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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-09-20 - Orange Coast Pilot' -• ' Ahandon.ed Boy~s - Fa1nily •Misunde~standing~ Returns; • DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * THURSDAY' AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 20, 1973 _ VOL, M, NO. Ma. 4 l•CTIONS, 411 l"AO•I • Boy Guarded (:aesar's .Palace • s I • • \ I . \ 1 0s111ond Brothers~ -400 Others Flee Las Vegas. Blaze • .. .. . 400 Flee Bla~e Willie Says 'This ls It' NEW YORK (AP) -Willie Mays o1 the ljew York Mets, baseball's Complaint Suhiiiitted In Vegas Hotel .Q..year~ld stlperstar, announced hLi retlrenent today, effective at By Ba' ttin" the. end ol the 1973 season.· (Story, Page~) "'nlis is it," said Willie. "I'nf • retiring after the season. I only B JACK BROB 'CK : hope I can make aoine contribution ~ ... Dalb '""°' ;.,. toward another championship in , First District Supervisor Robert Battin ' LAS VEGAS (AP) -About 400 persons,.Jncluding the <>smood !!J'others singing grolip, were evacuated from their rooDJS . earl¥ to®y aa •.;f!l:e swept throli&)i a ·W)l!g. of ~r's ' '1"""' Hotel here; ·causlilg'.on.eojjmsled l\C!l,000 dam· Passiatore said Ellen Fal1.one, 60, Walton..Mass., was admitled.to-abospital Walton, Mass., was aitiiiltled tO a liOSl>ital New York in the little time left." of Santa Ana filed a complaint with the Mays bas _played 66 games_t.hls__ :___jb.ange.__County~ssessment Appeals _____ -seas<>D-with-a-.2ll-battlng-averag.. .~Board-allegin&-thal the-Weslern-Wblte - and six bome runs, increasing his House property In San CJemente is under- age. -~ ·-· There · were oo : injurieS · reported, altbpugb a Massachusetts woman was adnµtted to a hospital for, trep.bnent of smoke inhalation, said oUlcer Don smoke llihalation. · Elev~iPiti.-\of.'1he .c;tifk County Fire Depattment, ba#ed iJP by'Las Vegas cl· ty ~.c rdi>O~·'tO.'the $rrn and had the· ~blaze' 'onder control in 15 minutes, Passiatbfe ·sakl. · • . ~r ~! ~'~' third ~ a~s~ by about $1.millidn. , 9\11Y .'!~'RutH al!d Henry A$ri. Ti!• !'Offiplalnt ~. 111ec1 Wednesday , ' . · ,' . '· ·~ with t'he clerk of the 1appea1s'boafd ·in the --.. · cotmty"assessor's;dttiCe, . ___._: ' • , B8~iit. in the appeal is·~cting as an ~ Dea& z. Sen*nnce. dividu•I not a county' sqpemsor. Ile said Wt K:> he did ii to "put the appeals board on the Ul'tT ...... -Puaiatore, -Las ·Vegas Metropolitan Police Department spokesman. An unidentilied couple climbed out onto a lhree-fOOt Jedge...!)yerloOklng the "strip" and_stay~ there_ until ·rescued by firemen. Decorative grillwork on the outside of Cesar's Palace prevented the use of rescue ladders. .... · ' spot." _ ; L "f d f ·A d The validity of Battin's complaint is ID f, te or ge question as the law states an appeal may Ulster Defense Associatio~· officials ·closely guu:d Ronnie Herron, 7·year-old son of slain UDA.officiaMTommy Herron, dunng fuµeral · procession fo r the· boy's fatber in Belfast. The elder Herron was found murdered in a roadside ditch. Family Returns for Abandoned Boy Jly ABTH.Ull .JI., v.fNsEL, , ' . G<isie~. ' " • ' · ·• .' <' Of; .. M,,..,._.,,~ _.._ _,. .. ~ ~· ·if('"Was :s£andi.ng.thett.al Linda'f ll~sk.< A llhOrt, swarthylnan 1'witb a m . So ~s ,Mig~l ~sr.'s wiirb..and theif... type ,of prid01aad' a !lklay•ii~. ne~s , , daug.~ ;aged 'S:,s,, 2 .llll!I 1. pin&.Gf clailnll.,Jbat he had a~ne<I ,Mtg.tel .sr. had ' jus<-found wbai,ap- oniy son•aulle qllleily inlo'Costa ·Me'sa · peared -to he the start of • a aolid · police•1"'adquarters the other day. • '.' subllstellce for his family wh<n'he g\)l·a · lllliuel ,,Sr< came !pc l\llgUe1' Jr., Joll·ln a fOQli piaht In Modesto. '· brlnilng', me whole family aloog. • The family had been ' press_ured ., to They drove down from Modeato to sat '"'move from an .Ana~lm motel, because. the lltU~ boy aornebqjy SUPJiose<\lY ~ "Ille ·management,sald that five children hebin<\ bl!loqed ·~··· · . ,'< ""'°·;.st too m'!"Y· • · · • • • · • A pair fJf ...... GI we1!11'9r'wtio,lilid . ~·Jr.,' 4,;got lell'belml'.mealllng,. volunteered to care for Miguel Jr., tum--he b'act'to learn to be a man early-:- ed him over to police and orange COunty "I wasn~ trying to dump the boy. I have juvenile autborWes more than a week 11 brothers and sisters who wouJd take ago. (See MIGUEL, Pqe I) . They llld tbe . cbjld 1¥1d lle9' ..... .~· "· : • • The blaze erupted. about 3 a.m. In a suite· of rooms occupied by the insurance company which carries the bOtel's fire insurance Passiatore said. A national conventio~ of imurance agents is under way •at the hotel. Pa.ssiatore said the blaie was believed to have started in a, mattress, but said the suite waa unoccupied at the time. Sidney Gathrit, executive director of 1 public relaUom fOr the hotel, said the alarm ·waa turned In by a passing cab drive' wtio;Mw fl!li.n<lt.s!looting from the seventh floor of ti\• ~wing. The wihg, which contains !m rooms ; was booked solid and all guests, Including the Osmonds, the singing group of five brothers who are appearing at hhe hotel, were evacuated, many in nightclothes. Mild Temblor Girl, 9, Freed On $2.50 Bail - 'Vicious' Mutt . ' APOPKA, . Fla. (AP) -Mayor, an arthritic cocker spaniel, would have died Wenesday if not for the efforts of C:Ora Lee Marden. · · · • Mrs. Marden, M and a widow, said she In K'ni f fug Case · just cculdo 't· t.t Ma)'Or die. , . ..Tile. dog had no defense, so I came to ~ EDINBURGH, Scotland. (AP) -A 9> his 'fescue," she said whlle preparing to yeai-otd girl sentenced to 18 months' sign adoption papers. detention lor stabbing a playmate with·&· Mrs. Marden intends to give· the 11· breadknlfe was sent home today-on-$2.50 --bail while her sentence Is appealed. year.old mutt a home in the middle of an A Scottish high court jud£e ordered the orange grove, a mile from the nearest release of Mary c.a,ims of Glasgow. nle neighbor. girl had been 'plac;M in a home for delln-Mayor was seritenced to death under quent children . 'Tuesday after be.lng the state's :vicious ·dog act last month by· sentenced by a QlaSgow sheriff's court. 1be length of ;~ -sentence for such a Seminole County commissioners wbo on1y be-filed by an owner of comparable property wbo was injured by the under- assess ment. Battin owns no comparable property. The· appeals board meets next on Mon- day and may bear the complaint at that time although it-is not on the agenda. The question of assessment of Presi- dent Nixon's San Clemente property was first broached by S t a t e Board of Equalization Chairman William Bennett several weeks ago. At that Ume, be requested that the board investigate the $1.37 million assessment placed on the property by Orange County Assessor Jack 'Vallerga. But the board refused -to-act.. . Four (See PROPERTY, Page Z) Oraage • Felt in State young child raiS.fd a storm of protest in ieeeived 18 complaints abOut"'the anlal Britain. English 'lawyers pointed Out no biting several youngsters. chlld under to ~d be arraigned under "t's all so ridiculous lhS! way this c8sc Weli.ther BORREGO SPRINGS (AP) -The ..., English law, which dilfers from tjie Scot· developed and bow this dog came .., ond mllcf eartbqualte ID 1 week bas hit tisb code. 'Ibey also noted that In close to death," said Mn. Marden, who Mostly sunny Friday; following the desert area near the San Diego-England the newspapers would not have already has three dogs at her secluded the usual low clouds along the Imperial County line. No damage was been allowed to publish her Identity Apopka home. "I Just couldo't see It hap-coast. Highs In the upper 60s at reported. ., because of her a,e. pen." tile beache s rising to 15 inland. The quw,, wldcb was felt 1-lay , Mary stilibed,l,&.Jell'-<>ld Morag Bro)m Besieged b)' 14H. Marden-lns2ired let· Overnight lows In the 60s. dooedraltec they ~ to ~)'ljl for a time. · SNoW"FOREC71.ST night, registered s.i on tfie Richter ocale, • In the chest durlllf ~quarrel. Morig suf. ters aod telepbone calls, the commission -Caltech-HiamolosJsta lll<Un p~ ered a rtlally coUapoed lung. modlfled Its original execution order and INSIDE TODA y Its eplcenler wu placed 1t n.. miles eglJ-aullforlU., said-the Ill--said Mayor woold·be-spored-if a-good +-There was a misunderstanding. 111 haven't abandoned -that bdy,11 MilUel Sr. declared Tuesday to orange FOR RENO AREA southwest ol !lor1:ego Sprillp •Iona the mo~th detenllon oidet CC!,lld be shortened home in a rural, !~In area was A/ur mos! o/ her life ioith Aquo 'Tlbll PauH. ' ii Mary behaved'.iltillactortly. found. White /o•ler _parents, an abarlg· County ProbaUon Department authorities and Costa Mesa Police Detective Linda Lest -.eek'a .. temblor wu rited $ 1111 the ' Wblle Mayor sat in the pound. his fate ine girl has beeTl take'n back to __.... Richter ...i. IDd allo did undecided, offers poured In from around bmh /or an arronged moniage RENO, Nev. (AP) -Tho National We•ther Service office here )las luued Its !Int forecast for mow of the -· The forecast calls for lncreulng ~damage. no Russ Tes t Indicat~ the state and as lar oil as .. orth Cir<> with middle-<Jge<J tribesman. See lina. story, photo Pog• 4. Nary Fliers Missing · . 24 Aliens Located chance of showers in tbe Reno &rel, with SACRAMENTO (AP) _ A ground and the snow level near 7,000 or !,000 In the SAN DIEGO (AP) -Twenty~our ~· 1 · under way today for a Sierra. • legal aliens 11ere found cn>wded Into 1 8 r sea. ::" i.. durin&-A wJevel The snow numes are likely lifthe Late camP.r found ~ed~th apparent -., ~ 0re -Tahoelliiln-•n<n rn11o-:s1m..-sonero111 --..ica1 troo~Y·•lonoldo ~~ gF:•lion :;~ ":\dt'nTwo g: from Ecbo Summit on ll.s. Highway 50 Interstate 5. Tho U.S. border pa1ror 11ld were reporled~board' the C..aft, last northward, forecaaters 11ld. the truck wu sold recenUy wl~t beJnc heard from at 9:~ p.m. Wednclday. ~' .... registered yet to ~ new ~,.r. WAS!UNGTQN (UPI) -The .Atomic Energy Commission said Wednesday the Soviet Union apparently conducted a new underground nuclear test. The AEC said ligOals indlcallng an explosion, detected y tsmograpb;-Originaled Tuesday night In the central Kuakh desert area or Russia . • " Even county pound officer Sa m Martin r- vohmteered to take tµm home. ~:it..'T .,1i = , .... -, 111 haven't seen the dog yet," said Mrs. c11uit1e11 414 ' N•tllMI .... ._, Marden. "but I'm ready to take him. t ~=:.,., ~ ~T"' c..., : just love animals." ~ o.ani "'lk" u '"""' ... She said feeding the dog shouldn't ::~ ..:l, \':t.::--a: cause many financial problems because PIMMI n. »n n-twt 1Nt ,., ........ n ....., 4 "two ol my <lopJreSJihuahuas and -,, ---don't eat much. And l'm surelliej'Jl iO Mt ......,,...,... -» _ _.. -t..1 get alona jurrt r·" ' . ., ' ~ --~-----~ ---~- \ J ., .+:% DAILY PILOl .~.-- 5 Agnew Pressure Mixed FronaPllfe l MIGUEL ••. my kids If 1 dJdn't want them,'' Aid Miguel Sr. Crime Ring Brokela'I .J Dragnet Arrests • -. • -·Nixon Not 'Pushing' for Resignation A few days ago, ii Los Angeles newspaper carried an Associated Press story aboout a boj' suP!"'sedly-abandoned Jn Cosla Mesa by lifs parents . Net 10 Suspects \.,, WASIDNGTON (UPI) -The White :Jlouse denied again today that anyone ln ~lhority is prtSsuring Vice President ~iro 1 T. Agnew to resign because Iii is :jixlet federal investigation in connection ;tith alleged political ci>rruptionl In his !:fll:me state of Maryland. ;i-:Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. ~arren a Is o dismissed a Washington ~t report quoting an un~entified 7li DEMOCRAT$ DISCUSSING ~AGENEW SITUATiO!i-Ptge 8 =~astern Republican as saying he bad ~~en told by a top White House official ·ihat Agnew's resignation was expected :.frithin the "next few weeks." "•"'The resignation would give President Nixon "an opportunity to set a whole new tone to the AdminJstration ," the story said. ·That statement, \Varren s a id . "absolutely does not renect the thinking , of the President." ..Asked directly if Nixon wants Agnew to quit, Warren said : .. \Ve will have no -~mment on this entire matter until the ~a.itorney general completes his work. , "Ji,ny comment would be improper and un'.. . ,fair." . ~w, who repeatedly has denied any wrongdoing, ia under investigation for possible violaUon of bribery, tax fraud , extort.ion and coMpiracy laws. The allegations say he was involved in a political kickback scheme in which some Maryland politicians received money from architectural and engineer- ing fir.ms doing business ~ith the state and local governments. .. Warren's comments at the regular White House morning news briefing ·Came after Senate Democratic Leader ~Mike Mansfield said Agnew must be con- sidered 0 innocent until proven guilty" ; ... and giv~o "the benefit of the dot1;bt" now. •. The Montana ·senator also said he ,f:>elieved Attorney General Elliot L. · .J;Uchardson would consult with con- gressi.onal leaders of both parties betore ,deciding to submit information about .Agnew to the House for use in con- ·;sldering whether to initiate impeachment proceedings. ··., Mansfield spoke with reporters on _, Ciipilol Hill shorUy before a federal . _w.and jury in Baltimore resumed in- '· vestigation of political kickbacks in :'Maryland, where Agnew served-11s ''Baltimore county executive and governor :-before---oea'.>mtng vice president. ·" The Washington Post,· which earlier quoted an unld~Ufled seni!)r ReP';1bliC:SO senator as saying Agnew was considering Woman Suffers :.~f~ lnjurie~; ·.:Friend Charaed .. 0 A 3l·year-0\d waitress is recovering :rrom cuts on her hands and ann she suf· :{~red Wednesday night when het boy -fri end allegedly attacked her with a -.l<nife. ;· ,The suspect, William Norwood, 42, of "rnn Warner Ave., was booked by police •. On charges of assault with a deadly weapon. The waitress, Mardelle Patrie, of 7662 1----·Commodore-Circle,-said-she_was_drlving NOrwiiOO'S car Oh warner-Avenue-near the Meadowlark Golf Course when the at- t;ICk occurred. :~She said Norwood had met her as she 2ot off work· and as she drove they began tb argue. She alleged to police he drew a \nife and sald, "I'm going to kill you." :;; She said she put up her hand to ward '.:qff the blows , stopped the car and ran for ~Ip. A passerby called police who ar- rested Norwood a few hours later at his lipartment. '. . ' ., :Uur1·icane on Move • " , : MIAMI (U PI ) -Hurricane Ellen, with ltinds of B5 m.p.h., churned westward l~rough the Atlantic today and posed no · ediate thre at to land. For three s. Ellen has moved almost constantly tward at 15 m.p.h. OU.N51 COAST " :t DAILY PILOT t~lllt or~ CH1I DAILY .. It.OT. 'll'lftl wlllctl 1J '°'"""llMI fht N-l'rn1, II Pllbll"*' llY t!W 0ral'fV9 j;htl l"llblllhlllt GomPtny. s.p.. tttt' .. llklol t rt pul>lll~ed. M-IY ltlrovD~ l'rllfey, for Cos•• M1t1o1, Ntwporl a.am. Huntington leach/Founttln v1111y, Lt91111• I a-cfl, lrYIM/$1ddlllNctl •"" $In Clwmefllt/ I "" ,_ ''"""'"· ' "'"" ,.,,.., .-UWll It publhhtd S.hlnl•l'I tNI s-t1-,.. • fM prlnclHl llVl>llllll"D pl1nl i. •I 2'I Wnt 1 .. , JtrH1. (Wit M<I... (•llfornle. '2'2'. Roberl N. Wetd l"r"ldt!'I 1NI l"11bl!J/le< Joell JI. C111rley Vlot ''''"'°"' tNI Gentrl l M• ....... Tt.om11 ic: .... a ...... Tho111u A. M11rpliit1t M.,,tgltlf l!•hDI' ChorlH H. leo1 Jl:Jc••rd ·r. Nill J-.-·-4 --Altltltflf Mlfll!_"!._ ff!~ ___ .. O:ffk•--· ., ' resigning, today quoted an unnamed friend or the vice president as saying he would not Step down. The ne~·spaper sald Agnew's friend was with him at a diplomatic reception Wednesday night .ond reported af· terward : "The vice president told me he is not resigning. You can say that he said he was standing firm in face of all these charges and Is gotng M stay on '8nd see the thing through." Columnists Roland Evatis and Robert Novak also reported that Agnew is "now all but persuaded ... to prepare a flat denial" of the resignation rumors. They said a denial would be · made public ..through some unidentified I forum that would dramatically reach the nation." New York Parking Problem Miguel Sr. saw that story a day or.two later and recognized tbe fact it was his own family's story. He came to straigh ten out the me!!. Things look better now for the fapilly and Miguel Jr. bas rejoined thejn.I "In my professional . opinion ," said Detective Geisler, "this is a family of poverty. But certainly not a family1 of neglect." UPIT,....,_ A series oC arrest! made following secret indictments by a federal grand Jury in l.()s Angeles has shattered what authorities allege was an organized crime ring which pocketed millions of dol111;rs annually in the Orange County, Rock Concert In Clemente Gets Study San Clemen~ clty councilmen held off a decision on proposals by a fo1k·rock theater owner who plans a free rock con- cert near the city's north beach this fall. Already the"proposal by James Jenkins for the free show featuring a group known as "Honk" has drawn disapproval from police officials and the city staff. In a brief appearance before coun- cilmen Jenkins insisted that a large seg- ment of the city's citizens -young lovers of contemporary music -are · being ignored and his concert Is an at.- ten;i.pt to provide them with their favorite recrutton. But councilmen hesitated on granting-a decision on the proposal for the North Beach parking lot and instead ordered that the request go to parks and recrea- tion commissioners early next month for a recommendation. Jenkins stressed that what he proposes would be an event catering primarily to South Coast music fans and he said he never intended for the show to become a "supertrip." . . Advertising, which began thi! week in a week1y want-ad circular, would only stretch as far away as Laguna Beach, Jenkins said. -\ Long Be·ach and Los Angel~ 1trca. The dragnet netted 10 p e r s o !1 s suspected of involvement i bookmaking and .loar. sha rk activities over an IS. month period, 'several ol them nil members of the same family. Spokesmen for th e FBI, Internal Revenue Service and the .J u s t I c e Department's Organized ertn:ie . s.trike Force did not specify any 1ndiv1dual cases thst came to light in their probe. Incidents were tabulated, they said. in Orange County, Long Beach, East Los Angeles and Whittier. Bookmaking activities alone ~et.led the alleged criminal cartel $3.S m1lhon an- nually. Newport Beach Police petecli~e ~t. John Simon, head of the vice detail, ~1d he had heard of onl y one or the In· dividuals indicted on mult iple charg es when contacted today. Indletees Include: Joseph Danell Dixon, 33, Nancy Hunt, 25 William Ronala Dixon, 29. Robert H~rold Dixon, 44, Charley Ray Dixon, 19, Kale Kalustian 41, Edith Mae Terver, 39, Prentiss Lee Tarver, 41, all of \Vhittier, Albert Frank Miller, 38, of Los Angeles and Bobby Neal HiCks, 40, address unknown. Additionally, Joseph Dixon was.~harg· ed with two felony counts of hhng a !i1iiiilii1<Dl tili'iiiile-tu return · ror the years '1969 and 1970. The federal grand jury i.ndictment Charged the 10 with running a ring ovet a six-week period in late 1972 that accepted more than $2,000 per day in wagers . The indictment also charged five of the ·persons with extending credit in the form of large cash loans· "under terms and conditlonS which instilled fear !n the d~bt­ on that delay or failure tn making repayment ... could result in the use of violence." It's tou gh to find a parking space in New York, and those who found this one found it even tougher after this three-story garage colJapsed with a roar, toppling cars like toys atop one another and spill~ ing some into the street. Miraculously, the only three persons in the .garage escaped after the warn~ ing rumble. No admission would be charged ii the concert went off, but donations for ex- penses would be accepted. "I don't expect to make dollar one out of this," Jenkins said, .. only a little In· stitutional advertising for the theater (the Folll" Muses)." County Narcotic Officers Study 'Red Notebook' From Pllfe 1 PROPERTY , • • 'Natal Cleft' Questioned The impreoaDcl a d d e d that rock musiC "serves as great a need for our young people as your.golf course does for the older element In thil city.'' 1nembers declared they" had no legal right to check local assessmen ts. Later, the board, 10 quiet Bennett, agreed to ask the otange County Appeals Board to check the assessment. In New San Cle1nente Ban He promlted to wort along with police officials and parks conunlsslonert to . achieve a compromise tn his bid. 1be parking lo!, a UUJe.uaed facility al the north,..Jy and ol the city, served ., a spot lot a rock dance last year u do7zm ' of San Clemente lllgh School )'Otlllistm climaxed a special cleanup d a y throughout the city. A . small red notebook that Orange Counpr ~f'• officers believe may prove to be a gold mine in terms of detallt ol nan:otics dealers and drug transactlllm <In and; bey,ond Calllornia Is being eagerly atudled today by the deparbnent's drug investigators. Battin claims the San Clemente prop- erty should be a s s e s s 'e d at $2.826 million . To the $1.5 million purchase price, he adds $703.000 in improvements made by the federal government and $123,000 in cl.anges the President made. Valler'ga conte~ds that the in1- provements made by the government are federal property and not ~ssessable by the county. Frank Manzo, a Battin appointee to the appeals board and his finance chairman in last year's election, has said he is in favor o( the investigation. The attitude of th..: other two members is not known. CARSON CITY (AP ) -A 70.mile-an- hot:_· speed limit along a high-fatality stretch of Interstate 80 ·from the Cali fornia-Nevada line to Reno was ap- proved Wednesday by the state Highway Board . Board cha irman Gov. Mike O'Callaghan noted the limit is a y-ear· long experiment. San Clemente today has a new ordi· ance banning nude or semi-nude exhibl- tions by waitresses or others. but several tof>'ranking city officials and policemen aren't sure they understand every anatomical item in the no-no list. Besides breasts, pubic hair and the more familiar forbidden parts of the human form, councilmen in a unanimous action \Vednesday banned exhibition of the natal cleft. But so far no one knows what -ex- actly -a natal cleft is . '·You mean that's in the ordinance, too?" City Manager Kenneth Carr said today. "I don't actually know..what-it-is. i'll·refer you to.,a-medical dictionary/t Conventional dictionaries don't have th e item listed. "Natal" refers to birth, they say. "Cleft" is any separation. Police, including detectives who would enforce sucai offenses in the ordinan ce, were just as vague. "l heard lhe doctor use the word once when my wife was pregnant," said one s110,ooo sa111J08t Atlantic Trip in Stolen Boat Ends for 2 Youths .. RIVERHEAD, N.Y. (UPI) -Two teen-agers Wl'io saiO. they waffled to visit southern France allegedly stole a $1 10.000 sailboat from a Long Island yacht club and set sail for" Europe. The planned ocean voyage ended JO hours later when police, the Coast Guard and state officials intercep ted the vessel \Vednesday in the middle of Long lsland Sound. Allen Fhzsimmons, 16, and Frederick Huntington Man Jailed in Incest ..-.a~'A:l;l!l,liEgl~~ .. Be~~~ m1oda'!.~~~~~~~!J,i-~ ~ ~o appear Jn cow-~ ay on c1111,rges that he had repeatt'<lly raped and beaten his IS-year-old daughter over a two-year period. ,, The man was booked into Huntington Beach Ci ty Jail Wednesday on charges or child beating, false imprisonment, incest, sex perversion and forcible rape. Police said the arrest was made after an extensive intcrVieW with the man's daughter who alleged that her father had periodically attacked her since July of 1971. • Police were called in by the girl who ;.n lo a .Jlejgh.b9r (or help al\er being __ severely beaten 'Wedl)<!sd•Y morning. c Dau , 181 of Huntington Station, L.I., the two Wolil<!-be -World travelers;-were chanrged with grand larceny and held in jail pending. arraignment. According to police, the air·and·sea chase got tmder way after Peter Toml inson, the own er of the 48-foot ketch "Snow Goose ," discovered at 8 a.m. that hi s yacht was missing from Its mooring in Northport Harbor. Tomlinson notified authorities, police said, and a Coast Guard cutter was dispatched to blockade the exit of Long Island Sound off Orient Point. Other Coast Guard ve sse ls. and police launches filled with cops and detectives set out from Long tsla nd Shore com- munities and crl~·crossed the sound looking for the Snow Goose , while Tomlinson tented-an airp1ano..to begJo..his own seart h ...... _ __ _ _ _ . But it was not until 5:45 p.m. when a· group or ctlmlnal lnvestJgators who com- mandeered 4 boat from a. Rlverticad com~ pany. finally Intercepted the teen· age rs and boarded the $110,000 yacht about 40 miles from ils anchorage at the Northport Yacht Club. Police said a search of the boat turned up charts of the ... Atlantic Ocean and enough food, water and supplies for at least a two-week voyag~. They said the two boys had been ral"'d nround boats .. were experienced _sailors and told thel'n ttiey wan ter• Vlfi Europe,'' The boOt was-undamaged. - offi cer, but his explanation of the cleft was different from a fellow detective's. City Attomey F. MacKenzie Brown, familiar with similar semantic problems with the natal cleft in other cities enac- ting the ordinance. replied sim p1y, "don't ask" to queries about the anatomical region. •·r-.1ost or the time in codes like th is they (councilmen ) ask 'will it work?' arid I'll answer 'yes ... it'll work ' and then they'll pass it unanimousl y. Roughly, that Is w h a t tninspir<?d Wednesday with the code which is an attetnpt to make sure no topl ess or bot· tonliess bars establish in San Clemente. Jenkins lnslsted that the lot Is one of very few places in San Clement«;_ suitable ror such an event. Attempts ~O)use the San Clemente lllgh School football stadium failed, he added. Police Nab Four Laguna Nudies Orange Q:iuniy Sffefitrs officers called lt came into their hands Wednesday when deputies moved' In ~ a car oc- cupied by ;ames Raleigh Chapman, 28 , of Washington, D.C. and Herbert Louis Goldblum, 25, of Abington, Pa . with the. Intention of booking both men on a drunken driving infraction. · 'Ibey halted the car on the San Diego Freeway about one-half mile north of Sand canyon Road after watching what they said was BOme erratic driving on the part of Chapman. But they stepped up the charges to transportalion of controlled substances (narcotics) when they found the notebook Th~ code does, however, _e~empt to the Soulh Laguna area Wednesday by and nearly $25,000 if1 cash on the persons bonaf1dg_tfteaters fr__gm Jalllng_un~entie-----t.~~-of-a__7-4e.y_~..oJd local_ of the two-suspects..-Both-men were lodg- strict rules of the code resid~t cited four persons alfer-illegea~ ed in Orange County Jail. ly finding them sunbathlng In the nude on Thieves Hit Hotel SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -Polico searched today for burglars who stole more than $48,000 in_ jewelry. cash and checks from a Fainnont Hotel room. Detectives said the thief, or thieves, took $37,000 in jeWelry;-$10,900 in lraveler!s checks and $350 in cash from the room of Akio Morita and his wife. Morita Is ex- ecutive vice president or Sony Corp . a local beach. Booked for indecent exposure were Kathy Elizabeth Coffey, zo, llf 32l9: Pacific Coast Highway, South Laguna; Thomas Howard Maxwell, 27, 967 Ocean , Front, Laguna Beach; JU.chard Bryan Albrecbt,_2'1,_409_W. Bay_St., Costa.Men and Ronald Wayne Austin, 23, of 25295 Front St., El Toro. ' Deputies said the elderly complainant tolil tlfem be spotted lhe four sunbathing in the nude on the sand adjoining his property. He said they Ignored his ob- jections to the practice. P~be_ Clears Banker LOS ANGELES (AP ) Frank Andreoli, a former Union Bank vice pl):!Sident,_ha_s_~n cleared of ac- cusaUons that h e misappropriated $150,000 from a holding company. Grand "theft charges against Ai:tdreo li. 40, were dismissed by Municipal Court Con1- mlssioner Reuben Rosensweig at a preliminary hearing Wednesday l>ecausc of insufficient evidence. 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I • .. • I ' Jo di st m m re w of b al t • • • • DAILY PILOT :J-~ • TRABUCO-SCHOOL DOESN'T HAVE HOT WATER OR-MODERN PLUMBING BUT IT HAS A PASSEL OF CHICKENS AND DUCKS; YOUNGSTERS LEARN T.O HELP EACH AND FOLLOW THROUGH By_ JAJ'IJ WORTH school bells -just a casually organized ot 1t1t 0111Y ,.1.., stiff daY that bigins at 8:30 and endS with There is still a place in Orange County calisthenics on the basketball courts where children can ride their horses to somewhere around three.: school, have the same teacher three A1any of the students say they wouldn 't years In a row, and know all their fellow want to go anywhere else. Most have students. always gone there .. But some or the It is the tiny three·room Trabuco strongest supporters are the ne\V School in rural Trabuco Canyon. Prin-.. students -who find a different feeling at cipa1 Tony Bube, who also teaches Trabuco than their previous school. grades five, six, seven, and eight, likes to . This year.there is only one third grader say the school is located "where the road and one eighth grader, Bruce Priddy. ends" in the canyon next to O'Neill Park. That presents some· problems to the This year the school has 56 students in teachers ....:. who. find themselves making grades kindergarten to eight, a part·time lessons pla:ns that Jook like a 10-genera- custodian, three teach;ers, including lion genealogy. Bube, and a secretary. It forces students. to follow through on It also boasts two Qonkeys (due to their own -a necessity which neilber become three soon), a passel of chickens the teachers nor students see as bad. and ducks, several goats and sheep, and '1lt's tough being the only eighth a hutch full of rabbits-grader," Bruce said with a grin. "You So the school doesn 't have modem get stuck With all the worK .. .I wasn't plwnbing or bot water. So there's no fan· sure if 1'd li,ke !t. but, so far it's worki~ --cy-auditoriwn Jor_gradualiogJhe eii!ith----OlllJ>loiY." • graders. Last year the school bad 15 eighth Princip1I Tony Bulte ,, . It bas its compensations. Like ruge oak graders who took a traditional trip to -----~--..:·u.-...-,,...:-treeri•with thick rope sWingso Like no • Sacramento. Young Priddy isn't sure if ' Div~:rce Not :Foolproof he'll get to go to the capital ltlmself; b.ut Principal Bu\>e has assured hith be will. Like most graduates of Trabuco, Bruce is uneasy aboJ,lt making the transition to "a big school" next year. "I'm not ready for the big schools yet," he said. But Bube said the record of the school's graduates, while not always tops . in grades, shows them heads above the crowd in · independence, motivation , and responsibility. Until this year1 the school was run by an independent district, headed by a three-member board of education. But with the wtlfication of the Sad· dleback schools into one district, Trabuco School joined in. The decision h'as been a happy one. Now Bube, a retired career Marioe, · doesn't-have to do the custodial work. 'and there's a goOd chance they've had the same teacher before." Mrs. Sullivan said Trabuco students don't develop cliques of their peers. "The older kids help the younger,"· she said·. "We couldn't do without the help our . older students give us." "l suspect it would be a lot easier somewhere else -but there are many advantages you just couldn 't find elsewhere," Bu be said. Bube (prouoWlced byu-bee) said he ~ bel~ves strongly in the s c h o o I ' s agricultural emphasis, in its second year. Himself raised on a farm, Bube became interested in agriculture a few years ago when he read that fewer and fewer students are opting for agriculture as a career. "Some day we may have a hard time finding enough people to produce the food them moved out here to give their children \his neighborhood feeling_ Tlty don't want to lose it," Bube _!.&id. •.:' Fortunately,, Saddleback Unifitfft district administrators support the neighborhood concept and so far are ebo couraging the agriculture program al\d other unique featilres. ' • ,;~ . Besides providing a custodian and fillt. time secretary, unification has ~ better music programs can be offerecf{ a Psychologist now visits occasionally, ~ busing is available for . yowigsters ~ need it. · · ~ "You'd never see· any' of our glifis wearing dresses or hose," Mrs. SulliVill said. -"Sure kids wear pants to scHooi elsewhere. But here they have to .r-~ cleaning out the pens and riding horseS''i1 a normal part of the day." we need," he said. .. '· In the fiv~ .Years . he's b!een with ·.t~ ·"If we can 'inspire an interest in S Th; H - school, he_and th~ eighth gr~de hoYS did _ ~riculture here an&,make_il_fun to hoot Q ~s orse ' most of the sweeping and mamtenarice. we tnlgfit contiiDu a few mOre to tbe 11 •1 . , ~ -~ ;--f-' They also put in a sidewalk and built a field." . Walks J to B pen for the donkeys, ' His students take the 'school's animals n ar ••.• "I feel that we have th"e best of all home during the summer, after learning ~ ,.... _;- worlds educationally here," said Bube, a how to care for and feed them GREENCASTLE, Pa. (UPI)~~ resident of Orange. Most of the animals were! donated. Beaver of Greencastle hu been char= The other two te~chers, Carolyn Bu\>f has found many local citizens in-with disorderly conduct after he brou t Sullivan and Charlene Ponder, agree. terested in helping. his horSe.into the Hotel Greencastle's ~ Mrs. Sullivan, a Tustin resident, -Parents take an active role. Jt's not room. teaches 11 students in kindergarten aod unusual to see a fat.her making· repairs The bartender· asked him to remo'ie A blushing County Clerk William E. St remarried and technically committ~ John had to confess weanesaay that .,.. bigamy. -, . • first grade . . on something around the property. the horse and during a sharp exchange' al license staff was not asking for ·~These kids are different from kids at One day last• week, a group of four . words the horse dii:l what many anitn'1S documented proof of tile final dissolution the bottom of the hill," she said. "They're fathers and one grandfather came to the do when they get excited; · '~ .. divorce and remarriage, Orange County ·Sf: Johh at thaj. point calmed the fears style, isn't quite as error free as he has of 'many remarried divorcees by assuring cracked It up to be. them that his marirage license divisioo of. any applicant's form.el' marriage. canyon kids. They don't seem to grow up school to build a new corral for the The outraged bartender gathered .>UP "I intend to work on this problem right so fast. Their lives are more stable. horses the kkb· ride to schooL the evidence in a plastic bag whictJ hotel away," he saip. "They're not afraid when they Come to "Our parents are our biggest suir officials carted to Justice of the Pe!Ce Meanwhile, Damron advises all di· school," she added. "They may be in porters. They want the school to stay Robert Eberly, who banded down tl'le Boat builder James C. Damron of made absolutely sure when the license Costa Mesa smacked a large oar ln the was taken oot that a fi,nal judgment of middle of St John's normally placid divorce was indeed on the books. vorcees who. have remarried in Orange class with their brothers and sisterS -pretty much the way it is -most of charge against Beaver:. County to take a good look at the validity J--;;;;::-J;~L:~~;t;;;;/i)::::;:;::::~~pi:==:=:=:=:;:=:=:=:=:=::=::;::;:=:;;;:;:;;;:;:::;;:;:;;;;;;;;;~ marital pond by revealing that' he learn· Damron shattered that i 11 us i o n ed after marrying his second wife that he Wednesday by pointing out that his ex-1-~w'°'as · notlegally d1voi'Ced from hiS-flrst -wife leamed-that-sheTeally wasn't an ex· spouse. wife when she enlered into a property Damron, of. 3124 Coolidge Ave., has -deal and had. to submit proof that she remedied the legal omission but riot was legally divorced- without bittetly~recajlil}g SJ Jobn.'s words "She henelf made sure right then and of five months ago: "It could never hair ~ tlat the ·fiilal-Jiidgment was ob- pen here." tained,'' Damron said. "But you can im- That comment followed the dl.Scov~ry ~ agine how my new wife, Joan, and 1 felt by_one_o( the o;>unty clerk's workers that when we learned that we'd been living in at least 5,000 dlvoroe "icllons l n orange sin, as the novels say:'' COUnty had never been legally concluded. "You have to remember lhat Mr. 'Jbe parties involved .h~ been~ granted Damron signed ·a statement under an interlocutoty decree Of divorce. But penalty of perjury that he was finally of their divorce papers. "I'd hate to see this happen to anyone else;'!....he-saido''Itrmade me prettY,..mad especially since that ~guy (St John} was so cocksure about this thing when that earlier divorce story came out. I read it and assumed l was okay." "If la}VYers would warn their clients at the time· o( 1U;le interlocutory that they were no.l'leP,lly invorced at that point, a lot of this trou6le would be eJiminated. '' St John said:---- "In ; the. meantime, J intend to look further into.this situation," he promised. "It m~ well be that we sh.pll have. to change rout practice in the marriage license division." they had not obtained the vital final judg· divorced," the flustered St J~bn said. But ment with the result that many divorcees he readily admitted that his marriage -.::=.:::=_:=.:..:~=-::~~_:_:,:_~____::.::~~~~~-"-~~-'-~~~--~ Weil, Offjcer, J Was ••• JJ./ 7}arreffd ... ~EPTEMBER SAVE 20% on ,elected cotlection of • SOFAS • LOVE SEATS • CHAIRS in yottr ch oice of fab.rics --of -BREXEL - UPHOLSTERY PROFESSIONAL Opon Mon, 22 15 HAR80~ BLVD. fl'lftl0611Dl'S'fGNEl-r-l>un.~ Fi:r,:'t:· ~,,.,--C-OSTl.-J;lt , C:-AT1 r,;_--,.~~~ _ E!'!l'Y!>OOY: ·oul~ers th_!lr · _U.tUe hangUP.S now and _ Oien ant!So II was for Elvil'l ;\ponte lif1iartlord, s;onn., who go_t be~ driver's UceMe jusl abqut two . weeks ago. Somehow, her car decided ,to climb a 'lity-pole guy wll'I!-She-la-trying 10-e•plain all: -··t-·:__:::~~~~======::=:::::::::=:::::=::=::::=::=:=;;;=::::!~ this to the nice man lll tbe blue uniform_ ' - ' . • ), ( ' • f DAILV PILOT Hushing Up Our Country BlJSlllllJP SBBB, DEPT. -Our good Orange c:ounty supervtson, acting in the din ol tbelr own so to 60 decibels of IOWld, roared Into the war against nolse yesterday. 'Ibey pas3ed an anU-racket law. No, they aren't going after the big rackets like sexy ,bookstores, pool hustlers -or sellera of football betting cards. They are out to stop noise In all the unincorporated resident la 1 nelgbborboods of our nglon. Thus if the law gets followed, places like Mission Viejo, E1 Toro, Lake F orest aod Laguna Niguel will soon become tslands of. whispering silence and tran- qulllty. , •.•. THE COUNTY'S NEW anU-nolse law should officially go on lhe books In 90 days. Mainly, it will be aimed at snuffing out such bedlam as caused 1 b y molorcycles ·roaring about oo prlvale property, clatlerlng lawmnowera, yelping clogs, blaring slereo re<ord playera and other similar nerve janglers. Sound, you see, is measured by what I! called clecibell. Yw can go around ond measure lhlngs lh8t make oolse from I .r..~ . decibel up to Lord only knows how blgb. Dr. John Pbllp, Orange COOnty's beallh officer, bad testified that noises above S> decibels over a loag period might ac- tually damage your eardrums, Also, any racket over 55 decibels is comidered ''uncoinfortable." TIDS 18 INTEl\Fm'ING In lhat at one point, an environmentalist for a sand &: gravel outfit told the supervtson: that the noise level In their bearing room was raoging from 55 lo 60 decibels. You suspect that makes t be supervbors a pretly noisy and un· comfortable group. Maybe it would be best ii the board didn't try to bold any of !!JI meetings oul in residential oelgbborboods. Anyway, county government isn't really the forerwmer in the anti-nolle business here in our area. 1be municipality of FOIDltain Valley came through with the first anti-racket law. FOUNTAIN VAU.EY'S quiet Jlw im't really too effective. Foe a law to wort, it bu to have IDllletbing to ,work on. And Founlaln VaHey was 10 quiet In the first place that the law bad nothing to stop. They won't even Jet a fOlDllain gurgle too loudly in the place. Well, I don't know bow it is around your oelgbbo.-but I'm lbankful the couty'a new aotkloiae law embraces ooly llOO-city areas. It would be difficult iDdeed if ~·a dictum was in effect in my neigliJorhood. Just take our house, for enmple. We ·have one large dog, two motorcycles, a large stereo p1ayer, one drum set. one guitar, one clarinet and a non-muffled popcorn mater. All of the above are operated at fUll throttle by our three teenagers. TIDS IS ONLY partially an ex· aggeration. Qpg is not operated by the teenagers. Dog operates on bis own. Maybe it wouldn't be so noisy if all these things were tmed one at a time. Mostly, however, an are going at once. including Dog. Clearly, it's a good thing that the coun: ty's noise ordinance isn't the law of the land where I live. I'd be Public Enemy Number One. Networks to Rotate NEW YORK (UPI) -The commercial television netwoOO will resume their rotating coverage of the S e n at e Watergate hearings when the public sessions resume Monday, network spokesmen said Wedoe!da.y. UPIT...,_t. NOLA GARANAMBA, 7, WITH WHITE l'OSTER PARENTS . Morrlogo HH Boen Arranged With Mld.u..god Tribosman Aborigines Reclaim Girl From White Home SYDNEY (AP) -After most of her life with white foster parents, a 7-year- old aborigine girl has been taken back to the bush for an arranged marriage to a middle-aged tribesman seven years from now: . The foster parents said a government official dragged Nola Gamamba away crying and screaming that lhe wanted to slay with them. A government spokesman said the child bad "setUed in well" to tribal life during her 12 days in her natural parents' but in the outback near Maningrida, in Arnhem Land. SYDNEY NEWSPAPERS today demanded an lnvestigatioo. Gordon Bryanl, the aboriginal affairs mlnisler, said be could not stop the mamage which Nola's natural parents had arranged for her because tribal custom was involved. But be said she would not marry until she Is 14. The foster paren!JI, Alhol and Ann Brown ol Darwin, have six cbildren of their own. "NOLA WAS BROUGHT up our way," said lilrs. Brown, who is 45. "She doesn't even know the aborigina) ways. She cannot spei:k their language and knows nothing .of life in a bush camp. Nola has been used to living In her own room wiUi all the facilities of a modern home. Sbe must be terrified and coofused.., Mnl. Brown cJaimed that Nola's natural parents wanted her returned to prove to her husband-to-be that she existed so be wwld QOlltinue paying them Ille bride price ol tobacco and food. Mrs. Brown said Nola was 8 mont.bs old when she came to their home. Nola's lribe lives In Arnhem Land, SOil miles east ol Darwin. Soldiers Encounter Fire From Snipers in Santiago SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI) -Soldiers armed with automatic weapons patroll- ing the streets of downtown SanUago ear- ly-today~encoontered ·sporadic fire from snipers resisting the nine-day-old ruling military junta. Shots echoed through the streets despite a warning Wednesday night by Air Force Gen. Gustavo Leigh, a ( IN SHORT ..• ) member of the four-man junta, that "any man who fires against our forces, dies; any man who shdets innocent persons, dies." e Saigon A irs Protest SAIGON (UPI ) -The Saigon go vern- ment said today it bas protested to the 12-nation International Conference on Vietnam about Hanoi's alleged rebuilding of U.S. airfields in South Vietnam. The government, in a diplomatic oote released today, called on the conference "to take effective action" to force North Vietnam "to immediately stop its con- struction and improvement of airfields soottrof-tbe17tbJl8fallel." e S kt1lab Shoots Stars HOUSTON (UPI) -The Skylab 2 :astronauts today phtographed X-ray light sources several thousand 1 i g h t years from earth and tested their disabled Apollo command ship to make sure they have a way to get back home Tuesday . P~ u much scientific in- vestigation as they can into the final days of their two-month voyage, Afan L. Bean, Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma used their solar observatory telescopes to make a dozen pictures of an unusual blue star in the Scorpio con- stellation. e Pemion Vo te, 93.0 W ASIIlNGTON (UPI) -The Senate bas pas.sed a bill to assure 38 million working people that the pensions they an- ticipate will be available when they retir~. ~ Army Post in LondOn Rippedhy Large Bomb LONDON (AP) -Terrorists pierced a Ught wall of security and exploded a large bomb inside an army post in Lon· don's Chelsea section early today. Two soldiers and three civilians were injured. The explosion badly· damaged the three-SIDl'y transport building at the home . base of the 141.h Parachiite Brigade. The brigade ~udes the lrd Baltalioo ol the crack Paracbule Reg!· ment, tile BritiSh unit most baled by Northern Ireland's Rornao Catholics since some of Its men killed 13 ~ on Londonderry's "Bloody Sunday" in January 1972. ~; rr WAS THE 5lst terrorist" at tact in England &nee Aug. 18, when in- cendiaries, letter bombs and bombs began going off. Nearly 30 persons have been lnjured, and .securitj authorities blame lbe Irish Republican Army. • Pollce said the bomb at the Duke of York's Barracks may have been planted In an army truck that was driven onto the base Wednesday. It apparently ex- ploded In a garage, and It damaged half a dozen vehicles, tore up a traffic sign.in the middle of King's Road and blew out dozens of shop windows. VOTERS PAID OFF BY PORNOGRAPHY PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) -Johnny <>stroll, 49, an employe of an adult bookstore, has been arrested on charges he ·paid voters with a dirty movie f o r their signatures on a petition. Police said Wednesday that OStroll gave an undercover officer a pornographic film in exchange for 20 signatures on a petition opposing the new Oregon antipornography law. Your Choice "'Ibere was a tremendous blast and the who!~ building seemed to erupt," Kevin Lovett, 15, said. 'jTwo of my friends Were blown off their reet. I just sank against a wall shaking." Dangers Rt,'maln THE POIJCE WOUWN'T say how much txplosive was packed into lhe bomb, but it was "certainly the largest we've come -across yet," a spokesman said. ... Two Sextuplet Babies Improve During Night DENVER (UPI) -Three ol the five surviving Stanek sextuplets today showed signs of overcoming the lung disease thar killed their infant sister. Doctors however, said, the children were sUll en· dangered. "We can't put any percentage on it because their condition can change from hour to hour," said a spokesman for the University of Colorado Medical Center. "We're all hoping at the m~ent there's no reason for any grave concern. The prognosis has to be guarded. But the longer they survive, the better off they are:" 'lllE FATllER or the sextuplets. a junior accountant. talked witti pediatri- cians, keeping watch over the 4-day-old infants and said two of the children in poor condition had rallied. "They improved somewhat over lhe night," he said ... "They're aren't any specifics on their conditions available as or yet, however.'' The hospital said two of the infants born by Caesarian section Sunday night within a four-minute interval to the 34- year-old mother were fair. The fifth child, John. the first one born, was in good condition. