJ Younger said, but little lnform.atlon is avaflable at the local level. He uried suggestions from medical, legal and other professionals "so that no stone remains unturned ln our efforts to eff~ively combat terrorism." First Students Arri,·e Today At UC Irvine The first groups or students v.•ho \rill attend UC Irvine v.•hen its loth year or instruction begins next week began arrtvln1 today fer a week of orientation. ,\ total ol l,llOO students are Hpected to 1ttend the university this year, up 400 from loll fall . About cne thlrd of Ille lclal will he enterln1 freshmen •nd transfer students fropi !)ther lnsUtutlona. ,,,_week'• activttle1are1in1ed larael y at 1ivln1 lhe new studenta a chance to 6ecari\e familiar with the campus, locate their cla11es, and get acquainted with the variety of activiUea available at the lrvloe campus. Most o( the new students will live in apartments oft campua or with their parentt, and a new commuter student program hll been formed to aot them involved in campus life. Regiltratlcn and information packet• given the -ts list a number or actlvltl,. .lllmed al geUina the COID!Duler student• together. TbJee areu where a Jar1e number ot commuter stludent• im have beet\ ldenllfled as places sl• off.q111pu1 UCI itudent advilOfl will set up center> or activity in tbeit homoa. '!be areu aie Balboa Island, Balboa Penlnaula and • the Colla Mesa.Santa Ana l!el&hts area. Other actlvlU., IOt for the week ;ire s-bes by UC! sct81Ull1, a camp out in the track and field area of the cunpus, and a fair In tbe cam})IJa park. The We<!k will end Friday with a noon debate betv.·een gubernatorial can· didatea Houston Flournoy and Edmund G:-Brown Jr. . .... .. . ' Take Your Pfcfi ... • • D1Ur ''*'1 $lltf Pllltt If you live around this 15-acre lake in Lake Forest ways to ease into autumn. The lake is one of three off Ridge Route Drive, you have the choice of sail· in Lake Forest, with the other two seven and 35 ing, fishing, or strolling in your spare time, aJI nice acres in size . 1'he latter has not been complet~d. ~~~~~~~~~~~.~~~~~~~~~~--'-~- Judge to Free Lt. Callev? OKLAHOMA CITY (UPll -A federal judge will overturn the con· viction of former Army Lt. William L. Calley Jr., for the My Lal mallaQ"e and set alide hi• l~year priaon INlntence, prqliably this week, acconiln1 to 04 we11·1rltonned &0urce1" quotad In the Dilly Oklahoman today. U.S. Di•lrict Juda• J. Robert Elliott in Columbua, Ga. Is ex· peeled to hand down the decision baaed on grounds that Calley'• con- stitutional right to due proceu of law wa1 vlolaled by prejtxllcial pretrial publicity, the new1paper uld. The Dally Oklahoman 11id the declllon aim reportedly waa in- nuencoct by the Anny'1 failure to procure evidence and witnesses and lhe lnOuence of superion over Calley'1 orl11inal oourt·marllal. l'ro111 Pqe Ai· ROCKY .•• Mission Viejo Choi~ ' Launches Fund Raisi11g To help pay their way to Italy !or a 1ingini tour oqt sl'rinl, the Million Viejo Hip School Chamber Choir i• begiMlns !und-ral•int projects jncludini a paper drive,· a motorC)'Cle &iv11w1y, and a donation& mpalp. The choir, conducted by Barbara Arnold, has been 'aelected to repreM:nt SouUtern C1llfomia in 1 muaic foUval of 600 internation_al vocall1t1. All the 1tnaer1 hive to do 11 t1ile 111,000 to pay their WIY to Rome !larch It The paper drive will be conducted throuah February, lln. Arnold uld. Pickup dal" lrt the lir1t Saturday of each monlb beglnnint Oct. I. Resldenla are &1ked to put their MWIPlperl in a larae arocery uck aJH! lie ltrtng al'.Olllll all ,Id4J cl the baa. Paper Nhould be In front of each hollae bolora I a.m., lhe uld. program the singers will take with them 10 Rome , Mr1. Afnold said. More inform1tioo on the fund-r1ising may be oblained by calling the high school, 837-7722 or 830-4811 after school. The chamber choir. composed of 17 of the hi1h school 'a top vocallslJ, hu perfonned for many community (l'Ollps and Is rated one of the top three groups in the Southern California Vocal Associa· tion. The choir'• performances in Italy .· v.:ould !:!e -OOrt d the 25--year celebratlon or Holy Year in -Rome. featuring a- concert on the steps or St. Peter's Balilica. Other performances would be schedu1· ed at the Cathedral of st. An!elmo and ln Florence. Jlrom P,.ge Al KISSINGER. • • TIM Mlallo!I Viejo• Mualo _..., are •llONortna the moloreycle rtveon1 with tfckoll oii ule throllflh Nov. I. Tho end or tho century. cycle will be presented at !hi Hllh "We have an obligation to strive for $choa1homecom1n&1ame Nov. 8. an adequate supply of food to every '!'he 1inf:er1 1lao ire t'Qflllderina a man, woman and child in the world," said : "I 'WQ\lld not be Jnnuencad 111 paneike breakiul, ule of 1 Chrlitmas he 01id . the 11ighle1t, frankly, by boldinJ1. album, and Jl"OUP perlcrn>f1nCta !or At the inlemallonal food eonrerence "I fm not inOuanced by ao-called donatinna. in Rome on Nov. 5, he Slid, the United lntere1l1, not that l hive none:11 be f-.nY area bualnel1 or aervice aroup States wlll preiiCDt a number of 1pecllic 1ald, adding: "Wben one takea the natb 11 Jnv"ed to make donftlCllll. The n1rne proposal• to increase fertilizer pro- of office, from that point on you eerve of ucb apol\llll' will bl Included in the ducllon, expand research programs, and the people ... and put everything else rebui_ld food reservu against the aside." Questioned by Pell whether he would C _ .1 T OIL NATIONS HEAR TOUGH • I Kootenai Tribe ·To Start Taking Fee From Trains Still Loves Liz, -tor-presldenrin 1978-Jl-Jbere-war-~OOnu--1:1ang-11a11g~e~==·=T~A=L~K~B~Y~FO~llD!?::!P~·!l!"~A:!4=~- an opening for the office, Rockefeller vagaries of weather. r- replied, "l am anxious to serve my C 0££ d / BONNERS FERRY, Idaho (AP) - XGotonal Indians planned lo begin col· Jedlog tolls today from trains as well u cora pa•inll through the land they have claimed in their nonviolent war witb tbe United Stales. Tribe! Jeadefl hove deferred any dtcl.ian on further escalation of their War tmUl late today. They agreed to watt for answers from Washington, D.C. m demands ror treaty negotiations and oa • ftqUelt thlt congressional leaders vl&lt their am. 0 ..... COA$T i. DAILY PILOT '""~C..-•"""'·'""~ .. -....... ,,._ f'f-.11 lllll*lhtd Dy ..... ~ COlllt P'INllhlnll ~ ..... ,. tdlllorM .. _....... ~ .,_... rr1MY. '°' ~· ..... """"""' ..... ~ lil«WF-.... .,,.....,, """""...,.. ""''*~ 11111 ~~~Cl""'-" ........ ....... Mlilioft II~ lfllltOl"I\ 1llll ili1!'!· dlhe. llle fflrlciHI pu~ pllM ii •' 330 W111 Itel'..,.., ea.ti ....... Ol~ior-, tttn Rol;.,1 N. Weed ~ ..,....,. .. ,......... T":,\~ Oalos H. l'°' Ri<lod P. Nol MllUnt~ tdlloll -" Cotit M-,UflwtM81yS1tMt ..._. .. _ 33,'3H4"'°""~ u.o-&MOii nt ,.,,,,.,. .. _ __ ,,., ...... _, .... ~, ~...,,.PC--tllttii • f111pflwf714164J·4JJI CloMlllH ~-.... '4z.1'71 .. C ..... Alh~llZRhl T-412400 . ~ ,,,4, °"""" Cle.-~11111. r.-,,.. ,., .... __ ..__~""119' ., ............................. ~ ................... o1~.._.. "-""--~~11 c.... ...... C11u• ............. .,_.......,Ol~,..,-­ M OO-W,.·~-........... ..,.00--,. • , But Incompatible, Burton Declares By ROBERT MUSEL LONDON !UPI) -Richard Burton said today he loves Elizabeth Taylor .and she loves him, but their divorce last JWle was the final burial rite of the fl'eat romance and there will be no reconclllation. "Unfortunately, we're incompatible," he said. "We love each other but we 'can't live together." Burton said this across lunch in a crowded tavern. He was aak.ed if he had heard the repcrts that Eliiabeth would marry her constant companion these days, Henry Wynberg of Los Angeles, the man who moved in when he moved out. Up to that point, Burton enthralled h11 lunch companion• With the fipe now or anecdotes for which he ia faqlOUI. He told of his meetings with Sir Winston Churchill , whom he will portray In a forthcoming televlslM production b11ed on one of Churehill'a books, 1'The G1ther· ing Slonn," and scheduled !or broadcast (NBC-TV) Nov. 39 -tho eve er Chw-chill's lOOth birthday . · But at the mention of Wynbera, the ft-year--old al'tor'1 face hardened . "Who ls he?11 Burton asked, ataring straight ahead. "Ah, well," he added after a moment , 41Ellzabeth Is such a moral person that unquestionably she will marry lhi1 chap. She'• llCI a layabout. If 1be aoes lo btd with aomeone, abe marri•• them. So J1ve M doubt she will marry this. •• Mr ... Weisberg." lie emphasized the mispronunciation. "Anl you In toucb w~h her!" . "Oh yes. I'm very fond ol her and l love her very much. And that's reciprocal . And l admire her very much . Shtl's a very lovely and lovlng-womaa. J'm pcr!eclly coovlnced she will marry a<)mel>ody. Presumably this rellow." • Burton and Miss Taylor we re separated in July, 19731 after 10 yea.rs of ma.mace and ~veral attempts at reoonclllatlon. MIH Taylor obtained a Swiss divorce last June. forth. One minute 1 have mine then hert, and than lhe has mint. Ah, she's i very dclighliul •nd· ramariable woman." •' Lifeguards Nab Swimmirig Deer Off CdM Beacli A confused deer that wandered into the 1urf from Buck Gully at Little Corona bNch Sunday aftemoon was led lo sbore and safety by Newpcrt Beach lifeguard Bruce Maclay. Maclay iiwam to the deer when it WIS atranded near Ladder Rock rte.f after beln& herded back tcwarda shore by a llarbor Patrol boat. Whnn he reached the floundering animal, Maclay dropped a rope halter around its neck and tugged it to shore. A rlw minllleo before the li!eBUard swam 1o the stranded deer crewmen aboard the patrol boat apotlad ii as ii swain toward the open ,.. beyond the surfline. Swlmmlns erCllflion1 by deer that Uva in the hlll1 above the beach are net llllCOllUllOll, accon!in& to Sfll Harry wne:r !he harbor patrol. 0 · 111t deer can't see above awells, they ol!an become ccnfused when the win<la ara blowllll! of!lli1oro u they were 8~..id Wright. country in any way I can. I would 0UfSC efC "At a time of uniyeraal concern !or justice and In an age or advanced have to presume that woWd not preclude technology, It la intolerable that mUllolll the presidency." English as a second languagt wlll Cannon also raised the question of be offered in a course of the Saddleback are starving and hundred• of mllliona presidential pardons, noting that Presi-Valley Unified School District Adult remain undernouriahed1' 1 Kiuilliet aaid. d F rd d I ~ In a gesture to the oil producers, ent o ec a. Cl.I at his vice presiden· Education program bca:lnning Tuesday. Kissinger said the United Slates is Hal hearings last year that the country Slated to meet from 7 to 10 p.m. prepared to ae«pt substantial irr wouldn't stand for 1uch an act. Tuesdays in Room B-5 or I.Al AliSOI He asked Rockefeller if he as president Intennediate School , the class Is open vestmentl ol the oil·price revenue• and I d d r ho I welcomes a greater role for producers wou d par on a presi ent under criminal to anyone or w m Eng ish is not in the manag8llent or lnternatlonal investigation. the native tongue. economic lnsUtuUon1. "My total hlclina Uon ii to qy 'no,'" A class ~es.igned to prepare people 'Rockefeller replied. for becoming American citizens la of-Bdul, lhedlsai~,' bethere must be 3 "new He added that he Wdn't feel "I should fered from 1:30 to t:SO •p.m. Thuradays un ers an ne tween coniiumera and producers. sa1 at this. point that I will amend at Silverado High SchoQl on Mu.Irland 11The ·high cost of QI! Ii not the result the Constitution of the United States," Boulevard near El Toro RGSd. of economic fac\ors, of an actual bv saving he would '·ke an act · )fore. information on ·'!her claq ,., J J \.ti ion .... shortage of can•city, or of the free ·•e1·rcumstances of wh1"ch I dnn" Jmow" available bv callin° the adult ed•1calion ~ ~ • J 11 '" play of supply and demand," Kiiiinger Rockefeller said: "I do not want to p!lice al 83711270. "d in ~I . aet to the box that my predecessor got into by being frank and open" and tt1en findinii: chan"ged circumstance& upon ascending to the pre1ldency. He proml&ed tllat "•hould I become confirmed ind ihould Cooll'"" request, l will placa -immediately all my securities which l own o~trl&ht" iqto a blind tru11 for the duration ol bis tenure. Acccmpan(ed by hil ll(Ue, l!appy, Rockefeller arrived preciael)' on time f~r the 10 a.m. hearing , in the va1t caucus rOQJTI -scene of many other historic investigations over the years. Child Growth Clinic Will Begin Tonigl1t A chlld arowlh and development class for parenta ta Ht to bta:in at 7 o'clock tonight in llcom 2M ol lllilllion Viejo lli11h School. . Spon10red by the Saddl!l!ock Valley Unified School District· adult aclyoallpn prQi?am, the oour1e e»1ta '5 and will la1t one 1emeater. More informatiop 11 available by callina NHl70 • Jlrom Page Al KENNEDY · .•• . incident qt' 1969 had on bia _. nouneement, Kennedy said : •'Th Is decision ... would have bc:i"'n made ir· reapectlve or the tragedy that happened In 1918. . . Were t to run, It would have been a factor that would have been raised." Cleek• to Red Cross Mary Jo Kopechne, a former secretary !or Robert Kennedy, was killed when n car driven by the senator went oft a bridge at Chappaquiddick Jsland1 Mass. Regarding Chappaquiddick, Kennedy said. he bad apswcred all questions "quickly, caqdi<!Jy and hone stly," in Massactwsetts courts. . OC Aiding ~ifi Victims '11 can live wiUt my own te stimony,'' • he 1akl. "I think I would llave Ileen abls to locua the campaign 0n the lm.-poftant Jasun." 1 ''I wui not •C!'ePI the nomlnaticn. r will not accept a draft," Kentiedy laid. Amert~ ~re responding to pi.I -•vutallan In flontWNs from lfllnic@ne fin "Ith l!plly, medioinea and other .....,oncyauppll.., Jn Or1n1e County, a spokesmap at tile Ame(lcan Red Croo• Headquarters Jn S.nt1 Ana sakl callt have been coming In iteadlly today. The Red Crou does not ocnd clothes or food to the site of disasters bce1uae or what ii consldorad 1 prohlblllv1 cost, the •pole-an uld. 11But anyone who wants to help ahould mall U1 a check with 'llurrlCBllt Fifi' or 'Hlnd"res' written tn the corner," lhe uld. "We'U forward It la our Wllhlnrton blfreau 11..i !hoy make sure '1111 Salvation Anny I• a..,ntlnl food It get.t where it Is needed." and clothing which will be shipped to the Lo$ Angeles :Ialvetlotl Army head- quarters and then to Hnnduros. More tnfonn~tlon ~bout 4onoltorw to uie Al111Y may be obtsln"1 by calling !*IMO. Food and clothln& may be drop- ped off at 410 E. Fourth ll!reel, Santa Ana, .. !I<! stioul4 be cl(afly mark«!, "For Hondur11/' a spo~etm~n s,ld, PiJone lines to the Ilondura~ Cons~! In Lo$ Anaeln were cloged with call• today. lnqulrleo about looir'or clothes do· nallo!IS, pr relailves may be mada br callfnl the consul at •IS.f:3·1804 , Doriat1on1 may l>e ~t to Uie Honduras e.mbuslea or , co111ul~te1 111 Atlf..1111, Botton, Los An•elei1 Ilouaton , Baltimore, New York, New orleans, Miami and Slln Francisco. I • A Hondufln Embwy ipo~11man in W•lhil!rton 111td Iha creatstt need · w11 !or medlclna for aurvivon or 11\c hur- rl .. n1, which left 1,000 oonfifl"l\ed dead and •• 11llm11td 150,000 homel111, In Miami, Honduran Coosul.Qener1I Antlonio V•llad1re1 uld thlre 11 a need ror 1lm01l everyihtna along the countl)l's devastated coast. - ''We doo't have ahythlng,11 ht aald. "We nee<l everYlhina , especi~lly me<tlcal 1upplla1, a!llbfotlco, tuol to boll !'•!Cr, food and clothing." • A Spanish-language rad io 1l1tlon In Miami collected more than IJO,llOO In hours after i11uing an appeal. New Orlean.t• lar1• community ol Honduran- born residents midi donationa at 1 half dozen relief centers. fie addtd that ho wlll "oppose any effort to place my n•nle in nomJnaU<>11 In any slate or at lhe naUonal 00,,. vention, apd I will oppose any errort to P!O!ll~le 111Y candldncy 111 any other way." Kennedy ~Id he reached his decision after discussions w!th his wlf~ ~n~ other family members. The sole surviving son or the late Joseph P, Kennedy said ho decided lo announce Ills declslQ/I now '1ln order to ease t~ apprthef'!tlotis wtttun my family •bout the po11lblllty of my candidaoy, •• well •• to clarity tho sit ua tion within mr party." Kennedy pled1ed to work !or llMI ne• two years ror !he DtmocraUc pa"" ond its nomlnets. · '( ' .. (. • ( '"" a d I a ti -• ~ Buntin1t1on · Beaeh Fountain ·Valley ' VOL. o7, NO. 200, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORAt;IG,E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1974 --enne-'s ' ' Catalina Reeord Lynrie Cox Does It U11,der 9 Hours • , AVALON (AP)-A 2l·year-old Los Alamitos swimmer conquered the 21 ·mile Catalina Channel In record time for a woman today and just missed the men's record set by her brother. Lynne Cox reached Catalina Island after 8 hours 58 minutes, breaking the women's record of 11 hours seven minutes set by Greta Andersen, now of Huntington Harbour, in 19571 spokeswoman for the swimmer said. Her brother David set the men's record of eight hours 50 min· ules in 1972. Miss Cox, who holds the record for swimming the English Channel, tried earlier this month to break the record but dense fog forced her to quit. Four Threatened Huntington Man Shot In Residential Heist One Huntington Beach man was shot and rour others threatened early Sunday during an attempted residenUal holdup, police reported today. 1be wounded man, Felipe COrtez Perez of 16161 Parkside Lane, was shot in the neck as he ran to warn his friends when two men came through the front door, according to detectives. Perez was listed in fair and ltable C<lllditioo l<>day at Orange OJunty Medical Center. Polka said they are looting for two men. ooa of whom ._iedly curled a .21 caliber pistol. The men In the apartment dld not speak Engliah, det..,. tlves said, making it difficult to gather infonnation until someone who spoke Spanish was available. After Perez was shot, the two intruders ran from the apartment, poUce said. No apparent motive for lhe shooting was listed. Little League Perez was first taken to Htmtington Jntercommunity Hospital then transfer- red lo Orange Coonty Medlcal center. '!'tie lhoOling took place about I a.m. Seal Beacli Pet Owners Seeking Repeal of Law Pet lovers in Seal Bea<:h •ant -1>tr crack al a city ordlnance that calls on owners of unspaycd dogs and cats lo pay an annual 110 ree and owners ol aJtered pet& lo fork out $5 every year. An Orange Coonty Superior Court bearing wilt be sc:l1eduled this week m the demand by the Pet Owners Coalition o! Seal Bea<h ror repeal o! the controversial ordinance recently upheld by lhe elty council. --Mo'lest Case Set The action filed by Dr. In! S. Cohen of the Coalition claims that the ordinance -woukl-have....been_overtumed if oetitioo workers had been allowed to enter the retirement commmlity at Leisure World dilling. their recent search for signatures. For Hearirig A preliminary hearing into child molesting charges against the Conner manager of a Fountain Valley Uttle League team and the te am's sponsor was scheduled to begin today in west Orange County Municipal Court. The manager, Gregory W o o d a rd Greene, 24, and the sponsor. Edgar Herbert 111ohan Jr., 45, were to appear before Judge Alan N. McKone. The public defender's office indicate<t. it might ask that the hearing, expected to last two days. be closed to the pubUc. Many of the boys Involved in the alleged Incident would be called to testify. The district attorney's office said Greene faces 35 charges of child molesting, whole Mohan is charged In connection wilb U incidents. The alleged cases involve boys' aged 9 to 12 from Fountain V a 11 e y , Westminster, Newport Beach and Hun- tington Beach. Some of them were members of the team in the Fountain Valley 900th Little League. The i,gvestigation started after a 12· year~ld Fountain Valley boy was found unconscious on the lawn of Huntington lntereommunity Hospital. Gre<ne is being held In fhmtington Beach jail under $511,000 bond. while Mohan Is in Orange County Jail under $20,000 bond. SAILBOAT SELLER GOT MANY CALLS 11we got so many calls about our sailboat we couldn't believe IL" r , Thol'• how a Balhoa Island resident I ' described the response lo this Dally ' Pllol cla'8ilied ad : LIDO ti, sail no. 3708, Used. sev~ral times by a IAusY saUor on Lake Arrowhead. Many extras, oover. Desperate! Best offer! xxx-nxr Let someone malce yoo an oiler you won't refuse. Call f4U611. Put • re1w words to wock for you. In the Dal Y Pilot. ' &mil.arty, the action notes, petition worten were denied access to the Oakwood Apartments where they coold have been expected to obtain a substan- tial number of signatures from pet lovers. As It was. the lawsuit notes, the workers faJled by only .6 percent to gather lbe 10 percent of registered voters figure that was required to overturn the onlinance. Qty Clerk Jerdys Weir is blamed in the action for that defeat. Cohen notes that the signatures gathered npresented more than 10 pereent until Mrs. Weir deleted more than 400 signatures of nearly 2,300 collected as invalid. Mrs. Weir and all five metl)berS of the city council are named as defendants in the pet owners' action. Haldeman Seeks Delay of Trial WASIIlNGTON (AP) -Former White House aide H.R. Haldeman asked Chier Justice Warren E. Burger today to delay the Watergate cover-up tria1, scheduled lo begin OcL I, until the U.S. Supreme Court bas ruled on a challenge to the cover--u.p Indictment. The former presidential assistant Is ooe ol six men lacing trial In the June, 1972 burglary of ntrnocratic party olfiC<S In the Waterpte building. All are onetime asaociates d former Presi- dent NI..,,, The Supreme Court has not decided -lo hear arguments o n Haldem .. '• challenge lo the lndlclment. He has wed tbe eourt lo overturn 1pecial leaislatioo whldl Congress pessod last fall .