Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-11-05 - Orange Coast Pilot7 • -!· I • • "l>· • • • • ' .. • .a e ' • 1 \ t • • ' • • r. B dreds Attend . ' Bero Cop Saves • • ) j • . °' . Coast Woman • Funeral Service • • • i ' ~om Rome Blaze For ' Slain ·Athlete ' .String Seetloa . . -. Uf'I,...._... Transplantelr'PeMSylvanian Patti Mae ties her string bathing suit before enteftng the surf orr Miami Beach. Patti, a real estate salesgirl with listings of 36-26-36, does some modelingoriherdays Coast Of/~t;er Saves . . . Reluctant Housewife .. V_alley~s Race Rift Rustlers Bunted Calf Carted Off • in Hunting ton 'Quieting' Huntington BeaCh poli~ were looking today for a 325-pound calf named Resins, apparently taken Monday afternoon from a back yard: THE THR.EE·MON111·0LD : Angus-Holstein crossbreed was a 4.ff project owned by Jennirer DeLoyola, 15, or 16672 Blanton St., poli,ce said. · ·By PA'l'TY BUllNE1T CN-.o.i" .. lll58fl ·._; A 13.year-old neighbor reported seeing two men lead the calf from the yard, then saw the men leave in a late model green and white pickup truck, police said. · Racial friction which erupted last week has given way to diaJoeue tOday at Los Amigos High.SchooJ in Foun- tain Valley. THE CALF, valued at $150, was described as black with (our white feet, a.small white dot near the right eye, a white spot on the tip or the tail an~ wbite·betw.een tbe front legs. But no one is jumping to the con· clusion that the rift between Chicano and Anglo students is resolved. Principal Kenneth Calkins reported. cautious! ''tbin s seem to ·be Hundreds Attend OC ~eting dOwn. . "There is dialogue, he says. And ' there . is one particularly positive result. •added vice principal Ray Ar· royo. . . ·Rites for Athlete Representatives of two student fac·. lions, who openly clashed iThursday l ByKATHYQ.ANCY ·on the . northeast Fountain Valley 1 ot ... o.1ty N1tMatt campus, have agreed to form a com-Stephen ''Mike'' Finklea, a mittee on student rights and respon· promising 19·year-old scholar and sibilitj_es, Arroyo said. aUitete, was buried Monday. · He was one of the two ad·· fttore tha n 225 classmates, ministrators who m~t with three teachers , coaches, neighbors and Anglos, three Chicanos and six relatives gathered at a small fun eral teachers Monday. · chapel to mourn the death of Finklea, . OnWednesdaythegroupwillmeet describ e d as ''everything to again to establish the rights commit· everybody." He w.as-captain of the tee, which .will also consist of Orange Coast College wrestling team representatives of black students al and 1973 athlete of the year Bl Foun- Los Amigos. ' . lain Valley High School. ''The committee will provide the There were few dry eyes during the students with a (Qrum to e_xpress briefservice. • · themselves , to channel some of these "I saw a whole neighborhood on the resentments," ArroYo hopes. street where Mike lived -I saw them Tonig}Jt, parents will have an oppor-... bleeding with the family," said tbe tunity to express their views. At 1:30 youth'& uncle, the Rev. Enoch p.m. in the litt.le theater at the school Finklea, who came from South the administration will ask parents .Carolina to officiate at the service. help and advice in keeping the calm. Mourners overflowed rhe chapel at "Parents also will hear the ad· Peek· Funeral Home in Westminster, rriinistration 's account of what did . a"nd what didn 't really happen." : Calkins said. Though accounts vary, Arroyo said racial slurs set off a right Wednesday. Thursday's copfrontation apparenUy was in retaliation. School officials called for police · help and sent stud~nts home early both Thursday and Friday. ·• ·During most periods Monday·, fiv e additional tea.chers or parent volun· leers patrolled the campus as a security picc_aution, Calkins said. 'l'hcday passed without incident. Women Escape From SF Jail SAN BRUN,O (UPI I -Women have escaped from the San Francisco County jai~ in San Bruno for the first .lime in the memory of jailers. leaving many silting outside on folding chairs. Most or them attended the burial afterward at Westminster Atemorial Park. "I stand s tronger a nd taller because I knew him," Mike 's unc le said. "He contributed so much lo each of us." Young Finklea was slain at mid· night Thursday by six bullets fired during the apparent holdup of a Foun· lain Valley ?·Eleven Market where the youth had been working the past three weeks. - !\Ir. Finklea , who planned lo become a math teacher and wrestling coach, was working at the market at Euclid Street and Warner Avenue to help pay for his education. fie planned to transfer to Stanford University next rail. "I have been thinking a lot since last Friday morning when A1ike's tSee FUNERAL, Paa:e A?) Child-slaying Mo ther Freed DENVER (.U PI I -A woman who used a broken wine bottle to stctb her 2·Yeilr·old son to death in a bathtub was released from the Colorado State l·los pital on condition she continue receivingJ>sychi<ilr'ic care al her nf\V homC in Sa n Diego.Officials :;;a id . An elderly San Clemente woman 's W\oe for 1n heirloom painting nearly cwt 'iler Hte early today and it took ~ elforts by a pab'Olman to drq llirfn>mlllebumlnslunllyhome. about $30,000 and nothing could be Escapee Captured saved rrom the ruins. William Davis. chier -jailer. said Monday two women had broken a window in a doc:tor·s of .. · - rice and slipped down~a rope to freedom . The 15·foot rope had been fa shioned fr.om sheets. Denver District Jud~e .Joseph Lilly ordered the relt!:h1e of Caroll'n fl.1cthard . 31, after bcin~ told by d0<"· tors at the hospilbl al Pueblo.· Colo . · she was no longer dangerous to her· self or others. Slptrlotl credited pet.rolm•n Tom Jwd1n tor saving Mn. W.W. Bassett dorlns tile 2:111 a. m: blue. • D1m11e to ·the tiouse. at 4 W. . Granada occupied by Mrs. Bassett Md ~er 85-)'ear-old husband was "Wben J got the.re Mr. Bassett was outside artd tbe· living roo'11 was In names," Jordan said. "He told me his wife was inside trying to get to the pie· ture 11ang:lng above tbe mantel. The patrolman then ran inlq lhi smoke-filled house. · ''I could hear her telling me where . • <See RESCUE, Page .UJ GLENDALE CUPIJ -A33-year.0id escapee from a Tennessee jail was ar- rested here Monday alter he abducted a woman employe from her Hol- lywood office and beld her for more than am hour, demanding $5,000 for her life. Arrested was 'Larry David Walden. who was charged with .. .suspicion of kidnaping for ransom. Those who escaped Sunday were identified as Siotha King, 23, of San Francisco, serving a term for prostitu!Jon and Car· rying a concealed. weapion, and Frankie Shaft, 23, also or San Francisco .. serving a robbery term. 1'tiss l\tethard was committed to the hospital after pl eading Innocent by reason of lnsa'nlty to the murder of her son. \Villiam, Nov . 21, 1967. She had- bCen charged with using the bottle to slash the child's wri sts .ind stat> him 1n th!.! chest. • One Piece Of Candy ·. . - Killed Boy PASADENA, Tex. CUPIJ -The rather of an· 8·Year-old boy fatally poisoned on Halloween night by a candy straw filled with cyanide was · charged with murder today' and held under Sl00,000 bOnd. Police, who had gone rrom door to door in a two··block area of this Houston .suburb tracing the Youth's lrick-or·treat path, made the stunning a nnouncement at a hastily called news-conference:-'I'hey-sa.id the·father was in custody. Timothy Mark O'Bryan died late· Thursday from eating just one piece of candy. His father, Robert ClarK O'Bryan, told police at the time his son begged to be allowed one treat before going to bed. "We and the district attorney's or. fic e felt there was sufficient evidence at-this time for a charge to be filed." police Captain R. E .. Rhodes said. "There is no further comment at this time as we are still rounding up loose ends." · Rhodes, s itting by assistant Harris County District· Attorney 1\-tichael l{inton , 'refused to say when O'Bryan had been arrested or what led to the arrest, other lhao that the charges fol- CSee CYANIDE, Page A%) Oranl(e cOast Weather Variable hi gh t"loudiness through \Yednesday, "ith sli ghtly warmer days and cool ni ghts. Beach highs at 6S rising to the mid·70s inla nd . Lows tonight dipping into the 40s. INSIDE 'l'ODt\ Y The iafety of America·~ ll!J nuclear Tt actors remains a nag . . ging question. The problem ;s e:ramined in detail on Page B!I loday. l-Don~t -Forget -to ote; Polls--Ope n Until 8 !. ' • ' • ' . ' . '· } -• ~ • .. ·' • -·~- flf ~YPILOT s • , ~Food .Bank' Urged ~ ' . . !(.issinger Asks World Aid 8rain Supply ROME (AP ) -Secmaey Of State Heney A. Klulnfer u ked tho other mltjor grJlll Hppllers today lo Join !lae trnlted States in a rood bank to en· · fllk.e that ''within a decade no Child , ...-10 to bed hunll'Y ... no ramily . : •ill &ear for its next day's bread." .: .. ~ Af the World Food Conference con· ~ ftned, with Kisatnaer u lta main -. oPening·daY spe1ket, tboul1nda ol JelWt atudenu Dtlretlecl In downtown· Rom e to protest-°'e t\meric1n's presence In ltaly. Terroriata attacked an American taraet ror the fourth day. Four young men stonned the Rome office or Honeywell Corp., the elec· tronics firm, beat up a woman telephone operator and set the 'clace a Ore with a homemade bomb. The Hon eywell 0111ces are abOUt lwo m11ea· from tbe Colosaeum, where 1 rall,y by Newsboy Killed BOmb Goes Off on Paper Ror4.e · • MILWAUKEE, lf:'as. <AP> -A newspaper carrier wa& killed today when a bomb placed on a car exploded on his Northwest Side delivery nMI. police s1ld. · . . · PoUee said tht bomb, in a plain c'1dbo1rd box. cxoloded when it w11 IDOYed by the victim. ldlntined a1 Larry An•tett, 15, a carrier· for the lililw1Uee SenUnel. · Aatboritie1 laid the yauth apparently became curious when he saw the box atop lhe late model car at the curb as he made hi• deliverie1 around 1:15 a.m. Tbe bomb was plated on the car some time during the . .._,pollce•ald. . Tbe lacldent ocemted ou\llde the bome of R.K. Vermilyea, 1nd the ~., was owned by Vermilyea's son Michael, 23, a member ot a local motorcycle club known as Heaven's Devils. . Police said tbefa'mily had complained several times in recent months Uoat baras1meat from members of another mot'orcycle group, The ·Oullaw.s. · Petersen Will Quit. High Justice Post . • 'll'ASllJNGTON mPI) -Hellr)' £. Petersen; his 1owernment career -.i durtni Its lut two yeera b1 daa'1ff he cooperated with the White 1laUA on n1tr0win1 the Wateriale in· ffltl11tlon, Is rettrtn1 from the .l.ute Department. it wu announ· eodloda1. a clozenlolanll1t1ollllterRl'OUPl...ied abouthaU an hour Wore the attack. KtuJncer told the conference tll1t the aim ol the Unltoclstates is "a bold objective" to cope with .. the soureeof hunger'' around the world.'. The system he envisioned would in· elude reserves for emergency food relier and punitive measures for COllft• lriet that ralled to meet oommltm,en· 11. . Kissinger also uried newly rich oil producing states to help poor eoun· Irie~ buy food, fertilizer and farm equipment. Quadrupled prices for ciude oU lt\e last year have prodt1e:ed a surplus of around '90 bUUon in the 0U ..1tat11. ' At the same titne, lhey have.farted hard limes on .poor countries that have had to decide whether to spend• scant toreign exchange on oil or on food. The grain supply deficit in developing countries will rea(h about 85 mil hon Ions by 198&, Killlnier said. Financing them to Increase produc- tion "must becomeoneoCtheprtority- objectives or ·the eounlriel and in- stitutions that have the tnaiot in· nuence in the international monetary system," he saf_d. • Hundreds or policemen and America n security orncera 1u1rded the downtown hotel where Kissinger aitd his wife Nancy were lodged.·· Kissinger saw none GI ·the demon ... ~ atrations as he was driven around the city for ornclal diplomatic functions •. includln1 his second visit wllh Pope Paul Vl In four months. · Vatican :;ources said Ule ponUff urged the United States to do all it can to help the world'lhllllj.r)'. . The Rome food eoillerence, spon-sor-ea b)' the Food and Agriculture · Organiration of ·the United Nations, opened with an appeal from U.N. Secretari-G'eneral .Kurt Waldheim for an ''equitable llobal strateo" to ward ocr m1s1 starvation. Lll<e an international panel of economists and food experts •hbse repo'rt was Issued on the e.ve of the ronf'erence, Waldheim said the rich natk>ns consume too much ind the poor aren't doing enou.gh lo help themselves .. MOURNERS GATHER ..Oii.l'UNlllAL OP lllUllDllllD POUNTAIN YALL!Y vouTtt More Then.225 Cli11m-1·N•ltlhllon and Ra1811ft1 Pay lleapettoi 111 HOidup Vlclllll . . . . f'ro• l'~AI Two Released H . Sh. .. . .. ; FUN£RAL' .... untin.gton ooting ~~~~~a~fd me," Nld 1111 l!ev. · . , · • · "It waa·lar be"""' ~ad ·Ruled Self :Pefiinse ~!;=~:-=~ ·Charges against two men, ll'l'Hted • one ~ritlcally. . such tr11edles cannot ~_b Utem ao after a Huntington Beach' 1hooting Warren Hicks, 271 of Santa Ana. matter how ~ucb they read ol Htb Thursday., were dropped Monday at-\ remains In Huntington_ Intercom-lhlr,1ahappentnatootMrs. · ter the Orange County District At tor· muhity Hospital with· gunshot wounds The pastpr su11estec1 that~,..., ney ruled the pair.acted in sell def en· in lhecbe1tand side. ., ~w lllke, late a"'~" rrom ~tn; se. After que1tlonin1 the five men on: 'thew11hedenltdauu.eu loadlle.,. M1rt Dewdriey, JI, of7143 Ronald Friday, Huntington Beach police w~,athewanted. __ ,._. ~:_ Road, llunUn(ton Beacb, and William released John Cooper, 24, also or tbe Heroes aren't w.JC ill a ~ Gehrk~ 24 who lists no permanent \ Ronald Road addreu and diamlssed He was a hero .berore be ever Mt U.. addru;, h~d been beld on charaes of the possession ot ::dauaerous weapons wreaWna mat... . assault with intent to commit murder char1e1 11alnst Gehrtte and Dewd· The Rev. Flnktlil IUlllatWI Ute and poueulon ot dqen>US weaPons. ney. mourners look abQd, n-ex1m~ They were among five penoos ar-The other wounded man, 'l'SIDOthy their llvet and tJ'1 toimprvfttllem. rested an.er a shooting at the Ronald Morton 23, of Tu1Un wu arralped · "Mike baa alreedt ftnllHdl th. Road addre1s left two men wounded, Monda); In Weal Or1n1e County coune. · .We ff,9 ~uon ~ plaJiAC Petersen· was head~ the criminal division and in charge of the Original investigation of the Watergate brea,~· in until. the Watergate ~ecial proleCutionfo~e wu formed.-:,:,,.. •' · White House cOnvenaUons bitt'(!id' President Nixon and aides indicated that Peteraen was reporting the. procreu or the ln~Uon to tht Preaident. Elephants Pull -· Stalled Track · · municipal court on two chartet ol 11· field." the P11atbr --••.ns ii wat· s'ault with intent tocommttmurder. • chincua u we tUeuptM&orcb.'• lfe was· booked into custody Thuf. ' sday mornin1 after belnl lttated .. .. t s rn" I"...: torminorbulletwoundalnlhellloulder ~en 8 WO llll IJld arm at Oranp County llledlcal SAN DIEGO IAPl-l'llr\1-- f'roffl Pa~AI • RESCUE ••• , 'J1rie WJlite Home ftleaed •n ex- ebance of letters in which President Ford praised Petersen's ·record of acbievement. Attorney General William 8. Saxbe said Petersen's decision to reUre after ·more ·than 2S years with the Justice Depart.men• was entirely his own. Peteraen repeatedly denied wrong. tloinl and defended hJs judgment during the W1ter1ate invest.111Uon. · He 1ave 8 heated dei'tn1e when he wu called as the lut wilDeSI Jn 1973 Senate Watergate hearings. • "'Damn! I think 1\_'.s a reOed.lon on me and the Department of Justice." be Aid, referrln1 to the appOintment of Archibald Cox a s a special • proHcutor• to take over the case. Petersen said his team was "on the fti'jeot breaklnc th·at case wide Clpltll'•when Cox toot over. Peters on notified Saxbe ot ntirement ·plans in a Jetter dated Nov. 1. The retirement ii effective J>ee.31. 120~,ooo Blaze .BUTTONWILLOW IAPI -A aoo.ooo nre destroyed • 7f.year-0ld ranchhou se co nt a intn1 f our ·teneralions or Kern County historical objects, fire officials said today. The ·blue was lri(gered by faulty elec- trical wiring in a storage room at Cecil Tracy's ei&hl·room, two-story home near b ere Monday, in· vesligators said. OllANG! coasr DAILY PILOT Robert N, WHd , ""11df!M. ffd ,.,........, Jack A. Curlev ne Ptftl4it"" .,.. 0.---11 MIM9tf' Tr.omas Keevil ..... Thomas A. Murphrne -~£•• ' Qar\H H. LOOS Akhard P. Nall . ""'""" M11"""'4~ Offices bitlf IM!ot; »t'-\1 &.y\lfHf ""'"°'' e...:11 · UU/tlt _.., lklulolff!'CI \.etOIN ...... ,.~ ... "'"' ..... ~ei.ltt<ll: Ut1fllal'l ...... t ~It Vt1i.11 t SNI U""' ..... ti lell °"°° ,,_., TttllNM C714) .UC1 a...MfMd Adver11slf9I MJ.5671 .......... ll•lltf""-Olllcs . F,.!'s!.. "'cVl.. 495-0.30 ~,..,. °'~ c:-.t• ~liM 540-1220 ~ ,.,,, OfMIOt (Off! .... ! .... ,.. C--,, Nit "*" \!-, lllint•..ilMo, ......... """"'' ....... 11 ...... " hfr.if! ,..., W "'""""" "illltwt 1"'1..i llf'rnl,...,. " ~-'· ... _ HE'LL STEP DOWN A11l1t1nt AG Petersen White House press secretary Ron Nessen said Petersen would return to private law pr~ f "rom Page A I CYANIDE. • • lowed an Investigation. Ht r ead a prepared state ment and refused lo an· swer questions. It was reported that the father had taken out S38,000 worth or lire in· surance on his two chJ ldren five days berore llallowecn. Rhodes would neither confirm nordenyihereport.· · The ch"arges, &~ifically for mur- der by po ison , were filed just before midnight Monday. Police said four other straws con- taining candy powder mixed with c.Yanide granules were round by police · In O'Bryan's neighborhood, but apparently no other younf&ters had eaten one. PoUct said the lather had•.taken hi& children trick·or- trcatl.ng because of the late hour a nd light rain. O'Bryan told polit'e where the1 went. a nd so the Investigation rocused on th at area, a two.black section of the city. .. O'Bryan told officers that Timothy:, his sl1ter Elizabeth, 5, and two (fiends ('Ollttta!·t'andy ror a hai r an hour, and that later in the evening Timothy beg· .ged ror a piece or candy and was al· lowed lo eat the c-andy straw. "Thirty si!t'onds after I left Tim's room. I heard him crv to me. 'Daddy, 'Oa ddy, m y stom ach hurts ,••·• O'Bryan told police. "He was in lhe bathroom, c.on- ''ulsing, vomiti ng and gaspir.g and then he guddenly went lilhp." Du r lTIT a1i Interview F riday, O'Bryan. an optometrist, sobbed and said his son had never had im enemy. Harris County mt:!dlcal e)taminer Dr. Joseph Jachimci)'k said the dtug, PotasslUm cyanide, was packed in the to). two inches of the 22·inch Jong "giant pixie 1lick1." . "It 's a very deadly drug,'' l1chimc- 2yk 11id. "That'll why they u11e Jt In the 1lsc.hamber.'' 1>asaden1 detective David Mulllfaa ~aid lnve!tl1ator1 were contused whv liO few or the children In the area had · the straws a nd wh v othl"r children did not rem em bcr rct;eiv\J'la it. "l\'s n rather expensltJe type or ca ndy to be 8ivln1 out al H~lloween," ' Out of Triiffic she was but there was no real way to see her i.tl the dark and the smoke. "Finally J followed her voice, but when J cot there abe wouldn't leave,"\ SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Tw0 Jordansaid. 8,500-Pound c.lrcua elephants named The officer finally grabbed the-t Henry al)d Manny IOOleoed a jun1le of woman and pulled ber Crom the home. traftlc outside C1ndle1tlck Park Thi miDute we got out the. whole where thousands of rootball rans were houae went up in narn·es,'' he said. streamina:totheR11n1-4ltn1arne. Outside , while he r hus band The elephants were pra&ed into agonized.over the loaof all the family servi~e Monday night after their cir· po.s5esslona, Mrs. f1:¥setl continued cus truck -eomplete with two other to lament only the loss of the pain- elephants. two llamas, a eamel and Ung -an an work painted by Bisset~ three ponies -stalled on the l's 1randf1lher:- causeway that cireles the stadiwn Firemen batUed the names at the parking lot. house ror about 15 mlnutea before The truck bound· for San JOle was quelliDI the blate .. headina the wrong way in the one-way The couple could salvage only a tew Candlestick Park lanes. .... clothes and Mrs. BasSMt's purse. "Four lanes of traffic were sud· Police checked them into a local denly coming at us like kamikazes," motel rorthe night.. · said Don .... MadeirOi, ao official wi• _ Fire Safety Speciilllst Don HOdgson the Var1as Circu1. 1a1d tfte cause o( tbe fire was a bur· Madeiros and circus truck driver nlng couch, apparently lgnJlld by a Clark Craig realized that Henry and cigaretearlier in the evening. · Manny were working, not performing He said that the Installation or a $50 elephants and harnesaed them to the smoke alarm now I required in new &.ruck. ronstrucUon would have saved the The elephants towed the rte a.round house. so that It faced the right direct.Ion. "l 'nt not chastising tbe poor couple Cralf tried the engtnt •&ala. It star· who lost their houH but one o( lhqle led.and th"'e Clttus rolled on. alarms would have awakened them in The fans mis sed the openlnt timetopoursomewatetonlhecouch minutes ot the game, but got a mini· and (Ill us. That's the ditterence one circus-instead. of those alarms makes ln a situation · like this," he said. Mills · Favored To Wi~ Easily LmLE ROCK, Ari<. IAPJ -ReP. Cente>. U.S. Border Patro1 apa1a-..,.... At10 arrafcned Monday wa1 In Monday and 1111.pedtablef..,u.e Lawrence Nyman, 21, of tbe Ronald Southern California bonter .,._ 'l'bl ,Road ·addrea1, accused al pc111e11lon new a•enta Join-111 cwrwa&b'oa "he ofd1qerou1weapom. ..... ; · watc:bT' alonlthe~'°""r •• !fld.ckl bat not beencbiriod, police in en effort 1o atOIJ llllpl-ln>m -'·· .enterinrlbeUnltedSlat-.· . Plot hy ·:M•o? · Attempt Seen, to Elevate Wife TAIPEI <UPU -Olalrman llleo wlio orten· defied Ibo Pekint Tie-tuna spent the tut" two month.I auUtoriUes. ~ _ln secluaion in Central Qdna P.lotUna Mao ls hopln.1 for 1 •"dl'utle earA· • to Install hll Wife U his SUCC!eS• pal1n" to furtJttr dow:nll'ade Aippor. tor, Natlonllln Clina .lfttelll1ence ten of Premier Chot,a·J:n.llJ, bSa rot. otrlclal.• 11id tod.ay • . lowers and thtlr modente pollciet, The lntellifence otncers u.ld Mao theint.elll1enee0Mwsaakl. pleas lo pur1e..the.j!Ovemment.ol • Th 0111 ·i•l·s aa1~-••-•--· nu.mberorkeyomclal•lnanaUempt e e u wwu-• ....., ... lo pave the way ror hls radlcll wire failed lo dl1clo1e •bea or what Chiana Chlnl to take over u hil un· form the new 1onrament P•f1• contested heir. ml1ht lake. But lbq aald repolla la· Tbeat-year-old Kaoapenttwomon· dlcated the first moftl WOUid be lbs at a villa at lbe East Lake .. soon and comparable" to tbl Red Wuchan1. In Hupe! prnvtnce tn cen'. ·Guard or Ille receot antl-Ooofliclua tral Chine. Then he moved to Mount movement.. Yueh Loll ·at Chanpbe, <Qllal of The lntelUfence olllcla&, wllo were Hunan provlntt, in Odober. Official.I the ftnt to dlJclOH tbat MID WU (or- Sald he Is stlll there. ffd to relln9ulsh bil pol(• tUltmaa Military intelligence reporll from ot the coverntnent ln 1-. llld their China showed .. Mao hu trted to rally report was subatant;latell b)r.lhe pa~ the 1upport of Central Chlna elementa · ternaoCMao's p11tpurae1DOY91,· -·--., Wilbur D. Milts faces hla strongest challenge in years today, but polls in· dlcate he will easily win rt-election over Republican Judy Petty. Mills, 65, chairman of tht House Ways and Means Committee, ia seeking his 19th term in the ltouse. There is a lenclancy for many carpet etores to· UM elrielly a warehouM concept One advantage Is -Ing CllP81ino In rolla rather tban S8rl'4)lel. Although Mills' Involvement in Id Ocl '1 incident in Washinitonin which a former 1tripper jumped from Milli' car and attempted what police said waa suicide in the capital's Tidal Basin WU highly publitlaed, Mn, PeUy did not use it as a ~llticalWuc. · Nixon to Be (Jn Feet More _.,_,_,,_ LONO BEACH IUPI) - Richard NiJton la "terribly phyalcally weak" and still has AOme pain In hla left.1ef, his dOc· tors a aid tod1y, but the former· prtsldent w11 recoverln1 suf· nclently to do more walking la h11 holpltal room • Ia b1 1 d1U1 . medlcal repOrt, Dr. John C. Lun1ren said the . .i. rormer c:hieC execuUve la s611 in 1ub-inteasive care .and continues to receiv e lntermllt tnt breathing treatmenl One of Nl11on'1 daug hters, Julie Ni11on Eisenhower retur-. . Many disadvantages· are evident ·-rnosl operatioris of this type buy only Ofl.gOods. so that the customer only gets to see old patterns. or carpe1a Ille mills couldn1 Mii lo regular outleta. Also, this type of operation generally feels lhal experience is unlmpartant, and consequently the salespeople know llttle or nothing about the ·products. Finally, most will farm out the Installations to the lowest bidder, guaranteeing a ·PoOr installation. (Many of these installers are contracling illegally wllhout a state · license.) . At Alden's. we maintain a happy medium. -We cairt a iarge lnvento,Y, and the largest sample selection around. We have experienced salelpeople. and our .Installers were lralnec:t by u&. FinallY,we are a elate llcented con<raclof. · ' • AIJlEN'S • . ' • C~RPETS • DRAPES • 1663PlacelfloAft, • COSTAMISA 646-4131 • ..,.. ""' ... , ... -"1--.t ~· ,... C.tl!~f, ~rlpt..., llf C""IH tJ 00 '"°""1111\1; 111 lftfil M.00 l'Mfllrllt, mll•l•1 _..Nt-.loi.IO llMIMI• Mulll1•n aid. . rmothY1 a l rd grader al Carpen· tc:t Elementary Sc:hool,in auburban ned lo Wa1hlngton aflcr sptn· dlllfrtveral days With ber• father .. lier return was 1eer1 Na slin that Nixon waa rtcovering. ~ • ·~-. HOUIS: Meo.111:-n.n.. t le l1H-.. I. t le t -SAT. t:IO lo I ~---'"·•- • Deer Park. was burled S8turday. ' ·~ _~( --· •1 • • ' , • • I ' ' • I ' • ' I , • ,, • . Tight-lipped ("Pilot Logbook ) ' ' 1Both Sides Right In Political Arena? By DOVGLAS FRITZSCHE .Of lhe Dally Pilot Staff • A vote ror Proposition 17, lhe~ say, ita vote to ."Save the River." A vote against Proposition 17 on today'S ballot, they say, is a vote to "Deliv~r the River." It all depends on who ''they" are and what they think about the Stanislaus River. Explaining that to my IO-year-old proved a tough chore. The whole arr air began as I struggled through the descriptions and arguments on the 17 statewide ballot measures in the voter's handbook. As I was maligning the .slate legislative analyst for his descriptions here and there of the "minor financial impact" of this or that, Daughter chirped, "Vote for Proposition 17.'' · · ' ' 1( F•ITDOIE AFT-ER MAKING a snide remark which would have made W. C. Fields proud, my better instincts took over and I asked what made her think Proposition 17 was such a good idea. "lt 'l.1 save the river." s.he retorted, citing a radio blurb heard on her favonte teeny -bopper station. Why should you believe that, I wanted to know . "BECAVSE they said it on the radio," she retor-. ted with a sideways glance and a toss or her mane, a gesture that seemed lo say "Any more questions, wise guy ?" . :·whoare 'they'?" I askest. ''The people who want lo save the river.'' I HAD spent an hour just getting to Proposition 8 and I didn't know at that time how I )\'.Quid vote on the rest. I handed her the yoter's. booklet with instructions lo read the descriptions..and arguments on her pet propositiort ---;· -w· · -~ · · · " After reading the arguments in favo~ of the measure, s.hc satd, See, it will sa vc. the river." -... . Aner ~ing instructed that she couldn't beli~ve that because 1t pres~n­ ted only one side, she read the arguments against. She was told that side was biased too. · .. h ted t "WELL, IF none of this is true, why do I have t9 read 1t? s e w.an o know. . h. I trt. d t " In an attempt to put some perspective on t 1ngs, e 01.1raw an. analogy tosomethingshe knew -toy ads., . . . . .. ''But those are just toys ''she retorted. 'This 1s important. 1 ONLY THE truth, she f~lt, would be written about ''import.ant" things: What about science, 1 asked, playing on one of her favontc scholastic endeavors. . . ''But that's true," she said. · . BRINGING ber up to date on the trial of John Thoma~ Sc_opes who 10 19'l5 commited the crime of teaching the theory of e~olut1c;>n 10 Tennessee. J &aid both parties involved in that flap thought thelf beliefs represeoted lhe truth. . h B'bl " h 'd Sh I t "Butdidn'tGodcreate man?Itsays so1nt e 1 e, s e sa1 . e e · ched a Bible and proved her point. . Yes~l said. but maybe God decided to use the pr~ess or evolution to do it. Was she going totel1 God what He could or couhln~tdo? No,shewasn't. · h tlh th' k ' t e THE POINT, I said, was that people wrtte w a ey tn . •.s ru · ·Did that mean that both sides of the argument on Proposition 17 were true? That couldn't be. sheJ>Ointed out. ··I'm confused,'' she said as her mother ushered ber of!to bed. 1 was too. · Theater Nixes· ·Porn., Closing NEW HAVEN (AP) -The owner of a s ix-year·old downtown .theater, r~jecting the idea of adding hard core pornography to stimulate sale, will close the theater today. The Coll~ge Street Cinema has en· countered difficult financial times because of a lack of suitable film s and slow downtown activity at ni ght and on weekends . an official of the par- ent firm, RKO ·Stanley Wa'fiier Thea- tets, Inc .. said Monday. "lt's not financially feasible to remain open unless we show hard core pornogr aphy. We don~t want that," said William H .. Decker, New England d ivision manage r of the theater chain. No Report . On Fate Of Couple HONO LULU (U Pi l -A weary and unshaven search team has returned from a South Sea t or.al atoll. but refused to discuss its findings on the fate of a San Diego couple last heard from more: than two months agQ. The y w e nt to the no rma ll y uninhabited Palmyra Islands some 1.000 miles south of Honolulu trying lo find some trace of Mr. and r.1rs. lt1alcolm Graham. who were known to have gone there in September.' 'The Grahams· $50,000 yacht . the Sea Wind, reappeared ·in 1-lonolulu with a new paint job and obscured name and identification numerals. Federa l agents arrested one of the two persons a board, Miss Stepha nie Stearns, who is in prison on $20,000 bail on a charge of stealing the boat. But a m an identified as Buck Walker, about 36, Ml. Vista, Colo., managed to escape by diving nude into the Al a Wai boatbarbor. He is Ule object of a widef'!ing ~anhunt . ·rhe pa rty 'or 10 federa l agents, divers and searchers said simply "no comment" when they arrived home late ~1 onday. But it was learned that Coas t Gu a rd district commande r Rear· Adm. William Morrison sent them a message ordering silence to the news media. The missing 43-year·old · retired Navy ofricer a nd his 40-year:eld wife, Laverne, disappeared 10 weeks ago. A Honolulu radio ha m operator earlier ta lked with age'.nts who said they found no evidence to indicate the co uple was ·'either de~d or alive.'' The searchers left here Thursday to ny to the remote atoll which is a fa.vorite or jet-setters .wishing to fi sh or dive ror World War II reli cs. They did not explain Why they returned home alter Jess than 24 hours on the islands. 111i ss St e arn s maintains the Grahams invited her and Walker aboard the boat for dinner aboard the Sea Wind . She lold a gents the Grahams went fi shing, but never returned, and said she found their dinghy in shark-infested waters a few days later. Miss Stearns said she made no ef. fort to contact authorities about the Grahams for fear the Sea Wind would be confiscated. But Coast Guard officials con· tradict that story, saying Walker was in touch with authorities i.q an attempt. to register the boat aS his own.. . . The . FBI released photographs or Walker, who is misSing several front teeth and has a number of tattoos. One photo s howe d him· 'in reli gious clothing, although he is not known to be a preacher. Meanwhile, federal agents are sear- ching the confisccited Sea Wind from stern to bow for any evidence. "They're looking for anything - h a ir, blood or whate v e r ,"~a spokesma n said. 'Dig' Graves. Wit~ Fork' Laguna Hills Health Writers End Russian Trip By JAN WORTH Of-. o.u, ...... Miff A society withotir'walls. That's the kind of heallhy world good nutrition could produce, according lo Laguna Hills health writers Robert and Raye Yallcr. The Vallers, a husband and wife team, just returned from a 35,(11()...m ile trip to the SoviefUnion to do research for a book on health spas. In their opinion. Americans arc ·going downhill, physically. mentally, psychologically -because of poor nutrition. '"We are digging our graves with a fork." s aid Bob· Yaller, a former New York Times reporter. In their trips around the world, the Yidlers found people from many other countries seem to have more ener.gy and healthier lives. ··we are the richest nation or the world -and also th'e sickest, .. Valier said. Yet Americans continue lo be over- weight, to gobble packaged foods and TV di nners, often ignorant of lhe steep price they pay, he maintains. "In the Soviet Vnion, they don't have a ny of this jau -and their energy bowls you over." Yaller said. In all , the couple visited 129 spas in Central-Asia, Siberia, along the Black Sea, Czechos lovakia, Germ11ny, Jsrael, and Mexico. "The ·aver.age Mexican is so far superior to an American you can·t believe it," Yaller said. "He eats beans. wheal. tortillas -all things· that keep him in better health than 'Our packaged diet. Unfortunately, his life ls so much harder that he doesn't Jive as long." In the Soviet Union, modern lifC is catching up with htalthy ways. . "Bl!L one advantage is lha\ the... Soviet.sdo11 'tdoany advertising.'' In Europe, many spas are run by pbyaiclans who a}e no( suspicious ot , J ,I I C.i..,Pl ... SU."P~ 'RICHEST ANO SICKEST' Diet Watcher Yaller natural treatments, according to Va l· ler . Because many of lhe spas are run by the gove rnment, people on avt-ragc incomes can nrford to frequ ent them . Some large corporations run .... ihci r o,wn spas where cmp\oyes can lake free vacations. 'The Va llers would like to s~ natural herbs replace drugs com ... plctely. "'-tore people get S~l'k in pitttl5 than cet~well there:·· nc said. "Of cou rse. doctors don't ngre.e with us. Tb~y call us health faddists," • Vali er said. "But nobody ever went into shock from a cucuni.ber. ''Asparngus never gave anybody in- tern al bleeding, and lettuce never caused any after efrects." The Vallers began their present in- terest in health and nutrition in the late 50s. when J\frs. Valier became ill. After coming cl ose to death. she believes. she overcame her probl em through natural methods and proper nutrition. . The two then joined the staff of Ran· cho La Puerta in Tecatc, Baja Califor· nia -the largest health and vacation resort hi Mex ico. Since then they have practiced a new way or eating and exercisin g. They start the ir day with a cup or herb tea and a brisk walk around Leisure World. Eight percent or .their diet Is raw fou.i ts and vegetables. The rest in· eludes ot'casional eggs, slices of homemade bread, cheese. yogurt, and cooked vegetables. They eat no meat. · r They fnst one day a week. Yo ga and· ftuil y caliSthcnics are a regular part' of their schedul e, and they don •t smqkc or drink. 1'hey are active members of the l~isu re World Hiking Club. "It s a fallacy of the rood industry that fasting makes you weak.·· Valier said. "'It make~ you feel much bet· ter." To the Vallers, staying slim is the key to long.lasting health. "You'Vc ~ot to. It's a,.constant right," Valier snid, addin g th.at each pound of extra weight pu lls 10 pounds or weight on the heart. "Young people arc bcginnil)g to un · derstund," Valier said. "There t:; a kind or renaissance or health goi nrr: on amonJ: ~outh -_making Jhtj.!j own bread an grow ng0te1rown fci0a.1 ' Perhaps there's hope, Yaller sald, if youth arc discovcnng wltb hlm Lhat , "you arc what you eat." .. Tuesday, NOYembw 5. 1174 'S DAILY P1LOT AS· HUnt · Old Battle Recalled~ Chinese Medal to Coast Man-29 Years Later By GARY GRANVILLE CM tM ~tw PU•"-" .. The rurious 45-day land-air battle of Chihkaing ended 29 years ago .. Last week, Jim Orstad learned,. will be awarded a military citation for his ro le in the 1945 struggle tor control oflhe ancient Chinese city. .. Chihkaing happened so long ago that I thoug ht only those of us who were there r emembered it," Orstad recently said. , "It's like a m emory coming back to life, .. the SJ-year-old Newport Beach resident added . · ' Pape r s r ecomme ndin g that citations be awarded Orstad and other American a irmen attached to the Chinese-American Composite Wing in World War JI were recently un· cover ed by resea rche rs at the Smithsonian Institution. They were among the personal er· feels of an Army Air Force colonel who appa rently died shortly after the Battle of Chihkaing. • When the researchers round the pa pers, they contacted the Flying Tiger A'ssociation and asked its of- fi cials to trace down suf'\'ivors of the battle. They will be awarded the China War Memorial Decoration. The' medal was established by the , . JIM OASTAOT)IEN As Young Officer ' D1111rP1111....,.,.,_ JIM OASTAO NOW After 29 Years, a "'9dal Chinese gove rnment headed by celestial navigator during his J9 bridges and "immense quantities or Chiang Kai-shek 'to honor foreigners · month assignment to the Chinese-SUJlplies . ·· . who disting ui shed themselves on American Composite Wing. -Now, 29 years later , the govern· China's behalfduri ng lhewar. . I-le alre3dy holds an Air Medal ... men t that no lon ger control's It will not be the· first decoration -Flyi ng Cross and Purple '.Heart, mainland China wants its praise ad· earn~d by Orstad for his servi~e as a citation:o; awarded him by the United de<tto th it already directed at·Ors~d Police Probe Theft 0£ Cement Mixer A cement mixt>r valued by the owners at $600 was stolen from a San Juan Capistrano construction site J\fonday ni ght, Orange County Sherif· f'sofficers said. Deputies said the mixer had been left by workmen on the site at Del Obispo Street and Alipaz Road. It is owned by the Ba rnes Roofing Com· pany of l.1idway City. Di,vas Abort Opera Season · SANTIAGO (UPI) .:...uot.tem-' pered divas caused Santiago's opera season to come to an " abrupt end today. J\fayor Cot. Hernan Sepulveda Canas suspended the rest of the opera sea son in the city's Municipal Theater because of "fights among the singers that range from jealousy to actions of certain violence." States governm ent. and his fellow ai_r~en. . . Add ilionally, ·o rstad's air unit was Orslad has v1v 1d memon es of hlS given a Presidential Citation in June days or duty al the the primitive ail" 1945 for its efforts in the Battle of base outside Chikhaing -a Chinese Chihkaing. nag sewn to the back of his jacket, The cita tion acknowledges the role $2 ,000 in _Chines~ money in his.flight played by the sma ll band of American vesttobr1.beposs1ble Japaneseor airmen in helping to obliterate a Communist captors and .. none of the desperate 22,000·man Japanese at· conve niencesofhome." tack on the aged city. Now th.e owner of a residential built. During the furious 4S-day assault, in appliance outlet in Santa Ana, Or· the city's air defenders ''killed 011e· stad has to haul the s mall glass case fourth' of the enemy troops, slashed that holds his ear lier medals from a s uppl y l i n es and complet e ly closet to show the curious the colorful paralyzed the enemy drive, .. accor-reminder s of his past. ding tothecitalion. "It 's funny. after aU the-se years It goes on to cite the destruction of Chi hkaing wo uld come up again," he 304 vehicles, 39 river vessels, 48 said with a laugh. S°'viets Admit Crime ,, MOSCOW <U Pf)~ft took a widespread crime scar do it, but &1oscow 's police chief final f-t:..esorted to th~ unthinkable -he w~nt on televi$iOn to admit his men h:lve failed to catch a killer stalking the Soviet capita l. Police Chier Vadim G. Samokh· valov made a r are television a p· pearanc_e to tell r.tusc~vites his men are harCI at work trying to end a series of mu ggi(\gs and murdert. in the city. The chief. in an unusual , Alnerican· style . crime announcement, said two women were slain last month during the spate or muggings and police have 'ye._t to solve the.cases. 1'hc Soviet Unio n usually suppres- ses cfim.e news, saying the reports fail to pro\ri e ideological me~sage"s. Now everyone in the family can enjoy Ad just-A·Bed wh ether sitting up watching TV, re ading, relax ing in the contour positio n or flat for deep sound sleep. 1000 posi tions at the touch of a switch - mattress firmness feather so ft to super firm . Why 'settle for a mattress that ca n only stay flat ? Experience Ad just-A-Bed at our showrooms today or call for information and prices. " 1 Keep in mind th at Ad just-A-Bed is one ot tl1e world 's fine st , gifts. MEWPORT IEACH CO'RONA..OEl MAA 3i37 E. COAST HWY (Just So. of F111Shlon lt111nd (71•)873-5855 . ' .---:$> ~~ ... 6 ADJUST·A·BED BY SI.EE P E R 1.0 UNG E .C O ,, INC. ' ' CITY OF OIAHCOI ''' SOU TM MAIN ST. !Just NOM ol FuNon So) (7 14) 63t-414.2 : .. OAl.L' rlLOr T~ ,No~5,1814 {;;t. Coal ~e ,.,~·. ~ . Executives c~\ w1t1a Back Offer· .·~~ ... Te• . ( .. ~ Plenty Room Ai the Polls 'ELECTION DAY 74: Ir you're one cl thole people who likes lo escape. ~.there is probably a place you can still co late on this. day to ehlde them. Y'":l co~ld .co vote. Y~ indeed. this was our election day for 1974 and as you read this, tbete is likely slill time to get to the old YOtin& booth before it shuts down atap.m. Soqte political wag-type observers are 1ua1estin1 even if they left the ·pa111 ppen until mid.night this election wouldn't draw a crowd. OUt of lbeer habit, J voted early · today before the misfs or the morning had cle•red from my windshield. I ballloted in a church and I'm pleased to report that the door didn't fall orr tbesanctuary wall when 1 walked Into the place. SOME OF THE l'Oln'ICIANS on the ballot should be pleased that their names are in some cburebes today. 1.t may. be the closest they ever get to heaven. Early votiftg sometim~ give~YoU f notion ol bow an eled.lon is going as lu as inte~t and turnout is concer- ned. Well . there was no elbow-pushing -in un-e al my precinct eatly today. That was in 8inly because there weren't very many elbows around. Once there was this polllltian who had the motto, "A Choice Not an Echo." He wouldn't have been too happy ln my precinct in the early going today. The place was filled with ec:hos and no voters. President Ford really went out on a limb on Election Eve. He said that people who don't vote will actually be voting No Confidence in the govern· ment. Early tO<ta y it looked to me like the President was losing in tJie con- fidence department. WELL, YOU CAN'T really blame the President ror trying to get the VOf.ers to turn out. Alter all, what's he got to lose? All the pollsters and political hacks have this election doped out as a large landslide \'ictqry fortbe Democrats. Aceording to these dopesters. the Demos may take over t~tblrds or the House a nd Senate and a whole giggle of governorships. The shape the country is in today. you have to wonder \\'hy the Democrats want it. Anyway, you can calcul ate by urging the voters to turn out, President Ford doesn't have a whole lot to lose.Uthe election could draw a crowd . there might be a few RepubUcans in it. HERE IN ORANGE COUNTY, you expect to see a Republican vote. ·Despite a narrowing or the registration gap , thi s is still Republica n Country because normal- ly. the GOP people will get ta the po). _Js, Thunder-, lightning and wild-horses couldn 't keep them away from the \'Oting booths. Today started bright and sunny. No telling how it will end. Thus the only prediction you'll get from thi s corner is to watch the Orange County returns. tr the Democrau are running close here -<lr even ahead, for heaven's sake -there may be some horrible GOP hangovers come Wednesday mor· ning. SO AS EVENING falls this Tuesday Nov. s, why not do something dif· ferenl from the rest of the people ? Go on down to the precinct and cast th3l ballot. WASHINGTON-IUPI> -United- Mine Workers officials today walked out on what.coal mine executives cal· led the best contract otter "lo any major industry" -IJmost assuring a strike next Tuesday that could cripple industry and ca use eledrlc shortages lhis winter. · ' The union said it was preparing_ rounttr-proposals to lr7 to bead off ai naUonwide.5trike. GOVERNlllENT AND banldns ex· perts agree that if the union strikes when the current contract e:rpi~. it could severely curtail uUUUes and other key industries and put as many as 1 ~illion persons out cl. wort. The contract covers 120,000 mlnen in 2S states who produce 70 percent of the nation's coal. Union president Arnold Miller led the way out of negotiations early today a:ner talks had resumed Mon · day night at the urcing of government negotiators. "With this contract proposal, they 've declared a strike in the coal fields," said Miller of the offer from the Bituminous Coal Operators As· sociation. ''There's not sufficient time toi-ratification Cby Nov. 12) and the membership will not ratify what they have given us " Guy Farmer, chief negotiator for the BCOA, called the UMW walkout "incredible ." .. WE GAVE THEM an offer that in mv opinion has not been exceeded in an'y negotiations in any major ihdustry in total scope." F.anner said 'I can't conceive that they would say we gave them provocation for a strike: · 1 Experts predict that aner one. mon- th. a strike would t.orce disruptions ror electric utilities whichdel>@ndhea\'tly on coal....Tbat is especially true in the: southeast. where inventories are low Many major steel producers have Jess than a 20-day supply or coal oq hand and some furnaces would be closed in the second week or a strike, according to iridtJstry estimates Chase Manhattan Bink economjsts reported Monday the U.S. economy is ''particul arly ii-I prepare d to withstand a long strike." ''Steel, railroads and tlectric utilities would be the rirsl sectors to reel the impact but the effects could spread beyond these inilustries ii the -strike were to be an extended one." lhe economists added. A PROLONGED strike could add 600.000 to I million workers to the Jobless roles, driving the unem· ployment rate, now 'al a thrtt-year high of 6 percent, to 1·percent, accor· ding t o the 'Federal Office of Emergency Preparedness. Fly Me, I'll Get You Higher Say Airlines Surgr.,, Sen. J . W. Fulbright, ([).Ark. I who is ending his 30·year Senate career in January, un· derwent m inor surgery at Bethesda Naval Medical Cen· t e r Mond ay H e wa s hospitalized for 'some correc - tive surgery·. h is office said. ReligioJ.LS Cult Leader Denies Sex Practices NEW YORK !UP.I> -Th e ''Children of God," a religious cult ac- cused by the New York attorney gener al or practicing brainwashing and $exual abuse on its members. !lay1 the charges resulted rrom- ''rellgious-intoleranre " A 20·page s tare menl mailed. from the group's Dal las headquarters 'a nd signed b y Cornelius Copp, described by a Dallas member as "a high ranking leader" Of the Chjldren ot God, saltl Attorney General Louis J. Lefkowitz was "relying on false witnesses to vilify us" in his report is· sued last month. COPP SAJO HE hoped hi s r ebuttal would be: "beneficial to our cadse of spread i ng the lo ve or Jesus throughout the world.'' He said he wanted to "warn other religious groups, parti~ularly those consisting pri marily Of young per· sons. that reUgious intolerance exists in New York, and those of us who choose to worship Jesus Christ in a maMei' not approved of by the At· t.omey General or the State of New York run the danger or being vilified and accused by him for doing so.·~ Lefkowitz said he stood by the report. The report made public Oct: 13, cited testi mony fr.om 74 witnesses, in- cluding 14 former members, 14 parents or members, and six present members. The religious group claims 3,500 members, a large number liv ing in 120 communes or colonies in 65 coun· tries. MlAMl <UPI > -National Airlines, COPP DENIED the charges. strikebound for 108 days unW tast "Our goal is to direct a person's ~ Friday, began passing: out free mind In accordance with the Jaws of cocklails to economyclua passengen eod andJDan's responsibility to God," onilsMiami·NewYorkflightsMonday Copp said in response to charges of and tou.ched off a "~~ war" with ·brainwashing. "No one is forced into compet1ngEasternAirlines.· I submissiori to our-belie rs. The Eastern Airlines Chairman Floyd Children of God. _ .are-not composed Hall.-who denoun.ced the National of juveniles who are incapable of Airlines action, said Eastern had no thinking for the-mselVe!" ~ choicebutto.matchthefreedrinks. Lefkowitz. also charg~ the group's Hall .predicted that the cost of the leader, David Berg, with promoting free dnnks even~ually would have lo unorthodox sexual relationships be passed al?ng 1n the form or higher among comnlune mqnbers, including la.res to drinkers and teetotallers a "mass betrothal" scene. alik~. . "Berg announced that he was If 1t spre,ads ~ Hall said, It ~Id cost 'taking a nother wife' and thereupon, the nations airlines SlOO million an· in the presence of his wife, other nu ally. . _ . members and their infant children; Delta Airlines. which already serves consummated the 'marri~ge• with a , steak and f~ee .cham~agne to coach young girl who had taken his fancy,'' passen~ers. 1~d1~ated it.was studying Lefkowitz charged. "AdditiOnally, th e N~t1onal A1rhnesact1on. various fem'ale mem~rs are compel· National formerly charged coach led to have intercourse with the top passengers $1.SOeachforcocktalls and leaders .. hi ghballs. · Eastern. U.S. Wet, Rainy ,_ Plains States Clear Up After Heavy Flooding Coaslnl Wralhrr V,_,llll!t fl lDll CkllHlllMJI lllOff l"I '"""'· UOM •.,lidt •IMI, ..rllierty t .. 11 _,,_,..,..,_, ~ i.., llt""' <'11111 -"""' ..... ~ ""'P!'l'M-wlll ,.,. Ill+- -SJ ....... 1111-·--·-'fillll ,.._.~_. ....... T,_....,_ .. , .. ~•IHM•I. Tldn Tltl,OA't SffoNS"iqll n·1'p,"" SI l'fot<.OllOIOW I ti•·"' 0.1 .,P' 'lift:Olfll DA1' f~"'ql'I )llt"" Jt flnlkN i H• m 1e S--'*111 1 llop m. •I $«-lcM • ll'p m. O,J S...•owtl.16tfll .. MI'' Slpm #loClfl IM\ II.It'·"'-· Mtl II ........ I • .... ,--\) ..... . ''°' .. •·-~ ~"'°""IS .... ,t:w Catlf-ia (lf'llilll .,, • ., <Ml 11111 """""-· ilo s..t!lff~ Cllihlfftlt wllll •IN~ jllllMillilt "' '""'*'"' ... ~ - -::; tutllMI ... .-Sfrt'la M'f'J ... ..,._.a.I ~-....... _..., cltlldl.,..•..,......,.f11ft .. ,_..Ml!I h t•Mt .. •c.o1tkWt.., ..... _. ""'*"' ........ ~ ... ti. ~Mnl -tt'IM ~f l11lt ..... •WM· ~ \ ' I, .,_. .. "'""" """"" ""-OfldllNll ,_,.,. 0.111\ -...... . ,. .. ,__~ -· ll'"W!ltity u .v...,. -.. _ Mlfwll•ll• HtwOr .. .im -· ... Olil.....,..(!lt ...... "-"•s.tt• PMllodltlOJIO,I ,, -· ··-"-'1 ..... °"'· .. ~ .... _, ........ s.nL.H.11Cllr $,jljl,1#1C.Me -. •I • • " ~ " .. " .. -ft " u • " • • • 0 ~ • ,, " • " ~ .. " " " " .. " ~ " .. • .. --• .. • • m M •• • • .. " » ~ •• M " " -" " ~ " " " • Israeli Kidnaping , Copter Force Nabs Lebanese ,Official By Uallff Pr-laleroallooll A helicopter-borne Israeli f0tte-en- tered a South Lebanon border villa&e early today and lddnaped lbe local mayor and his son after blowln.c up 0their home, Arab newsmen in the region said. The Israeli force landed neu the vlltaee or MaJ dal Zoun, north of Nakoura and some seven miles from the Israeli border short.!y after mid· nigbt, they said. THE ISRAELIS aurrounded the Vil· Jage, searched Mayor Arel Salman'i house, blew up the one-story building and kidnaped Salman and his son Ali before withdrawing, lbe newsmen said. · The l &raeli military command did not mention helicopters but said Israeli troops blew up a house used by Palestinian guerrillas and returned with the two men. It said the two were undergoing questioning as suspected guerri Ua collaborators. The flareup in military activity against the l'alesuntans carne as Secretary of State Hen,; A. Kissinger Drepared to return to the Middle East tanJght to try to pick up where he left orf. He Oies first to Cairo from Rome where he discussed Jerusalem and the Middle East with Pope Paul VI. He visits Saudi Arabia and Jordan Wed· DAI LY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE De!iYery of fhe Doily Pilot is guaranteed . ""'1dlrf.fridoy: II yoi> do not hOYt ,.,. """" by 5:30 ~ .... coll ond -111/11 ""'-be llRlught-to-yoi>. c.a1s-... tl:Rri 1.#ltil 7:00 p.m. SaludJy ond s..nctoy; If yoi> do not., ra:tiwe 'f'O.K copy by 9 a.m. Soti.rdoy, rx 8 a.m. Suncb(, mll cn:t a copy Mii be bnJ.9" to ¥<"· Catb en •-'"''~ )0 II.Ill. Telephones Miit Oranat i;.unty -.. 6G.oz\ -Huntington Beoch mi Westminster •.. _ ...... seo.1no Son °"""'"· CapiS1nn> -, Sm .k.lon Copistrono. Dem Point, ScMh lo!J'"'O, logo<'C ~- nesday and Syria and lsi-ael Thur· &day.He was expeded to-discuu-the effects or the Arab si.µnmitoe peace in the Middle East. Jn another development, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, in the fint official Israeli comment on tbe -Ara'b summ·lt eonferente at Rahl, said today the conference had streoc· thenecl Jsrael 's resolve to maintain its strength and Cfntlnue Its refusal to negotiate -with the Palestine Liberation Or1anl1atlon. · 0 11' OOEl°Nt<f even eater our minds to deal with groUpa whose pl ls tbe destruction of Israel," Rabin told the Knesset <Parllamt:m) in Jen¥alem. Ara'.b heads or state at the summit de1ignated the PLO to se.t up .• Palestinian state on any land Jsraer gives up on the occupied West Bank ol Jordan. "The Rabat decision a.imply adds to our resolve to continue atrivinC for our already stated goal&," he said. He said these gOal1 areu.~· of-lsrael'a-mflita'7---.-it ca- live witbintaft 1nd1eeW1 bor*n. Rabin 1114 Monday t11at lorMl 11111 hu not ruled out -"'-willl Jordan's Klng Huseela qyer Jarul'a : pouible return ol the _.,.... Wiii · Bank re1ioll. · But King' HdlNin, bi'ia ~ .. with tbe New York 1\DMt, aald Jar· dan would rewrite lta ton1Ut.U. toon and reor11alae.the caWntl ead parllament to remo•• repre•••· i..Uves of the Palelllnl-livlnll la the fsneli-oceuplet! ~est Bank. . HE SAID 108DAN wlll li•e Palestinians Uving in the part of Jor• dan east of the Jcvdn riwertbe rWee ol Jordanian or i-a-.Jnlan eWr.e. ship. The Kine del<rlbell the pi•• ned changes as the minimum. nec:.- sary to give ineaningtotbedteWoo ~ the Rabat summit tonf~ llllt week to name the PlD u tbe 101e representative of tbe Palt.U.11• people. Old Cases p,..fJed Sniper Shoots Judge ' In New Jersey Court WANAQUE, N.J . CAP> -:-A bullet Witnesses told offtcW'ltbt mann.4 fired throueh a ·w1~w (ataJ\y _woun--on foot. Tbe weaPon uted lD -- ded a municipal judge while he wu slaying, t>eue.ed tO be a .2J.caliber holding court. Police termed the rifle, had not been found. po&in said. death a definite case of premeclitated ·A detective on tbe l5·membtr murder. Wanaque police force ~·all ·~ :4-bout 50 J>!!rsona were in the cour-present and future case1 the Judlf: troom. Nooneelsewas hurt. was involved in were bein& cbetked Municipal--Court Judge Joseph ·:rorposs-ib1e1eaos. -· Crescente, 71, wassittin&:inhissecon· · d-fioor courtroom Monday nigbl wben ;,He runched in bls cbair and ..... the shot pierced a window and a 'What was tbat?'," J8ld Capt.~~ \ienetian blind behind hit bench and Cisco whowaslnthecourtroomattbe struck him in the back. tie was Ume~ftheshooUn&. holding a probable..t:•uae beariag at~ · 11\e lime. CISCO SAID bl ..,,. lo the judp, loooetled hli-robe and aaw blood Oii bla back. He ••I~ othen1 in Ille court.- scrambled for cover. THE MAGISTRATE died two bounl later at Chilton Memorial Hospital in nearby Pompton Plains. · Officers in this Passaic County community of 11,000 said they Were looking for a young dart.skinned male. Witnesses said they uw him aim a rine at the window of tbe cour· troom from the street. ''As far n we're concerned, thert ii no questioo that tbil w11 a caae of premeditated murder," JI.ii a police diJpatcber in Pompton Lakn, which serves as a central communltatioGI center lorllle are.a .. IS $10.20 IMPORTANT? My LOSANGELES FEDERAL SAVINGS account-earned more, SI0.20 more, tlian Iii a comparable savings " .~)"." account In a large 41\1~'::~~ commercial ba,nk .,f.I< .·""f"'~·< •'"Al'j.1-:r-' ----· ,;;;.;,-fl,;.~~-~·;,"01 . , Day·in and day-out eamirlgs, with interest"! earned from the .first on the funds depoeited by the 10th ol every month can make eacnings up to 41 % higher. Maximum interest rat.a are pre· seribed by Federal authotjtieJ, but there Ire varioua melh~ used to .com·pute inter.t • , . · and tllil ·peaple at 1'&. A:ngeles Fadetal Bl¥· inp compute ·interest in the moat favorable method for 11.vera. You'll 6nd out bow wery dollar ..,.. every day when you mab your opening depooil In your Loo Anaeleo Fodonl S.vinp 1ccount. ANNUAL lll'll:REST R4'rn! ON INSURED SAVll'ICS NI iflttrtsl '*"41Mdd dlilr 5~ 5Y.% 6Yi% --· -:;;..-;= :-:"T'i ~7:l .. ·-,, ... ,, .... ...,,oo1 ......... -· ,__.,." h---·· ""'""""""' .. ""::~ _l ___ ... "" -""" .. 5.39% 5.92% 6.72% HEADOmCI-DOWNT01VN 1 OM Wlw.M BWldlna. Wlllhin Blwd. •tOrand LM~.c:.Jlf. I0017 IJ5...73AI l)rfAnithtl81 6Y.% "~ r!l:'::" ...... 6.98% . 7~ -·-· .......... l.l"',..r. 7.79% Example: "fMhmonlh~hton I p1idout household bill1, l put •100 in a Let Angeln Fedft918e¥inp flllthoolc Account In 12 monthl my_..viftcl Nrned $.14.28, Thaf141% mor•or •t0.20moreUIAn lhemmmercial .bMk ~ hive paid." WSANGELES FEDERAL ' SAVINGS --~--~~~~~~~~~~ ....... . .. ... s. I ~==-'='·~·~=~=:• .... , .. .,.., •fltn ,.,._,._ lk lM •1Nr.,. EFFECT IVE NOVEMBER 21 . Savings areJletter than Ever: _- Account Insurance Now Doubled to $40,000.o · --, .. .. \J Sho.oting ... I• Turkey lnllatf on -· Charged ·To Youth: Group Charges ~'Fals_e Pricing' (, __ s_t a_t_e_~) tleJd 1n San liernardino County Juvenile Hall on a cbarge or assault )Vith. a deadly weaPon, allegedly fired a .38·ca11ber bullet into King's head. Pol.ice said the unnamed youth took a wheel from the King boy as securil)' for 70 cenls owed him. When King went lq get his wheel back, the other boy loaded his falher'a revolver and shot King. Will Tell A ll LOS ANG E~ES IAPJ VICTIM OF ACCIDENT Actor James Stacy Man Gets 1-5 Years in Fatal Cycle Accide nt Assemblyman Joe A. Gon·. SANTA MONll:A CAl'I -A :sb·year· s alves ID-Cerritos), has• old Woodland Hills bond salesmarihas been cleared by the slate al·. been sentenced to one to five years in torney general's office of pri,son for the traffic accident that any criminal wrongdoing tn· todk the life or a 27-year-old woman failure to r eport about and cost actor James Stacy bis left $130,000 in campaign funds. arm and left leg. Superior Court Judge Edward Gonsalves had stated lhe Rafeedie handed down the sentence money, raised last year., -Monday.against-Garter B. Gordon af· went unreported because he. ter Gardon had pleaded no contest to SACRAMENTO <UPI! -A statewide consumer group has oc· cused turkey processors of ar· tificially. innating the price of the bird as the holiday season ap. proaches . Roy Alper, spokesman for the Ralph Nader·Af(iliated California Citizen Action Group, Monday s:lid ·wholesale prices of turkeys have in· creased 20 percent in the past two week s ''without a n·y cost justlrication." · Alper, who refused to name com· pan1es which are m anipulating prices, urged the turk,ey-buying public not to pay more than 49 cents a pound for Thanksgiving hens or 45 cents 1 pound for toms. He said If the turkey price is not right, consumer s should "buy beef or pork for holiday !JSC. '' The group, composed of consumer activists, participated in a statewide meal boycott a year and a half ago and has led the fight for the reduction or milk prices in California. The group said . that just before Thanksgiving last year, the California turkey Industry attempted a "mas· sive hoax .. on consumers when it distributed "fraudulent market infor- mation" in .an effort to drive turkey prices up lo $1 .10 a pound. "The turkey industry is beginning another m arket fraud on consumers this year ," Alper said. "Wholesale prices which were stable al 42 cents to 43 cents in August, Stptember ond Ot· tober have escalated to 5<I cents per Pound." · The group said turkeys are In abun· dant supply this year with surplus birds being held In cold storag~. Cold storage poundage natlon'!Jly, accor· ding to "the group, was 526 million pounds in September. Alper's declaration varied from that of Barney Ruelas of the Norbest Turkey Growers Association in l\iOOesto. Ruelas predicted that "the con · sumer is definitely goi ng to make out better this year" and that "you will see 49 -cenl (per pound> tutkeys out there on the shelves.'' That would make 'the gobblers about 10 cents a pound less than last year. Because gr:iin prices were so high last spring. many turkey raisers round they couldn't sell al a profit and put the birds into cold s torage, causing an over-supply, he explained. ' Man Shot in Back SAN FRANCISCO tUPJ) -Three persons were arrested Sunday· In the. shooting death of a young man who tried to break up a (ight after a birth· day party. Shot in the back during the early morning brawl Sunday was Ronald Turnipseed, 22. thou ght the Waxm a n· manslaughter and drunken driving J d DJ m.al l y campaign' charges. . -u ge Disclosul'4!: ,!\ct <?Overed only A deputy district attorney _said the --f cash In checking accounts, sentence was·oot-:tts strong as expec· rather than savin(s. The as" led but 'theJ«dr:e''sG~ott-wtt.s-made Rules Nudity ~~~r~~~.·•ld ·ftenow is :!:~h:.~~~:,:::'.~~· "'"""'h••-'Freeilom~xpression, ._ Stacy. 36, and Clair Cox were r1d1ng a motorcycle in the early hours of · Sept. 28, 1973 , *hen they collided with · PALMDALE <AP> -A Gordon'sc-ar. LOS .ANGELES IAPl -_Cri~inal teacltef was shot In the . Rafeedie recommended that Gor· eon.spjtpcy charges of contributing to thlgh In her classroom by 8 don s pend lime in a minimum t he d'elinquency ar m:Jnor_s hav~ been 13·year-old pupil she had security facility. with credit for 72 dropped against the publisher• of a scolded In the hallway for daJ.~ .he has already spel}t In jail. nudist magazine i.--nd ~hree parents faillng to do his homework, who permitted their children to pose officials say. for nude photographs. . · · N" A"d Q 1"ts . Defense attorneys said they ap. Alice E.lhott, S-6, wus I X OD · I e ~ pro\'ed \he granting of the acquiital repo_rted an satl~factory motion because there was insufficient amd.1Uo~ in a hospital aner ·WASHIN GTON tUPI I -. Pres.ldent evidence to show that publisher. Ed·· Mond~y s shooting. at the Ford today acceptedtheres1gnat1onof mond Leja, S4, of North Hollywood, ~mondale School in rural Ken W. <;lawso!I· who served as com-and the l>arents had the specific intent Littlerock near Palmdale. munl_cat1on~ director under former of contnbuting lo the delinquency of Los An1eles County Pres1dentN1xon . theminor11. Sheriff's deputies said the boy pull•d •...... ube'Geo,.,..ek Accountant automatic pistol out of his .J. 1 1 pocket. Mrs. Elliott's other 30 pupils witnessed the F •'-ing. aces Perjury Rap rlek~rs Bookftl CARSON <U Pl) -Some 98 me m ber s of the· Steelworkers Unic.n who were booked Monday lor unlawful aaaembly, were released without bail after signing a written promise to return to court to answer misdemeanor charges. . SAN FRANCISCO CAPJ government agreed oot to -A former Geotek accoun -oppose any motion tbat she tant says she was permitted be placed on probation. She to plead no contest to a is sched uled to be senl~nced charge she.J.ied to a federal Nov. 8 on the perj ury grand "jury in retur'n for charge. testifying as a pl'oseculion ·. witn ess against oil Burk·e ts accused of promoter John Burke. failine: to disclose owner· Pictures or the children of Craig Sawilz, 30 ; his wife, Geraldine, _29, and Nancy Green, 26, appeared In Leja's magazine, ''Nudist Moppets.'' Superior Court Judge Peter S. . Smith made his r uling l\londey after derense attorneys argued that their cllents had a constitutional protection for freedom of expression under the f'irst AmeniJlfi"eifC': Two other .defendants were acquit· led in l:I slmilar ruling last July. An earlier trial of the four who were acqwtted Monday was held but ended in a hung jury. 'Co pter,· A irplane Collide RIVER.SLOE <UPl f -A single engine plane and a police helicopter collided 400 feel above an elemcn· tury school playground ~1onday, but a uthorities said no qne was iniured anrl 'both craft landed safely. The helicopter and the Cessna 140 both landed safely al municipal airport. Lee Ow ens. chief pilot of the copter. s aid he wa!'l searching for a suspect in iln attempted rape and did not seethe plane. . ··1 JUSt felt the impact," Owens said. "ll v.·as like an explosion , like a 12·gauge shotgun going off in your face.·· ' OLD FASHION ~ CHRISTMAS CAI\DS .'\;O\\' ,\'OU C'an put yourselr and your lamily into an 1890 style portrait LO u.<..(· as your Christmas card this '<'ar.>~e~·~e~~ 1 Oo/o oH "'ith th~ :ad-befott Nov. 15t.h \Ve will supply costumu:and matching envelopes. Only tho Doily Piiot 191lly tells · you what'a new In your ioc.1 community ..• '"" Ur E.!BMM SYNDICATE MOVES INTO NEWPORT For a while now, long-time residents· or Newport Beach have natic«I some mighty strange goi ng-ons at the Balboa Inn . Shi~y. over-dressed characters have been seen .iJlrl'ing in tjle corridor. and hammeriar:..ADd uwin1 -noises have been beard far into the nieht. ... Preliminary reports indicate that Don Vito or Spaghetti Syndicate fame is now on the West Coast. He has established a restaurant on the peninsul~ near the Balboa Pier, known aS the Spaghetti Syndicate. Under the directiori of chef Luigi, the Spaghelti Syndicate deals out a plate or pasta that local mobs have acclained as utlbeatable. Combined with one of their crisp, chilled salads and chest-cold preventing garlic bread, iruelll of Vito are treated to meals they can't refuse ror around two_ clams. Local officials, alwaya looking for some action. susoected the l!ani wasn-t pulling in enough dough to maintain the staff in the manner to which Viey have become accustomed. The town~s police chief. became concerned when he round a pair of dice in one of his meat balls. He then ran a check on all the Syndicate employees. Not much later, the chief, looking for a floating crap.game, discovered Tony "The Cleaver" Venturelli kneeling on the noor of the back room. However, the only ·thine raUling across the linoleum was a scrub brush. The Spaghetti Syndicate wu clean.· . ·· Don Vito is still calling the shots, seven days a weet. from the 8alboll Inn. Phone 675-2620. ' FIRST ANNUAL Sheriff's deputies llr· rtsted the union membe~ when they railed to ol>cy a court order to stop pickeUn~ •at _t_b e_"f) o m_in &uc_z Galvanizing Plant of Joslyn Manufacturing and Supply Co. -. Jacqueline Aldrich ship or certain oil firms lestiried· in federal court over \Vhich he had control. Monday th at she also was In addition, attorneys told sh"C""\\·ould be named-a Robert Rose a nd Arthur co-conspirator. and not a Lempert arc on trial for :11- co-defendant in the indict · legedly conspi ring with ment returned against .Burk_e to orcpare a" BurKe. Securities and Exchange Mrs. Aldrich. Burke's for· Commission affidavit con· mer accountant,_ said the lainingfalseslatements. SUNDAY. NOV. 10 ~~!{" wALrFf1'H01J. WALK PERSONAUTIES: Registration 8 a.m., Orange High School, North Schaffer at Walnut in Orange. ENTBTAINMENT. FREE FOOD, PRIZES: Along the 20-mile route: Entertainment by the mile! Free Food! Prizes! Variety Show at Orange High School, 2 p.m. (Walk will be .. afety patrolled by the California National Guard and Orange County Police Explorer groups.) r - - OUR THANKS TO: ' / I ------ Charlie Tuna, KKOJ, Chairman John Peters, KKOJ Chuck Sullivan, KLAC Buddy Clyde, KWIZ Jim Bain, KWIZ Earl Troul Ill, KWIZ Mike Wagner. KOES PLEDGE --, PRIZES: - KXOJ I NAME_ ADDRESS, PHONE PER MILE I Prizes for the most sponaora . e Easy StreeL. - v 35 exits a week from Orange County Airport ·With convenltnl same-day round ltips, you arTlw: early and retum In ttme for dinner. Nonstop1 lab only an hour. So call Air Callfomla first. ll's the Ea111 Street to Oakland, plus fNqutnl R~110SanJoseand San Francisco, too. Rental cars, hotels, thenetion'1 onlyfa!Nly discount plan. Economical group ratu and mllltary fares. They're aU pert of AJrCalifomla'• •IY My .. :and we can hive tieket.s walling al a nearbi; Ir awl agent. \lhwlt could be easltr? In fact, If there ls an easier \IAllY to get you ther1 ... M'll be the first to teU yau. Air <:allfomla. We'n euyto take. """"""'~ . . ' AIR. CALIFORNIA 737a .We're easy to take. CGll Ea.., l../O•m<>lion ~ °"""' c ...... f714) 54-04550; -.12131921.J.ll!: u,,...., 17141494-7595: l.o•-12131627-M41. • \ L I I . . _. •I ! • ,. Kl.AC ICW1Z I ~ MRS. DORIS VOLTAS REGGIE SOUTH I Tiit C.liloml• N1tion11 G1.11rd "' Orange County Police E11plorer Grovps I Orar191 High School MnHoro~U I Vtn di Kamp'1 BlklfY P9pll Cot1 C<lmpary I L11.1r1 Stt.iddlf'I Gr1nnyGoon See'• C1ridle1 I S1nt1"An1 Commt.inity Ho1pi111 Candy Sttlpers AlJ Ph0togr1phy I Buckingham Prlnt1rs Eric Etl11, Electro·Ac;ousllc1 Company Cosmopolitan Clubs I N11tle'1 Leonard Nin and The EWlrgreen Morning Anna M1rle loYe I 01vld Pom1ran1z Back Street co1t1 M• .. Yo11th Employment Semce I Hatfield Nelm1n Jewelert Wllk1r'1 M1rket Lutley SttHe .. ltlc Ol1tler F1ll1 1c1 Aten• I Art'• Landini Japanen \II 1ge l D••r Perk -J<nott'1 8efT)' Farm I ln1llnl Action Emergency Squid, IN: Mcl>onald'a, Or1ng1 (Chapmtn· Nortti TUstin> I lont BHch C1t1llna CfulHI PlorlHr Chicken O.x.ton Melt Company I ClrP1t Cenllr The A91}1Nan1 Fovntaln \11ll1y Minlltur• Gott Patt I Sun Ou1HI Products ..And htartflll tl'llnll11D !hi Qty OI Ofltlfl rot Ill help and 1nlhullum. I • • • • • I AH proceeds to benlftl the Retiab1Htallon IMtltult OI Orange CountY.. 1800 E. Lt\1111 Avenue, Ort.nQt, 1 nonprofil org1nlz1tlon dtd~td 10 tht aid 1nd 1r11tment ot phyaically hlnClcl.pped children end 1ctultl. I· i I and hig hest amount of collec· lions! So get your feet in geart • I Sign up as many sponsors as you can and bring this form I to Orange High. If you are under 18, your parents will have to sign the Registration/ I I I Waiver form for you at the Registration Center. -- I RIO friends reSOOftlible kif this announcement is:: I ..... E. l. .. ._ 6 Associates. I I I I I I . I _. .,-..l.--' . \ • • " i ' • • • • ... DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • . --·New Disclosure Rules ,. • • ' ' Aller more lhan a year or niggling debate, Orange County Supervisors have ordered 700 . middle· management iovernment employes to make major financial disclosures. -Tho$e who are directly arrected by lhe board edict are employes who regularly come into rontact with the pub~c and special interest gro~ps. Ttte same e.mployes also speak before the board and sometimes guide its actions. · · The idea of lhe law Is to let the public know what ft.ftancial inte.rests their public servants have and who they might be beholden to if lhe chips were down. Though it doesn't require listing of exact cash amounts, the new law does require revetation of all property holdings and interests worth more than $10,000. . : The county's dlsdosure rules will po doubt be changed or eliminated when new statewide clean government laws lake effe<:t in January. But at le3st it shows some interest on the part of county government to tidy up its own house beCore the big sweep begins. Challenge J ustified Orange County Supervisors have taken a strong stand against more state dictates that could ruin ~uccessful local programs. "' In this case, it is the state Department of Health, armed with a newly passed Assembly bill, that is doing the mandating. , !" It has been charged with tlle implementation by December lS of tough new regulations governing community self·help programs such as drug prevention centers and child·care facilities. They would involve administration, operating procedures. auditing and licensing. Supervisors have challenged the regulations by asking for a six-month delay In enforcement by lhe state and possibly major revisions In the law. They say, and rightly so, that the oew rules would overburden small programs that don 't have the fuods to-set up th state's-cOstJy new--admln1scrafi;;v;;:e __ structures and review procedures, among other things. -• • In short, the new state rules could kill many struggling programs that are beginning to serve an aching need in the community. Superv.l.'lors were right to challenge the rules. The state should listen hard to the rumbling at the local level. The Airmail Fraud Letter-writ~rs who pay 3 cents extra for an airmaiJ starµp to speed their missives are victims of a fraud, says New York Congressman Lester L .. Wolff. Statistics seem lo back him up. The fact is that almost all mail goes by air today anyway, except.over very short distances. And the Postal Service's own efficiency _!lleasuring system has come up with the news that the -extra 3 cents JlOt only doesn 't b\iy time, but may even slow down mail. That's because "airmail" must be separated from regalar first class mail and given special-thus time-consuming-handling. Back in 1918 when the extra charge for airmail \Vas established, it had some real meaning. Today it seems the American public is getting litUe or nothing for the whopping $200 million it spends annually on domestic airmail postage. - So a proposal to abolish the extra airmail charge altogether would seem to make s.ense. And the P~al Service can always reeoup the loss thfowi:h its now-habitu~l practice of ~riodically tacking a couple more pennies Onto the i-egular flrSt class mail rate-which it probably will do soon anyway. l<ING OF THE MOUNTAI N - lie Gets llis Wag in.Washiqton . ., . - . " • . • .'·I • ' Politics' Bad Nam e.' Mis leads Dear ~my ____ ~Sh~ ~Hol.ds~the~Key--to Oil ·Prices .. CHAR LES McCA BE There was the day when Winston Cblll'Chill nodded at the back or one or his colleagues in the House of Com· moas. ''Tbat chap," he said, "is living sodomy a bad name." lluch the same could be said, in another sense. of Mr. Richard M. Nizon and the p>lle of petty Vil· Jains be usembJed in tbe w ·blte Hous·e. These chaps have given politics 'an even worse name than it held before their coming. A very much worse name. And not at all deserved. in truth. Apart from the Nixon damage, there <re signs th at,Olilics has fallen on evil ways in our country, Since FDR,+ there b"'as been tmly one "President who could be described as having a d (!cent libera1 ;.rts education. Mr. Nixon ,tnS c1ear1v an intel_ligent man, b,ut few even Qt his admirers would Proclaim that Whit· tier Colleg'e and Duke law-school had made him an educated man. ·' AT TH£ bee.inninli! of our centurv we had-such rormii:lable iiltetleet:s as Teddy RooseYelt, William H. Tart an WoodroW Wilson at the helm. These chaps would ha ve been counted educated even by the 19th Century standards of the House of Lords, among whose members a favorite af· ter·dinner diversion was writing limericks in Latin. Wilson was president ol Princeton University. Tart single-handledly wrote the Organic Act which gover- ned the Philippines. Roosevelt read everything, and managed lo become a distinguished m an of letters in ad · d.ilion to his life in politics, OUR LAST t\lo·o pres idents, culturally, haYe been close to red· , Is it !true that 60 percent of the world's oil is ofJshore -1lor'ed in tankers waiting for prices to go . up? T.D. WASHINGTON -Secretary or [ Jongrange radar devices and other mto reports that tbe llaU W r... State Henry H;i ss inger held . ] bigh·powe'redeleetronicequii>mf:ntiD . oeledmoney-UatolheNiSCNlcampaip crucial discussions ln 'l'ehe<an this JA,CK ANDERSON hiscquntry. . . -by way ol llnieo. We made •alb lo week with the shah of Iran, whO has _ Met the Gr"eek military Junta was Teberan, GeneYa, Bonn. Mesko City the power to· bring the stratospheric ou'sted earlier this year, tho CIA.pul· and other faraway places. Separate cost of oil back down to earth. enormous oil wealth to make himself led many of its f acililies out of Athens aources, all of l.bem .m1 .. ball aad The shah bas rbeconie one of the a world power . .'Last year alone, he andmovedtbemtoTeberan.TbeCIA tberefore 1u1peet., told us that tbe world's most recklessly greedy, un· spent $4 billion for U.S. milltaq also worts closely with SAVAK, the lhab hid transferred more thn $1 'believably wealthy •· equipment. This bas made Iran the shab's secretpolice. mWioa from bis penoul. nmbencl r u I e r s . H e No. 1 military power in tbe strategic Yet the CIA has lost. the bOld it once accounts in Swhariand to tbe Buco spearheaded the Persian Gulf. bad QD the shah. "He •a..-wt baby," de Loadres y lle:dco ill Medco Qty move to quadruple a CIA source told ua, "but DDW'be baa for delivef'J to the Nlua eampaip. oil prices and he KISSINGE R went to Teheran, grownup." Swi.HbantinglOUl'Celcoaftnaed tl&at still isn't satisfied. according to State Dept. solll'Ces, It remains a mys~, meanwhile. tbe abah bad aent 1DODeJ to MexieO necks. Mr. Nixon's idea of Heaven, as He has hinted that prepared .to treat the sbab as a how the shah bas always managed to from the Schwel1eri1tb•;J;:. we know, was'lhe cinema-biov.apby lhe oil-producing. military ally and proted.or or U.S. in· work his way in Wuhlngton. He baa Getelsbaft. We ceuld set DO of General Patton, .a tin (Od ii eYer n a ti 0 n s s ho u Id terest:s in tbe gulf. Klssinger ia coun· been able to get just about what be · eonfirmatioa, · bowt:Yer. tbat tH there was one, or anything starrini: c b a r g e e ve n ting heavily upon the sbab's good will wants from the United.States. "It has money eVei reacbed. &D10DfJ COllDM- his fri end John Wayne. h. j g b e r togetloweroilprices. been a one-way street." a Cabinet of· ted with Nixon. • • The late Mr. Johnson had been a prices. 1'bi5 iS contrary to the advice of at ficersaid. · rural school-teacher; but he cared lit· His more responsible neighbor, least one top policy.maker, Treas\ll'Y •• -A former Habert Humphref aide tie for things or the mind. He governed Saudi Arabia's King Faisal, is wot· Secretary William Simon, who fears ONE ALARMING pc>ssibility, never told us he had been aPIX'OKbed by• by listening, and talking, reading ried that orbiting oil costs could en· Kissinger has underestimated• the fully proved, is that the shah has paid emi~ary of Ule ~ durin1tbe 1• newspapers, and watching the telly danger the industrial West. He has shah's greed and ambition. lfthe shah . off top American officials. Here are · ~idential tamp&ip. Tbe emiaaarJ news programs. Had you said Swift to written a private letter to .the shah, refuses to bring down his prices, say the allegations, which have been asked wh!'ther HumpbreJ ~like either of these gents, there would warning that neither kingdom will our sources, Simon wants to retaliate vigorously denied: a campaign contribdtioa from tbe have come the old blank stare. ..; last if .. tbe West is plunged Jnto by quadrupling the price Iran must • -A former Justice Dept. official, shah, buttheapproacbwasrejected. After Watergate, the words politics. , economic chaos by exorbitant oil pay for U.S. arms and wheat. who bas travelled extensively in Iran, -An exiled lraniu leader aamed. polilician and political/reached their charges. To add emphasis to the war· Not eveh the Central Intelligence reported to the Senate Watergate Kyber Khan testified behind cloled lowest point in public esteem. A ning, King Fai1ji.l"d11\ivered his letter Agency, which saved the shah's Committee that the shah 'bad Senate doors in 1963 that the shah had proper insult, In our contemporary toTeberan in persoi.. throne in 1957, bas bad any influence delivered huge sums to former given million·dollar contributionS to• lexicon, is "mere politician" or With him on oil prices. The late CIA. President NiJi:on. We contacted the of· list of di.stinguilbed AmertcAna. Khu "cheap politics " While it is not SAUDI ARABIA and Jran produce chief Allen Dulles new to Rome and ficial who described his sources to us produced pbotostats of ·aeeret Swiss altogether true that when a man is almost half of the oil that is pumped Plotted with the shah's sister, Prin-in confidence. "I am certain in my bank retetds. Senate lnvesti.laton elected to office he becomes attainted, · by the 13 nations of the oil cartel. cess Ashraf, to oust Iranian Premier own mind," be wrote us, "that if their were never able to confirm tbe the truth is not too far from that, in Thus, ~bey could break the~il squeeze Mobammed,Mossadegh. This preven-names came out: t~y would ~ in charges and it l s _ROISible_tbat. I.be J10mh~e1es. . . . by acting together to cut pnces. At-the led the ~bah s overthrow 14 years"ago. prison or-dead-wt~ 24 hours. '!'e record& Dad been forced. T is ts both _unr~1r an~. rn1slead1ng. lower levels, representatives of the can say only ~hat h11, sources !ll'e high If ¥~u lose faith 1n pohbcs, and the two oil kingdoms are discussing a ·RE SHOWED his gratitude by in the Iranian government. Tiie WashiGglon, meanwhile, is con~ ~ht1cal process, and~w~oprac-_ joint price reduction. But the shah ooenln.itirantotheCIA. Watergate commi_~tee_ never &ot U~uintitspolic)'.ofdnit:cs~L lice theQl,..