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtll.ery of tht Dally Pilot · is ·guaral'lttrd ,,....,.,.f'rW••: II '" ... Mt llen ,_ ,.,.... •'I' J:JI ,.flt,, c•U 11111 .,..,.. <-n wlll _ ... _""9M le .,__ Cl!N. •rl tM• ..ill ,, .... .... li,_,..'I' ... ,...,,..,, II ~ 1111 .... ,_.... .,.. ~ ~ ' '·'"· ,_....,, w ........ '-'•'I'· c•• allll • c..., wll .. ..,..,.... .. '"' c:.• .,. , ...... ,. 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Coetl~ .. ,.,,.....,,,... , •• from 51 to #. h1lt!MI fitmptf'tlVl'tl r11199 ll'Ol'n $1 to 7), Wstw .. mptl'"tlUl't ... -Sun, 111-n, l'ldet, ·r.Yo!PAY--Cwt• wllld• wlll blow ~ ... -..... ~······ •:•111.m. .s.• llOl"llllf""ll ·~~Ind mounllll'IS, S4<0l'ld 1ow .,,.,., .• ,.. 121!f •·"'-0.0 owrn10111 wlll bt In ti. VPOtr "'I" '"''• '''l'-41141 111 ~ 1111t ••tDAY1 "°' 11 1"' ,,_,, na. -liit Mph .. , ........ , . , 7:GI •~m. •.t ' I Fll'll IOW ......... ,., .. 11!Ut.m. 2.' Sllcond lllclft ............ l:J.1111.m. S.• SW ll._ •1• .. ,,._ kh •:» p,191. MCIDfl ................ ""t:5' ft•'"" MOO£L £S-1''JW!N . -I•" DIAGONAL PICTURE, Both models carry the· AA&D warranty Final close outs on 1973 mOdels -call for the best prices of the year. .. ec 'i>',/ l"fto111cs FO!l 1~ -lllloi lirrf•r-- <i)UALITT PIODUCTS PIOFISSIONAL SllYICI 275 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA ' 642-8882 HOUn: ·oally 9 • 6 -Thurs. 9 • 9 -----.SM-I .. Tiw H.tMf ~,.. SlllC.e 1956 .· - - , Wiiy Bay Fram Wo • One ye1r Ja.,or 9u•ra~t•1 , • Ont year pertt warranty • Five ytar picturt tube warrtnty • Oi1count price• ' One y11r 1pe•lr•r 1xch1n91 e 60 d•y tuntr 1xch•n9• • Friendly, personal 11rvlce-- w1 f(NOW our product• and back them with SERVICE , 196-·70 Models Deadline Jan. I ' For (:al' Devices LOS AN(lELES (AP) -'nle statewide, the board made a !~te Air Re~s Board surprising switch (rom a W~y aet Jan. 1 at the previous decision to conUne startlDJ date for a statewide , She mandatory pi:ogram lo the mandalor)n .requirement that 'Los Angeles, San DJ ego and ; 1966-1970 automobiles be San Francisco areas. equipped with new an-The ,board also confirmed a Upollutlon devices. declaion made last June that 1be board's decision, taken any 1966-70 car going through ln emergency ection1 will af· a change o! ownership ef· feet 4.5 million cars. fective Oct. 1 must have the FAciNG TRIAL 'Tito' Jackson 111E. RESOLtmON passed by the board wUI be the sub- ject of ·a public hearing In Los Angeles OCt. 30 at which public reaction will be heard and cbangea could be made. In ipaklng the, requifement Jet Returns To LA After Bomb Call LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A United Air!-7t7 bound for Honolulu wllh 85 persons aboard returned to Los Ang~ Wedneiday n i g h t after a telephoned bomb threat was _received, authoriU~ported. A F er Aviation A d m inls · n spokesman said Flight 111 with 71 passengers and a crew ot 14 returned to Los Angeles International A l r p o r t 27 minutes after takeoff so police bomb squad members could search for the reported bomb. No bomb was found and the plane again departed for Honolulu at 11 :34 p.m. A United !pokesman . said the telephoned threat came lhorlly after the p I a n c departed. i • ' .. devices. The board in July ten- tatively, set Jan. 1 for begin- ning of the requirement that motorists gradually e q u I p their cars with the devices, designed to reduce oxide of nitrogen emissions. The board also limited the cost of lhe devices to $35 each. A MOVE BY member Harold W. Sullivan to defer the effective date until Feb. 1 was rejected after represen- tatives of the manilfacturers al the antipollution devices said they Were ready to get going on the program, and that they would lose money if jt were further delayed. The manufacturers had urg- ed speedy act.ion in , remarks at the board's public hearing before thif emergency resolu- tion was presented. The start of the mandatory program had been postponed from Oct. I to Jan. 1 because of reports that some devices were causing valve damage. UNDER THE schedule of co1npliance set up by the board, all cars with license plates whose last number is one must have the devices in- stalled by the end o f January. All Cars with a last d.lgit o( two mU!t have them by the end of February, three by the end of Marcil, and so on through next. October. 'Jackson 5' Pair Get Trial Date LOS ANGELES (AP) -A judge has ruled that two members or the "Jackson Five" musical group must stand trial on charges of receiving stolen property. MUNICIPAL Court Judge Elwyn S. Bennett ordered John P. Jackson, 22, of Rese<:la, and Toriano "Tito" A. Jackson, 19, of Sun Valley to appear Oct. 3 for arraignment in Superior Court. Bennett ruled Wednesday after a two-day preliminary hearing. John Jackson is charged with one count of receiving stolen property, and his brother ·is charged with two counts. A third defendant, S a n d e rs "Bubba" ·Bracy, 24, of Van Nuys, was ordered to stand tria l on eight counts of burglary and four counts of receiving stolen property. · THEY WERE arrested last April 12 following burglaries of about 50 apartments in the San Fernando Valley northwest of Los Angeles. - - During September and October, $11.89 half-gallons of 80-proof Smirnoff are selling for $10.69. I· A savings of $1. 20 per bottle. Which you can wi sely 1nvesTin orange juice, vermouth, ton1ato juice, soft drinks, lemon juice, Snap-E-'fo1n,<a> beef bouillon or any of the other good things Smirnoff mixes so deliciously ;vith. so"Prooi _________ _ balf·gallons onJy$t0.69 cturing September and October SmimoJf leaves )OU breatfiless~ _, . .}; , Liddy Flown to -LA For Break .. in Trail • LOS ANGELES (UPI) -quart~·· . --not upectc:f to be on hand - Convicted Watergate co-con-lndicwcl by a_.county grand coo._ld ~k separate trials for spirator G. Gordon Liddy was Jury earlier this month along their clients. a r r a i g n e d today on con-with John Ehrliebman, Egil _Eh~tichm~n. Krogh an d splracy and burglary charges Krogh ·ay.d David Young for , Fielding, Liddy a pp eared CALIFORNIA Lli.1 .... , PILQT $ ; Rock Star l Parso1~s, 27,_tl Succumbs !l YUCCA VALLEY (AP) -I Authorities here ere awaiting ·, results of laboratory lets 'to:tr;-' determlne wh{!t caused.. U\e·~ death of Gram Parsons , :J former member or "The .. Byrds" musical group. f:.. in · the "Watergate West" the bre~·in at the Beverly . innocent. break-in at Daniel Ellsberg's HUls ofqce of Dr. Lewis A White House "plumbers" "---------~ psychiatrist's office during the Fieldlug 8J.so appeared before squad allegedly broke into Labor Day weekend in 1971. Superior Court Judge James Fleld~g's office In sean;h of Parsons, 27 , was pronounced ,.., dead on arrival al a hospital here early Wednesday after being stricken at a motel In ~ nearby Joshua Tree. An •.• autopsy was performed \Yednesday, but cause or death • was not i mmed i ately •• G. Kolts this morning and psycb1atrlc records pertaining LIDDY, 43, is in a separate pleaded innocent. to Ellsberg, a former Penta- cell at Las Angeles County gon Papers defendant. Jail where he was brO;iJght ATTORNEYS FOR the three federal judge dropped charges against Ellsberg and co-defen- dant Anthony Russo Jr. due to alleged \Vhite fl o u s e in- volvement.in the psychiatrist's Wednesday after be Ing other defendants -who were EARLIER THlS year a office break-in. , determined. • .... transferred from District of•-------------------=------------------------ Colurnbia jail. He was servui.g an eight-month · sentence for refusing to testify before a fed eral grand jury i n Washington. He also has been given a 6- to-20 year sentence for hi s conviction in the June 17, 1972, break-in at the Democratic Na t i o n a I Committee head- Blast Kills 3 Persons Iii Pool Hcill PASO ROBLES (AP) -An explosion ripped through a downtown pool hall, killing th·ree men and injuring four other persons. C a u s e of the blast Wed- nesday night w a s n ' t Im- mediately -known but officials -said it may have stemmed from a gas leak. THE EXPLOSION at Duke's S1noke Shop, which Is a pool hall and card room, knocked out walls and caused the roof to cave in. Windows were shattered a block away. Officials said two men died outright and another died three hours later at a San Luis Obispo hospital. The first two dead were identified. as Harold Zornes, 53, and Florencio Chaides, 83, both or Paso _ Robles. 'Mle third, who died at the hospital, was identified as Mullis Baxter of Ataacadero. Citizens i.n nearby buildings rushed to the site-to help ~ig aut the injured from a moun- tain of rubble. The hospital reported that an emergency alert system enabled 10 doc· tors and' 20 nursing aides to get to the Paso Robles hospital within half an hour to treat t'le injured. ForCI i111rodums the 74's. The news Is llig,meclium ancl small. At your Ford Dealer's. Mus tong n Ckia Ford Mustang D. A new class of small car: Fint Class. Mus tong JI is 19 inclies shorter th on lost year's Mus tong ... even obit shorte r thon the orig incl one. It's more th on o new Mus tong. It's o whole new class of smell car: First Clo,s. In everywoy. From its jewel.like exterior to Jts hondsomely . cppointed interior, the new.Mus tong D gives GIOnTorinoa....ghomrooi.~ ah:>wn with optional deluxe bumper group. 1974 Ford LTD. The quiet fulklu. you o luxurious level of slondord equipment you probably never expected to find a o small cor. Yet Musfongllstill carries on economical small-car price, Mus tong Il comes in two different body styles, four different models. See them soon • 1974 Ford Torino. The solid mid-size. Torino's goto new young~ this year. Excitingly restyled outside.,. exciting new features Inside. And lots of solid car to go with them. A new young Joo«, a smooth ond steady ride. That's Torino 7.4. Quiet, luxurious , beautifully built: thot's LTD for '74.A new level of croftsmon"shlp whertver you look, from the fit of the doors, hood ond trunk to the impressive list of LTD features. Steel belted rodiol tltes. Automatic transmission. Power steering. Power brakes, and more. AU standard on LTD for '74. Fo«l lTD B.oughom 2-doo< Hordlep shown with optional deluxe wkeel COoJen, white sidewall tires and delu11e bumper gr~. FORD OFFICIALS SAID the in- jured were Martha Martinez. a smoke shop employe~ who suffered broken legs and other injuries and was in serious condition; Jim Beecham, Paso Robles, serious back and bead injuries; Edgard Hanson . of nearby Shandon, not seriously hurt, and Thom~ Hopkins, Paso Roble s, who suftered a chest injury but deelln~ treatment. See all the 74's from Ford on September 21. -The closer you look, the better we look. FORD DIVISION .. The smoke shop was located in the center of this central California town's b u s I n e s s district, but no one ouUlde the More itews for '74 ••• Thunderbird, Pinto, Maverick, Ford Trucks .. .· : . •' ... ., ' ''t- . ... ·-....... '• . " . . ... . : " . ' " .·• ' ... J. ' • l"r... ; ~ ... • -.. . . ' .. '•' .. •• ... "., •• 1 .....:•~tru~ct~u~re~w~as~re~po~rt~ed~h~u~rt~._:::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::==:' • -- ' ( the KNOB CREEK collection A BRIGHT NEW ' WING CHAIR from $199 LIGHT IN l{OME FURNISHINGS VPHOLSTERED FURNITURE . ' LAMPS & ACCESSORIES ' ·A.1.0. INTERIOR DESIGN ATT~S DESIGN IV INTEAtQi:. FUi:-N l8HINQS ltOCI W •.. a ...... "'"t:NUt COlfA 1.11 ... , C..,, •i•i• ' . - . , • • • \ - DAD.\.' P R OT EDITORIAL PAGE '1 @ Job ~lust ·Be ·Finished • ·' • ·- ' ' 'The senate Watergate Commlffee, which has been meeting In close4 sessions to line up the next phase of Its illvestlgation, will be back on television Monday with White House "plumber" E. Howard Hunt as lirst wit· ness. . Hunt, alon~ with the Cubans involved h1 the con- sp~cy, is seeking to withdraw his guilty plea in the origmal Watergate case and have the charges dismissed. They maintain they were assured the operation had top White House approval and. was in the interest of na- tional security. Continuation of the bearings doubtless will bring complaints from those who were getting bored with the whole Watergate affair when the committee recessed in summer. One group, the month-old National Citizens Committee for Fairness to the Presidency (NCCFP) even has filed a court action to halt the hearings. But as committee chairman Sen. Sam Ervin point~ out, 0 The select committee didn't invent Watergate. It was invented by men entrusted by the Presi dent with great political and governmental power." And as committee member Sen. 'Lowell Weicker re- marks in an interview on this page, the committee was not established to determine the guilt or ,innocence of the President or any of the witnesses. It is a fact-finding body. set up by the Congress to !ind out what happened and to determine the need, if any, for additional Jegis· lation to prevent a repetition. Specifically, the committee must try to establish what, in this era of electronics and "dirty tricks," con- stitutes fair campaign practice; what steps should be taken to limit .big-money manipulations of political cam- paigns in general; and what, if anything, should be done to establish the now ill-defined limits of the power of the President. Few Watergate. watchers would deny that the first 37 days of testimony opened the eyes of many Ameri- cans to the painful !act that someone had been trying to take their government away from them. Those who don't A Legacy of I Economic Dear Gloomy Gus I j Ruin in Chile I like to race painful facts shrug it off with an attitude of "politicH!as always been 1 dirty game." • The more observant were shocked Into the reallza- tion that a dirty game bad somehow evolved Into a very dangerous game. If the committee ls permltad to accomplish its goals and complete its report to the Congress. and if this re- sults in acceptable protective legislation, there should be no Watergates in the future of American politics. One observer aptly remarked of the Senate hea r- ings, "The Americans they bore will be the Americans they save." - Casl1less Society Sooner or later it had to come -plastiC\ money! The U.S. S!vings and Loan League already is an- alyzing tests of this forerunner of a "cashless society/' using a pI,astic card manufactured by a Tustin firm. . The card, when insef!ed irl, a "money machine," will produce an envelope contilhing $25 in U.S. cur· rency. lt also can be used to pay merchants, who can u~e it to pay bills, or keep it in the cash register as a pilfer-proof petty cash account, while their real money earns interest in the bank. And there's none of the pa- perwork involved in handling regular credit cards. The plastic money cards, we are told, Carry the same protection as travelers' checks. The money ma· chines can be programmed to keep lost or stolen cards, without issuing any·cash. . And this is just the beginning. Next proposed step in the cashle~s society will be the deposit of employes' pay checks directly into their banks, which in turn will pay their bills and home loan payments. All this shoUfcl require only -ml nor reprogrammi.Dg or husbands who have been accustomed to turning their weekly paychecks over to their wives, anyhow. BACK IN S1tf Revealing PoU of Sulnirbia Middle Class Still Doubts Nixon I "I EDITORIAL RESEARCH It's a real comfort to know if you are kidnaped the police \viii get you if the kidnaper doesn't. R.E.L. LOS ANGELES-In the middle-class suburbia of southern Ca lifornia which has steadfastly voted for Richard Pwt. Nixon for a generation, the President has rea>vered hardly at all from the · Watergate depths and remains in oioomr Gus ceirunt11ts .,. tvbnllttell 11, desperate political trouble. '"*" ...,. • 11e1 '*"sar11y NJIKt t11e This unmistakable conclusion is drawn v11., o1 11t1 -· stM ,_ "' f m I ··" · . d """ 11 otoomr ov1, oa11Y ,.1191• ro answers o qu~onnaues preP:&re The Latin American left has for us by pollster 01-1o. martyr: Chile's late t · iver Quayle for in-' ( EVANS·NOVAK J by 2 to l. Only Z2 voters 'believe Mr. Nix- on teamed the details of Watergate just last March; rather, by a scarcely · believable 5 to 1 margin, they feeJ be is not telling. the whole truth. The sincere perception by many politi- cians that the voters have soured on the Ervin committee may stem from the vociferousness of dedicated Nixonites, as shown in these two precincts. Contending that the President "is being used as a -scapegoat in Watergate," a machinist told us he supports Mr. Nixon in every respect. So does a retired bus driver who said: "He's had a lot to buck- Congress and th.at damn Ervin com· mittee." in 1976. A divor~ who suppor~s her ra~ly on a nurse's aide's pay, com· plainlng about the "price ol (Ood and housing," told us she would vote for any Democrat next time. THUS, the polyglot s uburbanite pr~ncts of California's San Fernando Valley closely mirror the ethnic urban wards of Jersey City. N.J ., site .of our last scouting lrlp six weeks ago. The fact that Mr. Nixon has since broken· out or ' t l • ' ' . l ~ l ' ~- .1 -' l ~ l ' J :~ 'i J Allende, who died while a m ry!'f'ii;l'il'p.-FFiiiorPJimifco~n~.~1 "'1iail'~~~lcc:niftf'i'P""'ii\tr.;;;.~~iixon was in progress. The oftlcial explanation strikes _ or truckers, merchants, pr~ Co li·n i r y: two all· was suicide, but doubts are bound to ressionals, copP,S;r miners, students. white precincts h1 persist. In any event. Allende now joins Inflation has zoi:itled to 300 per ceot a tht San Fernando the pantheon of lertist heroes . ranfP!tg year. There is orily enough wheat in 'the 'Valley. Fat. f·r o m from Ernesto (Che) Guevara and Camilo country for a few days' supply of bread. confirming White Torres, to Marco Yon Sosa, Carlos It is also a country that has c~nged House claims that Pwtarlghella and Col. Francisco Caamano radicaUy since Allende took ovt!r. Its President NixOb's re- Deno. self -image as-a beacon or demcx;racy in cent spurt of visible A MORE unlikely candidate for mart)Tdom Is hard to imagine. Allende was no bearded guerrilla, defrocked priest, or fiery orator. He was, instead, a former medical doctor with a taste for good clothes and fine Chilean wine. A Socialist in politics, he was aa avowed adherent of parliamentary democracy, having served in the Chilean Congress since the 1930s. And yet, during his rocky, troubled Latin America .is shattered, perhaps for activity had set him on the road to re. years or dfcades. Hall the population is co very, these interviews revealed wide· bitterly antl-Commwiist, half avowedly spread disbelief in hfs Watergate ex· Marxist. Part of the division is due· to the plc:.nations and overwhelming disapprOval politics of polarization Chileans have of his refus4,I to surrender lhe sei:ret played these la st three years, and part to White House tapes. · Allende's own efforts to "re-educate the • masses." He overhauled school curricula, THE PRESIDENT'S problem • I s seized newspapers, est ab I is he d typified by a .. television repairman's yrife govemment-o'Ntled publishing houses and in her late ~. a registered independent magaZmes .11ld, at one point,-even who vot~ fot:_ Mr._Nixon__Mi,st year. but ordered the rewriting of such fables as now regards his performance as poor. The White HoUse campaign against Sen. Sam Ervtn"s Senate invesUgating committee has failed here. By better than 3 to l, these voters want Ervin's hearings continued. The contention that the commJttee is more interested in smearing Mr. Nixon than ln discoverin1 tbe truth lo rejected by better than 2 to I. THE MOST stunning result is' found in Quayle's trust index. Of seven political figures tested, Ervin ls highest at 66 (surpassing even the popular Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan, who had SB). Al the bottom Is Mr. Nixon wiih 40, running below Vice President Spiro T. Agne'if (44) and Sen. George McGovern(!?). -day&~&s--Clll'lS1llut!onal president of Chile, Allende seemed to courf the martyrdom he finaJly found. In his three-year effort to socialize Chile, AUende challenge'd and fought virtually all elements of Chilean politics, from the far-right "momios" lo the ultra-left MIR (Revolutionary Leftist Movement ). Cinderella and Sleeping Beauty to...con· "He is M!_ting a terrible exam le for the form to "Socialist Realism." American public. 1etOla us. 'He rs---- telling us to be Jaw-abiding citizens and A l\tARTYR'S DEATH for Allende can be doesn1t follow the laws." only add to the-problems or the United Electio~ .. analyst Richard Scammon States in Latin Anierica. The Chilean selected two San Fernando precincts for coup v.·ill fan the fires of anti-us-one 1-0wer-middle iii come blue collar, Americanism from Tierra de! Fuego to the other middle income white collar- the Rio Grande. lne.wP,ably, the CIA will which Mr. Nixon carried last November Not long ago I was told about an adve~sing copy writer ·who was fired from his job for dozing at his desk during working hours. I couldn't sympathize wllh his plight-for h~d he really been adept in the art of salesmaNhlp, he sW"e-- BUT 'nlESE faithful are too Cew to confinement ~·Ith two press corences and keep tbil1 truly Nixoo country The .. ......repeated other public ap'pearctnces has Preside s decline is measured )tu' the made no difference. attitude f Democrats ·and independents In fact, the interviews here dispute the who votfiSI for him and oow condemn his impact or those }:>ress conferences. By presidenCy-often citing economic fac· better than 2 to I, these voters denied tors. High prices is the main complaint that the. press conrerenees made them but a. Sf.Jllrising . number menlloo the think more highly ol a~resldent. By Soviet wieat deal The Democratic wife nearly 3 to 1, they · eed &hat the of a veterinarian regrets her vote for Mr. reporters were disrespect!ul to the Presi- Nixon bfc.ause of his "selling wheat tp dent. Based on. these aoundings from Nix· Russia while we get stale bread at on cowitry, it will take more than cos· home." 1' me tics and anti-media, anti-Congress Such disaffected Nixonites promise to counterattacks to rehabilitate the Presl· retqm ta their old Democratic alleg_ iance dent in the public mind. • j ·1 ' f ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ be charged with engineering the whole by over 60 per cent. The 94 vOten: we ln- thing. ·AI lend e's death is also likely to terviewed llith california po 11 t n g ly could have persuaded his boss that he lying down under piles of blankets to ALLENDE leaves behind a legacy of strife and chaos in Chile, once-the most stolid and peaceful of Latin countries. --<-·Chlle~1s'lnore bitterly divided today than at any time in its history. If civil war is not a prospect -and chances are that it is -t.ben continuing turmoil and violent dissent most certainly are. The country tod'ay is an economic ruin. ' ~ ~ ., lead to violence elsewhere in the supervisor Beryl Winn indicated no hemisphere. In Argentina, for example, reversaJ in the President's decline. where a nervous anny general staff J s pondering the prospect of Juan Peron's return to power, the example of the Chilean military could well stiffen some THESE VOTERS, by more than 5 to l, do not believe Mr. Nixon ·should either resign or be impeached. But that js the end of any comlort here for the White House (apart from some 25 bard-core Republicans who give the President blanket support). was not dozing but was in a "creative meditate. ' Iran-... Sebo-'--.. ~ ~ ..... uer once remarked that "my He Could have poinled. to Coleridge, for will & uleep when I do my most ef· example, who would fall asleep while • fective thinking, 'Yhich is usually in a working at his-desk ; on awakening he '" semi-trance." And, Carlyle, in praising Would find that be had composed two or' slumber, said, ''11le unconscious is the three hundred lines of'excellent verse. miker ~ creative power, the con.!cious came to him in dreams. Voltaire one night . dreamed an entire canto of his "Henr:iade," in an entirely different {and improved) version from the one he had wrttt~n the preceding day: Condorcet, the brilliant rm.ch mathematiciag, had the same Cruitful experience with mathematicaJ fonnulae. DIOGENES LAERTES,•>.uie Greek historian, mentions a. Staie ~llosopher who composed and C'o.-r rec t e d philosophical treati!el while slee~walk­ lng. and Zwinger, the 5w1., physician, cites several ... l • l • ' I Quotes Kay Ferris, L.A. -"I come from a welfare family. Al no time should (one) be able to say that they can make more and enjoy a higher standard of living y.•hile receiving welrare than if they were spines. The Chilean military junta will likely seek American aid and, after a brief period of waiting , will probably get it. There Is no chance of Chile's weathering the present' ·economic and political storm without heavy tranfusions of money and materiel from the outside. But such aid probably will serve only to confirm the leftists' darkest suspicions or American complicity in Allende's downfall . Although a substantial majority of those Interviewed In these two precincts voted for him, Mr. NiJ:on now get! only a 30 per cent job approval ratb)g. They feel he is wrong not to surrender the tapes and they support Federal Jlldgo John Sirica 's order to give him the tapes, bot~ Coleridge was in such a trance, indeed, while writing his immortal "Kubla Khan"-whlch l'tlllained unllnisbed only because the poet's snooze was rudely ig- terrupted by "a person on business from Porlock." . SUCH VARIED MEN of genius as Descartes, Leibnili, Milton ahd Ros!ini used to stimulate thelr creative jllices by that of mere skill." Sm WALTER SCOTT, that prolific novelist, would often reflre at nlg~. hav-lnlJ vainly sought an idea lot hou'rs-and1 the idea would promptly greet him the neit morning upon arising. Tartlnl, the Italian mu~c~an, c~po~ his .. Devil's Trill Sonata" While sleeping~ ' and some.of SCbubert's sweetest aielodie$• . . '' . But why go on? That copy writer deserved to be tired-pot for dozing at his desk, but for .faillni to impress upon his superiors the anetent, noble r and highly creaUve precedents he was follow· Ing.. How could he t41t toothpaste or detergentl' if he couldn't &en his own wor~ing habits? Don't call to answer, beoO,,.. I'm falling asl • , , ! Public Understands Committee Funetio·n, Says ; . . I Senator . I ' ! • I • l At the Watergate hearings re&u111e, Remember that a year ago, after the editors of the ~Vash ington Mont11. Wate'rgate occurred, after IIT occurred, ty interview Sen. Lowell \Veiclc.er (R.· nobody In this country was saying anything. Nobody In this country cared. Con11.). That's all changed now. And if you ask Q. When the flr1'1 phase of the me whether we've a cc om PI is he d Watergate beartng1 ended, there was anything, then J!d say that the answer wldttprud disappointment that thJng1 was yes . badlcoacluded so Inconclusively .. Do you Q: Tben I assume that the question of tJdak the public misunderstands the fun'-.. the Prealdent11 C!Ompticlty In the cover· tlea or tbe Seoate Watergate committee? up will be left to 1peclal presecator A: No. 1 think the public understands Archibald Cox? exacUy wbat happened, and that's why A: Yes, except for one further matter most people don't feel many additional which has nothing to do with legality or hearings are warranted. A.dmittedly, if 1with the break·in or cover-t.1p. Instead it you are concerned with the degree of thr relates to the. President's handling of the President'& guilt or lnnocence, the hear· Watergate crisis. Is thls the way the log1 were inconclusive. But t don't need President -and fulu_re Presidents -will it spelled out to me -and the American har.dle such-matten: in the future? pieopie don't need it spelled out to them J see this \Yhole question of the -...how the Coostitu.Uon waJ__fllpped into President's handllng of lhe crlsJs as the wastebasket when it was felt ex--somell'ltng that could come up in the 1 pedlent. by people at the highest levels of committee's final report. , govemmeot. Q: SI.nee the bearlngt recessed, the 1 ~e-noi a tr1al court.-We're .nnl Prtskltal ha1·beld tw1>-11ew1 confertacea , _.,,tors. Ou.r role la ID paint the aad made a major 1peccll Oii Watergate. I broad picture cl wblt llappened. And I bid k .. ,.., uy of yoar qo,.tlno? i UiiDI; Iha~ becaUJt ol tlie heortngs, that A: AJ lar as I'm concerned, none. Th< • p1cture bu come acrou to the An\erican -only wa.Y this Is going to be rcsolvtd lir t • people. for the Presiden t to sit down with the r , ' f ( WHERE THEY STAND J bur met with the judge In the case on 1'ptil 5, Wbat~ver the President's reason.- Ing was, ii came W"I alter all tilde• events. · Q: ww .-Pllrldl Gray's waralq IO die Plwlddt dial cerlaln ltdes were committee. You can't satisfy me with a 0.t to pl ldm! Were 1'11 ctavbicod by pres1 c:onlereoce. You can't just uk ooe tbe PnJtte1t'a exsl : tit• daat lie quesUon ebout. March 21 without o; Ull"Clll Gray -.., .... , to die CJA! ch&nce lo qUOIUon him on his ..._, ,A: I don'&-.-lo...rupond to thal' especially lioce )he • Pr<sldenl'1 IDh!U becauae I am ID the process cl going over was really a non-answer. thft vartDUt Ume teqUeDCtS and l bava't Q: Woald yoa .. k tlJo Pre1Nm Ibo gollfll lo 'tbat -yet. • 11me 1ypo .r .-!Mt,..,. -Qi a.•~.;.w11u iadlea&IM"' at tlie ,_ ... ,.,_, dlt ·-r ete la ... WWte - A: Some ol them, .:res. For exa.mple, dloe' l'olrld 1lr'7 wll Ille 1111)' ponoti the whole ma ol Match It ha• proCluced wllo -.. -lk ........,_ a cove ... 0one evasion alter another. Tiie Prettdent wp -laldlc piece? . sa id Jn his April 30 speech tilat he found A: l think people like HOIU')I Peleroen out about the COV'lf'llP on that dale. lie and Dlci Kleindienst, II ,given 11 direct said he ordered ail U-Involved In the an opportunity as Pat" wu given, would lnvesllgatlon lo report to him dlreclly. also have tried lo wam the President. This clearly did not occur, and no -llut I cer&alnly think It ·•peaks or the saUslactory •j,lanalion has been liven. caliber ol the personnel who were around .'Xben..Jhere s....~il!M break·ln the Presldenl that nobod7 dlcf cpen his where Jhe President asl don Wltl!Mo . -moulh:--~ Atty. Gen. Henry Ptlenell and P-Qi Wis Ilion ~ aay l>opo convinced him II was a dry.liolt. Tiie only -_,,... II lk eoiDmJttee !Mt thing wrong lo thot the President knew JOlal lieu'• leldmw1 -receiV)I about the Ellsberg break·ln oo March 17 dlr«I ""ITOboralloa from• uy or lk r I ..-.. INI followed? • .\: I don'& think so. Some J>arl• of his testimony were corroborated. 1 lhlnk there wa1 mo're cortoboraUon than had been e•~ledi not )<M. Q: Do ro• &Illa-yoa have beelt unfairly crlllchod.ler maklal ,,. ... ,.during Iha, q~ ta &ltt Walergl&e lw:arlag1? A: No. 1'h< ~ucsUoning has bemi pretty IOulh. too~ I vo got to mak< lbooe .apeechel because some wlinellel have OUJIH COAST l DAILY PILOT Ro~ert N. IVeed, Publuhrf Th<nna1 Kcevil, 'tditor Barbara Kr<lbkh Edilonal Peg• Editor ---- ' l '!ibunday, September 20, t913 j been trylhg to sell , tbol"ldca thal the ConstltuUon cao be !llSpended w!ien circumJtan.ccs 10 indicate, and I SQ: no. They are tty Ing to ,.II the Idea tha!1 the Pre&ident iJ. for some re1son or omer, . better than the rest of us etllzcns, and l ,say.he is not.. ; ·... 1 •• I Part or my job is not Ml IO get the !acts but to remind ~Jn thiJ -try we are stUI oporali"' under the ~IU· tlon. • -· ·-. '""' -al .... of ... •!lolly Pilot lttkJ to Worm ud: 11lmul&1e noden by pl9mtlllf <fl this -divcnie commtnt&.ry on ioplc:t of m. temt by. 91ndlcated coiWanlllt And. • cartoonials, by PfOYidlna 1 lorum tor tt~ert' vleWI and tiy ~na thlt ', ntwsPlPt'f''• oPfnlons Jnd •iifeu on cumnt topk:s. TM tdltorial oplr;donl ~f <he Dally PUot-Orily In th< edltorlai oolwnn at the top of the par .. 0 ....... ..,,_ by th< ... """~""" -"'"~Ind 1 ..... Wrlttts are ~r own and-no ....... ment of thflr *"°' br lbt Dall)( l'llol-be~ ' • ' Thursday, '!iepttnlbtr 20, i q73 DAILY PILOT T Se x u·al "Revolution' Mostl y Talk . - . . Marriage SiiU in Style,, But More Fun., Study .Reveals ~ I \ < '°'•Beach: F1Y1to1•t11to San Ftmwlsco W ASHJNGTON -No pro-. within the-framework of mar-25 to 34 bounce around -j>a(Uoo "b more wiaely Delfev-· .. · rlage, ·,albeit sequential mar-somewhat niore, blit they sUll ed ,,;th .~ oolliliV!il<nce , -voNrHOFFMAN~ riage. • as r'lre ir only sleop with three or -·. '"Stlmes ~day on PSA. than that we hav;been maK· grandchildren now c h o o s e J)OSSJbly rour different mates Ing a ~xual re luU,on for m~amous relatlonshlps. In the course of a year. Hardly ~ ou·rselves. 'I'1le e ot mar-.' WHAT SEEMS to be hap--reminiscent of · the delicious rlage, lbe· e)tttnction of the lhLs Issue of Playboy, whUe rJage are far less common pening Is lhat the revolu-excesses of the last days of famllf Unit aJ \ve've kno.wn It-we read1 " •••• liberation tia1 than they are generally aUeg-Uonary J d ea s of the Rome. in the W~ over ute l~st 5,000 \ not cut se,s. loose from slgnifi· -ed to be .... only 2 per Cent of "liberated" portion of the ui; Within the bounds or mar· or mare years, h~s been off. , cant persof;l~J f1J1tiooahlps or ~'Tied males a~ fewer than per middle ~lass haVe' been riage OJ' the quasi-marriage or blndecDf' predict~ even by from the \ lrlat16Jtion of' mar· % per cent of married females sprea~ng out andl downw'rd living together, the changes of Republlcana · Jnd others who riage: ..• for the great ma-ha~Ei ever particiPated ln mate through our c1us system. a generation have been Im· "-qucht to know better than to jorlty, sex remalna intimately swapping with their spouses." Thus ever since Kinsey there pressive. People are making be caught up unthinkingly in a allied to their 4efpest e~ The data from this involved has been a huge jump in love more, liking it more and t.d. lions and lnedricably in-and costly study tend to rein-premarital sex, but the doing it in many more dit- SQ comes l>liyboy magazine terwoven with their con· force the idea that the Playboy study tells us we.'re ferent ways, or, as Morton (October Issue), of all unlikely ceptions oJ loyalty, Jove and American sexual revolution still not very promiscuous. Hunt writes, "there have been lnstllu!lona, to ~ell us that the marriage." didn 't take place in the early The partners, w 0 men dramatic increases In tbe rre- small grocup o't skeptl~ were · sixties with the mass distribu-especially, have marriage on quency with which most right all along : there bas been 11:1E PL.A YBOY study in-tion of the pill, btit right after their mind . Nor is there nearly Americans engage in various no sexual revoluUon l n volvlng 2,026 participants World War I, at the start of 50 much switching around 85 sexual activities and in the AmeriCa. Changes, yes, some even finds that most married the t.92o•i when the upper mid· w~'ve been Jed to think. number of persons who in- ftry . lnJerested ones; but people or people f iv in g die clasS renounCed the cult of Women under the age Of 25 elude fo.rmerly rare or Jorb'id- revolutlon, no alrree. together, regai'dleS!' of lhtlr femaJe vhitnity and . pro-usually have but one bed den techniques jn thejr sexual To -come to these corr age, "are not inclined to grant claimed that sex was, 81 good partner in the course of a repertoires." \ ~UllOffldalstatebild) IJ PSA wants to go north (or south} with you r money. Other _ _,_, Grinningbirds to San Diego ~..,.,,-'l·'·~ and Sacramento. Over 200 'i flights a day connecting . all of northern and southern California. Call your travel agent or PSA and let's migrate. PSA gives JO'I a Ifft. clusions the magazine paid for lheir mates pennistion for and valuable for fun as it was year. The median number for None of il may be progress, the first massive study of overt extramarital sex acts." for babies. Even so, the flair malea in the same age group but it does read as if we are a Ame'ci.can sexual behavior h~ Indeed, all that wild stuff -pfrs did their ptaying around is but 1.5. Single people aged little happier than we were. bei made since the late Dr. mate swapping, open 11181'··1--:c_ ___ .,.:..._:_.::._ __________________________________________________ _ A1ftlid Kinsey's work a rlage or tribal families ....... 1s gerieratim ago. All the study 's what we like to rea~ ~bout findings wiU be publjsj)e~ ijl a others doing: " .... the mucb-seriea of articles and a book publicized sexual practlca ________ ._ ________________________________________________ -. ·by Morton Hunt, but' the that greatly alter the rela· overall picture is laid out in tionsbip between sex and mar· Chnle~ MeC.abe -~ SOUT•CO&S-T ViL ~ --Fat versus" Thin: ~~!i1!1~3 WISHON -HARRELL _tn American Myth 'DaLeS STONEWARE 01"11 -- t ha•e this friend, Alice, \\'ho Bm'!etimes t mounts the recovery chair next "to mine at our North Beach lo<al. She reads the Chronicle over screwdrivers. The other day some bit from the paper set her guffawing. Alice guffaws good. that people shoµld be made fearful and depressed because they do not conform to the current idea1 of physical beau-ty. , I aslred what Item among the day's holocaust had so set her up. '"Ibis cat says stay fat and be happy," Alice said, beaming. Alice is a broth of a ' girl hersell. She a d d e d ". -something her sister bad always tolclber; ~ _ 11llNNESS would appear to be at Its apogee riglit MW. II is even supporting the book .Publishing Industry, w h 1 _c b these days bu Its base in bestsellers explaining bow to be I! thin 81 ~iggy. and 811 uncontrollably happy. The medical profession, w h i ch badly___needs exaimnauon on this and many another matter, • ' l • -t-- 1 •1ni1n is in: but fal's where it's at." •.r. I liked Ibis bit of pomi,c wl!dom I liked both lls gallant spirit and its content. There ts a current, and highly eccentrk:, American m y t h which identifies being skinny with felicity, and being fat with melancholy. has coupled ....weight-with -~ heart attacks, on what 1eem1 • to me U6e BCaDtiest o f '.l 1-. evidence. •nr . . The inslB'ance companies want us thin, and that'• enough for me to suspect the whole mystique. They would keep us thin the better and longer to ge~ our premiums. The friendly,· nay' amorous, companies neglect to mention that a long life has little to do wltb a happy life, any more than physical weight has to do with inner satisfaction. So pervasive is this myth, and so skillully ts It pushed, that people who were fat and quite happy, or just plain normal happy-unhappy. have !alien inlo the vaPorS because some guru of the thin assured them-thil-way-warthe-way they lhould feel. · I've known a pile of unhappy people-in-my lifetime.-1.sbould _ say offhand that . the ratio of happy to unh8ppy was about 1\'llE;l'llll!L .Jhe_jol)y_ fat-one lat lo !)lree thins. The man, «~woman, ii a . real Spaniards· teU us, With their thing or aome kind of defense · harsh proverbial wbdom, that against the contumely Of the women, melons and cheese thinocracy is of no great should be chosen .by weigbL substantive interest to me. This is a wisdom shared by What does hotten me up ts most well-rooted cultures. . P.~?!.9.~S.!~~?.K~! 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For that Na,tural Gilt IS NINE -~-1~ REST..llURAN1'.S---, WHIM SEY 'HllbblJW BOOKS Al•AYAIL.AllLE HERE. , IWltfetitteterc.mfll••riH -withevt MilcriptiM. Comeift•ndlwewM MEROfAHTILI BLOG. SS1·ll7S . . ' 11911tlger •••TAUAANT ............ ,., .... ,.. 979·1181 OPEN Sa1untaY, for Lwlch Sundays ror Brunch ,, • ~ .. ,...lrt,.Pf•ltztr.tt • Antiqut no•~~ ~.c.-·1·. • Of'itin.-1 Ao11Mrtepf clay pots • Polpouni of ,;fl ""'"' THE JllLUGE ts 'oPEN 12·5 SUNDAYS THE l'ILLACE HAS AMPLE PARKING ._ • 556-7911 T HE J'ILLAGE IS YOUR KEY TO GREATER VALUES PLANT BOUTIQ UE ~i.t'liring in: , FRE NCH ,RESTAURANT !' Houn ftlanh •Fem •Terrariums • C.ramict • MM:ri1me phone PHllf • 5 5 6 • 0 5 5 6 .,aJLLUL.LU.a.u.UAJ~TheUA.a.wt..LU..LU.&.U.t Belgiari Waffle Inn •WORLD FAMOUS BELGIAN WA FFLES e<>MELETTES •sOUP & SANDWI CHES We Are Looking. Forward to Serving You OPENING SOON , 'fl/£ 1'/L/A Gf; ·1s OPEN SEVEN DAYS 'iou r ~mplete \\'omen's Fashion Shoe Boutique 1 71~) 979-9252 the lofty -lady • ti• ! 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The former Texas a:ovemor .said, "(don't know qf a Con· nally claque" trying to get the job for b;m. -\ Patrolman Shoots Hitchhiker SACRAMENTO (AP) -A ~year-old Utah hitchhiker has been shot dead by a California highway patrolman who said the youth pulled a pistol on him , the Sacramento .. Nixon Pledges Pakistan Af.d WASlllNGTOtj) (AP) -ceremony as he left for New Care of trumpet.I marked the Prtme Minister Zulfikar All York and the U.N. General ceremonial departure, but Bhutto of Pak!Jtan ended a Assembly. speeches were ~ !or 'three-day official visit with Acting Secretary of State later ln the day when Bhutto ls President Nixon's pledge of Kenneth Rush extended the scheduled to address the U.N. additional uaiatance for Pre&klenl'• farewell to the General Assembly followlns a disaster ~lief and strong sup-Pak:lst.anl leader. meeting with U.N. Secre_tary port for P a k. l s t a D ' 1 in-AN HONOR. guard and ran· General Kwt Waldheim. -dependence. ' .-~.:..:.~~..:....:..:..:..:..:..:. _________ _ \ A JOINT statement b•ued * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ** -by th.e White HoU!e m~de no* MERCURY SAV. INGS * mention bf any additional arms aid for Pakistan but said * and IOln association * WASHING TON -The con- troversy surrounding V i c e President Spiro T. Agnew's future has .spread to Cai>itol Hilt. A group of House Oemocrata, led by Rep. John Conyers of Micbi_gan, met Wednesday to dllouss the ~gnew siluaU!lll but rdused to ~veal the .substance of the closed door· talks. Earlier this year, the same group explored \be J>OS!ibllity of impeachment p~ings against President filxon. "I don't have any 1 aspira- tions. As I recall it, the nation ""'~­ already has a vice president ," [ __ B_Rl_EF_s _) that NiJ:on considered* Pakistan's territorial int~grlty ·~a guldlng principle of f<*1dgn palicy.'' NOW OPEN EVERY SATURDAY .•.•. 10A.M.-4P.M. ,. Connallr said. Sen. Barry Goldwater IR- Arb..J, also in Nt-W York, repeated. that he did not think Agnew should resign but should "tight it out." He said that if Agnew is indicted, "I would suspect t h a t im- peachment proceedings would follow, or that the vlce pre.sl- dent would seriously consider resignation." Kingpin Talk# Philip \V i I s o n, con- victed securities swin- dler, told a Senate pan- el Wednesday that Ford Motor Co. shifted in· s ur an c e premium overpayments to funds for use by company executives in Bermuda. County sheriff's 0 f r i c e reported. The sheriff's spokesman, Bill ~1iller, said late Wed- nesday the victim was Glen I. Johnson of Salt Lake City. e Train Derails DENIES PLOT CHARGE Michael Mclaney The communique did not specify what addillonal aid the Unlted States might provide with other countries to help Pakistan recover from its re-* cent flood disaster. * Bhutto received a 19·gun * •• • "STATEMENT SAVINBS"i::iPIESTIBE Car• l~sa~lu~t~e,~red~-o~a~r~pert~de~pa~rt~ur~e 1 * 1UEMA •• M•cury s.v1ng1 Bldg .. va111yV1tw at l.ileoln * * HUWTHllTOlf IEACH MlfQJry Slvlngs Bldg., Edinger at Beach '* Good Deed * tu1111 Mercury s.•no• B10g., 1r.i .. e1'd. ot Nowpor1 Ave. * make the scene * u KUIA·RIUDTO• Mercury Savi~ Bldg., lmperlll Hwy. It Hll'bor * '. FOU.OWING THE meeting Jn Conyers' office, Rep. Bella Abzug (D-N.Y.), said ~Something will come out of !his (meeting). We're going to eo aometbing and you'll know 'fbout it w he n the time JUnes.'' •Earlier Wednesday , a ipokesman for the House )udlciary Committee .s a id ~me panel member& bad •iscussed the Agnew case 'rnoD8 themselves, but denied a report that Ju>tlce Depart- ment officials were . present during the discu!sions . The tommlttee has jurisdiction ·~~.eachment in- · Unsafe Experiniental Drugs Hit in Report DEL MAR (AP) -Six cars of a southbound fr eight train derailed here, d a m a g i n g tracks and halting train .service between Los Angeles and San Diego for hours, of· [icials said. No injuries were reported. A Santa Fe Railroad spokesman said the cars were loaded with potash. e Indictments LOS ANGELES (AP) -A cowlty grand jury has return- ed secret fraud indictments against Jerome L. Goldberg, 46, of Tanana, and Theodore W. Dutton, 43, of Woodland Hills, both prominent Southern California real estate dealers. Roosevelt To Rep!y To Charge~ Sundays * cwOIMtrarySIWlgltlldg.A-Bl'ld.ltS..Dltgo'°'1. * * lltDYl*l.SM""'JSfttoo Bld£.Lonrh@...,.at~S1. * ~Ire ********************** WASHfNGTON (UP!) -J ~~~~~~~~~i::================~ The Senate Pe rm a ne ntl l Investigations Subcommittee today invited Elliott Roosevelt to testily next week in reply to an allegation by a convicted securities racketeer t h a t Roosevelt and orfered him and 1-e,,uted gambler M i c h a e I McLaney $100,00 0 to a!sas!linate the prime minister of the Bahamas. 'lbe activity on Capitol Hill llowed a White House denial a charge from a source ,:IOR-to Agnew, reported by UPI earlier wedfiesday, that the WhHe House wa!I behind reports of an impending Agnew resignation. • 'IN NEW YORK, John B. WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -A government report charged Wednesday that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) failed to stop testing eight ex- ~tjmellliJ _cgug.s on humans even though the products were found to be unsafe. 1be Government Accounting Olfi<e (GAO) report said FDA testing regulations are "lax" and do "not adequately pro- tect the patients who take these drugs." Connally refused to coment on ~'what may or may not be 1oin8 on" between the White THE GAO REPORT was done for Sen. ~braham ·n . R.Jbicoff {!).Conn.), dlairman of. the research subcommittee of. the Government Operations Committee. -. [ • • For Weekender Advertising Phone 6424321 The study covered 10 e:t· perimental drugs, and found that in eight cases the FDA had not halted their ap- plication to 4,555 patients, e~ though animal tests had adverse results, i n c I u d I n g cancer in three cases. The report said that drug companies often delayed from 40 days to 19 months in ACCESSORIES Authentic Blacklight o Fits 1ny household light totktt D 75 watl lightbulb KtivitH flour· escent color 9~ Great for parties and • '_f blacklight posters. 3-Pak Scotch · Recording Tape Buy 2 Tapes Get One Free 3/C-60 Cassettes 3~~ ... 3/C·90 Cassettes 5~.!3 ••• ALBUM SPECIAL! 3 Record Sets 249 Futurinv on Columbi1 The Fir1t Rock FestiVJils plus The Music People with 40 .Gr1at Artists. l'.P.'l"'!'~!!l"!'