-1118 the term ol the Watergate grand jury by one year. London Stocks Fall LONDON (AP) -·The London stock uchange, apparently beset by election jitters and conUnulng cash shortages ror lnduatry, slwnped lbarply In slow lrading today. The Financial Times ln· duslrlat Index plUJlied .7.1potnta1o 110.1 by lunchtime -Its lowest point In more than 16 yesrs. f Cites Need To Be Near His Family BOSTON (AP) -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, citing family tragedies, said today that he will neither seek nor accept the Democratic nomination for president or vice president in 1976. The Massachusetts Democrat, with his wife Joan at his side, said, "This deci sion is finn, final and uncond.ltional. There is absolutely no circumstance or event that will alter the decision." The 42 year-old brother of the late President John F. Kennedy and the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, both of whom were assassinated, said he weigh- ed his decision carefully. "One basic fae:t has become in- creasingly clear to me," he said at a news conference. "From the cam~ paigns of my brothers before me, I know that seeking the nation 's highest office demands a candidate's undivided attention and his deepest personal com- mitment. "My primary responsibilities are at home.JLhas become quite apparent to me lbat l would be wiable to make a full commitment to a campaign for Champion Honker u,1 T........, the presidency. "I simply cannot do that to my wl!e and children and the other members of my family.,. Terry !Wia of Omaha honked bis way lo the world championship o! goose calling in the Missouri Valley of Iowa in the fin~ of this annual event Italia, who collected a $11000 grand prjze, said, "I just trjed \o sound like a bunch of geese Calling :othi;r geese." . Kennedy's wife has been in a rest home twice In recent l!l<lltho and bis '°" Edward Jr. loot part of .a teg lut Nomnl>tt because ol lx1n1ramcer. Reagan Calls Solons Back P-Ford leamed ol Kennedy'' amouncement from White House press se<1'dary Ron Nessen while In Detroit, where he addressed the World Energy Conference. Asked by a reporter for his reaction, Ford ·-bis head, said nothing, and grinned broadly. For Pensio11 Repeal Vote Asked what effect lhe Chappaquiddlck incident of 1969 had on bis an- nouncement, Kennedy sa.ld: • •This decision ... would have been made ir- Gov. Ronald Reagan ortlered the COii· fomia Legislature to reconvene We<fnes.. d~y .noon to cnosider ~al of up to _ _!5.7 milhon-in-early-perlSlonr'f.:st---ret1nng or defeated lawmakers. Reagan's Order came barely 15 minutes after Democratic leaders of the Senate and Assembly announced that they ..,.ooJd reconvene the Legislature themselves next Monday. Up to 61 .legislators, many of them in their 30s, are eligible to start col· lectlng lifetime pensions of up to $12,00J a year under tenns or the current pension law. Among co-authors of the bill to repeal the retirement windfall are Senator Den· ni• Ca?penter (R·Newport Bead!) and Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·Hun· tingtoo Beach). Carpenter today expressed confidence that the bill would be successlul, but Burke voiced misgivings on the motives behind those calling for a special session. "Even if the Legislature acts on the bill, there is still a loophole," Burke warned. "They can turn in their resigna- tlon.'I so !hat !heir retirement would precede the date or lhe bill and Ibey "1ltlld still be eligible. "I wouldn't be surprised. if someone doesn't have something up their sleeve like that. If feel this might be more of a public relations move ." The bill to repeal the bonuses is by Assemblyman Robert McLennan <R- Downey). It wou1d prohibit legislators tmder age 60 from drawing an immediate pension when they leave office. The impetus for a return of the respective of the tragedy that happened legislators gained strength last week In 1969. . . Were I to run, it would and over the weekend as b o t h have been a factor that would have Republicans and-r>em4C:Htrllppa:rentty-been-raised. sensed the anger of voters at the Macy Jo Ko~, a former secretary payments that would be made to men for Robert Kennedy, was killed when still in their 30s, 40s and 50s. ' a car driven by the senator went off Carpenter. who noted that he has a bridge at Chappaquiddick Island, Mw. opposed any kind of pension for Regarding Olappaquiddlck, Kennedy lawmakers, said that the speciat session said he bad answered all questions would be an "opportunity to do "quickly, candidly and honestly," in scmething alx>trt a mistake." Massachusetts courts. "A lot of people who support the "I can live with my own testimony," the move ror a repeal will have to he said. "I think I wouid have been vote against their ovm vested interests " able to focus the campaign on lbe im· Carpenter said. ' portant issues." McClennan introduced his bill in the "I will not accept the nomination. (See REAGAN Page ..U) I will not accept a draft,'' Kemedy ' said. Today's First Day of Autumn WASIUNGTON (UPI) -Today is the first. day of autumn for those of us who live in the northern hemisphere. It began officially at 2:59 a.m. PDT when the sun was directly over the equator on the boundary of Uganda and Zaire in Africa . This is known to astronomers as autumnal equinox, the time when the nighttime is equal to daytime. He added that he will "oppose any e[fort to place my name in nomination in any state or at the national con· vention, and I will oppose any effort lo promote my candidacy In any other way." Kennedy said he reached his decision after discussions \vith his wife and other family members. The sole surviving son o! tile late Joseph P. Kennedy said he decided to announce hls decision (S.. KENNEDY, Page A!) Cliff Arquette Dead BURBANK (UPI) -CIIrr Arquette. 68, television comedian who played the role of Charley Weaver, died today at St. JOlleph hoopital. Burton Still Loves Liz 'But W c Cari't Li.ve ~ogetlier,' He Says · By ROBERT MUSEL LONDON (UPI) -Richard Burton said today be lc>Ve$ Elizabeth Taylor and she loves him, but their divorce last June was the rma1 burial rite of the great romance and there will be no reconciliaUon. "Unfortunately, we're incompatible," he aald. "We love each other but wo can't live together." Burton said this across lunch In a crowded tavern. He was asked tr he had heantr the reporll !hat £litsboth woold marry her constant companloo lhe1e days, Henry Wynberg ol I.al Allgelt!, the man who moved In when be moved out. Up lo that point, Burton enthralled his lundl companions with the fine llow of anecdotes for wtUch he Is famous. He told of his meetings with. Sir Winston Olurc!till., when ho will portray · In a lwlhcotni111 television production based on one of Churchlll's liooks, '"the Gather· ing Stonn," and achedoled for broadcast (NBC-TV) Nov. » -lhe eve or Churchill's lOOlh birthday; But at lhe mention ol Wynberg, the 49-year.ald actor's face hardened . "Who Is he?" Burton esked, staring straight ahead. "Ah, well,'' he added afttl" a moment, "Elhabeth is such a moral per>0n that unquesUonablf 1he Will marry Ibis chap. She's not a layabout. If she goes to bed \\ilh someone, she marries them . So l've no doubt she will n1arry thls .•. Mr. Weisberg." 11e emphasized the ml!:pronunciation. "Are you in touch with her?" •10h yes. I'm very fond of her and 1 love her very much. And that's reciprocal. And 1 admire her very n1uch. She's a very lovely and loving woman. J'm perfectly convinced she will marry somebody. Presumably lhls fellow.'' Burton and ~1iM Taylor w e r e soparated In July, 11173, lrtcr 10 years of marriage and several attempts at re<Ondllatlon. Miss Taylor obtained a SOA·iss divorce last JW'le. - Today's Final N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS ace UPt T ....... WON'T RUN-PERIOD Sen. Edward Kennedy Two Bandits Get $12 ,0lJO .4t Golf Cl11b The golf pro at Meadowlark Country <;iUb ln Huntington Beacl> WU forced to open the club safe at gun-point Sunday night by a band.it and a hidden partner. They took 112,000 In cash from the safe and escaped. Police said the bandits bad first. burglarized the home of golf pro Dennis Murphy, taking his wallet and keys to the clubhouse. After they apparently could not get into the club with Murphy 's keys., one bandit calmly phoned Murphy, said he knew who had taken his wallet and asked to come over to talk to him about it. Once inside Murphy's house, the robber then told Murphy his keys didn't work he--would-bave-to--eome-back-to the dub and open the door and safe. He told Murphy that a partner outside the window bad a gun pointed at him and would shoo! him if he dldn 't do it, police said. Murphy told police he never saw the partner close up. or the weapon but he did see a car following his own vehicle to the club. The first bandit, described as 28 to 30 years old , caucasian, \\'ilh reddish- brown hair and bushy sideburns and wearing a light-blue T shirt and light-col- ored pants, at one point went back and talked to the person in the other car while they were at f\.1eadowlark. police said. The first man took Murphy inside "''hile he cleaned out the pro shop safe shortly before midnight. Murphy told police the bandits' car was hidden behind a small hill, so he never got a good look at it. Once the first robber bad the ca!h from tbe safe, he told Murphy lo take off. Then be left the club himself, police said. Police are looking for the two bandits on charges of kidnaping, burglary and (See BANDITS, Pace AZ) Orange Cout • Weather It'll be another scorcher Tues. day, but not quite as hot as todi y, according to the weather service. Highs in the k>w 70s at tho beaches after lhe fog lilts, rising to 84 inland. .. INSIDE TODAY llurricane-ravaged .,.cside111' of 1'1oncbiran. ·villages llave sur· vi11ect one crisis -o'llu ro be /aced with another. Deadly viper snokes are swfmmhtg fn the flooded tow111. See photo o.ttd story PQf}e A4. Al Ylllf SffYICI A) ... 1111, ., 1...M. .. y. All C1Hfltlli1 U ClltMlllll l ... l ll CM'lln ti CNuwtft II ONO! Mlfl(H ' A.If ••torlll ''" .u lnlMtfflmtflt Al ,lu-A1•A11 "'"'.... 11 ' Allfl L~ al Mtvl•• ,,,. H•llt111I fitwt At Or1"" Cw11lf At ....... 11·11 s..m M-N S!IKll Mll'll111 AU Tltl'lltMll All ""'"" .. Wtltfllf M W-Mf'W\ M I •. • H Monday, Sept,mbe:r 23, iq74 ' . , ' . " ' LONG BEACH lllElllORIAL HOSPITAL IS WHERE E X·PRESIDENT NIXON IS SCHEDULED FOR TESTS H• Was Expected to Make Drive From S.n Clemente Home Sometime Today ·8 Rooms Clear for Nixon ·· .. :· 4>ng Beacli Hospital Readied for Ex-president LONG BEACH (AP) -Forrne< Presi- dent Nixcm, alllng wtlh phlebitis, checks into a bright, new hospital wing today. ~aervtng the same secrecy which swroundeil blm In lhe Whlle House, P{u:on and aides declined to reveal his r.,.,. '' expected check·Jn time in advance. A ltospj~l. spokeswoman and nurses saii:I the stall bad oo idea when he would arrive. (See ·r.elated story Page A3.) . According to the hospital schedule, Nixon was to go directly to his room after' Chedt:·in. There, hospital personnel ~D take .blocxl samples and complete ~r .dia~c proc<dures. Hospital opokesmen said It wuUKery, considering N'11on's ))'mptoms, that be would un- dergo intriVenous treatment with an- ticiiagulant ".drugs. Sud> treatment thins the blood and aids in ke.j>!ng lhe blond clot in the j\aUent's leg from flaking off and pro- 4'dillt smaller clots whid! mJgbt move lii'i>UierpOrls m the bcldy. "Dunrig 'sUchl treatment, the patient must remain immobile because any . . ,, ' f'rom Page Al REAGAN ... ' . ~er JO .overturn pension bonuses tbat would average $93,000 if all eligible Je&islatm11 stepped down or failed to be n-eled.ecL this year, the year o{ a.. reapportklmnl'flt. -r .The .bllladled in the Ms<mbly ~ules physical injury could bring on profuse bleeding. A bloc of eight private rooms at Long Beach Memorial ijospital MedJcal Center was cleared or patients Sunday in readiness for Nixon's arrival. Hospital spokeswoman Karen Krantz said hospital officials decided to use the rooms as a "b\Jffer zone" between Nixon and other patients on the sixth floor west wing . She said it was not known if the ex-president would be billed for all eight rooms, whJch each usually cM $85 a day. Nixon r~uested only two rooms. Hospital officials also would not say who is paying the bill. Get-well cards, a few telegrams and bouquets of bright fall nowers, mostly chrysanthemurm, were waJting for the former president, sent to the hospital by well-wishers before his arrival. Grace Hollenbeck, nursing manager ol the sixtb floor, said she did 001 know who sent the flowers. Miss Krantz sctid the hospital swit- " chboerd had been busy with phone calls from both well wishers and a few pranksters. Four additional telephones, plus a direct line between Nixon's hospital room and his home at San Clemente, were installed in and around the room. A squad of Secret Service agents was on hand. Miss Krantz said Nixon apparently chose the 14-year-old hospital because his long-time physician, Dr. John C. Lundgren, Is on the staff. The staff sald there were no requests for Nixon to have a private nurse. Nixon'.s room ls located in the Weil wing of the hospital , which was opened only last June 'and features the most modern equipment and ctieerruI sur· roundings in the building. Hallway walls are painted in gay, multicolored stripes. The walls of Nixon's room are gold. There is a remote control color TV set built into the wall _and a bullelin board where he can tack up get-well cards and telegrams. Orange County Residents Aid Stricken Honduras Nude Body • FoundS1wt In Irvine ··- he nude body of a young woman who had been shot once In the head was found Sunday on a lonely stretch road in Irvine, according to Costa l\1esa police Investigators . The victim, described as being about 25 years of age, five feet four, 150 pounds wtlh reddish hair and hazel eyes, has not been identified, according to the county coroner 's office. Police said clothing that may have belonged to lhe 'voman was found scat- tert'd along the side d. Barranca Road near the intersection with Jeffrey Road, where the body was discovered. The articles ol clothing included a blue flowered blouse, blue slacks and black and while shoes. Police were called to the scene at .. about 3 a.m. when the body was sighted. by people in several cars passing by. So Car, lnvegtlgators said, there are no leads in the shooting apart from the fact that it appears the woman was shot sometime Saturday night. f'rom Page Al KENNEDY ... now •im order to ease the apprehensions within my family about the ~ibility of my candidacy, as well as to clarify the situaUon within my party." Kennedy pledged to work for the nexl two years for the Democratic party and its nominees. Kennedy said that a candidate who is wiable to make the full oommitment needed for a presidential campaign 11does a disservice to his country and to his party.'' He said he would be a candidate for re-election to the Senate in 1976 and plans to do as much as he can "to influence the direction of the nation.'' Kennedy said his announcement "will permit others who have been interested in gaining the nomination the chance for exposure during this campaign." Martha Causes London Stir LONDON (AP) -Mart ba Mitchell caused a commotion at a London airport when she refused to submit to a routine security check, an official of British Airways says. The official said Mrs. Mitchell "was shouting and refused to be touched by one of the security girls. In the end, when we told her she would not be able to fly if she was not searched, she calm- ed down. and we used an electronic device to search her." NEW FRONT RUNNER? Sen. Henry Jackson LIBERALS' CHOICE? S.n. Wolter lllon~1lo l\.ennedy Announcement Ope~s De1nocratic Field WASHINGTON (AP) -By removing himself from the 1976 presidential race, Sen. Edward M. KeMedy has opened the way to a broadened Democratic field. . 1be action abo brings reuer to those fearful of the controversy and threat of tragedy that would have surrounded bis candidacy. The most inunediate po l i t i c a I beneficiaries of. iJs decision , whose tim· ing was perhaps more surprising than ( NEWS ANALYSIS J its contents, are the other Democrats who have either begun or have been contemplating 1976 presidential' bids. Minnesota Sen. Walter F.' ,._1ondale's potential candidacy, for instance, has been overshadowed by the possibility a Kennedy candidacy might wipe out much potential llberal suppott: Sen. Henry M. Jacbon m Washington faced the basic handicap that even poten- tial backers feared he would be unable to win the Democratic nomination from Kennedy. Mondale and Jackson may be the closest things to frontrunners at this early, indecisive st.age. But Kennedy's decision seenui, if nothing else, t o guarantee a long list of entrants and to increase the chances of a deadlocked conventloo. Some possibilities. such as Gov. John J. Gilligan of Ohio and Sen. Birch E. Bayh of Indiana. could have little hope as long as Kennedy ran, (>r even considered ruMlng. Now, significant vic- tories in November could propel them into the raee. other Individuals, too, could benefit. the active ones such as Sen. Lloyd M. Benlsen of Texas and others only candidates for office now. convinced even those unlikely to favor the Massachusetts senator that he would be difficult to stop ror lhe nomination. But many oC these. from chairman Robert S. Strauss down . reared that Kennedy, while able to y.•in the nomina- tion would be unable to wlo the presiden· tial election itself and that his candidacy would doo1n lhl' nation's 1nnjority party to a trurd straight nationn l defeat. Despite his assets, his ability to win backing from both liberal and blue collar Democra~ and his undoubted skills at campaigning, a KeMcdy candidacy threatened to undermine any benefit.s the party might realize from the scan- dals of the Republican administration. Town Hall 1'alk On H1mtingto11 F11ture Slated Future needs of Huntington Beach la terms of schools, planning and downtown redevelopment will be dl9CUSsed tonight during the new Town Hall forum. Talks begin at 7:*> p.m., in the police auditorium on Main Street at Mansion Avenue. Guest speakers lnclude city PlaMinC Director Dick Harlow, down town redevelopment coordinator V i n c ·e Moorhouse. and Glen Dysinger, an assls.- tant superintendent with the Huntington Beach Union Hlgh School District. There will be a guestioo and answer session following 10-minute speeches by each guest. At 8:45 p.m., the forwn is open to any members of the public to discuss anything, even if not on the topic of the night's program. Con'tmiltee and all efforts to get. it Americans are responding to the for medicine for survivors of the hur-_---;;'°,..tlle;;t Door ol the Democratically.con-devastation in Honduras from Hurricane ricane, which left 5,000 confirmed dead -~-hilled~------FF;ifi-wilh-mone-y,-medicines and_otbe~r _and~ an estimated 150,000 homeless. Mrs. Mitchell , lhe estranged wile of. former U.S. Atty. Gen. John ?.1itchell, boarded a plane for New York Sunday. She bad been in London for a television appearance. Beyond that. however, the Democratic party may be the ultimate beneficiary. Kennedy's long lead In the polls had Tov.n Hall is an open forum for public response to any community issues. It. is sponsored by the city council. Tbe meeting is open to the publjc, "We kept the pot alive by urging 'Ih-Miatni, oOduran COnsill-General that a apedal session be caJled," car-emergency supplies. Antionio Valladares said there is a need "i""'"""•Ul""'"" ... '"'",.. •• ,,...,.. ... ""'""•.,,.,. ... .,..,.r.;an.,.•••••••m•11C13'!l penfer said. In Orange County, a spokesman at for almost everything along the country's Iii 'J1XJle eligible for pension bonuses had the American Red Cross Headquarters deNastated coast. t.o:be members ol the Legi.slatW'e prior in Santa Ana said calla have been coming "We don't have anything,'' he said. lo' 1965. Under terms of the present in steadily today. ~ · "We need everything, especially medical plan. tbe'Y receive retirement benefits The Red Cross does not send clothes supplies, antibiotics, fuel to boil water, lp:uriediately Upon leaving office jn a or food to the site of disasters because food and clothing." vear Ill' which !here is a rea....v.rtionment A Spanish-Janmu1ge radio station in ' ,..,,.... ' of what is considered a prohibitive cost, ~-such as this year. the 1 spokesman said. Miami collected more than $20,000 in ._ Burke, who wants toho see theeli plan 1•But anyone who wants to help should hours after issuing an appeal. New overturned, is among t se g1gle, mail us a check with 'llurricane Flfi' OrleaM' large community of Honduran· alt.bough he is running for office again . born residents made donations at a half He said toda'll' he would get ~.000 a or 'Honduras' written in the corner," dozen relief centers. • J she said. "We'll forward it to our rear fcir eight yearS if he were defeated. Washington bureau and they make sure Alleulblymon Robert Badham (R-Newport Beacli), who has been in the The Salvation Anny Is accepting food ..__1.., it gets where it is needed." ,_,.uu1Y .21 years and is running for and clothing which will be shipped lo re.election this year, said today said that McLennan 's bill was, the Los Angeles Salvation Army head- "grandstanding" and noted that quarters and then to Honduras. 1 More information about donatiom to ~Nyman McLennan was in a tight the Army may be obtained by calling nee against another assemblyman who 546-7880. Food and clothing may be drop. ;iwoold benefit from lhe pension bonuses. ped off al 410 E. Fourth Street, Sanla ! Ana, and should be clearly marked, Lifeguards Nab Swirriming Deer Off CdM Beacli ~ OIAMGICOAST Ml "For Honduras,&. a spokesman said. ~ Phone lines to the Honduras Consul Q in Los Angeles were clogged 'vith calls ~ today. Inquiries about food or clothes do· Ti.en..oe c.oa..~Polcol.w«t>~"'-nalions, or relatives may be inade by· b1ntC1 the ~·f'I'-. it pUtlll,i.d Ov 11'4 0.11"199 eoe" Pu011.,,,,. COfo'Wtr. s-r.t• --11e calling the consul at 213-622-1804. pUl)idMO. MOl\11•1 lf>IWCI" Fno.~. 1(11' <'Ml• Donalions may be sent to the Hondl.lfas ...... N.,..llQll e.&ft. Hlll'll•"OIOll 8e11;11/f0Uf>o b . l U 1.,.,·v11-.,. L89uruo eeac ... 1 ..... n11s-i.. ..... em ass1es or consu ates in A ant a, - s.n o.-n101s ... Jo.»11 c.1111"•"" " k~ Boston~ Los Angeles, Hauston, Baltimore, ,...,.1 eo0110n '" '*""""9<1 Sllurdll'I •"" s..... ·New York. New Orleans, Miami and a.,l'I T,,_ l!follcioel OUbloil>"'U pion! 11 •! 330 W...l a.1&'"" (!'Ziii• Mw1.c.-1or""' •~a. San Francisco. f, \ Robmtt N. w!Mld A Honduran Embassy spokesman in · ,.,....,.,_Wld""'°"""" Washington said the greatest need was I • Jac.l R. c..ley f t v~,.,u-11'<110.....11 """"'"' T~KeM -I • ' • ThooncnA.~ ---CJ.aMi H. l~ R.dod P.-Nol , A-'"11 ............ Eoollft r...,eo.a. Wf!llO....c-otyl!Oo!Ot MWti..,t. '"'" Offk• ·J781!1Beo:+i~ ~Addr•u; P 0 Bo· 7~ 92011 °""" Offk•• l. ........... ,t,,_ ... ......,. ~.Mtiol 3.3C WIUI e.ulifl.Ut .......... 8Mcll 3J.» N-iiorl 8o\llwMd Sari°"""""" )Ofl~11uc-.... Rto111 -I/is Wife's Purse P aclred a Puricli .. BATON ROUGE , La. (UPI) -City police were called to Baton Rouge General Hospital to investigate a com- plaint by a 24-year-old male patient w.!Jo said hia estranged wlte came and hll him with her purse. He said the purse had a brick in -II. Police said the patient told them he was ln bed when his wife came to visit. He said that aft.er talking, he decided 14 take a walk. Police said the patient said thal his wife went with him and, RS ht tried to go down the stairs. she then hit him from behind with her purse with a brick in IL Police said lhe man was nol • rl<>usly injurod. A confused deer that wandered lnto the surf from Buck Gully al Little Corona beach .Surlday afternoon was led to shore and safety by Newport Beach li£eguard Bruce Maclay. Maclay swam to the deer when it was stranded near Ladder Rock reef after being herded back towards shore by a Harbor Patrol boat. when be reached the flounderlng animal, Maclay dropped a rope halter around its neck and tugged ll to shore. A few .minutes before the lifeguard swam to the stranded deer crewmen aboard the 1patrol boat spotted it as ii swam toward Q1e open sea beyond the surfllne. Swimming excursions by deer that live in. lhe bills al>Qye the beach are not uncommon, according to Sgt. Harry Wright of the harbor patrol. "Because deer can't see above swells, they oflen become confused when th• winds are blowing offshore as lhey were Sunday,'' said Wright. From Page AI BANDITS .... armed robbery. Police said there was no one else al Murphy's home when lhe bandits returned. No one was hurt during the holdup. Four Cases Unsolved Secret Witness R ewards Total $1,600 for Help . ' ,. The Daily Pilot's Secret Witness ~ is still offering cash rewards totaling $1,600 for infonnatioa that would help clear three murders and a hit-and-run traffic death in the Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley areas. Today's column will recount delalls of the four separate cases whlch have been published several times in past columns. The first involves the July 31 slaying of 2&-year-old Maria Canahuati, a Huntington Beach apartment resident. She was found strangled In her own bedroom. Police believe she was killed by som<ooe she knew because there were no signs of a violent struggle, or break-in. She lived in the Family A!rair Apartments, 6401 Warner Ave., Apt. -472. Her >year-old son, Alex, was visiting his father in Honduras at the time of her death. Police say she was a popular, friendly woman, who knew a Jot of local residents. She had worked at the Mercury SaVings in Huntington Beach, and when she was killed, was employed at the Banco de! Pueblo in Santa Ana. A lliOO cash reward is offered !or anyone who can provide information which might !tad police to a iwpecl in the murder. The witness need not be involved with the police. If you have any information whleh mJghl shed light On this case, phone the 24-bour S«ret Witness number. 