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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-10-15 - Orange Coast Pilot.• • man am es IXOll . . • DAILY PILOT Marine AlarnasPublic~ • * * * 1oc * * * • ID Clenient@ BunsAnioh TUESDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 15, 1974 VOL. ,,, frtO, S., t SECTIOHI, M P~Gil - ' I I -- • • • • Baker's County Race Costing $55,100 'It's All True' Mills Backed Up By Ex-stripp~r • WASfflNGTON (AP) -Breaking a week-long silence, the woman involved in a bizarre incident with Rep. Wilbur D. Mills. has backed up his version and complained that the press "is trying to destroy a gt-eat man." "Whal Air. lt1ills said was exacUy what happened ," the 38-year-oad Argen- tinian and fonner dancer said in a Elirlich1na11 Savs . - Ni ;ton 'Deceived, .. Lied, Used Him' telephone interview Monday night. She reportedly worked as a stripper in a \Vashlngton nightclub and was billed as "the Argentine firecracker." Speaking in a sort. slightly accented voice and sounding at times close to tears, Annabel Battistella said that ac- counts or the episode may also ruin "me and my chances of going back to school." But she expressed confidence that the political career of Mills, chairman or the House Ways and l\i.eans Committee. woold not be ruined by the episode which took place in the predawn hours of Oct. 7. "I am sure when he goes to Arkansas, he will be able to talk to his people like he used to." she said. Mrs. Battistella refused to elaborate WASHINGTON {UPI) -John D . on MiUs' statement about the events Ehrlichman's attorney charged today of Oct. 7 beyond saying it Was accurate. I Crash Vieiim Revived 1 - • $250,000 Recorded C,01u1tywide fi lore than $250.000 in campaign dona- lions and expenses have been reported by Orange Coast candidates seeking elec- tion to seats ranging from the Board of Supervisors to U.S. Congress. Final records released 11'1onday by the cow1ty Registrar of Vote rs indicated the· biggest money in the county - S82,500 so far -will go IO\\'ard the battle between tong-time supervisor David Baker and challenger Laurence Schmit. a Garden Gro\'e school teacher. Baker. whose district includes most of the \\'estem Orange Coast a r e a . reported collecting $ 5 5 . I 0 0 , primarily from the prestigious Republican Uncolrt Club and the building industry. Schmit, also a registered Republican, reported contributions of $ 2 7 , 4 0 0 , primarily from rancher Richard J . O'Neill and political figure Dr. Louis Cella, both kno\vn for heavy financing of Democratic causes. --that-former......iRresidcn\-Nlxoo....!!deceivOO;--Bukhe-differed-wilh-U.-S.--Par-k--Police Baker listed 84 contributors, lle receiv· ed $10.000 from the Llncoln Club and --$1,000-each fr.om firms such as Mission Viejo Company , Don Koll Com pan y , Rossmoor Corporation, Avco Community Developers, Broadmoor Homes and S and S Construction Company. • • misled, lied to and used" and finally accounts in at least one aspect. forced a resignation from his former Police said she jumped into the Tidal No. 2 aide in order "to save his own Ba.sin, a backwater of the Potomac neck.'' River, ~fter police stopped !\f i 11 s' Ehrlichman, ooe of five former Nixon speeding, unlighted car and he emerged associates on trial in the Watergate smelling of alcohol and his face was coveNJp, was portrayed by defense at-bleeding. tomey William S. Frates as a victim A policeman pulled 111rs. Battistella ol the plot who "repeatedly recom-from the water. mifuded" that Nixon disclose the truth. "I didn't jump into the Tidal Basin. It was the first time Ehrlichman turn-1 fell ," she said. "l got h y st er i ca 1 WATERGATE'S LIDDY ·OUT ON BAIL, Pago A4 COLUMBUS DAY GROUP ·CRITICIZES JUDGE -Story, Al2 ed accuser of Nixon, whom he served as chief domestic adviser in the Wh.ite House .until April, 1973, when the Watergate scandal became a major issue. Nixon, named an uniodicted <XKOn· 1pirator in the cover-up, has b e c n pardoned by Presiderit Ford and cannot be tried for any Watergate-related in- clllents. Former White House. counsel John W _ Dean IIT, previously Nixon's chief ac- cuser, w6 to testify later in tile day for the pn:isecuUon -whose case also was based on the complicity ol the former president. "Richard Nixon deceived, misled, lied to and used John Ehrlid!.man to cover up hb own knowledge and activities wbile publicly s t a· 11 n g that John Ebrllctunan was one of the finest public servants he had ever kQOwn," Frates told the jury. "He (Nixon} was deliberately withholding Jnlomuillon from him - covering up to save his own neck. In simple ter)llS, Mr. Ehrllch~an hod been ... hod by his boss, the president of the United Slates." Fratct said EhrUchman's decision lo leave the. White I louse was a "forced (Sc< ACCIJSED, Page 112) ' - because the officer was drowning me. J didn't need his help. l am an expert s\\immer." Mills' account stated that he arranged a b8n voyage party for Gloria Sanchez, a cousin and houseguest of Mrs. Bat- tastilla, )'ho was returning to her native · Argentina. , He said his wife, Polly, had a broken root and insisted that .he lake the party out while she stayed horn~. "Mrs. Mills went out with us all the Ume," Mrs. Battlstella said. "We were always with other people -never (See ~ULLS, Page A2) ' Nude Clemente Gi.rl .4.rrested A teen-age San Clemente girl asserted· ly fcelin&' the effects of a combination of benzedrine and ~D wound up in Police custody early today after a nude romp through a neighborhood. Patrolman Rick Jordan said that he first saw the glrl at about 2:40 a.m. in the 100 block o( AVel')ida Cann::la as she went rrom door to door, knocking on each cioe. After she was properly dressed, Jordll.n said, tie brought the girl In ~o the station. Later, she was cited for be I n g under the influence and relePscd to her parents. I' .. Rescuers administer oxygen to Mrs. A1ay Lovejoy, 60 of 275 E. 18th St., Costa li-1esa following plunge of her convertible off Saq Diego Freeway this morning. She later was taken to Mercy General Hospital in Santa Ana where she was listed in fair condition. Acci· dent occurred about 7:45 a.n1. just south of the Newport Freeway interchange. lfighway Patrol of- ficers said they did not know why Afrs. Lovejoy 's car left the freewa y. Nixon Reportedly Used Pressure for Ziggurat WASHlNGTON (UPI\ -The Nixon Administralion pressured the General Services Administration lo trade $ 2 7 million in usable government property for a huge, unused building so the former president could keep his roo>rds near his home in San Clemente, the Washing- ton Post reported today.-· The Post said the building, a seV<ll- slory pyramid-shaped structure o n e quarter the size ol the Pentagon. v.115 acquired from RockweU International Corp. within the last two years for some S20 ml!Uon \\'Orth of Air Foree property. The building, located in Laguna Niguel --a community 10 miles from Nixon's cstale in San Clemente -cost $27 million to construct but was appraised for $20 1nllllon In 1972. • According to the Post, the GSA sa id the purpose or the trl\_dC \\'3S to get a place to house federal offices and records in Southern California -but. the ptper said, the building has never been occupied and is still empty except for office furniture. The POlt said the deal actually cost taxpayers close to $18 million more because some or land the govemmcnt traded away is now needed. Richard D. Hanzlik , a former \Vhile Hou~ aide. told the paper he made calls on behalf of the transaction in 1971 while he was an assistant to fonner p~1dentlal coiinselor Robert H. Finch. "They (GSA) wanted a bulkUng near San Clemente," Hanzlik said, ''Th c memog won 't say ii \Vould be for tbc (See PRESSURE, Pop All , I - Mari11c Subdued ..\fter Rampage In Sa11 Clemente A young Can1p Pendl eton 11111rine ran an1ok in a quiet San C I e m e n le neighborhood \\1onday afternoon. police said. Officers said lhev rC"Ccivt'd several calls from harried hOn1L'O\VOCrs reporting that the n1an ""as datnaging fences, ramming his fists througt'I windows and bellowing at passersby along the 1400 block of Ola Vista. Police said they h[ld to subdue Robert John90fl, 21. Noticing mult iple cuts and bruises on him. they arranged to meet a base ambulance al, the Chri sUani t.os gate oC the reservation. Before they got Joh nson there, officers said, lhc arrestee mnn aged to kick out a windov: of n l)()ljcc cn.r ~ Johnson was ~at the ba s c hospital. Police said they planned to chnrge the youna l\larinc with being under the innucncc or drugs. ' He also got $2.000 from Fluor Corpora- lion. $2.000 from Union Oil. $2,000 from Deane Develop1nent and $1,000 from Los Alamilos Racetrack. The olher big money race in the ocunty does not involve an Orange Coast district . But the favorite in the '12nd Assembly Dislrict race, former Rams football star l\larlin ~lcKeever. main- tSee FUNDS, Page A%) Orange Coast Weather Dense fog tonight and in the early morning hours' ¥!'edncsday, according to 1he "·eathcr service. Othcr\\'isc moslly sunny with highs near 70 at the beaches rising to the mid-Ms inland. 11\'SIDE TODA V U.S. clteniist Paul J"lory of Sttlllford Universitu lias toott ti~ 1974 Nobel cl1emistry prize for research ·tn plastics. \V ll t n rct1cl1ed ot llome he iaid. "It's 6 a.•n. here. I'm. ·not awake yet.' See story and picture Page A4. lrm• loml>K~ 12 L. M. loJd "' C11itor11i1 AJ Ct.tnlt>t<I 11.u c ..... 1u IJ Cron-~ ll ~Ill lolollCJ!I At 'l!dikH'ill Pl.. A• E11tert1l-lll Al 1'111111<1 Al .. ll KJ G1rdt1tr til ... _.__ •i lnl.,..llllSl'-11 .U Alltl Ltt!Mr. •t M1¥1tt "' Mvhltl 1'•11111 Alt Hiii-i "'""' A4 Oftn.. Cow1111 At ,..... ••·1 l11rh t+I S1Kt: M"11111 Al .. 11 l•l\111 l"wttr ... ,. T91t.,.titll Alt TM1te•1 "' Wttlt>tf _., Wtrid Htwt 1 ... I i' I • ' • .. " r ' • A ! DAILY PILO T s TutsdillJ, Octobtr l.5, 1CJ74 New ·Snag May Appear . Ro cky Gift May Be Tied lo A irli11e Ruling NE\Y YOH!\ 'API -'rhe !l o u s e Judiciary 1·omn1ill l'(! plttns to look Into po.~!dblf' r o n n c C' t I o n a between a Hoekf'h•llcr ra rn!ly l'Onl rlbutlon to former President N"ixon '11 l!J72 c:.i mpalgn nnd !'\L'l:on 's re\cr~l or 1wo rull r1gs against !In Eastern Airlines ncqui!!ilior., the Nc\l.r York Tu11cs N·\'lOrll'rl today. In a dispatch fro111 \Vnshington, th!! 1'1rn('s 1iuotrd co111mlltt--<' sources a s s.1ying the in~·cst lgotlon v.·ou\d be In ,\<:CUSE ... 11.'SignnUon .•. so th al l1c:.it \\'Ould be taken off the Prc4;Ldenl iirltl the Presid ent standing !here knowing thnl hr was tl\e one co\'erlng up." I le sald tht: r vidcnct' 1rould sl\011-', that Nixon summ6nl.>d Ehrlichman lo Cainp Da vid. J\·ld. prior to his resigna tion April 30, 197~ "anti told him 'Ji:Hln, you have lil'Cn 1nv c:onscirncc, but I didn't follow vou r a<i\ 1cc. It ·s all n1y faul t. If I'd ~nly lollo\\'ed your ad vice, we wouldn't ht-in this s1tu::ition. ··• Frates also praised the t<1pcs or Nix- on's White House convursation1, which \1•ill be introduced into evidence begln- ning Wednesd ay. Fr3le~ ~kl. thet 1::ipcs will 1ho~ that Ehrlichman repeatedly told N 1 x on "\\'c'\·e got to lrt It all hang out " -tell thE' truth abollt \Vatergate. He also Strt'!Scd that D!!an, when he began cooperating 1vilh l~ progC<'utors, cantinu::illy blamed Ehrhchman and others for acts that he himselr (.'Qm- ntiUcd . Sirica rejected a 1notion by defendant Robert C. ~lardian·s attorney for a direc1ed vl'rdict of acquittal. In his opc1ting st.atemcnl. ~la _rd i.a n trn1•vcr Davis Brcss contended his chent nc vCr should have been indicted because he ,vas only a set'Ond-e<:he\on c:1mpal~n aide without any policy input. who had "no idee " what was happening. lie also noted that rtf a rd I an • a sometime San Cle1nente resident. wrote · a six·pagc memo three days belore the \V atergate break-in complaining about ronditions In thf' campaign and descrll> ing the organir.ation as "a fragmented group of people . . . who In the Jong run will ca.use more. problems than they will SOl\'e." * .... ~ ..:.r f'rotta 1•11ge 1\J PRESSURE ••• \Vt'sll'm \\'hitc House. but they would sav it orally.'' f inch. a trustee of the Richard Nixon l'"'ow1datlon. said ln un int erview lhal he pushL'ti the idea Of acquiring 8 building ne:ir San Clemente to help sup- port !be \VC$tcn1 \Vhile Hou!c. because he felt the GSA had an obligation lo store Nixoo 's record!. The Nixon Foun- dation \vas set up to build a library for the ex-presiden t. Jlanzlik said pressure also came from Rock"·e.JI cmployts who contributed S98.QOO to Nixon's 1971 re-elect ion cam- paign . TI1c office of ~1 :inau..ent. and ~udget -\\"hich originally ~ GSA s a~­ tjUisilion of the ~.11\\ding -c~!lcd . 1l a "\1•hitc elephnnt because or its size and disto1ncc fro n1 t os Angeles and San Diego. the pape r s.:ild. The building was bu\11 for Rockwell lnl('rn:1t\00<1 l Corp., fon ner ly No r I h Ainerican Hock\\'c\! Cor11., a ! a r g e dcfrnse nnd :irrospace L"On!ractor. T!w l'ost suid lhe GS/\ denied th(' h11ildinii; \\JS 11cquirL'<I to sto re Nixon's \lt'rSOnfll rt•cordi;, bul liSA rC('(lrds ob- i:iinetl in San Francisco sho1v thal lhc 1---'"'""'Y"""'llnt"l':rt\tle hul!d1ng iOT storage or \\'h1t1· llous<' docuinent s and ror offi ce :o;p<ll'l' \t1r th(' (or111er \\11~11\t!rn \Vhlte JluU'><' ~1;1ff and l:OP N111lonnl Co1n- 11nlh ·•' II\ \{lj'.! '-"\. ORANGE COAST \T DAILY PILOT ,..,. 0•M•'1" (IM<I 0~•1• PllOI •fllh .. hoth f\ ,.,....b.IM<I t~ N•,.., "••I•. I• l>Ubl .. tied ~· !"9 Ot AflQI' [~~~ ""hh•honq c.a ...... ~. ""'°"'.\" Ml•!•Ol'I• ••• publl•M~ lllO..O~• I"'"""" FroO~•. •or [o•I• ,.. ..... N•"'ll"'' 8'-M f\ H .... 1•nq!t)f'\! l"'•lho f<1llfll••" V•ll•• UIQ~"t 8'.o<~. , 1,,1\.,.·S,tdtll•h.KI ,.,..r ~_, {lt.,,..,.1• ·5.1., J ... ~ c.p .. u .no A ••n'llf •fQ'"'"'' f'll1l•b'I •1 pyt11IVl9~ !M!h•rtl••I •nrl 'luM•n Th• D''"'-'••I f'O'lll'>lllnll 1>1•~l ""' Jl)IJ ~'I ll1y41•!tl, Co•LI l'MY, "'1.torJll4 9'1•J~ Rober t N. Wet'd Pft\>°'n1 •lie! Publ•~""' rhomris A. Murpl'\lno ""'-I"'"'"!' Ettltor Cha rl e., H Loos R lc:h~rd P. Nall "'"~'•"' ~naq1.,q E!ll,at\ Offltlll (04 1 M~· • 1.IO Wt•t ft<I ' S1"'fl Ni.•C>ll•t!\<•1~ !11\ .. ~1"11'J•l ~lfW.t?tt l.•l~""P•oln ••'6 Cit-w•~\I . ..ior1 ""'"" h•lfh 17'1' &-"" Mt<llO•"'d ~ 4\ f.!~,.., ....... 'l(li lio•I" [I [l"'•na llt &I Tl!ll!phOM (714) M1:-4l21 Clilssllied A4¥trti1lng 641·5'71 J.rnm t M \1fl ,.,.., Sflul" !If YQll"l lltl<~ 492--4•20 Qilri_.1, 1~'•· o··~~ co'"' crv .. 1"'1"' GemH~,. NO ,....,, Ito<...,. 111,..l••llflM, M1t&,._I "°"'"•' t • •111t•h,,.,,.."t' "''''" 'lllf fll' ••lll"lldvC•d •lth0\11 \11«+•1 1Jt•rnt1\IOll OI toowr.9111 twM• ~ofl(I clt •I toi,.oo Pftlll 11 0-tl• M>••. ('11110•,.I• $Yb\Croouon DI" <..,,..,. U Oil "•"'"!!, 11 m.i• "'oo mO"tftlf , .,,1111.,~ clbll ... lo<!\ u °' lftf)ftlh!, 1.:onnectlon with President F o r d ' s • -no1ninalton of Nelson A. llocke!eller to be vice pre1ldent. LeS! tJian a year alter the Rockefeller family contributed '200.000 to the Nixon c11n1paign, Nixon cited u n s p e c i f i e d "f1>reign Policy reasons'' In reversi ng t"·o Civil Aeronautics Boord rulings and ::il\O"wed Ea.stem to acquire CariOOir. a Puerto Rican-based alrllne, a(."COrdJfll 10 the newspaper. Ul'I ,.. ......... Bock iii Society Robert Lee Green, 22, the first Pittsburgh man to accept Pres- ident Ford's amnesty program. says he's relieved and hopes to use his two years of public ser\'i.ce to prepare for a career as a cook and baker. Police ldentif y Slain Marine As Tal1oe Man A young Camp Pendleton Marine ~·ho was shOt In tbC back and killed Surlday . by one of three men who gave the victim and his buddy a lift In the San Juan Capistrano area bu been k1en· tified by Orange County Sheriff's 0Ulcer1 as Joseph R. Mosac, 20, or Lake Tahoe, CaUfornia. ~Investigators today soid they had no new cluc.1 as to the Identity of the 1 no who picked up l\.1osec and rellow Camp Pendleton Marlne Ron.aid Sendera, 20. as they sat on a bus bench Jn San Juan . Sanders told officers he and ~fosac 'vere robbed at gunpoint after the trlo drove them along the Ortega Highway and then onlo a dirt road near a quarry. Sanders said Mo88c used a f ew obscenities to describe their abductors ::is he Jay face down In the dirt and \\'as promptly shot In the back by a n1ember of the gang . an ers sa itlheTrlo tficn di-oVe orr :1l high speed with the $37 they had collected from the two Marine.a. • She~iffs investigators have circulated dcscrip\lons of the trio and tho car lhry usl.'<l throughout California. They arc "'orking on the theory that the hunted trio were off duty Mar Inc s . l{o ck Kills J\•la n, · !:i 7 SANTA CRUZ (Al') -A tw .. pouad rock tumbled down a coasto l cllU and killed a Saratoga 1nan. the coroner said. F"rank Stearns. 57 . of Saratoga, was fa1al!y str uck on the head Sunday wh ile sitting at the foot of the 30-foot cl\rf at Davenport Landing, 10 mlhts north of Santa Cruz. The RockefellerS have large holdings in Easttm. The 'nmes llld "there appwtd lo be no evidence at this point ot a con- nection between the Roek~e\ler ccm-- tribulion and the Nhc.on ruling. But com- mittee sources said the timing of the events raised questions In the minds of some members." The ntWlptper Nld the clrcumstancta o( the contr\bullon would be lnvtttlgalld as part. ot the committee's examination of anv influence the Rockefeller family n1ay have exerted on government agefl· cies and policy, Rockefeller's press secretary, Jtugh Morrow, said the former New Yotk J?Ovemor owned no stoek in Eastern Airlines , Butthe Ti m e ssaid Rockefeller's brother Laurance \''AS idfl:n· t1ntc1 as the single tar~st stockholder In the air carrier In a 1972 study. In addition, the Chase t1 a n h a t l a n Barut, the Rockefeller family bank, holds S. I percent ot Ealtem Airline.s stock In tnat and l!I the prime lender or a UOO mlllloo Joan to the airline, the nmes 18ld, Meanwhile, Senate Democratic whip Robert. C. Byrd said today a book about Arthur J. Goldberg "is pl'ttty reminis.. cent of the dirty tricks in the Nixon era." He and a Republican member or the Senale Rules ConUnlttee agreed that the matter would call for the reopening of vice-presidential confirmation hear- ings ror Roclttfelltt. Rockereller hu taken responsibility fDr the book, publlshed In 19711 when Goldbef1 was Rockefeller's unsuccessful opponent for governor ot New York. Republican l~er Hugh Scott said It was a book that Rockefeller h a d n • t "ordered, or read, or had distributed" and said Rockefeller was being generous in taking res~ibllity for it. Byrd and lio<!kefeller talked separately to reporters ju.st before the start of the day's Senate session, and th e i r remarks ren~ed the g row i n g con- troversy over f'nl!ident Ford's nomina· tlon ol &ckefelle<. In New York, Rockefeller said the government's Investigation of him 11 SJ detalled that It Is "out of this world." "There's not a thing I've done and hardly anything I've thought that hasn't been gone over," Rockefeller said at a sidewalk news conference. Rockefeller said 400 FBI agents have been checking on him and 20 tax agents have been workln& Ctl hla 1nCome tax retums. "rve never seen anything like it," he said. Alked If he tlllll(ht he WU being treated !alrly, he replied: "It'• America -the way our country works." Mesa Rotarians Set Garage Sale For Youth Funds D1!11 l'lltl S111f l'Plllt P11mpkita Patcla With Halloween lurking just around the corner. workers in this field near El Toro Marine Corps Air Station are readying thousands of jack-o-lan· heller-skelter duri ng the su~nmer, 'vere stripped froin the vines and lined up in ro\vs to m.ike load- ing easier. terns for the market. The pumpkins, whic-'h-'g"r'-=e-'w'------------------------ Fron• Page Al From l'age Al CAMPAIGN FUNDS ... ~IILLS ... tains a midence in Corona dcl Mar. DemQcrat McKeever has raised a reported $47,200 and spent more than $51 ,000. His Republican opponent R i c h a r d Robinson. has received $32,600 and spent about half or it so Car. To date in the Orange Coast 36lh State Senate District race, incumbent Republican Dennis Carpenter of Newport Beach is lOIJng the donation race to hiB Democratic ()ppOnent, Costa Mesa attorney Frank Barbaro. Barbaro rep:irta receipts of 523,900 to Carpenter's $18.200 though Carpenter has. spent !he most-$18,100 lo $10,600 for Barbaro. rttost or Barbaro's money also ca me Crom O'Neill and Cella, who contributed In-kind o(fice space and supplies worth more than $5,000. Carpenter's contrlbutor1 t n c I u d e d developer1 such as Harry Rinker. Robert Grant, John Lusk and Alex Robe rtson along with Union Oil and San Diego Gu and Electric. Carpenter'• Amer I can Independent Party challenser Gerald Bogart reported Income and expenditures of lesa than $500. Conflre111man Andrew Hinshaw ( R • Newport Beach) has relied '45,300 and &pen\ more than $40,300 ol It to keep Ulla fOth Dittrlct teat In the face of a chillenge by Democrat Roderick Wil- aon of Oceanside. \Vilson has raised $7,JOO and 1:1penl uJone:' almost all of it. l\1osl of hls money l\tills said in his statement that "arter is in the form of Joan s and Hlnshaw's a few refreshments, ~rs. Ba\tlstella bigRCSt donation. a $2 ,500 gift, ca1ne became ill and I enlisted the hel p of from the Repu blican National Congres-others in our group to ass ist me in sional Committee. seeing her safely home." Republican As semblyman Rob c r l On the wav hon1e. "ilh the car being Badham of Newport Bearh has raisl'd driven by a.nOthcr man, "~·t rs . Batti ste!!a $12,700 and spent about half of it tu att e1nptcd to leave the ca r and I at- meet the chal!enge or Sucanne Currie tempted lo prevent it." ~tills said . "In Lewis in the 74th District. She reported the ensuing struggle. her elbow hit my $823 in receipts and more than $3.0\JO glasses and broke ilicm, resulting in In expenses. a number of small c1.1ts atoUnd my Badham's money ca me from donots nose." such as California Auto De a I c 1· s , Asked about those deta l!s. ~1r11. Bat- Califomia Railroads, Pacific 0 u t do o r tis!elta said: "l"m not going to say Lighting, Union Oil. \\'inc and Spirits any n1ore -whatever damage has been Industry , Beer Dealers, Californ ia Dent:il done is enough."' Asiiociatlon and the building indus1ry·s i\lrs. Ballistella said she wns o Cen tury Committee . premedical student in Argentina, and In the 1~·est coun ty's 73rd Asse111bly is enrolled in a \Vashington-area college District, incumbent Republican Robert for the term starting in February to B1u·kE' has raised Sl l.800 and spent 1nore. lake '"general blological sciences." She than half of it to sta ve off Democrat v.·outd oot name the college. Dennis ~1angers. who colll'CIL'CI $9.100 "I'v e also been a school teacher anJ and spent all but S2.000 of it. take accounting," Mrs. Ballistella said. Burke 's major donors Include the "I spend half my life in 11Choof." Ca lifornia Lo3n and f inance Association. But. she added : "I don't know anymore California Au!o Dealers, Retail Liquor if it's in1portant to be deC'ent because Dealers Association , \Vestminster you get misunderstood." !\Iemcria l Park. l.Jolly1vood Park, Sh·~!l She "·as reluctant to discuss her dan- Oi! and Union Oil. cing career. say ing, "I haven't been In the 34th Congressional U i S l r I c I r 11 dancer in 'n long time -only one which extends fro1n LAJn g Beach fnlo motlth this year.·• rart of the "'rstern ()range Co u st . Both J\.lrs. Battistella and her hu sband , Republican Willia n1 Bond has raised Eduardo , who was intervic wL'<.l in Buenos $24.260 and spent nearly nil of il in Aires. Argenlin;1. J\Tonday night , seld :l battle agalnst J\1ark Hannaford Vl'ho they had be<!n good friends with tile Eplo z • has raised nearly $20,000 and spent mora J\-liJ!1'! fDr some time. SCOJ>U lUllS than half of it. They ore seeking to Hut they di!lagreed on ' whether ft.lrs. A communlty·wtde tar11e Ille 11 beln1 succeed retiring Congressman C r a I g Battistcl!a ever "11rkecl In the Arkansas sponaortd by the Coeta Meu Rotary F Di • lfosmer. Democrat's office. Club Baturday to ralae flllldl fot ~th ace 88C118l0fl "Fi nl, my wile bcgen working for pro)ecls in \ht Harbor Area and ln Mrs. 3:111ls as an assistan t and !hen Mexloo. "OAXTEPEC, Mexico (AP) -An Epls-J/O .. '"EY MOONERS a year and a half ago she began working cope.I bishop, who already stands ac-. l for ,.1ills as a person:1I secretary,'' Bal· 1'he garage sale, appropriately, will cused of breaking church law by ordain-tis lclla said. '"They saw she "'as very be held In a garage -the commerclol Intl -..n priests, todJly warned that SEA.LE D OUT bright." garage or Atesa Center AutomoUve, c:or-more women would be ordained in de-But his wife ~id : "I was not on ner of 16th Street and Otange Ave., ftanoe of the cb.irch ii It fails to clarify MEST RE. Italy (UP I\ _ Poo!o Pavan his (Mills'\ payroll. I did decorate his Coeta Mesa Jt1 poeklon on the Jsaie by 1976. could not carry his bride, Anna, across <1partment. I am not a profe!Siooal in-. diurcti oft'lclals said such aoove rould the threshold, because when lhe. couple tcrior decoralor but I manage very Items go on sale at 1 a.m, cauee further dlaen!ion amon g the 3.2 ret umed home from their wedding ban-v.·ell. .. Among wares on display are furnlture, million Epl9C0pella111 and their leaders. quct they foond only solld "·an Vl'herc She sa ld l\lill~ p~id her for t he appUancct, flxtUree, sportln& pxll and "Many blshopa are ready to orda in their t1partment doo r !hould have been. derorating job bu ! rcruscd to say ho1v clothing. Pe~ interested ln donating women," asserted Blrhop Jose Antonio Friends had bricked up the <l()(Jr unll niuch. items to the sale may call 6"-0l02 Ramos of Costa Rica, one of tour bishops painted It lo •notch the rest of the "That is personHI. '' she said. 1 who ordained 11 women three months wall as a pract\cal joke. A spokesmun for twlills dentod !'!he during bullnen houri, or Ml-oae to i~g;•·iliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiiOiiliiiiOiiliiiliiiiOi;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;~~~~i;iii~~""~r~kc~d~f~o~r ~t1:1c~c:"~"~ir~•~"~m~a;iaiiiiiiii~f-h1ve-thtir-ltetnll-ptdted-up,,, -----1· ----------- Item• m1y be delivered to the ule slle alter $ p.m. Friday. :J P erish in Blaze Cl~EA, Ma ... (AP) -A tbtee- alann fire cteslroyed a brick rooming muse and killed three persona today. one year after. ta blockl of Chehiea were destroyed tn what v.-aa described u the v.-orst Urben fire in the country 1n 40 • years. ~lore than 20 persons were evacu- ated from the three-story brick building during the early morning blaze, and sev· en were treated for smoke lohalatlon at a hospital and teleesed. AROUND THE CORNER AND UP YOUR STREET WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH." ' SEVER AL ANSWERS POP UP . FIRSTLY. THE COST OF STORES IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY. WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MORe SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM OFFICES AND WAREHOU SE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THlljDLY. THERE IS AM '. PL~ PARKING WITH LITTLE TRAFFIC CONGESTION LEADING TO US. Nixon to Testify? THE SITUATION HAS MADE us MORE COMPETITIVE ANO we' AR E PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE INCREASED OJR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR EIGHTEEN Y,EARS , ANO HAVE EX- Sir icn Plans I/earing Tliursda)· WASHINGTON (UPI) -U.S. Dlstr1ct Judge John J. Slrtca to- day scheduled a hearing !or Thursday arternoon on whether former Pre,ide nt Nixon •hould be compelled lo tesll fy al the W1\erii1te .:ove r-up trial or five former aldes. • "l think the •o<>ner wa dispose of this the better of! we'll bt," Sirica slld, announcing the hearing would be held all•r the lrlll adjo urjl• !or the day Thuraday. ~ N1lton. named an unlndicted co-con1pirator In. the c11e but jard oned by Pre1ldent Ford from an~ po11ible pro1tcullon, w11 •ubp0<na•d to testify both by lho delen1t and th• proncuUon. J~ls lawyers asked Slrlca to e1cu1e Nixon from tesUfying, con· tending on the advice of doctors that \raveling to Washlnjlon would posa "a se rious ti!k to his health." (Story, P1ge A3) Defendant John ll . Ehrllchmah, Nixon's former No. 2 aide, con· te nds the former president ts "an lndl1pen1abl1 wltneu" &l\d mwl bt compelled to provJdo lestlmony under oat h In 1ome Corm. PANDED FIVE TIMES AT lHIS LOCATION. . ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia AYe. C:OIT I. Miii. '646°4838 HOURl1 M0.-'11Nn.; 9 ta 5:~0 -FRI .. ~ k f -14T., t :JO lo & • , I I . ' ' • • • Tlltid.J.J, Octobtr 15, 1914 S DAJLY PILOT A iJ Doe1ors~ Eyebrows Raised at Se11: Movies ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -"t've ntw!r seen anything like this before," muttered an elderly, Y.'hite-hlllred doctor a& he ~at.cbed films of nude people having mttrcoune. "'Ibey never tauiht me anything about sex ln medical school," said another doctor as he 1ectured to a packed room of family llllyslclans on pt®lema of sexual development. It was all part of continuing, educatloa for specialists in famlly practice, who opened their aruiual convention h e r e Monday. The American Acodemy of Family Phy!iclans meeting included hundreds of other \opics and acienWic exhibits New Hotline Established In El Toro Leaders of the El Toro Homeowners Association have started a new J..ind of hotline which they hope will help their neighborhood "GET REP." The slogan comes from the name chosen for the hotline: "Greater El Tor o Homeowners Enrichment Pro- gram," which will be a 24.·hour open line at 58l...Cl20. 1be hoUine is al med at providing a "forum for problems faced by residents or the fast-growing__ area, ideas for the community, and complaint! related to homeowners needs and the developer. All oomplainl!I will be handled con- fKlentially, according lo homeowners assoclatioo. president E.d McKean. Officially, the ·aims of the line are lo: -Give each resident a simple way to Cl'flrt.SS himself on a problem he has or an idea he thinks might work. -Encourage each r e s id e n t to participate in the community. The pro- blem of one resident is the problem of all. McKean said. -Take prompt action on all complaints and ideas. -Hear all sides if an issue is involved. -Ev'aluate the complaint or Issue and tecommend. appropriate a c t i o n to cognizant officials, b u s i n e s s e s and homeownen. -Publicize communications received and results achieved. ''It's entirely too difficult for t h e average person to participate u 1 a ciliz.en," McKean said. "The government offices are closed when tnOflt people are not working-but we all have good ideas." . McKean said he hoped the hotline v."OUld provide a place where people could call to participate in their com- munJty "whether it's 3 a.m. or Palm SlEday." The hotline now consists of an answer- ing service tape, but McKean said the homeowners association board ~o1 direc- t.on: is meeting tonight to a p po In t volunteers for d i r e c t round-the-clock !lllfts. " p I ,__..,. Lut Call Johnny, !he Philip Morris bell- boy, has called It a career \ aner 41 years of calUng (or PhUlp Morris. John Louis Rov- entlni1 now 64, quit his New York beliboy's job_i n 1933 lo do the now.famous commercial on radJo. · to provide up-to-date lnfonnatlon ror • the doctors, who handle a broad range of allmcnta. But the biggest tTOV.'d Od docton was nmmd the EDCOA Productl°"' booth, \\'here films for sexual therapy a n d educaUon of doctcn ln sexual techniques were being screened. Richard Price, EDCOA Prtlidtnt and producer of the films, look great pains to establish that the films were strictly limited to use by professionals and pa- Uents. He said doctors, hospitals and medical schools are buying the films a n d videotapek to demon!trate therapie! such as sensate focus, in which a couple Is instnicted in lefl.Su.al ucrdses lo lm~ prove their sexual communication. "The response has been· exctllent," said Price. ''The doctors are by and large very much in fU\'Or. Oh, once in a while there are 501ne who have negative feelings. but it's rare for anyone· to leave the demonstration area before the end of a film." EDCOA, which has distributed seven hun1an aexuallty films and has 40 n1ore In various stages of readiness. is a subsidiary of Ormont Drug and Chemical Co.. Inc. Pri~ said all the films at~ produced ln association "'Ith medi cal consultants and a professional ad,isory council. In the first of a three.day seminar on human sexuality~. Bc\·erly T. ~1ead of Creighton University School (Jf ~11 .. 'Ct.lcint! said 80C ly has a ··~.CJOO. year-old hangup on sexuid problems." Althougn the sem)nar was to cover such difflcultie5 as fr igidly, impotence nnd hornesexuallty, 1t1ead said he bad one chief aim; "To help doctors get over whatever sexual hangups they have so they can get to be more at ease, and give them courag,e to discuss sex wit h their potlenls as part of the medical history, nol just tacked on al the end as an afterthought." li1ead said il has been only in the past 10 years that doctors ha\'e begun to get sex education courses in medical school. He emphulied the need for honNty ln amwering cN\dren's que11tlont about sex, and de a\ing with them straightforwardly when they show aexu1:tl curiosity or activity at an early age. Furthermore, Afead said doctors shoold try to eflCOUrage · aJliludes toward sex as part of sharlng and loving, rather than achleve1nent, conquest or selfishness. Doctors and a small number of wives watched the films attentlvely - sometimes tln'ough several showings of the J&-nlinute sensate focus movie. Most ol those askc<l for comments said they thought the films v.oold be useful in helping patients, but v.·ere not sure y:hether they v.oold like to use them in tlleir practlctt. hi do 1 lot of ooun9eling, and molt older people have.-leamed theee thin&t:" saki 1 mlddleaged physician f r om Chicago. "I SUJ)p()ie lhe films would take some of the repress.Ions away, would be aood for thc!!le wflo h a v e hangups. But I don 't lhlnk they would be appropriate In my practice." A pair of young heart specialists said they didn't talk much about 11exual pro- blems with their patients but thought the films y,•ere a good way to present information on sex therapies. One elderly doctor sat through the film four times but then said, ''When my patients have sex problems, I send them to a psychiatrist." Nixon Follows Recovery Plan LONG BEACH IL'Pl ) -Richard Nixon is recuperating on schedule. his doctor said Monday, \\'ith no sig'ns of a flareup of the phlebitis that is keeping hin1 off the \\1itness stand at the \Vatergate coverup trial. 'fhe former President's "lov.·er left Ca purie , E 11ds • Paddle Tri11 Do1vn Coast CORONADO (UPI) -A ";ea hiker" paddling along the Pacific coost can see many interesting sights including sharks , rabid foxes, naked zucchlni ped· dlcrs <ind Ron Ziegler. This \Vas the way Larry Capune recal!· ed today his 1,240-mile. 6 O ·day pad- d\eboard odyssey from Brookings, Ore .. almost to the ~exlcan border. leg is still s"'·ollen but non·tender,'' Dr. John Lungren commented after an Cl· amination which he said took place this weekend at San Clemente. Nixon , 81, was hospitalized under Lungren's care Sept. 23 to be treated for the phlebitis condition, which goes back eight years. He \Vas released 11 days later, Oct. 4, to return to his estate al S a n Clemente. v.•here be has been In seclusion since resigning the pre:!!idency. Nixon is "proceeding oo schedule with the recommended period of recovery following his demanding hospltatlzatlon, Lungren said, with "no cllnlca1 evktence of reactivation" of the blood-clotting that could threaten his life. Nixon must continue to follO\v a plan of controlled physical activity, the physi- cian said, indicating no change in his oplnion that Nixon should not go to \Vashington in the foreseeable future to testify in the Watergate trial. -Nixon has been subpoenaed as a \\'ilness by both sides. ONLY DEAD DISEASED OR DANGEROUS TREES CAN BE REMOVED IN SAN JUAN Tina Meadows, 4, St•nd1 Near Roots; of Mulberry Tree; City Allowed Removal Capune. 3'l, did it to show young people they can go on exciting "trips'' without using drugs, and to promot e his concept of sea hikers. Lungren said before Nixon's discharge that it \\·ould b& at least a month, and possibly as long as three months, before he could travel without en- dangering his health. San Juan Spares Trees Capune's sea trip includc<i a fa~ to face meeting v.•ith a \\'hite shark - "11 maneater," he said -near Point Reyes. "It v.•as scary. I found the best thing lo do is not stop paddling. I put a little extra english in the strokes." Car Rams Into Border Booth Residents Nee d Cit y Appro1,1al to Get Rid of Tltern Capune camped each night on shore, and a rabid fox, foaming at the mouth. appeured beside a campfire n e a r Vandenberg Air Force Base. The animal crouched and Cnpw1e grabbed up his flare pisto1 1, fired It Into the fox find then beat tne wounded animal to death \\"i th a stick. he said. SAN YSIDRO (AP) -A ""'thbound car crashed at 70 miles an hour today • into the booth in which U.S. 'Border Patrolman Frank AtcCaM was stationed. 8~P!M0~1~,1~~~~N Ten years ago 1'1.rs. Ruth StroscJlein moved into a new house in San Juan Capistrano. She couldn"t affon:l a patio, so she filled her back yard with trees. Now she can build her patio, but the trees are fuJI grown and two are in the way. And the city now has a tree ordinance lhat forbids removal of trees without specific approval. ~1rs. Stroschein's case is only ont of 25 tree-removal applications the city has considered since adoption of the tree ordinance nearly 10 months ago. Most are denied . ''The ordinan~ is very specific." said Raymundo Becerra, Assistant Planner and official city tree Inspector. "Only trees that are dead. diseased o r dangerous can be removed ." Trees requiring a permit for removal are those with a diameter of three inches or more, measured three feet above the,,pll.lnd. SpeciaJ provisions arc made for cl!mmercial tree growers, land develo rs and emer ency situations. Mrs. Strose in was allow@ to remove one of her trees -a mulberry - because the root system was close to the surface and had already dislodged concrete in a decorative garden area. But the evergreen ash bad to stay. . Cyp1iot Virgins Due in A·ustralia? . 1.1.ELBOURNE, Australia (UPI) - Two thousand "Cypriot virgins"· may come to Australia, according tG Im: migration Minister ctyde Cameron. Cameron said 1'1onday the gfrls were llvtng in the hill country of Cyprus. • "They are hiding from Turkish troops for fear of what miJi;ht happen to them:• he said. "Thei r ages nre helll'CCn 12 and ~-and they p\a~ great tmphasis on their virginUy. "' The imn1i~ration m i n i s t c r said "Australia is considered a safe country ror these Cypriot virgins to L'OffiC lo.'' Bird, Skunk lriva<le Church Mc~UNNVlLLE , Ore. (AP) - First, a blrd shattered a window pane at McCabe United Mothodlst Olurth during servtlet. Another wu shattered when the blrd tried to Wt. Then a skunk crav.·ll'd under the sanctuary. state Sen. Anthony f.1eekcr. the lay leader, announced he hoped tho tncldents were not ~r90MI and beg1m his talk Utled,; "Wllut Shall ! Doi" -, .. Anyone \vho disagrees with a de<.ision can apPCal lt to the plaruiing comtnission and tben to the city council," said Beccr· ra. "But this isn't done too often." Although the city's ordinance has never been tCBted in court. ~rra said many residents don't think the city has the right to tell them what to do with vegetaUon on their property. {)\e such applicant is the Capistrano· Uni fie d School District. The district wants to remove a dozen old olive trees at San Juan Elementary School. The city forbids it. ''The droppings of ripe fruit are being tracked onto the c:arpe:t in adjoining classrooms and smashed by youngsters on the sidewaJks of adjoining buildings." said Bill Dawson. the district's director of facillties and services. "The school district has tried to control this in the past by spraying trees during their pruning pericxl to prohibit the set- ting of fruit, but we found it impractical and only partially effective," he added. City Planning Director David J. Smith son1e people puqxisely ignore the tree ordinance. he did say that some trees arc cut down without a p prov a I . "Sometimes people don't know about the ordinance," he said. One \vell·known tree-cutting in San Juan Capistrano V.'as a case involving a huge eucalyptus at the entrance of a new tract off Del Obispo Street. During grubbing operations a sulrcontractor removed the tree because it was in the street right-uf-\vay. The developer paid nearl y $20.000 in reparations be· cause the city had required the tree 's presenralion. P.Iost violators of the tree ordinance aren't subject to such stiff penalties. The ordinance carries the usual penalty for a misdemeanor -up to $500 fine or six months in jail or both. Becerra believes the ordinance is necessary lo preserve the character of the city. Near San Francisco, Capune ·said he was la ying face down in the sand when he heard a girl's voice a s king if he "·anted to buv some zucchini cake. ·•J said ·sUre' and reached for the 35 cents. When I looked up, I realized the zuccini cake was all she had ." he said. The cake peddler was not •• alone. Two other nude women were "'ith her, he said. He climbed aboard his paddle.board and returned s\\·iftly to sea. Capune, who \\'BS greeted by ~1 rs. Rose Kennedy during a similar swim on the East Coa11t. said he had hoped for a bipartisan touch by dropping in on President Nixon at his Oceanside San Clemente home. The outpost was demolished, but ~tcCarm, 34. escaped ·with cuts a n d bruises by flatte!Ung himself beblnd a concrete barrier. A sailor identiCied as John Tuttle, 27, of the destroyer Piedmont in Loog Beach, "'as booked for investigation of drunken dri\'ing. Hospital to Present Talk on Acupuncture South Coast Community HO!J)ital llill present a medical forum on acupuncture at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday In the OOspital auditorium. The lecture and demonstratton. v.ill be presented by Dr. David Gardner, Dr. Eugene B. Levin and Herschel R. Hughes. The ses!ion is free to the public. wrote to the district, and told thein they.....ml.gbLbe-pconittecLJo_rcmoxe_thc_ .1-~------­trees if they arc replaced with ''e· quivalent trees.'' •Ie suggested that the district present a precise plan describ ing intended shrub- bery so their tree application can be reevaluated, and he warned the district that if the tree:> die because or severe pruning"' such action might strain rela· tionshlps between the city and the school district." But Daw!IOn believes the city hM no rights in the niatter. "1 feel that they have absolutely no jurisdiction over what we do with these trees on school property, ~ut do not want to cause too many hard feelings." he said in a spei:ial memorandum to Assistant Superintendent Sam Chicas. "These trees will have to be removed or severely pruned before the next crop of ripe olives drops to the ground." Becerra said some peo1>le appl y for removal perm.its because trees are dirty or unsightly or block their views. But most apply because they want roon1 additions. "When they fill out an applicati on we go out and lnsJ)ect the trees 10 see If their reasons are valid," snid Becerra. "Sometimest we allow a tree to be removed if it is replacro \1·lth another, usua1ly a 15-gaUon size." Allhougb Becerra woukln't admit that Girl OutguJps l'\'lalc Beer Drinkers l!ElNSBERG, Germany (UPI) -Gaby Von Hehl, a blonde, was crov.rned. tl'le 1974 "Betr Queen" in this beer·brewin& Rhineland town. Gaby, 18, v;on the trophy a g a Inst strong compeLIOon .from m a 1 e ro tt.>sl.anll by gulpiog down a quart 10 seconds .ftistcr in the nin-egalnSt·thc- clock event. v - I I ' • .t • • -' • I 1-,c• < ~ ~ ¥,. l\. ' , . "' 1~ .:,y,,i J1i; ' ' Beautiful Bedrooms Begin with ADJUST·A·BED Read and watch TV in the w.orld 's finest all electric adjustable bed . It is elegant and fits your headboard. Al! sizes; Twin to King and any mattress firmness. from feather soft to super firm. You and your bedroom ~serve Adju st·A-Bed .. '. so see and try it at our Corona del Ma~howroom. today! .;;;¢~~{ -~ ADJUST-A· BED. BY SLEEPER LOUNGE CO .. INC . CITT OF ORAllGl 411 SOUTH MAIN ST. (Jufll North of F11hion SQ.I (1 14)63M142 ( • Tutsda~. Odobtr 15, 1974 . JOTS & JOGS DEPT. -The time . has come to clean orf these old notes .and clippings plied upon my desk. I ~have th:ia urge to see \l'hat the desktop look! \Ute again. Herc's one no\1'. Scribbled note ~·hile in cooverwtion ·wi!h the office of one vf our Orange CoWlty congressnien back there in \Vashingtoo. Didn't put down 1 1 \\'hich coogre!!Sman's office so he re- mains h~ ..pnonymous. Anyv"ay, il's the latest giggle out of I the¥d1P.:il9:1..._fbey're claiming President Fo~'!-WtN uulton doesn't actually stand I ror ':Whip Inflation Now." They say I it ac\Wllly \llW:lrlS, "\Vilbur is Nutty .'' I Tsk, Tsk. I-low a\vful, i Now a crumpted clippil"lg of nev.'s l' report out or Phoenix.. 1-louse wife Sandi Ardy has invented her own ecooomi<:s-in-f nation button. She wears one that says r LOSE. • , TtfRS. AROI ALLEGES this m o t I '1 ~ stand! for. "Lei others Suffer the Ef- fecfs." 1'1eaning Ford's econqmic pro- posals are hitting the wrong people. Jler for one. probably. Here's another of my patented scrib- bled notes, from Arsene ' • B l a c k i e ' ' Gadarian. Newport Harbor's savant or shipya rds, prognosticator of politics, pun- dit on pollution and spokesman f o r Blackie. GAOAftlAN CA~tE UP with t h i s scratched-do\VJ\ quote-Of·the-week: "For some people. keeping a secret is just about as easy as sneaking daylight past a rooster." Egad. here's yet another clipping on the pile. Jt says the govemmerlt is scrapping the "interlock system" re- quirement for new cars. ''ou know what that ls. don't you? That's where you get in the new car and buz:zers start going off and lights flashing. Then you have lo do things in the proper sequ~. Close the door. Fasten shoulder belt. Fasten seat belt. Try to reach ignition lock. Offer up a prayer for Ralph Nader. If you're lucky. your car starts. lf you closed the ashtray. NO\V FOR A l\tORE recent news cli~ ping on the desk stack:. This one comes from just inland out of Cypress College, where the girls or the class on being stewardesses just took a No Confidence vote In one Ester Cordel. In event l\tiss Cordet has eluded ·your attention. she is the stewardea& for Pacifi c Southwest Airlines \Vho suffered overexposure in the center foldout sec- tion of that male sexist magazine called Playboy. News item says the stewarde~·in~ training weren't so upset at the exposure as \vith ~ fact that Miss Cordel ":as identified ·as one of them, who lites upon PSA 's. grinning bird s. f\leanY.'llil&. PSA officials have been telling everybody oh. how awfuJ this is. 1"tiss CQr;defs center foldout "''asn't authorizro;. they d e cl a r e. Besides she shooldn't have been identified as a PSA ste1v. \\'HY, 100· CAN BET they have a rule about ft. Probably savs. "No stew- ardess sha!! Pose nude \\'hile in uniform." Poor PSA: \Vith all that free ad· \'ertising, those jet birds \vill be grinning all the "·ay lo the bank. And finally, rm "·orkin.i;: do\\-n to the last !ew kt-aps on the desk. Another cllpving. 'P'tris one's aboul the CI vi c Cer1ter upf in our good County Seat in Santa Apu. THEY 'VE. GOT A LEAK. Ice \Valer is.. RQY.r_i!ill out of the j!ir _conditioning systcrn al \he rate of 1.300 gallons a day. Now th:it one has to surprise you. You didrl't ·think anything e\'Cr leaked out of the County Seat but hot a.ir, did you '! , r U.S. CheDlist STOCKHOL}.1 (U PI) -Stanford: University <.'hemlst Paul J. Flory WOb the 197t Nobel che:mi.Stry prize today for researeb in plastics and synthetic llbetl. The prize for pbysic.s went to h\·o British radio aatrooome.rs for their dboover· ics whlch could be lmp;>rtant to findl___Qg life ln outer 1~. A1ortin Ryle, 58, and Anthony Hewish, 50, shared the $123,000 physic' prize for t.helr research in rfldio astrophysics Which according to Prof. Olof Ryd· beck of the Nobel committee, "could be of great .importance as to flndlng of inlelligcnt lire in outer 5~ce." FLORY, 14, WAS commended by the Swedlsh Academy of Sciences for his findings in the physical chemistry cf macromolecules in industry which helped re,vlut ionize lhe modem plastics indLL!llry, including synthetic material! . "He wns in lhis from the start and he la.id lhe basis for all improve- menls that have been made," PrOt. Ande rs Ehrenberg ol the Nobel Academy said. "Cbemi3U used to mix various components and know that they would get nylon, but did not know exactly why." academy Prot Sture Forsen said. "Thanks to Flory, they now kno\v why It turns out to be nylon." Flory said he was "Qui te t.aken aback and over\vhelmed by thi s award.'' Notified or the award bY telephone at his home in Portola Valley, Call! .. near the Stanford campus, FIOry said, "It's &~o'clock in the rooming here and rm not ai;-alte." Flory noted th at the award was the highest in science and remarked be \\'OUld "like to believe the Nobel committee knows what it's dolng ." ' •·1 HOPE .TIIAT IT (the prize ) \\'ill focu s more attention on this field Watergate's Go1·don Lidd y Out on Bail ... ''' ASHINGTON (UPI) -/t federal judge today reduced bond from $100,000 to $5,000 on G. Gordon Liddy, silent member of the original Watergate defen- dants, and ordered him released from jail pending appeal. The former White House aide. also serving time in the break·in oC Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office, has. been in jail for nearly 21 months. He has steadfastly refused to t e s t I f y on Watergate. ··- Win.s :Nobel ol oclen<:e" which wlll be increasingly Important In tbe years ahead, Flory said. P?ovlouoly be had woo lhe SuJliyan m<dal at otUo sta_te and tbe Ba<k .. land award and the Pe&er Debye-awerd, both from the-American-ChemiClll Society. Both Swedlsh Academy apoke.smen str~ that Fklry was nol an indus- trial chemist, thal he wes n<>t tied to any lnduslries, but that industries later bad used his ODdlnga to lmprove their products. They said Flory's findings Were of "enonnou.J importance" to modern cheflstry and thanks to him, today clothes are made from synthetic fibers .. and the world has a w~ range of'plastK: materials. Regarding the physics prize, Prof. Per-Okll Lindblad, a member of the academy, sald Hewish's discoverj' of unknown radio soW'CeS had been merely a coincidence. LATER CALLED "pulsars," Linblad said "the first time Hewish DOtlced the &ignals ,_ •• be gol surprleed_and almost scared s1oct Ute signals might indicate intelligent life." , · Fklry, a native or &terUU, IH., did: research on synthetic fibers, synthetic rubber and other Polyqteric: su~ for t~ duPont experimental station in Wilmington, net., ror Standard OiJ bt Elizabethi N_.J., ,and fundamental re- search for the Goodyear Tire and RU~ Co.1 in Aitort, Ohio. He was a prores&or of c~ at 'Comdl. and was bead of research at the Mellon Institute in Pittsburgh before becoming profesSQr or chemistry at staJilonl in 196t wbere be ls cbaiiman of tl>e reoeareb. department. He piooeered research on the constitution and properties of aubStances comprised of giant moleculC-! ndl~s rubbers, proteins, plastics, fibers, and films. , K~s.singer, ,Chief ' Of A~gei::ia Meet RABAT (UPI) -Secrttary ol State J latest. peace efforts will come under Henry A. Kissinger. 'arrived -today trOm lntenSe discussion. Kissinger will retwn Algiers where tie' disc:uued ')>ositlve IQ. the Middle East in November ooce elements" of the Arab-Israeli situation the Arab leaden have decided their with President Houarl Bowntdienheari4 next.Course in the 1&-year struggle with way.s !or Algeria and the United States to reconcile lbelr dillereoces· over lUgb Israel. 0~ prices. , • Kissinger told reporters as he left Morocco was the last. stoP oo Kiss-Algeria that "I spoke to Pres i d en t inger's seventh mission to the Middle Boume.dienne_ of the engagement laken East and he landed in the sun-drenched by the United States to arrive at a MoroccGn capital at 11:30 a.ht. (4;30 just and durable peace in the Middle a.m. PDT). He was to talk with King East. U the two parties can agree on Hassan II ovef lunch about Middle East the princtples of the next stage. peace efforts aDd oil before Oyillg home "I spoke to him of certain positive to Washington later today, ' tendencies I observed." Prize UPt....,.... NOBEL WINNER Chemist P1ul Flory A r1n y Orders .Spyi1i g· Curbs On Civilians WASHINGTON (AP) -After 1 long controversy, Secretary of the Arm y Howard H. canaway has ordered a curb on spying by Aftny intelligence on U.S. civilians. The new Callaway mler \\'Ould forbid any spying o( the kind allegedly con- ducted against a group of American.\ ( IN SHORT .•• ) U.S. DISTRICT Judge Gerhard Gesell rl'duced the bond and ordered Liddy, Sl. rele;\Sed from the District of Colum- bia jail pending outcome of appeals in both the Watergate and E I I s b e r g cases. • A high American official with the . RELEASED -FOR NOW HASSAN WllL HoST an Arab 1..D.wt party said that following Kissinger's G. Gordon Liddy t l"· · b Bourn~•---- who supported !he 1972 0 em o c rat i c presidential candidacy ol. Sen. George McGovern wh.ile they were living in Berlin. ---------'----meeting on Oct. 26 when Kissinger's a ..., Wlt CUJC.11111;, the American Secretary oI Slate felt that Algeria will But the order stops short of an outright ban on Army surveillance of U . S . civilians. Under its tenns, Army in- telligence still may carry o u t in- vestigations of U.S. civilians working for the Defense Department abroad. Llddy's attorneys contended he presented no risk of filght 6nd no danger to the communily. Charlie Rieb 1be U.S. prosecutor's ,office did not contest the request for lowered bail by Liddy, one of seven men originally charged witll co~plracy, burglary, bug· ging and wiretapping in the \Vatergate break-in. Gesell said he had discussed the case with U.S. District Judge John J. Silica, who earlier set $100,IMXI bond in the \Vatergate case. TtlAROULIS TOLD Gesell tha t Lldd y's mother had put up the bail. money and Liddy \\'Ould live in Oxon Hill. Md. with his wife and flve children pending outcome of the appeal. Country's 'Silver Fox' Named Top Ente11ainer NASHVILLE, Term. (AP) -Fifteen years of sticking to a dream paid of£ for Charlie Rich as be won the Country ?<.1usic Association's most prestigious E l • ' award, Entertainer of the Year. Va1tge f.St S Accepting the award Monday night, the 41-year~ld "Silver Fox'' read from H untinM Cited a crumpled piece o1 paper .. which '-" his y.·lfe , J\.1argaret Anne, had written : NAKNEK, Alaska (AP) -Radio "If you have a dream, hang on to e\'angelist Garner Ted Armstrong 1t. Because 'dreams do come true." is facing a possible misdemeanor Si nger-writer-band leader Frank "Pee :barge after being cited by an \Vee" King and recording exec utiv e Alaska Fish and Gam e Protection o"'·en Bradley tied in balloting for the )fficer for aJ\egedl y shooting a County Music Hall of Fame. II was moose the day he flew in to hunt the first lime that two personallties, game. ins1ead of one. had been chosen. The state recently banned aerial Ronnie l\.1i\sap. a newcomer to coontry hunting of big game, and shooting music recognition, was named male game on the same day a hunter vocalist of lhe year. ~1ilsap has been flies into an area. blind since birth. Annstrong has been vacationing Australian Olivia Newton-JOOR, fresh in the King Salmon area. Afonday's from a string of hits, was named female arraigrunent at N a kn e k was vocalist of the year. postponed by Magistrate E 1 mer Rich's hooor cam~af a barrage --rtarrop-.tue-to-bad--weather:-ll..-11-.ot hthecord,stllld--stro "TOad·sh recommended the Armstrong party during the last tw ears. His "Very • wait for better flying conditions Special Love Song1 was named album before journeying to the Bristol of year. In 1973. he took the association's Bay community. top male vocalist, top album and top si ngle awards. COUNTRY MUSIC KING Chlrlie Rich, 41 restore diplomatic relations with the United States S>ortly after the Arab summit meeting in Rabat OcL 26. THE S~llLING se<:retary hinted at a possible resumption of diplomatic ties bet\\·een the U.S. and Algiers before boarding his special aircraft. "We reviel\'ed Algerian-United States bilateral relations whi(h have been im· proving considerably in recent month.s and which will t~e a positive evolutiOfl in the near future ," he said. Kissinger said his t h r e e - h o u r con· ference \\ith Boumedienne Monday night centered on oil prices. Algeria has stuck firm to its policy of high oil prices. · Kissinger bai warne11 publicly thal urlless oil prices: come do'4n the in- dustrialized nations are doomed l o disastreus recession which couJd result in the downfall of West.em democracies. Lutheran Panel· Soften s Stand On ,-\hortions • V .N. Guest• UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) Yasir Arafat, to the ISraelis a master terrorist and to the Arabs a freedom fighter, is e%pected at the United Nations early next. month as the first outsider to speak to the General Assembly since Pope Paul VI in 1965. The asaembly Monday approved 105 to 4 a resolution inviting A r a f a t ' 1 Palestine .Liberation Orga~tion, the PLO, to participate in its debate on the Palestine question. The PLO would be treated as "the represeDtaUve of the !Palestinian people," the resolution said. e Suspeet Re id DECATUR. Ga. (UP[) -Police Mon- day charged a 23-year-old construction worker with the deaths of two ol four women Who were k.illed ·arter apparently being accosted at nearby shopping malls.- Kenneth Allen Harris ol Lithiaia, Ga., who has an 'arrest record for petty offenses, was an"eSted without resistance at a construction site near the t\\·o shopping centers. Police said be was considered a suspect in the other two DETROIT (UPI ) -Am e_r I can deaths. Lutheran church delegates Mooday night e Bank SlcllMlle softened the 2.5 million-member clnttch's 'BRUSSEU (UPI ) -Belgium's 3eCOnd anti-abortion stand by approving a largest bank has admitted that at least resolution stating that abortion i s $15 million and po11sibly as much as necessary in some cases. $37 million in assets were lost to an Christians have "a respons~illly to embenlement ring in the bank's foreign make the best oossible dediion~cwrency._depar.tmen,k.--------l·-­ oonS10ering the termination of a pregnan-The Bank· of Brussels sent tremors cy "based on I.he situation and ac-through the banking world Monday when cwnntability for God, self and neighbor," it announced tbat Its assets had been the o:iovenlion said in a res'1lution ap. siphon«! by swindlers for weeks. But proved on a vote of 500-379. the bank assured customers it h ad The. resolution, however, reaffinned enougb money in Its ttsetves to make the unborn child's right to life. up the difference. Appalachians Get Showers Stepin Fetchit Loses La ,vs uit • The previous church position pennitted e Doctrine Dl1pute abortions ooly when the heaUh of the st. LOUIS (AP)o -The Rev. Dr. mother was endangered. In 1966 and John Tietjen, 'whose s1.11pension as prest- 1970, the cilu~h had issued Btatements dent of Concordia Seminary-sparked a s a Y I n g , ' ' The r e are times ··and doctrinal dispute wqhin the Lutheran circwnstanc,es when interruption of the Chu:rch-MWourl S~, has been fired pregnancy is necessary for therapeutic from the post by tbe semlnai'y's &an! No rtlt .4tlautic Coast Sho·wi ug Dark Clouds, Rains Over Broadca st Tem perauare• A.ll•~!t !lilr.erslltld • fll1m•rck &osro~ !l11!!•lo Cll1rloltt ~r~~t,,o:." Cltvf!1nd 0~11•• Ornvtr 00 Mo\nfl) Hi,~ L•., •o i.1 t 1 ~) " n ~l !1 n • " ~ " . n " n "' ~ . . " . " 1.H!ijij lt1ij DELIVERY SERVICE llelivery ol the Doily Pilot is guaranteed l.'ondl7y·'l'!dov' II ~ do f'IOI '°''hi '/Oll' porw 17( $;30 pll'I_ ((Ill ond "°"" ~ ... A bf b'Ol.IQ!ll ro ~ (Qlr5 lll't ICN'I ..-it.I 700 p"'" ~ond~".,C...di:t MI i.-VQ-' (llflo'f by 9 "'" Sotut«r/. cs 1 M ~. COi ancr 11 O»T .... n tlll~hl~.CCJllt,(Q~\1111~ "'" t~· ''~~~= \If'! Wl•1 •1 P01()(.All. Vlllbl!hv Ol'WPl'CI "' -a II LCK l\"IJI•~ ln!ern.atlorwl l\lfPOl'I, 1na w11 anly -.,lx!eenlh af I mH1 11 LOllQ l 1•th. Only lra«J ot 100 faulld !Mir w1y '' far 11!11nd •I -llurb1nk Ind Ille tallttn Sin Fe<n1ndo V1lley. WASHINGEON (UPI) -The Supreme Court today refused to order a jury trial to decide whether black actor Stepin Fetchit was defamed when a television Hight 111 filP ta 100 _,, prl!dlftl!d ;:.,D~'::,11:~ 1n°'15h';''°'...,~'k ~~:: documentary said he portrayed ''th e 111"'(1.s. Sunanaary tradition of the i.a2y, stupidi c r ap- sl!cl-• 11111 ""'"°"~" 11r11t11. shooting chicken stealing idiot." ~na ""~,.:~· Gr:::1i:w1r1k:i,-i:,K~:,n: f<'etchit. who sued under hjs real name Miululpp/ VllltY •nd -·'••n Glllr ol Uncol n ThcOdore Perry, 72, Slld he Co.ttl tlrlY lodly. Ho1uron, T1x.. 11111 ~1,,1111, kv.1 was entitled to a full jury lrla1 lo t"'6rltcl -fJl(I I lh cl lnd)ft 00 ·~1M111 rn 1 1lx·r.w -. " 1.,,,ne1 air his eomplalflt that the documentary tlO<JO wtf f!O!llt<I Ntr $tWn1n•HM, "ba I ·~ " hold' hi Ttnn. c10Uds 01rttMd ,,,. 111ny 11rM was se eu comm.,._ .. ary 1ng m 1n0 on to tl'l<J """"*" A111n11c Cottt. "up to hatred , CMtempt or ridicule" Mort (IOllOJ ll"lll"ltO l7Vlf IM wnltN! °'"' t111.., Ind • '''" anaw fhwr1t1 and therel>" deltPOying his entire career. lf\t In Ul)J)ef Mith~, J Some 1o;i ro11tt1 a-tM SOii'"-'" The black actor sued CBS, the Xerox Ctlllorfllt CM1t. lt--. II w11 h bro ,,,,.,.11v cit•'· Corp., which sponwed I a adcast ''"" w1rn1no1 w.1• 111ut11 '"'° Bl hi d WISH I I I · ~11-at Ka•11••· N111r•t11:1 ind on ack story, 811 e ev 11on, JIOUrl. . Indianapolis, Ind., which broadcast the Coastal Weathe r -documentary where he had a bllllncH l'llr ~y. Ll(lhf VM"IHll wlndl add l\IQlll 11W morn!llO "°""' tlll'OUQI\ ttoo res.IS. "klllt' ..,.,~,., ll0111 to 1b1ttr1 -""'" US District J•>Ane \YllUam E Steckler 111T• tfttr-. Tiii Jrol9fl ~ Mii toe • • • ..... ' • 1nC::,:"i.motr ~ """" '"'" ., dismissed the complaint, rullng that ,...... '° tnC1 •·" 1111' ~ ~· Petchit was a public figure through ::,~T~:.1"' .. st.._ll'ld '2· l"-hit movies and subject · to broadcast S11n, ~ltNJn. Tiiie• comment Steckler said his privacy was yu1soAY not Invaded and that the remarks broad· $«ond row 4:00 o.m. O.t ,, ... di -~~ I t his I MtOtld hlgfl 10:13 •• ..,, .. , ... a..,, were rQ."\CU on r a roe reasons." of Control · T~ resolution ~aid contraception was Ernestine Tietjen confirmed reports a viable alternaUve to ending the life today that her husband was notified o( an un~. infant Wt rejected volun-of 'the dismissal when he returned 1'1on-~·sterihia1~ as a met.bod of pteven-day to St. ~uis from the American Ung pregnancies. Lutheran Church convfJlUoo in Detroit. Law Upheld ' 11 ookers Get W orst Sentence WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court today dismissed a challenge to an Indiana prosUtution law on grounds It unconstltu· llonally applied only to women. • • The court issued no opinion In declinin g to hear the sex dis- crimination ~ppeal from a decision by the Indiana Supre1ne CoUrt upholding the law. • Indiana, Uke many other st.ates, has separate laws punlshlni prostitutes and their customers. Any woman ' who frequents or lives ~ a house of i!J-fame" ca.a be tined up to $500 and Jailed for up to f1ve yea.n. But men who purchase a ,Prostitute's servfce• can receive no more th~ a $100 fine and 60 days m jail. Fini 111011 MOMO-'Y ,.~ '''": t·• as Fetchlt and not at PfrrY octSOnaii¥. 111,.1 krw 3: .,,"'· .1 In private life. · "° 'C>r- Wconcl "'"' 111 1,rn. •.s The US ~-· ol I • Johnn1.~ ~tarie Sumter was conY.icted of "Crequenling" a "house of ti! fame m Evfnsv111e. She challenged the law conrendlng that It applied only lo ioomen and that the dlllerenc'e I~ punishment for men and .women. fOr . the same 'kind of criminal a~tivit.y was sex dis· crl mlnaUon ln v1olat1on ot the 14th Amendment guarantee of equal protection or the law. ~:' ·~ '·"'· s!:t~;·11.~~ St·-"! 7~h •11n. t.A.Nrt Appeo s upheld MOOfl ''"" 1:11 •·""· '"' 11111 ""'" ..:u. er s ru g. ' ' ,' r I Norris Asks Lie Detecwr Test for Evelle Younger '...Los-ANGELES tAP ) -Al· ty. Gen. Evelle Younger slloold submit to , lie detecto< test because of "mounttna: evidence" he lied to t be Security and Exchange ()om. mission in the Oeotek oil rra\Jd case, Yowiger'a campatan op-. pooent '"Y'· Youni~co.i:ld not be reach- ed for comment after t he statement Monday but he has denied Identical earlier allega- Uoas by William A. Norris, Ibo Democratic candidate for attorney general. Goolek'1 ·presid"1t, J a c k Siamese . Twin Girls 'Critical' LOS ANGELES tUPI) Slame1e twin girls, born join- ed together face-to-lace at tbe chest and abdomen were lilted in critical condltioo w t t h severe re!phtory problems, today at Qxmty-USC Medical Center. 'Atn: Sevino Morales, 3 4 , gave full · tenn birth by Caesarean -lo the girl:! at 3:21 a.m. Sunday at the c e n ter'1 newtx>m intensive. care unit in \\'omen's Hb6pita1. nlE TWINS, who weighed 12 pounds 12'h ounces at birth, have a severe respiratory pro- blem caused by a lack of lung developneot, acconl1ng to ~. Wb Cabal, director of the tmlt Prognosis in such cases is poor, he said. "U we can solve the cardio- pulmonary problems, the chances fer thelt survival are good," Cabal said. 5e!Jaralioo surg<ry will not be perfu nied IDil U>ey are healthy enotJgh lo w!tmtand it, be said. Cabal reported that M rs . h-forales was in good condition. Her 41-year-<ild husband 1s a fad<rry worlter, be said. They have four norvial daugbtus. Steel Bars Cause Death During Fire LOS ANGELES (UPI ) - 'l'be 8leeJ bon u.t Shepherd 'llouJdin put over his wtndov.'S to keep out burglan helped k!ll him today. Combustibles stored nen to a wate r heater burst I n t o fiame and bis house caught lire, flttmen reported. In the --.___smoke, Mooldln~29, oould not find his way tO front doo< arid tried lo ' through awlndow. But he bad boll<d steel ban OVef!. the windows to keep out burglars. Firemen sald lie appareiily tried to wrench the bara apart Burke, -and tn--otben ·have '-1 lndlci.d by a federal grand jury. Norr!1 bu been ..... rtlnc that Youn1tr dldn't ten the 'truth "1ltn be told S!lC !Dvettilolora he had never, u Loo, Angela OOunty district attorney, r e c e I v e d complaints about Gootek or Burke. NORRIS PRODUCED at a news O)flference ~tooday two indJroct wltne5,.. to back up hio (l()lltentloo a -plaint bad been made to Younger In 1969. The Indtrect wl-. WWJam and Natalie Llmberl. said they bad been told by a Geotei invest.or, Bernard Kamen, that he. bad • - versatlon with Younatli about Gootek and had been put ott. Limberg said be wu Kamen's tax accountam and had koown him !or ab<iut 12 years. "Mr. Kamen tb:)ught he wu be Ing defrauded," Umberg said. He said Kamen told him of this ~y - the alleged oonwnalk>n wllb YOllllltl In 1969. "'I1llt ls absolutely-untrue," Younger eald lut week In response to an affidavit in ~ ._ by ~ hlmHll which bad -i;amen had made. a penonal · qll'npla!nt to Younger and-. 1otten nowhm. Ypun,ger aakt hla off t c e record! show tba.t Kamen did make a phone. call' but that tt WU n:felftd to William RUzl, then !'hie! d e p u t y dJstrict attorney, Rltzl ls now a SUperior CClurt juclge. NORRIS SAID Monday that Younger should. have to face a lie detedor becauae rt was obvious either Investor Kamen or Younger was lying. Norris termed the polygraph ap- ~ate becauae "lie detec- tor teata are routinely used by Younger's admlnlstratlon, especially ln cues where law enforcement o I f i c e r s are under invesUgation." Last week Norris called for the U.S. attorney in San Fran- cisco to probe Younger'!' role. Firenien Discover Illegal Drug L_ab ENCINO (AP) -Firemen battling a blaze in the guest house of a aecluded home in this Ws An geles suburb un- covered a bonus · -a fully equipped laboratory that a police spokeaman Wei' could manufacture a suff icient a m o u n t of hallucinogenic drugs lo supply the en t i re county .• Offlcen said Monday they were seeking two young men who were -nmolnti from the home shortly after an e:r- ploolon ripped ihn>ugh t h e guest house, touching off the fire. Firemen rol.Dld several 5> gallon drums fl.Ill of various chemicals , lncl udJng pbenyclid.lne P), used to manufacture "angel dust" or "peacepllb, n as the hallucino- 1en is called In the drug cul- ture. Firemen allo found tbre< ve.ts and a distillation and beating apparatus. 'ttley said tile explosion may have ~ while the men seen neel ng were attempting to synthesl7.e the v o I a t 11 e substance. Lt. William Gartland, ad· ministrative nan::otlcs officer. said the laboratory did not appear to be new. But officers had not yet diloovered who owned the home or who had been living there. He assessed the laboratory as a "large. scale operation" that co u I d produce a batch of the con- traband -which bas a street \•alue of up to $4,000 a pound -in about five hours. ()(flee.rs said PCP is similar In effect to LSD and the druC Is normally used by smearing It on mlnt leaves which are then smi>ked. '!'bey said PCP, once used aS a powerful animal tranquilizer, was de- clared lllega! about two years ago. tt Is not a simple la$k for a patlenifo reach and maintain "leanwetgl't' lorllfe. Flm the patient IT'AJll haYe an honest delCre to cure his problem ... then accept prolesakinal guidance from tra ined Medical Oocton. ' · with bis hands, and tlien In Llndora's unique 10-weelc lrealmenl desperation hurled his body and training program wHI teach patients how lo $1 Million Suit Filed OAKLAND tUPll -A 5 0-ye a r·o Id Alameda woman has asked $1 million damages for in· JuM.eS sUffered during • "People in Need" Io o d distribution program set up on a demand by the S y m b 1 onese Liberation Anny. . Paula Atkinson, in a COIJrl suit filed Manday aougbt a portion of $500,000 damages f r o m p u b lisher WtlU&m ~ dolpb Hearst, •1- granddaugtur, Patricia Hearst, was kldnaped by the terrorist SLA in Feb- ruary just prior lo the food giveaway demand. The woman said she was a passenger In a c a r whose windshield w a s smashed· wlth a piece of concrete during a near-riot at a distribution point. She ·~ suffered a broken nose and lost the sight of her right eye, the suit said. The defendants, s a I d Mrs. Atkinson·, "careless.. ly, negligently apd reek· lessly dl!tributed food and other articles of value so as to cause a riot and oth- er uni a WM conduct." ago!nst them untU he was reach and maintain !heir "lean weight" lo< life 1----,0.,,v;J;:' smoke and burn· --A-10llH1Adprocttoal-plan,wtlh·HGG·:1reo1rr-11;"rl~----- His wife, M a rt h a , 26, proper nulrtttonal diet, and conllnual emotional r, managed 1l> pmh their two support, N-audio a{lCI sub·llmljlal vtsual aldl small children bet_, th• ore used 1o motlYale the patient. The enttre pro- bara of anothor window and gram Is l6ldef the strict supervtslon of Medical was reo<Ued by firemen, .wtio Doctor>. specla!lsts In Beriatrlc Medicine · put out the blaze in f 1 v e · minutes. UndOro CllnlCI ore owned end odi I• ~Med by' Meclcdl 0ootors ltd NIMct lhelt' ptOClce to a.to111ct. ALL Olr*= Penoilr"l81areloer1lll~W.Sk*ofCollbnlo. 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SAN OIEIO CUlllOIOllT CHUl.A¥11Tl SIMIU H0-\414 420-NM Al¥rl..:IO ,,,~ .. ,,~---Mtcll•ll C.llllf ""'" IMO&P -SAMIE--llYEHIOE "'"4711 717-1250 ot partlclpoling 011 Tocot AllOWfltlCI MIClltml MHKalllq, ..... oH ~.,.,tile Soutlllond - Tutlday, OcU>btt 15, 1'174 DAIL y Pll.OT A I $10,000 Reword \ , I , Sexual Psychopath Soug~t STANFORD (AP) -Aulhor- ltle1 say a sexual psychopath . murdered a young North Da-• kota "'Oman in the Sta111ord University chapel. A $10,00> reward was offered by the universlty Monday for· information leading to convic-. tioo of the murderer O{ Arlis Perry, 19, whose body was found in the campus chapel Sunday. Santa Clara Count v Sheriff's officen said ~1n. Pe"Y died of a stab v:ound lo the head and ttrere were l"..ti,..ati0;i~ ~hP. h11d been stranoled and a !mall bone In her neck broken. Thfiv sakl she had been sexually assaulted with a candle . THE SLAYING \\'I S label rd "ritualistic and satanic" by the Rev. Robert Hamme"tr'ln· Kelley, dean of the unlversity 's A-!emorial Church. "She was on her hark !'ld her Jeans removed," Father Hammerton·Kellev said. "One of the large candles -three- feet long and l 'l inches in diameter -bad been rammed Into her vagina. Another had • I . •. TORTURE VICTIM Arlis Perry, 19 been stuck between her breasts under her blouse ." SHERIFF'S LT. Rotert Bar- 100 said It w~s i:wt lmll_vm u A-frs. Perry had been tortured wtth candles. lte said there was not mudl evidence ol a struggle. Asked if the murder could have been part of a diabolic rite. he said: "We're exploring all possi- bilities, Including this." Undenllerlff Tom Rooa said the murder "seems to fit the typical pattern of a sexual psy- chopeth. It has no cult-like overtones -it just happened " C0 • .. .. MRS. PEMY llld" bor - band Btuee ...... to - from 81.tmaJt'k, N.D. lie WU a sophomore at the ·unber· sity and she worked as'"l re- ceptionist In a k>caJ Jaw firm. 1'ley .,.,·ere marrled last Au- gust Perry n.ld he hid lMt seen his wife at ntidnlJht Saturday. He said she frequently went lo the dlurch 111iw:n troubled. •••• •l•etrl•I .,., .. ,., "For CWaified Ari ACl10N Call 642-5671 A Dally Piiot A~- 8' 12 E. Soring Long88"" •• t • • • • DAILY t•ILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • Barking Up ·wrong Tree Oran ge County supervisors h;,ivc been µre ssured mlo schedulin~ tt "summit conrcrcnt-e'' on building industry problems The rnecting, set ror Thursd;iy 'at 9:30 J .m. in the board he~ring roon1, cun hardly be expected to yield anything more thun a lot or rel11:1 shcd rhetoric and (E!'f l'OllSll'UC'li VC ~UgJ!;CSlions. It \vould be nice to think our l'ivc supcr·visors could turn th e building market around. liberate lending capital, bring down inte rest rates and re~ucc the i~rlationary Cf>Sts or material and lubor. · Nice, but vC'r y un!U<ely. Industry spokesmen \\'ho ~ppcarcd before the supervisors to request th e sumn1il n1c et-notably Gilbert t 'o.rgu son of the coalition kllO\\'n as lhe Council for Economy , Employment. ~n\'ironment and Dcvclop 1ncnt (CEEEDl -c harged that governme nt red taJX> and obslructionis n1 is !he key preblrn1 preventing new construction ;.ind causin~ massive unemployment and high costs. Ferguson said the &ard of Supcrvisprs is the easiest level of government to deal "'ith. because there 1:1.re loo many cities and too many unresoonsive state and rederal ron1missions. Unfortunately. however ·good their intentions. and s incere the ir concern, the ract remains that (.-Ounty s upervisors cannot change state and federal laws on environmental protection. Nor can they o~der cities to change their zoning laws. in county govern1nc nt is aggravating the problem , lhe suµcrvi~ors ce1tainly should knotv about it. But, a t least -in the first session, CEEED Spokesmen SCCOlCtJ unable to COnle Ur \Vith any specific propos als for easing the loca impilct or 'vhat is in fuel a grave nttlional problem. If thL' s upervisors t\'ant to serve as a sounding bourd to lel the unha1>PY construction folk let off stea m, "'ell and good. But they s houW not let themselves be pushed into rurther unproductive sessi"Ons at the taxpayers' expense, "'hen the time and energy eould be devoted to problems they at least ha\•e a chance or solving. Safety and Sense Or the assorted mandatory safety devices ins talled on automobiles in recent limes, the interlock system \t·hich makes it impossible lo start a car unless seatbelts are fastened probably is the least popular. Any driver "'ho has experien_ced a n engine fade-out turning onto a high speed high"'ay or crossing a busy intersection finds the very idea of the interlock downright scary. Notv a Sen<ite-House conference in \Vashington has recon1n1encled eliminatin.g the system. along "'ith the irritating continuous warning buzze r now in use on most late· model cars. The conference did ag1·ee to leave the Department of Transportation \vith the author.ity to require ins lalla\iQn, at a future date. of passive · restraint devices, .s uch as air ba~s . .,.. 1'hc unemployment rate in const ruction is hurting many Orange County hous eholders-and hi"gh building costs a re hurting many would-be householders "'ho can't find enoug h n1oney to buy a house. But lhe county supervisors cannot order a !'eduction in building 1naterial costs, or in bank interest , or in construction union y,•agcs. Ir foot-dragging or obstructionism on any level While mandatory safety devices are not all bad, (there's no question scat belts save li ves) they do represent a s ubstantial expense. The governnle nt could \\"Cll exercise a little restraint of its own be£ore making any furtherSt\'ecping requiiem·ents. 