}'OU have 105t:-fa.i\h-1n.much-keeps-talktng-about"hi,Rher.not-lower-He-permttted1hrct:A-tol ·nna1r--arou.nd·toinve1ttg1.tlngllie"""?:liatges. wtiililie hurts Oiil states wllll more ~a_n you mJY think. You have prices He -is determined to use his radio and telemetry interceptors, WE SPENT SIX months checking his oil squeeze. · lost fa1lb tn nearly everything PECULATION is a part of politics. It always has been, and always will be. But even the worst thief, under our system or government, cannot fail to dQ quite a bit of good, even if it is against his better judgment. What we need more of, and have al"'·ays needed more of. are average decent men with average decent con- cerns. When these men get together, as they did in the founding of the Republi<'. we have polilics at its best. \Ve need a government in which Mr. Nixon wouldn't be elected dog cat- cher. We will never get it; but it's • worth a tr~. Still Too Soon to Write Off Ford WASHINGTON -As might have been expected, President Ford is the greatest disappointment to those who were most eager to have him replace President Nixon. Ford is not so badly off. politically, however, as some recent poll rigures would suggest. He retains the substantial majority sup- port of Republicans and independ· ents. [ RICHARD J ..._ __ WI_L _so_N _ __. wished to.dispoSe of Nixon because Or his Watergate involvement but to be rid of his policie!i on Such issues as en· forced school busing, welfare, govern· ment expenditures,. government reorganization, economics and general philosophy of government. retain majority suppart for Ford among nonaligned votei-1. Democratic leaders can peer into tbe future in vain for some as yet unrecognized figure with broad popular appeal. They Found 'Themselves At Last With a little better luck than he has been having lately he would still be a formidable cat¥1idate for election in 1976 against any foreseeable Democratic candidate. That is what counts. not the drop-off in Ford's popularity mainly attributable to his pardon of former President Nixon.• All this, it was hoped by Nixon's p-e rmanent critics , would be discredited in the ex-President's disgrace. but Ford is proceeding, with some exceptions, along the general lines of the Nixon administration so fill' as large policies are concerned. THE ELEMENT which pl'oduc.S the most political. uncertainty is economic 'uncertainty. A preshient trapped in a serious recession or depression cannot be ·very sure of his political fate, but Ford's chief ad· vise~ are telling him lhat the nation will be climbing outot recession wben it is time to go to the polls agala. Perhaps his fate in thilrespe«isnotlO Remember a decade or so back ( ] wbev millions of Americans deter- mill<dly set out to limtthemselves• ART HOPPE Well at last the glorious da y came '------------'· when not a single one could be num· be red any longer among the missing! : ~elcome home celebrations were m.altd in comm unities across the land. Typical, perhaps, was that beld in Pleasantville. Tbousinds of self· finders marched past the, bunting·. draped reviewing stand and submit· ted to interviewir by the press. Most said they i.ad found themselves through such · ac.tivities as nude discussion groups (where they discussed nudes). Zen llowling (which requires no balls), •nd gloshing (Which involves tlpl'a1ing whipped cream on one's par· tner prior to nagellaUng him or "her ·eight year s I found myself a mature v.'Oman \Yith an abiding hatred of :vr:hipped cream-and wet feluccini:V A more interesting case was that or Kenneth E . (narne withheld), wbo found himself twice. "Firi;t I lound myself in bed with my best friend's wife," he said. "Unfortunately, he found myself there. too. ·And the next thing I knew I found myself in Central "so;mer~ency with a broken leJt. '' Some found ad~enture. Naturalist Euell <name withheld)~ while sear- ching for himself. became lost for three week s in the Pasadena Freeway inlerchange and existed on a diet of alfalfa sprouts, macadamia nuts and soy sauce. ''J roundmysellealinga frozen pizza." he. reported, "and f haven't touched'" allal!a sproul sin· ce." /' In a brief address-. Mayor ltomerT. Pettibone, who recently found himself indicted over a paving contract. apologized that ''President Ford could not be with us today.··' The mayor said he didn't mean to imply the President hadn't found him· self. "I don 't thinJt he's been looking," he said. "But we must all agree he has certainly bumped into himself on numerousoccasi9ns. ·• ACTUALLV, most or those who found themselves appeared to wish they hadn't . Business executive Albert ~-<name withheld) was sur- prised to hind himself o.ne day in a bat .in Chicago. He bas since joined A.A. · Former young militant,· Ollver fname withheld), who wished to save the world, found himself in Al's Barber Shop following a shave and a ha•rcuL These revealed sloping chin and a low fqrehead. He Is now a door·to.door ~ salesman selling doors. So most found lhemselves rather or· tri111 wttletucclnl ). . AN EXAMPLE of the glories of cloSblni was Mildred cname with· beld>. '"'When I complained to my Daddy that I couldn't rind myself, fie aid to cit.an up my room bttause "I TllOUCillT 1 would Ond myself dinaryhumanbeings,nornore norless conducting our church's Good ... fascin11tlnglhantheirCellows.The.pall Nor does it necessarily follow that the widely predicted Democratic sweep in the coming congressional election will prepare the way for a Democratic presidential landlside in 1976. Politics hasn't worked that way in recent years, with both Presidents Eis~nhower and Nixon surviving reversals in midterm congressional elections and then coming back: to win by larger majorities than when rirs\. elected. ASIDE from the pardon, which may come to be vie.wed in a different lighl in a couple or years or less. the main elements of disappointment in Ford arise from his not pursuing liberal Democratic:: Party policies. And it is among Oemocrat.s that Ford has sur. rered his greatest decline in popularity._ Amnesty for Vietnam defectors has played a part In Ford's -decline, but one suspects that this Is not.a mll-jor · f1ctor; in any case, Ford has. the con· fidence or a majority of the younger voters. ., lie ha!\ not suddenly betom~ the kind or president that the 1972-suppor- ters of George McGovern would bave liked and quite obvlouslf hoped for in the eaily days when li'ord was trying lo salve the abrasions left by the Nixon admirustralion. . BUT NOW, as the new President campaigns to bold congressional· los- ses lo a minimum, it is perceived that he is still a Republican and proud of it. Neither does be hav.e any apology for pardoning Nixon, but has gone before the severest forum possible, the · ltouse Judiciary .... Commiltee, to dcrend his action. ' All this adds up to quite a dirrerent president .than the Nixonphobes thought they were getting, a good. · patured tellow willing to set aside C::On· · victions and. political habits of 1 lifetime and erase any trace of Nixon's 1972 victory from the national government. · To the disappointment In Ford rnusl, now be addedJ.he frustrating develop. ment that thl"candidate most likely to dark. · . . The short of it is that tllil is no-time to write o£r Ford.as a falleattar, ewn though he does not shine as bri&bt as before. • ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT l!ol>ttlN.W.,,d,_, Thomcu Keftllll, lditor' • BorboroKml>kll, 8diloriol l'Qllo Editor The editorial Pitt ol tlile DmlJ 'POot seeks to inform ... lthii\dale readers by PnHntiltl Clll dds .... divene commealaf1 • \apia of.., terest b)' a11dlc1ted ~ ... «rtoonlst1, by Pf'Ot'\clbic 1 ,.,_ ror tt•den'view111M1.., pn11.u.a this newspaper'• op..._ ..s ..._ on current topltt. 'he edttortaJ oPinions of lhe Dtl" Pilat appear 1 only In the edltor11I eelulnn at U. • top of the pa1e. Ophlkm talnlled by the colu1nni1U and tartoonlltl and letter writer1 are thetrown and , no endonement or tbetrvtews bf u. Daily Pilot 1houkl,be inferred. · •---mQbeJ-wulalllere,~Sild. "ButL tried P><"i•g lntleld. Alld alter only Samaritan Super·Keen-o (fames,"' ' that be.gan to setlle over the TllE DEEPER cause of disappoint· 5a id the Rev. Billy 1name withheld). c::elebrat1onwa.s summedupbythatotd mtn\ among t~ who at first were so ··eut instead J round myselt one day In curmudgeon, Mr.Crannich. 'enthusiastic:: obo\lt Ford ls his refusal line to i;ee ··o eep Throat." I have, of ''J\nytgocentrlc::ldiotwhospendsall : to regard.his accession lo office as a rourse, neverretur_ned...BuUdoubllbe hiaUmetrylnttofindhimsclf,"bcsaid repeal or the 1972 presldential elec- churchmisse1me.·· &YOUch11}',"SbbU1dgcllosl.'' tlon. There, are lhoset who not. only . ~ . . be able to defeat him has withdrawn himself Crom any consideration in 1976. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's with· drawal has reduced the list of 1 Democratic posslbilltlea to unin· ... spiring levels wtlhout.; even, the tdm .... pie and common qua,11ue1 'which -:ruesday, Novemtier s; 11'74 ' • I I l p • • . " - - " ' • • • I . TU!!d!y, Novemqw S. 1974 :TRI fAlllLY .ORCUS ,• ·' ·' • I ' . . ·Widow of ·Astronaut: Claims, Says She Broke Code · To Curb Says GM WASHINGTON <UPll-Thewldowor peer op\nion -that-should aC«pl astronaut Virgil "Gus" Grissom says In your loss in silence, bear up, speak no WASHINGTON (UPI)-. a book that she broke a cocte of sile.nce ev!1.---don'~~th boat.~be noble and General Motors hiS 8ereea-~:she·sued'tbe buU<lerofthe Apollo I ,sacnflce yo~~ life~~ the good of govern· to stop advertising that lts 1n which h·er husband died . ment and military, the book says. can handle well un&ess it Grissom, ~dward H. White a.n4 Roger has competent scientific B. ~·I~ died. when a nash fire swept evidence to back up such their cabtn dunng a ground test a month · cl alms \be Federal Trade before their scheduled launch on the first Commi1sion has announ-manned test of the moon ship. c~e FTC said .. Monday that GM ~nd Its advertising agency, Campbell-Ewald Co., signed consent agreements -rowinR out of an advertising campaign . for the 1971 Cbevrolet Vega . A REVIEW BOARD said the fire probably was caused by a spark from a damaged wire. The pressurized oxygen environment allowed the flames to engulf the cabin rapidly. MRS. GRISSOM SUED North American Aviation, now .part of lhe Rockwell Corp., and the sWt was later settled out o[ court (or ~.000. After expenses and attorney fees , Mrs. Grisson said, her two sons, Mark and Scott, each received $75,000 and she got $60,000. The other two wido s, who . rerused-to H>IR 1tt rs7 Gfissom in the sliit, later received similar amounts. Mrs. Grissom said she sued after the remaining astronauts signed a contract to share proceeds from a docum~ntary tilm. The practice up to then was for all the spacemen and the widows or those The advertisement in question quoted Road and Track Magat.ine as saying that Vega "is beyond a • 'We sure hove soup ond sandwich for dinner 0 lot doubt the best handling pas- when D_oddy's away on 0 trip." senger car ever built in Betty Grissom says in "Slarfell," writ· ten jointly with Henry Still and published Moqday, that she considered filing a damage suit after the 1967 spftcecrart ru-e. But she said she continued to live by the "Code ofTogethersville" until 1971. "That code decreed -by the force or · killed in the program to share money received from such contracts. ---'------.,,------------the United States.,,. The FTC claimed GM · L 111. B.l,,d . Don~t Fly Over The Taj Mahal ~That kitchen appliance know.a as the garbage com~ctor ori1inated aboard the Polaris submarine, -rm told. Earlier, garba"'gi jettisoned rrom a submarine floated to the surface, giving away the ... positioo~of the craft. You say you saw the movie? All ~ so the Polaris boys installed a hydraulic ram that compressed all shipboard trash into metal containers about three feet tatl and 10 inches in diameter.· . Weighted and ejected, these sank. Wonderful! Every household needs -~.saidthem~rke_t.Q1gmen_ _ • • EACH DAY just aboutZl people in India.die rrom snakebites. THAT FAMOUS Indian called "Geronimo" by the Mexicans was known earliei-among his tribal compatriots as "Qo1athlay''meaning''onewhoyawns .. '' MENSA . Q. '"That out£it called 'Mensa' supposedly only aceepts members with I.Q. 'sin the top two percent or. the general population. What's 'Mensa' mean·?'' A. That's the Latin word for table. WHAT, YOU can't nam e the only U.S. president who ne\ter married? Say James Buchanan ... FOUR to . one that's the ratio of men to women who get ulcen, pleue oo&e ••• IT'S AGAINST _the law in India to fiy ' 'an airplane over the Taj Mahal, remember that. · ·,. . cou ld not pro.ve the magazine made that statement. Specirica1ly, the tests· must show how the car han- d I es when e merg,e'nc'y steering maneuvers ari\' necessary, how the car takes corners at speeds above 30 miles an hour as· well as how it performs in heavy cross winds, on rough roads and under other severe steering and br.aking conditions. • Housing Forum. Due The Orange County 4201CampusDrive. Human Relations Commis· . .. . sion will cqnduct an open T~e prob!~m . Irv1~e forum on low-cost housing lace~ 1s acut_e, said Amin problems Thursday in Ir· David ~ cha1_rm an of the vine. · • county commission. The meetint . will take "Irvine's own housing im· place at 7 :30 p.m. in the In· plemenlation plan indicates . terfaith Conference Room, that, other than one mobile t -· • home park, there are no af- fordable units for low-in· come· families," he sai.d. David said the commis· sion is concerned about the appa~t . unwillingness or Irvia·£Tes"idents (o allow low and . moderate income housing in the ci..ty. OLD CRAVE r UNCOVERED Hair Slaves, Go Free! Ill ;...II Ill ... P-.r-'""liW ...., Ill.,..._ ... •••tu .. ..... ........................ ...,.._. .................... ., .. ,. .................. . .................... 0.-,-. ....... ..... ...... ._ ......................... .,.. ..... ................................... , ..... ; ........... ,.. ............... ,. ........ ... ...,. ....................................... ... .._It. We .............. Ai lttfie Wt....._ ..... nry -· JOSEPH'S .SCISSOR smt4G . '564 H-... Aie."1""'11agtuo i...._Ua,JSJS JOI N ....... llwf,,. Fuls1lw -Pl. .,,_JIO NOW llOI TOUI COllYINl..CI ••• OfllltUIL1' t A.M. ·lo 10 PM-T. • 51Wy,.9 to. I PM• • mGREST Directory Assistance Operators at Pacific Telephone receive over a million requests a day for numbers that · are already: listed ·in the Rhone book. ,· ... • . • Certainly :v.ou know the highest mountain in North . America is Mt. McKinley. And the highest in Africa is Kilimanjaro. And the highest in Asia is Everest. But ·"Were you aware that the highest mountain in South America is Aconcagua? And in Europe, Elvorus? Neither was 1. AGAIN am ~sked to identify the original Greyhound bus. That was a 1914 seven-passenger Hupmobile. It hauled' miners between the towns of Hibbing and Alice ln Minn'esota. WHEN the mothers·in·law visit, the kids catch cold . Frequently, frequenUy. Or so.a California physician reports. Clearly, a mental matter. And if it's not a cold the offspring surren, it may be bad back, a headache or-severe-insomnia. \Yhy mothers·in·law continue_to be blame4 in this matter I do not know. JXAt'TLY S2 DEGREF.s F. is said to be the perfect IHl"Ptratuce·arwhlcb"t«rserve·beeriJrEngland.:;__--lt----' ONE HOUSE gets demolished for every four houses ·that get built. ' , s1~s. Hall I · Gallo111 • _. ...... 111.lfftN. -!"'l"--~·~, ................. wwrs. . ·. ., SE THE. BOOK. In fact, many calls are for the same num,- bers over and over ... for places like restauran.ts, buses, theatres~ depart- ment stores, and ser- vice stations . And while it's our policy to provide you with whatever information you request, you should know· that last year, the Operator expense for handliug those unnecessary calls totaled over $55,000;000. $·55,000,000. That's a lot of money to pay for informa- tion you already have ... right in your local directory. So, if you're concerned about the cost of your .service, do something about it. Make a list of the numbers you call most ofter\, and keep it handy. Also, keep the book near your phone, and use it whenever you can : • : ··Of co\irse, whenever you can't find the inf ormatjon you ne~d, we're here to help. - . , . • ... • • \ • 'Al OAILYPILOT Deaths ·Elsewhere STANFORD !AP> -A memorial service wlll be ~Id Sllnday ror -rt L. Plerce,---who for 14 years was executive director of lhe Stanford Ul'liver sity Alumni AssOflation. Pierce, 49, retirea for hea lth Ttasons in 1970. He died Saturday in Carmel after an el(lended illness. WASHINGTON IUPIJ - Art historian Hermann W. Williams Jr., 66, director of the Corcoran Gallery Of Art. here for 21 years, died Sun- day afte.r a lengthy ill•ess. SAN DIEGO IUPll -Dr. Paul R. Saunders, SS. USC administrator and resear- cher on poisonous marine animals, \~ied Thur"sday. Saunders was a ssociate dean for basic sciences and professor of physiology in the USC School of ,_ledicine. CHARLOTTE, N .C . . fUPI,> -Funeral services for No rm an A. Cocke, 89, a former president or Duke Power Co. and a former chairman or the board or DUke Unive rsity. were s c h e dul ed a t Christ EPiscopal Church he re. Cocke, president of the utility from 1953 unUI 1959. when he retired, died at his bome Saturday. Tl.lffday, Niw.mbtf $, 1974 Pilot Logbpok '·('~~~~~~~~~~ ..... One Railroad That Makes · It By WILLIAM SCHREIB ER Ol I'°' !Hiit Pile! *•II ln these times of economic trauma, it's hard enough to scrape together the mone~ ~o~ food , clothing, housing und other needs of decent bv1ng. J. , •• ''.~ 5CNlll:llEll vei pf:ople are still finding spare dollars to set new spending reC'Ords on hobbie5. : Take model railroading -a $45 ml- : lion per yCar business as or 1973. THAT STATISTIC and others <i re contained in a document released recently by "l\lodcl Rai lro<i der" .magazine. According to the magazine's s urvey, mouc1 r11ilronding, "is currently enjoying its biggest grov.'th rate since the end of World War 11. '' An estimated 190,000 "serious hobbyists" managed to spend an average of $237 each IUst year on their railroad sets. According tO the survey, that's about 539 apiece less than five years ago, but there arc now more people spending the money, many of them in the category of "age 15 and under." BUT WITH inflation hard on its heels, the dollar ri'gure jumped by more than $6 million over the same ·five -year period. The report insists that the model railroading hobby is continuing to grow a( a rate or about eight percent per year -sligbUy less-than the 12 percent annual SARASOTA, Fla. !U PI) rate of inOation. -Funeral services were Economic problems are duly cited in the survey as scheduled today ror Eva . .:ausing many model railroaders to delay building Swain_Vtllmer,-76, once the more costly model railroads. world's youngCst prima bal -But, the report says. "it's encouraging to note t!1.at I e ri n a and the . firs! 43 percent plan to spend more this year than last while American to hold that only 19percentplantospendless." 'honor. Mrs. Vollmer' died . . . . here Thursday'. She became ACCORDING to the statistics, HO-scale t aiJrgJ.ds_,._ ·-~-~~-,,p~enner danse«se-or··tne-_,.-were tnemm-pOpUJar -_ $36 million worth ill 1973. Mell'.'Opolitan Opera Com-Those are the train sets where people are about an pany in New York City in .1ichtall, 1912. The remaining funds are about equally split between OIJfruarfes f'JIEMZEL ~' V. frentel, •tslatnl al Nl!-r1 N·gauge <about half the size or HO J and 0 -gauge 'about twice the size·of HO>. I-lobby Shops get the lion's s hare or m.odel railroading business -roughly 70 cents (or every dollar spent. .. e.«11.0.t•oflle•111HoV1'-l.1'fl•.Sur· THE llOBBY survey is incredibly detailed, right .. 1vec1 11, Nr d•~<JMH 11ri9ltt• ~nt.•~; -•own to the persor,l tif.e·s.tyl.es of the average model .....,ttr·lft·I•• ll••i..•• Wl••ll; lour 91'-· v -- • ORANGE COUNTY Rapist . Gets 9 Months S1\NTA ANA -A mun fou nd g uilty of rape, burglary , kidnap and sex 1>crversion after he raped a Balboa Jsland divorcee on her li ving room couch and then again an hour later under the Newport Beach Pier has been sentenced to nine months in Or ange County Jail. Superior Court Judge Everett W. Dickey ordered the jail term and three years probation ror Robert Clarence Stender. 48, Los Altos, aner a jury found him guilty or all chJ_rges. . The 20·year·old vi ctim tcstiried that Stender broke Into her home la'st Aug. 12 while she was asleep on the couch a nd raped her al knifepoint • Orange Getting Service . DiQl-a-ride Exp~ding . SANTA ANA -The/Int ror Dial·•·Ride ..met," or centers or popt111Uon buy r;r Dlal·a-RI'::i tiuses · .inaJor expansion of the Fleldini' said;\. "Staff bas needing transit ;;ind other and othe~ eq ~ Prange County "TransJl met with the clt,r manager considerations. needt!d to tie lhe net J>i•trict •s door ·to -ofeachofthecommunities to~et~er. . • 1 • desUnation Dial-a-Ride bus to Initiate discussions. · FIELDING SAID the rtD1a:·aiRld~l 1isn ~5 service is planned early <lbout the service." district a lready has poM atn .e t;1m• for a total t ~ received a Sl.S million as er Pan ... neic spnng. EAetl CITY that gets g"rant from the Urban transportatiol'I system. District di rectors were the new service must Mass 'transit Ati~ority lo Fieldina 1ald=·== ==• told Monday that all the share in Its costs because planning and funding will th ere is not enough capital tome together with actual in OCTD coffers to com- 1 service sometime in pletely sUbsidize it. The $0- '.March or April in the city cent-per-ride fare doesn't of Orange -top priority cover the entire operation. area for the pioneen rig bus L8 Habra currently par- system. tlcipates to fhe tune of a bout 30 percent. OCTD General Manager Fielding said' that cities G:J, "P~te" Fleldl~ sa~d 'can choose the level of ser-Dial-a-R~de . networks will vice they want by the be st~rted . •n . each or the amount or money they con~­ co:~~~ XEROX "y; COPIES 3 c Req 1 INTROOLJ(TORY OffER NO Ea . .., Miili Ml),.,.. GOOD THRU NOV 23 ill AL tc:>P s1x 1_>r1or1ty are~ at tribute. six to e1s::ht \\reek inter· ' 1 1;:::::::::::::;::;::;:;;:;;::;;::;:::~;;;:=:;:;:;:::::::::, vnls after the first. IF VOTERS approve an increase of up to one cenf ""OW OPEN AGAIM 546-2693 3400 IRVINE. "~;;,0,'.' CURRENTL \', only the city of La Habra hos Dial- a-Ride service, which brings a sma!: \'an-type bl.is directly to a rider 's front door Jess than a halJ'. hour afte r a call ls put in. Next in line after Orange is the city of Huntington Beach, followed by Buena Park, Brea, Westminster, Tustin, Cypress and Ful - lerton. "Contracts will be established .with each city in the local sales tax -" Proposition A on the ballot t.ogay -lrarisit planner$ say every community could have Dial-a-Ride free of city subsidy. Fielding said the plan· ning has been meticulous for the Dial ·a-Ride expan· sion next spring. Following Out Extensive Remoclolng COLONIAL KITCHEN IREAKF,lST • WMCH • DIMMER 6 o.m. to 9 p,,.: Mon. lllnl Sat. American Home Cooking 512 W. 19111 St. Costa-. 54MJU · He said each com· munity's needs have been analyzed to determine Ir:;;;;=;;;::;::~~;=;::~;::;;: =: .~~t:.·:::::·i:.~:~ Jllr. lbrt~ttan~ Term R Wed Far Jinin,e anJ i11ncing amort,e1t ,,,, rt lies of flnt old ' 1-N iling 1/1ips. Year's She $aid she \Vas_ then d _r __ forced to accompan y VOr Escatne T !fer-11-BEATINFLATIONSPECIAL Stender in a stfoll airing the r j ' • r iJiiJ . .,, :--. 2FOR1 WITltTlUS ... o -.-. beach··that ended with her , ·~------r--;--T.vo htrinf't7r"'l'~of(me--~ -·~in graped' 3fifi'ffUi'fuet'tffif -,-= · • • d b 1 -pier Stender was arrested SANTA ANA -Convicted term, was 1m·pose !'' Dai•ySunday thruThursday ·three days later in a local killer Lawrence Eugene Superior ~ourt Judge ' : S:00to7:00P.M. Wilson has been sentenced Everett W. Dickey. bar to 366 days in Orange Co-escapees Prince Pico luncheon MO!f.·Fri. from 11:30a.m. Dinner served nightly from 5: 00 p. m. Sunday Champagne Brunch from I0:30 a.m. Court Date In Swindle Case Set County. Jail after pleading Tarpley. 19 , and Frank guilty to escape charges Allen O'Hare, 23, both of filedafterheandtwoother-Anaheim , already are prisoners broke out of lhe , i;;erving sentences that will county courthouse last June keep th en'I in state prison 11, for at least 20 years. Both Fishts, Mtats, Oysttr &r, NotrJ 1Vints, A/1:1 ani Spin"t1 The sentence, academic were convicted on charges concurrently w;th h;, me w;th • deadly weapon and mr. ~11Tt.9 tan .9 escape. Al l three m e n we re JSJE. Coas1Et1lu11ay <lllld"" •nd ~· t•••t·9•_,c1111<1; .... e railroader. Notabl stat1st1cs include: brot11trn1wa.ist1rs. s. ... 1c.nwi11t11Ntd _ The-fact thai each hobbyist spends about 224 SANTA ANA _ Prec'iou' i: Wedneld;IJ 10 :00 AM 1Jrl¥tllot. GooCI _ srwi>Mro c.metoirr. c11ree1e.:1 o, e 1111--hours per year on his trains and does so for an average met a Is d e a I er, Miles BfrttrO"C.OSMIMtwMOrt...,,. ofl4years. · ... Crenshaw of Ne.wporl Pol Offender recaptured in the Santa Ana Ntwport Beach ·5 inc e it w i 11 run or armed rObbery, assault .J!ltl 11Tt. • f" · • • ; ·civic center area within an RanwtiiMs {114) '1S-5JZO _ . Gets Jail Term hour of their escape. I'---------..,...._ ______ _, O'MAlllA -The fact that 94.4 percent or all model railroad~rs Beach has been-()rdered to ~-c.~·:::':m"'C:~.m ... ~~ ha\·e at least one other hobby, the most popular being face arraignmentNov.12in "'"*D>'f'lllsw•nt1, Mr. & lih ThDmlsF. photography. Orange County Superior O'H.I••: mi.rs, 1Mr~rt1 -c.t11rrifte:--The (act that:othe average model railroader is 33 d s A N T• 'AN A _ A '"'° -11rr5. ~k •flCI o.n111s o "H•••· Se•· Colift. on charges of g~n ,.,. ••tes ••e r.t1>11 n.10 100 • .,, Tues.:l•'f. years old, earns $17,358 per year, has a college degree, theft and violating the Newport Beach man who "'°-jjfl-' u:po AM. St.~·".. owns h1's ow n home and spends 11 hours per week t t ' t' s --•e admi·tted ,··n the courtroom II••"'' ai"''"· 111111men1, AH """'' , s a es corpora ion 1.vu . _ c.,.,......,"' t.ont kKll. c... ~" watching television: The study notes average income Crensha w, 37, who lives that he was ·in possession or a.itJ-11er1111roneos1••wMort11er•-drops to Sl3,500 whe11 students and r etirees are at 2251 Jeronimo Road, El m ariju a na wh'e n local •1ot.a•OSON • I d d ••-Ill 1.. JtklWlrdM:tn. reliOent of c.osi. inc u e · Toro, and who operates the police arr,ested him ha s Mew.O.Wtet0Mtt1N11Mmtirr1,1ru .Sur-Gold and Silver Bullion beensentencedto45daysin ::.,""o.':; :-~~ ~:'~;.!':c~;;::~. A,,,,._...,,,._...,,. __ ...,..,_..., __ ..., ___ ,,. Exchange, 2445 E. COast Orange County Jail. o.to. c;.. .... ,,. se•~ic'\ Fri°"' $awlt1~ Highway, Newport Beach, Supe rior Court Judie """*"' "'""''''· Beu Bt-~., """'-· is accused of swindling Everett W. Dickey ordered "1"0"" Q ' D d r th l 1 d h M•riOll F. Flirtttr, rt~IGtlll ef LiltUN ueen s • ea fCliefttS OUt 0 more an the a i term an t ree etK11. o.1e o1 de1u1 Now-2. "" <11 $300,000. years probation forfeather trw -oe of ... s.ir .. 1wd Dy hff ""'·Hi-,.., C h -~-• k B · Le undiff F1;t1tHo1~1w,..;111wt11t••.t11111R.,.....n rens aw was arr=KU wor er nan e , Bert-Forde Revival, Inc. Brings To You MIRACLE DELIVERANCE REVIVAL Ui1d11r the Gospel Big Top ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS ·Costa Mesa ·. Nov. 7 thru Nov. 17 -7:30 P.M . °' u11111is; .. .,.,, grandcllllGrell ¥O 11... July 8 on the basis of 23, of 1880 16th St., Newport ore•~ 1r.tlldc.lllld•e11. Memorlll -mes T. Horw' r Ach•evers I . t d by a D·ach. • 0 0 n. t mi ss this M<tftetllllodlJ.TIHSOtJ,Nooembtf 51h,ll •tans &. COmp 31n S ma e . """'" Lf9lllMI &llK ll Pre~11,1erl1n Chutcll. Inter-• .,.. number or clients who told;-----,------; ·c~ ... Goel m •. Heal • DtlYll" OPPortunity fo hear the menl -..111 lol-in Broo~line. Ml~ Thow ofticers they had Paid for ll:.&C:l:-fROM USI preaching of the world ~will\ "1'1y Sl!'l'ld .... mot Ill <orltlblolklM ~ • 1,.,.,... Memori•• sdlol¥Vil• F....o. LERTON A someone who is an s i lve_r but h a d n e ver ...,_c.r.11110 .,......_ ... _._1_. c..i.u .,,..__.Go-ti Mn· le confirmed with s.igns TutU u..1..;.s11, in Med!Ofd, Mtu. Slwller F1.JL d th ecious ._..il~1"'°4'•JG ... -11'il-of!lollVftl' --.qnui nwsu "!I": ~11.c:11MDr1...,,dirtcws.. tradition has died at Cal achiever in academics and recei_ve e pr -· 1 ~ ·-· · · · -• .-------;and:wonders following, __ _ TNOMAs State FulleffOJf. --~s•e·rvrce-tothe--un:tverslty-or-met~I. .u..a..:::!1MM111 ~ le~illJ. 111111'1'11~11,reslC!tfllol1tll1 E•~ • d d I commun1·ty. A $100 cash . It IS furth~r alleged that ..-1,-.-,,,....Ulllt ... nu COME! HELP !J_S_TO LIFT up: ESUS•. L• ... 111111111>111onseat11.c...o.1eo1<k•1t1 The queen 1s ea. ong c h dd t have a ........... 111•-n __ N<>Mmt1e•1.1'u110ran11eeoun1vMtdlc•1 live lhe ''Titan of the prize and a plaque will go _rens aw 1 no. ui•MM•u ~nie•. aor" <emrx• 2•, 1ttG. ~-.1""4 .., a•ng w·ith ·,t ,·n place or license to sell the sliver. ,,,,10,,,,. E.dn1 TP1o nw1: s!sl••· SMldr• Year.'' u;i lfliiiiiiiiiiiiii °""'•;orMldmottwr. "'-•rti.E.,...,.,..Stt, Studenl orricers at the the traditional rhinestone wotf' will br Mid 10:00 AM~¥ •I . d fl . g el et 5n111"'· 1W1M .. ,. Ae•. E.-ett °""!lir' "'· /lOrth Orange Cou nty tiara an ow1n v v 11c1•nt. 1111e•mtnt Good s11.1111e•o ~niversity ·have voted that robe. eemt11ry,Sm1t11s·mori..-rydirt<tors. there will no longer be a r.~:;;;;;;;=:;;;;;;;;;;=:;;;;~~=il WlllfNWl!IN PJt•k l• Wt'111"'"· 011e 01 de11111 Nowm. homecoming queen. ·In· BEAT INFLATION mr l, ,,1.111..o .... 1..1r>0• Ho~u11. ~¥1-stead the new Titan of the bf lltr ~w•blnd Owl11P1t; two dl"'l!llWrs. • • • . ,.. Glldy• _ Ptny '°' '"'" •llfldchl-. 1Year award will bonor an FACTORY SALE Ser•it•• P,1C ilic vi,. 1111111.w, •:oa ""' out.Standing student -1 :::"'''· r"" tamlh .-.<1...ntsno11otwtr• male or fe male. $AVE 7501 1 "An ill-received tradition _ to /0 f AllUCKU.& SON is not worth keeping," said - . WESTCLlff MOltT'uAIY associated s tudents Pre-STOCK UP NOW&. $AVE •'27E.1 71hS1.,Co~oMno "sid ent Bonnie Sharpe, NATVIAL VITAMINS & 6-46-4888 "The feelings to do away fOOOS .. HWnt IOOKS -•-with the queen have been IAL~IEAGEROH getting s tronger among HOUIS Tue1. to frl. 9.5 FUtilERAL HOME students and someone had A ,_•peak out." 19321. IDI_., S .. Co•ono del Mo1 673-9450 w · Costo Me~o -•-646·2•'2• The new honor w~H~I ~g~o~to~::!:I ~lll~Wl~IT;;Of:;:;:N;;•;;WPOl:;;::;';;";;WT:;;. llLL llOADWAY MOITUAllY 110 Srood·..oy. Co~l'.l Me so b42·ql50 -·-DILDAY UOTHEIS MOITUMY I 791 I 6eoch &l~d. Hull!•f1910~ Beoch ' 841.7771 744 ~edondo Av" long 8~o(h 1713) 4JS. l14j • -·-McCORMICK LAGUNA llACH MOllTUAIY r 79$ toqv"o COl'vo~ l!d A94-941S -·-' McCORMICK MISSION MOllTUAllY 28832 (o""no Cap151ro'IO Son Non Copis•10110 49S-1776 -·-PACIFIC VllW MIMOllW. PAIK c-• 3500 Poclllc View Orr.. Newi)or1 &toch. Colilorl'liO 6•4-2700 -·-PIEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNlllAL "~ . 1eo111ot.., A,,., wnim1"'tet" 893·352S -·-SMITHS' MotTUAl'f' ""'·"'''""--~1 ;;,. • "".JTQfl /)." ~ .)~6 6J.39 I r WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW OF ORANGE COUNTY CAllFORHIA"S LARGtST LAW SCHOOL ' . •oFFERS A NEW PROGRAM• OF SPRING-ENTERING FULL · TIME LAW STUDY (WI ... 2 Vi• u•tf J.,_., t••d011tion •P'l•"tl •·~--~-:-~~~~~ A CHOICE OF FOIJR, P'ROGRA"4S OF LAW STIJOY IS Ar.AILAILE: e '" IH EITHER l'h or J YEARS ol flJLL.111>41 low 11\ldr • (IS 16 clrinroo,.,., hov11 pt r "'ttl ). or e IN frrHlR Jl/1 or .f YEARS ol 'ART.11"4E dov. •vt11ing. O• wHtt 11d l:i• Jlvdy (J (IOUOI: (le1 w~fl , J.~ ho~rl pl}• t<1011J. e YOll con '°'" you• JUl/5 OOCrOR _(J.0.J d•9r!e ~II(/ btcomt eli91blt lo la't II•• Coli/011111>' 800' f111m1110f10I\. Wtlff 01 ,HONI fOI CATAlOGU[ 800 South Brookhunt Anaheim, c •. 92804 1714) 635-3453, APPlY NOW FOR DAY, EVENING, OR WEEKEND ClASSES BEGINNING FllRUARY 3, 197S ,_.,. 'IOVUIONAU.l! ACCllOl!fO 1.!.lttL~~MMlflll Of IAI I XAMIN(fS 0' fHf SfATf IAI OF (oltr10•NlA ·--- ALWAYS INVEST AT fl ~~I INVEST IN HIGH-YIELD ~ ~ -::::!~ SAVINGS CERTIFICATES • WITH THESE ADV ANT AGES OVER 'U.S. TREASURY NOTES, BONDS, AND BILLS : ALWAYS YOUR BASIC INVESTMENT is returned Intact, plus interest earned, even when withdrawn prematurely and subject to s ubstantial interest penalties. ALWAYS GUARANTEED RATE OF INTEREST continues for the lite of the certificate, 90 days to four years. An<J as yearS pass, this amounts to well above interest yield on Treasury notes, which ... l'.'1~Y start al a "Sfighlly higher rate, but which does not compou~d. ALWAYS SECURE, NOT SUBJECT TO MARKET fluctuations, not subject to purchas, and selling fees and commissions whlch can re._ duce interest slibstantially. EFFECTIVE • NOY. 27 "INSURANCE OF ACCOUNTS 'RAISED TO $40,000! 260 Ocean Avenue, l.fg\lne hech, Celllornia 9265t , Pflono: 4944 7541 ·3 Monarch Bay Plaza, L19Una Niguel, California • 601 Notth El Camino Real, San Clemente, Call!ornle • 24038 Calle d• laPtata, Laguna HUii, C1lifomla • 600Wtst Ot11'11m'Avtnue, lake Eltlnott, Carlfom11 Comirtg aoon In Belmont Short! • I • l •• •• un wel le~ lu :1~; pr .Th en .. ~ tio fol Ba fi e of i~~ .. ch G \j ' Notables Diagnosed Did VD Cause Henry to Rage? LONDON IUPI) -Mi 1 young man, Kins Henry VIII of Encland wa1-ch1r· mine, pleasant and fun -loving . B"l when he 4ied ln 1541 at age ~. Henry was an unpredictable tyrant who killed ort his wives and h1d hulldreds of his subjects executed for no reason al all. His mind may hive been affected by syphilis. The theory ls c-ontained In one of 15 biographical essays collected by geneticist Arnold Sorsby from medical -journals datin1 back 60 years and published In a new book, titled ''Tenements of Clay." : Contributors to the collectiOJJ diag. nosed the physical problemsof tfittorical figures ranging from Noah (Llllegedly an albino) ~o William Shakespeare (who may have had writer's cramp} as well as Aets Legalf%ed Ludwig Van Beethoven, Napolean Bonapatt.e and Jane Austen. Their medical detective work was based on studying the individual's behavior, writings, looks and any olher evidence that might be avallable froro the time the subject was alive. Dr. Ove Brinch, a Danish physician, suggested Henry may have caught syphilis from the rirst or his six wives, Catherine or Aragon, who !!J most ac- counts had .an affair wilfi a Spaniah monk before marrying the 18·year-old king. Henry had a nose deforthily, a per:· sistent leg ulcer, skin diseases and suf·. fered from rages, forgetfulness and headaches in later life -all clle<I by Brinch as evidence of the presence or syphilis. Sexual Conduct -. Curbs Relaxed Water Poet , SACRAMENTO IAPI - Gov. Ronald Reagan ap- pointed C. J. "Jack" Frost of Coachella to the Colorado River Basin Re1lonal Water QUallty Control Board Friday. Frost, 81, a Democrat, will serve until Sept. 30 filllnl the unex.· pired term ol Keith Aln· 1 awortb or Indio, who reslg· nod, -!!;-....... .- "MAV5' SOME HONE"f,HOME'f. •· Breast _ Cancer In Men DEMA.RE SAID that two· thirds· of the men treated for bre1Jst cancer are more th an 65 years old. Breast surgery is less of an emotional trauma for men than wome n, probably because there is not the same sexual connotation in the male, he said. · DeMnre said the surgery is about the same in both sexes -removal o' the breast tissue, underlying muscle and nearby lymP.h nodes.._ - Tuesd1y. No11embet 5, 1974 DAILY P1LDT -AJ' • Saddle Pads Potentially Lethal WASHINGTON IAPI - Between 5,000 Mnd 10.000 saddle pads sold nationwide since January may be con· tamina{ed with potentially -ltthal :inthriix s~r~. the U.S. Consu mer 'Produc t Safety Commission says. It said the pads were woven from f!Oat and yuk hdir, Im· ported from Arghunistan wnd Paktstan . Anthrax is an acute'. bac· Our . terial disease that can be fatal to human s a nd animals if untreated. The anthra x spore is hi ghly resista nt to disenfection 1tnd may persist on a eon· tami~ated item for sevt'ral yt>ars. pnc of the saddle pads, the commission said, was believed to have been responsible for the death of a horse in the state of Philosophy . - IS: It's a changing \\lorld ... for we have only to look around us lo see a variety or new and different interests born of today's lifestyles. And just as people's interests and desires change, so must we at Pacific Vie\v vary our methods of providing memorial and interment services to accommodate these changes. For example, we receive maiiy requests to provide cemetery services only. From others the request Is solely for 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 fa cilities of our mortuary, chapel and cemetery. . Whatever 1he case, the service provided is exactly as requested by either the .d~cea.s~d befQ.re ~~th.or by ·the person responsible for final arrangements. And in all cases it is the right service, because we at Pacific View Memorial Pa1k and Mortuary cii.n-provide any or all of the services desired. To find out more about Pacific View a nd the savings that result from pre-need arrangements, call Mr. Ward at 644-2700. He'll arrange for professional counseling in your own home and supply you with a valuable estate planning pa cket atisolule)y free. \\la shington . T he horse meut \\'as (ed to a numher or animals in a1.11ri ,·ate unlmal r;irm near Sequim. \\lush .. rl'sulling 1n the deaths of 38 t-ouga rt;, lffi1n1 rds lnld·othe big cats, the c~o mmlsslon said. Pad O\\'ncrs \\"t•re ad\•1scd lo ('hrck \\'ilh state or ]oral hea lth dcp11rt1nents for di s posal advirt•. 1'he pads should not be steriliied. burn('d or throY.'d .away becau.se of th e poi· sl ble risk or further anthra:< t'Ont am ination, the eommls· sion said. . -', Sunday is Fl'.JD&AY' in U>e i1tjiijiji(1}# . ~- • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK 9 MORTUARY 3500 Pacific View Drive, Newport BCach, California 92663 fArea 714) 644 -2 700 . -' ' I I I So-called experts have maay answers as to how you can protect yourself frbm the ravages of inflation, The market. Silver. Land. Art. Possibly even gold . • Remember the stories about cattle, oil and orchards? While their figures and logic are often dazzling, there are two subjects they never mention: Availability and safety, What could be of greater importance to you than the ab ili ty to • Protect yourself again ~! inflation by investing for high return with safety.At Mutual Savings your funds are insured to $20,0 00 by an agency of the United States Government. We have many invest- ment and savings plan s. You can earn as hign as 7.79% per aooum when interest is compounded d'liJ y at 7¥.% on a $1 ,000 certificate issued for a term of four years. (Federal regulations requ ire a substantial penalty if funds are withdrawn before completion of the term). Come in . Talk to a Mu tual Savings consultant. No pie-in-the-sky promises . Just the facts . __ Gtt lhe most you can from what you have.· S1nt1 An• . 7th & North Main/547·9741 -Fountain Valley 17942 Magnolia St./963·8396 • ' I '. • • ' Corona del Mar 2867 East Coast Hl£Jhway /675·5010 • Cap,lstrano·San Clemente 530 Camino de Estr.ella/493-5651 ~ , - ' ,... • • • ... • • .. -. . . - . - ' .. ,• ,, '· ' •':.. ,. ~· A 10 DAIL V PILOf TONIGHTS TV IDGHIJGHTS CBS 12), NBC (4l and ABC (7) 4:00 -Election Coverage. All three natlona1 network s begin their rerrls 011 the congressiona l and guber· •natoria elect ions , continuing through the eve rung. KHJ (9) 7:30 -"'Walk , Don 't Run." One ol Cary Grant's last mov ies. from 1966. with Samantha Eggar and Jim Hutton al the Tokyo Olympics. TV DAILY LOG W ednesday DAYTIME MOVIES 1:10 Q "As Yt~nt: Ali YM fttr' (co111) "51-MOl'll)' Woolrt, )Cjfl Pd")· t :ID f)(C) .,.Mt It A f 19' l ttf" Wttf" (tom) '61 -OH1d · rntr, KOCE, CHANNEL 50 Or:inite County's UllF tr levision Sl1l tion, KOCE·TV, has schedul <'d the following special programs today. Det.:ii led listings or Chann<'l 51'}'s programs are! carried 1n lh c Daily Pilot'i TV Weck each Sunday. l\.00 St!!OOl.O!STAICTHEW\ICI 11;10 FllllHGl.lf'll. i(I 1;10 (.()MMUH!TVO' 1.IVl"IGTMIN1"i K l''T<'thn~IO' l•P'or••-·· I » TIMI; lO 01111.W ICI 'Or~ I.I 1.11..tl , .. , U MA TH fAtTOlt'I' 1(1 '"(11,. .... '01 f:.lliCTlll!((Olrtl\Pl.NY (Cl 1 .It (..111:111.StOLl!HOI.!; !Cl ) 00 (ONNlf;'~ C.l0THIN0 (.Oll:N[A tt'l~••$lllflt-"'l'11l1PClf'00 - J JO OIMEHSIONS tN CUi..TUll:E!I. CCI ~L ...... 91 .. .t 01 l'lll'((H,t.NO SICIETOfl NG t(I "~111'•1.t~pS·· • • » tLICT•1CCOMl'AHY iCt S 00 SISAM (Sfliltil 4Cl l·OO ll1CillUE MA ll:tl9 !Cl l.» OIMEHSIONS IN CUL.tUAES CCI ··1.~-·· 1.00 F!tJEEHilO S1tlE:JOtll!Y tCJ ·~ ... A'l.tlo<>\llllK'' P » FACES 01' AUTUMN tel""""""" -I. MllM..,.t.t,., .tW-11 !11-""'llf'lt fl!'IO'I•"'' ot tht r•O•"' t-•• 1!11! blotot•<ll lllO 1ot<lol111!< .. tWIKb of ..... t-to O!lillfN$10HS tN (ULTU*f!S lCI "L.-.VW9''" I II Sl'E(t'-'.. IN l't:lll'FORllMHCE ,t.J "'°"'" r•1.f' tCI .,_.,~ VMOtNt ,,,,,. .....,,,ltl<h" 'JO SPECIAL IC I RArt Ill Pllbtk Pt«H (ltMlnl ' I ~. ' jOUEENIE ·s·y· Phlllnterlaridi Depencfenq1 Deductions· A Few Dollars • on..r-.s,..&1m1., ..._ 1t1.,w..w~_.... "It's not fair. He gets a direct audience-we have to 10 through the t"81estipn box ." · Does Linck>ra think Losi Weight ·'L-141 IS ~· II i• not a simple task '"' a pafient to reach end maintain "lean weight" for life. First the patient muot have an honest deoire to cure· his prObtem:.lf\OO·accept proteosional guidance from trained Medical Oocfors. llndora's lktique 10-week treatment and training program will teach patients how to reach and maintain their "lean weight" for life. A safe and practical plan. with HCG treatments. proper. nutritional diet, and continual emotional support. New audio and sub·liminal visua l a ids are used to motivate the patient. The entire pro- grdm is under the strict supervision of Medical DoCtors, specia lists in Beriotric Medicine. Undofo Olnics ore owned and odmlnlsteted bV Medloaf Doctors fhOf reslricl their practice to Beriatrfcs. All OINc Peoonnefore licensed b'(the Slate of Colffomlo. Calf for lnformatton Mondoy lhN Fridoy BA.M. to6 P.M. lindora~ MEDICAL CLINIC SHERMAN OAKS WOODLAND HILLS LONG BEACH 789-7103 347-5647. 426-6549 Gtlllin-Von ~I w •• .,...v1c10<y 11(11 Prole»1onll Prote11IOnll 8 Og. MeC11c1l lllOg. e1dg, PASADENA WEST COVINA SANTA MONICA 796-2614 962-3438 828'.4513 C•ock•• M1•011 f r,..,kluo 8inll 610g. 111<18. lile<l>tll 610g. POMONA CERRITOS MISSION ·HILLS -623-1655 924-5748 365-1138 Pomo111 V1ll•r c ... 11os M•11lo11 Medic1tC.!lltr Pr.!llel\1'011.al llMl:I. .Mt~•ti' Bldg, E. LONG BEACH HAWTHORNE HOUYWOOO 597.03.78 679-9236 462-0883 Los 1.no1 Hl'Wtllorne Mui• MeOJc&I C1nrer Me(llc•I Ce11te1 Me<l1c1I C.nler NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE GARDEN GROVE 645.3740 538-2395 534-2051 P11ee P•o•esaionll Tu1t1n·Cll11>fl'lln P!u1 Bldg. ProltlS•Ollll 81c1g Prol••~•on•I BldQ, FULLERTON LA·HABRA COSTA MESA 870-9501 694-1029 557-1893 s1~1e College H1lltrHI M111 Ve1.te Me<lic1I 610Q. Mtd!c1I 816g. Proles11011il Bl(lg. SAN DIEGO CLAfREMONT CHULA VISTA 583-6932 560-1484 420-9580 1.lvu.00 ll&JMH!cef 315 f ourth "'"· Medlc11 Cente• C.1111• Suite O&P SAN BERNARDINO 886-4788 RIVERSIDE 787-8250 1.uir,,.11ea11 MeCloC1I 81<1g. M1d1c1I SouUI Today's .final stocks DAILY PILOT TO BE SP ECIFIC,lhe tax law says that you can get a dependency deduction for your mother only ir Ct > she has "gross income" of less tha n $750 a year ; a nd 121 you provide more than half of he r s uppoJt. As a n il- lustration, say that in 1973 your mothe r got Social Securi ty benefits of $2,500 and had no other incom e. To help her, you paid all her medical and dental bills in excess of Medicare -a total of $2 ,600. Result ~ you go_t a (\ependency deduction ofS750 a nd also deducted the $2,GdO in medical expenses, 'The explanation: Social Security be nefits a ren't · e&iiil ed: for-the ;i.iroSs in· come" test ; and (2) you con- tributed more than half of your mother 's support; But th is year has been much toug__h er, for with soaring living costs your mother,hasn't been able to swing it even "'ith her in- creused Social Security benefits. So you contributed $100 more. NOW lfERE'S how you , your mother and.th e tax col- lect or ma ke out: yo ur mothe r's Soc ial Security benefits have been lined to more than $2, 700 this year and she is spending the en· tire amount on her·own sup- port. You have supported your mother to the tune or $2,700 instead of $2 ,600 -and thereby. yo u lose your 1974 dependency deduction, for th.is is not more than half or your mother 's s upport. You also loSe the $2 ,600 or medical deduclioos. Who wins? The tax collec- tor. Here's why: your mother gets no beneCit from her depe nd ency e xe mption, since she has no income from wh ic4 to deduct it. You lost a $7,SO deduction and a $2,600 mcaical dedu ction. The enti re difference goes to the IRS. WH AT, TH EN, should you do? Make sure, say Prcn- tice·llall 's top tax experts. that in the weeks remaining before yea re nd. you nail down the entire $3,350 in deductions by seeing lo it that you contribute more than ha ir or your mother 's s upport in 1974. By giving. you r mother a few hundred dollars more this year, you w e l l mi g ht w i nd up poc keting as much as $1,600 in taxes-money that other- wise wou Id go to the I RS. "Right now," warns Pren· tice·Hall . is "an ideal oppor· tunity ror significant and successrul tax strategy." Find out now how much you r mother 's grbss income for '74 wi ll be a nd talk th ings ELECTION COVERAGE )'Vatch it live on Orange County television Tonight at 8:30 pm 9:35 pm 10:10pm Full fi nal returns tomorrow at 11:30 am TO BE SAFE, make sure that you -not the person you are s uppo rting -pay the medical bills ir you are contributing more than hair of that person's support. Pay by check so you have proof the payment was madf 1n 1974. ~llM1"' ,,. ....... ..,.,,..., ... Allergan's Sales Up Burroughs Gets Bid ORANGICOUN7V RADl07EllPHONI SfffVIC[ I~(" ... , .... 0.11, ""-' fer '"'"'" -7(...i~ ........... .,_......, •• MJ••J11/0W..tw ...... t) I. •· Over The Counter .,.,.,Lhlf .•. ) MUTUALFUNDS • I • •, I 1 1 p c c ni c t f • c • • ex fo 1 .. s 0 • a • l g fa in • c g fi • th c 0 • B " 5 • fo fa g p c d • ' ... • ' • ' • • .. ... "' " .. ~ ff '" ji • ' • " " J " " " ~· " tt " " " • I ' ' ' . . DAJL Y PR.OT ,, ,. Taxable retail sales of $1.3 billion were recorded in Orange County in the second quarter of this year, a 7 .5 .percent increase over s81es for the likC period ol J9i3. . But the increas ~ in growth did not compare _favorably with the pace set in recent years. It was the smallest percentage in- crease in second-quarter growth since l~l. million ih sales rorthequar· ter. Its auto dealerships recorded $16 million and its general merchandise stores $14 million. IN NEWPORT Beach, sales totalled $63 miUioft, The number or restaurants in the city was reflected In sales at eating and drinking places or $13.$ million, This compared with $11 million at· gener.a~ merchandise at.ores and S4.6 mllUon at THE ORANGE County autodealer!hl)).!. figures paralleled taxable Fountain Valley's sales sales state-wide. St.ate-wide tor the second quarter were there "'.as a 7 3 perHnt in· $22 million with tl! blggeat ~rease in ll\e dollar amount . categories being tn food of taxable sales ln the stores -S4.6 mllllon -and second quartet_\ but ~he-l>uJlding materials $2 mll· Board of Equall1at1on lion ' , reported that this was the · smallest growth since the Sales In the city of Irvine spring or I971 . totalled~ million. lts total --l'be i:eport showed that for all ~etail stores was $7.7 -for th; first time since the mlllton-whlle the amount fall of 1970, tai.able sales for "other outl.et.s" was t2S growth failed to maintain million, this amount pace with rising prices. probably reflecting . house ' ' Costa Mesa. with South transactions. Coast Plaza and it.a auto In Laguna Beach sales dealerships, led Orange totals hit $13 mllUon. Eating Coast cities with $108 mll· and. drinkln1 places ~ere lion in total taxable sales, responsible for $2.4 million General me rchandise andautodealersSZmillion. stores rang up $26 nlillion and auto dealerships $18.5 million. Huntington Beach was the next busiest with $82.5 SALES REGISTERED $11 .8 million ln San Clerh~nte with restaurants recording St.1 rnlllion. I • Monday's Closing Prices .NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE 1 . I - Religious S~ct To Have Tests CORTEZ. Colo, !UPI) -A stale health orricial has convinced 35 mem· bers of a religious sect to agree to throat cultures to find carriers or the infectious diphtheria \•.'hich killed a 4· year·old girl. ' "{'he unidentiried girl, whose parents refused her immunization against the disease. died last week. She wa s the rirst diphtheria \'ictim in Colorado in many' yC<1rs. A j udge in Cortez ordered the girl's l\VO brothers hospil ali zed when it was detcrm ined they also had lhe disease. Dr . Tho mas Ve rn on. c hie € epidemio log ist fo r the ' Color!idO Health Department. flew to Cortez Sunday and persuaded the sect mcm· bcrs to su bmit to throat cultures. Lockheed " • : ' . ' ···~ J -~' I .. •• \· \• t \ ' • . ., ;I. ' .. .. WASHINGTON <UPI) -Lockheed Airc raft Corp., the nation's No. 1 de€cnse contractor for five straight···- years despite cost overruns and near bankrupl<'Y, has been replaced by General I>ynam iC$ as the top co~trac· tor. the Pe ntagon has announced. Gencrol·Dynamics.11 lways a major con•factor .. grabbed lhe top spot ror the fiscal year ended J une JO With con· tfiicts ror ,.11uclear submarines. the 1<~111 f ightcr and the Trident missile. State Jobless ' SACRA"f ENTO tAPl -Stale of· €1clals s3y unemployment in Califor~ nia edged do\ll·nward to 8.1 pere.cnt In Octobl'r but rf'm:iined well above last yP'Dt 's-f1gnrl!-nntt-lhQ: current national rat~. " The Emplo>·menl Development Oepartmt:nt also said Fr;day th al cm·. • ployment had ,;Jumped during_lh•<----- ytar in-;n,-osrm~ajor taUfomta In· · dustries. -• ' • L • ' t ' I ,· ... -----. Alt DAlt.YPlLOT ' Novemt>.t-5. 197.C • ' I I I • . ~------------· -.---::--~-------.-, -·- • • • ~fl" •Now signed into law,effecti\le as of November 27 j l ~ The nation's economy being what it is, naturally you want as your family savings . So it is goqd news indeed that insurance ;of~s~a~Vl~·n;;~~~i;l;i~~' • • raised to $40,000 for an individual ,. up to $560,000 for a family of 4. And Home Savings offers ' even more. Among all savings and loan associations, only Hpme Savings is over $51/{Billion Strong, Number 1 in the nation in both savings and loans. No financial institution pays more on insured savings. Many do.not offer as mu. h in interest; in free services, in a~ed benefits'..:.._._• ~~------------~ Now increased insurance adds to the qualities that made Home Savings America's Largest • . . . • • . perfect safety since 1889 ... steady a·nd sure high earnings ... Peace of Mind . 'I • ' . ' f\iEWPORT BEACH 190 Newport C(ntei· Drive 640-6100' Member: FEDERAL Savings and Loan Insurance Corp. • Member: FEDERAL Home Loan Bank Syslem ' • . f, I ' Joa 11J1-l79t HSl"ft P•l• GAlAl.Y ADV. IMC. • ' ' • I • I ' • .. I • . ' J Political Year .for Women • Time ··.to · Groom ; . ' lyLAURIE~PER Having· been divorced and Women, who have to wait nine .,..,....,......,. ~idowed, ·•lie knows per:sonally months ·to. give birth to a child, This was to be the "year for how unequally women ha11:e been should know. they have to have women"lnPollUcs. ' -. trea~ under the law. Although ~ patience, expf8ined o"ne woman. Watercate demanded new slressing that laws should be made They should kno.w, "you have to leadership from the national to the for people a nd Politicians selected crawl before you walk, you have lo local leVe l . The women's on the basis of something other · walk before you run." movement had made women than sex, she said, ''We're n·ot It is unrealistic to expect that . aware that they could be that --making laws for-ourselves, are women become candidates or even ladenhip. we?" campaign organizers before they · NaUoaal publicity civen during ''I'm worried a bout.the fabric ol betome familiar with a campaign past months to these two fact.ors-In· society as a whole.'' explained• from the botto.m, even stuffing en- diealed women and Politics would Sheila Kramer, coordinator of a velopes, explained Mrs. Baum. meet and merce more than they past county supervisorial cam· "I don't think you should ever be everhadbefore. . paign. "The fabric of society has loo enamored with yourself that Women, wbo dldn't--need this hol~s in it and women are the ones you can't get in and find out what publicity 11 ind~cement to become who can patch it up." things are all about." involved, explain theimpOrtance of WIN WITH WOMEN" It is experience whh;h oounts. poHtics. Although she admits there a.ten'\ ':People don't realize the very air This year. the National Women's e nough women a s camp1ign you breathe is involved with Political Caucus made "Win With managers, finance chairmen and politics and somebody being for ., Wott\fn"its lheme, . .,.. prec i nct coord inators, s h e and somebody being against," said' B'4 one doesn'tneed to w1it for questions how many women have Sherry Baum, former member or ·the ballots to be'~ to know gottenttie necessarytraining, the DemocraUc State Central Com· this hasn't happehe(f"here. Qnly BACKBON!k OF AcnON mltlee who has been listed in -one woman:was r.uiminR for an·'of· Women, believes Rhoda Martyn, "Who's Who in American Politics" in the county and One other.was a a past president of the Huntington forthreeyears. major tParty •candjd~te on tb·t Beach League of Women Voters "You're putting your feelings statewide ballot. who is now treasurer of Dennis into action ••. so politics is an ex-During thq_ sprin&.eled.ioos, the Mangers' campaign for an assem· pression." number of city, council seats held bly seat, are the "backbone of a lot She asked, "Canwe affordnotto by women was increased to a ofcommunitygovernmentaction." care,nottobeconcerned?" .. record" number. But even this They 8re, she believes, a vital .. The ballot,•• concurs Althea could be viewed two ways. force because they have the time to Scott, member of the county One coiJ.ld question wheth:er 18 give and they have proven con· DemoCratic Central Committee "is ~ell, sea~ of ~e total 134 in the sistent in giving it. tbe most important thing in life.•• couoty s 26 cities 1s such a notewor-''Housewives, who don't have to Past experienc;e explains the-~lbyreeord. ~ . -work, could' walk away with need for women in politics, accor-. Or, on~ could note that it 1s a slg· ariyt.hing/' sai'd Ms. Kramer. · ding to Dorothy Musfelt, Laguna ruTic~nt 1ncr'lase ove~ three y~ars All the woman bas to do, she ex· ...Jle.l..C.h..db' £1£!!. who is m:ganizing aco when there were sax and a little plained, fs .. find a subject which in· • county· .. chapterOf-Califofura--~·to·year~agcrwhen~le wer.---1~.-her;-attend-meetings-of:--a-- JlirtedWomenOfficials. Just two women on councils. committee dealing with the sul> 7he fabric of society has holes in it and women are the ones who can patch it up.' • ject, lellm about it and volunteer assistance. ~ After not too long, she claim·oo, the woman would be appointed to the committee, then made chair.. man, sent as6 a rep~ntative to a stale committee and even given an appointment. by the governor. ••Pretty soon, -you might be qualified ror a job paying $36,000 a year." She is not concerned a bout women running for office. She said, ''I'm worried about where the ac- tion is." That, she believes, is at the local level. And women, she contends, are becoming more aware of their ability and power and more in· volved. ' BO Althoutb sbe would question· -· ":':' We have the cream of tfje crop here. There's no reason why we can't gfft it together.· • I BEA ANDERSON, Editor ~·---""'' ....... 1 whether •Oft people are becoming · • :>" involved, Judy Rosener, coastal il commissioner, believes "peop1e who didn't participate before are participating." And they are doing it, she thinks. at the local level "but maybe that's wishful thinking because that's my particular thing." · Ad hoc groups , u s ually homeowners or environmentalists, have become more significant, she said. And traditional social IUOUDS. as the American Association .of University Women and the Junior • League, have become active and are taking leadership roles in the community: Any member of the League of Women Voters will testify to their involvement in non:partisan is· sues. But individuals from this group a re also known for taking key roles in partisan campaigns. But there is also the NWPC which was organized primarily to belp women get into politics. Recently, a member declared, "Women are nowhere in Orange County politics " Normally a n optimist, she became upsel at a candidate's night sponsored by the NWPC. Only a few women attended that meeting which she believed shou10 • have been one of their more impor~ tanl meetings. It was, others agreed, embarras· sing, disapeointing and eve n disgusting. Although agr eeing. Ms. Kramer. also an NWPC member, said, "I'm notdlsOO'ID'a ged. '' She suggested the meager atten- dance might have been due to a change in the meeting place. But the women· didn't even come out and support the county's one woman candidate to the extent they might have. She said that may be because so many o{ the women, who work, go to school and have families, have so little time. ''The future's ahead or us," she said. •·1~ isn't behind us.·· GROWING PAINS Ms. Scott, state representative • for lbe county caucus, believes that women in the county are just begin· ning to recognize their power. And it is, &he said, "a very painful beginning." "The problems of the NWPC arc not unique proble ms . They'r e growing pains." Right now, she · explained, the caucus i s whe re the b la c k movement was some years ago. They are wasting a lot of time with "petty politics'' and "fighting ove r power.that isn 't.'' Rather than be concerned about who the chairwoman is, bylaws, telephone trees and even the num· ber of members, she believes they need unity with a serious purpose. Ten women "who have got it together," she said, will do more I than llOwOmen going otr iD lan&eD- ts. Although disenchanted, she agreed With Ms. Kramer that the county group is on the "forefront•• of other caucuses in the state. "We have fantastic women. The cream or the crop is there. There's no reason ·why we can't get it to'gethcr.'' It. is, s he explained. just a question qf when and what .issue they'll rally around. And now, with the election over, is the crucial lime, she aaid. Now, they can watch their represeo-- tatives a nd d e ma nd res pon· siveness. And , they can begin grooming candidates. She hopes the next couple OI yc:J rs, be.fore the nexlelectton, will be exc iting. .. . " ,. . \ Women. Behind' Moving Ahead' By JO 01.SON A former mayor of Seal Beach, Norma Hertzog, Costa li1esa's CM..,.DtllYNlllM8tf Mrs . Gi bb s admitted s he rir!t C¥Nn~i1woman, said she feels .. It 'au boils down to the can· sometimes felt like she was on the the key to m ore women beiilg elec· dldate-if they 're, qualified, griddle because she could always tea al state and national levels is poised, a good speaker-, poSitive be referred to a s "that woman." more . women who are willing to and bave a good ego." "Now they're going to have to relocate t hemselves and their Jody llarJ:, an Irvine resident dilferentfate." families. who baa been campaign manager She,' too, believes women ~ill She said she had some opposition twkeforlrvineMayorGabx_Pryor; \c ontinue in politics. She said when she filed, but that people l--~-"ll:DQW.l__l"hat it takes for a woman to women's credentiala generally are would come up to her during her win an election, at least on the local ••a litUe thicker, a litUe bit better'' campaign and say, "I think we level. than men •s. f need another point or view-a ·w • h .. woman'spo1"ntolv1·ew." · , • omen .. now t ey are as ciiDable 11 men. They want the title NOTGLAMOllOUS But the question remains . ls this wblcb goes along wiLh the bard -She warns others Interested in all part of campaign rhetoric!· Or wortE ,theY have been doing," she. running for office. "If .they think are women finally cracking the commented. it's glamorOus, It's not. It's realty a. political barriers? lln. Pryor a1reed 'that the Cirst totofbardwork." A visit to t he California major obatacles to women holding Being in politics, she explained, Democratic Women's Cauc us dftce have been removed. opent'You to attack and 101Detimes found that the central quesUon ot .,ID this (June) eleclton, I was a, _invades your private life. getting women elected to office had •nown quantity. There were no Women', she believes. are less not been resolved tesS than two quesUons about how I would handle J>.OWer~riented. 0 1 think they tend months beCore the ?fovember elec· lhe)ob·and my family. to be more caring and responsive tion. The pu.ztler still was, How DO "I have avoided mentioning sex and more concerned about local en· you 1et women elected tootCice? 111 my campaigns. Sometimes vlronment a nd their home and The intangible assets of a male' womu will take me aside aad ask· community." canClidate r.emain elusi4'e to ~ 1 me wltal kind ol a daily ac:hedule I Mn. PQ_or boldly said that she women. Do women lack .financial Mve. t teU them they must have a thinks a woman wW be able to run backing, acceptance in male cic- 1upporUve husband if they want to for president and .win within 12 cles ·where there is power? Or d,o nm for office.'' years. they lack credibility? 1----~ Norma_j)Jbbs, HuAtJDl\Qn --=~"We have the obli1atlon to tell Sueanne Lewis, a candidate for Blffb city councilwoman, a1reed. womenlhey can do il. ff we can c1o---th-e-;<J4tb Assembly-dtstrtrt"'whoae ••vou can't nRhl clly hall and h9me it in Orange Counly, wo can do it • fate will, have been decided by the at&beaameUille.'I 1 anywhere." time most people open their '· • -· • ,. .,. newspapers today, said that a m an's opinion orten has been colored by the women he is around. Thus, if he is not impressed with the women he works with every day, he will not be impressed by a woman's name on the ballot. QUALIFICATIONS A woman c andidate must be much more qualiried than a man running for the same orfice, she believes. "A man doesn't have to be qualified at all. That's what's hurting the system ,'' Sile pointed out that a woman, to run for ornce. must eithcr 'be in business for herself so she can af· rord lo take the time orr to ca m· paign, or have a strong Camily base O{ !\_Upport. Mrs. Lewis, an attom~)', believes that women will have much more success at the polls In two or four years, because many candidates and potential candidates now are laying groundwork for future vie· tori es. Mrs. Lewis has spent just about a year's salary, personally , on her campaign, but she said it has been worth It. '"It has been one of the best Investment.a I've made. lt bas ~ allowed me to do somel.hing I really believe In." Tr she loses today, she wou1a llke to be asked to run ag::lin by a group that .,.,,ould be supportive. "The roundalional work is impo rtant," shcexplained. · 11er own ca mpaign, she said. has been a learning experience. When asked what she would db diffferen· tly next tim·e , s he re plie d, "E verything," Dr. Lynda Aloss. an unsuccessful candidate in the spring for the county board of education, believes funding is·the missing element. "The minute women find the key to money. I think women can star! winning big," she said. Volunteers are.there, she added. "\\le just have to look for them." Dr: l\-loss wishes that campaigns could be lifted to a nother level. "l wish we could deal with is· sues and wh at we want to do In of. rice .. .1 wish we didn't have to deal in pe rsonality and character assassination. .i wc want to get out ihere and make things work."' A l'!a ndidate who has tasted or bot h success and disappointment is Ha rriet Wie~~r, now a Huntington Beach counc meffitief; · She ran lo a seal on the Los Angeles City Council and 'lo1t, • .,.,.hic h s he s a id was •·nol a gratifying experi enre. ". lier Huntington Beach campaign was waged beca use "I wanted the opportunity to have the buck' stop with me." . Commenting that ••an idea i:. only as good as its time," Mrs. Wieder predicted that women will continue obtaining political office because · technological advaqtes and changes in the family ,...s have allowed them ·more time for more roles. · Elizabeth Weingand, l'Unner·up ·candidate for lieutenant governor in June, said the public generally is ready for women candidates, so _J women m ~t gel themselves ready lo be candich,ltes. ·She advocated , in speaking to the Democratic Women's Caucus, that ":omen take· public speaking les~ sons, modeling and drama classes, look a round to see how and why male candidates were born ~and "do a selling job" on themselves. .. I continued to work for can· ' didates. but t s hould have been -oreparlng·m1s•l~torun," lho Ahto----"'i41 "I have spent hours 11 'the woman Ji< hind the succesa!ul ••~'." --- . " . ' . • • -- r I Bt ' DAILVPILOT Tu1sd1y. Nowmbtr 5, 1374 Communication Difficulties Defi.ned. By BEA ANDERSON LI.KE YOURSELF e1 ... 01nr~lel~Wtt "'Imagine how awful it would beln ,ba~e something really importaOt to !Ji aayandnotbcheard. psychologlcal dlffercnc~ between saying, "I huve to," and ''I choose to " "( can't " usually means "l ~·on 'l." Another negative word, he s~id. is "but." Substituting "and" too complex in the way we ask so we can't really gel the answers. In Q...~mnll diuussion group, led by Crump, a man (we'll call Al >, said that he had very 'strong fet1;1ings ; that he didn 't trust his wire or women in general. okay, but, unrortunately the girms are in epidemic prop:>rtJona out there. "Wh at really disturbs me Is to see you stin so screwed up ln that mold ." d1t1 that'• hlato.Y: lt muat be dlJcarded before it conaumes. • "This Is one or the games people pl1y. They Waste a lot of precious eneret mullinf over hurl.a. Crump -"To gain securit1. your rtrat step is to start liking 1 yourself." lie •sked her to really think about three words -I like mt-then he 11ked her to say them out loud. ;~ , • • • ,. 1 .,, ·, ~ • • •• . " ·' • • I '_.n, ' 1·: •. ,_ ~:~· •• , I • . . ' t ' J i s,:1 \'f!S a more positive attitude. ' Al -''I don 't know how to iet un· screwed." ~ "Well, it's happening all the time," claimed David Crump counselor, during the fourth m~llng in the Marriage.go-round sen es. · People have difficulty in talking al\d hearing, he said. It takes a skil- lful process to get to know unothcr person's meaning. In adult relationship<1, people run into difficullif)s and can't get out of th em because they are not commit· tcd to deal with them, Crump claimed. His reason, he said, wa3 because his wife had had two affairs and about one-third or the "women in my office arc htivlng them.·· Crum~-"What's your reward?'' Al -' Reward?l 'msomiserable allthe tlme." And . he added, ii 1 penot1 leelS rejection, he must. n811ae it ls because there is something inside that person that he had 6etter work on. She began to giggle -nervously. Then she said, "Sometimes I don't .t know who •me' Is .•• so I can't say However, he ~aid, you must be prepared to commit some time to make the process work. Adulls sPe~d more tiq:ie in idle talk than real communication, he asserted. To ~ee if you are conveying you r meaning to another person. Crump suggested "testing it out by having your words repeated.·· And , he advised. while you are c:ommunica ting be sure to li sten to the language that is used. EJllOTIONAL DIFFERENCE There is an emotional and Scholars Benefit Fall Into Fashion is Ille them1> selected by_ the Laguna Niguel Wom•n's Club for Its 1chalar· sftlp benefit lun- clleen and tashlOll ~s11ow. to be-p-...... led •t 11:30 a.m. Silturday, Nov. 9, In the Laguna tjills Hiiton Hotel. Creating center- pieces for the event are Mrs. Joseph Mathieu Utlll and Mn. Gerald Hof· tl•nder • "They,'d rather fight , hurt eoch other. put up With the status quo and not take any risks. . "1"he problem." he said. '"iii that they want someone else lo do their \.\.'Ork for them .·· ENERGY SAVERS Crump also suggested that a lot of our precious time and ener1•y could be saved if we would rreque~· tly ask ourselves two si mple, basic questions: .. What do I really want? "~low am r going to..acoompli sh it?'" Unfortunately, he said, we are Al anc;I his wife had separated during their marital difficulties and before they· we nt back together, he said, "I made her ac· cept certain conditions.'' · NEEDS HELP Although he. related that their ttlationship ':is pretty good," he said, "I need help desperately. I need to know my own feelings. I have this rear that I went back to her to punish her.'' Crump interjected that he sensed that the restrictions that Al set were creating an unreal situation. "As tong as you 11ve in this autoclave with no germs you're it.'. Crump - ''Then lllat'a what you are getting. "Do you think you could cut that piece out or your life aDd lhrow tt. awav!" A young wofttan aald that 1he of· ten reels rejection-whit~ Is (rUatratlnc. She Sa.Id • lot or her feedback comes rrom_jpsecure rrtenda. Crump-"Wh at can't you 11)'? 1Jke? Or me?" .. Bolh." • Al -"Yes, I wanlto." Ctump 1sked her to 11y tbe, words aealn. Alter anolher nervoUI glg1le, 1lte 111Jd, "I like me, but aomellmes I think nobody else does." Crump -''Thel)\)'OUcandoit. FIRST STEP "Your flr1l 1tep ls to stop muUJnt it over. Arter that. other lt.IPI won .. l appear all thlitd.Jmcult." . ··1 seem torn between the m1terlall1tlc thin15 and what I re•llY want, and there are times wbea· 1 don't really know what I wanL" ' Crump-• •Do you Jtnow where they get that Idea? YDYemit it. '"The number one quettJon in lhil world ls, how do I feel about me? 'Crump asked her how 1he tell about herself. One woman asked, "When )'OU cut out that )ieee of. your Ufe, shouldn't you keep il in the back of your mind to reflect on?" "I'm veey insecure." Crump -"Do you like being insecure?" · "l like me, ls the onJy answer. "These words," Crump 1ald. "I referred to a cer:tain mus ~ "No." "are the poetry that we should i ay toourtelvesoften." r Mitzi · the Computer Has Met Her Match .. By EBJllA llOMBE<X let Ung her cortee get cold 11 You c1n teed information. she anguls.hed over my Into them, but It doesn't My 15-year-old son said to son'a case. I called her the necessarily mean it will AT WIT'S END me the other day, "Mom, I next morning at the recotd come out 100 percent per· think I'm in trouble. MiUI la club office. feet. TheY'te an important referring my cue to Mr. ''Hello, Mitzi Green ,part of the family here at _ UffE.LL'S·· Weems." please." , Freako Recbrd.I, but they "Wbo IS"Mitzi!" "Who?" ~ are without emotion and UPHOLSTERY ~ "'She ~s the j lrl ·at the . -"Mitzi Gfeen. She's the· wllhoutincome."·· wt-T .. w.., record club who bu been girl .who has been cor· • "You have described my ,.. •• writing me letters saying I respanding with my son aonper(ectly,"l said.-''He'11 can't get out of the club abouthis.acc()~t.... anX·'{OmQdelwepur~bued ltlJ.....,IW.-. beeiuse i -1tilt1iave to buy ··Oh~ Mift:i isn't a person. lS years ago, Unknown to c-. Mt.-S4M~lt two moreselecUOns." She's a·computer." us, he punched out a mem· I~~~~~~~~~~~ . ''Then who is Mr. Wcem· "So, put heron." ·bership in your club. Accor· V s!'' "You don't understand. ding to his print-out, he has I!!.,.""=""'"".,.=""""= ~ "'He'aMitzi'sboll." Milllcan'ttalk." already fulfilled hi s "Let me 1eethe leUer;11 1 "NonSense. she has just obligation. However, if said. written us that she will be .these two machines want to 1 Mit.Zl was a 1weetheart. J talking s o.on with Mr. battle it out, it'a all right could tell by the. way she Weems about the possibility with me." used phrases Ute, "You are of bringing legal action "You mean our computer forcing me to do somelhin& against my son." has been corresponding I really don't want to do, "But Mr. Weems is a . with another computer?" Mr. Bombeck, but you have computer loo.'' asked the girl on the phone .. len me no choice than to "Can he listen?" . It was just a gut feeling, speak to Mr. Weems.'' ''Yes, but you have to un· but I had the distinct sen· 3 Full Service L_tl,.,. lo ffuntl"""' llMch PRESCRIPTIONS • ~ ..... .,.... •oettwr111 UI' • """ ,_.. ........ .......... 111 Jiii ~ ...... ., ""'* I had vi sions of Mital , derslan~ computers. You sation they were going to stamping out her cigarettes can speak lo them, but·tbey kick a few buttons in the in her eotta1e cbeeae and will not answer you back. FreakoRecordcompany. ""''..,... """"" .. ..., r '""""'"' & " ........... Your Horoscope Tomorrow ~--~~-~--.~~-~---~-~ ;b '71o'IO .$500 . ""' .7'~ Pots - #'~~ What Is Man?., :Aries' S1resses Money A Ploril Boutiqw A Puzzlement DEAR AN N LANDERS : I'm sending a column that I hi .. ·e sa.,·ed s ince March 1962 As you can see. it ls~·ello'li· Y•ith age. but it's surh a good one 1 "·ish you \\l>Uld rerun it. J 'm sure your readers who remem her it \!.'ill be pleased to see it again. Thank you for aU theple18ure )'OU '\'egi\'enme. -h-1 RS. B \VJ LLI NG RIVER FOREST. ILL. DEAR MRS. W: Here's your rerun. Thanks for making my Tuesday easier. . (Ann Landers OJ DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your column is astudy or !\Ian. But "·hat ISM an.? .. Jere is my definition: MRS~WALOAU MRS. PAULSON WEDNESDAY NOVEMBERS By SYDNEY OMAllR ARIES I March 2l·April 191. Emotlonal respon1es are iiitensitied Accent is on money and neighbors' money and relatives. TAllRllS !April 20-May 20) Your qualities of deter· m1natlon. loyalty will be ltl a n is "·hat WOM AN marries. Generally C C · speaking, he has t~·o hands and two feel. But he 08Sf eremOn/eS Agendas Filled' r~rely has more thanonedollaror one idea at a time. Vows Making a husband out or a man is one qi the most intri.cate and challenging forms of plastic art knO\\'n to ci\"ilization. This art requires a knoY;Jedge of science. sculpture. common sense, in· tuition. patience. faith . hope and charity. WALDAU-DAOUST It is a psychological ph~nomcnon that a s mall. t.1aking thei r home in t ender. sort. ,·iolct·scentcd creature like a woman Newport Beach will be Paul should enjoy kissing a stubby-chinned, tobacco-an· Francis Wa\dau and his d·bourbon scented thin.e; like a man. bride, the rorrnRI< ._Catherine If you flatter a male. you (righten him to death. I f Le e Daoust who were mar· ~·ou don't you bore him to death. ried in St. Boni race Catholic If he gets \\'hat he"·ants. he becomes uninterested Chu rch. Anaheim. -and it's the end. lf hedof'sn 't get ,,·hat he \\'ants, he The bride, daughter or the Virgil Daousts or Anaheim, becomes uninterested-and there 's no begi nning. H ,,·ou \\'e<Jr ga,\' colors. e_\·e m nkcup and startling was a graduate stodent at UC Irvine. She eamed a DA tiats he hesitutes to take ~·ou out. If )'OU "·ear a in English from UC Santu t ailored suit and a little hro\\·n beret he stares all Barbara. e\·e ning at the \\'Oman in guy colors. eye makeup and Her husband received a thes t a rtlin'g hat. BA in religious studies from Jr ,-ou are a c linging \'ine. incapable Of making a UCSB, did graduate work al deci6ion. h<' conside rs ,·o u an idiot. ff you a rc the University or Chicago "decisive a nd 3ccomplis'hed he considers you a ~ and ep.rned his masters m achine. degree. rro!" St anford If You are simple and uncomplicaled he loons for a .un1v~rs1tY.: ll~~parcnts are • . . · · · . '!" Mr ind rrtrs . Walter b1:al~y \\'Om an \\'Ith ideas. If you :.irc a b1:n 10.v ~om.an Waldau, al!oor Anaheim. ,,·1th ideas he suspects ~·au are compct1nJ,! \\'llh him Attendant& were" Virginia und e\·entualJ,\· he dumps .\'OU in faYOI' l)r a stupid and Annette Daoust. Mrs. playm :.ilC'. . Ri chard Mayes, Charle« \\'hat is the solution lo this.puzzlemcml of human \Yaldau, Timothy Paone nature. this collage.of quirks ~ind con trndictlons~ andThomasTranbarg~r. \\11n kno1l's the answers~ l don 't. That's why I'm PAULSON·BAKEA ,,·riling to Ann Landers -AUG USTA J\1 f:. 6-G ro 88 m on t College DEAR AUGUSTA: \Von1an was not born to under· Recited sludents Shelley Baker and Jim Paulson were married in St . Andrew's Presbyterian Ch urch, Newport Beach with the Rev. Dr. Charles Dieren· field officiating. Workshops Nlguei Art AssociaUon will sponsor a workahop on making stoneware filurH. Taught by Gerri Peter- son, th e session will be presented at 1 p.m. Thur- sday, Nov. 7, in the Laguna Niguel Community Center. It ts open to all area residents. Their parents a re the . Council Lloyd K. hak("r6 of Costa orange <.:oast Unit l'lt.cs a and the . John National Council or Jewtsh Puu l sons, 11unt1ngton Women will meet at 9·301 Beach. Th " a.m. ursday, Nov. 7, m The bride Is a graduate or the Newport Beach home of Est~ncla lligh School and Mra.C1alreSchnelder. I attended California State Speaker will be Mi"a. John University a t San Di ego.· Bruber, volunteer coor- Her husband, a graduate of dtnator of the Orange . Huritln11ton Beach High County Consumer Affairs SCfiOOl~ Bt tended Orange Bureau. Her topic will bt Coast College. Youttie Consumer . • NH 9PW Bridal attendants were Celebrating n1tlon1l Brenda Baker, Jan Og~en, business women's week will Karma Huber, Maria~ be New po rt Harbor R•~paolo an d Sherri Business and Protealonal J.lullgren. Women Serving lhe bridegroom They 0 Wlll meet ror. dln· were Mike PaulAOn, Dan ner Thursday, Nov.1, In the Edrlch, Craig Hombl~d·fCo,:•:t•:M~•;•;•~C~o~u~nt;y;Cl:u:b'-. _ 1 Jesse Steiger and Brian Lund . st1nd man. She "'asbor11t0Jovr h!m. .:'°'. lf'::'.'.'~~~firi====================; F~CIS, '\. ORR'J" I • flfie oflaaic'Pan COSTA MESA ~· . nfllrlc , ... For PRIVAT£.PARTIES .••.. ON.SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHTS ... .. .for groups from 10 to 100 people . , fR~_P:~c • 'S6-~22$ -Oo !Iii HOilh"ll o Iii COoirPW.-'l (Nt:lt to luttodc't) ,,MDtlCAN DtPAlSS • MASTtR CH.tiRGli • 8ANl(AM(RICAAO HOUOAT PAITT • IM'flTATIOMI --,CAii~ ow.--. ... ' tlti t.tllU ._lllf a .. ~ll)f c~ Nl IM·U1n•11 , .... - .,,_,.,, stronger at lhe end than at IOSMain&mt • called upon. You will be dealing with .persons who want their own way - almost at any cost. · the ou·tset . You-reach Balboa,Colilonlia b e y o' n d a p p o r e n t '-:::'at:':"":':":':':'':"':""::;'°":;::"";::;:'~ limitations. _ GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Steer clear of crowds - trarfic and otherwise. You need lime a lone lo collect thoughts. Be analytical - form creative quesUons. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Come to grips with reality of money situation. There will be quick changes and you s!)ould be aware of who owns what -and what you have coming to)'ou . LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You reel a need to know. Cycle is such that you can be entertained -but you will also assert your right to know. Message will be clarified. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Your sense or respon· sibility is highlighted. You find what is hidden and make it work . You visit those confined lo home or hospital. · UBBA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221: You learn to close a deal. Yo u fl n ish. Yo u are 'SCORPIO Ukt. 23,Nov: 21): New, creative touch, approach is featW"&. A1em· ber of opposite sex pays meaningful compliment. _You get plenty of action. . SAGITT,tRlllS !Nov. 22- Dec. 21 1: Trust hunch . 'Learn a nd teach. De al gingerly with older family member. Youleamsecrels. CAPRICORN !Dec. 22- Jan. 19): Friend Is apt to be aggressive. You socialize: You get into lively discus· s ion which cou l d deteriorate lntoargument. AQUARIUS CJan. 20-Feb. 18): Legal matters, in· valving relatives, tend to dominate. You do some tearing down in the hope or rebuilding. PISCES !Feb. t9-March 201: Basic services a rc highlighted. Persons who care for you let you know it. You gain greater reeling or security. Get a Sitter Skip Lunch Don't Min "1lt - Cancel the Bt1dge Game Leave the Office Early But What Ever You. Do ••• FUN AND FANCY BA,ZJ.AR OF HOLIDAY DECORATIONS & OtRISTMAS GIFTS ' .. .,, ,.._._ ....... ,. ••• 111• . --· Frldly,Nov.8, t074 10 A.M.-11 P.M. Stlurday1!'kJY.O. 1074 10 A.M,-e P.M, ·rhe Island House F--Blll'ICI, NtwPQn-IHch- Col!llllimentary ·eo11 .. & Coolijta • '. i FOR , " ).'. • •al participating~ foeo1 all°"'' 1he Southfond • ·' ,.; ,. • • ,. • \ ,. • I I MIXED SINGLES ~--"" 1~ NAME ~·T ISAM. Ml%, IT'S ICILl.V •. TUMBLEWEEDS 'HUSMNP HUNTIR'S .tWnooK Me.nv a man has su.ccwn.bed. to. • tJie Exotic Charmer& of the Far Eaat, F11tun llride. M"Jbe RE 'WDUld.be ane of them.! 1 'XlU TRADED CRAZY HAR!§'J 10 ANOIHEf:. 5CHOOL . RGMENTS NANCY . . by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson )) AND 1 Ntvfl? LIJ1e ING~IO B£2GMAN :ro PLA~ -me ~M£ DIDN'T KNOIAI ~ow . -P..3:-50iJ6 TWIGe ·1~ T~f GOOO ~ ~AO IT.' ! · eAMe f;!;T. 0UT ; MAYU A~OUl-lP ! MIPNIGHf ,,. i YEA", FRED! IT· lJ$\5 A CASH DEAl. ··· -·- i I ' by Tom K. Ryan ... wrn1 TWO HOODS 10 BE NAMED ITT A lAlER DATE.I ~POOHAS BEEN. VERY NER\.OUS LATEL.Y VE"TERINARl"N THESE P IL.L.5 SHOUL.D HELP by Emie Bushmiller I HATE THOSE TRANQUILIZERS .. . DOOLEY'S WORLD • • DR. SMOCK GORDO OPEN COLLAR. ";[1~ 1'U1<~5E . CHOK.E~ f • 11~5 -~ MOON MULLINS . ANIMAL CRACKERS 0 .. ®l November 5. 197• DAILY PILOT 83 by R09er Bradfield I f I by George Lemont WHICH IS ANO-r'MS:R WAY OF SAYING HIS .JO& 15 HANPING ou"f' "'ft-46 PRAMAMrNES ON A PAR-rY FISHING eoA"f' !' WHA1 'LL IT BE? RDCl<'·,O.·BYE BABY·· ""·· • ... SOON, I'U... BE ENl<'CilEO IN ~INDE~N ... 0 0 D by Gus Arriola ~o fROIJ&~, Ml:.>tJE'I! :J!M Q>.~"1•W<­'f11Z.l11J!:.D[ -by Ferd Johnson -WH E.W' oHA1.·WAS .CL05fi. by Roger Bollen TtlE/'I , I 'LL BE COlO~IN& I FOR ~e;epe,. i 'i I • = it C-4-""...C.~ CllD "' -=~~~cm.,,. v.,. "\..:::~:::,,..~ ~ -... ~_ .. --,~_ -._c_ ,,._6_ ""_'>:=_""'_, L·-· ----..!i."'".~""-llliU i TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE t.CROSS 1 Bild 1h1oa1: lnlo•mal 6 Common J;Of\Ui)C\1dh 10 Se1pents 14 Beoueath 15 Fronue• lewoll1cer 16 Rvn awav 17 Of a r.er1a111 51 Hindu garme<>t !J2 RNLQd 54 learn 11bou1: 2 WOfd5 !.II Woldly c1111v !>9 Boy's nan•u 61 french s1uden1s' <n1l1eu 6:' At1u1ed of cereal to1wne Vesll'lciay's Pul~le Solved: ' ' . '18 Provot.e 63 Western U.S. 19 Outto1ne roly 20 "······ St11rr" 64 Ot bi'1h ol 1h11 tomic1 65 Ride on 1nnw 22 Full of vigor 66 Menu item 11 24 Sl'larp ll1vo• 67 Pnfnt n! vl11w 26 Noi1v 1leepen DOWN 27 E•i11ed topioutlV 1 Sloppv one 21 Added 10 40 ln5anc J I Sconi1h tao 2 Lacerate 23 Thoroughfare 42 Fro,en dew 32 Corday's J Propo<1ion 25 Alrican tat 43 Swerves 11iG.1im ' Ultimatn 27 In the c:en1er 44 -····· lefmon: 33 S!lipped 5 Haog1ng of Loll 35 1Cinlo1~ ornamenl 28 Re5train 46 Cheer 38 Prmllng Sivie: 6 ·· · 29 Evangeli51 '7 S1reetcl!l1s Abbr. M1se1Jbles" ···· Rol>efts 48 Of the 39 39.37 inches 7 Chow 30 Poinls in lime blood 40 W1v ofdoing B Stumbles 34 U.l(.na1i11es: 49 Lvric "\ St11e:Abbr, 9 Eddie Ver, c:omposi!ion '2. S1ooping Tolan. JS " ··· 11f !fl Dogma pl1ce tor 11ne Ind~.. SJ Completed ,3 Fund1mental 10 Stal" 36 lmaoe of S5 Roll caM p1inc1ple 1111,.-11vclv divinity 56 Pearl Su~k "4 Oll1pung 11 Rool1n11 p1ec11 37 "Well•"'; h111oine 45 Throttle 12 lltcome 11a\111n 57 Was 47 ''Two Ye••• r•hausled 39 Fabulous conscious of Before ···-·" 13 Pt11111tm~ bflmg1 60 f11tnanim1I 2 J • 5 10 11 11 IJ " " 1J " ' ~1 11 19 JO " ' JJ J• J5 J6 J7 • • • ' . " " .. " 6l ., PEANUTS W~WHAT I MISS. MA~CIE? I Ml55 NOT HAV,N6 A'Sl(,),TIS6 M:Yir·iERw JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH ' i I ~ • [3[b@@'L? %RA 1'0 1'Hf .;-rLADENT COl.ANC JL- • DICK TRACY • by Charles M. Schulz ~KAT:r.jG i'AOTM:RS ARE LIKE '57,\6E MOTHERS AND SWrM.YllN6 MOTHE~5 ... THfl( 6RU.V.81..E AND COY.PLAIN AND 60551? AND ~U55, 61/T '(OLI SURE NEED T riE1\.'\~ HOW 00 TlolEl( EARL'!' Rl51NG 6ET THAT ANO TOO .Y.UCH uJ)iJ.{, ?IR! COFFEE ! • • r 1111 1ttl ,, by Harold Le Doux NO! HE 5AID ME WAS HE AAS A W0MAA WONDERING ~ YOU WERE WITH HIM! TMFf'RE THE&E DAY&! J/'C:'C".:-<(l &EATED IN THE COCKTAll- 1..0lJNGE ! ~.f- = by Mell MY Fi:rJEN0~1 l DON1T' KNOW MOW TO PIAT THI~, 9 L.ff" J~ l 1M NOT HECTED, l 'LL JWSf ~ CICY ... Gll!AT LITTL-E CAMP~6NEll' I i'RAT ONE .• 1 "GllOOVY. MEl;T US AT "YAWL-DRIVE'ANO BRING ONE: OF OUR TV CAMERAS.'' by Chester Gould • IF" BRAINS GIRL ·F=RIEND D ID LEAVE ~ER C.AR T~ERE,IT WILL SOON ~AVE A TV BUG . ,THE GIRLS ". D "I really don't care v.•tio !-!Cl~ clcc1cd. I'm juo;;t ~lad thcy're»ll going lo 4u1ct down fur a v. hile " ( 0 -~ - ' l Hm '!Wl ,RAT WINS THE. RACE , QAO ! ' 1 • l I 1 ' l l ., . . ( I h ' ' • •• , .. '· ·. • • ••• . " ·:' •• • ' ' • , .,. , .... DJ'IL Y .. IL.U I ~ •• • SPORTS GLENN WHITE Sports Editor B.owl Tilt . •. Set· ' Will Sun Pay • NEW ORLEANS -ll will be Florida and Nebraska in the Sugar Bowl ror the Dec. 31 football classic I it wa'S rtPorled today. ·The New Orleans Times-Picayne , sa,id in today's editions it.leirned or the line-up from an unimpeachable '*fUrce. P•11 Cltttla Lare Players ol the Southern California _Sun ot _the \Vorld Football League have been promised their late pay checks when the club returns from Hawaii. . General-man4gel' Curlf Pt10rrison said Monday he has met with the players and "they know tlle situation. which is a temporary one, and they will get their full pay." ProiBerf.wned LOS ANGELES -Coach-John McKay of the University of South ern California has rejected six offers to coach, in professional ranks, in - cluding lucrative, long-term propos- ~~~~Z-::1 E~:la~s p~~~~~ .Rams and In the recently published book , "McKay: A Coach's Story," by li-1.- cKay with Jim Perey. the Trojans coach also told or being approached by Paul .. Bear " Bryant to coach Alabama when BryaQt was con· sidering leaving the Crimson Tide lo coach the ~1iami Dolphins . The 51 -year-old McKay. USC's coacb Since 1960, used one Rams offer as le,·erag'e to gain a better contract at t:SC. "'oHlr.,al,6-1 ~IONTREAL -Sl.e\'e "Shutt scored two goals and added an assist, helping the hlontreal C<inadiens overpo~·er lhe Minnesota North Stars 6-1 Monday night in a National Hockey League game. All of st.-utt's scoring came in the· third period. He gavetheCanadiens a 4-0 lead after l :34 and assisted on Guy Lapointe's goal less than three minutes later. PHOENIX -Retired umpire Jocko. Conlan. a membei-of baseball's Hall of Fame. is scheduled to undergo open heart sur1ery \Vedne sday al St . J oseph·s·Hospital. his son confirmed :\lond ay. :\·01 Gnilr!I Pleo CINCINNATI -Cincinnati Bengals reserve quarterback ritike Ernst en· tered a plea or innocent in a Hamilton Count y court to a charge of possession of narcotics A-I onday. .Judge Harry Klusmeier granted a C'ontinuance in t he case until Nov. 26 and allo\\•ed Ernst to remain free on hi s O\\'n re<.•ogniza nce. The 24-year-old was released on '':iivers from the Bengals a day after he \\'as arrested Oct. 28. Conviction on a charge of possession of cocaine could carry a penalty of lG-20 years in prison. .. 't'a11k• Wi11 STOC KflOL~1 Fifth-seeded ).l art~· Riessen moved into-the second round or the SI00.000 Stockholm Open ·rcnnis Tourn:t mcnt l\londay ~·ith a ti-1. 6-4 \'ictory O\'Cr Barry Phillips- :uoorPof Aus trali a In other first round action. llarold Solomon defeated Bengt Aberg 6·4. t;·3: Vija)' Amritraj eliminated ltans f\3ry 7·5. 6-4 : Charles Pasurell do"·ned l\1 alli 1'1monen 4·6. 6·3. 1·5 :· Karl 1'1eller Ctumped Antonio Zugarf'lli 6·4. 6-2: fv an ~Jolina took the mcas url' of Jan KallqWst &-2. 6·0: n otf Norberg defeated Tom Christen· sen 6-2. 6·1: .rnn-Jo~rik Lundquist got pasl Georg Be rner 6-4. 6·4: llaroon Hahim bestrd .rwn Zabrodzk~k· G·I. 6.11 a nd Thomas Koch beat Mar · Furrcll li-:t. 6·'1 Readers Corner -.. Otar Mr. Wh ite: Enjoyed your article in today's Pilot (lbout decathlon prospect Dlxon, but I'd lik e to correct .an error. Bet- ween Bob Ma1hlas' Olymptc win In . 1952 ~nd Bill Toomey '~ In 1968 the U.S. •·on~l!"J! Qlh<tA<:<•lhlonsJo.J9'6 In l\ttlbourne t.tllt Campbell won . "'hilf' In Rome In 1960 the winner wu:; H:ifer John$ori. · · l . .ti nr. R Hlnnk I • • .. .. . Well Enough to Win ·' --That's Rams' Motto SAN FRANCISCO IAP ) -The Los lhe football." said coach Chuck Knox Angeles Ila ms' defense stopped San of the Hums. ''That \V3S a good win tor francisco's running attack virtually ui1.'\ all th(' time. and linebacker Isiah 'l'hl' victory made the Rams 6-2 and rt obertso n s topped new 49er!i gave them a stranglehold on the quarterback Norm Snead just in time. National Conference's Western "We played well enouth to win, and Division race, with serond~lace New that's all we're trying to do -win," Orleans standing 3-S. -rhe .f9ers and said Rams quarterback James Harris Atlanta Falcons share last place with after ft.1onda y night's 15-13 National 2·6records. Football League victory. 1-larris had his moments earlier in But he admitted that Snead and the the game, too, including a 23.yard 49ers ·•s cared us to death in the touchdown pass to tight end Bob Klein second'half. ·· which gave the Rams a 12-0 lead in the The 49ers went down passing a·s second period. The 27 -year·old they suffered their ninth straight loss Grambling product who took over two to the Rams. Running backs Wilbur 'veeks ago for John Hadl -now with Jackson and Larry Schreiber totaled Green Bay -cotnpleted 12 of 20 just40 yards rushing. passes for 150yards. Robertson was award~ the game But placekicker David Ray, O-for·2 ball, the one he'd grabbed while on extra point l[i.!!_S a_g~inst the 49ers. intercepting a Snead p8ss at midfield provided the points which ultimately with 4 : 09 left in the nationally made the difCerence' when be booted a tele vi sed game. The 35 -year·Old . 20-yard field goal early in the fourth Snead. in his debut with the 49ers, had period to give the Rams a.15-6 lead. tossed a 39-yard touchdown pass lO The 49ers had closed the gap to 12-6 Gene Washington a few minutes on a pair of field goals by Bruce earlier to cut Los Angeles' lead lo two Gossett, who also had a third-quarter points. , After the interception, the Rams' offense killed the clock, moving inside the 49ers' five-yard line before the game ended .. "Jim Harris did a fine job running the offense at the end or the game "'hen we had to suck· it up and contror ~ttem pt blocked. Snead, traded by the New York Giants the same day Hadl left Los Angeles, replaced rookie quarterback "l'om Owen at the start of the second h::alf and completed 11or17 passes for 149 yards agaln.'ll the Rams~ete and the· always tricky Candlestick Park"winds. Fin l_, Ru!llK-JMcll. ~"'"''"di Aflumy1ui. P1)H\ ""'" Fumolft-.... l Pt .... 11e,.,..,o~ .. _ -· 1 .AtS.11Frlfl<IKo -l1,Mll' ·-....... It II •UI H·6S US H• n " ,,.... lj-i..1 ....... ., l-1 l·I t-U .... • • 0 J -0 D ) ) 1-13 LA -Bili« 1 run r1111 l1llfd LA-llCll'l11tlpnslromHwrftt.kt.t .. ltd SF-fGGoss.11"6 5F-J.GGMMllll LA -fGR••!O SF -W•Sllift9t011 :tt .. 11l.....,SllNOGoeel.llklr IMDl'llDUAlUADIR$ - AuSHIHG -LOI An9tlK, Mc:Olt<:MOll 11·10. a..-1- leUI 1 ... ,. $.111 fr111cl-, Jetk-1'·J1, S.W.0 l•H , AECE l\llHG -Lo' .A111191K, Mt"'-...... iltkCUltllton 3-10, KJe;ll 1·ff, S... Fr111cl&<1, SdlrtlbH f.S1, W•SllllllJI.., l-tf.Jtck~J·JO. PA$SING -Lo' A .... lt'-"'-"•1$ 11•20-CI, l~\liM'CH.. ,_.., Fr111d1«,Snffd 11·11·1, Ht;o.tn4-IMl.11. ' .. ,.. . ' ·DAVE ELMENDORF (41) DEFENDS AGAINST A 49ERS PASS. ~ TONY lrAKEll (35) SQUIRTS THROUGH THE 49ERS DEFENSE FOR A TOUCHDOWN MONDAY NIGHT. 1 World Series Play Y-ce-death Letter Clears '25 JI erdict COOPERSTO\\'N. N.Y. (U Pll Sam Rice has posthumously ended a half·century of silence about his con·. tro,·ersial catch in the third game of the 1925 \\'orld Serie~. The Base ball llall of Fame has released the Rice's.own account of the catch. kept in a sealed envelope for- the last nine years. Rice, the Washington Senators' Hall of fame right fielder. caught a drive by the Pittsburgh Pirates catcher. Earl Smith, and stumbled into the low bleacher seats among the cheering home fans al the Senators' Griffith -Stadium. Regaining his feet, he displayed the ball t riumphantly.as umpiro Cy Rigler called the batt_erout. The Pirates protested that Rice had dropped the ball when he fell and that a r:.n stuck it back in his glove. • t:mpirt' Rigler. If he is still ali ve. can breathe a sigh of relief. Rice t laimcd in the sealed letter that he ne\'er lost possession of the ball. Rice penned. his report of the in· cident in 1965, sealed it and e ntrusted ttie docume nt to Paul S. Kerr, President of the flall of Fame and museum. Follo\v ing Rice's death at 84 in Oc· tobe r. ·Ke rr ope ned the e n\•e lope before witnesses. It "·as made public r.>!onday night. • The letter read: "· "It was a cold and windy day the right field bleacbers \YCre crowded '\\'ith people in overcoats and wrapped in.blankets. the ball was i;i line drive headed for the bleachers towards right center, I lurned slightly to my right and had t~e ball in \•iew all the "'ay, going at top speed and about 15 feet rrom bl eachers (sicl jumped as high I could and back handed and the ball hit the center of pocket in glove (I had a death grip on ill. ··1 hit the ground about fi\'e feet from a barrier about four feet hi gh in front or bleachers with all my brakes on but couldn't stop so I tried lo jump it to laQd in the crowd." But my feel hit the barrier about a foot from top and I toppled over on my stomach into first row of bleachers, I hit my a~ams :1pple on something which sort or knocked me oul for a few seconds but l\1cNeE!'.l.ey arrived about that time and grabbed me by the shirt and pul· led me out, I remember trotting back . towards the infield still carrying the ball ror about halfway aod then tossed it towardi; the pitchers mound. {How I ha ve wished many times I had kept it. l At no time did I lose possession of the ball " Ri ce nc\'er said during his liretime whether he had caught the ball. Kenesaw 1\1 . Landis. then baseball commissioner, 2"0l Ri ce's standard reply : ''1'he um pi re called him out.'' lticc refu sed "i tnagazine offer for the true story saying, "the secret is more run ... Spies Worth Pair of' TDs; Doors Shut COLUMBUS, Ohio IAP) -Woody 1-layes contend s practice spies can be "'orlh two touchdowns to a football op· ponenl. SQ.the Ohio State coach, probably within three victories of his third- . national ollege championship, i~ taking no c ances. · Jle's close practices for the rest of the season. "One person •ho knows what he's looking for wou Id be the equal of at lea.st two touchdown& per ~game," Hayes announced Monday. "We can't afford to give away fwo touchdow ns," said the..,, coach of the unbeaten Buckeyes, preparing for a regionally televised Big Ten contest Saturday at Michigan Stale. The Spartans, 3-1 -1 in the confef'en · ce. are in third place behind Ohio State and 1\-tichjgan. deadlocked at 5· 0-0. Al first. flayes agreed Michigan Slate would be the second toughest team Ohio State races this season. Then he hedged on that. "l\lichiean State will be an ex· tremely difricull team to subdue ... he said, "but I woUldn 'l say lhey were second or first this year.·· Ha)·es said l\-l ichigan State is an Im- proving team, but so are his 8-0-0 Huckeyes. unbeaten in their last 19 games. ''After our first three games, twas not sati sfied," he said. "From Washington State on, we've shown the improvement a good team should. Dankworth OK · ·v-ermeil Tabs _ Troy . 'fo Topple Stanford LOS ANGELES (AP) -UC LA coach Dic.k Vermeil ijaid Monday he picks Southern Cal to beat Stanford iu their Pacific-8 football showdown Saturday; which also would. bolster his Bruins' chances or going to the Rose Bowl : Vermeil. a former Stanford as· sistant coach. told the Southern California Football Writer s As- sociation: "SC has a very sound defense when those klds really want to play, and coach John McKay will have thetn ready. You can bet on that. I think they can contain Stanford's offense. SC offensively will have some problems. wtth Stanford. because Stanford detensively is physically as good as anybody ... " ·Vermeil added, "When SC has played al Stanford in· the last few ·years it's always been a good.football game. So I think it could probably go either way. But, if I was plcking a winner. I would say I think SC will beat them .'' Stanford and Southern Cal each is 3· 0-1 in conference play. UCLA is 2.-1-1 atter losing at Washington Saturday. The Bruins. w.ho played a tie with Stanford, host Oregon Saturday, then J!O to Oreion State and conclude the season against Southern Cal. A USC victory "would help us. We feel we're still in the Pac-8 race. If we win all three of our games, and if SC lost to us, for example, and beat Stan- ford, that would throw it into a pretty good situation. beca'use they have one tie and we have on e lie and one loss.'' Thal would leave the Pac·8 title divided, and both Stanford and Southern Cal have played in the Rost' Bowl since UCLA was last there. . · Vermell said Oregon. which \osl66·0 to Washington two weeks ago and last week was beaten by Washington State, has "been up nnd down-... "'c hope they don't have one of their bcl· ler· games when they come down here." The Bruins. meanwhile;-c•pcct quarterback Jere Dankworth to be 100 percent recovered from the sprained ankle that prevented his starting against Washington. Noseguard Mike l\1artinez's ankle was not broken against WashiAgton, as-originally feared, but he is not ex- pected to play against Oregon, Ver- meil said. HealthwiSe, Vermeil said he is hopetul that lincbac~er Fulton Kuykendall, defensive tackle Cliff FTazier. noseguard Greg Norf1eet, and offensive tackle Gene Clark will be able to pJay against Oregon alter · being sidelined or curtailed by in· juries. "I think we'll get a nn from just ha\'ing some kids healthy again.·· he said. Van Brocklin Fight Offer Is Declined · · ATLANTA (AP) -~orm Van Brocklin. in the midst of a frustrating football season with the Atlanta Falcons, spiced his routine Monday news conference with an expletive-fil - led challenge to fight a writer. Ron tludspeth of The Atlanta )our· nal reminded to Dutchman that he had said several weeks ago he was a fighter, not a quilter. The sports writer asked him if he still was a fighter. "Are you a tighter?" Van Brocklin asked. "Get out of your chair and you'll find out if I'm a fighter. You want to fight me? Jr anybody wants to fight stand up. We'll stack currency right now .'' Hudspeth told Van Brocklin, "I'm just here doing my job. I 'm here to ask questions, not to fight you or anybody." When the news conference ended, Van Brock Jin drifted into the hall out- side the room, poked his head back through the door and told Hudspeth his challenge was good anytime the writer wanted to accept It. "I don't accept your challenge," l-ludspeth said. Several years ago Van Brocltlln &ot into a brief scurne with· another Allanla Journal writer, Prank "1-lyland, during the Nitional Football League club's training camp at Greenville, S.C. • · The Falcons stiw their reeord plunge lo 2·6 &unday in a1 42-7 thrashing by the Stiper Bowl cham- pion Miami Dolphins. Maily had e1t- pected this Faloon team to reach the playoffs. There have ... been, numerous loc:ar ne~spapec storits attacking the ~~ chman a nd club owner Rankin Smith Schembechler ·Raps Rose Bowl act rorthe club's rallure. -.. Asked ir he were under pressure to resign, Van Brocklin snapped, ~'There's only one person lhal can dump the Dutchmnn. That'R Rankin Smith. He's the>Oneltiat hired m~." ANN A llBOR. ~li eh . tu'Pll ~o lo o]h('r bowls, .. the l\tichigsn i\li<-•hi gan coat"h Bo Schembcchler is coach su'd fl.1onday. tirL-d of\hc agreement which annually .. The r~a r of losing the Rose Bowl sends oil<' Big -Ten and one Pacific 8 pact is a Jot of m lilarky," he said. "'I tea m to the Rose Bowl and the rest don 't think that's true any more. hometothe-wash bowl. "'I'm not just concem'-'li with the top Not that the coach of the second-two teams, either," he said, not rated \Volvc rines Is preparing any specifically mcnllonJng his own team alibis or l i1ment.1 for hi s tcnm 's andthe oneWoody Hayescoaches. Nov. 23 clash with top·ratcd Ohio Stat,t -h<ldoesn'tthinkthalway. "A third place l~am with Q 9·2 But Schcmbechler beli eves the Jlii: record lllould go,' Schembechler Ten ond Its further growth~J!cpend on ~a.id. ''It wouldJ>.e..AQ.Cal~lloc:..th u changeTn thi rule. progrom ~ or ull the schools 1n our con· "There is a-strong scnllrncnl. not ferentt.' ~ only ut Aflchlaan but throughout 'he , It is true that ever since Schem- .Big Ten. for pcr91 ittlng other ten ms to tlcchlr r l':t mc to. ~Uchlgan, ror the • • 1969 season, the Wolver1nes and l.imesincel aln1967. Bucke)'es have won or shared lhe Big' Big Ten teams nlso posted their besl Ten title. d But the whole conference, Schcm· recor against oulsid~ competition bechler said, is on the rise and the CJ&-13·1) in 10 years this se11son. days of Utles and roses tor only th~ "N11me me a belier conft.rence than Buckeyes and Wolves may be Just ours from top lo bottom,." Schem- obout over. beehler ••Id. ''The ollenses today arc The third place team In the Big Ten, 60 good, we're having a hard time Michigan Stale, Is onJy a game arld a keep1ng teams or( the board. The hitlr behind the co-leaders at this equallt4tlon or granta (In tiild I hils relatlvtly late stage In the season and helped us, too. We've got some good untU-at le as fter~s3turday'Sjame-t0'01.b11tt·p1aycrs-tn thls leeguc:' .. between the SparlaM and Buckeyes, Pifosl o(, the talent I~ at Ohio St.:Hc there is a po1sibilily that someone and Michl1an, bul Sctiembechl r JSuid other than Michigan or Ohio St•le the other eight JSthools art c~lching tould win or s hare the title rorthe tlrst up -too rasl. ·-· ' Smith was Interviewed on the Falcon~ r odio network pos tgamc show after Sunday's defeat at Miami and said, "I just don't know. t know nobody in Atlar,ta likes me. The newspapers don t 1ike me.· 1 don't know Wt\~t (o do. If 1 kntw a coach, I'd hiroono. I don'tknowone." World Cup Profit ROl,1E ..:. Socctr'"s World Cup ·-1.-.-,-. - nament in· West Germany this year hus produced a ,.ecord profit of more tha n S20 million. the Jnternallonal Soccer rt'dCritliOn anrtounced. , _ ........ - r • ... ·----1 CRAIG HAWLEY Edison Defense 11.---:;; GAR.Y CONFER E1t1ncla Offense ' , BRUCE BOWEN Fountain Valley Defense , ol!i'''i!'• -.. ROBERT WOOD Laguna.Beach Offense MARKVICK + Marlr\a Defense • • CHUCK VAN LIEW .El Toro Offense . . Estancia Defense JOHN MCCALL Laguna Beach Defense JIMWIGMORE Mater.Dei Offense Wo .men,'s ·.Tennis T ... ~' 'tAltSITT • t'-'lhl ¥•llfy ttl IJI Wtltlllhiller Slntttl '"'ulf" IFVlcNI Horton I.. .' 8r""'mtll IFVfdel Flt'•lltf""I MOW! !,llldelGMdwt~l·J flofl'ljltl (Wl Oii B.c~m1n t-l , t.eaM•<l IFVloet crowtll I-) c;.rcl1 lfV)Clel B~Cft I·• ...... ' .. 11.ftASl-TT '"jnd1 111 IU Edl- Sint1lt• VOfl LU!/Ow IECI) lkl Me,,erS·• t..i~or•~ cE,il t!el OrrYlck .. 0 Pool tES1l tef1Crt1lolrf.S MCEiheny CEUl ddCorllo"' Saw•~ CE1i!ldl'! Pal1acl.t l MM\111119 \e[$\l MIJe1nScl>l•IWI ...... ........ Hiii (fWI clft wn .... Mullefll• JOfn Scllltl•I<, J~ CECii llel Q!~l"""9- 0IAllOl141t•I .. ' GAR~BAUME Costa ~1e.sa Offc .. ~ JEFFGl '3C- EI Toro' 0'?111,;, S':? JAC!< U PTU~J Fountain Valrey Otfen,,. J .• ROGER SMITH Huntington Beach c:~: ~fl e- • RO llR. S r..1arlna 011 ..... BOB M ACAULEY ti.1ater Oel Dr.t~n. a , ~r• Lrn.nerl1-Mr y1r$ dtl Aty· Mt0tCll·llrl111111e1 /Edi drl llel"I• NIYll!Mo • i -.... k-..Uwts (Fiii Itel Cbillllr Mc:GAw •• • .lel!llfllirl·l'•llr tw leel COi•·""™' .. IEllOll·HllltM IFV I cit! 8-P.ttfftl .. J MiJH.,.Sut...,1..-u•v1 ~ ~ .. Mlktw:!l .. 1 • Jo11n1ot'l·Akl llO CE$1l Cit! OI W1CI· Ttmll>C .. l ,.,.,l'llllerg mv1111 IE1I) drl $ey!nQW• Wftll ' PudH·lnlatlU IE'll Otl Wtlc1N11»\, >I •• PollHl·Pintll tECll llcl Wr!tElti.-U ,•\YISf(llf• ,L.UA •l.IDO•!ASHION lt&AND •CO' i=ASHIOH S'IQAIEJSAMTA AKtJ SOUTH COUT ll • -, " ' .• ·; l'.~r .. li.~!o: ... r,. 11 j,• I • I (' I ., ' ) ( .. , 1 1r :\1 <. I 111 r ' f an'I, ~' \';~·II f'IHI I\ 1 1h·· ;\ i fot. • ' . • Co npu·..: r~.tt i1 , . . r I I ' r • " " l , ,• c y j . ~· .. ;,.., "' ' . C:< VO CCA .1 l !Is Olfense BRENT DANNINGER Da na Hills Defense Be Spo i ler ~tart scoring n1or!'. 1·:1 ·ruru figures to 11·1r1. "1'hc ~ tire 11ell-bola11 , 1. 1 1:1 ' all thref' 'I hey lo:-it tu 1 \ il·Jo. 7 G. to , :1 l, Jr1dt0 Dana t l·d." says llaryung. •"rhey td don't pass-as muc-h. as "(.\<. • ..:n.,t' h:1s dont· :\ pl·Ople think, but lht-y Jh.1~~ .'•." '·'·\'" Jlar.vun•'. " --.. .. 11hen they need to pass. ' l' .1n·t hJ\·e tnough ·•in1Jfl<:n'.l'.. \\'hilc Gary K ~y is one of ,\rli.-.ls !:.irk Cln of· thl' lcague·s top quarll·r· C I backs, 1-lar~·ung s a~s tht' 1, .John ar snn. I 'J' , k . • 11 a h:.is dropped fi\l! key to E oro s :.iliac 1s Chuck \'un Liew. :.i bruising '·I since C.:irlson hurt full baC'k \\'ho gainl'd 123 I-Ii h. ' r',p1nct·mcnt. Kc\in yards <Jgainsl !\lt:;l'ion I 1 ,\' l ".., bc·..:?l .J consistent VieJO. 1u.uHn,.: b·ick. g:.iirung 162 "On papt-r, \l'C have no }:t .n!c;,,,i.:ucact lon. <'h ancc.'' SLl~'S !l aryung. .,u\ l .:irlson rould gain "But 'football 1s a funny ii 1:.1ny y:irds in onc -gn--me. \Ve haven't h ad .inything go our \\'ay all ' " 1t·,;~· Laguna <'3 R year . ., • .. j :ra, \'Jith g 2.S'i • ! :'.!. ,'l '8Z , / (. ~~· ' \. ~. ': , Tuesda , No-vember 5, 1974 e e NATE CHING Edis.on Offense Grid .Polls C.ll(l>•t• h ll TEAM POIHfS 1 0n.~s1~1e o.u ii 01 ~ l O•flM•<thQ•" (i-01 "' l Alllb.o""' \I) 11·01 ~ , l~•••AA.M 0·0 •• ~ N<Jl1tO•-\1·11 ·~ • ~~1;ttffl1J , . /, ~loroCl.l 11•1, '" I Nrl>rJ1~• 16 21 " ~ A~lk>rn ll·H " 10.l•··•~(~il " 11. u~c l~·I II " 11 MIM'" 1on1ol !l·O.H • U Hou'1on <• ! I u Pon•llu•on fo.1J l}.Maryl~1>1l(~l! Wrlle••' Poll 1 Ohio S1J1t ,9 ... 1,?U i O~ldl11'"10 1~ "' .. ~ 3 Ala~am• 1 ... "' ' Mo<noo;iJn 1 , ••• ow ~ ··~••> A&M 1·1·0 ~' 6 F1or1oa 11·0 "' 1 J°'t'MS!tl, '" m f NOH~ IJllmt '" ~ ~. Nel>r~-~· .,. ~ 10 A~t.,irn I 1-0 •• 11 use ~·1·1 •• 11 Te••\ ~)II "' 1] Mo..,u,0. 1-0.1 •• u Mlryl.1110 .,. • l~->19<> ... " .~ DAii.. YPILOT SC Girl Captnres Contest ?.1 arilyn Cote or San Clemente had only four losers of 30 games liSted in last week's Daily Pilet Pig- skin Pickcroo football gueg.. s in g contest lo in top: honors. She pi rks up a portable • black and white, television set from sponsoring ABC Color tTelevision stores ot 1-luntington Beach for her classy performa nce In a v.·cek loaded with upsets. Her only misses were on the El Toro-J\tission Vie.)o and J\tarina-Los Alamitos high school ga mes. the. FUI· lerlon College-Orange Coast duel a nd the flouston· Georgia clash. Alont.• in second Place was Arnold Vcrgilio or Hunting· ton Bea<'h with five wrong .. There was a five-way snarl for third place and when the tic-breaker system was in· voked to break it up, Dana J.lills Hi gh basketbell coach 1'ony Sti'llson was the sur- vivor. The two runnersup get portable radios for their er. forts. \\'eekly-contest cham· pions are eligible to get in the .'gala bowl game runoff and the winner of that bit of guessv.•ork will get a Zenith color TV set, courtesy ol ABC Color TV Stores. . Exxon• Steel Belted Radial 78. $ Our toughest tire, designed for outstanding mileage, tractlon and handl ing ease. Tw in ste el cord belts over two rayon cord radial body plies. "· ..... WNITEW~ (••lto lr•-1 51.66 2.11 56.62 2.58 60.33 2.81 73.33 3.05 79.82 • ------- • n 1 tJ Service. . "' t::i four quarts , r...iotor 011. I in Unillo". motor oil, tor J per quart. po~I<;, v1ater lev~L • UI • Engine Tune-up • s279s s for all stand:ird American·made 6-cyl. car$. for -;tendard 8-cyl. Fords, Chovys. Plymcruths & most American-made compacls. Air-cond>tioncd t.lrs rii:ihC'r. Check our prices for 01her makes and models . A well-ttlncd car c3n help save.gas~ oline. Ask about our tune-up to r yotlr car now. We'll replace points, spark plugs, and condenser. Sol timi ng, adjust iCle and set fuel mixture. Wo also check d1s!ributo1 cap, rolor, ignition wiring, PCV 11a!11e, elr lil!er, Juel Ii lier and ca rbur~tor. Replacement parts for lhese Items addllional, ii necessary. - Shop at the ValueCenter sign. Prices and offers shown above are available Al Exxon service stations identified by a Va lueCenler door sign reading: "Operated by Exxon Company, U.S.A." PnCfls and o!fer.!I mey very et participating 1ndopbndent Exxon ValucCenter dco!ors . , . • • J I • • , " I • ---44 • • ' • • •• DAIL V PILOT Prep Grldders of the Week· Injuries Riddle S~ ERIC SCHMIOT Mission Viejo Offense CARY GREER Mission Viejo Defense . For Mater Dei Tilt St. Anthony .High' football coach Richard Ambrosi is very candid about his team's chances a1ainlt the powerrul Mater Del Monarchs Thuraday nl&ht at Santa Ana Bowl. "We're an lnjury·riddled team and we don't beloq: on the same rt~ld ·with Mater Del,'' he -says. "We've ha~ 1.l guys out and all have "been first stringers at one time or another." VIN MULROY JEFF STARR Newport H1rbor Ollense Newport Harbor Offense As a result or their in---~----------~-------juries, the Saints are 0.3 in Servile Up to No. 1 In County Grid Poll Angelus League action and ~overall. St . Anthony has only scored seven points in 12 '1uarters of league play as Oppose.d to 76 tor Mate·r Dei. "For us to beat them, Newport Harbor, P..1ater jumped from eighth to fif· we 're going to ha\le lo play Dei and Edison• mo\led up th. over our heads," says Am· , in .the Orange County top tn othe r key changes, brosi. "They ba\le a spec. ten high school ratings as Foot hi 11 mo \I ed fro m lacular quarterback in Jim results of impressi\le foot-seventh ~lo secoiid and .El Wig more a n,d the Ir b a 11 \Ii ct or I cs I as t Dorado from tenlh to six· tailback Pat McKeon is weekend. th. Pacifica and Santiago very fast." And Santa Ana Valley, dropped out of the top ten. To contain Wlamore and need exceptional perfor· mances from their top defenal·ve pla.yer1, llnebacker1 M"la ay Tulasosota (8·3, ZIO) and Jack Sellllte (5·10, 175). Also, Ambrosi wants to see quarterback Terence Carney have another stron1 pa11ln1 came. Car- ney completed 13 ol 19 in the Saints' 21·0 lou to Ser- ~ite last -.:eek. -----· I WHY LEASE I AVW? I ----~ ~ .......... , h .... --· ..... C.....,J•JT..,. . ._ . ..,_. .... C11t.t ... · ._ ....... .. HARBOUR vw which was No. l , was McKeon. the Saints will bounced to No . 7 a ft er I piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilillii;iil;iiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii tieing Fullerton , 7-7. Ser- RANDY ADAMS · Sen Clemente Offense PAT NELSON \lite, an impressi\le 21·0 Sen Clemenle Defense , winner over St: Anthony, is ~n.'t\,@..lh Mobile .,.111-U''" ~ OveQ8 the top-ranked team: Newport Harbor, num- ber fi ve last week, advan· c e d to No . 3 a fter smashing Fountain Valley, 41·28. A1ater Oei, which tied St. Paul two weeks ago, ral- . liCd in the final four seco· nds . to edge Bishop Amat, 28·27, and is now No. 4 in- -.c=!I~ o! No.6. Edison, an easy 29-12 victor over Western, has 1:r 1:r 1:r l'M..T•-•Kwol .....,.. I. s.nl'9 c-..1 I M 2, Alotlllll (I~) !>l l. He-I H•<D<I< l•·ll .. ,,/loV>llrDel IS-1-11 -a s. Edi IOfl (S. 1-0 • '· fl Oo(.ldo Cl~! 3:1 I. SA V1tley 1•·1·71 21 RICHARD HERNON GARY PIEROT 1. Fu11.,1°" t•-J·U " offera FAST and HOT PIZZA, Deheret11or-t1onr1' DELIVERY HOURS ' 5-10 P.M. SUN.· THUR. it 5·12 P.M. FRI. & SAT.· 410 E. 17th St. COSTA MESA 646-7136 • .. , U I · D f t. WntmlMt•• 1•·2·0 It ·university Offense n vers1ty e e n1e . . ~"~'~':"'~IO~~u~.·~"~'~' ~~~'..'.:~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -----~--------------,---,-, OUlln -SHH .... ~tcilkt, II T- CIF Ratings N eivport 10th The s urging Newport l-larbor'High Sailors arc No. IO in the latest CJ F 4·A foot - ball poll. \llinners or their last rour games, the Sailors picked up 16 votes and join !\"lat.Cr Dei as the only· area teams r ated among the top ten. The ~lona rchs are No. 6. St. Paul and Servile are a gain rated first and second and the two meet in the 1:r 1:r 1:r •• ..... ~. l'K.... hllltl 1.St.P•ul C'"°'ll "I 1. Se< .. lf ( .... !). 1 .. J. L"'fO!I (141 US •. Foolh!U !1.(1) 121 S. P1.-.. Ct·H lit t. lrMte• De! ts-1-U n • I, AMMtm < .. II 10 I. 5'oulll HUit Ct-1' ~ t St Jahn 8oKO tt-11 H 'IG. Newport H11bor 11·11 It 1. MoNov!• fJ~l 7 C.ollan 0 4 1 l . $.lrl Mlri..O Cl~J '· 8'1r<OUOFl1 11~1 S. i.. Mlr..U 11.(11 "-Lompoo;Ct-U I. P•cllltt !6-ll .. I. 5oll{ll Pt~ Ct-II • Seo'•• Ct-ll IO. Sanu-vo ·""II >·• 1. El Oor-(1~) :z. RI• Mew !J~l J, "--16-11 •. A ll l•lap• v111r1 ). 8ofllta CJ4 1 t. unl-..rllh !•·II 1. Gtllr tt-11 I A<llflll\an !t-11 9 -to !S-U *O. El S.Ouncla lt-11 ,. ,. '" '* "' " " " " " ,. '" •• <•·I l "' ·~ " " • .. .. -Girls Sports T•1tMIS 'llA•SIT'f UtulWI .. tell (Il l UI Ul!IWltf'1ilJ Shot'" ROl>f•twfl CL816rfJl_llOll .. 1 S11\'dr! IL8110$llOl.ftlQlll 1'1'10llt IU l O..ISn~r t.6 6n1mileld ILlll<WI G111ml·i .,."'1¥ CLfl!OttM<Ft<l-M '>milll llll) 111!11 Cl1•k l ·O -tllenl U.111 <WI PU••"'WIO""? ...... Mr rc M"1-H111s1 fl81 de! lloni.ath• WO<,l\IMI 7 ot"owllOll·C•<hOll (L81 dPI A~ll· .......... ~-····! wa"del·W•I><!• II.fl) dt! AllCll-1· l Yl><l"l·O • P,.11hOl'l·ll1119llfl ILB I del R•"'icf ... CorY·Rll"Vf< !1.8ldotl E9111-0old ... Wolli..M·Alltfltrloody IUJ Otf Gllf!lll- T1ytor .. J probable Angelus League decider Friday ni ght at St. Paul. In the 2·A poll. University 1noved from s.evenlh1. - .'iixth as El ·o orado con- tinues to be No . 1. El Toro just-failed lo make lhc lop ten. picking up 12 \'Otes. FOR WEDNESDAY fROM4 P.M. DEL TACO al participating Del Tacos all aver the Southland The area's newest and friendliest Levi Capital! Thousands of pairs in stack -log: • Onginal Blue Jeans • Denim Bells •Cord Bells • Nuvo Flares • Straight Leg Cords ' ' Plll,S odidos and" ·lf)l l:!J· HOURS _._,_, .. , :· T--.. Wed., Fri., s.t. t:Jl-4 . 270 E. 17th Strffl -Co•la Meta H .... S.... 541-llJJ ---- r $ B.F.Goodrlch conventional passenger retreads Ore · buill on sourd, foctory inspect<>:! lire bodies. They'll give a smooth, comfortable ride ard good .mil..,.... ..... a.--N.,~~· ... ..._ ~ .. a..,...i ~to>"-i>ll""'.........t ~hW.o! ... ......-Ukiut_... ....... .i.,.,. to°""'M~o ...f-•.ntagortOl k>I._... ,...,...i bt'fo;id ~..todi .. .,...~-..., ... .-..... Ti....,-...,.o,,..tf(Jl ~ID~-~­IM'<"°"' -~ -1\ llt .. darr.og!!d ~ """""9 llol. ..... -"' ...._.. ,._,,'"""' ~""""' """"""""""' ... -opp.,"''""' ....... """'"" .....le>allwllu>o~""""""'*"'o ._,,.._....i:.,,,g .....ib -•~ . ,.,.,~...i .... .,,;t ..... hbfo .... to•••~ ~""""--toolfG_,,,_l"d ....... ..._Dto ... _.i.1 11'1~ ~..,,,.., ___ o_i..... .. """"'9 111-.Jd -or.i._....i .,.-~p~e bh--1"1 ·~-..,.q ·-' brake overhaul ....... _07~·13£7.00·13 H78·U/8.55·U .E78·U/7.35·U G78-15/8.25·15 . f78 ·14/7.75·14 H78 -15/8.55·15 .'G78-14/8.25·U bs.15 p us 45< federoi [,c;,. lox ord retreodoble trade-in. White"M>lls $1.50 mono. ·1:19J we're the Olherguys ·shocks sr rrml Alneri!:ln ........ insllllalion RE9Aar 118.96 ' . " ways to charge(RellOIYing Charge. Amer kon Expo-es~ l.'oster Chorge. fl>nl<Americord, B. F .·Goodrich Store 2049 HARBOR BLVD. lat Bayl COSTA MESA ~~:.., ...------------.A.LSO AT: ____________ .,. CYPRESS 6182 LINCOLN -126·4010 • ' I • ANAHEIM 524 W. UHCOLH -~~4-757.8 •. ,. • SANTA ANA · 200 SO. MAIH St. 547-7155 . AIC~T ....... 19046 ..,_hunt SI .. .... __ .. . Wlkht.this~PC ..... '74 ....... ,.,_ __ ...... _ ... '"'_ ....... _ tht ..... "" thl"k wt• wln "' .............. ... .. "JO ..... .ftlll ............. ~""" --~ .._. • • .........W. foalmlle. t1'M.,... the Dioflr Ollot _.. ..... r..-" -·, Uot ol --"' the Cllftdwt'-n of the 10-wHli ~·~ ~'will """'-flnt .... wlftMf'I te ..., .... ..... ...... ........ pri1•; • 'zenith ......... tilil ..... ... ........... ~ ......................... . ........... ,.. ................. ~ .. ...... 74 ......... whe Md ~· .... -·-.. ............. 1.,.1 . ..,...1~ the ...... ... ·cw..,....,,,....... ..... . .... the .... ,.. ... ,.... hne .. ..... -el weekly ""Pltt•ln PiclierM '74 ....., pettt .... 1:1..-.,. the """" ,... lilt el ...... .... '""" .... G..cl 1•. . ~ULES c ,_ ........ ......,.................. ....... .... ....................... , ..... 11"11 ..... 1\• .. __ ....,._ .......................... ~ .... ... .-.... ........ n-. ·..w. .............. .. •• !111'- 1 ~ It ... MIDI 111Cll900, ., .......... , t 1. P.O. ...,.C... ..... CA.9111 ... a. a.t,-......, ,_ ,.._ ............... _. C• I -.................. ~ _, ........... ........_.. ........................ _....... ... ...., ........,. ... "fktli:... _.. ........ .... • • .... ........ ......, ............................ .. ........... ,... . 4: ...._ ..... "' ,...umkll ""..._ 9* ,._.,,AA• ................ My ............. , ....... .. l.lbr1'$ Pk4 ........ lhair pl;:• ........... •s's ... ...., ... ,,,,......__ .. ,...... .. -· .. ,. .... II.AIM -.m' ....... c. """ • wall.. • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : ENTRY BLANK • • • .• • • • • • • • • • ""''--------Z1,_ __ _ a.de ....,. yeu think wlU wlf'I thil. ..... , ..... !· • • • Atlanta at I-: • • ChlcCllJO at G""" lay ! Clefflcmd at Hew bgl9CI ! .,.._. at laltl--. : Detroit at Oald•cl ! Houston at Mt. ! • Mlcnl at Hew Orll•1 : HYJefsatMYGIGllb ! Pllhllwglt at Clllclwltl ! Sn !>1etJO at I~ City ! San Francisco al Dalal ! Washington at l'llllllCl1lpllla . ! LSU at Alallw11a ! Texas at' Baylor ! G1oi gla at Flarkla ! Hann at Prlllceto. ! MlchltJan at •••• ! Ohio State!" Ml~ State ! MIUOSI at OldaJioina · . ! Mo. Caroll1111 at Ci..-! PeNI State at Mo. c-11111 State ! OreCJ011 at UCLA ! Ml-'aatl'w•e : • use at Stanford : • . Sy..-at West Yl...,Wa ! T-A&MatSMU : • y anclerllllt at llllhldy . : Calfonila at Washlll9foa ! : Wlsc-'n at Iowa : • • : YilleatPeNI . · : . : : -nl lllAICll -My tWH en tN "'91 ,,.,.._, ! - : ti ,...-..r.d In •II SO Ill"'" 11 ~ : • • • : ~ Plc•~roo 11 • ,...... ,....,. 9f "-: • ]Pii+s 1ectioft "'• MMilif. l'iHlitr.__ ! : ........ diry. .• • • .................................................... .: • J • • • • • • • c • • . " • • • • Tuesday. No11embe1 S. 1974 DAILY PILOT 8 7 La9u1aa, H1111ti1igto11, Mesa· -·- 3 Revivals Taking Stage For Van Dyke RadilJ Wedding ................... .. , ........... " ........ ~ .. , ..... .._,,, ... "EARTHQUAKE" OHNS NOV. IS LINCoLN .. IVl·tN u ~u CAIAln lf'OI "tin. &AMllA ., .. , ...... ON A CLIA.I DAY 1t1 Trivia? It's a reason to read th• Doily Pilot's entertainment page every $oturdoy It's revival time for three ooastal community theatei;:_ Eroups this "''eek as a trio or ol<!\~~ -two comedies and a mystery -make their way back to the spotlight along with an experimental collegiate production,· as a jam.packed month of local stage activ ity moves inlo high gear. Opening lonight at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse is the evergreen Navy comedy ··~tister Roberts ." On Friday "The Bat" flies into the 11untington Beach Playhouse, while Sat¢ty evening sees "Tunnel or Love" opening at !he Costa· Mesa Civic Playhouse. And UC Irvine has its latest &tr- vjval Theater epic on the boards Wednesday through Saturday. Closing their respecti ve engagements with rinal per- formances tonight through Su nday a r e lwo prorcs· .sio.nal productions, "The Real Inspector Hound " at South Coast Repertory and ""''Mame" al Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse. Going into its second " ()Jlo·;>Mon' !lwu Ffi 6.30 Piii 811 ts..n /><al. 1Z.l0 Ml)'l 1nru '""''lo 1 pm-JI 2~ I.A. 'RWY (MANCHESTER IX.I G.O. fRWY (CITY DR. IX.I "RiSM 601 N & 5'llort W»tKt "THI-el JULIUS 'flOOOB" &IOWS" .,..., TAMAllfilD Sl:ID" "lOYl AMD P.IJW" lf'GI ARROYO MYE SINiilllA 1oge1herwllh THE LOS ANGELES PHILHARMONIC ZLIBIN MEHTA condue11-. SUNDAY NOV. JO 8 PM .~7'~/0d Decnd e vr Ach!e\·en1e11t 1!>6•1·1074 ~ lvlUSl C CT NTER 0 PAV1i l 1t0 1N TICKETS NOWI $100.00 lti htltrfl'.l~t 11111 ••t•,. $15.00 lot ~1111otUlte, 111111 t!OI (f1' DO IJ 1 tll· ftl0.00 Is I 111.0e~llChO!f •nuct••lt c•t1111t11111 contllkl1t11l ti ... M•le Ct~ltr Ullifitfllflll $25.00 I 11 "'1-'flCI. -It fllS.00 !11 "'"efWCh"t Mlllllilltltfll JI0.00 roi •tr1MQJict,tlll1 {S$.OI ii I tJl4'4KtiO!t c1111111:.111111 Intermission Tom Titus weekend is "6 Rms Riv Vu" at the Westminster Com· munity Theater. SEAGOING comedy in one of the theater's most pol?ular plays will be revi ved tonight as ·'Mister Roberts" launches a thri:e· week run at La(luna. !\1ar· thella ll andall is i.:lirecling the large -cast sho.,.,· set aboard a Navy curgo ship during World Wart.I. Ron !\1eCall p~µys the title role or the battle·hungry df· ricer , with Chuck Roberts as his amorous sid ekick, Ens ign Pulver, Ge ne Benedict as the tyranni~al captain and Paul •loward as the underslt.lnding Doe. Bill Spencer is the chief petty ofticer , while Kathleen Dailey 11lays the Navy nurse. ' . "Mister Roberts" will play 1'uesdays throug h Saturdays unlil Nov. 23 with an 8 :30 c u rtai n at the ~1oulton . 606 Laguna Canyo n Road. Laguna Beach. Reservations 494 · 0743. REACHING BACK into the murder mystery genre of the Twenties~and Thir· ties. the 1-luntington Beach Playhouse "'ill di.Isl off the ~'lary Ro berts Rinehart· ~ve ry IJ opwoQd thriller. 'The Bat" ror a Friday openin g . Ron Albert sen d irects the whodunit. adap. led from 1\.liss Rinehat l's ''The Spiral Staircase.'' Love". under the direction of Pa ti Tambellini, The comedy.opens Saturday for a three-weekend run. Otheis in the cast of the bedtime story !Or adults are, \\'alter Daly, Kri!i Hagen. Sue Pellegrini' and An· nabelle Quigley . "Tunnel or Love" will be on stage Fridays and Satur· days through Nov. 23 at the Community Recr eation . Center auditorium on the Orange County Fairgroun- ds. Reservations 556·5300. UC IRVINE "'ill present ·:vector 1·.wo," its latest Survival Theater offering, Wednesday through Satur- day in the Fine Arts Concert 1-iall. Ashlc)!. Carr is direc· ting this sixth exploratory production of the unique drama group which creates non-verbal <:1ction through body movement and sound forr'ns. Cas t m e mbers include Skip Bogart, ~Uy Branstet· tex, Elaine Kew, l\1ichael fi'lack, Craig Gardner, Ann ltilles. Claudia Kadota·, Diane Kelbe r, Cathie Kiek, Fay Sutfin, David Pearson, Linda Rosengarten. Laura Segal , Thom Threadgold , H enry Woessner, Bob Dunke rly, Dale Kranz. Cyndi Lee, ·b1aurecn !\fit· c.helJ and J a.Y Schickentanz. Curtain is 8 o'cloc k for lhe Survival Theater produc· lion, which also will be per· rorme d at the Theater Vanguard in Los Angeles .ind at Rio J.Iondo College in Whittier. second s ta rring production of "l\tame-" aiit Se~~th1n:S, with Blanche Mickelll'.On. Patrick Lang and Robert Vaught in major supporting assignments . Curtain times vary and reservations are imperative at 492-9950: At Wllslminster, "6 Rms Riv Vu " returns Friday and Saturduy with Beth Titus f Lt•t1ki11g Bot•k and John Loughman as the trapped trysters in an e m· pty apartment. lle rma n Boodman dire cts the comedy, which goes up at 8:30 at the pl;,1,yhouse, 7272 l\taple Ave .. Westm1nster. Reser\•ations 893·8626. * CA LLBOARD Auditions have been an· !''rank Capr::i , dirc('tOr of n1 a n y 1v arn1 comedies or th e 1930s. 11·ill be feu tur~d on ""l'hl· l\l c n . \Vho f!.l a d e t h e !\lov ie s" \Ved n esdu v 1n ght at 8 o'c lock on K CE1·. Che1 nn el 28. noun~cd by each of the three com1nunity the ate rs un· Two veiling their new s ho ws this Video w~ek -the Costa !\lc.sa, Lagun a i\loulton and llun-Speci' -1-tington Beach playhouses. we f'i rst up w i 11 be Costa · l\tesa. "'ith tryouts for an F Moyers Orange .County 1>remicre, · Or Jean Kcrl''s "King of llear·' ts ." Guest director J\tar· the ll a Jlandall "'iii hold re a dings Su nday at I o'clock and J\l ondaya t 7:30 for a cast or s ix men and lWO. women in the Community Recre<:ition Center on the Orange Cciilmty t'airgroun- ch;. j\;f.\V YORK i l:Pl ~ IJlll J\loycr s . 11•ho rctently retired fron1 hroudcaslin~. is r e tur ni ng to p uhli t· television for t"'n special:. y,·ithin the next three mnn· ths, raising the possibiltty hC' mav soon be ba('k in a ·r v studio on a morl' pcrmant>nt basis. F o r el e ctio n ni g ht, tonight. t.loycrs will inter 1 il~"· NC'11· )'ork Go1· l\l alC'olm \\'ilsn a nd his 0 11· IJOnl·nt for th l· go\•t•rnos hi p, 0 : lai ll true tb1.i Andy Griffith v.·11 ~ broke lA blt t1rly actinic day!i , h' got married on the old rad .. program. "Bride and Groom" so ht. could get 1 fret rtni and honeymoon!-Ezra Connolly, Springfield, Mass. A: )'ou i::ot a ll the del~i\s co rrect bul one -the groom "-·as Dick Va n lJ yke. 'l'hc year, 1948. Q: Does that thi'ater In Dallas, where Lee Har~ey O!iwald was t·aptured after shooting President "Glad You Asked That• by Marilyn and Hy Gordner Kennedy, ha\'t' a plaque to mark the sitt'?-T.C.C. l'hot•ni~. Arl1. /\ No llowe\•Cr. the 'l't•x.;u, '!'heater recently booked a d oubll'·fc a turc "'hic h cOurct' ha\'lt lJeen un1n tent1onally upscUini:: "The Candidate" (i n 'A'hich HolJ!'rl Redford pla}'C'd a handsoml' polit ici<in .rt>m1nisc('nl of !he tale President! plus "Executive Action,'' "''ilh a plot loos('ly bast."<! on lhe assassination. Q: \\'hal 's the difference bet .... een :. gold a.n.d platinum r.-cord aw~rd ?--1\lrs. Te rri Schoninger. llolly"'·ood, Fla. .'°'I : The pl atinurn des1gn:1t1on is 1n ho nor of the sale or a mi llion albums or (\\'O n1illion singles. \1/hcreas a IJO ld 1:1lbu rn rt· presents :1 milijon doll!l:Ji in album sales ;incl a gold s1n~lc record sull• or a ml Ilion singles . (l: Isn't Jamt's 1\l acArthur of "lfawaii Flve·O" a s i len t nartner in a IJ.flnolulu dct e c .. ..,.e agt'ncy?-Elolse !\1cN.,Seattle. ~ A: No . \\'hen th is 1'V cop' moonl ights, it's as a partner 1n the tourist·oricnted enterprise. tlawai1an Adventure Tours. Frequently, '.\l acArthur's presence at an aloha party for depa rting tour groups gives the folks something to talk about back h~me . Send yuur qursllo•L~ lo fly (;ord11rr ... Glad Yoa Askf'd Ttull. .. core of ll11s neu1spapcr . P 0. fJoI 1560. Ca sio lltesa 92626 Aofor1 /y11 and flu Gardnf'r v>ill ansu.'t'r O.! 111ony quesliqns o.~ lhf'y cu11 1n rl1f'1r 1·n/ur11n. hut //I•' rt1l 1.1riq ~u/ r1101/ make I rwr· .~or1ol ri1p/1cs 1,,tpu.!s1b/1• . . Meanwhile, Costa Mesa 's reside nt director , Pa li TambelHni. trades theaters wi th l\I jss Randa ll and has auditions scheduled Nov. 17 al I o'cloc k in the Lagun a !\1 ot¥t on Pl ay hous e for "The Mat chm:.ikcr." I lap Graham has been preca~t as llorocc Va nd ergclde r, but .ill olher parts in the largc ·cast comedy remain OJ>t!n. "1\1 at chm ak cr " opens on Jan. 28. Rep. lf ugh Carey <0-K.Y .i.rn;;;;;:;;;p~;;;;.,.;;;oOii;; for·\\IN ET and8'>ubli c brtJad· ca St iflg stations-througholrt Ne.,.,· York stale. At ll unlin gton Be<:i ch. di rector l lowa rd Solomon \l'ill ha Ye rc;idings on l\fon· day, Nov. 18, for "The Ninety Day ,._1is tress" and \vill be casting ror fqur men and "'omen. The tryouts arc set for 7:30 p.n1 . in the Ba rn 211 0 !\fa in St., lluntington Beach. On J an. 27 . the thre(•·Um e Emmy a"·a rd·il'i nncr "'ill host "\\lorld !l unger ~ \\'ho \Vi ii Surv'ive ?" for the Public Broadcasting Ser· IUIMIT ICHA,lt'l PARDON MY BLOOPER• • lock..._ "PRETTY MAIDS ALL IH A ROW"' t•• "BUS~ AMD BIWE" .. "THE CENTERFOLD GIRLS" Cotti. S1t./S.. ..Z ,.... SP~AI. Diddy Lammers and Joanne w·olcott t ak e prominent roles in the mystery, abetted by Clark Burson, Barbara Carroll , J .D. Reichelder!er, Peter DotcAlli .stcr . D e w ey Kn{g hten. John l\l a her, Charles Pecrenboom and Jerr .Miller. Steve Craig is technical director. Pat !\ful· lins is producer and Elaine ritcAll is t e r i s s tag e manager . ll EA DING INTO the homestretch are a a pair or professional shows, South ,Coa~t Repertory's "The Real Inspector Hound .. and Seba s ti a n 's We s t 's "J\1ame '', both on th e boards tonight through Sun· '"'""'°"'"""'"""""""""""'"""' WlD.M~'6 1:00 P.M. day. "The Bat" "'ill hold forth ror five y,•eekends or Friday a nd Saturday produc;tion, throuJlh Dee:'7. at 8:30 lrrthe Ba rn. 2110 ~l ai n St., llun· ti ngto n Beach. Re ser· val io ns 842·5121. .. In spector 11ound" is directed by Johll-David Kel · ler, a member or the play's original Broadway cast, and£ ea tu res Don Tuche and j\.lichael Keenan as the dra ma critics lured into the action. Curtain is 8 o'clock a t SCR 's Third S tep Thea ter, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reser· vations 646· 1363. ,.. AT COSTA fll esa, Helene Briggs and Hichard 111cNaJ . Icy ride th e "1'unncl or Doris Allen winds up her -SIADlllM .••• .. ~rnu..i.uu.: ,,,._.. ''THI •AMILH" Ill_ • "A"l9mC.lstlP OF DUDDY' DA.YITZ" • ~I LOM•IST TAID .. · •IHI .Ill 11..~T llY..,OLD~ ..,.ITIY MAIDS All. IN A IOW" "TIXAS CHAINSAW MASSACIE., Ill ... ETUIN Of T1* DllA.eoN" Ill "IAMAM4S'" Ill "l'ftlnHHi YO,fWANTIO TO IN ., .. CAUfOIHIA SPUr' • "LAST DETAIL" Ill "WHERE THE RED FERM GROWS"· . -PLUS- SldC__. "TEM FROM YOUR SHOW OF SHOWS" m MANN THEATRES I s.t .• s-. .................... 1 Sl.JS't12:JO,_ 1 "THI •AMII.a" llJ ,..,. 1 1 It ~/ .. J.1·11 "APH:fNTICIStlP Of DUDDY KIAYJTZ" ...... "41 w. •:+M.:ff -11:4M :41.&:41 . 'ti W & DISOIDIA" .....,,,,..,. .,,.., ... ,.,_,. "THI LAST DIT ... " 111 .... ~. Wl.o4. J.-.M:4Mff ..,,_ --Class of.!f4 Ill MM.·Tllln.t,..... Fri. s.t. 7 • I0:4S '"THE OTHER .. 11111)/ W.irl!cll 'f rankensteln ... _"CRY RAPE" make the scene Sundays . in the •1,•t~i!~\•~1~~~!!~1}"1 'OI ••TWOll C"P'ITIT- tlfCMl'J -.. -........ ! "THE CANDY SNATCHERS" -l'UI' -I HI Q"NTTII FOU> ClllS" M "'°'' HAllT#'Vl M U 11'1 '"9 WOlUI ~ A.c1y Wcrilol'1 .. DRACUu.·• $1.00 . ' ' . ' . ' • I \ .. •. - • • • I • ' ' j ' .. "0..LYPILOT • Jerey Lewl8:£ited., .. "· Stops . on Freeway, Sets Off Crash -WlreS.rvtee. Comedian Jerry Lewl1 wu Ucke'ted by pc>Uce in Laa Ve1a1 after he stopped to view a traffic •«~l andlttoff a three-<:at crash lo which two Persona were lllOllY IDJ11red: The Nevada Stale lfigb· way Patrol 1ald Lewis told officers after the mlsbap he stopped -.-rter recocniUrii aomeone lnvolv.ed in the ortgin&I crash. i'attolmen Aid a vehicle driven by a 23-yea.r·old wom.an then 'La~t Supper' Costa Hit Restaurant . ST. CLOUD, Fla. tUPt > -tnnation has caught up -with the "Praise the Lord Restaurant," which dishes out biblical quotations with its loaves and fishes. But its rounder. retired Baptist minis ter DaYid 1 ______tbomas, said he hopes to open another ··Praise the Lord" near Orlando, F1a .• where there are more huoary sinners. rammed Lewi.I' car rrom behind, bounced otr and blt a third auto. l;.ewt.a WIS Cited for un- safe stopplnt o~ a bl"'way and the driver of tbeaecond e&r for failure to uerdle due care. • President Habib Bourgulba or Tunisia bas been re-elected for a fifth term by 99.98 percentotthe vote on a one·candidate bal· lot. " Joterior Mlni1ter TWr BelkbodJ1 said 1,573,291 citizens cast ballots out ol an electorate of 1,m,143. Out of 1,571 ,21~ vali~ votes, 1,570,594 or 99.98 percent.op- ted for Bour1uiba, the Only candidate. "This score is unequaled tn the world," Belkhodja said. HOLDSOFFIC~ -· GWC '1 KlllyKMng ' Nursing Student · Elected TllE RESTAURANT OPENED ta's t year in response lo a Thomas vision, and drew national atten- tion !or its_ catfish. hush puppies, cole slaw and grits special, pnced a t Sl.25, accompanied by a "Fishers or Men" biblical auotalion from Matthew 4:19. In 1969, Bourguiba ob-tained 99. 76 or the votes. Katy Kling; a second-year • student in Golden West Col- Its handmade menus announced :We're Bullish . on God ," and its menus featured such "soul food" traditions as mustard greens, grits and corn bread. But l~en innation .began io pinch and I.he $1.25 special climbed to $1.7:;. The costliest atem T-bone llobert D. Lund, a General lege's nursing program,...is Motors Corp. vice president the new second vice and general manageriol the pr.esident of the Student Cadillac division, was Nurses' Association or named general manager or California. steak jumped rrom S3.50to $t. ' tbe Chevrolet division -of· Representing more than ten a stepping stone to the '1,500 nursing students in the GM presidency. state, SNAC is student fun. ••wE RAISED. OUR PRICES but we just couldn't keep up,·· Thomas said. Lund 1ucceed"s F. James ded and student organised. llicl>Hald, who was elected The org8nization gives as a director and executive students a voice in for- vice president in charge ol mulating nursing practice J..l .S . and Canadian andinputintowhatnursing In tinv slios handed out to diners, Thomas announ· ced sadly, "We thank you for your prayers~. patronage. Due to lack of finances we will be cl01ing.~. operations in September. is to become in the future. Elliott Eates, GM's new Ms. Kllng_er Westminster uc·1 Announces president, and his predeces-is working toward her .as- sor, Edward N. Cole, sociate arts degree <1nd beaded the Chevrolet license as a registered T\laSOA'V,MO't'.S "'T ..... Cttlh.,. ~ TI>toil9" 5"Mt,._i1. MIOllotlon ...., ~ M .,.,...... .•• Gfl'ft, ,,,,0., ._....IOI"<• lw, San Oleto Mttlkol H'l'llftO!fs c.iw. f'Wt of IK1.,,. sorlft, "'New Olrw<lklfls for ...... Uftu Wrillf1,"' I -It p..on.. flDDlft "'· ""'1kol Sl:i.M• .... ~ _..._ _ ..... WIDlll.SDAY,NO'V.t .., .. Srtl• •1111 ·--· ......... ~ "'"otll·,.,..rlAt l'llnl," Mkll.l•I Olrlsa'-. \.\. .•.. •ltofflt¥, HewpDrt 9iMCJI, OtMI• Klorln. J.O •• SlftlOr. 11~ ....,.,_\. Mou. ot.Mn11 a. """'*'r· hl1.fll a 11dw• sorln, "'S.IKtlftg-1-,,...,..,U119"' 1!11"'11" T1• ....._ •• 1· Ml ....... R-111. liloonwtllllts Hall. Single ~.M.WI. '"c-il"t _, lnMr'rifwl"'I s.illl 111 ... """'" car• 1no .. ur,;• ""-•o Wluon. pro1101n1 • .a.o ... 1n1s1r111" •worcfl ot.1wc:lo1ts, Int. " --·; .............. 5-fYi_I ... ~ WI -HHftll C-IM\rslry," t:» fl.Ill.· •:• .. Ill., ..... llMoy lnA0 Jn1 W, ~ "'""·· Or ..... Fff• .... lnl:lldH tlftl tn1Mrt.i,-11 .... ,...•l11g. '"A .._ Cow-ot.~ to IN T_,.., of tt11difot,": 9111 ~ .>t., "'-0~ ....... IM H ilo!' otl t"'--Y ~ lllillorlol, MOii:. Rlflllw'I ltld ~ "-'"""' c,o.,.p....,. hn of.Mc• ..... Mritl. ""Fwt"'illlk IMttOIS(jptifwy °""'*""..,.. rMd.111 Str~··,. It ...... "°"" "'· Soo;lol S<IMQ Hail; $illoflt "*"''51Mft 14.w. TMUttlDA T, llOV. 1 ""Homl ....S Sl111l o1 \.l•l"'I lfl hi 11'11, tltlland 1'111 Ceftt,.rlt1: &•roq,., Rocoai. -a111lt ollod 1t111 C:l!'llhwr 11y10t," "*" HOii. E•.O .• cllttt • ot Arts. ... """'"inilln, u..i ... rsity E•toMloll. ueui. Pott 9' IKlurl writs. '"Tho DI....,_,. ol' lflt"104' ~ E•i.rlw 0.'9, n.. _.,.a o W..lo: ol M ;' 1:XI -O:lO P."'-....... 111, ~tlotHoll, $.illlll ..... -.... "\.l•lnt In Ills 20llr c:.M ........ "'1#f "'-kl. e . .r. .. lnt•1rlor °""""'· PMt cit a 1K1o.wt Wr\H, ""Tllo 0. ........... of lnttrlot 1N1 E~loflor 0.1lgo, Ttw ._ 0$ .. WO!"l fll Art.'" Tl'lwrtdw. 1. IOJI."'·• "-Ill, "-Ill"" HIM. ""91e-..,..._ ~u. division. nurse. . __ . ·• . Rose Grant of Seal Beach, ·John Lennon said the · also a second-year nursing ·.Qeatles baye be~n_offered . s_tudent. will fill Ms. Kling'.s ·.$7. million to get together seat as Region. 2 cliairper- again, but won't say·wbo .son on th·e· _organization's made the offer. ·state-board or directors. M°'"""' I-Ill Fll'Od ..... "llllrition. H Oortlllf Wen.ell, M.ot.., '-If """'•· UC Agrkllltw .. E"""'11on5'fl'ko.A_.., ..... ............ tt:•"·"'~ I ·J ........ . RoGlll ICM, l'lt,sk;OI Sl:loft<• &ldt-Fie: ''For a ful-1 Beatles . reunion, I have been offered $7 million. And I could get about $2 million just by myself,'' Lennon was ·q®ted as telling a London newsman in a New York in· terview . The Beatles, the hottest music group or U.-1980S, broke up five years ago_ . • The generation gap was to_o much for ·Mlcbael "'Pl-'1MJtorOrg1111l1t11-•Gr~ ... Besea, 17, who quit as ~:,i..~;"::"'!d!".!!i· ~": student representative on -1 Mll'lin.r, ,, ••• ,,, .• 4:30 ........ ' the Fremont Board or AoMi "'· $6rl~ Haon. FM: .., .,._ Educa•:on. Ml, ttttlil or llM<.ttdll. MciM: .. lntlKlli ...... '"'*" llllldl n 119rklftt. u MOMDA"f,IKW.n • Besea said in bis letter of ...... , .,.., ""'....,..,.,., .. o...i c. resignation that fellow • ......... $..LL.8 .• C.P.ot. .• ~;--boa d' fls. ICtrr, Forner lo C:1mp1111y. \.0$ r members Wtre COO- Allgtlft. PM1 at• ite1 .... M•ln. "C-cemed with maintaining "a ~lal 111114 ln.,.sllnlnl ~" 1- •:lO "'"'·· ~ 101, P11~1ta1 1'(.i.tq ·19th century school system Bldf. 51,.910 odm111lon. t•.SO. based OD rear and punish- TUESOAV',ltO'l.12 t kn b ' ( ed "YM o .. uook ,.., 1no Pfotn~-' men "W"""'e emg nu ur Howtlil.~ JolW\ a..11 ,ov1i.... ""HHlatU. by ignoran"ce. '' · Hlt'll.""Fl ... PIK••ef.i.dt,"""Ml•1CIOO A .. ·1 . Be *"" elltl.-.'" tit. P111 at ~ case. n point, sea ..-, • .,.., Dlr•u1or11 tor ......_. claimed; was the board's ~""..; 1-10 •·"'·· Roo"' 11~· ~, refusal to review the school SI:~ 8Jd0. 51"91't MMll-, U.if'. dis . • h . I cod w1.0•1.soA"f,llO'f'.1J tr1ct s air engtb e. "0.1U11t wlln "" Go•1rr1-nt.'" ,.. • Mic-• 0w,.ii.nson. \.L.e .• .it-y, Pr Id t F d will fl t ,.......,. tkMll, ·o.nnl• .:1.,.k\ J .o., · es en or y o s.n1or, t4• ~n1. """' -a. Las Vegas, Nev., and ~-,..,fk1tch••• "'rift. 1Me(. na. __ , A · b 11.,. Ml t~ ,,. l!Htcll.,. ,,. c1~wx, nz., on a speee • """'" J-N ,.m .. -R-1n. ...._. •. making trip Nov. 14, the Hiii. ~"°'!'I."*'· M.a. · · White House announced.. . --. ··.....,.:·A l'w1Ur1s11c '--• • Ford wil·I' address the ~-.. sc-:.· ~·•~·au.. National Association of .. lel -.slsUftt to IN dilnc•, ()ll'ka>fll Ec1wt111on -111t111 10 R• .. l'f"olt«. Realtors in Las Vegas, then Walhin...,, O.C. Ptn iii letll.n -~ g t p h ' f •• ,_lsik 1ntttOl$(.lpll11MrCur\'k:1i11-o o oenax. or a •ltd T••trilnt su.11,111."' ,_,, .,...... question-and-answer ses-"°"" 100. Sot1t1 Stl•"" Kell. Sintlt-. sion at the convention or rNulDn..M.SO. FRIDAT.Jto•.u Sigma Delta Chi, the ··z-'loy110111 W••~1110p;• Roa.rt Soc"iety of p ro(essional Rowtll. M.ot. •• as1hto11t Jlroi.,_. If ""*""1p11y, c..1 ~rt Lone 8"dl. Fint Journalists . . d a -Int led..-•·lleld -1tlholl. • "1·l0 "'"'·• ROClf'I 2M, H...,,..tlts Hall. Fn:llO. College To Offer 50 Cl'asses THE llEGfSTllAll'S of· rice · on the Huntington Beach campus will be open for signups 8 a.m.-10 p.m., Monday through Thursday, or8a.m.-5p.m. on Friday. Daytime courses will be offered in art, English, graphic arts, health education, library, music, physical education, psychology, retailing'. ·and secretarial science. Evening courses cover secretarial science, health education, home ii.nd_fainlly li(e and music. • PUllJC NOTICE • 1MUttSOAY, Pltll».T,MCO U.TUllOAl'.MW.l ... t "o-..11 .. _, Effftl..,. Ma....,_t:· .,latill ll. "'°"Cit W11tr, ,...~, v.,. Oil W11tr As .. t llttl, II'(. A llM'H-cl•y ..,.,,.., ·n.or ... , ........ -12:• p.m.. 1;3'1 • S p.11\.; f'rldiay. 0 0.111. • 12:30 '·"'~ ·=•·J11.no.. J _ ,, ....... ; $otu...S., ......... . 11>.llL, llNl'lf llOMI. Ht_ ..... IM. IMl1 J ........ Roeo. Htw"°" lklCll. Fie: lll:S.MCJ..-.Sclftl/"ft'1'ltl1,krdonfllll . l'atOAY AllOSA1UaOAY, llO't'. lfAllO ,, ""lte1 Qiflctpls Ill Earlr Cttl1191o011 CW· i'ltwlwr!I."" J-\.. H,,.., .>t~ EIS.O •• CDftWl!lnl, ll<lllrttr afOCI owl._ Ill E..,., Cllil•~••d E11 .. c1llon. A 1--ll•r Dentler. ErdmaM, 41, a business education instruc- tor at Los Angeles' Belmont High School, was named California's "Teac.her of the Year" ror 1975. THERE ARE som.e -openings, also, in evening classes which began in Sep.. tember, including the com- munity chorale and college symphony orchestra. Registration wjll ~n for 1 ___ P_VB_u_c_N6Tl __ CB __ _ some business pract1ce lab classes which began in Sep- tember, as well. " ',.._,_ . l'fllOA 'V ·AllO SA1UttDA Y 0 llt0¥ ... t .. 15, '' '"TJtt~y Scllool-A...,._.,... lfl•ol""''"'· •• Jomo1 Putti. M.A .• tllllUllGMI cllrKtDr, ~·$ OW<;. ot. hoo ----rklhop. Frldty. S • IO:lO p,m.; s.1wo..,-. • '·"'· • n llOlll'I, 1 -S p,on., J . t:»p.m .• 11-SI0.511 IJrtl..,...tyHlfll Sc-, an COffttlU1 l)rlw. '"""'· FM: is.. ifttlldff -,,,.,.,i.1,. Sewing Courses Offered -t ~. FrWty, J·IO p.m.; ~. 0 • ..... -n -. 1-s ,. ...... M .. ru--"--t.lnl•rllly Hlgll Sl:llMI, GT\ ~ ~°"""',l ... !M,f H !\3fl. .. ~ 111 ~111o1 ~•nh tar CltflUnr Orllnltci S<-1 Ptuonnel,'" "-14 Nor· "*'• 0.0 .S. A twO·O•Y Mf!ll....,, Fri&ly, 1-10 P."'·; S..t..,.lliv. t o.m.·11-. l:JO- S:XI p.1t1 •• fl.-119. !•htinM!llet tt.11. f'ft: '20. lnl;I-$ IWK~. SATUllD.t.Y.NOV.lt '"MllRM!ft9by<Mlif<li11ft.'"~W. iciws. Pll.O.: ,,,.Niiftt ar .. tso111111t1-- S1'--AdvlMtO Pl-"'t. "_., Mf!Ww, •~lO 1.fft.-<l;lO II-""~ Aoarn 101. flft.,-Mtol_Sclen<•$ 9ldl. F": MO.IM:hdH ' "'"'°' ... ,.. .. 1119. ' Runner-up was Dorot111 ----------1 Mesmer, 63, or Robert H. Down Elementary School in Pactric Grove. Other rinalists were Mar· · jorte A.. Jones, 45, or Alice McLellan Birney ~hQol in Redondo Beach, and· Jaaet S. Neill, 53, or San Ramon Valley High School in Dan- ville. I '4 GANG HAS MANNERS ' " .• r. • I I ' - .• •• ' • I 1~ • VERMONT YANKEE NUCLEAR POWER PLANT IN VERNON ONE OF SO NOW OPERATING IN U.S. . . ./ DAll.VPl.OT •• 11~16-lll R:E. 1002 ·-rltl. I ._.,,..u. . !•------' UPPER BAY ATTENTION: 3 Bdrm. .-.. -1mot.- IRRORS: · Acmrtlsan MR. RXIT ty pine -· 1-l """ ·•··•d ·•··k OD comtr lot, IOMli Jar ·-'" ~ ·their acb Brina hammer, n&iitr brush bonel. Eaceilent property ..... , a report trron " paint bucket. Save s s for amall ·tiuslbea aucll .. Imm• d I 1 t t I y. Thit s s this 3 br with BONUS kennel. IMll"lel')', etc. ·Ex· DAILY PILOT 011u1M1 ROOM lixu has pool and ceOenl invalment -; "" hililll"' L-tho fl t the basics to mak.e lt • ty. 138.500 · " -ra tnie ba>Katn. Onll' 137,000. DAVID O. CARLSON lncorrtct·Jn•rtion But you must hr.11'1')'! Call REALTOR au.'29' onlJ. agt 817.,.10.· . $7',54!0 01£N m. • • "s RM 70 • HIC6I Buys LIDO House ;; 1 :RDO.YA" j!~~~·~t~~~l~··~i'~'~$~1~j~~~=~ w~ .,2~ ·MESA "l."'DE = ·far ...,,. or . couple. No .. '" BEAUTIFUL ma.int. Fee land, term• 5 IR· 2700 59. FT. MESA VERDE '•Ylll B~ER Exdusive listliw! An elegant, $41,500 . OPEN . · spacious home featUrea a LOW DOWN GI . . large sepe.ra.te family room "LOW DOWN FHA Aggressive, amalltt office in with fireplace, formal din-be Corona del Mar, la ~ .ing and htige muter suite. You bargain h~ had l· siderizJ& the adclldon of OM Lovely landscapin,,. front &: ler hWTY on thas ooe. Huge or two hl&hlY quallfled lftl -... enclosed patio. play house __ , ,..__ ~· OUtstandlng location lot the kich: & much much estate .... nmen. ~tact on quiet street in choice more M&--!M9l ··Don V. n:utUn . neigh-. Pric<d at WALKER.& LEE '!'."""' 67>-2m $82,500. Exct11Uonal value to toda)t's market. For addi· l---,iReT.sl'"".:.~ta'i<;to .... __ tionaf,tnlo., ,please -· EASTSIDE "'""'* ~Y.'a. rrsF,... BARGAIN HUNTERS 1-lardwood f100ted beauty a:raced by fruit trees on extta. ,apack>us lot. $29,950. Trivia? Nuclear Plants: How Safe Are 1£1~=~· Propmrtn " . 7$2-1920 It~ a reason to rea.d the Dally Piiat'• entertalninent pa9e'-ve;.,. Saturday EDITOR'S 'NOTE -.Are Ure notiOn's nuclear power plants safe ? Whal abou! U.O. to be built in tM next dl!cacre~· Thtoreticallir, tMy're so~. But theory has no1 Mtt been fully tesled in. ezi.ierjments. · And day-to-day operation of some reactors is . tundng up problem.s no .one thought lill*ld OCCMr . By WILLIAM STOCKTON WASHINGTON CAP> -By 1985, nearly one-third· of the nation's elec· tricity is to be produced hy ·nuclear reactors. But their sarety is in doubt and might remain in doubt for ye~rs. · More than 110 r eactors' across the country· now are operating or being buiJt .. By "the early 19EK>s, there are to be 25G or the costly installations '· producing 29 percent oC the nation's electricity. Despite the Atomic Energy Coi:n- misaiop;, ·assurances that the reac· ton are sale, critics say the nation is st.akin& much of lts future energy sup. ply on a technology that might in time be proven unsare. Most or \\'hat is now known about reactOr sarety Is based on compµter ·analyses and simulations of reactor behavior. There have been no Cull- scale ·tests of reactor saCety systems under emergency conditions. "These experiments won't lake place · until 1977. Even then, disagreements may continue because sOme experts contend the experiments overlook p)tential reactor accidents. 111E COMPLEX controversy has allracted new attention in recent weeks. On Sept. 20, the SEC ordered 15 reacton s hut down within tP days so that inspections -lasting a day or t wO -ean 'be made oC small .auxiliary pipes that are part or larger pipes which carry cooling water to reactor fuel . Cracks in pipes at two reactors have been found. Also In Septem ber, Carl J . Hocevar, • reactor safety expert, resigned his post a\.P!e AEC 's Idaho Falls, Idaho, reactor test Cacility where much NJety research has ·been conducted. ~}\ocevar's letter oC resignatioo.:;aid he was quitting ''in order to be free to tell the American people about the poten- tiallY dangerous conditions in· the 1.atlon's nuclear power plants." Dixy Lee Ray, the.AEC ~hairm an, clitpatched .the agency's (op safety research administrator in late Sep· tember to meet. with scientists at Idaho Falls and discuss their eoncer· ns. 1HE REACTOR sarety.controversy mually pits the Atomic Energy Co!'l· mission and the n~lear power in- dustry against small citizens' groups around the country. Prominent sclen· ti.sts h.ive lined up on both sides or the debate .. The New England Coalition on NUclear Pollution, with 100 members, ia ,typical or t h~ dozen or more or1anlzations seekmg to prevent con· WUction or n\JC )ear power plants. The central Issue is whether the giant reactors can be operated without dangerous ·releases of radiaUon. These eould come through amall dally emissions or because or a non-nuclear explosion caused by_a mechanical failure that nO one thoUght would occur. Nuclear reactor safety nnd the problems with which it plagues the reactor Industry a(e symbolized by the Vermont Yankee ·reactor 'tn Ver· non,· Vt., a rur.al village or 200 ~J)le · on the banks of the C'orinecticut River .- , Dwini 23 rrionths or operation, Ver· ffl.Onl Yankee has shut down l! times beca use or accidents, equipment faUures, lightning strikes, or to cor- rect.dangerous conditions. THE SAFETY experts eentered their altentldn reacntly Qn Vilve V10- 2SA 1 steel alloy valve, larger than a ma~. rep nsi<I ~l"MonrYJnkec. ' Secured behind locked doors-in a room or conercle wall! fillfd wltti op· presalve Heal ao1t machinery noi se. Vl0·25A hang$ in sileol repose an· ticipqtng. the cat~ttophic accident e9eryone ti opes ·will never occur. ---..: -. . . Valv~ :VI0·2SA is Pirt or Vermont Yankee 's emergency syste.m. AEC rules reqµire monthly tests or the l,OOO·pound valve, which releases cool water into the reactor if the primary water cooling system rails. But last March 4 when engfueers ii'.' Ule reactor control room three floors above flipped a black toggle switch to open V10·2SA, nothing happened. The valve gate was stuck. The electric motor supposid to crank it open quickly burned out .. Vermont Yankee orficials said the \la l ve f ai lure wouldn't h ave threatened safety iC the command to open had com e during an emergency. Other emergency s~tems would nave taken over, preventing the reactor from overheating to the point that Cue I rods m elt and radioactivity is released. t. ' BUT TllE FAILURE was another in a.:str.ing oC problems plaguing the $217 million reactor since it started up late in 1972 afl~r five years' co nstrue- , MOO Ol#.ll St. NlWHMll 11~ OPEN DAILY l·S. . l ;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~==;;;:::=;;;;==:::;;::­racious livirq:: & J:real in- "estment on Blg C a Jl y o n Reactor manufacturers and th.e laden steam. . ~m. 18x3_2_ liv rm, din eou Cow's<\. l..Jxurk>us 3 Classifi1ed INDEX. public 'utility comPariies that" operate--· iifverse meteological 'Cc:>nditions ,M-n. Obi wet · bar. marble-Ad rt" • - the plant~ ·contend :the problems a_re might produc-e grave lossofhCe. 1nastcr bnth. Owner w i 11 • ve IStng . - •an inevitable result oC working the To prey-ent thts., elaborate carry ~1.-11t ·To at 9~7':· . bugs out or a new, highly complex emer gency systems, similar to Ver· on $149;500 prl<:e or ~ "'.:======::=::::::::::::==:;:=~ technology. moll Yankee 's ,. s ta_i;td ready to flood for SlOOQ. nlOfithly ... But nuclear critics, viewing the reactor cores with water. 29 Rue Grand Valll"l" ...._tori* I(~' I s...._,..,.... ,Gif'J problems collectively, argue that the With some exceptions: most experts Ask at gate for directions . .~ · newness of the tectmology and its agrfe the e mec:gency syste_ms would VOGEL, & BABBITT GttwJil ....................... 1002 Ac~111111 ••••• : ••••••••• "" ·complexity make it unreliable. supply the necessary water if all com-a.c11 •• , ...................... 11111o1 Mll+R_,. .................. ., r · d I •••* c-.................. 1005 • ,1,n,_1ng s.11ke ............. ..ii Reactor technology may have an ponents unc~1one prope~ y. 644-6056 h lbM 11tllld .... ~ ............ um :=·~· ._. ............. =: inherent, unseen flaw that will revoal . But there 1s a sharp disagreement •11* P9nlnsu ................. 1~ :!.1 '111 ~ ..... _., .. _,.,..,. · h lh uld t lircrnt ....................... 1010 aui:' ••••• .., ....... 111110 itselC only in a catastrophic accident over whet er e water wo pr.e\l".n . 2 STORY 11.,.tiorn .................... tin Cid,,:: ..w..,.·· , .. ···· ·· ·· •11, with great loss oC life, the critics say. . a reactor core m eltdown. The most in · GAIN· ~.,,:!' ·····::·::::::::::: :::: c.r.,_... .. ::::::::::~;:::: ... ,s tense arguments are about how the BAR +. Cac111tr1no ...,. ..... I'!... 1011 Carptt SottY1A .................. ,, ''It 's impossttile to know iC fuel r~s ~ou ld behave when the POOL 5010 DOWN ~~= ;:r11""" .. :: .. :::::::: ~= g= .. :: · ··::::::::::::::: ::1: something hasn't been overlooked," emergency flood waters pour over 11 c11111 -· ............ 1ou ~ ••••••••••••• ,.Mtt Sa '.d 01·ana So.debolham of the New them. $27,900 0-Point ····················IQ CNld Cll'e ··•············••·····-Dowr Shor• ••••.• , ........ ., 1oa COfttrlClor' •••••.•••••••••••••• MJI England Coalition on Nuclear Pol-Del harp-2 to E••tblutt ................... 10;,10 Dou G-. ...••......••..•.. ..as lul'·on. She battles Vermont Yankee The rod 's geometry is complex. The uxe-e~lra. s s ~ EL t•o .................. m:i Dr-1tt11111 .......................... _ flow of water O\ler them during or· bargain . Pride of ownership F-l•ln v111w ............ 1co.1 0r...-...................... . Crom the Coalition 's headquarters in d. reactor operation must be abounds. Decorators delight t::: =-=,·:::::::·:::: = r~ .::.:::::::::::::::::::: the damp basement oC an old sfone in ary with gold veined mirrored Hunlingtcin hKll-••••.•• 10C1 EIKtTolllc:s ••...••.••••••••••••. MD building in Brattleboro, Vt. exact. walls. Sparkling blue ~ Huntington tuor111w ....... .., 100 E'9'1\'1119 •...••...••...••...... all & BBQ are'. E losed red 1 .... 1,. •• • •.•.•••• ltloM Flr'IClnt •..•••.••••• : .......... .. Nucl ear c riti-ts claim that a. nc lrvt ... T•r•• ................ 1CM6 Fl~ •••.•••••••••••••••••• ..,, ntE 'VER'&IONT Yankee reactor flood fl brick patio with bubbling Lagune e.K11 ................ 1a. F._.. ..................... .. h a ' . b e' e n . c I o s e d do w n for emergency water ow patterns waterfall. 5% down to buy. u.-Hm1 •................. lHf Fllnllhn ...................... ..,. . would be differ ent, lpr;oducing hot Ce -· Be ch T •~-'-"""" NlOUill •• •••••• •• 10# G.lnMnl• · •• ••• •••• : ••••••. -.s m-.:.ificato·ons 1·n the nuclear fuel n..... a ownne .......... uu F.-................... iou Gotn1rtt ~ ···-··········...._ Uti spots in the fuel rods: Melling could lion. take-advantage of this Lkto 111e 1os. Gleu _, system. lt is toresumeoperationsthis result, further disrupting water now ""-I.I Call 963-fil67 Lim s..... .. :::.::.::::.:::::: itn Me1111119 .:.:::.::::::::::::::: .... . Call . B,·t fo·rsl the Coalition wan•· the ...... Iii n. · Lindi 111• .................. tOSt M111111 C11M:1& ••• ••••••• ~ ..... ..a u ..., and producing more melting. OPfNnl i. IT'S FUNro BE NrCE! ,,.,... ci.1 Mw •.•••..••.•••.•• 1°'1 HNtlft9 & A;r c... ........... olOSS operators of Vermont Yankee to ~ """' Vlflll ................ 1061 HouMclllnl119 ............... .u.. ·demonstrate at AEC hearings that the NUCLEAR ct · d lry Mklw•1 Clt'I' ................... 1065 •-Tu .................... ... TllE rea or 1n us Min ion Vll!IO .•............. 1ou Ironing ....................... .-modifications have improved sarety. contends this won't happen. tt bases 111--' ••acti ················ '°" . ..__. ....................... .... I ;.._., twlghll .............. 1070 Jlnltorl" •....•...... ·········*" its confidence on complex ca -N.-.port 11111"111 ................ 1071 Llndscl9inlll ................... :-. culations and computer.generated ""-'°1 s-a · ······ ····· ion Meld Sank• ................... .. 0.:..lllldl .................. 101• MllnltflartU .................... .... mathematical models oC r eactor NEAR THE BEACH ~n c1-'1 ........ · IU76 MllKlll"' ..................... ... . ~n Ju1n C.pblr-•..•......•. I071 MO-ting ..................... "" \ Durh1g 23 1no11lhs of operolio11 lhe Vermo11I Ya11kee 11uclear power plo111 has shul dow11 17 tl•es because of accide11ts, equipment fail11res, lighll1h1g slrlkes or dangero11s condilio11s. behavior. Only l'h nulcs to the surf S.n1• An• ............... , llJllO. Piin11..,..-1r.;11111 .............. tin from tills sparkling clean & £1n11 An• H"fh" .............. 1an P1inttne. s "' •.•..••••. , . .,_.. ..•. .,, In August, the AEC released results spack>us 3 bedroom 2 bath su1 Bead'! .... ,. .............. 1ou Pan.,. ... .-............. Mn .or a two.year, $3 million study to home on ideal cul·d~sac 101.· =~.~~ :·::::::::::::::::·~= ::!Mr'::=,·:::::".::::::::: .. : calcul ate the probability or a nuclear Call before It 's gone at only illnMt a.leh ........ .,. ........ :* Ph.1mblng ................... ~ ... r eactor catastrophe. The study, "" soo 556-1035 or 963-5611 Surtlldl ········-· ··· ·· on Pool Strvlm · ............. _,. ..,.,, · llnl .... rtlty Ptrlt ............... l.0'9' llemodlil a. ....,.... .•...••..•.• al wnose findings are disputed, found WALKER & LEE wuic1111 ..................... 10H lladlng ................. .- less chance of a nuclear reactor ac-REAL ESTATE ~~":~··;:::::::::: .. : ·tion." Problems· with nuclear fuel rods have caused hi gher than expected r eleases of radioacti ve gases . Through operator error the reactor was ·partially started up last year while the reactor pressure vessel was ·open and workers .Were inside the react or containment buildin g. Automatic saCety equipment look over and shut down the plant. No one was injured. In all, Vermont Yankee reported 39 abnormal occurrences to the AEC in 1973 and 12 more through the first seven months oC 1974. . Vermont Yankee's difficulties are typical or those besetting many nuclear reactors. The AEC compiled 861 abnormal occurrences in 1973 Cor all reactors and'a similar ntirbber the· year before. • TAKEN SINGLY, the problems have n't threaten ed public saCety. Nuclear power advocates point to the industry's sarety record ·-no mcm· her of the public ever has been in- jured. li owever, several plant workers have been hurt by radiation. Th"e plant, owned by Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corp., is designed to supply electrictty lo parts of Vermont and New Hampshire .. The debate about catastrophic ac· cidents centers upon the· nuclear Cuel inside metal rods suspended in a reac· tor's pressure vessel. The pressure vessel is a, large, sealed metal bottle. Nuclear Cission in the fuel produces ·vast heat which is carried away by water flowing ov"tJ; the rµe l..ro¢>. The heat produces steam to spin turbines that generate electricity. In their worst nightmares, nuclear engineers imagine termination of the dow or ~ooling water. They call it a "Class 9" accident. Heat from fissioning nuclear fuel quickly would melt the Cuel rods. releasing enormous quanliti"es oC deadly radiation to the.pressure \les- sel and the reactor containment, a concrete dome surrounding the pres· sure vessel. tlYDROG EN GAS mi g ht be generated in the process. Jr it ex· ploded, the containment might be rup: tured, r eleasing clouds or radion- Don't Waste Gas, Oil, Says Seaborg , SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Burning oil and gas to generate electricity is so close to being a erimethalit should be halted, Dr. ·Glenn T. Seaborg, Carmer Atomic Energy Commission chair .. m an. says. lion years for their lormation by . nature." Burning oil to generate electricit(. resulted in an energy convers1on e · . ficien«;y or less than. 4.0 percent, he said .. "Power plants still burn a lot oC oil and natural gas to make electricity," he .said. "A national policy should slOp that." l!onventiona1 power plants should switch Crom burning oil and natural gas to coal, Seaborg. 62, a Nobel prize· winning chemist, said here Monday. .Dil should be saved for transportation and petrochemicals and natural gas lie <"alled ror stronger pleas Crom· should be conserved for more essen· government to promote conservation tiaJ.uses. he said. _ •. or all scarce r.eJOW'tes. .. W~ MVST. STOP burning oil Just to']>ri5ltUce he-:rt lO"ln'lill.C c.le trl"CltY." he sa1d. "It Is almMt a crime to burn oil just lo jCet heat1 These are precious molecules that feqWred 2$ to 50 mU· • • "I WISJI Tll/\T our leadership ould-esk .. mor-e-or-the pubUe-ln thl regard," he said. "l think that some oC the suggestiotts be1ng made don't gofer enough." . • cidi!nt in the early 19fM>s killing 100 RMI Estate;, j [ji ~iJ19 · •· ·• .•.........•... .- people than oC an airliner crash killing NO DOWN VA General =:. R...ir .. ::::::.:·::::::::··= a similar number. You'll love the wkte open Tllloritlt ·· ................. .. feel.in,. of this Costa }.1~ 191..,,1'*" R..-r ....... ······· .... Chances oC a disaster killing 1,000 .... Motin. H-tor .... •••••••• nao t1i. ..•••• ·_-_., .•..•.•.•.... "'1 home. 3 Huge bedrooms, Mr•~ for ... , . • •••..•• 1200 T°" Soll •• ·: ................ .ott people were put al one in a million. 2 ba 2 brick trplcs tam """,,....,,,. tor .. _. •.. •·. •• •• 1• r .... 5efvlc9 · ••· •••·••·••• ••• • .,., 1 ' ' Susll'llU Pr..,..,., ....... 