642--0700, or write to: Dally Pilot. Secret Witness, P.O. Bo• 7ll0, Huntington Beach, Ca. (92S48). Founlalq VaJley.PoUce are still look· tng for the driver involved In the hit-and-run traffic dealh of 13-year-old Roger Patrick O'Brien. Tilt boy was ldlled about 1:35 p.m., Sep!. 7, while riding his bike eosl along Garfield Avenue, c r o s s l n g Magnolia Street. Wlin<SIOS report be was hit by ( somewhere in the Mexican-American Se.Crel wa• tness· communities In either Huntington I'/ Beach or Fountain Valley. " The other case in volves a mystery body dumped on a lonely stretch of Ellis Avenue in HU11tington Beach, sometime in the early morning m April, 1973. Police oot only do not know who killed the youth, but they have been unable to obtain an Identification on the body. Their only hope for Identification rests on seven distinctive tauooos etched m hb body. 8 cream-colored stAtioo wagon which The tattooes are: a spider on the iMer left forearm , four dols on the sped from the scene without even top of bls le.ft wrist, an "F'' on slowing do\vn. his left shoulder. a swastika on his .f But traffic lnvesUgators believe iMer left can, the initials "DF " on there may be more eye witnesses his iMer tight calf, and the number 13 on his Inner left calf. who have failed to report what they All of t~e tattoes apparently were saw, or 3001eone in the community homemade, police say. may recognize the car. Investigators believe his death may 1'he Secret Witness Is offering a have been a part or a series oC $100 cash reward to anyone who can »-Called "mutilation" murders which identify the car and provide enough occurred In the Long Beacl>Los information s<> poUce can flnd the Angeles area and may have beea driver " involved In young <rBrien's homosexually related. death. Police have so far been unable 'Ibe other two published cases: in-to come up with any IC!ads in this vo1ve separate murders which hap-case. '11:1e Sea'et Witness offers a .,.pened more than a year ago but $SO(l cash reward to Myone who can have never been aolvecl. name•the-youth's killer. In addition One In Fountain Valley was lhe a l50 reward is of£ered to anyon~ brutal stabbing death <i service Sta· Who .can properly ldentlry the yOU!h. tlon operator Lou Lovko. He wu Jn all caaies. secrecy is guaranteed, killed on a September nl1ht in 1972, and names of Secret Witness in- by one of two youths who bad walked formants are never revealed lo the up to his station on the aoutheasl )Xllice. comer of Talbert Avenue Bnd Bu!lhard To guarantee protection, ~'ltnesses Street. . are invited lo use a simple she-digit He was stabbed 17 times before code, combing letters and numbers 1fie yoothlt fin ll'om the statlon.-(AB€123) to idenllry written or phoned )Vltnesses did see them fleeing the material, so evl'f! the Secret Wilneas area, but could not lden~ly them. will not know the Informant's Identity. A $500 cash reward l5 offered for Remember: phone &12-0700, or write anyone who can provide accurate in-to : Dally Piiot, Secret Witness, P.O formation as to !ht ldenUUes of the Bot 71IO, Huntington Beach. Ca '. two youths Involved. (92$48), Ir yOU have any information 'Police bdleve they moy have lived which ml)' help solve these erlmes. ....... /, < \ ' r I I r • Monda)', Stpttrnber 23, lq74 H OAJL V PILOT A :J Rocky _Says His RiChes 'No Conflict' At Your Service A Sunday, Monday, WedMsday and Friday Feature Of the Dally Pilot SeehbtfJ a Poe no DEAR PAT: I have been trying to find a copy of a 'certaJ n poe m I want to use on the rrontespicce of some writing 1 am . doing. It fits the picture of my story which deals with many kinds of deception. All I know is the first line: "When first we practice to deceive ... " The rest deals with getting involved in a web of lies due to Uie telling of the first. A.C., Mission Viejo You are probably referriJlg to: 0 0b, wbat a tangled web we weave, When finC 'ft practice to dectlve!" nese llnet are from Sir Walter Scott's "ft.lar· mt.a, "Jatrodaction to Canto VI, Sf.a.nu· 17. '111.e full text of tbe poem is available at the Missloa Viejo Llbrary. Not A Word Heard DEAR PAT: Severa] months ago you published a letter from someone who had lost money on a company called Panel-Pak, including an address in the East where refunds could be requested. I wrote more than si:1 months ago, but have not heard one word in response . I have several friends who also sent $1.50 to the company for merchand ise and they also want their money back. Cou1d you give me the address again so my friends and I can send copies of our letters and canceled checks? I'm responsible since I sent an these cbects In to get a free panet-pak for myseU! M.M., Lagana Beach Compusamp Jnc. annou~ last M1rcb that it has no means of fulfilling pending or new complaint s lnvol\ing refunds or delivery of products. Yoa caa try again to ffiiUes& tbete refunds by wriU.ag to Ht!len Taylor, Compusamp Inc., D.C. Center, Marca hdlldrlal Par•, P.O. Box 5000. Smithtown. N.Y. 11781, hut it bas been reported that the firm 's financial status bas not improved and no refunds or merchandise wUI be , forthcomi ng la tbe near future. If further Information Is received , it will be reported In A YS. 1t'r0t1g Vendor DEAR PAT: I sent 119.59 in March for an attache case listed in the Consumer Buying Service catalog. After several letters. I was advised that the factory was out of them and told a refund would be mailed if I couldn't wait until more cases were available. I replied that would wait only until a certain date. That date has passed and neither the case nor my refund has arrived. E.B., Newport Beach Kayce Britt, customer 1 e r v i c e representative, says your attacbe case was ordered from the wrong vendor causing the e1ct1s delay in processing. After this error was d I s c o v • r e d, Consumer Buyln~ Service was willing to lssae a refund, but this eould not be done ubti l the ractory had confirmed the request to canctl your order. That bas been accomplished and your refund Is being malled Immediately. Hard to Find? DEAR PAT: My husband has used YardleY "Black Label" cologne and shaving lotion for many years. It has been harder and harder to nnd and now no one ls carrying it. We cannot find anorber scent he likes, so could you tell us where a large supply could be purchased? J.K., Fountai n Valley Yardley of London, Inc. 's Los Angeles )leodquarters can't understand this pnr bJem, lince. "Black Label" Is being su~ plied to Savon Drag Stores, Sears, May Co. and Penney's stores In both Los Angeles and Orange Counties. Your re· cent problem should be aUevlated wltb extra sblpUU!:Dls In preparation for Cbrlstm11 shopping. bot Yardley re- quests that you notify Its office, !S:JS E. !8tt. S&., Los Angeles, Calif. to05S (ZlW8141t7), If this product continues to be In lllorl supply. V ege twble Pnrehme n t DEAR PAT: ,,,. recipe I have for canning hot tamales calls for them to be wrapped In "vegetable parchment paper." Where can t purchase it? 0.L, Costa Mesa At almost any 1ton where tortilla 1bcll1 and otbtr lngrtdlents for Mexl caa dlahet art 110ld. Ve8e(able pert.bmcnt paper 11 a compUcaled name for packa~· eel con basks. Mojnve Is one or several br1nds aY1llable In most supermarkets. Chess· Ends in Draw MOSCOW 1AP\ -Analoly Karpov and Viktor Korchnoi agreed on a d~aw today on lhc 46lh move of their fourth 8'lma or the. world chess cha\1 ng(!rs Lina! match. Karpov leads I~ In the aeries. Three games have been draws. The fiflh match Is ICh<"duled Wednesday. I l(issinger Rips High Oil Prices UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (API -In a blunt warning to Arab oil producers, Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger said today a world poised on the brink of general depression caru1ot afford· cur- rent petroleum prices, much less con- tinuing increases. I The poorer nations, many of them rying desperately to cope with food shortages, could be overwhelmed In a never ending inflationary spiral, Kiss- inger told the 29th sessi~ of the U.N. General Assembly. While oil producers are entitled to "a fair share," Kissinger said, "it caMot OIL NATIONS HEAR TOUGH TALK BY FORD Page A4 be in the interest of any nation to magnify lbe despair of the least developed who are uniquely vulnerable to e:1orbitant prices and who have no reoourse but to pay." The speech followed President Ford's own warning to the General Assembly last week that manipulation of the energy crisis could lead to counteraction using food as a political and economic weapon. Arab delegates who detected a veiled ultimatum in that address will be fine- combing Kissinger's speech for evidence ol. a U.S. effort to turn sentiment, particularly in Third World countries, against initiators or the fourfold increase in petroleum prices th.is year. Kissinger said tbe Uplted Stales i> ready to joln with all nations in a massive ellort to meet the world's needs for doobling of food production by the end of the century. "We have an obligation to strive for an adequate supply or food to every man , woman and child in the world," be said. At the international food conference in Rome on Nov. 5, he said, the United States will present a number of specific proposals to increase fertilizer pro- duction, expand research programs, and rebuild food reserves against the vagaries of weather. St1tdents Begin Arriving for UCT 's 10th Year The first groups or students: who will attend UC Irvine when Its loth year of instruction begins next Wttk began arriving today for a week of orientation. A total of 8,800 students are expected _to attend ~ university this year, up 400 from last !all. About one third of the total will be entering freshmen and transfer students from other instit utions. The week's activitieJ are aimed largely at giving the new students a chance to become familiar with the campus, locate their classes, and get acquainted with the variety or activities available at the lrvioe ~mpus. Most of the new students will live in apartments off campus or with their parents, and a new commuter student program has been formed to gel them involved in campus life. u .. ,,.....,, Sole Goal: 'To Ser,re I My Nation' WASll!NGTON (Al') -Nelson A. Rockefeller said today '"it is a myth" that his family exercises vast economic power and added that he sees no conflict posed by the vast financial holdings \vhich brought him nearly $47 million in income the past 10 years. ''There could be no conllict with anything because my sole purpose is to serve my country," the rormer New York governor declared. He spoke as his vice presidential con- firmation heari ngs opened before the Senate Rules Committee in the vast Senate caucus room which a year ago housed the Senate Watergate hearings. Rockefeller was questioned b y VICE PRESIDENT-DESIGNATE NELSON ROCKEFELLER CHATS WITH RULES COMMITTEE MEMBERS Fr<>m Left, Sens. Howard W. Cannon, James Buckley, Jacob Javits With Rockefeller Chairman Howard }.1. Cannon (0-Nev.), about the potential conflict of interests which rould result from decisions he might make as vice president or presi· dent. Rockefeller Tells More He responded that the bulk of his income comes from trusts over which he exercises no control, saying "this myth about the power which my famil y exercises needs to be brought out into Faniily's /foldings in Oil Stocks Exceed $32•0 Millio1i the open. . "It just doesn't exist," Rockefeller , said, noting tha t he doem't "oetupy myself to even read the list of securities" WASHINGTON (AP) -Nelson A. Rockefeller revealed today that his family 's oil stocks are worth mOre than $320 million, but claimed the Rockefellers no longer control any of the giant petroleum companies his grandfather founded. Although Rockefeller's d e t a i I e d disclosure of his holdings gave the public its best glimpse of the family fortune in nearly 40 years, many questions re- mained at the out.set of congressional hearings on President Ford's ap- pointment of Rockefeller to be vice presi- dent. The fonner New York governor gave the Senate Rules Committee a list of all the stocks and bonds owned by him, his wife and two trusts of wh ich he is the life beneficiary. He also submitted the diversified portfolios held in trust for his wife, Happy, and their children. The total va lue of Mrs. Rockefeller 's tru:ts was put at $3.9 million, and their children 's trusts and personal holdings were listed at $35.7 million. The breakdown showed t h a t Rockefeller's art collection accounts for more than half his $62.5-million personal net worth. He also owns more than S12 million in securities and real estate valued at $11 million. The trusts. set up by his father , John D. Rockefeller Jr., are worth $116.5 million and show a strong continuing interest in Exxon and Standard Oil of California. But the vice president- designate said diversifi ca tion of in- vestments over the years has reduced Rockefeller holdings in the Standard Oil companies and the family 's Chase * * * fl ere' s Rock y's Bala1ice Slieet . Manhattan Bank "to nominal percen-The former governor's largest single but leaves financial mana ge ment "to; !ages." the very able men" hired by his family stock holding is in something called 10 m g the" If · • "The total holdings of all the Jiving ana e ir a airs. . Malnar Ltd., an untraded company Cannon described Rockefeller's ' de.scd ~ndatntstof mdoy fatther, both outright val ued at its cost to him of $4.2 milliQn. declaration that publi c service is his an m rus s, no amount to more w~le goal as "a very laudable purpose,." than 2.06 percent of the stock of any Malnar presumably is a family holding but said the committee must determine of these oil companies," Rockefeller said. rompany. the impact of "this vast economic power He cited family holdings of 1.07 per-He also owns just over $1 million which you say you do not have." cent, or about $159 million of Exxon ; each in Dow Chemical Company and Asked by Sen. Claiborne Pell (D-R.J.), 2.06 percent, or $84 million, of Standard Arsber Daniels Midland Corp. stock and how he would vote on an Issue _ of California ; 1.75 percent, or $6.1 million, just Wlder $1 million worth of Exxon such as a government loan for Lockheed of Mobil Oil Company; and less than and International Business Machines Aircraft Corp. _ that would influence one percent eadl in Stmdanl Oil Com-(IBM}, all based on their market value his or his family's holdings, Rockefeller pany of Indiana and Marathon Oil on Aug. 2..1. said: "I would not be influenced in Company. Rockefeller and his "i fe showed "None o{ the descendants of my father smaller holdings in 38 other stoc;;s and the slightest, frankly, by holdings. serves on the boards of any of the a half~ozen certificates of deposit and "I am not influenced by so-called oil companies, and we have no control bond interests, not that I have none," be, of any kind over the management or Th!· largest trust from which he said, adding : "When one takes the oath policies of any of them," Rockefeller derives income was valued at $106 of office, from that point on YoU aerve said. million, Including Rockefeller Center the people. · .and put everything else It was not clear from his statement, stock worth $25.5 m.ilJion, Exxon worth aside." however, how much oil stock is owned $20 million , IBM worth $15 million and Questioned by Pell whet{ler he would by companies in which Uie family has Eastman Kodak worth $9.6 million. run for president 1n 1976 lf the re was substantial holdings, such as Chase an opening for the office, Rockefeller Manhattan or RockeCeller Center, Inc. replied, "I am anxious to serve my Nor did he mention the sizable oil country in any way I can. I would holdings of the various Rockefeller foun-Rocky' S J 97 O have to presume that·woWd not preclude dations in which the family continues the presidency." _ to have a strong voice. Cannon also __raised the question of The only time Rockefeller dominance u s Ta ? z:zch presidential pardons, noting that Presi~ was ever challenged , in a 1929 groxy • • X • " dent Ford declared at hi s vice preslden· fight for control of Standard Oil or tial hearings last year that the country Indiana , all the Rockefeller roundations, WASHINGTON (UPI) -Nelson wouldn't stand for such an act. funds, trusts and personal holdings were A. Rockeleller said today he paid He asked Rockefeller if he as president voted together and overwhelmed the no federal income tax in 1970 -.would pardon a president under criminal challenger. because the other taxes he had investigatioo.- Rockeleller said the family owns only to pay totaled more than his entire "l\.1y total lllclinalion Is to say •no,' " 2.M percent of Chase Manhattan's income for that year. Rockefeller replied. outstanding stock. He did not point out It came about, Rockefeller told He added that he didn't feel "l should that that share, worth more than $20 the Senate Rules Co mmitte e, S/11 at this point that I will amend million, is the largest single bloc or because there were "major shifts the Cmstitution or the United states/' that one of hi.-, brothers heads the bank, in the investment portfolio" of his by saying he would take an actioo one of the two or three largest in more than $100 million trust. He .. circumstances of which I don'& know ." the world. • has no control over how the money Rockefeller said: "I do not want to He cited accounts about the in-in the trust is invested. get into the box that my predecessor terconnection of Rockefeller interests Because of the sales of a substan-got into by being frank and open" and declaring that ''there isn't .this network tial portion of the holdings in the then finding changed circumstances upon of control that is popularly imagined." trust, Rockefeller had to pay more ascending to the presidency. From the list Rockefeller provided, than $6 million in capital gains He promised that "should I become it was clear that the famil y diversified taxes. That exceeded his income confirmed and should Congress request, Registration and information packets given the students list a number of activities aimed at getting the commuter students together. its portfolio considerably since the last for the year, which was $2.4 I will place immediately all my WASHINGTON (UPI ) -What is il public examination of the Rocke feller million. Thus, he did not have securities which I own outright" into like to be "rich as Rockefeller"? fortune by a Senate committee in 1937, to pay any federal income tax. a blind trust for the duration of his Tilree areas where a large number of commuter stludents live have been identified as places six off~ampus UOI student advisors will set up centers of activity in their homes. Vice presidential nominee Nelson A. i·~w;;h~en~n .. ~r~ly~a~U~o~l~it~w~a~s~in~o~il~. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~te~nur~•;· ;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:~ Rockefeller provided some answers to- day in his opening statement before the Senate Rules Committee. The areas are Balboa Island, Balboa Peninsula and the Costa Mesa-Saola Ana Heights area. Other activities set for the week are speeches by UCI scientists, a camp out in the track and field area of the campus, and a fair in the campus park. The week will end Friday with a noon ·debate bct\veen gubernatorial can- didates Houston Flournoy and Edmund G. Brown Jr. Rockefeller filed a summary or his tax returns, and for just one year, 1973, they showed: -He recei ved a salary of $82,811 as governor of New York state. -'Dividend from stock holdings brought an income of $3,809,52'2. - -When other miscellaneous inrome was counted, he made a total of $4,810,873. -He gave away $1,654,832 in charitable contributions. -His business expense total $914,033. -He paid combined state, federal and local taxes of $2,003,822. Get Well~ Di~k Protes t Mc1rcliers Sy1npatlietic A group of students marching in protest of the pardon of !onner President Richard Nixon may have had "a change of heart," the San Clemente chief of police. says. . Chief Mel Portner said about 50 students from Grossmonl College in El Csjon marched past the front gate Sunday 'at the one-lime Western White House with signs protesting President Ford's pardoning .of Nixon. Mary Beth ""' ""' her jeans aside for a free and easy outfit bV Peggy Barker. Accesoorized with -~·no f\ef lavOOte hat. tt's a·pretty way ·to go to schOOI. par1ies. or that very special dale. Gomg Looks for SCl>ool and atter are available at The Red BallOon, Ltd. He said too marchers chanted "equal justice for all," and carried signs saying "Impeach Ford," -However, the march ended wbcn_a.Jeadcr~oLthc. rally-gave a get well card, addressed to Nixon, to a guard at the complex, Portner said. Nixon entered a hospital IA>day for treatment of phlebltl! of the left leg . TlfC ,RED-B!ittOON-1--1 '. . LTD. .. , guess they had a change of heart." .. id the police chief. He said the marche;> probably didn't believe In Nixon being pardoned "but they were sorry he was I.II." · The students traveled by car from their campus cast of San Diego and marched only a few hundred yards around the area. The police ehlef said the 90-mlnute rally conchid<d without lncldenl. t • f l'MHIOH !SU.MO _ .... _ l'AIH!oN IOJMI &lt'!lllA•1T141M1-rm .Qmi.otOH HAAtOIJl!t 11'14!M6-I ... \ ·• ' DAILY PILOT The Devil's Workshop UPCOAST. DOWNCOAST: Today's blue Monday had all lhe eannarks of being one of those · days which drive our ooastal sehoolkids to frenzy, teadlers to frustration and always causes me to questi111 ttie wisdom of my father. If you could believe the predictions: or the weather predictors, today was going t.o be one of those wonderful September dillies. . Temperatures would soar into the 90s inland. Along our coastline . the mercury woul~ f1irt with 80 as-Pacific waters daoced under balmy breezes. You could fai!"IY describe all this as super beach weather. BUT THE KIDS are in school, the teachers are locked in with them. and the rest of us are supposed to pretend we lll'8 working and not really thinking about it at all. I am thinking about it. Also, this kind of weather reminds me a Jot of my late father, who made rules about days like this after school bad started. As far as he was concerned, hot beach weather in September was the work of the devil, cunningly dev~ to turn the student's mind away from the work of the moment. He had a mental switch which he could flip to twn off beach days. He flipped it about the same time the fll'SI sdiool bells rang almg lhis best of all possible coasts. You cooJd argue that the sun was h>t. The surf was up. The breezes \vere balmy. It was, in fact, better weather than we bad in June or August. His mind, however, was locked on the sub- ject. It was September and beach days were over. IF THE SUNNY elements seemed to pres,, his point, however, Dad couJd then tum to the temperatures ot the Pacific to underscore his point. The . water, he would note. was quite cold . You could catch awful shivvers and snifnes if you visited your body in that stuff in September. ~Id September ocean temperature, he reasoned, was the Lord's way of reminding us that warm beach sand in the fall was the devil's workshop, devised to frustrate the good 'WOl'k of tho-8e instructing young minds in the mysteries al English II or Algebra l·A. • Monday, Septem~, 23, iq74 'T1ie Danger • J,S Cloo.r' - Ford Talks Tough at Oil Meet By HELEN TIJOMAS DETROIT (U PI) -President Ford , in one or his hanhest speeches since taking office. today warned ~1iddle East oil producing nations that their ex- orbitant prices run the risk of creating "'-orldwlde depression and a mil ita ry oonlrontatlon. I "It is diflicuJt to discuss the ~nergy problem without lapsing into dot ms· day language," Ford told the opening of the ointh world energy conference. "The danger is clear. It is severe." • ~ ELABORATING ON lllS warning bfore the U.N. Assembly last v.