'I think-it's safe to say the president doesn 't favor a gas ' tax hike at this time.' ~quality Dear Gloomy Gus Congress Study Blatnes W11ite flouse May No.t Be Oil· Edicts Cost Consumer Billions "' The Answer ( ART HOPPE ) Once upon a time the counlry called Wonderfulland got into the handicap- ping business. And rightl y so. "'Lire i!!i a race." said the Wise l\1en of \Vonder£u\land. "It isn't fair that some children begin rirh with all the "ad\'30lages and some begin poor 'A'ith all the disad\'antages. llow can the poor keep up ~'' So the Wise Men unfavorably han· dicapped the rich b)' making them pay m or e taxes (when they could- n 't a\•oid them). hfy husband's company gave their employes a second 10 per· cent pay cut within a , year yesterday. Beats no job! I don 't mind tightening my belt for my country , but a ren 't 18-inch "·aistlines out of slyle? E.11.C. G+Nmy G1111•mm1n11 "'' t111>mill1d 11, •t•Ollos -"". ,.., llfllH•rilr rtllt<I lllO' vlt.., M ll'>t ,..,.ltllo ..... ~ ... ,..,, •tl ,..,,.. to Gl-y G11" 0.flyl"illll. teelh unstr'aightened. _Each yea r, every Citizen \Vas gi\'en an annual checkup by the testers. 1r any citizen had m anaged to gain ground on the othei-s he or she y.·ou ld be given a greater handicap Lo c<1rry by the computers. "Aha!'' the testers \.\'OUld say . "\Ve see you have mall;agcd to buy a new Belchspume·8, which is the envy of all your neighbors.·· WASHINGTON -A confidential ·congressional study blames the Nixon administration for permitting the oil compani es to gouge almost $9 billion ·out of motorists and other consumers· in the last year. · · (JACK·ANDERSON J • 200m to $10.50 a barrel even though four dubious costs to ,the oi l firms were seldom and perhaps ii· morelhan$2perbarrel.Theconsum- Jegal White }louse "mer costs: J,3.25 billion. decisions were ----O?ngress is to blame, th~ Moss responsible for the study note.5, for exempting oil wells $9 billion loss, ac· producing less than 10 barrels a day cording to a study from price controls. While this may ordered by con· have kept some marginal wells in s umer watchdog vroduction, it cost ttu: consumers Rep. John 1\1 oss $2.64 billion. ID·Calif.). In additiory, the _report-The 1'1oss report concludes by reveals that Congress 1ts.elr directly noting a "ripple effect" caused when caused a $2 .6 billion ripoff. oil prices "have dragged coal and in· trastate natural gas prices up with them." Since everything from peanut.s Lo power plants are produced or fueled by· oil, coal or natural gas, this has meant that every price rlse can, in· part, be tied to the oil price hikes. The cozened consumer. therefore, has been tapped twice: Once with ·the $JJ.5 billion loss and once with lhe higher generaf -pf-iCes ·uti5rise bas brought on. JIEADL1Nt:S AND t'OOTNOTES: In· side informants tell us that the Cen· tral Intelligence Agency tipped off the shah of Iran in August t hat live or his senior officers, including Gen. Kiumarc Saleh, were plotting to overthrow him. An five were im· mediately jailed for "mis use of po'A·er." It may. b<! merely a coin- cidencl! that the U.S. ambassldor to Iran. Richard Helms, was a former CIA director. The CIA would not com· ment on the charge ... Government lawyers. digging through the small print in the Foreign Assistance Act, have now round legal justification f~r ex.President Nixon's gift of a military helicopter last summer to F.gypt's President Anwar Sadat. At the request of Rep. Jack Brooks (0- Tex. ), government auditors h ad questioned ~ixon's authority to give away the helicopter. But , the la.,~1yers have now authorized the AiJency for International Development to p;iy·the $3 million bill , which also covers spare parts and labor. They cited a provision which authorizes grants ··essential to the national interest" ... The White House mail is running heavily aga~nst President Ford's decision to grant "conditional . am · nesty" to Vietnam war resisters. Nevertheless. he has passed the word to subordinates that he wants the am· nesty board to take it easy on the young men who want to return to their country. He wants them to be given the benefit of any doubts. "And th~y f avorably h an - dicapped the poor by giving then1 specia l public education lwhich "'asn't as good as a pri\'ate Q.ne) and prerercntial hiring opportunities ('A'hen the employer couldn't gel oul or it). "Six parking tickets . .four flat tires and a \•alve job," the computers "·ould drone. And -by George! -the system worked. "All citizens now finish the race lhrough life in a dead heat," sa id the Wise !\ten proudly. "At lasl "'e have an ideal society y.•hich basks in the glo"'' of I rue equality.·· TllESE FIVE pro·industry edicts not only gobbled up the consumers' pocket money at the pump, but they alsO served to boost inflationarypres· sure and allov,,ed the major oil com·. panics to increase their profits by an average or 71 percent, right in the middle or the ail crisis. Medicine and Law Intermingle Here are the five rapacious rulings Despite the various errof~ '4'hich as detailed in the Library of Congress-ha\'C been made to overffme lhe But the handicapping syslcm didn'l work too "''ell. The rich i;:rcY.' rirher and the ROOr grew poorer. Unfortun<1tcly, the citizenl"y qui ckly disCO\'ered hoY.• the s ystem \.\"Orked . 1'ht: sY.•ift saw no reason to run faster 'tl"hile ge lling nowhere. And the s trong, the ambitious. the greedy and the \"ain felt the same\1·ay. Economics Oi\·ision study prepared critica l shortage or phys icians, for Moss, chairman of the flouse Com-California , is stil l a Jong \.\'::ty from n1crce and Finance subcommittee: meeting its nee'ds, especially in the ··obvious ly, to at<hicve true equality, we need a more \lt!tiect han· dicapping system," said the Wisc 1-ten . '"For we will clearly not achie\"c true equaJity until the race ah\•ays ends in a deud heat." -The Cost or Living Council al-field or general practitioners meeting lov.·ed the oil companies to increase the faihily care needs. "old oil'' from f:x isting wells from PcrhaJ)s•one of the reasons tor this $1.25 lo $5.25 even though "this is oil is that tOOay 's doctor must not only be- that cost, ,0ughly, Jess than $1 lo far better' trained SO THE C'itizens s at around t h h · Produce ." The CQnsumcr was stuck a n I s drinking beer, 'A'alching tele\"ision g'andfalhe' but he 'A"ilh Sl.9 billion in evcess oil bills. The and not bothering to sha\·e or comb " must also have Adnfinistration had claimed the a FORTUNATELY · ame t their hair. "\Vhy . work ?" the.v m h b d • science c 0 Treasury Dept. had documents to u e ro a er the aid of the \\rise II.fen. Nev.· testing rightly told each other. "The con1 · i·ustify the increase. But now. kno"A•ledge outside t h · ~ c·,e de,·elo~d so tl•al pl1lers will lake carevf us." And thc.v of med 1• ca J cc niqu,.,, \\' ,.... rreasury Secretary William Simon e\"t:ry citizen 's <td\'antages or disad· did. has privately conceded lo Pttoss ·that science. This is vant ages cou ld be me::isured Of Course, all citizens were still 00 "Treasuri· or Federal Energy Of-particularly tr~e · I trul.l' equal. for <1!1 citizens \\•ere 1n ,efe,ence to ht · prec1sc Y · fice pa""'rs were presented" at the s N t e'e then able to truly, trul)', apathetic. lethargic r-unde,s tandt'ng of e\Y compu e rs w Cost of Living meeling where the •----~ ·•·• · 1 ha' •-nd1·eao• slobs. And. of course, \Vonderfulland l"" r~t'rttn:-pree1s-e )'--W ~ '"" e-~-·~-~-;:'"':'O~· ====·~=~~===-•deci'Slorrwanrrad . ~ = -should be imposed on which citizen. 'A'ent lo pot. Part of this necessity .to know the StrongCr citi2ens \.\·ere put on bread· Of course, envy, greed, ambition la'A'S gove rning medical practice has. :utd·\Val~r di els. r·aster citizens had and vanlty fl ouris hed. "It isn't idyl. --ORIGINALLY, the Cost of Living resulted from the proli feration of' tli c1r ha n1 s trin gs cut . Fan1ous lie." agreed the \Vise l\len of Idyllia. Council rroze oil prices at $4 .2.5 per 'ma lpractice s uit s. once almo st r1\1ll!ns· namt's y.•e re chanj?ed. Richer ''Hut it's a lot more fun ." barrel in 1972. a price some 30 percenl-unheilrd of. B.ul aside from the c1111cn!-. y,·c re eut orf at the pockets. ~ higher than previous levels. Then, in hazards s te mming from liability ,\mlH\1uus e1lizcns \l"t:nt back three !tlORAl.E : An ideal society is not August 1973, the council freed prices suits, the modern physician mus~ !'pa ce~. And ;1ltr;.1clive citizens wer~ one with handicaps, but one without on newly discovered oil to encourage know a great deal about law by ~cnt to the orthodontists to have their them . exploration.This allowed the price lo reason or the many government11 I 1-' [ EARL WATERS ) p r ognams 'A'hich have been establis hed to provide health care and public health Pf'.O.lection. Then, too, there have been other governmental actions. leg'islative, administrative ~nd judicial, whi ch have ·s ubstantially affected the· practice of medicine: volume lo Problems ·in Law .and ?i1edicine." · In the current issue it contains 26 ar· ticles ranging from abortions and drug addiction to the use or comouter profiles and lie detectors .. ··The result." says Professor ?i1or· timer D. Schwart law librarian at Davjs. "is not a surprisingly wide ragge s or appeal to a broad s or readers, but a stimula ysis of some .. of the most ti opics in the field today.'' TllESE developments in medical "IT JS increasingly apparent th~l practice ha\·e <1lso affected the legal the delivery of health care is profess!o~ and law ye~s wh? become becoming an organized enterprise. 1~vol\'e<l 1n e_ases dealing ~1th health J}ot.h he~lth care .arofessionals and care have discovered the) must not their patients ha\·e-begun to percei\·e only..kno~the-law s-bu_t-'Jnust-have a---that-rn"l'rJ1lo uld rifFlletter as good .basic undcrs t.an~1ng of medical physicians and other medical prac- standards. Or spec1;1I interest lo both litioners band together in order to h1wyer!i,. and doctors, as _well a~ of reap the benefits and efficiencies of general1n~eresttoothers.~sthe.latest sl)urcd costs , equipment and La\.\' Review of the Un1vers1ty . of facilities." California al Davis. Taking note or ' . the gr.ow·ing inter·rel.ationship between thf -two professions, its editor.s h:-•vc d·e\•oted the entire · "LEGAL problems of medicine is a s ubje ct which cannot exist \n1 isolation,'' he declares. · ' Roosevelt's NRA: A Fail11re •• Ill . ' Economic ·Control' .. \\',\SlltNc·:TON -l>rop the con· troli.. dl'regul:iti· :-ind full speed lais- se1 ·fa1re. 'J'h;il "s !he\.\";\\' it sounded, ;ilthough not nccl'Ssard)· the \V ay it "''<1s. at t he Eco nomi(' Son1mit. Thl' irony is that n1ost or the regulat ions b ui;1ne.ss pco1>ll' ~1\, scrcarn about r '!99 W()r'(' in1poscd !lt , .., -r• tht: h<>he s t of 1J l business 1ti.elf ~ 'l'hc unf?in of pr1<'(' control on n~1tur . .J gas and oil w:1~ the· <-nergy industry ':-.~ -.._ d emands in lh e f'arly 1930s for sorne kind of ~immick lo prt\·cnt ··cut thr'Oat com1)('tition" hy "indu1'trial pirnles" or '"chisel · t•rs, .. ns buslnes.ci;mcn "'ho under- 5old their con1pe.tition were then cal· ThL• resull .... .-is a scrie:o; or s1a1c :4nd Fcdr r:1I l:tws des1l{ned to nH1kc it im- llOSsihlf' t11 st~ll oil under ., certain 'eve I. 1'he liu).1n1·ssrrr!1'n ':-; tl·ndl'IH'Y 10 a~k for pru·p runt rol.~ 1n H f11//i ng market ts but one n1anif{'slatio11 or n gt>ner3J intlinal ion 111 lhr u~t h1nu;elf on the IO\'trnm('nf rotther than trust hln1.,tlr to lhc f~c markcl 1'ht ideal of capitalism \vilhout <:ompct.ition was ne;irly uttained \.\'hen lhe Na tional In· duslrial Rel'O \'Cry Act "'as signed into l.a\1· by President Franklin 0 . Roose velt in .June, 1933, anti the Nulional Hecovcry Administratioo "';tS est a hlished by exe<'utive order. TAt: NUB o•~ the NltA idea \\'US lhut the free rnarket was so d('Slructive of Pri\'atc enterprise lh:11 et•cry industry in the country should bl"' given the po'A'er to regul :1te and lin11t t•OmfJetil.ion am-On J? its mem· bc.·rs The e(fccl of th<' la~' \.\·:1s to give C\"Cry trade assot•iulion In the C'Quntry· the po1A·~r to make its members join a monopoly whether they liked it or not. rn lhe year after the htw "''as signed. mort· lhn n 500 induslries "·ere op1;>rating under COdt'll Which pri'i.cribed such thlni::s n$ the lawful minimum price of ,c:oods ond ser\'iteS, salcd J)rnrl ires . credit terms. produc· Unn r111otas, m11rket Jltnelrtltit>n and uniiorn1 cost acc.ounlinf: formt1hui. RPJiu latln,cz American econClmy hy "t•odt-S of rair c:.o mpetilion" 'A'llSn'l <I Nt'Y.' 1}(?111 antl-buslneSJ measure, but th~ reall iation or a k\nt\ of privutt' use. of public pOwer for which huslneS.'S· men had been lobbying ror )'cars, ) "'- ( VON HOFFMAN ) -llnder lhC' doctrliiC of \\'hut was called "the neY.' conlp<!tilion, .. ·men like Gcr!lrd SY.•ope of flenernl-Electric h:id led the ch:irge ror carteU2alion lhrough the device or government . rev,ulatinn. His phH\ to "COOnUnAtC production with consumption" 1A•as m('rril y endorsed even by a n organi2atiun llkc the Unitt>d States <:hamher of Commer('(l, but h could· n't be sold to llcrbert lloover who said lhe idea was "the most gig::intic ptopo8Dl of monoJ>Oly ever made In history ·· ASIDE f-'ROM helJling to prolong the t>epresslon, the idea was too irand for those eomputerles5 tinles. "\\lashlngton was up to its nervous neck in codifiers, coordint1tors and all !he grtat ;1ssemblt1ge of other seeker~ after light 11nd lucre," a f'Ontcm· porHry obscr\'er wrote of the con· rusion. But by :ind lu rgc, ln hi ghly r1111ccntrf1 led industrie:, Ilk <.' elcc:tricOll nlanufacturlng, i;:la~s and steel, the Jtovernmcnt•s11 nctioned mnnopoly 'I r "'Orlced satisfactorily for it~ benerieiaries. On the other han(!, businessmen like barbers and dry cleaners revolted and "'·ouldn't com· pl y with the regulations. In the lun1 - be r industry a bl;1ck market developed for wood selling undor the legal minimum prices. - The' NRA sho"A•ed it's no e.asltr to rontrol wages und pri ces downward than upward. The nalion's rirst 1najor txpcrlment 'A'ith peacetime eeti'nomie controls was Calling apart "''i1hin a year or enll Cln1ent. <.;ong:rC$s began to h;ive misgivings about it and \\'llS not persooded other"'· ise by an Inundation or 1,500 pr()·NR1\ businei;smen, whose',, lobbying mission was called, by one ronser\'atl,•e Senntor, "the Save Our Ral'!kel£rusade. '' TllE LEFT fe lt no more kindly lo the NRA . Cl11rcncc Darrow. who hlld bee n brought in to lead an in· \'Cstig;ition to quiet the complaints. 'announced, "The wh9lt lhing \\'US ob· •\"iously made for the ri ch man -for obiJC business.'' W~lt boiled dOIA'n to. the famous la\\·yei; declared. "'as a choice between go\'l!rnmt:nt·i11·ran1tcd n1onC1poly and socialism. Before that choice had to be made, a 1ntrclful • Supreme Courl knocked the NRA off the Ill\\' books . B~incs s men r,eti\ioned to have It reconstituted, but 1t had become too big a "headache" for Roosevelt. \.\'ho preferred staying out or !ht' price-control business until h(• got back in during \Vorld \\lar II. In the Intervening years lhe belief In controlling our wa>; out of our problems has scarcely diminished. Al the mon1cnt, Wage-1>ricc_ Co11tro1s are out of favor, but the At.lmlnistration is ORANGE toAST DAILY PILOT Robfrl N. Wttd,P\ibtUhlr Thomaa Kttllil, tdltor Barbaro: Kreibtch, Editorial Pagt Edilo~ Tues day . October 15, 197'1 I still debating ;1:\1 sorts of control by other means. That's all that credit al· locations. roreed saving progr'ams and gas con11 umption taxes Rri.:. 11.lorcover, as the e;runch and gfind gets worse the businessmen will clamor for mo~ ProtCctlon agaiqsl the 'A'Orkings of the markc\; but as the NRA showed, a controllod las - sez"fa.ire economy iS more than a t:onlradiction in terms -it rs a nut house. The editorial page of the Daily Pi~ 11cck1 to Inform and 1Umulate re•ders by preaenthi1 on lhJ1 paie divt:rSe commcnl•r)' on topl c:s of In· l<'rtlt by syndicated columnW.11 and cartoonisl s. by providing a ror11m ror reader.'S' vlewitand b,\· Jlrc11<!ntinc this newspaper's opinions and Ideas on current topics. The. editorial oplnioru: of the Dallf Pilot appe:;i r tinly in \he editorl11I coh1mn at the top of the page. Opin\Qfll ex.pre11sed by the rolumnl.sl1 and letter wrlter1 art their own "nd no endorsement of their views by the Dally Pllot should ~Inferred . " ., doz ne hece their II')' old joyi "I Lan danc tem plun zero horn of ' abo I • ' I • Roofers Re~r 1Iited Y u.ko1t N ee<ls Cir ls--$500 Weekly SAN FRANClSCO (APl - A recruiter Is here I u r I n g potential doiicehall girls to the froien Yukon with promise11 of good 1noney. run and ex- citement reminiscent or the old Gold R1.l1'h days. "\Ve've been delug~ by topless dancers, s ecretaries and even housewives, o.11 looking for e"· tra income and excitement," George Lang of A I t! x -r; Enterprises re.Ported . -"TUIS ~tAY-JlAVt~ the air pea ranee ot something shady, but l{'s perfectly legitimate," Lang a d d e d . "\Ye want hoofers. not hookers." The booking agent said he was commissioned by a beer parlor in Whitehorse whic:1 is offering $500 8 week f 0 r dancers. He said the women hired \\'ill get a one-month contract with options. free lod ging and transportation to und from the I own in Canada's north coun- try, about 100 miles northeast of Skagway, Alaska. LANG SAID v.·omen by the dozens have responded to a news pa per advertL~ment here. apparently eager to try their fortunes in frontier coun- try -now that the area's old gold rush camps are en· joying a mini-boom. ''It does get pretty cold." Such warnings hardly deter· red ap plicants like B r a n d y Morgen, a part-time art teacher and North Beach ex·· otic dancer. ' "A F,AR pFF town like that with less than 10,000 ·people, -that's just what I need after all th.is hurlyburly," she said. ''The money is better than what I eam at both my jobs. "It's also a good chance to catch up on my reading QUEENIE and get in some meditation. Besides. I don't expect to be dancing in the snow." ltlT A lllGUTOWER, a 24· year-o ld fl><:eptionlst for a Montgomery Street insurance company, recalled stumbling upon White horse during a camping trip. "It was very friendly and folksy," she said. "I al90 liked the fa'ct that the men out· number wonien five to one."· By Phil lnterlandi Lang warned one t opless dancer, noting that \Vhitehorse temperatures s o m e t i m e s plunge 40 degrees below zero. "To get some idea, go home and stand nude in front of an open refrigerator for about an hour." ~ I O ltior r .. ,-~i..... 1t74.W..W ...... -M. • • "The all-inclusive lour doesn't mean I have to shoot anythine:, does it?" • 4 STORES ONLY I. EL TORO 3. COROMA DEL MAR 2. LAGUMA BEACH 4. HUMTIMGTOM BEACH BY SPECIAL ARRAMGEMEMTS WITH ORAN(iE COUNTY FULL SERVICE CAR WASH OPERATORS PRESENTS A COMPLIMEllTERY OFFER NO GAS PURCHASE REOUIREDI NO OBLIGATION! CAR WASHES AND HOT WA-XIS__,_, '24;00 Value full Strvlco Wothed ln1iM & Out IOMUS! 6 ADDmoNAL HOT WAX SllVICIS OH TOUI NfXT llGUUI PAIO WlSHIS 'HOT WAX YOUR CAR FOR YEAR ROUND PROTECTION AND BEAUTY ' . •\ , '• ' ' ~-..,..c..w• .. ,,....,._ ic-.--... a. "" '"'' ----. ........ c..w- UltW.~ ........................... --Nc...,..e..w• -tl-C..,. . ...._~_,....,_, --_ ..... lltM_ ... -----._.._.....,..c.w"" • 14111 ..-. ... """"""" ..... ·-.i. ... 1 ........... c .... lfliallim._C...,, ... llllt--.................. -"""' ---' -c.·-, ..... 1i.M. .,,. .......... ....... -.... -"'_ ........ c..w ... ... ....-----~_ ... _____ ........., •-c..,... __ ...__...,._.,.....~ _...,_,,,_ ..... I _,._ l.ll'lltt. ---c.i.-..~: .,...c. .... .,_ ... ............ -.,_c...-..... • .,Cw ... ............. '< u.-c.- "' c.-""'' I.Ilia.-... ~ ..... ---..,...._C••--·-.............. --,..,c-. c. ... tit...,...c.-... w _ _. ---_ .. _ lll-tt. *--... ~---......... ll~·- ~-c.::.:: .... ---..... ll& ... ttu.111 -- 6 months to use your wash & wax coupons. On 'sale S days only I 0 a.m. • 6 p.m. lo purchase your car wash and wax coupons bring in this ad to the stores listed above. Your first coupon good anytime. Five coupons not good on Saturday. One each month · from Movember thru April 1975. Oc:t. 16·20 • ' ' <;" • Nightclub Act Zilch -Se:\~ Star MIAMI C6Pl -Lin~a Lovelaee, star of the s e x movie "Deep Throat." has told a federal judge that a planned nightclub c a r e e r \Yas such a nop that "I was on stage once and n o b o d y showed up." LeRoy Griffith, promoli('!n manager for I h e burlesque show in which the Miami ac- tress was to appear, filed suit against her for $75,000. He claimed she should pay him for losses suffered when she failed to show up for a performance at a I o r. a I theater. !\flSS LOVE L ACE, 25. testified. in U.S. District Court that after nothing but failyres her dreams of a su~ssful nightclub act were gone. She didn't say where the no-au· d i e n c e perfonnance took place. She said that in the Sta ge performance for Grififth she was supposed to s imul ate some of the sex acts from the movie. She testified that it was hoped the police v.·ould arrest her and generate • '· • TutW6y, Octobfr 15, 1974 DAILY PILOT, A 7 . Shades of Knievel I , ' Englebert _ .. _ Accuse~~ " : Fall Pa1·al)·ies Ju111pe1·, 14~ ·~ - lITICA , N.Y, (AP) -Girard Plante, 14, Iles para!~ Zt!d in a hospital b e d , reco1•ering from a fractured neck and ot her injuries suffered in an attempt to fl y over the fro1u end of a car fro1n a ramp rigged up in his backvard. The accident occurred a fry,.· days before Ev i I Knievcrs uasuccessful attemp1 to fly across the Snake River Ca- nyon in a jet -propel led "Skycycle" and G er a rd 's mother. ~1rs. Royal r1an1e, says her son's stunt definitely was an attempt 10 e1nula1c Knievel's. ''I DON'T EVEN y,·nnt to mention his nan1e, but 1nay be. just maybe, by relatin~ our tragedy some other boy or ' girl ~·ill be !18\'('d," S:hc say!!. ;in act i\'C boy that it's hurd Young Plante, a fr1~shman tor hirn !o co'pe." at Utica 's Proctor Hi g h School, fell aboui four fl·et in the Sept. 3{) accldP,nt. "The other boys k n e w something· ·.was \\-roo g." Mrs Plante said. They covered hi1n up with their ooat s ant.l didn't try to move hi1n." Girard remaint!d i rt i11 tensive care for a \l'eek. To- day. paral.vzed ft'OITI t~e nl·ck <k>Yi'n, he'-. in a pediat ~ics 14•ard, still in seriol1s roodif1on l~irurd , l•quipint:nt m<1n11~er for 1ht• high scnoo l footba ll tt:::irn. is now In truct ion, He's ri•ltu:tunt 10 tnlk ubou! thl' atci1!1•n1. His idcnt il'<l l ty,·in brother Gern ld ]<; ;.1 frequen t \ 1<>1tor 10 his br o 1 h P r 's b<!dside. Thr l'lant('s ha1·1• fiv(' oll~r l'hilllr<•n -four oldcl' nnd vn1~ younger , 11 13-year'{lld girl '''l\'E llA\'E ALL be!'n LOS VEGAS , ~ev. f A P ) -A 26-yeor-ohl rnodel has a ccu s ed en· te rta i ner En gelb<lrt llu1nperdinck of beittg the father of her 4-year-old dau¢\ter, papers filed in U.S. District Court show. Diane. Vincent of La s Vegas fi!t.'<I a petiti o n se e king front l!un1- perdinck support "' of the child through her 1 8 t h. bi rthda y. The ch.lid. Angelique l\lililele, w a s bQrn 0l't. 22, 1970. In New \'ork City. Humperdinck reportedly wAs in Europe and not a\·ailab\e for commeot. 1·0U1\. PRAYERS and the shak:en by .fhis traged y. C>ur prayers of 1nany are 1vit h him whull• liresl ~lc has changed '' but he haS a long 11•ay tf) .\Ir~ Plante Sll id. "I ha"c had go ~·et." ~1rs .Plante said to qu it my job hl'<'ause C:irurd "I-le was in agon y those first "'anl1' rnc "il h hu11 1nost ofl1~~~-~~~~~~~~ fe\\' da ys . Ncv.• he doesn't ha,·c thl• tune ... much pain. But he ~·as such .\II'~. Plan!c's husband is a JrzIB roren1a11 ai Oneida Limited. * "{:( '{;( "{:( -{::( 'il ;t manul :icturcr of flatv.·are. · '· .... .-...... ........ ,_S .\1r s. Plante sa id her son's ; ....... ;:;G.;n.i.,-• T II MJ, futun~ is nn1v in the h.:i ncls ,....,.slltUI t ·--0 Un S vf <:I.Kl ·•1 prayl'd 1hal th at ~ aodle1>1cto: .-.11°''*' niun \1·ouldn'1 bt" kill rd in Iha! 495·0401 '"J·l75J E1!el Influence on Boys "All three of Lhem said they were inspired by Knievel's jump." he said. ran~·o11 1n Idaho. No1\ I an1 pruyini.t lor n1y son." --- Hair Slaves, Go Free! -publicity for her plaimed two- week stand. LAS VEGAS. Nev. IUPl l -Since the motorcycle jumps o[ Eve! Knievel have been increasingly publicized, an in· creasing number of y o u n g motorcyclists are getting hurt trying to imitate h i m . ac- rording lo the men v.•ho treat them for gelting their teeth knocked out. OR. llOWARD ~1ark o f Hartford, Conn. s a id hl• trettled one boy who charged other youngste rs 25 cents lo see him leap his minicyc tc! over four barrels. Th<' un· derpo~·ered bike crashed into the third barrel .. 1111 y•11iwlf ef the P11r90tctdcil •q.,.y ef ..,.,.. "-.... '"91 thock\M ef -'911\c rolloff ..... I: ttt. cett• c...,Y MM4 t•rt11rH l••k. Ltt 111 -••cl,.,. Y•• wltt1 ,.,. •'-ttytl ... tli•t •"'" y•11 ""4•1111 M4 t...U.--. O•r i.., c9'1, ....,..,. Cillh. w•.a. •Mil •eat, •1• fltf' tliil .... '-"411 fM Mf .,., .., ..... Her auomeys contended the contract with Griffith w a s unenforcable because it called for her to perform acts that are illegal in Florida. GRIFFITII S A I D Miss Lovelace "-'ould merely have been required to appear nude under a transparent raincoat and v.wld not have been ask· ed to perfonn on stage any of the acts that she performed on the screen. "\Vithin three weeks after Knievel did his slW'tt at Snake River Canyon, I treated three youngsters with major facial Injuries," Dr. Paul \Vallers of New Orleans said. WALTERS WAS here for the annual meeting of t h e· American Society cf 0 r a I Surgeons. Doctors attending the con· vention reported nine other cases. involving broken arms and jaws and broken. knocked oul or loosened teeth, son1e of them referring to the in· jured boys as being undf;!r 1 an "Evel innuence." AIM, N.-S..t ,.,_Mitt Weve. JM rollen. .. ,i... Tell .., ...,.,. .,,.,. t• .. , .,. .. , lialr ...-i•. Th• ..t11NI ,....,W tMt '""" 11"4 •f li•lt Ii• Its -.. t• ...,,..1 te ttt ... wll>e c•• 11-it. W• ,,. tlieM Nyli1t1. A lltti. bit ...,., tii• tk_ "'f .... , JOSEPH'S SCISSOR STYL'"G, , 956. H..,;tton A•e., Hunti"91on leoc:h-96a.353S. JDS N, H-lfyd., Fulloftoo -I'll. 87f.3'6J NOW FOi YOUI CONYENllNCE ••• OP'lN. DA.l~Y.,." , ": 8 A,M, to 10 P,M;.-SAT, & SUNDAY 9 to 5' PM•• . • j . l \. \ • If yotfre tired of pouring money into yottr old car. here are three alternatives. · · Ready Autoflnance. , Rl-;xiy AutnFinancc means 1hat \\'hl-n yQ\J b'6 co pick out ynur Ill'\\' car, ynu 11 <ilrc:"tdy h11vc a prMppr<1v\.'CI loan fn1m Sl'CUrity Pacific &1nk. l1 's like l-xtra OOrgaining po\vcr; 111hrn you make your offer, you kno11• you have the money 10 hack it up on the spot. I Con,-entlona1 Auto Financing. Our Cl)lllpt.·1i1ivc financing nlt':lns that O.:\'\.'ll this 1nost common n'\1nncr of aut o fin.1ncing is so1nething special at So.."Urity Pacific Bank. St><cl•Lcasc. Thi, ~!'l.'Ci:il Sl'cl1rity P:icific Ban\ ll':l~lll)! r !:in c:in l~hil y 1nean . :.ll h:.t;1nu;il s:1\ 1n~~ .u J<i\v n paym..:ra t1n1..:. "~·c your nr:irl"'f Sec1iritv l'.1cifk fi.1nk \..r:inch \II' \ "1 Ir lr'(',11 ~l'(llrtl \' ra~·1 ti,· Rink ;II Ill' .lr.1lcr. I " • • • • • 8 OAJL V PILOT Tuesda~. October 15. 1974 Dillinger Alive? Oates Thinks So Q. I jui;l he ard a rumor that Dillinger \oli'i!l sU ll alive •lter thtst ynirs'! Anything to It? -fr:llnclne P., Jamalta, N. \'. A: Actor \\'arren Oates '"'ho played "l)illlng cr " in the recent movleJ hopes it's true. "The rnun they fou nd :ind shot do"·n in (rout of the Biogruph Thea ter in Chlrago hud brow n eyes.'' the actor told us. "Oltlinger had blue ercs. Now lhC'rc·s a \'ast dirferenre right off the hat. And the size of their bodies \oli'as different .. "It's funn)'. 1'hcre \\'ilS a long letter sent to lhl' underground Free Press 1n Los Angeles at the time !he movie Cilme out. It c:o n111lained how the\• misr~presented his ILfe in the film -and that he wu's not al~ (•ertaln place at a certain time. II read tOffie like Dilllnaer had "rilll•n lhe letter himself. "Also," Warren "l'llt on , ··there 1\·as a ra sl'inaling artirle "'ritten by an anonymous person I thouiht sounded like Dillinger. lie grurnblcd that in the first 'Glad You Asked That" l:fy Marilyn ond Hy Gardn.r movie they tried to m::ike him a city slick· ·.And, 'Now they've got some long-legged, skinny y:1hoo up there,· That 11>'as n1 c ! "1\nother time an unidentified person ca lled our studio IA IP ) and said : 'Don 't do it.' Don't make lhat mo\•ic. Don 't bring up hi s life again.' Not a threat in that sense. but a plea. "J said it before. It wouldn't surprise me a bit if the re-al Dillinger. now un old man, suddenly turned up. It wou ld be a pleasant surprise. "I'm defending Dillinger because I think he was treated unfairly," says Oates. fmore recentl\' the star or ''Bring ~l e The liead of Alfredo Garcia''), Today' he never would have gotten IO years for what he did . lie was a 'loo kout ' for a l'On robbing a small store. He was paid 10 or 20 bucks to stand on a ·street corner to \\.'fil stle if anybody r&me along. That's really the way his life as a rriminal started -v.·hen he v.'as 19 and had never done a damn thing. tie came from a fin e, puritanical Christian family in Indiana -small town upbringing. And he spent 10 yeal'&,o f his life in prison ~cause of that one incident. Today he 'd get out in IS months. That causes n man to htt\'e a bitter view toward justice, I'd imagine. "Dillinger learned everything about robbin g a bank fr~m Charlie l'\I ackley and a couple of otht!r guys in pnson ," Oates rontinucd. "lie wasn't a bad guy . According to some old cons I talked to before "'C filmed 'Dillinger,' he \Vas a very nice, quiet man \\.•ho stayed in the background and never had a nything to do with the J\.1afi a. or drug running, or booze running. li e was just a \.\'ild kid, v.·ho got out of prison broke and said : 'Now I'm going to do it right.' And as far as I k~w. or anybody knows. he may have shot. may ha\·c killed one man. l\l aybe. But he wasn't the killer they say he v.·as." Q: \\'hat fa mous film actress said, "It's difficult ~nough being married to an actress -more difficult being married to a successful one. And. in llollywood, people laughed because (my·hus6and l was a de ntist"? -Mrs. Mary •·reeman, Long l sl~nd City, N.Y. A: In grid Be r gm an, speaking frankly , in PtlcCall 's about Dr. Peter Lindstrom, her first of three husbands. Q : It looks like Joe Robbie, owner or the l\llami Dolphins, is really hurting from the World Football League. llas he said anything about the new league fit to print? -Dick Gallagher, Pittsburgh A: Yes. Since many or the players who jumpCd said they did so for their families, Robbie slyly concedes: "Apparently, the \Vorld Football League has done more th an anything else lo make family men out of the players." Q: "'ho gave Bahe Ruth the. nickname Babe? - !\trs. l\fabel 1\ustere, Oakland. A: Sports writers covering the old minor league Baltimore Orioles. ,\l 20, Ruth was the baby or the team. •'OLLO\\'·UP : "In \1riting that the late Boris Karlofrs ·only series' of radio programs was one in which he to ld bedtime stories to children ... you forgot that he hosted 'Inner Sanctum' on NBC for 26 weeks in 1942 ... hardly a children's program. The very thought "·ould be enough lo make producer Iii Bro"·n turn over in his money!" -Ed Reynolds (former publicist assigned to the hair·raising show) Jackson llcights, N .Y. ' Send your question s to /ly Gordner. "Glod You Asked Thal," core of lh i.~ nru;spaper. P.O. Box 1560, Cos/a i\1esa !r.!626. Alo nlyu and ll!J Gardner unll answer os mnny questrotts as they can i71 llicir co hnnn. b1j1 the vo l um of moil makes per· sona/ repli es rrn po.~s1/Jic. STARTS FRIDAY OCT. 18. SO WHATS NEW WITH YOtl ? ~-' Only the Dall~.Pllot really 1:i11 -.h ~· . you what'• new in your local .., U ~-VA communlly ... every day l ifll!lnl!·ll ., ~ t•r••I «'f ••I Alex Kal'r as pla,·s a ?lturine out t o rCpa y llt.1 \\'kfye for ~aving his life un ''l\I ":\ S*ll '' torlj,g ht at 8:30 on CHS, Chunn('l 2. NBC Ai1ns At Rival's ;TV Perch Nf:\\' YOR K (UPI) -·rhe CBS eye is in first place in the television rating game after four wel'kS u[ the ll('W season . but th e NBC peacock is strutling around saying he's going to slap a big shiner on his chief com · pctitor. CBS \Von !\londa y. Tuesday, 1'hursday and Saturday nights . NBC took \Vednesday, Friday and Su nday whi le ABC \\•as winless. CBS had six sho"·s in the top 10, NBC had three, and ABC one. CBS has \\'On the raling battle for the last 18 years in a row, but this year NBC · seems to be making an :.ill out 1 surge to end the sl rcak. ···we're very excited," said Marvin Antonowsky, one o f N B C's vice presidents in ch arge of ·bl ackening the CBS eye. ,"La st year we trailed CBS by two po ints, but now we arc neck and neck. "Our new shO\.\'S have worked and theirs ha\·cn'l 1 ··ri.anct of the Apes," "Sons and Daughters" and "Friends and Lovers." CBS is also stu ck v.·ilh a lot of old shows -.. Mannix ," "Gun- s moke '' and ''Apple's Y..'ay .'' It's just poor program development and hanging onto old shov.'s. ,. NOW THRU THURSDAY ..W.. EtW & L5ottd ....,_ "RASPUTIN AND THE EMPRESS" ·-Hit'I St.II Y-H~orl! .. JOHMMY TOUGH" radio pager ---·--SI7.00 a month total cost d •. no epo11t on credit approval ORANGE COUNTY RADIOTELEPHONE SERVICE'" Jlnily WarhOli fr411kensrein . ':-= 5 • -·· ff11uti119to11 Plof1~011se ""'' .............. , .. ....... Variety -Show Set 'THE OTHER" __,..._ 'THE EXORCIST" -~ .. • -The lighl5 of the Hunting- ton Beach Playhousl>, durkencd only 10 duyis ugo. will RO u1i aAaln brieOy this Saturda y when th e playhousl•'s third annual variety show hits the boards tor a one-night stand. "' I" Intermission Tom Titus SPonsored !Jy Otl Corps , the theater 's ladies ' auxiliary, the show h:is !)roved quite popular in its first tv.·o outings 11>'ilh local talent fro m the ll untington l)layhouse and surrounding theaters convening ror an cntertaininl! "amaleur 11i i.:ht" pro,l!ra1n . This ti me around the v;1riety show \\'ill lake on a ··cal.Jaret" theme wi th Randy Keene, \\.'ho 's direc· led rnany productions ;1l llunt in gto n Bea c h and clSl'\vhcre. taking on the dut ies of master of ~·crcmonics. J>hyllis King \\•lll ;1C'Company the musical nurnbers on the piano, Fred Inncrbichlcr is t echnical dir('C'tor and Beth 'f ilus. chairman of On Corps, is the O\'erall coordinator for th{' event. Al\IONG TllE highlights or the 1974 cxtrava.ganza \1·ill be an origin a l skit v.·rit· ten by Joanne Wolcott, one of the better character ac· lresses in Joe.a l theater, y,•hich s hould stri ke a r('sponsive cltord among the predominantly· theatricai' types in the audience'. It · concerns the trials and tri bulations of the audition. Others contributing to the show include J eanni Gib- bon , Sylvia Lee, Ann J...app,' Co lin Guiver, Jim Grim- s ley , llov.·ard Solomon , Beth Tilus and Tom Titus. Those v.•ho 1vould like to join Ri churd Andersen, Alice , \Vade, Ardis Faith and two diffurent children in each act. A1ike Freeman and Carrie Cordon appear in Act I, Jim Vance aod Deb- bie llhome in Act II and · John Al ilosch a nd Elena Koster as the grown.up kids in Art III, Co mpl eting the San Clemente cast will be John ~try, Margaret Alvorez, 1£'hoel Forgie, Caro l ustarson, Les Heide. Brandy 1-l e nsen , J1eidi 1-lcide, David Reba l, Doug Reba!, Louise Schwabe and ~lary Vance. "Skin or Our Teeth" will open Nov. 14 for three . \veekends, playing Thur- sdays through SaturdayS but going dark on 1'hanksgiving, with an 8:30 curtain at the Cabrillo Playhouse. 202 Avenida· Cabrillo, San Cle mente. Ad· ,·ance reserv ations a re being accepted at 492·0465. . . *·-· ORANGE COAST College has announced the cast ol Its s~ason-0pening produc· tion, the gospel.rock musical "Godspell," wh ich opens next Wednesday for a four.ni ght run in lhe OCC auditorium. Bill Purkiss is directing. The OCC ensemble will il)eludc, in alphabetical or- der, Gail Brower, Ron in may l'all Beth al 557.7297 -;_;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_;~ to arrange it. ~ The variety show gels un· der \\'ay a t 7:30 al the playhouse, 21 10 l\l uin SL, lluntin1.,rton Beach. • A·L . .\RGE C1\ST or20 per· formers filling 36 roles has been announced by the San Clemente Comm unity Theater for its next produc· lion, Thornton \Vild~r·s Pulitzer Prize.wi nnin g pla y, ·•The Skin of Our Teeti:I." I Gil 4ordaa is directing the show, whtch centers around the Antrobus fa mily - LIVE OH ST AGE! 2 ·Hor ROCK IAHDS "DERRINGER" ... "THRUST" Z Sliows: 7:JO Ir I 0:00 I HMJ11t o.ly • A• Se.ts $2.SO WIST COAST PR&!ltl.L.------ lest ForeiCJn ·Play Of Tht Y tar _ Co~yA.wMd "THE REAL INSPECTOR -HOUND" GENERAL CINEMA COAPDAATIDN r11VL I 1t0•£1tT I ,/tEWlllllN/ltEDFOIUJ' JtO•.EAT SHllW ..... w ... M".tttloi; • C...t- "Pete'ft'Tillie". J:.Z6-7:J5 "BOOTLEGGERS'! l:lS.5:J0.9:ll .. , ···········••( CINIMAl ', • IAIGAIN MATINEE ~··········••\ LVIIYQ4Y ,. ·t1l ):)OP.M, LORDS OF FLATBUSH IPGI 1:30 4:4S 8:00 "BUSTER AND BOBBIE' ./"WHERE DOES IT HURT?" "' AtlKAJS LET THE."·" GOOD TIMES ROLL "BOOTLEGGERS" ... "L&MAHS'" t. ..... ," .... Chipres, Lindsay G::imbini , ltr'W' Robin Francis , Jack G b ~ .... , ......... ~ ru ish, Fe14cia llernan-, ~co• .. • H\ ....a .dcz, Cal lloff, Loren Mar-11-----------1 I sters, Andria h1eidinger, Su~ Rodriguez, Joel Swen· son, Steve Thomas and ·Patty Wright. · The entire producti~n, audience included, will be c;,~nfined to the stage area,' with seating limited to 200 ::.bt~l,tMt' hnlY •'. l~lilne- '.\l l.fiMM) .... <It ht-I belol!"' --........ _ people on a first come, first IJarbra ~ seated basis. Admission, as ,A~Jleteirl-'-' always ror occ student •.••. ,.~.-.·· .. -,. rr.,., shows, will be free. ,... '""; . * SUNDAY. 2·1:20. 1~40. BACKSTAGE -The ALSO .. Wes tminster Community 1.:;;;la~ Thealer is conducting a •-~ chi ldren's daytime 'drama ~ .._Owl "'orkshop each Wednesday ~ •• under the direction of Diane . Gem• 11111111 Schochet. .. information on t..'t'i ...._.. the program, which encom· 1R11r' • .... ,.,.. ·•· passes preschool through ~:, .t l :JS l • sixth grade kids, may be ob· SUMD'AY.· ):JS. 7 • 1.0:.10 ta ined by Calling 892·2574. ~~~~~~~~~~~ MO\/IE MnNOS FDR~AND WUNO PEOPLE T,,..~ ... -.,.....,.,.,.~ ,.,...,_ ... _ _,., .-i. ,_,., ,_...,.,.,,,.,, ""'" .... ............................ ·{°'I !l( ~ -~•~•°'"'~I ·~·-o• .... -... --.... ,,. .. _._ f-VAC.0>0:-"'"' '--'"""t:.<•-1 THIE CITY SH°"INO ClNT"l 0"ANQIE •12:11!·1721 "CAlo&tlr "40 C'AIATS" lrGI '11UTHWKH" .._l'ICO" Ill SAN OllEOO FRWY •t 80LSA EX, 813·05.e A "IOOTllGGllS" V "MOOttSHIMI WAl" CNI .....-u-tt· -·-··"-__ , ....... IA "CAta11r '\" "COUI Tlll.llT" IPGI _..._,g ..... 100 .... 1--·-..iu n 0pP11 D~1!y 10 15 ~ m From"'" -.._ .. -"'"'"-- lnt<t ..,.., »oi ~"".i""' calku OOESS"-lli!s 119"1 11 b.IN<I on , 1ea1 uicidc11111. fQf w .. o.i1 •.awn• '*"" .no ~-II&-.. btEn <N!'qld, CllL!.S\ PCmS A(M;(llCHll.ll/llA ~ PClOO ID!illllS.1£. STARTS NIDAY ocr.·11 di"@®@®@ (HIGHEST RATING). ONE Of THE BEST MOVIES SO FAR THIS YEAR~ ·l.-..H.,.,lt,WCI S-TVf"-Torlol 'l'let'ssayit flatout- 'llany and Tonto' Isa hit,ancl- of lhelNtst-les I otltH." I • • 11 MM101 IHOf'NtQ corftll • • llOWMllD HARBORJ.T:..2 IWllOll ll.YO. AT MllOll fl, OITA MllA Mt·dl1 .. m • MANN THEA TRES w.as-...,.w....... Sl.ll 'ti l :JO ,.._ "CAIARET''' 0., .. t s ... , •• • ·~· . ~ .. 40 CARATS0 hlty7A II ~./S-.. ].J.11 - "AIRPORT '75" • 1; , ' ' • ' ' GO ' • w ' ' ' " G ' • For the Record ·Dissolution• Of ·.Marriage •1111fW Alflllil n GILMORE, Llfllill L .•lid 11.,t L, FOW1..Ell, Jt,1111111 C. •llCI llob9rl I . AlllOTT, Mlldrtd GrK• ll'd Allin LHll• WICl(S, Mkll .. I J. 111111 C11t~rl111 Sl~i>SON, CollHn M1rl11 Ind W1ltw .. ~1111, l obbl LYM llftd Mlcr•tt l'r1n1< Wl-llTAICER., Undl J .. n •nd Allred St=. C•tlllrlnt ~ry 1nd R•\Pfl Lllt;ll•. HoW'lnolon ,IMllll El1lne 111!11 P11111y .~~Q111, S1ndr• Sunn Ind Rootrl 11!~'.'1::l.i.•rd Gltn •rid JUdy Oline. Slllrp. PonM WllN Incl Sovel Mervin. l'-s. AllfllllnY 11"' Jollllll. Rldtt!IJ, Arthur G. f!'ld V1let'k-I. Qultlot, 0.-DM Zolll<' •lid Arlhllr Lit. Kt11!, Robtrf W. llftd Sllolfllde Jio Sodtrm1n, Lindi Olol VllMI Ind L_.rd W1Utr R11<11ld. • TIIE FAMILY Cll\~US ln•.11.t""'...., _,_:.,.<Ii<_ •• -' ' By Bil Keane .. Here'§ one thot hasn't hatched yet." C11<1ntll, Robtf'I G. •l'ICI Mtrry M. M'f91"1, Mllrv An11 11\d llkll1rd Lowlov. -----------------------ICl11G1ton Mlrv C. •nd PollQIB S. Moctr9, Jutltl ll:1ve 1nd Robolrt Wldl. LOPll, Gltnd1 J. Ind R1ymond I'. McC11rtfn, Norm1 J1•ri 1111<1 Ron•kl ,.... ..................... ,,. ...... _ ...... _ ............................ ~ A~luncw H. •nd Lt illt J. C•r<wlll, C1llierlne H. Ind Jo.I A. O.wson, Ooroltlv M. llld Pon•ld E. P1vi.1 1>1ut W.altlv Jr. •nd M1rt1 Gil . Flt7W11t'r, H1rold Llovd •rid D•n1 1(11111. v11111o. ll:•lhl1tn Lov1ll1 1"'3 Roberto. L-11rd, 1(11ren Lff lf\d D•vld Mlcllaet 11rt1r, l'•lrkl• Pl1n• 11\d Art~11r J1m1s. Zmlldllnikl. Rounn Loe11n tr.d Jahn Fr11ncl1. t-lllrdlno. Sl>tron tr-•nd MlcllHI ~~: llllnM M. l lld RallltY """"""· s111nn1rd, lr•cll•V Jlmft 1nd lrtnde J11n. Miii.,., CoNll• J. 1nd Steven w. ..... , Ol11ne W .Ind WUH1m L, St.ct f!Y, l.,,.., W. •"'3 Lur1 M. Arnold, AIV«o IC. Mid JHIH E. Hod$0n, R.ocrt1tltl L lllld LM J1mes. Chltoll, Huao S. l!nd Ann M1uf"Mtl. Thing,. l(errl AM llnd Robert. Joll.l\IOfl, O.w>d V. 111d C1•ol L. MK Mitt.In. N•ncv Allyn •1'1(1 Gm Rk:lllrd. M1rtln, f'lul L. Ind Judllh Ir-.. lr•nch_, Cir• J. •nd J1m11 0 . Gf"1y, P.-rl AMI llnd J•-0Gugl11. Frlldkofl, Ellaetl N•nc Y•NI R-ld Wilbur. Walk•r, PototlMI Etltn llnd Ashlard Ml!rt!PI. L. M. Boyd Twins Pretty, Not Beautiful Identical twins oftentimes are pretty In a bland sort of way, but rarely are they strikingly beautiful. So contends a client who wants to know why. Imagine it's because identidl twin! usually have perfectly symmetrical faces. Few fraternal twins do. And hardly any singly born in- dividuals do. Portrait artists say the truly fascinating lttne, Joe E~ Ind W1nd1 Eflilbllh. .. Corbitt. Mincy LH I nd Rlchlrd Gfnl. Rtldllrdt. JtcklYn S.1nc1 Arlllur I'. Rw. Mary Ann •nd Roblrt. • -GlbbeJ, lv•IUI $1119'1" Ind )DKl!r faces arc those whose sides don't match exactly. • ' Lym1nl:111tt"H ltll._..,. 11 RNcf, JoM A. n •nd M1rlew'lt E. Oltm<llld, JOllnM Lff tlld WIUltm Cl•Y Wtllm1n. Kt!IV 0.M Ind LH Ann P1rclv11I, IMIY ~rl• •nd llctwd Edw1rd Kyker, Cllllrlolll L Ind RODtrt F. l11Tirtl. Prudence C. ~ SllOhtf\ 11J..-. Sllll"'ll A. 111d M1cll1cl O. 'WlllOll, 0-.. LH Ind Jimmy Lff ·Deaihs- Elsewhere ENCINITAS (AP) -A private crematk>n is planned for Rkllard L Nnrbaltr, 53, a utbor, 9Cl'eeawriter and -ed World War II Navy pilot. Newbafer. died Saturday while visiting !t:imh in Los Ange1es , I LOS ANGELES (UPI)-· • Fmera1 •rvicel foc D • n Hayden Rott, 83, foonder of Household Finance Corp., will be held 'll>irsday In Glendale. Rose died Friday in his home. Deetla Notlu• PD.J.AR POST is what the English call a mailbox. SAYS HERE $1 out of every $4 spent qn food if for food that's ealen away from home. YOU CAN while away some time at stofi lights, too, by trying to tick of all the different animals that give birth to calves. Like cows, moose, buf· falo, elephants, seals. Any others? HEADSTAND Q. "Who said, 'Standing on the head for a few-mmuteS every day is good for the complexion?" A. That seller of cosmetics. Elizabeth ~n. t think abe Was aware that only abgut one woman iD 50 can stand on her -wllbout help. Q. "WHAT DID bis sidekicks call the infamous gang- . ster Al Capone? Scarface?" · A • .Never, Either 1'fr. Capone or Boxcar '1'ony. Capone first showt'd up at .Cbicaf in a boxcar. EVERYBODY knoWs the long!!t river in Africa is the Nile. And in South .America, it's the Amazon. But can ~u name Elll"Ope's longest 11ver? .The Volga meril3 that dis- tinction. Now aSk the family geography wizard to identify Asia's.: Said party should say the Yangtze. PATl'ER , The word "patter" got Its start as slang for the' Lord's Prayer, the paternoster. THE SLESPING CHAMBER inside a gri!zly bear's den invariably is rJised above the opening into said den so wannth will be trapped therein. c111,...1 e. =.=0"01111 ot 1111111 THE GOVERNMENT of India wanted to put together Ottober 11, 1t1' 1n LoY••oe11, N1~111111. some statistical data about manuracturing companies $1Nkts Will tit Mid Wldlltidl!V 2:313 PM, Hwlord Funo1••t HOrne in s1n there. So it sent out a questionnaire to managers. One JK1nto. Cl. -· GoodlOll .. ....m-i I b\' 1111 ..,i11 G1111M1 1our 1111uoh1er1. of the queries was: ''How many people do you emp oy, 1.t• Mllv w*-1h ol' 11t•r•11 •rd • ~""en down by sex?" GIMIV-M. Mot!JI• ol' ArOngtcin, MlrY .,.""" LOU AttflOll o1 Cl,_ Clly Ind Omll L" 01 .... of 11111 Jou1 11111111rlltl0kfllldrtt1 WERE YOU AWARE California's redwood trees ..-follrt"" ornJ..gr1ndc.'Mtdr111. ed M10•11t started out in the Arctic? Sc.ho!.a.rs say they migrat . ~-~ ~i:o1~ ="'0r;~•n:z. Tit Took them 75 million years to make the trip. No, !lOl by s11rv1v.:1 DY 1111 ton. wm Hklllln 1nc1 dog sled. Wind and weather pushed them south. -9r1ndd~1. Mr. Htg9l11 Wli !ht -r of H !n Saltll, Inc. Cryptlldl ..,..,1c .. wm t1t d 11 1:00 ,.M "Thur1-Address mail to L. Ar. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, Ne w· .SIV ,.l!Cllk \II-MtmOrlll Pl r I< , N~ a.ch. Olfld •nt, o,.. Primp port Beach, 92660. Copyright 1974 L. M. Boyd. G. CYNl'f. Pldllc VllW MorlllllrY dlrt1e-.......... -,,. .................................. .,._ ... ,,. __ ,,.,J_ ttn. In lleu of ttow«1 conlrlbu!lons .,... nvy tit lnlldll tO "Thi LUl'lll AIK1Cl11tlon o«. Or•noe cwn1y, 1117 North 8ro1dw1y, S1nt1 An•, C•Hlor:li• Ver1 F. Wtbb. rtt!dtnl ol' An•llllm, C•. Do" of ciHlh Qr;tollfr 11, "''· Swylved. by on' ton. Or. H.ll. Wlbb ' ot L111u111 Hlollll. Cl. Gr.I Yt,lde SlfVlce• wlH W htld Wldlll$d•V l!OO PM, An•lllllm ---c.._.....,.,-McGomlkk---LllQun&-8eKh Mortutrv dh'"K•;:NsLOW Santa Ana May Cover ewspaper Headlines OOrl1 II. Winslow, rQldtnt ot NtwPQrt 8ttch. 01i. of dNltl October H, 19'1•. Sll'Vhltd lb'( thNt •lll•rl. M•r.tl f'. Stnllfl, N1nc:y NCW'IJlrVP• •nd S11r1 1-to111s11r1 tw'll "'-sv•""• Sm1t11 •nd ei-Smit~. s .. vtc n w!ll tit prlvttl. lntemwnl, Ptc:lflc Crest c ........ 1erv. 11111-111r9eran Cost• Mn1 dlrteton. -·- Corona del Mor °""'"""" -·-llLL 110.WWAT l MOITUAJlT 110 Srood'M'.Jy, C05la Mme. b42.q150 -·-McCOIMICK LAGUNA IU.CH MOaTUAllT 179.S loguno Canyon Rd, •94-941.S . -·-M<COIMICK MISSION MOllTUAllT 28832 Camino C0pi11ro110 Son J11C111 Copi11rono 49~1 776 -·-,ACiflC VIEW MIMOIW PAllK Cemelery Mortl.IOI)' """" ~00 Poclfic v;.w OriYe Newpo r1 8toch. 'Colllornio 644-2700 -·-PllK FAMILY COlONIAL fUNllAL -'l801 llobo A....,, W•~tmlnSltr 89J..352.S -·-51i'ITHS' MOllTUAllY 627 Moln St. .. lillnlln91on &.oc h )3<\.6.53'1 1 • • T.ut wlaJ, Octobtr 15, 1'174 D41L V PILOT 1\ 9 Cities fighting EPA Parking Ru te~ By WJWMI SCHREIBER 'ot•Dlillf ...... S_,. ' ORANGE -'lbe Orange County League of Otieii has voted wtanimously to ba.Ule against pending parking man- agement rules mandated by the fed er al Environmental Protection Agency. The local league chapter, "·hich counts all but t\\11 of lhe county 's 26 cities· a 1 Steamer Sale No Setback memben, \\111 carry tbe fi~t to lbe State League of Cit)el convMtioo. later t.h1a month. The rules, part ol lbc F.:P.o\'s proposed enforcement of the 1970 Clean Air Act, w o u Id place tight controls on all new parking lot proposals for more than 250 vehicles. T H E l\ESOLUTION' ap- proved by the league calls Cor Congress to shelve Its air poUutlon regulations w1tll a special business-government· environmental group t a s k force can restudy the Clean Air Act. The EPA has a lread y delayed enforcement of the parki:.g rules two times under pressure from local agencies. The latest' date f o r en- forcement Is July of next year. Orange Mayor, :h!ss Perez, president of the lea1;;ur, saitl . "We are not In favor or pnll11· Uon, but ~·e jwit don't believe th is Is the way to fil(ht 11 iu Orange County." PEREZ SAID the need to either repeal or substantalty a1nend !he Clean Air ' Act has put local go\·ernment in the 1 position or .fighting a losing battl e. lie noted that his talks with • Decathlon Ol(s All Bo ys; Girls SANTA ANi\ -For the Jirst Top aca d e mi c dccalhloo LONG BEACH _ The time in its eiX·year history. \\·inners vi'ill be honored at famous USS Catalina may be the Orange County Academic a banquet at the Disneyland Decathlon will pennit coin-Jlotcl Dec. 5. headed for the kingdom of petition by teams made up Decat hlon co1npetition pits Kuwait, but the head of a of eit~r all boys or all girls. teams of equal acadentic abili· competing firm insists that ORANGE COUNTY !\farilyn Woods, president or iy agains t earh other so there the loss \1111 prove no detri· the decathlon association, said is no automatic benefit for local congres.m.en b!!s '1l'Qn- vinced tum that Of\lnae Qoun- ty is one of only a1 few ~ti! se.riously pu$hing for elil\\in.ll.- t1on of the parking regulations. The Cow1ty Boord of Su1>ervisors has p ass c d 11 resolution urging tmre !i1udy of the new rules l:ieJorc they are imposed and sonl" cllics h<ive acted independently to for\\·ard resolutions o r op. position. ACCOHDING TO E."'PA of· ficiat s, the idea behind the parking re g u I 1.1 lion s is lo c!imina te cars fron1 the road and potlu!icn from the air. But opporn:-nts of the rules say the EPA is virtually forr- ing de\'elopnU?nl of strip rom- men::ial areas that \\ill require people to dri,·e more a n d farther to do their shoppillg. ment to Catalina's tourist. the group has dropped a rule any school. that allowed only mixed tean1s --------------------- hungry town of Avalon. to complete. Tim l\.fazur, the manager Study Set The rule dre\v heated CAR o f Lon g e e a c b ~ta.Una criticism from private a n d 6 Cruises, Inc., said his flnn parochial S<h::lols in the coun· WASHES and others which ar• using On Prepairl •y. moo1 o1 which ha" .u smaller ferry vessels, w i 11 male or all female student continue 10 expand t b, i ,_ Health Plan bodies. AllJ D fleets. THE DECATHLON, which " steamer Would mean that the SANTA ANA _ The Califor-1968, pits teams from rounty Mazur said tbe loss of the has taken place annually since 6 HOT smaller vessels wQUld bring nia Department of Public high schools against e a c h S tourists at a more stealiy pace. Health will hold public hear-other in academic subj e c I WAX E ONE DETRIMENT of the inp here Oct. 23b to ~siAnder quThe~e· ""-e Wl.11 only l~:::::::::S:EE=A=D=O=H=PA:G=E=A=·7========~ st h said h an application y a ...... s • 'w .......... '6 earner, e • was t e geles firm to renew ita contract affect teams from the private l a r ge single dr op of toserveMedi-CSlpatients andparod:rlalschool s ,ac· P~~gersfroit made daiBely onh through a prepaid health plan. cording to Mrs. Wooc;is. I rips m Long ac The renewal bid would a· "County high schools sen· to Avalon. dm· g te·-· to th'-year's~--ffect the service of 11 5 , O 0 0 ..... ,..,, .~ ""'" The C a t a 11 n a ' s rigid :fi.tedi-Cal benenciaries in the petition will still be required schedule allowt'd passengers counties of o r a n g e , Los to adhere to the rule of three only about four hours ashore Angeles, and San Bernardino. boys and three girls," she before they had to boaM !or The customers include 10,000 said. "The new action ls ap. the trip home. residents of Orange County. plicable only to the private With more smaller vessels and ............ hial teams." · t•-J gth of st The 'hearing will begin at _.. .... ~ running, 'ri::-en ay MORE THAN 300 students · ht be panded h ·d · 1 p.m. in Santa Ana Cit y Coun-mig ex • e sai · cil chambers. Spokesmen for are expected to p:irticipate the state _.agency said that in the examination event Nov. --HIS FIRM, said :Pi.I a 1 u r • testimony may be in oral or 16 at Golden ~west College for PRIVATE PARTIES ..... ON SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHTS ... •.• for groups from 20to 100 people FREE PARKI NG• SS6-122S On !ht North Sidt of South C.OUl PW.. (Ntxl to luUoc•'•) AMERICAN EXl'RESS • MASTtR CHARGE• 8ANl<AMERICARP plans to have four vessels "'Titten fonn. in Huntington Beat'h . shWtling tourists to a~d1 ...:.:.:.::.:.:.::.:.:.:::= ____ ~----"------'----------------------kom the Island by. next year. With the addition of two new craft, be said, hit firm ~ould be able to double Us daily passenger loads. 1 Newport Harbor b a s ~a regular summer ferry service to the island. The Island Holiday, with a capacity of 1« passengers, operates daily out of Davey's Locker during the s u m m e r months. OCC Airport To Improve Security Sunday is ·. FlltlBAf .r • Our ·Philosophy · • IS: It's a changing world ... for we have only to look around us to see a variety of new and different interests born of today's lifestyles. And just as people's interests and desires change, so must we at Pacific View vary our methods of providing memorial and interment services to accommodate these changes. For example, we receive many requests to provide cemetery services only. From others the request is solely ro·r the use of our mortuary. Or just graveside rites. Or the use of our chapel. Or cremation and burial at sea. And just as often the request is for a complete memorial service which involves the facilities of our mortuary, chapel and cemetery. Whatever' the case. the servi~e providfcl is exactly as requested by either-lhe deceased-before death-o;~--­ by the person responsible for final arrangements. And in all cases it is the right service, because we at Pacific View Memorial Park and Mortuary can provide any or all of the services desired. To £ind out more about Pacific View and the savings that result from pre·need arrangements, call Mr. Ward at 644-2700. He'll arrange for professional counseling in your own hom e and supply you with a valuable estate planning packet absolutely free. PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK 9 MORTUARY 3500 Pacific View Drive. Newport Beach. California 92fi63 !Atta 714} 644·2700 ED RYAN -& ROSEMARY CARUSO • TUESD..t. Y THRU SJ.TURD.A Y -9:00 P.M •• 2:00 ..t..M. <Ntrigger R~om-KONA l ANES 2699 HARBOR , c_osrA MESA 545-1112 I. I I • A 10 DAIL v PILOT T O NI GHT'S TV H I GHLIG HTS 1"13"f 14 1 ; :oQ -ll'orl<r Sc·ri cs. Tho Dodgers mO\'C to Q;l l\ J1:1nd ror the third ~<l l~lC toni ght \\'ilh Al Do"·n ing opposin i.: Catfish l luntC'I'. I AUC ' (7 1 s ·oo ll a pp ~ Ouys. The 1956 pres1dcnlial ca111µui~n !!µlit~ the Cunningh11m house hold as Rithi c 1 Ron •10,"·ard ) opts ror Adlai StC\'l'n!-1011 \\11i lc l><icl t1'0 111 Bosley> likes Ike. CBS 12 1 9 00 -11;1,,·ali ~"'i \'C ·O . f\l(.·G:.irrctt Pln's1u .. ·!<. a ,L!ri ~l y link b<>l \\l'Cll ;.1 fi \'C·YC:ir·old b:i nk roll hl·I'.' 01nd :.i \\"H\"(.• of liquo r !<.lO r~'holdup~ '·' fil•ll <.1 h u 111a 11 :-k t' lt•H 111 1,, lllll'a r l h1.:d. .,.. .... " - TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Evening OCTOBER 15 Wednesday DAYTIME. MOVIES 1:io O "S1y It In f"nch'" ltnm~ l8- R1y ""'llln~ OIJ'mpe Budn1 t ;OO 0 (C) "HrM l11dtri"' {d") '61- lo~n A111. Roeh11d Webb. JO·oo o ·111 'rni lbvt 11~ Odwl 'J!i -li11tr C1oor. V1111n" Br1.1tt "ApKht Chl1 r r .. ts) •!IQ -A!lft (;u1,>s "ll1ct toi l1!r" l1(!v' "!i~ -Rl(~J1d Cont, "111; A.ldtn 12;00 m "Ht1vrn t i n W11I" tcom) 'I) Ct~• ''"""~ ()en Amrrhe I 00 lt "UMl•tlllw1 W1f' ldtl) '6~­Slr~lun Auo1~~-l.l c~rl Bo~Qurl 1:)0 Q "Tt11•1 MaR Wltfl A Merl'" !chi) ·~ -11.i•k Oov1l1J, Pods l!1y, l1vrtn Btttll. 2:l0,)0J (C) "l ut ol [R••ll•"' (du) '62-Dlvt6 Niven, Mltllltl Wlldlnc. llt 11) (C) ~Tilt llart lrttd'' (1clv) "66--J1mes S!t..,l fl. MtUtetn Cl"· Hlrl, l111n Ktltll, Julitt Miiis. J.00 (t ·111, Moon h ll•"' (d11) 'Sl -l't1ll11m llnldt". OtYld "hotn, M111·• McN1m111. J:)O 0 (C) "lht Min ill !fie ,,., l'ilnntl Slrit~ P111 I (drl) '56 - Ciiei:ory Ptt~. Je"nlltr Jon11. (J , Hl11 flllnulltti" fe11111t) ·sz -M•(~lll lttnn~. llollttt Ntwtori. 0 (CJ "Tiie H111lltt" Pfll I (d") 'f:>J-P1u1 New~n. l1Ql1 GM'SO!t • K()CE, C"llASNF:L 50 Oran ge t'ounty 's Ullf' tclC \'iSion s t alion , KOCE-1 \,., has schcdultd the following special program s today. Detailed hst1ngs or Channel 50's proi;iram !I are carried in the Dnll y Pilot's TV Week ett'h Sunday. ll:IO J(MOOLOtlT•IC'T l'l f WS I(! 11.16 "•OUiLll'lf !CJ 1:."~-A!ll\f ...... ~~ l i'f (:OMMt,/l'lttY 0' LIVll'IG THIHC' t(J "tlgl'f Pollwl!O" t ·U TIMI TO OIAW 1(1 'A \4wt•" Hot .""°"''" t·u MATH rACTOIY !(t "'S.N•.ttlrQ !.fh" 1 Of lill(f l lC COMl'AHY 1(1 i It U.llaS(OLCHD•I !(! ).to C.0"1Hlli'' (LOtMI HG (011'1(• 1c1 ·-cu111"' J 111t 0 lM""l$10NS IN (UL tti•EJ !(I nl'al...,111~•1 ll• e Ail & ,1£&.l<IAHO 'lftT(Mlfrl O 1(1 • ""'"' Al'C"m'"' •:• l-llCl•ICCOMl'•HY ltJ '" l l$AMto )llllC•ll'I •to •1G •Ltili MAlll•Ll 1(1 Tlot tlllt 1'-" 1'4 ~-,,_ 11'>f A""A•llllCI el ti. •• .,,, ''°"" Olbd, •!Id I\ •Im••" t.Uw•· ••• •.JO OtM(H ~l01'15 IJI (ULTUllllS IC) ··PaltOlll~'• E•1"' I ot flllitHAMO SKit(tllNG l~I (.r~ Al'O""""'" I JI f l'lli IJ MY Ul'IO 1(1 '"Tiit a.t- '" I• OIMll'l"Ot<tt IN (ULTU•t:I 10 P11oo111,.tc 'fr-•" l ·H 11'1-(IAL: ICI "'1,.lllhOll " TM ~I Mttr1 o•fl-4'" -All lftftlitll I-11 ,.tltt'\ft•OPllliftf lo lht ttOftOfTlf, .,. '"'''""' ''"'"•C-..'*11 ""1•"· A """' qlrl't llt" t•P91' ltfKI wlh'I ~ llllMh ..... llOW II Mlltll lltr, (•-I I , • New Oil F i11d :consull\er Survey: Mexican Parties 'Count Chickens' Gloomy 1\11-;X ICO CITY (U l'll -'l'\\'O lcfli sl poHlit al pur· tlfl5 urged thal Mexico not onl)' join the 1\1 id die East oil cnrtt.d but <1l so to hcl1> cstut>llsh u. separate l~11tin An1ericuu c:•rtcl to 111-olcct ~lex ico's ne w ul l rind a g ain s t U .S ··1n1 - ~rla h :-1n " The t•all lur l\l cxJt'O"!i en· try into the Organiz1:1linn of Petrolcu1n l'.:x1>orllng Coun- tries t'Ollidcd \\'ilh rc1xu·ted U.S. pl :1ns, accurdiuc to \\'ttshlngton dispatcht's, tO negotiate directly \\'ilh l\1cxico on the nC\V oil discovery In hopes or breaking .the._ world oil car· tel lt!vcrngc with the United States. FINANCE ANN ARBOR. ~lich . {AP) Consumers are more pessimistic about the ei:onomy and about lhelr own flnan~lal sltuatlon$ now th•n at a ny lime since World \Y ar I I, according to a Univeriiity of l\tichlgan sun1ey. THE POPUL~R Socialist Purty, one oC l\lexico'& rour Jegul partie5, s11ld that In addition to joining OPEC a "parallel Lulin Americun . 0 r g a n i I at I 0 n 0 r 011 Seat B Lt Fifty-seve n percent or producing nations .should be e 1.138 persons interviewed cr·cuted in defense of our in· by the Survey Research terests again:tl the aggres-Systen.. Center said they expect s ive po s ition or im -" economic ''bad times" perialism. ·· durine the next 12 months. Their demand came ·'U · l ' About54percentsaidthey am id s t (' 0 n l in u in g 11po p u a r expect bed times to las{ at ',iiiiiiiiijiiiijiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiijiiiijiiiijiiii~ estimates that the newly . least rive yealt. , I~ di SCO \•('recl fields in DETROIT ruPJ) -The southeastern l\Iexlco con-In s urance I nstitute for tain so much petroleum the High'>'·ay Safety said !\1on-, totul maY not onlr outstrip day that at least 29 percent the \'crit.·iucla oil fields but or drivers or 1974 model cars 1·vcn the riehc:.t or those in (.•onsider the soon-t.o-distip· th(>~liddlc t:a ~t. pear ignil'ion interlock ~-lexiean President Luis system one or the least liked Echc\'erria has cautioned· features of their car!l. l\lcxicans to wait-and-see if An ear lier s urvey in - rcport s that the new dicated up lo 40 percent of petroleum finds in Tabasco {he owners of the 1974 and Chiapas s tates are. models fourid \vays to really as rich as thoseofthc ·bypass the system. which Persian Gulf. · forces drivers and front - Tabasco Sata1.e Go\'. seat passengers to buckle P.1ario Trujillo barcia said , up before starting the car. . I The study b y t he '·'there is not the cast ' \Vashington-based safety sh ado~· of doubt'' about il. group found dissatisfaction ·;This io~e can prodUce with the device was no more more than the l\faracaibo, greatly associaled with . Venezuela oil fields and as drivers who wore belts than much or more than the most those who did not. oil-rich nation of the Middle East," Trujillo said. Record Set "TO Al.L INTENTS and purposes. we are al the lo"·esl 1>0int no\v s ince the sur\'CY started a ft er \\'orld \\'ar II ,'' Jay Sch- miedeskamp, center direc- tor, s.iid. 'fhe ne"· car and the housing markets a re con- sidered ofr limit& by a wide majorily of the consumers surveye d, said Sch · miedeskamp. f''ifty-t~o percent said it was a bad lime to buy a car, and 61 percent said the same t h ing about pur. chasing~ honie. WEIJNUD~Y FROM4 P.M. HE SAID HIS information was based on "rigorous. geological studies" and ··preliminary explorations '' of the new fields by rilexico's state petroleum monopo ly, Petroleos' l\lexicanos. For Sales At May Co The center's index of con· stlmer sentiment, with a base 0£ 100 in February 1966, is now 64.5 percent, down from 72 percent in l\1ay. It was 90.8 percent in November 1972. but was as Jo\\1 as 60 .9 percent In st February. o .b I J {l.J An angry figure of Uncle Sam points at Mexico's oil' wells and tells Secretary or. State Henry Kissinger, "'~ is 3ll1Ted· ·in-·Ara b dress. '"Get rid of those ridiculous clothes. Henry, and get on· down there and ask our neighbor for a few bar- rels!" • • Specia l to the Daily Pilot DETROIT -The May Department Stores Co. ha.d record sales in August and September, up strortgly .over the same months in 1973, Stanley J . Goodman. chairman of the board. has <1nnounced. Sales for·the four weeks eneded Aug. ·31 were 11.4 percent over volume in the "'JJ.OWE VE R, T HER E'S like 1973 period, Goodman·· nothing tempor ary about said and sales for the fi\'e the lates t survey . I( ~'eeks ended Oct. s were an. anything, the current estirllatcd 12.1 percent over d_eclin~ may_ be understated the like 1973 period. since 1nterv1~wing wa~ con- " We see a good Christ·• d~uct~d during Pr~s1de nt mas season ahead." Good· :for_d s ~?'called honeymoon man said. penod . How sopltisTicATEd is youR -AppROACll TO GETTiNG NEW busiNEss? I Are you finding that the old forf11ulas aren't working as well as lhey Used to? 1 Is it getting too expensive to add-1market coverage simply by adding more salesmen, when statistics sh ow that the average cOst of an industrial sale$ call has now rocketed to $66.68, not to mention the time your guys are spending in the pub "making contacts"? Is a high-priced advertisi ng program simply out of the question? If so, you shou ld be talking to us. Oale Clou tier Associates is a public relations firm specializing in effective marketing communications. We make sure peopl e who should know about you, do know about· you. Region-Uy. Nationally. Interna tiona lly. Our efforts can bring all kinds of side employees, present customers, and suppliers. benefits, too. Like better relations with All at a cost that is surprisingly low. , · Sound impossible? Our clients, including dfvisions of several Fortune SOO companles, have found out it's not . • DALii CLDU'tlEA AS8DCIATEll Publlo Aelztla. • :ZOJO BUSINESS CENTER DRIVE • IRWNE,CALIFORNIA 92664 • (714)13l·ll60 I \ • ' Over Th Counter 1 MASO~ • " • ' HEADS WALKER & LEE Newport's Thagard • Real Estate Firn1 Picks Top Officer \V11J1 am (J 'l'h;.igard has been l:lectcd pres ident ;ind chief 011c rattng officer of ;\nahc1n1 bused Wttlkc1 uncl I.cc Inc , d1vcrs1f1cd 1c11l cst:1tc ~er \ices company. l'r1or t o the boul'd of d1r cclo1s' se l ection 1'hai:ard \\'il S CXCCUl\\'e \'IC~ president of the resale d1 v1s1on lie has been 1:1 n1 cmber of the company boardfo1 15ycars Joining \Valker & Lee for a tcmpor.1ry su mmer Job 20 yca1 s <.i go as a s alesman, ho rose up the management ladder as a manager and d1 s tr1ct manager before becoming a~ senior \'ICC president 1n 1965. The Newport Beach resident IS a member of the Ni.!tlonal Ass oc1at1on of Rc aH 01s .i nd SCl'\CS on l•I 1c.1ll v IJOiJrds lhroughoul CaHfurn1:1 Ba11krupt Bids Filed Iii County The ro11J-...·i ng perso ns h:t\ii' filed pctltlonf for h:1nkr urtcy In Sum.a Ana ~·cd{'ra Court . Slit l'l lO'f, lllt , ttn!Ollltf' IMll..,, ""'lllllKlurt tlld ttlH, lft W. 1~11 SL. Ne..-pert It.Cl! Ll11lllltlft t/,001,tlt, ... Mlt U,tn,111, llleltttl '•ltt Etllolt, Jf.IUllE W..1c.im ~roy, ..,..rrwtoo,M, 1021 Noro1, Lt1u111 ltltll. L.laMll!ltl 110,ltJ, tlH11 "'·*'• lttlt l'N A, I(. Pllf!lj>!. Flltltl ltW•ly Otll, ~lllllt, t i! Cl!P>r• Chottllt ti tllWt HOUSTOH ltltllt•d '"lllty, bwtll'lfH IYSltm\ elttwllvt, JJCl..I (.h.vlt'l\tt M Road L•twnt Hiii• Lltll'llltlt i Mlo,lll t 1" l tll\l,MIO fli •l11te P~t111t, HOUSTON ..kly~t Allll, ll01M.,jJ1, ti! &11'111• llell•+t 111oov1 MOOAIE ,..,,.,llfll J , flOUMwlft, t/Q C0<nw•U lluntl111ton lt~l'I. Lltoll!llt1 "'!Ill ''"''' '''· lltlf•et l!Ulon ,STf.WAltT A!Mt Mtry, llavlktl lfto ltr1or1 )a.JOI llil!Ott !.t, 5111 Jutt C#INM•tno Li.tllllltt 11•,0M, '"'"''10. Aettrtt PllelPl. DUNHAM V-lltllt M , llYFWt lllf, 10091 w111"0'°"!11, l"own11111 Volltt L1•11!hl~> Nt,UO, etHlt \l,t6Q, .._lirtf Elllol1 Pf.NDf.llOAtT O.orgt Arll\Ut, olr~tt C"»t cor>l•ol coor111n1tor, fOOO Stt 'lllO" o.,,., Ne.woorl 8ttcll Lltl!lltl•U•,..,,.. HllMI .,.1 f•flltblf lttftttt !°lllolt "°"'°"'' ,,..,, ltuUI, IUllff"lw, ., Pt•~"ltw Ullf, 11•1"" l ltbHltlfl -fl Jtl•Mt •ti f~tllfl!t llftt•H 11:111111, flllANCll l-Ut I, l tllli.111 •-..Ct """""'' .. ot WtlMr Awt , Hli'l!l1'Qlfl'I Beoc~ L"llUll11 l!O,•JS, toot' UJO. Rt!t•l'l'Cll ... rlty THOMPIOH J, •• , Ot .. fll r1ut• u1t1m111 1'1J 111•11 Dl!•t, Hullll11916ft Bt tth llfllllllfl 'IJ,IJl, llHU ..00, ~!ffft £111011 THOMf>tON (h••IOttt Lou!W, llfnli \ti It! l llllOlf' d1ltil1 •1 tb0\l't CULPIP PI• Cynllllo Lit,••¢•~· 1H:ml~I •'-Cfttlry, I t.ti S..n •••• H\111• l•nqton ll~tlh LJ1b1hhf1 ,!1,tol, futll t..1 000 R•lttM Phtlps lr,f.ll H~l'Old ltt r<'dl ~11~1• 1~lf1 ..... 11, llSI Lui • O'hl, 11unt•n9t11n k•th t •~blM ti Ut,1U, ••~•~ tl,tMI, "-!t•ff ~1111 AiEll C.IO!'ll , IJl~tltf•ll, 11! OIN!r •1•111 1,,fbQv• • 1 ·Collar Code Monday's Clo8ing Prices It's Mostly Wliite Today By SYLV IA POllTEll fl'or the Or1t time In history the U.S. Is approachln1 an economic milestone-a h1b<Jr force 1n which while· collar workers represent a majority or ,l,$ percent. · This prediction ror 1980, u. mC!re sl:ic yei.r1 from now, comes trom th e lluttau or .Labor Sl<!l1stlcs In Washington It underlines the ruct that upward mobility In our land is still very much alive -even 111 the race or the twin ni ght· 1narcs of g111loping 1nnat1on ulong with deepening reces· s1on. llVT WHAT DO TllE tcr ms "white collar" and "blue collar" really me:11in·1 What does this mllestone forecast for you" Most Americans have an over!impllfled notion that blue.collar workers wear overalls, work with their hands and backs and cat out or lunch palls, while while· coll u r workers wear neckties. '!\'Ork with thei r heads and fin gers, eot 1n cafeterias or restaurants. Therefore, this slatl&tical proJectlon may suggest that by 1980, Archie Bunker will huve a higher stntus job. move to the suburbs and give up his bowling for golr at a country club. Not nccessnr1ly. buJld In the trend toward ever·rl1ln1 llvln1 eos:t 1-1\mpl y because It Is sc much more dlft1cult to ralsl! the productivity ot, 11yl bc1 uty oper11tor1 th~n o mu.nut11cturer1ot1ood1. An eventual rosult or the chunglng work torce mi.iy b(i un oversupply at the top or the Job IM dder and an un· tier.supply at the bottom. By 1980, the percentage o JlCOIJIC Wiiiing to lake JO ...... P.tp.do! (low ~ -A"A- .... lll I U lG Jtt ,.\ll•l\lo AC,INl f,60 I U )IQ• 1' At""(l't!v 1 • 36 •1't """°' Olll ' • l l•. •\ Adf1p '20IS ~ ,( ... " A<:IMl!lh10t il 11-10 Alld•f• JO!l 11S 6) u-., ~ """11'¥ JQIJ 101 l fo '-In.LI l.OI 6 :IJ8 194\, ti ~~lltllPll 'll \ltt l ~o """'-20 ' 1s /_,,._ ... Alletll l~cp 4 I I + Ii Al' Pr<:i 20a IS Ul .J'I\ / AlftOlllf t6 t ti U\o • lie A JlftllyUr~ It 1,.,. 11 A.l.l!IN 120 • •1 It\•. io 11.!tC.St llU 1l tlo • Ai'.&P pl 1 18 liOO /I -\, Al"'•• 1nr1t ~t ,,,. •---------, ! "''""vl111 60 • \J 11 ~. 1~ Allle<IQC l6 II J ! .... o \o AlllHtl" IO 1 I \t i,.~ :i,o Money's Worth Ak..,AI 1 10 6 200 ltV. + lilt Al'-' S!f 40 I II th• l, AltOl'I th :,010 Ill 'lllio, IV. • 1 , .. " \Ob 10 .o ,t ... \. A l'IOl'IJ &id 2 11 Oho o \"o A lt4Cp l'Od 19 ,~. \, AllQluG I to I 16 JJl,;, • 'o AlkjLudptJ I 12\'>tll, A!IQ p,. I U I 89 16 Al1tt>Gr11 10 J I i .-------'I Alhte10. 11-1 -,... u·i ••• A!tltCIPrlld J I 2t I \\;., l l • AHllCl!ot 1 IO S t• 19 t \, as hou1ekeoper1 may be don•n to a n all ·l1me low of I 3 pe rcent while those iscek1ng hi g h er s tatu paslllons could exceed th Jobs available. COLLEGE GRADUATES may have to accept less deslroble jobs which don't 1 cally ut1hze their training D1ssallst11ctlon 'A'ilh their Jobs 1s certain to Increase, \Vl lh the result that more and more will try to change positions frequently or seek selr employment. A11 a result of these shifts in occupations, too, com· petition among highly skil· led "'Orkers could become AIMI Si.fl'll~I 1'4 tl l'i 1 ', Anis o.., i. t && ~\•• 1. Atl•9'1IA IO S 11 t~-YI AIP'\I P\ n l l l h -\, Altw 1:1t t t>O ll •I'• Amo1s.io l• t n ll.,., \lit AJNo• l ts ' JJ1 311"'-'l Al'I!~ IO S Ji IV., lo ""'*°'" 2• I • ].... • "''""it 120 3 9 tS\~, lO Amtrpr 1 60 b 2t • 1~. AmHtl XI\\ 3'1 11•1,. \\ AH)1 plJ'1, l II +1'4 A..,.lrFI 14 S 11 l'I -'~ Am lll•lllltl 21 61• 111 • "" A"'l•l 2G , I 1~• \0 AISrtndlk J 6t J '•• 'li-Aml,Cll 911 S UI U\'J-\o A<n9160 U 4 ti ~ A<nUl\110 t 1M 11V.;. 'I ·~-llit 6 JO"'-\lo A 1.1)11 U J • A !111204 1QUV.•"' Am(yjl\ IV1 1 U9 JO\lo + ~. ""°'jUI .!4 U ' It• Ab!" ti JI ti ,. JI"• Ho ""'°"" .,.,. . ll l\>o. "' AOul pl ... • I 10h • V. AmElcP• ! • •S& 11•, • A,ln!I~ 1111 • 11 .. ~. Into the w h lte·collar m o r e inten se . Young category, t he Census •Yiorkers could be forced to Bure11u lumps postmen and aher their expectations ror messenger boys, Janitors steady career advancement and waiters. as t he large baby boom generation s t r uggles to mo\e up the JOb ladder and educa ted members ol mi nority groups plus: more and more wQmen become fulltime career workers. A '!ntw1t11tS JI 14-\:; A Fin p1 1v,.. 11Q IJtn AOBdt •U .. It Jll\t b •Gllk t lJd .. is u~. AGnl111.0 I ii llo\-•, AOllDl !tll, 1) 11 •'I< Afflf\110\ IQ $ 19 Ja.>1 ~ 10 AlllHOr>t IOJI ti? ).Ito, ~' ·~pl1 tl6)+l1 AmHo1o1> JOU lllS 26\'l t 1Vo Amln•11 XI • 11 JVi I I• A Ml-di(l n • ., Ji.-.-i... A Mtdlcor11 S II 1\o • Am.Vig! 10d • 681 S\\o; It AmN~IM6 II ll\o.-\1 ...,, S.tllft9 I l~•-lo AmSfolp .. IS 1 t i.;.• .... AmSm!I 1\~ J tU II • lo Am Sina IO 4 10S ·~• \, AmSl<:illl I\, ' •tVi, t , AmS!t,11 11 t Bio I Vo + •, AmS1or 1 to I 11 J•~• • 1, 11.mT&TltO 921"1 IJ • '• Sti ll In the blue-colh1r class, though, arc factory workers-t he men a nd wo m e n who run th e machines-and theirs 11 the category which in the past 20 years a lone has shrunk a ruu 10 percent: AND AS IT HAS for decades, our economy con- tinues to move away rrom dependence on the produc- tion of goods and toward services An astounding 75 perce nt of all wh1te·collar workers a re now employed In such service 1ndustnes as Insurance. transportation, real estate, a nd th e wholesale and retail trades filany relatively new oc· cupatlons in tbe US. are services-tor instance, sex therapists a nd family plan· ners. The while·collar ranks alao have been swelled by women e mployes and technology. ~.The e ompule r h as replaced the 1hlpplng clerk and given rtae to the 1y1tem1 ·~_lyst. And as th(l' levl!I of e~~cation at each 1ucce1dln1 generation or worke rs lncre11e1, the proportion or workers available lor low-wage OC· cuputlon1 continues to tall. OUR HEAVILY 1ervlct1· oriented economy promlaes tar treater 1t1bllity or em· ptoyment than our old heavily iooda production· orlanled 1ocJely. Thia helPf' c~plal n the phenomenon ot lowe r rates or unem- ployment tv en In lhe busl11cs11 re~e11!non1 of the IXJll l·World War JI period. To put It bluntly, when you need an e11entlal repair or hcn\lh 1ervlce, you buy il. At the styllfe time, thl11 developmen ~ or 10 many 11er\!lces to an unpreceden· tcd dtitrea is helping lo Also, with government jobs especially al the state and local levels Increasing, and employm ent 1n service fi elds across the board clfmbing, there will be a much greater potcntlal for labor relations problems TllE TRADE-OFFS ARE built into American society-more stable Jobs but a higher rate of in· flat1on, more workers quahf1ed to use their heads and hngers, but fewer w1l· hng to work with the1'r hands and backs. There never have been and never will be "neat'' answers and you'd probably s uffocate with boredom 1f there were. '°9PJfl ... HI• Pilllt l~1trprl1H, l11C, OC Credit • Union Meet AmT&T pit 98 t~\o. '• A TT pf A JU JJ l9,, • \o ATTDl8 l 1' ll Jtht \~ Amt&T wl IS81 Ph~ 'lo AmWt lf .. J Jt I ........ Ol'I 'IQ • u ,.., Amtttli. IO o ll H'l,t \i AMF In I It SI" UV. , Al'l'llti: IO I SO 1114+ I'! AMP l<>t lJ 21 SU 11\'o • 1h A11111toP 40 l IS lh• \lo ...,,.,.. (II ' UJ J\o , • AlllrtpCo•p J 11 j"• " Amst1r t 10 • 1•• l • '" .+1)1••111 l IS J •! + ~. A""!' p1 .. J Ho • ArmttdJIO S ti 35'ot •1 AmUI In JO I 11 , .... '> AllOCOl'I IOd • 111 Ill-o 'o Anc.hHc l lltS 'll'• At!attCl•w I S )9 ll"o • \, An')tllll 11 I l1 6l, t \lo Anwt Co ti 6 !()I 11•>0-l'lf APKl'llC SO • ?t ll~t ·~ Allco on 41 .s 10 + 11 APKO Corp 11 1Va •• APL(orpt 9 t la • Attpllt<I M9S2 ll 1it-h AllA Iv 1 .. tl 'IQ 6•Y• + ·~ A•t ttlN .21 J II t1o -\Cr Ar(t\llCl . 1 20 •~1 ... tlWrO l~ ' II 11v..1n Atttlt E"lf • J '"° .. Arlstlt" I I 11! SV1-Ill At11PSt~o ti 1'._ , .. ... , 6tlt •• 11 1• ..... • ' AtkLIG\Xlt :1610 , llllM RllOW' 12t 1"'-VI ..,,,_Co ,16Vo •• Affll(o5 IAO S tfO JI'!)• ~ ...... ,, 1 to , 14'1)• " I ii. il(IO " -I ft I 11 tt11o ,_ II ....,,,. t M t t Uflo+ '4 Ato(orpln I Ji 4 11'1< • ·~ ....in1rc1 $2 11 60 I • VI ASA tl<:I I 1'0 IJ'/•-~ AWOll 1.i 4 11Z 11~• f.11 ol.l.OtyG I IO t •I 11~ • 1\1 AsSIWQ 140 s 11 II~• ... Arllione &II • tJ• 1"'1-\\ A!lco t.310 ~ lO I -'4' AllOJEI 1\'J I I• 1414'+ V1 AllCEI"' lfl ,, I l J • AtRt 1 ll\I , 6t ,.\4-\4 ~·u: '"' IJ M IJ .. -... AU .-1),. 11• -W. Richard :r..1 . Rockorr. :'r'!'i11e~2: it I:"" ~dent of the California = * 10 1u J •1.., t Union League, will A.,;• J:: ·; 1~ =: ~ be the featured speaker al """~ii .. :u ... , tt h 0 Alltt I , 'I J1V1 t1 t e range County cha p· "'"'t 't 1 .... .,.. ter'1 President's Night Oct. ::;11::11~ , 1~" 1t"! ~ 17 al the Grand llotel In wnfllr l.t.11t1Q1 '!"' • 1'Nt Oll&G IJ 1 I 1'1+ 1'I Anaheim beg inning at 6:30 -• .._ Pm ...... wn IO 1 "' u -111 • """"' 1or. 1111 '' • • y. R~~e!r will addre11 the Ef! fl'* 1ft i:*'•. ~ credit union repre1en-..... " : ; 1S t:_. ::· taUve1 at the meeting on the trf.0.s ~~ • ~= H~!," toplc "Your Lea1ue In t)I • '° l;""-" 1974 .'1 The league 11 tho 1~1~ 1Jl 1=·~1-t statewide trade a11o(!lallon {.ij i 11 If~., olcredltunlon11. ~I J I ~ n ... : ~ Tho Orange County chap-ni•"= t• 1'if !,:!1~ tar Is comr.1ed or credll ·'" I 1 s ... "' . ti II I • .. ,unions wl.th n Orange Coun. 10 s J u • ,.. ty, There nre 100 credit itt 1 · ' t•~ • " ,,_, 1 h · "°~!l't:#Y,1 11U ..L:,~ wuOl'll n t e area -72 ol ;:r;;'t 11 01 m;. -. which are affiliated with the S."f'lllct n 11 t1 •l'J • ., llta-11\ft .ti I ll 14_.. • "' CCUL. They have a com· BH1 Fe. n ' :uo 0 11. " bl -~ be hi r llNFd ,. ' • '! 'J '"''U mem r1 p o 71 ,000 SK~ ..... son 4l j •• • nnd seo. 1 million In assclS. ltec:lonD &II II Ill • " IWtflA IOI! S JI ltlo-\II ~~~~~-~~~~~~~~-~---~~~~~~-~-~~~~-~~~~---~~~~~-! 8110!' lndul 10 lH to\'t-" O..to ~l so•• l4 U .,_. fi11lt1C'l'lr r111d L1tlftol'11 _,... '"° s s 1114-... MARKl!T HIOHLIOHTI '"':'l:!"'' ' 1•·" -,.°'' ~Pl• -'"" fo110tt1111 0,1 :::'.!.., wieo "1 ! 10,l 1• 1:-!! 1"' ..... '".:I -~ 'llf\ 1\1 ..... lntd t{'t: ., fl~t ""' I 11f "'°' l•ltit .,, ll"Cfnl Bendl• 1 IO I JI 1t lrt o 'Ill :~(~ Oii ll!ll N•• "°'~ ~oe: t.,..i;Q, 'ril j II; ri ... ~·1 '4' 'HI Mwi pfrttfl •DI! tn•nlll" are tlW INDl,8 Sen(jlpl ?•,'J 120 tJV1 +1 "" CMlftl'fl'ltt l:ittWtt11 riw l)fPfl!Nt ,1.,,11111 l!rt>C p1 1 lO J •J prlcl 111111 I"' (Utt~nt cloti"I! llf\(e NYSE Index •s 36 up 0 87 8'!'1'4 ,,,. ' )lj I\\~ ... GA!Hl:RS oJ " • l!fnotll DI• I :l.o l t \II 1 Ml!•S111 11t •J .u UD ,,o Ase Index 69.37 11p 1 33 iltlrt;tr .l'Od 3 11 '"'1 " I • Homto pl 1 161 'll U11 1• i • llnt PmOt\ I JI 41<to. l\o Jcw,1nv•" Ill••., up 'I' r..w.Joncs Ind 073.50 15 .'3 1l1111siN11 s ,. ,,.,._" •bltCllOl llO H<o 11'1U11ll ...... Up .J ~9llnd.IOQl1 t0jtl4 t fl •=a 011 J. '• uo '80 S&PSOOSlocks 7._74 11tt~&o .~lto '"' '"'t" -· ,, c ' .. "' • up 1.11" ,.,,Jll .. ' ti ,...,_ ,, 6 ...-~p ., '• ..,p UV ••• '''::.' 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Jfl(I 11 , ., ~l!Gtll ••., ,M 1 • "' 11 1·•1 n111uny 11rf1c ul t•1hl lh~ Si1•1rn ~LPilil Ill• h••I" ,,...,.,.,.8111! ) JI'). ~£l..ao4_1•, r1Q }~ o \ 4'hrh ._ lo I I I I. - • • 12 DAIL V PILOT Tuffilay, Otlobtr 15, 1974 • • . . • ·Doctor Gives New Warning - On Heavy Vitamin C Dos·es IJSC Rlf'l1er Actress Virginia ~layo, '''ho has appeared in ml!f~ than a score of 1novies, has donated n1ovie. staj!e and radio 111emorabilia t o th e University of Sou thern California. Ne,vport Permits . Plummet The decline in con!!lr11etion In Ne"1>0rt Beach COOlLllUl'd In Scptcrnbcr us both the nutnbcr and value of building permits issued dropped to a 44-monlh low. NE\V \'ORK (1\PJ -J\1ore v.•amings 11gainst the use of high doses of Vitamin C tor the l'Olrunon cold have emc rg· cd r r o m an international ~eting on re search into the vitan1i11. "To recommend now for the general 11ub!ic to take high doses of Vitanli n C over and above those recommended by !he National Academy or Sci ence s v.·ould be Ir· responsible,'' said Or. Myron \Yin ick of lhe Institute of Jlun111n Nutri tion at Columbia University. \I ITA!