!'I THE MUSIC PEOPLE 40GREAT ARTISTS 3 MCOAOS Alfi THE PRICE Oft reporting adverse effects or the drugs on animals. In the meantime, h u m a n e:.:~ perimentation began in some cases. T H E EX PERIMENTAL drugs were given to patients with terminal diseases or serious heart conditions. In the case of one drug, cataracts developed in dogs, but the drug was used on humans. Follow up tests show- ed that eight persons "showed a specific type of cataract development possibly related" to the drug, the repart said. Ribicoff said the report showed that the FDA and the drug companies i n v o I v e d "showed a disregard for public safety." THE REPORT recom- mended additional an i ma l testing of experimental drugs and a change ni FDA regula- tions to require prior approval before human testing i s permitted. lleputY' llist. A1ty. &lward Feldman said Wednesday the indictments returned Sept. 11 acoused the pair of bilking in- vestors seeking reaJ estate tax shelters of more than $1 million. e Suspect Held SACRAMENTO (AP ) - A 42·ye~r-old man has been ar· rested in connection with the second robbery in three days of branches of the Bank or America Jn Sacramento. e Bus Drillers BERKELEY (AP) -Bus driv"ers of the Berkeley UnWed School district have vo ted to stage a "sick·in" to-- day, leaving some 3, 5 O O .students without their usual transporhltlon to classes. The district's 32 drivers voted Yi'edneSday night to take sick leave rather than report to work today. SEN. HENRY M. Jackson (D-Wa!h.), chairman ol the subcommittee, said Roosevelt sent him a telegram from Ll!lbon demanding an apology for airing the testimony of Louis P. Mastrlana Tuesday and "has · indicated that he wishes to testi£y before fhis subcommitt ee as soon as possible." Roosevelt, son or Franklin D. Roosevelt. called i.t h e testimony of Mutriana a lie and told reporters it came from "a man who is absolute- ly crazy -a man who would never have been allowed to testify if the subcommittee bad made even the most casual check of his background." •soup •SandWich •Slaw Choice ot Tw Salad. Eu Salad, Meat t.Nf wltl'I ll'l"Y• Grilled Chtese or Flshwich SandlrldL ~ ---lllll•2,. -~~~,,~ A-•I--lplllot loc1U11s, NEWPORT llACH. 3110 NIWPORT ILVD. HUNTINCOTON HACH. 9791 ADAMS FOUNTA!N VALLEY, 16115 HAUOR ILVD. l ARTIST SPECIALS! the reasury Cat Stevens l : ; , CAT STEVENS lt.scr and the F\rtal Shop The 1unrm _"_ .... t ~ !iiJJ~IJl)g!i.JJ!Ji'.IJJ Lot Cochinot .· ·•.' D SAVl .. NGS mplete Record Deparb nent & Save! Albums •33• Tapes •499 ON Jl.S.M STlllllO ALBUMS lo TAPES Futuring • Fotiltntr, T11 For tht Tlllffm1n end T1.., A tht F;-c.t On Capital Helen Reddy Albums s33a Tapes ON CArlTOL ITEREO ALBUMS• TAllS F11turlng • LOf'lg H1td CIJtnb, I Am A Wom11n A H1len RlddV l CAT STEVENS FOR f!I G!i!R t. PRE-RECORDED TAPE BEST SELLING 3'38 ALBUMS .. & TAPES· ' Cassette Special Pfocf>I HMoM l>fl A&M, Deit1 r'vr11!1 °" NAl, Lynn And11non oo CNrt, fl . Strtl__, .,. ~ii. 0t¥IO Huuscon on Ep;t, "'"'" ltOYm on Kirov. The Awoc111lon on W. I . plus mtny, ,,_ny mo1t 10 d100Sol lrom. All Top Artisu on Popular Labels. .---. ·-~-, L I I OH llllOSTCllllO ALIUMI 6 T..,11 •~ ol BH·G<on . Vol '} C)flj Alt..ANTICSTllt(O At..8VMS• fAl'tS RObt:rrt f!O(k . K1lh"tMc Sol!!~ • ON CA,llOL STllllfO ALBUMS • fAPlS titfl'ld h lnll • Wo!'•• "" "':"!"ic..e...- o·,.-coLUMtlA STI:llllO A.LtuMi . tA,lS Sty & Htl F~""lw Stynt ...... ON WAANfA 8111051 STEREO ALBUMS• lA,ES VI" Mi!H llOll • H"d NOM ""' ·~~"""'o>V C)flj TAMI.A STlRfO ALIUM$ • t•ns s1 .... " WNttJH • ,_.......,. BUENA PARK Stereo Jt.lbun'!' 491 8-Treck °l•pOs . \' 'I ON COLUMBIA ITIRIO A\.IUMI • TAl'll F .. 11n1no . No"'"'· Greetell ~Its Ind I, S, • T,_4 . • ' • \ ~· .... - Thursday, Stpttmbtr 20, 1973 * DAILY'PILO~ 1J l Thought Matters ELY, Nev. (AP) -A new ans!• In mWtary aervlce loducements has turned up here. N.e,vada Natlona I Guardsmen with special plates on their cars won't get parking meter viola· uon tickets. ' · . Mayor G.P. E!Cheverey said the actUon "wq not ~ very big thing" but 1 dr~w praise from Gov ~ke O'Callaghan who 48lfl. Hit ~ay not be large tn , flnanc1al tenns" but "re'present.s a strong . en- clorsement of our guard program.'" 't:ahptDN: 645-8600 Lk I• 108 ••• --n.-1t St.dMt111r HOii M1mori1/ Hospital Presbyt1ri1n GeoTek's Atwrneys Make Bid SAN FRANCISCO · (AP) - Two attorneys have urged a federal judge to consider nam· Ing a special master Instead of a temporary receiver In a Securities and E1change C.Om- mis!lon suit alleging a '30 million oil fund fraud. J A M E S MaclNNJS, at· torney for James Burke, a principal defendaitt, a n d James Thatcher. attorney for GeoTek Resources Fund Inc. and affWated pertnerships suggested Tuesday that U.S. District Judge Wtlllam T. Sweigert BPPoint a special master to investigate allega- tiooa made by the SEC. , Their proposal came as the SEC filed motions for naming of a temporary receiver and granting of a temporary restraining order a g a i n s t GeoTek, five GeoTek fiiods, GTR 1'fanagement, P-2,000 corp., Petroforce Corp . : Charter Street Corp., Fun- damental Oil Corp., J.B. Oil Co.; Washington Oii investors Inc., Cllri>: Oil Co. and others violated in the sale of oil drill- ing partnerships. TIIE SEC said such action was necessary to remove Jack_ Burke, his brother, Robert, and others from control and management of Ute various firms; te oomenle the com· panies' assets, and protect re- maining investors e q u i t l e a because the firms "appear to be insolvent." Maclnnts suggemd that a 11Pecial muter such 11 retired Judge Alvin Weinberger could determine whether there was any danger to investora and wliether bualnesa waa beil!I conducted properly. 111E SEC Contends that even tbouib Burke resigned · aa an ollicJal In GTR and F,'un- damental Oii he s ti II dominates the two flrml' aC> llvltles and ill dlsslpetlng their asseill. Yelite Grandma 1 Was Suspicious By ALMON LOCKABEY Of "'° D.ib' ...... ltffl Yoo've heanf about the "little old ladies In tennis sbnes." I think they hailed from 1101Deplace like Pasa- dena. Well, this ts a yarn about a "litUe old lady in tep- alders.'' Or was she barefoot? The Newport Beach police squad car rolled slowly down M Street on the Balboa Penlnsuts. One of them spotted • petite chick walking up the .sidewalk, barefoot, lier spinnaker hat on the back of lier bead, white levis roli!d te · the knees and tellng a green seabag on lier sholllder. The squad car stepped, backed up. One of the offi- cers leaned out the wlndow. "Where you going?" lie asked in typical cop no-n~ voice. THE CHICK SMILED. "l1m going home,'' she said. "Where do you live?" asked one of Newport Beach's finest. "Over on the ocean front," smlled. the pedestrian. LOQtAllY' "What's in the bag?" queried the gendanile, his voice edgeawith suspicion. The suspect dropped the green seabag to the sidewalk and started to laugh. "I thought you were going te offer me a ride heme," the said. "We may jut do that," said the cop. "But first let's hive a look in the bag." TIIE PETITE gray-llalred little lady, atlD llllillng, lfp. . peel open the aaa bag to dlaclole, """"'8 other things, a awtmautt, odds and ends ol aalling gear and aome knitting. "And, oh yes," she said, "over here in this side pocket ts a lresb lime. I just got off a boat." • The cop eumined the bag, lool<ed bock at his partner and aald: "I teld you I dido~ think Ibo looked like a burglar." 'l'lie Utile lady burst into laulhter. "I've been sailing on our b<!at and they left me off at the public dock and I'm· ...W., home. My name ts Mrs. Lockabey. I live ove< OD' the Ocean Frmt. The cops smiled. "Of course, Mrs. Lockabey. The peninsula out here ;., oor beat. We can't lie too carelul you lmow.·There ~v~been reports of trouble out here." Macinnis acknowledged that Burke was giving advice.lo the nnna• present directon, but they are acting "aboolutely in-MY WIFE, THE buralar, thanked the officers and ~~~~~~~~~~"""°~"""':' .. ~' ~t j~~~., ..... _:4 1\~=-m<nded them for their alert patrol. .: , .. ' . b ' . "There have been some atrlnae &'Qinp CD 1out here," · nfE . UO'ADWAY . ,. " Ibo~ we give you a lift lxme!~ -Ille ollkers. ADVENTURERS MY wile, the burglar, too1c ona 1oot at Ille oapc1 ·,.., CWI ••• VAUJE.TRAVEL IS WHAT OUR TQURS ARE ALL AIOUT ORIENT :soUTH PACIFIC . ORIENT SUNSET I ORIENT SUNSET II seat of the oquad car, glanced up and down the street at neighborhood resldes>cel and aald sweetly: '10h, no tbanb. It's just a short walk." Sllngin& the RObq back over her shoulder, the little old lady, ~ ol.!wr, trudged on home, .not com· pletely unaware ol the curious stares from residents en- roate, The First , o~.l.~ ~;." true o" ~' -.,<; . ""' Selt~adjnsting Color Set Ever -------. -·· ~· ,., ,,,,._. l\ l;;iiii ~ l .. . .. ::.: .. ~'~ SY'LVAflllA ,OltTABLI COLOll TV Moo•Ls cx11nw, CXl17f" • llt 1t Inc• 911 .... 1 ,ictur• • CllNlnlfr'll ll(tm) pl(ture tutlt wlfh Ill• su"r bl•cll m.Url• fw I .,..,._. , ..... JNctwe • •T-Matrkltml ciMtr hJllhlf Wlftl lldltd -ry COfltral-1 ........ tlc1lly ~II ctlor ftr ,.. • OT·1Nl'1'nl dlt11l1 1_,. Miid· ..... Nr 1t1t •ttm-11 In IOlld· 111 .. ,.,__ •1111 rmll•llolll· ~. • l111tt11t c•rOtnl ~ color picture NI _......_.. IQirm-., ..,._ '*IVl,... • LI ...... eNllllll fMlkltvs lw ... ,~., ......... • Mlk:IUlll 11 ............. el!ft'I 544995 • Tiii 11._ lt'IYMl1 GT· Miiie color ....... l)IJ-. ffm -.... 1Jkf111'9 .. ..... )1941 .. ... avtol'M· llc1lly CINTt(b llilt eelor ... , ... • ff'I M • avt9mlttc, rtll """"'' .,.. ...... "" Ill. TM 'l'lrtielJ -"' 1111 ..... 9'1ini....... .,.....,. -.. Ctlltr'Ht, 1'1111 ..... C..... COllll"9b IN Mllllll .... o.ty .......... '""""' _.,..Md dlMml ... ..... _...... .,. "'' ......... Til.lt's .., .,.. .............. ~. Y'M wtkll .. ,....,_ ..... .. ••tdl•llktwt. SVLV.l.Nl.I. GT·M.l.TIC(lm) -THE_,IRST TllUE Sf:L,.·.l.DJUIT/NG COLOll TELEVISION , l'l'LVANl.I. CONSOLE COLOR TV MOOEL CLJW'P'll ~ Mldlltrr1n11n stylt c1bln1! -Glint u Inell dl•fO<lll picture • ChroMlllri• IUtm) pktur1 tulle with 1111 wp1r lllKk m.alri1 fir 1 lhlrfllt' eelor Jlktur1 · • GT-M1tric(lm) coi.r hNlintl IJSllffl wl'lfl kldrllll mtmorv c111trt11 -Hi91ntlktllr arncb c...,. tor, ... • OT·l•ltll'IJ di111i1 11 '°""' IOl1Ht1i. i.r t1te urtim.a!t in 11Ud .. 1111 perfer!Mnce Mil Nli1lllllty • Ttvci.oTllM'lllll) T11nln1 Ith 1M swtkft cll111Ml1 II tlKl'9f'll( .,...:11 ~ 1n.i1n1 Color 1!111) Pf'"ldK Coler llkhlrt In HC· lltd1 -"' w1rmup tlmt rcqull'tlll • Ligllltll ClllllMI llldltllwt fir ... , WftMt Mtlc:· "~ • R1molt tvnlnt conll'lll lnc:ludtd Made by Americans tor Americans.· 1 ABC COLOR. TELEVISION OFFERS A COMPLETE SELECTION OF '74 SYLVANIA PROliUCTS 9021 AnAlffA.ST. ., ... ~ .. ,:' , .. , 19846 BRDOKHURST ST. AT~ AT ..U,11\.D HUNTINGTON BEACH = ,'!°!:,° H~tiia~ON; B~li., 962•5559 Open Thursdoy 'Tif 9 ' ,' ' • 3329 , : • Ho•n: n.llJ 10.7 S.nkAmeric::rJ • Masterchllrwe • Cash 90 Plan • 36 Months Fln1ncing (0.A.C.I , • Challenge the News Quiz . .. on Saturday's Family Page 15 d•ys, from 21 ~ey1, from Via-Kort•n Ai~i~~•I 74 1.Dtlu:iriot.lr,-mott-M~:~~ludocil~E.!thtr_I~~~~~§~~§~~§~~§~~§~~§~~~~~~~~::~=:::::::===================;::==~~~~\~ fully t1c ortad or locally ho1tod. No ttx, 1tno, Dtptrfur•1 N9i1111lnfl- No••mbor JO. • So. P1clfic Ad'l'tnhirt, 22 dty1, from S1J4f rckcloP 1cl fic AO••ntu,., 2J,,--4•TI. frOM'$141J e Orl111t Ad•enturt , 21 d•v•. from Sll6J Abo'l't J touN plu1 5 "/. tax incl 1ttvlco. WORLD-WIDE CRUISES • ~-silveJWOodr CARIBBEAN ft1turln9 Sitmar Cr11 i1e1' T.S.S. F1lrwincl Ill· 'beritn llo9htryl. Ctlling 1t Sin Ju•n, St. Thom· ''• S.1.11te Domingo, Port·•u-Princt. Daportur•• t'l'try fridty via Nttiontl Airlino1. MEXICO fatt11rln9 Sitm•r Crul1•1' T.S.S. F1ir100 C U!.ari· an llo9l1tryl. C1lll119 of Puerto V•llart1, Ma1at- l1n. Al10, 14 d1y1 Mo~ico, Cenh•I America from $160, 21 day erui1e, fto111 St•. I d1v1 fron1 Loi Aa9ela1 from . $355 7 d1y1 froni Ln An9tle1 .... $280 lets you sav~ s50.10 on a new fall · wardrobe! e l1r1ol/Grtek 11la11d1 II, 22 days eir/1e1,.from Sl21J. HAWAII '"'"' Stt.rdty via Contlnontal Airlirle1. P'lu1 10% ftll •''"" I cl1y11 I illtnd vi1itin9 Honolulu. l11cl11cle1 Pe•rl Harber Crubo. Up. qrode A¥ailablt. Fro'" 5251. I ni9ht Kauai, plus 24.M. I clip, l lt- ltnd11 I ni9ht Hilo, I ni9ht K•uai, 2 11i9ht1 Kon•, l 11i9ht1 Honol11:I•. UP9r1clo •••il1 blt. Froft'I $141. I Ii d•y1, 4 l1l1nd1. I nl9h' Hilo, 2 ldthtt Kena, 2 11i9ht1 Ma11i, 2 nlghh K•ua i, 7 1t Honol11lu. Uptr1cle •••II. fro111 $424. MEXICO •it Maxic tn• Airllnt1, L.A. Dep•rfuro WtlcorM coclr;toil on each tour. M~" W., I dt.,., 7 11!9hh fllfopoan Plan, from S1"; Amtric1n Pltn fro"' SMt. "-:IM Clff ..... I iloys, 1 nlght1 front Sut; or 4 ni9hh Mexico City, J nifhtl la d 1'9mc from SJlf; or 4 nlthh MnJ. ce Cltf. l ,...,. ....... fy"' Wt. Mlt Set, I dty1, 7 ni9htt1 l citia1 frofl'I U6f, Mnlce ... 11 dtyt, 14 'tl•hh from 141 t . M..,._ 9ale cieh,.o fr o·m SJlt. M..tc. C•I•• .. .W1& .. 1w., 14 dey1, ·14 nt,hfi, frotn 5469. Y•.._.. Abetl..,., I doy1, 7 nl9htt, from $219. EUROPE· AFRICA e hr1al ond E11rope, del111e, 15 li•Y• 1teriln9 Nov. 10 froM Slfl • hr1al •nd Europe, lint clt11, 22 dty1, 7 citlOI, frolft 1tff. E•1t Af· rlca Saf11i A4•otttvr1, 21 d•y• lncl11dln9 London, from $1191. Me"'""hlp 11 Nqtrlred for totrr partlelp1tion.-no-woltlnt l"f'JM kf.ro - dtp•rture. Dua1 SIS.DO por .,.,,, lndlvlliu•I mom!.er1hlp, $1100 per y••r 01ch 1ddlf1011at mtmhtr ef l'"modlete femUy ll¥in9 In ••M• hMt•holtl. C•1h dapo1lt raquirolf -Nlenco chtrt••blt to yow lretclwoi Cherie Acco11nt. All prleo1 ba1o4 on d••'-1• IOCCuponcy, ' Cll, ANO MAIL lr••dw•y ~•tntur•tt Club P'.0 . kll Jlfll , lo• A1191l11, Ct. tOO)I We h'l'l'lt• eomparl1on -ltf u1 u11h yo11 frat color brochure of tha fo!!-owlng tour1 .. . .. ~ -...................................... ' ................. ·" .. Nome •••·••••••·••·•••••••·•••••••··••••••••••••••••,'\,,.,, J.,..,,... . .................................................. . City • • • • •; • • • • • • • • • • • u ! • ••••• , •• Sta to • , , ••• , , tip , , • , • , , .. ' Phone • •• • • •• • • •••••••• ,, •• ,, •••••••• ,, .·Dept. 611.0CD' t/10 • -. LAST 4 DAYS-OFFER ENDS SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23RD. 1SUIT,1 IPORf COAT + 2 PAIRS OF SUCKS 4-Piecee In newest fall atyfee, colon! and patteme to mix and match for a Vtlrlety of handlome fall outllta, IMCllllCE• DllS I WOHi FUU:S. Your choice of: any eutt at .... 125.00 ~~-~ ' any sport coat at . • • • 75.00 any Perr of alacks at •.•• 26:00 aecondptlrolalacksat ..•• 25.00 Regular price 2!!0.00 You eave 50.10 •ltA11iiiUi,IMTAIMUM. . . 3 & 4 ·-... , ' A .. i I -• • •, I ( • ' Thursd1y, Septtmbe:r 20, 1973 Sheriff a Radi~al Swi 11ger 'ST INTERf Sl! M SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - Sheriff Richard D. llongisto, wtl> packs a. 38-ca Ii ber revolver and sports a peace symbol on his gold badge, doesn't think or himself as a "radical swinger" but doesn't 1nind being one. "I think of myself as a highly social but moderate person," said the a&.year~ld, blue-eyed bachelor who's been making waves ever since hi!! election two years ago and is feuding with the San Fran- cisco County grand jury. HONGISTO. a former policeman an d criminologist, gained his "radical" reputa- tion when he campaigned on a peace platform and -with the support of youths, minorities, liberals and the c i t y ' s I .. esti mated 30,000 homesexuals -ousted a 15-year incumbent. He came by his "swinging" reputi:ltion after a series of eye opening events : the .arrest of a date for marijuana possession, dancing on stage at rock concerts to raise money for jail i ll'm a t es , visiting gay bars and disclos- ing that he practices transcen- dental meditation. '"1£ you take the v.•ord radical literally," Hongisto said. "you kno\Y it comes from the word root; and I do try to • get down to rundamentals. It doesn't mean radlcal right or radical left. It means problem- solving, getting to the root of things. "I AUO THINK it's good ·for people to be swinging peo- ple. to be out in the com- munity meeting other people and promotin g com- munication. t dOn't think I'm a woman chaser or a social gadfly. I am a bachelor and I don 't belong to a religious order that puts vows or bans on me. And I don't intend to join one." Since he took office in January 1972, Hongisto has been trying to live ..his own definition of "radical swinger" -moving out into San Fran-. cisco's black, brown and white communities and trying to im- prove the county jail. Hongisto thinks he's ac- board to help nm the lherlU'1 department. "1i!E" GRAND JURY was asked to Investigate a Feb. !5 riot that <oused $20.000 -damage -to the main jall In San Bruno. Then the De p u t y Sheriff Assoclation uked\ the jury to "investigate -and ex· pose the inefficiency and faulty administration" of the departmenL Hoogtsto's 320-R\IUI office does not fight crime. It runs the jails, provides c o u r t bailiffs and serves I e g a 1 .papers ; the police \fepartmenl takes care of I a w ~ force men I. In a 17-page report last April, the grand jury con- cluded that po o r ad- ministrative coordination between the sheriff and his staff was "one of the main contributory causes" of the r<placed the seniority S)'llm1 with ravorlUsm, that Jail securl!J'. Is lax and that oome rehab1hti8tion officers have long criminal rea>l'di f1' said. With these charges, Martin.-,.;a, hiO committee is Investigating a complaint iJiat a deputy was having sex- ual relaUons with an inmate's wile. HONGISTO SNAPPED back, accusing what be called the rich, business-dominated, ultraconservative grand jury or being involved in "an abominable ripoff of tupayers n:>00ey" In its probe. 'I rhiHk of mu· self a ti hlghlu so· elal fi ut mollerate person.'· riot. complished ''one hell of a lot" u~• T.....- despite a chronic shortage of 'ACCOMPLISHED LOT' Hongisto, who looks more he°":me~:srad:;~ir.e~: ~lcharcfD .. Hongisto THE REPORT charf.ed that like a banker than a sheriff walking around in the tattered Hongisto's deputies 'believe witdh hrhis si~ebums:tsshort1d.hahir garb of a jailbird. the county ja1f last month, -_he_ ~~ too. littl e time ad-an t ~tere su1 , sa t e called Hongisto's performance ministering bis office and too aoswer to=iur-pl'Oblem-1 154 AMOUllT YOU-INVEST TERM -NO TERM DAILY INTEREST 6% PASSIOOK ACCOUNT r~n., 11111 tro111 \!alt of ltc•IP1 la d•lt 11 wlt1Mk1w1I. .............. , _.A I D QUA"T•RLY 6.75% •%$~o~;~tn.~~;r!.. * $ 28fj MONTHlY • INJ'Plll CMlOl 7% $5000 CERTIFICATE 4 YEARS $ z91i MONTJI lllftlUT ClllC« $25,000 CERTIFICATE •.n" llt1.,., , •• '"" 1.75% .... , 8% * $1~~67 MOM!lllY fflfl INTllltl Cllt:Clt 9% ,_J~~,;~~!!. ! ~J~.f..f.~.;;:,:;; FiaESJliE Tltrlft , • ; WDH io S£RVICE to SAYlRS for o GENERATION ..• invites YOUR COMPARISON of. ·the plans above. At FIRESIOE you get THE MOST and YOUR F.UNDS ~" FLEXllU! Although FIRESIDE bonus rates may be increased or decreased on pnor notice, ~nee founding, FIRESIDE has NEYER REDUCED A RATE to SAVERS. EVERY WITHDRAWAL REQUEST HAS BEEN PAID IMMEDIATELY on DEMAND! *These Certlllcates when held less than 6 months, are reduced by interest checks. P.reviously paid. 7% Certiflcatt 1e~t.r11ls contain early withdr1wa l interest penalty prov1s100. ~·BJ ;I 11 I !ffi11 I I 11\ i.;Jlii I ,U I Etjl ti;!:flQ! il :1 I: I (lj!: Ii iii ul A ij 11 :1;1 It til: 11:@ le;; rm o .... ,c •• 'I . RESOURCES over'ftOO,=:'-.! .£.. _a l.ilJs,.,..,,""1.F:IRESIDE .i.iarii ... 2328 HarbOrBlvd ;;COSTA MESA ·-645·1000-··---11 HE REELS OFF with pride "a miracle." And Mayor much time on .political ac--new OOputies for the jail and a list Of new Parole, JO. b place-Joseph L. AUoto said : ''Sheriff tivity." lots of new money· SotnftM CM.lfot1t11a eff1c£S. Alhimbr1J Ati•h•!Jtl/Bi-ersfle\d 'Bellflower 1B1vtr1y Hlll$/Chu1• v1,11/Colt• MtN/ u . gl to d th · Sam Mart~-H t ti t US C0¥1r11/DoWM)'/£l Ctjoft/11 Ctnllo/Escondldo/G.11dt11 Grove /Cl1n<lalt /Hunt!ncton B!1ch 1 1~1lellt(lad/L1nc1tt1r / ment, rehabilitation, medical .-wn s oes more an Jµst u1e.1i, a n ac--e cons an Y quo es · · lollC IMCh/ORtl1lo/OlnlN/h'l.O•D-..'l'9111C1111/les1c111111ver$idt/.6~n 1Mrn11dono1~n 011101saM1 An1,s1nt1 B1rb1r•/ care and alcoholism programs talk refotm, he does countant who.beads the grand DiS'trict Court Judge Robert J. iiiiiiiiiiiis.iiitta M1rll/Ti•i,.Mi'i.'"i'i"i""i"i"i''i"i'"i'"i"i'"i"i"iwi"''i"'i'iiiiiiiiiii for inmates and new training something about it. l\.1any of jury committee that is prepar-Schnacke. who ruled last for deputies. He also boasls ol h.is iiSeas are quite good:" i.ng a second report on the spring that San Francisco ending job discrimination in But the San Francisco Coon--sherifrs office, said he has County J ail ipmales were'i -----------~-"---'---------------- jail against black, brown, long-ty grand jw-y and the Deputy seen few changes in Hongisto's being subjected to cruel and T s da ' N Q • haired and homosexual in· SheriHs Association think operation since April. 1D1usual punishment heeause -··-rv_ -atur -~ s -. ews UIZ tes Rongisto has done more harm Deputies have complained they are underfed, have poor ~::.......1-_Y " in;tat~ prisons director Ray· than-good,-and the grand-jury that-the payroll system ls still medical-care -and-live in mond Procunier, who toW"ed,, -"=':.:i::ed::._:cr::_ea=ti=on::._:o::_I_a::._:•:cpec.::ccia=J-a::....:dis::_. e:gr:..:•::_ce:::•..ct=ba=t=Hon:::::::.:8':..:. •:::to..chas=_•:::•..::e•:..:cro::..:..:w..cd:..:ed::._:con=di=-·--uon='·::._:~'------------------------------- Peace Motive ' . . . ' Lyndon Johnso.n Tricked--Brother AUSTIN, Tc.. (UPI) Estranged from his famous family and only recently out of a wheelchair, the only brolher of Lyndon Baines Johnson sits in a rundown hotel trying to tell the world why the late president decided nat to seek ~ another term. ' ~ "If anybody tells you that.he didn'l intend to run they're very badly mistaken," Sam Houston Johnson said in an in- terview in his four-room "suite." '"HE WAS tricked. He was led to believe if he withdrew he'd save thousands of lives. It had the opposite effect of what he though t it would." Although Sam Johnson lived at the \\1hite House during the 1960s. his book "~1y Brother Lyndon" caused an estrange- ment between the brolhers when it was published in 1969. Sam Johnson is revisi~ and updaling the book to include his view of LBJ's surprise decision not to run. "ANY PRESIDENT is no smarter than their advisers," Sam Johnson said. "He (Lyn· don) depended on his foreign experts. Evcrlhing he v.·as get- ting said. 'Now they know they can't beat us.' " Based on that assessment, Sam Johnson said, his brother decided the time was ripe to try to negotiate an end to the biller Vietnam war. "He thought that the only way to show it wasn't trickery on his-part he had to take himself out of the race. He -... gave up politics for peace." SAM JOllNSON walks slow- ly, leaning heavily on two canes. Repeated surgery has Jell his right leg five inches shorter than the lert one as a res.Wt of osteomyelitis suf· fered in 1957 after he broke h.is leg and he only recently left the wheelchair. A semipermanent guest at ~he White House just live years ago. Sam J ohnson now lives at the 50-ycar-old Alamo Hotel in a slightly seedy district of downtown Austin. He is 59 ailJ a bankrupt. TllE TAB FOR his four room "suite" on the fifth floor U~IT ......... 'TIME WAS RIPE' Sam Johnson is picked up by a well-heeled friend. Otherwise. be lives on a '595 federal disability pension and $201.60 Social Securitf check each month. NeUtfer comes anywhere close to covering the $54,481.88 debts he listed in March when he declared voluntary bankruptcy in an effort to set- tle three lawsuits against Lady Bird Johnson o v e r money in LBJ's will. SMt JOHNSON says his older brother probably would have gotten back into politics and possibly would have run for president again if his heart hadn't faltered. "I don't think he ever in· tended to stay out of politics," he says. "He was just waitin8 to pick his time." Heads CoHege BAKERSFIELD (AP) -Dr. Phillip Wilder Jr., dean of Callfomia State College. Bakersfield, has been named interim president. Wilder, 48, will bead the college until a permanent replacement i s found for Dr. Paul Rombert. named president of San Fran- cisco State. gca 13· 739,1 MINI I TaAClt CAil S1AIO e AUTO AND MANUAL TltACK CHANGE e TONE , VOLUME· AND BALANCE CONTltOU e SHIELDED CA~TAN fOlt TROUBLE FfllEE TAPE FEED e TRACK INDICATOR LIGHTS e 7., WATTS lt.M.S. )3·7500 •-95 M F8. LIST PllCt 59.l5 • ~USHNRL 7135 SPORIYIEW BINOCUUU WIDE ANGLE ' • Wider Fleld of YllW • Fl1!4 111000 Yds: s11• e Eall hpll: SnMn • One Y•• W1rr1nt1· 38.87\ MFG. LIST PllCE 5' .50 BUSHNELL 7xSO SPORTVIEW BINOCUl.AU · CENTEI FOCUS , , e Hl&ht11 ,Ll1M GltlNifl11t'"""' of 111 C1nnntloul lhtoc1d•• e SOrM! Olljlctl'tf U •N• . ' . e Tw0ol'Jff:1 Bell)' ... • e Fltli 111000 Yell: l fi 5' 33~917 llFI. LIST •llCl 51.50 .. STIBIO CA~ e-· J.PEA #,9901 • '•o.twae ~ Ctrt · ew111n1t Gr1l"'11 U11iuttd Wood SPEC At PURCHISE .I , ~IG #4503 e NEW, Clt:•R !NTRY DUTION CALCULA ... 08 KIT COMPLETE WITH RECHARGEABLE NICAD BATTERY, POWER UNIT · 120V., & POUCH CASE e FULL·FLOATl•I OR l'ltOGRA*ED DECtMAL l'OINT P'OSITIOtUN& e Ctt_AIN MULTIPLipATION AND DIVISION e AC' dR IATIERY OPEftATIONr -..e ·N!W, l!ASY TO lt!AD, BRIGHT l~Uf. DISPLAY DIGITS • .t.u'TOlllATtc BA.nERY CHARGING CIRCUIT ' • ®,PIONEER"•-... "DACK TAPI " '·' Pt.A-YD FM AM RADIO RECORDER e _,.,,..,,., hwer for E1tr1 0.Llll e E1tt1 •lthlnt11 UMtr Po9f Lf&M • F'ltlll 473' 34.87-49.95 MFG. LIST Pl.IC.£ .53 •. 5.0 -----·MF8. LIST PllCE 59.15 .SO COAST PLAZA-COSTA MESA e SJ1t1'9-Clfllr•I Opt11Ullft • Alteutlc LA wt I Control for fttcordln& • llllft.tli ... J fteclalr&l•I Clrc•ll • •n-11 C...Wer .,.,._ -- • AMliallk: Sht:(Sff 1t End of T1,. • 111...i .. .,.1 latttr)'/lt•cOfdlnf/Tunln&, IMlloator • Sensltlft A•'• "'flo 89.95 DUI REG . PRICE 104.95 , • • --. • 1 r ' I ,. • ' • ' ' f. 'OUTSTANDING' ,; Army's Well1 • Ex-Mesan Selected for Jlonor Army Opp!. David V. Wells, formerly of Costa !\fesa, will -lie Ilsted . Tie 1973 edlllonof Otitstandj11g Young Men oJ America. 'Mle SOI\ of Eleanor \Velis, 425 Merrimac Way , he was chosen because of h i s academic and co1M1unity ac· ttvtties. Capt. Wells was active in college t~ter, a member of the tennl1 team @00 t~ ~u­ dent conduct committee at Chaminatle COiiege, Hooolqlu, where he received a bachelor or arta: d(!irte in 1m. Wells entered the Anny in 1967 and completed officer Candidate SchQol. He has been a Mlldent in the Ordnance or. ficer Advanced Course at the U.S. Annr Ordnance Center and Schoo at Aberdeen Prov- ing Groqnd, Md., s l n c e February. ms w1fe the former Nanette Reynolds, of Co.rta Mesa, and their dauchter Heidi are with him in M,ryland. Big Variety ~-Of Classes Set a.t 'Y' Re«lsU.tion is open .for claS9e1 a\ lhe Orange CQast YMCA 111nging f r o m scuba diving to Yoga. The VMCA's p ere nn ia l sw\mmi°' program is open In all categOries from beginners to advanced for llrea residents· in any a1e bracket. CLASSlllS ARE kepi small to individualize attention and competitive swi~ing will be made available four d!lf1 ti week_ -· A 40-hour hHlepth 1-tn~ SC'Uba diving class will Oct.. IS, <;OV«il!i aU.-'i the undefwater sport from photography to fish and game laws. The cfass meets Tues-- day and Thursday nlghls at 8 o'clock. Slgnupt are also open for !he YMCA's popular "Slym and Tryrn" classes, olfered Mondays, Wednesdays Md Fridays 1t 9:30 a.m., noon and 6 p.m. 1')e fitness classes are coed an~ accompanied by music. OTliER POPULAR I a 11 classes include karate on Tuesdays and 'Thundays and yoga on. either Mond.ly1 or Thursdays. New fall classes include belly dJmclng, hanchmtlnl analysis, Ice akatlng anCI reading Improvement. A free demonstration of the reading clas.s will lake place Sept. 25 at 7 p.m. · More tnronnation can be ol> talned by calling !he YMCA, locsted at 2300 University Drive in Newport Beach. Date Never Slio,u:,ed U.p • TOKYO (UP!) -A man cb«ked Into an lnJI known for romanUc 117•11 -•lone. He pald for two and aald hla lover would arrive shortly. She never arrived. Later, he lert alone, c•r· rylng what was assumed to be bis belongingR In a "ruroshlkl," a large shawl used for wrapplng and carryJng goods. A room clerk finall y • ' bec11me ,eusplclous Jr\d, --·• went to fhe room 'Vhire ~e. --- round a kimono spread the soft polka dot sbirtdress our carefree fashion value 20.00 A shirt dress de<lgned to go anywhere you do. Bufton front styling with.an easy flowing skirt that ends in a colorful 'border. All tied·uP with a self belt. Machine washable acetate and nylon jersey. Sizes 12-20 and 14'h-22'h in navy with wh.i.te or in green witn white. "Ws.;i Globe Traveler" bv F.uture Fashions. d;;i~~~-61 -a112u stores·-mail'Orjj ne ~xq:3515--· • I • • -· ~ ........ 20, 1973 . .. ' a check pantsuit with a career: designed for your busiest days The Polyester panUult for the busy .woman. F.ashion for the ofiice or en a round of shopping. Comfortable .. Stylish. ·Patch pocket'shirt jacket with pull-on pants. Tie It with a •elf belt. Wa.hable. 10-20 and 14~ -;it~ Green .or wine with white. By Joseph Feldman .26.00 ·daytime dresses 61 -all 20'1101"5 order by mail or phone MA 6-3535 • . If you c•n't conie in, orderby mall or p~on~ toll free phone order.board open·daily 8.:30 A.M. to 6100 P.M. MAY CQ1 Eighth & Hill Streets,. Los Angeles, California 90014 Styli I i1om I :t• I Coloi I lnd Color I Price Name ____ _...,_._ _______________ _ . Address ---------------------Oty SL11e ______ Zip ____ _ Cl Cash oc.o.o. ·ocharge Charge Ac:counl Number ------ Add 6.'lt wles t.1• if dl!liveM In Callbni.. Add shipping chilrges ~yorid Unit~ Parcel delivery ione. 75c chaf8e for plckup1, 7Sc del""9fy ch1rge for omen under SS. 7Sc cha1ge fol' C.0.0.'s un der $20. H-9-1':1 • over the tradltlon1l "tokonoma" alcove. When the lilmono was llflcd, It was .found l~•t the ioom'J !Clevlalon IOI WU .....- SHOP MONDAY 'tO FRIDAY 10100 TO 9:30 •·I SUNDAYS NOON TO 6 • soturdey I 0 to 9: 30· . . _moy~co..,.a_g,11th..s oeat pl1u, ~•n-di19Qjwy. etJ>dst.oJ,-5j6.832 -' -· ' I J ' "· -• - DAILY PILOT J ,( ' • I ' . • hwesTCLIFF"Pl.AZ4 Storekeeper · 142·7091 Anlkon'I~ SHOE SERVICE WESTCLIFF PLAZA 17th & lnl•, Newport lffc• RE-STYLE YOUR BOOT WITH THE NEW PLATFORM LOOK· 5 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS • COltONA DEL MAil • Ull E. (IMfl Hwy. e·J~ FASHION· ISLAND Newporl Beacll e #I FASHION SOUARI .S.nl& AM We're Celebrating The Grind Opening Of Cost• Mesa's M1rket Basket With These Specials At WESTCUFF PLAZA STEA'K Beef· Top Sirloin SJ 79 ....................... Lb. L•r91 Haw1ii1n 29~ PINEAPPLE ... ; . . . . . . . . . E1. MARKET 8ASK:E'!' WESTCLl!'F Pl,.\ZA • , CUDDLY AND Co'z.Y, THAT'S WHfTE STAG'S FAMOUS TEDDY BEAR® COAT WISTCLIFF PLAZA MOM,•l'"RI. 'TIL 9 SAT. 'TIL 4 SUN. 'TIL s SPECIAL BLEMD CHEESE BALL Idell for Family UH & Enltrtitlnl"t s11e Re9. 51 .98 Tiils Ii only oM of ,,._ny q.u1IUy chMSll In our 1tor1. T11Ue II f!r1t 0.- lofe purcll~w. Little girl!'i like the softness of its Orlon® acrylic pile ·and the \\'8.rmth of its qu.ilt- ed lining.· ?i.fothers appreci· ate its durable construction and \\'Sshability. Specializing In Back-To-School Haircuts & Blower Cuts Our St•ff Miss Ch arle!)•, Mgr. -Mr. Ray Alvar•do - Mr. Rick -Miss Rochelle -Miss Judy . Ml1s Lind• [Fl}e n~u!· 17lh ~& Irvine e Newpo..t Beach e 548-0460 Open . Sunday I ' r· •one-stop' shtj>pping .. I a.t its finest! ' a°P.EN,MONDAr° & THURSDAY EVENINGS 'TIL 9 . HALLMARK GREETING CARDS P-APER PARTY GOODS TABLE DECORATIONS PAPER UNLIMITED 548;7921 . Ghosts & Goblin1 Will Soon B•~•r• Men's & Women's Alterations :tvestrlif f ~ailor.5 Fine Custom Tailoring \\lestcliff Plaza e Ne"•'POrl Beach 10-6 Daily 645-1072 TRASH .. CAN Lock Pn Lid \ 12 Gal . • RIO,. HARDWARE · · WESTCLIFf PLAZA OPEN EVES. & SUNDAY ·DRAPERIES lU""-4) 95c PER. PANEL Linoel • $1 .3S ONE OAY SERVICE M ONTGOMERY c~:~~~' WE,STCLIFF PLAZA New Hours: Mon.•S.t. 1-10 p.m. Sund•y t-s l•flkAIMrtcar11 . DAUELL Dl!DRICK'S TUX SHOP DR. i.;ou ROY ELDER, OPTOMETRIST __ WES CLIFF, MEN'S ,HAIR STYLlllfG · ' WESTCLIFF PLAZA SHELL SERVICE --. --- ' ' • • . ' • ' • • .. " I ' Taxpayer Supports ", l.Dhhyist Cit*!!,, News Servlct/ , sACllAMENTO -What la your !>Pinion of lobb)'ists paid · from \ taxJ>49ers' funds who work agalnat the interests of a majorlfy of the people of Cllifornljj I You'll' fmd scores of them pr!!wling the capitol balls bere . ..m tlay 'the Legislature Is In .... !st.on, -. FREQUENTLY, THESE • paJd public servants find , them.selves on opposite sides !..'.::=:::=;. of the fence arguing against I' each other -and all of us are ...... _ _... ; ~~Jing the bill. ' . - • ··-------,....-----... . . ~, . · . NErS Aif 4VRr.1~ · :: .~ · : .. : ..-~ ~ !. , l fWrr:r" I '\ .. -' ' • , '.!~""p' " They're net called lobbyists . ': ot ev~ leglslative advocates, •: • , the correct term in CalifomJa, but that'• the job Ibey are •: ,11.•dgned· to do. ; •• EPcuilve departments of , ... t; state government are an • ""repi<iented -Department of .. Water Reaources, Parks and llecrea\loo, Fish and Game, ; Social Welfare, Housing and 'J Com m unity Development, • #. Department of Transportation, Veterans Affairs, Division of , -;Hlgbways, Department-of ; , JlealtJi. · ;· srATE-1'>.!D welrare-:-iob-· l>ylsts last week were tryfqg to ·~ l~uoo Jntroclurd )il' ·: . Aslerilblyman John L. Biii1on " (D&.n Francisco) and Sen. a-,e Moorone (D-San Fran- . • clsco) wblcb would hike the , ·minim.ton monthly payments to elderly and disabled welfare ; ·recipients: The authors claim- .,. ed .500;000 needy people will ~.suffer. • 'the 51tuation is no dillerent , with representatives Of #> Unlvenjty of California who wort at state expeme, to bet-. · tor, i'W lot of professors, seek ! It .'bulJd more buildings and 1et more government money • "" reoearcb lo be done by 'llal!o of the varloos univenl!Y ... • • .. \ .... .. · .. • •t ·' ... •. ·• ~ ·, I ,· i i • • THE SKINNY BELT Slcim-lining its way around the newest sweaters and skirts right now. ·Two leather belts by The Leather Shop, each 4.00. Personal Leather Goods,. 86. . .( '· TWIN-SET GEOMETRICS A ~dramatic sweater design. Matching V-neck _ cardigan ; and short sleeve crew neck pullover. ·Washable acryl ic. Hunter/white/green, wino/pink/white, navy/white/green , beige/rust/brown; S-M-L The sol, a remarkable 18.00. Moil and phone orders .invited. Accessori~s ..... , • ' T : 1-cbes· • . ~ Jol>,~~·tk=~~t:i;~;';-i-~~· --' i J.eacllont' Jnto . 'c»iiitaeta ' ~I '" ..,...;..,;,,....._;c_•~<"''T'-1.'....: 'llUA.'ii!JOl:l1'.lit lnicii-. -• .. .'.JOVt!n>Or'S office trying to llold lif!lill the budget. i• . .. ' . ~ .,., TilJ'.lYERS PAY ftJr an :~ fight when th. 1 Ulliversl'ty and governor's of· pee eapge In coolrontallon. . • Los Aog01es County Sheriff Peter lt·Pllcbesl has the bead • of hi.I · civil division i n Sac:ramento every week to ... t )usage of legislaUoo fal'lhb!e to his brand of law mlorcement. Often t i m e s , , <lllol Albert LeBas runs hucDoG] inlo confrolltation with the •!Obbylsl ol IA>s ' r Anaelea County r,. an c is )lcl.1ngblln County taxpayers l 1-.muot...,. tj>a 181>-• VlrtUilly MfY '!i!ljOI' -elfy •. In .Celilornla Is represented in the Capitol halls, and the ·1m11ter· cities take advantage " 1. ol. the. League of California Qtlel and C.llfomia Contract atlol AAoclatlon third house • repnsen~tives. Frequently, , rtlleoe .... ts are fighting for · · oddltlollll· money for local 'JG Ye r nment · and find -.. tbe other~slde · of the COllllSel table from state ~ and taxpayers' lobbyists . • LEGISLATIVE ·advocates for highways are Djll>OSing lob- .byilts foe-· rapid t r a n s I t 1ystems. Again, tl\eslibfect is money. Rapid .transit wants di~ ol gl,i ta• n)O\leY i"r Its ptlrJ\OOeS and Uie higblJ'iys • • people want to lay more con-- crote. . • for yitars, lobbyists for the 'Loo .Angtles County marshal have been doing battle with , , SberUI PttchesS and his ap- pointed lobbyist over COD· 1ollda tlon . of bo th departments. The taxpayers t pay,•tlie bill. I ~" _. I ·" MAKE NO Mll!TAJCE, lob- byists f1lllllJ a valuable post maM of the time. They can e:1· plalD'th• JlUlll!lll'! of Important teclalatlOn lo lawmaten, and ~ help draft bllla to meet the nOeda el lbelr cleplrlmeP.t ' • 'or Cl>llllftunitf,. n•a ..,... ll*I' } """'* In • """'1lel. WHb -other and a~ Jhe' bell In.' terests ol the.~. that tht7 , "" abullng their prlvllege. odd!U..., lobbylatl for ollk:el aren 't required to ltidlcate expenae;1 oo reportl, or account atewardlhi~ to the tupoym who are paying their Nlary. • " , I / / i1•. ,/ ; • -.. I MEDIA / I MIX I .. A .. moster.ful b¥.<Jing of~soft.su,.de ;' FRESH FRUIT • -~~o smQot'l,,,11•tu(ol: leathef. 1 CHAINS .' ~~iiti~t!t.cl;•\let opqity. ~ I . . . ·carry-on tote, multi-g11!!ef'de~ign, / 7 1 The new fine ·chain look lop zipper, shoulder strop. • ~ 'J • ,. / with tiny enomeled fruit. Br6'f'n lllonotone; brown/rust/ ' ,. ?~ Chook~rs in ossorted styles .• $~.50. brown/ton, 35.00. • /I . / ' , Moil ond phone orders invited. Handbags, 37 / /' , Fashion Jewelry, 20 • --style No. 01 24 41 50 10 90 91 17 207 JO 95 • • Thursday, Stpltmbtr 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT 13 c: .. ROUND Tl;IE . CLOCK PANTYHOSE AND ·STOCKINGS SALE t~ru September '.N ••. the more ,yo!,), buy, the more you save on your fovoril& pantyhose and stoc king styles. Hosiery, 3 < Description Agilon® Nylon Pantyhose Smoothline Bikini Pantyhose "Pretty Panty Pa ntyhose Nude 'n Naughty Pantyhoie Tummy COntrol Pant yhose Room-•td'he-T op Pantyhose Slightly Sinfu l Pantyho,e ·-Sheer Support Pantyhose Monvelle® Nylon/Spandex Support Pantyhose Agilon® Nylon Stic~ings .J Knee-Hi Sand1lfoot Stockings . . Reg: Price ' 6 pr. . 12 pr. 2.00 9.60 17.95 2.50 11 .'5 22.50 2.50 11 .95 22.50 2.50 11 .95 22.50 J.00 14.40 27.00' J.00 14.40 27.00 J.00 14.40 27.00 4.95 2/8.00 4/14.95- 4.95 2/8.00 4/14.95 2.00 9.60 17.95 1.25 6.00 11 .25 .. ' SEAMLESS UNDERCURRENTS BY LOVABLE~ The smoothest, softest support you wont . With not o seam to show for ii . •775 Sheer-idescent ·nylon, whi te. 32-34-36 A-B·C, 3.50. Matching bikini, 2.00. •776 · Deep plunge underwire , nylon lac& push·up cups. white, 34-36 B-C, 4.50. Moil and phone orders invited. Street Floor Lingerie , 54> • Kida Like _,To ~kAndy- --. ~'---.-......1 ~tl9~ .anll Uilu® !1DIBID~ • • ANAHEIM , • ' -• N. E1t1M 1714~ 111.a121 .% ' '{-/ . · sHofi II A.M ... t:Jt P.M. MONDAY THOU$H FR.iDAY-:-S Aflll!:DAY 10 A."'M. • 6 ,,M, SUNDAY ft-NOON-to·S.ft;M N~ . HUNTINSTON l~ACH ORANGE, MAll OF ORANGE 47 h ..... ltf• .. t714) .1111 7777 WI....,""""' 1714} 1•2·lJJ I 2100 N, T111tln Str••t 171-4i ''1·1111 ' • ,r. ~ t / --~ .. • " ' ------"----CER81TOS 500lotC1rti 'M•lll11ll ·IAO-Otll -. • " •• . . . FOLL OWS GURU Rennie Dav i5 MIRROR CAIUNET ~--Mil Jumbo 18 inch ..w;id.t ,,..;m kwve N0:.-1311 I Activists Fall on ... \VAStTI ~C:TON 1 UPI) -THEN, ABBIE lloffman. a The end of :;um111er was not a founder ot the Yippies an d a • good 1tme for the radical-defendant in the Chicago con· " . ., tho splrac.Y trial that grew out of t mo.,.·ement heavtcs -se ·1968 conventioo den'lonstra- who. either . through lhe.atrlcs lions, waa arrested for alleged or ~st daring. have become pos1eslk>n of a half mlJUon ~arJings ~f the "'~18 ~d dollars worth or cocaine. identified 1n the pubhc mind . . as the personification of the And ReM1e Oil v1'S, a founder movemen t. of ~tudents for a_ Demqcratic -, First Elizabeth McAllister Societ.y and one-tune f!plto.me Berrig~n. wire of former or t be radical . movem('f)l pricst~activist Philip Be rrigan leader an d orga~1~er, reair and a defendant in the Har-peared -pro~1s1ng peace risburg kid naping plot trial, µirough submlss1~n to a tour- was arrested for shoplifting in mg teen·aged lnd1an~guru . suburban Maryland. I See by Today's Want Ads e tvl USf SELL . and H you mu.st sail, here"s the per- f<'Ct 1<1" Skip J ack Sloop for you. lt"s fully cqulPJ)('d \\'ilh !railer 60d in good rondition. Btrr AS THE heavies fall aside, the reDU18.nts of what once was called the New Left .._ lhe ne>-longer-so-young peo- ple radicalized by lhe civil rights and antiwar moven1ents - are struggling to. pick up the pieces and keep alive their vi sion. Their biggest problem Is not government repression or even lack or money, but politica l faclionalisnt a n d ideological feud ing. The. leftist factions Include socialists -several brands - and an archis ts and populists ; Marxists. Trotskyiles, ~1:aQists and Castroites; the religious left, the labor left and the middle .class and cow\tel'- culture left. Uf"I T11Hhatt SHOPLIFT ARREST M~s: Berris-n > David McReynolds, 1 an in· fluential former leader oJ the Socialist Party and now on the staff of the War Resisters League, anOounced that he was making the "symbolic but not quixotic" gesture of ap- plying for membership in four radical groups -the Socialist Party, USA; the People's Par· ty, the New American Move-- ment and the Democratic Socialist Organlzing Com· 1nittee. ' ' • Tl• m·es N,~"\Signs Rikeway Op~ns M-... ~pilot Newt· S.Mllct • . 1 s. qy l \, Ui:it0 HESPERIA -The flrlt ate· Ing low a r d a pol\tfcal control at the tooal level ol the lion of Soutlitm cauromia's P,wer .•• " IJlllUtuUou thal alfecl ~ T q N udies lOl\iest,blkewa,y has.<U><ned. It Perhaps more irnporlaJ>t is u.... ·-is a' ta-niile !lrelch ol the the tentative talk of a. merger At Us recent convention in DE!l MAR (1.P,) _ The nei' Caiilomta Aqueduct Blkeway -oJ some groups on the DeKllb, 111., NAM ac1opt04 a slgM 'on Torrey Pines sate· o.. ~ ~teloi>e. Valley , 1'1lm t 'd emo c r 1 t i c left" -re10luUoa. a f ( l rm t n I • s.,dl.warn that nudes are off 1 165t\._ S~reet Ea I t in specifically the New American "tentative but interuted" IP" Umltti. .P~~ to Interstate 15 Movement and the Pep1>le's ~~-to the ''merger ques-Olle( Park Ran ger Frank · in ,Hespe'Hf. Party. Fairehild sald the signs \vtre NM f was organized in lW/1 THE PEOPLE'S Party, at p.at up ~bec•use of a state code out of the shattered SOS when its natlonal conference in Den~ against disrobing e x c e p t the hitter organization wns ver, also endorsed closer con-where fUtbortzed. taken over by the mil itant tacts between the. lwo groups. The al ed \Veather Poeple. The People's lAcal chapters of the two gns were post Party Is a loose coalltion of • groups w!U begin to talk between Mussel Rock, at the radi_cal indepe_ndent parties palitically on the local level. If edge of the ~a. and Be.Ick's whJch ran Dr,. Benjamin Spock they achieve a "working" Beach where swlnuning and for president ln 1972. political framework, native sun bathlna in the nude are American radicalism could ~ fo\r, rho roo.1gh, Guc1onlPl'd Real Es~atc S.:il('s and or Bro~1·r !i11·nse TRAINING Phon•· 'or ftt.'l" f uld•·r IA~ONY SCH~LS HAHOI C;INlll UN turNr Cell,_. • Cell• ..... (lllfitnl .. ... 111') t7t.JJIJ B 0 T H ORG ANIZAnONS re-energized in a way the left cOmmon. , h{lve similar critical analyses has not seen since the early "We hive had complaints" ,"' '· •l'llltfllrrtt ''· of American society, Jn days of Students for 8 of nudity on the state beach, ,.":t~~4i. ~,!':Oo particular the co r por a t e,-=Dem==ocr=a=ti=c=Soc=i_•.:.ty_. ____ F_.,~·rchl __ kl_· sa_id_.____ '"!l!"!!l!"!!I!"!!!! !!!!!'!"!!'!!! capitalist economic structure, 1. .: the racism and sexism both groups feel continues t o dominate American society. Bath argue that democratic socialism means that govern- ment has to become decen- tralized with people ·taking ' Judge Named 'SACRAMENTO I AP) C.Onstruction of dams on a portion of · the Kings Rive r near Pine Park Reservoir will 2640 Harbqr Blvd. COSTA MESA e FALL T RAVEL \vould be nltC'" in this '71 VW Can1p- 1•r. &·t ror 'thC' road ln cx- cl'Uent condition. THEV llAVE a hard time trying lo be civil with one another. much less 'vorking together. But recently some tentative steps have been toward a more co-ordinated if not unified left . 1\1cREVNOLDS SA ID he , be blocked through Jan. 1. 1979 was making the move "as one under legislation signed by eager to speed the unity ot Go~. ~ona~d ~eai::an. The . . lcg1slat1on IS aimed at pro- 546-5527 OPEN DAl~Y 9-6 · SUNDAYS 9.5 • HELP 'SPRING' Our Bulbs forces, and as one wi)ling to vidi ng more time for experts accept 'ideological impurity' to study if dams are needed on as the r1ecessary price of mov~ the river. ... k .. n.-look 49c lor;•r, bright•r l , EosytOimtOll \Cbt10 '' Ip. ;nch ti\st. ... ow .•• \ OOlD VllH TtLlS • • 5 9 C lA. HRST QUAllll CERAMIC 11LE H d bright glot:• " or , . 1 · f\ni~h \o~t' 0 life11rne. Oec:orotor colors! A 'l•~A11• in. NOW ••• 39c ~n. So ... ..,..,..d ,.._ """ocJck't- jf, ...._ if ,-..... wonted to! Nothing .,.;H .tick to the nclusn. Pemoa.Sftin. fini\11 -dirt, spilh, -blcxl< '-' ll'Kri;, ;u.1 lie ....... ..,.;1 )'O" ~ ,...., rrway. y.,.. o1-1 ........ lo - ii to bel;..e ii. So ,,;_ in. W1'M g;.. ,-..... o i..,. demon1trotiool ond '...,;;;."!!!""O:~:;;.;•;:"rn::::;low pricl! )111! ••• l't'llU .. m.., i.e 1'"9 ...... , i.v11, llllllltt ...... 21:dl lllCll 1111. 29'4· WALLPAPER IN STOCK! Scr ubba ble tvrloce vi"yls, flocks ond print1 for every room of your home! c~ in and see our big selection! SOLID INYL FLOOR TILE luxurio.nly supple 12K 12 i". tiles gi'llt a lifetime of weer! NOW ••• 2·7~. n. • Plump, Healthy Imported Bulbs Sure to Bloom • Sure to Please .. DAFFODILS-ideal In bord1rs and groups. long lasting cut flowers. RANUNCULUS -grHI In m•n pl1~tlng. Outst•nding. cut flowers in liv1ly colors. HYACINTH-Beautiful end fragrant flowers. Long·l•sting blooms. Tt,JLIPS-Glorious colors. Pl•nt In groups or •s border flowers. DUTCH IRIS, FREEStAS, LYCORIS, CROCUS. Plant now for annloads of flowers in th e Spring! POT 'N CIOCUs--Ni.. Cr.ch IMi ..... e Delft ... r.t, 9ttfeethretr IMlff ••• , •. fLOWlllNa WINDMILL- ,_ ,., • , .......... ..tell ""'' '""' ............................... . 2.95 lnstructiom on How.To-Plant a11d "Force" Growtll. ICELAND POPPI ES H.,. ~ ..._, !tftf ,.., ........ , .. ,, ,...,. •t-Y ...., terrlfic "Htltc;.en.H PONY 89 PAI• ~ • Buy,_ -t1k1 1 3rd home FREE. CYCLAMEN l r ... t, l•ffff ..tor fw ...., ....., • ...... 1.w... .... 1.49 - STRAWBERRY PLANTS ,.., r.11 .89 ... JUNIPER TAMS SHOWER DOOR BUY 3 ROlLS, GET THI 4TH ROLL FREE EVERGREEN PEAR TREE 51f1t1 g1111 doar in it u rd v 11luminum frame ! St•nd•rd li1• 2283 FREE!: s 1i.11.rproo f 9 1111 doon! Fih ' 1l•11dard 1i1• fo b 27ss Get o HO~!-IM k wltti-49"' Dllt wmte! s.tf~, ' ..,. •If-stick. I h 12 IH ll . . S~: Costa Mesa•• 2221· Harbor Blvd. OPEN SUNDAY -ll 1.m .• 5 p.m. THURSOAY, FRIDAY -I 1.m. • 9 p.m. --645 ·1 f26 MON., .T.UES.~ WEQ,. ~ T. ~ 8 a.m.-5:~0 p.m. -----------· ALWAyS PLENTY OF FREifl'J[RKING•'---.., • • • T ' ' '"' ... ,.. ...., .... wftti : ...... ......... C'°""!'-o1. -I!.-; ____ .,..,, fNtfnift.t •, ' ·~,_1,1.tl' 9 CHl i H"KIAL • "1'-91 AtMCll•e .. ., ._., 111fJr#s1 .................. ,.,,.... -.... "'""""' .. .... "' .............. .... ,.u NOW •• 98 \ ------ SDtclolo lhru Wtd., Sepe. aBl!i • 11A Wortd of Greenery" • ~. •· · RnlLoftu •-· Buckskin Bill, who lives • in lonely cabin dee{> in ~. Idaho's Salmon River Breaks Primitive Area. wait& for another hard winter. Only access to : · • cabin is by foot or· by / ; !: boat up river . . ,. ' -" ~ .. _ .. .. . . . ' . 2 Classes ' ' . ' Designed For Parents • I 'fi ,, ' . .... Two classes aimed at help-', l: ing parents to help their children are being offered by ;, Golden West College l n ... . ·. cooperation with the Ocean ;. View School District.' }-Ruth Gocx:lman \\'ill teach ~the parent -c hild com· 1 ~ munication class Wednesday 1--· evenings from 7' P·l1'1· to 9 p.m . .. :· in room A-2 at Lark View '°' SCbfx>l,. 17200 Pinehur~t ~· r'. .. .. l ... ,.,._ 1'IB a.ASS ls aimed a Im-. • ~ • proving communication -,,. ? between family members and • · between home and scbool. ' · '. Participants will d I s e ti s.s "· motivations of misbehavior ' and I ea r n problem-solving :,...! techniques to cope with family ·:: problems. iJi Remedial reading, geared to !:. parents wishing to help their ;i: children, meets Monday from ~ 7 p:m. to 9 p.m. at Glen View ~ School, 6621 Glen Drive. ,. ~ TAUGHT BY Joni Kellog , f-lhe c1ass will cover techniques ~ : for remedial reading from kin--:i:! dergarten through high school. A:. Parents interested in e1ther ~: class may enroll during class ~ sessions . .. "" ~ ' ~ ~How Soon ~ ---c ~~ To-Forget ·· .