·eek th at oil must not be used as a "political weapon ," the president said a global strategy was needed "lo achieve fuel prices which provide a strong incentive to producers but do not seriously disrupt the economies of the consumers." "We recognize the desires of the producers to earn a fair price for their oil as a means of helping to develop their own economies," he said. "But ex· orbitant prices can only distort the world economy, run the risk of worldwide depression and threaten the breakdown of world order and safety." There were dozens of rep?'C5entatives of the oil rich Arab countries amOng the 69 nations attending the conference. ''SOvereign nations try to avoid dependence on other nations that exploit their own resources to the detriment of others," he said. "SOvereign nations cannot allow their policies to be dictated , or their faie decided , by artificial rigging and distortion of world commodity markets." Pat Nixon's Baubles Seen .4 t $580 ~000 , 'VASHINGTON (AP) - A cousin of Pat Nixon personally supervised the ap- praisal and insuring of an estimated $580,000 ~-orth of jewelry at the White House from 1970 .to 1974, the \Vashington Post reported today. • Noting that nations often have gone to war over natural resources, Ford added that "no one can foresee the extent of the damage nor the end of the disastrous consequences if nations re ruse to share nature's .gilts for the benefit of all mankind .. , ''BECAUSE VITAL RESOURCES are distributed unevenly," he said, "na- tions are forced to choose Qetween oonnict and cooperation.'' Ford, who flew to Detroit after an early morning "Montana Breakfast'' meeting at the home of Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, pursued his ">amings to oil-producing nations despite a rebuke from Venezuelan President Carlos Andres Perez after the United Nations speech. Perez complained in a telegram that Ford was attacking Venezuela. but a White Hoose spokesman insisted the remarks \\'ere directed primarily at the Arabs. "When nations use their resources as political weapons against others, the result is human suffering," Ford said. "Throughout history, nations have gone to war over natural advantages sLJCh as water or food, or convenieDt passages on land and sea. But in the nuclear age, when any 1ooa1 conruct may esc_alate to global catastrophe brings unacceptable risks for all mankind." But he added he was "nevertheless optimistic" because "the advantages of cooperation are as visible as the dangers of confrontation." }fe urged that energy prices be approached wilh the same dedication that mobilized the United States to put a man on the moon. The value assigned by appraisers in· trigued Watergate prosecutors beca use the total· assets of the Niitoo family totaled only $515,836 in late 1968, Ule newspaper said. ,,,_.., .... ~ii.ol.~ -. The exact ownership of the jewelry was unclear, the story added. rt identified Edward 0. Sullivan, a 49-year-old .Bronxville, N.Y., insurance broker who has handled all or the Nixon family's insurance. as supervisor of the appraisal and insurance of the jewelry. Sullivan was not available for com· ment. Other sources have disclosed that the Senate Watergate commiUee ha s forwarded the data it uncovered about the Nixon family's finances to special prosecutor Leon Jaworski for further investigation. J\.'lembers or Jaworski's staff declined to describe the value placed on the jev.•els by appraisers and Sullivan. One angle being pursued by the pro. secutor and a grand jury is the alleged role played by Niiton's close friend. Charles G. (Bebe) Rebozo, in campaign fund-raising on Nixon's be ha If. Investigators for the commiUee say they traced left-over funds from the 1968 presidential campaign to the eventual purchase of a pair of diamond earrings from a New York jeweler for $4,562. .~ REFUGEES BEGIN TO FORD RIVER SWOLLEN BY HURRICANE FIFI, NORMALLY ONLY 12·FEET WIDE Honduran Off icials Call for More Helicopters, Medical Supplies for Floocf.ravaged Villages Fifi's . Victims Trapped In Snake-infested Areas Jordan, Israel Blast Palestine GueITilla Group From Wi~ Services CHOI.OMA, Honduras (UPI) -Hon-at least 40 more. He ~d "every time Israel joined J or d 8 n today in de- U'I~ KEPT DISEASE A SECRET Write r Jacqueline Susann Cancer Takes Jacqueline Susa11n , 53 From Wire Services NEW YORK -"I have no intention of aging gracefully," Jacqueline Susann wrote in 1962. "I \VIII go out kicking, screaming, fighting the batUc of etemaJ youth." At the time, ttfiss SUsann. in the mid.st of a career as a stage and television actress, already knew she had cancer. , But she \\'ent on to make a fortune "''ith ber lusty novels, "Valley of the Dolls," "The Love Afachine'' and "Once is Not Enough. .... Valley al the Dolls" sold 17 million copies and won her a place in the Guinness Book of Records. SATURDAY NIGHT, at 53. Jacqueline Susann died at Doctors Hospital. where she bad been a patient for seven weeks. Until recenUy, only her husband of 30 years. television-movie producer Irv· ing Mansfield, anct two close women friends knew of her illness, or that the "JWlCUlllOOia" and other ailments she had suffered in recent years were a reclUTence of cancer. Even her son, Guy. and her mother. ~trs. Rose Susann of Philadelphia. were Wl.1W{l:re of the seriousness of her illness. hf.i.si Susann's loog·lime publicist. Esther Afargolis. said on Sunday that t~ authoress had a partial mastectomy Cbreast surgery) on Christmas Day, 1962. and the disease was in remission for many years. When she became ill again more than two years ago, it was discovered Uiat the disease had spread to her lungs. 1\t the end, it had affected many parts of her body. t----TODAY, BOWEVER,we • ...,.in·the-•ge--Exec~s-Girl duran army ·troops burned the bodies they heard my American accent they . E--• and S . -gru· . . nounong &.r 1 ..... an ynan ..... u • of.thxisands ol» ... Lc..lims.. or Hurricane w~d ask .. for heh copters and mor_____!__.ilon.ot lestine Liberation aniza- ~USS SUSANN saw .. Valley of the Dolls" and "The Love Aiacbine" made into movies that also became "best· sellers," with the film version of "Once is Not Enough" scheduled for release next spring. ' ' of the wetsuit and the surfboard. You may slip into rubberized coat and pants and be pretty well immunized from the ebivers and sniffles. You might even just.sit-upon the surfboard , outside the breaker line, and not 1hardJy get wet at all. Besides that, it is considered socially acceptable today to simply go to the beach and bask in the sun wilhoot touching the Pacific wash at all. You just go to play cards, loll around and enhance the summer tan. Thus it is far more difficult these days to simply flip and switch and declare that beach days are gone and forgotten until next Easter vacation. I CAN JUST imagine how my father "''ould have viewed all this. He would simply figure that the e -t e m be r simply figure that the devil bad refined his September workshop. If this weather holds, we may find that workshop will have a heavy flow of customers. Retur1ied Safe -ilffiMINGHAM, Mich. (AP\ - The IO.year-old daughter of a General MotoFs Corp. executive, abducted at knife-point from her bedroom Sunday, was back home unharmed today. Police Detective Lt. Ed Ostin said ttie abducter entered the unidentified executive's $ 5 0 , 0 0 0 home in this Detroit suburb and forced the child to leave with him in his car. She was released without injury about 90 minutes later on a rural northwest Oakland County road in Davisburg. Ostin said the Intruder may have planned to bold the girl for ransom. But he added, "At this point, there's no way of telling what the motive was." Fifi today and sent out a desperate helicopters . . . . . . lion as the sole representative of the appeal for ''helicopters and more l\.1ost of the Vlcluns berng airlifted Palestine people. Israeli foreign minister helicopters" to save an estimated 8,000 to safety were in the Aguan River Yigal Allon said the move "''oold be pe-r-SOns-Stranded Jn_villages swarlllizlg-..Yalley_whic:h includes the town of Ceiba, harmful to his country's existence. with deadly snakes. . third largest in Honduras and one t ---Allon;--in a statement aLihe._Te!_Ayj_y__ P~:'!~~i~:st: a!~~i~e! t~?dn ~~ by U.S. banana finns. and Trujillo. He athirpoUrtNbefGore nytingA to Nb~w Ydoebark., said ·d bod. be' 1 d . e . . enera sscm y e on thousands of homeless victims had oot sai many 1es were mg oun tn Palestine \~·ould be the toughest Israel eaten in ·three days and most of them the ~1otogua ri ver which flows into were clinging to rooftops, high points Guat emala from Honduras. of ground and even treetops, menaced by fer~e-lance pit vipers driven out by the floods. THE NATIONAL Emergency Com- mittee has reported at least 5,000 persons dead, 50,000 homeless and more than $500 million damages in what Juan Bautista Vaca, a govennnent civil defense spokesman, called "the worst moment in the nation's J.50.year history." UPI comspoodent Tim !lerT)' reported from ooe of the disaster scenes that Hondurp.n authorities bad only six heiiooplers at their disposal and needed "There are still people in the Aguan Valley who haven't eaten in three days," a relief official said. ''People there who are psychologically disturbed and injured are also looking for the missing and we are trying to help as fast as we can." ADDING TO TllE fears of epidemics were the hundreds of victims buried just under the surface by mudslides. Rescue workers were forced _to wear gas masks because of the terrible stench as they dug up the bodies and burned ·them on huge funeral pyres. ( IN SHORT ... ) has ever faced. especially if the PLO is admitted to the world body. Israel has warned previously the debate could undermine Secretary al State Henry A. Ki ssinger's peace keeping efforts in the Middle East. "There will be an extremely anti-Israel atmosphere at the United Nations General Assembly debate which ~"OU.Id damage ef!orts at achieving a Middle East solution," Allon said. • e Braniff Fl11lng -carne t orlflrom het native Philadelphia an aspiring actress. She appeared in 21 plays, including "Banjo Eyes." "Jackpot" and the road companies of "The Animal Kingdom'' and "Watch on-the~Rhine" before turning to television as a dran1atic actress. game show panelist and mistress of ceremonies on interview programs. Although she was best known for her sexy novels about sometimes-thinly· disguised Clmracters from shov,• business and the jet set, ~1iss Susann's own favorite work was a piece or non-fic- tion -"Every Night, Josephine." She described it as the story of her life with Mansfield and Josephine, "the poo- dle who owned us." A family SPokesman said funeral ar- rangements would be private and asked that donations be made to the Jacqueline SusaM Cancer Research F\md at Rockefeller University in lieu of flowers . Texas State Waterlogged .. They found bodies and bodies and bodies -so many they could not bury them ," a government rescue spokesman said ... They had to btlm them ... Officials reported thousands of poisonous green and black fer*lance snakes swimnling onto crowded rooftops to attack families seeking refuge !rom the churnlng flood waters. DALLAS, Tex. -Braniff International planes returned to the sides early today after the company and its pilots agreed to submit a labor dispute to a fact-finding board. A 48-hour pilot strike was called off when representatives of Bran.if( and its 1,328 pilots sent the unresolved issue of ~'ages and retirement benefits to a board to be selected by the airline and the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA). Boston, C1iiUlre1i Side-by-side Jn, Eig1it1i Day El Paso .4 rea Residents Ev<1ciiated Due to Flooding "Please, we desperately need helicopters," the emergency committee said in an appeal to foreign newsmen in Tegucigalpa. "1PJease send out a worild sos." DAI LY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delivery of lhe Daily Pilot is guarant eed ""Olldf•· Ftldll't' ~ If .,OU do Ml! !'l.lvt l")l.ll' lltlltf ll't j •.M) p m., tllll M!O 'f(IUI laJlf Wiii bf lllOUQlll 10 •OU. C•U' 11r1 Mk~1.'ll1I /;OOo,tl'I. 5'1111'111• 1"11 Su"OotY• II '/Oii dOl'CM •KOi ... ·-UIO¥ by •• ,.. w. ........ ,, or ••. m Svnd••· (Ill .....04~¥•1IL~lll_,.,_c.lllbt11r.t.t.lltll_ r.ontll10• '"· TetephOnes ~11!'111,.•U H1mt1~0flbNtl! l"lll'<tllr?'l•l"'tt .................. W01tl0 ~Cll'mt"'' C'-™t-Bt>llCP! Mfl Ji.111 Cllet•ll•MIO 0-fliD•nl ~lll•~.l•0\11111"'•-' ) The agreement was signed on Sunday. Pilots struck at midnight Friday. e .Japan Protest TOR:YO -The Japanese Communist p:irty, whose demonstrators helped block the visit of the late President Eisenhower to Japan in lllliO, today announced it would "resolutely struggle" against the November visit o/ President Ford . An editorial in the porty's daily newspaper, Akahata (Red Flag), called on other opposition croups in Japan to Join forcos with the Communists tn barring Ford's scheduled visit Nov. 18-22. BOSTON (UP!) -Black and white children got off police-escorted buses by the hundreds today and walked into racfally troubled Hyde Parle High School side ,by side, some chatting and joking al the start of the eighth day o1 ~ court ordered plan to integrate public schools. A minor disruption took place w11en some 200 white youths tried to posh their war in Mlcbelangelo Middle School in the nc:rth end. A few windows "''ere broken, appareotly by thrown ato.,., In the school and in several ncarbf buildings. The group waa largely made up or yootbs lrom Boston 's Chark!stown seo- Uoni who were staging an antl-~using dcmoostratlon, or!ici•fs said. Alter b<lng pushed back by pofico, they marched e llfllk Chcf'!Je through a r<etion-of the Predominantly WASffiNGTON -Sctl . Wiiiiam Prox-ltali1111 north end before heing-dlll!l<n<d. mire (0.Wia.). has charged the Safeway There were no injuries or arresl•, chain rOQd stores with "ripping off" A 13-yea!'Old whit< yooth suffered 8 the larm.r aod the consumer by brokeo wrist In a Og)~ with 8J10lhcr o>'eTCharglng lor powdered milk. child at a bus pickup localioo in Jamaica Proxmire said Safeway'• pr 1c1 n g Plain. He was treated al QlJldten 's ~ policies were .. feedlnr lhe fires of In-llospttal. !lauon by puohing the_ tetall price .ol _ Poflce said three youths were &M'eSled nonrat dry milk through the roof while oo dhorderfy conduct charges during the gt1veinmeo< purclwes the llOl1lC pro-a minor dhturbance at Day Square duct at surplus diotrcss priet.S." In East U..too. I 1 lo da m' or Pa a f. ti t c e d g t a • ~· -• • • ' ~ange Coa8t · EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL 67, NO. 266, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 197'4 N TEN CENTS Le.gi·slature Called Back • Ill Pension Dispute Gov. Ronald Reagan ordered the cau. fornia Legislature to reconvene Wednes- d~y .n~ to cnosider repeal of up to $5.7 mtll1on m early pensions for retiring or defeated lawm'akers. (Earlier story Page AS.) Reagan's order came barely JS minutes after Democratic leaders of the Senate and Assembly announced that they would reconvene the Legislature themselves next Monday. Up to 61 legislators, many or them in their 30s, are eligible to 1tart col· lecting lifetime peosions of up to $12,000 a year under terms of the current pension law. Among ~authors of the blll to r~al the retirement windfall are Senator Den- nis Carpenter (JI.Newport Beach) and Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Hwi- tington Beach). Carpenter today expressed confidence that the bill would be successful, but Burke voiced misgivings on the motives enne * * * l(ennedy Opens Way To Field WASIIlNGTON (AP) -By removing him.~lf from the 1976 presidential race, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy has opened !he way to a broadened Democratic field. The action also brings relief lo those fearful of the oontroversy and threat of tragedy that would have surrounded his candidacy. . The most Immediate po 1 i t I c a 1 beneficiaries d ilia decision. whose tim- ing was perhaps more 1urprising than ( NEWS .ANALYSIS J its contents, are the other Democrats who have either begun or have been contemplating 1978 presidential bids. !flinnesota Sen. Walter F. Mondale's pc>tential candidacy, for instance. has been overshadowed by the possibility · a Kennedy candidacy might wipe out much potemial liberal support. behind those calling for a SpeCial session. "Even if the Legislature acts on the bill, there is still a loophole," Burke warned, "They can tuoi in their resigna- tions so that their retirement would p1'cede the dale of the bill and they would still be eligible. "I wouldn't be surprised i£ someooe doesn't have something up their sleeve like that. If feel this might be more of a public relations move ." The bill to repeal the bonuses is by AssemblYinan Robert McLennan (R· Downey). It would prohibit , legislators under age 60 Crom drawing an immediate pension when they leave office. The impetus for a return of the legislators gained strength last week and over the weekend as b o t h Republicans and Democrats apparenUy sensed the anger of voters at the 1,>3Yments that would be made to men still in their 3tlo, .• 0. llQ.d 508. Can>enter, wOO noted that he has Sen. Henry Af. Jackson of Washington • • -racca-flieDaSJ1"1u!nd!cap-thM-e•en-po&e~p1----------------­ tial backers feared he wou1d be unable to win the Democratic nomination from Work progresses on nine-story Marriott hotel under· dollar hole~ with adjacent convention complex is scheduled for Opening in mid-March 1975. Kennedy. construction in Newport Center. The multi-million- Mondale and Jackson may be the closest things to frontrunners at this early, indecisive stage. But Kennedy 's decision seems. if nothing else, to guarantee a long list of entrants and to iRCtease the chances of a deadlocked convention. · Some possibilities, such as Gov. John J. Giiiigan of Ohio and Sen. Birch E. Bayh or Indiana. could have little hope as long as Kennedy ran , or even considered running. Now. significant vic- tories in November could propel them into the race. Other individuals, too, could benefit. the active ones such as Sen . Lloyd Al . Bentsen or Texas and others only cancHctates for office now . Beyond that, however, the Democratic party may be the ultimate beneHciary. Kennedy's long lead in the polls had convinced even those unlikely to favor the Massachusetts senator that he would be difficult to stop for tbe nomination. But many of these, from chairman Robert S. Strauss · down, feared that Kennedy. while able to win the nomina- tion would be unable to win the presiden- tial election itself and that bis candidacy would doom the nation's majority party to a third straight national defeat. Cliff Arquette Dead BURBANK (UPI ) -Cliff Aniuctte, 68, television comedian who played the r'ole of Charley Weaver, dled today at St. Joseph pospital. SAILBOAT SELLER GOT MA.NY CALLS "We got so many calls about our sailboat we couldn 't believe tt." '!'hat's how a Qalboa Island resident described the response to this Dally Pilot classlfled ad : LIDO II. sail no. 3708, Used several times by a Lousy sailo r on Lake Arrowhead . ?ifany e1tr11s. cover. Desperate! Best offer! x.xx-xxx x U.t someone ma,ke you an offer you won 't refuse. Cell 64Ui78. Put a few words to work for you, In !he Dally Pilot. • Burton Still Loves Liz 'But We Can't Live Togetlier,' He Says By ROBERT MUSEL LONDON !UP!) -Richan! Burton said today he loves Elizabeth Taylor and she loves him, but their divor~ last June was !he final burial rite of the great romance and there will be no reconciliation. "Unfortunately, we're incompatible," he said. "We love each other but we can't Uve together." Burton said this across lunch in a crowded tavern. He was asked Ir he Kootenai Tribe To Swrt Taking Fee Frbm Trai1is BONNERS FERRY, Idaho (AP) - Kootenai Indians planned to begin col- lectiag tolls today from trains as well as cars passing through the land !hey have. claimed in thelr nonviolent war with the-United States. Tribal leaders have deferred. any decl$lon on further escalation of their war 1mUI late today. They agreed to wait for answers from Washington, D.C. M demands for treaty negotiations and on a rtquest that congressional lcader1 visit tbtlr area. ' TEscnpe 'lJetentiou NEW YORK (UP!) -&ven convicted narcotics violators escaped •from the federal house of detention SUnday, ap- partntly by using improvised keys, authorities said. Louis Gengler, warden of lhe-three-llOr)I facility In Greenw ich VIiiage, said the seven slipped out after lunch through tJ\ree locked grille doon. and a fourth which was not locked. "1 bad heard the reports that Elizabeth would marry her constant companion these days, l!enry Wynberg of IA'! Angeles, the J:nan who moved in when he moved out. Up to that point, Burton enthralled his lunch CQl1lpanions with the fine now o[ anec9.otes for which he is famous. He told cf bis meetings with Sir Winston Churchill, whom he will portray in a forthoomlng television production based on one of Churchill's books, "The Gather- ing Storm," and scheduled for broadcast (NBC-TV) Nov. 29 -the eve of Churchill's tooth birthday. But at the mention of Wynberg, the 49-yeaMld actor's face hardened. "Who is he?" Burton asked, staring straight ahead. "Ah, well," he added after a moment, "Elizabeth is such a moral person that Wlqoestionably she will marry this chap. She's not a layabout, U she goes to bed with sbmeooe, she marries them. so I've no doubt she will marry this ... Mr. Weisberg." He emphasized the mispronunciation. "Are you in touch with her?" "Oh yes. I'm very food of her and I love her very much. And that's reciprocal. And 1 admire her very much. She's a very lovely and loving woman. I'm perfectly convinced she will marry somebody. Presumably this fellow." Burton and Miss Taylor we re separated in July, 1973, after 10 Jear! or marriage and several attempts at reconciliation. Miss Taylor obtained a Swiss divorce lasl June. "I will, of course, naturally worry about Elizabeth," Burton said. "lf she's ill or something, I'd be there like a flash. We swap our babies back and forth . One minute 1 have mine then hers, Md then she has mine. Ab, she's a very delightful and remarkable woman." Burton was relieved when the subject was changed. Catalina Reeord Lynne .Cox lDoes It Un&er ·9 Hours AV ALON (AP)-A 21-year'.old Los Alamltos swimmer conquered the 21-mUe Catalina Channel In record Ume !or a woman today and just mlssed-lhe-men'screoord set by her brother.. Lynne Cox reached Catalina Island a(ter 8 hours 58 minutes, breaking the women's record of 11 houri seven minutes set by Greta Andersen, now of Huntington Harbour, ln 1957, spokeswoman for the swimmer sald. Her brother David set the men's record of eight hOurs 50 mill' utes in J 972. Miss Gox, who holds the record for swimming the English Channel, tried earlier this month lo break the record but dense fog farted her to quit. oppo5ed any kind of pension for lawmakers, said that the special session wou1d be an "opportunity lo do scmething about a mistake." "A Jot of people who support the tbe move for a repeal will have to vote against their own vt'Sted interests." Carpenter. said. McClennan introduced bis bill in the summer to overturn pension bonuses that would average $93.000 if all eligible legislators stepped down or failed to ' Cites Need To Be Near His Family BOSTON (AP) -Sen . Edward M .. Kermedy, citing family tragedies, said today that he will neither seek nor accept the Democratic nomination for president or vice president in 1976. 