\11N C !\IAY .indeed have an effect on the common cold, Dr. Winick said in an interview. but the effect is loo small to justify high doses in view or the lack 0 f knowledge of possible ill ef· feels, such as in pregnancy or on a fetus. Dr. Linus Pauling. the two-- time Nobel Prize winner. has stimulated \l'ide interest i n Vitamin C with his hi g h I y p u blicized recommendations for high doses to combat the common cold. A KEY STUDY that has been cited in support of Dr. Pauling's ideas was conducted at the Univers ity of Toronto and indicated that the intake sludy, told the meeUng that subsequent studies s h o we d that such high doses were not necessary to produce a useful reduction. PERHAPS 100 or 200 milligrams a day \Vottld he sufficient. Dr. Anderson snid. Dr. Pauling has rccon1mendcd a routine daily intake of 1,000 to 10.000 milligrnins or I to 10 grams of Vitamin C. The recommended d a r I y allowance. of the food and Nutrition Boord of the Na· ILonal Academy of Seicnce's National Research Council, is 50 to 60 m.illigrtims ror an ·adult. "In c on c I us Ion , '' Dr. Anderson reported, "l would· suggest. that unless and until firm evidence Is forthaiming that higher doses of Vitamin C are more effective . we should adhere to the principle of 'primum non nocerc.' and advise the public to li.Jnit their daily intake to 100 or 200 milligrams, e x c e p t possibly for brief periods during acute infection when gram d o s e s may be beneficial." Day Defiled Italians l l p in Arms \\'ASHINGTON (UPI) -The chairman of the National Columbus Day Committee charged U.S. District Judge John J. Slrica violated federal law by starting the Water· gate cover-up trial on a hollday. "We feel that Judge Sirica has desecrated Columbu s Day," Mariano A. Lucca, head Of the commiUee, said ~Ionday. The co mmit tee claims credit for getting Congress to declare an annual Columbus Day holiday beginning in 1968. "He (Sirica) owes an apology to the American people, to the people of Italy, and the people of Spain," Lucca said. "We are going to get satisfaction"." According to rigures re~eas­ ed by the city"i; Department of Community Development, 139 building permits bearing a total value of $1.2 million were issued last 1nonth. of t gram (one 28th of an -===================...,....,,.ii ounce) a ·day and 4 grams•· a day when ill produced ·al,..------,,,........,.-,::~----------,1 SEPTE1\1'8ER'S FIGURES brought the year's activity to I.799 permits having a value of $40.4 million. Jn comparison, during th·e first nine month or 1973. 2,019 building permits hearing an estimated value or $GO. I million were issul'<i. 30 percenl re<iuctioo in days 6 CAR o ff work due to co ld symptoms. • But Dr. Teren ce \V. WASHES Anderson of the University of · , Toronto, woo ainductcd the AND Sept~ber's report of building activity shows only .<;even permits c o v e r i n g residential dwellings w e r e issued during the month, three of them covering duplex units. .. w H l LE CONSTRUCTION activity hit its lowest point i{l Newport Beach s i n c e January. 1971. the department of Community Devclowncnt expects an upturn in October . "There are $20 million worth er building permits waiting to. be chcck'd and issued," said R obert Fowler , the department's ass istant di'rec· tor. How ever. aoothcr depart· menl spokesman said, high inte rest rates are expected to continue to .be a check on new residential developments. 20 Girls Enroll 111 'Corps' A total of 54 st11dents. 20 of them girls. have enrolled •for the first lerm of the i\tarine Corps Junior Reserve Officers Trainin!'.: Program at El Toro High School. ' .Accuser Must Pay Dog Owner ~IIA~tl (AP} -A man charged by a Miami Springs official with k e e p i n g a habitually barking dog h a s v.•on 3 $6.000 jud gment from his accuser and $4,000 from the city. A circuit Court jury award· cd-lhe money to Larry Carr, backing his cha r ges of malicious pro sec u tion . negligence, conspiracy a n d abuse of process. Tilton Chester, director of lhe city's building department, charged onetime n e i g h b o r Carr with keeping the barking dog in violation of a city law. Municipal Court dismissed the charge last January when Chester admitted he'd never met Carr and couldn't identify him as the dog's owner. Chesler, who maintained he \l'as acting in an official capacity, said, "All I wanted to do was stop the dog from barking." · Carr and-his dog .have mov· ed away since the charge was filed. l...ed by Lt. Col. J . Chene. ---------- fUSi\ft rel.). the c o n r s c is known as Leadership Educa· lion and n1ccts one hour per ANIMALogic1$.., .. h.., da~·. It entohasi1A's (our areas: Jeadershlp training; rl r i 1 I c er e1nonics: marksmnnship and \veapons: and military orientation and organl1;11io11. According to llern1 Schn1idt , 1 _,.,,, El Toro assistant principal. ~~~~~~~ "Overall acceptance appears to be excellent. "Some of the rl'quiremcnts. such as haircuts :i n d a 111ilitar\· CQurfeS\' of 'Sir' to lhc in.stn1ctor. ·ha\e not in any \\'ay dampened the en-~ thusiasm ... Schmttlt said. ,. The course is good for either ~:,;_~r _ " e!e<.1.1\'C or physical education ~fHAT KID REA.LL'( 6RAB5 crcd11. YOU .DOESN',. Mf? .. ) Jflr. (brts ttan's /.""' Ji11 i1t.I! and J.1nn'n.e 11tlhl1tJ?St tl1t rrlirs offlne old SJi/in,1! sliip. L1111 c1't>ot1 Speci,1 1 BUSINESSPERSON'S BUFFET $2.50 l.11n<l1r<Ht Alon. -Fri. frcn rt ll:JO a.111. Dinnrr 1rr1•ril N~~l1tlrfrom S:OO P·'"· SunJ11y Ch1'mp11,cnt l:trunclr SJ. 75 f 11J11t IO:JO a.m. -Entl'r1,1in1111•n/- t;~~·'r H.1rrs 1itts. -Tl1urs. £1•i'ni11.cs IJJn cing f'ri.-Swn. N~~hts Fishrs, ,\f1J1s, 01•11rr D,1r._tJ1•1rJ IJ'i11rs. All'I anJ Spirits 6 HOT WAXES SEE AD OH PAGE A·7 A great l>odJ doesn't just IA happen. . Why bulge when you can curve? Especially, when you could be as trim and slim as these people. ·L Dieting can help. Buf, d iet alone isn't enough. You've got to firm up your body to eliminate flab. We can help you do both with exercise programs and suggested patterns for weight loss. The most modern exercise equipment and professional supervision will help you change the look, the shape and the texture of your body. There are even Sauna, Steam, Whirlpool, Sun Room and Swimming Pool facilities to keep you firm, slim and trim. You'll look great, feel great. Remember, you don't jUst get a sha~: you ge t in shape. Make yo urself a cromise-Call today! There are 5 different programs -one to suit the needs ol each individual person. ......,._ tpKtal Mtt ollilctory offw.-2 ..... , .. ,.,. • ..,...., "o. Huntington llNch 18585 Main Street. Main St. at Beach Blvd. 842-1451 Westrninstff 6757 wes1m1nster Avenue. Westminster Center 894-3387 -622 East Katella Ave., West ot Tusun Ave .. 639-24 41 ........... 510 S. Beach Boulevard. South of Lincoln Avenue 826-0381 Cos'8MeU 2300 Harbo r Boulevard, Harbor Center 549·3368 .......... 41 o 1 Allanllc Ooule~arCI. Corner of Carson 426-8874 ...... 1703 1 llen1ura Boulevard, West ol Balboa 986.6330 ~r. Qlqriatian·s JSJ C. Cntll lligliu1,1y ,\'ru•r111r1 IJtac/1 Holiday Spa Health Clubs for Men and Women. H1•11.,1·,1rinnJ (114) 61S-Sl10 • I I • I • • • • Automatic Transmission H ow many times have you had the oppOrtunity to '~yy something you really wanted, possibly·needed, but just didn't have the money till next pay day? And it probably 'didn't warrant th(! time lequired to take out a loan. Well, with a Reserve Balance A ccount at First National Bank of Orange County you can solve this sort of problem by becoming your own "loan officer'' . An RBA account at First National lets you decide when you need extra money, then it's transferred to your checking account, up to the amount previously·Jgreed upon, whenever you say. A Reserve Balance Account cos ts nothing when you don't use it, only the usual loan charge when you do. Stop in at the New Accounts desk at the F irst National branch nearest you and find out about a Reserve Balance Account. It's like money in the bank ••• literaUy. MAIH omca: It IM~ ill dOM'll-Orlnrt ..... .,....: NWIUil: SUie Olltep .. Biii COITA MUk Miu Vtfdl .. ~ n MCJOlNk Chepmtll &.. PrllSjlKI OltAMOC: r.,.11n 'Col4in1 SANTA Nfk. 17th .. T11di!I 1UITIN: Reel H~I .. Wlllnul VIUi. l'IUlll: SMU. .. Wandl fint M Pmo..4,,....., &lruiorBWr JIOI ------ . .. • r • 23" ' WO dif Cr ri a the mo pa th shi an Yo he ch th th D sil Bi d to tc c se A 'St , • • • .. • Communication Sa.ves Marriage .. ~ , By BEA ANDERSON Oflllt 01Ur Pl'-' St.ti Of ult the reJUtionships in the world, the marital one i5 the most d ifficult, acc ording to David Crump, counselor. Opening a series, entitled l\1ar· riage-go-round, Crump said that the marriage pa rtnership is even more difficult than the business partnership, which "I am told is the hardest or all business relation· ships. , '.'In business, you don't eat. sleep and bear or sire children together. You just do business together.'' Whal really hurts in marriage, he said, is Iha~ no one expects change -eithe r in themselves or their partner. ''Chan ~e r e quires -com · ' ' munlcation between people ... If you don't communi cate with either yourselr or your partner there ls conrusion, he claimed. "How do I say my real things to you? Will you · allqw nle-•(o ~ me ... hear me .;· .~y wo~ds . . ,!TIY ·meanings. Ot will you· .twist them ?" MUSTER COURAG E You have to muster courage to speak and yoll have lo listen, he ad· vised. . Marriage·co-round is a place where you ca11 ask, listen and bear. The public series, which is presented at 8 p.m. each Wed- nesday in the Unitarjan Univer- salist Church, Costa Mesa, begins with an introductory lecture by BEA ANDERSON, Editor TfftMIJ,Oct1btr IS, lt14 ,. .... , Crump. , T~n come smaller groups where "you get to be with yourselC and other people.'' Serving ·as facilitator for one group, Crump asked each to Jn· troduce themselves and give a ·brief resume. - Members included a woman In the process of a divorce <Al, a divorcee of two years {8), a man divorced for three years CC), two married couples Crirst, husband, D, 'wire, E, and second '!'i'ife, F . ·husband, G) who admittedly are having marital problems, and a widow CA>. SELFISH A bpened with, "I used to t))ink that I-waS selfish. 1 kinda thought I always came first. Now that I am in the process of becoming alone, 1 docomerirst.'' . C -"Thal was the problem in my marriage. I consider myself selfish as I came first. I always had to have the 'biggest cookie.' "I went to college later in life. She lhis former wire) always ~·an· 'led me around all the time. I told her I would go (to college) with or without.her support. "(told her 'there is no way I can make you happy if l 'm not happy. She wouldn't go a long with it. "I Celt insecure, that I was kinda ·dumb. I feel better about myself and my promotions. But my wife said I didn't care about her and lhe kids,." .Ci-ump -''You both needed bet· ter understanding. llow could _you get it?" INSECURITY H - I believe th-at your wife fell . insecure. Thal is \•:hy she \Vantl.'d you around all of the tirnc ... to supply all her needs. 1-lad yoU been able tO help her reel more secure, perhaps you could have been more free to go to school . Crump -"Wh al I hear you saying Is, 'Wh al 1 feel about me is going to show up on how I reel about you'." . · A-"~1y husband fell inudequate; and he.brought out my insecurities. Now that I have no one else but myself 1 feel more secure. "l do all the thirigs. I i:ucss I always did, bUt il seemed lik e he · was a lways telling n1e how to do them.'' C -"When I went to school I car· ried 20 units and ~·orked 20 hours a ~·eek. I know I neglected my wife and children. I just didn't have time." G -··1 neglected my wife, tOo. But I feel if you ~·ere a better organizer you woUldn't ha\'e had to (neglect the family.) Had I worked smarter, not l)arder I wouldn 't ·tiave. Men get so carried away with what is important. It's not worth , aoYthing without a wife.'' C -"Now I think you are over· reactin_~ '.' ONLYDlrSOMUCll . D -Objecting to the comment about being a better organizer, ''I can only spread myself so much. I .can only work with what I've p:ot. · "We to1d a co mmon goal and worked {ogether. In relrospect it seems that we didn't have any ·problems." E -:--"I was very lonely then. It's stilfthat wa y. Helping him didn't make me vf!rY happy. I thouJ!;ht it would." Crun\I) -"\'ou're saying thut you are not g<'tling somethinj.!." · E -·•J'm not gelling con1pan1on-· sltlp ... trump -"\\'hut do you do about ' it?" E -.. I guess I 'II ha\'c lo look elsewhere." tShc is go ing to school now.) "School he lps. lt's very .stimulating. "I guess I 'm lhc one ~·ho is ani,:ry all the tin1c.· I'm angry Ix-cause I don 't like the way things arc and I feel I can't change thc 111 . l feel ~hings are very stilted." Crump -''Docs he (yo ur husband l kno"" you feel this v.·ay?'' E -"lie should. I've. told hin1 enough tin1es." Crump to D -"llo\v do you fee l about it'!"' D -"It seem s like our li\·cs have b ee n a k u t ei do sco p c of prioritie s ... th e large house ... the move back to Caliror · nia. "To get these thin~s I have had to gene rate the dollars. \Ve get s omething a nd t he n it"s gt'l somethin« else. "I can only ·spread myself so far.'' .., • Crump -"I hear you say 'l'\'e tried so hard but nobod y recognizes it.' Have you told her?'' D -"Yeah. l'\'e told her." Crump to E -.. Do you know .this?" , E -"''eah, but he wants me to be his mother .. J ix his dinner, you know." D -''That's her fli ght or fantasy. I've encouraged her to go to school ... join clubs." • OUTLET FOR CREATIVITY Weaving, Mosaics Taught ' By ALLISON DEERR Orange Coast College in mosaics and 01 .... 0.11, l'lt.1:11111 finger weaving. Africans believe that you put your MOSAICS FASHIONED / spirit into what you.create with your Her mo sa-ic class. Tu_Jl-s'ifa y own hands. Wh en you give that work evenings at the OCC Skill <;enfer from to another, that person is touched by 7 to 10, begins with a Jim'il ll project to you. · learn the basic· ti e-'CulS ~nd tile set· J ean Hudson feels that is true of ting methods American ethnic art. "People have to create something "With .Ji in s upplies, you havi the or themselves. There is a need to be mateyla1 for your_ first r,rojc<:~ ~nd the creative. I think that is why so ma ny J!>?!-Sfor 1.atc.r projects. s~c said. are frustrated. They have nooutlet~or Mosaic~ 1s closer to a fine art th~n l .. , ,, a craft or a hobby. What you hove 1n crea 1v1 y. h d . b ·1 I . f f A-1rs. lludson was "just~ er t _e en 1s _a eaut1u .p~ece o ur- frustrated housewi~e" I king {or n1tur~ or p1e.ce or art your~ ?rou_d t~ something to do some · g to get her have 1~ your ho,me or share as a gift, • she said .· ou~.Jh~hdet~~~!es~'J1 c~~l~~~~nd was ·· -·A"1tfF1e·atniri_g· tile bas ics, h'er looking for something relaxing " she students spen.d the rest or the course .d ' on larger pro1ects from tables to wall sa~ flyer from Orange Coast.Colleg~ hang_i!:!_g,s to_klt~_h en tile~·- led her to a class taught by COsta .. r:>efi!gns h ave gone frOOl _lhe mos t ftfesa artisan-author Ec;ther Warner rcah.st1c to very . abstract . ~fy Dendel, "and J've been with her ever favontes are.~hose that arc the mos t since." spontaneous~ Mrs. Hudson studied for five years, SIMPLE WEAVING . . then eight years ago began teaching She. has a natural ~cc!Jng f~r fin ger the crafts she learned. "You can wea\'1ng, a n art which requires few make only so many of a cran, then tools · . you have to share your skills." . For her class, Thur~da}~ at 7 p.m. Currently she teaches four craft in Roon1 303 at E stancia J.li gh School. classes at Leisure World and two for stude~t s ne ed only $3 worth of materials. "Most people arc fa miliar with loom weaving, but few have heard of finger weaving," l\1rs. 1-ludson said. An ancient art, it has been practiced by American Indians. in Peru, by French·Canadians and in Africa. Usin~ a board like that used for macrame, yarn is '''oven "'ith the fingers into basic designs., l\1rs. Dendel"s book, "The Basic Book of Finger Weaving," new this . year, offers directions for e'verything from coll ars to bedspreads and yarn sculptures. "You can do finger weaving almost anywhere." The skill is related to braiding, she explained. and the wa rp is nC\'Cr tight, a s in some loo m "·Caving. Finger weaving is braiding ex1landed . .. This can. be done by someone "'it h no art background at all. It is sim ple to learn. and you can go as far as you \Vant to go with it." • F -··1 reacted to that statement. 1• I J!ot lhl' bugging rn css;ige, too .• : 'l'ou knov.•, ljo a nything, get t>usY. ~ but lea\·e me alont·. ·• E -·"J feel 1t 1s my turn jgoin g ll) "" school ). I wa nt my Creedom, but l .... ·ant him around al l the time.•· Crump -"If you v.•ant to be in· 1, lle1:icndt·nt. 1hen don 'l depend oft ·him so rnul·h." C01'11'AN IONSlllr B •·cOmpanio nship and pr1or1t1es ).;eep co1n1ng up au the ti me ''\\'hy do men want or seem to need less t•on1pu n1onsbip than .,.,·on1cn'!'' G -I've alw:..ys felt she (hi.'l "''ifel ,is not h:1ppy in marriugc. \Ve don't do anything "e likt! (he ex- plained t here v.•crc onlr a few . things they li ked in cu111monl. We •enjoy dining out, but v.c can't go to dinner ;d i the tin1c .. F "I v.·ant t'On1panionshipday- to-day, not just <it dinner or on \lo'CC kends. "\Vhen he comes home I want to kno\lo' how yo u feel. ho~· you really reel.·· C -••\\1hen guys spend time with their v.·ives. v.·hat do they get '! ' "Nagging.·· Crump -"\Ve must ren1ember lh;1t tod ay is where it 's at. We might do our lovio_g differently if v.·c li\'ed today as ·i f it is our last. · ''\\'omen arc the ones v.·no tune in· on feelings from the heart. l\1 en can learn a loL from ~·omen about in ·· tuition. "And , there is a lot "'Omen can learn from men." G -"What?'' · Crump -.. Tune in next week." 1'11rs. lludson said her discovery of these arts made a nc\v person of he r . .. I was , as they s ay, just a houscYlife, and unhappy about it. "As I le arn ed to .... -cave a nd de \'c loped some skills and b('gan teaching, I became a person on my own. There is that need in all of us to create, to share someth ing of our· selves. All the tools required for "What we arc making, ~rcatin g now is American ethnic art.'' large hanging, above, or collar modeled at left, are yarn, fingers and a workbo ard. Dr. Bietz a·n·d OCC: A Happy .~eunion · < . By JO OJ.SON What is the ma1ic or this man whO see iL held together through love. Re 0tu..0111,P1ws"11 ·keeps being invited back year after orfe rs thou ghts toward this end ," she At 7 p.m. they sta1tcd galhering in , Yf?AS::t9,l~clureon similar topicJ ? said. · · the Orange Coast College, the rai(hful "We enjoy him and think he has a · A couple who did not Wish to be Dr. Bict1 fans. lot nf.knowledgc to impart to us,'' said identified said. "\Ye just enjoy the They were young and old , dressed Raymond Foster or Jl~ntington. way in which he presents topics. lle's. up and dressed down, chattering and S<;ach . ''And we al~·ays go away entertaining as well as instructive.'' silent. feeling good ." They had heard him '"a number of This was thclastnightofDr.Arthur "He tells us our joke of the timesbefore." Bietz' 18th lecture series at the coll e·gc week-an intelligent joke, '1 added Sitting In the back orthE! auditorium during which he was lo speak on the .A1rs. Fosler. "lle's\'cryoptimistlc." · were Julie Joyce of Santa Ana and topic , Arc 1'11 an·\Vom1:1n Relations Oct· The Fosters have come to one other Gail Walsh or l·luntington Beach, both tcr? , orhls l~cture scries atOCC. students at OCC. They had brought lo this series, tilled Vito I Issues thot 1\lice Siegfre id of Costa l\Jesa Vt' as thc.ir sten(') machines and were hoping Concern You. he hnd alr.c:i.dy disc:u . there (Qr he r second Blelz lecture. to get some pr111ctice. lt was their fi rst sed Wings on Your Mind, The Strange · ~o\MJ..:RICAN FAMfLY . time toMa·r ·Or. Blcti. Dr. Sietz himself then walked into the auditorium, a lone. and surveyed the scene . He greeted a fc"' people sit· ting Oil the edge or thecrO\\d. \Vhy docs he hkc to eom~ and lee· ture at Orange Const College'' AUDIENCE SHAR ES "Because there is a lc\'rl of sharing lhat..'ts-possible in a group that reaches heights above the ordi nary one-lo·onc encounter. There is an alertness, a degree Or vitality in an audience th at a speaker s hQres, If he enler!S in," he said , weighing each \\'Ord . refreshed from the l11t('r::irl1on. . Dr. Bict1 . "h<1 onC'c s:ud hl' IO\'CS to drive 9n the freC\\':..y:-. "h1ch hC> calls "ma},l nifict'lll," ~:11d h1· still <Inc~ 1·11· joy driving nn thC'n1 llis secrl'l is ll'l IC'<l\'e in lllcnty of time and to "discni.::igt• the nervous system nn<I refuse to lake on traffic as a bull \\'nulcl a rna tador '' In h is t11lk abnul n1on-\vOm<in r elntionships. Dr. U1 <'l1. "aid th::it "llfest~ le s h::ivc eh:1nj:!rtl " :ind .. n\uny don 't secn1 to knO\\' "'hat they \\'ant. I h1n1an natui i-is 1n .1 ~n)\\'th periotl. l'han ,R:~ Is t'huolit'. \\'c'rc li\'ing 1n t·haos.·· G1•0ll 01.ll I),\ ,.S '!'he i:•ch1c·•1ltH' .n1d 1111111~tl'r said thul look in g to th(' \lfl !i l 1:; nnt the ank ('r. "The ,l!OOd olri i::..y.s \\'ere n1)t good. 'l'hal ·s u dclu:s1011 '' li e a sscr1ed that man·woma n rclat1onsh1ps ha\'l' never tX'cn as gl)(KJ us they are today because "humans ::ire b<'ltcr no\\' " Attraction of Death and The Foolish "J. am very lntorestedi In 'thv "I'm hor,ing 4 t will help In my 'l.I Stcreol)'J>CS of Age. Am'er\_can famil y and w~uld Uke td-aoclo,ogy c ass," Miss Walsh added. . . lie added that his dilil~· onc·lo·one encounters In his pri\·atc practice sometimes leave h;m tired, on~ he comes oul or a large group feeling "1\fr:nrs on the sitll• ::tr(' ok a~. 1 n th is \\·ay, b oth tiln h:1\'l' s<•pura tc rolc.,.-this IS-th(' kin Tl nr I alk \\'l! hc11 r "I'm not an alarm1!lt. I b('h('Vl' \\'C li ve In son\C\\•hat a tinfc oC transition. And here 1s the problem. "\Ve i:i.:· JJl•<.·t too 1nut'h \\'t· eun comprl'hcnd \\ha! thf' idt>:1\ m:in·\\'Qn\un relation· ~hi(l ~hould be. \Ye reo<'h , but ~e rt itc h loohish. (Sec ltEUNION, Pa At 02 • I f ' I ' { ' . . ' ••• ;! DAILY PtLOT T1.1e&d1y, October 15. 1974 ., Her Life Style NOt so Gay J)~;Ar\ A'i~ 1.A Nl'lF.RS · I 1·.1n 'f po.-.h llrl~ t.d~ 111 <Hl\ont· uhout this prnl1lc·1n ond 11 h1·n I t1•1l .I/JU i,1,hu11t '' y<1u v. tll u111l 1•1 ,.., .111d 11 h~ .Ann Landers 1 JIU ;l7 :111d "I.I.\ 11J1urr1•il in 1972 l'ol,1 h11.-.U;111tl 11:1 _.. .i n old1·r 111;,i1111ncl I 1h~co1·cr1·d li1u l;1t1· ht• 11 us a11 -.J euhollt• 111· t'l'fU.~l'd to 1-:l'I h1·lp I <'On(c.li;i. J rn ;1rr11•d hi1n ln.:cuu~c I h:1cl 'an uul of 11'C'tll<1t·k :.on 11hu ll C'•·dl•tl u futhi•r , ;1nll tlu ... n1an ap· J""-;1rl'd In li ke 1111· ho) t"un lt•ll if her hu~bantJ Ix blsc xuul. lk·forr v.•<.• v.rrc n111rricd Jo:d was a \t•r~ ~nod ln\'t'I', hut lhe~1· llUst five nionlh!> ht· hus b:u·cly loUl'hl'd n1c. The1e dayt, In mo1tt st1te1, dlvor-' ces ire gr1nted tor "lncom. 11atlblllty'' and ''lrreconcll1ble dlf· fcrences." I 'd say you have both. que1tion1 the children as lo What11 going on. \Vhat burns mo up ls that he 11 always m11klng vulgar pas•es and Obscene remarks. He thlnki that because he pays alinlony ho Is en· titled to the prlvllege1 or a husband. The last time he tried to drag me Into the bedroom I gave him a black eye. pest sol can lead 1 normal UCe 7 AMARRll'lD DIVORCEE so, he ls agah1 In trouble wllb. lb6 Jaw. · l\'1' u . .;k C'd hini lu discuss his dt·chnini: lnlcrcsl in sex ;ind he su~:-. hi' still lovci; me hut hu ju~l du"sn't fL•cl like it. DEAi{ ANN LANDERS: I was divorced a (cw months ago and my cx·husbond is driving me nutty. J~e hu s the key to the house and gives me only part ol nly alimony and. DEAR M : Go to )'OUr lawyer and follow his lnstruttloM. Tbere are severa) things you can do. First. you can have the .~ks on your • doors cb1n:11:ed. ~" ' You have the right lo be lert alon~, and If you put up with any more or hh1 1hen1nlgans, you aub· consclousli enjoy It. 1 ln.J11n11111·1· I 111ar ril0tl u 1·h:1rrn<·r. 3.'i. rllfl\ll l' 'l\ 0 ur h.uul.\onit·, v.ho h:id ill'l'l'r bt:t•n 1narT11·1I Ed :incl I 11t·n1 togt'thl•r only .t f1•iv n10111h-. but I W R~ !<illr{' ht• Y.(J11ld lft· lhc pcrfctt Four nitdlls tu :-.t week Ed 111usout ~ l\'lth "the boy!t ." lie \\'orks in a fiPld 1 v.•on't numt', 'but rllost 11( th1·m oir(' hnmO!ll'xunls. ' child support bccau11e he tay1 J am not compctcnt to h11ndle that much nioncy. The court granted him Vitltlna privileges (lo see the children) on Saturdays a11d Sundays, but ho spends those two days harassing me a nd paying no altention to I hem. Second, dellver 'tM kid• ~ HJM and make lt clear lhal he Is not to set foot In rour home. The law wlll protect )'ou. on thla one. n he 1how1 up, he It In \lloltitlo.• and you can It's not always ea!ly to recognir:e love, cspectolly the first time around. Acquaint yourself with the guidelines. Read Ann Landers' 110111 rnn I ll'll for ~ltrl!'' 1 ~ thi:i ~rounds for di1·orCl''.'-ALONl'.: A 1.()1' The man wa lk s in on us n•hcncvcr he re els like It. •le rum. n1agcs around in my closets and drawers looking ror telephone me&· sages, letters -whatever. He makes a general search and ¥!1r~hle ·~iu,~~e~~:.~~ t~~: ~~:p~~ h usha nd [11111 futhl'r. Now I need lo knu\1' ho\1 a Y.O!ll:11J 01:<:1\R Al.ON,.;: ll's unlikely )Ou'll be able lo It'll for 11ure, hut from yo ur lette r I SU.'IJH.!<'L your hunch ls correct. I've told him l don't waj'lt him around but It does no good. Will you please tell me what to do about this cal.I _&!le Police. . • The lawyer can de1111nd U.at be give yeu the thlld MIPPori and alimony,' In total. If hi f1U1 to dO mail 35 cents In coin and a long, stamped, selt·addressecl envelope with your request to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 3346, Chicago, Ill. 60654. ' . . . . . It's Healthy to Break Rules )ly ERMA BOMBtclt ·quarrel with th'e theory'.· Memo to: School Children A a:rade school principal Childre n s ho.uld eat Re: Nutritional Lunches tntheEastrecentlybecame· nutriti ona l!~ balanced 1. carrots are illegal on .so upset about the lack of meals. But children do not school premises. Children nutrition in the .lunches the take l~ ultim,atums. l 'm no 'br1na:in& them rrom home children were eating that he aulhonty, mind you, but l will need a hole from a declared an edict baMlng wo\Jld have tried the old parent giving permission to Junk food from the "Accentuate·The·Negative· have1.hein, or they wUI be cafeteria. Reverse·The:Pos_i~iVe·And· conflsea:ted by the office·· . I have a leelina: the kids .Make·The ·".\Jd·Tfunk·Y~~r-. and held until dismissal jammed the edict between .Jdea;l s·H1s·A nd ·f!.e •.~:time. two potato chips and two Drlw1n g-You·Crazy •P· 2. Lotker inspection for ,squares of Her1hey proach. . · .. thermoses containing hot ··chocolate and had it ror tun· · Instead or an edict, the vegetable soup or other .th._ ... . · 'bulletin would have read nutritious· dishes will be There is ·certainly no ·somethinglikethis: held periodically without AT WIT'S END warn ing. At that time, students are instructed to go to their lockers and stand at attention. DO NOT UNWCK YOUR LOCKER UNTIL A TEACHER IN- STRUCTS YOU TO DO SQ_ Your Horoscope Tomorrow Theronose s will be ·det• "o: ~d by the custodian. i. 81..caus e of student .Libra: Halt sp·ending • 'e1n .. nd, we are selling lresh fruit by the door in the · cafeteria. This is on a trial basis. ll we rind this is all students are having for. lunch it will be discon· WEDNESDAY OCTOBER16 SYDNEY OMAllR linued. Remember, fruit 221: Accent is oft cr.ea~1J,f)',, 1ltu1tlon 11 tndtc1ted -contains 1ua:ar and Biily change. int~nslfle4 ~-dott't throw ,noney after a Toolh 11 watchln1 you. To 1hlps. Nolh~_ngJ1 h1Jlw11-~t l0",1ne "Pr0Po1~tlon. Know 1vold con1e1tlon at fruit the.house 1~ remodeled or ~whtntoeall1h1lt. counter, pleaae have cor· residence 1s ch1n1ed:.~ i;.. reel ~hange. puroh~se is made. J.'}.~ ~: ICOJPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 4. Teaeher1 have re~ed budget1sstretc~fd· 1 '\ Jl): ~:\';:t on inotlve1, to the office that ralain ' ' . :...; p!so 1:-CyCleif'auch boxe1· and milk cartons Fiesta Plans Flowering ARIES <March. 2l·April 19): II.you dig deep, you strike pay dirt. Ir you are quickly discouraged, you rind dirt, period. The occult, the hidden, the glamor sur· rounding a mystery -these prove especially Intriguing. LEO (July 23•AUc. 21J.l" tbllt )'<iu in whaC )OU uk have ~•en foYnd on the Home and dome1Uc coh-·~,fOr -be nrt iV• sood for acbool 1round1. We know dition dominate. Malnt.aln · )'OU. Flnl1h r1ther than Lhert are 1tudent1 who have bal1pcc -strive tor.1 bar· lnluate.J.7Jeot. been 1neakln1 nutrltlous mony. Be mod!r• •)-· j&O AllVI <Nov. n.. foodt on the premlHI and avoid excest In e1kll111; ·Dee. Jt): Slower pace Jor tkla reaton 1tudent11 drinkin g and. ma Pl,\fhoial• be no teaaon ror ll1ve been potted and are promi1cs. .o; dl1cour111ment. Some, lmtructed to "take namea." El Otono f~ie st a de I-lores has been planned by the Auxili a r y of ~I ission Community Hospital as its major fund ·ruising event of the year. The dinner dance will begin al 7 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 19, in El Adobe resta urant. Ready lo arrange decorations arc <left to right) the Mmes. Howard Huizing, Wil· liam Pierson and Frank Cassady. ' TAURUS IAprll 20-May 20): Don't skip essentials. The thortcul now eould lead to Jong·r1nge dl(fieulUes. It would be beat to specify, to read between the llnes and lo be rrank, direct. IJEMINI <May 21-June 20): Communicate with co- worker1, others who sh.are common Interests, ·goals. There are chan1ea due - and employment picture co~ld be a!rectcd. VIRGO (A.•I· •.l·S.,pt. ""° rolflt havo·-~r best 5. Your prlnclpol will be • . laterttll at heart, clo want patrollln1 the lunchroom 22): Accent 11 on IPfflil t.ochtckv1rtou1f1Clon,Jn· where he wanti to' aee mea1age which clUHt·)'OU clllll1n&C01ll. potato ehlps, candy bara, ·to check acc.obnt1. totab, tortilla chips, sort drinks costs, projected caah flow. , CAPAJCOIN (Dec. 22· end Ice cream. Remember, Relative may M ,fnvolved. Jal). lt)! Accent 11 on frlen· , junk roods build aoft bone1, Ker, ls to handle rttpon·. dlhlp•allid romanet. Your IOI\ teeth, and· make )'OU FromB-1 •• Reunion "Our ln!liR hl 1s aht"at.l of A couple must ha\'c come ou r capacit y for doinJ! 11·h:1t . through the first steps lo v.•c v.•:inl lo d11 \\'1; ;ir1·11 ·1 . uchicve hrtcroscicual Jove, v.·llllngtO !it'lllcfnrlt·.~~" he noted, aiid a ll t he Dr. Hict1. l'Spluilu·d th11t lK•nrfits or lhc t•e sl of the in lhe paltl , m('ll :.inti 11·onH'rl lrvcls can be enjoyed ut dif· v.·('re so C'OllC'l'l'llC'fl 11i1h sui · f(•1'1'nt limes herl'. · \'i\'nl lhnr lhl'Y didn't huv1· '"J'hl' !'iadncss, ''he lamcn· t11n c In fll.vrll 01t lh1• [111111 11·rl . "Is that so muny v.·1Hn .. n 1'l•l1Hln11~tdp , h110HUls never 1novc to the "Tht• 11 u1•stlon or IHllJ· lu·({'J'()!lf'XUll l lol'l'," pi n{'.~~ 11ai1 not cvc·n 11:.kf•d l\IARRIAGf': l1 R(lhl.t:l\IS unHI r1•t•rn!lv " l\1nrrlugt~ prohlen1!!, hl' llf' adrlt•d ihat ''sl'\: is h·.~'I nolt·d . ;.ire ''µeri;nnnlit y in1p11r\Hnl lod11~· lhun It has probll•ms, H rixa!\011 ut . t'\'t•r b\'f'll " 'l'hl!i 1'1 hecn u~l· li•v1•li; or loving. a ni:in 11nrnun rrlnlioni;hip "Thc1'l' is a J:rcat mis11n· lllll:..t h,1\l' 111or1• j.!11111g fur 11 t/Cl"•lUntlin g Of ll'h:l t kll'(' i ~. 1<1d.1, h•·:..a1d J,111l' 1s a dcc11 ufh•rti11t1 .\lftf{E 111·:1'1'11 .coing to11ard anolhrr tlf'•'· · 'l h1·r1' .1rr 11tht·r S••n (111 .... 11cu1s Is the n1:t11 a Il l' returned lo the lopir h11111 .1111 · hurn ;i n hl·1n.c '' fc•r thl' l'lt'nin$!. arc 1n:1n · n,11• ... l lu~ \\111111111 h:J\t' thl' \\0111an relationsh1f>S h11t :1h1hl\ tor·o1n rn un lt·;11t"' 1l'r. ;u1d r hnll('ngt•d !ht' • l';·rl1:1 11.., \\l' ar1• 1•s 1wt'· .11uti1•111·c: "You !!Cl inlhl'l'l' l 1nl!n11•1t·lh;1111:..pu~~1 bl1•ln and he one of tho:-.c 11hu 1 nnrt11 111n:. 11f p rt·..,1·111 n1 .ik1·1 tbctt rr'' .c ro111h" ·rape J"{•rordc rs rli1·ked J)r il i('t t. rh1·n :1 s k~'d hi.; .di Ol'l'r th(' aud1tonun1 a ... • :n1tli1 ·r1t't' r t tlH•)' 111•1'1' J)r fliet;:' talk ,c:11n1• !() <1 tl 1._.1p.1hlc•,,f rna1urc ll\\·1•. · l'rHI. 'l'his ltHllt'.~ at thl~ c•n1l nf Vur three pcopli! in lhl' ' (h(' typ1 •f( 11f lo\'ln~. t''lThl lf( ;i urli11nc<'. it \l'll S the IH!h t h1• Ii•\" .,f ,1 n1(l llH.•r (01 ~• lirnc thc.v hu1I fir11~hcd ;, ch ild 'l'hl·11. th1· l111e uf ;1 :-;rri1:s1rith Or. Bi('Lt. 1·l11ld 1111' ll :.. 01nthc·1 1'hl'll, l\y a ll n11l11·at1 nns, th c·y pf'l'f ai:1• !111(' 1111 th1• llnrl al l l h(' l'l'St uf the 11 t1e1l1·..,11•111 ~1.11;1· f l'•1111th t~ ;11ulh•ncc plunnl•d tu be bu ck 1 fl.1!0rn,1I li1\<' 11h1t•h IS OJ for1hcl0th. t•ultur;1 ll1 ('n ncllt 111nf'd. )f':1rn1'tl kind or loll', :iucl J1n:d h h1·!,.111c;~~\11:d h11l" '"I h1 .., t .. 1hi• l11 ~hl·~t. (1iil•\I nlf!"I \)llf'!Hlid of hun1 11n r1·lut1nn,hipi;," l>r llit•l7 1o;11rl "1-hii. 1n1·oh cs ~~ '1 3 Full. S1rvlc1 ' Loc1tlon1 In Huntington 811ch ·) PRESCRIPTIONS --;:'LJiffiE:!Lr'Siiil 0 """ ....... 0 '""'"' r Ltl 115 , .. 111.,..., ,,..Ulll , t rot,!1H1t111 UP~?!-._SJ.~RY :. ~ . .... "'' ,·~ ,,, Jiii llfffl .... '" JU-U01 1' I Hlltt!o~flO!I HttMur .. 1 .. 4'N , .. _".·.'\i.~.~-~ .• -=_;_.~_': .• ~.· ···-·I~·:~~"-~·:~ ··~4iJJ • '\ ! , Peering Around CANCER <June 21.July' Contributions sib1lily -in person. · . wt1he1 can be tullllled -If .1liep a Jot. ·a 1 .. A-t ->· You are ver1illle. Means Tr1a1tme.lt'llwork. U R~ (Sep · -.>''-"l • .. • don't 1t1y put -don't lnllJt Money Situation dotl ftlure ooonlyone Wly. ~m1~entlr. The end Ola " • AQUAIUUI (Jan. IQ.Feb. ...._ ______ _ 11>: You 1et chance to Prov• 1 point. One who can ·••Y ye1 or DO ll)'t )'ff Ind now lt It up to )'or.a. Produc:e -orelae. ~pea~ers Arronged PllCIS CF•b. If.Marth .IO)l Your philooophy comH to lbrelront. People want to hear yaur vlelli1, lon1·ran1e D• B -h t ho r. 'd E Ba plan1. Your tense ol com· r. r1c an, aut ro 10 pres1 ent; u1ene met. murtfC•tlon ls helihtened. AAUW ·books, ha s just baen secretary; James C. Wat-., ATTENOING TllE fall P.frs. Jane.1 Barkawi or. honored by th«: French' ion, tre11urer; Stanley You fMl more alel'.1, alive, meeti ng nf the Fellowships Fountain Va 11 ey 11 ig h Government, which made Cochr1n1 'ru1hlnt chair· vllal. Progr~m Commit~ee.of the .School will present a her Cheyalier dca Palme1 man, and Raydean M1hltr, irToDAYlllY°OUltllll· American_ Assoc1at1on !'t program on the role or .Acadenlfques. brldte c~1lrman .. ftDAY you are spiritual. 8 Uni ve r s it y Women Ill Amerlcanwomeninhistory , 't r'ptrtactlonlat, fascinated \Vash inglon, D . C. was for the Thursday, Oct. 17. CM Women StQdentGrentl •wltht~eatiertndlaw. Ca rol Arnold of Cosla l\.1csa. meeting of the Westmin· l\.lorlon W. Barke, MO, Ott' Th T '_ .. 1.1 ~ Ytu are bt1llfnln(nowto ster.Founlaln Valley· will discuss acupuncture· ll et~ Ill .IOnftllY. 1xrind t0 have tn0rt-fijn ~ SUSAN C ROUSE, a Branchotthe AmerlcanAs· when the Costa Meta wlll .1.ward more.1thl:n ou otilre-•ndnextre•r Junior at Costa l\.l e'sa 1-llgh soclation or University Women 's Club meets at $10,000'worthofedueatloial' In May you wll d~ 1'chool , h:.i s received the Women . ·noon Friday, Oct. 18, In t11e""lrant1 In the r_teld of IOmethlni Important-tor third annua l Ca ndystripcr· Mrs. Wiiiiam Oenlthorne clubhouse. 8utd1nce and Co11n11llllt. others and youraelf. of·lhc·ycar award al Costa or Fountain Valley will host 1ccordln1 to Mr1. 9on .. l\-1es:i ri.l e morial llospilal. the8p.m. event. Cho-Omega' Schorov1ky, presldentot·Nu She ha.'\ vo lunteered more EptllonCh1pter. lhan ·100 hours since joining' Chi Oml!ga Alumnae of The funds wlll be awar-·lr========================:::i::::;;:========;;;;- lhc °''anizaUon In April, Alliance the Newport Horbor Art' ded to Junior, tenlor or y Q U ·• >R E "I N V I T I! D 1973 and ser ves as its Or. Colette D. Bri chant, will hear an announcement graduate at'Udenta, baffdon' sccrct:.1r y·trcasurer. proresso r ol l"rcnch of the group's don 1 atThlon to ,1c 1 ho 1 1attdlc1'blllty1nd!tn1n· ·TO·,.. • • GROW • • . HAVE · clviliJatlon at UCLA, wil l Hope •1aven Schoo Ul'I· ca nee , .. , ... speak on the tople "Silting day. Oet. 18, when lhey Anyone lnl<r11led In op. :fUN • , 0 MAKE FRIENDS NF. \Y 1'1 E l\1 BE RS ol at table with our rorbears or meet in the Bahia CoMn· plylnr ror a 1rani mar · . • Delta Gamma Sorority at .\he XVII century" when the thian Yacht Club. write lo Mra. Schorov1ky 1t • Gcrtdtn Wiit ~~ frtvttH ooml'Y!anlty membett to 1 I UC I arc Pandora Rich· Alliance Francaise de Ja New officers are the M· 2980 Ceder Ave.1 lJ:ont •••k tirltt of 'oroudt'1 calltel Explorallont In mond.l.eig hKoC'feldo,Debl Riviera Callfornienne mes. J . E. Tce&ardln, ,Beach.90806. Oonwnuniolt60'1. Th•M ••not thir1py gfoup1; lhey are II F'll F Jodi t F Id O t 18 C1Ptn IO ~-Wl\o woutd lllct to fain who wish to ••Plnd rov.•n, · C'n rcy, mee s r ay, c · · • ..._...,... atw1 .. Une11rat1ndlt'KI of cthert. Groups Dtgln Palm blndl', Janine F'isctlc, The gathering will take•1;=;:::;:;:~~;;~:::::::::::::::~~::'.:::~:::=1I the week of N~. 4, day or evening , no chirge! To Join, iual E r~n F e c an d t~e rri I place in the Neighborhood! fill out lhe tPC>licttlon blank belOw. For more Information call Krogius. a ll Orange Coast Congrega tional Church, fAU NEEDLEPOINT .CLASSES (114) 892·7711 ••I. 615 °' 561 o' coma 10 en"""'"''°" residents. Laguna Beach. ~Coffee Hour" Twelday. Oct. 15 11:00-1:1:00 or Thurs .. Oct. TGUCJht by 1-,_Cr:o1Ht1 .tr. 1,:QO-t:QQ._Col!"' Afl•IT• 011~. Golden wat1 College. -. Peter A. Holmon, Ph.D. Licensed Psychologist announces the establishment of Private Practice Offices for Individual, Couples, and Divorce Counseling at WJ Newport Center Driv~, Suite 265 Newport Beach Telephone 640-5785 PALL sil111 • Oc.-.. II ........ ,._,..._ 21 ___ ,, . 10:00 a.m. • 12:00 noon Ribbol1 Sampler (Advanced) 12:30 p.m. · 2:30 p.m. Basic Sampler (Beginni~) ,_.,.o.w..rzt · 12:30 p.m. • 2:30 p,m, Artn Sampler (inlttm1dl1te) w.......,.0c,...Je 1():(()1.m. • 12:00 ooon. Original lrlsh Lace 'Piiiow Unfttmtditltl '\. 12:30 p,m, • 2;30 p,m. Bargtllo S.mpltr (be;lnnlnoJ 7:30 p.m. • 8:~ Atal'I S.(l'\(lfer (lnltrmedl1teJ ... ...,.o.. • 10'.30 1.m. • :1:00 D. , ~tl"IOP 0.-et run tour wttkl. plut one all-day wOrkihoP. Fae: 135.00 • tnelUCllng tN1lerl11,, Chtckt, paysbl9 to Bunny ~ mu1t t0comii1ny appUcallon . I 'i --------................ tes·-------· ·-WHIC ..... , ... , ... ~ ....... ttu azltlt• ... #12i 11744 ..... WHISf, ............... -. Ctlf. tJ647 ............... ··················· ..... ··················· . . . .... ············ .................. ····"-",, ........... . ON THE SCHEDULE OF GROUP MEETING TIMES 1'1.EAIE CIRCLE YOUR FIRST, SECOND ANO THIRD OOCU AHO MARK 11 , 2, or 3 IN THE APPROPRIATE a..a.e. DIY oroupi meet tot one hour •nd 60 mlnulff' r1Qt1t Cll'OUPI meet fOI two hout1. You will be tdvl"d of th9 rir;. encs_pteoa of m1e11no lot' t~ oroup vou 111In,11 tool\ •-...... loned. OE~DLINE ~OR APPLICATIONS \8 OCTOHR 24. 1914. MCMIAY ftaSIAT WWlllllOAT M.llSOAT •. .-.,,, tt.. •• ... _,..... 11-...... 11-7pA 1,.. 1,... Ip.a. '"""' ,,.. MOTll Grot10t meet on campu, and wu1 occ111o'n111y bt Vldeo0t1ped, tor lt1rnin9 purr.io1e1: 1ne1e ltDll ire abloluttlY confldenlil!ll ind wltl only be viewed by lhe group leldef' •nd hla lul)ervlslno instructor 10 Improve lht leader't ills • • '' ~ ' l I ·' • • • . I • r • • MIXED SINGLES r:::::::::---7,~E~e! TAKe A r ' ' f OlleH! l JU51 SIT M<J fONGUo ! SIP OF 1~15. TUMBLEWEEDS Hl6H 1lif:IR! "TELL ME,CRA2!.', DID<,()() EVER ASK <,l'.)URSELF lHE OlD ETERl<AL OUE&Tla-l 'l1lUL.JI 2 """""'-. SURE RJ"1K<,l I ' . •. ·RGMENTS N011Ce eNNYl\llN' PlffeR'NT '1'001 ME:? l 50 WHAT DID <,()() COME UP Willi FOR Ai-I AN5WE.R + . ..... • by Tom K. Ryan by Dale Hale MAM CY by Ende Bushmlller .. OH, DEAR-- SLUGGO FELL DOWN THE ~MANHOLE TODAY'S CROSSWORD PVZZLI ACROSS 51 lotertw!nt-1 I Ancient 5.2 Life Ye1terd1y'1 Puule Solved: GrHk w11lll proce11 S Rtliglou1 nKoenll'( f111IY1I 56 P.1J9tttold 10 50% m1teNI 14 J1cf'·,.·: 'T'J 60 Fondriea1 i;;ebt,rity 61 Nol btiyond 16 H1,11b1nd of r1p1i1 · 61thth1b1 64 Fr1N;lurt'1 16 Con1ltting of rivtr IPllCh 65 Nonh 17 E•lrtmtly Amerlctn · big lndi1n1 19 Put in pitch ee Oo 1 l1rmlng 20 Vind 1g1ln Job 21' Commenced e7 Th111-m1111d 23 Otlttt utterly: tchoon1r• Slang 68 Nltwlt1 26 Nlg91lln city 69 St1r11 II 21 Bt very DOWN 24 Stop: Naut. 44 Ch1ng1 tP.. hungry 1g1in t S1imut1t1 25 R1llev11g1ln contour of 30 $1111 of lndll 2 R•vlllllkln 27 lndi1n1poH1 48 "Fu" IP'ld, 34 Bow-lhap1d 3 C•r11I gr1u 500 driver -----1" things 4 Police 28 Mu11ofly1ic 48 Toth• 35 Son ol J1c:ob 1t1tJ11lc1 po1trx_ other tide 37 Off. ol 011. 5 L1111mp1y 29 "On -nllir 49 Ch1ng1 In ' Tr1n1. e Time perkld w1yl": Sling dlr1ellon 31 Vehlcle 7 Light b1ee1e 31 "----· 1nd 52 Sm1R piece 39 Set In order 8 Droop1 Juliet" of gtound 41 1002: Rom. 9 Behind ··-32 F1r1weH 53 Ridlculed : 42 GrHk le1t1r 33 Dock lnform1I 43 Contrlbute1 10 Souped-up 1uppot1lng SI In 1urplu1 10 the pot 1uto: 2 word• unit SS Rom1n rullf 44 Ou1ntltvof fflm 11 In ---·: 3& H1bfew MinOI' 57 Stlllfully ·45 lt1M1nc:itv Roudnl11d P~phet 58 PtumUk1 n1tlve1 12 Country rold 39 Mother of frui1 47 Omit: 2 word• 13 R1n 1w1y Perseus S9 Cl11vu &O D1pl111 18 ...... m111r 40 Anlm1ttd the 152 Stnll" drink gr1du1ky 22 Cognlt1n1 mind of " &3 Golf big hem I I •' , PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH WOIALP YOW ClrAWL THifOWfM MWGK ANI> Mitri 'lb N WlTM Ml? DICK TRACY ' VIS! I' I '' . ,, ... : . :J WOWLP VOio( Klff lHf Vl'Y 6'01ANO J: WALl<IU> UPON 1 SAM. MAYE THE L.AB SET UP OUR PAPIER MACME RIG. ,.-,.,.-,-'-.! '$1UUH. DOOLEY'S WORLD • Ml~1 MIRROR, 0-1 TME. WA.U., WHO IS 'TllE FAIRE$T Of 1\lEM ALL? MOON MULLINS Tu!!dly.Octobtr15.197' " ,,. DAii. Y ;,LOT 81, by ROl)ff Braclfltkl · 1r!> AAlll>11> llAV& fMH IN A Nw- 1HAT OQESNT Mil~ ENGUSU . ' GRAlloMAA. ~ byhrclJ..._ "TllANKS f>.l/fW//oY, THOU<;H ·· JILL GIVE 'EM A G0oP SNIFF IN A MINUTE •.. .,,,. ____ .. --- ANIMAL CRACKERS. I T>41~KI FEl!L IT/ 0 / )\ 104') .S~.f:!.~$:1 .__ _____ ...Jl!l. by Charles M. Schulz 4 !!) . a.QNI< I ~-· # • ••• by Harold Le Doux MeANWM1LE I THINK I'LL &E AT VOVR Pl.ACE THEY'RE TRY· A&OIJT FOUR, MISS &LAIR! ING 'TO PIN CAA 'fOU TELL ME WAAT MEL CAATER'S THE PROBLEM IS ? /v\UROER YfS! VE~! WOUL O "IOU Llf ClOWN IN A P'~OOLI I '" l M..O~T C~IT SAFE•Y? AND JUNIOR.. '10tJ COTt> TMAT ME01CAL SUPPLY ... ouse ON MAIN ST. ANDCETME A CERAMIC BRAIN l'IOOEL I. ON ME! by Mell >OW exPICT Ml TO MAlrlrY A MANW~~ FILTMY MAlllTf? by Chester Gould WHAT'S WE1RE UP. MISTER GOING TRAcYi' TO MAKE A HAT, VERA. 1 ' , ' , . , J! ,; ll by R04Jer lo~en -----,,~'* ... ~ "I'd sure make a perfect candidate for some pubu~ oflice - jell the things I keep saying I'm going to do and I never do ianyofth~ DENNIS THE MEN~ I I ' • • . ·: . ' • ' .. . . .. • . • • ; • ' . • • • • • • U-f DAILY PILOT tue5'J~¥. Oc1obe1 16, Hl74 • , b~wn ing Bids t-0 Give Dodgers Edge Tonight • A's 3-2 - Favorites; Evert Wins 'I.A S V!<~f;/\S, -Nc\"ada book- makers havl· n11ulr thr <Jakland 1\'s 3·2 fil\'Orlll's to "1n ton11!hl's third game of thl' \V orld St·nt•s, but !ht· l.os 1\ngc lt'S Oodgers r£'n1:1in :-.light fo.i\·oril1ts lo 1;1kc thC' llt rll'S Bookmakers quott'tl G1 ~to S odds on the Dodgers-to win the;> hc;>st -or...-e,·cn !!el. The odd'i \\'1•1·c IJU:.lt'<I l>cforc thl' Series <ind h;1 \"t• not chung1·d. 1-:a<'h trarn 'has \\ uu one .:::imf·. 'rhl' od ds on the A's ~·e1·c G Io 5 lo \\'Ill the Series. Ctts ttls 1l1J•·11t1c•••s LOS AN<;i~l.ES -Chl'i.$ f:\·erl and Roscn1 ;1ry C;1 s;ds scored convincing \'it·torics in 1 he opt·nini:.: round or lhe SI00.000 V1r,ginia Slin1.~ chan1pionship tennis tourn:1 lll(•11t i\1011day as 11n clt•c· Ironic monilorini.: (lt•v1t·c OVCfl'Uled a linesm'an on a crucial call in Casals' t1ium1Jh. OAK I.AN ll t A I'> 1'he tern· be just the thing that the A's need to der in Al Downing: Dark revealed: ''l there I expect hlni lo I.brow" a shut· r~, h~s !T~: o~r:~~C:w~~ra c~~l1~~~ pcsluuus Ot1kl:.nd A's hope to ('>:plO<lc Oldd some punch to their recent Pµnch n1lght bat Bill North rinl lnste~d or .out.•• dispj j But lt won't ruffle him 011 tu111.:ht "'llh their bats insteud of their .:ind Judy hitting. Dark, whose team second. tie has more power as a right· Hunter Is not so sure abo.ul • 0 . F. n ey. 5 tcmpf'rs in the third game of lhe 1974 '''on the World Series opener -..Ith on handed hitter. 1 might also, move shutout, but he's pretty conl1denL th~.~~~~ ~c s:tyo~ this unl(orm, I give \\'orld Series with the l.os Angeles .5:0me of the ~the.rs around in the a~ta,vlcto~~· 1 OUrballparknow; 100 perccni." Jlunter said. "I don 't llodgcrs ()u TV To11l9ht, 5:30 lineup, too. \Ve ve Just got to get $0me ·. We ve ao em n ' h th r 't's In a cow pasture or 11 ··l'nl .e.xpccting us tu break oul any more runs." Rnd that's definitely to our advan· care_ w e e 1 1 .. day nO\\' bul I've bCcn exi>ectlng that Cllauttf'I• 4 and J I The A ·s ·-may not be hitting well tage," said Hunter. "We're m_ore stadium Cull or peop ~-be au , ror six ~flt:ks ... So I don 't reully undistinguished 3.2 victory Saturd<1y lately, but they've certainty had the familiar with the layoul,,of the field ~unter, ~~~:: ~~!c~d 0~ h!ff ~~ knov.• "said 011kl:1nd m~1nrii;cr Al,'in in I..os Angeles and then lost the pitching. And the best on their staff andlhefeclofthelnfleld. c~aims thf 100 000 s~lary might Uhrk: w)losc tcn1n has had 11111re second game by the same score, ls goes tonight, 25-game winner Catfish The l~bacco-chewing _Hunter, well his year Y oJ eri forltto'nlght. not ire recent I\' ror hilling people th.-in thinking about an adjustment Jn his ll_pnler. rested since he only pitched t_o o~e make the D g ~ 'hitting bascb:.;lls. hitlingalignment. "He's a great starting pitcher," baller on Saturd~y after working in A chunge in the balling ordc.r might Noting.that the A's face'a_ left.·ban-sald Dark. ''Everytime he. goes out last week's American League playof· /OAKLAND COLISEUM I ~-~· .... ;-.: )<"" .Atf · ·'.<·:-:.: ... ~·.·.······················<· ••/:•.:::}:•••······· .·.-.·.·.·.·.·.·.·. 400 ft .-.·.·.-.·.·.-.·. . . . . . . . . . . . ... ' ... ' "-._ 3 3 0 f ..... : : : . ~ ...... 3 3 0 --.....,, t . • ••••• ······: ••••.••••• ··········:::· ........................... --:_\\...-\,_. Just Another Game •. .Incredible Dream Comes True·---Cey OAKLAND (APf'..:..Third baseman· Ron Cey, one of the many young stars of the Los Angeles Dodgers, declares, '•·w e try to play like this is just another ball gam e." E\·erl po.i ss c d Froncoisc Durr· fl'J)('atcdly :1s J)urr raml' lo !he net <1nd she St'Orl'd a 6-2. G·2 victory over the l"rcnrh pl aye r. Casals rushed the ·net repeatedly 10 dcfc:it Karen Krant· tckeor Au stralia , 6·4, 7·5. . ....... " ...... " ..... . - Still he readily admits the World )Seri es prei:;ents a tremendous scope, "a total scope tha t tr you stopped and thought about it, that alone might get to you .. , playing those games in Los Angeles with its mlllionsl>f people and being wached on television by mil· lions more.'' The hard·hitting infielder, 'known as the 'Penguin because or his distinctive running style, didn't think he or any or the other younger Dodgers were ner· vous, even in the first Seri es game. Casals led t\ranlzckc four games to three in th(' second ~cl t1nd v.·as "'in· ning lh e eighth gan1e 40·30 \vhen Krantzckc hit a shot to the baseline "'hi ch the linesman ruled in bounds. Casals' 1·l·turn shot \rasout. Cascils appco.i lcd the call on Krant- :zrke's shot to umpire ~like lllanchard y.·ho \\'<JS monitoring the electronic black box attached Lo 11 grid under the rourt surface . Blant'hard said the box sho\\·ed t h:it I\ ra ntzckc 's shot \\'as out. ~lt•rfn119h fff.•t 1rrt1.tt SAN FHANCISCO -Danny J\lur· laugh announced J\1onday he will stay on the job as manage r of the Pill· ·Sburgh Pirates. .. I'm physic<i tly able to do anything J y.•anl , and I "'ant to manage," the 57 · ye~r--0ld J\lurt;1ugh said al a news con· fcrence called by Piralcs gener<1l manaJ!er Joe L. Bro"'"· Tat1t1 Pr 1t'i11s S\"D:"\E\'. Au stralia -American Hostoc 'l'ann1·r \\·on his first round malch a ~a inst Au strali a n Di rk Crealy , 6·2. ()-'.I. ~londay night in the fi rs! round of l he S7 5,000 Australian in· door tennis championshi ps. Onnv Parun of New Zealand do"•ncd Sher\\'Ood Stc"·a1t. 5·7, 7·6. 6-4, and li1ike Estep tripped P;rul Kronk of ,\ust ra lia, 6·3. 6· I. Ukker Trhunp/1 s BARCELON 1\, Spain -Top·seeded Tom Okker of The Nelherlar\ds beat fo'ranliszek Pala of Czechoslovakia, 6-2, 6·3, i\londoy in first round play in the Spanish international tennis tour- nament. , Jan Kodcs . Czechos lovakia, defe<ited Nicola Spear, Yu gosla\•ia. 6-2. 7-5: t:ddic l)ibhs bcut ~filan Holocck. Czechoslov<Jkia. 6-2, 6·0: Jaime Fill o!. Chile, outlasted Norman 1-lolmcs . 5-7. 6-1. 6-4; and Andrew J>at· tison. Hhodcsiil , beat Joachin Loya: titayo. i\t ex ico,6·1, 6-3. Other first-round \\inners includ ed f'rancois Jauf(r('t of t~rancc, Juan C.isbcrt of Spain, Ray i\1oore of South Afric ... Roger Taylor of Britain, Barry Philips ~foore of Australia, Thomas l\och of Brazil. Uli Piner of \\lest Germany and Buster tilottram of Britain. I ' .. ft. 1''0111Pll M'itl :'ol EX ICO -1"hc tlefending Olympic rharnpion .J ~1 pane sc nicn's team d<·fe;tll'd Hl·d ('hina, 15-11. 15-3, l5·3 ~londay 111 tht• third day of lhc v.•orld \nll1·v hall f h;1rnpionships being pla ~·t·lt in larger cities throughoul i\lc•\ll'O In ;1nothc·r n1;1tt·h the U.S. \\'Omen hPld un· .1n aroused Bahamian team lo "" Ill I j I. 15 0. 11 ·I5 a11(l Hi l·I In othl·r n1t·n·s n1 att·hcs. llussia \\l11pr1t·d ~;g ~111. 15!1, 155. 15·5: Cuba d1•lt•<1tt·d \'1•ne1.1u•l;1. lft· ll . 15-2. 15·9 :ind Bi•lgium t11 11pccl (."ana.da, 15·6. IS· 9. 15 8 .flttl'iN llOtlf•rt•fl Al Credits LA Pi telte r s A's' Jackson, Once Unhappy Yeager . Writer Clash Nearly Became Padre OAK LAN fl IA P) -··Yeah." said1 Steve \'eager, "for S25.000 I'd have been a San Diego P::idre. ··NO\l' I'm playing for Lhat much in one seri es." said the Los Angeles cat- cher. a st;1ndout defensively and of- fensive ly in the 7l);t \Vorld Series. A year ago, Yeager "·as demanding that the Dodge rs play h"im or trade him. Buzzie Bavasi. president of the· lhen·financially-plagucd Padres, said he could have purchased Yeager for $25,000 from L:os Angeles, but .those \Ve re the days "'hen San Diego owner- ship "'BS "·atching pennies. If Oakland O\l'ner Charles 0. Finley 'knew th en \\'hat he knO\\'S now. he 'd probably have loaned Bavasi the money. or made a deal himself. ··t-le 's the best defensive catcher in baseball," said ·sal Bando. the A's captain. after he banged into Yeager <.it home plate in Saturday's Series opener. Yeager, despite a L"•isted and bruised lr ft knee fron1 the collision. caught Sunda:v's 3-2 Dod ge rs vi ctory and hi s t\l'O hits ,e;.1\'e him a .500 bat· ting average for the Series. · 'l"he 26 -vear-old \'cager. \\'ho wears sh:ittcrpr'Oor gl;i sses behind the plate, "·on'l' be cat c hing ton ight 's third game or the Series. but not h('cause of his knee. ~1ana ge r"\\l;dter Alston na med Joe t~crguson . \\'ho played 1i ght field in the first l\\FO games and hit a tv.·o-run hom e r Sunday. to r ece ive Al Do"·ning·s pil{'ht•s . One ke}' to that is Oakland'..\. use of Foo tball Ratings 11J .l.fto(iUICI ''"' 'righl·hander Catfish Hunter. Alston normally uses Willie Crawford in Ferguson's right field slot again.st right-handers, forcing Ferguson behind the plate. Another key is that Yeager normall y catches Dodgers pitchers Andy tilessersmith and Don Sutton . Yeager expects to be catching a_sain \\1ednesday a nd Thursday nights when the Dodgers pitch !\-tessersmith and Sutton while Oakland is' expected to counter \Vil h left-handers Ken Holt- zman and Vida Blue. Yeager no longer is unhappy, and he credits l\1e ssersmith and Sulton, as well as hard "'Ork. All season he regularly "'as the first player at the ball park to lake extra hitting prac· lice. "It's been a good year,'.' he said. "I opened the season warming up pit· chers in the bullpen. l opened the playoffs in the lineup and I opened the \Vorld Series in the lineup. · ''I know I've popped o£f bCCore. 1 Jet lt be known that I wan~ed to be traded. Then I was catching maybe , once every five days. So all my hard work paidofL "I caught !\1essersmilh (a 20-game· winner) and I caught Sutton rrom when he "'as nine and nine lo a 19-9 record. A lot of my Succe&s I credit to ·Andy. Ile requested that I catch him. and then Don felt the same way." Love t o Lakers? CH ICAGO -Coach f>ick !\1·otta of the Chi cago Bulls denied l\londay that for"·arcf Bob Love had been traded to the Los Angeles Lakers. · Over Story OAKLAND (A P) -"You 'd better not get around m e alone -if you do, you're in trouble.·• The speaker was Oakland A's out· fielder Reggie Jackson; the object o( ~is wr ath, sports writer Murray Olderman. Jackson and Oakland pitcher Vida Blue were angered by a magazine ar-· ticle written by Olderman, general editor of Newspaper Enterprise As· sociation in San Francisco, and they vented their wrath at Olderman during an A's workout Ptfonday. Olderman walked onto the field lo · watch batting practice and Blue said to Jackson. ''Hey, here's Olderman. '' Jackson then left the balling cage, ~·aved a finger at the 52-year-old Olderman and gave the writer a 10- minute, expletive-filled dressing down in front of several dozen sports writers and photographers. "I want to embarrass you," ; Jackson said. "I invite you to my ·home and you · had lo write that ·trash." •· ''I didnl call you a liar,"Olderman said to Jackson . _ .rThat 's not the point," Jackson said. ''I'm calling you one." Finally J oe Reichler, special as· sistant lo baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn, stepped in and attemp· ted to quiet Jackson dO\l.'n. Blue then took over, but in a somewhat more subdued tone. He told Olderman that although he had been quoted in the article, "You never talked to me." Jackson was apparently mad about the general lone of the article, which dealt with his a lleged battle with other A's pla)'ers ror leadership of the team. . ··w e've been winning for -two seasons, almost 200 ball games over that span. \Ve know how to win. \Y e know how to come from behind and we've done it. \Ye have a great ball · club. Still if we stop and think about what the \\'orld Series really means, it ·might be tough to.handle. "For me this season has been the in· credible dream , first the All·star game and now the World Series: Something you dream about, and either one i5 somettiing a lot of players don't achieve." On the Series itself, Cey said, "Oakland has a rine team . It has to be -brltiey-wouldli't have been cham· pions three straight year5. We have to battle all the way, but I think we've, commanded some respect Crom them." . The Dodgers lo!\_l 3-2 in the open ing game at their home stadium and then won by the same score on Sunday They took their first look al the Oak land Coliseum on Monday evening to get an idea of the playing conditions for their 5:30start tonight. Steve Garvey, Bill Buckner, Jimmy Wynn and Davey Lopes all agreed the advantages at that hour would be with the pitchers. . ''It's the toughest time.to hit," com· mented Garvey but he and the others pointed out the sun WO\J.ld set soon ar. terthe game beeins. RON CEY "It Jooks like a nice park," said manager Waller Alston. "Just so it doesn't gel windy like Candlestick tand they say it doesn't.·· Candl estick, the home of the National League San Francisco Gian· ts, is located across San f'rancisro Bay from this home of the A's. "I don 't think the sun will be that much of a fa ctor," the Dodgers ' skip- per added. On another point, he was asked ir he might bring ace relier pitcher ~like !\1arshall in early ir starter Al Downing got in trouble. "If we 1ump into a lead and Downing gets in trouble. then maybe I might. On the other hand, we wouldn 't want to have !\t ike pitch too long and then miss a couple o{ game5 when we might need him." Alston generally won't put Marshall in until late innings. But the pitcher who has appeared in 109 games so far this· season has gone into action in midin!'ings on occasion. Disputed Call Critical • Lions' Goal Line Stand Key in Win Over 49ers DET·ROIT (AP) -No longer will San Francisco coach Dick l\olan the cynics chide: "Detroit's got the rushed off without saying much but best0·4teamlnfootball.". quarter.J:ia c k Dennis Morrlton, Now it's got the be5' 1·4 team In making bis first NFL start. didn 't football. mind talking about the loss, the 49ers· The one victory may not enhance third straight in a 2·3 record. the looks of the record much , but "it "I was nervous in the afternoon, but beats getting hit in the eye with a when we openea with the passing at· sharp slick," coach .. Rick Forzano tack it calmed m e," the left.·hander said after Mbnday 's 17·13 victory over said. "But in the third quarter I got San F'ra"ncisco. more excited than I should have." The Lions ru;ed t..Jlisguted .Pa ~s in~ D_.e_tr..oit_pickecLoft.three Morrison terference-Penilty and a key goal line aerials. One, by linebacker Charlie stand to notch their first triumph un· Weaver in the first period, ended a der Forzano. . · · sroring threat. Then there was John- The natior1ally televised game, son's interception in the second quar- played before a Tiger Stadium crowd ter. and llnebacker Jim Laslavic of 45,199, had plenty of exciting plays grabbed another in the final four to keep the viewers happy. minutes to thwart a drive at the Lion Among them : 10. . -A 32 -ya rd pass interlerence Morrison finis hed with 17 com· penalty w~ich.§el up Steve Owens one· pletions in 40 attempts forl71 yards, yard touchdown plunge for Detroit in including an 11-yard pass to Jarkson the second quarter. with 33 seconds lert for the only San -Four intet'ceptlons. One wa5 Ftancisco touchdown. returned 44 ya rds by Lions comer-Detroit's Bill Munson hit on ts or 32 bar k Levi Johnson and led to an Errol passes for 130 yards. including a 13· Mann field goal. yard scoring shot to Larry Walton 15 . SAN FH1\T\('JS('O Stanford lineb:it•kt•r (iorrlon H1rgt•I has bec1. naml"'<I 0('f1"'11 SI\ c Pl avt•r of the \\lrck in thl' l';.it·ific-R l "1lnfcr1•nce ;i fter mak1n 1.: 19 1.11'kles in St anforfl'!i 13·13 tic ""'i!h 1.,"t'LA last Saturday. · r iw-top >O le•""'· w11n '"•t p!.oce ..,c.11n 11« ... 1rww,u ·~•!M>ll recora •nd lol•I 11c>1nh It was reported over the "'eckend that the Bulls would give lo\•e, a holdout. lo the Lakers for foru·ards Connie lla"•kins and Stan Love, and gua rd Pal Riley. Olderman said he was surflrised al the outburst. "I just returned from a trip to Russia and had come out lo get m y World Series credentials," he -A 4S·yard punt return by Dick seconds into the final quarter to rllnch Jauron of the Lions to set up another the victory. Southern Ca lifornia 1ai lb;1ck /\n- thonv ll;1\'i s "'<•S n<i rTl<'d lht• run· fcrt·rit·c l)ffl·n siv 1· Pl:i y11 r of lhc \\leek ;ifl c1· rus hin~ fo1· l!J.I y;i rds ;111<1 l\\'o toul'hdo1\11.~ in liUlc rnorc than l\\'O c1uarl crs aga 1ns1 \\' ashin h'\on St:1t e C'f•nc•I••'" 1\' o 111 r•d \\'ASlll:':(;TON Six ml'n hav(' ~n n:1mcd to roarh the men'!' rind "·omen':. U S :'I\\ 11nn11nJ.! ll'ams \\'hit·h vdll p:~rlicipal(' 1n lht> 1076 01~ ni1Jic:s at ~lonLre<il James "l)oc" Cnu nrilman. head roach 11l the n1\1·r:.1\,\· of lnd i<1n11, "'a5 chosen head conch for lhe mcn '1' swimming ttilnl, "'tlh Gt'Orl.!l.' ll11inc•s or UCLA and llon Gambril or lhl' University of /\lubamn·<"ho~n n!f hi" assistants. ' .lack N('lsou nf Pint' f rC!-;t lligh SthOfll . Ft J.audrrfla l•'. Flu .. v.·1111 t'leC'led h1·ad l'nu<·h fur lhc l ! S u·omt.1n's.S\\J1nn1ln g tcan1 ,.·r:1nk !<:hn of Hut i.:rrs l.i'nivcr~ll)' :1 nd J im i\lon· .irflht of Anal1c1m , a!'sisl Nelson . 1 ()llOllS.I (SO S·0.0 1,160 It ~M !.I • 1·0 1•• i. Qlillllo,... (Sl•.O·O 1,010 !1 PO•b•~'•• 3·?·0 "' ) M«nl9"'n 111 S·O.O •?• 1J 114"''' • 1·0 1'1 I .1.l•bil-Ill ~-0·0 Ill H, Fl~lcl~ 1·1.(1 101 S . .1.ubv<n HI S·O·O 6,k IS .1.•ltor>•SI, 3·1·0 13 • use: 3.1.0 SI• ,. ''''' l 1·0 bt / """•~me I 1·0 !«I/_ ft••l leln l 11 )t f l••••A&M • 1 0 •1S 18. Mtt\'IM\a J•J 0 •I '· "'"f""~ S·O·O ao•" M••m•.O. • 0 , ., 10. N. C:.ro. 5.t. •·0·0 3>) '6. lul•"' l•O.O ;i. Olnt•I ••ce!YlnO "°'''· • I I '. 0 ••llh•lllU•t •l!y: Ar~•ft•••, 8•,1or. C.lltornl .. U!!"Clll, Ml..,.! !Fii.i, M11_,1, 0•1•,,.,,... 5.l•lt, Plll, l t"1)1r, UCLA, Y•n<ltr. bill, 'M.CO!'"'"· "That's not even an offer. \Ve don 't need bodies and I haven't even discus- sed a trade with·J>ete Newell," ti1otta, said. Ne\vell is general manager of the Lake rs. said. . Wh at about his personal (eelirigs lo"•urd Jackson? •·1 have no personal (ccllngs toward him ," Olderman said.' A's manager Alvin Dark, asked for his comment on the inc;ident, replied : · "'\\lhat else is new?" TD. Owens' touchdown came in the rirst -A 64·yard run by 49ers rookie minute of the second quarter. t~e Wilbur Jackson to the Detroit one. scored on the first play aner officials -The Lions' goal line stand after said 49crs eornerback Ralph McGill that run: interfered with Walton in the end "We won by a rew points •.. We zone, would have made it more but we did · "We were jockeying for position. n'twantlorunupthesrore,"Forzano We .were hung up on one another," said, grinning. Watton said,'' ... he hooked me and Sick Offense Rams' Big Problem I hOOked him . I didn't pu sh him. I ju5t tried to get in position. I pl8ycd the ball and maybe he didn't. It was hard for me to keep an e)'C on the ball . Maybe that call could have gone either way.'' Los ANG !<:LES (i\PI -A year ago, John fl ad l \\':JS the hott~t quartcr- b.1ck in th~ N<t tional f.~ootball League :ind the Los Anitelcs 14tms averaged 32 points a i.tame to "'in their first fi\'e j.!UmCS Of the SCll.Sl'ln. Xow lladl isn't e ''en lukew11rm , the 1t11ms urc u\·cragini:t 15 points a Rame :tnd ther've lo st '" u "'' fi,•e ~a mes. All t111:o1 dl•spilc u defense u•h1 C'h ~el'm~ impl'O\'t'il , allov.·in)! 100 fcu·cr ya rd s . 30 f('"·rr points nnd 01A'nin1o: se\'CI\ morr <1ua rt c rh:1rk sack~ th:1n ii did th i:;. tin1c la$L year. In a nul.shf"ll, a sick offense Is "h~1l i~ \\'rong with the Ra.ms. preseason •avorites to capture the .,N ational Foolbull Conference championship and pl:iy In the Super Bov.·l. 1 player5, Is C:oncer~ abOOl Our ofien·: fl adl, All-pro last year, endorsed se. •· SUnday's r hange. "l wasn't getting Nobody blames one person. or even the job done. And llarris came In a nd ,one area or attack. "Our running did a good Job. That's ,why )'OU have backs have fumbled, oor ttceivers lwoquarterbacks." The Rams arc still atop their have run the wrong pass routes, we 've "We wanted to gel a llltle llfe Into divlsion..\vlth a 3'-2 r:ecord, but the.talk had dropped pasi;es and poorly-our offense;•' 1ald KnOx. who said about town is ho"· they arc llabhi to thro~·n pa5se5," Teele said. H11dl -.1ould start Sunday against San ba ck into the playofrs berause the Knox benched l·ladl Jasl Sunday Francisco ln Los Angele1. division Includes San Francii;co, · "''hen the Rams trailed Green Day, to. ijadl, 3•1, is a 13·year NFL veteran . 1\tlnnta and New Orleans. 3. James llarrls relieved lladl a'nd• He said he takes \lo•hat the dcrense will J 1.1rk Teele. assistant to club o"'ner plt.yed bcller than his three for 12 give him. It took him only a couple of Cffrroll Hosenhloom , said, ''Everyone pass completion rcrord lndica~es. gam~1 lo point Ol\l that defenses were in our organization. from Carroll 111adl was only 6 for 16. Each lhrew _ doubl covering A'TI-Prowidereceivcr Rosenbloom to the coaches io lht _ t\\·ointerccpllons. · Harold Jackson. ..... , .... ICO~I •Y Ol.la.llTl•t. ' . ' • • • $, -FO GMM11 1t Ott -0.ft~ I rtlft ~1111 ILklLI Ott -FG MllWI JI SF -FG C:...ftlt ,, 0.t -l. Wtltlol '' ...... trwm "'-1-.-tk•I 5' -Jloc'toll II "" from ""'°"'*""' IC:...•11 •k~I ' IHCU'llOVAI. lHD••S IUSMlHO -S1t'I "'""'"°· J#t-Ml'P I•·• I. kl'Prtllltr U'31. Otti'olt.-Owe11~'11..ci, Hoo1!1 1W'f • ltECEIVINO -5.,. l'rl!IC.h.co, K•l!k-).41, Atoo11MC1~•lt1 ).10. 891\lev 1"10. Olllrolt, L W•lt.,, •JOJ,t+eol<.$4-l'O, ~lf\J..IL • f"ASSIHG ~ Sfl'I irre11t1KO, M6"._ 11·41,. 111 ... ~, Dttrtll, M11111e111 1WJ.I, UO. • ' • • • ' • • Ar ea .Prep Gridders of the Week Griffins Get Ready For~Tars • I MARK MAXWELL CdM Offense ' '/< -• BUDDY LORTON Estancia Offen1e JEFF ROLETTI Mission Viejo Offense STEVE MAROWITZ CdM Defense MARK DE VEN Estancia Defense MARK MERWIN Mission Viejo Defense Area Sports For Girls Clt11 l•Mlt CdM IUl Hl 5..,lt 'in,1 s.,.., ... , Cloflal'lut IC!....,nl·.1 • M<Ktnrlf !(l-"IJ S.WI-u;.1111~1byl0<te•I W•rll lCl--.10 Dftn tCl won I I lloot ,,, -• ' 0.~11" ')'8ri.i.·W•rrl(• !Cl-lll·J s.:11.,..11nr Lo!lv• IC:I -I 0 .W-01fll'I Q'l rl'lll¥1'1,f ft:I -' 10 ,.., ... .._...,. "'6rl'll'r tCI WOii I I JOflft !lliitt• (t,.I "'°" I I AklFINlfl·911~t (Cl •Oii 1.(1 WOMl!N'$ i.t.Sli:f.TIALL Ot!tf~Wtll IJJ! lMl ~"tf .. " • ""~' • ' • N'otllOll • ' W•lff\ • ' ll!Qfllf~ • ' ' l(~lfl • • ' LIM\~, ' • 1ol8I\ " ' " Haltlf ... ~ (l016r11W.,t.JOt!, - " " • • " ' " KEITH JOSEPHSON Costa Mesa Offense BOB BLACKBURN FV Offense MIKE MONNIG Mater Del Offense RODFIGGATT Costa Mesa Defense MIKE JOHNSON FV Defense JOHN La GRANDEUR Mater Del Defense • NICK YOCCA Dana Hills Offense PAUL GASSMAN Huntington Beach Offense GORDON ADAMS Newport Harbor Offen.se RON KOSMALA Dana Hiiis Defense -RICHARD CLAPP Huntington Beach Defense PETE McCOWEN Newport Harbor Defense NATE CHING Edison Offense KEVIN PIKE Laguna Beach Offense LANCE BERRY Sa.n Clemente Offense TOMl'ELLE Edison Defense JEFF JOHNSON Lagurllt Beach Defense PON DO VLEISIDES San Clemente Defense CLYDE BIRCHARD El Toro Otlense JIM RANKIN Marina Offense JIM GREEN University Offense STEVE HERNANDEZ El Toro Defense MARK SCAVO Marina Defense DAVID SCROGGINS University Defense Mv, Uni Among 2-A Leaders ~liss ion Viejo a nd Univcr- sily remain :1mong tht' clilc in Ctr· 2-A footb<ill rirrlcs. The Oi:1blos or hlission Viejo are No. 3 a nd the Un· defeated Troj ans or Unh•cr· l!ily arc No. S following thl! runrlusion or their non- <lca,1n1c sch edule. ~ 'rhc only ol he r ~runJ!C '('011st. ·a rt!n tt'irm rated In the top 10 Is t.1 atcr Dci, LEASE A '74 DATSUN 710 2 dr. '89" mo . ~ho JI •.O.t.I.. COST A MlSA DA TSUH 2145 HARIOR ILYO., C.M. 540°6410 whic h is fourth in 4·A aner cashing in \\•it h ils rourlh 1A1in or the sca~on. SL Paul (Clrst ). ~rvil<' lserond) and ~1 :1 tt·r l)ci rfourth l arc all from lhc Po"•errul Anj:lclu~ l.t•nJ!ut· Bisho1> An1a1 dropped 01.1t of the Toi, 10 ofter (alllln1110 })il~ntlrn;i . 1•1·7. . The 3·A Is (f:rtC"d b·~· Tllonro,•ia. 1 ~I P•11I !4 QI ) 5.t't.,llt1 ll·O !I J Sol.I~ HI!!\ !• 01 • Mattr 0.-• I• DI ) LO'IOI• U Ol • Pt1YMfta ll 1~ I LO' AllO'I !l•ll I Foollllll i• CH t •11t11w1m U II 10. W..SI (oyon• t• 01 , .. 1 Mo11to•1• I( 01 '· 1;o11on •• 01 l t~mol• C•!v 11 01 • Sin M.O""° u 01 S t~f!OO I Mor111,,. .. a .. i. Ol I Pu(ol•t• "Cl DOH'T DISCARD THOSE OLD TEHHIS SHOES t t We..,.• 1 .. 1.ttMI All Typet of Adlcte1 & Tr.feni Shott. ANTHONY'S SHOE HRVICE . ,•WISTCLIJP 'LAZA •LIDO •PASHION Iii.AND •COtlONA DEL MAR fA»tlOH SQUAil ISAtn'A AHAi SOUTM COAST VILLAGl ( XlJ t Uvr•o"~~ •' )J ... "' '" ' SJ1•t•••1<1 ""' l• 10 !.>"• 11~· n '" •• • :1,.01~1•\ lf M••••ll• • I'" l•o, rlll 11' \v•·"• H 11· 1~ 11 1 s• VI'"' I' 11 i ,. ri ,, ·~ " ! lo L>n• ·1n ·• n I II M•·~ ', l M'"•Ot'V•·~ 11• • AG,.IAnll 11 •1 I l!~l•f""'' u ~ 1~1 & Ar·I• 1"11" V•·" r u I '"'I ' •• 1 .. ,"'"" •• ijl Id • I 11<'"!1• • l (II fl ~1""n1tr Tl' I i1 tol 10 r .. ~, ll 11 It (l!llf" ''""'~ IJ t, 9 GROTH CHEV. lfASINW '75 MONTE CARLO SI 24°0Mn 8•r <I' I • ,,,, '~' t"..,, < ••~• I G•OTH C"HlVllOLlT lflll -· r ••. -...... C• 111.aU! 10 llll ' ' " ,,, t~l '" ... " ~ " » " l.011 1\l:unhos ll lgh· root· bnll coach Jun llodarlc and tus C1·1(f1ns have a Sunst•l J.1·~1).!Ut' ll'Sl ;.it Nt•\\'j)O!'l Harbor Thurs da~· night :utd 1·11·to1)' i ~ n1undatory ln or· d••t' for t•i lht·r to stay 11 ithin Nh1l01111 g dist u ll<'l' of the cir- 1·1ut t'l'O\I n. Holl :irlt• ;ig rt•t·~. but a~tds . "\\'hH·h i:a nic 1:.11 '1·.· E\'(•I)' g:.i1nt·1~~0 11nportant " ·rhc Griffins an d f\1·1\'ll01t urt· I I <1 fll't' 1110 i::anit·s ;,ind both tt·an1s h;t1't' losl lo \\"t•~tniinstt•r. f':t'll'f>Ort 1vas dun1pt•tl. 2l ·i . \1h1lc Los AlaJU.1los fell, 2.8.:.11. ail.c.r tuk1n)! ;1 li-14 lt:'ad in 1hc third lll't'IOtl. '!'he Ct•ntra l r1 gort• l'ur Lu:. i\lan11tos has bt•t•n 5·!1. 155- IJOund tailback David ~JH';tt,;llt'. Spr;1g uc is t·xt·C'pt1nna!ly fas t ;_it the outset and picks his IHJll's as \l't:ll us ;,iny b<tt k in Ur;ingt• Co unt ~·- Sprague t•uf loose 11·1th a 73.y;1r d tOUl'hclo\lll run a~a 111sl \Vt·st1n111stcr and Hod;1rt1• reveals th(' 11l:1y ti · self is dcsi~ncd fur no inure lhan a (l'W ~·ard:.. But sP r ag ue find s day\ig hl a nd \\'i1h his ~peed he can ~o l:lll lh-.! v.1ay on uny play. Through four ~aincs he's accounted ror over 500 ya rds rushing. Jn addition the Griffins have t1vo c1uarter - backs -CraiJ! Chamberlain ;inti Hon Cass idy, l't\an1berla in has a strong :1rm a nd is a pure passl'r. Cassi d y c;1n do anythini:: as C\'idcnccd by his performa nces at q1.1ar- tcrback. s plit end. slolback, running hatk :.ind dcrcnsivc duty ;it eornt·r. ··ca..ssidy is our best uvrrall p lay e r ,'' s a ys Hodarte. Sophomore ful- lback Steve F'ogcl is also big in Los 1\l's orrcnsc. 'Mater Dei Still No. I ~later Dt>i anti Servile high s chools continue to pace lhC' oifil'ial Orange County prep foo\h;ill to11 10 rotlo11•ing las t week's results, "'hieh found fi\'c of lhc top JO tumblin g. Ne"' members to the lop 10 include El Dorado, Sunny Hills, Pa cifica, Nc11•port llarbor. 1\lission Viejo and Santiago. Pos. 'l'l'an1, record l'olnls !. ill <tlt•r Uci (4-0l 60 2. St'r\'i\c (3-0-1 ) 54 J . El Uor<tc.lo !4-U) 46 4. Foothill 14·0l 43 . ') Sunnv !!ills 13-11 26 t;i_ Pat·i fit·;1 14 ·0 ' 23 .. \Vt•slmins ler (2-2) 12 !I . ~('\1port llarbor !J·l l lO '.). illi~sin n \i"iejo (J. J l 8 Ill Santiago (-1 -0l r. Curtis Wins Grid.Picks ·ruhv Curtis of Co~ta ~1(·~;1 .h;ts ll'Oll the !Jailv l'ilot J->igskin Pi{'kt•ron fooi- , hall g uC'ssini:: enntc!\\ for the past ~·ct·kcnd , com in ~ 1111 1rilh univ fi1·c lo~crs in .a \1eck n1~rked by up~cts :it l'\'l'I')' ]('\'l'I. :\n<l lh1· kc~· ).!ilmt· he !:ib- IJt•d ·on tht· nos1• \1·as (;recn H.1~··s li-!i triun11>h u\·cr tht• Hanis Su1Hla \ 'J'h;it \l'aS rnough to g 11;. h1 rn 11t·\41ry 01C'r Kris \':111 Dv:.t•n of lluntinJ,!lon 1!1•;u·h iind ,JiTn IJllC'harn1 ofl'11 .. 1;1 ~le:.a 'l'he lalll·t' 11111 lll1tl rnr "t·ron1I. ;i ga n1t· hl'h1nd l"ur- 11:.. \"a n f)\'~l'tl lh<'n 11;i .~ :t\1 arded st:cond p];H't' h.v 11rtuc of !ht• t1t··hrt•<1k<'r. fnr 11hich he 11 a~ onl,1 IU po1n\)) offth1•t•,ael count 1\nrl. 11 1111l d 1011 IJCl1t•\'t' th at \111• san1;. 111·0 pro j:!a n1c~ lhat 11t'll' 111 \•rn>r I.I!-\ ll'l't'k art' :J1~11 11ronJ,: 1h1s 11t•C·~ ., 'l'h1· CIC'\'C'l:1nd- Jl\t•\\' ~:ng l-und . \\';1~h1nh'lfln· l'h1\;idc lphia ganll'!-11111 IK· 1).!no re<I ont'C a~;11n h.v 1udgcs un th1 !-11l'Ck ':. 1·on- 1~·st WHY LEASE AVW? •Lo-'~· ... 0o-'-r-t • ..-. c .. "'"" 2 Of' l y"" •'Tllew & ...,. fllOrf .. ,Mtt Contoct the lel:ise Ekperts ot HARBOUR vw .. I!· • • • • • . . ' .. ,. \. .. f '-..,.. TUKC!ay. Oclot>er 15, 197C OAILYPILOf BS PRIZES WORTH $tS DD 00 WIN _7¥."" TV w .. ldy 'it•kin !Jick9n:IO '74 wlnn.n will ....... ,_ d.d IMiin by AIC Colet Televi•ien of Hwntlftttten ~-Mt ploce winnen will reuiff • $ti.II z.Nth 12-lnch, diog-1 mea1w,., block •nd white p:irt.We t•l.vi1ion Mt. S.Cond ploce wlnnen pt • $16.95 l•nith tablo mod.I radio and third P'ctce prin1 ..,. l•nith "biUfold" pock•t portable ,.... wwth $12.95 -ch. All pri1e1 a,. valved •cCWlllint to manufoctw,.r'• 1w1~1te4 retail prices. Entriff may be deposited wntil Thw!'ld•_y aftomMn ot the AIC Colet Televi1ton Pigakin· f'ldterM '7• headq11Dr1tn or et Daily rllot officn in Hwt1ti~ten leach, Newport leoch, C..to Me.a, La9wne lffch • s.n Clem.t1le. WMtily winnen will be natifi.d by mail and ""'Y pkk vp their pri••• at A.IC Colet Television 19046 ltoakhwnt llvd, Hwntington IHch Wotch for thi1 rig•kln ,ickeroa '74 playen *'" each w•k in the Daill Pilot 1part1 &ectton, (In.le the team Y°" think wil win in eoch pairing in the lilt of 30 9arnu and Mnd in the ployH'1 form on· tty Wank Of' a nJGIOnablo faaimilo. Thon -tch the Dally Pilot •part• pa9H fet each weok'1 li1t af three winnon. At the conclw1ion of th• 10-wMk com"titfen, jwdps, will invite fint ~lace winn•n to try far t!:te .,......11 9rand pri1e; a Zenith colet televl1Htn. TM 16-inch, dl~anal mea1wr• table model cetor Mt i• *YOd at $291.lt. It f°'" lo the Pig.kin l'tdietM '74 COl'lt"tant who bMt ,,_did• !ho 9Vtceme ef ...Ndod profn1lonol football ~rne1 the wffkenfll foUqwi";f the clOM al '91"~' pickoroa c•nt .. 1. To ... e1t9iWe fa, the grand pri1e, you ha .... te win one of th• weokly ''t•kin Pickeroo '7• com· prtflioinl. lolow are tho fwle1, tho li1t of pm•• Ond entry !Hank . Good luck. RULES I , s.,i-;1 , ... tlltr'y W."• Ma..w ., • ,.--.-1. ~le 9' It lot .,.,_ IM -'"'· "11111 ..W. •IMile" 11 4141• • - • ..... ..,,.ii-t." IMri• _, .. ""1'-111 ei1t o111111 ........ M ,_llt9!1 j ..... htf. ThlM wttlc.h 4-'t ......,,.. wlll ... ....... ...,. . . 1 ~ It '"" PIGSKIN 11(11100, ·1•, Sp.rt1 °""""'-"'· P.O. ... IMO, C..11 MtM, CA. t2121. ). CWr -..,_,,., fttll fttlW ,.....1tt...i -h w..ti. C...11-111 -.......... the! -""' lfflcl.l1 _, 1-1..-. -~ ............... ,1..,i. ....... •'"ell .......... ,_, _, .,.._.lfr _., "llorl11i.-.......... ""'"" ...... .ti_, ..... Dto:hleo! el 1 ......... tlllt ,.;11t -• ._ ~ "t"'91 i., 914.....,._,., • • ._.... _, !lot ,..1....t.M Ml i.1 .. tke11 ,.....,..., AM. w -IN e.11 ....... 11 the Oeily Pilel .Hice ~ • P.M. n.-. .... J. ~,.i;,. ~ -.I lt>elr '"'''"''" .Ml hltr ..... .... ylljCll ..... ~Ir ............. ;... t-11; .. - --"tlWe .. -· ._ nl IHMll ILANI IM.IST 11 AWO IN 01! INllT IS VOKI. .................................................... • • : ENTRY BLANK : • • . ......._ .. . ·~-·----------------. . -·-. ..~. . . ~'----------------. . -. ! O..,•-----------Zip ! • • : ~ : • • : Circ~ toum1 yow think will win thi1 week'• .. ,,..., : • • • • : 49ers at Rams ! • • l Wa1hln9ton at Philadelphia ·: l Cleveland at New England l ! Wa1hington St. at UCLA l ! USC at Oregon !° • Navy at Air Force : • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Alabama at Tenne11ee : • Arkansas at Texa1 : • Georgia· Tech at Auburn l Duke at Clemson : Michigan 'at Wisconsin : • Iowa at Minnesota : • Missouri at Oklahoma State : • No. Carolina St. at No. Carolina : • Army at Notre -Dame : • Oklahoma at Colorado : • Syracuse at Penn State : • San Bernardino at Saddleback : • Golden West at CypreH : Los Alamitos at Newport l Corona del Mar at Estancia : • Villa Park at Costa Mesa : • Edison at Loara : • ftn. Valley at Western : • Marina at Westminster : • Dana Hills at El Tora : • Mluion Viejo at Laguna Beach : • Unlveroity at San Clemente ~ • Mater Dei at Pius X : • Cypress at Huntington Beach : • TIE llEAKE• -My gv•'' on the total nwrt1btt of point' wor"' in oll 30 gomet it ---- Plq~ln Plc.keroo Is a ,..qwlor feohtrt of tM Doily Piiot 'port' 'ec.tion each Mondoy. T11tMlay • c.tdWtdM•day. • • • • • ~ • • • • : • ••••••••••••••••• • -. ................................... ' ~ .. .. ; • B II DAIL v PILOT Tuesday, Octobtt 15, 1'174 -- PllBUC ~OTICE PUjlLIC NOTICE ~~~~~~~~-1-~~~~~~~~-1 -~~~- &U,.ll:IOll (OUl:T OP TM• SL,•7.... ,IC'/"ITIOU• ·~l Ml!SS IU'·UW PUBLIC NOTICE , PUBLIC 1'0'1JCF;· n .t.t• 0, CALll'OllNIA l'Oll su,•1:101: COUl:T 0¥ CALll'Ol:NIA. NAMI! &TAt•M•HT &Ull'llllO. COi.lllT o• TKI TMI cquNTY Olf OllAJIOI COUNT\' 01' OllANOI TIM fOllow1f'IO WWI 1, doil'll Ml,_.. STATI °' CALIPOl:NIA l'Oll .... •-tna 111 Clllk c.-~ on .... wtlol. u· THI COUNTY 0, OflANOI NOTIC.I 01' MIAlllHO OP P'I TITIOM le .. a AH. Calllwlll• 11.ICAllOO'& AUTO SALON, ~ E11t '"-MU1t ~I "110.ATI 0 1' WILL AMO fOI: SUMMONS Ulh St•ftl, Cotlt MIN, Cl . n•:M 0111011: TO JMOW CAUJI ITTtl:\ TIST.t.Jiilt NTAl'I" CASI NUM•llt lltttt Dor111\e """ 1:-., .001 DI,,. 110.C. 1'01: (HANOI O, N.llilll llalil .i MARii: G. A06£RJ, DK11" P'lelMIH1 GAIL fl! MUER1 0.lt~I: N....,PO't .. Kil. Ca. t2WO In ttw ...... !!..,. ot !ht A,flOllc;aflOl'I oh llO. llANOY J. IAUlll fldl bu .. lllH I• <9"111KIM bY NI SUSAH JOYCE OSIOllN. SHARON NOJICE IS HEllEIY GIV!"N tMt J o lftt O.~: A t lvll complall'fl lncl110l1i111I. MAllGREJ OSIORN •r>d UfNOllA YVONNE HELEN DOOL EY, IOttNr1y "•• tJMn 111..i bY "'-ll'!&l'lll" f;al111t OOr .. llf A. II-VICICllli OSIORN .__" •• YVONNE HELEN llOBEllT '°"'' " l'W Willi to tlti.tlO !!Ill ••wi.un, Tiil• lllltlMlll WI• IUld wllll 1111 Tiii --lf•llOft ol SUSAN JOYCE MAMMCRSCHMITT l'l.J1 tllM l\fftlll • YOU lftll" flt. Jn lhll tOUl'I I writ!.., C-ty Ct.rk ol Or•1111t ClllllllY Oft 05BOllN SHARON MARORET OSBOllN 091llllilf\ IOI' 1"•00.lt of WHI INI ltll' llltMl"9 In ••~ lo Ille comp.allll 0Ctl)btr :L 1'7• minor •'rid U.NORA ll lCICIE O~BOll N' 1-..n °' Ltll.,1 J1~!1!Mflt1r' to !or • wrllltn ot Off/ flft•<::llntj., If I 1'4UX 1 ' "-I bet Iii.cl I C 1 ~ lllf: ptllll-r rtttrtMI •o Wl>ICll 11 J111llCt Court I Wlltl!ll • dl'f) ., • ., "llOll1htcl I Dr•• ,co:·' Dilly "II?', Ii' ~ •• 1::ii flltrom II w1d .