-~ Jackass ~' .. ; / ••• ~ KELLOGG, Idaho (UPI) - · ·{ Noah Kellogg's 1 e gen d ar y • "' jackass, aedited with locating ~' .~· the nation's largest a n d • ' rldlest silver deposit, has been ~t. .;: shunted into history with the t'~.~· renaming of a local ski resort. ~ ;-The name was changed "~' · frOm Jackass Ski Bowl to a ~~ ~,. less colorful Silverhorn Skl fi'·~ Area with changes l n It .. ~. ownership . ~Jl LEGEN~ HAD it that '')' · · KeUogg, an early -day pros- ~"· •. _pect<r, ~1ert his Jacka11 lo ·~ ~ browse while he poked around -.;:, ._. the Silver Valley looking to get i rich_ ~ ... When he returned , Jhe ... ! jackass was eating atop an ex-l ;; poted oulcropplng or ore. ; ';:; The outcropplng If bellev~ , to 'be pert ot-the SUnahlne _ Slfyw llCJije property; •the ~ii l.,.. and richest .Uver, mine I .. in Ibo .naUOG. . t~1:r ~ . 'U1LOGG1 DIED . penniless. 4 Presumably, 10 4iid b I II ( 11:'Delther Wll forgotten, '!be small '1l'orth<ri ldaM> communJty waa named arter Kelklll. , A111CW1Ul recenUy, the ski mort wu' am"1 for his j-. . , " ' ' t • ' . ''1!iurst1ay, Srptrmber .J, - Ahead of its time I Available now in many screen sizes, in many styles. f ' , The amazi11,g - • • • ' I 1 ~ ,; ... 1... PILOT .~ It holds the picture so absolutely steady; we've been able to eliminate the " ~ . I : I : r : ' 'I ' j · 1 NEw three-part color level monitoring system helps remember.your preference. Corrects most problems caused by signal changes due to your antenna or cable, your local station, or· the network !Jrogram. NEW iocked memory controls, The Sylvania GT-Matic is so au~omatic, the color controls are locked inside the set. And you get a key 't? keep them that way. vertical control entirely_ . · NEW extremely simplified .100%-solid-state chassis~A-snap to-&el'Vice •. --- Circuits-are-logieally-grouped on.three.separate.plug~in_mo.dules_wJth... ·-~~­ plug-in transistors. Service is fast and easy, often right in the home. NEW Sylvania integrated circuit that's like a miniature digital computer. IC'j i El SYUIANIA INCORPORATED Sylvania GT-Matic model CX3178. 19" diagonal ChroMatri.x IIT~t picture tube. 100% solid-6tate GT-1001~chnssis, the ulti~ate in solic\·slate performance and reliability. • . • There is no other colorlV like lt-ai1ywhere. . ' ' Early American style model CL3263 Medfterranea~ style model CL3267 Both Sylvania GT,..Matic models have elegant furni ture styling with outstanding performance features. 25" diagonal ChroMatrix ll picture tube. 10.0% soJid·state· 'G'I'.-lbO Chassis for the ultimate in solid.state performance and reJiability. ' , only S 44995 .Syl~ania GT-Matic model CE3197 in elegant Mediterranean style. 21" diagonal Color Bright 100''" picture t ube. 100% sol\d~state GT·lOO chassis for the \lltimate in solid..gtate perfo{nlance l11d.reliability. • . · . on~y t 'SIA 995 . r r--. .. I ( ' ~ ...... e APPL;IANCES • SALES and SE~YICE 1947 . 28 Vear• of l11tegrltt1 & Dcpe111ll1b ili1 11 -- ' COSTA MESA e HARBOR AREA EL TORO • SADDLEBACK VA~LEY -411 E1,t Si••11t•i11th Str•.t , El Toto Ro1d it Fr11w1y ·1N1•t to 51¥-0111 ' 'D~il~t.t, S.lirtll•v t ·t '46,1"4 D1ily 9.9, S1t11rd1y 9·6 ll7-lllft , • iA..O Dldiltel....,.,,itwrr-aunwnlmo TVTAl'l'tlANCf .,!RVlCE-PHONl-141-1437' ~; I • I I ~ I I. DAILY PILOT Filmland Sta~dsVp. oDetroit ., DETROIT (UPI) -:n>e makers or Jhe llm "Detroit IOOO," wbl~ doi*ia lhil 1netropolis u the .. murder capital of the world," Mve refused to bad oil tram tbiir dispuled ad bJ dohn .... they were telling it like it la. ' • IN A TELEGL\M to Mayor Roman S. Gri~. wbo wired Geoerol Films Corp. Friday asking that the "ICUl'l'iloul" · advertising be atapped, ccmi- pany exec (t l'• e 1 said: ''Ch1U;1ge yo_ur ~ty.~ we'll change our copy." "As· long u Detroit .... tinues to have over 8QO homicides a year • and a murder rate second _only to automobiles as your city's ma- jor irldustry, we wi!I continue to quote Time magazine's line calling it the murder capital of the world~' the telegram said. 0 FURTllER, AS long as blacks are confined to· the in- ner city, and whites are restricted to the suburbs. we will 1 also conUnue claiming that in Detroit, honkies are in the minority. Our ads reflect today's Detroit." The movie, made in Detroit last March with assistance from the city's police depart· ment in certain scenes, is about the robbery of · a political fund.raising ball. F1isbees Catch :On In_ Peking PHILADELPHIA (AP) - A Philadelphia Evening Bulletin reporter mys be helped touch off the flJ'St "Great Frisbee Rio!" In Oilna. Sandy Gr'\dY, In Peking to E the Philadelphia stra's tour of mainland , wrote in the newspaper's Tuesday editiom tllat he and two musicians left their bolel to pus a Sunday afternoon by playing catch with the plastic disks. CURIOUS YOONGS'l'EllS be- gan gathering arouod, a n d the group Swelled. unW it DWD· ~ 300, he wrote. f ":~se kids bad obvlot;!IY never seen a Frisbee. 'Ibey l'alched popeyed and shy," newsman added. Grady s8id the Americans F,ugbt the youths bow to say 1 Frisbee" and a>axed them intO tossing the disks. Before , the Americans were sur· IOOnded by children laughing it the silently spinning toys, wrole. ' "KEEP THE Frisbees. Gilts America," Grady said one • the Americans shouted as lhey_i:etreated lirthe.botel. _ .. But the . children pursued · and tried to return the bll-d-Oun Frisbees. Grady said an interpreter bad to explain to t h e youngsters that the Frisbees r ere theirs ror .keeps. .! DeUums' Son Sent To Chino , OAKLAND (U PI ) 2'!icbael Dellums, 16, the !OD pl Rep. Ron Dellums (0. ·oor.), bas beell sentenced to <aJt indetenninate term in a _:,>rivate institution for the ed robbery of a grocery store. THE TEEN-AGER w a s >entenced Tues d a y by ;\lomeda Co,unty J u v e n 11 e Court Judge John J. Purcltlo to attend Boys' Republic in Chino, an academi ca ll y orierited institution. Purchio said he w o u 1 d review young Dellums' sen- tence in 11 months. A charge or attempled purglary against the · youth i"U dropped. l TlllaD cbarge, o1 auto lid. ta -imutlll•tion. DtUuml -ams1ed Oil imt ~ Satuni«l' by I ·-be ll9PPOd JtUlh 11111 an ualderilllied .,._'*' boy In a stolen car. 1-,-"~-n..ur-eau Chief SAN DIEGO (AP} -Dal Watkin.I, who hu b e e n mell'!' ol -service !0< U'nlled ·Air Unes, • will become j>tlidtnl cl the San Dieao C<>nveatlotl 11111 Vlalton J\urcau. Jllotldll, ti, replacet Robert Oodblif, who =lgneCf 10 become a .ke presid ent of 1ou 11o1e11, 111c. -.~ 'NOT TFIE FATHER' cliad 'Everett • ' • - • Everett Winn·er, In ~aternify Case .... LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Superior Court judge bas ruled In favor of actor Otad Everett in a paltmlty suit filed by a part-time actress after taking the case out of the jury's bands. Judge Benjamin L a n d I s decided against Sheila Scott, 42, Wedne!day alter the jury had heard five days of testimony. Landis ruled that Everett, star of the TV series "Medical Center," was not lhe father or •·month-aid Dale Scott. . However, Miss Scott said she was "happy that I fi led the suit and happy at how the case turned out." ""' , ...... J '°"" .., ! ·~ ·i i I l SVN'l.OWl .. AVE OLD WO RW SHOPS RESTAURANTS I BOUTIQUES 0[ r Attorneys for Everett and the judge refused comment about a reported out-or~urt settlement providing for pay- ment from an "unnamed, in- terested party." But J,>eter Brown, an attorney for Miss SCott, said a setUement had been reached. Daily 10 lo 9, Sorurday 1 O lo 6, Sunday 12 lo 5 Unique Shopping and Dining ' of ' 3015, -S.· BRISTOL ( Corner of · ) Bnstof&--:Baker 12 BLOCKS SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FReEWAYl PHONE ' 979-5040 - CELEBRATES GRANd OPENING OF ORANGE ' ' . I .. ful size COi ... ipCWCWJ <OIN& ll:Jlw KING SIZE · TRANSITIONAL ·LUXURY Sleeps 2, plus 1111 ~ Rivier1 exclusive feature$ . HERCULON CONVERTIBLE .. n_.i --flet! wilb ful size Nd"w · - QUILTED EARLY AMERICAN WITH EXTRA LENGTH $149 Only Riviera offers 7 sizes, ·~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!~ 86 styles, 2,000 fabrics, plus Riv ier1's exclusive 5'" erlta • length mettrass for supreine sleeping comfort; More cu1tom fe1tures plus Free Immediate Detivery! • GIFT & REFRESHMENTS Wingback colonii1I styling wit h bo 11 pleated flounce, in a zesty flor1I ., pdot. $199 ' .F R E ,I Matching chair av1ilable · ~~ • DELIVERY . II •SET UP . •WARRANTY [~] • DRAWING FOR REC~INER "BEDDING BONANZA" wl" ....., kbMJ or q••••in WWWlliW/boxsprWNJ COftlbl....-: e I king/queensiie headboard e 2 king/queensize pillows e 2 no-iTon pilow ca1e1 e No-iron top ANO bottom sheets I l ea.I e King/queensit.e metal fra{l'le with et.e-roll casters e King/queensit.e blanket QUEEN SIZE · Posture Rest $} {)() The mattress· supreme--Mth P'H>vilt borders. super-firm construction and thiddy quilted top. Extra firm box- springs..have corner gucrds for-all- ,oonc1 support. Includes 13-Piece i!eddng Bonanza PLUS Rm.a "'Room Mates." - A CASUAL CLASSIC IN qTRA LENGTH Transition1I flare )n rich, w•rry~s199 free HerahNt , pli1id or .... :nyj. KING .Posture Ease . . •120 ~stlc conifort, '"'*' firwness.. lndudes button-free, ridly quilted mattress, plus 2 stabilized no-sway box springs, S.. pi~e Riviera le<Jding Bonanza "loom Mates" RiYlera's Twi• or fal.5a. ... ... ...... -.. ·-• Mii R1lit ltt\ EZ·llll ·-· s33-.. EACH PllCE ALL ORANGE COUNTY SHOWROOMS ARE JOINING IN THIS FABULOUS GRAND OPENING , .S ialis1s $70lf;£ l'O/f ~ "°""" HOURS: ' • 2 position.-.. $49 glove soft vinyl 3015 S. BR,ISTOL, COSTA MESA PHONI t7t·5Mt WHkdays 9:30-9:00 S.1urday1 9:30-6:00 Sunday 11 :Q0.5:00 HI-RISER Our Hi-Risor ..... 2 .. _,, -~ ,... out c..d up to becw2 single bods ..... Q . double! ..., _..,, p<'Ked $88 TUSTIN ZJfJ N. TUSTIN ,,, ..... ,. 1' PllCI ·CORNER GROUP SAti!TA ANA 117 S. MAIN 147·611t ... BUENA PARK 1111 STANTON An. 11J7""4tt tlii:~'VIE.BA-tJ.¥ATIC ELECTRIC BED !~=9TUllE $120 t•••wn. RIVIERA HAS. fH• COlNR ON $299 ------~-~llllJlll----~-COMEOlI.lr .CHARM O::.C.ONYENllNCE • • Distressed Females Sheltered MIAMI (AP) -Some 2,300 women including rape victi.ml, alcoholics, runaways a n'd deserted wives have passed through a ramshackle, seven· room ho_uae_ in _do.wnto Miami since. March 1972. All have the eame pn>b- lems: no money, no place to sleep, nowhere to go. SO MIAMI'S Women In Distress mission ~uts a roof over their heads and gives them free bed and board II long as they want. , "Moot people don't "'8llze that women can be down and out, too," says Roley Bolton, 45, a fepilniJ t who started the borne. "When men fall, it's pitiful. U a woman goes down, it's a dl5grace and eVeryone is dbgusted." ! She aid the mllllon Is one ol the few sud! homes ft>< worrien tn. the 'natlGn, adding that It ls supported by dona· ' tlims and run with 1 splrit of ' cooperation. "Everybody helps out,'' ahe said. THERE'S UNDA, 21, from LOI Arigeles, pregna: and biding from her boyfriend; Sandy, 7.8, a secretary from Hyattsville, Md., who was rob- bed and thrown out ol her apartment when she couldn't • meet the bills; Francoise, 21, i I French . tourist who .was • ~· ... awted and robbed. · -\. there ls Elvina Davi!i, ~ . , who police found uleep on " a park ~ch in dOwntown 1 > Miami, lblverlog under a layer or llOliY newspaper. . • ' . . • • • ~ . • ( • • . ' • ; . • . "I'll stay here until I ~e," Mn. Davis aid. "The ~e here are so good to me. I m not lonely here.•· Gnostics' Old 'Bible' Translated CLAREMONT (AP) : Scholars at Claremont !-graduate school Are "' translating a GnooUc bible ,In which the snake of the Garden of Eden Is a hero and God ls a . . • . . • , villain. ; The 1cholars at Claremont's • Institute for Antiquity ancl ; ChrlsUanity have p l e c e d ; · together a f o u r t h century : -Gnostic-sacred -1 i-b r &4'-Y ' discovered In Egypt shortly : . after World War Il. English lranslatklllS ol the -U are ~ to be published belore li'IS~ • THE GNOSTICS 1 were .an · early primarily E gyp Ii' n ; •. O!rilllan -leter denoun&i t~ as heretical: 'Ibey believe in ~ the '*"'1>tlve nature ol ~ knowledge. Gnosls Is a Gl'<l'k ;;· root wonfmeanlng knowledge. The boot, "The Origin of the World," now belng translated, II slmllar to the Bible's "Genella." It portrays the snake as 1wing Adam and Eve to eat the forbidden fruit and "become like gods in that you will know the ,d!Jference between evil men and good." • • •• ' I •! :-• • • •. • ' aur WHEN Adam and Eve / tiave partaken, the Gnostic book says approvingly that · • - - • - TATE • .. ' ORIGINAll FAIR TRADED AT $599.95 ••• JI you've been waiting for the right !Ii t ime to buy a quality col or console, wait no longer! • ,Delivers brilliant, detailed ' color consistently .• Full-leature model • Rich walnut graiQfinisb· cab inet • Solid state chassis & matrix picture tube aisure"top Jlerfor~oce & dependability. WITH 1 YI. PARTS & tAB0°R 100% SOUD STATE - MAGNARX !5" 1:1::.i CUii CONSOLE ' MAGNAVOX 25" :::::.j cur CONSlllE ' ORIGINALLY FAIR TRADED AT 699.95 .• Hand-s ome mapte--finish ·&-Earty-~American ·Styling make ·this model dlsfjnctive •Sharp, life-like color •All.:hann<I UHF/VHF rec'lllion • So\id- slate for tOfl dependability-• Full-1eature mOO.I WITH I YR PARTS l WOR CRmlT Pl.MS ~~ :lf.~.'!! knowledge sbon~ '. MAGfMnl !6" :;_::.; CIJI CRlf· The G'!ll"Ucs also bell8)'ed , • ' · M.AGNAVOX 121N. =:;Cl.DI PillTABlf • •, • • l • in many -deltl., lncludlnll a DllCINALLY FAIR TIAll!D AT SH.95 ... V..1\ s ' central, beoeflC<lll God, called • low tbe l!Jlian . provincial styling & \he Old the All. World pecan or Milano Antique 1'ory finishes • . But tliey maintained that the 1 ! De~"" vivid, lil•·Jike colir • Precision en- god wtio created earth wa · gineeted toe too pertonnance .,....,.._, P<llY llld joalaua. iilTM M llTS PUTS & WOR 1 ,,..,. Nld he cut Adam and Eve ln1111 lho Gorden -..0 lie hoped ... bop llllm .la Ja! 1 t»rance. DRIGINALLY ,AIR TRADED AT 249.95 ... 12'"8 1 (Diag. meas. i<t.) portable is the ertecl · ext1a:set • r~fures retractable carrying Cnc11e, • tetest-Oping a1tenria •All channel reception • · Trim, hi-impact cabinet in an attractive con:- temporary de~g• WITH II DAY BRING IN SEIYICE . Thursday, Stpltmbtr 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT JZ ,. WHITE FRONT HAS ' PURCHASm •• • ·10,793 BRAND ,, NEW 19.ZlMAGNOVDLlrS ~~ SOLD AT SAVINGS TD 30% OFF FORMER · BDNAFIDE FAIR --RADE : PRICESI 0011 MISS , DOTI SHOP JODAY " Advertised prices i1cl1le ... yt' 3 YR. PICTURE TUBE WARRANlY · e1te11si1111f man111,tarer;s W1ria1ty Y" DELIVERY AND HDDK UP WITHIN AREA ON CDNSDLE TELEVISIONS lNCLlflfED AT NO E~RA COST T Y" WHITE.FRONT CONTINUOUSLY . OFFERS BRAND NAME MERCHlN· OISE AT SUPER-LOW DISCOUNT PRICES MAGNAVOX 25" i:i:~i CUI CONSll.E • ~op pertonnance a!!d reliability are ¥ours from this nifty little portable -Put one in the den, bedroom, office etc. • Hi·impact compact case • All c_hannel UHF NHF receplion • Comes in an attractive beige color •Hurry in on this Ian· tastk buy! Safety Drive SHOP WITH COl\IFIDEl\ICE ••• !iATl!iFACTIOl\I GUARAl\ITEEP DR WUR MONEY BACK' STOil MOUU. MOIL.SAT. HMI io ,,,;..,,._SUN. 10Urto 7Pllit*APl'UANCI MAITftO.UIS1 MON.-fll, NOOll-9 (WESTCHESTIR & LA 11·91 SAT. &-SUN. IOAM to-7PM Capllol Nen Semce ......, ...... ~-__,~~--..... ~_,,.--__,._,.,....,..~~~~......;.;.;.;..,, •• ~~~~ -;tA .::: (Q$Jl'. .. MESA . 3088 BRISTOL s•. . .... :~,:"'"'"'':~::.:;:..~"""" .. :: ... ,, .. down the number ,of accldenta 1·, 111 11• '' ,........ "'" 11111n.,•1t1. 11M• ni nte•n,. : in Lassen Votcantc National ni1Nt1 ••Nnt' 1t l•M• .. nt t ''"""'"'""' ,. Park has been announced b1. ~, ·Sift l>Jego fr~•Y at lrlttel · •tuo10 '''' • w11tc"''''' • tOJ •••t•s )' Ulfl flJITllUll.1'11. '"lhSll .. 1.'f'lllllUI, StMlllllllltk .. (_ Park Supwlntendent ~ • '1 1 .. 111cn,ut1t1 lftll• "L11111u ..,., "'"".,. _.-Mlll]>hy. -• ' -------- .- ,--• ' . . J· ' I ' l I I .............. What if Texans Revolt?· By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) -'l'um south off of lnterstate-20 · a few miles \vest of · Odessa. Tex., and you soon find yourself crossing a st.rip of desert larxl. As one passes the dunes and clumps ol stunted flora, one is . Temirxled of the ~fiddle East. Jt is not, howeyer, the shifting sands and scrubby shrubbery that evoke such an image. THE ARAB world is called to mind by the forest of rhythmic walking b e a m pumps that are draining the area of petroleum deposits. For this region is a part of the Permian Basin, the home of the oil d~pletion allowance. · I happened to have been <\rivi ng ·through the territory recently on a day when my car radio was reporting new mOves by Arab governments · against U.S. oil interests in the · l\ilddle East. • WHEREUPON 1 ··round myself pc>Qdering the question of what might happen if Teias were to nationalize its oil · fields. That possibility seeme d remote, of COW'Se. Texas political potentates apparently are on friendly tenns with the oil companies headquartered in ·faraway Pennsylvania and California. But with the situation tn the Mktdle East growing more unsta ble, and continued access lo· Arab oil becoming less predictable, no supply source abould be taken for granted. THEREFORE. UPON my reklm . to Washington, I con- tacJed. an oil industry spoXesman for assurance that Te1as oil would r e m a i n available to those of us in non- producing states. '-'-lCs a -matter of technology as much as anything,""lle told me. "The natives of that part of Texas simply don't have the know-how to develop their natural resources 'by themselves. "Be£ore oil was di scovered, the area was populated by pr'ffnltiVe cattlemen trying to raise cows on land that would hardly support a gopher." l SAID, "ARE you saying they need us as much as we need them?" ·~Exactly. \Ve need the oil: they need the royalties that out-of-state oil companies pay. It'' a mutually beneficia1 ar- rugement. I aakl. "But suppose t"t ~ decided they wan ted' an 1of tbe income from their oO°JI SUppose they took over &be> oil ·leases now held by ....... mterests?'' .~.-T GOOD l'.'Ou\d it do diem? U the technicians who Mt,e been sent into the area JJif joll companies were sud· fld1 Withdrawn, they C.'Ouldn't Pt the stuff out of the ~-" 'ftM!re are comforting \vords for coosumen concerned that oU lbl,pments from 1lhe Middle Eaat might be cut ofr. But let • mpe Texas stays on good *1D" wltb llrael. lF AT FIRS T YOU DON'T · J'bRr !:LIZABETH. South Alrb (AP) -A man kitted 111m1eff by dr inking ~c acid a lter 2 1 tl!llfuUy aUcmh. pting • t llde by (I) ohooting 1m,.11 i. Oio held. (2) sla1hing hi• wr111t. (I) throttling himself wlli a necktie and (4l ~ an overdose or 1-~---.81u,'11 pilla, authorlUe.a said. -· I • • WHITE .. SHERWOOD STEREO RECEIVER BSR CHANGER AND PAIR Of ACllDJHC DESil II ST !Ii s1050 as-WATT .1M1FM STEREO RECBVEll AsEo When it com es to power, sensitive tuning, versa tility of a command TELY center amt quality that's a trad ition, there's no better receiver in its Sherwood 705 .... 174.95 price fie ld than the Sherwood S7050. The FM section.incorporates such BSR JI OX ....•...... 54.95 proven Jdvances as solid state cerami c filtering for improved selec-•co ustic des1 n It 69.94 tivity and FET circuitry for superior sen si tivity and reliability. And it I:Q4 looks good too, with the wood grain finished enclosure that's includetl. 2 ACOUSTIC DESIGN II SPEAKERS BSR 31 OX AUTOMATIC CH~ GER Two way speake1S with I> inch high compliance The world's best selling changer w1th 1 4 pole wooler and 3 inch cone tweele< that del iver a lull irnluct1on motor, counterbalanced tone arm, Shuie iange ol sound. They carry a 5 yr. w•nanty and I magnetic cart11dge, custom base and dust cover. yea1 l1ade·up p1ivilege: In all , an imp1essive package. .~ .. -. /. •.. '11 1 , GARCIA MONO Regula r From 2.17 G •rc•a 2·~POOI ''""' "' ,, 100 ,, . 129 ~d· i. f 1ampl~ ot 1 lfldrto~ a.·a 1. 6):e. GA RCIA PRE-WOUND SPOOLS ... From 1.59 l r•111 ggc 9402 Reg . To 39.99 "Master" gold color w/true diamond 1 wrap style and heavy duty black wrap varmac type reel seat/pore. guides . Rods also 1or bonita, barracuds and al· bacore. HOOK REMOVER Com pa re at 42c Srnall ero for ~11e 21 c 6 & •mall··r. l1e. P•j !or a11 tar1e SlltS. SNAP SWIVELS Our Regular 25c sim J • .i. s, s. 14C 7, 10, 11. 14. Q113ht~ Olyt11p1a~ 5w1vefs. FAMOUS LURES DOUGH BAIT HOOKS Regular From 2.34 • Regular To 48c All,1rylf~~!llC<n fro"' Win llo1d t:itt1s~ ,,,. "" "'""'• I sec "''"""°"'· '" 13c ~nd11!ds ll'Kl't! 110~1 aho. TROUT HOOKS Regular to 48c Stoc• u~ DB I~· ''"" "'· ""' 1 ' '"' 15c otl!ef aold hoo~s; PLASTIC wo t Ms . Regula r To·l,1.98 . PJC~IJ! ol 100 ,, ... p11S1rc worms. 388 All $Ire& & s1,1es. ' . . . . . .. • I AFFERS.&. R E ' II •SATTLER -. ~ -.~. --=== ; -=--., .. ~~ .-.... -. ·~ -- WHIRLPOOL 1'9 CU.R. ·SIDE-BY ·SIDE· !Ii ,/ • Upright convenience in both 222 lb. freezer and fresh foo<f section • 6 door and cabinet shelves in freezer • 4 shelves, twin crispers, deep door shelves and dairy bar in ref rigerator • Rolls out on wheels 1or easy cleaning OUR IEG.419.97 • • .~ .. ' i ! ~ I SPORTING HOOS NOT AT TV & APPLIANCE MARTS NOT All ITEMS_AT_All STORES WHITE .FRONT OFFERS THE LAR6E!iT !IELECTIOl\I OF l\IATIDNAl...D' FAMOU!i BRAl\IO!i • . ' I TY t. APPLIAN~l MART HOUIS : MON.H I, NOON'I tw!SICMIS!El l ll 11.J) uru'""' ... SUNDAY 11111 ll IPM . CONVENIENT CRIDIT ·TERMS • • :S.ATTLER • ·~· ,,, ,._,· ___ ,,,, ,· ·• ••. 1.UNIMG. ~~ t,iql:jjf & l\(lS ARI ,\OW· £;:$llltt~·~S ,I . 1 ._ · . ... ·' ' .2 YEAR PARTS ,& LABOR WARRANTY ON MOST MAJOR APPLIANCES WHEN USED UNDER NORMAL CONDITIO'llS. EXTENSION OF MFG 'R>. WARRANTY. GAFFERS & SAITLER 30 INCH CONTINUOUS CLEAN GAS RANGE ·Our Lt'IJtDiscounf, Price I ' . Deluxe feature range ' has big continuous ·cleaning oven wi th glass window on door and ipterior light • Drip.-proof'cook tpp • Hi·pertormance top·burners -from low keep warm to high brotl • Roll -out 2 pc. smokeless broiler • Burl walnut back panel with electric clook & timer. GAFFERS & SATTLER 2 OVEN RANGE WITH CONJINUOUS CLEANING OVEN ' ·ou'r Low piscount Price 30'' eye level -gas range features programmed cooking • BlatK glas·s doors with oven lights • Roll-out -broiler with pan and grille • Con- tinuous type steel grates • Orip·proof re· movable coo~ top • Removable lower oven door and appl1aoce outlet. • 11/JJminMe~ backguard ~ · s ' ' • SAVE 150. .. PHILCO 15.8 ~~: • FRaT 2 m. RlflllCERATII , Our Reg. 339.97 • Freezer with automatic ice maker holds 131 lbs. • Fresh. food section with cant ilever shelves ttrlet-you make the space you neetl • Meat ir--~ pan, twin vegetable crispers. FREE AUTOMATIC ICE-MAKER with the ,.,c .. ne tf eitlter .t thl•e llhn11 r1fri11mor- fr1111r1. IAVE 150 ... 3. ·fAftllllBM •FHIT•PLfX $ Our Reg. 449. 97 . ' • Special fast-freeze section and regular freezer hold a total of 192 lbs. • Gliije- our basket for bulk items •Twin vegetable ciispers; diary bar and more! • SLACKS ' ' ' .. ' '' .I ,-' ' Thursday, Stpltmbtr 20, 1973 A. 3-PC. WDOL •BLEKNITS WITH sumE LEATHER TRIM Top-fashion pantsuits and oilier styles that easily could sel l for lilly dollars more' Our talk·of-lhe·counlry. eipensively made and _;~ lrimmed designercreat 1ons ... in newest -Pl'•"' s;~ ;,.., '99 SPORTCOAT B. THE FDRBIEST FAllE·SEAL PANTSCOATS IMAGINABLE! ' ' Tremerdoos value at our regular low price ... and, now even· greater' Back-belled and brass·bottoned .. , a ·.QIJill·lined pants· • C-Oat in shimmery srift·aS'Seal ·acrylic pile. Machioo·washable. Sizes 8 Io J6, 99 . ' . APPAREL NOT AT TY l APPLIANCE MARTS t402 !iHOP, WITH CONFIDENCE ••• !iATl!iFAC..TION GUARANTEED a.t \'DUR MONEY BACK . ' -J • • '. 3088 BR~STOt S--T. S•n Ditto F•••r at lrlslol STOii HOUIS1 MOM.·SAT. · IOAMtotPM SUM. IOAMto7PM ' . ------ . ' .. -..... OAILY PILOT Ul'I Tlletlfle'9 l Ret11r11 Visit. . , Paul McNabb • goes ·1 borne again to buy Jot-· tery tickets in Mary··. ·b land. The first $1 mil· lion winner, McNabb " moved his family to an· , 1 other state seeking anonymity from p.rank· 1~ sters, robbers and do- gooders. ,.,, ,, Woman CO ··~ • ! Will Head ... .'~ Army Post j WASHINGTON (UPI) -Lr. Col. N a n c y l!op!enspirger ' . takes command .of the U.SJh Anny post in Wurzburg'?1 . ,, Germany ne1t week -the ,, first woman to hold aucb 1~1, major Anny commanctr overseas. ln her new job, Col. Hop- fenspitger, a five-foot ~.n who has no fear of tackUDl1r, tough assignments, Will be il\..,1 charge o! a battallon-sise11! · group of Army men aad. women who m•intain the basevi1 , • where tl)e ~ I D fa D t Oil!>q 'Division ia .headquartered. l1.i ~ ! ' · Ho I mAT, lN !Uolf, f, a ,&lapm , 1, away from' the old Army m~ . ~where men commanded men '. and women c om mandeigr11 ,women. .~w : But the low;key manner in q: which her assignmenl W8.f1,1 , Lo.,,·kefl _,.' 1 laou.._._t tella." muela about neu!" •1' ,, handled tells even more aboot1q the new role of women in tlie 1 ·new Anny. >.11 'Ibei:e was no public aqr'rn pouru:~inent of the asilK9=; 1: ment, although Anny offictaJ/i" ' confll'llJed It had taken j>ta~~11 when asked by United Pr~ J International. It was, AririY ,,, otficlals said, bandied as if it'111 were entirt?ly routirie, 1 1(,1 1~·1 -.. WEl>ON'T announce-tlil"'n assignmeiits of male lieutenant colonels around thel world," one officer 1aid ... Anttdl we don't want to make •'" • __:_S nt commander something tmu.sua -out of'rll this gal. We want her assign· 19 ment to be treated the same If as if a man had· gotten Uie~T job." ... Col. Hopfenspirger, -47, of ..-~ Delmar, N.Y., asswn~· herll'> · new command Sept. 2.5. A ho veteran of 22 year1 in the 1!: Army, her last assignmenfuo was as congressional llason for Army headquarters. • '1~1'11 SHE WILL BE the aecond '" -woman-pl.aced-in command-ot~•--­ a predominantly male unitt~h overseas. ''- The first, this year, wa't'..1~ · C.pt. Reba C. Tyler, wh<> commands the <tsth AG ~ar•oJ Detachment at Mannheim, llo Gennany, a much smalter -->:·1 outfit, 111 Anny officials are considerl 01 Ing w1111t role women sbould play Jn the Anny of the fu. • ture, although theno has not l been any serious move toward abandoning the s e par 1 t e Women's Army Corps. ( ALL 111E SERVICES bave1 been opening up new op-'' ponunitles !Of' women 1q the ' United States . . ~ ,. Five women, lhree fn:m the Army, one from the Navy and ..i.i..: one from the Air P'OR."e, h01d'"'1' key command po8itlona over ~ both men and women ln ~ 1 United States. And the Anny a •I• few weeks a;o approved Us ~ lint woman , to enter-D1&ht' \ " tralnln& nell year. - ~ -- I 1:·· I :_1 \ • ,, • • • ' .. , . .,. ... --.. .. . . . . . . ' • 6 J DAIL V PILOT I f ' i L.1'1. BOflfl This Town Bad News To Bandit l:' ablonslri Killer Most All Teens Death Sentenc~ Ordered I W atch ·Television Subtract your waist measurements In inches from your height In inches. U the number you get·is the figure 35 or lower, look out. You've put on a few too many pounds al- -ready. ldeally, say the.experts, the number should be about 38. Exacily 'l'I percent of the nation's teenagers watch TV at least sometime in tbe evening hours during any given week. So the sur-- veytakers recently reported. 'Ibey did not say what tbe other three perceut do1 and I did not ask. There were horses before there were grass. But little horses. \Vasil't until the grass started to grow about 30 million years ago that the horses ~Orso says-a scholar wbo ha9 made a study of the matter. QUERIES FROM CLll!NTS Q. "How many newborn babies are bottle fed com· pletely by the time they leave the hosi)itil?" A. Three out of.fQur. Q. "What's the oldest town· in North America?" A. That would have to be Mexico City. Foonded by the Aztecs,ln )325. Under !he name of Teoocbtitlan. · Q ... In a double-ring ceremony, who· carries, the hus- band's ·ring'?" . A. The maid of honor, generally, A study of the finger paintings of about 900 hospitalized patient! turns up this: Men seem to prefer blues and greens. Women, reds and yellows. That color used least is orange. Black is by far the most common. As for purple, it's almost exclusively a child's color. THE HARD FACTS Statistics indicate a woman's 10th baby, if such there be, is 12 ounces heavier at birth than her first baby ... On that list of most common American surnames, Wilson ranks No. IO ... Were you aware the United States is the only country. in the World where matches are given away fr ee? ... White men generally have considerably larger ears than black men , .. Ocean experimeriters con- tend nothing will repel a shark except the odor of a dead shark. That state wherein the most queen bees arc raised iS Alabama. · • Address mail to L. !ti. Boyd, ·P.O. Bax 1875, Nell>* port Beach, Calif. 92660. W AS!UNGTON, Pa. (AP) - Aubran W. "Buddy" Martin~ one of three trlggennen con.- CLARE, Mich. (UPI) -It's victed la tho 11119 Yablolllld no wo.nder this small Central fanilly murden, bu been Michigan town of 2,639 boasts sentenced to die In the electric it hasn't had an armed rob-chair. bery in some 20 years. Judget Charles G. sweet, sitting in Washington Cowlty When one was attempted Common Pleas Court, imppsed one night th is week. the gun-the sentence We d n e Id a y man wu told by his would-be altbougb Pennsylvania bu oot victim to "get Jost." passed a capital pu:llslQnent statute since tbe U.S. ~· WHEN HE TRIED a second Court declared the i:leath hold up shortly thereafter, the penalty UDOOn.9titutlonaL 'lhe state dlsmluJtled Its olloctric man, identified as Julian Lee · chair three years ago. Amos, 30, Beavertown, ran in· to Police arriving at the scene. SWEET SAID he believed The fist .. de t ed. hlssentencewasCCllllilullooal 1f 1n~1 n occurr _ d~pite state and federal bourt when the gunman, armed"'Wlth rulings. In iHe event that his a high-powered BB g u n • sentence wu found to be con- marched • into C 1 ark' S' trary to the law, Sweet senten- Drugsto;re. The store owner, ced Martin to three 1 corr Charles CJ3rk, knocked the .secutive life terms tn Wison gun away wilh his hand after and provided tbit -be Mt be it was shoved in his f.ace, eligible for parole or turlOugb. police said. a.-The sentencing was the first "GET LOST," he said to the gunman. "It wasn't bravery, it was instinct," Clark . later told police. Undeterred, police said the bandit ran out of the slore and lQ a nearby service station where attendant David Lloyd, 17, at gunpoint stuffed $300 in- to a bank deposit bag. ~IEANWHILE, C L A R K notified the town's five-man police departm e nt and patrolman Craig Cla'ir got to the gas statlon just as the man was trying to escape. Amos was being held in Clare County Jail pending a preliminary hearing. Police Chief Elroy Tice said "The last armed' robbery in Clare that I can remember tQOk place when some juvenJles took about $1 in change from an e1derly lady 1n a public rest room." STORE HOURS: Mond•y • Frid•'/' 9.9 S•turd•y 9-<5 Sunday 111-4, YOUR CHOICE: GLOSS OR FLAT LATEX HOUSE PAINT Our best lttex boost P1ints, both 1111 prictdl Resists wuther, smog, mildew 1nd stains. Extr1 flioh hiding. Ont caat eowrs most .11.Kfaas. Dritt fast. Ouitk, easy clt1n-(Jp in soapv wat1r. For primed wood, metal, masonry, ett. Choosr flat (rq. 9.29) in whit• er ready-mixed co/ors. Gloss whit• (re;. 8.29). Custom Colors sli;htly h~ HPX·HPG 97 LATEX HOUSE PAINT I i for the seven peracm who bave been convicted or plead· ed guilty In tbe Yablomkl murders. Two more perlODI, lnchMl!og deposed United Mine Workers president W. A. "Tony" Boyle, have been charged In tbe case. In explaining the sentence, Sweet said: "It seems to me tbat It (capital punishment) may veey well not be com· pletely OuUawed for such a case as this. 111 HAVE elected to sentence Martin to death in the manner and fonn that shall be pro- vided by law at the time bis appeals have been exhausted." The sentence was handed down 22 mootbs alter a jury of seven women 800. five men found tlleooyiiTI! or mer cte..land Nsideot guilty on three counts and recom· mended ,death. Sweet said he decided on death becauSe Martin com~ milted "the worst possible mw-der, killing for bl!e." SWEET SAID Martin not only bad killed tbe target. · United Mine Workers rebel liiaer josepb J... Yablomkl, but a,lso two othera in the house, Yablonsld's wife and daughter. And Sweet said : "He (Martin) has never exhibited the slightest remorse." Martin, clad in blue jeans, a purple t-shlrt and sungluses, . stood lmpaaaively b e f or e Sweet ·as the sentence was read. · 0 00 YOU HA VE anything to say?" Sweet asked. 11No," Martin saJd. Martin's attorney, M a r k Goldberg, said he would ap- peal and said he· expected hi• di en ta to be •granted ·a. new trtal . -Whether to reinstate the death penalty is an issue in the Pennsylvania Legislature, where a special ~nel ap- poirited by Gov. "Milton Shapp bas •made a recommendation against capital punishment. , . . ' > TJtlf 'GoOd Life UPIT ...... Steve Tweed has own version of recent Time Maga- zine'·s cover feature of "The Good Life in Minne. sota." Gov. Wendell Andersori, who was on Times cover, reportedly is amused by poster but not an- xious to be closely connected with it. rnla Federal SaVings, here I came! , Always groaang to serve you ••• 21 OF"FICES 1171 . 29 OFFICES . 11173 • ' . f SAVE $2.32 A GALLON! LATEX FtAT, S&RUBBABlE,-NON-DRIP ,· 1'be_Nation1's Lar est Federal j \-~ ... --~-' ' l ' . ' SAT-N-HUE ll.4r INTERIOR uni 97 Slt-N.ffur •• .our best lat1x for. •/Ir, ailinp: ind woodwork. At. ldwrtbld In Hou• & Gardin 1n4 Bltttr Hamn.· Rtsists dirt ind soll/111. Sptffds on imoothly. GALLON drin quickly without "pm1rks.. One CG1t coven most iurfacn;, For pluttr, wtllboard, conm11. \'\obit• & modtJn colon. r REG 8 29 SMH-•GnK's • • ntw R=ilM COICM'S · l1Jllj:i1}j\}Q_l:!lti\J SAVE $1.22 A GALLON! LATEX HOUSE OR WALL PAINT MIXED COLORS YOll SAVE MORE BECAUSE WE OW N TWO PAINT FACTORIES' GALLON REG. 5.19 House Paint-mirtl fumes, mildow, 1lk11i, blistering. Dries flSI. Water cl11n-up, Well Point-Fully wuheblt, Dries in _30 mlnutu. High hidin§. Wat1rcl11111 toolr. M·•l !' -u111ere -,ou get rates competitive with ' my savings and loan I I 1Pn nnll•lllr: Aco• ML For \present and new account& Open 1 1with any amollDI. .Add or withdraw ~tanytime. i 6 1% 1•YnrC.rllft1•te,.Forn.., ="' 6 12% z 111CCOunt1. Minimum deposit $1,000. ,_er • --•Tcnna available: 12 to 23 months. · 6 3% 30·•••111 certltlcate. ::::-.. 6.98"-i For new account& Minimum deposit: :r-er . _... $5,000. Tenmnallable:·21Jitol0yea11. 1, C•1Ulloltta Acooaat. Minimum depoaic $100,000. llued 01) tam. ==·J.19"-.,_ ... ' 16 Free Services ~ Tr~velers checks, money ~ orders, notary service, trust :, · deed note collection and photoco11ies of important documents are free with aecount palances of $1,000 ' . ... . or more. And II other services an; free With accounts of any size! .. . I-~ whlwlrawtis cm tM new Ctni&atc •ccount1 ebcm: ate permitted btfore. .m•fiirity but thc lntcrat urned. · 1 ~ Jataelt on ell m:muts eompcnmded d&Uy. lri conlOnftaftc:e wtth tlle Fedttal Home I.A3e Bant'Bolnl ttp- I oo the amo¥At witbdrawa will 1" at the Pas&boolr. nte thtn btiq ptid lnot the Cen!Sc.ate rate! from tha date of .... « rcoewl ol the Cenifiate wbl~ la later. Allo, no in~ett will be paid for the 90-day ptrlod ~ .. " ·-,. I / ...,._IOW.Wolwiiluhawol. . . roMMvNtJ:y EVENTS MISS COSTA MESA BEAUTY PAGEANT ~Pon-.d by the Coif• ltltM Ch•mbor of Commorc• 1 , •nd 30 Lo<tl S.rvlco Clu bl •nd Civic Groups 3rd Annial Fl•ta de Costa Mesa OCTOBER 1'1.13-l4-COSTA MISA PARK-DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA t. Over ; $1000 In Pr!Zes to 9llffil and "Her Court , • APl'UCANTI ,, TO n y·wa CALLI ... ,. .... Cliff w-.. ·!---t7f·1ftt Col. r.4.ls..1-4'.ZIN • .. ~. !· Costa 2 Harbor Boulevard J 646·2300 . , EN SATURDAYS, ~' 01 . .. . . . ,, -- I ' ' .. I!:. "' . . ' ' ' J '• ·" -- . . . . . . . . . . .. .. ' ' • . ;Reagan Turns Down Thermnstnt .. '~ (Al') -'!be The exception will be those Re.,. odmlplotntlam hu offices on 14-hour duty, such •:: 1.~I~ · llo lights as the California Highway than 72 degnes during the wintertime. aod -lb e -P•tNl, Robinson llJd.. t Iii in effort> to con-In addition to conserving In summer, offices will be cooled.only to.7&.llegrces. • .,, •r../ ~-power and aaoollne, th e ··'.-'!'lit ............ • mto ef· 'program will save the money, (fte\•btit.,... now and Oct. 1, be said. UNTIL NOW, there have been no strict guidelines governing heaUng and atr con· dllioning . Robinson said some offices were kept warmer than 72 in lhe winter and usually were cooled as low as 72 degrees in the summer. 1'!"8 disclosed Wednesday by ~wrence R. Robinson Jr., 11WE ARE estimating sav- 1dlrector of the state Depart-lngs In ail< figures but Jt's too ment of General Services. early to pin that down," he \ said. BEAT, LGIHTS and air con-The state's annual light and dltloning will be abut down gas )>Ill Is nearly $Z million. The· Intensity of lighting will be cut back in most active work areas to reconunended standards, Robinson said, and lighting will · be trimmed by one-third in nonwork areas .. wcekencls and holidays aod the Stortlng this week, word has state will start buying more gone out to the state's small gasoline-saving autos , 125,000 civil servants to , Robinson said. keep. Ute heat set at no higher ..;. ,.~ Attornev " ...L -General Robbed -From Wire 8en'ices New i.i..ici> Atty. 0.n. , David Norvell walked Into a small branch bank near his di· fice in santa Fe and wU relieved of his billfold. 'lbe attomef geoeraJ said~• man and a woman tn their early 2111 ~· •g the bank when be en . He a~ ded that he . ci.,hlng to bis car for a gun but had second thoughts.: The ~put Norvell and three other persons in a closet, ( ' PEOPLE ) told them to wait 15 minute! before coming out and fled With an estimated '10,000, Norvell said. * .F.ddle Egu, the 'former New York policenWl whose uplolts were depicted In the ftlm, "The Fr en eh Con- nect.loo," says "I used to go to the movies; then I made one, and I ddn 't believe them ariy n:iore." · Egan, wbo nms a aecurtty guard agency and restaurant in.lort Lauderdale, Fla., said the · movie be made "dfdn't depict my real way of life ... · it made me look like a s~ ~~·~:: Yankoel pitcher dro from the ABC television Eye tneas News team in New York, has been hh:ed as a sportscaster by WCBS-TV. Ed Joyce, news director of WCBS-TV, said Bouton, whose book. "Ball Four," was a bestaeller, waa "part of the outsl'Okm breed of young . jounlaJlsts not beholden .. the sports establishment." * Senate President pro tem James Milli was to leave to- day on a 14·<h!iY tour or public !ranij)Crtation tylt<ms In West G<rmany as a guest ol lbe Ge~govemment. 'Ibo San Diego ~t has authored a IM!ries ol bllb aimed at booltllll r a p f d tranalt In California, Including a meuure that added a sales tu to gaooline to help pay for -tranalt,.aystems, ____ +-- * Normu Comtm, editor of the Saturday Rovlew for near· ly three decadel, wu named 11pub1isber of the year" ~y 1 be Maaa· -Publish-ers A.liocf&! u.n. ' CouslnS is the 11th ~ clpleot of thO award thal p r e v-IOUllJ bu included publishers ol Time, Esquire, · R e a d e r ' s Digest, and the Atlantic. Cousins joined the. Saturday ReVlew In 1940 and durtog nearly 30 years of leadership, 1 Jmlded it into a major news and literary -kly and saw its ctrculaUon increase 311-fold. * JoU Dltf1lll1br, fonner prime mlo1lter of Clnada, en- joyed his 78\h blrlllday aJOOI with • other -ta--,: 'Ibe OCCUlaD. Do wu a ., fllnd-nbin( dinner In Win- nlf>'I IGr the North Pvlla· mml cl Manllalla and ~Ontario. Diel• biW WU ..... led with a l\0-f......... two-Iler coke, 11urr0mdea·w 11 cmdel, two of wllfdi ba blow out for pbotolrlpllers .. * Lelm Ea1 Tuai, the son of · on lmm!gront ()ilnae cook, lield an lm~ve margin over six CJindklates In Seat· Ile'•' noRperUaan 9 r l mar y tlecllon r.. mayor. llAC« & OEC«ER ,. 7%" C•CULAR SAW • 1 H.fltend jlNl,... lctW, •~•nlll ffpth ollljt.t•lm•nlt. INTERMATIC 24HOUR, LAMP LYTER • • Protect your I-tome wfotile r.•u'r• o.wa y. • Turn1 amps on and off automa ticallj ot any time you desire. , OUR 4nn · I EG. 6.91 EA . 5'(~ VANI#, .... · FLUORUCENT TUBES MAGICOLOR '··LATEX ALL PAIN •o-........ .... -.w. .... ofMI •••loft l'ffittont. • Drinln20 "'""''"· •W•i.rci..n-vp. .RBERGLASS INSULATION • Aluminum foil va per barrier, pf1o11 hi9h-in1ulotion fibergla11. •Standard 15" width, 3 Y.t" thtclc· n•••· Tuai, who bu said he will mlp u City 'Qouncll pnal- doal lo nm lull time: laces the 1'o. I !Diil In ti. rll(t, ln- ·eundlol11 W..=IJhllnall,-in .u..J:=~~::1~==~~:'=~""""-'"" ~vembtr gtllllrol ctcctt --- ' and ballways. These cutbacks wiU include such state ln· stitutions as pri sons and men· tat hospitals. Robinson said .• J'!!E 'STAflt will start buying a majority or compact autos for genera l state use rather than intermediate-size cars, General Servicos of· ficials said. Of 650 autos to be bought this fall, only' 100 will be in· termediate size, said Dan S. Greene, c h i e f or the department's transportation division. "That's about the reverse of what it had been," he said • Comtru;tfon 9rad• • Ideal .., fence ' roil•, frtimln1 er '-raclftl. • Surfoced .. ur 1icM1. ou··n -• IEG. If 1.29 EA. / Tt.ursday, Stpttmbtr 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT • Dohhy"s R e al Lu-In TALLAHASSEE, FI&. CAP) -Evert Willlams, chlet-ot-Florida11 Bureau o~ vtiat St>tfsile1, collecta oames for a hobby arid released a llll of his m"'t bizarre dllcover1es. Heading the collection were twin girls pamed Syphlllls and Gooorhea. OR BOW ahout boys named Cancer, S k y HAND SOAP • 1 pound can • Waterle11-non· o mmo,nia ted. ~ • Angels' own quality brand! ._Just acid wOter-oncl mix. •It's just tha·t 1irnPle! ~ • • • Rocket, Teflon or Lavoril? Ille Moon ind Full Drw Coal Some of Wllll&m s' rovortta~ names included gtrls Cherry pye, Camella Bush, Etta Apple and Merry C. Chriltmas and boys Florjda Fellows, Mac Aron! and Cigar Stubbs. -Everett ,.Id he thouCht the mOlt tmusual mme wu given to a baby boy called F.lve·Elghtb Jameson. He said Mr. Jameson told him the infant was named after an old fanolly friend , also named Five. AT TIMES the heby name register aounded like a racing fonn with First Tune In, 0Looklng Al Eighth. . i I WAUORDECK KITCHEN FAUCETS • SolMI 1Ma11. •Tri ple chrome plated. • Standard t inch 1i1e. • lnclude1 anti·1iphon valve, tank ball, ffoat, lift w ires, float rod. OUR ~aa REG . S.99 KIT 3'oGAUON 'PLASTIC TRASH:C ... •Sturdy, ~igh imp.ct' plastic. •Complete w ith loclcing lid. • SAVE 1.52 4 FT.x8 FT.x3/8" IXTIRIOR . PLYWOOD • Smooth uanded fir plfwood. fuv1 J.o~ , OUR ~aa llG. ' 6.99 SHEET ' TULIP BULBS • Extr.mely fast gr.wln9. ~ t_rea~d t o ~vent fUn9 u1. • ldoal for foll plan~.,. Jf ~~· -!l~A - 4 lb. IOX IONE MEAi ... l_,_25 IOX f\I\\ ... """" --'1-.J.--l WROUGHT IRON PLANT, STAND • 30 inches hi9h • Mode of durable Wrou9ht iron ~~·411 7.49 ;:J· EA. REDWOOD BE•ER BOARD • Ideal lawn edgln1 tt......;,,,,;:' for ,.,-... CQ9Und trees, etc. ( OUI !. I EG. If I' lfN . FT. • SAN llRHAI DIRO .... --,;, .......... ,,,,, ·--HUNTINGTON HACH • lONG llACH 2)17 l.10Unfl . ----.-:,,...,., I I l I .1 l ' I ' • • • •, ~ I • • . • OAILY PILOT • . JhursdaJi Stptr..mbff 20, 1973 ! hd ,.,,,JWew Datu11a Facility ' •l:''A -' ~aheim-based Datum Inc., a supplier 9f minicomputer equipment to industrial ' "&>mmercial users, will be moving to new oCCices at 1363 South State College l!lvd. ln O<tober. The 80,000 square foot building, constructed by Sequoia Pa· clfie Realco, Santa Ana, is the first of an ~xpected 200;000 square foot-complex ~r the !inn: l)atum, which employes 350 persons, will be capable of handling r~:::egnew facilities. ~ Magic Mountain ~Seminar Set ~In Anaheim Profits Oimb Special to the Dally Pilot VALENCIA -Soaring at- tendance and spending at litagic li1ountain has placed the $31 million amusement park in the black during its third year of operation. Based on this year's per£ormance, the N e w ha 11 Land & Farming Co., the amusement park's parent company, will invest in excess of $3 rnlll iorr for further ex- pansion before the opening of the· 197~ season. Philco-Ford Gets Anny Contract Philco-Ford's Aeionutronic Division in Newport Beach has been awarded a $3.6 million Army contract to develop a computer-controlled defense system to combat low-flying enemy aircraft. Terry E. Van Gorder. presi· dent and general nu1nagcr of Magic Moootain, said that based oi:i excellent operating results to date, the park will be profitable in 1973, a dramatic turnabout from the park's $2.5 mHlion operating Joss reported in 1972. From Jan. 1 through the end of th e summer operating season oo Sepl 9, gross revenues climbed to $11.8 million and atten d a n ce reached, 1,454,000 compared to gross revenues of $6.8 million and attendance of 937,000 dur- ing the sa1ne calendar period in 1972. "In 1973, lifagic Mountain exte~ed its operations to weekends and holidays from Januaey through May for the first time," Van Gorder said. "These new operating days resulted io an additional 318,000 in attendance. That combined with substantially increased attendance during the summer season h a s brought us to the 1,5 million attendana! figure for the year to date." ~ :-;, Univer sal Has Aetonutronic wii1 be responsJ bJefor design and pro- totype development of the new weapons system, called Gwt Low Altitute Air Defense S}~tem (GLAADS). Rockwell International in Anaheim will also produce a portion of the system. Firm Na1ues New Director ~1::~ ~~:~:e In· ~...,...,Is Qlrj>. ol Tur· ranee, has opened a district olflce at 100 Sooth El Camioo ~Real in San Clemente. The new anti-aircraft gun win include twin 25mm rapid- frre machine gurui already developed by Philco.Ford. The guns will be locked onto a !lying target and ranged by computers and a low-powered laser beam. PHOENIX -John D. Couturle, -vice p r e s i d c n t • fin'ance of Hughes Aircraft Co., Los Angeles, has been elected to the board of direc- tors of NRG Inc., Phoenix, it was announced Tuesday by NRG Chairman Don L . Benscoter. NRG Technology, a division of NRG, is located in Newport Beach. ;'.:it 'Ibe company is a member £ol the Booton Slock Exchange Nand the Olicago Board of Op- An Aeronutronlc spokesman said today the new sy;i,tem will be developed by existing staff and the firm does not expect lo do any new hiring. ' tions Exchange. ' -,l .. AUCTION SALE by AUCOR INTERNATIONAL AUCTIONEER·S For Immediate Realizotion of IMPORTANT CERTIFIED HANDKNOTTI;D PERSIAN RUGS llvyert Nolt: Per lnstructlo'n of our PrlnciP:.ls In London, Teheran and South Africa. Th ia auction takes place a t EMPIRE ROOM, NEWPORTER INN 1107 Jambortt R .. d, Newport Buch SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2:36 P.M. Viewing from 10 :30 AM 1. The Auction wilt continue until all pieces on offer have been sold. 2. All ploct1 ore entirely handknotltd and of first quality of tho make. 1 C.rtlflcalH of authenticity wlll accompany u ch l'UIJ sold. 4. ·0ur C*npany 11 rocognlud world-wide as one of !ht leaders In dls- ,...1 by public •udion of fine •rt, handmede rugs, tapm1trle1, curio&, allwr, fowt lry and phll ately. , 5. We k.., you In touch with curr1nt prices on the m 1in workt me r keta. • Our..,..,_ In Loa A119ol11 situated at: I-Ventura Bl•d. Sherman Oaks, 91403 Phont: '911-2'10 • We •re always •t your service. • "•••• ,., ua • vltit when in our vicinity. r .. -~ ,_. ---. . -- ' $800 Mi lHon i n Quarter ' - Record Earnings at AT&T "'1'iEW YORK (AP) American Telephone Ir: Telegraph Co. Wednesday rn. nounced all-time r e c o r d quarterly earnings of $800 mil~on, for the quarter ended Aug. 31. THE PREVIOUS record, $750 million, Was set in the previous quarter, which ended May 31. The earnings for the quarter just ended lncludefl an ex- trao'rdinary Item of '47 million from the sale ol AT&T's slock in t..ft e Com municatlonS Satellite Corp., which provides international telecom- municalkxis vi a satellite. Even when this item is deducted, AT&T earnings still set a quarterly record . Per share earnings for the POSTURE REST Reg. $159.95 • Stretch out In Queen-size comforl'at Ortho's low budget price. Crown-Flex Center gives added support to baclo; and hips. Complete with Mattress" Box Spring, _ Ortho-Pak & Double Bonus. latest quarter were 11.!6 - $1.28 for normal operations and 8 cents from the ex- traordinary slock sale. The per share earnings for the same period last year were 11.10. · THE BE'1L System's net in- come for the quarter just end~ ed of $800 mlllion compares with $643 million for the same period last )'ear. Revenues for Ille. lwo periods were, respec· tively, 15.9 bllllon and 15.3 bllllon. Per share earnlngs forlhe 12 mooths ended Aug. 31 were 14.!H, compared with !f.08"/or the same quarter a year ago . ne announcement said customer d e JD a n d for teleJi>one service continued strong, with 1.1 million phones added lo the sy~tem. presents ... KINGS.I POSntRE REST Reg. ,$179.95 . Here's a King to fit your budget, with Crown-Flex Cenler tor added support to back and FINANCE hips. Complete with M~anress, 2 Box Sprfngs, Ortho-Pak & n't.f6 Double"°'"''· cs,~i -.