1400 Tvi.1ng ~ ....................... .,.. Actual tests oC safely systems never rm & much, n1Uch more. Clmlltrt" 1.oh-CrYptf ••••••••• t50CI upno1s1..,. .. . ............... ..,. No 2nd car needed here comn-c:1a1 Propert"r ••.•••. lllOO w;-°'"'• .. . ..... .,. have been conducted. _ walk to everything. A ccn1om1n1"'"" 1or seie ........ 1100 1 1~ -....:•· _, call I lull Ouplnu,.Unll1.,... •••.•••.• UllO --. The AEC plans such experiments in t.a1u1c v ... ue. or HOuM11o 11e n--s ........... 1f00 llldl 6......- a lest reactor being built at Idaho Fa!-details, 546-5880. •-Prgperty ······· · · 1000 . ,_ p,,_,., .............. 2100 Is, Idaho. But the project, first con-Loh for s.1e .. • •.••••• mo $dlOOlt. "'-iratl'1Jdlanl ......... MS ceived in 1969, has been plagued with :=!~11~~ ::...·::::::: I · ..... =.. 111•1 delays and budget problems. Data ~"':'s~!r!'r~ ·::::·::· =: . ---~-. fl from wh.ich conclusions can be drawn """""'"'!"'!~"'!""'~""'iR•ncM.F•r-.GrWH ........ 2100 .,. w ...... ...,. ···'········· _ d ·1 Real Ell1l1 ExCM"" •••.••. 21100 ~ ._.. are notexpecte uni• · 177. BElTER THAii RHI e1111t w1n1.o ......... 2'°' Jae. Wltflf9d. FllMle .......... 1151 It Jobi W1~tlll, M & 1' •••• , ...... lt7Y' NUCLEAR POWER plant critics ' Help W1nled. M .. F 71CID -~~~ ~~:~t t::re~a~~e ab!~;dp~i~~ ~ueN;:. ~N t!i~!A~~ ~'--"-'-'"" __ _.ll_.11 '•-... l[~J reactor components functioning per-bedroom +2 be dr oo m . · Cectly. triplex ln the heart of Costa HouN1 ru...llhl!I ......... 1100 Anllques ..................... IOK F I I · ·1 t VIO · HouMI unturnllhed l2llO -""Ptl•-••••••••.•..•.•.•.•••. 8011 or ex.a mp e, va ves s1m1 ar o · Mesa. ln be a ut i ( u t con-Housa lurn or...,, ·::·:· .. :: UID Auction .................... I015J 25A had failed to open twice beCore at dllion. c~1n1-'""' · ........ ., sa Slev(;les ····· ····· ······ · .... .. Vermont Yankee. The stuck gates f[RGUSOrf.llESJER ~====~.'.::::::: 5 ~~,:.':. ':'~~·::::::-.::: were blamed on difCerences in water DuPll••• 111"' ............. JS50 ~1 •••• ::::::::::::::::::::::: pressure on each ~de of.the valve. Reoltors, Inc. Duple-untvr.. ••.• .•• .••••• :l6CID Fr" 1• Yau ................... Md But after the mishap last P.larch, . ""r1men11 furl! • •• ..... mo Furnl!\n ..................... ea engineers discovered.that while hot ~401 Dove St., Ste. 220 =:1:;~'~':i~.: .. ::·::::::: = S-:.::::::::::::'.::::::::: water had coursed lhrpugh Vl0·25A, _ ~3-~I~ ___ ... ::=. 90.ro·:·::::::::::::::: ~-~.::::::::::::::·: its internal parts had expanded. Then ~~ Ho"1" MaMls ................ •1ao 1..1wnlodl ................... 1111 the_ gate wouldn't budge when BUILDER'~ADE·IN t::,:!..."-;:.:,.0 ::.:::::::.::. ::::i =:;:::::,.;; ... ·"·:·::::::::::·:: operators attempted to open it. · Like new 4 fam ml. v.c111on R ... 1.1s ...... mo MIK'lll•-W.tllllll .......... ... Procedure s for testing the Lusk Built I ted R..,1111101111r. ........... ooo ,-..ius1u1 1""'"'""""s ....... .n e oca G••IOH tor mll • ' .• .• . 450 O"I<• F~ ~ E-.••.... -. ·emergency coolant system were in Harbor View area . Ottlc• 11 ... 111 ............. IQI Pf'l1 .................. IOIJ' modified to prevent a recurrence. Cathedral beam ceil's in liv 11111 ... 11 Ren114 ·• ........ .uso ~!!!°'.,, !.~ .·:::::::·:·:.::: S I lllCIW!flll Rllllll ••••.•.•....• ot50ll -.........--& fam rm. pa c o u ! stor1111 .. .. . . "™ Sportlnt Goon ............. ..,. NOTING TIJE high incidence or ab· ceramic tile entry. 1.rg: d t1•n1111 w1111..t ............ ~ store.Rt111U1"..,i.a. •••••.•••• 10K normal ooctfrrences at nuclear reac· rm, eating nook in kitch, MIKtll-Rtnllls · •• "'511 Sw1P1 .. ·· ............. ""' tors. an AEC task Corc:e this year cal-crplS, drpe, park·like yd. ,...-------, Tv. Aldity,HlFI, s...-.o · · ~·· - led for tougher inspections throughout fully sprinklered and cov'd I~ I ~~ I •Ji the reactor industry. To prevent patio. $91,0CXI. Xlnt, finan· ~ . _ . 1'. I k V Y , cing '6.Vail. Call . . problems i e ermont anitee s LUSK co. (ll4) 644-1321 GMtt•I ·· ·············"'° stuck-Valves, the task rorce said. the ::::: ~·-~ ... :: ... :: .. :! ::::; :!~':.~,.,;.i.i·:::::·: quality. or reactor design, construc-1~-s-:-=s~:-=s~:-=s-:-=~-=-=~-:-=tl BOii"' ,._ .. . ............. .. lion and operation should be more ln11911"*" Oppart'y • ••••••••• 51115 aoa11. 1t ... t.c111...,. ............ tut WESTC:UFF 1nwe1im.nt W1n1td ............. 5020 &olll. Sall .. , ............. ... closely monitor.ed. ,,.._., ,. i.. .. n ............... setts &01tJ. MIP~t, .............. ..,._ E has! "ng d · It · .. _,_, " h e on BOllL~a.-........... .. mp z1 unng an n erv1ew ...,....,,, P••ct o D1 Mon.., W•ntM •..••.•••• , • llXID eo.1 .. stot.,. .•.••••• ,... that he spoke only ror himself, Her-market. Move ln condition. Mot"ll?flo Tr1111 Dllct• •••• .IOlS I ·-11·oon . ll•f bcrt J .C. Kouts, head or the AEC's Pw!K'r 1iquMlating. N<nv ex· ,. __ • reactor safety research program, cal· ceilent financing avail able. I 116') led for creation or\rigorous standards :t·m:. Ev11• .tu..AA.74 AnnoUnc.wtt Alru1n .. . ......... 111• that would assure the use or "nuclear -~ ,_.,.....,... · · ='c.~~~ .. ::::.:::::·fi: grade " equipment in key reactor ,,,...__,.,, .. s1eo Ndlllt ~ .............. tt• ·areas. · c-,._. .................... suo =~SoMS:; •• ·:::;·;:: "Just because a valve has worked """Notka •• ••• • , s:iee ,,,11tn, Tr.w4 .. ···········",. ell in a chemical plant doesn't mean !:'~1':;~;..t;···········: It's OK for a nuclear reactor," Kouts I' jrri'l ' •· ..... ~ .. -· said.· • ""' ... -· L:1J I ---1 .. Greatly expanded AEC inspections ASSUME/'fh & LOAN . . would cost r:nUlions or 'dollars more SUPER POOL HOME L111t' ,_,. ••• •• • . • m o_,.. ·· ............. ts1• per year. llundreds oC suppliers of Bltns. frpl, mR. Nr. So. 1 ~~"::'~~~··:·~:::::::= reactor components now are not in· Caul Plaza. Only 3 yn I '-'a. R11tt. •• ............. ~ .spected. -~ old. Nlee-bk yd w/fireplt. Petlonlt• ~= .~~.:::::::;::::.:: ... :: lnereased tn~pt"cttom mlght-extendl-µ-_S29l.._pcr mo to.L.J.I '-------'· "'-11 1.1111.~r.T ......... tsiit lh.tl'me o·tnow••kes to planandbulld pyml•• $38,900 f ull · ........ -""w.= .................. .,. .-f;:'-/"-t1 PRE S T t C E ""-" · ·· · ·• ... ·· ,,,_ ················"" tor ••m•tlmes by as m c.h as ~· -, ........ Autell., ..,...... •••••••••••••• .,.. a reac -.,.., u OMES. G45-6G48 aoc: •• --•••••••• ...... A111oa. ,... · ................ ,. -JO yea~s ~ !!!..,.,,..,..,~..,..,...,,.I ''•"" ..... · , AllMt. u... • ............ : ..• ,,.. • \ ' ~ -·· ... ~. .... • • • 1002 Gfftral ~~.ay, N~~si;:::,.1 R.E. 1002Gener•I R.E. 1002 General R.E.., d ;Q82 General R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1001 Gentr•I R.E. 1002 G9nerat' R.E. li2 1==========·/,;::::::::::;;;;=;;;,:::::::;:::;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;,;;I.;;;;~·~~~~~~~~$?~ Llalboo lay troptHtln * EXECUTIVE SPARLING ·;;,n J. J~fe-NEED INCOME UNIT • -H:bo, v iew 11 • .;,., $32.tso -'ff~tt';t~ .. ~~~,;..t Ul a , You will find just about any kind of Income Popular Palermo Model Costa Mesa. 3BR., nlct ~~-home arow>d Im- PRESENTS CORONA DEL MAR Beauitful delu xe duplex, south of high"•ay. J us t reduced $5000. 3&3 with Iireplace, beam ceilings, etc., etc. DANA POINT 6 units. 2 years old. \Valk to Marina. \Vill accept trades. $155,000. NEWPORT - Steps to the beach. Great rental area. 3&2 for only $95,000. THE HEIGHTS Choice location. 4, den , fireplace, 2 bath. Needs so1ne TLC. ?'\1ake oiler. $57,950. BAYSHORES You'll love il. 3 bedrooms, 3 bath, newly decorated. Fee land. $120.000. WE HAVE MANY RESIDENTIAL & IN- VESTMENT PROPERTIES FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION. CALL US FOR YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS. SPARLING REAL -ESTATE 833-3544 General R.E. 1002 General R.E. · IOO? &"'14@ ~. 190 Newport Center Dr. (Fashion Island) Lind• Isle Waterfront property m our huge inventory. Several of Exquisitely customized fam rm Lge back yard maculate lf'Oundl· Rumpus Lovel y s BR .. 3 bath custom home. Large tho duplex.., are st111 under construction & & expanded. 6 BR, fam. /BBQ. E · ti u ~:"ud'.':!.th ~i>f1 -~ ";;'7~~0~ courtyard. P ier/slip. Reduced to $195,000 may have changes made to suit your require--rm., din. rm, + o!c. vr · xcep ona Y ma .......... _ .. ments. Prices range irom $17,000 to $152,500; Low maint. grounds. clean. Good terms. 642· lalboa ltl1ne .. 1006 _ Tradltlon1I Style near the ocean. 675-7060 7491. Beautifully decorated 5 BR., 41h ba. Panel· ing, 3 frplcs. Pier/slip. $260,000. • Custom Spanish Hom• 5 BR, 5 ba., art studio. Gourmet kit. Eleva- tor. Pool. 7000 sq. fl. Ramp & float. $450,000. 70 Linda Isle Drive Prime 45 IL lagoon lot -$15Q,OOO For information on All Homes & Lots Call BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR 341 Boy~1de Or1vL· N 8 b7S 6161 General R.E. 1002 General R.~. 1002 THE "BLUFFS" -$74,950 & $71,500 Lush new landsc in the ONLY NEW I-story "LINDAS" left. 3 BR, 2 bath, formal dining, great kitchens. Custo1n drapes & cptng. Pool. 2111 San Joaquin Hills Ro•d NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 OUR YCAR BAY AND BEACH 675-3000 --------BALBOA lSLAND tlome &: EASTBLUFF GLEN MAR tnoome. 38R, 2'BA + l h\me Super clean 4 BR. home • BR ·rental. 2 car gar. 01ily Huge fam./dln. rm. Itunt. Beach. Beaut. 3 $129,000. Submlt--Vacant. New1y redec. Owners BR., 2 ba. Fenced yard, ~JLOT REAL!~ gpr.1. an x l o u s! S70,300. trees. Near s ch o o I . 00 LL liOUSE, completely ['~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 640r8484.----:... $43,~. 5~ remodeled, 3 BR, ~ Ba. [, m Country kitchen. + 1 BR General R.E. 1002 G1nor1l R.E. 1002 REALTORS CB Apt. Patio, cl.,.. to Bay. ?407 L COAST HWY CORONA OLL. MAR $129.000. Owntt 1J75.,.7016 4 Local Of!lces To Serve You . e.lboo P1nln1uto 1007 &414te@ ~~ 190 Newport Ce nter Or. (Fashion Island) EXCELLENT RENTAL PROPERTY DUPLEX-In Corona del Mair. All new con- -struction with builtins and beam ceilings. One 3BR, one 2BR. $115,000. CALL Elion, 640-1120 RESIDENCE : SSl-6140 General R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 -------2 Story Colonial A PAIR OF Estate TWO 'S 1002 Genorol R.l. 1002 , GET THE GOODIES Fantastic view home in Harber Vie\\' Homes Ill. Like new but completely landscaped, draped, carpeted, shelved, spanish tUed and ~ssessing a dog run, door opener and bf.eath taking panorama of Newport Beach. At $89,950 better see it soon! 4 Bedrooms-3 UNIQUE HOMES RHltor. 675-6000 \\'on't Q:CI you very lar in 2443 E. C.oast Hig.hway, Corona del Mar Baths Plus 'Hb9e 13311 W. BALBOA BLVD NICE 2 Br, Jt.2 lot 25x90. $58,00J. Miller Re a I t y , 642-181l Corona del M.r 102'! - -Don't Cil ttt• A Dualexl! I'm a del!gtitfuf 28R and den owners · de ...ce with beau. titu1 private llTOUndl PLUS A Channlni 1f : rental with private yard ~tly pl'!> . duclng 225/ino. ALL on a eeneroua 47XllB lot in the be•~ south-oi·hwy loca.· tion. $89,500 tJrm Call 614·7211 1002 BALBOA ISLAND D.ellgbllul "new" home on "The Island". "ABANDONED" Bonus Room Frpl in master suite, top quality construe· I ·--------•'Huge 2 litory + cool pool! 1002 '~.E. u poke1· ganlC but lhl~ pair I •'!'"~~~~~~~!!!~!!!~~~..,..,~~ or brand new bench duple)(. 4 SALE OWNER General R.E. t002 es Y.'lll put you on the right road lo an ex c e 11 c n t in-SACRIFICING v"'lmeol prog>~m. M•y be 3 BR & DEN Sharp· sharp home, lge yard • priced under market hurry won't last, $32,950. 14n NIGEL OAILEY ~ ASSllCIATES "''d toge!"'' " apart. """ ASSUME have 2 three Hr 2 Ba luxury unit! suitable for owner S 1/4 °/o FHA lion w/loads of extras. 4 Irg BR. $159,500. MINI RANCH LAGUNA HILLS Also walk to beach '°' CALL Ellen, 640.1120 Neat a! a pin & twice as sw·fers. Loods or cupboard RESIDENCE : 551-6140 ASSUME $14,500 nice! A real condominium space and closets for 1nom. l~--~~-----~-~~~---l~002= Enttr through tov."er trees. buy in one of our fastest Also new carpets lhru out. occupancy p e r re c t 1 y m 0 n I c ur@<I General R.E. 1002 1 General R.E. · •• Large rantlly sized livin• growing at'ens. Existing 4 h ug c f um i I Y s i :t e d · PLUS la ndscape. Secluded entry. 1---------1 room. J?ound up 11 ze d t1-fA loan can be assumed. bcdroonts + 3 b!lths. HUGE Finl Owner Depreciation Cozy parlor wiUi rock BEACH AREA EASTS! OE . 1.;1chcn. Dine. Huge 2 o • $.Jt500 B 0 N US RO 0 l\I \VI T If ONLY $85,000 EA. fire pln«". 'family dine . MESA VERDE BUILDER'S OR INVESTOR'S SPECIAL! • PONDEROSA. PAr.TY OntU POO L TABLE! L ush CALL ~n11 Cheerie k it chen. H~e CHARMER HIDEAWAY-ROOl\J w I t h comniandlng ~ landscaping. 3 car garage bedrdoms. ASSUJ\.1E 5l4.% lrn1naculate, 3 BR & rum· pus-Palos Verdes fp-<DVl'd palio · exQeptklnal buy at $37,900. In this exquislte Park llun-llUGE wr, 110 by 1~. vie-.v or ht!avily w o 0 de d 21 ~-~t or cxc·trll cu r·. FHA LOAN \l.•ith paymcnl~ -......,--:,---. I hrg tO n air coifll1nmifd 01,der l ~ horoe "'ith . grounds. Jlidca"'li.y spttcious ~ -',..,,e" IJ1Ql't'~ ! all to see · $180/n¥:>, AU lhls plus. °"'alk be a u-t y,. Gr.and "l'nuY. hll{.>e studk>: flr91lace, trees mailer suite.· s c par a 1 c 963-6767. ,. to shopping &. sc h o o I s. C t F J Formal ·dlnl""· co u n 1.r y 11.iMt-shru.bs gu!Oi'e. Olli. m childrcns ·suite. Take o\·er £!Nnt 9 • m FUN JO BE NICE/ Loads of "·allpe per and us om ourp ex R·2 lo! in heart of CDrona del ~1ar plus 2 Bdrm d1ve ll i n-g, clo1e lo ' eve1-ythlng. Can't beat this ptice $54,000. -•VISION• ' ;-kitchen with -eoenllng area. about lhl!i one o! a kind ~·~ VA loan. NO NE \\' CORBIN-MART.IN I" ~ shutters + boat gate!· CX· Spanish 4--plex, lge custom Fontily fun. Parly r 0 0 m property: Asking ~.000. LOAN COSTS $ 2 8 9 / mo . Realtors TOP 'BLUFFS ceptional \'alue • full price bit, 2 BR units, bltns, choice REALTY with !ireplace. S p a c Io us Owne~. will he!f\ Itnance. p ays a 11. H u r r y ca 11 * 644-7662 * LOCATION only $0,950. Hurry ca. I I a r e a of N·E WP 0 RT 6754600 Anytime bedroon1s wllh mru;tcr suite. 5'1D-ll:il. 963-1881. 842-2535. BEACH-priced righ t, at 2743 E. Coast Hwy CUI de 811c srrcct. Don't OPfNTlt II• fT'S FUN 10 BE NJCEI I ".:~~::;:;:;;;::;:;:~1; Great lhree bedroon1 plus Ol'f.NT/l 11 • fT'S FUN 10 BE NICEI $ll5,000 Corona del Mar '"" -"""'11 ho loo laJ•. ~ I· MESA VERDE UPPER 2'.I b•I"' homo. L ar i' -~ ) ,...-I., LOCATION/LOCATION ~~B:*~~~~=~i :~~~~~:::=-~~i-i-;I!~~~ .. ~~~~~~ CREAM ruFP BAY ;;;n~~;::!;:~,~!~~:;: lt~a;itl1 ~vruu~21 ~ ~~~-~ ~~:nn~liddl:i~'. 51' 01 LOAN IX't'n upgraded with nc v.· __ -renred. $69,500 ' OCEANFRONT 14 t O vi,yl lloora. "'w """""'I WAJ[R VIEW * * * * I 4 Bdrm.'i., '.? llaths: ch:ilct GREEN BROOK Su~r sha111 four bedroom " • . " & OC\V kl!chcn appliances. Lo\iely 50 IL ft.1 lot, ,.1 slylc v.ith bcantt'd c<!i lirigs NEWLY LISTED hon1e on short Slreet near Out by the . DUCK Jo ARt!I Call us for appolntnient 10 • . 1797 Orange, C.rit. quality-3 bdnn., formtll din· 1 ~~';'"'1~~~~~'"'~~ I & loft. On R·2 Jot•, could be LAR'GE FAMILY !he golf course. Beautifully -51!e tins custon1lz~ 3 see. 673-8550 l PROPERTIES 6~2-1771 ing, 3 paUOll, pod for travel u11gradrrl for gracious liv-bedroozn + huge fa n11 1 YI 1::;:::=:::::=::::::::z::z=:= . bus or ! $95.000 BEST BUY IN TOWN coniertl'<I 10 duplex. Owne r ROOM ing. I::nclo~I patio in front. roon1 11'llh raised hea r t h OPEN nLll • "3 FUN108ENICE' I -Ll11Ung.1 of Chris Hopper Super sharp 4 BR v.·Jpool. "o~ld like!· 10 trade up. ONL y 1 YR YOUNG Private b.a1;lcyard \\•ith SP8C· fircplac~. One of the biggest f ~ ~ New 3BR, lam rm $89.200 Brand New Price Univertlty Rulty Top re&idcntial area with Prk'ed a.1. $129,500. · • • ious gardens. All that plus yards in lhc areo, com-• r a. N . 3BR ""A .,.., n= B I u f f s Condon1lnlum. l """I E c t H -•~o '·U ITT'"""' 6 • ••>< E,., pl•1oly ••·!-·-• ·-"th cl·"u 1 · ........ c e11o; u,;o .,....,;NU ~ · 5 • wy. 'II •~• pride-of-ov.·nersbip nbrhood. ~ : 1"""""""' 1....,.-""' ._ Here's a best buy home. an assun1able S~i<;{. loan-bl:_,_ ro..'.j'1· ,°""",-•J• .1 uu 1 40 Ac. not New SlllOOac Bedroom11. 21,~ baths. Builtln . Estat• Builders Price reduced lo S·11,9.30. Owner hris UP'gaded this $186 JX'r mtinO, pays princi· """· r u r '-"'• lUi New lBR 2BA $88,300 kitchen. Fom1nl d I n in g. call to tiee-hon1c beautifully. 4 bcdro-pal. inlcrcst and taxes. $43,000 Like nu 5BR dup· • $119.500 Charming fire place. On a · International S4;)..42S!I oms, 2 ba ths. c h ar ming \\'Ol'l'l last long. Call 546.2313 1 ,tiew 38R condo $44,850 large corner lot, steps lo is preaenlly taking relt'l'Vn• GLANTZ REALTY SERVICE 1 brick patios & p I an t er s. MAKE OFFER \\'ATERFRONT rondo $59.500 Tennis Club. S72,IXXI tkilllli on their n e w con· I Don't mis! lhls S pa ni s h OPEN Tit 9 • rr'S F~ 10 Bf HICE/ 2211 ii II. Ne11i· lBR condo $57 ,800 don\lniunu, Canyon Cr e 1 l appeal? Sell' Your equipment I WALKER & LEE • 1~11 The O\\'l\Cr of this "°· bedroom Like Nc1v JBR rental $350 Private Beach ncr of PadfJc View Drll'f! !Outdoor sports lost it s beauty. a.15-9~91 '~'," ~ 646 ".lmll . Lse/Op Duplex SL?tl.000 Your Own Estates, loca ted et the COi'· with a low~t Dally Pll~ 1 CLASS SELLS-b42-56'78 Real Efitalc POO L home lS DES. OLD v.•alerf.rOnt $91500 In Bea utiful Canioo Shores.I &; ne1\· i\1acArthur Blvd in Gener•f R.E. 1002 1 General R.E. 1ooii--------~ Sun/ Eve PEHAi'E. He haf!o 10 sell! IF' you jwu ··HAVE·· to 111~nd i.:nJoy thi11 vie1v hoine on Corona dcl ~1ur. sta~lng B h I P d i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•j 546-.4140 J11tcrest rates have drop~l nic.re. 01{. \\'c\·e sOt ihem a 1 a r g", prof~lonally al SSG.900. J>HONE G·ID-6t00; Extro.Mdinar~ f~i cobUt. Newp&i t!re,rt at ~Newp&-t 13eotk. \1Jt10.:1c rise? And nolti•no !>Oulh u! S··u H;ll'lc!1~ l:iolrtnf's~ 111 .mr.•.,r• n 1•:11h 6t1! 1nr•n 11 rlr~ \ rJr 1\ 1 01111 ,11e,-n fJ• · ;i r ·LJr1t<1rC:-. 1;;111.()111•·:. "rid J•·1.k~ t V• r;»:r·• t• !.;J,11)0lJ'i .:r(.:•11"1" tJ.it;r1g r··•.1(11 ·ni····· 1()1 Ui\\'!1'11•'"'' I \'11~ I :,r1~,,tn,.1J rl,[ r~ rJ' 1~· ! .:ITU(I~ :.·~·1• ''irv 01.:lif ~,tk·r r1:r1111 11,LJ~!IJ• v11·" ,1.11, 11! 10 ti• .ippr• 1 1.11 I lv\Qtr• t11J ·~u: 11 1 ,\v•·t'll· t11,;n1 ti lo' 11IC CO'J!>I H•·Jr·.·. \' •·1<~!11 n1.1.111n:n1~1·l'>!/rirn S5t,QQQ . .' I\'.' rfrl f V<'f)' l"'nf \' ;.•1rj 1'1t·n ~Jt" ( <'11 .1>1!1 :! f'lle~·11 1o.~r1 t:.1·,:. tr • 1!11 r ''..Ill 11111<1\I \'J• t iJ ILJ' 1r;fu1 ol rr..,,.r1 (1"111" ,, ... Call (71 <1 , 645-61•1 GC, e 0r G and the prh't's are going loo!?! lands1.:o.•""'I oonM!r -lot. 4 002-~I C -d I M A CENTRAL up. So H you have been J b RI ~· ~..;.c~------' Orona e Gr COURTYARD considering a nc11' aco $ ty Bt'dl'oonis, t11111ily ro om , FOR BEAUT . LIVING With Pool Set.~ the inood foi· thill Dover STARTER-HOME-horne-rMJw is the Jin1c and .' (;l\('("rfu·! fplc .. , delightful 239 Poppy Ave, Shor<'s rcsi1\ence. The dark ONLY $23,SOO this 111uy he 1'HE ONE. 67.S.6670 blln. krtl.'hcn. Ne\vly deco-L>\·eiy l &Inn + Guest Qtrs Call us about this dcsit•ablc LRl one ol our experienced rated, $159,000. + a:u rnge ii·/ba ch. Qtr!I, Corona Highlands 2 br 2ba v.·oocls. "111"sivc d 0 0 r s· VACANT c'{)l!llM'loni rtlscuss "'ilh ''OU ~C"'pol·t Bl~·c~~~l.:_ 644-7270 1·, re••(-ao••ld•). E " c I . I ho Il l 1 "1'0U;;:ht iron, floor t i 1 e S. " ... ...._.. .., poo me 11' 1 ur ge add to the r.tediterrancan OWNER ANXIOUS the muny diff<'r('nt \i•aysof ~ brick patio, brick t"rpl c . master sllite private bench 1;harn1 of !his Ivan \Velis pul'('hBsin~ v.·\Ui the help NEWPORT SHORES · Financing avail. Make of. access ond very s pecial Ch••· · 11 1 1 ol llTI a11xious seller. On Th C I -'''· ••10,000. Avail lmm·". r I ln home. :"1 BR., 4 baths: bay ... n11ng lilll!I 1on1e n ex· .., "" SG9~nc g arrangements. vlcv.'. Huge kitch. ivi t h cellent Fountain V&.lley ~AR.IC PLAC'a~ J US T RE~u~":o! 4 MORGAN REALTY Call G.l.J-.7211 island, forn1al D.R., !lpt'C· arcu. Clo~ 10 shopping & lt......_'l"Dftll-ler-Bcdrooni honie. Huge fam l· * 552-4222 * lncular master suite. Only ~hools .. Doubh' garng1• with 842·7461 I Y r'o o n1 p I u I d t! n, I ~~~~~~~~~ $169 000 nlL"e pa Lio. Bellf'r hurry on 1\'a\crfront ""lio ond clof'k. 1 · ' this one. a-15-9.191 in• LIKE OLD TIMES 1 ' · HARBOR WALKER & LEE I FREE &.CLEAR Nero' olbow '""'""psi"'. ~ \l'l l II d and hnl\gination but Is now -2 FOR .1 SALE _ l'eal Esate (ow niust se or tra e exccllent buy for right peo.. RELAX BLUFFS DE LUXE-170 Acres. Hwy. frontage pie Hcre'ii a lot for ytiur nM>ney. I Largest floor plan availaii!': Sl20,000 PETE BARRETI A \'('lj' pleruiant surprise 2 atlj. R·2 lots So. of Hwy. w/4 unit bldg. Flx·up or tear dn. Owner 1acrillce at less than land value . Incl. plans for 2 new du· plexl!t. 675-6900. . ,, 'II' S · I 4 · -GEM-1tv.·ait11 }'Our in•pectlon. 2 Y.'I a m1 ion \11c"· ant spac1uus bdrms., fnn1Hy -REALTY--I [ bedroon1 and I be dro om pn\'Bcy u n s u r Pa II~ c < • SINCE 1,,., tm., lonnal clinin'•".Tn., \\'Cl L."()..F Tustin Ave., N.B. ~ '1od 3 "-" ho ' ,,...., slucco· exterior ho uses " crn . ,...._...,1wn1 rill' 67, .,00-bar + finished bonus room. REAlf'ORS 642-4623 642-5200 675-4060 ,c~··~·~·~Mo~""----..;.:1024 f • I f lh b 1 PR T e&Al!lde R·2 k>t. Full baths. with cozy tlrn for rlad and """" DelighHul end unit w i I h I ES IGE HOME locared oo extra Ja r g e am1 y rooni or c __ __ open g r een c t view. ~~ Children. I l · 1 imnuiculalc EASTS I DE TRIPLEX c;11arm1ng garde~ pa 1 io ~}.jard to ruKI 3 br mot;lcl Double garage. Call for ap-$1500 DOWN and rcndy to move Into. Soper value ut SS5,500. In pre5llgC homes House • polntment $ 3 9 , 9 5 0 • Call c.n """""· RARE FIND · 2 """"'°~ c. F. Colesworthy l• IMMACULATE ·t""'°"" Above the Average 64&-m1. MESA VERDI! This luxurious l bedroom, 2 bltth fa1nlly home ha! a large tree·!haded yard large eoough for a px>! and convertible f·•r traile r , campe r, or hoe.I Rceftl. A~ prai!ed al\CI appro\'ed Ior VA 9i~% loan. Ol'ENT1l11 •11SFUN10BENICE' each+ den a.nd f1rcplaet? You really niust sec if you OPENTIL l •fT'S FVNTOBEHCE! , in 011i1ncr·~ unll .. l:x~llent Realtors 640-0020 like lhe sp~le of really 1?C3li51n. P'~ll price $69,900. Don't give up the ship! I SHARP horn . Call a g t 'f H Ar VA' Se 11 e i· pays Call 54()..U51 points!! 4 Bedrooms, 2 , 1 · • You;1: find II In Chu ·tied 8'17-6010 now lo see. bat.s, family roo1n n little • General R-:-E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 GEi\1. Crisp • clean U\ruout, 1 ;~~~~::::~~~= THE REAL ESTATERS BY C11·ner. 3 BR ho m c. only $39,900. 1rorkshop. Lot 60 x lfiO. ~ COATS 518.!>W. $2000 dn & $120 1110. &. Ov.'ncr w!ll c;u1•y lsl TO. I "\Vhite Elephants''. over· · WALLACE :i1;,o BrnthcHon, llon1e tun ning }'Our house? Turn Ganh:ns, C•11n11:~ them int o •·cash" ... sell REAL TORS GIVE THANKS IM I.Quall ~ In }'"Olli' own l>eautiful Trina PlaC' • rnodel, 3 BR., 3 ba., on rtl a qulel cul de sac in the Prape •• ', Bluffs. 752-1920 Sell odlr 11e~.1?o 1V1th !l :it11lv then1 lhru 11 Daily Pilot -546-4141- Pilot On!l!!fled ncl. 642-ss·fs I ~'~'"'-';_n~""=·'~'~--=~ 11 (Open Evenings) Owner says "sell" 1400 auatlST. NtW.OtT 11acH G•neral R.E. 1002 Genna! R.E. 1002 LOW PRICE, LOW DOWN PAYMENT An ideal fa1nily fixer-upper with great financing. A University Park 4 bed room, 21h bath to\vnhouse near pool. park &..shopping. Price was $56.950. now $52,000. Petfect for macnab / Irvine realty COME HOME TO BAYSHORES Peaceful surround ings 'n' beach, cozy 'n' co1nfy 3 bedroon1 ho1ne. $651000. Jack Custer 642-8235. (W60) ' ~ CORONA DEL.MAR Tremendous Ocean & Jelly VIEWS. 5 bo,d· r oom Cameo Shores ho1ne in exquisite con· ditlon. Room for pool • maniCured entry courtyard -ninny pri vate patios & gardens. $310.000. 1'om Quee~ 044-6200. (W6.1) MESA WOODS Near new 4 bedroon1 , 3 bath, 2-story home w/beautifu\ ya rd. Spacious floo r plan. Con· versation pit. $61,950. llelen BalJ 'M4-6200. (W62) • . . SOMETHING SPECIAL Nearly new French Georgian § bedroom home w/numerous quality fea tures. Excel· lent Westclil! location. Appl. only. Charles Arnold 642-82.35. (IV46) the sn1:i rt investor. 2 PLUS 2 PLUS 2 2 Bedroom home plus separate 2 bedroon1 guest quarters off of garage plus 2 bedroom . garage apartn1ent. Exc ellent Corona clel J\1ar location. $85.000. WHITE WATER VIEW One or California's most bcautiftll lots with forever ocean view. 70' Frontage in exclu- sive Co rona de! ltfar. $150,000. :rHIS 15 REALLY LIVI NG Private beaches, gated area, boat facilities, plus a beautiluL garden oricntcd..Jl bedroom_ home on oversized lot. Enjoy this happy ho1ne. $1501000. ·GREAT VIEW -IRVINE TERRACE 4 Bedroom. fa mily room. free-form pool· with waterfall . gourmet kitchen, cathedral beamed ceilings, walnut paneling. e!fective- ly~corn bine to create .. comrortable, chann· ing home. $167,500. • COLONIAL BAYFRONT Fabulous vie wof bay Aind mountains from lovely 4 bedroom home situated on....two 30' lots. Garden, plj!r and Qoat, sandy beach And show. true n10tivati0n ---Olant Spanish v.•\th prlec reduclion t o Beautiful Greenbrook 4 bdrm S69.500 is just I year old! Show1 NO HOUSE e~,.~~~,.,~1 1 uko a .-I home. Famuy · · • :.i~• ·~ rm, irplc, electric built-Ins. ! JUST DIRT • • I 111 n1 a culate lalldscap~. In l.iPRUliful dov.'llt(iwn eo~111 • Sil p,\000. Call ;.~1120 i\lh!lll. Build your ov.'n on lhl• d.,or R-1 lot. Jw;t 0 * '75·59:10 * [ ...... ·~ short 11o;·aJk to 17th St. \Vesr 36.17 E. Cst. H1vy., Cdltl ...... QIU shopping & professk>nel "-"-"--"--B~A".'l'Y~S~H~O~R~E~S-"-"'-"'"' I •• llWLC? ' areas. Th!11 111 nn ESfATE ft I Vll.'1 I •S 0 AL1,!:;n trus •. ,.,1,"" .':°1.oooll fl~~~."",. Ba111:aln boouty In a private ... _ -----" ,._.._ ~ ...,.. \va llt'd comrnw11!y w i I h 29SS' Harobr J{arbor Blvd. Len1·r1 more about this ONE rirlvare beaches. Beautifully BUY OR RENT OF A KI ND call 6*-7ITI. de<.<orated cha rm ing home Ith n ri ·" ,_ ! Br, 2~) Ba townhou!e near ·-•nt II • tr'S FUN 10 8E ·-·• w owe ng ... ne1 euurn· B k JI W I k ~ '""" 1 r w:1 tlo eo pit ac ay. a Ina "~· '"' ng roo tu po • m e dist&""° lo-1chool1. Good ·1 wtaucsl house In the rear ....... r l tor lttntlgt'l'll or grandmll. investment. Owner wlll &ell I Plen_ty_ ot parking and al l at ~. r;i0 wl\easc option for $64.950. 01• rent for $3&5. mo, Owner _.:;S;:_:;;:P:;:LE;X;:-~B;EA;:C:;;::H";Lu: •~:::~! -~~1'\'.u:~LTv SHOWS Propertln . A MUST SIEl SPENDABLE 752•1920 4 Br, 2 Ba home, con1pl. . t•o~allSl, NI . 'lfa(H Ol)iradcd. Solnrlan l I 0 0 r I Plride of ownenshlp 5 plnx. LOW DOWN kitche n & bftlM, · untcd \.Vin. Close to bench. INCLUDES dows In fnni)ly rm. Net1r 3 Bdrn>.. 2 balh. lfomo TO ASSUME So. Cooat Piasa. Md wait wftll,""4 wills. Be a u 11 f u I 'di Y'OU. hear the prlct! """"''"· E""lol<d '""'" 70;0 LO~N >dLLER REALTY courtyard-garden. 212 x alr.e &U-411 I ~ u •• 1 Payments only '2\2. Buys ===~::..=::o:-~~-1 o t , ~ct ent u1w1tmen , thlt 1ovcl,y POOL fl o rn e , EASTSIDE FAP.ULY HOr..tE. 842--2$3.i. .. Prtctd for qutck aalel Call 2 4 convert. dtn, 1t1:pdn hm OP£N11l ••rN M10BEMCll ~. s.&7...f.010 nowt • •m w/ mualw brtck fpl A-din-din l'.tta., 2nd fpl Wfttslde "' ... ·1<1 d..,, ""'• ..,. throut, bltin ldl, c 0 v ' d . l ' • -on additional lots. $435,000. -IA 64Cl766 Nt•l>Of1 Beith, Calilefnl4 t 266l I I~~~~~~~~~ --~eor-Down1--i~Uo~J$leed LdL.I P.~c •-----1 bl ~ c -143,960. RED c A n P ET~ L VII 0 one ..... vroom nvn1C RF..ALTORS. ~72 on n.2, 60 .. 20S 101. Room ~='='='~~"'"'~~~1 for .. units. Only $211,500.. ASSUME VA 3 Dr, 2 Bu., _, . l I • ' )' , 2161 S.n Jo1quln Hills Rd., N.B. A COL DWELL BANKER CO. ·- AJent 64&-~. Owcor n1e_.~ o t ·~.3.-.1JIGO . .. ·ner ~ .. nt, :"r:'Tl!:t • ' • ' r u ' 3 N 3 • 4 . - • . ' ''" ' -.. ·- Tiwsct11, Novtmber $, 1,74 COit• M.H llBll. $4'.l,000 On cuHl ... ao, 2,000 oq h. Bar Harbor, nr. SO. Cat. 1;l;;rvl;;ne;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;,;;;;;;044;; ewport &Heh 1069 1 1n~omt ope ~ Pr.o,.rty Houset Unfurnl~ UHi nturn urnl ~---IN::s,s-~:T EN~JFs~~~T~~AR Belboo l'tnl-le J\IC)~ Huntl ....... -h _ 3240 Mllllon Viejo 3267 Captivating Panorama f·plc•e1 ,_ NBCll ....... ~... YEARLY RENTAL BEAClrooMB£1\ 1 llr,""" l BR'O>odo, 2», "°"'·pat.lo, Plua, Ov.'UCl·/o,a:t. ~ EASTSIDE 2 BR &: Den. bute M lot. $32.~. By owner. 646-46M or ~ 1.aotbluff 1030 roNDO/PLAZA 3 br. 2 ba, ~.000. Owner ~ 138-00G! fountain Volley 1034 llUILDIR R&PO Provlde• )IOU with exee.llen\ .flhartclllg on thll llkl' new, malnlenanoo fn1e midence- wlth Iurae bedroo1n1, 2 bothll, & bOnus room. For only $29,500 yau'd be t t e r take a look. 891-0321 1111\ui lM dlffttetll..-. , ., SHOPPING " u• ,....,. ""'"'-J 3BR 2 BA ckJwn5t1. Cat/1 child ok. SL40 nckJMd tt.ach 11 ,, uii:>ant "300 Sq. Fi, R•'~i· • units VA~ $45,990 a n tJ e 1o1 • ea 1:_r ow In rum' ..,_ 1n u.nl1t ct.UN 1,.. 2 Br··-••~--.. ~--• ....., a tar, 01D-• • ,, ........ \\"l•tt-~ 1 ,_ , ... ,, I ......... ~a!llllldc $13.Q!XI OCCt:mber un . -yrty Avll1 . """ uuu. ~ w~u ~·.., -'·• 810-0871 ...., ....... "' ~ ""' ...... Tr: -•e D nt. 5-' OC,O 71.iMJ-4441 Nov. ~h. c.:Qt, ~ olc $l~ 3 BR, 2 u. hmll Rull. CatClli~ ·"' 11" • 11: !~ x on-«· " SAME BLOC: 4BR. :?BA un-Clll. dri\<t1 3 Br Nie. fncd Patio\ crut' • ..1-1 1 n""" Oi.-cu.n ii: r.BR.1t11eriJ'11: Nc~l1 ~:~e:idlri~f~ ~:: lndu1trl1I Prply. 2100 turn Upltairs. $400'nw. yrly. ~ f)'pl, kid& i pc.t cente'r. $lll i»'"tw ec. $43,750 Ba.Y· ... 4 , !5 84. Muter VA auumt1ble, 4 unlta 8.1.0IXI Avail. Nov. 1611\, A B&AUTI 4 Ur, 2 Ba $32S 1~==·-"'ii"'' "i'..:.::::..,,,,.,"I •.• will bW, 28 R, 2 BA, Bradley Model In Su1!e haS 2 W&lk·in clolett. 4 unlt et.late , l29 500 ATT'N \Both haw crpla, <J.rpt;, garb. t-'tpl., ».11 appl.na 2 car Ntwport lklch 3269 &. ?if Arb I c Bath.tub. . • dU;JlOlll, D/\\r, fpl,) Cal.I C\'t•· a.IANY MO~ us " University ark, Village I. lnunac., well ~~··rot(.! Pi n l n c Kt*•,1. Investment Division UNl~UYERS 613-3170 or 67S.2'l'.A ALA Rentals 642.UU 1190. NICE 1 Bdr over cu taken care of home w/nicely ldsc..)I tarte Sunktn ConvenatiOn Atta \Ve have 1 in llunt Bch ,.._ -2 wu ocean, 3S' Uv rm b k U h !"" \\'/Marble Ft re al a c~. S units. AAA1.nne 6% In $53,000 CMt11. a. eu. Subtntt' r,:iJ.r YEARLY 3 Pl", la:e Uv nit, 'N?"''NlfOUSE 3 1lr, 1 ~ Ba, $225. UTlL pd, J Bdr hall ac ~a O. C.as to r enew loan ; owner w l Study, Re<!reution Rm & I-louse plus 4 unlu 49,r;oo oUers. Se.llel'I utt aGX oua. cpli, dn>1, dlnin& arc a. S~ Kidl, pe~. frpl IU' ocean A 00y, yd, l>llr\o CODSi er 8 second. . d11.rkl'Oon~: 30' Puo!/JS.~CU• 6 unit&, Euls.lde 13'1',lm Good ln¢0n"le In good rtntal trplc. ~· mo. lst .l: last l.EASE (Um. 2 0.r t.'Ondo, $230. S215. 2 BDR. trplc ho~, GRU&I & ELLIS ..! n. Prln<:lf)&ls pl4?aae c;cll t"lr 6 units, brend n~w 185,00l tn-eai. & !!ecunly dep. ~9173 Slniles ok.. bili yd, k\ch/pet, N. Hts Reel E•tate• 67S.70IO · t1J'lpmn1. Price $245.500. Own· l2 unUs, Long Bell.ct\ ~.000 Broker M!H398 Coron• del Mir 3222 O?NOO 2 Br. 2~. $250. $32.1. CHAl~11NG 3 Bdr ft'Plc ":"~'""!"'"!''""'!""'!'!'~"'l"""""!!!!I"'"'!""""~~ 111 fl (TI~644-2()l9 20 w1itx 220,000 Joun bt"inio. at 40 lfc1'<':. h..i1.:, yd, Vll'W, CC)M fi er w nance. ~ 42 units 5.~<XKJ Lots for n 1e 2200 Hom.find•r• * 642-9900 ~ 3 BDR. 2 Ha. ll'pl, Huntington hlth 1040 L19un1 &Mch 1041 & 494·5272. ADJA NT VU S9 units s:.'Q,000 BRAND NEW ~ ~J.?0---.000 96 unlls 1310,000 PllO,\Q:-;:TOR\' Suv L ot. Uf::ACll & 11Chool1 w l lhill bll 1 · pni~, N. ~ DESERTED -!Call far tree upiiraiRal ol rtneit localJon. \\'Ill sell or 3 BR .. 2 BATHS "'nlklng distance. 3 Br, 2 NU~VIEW R~NTALS II mbJIRn 2 NEW CUSTOM trade Jo ho . ln-4 & 6 .. ~ER..VLEA1'' Bn. tl?nccd yd. n.11 bltn~. 673-4030 or 494-314$ · uge, rs. u15 story WATERFRONT your units or o the 1• 1n-r use or 11m apt. \\'llh ocean view 1 nd d eatate. lron gate courtyard v~stmc,it propert\es. \\' c bldg. ~lust sell! 213-278-9966 Sl3 NARCISSUS uu ry nu & bl garaie. 4BR, 21/2 ha, dbl t' 11. r entry, guanJ lite&, nea~ In the heart of South Lquna. . WONDER speclel\.t:e, In both sales nnd BALBOA Blvd. '.!:'ls~O n.2. 712~l-G-9 PO£NS£TTL\ ~~· .~~· Co.!I after 6 PQ1, g!U'a~. elect illl' do Ol' In fQmlt of eucalyptus and Ocea~ view. L&"e. 3 bdrm., Spac 1 o u9~,and exchanges. plllM lncluded. S4 S.OOO . FROM $3 75 ~2-71.i.i2 opener, " 1 •CI b11.r, f°lf"ll' W alker &lee ~~:u·~p!t~~.T~ 2\~batheuatomhome,rendy re~ fa~~N~ Im. 1a1.1all ~· ?o1iller Realty, ~811 Bay&. Beach Rlty. 675--lXXI 3ro~~nl2 ~~n!fcr~ll~l~ ~'!it1~ ~rr·c~r!~ ••al '''"'' doned -1Ubmit your tenna! for occupancy! Has lge. llv· awinglna; pad. L"ow, 1 (Iv.· Place I Real Est•te Wntd. 2900 NICE 7 BR house, So. of ileia:hborhuod. $3;"i(l, nxi.' 1st ckl5e to 51•hQol1 t, churches 1,.;::::;;:::==;~=;:=;:'.'.~I Bkr962-S5ll 1 ~~18\:1Y1:W' wttb priced at $11,900. Only Prap-..a.i••· HWy.=.mo.67~ask Alai.t.!XiS-1931:~110 k Fi111hioo laland. S"75. llllJ!li'!lon hach 1040 TAKE-OVER ,.,,,,...,:; ior ;..... ~i.~ ~do•" and "'"'!!'!..•ill ;rr.~920_ _ ,. • '°"!.cul" Peto". Irvine 32"'4 Eatotblutt .,. .. C&ll tor ap. GOVERNMENT LOAN natl\/fl treet~ Short walk to ClllTY financing atlOW 8% 1•00 ou1o1L~1. NtWl'OllT aEAc• \\ ill:Yours·Quallfy.for 2 BR, 1 &, 111.J'11iC, $295. pt. S48-JT;iO. 3 A. 4 BR homes in all bellch. NO E1NANCING !Jitcre~f. 4 1st & \a.'lt. •rot"\D LA "UESTA PRO"'~·ts HERE. ·~ •• 11 jQuail ~ 16 UNITS-0 ··•r2112' N~""~'T'BEACll, trul y ¥ orea.a. No qualttylna. For O&,o£..L• ...,,, •l * RENTALS * beaut lful .ettllw-'larie 3 VILLA monolntormalloncallBKR., oor.N HANDLES: MAKES • Pl $225,000 l2"/o /0 NEW 3 Ir., 2 ba., bltno, Unlvcnlty P.u·k Btldroom. !Amlly room, 846-337"' 'W18m ~ b~~l BU!e AT _!I!" lrplc., gar. SUPER-VIE\\'! 3 BR .• 2 ba .••••••• ,SJr;>Ja85 polished •wd floon, beam Unique, 1lngle 1tory, one BY OWNER • u t • tra 1· Pl'Dp..-.i•a · ·~ CASH FLOW Cocnmission _ 9 _ Multiple $485.. G75-2024. 3 BK., 2 1 11 ba ••••••• ~/400 ceilings. YW'I Le a 1 c. )'eu new. Huge l bedroom 3 BR;-' + .12_ x n: Den. 1 ··, ~ 752·1920 . 16 Carden type unl!S. Qulet ~Una: Boards \\'ith over Cost• M"• 3224 4 HR., 2L..a bn •.••••••••. $-110 $5i5.00 mth. With family room, no Beaullful Cathedral CeUings Tm--~ t•OO oua1lst MIW~T l tACM 0 Ir 11 treet location. \Vood· 5000 1'&le~ !or v.vaU bl The Terrace Cole of Newport Rltn maintenance. Lott. of con· y,'1th 23• r.tuter Br Fre&hl)' ~-., burning fireplaces. Tero.no G ' a e. !! BR., 2 ba ......... $.".50/315 67S.SS11 cn:te and b~ work . painted hllllde &: oUt. Owner entries. Enclosed garagt!s. U 1'nfard PRIVATE 1 Br, $125. A\'11il 3 BK, 2 oo ......... $395/S4251=""""""'""""""'""= pro tesliorullly decorated. anxious Asking $49,SOO or 494•1,71 4tt.1100 OPEN DAILY 2-4 Sparkling pool. Large 2 F'uU kitchen, util pd Greentn:.-e llonlc11 * YEARL y RENTAL* Upgradl!d. carpeting and make olfer. oo.l-6546. No 4308 PATRICE RD .. PARK liedroom uni ts. F.:S.rns $3040 REALTY F~a5tehit~tle 2 Br hou&e 2 BR., J \i1 00 ........... $315 Blk To Surf drapes. No wax Solarlnn In l·-"'"'-""'-.!!'"":C'~":---,.,--I LIDO. 3 Bedrocun, 2 bath, mo 12"'v !l™'ndab\"' 6 lX Sine•'"' SHAJ. . & JICI ok t BR., 2~1 ba ........... $4ll0 B ,.11 N •i~ 28 kit ..... An and f•m"·· -m. •" l'rl B h •pill-level townhou!H' facln• · ' .,,-.... · \P ~ B\· how;e $200. Tu<tl•t•~k cuu J u ew ........ em r, ~~ ~ ·-5 II ~-A' YGte HC G1ms. Good tenns. Hurry " """ 2"· p A 1 c bl Beamed celllnp. ·owner me """'an 1r pool. Owner \e!\vlng area. _ cnll ln4) 752-lnfl. 3X"if1 Via Lido, N .B. SuHe 295 .i.~ncd !or Jll!l & child, a:a1· ~ BIL, :!' • baths , ...... ,S-1.iO ':"" fl\'llle JI • a o TV, must aelL Juat reduced Walk Recreetion Tennis courts &: pools att No Blgns pennitted • please 1871 Jlarbo1' Bl., C.M. 642-2991 VACA.t'llT 3 Bt nomc $29.) 4 Bil i baths $~-· \\alk in closets, blti111. "nc $U,5alli c enter w/tennl1-hani:lb61l just "flO,rt of U1e amenities ring bell. EC,M. Shag, frpl, 2 cnr I 3 Bit:: 2 ba. , : • : .' .'$~i~~l8d:~ garage, paU(I. No kldslpets. courts it scbools \ ov et)' that corne with thl.S 2 bdrm., Gloden Ficy 64~ Houses Furnished CALL US r~oR i\iOll.E College Park S32a ll\O . 1~· •Besl 0 I 1,1111.IMl!Alll! 4sdr. formal DNGRM. ,_ 2\ii bath condominium. sun---ALA Ri ntali 642-t"•" A llR 2,. ... I'~" tt 11-U 11I 1 t l t: s Pd. CaJI dilll mt "" d ff II 1R,. ith G I 3102 >IO,. " " '' ..,.., •••••••••• 'fioN :;.t8-~T8 or 5511042 e\'C!I. VA or New 1..Dan $48.000 ny en ° v .. ~ rm. "' .::.:•:;n;:.or:.:a;:,.. ___ _;~ EASTSIDE 3 er $2'i5 lrpl Udo I!Ue '62-4471 ( :) W10 Call Ron E. agt. 968-4456 ' ~;,e: ~,,!r.C>cbde~.viellw .!!:°,,~,, ""··lly ~mpany ., oco.: _.... tgc fn(..'ll yard pet ok ' .J. BR., 2 ba ............. $b'OO lli\RBOR VIE\V H 0 f.11 E S 2 Month1 Now .,., ,.... '"''" ....., ...,../SUS. UTIL pd, boch apts DUPLEX 1 Bt: $14" s· tv & CALL 552·7500 Like new, highly upgradt.>d, lh'1ng 11 tor you, you'll love I 'l'!'""'""'""!!!!""'""~"l'!!~ I 11l bt.>ach Laguna ' ;,i. 3BR ZBA. f d' 2600 Sq. Ft. Wt. v.1tb tile 80llnd of the Newport Htlthtl 1070 Prim• north "-ta ,1, .. 1_., $100, su.5, $145. Util Pd, COu1Ng lnc:l.Bcpts & W.'PJI • VISION • new cpt &md;· ~ly 1 Becl&lathdownwith •Urf at your lront door . ......., " "" oceanfront ba.chs. Nc"'Jl(lrt '001 r$160.lurn.Pool. landsca--' &: COi'. al l 4Bed I: 2',i ba vaulted cell-$68 500 SMALL yard, big v a I u e ? tlon. Annual lncomt' UJOO. $160. Utll pd, nice 1 Bdrm, student & pet ok. n. EAL:"Y Coni ..!:I &: rec ~aeill~ inp-pllery -3 """1' in ..,,,/6, Choice Newport He I g ht s Just' listed, nnd exclush-e patio, North End I.aauna Homeflnders * 64~-9900 ;;"-•J Incl. •~mo. ·~ ""1. ~ ol.a.n,, ·--!Jon 2 ~-'! .... •."'' of $61,000. Call -\JT1 pd --a.ssn.-huge-kit separate ldry cornfl' ...... a . BR. home ..-;:>U't ,,wu. L , oceanfront FOR RENT, sparkling 3 a red .bUI 1.-ompany . l BEDROOM 2 BATH area 1.tedlt. extttior Call \\'/frplc.; jU!t rigt\t fo r l Bdr, view, Laguna bedrm hOme Jn q u I et Uni\". l)a1~ Center, Irvine .' Le.IT)' today 893--8533 ag. REAL ESl'A""E retfi'ed couple or starter $230. 2 B DR , ocean/city r es Iden t f 8 l area. Coxy Harbor Vlew Homct1, nc,.1. EX'.QUISITE HUNTINGTON Ml hon1e. Priced at $45,500 Brokers Only!! view apt w/garnae, Lag\lna ti.replace, all .lXtns. lam rm, to IKJO!, park & school. Im· SEA CLIFF. 4 .... E-rt;-3 BA 900 Glenneyre ·~..THOMAS ii.Iain.I.a.iii :.independent .£la.Wt $250. L:_~l?,l!..i¥!1SC lfpt t"lpl. 2 ba~._ .t. ~anl. Now ~E . HAVE ~ENT AL~ mac. $42>. mo. 1 s ,._ o 4 6 o home with large poo·J. "94·!K73 S.·19-0316 REALTOR in fully staffed deluxe offices pool', a;ange,-rar;.t v a_c a. n f · ll50/mo. Call A.s Y.·ell 11.s a !Ux-~ion . anytime ~·1 ;. Close to golf, course and Expe1icnc:e8 . I PFOfci.;o;Jonnl $325. lJTIL pd, r ight on ~;r3-124 Associated South of beuu~llul homes F 0 R 1Broker Co-dp tnv\t~\ <1 c ea n . Be au ti f u 11 ~ 224 \V. Cst. Hwy. 548-5527 approach essential. }o'lexiblc beach. 2 Bdr, irpl, deck. ~<»ast Brokel'I. :~t~ ~~': \~~ rur . LEASE-EXECllTIV~ I and I cape d and \\<-ell Ne\\'PClrt Beach Eve. ~&5643 arrangemcnu;.ncgotlatc. Cu!\ Laguna 2 bdnn. Small baby OK. No to serve ut · . ere •HARBOR VIEW HO?i1E• Assumable 6% Loan -· "dl!C.U'ated. Call Century 2l Santa An• lOIO Al Black, 545-8-421. NU·VIEW RENTALS pets. $175 per 1no. S75 depo11-yo · (Porta Fino) 536-~12 [BAssociatecf 613-4030 or 494-32.u! it. ~1ust nave credit refer· Luxury Uving: 4.Br, 3~ba, RUSTIC CHARM A RC HITE CT• SCUatom VA-FHA ASSUME SOUTH COAST' NEWBORT Beach $95 .. util ence. Call after5 p.m. week· Family & Recreatioo Rnl· Near the sand and IUrll I!! A-Frame, 3BR + den on c 1 3 •· 2 •-di pd, .:i1•oles, duplex. A I s 0 days. 646-'::1637. $550 m<I. 557.9429 & l.fi3'7-2509 Swee 1.... !ron la u e Ul·, .,.., n. room, 11-•~---.,, ..,, Pu'6 t wn to a ~ acrt + huge pool + lrg. yard, F/P .. Owner wtll lliAAIOR ~-~ separate u 1. It Huntington EASTS!DE 3 br, fan1. rin.. BEAUT. 3 Br. 2 Ba. fn>lc, 3 Bedroom, and pool. Alley 80Cl"U for )'(lllr motor home at tn.ller. Sharp, cail.fornia ranch 1tyle. Beam ceUinp. Jee country gtyle ldtcben, 2 baths. ~zed dble garqe & n;uate woik 1"hop. All thl8 for o n I y $43,500. New on the m&rkct, caa for" complete detalla. 546-qll80, ~ritage Re-altors • 3 bedroom borne. Family 2BR goest house. A very Dramatic, new, oce&n view sell FHA or VA. Or a.sJUme A BREAD & BUTTER Beach SllO .. uUI J>lf.:'Walk 1 ba., new cpts. &. drp1;., cpui, drps. 2 car pri.ge, med Jlvlng room with cozy 1.nique prtvate e1tate. Only honie. 3 BR" den, 3 BA, subject to existing 7% Joan. to beach Balboa, $135 .. va-t:rcsh paint in1>ide & 011t. gardener, •pr ink le rs . fireplace, GINGERBREAD $19,000'. 9£i8..4403, Bltr. eves. "'OOd exterior. Price re-&16-17U Tv.·o 7 yr old 3BR ZBA homeio cant. Costa Me11a 1 Br Lg. !enc'd, yd, Pat 1 0 , \1estclilf areil. $335. 6T~1H~ 'N COOKIE KITCHEN. I I 1 ,.... duced to $145,txK>. Motivated "'Ith .. ~ Income 01 $500. hOuse. utll pd. Corona de.I ......... 1ener incl. $290. 546-2336 BIG CANY-VIEW L ara:e patio . NEWLY rvne _... seller, · w/assumable 7~'t'iii tiiA i\far t Br house, slnglesl""=--·~=,,'=""-"=-"-=-::;;;o u-p&intedlnllde&out.Al(l"eat OCEAN VIEW LOT per mo. $48.<XXJ. w/aSllum· ok.Agt. Fee.979-84Xl LARGE 5BR, on lovely c:W-Luxurlolll 3BR 2BA buy for only S.15,500. ---------No. elKI Laguna. Pot;glble to Walker & Lee ll~le 1•,1•,Q FHA loan. CALL B Ibo I I d 31t6 de-sac, nr schools, &. So. Lloyds Bank Bldg. S.!4--0786 9'19-4191 The R•al Est at. Fair MOVE RIGHT IN divide. $56,0CKl. 11 ,,~ ,.,-.,, 556-2660 a a 1 •n ~_:it . P~~!81d· $400mod. + $100 University Pa1·k, ll'vl.ne 3BR. 2be., Duplex. enclosed SJ6.1S51 • Uf.6133 This 3 bdrm., 2 bl.th, tantlly FOR RENT COZY N °-·•-t ho u.:p. u ... s gar en er· Days SS2~7000 N'-htt iarage, yearly, room home it. ready for Walk to be-ach. 2 BR house IMMACULATE · 3BR. + den &. fam rm. 2 BR Condo .. , .;235/mo Loe 642-3188 or 642-'191.4 . • SELECT 0· oa.,-... vn me. 0\\'11('l'/agt. 752--0008 .. 0.Mrtecl t Story lnunedlate o cc up an c y . furn or unfllf'I', Yrly $350. PROPERTIES Avail Nov. 1-74 to June N9~ ne~·· vcry1 private b3 2 BR Condos ••••• S265 &: $2'r5 2 BR.., 2 bo., $215 Mo. •-~--ch·-.-~ to Jleated pool and Jaci.mt ror WE HAVE OTHERS 2 yr. new, 3 br .. 2 ba .. fully ,-~--~~~~~ 14-7". $500 mo Lora. Vance r O\\n use w au p e r 3 BR Condo• """'" ... e.,.,.;. 3 BR 2 ~ HM ... ""'~~:Pi~rl.ll..hhi,1ec1 year-round pleasure p I us 494-7513 Ol' 4!»-1001 ldscped. wfsprinklera, cov1d-1 ' Comer 12 Units I ~Rl:c .. e:'c;rn-4002=-=:.,..,--~=118.ke view. Ten$, swim· 3 BR HJn"'eS : saoo.-ms. ms Caywocxi'Re~t). -~1290 root, adobe fireplace. huge l<lw maintenance land.scap-1 -~875.:,:'c,:;N:_ . ..;c.a.::;::,_t ,:.H:.:•:;~;..· ~ patio. nr. So. Coaat Plll.Ul. Corona d•I ~r 3122 millg, sailing. $290. ~l8 3 BR Homes • $360,$375, S395 CUFF DRIVE 3BR. I a m alas.I kitchen w/all the lrqc with aprinidm and SUPER LOCATION Asawne 7~i% VA. $45,950. Twin 6 U. Bld9s. -EASTSIDE3BR.2BA 4BRHomes ... $335,S395,$42S nn, 2 BA. Beaut master latest fixtures. Patio pan lights. See il today, you'll 2 blks lrxn beach-3 BR 557-8564 All :l BR. aomc w/beam CORONA DEL NlAR Neu 17U1 St. 1100pL Lease. RANCH REALTY b I · $450 MS-'Z39l thnl to ·vtood 1 undeck1 want to move in tomon'OW· 2 Bedroom Lanai, big patio, $375. nio. Call CJS Reill * 551·2COI * r w \'lll!W. · Sweeping st.a.!t'caae to main-$59.tnl. . home • laI'i'C utility room· ~ 'cell. l\Irsive ~ fadng. Top condltie»1. Near beiach. Estate. 5'\S-1168 RANCH REALTY BLUFF Condo. Z Plan. tmlh llx23.klea room. tou-CALL 552·7500 ~~REAL ESTATE --.., ~,\;'i..::;..'M.,1~,~1:~~~: $435.00 9 ""'nth ~,,., in-· OELUXE BACK BAY 4 BR, * 556-6800 * ;Br+Study ,l65fl mo l•o.. ty warm carpets llant boat • VISION • . ,.... Prinie locaUon. $184.9-W clude."J aardener. 3 Ba, 2 story, den, $475, TUSTIN RtALTY 1~1430 & ~. slab. Neltled a.mona plnet! · 494-8086 4gg.1397 Wesley N . Tiylor Co, Cole of Newport Rltrs. 380 hllra l..Dma p I ace, 11 832·5Ul * Univer1ity. P•rk 3294 $43,500. l'ull price! Bkr L•gun• Nlg~l 1052 REALTORS 64H910 67$.5511 PhOne 641-2222 Realtor ATTRACTIVE 3BR In TurtJe 96l-05ll REALTY ~ 1100 -4 ON A LOT CHINA Cove 3 Br .. 2 Ba. LARGE 2 Br Duplex Unit. Rock widen'. din, lg faJ!I ATTR. 1-Bn &: den, trplc. a red hill company house. ocean vu. $400 JTl(I. Single gar. New cpl. $180.. rni, pool priv. Vat. $465. Ideal far couple or weekend AIMnne 1% FHA Univ. Pork center, Irvine I/ .. '-A .. ~l . 'n LANCER 24 x 63'. Set $72,500 Winter Ise 544 -6130; 2232 Pacillc Ave. Ci\1. Bkr &12--0200 father. Tennis ct., 1wlm ~ Bedrm, 1 ~ bo., 11ep.I ~~~~~~~~~ _.fltluc, fTI• 1'J"MNV up In be11.utiful Adult Park. 673-7838. 646--8621. •NEW 4 br, College Park, pool. $300/IM .. 552-<&4 dine rm. c:!;Condo. Near I; c 262 "·-th 2.Br, l~~ ha, ra.mily m1. PRli\iE Costa ?tlesa locationr 2 BR ,-,,1 1 1 1 2 ba Ille roof A/C •A25 H F /U~· _ -1 • clu , 5 M'-u'·• " '""'' SPECIALIZING IN r ll ted & d .....i C II 1'"our individual pr Iva t e Cost I Mew 3124 · -.,.. • no pe 8 or 11 ng ell. " • ...., '" urn ""'m -i;' beach. Walk ta ~~I~. Al9WJ'le-7% 1oan, $l8Z montl\ LACUNA NIGUEL VIEW , ,CO::u~y=ccp;,,,.~-'-"_~_·· =-a h o mt!!. Attached guntges. --See mngr. Apt. A. 980 \Y · or lease opt. ~n.S974. · :;;;;::;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:1 Jnclud<• cpla drpo walher oo thi1 be•utl!ul Spanish 3 PROPERTIES "8J9.461J. All havo prlvato patios. 2 TRAILER Adul.,, Sp8"' 20, 11th St., CM. Laguna 8Hch 32481__...__. dryer, rerrtR:. $400, ~ bdrm. 2 bath home. Just . SEA 'TERRACE NEWPORT Uppe r Bay, bedroom~ineach.Pal'klilte See Manager. t·135. utlls. LARGE 2 Br. hort\c. Crpr., COM VIEW for new FHA er No Down 3 ye:an old. 'fhick s bag p ~.'Iv ATE Gu AR OED 20x!i0, a br. 2 ba, 5 ~tar setting. Quiet 1 tree t . pcL 1640 Newport B 1 v d · stv., 1't!t., F'cnced 'yd. Gar. ;21Q. 1 + OEN, vie"''• steps -to Veta. carp e tins , m Irr orod MEA pk., deluxe. pool, pvt. h., Shopping & '"""port•tlon 646-3500 Adults 1190. 615-1827. .to ocean, Vlelo,ia Beoch 2 bedroom, 2 1-th on quiet SCOTT RIAL TY wardrobe-.. Spanish tllo Enjoy Tho Good Llh ~~;1 11!,9\IO. 67>-45.55 Alt. ''"thin 3 bloc"'. PR~E OF Leguna BH<h 3148 2 BR, 1981 c 0 ,.,.1, St. $230. 2 BDR oc<•n/clly view •<net . ...,.. •undeck. l>lfl. "6-713' roof. $4!,900, Call 644-8750 Cati 493-2511 OWNERSHIP UNITS. Call St80 No d'll' No ''""I" apt, bl"","'""" mo. BOAT SLIP $3500. ( TMIR\J~ Newport Beach !~ .' ~~.s·.,..,,',j1~1s0Klb~11t11'"i"°~~~.·-: .t;r~;1;:•11 ~~;1'1·'.~"'1· \'Giu•tn,~a1 manr~a"ls~11~_h~~¥~~3· 2·~0~2. 3;B:R~2;:19.; •. ,::.~ma.~~epoo11~ , •3•2,34v ;,1 '•'··Bdw'1~0,~~-:.:.~= L.mo;.es ~[~ ~ ~.:E~!X.~d'lraneOOXS~u: •• rfa:.(ced<n,. • .•. • __ 1.,0IS,_., _ ONE JUST SOLD.ndln•• ro ,. ,._ •• i ---·-I ••• ,. ~ -UVl:I...._... " --•. --adult park on lhe Bay.t,. ' Houses Unfurnished fut!!'d. !Ag bont11 rm . $300. Nie~ l £<ir. 'a11 bltrui, COM LUXURY Completely redecorated. one mott to iO • outstu g $18,150. 540-3672 .. =· i _ _;.;....;c.;;.-'-,..;.;'----$-125/mo. Nr. schls. 5-l&-9097 Rfr concl. dbl gar .. Lag Hills ~tagnSilihcent 3 btd1. room11 I'°"'' ve-able a:ardt:n reA""• tor 600 Ne'o1'Jl0t"t Center DriV@ condo apt. 2 br, 2 ba, 7\1\ ...,.,~ LGE 3 Bd 2 Ba I cm e> rec 1 s pool ..Mac Prlced'beiow ASSUME 111>% LOAN floorvicwofB.,andocean '68 HOMETTE. 20'•44', 2br, WE HAVE ALA 1.ENTALS 'iuntlngtonBHch Jl<lll 'dbl',.,....,, ;d, pa:i"o'. beautifully turnl;hed: marled" at $34,960. Pymnts Brand new 3 BR. ~t 0 5 t ·all thla tor only $69,&n l bl\, Cl\.1 Ad1Ut Park 75l-On9 .,. WWAl•t•., ~wia kids/pet private-beach. 51200 mo. cheaper th4n re-nt. Call de1lrable, in demand UST Your Home eves&."·kn<!s.PP. DUPLEXES!! CLEAi'l' 4 BR. 2BA. tplc, $450. 4 Bdr, 2 frpl c. whlte NEW CONDO VWap Real E1tate 9634567. Unlvel'lllfY-Park location. . With VISION Commercial t'rpty 1600 Try Uiis one-f cpt, drps. D\V' bltns, nice water vie"" Enicrald Ter· Super 2 bedroom, 3 bath. OPEN HOUSE $51,000. 641).00B'l.... ' -TOP CORONA DEL ~1AR fill MOVSU friendly neli;:;hborhood. $325 r:\1,~ 1parklln; and pi"ett)'. 13'fS. By OWNER '·1 us lell you hy SMALL COMM BLDG I I •"5· mo. No .fee. Ai;k for Bev NU VIEW RENT nto 1123 Main Stttet ....., w ... come · location -con1fortablc 2 HR DU,~S. or Dale, 963-4567; wknds • ALS · OPEN DAILY l-3pm EVERYTHING NEW see Olll' beautiful new otnce 3 sep. Units $51,500. &: Oen home In !rant, with Nlwrotr, "'' c M ••a·•>•> & a(l 5, 96l-l786. Sll-4030 or 4!1-1-3Z-l8 Eastbluff Beauty NEW CU!ltm blt 4 BR & fam 5 BR.., 3 ha., f.11.mil,)' rm. at the corner of C.oost Hwy Owner will carry !lntt ·TD, sharp upstairs 1 DR apt '. . . 2 BR. 2 Ba, F'rplc. new Spacious 2500 ,sq. ft. 3 bed· nn,3caraarottalle)'w/lrg &: dining nn. 2,.UO Sq. fl. and Goldenrod, CdM. Roy McCardle Rltr new carpeting throui::hout N~\T b11~h units $115/$120 TO\VNtlOUSE 14. 2 br, l 'ii rcfrig., S3'P."1. Child & pe.t roon1, 3 bath with bonus space tor b'lr or boat. All 2 ft'plc1 $67 500 • VISION 1110 Newport Blvd. C.M. • front yard privacy. Well~ MOW1~ uul pd, dslngle:~ bu. Condo,. nr. l-1. u n t . o.k. 170 Cc-dllI' \Ve y. 642--08·'4 roo1n & sundeck. $500 mo. dlx features. Two blks to O\VNER 644-1554 e 541-7729 priced nt only $89,500. Call V In .~ Br pix s ;,o Ha.rbor. s2~,..,,-~10., • n c I . or 494-9007 Eastbluff Lake Park, walldn& dlsl. to u~ to see lhis .)cv.·el Stv/rcf. 1.:hld I pct ok n1Aint . & r vul. ( 21 3} bch. 538-8821 . VACANT Dec. l !. MUlt sell, REAL:TY co.,dominium• IW.4-7211 . CLEAN 2 Br. dplx $17 0 . 439-0969 2 BR ccn~I location 2 blk~ T h Ge«ld s. Thom,., R<ollo'-4b" 2ba, frplc. din rm, low for Nie 1700 Avoll., child & P'' ok. 2 STRY 2 b'-2 b•. Condo, to ho"h,trplc, gac, fncd yrd OWft OUM 1 ..;;:;.=:::..:~=~~""=· 1 down to 7~ loan 2nd TO Cill 67S-l600 _;c;;.~;.;__--'""--"",:...; ,_ >"NRPLC. 2 Br. S210. Tri \ndry, 1'~P. Bltins. N r . $385/mo yrly 497-2370 SparkJing 2 bedroom, 3 hath Mutt SN to Belle¥• ok ;,JIH)!llTeves. agent 2143 E. Coo.st J1:wy"' Immediate Occupancy ~ u pa1nl & crpts·gar. Ocean, 11ihoJl8 Ir. schlli. S250. '1.agun• Niguel 3252 -sp0lleaa ·views, $330 per 3 Bedroom. .2'1!! bath, with * NEW 4 BR. 2 Ba., College Corona del Mar East.side lrg 2. Stoey 3 BR .___:._ NEAT 2 Br h!!e N.B. Hghts 842-99i8 eveslwkndli. Avail n1onth. carpel.I, drapett, fplc Near Park, tile roof, AJC, $53,500 Anxious Ownerl Condo. lAiC $325 1110 or Ise 1 $225. Sub. pet & chld, gu Dec 1. PRIVATE SEA rtRRACE Call 675-7225 -~SSS ~~ .. Park.G · !2 n"'°'" 1 to l Story. 833-8974. Hu ~ .. ~ p"-on -,n· optlon $350 mo. $HOO option. 9 UNITS HFOM,£YlddJ "•'' 2 1Ba S7 4 S. HUNTINGTON ~acllff. for COMMUNITY' -au•. re at OOf p an •~ .... ..,.,. ,,,_ •"' ,..__,,1 ·~ t do rp · s pe · ga,rage I ... 2b f •• 25 REC fRclllties, Mh "''"' tor cnterWntnf. Ellly cnre L•gune a.ach 1MI hou&e at 43111 Spindrift Way • .... n:w ..,.. mo. 0 wn 3 ycan old. v.'OOd butTiing RACK Bay 3 B ho $295 en~. ,,.,r, ti. p, ~· mo ....., ·-~ lParl< Udo I to $42,000. 3 BR , pymt. By owner aft 5 pm. fireplace, y,·et bar, <rli!h· Sha lrpl t ~ 2 me incldirtg gardener. Kid11 & •4BR, hln1 rm \\'Cl bar, Ot' . ' ... , ~· ' . . \ \LLE"t HE \LI"' ll 11111(, fMl!llPAISfS (0 ,,......... ePRICE SLASHED• 00-ms g, ' 0 · car Pl'ts ok, call 5.'\6-ra112 vU. S·l50 mo lsc. lttd Carpet, Rtiltors 2'1i ba, po<ll-& you own the ' washer. heRvy shnke· roof N.B. bCArh. 3 Br $..125. •N~\V p;1:1rtlen honie. 3BR, SU..1&3' $3450. Vac1nt land. Ba.rre tl Realty, Income Property 2000 & enclosed garage. 8~!i'Jti f'rpl, gar.i!lnglee ok NICE ARt~A. 3 b.r, 2 b.:1. fl'pl. S.195. 1110 l~e. POR THANKSGIVING Ytry S.rioul Seller 61>4-*' 4 Pl N ~ W k pflnancl lr.g. B fj Id llouses? l!ouse-s! \Ve go1 •em 3 c~r 11:11r .. bltn1., nr. Slater .. NE\\' 3BH., trp\ beamed _ .-.. _ .-. __ - TV-'O llitm'Y Colonial. O..-ean S BRt BLUFFS ex •-s or au W. rum 11 A LA Rentals '42-8383 & l.iQJden \\.'est. 84l-6815 Ci'u. hill \'U. S375 'mo lse. ~~-- We wi&h yuu live v.·e:)I and v\cw, P~tial. 4 BR • lam. CONDO. Plan. ti-la n y Hut1tlngton Beach & Asioc. N~;,\R Newport F\''Y 2 Br 3 BR ho1ne, 1 yr olrl, .leoocrl LAllGE 3Br: vir\\· hOme. like Condos Furn 3400 buy wl&ely. Sec th·~• at· nn., 2~~ BA.. 30' llvina lmprvs. Purch1114! contract L.argebl 3 ~~_1 3-'t bedrOOf."J· 6~2-8550 or 5-1&-100 eve houM! $120. Ne"'port Beach yd, -near t>e-nch. S:$. nlO. nl'\v. nr cc. S39l n"KI lse 2 BR 2 B v N tracUve l'i~ llq ft " BR nn wUh •tone nttplace, all 8 ,.,11 •I 9"~ I Blk •·hool tns, u\nt:\.I pr., 1 w m 2 R•·. 2 Ba teahou.e $195., 191.1 Alsuna. &IZ-3216 Dee Grln1f?ll "'"l. 496-io.'" · A. ' est Ille, contemporary homo feat~ bllnl, dahwat\r, ceramic tile · Tl'"' """ • pool. EnS)' terms available. -BEACH DUPLEX .,. l\r Laguna Niguel. 496-8877 or 1 1 _ beth d 11 ht f 1 Nr T~rutls, Pools, Sho p 1. Hurry Only $l9,t50 11\ngle."J, lamlie.1. 2 Br house 525-li.\ 2 e:'!ft-~• ta1ch : ,Jn r ~ •· • ~:00~~ and~~ S9S,OOO. call &l.UO t First P ionHr Rt1lty NEWPORT -Co~ ta ~1 e 1 a.'i;Rr 11.~e. 1 'c;:::...:d=-U~nfu----34~2S-I You'll and none fJner. Nr. tlra-• ·•·-·• H':f. -tlo c•::.-~;:'o:·===~--21 i<l 11i;cle!I, tan11le11. 2 Br hOU$l' on os rn. -~-I "9900 AGT ~ ••-• ~ ' -PENINSULA 142-44 $32,375 Su"'" Bcaoh. !enc«!, kid•. $©\\.~µ ar.;r~ ....,.... .t sch s. ,... • · · ovcnbed )'ard, o u b I e Tl O H SES ON ON E ""Is. 2 Br 11 u ll t i n g t 0 n - 3 FOR l.ell..!H!, maje1tlc oeean lf7·~ garage. $69,500. Tenn• REO POINT ~ OU Gorgeous 2 sl<1ry Ne'~'POrt Beach. alnglts, families ok. \.1e....» new Jbr, 2\~/b&. i.nclds Owner Transhrrecl CARP=I', REALTORS 3 BU. bee.eh h0\l5e. C.ozy den ~ ~::'rpar 1E!sii~R~ Beach duplex! ~ fl. to \711c11nt hou~ Corona del That Intriguing Word Gome with o ChuCk/e i;lubho~. golf, pbol, adlts, One ol • kind, fmmacuhite, 6fG.8S72 <Ir 49!M2'11 &: dlnllll nn. C.ll day or ,,~ -... Surf and Sand! JuJt $32,315 r.tur $200 .. singles ok. Agt. no pels, tull crpt1 A d11J6. larg< 4 BR, olep doWn llv nlte fOI' dotalls. Exter!O' f" • h I Y pa;ntod. buy1 II (dO••l or oubmll Foe. 979-8430 "'""' "" '· ' 0 "'" 2 "" ••'-$~'<\ mo .. SmOI nn w/modorn tplc. Jt'am VICTORIA HLDS. CE NTURY 2l A•holwp""'•· ~"'iidnlt';1v·,,,'m''11kr. ',·n~ e»1 your terms. Nl:\Y!·l -~-~~-.-~~~-I O ~eo"o";e i.11111 o+ '~' nrr.e~;.,.~a27n Clemente, rm, coun• ... kltohcn, h\.ll'C A I 1n-~ti ~ hd ho u•7221 "" " "' Cathedral cel lln g1, LANDLORDS! lo~r K•Omblie wCrd1 be· ....,,,,;,,.,,, ~~ n n"'-ng .. rm. me ...,,.. come.$49 ,950 .RED Ii I tr. tll low 1otorm lour11mtilswo+"d1 NE\\'P()H.T Crest, • up. r p1u11h, 2hr, 2\'I bn, bc11u1. , .. ·11UrmP"1" mirro~. wet bttr. frrlr.. l1>nnlt, 1100J, + mortl $4i.'l. 612-!lm cov pat10. BBQ. Super with nnturu.J adobe, hand BIG CA .. YON CARPET REA.LTOR S. kr'tct!:."4i:~r8n11~8;,,.,Tru: \Vie Specllllb:e in NeWJ)llr.1r--------land1copll)3~ A du I t oc, he\\'!\ doont A nu\i:nlficent n fi4()r.867' dtluxe untti. 4 t)ed..;;,~m phi., Dench • Coron11 deJ 1'1ar • 1 · S E W T E f' 1 cu~. $43.500. Broker flhltr wa1er & CM1tHnc EXECUTIVE HOME CO"'TA MESA 2 bed-•·· "-~ f, ,. "' .•. & t.o."una. Our Rental Ser-~· ~,;....c;.....:.,..c..;,...:.~~ 342/1111. £vc11. 0084'77. vlr\\"11. Oe1lrable No111t end. F ..... , • _ 1:1 '"''" uvuu ~ vi,...., · >~EE t Y • -\ 1 [ [ \' \ • or .,.ue or Le:aac or ......,l\t1e INFLATION FIGHTER Full orict just sm.:-ioo. SC" ~~-1-' ·~ , o au. ••i only I\ fow hlockll lo the Oplion •Br 3 b:\ 1 ' 7 Nu-V\e\v! '==='===~_J DOWNTOWN DUPLE..~. No beach. S~OOO. view. 'v a i'u c d ' '11f 0 0°\'l'.f S new 2 bcdroo1n u 11it11. ~ .. t.o1..:,,,e! Cull ntiw 1 l•ll , NU·VIEW RENTALS ,.. 1 HR . \Vn,.hrr .. dryer, rcMs .. m.intena.nce, M \'Ucanclea TURNER AS'OC --tld ~ C 1• I Uo ,;i~ iw· I j ... "'-"' i::·"•• •in" o l close lo bellch. An out•lan· ~ • $....,..,,vuu. R uctd to '1'79.-, on• ,. • r aporee A n, lNVES'n!F.NT 01vt~ION 67:1·4().'IJI or 49-1 3~ 1 o u11 ~ \E' E 1 _ I ..... ,,.,,, ~1.. 11 " '" po · • tllna buY sl8 "'1 U(I; N, ())Ml H•')o., I.ogwta due IO emtt'JltUcY 1ltU•llon. P""cnt d•pct<'l•tlou & ltr FREE FREE . . . -Ad•~~ ";ll;· oo P' I I · (, a1 , 11. -~1177 Call &44-5345.or 64().-07TJ. con;.~~Vjg:wnt:-1ittooo. ~ ~ • Prof IOI 1 Servke • srro. !162·-· 1 or 003-2831. ~~ , CUSTOM BUILT ASSUMABLE LOAR • .._~;,;LMl'":.~TE · ·~~:1~·1!1 * N ta !lunL &b. ., .... , 11 Hiii•" ~ ':W.~bl~-o..~,!1: ~;: :::t::O."m'.~ IS UNITS, re!urbished. 1 'i j j) Ho.!::ind~r~'!R92~:00 I M 0 V N E i D~~~nl~:ltnr:~=C -.. , .. _,._ w/W..~36ixi ... ()..vacancy. 10% C..end-Calllomia'• t.ug'tit 11·-ilr'-Tl-'-lr-;;1~ Tk•t fl vis••n whe41 de•I 15 Pini&. Gar' pool, air cand. W •• tmlnstor ..,. ,_... .., n"~ 10 UNITS c M • Renllll Se-"-1 • lintlly n•lll""' lo ,.,.. Every (' I ('. $ 21 ~ m 0. 0 w n t.l' ft. 3 ear prace. Your able. Owner iiance, -• · '........... '-:::=::===:._~ time I buy ~ .. 10,r of b•e•d 1 , -;:;"""'"':=:::-::"....,.-.,..--..,-- IBdrm taJ\i)' CIOt\\'tttl to 8 Cholt.e ot Co\ors t 8IA %. Santa a.1aria. Excellent rcnl4l art'll; In-"REJllTERSl1'' r ,, rrowin&· adult 0 cc u'. CarpeUna. Auunic exl•tlna Call Jlkl'. M• "18 l~al . c:orne $19,9".ll a )'t8l'. Sr.lie \"ou Gtt 'All the H 0 u 1 c:..s I D U R O N A , --. u ·i. 7 BR, "·saher, dryer, 11~· n1aey c:ua1om ftatunt-6'rt lo.n at W,c;\..-Ownel' aQ:nt. BY OWNl!R--~ ""' ort!fchlll"lgt· 8.\'allt1 ble fOr rent tn .. OUR . Pool, adults only. $200, ntA loan cleaner thnn new · ~ NWPT HTS ATT'N UNIT BOYER.$ Pyramid Exch•"t"" I BUl.J.ETIN UPDATED 3 \ 1 [ [ [ j 0 ch•«t« -c"ue-·• ~.i ~mt ar KTm2 Runt. --~Ca~ll~l>~ll~ke~,N~e~wloiiinil~l~2-11311~i-1-~-~~ft::'f!~~~~~ 0111 ll " W I 1 68 I L_l._.l.-1-..l....J._J b.' ·~j '" '~1·-u·~o -•d1 Bc11oeh. v A CANT wtll detigned 2 avtn Artft, :r B"'. l e havt1 1111\111 In Hunt. Bell. Re1ltor1 3 7 t 1ne!/\\'L'tk. 1 I-;"::;;=;;;.--:;;,....;:::=== ""'ICIC s mt::-1i~ .. :r1e .. ~1 con·' UL-SS! Pirate Jld. ~-lot; Catlt11-4t!Ht=b)l:bmlt~ "BR lu: +• unhs l.."':"llJlbn HDm1flndtr1 * 642·9900 ,~~ ll•·•·llll /~ lfr.I r>o; -b•!-A DAB OP' P!:'l'ROLEUM ,,.,. 1, 111 p. »Hn. Jdt. w/anack $49.T!(ljh. ~~ ... ~ly. Aft.'8 orftrs. Selim; arc t11\lt'lnt111. "c.r.1. Q~1 tnvi'tmt: ~fii~ 132Cabrlllo.C .. \I. (J™l-."t?f~L'\•liifb 11 .t-1 .. ·: \' ji J-:rf';!J; P"'ttnt to lhft , WE IUY HOUSES b4r· awi~h w/ocun VII ot ura. 11'W"W1<11 Gooa lnr.ame In «ood tcntal .,al\ B Ibo p I 707 • i~f -'·.J'.•I( . . lhttadt nl IJneetna.11 pollsh Aak •·-Id. ~ • 11 /bee ~ CONDO BLUl!~rs--:u•n. 9 1,,ker ~ un\\t1 poir.1. ·~' t'.r •1fcaJ,·ry • a '" nsu • and slue bottlet Wiil keep """ e. ,, 'I/, )'1'11. \\' " ' UI Tl). Vcn.qcr R.e a 11 !i . ... I t~!CT.l.•.•M,( tt:•tt!. 10 \he !Mia from 1tlcld1'i· Try KASAllAN I. "'~ palnt ·~minor 4 br, m ba, frntl. din. rm., 5 units on ll!Jtlt rl11e' J\lc 5.•Mtil Ptfo:R. l1tach. 1~ $Hr ,1p1x. '=" It .... ·~··\'-!~ • D•lb' P\J(lt CIU&lned Ad tlx up. A ~. $0,950, l . .in. m'I. + botlU• nn. O.piltranO BCh 0 CE AN : \rlnter $:1jf). rno. )·rty 5550, \6 bU)I. lt'!ll or rent llt•I lst•te 9'~ ~llSSION REALTY 494-0731 &ll)o(l!OO,Or &11M'l'12T<"t.. f'RONT $110.000 -49!}.j()1'8 Clrui:~inr>d ,\d! Coll 6·12.-5671 1 mo.'"'1111 turn. Gn-66«'1. SCRAM-LeTSAntwer11'n Cl1111f'lutlonl0101 i,"'=mt::.t;::h»:;;ns,,,,._ _____ 1 I • -' ' • B 1% D~ILY PILOT r...,.,, No"-!I. 1974 conao. Uilfum. 54li Ap1,r1menll Furnl1h0d . Ap1rtm1nt1 Unlurn. I Aporrmonh Unlum. Apt1 Furn/Unlurn 3900 o ...... for lt•nt 4350 Rentals Wontad ~ Lost .. Found 53llO CarponTr iiu 3 8R. wutitt, dryer. rclrig, N•wport Beach 3769 Costa MtSI 3824· I Now. port 8-th 3869 CHOtCE SINGLE Car Gange nr l2UI 2 BR houlc. by Stnk>r Clttien CAWF. ANIMAL CONTROL CARPDh'RY, r e m o d • In-Mm. Pl;iol. AduJt.t. only, --LAKI l'RONT St A B&Uq Blvd. ~mo.-A wife .no children. Under _.Hwitlnnm_~bSbtlter terior,t")(terlor. aidln&a, No ».els. S22$..!16l--2'JS1 m Llk• Beach Living? ~dnyt;.67s-7876Evet. $200 ~. Clean &. quiet. 8311 r.aaon St., ~i pt\flelfri( 'p&tJo 'eova. OW · ~.ilunt.Bt.adri. 3Bll. zoo. fnrn/w1funt fpl. OCEANFRONT LOCATIONS Office Rental C400 Loceil ~u11ne 11 mu. BackolHumueSocltty lik'. nn Ilda. 5S6-118l N~ 2BR. Adult Condo. S2T5. G~t11111)"o. &1'.!"1783 ew. 3 BR, 2 ba, Yrty tSSO VERSAILLES :.:.;=;;;:::;;:;;;:-.;.;::.::l~-~-~~·531~-6~71'$~--~IANlMAL ASSIST. LEAGUE .Ml-l;;;.;;:193;;:,,~~~-~-I nr 8'11,cti, Huntington Bent h lB~FURN. pool, bile:. to 2 2Ul0t~ 2 2bt.: .. futJ! $400 ~~· FOR LEASE BEDRA-1. apartment, nlet -~~'-~nn.111\... ~ REMODELING, Pa. t lo s, daYl 96:H»I, ~ -.2297 llch. Sloe. adult. $160. yrly. 'BAY'FRO~T -ON THE LAKE nelgbbors, $140 ·rent. 2 O 7 ANiNAls"'iMrouN'DW Deeb. Room Addldons. 2 BR. North Irvine, Close !Wr2696 3 BR 2 ba. .... 14_ I ~t & uUI Cocut Pl.au. Baftimore, ApL A H.B. Ttrrler mlx. Bllt/b<n, M. C.bl.nets. 673-1166 Mr Ryan ~"Cf -mo Poo l O"IV ·r. J b n-... ·-" • J,UQ. ,.,yry. Pool ·--puJ-•-~Bot e OFFICES ·~oo ·~ Siud.ni~ :k'.:'5.5t~9 • "". x • r ""'""'"anuvnt STEPS TO _BEACH • ....,. .... -.-WANT to rent: Houab\tl'. hclp Collie, Bm/wht, male ~ t:4 _...""" ear lipt. \V lnter $350 furn. per PINECRE 3 llll 2 .. _ . 1 .,...., 6. Jl\CllUI.. Spectacular I • MEDICAL 11on1 stay in Marina . Hound mlx., Blk/tan. male convtrAon, CUIC I: ntw Townhoust Unfrn 3525 mo. CnlJ ~ AA:ent. EK · ""· wu i tr. H•-.. Acre Lake w/Towuina 892-1012 La~ Blk, mate, female const. 25 yrs eip. draw ;::;:;c;;::..:::=::::..:=~= LIVES UP 2 BR, '"'"" yrly U'l5 Fountalno • \l Mllllon Dollar e RETAIL ~••-B h I ·•-·· •--• ... ·-Son Cl-nto 3776 3 DR, '"'· '"'"ms yrly Cl «-•·-· m/W I, enr ·~~ ·---2 STORY, S BR. 2~-1 Ba. 81.llcoey off huge n1 u !I t e: r bdnn overlooks p u l 1 I n g gn!i!n, pool, club house & rmrk like groundt, 3 Ml. fl'oln• o«M. Air cond .. 2 r.ttr gor .. $385. n10. 962-5661 Ap1rtments Furnished TO ITS NAME 3 BR. 1 ba, turn. wntr $250 To':a~1 .... ~ym, Sauna. Prime Huntington B e a e h . ~_!.>e_lheSerd, b~ rem, -*CARPENTER* $89.50 MONTH 0v,,",.,m500s ta!lw 1 1 10n.-e~"' and 1 ., 1 , 1 1 1 u 1 · CORONA DEL MAR Jmrue<lhito Occupancy l"ountain Valley locatlons on [ I~ u .. ,. Iler,,,,..,... ma e Xint c1'll.famii.nshlp-low ..... " 4 BR f h F ADULTS Brool:hurst & Beach Blvd. huncw • • ~.:~. "'tht' Tt\Blk' man-~~. ....ices Robert-53&-2001 create a relaxing 5et•1n-tor ' un · ouse. am. rm, Ov 11 ooo It. t "'""'" ..,., ..... .,.. Lovely, efficiency st u d1 o, .... ,.. 2 bn $500 lse or 1°"/opt .,._ • ......,, No ,..._,_ er • sq, 0 ren'il:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiil"--"'tht,' BJk,0 r--''e 1·ar .... t <·rvlco .... Ulil' II id your spacious new l· or 2 DR, 1 ba 1 1-5 ·1 """"# ru... table area In c I u ding ' 2 """"' '" ""' •:u.... " r--' nen.s. ma serv., 2-bedroom apartment. From • ·• un · "'' 'Yf Y Bachelor, 1, 2 & 3 Br's. Del Prof s1ona1 s 1 Chihuahua, Tri, male · f PHrk'g inctuded. Con' p . s 19 o. Furniture svallahlr.. NEWPORT CREST I $llS •= ""M'o. wllh"ruu facltl"it .. 1". Bu1lnn1 Opf!'!r 5005 11nllK't, Blk/brn. M JOl:IN'S Carpet & UphoW:ery Secw-lty. See Mgr. U4 /.ve. 0 · 0 BR • ba eon 1 "25 ·rom per mo. ..,.,., -..,.. .. ...,0 OTHERS. '"'rl Sh~-... 1~• a .. d I ,1 SC ...., oA I.I.ice open 9:00 lo 6:00, ... • "' · · < o . .,.. Sonia Ano Plua office & retail iipace n--·atlng .... n ~ ··•r ' "Y'I. c "ar, 4--.30. 2300 Fairview Rd .. COii.tu COMMERCIAL ~ CATS tardants.) Degreasers & A U f 3700 Pia D from 636' • l640 sq. ft. at .45c WANTED Shthr Dom, Blk male al.I color brighteners & 10 p•rtments n urn. Pi1e!j.ll. Phone: §45-2300. Office suite, N' t. la r. ft. In new prime center. Man. \roman or couple tor Sllthr Dom, Tabi>)', inale ininute l:l~Etch fOl' vihtte Balboa Ponlnoul• 3807 HACIENDA DE MESA 7 l4-S5'-0l66 Good expo11ure to trattlc. O .... n .... 6: L .A. Counties. Shthr Dom, W!Uto. male carpel3. &tve vnur mone" LRG. l BR Apt av11ilable l60 W WU.On. CM For detaila and preview call ·--e.~ -1w # NOW. Wlntcr or Ycnrly. BEAUTiFuL GROUNi>s cn4) 752-1700. Decorating e JC Pe r te n'Ce Lngh.r Oom, Grey slp, Fem. by savifli me extra trips, , --~""~'::"":::..;":.:';;;"cc·~~ -SUPER DELUXE Adulti: -No PclJll INV:.. :rMENT DIVISlON he.lptul, but not neceuary. Siamese. cream &: brwn Will cleano.llvi~ nn .. dlnlng Jlalb.., Island 3706 •-1D minutes tG ocean. Large I ~~~~~~~~~ SANDPIPER INN Company will train. Annual OTHER. Kl'M'ENS & PUP· rm., &. hMI $15. Any nn. $200. ~10. winter '1 Br, ulll 3 BR. 2 BA, patio,, b'plc, 1 & 2 Br. ·l BR $175., 2 BR I; CORONA DEL MAR I income potential $20,000 to PIES Sf.50, couch no. ClWr ~ .pd. Quiet::~ ~iix!. ~esys t ~·. Ae':~ $19().y,ith PaliO SI95. Gu &: THE MOS1 •JU•, :tlfJ',~I $25,000. S m a 11 invtstment LOST: l o /.) 1 . Male-black 1i •yra exp. is what COWJ~ Water inc., D@pe.ries, car-WALK TO i;'fii~ nece&'iary for equipment. and/or !Bmille--Black rot method. J do \lwk &.lboa Peninsul• 3707 962-8721 pets, gu hear, gas stove, EXCITING VIEWS Jo~ASHION ISLAND ~~~~~~~!!!!!!!~\Call Mr. Carroll COLLEX:I' v.•/tllD mBrk'gs. Lab/Span. myself, Good rel. 5.ll-0101. N.lo,'\V xtra Jge 3 BR, 2 Ba. air oonditiontng, swimming IN NEWPORT Privacy·Peacetul-5pacloua between 8AM &: 2PM. Mon-mixed pups. 4 1DOll., both Cement/Cone,.... 601f \VJNTER , steps tG beach, Oceanfront Apt w/dbl "'""· I ' .. -~ .. --dsy-tl)rough Fride..Y at 160'1> we"'"•· fiinn-coU,, ... ---nw . .,........., --~-·---- l ~ 11 _ 1 1 1 .,..,..., ...... poo , rec. room, w ..... ieo .. , .. ~·-· .. B .. * ...... t apartm•nl -7 9231 --~ v •u-..,... mo. nc. ull . .,.,.,.,. mo. 6t2-2164 da)'s ; & dryera. • .....,. ... ,,. ....,......... ~· Pen. 833-8984 or Collect: CON-CRETE-ASPHALT NO pets. 67"'::>-5800, Bkr. _,6T.!~--O'l&j82~evii;i"-if;,;;;;;;;7.<rn l•:::::::::::::::::;;illving. BOat slips at your LUXURY APT. LlVING PARTNER WANTED 213-790-6lll3 Break I:: remove. Walks, BACHELOR apt, kitcht':nctte, OCEANFRONT Yearly. 1 BR. door. \Vill: 10 &hops, restau-1 & 2 br .. fUIJI. suites or To jioln light manu.la.cturer. LOST· Reward Blk I e Patios, Walls, etc. UsUig pvt bayfront bch. $175. mo En1j.lenook. wet bar, Bal· * VILlA NINOS * ~:!!111e1egthi!~~~'t-ryoce::t~at:. unfurn. suite .. $295. to $450. Must have S17,500 cub. Must ~ 6 mo's w h 1 're P.1odern ~ Nobe Tools. inc util's. 714-9175 t'Oll.y, cplli, drps, bltins, car-2 ~-0 ,_10 wu"· .th have 11U1.nagement ability l marking on c~ v 1 c Lcw;est pMt'eH)I) job_ too NEAT BACHELOR on bay. port. 67S.1536. s~:m· ,;~ces, p0W:1• 2 Swimming t!1:1s. 24 hr. I••• be willing to roil.up sleeves Brookhurst & Ellis, H.B'. small! ~993.1.or 640--0168 $225. yrly or SJOO. 11,·inter. YEARtY 2 br, 2 ba, cfU!l'd. 2 BR, 2 BA APTS sublerm.nean 2-cai: parking. t'1tc.:hbrd.,&u ·pd., elev., •••c•tl•• •fflct . All .&11 )llOl'k. Salary + equal 751:96Z-2289 da,y:s, e ves, BACKHOE, Grtdlni le 926 E. Balboa, 675-45.33 gar., steps 10 bch, adull!i, Su~=~a~~.iet All adult, full r,ecurity build· k~~·. 5~ws~ .• se~t~e:; ~ho( ~~flt~ Exi:,p~I TSl-1327 -~bing ~r:~~ ·, Coste Mesa 3724 no pets. $290. bil-1990 or Gaa &: Water Paid. Mo. to tng. New carpet, drapes, balcyl!. & much more s ua 'J3o . us-LOST· lrlah Setter male ean-up, a .. 't 613-3610 Mo. rentols Sl90 to $200 bullt·lru>, dPcor. Leases from sell, (n4} 997-5 · 6 ~s., y,.-ear'g. ~. CO~ Cust Cen1ent Work. 642--8514 GREENBROOK 1 BR Furn/unfum. yrty, uW Children Welcame $500 per mo. Opt. maid serv., opt, tennis. *RESTAURANT* & flea tag. Vic. 16th St.,HB. =Do=""=~~~--~ pd. S215. n10. Ne. w po r 1 2324 Eld A 833 2480 ---------ICosta Mesa. Neat &: clean. Ans. to ''Tu i' '. Call: CEMENT Work, any kind, ·· MODEL Be-uch. 673-72l9 eves. en ve -(714) 675--8551 FOR LEASE OR RENT Newport Center . Seats no +. Owner reUring. ?18-lln days or 842·9653 Comm e rclal, realdenUal., 3 b" 2 bu, pool, lrml din. * BAYFRONT MEDITERRANEAN (213) 661-0361 2101 E. COAsr HWY. G d floo $28,000-T•rm• "" Lie & oondod, 63&-1645 ' rm. spac. fam. rn1, lots of VILLAGE Newport Bay Towers roun r RIVIERA REALTY LIBERAL reward lot info CEMENT & Block Work fcr:°pdrsJ 25 wallpaP!!r. Prof. 1~·£.e~:C~~yrly. 1 Bedroom •""" 31Q Fernanda St., N.B. _ 8;~ J~~~.Hldrlls ~d 2!361 *642-7007* 1.~adln~ todtoeo0v11eryn~! __ a W1 a1811, htpatios,josbid~~~ BIG . 3 B0EDf!OOM . LARGE 1•-,1 blk. 10 bay 1 °-•room • -n :"~ PARK NEWPORT re ~v '""'t""'"" a,...s, a ir-RESIDENTIAL CARE rown an w e ~t ec., ~ .or ''P"W_. "' co:u .. I.A" 'f<'-"" 'I\. b '°"''! janitor, parking. Hound lo$t near Orange CONCRETE WORK· Patios 1o~am. rm, + din; rm, fncd. or ocean. utlls. incl. $195. 2 Bedrooms $265 • APARTMENTS . ort• Wes ey N. Taylor-Co. Lie. 11 • Census 11 • Cotµlty F~. 545--llll Drives, walks, toWldation!i'. yd, dbl. gar. $395. 968-44<5 1 .,;"",,__~=· ::.G'l>-:.:..,:'181G=-'"'='":c· ~~ 2 Bedroom Townhouse $32il Bachelor 1 or 2 Bedrooms REAL'1'9RS. $65,000. weekdays ~ SSl-6082. Sm_Jobs o .K. 64S-8512. 1:"~';;""'~~25~17~·:::::::::::::: IC•pistrana h•ch 3818 Costa 2~~ar"(~~h~7-8020 Fr.~ To~ Daily 2 BR. Townhouse, frplc, NZlll SanCJoaqwn ~~.~91. ABODE BROKERS, 645-7555 FOUND-Black male puppy Child Care 6020 !"" from $2:i0. 1 BR, from $195. ewport enler ~ 0 HEALTil Food Store. Uni· Tall markings on face & DELUXE 3 Br -2 Bath Spa Pools . Tennis Pool, teMls, continental WATERFRONT que Country Store. We 11 tan Jega. Wliite on chest. T.L. CHILDCARE. My Costa Ambassador Inn 1/ffoo~cft ~:~~u~; w I th fireplace. Bullt·ins, Across from Fashion Isliuxl breakfast. separate family NEWPORT BEACH EstabJished. Newport Beach Vlc. Clubhousl?, Mesa Verde }.tesa Home. Hot Me a J s . BRAND NEW bltns, gar. s 2 2 5. Call carpeting, drapes, Pat i 0 • jl\Jsam~ on San Joaquin section. Ootie to &hopping Exeaitlve offices mo&l desired area. D ays 557-9670 rncd Yd. C&ll ~1455 $29.50 & Up 496-1:196 f:a~~ ~!: g=e. ~~: (714) 644-1900 -· & fine beach. 6#-2611 2 Or 3 Room suite ~.Eves. 673-MOO . 1-UlST~~, ~,-,-m-ale-Jr-~-.-Se-tt-er, i ·c=..,=1'-roe1o'-·:.,,;;;;r"""-'=~602=1 SINGLE STUDIO APT Corona del Mar 3822 Plaza, Freeway & Orange l BLK TO BEACH Yiew of boaUI & water $5,000. Note at 100% Intern P.1\sskln Viejo ·area, about ~SPECIAL WEEKLY RATES Coast College. $310/mo. New-r. dern-Prlvate mR 1.Small office SUi5 payable in .6 moa. $10,tn>. 9 mo6., "'hile blaze on VAIL CONSIJ'RUCTION 2277 l{arbor f!'vcl. • DUPLEXES 2 Br .• 1 ba. Phone.eG:!-8118 . 2Ba. bltins, walk-iJt.Closeta: MESA '8111.Grundz Rltr. ,S'ffi.'T.260. .. cheat...}!!. Reward. 5*2665 General"Contractor Room ~·-r·~-~Mesa.G45-4840 ....... -. 2 br., i'''1ir;~.tn0:'.° --N"EW--BREEO encgar,Cab!e:rtf:~mo " G~Rb.EN -615-611-· lnvntOpport'y 5015 J:30tg05f~t~.4!6008 ·~~~~~.:· 3 br.. 2 ba. $3:5. A 11 1 BR AP~RntEN;rs 1 ytly 1se includes ntllities. NO INFLATION Reh:renccs. ~L #2!13Sl5 w/garage & rec ent I y • poo jaeun: • c osed 548-9578 or 551.WU eves APTS 35e: Incl. jalnt. &: util. Ti,..d of Inflation? I ~ 645'-0831 • · $30 WEEI< I. OP e $6.50 Night & Up., e Studk> &: 1 BR Apts. redecorated 644 6800or garage, applns. Util p·d . • M . I I .. . -Adults. $190. 393 l{amilton, Vista Del esa 2 & 3 Bclrms., crpts, drps, Corona del Mar Stock Market Down! Need ......... • GERWICK &: SON, BI d !l:. "644-'=1'="''6::.. ~-~--= ~54411 or 642-1960. ADULT GARDEN HOMES ntilltles pa.ld .. B 1 t l n s , 1CMiJ Sq. (I. _ smart Joe. shelter !~r capital gllln?\tjjiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i:· ~~ C-Qntr. Add remtld. St.· he. tk:TV a:Mald Service Avail. ~Phone Service -Htd. pool •Children & Pet Section .l:XTRA large 3 Br., 2'.J APTS Unfurnished, -2 B r IRVINE AVE, AT MESA laundry facilltiea.. Rec . Harbor Mgmt. Co. 675-60CJO Commodities may . be lhel ~ p Bl·ll.m.t., 6'l3-fl041. 5'9-2170 Ba. Brand new! Ft'P~c. shag $l$5. Util pd, pool, lndry Near New;Ylrt Blvd, 1'l'wy room w/pool table, gym "'~ answer. 1''nr more 1nlormn.-Peraonal.,J 5350 Electrical 60l2 crpt., fully draped, -a11 new facil, cpts, d,....d;, , dshwhr, & Irvine Jndustri..l Complex room, sauna. pc. '-Adulbl Dt"""'~ ~pace ~vailable · S50 tion, Call B, Wlldi:ir. ".\93-8686 '· applna. Mo. to mo. or year • •' only M pets 2881 .Brli:tol mo. Wilt provide furniture E LE C 1 C lease from $375. 6'13~, closed gar. No Ud/pct. 1 BR $190. 2 BR i230. Cdst~ M:sa . ' it $5. mo. An 5 wer1 n g Mort, Tru•t Deeds 50l5 GOfNG SACK TO WORK? , TR . I AN * Old M;ESA VERDE 3BR. 2BA, eves&: wknds 675-lOTB. Hacienda Harbor Apts Rec Bldg w/gym, Billiards, 751-4187 service available. 17875 BE PRE~ARED Jobs -Ne11.• J obs, Servloc l&m rm, trpl, heatr.d pool, """"'~;;;:=.:;"",=:;;=:,,=1----'~~'!:74~76"-'---0..lor T.V. Pool ,& J acuzzi. Beach BJvd., Huntingtwi Brwih up :your skillll, cnlls ·_anytlme • anyplace. 2376 Newport Blvd., CM 54S-91S5 ... 645-l967 fully crpld, big kilch w/ NEW 2 BR wUh ind ividual CASA VICTORIA APTS Security Patrol. Refrig. inc, Beach. (12-t.l21. LOANS UP TO IO% typing, &hotthand, office 542--9829 &ltns & D/W. On' quiet st. bet ... ,. lge kitchen. liv rm Adults. '~ 3 BR \V/patios • 5'li:;...@55,• LA QUIN.TA HERMOSA oFt"lCE S PACEFOR 1st TD loans macttlncs.Personalde\'elo~ ELEC'TRJ~ClAN--------.-.• -.1 Vacant. Children & pets ok. & n nn, trplc. bltns. Avail From n69.SO No Pets WESTCLIFF AREA Spa.ms!\ Cou";try Estate Llv· RENT. Costa MC!oa, Harbor meut & ofe· rapport. cali· 2331~. Small jobs, maint ~25 inc. water. gardener & ~2:zi,1~:es ~ 3 O O • Pool, rec rm., elevators 1 & 2 Bedrooms. Pool . ing & SpaclOU!I Apts. Ter· at Adams. Be a u t i f u 1-f<>mia Professk>nal C.Ollege, & repairs. 548-53l3 ~ serv. 642-SOll, 968-4950. 1 .,:;;:;.;~~7.'-'7'~"'-...,..~ Sec. gate. Gas & water pd Adults. Supcr sharp! $180. raced pool, sunken g a 1 mode r n . A i r , ni u sic, Zn d TD l" l. Of 1801 Newport Blvd, C.M. Fumltu,.. 6041 ***GARDEN APTS SPACIOUS Newly decorated 525 Victoria, CM, 642-8970 IG SZ25. F'Umiture a v a i I. BBQ, Unbelievable Living. janitorial, Class A. Walker uc:I " (n4l 645-292'2. ---'--'-----"';,;.;.I • eePOOL l Br. $200. Adib;. 3 0 9 LARGE 1 Br, pool, ad;acent Days Ul-3544 er eves 1 BR. UNFURN. Sl90 & Lee Bldg. call Gene Hill L I t 0 C SPIRITUAL R.:.:ADER FURNITURE Repair Service Furn. l&:.2 Br apts in adult Fer n 1 e.a f · 673-3!27 & tG shopping. $160. "mo, &i6-fi075 J ::t FURN $215 557·0136 or &42-0200. owe' r• 91 r•n9• o. Open 10 AM to lOPM Ch air a strengthened 6. section. No pets. Elm 6TJ-009'2. Depbsit r e f un d a b I e to BA YFRONT Charming lrg 2 AU. ~~S ~D * 1 ?t10. FREE REN'T . * 642.:1;:1er · Mt9. ~:.:C,.11 Advice on all ~ atters. reglued .. rree est. 646-m!9 1 ~G~•;:nle'°"'n"'A"P::l•o,·,.:"'"7,-3645~:.,,,=-2 Br., 1 ba.., 1 blk to ocean. responsible, cle{ln tenant. no br, 2 ba. Plush crptng, drps, Adultll-, No pelfl No lease req. Dix. offices Se . ·~-~~ .,~ 312 ~·-El Camino Real G•rdening 6045 'i.cE 1 br. nnnl, odj to shop-Malurc adults. No p e Is , pets. 1887 Monrovia·, 2 car prkng, pool. Adult. l62ll Parkside Lane, Hun-. adj. Airport.er Hotel. AJC, rving ruu ...... are• ..... yrs. San .....,men!£',. For appt, ...-R2frig + stove. 615-3.180. 646-6:j]4 Watch the boats sail by. tington Beach (TI4) 847·5441 lull services. From $145 Mo. PAY $10,250. for $12,SOO. se-Call 4.92-9034 492--9136 JAPAN~ GARDENER ~~~:,8°res=~e~~2or3BR.7 ·12·Mo.Lea.w. Dana Paint 3826 $575mo.ll-1gr,673-7985. lblkW.ofBeachonF.d· 2172DuPont,Room8 -condmortgageon bullding DIVORCE Exp.Week l yMaint . tenant. No ..,..ts.. 1887 l\fon-I Blk water. otc. ra2--0100 i ;:..:.:;.:..;...:;;;:_ __ ...:;c;::= 547--0321. , inger. South al lit signal, * s:G-322S 'TU noon* leased to U.S. Post Office Cl~ps. Tree & Shrub rovla . 646-6314. or 673-655 1 block. 1501 WESTCLIFF DR. and earn 18% i nt e r es t . ONLY $65. Trim. Free csL 548-¥83, 1BR. cottage apt, ln rear, $150month. 2538 N e w p o r t Blvd. Costa · P.Iesa c a 11 Costa Meu 3824 P~~~~e~li~~ 0i1,r;.r:.: =~ ,3 ~~-TI-IE EXCITING NEWPORT Finaiicial Center 837-ln7 or 496-2002 Cmnpl~793.rellable ~548-~7958~-------l $3IO. mo. Adlts. <19l-'1557 or beam. huge master suite PALM MESA APTS Leasing Office Space (gj EXP. Gardener ae rvln1 ***GARDEN APTS 496-2413. w/frpl. Must see. $500. Boat MINUTES TO NPI' oo{ CA1J. ON·SITE MAAAGER I l PREGNANT? N~. COM area. Ct>rnpl ••• POOL slip avail. 6 7 5-3 4 8 6 or Bach 1 & 2 BR. trom 1157· <714) 642-3lll ext 246. Lott lftd ,.... Carina. confidential counsel-gardening. Yard cleanup1, NU 2 Br, 1¥.r Ba. twnh.se, S57-1010 ' . . . _ :"t, & refetTal. Abortion, 646-4616 'UXURJOUS .......... hs-furn. Unfum. 2 Br apt in family lplc ihag ba!co•y M" I-CC°'=''='~-...,.~~~-Adu,113, No Pets. NEW Plush offit"e Bldg., 2 p"-· • "-p•~ AP ~=~,,-,,--.,----~-I .. 6"'"~· • • ............. UNFURN Apl1. 2 Bt., 2 Ba. ·~ M Dt 6 RM ·eo~· Ullll <It ....... ..... • Lol"o.r" know -ma Int ,,.._..., t.tald ser. No smo,ltc r s. setticn. Crpt-: & drps. NG 493--64.34 673--4200 ........_ esa · ttl suites. • .. erence CARE 642-4436 • • Emp. gen!. 543-TI9'1 pets. 642-3645 \..;mo""'·""'c;c"-'""-'-"'~7-=I Westclltf area, small pet (5 blka from Newib't ffivd.) Rm. Xerox copier. Near Lost & ~ound 5300 clea11upa, trimming, I -""",;;:;.:::~=~=--I E•stbluff 3830 OK, call 642-2152; 645-9060. ~9860 O.C. Airport. 833-l&Ml. L SEMI·Retlred prof. gent, 35, r eno v a.Ung, landsca&>lng. LGE FUW.Y FURN 2 BR CHILDREN OK EASTBLUFF Beaut. &. new, Rooms 4000 NEWPORT BEACH Deluxe LOST: Black Cocker Spaniel, nice looking, wilt!~ to meet call otter 4. 968-3486 Bltns, W/W, iJ;iys, po o I . Lge 2 Br $110; 3 Br 1~~ 1 br, bllrui, pool avail. Year-.;;...,;;..."---~-.C.:.:.: I fUtn'd ofUce QI' desk space Newport Hght.s area, Sun-attractive &"irl for daytlme LAWN SERVICE - AdHs, no pe1s. $190. 642-9i:D Ba $100. Duplex & 4-plex, ·e DELUXE • ly $240. &14-0355 SLEEPING room near Udo $50 1~ $l50. mo. { 2 13 j day. "Toto" 12 31!"' o.I d . dates. P.O. BoX 1124, Tustin _ DEPENDABLE LRadGl.:/!t°'s, •~UI, rnpdshops, 1~7~~~~s, 2m:R· 64U6821ngle lr!i~ ·s~a:A ~~;~r ~~a:: I '3"'"'s'°R.C-,-'"c.'2'Cbu""' .. "2'°-.-.,~.,-.. -.,-. Shops for malure woman 592-2251 ~anl. CaUSe67>-<;a;. RE""1JAL, ~-ATE -·~~•c ~I~ Maint e a~ u"" "" pe.... · · '8 •.din rm & dbl garage. Auto stores&. offices. Adults. or man. Pvt entr. & bath. ATl'RACTIVE rront office LO~·: Irish lier, fem ., 1 LO>J. J.IVUl."J.I" ·l =='"""~·----""-'°'°'1 l,884·'Monrovia, Cf.1 'a43-0336 story, beam ceiling, blt·ins, door opener avail. Pool & $300. By Owner. MG-839l. $125. mo, 673--0343 afler s ground Door Approx 400 sci yr., vie. of Golden West Indlv. Instruction. Penoaat GARDEN/RES/COMM/IND. $Tu(), 1 BR. all uttl pd. 1662 Acrpt, ~!15'92~ W aJ_la0~~ Recreation area. Adtllts pm ft. $l25 nw. 1648 Newport & Westminster. RE\VARD. attn. Sales or broker exam Cleanups, btt It ahrub 'trim ~cwport, near 17th St, C.f.t ve . ..,...,.... ...-. U'...-ooo.o only, no pets. P#:';~J.1:~:.P~~~b-~: FROM $82.50. Priv rms & Blvd; c:M Ms-9766 894-7051 2-3 wk!. Academy 548-U92 · Soil ed. Seaaon flowers, 642-6194 \V/~:1E reLGtrigE 2PB0~ 1 e $~2 e $329. 644-22'79; 67J.446G apts for IK!nlors. Llnens, S5c PER SQ FT FFOUNDal ' LatgThlne black ha!OOa· Adl*.,~~lmtlonlCaJ:.d~~dC:.~81 YOUNG 642-"33lta NICE l Br & Ba ch e I 0 r · • · . · 865 Amigos Way, NB maid serv, Xlnt security. lfil7 \VESTCLrFF NB em e. w/long r. nn1uc .._.. .. '~""' , man wan to buy trailer for rent. Laundry $175. _ Adults, no pets. Managed by BAYF1t0NT 3 Br, 2 Ba on U4 Del Mar: sc. 492.-MlO AGT 541 .,,..~.; Yorktown and Beal(h, H.B. Stan!OO., 517.34)6 Ganlening route In CM. NB, "l 'l "''"--'""" &i2-9520 WlLLIAM WALTERS CO main bay, pvt bch. w/pier ~ .....,,,... """-"""" Cd!ll •-•---1 •• 0 -18.C\. ava1 ......... -~·· gora.1935; 6444510 ROOMS $20 wk up, with . ......-•"""'· •MARRJAG&--FAf.ULY • u .. u ........... • ~ s;l;O. 2 BR ITailcr. Mature ADULTS, no pets. Wke new. H t' t Be h 3840 kitch~n $30, v.'k up apt. DELUXE 2 rm. office; East LOST: Sun 10/20 fem Germ HELP lINE EUROPEAN GARDENER liiduils only. l32 \\'. \\'ilson, Quiet. 1.ge ·2 Br. un ing~_•c 1 BEDROOM. Kitchen Flig 541J.975.5orG4S.l961 Col.st Hwy., Cd~I. 43<;: l''l. >Shep mix, blk/tan. flop 645-mG Landscaplng·ttte M!!'Vlce 164 5-45.'ll Dishwasher, disposal, patio, Luxury Ap-& Stove. Adults. CHEAP!! LIVE AT TIIE BEAru Realonomlcs, Bkrs. 615-6700 ears Miss~ a kit please B b lttl .. -. reasonable, 842--5329, 685-l-i2S Rf.E clean bach, redec. prage. $2lO. 644-087S '"" Sl25 mo. 645-289&. $25 & up a v,•k. 6n.-0440 JOO SQ FT, crpts/drps, $95. call .Bret 4!»-6090. • ·-~ ng ~ General Strvlces 6046 . Ad" lt• 0,_ '" I'""· A'ITRACTIVE 1 Br, shag Just oompleted. 1 BR's $195. San Clemente 3876 PINE KNOT MOTEL ~3109rno. Call 646-2130 or l()gJ'.Rewanl for Jake, lg. BABYSITTING by ht In~• .._, ""' ~ "Pis bit•• -Ad,I•• 00 mo. 3 BR w/fplc $310. mo. -,;;fi;"f.:i;f,f,.'-'i;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;-i.~•~·~~-=-~~-~~~J •·-HANO~"OMEN Cl ~ ti!' pd. 548-ZWl "' ' • ..,, .... ..,~. "" GREAT LO CA 'I' ION IN • NICE LARGE Room w/pvt. . grey eat, med. long hair, home, aftemoens and even-.. " • ean .. pets. $140. 1!m1 Wallace. 2 BR, cpts, drps, stv. & 150_ ~· Ft. $110. mo. in~ld. Ilea collar. Vic. 22nd & inp. Refa 642-0238. l\1aint. Painting, plumb , untington Beach 3740 64&-0176 THE BEAOI AREA. Open rcfg. Furn. avail. Sm. entry & Balh. $80. mo. uW a Boats & Bay outside 1 · 6"" •• ,..... c a. r pen try. Hol1\t/AplL 1i,.:::.:::::;!:.::::..::=::.::.c...::...:: Daily a f t e r n o o n s . 