~1c.c::.i· ~. ..,;;o_ t« ru111vr N rllc11l11-. •nG 111411 !Ml 1ummom 11 lffvtd °" "°"· t;klObltl t. S, n, 2'. '1 Ji6'2 7• SUSAN JOYCE OSBORN SHAllOH '"'" llMt •fllll plKI 01 ..... 1111 lht Othl<WIM, your Otltull Wiii bl 11111rtd MARGRET OSBORN Ni SANDRA 11"" !let ti.Ill Ml tot 0(1-r 29, on •PPllCl!lo(I l)y lht pl1l11tlll Ind lllCI f t l I t ·lO I 11\t c;ow1raom courl m1y ,n1.,. • lllCIG~I li!llll•I PUBlJC NOTJCE \llCICIE OSBOllN, hive IUtoll t n ao• ~ •o.t.rtm.nt •;:·• ," ot ••kl cour!. YCIU tor '"-' rr\Ol'lt'f "' olhfr rtlltf pllctllOft ,,._1119 1htl lllefr fl•m•• "' 100 Chile C.111,... Orlw Wl\I, In ttQutlled 111 01t Oll'nllltlnt l'ICTITIOUS BUllN ISS be cflt""'6 lo SUSAN JOVCI!' tOLEMAN, rhl (;lty g1 Stllll AIWI, Cflllornlt. U you wfMt tt Mell ti. ••hl(t .. NAMI STATa MINT SHARON MARGRET COLEMAN, •fllll Ot!K Ol:t-10. 1t7• M 1ttwt1ty ht ttil\ m.ll•r. you 1h0\llcl SANORA VtCIC l6 COLEMAN. WILLIAM a. St JOHN, .. M ..,......,ly M tMI '1'9llr 'INcllllt • T... lo!lowl119 Plliotll 111 clal1111 NOW, TH£AEFORE, 11 11 11er1by ,_IV Clirk II ....... Ml)' Ill lllH -tllM. ~UllNll ••: ordtrfd ll'ld dl...c!td tlMt tll perlOllt LOUIS A AUOET Otlt!:I J-21. J'7• JOHN'S It.ACING CYt LE5 LTD., lt1!t11ol9d 111 wkl mttltr dO IPON• Al'-;, L•"' WILLIAM E. SI JOHN, Ci.·~ nu M..-rior Blvd.. Cotll Meu, bttor• 1111• Courr In DciP•" ...... "" 3 °" 21 w1T11111 ll'fcl S\llla ~11 Iv A,11111o11y 1'. ThonlP'IOfO, Otputy C•lllomlt 'W6 Htfl cllJ ol Nowmbt!'. lt1•. 11 10•00 r .. A 1::. Ctllti:rllli '°'It C•OSI V I LUISEl •IHIC JQN! Mlcflffl CtllCclllo. 30.i 5, 1.m. b'dOO:k of uhj day to lflOw CIUM Ttlr 1':t1 .... ,.. u• H...tll Mal• SltMt, Suitt '°" a&IDOa llvd., HN'llOl'I •••ell. C1IUornl1 why ""' tppllu!IOl'I IOI' chi~ of 111"18 Altt,_Y lw1 l"t!UI-l tnll .t.111, CfUi.tlllt f11tl t1660 •l!Ollld 11111 Ill 11r111ltd. Pulllli-°''""'' cu~I O•llV l"ltot, Ul•I Nl4"' CIMrltl W•YN Snvow. :17 w. BIY IT II fur1hff on;llf'M !Ml • COOJ Qc!aOtr 11. I'-n "1• 111'·'' AtlwM)'I fw l'tal11Ht1 SI., Cool• Meu Calllolnl1 t2.!.27 o1 111i1 ord« be pUblllfled 111 l ... O•llY • PuDll•l\lld 0.--tl'lll• Couf 0.11'1' l"llo!, Thll. riu;a1ne11 II cOftOuc:Md Dy • 1111'\!ltd PllOI, • ,.._,...Pf, ot 9"1tfll Clt(UllllOl'I. PUBLIC NOTICE Od-l, L u. n. 19,, 366&<1' Hrll'ltJ~pi:111cclllo P!'llllM IR UIO County, II '''" OllCI Cfltrl1t SftYllll' IKll wttll lor 19111' W((tUlvf -kl • ,,... I PUBLI C NOTICE 11111 it•'-' w•t· 111..i w1tn '""-prior 10 tllt ""t• ol ~kl "''"1'111· . D1ltd Oct. 3. lt7• SU,.1111011 c~•T 0, Tlolf 1 -------~-~~---ICouflfy Cltrk ol Or•nvs Ci:0!.11'11\1 Oft FRANK OOMENICHINI, IT.loll 0' CALINHllNI• f'O ll N01'1Cf TO c•e:o1JOll:S Slpttmotr 30, ,.,. J~ ol 1'111 S11P1rlor Cavrl TM• COUNTY 01" Ot.AHG• SU,.ElllOll COUllT 0' TH• ,J7U1 110 . A..fUl• ST.I.Tl! 01" CALIFOllJUA FOii "UOlhlltd Orano-CWll 0111'1' l"llol TMOMAS M, TMOllHTOH • AlllrM'I' II 1.-DTTC.r O,-Mf ARIMO ~ ,.,,,TIOJI Tttl·(OUNfY-Ofl-O«IAH&E O<IOM<'--1 ... IS. n •. IJ7.f ,..,,.,, 14412 BMCll-B!Yf;;--SO)lt-E l'Oll "IOBAT.. 01" WILL AND ""1141 CODICIL AHO 1"01 L E T 1' E II S E111te ot RIJllY T. M. ICERll. ..... W~tmllllM/', Call!. fUIJ T•ST'AM•HTAl.Y ,, llUBY TERESA MAUOE KERR. Dectll• PUBLIC NOTICE TltltplltM: 17U ) "1~U ie:lltlt o1 ROY D. KLINIC , tlsa Id. AltlrlltY tor Pttlti- kl>O'Wll II ROY KLll<KER. R, 0 . l<OTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN IO 11\t l'ICTITIOUI •UllllllS Publlllltd Ori1111e COftl O.lly Piiot, 31U.1' KLll'llC(R, .na ROY DAVIS KLI NKER. nW!tOrl of 1111 •bow ... ~ ~-I NAMI! SJATIMEllT Oc:lobtr •• 15• 22. 29. 197' De<.Hl.111. lfltl 111 pe!'IOlll !llVl'IQ dalrru 1>g1l111I Tiit lollowl!111 petlOl'll •rt d>clng1-----~----~~=--- 1'10f 1Cl IS HEREBY GIVEH ll>fil 11141 lt!d de<:tdtill ••• raqulrtd to tllll 1Mln111 ilt: PUBLJCNv11CE 91'RBARA MOORE !111t !!ltd lltt'tl" I IMfn, wlll't the 11K1tUry vovcllf:ro. In St.G ENTERPRISES, 21>1•1 Ntccamt,1--------------~!lllOl'I kit P1obiltr ol Woll Ind COdk:U tilt ofllcr of 11\t clrr~ cl tM •OO"' MJ11l011 Vlt]O, Calll. 926,J. PICTITIOl.tS SUSINESS •nG for l~ll'ICI Of Ltlltr1 Ttlltrnentary t11ll!IK courr, or !<1 llf'Tlefll tlllM, wllh Sttwn G. Wtt!rom, 16~1 Ntccorn., NAME STATEMENT ft 1111 pellll-r l'tllf'tlltt to which !l\r ~ceuary vwchert. to the un. Mlulon Vl1]0, Ctll!. 91615. The tollowlng ,.....,.,, art clofllfl 11 m1dt IO< i~rlllet p1r11tul1r1, •'Id dtrtl!Jntd ;ii !tie olllct of ner f!IMMy, Giorgi l!I. We•!ram, 2~1 N1ccomt. l!u•!11HI •1: fl'•• , ... tlmt '"" plt(t ol llttrlll!I P1'UL A HANNA &81 Dover D•h•t Mlulon v1110. cant. 9167S. NEAT-N.CLEAN MAI NT&NANCE, 711 l,~ 11"" """ i..1111, Ml tor Oo;lotler Newwt ·l!lt•cll C~Hfotnll tl.!60 wllld; Thl1 00.111111 I• conducted bV I 0111tr•I A..-11ld1 Columbo, $111 Cltm,11te. C•. "· lfl,, it t :XI i.m .. In 1111 courtroom 11 1111 pltc• ol bu1ltw1n ol tlle unQer~fgned ""''"'"111P· mn " Ot~rlnll!ll No. l o1 11111 courl, In 111 mtntrl Ptrlellllfl9 10 !hr 111111 $t1v111 G. WestroM Otl& McCoy. 711 Ave11ld~ Columbo, f t JOO Civic c ... 11r Ori~• W11!, In 01 iald dKedtnl, wlllltn 1.,..,, rr>Onllll Tiii• 1t1!em111I w11 111td wllh Ille S..n ClttNnle, Ct . 92672 111t City ot Santi An•. C11llor11l1, 11,..,. tllCI llt•t publlc•Tlon of this notice.· '""'"'Y Cler~ cl Or•nu• c...,n1v on 81v1rlv McCoy, 711 A•enloa Columbo, 01!9d October 11, 19,•. Olltd s.pt1mtwr XI 1?N A1111u1I U, 19'11. 5111 Clent!nlt, C1. 9'16n WILLIAM E. SI JOHN. BEATRICE I. 'wETlEL f'·3"11 Thh bu•l11111 II condueltd Dy. tlllflffal COi.iniy Clerk E I I ot !!It Wiii cl Publhtled OrallOI COl!f Ollly Pllol partMrlhlp. -stHOOLINO AND SCHOOLING TJ:elK~~:, nemed c!«"toitnl • St111tmO.r 21, 1"" Odobtr l, I , 15, O!lo fl. McCoy ~ Clan-Alli-l'AUL A. HANNA 191• lSIW-11 Tflll •l•temenl Wll !lied with 1111 Mv•ll11910fl l".,k, Cl . tt'UI Ill 0-Vlr Otl.,., S!llte )l Countv C1erll ol Orange Cou"IV 011 Ttl• nu! SIMJll N•w"'1 Bl•cfl. cilltonol• nut Stpttmber 11, 19'11. Alt_,.. ..,., , ... "-Ttl. UH) 6.C-4141 PUBL~ NOTICE Publllhed 0tlll'J9 Cae1l 0.HY l"!lol, Alllrlllf ..... E••<W b ---_________ , Publl•hed Orafl(ll COlll OcloOlr 11. 1 .. 22. 1'14 Jl2J·74 "ubllll>ed Or11191 Cu•I Of,Uy P11ot l'ICTIYIOUS IUUHl$S Oo;t<>Dlr I, 15, 22, 29, 197I F·J112t DlllV "Ual, 31~·1' Dc-r I. t. 11. '2. 1911 3663-1' NAME SJATl!Ml!NJ Thi tol1owlnQ P«IOlll art dol"ll PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE DUSll'lllS 11: • '1'61 PUBLIC NOTICE SUNSHINE TRAVEL l"RODUCTS FICTITIOUS BIJSIM ESS MOTIC• TO C•l!OITO•I tNC .• 17t1l 5kYPltk Clrc!1. ltlllnl, C•lll. NAME STATEMl!HT suf'a111011 c ou•T Of' TME SUl'E•IOll COU•T OF .;1LIFOllNIA. '1101 TM tollowl11g ptl'SOllS .... dol1111 STAT• OF CALIFOllMI A f'O• COUNTY Of' OI AMGE A-rt M. Smith, 110 5'nl1 lubel, buli,...1 to: THE COUNTY Of' O•ANGE o•oE• TO SHOW CAUSE Cotl• Mn.I, Call!. t2617 T.G.T. (TR ANS GROUP TOURS), ..... A .. lllt FOii CHANGE Of' l't,IJrl\I PnUUp 511~ .... 270 S1nt1 lubel, Cost• 1''65 5k'f Park Blvd.. 320 1 .... r .... f$111't Of EDWAllD F II AN CI$ CASE HUMBE• AllJOI MRMI, Calif. 9162'· C1llfor11l1 92101 O'Le...RY, •bO ~ ill EDWARD Ill lht Mtller ot IM Appllcl!IOll ol _,!11,',~--buSlllCJI Ii conduc:Md by ' CCI'· J<>11t1 S. Karam. 11613 Outtmwre&!ll, F. O'L£1'R'f 11111 .. E. F. O'LEARY, F c ..-""' • , """' 8-y Earl Clle...,ltr or M"!)t 01 Sunshine Tra~et PrOdvet•, Inc. lrvl"'' C1Uloml1 9261!.4 .[)« 15 Hf ll EBY GlVfN to l1'lt N&me . ROiier! M. Sml!!I, Pret-Fe 111 d, I . IC....... 17 6, J NOTICE. o-,-,, lllmtd OK-I llOtll)y Etrl CMndllr ~tiled I petlhOl'I Tnlt Slllfmtnt "''' filed Wllh the QUH111wre1ll!, If.VIM, C1lllornl1 '1611• crodltor1 '"" "" 1 1 IR thh cO<lfl lor an otoer dllow!ng C 0 This bu1l11t1u •• con<1uc:!ed bY 111 "1tl 1n petlOll• 111vl11g clllll'll IQI 111 pe!lll-r 10 chlnQe llli nime from ounlV Cltrk of ••llOI County Oii Inell Id 1 Ille Mid d1Cecllftl art nqu(ltd lo lllo llobbV firl Chllldle• lO ROiler! E•rl SepternDt• 19, ltll , v 11~~1<1 I. Kiram fllthll, wllh tht riec:H•l rv Y<llltMti. 111 Chandlet. l'llltl rnrs •r.lement w11 111eo wit!! lne (tit olllc& o1 IM clerk of 1111 l l»vW 11 11 Mrebv woertd 1na1 all oeri°"~ l'uDl!thtd Or•11111 Coa't Delly "llct, Ccunty Clerk of 0 ••119t coun1v on enlllltd courl, or lo "'''"'' '"""· w!lh 11111rctll!CI 111 It!• '"'""" <llor~»ald 1ppe1r ~ottmbtr 71• "111 Odoblr ·1, I. l5, seplember 30, 191• itll nec11•1ry voucllf:rl, lo I h f Ull· tlelort !Ms court In Oepar!rnenl Ne. 19'1• 3S26·1• dtrtlgrwd II thl o!llct ol fttr 11tor111v. l 11 700 Civic C111ter Orlvr W111. HAllRY ALBERT, llOS Long B t•c h Stnll A,.., Calllornl•. on New. S, 197~. o'oulevtrd, Sulll 2-E, L.ollll I • 1 c n • at 10:00 o'clock a.m., 11111 me~ '"" PUBLJC NOTICE Publlsllld Or11111e Coasl Oct-01, I. JS, 7.l, 191' "Jrm Dtlly Pllcl, ,...,. • 1utornl• llDI01, which 11 1111 Pl•c1~ ""'' ihcw cauw. u any !My h1v1, 1---==="'cccccoo,----l' wtlr.eu of IM undtrllgnN In 1 wnY t•ld petition fer cn1rige cl 1111T11 f'ICT ITIOUS BUSINESS PUBLIC NOTICE :n•lltrs perttlt1lr>11 lo 1111 1tlt tt 01 tlloU<d 11111 be gr1nttd. NAME STATl!MlNT 1---------~=--- 'fld dKedellf, wltllhl ~ ll'IO!llhl llllr IT 11 lurll\t• Cl'elettd lhfl I (OllY Tiie fOllewlllll ptr!IOl'll •rl dlll~g FICTITIOUS •USIMESS j lll tlr11r pubU'-'UOl'I of 11111 nollc•. ot ~1111 oroer to lhOw CIUH i.. publlUlld bu1in1H ••: NAMI! STATEMENT O.ltd Otl_. II, 1'11 In Ort'IQe C0&1I 01lly Pllo.f1 <1 newlPaPt• THE ASPHALT PROTECTORS, '312 Tiie tollowll!ll 1>1r.011t t re doing 11\AMV~REf A. O'LE1'llY ol g-ral clrcul•llon. P11111l111ed ln thl1 Warr11r Avt. No, E, Huntlng!on l!ltacn, butlnlt~ 11: Ac1'1'1111111irl lrl• of IM lllltt ol CQl.llllV ti IH•I (111(1 1 wttk for lcur Ct. 916'7 MR. PROPERTIES. 11( ColllnL Tiit tt>o>t namt>d dleaotnl conMCullW -Q ptlor lo ll'lt lllV Mel l1ldWl11, ~ War111r Avt., Btlboa 11111'\d, C1Hlornl1 t261i2 MARllY ALll llT o1 1110 11t1r!11g. No. E. H11111lngton lleacfl, Ctl. 9'JW Ml<'C Han Family TrUll, IU Colll111, »OS i. .... Bff<ll a tn. Otttd S"'lrmbtr 2J. 197(, Mlc!llel Btch!RI, 25?3 Eldon AYI.. l!lt!llOI lll•l'ld, C1lltorl\l1 '2662 suite 1·1 FRANIC DOMEl'llCMINI Coslt Mes•. Ctl. G. ll otiert You11g, 1133 !. Sltlt 1.1111 •uc,! ~~=:.1n1 Jud(lt of lhe SuPef'lct Cou•t flll1 bullMSI It cORducttd l)y • lll l'ltrll Colltge l!llvd .. Aowlltim. Ca. 97&0' An.MW ...... l 1rl ClllfMlltr p;llrl11irr1hlp, Tllli ri.ttll'llSI b cOl!duCl.:I by I generfl T'/.:,J1~ ~~ COi~ O&llY Piiot, Plllll-le Pro I"• Mk;flttl B~htet p&r!Mrllllp. OclObl'I' u, ?L 2'. tnd N&ttmlllr s, KS< Yidorl1 Mtl B1ldwJ11 M1rcU1 A. Half 191, ~1' <ft!• MHI. C•lll, m n Thi• Sl•ltlTllfll Wll I/led wllh Ille TrustH. MARC HALL Pul>llS!ltd Ota* Coasl Oil!V Piiot, COUllfV Cterlt of ()r1191 CounlV on FAMI LY TAIJST PUBLIC NOTICE Odol>tt l, 1. n, ?2. 1t7~ 2662·7• ~ott!Tlbtf 19. 19'1,. T~!t 1tllemfftl w•• llltCI wllh Ille f'J1Ut counrv Clerk of Or•~ CO;lllliY Oft ----£Kt ... \J·llH pueu cNoTtcF. s.';i:~~ 2r•::, ~~0·l'.' 1;1~~ oc1o11er 1. 197, STA·Ull ----"'' J.!11·1' PuDllslled Or1111ge Ca11I MOTlCE ro CRllDITO•S Of' 9 ULIC NOTICS IHVITING l lDS '--------------1 l'-IDJ' ~Uy Pilot. 31.U.1• T•ANU'Ell ANO 01' INTEMTIOl'I JQ NOTICE ts HEREB'Y GIVE"I !Ml'. Ocl-1. 15. 22. 'l9. ,,,, TllANSl'Ell ALCOHOi.iC Drt:Vli •AGtri: 5"1td pral)OWIS woll be r«PIVNI OY l-------------- U CEN$E($)· llt<\. 6101·6111 u.c.c . TM C•IY ol Co•li tuw &t :r.. 01llce PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ...o11r 14"J 11.1'1 o1 111t CllV Clerk 11 ll'>t cnv H1ll.l--------------l ---;;;;;c;;;c;;;;;;;;;;;c-;;;;;-~-,....,, 1-.E I~· kco<cBY GIVEN IO t., 11 F1lr Otlvl, COS!I Mew. (1lllorni1, NOTI CE INVITING 110$ C.rl!ClllOl'I ol R1CllllY M. AbOOtl. :.OC•I 1111tll Tiii l!Our of 11:00 1.m. Oft Novtm. • nt7S Stc:urlty No. "'°'52·1Slt, Trantilt'?I' ,',,"", lier J, l'1'-II which !!mt IMV will NOTICI! TO CRl!OITO•S Nollet II lleteily 11lvrn 11\.11 !hi lloard l it_,., WNISll bu•IMI\ •!'Cl''" " be -"td put>llch t'ld •tad ilo>Ud In !UP'l!lllOll COUllT 01' THE of TruslHl of 11>1 FOU'llli'I V•ll•Y PIKen•I• Ave .• ln ~ Clly •0,,',,c°!11 '"' CoURCll Cl'l•mbt!'• tor tUfnli.hl11g Ill STATE Of' CALlf'O•HIA 1'011 School Ol•l•lcl cl Orange COUl'lly, ll'ew: Cou111y OI "'11\Qtf, ;, 1 lebor, mifet'llll. 1<1ulome<'ll. 1r1n1par· THI! COUNTY OP' OllANGll Ca!llornll , Wiit rKelW ieiiled bld1 UP c11Uor"!1 9Jo71, that 1.1 DY~~,,;~;• g llUOl'I lfld tucll other liltllllln as m•v Na.. A-tll1JI 10 7:00 p.m. on llM! lwlNllY·l~lrd aay It 1oout to De mlMle 0 '""i be t111ulrl!CI tor IM constr<1e!I011 c! Ille 01 OCIObet 1971 at tilt olllc• ol s1ld Aklrlcll. ~II Securliy No. $1.9·2 LA SALLE AVENU E Sl ORM DRAIN. Elltle ol RUTH J. HESSLER, school alitrlct purch11ol1111 dellilrtmenl Tttnoter" 11\G lntcll<le<I Tr1n1t•r1 e • 1 1 Uk ti aTld Dictated ' wll OUllMH ld!'•IU I• 322U P•e.o ot~r ~~ • .,~•c•"::~n..:~ m~v°"~ 00. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN le the II wnlch !lm4! said bid• rw\11 bl;"'"' ca::llWI, 111 Ille C•tv ol 5•n Cltmt'l!e. tell'ltd ti ""' olllce ol 1111 City E\lllnetr crfljltors ct 1,,. ~bOve lllMed deceden! 1nd reaa tor !tie pu thew one Cout1IV ol Or1ngt, $1111 ot C•llfot11\1 11 Fi lr Orlve, COiii Mesa. Ct1 orlllt: 11,.1 •II Plf'IOnl htYl!lil cli lmi a;elnJI turf !rDctor to .De lurnlsl'lld In 1ccar0•11Ce "t~ ~rty 11 dlKrlbfll In 11-r•I ~"°'::ll:r r:n-;:fuSl'~ll ...!t81y'be11t ~~d'i·D?i !ht 01ld d-.;edent art requlr$<:1 to Ille ~~~~h:~ll~~~""'~ ofon ,i.:1e F!';111~~ IS' AU llOC:k tn tredt. llJtU•lt, equlpmlf!I h !Idle<!\ ma'I . '"'"'· wll!I "" nK•H••r VOU(l)t'5, I~ v II• l(.l\oOI d'~lrlct Number OM 1,,d DOCCI wlll ot a cetlaln Dttr llar •E~ch bJ 1.,.;1• 111 maoe °" Tl\e prepaial t!lt ollkt of 1'111 clerk ol TIM 1bovt Lraht'f.ousa Line.' corO.r of TelO.rl DUlln111 k!IQWll •• IClm Sitt.,, Ind farm 100 111 Hie mlllf!ft 11rov!de<1 In enlllled court. Or lo pttllnl l!lem. with and l'lewllllll 5treel, Fou1111i11 V1llt'I, lo<:•1ed I! 2101 Place11t11 Avtl' 0 11 Ille tl\t conlract docurrwmli al'ld 1h1ll De 1111 l'le<:•1wrv vouclltr•. lo t fl e C•llfornl• 92108 cu~ of 1c°tta111M•~· C.a,::,111Y1,:11111~1"rn,j 1ccomP1nle<1 by , cerll!ifll "' c11hl1r'• 11110tr1111"e<1 at 1111 olllc• ot"" •llotneyt, av oRoER OF THE 60ARO Stl I I 0 ·....:~ 'btve<~ lk:tllll !or cflfck Cl' I !>Id ocnd tor nat ~· GRE\!:NDERG, BERNHARD. WE:ISS 1'HD OF T A US TEES FOUNTAIN !f:ioW ;'f. ~ Slit Bl!tlr Humlllr 11).~i>f'l, lfllR !Ml. of IN! 1mount of lllCI tild, K.1.RMA, IMO C1ntu'1' Ptrk E.111, Sullil VALLE'!' SCHOOL O!STRICJ :..:mu., 10 premhH 1oc1ttd •1 2101 = lllYilllf lo the Cll\I ol Cosla 11~. Los Angeltl C1lllornl1 «(M7, W!llch 1Care1>.Acklev, Clerk of Ille B0&rd PllCINllll Avt. lo< 11>1 prlll'llte• too:tlfll NOi'tCE JS MEREBY GIVEN Tfl•I It !I'll P'ICt of butlnftl ol tM una...1lgned Putllltl'lld O••fllll COiii 01lly Pllol, at 2101 Pl1crntl1 AVI. In lftt Clly lhe Clly COiJncil of llld C:lty net In •II mlllffl PIMtlnlng lo !ht ettatt Oc!OOU I, 11. 171, ll5'·7• .i CllSll Mftf, Cout1tY of Orfl'IOI, IM!retolo<e nliollil>td 1 orev1!11"11 ralf of 11ld dKedtnl. wlt!lln lout IYIO!llhll-------------- Slllf ot CtlllOnll•. IM le •!'Id octle o1 wl(lf!S. In IKCOl'd.J'ICt wi111 tfler 11\t llrot PllDllCallM ot !nl1 llllllct. PUBLIC NCYI'ICE JIWll IM 1moun1 of PUfC M pr ' law, 10 be llil•a In tilt comtruc11M Olltd AugUll 1', 1•7•. Cl' cana1<11rt1lon 111 ConRtCll,on ~uh ··~ ol !he •OOve elllillftl lmorovtmlNl!s. JACQUELINE M, CARNEY "'~'"''"' ol uld llctnM or """" Tiii! ttld •••• Ind Kiit WIS aclollled E ut I of "" Wiii 111d .. id o.illt1111. 1ncludlflll "" tilimalfll ov Ille cnv council DY RriotuliM u .1 xK ' • l'IYtnlOl'Y. I• ll>e .... ,., a! . $1l.20ll.OO, Oii !ht ,lh d•Y ol Jltllllty, 197 .. ii"" ol IN! •bow n•med dtcedtnl whiCll canahtt ol 11\t tollowl11g. !I Oii till in the o!flct of the City Gll EENIEllG, l l llMHAIO, C!>«kS. SIOOOO; P1om1no·y 1111111 1}.!l Cit•~ of 1110 City. Thal Slid r111 WEISS AND KAllMA lo be rtp!fctd bY c1sn belott t w-ll'ICI Ital• Is htrdn r~rrfd to llld , ... ClftlllrT Itri Ettl, S11!lt 1111 al ttcraw, ill,100.00. l®"lfd 111 thll no!ke f'I lftouslh lullv l• A,..le1, C1lltON111 "'67 !' SUl"ElllOll CO UllT OP' THE i JATE OF C:ALll'ORHIA 1'011 THE COUMT'I' OF OllANOE Nt. A..fU~ NOTICE DI' HEA•IMO OF l"EYI J !ON FOR PROl!IATE OF WILL AHO f'Oll L£TTERS -TESTAMEHTAllY All °'"'"' buSlMll 11•-· •nll -··'"' a"" compk'tell HI for!ll hcrel" •nd ""°"'"'' tor E•ttllltl• uHCI bY IM lrlntletot wlml11 ~fir: lnar Wld iCI e, as tclOIOI;, ov' ulcl Publltl'lld Ot•fllll COl\I Oil!V PllOI, Eilalt of ROBERT BELDEN, DK~ll· Yf.UO Its! Pl•I IO l•r •• know R ... GIUllOl'I Is made ii 1>1rl ol lhll StptemOtr :.. Ind October 1 I 15 K . The Trat1sferee ttt 51m1. notict oy ;.,,fl!<'tr>Ct. !'1• ' :J:i6&·7• NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lh1I ''~',, II Ills ... -r 1 ~~-I .~:;..~ TIM! c on I •• ( '0 r Jhlll, In lilt JEAN R. BELOEN hit rllfcl !luel11 u a Cll'IHf' a 11 111 ' Petlwm1nce ol Ille -k 1t>d Im. , pet!Uoo fDf Probate ill Win a!ld 11 r-iulc'1td ~ SttC~flJU 1~11"' m~'"1~~~ oroffmeMs, contorm lo ll'>e Lilt>or COiie PUBLIC NOTICE "" 1n u1nce ol Lfll.rs Tt tl•mentarw i>tld ro eu 1 e. al ll'>e S!a\9 cl C•lllorn!a i"O r.lher 0 '" -·01 eter~• IO '"k n 11dtt•llan for Ille tr1111f"" of H!O bullneH lt ws ol t'I• st.r• o1 Calito<nla appllcablf 0 e ,....,, Oller r ,.nd trlntfff' ol .. 1e1 UctnM It 10 rt>ereto. wl!n ~ eJcepllon o~lv 01 11 •nlcle tor lurlhtt p1rtlcul1rs. and bl p.olQ Ol'lly •Htr u ld lr11151tr !llJ J<Kll v•rlallons 1~ may tit rfQufrec • 40921 Ina! the lime •l'ld plate ot t>i"l"ll -~ approved lly SllC 0-rtmenl e! unller !hi 1peclal •ltlUlfS pursua"I !o llOTICf TO C•EOITO•I 1111 1•me Ill! been Ill !or Oc100.r 1'1Car>ollt Btverl\lt Conlrol. ""'ICll P•cccedll'IQS !>efeo.1•"'" 1'9 !l~fh SUPElllOll COUllT 01' THE n. 197,, ~t 9:l0 l.M .. 111 Ille courtra.om Tnet • ••lei h1111fer 11111 11\lr.;tNnl 1nd which n1v1 r>of De111 super$1((ed STA'l'E OF CALIFO•NIA li'Oll. of Deparlment No. l cl wld court. ot the •lore•• d 1toc:~ In !title, I ~ru1••· bv !P'>e provision• of !he LabO< COdt. THli COUNT'!' OF O•.t.HGI 11 700 c;~;, Ce11ter Orlvt Wfll. In ~WP':"' n~:':Je~oc:1111wll\..:' ~~11~~!~~ "'~ffre11ce to lebOr shtll ~ olvtn only •.. ~. A..flOM IM Cl!V of Santa An1. C11ll0tnf1, 11'••lor 1oge1n.,r w1111 1h1 c0111ldtra!lon 1"N;:' ;:\~"11~~/Jj0V~('J.,l~:;ed units'• Estate ot .,,_ JOHN CASTRO. •l•o Dated OCtotier '· 197• tor lhe tran,ter and •11l11nme11t of II It made °" 1 blin~ f0f''1'1 lurn!shHI kh<IWn 11 BILL J . CASTRO. Decea~. WILLIAM E, SI Johll. lftt •!Of't•1ld llctnw for llcen1H) It by Ille City ct CoSla Mesa. af\cl I• ""0TICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo lht CO~'llJ Cltrk 10 bl Cl:W'l""1"'fltd Oii or ~!!!!<' lhe mftdt in 1ccore11nce wllh mt p•ovltlons crtoil10t1 Of !ht 1bov1 namtd deced9"! T•EMAIHE, SHENIC, 21111 day OI October, 191'· II !he escraw ol lh1 l>l'ot>OSll rtauir•menls Ille! 111 petton1 111vlnQ c111m1 1gtlt1•l ITROUO lo llOBEllTS Gellil'''"'"' ol B~v E1crow Co .. lr>C., Eich tilcl<ler mutt be llc<lftstd tlld 1ht 1<1IG dlctdenl art re<iuired lo tilt 1'110rllt'fl 11 L1w <ti 1000 ... ~•11 Mcftvtol• ~~0fl'l111. 111511ir l llO Prtau111!11<1 a• rtauire<I bv 11w. 111em. wllh 1111 lllKfltirv voucllert in '°' s"u' OU"' Stretl. S•ll• 1414 Cfly of .,.11>9e, cun!y O tlflOI, a I The Ci!V Council of the Cl!v of Ille !fl I ll\t I I ... ' LOI AntRltt. Cf lllorllll toOU ol Calllw, .. , •. ..J!OV1.l'led IN ! ,1111 I~~·."· Co111 Mt•• .... ,~, Ille right lo rf)Kt el'l!lll~ ~·O\I~ or !Oc :;: •• ~. ,~ ... '':'1: Tel' Ulll '17·1111 "-' Of co .... +c t•trllll• ""'"' 11 1nv Ir 111 bin• ' • A i.r l"ttlll-•llP•Oved 11/d !•,.nstet of u lli Ileen... EILEEi.I I" "HINNE'( lhe necen arv VOUCl>tf1. lo Ille Ull· llOflltYI ' r O D I• I'll I Oiied Septemocr 75, 1911, c 11v Cle•~ · d"1'tl9ned 11 the olllct cl llClr anor....,., P~bll11'1td Or•"'<!e Cw5 • v o • AichltY H olbOoll CUv cl Cosll Mes•. NIXON A. LANGE, 7615 p 1 c1 1 l c OclODlr I, f, 15, 191, 3151·11 TrA'llteror 1na LICfftlff Pubtl5 l'lld OraAgt Coat! 0•11Y Pllol Bou~vfra. HullllnQ!Ol'I Park, C1llrornla "°"''ll''V D. 41drlcll O<:•obtr 17. IS. 1'1~ :11116·1• ?11255. ""'lcll t1 !ht ol•c1 of bullMtt PUBLIC NOTICE ~~:~::::: lfld llllff\dN 01 IM u-l19ned In •II mal1tr1 Plf'·l--------~-=--- "u11Uo!ltd D<'•* Coast D1llv Piiot PUBLIC NOTICE 11!1111'1!1 lo ,,,. ntalt ol ulC decldtnt. f'ICTITIOUS •USINESS October' B, 191• :eao-1, -------", • .!.."I.?.'.~.-.· .... -.','"'"'' lllCI llrsl P11bUc1-NA.Ml STATEMENT '"" "' . Tiie 1onowl11g PltlOm 1r1 d o l "g ,ICTITITOUS l USIHEIS Oiied Sl!lltrnDer 20, lt7f.. butll'llU 11: HAMI! SJATEMl NJ LUCY C. C1'STRO A WORLO BEYOND, •1!;5 0 '."' 1otr-i11V Pf'"'" 11 dol119 bUl1t11ss EXKlltrhl ol lhe Wiii of Mart!llglll W•Y· NtWPOrl 8 e I ' II FICTIJIOUI •USI NE'1S as. IM ·-n1m+c1 dettdenf C11ilorn!1 92660 HAMI! STAJEMliHT WESCO INTE~NATION\L, 1201 no,,. HIXOH A LANGI: ROCl'ltllt K. M1t11ry, Ul HimlUOl'I. Tiie fllllow/"9 111r1111 11 <IOh"<I Po.lsl...,U ~w:ulie liOO, tkwporl !!Heh, Calllort111 1611 P'1c1i1c Blwl. coo::n.-.wM.C•I~'= .... ~~' ~ ~." ••: NICY !Ofol Doll Pl L 'w11111m E. II""""'• 436 Bl'l'wood H•nll119I001 P'1r•, Ct, toUI Ber1111rdlno A.,.., l'l""'POrl 8tlC,h, .:!:~. c.1!1or,.;1 ,,.srr K t. ICIUl'll Ortw, "~ Beacn. Cft!llornlt 92660 Tll' UUI M1..fl44 C1lltornl1 t1UO RO!llld p EO!lfflV Jt ' ll)K r-.,.. TM• bullnes1 ii COl'ldl/CIHI llV Ill A!IO""Y ,.,. E•Kllltb Tiiis l>u0111eH Is cOl'lcluc:ll'll by Ill rlact. Ll<;IUN flffcfl, Cthlor~I• fUSI 11111lvklwl. Publi1htCI Or1'1Qe · C0&1! 0111v Piiot, ll'ld!Y!Ou~1Qc,,.ue IC M•tetl'Y "'' b11t!ne11 11 COllCIYC!ed ow 111 W!lll1m E. flOl'IMr Sl!lltMtltt 2•, tnd OCtoDer I, I, 15, TnlJ lllllnlll\I' was tlltd wllll lht 1,.qlvlctual. Tlll1 1ta""""'1 "'"' mtct wllh 1t11 191• J511·11 coun!Y Cieri! Of 0t111111 c-IV on Tllti ~J:1~~i ~~trlT11~' wlfll the CouMy Ct.r~ of O•l"Oe County Oft VC•-11, 1?1•. countv c'"• o1 Or•llCI• c ounty 1111 0ttobft 4 1•1•. PUBLIC NOTICE Firm OC!ol)tr 11. 1'71 MACICAY, Mdll:EGO• .. •ENNION , ______________ , Puoll1tled Or•r.ve COl$1 Otll'( l'•lel, l'll"Sf IU W. Mh $1., S•ltt 121 SLl"·PIM' OCtObtr U, tt. 'lf, ll'ld November S, Publl!l>td Dr11191 C!!atl 01lly "1101. Liii AllftMs. C•Ulenll1 *U IN THE SUl"ElllOll COUltT 01' ltl• :llOS.1' t,J:blr u. n. "'· 111111 Nawn1':i,./.j Tit!: 6U·T7tt !t :Ml THI IT.I.TE Of' CALl,OllHIA PUBLIC NOTICE Flln( IH AHO 1'011 THE COUHTY C 01' O•ANOil PURI.IC NOTI E oc'::!'r'r..:'s. °'""'' '°"" O•!ty Piiot. "'· ,..,,.2 F•~!J!~O~JAi~:.:=:~s FICTITIOUS l"SINl!:SS 1'74 22. tt. I nd No...mi;;.)4 OIDl!lll TO SHOW CAUSI: Tilt lollOWll!ll pCl!'IOl'I ii dOlll!I bv•lneu ., Acloli t ellorl of ROBERT KOEBURN 11: N.IMll STATEMl:HT ICELLEV, For c11111111 al N1me. WEBCO PACIFIC, 1101 o.,_.. SI .. ,1!/'rc! tollowl119 Pl'IOl'I II OOlllt ~""' PUBLIC NOTICE WHEREAS, ROIERT IC o E B u R 11 511111 XIO, Newpart Dt•cll, C1Ulornl1 7YCAL CONSTltUC'tlON M()MrAHY, ltELLEY. ptllll-t. I milt owr 11 '1660. 1•» R•lf•R 51tHI, INlroe. C1lltor11l1 • .,.... YN•I ol ""' !111 !!Itel '" •OPlk•Non WIHlem E. BOllNlt. ~ Bl\fWCJOCI 97105 NOTICI TO Cll OITO•S ..,11n tllCI Cltrk o1 lhli Court 1or 1n Orlvt, Ntwpert Beach, Callfar'lle t'lUO, 5"..., Ed1o.1rd Tyltr. 1'112' R1Uen SUl"llllOll COURT 0, fHE otder (11i11'19lrt11 pttltlo!ltr'1 IWll'llt from 1..J1~1l~u.~"114 11 ~'OllllUC:!tcl by •n \1 .. lrvJ M1 Ct ll too'lllt n ;roS ITAYE 01' CALll'OIUUA FOi llOIERT ICOEIUllN ICELLl!Y I e w/!!i•M E. 801111&r ..J,~ b1n•1111t /1 COllduc:ttcl tly '" TH• COUNTY OF o•ANOI. ROlll£11T l"OHO; Thi• '"'-"' Wll mea with 11\1 I ' uel. E 't I Mt. A-11111117 IT IS OROEill:EO 11111 tit ptt-COUllly CllOI ol Or111111 COlllllY Oii Tflli ;r~-;:,..;I t,:;, tlltd wllh ltlt E1llN Ol HE.LENE L. M1'11Ctt., 0.. l111trMltd lrl tllt 1-. tnlltltcl ,,,.llff ~r .. Jtl• C .., Cl rt of Or"'91 C 1\1 °" Cffstd. '""'' 1111111'1 !!Ill Col.or! Oft NowmDer llUCKAY, MtcCilll:IGO• lo •IUlttlON c::;:, 11.'1t1'. Ollll NOTICE II HEltEllY GIVEN fe IM n . ,,, ... •I 10.00. m .. 111 Ille C-lr-"! sa w. tlll ll,1. ....... •u ' ,,,,.. (...,lltll'I Of I"' toew f\I~ c!cUt!tlll Of Otpartlntl'll J el fllt llbcl"' rntllltd LtT"I ~~.,11, ~llf!Oml1 D1' 'l; C D 'I Nf 111 ~ ""'111t cl&!m• .O•lnlt 1111 C ,,. C : Jf.J, n P\lbfl~ frwlt Cotti I Y l"llot, Yid OtcldWll l/'11 ..-ir.:i IO Ille llKrn. Ollrl, lvk C111I"' 0.1,,. W.,.i, UMO OC!otMr u, • -:t, -NOortlllbtr S. wltll lllt l'lta'IUfV -..c......, 111 1'111 tffltt $1<111 A,.., C•Ulorlllt, •fllll l"-Cl\ne, l'Jn!J fti'• 31(!'·" ol "" cltr1t ol ,... l bllllt enr1Htd (Ol/l'I. II 1ny. WllY IM 1ppllc•lton tor Cl'llnllt PUOlltl>td Or•noe CO.SI ··-•11¥ ~toll flt fe orlffflt """'' wlffl 1111 ~,.,., of 11....e ~ not DI "'"'"· Cktotler U. 22. tt. -,_ PUBl.IC NOTJCE "'!U<htri. Ill "" Ulldtrtltl'ltd II 11\1 of1k1 If 1$ f'UftfHER OltOEIUi D Iha! I 1_ .. _• _ _,"'"'"''"'"'"'""' _____ .. ---~== cocccccc c ---1of Ill• tit~. TMEOOOllE c. ECKEi!· (Olly ol !Ills Cll'dtt IO tlww (lllM: bt ,tCTITIOUI aus1N1Ss MAN, :»! 11. co1oreoo ellld,. lull• '°'• P¥btl'1>fd 111 fht 0111, io11o1, • IWIW'lllllf• PUBLIC NOTICE NA.Ml I YAT•Ml .. T l"tudtftt. CtllfOrllil ,1101, wlllcll II '"'of Otftl'll clror;:lllali.tl prllllN In '"'1 ----=:::::=::c.:-00'.':==---,.,. to!IOWl'IQ prnM ,, flilllf'I °"""'11 olKt or tu&l!'llU .... n. ....,,.,,,,,11. C01111ty ol °''""' lt11t ol C•lllarlllt. l'ICTITIGl.tl 11.ttlN~S at 111 •II '1'l•n1rs "'1alllillt lo !flt ttlillt ~ I .,.... fOf ~ IUC:Cft\/"" wttb MAME \YATlli MINT • PACIFIC IHOUSTlllES, 1'1J a.von ol H id ~I. Wlffllll lour l'ROfll"' prior IO ""-O•le HI fer hl•rl"O lllt TPlt IOllowl'IQ "'""" Is clol!\Q 1111\1111:11 Cli(lt, ~I Ml~ Cf t'HM •llt' lllt llttl 1111tf/UIJM of this f'IOtlCt. *t:ltlk.lllon. Ml v lnc•nt 11. 1+!t'1. ltl) Avon Clr(lf, OttN OC'tODtr II, lt14 0.IW••lllll 17111 Oty OI J.fflttmtllr, NOll:MANO'f ltEPINISHl!!S. 510 lht CO$fl MIM, Ctlll, fMM HEHltY l . MARCIL lt7'-StrMI, Niwporl leto(fl, C•, tt~. 'tMI businttt I• cand\ICMd ~ •11 E11CUIOI' ol In. will of PltANI( D0MEHICHIHI !M:Oll Sirkll!t!I, JIO Jl1! 51., NtWl'Cf'l 11 ll'rlllvklll~~·l;ftl ' THI0~1''r."'1~1WA~1 JAMllJ~ur.t':',~':'"'lor c-· ~~:l'l,b~t~M~·-<'OMUC~H b'I' •11 T h11 1.111..,.,,.n1 w11 trtlllf w1th ti. •• I . Ctl6r.,. a 1-.... Altlnllft 11 L•• lllCl!v!dllt~·011 5arldi!tt1 Ctl<l'llt c 1,,1r of °''"" c-r, on s11111 .,.. WJ VI• o,.tr11 ,., , , , ''" , ~-•-lier It. lJlt. l"lltcllftl , Cllllf-'• "ltl N•WWI IMtll. Ctlllof'll11, • .,... "'' • ' •mtn WI• I w Ill I ... -• ,,, • ., '""""' fllr B•tc:lll• Tl!-! 111'1 f7Mlt, C0\1111\1 C1tr• cl Orlf\Of C911!'11y on -I .,. .. -. SIOTt!ftotr 11, 191(. ftwolitf'lttf °'""' c0tt1 O•"' iouot. l"vot!~ °"""' '°"~' P•11v '" 1111. """"" ,_ ,...,"'""' rmn *'""'* , .. #1-j OClllOeor •• •• u Ottooet IJ,. "·~ "· l<1CI ovtrnblr 5. P\ibl!lllM °''"'" Co.11 OtllV l"llot, "Vb!Olled Or•nll'I: Coast D•llV l'llol, tt1• iiJ1·1A 1'7' :Jlu.1• OtllOtf 1, I. 1$, U, It'• :IM7-H Ott-1, f, U, n, ,.,, U»/4 PUBLIC NOTICE I 6 4· 2 • • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y I L 0 T 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 • I • • The Biggest Marketplace on the Crance Coast DAI.LY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS .. You Can ~11 lt ,Find It , [642•5678] T~e It Wtth a Want.Ad Real Estate ...••..• 1000-2999 Rtnlals .......... 3000-4699 Busin1s1, lnv1stmtnt & Financial .....• , ... 5000-5049 Announc1mtnt1, Personals lost & Found .••.•• 5050.5499 Services & Repairs 6000-6099 Employment & · Preparation .....• 7000-7199 One Call Service Fast Credit Approval Merchandise ..•••.. 8800-8099 Boats & Mori'!' · Equipment ..••.•.• 9000-9099 Automobiles & other Transportalion .... 9100-9999 Gen1r•I R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 ERRO~S: Advertisers ==.;.;.="-·--""' should check their ads LUXURY dally & report errors WATERFRONTS IDmAlmLYo dPllLaDITe I Y: The ~te.0~2 ~~fth ;li~.i r1 t aissumes Ncgoliablo lernu. ll1blllty for tho flrot lncorr•ct ln1ertion BAYSlDE DR. -4 011 the only 1\•tUer, super hOuse, 11uper • \'iew & ~ach . TilESE bonies are n o l o~ise oJrered, so oppor [ II ieJ tunlly is limited. ....... .., .. ' ~~ 1~G-1;ne;r•a•l•R•.E•.iiii;m;,:;1m002~.ir-~-f!,~ ~) Bac:helor Pad Corona del Mar With Pool ~·; 1"0 BOit lllO -675-6050 HOME & INCOME Your Own Private Beach In Beautltul Cameo Shoreli. Enjoy this vlev.• home oo a I a r re , professklnaUy land5':aped oonier lot. 4 Bedrms ., ram rm., Liicerful fplc, delightful Wtn kitchen. Newly decorated. $159,000. South of Highway Dupl~ with best income in -coronu-det l!.tal'--ror-rrs price. Lot and a halt below bjghway with large 8'Vim· ming pDQI. SUbmlt contract "'"'le ~-7270 ".. -1 .. Jt'" s.tUt1i tJ"i"ll'-•' RlAUOllS Call us about this desirable Corona 11 lghlands 2 br 2ba pool hon1e with I a r g e master suite priva te beacb access and very special l I n ancing atTangements. 169.500 EBstsidc; slightly Spanish I """"'H"1"G"H""'"o""'N""'A""'"" owne1"s 3 Bdrn1. + dining Call 644-7211 em V.A. ND DOWN r m. hon1e. A dccoralor 's HILL deligl\l. Your ov.·n p1·iv. """' ""'"'" '"'"""" "' OVERLOOKING n1assive slumpstone v.·a\Ls. 8'cloo"" m•"· '""'Iott!!! BLUE PACIFIC All appliances 1* years P r ivate and quirt . nev." including trash com· Pa1)0ran1ic vil:'W of Pacific. pactor. Plus, 2 bd!'ll'l. in-Courtyard entry. Large come hon\e. $68,500 & kitchen. Family r o o tn . Owner will help finanL'C. HUGE UVJNG R 0 O 1\1 FERGUSON·HESTER Realtor1, Inc. wrrn A BREATHTAKING VIEW. Large bedrooms. Covered patio. Priced at on- ly $69,!l50. Ov.•ner .,,,, i 11 finance. Call to see 963-{i767. REAL ESTATE SALESPERSONS Need A New Outlook? A Fresh Start? Depressed? \\'e are interviewing men and women, experienced and ln- experienc • f:r aele& posi- tions in our Corornt de! Mar office. Eam and leam ln a Oetigli~armosphere-ot antiques and nautlca 'with he I pf u I , compatible oo- v.· o rk e rs and iodh'l<luaJ broker assist'ance. YOU Wll.L NEVER HEAR A DJSCOUR/.GING \VORO! ! Call Nigel for a pprintment 644·'1'111 Anytime M!lm . ' ' ASSUME B+ 1f2°/o FHA LOAN 2 STOllY Sl 82 PER trfO. $182 per month. A 11 1 u m e 8%% FHA loan. 2 story heme. Mrs. O t :at lives here prjce ihCludes \VD s he r , dryer & refrigerator. Bike to beach. Total price for Utis townehome $24.500. Call now 963-1)767. OPEH TIL 11 • f1'S F1JN 70 Bf IWCEI Thls 3 yr. oJd Select property has 4 Bdrms,-2 Ba, a large fan1·nn Jc a heated & fil tered Pool. The C>wner is gone & wants it to sell fast at $49,995. Call quick, 556-2660. ~SELECT T'PROPEATIES 1401 Dove St , Ste. 220 Newport Beach 83:1-9781 f~N7"0• rrS>v•ro~NUO~ [~ ~ THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD WE HONOR . ' . '"" ' ..... , . . \ \LLE' HL\l:t'' A BERG ENTERPRISES CO Lachenmyeri Realtor , CORNER SPLENDOR You'll love the \Vlde open feeli11g of this Costa 1.les11 home. J Huge bcdl'Ooms, 2 ho.lbs, 2 brick fir.·-luces, famlly rooni and n1uch, much more. No 2nd car needed here -walk to e\.'Crylhing. A terrific value, call for full details. 546-5880. ~~HERITAGE REALTORS COUNTRY ESTATE ()ver ~ aci-e. Spra wl l ng wood panelled, v.'OOCI beam- ed ranch house. Pool. 3 othel' furnished houses on REMODELED 4 BR $37,000. Talk about vaJue, Imagine 4 BR . .2 BA, beaut front kitchen, complere w/ new n11p!iances, lge enclos- ed 'pal.io, new cpts and paint. Located on safe cul-de-sac, Vacant and owner 11·ants ection. Cn ll 546-5880. --•.•HERITAGE REALTORS Walker&Lee Al l ~ •• , .. ,, OPEN HOUSE Sat & Sun 1-5 3277 l\1innesota, C~i. Mesa Verde VA, Appraisal ordered. 0 w n e r anxious. Low interest & low or no dov.•n. A super i; p aJ: i o u s sharp 3 Br 2 Bath fafJ)ily iPici~:il'l lii•Place Properties · · . 752-1920 1100 0UAll5T. NlWl"ORT lllACH BLUFFS CONDO WATER VIEW! 11 Just redecorated for a new buyer. 3 BR., 2~~ ba., fonnal dining, fa I r I y sparklC!s thruout. Vacant & ready-fast possession. Own- er v.•ill consider lease \Ylth option lo purchase. C. F. Colesworthy REAL TORS .640-0020 REDUCED $3000! 1\tust see lantiutie 4 +family room + private oUice. Gigantic mas· ter Bulle has room-size closet flnd blJl'. baJcony. BeKt big horre buy at $51,950! Call 847-6010 Agt. p r operty for r c nten OPEN71LO •IT'SFLWTOBEHICE/ DUPLEXES OCEANFRONT New listing! 3 BR., 3 ha. + den upper: 2 BR.. 2 ha. lower. Ncv.·ly paiilted; xlnt location. $179,500. Call: 673-3663 642-2253 Eves 2 BR., 1 ba. + I BR. (Lgl'), I ba. Newly rcclecor. Xl nt ('Ond. $179,500 can: 673-3663 associated BROKERS -REAL TORS 101S W Balboa 67J·l6l.J EAST SIDE COSTA MESA $36,950 3 bedroom, 2 bath, covtted patio v.·ilh a very large \\'Cll fenced rear yard. It's bright· t!het>ry and clean and 011 'a nl1:e slow tmffic street. J ust llllted. 646-TI71. ~~PLO ·rr•~roM~·~ COZY COTTAGE \Varm and wonderful bench home with gUest h o u B e • Ptivate b e a c h'. Exclusive community, Only · 2 blocks fronl the water. DelightJul red brick. courtyan.t. Only $64.9".iO. IMQuail ~ liilPlace Properties , 752~1920 1400 OIJAllSI, N~Wl"Oltt BllCH UNOBSTRUCTED OCEAN VIEW FROM CATl\LINA TO LAGUNA -enjoy e1n't!frce Condominiurn living \V I ! h security and comfort. Com- pare 01hers and this wlU be your choice. Prit'Cd at $!10,000 (.'Offiplctcly furnish- ed, seller m1cy carry J.st Trust Deed. Call 540.115.1 ~~HERITAGE . • REALTORS REAL INCOME 2-3 BR, 2 8;1 !louse! w/in- come of S500. Assume the Isl {at 71Ji!kl. and the 2nd. -And you'U have $200 left ?ver each mon1.h, The price lS $48,000 f()r both 80 caJJ now. 55&-2660. §:;SELEC'Ji._ T' PROPERTIES Maste~ Charge for 7 more unlta, St29.9"~. ONL y $34,950 relt1tiv('S or 1K"1vants. Zone ! ~ and BankAmericanl THE DIRECT LINE 642-5678 u: IQ ·1 ~ Grelit starter home In CO$lR UQI Mosa. 4 big bodro<>o,,. in Plac• . ~ nice area. Chvncr w111 well Praperti•• . ' DCEANVIEW VA. w."., , .... Call 6'G-71UI 75 2·1920 SPECIAL 11100 QUAil St. NIWl"O•l llACH Fasl Oc:c:upanc:y East bluff Call us l'bout Ibis extra neat 3 br family room home in F..astblurt "1~ large patk like ylttd tind ~Ible boat. traller storngt! a c c e • • . Quk:~ OC<:Up1uicy ll i ahort escrow de!tred. Owner wUI hclp llnanc:e 111 only $64,950. C..11 641-12.ll ,.. ME A DEL MAR- • $49,950, l.fH'at 4 BR 4 POOL. Neat as a pin. Call to s e e , 536-..32'J4/5i;...s289 4 BR, 3 & Bcnuty in gu:\J'd. ed prlv. orea. Fam -r m v.•/chllr broiler, I&: llv. nn . w/firepluCt', enclosed r,:.~ l .lv. rm. & ~fruiter look 1t ocean. Jw.f steps to priv. beach. Try lease option. Sl15,1Xk>. GRUBS & ~UJS Real Estate, 675-7(8) Walker &Lee 11111,. ,,, .. ,. $77.900? As.Bume 7'ii% JQM. Full p&V"'len~ $153 _t>U moath CJcnn and tharp. Two story. Call nov.· to 1ee S.t7-6010. Agt. OPF1I 711. I • IT1 f:IJN Ji • MCEI ! ll~l;ll\ll 4 BEDROOM 2 bath, double ga.-e, c.'OITll!r IOI. E11.1l!lklc. Coata MCMI. $34,SOO "'--------.J , GL.\NT?, nr.Al.TY SERVICE Roy Mccardle Realtor 1110 Newport Blvd., CM m-7729 • • • ' ' " ' •• J • • .--.,...,=---.,=,......,,...--.,...,,.,,---,.,,.,.,,--=---...,..,----=---.--.,..,_· ~TUMday, o:!._obtr 15, 1974 1002 G•n•ral R.E. lOO'l j General R.E. IOO'l ;C;.;•.;,•;.;••;....cMc.•;.;•c.• ___ ~~' Huntington 8e.1chJ0.4o laguna Niguel · Big Canyon Greenbrook =u.i.: ""'' 1"" '"""· • 1,G;;.',;";;";:';:al;:R:;;;:. l!;:.;;:;;:;:1;:002;;;;G;;;;;•n;•;r;:•l=R.;;E;. ;:;;;:;;;1;;;00;2; Gener 1 I R. E . 0•1L v mor B 1' r 1052 Newport Beach • 1069 Har bor Vlew- Reduced $2.1001 new cpts.. tile. recently Ma9nificent pn.ln1l'<1. 1 bbr. 1~ bu, 1rp1. Llk 4 BR & I r II 6 b •• 0 of A K" d Uc~utllul 5 ll" d r u u Ill II' 3 \_'IJ.'<.t, drp,:, Jg. lndkaped )'d. e new -ge. am 1y __ rm., ai~. ne 1n balhi, t'11Rr.i.cll•rt 111ru\ijlhou1. Pr1nw Lo1·111k',, nr. ,u·hli, Pier1 & Ooat. 30 Ft. rot. $'.lGO,QOO. Supe-rbly ilOOOl'Rll'd tUl11 l1uld· 0 r I I' 11 I 11 I r. a r tic n. . pHrk, & i>hop'it· Prin. only. ~·111i.:'il I br hvn1f' llil\Uat1'd Bo<1111rnlh•1· ilC'l'i'~ $52,!iOO By °"'nrr ~::. Family home: 6 bdrn1s., 4 baths. 36 Ft. lot. \\'\th vu•w nt BIR cunyon 675·8600 Pier & sUp. $295,000 1u~ u.nd "'"'' IOfl !.,;land. VISl•N TRADE YOUR f.'orn1er 1nodt!I h0n1e \\Ith EQUITY & OWN LIDO ISLE J SPECIALIZING IN UIOUNA NIGUEL VIE\V PROPERTIES SEA TERRACE i'RIVATE GUARDE:.. AREA Coklrful vicw of SYdlthllC'k r>.ltu,q. B~ t'xttull•' wJth ,, bdnn§., l baJhK. 'llU£1! 111utel' suite. Str~·n den wiU1 v.·ct bar. V~ultl'<i ctU· In~ \\1lh heavy hc11.ms. $113,500. Call 61·1-81'JO. Attract ive 3 BR .. 3 ba. sin gle story ho1ne on large ai.:tlvltJ~·"' roon1 se1~-Jilt., :r IN MESA VERDE 60 ft. street to street lot. $152,soo ra1ed fnl1n , ... ,i111t('n1·e. *-.. "I,; Y P cluda! ou1tk.ln1· 11\•ln}; a1·1·~ [,..L.J Covit11tto11 Bro~. 4 pit·~ 111th l'Xislinng 1•, VA lonu l~h OCEAN VU to11•nhon1('$, :I tlt111out. J\gL IW2·9:l71. ' Of 3 BR, $19.500 -$75,000 opular 4 bedrm lloor plan, Ute one with \VATERFRONT LOTS \l'ith pullinii IJl'c,·n, oriun1111 the large mas ter bedroo1n suite. No\v ava~ 40X90 Ft. $250,000 SOX105 Ft.. $1651000 i;.:urdl•n, view de•k. _gu~ Cl IEC'I\ 11 IESE /3 llR fixer Upper, VA 110 do,vn or ossurne l•'HA $32.000 2!!L! • $&t.500 "'ill buy this lovclv able _on a large pie shaped l?t. Excelle nt fi · tut.>le<I u~ pit. t.1u111 re11i-nanc1ng available thru Occidental Life In· (tcni;e feutu1-eii a t-onvel'ill.i· TAKE OVER GOVERNMENT LOAN UJ)~radcd j:a1iJen ho Ille 600 N1•wport C('nlt>I" l)rlvo w1atrlu1n. 2 i.iH. dt<n. FINAL CLOS£0UT 3 & ~ BR homl!tt in all • surance. Presented by Unique Homes at only llon well 111 hvl11~ 1'1'.)IJm, $58 000 formal dining, family l'xnn, ./4 Hll, custonl Capo ill'COS. No <1ualilyb~. !-~or BUY this outsland!n~ l BR * l\IODELS * n1ori.-lnforn111tion cnll BKlt., oc-ean vu vn ~-u1111·at·! \\ / uni I , · laundry-S(•wlng ruon1, hu"M1' · UNIQUE HOMES, Realtors 546.5990 1naii1er suite, 2 fil'cplat'('li, (~od , O\vner 1nay carry -s:Ji)..3.'!7:' SIO,IXXI dn. !\love Jn 101nQr· * NE\\I llUi\ll:S * 2850 Mesa Verde Or., Co$ta Mesa kitchen fully (_'(1ulpp..--<l 11.'lth 1st 'fD. S75.500. i~""'""'""'~~""'""'""~""""'""'""'"'"""'""'""'""'""'" I .G~•-"-•~•~•~l~R~·;.;E~·:.... __ 1;.;00;.;;2_G:..:•~ne~r~a~l~R:.:::.E::.:.. __ _:100:::2~ 1 all 1nodem 1unenltics. Ci1 \l C"al! dny or nitc Hunt. Harbour 1042 l'UW. S',', ~·1nnn1:)1\g 1tv11ll. HARBOR VIEW HOMES General R.E. 1002General R.E. 1002 -673-8550 for llll 11ppolnln1e111. CENTURY 21 6-tJ..i?.?1 BY O\\'NER 3 BR, 2 11 Enjoy The Good life * Balboa Bay Properties * [°"'®Nrit&·rrs FuN10E£Na\ ~1~Pe~.~1:~~~0~~~ ~~:~~~~t~r:f~a~:~ Lake F~~!s~9l-25t3 1054 N~"~~'~t~}~::iet190 STEPS TO OCEAN I NEWPORT DUPLEX f a1nily 1ton1r on 'ul ].,., II h k Irvine 104.1 BAYCRE!'T BEAUTY Cus(onl 4 BR & 3 BR. Near everything. 3 BR., .. , ... :.1· l'll\'Y s a ·e ~ 70" INTERES l ~iiii~iii 1 rooif, rustic extl'rior. Thi-ec 1o . T on one of nreas loveliesl dlx. duplex, l yr, old. 2 ~a . & ga~age, .each lX'diviunis. 11 .. 1,.11hs, fanuly slf'i*hl. 3 Bn. r11.n1 rn1. lrg Extra-large Jot-&-build· un1L; one-unit avaiJ.---at """" 41.11d hc:ifC'Ct-poot. DELIGHTFUL Z-STORY -hebhy or 11: .. rne-11n. Plm WESLEY N . TAYLOR co. REALTORS since 1946 ing. $129,500. 675-7060. $350 mo. Fu 11 price STUDftr'IN HOME '57.500. GARDEN HOME COUNTRY SIDE doc '° ""id' & ·uuL .,. ••9 500 64"7491 3&I l\li111 LornR Costa l\lesa They tU:;l~.nnilt'<l this 3 Udt111 ., , ll/F' pool, !;fl.'i BBQ Ir: fin! "'° · · v · Call ""'!'"'' ,,,:•Pr'< 2'~ llalh honic 11 ilh rirl'-l..AKE Jo OR EST r!ug. J d I! a I cnlertainnient Ar I j s1·s. BN'hitcc\5, mu~i-....,.,... .,.,.., ,..,_ ., I 4BR ., f 11 ~I . I d I • I EASTBLUFF NO DOWN Prin"I.""''· Onl>· pln('l'. 1nu·1'0rs . ~h"il•·•·. ~.uuo u . • u .~•.is. feD.tu~ or i'I u 1.s '" or rians, Sl't! !his 1 o v" I Y ",,... " " Sh b d lid OPEN DAILY l < ---l'i'l'111i1ll' 11lci and n~orl'. Oif· · ag t'tU'IK'IS, u t·UIS. ch rcn. ...,: SPYGLASS HILL -$149,950 lFEEl Beaut. 2·story 4 BR New Bedford home w/lge FR, huge bonus r1n & 3 baths. Fully ldscpd. Beautifully dee. Lge. yd , Lovely vie\V t super cl'ean 4 BR. home 3 BR, 1112 ha. Closing Ea st sld!', Co.-;tu l\1t'SU MESA VERDE NORTH ll'L'C'!\I an\; d1•l1i.;h1ru1 nt a D!Slt\\'.1Sher, GorL:t'OU S 1S2'l Buu .. 1nsht•ll 1~1rn', Npt. Huge ,fam./din. rm. costs & impounds, $575. outstanding v a 1 u r · !Ins !\lust S!)IJ our Drl'an1 lh1ui;t'. 1,,.1,,. 01 1-.·'·.-. . custo1n draJ)l's. Largr ex· Bch. O..vnr/~'1.. &12...sa.;.1 s e ['Ill I' II t l' nlOlhcr-in·hnv L S' noo ' -"" I . ' Newly redec. Owners I h1o. paymls. $241 PITI. i·avuu.: ·.al•·. :.._ i;q '1· CALL 552-7500 posi·l .. '.!!gre~ale patio ,..: N'EWLY rcmod. N\\'PI l'~ . 170 OO ap.1.rtn1ent plus the Sl\ldio. 'l i<tr)', I Br. 3 ht~. \\'utcr "alkv.a'.\'S. It s a RE AL J B , "· N "'._, an X I 6 U s! ,5 . F'ull Pr i Ce $23,500. Full Price $48,750 SVl!l•nl•1-. spnnkll'1'S. on I y • VISION • HAHG,\1.'1 at $·1,l. 000. area.. r •• :j9"":k e~~ .. ~12.;f' 640·8484. 55~8800. S~1S,lrJ(}. Assu1nc V,\ ]oD.rl fl.I 586-59~JO Principals only. --& paint, .,,.. • · ~· · ' I] 2211 NewJ>O!f Bl. 7',;, \1•ilh lg dn pynu1t. Uy REALTY Mission Viejo 1067 Newport Shores 072 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 REALTORS Costa Mesa -011·ner. 3.'\23 N(·1'ada, Cl\1. 646•8811 5:-i7·7007 nrt 3 pn1. ·H rrd hill l'Onirtiny REALCO * NEW LISTING * General R.E. 1002 Ueneral R .E. 1001 4 Local Offices To Serve You • * * Univ. Pa1·k Cf'ntPI'. liv\nl' TREES, TH!!:ES, TllF:ES .. 2-.s1y. ~-F:ru_me. New cury., BY 011'nt'I': L 1xurious Pool all over. 1nixl'd \\'ilh exotic \l'LY clean, 3 BR., din. -------ABANDONEQ ASSUMPTION 7°/o $223 PER MONTH SIX TOP SALESPEOPLE General R.E. 1001G IRE 1002 Sun/Eves. twine in l\lcsa Verd shrubs and plants, for !he urea. 2 patios. Wolk _to ener1 • . . · e, e1:1s-Assume a1;:,01 Loan ~n,,,.00 1,,. 11,,., 1,., u, "''""h. pool> & tcnnu1. 546.41 40 IU,ll t'(' .,n, l,'l'1'1lt l'ZllCl1all1· . _ . /O ~~· "'' . ';'a . r~0oo ONLY $41,900 WANTED \Ve 're big and we're small. \Ve arc a national company. listed on the Ame r ican Stock Exchange. \Ve can back up wha.I we say! But \\'e have ~ local offices in Califomia to get right in ._.,.ith the people in-the corllmunily. Yes, we're big and \\'e're small. If yau · want lhe advantages (I[ both or just want to know more CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX Close to ~an, with 3 bdrms., 2 baths & !rplc. plus deluxe 2 bdrm. apt. with fine ocean vie\v . All in xlnt condition. $114,950. OUR lit 25 BAY a11c1 l~1'~1\CH REAL TY YEAR CA LL 675 -3 00-0 ANYTIME ing, :l 81', :l Ha. hug(' fain . Cahfornia section of Th(' Granuda 3 BR IV/JI s renl c"'A.YWOOD REALTY -rn1, formnJ din & llv I'm, ltan~h. 3 bdr~1s, 't ba!hs, f11I, FA ht. t•rpls, drps, 2 CONOO in N.B., 1 blk from 'l.000 sq II. assuml" loan fi!-n1ily nn, f1~rcplt1~c. f!-111 RA. Ow11<'r "' i 11 finan-* 548--1290 * \\'atcr. $79,500! ! 2BR :!BA $-lM,500. Op•'n house Sun IO.fl, dtnuig roon1. F.ll!ctr1c hlnlt-t'C:.Submil your tt'1'ms. Ask· I 076 + den. 1400 sq ft HOUSE or CaU 5.l6-S63"I ins. Jusl $48.900. ca 11 ing s.13,jOO. San C emente 1 on LIDO, at quiet end of 5:10-1720 S?l 2770 4!) .. I. Isle. Ideal for sifll;lc or coo-UNLIMITED SPACE " -0 :'>-lSSO WANT A VIEW? pie w/no maint. !-~re lnnd. Fruit trees galore. De\ u x [ TIIRDElL.J REALC See forcv!'r fron1 I h Is Terms avail. By own er. carpc'Lin~. Real honest to REALCO talrnted 4 BR + bonus rm. ~6~T.Hl'2'-'~12=--------i.;oodness i:;tucco \\'alls. 3Br, ~ • SP1\."llSll BEAUTY • homl'. Plenty oI extraA! Balboa Island 1006 3 f'un1ily rooms. Be<1utiiul lMlS}~Ul.9AM~ Red l1le roor. "spht 3-lcvcl", $69,500 hon1('. Home lo\·crs on!y-no <1uthcnt lc hacil'nda, 3 kin~ -GEM- *· BAY VIEW * brokers. l1nmedia te posses· 29.);) Harbor Blvd. BR, form! din rm, ubt 25' , 5 BR.~J 3 baths, tam. rm. sion. $.t'>,000. Duys 558-6961. CUSl'OM POOL B\' OWNER sep playroom, log bu111ing RE'l2tro'" TRSusLin Ave .• ,!:!;,B~ w/ivet bar. Lge. pa1io:• 40 Eves >02-3137. Beaut JBI~ 2BA Univ. loci firepl, roo[ patio overlook-·1._.~A===---~~.=.;;::; ft. lot. Vacant. SlG4,500 Eastbluff 1030 Prime loc. Lg patio & deck. ~ng vnll0eyi A1!~u000Iy e-.Teiting Westminster 1098 Tree lined CMl·de ·SBC. Private entry. l\1arnmoth Jiving roon1. S e p a r a I e massive IH mHy room \\•Ith (.'(lzy fireplace. Cb u n t r y Kitchen. Separate fot•n111I dine. GIANT S IZE bcdroon1s CO!\tPl.ETELV REDECORATED.00' VERANDA \Vlth marshn1altow fire ring. BIG TREES. Buit1-in mountain waterfall. F'ARl\1 SIZED YARD. Abandoned a n d ready for you. Hurry on this one -Call Now! 842-2535. 0\\'fK!r 6/;;2711 View. Prof Jdscpd, jai.:uzil, omc. n.y :J;J, •• • enns;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 1002 (6~1664 E"•n•'<•-. 1 ]"' atriunl Ro •n b· . 1. or tr1ulc-1n. Vacanr, niust]' -~~·~'-"'""--=-·=~~="-" · . ·· .1, tp s. he sold. YOUNG EXECUTIVE Balboa Peninsula 1007 3 BR. 2 BA condo, plaza, drps, c,alh ce1.1. Only $73.~. 831-2770 495-1830 HOME aboot us, call646-0 555. ;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;:::::;::::;;;;;;;: · Charlie Silver can answer your qu~ions. General R.E. .1002 General R.E. oPEN TIL 9 • fT'S FUN 70 OE NICE/ ~ll ~ 180 Deg. View Quality built! Appro~ 3780 sq. ft. in excfuslve Corona del ~tar. So many C\Jstom extras you can't Imagine until you rount !hem. Sec lhi!i large a bOOroom dream home for family w I t h teenagers, in--la\\'!i etc . Large pool. WUI consider Jea<>e opt.ion. Price $155,000. For opp!, call 400£.17" C.M.· TOP BLUFFS LOCATION r•cc VJ IQP . '"" ,.,, .... ,. 01 ••Lu( \ \IJ ,~:\' HE.\I]'\ A 8ERG ENTERPRISES CO ARTIST CHALET AT BEACH POOL-$35,950 Se1·luded entry to enormous st udio living room with 20 fl. vaulted open beam ceil- lng! & sun ten'ace l h a I overlook11i prestigious harbor. Studio loh & library + wet bat. Gourmet kitchen. Huge master '11-"ith Newport Heights 3 Fireplaces $55,000 OCEAN VIEW . Abundant I•--------;. use of woods & gla,ss add Realtors lo artislic atmosphere. 963- 71!81. OPEN 11L 9 • fT'S FUN 10 8£ NICE/ [~ ~ Back Bay Home • 644-7662 ••• $39,900 "'"''Y quic1 TREE ·LINED I Am A Duplex!! STREET. with cool J1h11ded l'n1 well l&catcd in old la\\'llS, a great area for kids. Corona de! Mar, \\'ilh a It's a lovely 3 bcdrootn chlUTning 2 llr. & den home hOme with double delai.:hed in fronl a nd a SUPER 1 Br. garage and boot and trailer rl'ar unit. Ne\V carpet in storage area. Big fenced rl!'n and fresh paint and new Open 'til Sold ~~ ll'it~~VC~!~~A~~ cazri ~~~gn~1C:'HT PENINSliLA·~·1xr:n This 2 Br, 1 Bn dol!house need:; TLC. l lltk fron1 OC'ean. Xlnt rcnh1I area. f"~~ l<tnd. R-2. Tnk!' a1lvantage 00\\'. Principles only. MILLER REALTY 6-12-481 l BAYFRONT Pie1· & float . 3 BR. + ~lll'SI 11pt. Try owner finani.:., S55,000 down. l\farshall Rlly. 6i.;....l600 OCEAr..'FRONT Duplex. XI. cond. $149,500. Onr. "'/fin. Coast Properties 673-MIO Coron• del Mar 1022 Dan't Call Me A Duplex!! I'm a delightful 2BR and dr>n 01vners 1 ·sic! c:c 11•ith henu- tiful private iiround<> PLUS $50,000. 01vner OJK>ll :I to ti. Lonn avail. RE ALCO• 5:::.!-1543 or 8.18-9367 18031 Ai;pcn Tl'ce. 551-6620 4 bedrooms, fumily. room for El Toro , 1032 ASSUME a1;2o;0 LOAN 4BR, 2ba, 2 story 1v/trp~S· all vinvl Ooor:s Iola brick B . d 3 BR M !urge rear yard, assunu.• 7 ,0 ork 2 yeani nu. A~ 893-8533 ran . new, . , o st ~V~A~,~ll.10-~~59~3~9~~=Ji~~1;;;;;;;;;;~1 7 % fn!eresl d "'s 1 r a h 1 !' , 111 dcmnnd 1-Story University P a r k localion. Newport &each 1069 Be11utifu?04u~;?, ~i1~u baths. $Sl,~.;'1°o'WNER .... ..._ '1[1 ":/] Shag carpets, lllt·ins. \\IALNUT SQUARE TwnhKe, . Dish11•asher. Go r ~ e o us Air Cond, Refrig, high I y eustom dr.tpes. Large e11:· upgraded. $32,500. 64,1-4887 f YR WARRANTY INCLUDED po6l'd aggregate patio & aft 6 & "'knds. HARBOR VIEW Mobile Homes walkways. ll's a REAL for sale 1100 BAllGAIN at $44.000. •NE\V 4 BR, 2 Ba, College Beautiful Pall'rmo n1odel1----------·l 586-595() Principals only Park, rile roor, A/C, $53,SOQ "'ilh spectacular big yard. 8' x 40· 2 Br· This coach 1 Slory. 83.'t-897~ $86,495. \\'~uld make 'an excel. S~P~:(5~11ff! .Laguna Beach 1048 BA YSHORES \\'kend. home al the River, 1''an1. Rn1. · ro1·1nal Din Rn1. Large11l lot. Spa~ious 5 bed· or on your ~ lot; $995. D · b •~2 J 5 '· h 1 mil .. A Terms a vail . nve y ""''" ub1lo, El l'OO!f1. ...11 a Y uv1nc. A?tIBRlCAN.. 5.57-9390 Toro and see for vou1'SC'lf SUPERIOR $195,000. cleR r. \\•Ital $43,500 "•ill buY. Haine ,· · .• • • WATERFRONT 24x56', 2 xtrn lrg bdmu;. fcahn>es bl!-ins, di<hwshr in .... design .~ co~ll'UCllOn. The . . Dish"'Shl', shed, awnloga. 1\C'll-li!i•d kitchen. l\>Jll-lo-finest n111t~n~s used 1 o Thl' builders O\\'n home! Sx3:!' porch. Cool! counoe, 1vatl cariwiin;_. drps ,r,, fqilc. enhrin\·e this .. 'I hdrn1., ~1'>1 Beto1"'.' 1narkct. Spacious und resl & bar, pulling gm, See 1oduy! I::d t.toort', Bkr. / ~th home, 11'11h formal du.1· luxurious. :l hed~m l~w·n· s;iunu. Adi! pk 536--4664. Call 17141. :iil6-:ll~.( 1no.,: rn1. Your. ('!ltrnnL'C 1s housr. Pnv:ur slip. Sl-12,:ic>o. APT sizt.> mollik• hon1c in . of Terrd colta ttlc. The con1-PENINSULA adult 1111.rk on the ha Huntington Beach 1040 -pt'tluii; vie\\" of the cunyon $18 750 540-3672 Y · A charn1ing JF ~ renlnl 1\•ilh I·--------.... private yard "lllTl'nlly II"' ducing 225/mo. <ll"<ll\'S you into !he Jiving /\dorabJc Cape C~ l\11> berl-1~~· ~·-·~~-----) rn1., 11·ith a n111ssiVl' !\lex-roon1. den, p11va1c tree 5 STl\R adult park, San Juan ican Urick lrplc. The sun shactC'd pitllo. Pricl'<l to :;ell. CaPo. C111 space, 2B ·R2BA. ALL LA CUESTA VILLA reflects thru the s I a inc cl $68,500. 411&-0747/493-440'1. glass '-l'i!l~o\v fr~'lrn thc !oft BEACH SPECIAL 8Usine5s Property 1400 Great lhrce bedroom" plus 2i,., baths hon1e. Large patio. Addilional sundt'Ck - overlooks one of finest green belts. This home h11s been upgraded with new vinyl Doon;, new fi:<lurcs & ne kitchen apptian<'eS. Call us for appolntn1cnt to see 673-8550 Gracious Jiving & en-CAUSE IT \'"I.LL GO!! nt $89,500 Firm. Call us for tcrtaining & a greal in· a sho1ving,_ 644-7211 on u l.'Cnc1u11s 47xl18 lot in vestment at Big Canyon ~ COATS ,__ the be~' south-of-hwy Jocu- Unique, sini:;le.£101'.)'. one yt»u' new. I lu~1· ;1 bedroom 11·ith ffln1ily roon1, no nialn1cn- a11ce. Lois of c'Oncrete and brick 1vork. Professionatl~· dPCOl'.'.llPd . Upgradt'tl ear- f>el ing and drapes. No \\a.\ Snlarian in kitehl'n t•nd family room. Beamed ceil· ini;:~. 0\1 nrr musl Sl'll. 5al. .. rifice t•l $43,500. ubovc, giVlng 1tu~ hon1e !he . . . individualism tlwl it con1· SpaclOUll 2 bed~m. ~ining HOUSE on C-2 lot. $7,00J niands. $127.500. room, 0~?. large e~.t.lo!K'd dn. 7% Inl. 1963 Harbor, Country Club. Luxurious 3 &. tion. $89.500 fim1 bcdroo1n, 18x32' !iv nn, din-· WALLACE 5 Call &14·72ll ~,,,;JI ,/ :i'J~)o~. ~~~~~~l~~.2· 1~1: CM. 836-6670. 12-7 ot 962-&13.'; illl; room, dble wet bar, • • • em murble master bath. Dv.'ller ' REAL TORS 1 ' \\till carry al 9%%. noo.ooo. -54'-4141-TAKE OVER • V= Or lease option $1000. (Open Evening1) ~ monthly. 1 :::;~;;::::;::::::::::::::1 Great ~~A loan on t his ~ y'T0e/ZH,, Call 6/:rTn5 Commercial Prpty 1600 REAL ESTATE- 900 Glenncyrc St. C•l.• US "'"••~II (>tlO,..fl <J' >•>Ui ,-_ \ l,l~E\' REA Cf\ OWNER WILL , CARRY 8 V2o/o OPEN 11L 8 • "'S FUN 10 8£ MCE• :l9 Rue Grand VaUcc beautiful 11h yeur old home. Open Every Day 1-5 Tmnsfcrred ov•ner· must t· ~ Ask at gate for dircelions OVER 1/4 ACRE Sf'!I .• JtL<>l listed at Ul,500. VOGEL & BABBITT ON NEWPORT Call "15-<J.1_91-..__ 644-6056 KNOTTY PINE Loaded wll/1 the ren1 1 ----~-~-~­ th ing-talk about pr i n1 c Price Reduction East.side 16catlon, this is To $85,000 it!! Talk about size, you'll BLVD. J.fuge rooms lor "old Hnie" living -or display your wares for your own business. That's right. zoned for rcsidt>nlial or 00111- mcrcial. Louds of room for either. Lot size ls 1'10 x 95. Coll 546-2313. Walker &Lee •IAL 111ATI Ma9nificent La Cuesta Assume 7°/o VA gel lost ln I!!! Plus storage LClvely 3 Oedroom honie in 11.rea for bout or can1pcr. the middle or old Corona Now down to basfr:,~ ... 3 hlg dcl Mar. Has SCparate din-bedrooms, 21.~ baths, and In~ room spacious living OPEN Tll ri • IT'S ~UN TO BE NICE/ D r 11 n1 •• t i r 1\1 o n t crey, super large fnn1ily room. toont plus huge faniily room [I" ~ Bl!autifully manicured P.S. VERY GOOD FINAN· wilh .\\'et bar. A gre~_I buy , , Ya r cl s. BM'uthtaking in- Cl'NG AVATl..ABLE. CA.LL l $85 000 C ll 673-S550 I c r i o r . U Pg r a d e d 540-11'"1 a ' · a · l j lhro u ghou l. l\1nssive . J • OPEN rit ~. ITS FUN TO 8E NICE' "adohe" hcarth. Cathedral ® ~ BY OWNER cc1hn~ $:!39/nionth PAYS · I! ALL fl urry call 842-2.J35. !!11 ~ ~~~ ~'c:s~!c~.2~: ~OPEN rll 8. 11'5 FUN TO BE NtCE•~ I~""'""'""'""'"'"""'""'!!!!!!!!!~!.';=~'= Din. rtn, brft area. CoveN'd , .. ~HERITAGE '" REALTORS llG~";"";';;•;l~R;·;E;.;;;;;;;:1;001;;;;:;;G;;•;";";;'•;;;l;:R;;:.~;·;;:;;;:;;;:;100;;;2 patio. Lorge landscaped lot. 1 l\fove-in l."Ondition! On I y 179,900. 64MJ93 I 89 Coldwell Banker . . ' . . " . ' .'. ' i " '" .. ,;, .......... ·: ' ' .. .. CAPE COD 6 BEDROOM Truly a model home -hardwood parquet (loors, shutters, custon1 wallpapers wi th coordinated draperies, professionally land· scaped and ter raced. $174,500. PRIME RESIDENTIAL LOT One of the few remainin g 40' iois on Balboa Peninsula. Corner location in finest ar ea -a buy al $50,000. NEED A GAME ROOM? This great family home has 4 bedrooms, a game room, family room, 21h baths and 3 car garage. Located across from pool and park. J76,500. HARBOR LIGHTS Spectacular bay & ocean view from lovely 4 bedroom home. Exlrn large lot with sepa· rate terrace and patio. Priced to sell at SIOS,000. ENJOY THE VIEW Charming Cameo Shores bo1ne \Vil.h ocean view. 4 Bedroom, formal dining room1 s pa· clous pool size yard ond lovely brick patio. $132,000. DIAL 644-1766 2161 San Jooquln HllJ• Rd., N.B. A.OLDWELL BANKER CO. ·~; ........................................................... ~ Gener:al R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 macnab I irvine realty IMMEIJl,j\TE OCCUPANCY Prestigious 4 bedroom family roo1n lJni- versily Park executive' home. Formal din· lng-2 fireplaccs-veulted ceilings. Owner will consider lease/opt.ion. $82,500. E 1nn1et McKune 644-6200. (T55} YOU BET IT'S A BEAUTYI 2~yr. old custorn built home in \VestcUff/ Dover hores area. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths family room, galleria studio & pool. $235,000'. Bob Owens 64U23S. (1'64) NEW LISTING-NEWPORT BEACH 3 bedroom, 2 bath homo w /brlck fireplace. .Lg. corner lot. $49,500. Lyn11c Rothell 644- 6200. CT53} LOOKING OVER llNDA w/sandy beach & pier for 50' boat. Glan1· orous & exciting 4 bedroom everything home. $195,000. (ois Miller 642·82.15. (1'37) t01 00¥er DtlYe 642·8235 I YR. WARRANTY INCLUDED A BERG ENTERPRISES CO ~-x 105' lot on Ne¥.'J)Ort Bl\'d., Ne\\•port Be a c: h . ePRICE SLASHEDe 1 -==="":=:=:0::=7'=~1 $55.000. 10 'lo do\vn, O\\'ner 491-!)173 5-19--0316 I ' Bay View Condo \\'ill cri1,.Y. Call for in-$345o. • Vacant \Vaterfront: lg('. fro:it dttk; · rorn1a~10~ .... PREST I GE OPEN DAILY 962·4471 ( :::: J 546°8103 Very Serious. Seller 3 BR., 2 ba. Ready to move HO!\lF-S 6&-fi6.16 Spacious 3 bcdl'ootn · · o 1 fl I :::::::::~~:::~: I T~·o :;tory Co!onuil. Ck!'an in. Slll,500: 01vncr may Condominium• Corona" charn1er 1vl1h 11 I' ~iew. ~;i-iat~\ 4 B;. &J fa.m; carry. . for sale 1700 f:im1ly roon1. formal din1ni:: JOG TO BEACH nl., . ~ '... ivini:: Charming Wa terfront ---------"'-;,,; are a and a SUP EH rm ivilh slone [Jreplace, ~11 1-Bdrn1. rondo. S 6 9 . 5 0 0. BIG CANYON KITCHEN. Try n11d S(l's. ONE MILE blti_is, dshwshr, ceramic .tile Ownrr will i.: on s id c r COHNER CONDO. 319 Poinsetlia 'fc.]l appr('('iarion urea IJy the &SI indoor-ou,~door ndt'arpctilng. l!!n.o;e/optio n. $119.500 Cull 67:'>--722:1 iag cat-pc ing fl cus oni Newport Shores ·• BR .~ l-"'n1. Rru. 3 bths. ht•aeh. 1700 Sq. It . !nch1d!ni:: drapes thruout. Huge pallo,. . . · F · II 1\lodc111 2 bcrlrooms, 'lhath ho111c on R-2 !or. Douhlr• garage $6.11,500, 675-8600 VISleN lttAL:rY YOU \\"ILL LOVE I~· u11u sual dupll'x. 1 :i Bn. 3 ba house & 1·2 BR. 2 b~. \\"oorl punt.•litu;, ~t11111(•1t 1o:"l11ss. Frplc"s. Bc.1ch t"no!· hridi::e 1 blk. <l:ZS C~l•lt·nn~t. 0 '" n er I Buildci-. 1\i;1.f.9"2 1 Open 10-;) Pl\1 1J ho:•droon1s & s e pa 1· 11 i 1• oversized ynrd, d 0 u b I e 2 Bdl'n1s. & dc11, i;1ng!c -;..; Pen !i J v e 118 papers, l<1111il~, roon1. Sal·rifiec al gai·a~e. S69.~. Tr•J'nls. s!ory; walk lo . beach , cu s lo nl rl raped & $.1il,500. CARPE'.', RE AL TORS SJ0,000. 01111t>r 11'11\ carry. lnnclscaJl('d, \\'allt.'<i In t'On1- 6-lO.S67:1 or '199-,1271 Ba ck Bay plctc prlvn<'Y· View. 2Jyr. PAl\J( PLACD, ·--------.... Nrw 4 hdn'n., fa1nily + din· .11•; lorul. 00 pis. JlaAL"l"0"9<t·· ii..!£. 1·ni. 2 Frplc~. Pt'Oll'ss. 6 Rue Chan1onix VACANT 842·7461 -7N70~R=T~H~L-A~G-U-N~A-·I ~or. Pool. n1any exlra:;. 0\\nei· &ID--0089 lltllsicle villa 11·i!h old \l°Ol'lrl charn1: '.~ bdrnis., :t baths. Sl1!1.~i00. Duplexes/Units for sale 1800 COZY l'OUNTR)' !I 0 :\IE , !orn1al clinin~ l'nl., lj::('. Ii\'· S1tu..olcd on a good sizt'CI in~ rn1 .. hi!wrl. nrs. Lo.11i;e. :1 COVl~GTON BROS. 4 ln1. 3 Big BR's. '.! bath.;, \1·ell tPnrll'il ~ardrns, ~real NEW PORT 5HORE-S plexcs, side by side, 6 mo. 1·raekli ng fLl'l'fllatt. ocean \'Ir\\". Sll0.000 11('\\". &st location 1n Hun1 . c11ndlcl1~ht din•~. 1 O o s I Y TURNER ASSOC. Completely redonr 3 bdrm. Beac:h. lnron1c O\"t'r $1 ,IXKI \\,lrnl c:arpct t 11 r u out ! ll.05 N. CiJ11_.,1 11111 .. , Lngun;i + bonus room. ne\1 rllrpcis 11 nlo. Buy on,_.. or llolh A~r<un1l' lo\\ '• t,lA lo.1n. 494-1177 & piiinl . BHQ, "·alk 10 for $15.000. dwn., !)~<. Int. $'.!.l l. IX'r 1110, fl·l~s ;i 11 ! bea c h , pool & lrnnis ll urry: Pr1n. nnl). 1•lrase. s:~i.9:in. full pri•·c.! Bkr *UNIQUE 2-STORY* fa cilities. 0\\·111.•r has bou~hl Call: Ghazi, A~t. 5'1fr9.izt 962-:»ll Ion JI~ loL~; ;1!1 \\'OOfl l'xter .. nl'\\' hon1e. Call for 11p11t. Income PrOpe fY2ooo -G I NO DOWN sundN·k \\'/riccan vi1•\\'. •1 S.16-Till r • • BH .. ilrn; lll!-in kltch. Nu WALKER & LEE VAC'A.1~T. 4 HPdroon1. 2 hrller buy in be 11 u t l f u l REAL E.~TATIO: J 9 UNITS l.:11/1!1, l1l1n~. b1·;11ut 111•11· .~hair 1 Laguna; only $5j,950 l -~"'-'===--=""7':C.,.~-I (3 Tri-Plexe•) 1·nr~ & n('1~ p11111t thruour. i\USSION H.EALTY BIG CANYO.N DON 'T jud~e by !hr ou1sid1'! tlk11'<.'. in L-on11t1l•1n. Clo ... l'. '°· * 494--07~1 ft EXECUTIVE HOME ii blk~ rn11'TI 111·~1d1, :•2 Y" See !he klt{'hcn, lan1 r111 , uri\' Scnrs shoppin~. l\ffu·ui" BLUE LAGOON VILLA f . "-J I . .. Le . old. Xlnt f1 nnuc1ng. \Vii i sen & yn:f •Jf 1h\!! 3br, 21 ~ h11. lli school. rnlv S.'.\~.!IOO. . , , 01 .""'° c or ..raS1.: or os1 1nd111du.1lly nr nil. SHORECLC~~Fs honlt'. itn•;. Rrnkcr :1-12.7,111 ·,,., Evl·~; Prnnc loc.1tlon. \•!e1\' .. !BB. r1pt1on. ·!Br. 3 lw. pnl\I . P a ul W. Brumfield loan n v a 11 . Open 1-.1. !l&i-ll7g & !Mi:!-I062. 21". B1\, all. appt~1n1 ·1•s. vlr1\'. V •t I u (' d 111 l)\'l'l' & Assoc. 67;,..3'lti~. :u~, D1·H111·uod Hrl, --------dc('f1r11t?r furni shed ~·r1ou~ $200.000. RPrlU('t'd to .$179.000 612-S.'ill) or ,)lfl-1011.J ('VI' CDJ\I. $9"!.~ 011•nt·1· TAKE OVER Si'lll'I"'~ Lrst 1h11c ol!ft•rrrl. due In ••n1crgf.'ncy si\111111011. ----- Costa_,..M esa 1024 Gove rnment Loans Only $69.riOti. !1•r11111. HJ:::I ~ C':ill 641-~~14:, or 6·16-0777, '., * IS ~NIT S * 3 & '1 RDRi\:1 homc<i; Jn all CARPET, It EA I, T 0 R :-; 9 -·Bil. & • ha., 6 li::i.'. 1· EASTS I DE 1 111-eu~. No q u 1_1 11 I y 1 n g 64(}-X6i2~ 499-4711 CUSTO M 4-PLEX hdnn. ~~!~,:~IO n1(·C1~11' C::n1od 3'""1'rS S1SOOO SI0.000. to $1->,000· 1s :111 Skyli'ne D ., R ·l ., ... 1, 1..-.11<1 ne.11 ~11ap11n~.$26j.OOO ..... ~ _ . . ~ , r. • t t rt1nn1,. ~ '."' un11,;, SulnH!I. Remfltfeled ,i;, N'furhishrd, }OU need. For n1on. in-Ne11·, oc'f'an \'1P11, l.11•.inl(•fl f>r11111' 1'C1111lt"nt1u l al'~"<•. U , ., R It aS!lumullk· $:14.500. Uil To. I fnrm1111on. call BJ..: ll • 1 ~llln~11. \.,111 ol "ooil and !"ip:1nl~h t'Xtl'ri~'. B 1tn11 , . ~·v~rst Y , ea Y..,, Al 8~1~-&h•.'Clu]cd \fl('l)Lll(' $17-3:).111 gin~~. 3 hl.'<lrt1l, ;\ha. J 1•111·lh!1Cd .l(:tra1o;f' ..... \ro\ P, I'! Ill\} 67:\-6!•10 Sl:iO. n~. C:i ll llcallor Paul fplcs. pool tnlllc s111' 1!t:>11. S p r 1 nklt'1~·tl , h1ndot.c:1pina . ~·ot·n.;, u1111 ·1pt bhlc 11nrlcl' Cood 001-6142 P RIVATE HIDEAWAY ~'Ourn1l't kih·h<'n. s1101.:100. Onl) $115.000. t'l\t1~rn1\·tion fnr 8..11~. Close EAS SIDE 4 BDRM WITH 01\'~r '-'ill ~ell on lnnd ron· Century 21 642·1771 to m;1}o1 shnpplni: rent~r. 4 Br, f'Rt1'·r1n, ll('W r111.lditio11, 2 ll:1, Ol-p11, Crpt4. Tip·IOp 8h11pc. llurry ()n !hill' our• PHIL SULl.J IAN f<F"'\L· TOil. MS-6'i6t or :,.is.n ol Lo1~ or 01W'n .. p.'IN' Ci>S lot. truct at 8'1 . 1~1 ~r "ritl'·nff Sl-1\I. Cnll 1·:7. 1·;111! .1rd, vault<'<! LH * \\"ATt:RFHO:"iT, 6 RR , !iJt',.Xij(l Ill' ~i:_''~·'°='°~--,J 1·:-lllm;" 01.;hool. 11~11me Ultra Super den. -1 lk1, ct.11·k. C11ann1n~ T\\'C'> 1 1111•\r~. ...1111 r~,:t \' \ !Mn O\\'XC 2nd A5il . 2 Bft & <lcn. 2 bath. (1('(11111 (lldtr l)flmt' P<>r(C'Ct fnr lgc t"'t> ... t:i ~ll'-.:l lorilltnn \\lnlk 96!-1-1-l:lfi 1\n•I I II'~ $."il.~l(K), A~,:un1· l:un 10 >1'1''\I Plll!.;. A ~tld In· Hbl!'J',il'lf1 .n. In1n1l'<I. ()('(', • I UR. i)('n, f'/f.", 2 hi\ v1·~111u·nt f•ir bo._ .... \nncr ~ ASSUMETot 11l1>o yn1en 1 . \ 1·11 II I' r ,.... .... I -• $169.48 f)('r mth. for r-h•u'tn ASSUMABLE 'nu• ··111 O!llt• ·•'a or 'rlflll'I' ~u't'a v ,~('~port I~>. \.C"'tors. Dun'! "•lil ( I I 3 R ~ I <f.l4--7'1l:l or <19+-l(Wl 557.9!!0. . 1w1\ fcir n11•1v lnfo111111lkm n;l', g; B r-on1f' ~ 1fl!ll.' FHA LOANS VA si!i N. Cofl!.t II"~' Sp11rl1n~ Rcal E~1,.,1" s'.l:\-3.'44 MILLER REALTY ' to 11Chl 11. ~hQnrun11 & l)('('an N · -.-Call A~nt 5-t').1t'~1s I , Laguna lguel 1052 RF:i\('11 l'ROl'F.RT\ ~-(11t t;!:!--41i11 · · "' f"l'lr inlorn111ttoo !.-l0!'11llon S,\LE Nc11port Be 11 r h .• -~~-.-'-7-~~~-I • ASSUt.fE $1 6,100 FHA 7'" ul lh1..,. borne,._, oonl11ct. I G.I. NO DOWN \\'f\lrrll'l'lnl \\/l11Jnl .. 1 i P ·i 4 Ple x Ne.di Work 2.J)R townl~i!K'·i\1l'llll Vrrite, l(A-SABIA'N Ov.·i1t•r mu .. t ul-tllnrltin 1h 1 !t S\IJ'lo:r BnlhnR Co\f'!I, J hr, . H11nt1l\l•lon ,At':i1•l1 front unfl , t:mlll), 1•,11. r-\ii,:ucl 4 111 1r111 vlrw hoin\". '2 b11, Bett buy $115,()00 !A1rt:r 3 lilt -!-3-l! t1"\huom1, $2IJ.5()0, O\\'C 2nd. !U:h.\"Jll Re ~l _Esf'1fe 962-6644 l·~x11.,1 lar~t' pool ~i71' loL 97!)..9JS7 Ch\·nrr. hltn~. <'h'lil'•I 1:1\r., '"' i m S!tARP !'i srtl-&~wnlk :'\LNT li1.1n \\/no rJ1c.. a\1111 I A t1Cl}lrr buy nt flnly S:11,!IOO \'l\!tUK't<'ll l,,~1 11111111,.y~ R1 ~11 fl!-Hil. u ... )0ti•n1n.11i1 5"'9 1 9t..5hl0•- 'o 1111 Schlt1 & .Ir. C'n11t'ffl'. l•l 1111;11 bu,)'''r 11l3R 2llA , llrtti:-r ~ •hh1 ont> ~11\' )'OIJt 11'.lu<\C, 3p1 .• •tnr•• urry . n Y ~ ' $fi!l.~IO. \\' t t. L S nt-;ALTY, I 1 ul dt·"11e-. \lie. \\Rr11crf .r.t'i-1761 bide .. f.'lr. thru a l'nil'' Pilnt F irst P1q,neer Realty 5.l&-it::!l (•I' s 1:;..9n1 ?ll.1,;:Jl(.u.1. lill·!~r.J7 ('\1'.f;. I Red C11rpel, Realtors r11•t1lllf'fl Ari 84'.1-4421 4 '1 ' • . ' , ' t-: : ft8· DAJLY PILOT Tutsd11. Ottobtr 15, 1CJ74 l1;1com1 ropeny j Hou1e1 Furnia 1d -1 Hou·,-,-,-u"'"n'°fu-,-n"is"h-,-.--,H"o-u-,.-,..,.,U"n"lu-r-n"'t•"h-1"'d,-,-,H,.,.-ou_1_n-"'U-nTlu-r-n"'l•~h-,"'d~-rA-p1rtment1 Furnished Ap-rtment1 Unfurn. AP11rfment1 Unfurn. S.n Cl1m1nt1 3876 SURPRISE I General 310'2 Costa Me•• 3224 Irvine 32« Newport B11ch 3269 Costa M111 lnA Cotti Mesa ~814 Hunt. H1rbour 3842 OOMPLETELY redeconlted. ! On 8 lot ••Ith apr:ndable ;,:;"":;,.o;:;;.:;.:.;:;. __ ;;.;..~ 2 BR, 2 BA; quiet nclahbor. too. Low dov.'n & low In-l BR H0!.15t, ~. w k I 'I,! B.'CJI unla & 1 Br'• $1001110. WE HAVE RENTALS 3BR. 2b&, t1vl c, woo d -'I 1-lAClENDA O!-; P.IF.:SA BEAlfI'If"UL 2 br., 2 ba. hood, 'A'11lki111t: dls1nn1.:e to Wttat Sl!i,000. 11~1('~ o . ..: C..M. &icl~lor ! Stud£1n1•. tum. u11J °'"' As well as 8 fine .M'l('(.11on \Veo111cUU l'ion1e. nr ~farlnen Ambassador Inn 100 \Y, \\'tbon. CM. Condo. on the water. blt11. evef')1 hln1• I child ok. Sl~. BEAMED CEILING Unit. NB S12S. ULll 1w1ld.ISllAG :i Or, i-plex Jl:il>. i,:d of ~o,utllul hoinei F O R &:h-pric, s:m. 6'1&-23.'19 , BRANO NEW BEAtrriruL GltOUNDS !itv., \Y·D, garb. d~p, .fc 492-0801: "96-0'.Hl: "92-4795 BEAUTY-I Hr Hou5t', CcL~f., VRcunt 1u~a. chld 'A/p,'tn!nt,. SAU .. Let u1 801v" )Wt San Clemente 3276 $29 50 & U Adulll -No Pea dlihwshr. Boat sll~ a•ail. SPAN1Slt \\'Ith 11 view, 1700 2 HR, Bnlboa ~. Slnale1 CUTIE 2 Br hoUJIC S\7;) Ni~ huuslng neecb. we·re here • • P JO mlnutes to <>ce!ffi. Larae Ca.II !or Appl. 213+243-4216 , ft . $300. 1iei· rn o . TE~~ti1/i~t: \: ~nryh~~ or ~·1uu1ly. Ag1. f '«-, 979-~I~ 00y,r~,:,mort' & gnr11w:l' ' 1u 11ct"\''-' you! LOVELY 2 BR. Neo.r Del SINGLE STUDIO APT ) &,.. :.11 !J:·J1 ! Jo $115.. or :.113 +24S.10ll 2 Encino uuu.•. Inquire ut block fruin 8.hOppi~. Greut 81lbo1 lsl1nd 3106 Uni...!-.: .:urn..-(', 2 Br houi;c 808 PETTIT MarfBMch. Adults only. SPJ::ClAL \VEEKLY RATES 2. Bn. l;w-W lh rat Sl!ll. Lagun• B•ach pt. "D" t -·" • ,, & t Jm. 1:CM, ht ln•. n.·f REAL.TOR 49'1-~t<is 492-5700 2Z77 ll11rbor B~vi.l. Ga• .& Wa ter 1uc ., ur g,,...,.nll' * rt•lucmt·nt ;\ OR. 2 Un, blll.111, frp",, POOL 3 Br hnm11 S32S, Avnil. Col tt, 6-15-4840 Orn t. QC EA •rs t D • t \"....,. Spacio:Us 1-BR t.:lt!lS:I' IQ shops, lnr.ome 100. Will M'li on F1ro;t \VP1tcrn Bank -Sldi:. Santa Ana 3280 ltf t.-sa J*TIC•, carpe • I "•• ,, '"' u ·"uuu beaeh, NO P ETS, Penn. i,-ontraet ~·llh lo~· Jntrr•·•r Xlnl l<k:utl · sl\'/"1'1, \V/D. :.!car,i;:ar. Unlvt·~l ry Plirk ~7000 heat. .. go stove. ai r Cove: \Vatervie1\'; 1 Bed.rm. $IOO 4\)5_4764 or rou\,~111lunul 'A'ilh HY'r 6'ffi..7r-:t STUDENTS 4 Br, 2Bu, $~. l>AY or NITE JnDR~1 ,i; 2 BATll, lnl');e l'Ond1Uor\lni. awlmm ln& Pool, S225. 1135--2200 X·Z!llt7=~~~..-.--o."'-'I do'A'n. Balbol Peninsula 3107 B1'lng pet or chlJ_d. •NE\V 4 br. College Pnrk, lot, IJOO. Nt'w Cl'I" • 1,nlnt, $30 WE Ek & UP DOOi, 1-ec. roo1n, waaben or 4!»-1836 Apt1 Furn/Unfum 3900 FIXER UP ER ~1ESA Verde 3 Br + S37a. e $6.50 Night & Up. &: dryen. P RUQ 1 S.P. All 1tpplns, 2<·1tr 2 h11, Ill roor, A/C, $4:?>' $290. Lolli of tr't~s. $'2ro. e Studio&: l BR Aptl. 1.;:,_;:;f:""'-~--~-2 BR, 1 Bit, OCEANVl.EW, CHOICE I SPECIAL UA\'t'HON1' Pier, f~oot. 5'-?11ANY l\fOBJ::..CA.1..1. us !t•use. 833·R!li-4. Ccnl(lry 71 • !146-9S2l • TV & ltlald &!rvk.'O Avail. Off The Beaten Path Relrli. blt.1\1. S26a. U\O, LAKE FRONT ;( 1lllit11 In Orl!~e :11 only u ... I ll11. 'A'llltl'r or yt•urly, ALA Rentals 6.42-8383 LaSun• 8nch 3248 H1e1 Furn/Onfurn 3300 •Phone Service -Hid. pool on l..eNnlae. 494...-2339 39 LOCATIONS ~!,00,J. \VIII 111•!1 or 1•,. li73·20J9 I'ART FURN, 1 DR SllO. •Children&: Pet Sectlon Adult•. No Pe!!I L1gun1 guel 52 VERSAILLES tti1u1.il.~· \\'ntchc. itOl. f\IONTHLY rent:U, 4bt', 2 car 1 $1·10. Ulil pU, sn\all L Br, 2316 Newport Blvd., 01 * Luxurlout shlli carpets ' VA ASSUMABLE i.:-ar, on 1hc beach. 18th St, cu~,r r'a~11 ~ ~ ..... SJ~() s I nk~ Ul'('lt, .Yd putio C.D.M. 548-97S5 ()J' 645--3961' * m1.lna incl Dlahwuher A ~JERRY CHRISTf.tAS FOUR PL EX I $Ul fl''r 1111), 1~1T.l5 ·' · P x ' · g 8" $17~. l Br, No. end, neat APARTMENT * ELM GARDENS APTS * Lra: Pool A: Gas BBQ'1 F'rec rent mo. of Dec. Good '-w interts:t & high 11111·11· ~ -., Cvls. yd: Gur; kid ok. • I bt•nch, child/~l 'A't'h:ontt' FURN. 1 & 2 BR apt In l & -2 Bf'RM $17W195 for 2 11,eeb only. Tennis ON THE LAKE .,.,d Corona del Mar 3122 ~ BR, f ed )d. gor SI&i $210. 1 + d<'n vil''A'. steps Bi·lglit 1and il•ht one '--·•room & golf membership avail. At S. uth Coast Pl11za. able. Only •I y1·1u·:s oltl. new crot & rii•inl . I 'O CX'elln Vi!!IOl'ia bcli :200 1.t<.v adult SN'tlon. Pool. no pets, Gas & \Y11le1· Pd • Gar~ s240-$'.WO per mo. N<>i \eru;e. Poo! • Acapulco Aqua Bar 5"11 or cxchnriL.-e. :; HOH. 3 tiaths. t11m1ly rm. Homefinders * 642-9900 $230. 2 Hr, oceunttlly view ·SC DturM"OhcdT.ENNIS 177 F.. 22ixt St., C . ~1 . LA MANCHA APTS. New lrg dlx view 2&-31bdcm: & Jaciu.z1 . Spec1aculnr s "~Quail ~ fully carpc1M .~ d r 11 p e d . Dana Point 3226 up l, blllns, gar • • • &l2-JIHS. 778 Scott Place, C.M. 2\1 ba, 2 pools, central alr Acre Lake 1v/Towl!rinR iilPlac• ; Ut•11t!'d 11001 1>.lth cabtina. $300. Ou:irmll.i.:: 2 Br, lrplc Like new 3 bc'droom und NE\VLY decorated fully &l2·2o01or645-6318 cond.fpl.23821HlllhW'StDr. Fountalns·~~MlllionDollar rap•r1; •• pt-r mo. No children, no · Sch 'trpl d~ bltns cpl'g S400. Ulil pd 3 Br. 2 Ba. unlurnl$ht..>d. 2 01· 3 working ~pie share. VI' LAGE (T14J495-17SO oUlce, "l( no Total Secur" .. , P Lj •,,, lJlk fron1 t.."!.1ch. $1200. 2 BR 2 BJ\ nr. Dana Hi house, yd patio, No End. den · next to <.Vutt -$385. furn. 2 br apt. ideal for MEDIT,RRANEAN (Off Cro\11n Valley P~J. Oubllousc, Gym, Sauna, 1400 Ou•rls~~.-~:.!~o•r tfA~ r2~J\~i:i--~ I l 0 r u p pt . Nr.' 111Yr': & Bus. $295 1se: I l111tc. bcamH 60' d~ CD.M. CHARMER ~kJ,"'ut~I pd"e ... 642'".'12~lce 1 Bedroom S213 anawer 499-1625. lnunedl.cte Occuptmcy 193-12-13 jS450. Cust ne1v 1.n level 3 S . . .a bedroo d ..... l Bed Den Mau Verde 3863 · _AOULTS C 12 U • Laguna Be~ch 3148 Hr frplt" v tew;---decks -gar p;H.•KIUI -m an L . F II F 2 B room-S2t2 ~ ....... No Pets omer nits ~tin51ton Beach 3240 Ni.J.v1Ew RENTALS f~1r1111.Y l'OO!l} hon1e $41 5. 9• u v urn r 2 Bedroom• $255 ••;r • -------· 1'ur111shcd J;Al, L>«lras. Bltns. \V/\Y, drps, pool. 2 Bedroom Townhouse $320 • l!OME AT?.10SPHERE Bachelor, I, 2 & 3 Br's. Twtn 6 U. Bldgs. llou5C1'~!.~fi~1~15.:Yor wi· NEAT I Br trl·Plt''I $135. 6i.H030 or 49+-3248 WATERFRONT Adl ts, no pet,, SIOO. 642-9520 2400 Hlll'bor Blvd Ot•luxe 2 & 3 BR. Rental from $175 per mo, All 2 BR, li0n1c 'A'/b1,•1.1m 3 8 2 B ocean close to bellch, child ok STUDENTS, Bach. S85/125. EXTllA Jge 1 & 2 Br, S165. Costa Mesa. l714) ~7-80'20 ~~oo!.0 9 a Mace Ave · Santa Ana ·~eil. Ma,sslve stone" fncin,i:. ~~~... bc-R'dh sid:: $550. nsi;,oc, ·,ET 2 Bt '• "h'1'1·1 s1;.o, 1.A"'n"c"E· rolmBm, ~.·°"11"""1· ch. ~:~~'.ulrr~\Jll~d:n: :1~:n: & $I9j. Redecorated, new NE\Y BREED AP'l'S. 2 BR ' •.. Fe-~• ... patio 3700 p•-a Dr. . pa. m ~. e 11 u . ,-,. 'l69 "' r . sm Jlt' e c , ,. • a. now l''J:t ldl'al for ba · hel I BP frpl pt d~· I ·• ....... ..~.~ · nilA muint.ained. ?.1ode'''' ""nt:-. ..,-. JlO~IEY 3 Hr, 2 .... s•.>',,. Singles, slv/rcf. ""t ok. furnl1ure op llt:l!ll. $595. · c ors, ~. c, c s, .,.. .. poo • $225 Month, yearly. '" ·• ..,.., ~. .~ CHANNEL R F 11 ults. 1993 Church 548·9633 jacuui. encl. gar. /,ll utll 71C..556-0466 Primr. localion S1R4,!MO lido Isle 3156 Bltru;/ref. WID.1mtlo-<:0rn!o. Nfo.."\\IPORT 2 Bf Dplx $225. EE 1'19'd. No ""'ls Adul1i 0 I I J~o~"~";p;R;;ef'''J"iliieil;6,,_.Jt~2l~Oil:==:;;:::;:;:;;;;:::::;;:;:;;;I \Vesley lj. 1'<>uJor Co. ~'AMll..Y A Br. 2 n •. h""' l~ Blk bl•fl('h, Ulil pd. gar. Huntlnnton Beach 3740 ..... . n .Y· Newport Beach 3869 • ..,. ., cu = CD~fs n1ost beaut if u I • 190. 393 Ham1lton, 645-4411 REAL TORS 644-4910 \\'INTER RENTAL 2 br, i ba., sm. t'losc to schls & shops. I SHORES, 2 Br, 2 Ba S200. bayfront locfltlon. Very BJ.:AUT furn. apts $165 &li~or~642-~1~960ii''frii>iii'4i>'i'( 1----------1 COSTA MESA .. , 4 .,.1,.,,,, 3., ba & d·e·. All si~l'S, pril't:S·cul! us' yrly, dl'ck, pool, tennis, gar. '"""' two "•d•oo•n 1,,,.,,,.,1,. . " "' "' •• ALA R t I 642 8383 \YO\V' 1 Br ., nu s~50 uo. • ., "" Sl75 Spanish style building, CASA VICTORIA APTS 'Prlm1~ Jncom(' Pro pC!rty All nc11' er1lll, drps, & kih·h. en a s • 'd't. L~ • I " -• · ed. S600. pvt enclosed gn,. pool dui • 3 ; OCEANFRONT •'" U 1 •pi ,,.,1 2,~ A•" t " r rp c .. t."8.r, sg\s fine. LITILE ISLAND · ·· , A ts. , ~. BR w palloa -'--"' n lli, ..-cxl!s li75·7W or ....-.~5003 Ll::ASE: s:AAJ. 1110. · !udfn~ AH llie l.ieach area·call u.s ~~unu, laundry, iidlts 17301 From $169.j(I No Pets 3 BR, 2 00, Yrly S550 .. ~~11~9s~1l1is Newport Belch 3169 gardener. Famili£'s only. Isl ALA Rentals 642.8383 Lu x ur y hon\~ on East Keel!IOn L<ine 1 blk \Vest POOi. rec rm., eleva lotll 2 BR, 2 ba, furn $400 Wntr. & last plu11 S150. VHcnnt. -===~-'-~,....:...:.cc.c lli•ylront. C 0 111 p 1etc 1 y of Beach oU Slater. 842-7848 Sec. gate. Gas & ,vater ixt 2 BR. 2 bl\, wlnte1-. $300 'A•11 72 _vnil~Neiv Orlea,n.'I A T T RACT I VE and con-Immed. J)OS.5esslun. R c r s OCEAN view; 2 & den. furnish~. 40· slip nvallable. BEACH Single, fum. O t f 525 Victoria, CM; 64Z-8970 STEPS TO BEACH U•uts flpproxlmate Y \.'Cntent 1 bdr: on 'A'Uter. req'd. 4 Br. new ptiillt ,I;, $350 l\1o. lmmed. OC.'('Upancy •o~. tre t k' $12-1s J BR, 2 ba, ~·inter $27:'> mil« to Pa<'ific ocean. 13>_• mo. ~ .. , w/two ,1·,... clean. Nenr s\ t I ant a & 49-1-8566 Ext. 301 _,,,, .s e ~Pai: g. :i. t & I:'!tAND NEW, 2 br., lrpl., CORONA DEL MAR ARTl lOFER/1,0\v •RD , ~ ~ ~-=-7:'"-'=;::..::::..,,= BAYSIDE D", last. 551-1659 eves. inctlv. yd., ~uo, cpl., <l-., " s:m. w/o dock priv. 675-7156. Bushant. Cull & :i:-k for Laguna Niguel 3252 " r~ ·r DEV. CO .. INC. . . Chuck Everett, 546-4141 or Tv:o bedrooin Md den. New. l\1EN, 11n1all beach hot e I . bllns., all. gar. 1225. Also 4 BR, unf. house. Fam. r m, ~77 N~\V O';;anfront, Panoramic ., •. .___.,,719 •It 1pm. U r . Roo111s S21.50 y,·eek. ApLS. 3 br. $325. 2449 Orange Ave., 2 ha. ~l.11e or l.se/~" , 1 .,.,L-., . .. port area i.<pt. n urnu1hed. n:: ~~.,7 -"' 1 ~ NEW ORT CR ST f NF L AT I ON-TAX PR(). Vll'1v ... BR. Frp c. Beaut. , 4 BR, Fenced yd, fr p 1 c, $695 SJJ.1110. J.lO"' ()56 w•1 . .r.4-111, vi"'n House 1'ECTION & units, brJ.nd lurn. 3 car prk{:. Avail 3-7 n o super lldharp, '.l BR, 'l BA, sprinkll'rs. Lea;w S3J5. mo. . Call 6T:r1225 Newport Beach 3769 SaL 2 BR. 2 I.Ml. C.Ondo. $525 2 • 3 'br ino $450. 6'ffi...8249 new cpts. rps, ne'A' paint S::I-2099 or 494.3452 -LGE 1 BR "--\ dj COMMERCIAL new .. cpt., drp., · in i:,_ out ....,= & ·~"Imo ' , ruu, a . to trpl5., bltns.. att. g ar., Houses Unfurnished Ask' !or 'Ikv-..or ~ NO 3 BR. 2 Ba, "·alk to beach, \VINTER RENTALS shopping. S155. 1no. Deposit Olfl~ sul.te, N'pt . $250 .How;e Sal. 2449 0 r H n g e. fee. 963--1567 f'lecu rity gu11rds, $390. nKl. Oct. to JUl'IC! refundable to resp. clen.n .a.1,. Sl~.~· ~7111 I General 3202 ..c.o=..=.c;"------831-145.1 or 493--0628 2 br, Beachfront apt. S325. tenant. Infant ok, no pell. • paoos, in<bv. ,Yds. op ~ 1 VA CANT 2 Bdrn1 house on I ~""-"'""'""'· ~.~=-~32~6=7 Utll. pd. lzt & last mo. Ul87 ttl on r o vi a, C.J\t associated BROKERS-REALTORS 1 JS W lolboo t.71 Jt.t.J ~ llCJTINC NEW CONCEPT I i :~:~;:.~~~~' •I BR ,2 BR •2 BR& Den From $175 -$435 Meso Verde Eosl & Adams 540-1800 MESA GARDEN APTS !~ . I p 2100 1 LANDLORDS I Acreage. Also 3 Bd r m Mission V1e10 + refundable clean'g. dC!p.,~646-63~°''~'------I . ustr1a rpty. _ • 11ouJW?, C.l\1. StT.i n1 o .1 C-'-C'--'"'-""-"-'--....:.= 6801 W. ~B!lhore Dr .. Call e Trop'•cal Pool e , 1 s al In Singles & Families O. K . 3 BR Condo, 2b:i, pool, patio, 4 lld, 3 Ba, Furn ror.n Mr P11Ul!lon for IC \ '.i peel ue Newpor. Agt. Fee. 979-8(l(l enclosed attach gar. Ch.ii· _.., 64.2~3698 e Y • 2 BR, crpl.!l, ,drps, bltns, 1 ::~::::::::::::'12 & 3 Bdr1n.s., crpts, drpg, 1 ACREAGE licach • Corona del Mar • -"""-"-'"'-"'_::..::::.____ dren S275 1.io., 830-087l 3 Bd, 2 Ba. ~'urn. Cd~1 S65013,. ~=,,::::::=~~~---I spiral stalrcnae, r e at utilities paid. B I t In 1 . £.dil\j[er Avenue Huntington & Larurta. Our Rental Ser· LOVELY 1-lun"'ngton Btly. I ~::.:::..:=.:.:c..:::=:..:::o:..:::'.'-_ 2 Bd, 2 Bil, Un fur CdM ..., $35-WK UP. l B<tr., 2 B:i. fireplace retrig · lge patio THE MOSl' laundry facUitlcs. Rec . Beach; 2.57 a~res M. t , vi~ Is FREE to You! Try Adult Condo. 2br, 2 srry. 3 BH, 2 Ba, Fan1ily rm, 675-8600 & Bach. "..olor TV, maid gas & w~ter 'pd. Ms-1168 ' room w/pool table, gym 1~11.lble l"Omnierx:1il. Nl'iir f'lu.vil!w! 1 ~b11, frplc, close to hu.11 Patio, Grf'ut view! .i RL>c. .VISl•N 1 THE MESA 415 -EXCITING VIEWS , N -' s·'= "~" •u r.·• !crv. poo . , CHILDREN OK IN NEWPORT room, sauna . pc:!. Adults j lihopp lng . center k s . D. NU.VIEW RE TALS & s h o P ~ g $200 1no. c"'n crs. ~. <>-i<r.,..,.. N. Ne"·port Bl., N . B . onJy, no pe1s. 1881 Brblal, 1 f\vy. Askin~.())). 67J-w:l0 or 491·3248 -"'='-~""~· -~'~'-"~'~28~""----I Newpor t Beach 3269 •1 • • 'JY 6'16·9681. l..gc 2 Br 1110; 3 Br 1 ~~ Costa ~lesa -------3 BR CONDO p l F 1 ft ft• -~-~ , Ba SUKI. Duplex & 4·plex, Luxury bnyf--ont apartment 751 4187 HARllOft ''RENTERSl l'' ' ' ato, rp c, FHEE BOAT [)()CJ{. JSR, :!pools. Cl'Pll dJ·ps 64:.! ~"0" living. Boat till""' at your ' f ou Get AU The Houses COUR E Y R TALS P • s 1 • v e w · door. Walk to shops, restau· Bltns. "·nlkable lo beach. I----------T 5 EN I I "'deck t"llh I ' ' ~ "u :ii.iiiiiiii.'ii:iiijjj : REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 Irvine Ind. Complex opportunity to aqulre medium !lzc well I e a s e d bldlng. r.D),000 FP Prinl'i~ls only ple-ue ight i!oalty 97~-8533 avallnblc' lor rent Jn 0 U R J.ease S:tOO. Call Collect, LARGE FAMI Ly Huntington Bench Winter or yrly. On the 2 BR unlurn Garden Apes: rants, theatre, ocean. A ilULLETIN UPDATED 3 ,2~'='·~"='~72~·t~09c=:'~"~· ~·~-~"~' ~-1 Ho1ne in Euslhlulr. N e n r TI4! 842-'.>541 Agent water. 67:Hi169/774-4384 f'rplt~, DIW, prlv patio. $WO. few elegant. very private. li1nes1week. TQ\\'N•IOUS E, 2 br, 2 ba, Corona dcl Mur High. Ne11·· Apts & Condos ... $160 to $250 CLOSE to Beh, 2 br. new :i.~ine lndui;tria.l area. 2-bedroom, 2-bnth units wllh Homtfinders * 642·9909 2 car gal', pvt yr! '. pool. ly l'e furbish1..'ll, 4 bdrn1s.. J-lomcs ..... S160 to $4()(). cpl, $260. yrly, $220 Wntr.1"'::'-'::,0'===~~--spacious tetTace1, pool , 132 Cabttllo, C.l\t. SZ7:->. A~k for Carol ~2-6.135 2 ba .. new car pe Is &. Commercial Store .... $\&). 142\..i -17th St. 675-59'26/ $185. EASTSIDE 2 Br dplx, subterranean 2·car parking. ll B KIDS I ,_ 0 K or eves ·'<-wkndi1 5J2.i JO.S drapes: gardening furnish· Condos Furn 3400 5564760 .Yllrd, Ct1D. dfresh paint. All adult, full ~.ecurlt.Y builtl· . . , pe, sg~ .. ,1 Br. 2 Ba. close to schools. ed. Now only $550 a month. B"AUTIFUL 1 b Cl Responsib e a ults,no pets. Ing. New carpet, drapes, 2 BR. Tol\•nhowse, '-le, 1 Br Dplx $175. r. · r, ose to 646-2612 or S<IS-9030. b ll t d f .. ., L.B 1 Br Stve F""" $"=-n $375. very clean. 6'1~1831 HARBOR P\Lt\1 SPRINGS , Be ,1 Fash. Island. Comp. fum.,1-","-'=~~"-'="'---u t· ns, f'COr. Leases rom from $250. 1 BR, [ron1 $195. • • • ·~· LJU. or !213l 592-J76R eves. ~ -· -linens, dishes, etc. S315. n1o. $275 l\fO. 3 BR. 2~~ ho, cpls, S500 per mo. Pool, tennis, cont!nenta! util pd, sgls ok. Ba, pools, tennis, saunas, 640-1006 drps, bltns, re!rlg, dh1hwMh· breakfast. Separate family C.