~~ ,_.,,~ ORT HO POSTURE Reg. $2 • Royal luxury Is yours in this Queen-size Ortho Posture with Ctown·Flex Center for added support to back & hips. Complete with Mattress, Box Spring, Ortho-Pak & Double Bonus. ~$~~· ·s19· Excellent Ortho con- struction means this , t King.size Ortho "\ Poature gives firm, comfort- able support. Com- pff!te with Mattress, Box Springs, Ortho-__ ____....- k •Double --uc·s·t""""~ B nus. S~·~ ·-~ ' - • PQSTUAE,AEST Reg. $79.95 Genuine Ortho quality at • low, low Ortho price for eftWTwln or Full. Com- plal:e with M8ttress, Box Spring &, Double 8on<lc. TWINS ORANGE -. 24-tS N. Tustin Ave. (1cro·11 from Or1119• "''"' P~on• 6)7·0511 l ... & FULLSI S~NTA-ANA & Fountqln Valley 161 l I Htrbor 81.d. lcorMr of E'lr191rl N11t to Zody'• N.0111 1 l)t.4110 '• .. ·ANAHEIM 1811 ·w.tt Lincoln' Av•. . . lttw••PI Euell' •nd lrn•hu~ A'•nu~t Just •••t of Ftd M•rt {, !Jho11•1 776-tSM . l 403 Candltwood A••· ' f .• O.or IO-.. to 5.,.. y .. 111: LO• • ... NOii.i!• MOO~To' JAN llllANCISC? ,. ... HO I.AH 0\100 OAK NO IAH JOSI PHOfiNIX U. llAMINTO TIJC.IC* •TOCICTON '''IJA.NTA M~T LAIC.I CITY . . . ·.· ..... • Ot1ier 'Deatlr.s CARMEL (AP) -M~ Gan. Robert B. M~, 77, ac- c:µled qt . coddling •llll•t•• • when bo commended ·tho ~·· Ft. Ord trainlna bale . In the early ll!OI, died Satur- day at his home. ATIIERTON ( A P ) Memorial Services are schedul ed Friday for Howard Palfrey Jont1, 14: former U.S. ambassador t o Indonesia. Jone1 died at his home here Tuesday. BERKELEY ( A P ) WWlam W. W""1ter, Tl , foun-- dlng dean of the University of California College of Envifon.. mental Des!gn died at hl1 home Wednesday. __..:::x 51 ~ EL CAJON (AP) -Warren K. Hooper, p:>ultry rancher and a former dlrector· of the California Fam\ Bu r e a.u Federation, la dead at 66. -. OROVll.LE f( ti PI) - Oldllme cowbo' Al.tn Alo.,. Wetmore, who t{lok ''a notlon" to live and at •Je·tbl w11 s Ill packing away "all the bourb>n 1 can get my1 t'landa on," ta dead at 102. Frltllld1 In this Northern ~a com- munity liald ~ . f~nner--o:r cart and bull t,.drlver suc- cumbed durtna lfiie weekend. --,-\• PORTERVIilt (AP) - ,,,. Prominent Portefrille rancher Johll Gatllrle died · here Tliea- dai, victim 1 of an apparent heart attack. Guthrie, 59, was paat presi dent of t h e American N a t I o n a I Cat· : tlemen's Assoclatlon and the :..California Cattleman's · Asaoclalion. Death J'Wetlces • BELL BROADWAY MORTUAllY 110 Broadway, Cotta 1t1esa LIWOI • DIUlAY BROTHERS MORTUARIES 17111 Be1cb Blvd. l!JmtlallOO -IC-'ITlt : U. Redondo A\•e . ..... Bueb l!J--133-1111 • • .:._McCORMllX.LAQUN~-BEACD ~IORTUARY 17111 i..apu-CUyoa Rd. i .. '""'II . . ' i>ACIVIC VIEW -"-' MEMORIAL PARK f CemelerJ MorturJ Cbapel ' 35ll'hd!lc View Orlyt Newport U..cb, Celllonila -· ' • PEElt FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME : '1801 Bolla Ave. 11 Westmln1tu nw5U • <· SMITH'S MORTUARY ' ~-~!!'~81. Huat~Btlcb \ • PiJiiU~ Nar!CE 1'1or Weekender ' Advertmng Phone 64.2-4321 \ 4 Nohl· Ranch Biel Grand Jury Cite s 'Contradiction' By JACK BROBACK Of .... D4jfy l'tltl llaff ' In the resolution, ·the jury states fhat Anaheim Hills Inc, and Texaco Venture Inc. bought the property with full knowledge that It was subject to the arlcultural preserve agreemen ORANGE COUNTY • r Tlwrsdar, Stpttrnbt, 20, 1q73 SCAG O Passport Screen.ing Ordered.for County SANTA ANA By TOM BARLEY I dlvldual wil> falls to pa11 his tlonwlde in<:ree,. ol 30 percent Southern California ol .._ oelr ""°' 11ett new aecurlty . check a n d 1n the past year. tlon of GovUnments- SANTA ANA -New securi· auditing muasures. "Some 17,000 passports are proved a '30,000 federal ty measures were ordered lost or stolen each year in the for the Orange County pO Wednesday in lhe Ornnge '1THESE PERSONS will be lion growth policy stud": United States and many of 3· County pas,,port office with allowed to sign the pusport them are never legaltY ,ac-The funds Will be · lhe disclosure by County Clerk appllca't.lon attesting to Its ac-counted for," he said. "Many solicit citizen input , William E. St John that the curacy under the penalty of of them fall into the hands ot study according to M,r'\\ county bas had its share of wrjury," he said. "At that criminals." s. Golding, policy an&l)i SANTA ANA -The Orllllie County Grand Jury has urged the county Planning Com· mission to refuse to canctl the Nohl Ra n c h agricultural preserve agreement. "While lhe lawyers for the applicant have argued ln their letter ol Aug. 31 that no development is contemplated at this time and that the cor· ,poration merely wlshe.s to have its land assessed at Cull market value for the benefit of taxing agents, development plans for the entire r8nch area h.ave been dllCllssed in the original en.u.omental report by corporate executives," the jQry charg~ in a resolution to .the colllllll&sloo. , fraudulent p a s s p o r t BJ>" point the document will be the county general 11IE AGREEMENT, mede Leai;e Okayed plicatlons. paJStd to the Federal Bureau PAS5PORT HOLDERS must in I&etl Wlder California's St John re~ to reveal the or Investigation for further ac· take greater care of their program. Williamson Act, requires WESI'MINSTER _ A lease natw-e of bis qew screening tion." documents and public record Publlc hearings will be held that tbe I a n d remain for q u a r t e r s for the process ln 1 the c 0 u n t y \Yarning that the forged keeping will have to be revised and a random survey otffoun· In preserve status until 1981 Westminster branch ol the courthouse office, but be pro-passport buslneu has reached to eliminate many of !he ty taxpayers by new~ettcr and the jury believes this should prevail. , Orange County LlbrArY has mised prompt action by his "serious proportions", St John loopholes currently existing, will be made, accordi .f to "P.ortlons of the preserve _ been __ ex_t_end_ed_for_f_lv_e..;y:...e_a_rs_·. _c_le_rk_s_i_n_t_h_e_ca_s_e_o_f_an--'-y_in __ • _sa_id_t_h_er_e_h_as_bee_n_a_n_a-__ th_e_co_u_n_1y_c1 __ er_k_s_a_id_. -----~-!_rs_. _G_o_ldlng. I are Indicated as open space In ., -' "IN ~SID~ATION of thla obvious contradiction the jury belle;et· that the county mus!. demand an adequate en- vfr91lmenW report which ad· dreo!es lbe Impact of potentl81 devel"""'••t. lbe·J~ states that, U the report lilnlted. to the c&Jr cellat!oa question is accepted. the county would he, in effect, 11ivlng '8clt approval for Im· mlne!ll. development of the area. tr.e Open S p a c e and Conservation elements of the cow1ty general plan," the jury litates. Involved are '2,200 acres of land south of· the Riverside Freeway at the mouth ol &nta Ana canyon. Much of tile adjoining. acreage hos already been developed by the same~flrm.-:----· The jury contends that potential economic gain of the landowners or a more: pro- fitable land use Is not a reason for cancellation of a preserve agreement. IF TIIE COUNTY should allow the agreement to be cancelled the firm ·"·ould be 1lable for heavy penalty fees. . O(J ; Airport Parking Rk(lches StituratiQn Historical Chief Named completely filled by 8 a.m. on Wednesday,. Thu rsday and Friday mornings." Bresnaha n revealed. This is causing a serious problem for a i r travelers dri.Ying their own - cars to the airport. , "TIIEY ARE faced with a flight to catch but no pla ce to park,'' he explained. Bresnahan recommends that travelers, whenever possible, have someone drive them to the airport rather than try to use the airport parking Int. SANT A ANA -Cecil F. As an alternative,· be sug- Rospaw. former publillher of gested taxieabs or buliel for the Placentia Courier, ha traveling to and from ·~ been named In the Orang> airport. He warned tlJlitflltO County Historical Commission par~ problem will be ex- by Supervisor Ralph Clark of tremely acule during the Anaheirrii. · . Thankaglving _and Christmas . Rospaw recently sold the holidays.\ Ciourier after publishlng it for ~ iECA'N.'£ TIIE county 1.8 3Q years. He is presently "'" writing a history of Placentia. now having an enVfrO~mental Roapaw was born I fl impact report prepared· on the Anaheim in 1924 and now lives • ahpoi't the expansion~of park· in Yorba µMa. He i I ing will oot lie po111lble until -Uy in publi c relalloos the report ts. completed . in -k. March. ' · I Introducing Th• F1mou1 trend Nim• fiamilt~n ' • P•troc.olli Do11 loper U\y D1cho Ch1l1tre11 01ot ••• 011t1 oth1r1 EXCLUSIVE MEN'S SHOP Le BARON c"'"''""''., c•••,.•• • ' NOW qPEN IN ••• ·' EASTILUFF VILL.+.6E CENTER 2621 EASTBLUFF DR. NIWPO~T W.CH · • ' 640820 --• Convenience • ~-ervice 40 STOA.ES TO SERVE YOU t,300 H.UIOR ILVD. AT w11..so~ CHOOSE FROM A LARGE SELECTION AT A GREAT SAVING CORDUROY L1te1t Colors · Big S.foctlon V1lue1 To $2.29 s1• e Coutlero W.01, Pl1ld1 & N'ov1lti" • 100% Poly11t1r Imported G1btrdin1 e Heller Crepe Stitch Polyester Double Knit Vil. $4"9 To $5.99 s3n.· Yd. ' ' ' htll St.,.. 1300 H•W C .. hll M ... , ''"' ...... ~ ..... '" '''"" Bring' In Co..,pon For 20o/, Off Entire Stock Of Notion•, Buttons, Trims, Zippers, Thread, On Purch•" Of $5.00 Or Moro In Notions. Bring In Coupon l'or 20% Off lntlro Stock Off F1brlca Except S.IOI 1ten11 On Purch•H Of $10.00 Or Moro Of 1'1brlca .......... )JIO 11.,ht Cestf" M_,. 1 'Ml MtlRtA• I••....,,. Y•ll \' • l Quality Two Rlntt For Two Luera loth $9900 Rl•t • Wl!h A G .. .tne 58 Facet Diamond • 14K Whit• .,. Yellow Gola ' ''frosty'' JUMBO .YA,ftN . ' 8 OZ. SKEIN WllDllLWD&iill .. HARBOR C&NTER ONLY ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST CHILDREN'S STORE 200/o OFF Regular Stock (WITH THIS AD) Thun., Fri., Sat. Sept. 20-21-22 YOUNGLAND 545·1440 • WOMEN'S SWEATERS 100°/o Acrylic Boucl1 Knit Pullo"Y1r Style Rod, N1vy, Bleck Orig. $7. NOW . JCPenney COST A MESA STORE ONLY Windsor ASSORTED · TOPS • Swe•ttrs • BlouMS • J1dcot1 While They L11t s3 AND s5 MEN'S ·SPORT SHIRTS ~ PRICE • Penn Prt•t 50°.4 Poly.1ter · 506/e Rayon Prlnta e Short Sltevt e Slze1 S-M·L·XL Orig. $5.00 Orig. $5.91 Long Slttve $ 44 s2n JC Penney COSTA MISA STORE ONLY . ' J • l \ " 14 Di..11.1 ~1 lVi * 'rtn1rsday , September 20, 1973 PUBUC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE • PUBt.IC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE . ""' l'ICTITIOUI SUllNl!ll NOTICI! 01' PUBLIC SAL• NAMI STAT1!MINT l(olllltr•I S1l1 NO. t405 IOMt) "'Tiie 1011-l!lil !*'-.oil I• doing bu•lllfs.t TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: u : Nolle• Js herftly t lven fNt on leD- NIGHT GUARD, 1207 SOmerul LIN, tcmbli' 2~. 197], 1! 10:00 A.M. 1 p1,1bllo NewPOl'f 81Kh, (1111. f'lti60 ufe wUI wlll be held 111 Wood's GMC, Inc., • Robert S. A-11. 1•7 &orn..-. .. 1 1110 5, An1 .... lm lllYG., ANMlm, Co., to L.1on1, N.wpart 8e•ctl• Collf. f'J..o Hl1 for cast. IN tolloWlng coll1l«1I, lo tThls bWIMA I• condvc;tltd by on In· wll: GMduel. GMC \j,f Pkkll<IP lf7:J A~ S. Aoun11.1 nlcl coll1ler1I l>elng held to -. In ·t1111 ll1tcmM1! ""''' llltd with Ille Coun· oollptlon irising under 1 r11111 ln--fY-Clt[k..flOr~ County on kptemt111r u11me<1I ncurlh ~r"'1'Wftl ICOl'ldl!lon11 11. ltn. ul1 corilr&etl l>elo qy o.tl«•I Molor1 P:·2127S Acc~••ric:• CorPOrl!IOfl 1$ •KU~ ~rty. •Pubtllhld Of"lnge COltl O.lty Piiot !.11d jll,lblle wle 11 10 be eonducled 1c- Sttit.mbw 20, 21 11'Q Oct-r •· I\, cordlno to It!• laW$ or tM Stai. of 1pn • 21ff.n Calllornl1. G-r•I Molot1 A«e¢1nc• PUBLIC NOTIC~ '""' su~•ltlOlt COUltT OF THE STAT• DI' CALIJ'ottNIA FOR CorJ>Or"•llOfl rnervtt the rlflll to bid 11 !hi• salt. Tiie collateral Is presently 11ortd end m1v be Mm 11 Wood's Gt_,C, I~ .• 1110 S. Ana1>1im ~vd .. An11\efm, C1. GE HEAAL MOTORS ACCEPTANCE COAPOAA TION TH• co~~T~-~:.,.oRANGE Publ!shetl <><•no• COi•! Oallv Piiot. MdTICIE 0" HEAltlNG OF ,.ETITION S~tember 20. ltn 29.u.n IJOR PltOSATIE 01" WILL AND .. DA LIETIIEltS TESTAMt:NTAltY PUBLIC NOTICE E1tlll of JOSEPH FRANCISCO SOUZA,l --==~~===~=~-1\io kllOWll 11 JOE F. SOUZA, Oe<:t•Hd. NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE NOTICE 1.5 HEREBY GIVEN Ille! Lyn-UNDER DEED OF TRUST .,.. MllO!t l!ltfkl 1111 filed lier.in a l)C!ll-TF 2795 tlf!I for Probate ol Wiil ar>d tor l15uanee LOAN No. 121153200 .. ~ ' or_ Lell.n Te11ment1ry lo Ille ;'ltllll!ln•r Nolle• Is nertby olve-n th.al MASTER rellrtN» to wt.lcll 11 made tor furlhlr MORTGAGE COMPANY, fl CallfMnla paftlculal"I, find that the ttrne and place CMporallon, 11 tru11ee. or svcc•u<ir of •t1nrl119 tr.. u.me 11a1 bllltfl sol for lru1ltt, M 1Ub1tfluled trustH puriuanl 10 O(tober 9, 1tn. 11 t:OO a.m .• In !t>e the deed or trust txecuttd by OSCAR II. courtroom or Otp4rlm..-.1 No. 3 ot said ALMEDA & ANTONIA M. ALMEDA, llua- court, 11 100 Civic C1n11r Drive Wt~!. In bind 1nd wife •nd rKorded Nawmber 3, r .. • f the City of Santi Ana, C1111Mn!a, 19n In flook 1CM09 p1g.e 712 ol Olflclat pated kltlembtr 11. 197:1. Al'COl"d1 In the ollict of the County • WILLIAM I , SI JOHN, Recorder o1 Orange County, Cfllttornl1, I ' County Cl1>rk a!MI P'lf'SU'rll !<1 the Nolk1 <If Default 1nd GEOllOI J , Jll'l'ltlES Eteellon lo Mii lhtrtvnder r1t<1r<led JIJ<le .. "_,.,, Cer.lw Dr .• SMlll U$ I. 197J ln !!look !Ont P611t 9"6 Of Wld Of· NiiwPort a.ac11, Cllll. nut ficlal AecMds, wlll ~II on Octco.r 11. Tit: (JN) '*'64lt 1973 •I 11:00 A.M •• at Ille SOvlll front.,... ~ tw1 l"etlfttMr tr1nc1 lo lhl Or1no1 County Old PLlbllshld 0<~ Cotll DflllY Piiot, Cwrthousl, In !hi cilY Of S.nt1 Ana. ~ 20, 21. n. 1'73 29"3-13 county or Orange, stale ol C1tlloml1 11 ' P11bllc auction, 1<1 1111 hlg/lttt bidder for PUBLIC NOTICE c.all'I fp1y1bte fll ltle tlm. ol wle In l1wtul ------o-,=,------lmonev <If Ille Unllad States of America) • 7l111 111 rlgl\I, !Ille and ln1erest, conveyed lo SUPl!ltlOlt COUltT 01' THE and llOW held t>'t' !I Uf'Kl.er Wld deed ol STATE OF CALlf'DRNIA FOii trust ln tr<e praperly sOualed In said TH& COUNTY 01' ORANGE CounlY and Slate, Incl dHC:rlbed as Ne. A·7SSl4 follows : .. OTIC• 01' SALE 01' ltl!AL PllOI'• LEGAL DESCRIPTION : ~: t , llllTY AT PttlYATIE SALE PARCEL 1: Lot 16 11 sllowtl en llull 111 1111; Maller ol Ille E"''' of MARV certain Sllbdlv!ilon m;>p enlllled Traci PRISCILLA ALLEN, •bo k11<1wr1 II 3'33. City ot Costa Meu1, County <il i PRISCILLA ALLEN, a1i.o known as oranoe. Sla!e of Callf01"r<l1, hlrelna!ler ;-. ~~lrl'E ~sL'Hi::':t'e~'~f~EN 111at cm °' relerTed to as "Ille Map" tiled In 111e 111•[ Sept&rflbtr 14, ltT.I. th• under1l11ned, office <ii lhfl' Recorder of lht'Couflty 01 TIT E IN5 UAANCE ANO TRUST COM· Orange, Sl11te of Callf01"nl1, on Ma, 7, PANV, b't' Rlcllard E. Weltm1n, Tru11 Of. 111113 In Book· 119, of Maps. 11 l"aoe .U 11 fleer, ••Special Admlnl1tr1I01" o! tlltl Wiit wq; of MARY PRJSCILLA ALLEN. fllso E ' -I • !mown 11 PRISC ILLA ALLEN, Ibo known xeept ng ''"' reserv ng, nowever. •• MARY P. ALLEN, de<:11sed. will ielt noo-e;<cluslve ea•eml!nll I PP11r!en1nl to at prlv•ll Nie 10 the hljhest <>nd Desi htl Loi 15 •S 11\own oo the map lor The ~r. IWblect lo con lrml liOfl by 1111 m1lr<ten1M1t of party wills on or aloog ~· 1n1U Id Superior Court, an 1he the boun0"1rl11 between 11ld Lois end rlghf, tl!lef lnleralf ind ,t:1111e of 111• p1rc11 l. de<:ltdltllt 1 Ille llm1 ol her a.1th, and •ti To0ether with llltl fl)llowi n11 IP· !ht rlohtf t111a Ind lnltrtll 1111 esle!e has. purteilent easement: bY OP11r1 Ion or law or 0•11-11e, acou!rl'd A. A noo-e•cluslve eaSttr>ent for !n· citntr tllan M In lddltlOfl to 11111 of the clecedfl'nl at Ille !Ima ol her de1t11 In 1nd orotos !o Ind egress tram 11(d P1rce1 1 to 11111 cert1ln re1I prQPtrlY klclled In through IM common <>re1. tfle Cl!r ol San!• Ar.1, County cl Orange, 11. An exclu1lve easement to place 111d s111roi J•~l~r~~i ~~~;l~n'rn!o~~·~, ~~nt::~. u:!11':,0~1;:s .a;:::-e=ir~~: .,Santi A11<1, fll per M1p tflereot rKMdtd 1111• telrotione and sewl!f"age M'fYICe tor -In &«* 11. It ~II& 37, of Milei!H•news s1.,1e-1am!tv rttldenll•I llH to 11ld Mlps. r.cor<11 of u.kl Or1noe County, SU&JECT TO: Condlllon1, rt1Trk-Parcel 1, sald e•w""'"I lo De ll<lllO llltl flom. el_,.IS. .--rv•tlons, rl(ll\11 ..nortttl find rnoi.I convenlenl roole 111d rlohts of WIY of r.c<!l"d. II anv. tietweoen the said Paree l incl tht l!lld or offet"I 1r1 lnYl!ed for tM prcip. nearest pUbllc u!llllY e1W1T11n1 shown ertv 1nc1 must be ln wrLtlno 1nd °" the mop. ci.11.....-.d lo tM Spec:al Admllll1tr1t01", c. A non.e•ch;tslve e1s.ement burden. TITLE INSURANCE ANO TRUSl' COM· lng Loi H 11 sll<>Wn °" tht map IM thl PANY, II Trust O.Plrlmtnl, tOO North malnlenantt of iwrlY wallJ on °' •lono Main Str..i, Senta Ana. C1lltarnl1 '1701, tht bouncler!es between said Loi and 11 any llm1 11!1r 1111! llrsl l>l>blll;1tion of Parcel 1. this Nolle1 Ind be'IOl"I 111'1 m<tklno ot 1119 PARCEL l: An undivided .610\. ln-51f~ms •nd ¢ondlllons of sale: Casi!, teresl a1 ler<i1nl$ ln comtnOll I" 1..cl to lawful money C>I 1119 Unlllld Slllt1 of the common area as lltl!ned herein. AITWl'"ICa1 Ten percent (1~) of the exel'Pllno Ind reserving, ~tver. ltlt amou"I offered, Jn C1sl'lt1r'1 Of"" C1rlllfed following; check. p1yable to J.lTLE INSURAHCE A. Non-tttlu1lv1 111-!1 IP- AN.0 TRUST CO PAN V, mu1I •c· ~_. t ,. L " > -• , .. , ' · - • t Famows Weber® . . Special Purcho~e! ·• WHY WEBER · COOKS BEnER! l, IAS Y TO USE DAMl'ERS RlGUlATI MIAT. 2. lONG lAST roRCElAIN,flNISH INSIDE' our. 3.._ COVER MOlDS IN MEAT. -4. DU Al GlllllS . NiVIR NIU> ADJUSJMINT. 5, WfATHlll-l'ROOF ALUMINUM ASH CATCH( •• 6. WHITIWAll , IUllllt JllllD WHlllS. 1. EASY r'O ASSIMlll-l THUMI SCllWS; .2 HUIS. FOLDIJ4G CHAIRS • s.,.r.J ...l1h •' 1te1l l114i111 ch1irs •II Witt. cen1fert·<11!M1d SMIS &~.Ji1. • Great l1r c114 p11li11, 1J:lrl tliMer s eatint. Mh.th & cln11chtt. • l 11y "" -ltlr11r, wliil111Mt \111. .. . ' ¥ to -' . ... • :t•oi!l y """"'~--y~ , SUNBEAM SPRAY STIAMDRY IRON • w ••• ,,....4 • filtfi< Htti .... • S,..iol 11""",.,. _I prno. C:OIT>PIRV !Ill wrltltn bid OI" offer, Ind IM ,...., ,enan o inl"OUl1n Or n• r" bil1nc:• mint btt Pllld ltCIOfl cOflllrmtillon 11reu. ai;pport and repair. <If 0111 tw wld 5uperlM court. Said 11111 11. Exelu1rve easement 1pp1,1rten1nt to t.,.;o;~~e;;;;;.. wlll bl med& upan lhe usu.I escrow Lois I thrOU(lh 16' tor r>l«tmenl and term•, m11lnf«11ric:1 of utility llnff lo provld11 Tr.. property herein d11crlbtd 11 tom. n.ces.sary resldentlal utllliY wrvkl '°' morilY raferred to 11: .. ch lot from !ht pybllc ullllly ''' Linwood, S1nt1 An1, Calltornf1 nsements on Ille 1ubdlvldtd property. '2701 · Common area meiln1 Lots 165 and 1&11 Tiie underslgntd r•servts 1111 rlolll to ,, ,h-wn -,.., -••· '"•Iller wl'h "' Me4.ISS-91,. REG. '16.99 NOW$10,, ,..IKt any Ind 111 bids. '"" ""' "" OATEO: Augusl n , 1'73 lmprovamer<ls t11'1reon and thereto. TITLE INSURANCE ANO M-commontr known 11 331 R1lm1 TRUST COMPANY L1M, Coil• Mesa, C11iloml1 By Rltherd E. Wtllmtn. s.1<1 s11e wlll be made, 11111 wltl'lout Trvst OHlcer eO"ftn1n1 rw w1rrflnh', express or Implied, Ph-: ~100 reg1ntlno title, pouesslOfl M en-~}1= t! :::1~F cumbr1ncn, lo uitllfv the note secured Allmlllhtr1tor bY wld de-ed ol trust, Lncludlno Ille lee SIS West Thint SlrHI Ind tltpltt"\SIS of the trustee Ind of the Sflftll A111, C1Hl1or1111 '2711 trusts c:reattd e.v said dffll or Inn!, Id· ""'9M: 141~1 v1ric:tt ll'lertunder, with lnlt~st Ind lele Publl111ed Orange Coa11 01lly Pilot, chlrgts as provided in s.ald note. incl the -~~-~·~ .. ~·~"~· ~'~";"~· ~"~"~·~=;'~n~>~-nJlllllPlld principal ot lhe note secured by wld·deed of trust; lo wit "°"53.•1 with ln1ensl lhtreon from Ftt1ru1ry 15, 1973 Good Deed 11111 orO\llded In said note. Oiied: Seplember 11, 1!73 make the scene MASTER MORTGAGE COMPANY 11 such Trusttt ev Emily H<>mon Authorl1ed Ofllcer SPS J155S Sundays Publlilled Orange Coe~! Cally Pilot, Septem~r. 20, '11, and Ottober 4. 1973 ""'" NEW CASIO-MINI Y" llmlllin,t-1 Y," K I I" W I l y."D s)' .... lelle11P fir Zll'll Ir Two PIKD ,,; 1.11'11 Miiiie N11ml1 ,.:.. ·• "'" 11"1 1Z 11111 111111 Y" na !Hr AIUllM 111111'111 ®4888 PLUS 1% 111 1exas lnstrlRnent $6995 Model 2500 A••"•••• .. .. .. . . ,~"; .. SCM Model 250 A•~lloblo ..... 5 168~~-• FREEWAY STORES orncr lllACNllltS SlltC( 1111 OfD DAILY t.l:SO SAT. 9 •S 2706 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA CN-1 Te -Pl•r 1 lmports) PH. 556..0361.. RIG. '1.9' TO '9.!S i-..~~;....::"-~-1~ \ \~· \\' ,·~· ';~/ :': , ~ ·' ' 'i " . : . ,. . . . \\\\ \\ \\\\\\\\1\1\\~11 1'1~1~, ·:~ 67 Piece FLATWARE SET • Gift ~11ttl 11t MKIH111 SO pc. s1nl<• f1f I t.iil1Wlfl plul • 17 pc. lVll•fJ s•t• REG. '19.'9 • TrlHlitilMI "'C111ss" 1r c1llllltlf'lf•t'f ''P1f•"' ,.n.r11. i 11 pc. cwt("' 111 hK"'4n I tl..li biw11plus 1lt th1 Cll"iftl & 1tility k11ive1yH'll11t:ff. s 88 COFFEE MAKER • ,,_,_,1•1tKc1ffM- 111lll11". • , .... ,( ...... ~lty' 911r•lff -"''le k1., .,.,,.,.,~ • f1tdi'~r1wttlc1ffHMI• ti1111. RIG. '29.tS SA~l'IO.OOI WHitl lOl IASTI NlVfl: ll~l AT TMIS'\OW PllCU -•-~ws COFFEi MUG SITS YOUR CHOJCI OF Frying Pon FILTER COVER 6 MUG RACK OR 4 MUG TREE • live• up your ldkhtL • ld•I for tih t iWilf. I • • ' •' < ·' - ··- s VO on t of s m I • Ii d s 0 d' I I r • . . . < ,. Effects Are Far Reaching • Rape: Is It .Ever Over? • .. Storltl By ALLISON DEERR CH "'-e.ltr l"llef IJetf tt·has been more than a year since the yoWlg woman was raped, but the hurt re- malna and her life is not back to normal. Her band trembles as she lights her cigarette. She can talk about it now. Al first, she didp't want to talk to anyone. Now, she feels there should be a place where rape victims can tallc to each other and with women psychologists and other profeMionals who can sympathize. "Even the psychiatrist who talked to me told me to look at it as just 30 or 40 minutes out of my life, a bad dream, and jwit forget It," she-said. --- "It is not the physical act that does the most dimage, it's the psychological el· feet on the woman and her family." She feels '!only a womaq would. un4 derstand what-it-is-like-to-eave-yourself 'Only a woman would understand wh at it is like. It made me feel so dirty. At thqt · moment I did not trust any man.' for your husband and have a stranger come In and ruin everything In hall an hour. FELT DmTY -.. I felt so dirty, all I wanted to do was wash, over and over again.'' she remembers. It was humiliating lo have to repeat.d- ly go over the detalis with the police. Al the hospital, where she feels she was ,best treated, she was still em- barrassed about what she bad to go througll. And later she bad to take a lie detector test "as II they thought I was lying; .. if I made the whole thing up!" Not knowing if she bad cootracted a venereal disease, she had to take medication as if she bad. Getting the prescription filled was an added em· barrassment. Because she does oot take birth control pills there was an added uncertainty_and fear. WlJ,at if she were pregnant? Deacriblng the attack she is most often asked, "Why didn't you fight?" THREATENED LIFE She answers quickly, "He threatened to kill my children, and me. I don't think any woman would have fought or screamed unde r the s·ame ~lrcumstances." When he left she went for the gua kept in the room. which she bad no time to reach. Then she checked ber children, locked the doors and dialed the operitor. She cOuldn't find or remember a ppUce nwnber. Theo she cowered, clutching the loaded gun, in the comer of her dartenW. kitchen, waiting for them to arrive. When they arrived, less than JO minutes Iatei;. she would not let them In. "At that moment I didn 't trust any man. I made the police show me some identification. And I would not let them take the gun away." BITTER FEELINGS She wouldn't even let her husband touch here. "I had very bitter feelings then. I couldn't let him touch me. When be did it brought back everything about the rape . It almost caused a divorce." Some of the neighbors were sym· pathetic and ~Incident brought a little neighborhood cOhesiveness. • j P e o p I e began to take notice when a strange car came down the street." But other women neighbors were catty. "They said I asked for it because of the way I dressed, that my skirts were too short. "How could· I be asking for It, asleep at home, in my own bed with lhe doors and windows Jocked?'' she asked. The rapist has not been caught. So.she follows,,..rape aCCOllDts In the newspaper, clipping and .saving those which soW1d as ii It might have been the same man. LOOKED FOR IIlM She did some hunting on her own, C~ldng the places she went most often, hoping lo spot him. What if he is foubd? Will she go to court! "I'm not looking forward to it. I know what Ibey try to do; bow they want to make the woman look, as if she did It willingly, oonseoted to it. They try to bring up your past somehow to prove It was your fault. I'm not worried. I'm clean." But she wonders, "\Vhat will they do to •"'" him? J would llke to See hlm made an lt. ~ '• I think the penalti es should be stiffer. I don 't think he should be set free or '" ' ••J .. , •t'0\11 released in a few months to rape some--.,. ,. one .else. Who knows? The next time ~? .~ he might kill soffieone." "" ~·~· .. It is not surprising lo her that many .. ,,, women do not report rapes. "The general attitude seems to blame the victim for being raped . And men ju!t can't understand what it means, they can't. • DOES DAM.!oGE "It is not the act ltseU," she repeated, , ',,,~"' " "which does the most damage. It's the ,, .. , way if effects the family.'' . . She said, "Everyone close to me blam<d himsell IOi' what happened. I , I ,OQ ... ... 1 ... ""'" ........ •• ., think my father toot it hardest. He • ~U l 'vanted to kill the guy. My bUJband could ~ llC!f ~ ·~" hardly restrain him. Then he broke down .... ~~ and cried." Her life is noticeably different than a year ago. She is still afraid to go out alooe, ·daY.. or night, and when she does slie carriel a ... ' . gun. And she has learned bow to use it. ;~:"'- f:ler lrusband, who worked nights, now .'. ~ ., works · days, because she can't be Ielt 1~',..0': alone at night. Because of this the family ~ ~:: .. income is decreased. · •111.1·! Her children, who remember "there .~ .. :; "''. was a strange man in the house who '. · ~ wasn't supposed to be there," haye ~::,,~i nightmares and must sleep with a J.i&ht 1;-;;; on. (See RAPE, P.a1e ZI) .. , ... ~ .. , .. ' ' ,, "' .. , . .... ,, ' . . , '',\ . Women Getting Into the Race . . . • • ... . _,, "' ··•t .. I IT • 1 1141'q ~I~~\ .... "' 1 ~··" Cathy O'Neill_ lost the race for a state senate seat representing West Los Angeles ~ast" year by I percent of the vote. But the last thing you'd call this energetic young candidate and lhother of t\\IO ts a loser .. Speaking to the Orange County ai.p1er of the National Women's Political Caucus the talked of her own political ex- . periences and elect.Ion opportunJUes for women in the next general election. "This is t he most opportune time for women to bea>me act:lve in the t>®tical arena," she asserted. "There is a need for women to be ef- fectively represeoted, there is a chance to run and reapporUorunent bas provided an excellent opportunity to be elected." SHARE EXPERIENCES ' .. BEST CANDIDATE "You must concentrate on tht«best candidates who seem to have the best shot et winning." Can women be effective candidates? tiirs. O'Neill noted her own case. She defeated her opponent in ' the primary (a young, male attorney in his 30s) bye two ·to one margin and only lost the general election by 1 percent of the vote, notlng· that part of her support was siphoned off by the Peace and Freedom Party can. di date. In a district with Republican majority registration, she attracted support across party lioes. "Women bad to cross party lines to vote foc me, and the rnarg!n by whidi l lt>!t is proof that many wer'-' will· iDg to do it. ti She bas found that women who ire tied to the home are less willing to vote for a woman than those who have the freedom to be active outside the home. walking lllovie !iJ)e8 in Westwood oo Fri· day and Saturday nighta. "'11le base of my campaign was the pa.rents of the children in my son's co-op nursery school Jt's the people who know you socially, the ones you've worked with." Ahd, she emphasized, don't let money or the lack of it, stop you from running. "SometimeS it comes from sources you wouldn't expecL Don't give up becall5e you don't know anyone who will write you a $10,~ dleck." Running, she admitted, "is very ex- pensive. But ne1t year it will be chaos because of reapportionment a n d everyone will be fighting for funds. Everyone will have a better shot at it." RUNNING AGAIN Mrs. O'Neill, who ls considering run· ning for a high level state office next year, is active in the Forum for Open Government whose major concem is "For too long, we've been brainwashed refonn of the campaign financing law. to beHeve that leglslators m~t be god· Sbefeels reform is a must tr minorities She noted tlu!I ''people who "'8re a mutuality and commonality of ex· perienee may tie able to'beUer represent those who share thOM! ~iences" and that women must be willtni tq think in like fim•.-s." f I these terms rather than considering par-e.~.. are to be represented airy. ty affiliations. OO~ENT She ed the caucus members to Women should act· as a callCUS such.as_RlmnlngJQLJ>ffice.is.O'a.fulL.emotionaL . det~nnine. who w~d nm ~ Ibey ·the Black caucus and Qtlceno e11ucus, comnlitment for a seven~r eight-month will s~pport bYDecember or January to k _. "od" d .~. to be "ilio t mobilize efforts early. she asserted. "Women ma e up w per-pen an y~ lUllVe WI g o "E do t " she id "d 't · ed' · an f It " n rsemen , sa oesn cmt 'Of the poputaUon," she remmd her give ~ or · mean anything wtless the ~Uge of the audience, "but we have no state Believing in mu.imum voter contact group brings with it thousands of votes; senators, <r>e O;mgressper900 and onIY she went where the~voten were, even or it it meam much money, or if it two women in the state Legislature. There are only 25 women judgea in the state." Next year, ohe aald, could he the moat llgnificanl opportunity for women In the decade to be eleoted in Congressional and st8te legislative races. "Because ol. the reapportionment, all of the inoumbenls will be rumlng In d~tricts that may be significantly dif, lerent from the distrlcta Ibey Wiii! In originally. · CHAu.ENGERS "Therefore, many of ~ inalnbents may be unknown to mony ol the con· atituents and challengers will have a bet· ter chance of knocking them off. "Prospeollve candidates will have to -look at the new reapportionment map, see how the new dJatrlct. ls, how lhe old districts were, who will NP where and how muctt of the diltrict is new to them," she explained. Tho nert tllep, ahe werted, is IJnding a woman with a community base of ~ port, •uc!I aa PTA or League ol Women Voters, or who ·has been active In cam· palgns of olhllrs. "You nlust .flnd someone you th.ink can succoulully chllleqge somoone, and then back her. Later, It will be DWcl1 harder to unseal an illqllmbent." ··She emphaal1ed that the best approach would ht to back t .. or.three candldaley to the hilt with time, money and effort rather than ICOtlcring elforu . ! ' ' means bJnli workers and bard work." She advised 11getting all the free in- fonnation you can from whoever you can. Why do the job twice?" Mra. O'Neill,. a graduate of St. Joseph College who bolds a masters in social work from Howard University, teaches at the C.enter for Urban Affairs at the URiverally ol Southern Callfomla. PARTY WORK ~men BEA ANDERSON, Editor T.........,, 5-NM"" 2t. 1tll P-U '~ir l·,11<'UI ,.,.,A -· '''" .)\'IA ~·,,~' "", .. ~ <: I· 1111 ,,, .•. .. 11 !-•Of'1 "' " . " .. ,., "" She is a state commissioner of educa· 'AJ) tion, on the state steering and central Using Noodle ;~:.: committees of the california Democratic -~'.::'~ p~ ~ ~·~plevoteoolhreelevels.Mostgo Ide' a's We1"gh . 0 t .. ,... by the name; then by thelr feeling the _ U )n candidate Is a nice person; and some by the issues." .:> She recalled an Incident while cam-I might feel better. It'• 000 of 11- palgnlng for the state senate seat. ~ things I can't talk about. "My sister was passing out brochure! /? ~ --1.NrWV • My busbond and I have been trying t for me. She stopped a man and said .19 I--' have a baby for five years. We've been to 'Vote for O'Neill.' "The man answered, 'I don't like him.' four different doctors and the story is the My sister said, 'But he's 1 she.' DEAR ANN.LANDERS~: I have a !!'Oil! . same. "Keep trying. No rea!<>n Why you l "He told her, •nien I don't like her!' to say to the man who wrote to complain SliOUldil't ha-ve 8 family." mid kept going." about his fat wife. "She's not the girl I 1his ~ 1 attended a J a r g e · gatberin,. The following reinarb weni To-be-an-effeetlve'-C&Ddidate,--!!-JOU--married;'"-he-moans-aod-right-in-tbe directed-to-me:--have to sell a positive image relate· to ----· --=----~=;:;;,::'"'-"'-'""-the issues in the district." ' newspaper for millions of people to see. ''When are you and Ned goiOg to have- Women are winning, more and more, How many Y.'Omen do you think read 8 baby? Don't be so lazy!" she said. that letter and wondered if il had been "Are you going to let your .sister get "Neil year can be the big year for written by her old man? It ruined the ahead ol you? She bu two 1 o v e I y women. But we have to start now." children now, hasn't she? Or is it !bree?" day for a lot of wives. It ruined mine for "I'll bet the reuoo you don't get -, .. sw:e. nant is because you don't want to ruin I am a lat wile who hastrle<I every diet that lovely figure." imder the IUD. Nolblng works. I can't I left the meeting early with a spl!tting help It because I'm fat. headache. Wby are people so though~ I was raised by wonderful Italian less? Or cruel? Or dumb? What can r parents who bad very litUe money, but say when my heart is breaking and they Mama was a great cook. Food was our make such Insensitive remarks? Do you only entertainment. It was also OW' have any answers for me?-EMPTY reward and our comfprt. When things µEAR E.N.: You don't Jteed aanrers. v;ent wrong Mama would fix a beautiful You aeed 1bugtb, courage and aelf-c.- dlnner. She could make a banquet out of trol. Those women have no· .&dea &bek' noodles, tomato sauce and a hook of hog remarks are 10 hurtful. Tbey are d11111J>. meat. Her desserts were fabulous . bells wbole moatlls and bralD1 laave: Of course everybody in our family was become temporarily dlsconnectetL overweight. When my husband manied me be didn't seem to mind. In fact be DEAR ANN LANDERS: ls it all.right always said he didn't like skinny-girls for a mother to spank a kid the seemc\,. with legs like toothpicks. He used to say, time if he laugha the first time she "You're all woman, Carmen. There's a spanks him? I am asking this question : Jot ot you to love." for a very important reason. Please an- lf God didn 't want us to enj oy lood be swer In the paper. Thank you. -HOT \.\'ouldn't have given UI taste bud!. I Jove SEAT to eat and 1 look it. It's one oC life's grealeSt pleasures. -A MOOSE WHO LIKES LASAGNA DEAR WI.: A lid wllo ......... he .. t. _.... pV<t Ille -r lllo Idea tllal ... •P"•klol .. I joke. Siio mtcht lheo de<ide lo give him 1 men terloDI IJ!IUlol wlllcb lo oot IO 11111117,' And asaally It bn't. I DEAR CARMEN: Mony -lo shire your ehllo...,ity. They woald nther eat (and clrlakl lo tkl; hffrl'• coatut aad not Uve oo ton1-unt11 Ibey uve IO (aee -Got those weddlng bell bi~ ...,. COlll the doy of reekonln1. Then tbty 1ln1 1 -··.guest llst · what to wear .. and other details? Ann Lander!s completely new 1dlfftttlt CUM. Fit pM'plt dtt·aootr, aad "The Bride's Gulde" wlll help. For a .... .,.m;;:.:;.:L:. ·-tllere•t -Dt 1ettto1 oroucl It. CO!>!'> send a dollar bill, "Pi•• 1 tong, 1tlf· D!;AR ANN !.ANDERS: I am.oo upoeL ~· st~ i..':~"."' ~~ I don't know wl\al to do. If I wl'lte to you Chicago, Illinois tlll6SI. . • I I' • '. 1 -l -----.. ~2~6~_D_Al_L_V_P_IL_O_T ______ T::_h::"::''::':.:_Y•• Stpte1nb"' 20, 1973 Crisis Hotline Lends Victim :support From Page 25· Rape By ALLISON DEERll Of tlle D•llY Plttot Sllll .. If only there was someone to talk to, scmeone who understood, someone who'd been through what I've been through." She is a rape victim. And all too orten there is no one who understands. But last June, emerging from an AnU·rape conference in Los Angeles, ca1ne the Rape Crisis Hotline -(213) 653-6333. Staffed by a volunt eer roster numbering more than 120, the hotline works through an answering service. "calls corning through Uui.t are emergency situations arc put directly through,'' a hot~ line counselor explained. Other ca llers are asked tor a telc- j:ihone number \vhere they can be contacted and a volunt eer returns the ca ll. "We gel all kinds of cai\s," she added, ''Many of them just for information about what \\'C are. But a n1ajority are lron1 rape victims, an average or five per day . RAP GROUP "Most just want someone to talk to and want to know how to get in touch with so me kind or rap group." A Rape Cri sis Rap Group nlet e~~h ~1onday th ls summer :it 7:30 p.m. in the Women's Center, 218 S. Venice Bl\'d., Venice. The group hopes to ha ve such meetings at least one evening per month in the future. The need for auxiliary hotline is obvious, she noted, in the number of ca lls the line gets rrom Long Beach and Orange County and from all areas or Los Angeles County. "It's not that expensive," she asserted, "and these women netd so1neone to call, a sOurce of support." The Anli·rape conference needs volun teers for another iOlportant job as well -going to court wlib rape victims. "Mpst such botlines seem to begin with two or three. women who saw the need and did somet!tlng about it. One of our members was with the hotline and rap group in \Vashington. D.C. y,•hcn . it begon." NEED SUPPORT The group is looking for at- torneys who .are "more in· terested in helping the women victil:D than hU ifgreSaot, but these are hard to find .'' And, they are seeking pCO: fcsslotlal psycltologtsts WI>•. understand tbe ,effE.Cta of rape on its victim and are willing to help. "The largest part of our job on. the hotline is to convince the victim herself that It prob.. ably was not anything she did that brought on the attack. "We have a virtual epidemic· of rapes, most by n1en the vie· tims don't kno\v, tot a 1 strangers." She cited an all too common example. A woman's cat w•s l>!Jrnpe<Ul!lm behlnd by another car. She gave the man In the other car a ride to a gas Jtatlon where he roped htt at knife point. PREJUDICE "We are needed," t h_e CQUnselor asserted, "because there 'is a social prejudice against discussion of the sub- ject and a bias against the vic- tim which says it's the woman's fault no matter what." The group is pushing !or moro cotlldenttotJJ prosecu- tion ol rape C&S<S by the dis· tricl ottom~ and au..sing with vktims the need to pros- ecute ~pi1ts. 1 ·"A vut number or rapists, I feel, are very 1 i c k in- divlduala." The hotline gains Sotn• of ith support from speaking engagements by its members. For inforlnation regarding sper;kers, rap sessions or crisis support women can write the Women's Center or reach members through the hotline. • • • The !amUy ha4 to 1ell th•ir home, at a·loa1, and moVe.out or the ma, beca~ ihe rapist (oU4wed his attack w I t h mont~ of phone calla to their unlisted number. · Their new home ls "like a fortress" equipped with an ex· pensi ve arf&Y of locks and iron railings. A German Shepher4 guard dog now shares the house with their little dog, who since las! year hates men,· growling at even the hosband. When she must be al home. alone. her sfster CQllles to stay with her. And she won't go in· to a darkened house at all. Ellis ~amily Short on Height, Long on Love Immediately altar the rape, she made every possible efiort to look as bad as pOsslble. "I didn't want anyone to think I was attractive. I don't know when exactly, but J gradoally got OJ eJ' that. 95 CRAFTING DAYS TiLL CHRl.STMAS Retail $7.so$499 SPECIAL : TOii llfl STGllS 2704 HARIOR ILYD, COSTA MESA _ David Ellis {left) and his brother Darrell play 1 friendly gam.e of chess. The two share a rare bone di5elH. By JO OLSON 01 l~t OtHy PHO! Sllll How can you v,rrite about the problems a 3-fodt·2 person en· counters when he doesn't seem to have any? You can't, so you change the emphasis of the story and find out just what big things a small person can accomplish . Or two small people, for that matter, if you include David 's brother, Darrell. David and Darrell Ellis, behides their easygoin g friendliness, share another characteristic: they are both victims of a Very rare genetic bone d i so r de r , osteochoo- drodystrophy, or Markeo's Disease, which stunted their growth at an early age. They are only ~e 26th and 27th known cases ever to be recorded in history, so they are a constant source of in- formation to doctors and geneticists studying the con- dition . They have adapted well to their lives and put to shame many a person who laments over a trifle. ·LOTS OF KIDDING Their parents, Marnie and Bill Ellis or Costa Mesa, have given them a positive attitude toward life and a home that is overflowing with love and laughter, and ther! is a lot of kidding which points up the ·~ respect the four Ellises have for each other as adu1ts and fri ends. David and Darrell are as different as two brothers can be. David, almost 22, Is outg<>- ing and gregarious, while Dar- rell, two-years his senior. is a quiet homebody who enjoys reading and working on his coin collection. David makes candles, likes to work \Vith wood and is put· ting his winemaking kit to good use. He also is an Angel fan and likes to attend games. Darrell 'is a serious clless player and currently is playing a game by mail with an op- ponent in San Jose. Both enjoy going to see a movie or going out to eat (at- tractive waitresses are essen- tial) and both enjoy music, though their tastes are oir 1>0site. David prefers country- weStem while Darrell enjoys music of a more quiel vein. that ."ever yone at work is nice. The guys always like to help push me around." (David also has a wheeclhair but can be up and around more than his brother.) Natives of Iowa, the Ellis family came to California because or its w a r m e r \veather and better ~uca­ tion~l opportunities for David and Darrell. In Iowa City the brothers boarded at a hospital school and . only came horn~ on weekends, but in Orange County they attended Carl Har.vey School and were able to live at home. UNDER TABLES Being short bad its ad~ vantages. David claims. At Q:trl Harvey he would be call· ed on to crawl under tables and retrieve any dropped items no one else could reach, LIKES WORK and he admitted his height While Darrell prefers to stay makes a pcr£ect vantage point home (he is largely confined for miniskirts. to a wheel chair), David en-"David's very timid." his joys his jpb at the Easter Seal father said wilh a straight Rehabilitation Center in ' fa ce. Orange, where he has done "Everyone gives me ci. bad assembly, packaging and in-time.'' David replied , "and I spection work since April 23 of give them a bad time. That's this year. the enjoyment of it." His supervisor, Dick Cooper, The two find that most calls h i m ·an "excellent adults are very cordial to worker" and says of him . "I them. while curious children wouldn't want a b e t t e r sometimes give them a ques- emploYe." tioning look. David says he likes working At a movie one time., David because "you get paid and it recalled, he was getting more keeps you busy." He added attention than he liked fron1 the children. ""'If you're going to stare at me I'm going to charge admission" was his terse comment. What would David and Dar-...n like to do ll they had the chance to select any activity- .lhey wished? WANDERLUST David was quick to reply: "Travel.'' "I'd like to go to Hawaii and to Rome," he said. "Why Rome?" asked his mother. ''To do what the Romans do," he said with a straight face . David added that what he really 'would like to do is travel arow:d the world, if he could find a t.our for ban· dicapped people. Darrell and David, for a couple of small fellows, have a big-sense of humor and a .wide ouUook on life, and a person realizes alter talking with them that they really don't have a handicap. They just happen to be a little shorter than most people. "They're a couple or pretty good 'boys. We're proud of them," Ellis commented. "They've accepted things very well," Mrs. Ellis said. David best stated h i s philosophy, which he shares with his brother: "All you've got to do is give it · a._ go," Point well taken. ·~But sometimes, someone 011 the !treet will remind me of the guy and-.J:'ll clam up, And sometimes, my husband will "ao something that _reminds me. and I just freeze." Will it ever be over? "I don't know. 1 only kno\v that as long as I was in the other house, I always felt thaJ somehow he was still there. Maybe now, things wiU get better. But I don't know if it will ever be really over." Peering Around HOSTING a surprise 25th wedding anni versary party for her son arid daughter·in-law. Mrs. and Mrs. George R. Tup- pan oC La Habra Heights and Balboa Island, was Mrs . Peter Tuppan of Balboa Island. The .party setting was the Corona de! Mar home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J . Gumbinger. Following the di.Mer, a surprise announcement was made of the engagement of the Tuppans' daughter, Randy Tuppan, to John $hal!O\V Of L8 Habra Heights. When Inflation Hits, She Loses Dough a bag or bone s. so sex ~BRASS R/NO ~8 ~18i§JA By ERMA BOMBECK The gas shortage? I can live 'vith it. The lettuce boycott? I can adjust. Even putting the new na tional bird, the chicken, on a half dollar I can ap- preciate. But \\'hen t read where Rome is forecasting a shortage or pasta, it gets me right where 1ny lap goes \Vhethcr I sit or stand. You might as well know I'd kill for spaghetti. This, in spite of the fact that J know what spaghetti can do to you. Spaghetti, 'vhen eaten, go.es into the digestive tract, i~ absorbed by the bloodst ream and races its way to !he upper arms. the hi ps and the chin. Here, it takes root and blouses. Diet cannot touch these areas. J call them pasta pockets and they a r c ren1ovablc only t h rou g h surgery. ~1y husband thinks the Pasta Pilhie is a big joke. - "You laugh now," I said. "Just 'vait until someone mee ls you in a dark alley so me nighl, sticks a gun in your ribs and says, 'You:r AT WIT'S END lasagna noodles or your life !' " "l just think it's ridictl'lous to place that much importance on-something-that goes into your stomach." "You didn 't say' that the night one of the kids broke the handle off the refrigerator and your cold beer was inside. "That's differeht," he said. "Besides, there are lots of things that you cail eat instead of all that dbugh." "IC I could only believe that ," I sighed. "But when was the last time you found a carrot that tasted like stuffed manico.tti, or a dry cracker that faintly resembl e d vermicelli drowning in sour -cream. You·marlrmy word,'' r cautioned , "pasta is holding this nation together. When it goes, so goes civilization." "Aren't you belng a bit dramatic?" chided my bus· band. declines. \Vith no heartburn in w ..... , Ap,....t bf HUNTlttJ:TOH the country you wake up every • lteytie Loa111..iW"f~~""' morning knowing you are • N-.. Whm M911. "'"' w : it . s:>t . t r· I '--e AINI SHOIS never going o ee any uetter H.