1001 Children Ok no pets. $220. 645-5867 · 3-6606 rvuie. ,.,............, Cabinet Mai king 6014 ALL Servk!es 5 5 6-3 6 o o , OW WEEKLY RATES 2 BR, pvt. attached. gar, Alabama H.B. Call 961'.r-3?21 492-f.086 ' your door.~ . lOgJ': 2 dogs, 1 Siberian -545-0521 • quiet, clean, no dog or sm. or 839-fil33 osk for Jnck ROOM \\1/pvt. entrance & 20FFICESmnice~~trial Husky grey & white, 1 halJCA RPE ~TRY, cabinets, E ]JeCutive Syites child. S185. + dep, 1st & or ri.tarion. San Juan bath. Adull over 30 prefer· area. $100. both, util. incld. Coll ie/Shepherd, blk &: gold eu!totn y,.U)dworldng, home Haull"f 6051 T1.1 Yorktown Blvd. last. 642-9846 I-''-"==-----c · 3878 rOO. 548-2'120 548 8.100 -3 BR. 2 Bl\, lg. kitchen, ap1s,trano -58&-9769 repairs, remodeling. No job CONST .. & TR.ASH HAUL-~ach B5~1·04a1IYlorkto"n LA\VaR•Gh~I·,,~, ~'m". pl'',' 1 lbao •· lncd. bk.yd., din. rm .. ¥.i CONDO " b 1 b Room & Board 4050 Business Rental 4450 LOST sml blk silver .mutt , 6too7' ,!ml9au834. ~ est. Lou ING Tree remova.l-t.rltn· -~ • ·" • blk. to bch. $235. n10. Pre(cr " r., a'• ' 'KI n g ·' . Skin alergy. "'"9• • -""""' STUDIOS & 1 BR's. drps., crpls. Close to schls adlts. ovcr so. No pets, no \.\rood/mirrors. 2 car gar., l\fOTHERS llelpe:r, student ---------1 NeWJ>l)rt Isle, C11l Hw y Carpenter 6015 ~!~~~'{2move concrete, .a Full kitchen &: s. Cst Plaza. 546-8688. children, no single~. 2 O 'I ~29fsV:1 ~lr:ees~0· ok, room & ba board in Center San Clemente 675--L30l · I °"'""""'""'=,..-~~~-I • Heatt.'fl pool 2 BR, studto, 1'~ ba., shag Lake St. 53&-0206 exchange for Ute housekeep.. 1000 Sq f't LOST_ y 0 u n g l\1alc Cat. CUsroM carpeniz ol !!" LOCAL Moving & Hauling •Laundry fucil!ticii crpt., blllns, patio, pool , WALK TO BEACH Santa An• 3880 ing&.babyaltting.Prlroom, Store or office Gray>/Wtlt face. l\-1. Vic types, c°'blnets qual1()' bystudbi!·=~u~, e .t.Tee uttlltics SlOO. Util incld. 645-8079 or 1 2 •. 3 8 1 d bath. & TV. N.B. Mn. Long on ~I cam.Joo Real Broa<lway & Tustin. CM. c:pncrete. 962-1961 reuona ' · -):? !''rec linens G45-56471978 l\1aplc. • "' · r, crp, rps, Lge, atl'r. 2 BR, 2 ba, quiet ~8612 or 673·9114 7759 *ALL TYPF.s* HAULING, M.oVtng and • T .V. & maid scrv. avail, 2BR' --•-ad Its bl tins, gar. 8 2'll 16th St. or adult C O N D O . Dahwshr, I ·v'°"'=i'°I -"=R="71.c...~4~2=so 492 9764Excellent parki~!, .,.,.,., call 64~ · * BIG & SMALL * Tl'a&h Cle•n1in. 2 1tudenta. 'e Bar·B-Que 11Jlllll!'m. u , mar-205 l51h t.. Huntington newly draped, cptd, POOL aca on enta s -"""'--•.»>.>LOST: Black Lab. 19tti & """' ,.,_,0 1f ~17d9 * i... ried cple pref, no pets, avail Bch 847 3957 1· f · · 1198 H '11 •-CM •---~ 1; ~i: t:,e;:~n Nov 15, 2515 Elden, $175, ~HE; ORO APTS ;::;t~P~~ri..;.;1..:-~ Rent My Condoll 2 OFFICE.S/Stores Lag Bch, toa~Qu0:· c;a~ct ·&ti-2~; CARPENTRY Hous.ecleanlng . 60$4 t;,E;,A;U'l"=l;;,B:o• ~ • .,.""-.-.-.-:-.,:-=S!~s;' \G'4A>R-44DELJN 2 b . 1 8234 Allanrn Suhset Beach 3890 Large, l BR apt with view ~;J{i:·0/ s!'i?os::nl free. 664 Surf St., C.M. All types, 979-4954 2 MEN do expert etfic:lenl & Sl'l5 Spnnish style bW.ld· r, trip ex, 1.2& 3 BR. Ptiv gar, pool. or mountaiD.s and overlook· ,;:c.:.:~::,c:,=,:::;;c=--iFOUND : P ood le male Sell idle ltems with a Dally cleaning, /Uiy Job, re I ii·, . -• J-~ •at l bltin.s, quiet, gar., lndry, \vasher. dryer. Cl08C to BACHELOR Condo. Oecan-ing pool. Oiolce PA LM REA RESTAURANT for c h o co I a te , Dachshund ~Pl=l=ot=C!~as~•=lff~ed~ad~.=642-S618~=~~~~ -'.§::::::::::::;\ 1pg, ,,. .. enc""""" g ., poo , d"'ts l 0 ... ..,..~ """A L-h ·~ ~~ 1 1· I ·~·~ sauna, laundry, ad\ls 173Cll a .., · pc "" .,,~ or '"'ac • ...,.,...,..... vie"" walk to Bch. Frpl., DESERT location. Nr small case, 1rst &. ast mo. rent fema1e tan. Pekingese lem. Keel.son l..arlt"' 1 blk \\'est 64~2--024"'°"''~~-~---I EXTRA lrg 2 Br, 2 Ba, t'J)ts, drps, bltns. S 2 0 o·. shopping center. Weekly or req. f'Ully equip. 645-1030 Tan & 'tli!:ht. 54G-0083. of Beach on Slater. 842-1848 2 BR, Yard, Gar, .Quiet Street dlx JX)Olslde apt nr beach, Lease. 846-3336, Ask Io r mon1hly rates. For I n Io lncktstrial Rental 4500 FOUND Beige and wht pu~ SEEK & Ff ND' ~ h , 1 1 Child O.K. No pets. $170. adults. SOrry, no pets. $175. !\1ary Ellert 642.(1596 or 55:i-8868 · -py. Looks like Collie. Ma1e. MEN. small .... ar ,..Qte . :: _.,., 536-8362 R..oms $21.51) "·eek. Apia. mo. 6r::><>••J. Apts Fur n/Unfurn 3900 BIG Bear cabln for rent, NE\V WarehOU!e Next to Mogmlla and Atlanta, HB ',.,l'<i::":c· -'mo= . .:;'36-:::;..:1:::"'6;:..-~= 12BR 1%Ba lownhouse, cpts, 2 BR. free gas & \\'8.ter. -fireplace, TV, sleeps 8' Orange' Co Airport. u'""' .. , I ~962-~35.19=,_-..,.,..,,..~.,.....,....-.\ "Laguna Beach 3748 drps, bltns. nr Fairview & Cpts, dfl>5, Ch~d ok, oo COME LIVE 842-8'IT.Z ft ncl . 400 sq n o l':C n F'OUND ?i.1ale trl·colored 1::~:.::;:...:c;::o::.:_ __ :;:,.;~ I Baker $175 no pets M5-l882 "pels. $170. 842-1652 Rentals to share 4300 Industrial park. Tim Dnscoll Collie JIUP· Springdale and 2 huge bedrooms'. Super k>-LA.RGI<; 2 Br studio, encl. '-"==...;....;;;=:...-c.:.: = or Leland House Westminster H.B. 893-S87'9. 2 BR OCE.,N VIE\V-Adults -Nov-June Norrh Laguna S7'l5 4!M·5 l 78 3769 cation. Beam ceiling. $170 garage. $157.50 mo. Infant .W1llf US NEED a Rommmate to shr. COSTA MESA * L 0 ST, Ma I e German mo. 64!>£'610. ok, not pet!!. 847-4440 * ShOl'lhllir, n1J brown, S100 CHILD OR P-OK ' -1 expcnseii on sm. 2 b r ., Alm .. i-new M·l. n~ .. -~. u•~n EASl'SIDE---2 BR. crpts, ""' A virum i;etttng or en-house. Prefer werk 'g. '""" f llSS MO =·-• ~ stove, re(rig, gar. pool, lge Luxµry 2 Br, 2bo., DW, shng. tertalnlng lrlendll or rela."'(· female but will co n s Id e r JJN sq. t. · · LOsr: Irish Setter, ma1e, ' $29.9.i \\'K UP. 1 Bdt., 2 yd, $185. nw. 673--0731 415 l9ih. $260 mo 846-5975 Ing wl 2 th neighbors. Spacious anyoJ\e wlw is fi nancially 644-2361 2 yr. old. Vic. l21h St. 1-1.B. Ba ,t,. Bach. Color TV , 1nald 3n.. 2 .BR. 2 Bl\, cpl.S., dl'Jl!I., l & bedroom• featuring resp. •MWll like anhnals & 1,000 SQ. FT. office or Reward. 96()..13QO , N'!,w port Beach !if'fV. pool. 'fJ-11:: r.tESA, 415 °' · 2ba, bllins, cpts. 8ri8 carport, l child OK. no pets. bu.Ill ins, cui;h)m d r a Pe s • fre1tky prop le. 548-3211 aft.. 11tornge, Plenty of parking. LOgJ': 1 white rabbit, tern, N, N.~wport. Bl., N. B . ~~t;,r19st. Apt 1; $20.l mo. .S1::;60;;·,.:mo"7'-"53'iCl'-'-'5""15c.,._= 0 i shA.g carpeting, pool & out-5 PM. Ask for Pat. $225. Newport Sh0re1 Area. small. Vic. Shnlimnr & 646-96111. ~""·~~-.,..~-~ :-door bbqs. En)Oy the good C&ll 642-8252 -LARG~E 3 9 2 Bo h 2 UR, l Ba condo $230 •d"ll l<'f• ,1 11,, TEAOlER. sailor &: athle!Jc. · Ploccntla. Rev.•ard. 642-'2011 I WATt::HFRO~I dlX I 0 w e r ,_, -bl;:.... ... ' occs ag incl. Uu1. • . WE.ST BAY 18 Resp, fair. firm, ftiendl.)', RENT new 1200-2640 sq, ft, F-·nd -Biko , ~,•-. ~ BR. 2 B.~ well .;.;.~_· ~, .... ,;._,, "'" ,~ear · 842-3!»6 d · f ha 2BR h $170 to •360 fofii 208 -u "" ....,., a.. ....._. 131 E. 18th St, Costa Mesa et s em., s re 11e., ' • ' "" ce. 675-1612 btwn 5-7 PM rumlshetl. Dock. \VI n t e r • B h 3848 64 •• o.6 Bal Penln. Dave, Box 24t1, 3ph. Muller Rily 613-7039 · $350. ,\dullS _ no p c t 1 • EXTRA lrg 2 Br. Cr pt s. ...aguna eac I -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';:;~;;::;;;;;;;;;;; Bell 90201 Storige 4SSO FOUND: Pekingese, fem. nr. m-TRGJ drps, bltins. no pets. 830 J' MAN w/S yr. old c h 11 d __ Bushard & llaZIU'd, G.G. LAS BRJSAS AM'S Center St. &16-U81 t:\V 2 Ir l BR WXVRV ~ w\ahcs to lbara-4-u. p I ex 537·1201 80CJNT AJ CTNJMS IEDMR 1l I CA P I A L A 9 I E 0 ,M A,J AME DCKN 8 MHOP C B ~OSJ A 8NA ZMSIH 8 R 08~8 ... g c J .... c JA C AO TCU ' . IMO CC I S I OAT . '.r M-R U C L !I !I M O C f! a I A L 'I "S M 0 AMl£9CSN MLUPPMN1HAMUHDNMOIS 8 1LMNI O ATMHJAJM 8 ML 1 18~99TTO ~C88HEJOUOT H N IM SIKASMSI IJA C ~TL IUSOC1ALL8LOELJI I IU KCMMMSILAICOSDAA S P C JCULAIC08ASOCCUEM'HC !VlS ru"°"r Aw 612-2566 Sl 5 0 . LG E I Br. n o OONOO};ITNTUMS, Wide -Prefer girl w/chlld or who MINI-WAREHOUSE CALICO CAT--Ab.'.Uldoned & , Ell'\18l.ir bids on beach. 1&:2 child/dtlg. 6 7 3 -0 Center.~ OCEAN v1..;\\:S nr Victoria DCITINC N£W COlfC{PTI like chlldttn. 642-'nOO Private, kicked individual needs hOme. t..e.gnna Bet.ch 1 a·n.. Pvt balconies.. htd pool. Open. 642-2464 or '™;1763 Beaeh "2>$425 4*-1195 i ADUlJ W£.Slll UYllC Female needcd to 1 ha~ e ttorage unita. .From .,1.50 area. 499-1001 N 0° H N 1 M L M 8 D I MS L A I I C 0 _ Securll1~Adults. ...,_ 2 BR. 2 Ba. bttus, ba.lcoey, 2 BR. 1 BA. I blk to ocean. IMMLNH.llCC'lnfO Laguna Beach howtc!. Cnll pe:rmo. LOST. 1'· While Female \'--,::=:=,,-;"'°""="=-:======~...J ON 'Ill£ BCJ-1, Blld\, Sing, $.t!.1. mo. Adults on I y 1 Re_JfiK .• fnilc,...,.deck. bllns. •Bochelors LI n d " 837-JOOO weekdfU'I. ALLSPACE Poodle. Nr. Brookhurst A I~ n. _..... ..-. i..• '"'°"' ~ farwwd, ~ $125. THE SEX:tlND 64:z..3693 $.:.."1;,. mo ~1·~•·.:>~IJ • 1 8R,·2 BR 494-54nl eve. A weekend& 960-1970 Gt\rfittd. JIB. OOZ...2621. =-=--.... "=~-t ~-=:r 19 llMI ,.wt. FiM *11 STY. APTS. 103 McFaddcn, 2 Er. npt. cpt/drp. NG chlrtm GR.e'AT wa~r view at Woods •2 81 & Oen _ \V,"\1'1tTEO m 11 tu re ltnllght LOST brown, ah1ur:av m•le D<tsM ••'I.ISM CO"MU"I•·• ~ 81s..UJ6;"1 or pe1". $115. 6*:9280 22$7 Cove: J .. Bfl; pool; $240. m:tle to w-~-home LINK _..._ 'B o;;;;r..S t ~ " ·~ ¢94 11136 ~2200 From $185 & $435 ,,, , \."\.1\,:1\t\~. • u • ..,.. . tin • IOt:ALlllM f'l'IHrLISM CAPITALISM ~ FREE BOAT OOCK1 3 BR. Ap1. "F" Aiaple SI. -' In 11.D. S150. mo. . STORAGE UNITS A1* 6.-2llth. C.M. 548-14'7 .l~INllM. HUMANISM TAOIMM .oi t!il. tiundcck wilh \!I e w ' & en. upl)tt' fronl uni! In :.:M::•::so;:...:V,.;•;:.'.od•;.----'3:.:8:;63:: MelO V.rdefast & Adams BAL ISLAND De Lw<e Apt. J'thM)ru\.I, bush"le5S or rtettl'I• LOST: Vic. 19th ... llamllton. SIKHISM 1' SOCl~~IS~ OCCULTI~M p \V.i$:1'-or )Ti)', On. Lhc. f.o:ur ptex.-~1?..-adjlt&, -:;; t:==:;5!:4!!0~·:;!1~8_!!0:!!0~-....; to Sharc-.JUQ own room. • ~l IQLJ1 • ~1~~._mnlt Bia l}la<;k Lo.hrl\<klr1 °"'°'"-..KIM•or,lthRok• . ._ I water. G7HI@ llt' 1'74'""3M no pets. $160. 645-(1343 • JfOM'E AThfOSPHERE Cnll Rogtt or Luc. 675-f,091 . • .1m . II n r .<:11 o no collar, or r.o. &t~ ·T<t Okin .-n1 °' sll of'lbt-u .peniltd ''~la Find"' 600{~ ~ lo--Bft houic, gi1 rd~n. g1t.r~. ClEAN 2 Br. J~ floor. Cpt. Oeluk~ 2 le a BR. RcntaJ °ADULT APT LIVING~ RESP.ONSIBLE ;:lrl io ahaA?' t~w:sy. C11t :i7+o1'l t.OS'I" Chnrm rt n i; Mn-nurobe11 2 thro1111h !. ttnd 60 cent.t tor etth, 1111kio11 a.cu $1to. A v • 11 . Ott. lJ1t. range, rd.rig. Adults cw ·r o t c: • 3 o 9 5 l'lf A c e A v 41 • I & 2 HR. Pool, rcc. bo.IJ. 11\Y bench apt. _ call Tf!ri nit nu1te111 draw m trn:i \Vl'tl. Umeiitt11 value. JlElVARD. p1yibt! to "Sffk • Fin~. ",Sur• Teltpm Syndicec•. Addrea 642-oo.'.i~ or fi.15-alitG ~. J\:'l5. Gag pd. 548--2407 54fi..l0l4. " lt"J BBQ. 642·4110 11t oftlct.#644-6141), I • , , , a Dally Pilot Oa&tified Laguna al'Ca. 644-4~ ltU1r11n c111 ol this newap.per. \ • , • \. - I " • • • • ' • , ' I , i Tiltld11, N_.., 5, 1974 OAllY '1LOT HOUHCIMnJ"' . i6S4 Hotp w ... i.i. Mill -7160Holp WontM, Mi' 71iiti • Help wai\'IQ; Mill 71116' Holp W~;;;J~ail Jloo~ti~a!]lp~W~··~i..i~. M&~~F:!!71~o0!JH~o~lp~W~a!!•!?!t•~a~. Mi~Pdj~oo~~·~P~~~~~~~llt'§n~tu~r·~;:= Id ... Clellllrc -u•U Coipiu. Wlndowl noon C A R DellYer, Sunday Only wo-· 10 ..,. tor Invalid. Eto. Free E&t. ,.,..,u. EE R 0 PP D RT UH IT I ( S Sales ~V::.-~~ • •m. MAa:J.!!:,5:~ HOUSl!CiEAiilNG II our OFD~ILYPILOTTOCARRIERS.RE-TRAINEE YOUNG Man 1>-19 tor Qu«n,Full6Twln- bU1"-· Call JI.nice'• Roa· IN OUR QUIRES THE USE OF A LARGE STA-p/tlme loctory wortc. M1>1t PR.ICED TO MOVE l'IOWll ...,, Anm. ~ MARKETING DEPARTMENT TIONWAGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR. A way !or a high school graduate 11e '"'' 1o ..,... moma 6 ALSG, '""""' llMo!bMut. llOUS!l'LEAN!NG. Good BENTON WILLIAMS 330 WEST BAY to enter Ute newspaper buslneS& '"'' '""'· 645-27U'l. Kini• Qu«n BR !um. to rer.. Own tran1port111on. l?/:enin\\, local and throughout Ute United STREET. COSTA MESA. TELEPHONE be '""'"'"" wtthb..,. " ~~:'fu~ .. ~r J:~'. ~Q~u:a1~:sifl:arec11a~:.a1eZary:0i~~+tbtrcor:mm,~:be1:,·,w1N0~.~.t:~r~:~1~ SU:~:~~::.::.~M:~:i~yer Thl• hlg~y~!~!.ru~!~~~•~aper has •d~ )~ ew:,,~hln·s.E;:~;"'.1 "• R~ Help ~entod, MAP 7100 Help Wantld, M&F 7100 --~~~ k1r« • HOU SEKEEPJNG wahlod, CALL FOR APPOINTMENT an opening !or a trainee in lhe c rc.uial\on queen ,,,. IY.droom ""'· ~ '!!;{· llto•tlngton aran . ·TELE PRO $EXTRA MON£Y$ LVN. Gom-•,:JOom. F~I "' sales ana. Selected applicant will receive a AntlqUH IOOS herculon or .. ..,.. '°''" 6 p. ~· $3.~ hr. 96~1912 MPTEI 11 111 inc. MCdicaHon• &: liberal starting salary, regularly scheduled ~NTJQUES _ Crandlather, ~~~ps~a~~~J-'d::p~ M1sonry '°70 $200-$400 per mG. rrom trea1mcnt1. J\.1esa V<"rd e raises, bonus opportunities, end many Cringe ?.fantlc, Camtlback &: 3 1y 2624 W. Cust Hwy, Newport leech your home. One to two eves Conv. HOl!lp, 661 Centtr St, benefits such as paid vacations, paid group plecf' Ftencli Statue clockl, on\v£sr COAST CONSf. WILL 1 AMS I: SONS, 6424260 . lob Hinien 1-5 P.M. per wk + one eve our CM 548-faM5. ' ' insurance and a credit union . He will also be 1m. 011.)c lbl5., Oflk rolltop S:.79Cl Mun""' Lie. no 283046, 'l!'!'l!"~~~'!'~!!'!~"'!""!!'-~l'!'!'!'!!'l'!'ll J l"'UllY. No Wo """' """"'· LVN 3-ltPM provided a company car with personal use desk • ml ... ""V~1lnl• "ODEL FURNITURE Brlck. bk>ck A ·itoni !:!~. •nt9Cl,M&F7lOOHtlnW1n.ted,MAf 7100 must make appt, 552-199T. Good salary 54s..:ntt privileges. Pt., No. 3 S16-9082 -M 1,,:58U373~=.'-,~---=~ I t;. FACTORY HELP MAID YIANTEDf part Ume. PR of matching ntby va.aet:, Prlct1 slalhed. mU1t unload fi•lntl"1/P1perlng 6073 Wlll train. Welsa J.Ua. Call ~tesa Mote Applicants must be 18, have a clean driv· flutl!d tops. Ovf'r 200 .Yrl bftl ol nKldtl turn. Big Ca&- -DELIVER 64Eh11S7. ~ 64&-9691 ing record, have a hlgh school diploma. old. Call 64&-4391 for Inf. Yon Ease 11p1a, 411',V Pine. FEMALE• Daya. Male MAINTENAN CE Hours are generally 11 A.M. to 9 P .M. with Ask for Ruth Valley Ln., 10 AM 10 3 PM. •PAINTING I: GENERAL p/tJme. App I y Kentucky '.ZOO YEAR old solid oak ht-Come to Eut pl• on San HOUSE REPAIRS• m rnHOHE DIRECTORIES Fried Ol1cken. 2929 E. ELECTRICIAN some Saturqay oyertlme. droom oei. 3 ro·s. ""'· Joaquin Hill• Rd. 1.0yl'l ln artt, quality work, IU.U Cout R ..-Cdl4 Knowl~of elect'l. wlr'1.. drHser Ir: h ble Call ~rate11 ~ -W'i -elect'l. mOtors. rro uble If )'OU are qualified and are interested in l''Bs ta · MATTRESSES 1 NT·· Ext . Pa 1nt1n 1 • Men or women 18 or over with cars station GARDENER-Genera.I Utility lhOot'r. a: code req'ma. up learning more about where this trainin g &1.>-9CJ'j6, • • • Wallpaper hanglnr. Av r . wagons or-light trucko. Pleasant 'outdoor Semi retired indivlduRl for to 440V. Stable co., day leads, come to the DAILY PILOT o!!lce, 330 CARVED Pede11tal t b I.' . MATIRESSES eld. house $227. FrM EIL work, y_ou.r available daylight hours. Cali~ fuart.te~ ~.iy wori!n Afpli ~~~ ~t!rl~~ .. I~~IMl,O \Vest Bay Street and ask for Mr. \Villiams in \Valnut. ~~~· $M ~~~. Full • Twin Sets call Ray Parker &U-8245 forni~ license plates required. Apply dally 8 pm. FolUltain v a 11 e y Victoria St., CM. An Equal the Circulation Department. Appl lances IOlO PRICED TO J.fOVE NOW!! eCALL AN l!XPERTe for ]Ob description & training 8;30, 10:30 Drive In Theater, lSi-iS s. Oppor1ul'l.lty Emplo~r An Equal Opportunity Employer &U-9625 A 646-8688 't~tr d~ ~e~~~~ AM or 1:89 PJ4 at the locatioq nearest you. c°:::u;:'.:· MACo NA1 GERS WANTED Help W•nttd. M&F 7100 Help Wanted M&F 7100 FREIGHT pAMAGE SALE ROCKER, upholltte'tdi $100. 919-3!35 up e or young man to ' New Holpo1nt Retrlgeratora. Shell Marble Table, wlirold BEGINNING WED. NOV. 6TH (§,MACHINE m~=~e fas~~ A~onA~ ONE GIRL offico, full time SALESG LRL for womena ii Washers, Dryers, Dl s h· rron bench. $22$. (19 30J R.B. Painting ext, Mo 11 l 3150 La Palma·' Anaheim ~Near Kraemer) ERA TORS . ......sible for neat order!" men" spor11wenr &: IJ k I wuhen, New "\\"llrranty. White Velvl't chair, S 3 5 , homes 25c sq. tt., paint *MIX .OPERATORS l!ll'.per. nee. We will train. r-. ' . 1 • Credit, BofA, 3623 W (1890) Love SeatR. c ut lncld, a1!!0 Int palntlng, free 704: No. Valley St., Anaheim Off Crescent Ave) *WAREHOUSEMAN No lnveit. on part ol lndlv. m"''rgl ln ~l1Know~ig1~ ... onentled clolh1'0'· ExpeA '·1 ~~!~1 Warner Santa Ana near velvet $500. RecUner, $1.S. e•t 873-3658 aft s 3019 Kil Xln't oppor. to be one1 own · ""':' .,.,ge n or P me, PP Y in r-"""'• Harbor S79-29'll ' . son Dr., Santa Ana (Below Dyer Rd) Stable work, mu1t be able, boas. Applications be 1 n g bkkpg., is Important. Must Gl'tawny, So. Coast Village, • 968--«i09 . lat CLASS EJCUint Painting. 88 Fair Dr., Costa Mesa to work ariy shilt. Gd. taken now. For Info call be exp d. In general of.nee 556-8216. 3 Yr. ol<l perfect running CU!ITOM Club cha.in, OOlt PaPerbanitnJ. Al rl e • • (0.C. Fairgtounds enter from Newport Blvd.) t~ne·s. Apply: Na rm co 1213) 2 2 3-14 o t ask for duties, PRY"Oll, Invoicing, SCHOOL HOURS KENrttORE \VASHER . $600, sell $200. De11gn guild Spta)', .125 )'ti eX{I) ™2M Equal Opportunity E mployer P..taterlals Inc., 600 Victoria Wayne etc. Exp. in office mgmt POSITION 1'.1ovlng, sac r i l I cc , $3{1. noor lanip. COAi $115, _.a * 10% DISCOUNT * St., CM, Equal opportunity . ~ i: &. ~nles ht'lpful. App I y ·; S-1!>-347'l $125. Antlq oak table SllS. Wallpa-~A Palnt\na employer MGMT tme 21-30 $150 wk WALTON CORKWOOD 934 9:30AM lo 3Pltl da1ly, Sal. K N"10RE·\v h 40" Octagon L'Offee tablci ...-~..., -..e guarn st. College prld'd ' St C • opllonal. Exp. desirable In E " l!.'· er It Gas $40 644-0427 1=,.:l't<e;;;::...::""=,.=;-' "-"-"=-,-Help W1nted, MltF 7100 Help Wented, M&F 7100 ---------Mr. Richards. 714/346-5455. \V. 17th. -" .M. Church or ~unday S c h ., Dr Y e.r. $ 51J • e ac h · · · . PROF. painter, tones! work, GENERAL NEED 3 women tmmed. 10 Part-time Salesman PTA, Scout 'g, o r Cotn· Guarantted & DeUvered. CUSTO~f Spo.n. Dming reu, Int-eld, tree tit, rtls, ALARM installer/serviceman LABORERS distribute Chrlatmu pro. 3M Window Film. 644-8494 munlly v.'Clrk, etc. For in· 54G-8672 rm. set & butfet. Solid 1..::543-215::::::_:;59;;.• iiW-~3'13m;;;,;---IJ oi~iil;ii.""ii545-048'f~·ii""'iiiiyii'. iiOveriiii~ii'®iiiiyeaniiii;; J F/tlme~!:~';,,Rexper'd. Immed. Aulgnmenta. Top ducts. l'ull/p/t. Mr. Levi PERMANENT Part -time, tervlew appt., call between Rent Washers/Dryers wood,::g,. ~1 $2200. = WAILPAPER MuJU locaUon. SU. Long or short tenn. 846--5455. Mon &. Tu~ afternoons &. SAM & lOAltl, ' $2, Wk. rull J\taint. 6Th::w86 t 0 er over · H1111Rllloiuam for 5 yn Apt. Man ... r Metro Cir W1ah Call SiiQ..4450. NEED Licensee to hold Open eves, ln Composltig Dept. *Sec'ys, &ookkHpers •~1202• DINING rm table, RlllS Carl Re 846-2449 'Couple to manap lovely, well 2950 Harbor Blvd,. CM NEVER A FEE AT TEf.fPO HC1U!e on new cu 1 tom Will train. PENNY SAVER. Uz Relndl"n A8;ency FREE PICKUP -Rel's to l2; fcha.in, serving cart. I I I . ' ' .. .. . ' PROTECrIVE PAINTING malutained ., to 50 unit CLERK TEMPO Temporacy Help homes ...... S3J.-22'l4 . 1545 Newport Blvd., C.M. 4mll Birch SI., SUite 104 Appl'll 1. Scrap P.1etal Lrg floor clock l.nJ.ltwood w~~Wood , a,dut..tapartmentcomplex, Youna:womanwllhcashret-NEW FACTORY Pleas•nt Eve Work N~w;x..rt Beach m inoo Call llnyt!ITI(!, 67fr.5258 color. A.ti $500. Good cond I" __ Orange I: L.A. Counties. liter exper: toJ'IQfk.2 .d.ays .~A.NDYMAN .. . h ooti.ta..Juat ~1112 -2•rt JTlm .. , DiNal ACh~~ -.,.T_~S R EFR I C.J'~l'OB. White &44&806. . l'l11ter/R.,.tr _,, Xlnt tenants..._, Salary + per wk wltt\ occ fillin in For ll....,ting tb: .. -com"•"" In area needt lhe 1olloWlng: Appl_v In person only b!wil O . •rl• 0 ou Coldspot, l!ll. '120 Virgin.I.a VERY JNEXPENSIVE, nice bonus call 21J.926-4407 001 9 30 6 00p ' 5" .... "" ,......,, Mitnt Tme $185 wk T It 8 pm. Fountalri Valley • Established 196S . Pl .. 6-~9082 cond., '2 couches, chr., ttill, PATCH PLAS'l'E~'fe. weekday~ lhn.t 'Sat'. F1:. ~ch i:d ~f: ==~mto!1:" ~~ Setvmen (2) $3 hr Drive In Theater. 1824S S SECREfARY with' setu1'1tles WHIRLPOOL Electric Dryer lamps, 83:J:...2118. • All ~~ ~ ASSISTANT Man ager detlr1 able.GNo •dl u d1e n t 1, Contact The w Ua;htlng ~~~ 25 married ~ Brookhunt. l-~ e1_xp. foNrB lnxve1• 11. bcou~l'g. Like new,.,ES~17 CUSTOM made ..._tttbed. Ori 1 peue. oo reerences FlxtuttCo,3J31S.E.MaJn ,..,"' · • · PURCHASING CLERK um. • n. <'n e 5 • ,,.,........., pede.tal w/padded trame Plurnblnt 6071 :=.e· D;nt~!" g1:ey~ ~.:lfY· Call Mn Adams, St. Irvine, betwn 9am It All beneti~M.1045 positions. Experienced 641).1363 . Blcycles I020 and headboard. 55M843. V L.R. ofi:S P .L U M BING 1bltt. open full I: part-time. I~-~"""-----I ~4p~m~. -~~----1 ---_:.:_:_:;:::_ __ Jm't benefits. Coniact l'ofr. SERVICE Sta. Salesm~ & Garate S•i. Mii ~ Remodelk I: Repairs. Water Appl)' Jack in the Box, 385 CLERK TYPIST HELP' Wanted: Ideal for 1---------Carlew, 642-2734, c 0 st a lube man. Top pay & fringe 1 h 1 r · e rs, 4{ 'I pot 11 , E. 17th St, CM for pernment program students. P/tlme eves & Me 1 a Memorial Hospital, benefitft. Exper. man pref'd, BJ CYCLE RtfM?dAQE "' fumaCei, dlhW!ihn 64M263 ATTENDANT, exper. for dept. of nat'I heallhcare Sata,MonthruFrl5:30-9:30 301 Victoria, C..'1 EOE. Full or p/t. Shell, 17th & 10 Spd, Mens & Ladlii ~QUE & d "f'.' 1 MIC ' BIA O>mplett El ... •hilt Good ftOV ::ts. ~· Filing, very l~h.t ' Sat. 9:30-1:30. No exper. REAL ESTATE: Irvine, N.B. $79 95 • II po n I 0 re -J ~·-M-•-• LI c ~ e t:; t-50 X t needed. Hrly wage p I u a SERVICE SI Att -• t • Newport Harbor SP a 11 t e , ,..,...,,..,._ DUY•C9 • -benefits. Apply Shell e ~... .,.,._ •· bonu&. For more Info. call SALESPEOPLE. Whv not a. enulUI 20'' Hf.rise Boyt & Glrl1 League Wed., Nov. 6, 10 21"2994 • 1000 lrvlne, N.B. ca"1)1a:l..'_n .~,f~!.'!·, •• •-· app• QS-7891 or 89'2-2258.. work tn the hOttest area~. Full & Par1-Tlme $49.9$ am, pm Wiijan Produetl Remodel & R.,.lr 60l1 ncu'C" ru1111 "" ~· ., Huntington Beach/Fountain 990 E. COMt Hwy, N.B. Bia 240 --C t (TI4) 5.3&-9631. HOSTESS \ Valley? Let us lrain you. SERVICE Sta. help wanted. M.X. Dirt Blk11 g. ..., • ._ .. , o 1 a , I 25 AUTO GEN. & STARTER I"''""..=:..::=----I M t h' Call Phil M N k-•-•u 95 p f.lesa. Ph. M9-213.1 No ad-GOOD WORK. ~. yrs REBUILDER--EXPER'D CLERK to work In surplus U! ave some exper. c 11mee.963-4S67 Eve1 from olpm & w nu.11. ~· U mission charl;e. exp. Lee a am. jobs, h'-ec Top po.y, perm, f/tlme bakery store. Start $4.19 per MU!t be over 21 yn old Vlll11.ge Re11.l Estate .Shell, 3131 Harbor, CM 26892 La Sierra Dr. M.V. STATE SALE est, lie. ~n 642-1770 Call 3621.W ls St, hr. Xlnt frln1e benelilll. ApplyinPe111JOn10am-4pm 831-1644 E me. I cllft. ' t S.A. EOE. 26'14 PlacenUa Ave, LORENZO'S RN's I :80;:;;;LD::;;ER;;E~RS;s"----·1,..,-_:::.::.:.::::__=~IFine Bd:'r SWte. tine. turn, AOD A RM F-MoDEL .1 ••••;;;;;;;;;;;•iii .. • J..!CM~·-------25332 Mcintyre Rd CCU'S Cati I01I pedestal game table. mfily , -• · "I' (Wild W•'1 Shopping Ori ~ NEED 20 l;:::c:.:_ ____ ..::;= Mhld .;"""'· AnilqltH. All· ; ~P~~:~exr,oiW; AYON COUNTER HELP • , Mp vi.10 NEWPORT SOLDERERS HIMALAYAN K!TI'ENS, Spa« -· oorner · 4...l"').3474 Pltlme da)'I &: nlahlt.. Apply HOSTESS/CASHIER P.,aonnel Agency F'ull p.tlme. 3-U &: U-7 Sealpotnts & FI am es. Hamilton A Newland, No. N-~ ,,._L For Burier King, ~15 Hai-bor N t 8 h 642-3870 ExceUent Benefits Persians, While!! " Blue. 8-7, H.B. Sa.USUn. A: Mon. ' YOUNG exp. or Uc. Areh. ..,. .....,... Bl•d, Coots M..._ F/tlme. No .. ........ awpor HC Good ~1 ndl · ~. &: up. rn:._91110 10 am-4 pm. l will dHlp a. b uild im· COOK Apply It\. wo ... n,g .• co tionl!I TRAINEES ....... v•.r-o« - ...,..nts to your home "' Christ-? Cl1co'1 R ant COSTA MESA MTN. 3 MO'S EXPER O.,• -' DINETTES. Gu Loe "'· bum. Try JM, John. 54S-1m'7 If rou're ambltioUI I: en-s.1111')' acoordtna to exp . 11.AM~ Memori1I Hospit1I OR sCHOOLING Elee. he11ter, Wet/D r ~ ·-thullutic-, -· ··-start Prefer no ttudent&.. E)(per. 3850 s Pl-. SA. NUR.SES ' 642-2734 ·EOE EXPERIENCEO Vacuum, FUrn. Toys, Mi9e. : 11..n,. -·---· ~·d. bul will train. Apply . • .. Dr, . • Staff Relief • PUPPY WORLD • -s. c.....m •. s. A. • eatniii" money tmmedlatelx t!':.~ OS MIN. 6 P.10'S EXPER 56-1484 • as an AVON REPRESEN'· il!fiveen 2:30-4:00pm, Ham-H TESS TOP ENTRY Bull Terrier. L:ib, Oobennan ' REPAIRS.' all typn. Reaa. 'tATIVE. Med people. Have tiurser.l-lamlet, 1545 Adami, Dinner house exper. work ROlITE SALES American Eskimo, Collin, · EVERYTHING GOES , ~ "'· Uc'd. ._ .. for fun too.-Call tor detalla: >;.,·..::"'::k::..:::for:...:::Mr::;·..:H::•:o .. :.:•::.· _ eves. Apply, Sam's Seafood, WE ARE NOT~ Will Train, Salary, Conun, LEVEL PAY 1.. JI dogs, O!lhuahua, nny ·Le1S than Half Prim • 1 ,.= --REGISTRY BUT Bonus. Vehicle Furn. All NO FEE Poodl Pl! 8""' --ka I Walt. 8»-5020 anytime Mlr'ltM:L c o K , lMlltutionAI e.-.:per. 16278 Pacific -Coast Hwy, • Ex Pd Es es. WU>,'"-"" poo. Fri/Sat/Sun -Nov 1/213 • 1..-"'T,_"-;/A:;T.I '=at:iloM:::;-;-iMiJ~~~~~~~~ 0,.rd. Will Jraln. Xlnt wage H.B. WE 00 NEED l~tory. · Mod".'b . .,.,!';;',.~ STAFF BUILDERS 100 MIXED PUPS Siu<l 5'~ Nov 819110. lli5 Seton, . Sew.... ter J:!EAUTICIAN middle aged & benefit• for ma t u re HOUSEKEEPER, live-In, 2 Profit ~hue. Retire at S7. 500 s. f.Ialn, Suite 110 vice MO!lt Breeds. Roller lrvine. 552'-0314. DRESSMAKING lady. Must 1knl:IW plncUrl i pel'llOD. Apply 1445 Superior, little gtrl11, Eng. or French RN'S * LYN'S· No Str:ke, Layoffs 75 yrs. Orange 547--030 C.anaries, Reptiles & Turtle1. SF.c'I'IONAL Gm., I oo 1e ALTERATlO~S .\-Unger wavUia. A I go, NB ~1sential. Salary open . 1 ~54~~~3U~O~.~M~r~. jTu~c~k~"~·~7~-9~P~Mi I ~~E~q~ual~:O:ppor::·~E~m~p~lo;yo~r:l -'Ope:!:::n~E~"'~· ~5.'l~l-~5007~E--1 bftck cushions, gd. con d. ' MQ-,8840 modem styling. Tues tJU'U DELIVERY l'ofi'n for early 714-832-3492. AIDES Ettual Oppor. Emplo}'t'r mlf PEKINGESE $125., pretty hang'&· lam.,_ .~ Tlle '6091 Fri. can tws betwn 6:30 morning L.A. Tlme1 hotne Ho u s EKE E PER , AKC PUPS $25. 548-6l74 I 1:30, 54&-4066. <ttllvery rout!, Adults o.nly. panlon, fem. Live-in. n SALES, TELLER, P/TIME 842-ll28 lcHi'i"-0,'-,.=,='----,iiiii=· t'ERAMIC TILE NE'i'i I: BEOF.·SERVICETO 'Economical car required, 11moker . M~11tdr e. TO WORK IN INSTALLATION&. Brnnchofcseekslbondable~ERRY'S-9AIJ..BREEDS remodel. r re e t11tlmale1. YOUR COMMUNITY 7% houri dallf, no soliciting OOZ..5224. HOSPITALS IN BRAKE & FRONT & dependable T~ller to Boarding &: Grooming Pl.ck ARAB Morgan Mare (10 YrJ Sm jobl ""'l'IOlme. SJ&-2428. ~ Get Pakl For lt Welcom--r collecting, Westm.INlter, HOUSEKEEPER live in . ' ORANGE COUNTY ENO MEN work Mon & Sat & Full-time & Delivery Pood1 , Pups Exp rider only. Jumps . .. 7.U71 * l n I Newco~n. Flexible H.B. area. 638-2924. Must be able to travel with ror vacallon relief. Exper. ~~r sale ~~ e $500 551-3816 ~ •-N---' _ _.. pref'd. Contact Jim Park, · YEAR ~-p -.. • Kitch Bathrooma , .. .,.. eeu car, 1YPtw1"1ter DELIVERYMEN over 18. 2 adult1. Prestige home, top NO FEE EYER For Pep Boys Store 644-7255 Weslem r ederal SHEL TIES IM I n . Collies) 1 ~ · rva. OOJ .._., • '' I ' ,.._ I happy d 111 po Ii t Io b , Penn. p/tlme. Early morn salary. References re q . lmmedl•I• o-nlng·,. x 1n•1 Sa 1 '27 .. E "-· 1 H AKC CMmp sired sable Green hamea, gentle, best Teo Sol _.,., 5f1 ll95 LA Tl d 11 to NB. 4~3418. ,.-v ngs, '" · ...,.., wy, ' . ., offer 83l-O'l5'7 aft 6 .;;.t;;. _: • mes e very · ,,,,.... Aalary & working c0nt111 & Cdf\1 . EquaJ Oppor . .l lr1'1. Reu. & t~rms .. 1~--·~----~= •TOP SOIL * COMPOST• BR AKE I: A 11anme11 t homei. $225 per mo. 642-4800 HOUSEKEEPER· Live in, 1 Sl\ift or 5. Choose your liberal employee benelit11. Employer. 557-6169 Jewelry I070 •MULCH *'REDWOOD* service. Salary plus comm. DENTAL EastbluU, 3 gtrl1, 7 , 8, I 0. own d a Y s, hour 1 &: Apply In Person COLLIES AKC, t'hamp. P~ .. 1---'----- CAIJ.. 58&-4830 Newport Titt Center, t'hallengl.ng pc191tlon for 641}...1596 or 673-8914 speclaltl~. Compare our 120 E. lst Stttet TELLERS $25. Pup;!!, 2 mos., Sable WANTED I=-....;;="-'""'-=-,-= M4-80'l2. ftlthusfaatlc girt as dental HOUSEKEEPERi relief. 2 P8Y rates. Santa Ana Downey Saving• & Loan f\.lother 3 yn. J\tust &ell. 64~ 1 Tutotl'! BOAT Operator, min. 211J'on o1llee manager Iii growing daya a week. OWn lransp. STAFF BUILDERS has opening& in Its Hun-8998. TOP CASH DOLLAR PAJD', ~NI! inttrucUon. Pr1va~. Inland Uc. Full time. Write practice:. Exper. req'd. San V;;';;'·c,;64~1~h~S;:,t.,;NB~ . .!:'.~~-~~·-+<t11EDICAL SERVICES ~~ES I' bl 1 •• 1 tlngton Beach -branc~ tor AKC reg. 3 mo old Dal.ma· ~ARTCHESYOURARTJEWELRoft~::.:.!i One hou Box no 3JS, B Daily Pllol, Clem. area. 493-9311. HOUSEKEEPER 10 live-In, me 1:emyia J,~:O. ~m'k~ full tlme Te.lien. Exper. tian, female, all snott. ve.ry GOLD ll:!Ji.VER s£R~~· ; c!i1 675-434l P 0 Box 1560, Casto Mesa, DENTAL: Dper. front of· nice family, 3 sch. a 1 e 500 So. ?\lain, OrAn.IJ:C 1 catalogue buAlneis. Need prelerred. Xln two r k l n g afft!<'tlonate. sso. 897-9300 nNE 'nittN A ANTIQUES: I SChoo•• & CalU. 9'2621' flee girl. Knowledge of In· children. 6'1"::>-8166 =~1 1b~por. E~~~~~--O'll7 not leave ybur pment poil-S1'~m~~:J· ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ : ~c BOSTON TERRIERS M&-2200 lnttruetlon 7005 ...... 7¥-'VI-• , 11Jrtu1ce. Good payTRAIN. 54H8441NG, lion. Ownership posslb!lltles. Employer 6 \Vks old. 1,M~AN°'s="'Sol~ld""'Go'"l"d"'W:-ca"t-c"'h-,I Bkkpr thru PIL 1 $850 DECORATOR INSURANCE \Vrite C11ssllled acl no. 278 -::::::::::::;1jj\ISHi~...._~T;;;'i:-'.A_i<'C Cold mesh band. HaiWome • F/C:Bkpr/Collt t~ $800 Sln11:le atrl, 25 to 40. Call: NURSES Aide & Orderly c/o Dally Pllot P.O. Box i IRISH Setter, g mo't, AKC Chrlilmas gift. ~. ,, COILEOE student g Iv Ing K-n1•nch Operalor ..,..., 642--803) Ask far Tony. BILLER IJ 11 m -3 pm . Expcr. or 1560, Costa f\1esa, Ca 92626 TYPIST Regis_ Housebroken. Xln't -~ -.73 p I an o les10n1. Beginners ~,..~ = DESERT F (Ml 1 tr mp Ho1p!tal exper ln-Out-f\led-1· trainee11. P.1esa Verde Conv. iru.>-.lJ and lntennedlates. Ca I l Sales/Mens wear ~ ox or a Cate. Xln't benefits & \\'Ork-Hosp, 661 Center St, CM SALES REP TRAINEE Downey Savings 8t Loan \V/childttn. MZ-97S3 aft 6· Mechlnery ~ al 1 •2_13 2 3 or Claim• Adjwiter to $700 + company on I 0 ca I 1 di . Good starling salary. Car, Ho• o~nl"•' In II• H"n-PrT BULL Pup" Purple rl~ r.:;::.::;;:;:::.t...,k---';:;.;:J " caravan. Dig poopte, kids, ng con tiona. Contact Mr1. _548-5=_,,585,,,,._,~~~~-•~ D •· " 1 r 78. llD\Atc be'Drr...1t..ia p 0 11 er y, Oai pd, etc. Cygan, 642-2734. Cosla Mem· NURSE 5 A 1 D ES, ex· exp go comm. e gr e e tlngton Belich office for In-bon, UKC. Lcvab e 't\'alch-*HOBB JSTS* , CE Pi ~ '""""'L r-~"tl"'41:;L 548-l'75l orta: Hospltal, 301 Victoria, helpful. Tremendom future dlv. w/good typing ab!lltr. dog. $100.$100 {714) 842-5924 ~c!w. Hom':°Or Mtnit SERYICES•A9fNCY Dlct1ph Sec'y $500 Cf.1'. E.O.E. e~=~· ~~;;,~~/~ w cc~: w'J;rowlng ro. Cont1u.1. Per90nncl at <21:) IRISH Seller pup p I e ~. SURPL~~ irn~na: ,:;::; . Mt« Newman . 833--ZJ'lO ·488 E. 17th·St. (at Jr.1nej CM Type 65 1 ~ e11:per I ~~~~~~~~':"".~ J ,GD-:::..350:=5:..-__ ~~~-1 11~i:~!.!::!t.~~~:y :~!{~onr.or furt he r in· ~'lt2~:'b, •hots $Th. c~~et w/2 emagazlnes, prollf > --------Suite 224 642·1470 WESTCLIFf: JOBS JOBS JOBS NUREES Alde1, 7-3 &: 3-11. Sult!! 213 96.1--6775 j .,:iEq:,:;oo~l~O~p=po~r~ ... E~m:pl:oy~e~r.,j;~~n~j·~~!J~ pres11, galley cablMta. Call 1 11•1 Pel'llOnnel Agency AAMES 100°/o FREE Exper prel'd. \VIII train. BAS.SF.TI' mother/Rrd OSCAR, 64.2·4321 <lay,: •••r•Mllll ... f VP 1fr»" -V--"' <Mork III Center) Bureau of Xlnl wage & bcn . 642-2410. SALESREAO JHI f TYPIST. f\1on lhru Fri. 8:30 I~ound father. 6 p~mising 544-3417 n!t"9. • ' iiiiiiiii.:~~I :::-ia~O~Y~S~&i!G~IR~L~Sf'.: 1651 E. Edlnaer, S.A. EmploYment Ageocy NURSES Alde 3-11 Shilt. S. to 5. $550. per mo. Mut1t pups avail. 55 ea. 551-9915: SHOP SALE: Lathes, ''°"''t Ji 542-8836 Costa Mesa safr.llOO Port l'.1esa Conv. lfospital, be x\nt & accurate 1yplst. l\1ALTE.5E. AKC. Available 11aw11. punch PftM, ml~. • Jolt W1nNcl, M• .. 7025 The DAILY lLOT hat 2700 Harbor Bl·--', Suite """ Call 642 -. 11-A "on1• Prr1·me 96J.-4567 for stud. ltf:m1. 1001 W. 17th st, Suit~ routes open in COSI'A DISHWASHER Wanted vu '"" """"'"" •w '" '' 545--4··7 L 64" -MESA, OOlJ.EGE PARK I: Dn.w. Beachcomh 'I Cof· Anahm 600 N Euclid 776-8120 ORDER DESK. mfg , In-$5000 A ~tonth 'Frrime \\'HO \YANTS TO WORK1' · ;xi • v-w1v MARINE ~ .l parta Mgr. 30 yrs w/rrw, Dlut.1 flt IM boalL Xlnt rHume A:. ref1. Would Skipper or Encineer yacht toc&lly. 15 4 5 • 3 s o 9 before 9 or art ll, or write 331 Bowllng Green. C 1d · "6211. Job Wan!M, l'male 7G50 CREATIVE BUSINESSWOMAN Seeks position In art·relnted fteld Jn Harbor artl. Fabric detlgn particular Jleld ot lntereet. 0 cc aradu11te. 11!5-4>1() COLLEGE grad needs part time Job to supplemrnt sub. teac!IM' PAY· Evenlna• Mon.·Frl. 61S-6811. Housewife "'OUld love lo babysit your c hild . Wffkda)'I Million V I e j o •rtt. 581-3'M LEGAL .SECTY ttmporary .,,..-. I yra expor.. ,..ur ottll't or my bomf!, 675-C18 Help Wonted, MAP 7100 EAST A: WEST OJSTA tee Shop, 2Gl3 w. Coast Ol"I 2 O.ty Bl East G:w-1222 dt11trlal ball &. roller bear-Will train, commis!k>n only. DRIVE A CAB! Free To You I04S 1'M~l1"c"'e"n"a"'M4-o-u-.--..,I0=10 1'!.~i ~. Ein-'== , Hwy, NB. G42-B47S. JUNIOR SALESMEN ings. min. 2 yrs .... ~us'!2al ~~~W,~ sales. Mr. Tyler, tt:~~~~~ i!°~~r ~ NEWPORT Beach Tenn I ~ ..,.. ............ _. ~ _ otv~" Tratn to dive !or · 1elephone order .....,sk .,,.p, -"~=------,.-*POOOLE* BOYS Sea':.:d. PenhaM.nt \\'Ork. Must be detall oriented. Of-SALESLADY boss. P.!en or v.·omen. Can S C I u b Fam 11 J Tc n n I~ 28 N 8 Age 10-15, Earn $20-$40 per fice located In Irvine. Call p 11 . be slightly handlcapf)C(! TO GOOD HOP.1 E~ 546-284 Memb e r 1 hip, Sacr!tlC"'. er 19 Newport mvd. · • week aetunc new cu~omers ror apt)t. 979-76l.'l ~rm. Ce 1 me to &.ll'JSl!lt mgr. Nest -CleAn Appc!ar11nce . rnEE to right family 3mo ( 7 1 4 l 8 3 3-1815 (2ll) GJRLS DOCTORS ASSISTANT for th• DAILY PILOT alter ust BoxperM mp~ Vts., retired. Age 25 to 70. old puppy, 'Ai Sbt!ph. ~: 273-5700. P1-f Routes Orin y ........ hidy (lS-281 to work school and Saturda"", You Help W1nted, M&F 7100 P•9e Y aternity Suppleme:it your lnromf'. Collie all sho!Jc. 11:39-757'7 l'12""c="A'-'u'"c"E~ll"'"I n-,,.h-.-,~,-., ,...-... -o,e ... _ 'v I So. Csl Plaza 557-5734 Ori .. , h r In L19un1i Beec In a 1 do C' tors a 111 Is tant must -out l • achoo by ve a C'l no more» FREF: L.'\h (part). 11 mo's. shotgun .. Deep !lea rod .t Man~ Locitloni. /recept. In health 1pa. No 3:00 pm and be able to work J:lass!fied aC11 sell big Items, ~1~irn ~ppblyr'o tn18~ ~~~ Nf't'fls h 0 m c w/childl"(!n. reel. New suit S1 50. Cott Call r; Lam•-rt exper. necns. We train you. a~ lea11t 3 dlya per \l.ttk. No small items or any Uem . c v a ., " ~· t S{ll\)'ed shots. 540-0Cl"Zl llft 6. $Hi0. Sel1 $50. 5-48-J253. u. Apply In pet'llOn altn or eve. deUverlet or collecting. .1u1t call 642-!i678! SI., Cmt11 ~1e!t1. . , DECORAT6n has 300 )di; 842-4321 2112 Jtarbor Bid., Cf\!:_. TramportaOon provided. ": Furniture SOSO Rulrt Plush ca.-1. 100 \"&. Equal Oppor. Emfl1o)l'er c: •1 968-4812. ~ C) , ·~ u y 0 Drafting Equal Op I -,·,, STAR GA,..E-.>'• I' p NtStl I 2 lrl FertljTeen. SUPERB • 8 VS & GIRLS ARTIST ponunicy Emp °"'' .., .&'-" • s A "' '· , ,..... o . 642-22" & 54'-"'"l. N .... Carrl Mln J M h I ~=""'-'----ro LflN ~1u1t llCll. L1vg . tm. &1~-~-~~--~ ewspa.vu• tf'I, • wlth exten1IVC' dr af ting ourneyman ec •nc llrU.A\'ll.. 1• mAftll'r bdrm. S4~163l or Porta·Blrd r.!!'lplra.lor.Unlqu" ap 10. Lldo Isle, Da1boa iexper. wanted for p/tlme To worlc In tiulo club a.p-~Qi[iQ H Yw< Deilt Afll-•11 Guiel• M G44-:'465 Orc.11~ Forni Pl'\'JfC881onol Peninsula. Olntact Mr. eve work. Dover Bros, pl'OVed ILhop. X1n't pay. Ii~ V Auercl•"a 16 '~• sie'" V SACRIFICE ~'RNITUR£ H11.ir-Arylt( Mm '11 KOU cluM Backltl'Olr at the DAILY 673-iM6 aft 5pin. surance benefits, pa.kl voe: To dev•losi mr1iooie fo, Tue\de1, .-v Beat olfpr !t'.>'7-:l668 PILOT or call 8:21321 A ""'-'Ec,;.N;,G""'IN-7:EiiER:,.,IN"G=--5 Daya. 646-8838::;:.·--~ ~~~~:_·~~~tonumbtrs LlvlnR Rm. Se1, fl\nlng lt1t1.l'L"E=o"i"N"G~T.,-~"'t =-a=• lea~ ap{'lhce.tlo:1. JACK lN m£ BOX. lmmed lllf_.,-s.,.-.l"llllllt1111 I to1• 11 r,.,,,.01 ti1 Y«t ~r. T11hlf~. 1.nmpll. Ca.II l\lA .... 'hl el~OOOn I y o" Equal 0ppor. Employer TECHNICIAN 11._..,_ ~... "°"'''1'"' ti)n.t.. * 630-t7to· 63.~mt * 1 tom.,.,r~ p. . . u openlnp 9PM • mldnlte. l ""rr Jl No. ~°" t>r"'"'l1'UR ." bl 1 k PllY trnnsfcr fet. 67J..2Gf.l BUSBOY Progresalve, growing Al90..1,~Ai.'\f.sAM.1205Baker lhi-V•~.......,_. •'·~ J•u-"""""'9"'~ r 1:1 n1~ ~.1 .1e,,~un oft.!i:30 Experienced ._.1_,1_1., •t~·r .. -~. St, Lwtt Mesa ,Met.... ],~"~,"'._•_. 6~P,""'~..... cab .. lt1mps, Tf':.k·dln. lbl . ~01.~,~.~~ .. ---,.~,.~,-~"~h-G~· Sa • Se~" tl o;,,....,"''"'" "' •110>;u• ,.,...,.,"11 ~1~',_,." ~ ........... * &. chrt,. blot sol•, tnd !hi., r. ..., uuaA <!Al " m t .,......... sharp Ele<:tt'On c Tech., Lt:KE A Bual~! of YoUt HE"·P ~,.w. J7l.oill 7 w., ~ coffoc tbl .. 11..rmchr. ~:MJSlS 11nd , bo11il1. Contr11ct v.111~ CoronadelMar 675-0900 capnble of bulldlns A own. Ellsy tu.II or p/Ume • i~ J::;--~~::,i.i 110~"£..• ----toS1ck~nwl'Cd.Wll1 1up1~· C ASHIERS debu11lng IOphlsttrttlt!d work. Cllll 6'5-JU3 aft 8. ~ANTED !Ole ion-. 7"1-e °"'" ;-'\ f\.tUS'T SEU. J-lousehold ad ltion11I dh·en. 67~ ..;lectronlc clrcUlts. MUii be No obU.g11tlon. No Into ovu ltDITWlS !£~~~ :;~ :;~ ~~!:.'.-.. J,t:~~<:: ~~~l~~w~i:!ifio~h~': QUALITY Men'• SUit•, 4'J t ho r o u a h I )' f a m 1 lla.r phone, must m11ke appt. "' DmM. WMlllS:SU u.HCI' :! j:~ :~ r.:,. ~~ ~ :.,.., thlln ~ nrJce. $.)l-0374 regull'r, jaeket11, 32. wall! W/dl1IW A linear sol Id Llft.-IN Helper for elderly WM!lsstl ISA" •~I-7S\.-'' l lteks SlO 54,.9707 Aro >'O'I at ~ U yrs old, bondtlble, ne at In tlp- Acceuntl .. Cl1rk1 a~. mJoy \\1>1'klna Pottln1 l1!d3ttt, accounting w/pcople A outside in the l.Nll)'llt • b a n k neott• lttsh 11trT If-.,, we want ellladons. Actlni: expe-'. prt-to talk to )'OU about belna !'d. but not ttten. ,Salary • cublcr Ut one of our state ctrcultt. Gd. behe'~. woman. Room ln mob ile wMnJIS 16 Coll •ea. ,~,-... Ot:DROOf\-1 Furniture, \\'hllr · '' ' A opp or tun 1 t )' for~ home, bo&rd • ulary. Non Mlll'l'I. ::~!::.. ~~ !:~"';'p>, F'T'enc-h Prov, btue hlricabed STt.erl11"" E61 1 1"'0r f_I .. • t 1•1 •hr,:· vsnccment, DEt.T>. EL(;>'\.• anwker. Car OCQeN. Phone. -~ fl'""""!"'! rv~" '7 ~ 1QO. ecweh. c:ht:1t I. OutenJ.Z ~· t r:i.uue, ...... ·11 SG:I nr--crmmenl\U'lllt -et1f--ttf'¥, Pl 1tationt. We w/f!XPtl._ NeWpell'l 8 e i c h need ae~t full A pftJmt ofa OoOd co. lMnefttt, CaU Pl'OPll ibUntdla1el)' bi Colla Mrs. Ntl~ a.u-eao. M.._ • Hunllnaton Bt1eh ACCfS. Payabte{Qkltpt., for 1'or lntervltw cNl Barben., re111dentl11.I Wllckr. S 1:n I , 2l3J-.otll. otc., 11lf'Pl1t'I sntA. 0>ni1tr•uo-=a'" ... """rn.a="M""t '°'CaU='°'CHH6'11"'°'"" Jlan u p. ttq'd. m-.2104 •...::'°'="""i-'------\ TRON1C CONTROL CORP. da•"•hter, 673·273 4 or IUTOfNll\I 10...,. ~v.~ 8'1t'loe•""' t.Ni, 1111 ltkr ~·. 675 ~ _499--1221 Sl4-.'452_.===-t ''-""---• ,, ,~... ~I ...... \,"Ill ,, ~·"'' -· V'ftr""111u 646-8139. 1,..._,.......,M.,.._ 111.-~>'"'' e1 1~ '* !K>PA .l l.QVt'5('11t e wrv WATER SOFTENE SA"" SPAC& WHE-N LVN-Ow11c 3-ll lhl ._i.c.... ... _WtiltM .... Uol )l"°"" ~&,::!__ :!~ .1r'q1&al.,.,.~hhm.Mle.MY';r ~£\\',~Uk. ... Jl-i' MOVINO bf Wfli;'p r~T 8t1yYll'w OJ~ II°"' C•lfiln ""''""'''"'""1111ttr"1"H' 1,0..,.., '))..,.""" 11 •·-· ufed, ~u11lly 11111, !l&S-Tflln r11~h l't-MS-4 g~~ln -;:1...., clU:fi.. ~~ l\teM, M2--3505: ' . ~,f!'::':1:~·::~ I~.<.!!.,:!!,,.~-' ~1;._ ~~~... r,~~.':"od ,.sen fl10\'TNG:con~din.1to'~N~CR""'ET'==E°'l'l;,-1n-,p-,----nt-<J'1 --.~ I ftf ... 11.i. II .,., ....... Oil .,.,., H ..,,,•" . .$1-225.l llfl. 2:00 642-Ml~ antl otht!r llMM. """ -t Turil your J:'' clubll tnto 'i!' / ~'/¥. 11 ~i·-.. @~~. ~.:._""""'1'oft '"• "t~ DR & brkf•t trl alrrw1 new on Plck·up. Rtn80n1lil&. more llPllCC In lhe gaf'lll!l , a 11erco. II tht'm with 1714) 752 0621 ri._u.i,u.J • 1111, ~ Md clcwietJ by Aelllng ldTfl a DAiiy Pilot C'lauWtd All -'I!~~·~"~"'~' lllli"'"'c:'l::G~::::_l _.!:.::!;';:';:•:_:~:._: .. !.'~'.::':';;"'~i!i~!.!'J'!.' n!!.'·-"~}~:. KING-SIZE bed . comrilctr. MF.f\1BC:RSHIP lrvlM 0>.s! Items wltb I\ OAlly Pilot and \l.M the money for a I ~======== I' ~ •f<i!\pe. ~ll\O ,.ta D I t' • CQuntr>' ClulJ. $1000. Ow:ltJtd Ad. Call 6f2.-5678 1ttt'C!f>! Cnll 642-56'8 T(ldt,y. '· " l'.:1o1. 11fftt G only t.'l'rr232G I • • • ' ' . ,_ • -• I Tutsday, Nowmbtt 5, 1974 um. & Equip. IOl5 Sporting Goods IOM IBM Sl.LECTRJC or D. F,.x· cf-.zE Bindl~ b..Md new.1-...;..-...;...;...;..._'_·_f_H_O 95 TOI' DOLLAR l'AID IMMEDIATELY FOR: ALL FOREIGN CARS CALL OR COME IN TO SEE US Autoo anted Datsun 9720 Parse 7SOV ~="°=----- IQRAM·LETS ANSWERS WI L1. BU'rYOUR "'7~ 9i11'0'1i:sCJIB. b"iond -E ARE -·· ~utt\'e tYl>f\\Titcn. sm en.. C."Oet SM. Sncrlflce S 4 O. Under ·serv. Xlnt con d. 673.(177$ OAlSUN, TOYOTA new metaltic ""'"'"'brown. N 2 OR VOLKSWAGEN ,,...., ir>tmo•. AM IF.)! o. )81.-3102 FISCHER aki.8, 190 CM ~ith EXEC SWiil chn $1 5 I 2 5 , fl19.l'ktt bindings. Used one PAID roR OR NOT. \\'ILL 11eiw tape, 2t MPO, , t6e ln Ora~ Coontv. PAY TOP OOILAR. CALL over leue 67-3060 But Only J'ewe&t _Suede _ Venom _ secy chn SS/24. Dkt, aces. I .,;"~"'°"="·.;IOO'°"". ;:<13-6998~;='-=• Arodnd -SEE J?ED ~rct'. 867 \V 19 CM • Store, Rest., Bar 8095 KENT Au.EN. 540-0442. '68-912 PORSCHE YOU '72 240Z. f-.sp., .air, AM/FM, AMJFM. BUfi'Und.)I. Gd Clond 'l'ht.I Ruulan wheat deal 11 ..:"'-::::_:.;741::cl::.· ~~--~= finally ~ting to ri1e. E \'f:l'y Pl•nos & Ora•n• I090 CASH Rqrister NCR. n LI us Map. on new Steel ucm ~1 rads., Xuv. Make otter. Seab '760 tin l •-·' t •· d contJ, Sac. fl95. Day• 55S-61.ST • -r S~E nc-0.4 N<U 0 .... 1!a 531-3374 eves s.aa.-~. = • l'IANOS *'72 240Z, Red w/v•hite Intl'. WOKING ~°' '"'"""bl• TV, Radio, HIFI St. -AM!>'M. 4 •t>d. •• d lats, \bargain>? S<nrchlng for • ORGANS M"'tSac$3850.'39-9000 g op d buy I 1 Fu I u re Rentals fr $5 R.c,~ Pol rtable • .::,· v. x' 19.· t. day&, 842.-4943 eves .•• Se(re111ries Aasoc. of OCC v.• '"mo e conuv • 2 SCOOTERS Like New '72 24oz _ $4500 Is spollSOr.lna a Rumm!lG;e uond. $39. &16-15!!5 Cond. l VESPA RALLY ·n . 3100 w 4 11pd, air, mags, new tires Sale on Thurs., Nov. 7th, n...-Ni ht 'ti! t COLOR TV, Xlnt cond ition, 180cc. 1 LAM BRET A • Coa.lt Hwy., N.B. S46-8474 all da,y ·&: 10 be held nt ""t"'9n I 1 large sc~nconso.h!. SILVER SPECIAL '69,j ___ _:64~2-~9405~~~-J;;;:.--''-"=.:....-;;;.,-I I.he Scktnce-llnll fta!.·klng S•t: 'tll 5:30, Sun. 12-5 $80 556-289;; 150t.'C 1800 mt only) Pvt CADILLACS Flet 9725 lot, oU "S" Street. *Pl1no1 la Grand•* ~~~~;~;~ Pty. 979-4154 & 581-2306. 8 AL ow r N oRCASONJC, a&Jdwin -Cable -Olickering ~ TCl25 SUZVI;{{, super cln., , lilrge1t S.leetion :ELECTRONIC Orgo.n, -Fischtt-Kawal-Kimball Boll and ll·ll'} lo ml., $400, or best oUer, In Orange County Model 711. Beautiful can-· Knabe· !.f~:on & Harr",· MatN ~t lC. 642-1315 Aft. SPM ColU)e DeVilles • Sedan oe- ditlon. Must sell. C a 11 Mussert • Sohmer • Stein-'70 i<AWASAKI Atach UI 500. Vllles • El Doradoe • Con· S.16-5TIO. o!t 6:SO Pl\t. Do W8¥. Storey & Oark. Win-9010 -·-we!' m"~ ll e tu> vertible» ··--• an ··-- "' • Wurli•-r • Y•• ·-•-1 ~!.f'O;;;r'_;•~-----'-'-" .,....., ., ...,, SC • .-~. . .tUJKJ I y Ou..:1· not call before due 1 o """' ....,..... ~5--0930 aft. 12 select Cnd.Jlac Trade-ln1. ans \\'ertng &ervict t.'Ontrol New S{linels J.. ••••• ••• $595 14• WOOD n..,.. .... 18 b 0 a I, •before that time. They do UK'<! ~ ••••••••••• • $95 :.!5HP Jo~';"°&.& trlr. J:m, not ~·of thls ad. Private P~c rs • •••••••· • ~ Bu for 11 '··-'· ~ -......... ... ,.. __ .. , ,. 1Ma<. mper sma u·uuo....,. 1:·:::~="::.·--==~--1 ~~N *°ROANS··· -See att 1om. J911Gt Ranger I BUY!! Baldwin. Conn. Hammond. Ln, H.B . ......,.. Good, used lun1lture & Kawai • Kimball. Lowrey • Boats. Marine Eq. 9030 'pplianlfl or will 11etl for yoo ftodien. Thomas. Yamaha MASTERS AUCTION · WurlllZer Cul...._ • 646 1611 or 133-962S alt. & ot. Sunday 839-0974 , WANTED TOP CASH DOLLAR PAID !!OR YOUR JEWELRY, WATCJtES, ART OBJECTS, GOL.D, s,r.;.-_n SERVICE, 1',ti,E FURN,,& ANTIQUES. -r ;wANTED roJT'O\SH DOU.AR PAID FOR YOUR JEWELRY, WATCHES, ART OBJECTS, GOLD, SlLVER SERVICE, fl.!'!; FURN • ANTIQUES. 64.'>2200 OR~GAN:'Orlg $2195. S aif! U l c e ! $1500. Can _nnanee,, Xlnt cond. Private pa~J'i!'•..no d"A•n/ pmb· 537~ oa: 646-2393. HOLIDAY BOUTIQUE ,by Senior Gt!-~~ Las Companeras Sat Nov 2 , 11-S, Girl Scout Office on Adams, Cl\i lnc:xt to Post office) Ml\c, Wantect_ IOll WA NTED: T oys f or 'Christmas. Opening shop at Village Fair, Lag. Bell. \Vill sen· ,custom made toys on Colisl('n ment hfuxine, .1jjs.fll43.. MUtical lnstrum•ts 8083 For an ad in. Women's World Call Su• 642-5678, atx. 330 Cozy Scarf-Hat! Indispensables! -~·~fl .. 41ill '71 KA\VASAKI 175CC, Xlent. c.ondltion. 5.1H.1al Mo&ile Homes 9140 Vans 9570 • , t ' ., ... SALES-SERVICE !..F.ASING OVE·RSEAS DELIVERY ROY CARVER, Inc:. ~\'I CT OH.Y . DODGE '• . ~56-4620 ROW! ROYCE BMW '59 MGA COUPE 234 E. 17tb St. I ' I I • , . .• O>sta Me11a e 5t6-4#t $1,395. 548·6162 ' Capri 9715 MGB 9744 Brand New 197 4 SAAB 99LE P.rlced to.Sell $4384 (#7386) i!h·arh Jh11p1111~. u ...... . ~ ... , .. ., ... ,_, ,,,. Can IN~• Us No. 1 &,!! UI Flnst or La!it and \\-e'll try harder for your best deal. ~tM.l.W W VOLVO 1966 llarbor, C.?tl. 646-9303 AUTOS USED AMC 9905 I • .1&1 QffiYSl.ER 30Q. Id . rond., $500. or beAl offer. AJU(or De.Vld 6*-1241 Corvotto "32 '66 CORVETtE 350-32"1', 4 apd Jlardtop Cbnve.rtlbl•. t.'OOl. belt otter. 645-1520 1960 CORVETTE Original, - '69 CORVE'M'E. 421 cu in. p/», pfti, 4 spd. T·top. $.1500 flnn. 968-0315. Ford -• '64 RANCIIERO, drag racer, 260 cu. Inch, 12.87 E.T., 108 spd., tandem trlr. Over $4000. Invested, Sae. $1450. Days nit-549-9729, E v e 1 213-Jn-'1973 'l4 SS Tor I no C.ompletely equip + air, shockl I. tow hitch. fo.1lnt corx:I. $3695. Owner 894--5353 le 898-2220. '&I GALAXIE. gd cond & gd tntnSp. $400'' D •, y 1 , 54()..0066, E~.-~3483 \VANT TO BUY 11159 thru 1962 FALCON for pa rt •. 968-4911, ask for Larry WllJ.. trade 971,\ a c r e s . ·value $4<1,oo:> for boat of equal value. 499-GIS. "" Cheyslor/Pi-,-th Open Dally &: Sun. 'W 10 PM 2)29 Harbor' Blvd., C.OStaM'" 546-1934 '66 VALIANT. Very gd oood. $400 or Bst. Offer. 491'·ll49 anytime 833-5564 8 lo 5. 1972 PLYMOUTII F\1ry JU. Lo mi. Many Xtn. Xlnt cond. $UXJ. 847-1.MS. Pontiac: SPECIAL PURCHASE 1974 l'ONTIACS as low as $2995 Including Factory Air! NO MO/'IEY DOWN SBZ.36 .Mo. (182.36 per mo. for 48 mos. Total of $.'9.52.80 A.P.R. 14.35% l59SJEZ) O.A.C.) WIN WITH BOB 1 I ( ·! ) 7 • Lag11na/-South Coas~ • • EOITiO_N • • T oday's Final N.Y. St0eks • , VOL. 67 , NO. 309, 2 SECT.I ONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUN TY, CALI FORNIA-TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 5, 1974 TE N.CE NTS . • t· • I I . . d : ~ a 0 " Deitf 1"1191 !'NI•· THEY AWAIT HEARING FOR ALLEGED PORNO SALES Laguna Bookstore Owners Evelyn and Gordon Wilson and Child ·Hearing on Laguna . / Boo.kshop· Case Set A Laguna ·el';ich bookshop owner and his "'ire." an ex-Ca"tholic nun, face ;a !':ov. 19 hearing on charges of-ped- dling por nogra phy, nearly a year af- ter the Ar.t Colony case broke with their arrests on charges of selling .smutty co mic books. Gordon \Vilson. 34. OYlner or the Fahrenheit ·451. at 509 S. Coast lligb- '-':ay. and his \\"ife> E\'elyn, 36. have pleaded innocent to the misdemeanoJ:. charge. The hearing ~t·t for a "'eek £rom 11ext Tuesday in South Orange County Judicial Disl t!('I Cou rt. Laguna Niguel. had become a ··cause celebre." amon'g La guna Bt'ach's in- lcllertuuls Demonstralions have been ..held 8Upporting the right LO determine for one's self "'hat is or is not obsce ne or pornographic, including renc parade '-'4ll lhc Festi val of Arts grounds. Auto Wreck e r Rolls, lnj11res A special Laguna Beach City Coun- cil meeting was even urged for a hearing at which citizens could air their own viev.:s on what is or is not al· legedJy obscene. , State-law pre-empts IOcal jurisdic· lion in suc h matters -rendering the Laguna Beach City Counc;il powerless to set any suc h community standard'! -but city fathers fcft the Art Colony citizens should have their say. 1\fayor Roy llolm refused to stage the hearing. ~ Protesters including book dealer \\1ilson him self appeared at the ' reg,ular council meeting ~1.'ith the defendant carr~'in g one sign that read : .. B.urn People \Vho Burn Books. Not Books That Burn People.·· The key issue is purchase of a cop~· of the und erground publication "Zap Co mi x '' which Orange County District Attorney's invest igators claim is 6bscene and pornographic. \Vilson and hi s wife, a former nun \\'ho \\'as pregnant at the time or their arresl last Dec. 2. al so sell the Bibl e, in addition to a variety of travel guides a nd textbooks. They have ·vowed to carry their fig ht against local censorship to the U.S. Supreme Co urt ir neeessary. Laguna Gii:l j A Lv.•o-year-old gir\ v.·as crushed bet- Prelimin a r y hearing fo r the \\'ilsons v.·as originall y scheduled ror lhis 1-~rid ay in the Laguna Niguel courtroom. with legal counsel from American Civ il Liberties Union <A.CLU l attorney Patricia llerzog. . I ween the rear \\•heels or a ·runaway auto wrecker and a concrete retaining wall in Laguna Beach l\1 onday. Susan 111 . Cheatlcy or 249 San J daquin .Strect v.•as rushed by police car to Sou'th Coast Community }lospital "'here the tot was said to be in ''stable condition" loday al the flospital 's intensi ve care uni I. The cftiild sufrered head and chest lniuries in the accident v.·hich occur- r ed n ea r he r home while s he The \\'ilsons' arrests on charges or alleged-s mut-dealing actually include thr e e publication s, ··za p ,'' (See BOOKSllOP, Page AZ) 5 -Held in Coin _)YJlS wa lkjng with her rfl~olh.er. __ ., ~ Poli ~e <?ffic~r Don Ab~hier said an Museum ~e•.s t 1nvesligat1on 1s proceeding today to 1 d etermine "'ha t ca use~ the. a ut~ PROVIDENCE. R.I. (U PI 1 -Five • wrecker, owned by David Hughes persons "'ere arreStcd early tod ay in North Laguria Shel!.,_LQJ:bl~a way .. c6nrlcction with the theft of millions of It had been P,llrked by dn_ve r Sidney. dollars· "'Orth or ancient Greek and }I. Lucas. 27, 1n front or hts ~om c at Roman coins rrom ~larvard Univc r· 24~1" S~n .Joaquin Street. orC1cer Ab-sit y's Fou'l\1u seum Inst December. sh1er sr11d.,. . Daniel Steiner, Harvard's general The \•Chicle rollc_d about 108 reel counsel. said the recovered coins d?wn the steep !ilre.ct, jumped a curb, made up about 40 percent or the 5,650 ~uLthe. child and Pinned her belv.•e.en coins, dating rrom lhe 1th C<'ntury its le(t du11 I rear wheels and the B.C. to the 4th century A.O., take.n in r tai.n1ne. wull . , . ..,,. the Dec. 2 robbery. Th~ child had bec.n listed in cnt.1cal "There is no way telling tlie \'alue or condition upon arrival at .the hosp1t.al. thl_ lfecOveredl coins al this time. She "'aS taken l~ the,'1~p1tal by police They h a\'e to be inventoried and <'Or dut• to her t!nY, size and the severe checked one by one. That's going ln 11aturc or her In.Jun es. .. ta~e some time," Steiner said. .. > I • oses 39 Items Cro wding City Meet Reali gnme11t or Pacific Coast High. way as it passes through downtown Laguna Beach is one of 39items on the agenda of the Laguna Beach City Council Wednesday at city hall . • The council will consider· the regular business portion of the agenda beginning at 4 :30 p.m. and will take up the public hearing agenda at 7:3Cl p.m. . Realignment or the highway may involve closing ·of left turns to and from Forest Avenue, the main down- town business street. fl.terchants have charged that such an action will hurt business ror them. Contra~t for the highway work is scheduled to be let Dee: 16 with work lo begin J anuary IS. The California Department of Tran· sporlalion fC ALTRANSl will pay Sl60,000 ror the 'work "'hich stretches from Broadway to the south end of l\1ain Beach Park. CAL TRANS views as a major part of the project construction of a center m edian and e limination or· the sidewalks at Forest Avenue on the West side of Coast Highway as impor- tant sarety measures, the project staff report said. The project would s mooth lhe high- way at Forest, provide for a land- scaped center median from Broad- way to Forest Avenue and add tur- nouts for buses along the Main Beach eark. Three alternatives to the project are outlined for the council: construct the project as previously approved by the state and city: requEtst that CALTRANS delay or not construct the project; make minor changes in the pfpject a.nd allow left turns to and from Forest Avenue. . Other bu'Siness to be considered by the council includes : -A heritage tree ordinance which would prevent the cu.tting, removing or otherwise-molesting of designated heritage trees. -A review and discussion or lhe parking me"ter revenue policy which allows the city to withdraw S30 000 yearly from the parking meter fun~. -Approval of an already begun management development program for the city supervisors . Jloter Turnout S aid . JI aried Election offi cials deseribed South Coast vo ter turnout tod ay as ranging from "lousy" to "very busy.·• A check of polling places revealed early turnouts as high as 25 percenl at Serra School in Capistrano Bpach. Niguel Shores Clubhouse in Laguna Niguel and the Schulz and Lee Real J<.:stute office in South Laguna . ~·luch lower turnouts, about 12 to 1.1 percent v.•er e r eported al the La guna Beach Unified School Oistricl offi ces and at San Juan Elementary School in San Juan Capistrano.- Other polling places checked. <ind th<: percentage of early turnouts. "'ere 'Thurston Inte rmediate School in La guna Beach "'ith 21 percent and Concordia Elementary School in San Clemente v.•ith 20 percent Nixor('to Be .On .Feet More LON.G BEA.CH (UPJ ) - Ri c hard Nixon is "terribly · physicall y weak .. and still h'as some pain in his lert leg. his doc · I.ors said toda y, bul th'c former president was recovering su(. 'ficient!y to do more "'alking in his hos pital room. . . ' In his daily medical report , Dr. John C. Lungren said the former chief cxecuti\'e is Slill in sub·intensive care and continue!! to receive intermitt e nt breathi ng treatment ... ..... One ol NlxQn's..Aru,ig_hle.r s.. "Jffiie r{ixon Eisenhower retur- ned to \Vashington after SJK'n· ding seve.ral days with her father. Her return was seen as a sign that Nixon was recovering., c 00 '. • Structures Deemed 'Not Safe' By PAMELA llALLAN' OiJ.M O•lly (l'illrl Stilt 1'rus tees of Capistrano Unified School District have ordered im ~ mediate closure of all buildings, that do not meet state earthquake slandar· ds. Not onlr y,•ill students be forbidden· to enter the structures th at do not comply with.the state's Field Act. bul the public also will be barred from them . . The ban goes into immediate effect at the gy mnas iuln at the old · Capistrano lligh Schobl, used exlen· sively by community groups,_and l¥-'O • T". classroom . buildings at the sa·me location v.·hich are used as main· tenance and repair shops. It also arfects the Central Oistricl . . Of'fice at Serra School in-c-apistranc Beach, but will not apply until after this week because or its scheduled use as a polling place in today's election and a meeting p lace for the district• • ·wide PTA Council Wednesday. Allhough the board wrestled ~·ith the idea of shutting down the Ce ntral District Office entirely and moving to rent~ faeilities, they compromised. by ordering a study prepared by Dec. I to determine ir they should rent or- fi ees or tear the old building down and move irito pe rtable structures. Em. pl oyes of the district and adults on business v.•ill still use the non-confor· ming buildings. CHARRED FURNITURE AND GUTTED HOUSE ALL THAT IS LEFT In San Clemente, Woman's love For Old Painting Sparked Heroism The swi ft action on c losin g i>uildi.ngs built.before 1932 came after the Ora'!se Count y CounsQI lnform~ • ihe.boarti that trust~ are personally liable if a·nyone is killed or injured In a building considered structurally un· safe by the state. Coast -Officer Saves Reluctant Hous ewife Superintendent Truman Benedict said if anyone was hurt in one of those old buildings -student, adult visitor. even employes -there would be ex · tensive laws uits fil ed against the .. district. The board also ordered an analySis of a duplex at San Juan School in San fSee CLQSU RES, Page A2 > An elderly San Clemente \\'Oman·s love for an heirloom painting riearly cost her life early today and it took heroic efforts by a palrotman tqxlrag her rrom lhe·burning family home. Superiors crediled i;iatrotman Tom Jordan for saving ~frs. \V. W. Bassett during the2:30 a.m. blaie. - Oamagc to t he house ITT 4 \\". Granada occupied by ril rs. Bassett and her as.year-old husband v.·µ about $30,000 ·and nothing l'OUirfJ"'1xo sa\'ed from th e ruins. ··\Vhen I got there rilr . Bassett "'as outside and. the livi ng room was in fl a hi es,:.· .Jord<1 n said. "fi e told me his wife was inside trying lo get to the pie• t.u re ha ng1ng abO\'e the mantel. 1'hc palrol man then ran in to lhe smoke-rilled house. "I could hear her telling rnc "''here she was but there was no real wa y to see her in the dark and the srrioke . .. Finally I follow ed her voice. but "'hen I got thert• she wouldn't ieave." Jordan said. 1'he officer finally grabbed the "'Oman and pulled her fro.Jll. the home "The minute v.•c got olif theilNhole house went up in ti a mes.'' he-said. Oulside, white he r hi..isband agonized over lhc loss or all the family possessions. A1 rs. Bassett continued to lament only lhc loss of the pain- ting -an art work painted by Bassel· t 's grandfather . 1',iremcn battled the fl ames at the U.S. Speed s Up . Is rae li A.rms \\IAS lll NGTON !U Pl l 'Thi'.' L'nilcd States is speeding $hipm ent :- Qf arms i11clud in~ warplanes to Israel. di1>lomuls said tndav. They said t he · arms s hipment speedup e merged from a meeting at the Penla~on lust v.·eck 'between Derense Secret ory J ames R Schlesinger and l sra~L .1.\mbassador Sark:hu Dinilz. ' Dihiti asked for the raster shipment because of war re11rs stemm-1ng from the Rab<tt Arab summit "•hich aligned the Ar abs with -rhe -p·3lattnt: Liberation Organization. house for about 15 minutes belore quelling the bl aze. The couple could salv11ge only a few clothes and fl.1 rs. Bassett 's purse. . Police checked them into a loca l motel for lhe ni ghl. ~ Fire Safety Specialist Don llodgson !->aLCI the cause or the fire was a bur- ning couch. apparently ignited by a cigarel earlier in the e\'cning. li e said thal the installation or a S50 smoke ularm no"' required in new eonstruetion \\'Ould ha ve saved the house "I'm not chasti sing the poor couple \\•ho lost thei r housc but one of those al:1rm ' would h:1Vl' awakened them in time to pour i;ome "'atcron the couch and call us. 1'hal·s the difference one of those alarms makes in a situation Hke this,'' he said . Rape Suspect, 5 6 , Ar rested After Incid e n t · San 'cicmcntc 1>0\icl' arreslcd a sr. .\car.old aparlmcrlt resident Alonday on attemptt'd rape charges after they <illcged he tried tn assault a nei,t:hbor, th en barric:1dcd himself in his Ii\ ing room n•hen s he ca I led officers. Ernei;t Busby of 231 La Paloma \\'8S scheduled for urraignrnent today in ~oulh llra n,t:l; ('oun1 y fllunicipal Court ' Se niors to Get Free Flu Shots _; Flu shots for senior citizens 65 and • older v.•ill be given &inday in the Sad· dleba c k Com munity Hos pital cafeteria. 24451 Via Estrada, Laguna ~!ills. Shots v.·ill be administered by the hospi tal's registered nurses rrom 9 :1.m . to noon <i nd l toJp.m. There is no charge for the shots, hut donations to the Orange Cou nt,· llC'a llh Department to eover tht> coSt of supplies "'ill be accepted. Immunization is 1>rovl dcd in a :-1ngle dose. Persons \.\'ho'<ire allergic lo eggs will nol bC' immunized because. Jlf the possi hi lily of adverse react.ions. • Oranlfe Variable hi gh cloudiness " th roug h \Vednesda v, wi th slighlly \\•armer days ~nd <..'001 nights. Beach highs at 6S rising to the mid -iOs inland. Lo "'S tonight dipping inlo the 40.'. I NS IDE ·r oDA , ... .. 'l'hl' ca~~· :-lt•1n-. from a report by a I 1'hf' safety 11f America '! 110 2U year·olc Ol'l ghbor \Vho. pohcc saicl, rt•portl•d Iha! :-he hud .:one 10 the nuclear reaclor.-t remcuns a nag· n1anTs hnmf' !\horth hi'fnrc noon to g1ng que stion 1'~e-prlfblem i$ - hiHTO\\' :i p;icka uc nr"1.:i11,;u·cu'·' ~·-.,.---/i-'"r~a"m"•_•_•d_'_" de/ail (In Page B9 "' . . ladnl/ The 111,t.•gt•d rape :H!cn1pl took place a ft'11z>(11· ";1, i!l\l'n lhl' par-k of ci,g:1 rC'llt.·~. poht'l' s:u<J Polirl' rl'portl'd thill thl' \'1cllm ran--- fron1 lhe houst.• :in1I phonrd for of. f1ccr.s.. lly the. llml! lialrolmen 31 · r1\'ed. !hey :.atd ltu,b,\ had har· r1 c.>uded himself 1n the apartment and phOllt·d hrudc1uatll•rs Off 1l·er' at the sl;1t1on ronvinc.>ed the -mnn lo 11uOmlt to arre!'il And l'te·cavc UI) "1lhout 1nci(lcnt . "'""' leJftllK~ 11 t..M.loy• "' C.llfel-Jll• a.J tl•M'" It 1t CW!lou I I er.u-• ll °'"'"'"''"" ... . l•w.r .. ~ ...... ... . • 11119 .... ,,,,;,.ftl 1r l'•-e .&t•1 "'°"' ..... ' 11 -~ •1 ~u-a1 """"" .... " Mo•le• Moilwl,_, !Wit-I~'°' or-..CMftlT -5yl•I• "-fit• -· S\IK~ 11Vr~f1• '•le•l"91! -·· Wt.•11\f! -.. ~ " " ... .. .. 11-1 ... ... .. , .. " ... " .. .. •• J • . . I I . '· • 1'2 DAILYPILOf LISC . Tuesd!'t, NoVf!mOer 5, 1114 {}oast lJ.nit Votes No To Outfall Amid hu...sh comments rrom some . tommissiont•rs th at more emphasis ·.s hould be 1>l<.1 ced o n wa s te .~rtclamatlon, pl ans ror a new qcean • ·.:OOtfall at Dana Point rell to dereat -.::Monday befor e the South Coast ... llesional Zon e Conser\'ation Commis· sion. But the South £ast Regional Recla m ation Au thnritv jSl".RR AI compelled by .:i ntipollution ugenc1es to replace the cxisling substandard oulfit ll , will appeal the 1lcnial by the regional panel and s pokesmen for the entity hope to sway enough vote~ at the state com mission. Although the final vote Monday. was a blow in one respect to the oulf<tll t>rojcrt, the waste entity managed to' score heavily on another vote which Killed a staff recommendation that '"'Ould have placed thf-s trictest rules in 1he nation c overing ;i mmonia dis.charge through the pipe. The treat.m ent enlity claims that even before s ignificant inland recil~m-.tion could lake place along 'the South Coa\t and Saddlebnck Val· tey, the ou.trall project -calculated to cost rno.r.e than Sil million -is a ~essity_ , •. But __several comm1ss1oners, 1n- <"luding Rimmon F ay and Judith Rosener. disagreed strongly. "\\le fll know.. thiit the only way to make Strides in cleantlig up the voaters offshore is to compel govern· menf agencies such as SERRA to change the attitude toward disposal. .. This is our chance to compel the!" to take another looJc a nd spend some or that money for reclamation . not just the sam~. old ocean dumpi~g," she said. 1',ay, a champion of the stiff am· monia disch<1 rge requ.irements. con· tinued his disapproval of the SERRA plan, but conceded that scientists di[· fer on the effects of ammonia. He added, hov,.ever. that the com· mission shOuld side y,•ith the faction that questions the effect:tof the com· J>O:Und on ttfe marine environment. .. Since the initiation of a permit ap-. plication before the commission for the 11.000-foot outfall project near San. ·.,Ju-an Creek's exit to the sea in the mid·· die of Doheny State Park. Environmentalists dead-sctagainst ~ increased ocean dumping of treated "·aste had promised to appeal ap. pro\'als, if the regional commission granted a per m it. Trustees Order New Bidding on Tennis Courts _Contractors will be asked this week to submit new bids oo a scaled·down proposal for six tennis couri.s at Sad- dlcback College. New plans reviewed P.1onday night by college district trustees call for six coutt!'I, professiona l li ghtin g, restroom and storage facilities, fen· -cing-and water lines. .· The project is expected to cost about $190.000 . .according to district architects. Trustees agreed to bid· fencing separa tely to reduce th at por-. lion of the project cost. Original bids came in at S240,044, about Si8,000 more than "'hat "'as budgeted for the courts. Trustees then pared m ore than SS0.000 in extras from the plans. Ne\V bids "'ill be opened Nov. 14. l f a bid is acCl'J)led , architcrts suid the courts could be inst:1lled by the end of J anuary. ORANGE COAST L,.,;c DAILY PILOT ,.... °'9fl9lt CM\! 0.llJ Pllol. ""'l'lwl>i<l'l i•<om· '°"" ''°" ""'""·Prtt\, I\ P®!1""d &> 1hf 0...,9" C:0.•I P\lblhlU"O C.0MOtn,. S.Plt .. t tClil•-«• llU'llllt!IM. /l<IJ"'l•Y •n•o..;n ,.., .... ,, ,.,..,. Col!t ......... "'-•P<WI llf'•Cf>. ~ .. n1 •"<110fl Bf«l'll,.-a..,. t•ln V•tley, ''"'Int, S•d<Httl,l(k V"ley -u...., k kfl/kovlfl (a•,, it. •"'911' 1,..;- eG<l•Dn ~ 11Ut>llYlecl S.!u•d••• -s..nci.v•. Tne lll'U'l(-1 PUOl .. ftonq p!~nl l• •• )XI Wt\\ 8.oy itrttt, CMI• Mew. (t lotarno• n•it Rober! N. Weed PrO\o<Nnt •flll Putlt•l/'IN Jack R. Curley V•tt P•H•O.n1 •!ICI """-'•' MOl\lq/<' Thomas l(eevil Thomas A. Murphine ....._•t q•n; [01!0' Ch arles H. Loos Richard P. Nall ... ,i ... ..i Mf ... ••"'l[llOIOI'\ Laguna Beach Oflice- 11a.c.1tmt"t !sl•HI Ntloh"O AOllrO\\ ,. 0 flo< .... •10 1 Othtr Off ices (<>\It lit.tM lJO W.\! &lr Sl•fff "ff.,_,illl«fl JJUN,•POtt lloUW .. HO !'jllf>lll•t !C•" ltt tft !llll 8t1tft 1tou1t .... ~eiti.11otc~ Vi111t1 n101 t• l>tl lflooet "S...D~rrtt•tr Telephone 11141 642-4321 Cl•ssltltd AdverU1ing 64?·S611 L•;una Be•ch All [Hprartmtnts : __ TJel!l~~ 495-0620 (oo.,.1_.t 1tJI 0-t n.. (~1 """'"""' ~ ,. ... ~ ""'~'. 111.,. ... 11_, ... JW L•I .... ,~, .. ..r ... "'111"""11 ,.,~'" _, W 1'1111'_ .. wtl,.111 \""Ill lllfl'""l\IOft Of llllP\'1'.~f ... MI~ ~c.tflll ti••• "°'••flll' OllO ,.. ~· .V-1.t, ('tl!tor~lt !1•HllU•~llOfl bf (.tl'rloot tJ 00 -llllY bf ..,.,1 M 00 _,,..,, 111lt;tlir' OUll~-U 00 1110<'\ll!IJ r I Sfiip · Tliat Boat !Runaway Vessel Overtaken A pilotless, runaway boat heading out to sea In Newport Harbor this morning was boarded by a Harbor Patrol officer and returned to Its c-hagrinedowntr. TllE OWNER has been len on a dock'near"the llarbor Patrol station when the ~S.000 boat somc~ow slipped in~o jl:ear and started its lonely journey while efforts were being made to lie ll down. . Witnesses ha lied th e llarbor Patrol as the 43·foot Nausika headed in a straight line out lo the harbOr 's entry chll nnel. TllE WAVWARO craft was overhauled by ·a patrol boat and officer Cha rles Chi ck leaped aboard to bring it under control. Chick returned the vessel to its owner, Von Pri"'-.43, Corona, whose hands were blistered when he tried to divert the boat from its 8:30 a.m. solo depa rture by hanging on to its mooring ropes._ Hundreds Attend· OC Rites for At_hlete By KATHY CLANCY Ol tk O.lty ptlll; ~ Stephen ''Mike'' :Finklea, a promising 19-year·old scholar und athlete, was buried Monday. More than 225 cJ-.ssmates , teachers, coaches, neighbors and relatives gathered at a small ·funeral chapel to mourn the.death of Finklea, described a s ''everything to everybody." He was captain of the Orange Coast College wre!'IUing team and 1973 athlete of the year at Foun· --tain Valley High School. • There wert few dry eyes during the brief service. "I saw a whole nei&hborhood on the street where Mike lived -I saw them bleeding with the family," said the youth 's uncle, the Rev. E noch. Finklea, who canle from South Carolina to officiate at the service. Afourners overflowed the chapel at Peek Funeral Home in Westminster, leaving many sitting out~de on folding chairs. Most of them attended the burial afterward at Westminster l\1emorial Park. : "I stand stronger and taller because I knew him,'' Mike's uncle said. "He contributed so much to each of us." Young Finklea was slain at mid· nigbt Thursday by six bullets fired Marion Ringer .. Deaa at 86; . Services Today ~remoria l services were sched~led today !or Marion F. Ringer or Laguna Beach "''ho died Saturday at age 86. Services were a t Lagun a Beach Community Presbyterian Churc h. Burial will folloy,• at Brooklinc, l\fass. Survivors include a son, Hayden Ringer of Lagurra Beach; daughter, lk>th R. l\1ora n of Jt\inois: seven gran- dchi ld ren and five grea tg rand· children. ~1rs. Ringer was a resident of Laguna Beach Nursing Home unt il ~er death. She came to Orange County in 1967( The family suggests memorial"ton- tril1utions to the Rin ger P.temoria l Scholarsh.ip, Tufts University at P.1ed· ford, ~Tass. . Arrangements "''e re by Sheffer Laguna Beach ~f ortuary. t 'ru111 Pa!J" A I CLOSURES .. J ua n.Capistrano. The buil ding, "'hich one served as a home for teachers. is no\\' used for other di strict functions in· eluding a class for teenage mothers to be. The teacher's home was built after J932. but probably does not meet state e<irthqu ake standards , acrording to llcnedict. . . ... ·rrustee \V1Jliam Thompson sug- gested that the board look into the pos- sibility of selling the old Capo gym to the ci ty of San Juan Ca pistrano or some oth.cr group which might be able to use it. Trustee George Wh ite agreed, s aying that muny buildings used by private or comunity groups are not as sou ndly build as the old gym. Benedict said he did not think t he district could sell a building that was considered structurally unsafe, nor could it alloy,• people to use it who sig. n1..•d a \\'aiver or the district 's liabilit y. '!'he board 'A'ou\d still be held respon· siblehesaid. Community groups thnl use the ~rm School auditorium will h<.1\'C lo meel elsewh ere. t ·r.,111 Pa9<• 1\ I BOOKSHOP • • "Grea ser ."' a nd "Yel low Dog Cdmi~." 1\ Oi stri<'l Attorney's spok e.!man futlcd the controversy after at •ur· faced in Lagun a Beach 11 months ati:o. lie complained that 1f oo b1(l hi!'i had been made O\'Cr the couple'" "r· resl. they probabl y would have ··co~ pC'd out .. in pollce parlance. Th1!i means they "·ould h avr plc:1dt>d (!U11Tflo-a!Mr-<'hnrjte ttrJl'I !hr porno~ra phy rap 1n return for Jt<'I · ll n)l off 1\ 1th only token punishment. 1.\ .fTlis_dcmcaDor__yJoJation....sucn as they arc Cha rged \lrith in Cfilifom ja <';1r'r1es a maximJ!m 1H!nalty or six months in jail an11 D $SOO fi nc.i uJK>n conviction. Laguna Nigu~l Burglars Take Cameras~ Gems Cameras and jewelry valued by the victims at nearly S800 were stolen during the weekend from a Laguna Niguel home, Orange County Sheriffs officers s today. Deputies s aid intruders pulled a screen from the bathroom \\'i.ndow to gain entry to the master bedroom at the home 'of lloward Leroy Thomas, 38, of 25182 1.1onte Verde Drive. The fa mily wu s away from the home at the time. Deputie s working the La guna Ni guel11rea also reported the arrest of Scott \Vhitworth . Hickman, 19, of 29-162 Troon Drive, Laguna Niguel on charges. of possessing dangerous drug.!I. They said Hickman was halted in his car near a construction site at il1foulton Parkway and Canada Road. 1'hey said a search of the vehicle yielded a plastic bag containing a quantity of dangerous drugs. Sari Juan Get~ Greeter Group \I/hen new businessmen open their doors in San Juan Capistrano they'll fi nd a grou p of greeters waiting out· side. 'rhe "greeters program" began this \veck as °3 perm anent project of the San Jua n Capistrano Chamber of Commerce. First to be \\•elcomed was Dr. Rohert Jenson \v hose dental office opened ~lo nd ay a t 32282 Camino C<1p1strano . ' "1'his v•ill be like the Los Am igos proli(ram in San Clemente," said San Juun f'h:1mbe r manager J ohn Toner. "\Vr-don·t yet havl' a name for our i.:rou1' ·· Form in~ the nul'leus of the commit· lf'C "'tl l hl' ·rom llcb<ir. Al Seeger . Hlt;i Cn sll•c l ;ini.1 P<1ul llunter. The p1,1rpo'>1> nf the group will be to assist n('w bul'i lnl'S!H's in the l'om munity in :.1n\· ..... 1y ro:.s1Ulc. Guns, Stereo Ge ar Stolen ·rhe theft o( SIS,000 worth of guns, ~lfor('fi tqu1pment alld other \1aluables ti .. .s hec n reported by Emmett Jones. 24 19 S. Coast 11 1.l(bwa_y , Laguna Ueach. Jones told orricers most or the los!'i wus 1n th e \'aluablc firearms, hunlin~ l'ln"'1mll"JMrgu... ~ Poltcc believe entry may have been 1hrough 8 garajil e door. The hurg~1ry occur.red Friday. t he i'lotcl Laguna, 425 S. Coast JliRhway. reported loss of a SU.lO red carp<il Saturday, Police u.r e in· \"CS.tigptinjl. • . College's • • Trustees . ;Eye Gym By FREDERICKSCllOEMEHL oii-. o.n, """ lltft .. D . . ' ISt-l!ICt S Finances Tree Denials To Be Appeal~d · Vice Principal Gets Top Post Jim Henderson, vice principal of l\faroo Forster Junior Hi gh School in San Juan Capistrano, will become principal Jan. 2. Henderson's appointment was ap· proved by trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District ~tonday. · In (;apistrano Two denials of permits lo cul down trees in San Juan Capistrano will be appealed to the city's Planning Com· mission tonight al 7 o'clock in the City t ouncil chambers. Tom Nis himoto, who allegedly cut down two pepper trees in violation of a city ordinance prohibiting thedeslruc· lion or trees, applied (or a permit af· 1.er the trees were down and the permit was denied. Planning Director-David J. Smith y,•ill recommend two alternatives: .that the city take legal action against Nishimoto or require him to plant sub- stitute trees along A venida de la Vista. the place wh.ere the trees ~were removed'. The trees allegedly were taken out because they interfered with a hor· liculture business Nishimoto intends- to Start on his property, located bet· ween Avenida de la Vista and Trabuco Creek channel north of Del Obispo Road. Cancer Fight Long The new principal. who has been at l\farco Forster for three years. was a teaching vice principal at Ol e }lanson Sc hool in San Clemente and '::l lso taught at Crown Vall ey School in Laguna Ni guel. Also appealing a permit denial is Noel Le erskov who wants to remove an evergreen ash from his property at 32836 Via Del Amo. He has supplied the commission with documentation from the city or Santa Fe Springs and Hun- tington Be ach that the trees cause root damage to sidewalks and other struc- tures built over them. \IJAS•ll NGTON !UPI) -President Ford, v•hose \\'ife ·recently underwent br east c ancer sur ger y , s ent to Congress Mond ay a report saying that the natibn 's research program to conquer cance r "will take years before achievcing ultimate success." The statement was included 'in the 1973 annual report on the national can· cer program. He has taught in the di strict !'iix years. is marri ed , and li ves in Lagun a l\'iguel. HC'nderson will repl ace Ed Kincaid who will become principal of the new Niguel Hills Junior 1-li gh when it opens next fall. Strippe d Auto AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI)-Police Mon· day found the stripped car of two Mor· mon missionaries abandoned in an apartment parking lot. Gary Smith ·Darley, 20. of Simi Valley, Calif., and ~lark J . Fischer, 19, of Milwaukee, Wis .• disappeared last week. -• A WORD . TO THE WISE-· ,. There is a tendancy for many carpet stores to use strictly a warehouse concept. One advantage is seeing carpeting in rolls rather than samples. Many disadvantages are evident -most operations of this type buy only Off-goods. so that the customer only gets to see old patterns, or carpets the mills couldn't sell to regular outlets. Also, lhis type of operation generally feel s thet experience is uniryiportant, and conseQuently fhe salespeople know little or nothing about the producls. Finally, most w~I farm out the installations to the lowest bidder; guaranteeing a poor installation. (Many of these installers are contracting illegally without a state license.) ' At Alden·s we maintain a happy medium. ·We cairv a large inventory. and the largest sample select/on around. We have experienced salespeople, and our installers were trained by us. Finally, we are a s~ate licensed conlractof. • -ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES . ~ 1·663 Placentia A 'fe. COSTAMHA -646;4838--- 'HOUIS:Moo.lln:n ..... ''° 5:30-Fttl,,' .. t-SAT .. t :J.Olo 5 • ' • .. " \ I I " DAIL y PILOT A J l • l Good, -Bad News Of U.S. Economy Monday's Closing Prices NEW YORK,.; STOCK EXCHANGE , Year'• Hlgh-Lowe Appear E~ery Saturd•y Nl:W YOlllC 11.1110 -SOllt w.1 ~ Ms1 ~ tit! W., llfl !db """ ~ 1i91- Follewl"9 •'• r.1Ctt Oft lhe Pt(hal(low °'I P!\halOM ~ l't!rillllO. ~ •l{lw:ll)O. ~ PJ lldl)(W ~ • Pl!fDI O.. 0... NewYor~SID< ••<M••t C.!Wt(<IO' ,, 1!11•11" \flO. M )"+"" l!Olfieft°'"! s l 11\:o+"" -····. '' ••••• N~·i·. 1 1'1' fftloltM .10' '' 1u.-1. (low. • c.tttJllG. '1 ' u ~Vt: ~. !JP ff CO!j 4 266 11 ... ~ lllOl>wL.1,1 ' 11 "". ... ..... Aef '"° .. , .... Miio.. ''· TMllM11 n ,, ,, )I. +I -' ' • ... ,,. MDII,._ 1,IQ I It 1Jl'r-h "''" i:.·· .. 'r. w , .. ~ ,..._,, f'/ > " ,.. • •• 16o1 C:-llt( ,t(IQ ' ,U U'--'4 llr.CI I J II I -HtU 1,to ' U 11\o:o • i.. 1iM1116t I'° Ml 201oo -,..... '" "-" -P.t.\1116110.. O, CMl•Trl.llCIU 111 ~ti l!nwt' 11011 ll• •+11& 1-o Olf I 01 •V.t f'i -YM y.·; • Jh ·.,.; "-rlll II l ) Hh• 1" t ........ JW IJ ti •1'-..._ A C.•CM!C. j " -·'·" 5!!'!!...""'··" tu~."' l<'llllMIWIJ tJO UV.t" -~ .... ' 17' ttw.!..,., 119.,.,,s.t .s '"''"'o ·'°. 1J J -'"- WASHINGTON CUPI) All the m ajor economic statistics point to a United · States tortured by inflation and recession. These statistics are is· sued separately. Putting them together helps show a full p1~ture or how the economy JS progressing. For that reason UPI presents a box score or the lalest economic indicators: PRICES: The Consumer Price In· dex increased 1n September by 1 2 percent. Ir sustained this would translate into arl annual increase 1n con- sumer prices of 14.4 per· cent Jn the first nine mon· • • · FINANCE ths or this yeur, prices rose more than they did in all of last year.· I 000'1N'1GiJ ~~~-l!r Nev.·port Beach-headquartered Universal Data Corp. has named two men to vice president posts. Peter J . Gendron, of Newport Beach, has been appointed vice p resident and chief financial orficer. Donald E. Kerr of Cernlos has been na med vice president or marketing The firm 1s involveµ in computer and management AM!litll1,t,ttt ;-,5"+1 C•11.-2o10 ...... 1 ~111 .:>1• fl~ ... 1::r~::...P1:1.as . ,,.,....,1a,,..,..,l',, .. ,1...,,,.~."'·' 10 •'<'• --r1c..-1M1 ·u_u _ J NFi.ATlON: • ~Ji :1 i~:·~ .. u.t:cfi:• ·: :ra·:~ ~irs i ·~ ,~::·= ::~: ~ ~= ~ ea::z ! 1: 11a!:: = .. 5,!,: ti:=·~~~·: ,H r·:'s Measured by a broad ME.,.1 .•• ,,, • c. .... ,.,111 " ..... Clftl:>lll&j(l .. 1100 s -.,..•Ml4'1CHS 1• '"' Ml•Tr.•• ,, , .. A'-"-•' s10\ ...... ,_,M.to1 •s11'4.11.o •a • II d th GNP -111 c.i~ •Yo I 41"" • \II En!Plr• Fin 8 41 Milli• "-I~ l\lo j llfto t ·~ ,_,..._ .. 1 IU 11 • i~ fli.Gf In ,tO ' 'j '"' · Tlm~n 1 Kw • •1 1•~ .. \o .uoe -ca e e =111o~1:.r 1~-"'c.nc,1,.20;1 .. J""•"-~G4is t 41 ..w.-11t1 1111 "i 11"'•'lllllMS1..~ . .os•nso •VI IUoGr.Jc:,~ .. 1 IJoo•"""'l'l"fl.o.:i . 1t1Jllo•1t1 '"deflator," a mep.suremenl MY1nv .)Ocl .. il :=: ~ ~~!i 1·:i J , 1~! = ~=t°'F ;tt ! 1, '=!:: l:t.::·~: 1~ ~1.~tt\ ~Jgl! Uf ::::::: ::~ .... d :~ l 1~; ,h, :· ~~~J; t ~f ,tt?.:.!'; preferred by economists -m:.."1.~ 21: ii"-.~ g::J~'·~ ~ J: :~:,~ ~Enle•ln ':' ~ , ~! ~ ::::..1i: ~ ,; t,=-.~ ~l;ll ~ 11 I~::: =·1.: ~ 1~ :~~: ~: ~:.\•:iP.: ~ t ~~-.~ inflation's pace Was at an ,. t: ,; i ... : :z 9.'~~!'5,',!! ,' ',', 11"" ... E' ,·..," •, ,.• !!.~•. •. ,",..""l''r"••'• ~ r.1.1o ... ~1.• 1 1 11,. ... ~it'tt 1•n 11• 111 ... tr-c.o ." 1 n 11\:it-v. annual rate or 11.S percent AllMfl 1 ........... •• " .. "' ........ ..... 101 1 u ...... ~ • 4 11J 11 .,,. --.. ,,. 11:i 1 " '1'•• .,.. 1.