~1. Bring Pet, 2 BR, fed LARGE 3 br, 2 ba Home, jacuvi"I. \\'eeknd, 1vkly, er ~an le """VI tnrla (714) 675-8551 Cl yd, b<al', SHiil nr. bch. Cpll., frpl., bltru., monthly. 121315'17--0209 or ON THE BEACH, l 8 r, 9W..5i)9g v 'A', .uJV c · Newport Bay Towers &f1:1·bea~h.5C! ~~ttppln& Homefinders * 642·9900 S325 1110 .. Ava.I . oow. 96&-3450 COM,.ANV &31-4870 Winter Sl75 +utils. to'-co.:-==~===~--1 I i~·~~~~· ~~~~~I FllEE FREI:: 4BR, 11/2 ba REALTORS AOUL T GARDEN APT 675-8224 m' Sl!IO PER MONTii, Li: 1 310 Fernando St., N.B.I: .Pro' Jo al Se-" e Cnll ~·10-1 150 SINCF. 19-W 1 BR fu 11"/>10 ~1 213-800-850-\ BR. Cpti/drps, bltln5 , PARK NEWPORT THE EXCITING , *LA "N' D"LOR~D'"'s*· 673-4400 Nr. Lak~· Pa:.°k. tois rllii; ON the beach, bac"?elnr dlll~washer. relrig. 1130 Vic-APARTMENTS PALM MESA APTS. lrYine 3244 ,, .• ,1,,, from 112,-THE tonn. 979-5099. St. ;,:.;o..7447 11fl !'> & 1>.•knd11. " Bachelor 1 or 2 Bedroonts ~llNUTES TO' NPT. BCJI. Homefinders * 642-9900 HARBOR VIEW HOM~ V SECON D STORY. 103 l\lc-EASTSIDE C.~I. J.arge du-and Townhouses Baeh, I & 2 BR. Cro1n 1157 6.400 SQ. 1'"l'. In d u 11 tr I a T California's t n-e... * RENTALS * 2 BR. 'l BA. ' t•i;I Ninr, ~'adden. 67~1865 plex 1 Br, b'rick h-pl, cpta, Fr. •?'.!-.f.50 o-n 9--6 Dat·ly AdulUi, No Pela. Bulldln,.. far lite A1FG. Near ....... "' '" Lliguna Niguel. 496~8877 or I t'I J 1200 I ~ ~ O.C. 'Airport {Baker & e Rental Servlce:e 'tillage 3, Univ. Pk. 3 BR, 2 Ba . $475. 525-1732 OCEANFRONT \Vinter re:n· cr~j u 1 1· G4Z..·l~o. Spa Pools Tennis 1561 ~lea Dr. Brlistol) Balboa Peninsula 3207 3 BR .. 2~2 bn .........•. $•125 Steps away from Park, Condos Unfurn. 3425 ta!, Jge 3 BR, ne1vly decor. l:I. u · no ?t' s. Across from Fashion Island(~ blks lrom Ne1vport Blvd.) RIGHT REALTY 979-8533 Denne Homes Eleni. School. Swimn1ing 17111 675-46S8 or 521-0388 SHARP Bachelor unit. Close at Jamboree on San Joaquin ~ Lota for sal• 2200 prER. main bay, pvt bch, 4 BR., fom, 3 ba ....... $j75 Pool & rtec. area. FOR Lease, nla.iestic ocean OCEANFRC..NT apls, avail to .orange Co11.st ~oll~ge. !fills 1noa714q. ,.,1900 2 Bd, 2 Ba, Furn .. N.B. S500 1------------1 lgl' 3 Br dplx. Will furn. The Terrflce view, ne1v Jbr, 2\.1. b11, lnclds winter/yeRrly, plush, 2, 3 & $12a. per ino. Call :>-16-5880 I) _..... 2 Bd, 2 Ba, Un f. N.B. $500 T\vo wrs lot•\ l"'/209. \\'inter or ,Yl'ly. 67~ 3 BR.;-2 In~ ......... S-Hl0/425 R. c. TAYLOR COMPANY clubhouse. fiolf. pool. todh1', 4 Br. 675-141J.1 Ll\TTy. . Yi'sta Del Mesa 3 Bd, 2 Ba6,7u5-nt8600. Lido $475 " "" Greentree J-lomes HEAL.TORSIDEVELOPEB.S e 2 Bil LOWE'R 11= CIK1ice JocaUon, Huntington Corona dtl Mar 3222 2 BR., 1 bath ..•..•. $3!5 Tal--0460 no pets, ful ('rpt11 & drps, 1BEO-pool·b __ lk10 ocean·sngl Sh•• •p> .. d•·p.·, 8·1. N~0 ·!,,, Beach. Zoned business, T"~I k 2 car gll.r, $3S5 1no .. Smog adlt ,,,.1 -ll5:> 646-2G!l6 ~ .. ~ ,.~ ADU LT GAllDEN HOf..fES 1 Ion! 1 ..... eroc LEASEITNEW fr e l'S nnClC!1n e n t c , 67~~~·28Y · orN1·.Harbor Centel'.54G-44M IRVINEAVE,ATMESA VISleN .Ji'l"Oess n or off ces. $175. ~ bach tr pie, •I BR 21~ baths •4j0 7 ~26 627 """' Ncttr New;nrt Blvd, FI'W)' ;$Zl.tnl each. TER M s . be a . c 4 en:.· : . baths .. : :: : :: :1".175 W ith Ocean View I ci.: • I NE. IV . ' ,. • BR 2 B ,.s215 2 BR. 2 ha, cpts/drps, & 1-·l•o l·dustr•·al Complex RIAl:JY W,11.·. KANPA'', \993 Klhe•' urns. near iuia ove <BR 2' b dbl win e ' 1 d. I wasl er bltl ll.10 VI '• " " " $21' 2 B b I · 3 BR., 2 00.. , , . , .• $•17~11,•/gdnr Gt'C:it kitchens, 3 BR., 3 lJa.. , ,~ il, car g11n.1i,:e, r. • • is 1 l , n. c-90 I Rd """'cl !\tow· If ,11 :>. r, 'P c, p 11 t 1 o. I b I I doo $37a. Also 3 BR, 2 ~a $j35, torili. 919.j()!l(J 1 BR SI • 2 BR 230.t -:-__;-""'-"-=""--'-~= , ., JULI , , ·aw Oc!!an side of H\\'Y College Park flrep ace, 'A'l'l ar, tennis. e l'C gll r r opener, "''et ~!i blk to oc.'Can. 6j:>8038 Rec Bldg w/gym, Billiards, Rooms 4000 or Ph. l!08-8';9.J:O!J>!. $325. 2 + Den. 2 Ba, frpl c, 4 BR., 2 ~~ ba ........... $•150 j11cuzll, s1vin1n1ing', et c. bar. ne>A1 crp!lng & drps. STEPS TO BEACH f.1ESA 'VERDE, 2 Br+ den, Color T.V. Pool & Jacuzzi.I-'---''------":.:: PROMONTORY Bay Lot. front house, child/""! OK P11rk JI OVERLOOKING NE\\'PORT pool fac, 01·erlooldng golf 1 Ba new crpl.!l/drps frplc SC!curity Patrol. Refrlg. inc. ROOr.1S •20 wk up, with ~ BE 01 • $400 I t I I & 3 Be, 2 &. 1275 \\linter Adul;, 00 ~ts.......___~.:... ' ~ finest location, Will sell or S:i50. 4 Hr. 2 Ba. frplc, gar. 3 BR., 2 baths .......... $·150 A ! 1' rum · month l'Oursc, c osc o sc too s "' .--., • .,...,)'W,< • s.i~ • kitchen: S:IO, y,·k up Rpt. , D11de for house or sn1l apt child OK Garden lloml!s Call 64!>-6147 churches, & Fashion I11land. 213+728-3354. =E~XT=RA'!-c' L"'-~0e""'1 =~,~.=---1 ·*-~L-A,-"P~A~R:;..,:IS:;:I E~N~N~E~*-1 548-9755 or 645-3967 'bldin.". 213-Z71l-9966 S~50. Excepty nice 3 Br. f""lC, J BR., 2 ha ............. $;.t.'\:; Ne>A·po1'1 Crest Realty S475. Ea11rbluff area, Call OCEANFRONT e•· '''· -"· bl;;~~. Nor ~t,•,·. ·• f ' '"31~ s di 1 .,_ 1 ,. .....,.., ,... 2 Br. unfurn. All electric. FOR 1 or 2 people, nlE!n DANA PO IN T . Sacrl!i1,•. dbl gttr, nen.r Oiina Cove Lido Isle Ni'.."\VPORT BEACH, I r u I Y or app' .,...,...., "" • tu. o RP " Snt1R cp ., gar., $1!1(). S:lb-1181 Fireplace. Heated Poo I. or \\'On1en. Kitchen pr Iv . L.evcl JU !or. Qi.;100. $17,500 1 NU.VIEW RENTALS 3 BR., 2 h· ............. saoo bcRullful Sl'lling • I a r g e BEAt.rr JlJr, 2ba, sgl story $230. yrly. 613-2493 R l2 Adults. $185. & up. Outside pet OK. f>.18-4•16-t. terms. 646-11.1.;i. 613--4030 or 49'1·324S 4 BR .. 2 ba ............. $690 3BR, famUy room, f!Ollshed condo nn n1a.)or Greenbelt 1 BR apt avail to emplyd BACIIELO S 5. utll~. pd. - Mo ~-O RENTA S CALL 552-7500 l\'uod floo rs, 0Can1 cei.lings. in 1st section o( Bluffs . person yrly. Steps to bch. 3 br, 2 ha •• S205 .. 2 br, 979-116!1 Room & Board 4050 unt'n, ..,.sert, F R L • VISION • \'ean; Lease S5?5.00 mth. Ne\\·ly dcl'On!lcd In earth $160. + utll. 67~2677. 1 ba, house $1§. 518-8945 Acims from golf course Resort 2400 . any size, please ca J I Coll! of Newport Rltrs tones & resantl y,•o od . Oana Point 3826 20432 Santa Ana Ave. DEPENDABLE fC!m college Rosen1ary Sietz ... she is 675.55 11 8J3..2431 Apartments Unfurn. 3 BR, 2 Ba, bltn•. cplll, or HS _stud_ent needed !or hcadin11: our rental dt'pt. REALTY PANORAfl.1Ic OCEAl'f VIE\V drp5, sundcck. New J y babysltttng in exchange for B;•." & Bet1"h IUty 61~.··_,., \'E,\lll. r duplex. :1 hoUsC!ll 3 DR 2 ba CONDO on El Balboa P•ninsula 3807 1 •• ,·.t"". ..1.... 1• t-••h. room & board, 5 eves week, • .,_ • ..-MN N · I Gol l c -Lg 3Br duplex, 28' Ii\.' r1n. "'" .,_..., .,_ u ..,. u "' " 11 reri hlll con1pany from beach, 1-2 br, 11,~ ba. 1 II' u e 0 u r H e • di 493-T;i Year round lease. $325. mo. &-2, 675-8136 nflemoons LOVJ::LY J bdrm. 2'".! bath Univ. Park Cl'nter, lr\Jil'le S27j., 1-3 t1r. 2 b11. $375.. dishwasher, ga_rbi\gc disp, SUPER DELUXE $310. mo. A ts. 557 or V fivl' Al'n'll ln Bllpp~· n\''A' paint. crpts, dishwhr. both il'p resh P ;i 1 n l & .. car gar Sl~ 8:\l-\()7<: eve. 3 BR, 2 BA, patio, trplc, 496-2413. ~*~~838 ~t'A"eeJ'-1 t f _•_<_•l_i_o_n_R_e_n_t_a_l• __ 4_2_S_O ";1 1 J e y Riverside C..ounty. gariige. S:!7~~ .. ~ease. Barbr a 2 BR Co~ .. -.-.~•/mn '-·· tile. lrpl. .v ~11r. 979--1521 Duplexes Unlurn 3600 513 A \Vest Bay Ave, Eastbluft 3 830 s'• .• 1've•t Nane .. ytpo";,e. ti Rent My Condo I I CurnJortabl• furnl.sl11'\I ('U1· Agrnt. r,7~ "'"' ''' . ., ... ,., " I.Al: k I , .. 1'110 kd B•l~o D•-0~~832· -·el.;;:;;;.;;,;."-'----_;.;:.;_: ' · 2 BR C··d•• s~' & 121' 11' 111 s, 1:,_, · 11· )'ll. uu • 'V"' O<Jl1""""'0 ' ... v '-ru l BR llh I t ta1-:e. Pn1·(' $11,;](J(). 01vni'r 2 J '"' " • •••· £w ... --STEPS O BE C 002-8721 ON THE BAY, dock opt., ...... ,;e. . apt W \J ~ v.•ill fhlnni:t'. Lurry Pfister. ~~~~-~tY~·ER ti..yl~\~~11• ~~'. 3 BR Condos · · · .. $265 & $275 THE BLUFFS.Sp o l~ * T A 1-f * · e DELUXE e 3 hr. 2 ba, sundeek, upper ~r n1ount1uns and O\Jl'rlook· J, F: T E B ,, It R J.~ TT 673-2925 or 6T:r20'l>! 3 BR HJrrcs · $JOO. $'.125. sa:m hRrely used: 'I BR., 3 ba .. To]nhouse, 2 + !k n, rrplt". N~\V xtr:t lge 3 BR, 2 Ba, 3 rlR "'!z BA apt for \ease duplex, lull din. rm, frpt., 1ng pool. CholCt' PAL 1\1 REALT\'-r,42~1.'!jJ, 3 BR Homes . S360.S315, s:l95 111m honie nr pool S52j tie Deck, BH·ln.,, $275. yrly Oceanfront Apt , y,•/dlJl gar. In id ' t 11 ' uUls. incl. $450 mo. yrly., DESEH.T locution. Nr small 0 I s:'..·{I. YE ARLY Duplex. 3 4 BR Homes .. S3Jj,S3~5. 1~25 Pl'r rno. !t-10-~~"60 l\gc~r · lse. 5219 River, Apt, A. $500. n10. Ne>A' 1 BR. 1>.'ldbl d.c sp&ocd.blmae er 11X .e, furn. avail. 675-4200 shopping center. \\'C!l!kly ot· VICT RV LLE-BH, 2 8'1, ~'l'Jll'I, dhl "fir. RANCl-1 HF.ALTY Newport Be11ch. 5'18-8532 ~ar. $250. mo. D::iys &12-2164 ill rm garage. uto BARSTOW hll11s, patio. 1)t·ts'! (i'!2-99fs * 551-2000 * BLUI-~r:; Conl!o, 3 Br 2'~ Eve!I 1145-.\45 8.'i49 door opener avail. Pool & ELEVATOR bu i Id in g on mon1~ty r11ll's. F'o1· l n f o L. 11 Sllff.llXXI --RANQ f REALTY Bn. frplc. ronn11. pool. S400. Apartments Furnished · Recreation area. Adults beach. Pvt balconies. Pool , IM2·()',),%or556·S868 lffll ( iilina; · · · · . · ~'Ort h , Costa Mesa 3224 Coill r.tary Von G l' I d c r n, Balboa !•land l\oT 0 NTH LY · 1 rm. bach. only,' no petii. 11ecurlty, adult Jiving, bltini1. MODER.r..: CABIN. sips 4· o( lorul Sl 1(),000. in l'Offi· * &51t.fi80:1 * II "" llornl's. 64fl-4050 · 3706 w/lull ki!ch .. gar,, cpts. & • $322 e Bo 1..n ~·--n1 i:-;s11111~ & 11 r tlls l'!HUit,.. TUSTIN REAL.TY ..,, fl•p $lw. 97~l52l { &ch. 1·2 BR. 5515 Ri1•er at m.,.,.y a o.:uch, wk I y Neu Hillnn Inn. frt'f'\1 ,1.'s NE\\' 1101\IE, ::: b1·. hu"e ---· _* 832·'1111_ t \VALi.:: TO BEACH NE\VL.Y dC't.."'Cll'!llt•d, 11·ull to s'p \'1" IJ. . at, 865 Amigos Way, NB Ave, 642·2566 rate~ & go ll coun;c.·s. Frnni S:.':iO. f:1111. rm. l.ease Opt. SJ!io IRVINE RENTAU3 '.l BR.; $350/3.SJ, yearly 11·all 1'1'Jl!, Hr1•ph•t t'. l~~ Bu. -. l\fan4jed by ON the Bay, flllllustic view, '152-lT".A an acre. F"'P :?3 pagr color 111·r 11111. i'.'r. S<i. C o a s 1 Cayv.·ood H.f•Hlty ·.:,,is-1290 1 t-;r, 1·ar Sl).IH'l', u1il pd. CHARf.flNG 1 br, 1 b a• \VILLIAI\f WALTERS CO !M!Curlty building , lrg Jbr, Rentals to share 4300 hrochun.-. h. ln\l'lillll('n\ Co.I PIN:R. Cull J ack Pe c k , 2 BR ................... s:i,1;1 LOVELY J!(1r\.Jor Hiahla.1s yt•:,rly leriiol' S:\00 1110. Cnll ~~~1ngf:1~·n1:000~I~~b. t=funtlngton Beach 3840 Balcony, Pool, S500 11\0 , -64()...g3(')() :> ~ 6 -j 9 6". Radio Pagt' ? BR , ..... ~ ·I BR .. run1 . rn1 .. 2 1~ ba. at 126'11 A"ate Ave. SJ6...8538 673-ll44 \\'ANTED 2 Gals lo fllife 30 "K-161'' • .................... _,,..., l...<'!llll'. A51:ent 673-22'22 or 675-fi5Z7° l BR Furn/unfurn, yrcy, util to h 4 b I d Rillnches, Farms, 3 en ' ................... $17:1 pd sru N LUXURY APTS YEARLY 2 Br, 2 Bn., 'h 8 :iic Ir, xtra.. g&. u~x, GroYes 2700 f.J\S'rs!Dt.: Co~ta ;\f es a, 3 BR. FH · •• · • · • •• • ·,. S1t:i ~·tNF:: Bnchl'lor apt.S125. yr· Balboa Peninsula 3707 Be. h. 6~tiiiJ e w p o rt Newport SIKim. 2 bll<s NB C II o OC.'t'an y, ----~·----{'111H· Cod, Jbr, 2 hH, liirgc 4 BR. FH ............... $~'{) ly. Act now. i.;rt 2 wkH free -----ec evesi. Just being Coruplcled, t. 2, ocean. $260. ~8-8912 or ~.,,.~a: Gary or Jo e llORSE or Co1v r:tnch. np. f1•nc'NI y b r t\. eon1plt-1cly renl ~ Cell Jnhn 673-5535 % BLK lo boy or bch. 2 Corona del Mir 3822 & 3 bedrooms, flreplaee.s, i."'~;.Jt;OO>;:'~~==~=~!ltiIT~'fi'--;;i'i"ITn-::::-1 prox l:iO ecn·. hl.'11111 hn· n1h:c iniside ~· ouL $375 Stl\fPSON·DUN711 REALTY Br, \\alk·ln ck>M'lf, shag _,me with p.1tio8 or \'EARLY J\100ERN SPACI· RES p · • MEL LO , yng. provenu•nts. Onk stuilc1f'l"l 1r. 1no, ~!}9 flo111!.r 81. C~I r~·,'2-1800 642•4321 Direct or Collect crpt, cr1r1io11 , laund rm , F.XTRA lnrge ~-Br, 21ii Bo. b11loonie11. GREAT U>CA· OUS 2br, hlk from ocean & worn~ to shan.> lg. PRI?.10 ri.e:att-d mt>11rto11·~. lo•~ or !1 11-;;1 71. Sell idle Items wllh R D:illy ,. ••• ,.,. ......... 0o1i,•>1w1 $250 p1•r mo. 1116 \V . Brunel ~w! Ftppcdlc, shag TION IN THE BEACH bay avail Nov 1, only $250. hse. in Las:: .. sn1. chUrl OK . w11tl'r.lnkc Sci>J1r\n:: ()th1•r..:. 1.~:A SI-:I OPTION. l\11.'lJll P ilot Classlflrd ad. Ml-Sim •OY•--·~"Y -Balboo.Calt613-1.i21i. crpt, fu Y dra . ell llt'W AREA. call 960-3221 or 873-1909 S187+. 8!)6:.16151536-4244 in choo!>t· f1'0111. Poulu1 n111· \'('t\h' ,1 HH, :,: Bf!. hrand BAYFRONTY EARLY Rppln.,, l'l10· 10 mo.-l!Dr vear 839-6133 ask for Ailene or UNFURN Apts, 2 Br, 2 Ba Sl-IARE 4 br, IK1use wf'J t·h. i():\I bll'ds, 24 acr••S, ' nc'\I' p\u~h l'l'Jlh;. fr i" ~ h 1 y Bachel•1t S~lj, 1 BR S2~. ll'itSC from S400. 673-0930 Marlen. \VrstcHU nrea, sn1all . pet Olher slt11h·nt1 on Balboti L.rtrw! SI.COO /X'r a c 1· l' 11 fl \nh'll, hun1:«·-1hn,1<1u1 Util pc1, ndult!!-no pe ts, 926 DUl•LEXES, 2 br, l Im, $290. DOG RUN OK cull 642-2152• 64j..9()fKJ, !~land. $811 1110. Incl. ullls RC(renl!onaltrailc>r park . nui;:t• t t'l't'~. ,t· frp!c. $37~ $@R~~ l!it-!Ji~ E RH 81 fi1H:'{I 2 br, 1 ha, SZGO., 3 br.8 28 1 Ct 1 ' ' · 675-2351 ' bl~ f)Otl.'f'ltln! for I u r t h (' r 1110. CP11!u1·y :.!I. ~IG--9~i2l ~ -® . A JO:J ' I ! ~' 2 ba, ~32.i. All W/$1:1lf8JC(! 1m,,~· ..... r,,.,'!!', · •• ~ ... ',"',,,'···· BA\'FRONT 3 Br, 2 Ba on sr"'1A~R~E""2;;;;;;-c::;---,-~--1 d<'1£'lo1J)nn:>nt. lton1ona. 1u.;1. -; .-----. ---BACHELOR npt, rpan only., !:; r ec e n I 1 y redecol'8led b " .. "" "' n111ln bay, pVI bch. w/pier ~ BR apt : Ill at u re ii l-7w.l-12~.6 f•vf·~ , XI~"\T. l..OCA1TON. S1ll.1c. 3 50 or O\Jt>r. No car nCl..'lled. •· . · S\75. ~~ blOck Wes! of Beach. 979-1935· 644-451 ff'm Z°>-35: 1100 + uur. h1·, '1. rui +1\t!n. ne,,,,,,fully That Intriguing W ord Gome with o Chuc'le l"•h· ''''· ''•·' ••L·~ ~~r &14~73:26 842 03!19 • ' 979-3343 6AJ\1 ·, .. •o:c .... 1 or 11 R I E W d 2900 1 · /( " v .-. '"' 0 C E A N I<' R 0 N T 'p'lush, •.· 30p•1'.' . "''"'~" 8 e1 5t•t• nt • Dec'd. Condo. Full r ec, ,411.,. i., Cl.t.Y ~-,0u.t.N -------2f!I{ apr. Sonlh of High'A'a.Y. WALK TO BEACH ""f~""",,-,:;-,:-c--~·I lac's. ClOM' to Sch!s. S:®J DAYVI E\V, bc.•uch 1 Br $250. 1lrp11, Cillis, ~love, refrlg unusual, 3 & 'I Br, Winter MAL ~ • L:P 1n On1• 1111tllur. In \'n1· I~. 51~-<IJIS O Rtt1?1r1111g• 11!1111 of 1~11 UUl pd, pkng, 11d!ts. 303 S27~ mo, or 6 mo leRsc. ;na: 1, 2 &. l Br, crpt, drps, or yea1·ly, 615-1404 E 2;:, lo 30 to i;hnre .Yl'ly. pei·ty lll't'<h·d h•,•f<\11• ('nl' Qf j E , . lo11r 1erombl.d wo1dl bo· E. Edf.t{'11•11rer (l )8Tl-m 632·5039 hltlns, gar. 221 16th St. or WATERFR, ONT Apl. _3 Br. :inlyb,lkA. 1 16°~, 1~110·r :...t"'0 41i~ }'t'llr! Apt , & n r l'>.'lnl· 1\1 ~A \ crrle. 3111'. 2 bu . low 10 fo<m fo11r i1mpl1 wo•01 C M 37 :'m 1501 St., HWltitialon 2 Ba '): I I 140~ ,.,.,£4Q '""'" 14!111 nitrt'illl. ~ick pro!J{'rlfl'! ok. j ~1!1ns, 11 111,er !I o rt n I! r , osta esa 24 NICE 2 br duple-x. ava.11 Ocl Sch. M7·3".i57 640 !1866 r Y ease. ,,.., nto. &-leavp rnessage. \Ir t\M' "41l-C/:V!f1 t'Ol'l'"'(I pat Kl. l'lo~e to p~r~ I G U T H A C T I p I 1. 426 Acacia. 52:,0. mo to CUE?. ORO APTS 1· -. B ~ . \\'ORKINC pl has lovely -1 • <ich1 •11. lmn1ed IK'('up, S:l7J . • ropJca oo • 2._00· &IG-ll_:,_100 !123-1 Allnnto .:\11. t\Y & Shops. J hr, 3 Br bo1ne to llhul't', C~t rn•i, ri·16-:l!l90 t I' I I I I 1 Ult, Patio. GA.s & Wllfcr STUDIO APT. l & 2 BR. t ,7& S BR. Priv ~tlr, pool, .. y,""1y.' ~t~15trp1, gar. S360 ~$150. Incl. ulilA. 645-9662 · [ ll~l 3 BR. Air ~'(')nrl. lRC ll'<I I p.ild. 548-1168 h.1rn'd. $120. & $200. per 'A"u•her. dl"'tr. Close t o ··~ R.nt• 1 LRG \ B , 1 · • n A MALE, 1lrfl l}'cht age 3a to yrl. 11ard"n !!P•"·"'· .to fn1 i1 I r s, poo, nr shop:t n10. 67M048 heach. 536--0.tJG rARK Ntwport pl, 2d plan, 6'.> share 2 UR_ apt. $150lmo l ~iiiiiiiiiiiijjijiii~·~-1 !r('("i ~'\2.'1. ltai.c. 646-Gm . K J R E O I ndul!11/no JM'ls. Utll J'l(f. 1881 2 YEAR Old CM.rming l BR, CONDO 3 br, 2 bn., cytl, only $329 mo, tennis, tic 64$--3'76l or &!6-4336 · 11 l•r :14,;..Js?,I I I I' I I ,,_ ~lol1rovia. CM 5'18-0336 3BA ~t w/patlo. s 4 2 5. d..-, patio, W/D, refrln, &ID-3771 n\Ol,,lngs or l!vt'S Houses Furni•h-• BAC 1ELO o STU ·•-~ N P.J A J. E Roommate 1\·fl nled -TIIREE \'flCAnl :? B d 1' m " 1 l R R DENT 675;i1 & SI0\.11, No fee, $~. mo. ewport Helghta 3170 shart• furn. 4 br. ho u 1 ~ General 3102 houwi;, also 3 Bdrm honlC. 140COWST. \V!L.S0£SN. 2 o1· 3 BD!Utt, 1 blk. bch., Ask _for Dev or Dale ... --.EW CUST. Duple•. 3 br, w/pool & \'kW.•. 640-4741 SIB. Sl~le or r amil.Y. Agt. , I · A ~·I A fJ'l1, or un., al! or F share. _!3-4567. •· ..:t /SUS. Ulll pd, Mt.k ·i""r F'tt, 979-84.10 T U S E A CO~IP, f\JR.i.'I. 1 br. 11p1, 673-4..")55 or r.12--0100 2 BR, cpta. drps. no let. 2"' ba, ronn. din. rm , ~ANTtal• EtD -~~l urc1 slntlght ~ .. ~ I I I' II 1c•• Ad II 121 IW1':tn llv. ITl1 2 l..'l.r aar " <: 0 ....... m lfl' hon1e at bcll .. l..LiJlUM 110 S~: for l'f.'nl , ~I,..~ .1 A iennis pro i~ • guy will\ ,...,, u 8, no pell, NICE corne.t lBdrm! , 11 n 1150. mo . Ask fot Bev. or <'pta, d~ hllllll. 1 315 •• In 11.B, $Ui0. mo. 962-lf& $125/St<I>. Uul pd. 1)('{>:1n· 1 Verde>, 3br. 2bn. n r• \\'I y ) _ . . . F'klwf't, 646-7893 d['('k to i<ln.ttlc renni'() l~dy. Dale. 963-4567 ~ lV '1 rrnnt btu·h,, NeY.'?ll'I t1f'C'Of'Jltrd. Slr1. 5~3-ni&a I d 'weet -10·1i -1-BR. f12.f Quiet loc. Rrfs. St!IO. 673-6224. fH4.-0.1.t9 $210. mo. 2. Br, 1 1~ &, all U25 ::vet, WORKIN(; \\IOIT\an Lo ah11re Sl:lO. UOI fld, ''n11ll rr11r r<ll• / •4 BR. 2 BA. lf•r .. rhilrl OK, I D A W R 0 C I No prt1 or chlldrrn Coi le Mo•• 3824 elec, nr Hun1lngton rnter. 'l BR, l ha , cpts, p&l lO 3 BR hnme, C'.riplslrano •rta. l!IJl:C. yd pi1.1to, CtfM ..-_ N•"' Paint , ··r•e y-w• . . I AGENT 83.l-97!1 11101 Mftll R" IA-"·'"13l9 gnr, llll'. Adult&, no pet!"!'. Non anioker. 4f~ 2522 bc.f 3. '1Jl.I Ulll, n!Cl' 1 11.r .,..,.,, ~ " ·I.A"' ruu I I J J J' J O Cotroltte 1lit t l't11c•!1 q11ot1d -" ,..-, cro.i-Ycarl)I. M8-&CJG. RESPONSIBL.F. ft'mAlll only J)Atio. No. fn;1, J.n.gun.1 ' 8.tW!h4 .. by 1.11111g '" 1111 ,.,.u,rocJ wo1 d NlCE I Br dp!x· Quirt $1.'p. 2 DR, I~ paUo, Rel r I g, NF.AR nmv I BR Uppc!Z' S h 3BR • SHij Ur i! 11d 2 bUr !) BI J.: CH,\h.\llNG 'J ~10tv 111111!!<', VCll dt'lelCp hom )l•p 1'o. 3 below I by Wl\ICCS. tmploytd atl\llt stO\'I!. SITO. TIT \V. ISlh St. ru· r~')'. St!Al. mo. Nd Newport hores 3872 In~ tolldo w/arune, bt.-h 'N · l Br 'J 8tl a1trdrii !lt'illn5: 1 over l'l. rK1 }>l'ts 54g..111Zt 062-89l6 PETS. 847-oo?O or "-7-0180 nr · M . 96S-!l316 : ;· HOO ·u~onip:;· ~~~nl lllr •.:. c::i.1. 12:iti. 671'.r4H17 ' & ';I/JI r~ l~!•fo 11 llCRS IN , • 1 DR t1tlt. p:tima:e " go.rJcn. 2 WL UUS,111.ll"L.-J tfrt,. ~ 3 br, I~ bA, -·I s IJR Dupll!x. 1% B a. llAl.JK>A l•htOO fe1nalr: 3 ' ' • • -t•1! \ o;u~'"' Llk II ho S S I I N 0C , ,....... O!ltiwshr. F'rplc. 1 blk to bl.•(h'OOm, 2 bnih. S h c r I Rrftul l(lf'! LaauM TUm .)IOUt l')IJ tlubl 1nlo e &ma lll!C. l (]. I 17na, garage. 1 tar C. A clubhou~ f11c a, Av• i I brllch. $300. mo y r J y. 673 0033. Sttl. 2 nr, uettn/c\ly \lrw ll .~fl'i 1:1. ~II umr.i 11 tth 1 A l.r .~t'fANl!l[ J.&OvE i!nE•S. I I J j I I j 64:l-OO.i1or 6-~143 SI 5. n'ln. 5~7.fl3M Nov. 15, S250. 1147-5$0 1142-t.n l • l;i:::::;':::':::,=-·----1 •Pt wilh/1t11r l.J~n11 o O.ily Pllol Cl1111rl"li Ail ~ 1 C!I ,c..~\1tt• 1 sru~'NING I br f81nlnn ar1 . mNCf.E 11th1lts, nn Pf'18. 3 $100/MO .. 10.11W 2 Bil""' Don't ll:illit up I.ht. lh~pl 1~~e ~n 1~;·r ·~:,<; ;:j!1f NU.VIEW R NTALS and ust> the money tor 1t l SCR'M-LETSAn•worilnClossi'flc•tlonSOIO POOi. rec 1m .. S , Arhllt•.l Br, 2 Bu. 1 yr nuw. $26U. Carp./1\1'1tn<"!. Shnrpt Nr. "Ll~I " !l tn claulftcd , Ship now with 11 Dnl\y Pllo~ r.r:~-IOJO or 494-32-1 irlt'rro~ Call ~TS 1'odl\Y. "" 'tln \\'. 1Jlth S1. mo. Evc11 6'1-0--1161 : 61a-6-t$8 s1orcs It: beach. Alt-6'7l-ti100 to ~"' ~11111 &Q..6818. Ad. C.11 642-51lnt. f DESERT HOME • • • .. •' Schools and -. Instructions This variety of fine schools could introduce ) yo-., to a new tomorrow. For further infonnation regarding placement of advertising in the Daily Pilot Schools and Instruction Directory CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325 WOOLBRIGHT ACADEMY READING CLINIC READING, MATH, SPEECH -Individualized Instruction After School Program .Specializing in Learning Disabilities Evening & Saturday Adult Education Classes Now Forming -OPEN ENROLLMENT THROUGHOUT YEAR AFTER SCHOOL READING, MATH, SPEECH CLINIC Elizabeth A. Hawk, Ph.D. CCC & ASHA Director of Speech & Hearing Clinic William J . Woolbright, Ph.D., Director Psychological Services Florence Vaccaro Woolbright, M.A. Directors ' WOOLBRIGHT ACADEMY 6432 Bol1a Ave. Huntington Beach, CA. 92647 897-2855 ~ 892-6420 Want a caree I Then don't settle for just . a job. Get into the business world. Insure your future. I Fret rtoc.......t Assistonce -lal Aid '"'1'-• Accredited M1111b«.A.C.1.s. CALL TODAY 772-6941 ORANGE COUNTY BUSINESS COLLEGE I 11 0 I So. Aoaloei• llvd., ,i..ai..;., Please send me more information. Wilhoul ob61gation ol course. r-r.t;--------------1 I .................................... A ........ I I -....................................... . Qty •....•.........• S1a1e .••.••... Zip .......• I I 1'fone · ·· · .. · · · · •· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · I ir Liit grade oomplelad ......................... . ---------------w~ . ENJOY The benefits of TRAVEL Call PACIFIC TRAVEL SCHOOL today to seu If you qualify for a posltio11 In the · AIR TRAVEL INDUSTRY! 543-6655 • • Ti!'kll Aaont e R1ttn"1tions Acenl • Rattt1 Al•nt • Alr·froi&flt Aa•nt eTr1•llAatnt DIRECTOR: Ja mts R. McC1ure (USN, Rill ESTIL 1983 APP'IOWUI JOI vtTllWl·TIMllll • TUITION fltwtel• AYASL PAQFIC TRAVEL SCHOOL 610East17th Street, Santa Ana YAMAHA MUSIC SCHOOL INVITES you & your child to REGISTER TODAY for new FALL Music Fundamentals Classes ••• For Children 4 thru 8 Call 642-1844 FOR REGISTRATION & INFORMATION 109 East 18th Street Costa Mesa -92627 PLAYMATES SCHOOL & Pre-School • ENROLL NOW FOR FALL SESSION Ages 2V2 thru 10 All Day Child Care Hot Lunches & Snacks Educational Pro9ram for all ac:ies Three Locations To Serve You 1937 Church St. Costa J\1csa (1 Blk. E. of Newport Above 19thJ 646-3636 795 Paularino Costa 1'1esa 12 Blks \V. ol Brislol near So. Coast Plaza) 541).1919 190 E. 15th St., Costa ~1esa {Corne.r 15th St. & Orange Ave.) 548-2550 - I JAPAN KARATE FED. " 325 No. Newport Blvd. N.B. Suite #5. Downstolrs Days Tel. 551-3683; Nites 642°8387 Across From Hoa9 Hospital K•rate Uniforms RATE $24 PER MO. *Karate-Shito Ryu Shoto *Aikido *Judo *YOCJCI *Meditation *Hapkido MEDICAL ASSISTANT Kan DENTAL ASSISTANT RESPIRATORY THERAPY TECHNICIAN OPERATING ROOM TECHNICIAN MEDICAL ELECTRONICS OAY & EVENING CLASSES ENROLL NOW FOR SEPTEMBER CALIFORNIA PROFESSIONAL COLLEGE 1801 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, CA 714/645-2912 •• Student Payment Plans - Graduate Placement Assistance Call or \Vrite for Free Catalog (Approved For Eligible Veterans) PORCELAIN NAILS ""'"'o"~~ OPPORTUNITY TOIE TRAINED INTHE ART OF APPLYING PORCEUIH HAILS For Mon Information Call: MAGI'S MAGtC COSTA MESA 645-9056 \ \ Tuesday, Octlltwr 15, 1~74 Earn·N·Learn I Call For Details I ,We've combined an ultra modern facility with years of experience and know·how lo help career !rain you 1n a short time as: S.Cl"t'tory lookke~,.,- G•M1"GI Offic.1 A11l1tont Typist.St"'° Speciol lrustt-Up Coun11 Day of EvlftilMJ Closws 556-8890 v Irvine ColleCJe of Business 1700 Easl Garry AYenue Santa Ana. Ca1trorn1a 92705 (Newport Freeway at Oyer Roadl Orange.County's most· progressive and innovative Career Center. 'I DAIL v PILOT B i Lost & Found ' CALIF. ANIJ\11\L CON'rROL Hunt!nfCIOn f ,ch Shtllt.r Ult EdiAon Sl. 5J8...6551 SHck ol Humane Sodell' ANIMAL ASSIST. LEAGUE adoption, spayh11t and ~Ut<'ring lnforni. 96().:?!0J ANU.tALS IMPOUNDED Poodl~. "'hlte ii.prloot, 1nale Shephard, l:rl. n1ale L8.b rnlxed, black, (emale ?\tlxed Shep, black & tan. ""''' Doxie. blk-tru1, male GPt". Shep, trl, male ~ Cockapoo, JlUP. b I k • W h t , len1ale Lab pup, black. female Terrier 1ntxcd, brw, female Lrish Seller, red, nullc Sl B<'rna(.d. l!rv.•·"·ht , (emale Ll:lb 1nlxed, tan, fcmult' J\ti~ed Canine, brown, fema1e Ten•ler mixed, crean1. male r-.1.iniuture poodlr, U I a ck, n1ale Schnauz('r. gJ't'Y·tan, female Cats Seal Pl. Su1tut>SC, female Lg hi.tir do1nes1ie • 3 kittenl 5 long Mu· kinens, 1nixed rolor, 1nale & fen1alr GrefSfi'fµed, tllbby, n1ale Sl&111esc, beii;te ""Jth bro~'Zl h1ce & f('('t. rnJle Don1eslic s.h hair, hlk·w/¢ spots, fl'n1alc Doniestic sh hah·, l1lack-wht stripes, fc11111lt' Don11..'Stic Lg hair. Iii, n\8.le Don1esUc Lg hair, black. ; •••• ~iiiii~~iiiiii~---~~I lllalr i Asso!'tcd killcns & pu1>pies Losr Yorkshire Terrie r , n1ulC' 9 1110, hli•ck, tan & silver. neat· B<lyside Or, Cd~'!. 3 weeping little girls anxiously awaltin£: iood news. Lost a11prox l 0 12 , 6/a-3723 ADVENTURES IN ATTITUDES · A Program Ded icated To Unlimited Human Potentia l CLASSES NOW FORMING ./Learn how to release the ta!~ ent potential & mind power locked within you. /'Learn the thought techniques of influencing, pleasing, attract· ing & getting recognition from people. ./Break crippling altitude habits that hold you back. /'Gain courage & self confidence & overcome feelings of infer· iority. ./Find innerpeace, happiness & a life filled with riches of achievement & purpose. This condensed 30 hour 10 week program is being offered for only $60 ... $45 for spouse by SUCCESS GuidH 979-2295 SUNSHINE COMMUNITY NURSERY SCHOOL 2850 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa \Ve are a coope rative nursery school with parent participation. Our school is of· fering morning & afternoon sessions. Ses-- sions for 3 year olds 2 mornings a week on Tuesday & Thursdays from 9 AM -11 :30 Curriculum for 4 & 5 year olds on Monday, Wednesday & Fridays. Activities include: Field trips, arts & crafts, Science. \Ve have a complete music department & prepara· lion for kindergarten readiness for 4 & 5 year olds. Sincerely, SUNSHINE Call for more information 540-1183 •• 557-0609 \~Or \Vrile For F ree Brochure FOUND: Small red Peking· ncse fen1ate, nel!r Sea,•ie"' & Heliotrope, Cdr-.t. Sat .• Oct. 12. Call bi:Hi02.I or 213- 874-828.1 LO~i': Irish SeL, maJe . 10/5/74. C~J r..·<fs. cruclal n1ed. trealrnt.. Ji\·er cond.. IO tag. "Alfie"'. &15-1008, 642-9611. RE\liARD! FOUND: 10/8 Blk Lab m~ pup. 2 mo's old. at Tbritt1 Orange & l 1th . C.lllL 546-5.192 LOST. Siamese cat, fe m • tn. Oct 11. iA"h/b1·n. C.M. vie Santa Ana St. Reward. a-18-4931 LOSI': Lob male. Vic Balboa Isl. Daughter's pet. 1 r f lea.U}('I' collar. 673-6163. ~ - Personals . SPIRITUAL READER Open 10 Aro.I to 10PM Advice on all m•r•-:...11. 3U N. !:O. U!lmlno ~a1 San Ciemente, ror •ppt. Call 492-9034 492-9136 DIVORCE ONLY $65. Co111p1E'tely reliable 673-5793 PREGNANT? Caring, confidential couruael· ing & referral. Abortion, adoption & keeping. AP- CARE 642-4436 REAL''Estate Training. lndlv. iruJtrucUon. Personal attn. Sales or broker. exam 2-3 "'las. Academy a48-U92. NEED PERSON occasionally drive my car. daytime, for brief local Hosp., Dr. ap- points. S2.50 per hr. 644-2737 * Pa1m/Card Reader * A~ "ReJuc:tion 108.11 Ben<:h Bl, Stanton. 527-3406 Social Clubs 5400 Of\TOBERf'EST Au1henic Gt>rm. food, Swiss-- Germ. yodeling Band, dark & lite tap beer. lots gf xtras. The llale Crest Club has limited re s v ' s . re- main'g. for Oct. 19th, 7:30 ·PM. Call: Ben or Ruth fudge at 557-7234 in CM. Accounting 6001 l=,...--,.--,--0----:===;--;;""';:::;----.;u 11'1!!1!!!1!!!!!!"'!1!!!!!1• ... !!!!l[!!!l[!!!!!!j!!l!l!!!!!!!l''!"'i!!!I!!!!!!. ~1 0 N T H L 't bookkeeping ,Olf"-i-'c-'•-R_•_nt_.~•-1 ___ 44_00_ Office Rental 4400 Office Rent.al 4400 lndustrlal -Rental-4500 Storane 4SSO Business·Oppor 5005 Mort, Tru.ltt>eeds-5035 Lost & f ou nd 5300 service incl. all taxes and ,. -• -'---'--'-''-----'·I--~-----------------1 reports. Gordon \Var re n, OFFICE SPACE FOR LOA PA s--.. ~.- WESTCLIFf BLOG. NE WPORl BE.ACH ~"' " '• .. " .... "' A ) •• ' •••c•tl •• •fflc 1 • All C.111 Mr How.11d 645·6101 OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE CORONA OE:. l\1J\R INCUBATOR LINK NS UP TO 8-0% · · •~="· RENT. Costa Mesa, Harbor BEAT INFLATION • t'OUN D: Cockapoo, B1k 11·/ A I' R a 'r •-• RI Adams. Beautiful-Koll Ind. condo avail. Two STORAGE UNITS BUILD A FUTURE 1st TD Loans 1vhite spot on chesL l\1ale, ppia nc e ep I --mo cl er n . 1\ i r, m u sic, air-cond. oUices & iIKl . A p-~rsonal, ~uslness, rccrea-v· s t A A C'.I janitorial, Class A. Walker space. Plenty of parking. tlonal storage. 1'~ro1n SS. Nobody has to tell you what 641t·~n 8 nn ve. · · REPAIRS \\"ASl-lERS, DRY· & & Lee Bldg. Call G<!ne Hill "'VV\ Sq fl ·~ h J L.-eo · ,.__ infl ation has done to your ~ d TD L · · ERS. DISH\VASHERS. DIS. 557-0136 or 642·0200. """"" . ., """"a mont . amuuree & :j3n Diego F ,._,_-famlly"s buying po":er, but t O na OS f"'OUND: Sri all, black. POSALS ONLY. &16-5848 IRWIN 1IR\VIN HARBOR "' y. Call 979-015() here's a wav around iL \\'e lc>malc, d~. Approx. l y~. Cabinet Making 6014 ,, DEVELOPED Onice Space. Rentals Wanted 4600 offer you rui exclusive pro. Lowest r•tes O ra ng• Co. No. l.D. Vic. Beach & He1l•-----~~---I 1[1(1 to 1500 sq ft. sublt?a~. f · S I 10/10 8'" ~·1 ' REAll'ORS pn.1. efltrnnce or common gram ealunng the new pop •tt er Mtg. Co. ...,_...,..... c AR p EN TRY. cabinets. 644-6 reception. 4500 campus Dr. I 1~RA~~a~~. N:~~~~= top hot foods,. such as ix'E'f 642-2171 545-06 11 FOUND: \Vhite dog .w/flea custom \\'OOCl\\'Orking, ho~ 675-6060 ill NB. Phone 556-3028. . COM~ANY D a y 5 . 'is'l-!500/eves & sm"a'"" .,,•P•1g&hctt~~ m, eaAtlbal lls. Servir.g fl arbor area 24 yrs. t"'Ollar & choke chain. Vic. rt' pain, remodeling. No job o FF t CE Sp ACE &: REALTORS ca n C•n..~s · na-Doheny Pk in Dana Pt. too s1nall. F'T'Ce l'Sl. Lou Secretarial Services. Ex· BANK of Costa A1esa Plaia, SINCE 1944 i-'~'''-""'~~673-~1~7'~''~---1 lionally advertised brands. 15 % RETURN 492·8~11 615-6139. Sl·l-1299 Nolle':· ~~Ff,lx~~ces perle n ced/Professional ~~~.ea~:.'1:.t~~~e ·--·6•7•3-44-•00 ____ 1 1 n!;,?~~: $fifort'::nnt:· ~~7 ~:nd~~ u~;:~Ho~nF~ Seasoned 2nd, ~27.5Tl. Pll};i FOUND-J.'en\ale gray Jong· Carpenter 6015 ·~· Airporter Hotel. A/C, licensed rea1 estate brokers Balti A t A H B duslrial con1mercia1 and $400 mo. All due Oc! 191;,. haired shahi;:gy dog. !\Tedium ful .. -"ces. ~ $!<5 Mo. only. Prime Costa ~1esa Business Rental 4450 more, I>· · · ..... 1 .• 1 ope' ,..,,.,,,. You's,·mp-Sell for $26,00J. Pvt Pty. size. Adams ruid Bushard, REl\IODEI.. Add-on. gar •v• ••u11• localion·deluxe offices-·~.... Bo 78' Co B -• ·o t & • 2111 DuPont, R.oozn 8 * CM * ly collect the money. F"o"t, x • 5ta i'olr~a. ~21_. II. · 968-7~03 ... vivers• n, cus · n w percentage lease. For ad-r" .... -co11.St. :.!:1 \Ts o.xp. d r a "' *833-3223 'TU noon * ditional information _ write C S Cl 700 Sq. Ft. $115. ~~ 1ve guarantee that you will $34,188.46 lst T.D. on 1Hin1<' FOUND ~lac~ ca!. Neutered plans frre i>st, 6<1a-3439 DESK apace avaflaWe sso Associated South Coa.s t enter a n emente 1300 Sq. Fl. $195. ~lnlnciat • collect a! least 1&/,, over Comm\ site 001vnto1vn. S.J mAlr. Wearing flea t"'Ollar. C-O'l\-IE_l _Cl \I RESIDEN mo. Will provide furniture Brokers, P.O. Box 15.95, 1000 SQ It Pvt orfc, plenty parking your lnvestn1ent the first Capistrano, $350. .,er n)o. N1·w1Jf111 Blvd., l\lesa Dr .. TIAf: ~d ' j .. b F ' • at $5. mo. An 11 w e r Ing Newport Beach, ca. 92663. Stor• or office 1750 Sq. Ft. $245. year flu1sun1ing You follow Incl 9'~· dut' '21 mo. Strt111..:: C.1\f. ~8-1363. T 0 , •1 · Leod'" • ll?IVice avalla.ble. 11815 on El Camino Real Nr. San Diego Fnvy Business Oppor SOOl our dircclion l or \Ve · buy land 011'ner. 15'' disc"'OUnt I LOST: Ll1tl(' i;iL-l"s b 1 0 c k esthnn1es Onl t• ac BC'ach Blvd., Huntington E xec. Office Space Exccllenr parking Nattress Realty ~71 ~ck lhe 111achl~~· If you CaU 493·1 153 puppy , ii·/black ,(: "'hi l el='4!177'-30'121J""'="""'"c-o,--c-I lleach. &li4321. · Furnished Or Unfurn. \V/w 492-9764 492-7333 ____ 1 \\'Ill devote a 1n1n1nlum ~f 2nd TRUST DEED for sale. I spci·kl•'<i fl'rt. tr found pis. C ARP ENTRY.· M RJ>tr.r NO INFLATION c11ri;c1. p.'lnCI walls. nlcon:I, ASSOCIATE 10 hours per weE'k. "'e ":'111 $11.500. 3 yr. tor;.. Pos t contnct: :l4ii-9..~S~ievcs. ~~aftsn1an·1-e111odcllng Ill ~ '"''· •-,ii. & u!ll . ample parktlg. Short term MONARCH BAY NOW LEASING to ]CIJn 1 Ile manufacturer. 11how you how to build 1n-olfict' bldg. $l87Sdiscount LOST· <• Blk Lb 2 finish "'"wk ~uar;1nt<.'Cd. """ "' lease avail. Im med. Ot.... Huntington &.•ch ~lusl have $11,500 cash + dependent-e for you and * 49~* · r.eni. ··o-OG~ ·RE FREE EST1~1i\TES 4~3105 Corona del htar -700 &/or cupancy. 3500 Sq ft. WUI PLAZA NEW M-l rngn1t. nbi!jty & be "'i\ting you r fan1lly. ~·hill~ ta~ing C p I 5150 {,~, .• 0:111~~.}~""-• • -CL'~~t-Pntio eove- 1000 sq. tt. -11mart loc. sub-divide. N. B. a r e a. Otflce !or Lease to roll up sleeves & work. the bite nu! of 1nnation. ar 00 1 !J'tQ""W<;J Redwood & C<lric OcC'k. Harbor Mgmt. Co. 6r:Hi050 Anthony Burton Re a I t Y , Prtme t1rea-640 Sq. f''t. 940 Sq. l>'l. & UP Salary & equal &horc of J\Un. 13915.32 do\\'tl. terms F'OUN0-1 <>rren Parak ...... t r--......... ,1 6 '" -, ,98 • ... ••- R "'"1047 "'" ••-•~ b Cali llan1U1on & Newland St. r· Ex I h "" ""' ~ , .. ,.. .. .,,... ., ""'"1-iJ'lJJ 1501 WESTCLIFF D • .....,.... 01' ~·v ~·per mont · a.t .. 1,70 pro 1111. cepUona grow1 available. Call Toll Frtt CAR pool 1,·,intcd 10 Erh!!Qn rnll ti.•t11ecn 8 & 5 p.ni. 1 1 ~:: &'fk.ia~~;~er -"N'"'t"w'"A"~~g"R"'R:::f"~"o"'EN"A"l~H-· l ~:M:~;~ A o ~~~ ~ ~~U:~934t' r . \\'llllams. ~~ ~l10'l3. or ~ 1 J ~ ~ High, A~val a1irox . tl:OO. 96:!.:\3f1!l ~~~~I1·a ~:'n~"UZ :uai~ CALL ON·SITE MANAGER Executive otnce 11pace avail. Several Joe-a· SANT,\ ANA !"le\'" M-1. In-* AF FILIATE * sky" Por'-1:' Ci~re~·rv in e, OeP1ir1 a:OO. 968-"19l•I t'OUNLl.. ronrr~·h'. !WU-1001 (714) 542.3111 ext 2.16. 2 Or 3 Room suite hons In Ulgt1nn. 25c To flustria.J unils, 1~ sq Posh Mahal needs manager , _,c"'•"'ll"lo"rru"'o=9"':11"'07~==,,-l '!!!l!!!!!!l!l;;;i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!(i!!!!!!!! r ~:~:~ r~~1· RE~10DELING, Pa 11 o'. S Vklw of boats It wutcr rac Pt!r Sq. FL. ft from t2c. ~ wi1h Yelled interest. Select 1 RESPONSIBLE PERSON Iii ]@ , 1 1 . O.:'(·~. nooni i\ddllloo!'. 55c PER Q FT 1 Small oUk:e ll65 Nolan Jteal £st.ale "94-9424 Storag. 4550 lmporta In South Coast Wanted to own &: operate l.olt Ind f-ound (") LOST: 2 In-.h :wt 1cr~. ":' II. Cab1nrts, 673-1166 J\t.r Ryan 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB Bill Grundx Rltr. SMALL OVAL Shop avail. VIiiage (p.!lrt or SOUth Cout candy l c6nlection vending "-\ f. Vic Ortrgn H11ray. 4!16-;Jl31 t'ENCES/C,\TES e-tc., CpU., drpl, AlC, h'te pkg., 67' '1 1 Loe:. In th4! ~I c 11 11t Pl:>.u-compltxl 979-e.583 mule. Costa f\fcsa & sur· bcforr 4. Rev.11rd. Bullrl Repair l~ut~ilo,· ;lD~' ;ccd~ngs~.-"Agt~.::.54!!J:::.:;o:;;'2~1,-.,..,.:::::c:~-.::.-.:;::::;::;: I n-JE FACTORY, $90. mo. MINI-WARE HO USE HEALni F'OODS rounding ~a. p I e.a ~an t Lost & Found 5300 l.OST: 1..rJ:. broll'T1 Siaml'st> :;.t.11:np1 evenings DELUXE 2 rm. oftlce; East **Corona del Mar** 425 30th, N.B. ~ Private, kicked lndlvkluAI Beoutl.IUI we 11 establl'hro buslncM. Htgh profit 1te.m!l. CAT, lk-cl:i\\'ro. RE\\o'AR Ci\RPF.NTRl' • Pi\INTING Coast Hwy., CdM. 43c Ft. Prolcsslof\31 Ollir..U and/or SPACE""°AVAtL for I ue In storage unlta. From $1.SO store In mos! des Ir a h I e Can RIA11 p11rt ~lme. Age FOUND m~lt Samo)'ed dooi:t'. La~unn N f~util lt11--0441"1 RJ::i\iODEL & REPAIR Realonomks. Bkn. 61H700 •"'m'p•llei. p!?.'2,""ia'n'. ";,~-.~ •• ""uu·,: Boardwalk Shop'R'.· Or. at per moA. LLSPACE 67N3-e !" • .!!..•,•,•,.Beach area. or l"xpr.rle11ce no1 im1)1"1rtan1. Garfield nnd Bushard , ·t"'OUNO: S7.hr St6-007!1 COSl'A MESA DOWNTOWN ·~ ""'~ Hunt. Hilt'. Call : 846-.2.1fi6 .>'tW Rcq11irf:S Cf!.l & $1395. to Fou11t11ln Va I I ('y 962-8921 Af~h11n CARPENTER * Ilse. New'"' dtc, quiet. pd. 300-2000', li"'Y rront8J!(I -lnd-uotrl-al Ronlal 45-00 960-1970 er~ Shop. po •·h locatio" $479). cush 1nvM:tn1ent. For aftt'.'r 6 Pm I 615-"J.·1 * y o 2nd fir Rnt•• ·-n1 A)(' r I detR\IS \\'rltC • include '""' • ' . ~ l :<J n f (' r /If 1 ~mRl\!ihtp-klW l36 R.oche11lcr. fi.(2.-49Qj Owner 67a&fi u:l'sss .... t::. Promontory Poln1 . Gro11 phone Number. Dep:ll1.litent f-o~nd-8l111'k mull' poo.-lll'. F'CJl'NO pri('('oi .• RobC'rt. ~2051. 714: 842-53'i1 Agent Coa.lt 'Highway, ·CdM ' * COSTA MESA * NE\\'POflT Beuth, Cll!ltl('cy J4~ Mo. Broker 55:i-8006 BVV. 3 9 l 8 J\1et1dO\\'bn:r<lk '';.!llmon1 Trn1·t, }' V .. 10· 11. 10 spcc"r! 'lil")<'ll' Ce'•I''""' 60ll COUllTESY Rl::NTAL -Ahi)Oll new ~1·1, VIiiage. llOO l5Q ft, 14' cell· H..d. J\1\nneailOlis, MN ~2G ~1 96..~:11"1 • Commerclnl Store $llS 325 SQ. ~ofriccs, t '""" fl Sl85 li10 lng:1. 8xl2 slidinp: door' '2 DJ c.i1 FOUND S ~-~~ ·•·• ' Ba.. All walnut paneling &: ~ aq, • · ' ~~ny win~. oU 'pactons 642.:!!.~ .. '":~-•0 2nd lru.<il deech$~,OOO. l(n. ml. blk. malt' do.Ir FOUND: \\1atch, \rlc. N1vpl. *·\COL'~ICAL • Sell Idle l!em• w\th a :>ally crplll. Sl~. tncludes uiu.1 ~---'6<"1,:·236=1-===1 bnck . patJO w/trees. $475, _. __ ~·-3 yrs. 3a")l d I~ co 11 n 1 . ~IO" I e V l 111 fl a n (I llbr Ill Srh. Crill lo Iden· Ap1 lit'i :..rep.'l11crl ·repaint~ Pilot Cru11ified ad . 6-C~ 500 supcr\or, N.B. ~s.-2635 Want ad re!!ull• .••.. 642.-0678 -"-~~-~ ,,_,_,_<>-_965_.,___ ~1~25 "vca. \Vestrntn111cr, C.ltl. M&-695-1. l\ty, 6-14..0037. dn·watl. "all !rx, &U-5TB • ' , •• • • .. .• I 0 DAllV PILOT Tu~;~,.~··o.· :!.°'~"°"~;;;is~. :.,19!!7;4~,__,....,....,.,.,,,,,.,,,=-,-,,,--.,-===:-:-=-:-=-=c'.".:"=~==r:r.:-;:;~;:'.l""i:;;o.;; c.,.,., Service .016 I f?alntlng /Paptrlng 6073 ! Htlp W•nttd, M&F 7100 Htlp Wented~&F 7100 I Help W1nted, MiF JiooHef P W1ntid~ M&F iiiit H'olp Wonlod, M&F 7100 ~ W•n~ M&F 1100 Help Wonlod, M&F 7100 JonN's c...,,.t • u~hobtery * W ILLARD Delivery-Sunday Only ---------111'1 Shan1pr , ISull Ht>- · RECEPTIOJ<LST. p/tlm• WAITRESSES .N~ tot beauty 1alon. Exper. Neat Appearance t 1r<b1n1s.1 0.~·11~t• .r: PAINTING* OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE· QUIR ES THE USE OF A LARGE STA- TION WAG ON OR VAN. CONTACT MR BENTON WILLIAMS. 330 WEST BAY STHEF.T. COSTA MESA . TELEPHONE 6424321 FOR APPOINTMENT. IBM SELECTRIC ll TYPIST PROOFREADER/PASTEUP COMBINATION. Call 833-98!1 21 Ot O\•er 311 cvlor hril{htirooril & Ill THE FINEST minute Ult't1·h fur \\hlla Resident Manqer Appl)' Surf A Sirloin ' ~ltlLU'e couple to mabi&:e apt 5930 \V. Coall lfwy .. NB t:0mplex. BkkJ>nl. rent cal· WHO wANTS TO \VOnK! 1 ·~11111•11. Sav" >oUr lllOl~"Y j 110;\lt:~ · RQ.\T~-Plt:RS hy ,Jl.l.l\hli nil' l'\(l'il lripi., I Stts·z;., • \\'1.11 clc1u1 l1v11u: n11 , dlnlni: ,...,. _______ _ 1111., &: hall $1 j ,\ny 1 ru. *W•llpeper 'Hanger* ltction & so m c main· DRIVE A CAB! t u n a n c e , Snlary (.'()m· CllOOSF.' your hours, ""Ork '>7.~. t'tlU•·h SlU. Chlllr 5j.1 {', Hf.BKO 6lll·:!4HI I 1 1:1 ~1 ~ r'l1· ia 11llHI i'Ot1.1iL' F.x-rl-~li !Oll . l:\TERIOR An Equal Opportunity Employer Need to type 65 word s ii.er minute accurately, Kno\Y ne\vspaper page and ad pasteup. So1ne proofl'eading experleuce helplul. I ml'tlliuni.te 11·/e.xpC-r. Call for youneU. be )'OUl' own 1:M:'~· :Lo:•:':":·:ll33::·:•:11:7.::=:! boss. ?llen or \\'Omtti. Can ""I \lll'!h•~I I ,1,, l\tllk I \' I I I . ' R f t . · . n •)U1· 1· W"J <.~ o p;11n . r : ~.,.--,,,,-.,--,-,====-,,--,.~,,----,.~--·-~= "1~"trr. f ,u.~ro·I ''1..:..~ f\l'nl: I.it·: Ound,'<J, 9i~-t.JO Help Want~, M&F 7100 Help Wa nted, M&F 7100 1, be slightly handlc&ppe<! N~t . C11·11n Appcarimce. Ciment/Concrete 6019 1 P i tlos 6075 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:; CLlSTO:'lt C'F.1\11':.~T \\'ORK 1 Cook Exper •• Line F/til11!'! l~.!!illlt.ln. Pnld VRC. Ho!lfl. ~11.~lll'. & Q t h c r benefit!>. A11ply. Sam' 8 Seafood, 16278 Puciflc Coast 11\.1)', H.B. -Apply in person - ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT NEWPORT Personnel Agency Newport Beach 642..3870 * CCU'S Vt1 •. rctirt.'11. Age 1.> to TO. S11oolen1e!'!t your lnronie. Drive a r.t.b 6 hr11 or rnof(I A day Apply In ~non. Yrllow Cnb l\O·· 186 E. 16th St., Coilta Afet1a . ·s BRICK, '11 W';., OR CON· I I' \1'1<>~. Ol<IVES, \V1\LK Cnll Oon li.12-8314 C'ltt·:rr. P10!1ns, <rtl al . AYON Full p.tfn1e. 3·1J & 11-7 Excellent Benefits C'.oo<l working . coiiditions -_ -l'-l\l'krn;,n~)ujl. li<' & !.1•.'llllo:d. fl.\lt·::-:r \\'t1rk, 11.ny kind, 5.·11-tri1;:1 NHd Cash For Christmas? 300 West Bay StrMt, Coste M,sa c Q 11111\crclul. rea\d{'n!lal. "p~1-1-~/~R--1---,=•77 l.1¢' .\c h.>r1(1<'1'.l. 6."'.&-101~1 II er epa r .,.., t 'l·.~IE'.'.'T \\'ol'kor"'7au~ I l'A"fCH PLASTEHING Ask for composing room foreman after 5 p.m. 1 -Equal Opportun.lty Employer- COSTA MESA ' I ~~~~~~~ Momorlel H"plt•I 1: 1 JI~ J COOK I 11 you're 11.mblUou.~ & rri· Aftply fl•11 ... niabl1\ lrf'1• •'.~l mate~ i\U--lj·pc~ frl!I! f':jtfme.tes thuaiillltic, yuu cnn ~ 1 ;i r 1 GIRLS & BOYS '10 yrJ & alde,r 642-2734 EOE . "'""'"""' . V Call G:i'l-33'!:; Call 5W-6825 1e11n1lng money IMn11•1!!111t•ly Dick Church's Antiques 8005 l.l_.r ... ~n.>~11'<111111't.· \\nrk Plumbing 6078 a~ llll A\'ON H f:J)ftEs~:N. ~ Resta urant ~~ DAILY PILOT RN 1:::::.:!:::::C....---- 1.,,11,,s. \\u\k~. Dnvell. TATIVE. f\INt peopll'. lln\·r ~'6!18 Ne"''llflrl Blvd Help Wanted, M&F 7100 Help Wanted, M&F 7100 !\ted-Surg. unit· ll·7:3tlAM LAST 4 DAYS! \\led, Thun, 1 ~.,1·rin•1·-.61~·.70t·h .•il:i-K1\:! L.R. m·rs PLUl'tfBING fun too. Call for •lctail~: ===="~="~·~·~lo~'=•---I GENERAL Offll'e Clerk. J ANITORIAL shift , f/time. Xln't btnefits. Fri. & Sitt. Oct. 16, 17. f.,ntractor 6021 "/tl'nlnJC'Jii & Rcpalrs. \Vall'r 540-7011. COOK, l'Xper'd, p It Im e , Has routes open In EOE. Conte.ct l\lrs. Jensen, 18. 19. 10 A!\f-5 Pf.I. !\farble h , .• c• r:;i, 1! is pus 1 s ·I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!""~~..,,..-~ 1\inturt" fem for gu~t home. Trattlc & record kMPh1i;: P/tlme man, 1>."0man or cou-S Cl I Cos.ta !\fCill M e m 0 r i a I top dl-esser, capt a Ins h11~1ri1~. d~h1o1 !1.h.rs fil2~2G3 * BABVSl'ITER. 1;r11 ncl· llrs 10am--Opn1. 64H716. c:-.11 desirable. Lite typing, pie. !\tature, re liab le . an emen e Ho~pltal, 301 Victoria, Of Oialrs, Coffee Grinder & 1.1 f('JIF:'l & ha1h n•n101l!·I-1\1/(' ,\: RIA Con,fJll'tl' 1n<>1her typt' 1nixl<'n1 "l'l)U· R1Mh uf America. 1Y00 Mission Viejo/Laguna area. 6'a-2734--~ HRnging-1.Anipil g drw Pine 111! addihoni;, 11lt<'r:it10n1t. Plunibinl.'. Scr\·ire L lc. •. t'litQ apt _.. br:lftt\I & i-nutll COIUNT~:H"' llel11 _ ~11 dEry Quail SI.. NB. 833-9750 $2.50 per h:r to s111l't:--2-CALL Mr. Hyde D•-·"r & ige l\1aole Mir--• , I C' Pan1n~ ocpt, n/tin1e. .:00:· ---d ·-;.:l!lk>I ,cf1d1ni: lllJOn< 1n~rullt'(. :!i'..1~n si1Jt1ru. 2 girts 3 j_, ;,, Eo~lish ,. GIRLS-GIRLS Hrs pc.r day. 5 ays per 4_ •• 20 ror, Brat .. ...,, revl'rsible Rug, C I "'' ~=~,~~=== . ., per, pref'd. but \\'i0 lrain. k c II .. o ~66 ,.~ ~-J>.11011100 ,i•n .. s UC.1;' 1.,..;,, R,\y~ Pl.l";\1B11'G ~ERVJCE sp<>:iking rnu1;r driv<'. li·I0·0-182 ApJily in person The Easy lun job. Day or nli;:hl. Wei' · a .,.._,.. · RN-LVN-Aides approx 14 'x2'.l'. 9' 3 cushio11 \Jeuilwr l3l,B.iJEi:t-l!l6l I llrph1r:.-J1\Stal!<11ions BARYSITIER, af!cr srhool, Treu:rury, 3900 S. Br I s 1 o I No. exper. necess. \Ve train JANITORS, CPlS, ~OS NEW FACTORY Beautiful hosiiital 1v 11 tr e Divan, Ann Chr & ot1oman, 1':!.n\\JCI\ .r... Son, J.llftt Conlr. 24 hr. lll'l'\ 11·e 54s-8G.".8 my /Klnll', No rth ntu/f. '.!I .,"s~,,\~.=~~~----you. You must like pcopll' P/time office cleaning eves. Branch outlet& J:t opening goorl nursing C'arc ls top items. Sec ot 905E. Bal~ \tlil 11·1111~1., ~t. ]le ID-111321 1 Remodel & Repair 6081 P.:'11 . -j p.rn. 1\t u 11 . ~· r 1. C.1JSTODfAN. l~p exn pre· & be 11t least 18. Apply Nev.•port & Balboa areas, in area need.I following: pr i 0 r ! t y . Xln't Iringe rolfee table, & ~thE"Bamlbo""· •;7:)-1',f)I\, .1 l!t-:ll 10 , ------'------6'1'1-f'Ai~~i ;i r1 r. .. ~-----,. uny A.On or eve. 2930 \V. t..hliil. have car & phone. Mgmt Trne $185 wk benc[it;i. Various sh If 11 . Hems. See nt 190:i . a El.~I 60J2 I ADI> -,\ -J;;\I · nC:l\lODEL & BABYSITfJ-:ll, ll\'c-1 11. Lite ~;~~:~~1~117~~~'1:ni~11 :~: Coast Hwy, N.B. f2~11N ~ J: apply at Servmen (2) $3' hr En1press Conv. Center. 1020 BI ''.d , I a t ' ' L '' St· I n~:PAllt 23 vrs. e.-.:p, Lie. hous••keL•ping. Pvt :opt r.c11r San Clen1enle General Hos· GIRL. over 1S to aSRiSI auto · 0· \'f', ange. Salesmen Open Tenninal, Wng Bch. Apply1_:f~P~oo~1~"'~"~"~'------I 1.1.ECTR!<;IA :-.: * 0 l ti No. :?3.'\-01•1 s:\l!TH CO,"JSr bch. Salary. 673-1153. pita!. 1714~ 496-1122 ext 224 \\•holesalcr, n1ust have Calif J A NIT 0 R 1 AL company Pref ovr .25, mruTled, ear. in perscn. ANTIQUE (OUch, American. J,.h .... ~l'\1 .Joh~. S.·r. it•e 11!1.>-:1'174 f,:fuf,-iji'~;=;.~T,'o;~;;;;;I ~iiiiiii.i;iii:.iiiij;i;.;;,.;.::;.iii. drivers lli·, 645-1612 seeks men ll'ho ore expd All benefits, career positions. RN, lk licf, \Veekends, Da"". S300. or $200 cash. Ca 11 BARJ\L\ID, J)nyH. 11Hc:<, ful l in t & f u 4••106s ,. 0.07137 1·.1. 11_~ A1lytiuu·-A11) ph,re. 1 Roofing 6082 DAY BUSBOYS GUARDS res uurants, part u -,..-$4CI per shift. Bavv_iew Conv., ;~=..-;.,e:;_----~=I . & p/!un~. licc1· & \\l inr. Un e 54S-383.3 ..-.... ~ 1· .d:Z..9"29·==-----1 --~~------C:ill 548-9().10 for i11f{'rvil'.'1\s Jn1n1cd. Need ful l .t p/tin1c 1 •• • NEW Spa ope ning Hun-Hosp. CJ\1642-350J. Appliances 8010 i-:1.EcrRICI,\N-license no· REPAIR~. all t~s. Reas. Hl/\l\1-2Ai\·1. gunrds ro r Orangr c o. urea. JANITOR. f/limc. Mes a tington BC' a c h, 11ttractive ROlTT'E SALES ·.;,:c.==::...---0'-~ :!::l!Oli. Sn111ll jobs, mulnt f'"l'l'•' est. Lic'd. Ask ror BEAUTY OPEH.ATOR i\.s· DISHWASHERS Call (~131 4:Jj-;).12j. &ini-Vl'rde Conv. Hosp, 6 61 JW:'ls needed for tnasseuse \\i'UI Train, Salary,. Comm, FREIGHT DAMAGE SALE .•·. ,.!,pairs. 548-m"l \\'ult. RJ0-5020 anytin1e ~ , •101, 1111.,, f'rl Center SI, C!\-f 548-058.i ~ r ec e p tionlst positions, Boo"s. Vehicle ""·-. All New HotN>int Refri~rators. "' ="-":C:.C"O'..'.'.O'.:O'..-".::!.::.o:;~ sislanl for Busy Sl1Jon. \\'rd :i I n1, " . .. .,.,... •- Fencing 6038 Tile 6091 thni s.ir. i\lust he liscrncrd. La\.\·rence Security, Inc. Exper. not rieces1. Will train E)cp. Pd. Eltab. bu!I & '1.'asbers, Dryers, 0 Is h - Richarrl Oticllette. i 61 n Night' & WHkends HOSTESS/CASHIER JUNIOR SALESMEN Day & night openings, call territory. hied. coverage, wa.shers, New 1varranty. II I CER c •·-I !or interview. 900-:1577 & Profit Shere, Retire at 57. Credit, Bol'.A, 3623 \V :-:o job too sn1t1 or al'\?(' •. -\:\II TILE \\'or~. kt., \\'esl c (In s I 11 .... ,, NB. av., 21. molure. Ex .. t. Ap. <=L134 C-t 9 & 5 N SI 'k f H 15 IV o. A Chain llnk our l l)(:ciaily ' hath. cn1ry, sh1vr. pao ·"~;~3~~~===~==~ Apply 3-5 Dally ,,,,.,.... "" o r. e, . .oyo..,s yrs. arner ~nlfl rw, near ..,"'' -· 251 E c H ply Hamburger Hamlet. A&'e l!J..15. Earn $20-$40 per NURSERYMAN 549-311 0, l't1r. Tucker. 7·9PM Harbor, 979-2921 Pyn.n1irl F"r1x·e j.J~OC'i.2 Li1• l't'Plllr. r rec Esr. 494-2135 BEAUTY OPERATOR • oast wy I.".' Adorn• A"•, ~1 olt k l I Eq O Ero 1 If c1·0.1s-271 N B h H.. • '-1' wee ge tngnewcu."!omers ual ppor. poyerm MOOEL800Kenmore 'G.rd.n'tng 6045 ~ . I l'.'o:I, -ewport e ac ?·J0p1n '0-'Ir H•"•n I' th DAILY PILOT ft Ex rt __ , hortl ... ~ ----No following llC(', Com nl E -· · ~ " · ..... · 0 e a er pe e, .... ..,., or Cwture Sales · Washer $100 Model 70 Kcn- 1 c:;;~~i~\~ ~E :i~;~,C:. gua~~r~o·~·~·1~;..~1~0507. ,,-,-,,-,.,-,"" !~;'~'"~·~' ~o~,,,.,~·~· ~E~m~pl=oyo~r~ I Ho T EL l\IAIDS. exp.,y~Rr school and Saturdayi. You bkgrnd., Jlunt. Beh. 842-8&'ti6 $30,000. to $50,000. more \\lll.R~ $75, Re b J t, •Gardening Services* Sr· jobs \.\<elLiJnil'. 536-2126 BEELINE FAS 111 ON' S. round job in Laauna. Xlnt must be out L' school by OFFICE CLERK \I/ANTED A YEAR guar & del, 546-867"1 \ I l lon1r~ & Co1nmrn·inl~ * S47·8878 *t-HouSC\l'iVf'S nc«l inQlll')'. 2 DP~~~;e~R~~~yN\nt~ r ~Ii~ re!IOrl \\'Orkingboco n<:I. ~d 3:00 pm and be able to \.\'Ork lull Co. benefits, 5 day Direct sales mg1nt. t Y p e. G.E. VERSATRONIC Range. Sprl.nklrrs Free E11im. " 1\·ardmbes a yr. N'o in-salary + lips, nus & pru a~ least 3 days per Wffk. No week. Apply at 2139 La~'tlna Comi:n. only. Trade .show 2 )TS old. 2 oven.~ • .xlnt :i3 1·31~l :t:.:1-71!17 Kitcb, l::nlT')'l1Tiys, Bathrooms \'Cstn1ent. Exet'I. opp .. IKl -~~~\ N!i:i~:: !\:!~·ha~ t -'~0~0~•~tio~'~"~· ~C~•'~'~'M-~J~l~o;~-t ~~~aUoo: prc::::1~~~· C~iyo~ ~..i~ q u~~ ~95 Mies. ~1r. Tyler. ( 714) eoncl 548--2512. EX'.P. JapancSl' i\ml'rlcnn Top Soll 6092 t>xp. !\.trs. Sha,1\~ ~t~~!9-l::9 or depend. car. 54!-4752. HH 0 UTkS ElroK ~ EIPltER-<:ok,n. C U 968-4812. . PpoBXun1 Y l'""I yrr .I 543-9341 Rent Washers/Dryers G1rd("ncr. Ou.1Hty Complele l\1rs. Sl.-xron ~u-... l('o · DELIVERY~IEN. early A1\I sev. ·• n g, e c::oo g, Equal Opportunity Employer Answer ng Serv ce Sefe,/General Helper $'.!. \Vk. Full main!. Garrlenin;.: Scorvirc. Bomai 1 l'OP SOIL * CO;\tPOST• lj~ Al\JM J'll"Vft _,., Times Route, Costa Mesa _..hoo"""1 5 f~~ld7 yr.I old . art. Days or ~-Full or p/t Retired nian to \lo'Ork part * ~12J2 * Tra1nill!;!. :H.S-91<9 * l\fULCll * HF'D\\'OOD• -v -v -,, sc · '"' ay. r I' 1 n e Exper pref d EOE 540-llMi'2 -' Ca1i '·°" "'.!"""' B' lror lhru p,tl. !" .$:GJ area. No eol!e(.!ting. 11USI area. ~lust have r c r 's, LABORERS · · tim~ in ncv.· 11me.ll wholesale H 0 T p 0 1 NT Fro 1 Urtt l·:x·r.-know 0011' 111 a I n 1 , ....,.......,,..,.,. Exec. Secretary ss::,u hav" fit>prnd. car. 546-6427 t ra 11 s . &. be s u p <! r •PBX Operator, p/time. Ev{'a bus1ni:11s. For appt phone Refrig. Two door. N e e d 11 ,. I e fl n ups. tr l ni minx. Schools & Loan Shipping Clci·k or 546-17!0. \\'/children! Mr . C arr: iGeneral Laborers v.·eekcnds. \Viii tre.in. Ca ll 556-8956. door flaskct. $60. 6T:J-9753. t' en o v Illini:. lntlflflcll ping, Instruction 7005 ?.1ortgagc expcr. 10 SSOO DENTAL ASSIST. Ortllodon· 546-5243 or 551--0241 iPackers ~·:1'::·8139~·======~11;;:;~~~~~~~~=1 r:1.ll a ftl'r 4.flf'1S-::.iso --Legal SeL'y/Pmh;1t· to $750 tic chr. stdr. Approx. 4days 1 H~O~U-~S~E~f~<~E~E=P~I~N~G' 1iLite Assembly • SECRETARIES Bicycles 8020 !-: X P E n T Ju p ri ne !11 r PIANO LESSONS Bkkprl!>tort Bank1nf! ro $7'JO n \\'eek, Or!IJO. exp. req'd. supervisor, 3-1 1 : ;i o pm, Apply TODAY! PERSONNEL Sh & G-I typl"•. •-ooft• .. RALEIGH Sup ER Gordl'rll'I': Cun11llcl{' yo rd D-g1'01••-lot•,mo"1•t•• 0 -· -I••"' to '""'" Storl S'' lo •• 1-, hr /ho ·-· Al •· ""rt II' k T0'10RR0W' """' ..... °" "' ~l'l'Vii:e. clean un~. free est. ""' ...... , •. '•2·1',!"'3 " " ~ ...... "'• ~ ·" · ""'"' · "· .,.. "' ·· w sp exp .,,..;. "'·' ''" · or •• · Ability to Interface \\l/oUu~ni Include vacations, pa i d . CO URS~. ,~ ... IX-nlal f''rnt !B~·k 10 $600 deprnd'f· on ex P. No time pm housekeeper. San + cxper. in pca·sonnel \\'ill holidays, & NO F'EE'. 10 SPEED. J4 •. $100. :,~.2fiti1. voter.;, Piano, Thl.'Ory llleii lc·:il Bek Of!· 1u S500+ ~ok'g. At:l' ~l(}..30. 642-2626 Cil"rncnte General l-lo8p11111. r-f-'·<Jid make you a va luable asset * 640-t5-1a * l.A\\'N SF.RVICF. -~ly lloruc Or Yours. IRYJNE PERSONNEL DENTAL Rct·cp!. for busy f7l4• '196-1122 ext Zl4. j ·( JlllhP ... lh-, to th i 11 iuternatio11ally GIRL· s 20 ••Se h w Inn DF;r>l-:."'l),\lll.I·: [11n. Ne11·1n1111 83:\-2320 ofc. 1\! !east l yr CXpC'l'. HOUS E K E E PER, Eng. known tlrni. Seel'(!tarlal rt'_ F'ail'lacly, exc. cond. ~~ ":~,e~~.~·.1.l\lnlnt • C:J~~C~7 SERYICES•AGENCY· S600 111i11. Very good sµe ak'g. Beaut. qtrs. f or rf":. Jrwiile. IJJ.1Zt5 skills recf d. j -(-izl. nao.,_ "· Price. 545-8345. 5'l5-fil28 " ~ I .fS8 E. 17111 St. {al Jr\'inf') Ci\J benefit~. Some Sats. H.B. Jive-In on Lido Isle. No 1-Man AAMES IOOo/v FREE 'd Camero1s & Equip. 8030 EUROPEAN GARDEN En. I 111 JI S 't 224 642 1470 84fl'-35<10 children but have dog. Xlnt. ~~~~:::::~~-~~:I Bureau or ~ .. ..-. DJ.IN i.an<lllC'up1n~-!n'<.' llf'rVI{'{' tmplo,m..t UI • •~ :._ DENTAL ASSISTANT sal. Over 40, 2 or more Employment Agency .Ir CAMERA & D.·"· ro om rc:isonab.le, 6-12-S32!1. 68.1-1425 . . .,...... ,.___. • .,.~ 'l Exp prerr m.'CI Costa l.!esa. yrs. ref'!. rt"<l'd. 6i:°'l-3770 LAB TECHNICIAN Costa Mesa 556-1100 1~ Equipment. c;;i1" a ft 6 L.'<IUSCP/Gi\RDENl'.\IAIN·r I _Ai'inifii<~><i>~'l"-l c°'~'~'~' ~"~"~"~&~T~"'~'~· ~"1~~~71""'7~ I HOUSEl<.."EEPER .Chlis!ian 2706 Htt rbor Blvd Suite 2.()7 i\oton/Fri or other eves art :-:..id. Sprinkler~. Clcanu"!'. Job W anted, Male 7025 BOOKKEEPER F /C Dental Ass•'stant lady or student. Lite hse\.\·k. P /tiTT'!! !n 1~~ pediatric Anahm 600 N E uclid 776-8120 10 ••. o~ • ..:Oil cn, 642-3.l.11 &IG--190.lt For pul>Hc aii:.wntfng oft·.~ 'd 111 el'(chg. for rm . .,.......u. '"' Sec'y, So1les Asst. B&H 16mm 10DR , ... , · & •--~ group. 64.~70, l\lrs. Austen O"" .2 City Bl East ~1222 • ""'7 ·"""· I I S I Lll.tL i\tAT UltE hard 11o·orking in-p ·11 l r •vnt & back ef"pcr. req · in exchg. for rin . & board. LEGAL Secrelllry In 3 Genera erv ces -itl\·l'c!W'!I seeking t.lana~e· q ~ ~~U ~x~! 1 1~ :S;n~~ Salary open. 6.Jj-W'lO 5U-4464 yea'rs exp., SIH. •8 :l a·r Y Very !\111trp. n11t1u1-e young w/one--inch Jens. Unused I nirnt Trn inl'e position. F.x-\\'l'Sl<'rn Businc~s &>r.'IN's DEN T AL A ssist ant . H 0 u SEK EE PER. want open. Call 64~303l, 642_~ Promotiona l Sales st'Cl'l'lury \'./i O+ lvt>ing since owi:Mnul. $ZOO. Call n~t-: Call [)oN; II All~ N•• IT'C'n1el) l'C1V1nablc. Xlt11 Inc., ~ \\', 19th SI. C'.\1. chairsiilr f'xper. ~ton 1h11.1 qualified hou...ekceper, 9-5, LIVE IN Housekpr & com 50% C.ommlssion. 28 llrs a ~~1M Se& 1 1eclrlc & 1 abil 1 i1y to 675-4Z7l In u.111. ' 0·1tll loo ~ma 11. Compll'tt" 1 relci'Cllt'<.'s X'pd. J o s e.ph 6t2--0Z12. Thurli. Sahu')' OJK'n. 817-3507 mon-fti. GT.rl44l -· ' • \\'eek. Openings for 5 tncn. L..., t -or "'r If' e~ten. CANON ·IT "'1501.lM, 1:4 home & apt. 1111t1n1{'Jl!lllt·e 1 .\liJ~r liT.r2499. pu.nion. n I e e surround'gs. Neat appearance. Over 18. Figure aptl!u<te & x.ln t w/ Jens. + filh'ni, an.~h & ac· HK". p;tintlng, ilt~llll! & !_}Ill. YOU:\'G man C'Xpcrienct'd in BOOKKEEPER. f cxp<>rk in D ~ ~ ~ t L A ssis I a. n. t , 1-IOUSE\\'ORK, 4 1non1s !l .-=-=~-~.ri ... iil<Tc---J c'~·IB-4":!~13~7~1o~•~· ~·"~'°~"~':.''~"~·--pt-ople. Joumansm or ces. ExC('I. i'Ond. $300. i· e n1 orlcl n ii:. redC<.'Or.1 1 1~. 11 II in I i 11 g a par tmcnl all phuses c;iJ or ice bk 11(1.1-v d ~1rs:c (', exp or trrun1ng \\'C'C'k. ~ ho11rs C'.1f'h Al\1. MAC111NIST PROPER1 Y E:nglish rnajor \l'/l11ry ofc 642-li92 r ug 1·lt>anhu:. 11!umhin:;, 11111 1 n 1 c 11 ;; 11 cl' and ron-~~~~~~:~;~f rt~~';f~;C', Pff~riY esirei' l\lon-Fri, 614-TI62 _o~-c~_& jl~~· 6-1;;...&§1. Oependutrle \.\'/tools. Must hAcki..'f'l'.lund \\'ho li kes C .._ 8035 j·a.rpen1ry·.c1111 All Sel"\'IC'l'lt. ~1ruc1 M)n S\."Cks peiTnurlC'nl 10 C\ussificd ud l'KI 2i t c/o Dishwasher/Kitchen ll OlJSEl{i::EPF:R. Com· have knowledge of pattern MANAGER prt!ssurc & hard \\'Ork will ats -.IG-3600/:>t:Hl'521 _Job. Coll Grt',r,:: !li!l-9621 D:iil.v Pilol, P. o. Box 1.500, Help, · panion. fem. Livl'-in. non work both "'OOd & metal. EU:~~;·~11r''OJ~~o~'.11'~~fer1~ !Ind Xln't futu~ "'/Sltil~: SL\hfESE Rl~r:JSTERED IHAl\lOND & L'Olore:I stone Job Wanted, Fmale 7050 fosla 1\11.•sa Ca 92132\i l<lo111in~ shHt. 1020 Tcrniinal, 11n1oke1'. i\lusl drlvc 962-5124. Full or p It Im e. Call k & . . 1 1 mnnuf. ~ I l'r mo. Ca 7 \\'eeks, beautiful. 327 GHi .:..=c.;;"C"""~:i"'"----1 I B h 542-S.:;58. \.\"Or supctvllllOll o res -Ann 642-891i1. St. Apt. J, JIB , ...... l'lasses, 11 in1lng !IOOn, by BOYS -~~~"~"7'-'~·~-~~--HOUSKEEPING. pL t I 111 l', .:.~7"'""====--denl 11111.1111.gcrs ''° projectl -:i:i;S;;:'"'i;::::;;;:::::::~ J.,;'!c.~C.:!~~~·~·~·;._== :zradu:ill' ~ t' n1o1 o I:': is t , SE:CllETARY D ishwasher, f/tlme students OK. SJ.00 pr, hr. MACHINISTS nu1nage1'll. s u I 11 r y con1•1 *Sec'ys, Bookkeepers Dogs 8040 :-i..."ti--7:>4!. 962~l!l:i OCC evenini; srudcnt seeks or Conv. Hos p. 612·05~ 288 Cabrillu, Apt. C. Ci\l, I Produclion or I racer lolhl' tncnsurate \\'/cxper. Ca 11 I-lave too n1any lo list l~.;;,,o:_ _____ ...;::;.;.;: I JD.ft.R Clcanin~ :'c1•v!C•' full ·liml' Harbor Arca JlO»i· GIRLS 348-6606 • ope.rutor. Pnrt or f/tin1{'. llolr. Lester, S33-9ll 7. Liz Relnden Agency e PUPPY. WORLD e Apll rlnll'nts fur R•~r.e11t tion. Types r.o w.p.111., docs Paper Routes Open DOCTORS ASSISTANT tst or 2nd shift . 540-5206. RE ALCO 4020 Birch St., Suite 104 Bu 11 Terr le r . Lah , 84&-&"iRl nr fMG--0·11!1 shot1hRnd lr.) ...... p.m. Honor In Lagun.t Bea ch in Young lady (18-281 to \\·ork INSPECTOR MAIO-Conlpetl"nt fOI" gen'! New;>ort Beach 833-8190 Welmaraner, Bull dogs, Sib. 'THJNGS" l>y i\11Yl!k!. C>l'n'I -~tudl'rtL llcfcr.nLfl. 5.fS.4240 M any LocatianJ. as doct~rs ha Ills is tan t I housework': 2 In family. $450 ~;· l~~~ES~r San Juan• Dial A Job 13l-0855 Huskey, Chihuahuas, Tiny l'aJ::Pl?ntry. l'<'puh·s, 1ilu1n· fllATUJtE \ron1an looking for Call Mr. Lambert ~~~· n~~ss~~\~ ;:i; Y~~ In-Process per mo kl start. Live in Mission Viejo. El T 0 ro . No Charge To You Po o d 1 es. Pit Bull.~. hln", elect., 642-5613 JK'rn1a11en t live.in, child 642-13:!1 Apply 1.0 pe-•o al~ eve. or out. ST;,-0025 Cbeck our ads. fl.lore Ill Established 196.5 Cocka!X)(). 100 ?tt TX E D It h k . IJ • ...., l\lin, 6 nio's ex""!'. i11 1n-PUPS SI d 0 --·I ., t A t t Cl • ClU't', · ouse ceping .• ave Equnl Oppor. ~~mn1oye1· 2112 Harbor Blvd, 1 t p ....... , •• , All el;,-lr'Oni" lo· AlAINTENANCE Pt r 9 on. per sales1nnn the.n anyone u ""'' • (.'t' "08 par me~ ean1"¥. rcf1•1'1.'11t~s 646-1484. I ,....._ = ._ ... I 'bl f II ti else plua h lg he r com-SECRETARY B~Pds. RollPr Canarie1, ~:x1·rp11nnal S<>l"\lce~ nt Fa11· --~--.. BOYS & GIRLS Electronic Assemblers spcction. !\lust know L'Olor part 0 possi Y u me Reptiles 1: Turtles O""n l'ric't's, ~'.&-4fii2 ICLEAN lr'G Gcncrul, ha r d Th DULY PILOT '·'"' bl 1 f o r community clubhouse mlsslora, with a realistic ,. · ,.._ \\' o 1· kt 11 g n1 a t u r <' e ' Pro101ypc \\'lrer •,vith l!trong c 0 des· u c Pr n 1 s • pool & grounds. Pref semi slid.in& scale where you can Free! \Vork In pet'!IOlll"lel. Eve1. 531-5027 .. Hauling 6051 re}<. renL-cs 96J_ -1,r ' routes OJ>Pn ln COSTA bltckqround in r ead in g schematics. Xln't co· retired or retired \\'/general earn up 10' 85%! We are Nevrr a dull moment. SILKY TERRIER Puppies, J,;,;;:co.c;_"-------·J.,~~~~·""~'~';"~== i\rE:SA, COLLEGE PARK & schf'n1atic.'S & 11•iril'IJ.!: fro1n benC'fits includ~ 1 11·k1 malnt. exp. Call 64£1'-lOil, fiexlble and ogreeable. and \'ionclerlul people to work AKC, 6 wks .. shcdlt'I!, I'ON~IH.UCTIO:-J ,i;, lr.i,-,~ Help Wanted, M&F 7100 EAST ,t. \\'EST COSTA su1ne. i:: .'I( per i •'n c e d in vat'ation u!!t'r 6 n10' s · 646 .. 5768 &l:">-3Jlg r 0 r in-\\'ant to help you make your with. AllO Fee Position!. odorless. adorable. 962-8377 h Ru r-,11g. Ille clcnJ()lilion -, .!\!ES.A. 612-4321 .o;olrlf•riri:; pt 10 pt 11·iring, C11riiitn111s \\k off \V/llfty. lerview goal: All replies strict I y Jason Best Agency SHEL1'E/KE[ ..... 'ONO m; .. lro.:.! 1"e1no\·a1~ etc, r l'a !I _ ACCOUNTING i Equal Oppor. E1nployer hurnC',-,~in~ of ell'rlronics Giuup lns. NI arts dny of I ~:=;:""'"==c-o=~=,--confidenliaL Call Gene, 1.7400 Brookhunt, F. Vly puppies, B \.\'ks~ '5 10 ~ 1;.rrS.)1:? CLERKS BOYS & GIRLS a!'lscrnblies & p.c. board.~. hire. l\1any more. i\IAINTENA.'fCE MAN 831-2770 suue213 963-6775 home. ~l04\ •:\10Vtr-.-c: AND !11\ULJ:\'t_;• l't1!11ine lcdl;'ers, at't'OWlting Newspaper Carriers. l\lin. NII Ht>Sean:h. 1:,10 Souih Documentor Exper. in apt house malnt. ~~~~R~E~A~L~C~O>__ __ J•"";~'";~~~~F.,..~ic==.:.:==---- Loc11.l or distant nnal.vsis & ba nk recon-age 10. Lido Isle, Balboa L~.,.,""· SA. S3:>·1G16. D" • • ;t~ee ~~ave 1"! ~Yin~~~~ REAL ESTATE 'EX. SEC'Y TYPE O~~•-,Eogoldl~. h~~C.eeAlpdl~ .. '. 963~LI2 cillA1i•u1s. Acctn:;:: r. x Per· Peninsula. Contact ~lr. EX F.C. SECRETAR\'/Girl IYISIOn t Girl 1......i. ._.. .. · n-=>f, '"'"' I f' I bi. 1 Sal n1e11.~urate w/ exper. Call E x p e tieneed/?rofessionaJ. O .. -.. a rreu uut1e! Cuddly. 636-, l\10\'ING & HAL'l.ING r: $tl:il 101~1t:'n~n~ruiu:a~ B.::icks!mrr al the DAILY i'~rhl;1y. Pr<'~. of s111i1IJ. \\'{'II Addressograph ~Ir. Lestu. 833-9ll7. Brokers Only, t..talnlain in·*** Inventory Control LOCAL &: !:-Ot.!SG·l!'p!.STA1'\CE j \V/cxn.•r. Nl'\\ ......... A e fl ch PTLOT or l'<l11 6:2 1321 ,r,, established N.B. co. looking Multigraph MAKE $$ AT HOME dependent status In deluxe *** Typing Invti ices POMERANIANS. 1 AK9mC, male " , " I '" ,.,,. ' Jc;i\<' UIJ"hca llo:i. for girl 1\·/i;ood ex . .st'e'y '!921 s D · I S \ offices with c 0 m pc t en t ** * Phone order.1 10 n1o's. Fem11 e o's. I l oc \' . =-.-1-1-. -,~r,c. GHod C:l·., w8 nc•flts. Call l:;qu1;1\ Oppor. r:mployer & ofc expcr. Top pay. nice E .. qual Qppoa~l~~pi~'.~·~r h1ature telephone mllcitors. secretn ...... Percentage l!."ase. Sport~wear J\1Anufartuttr 6'12--0241 t I •-k BRIDGEPORT "'" "' " •·••· }'or add!Uonal infonnation· 11 ..,...., • .,,, • • BEAUTIFUL K ees hond · 1.., 111ov1~ ''' iau uii;: I "I'S. l\1·11. 1-i;~ •• 'l;,t.J, ,\ ... -'·1'0• ,•tmo•ph•.-. Xlo't All areas of Orange Co. ., C II 64" ,.~ NB •Y ~Ill( cnL ...., 1' lruc ·, reas. ADD •. ED $$$ benefits. All r ep! i r. ~ con· Cull (71~) 635-5870 collect. r:i11T;. .X:l·123..i MILL OPE RA TOR tidcnllal. i;.1;"r'.tJ"l~ 01. H.;\l.F . .JACI< IN TlfF; BOX, immed. \\Tile As!IOciated Sout h SECRET AR y w I t h pups. AKC, Sholll &. worm· IL;i.11111~. ,:.:r 1J1n::. P•Culillin.;. rr11~h:111d ,\ \\'[!(' l'illl f'O rn ;\1l1st ha\'C!!ll'On~li:icki;:-tt1u11rl P. 0. Box 20.JO Nc1vport OJ}('llings 9Pi\-1-midnilc.Also, MG~IT lnll' 21-30 $150 wk Coast Brokers. P. 0. Box typewriter to do typing"' ed. cau aft. 6P~· 979.9007 I fi ll dh'I, l'll:. lo1w fl r l (' L' . S2t111 l•J .~;;1~) JM'I' 1111H11h )\lol'l I irl i<o:I 11r .~ 01x.•n11ion of niUJ Beach c.1 926G3. l2Afl\-8Al\I . 120'.i Baker St, ri~~~ni~·. c~~~~.rr;~ ¥r· 1535. Newll(lrt Beach. Ca, transcribing in bet. home AFGHAN •>o&-ll•r~; lune 11hll..,, kc<' pin~ 1'l.'J::Ula1· 1 ancl hi•i•e oivn tools. Xl nt FAR OUT Cosla A1esa. '7c.:i,;:.:~,,;:7"~""::..,,,,. I ~9~1;663~===-----nnd ~me errands. S2 per $50. to good home, we 11 I H f & A" Co d 6053 1 J1ll1. tall ,~d1\·11t\t B;irm.1-!Jene h1eludin~ p1'0flt stint· E·Z MONEY JANITORS MALE Wan!ed full or p/t. REAL ESTATE h~. Send resume to 16152 tempered dog. 675-2351 ea ing tr n klan. Jlnts ,\. J•;1L'~ :i;12-i997. ins: & ovt'rl1..,1r.. NEEDED: ~rGHT Gl)()D Apply Kentucky Fr ied SALESPEOPLE. \\'hy not Beach Bl'(d. Ste 179. HB. F rt To You 8045 I - -,-----' L k E · · For your vl'rhal rapnbillli,..s. QUALITY PERSONNEL Chicken, 2929 E. Coast Hwy, 11•ork In th~ hottest areas, SERVICE sta. Salesman &1:..'-"•:_:.;:_:..:;..;:_ __ -"'~1 ~;RAl!:\!\l Br.Os. :~16-IG.i:i .\!l\'J.:1{1'1'1\: S,\r,~:~.\t.\~, ar n91nter1ng E '100 k I ~ Cdl\I H . "-'I' I I T • f . I r·um :u•c •~·plar1•1111, \1all f,,r l.A'll•llot: '!'\. Puhl. High .~iii \V \tirh SL NB .. arn ., + per 1~·ee OJ' For fu!I & pnrt !in1c 11'0rk -"=~~====--I untington ccacn .-·owilaln u >e me.n. op pay rtnge FRE E to g d ho n1 e he:tlL·r~. i,:nt!PI' .~ ch111 1•un1m · prl)l1l :-ihal'c c•ppor. fil2·!•:l0~1 purt·thnc. 9nnl-lpm or lprn-at a modem facility in SJ'C, MASSEUSE .alley? Let us train you. bonclit1, Expcr. n1an pref'd. Sarnoyi:d/ ,Shep. 8 m·oa: ~oout~. l)J'Cll(·u <o111 r111·n1u··· I fu rn ltcn• ha r<. a . ( i 1·I 1 CAKE DECORATOR .'•flffl;>Ol' 5pm-9::lflpin 1n 00111-Good \\'ages. Position~ now avail. for new Call Phil McNamee 963-4567 J<'ull or p/L Shell, 17th & Aft s, 982-4sz1 ',·11l'C'k. C11ll l;'lr\ l•>r S!. !.::7-~\1 Ill' ·" I Tl C fo1·1ahlc spacit111s of f ice 11Leflclman,8 llrs co. in Garden Grove. Must Village Real E.state. Irvine. ,N.B. 1IAMPSTERS. Some long · rt f' 1 , ;--unttu. App\ 1c upcakl' [1t'lUS!i lhl' ~lrcr! r r O n1 2) Maids, •I-.) hl'!I tic attractive & d-ndable. Re I "' SfUDE'NT p/Ume /,,..,..... i i~.!. l~ . .\J.I· .. \ ll•~1nlu11 01· i1;i n!i'd . Bi1kl'ry, :!<3 ·r.:. lith St. Clio! <.>ra11~r Coun1~· ,\irf)Ort. f''or 31 .J11nltori1. 4.r, hri. CA.II 636-3370. ._,.. a late , . \Y "' .......... halreft. need }'OUllst&ten Housecleaning 6054 0fJf)<)r. 111 i•a1·11 1111. 10 S.'00 het\.\'ll 81,111 & I:! noon. fl('rsonaJ intt'f\'it•w. C a 11 GRO\VTH ComJ)fln,y w Ith mechanical abll.lty to help \\'ith tow to. give. 6(5-i;774. per 1110. r1 /1111u•. \\I' 11'!un. --. . . . i\lr Kc r Q~~ ~""" Olli 979-36.-1:.i NEED 3 women imnied. to newly established office re-w/auto mlol'Rtion & boat GERl\IA.'l Sl 'EPHERD 1; 0 l' S t:CJ.t •• \Nl:>:f; •l'.f:\·1rr. HY HLLIABLl:: 1'01. l'LE "•l'i-!;Z"il Masonry 6070 -....:.:..:cc..<... ______ , ,1 !LLJ,\ \IS .I: \!.o"111l") l.1!' t:r1<'k, J.,,/111,;k SONS. f no :NJ0.16. f i. tone -,"HJ.,:: .. ~.'------- ll;Hlfl\ l:LUl'I.; ,ii,, ST(lN!':, 1q1n~ ,._, 1~•rlos, q 11 11 I •'.t•rk"•nn n~hlri, 11,• k b<intli'cl ~j.J',">6:{ • P-;intifi9/Pa pering 6073 \ I CUSTOM PAINTING t ·.1 11 fttr inh t\'\1 1;·:~•·•il:!:J. Cll.\l.LF.XGl~Li J.K•sl11on ~0.r 1 • YM' ' .,.,.,.,...,.,.,, Classified aos sell !Ilg 11en1s, di1trlbute Christmas pro. quires salespeople. Finest main!. Apply 814 \V. 16th, 1 PUPPJiS -1 l~.1~:~r 1~~~~11~1' ~~ ;h~~~~ J<~~'t'~(v h:li-1t~.•~n10i~k~ ~~~lleti1~e~2-~~8!un,y llen1. ducts. F'ull/p/t. ?.tr. Levi ~~:i~Vis~~ ~~~~=I ~~~MSp::~~R~~nl~ar~Y~· Biildgiiiil0iiboiitii•ii·o-4li'iiii:£Pi8~j2-00SS~;'10g0o~I ASSEMBLER 11 /11knd~ off. Great \\'ali!'.t'l' 2!129 f.:. Coa!1 HI\)', Cdi\I !W6-M55. Charll!s Ge.renralch. Ii FREE PUppies to g ood TRAINEES .t-tw-nclll~ fu1· ri~·ht l)l'J'SOn. t'J<-::'llALF: fKelory P111:kagen, Real Estate Salespcnon T I h Sal hon1cs. Collle/Ten1er + 11 .\0·1't'ptlni:: a11plir111io1111 at $2.00 pt>r hr to start, merit SEEK & FIND' Weasel Jo'amil_v WANT A CHANGE? e ep one es Call 646-4184 A1Jpl) ln J:>1.•1·~011 !'ark ~upcorior Hc~lthcure, raisr ... S<IS-5125 Co1to1 Mesa Afea Furniture -8050 VOLT 1~15 SuJl('l'iur ,\\·r. N.B. --G-A~R"D°'E"'N=E~R~--85% Commlst1ion T S ' Cl I A kk D P K C M E R N P £ R T E R E M S T S S5.l. Llcen!'.i~ ~hool Work From BIG Cir B-·· Dbl •~. emporary 1rv1caJ erica sst B pr Full 1;.11~. r.onirncrcitil f'Xper. REALCO, REALTORS a • .._ °"" ~IS \:~1::111•~,'.'ii Drh!." I IA've11 In Tn.t~t Dl'1 pt.Lott Unnn-l'K'C'es~. !'refer aqe 30 01. 1 M T O T A E £ p O L r. S A R L K T W K ·495-l830 or S3l-Z770 Your Home Vi e tor le. n Love 1tat, " or-1·1ii 011;a1nv1t 011. le l~}· n,1.,., hlust speik f·~r~irllsh & Top Commissions t.fr/l!otn c.halrs, a Imo s t (1\cl'O!is lt'Onl O.C. 1\ir11or( 1 ini:, A/P 1':xpt>r. helpful. drl\·I'. Good .'lflllllJ' & modlcal / R A T L R T N R M 8 P " K y N E A 0 lJ If 558-?3lt * new. Atarble I ab 1 es, ple- l\lajor ri1e<11c111 Pluu l\!111. 2 yr5 1iu~1ucgs t')lf)(>r. bt·nefll ~. 67:i.2:i.':r6. Recepl"IODl.Sf Equal Oppor. En1ployer •'"""•'n'tt~m,,IJ!: ... boudokoo ,'','•~k"'. l'."n1v ,\~allablc Xln t t'O. bcnef\1s & \\<orktng it _;;cc;:.:.c:.c:cc::::.::=::..__~-T A V M ·r B M I N A I) I N U R N Y l. N ... """ ,. \\'r hft\11' fl Cl'lmrlele puc·kncl'.' ronds. Phonr ft14-1360. *Gtof'd1ner1 Wanted* R· c 1 0 •~ A N 8 R L L .AJ K S A 0 R y S l:::::::ii:c:-·==-1 ~?me see at 2a44 r or t or c11111lo}''C' ben<'fits, \\'e -·-Cuoril. L'USlo1ners. Earn Exper/enced TELLERS A.rll.11te or call 64.4-5009. P<(Y top 1\·nfl'C'S. 1\ll oftu·i> Conventional Loan now, pny lutt•r. High $'s K N U K N K 8 A V ft E I L K T ·E E AW I . Downey Savl,s I.· LoA.n h&s ~ENCH Prov.. Anfl \\/ht. /ii: lnduJStria\ ~kllls :ir1· 1 Proc1Jsing Clerks 53•1-7187 534-3144 E S K A S D K 1·. • M V '•,"· T L L N 0 Rcceplionillt prefi;.rred vo.·/ w,olngs In ts lf"Otl••too 9 couch, like new. Grn. r:rlf'ri• r f'pr'· i1llr. Stole nt'cded. l' s' 1 • Loo h ~ENERA L Of'•'JCE' GI r I " l ~1 u 1 & & I " ""' N t Id bed rnd bed llL~n~wt. r-.•i. )! ·1 P.llnrl· 1 t-Aiual Oppor. l::niii!iivi'J' , .. 11·llt::'y . A\ rig~ ,,. n oil '"' r Pe sanl appearanee ti' e· nch bronr.h !or full & nuq. o ·A.· , , , ed. LJnhlth) In f°f"" Colr.r ... · 1111('n1n::."l'I Jn Hunt. B...·h. oft'. wh11 c1111 "'r11·k ,,. I m I n , N J, T 0 Y A R S I E R L.i P T O B U t; L I !!hone peraonallly to hrmdle p/llme Tellers. E.-¥ P <' r , Q111tc.n matt/box llpg., hond l'11n~llllln~ ; •. ir.11tr.. ASST MANAGERS r 011 "•'n 1 1 nnn I loan pro· JUP<'n·l11on. I' n" It io n in· bllll)' conJle11 1wltehboord prefem'd. Xln'l w 0 r k 1 n g mRdt" 0 1lnCAC ttylc kl~slze I.av. (:.unpt·i,1 ,. ltnres. .1'!'~~lni.: hac:k~rouncl helpful. eludes pre Jl 11 rn t lo n or E I B I' T D RM E "f I, M 0 P E A C R V & m~t lhe public. Good condlUoni. t\dbrd. Numerous o t er 1 ,&2..f.M~i !)Ui' 10 nur prf't<Cnt ropl1I pn·f,.rrahly •'\'po•t•'d 111 pro. report~. c Qr r cs p, lite c N 8 A 8 C R y 8 11 A p L W 8 R L 0 p I !yplrq skill req'd. Variety Call Mr. Ruppe • Items. ~464 I f':\l)ll11~1r.n pro1.i.rnui1 \\'t' are ,~,..s11~ lo~u11" for froddle hkkprw. fll!J)8:, 1101ne ph0ne11. .... , I oi duties. S4t-3220 · KINCSIZE Bed, new, -~r·i·kin" f'nl.'l""'l1e .~ Ag· 1 \I C '1 " h 0 -·t I kill & D M K 0 8 E L • "·8 0 E L 0 bo ~--· rJtOr. 11,11n!••r. • ,1 v.•.rk.. ,. .. ~ . nc·. onhHI 1• I'll. ore: m ._....,,.. yp1n11 ~ s SOml' • ~ ~ E P v TT £q 1 Oppo E 1 me.tt:ress:, x sp ... 159 & l;i '· 1111 ., ,1 Irr•• 1.."t<·~s1\'C' ynunl! JK'OPIC \\'hn l 111 !IG.l-S.~2 1 for further In-prcv. ore t!xpcr. r t!q 'd . ,. Ncw faclllty inlrvinelndu.t. llll r. mpoytt fn.me. still packflied, xtra rctininir. J:i l• l)-/i.tl, 1\!~h to pn>r,.'1"1"<111 l!\/IC'kl,\'. l<1m111tion Sall\ry con1n1ensuratl' ART.E RR ~-..t>TEL C AB LTA K I ~Complex. _ -flnn, $17$. ("'Orth $-t2S) ll11-:::n ~ 1f )••11 pro"" !(l l>t> !tluhl!·. 1:;quul OJ>1J0r. Employl't' 1\/1'."Pf'"· In N.B. J> hon c a 8 L M A R T E A T A R A T F. L R y T TO Queen $155, Jlereulon corner --"~"'"""' ~ '"""" t 1" ..,,;.,,...~~...,,...,... '42-158<. PAUL DOSIER OL &_ ""'"' 1100. UauaUy home. Ex TE H I fl H r \I!\ Tf:\G. nhlllty 1(1 h't1<l, II~ \\Cl! 08 COOK __ ..,._iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii J w 0 I N E T A K & RM f[ T A R E F R p DIE MAK£RS illClds !kliwry S3i-:!488 l.lr-.r. lni'•I, l :·r~. Trnn~ 10 mo11v111t propll', your S 1 rdii GENERAL ASSOCIATES l~1·h11r<I, 97fl·J~·~;. \n\.1lmf' fu1111'l' is "'1th u11 i\lan~ a al')' ao..'O II: to tXP.. · W 0 L V E R I M IC M A fl T E F E R E T 14' CURVED S«UonaI 1150. ---· mrn1 {''q)('r. Is d~lml'll<", Prefer no SIUl'ltnl~. Exper. LABORERS Coal• Met• EXPt:r1ell<.'ed tn construe.lion otrielle tel s"1ve1. uphol p,\pt:IUl,\.\Gl'li<; ,._ rmln h•tt -1 -,. '·· .''In" '"''"'· 1 ['>tt'fd., hut "'Ill lniin. A'Pply tmmcd. "'·..i-ment11. Tap ln•riKtbiti .... JtlUn •-...,.., btlow;.:r.:• !1orww, ~•L 7075 of p~atve dies u wdl c h a irt. pedestnl llC\IMlar ntr.. :11 y~ llnrlJOr llrf'fl, I "" .,,.,."' ·" "·t i·•• • -II ·-.... ~-~· ' -·-1 .,. --~ ~.. ...,..~,· t bl llur. ,., , ----tllft ~ ro p iJ bt'nrfh• profit '"' W('('n .. )! .... :,,,, p.1n. S , Lont: or short lrm1. ..:••• • ''' 11, Of iitow•' 11 • r .... •dr Equal Oppor. Employtt u l'!'pll r & malntt'.IMU\ct. II e ....,, i.I ~at -rt' rurn, ~ 1.,, ·~t. fll:t-1X'ifl ~imr1;1~ ::nci•nll\'r .1\ l> Pt) ll&rnburl;i:r llnmlt•I, 1J4J. Call r.404-150. IV44e1 • ..,....,. lto~lr ht u '' ----------1 ot extirttnv to o 11 n If , Ex·1 ,;~~;'~"~·-------I I•! CL\S~ F;:\l/lrll fl"11111ni:. hi•!v.n :!::it> It 4::Jl pni !!ail~" I Arlan11., C~I. 1\sk for [llr. NJ-;\'ER A FEI-~ AT TE;?iJPO DAOC::r.R MINK ffAllL~ Cf':lltnl con1pan,y beneUl.I & HERC. 10fa bed· maple din: l.'lt:i« rtu•niun.ir:. A r I"_,,," ll ·unhunz•·r Hiunl•·t. I ~' I :'i ~la~en. . __ TEt.1PO Tl'111por~ry Help t:R.\llNE OTTt:R MKUNK ~ RECEPTIONIST $537 Yt'Orkln1 condlUmu. r.hlld'g ehlrtero~; AM/f'7o.I "11111.' • ''J• )o r, r\t~T1J-i.t<ll 1 i\011111~. Cosra ~l•i<;1. Si••• (."Q()l{.'I A: f) HI\' F: RS , f't:NRf:T POJ,Ec:AT TA'l'KA .. Typtng 40, + ' SIC!rtO 1•rul\o/CUHllt', 125(1 I I,,\l\Tl'l:f;.Jru-1~''· Jj lt5 1'.11' llr1~n. No 1lh1\n•• rn!li; P1Un1e. Ch;t>1' 18. ~;o rn Xli'9 GEN F. RA 1.. • O ~ r TC EI MARTEN ToR,,,"'J!l;,i Khul•or~?i~·\lf!RINE . ; Some mi:odlcAI Mckground ~Y In PerMn Adams No. A·Ull Ott. Blda:. 1·1':!111, n·I•. fr1·r e,i;t. S1111.; 11!1•11~1·. Jlrloi: ptv.lt!Jh'l'tl.Ph, I -'SS Appl_y ~II.' n f.dsPlna, wlphonr11, S<1 m c bkkpng, WESTCLIFF' SH ·LOK CORP. facing Adnni11. Mnke otters. / }_"' ,,,, ii'll..'2. r.11.ft.i::S __ ,\'M"E.'il>AN°T.eiei)('r. / n r 11n !::_171h s.1. Cn,rR f\lesa. 'fyp!" n1ln .• ~. w.p.ni. Cnll l To Ol'dtt any or all of the 1spanded "Steir A f'lnd" booll~. PrJiionncl A .... ...,... 1300 IC. Normllndy Pl., S.A. TllDE-e bOO ._1_ I for llf)f)I, 833-«181 I numhers 2 thtou1h 8. ~end 60 cent.I fore.ch, miklnf thtckt ~ .. ~ . ....., II blk No. of ~1cFadden, ' · ....,._"' n a U I h • • I• Ol!"C.'OllN'f ~ l{Mi\'t')llrd iih!ft. C:ootl 1H1y. Don't Flve "P. 1he shtpr Tho ~,,_1 'rnw In tit• I"••>. Pl.Y•b~ to''Snk 6 F. ind, .. St•r·l'tlt.,•m Syndlttt•. Addrt• (~fuk Ill C<'nltt) \' blk \V, of Grand) $100. 2 miatch ch•l\'11 w/1llp ti.· 11,~,t11 t l11:z ,i; P11!111ln-t , frin~e htnl'fll~. Aflply Shell "t.,1~1 · It In rns"lttcd, Shl11 '" """ 11 .v 1601 E. E:dtliat!r, S.A. Eq"al "-pt• ~mnv....-CQ\.'f'l"ll atD.. gol d ft\ eect\. I S ' 1000 I I "B n.. • , _ •• -• DaUy l'llot 0 ... 111·• ···-"·::.·~:::'"::.:"::":.::of~t:::h:"..:~·::•::"::'~:'.:·:_ _______ ....;. ___ 2!~:!!!:-~!!._ ___ , __ "_ ..... ,.,.,~ ...... " .... ""-1 M•1'""' ' -f 1·r;• •· !, 0111 W~J !8 tA\lUrt, rv fk', 1... • Jo ShQn! 1">QuJts! 6'.t ......... Q. 11:'!1 _ ..... 542-oo.:iru 111111"'.,.,., ' I • • I •' " " 1 _F_u'-r_n_l_t•.c•.;.• ___ ...;80:.;:;SO Miscellaneous IOIO ENGLANDER Queen S I z e lied .t J'nme. Xlnt cond m. &.U-2'51\ e-xt 2-1 & 6T3-1140 afl 5. LAll/SJ-IEP. male, 6 mo. all 1 ho I ll , housebroken, frkndly, g'Ol'W1 wntch dog. 6'H33l MOVING. l(OUl!cfU of f\ln1 + at'Ct'ISUt1e. & rnlsc. Xlnt t'OIKI. 963-GOZ'l, •MUST tell. loveseal & sofa, never Ulled • custom made, WI)' 511 quill 968-7910 Gara,. Sala 1055 QUEENSIZE S1>8nl~h bed· llprted In blue 11reen and tuniuolAe \Vlth 3 plJIOWI. $29, Quarter round rned!terTnn· 11111 canllelnbrll 13: .. ~I $25. Childs akl!I It 1kl boots f11J;ie 131 SlO. Bowll11g ball wllh suit t'lllf! alld 11hoca. Sb.<' 9 {n1en1l like new S20.00. G«-4681 2 STOVE;S. Pitiac. I u r n , boOlta, etc. Cotton, \Vool &: &ilk fahrlc&. wk!M Mltctlon, lOAM to 4Pb1, \\1ed, O..·t. 16th thru sun. Oct. 201h. 1717 Park St. llB. Ult' 1lde gate. GARAGE SALE 335 6211d St. NB Fl'ms, CI01hc1, furniture, a.n- tique1, In/outdoor plants ... COME SEE TIIE GOODIE!:s! Oct 8 lhru Nov 30 Jowolry 8070 WANTED TOP CASI-I DOLLAR PflJO FOR YO UR JEWELRY, WATCHES. ART OBJECrs, GOL~;.elLVER SERVICE, FtN RN le Al\'TIQUES . 645-2'00 caught -Joker -Saulc -Cowttrd -lt.ACKET A tennis pro i11 a guy with a llWC't'l ltACJCE'l'. '74 2'J~;· Trovl'I trlr. "Korn· fort", llko new. $350. cash & take rvl'.'r pyn1111. '74 Honda CB200, Xlf'RI, like new S850. ~\:'t 11leel 1t1or. shed wfl1lid'g. di'!. '8 5 , 64~UI . A CONV!MJINT IHOMNQ AHO ltW1NO 0Ul0£ fOll THE GAL ON TH I GO, l'or 11n 11d In Wom11n•1 World Call Poggy 642·54.71, ox!. JIO Bandit Up! Motlern Women 7253 Wt~~ ' "\. ·- I 9765 ~~~ ~~!...__ 9SS~ I BMW 9712 Jaguar '69 DATSUN. New 11~"' ,;;;;========I 9730 f oyot• -'74 TOYOTA now ~prl11£1, mlch nidlala, rhlt ciarb, s~ooo r.16-4J016/83G-6491 . ruclct fMO ..., Deal Anywhere I LllASI OR BUV All Modolsl CADILLACS -;-1)8 MIDGET Convertible, L11rg11t Stltc:tlon wire ~·heel•. S700. In Or•nt• County 49'l-2957 A DEAL! Coupe OeVl1le1 • Sedan • -DeVllle1 • El Doradot • 'fl5 &1G l<ompletely overhaul Convertibles. Alao Matty ed, new palnl & nf'IY uphol1, other select Cadillac Trade-_SUXXI or best olr, 6-14-4196_ Ins. MGB 9744 • DAIL v PILOT B ' Chevrolet 9920 CLEAN '&I lt..1PALA W(;N . 1 f wltriflt 11xa1llt1nl 327 V.,, 11UJ.o ~ .• new bill Joint•. I Ir 1hookl, Radial Ura. vtr., eoon A OOpt>nd. s 3 e o , 003-tm imolMP~. -.-LA-.-.-.-,-. -... --.~' 1 •ulo, M.000 ml, Xlnt concl. $1.!iOO. ~T-<1891 e YI! I 6 $0-3214 d&)'I . · 1'-t MONTE CARLO, 8 p I Cpe. X/nl 111rid V!I 35D ll!llg, ... air, r11dl1'111, rull pwr. 10,000 r .. : ml. $4}((', 8:1J-94Ji. I ''l'.l EL CA ri.11 N 0 1101 Everythin1t. Xlnt coOO. S:la'IO 54T·61H9 or 9'm-8209. 9930 '74 MK IV Only J,700 P.llle~ New? Full pawer, full fnctvry f'Qt1irn1cnt with every <.>on· c e "in b I e extra 1?)(~···111 11un.roofl Priced to 1e111 (d!r.l hJ111 • Sr."t\ce OLOSMOBILE OMC TRUCKS HONDA CARS UNIVERSITY OLDS mo Harbor Blvd. Co11ta 1ofn:1 54().llltO Pinto "S7 '73 PINTO. A·l 0011dltlol1. 1'1ake offer or trAdc . • 4fl3.D188 • Plymouth . ATLAS ' ' ' 9960 ...... -·' " --• I'~ 11 • J "' " .. "'J1ijtt'(!Jlll "" ' 1• 't • • • .\ • • • ·' .. I~ .. JI ••••· '"o' • Tutsday, Oc:tobff 15, 1974 • -' --~ .. ~--........ .,.,.""'""'""''""'""" ___ . ..., ... 18 "'t· "1t(.' 1.3 mg. nicoilne av. per cigareue. FTC Rep~1 MAR. '74 . ' • " ~ ' . .