-."-" CHRISTMAS than you do right then. There Cl°"· luckilt WORKSHOP DAILY is no garlic pollution to fi ght • to-ther." 1121 E•1t , .. u ..... i .. ,, "Nothing to do on ~Ion· Co•it Hwv. CltrlltiNS d · di , Coro11• d•I Mar 11111dt Tll• ... ,... ... Cl'ltl•r ays since ets are pa.sse. HUNTINGTON llACH The country becomes thin and 671""'740 16*41 AL90NOUIN ., WAlltNlllt ...... lazy. GovernmenHalters. Thel ;:==::~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~ church clo.ses its doors. The ]; economy sags helples5 ... " "What are we having for dinner ?'' inte!TUpted my ·b.ls· band. &--llltJIIIllllllllllljlllllillillllllllllll!ll! 554·0~00 ~!··~'~"!~!·!· !'~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~I Good Side Explained "Dramatic!" l s houted . "Spareribs and sauerkraut. l'm cutting down." "WithQut pasta we s top eating. When we stop eating, 've grow thin. When \\'e growl ==----------11 we've been doing the frame thing $ince 1907 SIZES 36 to 46 Th is is the year of the t urtl eneck. Perfect fa shion punctuation w ith your suits, pantsuits, jumpers. We believe in the mod ified little ''m ock turtle" in rib polyester. Get !he loo k wit hou t the bulk.. from $16.00 Sunday Shoppe<? F11llerton & H1.mlln91on !tock ' 1 Open 12 !o S tJ S'"'''°' To M.,ci'to,.,cjue In Sloe~ ~~sHALF-Sl1ZE SHOP ¢ 0 ST 1' HUNTING T 0 N. MESA IEACH 11,1 NIWPOIT llYD. 14 HUNTINGTON CINTEll: 11/J w.a flt~ el lltlt St.I t,.trttohrller lros. f11ut.l f4ilUQTON -114 Oro .... olr Mell, •t Ora,.,.thorpo & Heritor ..... • f'IMHa.-: Fri. , .. , -T-11n. • We4. • S9t. 'fO·I ~.al&A-lcard • ltla•ter c11:a .. ,,e , An intensification or the teacher surplus within the next fo~ to fi ve years is view- ed by the U.S. Office or Education lUSOEJ as a com· bination of good and bad ne\VS. although more than on e thin, there are no more fat UffELL'S LOOK FOR OUR NEWPORT EYEWEAAOES1GN miiJion too1nany teacllers·will --jokes to make us laugh. When UP"'OtSTERv-,______ ~~~----""""'"'"'-Q..P£~.91t_.l---1-- enter the market the surplus we stop laughlng, the joy " 1 HllMANli)Jr i;::v,S , ' leaves our lives. w... '" W• ~U I of teachers offer the op-"No one 1 i k e 5 to pinch lite a.t portunity tor school systems 1t22 H_..., ltwl. 200 NEWPORT CENTER OR. to be more selective in their ----------__'.l~~C:-!!"'!!!"'!M~-!!"'!!!"'!~S4~l~.f~l~l~t~~N=E=W=P=O=R=T=B=E=A=C=H=9=2660==='==(=7=14=)=6=4=0=·8=4=7=5==:::=!_ ln its report "The Need for Teachers in Our Schools and Colleges," the office notes tha t recruitmen t and more deman- ding in the preparation. re- quired. By Order of R.R. Repphart, E1q. LENARD'S GALLERIES OF NEW YORK wlll prff•nt ulected ltem1 from the estate and colltc· tlons of R. R. Repphart, Esq., B•lalre, Virginie, to ff sold •• PUBLIC AUCTION (No Limit 11nd No RHtrve) TWO SESSIONS l"UtlT Sl!tSION1 (P'lrlltJ Ll1tl111l Chkktrl119 Orlrtd PllllO, I ''· Sl11H Cllldw11! Gr1.-clfather Clotk, Cwt Glltl Talll• Limp, Mlttlllll C•l'Nltl••r•, t:u111ftlM c.,,, .. or .... t•I s ..... W/INtcllll'lg 0.•lr, tt Pl•• 11111\d ''911d! MlrDll Ttrt D1111nf ltotm o,_,, Dntcllll Tllllt Ump, fl11t (Ill Olttt, fltln NI ·-· V•w. L•rv• Vlctfft•• o,..i111 {L.V• St•t • Cflllr, MIP'tolt Tep Tff't, 7 pltcl ,.,,.., kf, Mltlt l lU Softl Slt11..i Oii P•lflllftf, 9rGflU CMfftelttlr1t, Sll¥tr (tffM ltl1 M .... fklll HM91111 Clll!Wt41er, Slglltd l"1'9!1tlt (lotk, Hll'IUJ C•""" T ..... , Ot,,..,tll lf1111ftirs CllllMI, En1HM llrffl, 6 Pl«t lllUlld S.!111 W"" Ma,..,.. Tot lffr-er.up, 1k, Sl!COHD SESSION/ Spt<lel Cllllit~hi H pltcn If WkllW' p;lll'ftlo "'"' o.11 $ttttl•'l'· ChlN '•• O•k llt•und T1lll••· Pren ••ck c1111,,, Ht. lltk l"U'"I Ofl•n, HlltY C!lfll1, ltl• of lrlc·•llrlCJ .. o.k ''" calllMt, 6 Mlllt Gell' H•ll T ...... le• l1x, I~ Ylclro!I. Otll Wiii rtiiN, 6 'PIKt M11tot1n .. ltcll'Otll'I S.I. OYER 1st LOTS MUIT 11 '°LO, INSPECTION: ....... -"o.m ..... m ...... -... u SALE P:llltn SI SSION! Tlltt NlfM, ..... U. 11» ,,M, : SlCOHD s1ss1.010 Wld. HJjM, s.,t. "· 11'9 P.M. LOCATION Dut It ~ ldNI Ctlltrtl -.UHM eM 11t11i.., fldll· : tits, tllll Mlt 11 ftlltl MN ti IMI Ht <Ml-' ... with! JAKE'SJNTIQULAUCTION GALLERY 2m NO. MAIN ST., SANTA ANA 1111 '•li'llH L111t Ne~r lullfel!.t) Ith AllllUAL, WAREHOUSE WALL TO WALL BARGAINS! uo~~No 5·0· O/o 0-FF = FIXTURES I~ Off Unique Ughting.Fixtures from Cryslal Chandeliers to utility lighls. Savings _ for flVtry location in th~ home awaiting your selection. All Sil•$ Rnll SALE NOW IN PROGRESS OPINDAILY9·~,SATURDAY &.SUNDAY 10-4 RETAILERS, WHOLESALERS; C!:ONTRACTORs WELCOME -. • • ~ ! • . l "" : • • ' the wooo l1qht~liG r1xtUR€ company 4020 CAMPUS DRIVI, NIWPOlT IEACH 1714l J541·2901 ~ hfWffn '•l1•6dN & MocAlllrur llvd., ocrett '"'" °""'9• Co. AllJIOrt, NIWPatt loiicfi. -' .,. '· ' ~ ' •: -' A Mixed Blessing Though 84-year-old Ruth Simmons is confined to a wheelchair, she still does her own grocery shopping at a market in Lorain, ,Ohio. These days she and other res!dents of the ci_ty's Kennedy Plaza find shopping an unpleasant task. Many res1def!lS are on fixed in come. from Social Security, and have complained about not being abl~ to keep up with the prices. You r Horoscope I Cancer: Build Hedge FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 2 1 By SYDNEY OMARR I have noted that persOns born on the 6th, ISth or 24th of any month have unusual speaking or singing voices. These people find their voices to be or special Importance where career is concerned , such as teaching and drama. 'lbe voice angle is emphasized tr the native is born under Taurus or Libra on the specified dates. Do some checking and let me know your findings. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Accent is on creativity , change , romantic interests. Purchase of luXW'y item is iir- dicated . Be selective. Consult famil y member. ~take home lite more harmoniou s. Diplomacy now is a valuable ally. Know it; act accordingly . Be aware of details. Take nothing for granted. Don't give up 30mething or value for mere . pfomise. · GEMINI (May 21.June 20 ): Accent on movement, ideas, contaci.s involving trips and. coocepts. Submit format. Deal with confidence. You have more backing than might be imagined. Capricorn, Cancer persons might Hgure promi- enUy. Don't scatter forces. • make progress by maintaining steady pace. SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): A ctc-e n t oo philosophical corlc.pts, the learning process ·2Jld travel. _Gain indicated th.rough ad- vertising, writing. Reveal your style. Stimulate creativity. Special reading material can provide key an,swers. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) : Discuss needs wl th one CANCER (June 21..July 22 ): who has your interests at You realize profit. Past effort heart. Tauru1, LI bra in- now can pay dividends. Aries, diviQuab could figure promi· Ubra persons could be in pl.c-enUy. Budget is important. lure. Empha~is is on pay· • Be realistic about s a I es , ment, colfection. Protect in-purchases. You need not at- terests. Add to po~ssions. tempt to "buy" love. Frank Build hedge for inflation. talk resolves dilemma. LEO (July 23-Aug. 221: AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. • ---· • 2/SS Girl's flame retardant flannel P.J.'a 2 pc. set In aOft vlnal/vlnyon flannel cornea In 1lze14 to llx. Special buy. Flame- retardant sleepwear for your · a precious little. ' TAURUS (April ~May 20 1: Lunar cycle is such that your 18): ·ue low. Don't push or judgment. intuition are on chtde. Patience now is your target. Personal magnetism ally. Curb tendency to speak soars. Take initiative. Make or write while angry. See new starts In new directions. persons, sltu&tioo.s in light of Highlight appearance. Be cort-~Mate Ol'-partner has --11 -l )<'... spicuous. Come out of blding. right to express defmite view. The end of matter is indicated. Issues are settled . Older fami- ly member r i g u r cs pron1- inently. Build on solid base. You win! He receptive. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): . PISCES .(Feb. 19-March20): Brocks _ ___.r ....... etl-T--r-0th If naive. you pay the price. You get to heart of matters. Means look beneath surface Co-wo~kers, other! who share indications. So m e o n e ap-your interests express con- parently is not telling entire !idence. Your position is vin- story. Unusual proposal needs dicated. Promotion, ad- careful c o n s i d e r a t i o n . vancement is Indicated. Strive Unorthodox approach may be for balance. Going to ex- necessary. tremes will defeat purpose. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): IF TODAY IS Y 0 UR ( ~rr. and Mrs. Eorl A. Brock Emphasis is on friends, hopes BIR'l'HDAY you have great of Newport Beach have an-and wishes. Romance and sense of humor. You have nounced the engagement of creativity a r e spotlighted. tendency to Scatter forces. their daughter Janis Eileen Pleasure principle is ac-Your intellectual curiosity is . Brock to Larry Ray Miller, centuated . Leave details for sharply lloned . You are in- son of the William Millers of another time. You deserve to tercsting and somewltat ol a ·--. Huntington Beach. relax . G e m I n I , Sagittarius bundle of contradictions. You ~; st. AndrCw's Presbyterian persons are involved. also are a n~tural entertainer :-: Church In Newport Beach will SCORPIO (Oct 23 N 21 ) and could use more self-•· f the J 19 . . ·. -ov.. : discipline. ll«ember should • • be the setting or an. H1gbl~ght g~als, ovtc proJects. be your most significant :~.· rite. · St d••g 1n commwtlty Is • The br.d •·be tt ded La an '"' month of .1973. 1 e-w-a en elevated. Professional ' .. I ' . • t . . . • t . ' . < ' ~ .. · .. Ca~ada . High ~chool and superior could pay valid com- Un1vers1ty ot !"'lzona when; : pllment. Do some rempdeltng .• i";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'I she affillat~ with Gamm~ Phi Streamline procedures. You II Beta sorority. Her f1ance studied at Edison High S<bool and Orange O>a.st College. Symbo ls Re lated NeWspaper comlca offer ex- amples of man's earliest writ· ing -subltnguistlc lde<111aphs. , There are symbols; ac- cording t o Encyclopaedia Brit·annica , which are senerally understood e v e Ii though they have no con- .. ·ventlonal counterpart In speech. Ancient people made extensive use..of them. r Such symbols in the c:omics Include a balloon encircling print, slgnUylng a character In speaking: lootptinls stgnllylng that he Is going; .sawlrt wood for snoring or sleeping: a lighl bulb With rays for nn Idea. I . I • Children's Advocate Will Speak Thomas K. Gilhool,' assoc:i- ate proleosqr ol I~,., USC Law Center, will speak 'l'lle!day, Sept. 25, In.Manlan Center o1 Educitlonal' Thenpy, Costa Mesa, at 8 p.m. Gllhool, 111 attorney In landmark cases concerning the educational rights or han- dicapped children, wUI apeok on children's right to 10 ·~ propriate education a n d right! or ~rents and p~ fessJonals. / Reservations should be made with the center, 54Mll31 , be c 1 use se11fio& 'will be llmlled. ' I 95 CRAFTING DAYS Tl t l CHRISTMAS Special 2• • ; Reg. $4.00 ' 1:-;STEP DECOUPAGE By TITAN ' -· Thltllame-aleepwe1r mMtl thti teel ,.qvlrement1 of Federel atlnd1rd DOC FF~71 which 1pplltl to &11ee o to IL e.ctllfOllf!Dl'lllolp• IUUIA PARK .... ..,, •• ,111,........, ••7 ,_ .. -. '11ursd ar. S!ptembtr 20, 1973 SA-LE 11.99 Reg.14.99 Foam mattress SALE 16.97 Reg.19.97 104 coil mattress uAJLY PILOT 5" thick polyurethane padding with a juvenile-print cover of quilted, pearfized vlnyl. Quilled, peartized vinyl print cover. Sisal wlth urethane foam padding. SALE 23.97 Reg.28.97 ·Qouble drop side crib ln'Walnut or white w/lh 4 teething ra ils, wooden play balls, casters, and a pretty decal. Sides lock Treasury disposables. It doesn 't cost much to save a lot of work . TREASURY DAYTIMES, pkg. 0130, Reg, 1.49 1 .26 Case or 6 pkgs, Reg. 8.94 7.56 TREASURY NEWBORNS, pkg. ol 30, Reg. 1.29 1.09 Case ol 8 pkgs, Reg. 7.74 6.54 TREASURY OVERNIGHTS, pkg. of t2, Reg. 79c 674 O Caseol15 ykgs, Reg. 11.85 10. 5 TR EASURY TODDLERS, . pkg. of t2. Reg. 1.04 88¢ Caseol 15 pkgs, Reg. 15.60 13.20 CurltyTldy·upa 1.88 Reg.2114 (pkg. of && washcloths) Help prevent diaper rash wllh these soft, pre-moistened washcloths. -. ,-- SANTA ANA 3900 So. Britto!• No, ol 9o,Coat,.._ O,tn 10-1 , .... Dfrl•r..., • •• ..-- • • l ~ ' \ I • • • ,. • P-T Units Bae I< • Swing • ' terta1nmeo1. Booths will lt>- ctude g,mes, •Ulhentlc Mexlcon lood, ha~ All!!V Al.OS PTO' ~!em­ bersblp drive will \a k e place !rom Mooday through Friday, Sept. 24 to 28. Mn. Bud Ror,man Is chainnan . . . Fa.Woo show Is 1<:heduled Thursday, Sept. 27, at 7,30 p.m. In school. Tlcketal will be priced at fl for adults and 50 cents for -chlldren. ) M r s . George Rennie ii chal man. . fra::~ts llJ l·Teachers ~1l-: ::~~b1e hot doll!.__ corn clop, <Olton candy, ancl baU<I ~-j\Jjjj oflered will be a -steak dlnneT, • pony ridea, aquare ~ing and ,a Cake wall:. Houri Frid.ly IN I to 10 p.m.; Saturday, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., and ~•y,'11" a p.m. Mn. and Mn. I Angelo SUN V!Elf no, Kiil Goll: dud, crlmlnolo&ill, wlll . .-t oo c1n111c1enunctt1oo 11111...,. trol at 7:30 p.m. Tuooday, Sept. 25, In acbool. Fifth ad lillh jp'JMie I I ~ d e D t I &<> ....-lod l>Y their ponnta are Invited tO·attend u will u • por91tl ol all other Sun View ltudenta. : ··--··-.. ---·--· vtcroRIA' Back·tcHchool night will take RJace at 7 p.m. Right This Way, Mom 7:30 p.m,., in the multipurpose room. Proposed ways 1 and means projects and the annual budget will be presented for unit al'l""'val. HARBOR C 0 U N C•ll. ' Pre&denl's roundte.ble at 9 a:m. Monday, Sept. 24, at ,._1N::teiiiwpol'ctirt Harbor L u t b e r an " -, -798 -00Ver Dttve, Newport Beach, will be follow- ed by a Council meeting and a NEWLAND pro, Annual salad luncl_leon at 11:45 a.m. lunteer rr scheduled at All attending are asked to VO co ee brin~ a salad and IZ 10< ad-. 10 a.m. Wednesday, :;opt. 26, miss lOD. Reservations may be ln Fountain Valley C<lmmun1ty made by contacting Mrs. Center to acquaint vohmteers Ralph Boegel. with their duties and introduce ---t.he committl!e.chairmen_,_Mrs. LAND PTA, Ba~ sale wlll Jolin Bolling, first vice presi· be conducted during back-to-dent, will present the orien· school night for parents of taUon. lirst through !Utb graders Monday, Sept. 24, at 7:30 p.m. -Mrs.-Lloyd lluclcllng-;; In ~ Cllirge Of !He sale. IJNDBERG: Bowling league for ill parents and friends will begin at 11:30 •-Ill· Monday, Oct. 1, at Kona Lanes in Costa Mesa. Interested persons may contact P..1rs .. Hank Jarboe . . . Arts and crafts workshops for the Ch~s bazaar will start Tuesday, Sept. 25. M,rs. Leroy Welters, Mrs. James Thomas and Mrs. Hap Garner are chairmen. ORANGE COUNTY LUTHERAN lllGH SCHOOL AUXJLIAl\Y' First meeting will be called , to order at 8 p.m. Monday, Sept. 24, in the Trinity Lutheran Church, San- ta Ana. Speaker will be Charles Scblimpert who is working on a doctorate in gtµdance and oounseling at the university of s 0 u t h e r n California. Robert Jenkins seems to be leadin·g his mOther Mrs. Donald Jenkins a,n d Mrs. Ja-mes Dahl (rear) to the fa shipn show a~d buffet luncheon pl;tnned by the Hun• tington Beach Police Wives Guild. The event will be staged Saturday, Sept. 29, in the Tale of the Whale restaurant, Balboa. The guild provides college schol- arships and assists with the Albert Sit ton juvenile home and hospitals' chil- dren's wards. Speakers, Socials Club Programs Vary Along the Coast NB Ebells ' ' i Newixrt Beach Ebclls will 'open the fall season with their traditional cotton party at ~ 10:·30 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 26, in the clubhouse. cards. j lWlcheon and a showing of , fashions are on the agenda. ~ The 1lrst meeting of the year will take place Thw-sday, Oct. 4, in the clubhouse with 1 Wallet" Craig presenting the program, entitled The Man of a 'I\wsand Voices. Speakers Las Olas Toastmistress Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 26, in tbe Men:ury Sal'lngs ~ Loan, Huntington Beach. On the pro- gram will be .Mrs . Thomas Woodall, Mrs. G e r a 1 d Landsman and Mrs. Jane Bnine. HB GOP Garden Club in the home of Mrs. Donald T. Smith. RV Juniors Care and feeding ol house plants will be the topic of Russ Croot at the Wednesda~,.-Sept. 26 meeting or Rancho Viejo Juniors In the Mercury SAV· ings and Loan, Tustin. CofC Women A luncheon meeting of Newport Harbor Otamber of Commerce, ·Women's Division will begin with a social hour at 11 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 26, in Irvine Coast Country Club. Speakers will be four area businesswomen-and fashions will be presented by area shops. Christian Club Irvine Gardeners : Irvine Garden Club will meet at 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 26, in the Park West clubhouse. DAR Col. \\'illiam Cabell Chapter. Daughters of the American Revolution will meet at 12:30 Wednesday, Sept. 26 in Park , Newport Clubhouse. Morning Club at 10:45 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 26 in the Balboa Ba'y Club. Cavaliers British Home in Sierra h1adre will benefit from pro- ceeds realized at the luncheon meeting oJ the Cava l ier Chapter, Dau'ghters of the British Em pire Wednesday, Sept. 26, in the Mercury Sav- ings and Loan, Huntington home will be the setting for a participate in a Bookmark get-acquainted membership Design C<lntest. sponsored by brimch' fo.r the Mesa-Harbor · (the Orange County Public Club.· Library. The· event will begin at 11 Entry forms are in all coon. a.m . Thursday, Sept. 27. ty branch libraries and bookmobiles. Theme is Live! Contest Read ! and children may use tw_o colors. Judging will begin All Orange County students, after the contest closes Oct. 20 kindergaretn through ninth and wiooers will be announced grades, are eligible t o Oct. 22. Beach. ----------------=::-c= AARP Newport Beach Chapter, American Association o f Retired Persons will meet at 1 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 27,Jn..tbe Newport Harbor Lu t h e r a n Church to hear a speaker from the Santa Ana Social Security office. Mesa-Harbor Dr. and Mrs. David Davis' rrlU5 6ood 'tll T......,, hpt. JI SPECIALS OF THE WEEK . '•llCfrl Frfth • LARGE AA EGGS '""". DOLi .... .. .... .. ........ 'Jlf DOZ. 'f'Hltone Swfft . PEACHES . . . .... . . . 4_.,~ ... , s100 ~Solid ' ICtBERG LEnUCE ........ 19~ ... Gl'ff. for Sc.tio.t S<ar«llo ind Mr. and Mn. and Ibey ma,y contact Mro. Jooeph PlllTlno are chalrmtn' • Paul Dumaln. \, sr. NICllOLAlh F .. Uval of the Hilll will be .... .,.......i 1>Y St. Nlcbolaa Pariah and SI. ~ Nlcl>olos Paro- cblol SChool FricloJ. 8llurday and Sunday, .Se!>!· 18, 19 and ' 'Illelday, Sept. 25. Project Four !"Ogram and the special readin( cenlet" !or prtochool- cblldren will be nplalned. Ice ' cream and e1ke aocW will l<>llow classroom villtaUon. ROBINWOOD pFQ, Unit of· ficers and staff members f rom the past !Cbool year will· be honored at a poUuck bmcbeon Friday, Sept. 21, at U:ZO a.m. in the teachen' loUD1e. Mn. William Martin is 1n charge of the event. · 30, on the church .....,SS at p.m. Saturday and Suncloy. DAYS TILL F~·red will · be comival St. NI-. Hourt are 1 lo·~iiiOiiiOiiiOiiiO;;;;;,;i;;;;;iiiO"i 10 p.m. Fricloy aild 1 to 10 9 5 CRA"ING -CHRISTMAS -ST. JOHN' Country ·C.pera-:=:, ~~~= • festival Friday, Saturday and to defniy -• ._, Sunday, Oct . 5, 6, and?, on the aipport the Oiolnltemity of school grounds will IOllW;re airisUID Doctrine program co u n W' y fun ~ ep-scholarahlp' f\Uld, semtnarf bone, help lor~the needy and Sleeping . parilb lml"Ovements. ~ Rlillli $10.00 . '6. I I SPECIAL , ·--- Exclusive HI-Humidity Vegetable Compartment K111ap1 delicate veget1bl• moist ind cool up to 1hr" Wffka. }. r11I rnonev-nv.,. You ju1t 1tt th• conttof. .llDIY from~ Exclualve "Refrigerator within a Refrigerator" .tf, ... .itr.26 Modll l""JIG-1, HA-. L ~Gla••t.4•1- CllllllJ- H )QI ..,,. 1ht '9lt word In r .. fr~~·'*· ... dlc-1 witft Ill of Amini'• ud!AM fllhnL Aut 121 decor•tor coklf'I to chOoM "'°"'· In two-tone IVOCl-do,~. Autumn Gold or ~!.••· . .llDIY from~ Exclusive New Convertible Fresh Fruit Bin Jult r9f'l'IOYe the befkM and you .....,. an ·eX11'9 Shelf that adJuttt. JUll right tor atortng trultl to kMP them It peak flavor. relOy tor .. ting. - -iiiiiiiii" -r.-~--2 Automatic Cold Control• -Set one Without .tfecilng th• ottitr. One for tht refrigtt110f. l:tnf tor the trNltf. Optional Add-On , ' • .. • " Mrs. Allee Wagcnhals, na- tional flower show judge and llladllCape design critic lvill ••k on Propagation and Division when she addresses the Harbor \7lew }fills Garden Club at 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept .•. Monev Crisis v.•ill be the topic ot Cliff Frazier, of the Oran,ge C-Ounty Airport Inspec-GRAENSTEIN APPLES ................. 4 LI,....... 46• Fr11h meat •19Yt nmflttt·'ffnh 2 tim•• longMI You ctn 110tt fr•h me1t up to 10 d1g1ee1 colder thin in tht rtlr1gerlt0r, No dry 1lr to 1hr~ up the mtlt. H11 It• own cold COl'IV'ol, · Automatic Ice Maker ' 'lbe meeting will take place • I I tion Service. Wednesday Club A shov.·ing of fall fashions v.•ill highlh:ht the fi rst fall meeting of the Wednesday • .1 • ,.... • Crilp LARGE CELERY ........... :. •· .... -11! .. . F,.1h LM .. BELL PEPPERS . .... . .... .... . .11• LI. .... ., ..... '. .............................. "" 10• LI. r-l n11 I S.JW TOMATOES Fr.II £ J•t.J CAR Rm ~ LI ...................................... 2 ........ 11- '"C'AL DISCOUNf POI llSTAUU.Nft f•U DIUWllY INGARDIA BROS. " •Illy 11'1111 ,AllHI You ctn change from trtYt to let melclf whenever vcu want to. In mlnutn. TILIYlllON e STlllO 8 Ami-8 IAUl e lllOICI e llllCI IM7 • I • t I l!I. TOIO ~cosTA MHA ....... •••••• lb...., ., ............. , 411 I. twes•taa A It. 1.._ ........ , -........... .Ji---.D'ilrao ~ fl-----· ...616-1'M - Wf 11'111 If. _.._ u !..I ----- ' ' .. I ' . • ' • • l -' TUMBLEWEEDS GoT HN SCOOPS FOR"lllE 'Dl'SERJ PENOUNCER"P! MUTT AND JEFF FIGMENTS QJICK, AIOlt..C'U QJT NII SEE f/::11' H1611 lP IN TltE Pl~ TI!Ef li:IT QJMfla)/ NANCY l I I ' ii ii lj l • \ ves, EiAU.~! \00 MAV SAV I PL.AN SW!!PIN& CHAH&e5 Wl1HIN MY JURIS/7/CTION! by Doug Wildey IP 10·"°"" l'\11; HAO All MY llOW!S-'lt THE AIR_ NOT Jti IT! by Tom K. RyCUI 6AP! WllAI A ~j I CAN SEE /'f NCJN 11RfAKIN6 ACros5 PAGE ONE!:•SMAKE·UP IN COURT! JUlleE 11> f'VR6f JANITOR'!! "/f:f'tlr by Al Smith · __YQy'R.E NO EARTHLY GOOD/ Wt-N DON"T YOU VOL.UNTEER FOR SKYLAB! ' by Dale Hale WHAT'S IT SAID THAT LONG HAIR 15 ' TDDAT'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLI ACROSS SO legal fon:es PEANUTS 11/EU.., NE«E I AM A6AIN-illfAHXWUS 52.·Stna•.;;:;;.;--iiliiB~~ji.}:iiiJiiiiiif-~t 1 KJndof Slendetand building trim l'IJl'IL.! 5 Y•Powht•d 64 Gadget or Donntr -56 Dri'te• mad 9 Open· 69 AbHnt GI mouther;' 62 Nocturnal 14 Europtan mammal /tinlper 64 Prohibit 15 Coun.ttr· 65 Ruui.n ttnor revolut1on1ry 18 Nonme11n1c 87 Aaian -•mtnL couritrv~ 17 Effu1lVt 70 Supine prtlM 71 Promptly t9 Twiihl n Blue g,.pe 20 DtliCate p~tnl -fabrics----13-WooMn--lT 'Miio<rv~~(rYOiiiii'nbli~d-~. 21 Cheriy slont fabric ··• 23 Mr: Carnegie 74 11aH1n. 12 Gallup-43 Overdue 24 Oog9<1ned community 13 Noun e~g "6 fart'( auto 27 "-··Of 75 RectOJ:Abbr, 18 Star:Pefnt 48 Undenllffll charge1" 22 Thrash: 51 Weep alOUd 29 Move DOWN Informal 53 Canopy over unstudily ' . 25 Al'ICI else· 1'bed 3t Runn~ I Bum with hot whire:2 55 Mfnoratip ltnots llquld WOfdl 57 Carbonated 35 Calendar 2 St• In 26 Breed of· beYtrag• .tibf. Centaurus reddish cattte 58 Depleted of 37 Speak.a 3 Acquisitions 28 He ... ! 59 .~~gy wlldly ol ltnowt.Oge ,... .. 39 F,uctn1lion " Cane• 30 Rec:~1tton· • mount:eln 40 Rogionot 5 Tapgtnttv edUre range 60 Part of "to Sp1ln B Mollam 32 Sn•ketik• be" I .U NotbtJ)ad leader 33 Charin Lemb MISS PEACH DOOLEY'S WQRLD SALi. v BANANAS \Me.#\&e:R, F'8Lla,OUR i>to'T'J'o IS, ~'Illar 8N'( co5T': r----: GO RDO MOON MUL!.INS WHAT DOES ONE T lli?EP llUS/NESS ' L.ADY RAYE TO , Do TO o:;ET ,...?VI>' SOME DINNoR? ANIMA~ CRACKERS ... "· , I . -by Charles M. Schulz EOllCA'IC ME IN 1UE ~5 ' WA~5 ! MAKE OF ME A l'ES5EL f'OR1ll~T/;ACHIN.6! LET~ LEARN OSE CAPITALS!! .Y-~-H-----H >ct~ by Mel 44 AsMm 7 Corn•to• 34 Vligetible 61 --aboUt 9i1kwonn halt dish 63 Indian of 46 Occunlng 8 01 eudlblt 35 Someraault New MelliC" within sound S 66 Born: Frtnt 47 Oftnat"mtd 9 £1emen1at'Y 36 WntemU 68 Abraham'• --..t ::i.:A, i ~~AW - /Nt.. &ll'IMMI~ ... HIS roi:o Ml YOUI' liNG~H MAl'I<? A"e THi LOWi?T IN ~~~,, ANP YOU'/i?~ N PANbil< O~ FAICINlir .'IJ.IAT +W Ol.P PIVIL I! IT'ST ... eow 'I.OW ·liNGL/Sf<-AND· FA/LIN" ·MATH' icour•N&!! tore• taei. city nephew <49 Human hand: 10 C1pt of--38 Re1cued 69 Ccmpus Informal from daf!O• point •• 1 • • -,. MATHL A? W'l.l.! ANP THAT'$ WHY Hf WANTll> TO ~It Me! • • ,J,Mf.if, ~rpt11 ...... f (.U, !1'13 I.JAI L• PILOT by ROCJer Bradfield ·By Charles ""rsottl 1JiU. t.)IJ'V. N&eoeD ,. N .. IJ CQik:H Fe• 5GV'le TIMfl l\la.J. . • . ' ' by Ferd Johnson ' by R09er Bollen_ ..... _._,._.."' ......... THE GIRLS ... ,, a • ,,., •••• ClllDUDed oa tlle tekwtted ...... ..... • ....----:roa lwl come op wllll tsllitthc--. • .._,.. Uaaa Senator Baker Ja _ datllq." DENNIS THE MENACE ' • • -1---1 ' . ' t-- .. ... __ _ DAILY PILOT s Thursday, Stpltml>ff' 20, 1973 . Ho using lndust1~y Gets Nixon Boost WAS~INGTON JUPI) - President l!lxoo sald Wednes- day he would try to pump 1$.5 billion lnlo lhe nallon's aagglng housing Industry in the near future while Congress considers his proposed long- ra.nge 90Jutions tn housing. Jn a message to Congress, the President said the govern· ment. would move shortly to allow-savings and loan in- stitutions to provide an ad- ditional ·12.S billion In loan commltn\OnL'I. Savings and Joan associations have virtually shut off mortgage lending since June. NIXON SAID the Federal Ba1iks Up Prime Rate 11ome-Loan Bank Board would provide ''forward com· mitments•• to t h r i r t 1 n· stitutions that would guarantee money for them at some future date to co•er loan commitmenUJ that c o u I d otherwise not be made. I ' A 1hortage of runds for thrift institutions could occur if savers continue to withdraw fund s for investment i n Treasury bills and other in· vestments returning interest rates of 8.2 percent and higher. \VITH CONGRESS not ex- pected to act before next year on new housing proposals, Nixon outlined steps t h e • Administration could take w i th o_u t congressional ap- proval to ease the housing credit squeeze. He said they were intended •1£irst, to help alleviate the im- med~te housing credit prob- lem; and second. to improve fof''the longer term the supply of housing credit and the abili· ty of our people to use it." Wecan~­ ~,,(tlw,.,i. ~\\ ~ .... :io.I ~ ~ tlw flllll ...... 1., Iv ~ s,.: .•• tJMift,I JU °Of \Ill p:.lflc .I of ~II tl'lll" The Jong-range Nixon hous· • Ing plan included a proposal Sign's a Gas • • SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Bank of America, the world's largest com- mercial bank, led the list of California banks Tues- day that raised their pnrne interest l e n d i n g rate to a record 10 per- """'- eventually to replace the • system or federal housing John Harstad, manager of a Springfield Mass. serv- subsidies for the poor with ice station, continues business 'as usual. United California Bank and Security Pacific bank, both headquartered in Los Angeles; The Bank of California and the Crocker National Bank, both with headquarters here, joined in the jump from 9* per- cent. nus latest increase, the 16th this year, was in- itiated last week by San Francisco-based W e 11 s Fargo Bank. Service Ends SAN FRANCISCO (AP) The American President Lines has suspended its around-lhe- workl freighter service, the shipping company announced Tue9day. William McGowan, a vice president, said the curtailment of the service which has been offered for 53 years was due to the sharply increased costs of each voyage. HDFS AN OFFER YOU SHOULDN'T REFUSE lliy maY GIANT, ..... Better health care for vour ran1ily is no"· yours for ih<' asking. And \I is an of· fer U1at you Jihould not re-fuse. l\1edical knO\\'ledge is increasing at a rapid rate and n~\· techniques and de-\'\ces make it possible for your physi<'inn to diagnose diseases and to treat you more ('ffectively than ever- befol'c. Our phnnriacy also hns an offer for vou -\\.l' wl\1 el- wa)'11 NtoCk any JlC\V medi- cine as soon as it is released for public usf'. We "·ork closely with the-physicians in this rotnmunity to bring ~'OU the best in health ca.re service. YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US '''li en you need a ~livery. \\re \\'ill de· liver promptll' "'ilhout extra charge. A great many peoole rely on i1s for their h1;"11lth nPed.1;. \V<' "·elcome reciuest5 for df'll\·C'ry "<' r v I t" I." and chArge accounts. PARK LIDO PHARMACY ,,, Ho1tpltal Road ~port l aKh 642-1510 Frff O.llwery cash payments. THE PRESIDENT said this would attack the basic prob- lem in housing, adding that it would give the poor "freedom and responsibility to make their own choices about hous- ing and would eventua11y get the federal government out of the housing business." Secretary James T. Lynn of Housing and Urban Develop- ment said Nixon considered tbe cash paymfnt program 4'Ule most promising-ap- proach" of several discussed. Btrr HE SAID Nixon felt additional study and ex· perimentation were needed, since the program could cost between $8 billion and $1 l billion each year when im- plemented. For the near future . in ad- dition to $2.5 billion ror sav- ings <l\'d loan institutions, the Prestdent said the government \l.'ouid try to attract $.1 billion in private funds into the mortgage market for new· house construction. HE SAID those funds would be attracted Utrough a so-ea11· ed "tandem plan" under which the government would provide money for FHA insured mortgages at inte rest rates below the market level. WASHINGTON (API -The nation's balance of payments was in the red by only $800 YOUR NEWSPAPER CARRIER --. IS A CREDIT MANAGER M.,._ ttlie """!!Wt'" lrnoot..4 4M"t .... 6Mpertent to fN .... '" ""' •ff ..v111ct -., .... '°"" .. ,.., -the --··· tp W11 fff ffll"'l' of yoor .......... t.t DAILY PILOT ccmfers .. t. ....,.._ fer rMMMlns. They ~ f" te pay '~ -4 tMy .... to !MY for tfte ..... ,.,_,,..., ........ to¥''"'· C ........ .,. e4•becl to ltort collec ...... ..., reot1t • early • ... 11" ef 1oc• lltOdtrl, er c~ lty rM 20ttl, &e tti.y um M --" of kl•t pold by tM -' ., • tM fllOltth whell ..., .... M p.y l'Mlr bJlh. If ycio11 ,., ·yMt _,wy bill ""r Ir Ht ..., ... .., JOllt &at11et" ...,,,~ ht It win ASSURE PROMP·T COURTEOUS SERVICE DAILY PILOT CIRCULATI ON DEPARTME NT ' Gas Stations Close In Parts of Nation ' By United Press lntematlonal A number of service stations around the country either clos- ed or sajd they would cloSe to protest the government's Phase IV £.reeze on gasoline prices. Hardest hit w a s 1i-1assachusetts w h e r e hun- dreds of stations shut down Tuesday. An automobile club i n Massachusetts said its survey showed about 50 percent or the 4.000 stations in the sta te were closed. But it found no area where all the stations were. NORFOLK DISTRICT Court Justice Vincent J. Brogna issued a temporary restraining order prohibiting owners from taking collective action to shut down their sta· tions. State Attorney G e n e r a I Robert H. Quinn sought the in· junction . .saying ''An emergen· cy situation exists and I can- not allow the public's health and sarety to be endangered." Elsewhere, more than 50 stations were reported closed million in the second quarter of this year. the smallest quarterly deficit in 21h: years, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday. The latest report on the country's intern a ton a I payments position indicated that a trend of improvement which started earlier this year Js continuing. The payments deficit Iasl year lolaled $11.8 billion. THE COMMERCE Depart· ment said the second quarter Improvement resulted largely fiom a reduction in the coun· Auto Lease Ag reement Concluded Special to lbe Dally PUot BEVERLY H I LLS Southwest Leasing Corp. of Beverly Hllls and Ra Ip h WUliams Enterprises Jnc. of Encino have announred an agreement which calls for the purchase by southwest Leas· Ing of certain of t h e automobiles and related leases of WllUams Enterprises . Consummation of the purchase Is subject lo Ille ap. proval or the exec1.1tlve com~ mittec ot Soulhwest Leasing and the board or directors of Williams Enlerprlses. Inc ., the statement said Tuesday. Ralph WllJlams, presidtnt of Williams Enlerprlses, and Jel' rold 'M. Axelrod , prtJident of Southwest Leaalna. said the purchase price is In excess or $2.4 million and coven a~ proxlmolely 550 vehicles and related lcues. Soulhwest Leasing Is one or the largest independent con- 11.1mer leasing oompanie1 ln the Unlled Stales wilh a fietl of more !hon 13,000 vehlolel. Grove Fir11i ., Complete New York Stoc~ List ' • " • • ,, • • • " • • " " " • " '• " '• • .. ,, ,, • ~ " " .. l: " .. .. e '• ~ • .. .. • .. " .. ,, '• " " .. .. .. ~ ,, " .. c ii ~ • 'I • ' > Stpltmbor , 1973 DAI LY PILOT Wednesday's Closing P1ices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Market Surges; 'Glamonrs' Rally NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market enjoyed one of its strongest days o! the year Wednesday as broad market fndlcators were sharply higher In \ heavy volume. Brokers credited much ol the advance lo rally· inll $1amour issues, aome of which had token a heal· Ing rn trading~hl5 week. ~ IBM was p subsllint!ally i heavy lrad ln after It& openlllg w , s delayed lor th third sfr-.Jg~t ses- sion on the Now York Stock Ex ange sµfc~ i '.Jil.S. District Court ruling against the compan,Y~I~. an antitrust suit Ith Telex. IBM had Jost nearly 38 point. in two se slons . • • !t32 DAILY PILOT I OVER THE COUNT~R , NASO Listings for Wtdn.5d1y, S.pttmber 19, 1973 .10 Alosl Actire Ort 11.• 011 111 011 11.1 011 ~,,,, 011 H.l 01! ll.S 011 11 I Of! 11 6 Ofl 1D.I 011 10.6 OH 10.Q OU 9.! O!t 9' OU 91 011 Q,1 Off 9.1 Orf 9.1 011 8.l 011 1 ' 011 '·' 011 7.1 Off 1 I 011 7.1 Otf 11 011 , ' NEW YOAIC (UPIJ-The 10 rnMI •cllft U11C:t1 tr.t::led "" me OTC rNrtet Wedne\· day. •S SUOl)lled by NASO. Vol-l hf A1ktd Cll,. PionHr Hi Brf'd 186.900 ll ]) ... + 1~ MCI ChTllTlun 111,CQ:l -,-. 9~+ "- Llbtrtv NII Lr IOS.~ l'"" l S'• + \io Plft oce.,, Oil 10•.W lit~ II .. + 114 illl•llk O!'Q(I A.OR tS.lll'l 111-i 11'"' .. 'Al Am E•D 81,7111) 61 61 .... + 1'11 l"el~ LenlrtQ 73.10'3 11»1 lllli+ 1• Ptrn'I Olhl!G 71,SOO '"° 7'11 + V. Fir" Ml~\ 61.•:>0 J~:i. :J!oio + 1''• Oortlle<lter Gii U ,JDO 6 I I•+ _.. N.t.SD \IOllll'ne lo4ay, 11idv1111Ce' an Declil'ltt 141 Unch•n~d nu TO!itl ?'IS! 7.1~,200 MUTU AL F UND S -New Yo•k -f'o! EliTON & Jol'l11,r11 14.191~.88 SCUDDl!JI FOS: lowll'IO is 11 U,1 o HOWARD: £YST0ME: In!• lrw IS n l~.Sl bid •nd 11~-ed P<'I· B•I" Fd t U 10.S4 Cui! Bl 11.61 1•.U Bal11nc 16 1116 1~ t Ct• on Mulu•I Gw!PI F U.S• IS.•S Cu1I B1 19.flll 11.19 Com 13 ~I I~ M , F1'"d, •• quoted Oy ·lnone 6.01 6.St (IHI Bl I 11 l .'6 Soec11 lD 91 ll.92 thr NASO Inc. " ~ell ,.. 1.•1 1.611 Cu\\ IU 7.111! 116 SE.AID GRP: 1•1 Stck Fri 11.1111.H Cu\I Kl 619 6.11 lid Gw 111 l~S l id Ask EDIE Se> 1)411111 Cu\t Sl lJ.llll.IS Ad l'IC l.10 I OS 1 "11"'''' I 1S I ~ E FC MGMT Gii,.: Cu\t S? II 91 1).0'I Ad IM 1 .. a I~ Ael"I Fd 9 11 9 S9 Eoty Gr 1.01 1.19 Cu•! Sl I 11 9 01 Cm Cao I I~ S l~ J Atlrta In 11Sl 11 11 Eqty '°" J.ll J.11 C.nt SI 1.•1 SOS lrt( FdB 6 10 6 S• Alutur' lllS 10.IS Fnd Am 79S l.S~ "llOllO 10\ SJ! Stld'Ltv •II I BJ AGE Fd I n S.M Eqrtl GI 11 JS lJ 811 P~lars 3 86 I 21 SECURITY FD5: A!hl•1e l].19UUEllU11Trt 16SS ... Kn•ckr 6.16 6.'1 E<J111IY 169 I .OJ A!Dll• Fd ll.JJ II 16 EmtrO ).11 I.OS l(nk• Gtlt J.IJ 1.16 l"vt•I 6 61 I 19 a.mca11 F S.M SSJ E"'rqy 11MllM Lndmrk 6.U 1.Sl Ultr• F I.SS I.II Am Dvrs 91~ 10.)1 FJlrlld I Sl •.11 Lenl F" S.SS S.SS SELECTED l'DS: • Am E11tv I 110 S 16 Fm Burt '19 9 19 Ll!I GROUP: Am Stir I U I H lM EX,.JIESS Frd AA' t SI •.. C11 Ledr li.U 16 Sii ()i)o Fd 9 tl • •1 FUMOS: l'IOl!LIT't G,....tfl 6 II 1.11 Siii Sii~ 11 )11) ll (~11111 161 1.)9 GllOUP: l!hvcfl 11 ... U .tt !>enli<ltl 10.SJ II.IS lncom 9 11 t.n Bnd ltlb I.II •.61 L•b!V Fd l.~I l.9S Sefltry F 11 01 l~.16 '"•,tm 1"' 16) C1at11 1169 n.n Liie 1n1.. • I] t.s.i SH.t.lll!HLD GllP ' Soett 1.,, 1 ll Con••• t.•s ... t~J1~ • 1.n 1.11 ~~'(;~~ ~ ~ :::1 ,., Stock 110 '11 Cw ssec 7.1• J.61 SAYLES Flt! Fd •.ll 1.\1 p :::i f:.~1~ ~-~ ~~ ~!!. 1~·~! ::: C•a o~ 1l.S,1l.I~ H1•br 1~9 Ill ~ Am IPIY\l S l~ S.16 E¥er1t 11 .1111.66 Mutull 11.11 11.11 L!Q&I L 6 lt 6 II ·, Am Mui I JI 9.11 Fund 1S 16 H.ll LORD All: P1ce Fii 116 I.ft : AmNI Gr 11' !.•1 Pu•ll" tf0\071 A!IU•I 6.11 7.]I SMEARSDN l'DS: u AMCNOll S~lem F ,.ll 4.19 Am BIK J.t• J.1f AllllfC n .1• 11 1• GllDUP: Trend lf.16 J6.ll 9nd deb t .tS 10.tl '"com 11 Jl It IJ n C1al•I I 01 116 l'INANCIAL Lull'lern 10.n II.Sf lnVt\t '19 I~ •• 'I F"d 111v 1.11 8 46 PROGlllliMS: Lutl'ln In t .16 10.Jl Sfl Dell" 11.11 U.1J , <i•WIPI ~ 1? 9 01 Fin OVl'I f.)9 '.lB Mlnllll'I f.!rl ,.)9 Sf.ti! Fd l .U I.II , 1nc11m 1 U 1 as F;n tnd f 11 f 11 MliSS CO: SIGMA FUNDS: ~ Ventur 9.JO 10.0ll F•n lllC 1:1• i:,, Freem l .,, 9.16 Ca11 Shr 7.91 9,!S · W1N1t1 171?1J.1S Ve"t 111 f 11 tn~11F 9.l' 9.19 Inv 1056 11.\f • A,1.on J ,, '11 h!Fll Vil 11 .•~ n .68 Ml$1 F 11.6t 12.81 T•sl 7.11 I .I] 4 A11d1~ F 8.10 8.% l'lllST MASS rNCL: \IJntur t .1. 10.01 AJl.E INVESTORS: MIT 11.11 U.llO 5ml!n B 10.1110 IJ HOUGHTON: 01,c Fd 161 • 1~ MIG 1l.J9 11.51 SB l&G• 10.16 10 86 Fun<I A '71 5 11 G•lll Fii 1" I I~ MID • 11.19 u.a~ so Ge11F U .M \11~ Fut'I(! 8 IM I.I~ S!oclt ~ 1.91 1.11 MFO 11.118 IS.II $Wlll rn~ 8.11 I 11 r Slock 5~l 61,ht Multi 17D arn MCD lS:llll.H Swl11vG 611 6.11 A~~ Sd 111 '·" l'OJIUM GlllOUP·· Male\ '" 1.11 1.11 sovr 11'1 11 s• n 66 I LC Gii\ Bitl\.O!\ tl;ty•ac: Bav•• Q• lie'c" HI "8e11ton 1ro F~d 11 S111.S1 M~ll'I!• 1l 0111" 5.oeclrll S.11 1.61 H 11 ·11 •1 101 Fnd s u 111 M•d Am S.Jl s.tt S&P lnO 116 l .11 11 S111 11 Colum •SJ 9.19 M.311¥ Fd 1~19 11.19 ST.t.TE llND GllP: If/ J16 ll Fund 63'1 6l9 MSB F" Ill UJ Cctm Fii f 'tl Sl9 !91 6 H F~ G• •.sz .... Mtl BnG 13.Ull,)9 DiwHil 111 1.16 1 tl 1.tt l'OUNOERS MIF Fd 1.13 l .U '°"l)(Jr' S 11 S 69 GllOUP· M!F Gro l 1>11 S.CM St Fr Gr •St 111 •11 11 II 11 G•wlh. s n 1 •1 MllOm qt I ti 1.,0 SI Fr lllC •.u •.u Bero!•~ 11.6111.u l1Kom 11st nu MuOmin 11'f 9.11 Sl•te Sir 46.114100 6e•••~• '16 l ,\ F Mtulll t !2 t '4 Mui 511,, !rl lzt ST£AOMAN •DS: 6ond1lk ' 11 s 11 F b ell 11 n f1 u MuU Trs 111 1.11 Am l11d l n J 19 8~t Fd11 'JS ID 6" F-,~ F •.08 t.n Mii '""d 10 n 10 ,, ~n~~.1Fd l:!' : :~ Brow" l.l, l.6• t'lllN LIN N•T SEC 'OS· . ''''" •OIE ,.05, llULLOCI( GllOUP: · •UNDS· ONTC I Oii I !I Blll'I( t .1)(1 •.M B1l1nc 10.tl JO •1 . 81111 Fil 11.l't u ~ G•tfl S• ' SI I 1, B?"d Sr C.11 s.n ~olll 10.\] 10 n ~ C"n F" 2111 11 t1 Fr !nc:m 1 91 1.13 o,.,dn 3 lfl l .tt SUK• 1S.DS lS.,S Ojv Sflr J 61 'i1l US Gv S t 17 ll.11 Pref Stk 6 1J t .10 SIS Glt0U": Natwd • 67 IDs• Ulillt•e \ 11 1 6~ fncom .' 67 s 10 G""th 6 ll 6 01 NY VM 11•111 Sl Ae1 C11a t H S ll Slock Sr 6 IS 1.ll Ii-com I l t t. I' B•ri~m 10:1• 10 11 A\ Eqlv t IS , ~~ MGi-#'~lfO ~ l~ 1.Sl Smmlt t .19 10. 11 F•I LIE<1 11110'1 E .1 ,,·,,,,00 TP<hnl 6S\ 7.11 CG Fund 10 \.I I I 1• F~ Ml do o S! '·19 G~~'th 1i •? 11.!I ~~~~~: ~ 1?,~J 1l,~l ~1111 T•ll'I U 0111 IS ~~~e~.INCP '>hie 16.!] n )0 TMA All 9 01 t IS ~ ent $1\\ G ll I 1S.l6 Comm . 9 U \l 01 NE.l Ml t 6~ 9 S8 Tttmi>! G l.n I 91 HliNlflM 1mp1c a 11 a 9~ Nt~ C~nt 163 S 6J Tower C S.!ll .•. '' l'UNOS: 1 d I 11n11 lf Ntvwll'I •.11 O,I) Tr•n (1111 Ill •.I~ 0 881nc" 10 n,, SI " II\ r N•wl<"tn H.I! ''" • ' E 10 •• '' '' c Bnd Fd t.01 t .19 Pilat • I la I .SO Nw Ptrs 1t.IK U.fl f~d:, ~ "U,t111.9J r Cam SI~ I 11 l 11 G11!ew~ I.fl I 01 New Wld 11.tt U.6S 1a111 CG ) 00 ) lt t GrwlPI Stl ltt GE S. 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Comes in 2 sizes, 11 !h" or 13". Eosr. to install. With all fittings. 9400. ' • Black & Decker 3/4 H.P. Router Router kit includes #7 610 router plus 2 Wrenc~es, straight ond circular guide, bit, case. Model 7.611. 4499 3 Piece Nylon Brush Set M I . , .. l ll" ost popu or sizes; , 2" brushes. Nylon handles For all point ing jobs. Handy Wiss . Pruning Shea rs The way fo easily keep slirubs and bushes pruned just right • Easy grip handle. Model T78. 2•9 1 • Handsome LoBoy ~ \ . White Toilet · \ Made of white vitreous chind with special ,lo w ~ofile design. Fea· tures include everse trap, close· couple, ba llco k included. Toilet seat not included at this price. Black & Decker Belt Sander Belt installs easily on this 3'' x 14" LCG belt sander. No tilting, gougtng tor rocking. Model7459. 4999 Wiss Special Grass Shears Ideal way to trim your gross neatly and reach into tlio'8 hard to get at areas. Model 717. • 2•9 Wiss Special Hedge Shears Designed Ond balanced just right ·so you keep thoM hedges straight and lush looking. Modol 8·HT, 419 SAU PRICES GOOD TllU $EPT. 26 Waste King Fo.oci Waste Dispose r Patented onti·jom mech·a· niSm of 1toinle1s steel, rub· It., CM1 pressiol'\i ·mount. Model2500. • 2688 'Doorkeeper' Automatic garage . Door Operator • • Opens and closes your garage door eledronicolly. Turns lights on and off. And , it's safe, quiet and easy to install. 1/-4 H.P. mo- tor,. safety stop, .50' working radius. • ' • ' • . \ OAJLV PILOT 33 Ri·ggs, King lay Out All-time Sports Hustle HOUSTON (AP) If Bobby Riggs ment for the final seuion before "There's oo way that 55-year-<>ld guy "Ill gel$ behind in hl.-$100,000 wJllner·tal<e,/ill tonlgWs producUort that wlllj>e televtl<d handle ~c I sWl hava I"'! much yr!cle. Battle of the Sex.es teMis lflatcb with · into 36 countries lncluding EnJ}aiia. Tbere'1 no reasoo. J shoUld lose to an Old Billie Jean King tonight, he con ,iw•Y• whero it will be showp al ! o.m, In LDn-• guy like tbat.' ;, try &Omethlng h<! does even belier than ' don. 1 • t 7 l!<prdless of who Wins In the best ol play tennis -talk. · ·••This 1$?1'1 just ft tennls~miitch, It's a five sets Wibowdown, Riggs already has Billie Jean and Riggs were eye be.II to battJe of the sexes and the· gladiator of won one championship -world's eye ball for the fin al time be!ore their the men happens lo be me," Riggs said. greatest hustler. match at a news conference Wednesday "I happened to be cast in that role, a 55-Rigp, who disappeared into relatJve and Mrs. King told Riggs she didn't want year-old man with one foot in the grave., obscurity alter winning the 1 9 3 9 any \ 11shenanlgans" during their in· who hasn't played tournament tennis for Wimbledon title, became a household ternittlonally televised. extravaganza in 15 years. I ..,.ord when he started talking down the "8trodome. "Billie Je ... would be~ to women's tennis and demo 11 s bed '!be, ~year-aid ·machine gun.tal~g ge~ on the urt with a good men's Australia's Margaret Court S.2, 6-1 ln a Riggs, son of a minister, was in bis ele-player. Bu look at me. say similar matt;h 1n Florid ' Ul"IT.....,.. TENNIS HUSTLER BOBBY RIGGS OF NEWPORT BEACH· ~WAITS 'HIS !LATEST CHALLENGER. .J~bnson Tops Mark 40,000 Disappointed; :A.aron to Play Tonight By GLENN WlllTE. Of nw o.1r l"llot s1ett l.OS·ANGEbES -Forty-tho.u.sand peo- ple . cruwde<I · 'into Doc!l!er St•dium Weqnesday ·night, most o!. lJ!tm bOpeful or seeing Hank Aaron•hit a home'n.1n1and of having the Dodgers win a. game. nley gOt half of their 'wishes. The Dodgers 'defeated Atlanta, 4-1,, with four runs In the last of the eighth on two hila and four waik.s. Aaron has assured fans he'll be .In ac- tion tonight. Small wonder. AI Downing is pitching for LA and Aaron has touched Downing fOJ;' a pair of homers already this season. "Oh, yes, I'll be playing," Aaron com- -inehteil:"I could hsve played.Wednesday night., but it's tough. I just can't make it ill'tbe titne. My body time was fouled up after lhat 'flight from Atlanta." Andy Messersmith, 14-10, served the home run pitch to Johnson. ·sides Line Up For Showdown At Astrodome By Asaocioted Press Is Riggs rigged 'for victory or will Billie Jean be the King -er, Queen? Who knows? But plenty of people -from women's liberation activists to the rac-- quet-swinging vice president -will watch the . tennis battle of tile sexes · tonight , ro rm~ out. "As a 'tennis bug, I'm looking forward to the match and subsequent Riggs' vic- tory party,'' said Sen. LOwell P. Weicker, R-Conn., who'll be giving a dinner party tonight ror his stall. "As a politician I've already said too much." Riggs has been a promoter's dream Jn drumming inte~l {or the match with Mrs. King, maldiil: trips to surrwndlng On TV T -l ght Channel 7 at 5 Texas communities and always talking. Mr1. King , a five-time Wimbledon women's champion, is the recognized leader of equal women 's rights !or tennis movement and She says this match means more to her than money. "We're changing," MI'S. King S8id of women's tennis. "Businessmen are Willie Mays Bids Farewell To Baseball NEW YORK (AP) -Willie Mays. whose all-around playing ability earned hi~ legendary s t a t u s despite being hampered by numerous injuries, says goodbye to baseball today. Mays' retirement as an active player was announced an a news conference at Shea Stadium. "I love pressure because it doesn't botbeT me," Mays once said, adding: "I love to be in a situation where I know I have to get a hit." That more or less swns up the philosophy or :h-fays, baseball 's beloved "Say Hey" ki.d for nearly a quarter~­ tury. Now 42, Mays was bobbled by injuries this year, after playing out the 1972 season despite an lnjured left knee that required cortisone treatments and a gim- py rtght knee~that gave him trouble. Th.ls season was the first time in his zz... year career that Mays had been placed on the disabled Jist. He injured his right shoulder May 14 while making a throw against the Houston Astros and spent 15 days on the disabled. list. "l wan~ to play as long as I can help," Mays said recently. "I've always said that I'll quit"'when it's no longer fun for me or no longer any help to the team." He received $165,000 a year from the Mets, who a~e obliged to pay him $50,000 annually until he reaches 50 whether be plays or not. • Mays was acquired by the Mels from the San Francisco Giants on May 11, 1972 in exchange !or Charlie.. Willtams, a 24- year-old rookie pitcher, and an undJsclos- ed amount ol. cash. Estimates of the mon- ey involved ranged ffum $100,000 to $200,000. In his first home game with the Mets he hit a game-winning home run that beat his former teammates ~. He defeatt;<I h~ fonner club again a week later 1n his first game as a visiting player to San Francisco's Candlestick Park by walloping a two-nm homer as the Mets defeated lbe Giants' 3-1. His contract was purchased from tbe Birmingham Black Barons in 1950 by the old New York Giants and he made his major league debut. the following year. His first major league hit was a home run off· Warren Spahn at the Polo Grounds May 28, 1951. But Aaron rode the 'bench, saying h'ls body was all fouled up ofter the four-boor flight from Atlanta to Los Angeles the nigl:lt before. However, fans did get In .oo. one record -when Atlanta's Dav&JohnsoftJbacked his 43rd home run of the lelSOll to become the top home run hittilig second bueman of all time for a single'aeason. "It was a thrill when ·1 hit it because it put us ahead l~ in the fourth, but'.it diminished in a hurry," Johnson said. 1be Dodgers, who onJy managed to stay 51> gamea behind CincinnaU In tile National League West, finally beat knuckleballer Phil Niekro •with a rally started by walks lo Bill Rustell and Dave Lopes. When Nfeki-o wild pitched to Bill Buckner, Alan Closter came in to relieve. He was. voted Rookie or the Year in 1951, Most Valuable Player in 1954 and 1965 and was the National League borne President Nixon's press office said, it run champion in 1955, 1962, 1964 and 1965. doubted the President would be walching Mays, who hit 660 hooters, compiled the match or that ~ would. care to com· -ms Hljbest single se&10n l)attmg average ment on the matter. in 1958 when he batted .347. 