-. ... )t r ,... ,,,__ durlng th. July.Seplem~r ""' l"td = ,: 1!: .;:: .. iii; OIMPw 1 )I 1 11 11"-. , l!QUle l.Old J lt ••-• "' llltl'tl\I ldU "81 )Cl + \,, ....... Oii t s ' "\lt t \lo liloc ... ~~·!. •, ,,> ·.~ ·,· tr.In\ pl••-... l SI ..... Lii: -'if'Cllll(.~ j ,. IJ\lo• 'Ill C...ISWIU t •olO 11\o• \lo E_..1111 6 ti""'• \lo lftH .. wl\.'W I 1'6 ~•'It Mul()ml JJ. 14 14"'-llo .,_ •+ 'o y.,,.1 .. 1.i.. .• •II+ period or 1974. •J 1-11'.. 1• 1"' ... f!;:l\~1 tt : '!: 11"' .. ~ .. ~::!'.~ :U ~ ~ ;~."" :~~t:i'~ ·; .~ ~ .. :;: *""1 1.. ~ H~ • =::-:111~ .~ ~; ~e-.... ~::::,~111,i:: ! 'J' i:=-·,.. WllOLES •1,E PRICES·. !~ ..... , ... ,,,•, "• "•'• \ "" Ct<~p I J u :~~-~ f.111)'1 c I 2'0 ' H til'r• \lo lftll Ml..iflCI $ ,., I~-'"' NIOIKI 1.)0 II :16 2tllo. "' JtofrMh I.II I 11 •1•. h l• ... Uft 1 SI '! 32'ill ..... ~ ~ •• -. ,·,. >OO '' .,. C.rtn•td 60 \I 2J Ew1,.P 4)11 2 Ill l • I• lnlMl.ltt J,3' J 20 )0 Ntl<O (.II 60 U )l ""' Ill RIM Ind tit ) 11 111 fr ft,..,, I o10 Ill. •·• A 1· 1 h b' f ;::P•t:47 ·.·.'.,,, .. ,·,· c..s-•l•IS '•-\\ E•C.UOIS •H -...,1n1Nc••.o.111111 ,.·~l ~ RoUln\lnU • JSlll\' ,.,.,,.,...A .... ni ,.,.,._ par ta ar 1nger O -•· .. 0. • .,.1 u1 , J• H:=~ IE•cllltl'l" • 11'4 11111P•Pt•1, ''° 1'ft• .. ,..,cosc '° 1 14 )"'-"" R1>1••" t1110 •1 ,,.,;,,:TWA p110 . 'i.~-i.. things lO COmC, WhoJesa)e ~f·.,"',,,'," .. " ·,· '•' ,•,•.: • .. O!n<AiC:.60 5 ! W-\I; Ell•Ol\Cp 0Sd ••• ,•_>t M~f ~ 1"'Rff.I Ito ' t ·~ .. =~~ ~ ; n~t t~'4 7 ~ Ro, w','c'< ·~ 1' 3?1, ·.~·-',~ Tr"WFI 1.0 S J'S 1'1• X~ AiWrtoC'61111 ,\lo ,. 0.IU(llll20 . I 10,.. IMT&TJ ,U•I01tllotl.lo,._\,.wn ,16d . 11 t""-\• .,,, ...... 1::.~,rr1wlr>IOl •llll'<'t'.., pncesrosebyone..tenthofl A1111rt"',j0 1 ,, UY>•"" O.ft'IPSP 611, 111 •11t• 111 F-. ,., • it S1'•..., ,•t~TJ:I,•,.~.·.· 1 Jll'I-~ N.oUC.n .sJ • 1, 1 , ...., R11101110 1 A tr1v1r)p11 '9 2•\<o•"' percent in September the IJCMlll 1 • .0 s ~ 1011_ .,. Oll•C 1.JSd ' 11 ,, ..... _"' F11rcam .llO • 1" '""' • 1"' •, ('~ ,. J I:'" '"' "' p1 ,\, ,0 ,,.,.. • "" Ao,11 111 1111 l .o ,.,.. • "' TRE ~ ,.. t 1n J:h• v. smallestincreasein11mon· :ii:nsa-:J ~ 1~t_.1 g:t;~vJ .~ :~ i:::: ~ ~:t:!.:11 ·~•, zi ~: r: :::r~::: 1~ i.~::·~ ~::'di~·=~ J! 1~~.'...1\11 :~.,::: ~,:;.·\lo ~;;gr:'"';:~·: 't ;;~.~: (: th d · ) ~ .IOI 10 It J . ()\l'leM 1.20 4 -.i 1'111 •II\ F•l•rtilfot.J.... I 11 t ~. I TI r" J .. , , .. Ulili+ "-HtDltrt LSI • 1t '°"-i. Rutktr C.0 1 tell ll .. • ,._ y., !ioo 1 Uo t It •"'• "'° s an equ1va enl to a 1.2 Al'-i.w 2 u s1oo -11i OtlM!IJ.20d • .... ,...,, "' ".i•i.tt er .. 11 1t1i ••• •r• flfOJ . , u 11o ... N110i.i11to • 3n 1•11o-\,. ituv.Tot '• s •1 •·· . T•:'!1'• ~' IJ '' "\• percent annual rate. Thi's .t.11e9c,p 11111 ~ 1 1 "' 0.1-.a. 1 ' , ... ..., F--.o ' 1 ,..,._ ''" 1111r'* 11• s s 1tV1 .. NOl•I p1 •i... . rJO 10 .... R,oers, o10 J i,1•• •I••'"" 1r11 ... .., i 2 •h-~. AHtllld160 l I JJq,,, \II 0.-1•'1 f S tt-1 14Ui• 14 F•rW1tl'c1' 4 ....,.._ .... lllltrPKPfS ., l Jll& .. 1111 NUFuet~J J I lllo:o• 1,o -w -l"n11y ln ~) t 12~1+ 1• was well below the 3 7 per· IJIQ LlllllOl l •• l 3) .... "" OlmNV'l M ' Ji lJ.!11. .. , ..... M19 .. 1S J\ro . ' lnl•f•l ll<ftd • 31 ..... _.... "'" Gvc> I.OS • 11 10'• ..... s.o. .. R • ll • JI .. ~ Trpc ... !()cl 10 llS IUt-~ AlitPwl.)I. 111 H lft-'lt 0..sCi:rl .. s so 11~-1 F-• 3111, St J\\o. lnbtPwl». l Uli .. ~ Niii-• .. ,. t..,_.,. S.io..d•..., s • 1 • TllW1nl12 ~ 111 11n .. ~ cent annual rate recorded Alle!\Grp o10 4 s2 sv, !'i!.'!•Pd 11• 1• •• •llfi • 11o ~!!'Mr•1eo.,• • •, •,•,1• • ~ ,111'11 UM"' '•4 1 i JVJ . NII '""" 20 1 ,, s\lo ... t';.-1 '•·'° : ~: ~~ • ~· ?RW pt "'• .• • •:t!-"" I A t AlllOO!lto•l24 :q\l'l ll._...,.."'1 4'10S1111S1"°•1Vlo ,·-,.,,"',' .. '•••••••.',:':.-' I l tillh~\lo NC111pl81 ~• .. 1110'~•\\o Jo~ n '•oRWpr4.0 ., 6 4~-••• n ugus A!illdPfld,I 4 1S U\llt v. 0.IE IU u" 10 U'11 • "' -....... l-EllJOll ll 1ov. ...... NllMl'lO~' 19 , ...... SI M1rvl1. •O :16h~ •• T~-G .. s ., ,~."" UNEMPLOYMENT•. AllleG!ollJO • t 11 • , OllMll..,(O' 1 13 •l't .. v. ,'~, •~·.~ l 10,• •,,•-., •., lofr•llGl,4'1 I t 111~ .. "' NPrnlllM 4 1 11\lo SllS...F111 ' I 1Slo-""' l.CF1 11<11• tJ J\too ••• •lld ~kl HI 2• 1~ , , OllMllCO pi • 2 II t Vt PDi8 •v I-Pl 1.14 6 IJ h -.: Vt NO StmlCon 7 ••U \Oh+ 1(~ StP4~I !o .. •• JI 10"'-1• T~o lei.ort 1 I SJ lh + lo! Joblessness rose to 6 per-Aub Che J• s 19 1,., • " Ch Pnwm J 1 21 tew., "" FeoC>S1 '·" 10 l:rt ~· v. l-P!o 1.n 1 1 u1• ... N•i s..~ .n , 12 1 ., ,,.. s.11..,, 1 o101• 111 21,,. >-1o 1,i., Cp t0 ' • 1s~-..., AllrglltA ,JI • 1 ... --011 llk>ck Ill •• • t" t "' FwroCorp I s 1 -... Ire HHo•ll J ,, t~ . NI SI-.to • 11 U\li t l:o s.1 ... 1c .J~ 1 JI 4\• . . -ti u-cent 10 October' the highest •kor. ' )0 I f'IO ll\lo • ,,,., ~.'",",• ,·,· ~ 1,3 tV. • . Fltlrtbrd 'ill J JO 11\'r-"' I E lmp .M • us U\ro. Vt NISU.rtll u u I ,. .. ,,., =" 1 s t: lj~ .. I.. U•llfl( "°" 5 ,.. 1tW. " in three years. The number ,.,...151o; 11 4 11 n~. "' ...-. 11 '"" • • Fid Ft..ctCp • ' '""' "" 1ttt. Cor"'1n .. 100 '""' ~ ta N•I su ll>M , u ll>1o .. .i-. ~ A\1.o.. • . u..ce 1 10 ) 21 19...-., 1" .....,.,.x 1n 6 111 ss1o11 OlrbC..tfl .. 11 1\0 Flort M191 . u l'Mo •.• IUlnUIS ~ 1110\;o NIUTt•Co • J\~ S...Fflc10• II ''-•1•UGICp 1H J •11i.t&1o or une mployed persons MM.-•••..,•,,•,•,.""." .. g::-,..,,:::.,;: ,:.,,..:~ ~~~l:S! .! ~~·.~ iui11t1c.p~J-• .. tt ., ...... ,-, ... ~120,,·,• "',., •,·,~·i.~ W.,,.1';,i11:~ 1>;2:""!~t:~Jric:t~; ~~ '~ .... !~' looking for work reached S.5 Nn<«d .1• , 2 iv. • 0v""1., w1 • 110 2 • v. F111ro1Cp ·'° • • ,.,. .. "' ""°'" F ... • 11 Jiiii-v. ,....;;:; ·.., , ,, •" ! ~ s..Fe1r111 .11113 11s 11 .. 1 Url4tco so 1 11 11\, + ""' .11. t f . ·u · AmHes .f!09 2 u1 , .. • 11o ct M191.611i " tlllto ••• F1nt1Ftc1S1 :t ' 1-.. •.• .wit.,. 1t ' J 101ori. .-NlwPw1o10 • 20 16111-Vt Wll'M' • » • 1 •,-"" UrollLtd .111111 J ' ''"'-1.~ ml ion OU 0 a CIVl an A H11 pf fu.. 91 •4 • lh Cl lftlly .6Jll .. ll JVI-\lo Fl"lne I 10 • fl 1»-"' ~d l.61d .. JI '"'. 'It Nt~PIM ' 1.-. 1.0 " + v. s.il I o..s ' lllO ~ + h UftlNV, Hod ' • JI'-'+ "" work force of 92 mi'l"on. In Am.t.lrFt 4-1 s ,. 6'ft._ 11o an 111111.60 • .11 ""' t " F11 Owrt ~ 1 tit ' • v. PllOI '° 11 uJ uva -1 NE.119E• 111 1 ,, u14 + "' S.vE1P , n 1 \ • un ant .14<1 , 14 1 •1• u AmAlrUtoesl• u s •• "OnG1111 .. I 11 IS'h-"-F$1111Bnci l1J 2•J Jtl'ot2 PDlt.3' •• 11.0 )0 -1 NEGIEl,U I , ...... "' s.r.•s1 °"'·· 11 IYt-1• Uft Glmr•,. 11'1' •S -4 October of 1973, une m · ABr111C11Mo, ss 3n1o."" C1nGo1121 •. r100" t-. F11M10 .2sn .. •1 .1a.:.+"-•~c11~1 . ~1oo u +1 ~EotTt.)lot , J4'111+\l'I S.•lllllMc~ .. s t1• •.. unC¥b :ra • '11 ,3 ..... 1 .. Am8rtlltl05 S6 lt~-VI ClnGEpt 4., J:rG •11\N't FIH8oslll6 IS,.._+_ h ... IC\.1111 11 U\6 -\/• -II )1,1 $i 1"°+\lo SwOllOr .l!od• 10 l l) •• UftCom11li 11 fl-1•1• ployment was 4.6 percent ..., 8 1c19 :12 • • s . anGEpt 4~ 110 so ... F1P•CP 1 n • 1s2 141. ... Je ... l<Or '" 2 1 '"" • Nwl'l'Vlt 1.111 4 ,, toll.+-"' ~~,.•M,~s J lloOO t,"" • \.) U111 ... Co<P n 1os ,e; .. '"' 0 ""'ClllJ,IO'J UI 2•1'ot V. Cll!Mll11,40 J II 1'~"+ "-F1PMll4/d J 24 '"" , .. JfmW11t .ICI S IJ H\lo• Vt N.....,pt•Vt •. t 67 ,,, """" <•Cl' 11 « · UftEl..:1211 • 1.,.. .. I•, UTPUT: ,.c..,p1 1,,.. l 11 -v. CITFln11111 11' ni& .. FllUlllE ..,11 22 a -"' Jlmw111p11 ., 110 1oy,;~, NYSEGJ.20 s ,.. 11\oli~Vt !ocl'IMt~C11 I l J • UftElpl J'1> .. 120 JJ •I Th t • " l"G •CnN.l.U/I IS l Ollc1>1p ICllJ 110 nVt+l\lo FMVBk 4Sd J u •u. Jlfl'l,..pl.1611 IJ 1J .1 NY=IE 111 ,. 11 It -~ S<"""'ll•I01• l4t S.\.oJ'o l,.lrlflpl•~• .. 1100 ,, .. 14 ena tons rea ross ,.0 ,.11;1,ioo ·t 1 14:w. .. ·~ C11s.. .. 1 • .oo, •t •SI.lot "' ,,,w11c '•1•11 • 1io.+'ii; Jhfl1~1Jld .'. 11 u""•,,.. Ni ,11 , 60 ,.,. ••• S<t1111.1&.6111 1J1 11\o.1 1, un F1c1e111y11 1s 2• •• National Product , a Nncy1n1111 ns 11.,., • .., 011M1cit20~ 11 11o. .. F•1oe11.M1.10 • • 20Y> .. 'lll JH.,.•1-.. 111t..., v. Nl6 4.1s .. ,.., ii\'r-VI S£hlumto n21 .... ,ae ... J\, u..oc.11• '1110 J)lo; .. h ·• AmDt\111 ,SOU , ....... lo Cll•Sl1i0Clll J1.4h .. l'•-F.40• J llh •• .lolwlM•IO'O S no Ith•'• Nl~S1S .• 1l4 4-1 .. SCM CpS03 111 \l\oo lf !JnOICP11•1 .. 11 •6• ... 1i.. measure or the total output ADrttt•• si 1Q 41 "°" • ..,. 01, In• .. 1 u 1 s"". 11o Fi~ N • 11 s.,._ "" .llfln&.lft 10 21 :i.o t0 , l~. N•• s.. 1 1Dll _ J1 1J • ,.,, sco"'"" 611 ) • ,.. • lift P•~ 110 11 ns 1~.-~. r d d . Amo ... 111~1 ' )l<o ' 01,•n~•h .... -1·1• F-1En1 u .. ns. 1~.1 JofWl!ovc .1111 JU 1\lo -'" NLlnd<Al" 1 ' 111 "\~~"" '<:Ol l.60 SI l IG •>..-\. UP•<PI II .• I 1m. l• o goo s an services ad-AO...• p1 ....-, . 1 11...,_ ,.. Cilf '"" p11 '"' 10 •• .,., Fieml"9 10 • 1 '"' . •• .IG!ll.Oln .a 2 " JI.lo~ ,... NL t c,p _.., , in u .. ~ ,,,. Scot1F•1 .. 1 ' ls ~""-1, un111on .... 10 s 1 1~., . JUSted to e liminate the •mEl<Pw1 6 317 l~l~• 1, City !olor•1 1 2'111-\ro rlofllllOl1.16 5 16 11~t fllr Jor1oH L1.tO • JI 2tl'-.. Norlolli'N') 5 ll Jl\t~ ~. 5£ottFor .. ' ill Jv,,. "• Uftuo,1110 4 Sl 6'1.o . •Fimlly7t 3 J '"-• '• CllrkElt.11 l I~ 2t\lo /. l'lilllkpl•'h .• 11llO.U\ft .. t.<r, .llllHLpl.t.J , 110 SO\\tl~ Horln(plllo J 21 i..,.,...,11< Sc1>11P1plol • 11lJ>o>1, unlro~llPll . JSO IS -t. d1 slorl1ons of 1nflatia.n.,.. •FlnSys 4() 116 J\,-\oto Cl1rkOll!olt2 lS ll'r+Vt F14Goti '° Jll)t ..... .,,. Jol';m150Ql 2 261.io•V. HD.,1, IU • '"-\lo $(0(tyt!111• I 6"'6-)to UIOA!•tr1J 4 16S 21V.•'• " Fin pl I.... lllO 14 Cl.C Am .20 l • 3~-..... Fl•Pwr I •s I IO IJl'o• 'll .Josltnl .90 s H• n -VI NA C.0.1 • • 2J 2• t l\lo Sc;ewlll Mll l 4 .. ,., •• Uld A!•< P•• 11.00 80'11 -11· declined 1n the third quarter ,. G8CI 111d . 3s 21 • o.~cu12 40 t s u • t1o F••P.L 1-» 1 11 111i1o. "" ....,. Ml! 111t 11 121 " .. iv. NA Ml 11111 • 15 tV.-"-Sc .... u p1 .,, .. 11 z•>..-\, Uld er-1 10 111 •• 1 1974 l I l f AGnScl tjcj 11 lHirt"-C .. •Ell,.06 .._ JJV.-"-Ft.stHIJY:r l 611 ••• .MMQ 1401 1t tl'o •.. NAMPfllto• :rt !t'lll•"" ScuddletOV., ~ •""•l• Uftlkpl..,., I 6U-\ .. * o a anannua raeo •Gtiins 604131 9\lo -v.Ooro•Co .st• • '"" •.. F1uwei:r .N1•n121v.+1.,. -«K-HCftAlr .IOcl• v 2..,_ .... ~~!l.!,·'!li,· ,,",,,1~-~UftCG<p:nd.: 11 &Va ••• T 29 percent This Was the AGnDllto .. O> •••••-CluettP .i.o• 11 Sf'otlll "•~in • 21 IW.ttt. 1talwr.t.h1ll 1' 16 +Y• ND(Mlr1or1 •. J 1 _.._ ~. -,., > ,,, ... :"" Uldl'llC.11 .10 4 IS~-••• information systems. WO promotions at Sound Produ~ts Division or Allee . AmHol\I IO ' 21 tfot " ou::rl-pl 1 '' • ·--"' -2111 . I Z1't• ~ KAI""'~.. I ''" .... -Ul 1 01 ) )tS ""• "' ~ r . ' ..... UG\PL. .JOO i ltli ' ... ~. Corp. ·include Vinton J. • -ckey, new vi'ce president or lh1rd consecutive drop. One AmHom eon 1u ll •'"' 2':' '"" ep i 131 1°"'+ h ~~"~' "., •, "• ~ ... • • .. ,01wra .so • 1 s .. HDn•Gs , tt 1 .a 11 .. , \.o *:::n;,;" ",'.,si ! 2l l,~· .,11o UN1111u1.n , 1• 1111o+ .., ~ d f f A No-pl 2 . J 161 t IW. .....,AFn .1111 ·• lttl tllo , •• .---· ... ,.....-H• •• 4 111'11-\lo HllGilor I.... • 20Yio + \olo • ,..-IJnlflO(CI » t 6 '~ manufacturing operations for the Anaheim fi'rm and common e 1n1t1on o reces-_ .t.mHo»o .xi J4 1 .. _30 _.._~ CH•p1 1 . .0 .. 1U1o •111 ... FlnlMoJtlll • .,1 11t1r t ._ ~ .. Mi1 .10 1 1t ' -" f'i9tnPS I.» 1 w 15 + n ' 10 1to• ~' un•n11 p1 'n 1 •VI-·~; -• sion s a de I •• f l Amlnn 21n . 1 J • "' CHA Inc I.GI .. 11 1014-\o'll l"W'Mcll ·• • '' t1'1!ot ¥r IUocPU 2.20·1 '' 20 + y, HDktGt. 1.10 1 llM sw + "" ~o,..,.~ ,',' ,',',' ,•,••, ,.-~ Viii inns · 10 '7 -.,, 2...--.. • • , Robert Rofkahr, vice president of marketing for the 1. c 1'""'-or wo con· ",,,.dl,1 .12 ' 104 ' -·-CN• ... ...-n .. i 1 ... FrM p1 1 '° ·· 3 10V1 ... kaoi .. .50d s ' n~" .,., HOMGot' s .o zn \i-1 "" -~ ... UftJs~a} s i •to f "'" u1 w.s; GNl?-4'~!!!'1~-1-L._Jll "CHAL.J!2~ .. s 11'.t.if FU>llnltSd . '1,.,.._\oli ~11Gfl'6I s n -Ioli st · • 5-lr•lnL!"·· ll 2'11.. ~---2 •l 1~~-...rG --'""""'"' -•-,rTVisiOil----~•----.Se& Ute-quar .JD -..,,,.,.,1 ~ 3 22, 414+-il 'CMM .-(n·~,~1..,,· .. "or.1~4;1:~ n ·1t"11-"'4 i<•mtn:'Sll:i-•_,_,•._-' ,...,G,""'1~t, ~'l -" seoco-:;t0-r1 ·m-n lift llOi ••• -»-.l-•-"- 1 ~,,..,. ·-·-•-. --J'~~STnJ.i~•""'PUT · •mN">.,, '' -•• ·~ Cat~" ... l.lt .. 10 11-+-'ill F"lllf'Wnl .. , .Sl 19t:tJ. W..l\Plft .Jl 1 JD 1S111to-·\4 .,.·,· ,, , ,·~ s.tYklC.1d'l 111 l"'• \/, utdP~CMll .. S I'll>-.,.. Ru!kahr _ives in 1-funtington Beach ·and Lackey .. p"uud n ~Lu1 u • • ""'~h;; 2 ~;~ .. I; C!.t$0;1.u .. 10 16 -Ioli FoJ1ilor9 '°" u u • 111. 1C11y1-• 1 10 Jv. .. 1o1i r,i.o s 'ii m'l.:..t"i-$11-. .0 • 1s ~\<+ 1o1i ta.R•fh.9 40 i , ,~ .... res'• des in Laguna Niguel. ro uct1on o U S. in· •m sn1, ";,· , , .. • eor.ac.1 :t.1111 J~ tl'llo '"" ,,.,_ "' .a 10 110 14 • ~ ic.1y pf 1." .. 1 n . . Hwsv. 1 4J s 111 1•1o11 .., .n s 1l •"<-1.. usF10.1 2.41 t JJ ffV. • ii. d Am!otnlt IV. l 101 16\lo • ...... Coc.1lloll 40 I JM 4'4 • 16 F,_.tM. I 60 S 1.11 1011•1 IC.a\11&8' .16.. Ill l\lr .. lllo M.,a,.,.' 1 · .. t Ill :pv,,: 2 SNlltl .10 l It 6'h · USF1S l.tOd.. 16 ll\11 .. 1-. * uslries fell at an annual ...,.. 51,,., ICI 4 92 ,.,.. .. ""c-•k •, , '"'-"" Fr....,u11..10 s llo,. .. Vt KaMck .40, 1 1o ... N•n 1,.120 2 10 u"'+1 S1>1h011t . .o' 210 ...... +~ usGypli.o , » i•Vii•" ~ , . • rateofthree-lenthsoflper· A ... s1ooi•l. • ui.. .. "' Coll<otn °'. 11 111o-M F-1"""" J ., ,.,.,.. 1o1i ic.l'HfR .o s • 1v. •.. Nw\11no· , 11 "'Sftt11Hr..s.' 20 111 .. .,. us.c.,p11eo 1 1..., ~ ~eorge R. McKean, cha1r~an ang chief executive cent in the third quarter. z::s~~!~~ '! 1} ,::. \t g:r.:.t ~ 1~. ~ '!~~:: ~ 1.;;1 &-;;-~ ~ =1:.U : ~ ~~! = =::!.~f':i :''. t ~ t ~ t:l:~ t;t :: ; :t~:-= ~,;-~ i ,~; l~=-~ t>fftcer or McKeon Construchon or Th1scomparesw1than'seof Amf&l lolO ''"'" • ~ Coltlnl flM' • J t... c Corp 2 ~ '"' ••• ic.11099 .OU 21 u • \, H""'llftplCS • JJ tl\!o Sl'ltrwllt.20. 1:SO lll\o• ~ U!ot..IM .2•' 11• 11\lrt l"'i H h AmT &lpl• 11» SO\lo•I Col"9fWI Xl1t 1U lt t"' GAF 41 .51 ' 1t •••• Ktlwuod .• l ' t ~\t H-Ul.&ld ·; 11 lll'l t " SlirWpl•.• .. 110 J)'l>•2Vt us 1111,.10G. , ............ 1,1nt1ngton Beach, as . named 'l .9 percent 1·n the second "'llll" , ... ·· ,0 43 , * 0>1anS1 1.10 s ' 11v. . . F Pf 1.20 . • 111i1ot " ..:uwnu 1 40 s J 2111-v. N PIU 111111 • •t u"" "' 5'lr••h .n s •s t -v. us Stoot •s s 2• ....,_ '"-J h J ff f d d f ATlll!Bl14 20 "' -\lo C.0111"""'1 J 206 Jnti + Vt GemSlllAO' I 21.\ot •'o l(tncon2i.o J llt 3lloli+ lio N:!otl 1.0. 1 14J J1v.!."-Si9fl1Co IOCI 2 4J 1•'<+ \\ U!o!olHlt.40 • ll'O -.O .. V. o n ·, uro~ as pr~ienlo quarlerandadechnetn lhe Amt&Twt 216t 111i +....,Co1:r,A1111 .. '" .. GM1M11 .u u JJ1Dt llo k,U1U11•12'""'•""N•1~co•611 •1r211":o .. 1 ~I• ,.,,.,.._v.us1011to• 1J u'!i< .. "' the firm s Ventura division first quarter of 6 .6 percent. Amw,,1, .. 3 111 714 • \':I eon "pf'"' . 1 49\lt , c;.r110en 1• 16 1n »OA. • 11• k•rr #<G , t' Hs 1JVt .. n. ....,.,,.s; 30Q , 111 11 + ,. slftoiPr< .IOd s 10 ii.• \\ un1re1 1111 • stl 11 .. v. AWlr pl I 43 uoo !Silt v. Col Glos I,. 1 103 21h. Vo Glrllnlll '"' •. 1 ·-\lo !Ct~I-1 ? ' u .. -14 Nrlsl pl l.llO ? 21 ... ~ SlmnsC ... • n u,,,, .. '" Unlf•I .. u .. 'l ... ... ,. PRODUCTIVITY Ameron tO , , 10 .. _ \, C.OIGI pl!"' . 2 St\lo .1 GM Svc 1 n 1 ' 't.\O • !Cldlle w 611 t I •.loll• v. Nut1>1Co 24 l 9 IJ'4 + -., JlmpP6t ,p I lff llft • Uftltpl.t. ,.,., • 161,.+ "'" Hurford was previously nallon11t : ,.,.,,.)51 .uia 3 3 3.., _ c.o• Plctu .. s ., 21 1,. .... 14 o..te ... •r 111 • • 211o • Koddew p1 • • 1 ls\lo-11o N.,, F eo s1 1 ,. 1,._ +-w 51-rc 1 iCI • to1 121':1 ' tti VIII!•-ei:r , u ..-, ••• director Or Constr.cllon and Co'• Worker productivity -AmlW• to s 1 tD'llt• 11. O:il~Oll 1"' .o ,,,,_" GCA Corp J >s m+ ~ 1<1~1 2.10 1 '' .. '• --o o-~...... >h.. 11 JO • Uni••• "' J 1D 1,v. ••• AMF In 11• s " !Oft • Got•# I ~In 1 ' ~ ~ Vt "' C.-p . 2 .-~ !Cimo(\ 1· ... ' 109 ,, -~ O.k !ftd .., J IJ 1 ... '° • 12 !Gt\• ... Vfll•\O•I .., • -.,,.. • ... • pol ff f T a Ca oulputperhourofwork .t.m«. ..,5 2.11,. .. \.o c.omDE1111• •111-1.1 .. VI 1"1111C 1 · Jn •Vt1<1ngoos.0•2t11 • .1 o.i.owPr"'' 1 t\\+""Sli ,1io.1 '''""•,""UotoM '"'"JIS44--'t ra e o 1cer or rans mert -'-MP inc u 11 1,1 ,.~·'"' eornsi,.1:ro l1 ,0 u1,t '14 Am111td n IY>~ 1o1o 1<1n.uic.., 5 1• 11,.. .. " ou1c1 ~1,1 2 u• 11"'• :io 511.11 cw,... , 1\0 -.. IAL•FE it, m 1,._ .... Dc\•elopment Co. fell al an annual rate or 3 ""'peoP .olO l , 1"' .. .,. F.Ea 2 » 9 1• ,s ~ "' GM0.1 .-10 " " .. 111. k L "' Air•.. t n11o .. 11. Oc<lclPI p1 4 . s 11i.. • .,.. s-y11roc.. l• ti m 11"' • 11~ USLF1nc ... . .., ,.__ " . l th lh'd Ampo:-. (Ill .. 1 ..... Eprlo!O . 1019 ~2 Glfl.AT•llll• IOlt\\o• .... l(fllqll!NJ:J• 1t!lh-:\llOccPIPl~.loO. 2So!O'htl1Smi!M0115 n l•~-VtlJ!oM(orpl l 161Sltt\loo HUllFOlfto percen 1n e 1r quarter. Am•tPCo<P 1 3 ,.,.. .. to •Ep11u .. 11 10 •1 GnATp12.,,,. C11X1 Jt ~"" l(oetor9 :111t> • JO su. .. 0ccP1p1 116 . 2 11 ..... w Sm11111111 u u 1•1 ,. .... "'USMOo!Jlo _ 1 21,,.,_"' * This helped boost urut labor ,...,.,., J ,0 1 lllO ;iol<. • i,;; Com Ed pr 1 . 1 10"" • Gne.MMt .. s SJ 1"' • .. Kepper t * • 13 u h• '• cig,o...~.eo • ., 1)>1+ " Sm1111t..11rw 1 tJ n1 .... • 11. ut.tri 111 .1111 u 1S1 ..o:i. .. "" Armtrpl,61 .. 1 I!.. .. C.Edpll,,1 .• 11 """•Vt Gnc1r ll'O. 11 11'1! ...... !C~rpl' 110 41 •t Oclllr'I '" 1 1' .... + v. Soll..,, tO l 61 '""• \j Ut.tr!PL2:16 I t 1 t•"-• I• l>ennis \Y. Woolen has been transrerred from field costs al a n annual rate or •mi-led 3 11 6 " 11 • 1 c.... pr 1 "'.. 10 n'lt . . Gtri ,,.. 4-1 4 11 '"'-"" K••llco 1 n 1Q " lSf'o-.,., Ohio d , .. 1 1s uiot ,,.. ~te 1n11 1 s 1 '" uv '"""'" 1 t .o UVI + '" •mtel tn 20 S I02 '"'•'Ill c..n•EdWI ,, 1 I~•"-Gn 0.WIClll' l 16 iot .. " KrQOt 2221 '" ltllltl OPIE pt•olO , llOll t• ••• SonyCerpt" t !~ •h• -¥ ¥-("OnSUJlant 1n San Francisco tom anager or tra1n1ng ror 13 9 per.cent. Productivity .-....con IOd l " ,,~ t I c.orn .. Oil Si ' HI ,.... . ' Gero DJn•m ' Ji ,,,.,.' KrlJQtf" 'l6 s ill 11\'t t \lo Oll1GE I :16 ' ' ""' •.. ~ ~-~~ •' •' ".~= :~ V1rl1'1 20 • '° , ..... "' N IF lpl •r-1·r1dPI I fl d I tlh t tf"'"d1Hc1C11s S j•l'r•\loCW011p11n .. 2"11' •• G11El..:l.6llUt02l'lflotl<lt1<y,...,.lnto• 64111 <llll•NGtAlr 21111o11 11.~~........ w ... v1111r11n115 '"'"' ewpor 1nanc1a azas'-'Cr l e ans, nc. o en ec 1nesa esar o AndfrCl•YI 5 s. 2.,_v. c.ommSilli 1 •s 2, 11v. G11Foed1.01 111~+v. -t.L-••• ounei:ri.zos ni ""'="" sc..r1E11:.,, ,1 11w-"' vtftdoCo.o• • MOo+·~ \llooton was assistant to the vice president or a recession , there is not l.ll!lftlc1.n • 1• SV!o-\oli CornllU1rS<112 2• z111-""' GenGrllliodl• 11 11'111 • • l.6<Gas1J6 • 2 u:w.-u. 01Mr1ft 1 • 11 u'" ••• SoJ 111111·"' 1 UV.• Vt Vlf>ktln to 1 •t ,.,. • ..._ AnSulC.041 S '1 Tt~t ... Con ....... •ln 10 l ....... GlnlMltll l 111 6'11rt'l!o l.6rm.toSll10l 111'\ti -l. On\¥klnSOJ U lh+\lo ~--·-· », ,·.~· ... Vnt1.or11'°°·· 1l l""0-Vto marketing ror Computer Operations, l nc. of Costa enough work to keep em-A'*ro.c so s ... 11"•'"" ~Mi 120 • s ""'• v. GenMed." • 12 1 • v. l.6nt&r, n • • 1o'tli .. "-OnelOIL 1• • 4 1,., • • ,... ·-·· ,., • v.v:e ot111122 " J1 • , .. u bef ) · d fuJ Apeo o;1 •I 2 ~S 9\:. GonnMI I 111 ' 1! l•h .. v. ~,u I 20 11 n1 "41Mt \Ioli l.6r¥tt ,Mn 1 '' lf'o -"" °"91ikl M 1 J t \9 .;. v. Sol)! I& IO • U 11""-h VI' Corp 1' • 1 1•\lo + ... .wesa ore'101n1ng CPI. p oyes occup1e I time, Apeco Corp 11 1..,. •• • c.orv.tec "° s 1 n • "' GnMol J t0ct 11 t)i ~ • .,.. L11..-.10. 1 1 • .,,_ "' 0rnooc.o 12 • 11 •""' .. 14 s.11PS 1.21 • 11 1r. ••• vi'°'"' 1111 , 20 2,.._ \~ bl lh d • d d APL (;orp 0$ IS 11.io-'i.i: C....Ed.l!<I l 21J I""• Iii Ge.-pfJ · J tJlh-'¥1 LIN'SMri.ll J .. • -\lo Orlkkll:20 1 In 1¥1 .. 111 !oc.lldl.61 4 l6t 11\lo--tYo Vk•CC :ill 1 1J S"'i.+ ,,_ * u e ropin eman is AR•s.1 .. 1o uss .. -iv.CeMlopl• •• 14-11'1+\lo GenPort.11172 11 ~-··LearSrifJ111 •• 1•i.,. .. .,.Oll,E11.10s a.tJl'l+""~••'·,.c',"',,'~·~"•E•-:1111u1..., •.• • not yet s harp enough•···•••••-,'', CoMEdplJ ., • lt11> ... GPvlltli .6ls no 11111 ... L.N-,.-s '' u""•"" 5:'"' ,_ 1-• s.inc;e. ....... v•~·-,_ -,._ \Vllliam F . Schwan has been elected vice president "" :;;;.0 ... ,0 ·u 1 40 11 .. ·y; c.ne pf''' .. 1100 u ... ""'A"'"'1 ' n1 ""'+ "" ~su. .$11 s s ,..,, . .,. · 0 •• ..... SoN11111 .. s 1 "' ~ v. ·~-··die 4i ... of the Ora nge Coast chapter of the Nationa l jusWyJ.ayorrs. •rc:11< E"!j ·· 15 2'111 t"' ~.".,.d 1 n • UG 14'11+1 3::~11~; 2~ 21::•"' ~,·!! i, ,• •,~ .. "" :• : 1 :~::: SH.,,~!",,' ... ,, ,' ",. ,."'•-; ~ ~:1:. ,,.r~:: ,.. u -~ .• PAY "rllltr_ • •J 4\o'tt \'lo._, •'h .. t •ll't ... •·• .....,r, -1 ,,,.,_.,.. O...nc11 .a1s 91 lt\.\-V. .,..,-,,, •• ",,.+;.:. V1Elpl1d •• l1I M ••• Association of Accountants rorthe 1974·7S-year. "Real" hourly: pay·-ad· ~-1Cu1·.,.1: •r'!~ = ~~'ti~t1-=t-~':;'~ g,.},~/11/2 .~ Jtl-l;!lo:t.~ ~·~ \'1$--;~ ,, 1>-~~+2c~ =~~~:::-f 11-s:.,., •.~ s.R4uof i .. 1 ai..!i""' ~f.IJf"R :· '!~-:; !~ The Cos ta fl.tesa resident is an audit manager with AAL6Gl.IO 1 " 11~.,1u. c.on.....-Pw2 1 Ill •'--"' GT1F1p1110 •. r!olt nv. ... Lemar ei:r • l J\lo+ 1o1i ~ ,._ So1JnG11111 1 IS 20M<+ to;, .,,..,_,no: 3 17 3"" • •ioss, Adam " and Company. • • justed to wn ng out inflation ••1tn Ruo.... t1 '"• "' eon P p161'1.. 110 ,,._,_ "" o ri.. 110g ' ., 11"' ... Leno• rn .n s • u 111-.,. P«..t.ln 1 20 .. N 1u1i-"" Southld ,«llf • 11 1•~• "" vsi Corp 611 , 3 10 -·\; " " Armto I 1411 t 13 ti--~ ConP pl 1 •S ,, 110 Sl\'1-1 GtrwKO Inc t >0 t'lor ••• LAW Fd C.. 1 !\lo , , "4<GIS l 11 • 1•l 20\oli .. Ii S.WllFr .20 2 21 J'4, ••• Vulc:nM I loO i t 2'4., '111 * · · --fell at an annual rate or ""'" p1 11Q . J n + 11o °"'" P' 11• .. 1100 !t -1 GloMnP .i. 20 11 -· 111 Lewi !>In. M t n. u -v. Pl< 1..10 1 .. 1 " l•llo .. .,.. SO..lPS ·"' 1 u 10 . .. -w-< . h d Arm10.n• Slt """•'14 (Oro,..,,.pf, .• 51\lo+V. G,,f'.c~· UI ""'•" t..•lllFurn J 211 J~ ..... P.tePlfr1 .fJI 1l 1t .. v. $.pHryHull ~ I 1~-.... W6RRpt•VI .. ,.., 40 ••• Santa Ana.based Shelly Associates has announced ..:;.Jpercent1nt 1r quarter. Ann11R1.o s n 13'olo .. \\ c.onuAlrLn 1 tt• s . , G,,Pwo11 •. lltl .. -~ LFI! eorpn, :n J""'•""" P.tePwrl.ICI 1 ,, I•'-'-"" ~HpJJ .. 1 11 ..• wcnCi:r .J•, •1 13 -"I Nvlnllld5110 '11'11 ,Cnc...1.•• ., •• , GlrMrPOll ll~\\lt<EOol .l4 .• I •'l•W P<TITl .201 J612tl . 5"R4no169!1JlltVt•I W•<"Pfl 'IO .. •14 • ..., the appointment of Robert ft . Sears as national MAL1d 1 io >s1 ~.11111 Cnll~.IO 1 20 1\lo · · Gou, '* 1° 15 1"'"''1\'t L. 0 ,: 2.20 • 11 11'111• "' Pc T•T p1• .. 11110 121'1-,,.. *--·• •,,' '• •,• ,',"'' ~ w.te111 1 l4l'I J 1• -'"" •.• •·• p>H .. , >Ol ,,. • •-Conll(p JJ.0 I Iii 11 t tt i;.tlJpl 1.20 • • I II-~ Llflo'ITCP .0 t t 11'1-"-PK •• O> ' ' ' -w w• > > '' '' m arketing manager for the subsidiary of Datatron, A;"0..1G 1 .a s n n ... -V: o.11Qi pf "'.. 1 lt -,.. GF a"" 31 • • "" • • Lib 1..on .1011 .. 11 s1111-"' P••~ -b .. 10 iv. .. ·it: SCltllrD • 10 10 10 '' .. \lo w •• ri:~ ss , " 11"" .. ·;.: I Ai Cal' ""'5fitol.4GJ 1 lt'!ll-1'11 etnuc.p120• 21 JI ti.lo Gl•lllPCmt 1 I lCM+l'll LlbL11t•1n 4 11'<-lolr Pllm8~.21 J ! l\6+\oli Srlllltill lo161 SJ 111!' .. 1 Wl!IW.r.O 1 ,. 1'-+-\1 lnHc. · j d' · ( r s !l~1.1~ l 1\1 ~=: ~ g::::~ :.= .~ ?g !.,.,= ~ &i: F~;~~~ ~ :: ;""• ·~ tir, M/i11~J 1~ J~V.!~ ::!i"':! ~~ .~ ~ ~:-.~ ri:~~-: 1t = Jf~! : ::~~t'1~ 'l J :~: ~ e Y.'as prc,·1ous Y 1v1s1on manager or \vestern I · A1iovE• IVI , 21 lJ'!ll-11o Coto• 1nw11 .. , 1).3?-1-1' Giii H!U 52 a • ,_ ~ 1..1no:Nt1 1 611 1 11 2i . . p,~1, 1 , 12, as + 111 S1BP11n1 1114 u• nl't+ y, w .... d "-) . 14 • + \ • . cperahons or ~11croelectronic Tes ting Laboratories fasseng-er Al Al<lll ?Vt 11 65'6 tlY,•~ CollM.to .... 1 1.. '"" ••• Gilltlte I so • 13 2'V.t ""' LlncNtl 1113 •• l ••1'1-y, P1c-rcr1 '° ' 21 1\11 .. ~ SIOOll Cltl 4 SM 1U'tt Vt W••nKO IO l • .,,. ••• AIR<pll:.1, /061V.•t"'ConllOllllOS"l'•~·111o Giflos lncorS I ,_l'IL.lnMFdl.1• 111"' .. \lt P••flol• ... 1 tl'-\lt 5'dOlndJtOl;ICl't""'f2toiow .... nc:pj'lh .. 714\.\o-\.'o a nd h as 11 years experience with Rockwell A111tc.~, 2 .. 21s. •t'• eon1oopf1 -1 s• .,,,. G1nst1 lll'r•2 9 ~ · Lior..1 Co•P s 1• H• P~rkHn11111 11 u"'~,.., St0110t11»to J4J ~ ..... n, w .... c ...... 1 1" .... \ .. All41i rpll ll !\lo . Cenllnllt11 6 '191 10 • , GllOll INr IO 1ol0 12 • ~ Lltt«olnJVll ..... l\.-'\\ PttlrP »;i ~ I 111'• \It SIOPoorl91 1'11 11lt ,,, WICmpl40/•, t .t1J .. t lnternaltonal 1n a vanely oEenglneering assignments. Ato inc 20 1 • , . cor11r1 Diii• • ,.. 11,., 1Vt G11G1U11 1C1 s 1• ll'"'•t"' Llttfl cw ptl . , 11 -1 .. sc:• tnc: t 1,, ,, .... 1 Sid Ptstl 40 1 .. • ••• w .... ,eo.111 s 11 "'-\~ * Incr e ase AUIO.I 20d'IO Ill u:w. .. 111o COllWODd 2, l 1• ... "' GoklWMFcl. 2 ""• .... L.llVICWpl'1' • UV.t"" Plylni JO s l '"• v. SldPtud ... ' 1\11 •.. W••Um .loU SIO 2t\lo• \1 .....,,_ Inds . ,, 2'4-"' C-Un ,.. 4 2• 2111to-"' (jo(Jdrl( I 11 5 .. 19\fo .. VI Un.>1n DIA . s' •I.lo-Vt PllllGI .. 1 ,, 101'11 +-"' s ..... .SJ l J ·-'/_• w. ... ..s 1 20 s JI 1J.,. ... Mr •• Ann. Ill.ck' President and Chi.el executi"e Aw:o Corp 1 11 3 ..-""c.oo.111104' sJ 11"'•',. Gmd'l•t1r1s2112, ...... 11o UK;kllHd 1 " 4\olo•.,.,....., eentr .. 111 ll':I-" si..wi.s" 5 1u 1:»1o ... "" w~t•, 1 1111., ~ • Aw:oCpwls .. 6 " ,,, C-.. \.Ill . )I • -t \o GordDtU.Jt • S ltlot \II l.MwCollO t 210 u .... , Plrwwy \"I• 111 4'1'111t-1Vt sc-., Ml ' J lllit \lo Wfff!Nll to J l' N t i , officer of Bob Black Oldsmobile Ai r California flew an Ave pf 1.G1 u uVt-"' C--tlr• ·'° s 13 14"-111 GouldPI l l) · 1 14~ 11o .....,.,,,1.•1s. n1 ..... "' ~ .... 01 •. 1• • 10 J\oli+-.. Ster!'Tlt ' 5 1 u -14 w1s11w 1 .. 1 10 1•t1o• \• ,..,.,.,Pr JO 11 61 lCll':o , , , C--Tpl l'f• . 3 11 , Gr«.1W 1 60 6 ll6 H'N•lllir loMl11 l "°° 5 •1 11 t \o Pinn PL I • 1 11 161't t \lo MMllw IAOd 4 .. t'lo-"-Wr.111! Mnot • olO ........ t , in Santa Ana, has been awarded estimated 38,918.800 A-t111C JO 1 .., st1ot w. ~1no '° s • ' _.,.. Gt"...., u to» 21 Ml .. "" ~s•""'' 12 •• • PPLp11i.o .• r20 11 .1 St.W1s1ow ,. 10...,-Vt w.11•nJ 1Sa, ,, 11 ... 1.., 01 . I -'"' ,.,..,,., p1 t\1 . 1 n • ,~ ~ Ag 1YH1 J 133 21'11 • t• Gr.., ... 1 1 ill l 2 ,..,. • 111 i..-s1G 1"" 1 s1 tllfi • \lo P Pl p11 40 ., !:20 rt -VI !>ttulfWr 120 • u tJ1'4r • .,.,, W•rne c. "° , s • ...., •.• the dsmob1Je.~uuse revenue passenger miles in Avon Pr 1,.,. 12 .us 21i.. ttv. CDPw-ld ''° ' 11 21•-"" G<" ... 1w ton :w 1s 2__.,,.. Lont!L.11 " s ,, 11 .,., • v. P1P&L ,.. 1 •• ,10 13.,., • ll'r !>N!rc111 .• i 2 s~ .. "' .,...,,...!If 1 .., .• 2 11Vt ••• Sh. l·s the >rSl female Old· October. All..: on•G u '' uh .. "°' eorour1 Cp ., • 1'111• "" Grey Ora '° J 13 ~ •• · Lil p1 1 I\•. ? Soll\-YI p PL. p1 • ». t:tO ••VI-..., si.rto..I .10 11 J11 1s .. "' 'ffl!1nlln lft< . 2 Jw.-,... --O t -CornGlll•llll3ll~t\\ Gt.t.Mtl,.ld6 l' 2tto, •• lontOrft ... 21 11'4 ···Pel'lftWl l Jl1 $l17V.•I Si«lldn ,1J6 HI ll<o+\• Wellptl2k . lll\lo-\lo smobile dealer in Orange County. T h 1 s c o m p a res t 0 &.bawu 1C1 s •1 13•" + "" tt-1e.ci 40 s 1s 1'1o-11o Gt•• .•1<1 ' 31 .._ ·· · Lor•• Corp • 2 J'tli .. P1nn1o11 10 s »s 11r. .. tti s.. ..... , 1 20 J u 11.,.. • ""'""'r 40 J ,, '"' ••• ~ 10lltl ,. »it"' Coutlnl•Jn 1 2J 3 -Vt GtLk09 12'0 .. 1 Ul'l+"" l.6Ulld llH. )JO 251"o•lllo Ptrulpllll .. UOO nv.+,. SMwWft1'1. 6 II-·~ .... DbOtl Cp 4 l1 ,,. .. ~,. The franchise was formerly held 38, 727 ,600 in 1973, an 1n-a.t;er 1n 20 • .o J,. +-"" c-iet .11<1 t ' •'11-"' GIN Ir 1 100 u 10" 12 -"' UP«.11c 11 4 till •v. .. v. """"' o.. 20 , is s""-11. sto0.1,v ' 10 ) lt u+.-"' ,,,.,llM<L '° 2 t ..-i.. t. b h h b d h d ed I a.i. .. 0!11111 1'l 3' .. 111t CD~ Brd .lS J '8 ~D •"" GtNNftl.IO' 16 Jt "' LluGttl MID l 11'1')-U. ~2l6 6 I• 11~•\!ot S~t :IG 1 4 , .. -\/, Wt!bUI C11 • 1J -l·llo y er us an w o 1 18 mon-crease o O.S percent. a.1e1 0 ..,. 3 11 , _ cPC tnu 1 1 130 :111Vt ,, GtWsFlll M • 10J1 is + 4 i..-min 1 1 1 1111r-,. Pllfll.IC. 1 • .o u 103 •S1<o, JIJO s-wb ld t 11 u~. '"" ..,.111 FQ ·"' , •> uco+ t~ lhs g A I bl l I &•HC..p.60 s 11 -•"--Yo1J-c1o10 l ioJ J1\lo .. " GIW.11 u" l in JS --1..rv Corp 2 J44 10\6• 'Ill l't1'111EI 1111 Jll 11 -\:.. s1oo•S11ci1>t • 11 11,,.t .io. WFMollCkl, " 5w;, l!t a o val a e sen m1 es u.-ere a.1tGes 1 " 6 ,.. is""'+-v. ereci:u Fr .• 1 7 :n ,1,._ ~ GtWP' ""' •. • 1sw.. v. LTV._., p1 . 1 .,... ,,., I'll •"< 1 411 • , 1t11i. " stonr &rd 1 4 1 11 • 11o Wllt•JIC:. .. • 21s l \:ir • ...., Mrs. Black, the mother or five, down shghlly to 60,066, 100 1n a...c.1 1 :w 1 s 12,.,. "" Cl"Oc.• ... 1 .. • 31 ll'l • "' G«i oi. 1 °' s 1 1"'• L1111no1~ 11 101 42\lo • 1 Pet •no p1 1 •• 1 n .... -~. s1r;.i.R11 •s s • 6'~ •.. WPKOF ~ s 1 1l't-,,.. ll·ves ··n Santa Ana W>lh two of the 1974 from 6-0,649,100 •.• 1973, a-9 1"' 1' 111 ll.\o• ... Cromp I( to ' ll I') . . ~ .... 1·1' ·,· -! n ..... ·.,.. px._a~ ·, •' ",. 1'° Pttrncpl IO JS !IV •• "" !.hlOeW ':n l ,, 7Sl':o t '\;,, WPePpl ..... 110 " 8-Pn 1 1V.• V.CroustH 7111 I IS"',, O.Vfld ~· ._...,._ 'tl'I. PettrPtlO 1 SI 1¥•-"-!otUdeWp!S., I •I • W.IPIPwp1 ·4 :n 21 -·v; C'ildren I th N l B h Bnt'NVJJD J IJ H • v. CroWllC.Ork I 31 11 • .._ G<tylllld •I ., :tO 1"'• "-UA/!Sllt.O s JO ltlo~ ~. Ptt•eSlr '°" 111 Jll(o•fv;, !oluWptltll .. •27 1D .. "'WilnA• •OQ • 301 111o+ '-:n or e ewpor eac • Bink"•·•• s2 tt •. er .. nz1100 s 6' ,, .. , ~. °'°'"' 1111 11 ,_,"' L"""" lJd 1 u9 u...,, """-t•oint x s 1• 111 ._ .. !oulw s-1 1.,., .. "' W•B•nc1•o s 10s itl'o • * bosedairli'ne. &.ftkTrU\ll s '' 36"11• 11r CTS Co so • u 11"-\<o Grum•n "°' JS llfiiit \lo Lykept 1v. 1a IJto-Yt "-1r1C2 4'd 1 ,,..,._ .... :wt>Pr"" 11 s 11 uv.~"" wo.trnC.O N•u 111 11...,.,YI &.•llOll IOd 10 1•'1.-Vi Culll1111n 40 s 16 6 -~1 c;...rdl 1°" 6 ' •1111 • Ly"'l\Sy 40 SrlOll u.,,_.,. Pll~··" 1•1• 34• l2V1 •1'"' S...CrtstC .2'0 Ill 11 • i ; WllP•t!ftd . 16l ''"' .. \. Robert W, Dintinger has been named to th!.! Revenue passenger miles a.rd CR 10 u ~ 12" ••• a.imrns "' s 10 11•\ • " &:rt~?.!~~ ! ,,"f l"': :~ --M M-"'1t1p o J 20 s s1 30'-. 1 ...., °'"' .40 1 l 1~t.1o .. v.. -.-.1Pub " 1 10 '"' .. '" 81.ACK B«Mt\6111\ 11 l\i-VI (Umnl~ JlOll II , • "' ""IM<•nF .0 1 J •'I>,, Pl'UlllEll .. 6 111 11.... 5';n Olt It • •• .1i.. .. 10 WUno ... ltO l•O 10"1 •"""' JleWJy Created post Of d1reCtOf Of tnformallOn ror the flfSl 10 months Of Bts!c!n 40 l II ll•t 'It (11t1n0..g,20 o J •lo -b ~:~1111~ ~ 4)~ ,}:~-\~ MtcDonld 1' U n, Plu11Elplt•1 J2tll ID • ~ 5'#>0UPl1\• 31 41 \lo,IV. W>Unpl•'IQ' s )6Y, S)'Sten1s for i\ISI Data Corp. or Costa Jli1esa. 1974 "'ere 435.692,200 vs. &.lil M.t 10 s IO lJ\!o-\lo (UHlllC "".. 6 lO'.~ . . GolU Re•Oo l nr-, I • ~. ,,..,_, lO I 6 3"'-, .. Pt!llEIPI ,,,. . : 1'10 It -1 Sur'lbl-lm 1 1• \Jcl.o. loo W•Unp! • ..,.: I JS .. ·.,; &.liiM pl I . ' u~ •. (lwlls• 30d • ~ IW. .. GllR plA .10 • l 1S MltMUr ZS l :16 lh-.... PllEI pt 1 IJ.' ll'IO .. • I.... Surosltl'O:t ICI 4 Hl llVl-IV. Wettll fl ti 1 Ul) '"" ~ .\, I le v.·as rormerl v director of management ser-376, 175,200 in 1973 !or :1 15 8 a.I/I Ind o10 • n s'lt-" c...r11''"'A 1 • s 11~· • "' Git Apa 1 30 . 11 16v. , ... ""''' '·10 1 Js 13" .. "" P11e1 " 1 111 . 11~ •s -1 !ounil•lll 1"' · 1 33 • '" Wltv•c 1 t11 • " 11 .. v. ; di 81tn<l!L. 611 II Ill )II~ t Uti Cutlt•H 1 60 o 10 O'Oi. • VI CNllSIU I 1l 1 '1 1\t'o • \, M¥J FO -'!<I • • 14 ,,,__ l't Pl'IEI pt 4 40 , , 1N llV. •·· S.U..ll>I ... .0 I• Ut 11\~ • i,, ""'rtnb t JI J u IJ'4 , .• \i ces al Olga Company or Van Nuys. • percent increase, acoor ng e.111•• 1.. 11 so •15 :1111o, '" c:wtoos ' t0 2 11 1• wo s.ciu••e 11 •"'--1 .. Pll•1s..a 1 ,., s • ,..>\ .. .,. ~ o;1 ' ..a 11 • 111 • • ~·1111 ID 11 111 ,..,. .. ,,. * ' a.,...•cg :u ,, J , ..... CyPNt \,.0. 11 2•'»t VJ Gu1••w1 90 • 113 211•·"' MlglcOo "" " l\1 . Pl'llhp""' IOU 111 ... 1>•1 .... !oupet'Gn 10 4 IJI lllll-!Ao .....,,IFryt 40. " , ....... lO Joseph E.· Walkel', as· 111 .. 1...,.11, 111 ,."'-t~ --o o-G.11••w1w\ 1' • • ~. w!ll'I" 1~40 14 111.-•1 P11111"'1" 205, 60 1 ..... sur.n1>1 130 .. 1 1Jl.+ l':I wr.iPSi J!<I 1 lt lll>., Davl.d A S di h . a of the boa 'd r s1'stant v1·ce prcs1'dent sales lll••Fo• n' 210 111"• 'l'o °'"'°"' cp1> "1 l)w .... w1111n111C1•19 41 ' ,,...n.,,eo1) 10 1111."" "'"11n<1p11 ' 1VI•.., SuPr1oeo"' 1 ,. 11 v. .. \I) 'N!ln1s1p1• 110 s1~.-·.,; · we ow. C a1rm n r o -&K•m" 'so 11 1,211r.. loo O.nlll•r ''° • 11 si... \11 H•t-.,... ~ "t 1s _ v. MllontH .u 11 1r 11v. .. P1111~1 , .o 't •71 41""-1, = 1111 .tO • 1 IS \to -"" .....,,.115, pl s" 1m ,1,,., S"e.dloM, Jnc. or Garden Grove, has replaced fortheintrastatecarner. a.c1on04011 lltt ., °'"•Col.36 4 'l 1H•-'ft tttllF••• ••••••. MIH'll!IOO •O. l J~. Pl11IVH~6 I S'h roM.•1-11• ,. 3\11 .. Wlt"poolMl io 111s•r·+·v; 8tKllA 60Q J J 1 .... -Vt 0.rt ln ,4"0Q J 6l 16'1>• >\lo Mlnpw< .88 ' 11 ll't+ \'I Pltk•lnl •~ I S2 I •• , S..•"-41 J JI • •. ~''Con 10 l 21 ,,,._,. 11 Jlobert \V. Jl:i igh as president and chief executive A lot al of 107 ,504 pas· Bt••• 1" .1' ' s,i;, 2JYT. 1~ o.runa p11 1 22v.~ v.r ttt11"'1 '°" 4 • 11~ ""-" Hn 1 12 1 ll :>0 • PieoNG 1 21 • s 10•. • • s,b..,., n 1 4J ""' .. OAo Wh11c. p1c 3 1 i"I\.. .. "'• led • 8tttoPetJI ' UJ 14 ..... ~ O.l1Glftr•l1S .. 11\~t l\.o '"'-111Dtnl202' 2'll 149 t 4 MloPCO 411 13 211 7"•• ... Pie-11,,,,.,1 . -.s JI•:·· s,~,""'°""'' 41 lht ~ ~IMol .:JOd i JO'I 1ov. .. , .... off1ecr. sengers wece carr 1n its 11110.n 120 • J u1~. o..,.,o 114 , 1 11111 ... tttmm1P1 1 1 •s u -11o ""'''"'°""". 11 •1 •• v. P111 .. ,1..,, 150 :nv.-.... -n -.....,.11" .. ,ep, 411 H. ,... . I I h r· h I d 't rr· . l )lit k ts d Oc Blldllt+ .)Og • I '"' ... \lo 0.yllnl" °" . 11 ,...,_ \lo Hll'l'l:IC JDfl • •'Ill . ,,,., Ool I to • 10I 3)111 ..... Pl ... NGI .. I n ..... _ "" lltftlkil .., ' " UVt .. .,., W•c•n Ci:r , ' HI ·~-·(; Samu tancous y. t e 1rm as c ose 1 so ices 1n sa e e mar e unng • ·aeu l-lw• ... • se 12...,,. .,.. 0.'1'111nH "° , 1, 1,.__,., tt•nolefn 40 1 2s l\\-"' ""~WIK.I-~ 111 IS\•• 111 p; .... , •• 611 •• " 11~ • .., ta1c.o11 H•t •• 2l 1 .... wtt-.n , 1 1 • w Conncct1cut with acti\'1lies being trans( erred to Gar-tober, a decrease of O 9 per· Btll'll• eo 1 • 1 "\' • .... o.,P1..1 1" • '° ,,.,. . .. """°" N • • s 1r~ • "" """"'°"pl' r.. J »"" • ... P11Fotg 111o 1 1 1411o t.i .. , 1ft '° 4 JI s,.. -·~ w.111 • ..,.. W111 "' 111~. tv1o Btl'ldll: 1ICI 5 )Q O'O~'o .. ~ DPU>ICl1 •. J}(I 61 tl H_!Cp .. l 31 ·~-..... """""" 40 t tJI ll~tl\'I P1nsb'l 061111 7 1't11 J4 .... -·-lo l1l1t, pl I •• • ,,, ...... W!ll(ft ~U US t'lh•l"' den Grove. c~nl from Jasl year. 111nc11. plJ .. n JsVJ ON•• 1.60 1 20s •ll'ro 1u. ....,,,... 1 li16 21 1•~•1v. M¥M1d 11C1 s ,., 11 • Plu• H~l • 100 U\lo+-ll'r 1.,...,..e ... 1 •• 10""• h w111c.op1 ICI .. •.., .. 1 8tn CO' i.u j ''" 11 • ,,,., Ot!Pll 11" • 169 '""' \It lil'OI'$ o..11 •• H JVI-"' Mlnol!L • ll 1n ,, t "" Pl ... lltS<<ll J 10 JI\-"' 111111, Corp 1 ll , .... ,, • . 'MMD• l.J2 Ii ll l•~· t "" IMll(wf Siio •• 2 17'1> .. 61'1 Oti Mnt I lll 6 11 11\\ • Vt turrlll9 l.olO • 11 11+\ • Ml•ltn I loO 16 t1 ~ ,. P11)'b0y u 1 JS •'Vt .. .,., lapp.nC 40 ,, 1 S ... + lo Wl.....,.,_00 '1 J'lt ~tatistics Point ·w. ay 8tnC pt ' JCI •• 1 •Siio .j 'h 0e11.1•1r '° I Ul lttt .. I Htrr"") 22 ' .. t\lo-"" ""'"{ '° l 11 11 .. loo Plftlll' ifd • ' 10\11.. .... le<IWICO!or J s. 41> ... w .. 1;1 p f M 'i 11 ""'. '"" BlnCppt ........ rlllO ., • 1 DlllK .lOll 16 1• '"" ''' H,itflsC I lO ' Ji 1t\\ t IV. Ml~ .tllll • 21 I •.• PNBM 1 ,.., • lJ J"" ltkl•ort• 2!I • 11 111-7 •• ,, w .. e1p1 I 90 00 " ~ 1 BlnSl 21'l<I 3 11 ..... , ...,, Oe!tonl CplO 11 4"• ''' H•t><O lg' ll lOl't -\lo Mf•IOU2'hi ',.,, IU-\'r ::::~o J2'1020JI 2'\(oo-J\I, TtlKOf 1i 3 • l ... -\.oo Wl\CPSlll I 11 11'11 lllngeB Olt 4 ltOt 3\\o ••• Oellll!M'I t0 t S ll~> • ,,_ H•M~M• NI 4 ll l'lt .. \'o Nw""F I t4 1 1 ll'llo ••, tOll S t HS 1'-" , lVt ll.'led'ynt Ji l 11 1\/0 ••• Wll<I (. 1 10 S 1S JJ~) ••• IM•'tY Xk1 2 111 l \:i , . Ot>111y,.lZ• I UI 8\1'1• "6 Htttf\l'IOd •• '!6'\~ \'o Ml•IMl10 4 JI IS ••• Poolcl .60Q t JJ 11'11 .. I'll ltlfl!yn~l6 .• I S1~t •. Woh Wlltld • 1 1 ••••• •11111 PrlOU S 31 3fo, \11 DtftliPIJ 161• 116 ~ .. \lo H.ll••fl I .. 1 ' 1,Vt-VI Md Olp :1.4 S 10 UVI •. Porte'"' lj J JJ 1J -'Vt Ttltpromp . . •I l • Wornt<o S6 S fl 1..., + I~ &ti~ !olffl 1 • 21l ,,.,.,_ "' OewrP~ 1) 11 SI • Ht""' AID 1 s 11 ..... VI Mlsc:o(o l2 14 m )II\~ .. "" PoflGE 1 s s !.6 1• • \;, Ttlt• Corp . •l ,,, • 'I ~,.-... • s ··--\• BlgJlno 6()o14 61 •7'\0-V. OeSotoln to J 11 6 , . ~.Jl~rwr1ln ! 1J : =::: Nw""l" S• t 1• ""'• ~ Potl.ic 140 , I 1l\lt-'(o lerwco 1.0 J 111 22\.o• 'Ill _.,lij 70 , ,.. 11"' Blec~&0 . .074 •lJ :>.1.o-•1" OelEdtSl•S• IZ 9\t/f ... HtCllllC.llJ Ill sv.-... ,,,. ... ,'°".JI""'. Pl:lllEIPl166 •1111 ...... Tonnec• .. 1 •• ll 2 .. Woo>pl1'10 I JJ BltlrJn ". IJ •'It+ v. De1Epltl1,.ll!olt" ' ttlt<t~Mln1•U , .. '' ••• ~11!.IO .. It ltl':o-11. PolElpl S~ •..• 600 Jl +-"" l-<pl)'•·· IS 11 • \;, ......,,10 .... 1 II ..... ·..; llhull.llla' 1 12 -16 0.ll!!pl/lt . U0 Sl"•l\6 '"' M\lnlwlOI . 11 11\'r-\• PotEtpl•'• ,UtO 411",. Tno•o~• l ISO .... ,1 .... Wt •Qly1'°"'lCI ) 41..,_~.,. BkK~HR .411 t 1" 11--. .... Del I! IH J .... . J _,...,_ "" Htlll'M a. J U '" t Vt M.Mllw I.HG 6 ?6 II -lolo Pl:lllElpt • 11o1 1100 JI Tt u co • l 600 13 • -l.. w""hHf Ca I S Blut8tl1 ICI s "ISl<ot ... DulrCll l6. 16 111>11--HelniHl l1l0 ,, l6'·• VI Mitsue JM J u II.,,. •• PPGlft(l l lO f \19 77t•t'i~ lt•Clli toll )I ll -·· "'•'• C.Orp " 11 1 &obblelllks . 11 ,~.-111011IF!n .Sols 11 , .......... HelttltCl#t S 2 ''"'. MtyOSllCll 1111,,,, ..... P,_j~dll•,' • '••EfrllO I ••H"·•1 -a:'Tt-· lkllllllft '°' • Ill 111/t. \• Ootmcll"\! 1 6 ,. 1•1•o-... Ht!ltrlfll .. 11 •1 1Ho. "" """"°' ., 6 Jj, """ .. v. Pnm pl tO I 1 i.• • '• r.~ l• ' ,. s JJ 2• • Xt•D• (.p I II 611 611'> 1' .. To .Economic Problems· By JOHN CUNNIFF .. NEW YORK IA Pl -That rising jobless rate tind the decline 1n prime Interest r:ites are si"gnals that the \J .S. economy is undergoing a c hange that will bring both pleasure nnd p!lin over the next year. Shortages arc being tcpl a~ed by abundance in some s upplies as consumer interest lapcr8 orr. lnven· torlcs or unsold ~oods arc. beginning to pllc up 1n "'3rehouses. And lhal means pressure !or lo\\•er prices. those rntcs might fall. having been burned too of· ten In the pn1't. llOlll!C.! SO l 216 11(~+ Vt D1•mS~l40 J A 26 • V. ::::::::i.'::.~i:i 1~~ J~-;I:: Mlyl~IJOll I 2!I t \/, Pl'ot•C:.l l017 llf t0'••l lt19unt1'1 I IOI 11""• '°" Xlrt 1~<101 J 6<> 11 t \., TllEFIRST Natlonal City 8ondlnd11• s • -1•0••!oflmpf f ,,,..,___VI Html•C•P . 11 ,...,,\,,MBPXL . 1 11 ... PtOOFlt\1'1• 1l •'-•'• Tt••1•r>d1y• 1~111" v11etl"<'u•l s1 •l B.ink. •econd onl)'lO Bank llook Mo\Y,. 1 lt . D11Sl!pj 1.10 •S , ... _,,., ltlrcu!n toll lllS l•'llo-I.lo MCA Inc to • ,. 2)'•' \~ ProlO•l~t lo 1 ,. 20'•-~. l~· ln\tr 1• ,,, II'• ·•h Y>'IQStUr .0 • I llt1-'•; "' llo!1lltfl 1JO' 81 ,~, ... \• O.c•A8 u 4 ,. a~ .... i'lto'""' to, 1 '_,,. McCorcl ... 2 ' ,.~A lllC. u I -• .. , .... 0.1 011' IJl , ••••• \o leltl'..O>P ltS ti 11 • 1, of >A merica among the &orow1.»• 11 u1-o, i.. o"'•llhn 611• 11 .. ~ ........ tttuion.tOJ 111,111 ,t-. McCro111'1 • 11. P1.osce11 101 11•111.~"" 1e.u1.1111•m111'>• 1. l•1tCPlltt!l 1 10 ~ 1. 8ormtnSlftH 11 ? ,,Oif1!01d40Q I 101J'O•.\o M.tO~mt201t231 .. l••ll'PSE•G1 11 6 ellJ•,, ltahlnclY\1 4 I)•'•• l•INli.olO!:I ~ 1123 _,_ nation·s largest c~tner· Bini Ed1.4'1 • "' IS\\-"" OIGIO•QO .. l t 31 ... . He..Oltln I t SJ J ... ~ .. Mc0onld (pJl 9'•S 36h•ll't PSEGpl 1 tO • " ~ '• lt•ltllon I 10 ) JJ 1 ..... l•1tt C.O•P ' II J ,. \Vith economic activity contin111ng to dry ,up, at least In comparison with lhe 8clol#''ll Inc. I 21 11• o • OIC111tl Eqp\ II l SS .,.., ~)"" Ht•ltl p .20U 111 •I\.;+ l~ M<OonO 40 • 111 ID • I\ PSEGpt • 11 , '. 1111 JI • I lt•!•pt 1 OI , 1 11 1 • '• 7t'ftllftll•O 1 11 1• tlY, +'..; c1al b anks , belie an e.-... 111 .•Oii • •"' 11~~ ·~ o.iuflCI~ .a 4 n u.~..., H!t'!Vo111En • u 4"'. Mcc.tEdlh 1 1s u •• -1, PSEGcrl•XI .. ''° 18 •"• lt•l•Dt 1o10 .. , u -. 1. z.,,,.1,,.,,., ,2 '"'_..., • f r ')) &l,\51141111 72 •llo .i-._ 0111111 l 10Q 10 1 11 -\II Hll'"'°' ·'° 6 ' 1' ~"" Mcc.r HI :ill S Je •'• ··~ PSEGcrl 1 H •• 110 •t , 11, cas1ngo in lationwi gin 1111,M11.u 13 13~ .,.,.,, n oi-fw.121s lM 14 ~11' 1-111too1 H111 • u 11 ... v. M<Grttt o i 1 1 _.,. f'!>EGpl•to .. •WI"° ., to show up in the Consumer 1111, MY o1 t . 1 11••-1. 01•1ton .12 • 10 1•• 1t HMW J-... • 1 2111 · · Mc1n1vrt M • 1100 ll\\, ~ PSECOl l.OI . 11 .. ,0 • 1..., Price Index by the first t:!.';.'~4: ~ ~: ,;~:-~: g:~~~,~~1~ ~~ ~;:::;:~~£.~!,ii 1;~;~ =~r.: ~ i ~l ::~-.~~ ~N1~~!: ~ 5j ~:::.:.~ q •• rlerofl915. &UftGi ll1 1 1 ll:i..-\.'O O"'Ml\Jtd ~6 '"' ... ">ll•llO!I I 1..... fo\l;Ll"Sl.O l 61 IOI'>••• PSNM•l l'D' 1 11 ll•DWll Ctlm l J 10"'• \.'I Or""-.301• 91 lloio .. " >>•-,,-..: McNtll .to 4 Je e ... l'l.ltblll :io. I 1 J 1 'o; C . k • 8•0.-uDl611 s • ll"-111 °"""'M" IClll •• , !41.._VI tf~Y~UQ•l. 71 "" -""'"'Cl:to J 31 I•-\, ......-111c 10 ~ •••• ihban economists say O.nSll•P to s ,, s\\r OonLutJ .10 . 11 '". i:;.,""'"-" 11111XM SJ""• v. ""'"""'t·'°J· 10 u ... P\IQISP••·~ ,0 ,0., .. ,, they still look for 3 dmp 1n e.'t"11.2C1 1 311 -1 +-,,.. DonM11v s. n 36 201>+ ... , ttoo 1•1 ; ~ l "'i': ~l·~ •, .·~.. MMvw 1 40 s 2 u 1, •• P\of-, IQ r 11 ••• , 1 ~ llrunswkJJ42Gt l~+a.,Oor•tCo .20• ~ t . -... Mll (olpJ l 1"°-\~Pur••CPll~ u l ••i '\ the1nflalionratcto6per· a.in11w.0J 110\li ... Ool•ofl .... r• 'S'"'•"'/Hor•""CPJ ~: ,,.,.1,._,..,. •• •"' •.. ~nu.11 ,x , ''•-'" bloated economy or the past c•nt ,·n the curly pa~ ur aT Mt 1111d 1 11 • -'" 0or~ .10 • '' s\!o-• ~11.t.1141 s '"-" ~.c:• , 11 oi ••• """°"" ..,, 1 ll 10., •1\o 1• Buc""'l!.116 311 l•"•" OO.•CPl 10 t 111111• "° ""'pUCp ,l•• ISO '•• 'Vt "'-'•<51•.IOi l 3S:><o-'4 -OQ few ytars .• the. joblcs~ rate 1975. TheCommcrce Dcpar· euoo eo to l , 1,.._,, °"""°' 11112 ,.. u .... ,11 ...,., 1nu • s ti 111o, ..,. ""''<~ ,,.,1, •n ,,,,.,1, ~0,1 "' , wii 1,1,. •\ h ded ,_ •)·· • •••r 9'ld0I Ind~ i l )\11 •• ti P F lll<P .. ll 1 .. • It HOullll-'•' °'• 4 II •v. ••• MerrllLY ,)6 IO 1141 IO'h • \o QIH~SOI .. ll ,6 1' , • 1. 1s ca 1nev1'""6-'.l;'f;'"&-"" • tml!TI-ulthe infh.llionrate e111111 .. 1.t0ri 1 1• l1-o-i.. o.-..... ''° 1 11 :Ill_...., • l• '"'"'\lo ""9Q~l ,os1a •it J•l'I ·'~ <M•tor so ,, 1., 1• t ~ t' S..l~4W ,JO 6 11 I , 0...,_ 1 .il U 7U ..,,, , .. ::::;",!'~,:"!I~ •S ,:i: t "1.4i ,,..w.bl ,tld I IJ't '"° -"' -JI 11 t celmlcm.reent"s'bey '•~~n~~1~~~~r ut t lths ptehrc,entdlnd th~ththSeree t:~": .~ .~ 'i i~~-.~ o...::;. ~'1:: ': :"': l"' =:: l~ . ,, ',:~ ', ," :8~1~M1t~1f : ~~: i: :::: t': ·~ il: ~ ~: :: • mon s a en e WI P· l!il.lrunct 1,.a s tt 1• • u. l>A••I 1 • .u ., u 14"' •.. Hovt~P 1 s. ; •) 11'-l'r ""''"'"' io ' 21 6 • ~ lil•'ICo tn ti • I t~'•, !... influential bu!)intss and tcmbcr. '"'-"No1 10J 1ot31'"'' o...,1t .10c11 it •Yfh "" Ho10Hic..·11110 1J ,, .. :n. ""''El>l•n . 1111ct .... , lil'!l•dAM1 i • i•.-1. I 0..rlN pl ,}J . I '"" .• °"" P'll! 1.40 e, •'6 11\.'o• "' MClllo.lrdJ ·10 111,. s ... " ""''Epl J.90 1100 ll • "' RIPi'<M 1)1 J ' )0 '' financial lnstltut ons regar· Lionel o. F.die & Co , the &..•!Id¥ ·" • r lS'ro-1. Diil• p11,10 . 110 " . HD 1 (JI• ~ 1,. u» .,. MGIC: '"' " i 1111 &"' • '"" 111111uo 11 t • , ""'-\ti ding job~. interest rutC!I and economic research and con aur.,~ IOls c1~1oh, '"' 8:~~ ,!: :: 1•., !~ ... ,~ H=d 1.0 • 11 uVt : ~ .. :'~~ ~ 1 !; 10~. ~ ::r:i.::• ·:, ' ,:g ,:": ~ ( NEWSANALYSIS ) Mutuals ll ait \VASlllJ\'li 'l ()N (U PI) -1'h e · S<-euritit•:;c ;ind F.xch:111g<' Commission h :1~ ~•d opt ed rules to Jl('t'mrt di srounts-·- ror ~roup purrh asrr~ 11r mut u:il fu nds. The ,;:rou p di <>('OUnl"' \\OUlrl result in br11kcr:iJ:c fl'L'S of ll'"'!ii th3n lhc f-11ston1a1 y 8.S pC'rce nt, SEC <.iff1c1al:1 s.11d. th 'l !'flt' C.bL.T1116 t )a ... _,\ OU..81.., .. lJ lt20 o k HIOllAl,.O. i 11 ""'• \o Mlc._....11 s tt lO"l •l!l RU.Corp! s ... 11 • ,, CORPORATIONS ARE erd co in a ion : , ~ulting arm or ~t.1•rrill Lyn· c.IMllCl>.<n • ,, u • ._ o..oi... cp1 , r-.,, . HuQrM>lH io • 2 , ... 1, Midc""1 1.04 • ,. 10•.-,.., RCA~wi:r•• 11 •1~. '• Curl.1.11.01 borro .. ·lng plans.-. Consumer prices m1 gh. t ch.k th e world s lar"eSI ~ '"° • • 1", \• o..Pa111 40 11 lf! 1io..•Jloolo HUC1nt1r .so 20 '°' ""''• M.lc:rSou, 1• • 101 n ••· "" RCA"' 1~, · ,611 .s l 'h,. rliscounts \\'l'rC' nnc p3rt or a \\Jdc rnngins: "roup or rule udopt1ons .ind prorlQs:tls des•J:nL'd lo inc rl.'a!;e compcUl\on within lhc 1ndustrv and to atlr-uct more ln\'l'Stors 10 nuitUat fun· ds. • Boeing Dividend n " Wdt I! 0..Pn ft11, t ~ •''1 H""""'-1""• 20 ,-..., MIOMllOl!I• • l'•-"llted'M -JO!lllli 20•••1• ( •• Jul lh'l •n 0-... ··mlc increase-by 8 to 9 J)ercent 1n bro ~rage house. rorc~ees a ...... c J" ill 1"-·~ Du!Jrw'L 1.n • •oo "~ .. \~ ...,, °' t• 1• uo '" • ,," M1<1Ae., eo 4 ,._,,'", '• 11_,.,.. e)d '" 1.,, ""' II "'-' \.VltV 1975 h }j k f' rl t.!P.\lllli~ llt\oo\;,Ouill.l'llpf2 r .. to -"' HullOl'I OCI • 11 lt\+ .. Mllft.L(ll,HI 1411 •'•!'lt;t<• ;, •• 1.) ''lo ' downturn will leave them , le an. o , .. me ca dron 1n the cost or borL c.11 ..... 1 • 1,110\oo•" 0..0,1.0ttr1D •• 11ao ""' .. 111 H""•~·~.!1 • ''""-"' Mt1!(1;'!1r•1 's r..i illttd f 001 , ~ "'"''''• Ov.r.·t•nded. Jnillvldu•Js, state•, compared with a mw'1ng money to a slow as 9 ~m or ~' ti.ti Oul!LP' 1 ,,. •· noo U\11, 1• H~t~ 1 5"' • · MM&M',, 11 .,, .ci·. • ••) ~ •" J 10 n , 1\ ,. " ~ IJll!.Lk Ml 2t SIS •0\li-"° o,<no lft '8 ' t 6'1'1-l(N P'N I-MIMJIL t 44 I .JO ''"' • 'I ""-o<Mld •}'2 101 1011 1 i;? too arc tfying 10 cut their n!$e for 1974 that 1t puts ;it percent by December. ~l.:f ~11: 1~ 1t Jr•!~ r:t111t..P ;;~ '.ilu " • .J4allo ,.-r' .. J ;J..1l'C.:.. r! Et~·~ ; : 1: ... : :: ::P't-.~ •;. ; 1 rl~..!. ~ bo~ro>A'ing and pa)' ore their 10.s percent. Th~· prime le nding rate l:'~i~\~ : .; ,~-.,. ~:~i.~ 4~ .4 1~~ .:::::1;,~1:,! .' i ~,:. ~ MO·:~ ... iU~ ;: 11:: ~ lO :::Gl)-Ji::l • 'l ,,~~ --lua _: In il s ''..f!lSP.S-9n, \~_OO'A'JS around-.1.L(Wco.nt.-~;:-r·-;r~ ~~crvr:;-m1....,l '™·" •os11.u~".:.;-\,;. ""''.., 11.1oP1"1c 't •1~. tit '"''"plt.611~~ •• 11 _..., Al the demand !or money Economy -1975" the bank having fallen from a.,pcak of C'M•C:..1 ,0 ., )J ~. 1~ lt\I • 1 s. 10 '" 1•flt •i1 111Ct111n 1 • ' ~ n... ~~ = .' 1,. ;"': ~ Aot"'b11< ~ i . " ~, ...., ' did 'l t l lfl 12 l · Seltcmber c ..... oir11 • 1 -... NU>Co '·"' it" .... ~ it1{MID1J"I .. 1 11""• '' MStti0ti.10 1 n1 JJo.. :;:F,:s,~' •: , eailes, 1ntC'lrt1st rat~s are n sac a spec c percen in I • c-11 ... •'4 11 11 • ,,111.nM .•11 ,1, ,..v..1 111,...... 1.20 • ,., 11 • '-"••20 1 11 111,. ,, "''""s..11 .. J "' 1,:: ·,, likely to continue !nlhng. joblt'ss figure but referred Albert II . ~o:t, thief =(\C: ,! 1J~:-~~ li"\~·i'iU ~ :; ::;: :;;:==!·~ .. '~: !l"":f =..::•11g\·I '! 11~-.1• ::::~~·;: 't1 ,r··: h although ptany previously l() moderately high uncm· economist. bchcvcs a 7 per-c... Tet 1 . .0.• 1 1-1<t . •t ~~·ep~~' 1t 11," 't. t~f:rw>: I)·~ r..,., :• Mi>l•CP Ud 3' • • .. • l\o ll'l'"'C•~ 12 I 1 11... ,, fearless forecasters •tire ploymenl ~urlng o yeur 0£ .. cent rnle.n1i1Jhl be rf'acllcd ~n;·1:oM ,' 11 ~~:..~ t~"'·-i •• 1:-:~;.i(o) ,,., 1w.i' =:,;r,._ J »lWtoo:1\~ ::~·11;,,,, ;! ,p';1'• tt1u,t:1nl to 'IOY how low Uttlcroalcconomlc ~rowth.. by:ipr1nGor sumtl\er. ~:~::'of':.~ ~ ~ _, .. t:~i .. ~!!1 ::._ ! }~ ;;: 1H•1~~:.1, 13 ~i ... : ~ =11~,! "• )4 !..!: t:=",11 : ,; ,f •;; \• • \\'lClllT1\. Kan. 11\P) -Dir(.'(tocs o( 'l'hc Doe1 n,11: Co thr., have deC'lllrcd ·"' spt•t·1lll qu;rrt('rty d1\1dend :\nl'l" rrv1C'"'1n ~ the cnrop~nl-'$: slc.ong -ITnunci:1l rrstiTt s or lfie third quarter and fir'llt n1nr m1intt'i s or the !it!ar. ltnlh the rC"i:;ul:\r IS--("('nl per &h.HN? :Jn(I a !il>ccial 15 cent pf.'r shar • d1v1dcnd t' 14ill be p~11d IJcc. 10 lo 1<hnr~li'oldcrs .or rct'Ord Nev. 14, lhe board»:ild: ' , . . . , • " , , Novembers. 111• • . I .. • ' • .. ' --, - - . ' ~­• ' • ,..... __ •Now signed into law, effe ctive as of Novembe r 27 • • raised to $40,000 for an individual , up to $560,000 for a family of 4. And Home Savings offers J even niore. Among all savings and loan associations, only Home Savings is over $5 V• Billion ' . Strong, Number 1 in the nation in b9t~ savings and loans. No financial institution pays more on insured savings. Many do not offer as much in interest, in free services, in added benefits. Now increased insurance °;idds to _the qualities that made Home Savings _Arne_rica 's Largest ••• perfect saf~ty since issg ... steady and sure high earnings ... Peace of Mind.· .. NEWPORT BEACH 190 Newpol't Center Dri ve . 640-6100 Member: FEDERALSavlngS11n<f!Min-lnsurance.Corp. · 'Member: FEDERAL Home Loan Bank System --------, ~ I -· • I ' . * . ' • • , • - ' ' . . . • ., .. '. • _,,_ ---~-·---------- • • • • • • •• . ' .,, ___ , __ ...._.._ r ,, ,. . . 7 . - -. ' ' ' • Satfdleliack· EDITION VO L. 67, NO. 309, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1974 TodaY-'s Fi9:1al __ N.Y. Stoek TEN CENTS Saddlehack Valley Voters Turn Out Wilen, What,Bow?_ ' MAC Furi.ctions ,-·still Unknown By JAN WORTH 0tU..D41U't'4*M..ff said Vic Bellerue, a deputy county counsel whose specialty is the 1'1AC If ballot counting runs without hit· guidelines. <:h, five Mission Viejo residents will "I haven't even thought about their know Wednesday that they comprise swearing in ,'' he said . ''The Orange County's first municipal ad· guidelin~Say they are to be elected visory council fMAC). just like city council." They are being elected today from Fifth District Supervisor Thomas 32 candidates. · Riley said he expects the council to But that is about all the new council start meeting immediately· to hash members will know. Things they win· out its method of operations. not know include: According to Bellerue, any action -When they will be:;Ylornjn. lhe·council lake_! will be unofficialJID_· _ • Heavier Numbers Reported An 11 to 17-percent turnout. a precinct that opened late a'nd election workers with cold feel marked early \•oting trends today in the Saddleback Valley. Afarlene Perkins, a voting inspector at Cordillera School, 25952 Cordillera Drive, Mission Vi ejo, said 40of the 232 voters. in the precinct, about 17 per· cent, had cast early ballots. "lt 's been ver'/ good, con!idering that-the turnout in other recent elec· lions llas been extremely poor." said ~ l\1rs. Perkins. T-he low turnouL-was recorded a( Santiago Elementary School. 24982 • -What they will do. U its members are sworn in. ~-----4•hen·they-will begi11 meettng-;md--JR~o~bert-Netson-;--executive~'l'ilnt- how often they will nieet . lo Rtley;-s·atctthe-M:AC membt!"rs___._ · -"-Riv-en·ctt~?!l"!l'tmrwbereii-per· -- . cent of the Precinct's 52S voters had. 7 ·- Because. of pulposely vague ··probably will be sworn in in guidelines produced by the county January. like the other officials elec· supervisors. most of the operating tedtoday." · procedures or the council will be Jeft Shirley Deaton, chief of registration to the council itself. lor the county's Registrar of Voters "Each MAC is supposed to be han-office, said the Board of Supervisors died out of its super-Jisorial office," ~·.~!obably would swear in the offlcer- tf tf f::r l'llrs. Deaton said the officers would take office ''immediately after the Bl·g. Party date or certification of the election." Th1s<b'ear the.election will be certified solnetime between Nov. 23 and 25, she S h d l d said . . C e U e "But "'e_definitely have to have an opinion from county counsel,'' said J\trs. Deaton. .. F M C J\luch of the uncertainty about star-. 0 r r ~ .~ ting the J\tAC stems from the fact that ./.I · it is the first one organi;ed in Orange County. Eleven others have been for- • E\•en though onfy fiVe of them can medthro~ghoutlheslate. . be elected, the 32 candidates for the Accor~1ng to state law. the county 1s :tdission Viejo ~1unfcipal Advisory to provide .the. support systems for Counci) scheduled a "victory night" .. ~tA~s. which are an attempt . to celebration tonight at the Red Onion prov1~e better local representation Restaurant ln El Toro. for unincorporated areas. All cundidates. their v.'ives or Ati:out$20,0?0hasbe~nallocatedfor husbands and campaign workers are ~he f1r~t year s operation of the .J\tAC . invited to the no-host bar, according 1ncru~1ng about S3,500 to pay for the to Jeanne Gagnebin. one of the can-e}cct1on today and the res.t for. a p~rt· didates and the hostess for the time secretary and operating costs. evening. .II First priority of the MAC sh.ould be t.1rs. Gagnel1"in said she plans to to .. establish a confidence level in the bring a portable television for Wat-cO-n'fmunity," Riley said when ching the returns. ··Arter all, this is our first little fun ~Seel'"IAC PANEL, PageA21 and games with politics here in !\fis- sion Viejo and "'e'll all be up tight," she said. "This is our first chance to Jet our hair down." The campaign, first local con- test other than a school board election in the Sadd\eback Valley. has had its share of frus trations. Because the cou·ncil, first or its kind in Orange county, is only an advisory body. the candidutcs were denied county se r\·iees for enclosures of a .statentent of qualifications in the sample ballot to \'Oters. Because there were so many can- didates, they had trouble getting any exposu r e . Newspapers limited available space to be fair lo each can- didates. and the two can<lidaf.P:s• fo rums held in ttw: community li mited speeches to three minutes .. The only advantages the candidates ha\'e as thei r s:arnpai~n draws to the close is that they don l have to nfe a ri na nci a I disclosure statement. "I just hope the results don't dim .a nyone's enthusiasm," Mrs. Gag- nebin said. "\Ve hope this earty en· courages e\'eryone to hang in there and continue caring about Aiission Viejo." Nixon, to Be 011 Feet More LONG BEACH IUPll - Richard Nixon is ··terribly · ptiysically weak" and still has :i1ome J>ain in his left leg. his doc·- tors said today, but the former· pr<?sidc:nt \\'US recovering su(- ficieJltly lo do more walking in his hospltnl room . Jn his daily medical rePorl. Dr. John C. Lungren said the former chief executive is still in sub-intensive care and continues to receive intermittent breathing treatment. One or Nixon 's daughters. Julie-.Nlxon Eii;enhov.•!!:r..retu~­ ned to \V ashtngton after spen- ding St\•eral days with her fether. lier return was seen as a r;ign that Nixon was reci>\'ering. El Toro High's New Principal .To Be Schmidt. llerman A. Schmidt. 45, was selec- ted principal or El Toro liigh School l\1onday. Schmidt, a Mission Viejo resident. had served· as assistant principal at the school. His appointment lo r~elace Robert Bosanko will be effec· ti Ve Dec. 1. Bosanko, principal or the school since it was begun last year. has resigned to take an atlministrative position at SaddlebackCollege. Sch midt will earn $26,304 in his new job. As assistant principal, he earned 525,538 . ~ District Personnel Director Gary Shinkle said Schmidt was chosen from a semi-final list of "10 very qualiried people.'' Schmidt was &elected after a closed-door session of the Saddleback Valley Unified School Dislricl trustees Atonday. A long-time re&ident or Orange County, Schmidt received his first col - lege degree, an associate of arts,,from Orange Coast College in 1950. I-le was an officer in the Army until '1953, then he finished a bachelor's degree· program at Arizona Stale University. '- lie has a masters cfegrec in educ§tion from Arizona slate. From 1957 to 1961, he was assistant dean of students at th al school. In 1961 Schmidt taught mathematics at La Canada Junior Jiigh School anit. liter moved to La Canada High School as director of ac- tivities and athletics. lie came to the Tustin Union 1-ligtL Schoo--r-D1s nc 1n 1967 as assistant principal (or Tustin tligh School. FtOm l970l01973 he was assistant principal tor instruction at lr\'ine's University liigh School. · Schmidt and his wife have rl\'C c.hildrcn. Saddleback Structure 'This is the new, $4 .l million scienci;:! and mathematics building at Saddleback College in Mission 1/iejo. The new structure is next door to the campus library. It contains laboratory facilities, classrooms and oftiCes. CUSD Closes Trustees Seek Gym Condemnf3d For -Campu_g _ at Viejo Buildings By PAa-tELA 1-IALLAN OI Ille D~llf Pilot SUff Trustees of Capistrano Unified Schc;iol Di strict have ordered im - mediate closure of all buildings that: do not meet state earthquake standar- ds. Not only will students l;le forbidden to enter the structures tl);it do not comply with the state's f'ield Act. but the public also will be barred from them. The ban goes into immediate effect a t the gy mnasium at the old Capistrano High School. used exten· sively by community groups, and lY.'O cltlssroom buildings at the same location which are used as main- tenance and r epair shops. It also affects the Central District Office at Serra School in Capistranc Beach. but will not apply until after this week because or its scheduled use as a polling place in today's election and Ii .. ineeting place.. for the district - wide PTA Council Wednesday. Althoug h thE:, board wrestled with the idea of shutting down the Central District orfice entirely and moving to rented facilities. they compromised by ordering a study prepared by i;>ec. I to determine if they should rent 0£- fices or tear the old building down and move into portable structures. Em· p!Oyes of the district and adults oo business will still use the non -conror· ming buildings. The sw ift aetion on closio g buildings built before 1932 came af(er the Orange County Counsel informed the board that trustee::; are personally "liable if anyont is killed or injured in a building cons idered structurally un- CSee CLOSURES, Page A2 I By FREDERICRSCllOEMEllL OttMD4111¥ "*M&H said proposals were made for a tem· porary gym, but never got past Saddleback College trustees want a Bremer's desk. temporary gymnasium on the Mission ;'They would go to the superinten- Viejo campus by next fall. ·dent's office. then we'd be told no At a special meeting in Tustin A1on· · money was available and we'd beshul day night, trustees asked college ad-down," Hartmann said. minlstrators to ,explore the cost of a "Many, many items did not. reach temporary gym and then to return to the board level." said 1-lans Vogel, a the board with a reconimendation former board member who attended soon. ri.1onday 's meeting. "We were not in- The strong stand by the board fol -rormed." lowed objections from basketball ··1 want lo make sure the former team members about having to prac-board is not.held responsible," Vogel lice on a hit-and-miss basis at sur-said. Vogel was elected when the col· rounding high schools because the col-lege was formed in 1967. lcge does not have a gym of its own. Basketball coach Roy Stevens told During the discussion, much of the trustees that he once wrote a lettei-lo blame for the dismal situation was the board outlining the problems placedinthelaporformerSupt.F'red facing the basketball team. li e II. Bremer. recommended basketball not be en· Athletic director George llartmann couraged until a temporary facility was built on the campus. Seniors_ to Get f;ree . Flu Shots ' Flu shots for s enior citizens 65 and older will be given Sunday in the Sad· dl c back Community lio s pital cafeteria, 24451 Via Estrada, Laguna 1-lills. Shots will be administered by the hospit1:1l's registered nurses from 9 a m. to noon and I to3p.m. There is no charge for the shots, but donations to the Orange Co unty llealth Department to co\'er the cost of supplies "'ill be accepted. Immunization is provided in a single dose. Persons who are allergic to eggs will not be immunized because of the J>Ossi bility of ad\·erse reactions. ~gel acknowledged that he had seen the letter. but that it had been • gi\'en to him with a cornment rron1 Bremer that the team had racilities for the future. ·'There was no ques tion for a moment that there wouldn't be facilities £or th is year," Vogel said. Stevens said estimates prepared earlier this year showed a tem1>0rary gym wou ld cost between $120,000 and SlS0.000. ~lartmann said a facility is needed to boost the basketball team's reci'uiling program. ··1 hope this is on the agenda and done by next fall ." declafed 1'rustcC' Norrisa Brandt of Irvine. '"I'd like to sec a recommendation fo r a temporary facility." agreed Trustee Donna Bcr.ry of t.1i ssion Viejo. "'\\'e ha\'en't talked about our per. manent gymnasium since April. We Stop That Boat ought to set son1e time and get back to "·orkin g on a gym," said Trustee Larry Taylor of Laguna Beach, ooting ISeeGY/ll ,PageA21 -. ~R_unaway Vessel Overtaken A pilotlcss. rCinaway boat heading out to sea in Newport Harbor this morning w-as boarded by-a liarbor ra.1.rol officer ind return-ed co· 1r~r - chagrined o.wncr. ' TllE O\VNER has been Jen on a dock riear the liarbor Patrol station when the $35.000 boat somehow slipped into ~ear and started its lonely journey while efforts were being made to lie it doWn. Witnesses hailed the Harbor Patrol as the 43·foot Nausika headed in a straig_h_t line oUt to. the harbor's entry channel. ---- TllE WAVWARD craft was overhauled by a patrol boat and officer Charlc!'Ctiick lca~litioardlo llring it un<Jer control _ Chick r£lllme.dlhe vessel to its 0\1..'ner, Von Price. 43. Coronal "'hose hand.!S wtre blistered when he tried to divert the boat from its 8:30 a.m. solodcpartur'e by hanging on to Its mooring rope!!i. , • Viej0Ba1idsmen Boost Scores Mission Viejo liigh &hool's band scored 920 points of a possible 1,000 in the El Primero band and drill team revi ew Saturday at Santa Monica. The score was up 60 points from la:-L )'Car's.tally Of 860. '\Ve didn't place, but y,•c 3re very pleased with our high scor('," said Uandmastcr T erry Nev.•man. tllission VieJO .student-; CQmpcted in Santa t.:lnnicn against 56 bands. some from B!t far away as Sacr:imento and Lancaster . cast ballots. ....-'\ A Daily Pilot reporter. first in line at a poll at 25111 Fortune St., El Toro, was among 30 voters waiting in line· when the poll opened at 1:15a.m. A precinct. worker there said the· initial turnout was heavier than durj.ng,the June primary. At a Laguna Hills residence, 22682 Ancona, precinct captain Linda Melville said set or the 320 voters, or 16 percent, had trekked to the polls. "No problem, except our feet are awfully cold, because we're set. up in· the garage," she said, laughing. Trustees Okay --;--..-I Bid for Buses A bid for three 85-passenger buses was accepted by Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District Monday. The low bidder. Crown Coach Com- pany. bid S54,837 for each bus on a Jease·purchase agreement which the district fi!Vors. Gillig Company bid $55,442. If the buses had been purchased outright, the Crown Coach would have cost $49,176 while the Gillig bus would have been higher, $49,528. The three bu ses, which will not ar- rive until next fall, will be lease·pur- chased through Aug , l , 1978. Bus Bomber Jailed LONDON CU Pl) -A judge senten - ced former Women's Royal Army Corps m ember J udith Ward, 25, to life in prison Monday for her part in the bombing of a bus in which 12 persons were killed last February. Judge J .D. \Valker also sentenced Miss Ward to 2Q years for causing the blast, 10 years ror a bomb blast at the Military Defense College at Lattimore, where 10 persons were injured. and fi v£> years for a bomb blast at London's Euston railway station. · Oran!!<" Coast Wea&her Var iable hig h clo udiness th rough \V ed nesday, v.'il h slightly warmer days and cool nights. Beuch highs at 65 ris ing to the mid -70s inland. Lows tonight dipJ>ing into the 40:,. I NSIDE TODA,_. The :rafet.11 ()/ America·.s-110 nuclear reactors ren11ult.'f a nag· ging questio n. The problem 1s examined iR d elad on Page 89 : loday. c""".,."'""'' •• L.M ... \'il "' t.1t .. tlll• "' 0.tttHH l"!t ~I IJ "9u~ I\_ Dl.ttro fllatkt1 ... Et<iMf._I ..... "' ,E., .. rt_1 11 l'i-Al .. 11 "•""".... ,, ........__ I t ""'lf'fllll-Ir " • Don't Fm-get-itt ~Vote; -Polls-epen U~til 8 . • • • ' ' . ' fy' • • AJ! DAILV,.LOT 59· Coast Unit Votes No .To Outfall By JOHN V~LTERZA °''" O.llt l"lllol$Mott Amid harsh comments from some com(l"l.issioncrs that more emphasis ~hould be p l riced on was'tc reclamation, plans ror u new oet!an : outfall at Dana Point rel! to defeat Monday before the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commis- ~ion. . But the South East Re&?ional Reclamation t\uthnril\· ISF.RHA I compelled by antipollution agencies to repluce the existing substandard outf.all, wiu appeal the denial by lht> r egional panel and spokesmen for the entity hope to sway enough vote.s- lit the state commission. Although the final vote Jtfonday. "'as a blow in one respect to the outfall p roject. the waste entity managed to' score heavily on another vote "'hic h· killed a staff recommendatiOn that. would have placed the strictest rules in. t~e nation covering am mon ia discharge through the pipe. The" treatment entity claims that even before s ignificant inland reclamation could take place along the South Coast and Saddlebac k Val· ley, the outfall project -calculated to cost more than $11 million -is a :necessity. But sever a l commissioners in· ~luding Rimmon Fay and J~d~ Rosener. disagreed strongly. •·we all know that the only wa to TH EY Aw " ' °"'' Pli.t ~ • AIT HEARING FOR ALLEGED PORNO SALES Laguna Bookstore owners Evelyn and Gordon Wilson and Chlfd make strides in cleaning up the H waters offshore is to compel govern-• • ' L menl ag~nci e.s such as SERRA lo ea ring 0 n aguna chance the attitude toward disposal.' ··This is our chance to compel them . to take ariother look and spend some ~ohsh-~ . -8-1t---._"-'t'hat-nrnneylo·~ma:tWn-;::n~" .. · -· -Ofl=-." ~~ ·IA t -JUSt t~e same old ocean dull\Ping,"., "' ..._.. r -.. -ic;;tl~&--__-:--E-' -:; - she said . • Flll:'..-a champion of the stiff am· tnonia di scharge requiremerits con· t inued his disappro\lal of the SE RRA plan. but conceded that scientists dif· fer on the effects of ammonia. lie added. however. that the com· mission shou ld side with the faction that questions the effects of the com· · J>O':'nd on the marine environment. ~1nc:e the initiation of a permit ap·. phcat1on before the commission for ·lhe 11,000-root outran project near San Juan Creek's exit to the sea in the mid·: dJeorDoheny State Park. . Environmentalists dead-set against increased ocean dumping or treated v.•aste ha.d pronlised to appeal ap· provals, 1£ the regional commission granted·a ocrmit. And after r.tonday's vote Carl l\ymla, the manager of the l\ioulton :"Jig uel Municipal Water District f!ERRA member agency) answered with a single word queries on an appeal ofllJ,e_Jiecision to the state. ··Absolutely,·' he said. The· outran has been designed to serve the needs of several com· tnunities along the South Coast nnd Saddleback Valley for the next two decades. The agencies, which have banded together ir:ito the project group, in· elude the ~1ty 01 ~an Juan t:ap1strano. the Capistrano Beach Sanitary District, Dana Point Sa ni tary District, f\.1oulton Nig uel and th.e Santa' l\largarita \llater Di strict. 6 Trucks, Car Crash in Fog CHO\VCllJ LLA fAPl -Six trucks and one car slam med together in dense fog on Highv,,ay 152 fi\·e miles west or here today, leaving at least one dead 1n th.e twisted wreckage, the Ca lifornia lhgh\\·ay Patrol said. Traffic in both directions \\'as halted !ihortly aft er the 4; 15 a.m. cras h "'hi!e y.·orkers stru ggled to clear the str.it· tercd \"Chicles and cargo from th t' road. officers said . ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed Prn•Otnt •"" Pui.o- p Jack R. Curley 'Yi(I Prf.,dtllnt •nd r.. ..... t1 Mil ... IJ"r Thomas eevll Saddle~ck Valley Office ~s101 i... P•rJto.o •• :....o,.F•tt .. •• Othtr..OlllCH Ct\lt "'-W 3>CIW•'1 e., Strfft H.wporl Bt..:n llll Nt"'P)•I &olllfftrd 1'111nO"V!Ol'I 9t•(n ,1'11 &r-.~ e.ui.~Nd u.,,... .. .cn, n•o......,,...Strttt !.B • . Ttltphont (114) 642-4321 ' Claissitled Ad ve rtising '42·S611 S-lfll.Kt v.u-., "'""°"k• 511·6310 Fro"' Wn (;•-Mt ••-5·0630 C..llf•Olll. ,.,. O••flQtr C60•1 l'l.rltlltM ... ~Mll'j ... -'"''°" 11tll'll•M~, .. 11 .... .i lfl•llt• •• •d¥t•ll-111\ l'lll•t\11 ..... illt rt..-C.M ••I-lptf!!•I $1 .. lfl•notl'I OI '""''"'' o ........ S.ton• Cl•'l DOii• .. N !d t i CMW Wu, ~··toi"rM•. .. .. D\t. .. Pl•Ol'I ... (...... u '° ..-1~11 bt "'Ml M 00 1'11111111!,; nlol•IM' Gnlll'ltl...,l W OO"'tntftlJ I; · A I:agu,na Beach bookshop owner and his wife, a n ex-Catholic nun, fa ce a .Nov. 19 hearing on charges of ped· dhng pornpgraphy. neilrly a year af. ter _the Art Colony case broke with their arrests on churges of selling smutty comic books. Gordon. Wil son, 34, O\\'ner or the Fahren heit 451, at 509 S. Coast High· \\"ay, an~ his \\'ife Evelyn. 36, liave pleaded innoce nt lo the mi sdemeanor ch arge. The hearing set for a week from next Tuesday in South Orange County J1:1dicial District Court, Laguna Nigue l. had become a ''t'ause celebre." among Laguna Beach 's in· tellectuals. Demonstrat ions have been held supporting th e right lo determine fo r one 's self what is or is not obscene or Hundreds View Star Athlete's . Funeral Rites By KA.TllY CLA.NCV Oltll• 01!1y Pilol i i.II Stephen •·»·I ike"' Finklea. a promising 19-ye ar·old scholar 11nd athlete, \\·as buricd.l\1ond;;iy. r.tore than 225 classmate~. t eachers. coaches, neighbors and relatives gathe red at a small funeral chapel to mourn the death of Fil'lkleu desc ribed as ''everything t~ everybody."' He was captain of the Orange Coast College "'restling team a":d 1973 athlete or the year at Foun· lain Valley High School. There were few dry eyes during the brief service. '"I saw a whole nci~hborhood on the !;treet whert• !\like lived -I sa11.• them bleeding with the family.'' said the youth's uncle, the Rev . Enoch f'inkl.ea, wh?. came from South Carolina to off1c1ate at the service~ r.1ourners O\'erflowed the chapel nt Peek Family Colonial F'unl'ral 1-lomc in \~e:.tminster, lca\'ing many silting outside on fold in~ chairs. r.Iost of th en1 attended the burial afterward at \I/est minster r.tc>morial Park. ••[ stand stronger and taller because I knew him," l\o1ike "s uncle said. ''He contributed so much ta each of us." )'oung Finklea 11.·as-slain at mid· niJ!hl Thursday by six bullets fired during the apparent holdup of a Foun- tain Valley 7·Elcven l\1arket .... ·here the youth had been "'orking the pa~ll three 11.·eeks. ' l\lr. Finklea, ""'ho plannCd t o . become a math teacher and ""'fest ling coach. was working nt the market at Euclid Street and \V;1rncr A\'enuc lo help pay for hi s l'dueatinn. lie planned to transfer to Stanford UnlVJ!rsily next tall. "J have been thinking :1 lot since last Friday morning when J\like's father called mP." said the Rev. Finklea. "It was far bc,'¥·nnd unythin~ 1 hnd imagined, .. he s:ud or tu s ncp~ews ':l tragic death. He explained most people "build W<tlls" around thcmsel\'eS, lhinkinA: such tragedies cannot touch them no matter how much they read of such things happening toothers. The pBstor-su.stgcstcd that those who knew l\tike, take a lcsSon from him. "the.way he denied himself to achlevl! \\'hat he wanted. ··~leroes aren't made in a contc~t. lie wa~ a bC'ro before he ever hit the wrrstlinR mat " "fhc .Re\·~ t~inklea suggested the mou rners look 11head. re·examlnt~ th Qlr Hves and tr)' to improve them. -.'lfil<e ti as a11e.idy-rlntshe-d tht roursc .. ,\V e arc sl\11 on the µ111ving r1cld," the pat¥nr s"lct "lie ls ~Al· ching us as we tuke up the torch." I .. ' \ I pornographic. including one parade at the Festival of Arts grounds. A special Lagu na Beach City Coun· cil ~eeting was even urged for a hcannj.! at. \Vhich citizens could air their 0\\'11 viC\\'S on \\'hat is or is not <.ti· legcd l.v obscene . . St~tc la\\/ pre-empts local jurisdic- tion in such matters -rendering the Laguna Beach City Counci l Po"'erless to set any such tommunity standards -: ~ut city fathers felt the Art Colony c1llzcrfs should ha \'C their s;,iy. r.tayor Roy 1-Iolm refused to stage I.he hearing. Protesters including book dealer \\"il soo himself appea red at the rcgut;.ir council meeting \\'ith the defendant carrying one sign that· read: ··eurn People \Vho Burn Books, Not Book s That Burn People.·· ' The key issue is purchase of a copy of th~ u1~derg~ound publication "'Zap C~m1_x 11.•h1ch Orange County D1~tr1.ct Altatney's in \•estigators ·ela1r:n 1s obscen~ and pornographic. \Y1lson and his wife. a former nun \1•ho \\'as pregnant at the time of their ~rrcst l.a~t Dec .· 2, also Sell the Bible, 1n . add1t1on to a variety of tyavel guides and textbooks. . They h_a1·c \'U"'ed to earry their f~ght against local censorship to the L:.S. Supreme Court it necessary. .Preliminary hearing £or the \\'~!sons \\'as orillinalty scheduled for lhts Friday in the Lagunu Niguel courtroun1 . \\'ith legal counsel from ;\mcri can Cil'il Liberties Union IACLU) attorney Patricia Herzog. The Wilsons ' ar_rest~ on charges of alleged smut-deahng actually include three publications, ''Zap ," ··Greaser," and ''Yellow Dog Comix .·· A District Attorney's spokesman fueled lhc controversy after it sur- faced in Laguna Beach 11 months ago .. li e complained that if no big fu ss had hc<'.n made over the coup le's ar· rest. 1hey probably \\'Ould have •·cop. pcd out " in police parlance. This mt•an s they "''ou ld have pll'adt'<l guilty to a leSser charge than l~e l~)rno~raphy rup in return for gel· lin g off 11.·1th only token punishment. A mi sdemeanor violation such as they ure charged with in California <";1rri<!s a maximum penalty of six mont.h~. 1n jail and a SSOO fine upon conv1ct1on. f 'r,•111 P11gt• :"I CLOSURES .. safe by the slate: Supl'.'rintendent Truman Benedict ~aid if anyone was hurt in one of those old bui !dings -student, adult visitor, even employes -there would be ex· f~nsi.ve lawsuits Ciled against the district. • · The board alsb ordered an analysis <'f 11 duplex at San Juan Sc hool in San .Juan Ca pistrano. 'fhe buildjng, which one served as a home for teachCrs. is 11011.' used for other district fun ctions in· 1•l11ding a class for teenage mothers lo "' "fhe teacher's home wa s built utter rfl32. but probably docs not meet state c11rthquake standard<;, according to Benedict. · Tru~tnc \Villiam Thompson sug~ J.!~Sted that the hoard look into the J>OS· ~·1blllt_Y or selling the old CaPo ll>'m to the city or San Juan capfstrano or some oth~r group \\'hlch might be a hie Lo u,se 1t. Trustee George White <11ZrcOO, Saf ing Chat many buildings used hy private or cnmunlty croups are not as soundly build ;ii; lhe old ~yn1 , Hc nedlct said .ha did not think the d1strfct could se rJ a lii1ilaTng that was ~nsidcred structurally unsare nnr rould it allow people £0 USf' W OS g. ned a waiver of the dlstrlei;a liabilitJ: • The boa rd would stttl be held respon. hiblc hcsuld. • 'n Da.d ·Held In Boy's Poisoning PASADENA, Tex. tUPO -The father or an 8-year-<>kl boy fatally · poisoned on J1alloween night by a candy straw filled with cyanide was charged with murder today and held under $100,000 bond. Police, who had gone from door to door in a twq".block area of this Houston suburb tracing the youth's trick-or-treat path, made the stunn ing announcement at a ha'"stily c.all ed · news conference. They said the father was in custody. Timothy Mark O'Bryan qied late Thursday from eating just one piece of candy. His father, Robert Clark O'Bryan, told police at U)e time his son begged to be allowed orie treat before going to bed. "We and the district attorney's of· fice felt there was sufficient evidence at this.time for a charge to be fjled, ·• police Captain R. E. Rhodes said. "There is no further comment at this time a's we are still rounding up loose ends." ,Rhodes, sitting by assistant Harris C.ounty District Attorney Michael Hinton, refused to say when O'Bryan tui;d been arrested or what led to the a'rr_est, other than that the charges fol · lowed an investigation. He .read a prepared statement and refused to an- swer questions. '· It was reported that the father had taken out $38 ,000 worth of life in· surance on his two children five days before Halloween. Rhodes would neither confirm nordenylhereport. U,.IT .......... HE'LL STEP DOWN Juatfce Aide' Petersen ·Petersen. Quits Job at Justice Department WASlllNGTON IUPI) -Henry E. Petersen, his government career clouded during its last two ye3rs by charges he cooperated with the White House on narrowing the Watergate in· vestigation, is retiring from the Justice Department, it was announ- ced today. ~ Petersen was head of the criminal , division and in charge of the original . fro• Page AL _ ~v~~igat(on oflhe Walirgate break· 1',L.A. "'P A.N~'" .unt~ l.he Water gate· special "llJ.h~ ?&. • p~ecu11onforce was fottned: . . itt1louse conversations be~een questioned Monday, President Nixon and aides indicated He said he has asked county counSe1 that Peter sen was r eporting the to come up with a -list of things that the progress of the investigation to the MAC should legally respond to. President. Bellerue, the county counsel, said The While Hou se released a n ex· he h,as not .. yet received suc h a change or letters in which President reque:5l.· "The most knowledgeable Ford praised Petersen's record of people Qll this whole thing qre the ones achievement. who have lobbied !or this MAC in Mis-Attorney General \Yilli am B. Saxbe sion Viejo," Bellerue said. said Petersen's decision to retire after Pal Schubert, chairman or the MAC more than 25 years with the Justice study committee for the Mi ssioq Viejo Departme~t was entirely his own. flom eowners Association. said she ~etersen repeatedly denied wrong. and severa l other homeowners doing and defended his judgment leaders have met with Riley to sug -during the Watergate-investigation . gest how the MAC mi ght proceed. He gave a heated defense when he Riley said he will ask heads of was called as the last witness in 1973 various county departments -from Senate Watergate hearings. . t~e special district orfice to the e n-"Damn! 1 think it's a renection on \'lronmental agency, sheriff's office me and the Depa rtment of Justice " and library district -to give him he said. referring lo the appoinlme~t suggestions on how the MAC can best or Archibald Cox as a special communicate with them. prosecutor t o take over the c~se. "It looks to me like the greatest ac· Petersen said his team was "'on the t ivily will be in Environmental verge of breaking that case wide Management Agency," Riley said. open" when Cox took over. "In that.sens e, this l\fAC would serve ~eter s o n f'Otified Sax be or as a sort of area planning council." retirement plalis in a letter dated Asked how he would respond to 8 3 Nov. 1. The retirement is effective to. 2 recommeodation from the-MAC. Dec. _?I. Riley s aid •. "This certainly requires While House press secretary Ron more effort to decide on than a,5 to o Nessen said Petersen would return to vote. I'd want to know how the privatelawpractice. minority fell as well as the majority.'' All the council's reeommendatibns "'.ill be rererred to the Board of Super· visors, who make all final decisions for planning and land use. public s afety, traffic, and parks and recreation for Mission Viejo. Asked what he would do if the recommendations of the county start differ from the recommendations of the lt1AC. Riley said,. "Probably I would handle that just like I have been handling things here today. lf your constituents are very much against something, I think you have to go with the constituents. "To me, th is MAC is a very impor· tant thing," he added. "I'm hopeful .that along with the new members and guidelines that we can provide, that we can get off to a start that can be tremendously beneficial.'' Bull Departs . Nixon's Staff WASHINGTON (UPI) -Stephen ·Bull, one or the Jew persons to have a~c~ss to the White House tape con- ta1n1ng the l~~·minute gap, has quit form~r President Nixon·s staff and gone into private industry, it WljlS lear. nedtoday. With Bull's departure. onlY foi-mer p~ess. secretary Ron Ziegler and Nixon s personal secretary, Rose Mary. Woods, are left among the prominent holdovers on the Nixon staff, Sources indicate that Ziegler may leave next to'ebruary. ..... • ·-. ' . Drafting Students ~ ~p Early By JAN WORTH 6t UM 0..llW "•a.