•.J. -.. .,., •• I ' • t • . Warning , The Surgeon General Has Determined ' 1 That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. • I • , . " • I 1 \ l I \ • ' _, ' I • •• • • j • . Laguna/Souih" Coast EDITION T oday's F inal N.Y.S~ VOL. 67, NO. 288, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE CPUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1974 TEN C,ENTS . . Press-Ure to Acquire Ziggurat for Nixon Told WASHI NGTON (UPI) -The Nixon Administration pressured tbe General Ser vices AJimi.lli.s.t.raUQll ig tni®__j_2 7 million in usable govemment property for a huge, unused building so the former president could keep his records near his home in San Clemente, the Washing- ton Post reported today. The Post said the building, a seven- story pyramid-shaped slructure one quarter the size of the Pentagon, was acquired f r o m Rocirn'ell International * * * ·Aide Claims Acqui sition Not Pushecl A General Services Administration of- ficial familiar with the f e d e r ·a I govemment's acquisition or the Laguna Niguel "ziggurat" today denied the bullding y,•as acquired under pressure from the administration of form er presi- dent Richard Nixon. Gerald Meckler, acting regional direc- tor or business affairs for the GSA, said be kl)ew of "no substance to the charges" contained in a story in today's editions of the Washington Post. Richard D. Hanzlik, a former White House aide, told the Post the GSA wanted a building near Nixon's San Clemente estate. "The memos 'A'on't say it would be for the Western White llouse, but they 'A'OU\d say it orally,'' tbe Post quo\ed Hanzlik as saying. 'nle Post also reported that G S A records o b t a l n e d in San Fran.:isco show the agency wanted the building for storage of White House documents; office space !or the forme:: Western Wipte lfouse Staff and space for the staff of the Republican National Com- mittee. Elderlv Laguna . ~ ~roman Arrested 111 Shoplifting Newport Beach police traveled to a cottage in _Laguna Beach f.1onday to arrest a 66-year-old grandmother charg- ed in a series of shoplifting ei:cursions in Harbor Area stores. f.trs. Janet Evelyn Ennis of 24l El Cajon was arrested on a warrant speci- fying $10,500 bail stemming from 11 al- ,leged shoplifting incidents. Major department stores. said police, were visited most often by the y,;oman who told officers she \1-'0rks as a nurse. Officers have not totaled the estimated value of the «llegedly stolen articles, and 90me puzzling evidence exists. Detectives said -0ne item identified BSSfolen from an r: J.fagn1nS tore 1n Los Angeles still has a price tag on it, yet .istore officials say it went out of stock eight yea rs ago. Officers said !hat an alleged shoplifting spree at a Fashion Island department store led to the issuance or warrants and the arrest of the elderly woman. 11trs. Eonis remained in custody today in the Y."Omen's section of Orange County Jail. Nude Clern ei-ite Cirl . .frrested A teen-age San Clemente girl asserted· ly feeling tl1'e effects of a comblnatlon of benzedrine and LSD wound up in police custody early today after a nude romp through a neighborhood. Patrolman Rick Jordan said that he Urst saw the girl at about 2:40 a.m. In the 100 block of Avenlda Cannda as sbe went from door to door, knocking -0n each ooe. After she was properly dressed, Jordan said, he brought the girl In !o the station. Later, she wu cited for be Ing under the lnnuence and released to her perents. Medi ta ti on Talk Set The lnlemallonal MedltaUon Society will spon90r an hour·long Introductory lecture Wedne.iday at 7 p.m. at the San Clemente Beach Club, 103 Avenida Pico. ,.A few 1nlnutr?S of meditation twice • day helps us to use more or our pote1Ulal ," a 50Ciety spokeliman sald. I ' Corp. within the last l\1-'0 years for some $20 million V.'Orlh of Air Force =r!Y~ -The building, located in Laguna Niguel - a community IO miles rrom Nixon's estate in San Clenlente -cost $27 million to construct but was appraised for $20 million in 1972. According to the Post, the GSA said tile purpose or the trade was to get a place to house federal offices and records in Southern California -but: Price Lid Off For Soda Pop WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Agriculture D e p a r t m e n l says prices for most soft drinks, already JP 25 percent or more from last fear, ·are likely to increase ag ain :his ran .as a'result of rising sugar lrices. 'Ille soft drink industry u s e s :iearly one fourth of the aMual 1ugar supply, second only to lOUsehold wrchases or packages >f sugar at grocery stores. Sen. Peter V. Dominici (R·N.~t ), ::barged in a letter to Attomey Jenera! William B. Saxbe on Moll- ~ay that illegal price fixing was responsible for the nearly five-fold ?rice hike for sugar. J1 iejo Student Shift Plan DrctwiJ:i g F'ire By JORN VALTERZA Of .. ~"' l'lltt '"" ~t 1,000 acres of Southerly MJsslon Viejo territory ~rom the Capistrano Unified School District to Saddleback Valley Unified drew an unexpected amount or resistance from parents Monday evenlng. At a joint study session of the boards of trustees of the t\vo affected s c h o o 1 districts. the prop o s a I as drafted by a parent committee was met with major opposition from parents \\l ho questioned the wisdom and even the financial hacking be.hind the project. Straw votes taken after the sesston at Viejo Elementary School showed that of the 110 persons present, about 30 approved of the secession idea which could prove costly to the taxpayers in the small section or the · community lying v.·ithin the CUSD boundaries. Saddlebaek Trustee Dennis A. Smith early in the evening "ofrep v.·hat may become a pivotal issue m the debate over secession. ( Because of the disparity of tax 'rates (Set smF'f; Page A2) F Ol'ln er Dan cer Bn cks Up Mills: 'It's All Tru e' WASHINGTON (AP) -Breaking a week-long silence, the \\'Oman involved in a bizarre incident with Rep. Wllbur 0. P.liUs has backed' up his version and complained that the press "is trying to destroy a great man ." "What fl.fr. ?\iills said y,•as exactly \\'hat happened ." the 38-year-old Argen- tinian and ronner dancer said in a telephone interview Monday night. She reportedly worked as a stripper in a Washington nightclub and was billed as 0 tbe Argentine firecracker." Speaking In a soft, slightly accented voice and sounding al times close to tears, Annabel Battistella said that ac- counts of the episode may also ruin "me and my chances of going back to school." But she expressed confidence that the political career or Mills, chairman or the House \Vays and ~1eans Committee, \\'Ollld not be ruined by the episode \vhich took place in the predawn hours of Oct . 7. , "I am sure when he goe.!I to Arkansas, he will be able, to talk lo bis people like be used 10," she said. f.trs. Satttstetla refuSt.'CI to elaborate on Milli' statement about the events of Oct. 7 beyond saying it was accurate. But-she differed. with U, S. Park Police account,, In at least ooe a,!pCct. Pollet oaid sh< jumped Into loo Tidal Basin, a backwater of the Potomac River. after police stome<t M 111 1' speeding, unlighted car aild' he emerged smelling o! alcohol and his f11ce was bleeding. A Policeman pulled ~lrs. Batllstella from the water. "I didn't jump into the Tida l Basin. !See MILLS, P»ge Al) ., the paper said, the building has never been occupied and is sUJI empty except for office furniture. The -Po& said the deal actually cost taxpayers close to $18 million more because some of land the government traded away is now needed. Richard D. Hanzlik. a former \Vhite House aide, told the paper be made calls on behalf of the transaction in 1971 while he was an· assistant to foi-mer presidential counselor Robert H. Finch. "They (GSA) wanted a building near San Clemente," Hanzlik said, • 'Th e memos won't say it would be for the Western White Rouse, bUt tliey v.·ould say it orally." ' Finch, a trustee of the Richard Nixon Foundation, said in an interview that he pushed the idea or acquiring a building near San Clemente to he lp su~ port the Western While House because he felt the GSA had an obligation to store Nixon's records. The Nixon Foun- elation was set up lo build a library for the ex-president. Hanzlik said pressure also came rrorn Rock\1-·ell emp\oyes who contrlbutcd $98,000 to Nixon's 1972 re-election cam· paign. The office or f.'lanagement and Budg<'t -'A'hich originally opposed GSA 's ac· quisition of the building -called it a "v.ilite elephant" beeause of its size and distance from Los :\ngeles and San Otego, the paper said. The building was built for RocJcy,,eU lnternalional Corp., fomlf.rly No r t h American Rock"A·e\I Corp.. t1 I a r g e defcnre and aerospace contractor. The Post said the GSA denied the building v.·as a~uired to store Nixon's personal records, but GSA records ob- tained in San f'rancisco show that the agertt.'v \\'anted the building for storage of \Vtiite Hoose documents and for office space for the fonner \Vestem White Hoose staff and GO I., National Com- 1nittee in 1972. ' Nixon 'Lied, Deceived, ' Used' Hinl-Ehrlichman 'Big Fat Zero' Saddlehack Cut From State Aid By JAN WORTH 01 ""' o.11y l"liot s~ As of the 197S-76 school year, every penny of state aid to buildinl prvgrama at Saddleback Collqe wilL be cul. off, college trustees learned Monday. Saddleback received 51 percent of its funding for construction on the 200-acre campus from tbe state last year. It is one of three community college districts to be cut off; according to Reddin Te.a111 . 'Can Stiffen Backbones' By hcK CHAPPELL Of no. D&1tr l'l1o1 si1n Observers or municipal government usually get two greatly contrasting opi· rtions of the consulting finn LECAR. operated by fonner Los Angeles police chief Tom Reddin. Some observers think tQe firm is like a guy in white -hat-and suit who has come to save the citizenry. others see the outfi t like a public executioner in a black hood . carrying an ax. But LECAR, known as Law Enforce- ment Consulting Aid and Research, is Ule organization \\'hich the Lligu a Beach Police Employes' Associatioti \Vanta to hire for "review and analysis" or the Laguna department. The Reddin firm studied the S a n Clemente Police Department. and a subsequent overhaul left the long time Chief Clifford P.1urray and A s s i s t a n t Oiief Stan f.fatchett v,.ithoul jobs. In Carlsbad, the Reddin firm went in and the police chief went out. According to one Laguna Beach city councilman, Reddin is brought In \\'hen city councils lack the gumption and justification to bounce a police chieC. LECAR gets the :ustification and stif- fens backbones. accordi"ng to this cily councilman Y.'ho asked not to be klen· tified by name. (See REDDIN, Page A!) college Supt. Robert Lombardi. He explained It ls the relative wealth of the Saddleback College District that determined the cutoff. The other lWO ~ alfcted are West Hills in Coa- llrtga and \\'est Kern: Both are oil·pro- ducing areas. "I am oot salisried. I don't like y,•hat I sec here at al!," Lomba rdi told the shocked trustees. The state decision. based on a new formula determined by a fin ance com- mittee of community c o I I e g e ad- ministrators, brings to a sudden halt. at least temporarily. Saddleback's plans for a new performing arts complex and a physical education facility. Acknowledging that the cutoff might have some political implicati:>ns, Lom- bardi said, "When important committees are pul together on things like this you have to fight for your O\vn district. You have to be. there. ON THE OF FENSIVE Pro1ecutor Ben·Veni1 te l\f a1-i11e Suhdu~d .t\.ftcr Rampage In San Cl en1cnte A y·oung Camp Pendleton f.tarine ran "There is a group that got their cut out of this." be added. ''Though 1 amok in a quiet Sa n CI em e n t e V.'Oukin'l necessarily y,•ant to sec !hat neighbo rhood ~tonday afternoon, police in the paper. I know what this world said. is about.·• Officers said they received several "What I .mean is, the people who calls from harried homeo"'flers reporting put together the formula made dam sure they weren't injured by the formula. that the man v.•as damaging fences. I can't believe Saddleback is that much ramming his fists through windows and wealthie r than all the other districts be.UoWing at passersby alohg the 1400 in the state." I block of Ola Vist'1 . Trustees asked for more infonnation Police said they had to subdue Robert on the new state formula which cut Saddleback out. Lombardi said it js Johnson, 21. Noticing multiple cuts and very complicated-to-explain, ----'""'·~ him, lliID' arranged_l_Q__!!1cet "But the end result is simple. \\Then a base ambulance at the Christianitos it comes lo how much we get it's gate of the reservation . "a big fat zero." Before they got Johnson there, officers He said he and other di.;,irict ad-said, the arrestee managed to kick out ministrators planned lo go to Sacramento to fight the decision. ''\Ve may have a windo\v of a police car. great wealth, but v.·e also have great Johnson "·as tre'11cd at the ba se l)eed," be said. hospital. Police said they planned to The new ronnula resulted because the charge the young l\larine 'A'ith being state ran out of money for community unde,r !he infl uence of drugs. college construction, accord ing to Fred Bremer, president of the college and now in charge of facilities p I a n n i n g research. "The state had planned to put a bond issue on the November ballot for $250 million to replenish the fund, but the idea was abandoned when the Post- (See SADDLEBACK, Page A!) Bl flc kout fli ts 1,ilOO Ho rues in Lc1g·111ia Are£t Sa11 Juru1 Sl1ooting Death Called Suicide by Police An electrical power failure I a s t 1 n g several hours hit 1,300 hon1cs in Laguna. Beach and f\\'O school s 1oday. Bud Jackley .• area n1anager for the Edison Company, snld the b 1 a ck ou t begun at 4:&1 a.in. and affected ar~as of ~lystic Hills. Top.,_or the \Vcrld and Temple llills. Orange County Sherifrs officers have the head with a .38-caliber re,·olver close<I 1hclr lnve.stigatioo into, t h e _ a , few .seconds after she shot a friend. shooting death of t San Julll Cfp!JtiuO r Jotm ~·· II. of 4017 Cillo r""°• woman with the determination 1"8( me San Oemente ln the right a .rm • . . .... -rtSJid. took her 0"11 hfe •net she ~that •nf Stllnlbury· said Reye1' account of the v.·ounded her bOyfriend.-f Incident ha.a been compfeteJ.1 verllled Jpvestigolor IV Ii I le Siombu'l'. c:o~-afl<r I pliyliclal examinaliOf! of !he mented today lhah it is qow k:Mlfn C.aplstrano l'c•c:h loe1tioO where the that Dora Rodri.~ 22, of 31796 El lhootina toot place Md aner analysis C.mino Real, Sin Juan, had b e e n ol labomtory tests. The tn••esliqator despondent and moody for some weeks said, "\Ve are quite aatlAtied. that s~ prior to her dtatb la8t Ot1. a: · , tlVl'Mld lbc "'ea~ OfiJtterseU ancr woun- Mlss RodrlguO. 'Silo~ •I! UlfOl.ICh ding Mr. Reyca," , ' I Officials 111 Thurstoo lntcrmedlate and Top of the \\'orld Elementary schools said po'A'Cr Md been restored by the tbne achool $larted . Thurston offici'11S said they aim had lYiO fl ve·m I n u t e b'fackout'\ during school hours. Jackley said po"A·er wa!I restortd to all but 50 homes by 7:-8 a.m. hy switching the load to other J'IOY.'C.r lifk's. He Sllid 1X>v.·er was restored to all homes by 9:5.'i n.m. The trouble wos traced to the failu1 c of R trnnsfonner in an underground ca.hie at 2925 Chilton \Vay, l)acklty !iald . ., Attempted To 'Save Owi1 Neck' "'ASHINGTON (UPI) -John D . Ehrlichman's attorney charged t oday that fonner •President Nixoo "deceived, misled, lied 10 and used" and ruia.ny forced a resignation from his Connel' No. 2 aide in order "to save his own neck.'' ~ Ehrlichman, one of-live funner Nixon associates on trial in ~the Watergate cover-up. was portrayed by defense al- tomey \Villiam S. Frates as a victim or the plot w h 0 "repeatedly recom- n1ended " that Nixon disclose the truth. It ""·as the first time Ehrlicbman tum- WATERGATE'S LIDDY OUT ON BAIL, Page A4 COLUMBUS DAY GROUP CRITICIZES JUDGE -Story, A12 ed accuser or Nixon , whom he served as chief domestic adviser in the White House until April , 1973, when th c \Vatergate scandal became a major issue. Nixon. named an unlndictcd oxon· spirator in the CO\'et-up, has b e en pardoned by President f'ord and cannot be tried for any \\1atergate-related in· cidents. f'ormer \Vhile House counsel John W. Dean Ill, previously Nixon's chief ac· cuser. was to testify later in the day for the prosecution -v.'hose case also \1·as based on the complicity ol the ronner p-resident. "Richard Nixon deceived, misled, lied to and ,used John Ehrlichman to cover up his own kno"A'l00ge and activities v.·hil~ publicly, st atin g that John Ehrlicbman...\l:'.llS .. J>fle ol thi!. (jnest public__ servants he had ever known," .Frates told the jury. "He INixon) was deliberately \Vithholding infonnation (rom him - covering up to save his own neck. In simple term.5. f\Ir. Ehrllchman had beeo had by his boss, the presideot of the United States." Frates said Ehrlichmait's deci~on to leave the \\'hi1 e House was a "forced (See ACCUSED, Page A%) • Orange Coast • Weather Dense fog tonight alld' in !he early mornini:: hours \\lednesd<iy, according 10 the 1\·enthc.r service. Oth er"'ise mostl y SWU\)' \Vilh highs near 70 o~ !he beaches rising to the mid-SOS inland. 11\S IDE T ODAY L' .S. clir111L$/ Paul Flory of St()nfurrl U>lll't>rsuy /las won tile 19i-I 1\'obcl che1ni1 tr!I pn.:c fo r res~arr!i '" p/aallcs. \V It e 11 rrQC:hecl at lton1c he said. "l t'a 6 11 ni lierr. l '111 not a1ooke tftl." Ste srory and p1ct11re Page J\i/. lrm• ·--~ 11 L. M, •• ,. A' C:•1i~ .u C:l•\11fitd 11·1! c: ..... ;,, ll C:""u"rd IJ 0.•111 NMI<" At llfl .. ri1t fl•" At t11ttflllfll!'M11I Al l'lftl ll(.f Al .. 11 Hy Gt.-.!Mt i t "-""-l l ll'lltt'l!llJ,_ •• ,, Allll Ltllff" 12 'Mt'llff .... M•tv1t f wllllt All Htn..,11 """"' Al Oo'-CM111, A' """'' ,,., '"'" •.. , Uot~ M'"'''' Al•H SyM I .. l tltr Alt Ttl•~l, .. 11 Al t Tlltl!tfl Al Wttlfll{ A4 Wtflf NtW~ At l tSC ll 2 0"lY PILOT ---- 3 Pru·king St1'Uctu1·es P1·opo sed By J.ACKIE JIYl\1AN 01 ,,,. 0•11~ l'li.1 11•11 The Laguna l3e11ch Parking a n d Transportation Cornmittft!' will reeom· mend to the city council We<lnesday that three parking struc.1u res bl• considered for the central business district. The re<:tinunendatl()llS parallel those presented IG the eorn1n1ttee to.I on d a Y night by traffic consultants \\'ilbur Smith and Associates. "'lth the omission of a fourth recommended lot on Ocean Avenue. Recommendations gi~·e priority lo a structure 00<! level above grotmd which Y.'Otdd add 100 spaces to the Glenncyre Street lot near the library. Stanley Scholl, public "''orb director, said this lot was given priority because. the city already OY.115 the property and because it is closest to the center of parkin g demand. the intersection 0 r Glennerre Stree t and Forest Avenue. Serond priority was Given to a slruc· lure alongside city hall and third to a structure on the site ut 310 Broadway \\'hich v.ill be vacated y,•hen Phillips Buick moves. Scholl said the Ocean Avenue structure was not recommended by the commillee beeause of the complexity of real estate transactions wh.ich would be jn· volved. '· The oral report l\tonday 11,·as a status report by the consultant, hired In Augw;t to complete a $6,000 study of parking demand and supply, Sch>ll said . A written report Is expected to be completed within alKAA a month , he said. The consultant's findings shov.·ed th at parking demand 1n the central business district averages about 1.700 spaces a clay betv.'tell May aod October except at festival time, when 2,700 spaces are needed. At both times, tpcre is a shortage or 300 to 400 spaces even though ad· ditional spacer; are available during the festival because lots normall y used for other purposes are temporarily turned into parking lots. Scholl said . During the winter, the consultant found that there are about 100 more parking spaces than needed. Scholl said the coruullant has not yet completed a par! of the st ud y oo v.·hether or not demand is increasing and supply decreasing each year. Fron• Page AI Sr\DDLEBACK .. Secondary Education Comm is s Ion recommended against it," Bremer said. 'Ille Board of Governors of l h e caJifornia Community Colleges hopes to use money from the CCC general fund for the interim, Br~mer said. That was dooe several years ago in a Ugbt spot between bonds, he said. A bond issue proba bly will be put to \'Oters by June 1976, he added. U>mbardi is planning to challenge the cutoff. "I'm not sure y,•hat v.·e·n do ," Lom- bardi said. "If the formula doesn't give us v;hal we need. we'll ha ve to try to change the formula." Until that happens. Lombardi said. the school. will seek special legislation and will try for some adjustment from the statewide community college board. Saddleback trustees set a s p e c i a I meeting to discUSf the situation for 7:30 p.m. :ri.tonday lhe campus library. Roy Struck by T1·ain OCEANSIDE I A Pl -Billy Fran tz, 16. or Carson. V.'aS struck by a freight train and carried several hWldred feet 1\tonday, suffe ring a broken arm' and skull fractu re. The boy apparently had been sleeping pHrHy on the truck. poli~ said. ORANGE COAST LB DAILY PILOT fi'I• o .... O" CNll O•n, PilOI .... 1,. ~.,. ;, «omb1n@(! ll>e Nf W1·P•ttS, IS DllOl1!.llt<:I 1:1¥ ! ... 0.•"91 C.0.\I Po..llt•\ll!fUI (.o"""'""' ~••It fG•hO"" .t<• CNlll•"'td. MO""ff lf"OUOfl '"°''· IM C<;\I• ,,_..,., ...... IMI'\ flell<", tl"'1•f>Q!O<I fie.,;" fo...,1 .. n Vl>l~W l..llquN k•"· l"''ne s..""'~fl«t .,.. !-I" o. ... ~te lSen J..,,. C.11•1l••'IO /1 \"•<ii• •t'QIO'Wll ro.i.on " outlhU'of<I '.>.i!u<D•1• ..,., !o.....a41•. The P'•Mip..t! 11Uill•.,.•"9 pl•nl 0\ •1 )00 Wl!•I IN' \lf'fll. <'.mi. ""'!.I· C..lt!o•~•• '1tU. Robert N. Weed Pr~••0'111 •ncl Po..Dl•\N• Jack R. Curley V•te Pr"''""~'•"" r.tne••! ,,.,.,..oe• Thomas Keevil Ea!!a. Thoma s A. Muroh ine ,,.,.,..lllf>q Ed'lfl:lt' Cl'lar!ts H. Loos Ric hard P. Nall Laguna B•ach Ottlc• llkC.!fn .. t•fl~I Mllll"f •fll•t n Po Bo• .... t'H.11 TtltphOnt 1714) '42:-432:1 Classified Adv•rtlslng M2-S67t Uguna &each All DtNrlmtnts: Teltphont 4M·•466 Cocryrlgl'll. 1tll. O••llO' (Clo6\I "'ftlll.tllflll ~'· ~ ,...,, ,,.,.In. MhllllfMIOll\, @01\etflll INltwr .. ad ... '11-11 .,_...lrt IN'f bt ... ,.,,11(.~ ""''"°"' ,_!al ~--ti' '°"" ... ' 0-llt•. St<.oncl CleH -1•0" eitld •t OHt. •ti, C,.ll•Dml• $.l;"'tr•p'!IOll llV < .. ,,., '100 ·""°'""1,; o, m•ll t.f 00 mOO"!lfllJ; llllHl•f lltjl!M\1-lJ OO"'°"'t"IJ • I • • T11tsd17, (ktObtf 15, 1974 D1Hr '"llel Iliff Pl'llll • I J,andnaark A.rrest Court to S~udy Border Arres.ts A rouline arrest of alleged Jllegal aliens and their smuggler last year at the San Onofre Border Patrol Checkpoint will be the basts of a landmark decision 5000 by the U.S. Supreme Court. And·if it Is adverse to patrol methods, the decision c o u I d speU the end of the traditional roadblock as a tool In fighting illegal immigration. The high court Mooday agreed to bear the case !n which the government is appealing an appellate court decision which ruled that Immigration officers can not stop cars al random In searches for aliens, unl~ey have warrants or legal probable cause lo do ao. Thal court decision alS> slreMed that the color of the skin cl the occupants of a car does not constitute: probable c a u s e . there said that the rate or detentions ol allerui continues to break record~. One aspect of the ·roadblock, however, is radically different. Since tbe court ruling on waM'ant., and probable cause, patrolmen who at one time scored hoavily oo dope smug- glers have made but one arrest. From Page Al MILLS ..• I £ell.'' she said. "I got hysterical ~use the officer was drowning me. i , didn't need hi.s help. I am an expert S\\immer." CULTURE PAYS -Clenn Vedder (left) president of the Festival or Arts in I..aguna Beach, presents $155,808 check to Peg f.Iorreale. city treasurer. Ne xt to ~Irs. Morreale is Stuart Durkee, festival treasurer, and Councilman Charlton Boyd. The group, was standing in the Main Beach Park. Eighty percent of c,heck will go toward paying for park. The case involves the 1973 arrest of Felix Humberto Bringnoni-Pooce, who was set free last June when the 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals threw out his cooviction. Since then the patrol has suffered other setbacks from the same court based in San Francisco. Similar rulings on the patrol's arrest of drug smugglers were thrown out oo the warrant or probable cause issue. MlUs' .account stated that he arranged a bon voyage party for Gloria Sanchez, a cousin and houseguest of Mrs. Bat- tasUlla. who was returning to her native Argentina. He said his \Vile, Polly, had a broken foot and insisted that be take the party out while she stayed home. Fro1n Page Al ' SHIFT ... bctv.·een the two district.s, the shift could cost the owner a of a $40,000 house in the area an added $180 a year. "That is a strong maUer to consider," said the t r u s l ee. who \\'ith others indicated that the idea of rourxlinit orr school distrirj boundaries v.•as worth exploring. Discussion during the evening w a s dominated by the audience. muc:h of it made up of parents who we re outspoken in their endorsement of the CUSD and wary of the shift. Many sald ttiey were concerned that the educational programs at sever a 1 CUSD campuses in the territory might cha nge if the shift were effected. Others condemned the roje played by the Mlssion Viejo Companf in drafting the committee report. Leaders of the committre effort con- ceded willinj!ly that the development firm-as well as the staffs from each affected district -lent val uable help during the formative stages of the <!ot:u· ment. The 11-tii;sion Viejo Company absorbed abaut $275 in cosUi for six hours or legal research and some printing and duplicating services. Despite hearing some b i t I e r coo· demnalion of the firm 's role in the ttPort company officials at the meeting chose not lo join in the debate. This morning. Art Cook, the firm's manager of community infonnation pro· grams, said that the firm's position is that when an issue such as secession affects a la rge seg ment of the com- munjty the rompany offers help where it can. fie characterized the finn ·s role ns a "helping posi tion ." Capistrano Unified •Trustee G e o r g e \Vh ite found no fault ~·Ith the develop- ment finn·s assistance in the report. "I find no fault in it at ail ." he . said. "In fact. I believe they did a great service." Gapistrano Trustee \Villiam 'l'hompson. "'hose fonnal represen tation area In- cludes the section. stressed that no one 11,·as tryinR to force the issue on rcs1r1ents. ' \Ve need to know if people really v.-ant it to happen. No one is trying to sell this plan to anyone ... 've \~·on't go for it. unless the people really ""'ant it to happen," he said. Smith suggested that one means of see king a ro\lective opinion on the shift \\'OUld be a formal poll of all residents in the area. He indicated that he \\'OUld propose suc h a plan to his board in a subsequent action s~sion. Gi_pistr ano Unifi~ Trustee Bob Hurst warned that dempcraey mi ll not be sen 'ed. because one of 1'0 enabling processes would amoun o p e t i l I o n s seekinR the shift and the legal re· quti'en1ent that only 25 percent of the residents in the area need sign the documents. From there. the proposal \VOuld be hea rd and acted upon by the County Comn1ittee on School District CPJ!aniz.:i· tion and then lhat bodv's rcron1menda· lion "'ould go to the Oraitge County Doord of Education . The county board could act on the issue wi thout a public election. unless one or the other district formally opposed the idi!a. If such opposition came. the election 1\'0Uld be hetaln the affected section . ''f~·om the indications 1 get. this issue might never be voted upon by the J>eoplt• .involved,'' said Hurst. l'rona Page ill ACCUSE ... resignation . . . so that heat would be taken off the President and the President standing there knowing that he was the one CO\'erlng up." lie said tht! evidence \\'OUld show that Nixon summoned Ehrlichman to Camp David, ~1d. prior to his resl(n3tion April 30, 1973 "and told him 'Johnr you have bttn my conscience. but I dldn•t follow your advice. ll's all my fault . l( J'd onl v followed your advice. we wouldn ·1 be 'in this situation."' Frates also praised the le~ or NiA:· on·s White 11ouse 1conversatlon1, wh1ch will be introduced into evidence begin· ning Wednesday. Frotn Page AI Rl~DDIN ... lie viewed the poli~ employe's requesl as a means cl db1crediting and removing Laguna Police Chief Frank Schopen. Festival Board Considers Boosts In Ticket Price The city of Laguna Beach has COUJI· Ticket prices for the Laguna Beach tered the polire employes' request with Festival of Arts' Pageant of the ?\-tasters a proposal to have POST (Police Officer may be increased more than 15 percent SLandards and Training ), an agency of und er proposals being considered by the the state Department of Justice, un-fe9tival board of directors. dertakc an investigation of the local department. 'The board previously increased the price of loge seats from $7 to $8. The city announced the POST study Although declining to take formal ac-just afler the police empldyes announced tion Monday on the prices of lov.·er thei r intention to request the Reddin price seats, the board discus.sed and study. Mayor Roy Holm said the POST appeared to favor increasing the prices probe had been in the works for years of olher seats in the 2,500-seat Irvine and only now was coming due. Bowl amphitheater during the summer lle said that in view of the pending living pictures performance. POST study' hiring Reddin at a cost Action was withheld until financial of $7,500 v.-ould not be practical. records of the past year are available. The current controversy is only a Increasi ng the loge seat prices would cootniualion' of one which began prior gross the festival an additional '59,000 to the drafting of the city's municipal of which $10,000 would go to the city budget last ·tall . of Laguna Beach. Since the decision, government lawyers have succeeded in ob ta l n i n g un- precedented blanket warrants which also hong in the legal balance at present. The warrants, renewed every 10 days by a U.S. Magistrate in San Diego, allow the patrol to stop cars at wtll in a specific geographic area and for specific purposes. . Challenges to those warrants are abun- dant and in U.S. District Court in San Diego, two judges have upheld the warrants and two have not. Ttie U.S. Attorney 's office has stressed that despite the split vote, the ·depart- ment still feels justified 1n obtaining renewed· warrants. Th at case, they predicted, would prcr bably wind µp at the Supreme Court as well. . Despite the pitched battles at t he highest judicial levels. operations at San Onofre sUll are status quo. Spokesmen Police Identify Slain Marine As Tahoe Man Then. the police employes' association Increasing the center seat price.s from was highly critical of the administration $6 to S7 will gross an additional $96,000 A young Camp Pendleton Marine who of the department, of its personnel prac-of which $23,000 would go to the city was shot in the back and killed Sunday tices and indirectly of Orief Schopen. of Laguna Beach. · · The association was also critical of The Festival or Arts leases the ex-by one of three men who gave the proposed budget limitations being forced hibition grounds and Irvine B 0 w 1 victim and his buddy a lif( in the on the department, of personnel change!'! facilities from the city. It pays between San Juan capistraoo area has been lden- forced by the budget and of the council 25 percent and 17 percent or its gross tified by Orange County Sheriff's officers for forcing the changes. income to the city in rent. , · as Joseph R. Mosac, 20, of Lake Tahoe, Currently the associatioo charges the Monday, the festival turned over a California. department has a high pe rsonnel check for $lSS,803'to the city as payment lnV!sligators today said they Dad no turno ver-more than 60 persons through for the .1974 rent. Eighty percent of new clues as to the klenUty of the the 50 man department in five years the. payment will be used to pay o!f trio who picked up Mosac and fellow which has left at times only in· bonds issued to purchase the city·s Main Camp Pendleton Marine Ronald Sanders, adequat.cly trained patrolmen on t he Beach Park. Other funds benefit cuJtural 20. as they .sat on a bus bench in streets; reductions in the size oC the organizations. San Juan. department narcotics sCctton; and low Sanders told officers he and ~tosac and declining-morale a m o n g the were robbed at gunpoint after the trio patrolmen. . S J p k U • drove them along the Ortega Highway Jack Halstead, vice president 0 f ' 311 uau ar S lllt and then onto a dirt road ne&' a quarry. LECAR. stressed the professionalism of Sanders said Mosac used a few the unit but acknowledged ·that o1 the llas One Seat Vacant obscenities to describe their abductor. two probes rompleted in the organiza-as be lay face down in the dirt. and tion"s first year, both resu)~(.d in the One opening is available on the San was prom p!J.t shot ln the back by a resignations of the department chiefs. Juan Capistrano Parks and Recreation member of ftl'e gang.··· But Halstead said that h a p p e n e d Commission. ~yone \\'ishing to apply Sanders said the trio then drove off because the "trouble was centered in may do so by filling out an application at high speed with the W they had the office of ..!be. chier." · available at city hall. collected from the two Ma rines. lie sa~ the finn ts now studying A backgroutfd in reerealion Is desired. Sheriff's investigators have circulated the Stanton Police Qe-partment and will but not required, acrording to interim descriptions of the trio and the car find a completely different set of dif-city manager John O'Sullivan. The open-they used throughout California. They "Mrs. Mills went out with us all the time,"· Mrs. Battistella said. "We were always with other peopie -never alone." l\tills said in his statement that "after a few refreshments, btrs. Battiste:lla became ill and I enlisted the help of others in our group to assist me in seeing her safely home." On ~he way home, with the car being driven by another man, "tltrs. Battistella attempted to leave the car and l at- tempted to prevent it," Mills said. "In the ensuing struggle, her elbow hit my glasses and broke them. resulting in a number of small cuts around my nose." Asked about those details, Mrs. Bat- t.istella said: "I'm not going lo say any more -whatever damage has been done is enough." Mrs. Battistella said she was a premedical student in Argentina, and is enr9\led in a Washington-area college for the tenn starting in February to take "general biological sciences." She v..'Ould not name the college. "I've also been a school teacher and take accounting,'' Mrs. Battistelia said. "I spend half my life in school." But, she added : "I don 't know anymore it it's important to be decent because you get misunderstood." She was reluctant to discuss her dan- cing career, saying, ''I haven't been ar dancer in a long Ume -only one month thi.s year." Both Mrs. Battistella and her husband, F.d.uardo, who was interviewed in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Monday night, sald they had been good friends with the Mills's for some time. But they disagreed on whether Mrs. BatUstella ever worked in the Arkansas Defliocrat's office. "First. my wife began y.·orking ror Mrs. Mills as an assistant and ·µten a year and a half ago she began working for' Milla as a personal secretary," Bat- Ustella said. "They saw she was very bright." But bis wife said: 011 was not on his (Mills') payroll. I did decorate his apartment. I am not a prof1ssional In- terior decorato r but I manage very well." "I don't know anything about that. To my knowledge she has not been on his official pay r o ll .'' his ad- ministrative assistant, Oscar Goss, said. Mrs . Battistella said she lives wtth her son and tv.'O daughters, all teen- agers. Sbe and her husband a r e separated "in a way, hut not legally," she said, adding that "be hasn'.l been ficulties. · ing was made available-by the resigna-are working on the ,lbeory that the "\\le call the shots as we see them. tion of LaVeme Mllea. hunted trio were off duty Mar in es. " \Ve y,•il\ analyze the problem and make l ............... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiji here fo r four month!." recommendations as we see it." Hal-11 srcad . a retired Los Angeles police ex· culive. said. Ile said the service offered by LECAR is similar to that of POST hut said lhe private firm would go into greater depth. and can analyze problems better because its personnel are all former bii:1·tin1e la\v enforcement men. AROUND THE CORNER AND In S.1n Clcmente'S case. LECAR was hirffi hr the City Council after individual police officers began complaining to city councilmen about conditions a~ the department. Reddin v.•as hired th.an exec u t l v e session to conduct an audit and revie\v ot the depa11ment. Th'n began a three v.·eek series of intcn 1iews with the public, past and present members of the force and a fine tooth C<>mbing of the department's records. Onl~· a 12·page summary of the Reddin report .\\·as released publicly. But it siz.. ~Jed . ll railed for the resignation or the chief. elunination of the position or as- si!ilanl chief. finning up the roles in each k•\·rl o the chain of rommand and light· cning administrative policies. J1nplicit wa.s the exposure that in San Clen1ente. some of the highest ranking offi<'ers were surpassed in education and pohce. lraining by klwer ranking men. Clen1e111c's eniors Can Get Free Shots San Clemente senior clti1enJ 1 6S and older am get free nu shmt--On Wed- nelday rrom 10 1.m. to 4 p.m. at thf. Flm Christian -Qlurch, 702 De L a Estrella. The immunizations are being provided by lhe Senior Cillzens' COw\cll I n CC>Opt:ralion with Orange County Health Department. Tran5portaUon Is available at 492-2553. • UP YOUR STREET • ,. LOCA~:D~c~~Ti~i~.o~~~~~BHE~~~~~~H~'F Tll.lES WHY WE SEVERAL ANSWERS POP UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STdRES IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY; WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM. OFFICES, AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION . THIRDLY, THERE JS AM· PLE PARKING WI TH LITTLE TRAFFIC CONGESTION LEADING TO US. THE SITUATION HAS MADE US MORE COMPETITIVE AND WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR EIGHTEEN YEARS. AND HAVE EX· PANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LO'CATION. . .. ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Plac:entla /1"''· COST A MISA 646-4838 • • • 7 I ' ' .. First Class Fraud? Tlial Extra 3 c Does1i't Speed VJJ Mai l 8} S\'LVll\ PORTER You and I spe nl more than $200 m1ll1on on don1est1c f1rs t-c l;fss ai r mail postage last year - and gol 1n return mostly fourth class service No longer 1s an air mail stamp the only way to gel air service, as 1t was when air mai l al a n extra charge \1:as or1g1nated 1n 1918 Air mail 1s, 1n fact, a "fraud on the American consum e r ,'' d eclares Congressman Lester L Wolff (0 .·N \' ) afler his own 1nv estigat1on of the postal service. (I) TODA.\', MOST first class letters, as ~·ell as air mall ones, are flown to their destination, except over short distances. (2) For hauls of up to about 250 miles, all first class and air mall letters• travel via the fastest means available. Two Firms To Design Navy Plane ST. LOUIS (AP) General Dynamics Corp. and lhe LTV Aerospace Corp. have agreed to co· design a new aircraft car· n er·based plan for the US Navy, officials have an- noWJced - The craft will be a version of General Dynamics YF-16 Lightweight Fighte r. which ts competing with the Nor· lhrw YF-17 for use 1n the US Air Combat Fighter Program. McOoMell Douglas Corp and Northrop Corp. both with Orange County operations, an noun ced sim1la r-co·development plans for the Northrop :mode l l ast week. An Air Force decision on the mode ls 1s expected 1n .January. The YF·l6 1s µ<>~·cred by a Pratt & \fh1lney F-100 engine, which 1s also used 1n Air Force F-15&. Money 's Worth (3) The cxt 1 a 3 cents yo u pay for an a ir mail stamp makes little 1f any d1f ference 1n delivery time. 14) In fact, da ta from the OD IS (Or1 g1n· De st1n at1on Information System). the Postal Ser· vice's own internal sam- p J 1 n g sys tem for measuring its eff1c 1ency , show:os that extra air mail postage oflen buys the average mall user slo"er service Air mail letters were deli vered overnight about a third as often as fi rst class letters dunng a recent postal fiscal quar- ter. Even local mail that carries ai r mail postage reaches it s dest1 nauon far slower than first class. tr it travels more than about 400 miles, air mail does have a slight advan· tage over first class -but the Postal Service adve r t1ses speedy a ir m ai l delivery no n1atter what the dista nce Why is air mail service SO poor? volum e 1s dropping rapidly and this class of mail 1s becoming evermore expen· s1ve to ha ndle They are openl y propos in g: to end !he lategory of air mail i.ilto gcthcr But lhi.il \11on 't save us n1oney -don't fool your self one bit on that' For along \Vtth the ehm1nat1on or air mall, we face lhe virtual certainly of ad· d1t1 onal po stage rate in· creases. W1th1n the next year or SO, f irs t class postage stam'()::\ may nse to 12, 13 or el'en"1.5 cents --= with all that means to all "'ho use the mails s N c E Oregon Wildlife Attraction Facing Economic Dy The Associated Press Oregon 's only drive through "•!Id animal park. \Vo rld Wild hfc SafaM near \V1nston, is having financi al problems and nlay close. IF THE S AFA RI Is c)oscd. al l 501 an imals "ould be sold, ~aid Ed Jl ut· Ion. the p111 k 's third manager 1'hcrll arc lions, tigers, ostriches, 1.ebras, (!ltphanls, J;Uicllcs,hy· r.nas. kudus <1.nd chHtahs among the 40 s pccle.s ot J:1n1ma)s in the park. Some un1n1 :i ls, 1ncturhng lie s au1 1 :1~1 \Vlnlcr',;11 .1 bnby cll'ph.1nl , d1crl lao;I 1asol1nc short age untl the "•In ter because or h11t !1h • ' • Tuesday's Closing Prices ' ' • Tutld.y. Oc1obflr 15 1974 'NE W YORK STOCK EXCHANG~ • Year'• lligh·Lowe Appear Every Salurd•y • Xrrn' Profits 1'1:11 \"ORK <AP > Xerox Corp .innounC'{'d C':lrn1nAS 1n the third · 11ul11 l1•1 lnt:Jl('d .1 record of W mil hon (\I Si O·I :l :o.h :\r{', ;l ~Min or 7 prrrcnl 11\ er I hr 1 um Pll r ,, h h~ pc nod la~l y\!r1r. In lhC' \hn ri 11u~rtc.r or 1913. lhc cnnln:1n' tarn~d Si 1 n'11lion. ·or 97 t't'nt'-t• ~h.u't' ' .. -' ti • I • A I 2 DAILV PILOT Tutsda7, Octobtr l S, 1974 Doctor Gives New Warning On.Heavy Viiamin ·C Doses IJSC' lfi<•/wr • l\1E\V YORK (AP) -~tore "'amings .against the<\ use of hlgh dose! of Vitamin C for ....+¥!l,common coJd have emerg· ed f r o m an internatiOOlll rnteling on research into the vilantin. · , "To recom1nend now for the general public to toke high doses of Vitamin C over and above those recommended by the Nation al Acadcn1y or Scie nces \\·ould be ir- responsible," said Dr. ~lyron \\'inick of the Institute of lluntan Nutrition at Colwnbia Uni\•ersity. \'ITA~11N C fltA \' indeed have an effect on the common ----cold, Dr. \\'inick said in an intervie"'· but the effect is Actress \'ir~inia riilayo. \\'ho has appeared -in 1n1Jrc than a store of --1 1novi cs. has donated movie. staGe and radio 1nen1orabilla t o th c U1livers iLy of Southern California. Ne ,vport Perhiits P lummet too small to justify high doses in \'iev; of the lack of kno"·lt•dgc of possible ill ef- fects, such as in pregnancy or on a fetus. Dr. Li11us Pauling, the tll'O- time Nobe\ Prize winner, has sliniulated v,ri.de Interest in Vi!amin C with his high I y . . . publicized recommendations The decline 111 con~!~uct1011 for high doses to combat the in Ne,11port Beach continued in . conunon cold. September as bo!h the number and \'aluc of building pern1its A KEY STUDY that has issued dropped to a 44-month been cited in support or Dr. low. . . Pauling's ideas y.•as oonducled study, told the meeting that subsequent studies s h o w e d that such high do6es "·ere not necessary to produce a useful reductian. PERJIAPS 100 or 200 mllllgrams a day \\'OUld .Jtc sufficient, Dr. Anderson said. Dr. Pauling has recommended a routine daily Intake af 1,000 lo 10.000 mllligrnms or I to JO grants of Vitamin C. The recommended d 8 11 y allowance, of the Food and Nutrition Board of the Na- tional Academy of Science's Natlooal Research Council, lJ 50 to 60 milligrams for an adult. ' "lneoneluslon,'' Dr. Anderson reported, "I v.'OUld suggest Iha\ unless .and until firm evidence Is forthOOming that higher doses of Vitamin C are more erfeclive, we should adhere to the principle of 'primum non nocere,' and advise the public to limit their daily intake to fOO or 200 milligrams, except possibly for brief periods during acute • infection when gram do ses may be benefici~l." Day D e filed Italians l J p in A rnls \VASHINGTON (UPI) -The chairman of the; ~ational Columbus Day Committee charged U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica violated federal law by starting the \Vater- gatc cover-up trial on a holiday. "We feel that Judge Sirica has desecrated Qilumbus Day," Mariano A. Lucca, head of the commiUee, said l\fonday. The committee claims credit for getling Qingress to declare an annual Qilumbus Day holiday beginning in 1968. "He (Sirica) owes an apology to the American people, to the people of Italy, and the people of Spain," Lucca said. "\\'e are going to get satisfaction ." According ~o .figures rcleas-at the University of Toronto ed by the city 1> Department and indicated that the intake or Con1muni1y Development. of 1 gram lone 28th of an '================.,...,.==.,....-.,,,J 139 building permits bc~r~ng ounce) a day and 4 grams•· ----- a total value o[ $1.2 million a day v.·hen ill produced ar ~--------------------.1 were issued lasl month. 30 percent reduction in days SEPTDIBER'S FIGURES brought the year 's activity to 11199 pennits having a value of $f0.4 million. TR comparison. during the nm nine 1nonlh Of 1973, 2)lt building permits bearing an esnmated value of $60.1 millkin were issued . • .,,~~~r's report or bUiJdlng activity shows only seven· ~on its cove r in g residential dwellings we r.c issued durlilg the month, three of them covering duplex units. • 4 WHIL E CONSTRUCTION activity hiL its -lmvcst point in Newport Beach s i n c e January, 1971. the department o f QimmWlily Development expects an upturn in Octobe r. "Ther.e are S20 million worth of building permits waiting to be checked and issued." said Robert Fowler. the 'department's assistant direc· tor. How ever. another depart- . ment spokesman Mid. high interest rates are expected lo ..aintinue to be a check on new residential developments. · 20 Gi rls ::·Em·oll : In 'Corps' /l total of 54 st11dcnt s. 2•1 of thefll girls. ha\·e enrolled for the first term or the Marine Corps Junior Rese rve . Officers Training Progra1n at El Toro High School. off work due to cold symptoms. But Dr. Terence \V. Anderson of the University of Toronto. y,·ho conducted the Acc user Must Pay D og Q,vner ~11A~tl {AP) - A man charged by a l\1iami Springs official \l'ilh k e e p i n g a habitually barking dog h a s \\"On a $6,000 judgment from his accuser and $4,000 from the city. A circuit Qiurt jury award- ed the money lo Larry Carr, backing his charges of malicious pro secutio n , negligence. conspiracy and abuse of process . Tilton Chester, director 9f the city's building department. charged onetime neig hb or Carr \llilh keeping the barking dog in violation of a city law. l\tunicipal Court dismissed the charge last January when Cbest.er admitted he'd never met Carr and couldn't identify him as lhe dog 's owner. Chester, \\•ho maintained he \1·as acting in an afficia l capacity. said. •·All I \\'anted to do was stop the dog from barking.'' Carr and his dog have mov- ed ay,•ay since the charge was filed. Led by Lt. Col. J . Chene. ----------1 IUS~1C ret. l, the co u r s e is knowtl""'"as Lendcrship Educa- tion and meets one hour per ANIMALogic1$~ ,,,,,,., day. 1t ernohasizcs rour arcas: leadership training: d r i 11 c er e1nonics: 1narksn1anship and v:eapons: :ind military orientation ·and organ;~:11tion. According to Jlerm Schmidt , El Toro a.<:~i~tant principal. ~~~:-:~ "Overall acceptance appears I ~ lo hl' e'\ct•ll<>nt. "Some of 1hl.' rrqu1rcments. such as hairtuts a n d a n1ilit:ir~· N1urte<i~ of ·Sir' to the inst n1c!or. ha\'e not in any \\<IY d:unpcned tht.' en· ~ 1hu!'i1<1!(1ll " Sch1111dt !'ia1d. The course is i::ood fo r either ~~;,;~r -•l•' clce!i\'C or ph~sica\ education ~f"i.IAT KIO R'.fALLY GRAM'- crl'dll YOU.DOESt.l.'"T' ME? •. JMr. QCbrtsttan's l'or J1'"i".f! <111d J,J111in.I! ,,,111111,f!Sl tlte rrlics of finl' of J .•.1ilit1.~ .•l11p.•. L1111cl11'01t S11t·ci11 I BUSINESSPERSON'S BUFFET Sl.5 0 L 11111·/11·on 1\/ 1111, -1: ri. Jr11t11 JI :J 0 11.111 . lJi1111rr .(1"r1'1'J 1\'~t!/11/r.fr.1111 i :OO p.n1 , ~11nJ,1)' Ch.1111p.1,enr Brunc/1 SJ. 75 Jr1111110 :JO 11.1n. -l .nf1•rf,u'111111·11f : l.~~.1r fl.1)'1'' ·1u .. 1. -I l111rs. 1~1·.-111'11.es D,ir1 rin.t! Fri. -Skn. 1'1(el11s Fi1l1rs, i\fr.l f!, O)'Sffr 811r, 1'J11t1•J ll'ints, A/rJ and Spirits JJJ E. Co1tJI fl~1tliu.•>1y 6 CAR WASHES AND 6 HOT WAXES SEE AD OH PAGE A·7 Agreatbody dOesn't just / happen. · Why bulge whe n you can curve? Especially, when you could be astrimand slim as these people. · Dieting can h·elp. But, diet alone isn't enough. You've got to firm up your body to eliminate flab. We can help you do both wi th exercise programs and suggested patterns for weight loss. The most modern exercise equipment and professional superv ision will help you change the look, the shape and the texture of your body. There are even S,auna, Steam. Whirlpool, Sun Room and Swimming Pool facilities to keep you firm, slim and trim. You"ll look great, feel great. Remember. you don't just get a shape; you get in shape. Make yourself a oromise-Call today! There are 5 different pfograms -one to suit !he needs of each individual person, ............... tf»Clal introdVclory offer-2 wffks al tho S,. fer ooly S I 0. Hunm,ton Buch 18585 Maul Streel , Main St. al Beach Blvd. 842-1451 Westminster 6757 Westminster Avenue, ~Vestm1ns1er Center 894-3387 -622 East Katell a Ave .• West of Tustin Ave .• 639·244 I .......... 5105 Beach Bouleva1d. South ol L•ncoln Avenue 826-0381 -.. -. 2300 Harbor Bouleva1d, f"l arbor Center !>49-3368 Long Beach 4101 A1lan11c Bouleva1d. Corner o! Carson 426-8874 ....... 17031 Ventura Boulevard. West ol Balboa 986-6330 • • . - ( • ( Automatic Transmission How many times have you had the opportunity to buy something you really wan ted, possibly rleeded, but just didn't have the money till next pay day? And it probably didn't warrant the time required to take out a Joan. Wel1, with a Reserve Balance Account at First National Bank of Orange County you can solve this sort of problem by becoming your own "loan officer" An RBA account at First National lets you. decide when you need extra money, then ~·it's transferred to your checking account, up to the amount prevjou5ly agreed'upon, whenever you say. A Reserve Balance Account costs nothing when you don't use it, only the usual loan charge when you do. Stop in at the New Accounts desk at the First National bra nch nearest you and find out about a Reserve Balance AccounS,. It's like money in the bank ••. literally. .. MAIN OfJlCl II the Plau in ~-Orarlft ._..~ ANAHEIM: Sl•te Co1ittt l 8'11 a.TA llt£SA: Mtf.I Vtfdl: l Adll!I\ ll llllOOfJtA: Olapmtn l PT~ OltANGC: Tustin l Callins SAlfTA ANA: 17111 l Tu1tin TUSTHt Red HiH l W1lmll VILLA ,MK: Slntiqo l WWlda \ Finl;. p,,_i B.,......, Soln>ift SW. JfOf ------ !Ir. <!Lqrintiu n ·.a ~,., t- J\/t·111purt 8ro1cl1 ... ·1 ~ R.1•31•r1•.11io111 (714) '1S·SJ20 ~ _ .. ..,,, Holiday Spa Health Clubs lor Men and Women. ' ' • i I . . \ . "• . 20" 23" I r • al co f c di co of d d. ' m fo pr hi lo st q a so p es m fo t a r t fi I ~ ' d r ' ' .. • I • ' ' I w ' • ; • • Sadlllebaek EDITION Today's Final N.Y. St«rc~ VOL. 67, NO. 288 , 2 S~CTIONS, 24 PAGES TEN CENTS Saddlehack College W""il,l . . State Funds As of the 1975-76 school year, every penny of state ~Id to building programs at Saddleback CoUege will be cut off, college trustees learned Monday. Saddleback rec:eived 51 percent of its funding for construction on lhe 200-acre campus from the state-last year. It is one of three community college districts -to-be cut off. according to college Supt. Robert Lombardi. lie explained it is the relative wealth of the Saddleback College District that detennined the cutoff. The other 1111·0 districts affcted are West Hills in Coa- u linga and West Kem. Both are oll-pn> ducing areas. "I am not satisfied. I don't like what I see here-at all," Lon1bardi told the shockl'd trustees. The state decision, based on a new formula determined by a finance com- mittee of commun1iy c o l I e g e ad- ministrators, brings to a sudden halt, at least temporarily, Saddleback's plans for a new performing arts complex and a physical education facility. Acknowledging that the cutoff might have some political implicati:>ns, Lorn· 'Ehrlicli11ia1i llsed' Attorney Blasts Nixon at Trial ON THE OFFENSIVE Prosecutor Ben·Venisht Pa1ler Ch&rging Nixon Pressure On Ziggurat Buy WASHINGTON (UPI~ -The Nixon Administration pressured the General Serv.ices Administration to trade $ 2 7 million in usable govemmcnt property for a h~e, unused building so the former president coold keep his rerords near his home in San Cfemente, the Washing· ton Post reported .(lday. The Post said the building, a seven- story pyramid-shaped st ructure one quarter the si1.e of the Pentagon, was acquired from Rockwell international Corp. wiU1ln the last (\YO years for some $2()) million \\'Orth of Air Force· propert(. The building. located in Laguna Niguel - a community 10 miles from Nixon's estate in San Clemente -cost $27 million to construct but was appraised tor $20 million .in 1972. According to the Post. lhe GSA said the purpose of the trade was to get a place to house federal offices and records in Southern California -but, the paper said, the building has never !See PRESSURE, Page A.%) ~ie jo Bee1· Bar Tapped for $407 Operators of a Mission Viejo beer bar that was burglarized over the week- end have now established the tun cash loss ot $407, Orange County Sherlff's of. ficers said. Deputies said the mooey was taken from the office or "The Bcerd" 28.~ Marguerite' Parkway. by intrude:rs who smashed the glass panels In the rrout door to gain l'.ntry during the hoon of darkness. lnvesllgators said the cash wo.s taken l'rom two locations In the bat's office. ' u. , . , WASlllNGTON (UPI) -John D. Ehrlichman's attorney charged t o d a y that former oPresident Nixon "deceived, misled, lied to and used " and finally forced a resignation from his former No. 2 aide in order "to save his own neck." Ebrliclunan, one of five fonner Nixon aSIOciates on trial in Ule Watergate cover-up, .was portrayed b¥ defense at· torney William S. Frates as a victim o{ the plot w b o "repeatedJy recom- mended" that Nixon disclose the truth. It was the first time Ehrlichman turn- WATERGATE 'S LIDDY OUT ON BAIL, Page A4 COLUMBUS DAY GROUP CRITICIZES JUDGE -Story, Al2 ed accuser of Nixon, whom he served as chief domestic adviser in the White Hou.se unW April, 1973. when the Watergate scandal became a major Wue. Nixon, named an unindicted co-con- spirator in tbe cover·up, has b e en pardoned by President Ford and cannot be tried for any Wate rgate-related in· cldents. Former 'Vhile House counsel John \V. Dean Ill, previously Nixon's chief ac- cuser, was to testify later in the day for tbe prosecution -wOOse case also was based on the complicity of the former president. "Richard Nixon deceived, misled, lied to and used John Ehrlichman to cover up his ·own knowledge and activities· while publicly s t a t i n g that John Eh111ichman was one of the finest public servants_ ¥ had ever known," Frates told the jury. - "He (Nixon\ was deliberately withholding information from him - covering up to save his own neck. In simple terms, Mr. Ehrlichman had been had by his-boss, the president of the United States." Frates said Ehrlichman's decision to leave lhe White House was a "forced resignation ... so that heat would be taken off the President and the President standing there knowing that he was the one coYering up." He said tht! evidence would sbow that Nix® summoned Ehrlictunan to Camp David , Md. prior to his resignation April (See ACCUSED, Page AZ) Price Lid Off For Soda Pop WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Agriculture De p a r t m e n t says prices for most soft drinks, already 1p 25 percent or more from last 1ear, are likely to increase aga in .his fall as a result of rising sugar >rices. The soft dJak industry u s e s 1early one •th of th!! annual 1ugar supply. second only t o 10usehold purchases or packages 1f sugar at grocery stores. sen. Peter v_ Dominici <R·N.l\t.). ~barged in a le:tter to Attorney :;eneral W\lllsm B. Saxbe on MOn- ~ay llwt Illegal price fixing was responsible for the nearly Uve.(old >rice hike for sugar. L ' " . bardi said, "\Vhcn important commillees are put together on things like this you have to fight for your own district. You have to be there. "There is a group that got their cut out of this," he added . "Though I wouldn't necessarily y,•ant to see that in the paper. I know what this world is about." '•\Vhat I mean is, the people v.·ho put toget her the formula made darn sure they weren't injured by the formula. I can't believe S:-iddleback is that much wealthier than all the other districts in the stale." ac Trustees asked for more information on lhe new state formula which cut Saddleback out. Lombardi said it is ' very complicated to explain. "But the end resu lt is silnple. \Vhcn it cOn1es to how much \.\'C get it's a big fat zero." He said he and other district ad· ministrators planned to go to Sacran1ento to fight the decision. ··\'le may have great y,•ealth, but y.·e also have great need," he said. The new formula resulted because the state ran out of money for community college construction , <'ccordin g to Fred s Jtl.a1·cli To A New Ho111e Bremer, president of the college and nov.• in charge of faL·ilitics p I an 11 i n g research. "1,'hc state had plannL'<l to.put a bond issue on the Novcn1bcr ballot for $2:)0 n1illion to replenish the fund. but the idea was abandoned v.·hen the Post- Secondary Education Com m is s ion recommended against it," Bremer said. The Board of Governors of t he California Con1mun1ty Colleges hopes to use money fron1 the CCC genera! fund for the intcrin1. Bremer said . That was done sevcrol years ago in a tight spot bct\\·een bonds , he said . • Ill D•oly P!llll Slftl ,,,., .. After delays from the summer construction strike. inflation, and a month or crowding two schools into one at Valencia Elementary School, students and teachers or the new Lomarena School in Laguna J·lills felt lhe move to their building called for a celebration. So they had a parade, an assembly. an d a picnic l\·londay. first day at their Laguna I-tills ca1npus. And even the El Toro l\1arine Corps band caine along to add spirit. Student Shift Plan Scored Parents Oppose Nlis1Sio 11 Viejo Red[.~trict i11 g· • L By JOIIN VALTERZA DI the D•ily Pit-ol SllU Proposals to shift 6,000 acres of Southerly Mission Viejo territory from the Capistrano Unified School Districl _to Saddleback Valley Unified drew an unexpected amount of .resistance from parents ~londay evening. At a joinl study session of the bro rd.) of trustees of the t\\'O affected sch o o I districts. the prop o s a 1 as rlrafted by a parent cnmnlittce was met with major opposition from parent~ ~·ho questioned the \\'isdom and even the financial backing behind the project. Stra1.,. votes taken after the session :>' All True~ Stripper Supports ~fills' Story \VASHI NGTON (AP ) -Breaking a wcek·long silence. the woman involved in a bizarre incident with Rep. \\1ilbur D. fl.1ills has backed up his version and oomplaincd that the press .. is !rying to destroy a great man." "What tl-1r. Mills said \l'as exaclly whal happened,'' the 38-ycar-old Argen· linian and former dancer said in a telephone interview Mond ay night. She reportedly v.·orked as a stripper in a Washington nightclub and y.·as billed as "the Argentine Ciretracker." Speaking in a soft. slightly accented voice and sounding at times close lo tears. Annabel Battistella said lhat ac- counts or lhe episode tnay also ruin "me and my chances of going bnck to school." But she exp re&sed confidence that the politico\ career of MUIS, chairmen o( the House Wa ys and ~team Co1umltltt1 would nol be ruined l!y' th< ~ whlclt took place in the preda\\·n i.>ur s of Oct. 7. "T am sure y.•hcn he goes to Arkanus. he will be able to· ti llt lo hi1 !lCOj>le Ince he used to,'' she sbitL • ) Mrs. Battistclla retu~ to elaborate on Mills' statement about the events of Oct. 7 beyond sayin,J.! it was accurate, But she differed with U. s. Park Police accounts in at least one aspect. Police said she juinpcd into the Tidal Basin, a backwater of the Potomac River. after police stopped ~Ii I l s' speeding. unli ghted c11r and he emerged smelling of alcohol and t\l.s face 11•as (See flllLLS, Page A:!:) Burglar Tukes Co in ' F1·0111 Mari ne's Monte Orange County Sheriff's officers arc inve1Hgatlng the theft of a coin coll~tion W'ld poc.-ke" C<\lculator from the El Toro liltie-tane (l( a M11rine Corp.1 lituten:lnt. l l)eriuties S11id I~ v11lupblcs were tuken by fntruders who cut the screen of the rear vo'indow to i;::ain entry to the homt of 1nd U.. Jay Pnul Reidy. 29, of 1S682 .Wake. Ave., \Vhcrry Housing. Tbtj valUOtl the total lou at $625. . • nt Viejo Elcrnentary Schoo! sho\1'c<I that of the 1 lU person<; present. aoout ~o appro\'ed pf the ~t>eession idc;1 v.·hich could prove t.'Ostly to the taxpayers 1n the sm;1ll S<'ction of the community lying within the CUSI) boundaries. Saddleb:1ck Truster Dennis A. S1nith early in the evening: offered what 1nav become a pi\'otal issue in the debate over secession. Because of the disp:-iri1y of tax rates betwrcn th e 111•0 districts, the shift could cost the 0\1•ner a of a $40.000 houS<' in the area an addcd SIBO a year. "Thal is a strong matter to <'Qnsidr>r " said the I r u s.t e e. \1·ho \\'1th other.• indicated thal lhc idea of rounding uff school district boundaries 1ras \\'Orlh exploring. Di scuso;;ion t!unng 1he e1'en1ng \I' a s don1inatcd hy ihl.' :1uclicnt'e. 111uch of it n1:1df' up of parents who 1v r r 1• outs1l0ke11 1n lhC'ir l.'lld11r<;ement of the CUSD and 11 ;irv of !ht• Shir! ~ianv s.1id thev \~1·rr ronc1'rned th\11 th·• <'<!l1cn1ional Proi;rn111l'1 at s c v c r 11 I cusn can1pu<>e~ in the territory niight chnn~r 1r thr shtft 11cre l'ffN:IL'<I Others concll'1nrK'd the role plny<.'d bv the ~hs:-1on \'icjo Co1np:-iny in dr;Tfllng lhti <.'Omn11ltt'C report . Leader~ of the L'Oll\JHl ll<-'1.' c(forl con· C'l'CIL>tl "illint:IY th.it th~· developl'Yl('f\\ finn-as well ns ttw st:iffs from c.'.lch tiffcctL'{I di.strict -lrnt \:th1<1bl~ help durinR the fon11<1t1\'C sta::lcS Qf lht' r!oru- nlt>nl. The ~h11sioo Vle10 Company atm>rbed aboul S275 1n costs for si"X hours or legul ~search and ~on1e printing and dUJ)llcat1ng services l1csµ1le heaMng son1<' h \ 1 l c r con· dcmnutitin ut lhr hr1n ·s rolf' 1n 1he rcpo11 con1p~ny official s ut thr mcetinK ISt'I! SlllFT, r age A!\ ' .. A bond issue probably IYitl be put to \'O!crs by June 1976. he uddcd. Lo1nbardi is planning to challenge tht' cutoff. "l'rn not sure what we'll do," Lorn· bardi said ... If the formula doesn't give us y.·hat \l'e need, we 'll have to try to change the formula." Lnti\ that happens, Lotnbl\Jldi said. the school v.·ill seek spc<:ia l IC!g1slat4on and will try for some adjustment from the statewide comn1unity college board. Saddlcback lrustees set a spec i a 1 meeting to discuss the situation for 7:30 p.n1. !'.londay at the catnpu.s library. Ca11didate Admits He Paid Funcl By JAN \\'ORT ll nt lllt D•llY ~llol Sl•ff Fi\·e or 32 candidates for the ~1ission Viejo municipal ad\'isory council (MAC) ha\'e been recommended for· .election in a billing sent to 800 ~fission Vic}o homes by a subcontractor of the Mission Viejo Company. One of the candidates. nichard Low- cock of Casla del Sol. said toda y he paid the posla gc for the billing v.•hich included a souvenir notepad bearing his name. And a spokesman for the r<.1.ission \'iejo Company. Jerry . Ognibenl, said he okayed !he "infonnation bulletin'' and did not feel the list of five names constil uted an endorsement. l.O\YCOCk. an officer of !he Casta del Sol homco11'Tlers as.."OCialion. said it v.•as his idea to use the billing. "If you knew that the mailing list "'as available al the trarbor Investments officc~at would you do?" sai d Loy.·coek. a former newspaper publisher from J\1aine. "I paid the postage so I don·t see what the crime is." Also recommended in the letter were Jea nne Gagnebin of Aegean Hi l Is . Dorolhy Hufford of Aliso Villas, Del J\1nrtenson of Coronado Homes, and John Noble of Seville Homes. Lo\\•cock said he llas received negative feedback from many residents in the cornmunity \\'ho received his information. A letter urging residents to vote and describing a municipal advisory council also \\'as included in the bill . A representative for Harbor Investments said the lcllcr and the fiYe names y,·ere provided to her by~ Jcrr~· Ognibeni, manaj;ler of planned unil i deW!loprnenl administri1tion for til e- ~1ission Viejo Company. "If lhls is true, H's unfortunate.'' said lnnl Arsan. one of the candidates not l1stcd in the billing brochure. ''Nov.' we ha\'e an issue in this c~paign. The voters ha\'e to decide \1hethcr they want fo live in one con1pany-run IOY.'11 or decide their 011TI destinies ... J\lembership in the homeowners' n~socialions of Casla del Sol and Aliso Villa is mandatory. The association~ are controlled by the J\lission Vieio Com- p;:iny with Ognibcni as either president (Sec BILI "\'G, Pag. A2~ Orange Coast • Weather Den~e fog lonight and in th{• f.''1rl ,\ rnorning hours \\cednesday, according to the 1veather st"r\'lt'e. Othf.'r\11sc rnOslly sunny 1v1th hl~hs near ifl a1 the beach~s rlsins to the n11d-80s 111land. l!\SlllE l'ODA l' l '.S. <"ltf'n1i.(t raul J.'lory of ,(i1nufo r(1 (:111t't•r:111y !10s n•o11 t!1c J.fJi-1 f\'ohc>I cl1cn11.st r11 pr1 z.e fo r 1 rsenrch 111 plas11c..~. \V '1 c 1t rr r.cJirrl ot !10111e /11· .:in1d. "fl'.~ t! 0.111 . l!Cl't', /'111 ll OL <l!OO~'f" UCL' Si•c stnr!J u,11/ picture Pn(JC A/. ,,,... lllmlMc-11 L. M, l•'d A• CllllO<"l.I AS C••ufHtd I I II (.,..!Cl 11 c ... ,.__, aJ DHltl HOlotPI Al lfllllrl•I P191! A• E"ttflal-1 •• 'I'"'"'• .. , .. n Ml Gtt11"tl' lol H ... Ol<IM It IM•flun..,, .U , An11 Lllllltrl •1 MoYl4'1 Al MYIMI 1'11_, Alf H•ll-1 H-• .t.4 O<tntt c""''• •• ....... tl.f '""' f4'1 SllK\ Mu-•" •1•11 1~•'11• ... ,.. ~,, Ttl•• .... R All T~•Ut•• Al WHlfl1'f •1 W«lt HtW\ M _!_\ 2 DAIL V PILOT Saddleback By Citize11s Trllfftt· fron1 S:Hklll'l:l.'.ltk Qlllcge Is e:1usin~ prubh:tll.~ tor r1'sidcnt~ from !he foronndo llonil'S ~IU!h or lhe school 111 1\llss!oo Vie10. 1111d thl'y asked fo r !Olllj' relief {1.1und11y. In a letter to the !'iuddlcback Bo!'lrd of Tru~tcl'~ l>t•l ~lnrrcnsnn, pre'ih.ll'nl or 1hC' roron.1d1l h1i1 nN1>1·11t'rs <1SS1X·•alion, <•!tked thi: bo;.1rd 10 pl:iC'e :\ h i g her priority ou wlv!n~ trnfllc problern~. TIK' 1..inh rntranc:t• to the %00-ucrc ca1n- pus no11 is 11.1 t\\l't'Y Park1vav which also li·art~ !o !hi' tr11ct A t1•·•,,fane left tum pat1f'rll gtncll"s ~ludcnt~ into the 1·a1npus. >1h1ll' re:ndents leavi11~ the ad - jACt"nt C.oronndo Homes have I() >1'ai t ~ ,Jl SI .!olOp llfgn Since school ~t:irtffi, {i.!ortcnson !'laid hf· h.1s been bArra_iied >1•ith calls f~nm his nl'1ghbur5. !lOme of >1'hom reportl'<i r hey tr1vt' hnd to >1'3it 20 1ninutes At the stop sign \1hile left turn traffic f)OU red into I he 11chool. · School officials have alleviated the prub lem so1newhnl by putting someone ou! 1ht'rc to direct tr11ffi c Bl rush hours nnd 01:ienini: a lcmporary n cc c-; s on c\'laq~ucrill' l'arkwa y," Mortenson stutl "But \.\'C still have a terrible prcr blen1." ~lorlcnson said the residents .wish o'llly !hat the school would move more quickly 10 deal wi th its growing circulation pro- blems. "It's going 10 get 1-1·orse and worse ," he said. Enrollment al the com1nW1ily colle1::e jumped by 26 percen t this year. Eventually, t>1·0 entrances to the Echoo\ "·ill be built from '-1arguerile Park\\"8Y. acrording to the dilllrict's master plan. "\Ve reel th ese are the most important lo complete.'' '-1ortell900 said . ri.tOrtenson said he has rour.d lhe responsiveness or Saddleback officials to be excellent. "We 've always had an excellent ra· port with them." he said. "~1any of us moved here specifically to be close to a college. We use the college often and many of us take courses up there. '"But "''hen you're lhat close you get all the minuses too." Fron• Page Al ACCUSE ... 30. 1973 "and told him 'John. you have been my conscience. but I didn't follow your ad vice. It's all my fault. If I'd only followed your advice, we wouldn 't be in this situation.'" Frates also praised the tapes of Nix· on's White House conversations, which "''ill be introductd Into evidence begin· ning \Vednesday. Frates said lhet tapes will sho w that Ehrlichman repentedly !old Ni 1 on "\Ve've got to let it all hang out" -tell the truth about \Vatergate. He also stressed that Dean. when he began cooperating with the prDSeeutors. continually blamed Ehrliclunan a n d others rOr acts that he himself com· 1nlllcd, Slrlca rejt'dl?d a motion by defendan t Robert C, Mardian's allomey for a directed verdict of acquittal. In his opening statement. ~1 a rd i an lawyer Davis Bress contended his client never should have been indicted because he was only a second-echelon c<.1mpai~ aide v:lthout any policy input, who had "no idea" \.\hnl was happening. lie also noted !hat ~1 a rd i a n , a Yi01netime San Clemente resident, wrote a six-page memo three day s before the \Vatergate break-in complaining about conditions ij.<t he campaign and descri~ ing the organization as "a fragmented group of JK'Ople . , who in the long run \\"ill cause more problems than they will solvr." '"The tapes may have done some peo- ple harm but they're the greate:oit thing th<it ever hai:tpcned to .John Ehrlichman"' Frates said. "Contrary to obstructing justice. i1 Y.'3'-everything but that and lhc 1:i_pcs will shO\\' that chapter and \/('TS(' OR ANGE COAST is DAILY PILOT "tP>e O••"QO" Co•\I 0•11• Pli.!, WI!" wlllt" i. co .... 111 ... d IN Nt #!o·P•tH. !\ PIJOI•...,... bY , ... Ot.,,ge (O<l\I P"D11'1""q (-y WP.>•l!t •'1•!•<111\ ••t PWlll>"'•d. Mllncl•.f '"'°""" '""'"'· "'' Co•I• ~··· Nt woorT !IP«ll. MU"h!!QIOO'I Hf,l<h •ooml••" Y•llt~ l•QUf'd !IP.ocll. l•••Ml'!.Ollltu.oc' •"" S.O Oom!nlt S.11 J ... n CAG•lfl•"ll A ""qlt •tq..,..~I f<l•l1<1n " pUl>l•\Nd S•!u•ll·I•• l lld Sull<Y•\ Tht P<•"'t!P•t ~•\II•~ D'•"I •• •I )00 ~\I &.y Strttt, Co!.!• Mt-.. (•lllOr~•· t Ufl. Robert N. Weed P•t••0.111 •1'1111 Pulll<- Tho mas Keevi l ED<IDI Thoma~ A. Morphine .w. ... ql"t Editor Charles H Loos Richard P. Nell ,t.\\O\I l•l! M.illlQ+llO Ellllor\ OlfiCI$ ~t• M<'1• no Wfl•I S.Y St'Ht "'"""°" &tMll J»J Nt•J:Drt l.low1t••r1t l~,u~• e···~ l•f'l(;lf"""•""\l M\lft.tl"'tOI\ attcll H-11 &ffl h .,,_,.., .. ., S... t.lt ... "\t JO~ NOlll'l 11 C.m1"" Attl Tt lephone (7 t4) Mt-4321 Classified Ad¥trtlsln9 '4%·5671 san Clemtnlt All Department!: Telephone 492-4420 C-.O"•tlll. 104. 0•_,. Cof•I 1<\11i11!Vlt1141 C.0...-• No "'*' •t .. ,.1 •ll.,.ot•-•..,1, "<!•tor"' "'IJO'l•f fl• "dttlll-111\ "''"" m•• b ••]"l<n~t'fl •111\0u\ \PKl•I Pfrl.,l\li911 ol tOflf'•l~I 0 ..... , So' ,..a (It\\ 1111t11.,. ci.la 8! to"• IM,_., Ct1•;vM1 <,..our!11oon 11'1' ciw•1t• WOO "...,,,1"'¥ 11• .... 11 "'w """''"!1, "'111111 .. "''''"'''>G~\ \,1 QO maflT/lt- r \ ·- Tutsd11, October 15, i q74 CORONADO HOMES REP MAC Candidat• Mort•nso n Fro1n Page Al MILLS ... bleeding. A policeman pulled 1'1rs. Ballistella from the water. "I dldn "t jump into ttie Tidal Basin. I fell," she said . '"I got hyst e ri cal because the officer wa.s drowning me. I dfdn 't need his help, I am an expert swimmer.·• f.1ills' accoWJt stated lhat he arranged a bon voyage party for Gloria Sanchez, a cousin and houseguest of A1rs.· Bat· • tastUla . v.·ho v.·as retu rn ing to her nali"e Argentina. · He said his wife, Polly, had a broken foot and insisted that he take the party out while she stayed home. "Mrs, 1'lills went out with us all the time," Mrs. Batlistella said. "We \•:ere always v.i th other poople -never alone." ?-.lills said in his statement that "after a few refreshments, .r<.1rs. Battistella became ill and I enlisted the help of others in our group to assist me in seeing her safely home," On the way home, with the car being driven by another man. "l\trs. Battistella attempted to leave the car and I al· tempted to prevent il." Mills said. "In the ensuing struggle, her elbow hit my glasses and broke them, resulting in a number of. small cuts around my nose." Asked about those details, Mrs. Bal· tistella said: "I'm not going to say any more -Vt'hatever damage has been done is enough." Mrs. Battistella sa id she was a premedical student in Argentina, and is enrolled in a Washington-area college for the tenn starting in February to take "general biological sciencts." She would not name the college. "I've also been a achoo! teacher and take accounting ," A-trs, Buttistella said. "I spetLd half 1ny life in school." But. she added : ''I don"f know anymo re if it's irriportant to be decent because you get misunderstood.'' She >1'as reluctant to discuss her dan· cing career, saying. "I haven't been a dana-r in a long time -only one n1onth this year." Both t.irs. Battistella and her husband. Eduardo, y.·ho \\'as inter1;ie>1·cd in Buenos Aires. Argentina. ~londay ni ght. said they had been good friends with the ~Ulls's for some time , But they disagreed on v.·hether ri.1rs. Batllstclla ever \.\'Orked In 1he Arkansas Democrat's office, "First. my wife began \vorklng for ~-!rs. ~\Ulls as an assistant and then a year and a half ago she be~an y.·orking for ~Ii Us as a personal secretary," Bat- tistella said, ''They sa w she y,·as very bri~ht." But his \Vife said: "I 1vas nqt on his (Mills') payroll. I did decorate his apa rlment. I am not a p1·ofessional in- terior decorator but l 1nanagc \'c ry \\'ell." "I don't know anything: about that. To my knowledge she has not been on his official pa y r o \I,'· his ad- ministrative assistant, Oscar Goss, said. Mrs. Battistella said she lives with he r son and t~"O daughters. alt teen· agers. She and her husband a r c separated "in a way, bu1 not legally ," she said. adding that "he hasn't been here for four months." She said Alills paid her for t h c decorating job but refused lo say ho"' much. "That is personal." she said. A spokesman for {i.lills denied she "·orked for the ror1gressman. H£tllo ·ween Pnrty Set llt Library A Halloween party for children 5 yea.rs and up has been set for Saturday nl the Missio n Viejo Public Llbrnry. Two programs \\'ill be prc:ienled--One at 11 a.m. and one at 2 p.m. Children are Invited to wear costume!!. according to children 's librarian Trish ~1elcher, but co.stun:tea are not necessary to come. Altracti~ of the day will Include A haunted hou5e lnc1udlng mwnmles, caskets, fo'rankcnsttl n, witches. 1nd l\\'U fl11ns {"Dracula" and "Gh08ta a n d Ghouliea ''). Tite library is located at 24a51 Chrisan· la Drive, Atission VicjO. I ·- \ PAID FOR POSTAGE C11t1 del Sol's Lowc.oclc SEVILLE REPRESENTATIVE MAC Cand ld1te Noble o.ilY l'lltt Sltff l'MI .. ENDORSED FROM AEGEAN HILLS MAC C1ndidat• Gagnebin • AideOaims AcquiSition Not Puslled A General Services Administration of· ficlal familiar wllh the f e d e r a I government'! acquisition of the Laguna Niguel "ziggurat" today denled the building was acquired under pressure from the administration of former presl· dt!nt Richard Nixon. Gerald Meckler, acting regional di rec· tor of business affairs for the GSA , said he knew of "no substance to the charges" contained In a story in today's editions of the Wasttlngton Poat. rucbard D. Hanzlik, a fonner White House aide, told the Post the GSA wanted a building near Nixon 's San Clemente estate. House Panel Will Probe From Page Al BILJ_,ING ... "The memos Wtln'I say it >1'0Uld be for the \Vestem White House, but they would say it orally," the Post quoted Hanzlik as saying. The Post also reported that G S A records ob t a i n e d in San Fran..:19co show the agency wanted the building tor storage oC White House documents office space for the former \Vester~ \Vhite House staff and space for the staff of the Republican National Co m· mit tee. Rocky Funds to Nixon or as a board of directors member. Ognibeni said l..owcock had come to him and asked if he objected to enclosing the statement wi th the five names in the recent bllling. NEW YORK (AP) -The House Judiciary Committee plans to look into possible conne ctio n s between a Rockefeller family contribution to former President Nixon's 1972 campaign and Nixon's reversal of two rulings against an Eastern Airlines acquisition, the Ne\v York T1n1es reported today. In a dispatch from Washington, the Times quoted committee sources a s saying tbe investigation would be in connection with President F or d • s nomination of Nelson A. Rockefeller to be vice president. President Ford fully supports Rocke. feller and "~as complete faith in Gov. Rockefeller's integrity," a White House spokesman said today. 