1bird. on the H1s rap into the Dodgers bullpen eras· ed the previous mark: of 42 set 51 years agO by Rogers Hornsby of the St. Louis Cardinals. Endorsements. For White Men, Aaron Claims LOS ANGELES (AP) -Henry Aoron approaches Babe Ruth's ttvered career h!Jn.!e run record with a feeling that ~ik!ng the mark would be more valuable commercially If a while player had done It. The Braves put one ruMer on base l n the ninth before reliever Jim Brewer put them down. Even with a man on base,-Aaron didn't plncb hlt, but Alston commented. "If they ~et two men-oh, you can bet you're going to see Mr. Aaron." Braves manager &:kl1e Mathews -agreed he pliDoed to use Aaron U two reached base. · A crowd of 31,012 paid ill way into Dodger Stadium and booed when Aaron wasn't In the Wednesday night lineup. "We want Hank," came the chant early, and later in the game, when Marty Perez went in as · a pinch hitter, the crowd booed. • Al1111• OJ loft Allfth• 141 .. '"""' 1i. '""' SOtOLopta.fb 1100 C 0 D 0 B~,lb ; DO O )OfOO.rvty,Jb 0100 JtlOWO.vll,tf •Ill G•rr, rt Ltm, tr • 1 t 1 1'9f9U*Oll, e l a a 1 2 0 I 0 WCl'lwtttd,ff 3 t I O Joooc..,.,Jb .fOl2 But Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, a all-time home run list behind Babe Ruth tennis player remembered for some .and Hank Aaron, Mays collected 51 rather spectacular forehands, "will homers in 1955 while batting .319 a n d almo~ certainly be watching the game, that year also stole 24 bases. He spent but he is not prepared to go out on a limb his entire major league career with the with predict.ions oft be results," aides Giants organization before being sent to said. the Mets. · At stake in the Houston AstrodOme tonight is a $100,000 winner·take-all purse. "May the best person win," said tiew York mayor John V. Lindsay. . "It is immaterial to' me who wins,'' said actor Dustin Hoffman , who will be watching the match with his tennis teacher at a private party in New York. "What I would like to see develop out of this match is for Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs to fall in Jove, get married and : raise champion unisex tennis pla,ers." Femtnist Gloria Steinem and others at Ms. magazine are planning a "tremen- dous bash" for the staff with lots of money riding on Billie Jeao, of course. • SA.N DIEGO SHIFT WEIGHED BY NL CHICAGO -The National League warily is weighing the proposed shift of the San Diego Padres to Washington, D.C., graveyard or two American League franchises since 1960. The NL owners Wednesday beard details of the long proposed •12 million sale of the Padres to a trio cl. Washington men, but then dodged an immediate showdown on approving lhe franchise shift. reall1lng that we are marketable and can help make money ror thelr companies and that we arfProfessionl'iI athletes foo. "1 more than any olher person want thJs. And you'd better believe that this matters a lot more than just money to me." Whatevtt it means to the participants, the whole promotion adds up to the big- gest and most unusual tennis match in history. I Far from typifying the stoic at- m06phere-' and polite clapping after a good shot at most tennis matches, this one will have all the showmanship of a three ring circus. \ 1 I There'll be cheering sections on each slde._ or the court tor Riggs and J<lo&..l!ep rallies were held for both Wednesday night With a crowd of 35,000 to 40,000 ,on band, it's doubl!ul the usual quiet wiltbe o..bserved. Just to make sure, the entire University of lfouston marching band will add li veliness to the occasion. Movje 'Stars are flying in and many will participate in a celebrity tennis tourna- ment with the finalists scheduled to play prior to the King-Riggs match. Riggs and ~ing agreed that their match was good for women's tennis. Ul"I T•~~ BILLIE JEAN GOES AFTER BOBBY RIGGS TONIGHT IN HOUSTON. i\ngels Sweep Twin Bill ·; _, • ' .. AL Strikeout .. Record • •• ' Doesn't Thrill Ryan ARLINGTOl'f, Tex. (AP) -There are a lot of pitchers who wou.1d be thrilled with a seven strikeout performance. _ Call!omia's Nolan Ryan is not one of the'!'. Despite his "low" total, Ryan knocked Rube-Waddell out of the record book with bis third inning strikeout of desi gnated hitter Bill Sudakis. That was the former Aaogels Slate ..... _ .. KM~mtl $1ipt. 20 C•lllornl• •I Tex•• Sept. 20 Calllw.fll• •I Texas Sept. 71 t •lllornl• •I TIXll 5:2J p.m. S;IS p.m. 2;.S.S p.m. New York Mets righthander's 350tb strikeout this season, eclipsing the American · League record set by Waddell in 1904 when he pitched for the Philadelpbla AtlileUcs .. Ryan now needs 27 strikeouts to tie Sandy Koufax.' major league record of 382. He has two scheduled starts re-~ maining -against Minnesota in Bloom· ington Sunday ard tHe Twins in Anaheim next Thursday r\l,Bht. If he has a sbot at the one-season strikeout record after }hose two starts, he will face the Twins again in the season finale. Ryan's five-hit perionnance earned the Angels a 6-2 victory in the first game of a twin-night doubleheader against t he Rnngers and lifted his record to 19-16. The Angels swept the twin bill, taking the nightcap M behind the patent hitting of Frank Robinson and Richie SCheinblum. "If I break the strikeout mark and don 't win 20 games, I'll be dlsappointeCI., .. said Ryan. "That's been my goal all along -winning 20 games. To hn!Jk Koufax record, I can 't afford to have · another low strikeout game like dis one." • Ryan fanned Texas shortstop J.tm Mason in the first inning to tie Wa~s 6J.year-old record. ' l'lllST OAMI C•llf•nil• f61 Tt11• 11J RI._,,, ef Pf119M,lf FAOOll'l50n,cll'I ROllv•r, lb McCr•w, lb Sr•nton, rl ,8P1r11e..,2Q s1ep1•11n, c Chalk, IS NAy1n, p •• r 111111 •. n r•rM l J J 1 ON.il0rl,7b ) t • I t JOIOMolton.M COf,t J I J 2 Sud•kls. dh J. t 0 O J o o D l!hirrvohl. rf l 1 '2-1 C 2 I 0 SPtnC.,.,ltl .f O .._, l 0 l 1 M•dlack,Jb l l to •1l2B1111n•r.ll •6 10 •OOOB!lllngs,c lOtO • o 2 o H1nl1,cf .f o 1 ·1 ODDOBrobtrg,p o•:· JBruwn, p o o _,. JI Durl!1m, p o O O o T~•I• 31 6 12 6 Total1 31 J \. J C•lllornll ;JOI OQI 001 -6M Ta.1 010 000 010 -2 t l!:-MldlOdc, McCr•w. Dl"-C.•llfoml1 1, Tent 1. L08-C1llfornl• I. T1ht111 1. 211-Rlvtt"a, I'. 111111,.. tO!I. HR-8urrough1 21. 58-Rlv.ri., D. NNon, H•r• r11. S-Rlver1. II" M R. IR a• SO N. Ay•n rw, ''·H J ' Bl'Obe!"ll IL, '-fl 2 1/3 J. Brown I 2/3 Dur/Wm S Wl"-N. Ry•n. T-2:21. ' • ' ' SICOND GAMI! ' • • ' ' • • ' C~ ft) Tpq (4) . ' . , • • • • ' ••rll,., •rlrt111 lliven,Cf S 0 1 o OH.itOll,~ 4 1 } 0 Sdvtblm. (f 2 3 3 2 H•rr•ll. II .. I 1 0 FRoblnson, dh S 1 J 4 llurrugM, rl c • O o ROii...,, lb S 0 2 2 AJohnsm, dh 4 I l. I Stinton, II S 0 1 0 Mldloclr., Jb • t 1 0 G11ll•ghtr, 311 J I l O Grl ...... It •· 0 t I 8P1rker, :lb .). I O O Frtl,IOll, lb " I I, I Scancb, t; C 0 0 0 H1rrl$, d 4 0 .. 0 HJ ~k a white player would have en- dorsements just flooding at his feet ," A'afon commented. "They're certainly not flooding at my feet . I do get a few endorsements, maybe when someone feela sOrry for me." l n compafison with the financial Cleats he has received during his home nm assault,' now Just three sh)' of RUth's 714, Aaron pointed to the endorsement op- pQrtunlties given swimmer Mark Splti. Ev•n .. 3b B•k.,, cf O.JohlllOn, 2b T'llldlno, lb SJ1<111011, 11 Gogjln, ph c ... "°"•· e PH!lkro, p Closter, p JNllkro, p MP.,.t,pll """ All•nl• 1 0 0 I P1clorlk,rt I 0 O O 401011:11111'11, •• 21 2 0 2000Ms1nlll.I) 20 00 OtOOMol•,llfl 1000 ooooar.wer.p 0000 1 0 0 0 U 1-• I • TOl•ls fl 4 1 4 llllD HID 000 -1 Cih1lk.11 3l2 1 S,..,..1,t :to .lo CWrlvhlt O 0 II 0 0 HudlOll. 0 f 0 0 J8rawn. o 0 GI • I Htnnlnotr, O 0 0 ,t · 0 F1WC111lt, p 0 0 o~ 0 LAllen.p o t '9 o -To!•lt )f t IS f TDl•I• aJ 4 -1 J C1Ufornl• 2JO 102 OIO...a.,.J T•xa1 300 001 000 - Wilt Still Mulling It Over 11-te ea.me.t seven gold · medals swim- ming one year In the Olympics and the endorsements really came in," Aaron tifd. 1"Did Maury Wills make a lot on e.n- doneme:nts atter his 104 .stolen buell?" WUls, who atole a record nwnber of bu.et. tn lll62, wu in attendaoce at lhe Atlanta game ln Los Angela 'and con- firmed he hsd received jun one op- ponunlty to eodone I product -l bat· I tery. . To 1 suggestion that he might have had more endo..,.ment oppo-IUes I! he had played In New York, the Braves' alu8ger replied, "Johnny Beiic1i doem'l play In New York.'' • Aaron seld he was gl.0 to get the op- portunity to throw out the first ball at the Wotld Serles s.lnce "10 many~ball players have to wall unUI they hive reUred to get that honor." Los: AngtlH CIOO ODD 6--4 ll"Nll:lll:IBSO l".'Nltl!;,_ (I., 1).f) 7 I/I S 2 2 2 C ClollW ' • O I 2 S t O J. Ntlkro 2/3 I o 0 1 t Mlmlh IW, 1._101 I J l I l 6 a,..., 110001 ' He's Reportedly Irked by Acquisition, of Smith 1!'-S.nd1. Dl"-T•-1• 2. LOe-c.llicwni. M1_ i.A., 4, 28-Suern., A. Oliver, Hft-F. ROOllllOfl 'l:/,'b• 90tl 6, SB-D. N•i.on, H•rr1h, S-At.,.,._ JllC"- khtlnOlm. • · '""······ lt¥t -B,--.It. HI~ -Dy ~Ill! P. LOS ANGELES (AP) -"Doo'l con-Cbomberlain bH also pointed out thst elude that W'tlt hss absol_utely committed the Laken did not bother to acquire himself to anything," ays-the attorney anyone to replace fellow holdout-Jerry West. .__ Wtf .,,....,. b'I' 1 for WUt Cbamberlain about reports lhe Althouah there was U'Ollftt.' tatioo that m-c"*""' .,, 4 ta I •• k ·• ·~·• M _ ~·1: 1 supers r prolessinoa -• etball center Chamberlain bod made his decision, •..,.,. .., s ls ready to leave the Los Angeles Lakers. Goldberg said Wednesday "I wouldn't ~'1f :~ 'l w ~. 1 ·~~tav•~ agai'nlt the l.akers.1 wall at tbeod. tele~ for any an--...., rt/ ,,.. ,., , 1. • ..-t be when the dust setiles, WI t • .....,..,..t t ay. ~i:o::...o;r.-..,.,.. ~,;•"" .will be back with the Lakers," lawyer Sy 1bere \;98& w<ll'd Chamberlain might iiirno11 _..c.11twn1• ~'Mi Goldberg .said Wednesday. make an announcement today in New ~~ Z \;: "" Repcrts uid a· decisiolfwas close...ovt:r York where he. was tuppoted to appear &sr.: .._. 11 .,,,,1 ---Wbat....-.s llkl~lo be ••.ooo a7't1r ~.. to Jl"OlllOte bll M\f boot. But Ootd1Str1 Arll'Oftl ... o::'........, J' fer. [or Chamberlain, 37, to leave the Nit said, 0Wllt mustj make up bis mind, l l'::.'L°"'' · .,., · U~ Buketbalh\JiaoclallOn end join the doubt !Me will he a news conltrence °*"' w:..o:'.r· .:'? San Diego COoqULltador1 of the American wtlhln the-nut day or two." ~~.,.,.., ovw 1 I!.'!~ a Baakt:tbal1 AslodaUon. Goldberf; confirmed meetings were rwtr,o;;, ~':1'"""'* . 1 Part Ill ai.tnberlaln's pique Is over held' over the olfer fe< Chamberlain to ,,,..., o.i -.,_.., • .,, ' ' ...... _ E'-··' ~--'·-! Sa f•" :'r' ... -.,:.or,:• ., • ..,._ acquisition ol center ·-~ ....... ~ a ....,~...,.cit a n Diego. . Football Odds in and help the Conquistadors pick up the tab. "Some tempting d!en; hsve been made. Wilt will have to make a very im· portant decision, one of the most im- portant ol his life." Goldberg said. "We are coos.idering all options which C. Wright (W, 11-lt) f I • 4 t 'l Hud$OOI tl , •fl I l/J J J S 1 ~ t J.Bruwn 22/J ' I I t •1 Htt>ftl~ I 1/J I J 2 20 r Fouuulf I 111 1 0 0 L.AI ... 2S11t ,• T-2;16. ~. Riggs 9-5 Pickt are available to hfm:. Hts eontract obliga-RENO _ Oddsmakers here have. Uons with the Lakcrs have expired,'' the Bobby ftia1n1 a 9'5 favorite to deftiia.t attorney said. --He said that. there. was 8 ooe-l'_ear ~ Billie Jean King in tonight's "Ba~Ol tJOn remilMtg on Qwntierlalft's Uliers the. Sues" in Houston. + contract but added, 11Slnoo,the Rick Bat· North Swa nson at the Reno T\lrf Qwb ry case, at leaat 15 cases have knocked said the odds had been 8-5, Rias lot the-optlon ·clause for a loop." ~ were lengthened because of heavy lit!· Hirey's case upheld the right of a club lin• on Riggs. to bold a player to ll1e <Ille year oplion. Swanson added his be1tors seemed' to Chamberlain hH completed hlJ fifth be fav•rl"" Rl•gs ood small bettors ~ year ·with the Lekers alter orlalnally g<>lng with Mn. King. He could not tx• ' c Olinmluloner Bowle Kuhn Invited .•• Aalill-IQd bij.J•lltl.i)' to tile World· Serles -. Aaron hid crlilChle•I° the-com~ mlaalonor when be failed to acknowledge the aluner'• 700th home run. Gr:::i.Ma,C:~.,..... .., 2 Smith from. Buffalo. , No conftnmUon wu mtde over other ~:=.,..= ,. L-i' · . "Ctn yoU lma1lne Wilt sitting on the reports that aakt the 7·foot-1 center wa1 MT~•I•' c 1'1¥M "' ~. -'tienchT" --'-alked1 ·the -•tto_, ~h·m· olfered ..... more than ·th&-'3001000 -ldflol! ..... , ""'""'" "' • • • ol • '"'J. .,...._ ! v••• :;:.'\, .. -~ "I.: , btrlain baa v Ced Impatience at the bracket he now &ell lrom ll1e Lakers and algitlng !or five years. He tried to plain wby. ·rooe10tla~ earller...coot1:acL1Yilh the,,. lb I•s.Vepa..J:hurchlll llowDa ~-_ team , wblcll 881• It refuses to redr aw and Race Book .hsd Riggs a 5-J favoAIL ':.= H~~: cflrOM~:rr,.:w ·~ thQugbl of tutoring the young Smith. that other ABA CluDs were ready to pitch agreements. There was not much bftllng-aetlon. • 1 J • _ _., .... ' . .. lJAiLY PJLOT Mater · Dei, San-ta Ana . Clash Uni, ·Tu·stin Collide Tonight ! : 0 '1..-0ughlin l G~ars Trojans Passing Grune Victory .hungry Univers ity and 1\lstin High hope to start orf the 1973 football season in a way they haven't started many others when they clash at 1 tonight al Mission Viejo stadium in the opening game fot both. University, a loser in its first six games of the season in each of t.be past two years (it waS later awarded one forfeit victory for the 11 contests) hasn't won an opener since 1970, its first year of competition. Tustin, meanwhile; hasn't won an opener since 1968 and has managed just one opening game touchdown in the last, tour years. There's litUe wonder then, that both coaches are pointing toward the game to erase memories and start a new tradi· tion. Both teams will start 1 e D lo r quarterbacks with impressive statistics from last s~n. University's Mike O'Loughlin passed for 1,239 yards in 1972, and Tustin's Jim DeBord totaled 1,265 for the year. Both teams are counting on improved ·running attacks with Tust in Dashing seniors Paul Moberg (190) at fullback and George Gay (170) at halfback. University counters with fullback Jim Green (IS!) and tailback Murry Graham (150). DllfY """' Staff P'Wo ERIC HEARD HELPS LAGUNA BEACH'S PASSING GAME. Tustin bas an edge in experienced receivers with slotback Jeff Deweese, the nllers' leading receiver last year, and Jim Goldstone returning. University has rebuilt a receivin_g corps (which was decimated by gradualioo) around juniors Gary Pierot and Chris Stark and senior Tony Graham, Graham Is the only member of the University group with varsity experience. 'Carlson Returns ~i Artists Ace .in Opener ' f (Football practices at Laguna Beach ~ .suddeoly gol a lot quicker on 'Wednesday. : That's the day 10.0 sprinter John . .C.rlsoo, expected to g i v e the Artists ..fnucb or their offensive pWlCh, reported jo the football field wilh a note from t~e ~oclor for coach Hal Akins. .(, It said Akins could count on the swift s. 41, 160-pound back to be available Friday ',Ught when Laguna hosts first-year ')chool, Cypress High, in an B o'clock ]:ame. ., .. 'John could give this team a real lift,'' ~I! ays Akins. "He could be ooe of the best sks in our league if he just stays al thy. ~"I'm not really sure 00w ·much he 'll elp us Friday against Cypress, though. e still isn't really football orien'ted yet. <But boy, is he fast." ~ The Artists had what Akins cailed a ~ery disappointing sCrimmage against t. . Carlsbad. Ile was especially disgusted with· the ·play of some of the bigger linemen and has made a few ad- justments. "'We've had what I'd call very good workouts this week,'' he says. "We had ·to because Cypress, even though a fi.rst- year school, impressed me in its scrim· mage against Dana Hills. They seem to be well drilled iand fundamentaJJy sound . They execute well and aren't concerned with any fancy stulf." His mm team meanwhile will have six players going both ways. "We're going to try to establish our running game flfSt ," he says. Hl 'm basically a run-oriented coach who thinks too many had things can hawen when you pass. "But when the situation calls for the pass, we'll do it." With Carlson in the backfield, however, you can expect the Artists to run even 11,1ore now. On paper, the teams are evenly match· ed in Ille line, wlth Univenity's slreru!lhs being Ted crego (213) and Kurt Sduilten (200) at the lackles. 'l\Jstln Is led by ..-Curt Nicl!ols, a 175 pounder and Greg Hamilton (175). 1'he only player of import expected to miss the pme ..Is Univeni!f's Randy .. DeLapp, a po1¢Dtial starting "'3rd who wW he oot of l<tlon with a knee injury. "It's difficult to rate this game, but 1 think it'll be close," University coach J~rry Redman says. "They're a good passing team, their running game looks to be very improved this year. "DeBord is their key man,· or course, he's a fine runner and thrower, but ir there's 8QY key to the game it'll be mistakes. 1be team that makes the fewest errors, mental and physical, will probably be the one that wim." "We were guilty of quite a few errors in our scrimmage last week, but they were correctable ones anyway, and if we can eliminate them altogether we've got a good chance to win." · UlllYlfllfy u...,.. --TE Nidlols 112 225 Corrtr l T t.T .Cr• 7U l•l 80Mtt LG LG Ecc~ 170 165 McG-RG RG P1rchtn UO 2fM Poirier ltT C H.ndfftld 19S 151 Goodrldl DE R1' Sch11ltlft 200 175 Be-ntO!l LG se T. Gr•ntm • 1~1 1a Or-...rn ca QB O'Louohlln 176 155 Plerot ca l'B M Grllhem 150 l.:i Sllrll S FL Plerot lli l.W 011~ S FB Green 111 ' DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO Baseball Standings BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS! 1964 VOLVO 122 CPE. 4 cyl., 4 11'ffd, rMlt, hHltr IOTS4t NIW rtd p.tlnl bltdl f1Hl9ht. $877 1968 TOYOTA 4 Dlt. A•IOmlftC lranamlHfl~, t.tdle, 1111Mr1 {Wlf114)" $1199 1967 VOLVO 4 OR 144 AMERICAN LEAGUE East w L Baltimore 89 62 Boston 83 69 Detroit 80, 71 New York 75 78 Milwaukee 72 80 Cleveland 67 86 West Oakland 90 61 Kansas City 62 uo Chicago 74 78 Minnesota 73 77 California 7i 79 Texas 53 98 We4Msd1y'1 ••mn Mltw1ukt11 7, Cl-lend ' C1lltornl1 M ; T1l{ll 2~ 8Qtfllfl 3, Ntw Yori! 1 ()et(olf)O, 811ffinot~ 1 Chlc1g0 4, 1<1nse1 Cltv 3, 12 lrmlngt1 01kJ1nd 3, Mlnneso!I 0 ToHY'• Glll>ll Pct. .589 .5% .530 .490 .474 .438 .596 .539 .487 .487 .473 .351 GB 611 9 15 1711 23 8'k 1611 161k 1811 37 0Ak11nd fl<MW'ln 6-7 •nd Odom 4·1 1) 1t MlnM$0l1 !Go!ll 6-1 Ind Hind$ 6-10) C1llfornl• (Sl/1119'1' 18·11 1nd Hind .J.li) 11 Tl)l;8t !D11"'1i"9 Q.t 11'111 Sll!t:lert 1·111 811tlmor1 tP.iFMI' 11-1 11 o.tn>lt {Fryman 6-11) Chlc1go (Forsttt y.4) 11 Kinan City ($cllllf0rfl 17· 11) ~ Oti!y o•mn KNO!Jltd l'lrkf1Y" G1m1t: 01kl1nct 1t MlnnetOI• c .i11om11 11 Tex•• BOiton II Detroit Chkl!IO ti 1<1111119 CJty B1ltlrnore 11 Mllw•ukM Only eamtt 1chea111ed NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division. ·~L Pittsburgh 75 74 Montreal 75 76 New York 75 77 Chicago · 72 79 Philadelphia 67 85 w .. t Cincinnati 94 58 Los Angeles 89 64 San Francisco 83 68 Houston 78 77 Atlanta 73 81 San Diego 56 96 Wl'llMS1$1Y't ··-Cl'llcl90 t. MclntlWll 6 Houllon t-3, Sin Dlt90 .M F'tlll..ttllll'lll I, St. LOI.Ill 2 N.-, Yort. 1, Plttlburvh l l ot AllOlle• 4, Atl111\ll I Clndrwilf s, hn ,.nincltco 1 TtcllY"I G1met Pct. .503 .497 .493 .477 .441 .618 .582 .550 .503 .474 .368 GB Ill SI II 4 114> 51> 1011 1711 22 38 Mon!re1I CRento 14·101 11 Cl'lleloglO (Jll'lklns 12·151 Clncln~ll !Grlnul•r 13-9) 11 Sen Frlfl(.IKO IBry1n1 22·111 -ti!. t.oul1 CF01ttr 13-1) 11 Phli.dllpt\I ll.ollbolll 1~ " . lthbur11h (Roolcft" "-SI 11 New York IK-n 12· "' At1tn11 (kfM11ler .. n 11 Lot Anollll (Downlno f. " 1 Only Glmll ICllfdulld , Deir ......... ,.. UNl'S RICK HANDFIELD .(54), MIKE O'LOUGHLIN PLAY TONIGHT. Sports in Brief McKay Raps Trojans; Britain in Golf Lead LOS ANGELES -Coaeb John McKay continued to criticize his No. 1 ranked University of Southern California Trojans Wednesday as the squad worked out for this Saturday's game against Georgia Tech. Mier the last Trojans workout in pads before the gatQe at Atlanta , McKay snap- ped: .. I'm glad this practice is ·over so we won't have to have it again." McKay again berated bis team over its 17.0 seaJOD opening victory o v e r Arkansas. League's Eastern champion's city and the National League's Western cbam· pioo's city on Saturday, Oct. 8 . •Casals 'l'riumpu HOUSTON -Rosemary Casals, a tiny Jobber from San Francisco, says it pays to have confidence . "I never doubted I would win, 11 she said Wednesday night after defeating Kathy Kuykendall of Miami H , S.2, S.3 to advance to the quarter-finals in the $30,000 Houston Women's Tennis Touma· ment. e Americans T rail SeaJod.seeded Kerry Melville o f MUIRmLD, SooUand -Britain's A-all• and sixth-seeded Nancy Gunter long .. hot Ryder Cup team took an early of Lake Livin&ston, Tex., al80 advanced lead against tbe Heavily favored but eighth-seeded Karen Krantr.cll:e ol Americans 'Jbursday in-the opening Australia was a second round casualty. matches o( the ·three-day international Miss Melville defeated Laura FJeming, golf Series. · 7-5, 6-3, and Miss Gunter defeated Mona The British-Irish team assumed an Sballau, M, M. early 2·1 lead. One match-Lou Graham Francoise Durr ol France upset Miss ~ Favored To Top Saints In '73 Opener Maier Del High's new look Monardis, under coach Gary Carr, battle arcb-rlval Santa Ana 'tonight at Santa Ana Bowl in the opening round of football hostility for 1973. It's an 8 o'clock start and the Monarchs are rated one-po~t favorites to hand .coach Tom Baldwin's Saints their seventh loss in the nine-game series. Santa Ana hasn't won since 1968 and the Saints a're hampered tonight with the loss of starting line backer Tony Paulo and full back David Kersch, among others. Mater Dei's only preseason casualty has been fullback Hector Delgadillo, But Delgadillo rnay see some action although Bob Macauley has taken his starting post tonight. Macauley was Mater Del's top in the Monarchs' scrimmage with Newport Harbor. ~ Teamhig up in the backfield with Macauley are quarterback steve Martin- dale and tallback Jim Gardea. lt gives Mater Dei an imposing attack with M&rtindale's aerial game and Gardea's quick, darting running. Santa Ana counters with quarterback Mike Molina and a wicked wishbone at· tack. . . Speedsters Edmond Burks, J 1 m Gastelo and Rick Jones provide the 5e.ints with the outside threat and fullback Jim Crandall likes to move the ba11 inside when the opposition tries . to key on the pitchout series. Neither team · is exceptionally big in size, an oddity for lbese opponents. Carr rates the Santa Ana attack similar to what he's seen against Foun- tain Valley High while assisting at Estan· cia in the Irvine League. "Santa Ana has the good outside speed. inside runners and it has Molina at quarterback," says Carr. Molina is the key in the wishbone. It's his responsibility to keep or pitch the ball off at the cnlcla1 moment. Martindale passed !or 729 yards in 1972, completing 54 of Ill attempts. lie ripped Santa Ana in the opener, com· pleting eight of 12 for 145 yards. Gardea rushed for 84' y>rds and a 4.6 average against Santa Ana and scored the go-ahead touchdown. °"""" IMtw Del U_,. OltlllM Ti ..,_I 180 1• ...,_...,.. LE LT Peoen 200 110 ltldoe LT LG AIV1ru llO l» WlnlhllMr MO c L1Gr•ndl\lr llO TU t.oou flt RG W1i.rt. 175 lU RlllNll ltE RT Bent llO 17S MKl11lw RLB 5E Oudllr. lil 165 $!,lllfy LL B Qll ~n1ndli. llCI uo Gon,.m ca TB ~ 160 165 Oudrtr. CB f9 MK111lev ltS 155 Vivi-s Ft. N•ltre 145 1• Prltd S Two Straight Shutouts Still Haunting Tars and au Chi Rodri f the u · ed G1"antdte H , 7-<I and 'l'«Y Frelz of guez o rut Studio City, Colli., defeated Laura Newport Harbor lligh's football team States playing Tony Jacklin and Peter Rossouw of South Africa, &-2, ~3. figures to be a little more psyched up Oosterhuis of England -was even • La-r's Views than usual when it faces invading Corona throogb 16 holes. ~ del Mar in the 1973 season opener Frida• HOUSTON -Corona de! Mar's Rod · < e l\'ewcomfJe Wins Laver said Wednesday the Bobby Riggs-night. COLUMBIA -Top seeded John Billie Jean King match has given tennis Although It doesn't lake much to get Newcombe and fourth seeded Clark 8 boost but, in the lq nm, the sport either team turned on for the backyard Ur•ebner _were Jdie today afw Jaldng shoul<lnot be burlesqued. battle, Newport probably has a JitUe opening singles matches Wednesday in "Tenn111 ls no Iaugtiinj matter·, an<I the JllOre-golng for it psychologically. ----•-- the first aMual Palmetto Tennis Classic. tennis format baS 00 place for comedy,'' The Sailors of coach Don Lent have Newcombe had no ' trouble defeating the Australian star said. bowed to Corona del Mar's Sea Kings the Grahams w u f G B 'lain past two seasoos -and even more t we o reat n ' M, &-"The match will continue to keep ten-frustraUng is the fact they've failed to 4. nis in the national coosclousness, just as ..1--.1 .... 7 Graebner lost bis opening set to owen Bobby Flsdler's oherumlgans in lcoland score --""""'" -0 and 21-0 decisions. Davidson of Australia, S..7, then took a 7-.tl rai!:ed the profile of cbeas. But once this "'lbe shutout losses to Corona d~ Mar set and breezed to. victory in the final is done, any more matches of this kind the past two years have been a be.rb in set, 6-3. would no longer serve the 'cause or ten-ourt habothck,'' says Lent. j'They've taken it Gerald Battrick af Great Britain ni 0 us years. ed 7 s. "Corona del Mar always bas a fine scor a -6, 6-2 victory against ~year· ·"In the long tun. the sport should not football team. They play excellent old Torben Ulrich of Denmark. be burlesqued by being overly used as a defense and they're always ready for e Ex-outfie lder Dies means to dlsplay peraooal atUtudes and us." DECATUR, Ga. -Former, major to prove subjecUve points of view/' he Newport sizzled in a scrimmage league baseball outfielder Dave Harris, said. session with Mater Dei last saturday, 72, died Tuesda~. He played for the posting a 27-' edge on the scoreboard. Boston Braves, Chicago White Sox and I M k And it W&S heralded senior quarterback '!~~ton s. .. t.,. during Ille 1920s Na tiona . ar ~~~kich that gleamed most of the The Tars' passing game accounted for e lJmps Alter Rabe F MV' Cook nearly lf>tl yards with Buldch teaming CIDCAGO -Major league baseball Or 8 with Gavin Hedrick for a Si>yard TD b1Lpires, starting next sea900, are seek· aerial. ins a contract calling for a basic $4,000-a· Joo Cook, Mission Viejo HJgb's CIF Thus, Lent isn't really worried about year salary increase, a share of the 1320 champfon, sped to a 4:09.l In the the offense, but be is concerned a Uttie World Serles receipts and a lucrative 1,500 meters at UC Irvine Wednesday with bis defeooe. • pensloo system. afternoon to eclipse the national 15-year-"I don't know what our defeme will do. During the National League 111eetlng on old age group record. . It's really untested, but Corona de! Mar the proposed. transfer qi the San Diego Cook, who turm 11 today, dipped under always does a good Job on defense. I Iranchlse to Walhington, D.C., Jolin the listed record of 4:H.O by Shaanon really don 't have any Idea U we're 4 cyt., ht., tr1n1., rldle, llHttr UM1411. Wlllfll 111., .. lltt. Cifelli, counsel !or the Major .,League Laird of San Maro>1 set hi 19'12. He fell ready." -Umpires Alooclatlon, dlJclooed that-116 &bcrl..oLlhe -Id age ~Jllltk o! Newport, the fourth-ranked prep team baa presented the new demands tO the 3:56.5 ,.t by Great Brittan s Rlchatd in Orange County, wiil open with ·an of· $1177 1m TOYOTA COI ONA 4 Dlt 4 Cl!'L ......................... . .. _. ' ... """' .. .... ... ... $1277 r ' ) 1 -. • • ])IUidenta of the National and American Callan In 1'11. . fensive lineup that includes Buklcb (200) leagues. -'---.ftil· .-pills for the 1,500 were fl aeoonds · .at quarterback, Brian 'f'll<rlot (tll4) at .•. '"'• ..,,.._1 D•v• for the 440, 2:12 for the 880 and 3:21 at tailback, Tom Saftig (196) at fullback ,. • ~ the 1320. Lui>'"" he c~ a 3:07.1 in and Tom Basacaa (135) at fiankel"> NEW YORK -'lllere will b6 no days the C!F Maattt1 track meet for the (old Four of the seven oflensiVe llnemed oil for lraVel hi the American and NO: medal and came , back nine d8YI later better the 200-pound mark, thus NeYl]IOrt tional ~gue playo!f1 ,unleu the Les ·with a 4:18.1 mile in the V0111 InYlta· ahoUld out,,.iah the Sea Kings by a bfS Angeles Dodgers beal the CllldnnaU Ucinal. He waa clocked at !:Ot ·for 1500 marfin. · Reds for first place In the Nallonal melera there but only one w1tth waa on Oflenslvely, JOhn GU9t .(215) will opeq cj.eague'a Westam Divtiloa, the bo,.ball him and It couldn't be aubmltted (or the at center wtth Marc Wilsey (168) i1>4 cummlaalooer'1 o!Uce Aid Wednesday. -record. Jell Kravtta (208) at llUlnll, Tom The l>eat-of,five pla)'Olf•rlltlween the Cook's competition ·WedllOlday esme Formica (2t2) and Ken Newl!ery (207) al ta.tern and Western dlamplons ol the from teammates, Mark Hower, who ran tackles and Vinnie Mulroy (174) and lwo leagues will sllrt-ln the American 4:1M,. and Mort Womack, 4:\U . Burdick Hay (175)' at the en\fl, l , I ,__ • r· '• .Lakewood Impressive -Boswell We1U!linster !Ugh lootbatl coach Bill Boswell is worried and he isn't hiding his feelings. "I'm not <."Ollcerned about our club," says \ the veteran Wons coach, "It's Lake\vood 'that bothers me. They're big- ger :llld faster th·is year." The two clubs kick off the 1973 prep season at Westminster High F r I d a y night ~with Lakewood holding a 3-2 series edge. Westminster, however, will be shooting for Its third straight win. "I was very pleased with our .defense," says Boswell of his club's performance in a 'scrimmage last weekend against Edison. ·""" "The defense has been working out together as a unit and .happily they .Pl~yed_ \!mt way against Edison. Edison couldn't launch a sustained drive against our first team defense and scored just once starting from our 10. "The offensive line is always _the last part of a footb;lll tea.JP. to jell, so l wasn't disap- pointed with their play." He praised the passing of quarterback Mark Stewart, who completed seven of nine; the receiving of Tony Mad· docks and the running or Tony Accomando. Despite the praise, hoWever, he didn't conceal his concern over John Ford 's Lakewood club. "We saw them sc rimmage and they will average 200 pounds acf9SS the line;" says Boswell . "They. have . a legitimate 9. 7 sprinter in the backfield and tWC> f i n e receivers. The quarterback appeared to be equally adept at running and pa~tng. "FOr the past two years they've thrown the ball a lot because Pete Tereschuk was a great pas.ser. Now I suspect they'll run more. "'lbey're always such a well-drilled team but they've been small In the put. It'll be tougher if these kias come at us like the ones in the past begiUSe tlley're bigger." • . HARLEY HILL (44), LOREN MICK LIN GIVE HB GROUND PUNCH. Oilers Seek Balance Roy Brummett, Huntington Beach H i g h ' s second-year head football coach, would like to clear up a misconception he thinks has been growing. "When people see we scored a Jot early against Foothill ijigh in the scrimmage last week," he says, "they stop right· there. "The truth is, while we did score, we also made an awful lot or mistakes. It wasn't a perfect .scrimmage by any means." Bnurunett's Oilers meet 19'7Z Garden Grove League champ Pacifica to open the football season Friday night at Garden 9rove High. Kickoff is •at 8. He says Huntington Beach has made good progress and will throw a balanced offense at the Mariners. 'We'll try to establish the running game and then throw when the opportunity presents itself,'' says P,rummett. Greg Nitzkowski, the 175- Polllld quarterback, will ~ve speedy Loren MickLin. power· ful Harley Hill and ISO.pound Charlie White in' the same backfield. This ~P: was able to mov~ . ' almoit at will .a.gainst .• Foothill High in the scrimmage., "One thing that · w a s definitely a positive thing to come out of it," admits Brum- mett, "is . not one of our players got hurt. Wei plan to play 32 kids in various positions on Friday Right a not one will have an lnjuey." "We knOw, for eXample, Pacifica will be a far better team than Foothill. We looked at the fihns and used them to pinpaint our problems. I don't think anyone, the coaches or the players, got much of a lift out of the scrimmage." ~ FalsUlf Brewing c • • Emerson KO's Foe, 6-4, 6-0 Newport Beach's Ro y Emerson rolled Into the third round of the Pacific Southwest tennis t o u r n e y Wednesday with an easy 6-4, 6--0 victory over Czechoslovakia 's J i r i Hrebec. Stan Smith, seeded No. 1. came back from an opening set loss and advancf!d by beating Richard Borlmi;tedt of Redlands, 4-6, 6-2, 6-3. No. 2-rated !lie Nastase of . Romania downed M i I a n Holoceck of Czechoslovakia 6- 3, u , 6-2 an<l third.....Sed Arthur Ashe stopped Tenny Svensson of.Sweden 7-5, 6-3. Ml!N'1 SIHGLl!S IMCNd aM!MI) s11n Sml h CP•Hdt!'t•) def. Dlt~ Bohrniteat !Redl•nds), S-7, 6-3; R1ul R•ml...,t (M•xlco) d. R°"oe r,,,..., (Lllkoul Mount•ln, TMWI.}, "'3, 7.,.; C,,...les P1Mrell {PlltrlO RIC11) d. Boto Kr.iu (Los ...,.lul 1"'· 6-21 ,,...riv RlnHn !Ev•nston, 1h.l d. Phlt O.nt- 1Aintr1U•I, 44, 7 ....... 2; J•ll Borowllk L•••v•ll•l d. Frew McMiiian !South Alrlc1I. ...1. M 1 Ray Emerson ~•woorl B••ehJ. d. Jlrl Hrtbec zKi-lov•kl•l • ...,., 6-(); Tom Okker 1tllerl1nd1l d. Onnv P1run (New •l•nd), 7-1.. '"3; Ken r Rosew•ll (Au1tr1tl1) d. Al•• M1v1r (W1vne. N.J.\, 7-.5!6-11 Arthur A•tw (Jtlchmood. V1.), d. •nnv Sven11011 CSw.d•nl, 7·5. "~ilmmv Connor• IB•ll•vlll•, Ill.) d, P'•r.cho Gant1lez M•llbu), 7.J,. 6-J; P1ul Gerkin (Nll<"Wllk. conn.} d. Jaime flllol (Chi•), 7.5, 6-7, 7-6; Paul Kronk (Au1tr•H•l d. Erik V•n Diiien (San M11eo1, l-6. 7-4, M ; RIV Moo .... \""" Afrle• d. P•I Cr1mer ($0!,/lh A rlc1). J ... '"3, 6-4; John Al•••ndtr {A11$lr11la) d. Mlk• E1teo (01!111), 1-5, 6-4. MKN'S POU81..ES ,,..,..... a aundl Smlth·V•n OUlm d. L•Kh·Rltter, &-3. 6-1; e .... rson.Roww•ll d. Fort·Pfflllfl, :M, '"3, M · AJ1xander·Oent d. Gert<MI· McKlnltv, 1 ... 6 ... 1 P•s•rell·RllSIOl'I d. Anden;--5-, 6-2, 6-2; Andrews-Mefal d. B1r1h·T_ldball, 6--4, 6-7, '"3; C1rmlchael-Mc:Mlllan d. B • rt 1 • t I · aor-!1k, 7.5, 6-41 Edll'hen-l.eon11rd d. Okk.,·Rlesi.en. 1·5. 4-1, W. WOMEN'S SINGLES IS.CW aauM) Evetvn Houwm1n !Btvedv H!lls) d. M•rv Goldftl_. (Mlr11lestel, 6-0. M; Oline Mol'TllOll !l.ot: AnlMl"l o. Lol.i.11• Lipson (C1f11lnterl1J, 6-1, M; Llndn L.wt1a(P1los Vorrde1J d. Norma V••I {T1n1n1J, 6-2, '"3; Tln1 W•ltnlbe !Lot AlllMIH/ d. M1rllvn lltberm•n Woodland HI Is), M, 2.J,, .... ; rt.ere .. Hotladly (Lii Joll•) d. v ... 1 Komar (C1nld1I. 7-S. OHll INDS OCTOlll JI -·· • • DALY PILOT 35 ~ustlers Again Fav ored To SpUis h w Loop Title .• With fi ve starters back, Golden West College's water polo team figures to again waltz away with Its fJlth straight Southern Ca llrorn1a Corirerence championship in 1973. The Rustlers open the season Friday, facing Santa Barbara City C<!llege at 5 p.m. in the opening round or the Gaucho tournament at UC Santa Barbara. Back fiom GWC's 1972 ~ team that finished third In the state, are starters Frank Rrowne, Jim McAdams, Kurt Westerfeld, Pete Noah and Larry Rob<rtson. . Westerfeld was the leading scorer for coach T o m Hermslad's Rustlers I a s t season with 69 goals and needs just 13 more to set a Golden West career record. McAdams scored 63 and Adams had 50 goals as the Rustlers had one of t h e better balanced attacks in the state. Although Hermstad has ex- perience and depth, the big- gest gap he must fill is goalie. Eddie \Vhite has graduated (he's at San Jose State) \Vith letterman Rich Leoni s ex- pected to take his place. Leoni.$ backed up White last season. The leading freshmen are Keith Colton (Garden Grove), 1''rank Haselton (Westminster) . and Mike Eich (Fountain .Valley). "I think we'll be pretty good," says Hermstad, "but l really don1 know how gOl)\I until we play our first game. We didn't play in any summer leagues, so we don't know what anyone else has. But tr our freshmen do as well as last year's freshmeJ! did, then we should be all right." • Other lettermen back In· elude Fred Lammen and John Maltby . Tom Burgoyne, wbo pre,pQeel at Westminster, i.r a transfer from Cal Poly (Pomona). t El Toro Can Triumph, Says Chargers Coach ~ With no seriior in camp one..._.Birchard are !tlpplytng Moor<' of the primary goals for varsi· r-With the leadership fro m ty football coach Mack Moore within. at El Toro High has been tG Nevertheless, El Toro'~ find some team leaders to lead Chargers are a decided un· the charg~ into Carlsbad derdog to the more ex· Saturday night. pcrienced Knights of . .\rm~· The Chargers tackle Army-Navy. Navy's perennial CIF (San But Moore says his team i!' T•k• IM Sen OelQo Freew1v sou!h lo C1rt111a<1 (11111th ot Oce•ntldel. Take tne Elm l'urnoll, 110 left off rne r11mp •nd proceed 1111 on Elm. Turn rlgh! nl Ille end ol Elm 1nd'go lo first 1!eop •lgn (B111woodl. Turn lt'tt on B1s1wood and r!ghr 1t nrst opportunUy. Diego) l·A powers in their ini- tial test of the se'aSOO 2t Carlsbad High with tailback- linebacker Leon S fj n c h e z sidelliied for the year with a broken arm. But others are coming on to make the absence not quite so painful. Quarterback Jerry 'Key, center-rover Keith Jones, guard and defensive end Jeff G r e e n , fullback-linebacker Chuck Van Liew and San- chez's replacement at tailback and l ine b acke r , Clfde capable of winning. ''Withou1 any doubt we have a goocl chance of winning," say!' Moore. "·If we play to wha t we're capable of ·and can avoid most of the first game jitters and mistakes .. , . " Aside from the obvious first game problems, Moore's cz:ev.' is also faced with playing eight players both ways. Middleguard Brad Side, end Steve Kachelein aad cor- nerback Kevin Urquhart are the only defenders who don '! start on offense. The biggest starter on the team is right gll!lnl Tony Lun- dy, who checks' irl at 10$. A step or two away at flanket is Joe Carta, the lightest starter at 130. SERVICE COUPONS r.:. ~:!!!_111111111111111WW ~ f,!lltl~ lllJ!tllllllUtJ~ ~ Wf!"I THIS COUPON wrm THIS COUPON WITH THIS COUPON SAVE! '500 OFF ENGINE-TUNE·UP , Includes all labor and theta parlli • Naw 1p1rk. plu11, condemer, polnlt. SAVE!'300 0FF AUTOMAnC TRMSMISSllll . TUNE·UP $1295 :.:::~.:.-=.. • C111n1• """" OH • HIWPA ~~•Sft SAVE!•OOFF BRAKERIUNE •2e1s:UIAR .... 1: ... lnr:h-VW., TOf"I ... Oolt1t11• l...toll .... ~e liti- I""" "" •11 foHr ,. . .....,,. • l•o,..C.t -t• CJ""""' •OMI •yd,.H!Or. b .. U """n• ll-0"'' cleo•, ln1,...., w ....,oQ "-•• •Jwo,l linflo.., ..w ""'" n.w !O -CAJll'RtCElD]~-~~•:il-~~'REGUCAR PRICE'$15.ll~ • II •q6t•1 Wlwtl Cyts. Sl:iO .... ._ ....... Sl ... .....,....,,,._·••-~s,.., ....... .-..1i• Offll INDS OCTOlll 31 Offl!l ENDS OCTOlll JI Offt:R ENDS OCTOlll 31 lllmllUOU\hlllillAlll . .-nil!IUINlllH ff ~ lfHlllUtlal~lll;:::=: ·~ wmtTHIS COUPON Wmt THtlii COUPON WmtTHISCOUPON SAVE!..,OFF SAVEi SAVEi 112arn-1ND ALIGNMENT •79&=:-.~.l' .. ::.:I'.'.. •1&9& ....... JI tor 1lr<CM. tlfS. l"11.111ation •Complete lront-end Inspection. LUBE & OIL FOR $5.51 • Camber. c11ter, and toe-in ••t hr pre-MufOere fOI' oth• oani all.ahtly higher! •Y' Al'f'OIHTMENT ONLT 1d1lon equipment R£QULAR PRICE $10.H REGULAR l'Rlca t17.71 oh':!~ ~~':0.:,. NEW MUFFLER NEW Oil FILTER 12" ""'"'°" ¥ GETOUR ·FOR FORD, PLYMOUTH, CHEVY OFPIR ENDS OCTOIEI J I Offll INDS OCTOIEI 31 Offll INDS OCTOll R JI ~;·;111~1tlltlllt~~m~t11~llll;l\;111~n1:n'";·ff~;;:~~=~~===;;=~=· AffHlttHllHlr.UIHnllillmmllU.'ID'r. ' FOR llH I.SO.I! ""lilwlll"twbtltlt ,1111 ll.7l f ... Ea. Tu 11« tin W eM tlm. OTHER lllZES LOW 2 ,4 "'"p.oo PRaDTOO t ~1'>0 SIZES =-·,fr!, Tu 7.7Sx14. 8.251114, :.,~'.n~ntl 7,7Sx1S. !.25«15 FOR •Id tires. •A Great Tire In 111 Prfae Claes • Performance Pe1ture1 •Triple T•mpered Nylon Cord Ccinatruction 3W ... TOMYl(f'~-= HUNTINGi.ON j BEACH W ESTMINSTER , 7872 EDINGER 6872 \YESTMINSTER • '. 842-4495 894·1391 ·-- ' l \ 36 DAJLV PILOT Workman Concerned With Foe Defense Is Key, Says MV Coach Injuries May Hurt Mustangs Great Defensive Effort,s Make Barons Winners Fountain VaUey High foot· for victory. The BaJ'On.\ are Oodsoo and Bill Ogden. And ball coach Bruce Pickford rated tw<>-point choices to the Barons have additional says his team's chances for dispose of the Bay League strength Jn the passlng game Bill \\'l'lrkman sends his first Ecllson ll 1sh football team on the field Friday . a "al n 6 t Fullerton. so i I 's un· derstandab!l' if he considers il a hit of .in a1.h enture into the unknown . .. ,\le don 't kn ow y,•hat \\'C ha\'' for sure. and we're not too sure about f'ullerlon," \"orkman sa~·s. "They didn't v.·ear numbers in the sc rim· mage we scouted, so we don't knoY.' i,1•ho their best players are. And YiC haven't ex- changed any game films. "\\'e have a general idea or what they run, but for an ·opening game it would be nice to know a !i!lle more." Despite the unknown qualities of the two teams, 'Edison is a 51h-point fa vorite based on past per(ormances . ·La st season the same schools met in the opener a n d Edison's Chargers prevailed, 33-0- Workman would he highly pleased if the Chargers could _,, Clime up with something near pat offensive output this jieason, since one of the ~certirig aspects o f ~n·,s scrimmaJll:e I as t SPORTS Bad Drill Good Sign -Or Is It? If a poor practice session two days before the opening game is a harbinger of things to come, watch out for th e Estancia Eagles Friday night when they journey to Vista for the season football opener with the Panthers (7:4S). Coach Jim Hemsley was anything but pleased with his Eagles as they ran through a scrimmage-type drill Wed· nesday. l\1ission Viejo High football ooach Bob Hlvner's resiltance wasn't what It &bould Rave been this week. On the eve of the season opening game wilh San Clemente he's been fighting a ~ouch of the fl u. l~ivner hopes his team's resistance to a San Clemente offense Is better when game time rolls around Friday nlght at 8 Bl Mission Viejo. "Our entire defense is the key," Hivner says. ·•we have to get a good rusb from the line and get to · t h e quarterback if we're going to stop them." Hivner isn't the on I y member of the Mission Viejo group who has been battling an illness this week. Several of his players are in the same category. But he expects they'll be ready (or action Fri· day. "We've got a balanCed of· fensive attack, running and passing, and we've got a little experience and fair quickness on defense," he says. Offensive balance will be built around returning quarterback Dave Schmidt and the running duo of fullback Guy Reeves and tailback Ken Robbin!. Defensively, a stand o \.\ t backfield w i t b all-leaguer Kevin Eaton. a hard·hitting pair of linebackers in Rick Curtis and Rick White, and a line featuring Jim Hausauer. li-1ark Merwin and Jeff Hickey are Diablos strong points. Hivner's concern for his defense is based on the presence of San Clemente's 6- 6, 22$-pound quarterback Dan Dodd. who Hivner r a t es highly. "He's very strong. and he throws the ball very well."· Hivner says. "He reminds me a Jot of last year's quarterback for them, Bill Kenney, and Kenney was .a tough man for us to handle." Except for the nu cases. Hivner feels his team will be in good shape for the game. Wilbur Gregory, a junior wide receiver Is recovering from a slight knee injury, and should be ab!e to start Friday. Glendale Aerial Game Costa Mesa High's varsity football team has two.startlng linemen injured and on the aldell.nes for Frklay's opening game le.st at Tustin against Foothill High. But despite the setback to coach John Sweazy's C.OSta Mesa Mustangs, the Mesan.s are a one-point choice to end a If.game losing streak dating back to 19'11. Mike McDorman (215) and Gary Perez (218) are lost for the Foothill encoi.mter with wrist and knee injuries, but are expected to be ready for Newport Harbor a w e e k hence. · Ready to step in a s replacements are K e i t b Bateman (185) and Jim Davis. Davis moves from defensive end to noseman. Sweazy's Mly concern ' is depth at those spots. But tbe're•s no worry about depth in other .areas - especially in the offensive backfield. "We've got the best ·set of backs in the seven years I've been here," says Sweazy. Sweazy says his t e a m respects: the Foothill menact but is confident Mesa will end its long losing streak. victory a.pins! North Tor+ 1 1. wr'th D•n 'h'oup ready. ranee Frklay night at Hun· represen 8 tves. A....-.u;l tington Beach High, hinge on The Barons have everything All ~ w111ch Prom Pt s his Barons' ability to stym.Je needed to run the wishbone Pickford to note, "l'm.a:oing to the North Torrance offense. attack and one of the big be very dlsuppolnted II we And past records tend to bonuses for Fountain Va!Jey don't move the ball. We hope back up that statement. Foun· this season is the appearance to hold our mistakes to a tain Valley hasn't been able to of 100-powv:l. Steve Thompson minimum offensively -but shut out an oppon~nt in the at fullback. again the whole thing tends to last z.1 outings-although ooly He compliments the outside hinge on our defense," says ooe team bas been able t?':o;iithii"'iiaiii...;ol ... ;iihiialiifbiia;;i;cksiioiiBii.ie"inil -P':.i".:ckl~or~d:_------- bold Fountain Valley without a s.. ""r:;1:" :' 34~~rous COSTA MESA DATSUN defensive statistic for Foun-• ·hr taip VaUey the Barons have W... 5-fvlc• • ....