1be Massachusetts Dtmocrat, with bis wife Joan at bis sk\e, said, "This decision is finn, final and unconditklnal. There is absoluteJy no circumstance or event that will alter !he declsfon." ' :Ille 12~ld brother of tl)e. late frealdonl John F. Kennedy and the fate Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, both of whom were assassinated, said he weigh· ed his decision carefully. "One basic ract bas berome in- creasingly clear to me," be said at a news conference. "From the cam- paigns of l\lY brothers belore me, I know that seeking the nation's highest office demands a cu.ndida&.e's undivided attention and bis deepest persoiial com-· mibnent. . "My primary responsibilities are at home. lt bas become quite apparent t.o me that l would be unable to make a full commitment to a campaign for tluq>resideney: "l simply cannot do that lo my wife and children and the other members of my family ." Kennedy's wife has been in a rest home twice in recent months and bis son Edward Jr. lost part of a leg Jast November because of bone cancer. President Ford learned of Kennedy'• amouncement Crom White House press secretary Ron Nessen while fu Detroit, where he addressed the World Energy Conference. Asked by a reporter for his reaction, Ford ·-his head. said notbing, and grinned broadly. Asked what effect the Chappaqui4dick incident of 1969 had on bis an- nouncement, Kennedy said: •'Tb is decision ... would have been made ir- respective of the tragedy that happened in 1969. , • Were I to run, it would have been a factor that would have been raised." Mary Jo Kopechne, a former secretary for Robert Kennedy, was killed when a car driven by the senator we.nt off (See KENNEDY, Page Az) Woman's Nude Body Discovered 111. Irvine Area The nude body of a yOWlg woman who had been shot once In the head v.·as found Sunday on a lonely stretch road in Irvine , according to Costa Mesa police investigators. The victtm, described as being about 2& years of age, live feet four. 150 pounds with r<ddish hair and haz<:I eyes. h.. not been ldenUfled, according to the county coroner'• office. Police said clothing that may have belonged to the woman was found scat· tcred along the side or Barranca Road near the intcnectlon with Jollroy Road, whtre1he body was dlscovered. The articles of clothing included a blue flowered blouse, blue slacks and black and white shoes. Police ~·ere called to the scene at •boot 3 a.m. when the body was sighted by people In several cars passing by. So far, investiCator• said, there are no leads in !he shooting apart lrom the lac\ that It appears the woma n .... aho\. oometlme Saturday nigh!. I be re-elected this year, the year of a reapportionment. 1'he bill died in the Assembly Rules Commiuee and all efrorts to get it lo the noor of the Democratlcally-con- trolled Assembly failed. "We kept the pot ali ve by urging that a special session be called ," Car· penter said. Those eligible £or pension bon uses had to be members of the Legislature prior (See REAGAN, Page .\!), ace U,IT.._.. WON'T RUN-PERIOD · ·, Sen. Edward KenMdy Lifeguards Nab Swimming Deer Off CdM Beach -. A confused deer that wandered Into the surf from Buck Gully at Little Corona beach Sunday afternoon was led to shore and safety by Newport Beach lifeguard Bruce Maclay. Maclay swam to the deer when it was stranded near Ladder Rock reef after being herded back towards shore by a Harbor Patrol boat. When he reached the floundering animal, Maclay dropped a rope halter around its neck and tugged it to shore. A few minutes before the lifeguard swam to the stranded deer crewmen aboard the patrol boat spotted it as it swam toward the open sea beyond the surfline. Swinuning excursions by deer that live in the hills above the beach are not uncommon, according to Sgt. Harry \\'right of the harbor patrol. "Because deer can't see above sv.·ells, they often become conlust'd when the winds are blowing offshore as they were Sunday," said Wri ght. Orange Coast • Weather It 'II be another sccrcher Tues- day, but not quile as hot' ay, according to lbe weathc service. Highs in the low al lhe beaches after the f lifts, rising to 31 inlan\I. ..·~ INSW... DAY H unicane•TO ged re11klent1 of flonduran villages ha~ sur· vived one crisis -m1WJ to be faced with 011other. Deadly vlper snakes ore swlmtning in tl•e flooded. towA.B. See pho~o and story Page A4. A.I 'Yt W $trVkt A.) o\1111 LI~ a1 a .. 1hw '' Mt'l'ltt M L,11\. .... A.It Natlo11al Ntw1 Al Calit1rt1l1 A,J Of11HM (tllfll'f' "' Clt »lfltC .... II , .... It ., .•• (tlT'llCt •I , 5Hf1' ...... Cl'IUw.rf a.S SllCtl M1rlltlt t.U O..Ui Hollen A,t ••iloNI ,.,.. .. , f t+•vlOtll 1111 _.... .. l11ttrt•IMMll• .. . w .. IMr M 11111.1~ ,t,1 ..... 11 W•N H"' 11• -" l I ' L •• DAILY PILOT N Monday,_ Stitttmbtt 23, 1974 T~rrorists to Disrupt Bicentennial Revelry I I WASHINGTON (API -Terrorists are plmmln& lo disru pt the United Stain' bicentennial celebration with acts or violence. Californi a Alty. Gen. Evelle Younger told a Senate panel today. 0BI~ and p1ece1 ot lnformaUon, • . ' Two Bandits Get $12 ,000 .4t Golf Cl1Lb ' The golf pro at Meadowlark Ccuntry Club In Hwitincton Beach was · forced to 'open tbe club 11fe at IUJ>point SUnday night by a bandit and a hidden partner. They took $12,000 in cash from the safe and escaped. Police said the bandits had lint burglarized lbe home or 11011 pro Dennil Murphy, lU!ng bis wallet and keys lo tbeclu-. After thiey apparently could not get into the club with Murphy's keys, one bandit calmly P,oned Murphy, said he knew who had taken his wallet and a•ed lo come over lo talk lo blm abOul II. ODoe laalde Murpby'o bouae, the robber tlleD told MUrphy hla keya dldn1 work ancl be would bave lo come back lo tbe club and open the door and safe. He told Murphy that a partner outoldt the Wlndoll! bad a pn pointed at him aad ~ ·lboot blm II he dldn~ do it, pollct Mid. Murphy tq14 police be never 11w the Jlll'IDir cloae up, or the weapon but he did ,.. a car followlni bis own voblcle lo the club. 'nit !Int bandit, dtocribecl u 28 lo 30 ,.an old, caucaolan, with reddlah- -bair and bullly oldebuml and --..a u,hloblue T lhlrt and ll&ht<>ol- cnl pall, at ooe point went back aDd lllted lo the -In the other car wblle .Ibey were at Meadowlark, Police Aklt11 Tbt ftrat man toot Murphy Inside wldle be cleaned out the pro shop safe sborlli be/ore mldnllht. MurJllly told police the bandils' car was hidden' behind: a small hill, so he never got a good look at it. Once the first robber bad the cash from the safe, he lold MurJiiy to take off. Then he left the club himself, police said. . Police ·are loo kin& for the two baodlts oo cbarlts of kldnapln1, burglary and armed robbery. Police said there was no one else at Marpby'1 home when the bandlU returned. No one was hurt during the holdup. Prem Pqe Al REAGAN ••. to 1915. Under tenno of the present Pan, Ibey receive retirement benefits linn!ediatelY upon leaving office in a r.ear Jn w!Jlcb there is a reapportionment, sych as thts year. Burke, woo want.a to set the plan o-..rned, ia •monc those elig!gle, al"""8h be is rwinin& !or office a1aln. lie said loday he would get ie,ooo a year for eight years if he were de(eated. -btyman Robert Badham (R- N-1 Beacb), who ba• been In the -bly 21 years and is runnin& !or re-election this year, said today said that McL ennan's b i ll was "grandstanding" and noted th It ~ McLennan WU in a u.t>t """""Q11nst another asaemblyman who would 6ene0t from the pension bonuses. " OIAMl!COAST • DAllY PILOT Tile Or1119' COit! 01>Jy ''lo! ""1~ ..,,11:n 11 "°"" btllld""' N•WI~ •1>Ut>lo•~9<! 1>¥1/le Ot•"ltll 0.. ~ C-0"1' s.r.t•i. IM~-• .., P\ll!flllled. MOnd-v !hi-., r .. a•v. lot Cosio Mia. HfwlXl'I l:le1en Mwnl"'Qll)ll &tatlllf- ..., !hlW. L...,... a...c11 ltvlnW~ 11\d 5"' ~Sall ....,.., C.fllll!lllCI A "'fl9le reooo<* tdl!M)ll if~ s.iutC1n •"II Sil,_ •n. Tilt pnnccllll lllMl!ohiflt ~Int 11 11 l:IO W~st BtYS!rMl.C°"9MM,Gal..,...._ t~:>& Rob.I N. \ll"d _ ... _ »:.•R.c...i., VO ,.,..._,, oW'ld GtM<t1 MJl'IGeo lhorr'O\ K...-.1 -11,.,..,. A. M-..._. .... Chcirl..H. lOOI RM:lod P. No!! ............ ,...,... ..... ) t - however slight, are appearing ln un· dergl'Olllld publlcationa indicatina that plans are already being ronnulated to insure that the 3'>0th anniversary year ot · the United States is marred with domestic viol en«," Younaer satd. No Council Meet Tonight Newport Beach Cl.ty Clerk Laura Laglos wlll be a lonely flguro tonight -lhe goes to City !!all lo IMOllllced tbe regularly ached- uled City COOncil meeting wlll not be held be<au,. ol lack of a quorum. . Younger, whose state has been the oenter of terrorist violence In ncent months, including the kidnaping of Patricia Hearst, told the Senate judiciary subcommittee on internal security: "Each year it is beoomlng Jess difficult for a terrorist, with a ppr op rl ate scientific-technical skills, to construct a chemical or biological device capable of mau destnlCUon. The era of supervfoltn(:e may he upon us." Younger said the Symblone1e Libera· tlon Army, which clalm1 retpOnslblllty for the Hearst Jddnaplng, exemplifies the new breed of educeted , re10urct1ful and ditcipllned terrorists. The SLA, In _, from a book written by terrorllll in carrying out that kldnaplngl took a page Latin America, the MJdd e East and Northern Ireland , the the attorney general said. ' : ' • At the aame time, Miss Laglos will aMOl.UlCt that t 0 n I g h t • I scheduled meeting will be held next Monday night, nonnally an off ~ night ror tbc seven c o u n c 11 members. And, he added, the SLA proved itself to be a master at gaining publicity. A ) , . Prompting can ce 11 at i o n of tonight's meeting was r e c e n t surgery undergone by Mayor Don Mclnnis and the ablence from the city of three other c o u n c i I members. From Page Al KENNEDY •.. a bridge at Chappaquiddick Island, 1.fass. Re(arding 0..ppaquiddlck, Kennedy said be had answered all queat.i011s "quickly, candidly and honestly," In Massachusetts courts. 1 "I can live with my own testimony,'~ he said. "I think I woutd have been able to focua the campaien on the hn- portant issues." 0 1 will not accept the nomination. I will not accept a draft," Kennedy said. He adMd that he will "oppose any effort to place my name in nomination in any ltate or at the national con· ventiOn, and I will oppose any effort to promote my candidacy ln any other way." Kennedy said be reached his decision after discusalons with his wife and other family meIJlber&. The sole surviving son of the late Joseph P. Kennedy said he decided to announce his decision now "in order to e11se the apprehensions within my famUy about the "°"'lblltty of my candidacy, as well as to clartfy the sltuatlon within my party." Kennedy pledged to work for the nut two · years for the DemQcratic party and Its nominees. Kennedy said that a candidate who is unable to make the full commitment needed for a presidential aunpalgn "does a dis9ervlce to his country and to his party." "Frorn the day their first commwiique was printed · m full to the day of their shootout -live and in color -lhty remained a med.ta favorite ," he said. -"All this publicity tends to romanliclr.e the terrorists in the eyes ol the publlc and is instrumental in attracting addl· tional sympathizers and supporters," Younger added. ~ \Vhatever they call t h e m s I v e s , American terrorists are guided by the Marxist-Leninist doctrine as in terpreted by· Mao Tse-tung, Younger told the sub- committee. He said their essential need• -arms and money -tre easily obtainable. Weapona are stolen from military in· siaU4tlon1 and cuh Is oblalned from sympathizers, bank robberies and thefts of credit cards, be added. The moll Important tool in fl&hllng terrortsm ii lnlellil'llCO, Youn11er aald, but Uttle information Is available at the local level. He ur1ed ouneattons from medical, lega! and other profeuionals "ao that no stone remains unturned In our efforts to effec~lvely combat terrorl&m." LONG BIACH MEMORIAL HOSPITAL IS WHERE EX·PRES!DENT NIXON IS SCHEDULED FOR TESTS · He Arrived by Car From San Clement• Home, Enterhi g Through • Rear Door r 8 Rooms Clear for Nixon Long Beacli Hospital Readiet), for Ex-presiderit BUIJ.ETIN LONG BEACH (AP) -Former Preaf· dtal Nboa sllpted luldo a lar10 bo1pltal Mre tltll a.fttnooa, arrlvlq In a c•r •t 1 rear service utraace. ' LONG BEACH (AP) -'Former Preli· dent Nixon, ailing with phlebitis, check1 Into a bright, now hoopllal wing today . Prt1erving the same secrecy which surrounded him in the Whlte Houae, Nixon and aide• declined to reveal hls expected check·ln Ume in advance. A hoopltal spolteswoman and nurses said the stall had no Idea when ho would arrive. !Seo relaild slory Page. AS.> According to tho hospital achedulo, Nixon was to go directly to ht• room alter check-In. There, hoopltal peraonncl will take blood 1ample1 and complete .other dla&noaUc procedures. Hospital •pol<esmen oald It waa llkely, conoldering Nixon's symptoms, that he would un- dergo Intravenous treetment with an· tlcoaculant drua:s. Sucb treatment thins tho blood and aids In koeplng the blood clol In the patient's leg from !laklna ott and pro- ducing smaller clots which might mow to other parts of the body. During such treatment, the patient n1ust remain immobile because any physical Injury could bring on profuse bleeding. A bloc of eight private rooms at Long Beach ~temorial Hospital li-tedical Center was cleared of paUents Sunday in readiness for Nlxoa's arrival. Hospital spoke!Woman Karen Krantz said hospital officials decided to use the rooms as a "buffer zone" betlt:een Nixon and other patj ents on the alrth floo r welt wing, Checks to Red Cross She sald it was not known if the ex-president would be billed for all eight rooms. which each usually C06t $85 a day. Nixon requested only two rooms. Hoapltal officials al10 woukt not aay who 11 paying the bill . OC Aiding Fifi Victims Americana a,. re'ipondin1 to the devaataUon ln Honduras from Hurricane Fill with money, medlclnea ind other ernersency 11.1ppUt1. In Oranae County, a spoke1man at the American Red Cron Headquarten in Santa Ana said can. have been comlna in steadlly loday. The Red Croaa dces nol aend clotbel or food to the Ille of dlaaatar) .because • ' of what I• considered a piOll!blUvo coat. the spok01man said. "But anyone who wants to help should mall uo a check with 'Hurricane FUI' or 'Honduna' written ln the. comer," she aald. 11We'U forward it to our Wuhlnaton bureau and they make sure The Salvation Army I• acceptlnll food It 1011 where It la needed." " A Honduran Embassy apokesman In Washington said the areat.elt need was 'for medicine for lur'r'lvors or the hur· rlcane, which lefi 51000 confirmed. dead and an e1Umated 150,000 homelesa. In Miami, Honduran Consui-Oeneral AnUonlo Valladarea uld there la a need for almost everythln& alona the country's dovutated coul. "We doo't hive; anythln1." he said. Get-well cards, a few telegrtml and bouquet. of brlg!lt fall noworo, lllllllly chrysanthemums. were walling lot ate former prOaldent, oent 10 tho holpltal by well·wi_,a before bl• arrival. Grace Hollenbeck, nursing manager of the aJ.xtb floor, said she did not inow who sent the flowers. MJss Krantz sald the hosplta1 1wit· chboard had been busy wtth phone csll1 from both well wishers and a few pranksters. Hearing Today in Little League Child . Molest Case and clothln1 which wUI be shipped to the Los Angeles Salvation Army head· quarters and then to Honduras. More information about donations to the ~y may be obtained by call ing Sj6.7880. Food and clothing may be dror> ped off at 4t0 E. Fourth Strtet, Santa. Ana, and should be clearly marked, ''For Hondura s," a spokesma n said. Phone lines to the Honduras Consul in Los Anceles were clogged with calls today. Inquiries about food or cloth.es do· nations, or relatives may be made by calling the consul at 213~22-1804 . "Wo need everything, esoeclally medical supplies, antib101ics, fuel to boil water, food and clothing." A Spanish-language radio station in l\1iami collected more than $20,000 in hours after issuing an appeal. New Orleans' large commw:iity of Honduran- bom ~esidents made donations at a half dozen relief centers. Foor additional telephones, plu1 a direct line between Nh1:on'1 hospital room and hJs home at San Clemente, were Installed in and around tht!l room. A squad of Secret Service agent.a wu on hand .. Miss Krantz said Nixon apparently choAe the l"year-old hospital became his 1001-Ume phyalclan. Dr. John C. l.Amdgren, is on the staff. The staff llld there were no requull for Nixon to ha\le a private nune. Nixon's room Is located in the \\-'est wing of the holpltal, which was opened ooly lut June and features the moll modern equipment and cheerful sur· roundings in the building. Hallway walls are painted In 1ay, multicolored llrlpes. The walls ol Nizon '1 room are eold. There 11 a remote control color TV tet buUt into the wall and a bulletin board where he can tack up aet-we\1 cards and telegrams. A preliminary hearing lnlo cbl!d molo'1ing charges again!! the fonner manager ol a Fountain Valley LltUe League team and the team's sponaor was scheduled lo begjn today in west Orange C'.ounty Municipal Court. The manager, Gregory W o o d a rd Greene, 24, and the spon30r, Edgar Herbert Mohan Jr., 45, were to appear before Judge Alan N. McKone. The public defender's o!Oce Indicated it ml(ht ask that the hearing, expeoled to ll!t two days, be closed to the public. Many of the boys Involved in the alleged Incident would be called lo testify. The dlatrlct attorney'• olfice said Greene laces 3.1 charges of . cblld molesting, whole Moltan 11 charged' In ronnectlon with 11 Incidents. The alleged cases involve boys aged 9 to 12 from Fountain V a I le y , Westminster, Newport !leach and Hun- tington Beach. Some of them were members bf the team in the ·Fountain Valley aouth Ltttlo League. Balboa's Lions To Hold A11.nual Lobster Feast More than a Ion of lobster Is expected to be dropped Into tho c;ool<ing pots th!• WMlcend at Fashion Island In Newport Beach when the Balboa Bay Uons C\ub l)olda ill 15th aMual Lobolor Bake. Lobster dinners costlni 1$ ucb will ~ IOld beilnnln& at I p.m. Friday. They wl~ be sold through Saturday and Sunday. Procte!ds from the weekend ac- tivities, which Include a mJdwey carnival and parade1 go to tM Strvtees ror the Blind, roe., a non-profit center serving blind people throughout Oronge County. Along with the dinners, villtor1 to the lobster bake may also portlclpeto in a carnival, complete with ridea. c:<>ilon candy and hot dol•· A parade at 10 a.m. Satutday wtll Include marching bands, clowns, antique can, nea11, boraes and local celobrltlea. •• II " The investigaUon started alter a 12- year-old Fountain Valley OOy was found uoconscious on the lawn or Huntington lntercommunity Hospital. Greene is being held in Huntington Beach jail under $.10,000 bond. while Mohan is in Orange County Jai l under !20,000 bond. Donations may be sent to the Hondura s embassies or cons ulates In AUa'iita, Boston, Los Angeles, Houston, Balti more, New York, New Orleans, Miami and San Francl!lco. They're fn ,,Beaven The first Orlando, l"la ., comic art ccnventlon was a haven to collect· ors of old comlcs lDd original comic art, but there two aren't con· corned with nostalgia. Robert Smith, 11 , and hls sister Kimberly, 9, ju.st difl comica, old or new and Utey difl into Ute stacks here. • ' lleir Falls, Critical NEW YORK (UPI) -Fernanda \V anamaker Leas, he.ir to t h e \Vanamaker department store fortune, today was listed in critical but stable condition at Lenox Hill Hospital after · plunging five stories from a window of hei fashionable Ea.st Side apartment, ' Four Threatened Huntington Man Shot In Residential Heist One Huntington Beac~ man was shot and four others threatened early Sunday during an altempted resldenllal holdup , police reported today. 1 The wounded man, Felipe Cortez Perez · of 1811U Parkside Lane, was shot in the neck as he ran to warn his friends when two men came through the front door, accordlna to deteetl\lel. Perez Was li1ted in fair and atable condltloo loday at Orlnll• County Medical Center. Police ssld they are looklnl !or two men , one of whom reportedly csrried a .22 oallber plslol. The men In the apartment did not speak Enlllah, detec- li\les said, making 1t dlfficu l to gather information until someone who spoke Spanish was available. After Perez was shot, the two Intruders ran from the apartment , pallet? said. No apparent motive for the shooting waa llltled. Perez was f1tst taken to HunUngt.on Jntercommunity Hospital thel) tramfer- red to Orange County Medical Center. The lbootlng took place a~. l ll.m. -t-------------, Ford Road Bids Set for Opening Bids for the reconstruction a:nd wldcn· ing of Ford Road between Jamboree Newf)Ort Beach will be opened Oct. l. EnglncerlnK estimate• set the project's . value al $39910001 lncludln1 re<:onstruc· Uon of a ltorm dr•ln syatom and In· stallntlOfl or street aalo«y lighting. · Project TMn•ger C. Slepben Bucltnam Jr. oxpecta consmictloo lo atart in mid- October and 11y1 It "111 probably be completed by Jan . IO, !I'll. "T• ... way traffic "111 be open during the t'Ol\lfructlon pertod," said Buclaiam. Today's First ' Day of .4.iiturn1i WASHINGTON (UPI) -Today Is the flrst day of autumn for those or u1 who Uv.e In the northern hen\itll)lterc. II be11an o!n clally at 2:51 a.m. PDT when the sun was directly over the. equator on the boundary of U1anda And Z•lre In Africa. 