1 Press Secretary Ron Nessen said he did not see "any sense of concern" on Ford's part that the gift-giving disclo- sures about Rockefeller would have any adverse affect on his confirmation by Congress. Less-than a year after the Rockefeller family contributed $200,000 to the Nixon campaign , Nixon cited u n s pe ci f led "foreign policy reasora" in reversing two Civil Aeronautics Board rulings and allowed Eastern to acqui re Cariba.ir, a Puerto rucan-based airline, according to The Times. The Rockefellers have large holdings in Eastern. The Ti.mes saul "there appeared to be no evidence 8.t Urls point of a con- necl ion between the Rockefeller con- tribution and the Ni1on ruling. But com- mittee ~es said the timing ol the Frona Page Al SHIFT ... chose not to join In the debate. 11Jis morning, Art Cook, the firm's manager ci conununity information pro- grams. said that the firm's position is that when an issue such as secession affects a large S'Cgment or the ctlm· munity the company offers help where it Can . He characterized the firm's role as a-'.~elping position.'' l:ii:pistrano Unified Trust~ G e orge \Vhite found no fault with the develop- ment finn's assistance in the report, "I rind no fault in it at al\," he said. "In fact, I believe lhey did a great service." Capist rano Trustee William Thompson. whose formal representation area in- cludes the section, stressed that no one u-'a! l.rying-to rorc-e the Issue on resir:lents. • \Ve need to know if people really want it to happen. No one is trying to sell this plan to anyone ... \Ve 1von't go for it, unless the people really wanl it to happen," he said. Smith suggested that one means or seeking a collective opinion on the shift woold be a formal poll of all residents in the area. He indicated thal he would propose such a plan lo his board In a subsequent action session. Capistrano Unified Trustee Bob Hurst "'amed that democracy might not be served, because one of two enabling processes would amowit lo p e I i t i o n s srekin~ the ~hift and the legal re- quirement that only 25 percent of the rl!Sidcnts in the area need sign the documents. Frorn there . the proposal would be heard and acted upon by the COlmty C:Ommittee on School District Organlza· !Ion and then that body's recon1menda· tion would go to the Orange C:Ounty Board of Education. The county board could act on the issue wlthoul a public election, unless one er the otl1er district formally o_pposed the Idea. If ~uch opposition ca.me, the elecUon would be held in the affected section. "Prom the indications I get. this issue might never be voted upon by the people involved," said llu.rst. l\"orlhrop Res ponds LOS ANGELES (AP ) -An aind;ivit charging Northrop Corp. with 13 years of Illegal campa.Jgn contribution1 i s "regre:ttable'' pnd ' 1 m a k e 1 assertions b8sed on prd:tTl•l and unve.rlfied In· formallon which can be misleading," the Los Angeles-based aerospace firm said Monday. Northrop issued the state- ment In response to an affidavit flied Inst week In a shareholders suit. ' - events raised questlo~ in the minds of some members." The newspaper said the circumstances of the contribution 'A'Ollid be investigated as part of the conunittee's examination of any influen~ the Rockefeller family may have ex:erted on government agen- cies and policy, Rockefeller's press secretary, Hugh :P.1orrow, said the former New York governor owned no stock in Eastern Airl ines . Butthe'flmessaid Rockefeller's brother Laurance was iden- tified as the single largest stockholder in the air carriei-In a 1972 jtUdy. In addition, the Chase M a n h a t t a n Bank, the Rock efeller family bank, holds 6.1 pereent of Eastern Airlines stock in trust and Is the prime lender of a $300 million loan to th e <tlrllne, the Times said. Meanwhile, Senate Democratic whip Robert C. Byrd said today a book about Arthur J. Goldberg "is pretty reminis- cent of the dirty tricks in the Ni\on era." He and a Republican member ol the Senate Rules Committee agreed that the matter would call for the reopening of .-vlce-presidenUal confinnation hear- ings for Rockefeller. Rockefeller has taken responsibility for the book, published in 1970 when Goldberg was Rockefeller's unsuccessful opponent for governor of New York. Bicycle Safety Tests Scheduled At Viejo School An Automobile Club of So u t h e r n calitomia sponsored bicycle safety check will be held Wednesday at Mission Vie- jo's Del Cerro Elementary School. Automobile technlcl11.ns will be on hand from 9 a.rn . to check wheel and frame alignment, spokes, bearing, b r a k e s , handlebars, grips, ti ghts and renectors. ~tore than 150 students are expected to have their bikes checked. "Provided annually to more than 55,800 cyclists in Southern California, this free auto club service stimulates an awa- reness of a.are cycling and alert! students and parents to needed repairs and , or des irable safety aocessories," said ~1ich· ael O'Steen, district office m];nager. The club provides the thspections free at the request of schools. ''[ felt their original letter was too strong, so I tried to mal:e it more an information · letter," Ognibenl said. It was labelled "Information Bulletin" and had no company emblem o r signature. The fi\•e canilidates \\"ere iden tified as people who "represent homowners associations within the ;\tission Vi ejo Planned C:Omm unily.'' Ognibeni said after L<>weock 's cam- paign committee got an okay from him they went to Harbor, who also cleared the in rorma tion after dlecking back with Ognibeni. Lowcock said he did not feel the mailing was an endorsement by Harbor Investments or the Mlssion Viejo Corn· pany, But one of the other candidates, Jeane Gagnebin. said she did feel en· dorsed. "I would have been upset if they hadn't included my name," she said. "I didn't think it was terribly ../J'911g. They asked me beforehand if they could use my name. · "I didn't see anything wrong wilh it. but I think from their standpoint It was probably a little bit foolish." Ognibeni said If there had been other candidates from the mandatory homeowners associations, they v.'Ould have been listed as welt "The idea is that there should be some representative on the new council of the m a n d a t o r y as!IOCia· lions-someone who understands their problems." Ognibeni said. The letter also urged residents to register to vote and take rn interest in the campaign. So far in the contest for the five seats on the first quasi-city council , campaigning has been on a very low-pro- file, The council will meet regularly to review issues of local concern In law enforcement, parks and recreation. park· ing and traffic and land use and develop- ment. It >1'iil them make recommendations to lhe Orange County B o a r d of Supervisors. who make all finaJ decisions regarding Mission Vie}o and the re!t o·f the Saddleback Valley. l\1ission Viejo Is not a city and as such is subject lo county jurisdiction. "Most of the candidates don 't have enough money to campaign much," said Ken Ledesma, president ol the Mlsslon Viejo Homeowners As90Clation which in· itiated the MAC formation. "Most people are trying to form some loose slates and pool their dollars," ...he added. ·* * * PRESSURE. •• been OC('Upied and is still empty except for ()ffice furniture . The Post said the dea l actually cost taxpayers close to $18 million mo.re because some of land the government traded away is now needed. Richard D. · Ha nzlik , a fo nner White House aide, told the pape r he made calls on behalf of the transaction in 1971 while he was an assistant lo former presidential counselor Robert H. Finch. "They (GSA) wanted a building near San Clemente," Hanzlik said, ' 'The memos won't say it would be for the \Vestem \Vhite House, but they y.·ould say it orally." Fin ch. a trustee of the Richnrd Ni xon Foundation , said In an interview that he pushed the idea or acquiring a buildlng near San ~i;inente lo help sup- port the \Vestem \Vflite House because he felt lbe GSA had an obllgallon to store ·Nixon's recordll. The Nixon Foun- dation was set up to build a library for the ex-presif!ent. Hanzlik said pressure also came from Rockv.·ell employes w h o coolrlbuted $98,000 to Nixon 's 1972 re-elect.ion cam· paign. The office of Management and Budget -which originally opposed GSA 's ac· quisitlon of the building -called it a "white elephant" because of its slr.e and distance from Los Angeles and San Dieg9, the paper said. The building was built for Rockwell International Corp., formerly North American Rockwell Corp., a I a r g e defense and aerospace contractor. The Post said the GSA denied the bu ilding was acquired to store Nixon 's personal records, but GSA records ob- tained ,in San Francisco show that the agency wanted the building £or storage of White House documents and for office space for the fonner \\'es tem \Vhitc tlouse staff and GOP National Com· 1nittee in 1972. Boy Struck hy Train OCEANSIDE (AP) -Billy Franlr, 16, of Carson, was struck by a freight train and carried several hundred feet Morxlay, suffering a broken ann and skull fracture. The boy apparently had been sleeping partly on the track, police said. AROUND · THE CORNER AND UP YOUR STREET I WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF· T/MES WH Y WE LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH." SEVERAL ANSWERS POP UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STORES IN SHOPPING CE NTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY; WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE. WITH OUR SHOWROOM OFFICES AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY, THERE IS AM: PLEPARKING WITH LITTLE TRAFFIC CONGESTION LEADING TO.US. THE SITUATION HAS MADE us MORE COMPETITIVE AND we' ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE INCREASED CIJR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR EIGHTEEN YEARS, AND HAVE EX· PANDED FIVE TIMES AT THI S LOCATION. AID EN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTAMISA 646-4838 ,HOURS: M ... tln'lhws.. t lo S:JO-NI. f '9t-SAT, t :J0'9 I I I 7 ·• 7 • • t • Irvine ,_. ED ITION VOL. 67, NO: 288, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ' ' --- .., ..- I Today's Fblal N.Y. St.eeks •• TEN CENTS \ Saddlehacl{ College Will • State Funds As of the 1975-76 schOol y~r, every penny or state Jlid to building programs at Saddleback CoUege "'ill be cut off. college trustees learned Monday. Saddleback received 51 percent of its funding for construction on the 200-acre campus from the state last year. II is one of three community rollege districts to be cut on, according to college Supt. Robert Lombardi. He explained it is the relative wealth of the Saddleback College District that detennined the cutoff. The other l\vO districts affctcd are West liills in Coa· linga aod \\1est Kern . Both are oll·pro- ducing areas. ..1 am not satisfied. I don't like what I see here at all," Lombardi told the shocked trustees. The state decision, based on a new • formula determined by a finance com· mittee of commun1iy c o 11 e g e ad- ministrators. brings to a sudden halt, at feast temporarily, Saddleback's plans for a new performing arts complex and a physical education racility. Acknowledging that the cutoff might have some political implicati:>ns, Loni· bardi said, "\Vhen important committees are put together on things like this you have to fight for your O\\'O di strict. You have to be there. ''There is a group that got their cut out or this,'' he added. "Though I y,·ouldn't necessarily want to see that in the paper. I know whnt this 'i\'Orld is about." "\Vhat I mean Is, the people who put together the formula made darn sure they weren't injured by the formula. J can ·1 believe Saddleback is that much wealthier than all the other districts in the state." Trustees asked for more infornw.tion on the new state formula which cut Saddleback oul. Lombardi sald it is very compllcated to explain. "But tbc end result is simple. \\'hen it comes to how much \\'C get it's a big fat zero." He said he and other district ad· ministrators planned to go to Sacramento to fight the decision. "\\le may have great wealth. but v.·e also have great need," he said. The new formula resulted because the state ran out of money for community college constfuCtion, <!ccording to Fred • Bremer. president -0f the college and now in charge of facilities p I a 11 n in g research "The stat~· had plann('d lo pul a bond issue on the ~OVt!mber b.:11lot for $250 million to replenish the fund, but the idea y,•as abandonl'<i when the Post- Secondary Education Com m i s s ion reeoznmended against it," Bren1er said. The Board of Governors of I h c California Con1mun1ty Colleges hopes lo use money fro1n the CCC general fund for the in!cri1n, Bretncr said. That was done se veral years ugo in a light spot bctY•ecn bonds, be sald. OS anos Ie 0 'Elarli.cla111a1a Used' Attorney Blasts Nixon .. at Trial U,I Or"'I"' ON THE OFFENSIVE · ProSecutor Ben-Veniste lrl'i ne School Officials Draft - Policy Outline_ Irvine school officials are drafting an outline for a new series of · parent ad· visory groups designed to keep the di,s. trict from "getting way off track." A first draft of the policy setting up "school advisory forums'' was challenged at a recent school board meeting by Trus.ec Diaries Boulanger. The groups will be set up for each of the distri crs 1 l schoots and are designed to Jet parents tell the school administration \\'hether it is doing an acceptable job. Boulanger objected to the wording of the first draft, contending that it would give such Rroups too much direct power over school affa irs. The plan, said Superintendent A. Stanley Corey, is nol specifically design· ed as a response to parents.·who, in recent months. demanded a "fun~ dament3\" school as $ alternative to what they see as an overly I i be r a I district education program. ''But that ccrtalnly would be one of the things it does," Corey $Sid. Composed ol parents, teachers1 the principal and in som~ cases stude~ts , the forum.s would not Gupplanl exlsUng perent teacher groups, Corey said. Those schools which already have In· fonnal groups like those proposed Y.'Ollld be asked to reori1anlze the group to confonn with the boord l'f!gulatfons. Corey <kscribed the groups as a way the district can kttp track of how v.·cJJ the dl1lrlct Is mtttlng the desires of parents In its menns or educating pupils. The groups would advise principals on programs and evaluate U1e school's performance.. A rewritten policy Is to be considered by the bo4rd al its next meeting Oct. JO. WASHINGTON (UPI ) -John D . Ebrlichman's attorney charged today tha t fonner ··President Nixon "deceived, misled, lied to aad used " and finally Iorred a resignation from his former No. Z aide in order "to save his O)Vn necl:." EhrUchman, one of five former Nixon associates on trial in the Watergate cover-up. was port.rayed by defense at· tomey William S. Frates as a victim of the plot w ho "repeatedly recom· meoded" that Nixon disclose the truth. It was the first time EhrHchman turn- WATERGATE 'S LIDDY OUT ON BAIL, Page A4 COLUMBUS DAY GROUP CRITICIZES JUDGE -Story, Al2 ed accuser of Nixon, whom he served as chief domestic adviser in the \Vhite House until April, 1973, when t h e Watergate scandal became a m a j o r issu Nixon; named-.m-mrtmtt~n­ spirator in the cover-u,p, has b e e n pardoned by President Ford and cannot be tried for any Watergate-related in· cidents. Former White Hoose counsel John \V. Dean III, previously Nixon's chief ac- cuser, was lo testify later in the day for the prosecuUoo -whose case also was based on the complicity of the former president. "Richard-Nixon deceived, 171isled, lied to and used John Ehrlichm!fti to cover up h~ own knowledge and activities. while publicly s t a t i n g that John Ehrlichman was one of the 'finest public se~ts he had ever kno"'n,'' Frates tohMhe jury. "He (Nixon ) was de Ii b e-rate I y withholding information from him - covering up to save his own neck. In simple terms, r-.tr. Ehrlichman had been had by his boss, the president of the United States." Frates said Ebrllchman's decision to leave the White House was a "forced (S.. ACCUSED, Page A!) ln,ine Students Will Ride Along l1i Police Cars Teenagers seen' in the back seats of Irvine pol1cecarsincoming \\~eks may be just along for the ride, ratOer than en route to jail. 'A tw" ride along program has just gone into operation, giving Irvine in- termediate and high school students an opportunity to watch police work. School programs allow the students to reeeive course credit for riding with the patrolling cars from 6 to 10 p.m. RegulaUoos for lhe program, said Acting Director or Public Safety Paul Brady, include waivers signed by pRrents lirting liability from the police depart· menl In the event 11 rider Is tnjured. JlidtrS must be ''neat and cle•n and prtPerly atUred, including shoes." ae- cording to M description of the program. Tape recorderS, camt!ras and simlla.r devices are not permJ~ted. On extreme~v hazardous c· "s. Brady $8id, riders will be dropped off lilnd told to wait until another car can pick them up. ' P11111pki11 Patel• helter-skelter durinfi the ~mn1er. we!!_ s![i ed rom t e vines and inea up 1n rows fo maKc oa - ing easier. With Hallo\Veeh lurking just around the cor.!1£!i_ workers 1n this field near El Toro l\ ar1ne Corps Air Station are readying thousands of jack-a-lan- terns for the market. The pumpkjns, wh.ich grew -"------------- lrvi11e Plan11ers Approve Anti-noise Ordina11ce An ordinance des igned to keep things Quiet in Irvine \\•as approved by the planning commission Monday and sent on to the city council. The noise ordinance is aimed at quieting loud or irritating noises and y,·ould be enforced by the Orange County Health Department. The ordinance sets a m a x i m u m daytime noise level of 50 decibels of a frequency to which the human car · is sensitive. The permissible noise would drop to 45 decibels at night. Ellwyn Brickson. Orange C o u n t y lfeallh Department noise con l r o I specialist. said 65 decibel£. a rating higher than that permitted by t he ordinance, is the level of a conversational human \'Oice six feet from the listener. An our<!oor air condltioner at 10 feet, he s!id, y,·ould measure 66 decibels. The ordinance is designed to separate offensive noises from the background noise usually present but seldom noticed. Planning Commissioner Roland Schinz- inger, an engineering professo r at UC Irvine. said the ordinance is intended "rnsislly to squelch the source of noise." Enforcement. he said, would be dif. ficult if all noise complaints had to be formall y processed by the health depa rllncnL . The main value, he said. is as a lever in asking neighbors to cut doY.n the noise because il 's against the law. jSee NO ISE, Page A2) '"lt"s All True" Stripp er Su11ports ~tills' Stor y WASHINGTON (AP ) -Breaking a week-long silence. the \VOman involved in a bizarre incident with Rep. Wilbur D. ~1Jlls has backed up his version and complained that the press "is tryinc to destroy a great man." "Whllt ?i1r. Mills said was exnctly what h!lppened," the 38-yeaNild Ars:en· tlnian and fonner dancer sakl. in,. a telephone interview ~ night .She n!P-Ortedly worked .as: a sltlpptr , in a Washington nightclub and wm blllcd u "lbe ArMJlline firecn!:cke(." Speaking iTI a soft, slightly accented \•o\ct and sounding at times clo~ to tears, Annabel Battistella said that ac- coun ts of the episode may a!So ruin hmc and my chances of going bock to school." But she expressed ron!idenet: that the polillca\ carL'Cr of ~Ull$. chairman of lhe House \Vays and '.\leans Committee. woold not ~ ruined by the episode "'hlch took place in the predav.·n hours or Oct. 7. '1: am 11\irt Whel;' he 8.0CJ to ~rkamas. be wUJ be able. to talk to his poople like be U>ed to," she sold. • • l1 rs.~ BJtlistella rtfu!Cd to claborate on lifitls stat~mcnl Dbqvt tbe events of Oct. 7 beyond AAylng ii ~.a.s accurate. But ahe differed "'1th LT, S. P3rlt Police accounts In at leas1 one aspect. M cc said Mic Jurapcd !Dto tile Tidal &sJn, a blcltwater of the Potomac f\lY<fl_ ofter , poll<~ stopp.d Ml 11 • • speeowg, unl~hted car and be tmergtd ,(Seo ~llLts, 1'1180 All -' Se r1!ice St ation .4ttendu11 t Narne<l In l rvine Decll.h By ARTHUTt It VINSEL ot tht Dolly PHot sr~u A San Pedro servlce ~talion nttendant accused of hacking a Long Beach girl in the foreh ead \1'ith a hatchet Friday is also charged today as a suspect in the slaying of a \\'Olnan whose nude body v.·as dump<'d on a lonely rural road in !rvi ne three \1·ceks HJ!:O. Gerald J . Shill .Jr., 27, of 523 \\' . .!~th St .• San Pedro is already booked on suspi· cion of attempted rape and atten,plrd murder in ('Onncction 1vith the grizly Sll;- nal }!ill incident four days ago. .. \Ve have a hold on hiln no•v for sus- picion of murder." Police OetCC'li,·e LL George Lorton said today fol\ov.·inJ ques· tioning or the suspect. "\\1c ta\kl:'d to him yestcrd::iy (Ind 11c do have a \eh1cle." LL l..onon expla in€'d. He said a dainagcd pickup truck ·scdan of the saml' }'l'•~r. color <HHI description of I.hat l>clic1 cd involve r! tn the Eept. 22 n1urdrr or Bonnie Faye Davis. 22. has been 1mpou11dC'r Jnvesti,;:n!ors found i\'lr·s. Davis' nude body la id in 11 dllrh ;Jlong R<trr(lnca Road ncnr J rffrr.\' Hoad in n remote (lrca or I r ,. 1 n c eflrly Iha! Sun· dnv mor111n jl. her c!o1h1nji! nnd unde r· .1u1rml:'n!s 1or,srd llUl a~ thou:.:tti fron1 11 movin11 car Qucstkmin~ of ~no1111 :i~w1.·tc~ lt•d IStt SUSPF:CT. l'a~e A21 Bu rgl::i r Gets 82,000 < Ju Office F.qnipmcnl A burglnr us1n~ a pair of channl'I gnp locking pliers tv.\stt'd 01"1en the door ol an Jr\~nc firm ~londay. !iilealing some $2.000 worth of office l.'f1ulpment Hcl<'n Lt;c. or the flrnnln1nn Con1pany, • rent Mlate brokcr:.:age oil 17802 Sky Park Clrcle, told police lhe loss Includ- ed nn electric: type"titer, an addinA machine and a calClJlator . ') t\ bond issue probably \\'ill be pul lo vote.rs by June 1976. he added. Lo1nbardi is planning to challenge lht cutoff. ..J'n1 Tl(lt. sure v.·hat y,·e'll do," Lorn· bardi ~id. "If the formula doesn't cive us what w• need. y,•e'll have to try to change the formula ." L:ntil that h:1ppcns. Lombardi said, the school v.·ill seek special ll'&islation and will try for some adjustn1ent from 1he statey,•idc community college board. Saddleback trustees set a s pc c I a 1 niectlng to discuss the situation for 7: 30 p.m. i\londay at the ca1npus library. ' Irvine Gets I 33-year-old By DO'JGJ.AS FRJTZSClJE 01 tlM Dirty Pli.t Slllf Irvine council members are ex- pected to appoint Leo Peart. tt.e young police ctrief from the fanning comrnu· nity of Los Banos. as the city's new di· rector of public safety tonight. Irvine officials ha ve refused to releaSe information about 1he man "ilo will organize the city's fir:sl police. fortt prior lo lhe 6:30 p.m. meeting al city hall. 42111 Campus Dri\·e. But at a press conference In ~ Banos ~tonday. Peart. Los Banos police chief for !he pas t yea r and a half. announced . his intention 10 accept the Irvine post. The Los Banos P o 1 i c e Department spokesmen today said Peart had left on a plane for Irvine. In the growing community of ~ BAnos, which doubled its population to t 1.000 in the pr1st decade, the 33-year· old chief has developed a reputation fo.r his v.·ork 1,1.•i\.h youth. Los Banos' Finance Director Bob Broy,11 descr!bed Peart as "soft spoken and quiet mannered. He·s very highly thought of by other police chiefs In/ Jl;ferced count.y " In addition to his duties as police ch-ief, BroY.'ll said. Peart has tauAht police science classes in colleges in that area. Peart holds a master's degree in criminal justice administration and has about IO years <lf kiw enforcement experience. Brown said. Peart has also \rorked for the citi~ or Long Beach and Palo Alto, Bro\\'n said. Los Banos Enterprise Editor Bob \Vilson said Peart is "aly,·ays cooperative and a~a)'S has an open doo r. "If he has any faults at all . ifs that he's too ambitious ." \Vi Ison said. Rapid grO'i\'lh of Los Banos' population has been due largely to construction of the Sa n Luis Dam and reser\'otr (Ind the Central California Irrigation prD- jcct. Broy,·n said . Gro.,.,th of the city, Brown said. re-- quired a change from "a small tO\\'Tl police force to what I think is a really top notch department" 1under Peart 's control. The department has 27 employes In- /See CHI EF, Page At\ ~ra::a :~ast \\'e athe r Dense fog tonight and in the earl~· nlorning hours \Vednesd;iy, according to !h~ weather scrvi~c. Otherv.·isc 1nostl y sunny \\'ilh highs near 70 (ll the beachl"S rising 10 th e mid·80s Inland. I NSIDE 'l'ODAY U.S. cllc1n1st Poul l"lory nf S1011ford U111tier.~11u llas won tlie 1914 1Nobel cl1e n11.ttry pr1.:e for rcse11icll hi plt1.~tlcs. \V h t 11 re(lched al J1Qn1e hi> 'aid, "I t's 6 o 1n l1r re, l 'nr 1101 au·oke 11e1 ' Set: s1ur11 a11d ptct11Nl Page A-1. e r .... 11MCW1<t1. 11 l . ,,.,, ..... .., Cllii.n>l.o A.I c .. nu._o •1·11 Ctmlft •1 c,.n_'11 •1 ~tll Holl{tl At ••n• ... 11 ,.,, "' 'Ellftf't1l11mon1 1.1 l<lfll!W.t •1•11 Hv O.,.l!Mr ti.I Htr~•t I' t11i.nn1111tt~ ... ,,1 ·~ .... _... 11 Mtvl._ I.I "'"''ti.It' .b .... , "'" N•ll-1 Ntw1 At 0 Flfltl (IMlll1 At '••le .,., SNrl' •• .., Stvttl. M••-tll At•n t1!"4• '•rttr Alt , ..... 11 .. ~ 1111 r'",..,.. •• WNfMI At w ...... Iott•, ,t,j " • • A 2 OAILV PILOT ___ Twsday, o,tobrr 15, 1974 ' 'Nixon to Testily?· • Sifi,ccr JJla11s flea ri1ig Thursdll'.)" WASlllNGTON 1UPll -U.S. District Judge Jbhp .J . Slrlc1 to- day schcdulccl a hearing for Thursday afternoon on whether former Preside ol Nixon ~liould be co1npeUcd to tesUfy 1t 'tbe W1terg1te cover-up trial of five for nl'Cr.aldcs. "l· think the sooner we dispose of this the better ort we'll be" Sirica, guid. 11nnounc1n g the hearin g would be held after the tri~l ;idJOnrns for the day 'l'hursday. Nixon. 11::11ncd iu1 un indil'ted co-conspirator in the case but Jurlioned by President Ford frorn any possible prosecution, was .subpoena ed to testify buth by the defense and the prosecution. ~lis lawyers asked Sl rica to excuse Nixon from testifying, con- tcndn1g 011 the ad\'1rc of doctors that traveling to \Vashington would pose ":1 serious risk to his hcat1h." !Story, Page 1\3) · .__ Ocfenda nl John D. £hrltch1nan. Nixon's for1ner No. 2 aide, con· tend:, the torrncr president is "an indispensable witness" and must be co1npelled to provide testirnony under oath in some form. Ni xon Reportedly Used Pressure for Ziggui:at \\'ASHl!\GTO~ jUP1) -'f11e Nixon AdrrHnlstratlon pressured the General Servlres Ad1n1n1s tr;;illon to trade S 2 7 million u1 usable ~ovenlmc:i'lt property for a huge, unusl'd building so the former president could kl.-ep his rL'('()rds near his home in San Clemente, the \\1ashing· tori Post reported toclny. The Post said the building, a S<!ven- story pyramld·shapt.'<I st ructure on c quarter lhe site or the PNltagon. ·was acquired r r o m nock"·cll lntt'rnatiooal Corp. ...,·ithin the last two years for so1ne $20 million v.'Orth at Air Farce property. The build.ins. located in Laguna Nlguel ·tr Offi ('ial of GS A Denies Press ure 011 Zi ggurat Buy A General Services Administration of· ncial femlUar with the f e d er a I gavemment's acqulsilion at the Laguna Niguel ''iiggurat" today denied the building was acquired under pressure from the administration af fonner presi- dent Richard Nixon. Gerald ~teckler, acting regional dirl!C· tor of busineSll all.a irs for the GSA , said he knew of "na substance ta the charges'' containoo in a story in today 's editions of the \Vashington Post. Richard D. fJanz lik, a fonner \Vhite House aide, told the Post the GSA \Vanted a building nea r Nixon's San Clemente estate. "The memos won't say it \\'ould be for the Western \Vhite House, but they would say it orally," the Past quoted llanzlik as saying. The Post also reported that GS A ~ o bt al n e d in San Fran..:isco show the agency wanted Ille building far storage al Wh.ite House document!, of!ice spa ce for the fonner Western White House staff and space for the sUlft of th"F Republican National COm· mittee. ----------- 110 .'VEl'illOONERS • ' St:ALED OU T ~t ESTRE. lt:ily (UPI) -Paolo Pa,•an could not carry hi~ bride, Anna, across th<· !hr~hold , because when the couple returned home from their wedding ban· <iuet thoy round only solid ·wall \Vherc their :1partn1 cn1 door :should have been. lJW!ntls had bricked up the door and painted.} it to match the rest or the wall as a practicaljake. ORAN GE COAST ·~ DAILY PILOT 1,.. Ot.,.qo (IW\I 0.11'1' ll'llOt. will! wllidl ll (11'"'&<'1<0 ,,~ t.t ...,·f'•tl\, tl pulMl!.l'otd "' ll>o> O•~"'" C11t11 l'u~l tlll"'9 ~...,, s.e~,.,~ ~d•1"1"1• ••t DY~l•\hotd Mone!•• Ul•""'I~ Ft•IMIY. t<o< C11i. Mt-w. N••llClf1 !Ir..:~. HuntlRqlO<I ,,.,..~ f11""'1.,11 11.ilf• L•~ S.t<Pl. ""'"' S.O<J!ObO< • And Sottl a~""'Mt Soll\ Jut" CtO<l\'f"" ~ \•llOlf 1t9•on•I O'll•h_, t• 111>~•\Nd S.~IY•a•v• ••d ~UflelfV' '"-°""'It.ID•• fl..itl•lh•"'J l>'A"I ,, •I IOO ~·' ~· ~ ... ,,, Co1C• ""-.... (..l•tO•l\o~t2111. Robert N. Weed "'•••C11111 •"II "°fll•-r - a commun ity 10 miles from NlxOn's ('State in San Clen1ente -cost~ $27 million to construct but w:is appraised for $20 1nillion in 1972. According to the Post , the GSA said the purpose of the trade was to gel a place lo hoose federal offices and records In Southern California -but. the pape r said, tbe building has never been occupied and is still emply except for office furniture . The Post said the deal actually cost taxpayers close to SIB million more because some of land the government traded away is now needed. Richard 0 . Hanxllk, a former White House aide, told the paper he made calls oo behalf of the transactian in 1971 while be was an assistant to former presidential counselor Robert H. Finch. '"Ibey (GSA) wanted a building near San Clemente," Hanzlik said, ''The me.mas won'l say it would be tar the \Vestem White House , but they would say it orally." ,. Fl.ilch-;-atrustee of the. RJchard Nixon Foundation, said in an interview that he pushed the idea of acquiring a building near San Clemente lo help sup- port the Western White House because he felt . the GSA had an obllgatlon to store Nt1oo's records. The Nixon Foon- dation was sel up to build a library for the ex-president. Hanzlik said pre!SUI"e also came from Rockwell emp!oyes w ho contributed 598,000 to Nl1on'il 1972 re-election cam· peign. The office of l\Ianagement and Budget -which ariginally oppased GS).'s ac- quisition of the building -called It a "white elephant" because af lt.s iilze and distance from Los Angeles and San Diego, the paper said. The building wu built fo r Rockv,,ell International Corp.. farmerly N o r t h American Rockwell Corp., a I a r g e deferue and aerospace contractor. The Past said the GSA dcT!ied the building "'as acquired to store Nixon's personal records, but GSA records ob- tained in San Francisco show that the agency wanted the building for storage of White H~documents and for a!fice space for the former W~stem White Hoose staff and GOP National Com- mittee in 1972. ' ·. From Page 'Al CHIEF ... c11Jdiog_I6 s!ft:orn_poti cemen. The city, 70.:nl!es northwest of F'resno, has had a minor racial problem resulting from the arrest of a Mexlcan-Ameriran youth a~ the county fairground s, the Enterprise editor said . Peart, he said. has been instrument al in smoothing relations bctwet:!n the Angla a n d ri.le:dcan·American communities :since, he said. Los Banos, \Vil.son said, has a fa irly low level of crime. Typical arrests, he said, include "a couple of murders of passion. o r maybe arresting a kid wllh !Orne mari· juana. ~Ioslly run of the mlll." During faur monlhs \Yhen lhe Uis llanos city manager \Vas Ill, \Vi\son said, Peart held the dual role of city mnnager and police chief. \\'hlle chief, Pea'rt was a Is o In· strumental in getting a new Los Banoli police station built with joint use of city and county lunds. Uro1,•:n said. , • Bark ho Soclel!J Robc1t Lee Green, 22 , the first Pittsburgh man to accept Pres- ident Ford's amnesty program, says he's relieved and hopes to use hi s two years of public service to prepare for a career as a cook and baker. 111 Front Page Al ACCUSE ... resignation . . . so that beat would be taken-off the President and the President standing there knowing that he was the one CO\'ering up." He said tht evidence \\'OUld show that Nixon summoned Ehrllchman ta Camp David, Md . prlar ta bis resignation April 30, 1973 "and told him 'John, yau have been my conscience, but I dldn't follow your advice. It's all my fault. U I'd only follOwed ·your advice, we wouldn't be in this situation.'" .Frates also praised the tapes of Nix· on's White House conversations, which will be introduced Into evidence begin· nlng Wecin<sday. Frate:s said tbet tapes will show that · Ehrlichman repeatedly told N i :x Q. n "We've got to let 11 all hang out" -tell the truth about Watergate. He also stressed that Dean, w h e n he began cooperating with the prosecutors, continWllly blam<d Ehrliclunan a n d others for acts that he himself com· mitted. Slrica rejected a motion by defendant Robe.rt C. Mardian's attorney far a directed verd~ of acquittal. fn his openirlg statement, M a r d l a n lawyer Davis Bress contended his client never shoold have been Indicted because he was only a second-echelon campaign alde withaut any policy input, wha had "no Idea" what waa happening. l·Ie also nOtcd that hi a rd l an , a sometime San Clemente resident. wrote a six-page memo three days before the \Vatergate break-in <.'Omplaining about conditions in the campaign and describ- ing the ~anliation . as "a fr11gmented grouPQf peOple .-•. -Who-in Uie long run \viii cause more problems than they will oolve." Fro1n Page A l SUSPECT ... to information from a Lons Beach man that 11e ha<I seeDfrs. "IJaVis,WVorCed mother or two small children, the previous night. He said htrs. Davis \vas talking to a large man with a reddish beard at the earner of Pacific C'.oast Highway and Ume Avenue, near a truck-sedan vehicle. He has since been questioned under a deep hypnotic trance induced by a medical doctar occasion,ally used to as- sist witnesses ta criminal cases In recall- ing obscure detalls that might prove val- uable . Detective LI. Lort.an did not SllY i{ lhe Westminster physician's work with the unidentlfied potential murder case witness helped in this instanct. The same doctor placed Irvine Detec- tive Steve Nash hlmselC ln a .trance some t"·o years a~: after he was tfle victim of a murder attempt by ~ a Hcssinns' motarcycle gang chieftain near the ~1me spot where Mrs . Davis' body "'as round. .. N.ew · Snag May Appear Rocky Gift May Be Tied to A irline Ruling NE\)' YORK (AP) -Th< II o u ae Judidll'1 Committee plans lo look into paMlble cannectJans between a Rockefeller family contribution ta Carmer President Nixon's 1972 ct1mpalsn and Nixon's reversal or twa nilingii against an Eaiitem Airlines acquisition, the New Yark 1\n1es reported today. 1n a diapotch trom Washiniton, lhe Times qootoc\ committee sources a s saying the investigation wou,ld be in connection . "'ith President F o rd ' s nomination of Nelwn A. Rockefeller ta be vice preskfeot. , President Ford fully supports Rocke- feller and "has tomplete faith in Gov. Rockefeller's integrity," a \\'hite Hoose spokesman said today. Press Secretar;i Ron Nessen said he did not see "any sense ot concern" on Ford's part. that the gift.glvtng disclo- sures about Rockefeller •rculd have any adverse effect an his confirmaUon by Congrm. Less than a year afttr the Rockefeller tamlly oontrlbuted '200.000 to the Nixon. campaign, Nlxon cited u n specif I e d "torelgn policy reasons" in reversing t"'x:i Civll Aeronnulics Board ruJlngs and allowed Eastern to acquire Carlbair, a Puerto Rican-based airline, according to The Times. The Rockefelleni ha·ve large"--"haldings in Eastern. The Times s~ud "there appeared to be no evidence at this point of a (..'()1)- nection between the Rockefeller con- tribution and the Nixon ruling. But com- mittee sources said the timing of the events raised questians in the minds of some members." The newspaper said the circumstances of the contrtbulloo v.·ould be inve!t.lgated as .,art of the committee's examinatian af any Infl uence the Rockefeller family may luive exerted on govermne.nt agen- c{e• and policy. kockcfeller's pres,, secretary, Hugh Marrow, said the former New York governor awned no stock In Eastern Al r ll n ea. Bu t the T i me s s a id Rockefeller's brather Laurance was Iden· tined as the &Ingle largest stockbalder ln the air carrier In a 1972 study. In addition, the Chase M a n h a t t a n Ba nk, the Rockefeller tamily bank, halds 8.1 percent at East.em Airlines. atock In trust and ii the prime lender of a $300 million loan to the airline, the Times said. Meanwhile, Senate Democratic whip Robert C. Byrd Slid loday a book about Art.bur J. Galdberg "is pretty reminis- cent ~ the dirty tricks in the Nixon era." He and a a.publican member of the Senate Rulea Qxnmlttee agreed that the matter would call far the reope.nl.ng al vice-presidential conrmnatloo bear· lng:s far Rockefeller. -<. Rockefeller has taken responsibility for the book, published in 1971! when Goldberg was Rockefeller's unsuccessful opponent for governor of New York. From Poge Al NOISE ... Republican leader IJugh. Scott said It was a book that Roek~eller h a d n ' t "ordered, or read, ar had distributed" and Mid Rockefeller was being generous in taklog responsibility for il. Dyrd and Jlocketeller talked separately to reporters just before the start at' the day'ii, Senate session, Mod the Ir remarks reflected the g r o w I n g con· troversy over President Fard's nomlna· tion of Rockeft'ller. ln New York, Rockefeller said the governm ent's investigation o! him is so delaJled that It Is "out o{ this warld." "There's nol a thing I've done and hardly anything I've tbought that hasn't smelling of alcol>ol ind. hi.s ra~ was bleeding. A policeman pulled Mn. Battlstella from the water. "I didn't jump Into the al Basin. 1 fell ," she sold. "I got h y s r I ea I because Lhe officer was dro ing me. 1 didn't need his help. l am a,IJO>P',ff' swimmer." ?\1ills' account slated that he .arranged a hon yoyage party for Gloria Sanchez, a cousin and houseguest of 1'trs. Bat· tastilla, who was returning to her native Argentina. He said his wife, Polly, bad a broken fO(lt and iMl.sted that he take the party out \\'hile she stayed home. "Mr... ~tills went out "'ith us alt the time," Mrs. Battistella said. "Y.'e were always with other people. -never alone." Mills said ln his statement that "after a few refreshments, A1rs. Battistella beeaine ill and 1 enlisted the help of others in our group to assist me in seeing her safely home." On the way home, with the car being driven by aoother man, "Mrs. Battlstella attempted ta leave the car and J at- tempted ta pre,,ent it.'' Mills said. "ln the ensuing stn1ggle, her elbow hit my glasses and broke them, resulting in a number of small cuts aroWld my nose ." Asked about those details, Mrs. Bat· tiste\la said : "I'm not going to say any more -whatever damage has been done is enough." ?.trs. Battistella said she -was a premedical student Jn Argentina, and is enrolled in a Washington-area college tor the tenn starting in February to take "general biological sclences." She v.'Ollld not name the college. "I've also been a school teacher and take accounting," Mr1. Battlstella said, ''l spend hair my life In school." But, she added: "I don 't know anymore tf it's important to be decent because you get misunderstood." been gone ovt!r," Rockefell er said at a sidewalk news conference. Rockefeller said 400 FBl agents have been checking on him and 20 ta1 agents h1:1vc been working on his income tAx retums. "I've nc¥er seen anything Uke It." he said . Asked lf be t.Mught he wu being treated fairly, he replied : "lt'a America -the v.·ay our country war ks." Ho11se Fails To Halt Veto WASH NGTON (API -Th< House failed t ay to override President Ford's veto Congress' cutoff of military aid ' ta rkey, killing 1he cutoft. e vote was 223 to 135 ta over-ride, 17 short of the two-thirds nectssary. lfouse Appropriations Ch a i r m a n Gearge It Mahon (D-Tex.l. said the committee would meet later in the day to redraft an emergcncv fu nd ing re90Ju- tion for a number of federal agencies. The resolution died with the veto because the Turkey aid cutoff was attached ta it. The House vote was Congress' nrst on overriding any or Ford 's vetoes and the House began recording it on the electronic voting counters on each end or the chamber almost immediately titer Ford's veto message "'as read. There was no debate. A presidential veta can be averlurned only by a two-thirds vote of both Hau:se arxi Senate. Congress pastponed its c am p a I g n recess far a week ta vote because the Turkey aid cutaff was in an emergency stop-Jtap fundin,g resolution for aj:!encies whose legal spending authority expired Sept. 30. DenoWlcing "reckless acts," Ford sald In his veto messa,e J\1onday t h a t Congress' resolution to qit of_I a.id to Turkey ls "entirely destructive" to U.S. efforts to bring about Cyprus peace negotiations. Tne President also said the aid cutoff might imperil U.S. relatians with Turkey "and weaken us In the crucial ea.stern Mediterranean. It directly jeopardizes the NATO alliance," he acided. Police Identify Slain Marine As Tahoe Man SHe was reluctant to d.Jscuss her dan- cing career, saying, "I haven't been a dancer in a Ioog lime -ooly one month this year." A young Camp Pendletan Marine who Both Mrs. Battlslella and her husband, was shot In the back and killed Sunday Eduardo, who waa Interviewed ln Buen~ Al.res ....... •:-M·-• -•·• d by one af three men wha gave the • -•enw.a, ;.~ay , • .,.t, aal victim J his buddy a lift In the they had been good friends with the ''It really just ~ives us more strength MiDs's for 80me time. San Juan Capistrano area has been Iden· in jawboning," Schinzlnger said. But they d.lsa.gr~ on whether Mrt. tilled by Orange County Sheriff's affleers Costs of enforcing the new ordinance Battistella ever worked tn the Arkamas as Joseph R. Mosac, 20, af Lake Tahoe coold range from a low of $2,000 a Democrat's office. California. ' year far county enfarcement to a bigh "First, my wife began ~·orking tor Investigators today said they had no of '600 per ·t.a5e for private enforcement ---Mrs.. Mills-aa an asalatant-and-then ~w c\~s P........JLlhe identity of the plus a S13,000 a year new city employee a year and a half ago she began working trio who picked up Mosac. and fellow to be in charge or noise abatement. for Mllls as a personal secretary," Bat-Camp Pendleton Marine Ronald Sanders, The amount, said Planning Director li.stetla said. "They saw she was very 20, as they sat an a bus bench in William Livingstone, depends on whether bright" San Juan. the cooncil decides to appoint its own But his wife aald: "I wa1 nat 00 Sanders told officers he and ri.·losac board to deal with noise problems or hls (Mills ') payroll . I did deeorate his "'ere robbed at gunpoint after the trio uses the county Noise Variance Board. apartment. I am not a professional In-drove them along the Ortega Highway If a 'City board is appointed, he said, terior deoorator but t manage very arid then onto a dirt road near a quarry. the county will not enforce the ordinance. .,.,·ell.'' Sanders said Mosac used a few .A ~o_ise <.'0!1sul~ant,_ LiVngstone said. ''!__Ao_l!'t know anything abo~t_that obscenities to describe. Uteir abductor& esumat-00 the cost af cnfarcemenn r To my knowledge she has nat llten --a!" ne tay race down tn thc\firt and done by a private firm at $300 to $600 on. !Us ~fflc\al pay r al 1 , ' 1 his ad-was promptly shot in the back by a per oomplalnt. nurustratlve assistant, Oscar C06S, said. member of the gang. AROUND THE CORNER AND UP YOUR STREET WE HAVE BE EN ASKED HUNDREDS OF · TIMES WH Y WE LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH." Jack R. Curley \l>(t l>i-t!l,,.111 fnd Glnt••I Mil"'O'' Thoma~ Kee¥U EIJUOI ihomas. A. Murphlne ""'"•01110 litilOf' Cha r te~ H Loos Richard P. Nall "'''''""' ......... 0•1111 E<111or\ In other areas, BroY.Tt said, Peart ·has helped the city get several federal gra~ts. including about $100.000 tor youth proje<:IS. Through involvement in the schools. he said. Ptart helped Initiate a counsel· Ing progr:im to get early htlp for young· sters "Y.'ho might turn out to be criminal types later," Brown saJd. In vestigators who sal in on the session in which Detective Na.sh relived the brush with death when a bullet grazed his cheek said it was so real In his re-I collection that it wns eerie. , The lotl'St lrvlne murder suspect was arrested i-~rlday after his alleged vu:tin1 ran-screaming and spewing blood fro1n a gaping hatchet wound In the head-lo a house ror sanctuary. SEVERAL ANSWERS POP UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF SrtlRES IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY; WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MOR E SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM , OFFICES AND WAR EHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOC~TION . THIRDLY THER E IS AM: PLE PARKING WITH LITTLE TRAFFIC CONGESTION LE0ADING TO US. THE SITUATION HAS MAD E us MOR E COMPETITIVE AND we' OU ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE INCREASED R VOLUM_E EVERY YEAR FOR EIGHTEEN YEARS, AND HAVE EX· Ttl•phone (7141 642-4321 C11~s lied Ad'l1rll,in9'41·S61& S.n tl•mtn1e All Departmenti : Teltphone 491-4420 eno,...1.,,1, 1•1•. 0••11~· eow,. "'111"''"' ~ '* !WI~ \\Otof\, ~11"'1•.C-~. ~1111"1•1 lft4'!1f• 01 •O~••ll-l't' "9NI" ,.,., bO "'fll'GO\l(ff woll'IO<.lt 1011Clto1 _.Mhliloo ot ,.,..,,,~\ oV<fttr. iot(OM c••n °"V'fl' o.•<1 •t c°''• ww, (A!IWnl• t.u1»<••11tlon O\I cirri.• ~ 00 _,,,.,,.v '' m1:i ._, 00 ,.,..,,~1,1 1111111.,.., .-rtl..,,.111111• fl 00 mOllllll• • The gent'ra l assessment al Pearl's Y.'Ork, 8J"O"IJ1l said, Is "he'1 done 1 tre- mendous Job and v.·e're sorry to sec him go." J\orthrop Res ponds LOS ANGELES IAPl -An 3fflda\·it charging Northrop Corp. "Ith 13 yearj or Illegal campaign contributions I s "regret~ble" and 1 'mate 1 a51ertiosls Msed on pretrl11l and unverified In· fonnallan which can be misleading," lhe Los Angeles-belled aerospace nnn s11id ~tonday. Northrop Issued the state· mcnt in re!lponsr. to 11n arfidavlt IUOO las t week In ii sllart.boldcrs ault. • I Site lotd -s!gnal Hill police she had been involved In a minor traffic accident ~·Uh a large man In a plckuJHedan vehicle who urged her to follaw him lO hls brother's auto body ahop for a dnmage etUmate. ~ there, investi11uor1 said, h c allegedly tried to criminally amult lhe cal State Long Beach coed and Onal\y ltllcked i... with a hatdlet wtien she loughl back. "lie burled a hatchcl In the gal'• loreheall," Hid U . Lorton. lnves!Jgator1 who found ?toira. Divis' body Sept. 22 SAld she was uocuted with a sin&!! shot Crom a small calJbtr pb.10\ fired nt point-blank nmge into her hcoid . • PAN DED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION . . ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia A••· COSTAMHA 646-4838 HOUU:Meo,ttwvn.n., tto l:JO -Fll, t tot -SAT, t :JOto 5 7 .• I 7 1 • , • Huntington Bea~h Fountain ·Valley ·EDITION ' VOL 67, NO. 288, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES -1 • • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today's Fl., N.Y. Stooks TEN CENTS Ehrlichnian, Says Nixon 'Misled, Lied' to Him WASHINGTON (UPI I -John D . Ehrlichman's attorney charged tod ay that former ·President Nixon "deceived, misJed, lied to and used" and finally forced a resignation from his former No. 2 aide in order "to save his own neck." Ehrlichman, one of five tormer Ni1on associates on trial in the Watergate cover-up, was portrayed by defense at- torney \Villiam S. Frates as a victim of the plot who "repeatedly recom- mended" that Nixon disclose the tru th. It was the first time Ehrlichman turn- ed accuser of Nixon, whom he served as chief domestic adviser in the \Vhite House until April, 1973, when t h e Watergate scandal became a n\ a j or issue. Nix.on, named an unindicted CO<'On- spirator in the cover-up, has b e en pardoned by President•Ford and cannot be tried for any \Vatergate-related in· cidents. Former \Vhite House ~el John W. Dean Ill, previously Nixon's chief ac· cuser, was to testify later in the day WATERGATE'S LIDDY OUT ON BAIL, Ptge A4 COLUMBUS DAY GROUp CRITICIZES JUDGE -Story, All for the prosecution -v.'bose case also was based on the complicity of the former president. "Richard Nixon deceived, misled, lied lo and used John Ehrlichman to cover up his own knowledge and activities while publkly s t a t i n g that John Ehtllchman was one of the finest public servants he had ever known . ., Frates told the jury. "He (Nixon) v.•as deliberately withholding infomiation from him - covering up to save his ov.'n neck. In simple terms. P.1r. Ehrlichman had been had by his boss, the president of the United States.'' Frates said Ehrllchman's decision to lea\·e the \llhite Hous(' was a .. forced resignation ... so that heot 1vould be taken off the President und the President standing there kno'A'1ng that he v.·as the one co\·ering up." He said th.. e1·ident-e v.'Ould show that Nixon summoned Ehrlichman to Camp David, r-.Jd. prior to his resignation April 30, 1973 "and told hint 'John. you have been tny conscience, but I didn•t follO\V your advice. It's all my fault. If I'd only follo\red your advice, we v.·ouldn 'l bf' 1n this si tuation.''' FrateS also praised the tapes or Nix· on's \\'hite House conversations, which y,·ilJ be inlrojucfll into evidence beg.in· ning \Vcdnesday. Frates &iid thc.1 tapes v.·111 sho\v thal r~hrhchman repeatedly told Nixon "\\'e'\'e got to let it all hang oot'' -tell the truth about \Vatergate. lie (See ACCUSED, Pap Al) Baker's County Race Costing $55,100 •Jt"s All True" Stripper Su11ports Mills' Story WAS .. HINGTON (AP) -Breaking a week-long silence. the woma n involved in a bizarre incident with Rep. Wilbur D. Mills has backed up hls version and complained that the press "is trying to destroy a great man." "What Mr. Mills said was exactly what happened," the JS-year-old Argen· linian and former dancer said in a telephone interview Monday night. She reportedly_ worked as a stri~r in a \Vashington nighrclub and was billed as "the Argentine firecracker." Speaking in a soft, slightly accented voice and sounding at limes close lo tears, Annabel Battistella said that ac· counts o~ the episode may also ruin "me and my chances of going back to school." But she expressed confidence that the political career of Mills, chairman or the House Ways and iMe;ms Committee, W'Ollld not be ruined by tr.e episode which took place in the predawn hours or Oct. 7. Meeti1ag To1aight "I am sure y.•hen he goes lo Arkansas, he will be able to talk lo his people like he used to," she said. Mrs. Battistella refused to elaborate on Mills' statement about the events of Oct. 7 beyond saying it was accurate. But she differed with U. S. Park Police aceounts in at least one aspect. Police said she jumped into the Tidal Basin, a backwater of the Potomac River i after police stopped M i I I s ' spieding, unlighted car and he emerged smelling of alcohol arxl his face was bleeding. A policeman pulled Mrs. Battistella from the water. "I didn't jump into the Tidal Basin. I fell," she said. "I got hy s t er i ca I because the officer was drowning me. I didn ·1 need his help. I am an expert swimmer." P.Ulls' account stated that he arranged a bl}l:I ~ge party for Gloria Sanchez, a cousin and houseguest of Mrs. Bat· (See MIW, Page A%) Huntington Downtown Revamp Proposal Eyed · The rebirth of downtown Huntington Beach. including high rise hotels, fancy restaurants and maybe a small COO· \'enfion center, will be d i s c u s s e d by property owners al a 7:30 p.m. meet- ing tonight. Detail! of a nearly year-long study by the Irvine engineering firm of Voorheis, Trindle and Nelson, will be revealed and property owne rs v.ill be asked for their comments. About 20 downtown property owners PROFIT TA KllVG were invited ID tonight's meeling by Vince Moorhouse, director of the city's CHRIS BENTON PONDERS UPCOMING MOVE OF HUNTINGTON YMCA BUILDING The 'Y' Wilt St•rt Getting It All Together Early Wednesday Morning -----------~-- Explorers Slate Recycling Depot Ne~v Dome Huntin gto n-V nllev Fa cility See n ,_ ., .. $250,000 Recorde{l Cou11tywide f\lore than $250.000 in campaign dona· lions and expenses have been reported by Orange Coasl candidates seeking e.lec· lion to seals ranging from the Board pf Supe rvisors to U.S. Congress. ·Final records released f\·londay by the cowity Registrar of Votel'll ind.teated the biggest money in the county - $82.500 so fa r -v.'ill go to'n'ard the battle between long·time supervisor Dav id Baker and challenger Laurence Schmit. a Garden Gro\•e .school teacher. Baker. whose district includes most of the 'nl!Stern Orange Coast a r e a , reported collecting $ S S . 1 O O , primarily from the flrestigious Republican Liocoln Club and the building industry. Schmit, also a registered Republican, reported contributions of S 2 7 . 4 O O , primarily from rancher Richard J . O'Neill and political figure Dr. Louis Cella, both known for heavy financing or Democratic causes. Baker listed 84 contributors. l~e receiv· ed SI0.000 from the Llncoln Club and Sl.000 each from firms such as ~lission Viejo Company, Don Koll Compa ny . Rossmoor Corporation, Avoo Community Developers. Broadmoor lfomes and S and S Construction Company. He also got $2.000 from Fluor Corpora· lion. $2.000 from Union Oil. $2.0IXI fn'.lm Deane Development and $1,000 ·from Lo& Alamitos Racetrack. The other big money race in the ocunt.y docs not invtilve an Orange Coast dist rict . But the favorite in the 72nd Assembly District race, former Rams football star l\1arlin l\1cKecver. main· tains a residence in Corona del r-.1ar. Republ ican l\"lcKee\·er has raised a reported $47.200 and spent more than 551.000. COOLS •fARKETS Harbors and Beaches Department and 1---~~ -.. l,. -~,~~~-~cmoon,rdtn-atoro:rtbeaowntown l"edevClop- Coed Exp~re:r Post. 226 of Huntington Beach will set up a weekend recyt•ling ~_Saturday and Sunday in the <:.·1ints -Simon and Jude Church parking lot. :M44 Magnolia. The Huntington Beacb-£ountain_ Valley Yf\1CA will finally get its new home and new home site toge ther early \Vednesday and hopes to have the facility in use by December. times the space. the Y.i't.CA has available now in offices at li941 Beach Blvri. Davis said he hopes to rn o v e of- fices into the ne1I' building in Dccernber and have the \1·hole project finished by February. His Democrat opponf'nt Richa rd Robinson. has rt!Cl'ived $32,600 and spenl about-half of it so fa r. To date in lhe Orange Coast 36th State Senate District race. incumben t Republican Dennis Carpenter of Newport Beach is losing the donation race to his Democratic opponent, Costa .11,tcsa attorney Frank Barbaro. NEW YORK (UPI) -Profit taking hit the stock marekt twice today -at the outset and in the artemoon -to send prices sharply lower In fai rly active trad· ing on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow Jones industrial average lost 15.10 points to 658.40. It had recovered signi6cantly after 106ing more than 10 points at the outset. Declines dominated advances. 907 to 473, amoog the 1.780 issues traded. 'The volume amounted to 17.06 million shares. compared with 19.n million traded P.1on· day. Prices were lower ln moderate trading on the American Stock Exchlttlge. Orange Coast • Weather Dense fog ton ight and in the early morning hours \Vednesday, uccording lo the weather serviJ,'e. Otherwise mostly swmy with highs near 70 at the beaches rising to the mid.SOS inlan~. INSIDE TODJ\ V U.S •. chemist Paul Florv of Stanford University haa won the 1974 Nobel chemistry prize for re.tearch in pla.tlics. W h e n rtnched at home he told, "It'! 6 o.m. here, l '·m not awake yet.' See ttorJI and picture Paae A4. ., .... hmM<llc •• 1., M ... W. At C11t""1ll9 Al Cit.... •J·U CM!k• •1 c,..'""' ., 0.111 lfftltt1 Al ltH'9ri•I "'" Al 1:•1trtal11mtlll Al ,.llllftCI Al .. 11 M; Olt"""' Al Mtr..C:CIH II l111ef111luf911 Al """ "'"'"' ., Ml¥1tl .... Mllhl1l ,.u!WI All NIHtottl lftWt At Or•-'-'' .... , ... " •.. , S..tll .... llldl Mlrill'lt Al .. 11 ,,,.,.. l'trlff' ... ,. Ttt.¥1..... All T .... ttrt Al Wffltlff At Wtn• Htwi A4 ment project. Similar discu!Mons with other prop- perty owners will be Wednesday and Thursday nights, with later meetings planned for other groups. The meetings mark the official opening of the ci ty's new downtown redevelOI>' meat headquarters at 220 Main St. Moohome says Huntington Beach's new look may include five.story hotels, high rise condominiums and g a r d e n apartments, specialty shops and possibly a convention center. 1be VTN study concerns potent ial redevelopment of a 350-acre area from Beach Biu1evard to Ninth Street and Pacific Coast Hi ghway to Orange and Atlanta Avenues. The study was completed at the com- pany's own expense, in return for a share of 'the redevelopment propject lf and when it happens. The young people will c o I l e c t ne\vspapers and other paper, including computer cards, and cans. Those who cannot bring recyclables to the depat may call 962-8519 for pickup service. Artist to Di splay 'Wipe Out Painting' Orange County artist Virgil Bienvenu will demonstrate the technique of "wipe out painting'' in a public pro g r a m \V ednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the recreation ce11ter of Murdy Park. The Artists Association of Huntington Beach North will sponsor the program in conjunction with its general meeting. • Hugh Davis, Y!\otCA director. said Younger and Sons !·louse f\tovers of Santa Ana submitted the low bid of $5,200 to move the 2,500-square-foot building from Gulden \Vest Street and Palm Avenue to its ne\v loca!ion on Gar. field Avenue near Crystal. An official of the firm said the move probably "'iii start about 3 a.m. and take about an hour. P.1ansion Hall Construction Company donated the building in January. It is the former pro shop from the old Hun· tington Beach Golf Course. ·rtie Hun· tin8:ton Beach Co1npany offered the new site . But Y~tCA officials had to wail for enough funds to get the building moved. The new facility v.111 offer about three Indian Skeleton Found Expert to Study Bones· Unearthe£l in Fountai11 Valle)· A phfslcal anthropologist will be called in to determine the age of what may be Indian bones, found yesterday in a backyard pool excavation in Fountain Valley. Workmen at the home of P h 111 p Prisone1·, 25, Slain SAN QUENTlN (API -A San Qu<ntln Prlton inmate was stabbed to de:alh ~1onday, officers 5ay, one day htforc he "'at to be transferred lo a mlntmu1n security work camp. Wiiiiam, Van ~leter. ~. was stabbed 13 ti mes In the back and chest during an exercl!C period, a prison spo~smnn said. Walker. 10424 Ni~htingale Ci r c I e, discovered the delenorating s k e I e t o n about 4 'n feet b e I ow ground. They notified ~frs. \Va\ker. and she !!Ought the advice of Archaeological Research, Inc. The c;o.,1a Mesa firm's Steve Colegn'.l\'e led I te&m th ID artheological e:"cava· liOA. '11le ikel<IOll now: .. ,1a •• a lobora~ tabl& In tl!O · •Mior llouleVar4 ill< • quan~rs or frctuicok>glc1l R•nrc . •\l'alllng {be analysis or •. pbylloal ... lh<W>ologlit ' Wllh ljO ,..,..iatetl cuju.ral ovidc""" Jour!d at lhe ittc. Colegrove said only e physical inthropologlst can determine lho • al lhe bon ... " ,I Colegrove and his co-worktrs found no evidence that !he burial site y.·as for more than the one body. Workmen continued tod01y to construct the \Volkers· paol. Principal Kiduapcd PIE0~10NT, ~lo. IAP) -TI\e prlnti· pal ol \he Piedmont High Sthool was kldnaptd today by a student v.11o had rob!J\lll tho s<hool or about $200, police said. 'Ed Thompson. principnl And super. lntnd,erlt c.r the soothem M'6SOL1ri dis~ lrld, later was found unharmed near J)(!s Arc. a small Iron County communi ty about to miles north of Piedmont. _.,, The Y~ICA had about StOOO scl a.;;icle for the project. then raised abbut $<1.300 in a Jul v Bike-a-Thon . Zhe 'i"s ~1en ·s Cluh added another 53.700 donation for cen1ent \\'Ork, Davis said. Davis said the vr-.tC1\ ~t i ll needs about $5.000 to S7.iloo for niaterials to co1nplete remod eling of the facilit y. He exp\!1incd that amount \\'Lil be financed by \'i\lCA Board Ch<11rman Richard \\1ilbur. \rho ov.TJs an arcountin,g firm . The oq::anilalion "'ill repay tllf' loan through the S230 a n1on1h it will save on office rcnlal. Davis explaint'd. He added the Yr-.-ICA still is SC<'king dona!i on" of rn a I er i a Is. as well a~ \'Oluntcers wil \in~ to help in construction \\'Ork Ji111 Keller. <1 llun1Lng1on Beach ron· slruc11on officin l and YP.ICA volunteer, 11:ill coordinall.• rcn1odcling, Davis said. TI1e orJ.(;i ni z;ition also has spent ~t.20.J ror ~rad1ng th(' Si le, $1.300 for pe'rnlils and fcfs and $1.000 ror plumbing \vith installation don ,1 I e d by Hunti11gto11 Valley Plu1nbing, Davis said , lllood n1obile Visit Sc i for Huntington I-;mploycs or l!k) city of Jluntington Be;ic.h v.·ill sponsor a vl!lt of the Am erican Red Cro!'is Bloodmobile at the Civic Cen tl'r Oct 22. Donors shoul d reoort bctwC(>n 2 n.nd 7 p.m. to Rooms 306 and 307 In the lower pl aza of the ri"tc ccnler. 2000 ~·lain SI . For a d v n n c e rescrvationi., donors may cnll lhe Orange County chapt~r of !he Red CN'l!ls :H 831\·,\181 or cit y b1ot'ld bt1nk coordinator Dick Boucher nt SJ6..SQI. Barbaro reports receipt s of $23.900 to Carpcntcr·s 516,200 though Carpenter,· has spent the mosl-$18.100 to $10,600 for Barbaro. r-.tost of Barbaro·s money also came from O';';eill and Cella. \\'ho contributed in-kind office space and supplies y,·orth n\OrC than $5,000. Ca rpenter's contributors inc I u de d (See FUNDS, PHgc A2) Co unty's Voter Rolls Reu.c h .4ll Ti 1ne fl ip;h Or:'lngl' County's \'Oter rolls reached an <ill·tinie high of 812.322 Mondoy 01 :i !:lll' surge of affidavits poured Into thl' Hegistrar of Voters office. tnterin1 registrar r-.1. J . l\1nytr s.1irl !hl' sharp increase of 3.500 \·otcn; in the final d11ys is unusual because of normal dt>elme. as voter~ are deleted becaust' thl'y n10\e oot of the count~. TI1e biggest contributor to the hitesl lll('r('fl~ \\aS :in influx of a r f id II v \ l tran~ft>rs from 1.(ls Ang('!es Co u n 1 ~· • \':here many Orange Counlians uork aOO rl"l!,1S1erffi to vote. Thl' latest ''Oler lol.'11 Mov.·!i t h ~ RC'puh!i('an p.1rty's traditional domin11- tion 1n lhl• coo nty crum bled sti ll further. Tht> GOil rnrargin is now only 34.SOO \'Oler~. A total or 10 c1llt'.! in th~ county art' now in Ille 0..'mocrollc column 111 tern1s , of voter f('~i~roliQn, 'wo more than !a~L year. The new additions ur1 lluntlngton lk'och and La Palmn. ' ' . • •• -' l .1\ .:!_ DAIL V PI LOT tiff • Tu~Sd.1y, Octobfr 15, 1q74 C'Hn1pai91a Gro1vs House Pa11el San Pedro Brown, Flournoy Vie for Media Eyes Nixo11, ... . Rocky Lit1k Man Held In Deaths SACHA~IE:'\TO tAPl -l;:rimund G. f)rQ\111 Jr ·~ picturf' 1s -On lhr rot-er r 1'1011• nu1gni1nl·. ;:1nd 11 o u ti t on floumoy's l lrst ('Qmnlercials arc o 11 h:lev1s:lon Th.11 mn<lt 11 n hi~ n1edla day ~ton­ da~s in U1t• l"o1nip;11gn for .1tov1~rnor - bigger. pc:rhap~. for Ot;n1ocrat BrO\\rl th:-.n for Hrpuhli('!lrl Flournoy. Brown"s n11.'<li1:1 t>xposure was fr(.le nnd pr<'Sl1gious. al!houi.:h Flournoy al!IO \I.On praise -1n 1nu<'h briefer comrntntli -in the ttxt of the Time story on llrov.1t Floumov's 1('!(.l\"is1on c:1mpaign is µrlc· t'rl al $:!00,000 including a few key spo4 111 !he \'lorld Scri~s. professional football i.:nmes and top rated shows such as ··All In the Fanlily." The GOP candidate Sflid he has nol :icrl-ptf.'d Cov. Bonald Reagan's offer to filrn television commercials for him hecause his television illnds arr Ji1nited and he gives a higher priority to air JX•n ring on his own behalf. Flournoy also previewed scvt.'Tl 30 and M-sccond commercials which he said will 1x> aired on S250.000 raised by a advance sales for an Oct. 31 fund-raiser by President Foret Time l\1ngazine billed BrO\\ll in a cover !'ilory as the favorite in the race against Flournoy. T he magazi ne described Brown -bo!h from the eyes of critics and friends -at length and generally favorably. Flournoy said he had known in advance about the national news m a g a z i n e ' s f'ro111 l'age Al FUNDS ... developers such as Harry Hlnker, Robert Grant John Lusk and Alex Robertson along' with Union Oil and San Diego l:a!ii and Electric. Carpenter's .4'm er I ca n independent Party challenger Gerald Bogart raP<>rted income and expenditures of less than ~500. Congressm;1n :\ndrew Hinshav.• ( H · Newport Beach) has raised $45,300 and spent more than $40,300 of it to keep thls 40lh District seat in the face of a challenge by Democrat Roderick Wll· son of Oceanside. \Vilson 'has raised $7 ,300 and spent :i!most all of it. l\1ost of his money is in the form of loans and Hinshaw·s biggest donalion. a $2,500 iift, came from the Republican National Congres- sional Committee. Republican Assemblyman R o b e r t Badhant of Newport Beach has raised $12,700 and spent about half of il to meet the challenge of Sueanne--Currie Lewis in the 74th District. She reported S823 in receipts and more than $.1,M in expenses, Badban\'s n1oney came from donors !;Uch as Callfomia Auto De a I er s , Cali forn ia Riiilroads. Pacific 0 u t do o r Ltghling, t:nion Oil, \Vine and Spirits Industry, Beer Dealers. California Dental Association and the building industry ·s Century Commiltee. In the \\'est county's 73rd Assembly l)istrict. incu1nbcnt Hepublican Robert Burke has raised $11.800 and spent moi:c than half of it to stave off Democrat nennls ;t,tangers. "'·ho collected ,9,100 and spc-nt all but $2.000 of it. Hurke"s major donors include the California Loan and Finance Association. ('alifornia Auto Dealers , Retail Liquor Dcal<'rS :\ssocintion. \\'est minster i\1C'mori:il Park. llollywoocl Park. Sh~ll 011 and Union Oil In rhe ~-uh Ccngrcssional Distri c t . which ex.tends fron1 Long Beach ;nlo part of ihc ..,,es1ern Orange Co Ii st . Republican \Vlllitun Bond has raised S:l4 ,260 and spent neurly all of it in a baltle BAHinst ~lri rk Hannaford 1vho ha:; raised nearly $20,001 and spent mof'~ 1hnn hf1l f <If it. They are seeking lo .. uccecd retiring Congressman C r a 1 g J{Q5mer. ORANGE COAST HB DAILY PILOT T"" o-..-.oo (PU\I IM•ff ~IOI, •!Ill •Iii(/! 1, <Omllo"t<t !"<' Nt""' Prti\. h l)Utlll\.1"4od bV 0,_ °'~"'"" (DJ .I Pu1>lo\l'll<11 (a"-"''· ~r6tt '~'''""'•ft lklb•o\l\o'd Mo'lll•• l"'Oul)ll F-".UV. ~· (o\1~ ,..,,..,... Ntwfl<lr1 Bt...:11, Hunl•fOqlon !~a(" ro~,.,t-•n 11•11••· u~ l:lt«ll. +••"• ... 00••-W •llO ~"' Ot......,tt•"W)\ J ... ,. , ... .,,,,, .. ~a " ""<II~ ·~a•on111 .Olllofl •\ th.IV' ~"tl ~~1u•d.lvl And \ur<I••• t~ 11tOn<l1MI 1W1>11 n "'I 01~ .. 1" •'JOO wi-~1 8•1 S1tf,I. Coil• ~,... t.A<·'O•n••tllU. Jack R. Curley ll•t' P<n.Otnt •'Ill Gol,,..at ,,......,. Thomas Kecvi l EOth>r Thomas. A. Murohine ,....,..Q,~9 E.Ol!or Charles H l.oos Richard P. Nall Jo11•\t.o .. 1 .......... ,,'IQ E.OU1r1. Terry Cov lHe W•" O•anoo <;ov..,, £Ollor Hunt lnqton Beach.Office 1111111-.-:11 110~·~·••d Mt•hno Addtll\ II 0 Bo• l'WJ. tM4 Othtr Offices L•Qlln• ~•tll IU• !..ltftl'l'•'• S1. ,. -.... lJ0 ....... 11 a..~ ... , t#WPO'I S-Mf\ lll) ~•POr1 ..,.,...,,..,d ..... ~"'l'lllf JO~ Noll~ [I c,,..,,.,. a.,01 Telephone (71•l M1-4321 Classifltd Advtrtlslng '42·5671 ~•O)ffl lrOottll °'..,°' c-trc.o-nll•tt S40·1220 OHl.,..ltf!t. 1'11 0••"..,. (M~I Pllbll"'!"" ~· ,.. """'' ,, .. _, •1111'•••'-· ttlllftrllH _, •• , ~· .,, .... , .... _ .. ~ -· .... -· !If rt~ta "''"'°"' u•..r wmiu-ol to.vrl,r.t owr.' !oo<O"" (i.~l 00\tl~ !MIG •I (O&jj ,,..W, C-'!IOrftlol.. S..l>\••1111,,.. ~ t ,...rJtr \100 -1111., br ,.,,,1 ~ llO mon1n1,. 111•111•• o.tUllllll•M \J OQ l!IOlll~tt cover story on Brown 1Jnd !I.Bid \Vlth a liiugh, "It d0t.-sn't bother n1c. \Vhnt do th('y know on !he Easl Coast tlnf\\'il)'," floun10y, although favorably described by Timf'. received only a few paragraphs or n1cnlion nnd on c black-and·v.·hile photograph in th(' l('ngthy slory on new 1>.:1t 1!lcal lt>aders of 1hc nation. Ti.n1c's i1rliclc, n1ainly a po s It I v c portrayal or Brown as a new style politician -v.·as viewed by Brown as testimony to '"the seriousne.ss or my carnpaign.'' Brov.n also had lo take some ribbing nbout the article from two KNBC com- 111cntators. One a~ked if Brown hnd v.'ritten the article himself. Later in the KNBC In le rv i e w 1 In· terviev.·er Robert Abernathy ll!ked Brown if he "''ould consider running for president in 1976. "No, absolutely not. I am going to be governor If I am elected for four years." Brown replied. A similar theme \\'BS raised in the Time article; v.·hich noted that after completing tour years as governor of the nalion's largest state Bro"'" \\'Ould still be only 40. •·young enough to start thinking about !he \Vhite J-louse." Time described Brown as '"a D!'mocrat who sometimes sounds like a Republican'' and said he \\'as ·'no id£>alogue, and often he adopts traditional conservative positions." The magazine described Flournoy as "handsome and hard working with im· pressive credentials." . Dul it cited Flournoy onJy brlcny as an example or the predicament of Re- publtcans natlonwidt:. Time said Flournoy has been "unable to find a way or cowitering Brown's charges that he Is the heir of a Republican µarty that gave the nation Agnew, Nixon, \Vatergate and inflation." 27 Meet Death l)flly l"lltl 11111 l"l'ltlt TO LEAD JAYCEES Founttln Valley's Harvey II cir11ey Gets Top Valley ]<tycee Post Bernie Harvey, 35. was elected preai- dent of th(' Fountain Valley Ja~cces l\londay night. He will fill the unexpi red term of James Bennett. who died as a result of a Sept. 17 traffic accident. Harvey. of 9568 El Tambor Ave., has been in the local Jaycees chapter five years and a Fountain Valley fPsident for seven. He had been serving lhls year as cl ub secretary. He also serves on the board of Direc- tors of the Fountain Valley Boys Club and is chief umpire of the Fountain Valley North Little League. Harvey is data processing manager for U.S. Divers Co. in Santa Ana. He and his wife, Alice, have four children. Replacing Harvey as cl ub secretary is Gr:eg Ca!!idy of Tustin. The club also elected Bob Fulton of 6700 Warner Ave., Huntington Beach. lo fill the vacant club office ol intema1 director. Bennett and another Jaycee club mem- CHICAGO ( A p ) _ Twenty-seven be~, ~u~rey "Bronc~" Helphinstine, died of 1n1ur1es suffered 1n the Sept. 17 crash. persons died In a bloody outburst o~A third club-member Vincent Scotti , In Chicago Area violence over the weekend in the Chicago is recoverin~ from inj1uries at Orange area, and police say the availability County Mechcal Ce~ter. or handguns was a major cause Q The men were returning from a visit the deaths to the Sa n Dimas Jaycees when their . ·, . car was struck by another vehicle travel-Pohce said 93 shootings were reported Ing in the wrong -direction on the from 6 p m. Friday to midnight Monday fr eeway. in Chicago alone. Jaycees so far have raised nearly In the city, 17 persons died of gunshot S~.CJ?O to aid the families of the accident ..,,.ounds. Three additional fatal shootings victims. in suburban C.OOk County brought to 20 the number of gun-related deaths in the COWlty. Seven others died by assorted methods ol violence -one \ras sirangled, four were stabbed and two Persons were run down by a car. V nion Predicts Bus Strike En£l f'ro111 Page Al MILLS ... tastilla. who y,·as returning to her native Argentina. · He said hiri wife. Polly. had a broken foot and insisted that he take lhe party out while she stayed home. ''f\.1rs. ~11\ls went out w1th us all the time ," Mrs. Battistella said. "We v.•ere ah~ays \\'ilh other people -never alone." NEW YORK IAP I -The II o use J udlclnry Committee plans to look Into possible coonr:ctiona between a Rockefeller family contribution to former •President Nixon's 1972 campaign and Nlxon's revert.al or two ruling~ against 11n Eastern Airlines acquisition, the Ne11• \'o .. ·· Tunes reported today. In a dispatch from Wa.shlngton, the Ti1nes quoted commluce SQurces a s saying tho Investiga tion would be in COMection *with President F o rd ' s nomination of Nelson A. Rockefeller to be vice president. President Ford fully supports Rocke- feller end "has complete faith In Gov. Rockefeller's intecrity," a ·White !loose. spokesman said today. Press Secreta ry Ron Nessen said he did not see •·any sense of concern" on ford's part that the gift-giving discil)- sures about Rockefeller \·1euld have any ad\•crse effect on his confirmation by Congress. Less Lhan a year after the Rockefeller family contributed $200,000 to the Nixon campaign. Nix.on cited u n s p e c i fie d "foreign policy reasons" in reversing l\l."O Civil Aeronautics Board rulings and allowed Eastern to acqui re Caribair, a Puerto Rican-based airline. according to The Times. The Rocke!ellen; have large holdings in Eastern. The Times saJd "there appeared to be no evidence at this point of a con- nect.ion between the Rockefeller con- tribution and the Nixon ruling. But com- mittee sources said the timing of the events raised questions in the minds or aome members." The newspaper sa.Jd the circumstances of the contribution would be lnvesU1ated as part of the committee's examination ol any Influence the RockefeJler family may have exerted on government agen- cies and policy. Rockefeller's press secretary, Hugh Morrow, said the former NeW York govemor owned no stock in Eastern Ai r li nes . Bu tt heTlmeaaaid Rockefeller's brother Laurance wu iden· tiffed u the single largest stockholder in the aJr carrier In a 1972 study. In addition, the Chase M a o h a t t a n Bani<, the Rockefeller family bank, holds 6.1 pereent of Eastern Airlines stock io trust and is the prllne lender of a $300 million loan to the alrline, the Times said . Meanwhile, Senate Democratic 'whip Robert C. Byrd sak! today a book about Arthur J. Goldberg "Is pretty remini s- cent of the dirty tricks In the Nixon era." He and a Republican member of the Senate Rules Comrrllttee agreed that the matter wouJd call for the reopening of vtce-prestdential confirmation hear· ings for Rockefeller. Rockefeller lw.1 taken responsibility for the book, published in 1970 ·when Goldberg was Rockefeller's unsuccessful opponent for govCrnor of New York. Young Bicyclist Injured by .<\uto ON THE OFFENSIVE Proncutor Ben·Venlste F·rom Page A I ACCUSE ... also stressed that Dean. when he began cooperating with the prosecutors. continually blamed Ehrlichman a n d others for acts that he himsclr con1- n1illed. Slrica rejected a motion by defendant Robert C. t\-1ardian's attorney for a directed verd ict of acquittal. Jn his opening statement, At a rd i an lawyer Davis Dress contended his cllenl never should have bce.n indicted because he v.•as only a second~chclon can1paign aide without any policy input, who had "no idea" what wa s happening. 11e also noted that t\-tardian . a sometime San Clemente resident, wrote a six-page memo three days before the \Vatergatc break-in complaining about conditions in the campaign and describ- ing the organization as "a fragmented group or peoflle . . . who In the long run will cause more problems than they will solve." He stressed that Nixon and fonner \Vhite House chief of staff H . R . Halde1nan, one of the co-defendants in the cover-up. never t o I d Ehrlichman about the secret taping system. lie also sought to divorce Ehrlichman from 1-faldeman, once Ehrllchman's close friend. T~ two once were the po'A'erlul men in Nixon's White House. ''Your natural inclination will be to put these defendants in one pot and £rankly that's my problem," Frates said. '·The government, in it s opening state· menl, was always saying 'Haldeman· Ehr Ii c hman, Haldeman-Ehrlichman, Haldeman-Ehrlichman.' We're here to defend John Ehrlichman. We're not here to defend the other defehdants., nor are we here to prosecute." Ford to Stump 'GOP Country' Seeki ng Support WASHlNGTON (UPI) -With his own popularity slipping, President Ford is heading for a swing through tradilional GOP country in another attempt to win support ror his anti-inflation program and to ald Republicans ln next month's elections. Ry ~ltTUUR R. VINSEL Ot l~t 011!~ Pllol Ullt A san Pedro service station attendant accused or hackln~ a Long Beach girl ln tbc-4rehead with a hatchet Friday Is also charged tod:1y as a suspect In !he slaying ol l1 \VOman "'hose nude body ...,·as dun1pcd on a lonely rural ro.ad in Irvine three weeks ago. Gerald J. Shill Jr .. 27. of 623 \V . .!4th St. San Pedro is already booked on susp1· cion of attempted rape and atten1pted murder in connedion with lhe grizly Sig- nal Hill incident four days ago. '"We have a hold on hi1n no1v for sus- picion of murder," Police Detecth·e Lt (feorge Lorton said today following ques· tionlng of the suspect. ·'We talked to him yesterday and v.