-H. ., . lt's 6:15 a.m. and in a draning clas· sroom at lt1ission Viejo lligh School 20 kids <ire already bent over their drafting tables. A box of doughnuts on the teacher's d esk is e mptying rapidly. and everybody keeps asking, .. cor!et! ready yet '!'' But th~ mood is light and the students <ire doing just what they want. !l 's <! mel'ting o( th e engineering drafting C'lub. Even berore their ftrst dose or caf- . feine, the students ~re grappling with pentagons · ;.ind hexagons ;:ind throwinl{ around talk of isometric drawings a nd three-dime ns ional space. And to all outward appcaran- ~es at thal outlandish hour, ttiey like IL Three yea rs ugo, members of lhe ' budd_ing club, sttidentsof dratting and architecture teacher Steve Mitchell hit on early morning-as the only tim ~ a ll of them were free./ Now the pre-dawn gathering has become a tradition. "The fi rst time Mr. Mitchell went to the doughnut shop at 5:4S a.m. and bought six dozen donuts, they thought they had a live one," one of the students said . . Most of the students don"L mind coming in early. ., "I have to get up at S to get here." said Dan f'~ilipowi cz, president of the club. ··But I don 't mind, and my· parents think; it's great." The senior plans to go into drafting as a career. ... Sometimes it's hard because I'm 1n t~c.band a~d ~e've been practicing .until 10 the ni ght berorc, '.'said LYnJ'e McCJella'l. club vice president. · But li~e-the others. Miss McClellan gets up a nYway -partly betause it's the only time of day the drafting cquipm;?nt is free for indi'vidual projetts. Man y o( 1\1 itchell's students a(ready have gone on to careers in architec· ture and graphics. His program has a hi g h s uccess rati-o in he lping students qualify for difficult and com· petitive programs such as thatorrered in the architecture school at Cal Poly San Luis Ohispo. 2. ' Interest in the engineering drawing and drafting program has been high -enough so th.._at a full curriculum in· eluding a three-year progression has had consistently healthy enrollment. For. projects, the students have taken on v.•hat Mitchell kiddinglf calls ··government jobs," doing minor ar· chitE?ctura l chores tor the school district. The club members also would like to .landscape the patio outside the dr~(ting room and perhaps design and bwld benches for it. By about 7 a.m. the club begins to disband and s tudents go lhe lr separate ways. But ·members don't start the day disoriented. They've already got a head full of pentagons and hexagons, which seems enough to keep anybody straight. f'ro111 Page Al GYM ••• th'at i~ would take two years for con- struction of a permanent facility. Hartmann urged the board to move ahead with · plans for a permanent gym, and build a temporary gym for Interim use. -He said the temporary gym could be used for other athletic . programs after the permanent gym is completed. . Trustees agreed to continue discus· s1on _of the question at a planning mcet~ng Thursday night or a regular meeting Monday night. A WORD Tfr THE WISK-· .. ' There is .fiend?ncy for many carpet stores to use strictly a warehouse concept. One advantage is seeing carpeting in rolls rather than samples. Many disadvantages are evident -most operations of this type buy only Off-goods, so that the customer only gets to see old pa~erns, or carpets the mills couldn't sell to regular outlets Also th1.s type of operation generally fe els that experie~ce i$ un1m.portant, and conseQuently the salespeople know little or !1oth1ng_ about the produ~ts. Finally, most will farm out the 1nstallat1on~ to t~ lowest bidder. guaranteeing a poor installation. IMany of these installers are contracting illegally without a state hcense.) · _ Al Alden's we maintain a happy medium .. We carry a large 1nven!ory. and the largest sample selection aroUnd. we have ef~penenced sale_speop/e, and our installers were trained by us 1nally, we are a s!ate licensed contracto f. · · • AI,DEN'S . CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia AYe. COSTA MESA 646-483 . HOURS: Moo.lln'1111n. lto 5:30-Fll .. 9 ~ t-SAT. 9:30 lo 5 17 7 • . Irvine EDITION .. • Today's Final· N.Y.Stocks ,• VOL. 67;NO. 309, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1974 TEN CENTS ' • e Planners Okay 108~mile Bi}ce Trail A master plan for a 108-mile system or bicycle trails in Irvine was ap• proved by the planning commission )1onday, The trail system, to be built rrom several sources or funds including the S2 million bike trail bond Issue ap- proved, by Irvine voters in June, must '?e. appro\'ed ~Y the city council before it 1s included 1n the city general plan. In approving the plari, the commis· sion removed a suggested "interim" category of trails and added a trail which wi ll parallel MacArthur Boulevard. The planning commission madeihe changes on the urging of the city tran- sportation commission. ln its review of the plan, the commission said all trails should be permanent. The interim designation Would have allowed temporary use of some trails whJle the ultimate system was being developed. . The trails plan calls for construe· lion of 10 miles of new bike trails by July. An additional 29 miles of trail is lo be completed by 1979. The schedule for building the balance of the lOB·mile system will fit in with Irvine:S growth_phasina: plan~ The trails will be built as additional areas or the city are developed:' Each five years, the plan must be reviewed and modified. Construction of the first 39 miles of trails .is expe'eted to cost the city $1,541,000. Additionally, $236,500 will be contributed by Orange County and private developers. Proposed changes to a county regional bike trails cost-sharing plan c.ouhLinc.rease. the cou.ntY 's con- tribution and proportionately reduce the cost to the city. The entire 108·mile trail system, ar- cording to. planning department pr:cdiction s, is expected to cost $9 mil· lion. lo1aintaining t~e trails is expected to cost $1,000 a mile each year, or $108.000 annually when all trails are built. Including the existing trails, the city '>''ill have a 47.3·nfile bike trail system in 1979. according tot.he plan. The addition of t.he l\1acArthur Boulevard trail. Planning Commis· s1oner Ro'>'•1and Schinzinger said, was made on the theory that a trail might be included when the final alignment for MacArthur BouleYurd in i'ela.tion to the Corona del r.t ar Freeway is made.. ~- No money "''as budgeted for that trail, howe\•er. In the form adopted by the commis· sion , the city is to seek additional money for building the system· from state and federal sources as well a!i from Orange County. Dad Held • m Cyanide Candy Ki11ing ·Runaway Vessel Overtaken ... . . ~ pilotless, rµnaway boat heading out to sea in Newport Harbor this -morn1ngWas··boan:ted by .;f fra1'bor Patrol O ffil'er-a11d-returned-ta-its-· chagrined owner. · TllE OWNER has been Jen on a dock near the Harbor Patrol station when the $35,000 boat somehow slipped into J!;ear and started its lonely journey while effortswerelbeing made to tie it down. \\'l tnesses hailed the Harbor Patrol as the 43-foot Nausika headed in a · -straight line out to the harbor's entry channel. - TllE WAYWARD craft was overhauled by a patrol boat and officer Charles Chick leaped aboard to bring it under control. Chick returned the vessel toils owner, Von Price, 43, Corona. whose hands were blistered when he tried to divert the boat from its 8:30 a.m. solo departure by hanging on to its mooring ropes. Selling for Le s~ Discount Store Curbs Sugar to' Customers mcidity on Thursday. • Saddleback Structure Insurance r Taken Out . . ,_O_._n_,,Z-Kim PASADENA. Tex. CUPJ) -The rather of an 8-year-0ld boy fat ally poisoned on Halloween ni ght by a candy straw filled with cyanide was charged '>''ith murder today and held under $100,000 bond. Police, '>''ho had gone from door to door in a t"'o·block area Qf this Houston suburb tracing the youth's lrick·or·treat pa th . made the stunning announcement at a hastily called news conference. They said the father "·as in custody. Timothy l\1ark o ·eryan died late Thursday from eating just one piece of candy. I-I.is father, Robert Clark O'Bryan. told poli ce at the time his son begged to be a\l oy,·cd one treat before going to bed. '"We and the district attorney's or~ ' rice felt'there w~ient evidence at this tirpe for a charge to be filed .·· police C'fiptain R. E. Rhodes said. '"There is no furth er comment at this time as we are still rounding up loose ends.·· LOS ANGELES (U PI ). -A major Southern California supermarket chain, which said it is selling sugar (or less than it will cost to restock if. announced pla!ls today to begin limiting· the purchases or the com' The price of sugar has_been sky rock eting for several months and could go even higher follotA•ing reports that the .Soviet Union ordered up to 500,000 tons in the open market. This is the new, $4.l million science and m~t~emat.ic ~ building at Saddleback College in • l\1iss1on V1e10. The new s tructure is next door to the campus library. It contains laboratory · facilities , classrooms and offices. · · Rhodes. s ilting.by assistant 1-larris County Di stricl Attorney 1\fichael l·linton. refu'sed to say \\'hen O"Bryan had been arrested or what led to the arrest. other than that the charges fol· lou·ed a n investigation. !-le read a prepared statement and rerused to an· S'A'erquestions. China's Mao ·Plans Purge ·For-His Wife 'fAIPEl IU Pll -Chairman Alao Tse.tung spent the last two months in seclusion in Central China plotting 10 install his "·ife as his succes· sor,. Nationalist China intelligence officials said today. The inte\ligeiice officers said l\1ao plans to purge the government of a number of key officials in an attempt to pa \•e the way for hi s radical wife Chiang Ching to take over as his un· contested heir. ~ The 81-year-old l\1ao spent two mon- ths al a villa at the East Lake, 'Vuchang, in Hupei province in Cen· tral China. ,Then he moved to _r.tounl \'ueh Lou at Changsha. capital of !lunan province, in October. Officials :;aid he is still there. l\tilita ry intelligence reports from China showed 1\1 ao has tried to rally the support of Central China elements ~·ho oft e n defied the Peking :authorities. Nixon, to Be .On Feet More LONG BEACH (UP() - Richard Nixon is ''terribly physicl!.llY weak" and still has ··-~some' pain in his lef'\ Jeg, his doc· tors said today, but the former· president was recovering sul' · ficiently to do more walking in his hospital room . In his daily medictil reP,Ort. Or. John C. Lungren said the former chief executive is still in sub-intensive care and continues lo receive interrnlltcnl breathing treatment. Eugene \\'alsh, president of Ralphs Grocery company, said Ralphs stores are selling five-pound bags of sugar for SZ.20, or 44 cents a pound. '·Jt will cost us 52.58 wholesale" to replace those bags. Walsh said. New Irvine Park Code To Hike ffome -Costs?. "All tbe chait\s have-boughN ugtt in advance and retail prices are lag· ging-beh!nd wholesale pfiCes. \Ve -will limit purchases of sugar to one five - pound bag per customer starting Thursday.:• he said. Other grocery c~ did not an-Although Irvine Company aides in -amount of land dedicated is reduced. nounce plans but a spokesman for sistcd a proposed change to the Jr. Planning Commissioner Fra nk llurd. however, said the city still ha s the option of reducing the new requireplents on a case·by-case basis . SareYiay Stores. Inc. said there weri;__ \'inc park code could sharply increase indications of customer stockpiling". the cost of houses, the planning com- '"Sales are a little heavier .·· he said. mission !\1 onday rerused to back '"It appears qui~e a few customers are do'>'•n rrom a new set ofstandards. buying two fiv e-pound ba~s V.'here In a letter to the commission. Irvine they would have bought one before -Company planners Don Ca meron said it's not a dramatic thing, not what that revised requirements for cash \\·e'd call a run on sugar. payment in stead or dedicated park The average retail price of refined land would have cost the company sugar has jumped from 18 cents to 52 St.08 million in the planned Universily cents or more a pod'nd since January. 1"0\lln Center area alone. The new code amendments "''ere not appli ed to the Town Cehter development and ii was used by Ca meron only as an illustration or the effect of the proposed change. and a major neu• demand on u·orld, supplies. such as a major Russian or- c;ler. would drive the price significan· tly higher. . · "'The Soviet move indicates the Russian suga r beet crop is shorter than expected and that Cu ba cann ot supply Russia 's additional needs." said a spokesman for B. \V. D~·er & Co .. sugar economists and brokers. In \Va shii:igton. Agricullurc Depart- ment officials suid they had either no information or "only rumors" about reported new Ru ssian purchases. But ir the reports prove aceurall', -\Villiam N. Starkey or the agency·s Foreign Service said, it '>''ould probably lead to still more increases in sugar prices. Secretary of Treasury \Villiam E. Simon said government hearings would be held to determine whether refiners are reaping excessive proCits. One refiner. Amstar Inc., reported a profit increase of 1,100 per- cent. Snorkel Resc ue SAN FRANCISCO IUPl>-TheSan Francisco Fire Department Monda y used its $110.000 "snorkel." a high· rising rescue vehicle. to prevent a The amendment to the park code would make developers pay market value of l~nd plus the cost or im - provements if the developer wanted lo dedicate less than the required_4,5 acres per 1.000 residents 'l'he code presently eall s fo r ,payment of assessed \•aluc, one· rourth of mf!rkct value, when the In the case of that development. he s a id . reducing the park-land dedication requirements from 4.S tlii 3.8 acres per 1.000 residents would have '"serious implications to the sales and rental costs of housing.·• The added cost of $1.08 million 1>ayments in stead or land dedication. he said. ultimately would be bor~by the 5.000 re_sidents as costs ""l rc passed alone. . Newsh,.Y. Killed ·Bomb Goes Off on Paper Route !\11LWAUKEE. Wis. (API -A newspaper carrier was killed today when a bomb placed on a car exploded on his Northwest Side delivery route, police said. Police said the bomb. in j-plain cardboard box, eiploded '>''hen it was moved by the victim. idenlf!ied as Larry Anstett, IS, a carrier for the l\lilwaukee Sentinel. Authorities said the youth apparently bec;amefurlous when he saw the box atop the late model car at the curb as he made his deliveries around 6:15 a.m. The bomb Vi'as placed on the.car some time during the night. police said. Th-e-nrc-l'dent ot?Ul'f~ outiiae tile Mme oF'R .K. Vermilyea, and the: car '>''US ow ned by Vermilyea's son Michael, 23 , a member or a local One of Nixon's daughters, Julie Nixon Eisenhower retur- ned to \Vashinglon after. spen- ding several days with her father. Her rerurn was seen as.a sign that Nixon w ali recovering. I-youth on a JO-story scaffold from en· motorc~·cl e.club rnown aS lleaVen's Devils. · , Police said the family had complained several times in recent months about harassment rrom members ot another motorcycle group, The . ·ding his life. The would-be jumper. Richard ~1cArthur, 21;of Las Vegas,· told police "1 'm )!,red or it all. l've gol nothing to live rot:· Outlaws. - Change Set In Irvine's Town Center \Vith little discussion. Irvine plan- ning commissioners. ratified changes made by the c ity couri.cil to the . proposed. 250·acre Uni versity Towo Center development fl.1onday. Changes to the lrYine Company proposal for the crescent-shaped par- cel between Campus Drive and Wil - liam l\lason R('gional Park. <icross Ca mpus Dri ve from UC. Irvine, in - clude: -A total of 20 percent of the 5.000 houses and apartments to be in a price range '>''hich can be afforded by those earni ng less than 515.000 :i year. Of th e tota l, 10 percent is to be built ror those fam ilies. primarily students. earning less than SS,000 a year. -A promenade mall across Cam. pus Dri Ye, co nnecting Town Center and UC I. \vilh a people-mover system providing lransportation between the areas and through Town Ce nter. The plann ing commission approval was required because the city council made the changes after the proposal had been reviewed by the commis- sion. Mills Favored To Win, Easily LITI!.E ROCK . Ark : <A Pt -Rep, \\lilbur D. i\Tills faces his strong est challenge in )'('ars today, but polls in · dicate he will easily '>''in re-election (Iver Republican Judy Petty. !\Tills. 6S, chairman of the •touse \\1:.iys .a nd l\1eani-Committee 1~ seeking his 191h term inthe liousc. • Alt.hough l\1ill s· involvement in ;1n Ocl. 7 incident in \\'ashington in v.ih\ch :t rormer stripper jumped from !\tills'. car and attempted v.•hat police said '>''as suicide in the capilal'.sTidal Basin Wlil!I highly publicized . • It was reported that the rather had l<iken out $38,000 'A"Orth or life in· surance on his l\\'O children five days before l-lalloween. Rhodes would neither confirm nor denylhereport. The charges, specifically for mur- der by poison. were filed just before midnight ri.tonday. Police said rour other straws con- taining candy powder mixed with cyanide g ranules were round by police in O"Bryan's neighborhood. but apparently no other youngsters had eaten one. Police said the rather had taken hi s c hildren. trick·or· treating because of the late hour and. light rain. O'Bryan told police where they went. and so the in Yestigation focused on that area, a two-block section of the city. (Set> C\'AN IDE. Page A2> Ornnf,!e \t aria.ble h igh cloudines s through \Vcdncsday. with sli ghtly u·armcr day~ ~ind cool. nights. Beach highs at ~ rising lo the mid-70 s inland. Lov.·s tonight dipping into thl· 40!:;. INSIDE 1'0Di\ \" Thl' safely of Amer1ca'ii 110 nuclear reacl ors remains a nag. g1ng questio n The problem '·'" examined 111 d,.1a1l 011 Page 69 loday. """'u"""'' '" Mt"'4on ., """"""''"'....... A IO Hll-1 ,..,..... •1 Or.,,.. Cw~tr Al ....... 111·1 s, ... ,.,.....,, ... ,. ..,, fl4·• $1M~Wr-t11 Alt•11 Ttlt•lllOI!. Al• 1"11ffl9'1 .,, WM\lltf At W.1MN••1 Al -DoWt <l Forget 0 V:ote;-~oils-Op~n u_.ttt-.~- • • , I. • • t':! DAIL V P1LDT College's . Trustees ·Eye Gym By FREDERICK SCllOEMEllL Ofll1tO.nrl'i•~ff 6 Trucks, Car Crash in Fog Cl-10\VCHILLA (,.\P) -Six trucks and one c ii r slam med together in dense fog on l.Jighwa:.· 152 fi\'e miles \•:est of here today, ]('a vinf;l at least one dead in the t"·istcd "·rceka~e. the California High\11'3)' PatrOI said. Traffic in both directions \Vas halted shortly after the 4: 15 a.n1 . crash "'hilc \vorkers strugglc>d to clC':1r lhc shat- tered vehicle's and cargo from the ro<id . offi cers said. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT r .. OtM>Cll too" 0.1•• P1101 wi•~w!litft ;•<om· bo....01 .. N•W\·Pr•H, <I p,.Dl•\.lleO D• l!'ll'Oo- """" Put11•..,ln<1 como•n• S.S.•r•l<l!'<l•I'°"" .,. pUCll!-. MO""•• 1n'°""" f.,a.,. !O< to.I• NII!••. Nt"'IHl'I S...Cll, "uM1n91"" 6'0<~ Foun t1111 \f1nty, l•••ne. ~•<1<1IU•..c• v.i•r1 •ncl U~ SeKll Sau!ll Co••I. A~"''I .. "°'"'''"' e<1111°"' ;, M••~"'" .... lu•<1••• -~·1~. rn. CM'•n<!J><il O.Obl•\11•"<1 P••nl " M 100 Wl!\I S.• !olrttl, (O\lf 1$~• (••1!orn•• 'D'2• Roberl N. Weed ~"••1<Mnl • ...., OuDf•''''" Joc k R. Curley ¥•(f Ptt\•<M~I • ...., (,en .... Ml-f Thomas Keev il ~Gl10r ThOmas A. Murphine Charle~ H. Loos Richctrd P. Nall A1 .. 11t•! Me ... 91119 E<lllb<1 Off icrs Cn•• IWI» J)O W.•I a.v Su"' N~'*'llClfl lkM~ JJ" Nf •-1 8oult•f•<I 1..•9""' Btt<", 11 .. G*'-""J•tSlft'fl M11t1UflOIOI' &ff(I\ 11111 lltMll -..rl ~ltO.<• V•Ut• U10t ~.i,-.1 Ro.cl t•S... 0-,, ..... , Telel)tlone 17141642-4321 ~l~ssitied Advertising "42·5671 s..ocri.11«• V•l1ev -OU It• Sll-6310 (OP"' "'' tt!O 0••~$f' (Diii l>ulll•""•r>q (OoooP•~• oto ,.._ •10<• .... •"•"''"''""' "dll«•ll m.l!tl It< •dv••l1_...n1, I'll""'~ ...... ? Or "0'°""''d wllf'IO~I >pt(••I Pt•,,.,\,.,,, 01 t•vri0111 11 .. 'lf'•, !!.o>tor>d t••n "'''" NIO ti "°'" i.ww C.hlPt~•• $u11Wr11tl""' "' ,.,..,,, \) .. _,ft[, "~ .... u "'Oll ,_ .... ,, ""l''"'' drilff\fl~ U.Ol rft(ltlf~ly ( Child-slaying Motlier Freed UEr\\'ER tU Pl l -A woman \\•ho usl'd u brnkt·n "'ine bottle to stab her 2·rear-old hon to death in a bathtub 11as rch:'a:;1«l rrom the Colorado State llospil:tl un l'o nd ition she continue rccc1 1·ing ps~ ch 1 atrir care nt her new home in S:ttl IJil·~o. officials said . i)l'lll't•r IJ1 s1rirt Jud~e Joseph Lilly ordt•rt:il thc rt'leasc or-cnrol\·n i\lt·tha rd. 31. after being lold by d0c- f(•rs at lhl' ho spital al Puchlo, Colo .. :>ht• 1i ao; nn loni.;er <la'fi~l·ruus to her- ~l'lf ur nlhvrs. ~J 1,~:; :\l 1•\ h:t rd \\'a.' coin milll'd to thC' h11,.µ1t :1l .1fll'I' plt':1tlu1i.: 1nn11ccnl by rca:-un of in:-:1111ty to lht• n1urder of her :-r•n, \\'dhan1 , No\'. 21, 196i. She h:id hl..'1.'n (•harg1·rl 111t h us1n!! the bottle to :;lnsh t hl' l·hild 's \1·ri sts and !!lub him 111 lhl' l'hl'S:t. f 'rt»111 1•11ge A I CYANIDE. •• O'Bryan told officers that Timothy, his sister Elizabeth. 5, and two rnends collected candy for a half an hour. and !hat later in the evening Timothy be'g· J.:Cd for a piece of candy and was al- Jo11·ed to eat the candy straw. · ··1'hirty seconds after I left Tim's room . I hc;ird him crv to me. 'Daddy. D01ddy , m y· s tomach hur1.s:·· O'RryanJold police. "111..• "·as in the ba throom. con - ,·ulsi ng. l'om·iting arid gasping and I hen he suddcnl.v went limp.'' During an interview ,.,rida\· <I' Bryan. an optometrist. sobbed ai1d ha id hii; son had never had an e~y . flarris l'ounly medical exa miner l)r. Jost·ph Jachimciyk said the drug. potassium cyanic!(>; "'aS packed in the top 11~·0 inches or the 22·inch long ··g1an1 pixie sticks ·- ''It 's a very deadly drug,·· Jachimc- zyk said. "That's '>''hY they use it in th cjlas chamber," " Rustlers B1•nted ("' Calf Carted Off iii Huntington llunt in~ton Bcoch polite were looking today ror a 325-pound calr named Rl'i;ins. ap parently taken rt1onday afternoon from u back ya rd . Tiii-: TllREE·MONTll·OLD .:..Angus·llolstcin crossbreed was i:I •·H' prOJt"'(I o\\ ned by Jennifer Oet.oyola , IS, of 16672 Blanton St .. police said. 1\ l:l 1rar-nld neighbor reported seeing ly,·o men leod the calf rrom lhe )ard. lhc n !'l:IW, the m'n leave in 11 late model grtcn and "".lJ-i_te pit:kup lrul·k. police sa id. _ - - TIIF. CAl.f', valued al SI SO. was described as black with four wh ite rCet, 11 small white dot near the right eye. a whlle spot on th~ tip-of the tail :tnd y,·h1t~ between the front legi>. • . . • • '\ • ! " ' I Kissinger . Suggests FoodBank Trustees Order New Bidding on Tennis Courts Contractors will be asked this week to submit new bids on a scaled-down proposal fot six tennis courts al Sad· dleback College. .. • . u .. 1,....,..... HE 'LL STEP DOWN Justlce-AldePetersen . P etersen Quits Job at Justice Department ' \\'ASlllNG'fON tUPI) -1-lcnry E . • Petersen. hi s government career clbuded during its last two years by charges he cooperated with the White House on narrowing the Watergate in- vestigation. is retiring from the Justice Department, it was announ· ced today. Petersen was head or the criminal_ division ::,ind in charge of the original investigation of the Watergate break· in .until th e-Waterg·ate s pecial . prosecution force was formed. White flo\J se conversations between President Nixon and aides indicated that Petersen was reporting the progress of the investigation' to the .- Presidenl. The White l-lou se released an ex · change of letters in which President Ford praised Petersen's record of achievement. Attorney General William B. Saxbe said Petersen 's decision to retire after more than 25 years with the Justice Department was entirely his own. Petersen repeatedly denied wrong· doing and defended his judgme nt during the Watergate investigation. I-le gav~ a healed defense when he "'as catled aS the last witness in 1973 Senate Watergafe hearings. "Damn ! I think it's a refieclion on me and the Department of Justice," he said, referring to the appointment or Archibald Cox as a s pecial prosecutor lo t~ke over the case. Petersen said his team was "on the verge of breaking that case wide open'' when Cox took over. Thugs Strike At Restaurant New plans reviewed l\fonday night An El Toro restaurant was robbed by coll ege district t~ustees c~JI ro; six of $700 1'fonday ni ght by two men who courts, prof essiona l l1 g ht1n g, sat and sipped coffee for some time r~stroom -a nd-s~orage-facilities:, fen --15efore oneortnem prOduced llpistol -- c1ng and w~te r 11.nes. and demanded the takings. The proJect 1s ex~cted t~ C«?Sl \V ai tr css Ca nd y Berger of abou.t $190.000. accord1n.e-to d1 stn.('l Jonolhan's Restaurant, 23862 Bridger architects. Trustees agreed to bid. Road, told Orange CounLy Sherifr's of. f~neing separ.ately to reduce that por~ ficers she was ordered by one of the t1onofthepro1ectcost. two bandits: "Give me the money . Original bids came in at $240',044, from the cash drawer." about $18,000 more tharf what "'as The "'aitress said she did so al the budgeted for the courts. Tru~tees then point of a small cali ber automatic pared more tha n $50,000 1n extras pistol. from the plans. Miss Berger told ofrit'ers the t"'o New bids will be opened Nov. 14. If a men then CJed from the restaurant and bid is accepted .. architl1tts said the drove~ff at high speed. Sheriff 's of. courts coul d be installed by the end of ficers are circulating their desc rip· January. lions throughout the county today, A WORD TO THE WISE- • I • There is a tend~ncy for many carpet stores to use strictly a warehouse concept. One advantage is seeing carpeting in rolls rather than samples. Many disadvantages are evident -most operations of this type buy only Offi10Qds, so that the customer only gets to see old patterns, or carpets the mills couldn't sell to regular outlets. Also. this type of operat ion generally feels that experience is unimportant, and consequently the salespeople know little or nothing about th e products. Fi nally, most will faflll out the insta llations to the lowest bi'dder, guaranteeing a poor installation. (Many of these installers are contracting illegally without a state license.) · At Alden's we maintain a happy medium: ·We carry a large rinventory, and the largest sample selection around. We have experienced salespeople, and our installers were trained by us. Finally, we are a state licensed contractot. ' . ' • AI DEN'S . CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Aye. • COST A MISA . -646°4838 ' ~ 'HOUU:-lln'lllon., 9 to l :lO-Fll,. 9 to 9 -SAT. 9:l0Jo 5 I '1 ---- I_ - . ' Bu·ntington~ Beach Fountain Valley EDITION 1 , .. . ' ' • V OL . 67, NO . 309, 2SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUN TY, CALI FORN IA TUESDAY, NOVEM BER 5, 1974 Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks . TEN CE NT S ~W·est nnty Voter Turnout Light I Pre cinct Logs Only 5 .Percent Election turnouts in 1-luntingtOn Be<tc h and Fountain Valley appeared light this morning, despite ballots cal- ling for v.oters lo choose from a num- ber of controversial candidates and issues. In·one Huntington Beach precinct only five percent of the registered voters cast ballots in the first three hours polls were open. Voters in Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley will ~hoose among in- cu mbent Da v id L . Baker and Laurence J. "Larry " Schmit for supervjsor in Orange County's Second Distri~L . ' , Another race voters will decide is be tween incumbent Assembl)Wllan ' Robert 1-1 '.--R.ur.ke... c.R:Hunlington..___!t:-;.., Be ach ) anii Democrat Dennis ,.. l\1angcrs . • In addition . PropOsition A asks county voters to pay £or more mass transit. The lluntl ngton Beach Union 1-ligh School District's 13.5.-cent t!:l.L9.'>!e.r-O.lty PllOI P~cllo I" Tl"' Cll'fille • ride for construction or a new high school also is on the ballot. And voters in Huntington Beach will advise the city council on whether or not lo retain a controversial real estate transfer tax lo resolve budget deficiencies. or switch to another form HUNTINGTON BEACH'S CITY HALL: "LUXURY ITEMS' GET A HARD LOOK Councilmen Decide Th ey Can Do Without Offices and a $60 ,000 Piece of Sculpture ' Go \liki11gs Leading the cheers at 11untingt0n Beach's l\larina High School Jhis f~!Lis__this_s_pirited group o·r yell leaders. On th-e left \ving is Cathy Valle rcamp. On the ri ght wing is Cf\ren Turley. Others I from top I a1•c Pam Dudley, Dale r.1urakami, Lisa Gurvit z, K<iren 1'aylor and Wend i-Siehl. · Racial Tension Eases of taxation. Generally, election offici'als today were reluctant ,to specul ate on whether 1974 will live up to predic· tions of low voter turnouts. Locally, how many commuters stop Civic Ce nte r Budge t Sliced In H11ntington- by the polls on their way home tonight • probably W.lLbe UJe deciding ractor in By TERRY COVILLE turnout. ~1rwo.11,l't1111~" lluntinglon Beach City Clerk Ali cia A S60,000 pij!Ce of sculpture and six: Wentworth said votihg between 5 and pri\•ate offices for city councilmen S_p.m. historically has been hea\•iest were among items sliced !\Ionda¥ in the city. . night · from a. proposed half-mil~ion County officials have predicted a 68 dollar expansion or the new 1'lunt1ng- percent turnout . Mrs. Wentworth, ton BeaC~ civi c center. however. believes that fiiure!Stifgh-. -Counc1\men c u~ $209,200 fr~m In 1'1untington Beach's municipal proposed expenditures totalling election last A-pril, she poin.led out. S494. 700. only 17 pe rcent of those registered "'These are all great. needed and voted. impo rtant projects," commented Councilwoman J.larriett Wieder. "But we're having a financial problem. In good conscience "''e can't spend this .. money pubhcly. She set the tone lor a h8 rd council look a l several proposals for remodeling, expanding and re pairing the ne"' rive-story city hall and three- story police headquarters. Weather's No Excuse for ·Not Voting Today By the Associated Press The early vote turnout was mixed "'I'm not ready to spend a half-mil- lion dollars. What percentage of these dv we really have lo move on?'' asked !\1rs . Wieder. -When it was finished. councilm en cut a number of items they termed · ·1uxur'ies, not necessities.·· At Los Amigos S today as Californians cast ballots in a h I post-Watergate referendum on in-C 0 0 nation, political disenchantment and -to a degree -eight years of hold · The actual cuts will h ave to be made by the Public Facilities Cor- poration which controls the purse strings for civic center expenditures. lly P,>\TTY BURNETT Ot lllt !Moily Pllel Still Racial rriction '''hic h erup,ed last v•cek has give n v.·ay to dialogue today at Los Amigos l-l igh School in foun· lain Vull ey. But no ont> is jumping to the con- clusion that the rift bel\\'een Chicano and An glo studl'nls is resolved. Principa l Kenneth Culk ins rt'ported ra utiously. "things seem Lo br ~ . ~ helJl and aclcicc in keeping the calm. "Parents <t lso v.•ill hear the ad- ntinislralion's. account or 'vhat did und \\•hat didn 't reallY happen." Calkins said. Though uecounls vary, 1\rroyo saitt racial slurs set off a nght \Vednesday. Thursday's confrontation apparently \1·as in retati alion. School offi ci als called for policf' help ·and sent students home curly ~uictin g do"·n. ·· ~ both Thursday and l-Tiduy. ~ "'rhcre is dialogue, he says. And . . . there is one particularly positiv1:.........._ D!1!·1ng n1 osl periods r-.1onday, fi ve resull ... <.1dded vice principal Hay Ar· additional teachers or parent volun- royo · IL•e rs patrolled the ca1npus us a ' security precaution. Calkins said. l~e prcscnta ti\.-es of't\\'O student fa c-'l'he day p;.assed "'ilhout incident. lions. "hb ·openl y clashed Thursday on the northe a st J."ountain Valley the-line Republican administration. The weather was no deterrent -a fair Indian summer day Over much of the nation's most populous state. It was s unny in the vote-rich Los Angeles area where the two can- didates for governor cast their bal-' lots , presumably for themselves. Democrat Edmund G. Brown Jr .. 36, voted at a hillside home in the neighborhood or his $70,000 bachelor home in the Laurel Canyon area of Los Angeles. Republican 1'1ouston I. Flournoy, 45, and his wife ~lidge, voted at l\lountain V i ew E l ementary Sc hool in Claremont. not far fron1 where J.1our- noy once taught about politics before entering it. Flournoy then planned to relax with a round of golf. California's votes also included that Councilmen made their recommen· dations, but also agreed· that a re"'' items, especially in the poli ce depart- ment, may be built anyway. if they can be justified. The money for the construction and refurbishing is in t~ civic center con- struction fund. If it isn't used for work on the civic center. after 1982 it can be used to pay off the bond money used to build city hall. a suggestion made by Darrel Ward of the Public Facilities Corporation, The civic center sculpture -$40,000 for the work itself and $20,000 to in- stall it -was one of the first items eliminuted. Three artis ts arc in competifion for the sculpture contr act under ar- rangements with the city's allied arts. CSeeCENTER, Page AZ> Hundreds Attend OC ' . Rites for Athlete By KATJIV CLA NC\' Of Ille D1llyPllolSUlf Ste phe n ''l\1ike f Fink-l ea, a promising 19·ycar-old scholar and lllhletc. "''as buried l\tonday. !\lo r e than 22S clas s rnatcs . teachers. coa ches. neighbors and relatives gathe red ut a small fun<'ral cha pe l lo mourn the death or Finklea dc_scribcd a s ··eve r y thing t~ everybody." l·le was captain of th e Orange Coas t College wrestling team and 1973 athlete of the year at Foun - tain Valley 1-ligh School. There were few dry eyes du ring the brief service. "I sa "'' a whole neighborhood on the street \\.'here l\1ikc li\•ed -I saw them bleeding "''ith the family," said the youth's unc le, the Rev. Enoch Finklea. \\'ho came from South · Carolina lo officiate a l the service. l\tourners overflo"'·ed the chapel at Peek Family _Co loni11.\ Funeral llome in \Vestminster , leaving many sitlini outside on fold ing chairs. !\lost of them Victim Sui~g Aft er Beatin g I\ ll untington Beac h man wh o claims he wa s severely beaten with a baseball bat afte r threats were made ~n hi s life sued five defenda nts ~Ion · day~l ofS305,000 indamagcs. Kenneth S~ott Kaiden claims in his Orange County Superior Court act ion that defend anl Robert Corona ad- ministered the beating last Au g. 29 at 19141 llandi La ne, llunlington Beach. Named as defendants \\'ilh Corona are Vella Nichols. Gene Pappas uni! minors Shi rley Putnins and Nicolette Pappas. Kaidcn further alleges that he has been hurasscd by pr;.i nk telephone cal- ls. reported to police on numerous oc- casions and almost dri\•en off the road in his car in an .actinn.<.illegedly l<.iken by One of the defcndants. attended ihe buria l art cr"-'ard al \Vest· mi nster l\lemori al Park. leaVing rliany s itting outs ideo;- folding chairs. !\I ost of them "attended the buria l afterwa rd al \Vestminster l\Jemorial Park. ··1 s t a nd s tronger and tall e r because I kn ew him," r-.1ike 's unc le said. "I-le contributed"SO much to ea(·h of us ."' Youn g Finklea \\'as s lain at mid· night Thursday by six bullets fired during the apparent holdup of a Foun-- tain Valley 7-Ele\'en l\1 arket where the youth bad been \\'Orking the past three weeks. !\1r . Finkl ea, wh o planne d to become a m ath teacher and wrestling coach. was working al the market at Euclid Street and Warner Avenue to help pay fo r hi s education. lie pl anned to transfer to Stanford Uni versity nex t fall. "I h<.t ve been thinking a lot since last Friday morning \\'hen Mike"s rather called me," said the Rev. Finklea. . · .. It was far beyond anything I had imagined," he s aid of his nephews 's tragic death. I-le expl ained most ·people "build "'alls'' around themselves, thinking such tragedies cannot touch them nu matter how much lhey read of sur h things happening lo others. 'rhe pastor s uggested thilt those "'ho knew l\1ike. tuke a lesson rrom him, <See FUNERAL, PaJt:e A2) Ora nlft' Coast Va ri able h igh c lo ud iness throug h \Vcdncsd ay, with slightly \\'armer days it nd cool ni ght s. BeD r h highs :1l 65 risi ng to thL• m id-70s inland. Lows toni ght dipping into th!.' 4~. campus, have agreed to form a com- mittee on s tude nt ri ghts and respon. 8ibililics. Arroyo said. lie wa s onC' o f lhe two ad- minislralors "'ho ml'I wilh three s·rocxs SURGE DESPITE SNA GS ol the former president. Richard fl.1. Nixon, who marked his absentee bal- lot ft1onday at the Long Be ach hospital where he is being treated for phlebitis. In the first two hours, \'Oling was rurining ahead of 1970 in the key county of Los Angeles, where the out- com·e oftc-n df:t c rmiheS statewide races. Rustlers Bunted l :\SIDE1'0DAV Anglos. three C hica nos and s tx . NEW YO RK (UPI) Prices closed .. teachers 1'·tonday. . sh.ar.ply bjgher today in fairly active On \Vedncsday thC group "''nf meef -trading n-l~e--New -York St<fek Calf Ca rte d Off in ' H uittington Tire snfel ,11 11f t\mrrica ·.~ r1n 11uclear rt•aclo r~ rPnuun., a naq. ping quest ion. Th t> problem ·r., f'Ittminer1 rn r!eta1/ on Pogt• 119 ruday. ag1tin to establis h the.right.:; com mil· ~xchange despite another break4_own t ee. "''hi h "''i ll a lso cons iSt or 1ncoa~negotlatlons. (Tabl~s1 Al1 ). 1----~r~c~p-'re~s"c'"n(a 1ves o black students at 1:h'E! Dow Jones 1nd.ustna1 avera~e . Los Ami •os which mo,•ed lower 1n early trading But by midmorning. the turnout had fallei\behind 1970, the last election for . governor. Huntington Beach police were looking tod ay fo r a 325·110und calf namt-d Resins. apparently taken Monday aftr rnoon trom a back yard ' ,, l •• S · followin~ a serond breakdown in the ''The comn1illee "'ill provide lhc coalta lk s. gained117.52pointsto674·.7S. ~ludents wlth-a...Corum to express Adv.ancesheldabouta three-to-one thcmselve!. t.~ channel isome.of these lead over declines among the t,742 resentments, Arroyo hopes. issues traded_ Toni ght, parents will have an opPor-Prices also were higher in iairly tunlty to express thei_r vic.ws. Al 7;30_ active_.lradlng on the American SlOck p.m. tn I he little theater 11~ the school Exc,hange. the udministratiOfl wt!\ usk parcnt51 --'"------------ • • The turnout in San Francisco, the traditional Democratic stronghold, was running slfghUy behindJ970. It wa slow in San Diego County, where Republicans tra.ditionaJly have to draw well to have a chance to win. 'There-was a hea.vy. lurnouLin somltl sections or the San Joaquin Valley but "fairly light" in FresnoCount,y. to ~ . • -............ . ~ -· THE TllR EE·MONTll·OLD Angus·ll 'l lstcin crossbreetl was a 4-1-1 project.owned by J ennifer De Loyola , 15. of 16672 Bl anton Sl ., poli ce said. A 13:Y.ea r-0ld neighbor reported seeing two me n tcad~lhe c;.alf fron1 the yard., the n s uw the men ICU\'(' in a I alt· model green :ind "'hile pickup lru~k.. poll·ctrsald. THE CAl.f'. \'alued at $150. wa$ dc~cribcd a~ bl ack with four "'hite feet. a small white dot. near the Mght eye. a wbite spot on thr tip or the tai l and white between the front legs. , ' . - . ' . . - . ,) • • Erm1 .. m•ct IJ l M,hJCI "' C..111«~11 "~ CMI'"'"' 11.u' Qmt(1 IJ Cto .... rd I J Otlffr""ttCK a I -1-.i.. .. 1 ,,,. ... '-~"rt"n-"'• •r l'1M"t' A1f·I "'Ge'..... ., . it. .. u,.,. I J llltt<mhloltll I I I -~-... -•li:I ~I PIOM1 iqn...,1w...., o..,,..c:...u, _ .. ~, ...... "'~ -· $1 .. -"'-•ktt5 T•llv1"eft Tllllltrl W.tl"9r ,..NfttW'.1 .. " ... .. •• •1 1·1 ... ••• All· II ... " .. .. ' . I • /12 DAILY PILOT H/F . l 1Htsd!J. No.mbet s. 1974 ·stop That Boat . . Runaway Ve ss el Overtaken ·A pilolless, runaway boat heading out to sea in Newport HarbOr thla morning \o\'as bourdcd by a llarbor Patrol officer and returned to Ila chagri ncd owner. TllE OWNER has been Jen on a dock near the Harbor Patrol slation when the SJS,000 boat somehow slipped into ie~r and started Its lonely journey while efforts were being made to tie it down. Witnes)les hailed the l·larbor Patrol as the 43-foot Nausika headed in a straight line out lo the harbor's entry cJlannel. TllE ~·\YWARD cran was overhauled by a patroi boat a~ ~fficer Charles Chick leaped aboard to bring it under control. Chirk returned the vessel to its owner, Von Price, 43, Corona, whose hands were blistered \\'hen he tried to divert the boat from its 8:30 a.m. solo departu re by h<i~ging Q/l to its moori ng ropes. Te~a s Traged y Dad Held in Poison Candy Death of Son ... . $I:. Million Bid Eyed _ . . By Seniors ' By TERR V COVILl.E Ollllt O.UrflOlllSUlt Senior citizens in J-luntington Beach, with the help of the city, wiU ask Orange County Supervisors soon for a SI .I million social-service · ·grant from. county revenue sharing funds. The bulk of the cash, $906,450, would· be s pent on the construction or a senior c iti zen meeting hall and headquarters -possibly downtown where the old city hall still stands. Another $100,000 would be u1ed. to demolish old city hall an~ the vacant police building, while $119,290 would be. requested to establish formal senior citizen programs at the new center. City councilmen agreed to submit the request, which would also commit the city to spend about $35,000 to $62.000 annually to operate the seniors hall. • • ' • o.llJl'lllllMI",.... PASADENA. Tex. (UPI) -The father of an 8-year-old boy fatally poisoned on Halloween night by a candy straw rilled with cyanide wa s charged With murder today and held under Sl00,000 bond. The co~nty funds are currently rrozen, according to City "Ad · Timothy fl.lark U'Hryan died late ministrator Dave Rowlands, but he MOURNERS GATHER FOR FUNERAL OF MURDERED FOUNTAIN VALLEY YOUTH •· More Than 225 Classmates, Neighbors and Rel1tlv~1 Pay Re1pect1 to Holdup Victim 'Politt, who had gone from door to door 'in a two•block area of this Houston suburb tracing the youth's trick-or-treat path, made the stui:ining announcement at a hastily called news ronference:·They said the father was in custody. • Sugar Co~ts -Soar--while Sovieis Buy 'LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -A major Southern California supermarket chain, which said it is selling sugar for less than it \\.'ill cost to restock if, ~ announced plans today to begin Jimiting the purchases or the com· modity on Thursday. Thursday from eating just one piece urged the council to submit the grant or candy. Hi s father, Robert Clark anyway so the city would be "at the O'Bryan, told police at the time his top of the list" when supervisors un· son begged to be allowed one treat freeze the funds. before going to ~d. Rowlands also cautioned that the "'We and the district attorney's of. old civic center at Slh and Main fice felt there was sufficient evidence streets, may not be the home for a at this time for a charge lo be filed," senior citizens facility if tha{ area is police Captain R. E. Rhodes said. needed for downtown redevelopment. "'There is no further comment at this Another site could be selected. time as we are still rounding up loose The seniors wo_uld like to build a Huntington Shooting Ruled Self-defense ends." 14.500-square-foot·facility which Rhodes, sitting by assistant Harris would include a large meeting hall. a Charges against l\o\"O men, arrested address, had been held on charges of County District Attorney Michael dining area, a kitchen, rooms for arts, after 'a lluntington Beach shooting assault with intent to commit'murder Hltlton , refused to say when O'Bryan crarts and games and a l(>Unge area. Thursday, were dropped Monday af-and posses~ion or dangerous weapons. had been arrested or what .led to lhe _. They also y.rant shuf'neboard,· put-ter the-O range ~ounty D.istrict Allor-Th!!Y were amon~ fi.ve persons ar- arrest, other than that the charges ~ol· ting green lawn bowling and patio ney ruled the pair acted 1n self defen-rested after a shooting at the Ronald lo.w.ed-.an invesl.i&a.lioD. He....teadJL._. facilitieso~l'tidf! the hall.-. _____ ~ . ....:_ _ _ _ _ _____Ro.ad ~~_dress lef~o.:..men wow>ded,. preparedstatementandrefusedtoan· An in-depth repOrt on the project, ~1arc Dewdney, , o 7743 Ronald0necr1t1cally. · swerquestions. development by the I rvine engineer-Road , •luntington Beach, and William Warren Hicks, 27. of Santa Ana, It was reported that the rath~r h_ad ing firm or VTN, covers 38 pages Gehrke, 24, who !isl" no permanent rem~ins in . Hun~ington Intercom- taken out $38,000 .worth of hfe 1n-listing proposed senior citizen ac-mun1ty Hospital with gunshot wounds · s~rani:e on his.two childr(!:n five days tivities and describing how the hal l in the chest and side. before J-lalloween. Rhodes would wouldbeused. p l Q 't After questioning the five m~n on neither confirm nor deny the report. Some activities and classes the city e e rs en Ul s Friday' Huntington Beach police The chilrges, •pecifically for mur-"'.O.uld li~e to provid~ for its senior released John Cooper, 24, al~o o.f the derby poison, were filed.just before c1t1zens include sewing, macrame, Job at Just;ce Ronald Ro~d addres$. and d1sm1ssed midnight l\fonday. needle~int, oi l painting, a~rylics, &< the possess10.n of dangerous \o\'eapons Police $.aid four other straws con· ceramics , sculpture, lapidary, charges against Gehrke and Dewd - taining candy powder mixed with jewelryandphotography. . D l l ney. cyanide· granules were found by Al so s ug~ested ar.e. social a~d ~par men The other wound~ man, Timothy police in O'Bryan's neighborhood, square dancing. exerc1s1ng, badm1n-1'-1orton, 2~. of Tustin was arra~ned but apparently no other youngsters ton~ roque, croquet, horses~oes, P.1on.d~y 1n West Orange County had eaten one. Police said the father quoits, bocce. s hde sho\o\'S, b1n60, WASJflNGTON CUPJ) -llenry E. municipal court on two charges of as· had taken his children trick-or· choral music, card playing, piool, bll-Petersen, his government career sault with intent to commit murder. treating becaUse of the late hour and liards, mass dining, Sunday break-clouded during its last two years by He was booked into custody Thur· •·ro111 Pnge A I ' . FUNERAL. • • "'the way he denied himsellio achieve what he wanted. "Heroes aren't made in a con.test. lle Wis a · tiero before 'he ever hit the wrestling mat." The Rev. Fi,.nklea suggested the mourners look ahead, re-examine their lives and try to improve them. "1'1ike has already finish'ed the CQl.tr~.W e are JUU an ,the playing.... ield," the' pastor said. "He is wat· .ching us as we take up the torch. •1 Cranston Tops $1 Million In Campaign The price of sugar has been skyrocketing for several months and could go even higher following reports Ulat lhe So\•iet Union ordered up to • 500,00o toOi in the o]market. Eugene \\'alsh. pre 'dent of Ralphs _9rocery company, s d Ralphs stores J <.1re selling five-po d bags o{ Sugar forS2:20;-or 44 cents a pound: - li ght rain. fasts, barbecues and table tennis. charges he cooperated with the White sday morning after being treated O'Bryan told police where they Th.ere would also ~several sup1,><>rt House on narrowing the Watergate in· for minor bullet wounds In the shoulder went, and so the investigation focused services made avadable to seniors vest.igation, is retiring fro.m the and arm at Orange County Medical onthatarea atwo-blocksect.ionofthe such as arrangements for transpor-Justice Department, It was announ· Center. city. ' _ tation. mess.ae_e.Jktiy.ery_,_ccunseling. ced today. _ _ _ _ .. _ ._ . . WASHINGTON !APl -Sen. Alan Cranstoq.,.clung to a slim lead today over Sen.L George McGovern for the distinction of running the most expen· sive Senate campaign of the year. with both men·s spending topping $1 million, 'A tabulation.Rf Caln aiJn SJ>:Cnding re ports a so Sfiows fiitformer ·astronaut John Glenn, running for the Senate in Ohio, lopped the SJ-million mark by the start of today's balloting. "'lt will cost us S2.S8 wholesale" to replace those ba gs, Wal sh said. "'All the chains have bought sugar :in 'advance and retail prices are lag- . ging behind wholesale prices. We will limit purchases of sugar to one five· pound bag pe r customer starting Thursday." he sa id. Other grocery chains did not an- nounce plans but a spokesman for Safe\o\·ay Stores. Inc. said there were -1ndicalions of customer stockpiling. "'Sales are a little heavier." he said. "'It appears quite a few customers are buying two five·pound bogs where they would have bought one before - it's not a dramatic thing, not what v.·e'd ~all a run on !iUl'!'.Rr. The average retail price of refined sugar has jumped from 18 cerits to 52 cents or more a pound since J anuary. 01nd a major TIC\\' demand on "'orld :;\lpplies, such as a 1najor Russian or- d~t. would dri\'e the pri ce significan- tl y higher. .. l'he So\'1t•t mO\'(' indic:ites the Russian s ugar heel crop is shorlcr lh:in e!epCcted and that Cuba cannot supply Russia's additional needs," ~aid a s jlokcsn1an for Il. \V . Dyer &: Co .. sugar cconon1 is ts and brokers. In Washington, Agriculture Dcparl· /" ment officials s aid they hnd either no information or .. ,only rumors" about re ported 11('\\' Ru s:-.i:1n purchases. OR AN GE COA1ST "" DAILY PILOT TlllOr-CN\I D•lly P<l<H,witl\ .. 111(1\lstam• llol'lf'dtloe lff""·P••••, Ii 11UIM1-~f trwOr..,91 to.IA P'Vttt•"'•"'I (om!l•n• '"'°'"'Mt f'6>l•Ofn .,., pulll1U\eoll . .....,,.., •• t~r .... 011 r.,...,,, i.... Co.t• ,,..,., Ntwpoo1 8'•<11. t<unt."9«1'1 &t..:l'l/F-· I~ V•lle,, l•Yillt, S•d<llfll,otk V•llf'J •"" ~Q""" flt..:1'1~"111 (O•ll /4 \1""lr14! r-1 """*' l!o IK>DI•\...., S.!u•d••• -s.,,,.,._,,, trw ..,.,UNI 1J11bt1'1l•"'lt p!•nt " it lOO l'<ISI e.,,y St•ftl.Co'.11• ...... u . C•l1la•n••.,•i.. Robert N. Weed P•r!1dtnl •M Publ"'"" ' JdC k R. Curley 'V'I" Prt<•oMn! ~~ C..n••M Mt.,.llt, Thomas Keev11 E<l<tor ThomdS A. MurphiM Mln•o•no Eallor Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nall A.u.hl1n1 Ml"IQ•"'I £dl!or1 Te rry.Covil le YH•t Or•nor '"""'' £"''°' Huntinqton Beach Office ·111/l Be.ell flour.w.,d MIUl"9 Add•ru. P O "°'HO,.,.,. Other Offices Uoo-IM.i." 1 ... C,...,.,..l'f"' 51,_1 «;Mi. i.r..w l>O ~11 &.w SI-• '*"'*' hl<ll XIU H••OOt'l l!oul<tv-~ltMI-v.u~v 11101 u .... Ro.a •• s.n o"wa • ·-•• Telephone (7 141642-4311 Classititd Advtrtising '42·S678 "-"'°''~°'.,...c"""''~1~ .540· 1220 C'.oll•••q1<1t, nu f.'"'• c...11 """"-"""'' C:0-flf ... n w~ •!••..-lliM\li'l!o ..... .0.1$1'••1 -IT•• <If •d~,,,.,.,...,., """"' ""'' _.._ ttllOlll..r.ilLll1UMhll 1.PO<i.i J!''""'''-... ~,,,.,,., ....... ~Cond rl ... 1191!•~ llf•d 11 C..1• """"°· (al110r"'-'Ulllt llpl•M bf C "'"'" \l (1(1 -1111, II~ .... ,, t• 00 l"'lt!fl!M1', m1ht.,, •~lil\rll-U DOmO"t~ly r, -a hot line for help, first aid emergency ~c~ersen "'.as heael or the cn"?"!na-1--- care and a fitness and health center. ~1v1s1~n a~d 1n charge of the ong1nal .. ·•'ron1 Page A l : · If seniors win the county grant, ~nvest1g.al1on o(the Watergate bre~k - VfN' estimates the start or construe-1'n unt1~ the Wate rgate special Council Sets • CENTER tion in November, 1975, and expects prose.cut1onforcewasfor~ed, the facility to be built and occupied by · ~1te Hou~e convers~hon~ be~ween . The public-interest group Common Cause prepared the tabulation from the most recent wave of campaign spending reports, which piled up over the weekend and cover the period up until 12 days ago -Oct. 24. • • • Study Session November 1976 President Nixon and aides 1nd1cated ' · that Petersen was r eporting the commission. progress of the investigation to the President. 1'he \Yhite I-louse released a n ex- change ,of letters in which President At one ti_me, lhe city had planned to place Edmund Sshumpert's Sll,000 metallic surfer at the city hall entran- ce. The s urfer was shined to the beach, however, \o\'hen City Ad ·· ministrator Daye Rowlands and ar- chitect Kurt Meyer objected. to ·its. naked form . Bargain .S_t,ereo Deal Lands M · . Ford praised Petersen's record of an achievement. The Fountain Valley City Council will hold a special 8 o'clock · study meeting tonight \o\'ith members of the city's Parks and Recreation Con1mis· sion. Afterward, councilmen \o\'iil meet in a "brie[___e:xecutive session," accor- ding to City !\tanager J ames N~al, to discuss~e rsonnel and labor relations. The Common Cause tally shO\o\'S Cranston. a Democrat seeking re· election over fairly light opposition in California. leading with $1.27 million raised and St.11 million spent. Councilmen also knocked out a proposal to spend $33,300 to build six: private council offices on the un- finished fifth noor. "'One office for the mayor (already built I and council and a conference room are sufficient," l\1ayor Al Coen suggested. CouncH members also objected to ' spending $30,000 for exterior signs . Sl,500 for a bulletin board and $4,000 to move the location of a projection sereen in the city council chamber. They also refused to put carpet over some or the cement public entry\o\•ays for noise control. ··we just can't always work under idea l conditions ... warned 1\-frs. Wieder. Changes the council did allow in· elude: --Construction Of administrative Of· fices on the fifth noor for the parks and recr~ation department, a cost of $35,500. Marlna High Dr ill Tean1 to Perform tilarina 1-li gh School's Valkyrie Drill Team \\'ill pC>rform before the Los r\ngeles Jtams·Allanta J"alcons game Sunday in the Lo s Angeles Coliseum. Under the direction of Jackie Bier· man. the group from Huntington Beach \o\'ill perrorm to tunes of "A Pretty Cirl Is Like a Jl.1elody," "Ashes to Ashes·· and the Ran1s' fight song. In City Jail A Huntington Beach industrial worker who said he paid $200 for a second·handstereoset. wilhasofaand love seal thrown in, got more than he bargained for in the deal, according to Costa &1esa police. Detective Norm Kutch said he received a tip that items allegedly !ilolen in a burglary had been sold to Roy Eben Stronach, 23, of 7682 Com- modore Circle. lnvestigato·rs from Costa Mesa \o\'cnt. to Strbnach's apartment Monday to discuss the matter with him, but he wasn'tthere. Kutch said two friends of Stronach who had dropped by to visit explained that their host had stepped out to make a telephone call and cordially invited lheofrirerintowait. , I-le said he arrested Stronach when he returned, after finding the allegedly stolen furniture. in addition to a sma ll quantity of alleged marijuana and hashish . The suspect, who said he thought the 5200 stereo was a barg_ain. remained in jail today in lieu of $2,500 bail, booked on charges of possession of stolen proper~y and possession of marijuana. 8 · Charged in Fire SEOUL. Korea (UPI ) -Eight per- sons were arrested and charged with negligence in the weekend fire at an office building and hotel complex thnl killed 88 persons. 6Softhem in a night· ~lub, poli ce said today. .Beach CouneilAction Here in caps.ulo rorm..are the major ad.ions taken Motrdlrntifit"tiY Ull!liuntlngtonDeachCityCouncil: . -~ - CITY llAt.I.: Cut more than $200,000 rrom a proposed hair-million doi- tarcity h"'all expansion and improvem~nl projeel. St:NIOR CITIZENS: Agreed to support a Sl·.1 million grant request ror senior citizens \o\'hi ch will be made to Orange County Supervisors. ELECTION: Strongly backed SUpervisor Dave Baker.'s re-elect10n bul. COUNTY: Gave narrow approval to the city's continuance iri the Jn· tcrgovernme nt a l Coordinaling·Cou ncll for one more year: r.CONOMVI Asked city &tarr members and community residCnt.s lo dcvelop'!iutgest1ons.ror flthtina lnnation. Rl(;YCLES: Agreed to seek cooperation from' the state to build a. bicycle tr ail on •luntlri'gton State llcach. • '" ~I • Attorney Gef\cr:il William B. Saxbe said Petersen's decision to retire after more than 25 years with the Justice Department was entirely his own. Petersen repeatedly denied wrong- doing and defended his judgment during the Watergate investigation. lie ga\fe a heated defense when he was called as the last v.•itness in 1973 Senate Watergate hearings. The city is currently involirted in contract ta lk s with municipal em· ployes. P.fcGovern trails only slightly behind, with $1 .10 million raised and Sl .3 million si>ent. "Damn! I think it's a renection on me and the Department of Justice," he said. reff;!rring to the appointment or Archibald Cox as a special prosecutor lo take over the case. Petersen said his team was "on the verge of breaking that .case wide open" \•:hen Cox took over. At the meeting with the recreation B com mission, councilmen are ex pee- led to discuss the future development of the Fountain Valley Recreation and Cultural Center. building a city hall fountain and building a park behind city hall. Tonight is the council's regularly scheduled m eeting night , but it was postponed until next Tuesday be· rause of the election. McGovern failed to carry his home s tale of Sout h Dakota as the Democratic nominee for president two ye ars ago, and this year faces a chall enge for re'·election to the Senate from a former prisoner of war, Leo Thorsness. McGovern 's s pendin( is aboul dou ble that of Thorsness' and amounts to about St.67 for every man, woman and child in hi s thinly populated state. ' -A ·woRD TO THE WISE- ' •• '. There is a tendency for many carpet stores to use strictly a warehouse concept. One adVantage is seeing carpeting in rolls rather than-samples. Many disadvantages are evident -most operations of this type buy only Off.goods, so that the customer only gets to see old patterns. or carpets the mills couldn't sett 10 regular outlets. Also. this type of operation gen'8rally feels that experience is unimportant. and consequently the salespeople know little or nothing about the products. Finally, mo st will farm out the installations lo the lowest bidder. guaranteeing a poor installation. (Many_ of these installers are contracling illegally without a slate hc~nse.) At 'Alden's we maintain a happy rpgdium. We cairy a large inventory. and the largest sample selection around. We have experienced salespeople. and our installers were trained by us. Finally, we are a S!ate licensed conlractof. , xtDEN" CARPETS • DRAPES 166 3 Plac~ntia Aft • COSTA MESA 64~4838 HOURl: Moo. "'"'T1oon. 910 S:lO-FRI.' lot-SAT. t:lOlo s • ,., .r . ' ' \ . ' . • • ' f .. • Tuesday, November 5. 1974 M DAILY Pit.OT Tight-lipped Seftrchers End ) Hunt Pilot Logbook • . Both Sides Right In Political Arena? By DOUGLAS FR ITZSCHE ' 04 IM 01;1, P1J.i S~lt A \'Ole ror Proposition 17, they say, is a vote to "Save the River." A \'Ole against Proposition 17 on today 's ballot, they say, is a vote to "'Deli ver. the River." It ll ll depends on who "they" are and v.•hat they think about the Stanislaus Ri ver. Explaining that to my JO-year-old proved a tough chore . The whole affair began as I struggled through the descriptions and arguments.on ~he 17 statewide bullot measures in the voter's handbook. As I was mahgn1ng the stale legisl;itive anulyst for hfs descriptions here and there of the "mi nor financial impact" of this or that, Daughter chirped, "Vote for Propos ition 17." 1 FlltfUCME Af'TER.1'1AKING a snide remark wh.ic_h w_ou ld huve mude \\I. C. Fields proud. my ~etter 1nst1.n~t s took over und I asked \\'h<it made her lhtnk Propos1 t1on 17 "'as s uch a good idea. "It 'll save the ri ver," s.hc retorted, citing <1 radio blurb heard on h_er favorite lceny·boppcr station \Vhy should you behcvc lhat, I \1·antcd to knov.·, .. BECAUSE they said it on the rudio."" ~he rctor· ted v.•ith a side"'·ays glance and a t.o~s or hci_-mane_. a gesture that seemed to say ";\ny more questions. v.·1s c guy?" "\\I.ho arc 't.he.y ""! .. I asked. ~ ··The people who want t?savc lh.e river.·· . . . . I llAD spent an hour Just get:1ng to Proposition 8 and I d1dn t know at that time how I would \'Ole on the rest. I handed her the voter's booklet v.·ith instructions to read the deScriPtions and arguments on her pet · proposition. ·· . · . h said "Sec After reading the arguments 1n fav-2:.r.of_tJ:!~~r~. s e _ ~--__ ..._ it "•il~~uvMhe;-iYer:'· . After being instructed that she couldn'.t believe that because tt pres~n­ tcd only one side, she read the arguments againsl. She was told that side v•as biased too. d · ?" h a ted to ''WELL. IF none of this is true, why do J have to.rea 1t . s e w n know. ...J ~. • • • d t d In an attempt.Mi put some perspec.tivc on things, I trie o raw an an<ilol:(y to somethlltg she kne"' -toy ads. . . . ,, ··RUt those arc just toys," she retorted .. "This is 1m.~rtant. " . ONLY T llE truth, she felt . v.·ould ~w ritten about import.ant. things: \\lh<it about science, I asked, playing on one or her favorite scholastic endeavors. I "But that's true," she said. . . . BRISGING her up to date oq the tnal of J ohn Thoma~ Sc.opes \Vho 1n 1925 commited the crime of teaching the theory of e~·oluttl_ln 1n Tennessee, 1 said both parties invol\•cd in that flap thought their beliefs cepresented l h~~~tt~idn "I God create man? It sa;s so in the Bible," she said. She ret- l"hcd a Bible and proved her point. . d ,·es, I said, bu t maybe God decided to use the pr~ess~f evolution to o it. \\la s she going to tell God \~·hat lie could or couldn l do. ~o she\~·as o 't. · ·h. k ' t Ttt E l'OIST, f said. v.·as that people v.·r1te what they t in . 1_s rue. Otd tb..at me.an.that both sides or the argu!Jle.nt on Propos1t1on 17 were true? 1'hat couldn'N:>c, shepointed out. · ··1 ·m confused." she said as her mother ushered her off to bed. I "'as too. ... No Report On· Fate Of Couple llONOLULU fUPI I -A weary and unshaven search team has returned from a South Sea coral a"toll, 1but refused to discuss its findings on lhc rate of a San Dieg<fcouple last heard from more than two m"onths ago. They went to the normall y uninhabited Palmyra Islands some 1.000 miles south of llonolulu trying to find some trace of Mr. and tilrs. l\la lcolm Graham, y;ho \.l•Crt! known to have gone there in September. The Grahams' ~.oo:i yacht. the Sea Wind. reappeared in llonolult1 'ol'ith a new paint job and obscured name and idenlification numerals. Federal agents arreslt'd one of the l\\'O person ~ aboard. l\liss, Stephan ie Stearns. who 'is in prison on $20,000 bail on a charge of stealing the boat. But a man identified as Buck V.'alker, about 36, J\1t. Vista, Colo .. managed to escape by di ving _nude into the Ala Wa i boat harbor. lie 1s lhe object of a v.·idening manhunt. "l'hc party or 10 federal agents. divers and searchers said s\mply "no comment" v.•hen they arrived home late !\-Tonda~'. But it was learned that Coast Gujlrd district COf!lm a ndcr Rear Ad~. \Villiam l\1ornson sent them a message ordering silence to the news media. The misSing 43·year·old retire~ .r-;'ai.:.y..office i;. and. his-40.yeaT-o\d-wife; Laverne. disappeared IO weeks ago. A llonolulu radio ham operator earlier talked v.•ith agenls who said they round no evidence to indi cate the couple "'as ··either dead or alive.'' The searcher s left here Thursday to fly to !he remote atoll which is a f11vorite of jet·settcrs"wishing to fish or dive for \\lorld War If relics. They did not explain why they returned home after less than 24 hou rs on the islands. ..., l\li ss Stearns .maintains lhC' Grahams in\·ited her and Walker aboard the boat for dinner aboard the Sea \Vind. She told agents the Grahums v.·cnt fis hing, but never returned. and said she found their dinghy in shark·infested waters a few days later. ~I iss Stearns said she made no ef- fort to contacl authorities about the Grahams for rear the Sea Wind would be confiscated.~ But Coast Guard officials con- tradict that story, saying Walker v.•as in touch with authorities in an attcn1pt to register the boat as his own. Old· Battle Recalled Chinese .Medal to Coast Man-29 Years Later By CARY GRANVILLE ..... ,Ofl)rD1ll•l'l10t"4" The furious 45·day land·air battle of Chihkaing ended 29 years ago. La~t week. Jim Orstad learned he "'ill be awarded a military citation for his role in the 1945 Struggle for control of the ancient Chinese city. "Chihkaing happened so long ago lhat I thought only those of us v.•ho were there remembered' it," Orstad rccenllv said. .. It's ·like a memory coming back to life," the SJ.year·old Ne'o\'port Beach resident added. Papers r ecommend in g th at citations be awarded Orstad a nd other American ;1irmen attached .to the Chinese-American Composite \Ving in World \Va r 11 'o\'Crc recently un- t'O\"Cl'l'd hy researc hers a t the Smithsonian Institution. '!'hey v.·ere among lhC' personal cf. feet: .. of an Army Air F'orce colonel v.•ho apparenll y died shortly after the Battl e uf Chihkai n~. •When the researchers found .-the papers. they contacted the F'lying Tiger Association and asked its of- ficials to truce dO\\'n survivors or the .. battle. o.ilJ l'l..i IWM ,...._ They 'ol'ill be 3\\'arded the China \\l ar i\1!'morial Decoration. JIM ORSTADTHEN As Young Officer The medal "'as establishe4 by the _ JIM ORSTAD NOW After 29 Years, a Medal Chi nese government headed by played by the s mall ban~ of ~merican· and his fellow airmen. Chi ang Kai-shek to honor foreigners airAlen in helping to obhlerate a • Qrs tad has vi\"id m emorie~ or his wh_o -distingui s h~d !hemselves on desperate 22,000·man Japanese ~l-<fays of duty at the the primitiv_e air Ch1n a·s behalf du·ring the v.•ar. · • tack on the aged city. base.""outside Chikhaing -a ·C~1nese ·· _ It will...!¥>l he the fi~s~ dec_oratio~ _Jll.uto.g_thUJuiol!s 4~·da)'. assa~lt, -_111\&::..~·n......LQ.:.llJ.tl.~k <![. his_J!c~el _ ~amcd.·tsyornmt·for his s~v1c~~a the city's air dcre"ndfrs "k1llecf one:-S2.000 in Chinese money 1n his fhgfrt' celestial navigator during his 19 fourth of the enemy troops, slashed vesttobribepossible Japaneseor . monlh assign"ment toihe Chinese· supp ly lin e s and com pletely Communistraptorsand ''noneoCthe America'n Co mposite v.ring.. paralyzed the enemy dri1·e," accor· convenicncesofflome." ll ~ _already holds an Air ~tedal, ding to the c itation. • . Now the owner of a residential built· F lyin g Cross and_ Purple He~rt . ll goes on to cite the destruclton or in appliance outlet in Santa Ana. Or- citations awarded him by the United 304 vehi cles. 39 river vessels , 48 stad has to haul the small glass case States.g.ove rnme n~. . . . ·bridges and "immense quanllties of that holds his earli er medals from a . Add1t1onall~. O~stad .s a!r u~1t wa ~-supi;)li es." closet to show the curious the colorful given a Pres1dent1al .C1tat1on,1n June No"·· 29 years later, the govern· reminders q(hi s past. . 1945 for its efforts 1n lhe Battle of ment that n o longer cont r ols "It's funny, after all these years Chihkaing. mainland China "'ants its praise ad -Chihk aing 'o\.'ould come up again;• he 'l'he citation ackno\vlcdges the role · ded to thal already dirccled al Orstad -said with a laugh. Q11oke Da11ger Capo School Sites Shut By PAMELA HALLAN' Of llM 01U, flli.t "41" Trustees of Capi strano Unified School District have ordered im· mediate closure of all buildings that. no not meet state earthquake standar· ds. at the gymnasium at the old Capistrano High SC'hool, used exten· sivC'l y by community groups, and t\\'O classroom buildings at lhe same location which arc used as main- tenance and repair shops. wide PTA Council Wednesday. Bookshop Hearing Set Not onl y will students be forbidden to enlcr the structures that do not comply with the state's Field Act , but the public a lso will be barred from them. Ttte tian goes into im mediate effect It also affects the Central District Office at Serra School in Capistrano· Beach hut will not apply until after this week because of its schcdiJ\ed use as a polling place in today's e~ect_ion and a meeting .Pl ace for !he d1stnct- · AlthoughJ the board wrestled with the idea of shutting down the Central l>istrict Office entirely ar'ld moving to rented facilities. they compromised by ordering a study prepared by Dec. 1 to determine· if they s hould rent of. fi ces or tear the old buildin g down and move into portable structures. Em- ployes or the district and adul ts on business will still use the non-conror- ming buildings. Laguna 's Fahrenheit 451 Owners Cite Innocence A La guna Bc ::rc h-boolrstrnp -o\\'nCf and hi :. 1\·ifl·. ~111 c·x·Catholic nun. racC' a '.\"o\·. 19 hearing on charges of ped- dhn~ pornog raphy. nearly a year af- lt•r the Art Colony case brokC' "'"ilh their arrests on charges or se!Hng smut\\" comic books. Gor(lon \\'ilson, 34, 01\·ncr of the Fahrc·nhcit ~5 1 . at 509 S. Coast lligh- \1a1', and hi s \l"lfl.' F.rclyn. 36, hu\"e p!t;arll'd innocl'nt lo the mi!iden1eanor t•hurge . 1'hl· hC';irinA-set for a \\t•ek from nc.'\t Tuesd:.i y -in South Orunge Cou nty .Judiria1 District Court, 1:aguna :'\iguel. h a d become a .. cause t•elebre .. , among La guna Beach's in- tel lectuals. Demonstrations h.11\"e been held s upporting thC' right to determine for onl'·s self \\'hat is or is not obscene or pornographir, inC'luding one parade at tht• Fcsti1·al of 1\rts grounds. ,\ spt>cial Lal'(una Bblch City Coun- cil mecling v.·as even urged for a hearing ;.it \1·hich citizens could air their o\1'n viE'WS on v.·hat is or is not al· lc,gC'cll~· obstcnt'. • • • • Dtltr l'llet !"Mia THEY AWAIT HEARING FOR ALLEGE.D PORNO SALES Laguna Bookstore Owners Evetyri Ind Gordon Wiison and Child • • " State la1v pre.empts local jurisdic- tion in such matters -rendering the Lui?una Beach City Coun cil powerless to set any slich community standards --but-city fathers felt the Art Colony citizens should ha ve their say. i\layor Roy 1-lolm refused to stage the hearing. . Protesters including book dealer \\'il son himself appeared at the rrgular council meeting with the defendant carrying one s ign that read: ··Burn People \\rho Burn Books, Not Books 'rhat Burn People.'' 'fhe key issue is purchase of a COl)Y of the underground publication "Zap c:omix"' 'ol'h ic h Orange Coun ty llistrict Attorney's invesligat ors cl:iim is obscene and pornographi c. \\'ilson and his wife, a former nun \Vho was pregnant at the time of their arrc:-;t last Dee. 2, also sell the BiblC', in addition to a variety of travel guides and textbooks. · They ha\•C \'Ov.•ed to carry their l'ii!hl against local censorship to the U.S. Su1>reme Court if nccessar.f. Pre liminary hearing for t hC' \\~ilsons v.'as originally srhedulcd for this f'riday in 4he. f,aguna Niguel courtroom . \\·ith legal rnunsel from r\n1erican Ci\"il IJiberties Union 11\Cl.L1l attorney Patricia llcrzoJ!. Thl' \Vil sons' arrests on charges of alll'gt'd smut·dcaling actua1\y include three p ubli cations. ''Z<ip , '·' ··G reaser." and "Ye llow flog Com ix."' A Distri ct AttornC'~"s spokesman fuelC'd the con troversy after it sur· (aced in Laguna Beach 11 months ago. 1 lc complained that if no bil! fuss h:.id been made O\"er the Couple's ar- '"L they probably would h"c "cop· Now everyone in the family can enjoy Adjust-A-Bed whether l><'fl out·· in police parlance. Y This ml'ans they v.·ould have sitting up watching TV. reading, relaxing tn the con tour DOSition or pleaded guilty 10 o lc~ser charge than flat for deep sound sleep . 1000 po sitions at th~ touch of a switch - thC' pornograP.tiY rap 1n return for .;:s•_<_· _1._ ___ mattr.ess.-fir-mAeSS---featber___so.fl_to__su.p_er.Jj lng.~h-oflly teken~hmen . A misdcmc;1nor l'iolatlon such :lS Why settle for a mattress that can only stay flat ? they :ire charged "'ilfl--.in Ca\iforni:1 .. \ carries. a maximum penalty or six Experience Adjust-A-Bed at our showrooms today or call for mon1hs in jail and a S500 fine upon. information and prices. con1·lctlon. Keep in mind that Ad1ust -A-Bed is one ot the wor ld's finest \ Agents Swo rn In gilts. • SAN Dlf;Go IAP) -Forty.one n~·w U<S. Oorder Patrol agents wet•e SM)rn-. in l\1onday and ris signcd lo beef up the Southern California border ar.to . The new agents jnln 162 currently Qn "line walch " along the inie"'Utlonal bOrdcr.. 1;;:¢ ~ ~ e:::::t. ADJUST-A-BED BY l>t:E E P E R l 0 U .N G E C 0 .. I N C • CITY Of ORANGE •11 SOUT'H MAIN ST. .!Just NOffh ol Fashion SaJ (71•) 63~41<12 ...... ·~ ·--' ) ' ' ' lt..J DAil Y t'ILOr' Tuesday, November S, 1974 Plenty Room At the Polls •ELECTION DAY 74: If you're one of those people who likes l.O escape crow<Js, there is proba bly a place you <'an st.ill go late on this, day lo elude them. Yo1;1 could e.o vote. Yes indeed. this was our election day for 1974 and as you read this, there is likely still time to get to the old voting booth before it 6huls down at 8p.m. Some political wag.type bbservers are suggesting cVen if they .left the ·polls open until midnight this election wouldn'ldraw a crowd. Out of sheer habit, ·r voted early_ today before the mists or the morning had cle~red from my windshield. 1 balloted In a church and l 'm pleased to report that the door didn't rail off the sant:tuary wall when I walked Into the place. SOME OF THE POlmCIANS on the ballot should be pleased lhat their names are in some churches today. It may be the closest they ever get to heaven. Early voting sometimes gives you a notion of how an election is going as far as inte~t and turnout Is cf':)cer · ned. \Veil, there was noelbow-pdshing __ __,,;in-line--at my precinct-early today: 'fhat was ma inly because there v.•ere'!.'t \'e ry m a ny el bov.'S around. Once there was thls politician who bad the motto. "A Choice Not an Echo." He v.·ouldn't have been tO!O happy in m y ·precinct in the early going today. The pl ace was filled with echos and no voters. President Ford really went out on a limb on Eiection ~ve. He said that people v.•ho don·t \'Ole will actually be voting No Con£idence in the govern· ment. Early tod ay it looked to me like the President was losin g in the con· fidence department. WELL. YOU CAN'T really blame the President for trying to get the voters to turn out. After all, what's he got to lose? All the pollsters and political hacks have this election doped out as a lar ge landslide \•ictory to r the Democrats. According to these dopesters. the Demos may t ake over two-thirds of the House and Senate and a whole gaggle of governorships. The shape the country is in today, you have to wonder v.·hy the Democ rats want it. Anyway. you can calculate by u rging t he vot e rs to t\lrn out, President Ford doesn't have a whole lot to lose. Ir the election could draw a crowd , t here might be a few Republicans in it. Coal Mine Executives WASHINGTON !UPll -United Mine Workers officials today walked out on what coal mine executives cal- led the best contract offer "In any major industry'' -alm05t assuring a strike next Tuesday that could cripple industry and cause electric shortages lhls winter. • The union said it was preparing. counter-proposals to try to head off a~ nationwide strike. GOVERNM ENT AND hanking ex- perts agree that if the union strikes when the current contract expires, it could severely curtail uUUUes and other key industries and put as many as 1 million persons out of work. The contract covers 120,000 minen In 25 states who produce 70 pertent of the nation's coal. Union president Arnold MiHer led the way out or negollations early today aner talks had resumed Mon- day night at the urging of governm.eot negotiators. - "With this contract proposal. they've declared a strike in the coal fields," said Miller or the o!rer from the Bituminous Coal Operators As· sociation. "There's not sufficient time ror ratification <by Nov. 12) and the membership will not ratify what they have given us " Gu y Farmer. chief negotiator for the BCOA , called the UMW walkout ·'incredible.·· .. U ... T ....... Surge,r!J Sen. J. W. Fulbright, ID-Ark .) "'ho is ending his 30-year Senate career in January, un- der\v ent minor surge ry at Bethesda Naval l\1edical Cen- ter Monday He wa s hospitalized for 'some correc· ti ve surgery·. hi s offi<:~ said . Religious Cult Leader Denies Sex -Practices "\VE GAVE THEM an ofrer that in my opinion has not been exceeded in any nef otiations in any major industry intota scope,"F.armersaid 'lcan't NEW 'YORK cUPll -Th e con~eive that they v .. ·otJld _say we give ''Children of God ," a religious cult ac· them provocation for a ~trike · ...cused by th.e New York a ttorney ElCperts predict that after one mon· general or practicing brainwashing th, a strike would force disruptions for :and" selCual abuse on its members. electric: uUlities which depend he1vlly ~ays the chart:es resulted from on .coal. That is e~ciallyjru~ lq thi! "religiouseint.oleranc&J.'.-· ~- southei.SC-WMriinvenlories are.low A 20-page s tatement mai~ed P.1any major steel producers have from the group's Dallas headquarters Jess than a 20-"day supply of coal on and signed by Corne lius Copp, hand a nd some rumaces would be described by a Dallas member a s •·a closed in the second week of a strike, high ranking leader" or the Children according to industry estimates of-\{;od, s aid Attorney General Loui s Chase Manhattan Bank economists J . l:.et1cowiti was "relying on false reported Monday the U.S. economy is witnesses to viliry us". in his report is· ''particularly ill prepared to suedlaslmonth. withstand a long strike." "Steel, railroads and electric utilities would be the first sectors to feel the impact but the effects could spread beyond these industries if the strike were to be an elCtended one," the economists added. I\ PROLONGED strike could add 600,()()(f-to 1 million workers to the jobless roles, driving the unem· ployment rate, now al a three-year high or 6 percent, to 7 percent. accor· ding to the "Federal Office or Emergency Preparedness. Fly Me, I 'll .Get You Higher Say Airlines COPP SAK> HE hoped his rebuttal would be "benericial to our ca use of spceading th e love o f J,esu s throughout the world." , fie said he wanted to "warn other religious groups, particularly those consisting primarily Of young per· sons, that religious intolerance exists in New York, and those or us who choose to worship Jesus Christ in a manner not approved or by the At· torney General of the Slate or New York run the danger of being vilified ~nd accused by him for doing so.''. Le£kowiti said he stood by the report. The report made public Oct. 13, cited testimony from 74 witnesses, in· eluding 14 form er membe rs . 14 parents of members, and silC present members. .·. The religious group claims 3,500 members, a large number living in 120 communes or colonies in 65 coun- tries. ~llAMI <UPt) -National Airlines, COPP DENIED the charges. s~kebound for 108 d~ys until last "Our goal is to direct a person's •' • ' Israeli K.idnaping Copter_ Force !Vabs tebanese. Official By U1l&ff PreuhilernatJoul A helicopter.borne Israeli force en- tered a South Lebanon border village early today and lddnaped the local .mayor and his ion .tter blowln• up their ~mt, Arab newsmen lo tbe region 811.id. The" Israeli force landed near the village of At ajdal Zoun, north of Nakoura and some seven miles from the Israeli border shortly after mid- ni ght, they said. THE ISRAELIS surrounded the vil- lage, searched Mayor Aref Salman's house. blew up the one-story building and kidnaped Salm.an and his son Ali before withdrawing, the newsmen said. The Israeli military command did not mention helicopters but said Israeli troops blew up a house used by Palestinian guerrillas and returned with the two men. It said the two were undergoing questioning as suspected guerrilla collaborators. The flareup in military activity against the l'al.estinlans came as Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger ~repared to i-eturn to the Middle East tonight to try to pick up where he left off. He files fir&t to Cairo from Rom e where he discussed Jerusalem and the ~1iddle East with Pope Paul VI. He visits Saudi Arabia and Jordan Wed- DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delivery of the Doily Pilot is guaranteed . """1doy.friday: If Y<!tl do ·not """ yox -by 5:30 p.m. toll ond Y""' __ <!IP.V_~l!b• bniuob.t.JQ~Jolll.co ldlen U'ffd f:MP:m. • Sol"'*>y ond Sunday: If Y<!tJ do not . ,..... ,.... """ by 9 o.m. Solunlor., er 8 a.m. Sunday. call ond o aopy will be t:rtujtt to you. tolls «e tt*en ll'ltil . 