1'h1I la known to 111lronomer1 aa autumnal equinox, lhe Ume when the nighttime Is equal lo dayUmo. ( ·~ ......... ··' t. .... ...... ~-· -I ~·-··· .. '···-·-· ... ·-.... ~ ... ... .. . . .. . ' ' • •• •• • • I I A • : . r . • I , . • • . ' ' ' • •: • • • ,· " .. ' 1 ~ I· .. ' 1o, •• •' ' • ' ' . • • • I • .. • DARY PILOT EDITORIAL P AGE Taxpayer Among the fringe benefits of Watergate, If the expression may be used, is the initiation of a substantial amount of le~slation to protect the public from similar political marupulation. Of particular interest is a bi-partisan legislative package just Introduced in Congress designed to guar· antee the confidentiality of every American's tax records. -The legislatloo-stems-directiyJrom_Jhe Hou se Ju. diclary Commltlff's articles of impeacluneiil, wliiCh charged President Nixon with misuse of IRS inform•· tion and attempting to initiate IRS audits of White House 11enemies." Other abuses included digging around in whole batches of tax returns in certain occupational areas -farmers• returns by the Department of Agticul- ture, for example -ostensibly for statistjcal purposes. The propoesd law would make unauthorized dis- closure or receipt of tax information a felony. It would restrict access to tax information to the taxpayer himself, his attorney, Internal Revenue Ser· vice officials and employes and the Justice Department, for the purpose of enforcing the Internal Revenue Code. This is the sort of confidentiality American tax r.ayers have a tight to expect and if it takes additional egislation to insure it, IJle law should be passed. Wh y the llypl1ens? Among the many bills signed by Gov. Reagan in recent days is one requiring that school textbooks "ac- curately portray'" the role and contribution of European· Americans in the' development ·or the nation. Since the textbooks already have been taken to task for inaccurate or inadequate portrayals of black Americans, brown Americans and· female Americans, • J1e must presume that someone feels the European· Ametican, also has been neglected. However, this a~parently increasing emphasis on hypbenated-AmericanlSm causes one to wond~~ ;tYh~t • ~1~. -, . . . , ~ ' • Protection ever became of the plain old American Ametican -the proud · product of the once· renowned "melting {>:Ot." This is not to denigrate the cultural contributions of Americans of all racial and national backgrounds to the development or our society. It just seems that since everyone -including perhaps the Indians -originally can1e from somewhere elSe, this sudden passion for identifying hyphenated Americans-is-a-little exaggeratect.- By now we have some truly wondrous mixes of race and nationality, and simply identifying ourselves as Americans seems more than adequate. Or, in a couple more generations, can we expect to have legis· lation demanding better recognition of the special con- tributions of Irish-German-Norwegia n-Greek-Japanese- ~lungarian-Eskim<rHawaiian-Americans? (Edi tor's Note: \Ve ?neant to recog11ize n1orc 11ation- alities, colors and cr eeds, but we ran out of hyplte1is .) Side Effects The fuel-saving 55 mph speed limit is having son1e side effects that weren't anticipated. • Auto-make.rs report a n1arked drop in sales of such car replacement parts as fenders. hoods, grilles and bumpers -items most likely to be damaged beyond repair in accidents. · This is attributed both to the lower overall accident rate and the fact that collisions at reduced speeds are less likely to result in irreparable damage -in short. more fender-benders, and fe\ver fer;i.der-destroyers. But pCrhaps the most extraordinary side effect of the speed limit law is a report th2t the reduction in highway fatalities has resulted in a shortage of kidney donations for transplant operations. So con1plex are the interactions of our modern society, it seems, that even the saving of lives and p,roperty is not without some negative spin-offs. ',What's his handica p ? His partner!' : Higl1 Pay · Not Buying · Quality Dear Gloomy Trapped 011 a Crazy .Spaceship Di111 Prospects for Noven1be1· • . ( EARL WATERS ) nu. ii an open letter to two New ~', fo York lawmalten who recenUy visited .-< caUfonda to study our legislature with •• a view to improving ·their own. :~ ,• At least the pair, Democratic ;~ Auembly leader Stanley SteJngut, who expedl lo become :• that stat.e's next ,, ' Speaker, and Doniel • Haley, a fellow as· leD'lblyman, s a i d they were here to li-and learn. Dear Ms!:rs. stein- gul and Haley: It ia an irony that two legi!lators from a st.ate which. until recently, was ,,· more populous than California and which bas been in existence nearly a century longer than this stale should look here for leadershi p. a •' .. " ~> PERHAPS you ba\•e been deceived by the vario11S claims '!hich have ~ made ror Olis state's legislature: as being rated the highest in the nation. You ~ should Jook: more closely at the f.; measurements used for such a rating. ~ And regardless <1f that, you should ~ me* even closer those who are doing r ' lbe rating. For it matters little what ~ an organlz.ation which is funded by an !;::' -n ol l!tate legislatures thinks of the C.Hfomia Leltislature. What really : ... · OMltl la what the people who elect ! thot Jegilloture tblnk. , ... At tbe moment the people or California :..-doft't seem to have so high a regard fat" -the Uegislators or the quality or }_.,... their performance in recent years. They j' are oot only ticked of£ by Jhe failure .• ol their legislature, desptte its lengthy f :"... full two year meetings, to fiod 80iuUons • to the many pressing problems ol this state. BUI they are incensed by the dilclosures of the compensallons their lawmakers have taken for themselves . J•l • ' .. ,. ~ • ,. • :· 111,t11e way ol fringe benefits. AND WlllLE you seem to have been Impressed by the "professionalism!.'. or our lawmakers and their abundant staffs, those who have observed ti'll transiUon ol California's lawmald'ng body fr()!TI ,y~ '· • 'Gus-· ~· If pri.!!On is degrading to certa in men "who have suffered enough," ' perba~ this is the time to take a hard look at how degrading and de- humanizing prison is for all other persons. We have the money. Do we have the brains, wisdoin dnd will to find alternatives'? (P.S. Add courage to the recipe). DEMOSTHENES JH a--., ow c_........ .,.. '""'lttW .. , ,....... ... "' "' "'"9NrllY rwfllct ''" ¥itWt tt Ille ~-.... -"' _.... tre OltM!y ~ Ol llY L'lr.t a "citizen-legislature'' to a full tilne "pro(essional legislature" are not nearly that enthwed. Obvi~ly, since you are the hl~est paid lawmakers in the nation, receiving J23,500 to our $21,120. you don't need to Come here lo find out about salaries. But the Question is : does the payment ol high salaries impnwe the quality of legislation or even the caliber or the members '? Some oC us think not. AS FOR staffing, the growth of legislative aides in cali!ornia in recent years from practically none to about 15 to each elected member seems to have only added to the conrusion. In most cases they create a 1ot more work for the members, often resulting in unnecessary laws, and they tend to serve as a btlf!er between th e representatives and the people who elected them. In the extreme they work in political campaigns and sometimes even run against the members who gave then1 their jobs. If there is a lesson to be learned In California it is probably that loo much Is worse than too little. WE SUGGEST that, before you conclude your studies on how to in1prove your legislature, you take a look at a smaJI state like South Dakota. Its lawmakers, unburdened by staff , meet briefly every two year!. Being a citizen- legislature they don't have: time to dally. Besid~ they are among the lowest paid in the nation. 1'tey have to get home to the harvest or other business. Still the people ot thar stale seem lo have an adequate educational system, don 't seem to be oppressed by taxation, and aren't starving. 11ley also seem to be geUing along all right otherwise. Sincerely, A CALIFORNIAN "V good cha11s, now we 'II try it from the P,lane. " Trouble ,in GOP Country ( ART HOPPE ) Help somebody! I'm trapped aboard this crazy spaceship. Nobody seems to know where it's been. where it is, how it got here, or where it's going. There's no captain aboard. Nobody's in charge. Some of the nuttiest passengers would like to be. They're the ones "'ilh the bombs . Anrl th ere's no way to get off. Luckily, I'm in First Class. f\rlost of the others are in Touri s t. They've really got it bad back thete; ... Some or them are slanting. That's because this crazy spaceship is getting really over- crowded. So there isn't enough food to go around any more. We keep telling them back in Tourist to stop having so many ldds. \Vhat's the good or them having kids if they're all starving'? But they don't listen. Nobody listens. Nobody dOP.S anything. And there 's no way to get off. ACTUALLY, things aren't too bad here in First· Class yet. The air's getting harder to breathe. And the water's beginning to taste funny. But we've got plenty to eat still. Of course. \\'C feel a little guilty eating so well when those poor •. , But we don't ta lk 1nuch about that. We're running out of fuel. though. It lights our lights, warms our cabins, powers our machines and runs our television sets. TNDIANAPOLIS -Here in the heart of what used to be Nixon country, President Ford·s pardon of Richard M. Nixon has trau1natized the Republican fa ithful into ugly resentment :igainst their new !>resident and despair over their election prospects Nov. 5. Al though the old Nixon hardcore has diminished to a cor· poral's guard even in Indiana. the an· gry mood here goes not to the substance of the Nixon pardon but to its politiC'al impact. From h>p to bottom of the Indi· ana Republican hier· archy, one consis· tent theme is sounded : the uplilll fight by Mayor Richard G. Lugar of Indiana· polis to unseat two-term Democratic Sen. Birch Bayh has been undercut by Mr. Ford 's liming. THESE REPU B L I CANS are disappointed that Mr. Ford instantly transformed · himself from glittering asset to at least a temporary liability. But beyond that is deep resentment that ~1r. Ford thought so little of the pardon·s political consequences. "I keep asking myself: why did he do ii M\\1°!'' says one county chairman. "We were just startifig to get moving." Indiana is no isolated case. In Ohio the day after the Nixon pardon, one hard-pressed Republican c a n d i d a t e removed from his campaign brochure a letter of praise from Mr. Ford (explaining to us: "1 just couldn't take the chance"). ln New Jersey, an i n c u m b e n I Republican Congressman racing a stiff challenge scrapped a cam· paign nyer because Mr. Ford's: picture was on the cover. ( EVANS ·NOVAK) The surest test or how much the pardon deflated Republican prospects came in Nixon·loving Indiana. When a fund-raising visit to Indianapolis Oct. 16 by the new President was announced in the midst of the Ford euphoria, Democratic Senator Birch Bayh's man· agers trembled. They toyed with the idea or counteracting the $500-a·ticket Ford reception \\ith a $I-a-ticket Bayh rally here the next night. BUT TIIE pardon immediatel y undermined the Ford visit. "Afy husband told me he just doesn't want to pay $500 to see the President now," a party worker confided. Even t h o u g h Republican leaders claim llckets arc selling briskly. few see the President's visit as a political bonanza. Neither do the Democrats; Bayh's managers have abandoned the $1 counter-rally. Bayh's own campaigning also has been affected. WbHe last week's television commercials were crediting Birch Bayh as principal sponsor of the 25th Amendment , \Vhich made Jerry Ford President . the Senator sharply changed his tune last week. "It's surprising how fast a new Ford depreci ates in value these days," a grlMing Bayh cracked to a cheering Democratic rally in conservalive southern Indiana. THE NE\V President was scarcely mentioned at Republican r a 11 i e s . Campaigning in southwestern Indiana . LAlgar ignored Mr. Ford except when reporters or students questioned nim about the pardon. His answers were cautious and tentative . \Vhile suggesting the pardon was an effort to get rid of \Vatergate once and (or all. Lugar added. dryly that the effort "may not have been successful." The Nixon hardcore has so dimlnished in hi s old heartland that Hoosier enthusiasts for' the pardon were hard to find. "I was amazed," relates one COWlly chairman, 1 ' h o w many Republicans wanted Nixon to eat some crow before Be was pardoned." HOWEVER, bard·boiled leader! of the Indiana Republican organization are long past caring what happens to Richard Nixon, pardon or no pardon. ~ir despair stems from fearing th a t persistent disregard for Republican fortunes in the Nixon White House may continue In the Ford White House. LA.tgar c:ooc<ded lo us he expects nothing of benefit from Washington, bUt wistfully added: 0 1 hope I won't get bombed from Washington every other week." Lugar's campaign manager, national committeeman L. Keith Bulen, is considerably less 'Phlegmatic thari his candidate. Angered enough by tbe pardon. Bulen was absolutely outraged by last week's maladroit suggestion from the White House of poMible blanket \Vatergate pardons. \Vhat infuriated Bulen ~·as continuing Oval Office disregard ror party affairs. \Vhat makes the Bulens or the Republican party so frantic is that Mr. Ford's conduct as President, from the appointment of Mrs. Smith to the Nil.on pa.rdoo fiasco, suggests he realizes no. more than his predecessor that the Republican party and the twc>part:y system are on the brink or destructim. Their grumbling about the President stems from genuine anguish that even the r~ord Oval Office may have forgotten that there is a Republican party. 'The fuel was put aboard before the first passenger. It's almost gone. Us guys in First Class are using up twice as much as all those J>e9plc in TourisL But we hope some~ will find us plenty or new fuel somewhere. Nobody Nixon Psychiatric Study Prophetic has yet. :- . I'll miss television. . BUT WHAT scares me most are these nuts with bombs. We've got a hair dozen of them in First Oass. A guy in Tourist even made one. He's starving and .he makes a bomb! "'For prestige," he says. How crazy can you get? Each of these nuts in First Class ~s he's got to have his bomb because thCse 'rive other guys have got their bombs. "iheY can't blow me up," each says with kind or a mad glea m in his eye, "because, U they do, I'll blow \\IASHINGTON -The young Air Force psychiatrist who wrote the eerily pro- phetic "President Nixon's Psy~hiatric Profile'' has complained that he 1s being so harassed by his Air ForC'e bosses be wan ts to resign . Maj. Eii Chesen, chiel of the Nellis Air Force Base. Nev., mental health clinic, has confided to congressn1en that he has been threatened vith court· martial, that his patriotism has been questioned and that his integrity has been assa ulted -all because or tilt' book. them up !" And the spaceship along So serious is the alleged mistreatment, with them . we have learned. that 13 plucky doctors Vet each wants the other passengers at the Nellis base-hospl,tal have written to think he's the sanest and the right Congress anif lhe Air Force asking fC!r guy to nin the spaceship. Talk about a ''full , investigation " of CheSen's fruitcakes! charges. But does anybody try to take the CHESEN wrot e his book while he bombs away rrom these nuLti? Nobody was on Inactive reserve. It was based does anything. Nobody'-ever does anything on this crazy spaceship, And on Nlxon's speeches, biographies, tele- r vised appearances and writings. Fro1n there's no way lo get o f. this gigantic heap of material. Chesen -EVERYBODY KNOWS what we mould shrcwd\y drew lhl! conclusiQJ1 that Nixon do. Us guys ln First Class should ration never wou1d buckle from the most crltl· our food, have fewer klds, turn .olf~L~cy crises, but might disintegrate our machines that arc eating up our from personal problems. ruel and mucking up our aJr, and The Alr Force majOr finished his book somehow get those cra1jcs to throw almO!I a year ago when the wor ld away their bombs. still believed In the exuberant Nixon Everybody agrees to thal. Trouble is, or the Ut72 election period. But Chcsen nobody wants to give up all the good accurately predicted that Nixon mighl things he's got unless everybody does. become the pr~t-d~y recluse or San So nobody does. Nobody ever docs Clemente, a lonely, tortured , insecure anything. I guess lt'a becnusc \\'tfve mat1. got it so good and we're going lo gel "lt ls in the personnl conte xt that u so bad. I nm most con~tned about Nixon'! Sometlme9 l think ev.ryhody aboard stability \lndc:r stress," wrote Che<on lllis crazy oppce hip Is c:ruzy. wllh ~lsc.l>ccrtlng roreslghl. "The thre t of worJd~v.·ar poses less of a vexation for Nixon than the outcome o f Watergate~·· INDEED, Nixon 's physician, Dr. \Vat- ter Tkash, might well have been quoting from Chescn's uncany rorecnst when he said a few days ago that Nixon was "rav- aged" and broken in spirit. But Che9Cn's Air Force bosses apparently art not interested in the accuracy of the young psychiatrist's star-gazing about Nixon. Even before Chese11 came on active Air Force duty la.st February, he ran into trouble. he confided in a letter to several congressmen. including Rep. Wiley a.fayne, R-lowa. Chesen said tlls future commander allegedly told aides, "If Doctor Chesen gets even a step out of line, he will be court·rna.rtlaled." W!TUIN DAYS after he got to Nellis. he said, an Air Force general at a small d.inner party qurnioned him about whether hi• father WM born In -Russia. ''His questlons to me indicated a surprising pert0nal knowledge •f my background , Including minor details about my wife's medical problems;' said Che sen. Al the base, he said, a special £Ile was kept on him arw:I. was "shown to discredit my r<putation ... my com. manding orncer bas pcl'IOJlally • • . in-- formed the defense rounsei on (a ) case that my opinion was not reli ti ble ln \'1.ew or JUY pnst performance ., an author of •i boo~ or whl';h he dlSAPPl'O''"· Che.sen, v.:ho had settled with his fa1nily in Nellis, also intennittenlly faced threats of reassignment. As a result of all this, he said, he wanted a release from active duty. even though. his time is not up until 1976. FOOTNOTE : Chesen refused comment. saying, "I could get court·martfa!OO." An Air Force spokesman said a prelimi· nary inquiry has produced no evlde1l<le or harassment: but the Air Force. he told us, has begun a thorough investiga. lion. OJAN .. COAST DAILY PILOT .Robert N. WHd, l'ubli.!h<r Thomu KttvU, Edftor Barbara KTtibich Editorial Page Edik>r 'n>e editurial .t>qe of jJio !laity Pilot ~ks to inform and 11.Umulat~ tt!Mkn by prtSCtttlnc on this pqe dlVflw fcmnmtntaey · «t toplct of l.n.. ·lertat by syndicated colwnn.lsts and c.artooniabjy provhtina a forum for mutm' .... ~. anc1 by pn.~tlnc tlilil nev..-ptr' I oplnicns and \dtu on CUl'T'eflt topk;:t. The editorb.I opln)om: ol Ute Daily PUot apptat only in tht tdhori&l column at the ,.. of lhe ..... -.xpoeatd ......... wnMltl and cat100ntst1 and Niter wrtten are Uleir own and no ecMb;e.- mmt ot thtir vSen by the Dalli ..... -lie infm<d. Monday, September 23, 197 ·~-----------....... .. • Monday, September 23. 1974 DAILY PILOT ;\ ;; Watergate Backlasli · VERMOM HOWARD Southland Blackened .. By Fires Fund Raising 'Difficult' author of "Mystic Path to Cosmic Powtr" le othet' books . .............. Three-Session Seminar By United Preti International Flre!lghters worked toward lull control today of a wtnd· whipped bnish fire t h a t blackened mor~ than 5,000 acres In Southern Calil0rn!a. The flro broke out Sunday In parched grass and brush lo a canyon near Castaic, aome 30 mlles north or Los Angeles. It was fanned by winds gusting to 30 miles en ( State ' J hour. !Aw bumldity and 100. degree temperature hampered firellghtlng efforts. At Jeast 20 homes in two adjolning canyons w er e evacuated briefly S u n d a y when names licked ~ toward them, but winds s h If t e d faVIJfably and helped firemen control that sector. e Roek11 Rapped SAN JOSE (AP ) -The Ca lifornia Republican Assembly has urged the U.S. Senate to reject the nomina· tion of Nelson A. Rockefeller for vice president. During a weekend policy meeting here, the conservative vohmteer organization passed a resolution saying President Ford had chosen a vice presiden tial nominee who "has been denied · high office by the voting Republicans of our nation three separate times." e 2 Jtl-Kiiled TRACY (UPI) -Two balloonists were killed during a weekend sky show at the Tricy Airport in Sen Joaquin County. A valve apparently malfunc- tioned on one of three hot air balloons, plmglng the col· orful craft 2,000 feet lo the ground. Killed In the accident Saturday were Mlohael A. Curley, 15, Sunnyvale, and Arthur R. Adams, 28, ol San Mateo . .A young woman. Kathy Beaver, was critically injured. '· e Fire B•fied UPI 1tlwfltlt SOUGHT BY FB I Stephen Blnghom News Items .Say Suspect Still Alive LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Watergate backlash Is hitting both Political parties In the pocket books during the 1974 election campaign. Democrats as ~·ell a s Republicans decry the pro. blems in raising money in strikingly similar terms. Some traditional I o y a I Democratic coritributors are ju.st saying no this year, said Rosallnd \Vyman of L o s Angeles In an interview this past week. Others are con4 tributing but not nearly us much as in the past, she said. THE REPUES to campaign fund solicitations often take this tone, she said :. "I'm out of it. l don't want to have anything to do v.'i.th it. We don't want to get oo anybody's list. We don't want to be in· vesttgated." Out in Malibu on the Pacific Coast, Pepperdine University presid e nt \Villiam S. Banowsky says, ' ' T h o s e businessmen have b e e n traumatil:Cd by \Vatergate, •bsol utely Irawrulllzed." Banowsky, the Republican national committee.man from Califonlia, said 1n an ln· terview: '1Those guys don't wanl 1o have their names on a list or ln a newspaper." Both party activists said the traditional big givers also are being turned ofr by in· (NEWS ANALYSIS) creasingly detailed and com· plex campaign r in an c e reporting fonns. This has caused someUJ.ing of a reaction against the cam- paign of Democrat Edmund G. Brown Jr., Cali!omla's secretary of state. for governor, said Mrs. \Vyman. SHE IS the widow of Eugene Wyman, a Beverly Hills at· torney who long was con· sidered one of the most astute Democratic fund.raisers in the nation. Mrs. Wyman has taken over son1c of her I a t e NEW YORK (UPI) Stephen Bingham, a leftiSt lawyer who disappeared three years ago when he was sought !or the alleged San Quentin escape attempt by "Soledad Lawmake,.s to Decide Brother" George Jackson, is Pensio11 Bond Issue ahve, well and hvmg un-'4 derground, according to an article in Sunday 's New York Times. The article, written by Henry Weinstein, a fonner law school classmate, was based on two conversations last month Ln an undisclosed location in Canada. Bingham, 32, declined to reveal where he was living, whether he had a job, or was in contact with the un-- derground "Westherpeople," the Times said. HE SAID he wanted the interview because the danger of capture had lessened and he wanted to be seen. "Ll".,ing underground has not weakened me -has not kept me holed up in a room ... and that'• difficult to com· municate in a tape," Bingham told the interviewer. Bingham, heir to the Tiffany fortune, grandson of a. former &enalor and nephew of Rep. Jonathen Bingham (0.N.Y.). also has evolved into a Marx·· ist-Leninist, the article said. SACRAMENTO (AP) Democratic legislative leaders say a decision will come early this week on the date for California's lawmakers t o retwn to face .UJe issue of the $5. 