·e do have a vehicle," Lt. Lorton explained. lfc said a damaged pickup truck-sedan of the same year, color .and description of that believed involved in the Sept. 22 n1urder of Bonnie Faye Davis, 22, has been impounder. Investigators found Mrs. D.avis' nude body laid in a ditch. along Barranca Road near Jeffrey RGad in a remote area of I r vi n e early thal Sun- day 1norning, her clothing and under· j.l"armenL'> tossed out as thougil fro111 a moving car, Questioning of known assoeialcs led to information from a Long Beach man that he had seen ~1rs. Davis, divorced mother of lwo small children, the previous night. He said 1.trs. Davis \vas L?lkin~ to a )arge man with a reddish beard at !he comer of Pacific Coast Highwa y and Llme Avenue, near a truck-sedan vehicle. He has since been questioned wtder a deep hYJ11Qlic trance induced by a medical doctor occasionally used to as- sist witnesses to criminal cases in recall· ing obscure details that might prove val- uable. Detective Lt. Lorton dld not say If the Westminster physician 's work with the unidentified potential murder case "'itness helped in this instance. The sanle doctor placed Irvine Detec- tive Steve Nash h1rme\f in a "trance some two years ago, after he was the victim of a murder attem pt by a liessians' motorcycle gang chieftain near the same spot .,.,·here Mrs. Davis' body v.·as found . Investigators V.'ho sat In on the session in v.·hich Detective r>.'ash relived the brush with death when a bullet grazed his cheek said it was so real in hi s re· collection that it was eerie. The latest Irvine murder suspect was arrested Friday after his alleged victim ran-screamin~ and spewing blood frorn a gaping hatchet 'A'Ound in the head-to a house for sanctuary. Cory Asks Probe Of Opponent LOS ANGELES {AP)_-Southern Califomia Rapid Transit Dist r i ct drivers· United Transportation Union. but union leaders predicted a tentath•e agrcen1(·n1 reached in the 10-we!'k~ld trllnsit strike would be ratified \Vcd- n('sday. ~1ills said In his statement that "after An a.year-0ld Huntington Beach boy a fev.• refreshments. Mrs. Battistella was reported in satisfactory condition Ford plarmed to leave late today for the JS-hour trip through l\.11 s s o u r i . Nebraska. SOUth Dakota and Indiana -all traditional Republica n strongholds. SACRAME NTO (U PI) Assemblyman Ken Cory (D-Oarden Grove). the Democratic nominee for state controller. has called on the State Bar Association to lnvesligate confli ct of Interest charges a g a i n s t his Republican opponent. Cory demanded the investigation Mon· day Into Assemblyman William T. Bagley's support ol a bill that Included the $284.875 stale pu rchase of land owned by a client of his San Rafael Jaw flnn. became ill and I enlisted the help of at Pacifica Hospital today after he was others in our group to assist ine in struck by a car while riding his bicycle The President's first appearance will be in Kansas City, Mo. at a convenUon of the Future Farmers of America. \Vhite I-louse aides called It a nonpolitical appearance and Ford said last week his address would include 10-recom- mendatlons for volwitary citizen action to slow the rise in the cost ot living and conserve energy. seeing her safely home.'' home from school Monday. On the way home. 'ol'ith the ca r being G. Gene Quan, 17092 Emerald Lane. Ear! Clark. gcncrril ch;.iirman of !he drivers' United Transportation Union , said if the pact v.·erc ratified by the union -and-management. RTD l>iJses pro- bably v.'ou!d begin rolling Saturday. driven by another 1nan, '"i\·lrs. Battistella was struck at 2 p.nl. as he rode his "If there has ever been a case or conflict or inte.rt'9t . one w be re a legislator has used his offlti! for personal g<'lin. thcn-thisi.-lt." Cory charged. attempted to leave the car and I at· bicycle from a drlvev.·ay at Oak View tempted to prcvenl it," ?>.tills said. ''.In School, 17241 Oak Lane, police repor\ed. the ensuing struggle. her elbow hit my The drive ol the car was ~1ax Eugene Bagley has denlfd l"e allegat ion and said he rectiv~ no rtmunuation for the hind dell ln 1111. The tentative settlement, reached on the 63rd day of the strike. grants the drivers a 24 percent rise in wages and benefits ln a l\\·o-year contract. glasses and broke them, resulting in Benward , 42, or 20722 Spindrift Lane, a number of small cuts around my 1 police said. He was not cited. no~~~~d about those detalls. Mrs. Bat· I •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiimiiiii;;;;;;iiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiii.iilili-oiiOiiiiiii-i..;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. E piscopnlia ns F nee Dissension OAXTEPEC, Mexico (AP) -An 1:."pis- ropal bishop. who aJrt?ady stan<ls ilc- cused or breaking church law by ordain- ing women priests, today wamed that n1orr v.'omcn would be ordained In de· fiance of lhc church if it fails to clarify its position on tbe issue by 1976. Church officials said such a ~ovc could caµ~ furtt"!cr di~ension an1ong lhe :i.2 m1lhon Ep1scopahans and their leaders. tiste\la said : "I 'm not going to say any more -whatever damage has been done is enough.'' ~lrs. Bat!istclla sa id she v;as a prenleclical studenl in Argentina, and is enrolled Jn a Washington-area college for the term starting in February to take '"gencrnl biological sciences." She v.·ould not name the college. "I've also been a school teacher and take accounting." Ml'!. Battlstella said. "l spend half my life in school." But. she added : "l don't know anymore if it's important to be decent becau~ you gel n1isundcrstood." She was reluctant to dlscu511 her dan- cing ca reer. saying. "I haven't been a dnncer in a long ti1ne -only one 1nor1th lhis }Car."' Nixon to Testify? Siri.ca Plctns H cnri1tg Tliursda)· WASHINGTON !UPI) -U.S. llislrict Judge John J. Slrlca to- day .scheduled a hearing Cor Thursday afternoon 011 whether former President Nixon should be compelled to testify at the \Vatergate cover-up trial o( five former aides. "I think the sooner we dispose of this the better off we'll be," Sl"rlca said. announcing the hearing would be held after the trial adjourns for the day Thursday. Nixon, named an unindicted co-conspirator in the case but jardoned by President Ford froQt any pos.~ible prosecution, was subpoenaed to tcstlry both by lhc defense and !he prosecution. I-tis lawyers asked Sirica to e.xcuse Nixon from testlfylng, con· tendln& on the advice or doctors that traveling to \Vashington would pose "a serious risk to his health." rstory, Pase A31 DeCend3Dl John 0. Ehrlichman, Nixon 's Cor1ner No. 2 aide, con· tends the former president is "an Indispensable witness" and must be compelled to provtde1estlmony under oath in some form. AROUND THE CORNE~ UP YOUR STREET I WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH." SEVERAL AN SWERS POP UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STORES IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECOND1_ y, WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM OFFICES AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY. THERE IS AM: PLE PARKING WITH LITTLE TRAFFIC CONGESTION LEADING TO US. THE SITUATION HAS MADE US MORE COMPETITIVE AND WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR EIGHTEEN YEARS, AND HAVE EX· PANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION. ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Plac•ntla.AY•. COSTAMHA 646·4838 JIOURS: MM. t1wv T1ws., t to 5:30 -flt.. t tot -SAT. t ;JO to 5 l ' I T11tSdly, Oet.obff' 15, 1974 H DAIL V PILOT 1\ 3 Nixon Pressured· GAO for Ziggurat?.· Aide Claims Acqllisition Not Pushed A General Services Administration of· ficlal familiar with the f e d e r a I government's acquisition of the Laguna Niguel "tiggurat" today denied l he building wu acquired under pressure from the administration of fonner presi- dent Richard Nixon. Gerald Meckler, acting r'glonal direc- tor of business affairs for the GSA, said he knc\v of "no substance to the charges" contai ned in a story in today's editions of the Washington Post. Richard D. Rnnzllk, a former \Vhite House aide, told the Post the GSA wanted a building near Nixon's Snn Clemente estate. "The memos v;on·t say it v;ou!d be fer the Western White House. bui th ey \\'OUld say it orally," the Post quoted l-lanzlik as saying. Pt1111pkit1 Patel• So Records Woul cl Be N eru~ Ho111e \\'ASHJ;\C.TO'.'\ 1UPJ\ -The Nixon Ac\tninislration pressured the General ScrvicC'S Administration to trade S 2 7 nhlllon 1n usable govemment prDp('rty for a huge. unused building so lhc former president could keep his records near his home in San Clemente, the Washing- ton Po~ reported todnr. The Posl said the building, a seven- story py ramid·shaped structure o ne quarter the size of the Pcn1agon. "''~ acquirNI f r om Rockv.•ell International Corp. v.•ithin the last l\\'O years for some $20 million v.·orth of Air Force property. The building. located in Laglllla Niguel -a ci:imn1unity 10 n1Hcs froin Ni xon's esl:itc in San Clen1enlc -cost $27 1nillion to coos1ruct buL v.·as appraised for S20 million in 1972. The Post also reported that G SA records ob l a i n e d in San Fran.:iscl) show the agency wanted the building for storage of White: House documents office space for the fonner Weste~ White House staff and space for the staff of the Republican National Com· mittee. helter:skelter during the sun1n1er , \vere str ipped from the vines and lined up in rows to make load- ing easier. \Vilh Halloween lurking just around the corner, workers in this field near El Toro flfarine Corps Air Station are readying thousands of jack-o·lan· ternk for the market. The pumpkins, which grew --''---~~~~~~~~~ According to the Post, the GSA said the purpose of the trade \.\'as to get a place to house federal offices and records in Southern California -but, the paper said, the building has never been occupied and is still empty except for office fumiture. The Post said Lhe deal actually cost. taxpayers close to $18 mlllion more because some or land the gow.mment traded aY:ay is now needed. Court Will Rule On San Onofre Border At·rests Nixon Shows No Signs Of Flareups-Doctor Suprem e Co urt l lpholds Rulin g On Retired Pay . Richard I'.:>. tlanzlik, a former White: House aide, tolii the pcipcr he made calls on behal f of the transaction in 1971 while he \\'as an assistant to former presidential rounselor Robert H. Finch. "TI1ey (GSA) wanted a building nea r San Clemente .. , Hanzlik said, ·'The 1 memos won 'l say it ~·ould be for the \Vestem -\Yhite ·House, but the}' woutd · say it orally."" Lnat Cnll Johnny. the Philip t.1orris bell· boy. has called it a career after 41 years of calling for Philip ti1orris. John Louis Rov· entini, now 64, quit his New York bellboy's job in 1933 to do the now-famous commercial on radio. Police lde11tify Slain Marine As Tahoe Man A young Camp Pend leton Marine who was shot in the back and killed Sunday by one of three men who gave the victim and his budd y ;i lift in the San Juan Capist rano area has been iden- tified by Orange County Sheriff's officers as Joseph R. Mosac, 20, of Lake Tahoe, Cslifomi::t. A routine arrest of alleged illegal aliens and thei r smuggler last year at the San Ontifre Border Patrol Checktioint will be the basis of a landmark decision soon by the U.S. Supreme Court. And if it is adverse to patrol methods, the decision c o u I d spell the end of the traditional roadblock as a tool in fighting illegal immigration . The high court Monday agreed lo hear the case in which the government is appealing an appellate court ~<>n which ruJed that imm.igraUon officers can not stop cars at random in searches for aliens. unless they have warrants or legal probable cause to do 50. That court decision also stre.ssed that the color of the skin of the occupants o( a car does not constitute probable c a u s e . The case involves the 1973 arrest of Felix Hwnberto Bringnoni·Ponce, who was set free last June when the 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals threw out his conviction. Since then the patrol has suffered other setbacks from the same court based in San Francisco. Similar rulings on the patrol's arrest of drug smuggler! were thrown out on the warrant or probable cause issue.- LONG BEACH (UPI \ -Rich.ar.:i Nixon is recuperatin g· on schedule. his doc tor ~'laid MondayL wiUt JlO sign i; of a {lareup or the phlebitis th.al is keeping him off the witness stand at the \Vate rgate coverup trinl. The form er President's "lower left leg is still sv.•ol\en but non-tender," Dr. John Lungren commented after an ex- amination which be said took place this \veekend. at San Clemente. Nixon, 61, was hospitalized under Umgren's c:are Sept. 23 to be trea ted fop the phlebitis condition, which ~oes back eight years. He was released 11 da ys later, Oct. 4. to return to his estate at S ::i n Clemente, \.\"tiere he has been in seclusion since resigning the presidency. Nixon is "proceeding on schedule with the recommended period of recovery following his demanding hospitalization , Lungren said, with "no clinical evidence of reactivation" of the blood-clotting that could threaten hi& life. Nixon niust continue to follow a plan Cypriot Virgins Due in Ausb·alia? or cont rolled physica l acu\•ity, thr. ph~"'i· cia n said, indicating no e-han.c~ 1.-·114 opinion that Nixon shQukt r .... .JN !O Washing ton in the fore8C!f'3Dle future to tes tify in the Water1ate trial llouse Fail.s To Halt V eto Over 1'urke v \\'ASlll NGTON <UPI! -The U .S . !;upreme Cou1't today let stand California cuurt decisions holdin g_ that i:n_i Ii ta r,Y retirement pay is comrnunily propeilty subJect to di\·ision bctv.·ecn man and v.·1fe <luring di\"orce 11roceedings. TI\e court refused to revie\\' a decision by lhc <:aliofrnia Supreme Court that Congress did not intend to interfere \\'ilh. community property lav:s and make military retirement pay free or state courl controls in di\'Orce actions. Se\·eral 01hcr stafes. including Texas. Ne\\· r..1exico and \rnshinglon. m a k e niilitary retirement part of community \VASHI NGTON (AP\ -The House property. failed toda y to override President ford 's As part of a community property. veto of Congress' cutoff of military aid a portion of a r c ti red serviceman·s to Turkey. killing the cutorr. retirement check would go to his fonner The vote ·was 223 10 135 to over-ride. v.'ife even if she ren1arricd. If the rctire- 17 short of the two-thirds necessary. ment inoney "'ere declared me re income House Appropri ations Ch a; r m an to the husband, he could be forced George H. ~tahon (0-Tex.). said the lo pay a percentnge of it for ali1nony. committee v.•ould meet later in the day ,1·hich \\•ou\d stO)l in the event the ex-wife to redraft an cn1crgency funding resolu-rc·n1arrjed. lion. for a number of federal agencies. James !'.:. Fithian Jr .. a retired· ~l arinc The resol ution died wit h the veto because li ~ulenant colonel in Orange County. con- the Turkey aid cutoff was attached to te!>lcd the California decision. He h11d it. been ordered to tum over 35.1 pc:rcenl Finch .. a trustee of the RichArd Nixon Foundation, said in an interview that he pushed the idea of aa1uiring a building nea r San Clemente to help SUfr port the Western White House because he felt the GSA had an obligation to store Nlxon·s records. 11le Nixon Foun- dation was set up to build a library for the ex-president. Hanzlik said pressure also came from Rock\•;etJ emp\oyes v.· h o contributed $98.000 to Nixon's 1972 re-election cam· paign.· The office of ~1anagement and Budget -which origi nally opposed GSA's ac· quisition of the building -called it a .. while elephant" because or its size and distance from Los A . .ngeles and San Diego, the paper said. Gid Outgulps l\'la le Heer Drinker s The J~ouse vote "·as Congress· first of hls monthly benefit check to his on overriding any of Ford's vetoes and former '~·ife. Camille. HEINSBERG, Gennany lUP I 1 -Gaby the House began recording it on the Fithian's attorneys a r g u e d that Von Hehl. a blonde. was cro"ned the lnvestigators tod ay said they had no new clues as to the identity of the trio who picked up Mosac and fellow Camp Pendleton Marine Ronald Sanders, 20. as they sat on a bus bench in San J uan. Since the decision, government lawyers ha ve succeeded in o b t a i n i n g t.m- precedented blanket warrants which also hang in the legal balance at present. electronic voting counters on each end Congress intended for milii ary retire-1974 "Bttr Queen" in this beer-brewing ~1ELBOURNE . Australia (UPI) _ of the chamber alm06t immediately i.fter ment pay to be free of community • Rhineland tO\vn. Tv."O thousand "Cypriot virgins'' may Ford's veto message was read. There property la\\·s. and that California could Gaby, 18. \l"OO the trophy aga in st Sanders told officers he and 'f.1osac were robbed at gunpoint after the trio drove them along the Ortcga__High_way and then onto a dirt road near a quarry. Sanders said "-1osac used a I e w obsce nitic!! to describe their abductors as he lay fncc down in the dirt and was promptly shot in the bnck by a member of the gang. The warrants, renev;ed every IO days by a U.S. Ma.gistrate in San Diego, allow the patrol to stop cars at will in a specific geographic area and for specific purposes. Olallenges to those warrants are abun- -dant aod in U.S. District.-Courl-irl San Dieg<>, two judges have upheld the warrants and two have not. The U.S. Attorney's office has stressed . that despite the split vote , the depart- ment still feels justified l.n obt:iinlng renewed warrants. come to Australia. according to Im· v.·as no debate. not change this policy because federal strone: competition from ma \ e con- migration ~1ialster Clyde Cameron. A presidential veto can be O\"Crturncd \a\v is supreme law of the land testanta by gulping ckiv.n a quart 10 Cameron said ?\tonday the girls v.·ere only by a 1wo-thirds vote of both House The California Su pre m c Court seconds faster in the nin-against-the- llv1ng in the hill country of Cyprus. and Senate. disag reed, clock e\·ent. "They are hiding from Turkish. troo~ r-;;::==:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;:::;;:;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;..;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;::;;::;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;::;;::;;::=====;;::;:. ·for fear-of~what-migbl-happen-lo them~1 he said. "Their ages are bet"'een 12 and 20 and they place great emphasis on their virginity." The immigration m i n i s I er said "Australia is considered a safe country for these Cypriot virgins to come to.'' • ' ' Sex Movies Sho~k Do~s I~ I Convention Physicians Ha ve Jttlixe<l Feelings LOS ANGELES (AP) -"l've never seen anything like this before." muttered an elderl y. white-haired doctor as he watched films of nude people having intercourse. ''They never taught me an)•thing about sex in medical school." said an<>ther doctor as he lectured to a packed room or family physicians on pn:iblctns of sexual devcloptnent. It \.\'tis all part of contl.nuing education ror spcct11:1i!l"IS In fflmily practice. who o~ .. their annual convention h e r e ~1onday. 1'he American Academy of Family Physicians meeting included hundreds o( othtr loPiCS and scientific exhibits to provide uP't.o-datc lnfonnation for the doctors , who handl e B broad range of aliments. But the biggest crowd od docton was around the EDCOA ProductklnA booth, \\'htre films for w ual the rapy a n d educ11t1on of doctors Jn sexual techniques were being screened. Rlch3.rd Price, EOCOA. president and producer ol the flhrui. took great pa.Ins to estab\lsb that the fltm1 were n rtctly limited to use by proresalonals and pa· lien ts. lie &3ld doclon. hosp\10!1 •nd medical schools 3re buylng the films a n d vldeo1111>es to demonstr11t4 therapies such aa se.nsate focus, in which a couple ( is in!rtructed in sensual extrci9e! lo Im· pro,·e their sexual communica tion. "The response has been excellent. .. said Price. "The doctors are by and large very much in favor. Oh, once in a while there arc some who have negative feelings. but it's rare for anyone to leave the demonstr::tt ion area before the end of a film.'' F.DCOA. \Vhich has dist ributed seven human sexuality films and has 40 rnore In various stages of readiness, Is a subsidiary of Ormont Drug :ind Che1nical Co., Inc. Price said all the films are produced in association with medico! consultants and a professional ad\"lsory council. In the first ot a three-day seminar on hilman sexuality, Or. Beverly T. Mct1d of CreJghton Unl\•enlty School of ~fedlcine said !IOciety has a "S0.000- year-old hangup on sexual problems.·• Ahhoujh the aeminar Vt'SS to oover such dlfficultlc1 as frisldty, impotence and homesexualll y. ~1ead said he had Ont chief aim: ''To help doctors get O\'et what-0ver sexu111 hangups they have eo they can get to be more at ease, and. tl'le them cou r11gc to dl!CUss sex \\-i lh lhetr pnl.lenta ns part of the medical history, not just tacked on at th~ encl u an afterthought." Mead ~Id it has been only In the past 10 year11 that doctors have begun to get sex tducatkln courses In mcdlcal school. He emphasized the need for honesty in ans~·ering children's questions about se x . and de sl i ng \V lth t he m stra!gh tfonvardly \\"hen they sllO\V sexual curiosity or activi ty at an early age. Furthermore. f\.1ead said doctors should try to encourage alliludes townrd sex as part of sharing and lovi ng. rather than ac hi ev e me n t. conquest or , self!shne~. Docto~d a small n11mher or "·ives '''atched the films at t entively - sometimes through. several sho\\1ngs of the 18-minute sensate focus movie. h1ost ol thMe asked fo r comments said they thought the fi lms \\OUld be useful Jn helping patients, but were not surt whether the)' wou\d like to use tben1 in their practices. "I do a Jot of counseling. onri most older people ha\'e le11med the!C things," said a middlea ged physic ian f r o m Chlcaso. "I suppose ti-films \\"Ot1ld take some of the repressio~ a~·n y. would ' be l:ood for those who h A v e harij!'.u ps. But 1 don't thi nk they \\"Otlld be •Pfltoprl.Rtt in my practice.'' A pai r of young heart spedellslll said they didn't talk much about sexual pro- blems with t~ir patients but thou~ht the fil m& wert a good way to presen t informntlon on se.x thcraples. One tldcrly doctor Ml through the film rour times but then S.'lld, "\Vhen my patients have sex probltms. I send them \0 a psychiatrlit." - Beautiful Bedrooms Begin with ADJUST-A-BED Read and watch TV in the world 's finest all electric adjustable bed . It is elegant and fits your headboard . All sizes ; Twin to King and any mattress firmness. from feather soft to super firm . You and your bedroom de serve Ad just-A-Bed . so see and try it at our Corona del Mar Sh ow room . today ' HFM'OIT IEACH CX>RONA DEL MAR 3137 E. COAST HWV (..kJlt So. ol FaShion Island) 171~) 673-0655 A D JUST-A-BED BY SLE E PER LOU N G E C O •• INC . 't CITY OF OIAHCOf 411 SOUTH MAIN ST (Ju~I North ol Fashion SQ I (71•) 839·41 42 I Just i-'\. Coasting,~ J t,.-·~ ~ . '\~~\\' with Tom urpbine JOfS &: JOGS DEPT. -The time bas comt! to clean off tht'St!. old notes uod c\ippil\~S J>llt-d upon nly d('Sk. I have thhs urge: lo S\'f' what lhl' desklOI) looks like Rga111 , Jlere's one no"·-Scribbled note \\'hile in ro11\'i'rsat1011 \\"llh the office of one •of ()ur OrMn~c t ounty cong ressmen back -1 there in \\' ashn1gton. Oldn 't pu t d01\'T1 which congrcs.smJn 's office so he re- m:uns ha!JPilY ar~nyrnous. Anyway. tl's the latest Atggll' out or the Capitol. Th<'y 're ch1iming President Ford's \VIN button doesn 't actually stand for "\\ihlp Inflation No"'·" They say it actually means. "\\'ilbur is Nutty." Tsk. Tsk. ·flow a" f\11. Now a cnimp!f'd clipping of nC\\'S report out of Phoenix. I foUS<.'"'ife Sandi Ardy h<1S in\·cnled her OY.'11 econon1ics·in- flation button. Shl' 1vears one that says LOSE. !\LRS. ARDI ALLEGES this mot Io stands for . "Let Others Suffer the Ef· feels." Meaning Ford's economic pre>- posals are hitting the 1vrong people. Her for one. probably. l·fere"s another or my patt'nted scrib- bled notes, from Arsene · · BI a c k i e ' ' Gadarian, Ne"'port Harbor 's savant or shipyards. prognostica1or of politics. pun- dit on pollution and spokesman for Blackie. U.S. Ch Wist I I STOCKHOLAJ {UPI I -Stanford Unlvertlty chem lst Paul J. F'lory "'On the 1974 Nobel chemistry priie today for research in plastics and !Jynthetic fibers. The prize for physlci; wl'1U to t\\'O British rad1o astrooomers for thelr discover· ies wh.ich could be important lo findlng Ufe in outer .space. Martin Ryl•, "· aad AntOOny llew!sb, 50. share<I the 1123,000 pby~CI priie for their research in radio astrophysics which according to Prof. Olof Ryd· beck of the Nobel rommluee, "could be of great importance os to finding or intelligent life in outer 5pace.'' f't.ORV, 14, WAS comm~ed by the Swedish Academy of Sciences for his findings in (he physlcRl chemistry of macromolecules in industry Y<'hlch helped revolutlonlie the modern plastics industry, including synthetic materials. "He was in ~s from the start and he laid the basis tor all Jmpro\'e- menlll lhat have n made." Prof. Anders Ehrenberg or the Nobel Academ y "'Id. "Chemists used lo mix various components and knOw tha t they would gft, nylon. but did 001 know exactly why.'' academy Prof. Sture Forsen said. ''Thanks lo Flory, the y now know why it turns out lo be nylon." Flory said he "'ns ''Quite taken aback and overwhelmed by this award." Notified of the award by telephone at bis home in Portola Valley, Calif., nea r the Stanford campus, Flory said, ''It's 6 o'clock in I.he morning here and I'm not a"'ake.'' Flory noted that the avoard Y.'aS the highest in science and remarked he "·~dd ''like lo believe the Nobel committee knows what it's doing." "I llOPE TIIAT IT (the prize) "ill focus more attention on this field . -- Watergate's Gordon Licldy Out on Bail ... \VASHINGTON (UPJl -A fed eral judge today reduced bond from $100.000 to $5,000 on G. Gordon Liddy, silent member of the original \\'a lcrgate defen- dants. and ordered him released from jail pending appeal. . . ' Nobel ' of K~ce" which ·will be increasinaly Important in tbt )'ears ahead, Flory said. Previously he had woo the Sullivan medal at Ohio State Md the Backe. land award IUll:I the Peter Debye award, both from the American Chemical Soclety. Both Sw('(Ush Academy spokesmen stressed that Flory wu not an indu s- lrlal chemist, that he wu not tied l6 any industries, but that industries later had ~his findings 10 improve their products. They aald F1ory's flnding.s were of "enonnous Importance" to modern chefiStry and tlulnk! to him. today clothes are made Crom synthetic fibers and lhe Y.'Orld has a wide range of plastic materiabs. Regarding the phystcs prize, Prof. Per-Olof Lindblad , a member of the academy. said Hewish's dl~ve.ry or unknOwn radio sources had been merely a coincidence. LATER CAI.LED "pulsars." Linblad said "the first time Hewish noticed lhe slgnalJ ... he got surprised and almost scared since the slgn\ls might indicate intelligent life.•· Flory, a native of Sterling. lll., did research on synthetic fibers. synthetic rubber and other polymeric ,substances for the duPont experimental station in Wilmington, Del., for Standard Oil in Elizabeth, N.J., and tundamental re. search for the Goodyear 'Tire and Rubber Co .. in Akron, Ohio. He was a professor of chemistry at Cornell and was head of resenrch at • the Mellon Institute in Pittsburgh before becoming profes,,or of chemistry at Stanford in 1961 where he is ~innan of the research department. He pioneered research on the constitution and properties of substances comprised of giant molecules such as rubbers, proteins, plastics, fibers, and films. K is.singer, Chi·ef Of Algeria Meet RABAT (UPI) -Secretary of State l~enry A. Kissinger arrived today from Algiers where he discussed , "positive elements" of the Arab-Israeli situation with President Houari Boumedienne and \\'3.ys for Algeria and the United States to recoocile their differences over high latest peace efforts 'lll'il\ come under intense discussion. Kissinger will return IO the Middle East in November ooce the Arab leaden ha ve decided their next course in the 25-year struggle with Israel. GADARIAN CAi\fE UP 'tll'ith t hi s scratched-down quote-of-the-week: ''For some prop le. k(l('ping a secret is just about as easy as sneaking dayligbl past a rooster." The ronner Whit e flouse aide. also serving time in the break-in of Daniel El!sberg's psychiatrist's office, has been in jail for nearly 21 months. He has steadfastly refused to t es tif y on \Vatergatc. '.. · oil prices, ·Morocco was ·the last stop oa Kiss· inger's seventh mission lo the Middle East and he landl!d in the sun-drenched Moroccan capital at 11:30 a.m. (4:30 a.m. PDT). He \va.s to talk v.·ith King Ha$8ll II over lunch-about Middle East Kissinger told reporters as he left Alge ria that "l spoke lo Pres id c n t Boumedienne of the enga@meat taken by the United States to arrive at a just and du rable peace in tbe 1itiddle East. If the two parties can agree on the principles of the next stage. Egad, here's yet another clipping on the pile. fl says the government is scrapping th<' "'interlock system" re- quirement for new cars. You know what that is. don't you? That's "'here you get in the new car and buzzers start going off mw lights nashing. Then you have to do things in the proper sequence. Close the door. Fasten shoulder belt. Fasten seat belt. 'Try to reach ignition lock. Off-er up a prayer for Ralph Nader. If you're lucky. your car starts. Jf you closed the ashtray. NOW FOR A ~10RE recent news clip- ping on the desk stack. This one comes from just inland out or Cypress College. ll."here the girls of the class on being ste\\'ardesses just took a No Confidence vote in one Ester Cordel. In event ri·liss Cordel has eluded your attention. she is the stev.•ardess r o r Pacific Southwest Ai rlines who sufferOO overexposure in lhe center foldout sec· lion of that male sexist magazine called Playboy. News Hein says the stcwardesses-in- training weren't so upset al the exposure as· Mith the fact that ri1iss Corda \vas identified as one of them, who nies upon PSA's grinning birds. U.S. DISTRICT Judge Gerhard ~sell reduced the bond and ordered Llddy, 51 . released from I.he District of Colum- bia }ail pending outcome or appeals in both the Watergate and E 11 s berg cases. Liddy's attorncyir contended he presented DO risk of flight ·snd no danger to the community. The U.S. prosecutor's office did not contest the request for lowered bail by Liddy, one of seven men originally cha rged with conspiracy. burglary, bug. ging and wiretapping in the Watergate break·in. Gesell said he had discussed the case v.•ith U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica, who earlier set. $100,000 bond in the \Vatergate case. l\l!ROUUS TOLD Gesell that Liddy's mother had put up the bail money and Liddy would live in Oxon Hill. Md. with his wife and five children pending outcome of ihe appeal. Ei~angelist' s flunting Cited i\·leanwhile. PSA officials have been telli ng cVC'rybody oh, ho\V <1wful this is. ~liss Cordet's center foldout v.'asn"t authorizC'd. they de c I a re. Besides she ~houldn't have been identified <is a PSA NA KNEK. Alaska {AP) -Radio ste"" evangelist Garner Ted Armstron g is facing a possible misdemeanor \\'l!l'", YOU CAN BET they have a ~harge after being cited by an rule about it. Probably says, ·'No ste,.,•-Alaska Fish and Game Protection arde~ shall pose nude \\'hile in uniform ." Jflice r for allegedly shooting a Poor PSA. \Vith all that free ad-moose the day he new in to hunt peace efforts and oil before nying home to \Vashington later today. RELEASED -FOR NOW HASSAN WILL HOST an Arab summit G. Gordon Liddy ----------'----meeting on Oct. 26 when ~inp,er's Charlie Rlel1 Country's 'Silver Fox' Named Top Entertainer NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Fifteen years of sticking to a dream paid off for Charlie Rich as he won the Country l\1usic Associatioo's m o s t prestigiou s a\\'ard. Entertainer of the Year. Accepting the award Monday night. the 41-year-old "Silver Fox" read from a crumpled piece of paper on which his wife, Mar garet Anne. had written : "If you have a dream, hang on to it. Because dreams do come true.'' "I spoke to him or cerlain positive tendencies I observed." A hi gh American official wi.th the pru:ty said that following Kissinger's talks with Boumedienne .• the American Secretary of Sta te Celt that Algeria v.·ill restore diplomatic relations with the United States mortly after the Arab summit meeting in Rabat Oct. 26. TllE S7'1ILING ~tary hinted at a possible resumption of dip\omalic tics between the U.S. and Algiers before boarding his special aircraft. "We revie\ved Algerian-United States bilateral retaUons which have been im· pro\ing considerably in recent month! and which will take a positive evolution in the near future." he said. Kissinger said his t'h J. e e ·hou r con- ferenre with Boumedicnne A.londay night ·centered on oil prices. Algeria has stuck rmn to its policy of high oil prices. Kissinger has warned publicly lhal unlea oil prices come down the in- dustrialized nations are doomed t o disastrous recession which could result in the downfall of Western democracies. Lutl1eran Panel · Softens Stand On Abortions Prize ur1 _..""'- NOBEL WINNER Chemist P•ul Flory .4rmy Orders • ,S11yi1ig Cf!rbs On Civiltdns WASHINGTON (AP) -Alter a long controversy, Secretary of the A r my Howard fl. Callaw3y bas ordered a curb on spying by Army intelligence on U.S. civilians. The new Callaway order· would forbid any spying of the kind allegedly con· ducted agaiMt a group of AmericaD.! (.___l_N_S_H_OR_T_ .. _· ~) who supported the 1m Demo c ratic presidential candidacy of Sen. George ~1cGovern while they were living in Berlin. But the order stops short of an outright ban on Anny surveillance of U . S . civilians. Under its tenns, Army in- telligence sli1l may carry o u t in- vestigations of U.S. civilians ~ for the Defense Department abroad. e U.N. Guesl• UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (APJ . - Yasir Arafat, to the Israelis a master terrorist and to the Arabs a freedom fighter. is expected at the Unit~ Nations early next month as the first ·outsider to speak to the General Asscinbly sine' Pope Paul VI in 1965. The assembly ~1onday approved 105 to 4 a resolution inviting A r a fa t ' s Palestine Liberation Organization, the PLO. to participate in its debate on the Palestine question. The PLO would be treated as "the representative of the !Palestinian people," the resolution said. e Sqspeet Held. DECATUR, Ga. (UPI) -Police ~fon­ day charged a 23-year-old construction worker with the deaths of two of four Y.'Omen who were killed after apparently being accosted at nearby shopping malls. Kenneth Allen flanis of Lithonia, Ga., who has an arrest -record for petty offenses, was arrested without resistance at a construction site nea r the two shoJ>Ping centers. Police said he was considered a suspect in the other two vertising, !hose jct birds will be grinning game. all the \\'ay to the bank. 'Ille state recently banned aerial And finally. I'm workin g dO\\'tl to the hun'ting of big game, and shooting Singer-writer-,band leader Frank "Pee Wee"l\.ing and recording executive Owen Bradley tied in balloting for the County Music Hall of Fame. It 1Yas the first time that l\\'O personalities, inslead of one. had been chosen. DETROIT (UPI) -American deaths. Lutheran church delegate.! J\1onday night e Bn.11k S1vi11dle . I •• . ' last few scraps on the desk. Another game on the sa me day a hunler clipping. This one's about the Ci" i c fl ies into an area. Center up in our good Cowity Scat Armsl'ro~ng has been vacationing R01U1ie l\1ilsap. a newcomer to country music recognition. \vas named ma I e vocalist of the year. !\lilsap has been blind si nce bi rth. All5trallall01iViaNe"ion-JOhn. fr esh from a string of hits, was named female vocalist of the yea r. softened the 2.5 million·member church 's BRUSSELS {UPll -Belgium's second anti-abortion-stand-by-approvtng-a-IBl'gest---bank-hAs-admitted--that-aHea.,...---l~--1 resolution stating that abortion is $15 millipn and possibly as rnudl as --u15abta A:nir.----•·~,~n~t"hc~King Salmon area. ri1onday's THEY'VE COT A LEAK. Ice \l'atcr a~aignmcnt at Na kn e k was is pouring out of the air conditioning postponed by Magistrate EI mer systen1 :11 the rate of t.300 gallons Harrop due to bad \YeaU1er. He a dav. recommended the Armstrong party SOI\' th:it one has to surprise you . 11.·ait for better flying conditions l'ou didn't 1hink anything e\'er leaked before journeying to the Bristol out of the County Seat but hot air, Bay community. did you? Rich's honor can)e after a barrage or hit records and successful road shov.'s during the last 1~·0 years. His "Vt'ry Special Love Song" was named album of year. ln 1973, he took the associalion"s top male vocalist, top album and top single awards. Appalachians Get Showers ·!\1 orth .41.lnutic Coast Sh o-ivin g Dark Clouds , Raiu.s T e 111pc r1111rre s At18~t• 88 -.,l••rlo "'""'•re ~ !k.~IQ'1 8utl11~ c ~afi~"t c•,,r•oo ''"''""''! Cl~vtlanO 0 11tAl ~~v~~ oe' MC<r•' l1tj!tlijll1ll DELIVERY SERVICE OelNe<y of the Do•ly Paot is guaranteed M:lndrJ'¥-lr1<ioly If VO.I do !'GI l\M VOii PX"" Dv S.JO 1>.111 , ml! nno '°"' IXID'\' W.~ bo! ~! !O 'Al (Ql4 Ol't I 11!'•1 1 DO 0 "' ~.ntlt 'Wt S.fl'Kbr u Y"1 °' P'WJI "'°",.. ,.... coor b't' 9 o"' Soiuidoy. ff II D"' Suoitkl~, tall 0<"01 D cooy wiO hP btu1'1 to Vf111 ton~ 17• 1(lflfft Ul't•I IOom Telephones WC C>!FO C6Jl'!v k"'°" ... 1.4311 ,,.,.·-~· l'V'•·~!l'(WI 8fOxtl <YI! 'N,.l..,,M""' ~1220 Si;,\°""'-'' (ap\lt(fOO ~ !io:rt l<.01 (.QDIVtOl'IO. ()o'l(I Point, .SWiii ~ lng\JllO Ntgufl f9'2."2Q D"•CI• ~ f rt"'° .. Hf!t111 .. H-lllhl " K•'"'' cnv ll ..... ""•' Ml1,,..; .. N<il"'""'"' " ~'nl'IO"• " "'"" ,,,~, " HPW Yort F, i:'•~• eu, ••• •Im .$11rtnel P.ue Ito~"' P~l! ..... Olllfl•I • P!!Clt~!O " " 'l"':.:J.h " n " "orll• , Ort. " " " .. M " " " ~1(rtmen10 .. ll 'l SI. lP11l' ~ :! S111 ~·~• ~111 .. p •• ,, !l!tCttCIJ " • ~111f " " .. f""'mtl ·~ ~ " WttN .. I~ " " 0 C:allfor11la ,. " flt"11 el Sollll'ltrn G.t!l!Orni• wtrt " clot-td "" .,._ 109 t11h mon>!"9, * ....,1 11<1 .. ~·••11 w m10011. • "IOI" lo.11¥ aM W"O~Nt• " Wlt'I IJIOK!ff '-rffC!I l1't * ( ' COUNTRY MUSIC KING Charlii: Rich, 41 Stepin Fetchit Loses La,vsuit Over Broadcas~ WASHINGEON (UPI) -Th<! Supreme Court today refused to order a jury trial to decide \\1hether black actor Stepin Fetchlt was defamed \vhen a television documentary said he portrayed ' ' t h e tradition or tile la·iy. stupid, c r ap· shootinR. chicken stealing idiot.'' Fetchil , who sued under his real name ·of Lincoln Theodore Perry. 72, said he was entilled to a full jury trial to air his complaint that the docume'ntary wa! "baseless commentary" holding him "up to hatred. contempt or ridicule" and thereby dt!:stroying his entire caree.r. The bl9Ck actor sued CBS, the Xerox Corp., which sponsored lhe broadcast on Black history, and WtSH \elevlslon. tndlnnapolls. Ind., which broadcast the documentary where he had a business address. U.S. District Judge \Vllllam E. Steckler dismissed lhe compta,lnt, ruling 1 h a t Petch.it was a public figure through hl' movics and subject to bf'0.1dcast comment. Steckler said hia privacy was not Invaded aod Iha! thc rt.'IT!arlcs bro.1d· case were dlrt'CtM only at his role 11s Fetchlt 11.nd not at Perry per90nally in private life. Tho 7th IJ.S. Coor! ol Appe>Js uph<ld Steckler's ruliog. necessary in some cases. $.17 million in assets were lost lo an Christians have "a responsibility to \ embezzlement ring in the bank's foreign make the best possible decision" in currency department. considering the termination of a pregnan· The Bank of Brussels sent tremors cy "based on the situation and ac-through the banking world Monday wben COUMtability for God, self and neighbor," it. announced th~t its assets had been the convention said in a resolution ap-siphoned by swindlers for "'eeks. But proved oo a vote of 500-379. the bank assured customers it h a d The resol ution, however, reaffirmed enough i:ooney in its reserves to make the unbom child's right to life. up the di fference. The previous church position pennilted e Do~trine Disptcte abortions only when' the health ol the ST. LOUIS (AP) -The Rev. Dr. mother was endangered. In 1966 and John Tietjen. whose suspension as presi- 1970, the d:lurth had -is.sued statements dent of Concordia Seminary sparked a s a y i n g , ' ' T h ere are times and doctrinal dispu te within the Lutheran circumstances when interruption of the Ch~Missouri Synod, has been fired pregnancy -is necessary, for therapeutic from 1.he post by the seminary's Boord reasons." ol Control. The resolution said cootraception was Ernestine Tietjen confinned reports a viable allemative to ending the life today \hat ber husband was notified of an unborn infant but rejected volun· of the dismissal when he returned Mon· tary sterilization as a method <lf preven-day lo St. Louis rrom the Americnn ling pregnancies. Lutheran Church convention in Detroit. Law U~he~d · H ookcrs Get Worst Sente1tce WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court today dismissed a challenge te> an lndiana prosUtut.ion law on grounds it unconstilu- liooaUy applied only IO women. The court issued no opinion la declining to hear the sex di_s.. crhnination appeal from a decision by the Indiana Supreme Court upholdi ng the law. Indiana, like many other statesJ has ser.arate laws punishing prostitutes and their customers. Any woman 'who frequents or Uves 10 a house of ill Camell can be fined up lo $500 and jailed for up to five years. But men who purchase a prostitute's services can reeeive no more than a $100 fi ne and 60 days in jail. .Johnnie ~farle Sumler was convicted or Hfrequenting" a "house of ill fame" in Evan!lvHle. She challenged the 1aw, contending that tt applied only to women and that the dilfercnce in punishment ror men and women for the same kind of criminal activi ty was sex ill_s.. crimination In violation of the 14th Amendment guarantee of equal protection or the law . l • • -. " • Today's Fln.al I N.Y. Stocks VOL. 67, NO. 288, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESOA Y, OCTOBER 15, 1974 NC TEN CENTS Supervisorial Race Most Expensive in County tilore than $250,IXXI in campaign dona- tions and expenses ha\1e been reported by Orange Coast candidates seeking elec- tion lo seats ranging from the Board of SUperviSors to U.S. Congress. FinaJ records released Monday by lht COWlty Regis'.rar of Voters indicated the biggest moriey in the county - $82.500 so far o:_ will go toward the battle between long-time lllpervisor David Baker and challenger Laurence Schmit, a Garden Grove school teacher. Baker. whose district includes most of the westem Orange Coast a r e a , reported collecting $ 5 5 . I 0 0 , primarily from the prestigious Republican Lincoln Clilb and the building industry. Schmit, also a registered Republican , reported contributions of $ 2 7 , 4 O O • primarily from rancher Richard J . O'Neill and political figure Dr: Louis Cella, both known for heavy financing of Democratic causes. Baker listed contributors. Ile rcceiv- Plu1ages Off Freeway . . -ed $10.000 from the Lincoln Club and $1 ,000 each from firms such as P.1ission Viejo Company, Don Koll Comp a n y , Ros.smoor Corporation, Avcn Community Developers, 'BroadmOor Homes and S and S Construction Company. He also got $2,000 from Fluor Corpora- " tion, $2,000 from Union Oil. $2,000 from Deane Development and $1,000 from Los Alamitos Racetrack. The other big money race in the ocunty does not involve an Orange Coast Rescuers admini ster oxygen to Mrs. Ma:,r Lovejoy, 60 of 275 E. 18th St., Costa Mesa following plunge of her convertible off San Diego Freeway thi s morning. She later was taken to Mercy General Hospital in Santa Ana where she was listed in fair condition. Acci- dent occurred about 7:45 a.m. just south of the Newport Freeway iriterchange. Highway Patrol of- ficers said they did not know why Mrs. Lovejoy's car left the freeway. Ne,vport Guard Rooked it1 Rape, • •• All. rrue' Stripper Su.pportsilf-tlls'-Story . district. But the fa\•orite in the 72nd Assembly District race. Conner Rams football star l\tarlin McKcever. main· tain.s a residenCt> in Corona del ~1ar. Republican ti1cKeever has raised a reported. $47 ,200 and spent more than $51,000. His Democrat opponnnt Rlchard Robinson, has received $.12,600 and spent about half of it so far. To date in the Orange Coast 36th State Sena.le pistrict raee, incumbent Republican DeMis Carpenter of Newport Beach is losing the donation race to his Democratic opponent, Costa ~·lesa attomey Frank Barbaro. Barbaro repo rts receipts or $23.900 to Carpenter's Sl6.200 though Carpenter has spent the most-$18,100 to $10,600 for Barbaro. l\1ost or BarbaNfs money also came fron1 O'Nei11 and Cella. v.•ho L'Onlributcd in·kind office spate and supplies v.·orth n1ore than $5,000. Carpenter's contributors inc! u de d de\·elopers such as Harry Rinker. Robert Gran1. John Lusk and Alex Robertsoo along \\ ilh Union Oil and Sun Diego Gas and E:lectric. Carpenter's A 1n er i can Independen t Party challenger Gerald Bogart reported income and expcnditure:i of les:s than $500. Congressma n .o\ndrew tlinsha\\' ( I< · Nc~'µOrt 8c;1ch l has raised $45,300 and tSee FUNDS, Page AZ) Nixon Called Liar 'Deceived, Misled' Sa)'S Ehrlichrrian \\'ASHINGTON (UPI) -John D . Ehrlichman's auorney charged toda y that former ·President Nixon "deceived. misled, lied to and used" and finally forced a resignation from his former No. 2 aide in order ''to save his O\\'O neck." Ehrlichman. one of five tormer Nixon associates on trial in the Watergate cover-up. was portrayed by defense at. tomey William S. f'rates as a victim of the plot ~ ho "repeatedly rccom- I\'~an Charge~ fn lrvi.t1e Slaying Case By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of Ille 0~11¥ ,ilol Stiff A San Pedro i;ervice rtaUon attendant accused of hacking a Long Beach girl in the forPhcad v.•ith a hatchet Friday is also · charged today as a suspect in the slaying ol a v.·01nan whose nude body was dumped on a lonely. rural road in Irvine three \\'eeks ago. Gerald J. Shill Jr .. 27, of 623 \V. l4th SL, San Pedro is already booked on suspi· cion of attemplect rape and at1en1ptcd murder in connection with Ille grizly Sig- nal Hill incident four days ago. "We have a hold on him no1v for sus- picion of murder." Police Dctecfi,·e Lt. George Lorton said today following ques- mended" that Nixon disclose the truth. It was the first time Ehrlichman turn- ed accuser of Nixon. whom he serve..1 as chief domestic adviser in the \Vhite House until April, 1973. when t he \\'atergate scandal became a in a j or issue. Nixon, named an unindicted co-con- spirator in lhe cover-up. h;.is b c en pardoned by President Ford and cannot be tried for any \Vatcrgate-related in· cidents. Former \\'hite House counsel John \Y. Dean 111, previously Nixon's chief ac- cuser, \\'as to testify later in the day WATERGATE'S LIDDY OUT ON BAIL, Page A4 COLUMBUS DAY GROUP CRITICIZES JUDGE -Sto•y, A12 for the prosecution -whose case o.1lso \l'aS based on the complicit y or the (See ACCUSED, Page AZ) Nixon to Testify? Sirica Plans 1-1 earing Thursrln :y \VASHINGTON (UPI) -U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica to- day scheduled a hearing for Thursday aftern~n on whether former President Nixon snould be compelled to testify at the \Vatergate cover-up trial or five former aides. "I think the sooner we dispose of this the better off we'll be," Sirica said . announcing the hearing would be held after the trial adjourns for the day Thursday. Nixon. named an unindicted co-conspirator in the case but jardoned by President Ford from any possible prosecution, was subpoenaed to testify bot.h. by the defense .and the prose~ut~on. J·lis lawyers asked S1r1ca lo excuse Nixon from test1fy1ng, con- tending on the advice of doctors that traveling to \Vashington would pose "a serious risk to his health." (Story, Page A3) Defendant John D. Ehrlichman, Nixon's former No. 2 aide, con- tends the former president is "an indispensable witness" and must be compelled to provide testimony under oath in some form. House .Panel Will Probe ----nwe;t:alked ip::: im yesterday and we do have a veb(cte. ' U . Lorton explained. V Kidnap Cl1arge WASHINGTON (AP) -Breaking a A man from ~1ississippi c u r r e n t I y ~"eek-l~ng silt;n~· the ".''oman inv~lved 1 ed · N wport as a security guard 1n a bizarre 1nc1dent with Rt:p. Wilbur tioninLQf the sus~t. He Sn:ura··damag 'ckup truck-sedan R k F d N • whiQk place in 1h< preda•n hours ,r •h• sam~ l''"·· col•• and ,,,.,.n OC y UJl s to lXOll of ~t."7. of that believed involved in ._ t. "I am sure \\'hen he goes to Arkansa s. 22 murder of Bonnie Faye avis. emp oy 10 e . o. ti1ills has backed up his version he will be able to talk to his people has been impounder. , like he used to," she said. I.nvestigators found r..1rs. Davis' nude NE\V YORK (AP) -The Ii o u se • \\'as arrested by Newport Bea_ch pohce and complained that the press ''is trying lt----·earlytodayiTrconnection with 11n alle:g~roy-a--greet-rnartl' . kidnapping and attempted rape of t~·o "What P.Ir, ~Ills said \v&s exacOy teen-age girls Sunday. '!h:'t happened, the 38-year-ol~ A~gen- Mrs:-Battlstella-ttfused-to--tlaborate-bodY-laid-in-3-(Jiteh---alo~· · Jmttrnrry-Co1nml1t·ei:ptan·s-r<rloolrinto- on ti1ills' statement about. the events Road near Jeff.rtfy Road 1 remote possible c 0 n n cc ti on s betv.·ce n a of Oct. 7 beyond saying it was accurate. area of I r v 1 n e early at Sun-. . . But she differed with U. S. Park Police day morning, her clothing and under-Rockefeller family conlr1bu11on to former Less than a year after the Rockefeller fami\y--eont-r-ibuted S200.000 to the Ni"-on-- campaign, Nixon cited u n s pe cifie d "foreign policy reasons" in rc\'e rsing \\\'O Civil Ae ronautics Board rulings and allo\ved Eastern to acquire Caribair. ld h f kidna and at-tm1an and former dancer said 1n a He on c ar~es 0 P . telephone interview Monday night. tempted rape is Andrew Jerome She reportedly ~·orked as a stripper Blackmon, 32, v.•ho has been Jiving in in a \Vashington nightclub and was billed his car during his two-week stay in as "the Argentine firec racker." Newport, according to police. ~peaking' in a .soft, sll~htly accented Blackmon is believed to be the man vo1Ci! and sounding. at tJme.s ·close to who offered two Newport girls, ages 1ears, Annabel Ba.ttistella said that a.c- 14 and 15. a ride in Laguna Beach ~unts of the episode may ~\so ruin and then · threatened to rape them at me and,, my chances of going back knifepoinl in the Dover Shores area. to school. . Both girls escaped without injury when ~u.t she expressed con!1dence. that the they ran from lhe car to a nearby pohticaf career or Mills. cha1nna.n of house. , the House \Vays a~d ~leans Comm~ttce, A description of the suspect's car wooJd not be nuned by the episode given to police ma t ch e d Blackmon's \ automobile, according to Detective Ken Smith. Police located Blackmon's car at I :30 a.m. this morning and arrested the man when he returned , to his car ju~t before 7 a. m. According to Smith, employed as a secu rity apa rtment bui ld ing Peninsula. Blackmon Is guard for an on the l.Jdo PROFIT TAKING COOLS MARKETS NEW YORK (UPI) -Profit laking hll lhe stock marl!kt twice today -al the outset and in the aJtemoon -to send prices sharply lower in fairly 11ctlve trad- 1~ on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow Jones Industrial average lost IS.10 points to 651.40. It had recovered significantly itter losing more than 10 potnls at lhe outset. Declines dominated advance!I, 907 to 473, among lhe l,'/80 "'"" ltad<!d. The volume amounted to 17.08 mllllon shares. compared with 19.77 million traded li1an• day. Prices ~·ere lchver 'n moder:ite trading on the American Sloc1t Exchange. • ., County's Voter • Rolls Reach All Tirne llip,Jt Orange C.Ounty's voter rolls reached an ~all-time high of 81Z.322 Monday as a late ~e of affidavits poured into the Regi r of Voters office. lnterlm egistrar M. J. Mayer said the sharp increase of 3,500 voters in the final days is unusual because of nonnal decline as voters arc deleted because they move out of the county. The biggest c:ontributor to the latest increase ~·as an influx of a ff i d a v I l transfers from Los Angeles Co u n t y . where many Orange Countlans work and registertd to vote. The latest voter total sho\\'S th c RepubUcan party's traditional domloa· tlon in the county crumbled stlll further. The. GOP margin Is now only 3~.500 voters. A fotnl of JO cities in the county nre now in the Democratic colunin In terms of voter registration, two more than last year. The new addlll,ons ·arc Huntington Beach and La Palma. • acco unts in at least one aspect. garments tossed out as though from a President Nixon's 1972 can1paign and Police said she jumped into the Tidal moving car. Nix on's reversal of l\1'0 rulin gs against Basin a backwater of the Potomac Questioning of kno\\'Tl associ:ites led River'. after police stopped ..M.i 11 s' to information fro1n a Long Beach man speeding, unlighted car and he emerged that he had seen ~frs. Da:is. divorced smelling of alcohol and his face was ibot~r or. two small children, the bleeding. ph!v1ous night. A policeman pulled ti-lrs. Batlistella He said ri.1rs. Davis was talliinR to from the water. a large man with a reddish beard at "I didn't jwnp into the Tidal Basin. the comer of Pacific Coast Highway r fell,'' she said. "I got h ysteric a I (See SUSPECT, Page A2) because the officer w~ drowning me. I didn 't need his help. I am an expert swimmer." ~!ills' account stated that he arranged a hon voyage party for Gloria Sanchez. a cousin and houseguest of Airs. Bat- tastilla, who ~·as returning to her native. Argentina. He said his wife, Polly. had a broken foot and insisted that he take the party out while she stayed. home. "li1rs. liUlls went out \\'ith us all the time.'' Mrs. Battistella said. "\Ve \\'ere alv.•ays with other people -never alone." Mills said in his statement thal "after a few refreshments, Airs. Battistcl\a became ill and 1 enlisted the help of others in our group to assist me in seeing her safely home." On the Y.'ay home. with the ca r being driven by another man. "~trs. Battistella attempted to leave the car and I at- tempted to prevent it,'' ~1ills said. "In the ensuing struggle. her elbow hit my glasses and broke them, resulting in a number of smart cuts irOund my nose." Asked about U1ose dcta.ils1 lilr1 . BaL- llslella s&ld~ "I'm not goln.g to 11.Y any more -wh&tever damage tias been dont Is enouglt" ~frs. Battistella said 1he was :i prtmedltRI student In Argentina , and Is enrolled Jn a Wub,lngton·area college for the t.enn S(a~·n in February to take "general bio eaJ tcltneta!' Sht CS.. "1 , 1"1t Al) d ' • Lost Boy, 3, Poses Problc1n For Police111en What !hey had ~londay was a failure to communicate v.·ith a 3 · y e a r • o 1 d Ncv.1>0rt Bench boy who couldn't tell people he v.·as lost and a Spanish·spcak- ing housekeeper \vho couldn't t e 11 anybody lhe bov v.·as missing. After somebody found the tot toddling- down '-facArthur Boulevard at Ford Road dragging a toy motorcycle behind him, police triL'CI to tell the whole Harbor View Hoines area that he was lost The crew of the police helicopter circl- ed the neighborhood . public address system blaring out details of the lost little boy and his de..<iCription. '!he S,,.nl!!Hpeaklng baby siller and mtid, however. couldn'i uOOerstand It al all. FlnaTiy, a ntlghbor beard the voice rrom the lk:y after three hours of the frullleu searc~ effort and telc.phontd the cltlld 's llthtr ~t bis orflet nboul 12:30 p.m .• summ oning him home. The boy was picked up at the polic:e · station ~·bt!re ont detective described him 81 "one of lhC! rastnl-mo\'ing 3·)'tll!'· olds l've ever seen." ' 11n Eastern Airlines acquisitior.. the NC'\I' York Times reported today. In a dispa1ch frorn \Vashi ngton , the Tin1es quoted committee sources a s saying the investigation would be in connection v.·ith President F' or d 's nomination of NclS<ln A. Rockefeller to be vice president. President F'ord !ully supports Rocke· feller and '·has complete faith in Gov. Rockefeller's integrity,'' a \\llrite House spokesman said today. Press Secretary Ron Nessen said he did not see •·any sense of conctrn" on Ford's part thai the gifl·givinf,l Jisclo- sures about Rockefeller ':culd have any adver:;e clfccl on hi.! confirn1ulion by Congress. Guard Ca11efl Up In Boston Flap BOSTO~ <UPl l -Gov. Francis \\' Sargent mobilized the ~lassachusctts ti;a- tional Guard thls afternoon w h c n vlolc,a•tnarrOO the 23rd day of a court or~ in!egrale !he city·., p u b ti c schools and asked President Ford for federal lroop$ "to insure t.be public snfe- ty:· Al a hnstily called nev.·s conference. lhe govt?rnor said gu:irdsmen •·art no"- t'n route to licy armorit!s in and around the city of Bns;ton ·· Gargt!nt said ··for the pr~nr· the guardSTnen \\ill remain 1n t~ annont!s hut emphasi1ed, "If federal troops are denied or dcl:iyt'd nnd lifl the safety or the public requires. 1 \\'ill not hesitnle to order Nntional Gu.ord Into the streets or Boston.'' ·• a Puerto Rican-based airline, according to the Times. The Rockefcllcrs ha\·e large holdings in Eastern. The Times :>aid "there appeared to be no evidence at !his point of a con- nection bc-t~'een the Rockefeller con- tribution and the Nixon ruling. But com- mittee sources said the timing of the events raised questions in the minds or some members." The nr"·spaper said the circumstances !See ROCKY, Page A?) Weather Dense fog tonight and in the cHrly 1nornlng hours \\'edncsday, ncrord1ng to thl~ 1\'Cnlher servil'e. Other\1·1sc nio.~!ly sunny 11·uh hi,l!hs near 70 at the beaches rising to the mid·80s inland. INSID E TOD·\Y l·.s. cl1c11tisr Ptal/ Flory QJ Sf<n r/ord U1urersll!J llns 1('011 tl1c 197 ./ 1\lobe/ tl1ent1st ry pri:e for reSt'Ol'('/j Ill p!OSl/C'~. \V lt t 11 1c11rhccl 01 /101111• 1111 :-io•rl-"f!'s a() '11. !ttrt. f'm Ttr,lit.~j,·e j/el.' See siory and j)ICl·A r~~r A4. li•fO\• 1-bt<l II P.-. II<\.. le'd At (ll•ltrll'-AS c1111111H .,.n C-<ao IJ (..,,l ... l'f II Dull! ftt);fn At Edil•t1•r P,.. Al l11!.,-1~1111n111I Ar ,,11111\N ...... " HY C•r-r II Htt'MC-11 t11,.r1n1n1t" Al "*"' l&MtFI II Mlv!H ot.e Mwrwl "'""' Alf l'Ulitn.t .,._, At Ot•llff c-•~ "' , ... 1. ,,,, s .. 111 , .. , Stoel .llY,.tll Al•ll ,,,.1. '"""" .. ,. Ttl~iri1,." loll Tll1t1m Al WNll\f't At W"'ld HltWI At . ' • . ~ . . ! DAILY PJLOf N/C Tutsdar, Oclol>ff 15, 1974 f'rom Pqe Al FUl\TJlS •.. spent more than $40.300 or It to l<eep lhis 40lh 015trlct 1eat In the tace or a challenge by Democrat lloderick W1l-'°" of Oceanside. \Vllson hu ral!ed S7 ,300 and sptnl almost all of II. ~1osl of his mon Y is in !he form of loan~ 11nd tlinsh.aw's .biggest dOIUlllon. a S:l.51.(l gift. can1c from the Republican National Congrts- siooal Commltlff. Republican Asscmb\ym;in R o b e r l Radham of Newport Beach has rai.st.1J $12,700 and s~nt nhnut hRlf of it to meet the ch~ge o~ Su('annc Currie Lt\\'is in tht 74th Ulstrlct. She reported "823 in receipts and more than So',Wtl in expensl"-'1. Dadh11m'~ rnon('\' l'arne rrom donors such as Cal1fom1·a Autu De a 1 er s. California R:1ilro~rls. Parlftc Ou l door Lighting, l:nion Oil, \\'ine and ~pirus Industry, Beer Dealers. California Dental Association and the building i.ndus1ry's Century Committee. In the ..-.est rounty's 73rd A~mbly Otstrict, incumbent Republican Robert Burke has raised $11.800 and spent more than half of it to stave ofr Democral Dennis ~la11J:;crs. "ho collected $9,100 a.nd spent all but $2.000 of it. Burke's major donor!! include the CaU!omia Loan and Finance AMOCialion . California Auto llca!crs. lleta1l Liquor Dealers As.<;0eiation. \\'est min ster l\lcmorial Park, Hollywood Park, Sh~H Oil and Union Oil. In the 341/J C:Ongrcssional Dist r i ct , \\'hich extends frorn Long Beach 1n1o part of the ..-.·cstern Orange C o a s t , Republican Williarn Bond hos raised $24.260 and spent nearly alt of it in a battle against ii.lark llann..'lford 11·ho has raised nearly $20.000 and spent more than half of it. They are ~eking to succeed retiring Congressman C r <1 i g Hosmer. Fro111 Page Al ACCUSE ... former president. "Richard Nixon deceived, misled, lied to and used John Ehrllchman to cover up his own knowledge and activities ·while publicly s t a t t n g that John Eh.rlichman was one of the finest public servants he had ever known," Frates told the jury. "Ile (Nixon) "'as d cl i berate ly ~ithbolding inlonnatlon from hlm - covering up to save his O'A'n neck . In si mple terms, fl.tr. Ehrlichman had been had by his boss, the president of tbe United ~ales." Frates said Ehr\ichman's decision to leave the White House was a "forced resignation , , . so that heat \l'ould be taken off the President and the President standing there knowing lhat he \\'as the one C'O\'ering up." He said tht! evidence \l'OUld show that Nixon summoned Ehrlichman to Camp David. ~·Id. prior to his resignation April 30, 1971 "and told him 'John. you have ~ my consci ence, but I dldn 't follow your advice. Irs all my faul t. Ir I'd only followed your advice, we wouldn't be in this situation.'" Frates also praised the tapes of Nl:t- on's White House conversations, which \viii be introduced into evidence begin· ning Wednesday. Frates said thet tapes \\'ill show that Ehrlichman repeatedly told N i x o n "\\'e've got to let it all hang out" -tell the truth about Watergate. He also stressed that Dean. when he began eoopera1ing with tile prosecutors, continually blamed Ehrlichman and others for acts that he himself com- 1nitted. Sirica rejected a motion by defendant Robert C. ~\ardian·s at!qrney !or a directed verdict of acqui!la l. In his opening statement. '-1 a rd i an Ja..-.·yer Davi s Dress contended his client nc,·er shoUld have OC>en indict ed because he was <lnly a ~cond-echelon c,1nttwi~n aide with<lul any policy input, ·who had "'no idea" what "'as happening. He also noted that !11 a rd i a n . a sometil'l\C &lnClemente reilaCnt. Wrote a six-page memo three days OC>iore lhe \\lntergate bre3k-in complaining about conditions in the campaign and describ- ing the organiz.atlon as "a fragnlCnted group or prople . . . who in the long nin 141iJl cause more problems than they "·111 ~Ive:· ORANGE COAST ST DAILY PILOT T1\t 0•"'.,e Co••I O••h Pl~ • ..,111 .. 111c11 l\ ,,,...a1 .. 11 ,,.. ,,., ..... Prt•• ••• 1Nbl•'11f• Dy 1i. 0r*'9' Co••I Pvo1,.11on9 ~n1. \elM•f!t e<1•\11>o'l'o ••• 1111~!!.l\tll """"°'' '''"'''"' f"O.v. llW Co\11 Mt \I . "l~"'l>Ort Mii. HUf'hn<JI"" Sir.-:n Fo...,1•1" """~• LA9\I..., ee ... n. 1,viM $.IOOltO.Kk •"!! S,... (J......,1t~n J ... n ,_,,10•"" A ~·,,.q1r ••ll'GAol r<1 h.,., •\ pWlo\N(! !t&!U<rl"'' •<'<! !.""""'' Tho p<1"(iO•I pUDlltlll"'I plan!" ~I >00 W.•t•w41rq\. CMUI ........... (.,\l•IO,ftl#•l•1• Robert N. Weed P•tl1<'9ftl 1111;1 l'\tDl1\N" Jack R. Curle'!' Voct Prt1ldtnt &"II U.n~•' ""'"'""'' Thomas Kei?vJI f.ClilO• Thoma'i A. Murphine Men1gln,9 f.!hlor Char le•iH. Loos Rlch .. rd P. Na" •1 .. 11 '"' M<tn•q•ntE,,.1or1 Offices (O"" M•\I J.IQ W•" ~'\tffl'I kf•PG•1 flt .. 11 )JJ) NtW1111'1 8oll't•lld i..1ou.,.!+1c11 ,, .. ,,.~,<t!t1 ~llfltl"Q10tl B~Mll l fU \ ~.-:11 llov"'~•«I Woll (-1111 JCIJ Nel•I" El C&ln•fllll lttM T1l1phone (714) M2-4321 Cl1s1oltifd Advertii.lng '41·5671 Fr&f'I C0t1111 A,.11 ~II Ill LiQll'le 9'1C" 4t2-4420 °"''~1.,,1. 10 1 0••• CH\! ~1111~..., ~-· /OD ... WI tl<ll'•t, lllllll'lllOllt, eotl10t111 .... n •• o• •d"tn111 ... 11n. "'~111 -v lit "llft'IOY<.tf "ll"°vt ljlKlot! iorfmll\IOft I)! (.Oflyrltril e-r lt<o"" <l•tl 00111q1 ~Id '' U t!I Ml w, C..lllo•~I•. J11Mc .. p1illl' 1111' <""''" U OO l\'!0111111¥' Df I"•+! "00 1110tlllll1', ml!IU•J Oll•llN!lllf'• ~J 00 mo11tll•f \ C'anapaig11 Grows Brown, Flournoy Vie for Media SACR AMF.NTO (AP\ -i:dmund G. Brown Jr.'s picture Is on the cover of Time mug111lne, a.nd Hou s lo n Ftoumoy'11 first co1nmercials are on television. That made it a big media day Mon- days in the campaign for governor - bigger. perhaps, for Democrat Bro..-.·n than for Republican Flournoy. Brown's media expiiiure was free and prestigious, although Flournoy also won ,4.ustria Team Tcikes World Sailing Title From Wire Services praise - -in the Brown. ln much briefer comments text of the Tilne story on Floumo)·'s televislon campaign is pric- ed at $300.000 including a few key spot:i; in the World Series, professional football games and top rated sho"'S such as ··All in the Famil y.'' The GOP candidate said he has not ;ccepted Gov. Ronald Reagan's offer to film television commercials for him because his television funds are limited and he gives a higher priority to ap- pearing on his own behalf. Flournoy also previewed seven 30 and 60-second commercials which he said will be aired oo $250,000 raised by a advance sales for an Oct. 31 fund-raiser by President Foret Teacher's a Sivi11ger HONOLULU -Austrians R o b e r t Jessenig and Hans Polashmegg won the Tom ado world sailing championships liionday at \Ya lkikl. Time Magaz.ine billed Brown in a cover story as the favorite in the race against F lour noy. The magazine described Brown -both from the eyes of critics and friends -at length and generally favorably. Flournoy said he had known in advance about the national news m a g a t I n e ' s COVef' story on Brown and said with a laugh, "It doesn't bother me. What do they know on the East Co a s t anyway." It talces more than cool autumn weather to deter l\1rs. Jean l\lernstein from swinging with her kinder· gaMen pupils during an aclivity period at her school !'"' in Bay City. ~1ich. She overheard one of her pupils say after the period, ''But teachers don't swing." After seven days or hectic racing, Jessen.lg and Polashmegg had the lo"'est scores for six of the seven races. The boat with t..e smallest total in six ~·on the championship, and that was Jessenlg's "Hutanix" with rr.7. In second place overall was Paul Allen of Del Mar, Calif., and Woody Cox. sailing the "Rapld Transit S y s t e m .. ' 1 Allen and Cox had 51 .1 points. Newport G1·andma Held 111 Se1·ies of Sl1oplif ting Jn third place was the Honolulu team of David McFaull and Michael Rothwell, with the "BandJdo" coring fli~ folloYred by Bruce Harvey, of Marina de! Rey, Calif., and Bruce Stewart, with 65 points for the "Sokltoum." In fifth place was a German entry. Jorg Spengler and Dr-. Ekkehart Von Selzam sailed the "Fuzzl-T' ·and totaled 69 points. Flournoy, although favorably desttibed by Time, received only a few paragraphs of mention and o n e black-and-white photograph ln the lengthy story oa new political leaders of t~e nation. Time's article, mainly a po 11 it f v e portrayal of Brown •as a new style politician -was viewed by Brown as testimony lo "the seriousness of my campaign." Ne""'()(>rt Beach police traveled to a cottage in Laguna Beach fl.tonday to arrest" a 66-year~ld grandmother charg- ed in a series or shoplifting excursions in Harbor Area stores. \1'ere visited most often by the woman who told officers she works as a nurse . TONIGHT Officers have not totaled the estimated COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL - value of the allegedly stolen articles, Regular meeting, City Hall, 6:30 p.m. and some puzzling evidence exists. "BEHIND THE HEADLINES" -Dr. Detectives said one it e1n identified Giles T. Brown, occ Forum, 7:~0 p.m. as stolen from , .an I. htagn~n store in "THE REAL JNSPECTOR HOUND" .Los . Angeles stil_I . has a p~1ce tag on,~ -South Coast Repertory The ate r Jes.senig cN!dlted his three years of sailing experience with Polaahmegg for his performance in the often rougb swells and high winds of Waikiki. Brown also bad to take some ribbing abouHbe article from two KNBC com- mentators. One asked if Brown had written the article himselr. La.ter in the KNBC in t e r v i e w , In· terv1ewer Robert Abernathy Bjked Brown i£ he would consider ruMing £or president in 1976. Mrs. Janet Evelyn Ennis of 241 El Cajon "'as arrrsled on a "'arrant speci- fying $10.500 bail stemming from II al- leged shoplifting incidents. ~lajor department stores, said police, it. )Ct store officials say it went out 1 through Sun 8 ' , of stock eight years ago. · p.m. , , , Officers sa id that an alleged shoplilting UCI ,f;ECTIJRES -. W.o men s "The winds coming off· the mountains are similar to Austria's," he said, as he washed down the "Hastanix" after Monday 's 18-mlle race over an intricate pattern on a triangular course.' "No, absolutely not. I am going to be governor if I am elect~ for four years," Brown replied. Capune Ends Paddle Trip Do1vn Coast CORONADO (UPI} -A ".ica hiker" paddling along the Pacific coast can sec man y interesting sights including sharks, rabid foxes, naked zucchini ped- dlers and Ron Zie11:ler. This was tl1e way Larry Capune reca ll- ed today his l ,240-mile, 6 0 -d a y pad- d!eboard odyssey from Brookings, Ore., al"!ost to the Mexican border. Capune, 32, did il lo show young people they can go on exciting "trips" without using drugs. and to promote · his concept of sea hikers. Capune's sea trip included a fa ce to face meeting with a \1•hite shark - ··a maneater," he said -near Point Reyes. ··11 was scary . l found the best thing to do is not stop paddling. I put a lillle extra english in the strokes.'' Capune camped each night on shore>, and a rabid fox, foaming at the mou1h. appeared besid(' a cam pfire n e a r Vandenberg Air Force Base. The animal croucllcil and Capune srabbed up his flare pistol. fi red it ialo the fox and then beat the "'Ounded animal to death \1·ith a stick, he snid. Near San Francisco, Capune s11i<I he \l'aS laying face down in ihe sand when he hcarrl a 11:irl's voice ask 1 n Ii( if he wanted lo buy some zucchini cak e. "I said 'sure' and reached for the 35 cents. \\''hen I looked up, l reallied the zuccini cake was all she had," he said . The cake peddler was not alone. Tv•o other nude wo1nen were \1·ith her. he said. He clin1bcd aboard his paddleboard and returned S\\'irtly to sea. Capune. who ..-.·as greeted by ?o.1rs. R.05e Kennedy during a similar trip on the Easl Coasl. said he tiad hoped for a bipartisan touch by dropping in on President Nixon at his Oceanside San Clemente home. "Only by the lime I got there. he \\·asn't president anymore." Capune said. and Ziegler and a group of Nixon aides shooed hirn off. F orcl to Stnrnp 'GOP Country' • Seek ing Support \\'ASHlNGTON fliPI) -With hi9 014-'n popularity slipplng. rrcsident Ford is headutg for a swing through traditional CiOP counlry In another llttempl to win support for his nnli·lnnation progrem and to aid Republicans In next month's elt<:tlons . ford r\anned to )P8\"C Ille today for the 36-hour 1rip through M I !I 1 our I , Nebraska, South Dakota nnd lndlflnl• -111\ lraditional Republi can strongholdii. The President's first nppcar111nce "'111 be in Kansall City. ~10, at a eonvention ot the future Fanner~ of America • spree at a Fashlon lsland department Forum," Room .140 ~1al Science Lab, store led 10 the issuance of warrants 7 p.m. New Directions for Free-Lance A similar theme was ralsed In the Time article, which noted that after completing four years as governor of the nation 's largest state Brown would still be only 40, "yodhg enough to start· thinking about the White House." <ind. the arr:st. of the elderly woman. \\'riters," ~ 101 Physical .~ence ~trs. Ennis remained in custOOy today Bldg. 7 P·~-Landmark.s of Art, Room The red~hulled Hutanlx placed fourth, eighth, first, seventh, fourth, fourth and second in the seven races. AU they needed to win was to finlsh the final day in the first 10. in the women's section of Orange County 178 Hwnaruties Hall, 7 p.m. Jail. Frorn Pnge Al SUSPECT ... and Lln1e Ave nue, near a truck -sedan vch.ic\e. He has since been questioned under a deep hypnolic trance induced by a medical doctor occasionally used to as- sist \l'itncsses to criminal cases in recall- ing obscure details that might prove val- uable . Detective LI. Lorton did not say if the Westminste.r physician's "·ork with the unidentified potential murder case witness helped in this instance. . The same doctor {'laced Irvine 0etec- 1n•e Steve Nash hunself in a trance some l\\'O years ago, alter he was the \'ictim of a murder attempt by a llessians' motorcycle gang chieftain near the same spot whe re Mrs. Davis' body \\'as found. lnvesti ga tors who sat in on the session in which Detective Nash relived the brush with death 14-·hen a bullet grazed his cheek said it vras so real in his re· collection that it \\•as eerie. The latest Irvine murder suspect was arrested Friday after his alle!!;ed victim ran-:i:;crea ming and spewing bloocl from a gaping hatchet wound In the head-to a house for sanctuarv. She lo!d Signal Hill police she had been involved in a minor traffic accident v;ith a large man in a pickup-sedan ve hicle who urged her to follow him lo his bro!her"s auto body shop for a damage esti mate. Once there. investigators said. h e allegedly tried to criminally assault the Cal State Long Beach coed and finally attacked her ..-.·ith a hatchet ~·hen she fought back. "lie buried a hatchet In the gal's forchl'ad." said LI. Lorton . Investigators who f0tmd ~tn. Da vis' body Sepl. 22 said she "'as executed "ith a single shot from a small caliber µistol fired at point-blank range into her hrad. Frorn Page Al ROCI\:Y ... of the C'Ontribulion 1vould be Investigated as part or the committee·s examlnntlon or any influence the Rockefeller fan\J\y may have exerted on government agen. cies and policy. Hockefeller's press secretary, 11ugh ~iorrow, said the former New York governor owned no stock ln Eastern Ai rl in es , But the Times said , Rockrfelll"t's brother Laurance waa !den- tified as the single largest stockholder in the air carrier ln a 1972 study. In add ition, Ult Chase: ~1 a n hat tan Bank. the Rockefeller ramily blJ\k, holds 6.1 perttnt of Ea.stem Airline~ stock In lr\lst :i.nd is l~w prime 1endu of A S300 mtlllo:i. lor.n to the alrllnt., the Times W'id. ~1eanwhlle. Senate Democratic whip Robert C. Byrd stid tOday 1 book about Anhur J. Goldberg "Is pretty reminis- cent of lhl' dirty tricks ln the Nixon ..,ra. ·· I WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16 "ALCOHOLISM, AN ADDICTIVE DlSEASE" -Dr. Robert Schmitz lec- turer, Raleigh Hllls Hospital, 150'1 E_. 16th Street, Newport Beach, 6:15 p.m. Jnformation : 645-5707. NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH DRAMA -"Effect of Gamma Rays on Man in the Moon Marigolds." Room 120, Oct. 16, J7, 18 and 19, 8 p.m. Adults $2. students $1 . UCI LECTIJRES -"World of Plants." Room 550 Physical Science Bldg. 7 p.m. "Effective Tax Plan," Room 178 l:lumanilles Hall , 7 p.m. f'roara Page Al MILLS ... \\'Ould not name the college. "I've also been a school teacher and take accounting,"' Mrs. Baltistella said. "I spend half my life in school." But , she added: "I don·t know anymore if it's important to be decent because you get misunderstood." She ..-.·as reluctant to discuss her dan- cing career. saying, "l haven't been a dancer ln a long time -only one month this year." In the final standings, B o b Kel· tenhoffen and Bob Klein of Newport Beach finished sixth with 76. 7 points. Rounding out the top ten wert Bill Hollier of Australia and John Bleasby or Toronto with 76; Bruce Badeau and Doug Cummings of Houston. Tex., with 81.7; Austrian brothers Hans a nd Bernhard Prack with 83; and J o h n \Vciser Jr., and Fritz Homschurcb of Honolulu with 83.4 Rick Taylor of Costa Mesa and Randy Smyth of Huntington liarbour finished sixth in Mo.nday's flnal race ln the "Duck Hawk," but were not among th e top 10 in the final standings for the series. Costa l\'lesa Burglar ---Gets TV Se ts, Stereo Orange County Sheriff's officers today were investigating the theft o{ cash. television sets and stereo e q u i p m e n t from a Costa Mesa area apartment. Deputies said Intruders broke the lock on the front door to gain entry to the apartment or Roger l.e<lnard Wander. 33, of 2270 Pacific St. They estimated the total loss at $670. Mesa Rotarians Set Garage Sale For Youtl1 F1mds A community-wide garage sale is being SPoMOred by the Costa Mesa Rotary, Club Saturday IO raise funds for youth projects in the Harbor Arca and in 1'.1exico. The garage sale, appropriately, will be held in a garage -the commercial garage of ~lesa Center Automotive, oor· ner of 16th Street and Orange Ave., Costa K1es3.'" -- I terns go on sale at 8 a.m. Among wares on clisplay are furniture, appliances, filctures, sporting goods and clothing. Persons interested in donating items to the sale may call 64&-0102 during business hours. or 546-1036 to have their items picked up. Items may be delivered to the sale site a(ter 5 p.m. Friday. AROUND THE CORNER AND UP YOUR STREET WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH." SEVER~N WER S POP UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STORES IN SHOPPIN RS IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY, WE WERE ABLE TO OB AIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM OFFICES AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY, THERE IS AM; PLEPARKING WITH LITTLE TRAFFIC CONGESTION LEADING TO US. THE SITUATION HAS MADE US MORE COMPETITIVE AND WE ARE PROUD ANO GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR EIGHTEEN YEARS AND HAVE EX- PANDEDFIVE TIMESATTHIS LOCATION. . , . ALDEN'S CARPETS • ~RAPES 1663 PlacenHa Ave. COSTAMHA 646·4838 • HOUU: Moo.tin'"'""-9 le l :JO-Pll., 9 let-SAT., 9:l0 I -.. I I i , I I