10 o.m. Telephones """' Oronge County ,.,,.. .. 6'2"'321 N:r1hwest Huntington Beach cn:I Westminster ....•..... s.t0-1220 Soo Clemente, (aptshCllo Beach. S... Juon Qip;stn1no;Dono PQnt, South Loguno, loguno tiguef "9S4630 nesday and Syria and lsiael Thur-said these goals are'tbe ~ aday. He was expeet.ed to disc'!" the of Israel's military mJCM, ao it can effects of the Arab s1:1mmlt on peace in Uve within safe and l9CUftl borden. the Midd)e East. Rabln 1aid Monday that llrael ltil1 In another development. Israeli hu DO!-ruled out necoUaUons •lf:h Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, lo the . Jortl.an a Kini Husaein over. Iarael s nrst official Israeli comment on the · possible return of the occupied West Arab summit conference at Rabat, Bank rerton. · . , said today the conference had streng-· .But Klng Husseta, in an mt~v1ew . thened Israel's resolve to maintain its, With ttie New Yo~I{ :ninea. 111d J~r­ str..ength and continue it.!I refusal to dan would rewr~te its co~titution neQ:otiate with the Palestine S090.and reorg1n1ie.the <:abinet and Liberation orcaniiation. P•!ltament to rem~ve represen· tat1ves of the Palestinians living ln the Jsr.aell-oecuple4 West Bank. "rf DOESN•T even enter our minds to deal with groUps.whoH goal i4 the destruction or Israel':-.. Rabin, told the Knesset (Parliament) in Jerusalem. Arab heads of state at the 111mmit designated the PLO to set up .a Palestinian slate on any land l1rae1· gives up on the occupied West Bank: or Jordan. ''The Rabat deci.Sion aim ply adds to our resolve to continue str\vinl for our already stated goals," be said: He Old Cases Pr()bed HE SAID JORDAN will give Palestinians living in the part of Jor- dan east ol the Jordan river the choice of Jordanian or Palestinian citizen~ ship. The Kina described the plan·- ned cbanges as the minimum neces- SarY to give meanina: tothedeclaion by the Ra bat iummit Cbnference last week to name the PLO u lbe tole representative of the P1le1tlntan people. Sniper Shoots Judge_ In New Jersey Court -_I . WANAQUE. N.J . (AP> -A bullet Witnesses told officentbe manned fired through a ·window fatally woun·· on foot. The weapon used In the ded a municipal judge while he was slaying, believed to be a .22-c:aliber- holding court. Police termed the rifle, had not been found, palit:eaaid. death a definite case or premeditated A d etective on the 15 ·m~mber murder. Wanaque police fon::e aajd all "put. About SO persons were lQ. the cour-·present and future cases.'' lbe judge • (room . No one else was hurt: was involved in were being checked , Municipal Court Judge Joseph 'bl •-d -cfescente, 71~1i5Silting 1n mssecorr-. . for~poiSl e.-a S--------·-- d-Ooor courtroom Monday night when "He runched in bis <:hair and asaid, the shot pierced a window and a 'What was that?'," said Capt. Joseph veF1elian blind behind his bench and Cisco, who was in the courtroom at the struck him in the back. He wa~ timeortheshooting. holding a probable cause hearing at t.henme. TllE MAGISTRATE died two hours later at CWilton Memorial Hospital in nearby Pompton Plains. Officers in this Passaic County community or 11,000 said they were looking 'for a young dart-skinned male. Witnesses said they saw him aim a rifle at the window or the cour· troom from the street. CISCO SAID he went to-.lhe Judce. loosened his robe and saw blood on bis back. He said others ln the courtroom scrambled for cover. "As far as we'reconcemed, tbereis no que1tion that this wu a case or premeditated murder," 1aid a police dispatcher iii Pompton Lakes, which serves as a central communications center for the area .. IS $10 .. 20 IMPORTANT? fIERE IN ORANGE COUNTY, you expect lo see a Republican vote. ·Des pite a n a rrowing of the r egistration gap, this is sti ll Republic an Co untry because normal· ly. the GOP peopl e will get to the Pol· Is. Thunder. lightning and wild horses couldn't keep them away from the voting booths. Today started bright and sunny. No telling how it will end. Frida¥• began passing out free mind in accordance with the Jaws of c047kta1~s to ~conomy cl~ passengers _god.and..man..'.s..r.esponsibilit.y.io.God_'..: -1-1--- on tts-M1amr-New Y?,Mc~ghts-M.~ay Copp said in response to charges or and tou.ched off a t;>oc?ze war with •brainwashing. "No one is forced into compet1ngE~st.ernAirli~es.· submission" t o our beliefs. The My LOSANGELEs FEDERAtSAVJNGS account earned more, Thus the onl y prediction you'll get from this corner is to watch the Orange Count y r e turns. If the Democrats are running close here -or even ahead. for heaven's sake --there may be some horrible GOP hangovers come Wednesday mor· n1ng. SO AS EVENING £alls this Tuesday Nov. 5, wh y n0:t do something dif· ferent from the rest of the people? Go on down to the precinct and cast that ballot. Eastern A1rhnes Chairman ~oyd Children or God , .. are not composed H~ll .• who ~enoun.ced the Nauonal of juveniles who are incapable or A1r~1nes action, said Eastern had no thinking for themselves." cho1cebutto.matchthefreedrinlr.s. Lefkowitz also charged the group's Hall _predicted that the cost of the leader, David Berg. with promoting rree dnnks even~ually would ha~e to unorthodox se"ual relationships be passed al~ng in the form of higher among comnlune members, including ra.res to drinkers and teetotallers a "mass betrothal" scene. alik~. . . "Berg announced that he was Jf it spre.ads! ~all said, it ~Id cost 'taking another wife' and thereupon. the nation s a1rhnes $100 m1lhon an· in the presence or his wife. other nually. . . . d erves members and their infant children. DeltaA1rhnes. whtchalrea ys consummated the 'marriage· with a steak and r~ee cham~agne to co~ch young g irl who had taken his fanc'y," passen,ers, 1ndi~ated it was studymg Lefkowitz char_ged. ''Additionally. the N~t1onalAirhnesactlon. various rem'll\e members are compel- Nal1onal formerly _ charged .coach led to have intercourse with the top passengers $1 .50 each for cocktails and leaders .• highballs. · Easte~n U.S. Wet, Rainy Plains States Clear Up After Heavy Flooding ....... (on.inf M"<'nlhPr V~"lblt ~10~ tlo .. d•~U 1~1 '"" , .......... . 1-.. ""'' tor -ell OI ~"";Mfll ••l' tort<M.I IFl lM.0.. L-lf 9'Mf'li-v••· pttt <6"'1fortlble Slllo1Mft\ll _,..... ift t•G~! ·••·101t. ..,,,,,n, -·· • 1t1 n ........ ,_, 1ntt-" • .,11ft~•-1 t1••M m•d u•d..,.•llO" C411•111 1-l)o•l!U!I\ Wiii ·-111'1• "\l -Ill 1"1-tfm-~ ..... \ Wiii •·-llfOl-ft .. Incl tt fht "'llor<" ~­P"•ll~'9""1! I>" •1 '-/Tldn S,0(.t)fto!~>'I~ lilCll"' ,1 ~-Id• , I ~1 11,.. OT ¥1'lDN£S DAT t'i""t ~'QI• l IS.f "'-l • f o°'ll'IW I U.f"'-JO s.c-~·'l'I '3' .. 111. '-' s..c.--t NCU'I. U s....."w•6 1'l.m .. ,.1-.•·S1pm ~.,W',1Q .J4pm.,:i.chll :llAll\. u ...... S•••••1nn,,, P<tl" ~ .... "«I •~tf "lvtll (II 1111 t l"ller" third ol !11o "•'I"" Ill(!••, bul Eled'' ..... 0.f -9'~'•"• ci.•• '"" "'~,..,.,..,,..Ml~· MYIUllll lltlltt "'"'t .. ~r!t Ill thP P ..... •.o: C-""1 ,...., "~" ..... 111,,.,,, ... ,_.... 04¥ br9Ufll1 M'I '"" 111110001"' f...,_ IMol •ro•• 'lfft•I l!IOll,~ flr\!Cllfll\ el """' !-!~•~ Co.I....,,... lofm thllf Jlllfl"'\ •w•IM-•- 0.-91 '''°"' IN • tl!Ot -ll!'lldl"'I P111 t>oolfl 1\lll'lllt<I •I _, Ill"" 110 lftlllll!rl, Al IOffl 1,.ea Pf•-••rt lor°" l•om •tti..r _, lfl "°''""" lltlw COwM, -. • ,., ...... 1 t,,,. ttlt!Pfflhtrl \ ..-r~lli'" -·I b'1NMI iflMd'I el INl.flllll· '111111,.nl 1,0,,., •"'" ~o,.. '"' la "" AP• ' !IAllCl'll ... , '"d $<\$ .. 51f'Ud '"'' '""' UllPt'r l(jf•~~·t-\ rtq>Ofl (l«UOf• Ny wei t"l IM tNUIV "-"'" '"' '''"' t •lt!IClofd fl"'9 t cdd '""" iill SeufMfl'I Olftom11 .. 11111 ~ .._..., tt.,rn"" """'' M1"11 .. 11p111 .. 11'¥ ltll"0\1911 ~ 0. nfgllll.il 111 ,"""""1'1 -.,_ c;,••I U'•l lo Ht• lf1911Ait, ......,, tt1M. tn •lllfl ot ••WI _ .... C..l\ll'l'llM, Mitt., TIW Ntt .... t wttrNI' S.""'(lt""O ~ -lfMI o .. <119111 Ofld lltU•iN:fllll'"""lti"ll ~ _....,,. " < ... ,_.., ........ ¥«MM .... ,_ <**Mii • ... ~(' lfl ~lt!OIMI""' ........ ~._.,,1lto:'I&..,,.. "''''*' .... ~,-lfWtollll ... -. "''' !II""'""'""'' All , ~ ~. llut U"*"'lll -llM• It foftu" IOf 1"8 t~tt ••t ftO r•llOf1\ DI ·~l>l!IQI Of IJiolUl'W· -lfltl"l'I _l .. M "' IM ...,.... GI' """"' ""' ~.,•••Pl'(led io,...,.,,,,.,.,s1oss al.,,.. ,,. to1~I to jinl btl-trwrl"' in t"'9 .......... 11W cio-!OW'ft I.ft Al\9Si.o.llllJll ""'1"'11¥ ..... 11.u...,.u. · T,..pft'fllure• -... ,...,_ ... " • -~ " .. .,.._ n .. <>-.,. .. o"''-" .. ft .,....._ " • ...... " • -M " ...... ft .. Fllr""41' " • --,, " "-c.i•• .. " ... _ " M Mi"T'I n .. w_.., .. " ~.,.n~ u " _ .. _ n .. ........... .. " Ol!l.,._(;1, • • ..... " M Pl111'1$0fi-• " .. JlhlfOtlp!\11 • M -· " M ~·-.;,: • Porll«KI, Ol'"I. • .. M ll .. Mot.fl""""' .. .. ....... -• M kll'-'MUl'f " " $.111 FritMIM• .. M S..ltle> • " • $10.20 more, than In a comparable savings 1,,.,~~ . account In a large =;f;?t.~&:i;.?' commercial bank. Day·in and day-out earnings, with interest ea med rrom tbe .first on the funds deposited by the 10th of every month can make earnings up to 41 % higher. Maximum interest rates are pre- scribed by Federal 1uthorities, but there ·are various methods used to compute intereat •.. and the people al Loo Angelea Fedtnl Sa•· ing1 compute interest in the mOft ftvprable method for saven. You'll find out how every doller earns every day when you mtb your opening depooll in your Loo An1eleo Fedenl Savings account. ANNUAL llVl'EREST RATES ON INSURED SAVINGS 5X'% .._ ... -. :::.~ :"'"i''I .. u,,.-.,..,.06)' ..... -... ., •.i.rt•I. • lltlll It< __ ... ,....., 5.39% AU i!ll!rnl cQlllflOUllCltd dlity 5Y.% 6X% I 6Y.% ~-· ,_ :t.::1 .. -. ·-· ·-·:""'.'·1 , ,1,111111-. ,~·=-·-=1>'1 -·" __ ... ., ... .,. .. ,. ..... 11>111"•·=" ""'-'~ llOIJr... " .. ., ... _ .. 5.92% 6.72% 6.98% . .... --· """''-~ IMflHI:. 7~ ,_ ·-· H~Mll~ ...-..... -; I E1am11l": "Each month ¥thtrn I J»id our hou11ehold bill1, I put 1100 in a Lott Angelee Federal S.'l'inp Pu.book Accounl. 7.79% In i2 month& m_y uvinp ~•med $34.28. Thlt'• 41 3 rnoff' or SI0.20 rnore lt\ln thecommt!rclll baink would havtt IJBid." ' LOS ANGELES ~ FEDERAL: . SAVINGS .... _ --·· .. =----I ... t tlN•hlt ... H 11 ltlt,. "'°'ICT..,., - EFFttTIVE NOVEMBER 27 • 'Savings are Better than Ever: . Account-Insurance Now· Doubled to $40,000.00 . -l ( . ' \, • ' i-- 1 I • ! Good, Bad News Of ·U~S. Economy • WASHINGTON !UPJ> _ A11 .t~e m ajor economic s t11llst1 cs point to a Uniled States tortured by ~nflaUon ;1nd recession. These statistics are is- !Ued separately. Putting t hem together helps show a full pict ure of how t he economy IS progressing F'or that reason UP I Jlresents a box score of the latest economi c 1nd1cators : PRICES : The Consumer Pnce In· dex increased 1n September by 1.2 percent. 1£ sustained this would translate into a~ .annual increase in con· sumer prices or 14 4 per- cent. In the first nine mon- _FINANCE lhs of thi s year, prices rose more than *1ey did an all of last year. oiirui':N1GiJ !~~™r!l!r ., Newport,.....Beach-headquartered Universal Data Corp. has...uamcd l"'-'O men to \'1ce president posts. ,.... Peter J. Gendron, of Newport Beach. has been appointed vice president and ch1e( r1nancia l orflcer. Donald E . Kerr of Cern tos has been named \'ICC president or marketing 1'hc firm is involved in computer 3nd management information systems. * Two promotions at Soond~Products D1v1s1on of Altec Corp. include Vinton J. Lackey, new vice president or manufact ur1n~ operations for the Anaheim (1rm. and Robert Rofkahr, vice president of marketing for the d1vis1on . INFLATION: Measured by a br oad gauge -called the GNP "den ator," a measurement preferred by econonusts ~ lnnation's pace was at an annual rate or 11.5 pc'rcent dunng the July.September penod or 1974. WHOLESALE P RICES: ~A pa rtial harbinger of things to co me, wholesale prices rose by one-tenth or l· percent in September, lhe smallest increase 1n 11 mon- ths and equivalent to a l 2 percent annual rate. Thls was well below the 3.7 per· cent annual rate rel'orded in August. UNE MPLOYMENT: J oblessness rose to 6 per- ~nt 1n October, the highest in three years. The number of une mp loyed persons looking {or work r eached 5.5 million out of a civilian wo rk force or 92 million. In Oct obe r or 1973, unem- ployment was 4 6 percent. OUTPUT: The nation's "real" Gross National Product . a measu1 e of the total output or goods and services ad· Justed to e li m inate the d1stort1ons or inflation, dechned 1n the tlurd quarter of 1974 at an annual rate of 2 9 perC'enl. This was the third consecutive drop. One com mon def1n1tion of reces- sion is a decline for two con- Secut1ve quarters In GNP. INDUSTRIAL OUTPUT: Rurkahr Jives In lluntinglon Beach and Lackey l-.--~r£§!<1es in La~ NigueJ.. ___ ----_ Production of U S. tn· dustrics-felt a l -an annual rate or lhree·tenths or 1 per- cent in the third quarter This compares with a rise or I 9 percent in the second <1uarter and a dechne 1n the first quarter of 6 6 percent ( George R l\tcKeoJ\, ch!.;.man and chief executive I t>fficer of McKeon Construction of lfunt1ngton Beach, has named I John J . Jlurford as president or the firm 's Ventura d1v1s1on. I -llurford was previoui ly national director or construction and cor- porate officer for Transamerica Development Co. r MUltFOltD - * Dennis \\'. Wooten has been transferred from fi eld consultant 1n San Francisco lo manager oftra1n}ng for bo'e\\'port F1nu nc tal Pl al.a 's Certified Plans, Inc. \Vooton was assistant to the \1ce president of marketing for Computj!-r Operations; Inc. of Costa ~tesa before Joining CPI. 1 '.t...-.-..* William F. Sch\\·1n has been elected vice president Qf the Orange Coast chapter of the National Association of Accountants ror the 1974·75 year. T he Costa A1esa reside nt is an audit m anager with !\loss, Adams and Company. * Santa Ana·based Shelly As~lales has announced the appointment of Robert R. Sears as national marketing munager !or the subsidiary of Datatron, In• 1fe was previously division manager ror western operations of l\1 1croelectron1c Testing Lab0rator1es and has 1 t yea rs exper ience with R ockwell International in a vanetyof engineering assignments. * -Mrs. Anne Blick, pr~ident and chief executive 11.ACk officer of Bob Bl.ck Oldsmobile in Santa An a, has been awarded the Oldsmobile franchise She is the first female Old- smobtle dealer in Orange County. The franchise was formerl y held by her husband who died 18 mon· ths ago. l\1rs. Black, the mother or rive, lives tn Santa Ana with two of the children * Robert \\'. Dlnllnger has been named to the J'I C\\'I)-created post of director or information systems for MSI Datl Corp. of Costa A-t esa. I-le "'as formerly director of management ser- vices at Olga Company of Van Nuys. * Dav id A. Swedlow. chairman of the board of Swedlo"'• Inc. or Garden Grove, has replaced Jtobert \V. ~II.ugh as president and chief executive orr.~. SimullaneousJy, the fi rm has closed its offices in Connecticut "ith acllvilies being transferred lo Gar· den Gro\·e , PRODUCT IVITY: Wo rker productivi ty - output per hour of work - fell at an annual rate of 3 percent 1n the third quarter. 'rh1s helped boost unit labor J c.'Osts at an annual rate of , 13 9 percent. Product1 v1ty often declines at th&ostart of ;.i recession , t here 1s not enough work to keep em· ployes occupied full lime, but the drop"in demand is not yet sha rp enough to Justify Iayorrs . PAY ; "Real" hourly pay'-ad· justed to wring out inflation -fe'll at an annual rate of 2 3 percent 1n t hird quarter. I Air Cal's .. Passenger Incre ase _Air California Hew an estimated 38,918,800 revenue passenger miles in October:- T h is compa r es t o 38,727 .600 in 1973, an 1n· crease of 0.5 percent. Available seat miles were do\\'n slightly to 60,066,l00 1n 1974 from 60,649,700 in 1973, for t he Newport Beach· based airline. Revenue passenger miles for the first 10 months of 1974 were 435.692,200 vs. 376.175,200 in 1973 (or a 15.8 percent increase, according to Joseph E. \Valker, as· s1stant vice pres1denl·sales ·for the intrastate carrier. A total of 107 .504 pas· sengers were earned in its satellite markets dunng Oc· tober, a decrease or 0.9 per. cent from last year. IND EXE S 39.54 69.78 674.65 75 II t up up up lll) . • 1.01 P.60 17.52 ' 20.3 Mond ay's Closing Prices t .... '!Ued!y1NOYefnber5.197.f *. DAILVPILOT "'I NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE ___ , Year'• Hlgh·Low1 Appear Ever)' Saturday -- i ..;: :':' , ... t'o-\o ~ .. lllo-l,. ·~·. '. l• • \o 11 • '. •!lt. '• .. lfl'o • ,.. i~. a. lll"o. 1"• II • It '.a. • 1.., l'O. I'll U'--t.,, •••• 111'1-u -... 1~"1 '' ... ~ l• . 1 .... 1 .. •• , • ''I "' u"'-'• ••• • • U 'I ' "'' . ,, ~lutu a l s Bait \\'ASlllNG1'0N IUP I l -The N-cur1t1 cs <inri Exchan1tc Commis.;1(>r\ h;1~ .1tlo1,tcd rull's to pcrn1h dtseounts .• for Jirou1r.purcha s~rs O( mutual (un{IS. The group discounts "''OUld rc!iull 1n brokc r :•gc fees of le!is than the ruslomary· ~ 5 percent, SEC offi cials said. The 1li~counl s "'ere one part or a ''1dL· r1.1n g1ni;: group or rule adoptions and proposci ls dcsii;tncd to incrf'a!le rompelit1on \Vi thln the industry and ft) attract mo·rc lnve!'tors to mutual fun- ds. I Boein g Dividend \VI CllT·rr\. K:1n. tA PJ -Director.. uf 1'he Ro1Jing Co, Inc , h:i\'C declared :1 sp('cl:il quartrrlv d1v1dl'nd after. rl•\ 1t.>w1ni:: the fOtnpany ·~ strong flnanc1<1\ r l'1H1lt" for lhl' third quarter arJCI flrail n1n~untbs ol lhe..)•c ' Hoth the rr~ul.1r 1~ cf'nl per sh3re and a Special 15·rfnt ptr 5hare di\ idt'nd!' will ba 1>w1d l>ee. 10 t'3 ~tntr hQ)dcrJi Of rcoord ov. 14,"the lmafd snid. • I • . - All DAll.YPlt.OT . . ' .. • . • ' NovembefS.1174 , . . ' I * .. ' " ·' .i>! • •• . 'I =tr-'.. ri .. .. -... -;" -..... ~/> . $J~-W:fl"'~---zc;--~~ -·-------~.- . 4;,~1f9 ; ..... -..... ~~fr: . "--?'° f: ~ AN~ fi-1 ""'· "· 1r...,,~r:.ri > • ~~,,,... ~I.~ I &CD AN ~~l7. ....,. .. , ... ~. f<:;. r_-:; , . :-:... .. . . . . ;·-_,~ -n.1uk · •NOw signed into law, effecti ve ~ovember 27 ~~~ • -. J ( ·- ~· -• {-• f' • • • raised to $40,000 for an individual, up to $560,000 for a family of 4. And Home-Savings offers even more.' Among all savings and loan associations, only. Horne Savings is over $51/• Billion Strong, Number 1 in the nation in both.savings and loans. N? financial institution pays more . on insured savings. Many do. not offer as much in interest, in free services, in added benefit s. Now increased insurance 'adds to the qualities that made Horne Savin.gs America 's Larg~~t ••• perfect safety since 1889 ... steady and sure high earnings ... Peace-of Mjnd. l NEWPORT BEACH 190 Newpo rt Center Drive 640·6100 . Member: FEDERAL Savings am! loan Insurance Corp. Member: FEDERAL Home loan Bank System ' ..• • • , .. • • - -• • ' - - • • s . ' . " • • . " " 7 , - • ' - I I I . " o_.ange Coast . EDITION • Today's Final · N.\'. Stoeks • VO L. 67, NO. 309, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1974 N TEN CENTS' Voters • m Stop That Boat 'Runaway Vessel Overtaken A 'pildtless, runaway boat heading out to sea in Newport Harbor this morning was tx>arded by a Harbor Patrol officer and returned to.its chagri ncd owner. TllE O\\'NER has been lert on a dock near the Harbor P~trol station when the $35,000 boat somehow sli pped into gear and started its lonely journey while efforts were being made to tie it down. Witness·es hailed the liarbor"Patrol as the 43.root Nausika headed in a straight line out to the harbor's"entry channel. THE WAYWARD cran was overhauled by a patrol boat and officer Charles Chick leaped aboard to bring it under control. _ Chick returned the vessel to its owner, Von Price, 43, Corona, whose hands were blistered when he tried to divert the boat from its 8:30 a.m. so!odeparture by hanging on to its mooring ropes. . Coffin Named New .... ._____ - Assistant City Attorney 0.11., """"SUH ......_ NEW LEGAL AIDE Newport's Coffin II ugh Cornn. a 31-year·old Hastings Law Sc hool g raduate, has been named Newport Beach 's new as· sistant city attorney. Coffin, who served in the Riverside city attorney's office four years, replaces Da vid Baade who left city service Friday to enter private prac · lice. Accordi ng to Ci ty Attorney Dennis O'Neil. his new assistant will act as legal courisel to the city Plannin11: Commission as well <J S genera l litir;ation matters. In addition to his experience "'ith the Ri\'erside city attorney's office. Coffin was a member of a private firm that acted as counsel to the cities or Norco and Corona and to the River- side Redevelopment Agency. The new assistant city attorney is married and the father of two boys. Coffin said he plans to mo\·e from Ri\·erside, his home tov.'n, to Ne"·port Beach ··as soon as possible." Ralphs to Linlit ·Buys Of Sugar to One Bag LOS ;\r-;GELES (U Pll -A major Southern Cillifornia supermarket chain, which said it is selling sugar for less than it will cost to restock if, annou n c~d plans today to begin limiting the purchases of the com· modity on Thursday. The price of sugar h as b een ~kyrockeling for several months and <'OU Id go e\•en higher following reports that the So\"iet Union ordered up to 500,000 ton s in the open market. Eugene \\'al sh. president or Ralphs Grocery company. said Ralph~ stores 11re selling ri ve.pound bags or sugar for $2.20. or 44 ce nts a pound . "It "'iii cost us S2.58 \\•hol esale "' to replace those bags. \\la lsh snid. .. All the chains have boug ht sugar in ~d\•ance and retail ptices ure Ja g- ging behind \.\'holesale prices. \\ic wi ll Jimil purchases of sugar to one five- • STOCKS SURGE DESPITE SNAGS NEW YORK IUPI ). Prices closed !harply hi gher today in fairly· active trading on the New York Stock Exchange despite another breakdown in coal negotiations. I Tables, A 11). • The Dow Jones industrial average. which moved lower in early tradipg rollowinia: a second breakdo14•n in the coal talks. gained 17.52..,polnts to 674 .75. Advances held about a three-to-one lead over decl.ihes among lhe 1. 742 Jssues traded, Prices also )Yere higher fn fairly active tradin~ on the Americin Stock 'Ex.c hange. pound bag pe r CU.§.lOm er startihg Thursday,·· he !l81d. Other groce ry chains did not an. nounce plans but a spokesman for Safeway Stores, Inc. said there were indications of customer stockpiling. "Sales are a little heavier." he said. ••ft appears quite a few customers are buying t'4'0 five-pound bags where they would have bought one before - it's not a dramatic thing, not 'o''hat \\·e"d call a run on sugar. The average retail price of rerined sugar has jumped from 18 cients to S2 cents or more a pound since January. and a major ncu• demand on \\'orld. supplies. suc h as a major Ru ssian or. der. \voulcl drive the 1>ri ce shznific ;i n- tly high<'r. ··The Soviet move indicates thl' Russian sugar l>cet crop is sho'rter than e xpected und that Cuba cannot supply Russia 's additional needs," ... aid a spokes man for 8 . \V. Dye r & Co .. s ugar economists and brokers . In \Vashington. Agriculture Deparl - ment officials said they had either no information or "only rumors" about reported new Russian purchases. But if the reports prove accurate. \Vil\iam N. Starkey or the agency's foreign Service said. il would probably lead to still more increases in sugar prices .. _ Stripped Auto AUSTIN, Tex. <UPI) -Police l\Ion- day found the stripped car of t\.\'O l\l or- mon missionaricl'l abandoned in a n apartment pa.rking lot. Gary Smith Darley, 20, of Simi Valley. Calif.. and 1'11al'k J~ Fischer, 19, of Milwaukee. \Vis ., disappe11red last week. ) ort ·'Enthusiastic' Turnout Not Heavy, However Keen interest among the voters that made the early trip lo the polling places m a rk ed election day in Newport Be ach. according to precinct workers. . ''People seem to be eager to pin their ballot-stubs to a lapel and are really in- terested ii;i how many people have voted so far," said Joan Reynolds, a - precinct Worker at a West Newport polling place." , Earlier checks with several precin- cts showed a k:e_eo interest, but not a spectacul ar turnout. · Some workers said they sensed tlJ,at more early birds were evident l,oday, in stead of the late arrivaJs · i,yh ich marked the primary balloting last June --......_ • -· _ ; . At a Balboa Island precinct the highest turnout was reported, 24 per. cent. Voting at th at precincl was routine. !\Trs. Rudy Baron. precinct super- visor. reported, with a steady stream of voters fro m the minute the polls (J~nedat7a.m . ··J\.1ost of our voterS" here on the Island are Republican, except for lhl' college students who are registered Democrats,'' l\.1rs. Baron said. j\t a precinct on the Balboa Penin· sula, l\.1rs. Hillary Thamer reported \'Ole rs were not making the usual com. men ts or ··not having a choice.·' "Generally, you hear grumbling about not having a choice of who to vole for . because they're all bad. But so Car today, no one has said that," Mrs. ·rhamer s aid. lier precinct hart a 15 percent turnou t. Voters a re easting their ballots for federal. state and county candidates, plus voting on a long list or state propositions . Local voters are also deciding the fate of Proposition Z. a measure placed on the ballot by Newport-Mesa Unified School .Distri ct trustees. The proposition requests a 53-cent tax boost for the coming.year. Polls are (Jpen until 8 p. m, Weather's No Excuse for Not Voting Today 8 )' the Associated P.:resit· The earl y v.ote turnout "'as mi xed today a·s Californians cast ballots in a post-Watergate referendum on in· nation, political disenchantment and -to a degree -eight years of hold - the·li ne Republican administration. The weather was no detcrrcnl -a fair lndiarl summer day o\/er much of the nation 's most populous state. It "'as sunny in the vote·rich Los Angeles area where the '"'O can- didates ror go"ernor cast their bal· lots, pres um abl y for themselves. Democrat Edmund G. Bro"''n Jr .. 36, \'Oled al a hillside home in the neighborhood of his 570.000 bachelor home in thC Laurel Ca nyon area or Los Ang eles. Republican l·louston I. F1ournoy . 45. ;ind his wife ~t id gc.>. \'Oll'd at l\I ountain Vici\' El e m entar~' Sch oo l i n· Claren1ont. not far from v.·hcrc ~'lour· noy once taught about IJO\itics berore entering it . Flournoy then planned tn relax with a round of golf. California 's \'Otes also included th at of the former president, Richard 1\1. Nixon , who marked his absentee bal· lot l\fonda y at the Long Rea e,h hospital where he is bei ng treated for phlebitis. ,.. In the first two hours, voting was runni ng. ahead or 1970 in the key county 01· Los Angeles. where the ou1 - come often determines sl11tewidc races. But by midmorning, the turnout h11 cl: fallen behind 1970, th,e last~clcction for . ·governor . The turnout in San f)-ancisco. tht· traditional Democratic stronghold . v.•as running sli ghtly behind 1970. It was slow 1n San Diego Count.)'. where llepublicans ltildilionally hU\'l' to draw well to have a chance to win. There wa$ a heavy turnout in snmf' l\ection~ or the San JoaquJn Va\lcy but ··fairly light" in Fresno County. Tractor Crossi119 Crossing gate goes up for northbound traffic on ~1acArth ur Boulevard as traclor completes its trek across the roadway between University Drive and P alisades Road. Crossing guards have been inslalled0 lo racililate _grading work for the Corona del Mar Freeway project under way in the vicinity. Hundreds Attend QC R,ites for Athlete By KATllV CLANC\' 01 IM D•ltr l"llM $ ... II Stephe n "'l\like :• Finkle a. a promising 19-year·old scholar and .athlete, was buried !'11onday. r.-Io r e than 225 c lassmates . teachers. coaches. neighbOrs and relatives gathered at a small funera l chapel to mourn the death of Finklea, d.e s.cribed a s "everything to e"'Crybody." lie was captain or the Orange Coast College wrestling team and 1973 ilthlete of the year at Foun.- tain Valley l·ligh School. ' There v.•erc few dry eyes du'ring the hrief service. ··1 sa\\' a whole neighborhood on the ~treet 11•here J\1 ike lived -I saw them bleeding with the fa mily." said the yo uth "s Unc le. the R.e\'. Enoch Fink lea. "''ho c<1m e from South Carolina to orfi ciutl' at the ser\'ice. J\'lourners ove rflowed the chapel at Peek Family Coloni .al Funeral 1-loml' 1n \\'('stminster. lc a\"ing many silting outside on fold ing chairs. !\lost or the n1 att end ed the bu rial aftcr\vard at \\'est- n1inster l'lt emorial Park. leaving many sitting outside on folding chairs. !\l ost of them attended the burial aft erward <1t Westminster Memorial Pa rk. · •·1 s tand s tronger and ..-tallcr because I kn ew him."' !\tike's uncle said. ''lie contributl'<i so much to each of us." Young Finklea was slain at mid- ni ght Thursday by six bullets fired during the apparent holdup or a Foun- tain Valley 7-Ele\·cn tilarket where the youth had bl•cn l\'nrking the past three weeks, Nixon to Be .On Feel More LO NG B E 1\CJI <U PI I Richard Ni xo n is "t erribly physically weak" and still has some pain in his left leg, his dof - tors said toduy , .. but the former· president \\'US r('COvcring suf- ficiently lo do more \\.·alkinJ?: in his ho spital room . In his daily medical .report Dr. John C tungren said lh t· former chief executive is still in riub-intensive cure and continue~ to r ecei 1•r int er mt ~t e n t breathing treatment On e of Nison·s d aughters. J ulie Nixo n F~isenhov.·e.r retur- n1..><I to \\la shington a11er spen· ding sever a l days with her father. l·ler re'turn "'as.seen as a sign that NiM;J wus rticovering. ~J r . Finkle a , "''ho planned to become a math teacht:r and wrestling coach. was working at the market at Euclid Street and \\1amer Avenue to help pay for hi s education. He planned to transfe r to Stanford Universit y next fall. . .. I have been thinking a lot since last f'riday n1orning "'hen ~1ike 's father called me," said the Rev. F'inklca . .. It "'as far beyond anything I had imagined,'" he said or his nephe"·s·s tragic death. lie ex plained most people .. build IS<'e FU:'\ERAl,, Pa~f' A2l Newport Seeks 10 Part-time • Polic·emen T he Ne wport Be ach Police Depart· mcnt is look ing for 10 persons who would like part-time work as reserve police officers. 1'hose selected will become part or the police reserve program. a corps of offic ers that "'orks alongside regul ar officers on a part·time basis. They call them layman lawmen. Reserve officers donate 16 hours pcr month but are pa id S4 and $4 .86 per hour fnr dut.v beyond the don ated time. Primarv function of the reserve of- fi cer is r"idin g as second offi cer on night shift patrols, peliorming the same duties as the regular officer. Others assist in th e detective division. In the summer, duties are extended and reserve o ffi cers, particularly school teachers. may v.•ork nearly 40 ~hours pC'r week. Summer duties in- clude jobs such as traffi c control and pl ainclothes beach patrol. Prior to becoming reser\'c offi cers ca ndid at es und ergo a 200-hour (raining prog r a m al the 'Orange County Peace Officers' Academy. l 'hey wear the same unifo:-ms as the regulars. with a reserve officer shoulde r• patr h. and have the same sworn peace officer status ""hilc (ln duty • Du ring non-sum mer months. f'l'lSI rt'serve off icers are attive 1n the e\'enings aft er the ir regular jobs arc.> to{Tlplc\ed :ind on v.•ee.kends There are currently 21 reserve or ficers. in cluding tcachct.'i. bus1nc11 smen." electricians. e ngineers a nd others. accor di ng to Offi cer Lee Robe rts. Cln c of the prog r am organize rs. · Eight Rescued After Craft's ' Motor Stalls Eight persons aboard an 18-footoul- board boat were rescued by Coasl Gua rdsmen and towed to Ne'Arport Beach late l\Ionday night afler _the c raft 's motor stalled. leaving the party drifting al sea. The' crift left Avalon before noon l\.tonday, bound Cor Newport Beach. but the motor railed. The boat was fou nd 28 miles southeast of Catalina, according to the Coast Guard. Aboard wer e-.. Jos.eph Stewart of L0t Puente and his son Gary, 9. AIS:O on the boat were Stewart's brother Daniel and his sons Daniel. Jr .• lOand Travis, 9, all of San Gabriel. Troy Bro'o''ll a nd Ray Garrison of Sa n r.abriel and Eddie Glasscock of F.I f\lont e. The crart was reported miss.ing \\'hen it failed lo reach Nev.•port Beach by nightfall Pttonday. T he boat ·s occupants si gnaled a Coast Guard helicopte r ""·ith a flashlight about l l p.m. The helicop- ter. "'hi ch had been searching for the disa bled c ruft, summoned a cutter which lowed t he boat to Newport fktach . Wealht'r v·ariabl e hi gh cloudinc.>s s thro ug h \Vednesd ay. with ::;lightly wa rmer days and cool nig hts. Beach highs at 65 rising to the mid-70s inland. Lows tonight dipping in to the 40s. I NSIDE TODA. Y The $afety a( Ameri ca'.~ I 10 nuclear reoctars rPmo rn.t a na~ ying q ue$1/Qn . The proble m i.t ('IQ nnned 1n de1c11t on l'age B9 1oday. f. ............ l~ " "'""u"'"'' " l M.&ev• .. ~ .... " C..hl .. Rt• •• """tff'I'"-\ ... 0 •1lil1H ••·16 M1H .... I Nt~ •• C...tte1 " °"tllftCMMr •• Cl'fll ... , " ~f~"'" .,., 0.11~ Mtllct • .. ... f.~ .... 111.-... .. ···~ , l:fttffillft""'AI 11 INl'\th ,t,l l ·U 1'"1nlfttl All •l l tit b lM ... MrGlrfftll'" " TI!Nl9t'I " ... rek.,. " -.11• .. lafeftllllHllHI ., -·-•• • ,_· llon't~F.nrget to :Vote;-Polls -Open lfntil~-8 . ~ • -. ' • • ! . • \ ~· . "( J • • • • • MOURNERS-GATHER FOR FUNERAL OF MURDERED FOUNTAIN VALLEY YOUTH More Th•n 225 Cla11mates, Neighbors and Ael1tlve1 Pay Re1p1ct1 to Holdup Victim '· . Petersen Will Quit High. Justice WASHINGTON !UPI) -Henry E. Petersen, his government career 1 clouded during Its last two years by ·charges he cooperated with the White House on narrowing the Watergate ln- vestlgati~n .. Is r etiring from the .Justice Department, it was announ· cedtoday • ..._ _ _ __ _ Petersen was head of the criminal division and in charge of the original investigation of the Watergate break- in until the Watergate special ltf'05ecution force was formed. • White House conversations between President Nixon and aides indicated f that J>cterse n \\'<I S reporting the progress of the investigation to the President. · The White House released an ex· ., <'.hangc of letters in whic h President Ford praised P etersen's record of t a chievement . Attorney General Williain B. Saxbe said Petersen's decision to;i=etire after more than 25 years "'ith the Justice , Department was entirely his own. .Petersen repeatedly denied "'rang. Ooing and defended his judgment d uring the Watergate investigation. lie gave a heated .defense when he was call ed as the last witnes,Jn 1973 • f 'r1•111 PtrgP A I FUNERAL. • • walls'' around themselves, thinking such tragedies cannot touch them no matter how much they read of such things happening lo others. The pastor suggested that those who knew tl1ike, take a lesson from him, ''the way he denied himself to achieve what he wanted. . "Heroes aren't made in a contest. ,He was a hero beCore be ever hit the wrestling mat." · _'fQe_!ev~Fin~I~_S!!gj_esl~ .. ..t.h_- mourners look ahead, re-e:xam'ffte their lives and try to improve them. "111ike has a lready finished the course ... \Ve are still on the playing field," the pastor said. "lie is wat. ching us as "'e take up the torch." Women Escape From SF Jail SA N BR UNO (U PI ) -Women have escapell from the San F.ranci sco County jail in San Bruno for the tirit lime in the memory or jailers. Dad· Held In Boy's · .. . · Poisoning PASADENA , T ... (UPI) -The father or an 8-year-old boy fatally p;c>isoned on Halloween night by a c'a ndy s traw filled with cyanide was charged with murder today and held under $100,000 bond. Police, who had gone from door to door In a two-block area· or this Houston suburb tracing the youth's trick-or-treat path, made the stunning announcement al a hastily called news conference. They said the rather ~·as In custody. Timothy fl.lark O'Bryan died Tale Thursday from eating just one piece of candy. His rather, Robert Clark O'Bryan, told police at the time his son begged to be allowed one treat • before going to bed. "'\Ve and the district attorney's 0£. flee felt there was su£ficient evidence at this lime ror 8 charge to be filed, .. police Captain R. E. Rhodes said. "There is no further comment at this lime as we arc still rounding up loose ends." Rhodes, s itling by assistant Harris County Dist rict Attorney J\.1ichael llinton. refused to say when O'Bryan had been arrested or what led lo the arrest , other than that the charges fol -/ lowed an inves tigation. He read a prepared statement and refused lo an· swer questions . It wa s repor1ed that the father had taken out $38 ,000 worth of life in- surance on his two children·lfve days berore Halloween. Rhodes would neitherconrirm nordenylhereport. · The ch&rges, Specifi(!aUy for mur· der by poison, were filed ju.Sf ~fore · midnight Monday. Police said four other straws con· taining candy powder mixed with cyanide granules were round l:>y police in O'Bryan's neighborhO.OO~ but apparently no other youngsters had eaten one. Police said the father had taken his children trick-or- treating because of the late.hour and light rain. O'Bryan told police where it.hey went. and so the investigation focused on that area, a two-block section of the city. J•asadena detective David l\1ulligan said investigators were conf~ed whv so few of the children in the area had ·the straws and whv nl.hPr children did not remember receiving it. "It'S "a rather expensive type of candy to be giving out at Halloween," J.1u\ligan said. Timothy, a third grader at Carpen- ter Elementary School in suburban Deer Park, was buried Saturday. China's Mao • ' . O.llr l'llM l~ff ""Mt DRESS REHEARSAL -Student thesP,ians rehearse scene from "The Crucible." \Yhich opens Wednesday night at Newport Har- bor High Sc hool. Standing-(from left) are John Jaenicke, Charlie Bill and ' Cindy Klugiewicz. Kneeling (from left) are Amanda Norminton, 11-fonic!l My'ers and Sally Filer . Newport Big~ Drama . . . 'Crucible' W e.dnesday· Drama students at Newport H:irbor involves the resulting trial and its 'liigh School will present their second ronsequ enccs. olav of the fa II season. Arthur l'l1iller 's Other student players include tJell "The Cruc.ible" Wedncsduy through Wolfensparger, BobKell~r. l\1ike l\l r - Frida y nights in the ~c h o o l Connell, Pam Franklin, No\'a Ball , auditorium. Ri~hard Rodriguez, Amanda Normin· h1ill er 's story concerns the Puritan ton, June Gorman. Chip Leroy, Sally purge of "'ilchcraft in Old Salem in Fifer. John .Jaenicke, Amy ?t1enkes. the sevcnlecnth century, but was "'ril · l\1&rk Rucker, Cirtdy Klugiewicz. ten as a nublic Statement ae:ainst the Charlie Bill. Bob Hulse. Monica McCarthy hearingsofthel950s. tl1yers, Christi Carr and Candy Wil lis. The play. directed by Thomas The curtain will open at 8 p.m. for- Bradac. drama teacher at the high each performance In the auditorium. school. stars Rob Willhite in the lead 600 Irvine Ave., Newpori Beach. role of J ohn Proctor with Lauren tl1it· Tickets, price() a-t $1 for students and chell as his wife, Elizabeth-:-eotli~a~,~e-;$2 for the public will be available at .accused of witchcran and the drama the door. I senatewatergate hearings. . ..Damn! l think it's a renection on ' tne a nd the Department of Justice." _lll•I Ttt~• HE'LL STEP DOWN Justice Aide Petersen William Da\'is, chief jailer, said Monday t wo women had broken a window in a d()(tor's of· fic e and slipped__do.w.Jl.<J rope lo freedOm . The 15·foot rope had been fashionel:l from sheets. -'Plans -Purge --Crans..tan _H as~M_osr . . . .. ' Ile said, referrin~ to the appointment of Archibald Cox :is 3 s pecial prosecutor l o lake ovef the case. Child -slaying Mother Freed ~ DENVER IUJ'll -A\\·oman ~·ho --~-1-t1sed a brOken-"·ine bott le to stab her 2·year-old son to death in a bat htub . "·as released from the Colorado State )los pital . on condition s he continue receiving psychi atric care at her ne"' home in San Diego, offi cials said . I • • l>cnv<>r Dis t rict J udge Joseph Lilly •Jrde red the r elease of Ca rolyn Ji.Ielhard. 31 . a fl <>r being told by doc· 1ors 11t the hospital at Pueblo, Colo .• !'\he ,,.a !-! n11 lo nger dan~erous to her · :self or otht•rs. J\1 iss l\tethard \vas committ<'d to the l1ospit al <i fl cr pleadi ng innocent by reason of insanit~· to the murder of her :;;on. \Vill iam. No\•. 21. 1967. She had been churgcrt \Vilh using lhe bottle to :5\ash th(' child 's y,•ri~t s and stab him jn the thcst. ORANGE COAST 'H DAILY PILOT ~Or'"9t CNsl 0.11~ PllO'I. Wll!lwllkl'I kt om· btM'll llWHIWl·Prfll. II pwbh-by ""'·°'- C.0.11 Pubh..,lftf ea,.,..n,. S....tlt ""'_.. "'' Pllblli1'!M. ""'""•' '"'""'" l"rilMv, ""'" cou.t Mew, pq~ kac11. Nwnli"91on Bff<ll/f...,. ""' V•lltf. l•.,11r, S.•ddtrbKk Yeil<IY •l'ld U..,... .. Mli"ISowtl'I Cae•L A \lno;tle t~I ... , .. 11 11to111•""'d S••w•d•r' -s--n. l ,,. po-lrw;lp.ol 11UbllU1l110 ote11I \et JOO Well a., ~rut,(o!.1• ""'"· c.1110..,,•f ~ Robe rt N. Weed Pr~"leM """ f'llbl111>ti J ack R. Curley 'II of t Prt\1,,.,111...:1 Col'Mf•I "'1irtftlff Thomas Keevil fd•IOr . Charles H. Loos · Ric hard P, Nall ll1oihl<1111 ,,..~9111g Edi ton. Newport Bfach Office }\ll N~.,llOr! 8o .... Y"1d N.11111q AOdrf\\, P .0. lkl• 111', '1tfJ I Other Offices f.o\11 Mt1e UI) writ &tw Sl11oft L•O_,, ht<ll. llK Gtr-"'9SI~ ~"''"''"•fl•• llflS liH<f> ............ :s.odlt.,.,, Veller · 1!Kll l • PeJ ~ •t• 0••00 frMWff TelephoM {7141 "42'4321 Classlfltd Advertising M2·5671 C.001••0l'll, tfU, Cl••"ll" C-4 P\11)11..,,,.. C--1 ""6 ,.."' •!Ot,., •lllnlr•ll-. 1'•1ll10r••t """''1•• •• •ot•~•U-"'• ""~r" "'•Y Ill ftptlMhttlt •UIWlll ,,_,ti ,,...,..,_ 01 coer.i.f"'OW'!lr• ~81\d (.lfH llll'l<ltl .. lit •I Q\11 Ml:\<!, c..i11 .. 1111. Mt<•lltllon ..... COM"~• U 00 ...... 1 ... ,, .,., n'llll "'00 '\*'!lllf . n1lllt"1f dl•fll'WlhOll' U 00 ""°"ll'llr Elephants Pull Stalled Truck · Out of' Traffic S+\N FRANCISCO <AP) -Two 8,500-pound circus elephants named llenry and l'll a nny loosened a jungle of traffir outsidc Candlesti ck Pa rk \\·here thousand s of football fans were streaming to the Rams-49e rs game. The elepha!s were pressed into S('r,·icc ~lond night after their cir- <'US trurk -r pletc \11ith t"·o other elephants. tv.·o llamas. a camel and t hree ponie ~ -stall ed on the t·ausev•a.1· that <'ircles the stadium parking lot. The truck bound for ~an .Jose \1•;1s heading the wrong \\'ay In the one·way Candlestick J>a rk Janes. "l-'our lanes of traffi<' "·crP sud - d<'nly com ing at us like kamikazes,"' s aid Don r.t adeiros, an offi cial with the Vargas Circus. l'lladeiros and circus truck driver Cl ark Craig reali zed that Henry and 111anny "'ere working, not performing e.leph ants and harnessed them to the truck. The ~lephants towed the rig around so that it raced the right direction. Those who escaped Sunday ~·ere identified as Siolha King, 23, of San Francisco. serving a term for prostitution and car- rying a concealed weapon, and Frankie Shaft. 23. also of San Francisco . .serving a robbery term. Mesa's Moose Lodge Loses Booze in Heist A burglar "''ho entered by unknown means has looted the .Costa 1.1esa hloose Lodge of a· large quantity of liquor . a rcording to police ln- \'estigating th e case today. George R. Coleman. representative or the fraternal and charitable organ1r.atinn at 437 E."'7lh St.. told Of. fi rer Rod Ca nington the loss was discovered l\1 ond ay by janitors. li e said the burglars may have ex- pettcd a !u rge sum of money, since the l'lloose Lodge served dinner to a bou t 100 persons Sunday night, clos inglhe b<i r ea rl y Monday. The intruder or intruders also inex· plic<i bly stoic the handles to the bar's beer taps, Coleman told police. · The monetary loss was being com• puled today. Costa Mesa Leaders Seek Site Interest l 'i\·ic leaders in Costa l\l esu arc trying lo get the citizens interested in development of the Oranl(e Counl y }'airgrounds. This \\'eek Mayor Robert \Vllson ri nd Councilman Norma Rertzog are ('onducting a series or informational meet ings on the city's proposal for developm enl oft he 163-ac re·g rounds. They said the meetings are being h eld t o encourage c itizen par· t ici pation in the plan. The first meetin g was held Monday night but the presentation will be given again \Vcd nesday. Thursday and Friday at 7.30 p.m. each night In the police auditorium , nt>xt to city hall. The presentation that is being given is the same as lht'l concept put forward hy \Vilson rC'c<'ntly to members of the t>r::in~f'eounty Fair Bourd. lie sli}!Jl<'"'te<l a culturol-rccreauon eomplcx . 11 s1mrts center, faclhtle9 ror st>ninr eilitens and tcenal(CC'J. a 3,000· ' ~t --audttorltrm , 3 corr~ ~fir.den su rroundc>d b y !m al l 11 h ops , ;i n upgrad1•d equestrian ure11 and a n _ .. grjeultu r.-..l area operated by I. / I he schools. Wilson arvl. l\1 rs. llertzog are mem - b~rs of the 'cit y council's fairgrounds committee and are working with a fai r board committee in trying to get the """plans beyond the conceptual sLagc. Wilson explained that th<! concept is open lo change. "We are laymen," he said. "We are interested in getting the opinions or people who are prores- :slonals in their fields. "Those involved In the :acting field, theaters and theater group&, have not come for:ward with any proposal on the cultural center. The same is lrue with the equestrian people. Wt; are in · tercsted in seein g plans on what they wnnl." Wilson said that there has been lit- Ile discutution <lf'I fu nding the projects bcrausc no ~pccifir. plurui have been ngrP<"d upan. The rAir board has been In· \'e8liRatlnf( th41...pos.sibility of~pon. sorinl( 14 days of horse racing at Los Ala1n ito1' to r11isc mbney ror develop.· menl or the ful rgrounds. ' ·For His Wife ' TAIPEI <UPll -Chairman ·Mao Tse.tung spent the last two months in seclus ion in Central China pl6tting to install his wife as his succes· sor. Nationa li st China intelligence officia\5sald tod_ay. · The intelligence officers said A1ao plans to purge the government of a number ot key official!\ in an attempt to pave the way for his radical Wlfe- Chiang Ching to take over as his un- contested heir . The 81-year-old l\1ao spent two mon· ths at a villa at the East Lake, \Vuchang, in Hupei province in Cen· tral China, Then he moved to Mount Yueh Lou at Changsha. capital of Hunan province, in October. Officials said he is still tbere. Military inlelligenc·e reports from China showed Mao has tried to rally the support of Central China elemenL'i who often· defied the Peking authorities. Costly Senate Drive \VASllINGTON (APJ ·-Sen. Alan Cranston clung to a slim lead today O\'er Sen. George McGovern for the distinction or running the most expen· si<re Senate campaign or the year. "'ilh both men's spending topping SL million. A l3bulation of campaign spending c.e.ports a l s..o sh.o.w.s_tbaLfoc.me.c.. astronaut Jo~n Glenn, r unning for the Senate in Ohio, topped the $1-mllllon mark by the start of today's balloting. The public-interest group Common Cause prepared the tabulation rrom the most recent wave ol campaign s pending reports, which piled up over the weekend and cover the period up until 12 days ago -Oct. 24. The Common Cause tally shows Cranston. a De mocrat seeking re· ·election over fairly light opposition in California. leading with $1.27 million raised and $1 .11 million spent. McGovern trails only slight!}' behind. with $1 .10 million r aised and $1 .3 million spent. h1cGovern failed to carry hi s home state o C South Dakota a s the Demoqotic nominee for presid ent t"·o years ago, and this yeu.r faces a challenge for re-election to the Senate lr.o_m_a_(oJm.er...JUisoner of war, Leo Thorsness. 1itcGovern•s spending is about double that of Thorsness' and amounts to about $1.67 for every man. "'Om a n and child in his thinly populated state. 8 Charged in Fire SEO UL. Korea CUPII -Eight per- sons were arrested and charged with negligence in the weekend fire at an office building and hole1 complex that killed 88 persons. 65of them in a nig ht· club, police said today. A WORD TO . THE WISE- • •• There is a tend~ney for many carpet stores to use strictly a warehouse concept. One . advantage is seeing carpeting in rolls rather than samples. Many disadvantages are evident -most operations of this type buy only Off-goods. so that the customer onty gets to see old patterns. or carpets the mills couldn't sell to regular outlets. Also, th is type of operation~ generally feels that experience is unimportant. and consequently the salespeople know little or nothing about the products. Fincitly. most will farm out the installations to the 1owest bidder, guaranteeing a poor installation. (Man,y1 of these installers are contractin'g illegally without a state license.) At Alden's we maintain a happy medium. We carry a large inventory, and the largest sample selection around. We have ex~rienced salespeople. and our Installers were trained by us. Finally, we are a s!ale licensed contractof. AIJlEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia A•e. COSTAMH4 • -646:4838 ___ ~, . ' "HOURS: Moo. ttnn.n., f .lo 5:JO-Fll. f lot-SAT. f :JO lo 5 • • " • l • ' , I Orange ~oast •. Today's Final N.Y •. Stoeks E DIT I ON t ~OL. 67, NO . 309, 2 SECTIONS,26 PAGES ORANG E COU NT Y, CALI FORNIA TU ES DA Y, NOV EM BER 5, 1974 c TEN CENTS Vo.ters to Slow Start C'yaalde · Pobmtlieg Father Chprged ,, In Son's Death I 'PASADENA, Tex. (0 PI J -'l'he father of ·un 8-year-old boy ratally poisoned on l·lalloween night by a candy straw filled with cyanide was l'harged with murder today and held t1nder SI00.000 bond. Police. who had gone from door to door in a two-block area of t~i s Houston suburb tracing \he youth's trick-or-treat path, made the stunning announcement at a hastily called· 11ews conference. They said the father was in custody. . " Sugar Costs -~ ~ .--,, .. Soar While Soviets Buy I LOS ANGELES {U PI ) -A major • Southern Ca liforhia su'Permarkel r chain, which s aid it is se!Ung sugar for less than it wil l cost to restock if. 1 announced plans today to begin~ l limiting the purchases of the com- t 1 rnodityonThursday. ·rrmothY~t ark o ·urya n died late 1'hursday rrom eating just one piece of candy. His father, Robert Clark O'Bryan, told police at the time his son b.ea;ged lo be allowed one treat befod-going to bed. ··we.and the district attorney 's or. rice felt there was sufficient evidence at this time for a charge to be filed.'' police Captain R. E. Rhodes said. "1'here is no further comment at this time as.,.,~ are still rounding up loose ends." Rhodes, silting by assistant Harris County Di strict Attorney J\1ichael .liinton. refused to saY when O'Bryan t1ad been arrested or what led to the arr£Sl, o"'er th.an that!Jlc charges fol- lowed an investigafion. He read a prepared statement and refused to a n- S\\'er qu estions. Jt was reported that the rather had 'taken out 538,000 worth of life in · surance on his two children five days before Halloween. Rhodes wo1,1ld neitherconfirm nordenythereport . The charges, Specifically for mur- der by poison. were filed just before midbight Monday. Police s aid four other straws con- taining cand y powder mixed with cyanide g ranules were found by police in O'Bryan·s neighborhood . but apparently no ot her youngsters had eaten one. Police said the father had taken hi s children trick -or- treating because of the late hour and • ' Baseball Bleachers \\lorkmen reportedly are ahead of schedule in building ne\v bleachers for 350 fans at baseball field at dov,intown Costa Mesa City Park. Costa i\1esa city officials sa.id the $143,000 project will be completed in late December. in time ror the field . ..- ·' -• ., ..,,.-.~ ... , Turnout . Expected For Later The candidates and prdoositions on the election ballot were not drawing cro"•ds to votin g prec inets in Costa f\te sa today. ' f A check ·"·ith · precints in the <:ily found the early turnoul by "oters com 4 parati.,.el y light but with prec inct· "'orkers expecting more trarfi c during lunch break s 1a nd in th e evening. The polfs . 'which ope ned at \ a.m., will close at 8 p.m. . The survey found that 133 or ru registered voters had cast ballots at Vista Del Lago Clubhouse on Mesa Verde Ori ve East. At another precinct-near l\1 esa Verde, the fire sta,.tion on Roya l Palm Drive. t~e . couot was 62 ballots cast from 389 eligible. · , ,.-.:ti\."" -Jt"Was"ff011'f'O"tC lru5y-at-th·e-· Halecrest Clubhoi.ise at 3124 College . , f I 7 to be re novated for league schedules that begin in February. Field is used by l:larbor. Area Baseball Program and by leagues run by City of Costa l\lesa . . .. St. , "''here precinct "·orkers reported that 58 of the 459 persons registered in ·the area had voted. The c ount at the Covena nt Presbyterian Church, 2850 Fairview Road, was 87 ballots cast rrom a precinct roll of 585 names. At Wil son Eleme ntary School, where the roll showed 395 registered ... oters, SO persons bad cast ballots by mid-morning. ;. Cooperative Hundreds Attend OC Workers at Bethel Towers at666 W. 19th St. reported that the totals were 120 ballots cast from a total of $46 registered voters. The price of s ugar h as ·been 5kyrocketing for .several months anCI a>uld go even higher rollowing reports that the So ~·iet Union ordered up to :;oo.oootons In the open market. Eugene \\'alsh. president of Ralphs "Crocery comp a nr . sai~ R·alphs stores \ a re selling_ five-PQund_..bags ot sugar · tor·sz:20. or 44Cents a pound. light rain. • O'Bryan told police where they "'rime Umt Costa tttesa City Hall was proving .. one or the le ast popular precincts with early voters. The count there was 13 \'Otes from a roU-of287. ~·enh_4!llilS-o.lhe..in.vestigation-foeused-\.A----=-- _,__cmtllat area. a two-block section of the . -Ri_t_e s for Athlel e '"It will cost us si.58 wholesale '' lo r eJl!ace those bags, Walsh said. ··~11 the chains have bought sugar in advance and retail prices are lag- ging behind "'holesale prices. We will limit purchases of sugar to one five- pound bag per customer starting Thursda y." he said. I ' Other grocery chains did not an~ nounce plans but a spokesman for Safe"·ay Stores, Inc. said there were Jr indications of customer stockpiling. .. S<iles <ire a little heavier." he said. · .. ••1t appea rs quite a few customers.are 1 buying two fi ve -pound bags ~here ! ifiey \\"OUld h.a've bought one before -- t'ily. Pasadena detective Oa\·id ~1ulligan said investigatois Were confused "'hy so few of the children in the a rea had the straws and whv nt hPr children did not remember rccei.,.ing it. "'lt"s a rather expe-nsivc tyP<' or ca ndy to be giving out at lla\lo\vecn. ·· Mulligan said. · Timothy, a third grader al Carpen- ter Elementary School in suburban Deer Park . v.'as bu'ried Saturda_y. Child-slaying ' \ irlli not a dramatic thing. not what ~·e·d ca n a run on sugar~ Mother. Freed 1 The average retail price or refined · sugar has jumped rrom 18 cents to 52 . t ents or more a pound since January. ;ind a major ne"· demand on \\'orl.d supplies. such as a major Russian or~ <ler. v•ould drive the price signilican- 11y higher. . . '"The So\·ict mo,·e 1nd1cates th{' Russian sugar beet crop is shorter than expected anrl that Cuba cannol supply Russia's additional needs,'" ' DEN-VER (U PI 1 -r\ \\'oman \\'ho used a broken winl' bottle to stab h<'r 2-year-n ld son to death in a bathtub was released from the Colorudo State Hos'pital on condition she continut• receiving psychiatiic care at her ne\\ home in Sa n Diego. offi cials Sil id. • '!'aid a spokesman for 8. \V. Dyer & ' Co .. sugar econom ists and brok ers. Denver District Judge Joseph Lilly ordered the release of ·Carolyn '-1ethard. 31 . aft er being told by doc-- tors at the hospital at Pueblo. Colo .. she was no longer danj(erous to her- self or others. • . • . In Washington, Agriculture Depart· ment officia ls said they had either no infor mation or "only rum,ors'' about r eported ne\\· ·Russi.an purchase~, Ora nit<' coa~• ''ariable high cloudiness t hrough We dnesday, with 5li ghtly u.•armer days and cool • nights. ]leach highs at 65 rising to the mid-70s inland. Lo\\•s tonight dipping int o the 40S. I NSIDIE 'l'ODi\ ,. 'Thf' saltly (ll Amer1cQ·.f 110 11uclear reactors rer1XJim a nafi· qinq qut'slion. The problem i.s ~raminelf in dela1I ori Page 89 • loday. .. " '., . • •• •• •1,1 ... .... •t•n ... " •• •• Mis~ Metha rd wa.s committed to the hospital aft er pleading innocent by reason of insanity to the murder of her son, \\lilliam . Nov. 21. 1967. She had been charged \\•ith using the bottle to slash the child 's ,,·rists and stab him in the ch est. ! Mesa's Moose Lodge Loses Booze in H e ist .\ burglar "'ho ent-ered by unkno,.,.n means has looted the Costa ~Iesa l\1oose ~6e or a l;irgc quantity of liquor. according to police in · vestigating the case today. George R. Coleman, represcnt ati "e or the fraternal and charitable ·.organization at437 E.17lh St., told Of- ficer Rod Canington the loss "·as disco\'ered '-1onday by j1:1nilors. f.le said the burglars may ha"e ex- pected ii larte sum of money, ,;incc the Moose Lodge scn •ed dinner to ab9utlGO 'J)e1so·ns Sunday night.. closing the bar early l\1onda y. . The intruder or Intruders also incx · plicably stole the handles to the bar's beer: tap.\, COiemen told police. The monetary loss was being' com · puted1od•y. Wins Kudos A cooperative program bet\\'een UC Irvine, Costa J\1esa. lr\'ine and Hun - tington Beach .. designed to diverl young, first-time criminal offenders from the justi ee, system has won hi gh marks by ils UC J evaluators. The yea r ·o ld .-You th Se r vices Program, says a re part ~yaluating its first six months. has caused a 48 per- cent cut 1n the number ot Jl,IVe n11 es \"ho got into trouble \\'it h the law on other charges after going through the program. By KAT HY CLANCY . OlllMDl ilyl'Ol'ISU" Sl ~p hen ··~f ike'' 'Finklea . a pro misin g 19-year-old schol ar <:tnd athlete. wa s buri ed ~1onday. Mo r e th a n 225 ·class mates. teachers. coac hes. neighbors and rel citives gathered al a small funeral chapel to mourn the death of Finklea. d esc ribed as ··everything to everybody." 11 e was captain of the Orange Coast College wrestling team and 1973 athlete of the year al Foun· ta in Valley 1-li gh School. · There were few dry eyes duRn"fCfie briefser.,.ice . "I sa"' a \\'hole neighborhood on th<' street where !\l ike li"ed -I saw them bleed in g "·ith the ramil y," said the ~ youth's un c ll' .. the Rev . Enoch Finklea . "'ho ,ca me from South Carolin a to offi ciate at the service. '-lourncrs overflowed the chapel at Peck Family Colonial Funeral Hom e in Westminste r. lea ... ing many sitting out side on foldin g chairs. f\1ostofthem attended the burial afterward :1t \Vest- n1in stcr l\lemorial P:.1rk. leavin g many si tting out:s ide on folding cha irs. '-1 ost of them attended the burial aft er\.,.ard at Westminster l\lemorial Park. · "'I stand stronger and taller because I kn ew him ... ~tike's uncle said. "lie contributed so much to each of us." tSt•e FUNtRAL. Pa 11:e AZI The Youth Service s Program . fin ~nced with a grant from Orange Coun ty Council on Criminal Justict• and matcbinLfunds from the three cities. is designed-tO refet arrestee\ youths to counselors rather than lo cou rt and jail or probation. Com paring statistics on 130 youths "'tio '"ent through the counseling program with those on 30 "·ho di d not. e"aluators fou nd th at 29 percent of those without the program were ar- 1rested again within six months. Costa Mesa Leaders By contrast. 15 percent of thos!' counselled were arrested on other charges \Vithin six months . Seek Site Interest • The rate of juvenile crime repeaters, said the report. \\'a~ reduced 48 pel'cent. Dufing the ri r:st year of the . program. 347 famili es \"ere assisted. About 75 percent came from police referrals and the remainder \'Olun· tari\y, In the evalu ation. ·99 p!'rcen1 of the parents said they \~Ould recom mend the program to other families in a s1m111ar s1tuat1on. ur the Juveniles, 92 perc<'nl said they v.·ould rccommt'nd it lo a friend. Civic lcuders in Costa ,.,.lesa Are trying to ge t the citi 1.ens interested in dc\'clopment of the Orange County Fa irgrounds. Thi s "'eek f\1ayo r Robert Wilson ;ind Coun cilman Norma f-lertzog are conducting a series of informational meetings on th e city"s prbposal for de\•elopmcnt ofthe 163-acregrounds. They said the meetings arc being held t o encourage cit ize n par· ticipalion in the plan. The first meeting was held f\tonday night but the presenlation will be gi.,.e n again \Vedn~day . Thursday and Friday at 'Stop That ·Boat . I :Run.a wa.y Vess e l O vertake n A pilotless, runaw<iy boat heading out to sea in Nl'wport Harbor this morning was boarded by a 11 arbor Patrol offi cer and ' returned t°f!ts ch.agrined owner. ../ T llE OWNER has bc~n left on a dock near ~he HarOOr Patrol station when the $35,000 boat somc~ow slipped into gear and started its lonely journey while efforts were being made to tie it down . Witnesses hailed the Harbor Patrol as the 43-foot Nausika headed in a straight line out to the harbor's entry channel. TllE Wt\ YWl\llD craft was overh&uled by ~ patrol boat and of(ice r Charles Chick leaped aboard to bring it under control. Chick returned the vessel to its owner, Von Price, 43. Corona, whose hands were blistered \\'hen he tried to divert the boat from its 8:30 a.m. Solo departure by hanging on lo its mooring ropes. -. - 7.30 p.m. each ni ght in the polite auditoriu m. nex t lo city hull. 1'hc presentation th at is being given is the same as the concept put forward by \Vi\son recentl y lo members or the Orange Cou nty Fair Board. li e suggested a ,cultural-recreation complex, a sports center. fac ilities for scl'ior citizens and lecnagers, a 3,000- seat auditorium . a coffee garden surrounded by s mall s hops, an upgraded equl"strian areu and an _ ~gri cultural area operated by ·the schools \\lilson a~d l\1rs l·lertzog are mem - bers of the city council's fai rgrounds committee and are ~·orking with a · fa\r board committee in trying to get the plans beyon d the conce ptual stage. \Vi Ison ex plained that the concept is Opl'n to change. "We are laymen." ht• said. "We are interested in getting tht• opi nions of people who are profes- sionals in their fi elds. "Those in.,.o\.,.cd in the acting field . thcalers and theater groups, have not come forward with any proposal oo the cultural center. The same is true "·ith the equestrian people. We are in- terested in sceinR plans on what they wanl." Wilson said that !here has been lil· lie discussion on fund ing the projects because no specific plans ha\'e been aRrced upon. The rair bo;ird hu s be e n 1n· \'CSligating the possibility Of spon· ~oring 14 da)·s of horse racing at Los Alamitos to r&lse money for develop· mcnl of tho f airgtounds. * * * Weather's No Excuse for Not . . Voting Today _, By the Associated Press The early vote turnout was mixed today.as Californians cast balJots in a post-Watergate referendum on in- flation. political disCnch:intrrlent and -lo a degree -eight years of hold · the-line Republican administration. The weather was no deterrent -a fa ir Indi a n summer day over much of 'the nation's most populous state. . It was sunny in the vote-ric~ Los Angel es area \\'here the two can- didates for governor cast their bal- lots, presumably for themselves. Democrat Edmund G. Brown Jr .• 36, voted al a hillside home in the neighborbood of his S70.~. bachelor home in ihe Laurel Canyo n area or Los Angeles. Republican 11ouston I. Flournoy, 45. and his wife.'-fidge. voted at Mountain View Element ary Sc hoo l in Cla remont. not far from where F1our4 noy once taught about politics before entering it. Flournoy then planned to relax with a round of golf. Cali fornia's vo tes also included that of the former presid~nt, Ri chard fl.1 . Nixon, who mark ed his absentee bal· lot f\:lond ay at the Long Beach hospital where he is being treated for phlebiti s. In the first l'A'O hours, voti ng woi:s running <:1head of 1970 in the key county or Los Angeles. ~·here.the ou1- cnme ofte n determines statewide races But by midmorning. the turnout had fallen be hind 1970. the last election for go\'ernor. STOCKS SURGE DESPITE SNAGS ' NE\V YORK <UPl l Prices clo!iied s harply higher tod ay in fairly aclive lr1;tding on the New York Stock -Exchange despite another breakdown in coal negotiations. I Tables, A 11 ) . The Dow Jones industrial average. whi1:h moved lower in earl)' trading fnllo"''inl? a second breakdown in the coa l tal.ks, gained 17.52 points lo 61pS .. Advances held about a three-to-one lead over decllne5 among the 1 742 i~sues traded . ' Prices also were hiGher in fairly :ictive trading on the American Stock Exchan.11:e . :Oon't~orgeHo Vote;_Polls Open~ ~j}--8 • • .. ·~ -~ ... , ·' • f • • • - ) r • MO URNERS GATHER FOR FUNERAL OF MURDERED FOUNTAIN VALLEY YOU TH More Than 225 Clas1miites, Neighbors and Rel1tlve1 Pay Re1pect1 to Holdup Victim Tip Receiv ed Mesa Police Hold Manon 'B~rgains' f 'rfit11 Page A I FUNERAL. • • ~· . Young Finklea was slain al mid- night Thursday by six bullets fired during the apparent holdup of a Foun- tain Valley 7-Eleven A1arkel where the youth had been working the past three weeks. Mr. Finklea, who planned to become a math teacher and wrestling ' A Huntington Beach industrial •WOrker who said he paid $200 for a ---second-hand stereo set, with a sofa and coach, was working at the market at Costa.lt1esa police. . Euclid Street and Warner Avenue to· Detective Norm Kutch said he helppayforhiseduoeUon.Heplanned received a tip that items allegedly to transfer to Stanford University -' Jpve ·seat.l.hrwm.Jn...eot..mor.1-tha».. ...... _,_...bargained for in thiCle.at, according to -st~in~&l~en..iOl"-'"-ffeXt fall:-· " Leland E. Rule Dead at 41 ; ·Rites Set Today Funeral services were scheduled today for Costa l\1esa insurance com· pany agent Leland E . Rule, 41 , a Santa Ana-born native of Orange County who died Sunday. Rites fo• Mr. Rule. a State Farm In· surance agent, were set for 1 p.m. in Waverley Church at Fairhaven Memorial Park, Santa Ana. with Rev. Roy Eben Stronach, 23, of 7682 Com· · •·r have been thinking a lot since modor€Circle. last Friday moi-ning when l\1ike's Investigators from Costa 1'-1esa went father called me," said the Rev. to Stronach's apartment Monday lo Finklea. discuss the matter with him. but he .. It was far beyond an}1hing I had "'~~;~~h=~fd tv.•o friends or Stronach imagined," he said of his nephews's I . d tragic death. . \\'ho had dropped by to visit exp a1ne 11e explained most people ''bwld that their host had stepped out to make walls'' around them·selves, thinklni: a telephone call and cordially invited s uch tragedies cannot touch them no theofricerintowait. matter how inuch they read of s uch He said he arrested Stronach when things happening-to others. he returned, after rinding the allegedly The pastor suggested that those ~ho stolen furniture. in additlon to a small knew !\like. take a lesson from him. quantity of alleged marijuana and ''the IA'ay he d·enjed himself tO achieve hashi sh . · ""'hat he v.•anted. The suspect, 1A•ho saidhelhoughtthe "Heroes aren't made in a contest S200 stereo was a bargain, remained in lfe was a hero before he ever hlt the jail today i'n lieu of $2,500 bail, booked wrestling mat." on charges of possession Of stolen The Re.\•. Finklea suggested the property and possessionofmarijuana. mourne rs look ahead, re·examine Richard W. lron-s of the First El h t p ll Presbyterian Church of Santa Ana of-e P an S U their lives and try to improve them. "1'1ike has already finished the course ... \Ve are still on the playing fidating. An Army·vetcran, l\1r. Ruic lived~ ~I ll d rr k 806 E. 20th St., Costa l\lesa, and lea''!~ff e .J. TUC his wife Barbara ; sons Thomas and--· fiefd .... the pastor said. ··He is wat- ching us as we lake up the torch.'' Randall: his parcnls. J\lr. and J\1rs. ""Chet Siegel. pf Costa l\lesa; a brother, Richard Siegel or San Diego. plus ~sters Mrs. Barbara Zieglar. or llun· -"fington Beach and J\1rs. Doris l\lillerof \Vashington. Services were under direction of Brown Colonial Funeral Home, Santa Ana. - Gun, Wetsuit Taken in Mesa A burglar invaded a Costa J\tesa nursing aide's home fl.1ond ay while lihe was away at v.·ork. selectively stealing only t v.•o items. Imogene F aith Pomeroy. 41. of 1952 Rosemary Pl ace, s:iid her S60 loss in- cluded a Ruger Bcarcat .22 caliber revolver and a rubber v.·etsuit for sur- fing and skin diving. Police said it v.·as not determined h ow entry v.•as m ade to the home. The gun and wets uit v.•ere taken from a ~loset. • ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT J Robert N. We@d "'"•\llirft1 ,.., ""Ill•- Jack R. Curley Vlt""'"ft•M"I •"" C.0-•• Ml-• Thomas Keevil Thomas A, Murphlne Mt"•Ol"V EdUDr Cosbi Mewi.Dflic• llD Wtll •·;"ft~ IM!tl,.. Md••t~ . .l'.0. lo• l)tO. ~ Othtr Offices c • ......,_, "•" uu .. ,._, ..,.,......,. W...... .. «11, ,, .. ~Solnet M""'l'""PI .. Kii. 11111 lttcfl ....._. SMClleblt• Vtllt• 1UO! U P11 t11Md "5'>11 OH!90 F•-•f TtltphOM (714) 642-4321 Cli1ssified Advtrtising '42·5'71 C..Ortl .. 1, 11H, o. ... 111' COfit "vllll'lfll ... ~r HO °"'""' \!Or"" 1~,.,h..,\, ftlltorltol ""tltr er Hffl!IM_lll, l>t'1ifl t'lht1 Out of Traffic SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -Two 8,500-pound circus elephants named Henry and l\tanny loosened a jungle of traffic outside Ca.ndlestick Park where thousands of football rans were streaming to the Rams-49ers game. The elephants were pressed into service t.tonday night after their cir· cus truck -=complete v.;.ith two other l'lephants, tWo llamas, a camel and three penies -s talled on the causeway that circles the stadium parking lot. The truck bound ror San Jose w~ hea<1jng the wrong v.·ay in the one-way C~.lestick Park lanes. · 'Four lanes of traffic were sud- denly coming at us like kamikazes." ~aid Don ~tadei ros, an official v.•ith the Va«!as Ci rcus. ri.ladeiros and circus truck driver Clark Craig realiz ... ...:t tha_t ~lenry and l\l anny were "-'Orking, not performing elephants a nd harnessed them to the truck. The elephants towed the rig around so that it faced the right direction. 6 Trucks, Car Crash in Fog CHOWCHILLA CAP) -Six trucks and one car slam med together in dense fo~ on iiighway 152 five miles ""'est or here today. leaving at least one.dead in the tv.'isted u·rcckage, the California Jli ghv.•a)' Patrol said. Traffic in both directions was halted ·shortly afler thC' 4: 15 a.m. crash while \\"Orkcrs struggled to clea r the shat- 1.ered vehicles a nd cargo from the road. officers said. Cance r l"ight Long \VAS~IJNGTON (UPI ) -President F'ord. whose wife recently underwent breast cancer sur gery, sent to Congress . .l\IQilday a report saying that the nation's research program lo conquer cancer ··""·ill take ·)'ears before achieveing ultimate success." Women Escape From SF Jail SAN BRUNO tUPl)-Women have escaped from the San ' Francisco County jail in San Bruno for the first time in th ~ memory of jailers. \\1illiam Davis. chief jailer. said 1'1onday two women had hroken a window in a doctor's of- fice and slipped down a rope to freedom . The 15-foot rope had been fashi oned from sheets. Those who escaped Sunday \vere id entified as Siotha King, 23, 0£ San fruncisco, ser\'ing a term for prostitution and car· rying a concealed weapon1 and Frankie Shaft. 23, also of San Francisco, serving a robbery term. College ~els Grant . Southern California College, Costa !'llcsa, has been awarded a $433,971 grant by the Department of llcalth. Education and \Velfare for the .con- s truction of a n administration building and classrooms. College director Emil A. Balliet will he in charge of the federal grant. , · Newsboy Killed Bomb Goes Off on Paper Route itILWAUKEE. Wis. (AP> -A newspaPer carrier was kllled tOday when a bomb placed on a car exploded on his Northwest Side delivery route, police said. · Police said the bomb, In a plaln cardboard box. exploded when It wa:s moved by the victim. identified as Larry Anstett, 1.5, a carrier for the ft1ilwauk ee Sentinel. · Authorities said the youth apparently became curious when he saw the box atop lhe late model car at the curb as he made his deliveries around 6: ts a.m. The bomb was ph1ccd on the car some time during lhe night. police tnid. "" The Incident OCl'urred outside the horn of R.K. Vermilyea, and lhe car was O\\'ned by Vermllyea 's son Michael. 2.1. a member of a local motorcycle club known as !·leaven ·~ Devils. ' • TONIGlfl' ELECTION DAY -Don'trorget to vote. COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL - Regular meeting, City Hall,6:30p.m .• "COMMUNIT·Y '74" -Lecture series sponsored by Newport Harbor Junior League. "Education-En- tering College.Today: Are you lnfor· med?" UCI Science Lecture Hall, 7:30 p.m. "BEHIND THE HEADLINES" - Dr. Gile5 T. Brown lecturer, OCC f'orum, 7:30p.m . "THE REAL INSPECTOR HOUN· O" -South Coast Repertory Theater, through Sun. 8 p.m. UCI LECTURES -"Women·s Forum," Room 140 Social Science Lab 7 p.m . ''New Directions for Free· Land Writers," Room 101 Physical Science Bldg. 7 p.m ... Landmarks of Art," Room 178 Humanities Hall, 7 p.m. WEDN ESOAY,NOVEMBER6 "ALCOHOLISM, AN ADDICTIVE DISEASE'' -Dr. Robert Schmitz lec- turer. Raleigh Hills Hospital. 1507 E. 16th Street, Newport Beach, 6:15 p.m. Information 645-5707. ·•THE CRUCIBLE!' -Newport" llarbor High drama d ept. Auditorium. Nov. 6·8, Adm. $2. UC! SURVIVAL THEATER - ··vector Two," Fine Arts Village Con· cert Hall, Nov. 6·9, 8p.m. Adm. $1. UCI LECTURES -"An Effective . Tax Plan," Room 178 Humanities Hall. 7 p.m . ''World of Plants," Room S50 Physical Science Bldg. 7p.m. Mesa Planning - ... 0.Uy ll'lllll ltfH PIMI• DRESS REHEARSAL -Student thespians rehearse scene from "The Crucible " which opens Wednesday night at Newport Har- bor 1-ligh School. Standing .<fr~m left) ~r~ John Jaenicke, Charlie Bill and Cindy KJug1ew1cz. Kneeling (from left) are Amanda Norminton, ltionica Myers and Sally Fifer. N'ewpor~ High. Drama Trirto-'Sun~~~~~- cosl•M•••n••r•bejngenco•r•ged ~'-Crucible' W ednes~ay to goto the Sun next week _:_by bus. Tonight Mayor· Robert Wilson will proclaim Thursday, Nov. 14 as the City of Costa Mesa Veterans Benefit ..Night atJhe.......Caji!Q.mia Sun game ugainst the Florida Blazers in Anaheim Stadium. • The Chamber or Commerce, the city ·and the veterans office at Orange : Coast College are teaming up to make the excursion a success. Tickets cosl$6 each and· include the cost of a bus ride to the stadium. Buses will leave Costa J\lesaCity Hall at5:15p.m . Part of the proceeds will go to the veterans office at OCC. Tickets can be ()btained by calling the chamber. 646- 0536. the veterans office. 556-5853 or Pat Sanchez at city hall, 556-5300. Volleytennis In Costa Mesa ~· Anyone for volleytennis? The game, in which a...v.ollC,Jballis used with a tennis net, is being offei;:ed by Costa Mesa Recreation Depart· ment to girls in the fourth grade and under. Volleyball is being offered for girls in the sixth grade and under. Games will begin on various city playgrounds Saturday. Those wishing to sign up can do so at t heir local playground from 3:30 to 5 p.m. Monday through · Friday. · Alioto Gets Veto SAN FRANCISCO <AFJ -The Board of Supervisors voted l\fonday to override a veto by l\1ayor Joseph Alioto for the first time since the mayor took orfice nearly seven years ago. With two votes to sp~re, su~r­ v1sors voted 10·1 to reqwre service stations to post gas prices on signs visible to passing motorists. . Drama students at Newport Harbor High School will present their second olav of the fall s~ason. Arthur Miller's "The Crucible'' Wednesday through Friday night s in the sc hool auditorium . Miller's story concerns the Puritan purge of witchcraft in Old Salem in the se4'enteenth century, but was writ· ten as a oublie" statement all!:ainst the McCarthy hearing_sof l.hel950s. The play, directed by . Thomas lJradac, drama teacher at the high school, stars Rob Willhite in the lead role or John Proctor with Lauren !\lit· chell as his ~i!e, Elizabeth. Both are accused or \\'itchcraft and the drama involves the resulting trial and its consequences. Other student Players include Dell Vlolfcnsparger, Bob Keller. l\1ike Mc · Connell . J>am Franklin, Nova Ball, Richard Rodriguez, Amanda Normin· ton, June Gorman, Chip Leroy, Sally Fifer, John Jaenicke. Amy l\tenkes, l\tark Rucker, Cindy Klugiewicz. Charlie Bill, Bob Hulse, l\1onica .l\1yers, Christi Carr and Candy Willi s. The curtain will open at 8 p.m. ror each performance in-the auditorium, 600 Irvine Ave., Newport Beach. Tickets, priced at $1 for students and S2 for the public will be available at the door. Plot ~y· Mao? Attempt Seen to Elevate Wife TAIPEI (UPI) -Chairman ·Mao , Tse.tung spent t he last ~o months in seclusion in Central qiina plotting to install his wife as tiis succes· sor. NalTonalist China l'htelligence officials sa_id today. The intelligeilcc officers said Afao plans to purge the government of a number of key officials in an attempt to pave the way for his radical \\'ife Chiang Ching to take over as his un· contested heir: The 81-yeJfl":Old !\·tao spent two mon- ths at a villa a t the East Lake, Wuchang. in liupei province in Cen· tral China. Then he moved to Mount Yueh Lou at Changsha, capital or Hunan province, in October. Officials' said he is still there. Military intelligence reports from China showed Mao has tried to rally the support of Central China elements who often· defied the Peking authorities. i1aa is hoping for a "drastic cam- paign" to further dov.11grade suppor- ters of Premier Chou En-lai, his fol· lowers and their -moderate policies, the intelligence officers said, The officiats said their reports !ailed to d-isclose when or what rorm the new government purge might take, But they said reports in- dicated the first moves would be "soon and comparable" to the Red Guard or the recent-anti·Confucius movements. Baiik Cash Found SEATILE, Wash. <UPl)-Part of several hundred thousand dollars taken from a Woodland, Wash. bank in a burglary last May has been found by hunters,J.he FBI said Monday. The FBI said bnls of small dcnomlnalion <J.Od Travelers Checks were round Sunday on a road near Easton about a mile from Inters tale 00. A WORD TO THE WISE-· '· . " There is a tendency for many carpet stores to use strictly a warehouse concept. One advantage is seeing carpeting in rolls rather than samples. Ma ny disadvantages are evident -most operations of this type buy onty Off-goods. so that the customer only gets to see old patterns. or carpets the mills couldn't sell to regular outlets. Also. this type of operation generilly feels that experience is unimportant. and consequently the salespeople know little or nothing about the products. Finally, most wlll farm O'it the installations to the lowest bidder, guaranteeing a poor insta11.ation. (Many of these installers are contr.:.-;!lng illegally without a state license.} At Alden's we maintain a happ~ medil.lm. ·We carry a large inventory, and the largest sample selection around. We have experienced salespeople, &fld our installers were trained by us. finally, we are a s!ate lic;ensed contractof. • AI .. DEN'S · CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia A•e. COSTA MIU 646·4838 \ . --·--" WllPll!ll t e.(•11 ""'""'-11 ~, ........ ~ ""tlli• IDfli""ti" ..-.r.1-(iW Miw. - Calllori•I• MM:rl.ilofl h c•rW UOO Police s·aid the family had complalncd several times in recent monlhei•i-t-I iiOOuf liarassml'nt f'ml'h members or t notticr -motorcYfl roop, The I 1 "'°"'"''Y · or "'fil ~00 "'Ofllfll,, "''h!ery ~,,.,,.,,.... iJ 00 ,,.or11111 . ' . - Outla"'s. ·-• • • I