7 million legislative pension bonus. After the failure in August of one effort to eradicate the bonus for up to 61 lawmakers, several politicians said voter pressure has increased during th e fall campaign. Citing that pressure and re- quests from colleagues cam- paigning t o r re-election, Assembly S peaker Leo McCarthf and Senate Pre&.i· dent pro tern James R. Mills caJled for the leg islature to reconvene. "Frankly, at this moment , it is not a question of v"hether ... it's only a matter of when and what the details are," McCarthy told a retxirter in Chio. Early October , \.\1as being considered. of .5tate said. The Democratic 1 e a d e r s made !heir decision less than 24 hours after the GOP leaders asked for a special session. Police Tell Of 'Brutal' Stab Death FAIRfIELD (AP ) -The identity of the victim of what one officer called "lhe most brutal murder I've ever seen" is still being sought. Solano County sheriff's of· ficers said Sunaay they were investigating the death of 'a neatly dressed man about 23 years old who was found in a ditch, along h-iankas Comer Road early Sa turday . He had been stabbed 17 limes in the back and 10 times in the head. husband's fundra islng chores. Banowsky said the state of the stock market has arrected fwuiraising, as well. "These gu ys are worth a lot less than they were a few yeen ago," be said. , THEY ARE reluctant to sell "THE INNER AIMNTURE IS EXOTING" Wed .. Thurs .. Fri. -September 25. 26. 27 7:30 evenings ... Olul<h ol Rolloloul Soienoe of~ -20092 \.aOUlll Canyon Rd. Brov.n, 30, brought tough campaign law enforcement to the long-dormant secretary of state's office and was a sponsor of the pol!Ucal cam· paign reform act overwhelm· ingly approved at the June 4 primary elec tion. There is "no question" that they resent Brown proposing tough c a m p a I g n reporting laws and limits and then, coming around to ask for funds, she said. stock8 at a depressed price l.ENlNJ<OW TO: -end r.w & •""lelY to raise the cash for political : d ... 1-r: =~full PoW9I' • oom donations, he said. Polls also ha ve a bearing -attt'ld rfQht..,...,. on fundr oising, Banowsky ad·1 ~====·:-::':":·"::"':-===...,:::•::":"=====:::_ ded. 1-The California Poll, taken the v.•eek Richard M. Nixon resigned as president. showed Brown leading Flournoy 50 percent to 36 percent on the basis ol a sampling of about 1,000 voters. But she added, "he kMws he can't get elected without asking !or it, too.'' The Republican nominee. Houston I. Flournoy, Ihe 44- year-0ld state controller, pl.an· ned to go to New York last week to solicit ftmds from associates of Vice Prcsident- d es I gnat e Nelson A. Rockefeller. THE MEET I NG \Vas canceled because Rockefellt'1' declared he '\\"Ollld not get in· volved in politics u n ti I C.00.gres.~ acted on his con- firmal.ion. Flournoy did go visit the White House Wednesday with hopes that President Ford would agree to address a campaign fundraising affa ir when he comes to San Fran· cisco for a conference of editors and publishers Oct. 2. But Ford said he did not want to mix politics with a nonpolitical trip and would have to posltxine his California political efforts Wltil the week before the election. BUT NOW JS th e critical lf the next poll shows Flournoy closing the gap, as Flournoy is confident it will, it woul d boost his fund.raising ability at a · critical point in the campaign. T,vo Sisters Shot; I Deacl In Robbery OAKLAND (AP) -Police say kidnap and robbery may be involved in the !"tal shooting of a masseuse and 1 he wounding of her sister. Officers said the nude body of Geraldine Bonnifiefd, 19, Wbo worked in an Oakland massage p a r I o r , w&S period for raising money, largely because television and discovered shot to deatQ early radio broadcasting time musl SWlday in the parking lot of be booked and paid for in Proviaence H o s p i t a I in advance. Oakland. C a I i f o r n i a ' s t 1~' o Her sister. Renee Bonnifield, gubernatorial hopefuls have 22. v.·ho works in a Berkeley New Way Found To Stop Hair Loss, Grow More Hair HOUSTON, Texas -If But. tr' you are nOt :already you don 't suffer from slick bald, how can )'Ou be sure 1 b ldn what is actually causing your ma e pattern a ess, hair loss? Even tr baldness may you can now stop your seem to "run in your family," hair loss . . . and grow this is certainly no proor of the. more hair. cause of YOUR hair loss. . Hair loss caused by sebum For years "they said it could· can also run ln your family , and n't be done." But now a firm of many other conditions can laboratory consultants has cause hai r loss. No matlt>r developed a treatment for both which ane is causing your hair men and women, that is not only loss. if you wait 'until you arr stopping hair loss ..• but is slick bald and your hair roots really growi ng hair! are dead, you are beyond help. They don't even ask you to So, if you still have any hair on take their word for it. They in· top of your heo.d. and ·would like \'ite you to try the treatment ror to stop your hair loss and gro\v 32 days. at their risk , and sec for more hair ... now is the tim e to 'yourself ~ do somethine about it before it's Naturally, they would not of· too late. fer this opportunity unlc11~ the Loesch Laboratory Con - treatment worked . Howevf:r, it sultants, Inc., will supply you Is impossible to help e\•eryone. 11.·ith treatment for 32 days, at The great majotily of thei r risk, i~ they beliC\'e th~ f · . h · treatment wtll help you. Just cases o excesSJ\·e air send them the inrormation fall and baldness are the listed below. All lnqulrits arr beginning or more fullv ani;wered confident ially. by developed stages of male mall and "''ilhout obligation. \' pattern bal<lne ss and Ad · cannot be helped. · .-----NO OBLIGATION COUPON,-----, To: l.ot•srh f.01t)nr>1tor~· l'nnsu\!;1nts. Inc. signed a fonnal agreement massage parlor. "''<•S found by 1v.,. r,•;oot, :J:Jl 1 \\'t·•t :'\lain St . for six debates and to limit a passerby sprawled on the Jlnuston . 'l't·~;os ~;oo; ail media spending to S900.00D pavement near an Interstate 1 asn suhmit11 ng lht· rr>ll111\·ing inrnrm~tinn ."'·ith lht; un· each -including $800.000 for 8(1 offramp in Richmond. 9le t1\•rs1un11ing 1h:11 ii 11111 he kt•pl stnctly conf1den11u\ and lhul I radio and telcvisioo time and V.'3S reported in critical con· ;1m undl'r 110 nhlii;:a1111n 11 hatsiw:1·l'r. I nm\' ha1·t· nr huit· had production costs. dilion at Brookside Hosp ital thl' folh1\1·ing cnn<li11 nn s: The agreement was reached in Richmond with gunshot 'Oo..·s ,·nurfort•he;ul ht·c1 1n1eni()'nr11't'OJS)"'? •••••.••..•..•• in the spirit of California's wounds 1o the face. l-11111· soon ;11'\t•r \\ :1sh\ng·.' ..........•........•........... l' I ( Off · he had 0.1 1·nu ha1l'll;tn!lrntf '.' .......... drr11f'111b•? ........... .. po1tica reorm act even 1cers said t Y oo Dnt•s \·iw.ir sc;ilpnl'li·• ........... \\lll'n? .................. . thougtl it doe' not fonnally SllSpects and did not know l )l~.~~·11ur h ;1ir pull nu\t•;1slly '.' ............ \\.ht•rt":' ....... , .. go into effect until Next details of the brutal shloting Hn11· lung h;is .1·11111· h;111· l)(.'<'ll thinning'.' ......•••...........• January. attack. On ~·nu still h:n t• ;in~ h:11run topnr ynnr ht•ud? ........ . In Spite Of the limit, it stiJI . -----! Jlo\1· long L~ ii... . ... , .... ·. · · · · · · · · · · • • • • · · · · · · · · · • • • •• • takes "an astounding amou~t'' ~-. RABB In '..\tt;.irh <in.\' ntht•r infnrmal innyou rl't·I ma .I' t,l' h<>lpl'ul . o! money to run an effective -.,,\ · AuT~OMl:OWMa11ts ~ .. \'.\IE · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • · · · • · · · · · · · · · • • campaigo in a state as ·--INSURANCE ;'g~~ESS sT1n: ·:· ::·:·7.ir : -·· ·· · .. p~ysic;ally lar~ .as Cali!ornia r -~ 1914 Horbor loulevord 1===================== with its .21 million r~1~e~ts r,..,, .. /I' COSTA MESA .-~ Cl ll J 1'T Q , PIRU (AP) -A brush !ire blackened 100 acres o f watershed near this small Ventura County community Sunday and for a w h i l e threatened nearby campers. IT SA.ID Bingham has spent the past three years eating natural foods and assessing his background in terms of the revolutionary struggle. THE DECISION came after the early pension issue entered the gubernatorial campaign and several legislative races. !~rs.~.awiym.:.0 .~•Ilion "'=" 5-41-5554 .~ ~ t(l enge t ie j 'ews uiz SGT.TOMLONEYdescri~.----------------------------------------~ About 1i.; men from the Ventura <hmty Fire Depart· ment fought the blaze in an area called Ran<:llo Penescal and had It under control in tMee hours, a spokesman .. Id. Eight aireralt dropping chemical retardants assisted ground crews. e Bitten h11 Bear RED BLUFF (AP) A&Mnblywoman P au I t n e Davis (0.Porto!a), was nipped by a bear over the weekend while campaigning fer re-elec- tion on Main StreeL It was a pet cub bear being t.aken for a stroll by a passert>y who apparontly also wanted to shake hands, aldes said. But the bear's mistress i.It without being ldenmied. e Tr•in Derailed BAKERSFIELD (AP) - Seven railroad cars carrying military bombs and shells were derailed 10 miles south· west of Bakersfield, a railroad spok .... n aald, but the munl· lions did not spill out . Twenty othe< cars of the Skar Southern Paclllc train -d!. the tracl<J SWlday, but there was no explosion or fire because the am· munition wa.s not equipped with detonator s, the opoltesman added. Sunday is Fl1LlE>AY' 1n tt. j,J.iitlijil·ll On Aug. 21, 1971, Jackson allegedly tried to break out of Sen Quentlo prison with a pistol allegedly smuggled by Bingham, one of his lawyers. Jackson, accused in a 1970 killing of a Soledad Prison guard amid charges by some radicals be had been framed, was killed, along with two othet lnm·ates and three guards. Bingham, who was charged with five oounts of murder as an alleged accomplice, said he was innocent and Jackson was "too disciplined . . . to throw his life away in a reckless suicide." Woman, 66 , :F'ouncl· Witl1 Throat Cut SAN BERNARDINO !AP) -' An elderly woman was found murdered S a l u r d a y morning in a rural section of this city, police said. Ernestine C. Pickell, 66, of San Bernardino, was found in the living room or her home by a neighbor woo was looking in on her. ·Police .said ~1.rs. Pickell 's hand! and feet were tied and her throat slashed. lier house was ransacked, and a televis.lon, coin col· Jection and late m o d e 1 automobile stolen. police said. Police art looking I« two men in their early 20s seen earller in the neighborhood. ORIENTAL RUGS at ASIAN ENTERPRISES In . . ·-Design Plaza • 250 Bldg ., 2nd Floor Donlld F. MoDermott Jr .. owner TILll'HOHl 644-ell I PAIHIOH ISLAHO • HIWPOIT CEHTll -.. -. . . . . . . ... . . . .... . . . ' . .... . ... . - Houston 1. Flournoy, the Republican nominee f o r governor, accu s ed hi.'i Democratic opponent. Ed· mund G. ·Brown Jr., of "in· credible waffling'' on the issue. ''Mr. Brown apparently rides the charger of refonn when it suits his o w n purpose," the state controller said. ed the scene. He said the victim was apparently stab- bed, then broke away and ran about 300 yards, was probably hit by a pursuing car, and then stabbed agajn. A nearby rancher heard shouts about 2:30 21.m. after his barking dogs awakened him, Loney said. The body was found about 10 a.m. He added that there v..-ere car keys on the body but no identity. The victim was S·foot-8 and 170 pounds. Cancer G1·ant Flournoy said at Stanford University Sunday he would request the governor to call the session so as to preve11t legislators from ducking the issue. Brown said Flournoy voled LOS ANGELES (UP!l . - to give the legislators tt~The USC School of Medicine bonuses when he was an has received a $900,000 grant assemblyman in 1965. to support training programs "I understand that Mr . in the study of cancer. The Flournoy ha.e now changed his award, by the National Cancer position and acknowledged I~itute to c:over a fOW:·Y~ar that he made a mistake wtw:tt' penod, continues a clm1cal he first supported the reti:.(e. cance r training grant which ment bonanza," the secretary has been in er feet since 1?1>5. BEMElilCIAL'S NEWEST OFFICES 23704 El Toro Rd., El Toro Phone: 581-1811 3605·F So. Bristol St., Santo Ano 556·3874 211 72 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach 536· l 406 ,.ION.AL LOANS U' TO $10,000 Something new has bei!n added to the local scene! It's Btneflci11'1 new office right here in town ·· modern, comfort1ble , coovenient -the latest addition to the world's l1rgest 1yst1m of affiliated finance offices - ready to give you 8tneficial'1 own 1pecial kind of cam loan service. You are cordially invited to come and get ICQuainttd. Meet the Manager and hit Staff. You'll find that 8f>heflcial is 1 good neighbor, a good citizen, a~d a good.place to get money! Clll up or come in today. You're fOOd f« "'°"' It lklntfic'8J. b &'neficial Fmance System • ----....... ---.. -·-·--··-·••4··~ .. SANTA ANA SOCTH COAST PLAZA P ulsai4', the,..rch of today, with new two button design that tells rhe date and time. There are no .moving pans. And ic's accurate to wichin one minute per year. 14 karat gold fi lled case, 8395 Srainless case and bracelet, 8295 Fine Jewelry MEET MR. BLACKWELL ... famous fashion and radfo pe1Wnaliry, as he introduces h~ new leather accessory collection for him and her, Tue!day, September 24, 7:30 p.m. Accessories, Middle Level SANTA' ANA, 547·7211 • SOUTH COAST PLAZA, 556·0611 . . . ' I '• . . • .. I • ' i Today's Final N. Y. St.eeks VOL 67, NO. 266, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES · ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1974 c TEN CENTS Legislature Called Back • Ill Pension Dispute Gov. Ronald Reagan ordered the can. fomla Legislature to reconvene Wednes- day noon to consder repeal of up to $5. 7 million in early pensions for retiring or defeated lawmakers. (Earlier story Page AS.) Reagan's order came barely 15 minutes after Democratic leaders of the Senate ·and Assembly announced that lhey v.'ould reconvene lhe Legislature themselves next ~fonday. Up to 61 legislators, many or them in their 30s, are eligible to start ool- le<:ting lifetime pensions of up to $12,000 a year under terms of the current pension law. Among co-authors of the bill to repeal the retirement windfall are Senator Den- nl• Carpenter (R-Newport Beach) and Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Hun- lington Beach). Carpenter today exprested confidence that the bill would be succes.sful, but Burke voiced misgivings on the motives enne * * * Kennedy Opens Way To Field WASHINGTON (AP) -By r<m0vlng himself from the i976 presidential race. Sen. F.dward M. Kennedy has opened the way to a broadened Democratic field. The action also brings relief to those tearful er the controversy and threat ol tragedy that would have sUrrounded hi• candidacy. behind those calling for a special session. "Even if the Legislature acts on the bill, there is stUI a loophole:," Burke warned. "They can turn in their resigna- tions so that their retirement wou1d precede the date of the bill and they would still be eligible. "I wouldn't be surprised ir someone doesn't have something up their sleeve like that. If feel this might be more or a public relations move." The bill to repeal the bonuses is by Assemblyman Robert Mclennan ffi. Downey). It v•ould prohibit legislaton uoder age 60 from drawing an immediate pension when they leave office. The impetus for a return of the legislators gained strength last week and over the weekend as both Republicans and Democrats apparently sensed the anger of voters at the payments that wou1d be made to men ktlll in their 30s, 40s and 50s. Carpenter, who noted that he has opp>sed any kind of pension to r la~makers, said that the speci al sessi('ln would be an ''opportunity to do scmething about a mistake.'' "A lot of people who suppcrt !he the move for a repeal \\i ll have to vote against their O\lo'n vested interests." Carpenter said . McClennan introduced his bill in the summer to overturn pension bonuses that \l.'Ould average $93.000 ir all eligible legislators stepped down or failed to ' Cites Need To Be Near His Family BOSTON (AP ) -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, citing family tragedies, said today that he will neither seek nor accept the Democratic nomination for president or vice president in 1976. 'lbe Ma~chusetts Democrat, with his wife Joan at his side, said, 04This decision is firm, final and unconditional. There is absolutely no circumstance or .eveot that will alter the decision." 1be most immediate pottttcal beneficiaries ol his decision. whose tim- ing wu ~ps more lllrprillng than ( J The 42 year-old brother of the late ' President John F. Kennedy and the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, both or whom were as,wrsinated, said be weig~ ed his decision care!uliy. "One basic fact has becon\e in-- creasingly clear to me," he said at a news conference. "From the cam- paigns of my brothers before me, J know that ~king the nation's-highest office demands a candidate's tmdlvided attention and his deepest personal com· mibnent. NEJYS ANALYSIS Its contents, are the other Democrats who have either begun or have been oontemplating 1976 presidential bid!. _ Minneaota Sen. Watter F. Mondale's potential candidacy, for instance, has been overshadowed by the po!Sibility a Kennedy candidacy might wipe out much potential liberal support. Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington faced the basic handicap that even poten- tial backers feared he v..-ould be unable to win the Democratic nominatioo from Kennedy. Hungry Bug: It looks like an ecologist's nightmare where the aul<>- mobile rises up to destroy the last ol tbe earth's greenery -munch! Or possibly a way to beat ris- ing gas prices (how many leaves to the gallon?). u, ........... Actually John Reilly, a RA!no painter and roofer, said his car's mouthful wasn't an exotic experiment -he just didn't have a truck. Mondale and Jackson may ~Jhe _ closest things to frontnmners at this early, indecisive stage. But Kennedy's decision seems, if nothing else, to guarantee a Jong list cf enlr<Jnts and Burton Still Loves Liz 'But ·we Can't Live Togetlier,' He Says to increase the chances of a deadlocked convention. Some posslbWtles, such as Gov. John J . Gilligan of Ohio and Sen. Birch E. &yh of Jndiana, could have little hope as long as Kennedy ran, or even considered nmning. Now, significant vic- tories in November could propel them into the race. Other individuals, too, could benefit, the active ones such as Sen. Lloyd M. Bentsen of Texas and others only candidates ror office now. Beyond that, however, the Democratic party may be the ultimate beneficiary. Kennedy's long lead in the polls had convinced even those unlikely to favor the .Massachusetts senator that he would be dillicult to stop for the nomination. But many of these, from chairman Robert S. Strauss down, feared that KeMedy, while able to win the nomina- tion would be unable to win the presiden- tial election itself and that his candidacy would doom the nation's majority party to a lhird straight national defeat. Desptte hJs assets, his ability tO win backing from both liberal and blue collar Democrats and his undoubted skills at campaigning, a Kennedy candidacy threatened to undermine any benefits the party might realize from the scan- dals ol the Republican administration. SA.ILBOA.T SELLER GOT ~IA.NY CALLS '4We got so many calls about our sailboat we couldn't believe It." 'Mlat's how a Balboa Island resident described the respon!e to this Daily Pilot classilied ad : LIOO 14, sail no. 3708, Used &evcral times by a U>usy snllor on Lake Arrowhead. l\1any extras. o:wtr. Desperate ! Best oiler! X-J:X-lCXXX Let someone make yoo an olfer you woo't N!fU!e. caU 642-5678. Put a few • "'Ords t.o work for you. In the Dally Pl1ol. • ' By ROBERT MUSEL LONDON (UPI) -Richard Burton said today he loves Elizabeth Taylor and she loves him, but their divorce last June Was the final burial rite of the great romance and there will be no reconciliation. "Unfortunately, we're incompatible," Woman's Nude Body Discover~d In Irvine Area The nude txidy of a young woman who had been shot once in the head was (ourid Sunday en a lonely stfetch road In Irvine, according t.o Costa Mesa police investigators. The victim, described as being about 2s years of age, five feet four, 150 pounds with reddish hair and hazel eyes, has not been identified, according to the county coroner's o!Dce. Police said clothing tbat may have belonged to the woman was found scat- tered. along the side ol. Barranca Road near the intersection with Je[frey Road, where the body was discovered. · The artlcl,. of clothing Included a blue flowered blouse, blue slacks and black and white shoes. Police · were called to the scene at about 3 a.m . v.•hen t.he body was sighted by People in several cars passing by. So 'far, investigator• said, there are no leads in the shooting apart from the fa el. tl!llt j\ appears the woman \Vas shot sometime Saturday night. - Cliff Arquette Dead BURBANK (UPI) -Cliff Arquett•. 61, television comedian who played the role of Olarley Weaver, died loduy at St. Jooei*i hospital. he said. "We Jove ·each other but we can't live together.'' Burton said· this across lunch in a crowded tavern. He was asked if he had heard the reports that Elizabeth wou1d marry her constant companion these days, Henry Wynberg of Los Angeles. the man who moved in when he moved out. Up to that point, Burton enthralled his lunch companions with ·the fine flow of anecdotes for which he is famous. He told.of his meetings with Sir Winston Churchill, whom he will portray in a forthcoming television production based on one of Churchill's books, ''The Gather· ing storm," and scheduled for broadcast (NBC.TV) Nov. 29 -the eve of Churchill's IOOth blrtbday. But at the mention of Wynberg, the 4~year-old actor's face hardened. "Who is he?" Burton asked, staring straight ahead. 4'Ah, well," he added after a moment, "Elizabeth is such a moral person that unquestionably she will marry Ibis chap. She's not a layabout. If she goes to bed with someone, sl;le marries them. So I've no doubt she will marry this ... Mr. Weisberg.'' He emphasized the mis~unciation. "Are you in touch .. with her?" "Oh yes. I'm very fond o! her and I love her very much. And that's reciprocal. And I admire her very much. She's a very lovely and loving woman. I'm perfectly convinced she will marry somebody. Presumably this fellow." Burton and Miss Taylor w e r e separated in July, 1973, after 10 years of marriage and several atfeinpts at reconciliation. Miss Taylor obtained a Swiss divorce last June. · "I will, of course, naturally worry about Elizabeth /' Burton said. "If she's Ill or something, I'd be there like a nash. We swap our babies back and forth. One minute I have mine then hen, and then she has mine. Ab, she's a very_ delightful and remarkable woman." Burton was relieved when the subject voas changed. Catal.ina .Beeord L~ne Cox Does It Under 9 Hours ' AV ALON (AP)-A 21-yeaMld U>~ AlamltO. IWimmer conquered the 21-mile Catalina Channel In record Ume !or a woman today and just missed the men's re.cord set l)y he!' brother. ' Lynne Cox reached Catalina Island after 8 hours 58 minutes, breaking the women's record of 11 hours seven minutes set by Greta Andersen, now of Huntington Harbour, in 1957 , a spokeswoman for the swimmer said. Her brother David sol the men'• record of eight hours 50 min· ules in 1972. - Miss Cox, who holds the record for swimming the English Channel, tried earlier this month to break the 'record but dense fog (orced her to quiL "My primary responsibilities are at home. It bas become quite apparent to me that I would be unable to make a full c01nmitment to a campaign for the presidency. 041 simply cannot do that to ·my wife and children and the other members of my family." Kennedy 's wife has been in a rest borne twice in recent months and his son Edward Jr. lost part ol a leg last November because of bone cancer. Presklent Ford learned ol Keillledy'1 announcement from White House press secretary Ron ~n while in Detroit, (Ste KENNEDY, Page A%) Mesa Trustees ' View Low Bid On Gymnasium If school trustees accept the latest low bid oil a gymnasium remodeling project at COsta Mesa High School Tue,. day nlght, work will begin "abnoo im· mediately," according to Busi n es a Manager Raymond Schnierer. Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees will be looking at a bid of $508,893 submitted by Nick Pokra}ac, Inc., the same firm currently working on another project at the high school. They turned down a low bid of $862,473 on July 30, roughly $216,CXX) more than the district wanted to spend, Schnierer said. After rejecting the bid, trustees whit· lied down the soope o! the project and reopened bids on the remodeling job. Plans call for remodeling and updating the boys' and girls' physical education facilities at the 9Cbool. The work will also include completing drainage systems on the west and north sides of the campus. Plans to install a drainage system on the east. or back, side were eliminated when the project was nar- row.a down by trustees following the first round or bidding. Schnlerer said the staff is recom· mending the board accept Pokrajac's bid. Although the bid acceptance will be at least seven weekJ delayed, Schnlercr. said the proJ«t is still within the bidding Ume scheduled. \\'hen tbe hoard meets at 7 :30 p.m. at the Costa Mesa City Council Chambers. 77 .Fair Drive. they wut aJao discuu enrollment projecllonJ at rut .... Spy Glass Hill and Harbor View Home• sites. , be re-elected ·this yl!ar, the year o( a reapportionment. The bi ll dil'<i in the Assembly Rule!: Committee and all efforts to get it to the noor of the Democratically-con- trolled Assembly failed. , ''\Ve kept the pot alive by uri;::ing that a special session be called," Car- penter said. Those eligible for pension bon uses had to be members or the Legislature prior (See REAGAN. Page A!) ace. • Uf'I,...... WON'T RUN-PERIOD S.n. Edward Kennedy 'Million to One Sliot' Declared l1i Murder Trial By TOM BAR LEY Of tM O•H'f' ,.Utt SN!ff If anyone other than Helen Jeannine May had been holding the deaUt weapon last June 11 when jazz drummer Venice Hernando Willis was shot through the head, she would have ·hit the chande1ier, defense attorney Donald M c C a r t i n argued today. Pleading for a verdict of uivoluntary manslaughter in the Orange County Superior Court trial of the diminutive Costa Mesa widow, McCartin told Judge Walter E. Smith that Willis, 23, .... ·as killed "by a million to one shot "She was the mouse of t h e neighborhood." McCartin said. "She was not capable of forming malice and it is ·hogwash to suggest that she intended to kill Willis.'' McCartin reminded Judge Smith in the closing minutes of the non-jury trial of Mrs. A-1ay's testimony that \Villis had announced his intention of ra ping her and had, in fact, begun to unfasten his clothing when she ran for her .22- calibef' pistol. "She was not substituting a buUct for a seven-day notice to quit," McCartin (See ~1AY mIAL. Page All Orange Coast • Weather It 'II be another scorcher Tues- day, but not quite as hot as today, according to the wealller service. High! in the low 70S at the beaches after the fog lifts, rising to 84 inland. INSIDE TODAY Hurricane-ra uaoed rcside11ts of llondHran vlllagea havt sur· vfved one crisis -01dri to be factd U?ilb anotheT. DtadLy viper sMkes are swimm htg In the flooded towtu. See photo end a:tory Page A4. Al Y•vr S•rYict AJ toetlnt ., L.M. tt.-41 All Ctlllwrli• ll C\IHlllM .... ,, (lfl'llC• al (ftMWOf'C U Offlll NtHCH At &flMlll ''" &6 11111"11lllflltlll ... ,l...,._ A1'"411 MrttotC!tN •• , • • • ' <I ~LY PILOT c Mondu, September 23, 1 q14 . Countim1s AiilRavagecl Honduras Americans arc responding to the devastation In Honduras from Hurricane Fifi with money, med icines and other emergency supplies. In orange County, a spokesman at the Ameti.dan Red Cr0&s Headquarters in Santa Aria Said calls have been comin& in steadily loday. The Red Cross does not send clothes or food to the site of disasters because of what is considered a prohibitive cost, the spokesman said. "But anyone who wants to help should mail us a check with 'Hurricane Fifi' or 'Honduras' written in the corner," she said. "We'll forward it to .our Washington bureau and they make sure jt gets w.hcre it Is needed." The salvation Anny is accepting food a nd clothing which will be shipped to the Los Angeles Salvation Army head- quarters and then to Hondura s. More infonnation about donations to the Army may be obtained by calling 546-7880. Food and clothing may be drop- ped off at 4JO· E. Fourth Street, Santa · Ana, and should be clearly marked, "For Honduras,'' a spokesman said. Phone lilies to the Honduras Coosul in Los Angeles were clogged with caU.. today. Inquiries about food or clothes do· nations, or relatives may be made by calling the consul at 21.3-622-l!MM. DooatioDs may be sent to Ille Honduras embuaies or consulates in AUanta, BoltOn, ·Los Angeles, Houston, Baltimore, New .Yori:, New Orleans, MJaml and San F'rlnclaco. A Honduran Embassy spokesman In Wuhingto1rll8ld lhe greatest need was for medicine for survivors of the hur- ricane, whlc!t left 5,000 confirmed dead and an estimated 150,000 homeless. Jn Miami, Honduran Consul-General Antionio Valladares said there is a need for alm06t everything along the country's devastated .coast. "We don't have anything," he said. "We need everything, especially medical suppUes, antlbfotlcs, fuel to boil water, food and clot.bing." A· Spanish.language radio station in Miami collected more than $20,tKXI in boon altel' issuing an appeal. New Ortoom' large community d Honduran- borll residents made donations at a half doun rollel centers. ' . TONIGHT OJSTA MESA PLANNING COM· 1'11SS10N - Regular meeting, City Hall, 6:30 p.m. i FLAG FOOTBALL SIG NUPS -Dept. of Leisure Services program for boys in grades three through eight. Register . at ecllOOI playgrounds altet" ocbool. Fee $2. lnfonnation 556-5300. UC! LECTURES -"The Occult," Room 178 Humanities Hall, 7 p.m. "Com- mercial and Investment Properties." Room IOI Physical Science Bldg. 7 p.m. TUESDAY, SEPT. N SE!"!OR CITIZENS CLUB -Com· mwiity Recreation Center, 11 a.m. - 3 p.m. NEWPORT-MESA SCHOO[. BOARD - Regular meeUng, Costa Mesa City Coun- cil C1'ambers, 7:30 p.m. ~ "BEIIlND TIIE HEADl.JNES" -Dr. Giles T. Brown lecturer, OCC Forum, 7:30 p.m. UC! LECTURES -'\>.Ian's Effects on World's Climate," Frank Rowland lecturer, Science Lecture Hall, 3:30 p.m. "Me~ and the Brain in the 21st century,' James McGaugh lecturer. Also film t•Future $bock." Science ~ture Hall, 7 p.m. "Landmarks of Art," Room Z1I Humanities Hall, 7 p.m. "Women's Fonnn," Room 140 Socla1 Science Lab, 7 p.m. OUNllCOAST CM DAILY PILOT 111o1 on"" CoHl o.a~ Nell Wlln •t>ocn ~ - -1"'9 Ne••.P-• .,._,....,bf 11"' Ollll'IQe CoMt ~""" ~ SecHitat. edlllons .. , .1Nb41'11414 M<lllOIV ll'«lu!I~ Fltdn br Cool• Miu. "le-' &tl(lfl. -ll'IQllOll S..C~/f()0,111• ..,, .... ~ ~..,...e.111:1'.~l!l(I S..00 ~ellila< .k-'*'I ~~ A i'"Ole •egol)All tdllloft • ~ ~i.all\11 l"ll Sui" Cll\11 Thi ~IN~ !11.tnl 11 fl 3JOWW llil~!lt.-.el.COll• MIN.~ tH1211 lob.t N. Vind _ .. _ ............. ... T.:.~ ~H.l.00\ ltd'Od P.,..,. AMMIM .......... U.. ~""' "'' 0r.,.. co.i ~ ~ ...., ,......,.--.""*'._ tflli;..11,..n• ............. , ,,........ """ " ~ ......,....,.,..__o1-....- ............ o..o .. o.i.Mitm Q~-­-..,..,...,..,.c-»OO~ llt,.,... Mell-""" ........... "-''IJOO_,.. " Martha Cau$eS . . London Stir LONDON (APJ -Martha MlldJell caulOd a. commotion at • l.ondCln airport ""°" she mused to 1Uill>lt to a routine security Cbodt, an o!ftclal « Brtlllll. Ainil)'I llyl. I 'Ille official laid Mrs. Mllcboll ' "was shouting and refused to be touchid by one of the security girls. In the end , when we told her she wou1d not be able to fly if she \\'is not searched , she calm· ed down, and we used an electronic device lo search her.'' Mrs. Mitchell, the elf.ranged wife of former U.S. Atty. Gen. John Mitchell. bOardOO a plane for New York Sunday. She had been in !Andon for a television appearance. From Page Al MAY TRIAL. • • said. "We have here a classic case in which a mental defect in Mrs. May's makeup led to the shooting. ''It was one more tragedy in a history ol tragedies," ?.icCartin pleaded. "This 4~year-old woman has lost her husband , her mother and her sister in a matter or months and these losses and the resulting depression all played their part in the killing of Venioe." Prosecutor Pat Brian has stated that he ·will demand a verdict of first. degree murder in his final argument "with nothing le~ than second degree." Brian said be will remind Judge Smith lhat Mrs. May left Willis on the floor after she shot him and did nothing in the way of seeking medical aid for her boarder before Costa Mesa police arrived at the home at 1383 Shannon Lane. Mis. May, whose husband, Conner Costa Mesa Fire captain Lawrence May, died earlier this year of leukemia, testified that she was told by a friend to leave things exactly as they were after the &hooting and do nothing until police arrived. Mrs. May testified that she had repeatedly served notice on Willis to leave ber home and that her boarder · often put her across his knee and spank· ed her with his belt when her meals displeased him. Judge Smith is expected to take the case under submission after final arguments in the week long trial are completed today. McCartln said he will ask him to rule that Mrs. May was of "diminished mental capacity" at the time ol the kill- ing. ·I " '• From Page Al KENNEDY .•. where he addressed the World Energy Conference . Asked by a reporter for his reaction, F<>!d shook his head. said nothing, and grinned broadly. Asked what effect the Chappaquiddjck incident of 1969 had on his an- nouncement, Ke~y said: ' 'Tb is decision ... would have been made ir· respectl.Ve of the tragedy that happened in 1969. . • Were l to run, it wou1d have been a factor that would have been raised." Mary Jo~ Kopechne, a fonner secretary for Robert Kennedy, was killed when a car driven by the sena tor went off a bridge at Chappaquiddick Island, Mass. Regarding Chappaquiddick, Kennedy said he had answered all questions "quickly, candidly and honestly," in Ma ssachusetts courts. "I Cfln liv~wlth my own testimony," he sa~ think I wouid have been able to foc us the campaign on !he im~ portant issues." "I will not accept the nomination. I will not accept a draft," Kennedy said. He added that he wilt "oppose any effort to place my name in nomination in any state or at the national con. venUon. and t will oppose any effort to promote my candidacy in any other way." Kelinedy said he reached his decision after discussions with his wife and other family members. The sole surviving son of the late Joseph P. Kennedy said he decided to announce his decision now "in order to ease the apprehen!toos within my fa!Jlily about the possl bllity of my candidacy, as well as to clarify the situation wt thin my party." Kennedy pledged to work for the next two years for the Democratic party and its nominees. Kennedy said that a candidate who is unabl e to make the fu11 commitment needed for a P""ldentlal campaign "does a disservice to his country and to his party." Koote1w1 Tribe To Start Takirig Fee From Trains BONNERS FERRY, Idaho (AP) - Kootenai Indians pllMed to begin ool- Jecling lolls tllday from trains as well as ca" pasoing through the land they have claimed In their nonviolent war wl!h the Unlled Stale1. Tribal leaders have deferred any decision on further escalAUon Of the.Ir war unlil late loday. They agreed to Y.'ait for answers from Washington, D.C. on demands for IJUtJ negotlatlonl and O!tJ a request that congressional Jeader1 vWt their ...... - To Di~rupt 'Birthday' WASHINGTON tAP J -TeITOriaiJ are planning to disrupt the Unittd States' bicentennial celebration with acts of violence, California Atty. Gen.' Evellc Younger told a Senate panel today. UBits and pieces of in formation, however slight, are appearing in W'I· dergro'und ·publications indicating thal plans are already being formulated to insure that the 200th anniversary year of the United States is marred with domestic violence," Younger said. Younger, whose st ate has been the center of terrorist violence in recent months, including the kidnaping of Patricia Hearst, told the Senate judiciary subcommittee on .internal security: "Each year it is becoming less difficult tor a terrorist, with appropriate sc\entiflc-technical skills, to construct a chemical or biological device capable of mass destruction. The era or superviolence may "oe upon us." Younger said the Symbionese Ubera· lion Army, which claims respcnsiblllty for the Hearst kidnaping, exemplifies the new breed of educated. resourceful and disciplined terrorists. The SLA, in from a book written by terrorists in ca rrying out that kidnaping, took a page Latin Ameri ca, the Middle East and Northem Ireland, the the attorney general sa id. And, he added, the SLA proved itseU to be a master at gaining publicity. "From the day their first commwiique was printed m full to the day of their shootout -live and in color -they remaiped a media favorite," be said. 11 A}I this publicity tends to romanticize thet"terrorists in the eyes of the public and is instrumental in attracting addi - tional sympathi7.ers and supporters,'' Younger added. \Vhatever they call t h e m s e I v e s , American terrorists are guided by the Marxist-Leninist doctrine as interpreted by Mao Tse-tung, Younger told the sub- committee. He said their essential needs _. arms and money -. are easily obtainable. Weapons are stolen from mil itary in· stallations and cash is obtained from sympathizers, bank robberies and thefts of credit cards, he added. The most important tool in fighting terrorism is intelligmce, Younger sa id, but little infomlBtion is available at the local level He urged su~estions from medical, legal and other professiorials ".so that no stone remains"untumed in our efforts to effectively combat terrorism." ' From Page Al -REAGAN •.. to 1965. ,Under terms of the present plan, they receive retirement benefits immediately upon leaving office in a year in which there is a reapportionment, su·cn as this year. • Ul'I Ttlfflll't I ~ • • ' • LONG BEACH MEMORIAL HOSPITAL IS WHERE EX-PRESIDENT NIXON IS SCHEDULED FOR TESTS He Arrived by Car From San Clement• Home, Entering Through 1 Rear Door 8 Rooms Clear · for Nixon Lorig ·Beacli Hospital Readied for Ex-president BULLETIN LONG BEACH (AP) -Former Pr<sl- dent NllOa .Upped laaide a large hospital here this afternoon, 1niving in a car at a nar service entrance. LONG BEACH (AP ) -Former Presi· dent Nixon, aili ng with phlebitis, checks into a bright, new hospital wing today. Preserving the same secrecy which surrounded him in the \Vhite House, Sixon and aides declined to reveal his expected check-iii time in advance. A hospital spe>keswoman and nurses said the staff had no idea when be would arrive. (See related story Page A3.) According to Ille hospital 1ehedule, Nixon was to go direct.ly to hJs room after check·ln. 'There, holpital persoMel will take blood samples and complete other diagnostic procedures. Hospital ftpokesmen said it was likely, coosidering Nixon's symptoms, that he would un-. dergo intravenous treatment with an- Ucoagu1ant drugs. Such treatment thins the blood and aids in keeping the blood Clot in the patient's leg from flaking off and pro- Hearing Today in Little League Child Molest ·Case · ducing smaller clots which migbl move to other part• of the body. During such treatment , the patient must remnin immobile because any physical injury could ttring on pro!uae bleeding. · A bloc or eight private rooms at Long Beach ~temorial llospital Medical Center was cleared of patients SutMlay in readiness for Nixon's arrival. ltospital spokeswoman Karen Krantz said hospital officials decided to use the rooms as a "buffer zone" between Nixon and other patients on tbe sixth floor west 'Wing. She said it was not known if the ex·president would be billed fqr all eight roans, which each usually (.Ul SSS a day. Nixon requested only two rooms. Hospital officials1 also would not sa1 who is paying the bill. Get~well cants, a few telegrams and bouquet! of bright fall flowers, mootly chrysanthemums, were waiting for the former jlresldent, wit to the bolpltal A preliminary hear'ing into child unconscious on the 1awn of Huntineton by well·wlshers before hla arrival. I ~•-cha ' ··~ the I I t unity H pi I · Grace . Hollenbeck, nur'ltilc manager mo e;,w1g rges agatu.,~ onner n ercomm os ta . of 'the 'sllth floor. said lhe did" not manager of a Fountain Valley Little Greene is beipg held in Hwitingtoo know woo sent the flowers. l.eague team and the team's spo!1'0r Beach jail under $i0,0llll holll, while Mm-Krants pld the holpital swit- was scheduled to begin today in west Mohan is in Orange County Jail under chboard had been busy with phooe call• Orange County Municipal Court. $20,000 bond. from both well wishers and ·a few The manager. Gregory W o o d a r d ~ pranksters. l f Four additional telephones. plus a Greene, 24, and •he sponsor, Edgar _,i eguards Nab-direct line between Nixon'• hoopttal room Herbert Mohan Jr., 45, v.·ere to appear and his home·at San Clemente. were before Judge Alan N. M.cKone. installed In and around the room. A The public defender'• office indica ted Swimming . Deer squad o1 Secret ·s.rv1c.1; •gt•il .... m \ might 8'k thal the hearing, expected hand. to last two days. be closed to the CdM Miss Krantz said Nlxon apparemly public. r.iany ol !._he ~s involved in Off _ _ Beacli chooe Ille 14-year-old hospital because the alleged incident woiild be called hU long-time pjlysici~ Dr. John C. to testify . Lundgren, is on the stan. The staff said A confused deer that wandered into •'---ro Nixon The district attorney·s office said ~ua.::: were no requests r to have Greene faces 35 charges of child the surf from Buck Gully at Li.tile a private nurse. \ Burke, who v.·ants to see the plan ove rturned. is among those eligigle, although he is running for office again. lj'e said today be would gel $6,000 a year ·ror-eight-years u-i,e-were defealed . Assemblyman Robert Bad ham ! R· Newport Beach ). who has been in the Assembly 21 years and is ruMlng for re-election this yea r. said today said th a t fti c Le nnan 's bi ll v1a s •;grandstanding" and noted t h a t Assemblyman McLennan was in a tight race again st another assemblym an 1~·ho would benefit fro1n the pension bonuses . molesting, whole Mohan is charged in Corona beach Sunday afternoon was led !"lion's room is located in the west connection with 1 2 incidents. --tlS-shore-an<t-safety-by-Newport--Beach-WlDg--'of-the-ho&pttal, which wu opened- The alleged cases involve boYS; aged lifeguard Bruce Maclay. only last J~ and feature& the most 9 to 12 from Fountain V a 11 e y , modem eqwpment and cheerful IW'· \Vestminster, Newport Beach and Hun· Maclay swam to the deer when it roundings in the building. Hallway walls tington Beach. Some ot them were u•as stranded near Ladder Rock reef ·are painted in gay, multicolored !tripes. members of the team in the Fountain afte r being herded back towards shore The walls of Nixon's room art gold. Valley south Little League. b H ho p t 1 ho t There is .• remote control color TV "The inves tigation started after a 12· y a ar r a ro a · set built into the wall and a bulletin year-old Fountain Valley boy was foun d When· he reached the floundering board where he can tack up get·well animal. Maclay dropped a rope baiter cards and telegrams. , They're in Heaveia The first Orlando, Fla ., com ic art convention was a haven to collect· ors of old comics and original comic art. but these two aren't con· cerned with nostal gia. Robert Smith, 11 , and his sister Kimberly, 9, just dig comics, old or new and th ey dlg Into the stacks here. -. around its neck and tugged it to shore. A few minutes before the lifeguard swam to the stranded deer crewmen aboard the patrol boat spotted it as it swam toward the open sea beyond the surfline. Swimming excursions by deer that Jive in the hills above the beach are not uncommoo, accnrding to Sgt. Harry Wright of the harbor patrol. "Becall3e deer can't see above swells, they often be(ome C<llfused ~be'n the winds are blowing offshore as they were Sunday," said Wright. Clilld Developing Class Set Today In Costa Mesa Anaheim Motorist Killed in Car Crash BAKERSFIELD (AP) -Tw\l drivers, one a man froni An~lm v.·ere killed In a wrongway, head""1 colli!ion on Interstate S west ol here, the highway patrol llald. Officers said Johnny Ray Butler, ~l , Bakersfield, was driving nocth in a soulhbound lane Saturd1y night ~ Slammed io~o a car driven by William Plest, 24, Anaheim. Judge. to Free Lt. Callev? OKLAHOMA CITY (UPJ I -A federal jildge will overturn the con- A child development clw f 0 r victlon of former Army Lt. William ptt1ehoolel'll 8"" !heir mothers begin L. C.lley Jr., for the My !Al tod•Y at the Harbor Area Boys Club massacre and set aside his t~year und t•---" of Orang Coast 'l>ri""' sent.ence, probably Ibis er ''" 1,,......-P e week, accorilin1g to "welJ.ln!ormed College. Mothers ol children 2~ to 5 years '°"""'" quoted In lhc llally 1d Ill i f the Oklahoman loday. o may st '811 up or program U.S. District Judge J. Robe~ at lhe club, 2131 Tustin Ave . , ·~ Cl•'5el aro held 9 a.m. to noon Monday Elllolt In Columbus, Ga. ls .ex- lhrolJl!h Friday and noon to 3 p.m. peeled to hnnd down tbe decbloo Tuesc!Dys. Attendance is required at one b~sed on grounds that Calley's con. session per week. stitutlonal right lo due proces.,, or The first two houn-d-..th<....sesslonl e-!aw was violated by pre)udlcill nre devoted lo mothers watching Illelr P~rlal publicity, the newl]>aptr children in a nursery school setting. said. The last hour Is devoted Jo discussion T~ Dally Okla11<>man oald the • bclwccn moUiers dce1s1on also reportedly was tn. cost or the nOn-credit course which · Ouenced by the Army's fail ure to will run tbrough February, is fl6~ procure evidence and wltncsaes and · . PerlOlll dtslriq 1 further infonnaUon tbe l~fluencc or superiors over ' on Ihe class may contact Mrs. Robert C.lley s original court-marUal. , Bowlus, 175-1468. ,· , •, '• ·, ' r