-... not bad a losing seuon the 1145 H~ MM., C.M. past four yean;_ '~~~ii54~0:;-64~1 o;;;:;;;:;;;:~I "That's the key to bealing!J- North ,Torrance," says NEWPORT LEASES Pickford, "we can score three '74 AUTOS, TRUCKS, VANS times but if our defense gives COMPITITIYI PllCIS up four we're gOing to lose the 2400 W•• c .. 1 Hitlt•oY ball game." The ' Barons mentor feels 645·2202· North Tomlllce has t h e personnel to make It tough on Fountain Valley physically. DON'T DISCARD THOSE OLD TENNIS SHOES!! And Fountain Valley is hurting somewhat injury·wlse. Linebacker Doug Wilson ii out with a cracked wrist and •• ,.,.., •• ..........., "' "'"' " AdldH ,.,. Tr.t'"' Shtff. d K -H nd ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICE guar evm ayes a tight • WIEl~LWI' f"LAlA. LIDO . FAIJ HON i5LANO . CoRottA OIEI. MAR end Jerry Jolley are plagued j!~;;;;:;;:;;:;~~~;;;;:~;:;;:;;:;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;; with knee injuries. ~ekend with Westminster ~as offensive \nconsislency. if'.. "We've got to move the ball. fh running and passing," With a young and in· experienced team , thjs: is Co Viki• Chi £ "Our kids have Confidence ncerns ngs e in themselves," says Sweazy. "because they have the aQiUty The passing game /s Afarina been somewhat of a sore point and they're not worried about "Ancf we've had a bit of a AT LAST rash with strep throat," adds Picklonl. A .COMPLETE RN Despite the problems. Foun-ARTS SUP LY lain Valley's chanC<s are good P , P orkman says. "We didn't w much offen.~ until the ~1· tine situatiom in the ·mmage." Senior quarterback Dave 'te will be at the controls ·day with 170-pound senior 'llba,ck .Joel Peck and 1.40- bound to make a difference but Hemsely feels it might also be a good omen for the Eagles. High football coach Mike for Henigan. "We're not as taking a backseat to anybody. · Henlgan's chief concern with happy there as we'd like-I'm "We hope we're a little fast· Friday's 8C8SOfl opener at a little concerned with all of er this year and we want to Glendale High awaiting his our ,.._.;ahy teams," sa""' the control the footba11 v.•ilh sus.-yy~ .l"' tained drives." Vikings. Marina coach. for victory. The Barons are & srRVICE rated two-point choices to t dis(JO'!e of the _Bay U!;rgue CENTER! representatives. Despite the problems, Foun· lain VaDey's chances are good • d tailback Bill Rutherford e backfield wlth him. Glendale's pas si ng in As for the game plan "As for passing, we want to particular, ts his preoccupa· against Glendale, Henigan do that at our convenience . .., Rutherford has been nursing Hght muscle pull in his let, if it proves t o o lhersome, 170-pound Bert rron could fill the tailback "Many times when you have ~ .. bad practice. it means a good performance in the game that ~eekend," he says. lion. says_ be wants hiJ team to con· Another returning starter Cross Country "We thought Glendale was trol the ball -to keep the ball who will be missing from the very impressive in its scrim· awaffrom Glendale. Foothill encounter is Paul "I'm not saying we are, going to have a good game but I do think this is a ball club with adequate speed and bar· ring further.injuries, we could do a respectable job." ~ ........... " .... Glllndale Hlgh II -.11111 •I I.WO E. 9roNwtV. Go norltt "" Sen 01990 Fiwwev to ...,_ .. ,......, (II). '"°'"' °"' H.,..... Fr-•Y to tM Golder! &let9 Jlf-rt· Mcwth on OolOen Sl•le Fr-rt, t11M ... 1 on Gltrthle ,.,_..,to V"""'90 llOMI, Go n«1tl on Vwdugo ltoed to 9ro.dway. ScPlllOI 11 loc:1t9d •I IM conw 9f Vtrdufl ll-.1 lrd lll'OMwlY Bu! he also adds lhat~his Farris, who started at center team will be passing more fre-in 1972. quenUy than in 1972. Otherwise the Mustangs are Foster provides the arm and et full strength -especially at receivers who appear capable the skilled positions. VAaSITY Mil.,. D8I 15 915'IOP Moflltom«Y iG I. ll• '"'°""' Oowll1111 IMOJ. sr. J~n (MO), Ke1!1119 {MOI, Plllm•n tMOI, Ahll1 (MOJ, 11 :00, 6. Ounl'JI) IMO). • 11:10, 7. $C:htnll (MD I ll:lf. JUNIOR VARSITY COMI Ill UI l'Olt AlL TOUI •V NllDll NOW O"NI f matin the 'al Qu t ~ k SI Sh Ma•..,. Del 1s e r1.11op M011t. 1n G1ll o g aen game a e11HC eve arp, 1. 81r,.,, CM DI 11 :», 2. NGrr1t. cM01 click include flanker Dick tailback Paul Desmet and '""' '· ···-(MOO ,,, •. ·-"-•• mfVl'Rll'<Mlt ......... nn s•19m11' Morgan. split end Andre Lopez fullback DeMis Delany give (MD) 11 :'6. s. Fllz~trkli (MD) 11:41, D\111Jli1VJVI1 All'1D JMll£H ur.r•• 6. 8orl1nd IMO) ll:e. 7. ll•ld.,.r1rn1 IUCI 1.._. IL, .._..,._ htcll, C..lff. ftW • 71•1M - Whlte wHl hav~ nanker Mike ett, tight end Dave Mill! split end Joe Troxell for '-9" receivers. Bennett caught ~,~short touchdown pass from ~~te in the scrimmage Satur· ~y. as did utility backup man fa.eve Rines. a junior who will Lone returning starter on of· fense for Estancia is right end David Gibbs. He was a stand- out at tight end a year ago <i.nd not only plays offense but is a defensive end as well and tight end Jim Wendall , Mesa its best. backfield setup 111.10 1 11 :)1, •· Herold cMOI 12:01. •· 1v ... 11• -'~ •1s...111 ... ,_.11 mage," S8)'!1 Henigan. It has among 0 . ID years. 12:1)}, UTISf.t.CTtOll Will II OVI ~·· ,,_ thers •iii.i-i:~~iiiiiiiiiiiiii~'~"~'~~•~l~M~OO~"~'~~·.·~··~HO~,~~(~M~O~O ~~~~~~~·~ ... ~~~~~~~~~I~~~-~~~====~ an excenen,t throwing --· - --t plenty of action. _ olphins on't Lose • pr1ngman . What might have been a Ewling blow for the Dana Us High football team has n softened somewhat this ~k with the rev.elation that ~lphins quarterback B i I I ~ingman will not be lost for ~~e a:;p:i~· ::v~:l: Steve Morton will direct the team from quarterback. At 5- 10 and 170 pounds, be is rated a good thrower and adequate runner. Injuries have cropped up to hurt the already thin Eagles squad. Mike Hewell is out with a puUed ligament and Rick Webb will miss the entire season with a knee injury. Jim Glancey has a broken collar bone and Pat Shaugjm· cssy is recovering from a motorcycle injwy. quarterback with fine receivers. "And our secondary didn't loot very good in our scrim· mage with Saddlel>lck." Jfenigan'I ltarting lineup in- cludes fullback Mark Link (206), quarterback Gregg Fostef (18S) and tailback Jim Straube (t&>J behind the blocking of tackle Bill Grant (6--3, 240 ). "Glendale Isn't very big," says Henigan, "But it's very disciplined. The overall team functioning of Glendale could be a problem for us." The kicking game bas also Saddlehack R11nners Lean, Green in '73 "i~';terback was injured \n ~t Saturday's scrimmage. ~t what at first was thought Saddleback C:Ollege's cross distance namers, but in-~ be a broken collar bone is country team figures to be experienced. They i n c I u d e ~w reportedly just severely lean and green in 1973. Chris Paul (Mission Viejo), ~ined neck musclcs. and Only six lreshmen are cur-Jesus Go n z a I es (San ~ringman may be ·able to renlly on the Gauchos roster, Clemente). Randy Bass a y next week . but coach Duane Cain is {Mission Viejo) and DeMis -~Th hopeful of recruiting three or Bialuk (San Clemente ). ~ at doesn't help 1 he four more candidates from the sffllt.Mtk Cron lphins thls week 'vhen they track sq-·•"d. c...,,., ldltdul• Jtcq u are of l a g a In s t '"' Fri .. Stfll. :n -AT P1lom•r wl!h r ''We're very green, so we Gtmllftllrll•. nJgomery High o.f Imperial have to .... basically look for im· c.f.~~~· 5 -11 Soutt11n111rn with ach, but Dolphins coach provement from week to Frt.. 0cr. 12 -11 s.n t>1tt0 w1111 y Leon fee ls that even ... eek. The al!o'tude 1·s good. but cnrvi•. , ., Fri., Oct. lt -S•n Btrntrdlll(I tlld -~thou! Springman the game our ex per i e nc e and RJv«MM' (tiome). ilJ be close. background is very limited,,, ~'·i"~:~,r:,_~ •t coueoe °' fM C1rto ..; Game time is 8 Friday even· savs Cain. Fri., 0c1. n -et M1. s." Arttonlo ~· not Saturday as indicated Rick L ee dom ( San 1";:!!'!'.;~~. 6 _ ,, Ml•tl°" con-ijft previously pub Ii s h e d Clemente) 3lld Mike Bejach 11rtrict ch1~on1hlp1 1-ni-1s1em1. • • t S1t., Nov. 11 -11 Soull»rn ,por s. (Foothill) are the only twtt of C•"torril1 d'llmpiont.l!IJK !Pl.,.«). : "Initially. the team was the six with cross country ex· · s11 •• NO't. 14 -11 St•'• thllm. ook cd ' h Jh "b'J" f plonlhlPI ISl<vtlnt). w1l c poss1 1 1ly o pcrience. The rest a re • c1eno1n M11s1on con11fftle1 mw1. ing Bill. but they're begin--r.;;-,;;-;_;;~;_--...;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;~~~::~1-1 g to realize we're not a one an team and that our other £R ' """'·····~ arterback. Al Benavidez is a I nr.~fJ 119 ' etty good one,'' Leon says. S£r ~.l'J· J "Al hos good abi lity. and if I S11 eci· a t can kee1> the pressure off 11illm a Htile bi! I'm su re he'll Scb OO ~a good job. Its going to be a ~nee for Al lo get some jood experience." :t:•l..eon says "-fontgomery lgh's team is com parable to ost AAA squads in Ora11gc .:.C.Ounty. "'\Ve're in over our heads. 11 think th.it if we get a f~1\· eaks we'll give them a good same.'' POOL TABLES s39500 _ _......::__ and up ASTER BLUEPRINT AND SUPPLY COMPANY WILL BE OPEN from9 to 5 SATURDAY SEPT 8, 15, 22, 29 Week d1y1: 7:30 10 5:30 SPECIAL BARGAINS LUXOLAMl'S· re1«.00 NOW ONLY 35.20 OFFERING A LARGE-=£~~;;~ SELECTION OF ·() ARCHITECTURAL . ~ ENGINEERING, GRAPHIC ART ANO STATIONERY SUPPLIES ' POPULAR STUDENT DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE ~ntD0~ t\~ MASTE~ BLUEP~INT a SUPPL y co . 1--'---I~ 1.._~"' .. !!r !!'_"'-,-,,-.. -lll---+U, -234 FISCHER AVENUE. cbsTA MESA ..... - -540 . 9373 ....... -- ; PLYM catV~TIE CAMAl'CJ MUST.I.HG DOOGE ,.AHILN\1£ RIVIElll:A l"ONTIAC • VW &VOLVO. ,.IR •MO MOST CAllS 2 •0 "29" ·2 •0 •33" j,,jff if,, J i .. ilf.IOn.l SIZES FITS SIZES FITS -·· .. _,. '·'"'" -·· t.1'1•111• , .. ,.. ... -·· ......... .,.,. .. 2 •0 -\18" 1.,i11l511.J SIZES FITS ...... . ..... . ........ ..... ,. 2 ·0 •44" '"ii• ., ..... 1 SIZES FITS ....... ....... ........ . ........ ABOVE PRICES TUll£1.ES$ 8LACKWALLS -$0ME llLEMS ---=--AOO 13 P"OR WHITEWALLS-F.1:.T. l.H TO 1.ll & SERVICE HI-PERFORMANCE HEADQUARTERS CARS· TRUCKS MOTORHOMES MA~HIOMI ad STllL WHllLS BRAKE REUIE •• CAR ~ SPORTS CAR '0WNl•l --•--~91CIAL c•ott..t..Ac .\t..tNCOLN NEW RADIA DOUlll.I •IL nD ALL SIZES $ 9 C\. 40,000 Mfil 'CJ GUARANTEE ~I NING ANO LABOR •w~:~'::"'"'" 2495 WHITEWALL 40,000 2 TUl•LESS Ml~~ ... --30,000"'MILES '-""· """'..., + """' SHOCKS ·~ • au ... LIT'r , ~ l'llEPl..ACt: ""l["'T \ PARTS ' e 'SP[CIAl . .._ '-.J L OW PRIC £' • Rl!G, S 111,11\ ·-__ ,, ...... ~··-· _ ........ --........ _ ....... . ... ··-····· -......... -·--............ -.. ' .. ........ ·-· .............................. _ ..... ····-· ·-· ................... -. ·-··"· -··· ... ,_._ -..... . -· .......... ~ ................ -··-····----···-.. TRUCK-CAMPEil MOTOR HOME 1565 SIZI: ..,IClt llG ULICTION OF SIZIS ltD PlfCI SIU PllCI •10.15 •••••• JI.ts lfl).J,,5 .. , • Jt.tl 7ft.14, ., ••• JI.fl 17S·l6.S , .... 47.H 700.16 •.•••• H .t5 tl0.16.5 •••• 16.71 r10.t6 •••••• J6.71 10-16.S, .,, 4t.ll • ·1'\" Ill I ff .. J""J • ... ..... 3 i:C-..... :-::..::" ..:\ ~ 9'/t .. ,..... (.It, ... ~-.... J ._,,, ft " .,.. wlli flW y-•• 'tit """""""' /# f' ( .... .... Ml ........ ,,.... .. "1<• " 1 ..., \........_, "" llffLA• •·• YALUI 14Lfl ' \. , .. sT'-l.1.ao TY ~2v:o:u18 "60" SERIES 14" TIRES 15" RAISED 21 ::~59 ,_..,.,_ .. _6 lllUll _. ,_. - IHIMMlll I.ET US TRU[ A 3 95 •- BALANCE ....... YOUR TIRES NOW MOST CARS •t•""' -------REPACI( BEARINGS & GREASE SEALS ""'''-'-1.u•1111r.•T1 VQV!lt C •Jt ..,,.0 C,.AHGr l:otG•,.I 011.. P !lt lCI: t .. C'LUDI• U .. TO\ Qu A11tT • 0' G UALITV O IL, --------WHEEL BALANCE ---UflTIMI - DELCO Batteries ----24'5 MOST CA"• VALUE $33,86 ·--------···· WHEEL 5ss ALIGNMENT ~: 111so. VAL.UI It.II -------------.AIR 34so SHOCKS "IG. VAL.UE S4.SO 12-16.5 , ._..It.II F.f.T. J.14 T0•6.41 . '11'• .,..,, llt •• .••• :t.t• ~lll··llL•'·ll'•"•"•"•"•'ll•vlll1<•'~1iii'OiiiiiEiiLiiCiiO~llI HI JACI< ERS JONES TIRE SERVICE Phone a . 6tl6M21 .540-4343 ...,_ 2049 'HARIOR BLVD.!!! •. ..,,,__,.~· ( A'r BAY ) - . ·coST A ·MESA ctr:':O~:. .---OPEN--- 8 AM TO 6 PM MONDAV TMftU F'AIOA SATURDAY -8 AM T0-1.,P • • '1 l T \ ' . • -· .iAJL PlLO I 37 THE/.'> A6 Jf"2 a, ' ~~ETFIOD· Women I\.eep Area Courses Busy' Members of the Huntington Seacliff Country Club women'• Eileen Allen, H•zd Motuca. Golf Course women 's club this week. · golf club hosted Meadowbfrk and Mlle Square Golf Course women!s groups in a two bet~ ter balls of foursome com~ petition this week. Kay Knoph and Jean Castor were next at 145. In a couples tou'mement over -the weekend, first place went to Hazel and Angle Mollica with a net 61.- gr.., with 49. Dorothy He•· cock coppecf net honors \vlth 37 while Elsa Wise and Gene Carrick were next at 39. Lucy Parsons was the C di- visloo gross winner •·ith 49. Judith Eriksen took net honors at 37 with Delores Smith and 11orolhy Banks at 38Y.. The winner posted a 31 ~ with Georgia Prince and CarOlynn Walbridge second at 33_~. Jackie Kroll and Fem Sproul were next at 341.!t. ---.... -~---·-~ . GET SET FOR A 'STRAIGHT SHOT Aiming· a golf shot does not have to be a complicated procedure. ·There is a sjmple method· which makes it easy. First,· stand behind the ball and line it up with the. target, Then, standin_g beside the ball, sight a ~cond line to some·object on the aide of the fairway. Thia second line should be at right angles ' to the t3rget line .. Now when you· ·line up for your shot, place the ctubhead . behind the ball so that it faces down the · tatllCt line, \Vhile your feet and b ody are facing the object you, sighted on the side of the fairway. Both . your clubheali and your body will be properly set for a strai.i;ht shOt. · ®.C leJSN,1,r1..~-~ lt-4. ·LOW SCORES! HJ(;}/ POWER! Gt( plenty of1ol/ifll ·help in Arnold f1lmtr'1 booklet, "Ttt Shois and. Fairway Woods." A c,,py b yowrs for 20t end• stamptd. stl/-addrtsstd tnvtlopt ''"'to Arnold Palmtr, c/o 1hts ntwspaptr. - What's Doing Outdoors JIM NIEMIEC Th.is weekend marks the second annual National Hunting and Fishing· Day as proclaimed by President Nixon. Many ac- tivities are planned around the country to coincide with this sportsman's day. Locally, sp:>rtfishing landings up and down the coast~ will be participating in a derby with top prizes being awarded to anglers landing the largest gamefish in a nwnber of categories. Cheek with your favorite landing for mor~ details and reserva- tions. ' The Garcia Conolon Corp. of Santa Ana will bold an outside sports show in recognition of the day. Manufacturers, p~ofes­ sionals and personalities will be on hand at the McFadden Street facility to acquaint outdoorsmen with all that is on the market in the industry. President Boward Ashby has ordered hundreds of poonds of rainbow trout for the day-long event beginning at 10 a.m., and }'OUDgSlers under the age ol 16 will be permitted to try thei< ~trlanding a ljihling.rafnbow.For more information on this iariii1y outing phone :>U-MllL · ' Inland Deer Season Opet1• , Tbe inland deer aeuon opeu Saturday and optimistic reports )lave beea received from all areas of the SouUtland. Ora~ C.aaty banters will flncl deer In good coadltloa In Ille Clevelalld National Forest, wHb ue of tbe botteaC spots belq tbe Sierra 'Peak area. Good food and water baa toded to scatter &be bucks, but bunting should be better tbaa Jut year. , Due '° tbe e1:treme ftre buard ezlltlq, almrOda sboald check with rangers lor closed lumthtg areas and· allo avoid smoking and camp fires in tbe field. PrlTate property, chained off, will allO Umlt ae<en to public property. . A good fawn drop tut year and a better than average bock carryover In tile Hlgb Sierras will provide buten w:IUI a better Chance at blufng lepl bucb, Moat of tbe deer are fried bora1 and ' three pointerl wltb a few treplly bac:U also spotted. Dr. Lee Chow of Bakenfield 1COUted the mowa'8lna around Ill• Immediate area aad spotted may legal bacfls, bat also ID- ~caied that tlley were In very advantageous positions for pro- tection and aD lontn. Rnten working tbe east and west aide 'of tbe Sierra sbould conceatnte ln &lie heavy timber between i ,ooe and l~-feet. - ffllDten wbo are successful at bagglag a back sbould care for the ·meat properly. Deer 1boald be cooled properly aad aJlowtd to glue, and every effort made lo avoid cetuac dirt or ~ptured stomach on the meat of the animal. Good Weather Aid• Anglers The overcast weal.Her we have experienced the past couple of weeks is responsible, in part, for the poor marlin bite re- ports Whitey of Angler's Center in Newport. A few days of sunshine will warm the surface water and more blllfisb Will come to the surface to feed during the day. The lack of billfisb sPotted is keeping fishermen off the ocean. Unless there are anglers out working the channel, new feeding areas for marlin are hard to locate. ' Action in general Is slow all up and down the coast, but with the scheduled tournaments coming up, more marlln sbould be weighed In al the angling clubs. Down Baja way, fishing is considered fair for lhis time of the year. Some anglers are really getting into the billfish and other e1otics, while Some days the catches really drop off. The big blues and blacks will start working the sea later this month and on through December especially off Rancho Buena Vista. currently, striped marlin, sails, roosterfish and dolphin are likely to reward vacationers with plenty of acUoiJ . YellowtaH Actlo• Hot What appears to be a fepe•ted performuee for the fifth or sixth ttme1 tills aeaaon, ii occorrlag at tbe Coroudo blanda rlcbt now. Tbe ,yellowlalf adlon off the Border Qty b llol aad beovy for big fllb, reporll BUI Poole, owner aad Ripper-.! the cape Polaris. Anglers are getting a week to lt 0,. llol aad heavy - then tblnp tall off for 1 few days. Skippers .,. ao1 mUlng uy predldtom, bvl they do hldlcate that this patllrn ctald be c'ar- 'rled oa lato the.early whiter moatba. In first place with 138 was the team of Helen C.O.wden, Pat Hood and Winnie Lindsay wllh a hi ind draw. Second went to Ev Rice, Helen Moulton, Diana Saenz and Peggy FramcOm at 140. Liz Brandenburg, Fred a Silverman, Fiona Moore and Bernice Covey were next at 141. Two teams tied for fourth at 143 including Ann Mays, Shirley Stebblngs, S h I r I e y Pobe and Belle Caruana on one. Polly Browning, Anita Appleton, V. Aye and H. Olisar were on the other. Olah Morgan , Cheri Thomas, Bonnie Nuccio and a blind draw tied with Joan \!leaver, Norma Smith. Jane DuPre and Teresa Finizza for the next spot at 144. Second place was taken by Dottie O'Dell and Harold Wick with 62. Ginny and Hoot Lambert finished third at 63. Closest to the pin c<>m- peUtion was won by Kay Moser and Wes Wahrenbrock while the longest drives of the day went to Clleri Thomas and Les O'Gara. El Niguel It was best. nJne with half handicap for members of the El Niguel Country C I u b women's goli group this week. Doris Handschuch won low gross with 45 in A flight while Virginia Bordwell was the net victor wi th 37. Marion Menne finished seoond at 39 while Nel Townsend and Bonnie Blair lied for third at 4l lh. Martha Twner won B flight ' Polyester Cord General POLY-JET Whatever your tire needs, the wide, s mooth riding 4-ply polyester cord POLY-JET is an outstanding buy! Fits: Gremlin, Vega, Peg Herten won the D flight gross award \Vith 53 with Gloria Weidner and Muriel Gair tied at 38 for net. Evelyn Wager was next with 39. In the Tuesday team rom· petition , the El Niguel A squad lost to 8anta Ana CC while the B team won by two points. Elaine Tully. tournament chairman at EJ Niguel, suf- fered a multiple fracture of the leg when she fell in retrieving a ball on the par- lhree, li>th hole at Big Canyon cc. Rancho SJ Zola Bartholomew was the winner in A flight in a blind nine tow-nfl.ment for members of the Rancho San Joaquin, In B flight it was Gene Grif· fin the winner with 30, follow~ ed by Vivian Troutman with 32 \.2 and .Marion Keele r at 331,~. Joyce Roberts won C flight honors with 28 with Charlene Collins next at 32 and Connie Dunlap at 34t,2. Grace Wehe was the D win· ner with 351h with Ann Ar- quilla next at 36. Jn a field shots event , Betty Gallagher and Phyllis Stafford tied for first at 44 in A flight with Margaret deBach next at 45. Shirley Wetzel won B flight with a 46, followed by Marion Keeler and Vivian Troutman with 4~ . Anne Hesik was the C win· Pinto, Dodge Colt, Cortina, Toyota ... and more. Size A78-13 .. tut>efnl blackwall, plus $1.83 Fed. Elt. Tax per tire. R!QULAR LOW SIZE REl'U.CEI 4 FOR PRICE A7&-13 e.00.13 4 lorl 87,.80 B78-1' 6.50-13. 41or$ 91 .80 E78-14 ?.00/7.35-1,4 4 lor I 99.80 F78-14 7.50/7,76-14 4lor1103.90 678-14 8.00/11.2~14 41or.115.80 0 78-15 7.10/11.25-15 4f0f $115.80 H78-14 8.50/8.~1 4 4tor$127.80 H78-15 7 .&0/8.55-15 4IOf 1127.80 RADIAL TIRES FOR IMPORTS Re~ponslve Radlal Ply Con-- s t ru ction • Aggressive Europea n Tread Design llZE 155SR-12 145SR·13 155SR-13 185SR-13 15SSR-14 1t1MiR-14 175SR·14 ~55SR-15- 165SR·15 185SR-15 800116.5 POLYISTl!R MOUL.AR LOW 4 FOii PRICE 4 for $103.IO 4 for $103.80 4 for 1107.IO 41orS111.80 4for S11 1.ao 4for1123.llO 4forSt31 .80 -4 lo"t s 1 t5,80 4 for lt23.80 41or St39.llO TRUCK & CAMPER TI RES I 4 FOR ' F!D. EX. TAX SALE PRICE PER TIRE 4 few I 71.00 $1.83 .4 few I 12.ISO $1.81 4 lor S Sl.IO $2.22 4forl AM $2.37 4tor1104:30 12.53 4lor1104.20 $2.60 4for111$.00 $2.75 4 lor $111.00 $2.80 Size 145SR·13 tubeless blackwall, plus $1.41 Fed. Ex. Tax per tire. 4 FOii RD. IX. TAX IALI PRICE I'll!: TIRE 4 lorS N .00 • 4 lor S IS.DO 4foft t7.0I 4lor1101.ot • fOf s101.oo 4tort111.oo 4IOl'S111.00 4!Of1104.00 4fOff111,00 4 for St21.DO USED $1.49 $1.41 Sl.81 s 1.54 . $1.8Q $1.92 $2.05 Sl.92 $2.00 $2.41 5(,95 ... Lot• of tood mllN9t left on th•M tlrei. - ner with 40 with Nalalle Mathews next at 46. Grace Wehe won D fl ight with 43. Costa 1Ue•a with 49, followed by S)'t>O Foster (S2J , Belly Brown (II) and a tie between Betty Jo ~ Sleva and Barbara Leonard at 157. In a mutt and Jeff tourna- ment for n1embers of the Maise Kato won B fil&bt women's golf group at Costa with 47, followed by Norine Mesa Golf and Country Club, Grady (49) Anne Keenan (S!) Barbara Leonard was the win-, ' · . ner with 39"2 and Rosemary SklU1on (52). AM Van Cl~ve finished see-Elise Stipes captured lhe C ond at 42 with Frankie Durst crown with 50. Next ~ere next at 42Yl. Reva Samuels (51) and Slurley Rosemary Skill ion was the Jackson (52). B winner wilh 40 followed by l}Jlssion Viejo Sybil Foster (40~). and a tie between Failyn Brooks and Belly \Valthall at 44. Carole Ross copped the C crown with 37'h with Maxine Assmus next at 40. Maise Kato took third with 41 with Shirley Jackson at 411h. Elise Stipes \Von D honors with 40 followed by r..tary Clark (42), Carne11e Kenned y l44l and Donna Costello (44\1 ). Alice Derby was the \vinncr of a three blind mice event Jean Metcalf \\'SS the A flight winner in a field strokes tournament with full handicap for members of the Mission Viejo · Golf C l 11 b women's group this week. ~large Cypert finished sec· ond \~ith 44. In B fli ght it was Helen ~1armaud the winner with 38 followed by Virginia Bramsby with .41. Sharon Lewter 1•:as the C 1,1,•inner with 43. FRONT END ALIGNMENT Only ••. We· correct Caster, Camber. ·Toe-in, Toe-out to 'your car .manufacturer's_ apecifieaUons . .. Safety check and adjust your steerin~! $8.~~ Con UllA SllYICI a!MICJOrCMS Wlll( AIR COllDITIOllU• Ol TOllllOl UQ C AMPER . MOTOR HOME HIGH-SPEED WHEEL BA LANCE ON THE CAR Complete BRAKE OVERHAUL 1. 1....UNIW....,.....,W.,• .. 4 ...... l .... 114 ................... , " ---1--..,i..-•.w. 4. 1..,..t lnll•,...,. ........ .. , .......... ~ ..... .... .. ..,...., ........ ........ 7. Alijtlt.,..__. ..... 1:1a1111j ....... s .......... ,.. .......... . ALL $ FOR ONLY. •• 95 Newporten are retllnglalr actfoJI 1rom-m1nc1 llalt-and load• are Ugbt. Ball, bonito, oeeaslonal yel)owillt and rocli: cod art lpafilag up the built of the dally calcbff, Bolfa Newport Ludin&• are MU111inJ foll bore, with some ll<bedulecf trlpo to the outer fl. land1. · Don Swedlund Reek Cod Season IVeflf'• The high price of meat has been fordng many more anglers 'out to the fishing grounds. Wtth the fall rock cod seaaon just around the corner, anglers stand a good chance al ftlttng tholr freozm with good eating fillets:· 646-5033 • Anglers should also look to Morro Bay for a late ,. .... run ---qlJ a!l>iCOi'e U"u;eywnr proliabl~hlnf"lhe'-lon(flns lhro<la~ October, weather permitting. 1----'-----'--'-------------"=== . . , ' • ) . - ' ... r !; .. 'r· '1• • ~! DAILY PILOT TV IDGHLIGHTS ABC 0 5:00 -The Big Tenn is Match. Bob- by Ri us lake!i on Billie Jean King in the battle of the sexes for a bonanza in ca.sh and chauvinistic supremacy. KCET llJ 8:00 -Playhouse New York: the 40's. "The Last Gls" is the first of a th ree-part dramatic exploration of American soldiers during and after World War II. CBS 0 9:00 -"Bonnie and Clyde." The tel e- vision premiere of this 1967 biographical drama of the famous bank robbing team of the Thirties. \Var· ren Beatty, Faye Dunaway, Ge ne Hackman, Michael J. Pollard, Estelle Parsons. TV DAILY LOG Thursday Evening SEPTEMBER 20 WATtAGllTE HEARINCS. Al llf'IJ••111i11e h subltd to ch11111 .-.vt llOtlce for cov11111 of till Wltlfeate Ht1ri1p. • 0 MIHICI~ $ Movlt: (C) (fit) "Tlll lo$t F1i1lllr (dra) '69 -Lloyd Br:dgu . Anne Francis. I Alfred ffitdlcod Pmellb 81lin1 fra11 the Oty111pk (I) Merie: (C) (2't') "'TIM Nfttr PnltSMf" (com) '63-.leNY lewis. ED u Se11C111 1ovt11 @ Novi•: (C) "Th• Com111<Mrn" (wa) '61-Jolln Waynt, Stuart Whit· min. ,.-~ D Cadillac. presents the · * years' sports event ..• Billie Jean vs. Bobby! ED,..,...._ Jkw Ttrt: TM 40'1 ·"The l ast G.l.'s" Part I of a J.part dramatic upllHation al Americln GJ;s durine and alttr W.W. II. 1=11=·1 Te .. All!lllllCd , ........ •:0010 mm lilil m- ,.. ' 4o CourtslllJ of Eddie's fattier ...... : {Zhr) .,..., .... Ci•· IMI" (mus) '-44-ktlt Davis, Jadi; C.uson. • :"W (l) al T111nil lattll et the kl.IS Con!'dliom SPM. Bobby Illus ws. 811111 .ll1n Kine. _Q The LICY SM'# a ?ii!?B~ ~::"'"' '"" A fun hl!1d special based on Ille OscJr Wilde story, 1he Cantertlll1 Ghod." ~Star Trtk Simp111111111t M1ril Movie: (C) "fulJ at Smaa'er's llJ" (ldv) '&3--Pettr Cushlns. John f11ser. m Hodppodp lodrt &) llllm·Stoores l :JO m Mm Critfll, Sllow lilil """' 1:00 D ~ CIJ CIS .. ,__,IC) (fM) "'ltn_lfe 111C1 CIJdt"' (dr1) '61 -Warten Be1tty, Faye Dun1w1y, Michael J. Pollard. Gene HKlrilTlln. Estelle PaBCns. The story ol Ctydt Barrow aftd Bonnie Parktr, !tie p;ilr ol bandib who became l•mous rob- bin1 banks durlnl the e1rly dl)'S ol the Dep1ession. (I) Kiit SllllUI "'1tllb Rock 1•d Rt•etnbrtll«S O @ 00 ®I !D '"""" "•~· der By One" The fatal sllOotlnt ol a letnaeed boy luds Chi1! l1onsld1 to l:lO (6) Hoea1'1 Hero11 !ht flan~e of the dead boy's di· CJ) Ci1 (I) (if.()) Nnn vorced mother. I Cftintntlon Jack Narz hosts. ~ Tiit lold OM• Mtrt Criffi11 Show fflstoria1 dt M1•1 J P1p1 lllCll11 Arts "Stitks ind StonH D Sllow de AltJllMr. Su1a Wilt Bulld a HollSI" Focus on the t.30 @ Slltri to Adttlltllf't Amer~n lndi1n I S t builder. fl} Jm Sit "Bobbi Humphrey Q~ln• I l.irifte bSJ tet'.' Mo\11111 fl) MICitcM lbllffl lJttlt lads m eo• 1:001 rn oom•... 1o:aaoi»ooamJ111e ,.11 1 •• lnli11 for DoH111 Sammy ~vis J1 .. Johnny Brown. 6 Morie: (C) 'Zhri "Its Alw111 Mld ey Rooney, Michael Lindon and f1 ir Weathtr" (mus) '55 -Gent Connie Stevens 111ut Kelly, tyd Ctllrlsse. IJ 0 m 1iJ Nm I llllMln,tel CJ) lliPl-~ry "'''" "1 ""' 0 THE STREETS OF SAN ~!:" .. ';';' * FRANCISCO-BIG HITI @@ Pll111p\lll: Thi Crtlt QMIW· •@ (J) al Strnb tf Sin fl11· back Snuk aKt "Betrayed" A woman wllo is (1) D111ntt may leave her is U51d to set up an fr1tt & Theo11l1 et1bo11t1 bank robbery, endan11tine 00 ltul1 her life. Telt-Rnlrtl Musktl ' All AintricH fa•ili I b111eraldl worried that her youne boyfriend M(rn .. ro Amor I wtld WIN wm ' : Spttcl bctr · • M11sicll • 7:JO fJ One1 Wtllts' Crtlt Mysttria 10:JO T1lk lack "The ln1111iolls Reporte(' Posin1 ai Tywlll"'pt"'Z-... -a convicted m11rd111r, a ttporltt · o finds th1t his plans IO nltay when = Snmt c.tlldt ht loses hit proof of Innocence. "'1 ".,'u' ~ - Int New Price b RIPl o ta II '"" Kelp T)J Nt lll!bor · Acom1111111111 News · • Nnn/s,orts '"""''" • 11:00 OO!D!D!!IN.., Thi LUCJ Shaw 3 00 lfj EE @ @ Nns llt'l Male a Deal TwlOlflt Z.11 § INikhtd 6 l'lrry lllsen fi (6) Tbt nril\Mtkfl Dick Y11 o,\t A«ion Ctlitt111 film clips of Ti Ten Utt Triitll United Farm Wo1kefl Union diredOI' Dupd Cesar Chmz, spe1kin1 11 union 1 @ be Wonil Today he1d~1rter1 in Otl1no. Atfred Hltdltoci t'Tlsellb I lll Jimmy Dean Shew Cil Tr1l11 West l Jonalh!ll Wintm Show The Addams ftl!lllJ 11:15 m ChtlU 34 11:30 CJ ~ Cil (iijJ m JohnllJ C.flOll t ·OO O Movie: "The Blue Dahlll" (mY1) fJ. WALTONS' JOHN-BOY '46-Veroniea Lake. Alan Udd. 8 @rn C:E Itek Paar T1t111tt -" 'Ir DELIVERS A BABY!!! Movlt: CCI "A111us hldm" ' ' • • , I) 8 fl) llJt Wa1tons John·BoY mks pnv1cy for hls writin1 11 1n abandoned e1bln and trrlves lust l (was) '51 -Audit Murphy, Brian Don levy. m Alfrtd Hitchcock (D Mowle: "8!1 HoaM USA" (dra) time to help 1 youne &irl deliver he1 '55-Ralph Meeker. baby. Sissy Spacek 111.ests. ll:45 0 fl!. (l) CIS lite Merit: (C) (D 191l Mlsa llmeflCln Tu111rtr "Jld; ti Dilmollds" (adv) '61 -Papan! ,.~ H · ~-h •·tt O lfiCil®imNEWSt1110N ,_,,1e amitton, N ... p ..., en, Flip Yfilson SlltW 811dcty Hac:tett, Carroll Ba~r. , Ruth Buui, Ricll1nl PrJOf, Wlllilm lZ:OO (6) Ont Ste~ Beyond 11 , Attmore II, and ttlt fllp41ttes guest m Mow!•: I Accuse (dra) 58- 0 Mow\1: (C) (2h1) "Manlltt 11 .lose Feirer, 'li\ltCI Urtdl0!$. tfll llocb" (com) '6S-Otan M•rtin, 1:00 (3) 0 0 00 ~(I) JCtn Deborah Keir. fun• Sin1\11. 0 Highr17 Patrol O Mll'rif: (C) (2hr) "The Kine Md 1:30 IJ O News I'" (mus~ ·~v~t Brynner, Debof1h l:4S U Movie: "Hllllll H Ttltlfl,. Kerr. R•I• ~onno. Rodltfl ind Hill'" (mys) '51-ltidlaid Bastbtrt. H1mmer1teln s celebrattd musical m Al NI-••-'C) .... • venion cl "Anna and the l(Jne or l :OO · P" -· 1 ,.., Siam,N the stort ol tht scl!ool leath· "I C.... 1ht WMll'fl'lftt" er who 1r1ives in Slam lo teach tht J:lO 1J Morie: "Tbt W.iplll" (dr1) '57 children of tht Kina. -Lizabeth Scott, Steve Coch11n. Friday 1111 fi(httr" (com) '45-lluret en(. Hardy . 1:00 0 (C) "$tr1np LldJ 111 TOWI" (dra) '55--Grttr GaflOn. , Coastal Boanf-.Steps _la 'La Mancha' Postpon~d Don Quixote ran into some formidable opponents in his lege~i;y travels. bul no wlndmlll or mule dri ver ever packed as potent a . P,IJilCh as the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission. Intermission Tom Titus ' Thanks to the coastal board. empowered by the passage last November of Proposition 20. next Wednesday's schedul- ed opening of "Man or La ~1ancha" at the new Sebas- tian's \Vest Dinner Playhouse in San Clemente is kaput. No one ever told the politicians !hat the show must go on. The musical was primed and ready, Sebastian's own er Ernie \7erre explains, and all was in readiness for the Sept. 26 grand opening. ~n the playhouse personnel decided to ductions of "Cabaret" and "Fidd1er op the Roof." Gary Davis, who's directing "La Mancha" with many of the same performers from his excellent Long Beach 'Civic Light Opera version, will stage the other musicals also. fie advises auditionees lo bring their own music and be prepared to sing. \Vhich will be about the only repair the sidewalk outside the .,.... renovated building at 140 Avenida Pico -and thal's when the coastal watchdogs moved in. The upshot of it all is that now Sebastian's West must halt au wOrk on the building unUI Oct. 1 when a permit ap- plication goes before the coastal board. Assuming ap-1 proval to proceed is given, the theater must then sit out another 10 days during which an appeal may be filed. KOIA guest director for Eugene O'Neill's Lighthearted memoir wb.lch opens Tuesday for a three-week run. Jean also is noted for her sterling pro-- duction of "Cat o.a a Hot Tin Roof" in 1972 al the Hun- tington Beach Playhouse. Jean's husband Alex, who'll direct "Life With Father1' al Laguna this season, heads the Laguna cast as the father, with Gertrude Zint playing his wile. 'llie four children are ~1ark l\1anning, R a n d y Holland, Dee Dee Challis and Mike Taylor, with G e n e Benedict, Helen Vail, Elmore Vincent, Caro I Gustafson, Peter. Case, Gail Sikora, Herb Johns, Milt Sampson and De~ bie Wilson rounding out the cast. "Ah, \\lilderness" will play the regular Laguna run of three weekends. Wednesdays through Saturdays, at 8:30 in the playhouse, 006 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Reservations 494-0743. the company are Don Tuche, Gary Bell, Elizabeth Herbert, Mich.ael Douglass. J u n e \\'inalow, Sharon Crablree, Reginald Rook, Jeff MacNeilledge, John Ellington and Stuart Du_ckworth. "1be Tavern" will be on the SCR boards W e dne s d ays through Sundays until Oct. 'n at the Third Step Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, with an 8 o'clock curtain. Reservations 64&-1363. CALI.BOARD -The latest group to stage the popu1ar "Peanuts" musical "You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown" will be the FoWJtain Valley Community Theater auditions for the four-boy, twC>- girl cast will be conducted Monday and Tuesday at. 6:30 Nordic Cutups p.m. by director Dav 1 d . Maiville at the theater , 18280 MiCkey Rooney and Sammy Davis Jr. play a COUP.le fl.1t. Baldy Circle, Fountain of Norsemen in a skit on tonight's NBC Follies Valley. wh ere the show wiU show, airing at 10 o'clock on NBC, Channel 4. BACKS 'l'.~·GE A Papers Strike children's theater program will be offered in Laguna S pJ l Off Beach this fall by tbe city's 0 a y s recreation department . . . ST. LOUIS (AP) _The first the group will be composed o( open Nov. 8 for two week- end\.. .. ~ *Surfing Festival* This WHk "PacHic Vibrations" -music emanating from the halls of Sebastian's \Vest for another month . 6 to JS-year-olds and will meet production scheduled this fall aft er school on \Vednesdays at the American Theatre has under the direction of Tom been postponed because or the OPENING FRIDAY a t Threadgold ... information is St. Louis newspaper strike. r.IEANWHlLE, TWO other South Coast Repertory is available at 494-1124, ext. Manager Edward W. 2 lmY IOOP CAITOONS productions being mountt'd by George M. Cohan's "The 47. . . . ~Steinhauer said the play. FIEE DYNO SUlFIOAIDS ....... ,,.,n..tre COMPLETI l'tlfOlMANCU 7:l0 & 9:)0 ........ , .. "I DON'T KNOW what we're going to do with the cast," Verre says. "The show is ready to go , and if we keep it in rehearsal we have to pay the actors. We're now setting a goal or Oct . 25 to get the show open." Be that as it may, Se bas- tian's \Vest is looking ahead to its next three shows following the scheduled six·week run or "Man of La Mancha." Audi- tions will be held Saturday from noon to 3 p.m. at the theater for ''P r omises, Promises," while talent also will be sought for future pro- the two largest theater groups Tavern," the curtain raiser of For those who missed the "Don't &ther ~1e, I Can't on the Orange Coast are the 1973-74 season for the li'ountain Valley Community Cope," was postponed by pro- heading tow ard their season-Costa ~1esa company and 'llieater's summer production ducer Norman Keane, who felt opening performances next SCR's 83rd production in its or "Peter Pan," the show will there would not be adeq1.1ilte1~'!!"''!!"''!!"''!!"''!!"''!!"''!!"''!!"''!!"''!!"'~ y,·ee k. The first is ''Ah, \\lilder-8Y.r:-year history. Guest direc· return f o r six additional a dver t is I ng with o u t l: ness" at the Laguna Moulton tor Is Robert Bonaventura, performances this 'Friday and newspapers. Playhouse: the second "The who staged th e hilarious Saturday at 8 p.m., Sunday alJ;::=~========>:I Tavern" at South Coast Reper-''Charley's Aunt" at SCR 3 p.m. and a similar schedule tory. sev<;t."al seasons bac~. Sept. 28-30 ..• th e theater is Al Laguna. Jean Koba -Rick Doyle plays the central located !t 18280 Mt. Baldy Cir- who stai:red with Laguna role of the vagabond , the part 'cle. Fountain Valley, with managing director Ii a p Cohan created for himself in reservations being taken at Graham last season in "How -~'b:e;;;ioi;ri~giiiniiailiviieiirs;iiioini.iAiiilso;i;;,iini;;;oii53i;;i;t-8602i;;i;;i;;,"iiri84ii7~ii;7iiOi.i.iiiiii;~ the Other Half Loves" -is 1 Gleason Joining NBC, Will Switch to Drama MIAMI, Fla (AP) -Actor- comcdian J ackie Gleason says he is switching his televisi?n allegi ance from CBS to NBC and his show rare from C()ffi· edy to drama. "It's the kind of thing I've wanted to do for a long time. They're more easier to do than comedy." Gleason said Tuesday in announcing he was severing his 22-year associa- tion with CBS . He said his twC>-year con· tract with NBC calls for a minimum of three shows a year after he joins NC in ~ptember 1~74 . Gleason said he was not con- sidering beginning a new television series "unless a show comes along we can spin one orr of." He said although CBS of- fered to renegotiate his con- tract. he decided not to deal wilh the network because "our relationst:Hp isn't what it used to be." . He said ABC offered him the most money but that he "preferred working w i t h NBC." Gleason declined to reveal financial details of his new contract except to say it was more lucrative than h i s present agreement with CBS. which has provided an annual $100,000 retainer. Meanwhile, the comedian said tom cartilage in his right knee has him worried about upcoming tapings for an Oct. 11 special on CBS. Gleason hurt his knee stumbling over his dog's bone. U, A. CITY AN OSOUTM COAST CINEMAS-TUESDAYS SIC {LADIES AHD GOLOENAGERS~PEN Tll. 1:.te PM. ;:: :::: iilr i:.: ;;• 11:41 Im SOU!h ' UA """' '1.AOY tr;UNG l'U" "CMINESIE CONNECTION" "l'IST$ OF l'u'RY" All 111 Color! IRJ '! .. easily the best movie so far this Yea.•'' -Steohen Fo<toe• • • NEW YORK TIMES :-: .,.,.. UMt9: you r.'6Z? ~ )0UTH C:OAST PU.lA I Wkdll.,.1••J:a.t::xi S.11~·1 :)1.J:»S:• 1:Jl.t:• riiEil ' >" UI ......... ,,~... I e ALL FAMILY SHOW FOi FIVI llG DAY5 e • CAMPEU e ,MOTOI HOMES. e e TUILllS e CAMPING EQUIPMINf e I IOATS I SflOITING GOODS I I VAN CONVllSH>NS I DAILY INRITAINMINT I AT NWt91 STAOMI UNO€ll TME MO 0A• KATI:Ll.A' 8TATt OCIUfCif .:w. SHOW HOURS: ~·~::'.": ::';.'.!"t,_..,, 11 ....... , ... ....,. ADULTS $2.00. JUNIORS $1.00 SAVE So c "'"""'_, ___ ___ -·--·-·-·-lll!f.~---~ 34511 Via t.ldrl Ncwpoft Bach ,...,,,., 61$-1350 EXCLUSIVE ORA.NGE COAST A OH~O 0[ lAU-UHttS ~OI ffO!ll COUJMllA PtCTUU$ Al.SO ''DOLLARS'' L"ocohl A•• --.s:ot ~~· a2t.41,. .. __ ILUME' IN lOYI !II l'W1• ... •0'M&I. "'==':••:::Y •c;•; .. ~';;;;,:;;' IUfl' ltTNOlDI WHITI LtGHTNING !Ni "" LEGINDOF HILL HOUSI f •_o;.A_v_T1_M_E_M_ov_1_Es_ ~ -~ m "l1bet11011s O.u1httfl" (dfl) : 'Ji..=M1rjorit Reynolds, Ve rna HHll. 'm ''Gitt In W~ill" (1om) '52-June Atlyson.Wur Kinnedy. J:OO Cl) (C) >7he Mat111 StlSOll" (com)' fNlliii '51--Cene Tierney, John Lund. EXECUTIVE • • 1:J1 D (C) "The rlflt M•~ lft tlle • ...... (sd·ll) '64-£d1111rd Judd. ... m "'Hid• and Sen" (com) '64 -, Iii C.rmlc:httl, .line! Munro, &I °'£\JlfJ Day's I HolldlJ" (com) , , 1D-M11 West, Lloyd l'lol1n. t J.tt0 8 ..._.. II Prito11• (dr1) '5& -t. lidflrl1 Dtiu\1111, .kla1 TaylOI. "'TM ' (Jj "De•r 1t11rr Cone!. N1M If ....... J:JO 9 Cl) •1 S.W -.t '" Dk!" (dra) '6'S-=Joan Cr1wforcl, John !rtl1nd. l :OIO!Cl .,..j ... I« ........ (d1aJ '!18 -Roe• Hlldaon, Crd Chariue. 4:XI CJ) S.1111 •s Illl\lll lstl11 6-j ()) '1•• of Ille Ten"" Cond. (COii) '42-tl!J Grant, .kl• Mhw. KOCE, CHANNEL SO t Mon. thru Fri. 7:15 AM -Sat. -arid Sun. 8:15 AM 1 F ON YOUR DIAi; KAPX NEWS AND MUSIC -'RADIO Sponsored By: STATE MUTUAL SAVINGS 5661 LA JOLLA BLVD. 6l5 E. FIRST ST. ldA :us: J, .. IM'Mf AY•. Sou!~~1.elfi I Mit e! .. ~lfvo,. ..... ,," ..,., .. , WI Mn 1 l. trtS UT4UN211M1H 1 _, fi1S IXI HIW Cl ... llOUlAI PIKU Pl.Ill I MCI Nlt!IO'tofil '"'~"'"' ,., · FIVI IAIY "ICU .:i. **·""' """ • I \IT, I -. II South Coasl PlaZa II • ' MtJJ!i ' ' .. • • • • . • • • l • . • • > t • ' • M • , • • " . • t .. • " I ' • • • - • • With 4" Serles" MGM Gives Up, He's a Doctor Now ·'Recognizes' TV LOS ANGELES (AP) - James Franciscus, television's Pe·a bod y Award-winning school teacher, "Mr. Novak," b now Into the medical hag. P e o p I e -t o-people rela- tionships. People and thetr1 problems. Ir you think Uiat sounds li1te "The Waltons," yo.u are right. "Doc Elliot'' is from Lorimar Producllons, the folks who brought you that Emmy and Peabody Awarcl- winnlng aeries of the past season. By VERNON SCOTT HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Melro-Ooldwyn..Mayer o n e e waa the most lnfluenUal studio on iarih, ruled by the iron fist of Lout> B. Mayer, the ard!lypo mOvte mogul who tg. nored television like a lion ig- nores a gnat. But Mayer iS dead and MGM has been in the in- tenalve care unit for years, !aaping along selling its real eotate, 4uctloning off its props and wardrobe and making ,.. so movles. Now the MGM lion, the studio'a !amlliar trademark, is being revived by some box-of- fice mo\lies, "WestworJd" and "Skyjacked," '8nd full recogni· tlon of television. At long last MGM is convinced the tube is here to stay. LAST YEAR It had only a alngle series in . prime time, "Medical Center." This year it has four : "Adam's Rib," "Hawkins," "Shaft" and "Medical Center." Next season it hopes to add to the lilt. called . the MGµ F a rn 11 y Nefwork, si81'ing 144 statlqns to carrj old MGM family fUm.s from S.7 p.m. several times a year. "WE HAVE 14 films earmarked for tlte network," he saidJ "and then we'll start making our own projects for the MGM network. "'!be two boui:s between 5 and 7 in the evening are famJ~ ly hours and they've been ig- oored. We. are· going to show the kind of plctllfes that ap- peal to the entire family, not just to segments of it." The first o[Cering Sept. 9 is "The Yearling," which recelv· ed •three Academy Awards l'__.%ft Mck in 1947. lt has been U"• shown on lelevisiqp in the his past, as have such otber MGM Joh'.n B.oy (Richard Thomas) ,seeks pri~acy ~or . of Life network candidates as "Na-writing at an abandoned cabm and amves m time tional Velvet," and "Lill." 'to help a young girl (Sissy Spacek) have a baby on Each show wUI be hosted by tofilght's episode of "The Waltons," at 8 o'c)ock a famous star known' to kid-on CBS (2). dies and parents alike. _.:_..::.;c_:..:.._: ________________ _ Just before going intq "Doc Elliot" for ABC, Franciscus spent days nmnlng thi'ougb medieal drills -learning to handle the hag properly, bow to use instruments, give a !tw>t -so that it will be second Producing the show will be Sandor Stern, who gave up his medical practice in Canada nature berore the camera. several years ago to write for "It's just the mechanics of · such ahows as • 1 Marcu s it,'' he said. "ln a sense it's Welby, M.D." He last was pr0;- almost secoodary to the show ducer of ''The Mod Squad." becauae if we were a medical show per .. ~ could throw oor whole heart behind tt. "But this is not a medical show in lhat sense of the \\Vd. It's much more about the people who live in the Cltlorado mountains and the people-to-people relationships. "WE HAVE the medicine as part of the show, but you get into the medicine and you forget it for the rest or the show. You tallr about-people and their problems." "Doc Elliot" was a late ad· dition to the ABC schedule and will appear tince a month in rotation with uQwen Ma rshall. Counselor at Law," on Wedne$day nights. ABC had good. luck with that system with "Kung Fu," and at midseason it became a regular Weekly series. The network also will r o t a t e "Cyborg" with "The ABC Suspense Movie" on Saturday nights . "DOC ELLicrr" is about a doctor who moyes from Nfl W OTHER OLD fiicks headOO p USO R • z • • York City to the mountains or ~la~ ~=-· '!:;,~~ ostwar evita izzng ~!~:~~ynu can say he came Beauty," "Wonderful World or from Missouri or somewhere the 'Brothen Grimm," "Tom and ended up practicing in .... '"J'At NOT KNOWN for my longevity," be said, grinning. "One year, two years, that's about it But l've been pleased with the sho ws J've done, I must say. l have no regrets. "Longevily to me isn't the measure of success anyway. I think if yOu do a year and it's something you can hold your head up about a year's as good as half a year or IQ years." After the cancellaion of "~tr. Novak," he tu med from television in disillusionm ent and made such movies as "Youngbl ood Hawk," "~farooned," "Beneath the Planet of the Apes," "Hell Boats" and a hall dozen movies for television. "I v;as disappointed in the horizons television of!ered ," "Franciscus said, "We bad so many shows on '?\-"Ir. Novak' that we weren't allowed to do. Sho\VS that dealt with life in an adult maMer. And we just were not allowed to do them. "And I think when the show • ,. ........... /I. DOCTOR NOW Actor Fr1nclscu1 was over I kind of said. well , television is too damned limiting. "You Can't take a subject and treat It, and the only place to do that in film is features. But now I think that's changed considerably. Now there's next to. no thing you can't talk about on television. And r. thin" that's all to the better." FAMILY TWIN CIN~ Fount•111 v.au..,. -Nl·lttl N1lft Tl G-o Sl- A<l'Ml •rem Llflll..._ Hl .... 11'9 CINEMA I "Bl LL Y JACK" • .. ., .. , ....... " As Is often the case in a cor· porate-tumaround , me man Is respons ibl e. At MGM television the '11\B.n 1 is Harris Katleman, a funner agent who joined Metro a year ago. Essentially a businessman with a sure grasp of show business, Katleman iJ in hls 405, ·tough minded a n d optmlsUc. Thumb," "Knights of the F M l b • w k New York," Franciscus said. Round Table," and die fairl y or ora e oosting or "Then he looked up one day new "Peter Rabbit and the • alter the third junkie tried to "DILLINGER" (l\J CINEMA II Tales of Beatrix Potter." slit hi s throat and the fourth a ''40 CARATS'' . A.d Clilldr•" (~I "If we put these pictures on " guy died in his arms and he "LADY KUNG-Fu .. Clll "lirtt.ffti.!',,,,. ,,_ .. television movies are shown, LOS ANGELES (AP ) process of revitalizing the there is a 400, annu2~' "And whether he ran from at 9 p.m., when mo st By BOB THOl\-fAS Sheldon said he Is in the demonstrated bf t~fact tha~ just said there's a better way.,j~iiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~:.~iiiii~~~~~~~.~ We 'd be murdered in the USO show operation in the turnover among the n t th tai · Fred Astair.e dancing on a million Ill. uniform. or o e moun ns is a ques-~ p· t ratings," KaUeman said. "But £-·-'·flatbed In the middle of face of two major deterrenL'I: li tion the series will deal with . aramOUn our 'Wlzard of Oz' on its 15th u ·u1,;11. 'Ibe loog, unpopular Vietnam "Many yowig people be ·eve Did he run from New York or d~J ..r.-Jt1d Showing on the air got a so war.torn France · · · Joe E. war, which caused unwilling· that being in the military t th ta· , M · .QTV"~wtr1 p·1ctures He's put toget~r a project Met Opera Canceling 'Giovanni' Brown •·U••• jokes to invasion ak h go o e moun tns. y opm-pereent share. i..::. .. oe ness by some entertainers to automatically m es t em ion ls he looked arolllld and ._A,.llL ~ t ' "Our MGM Femily'Netwo11k troops . in the Phllippines · · · donate their talents, and the second-class citizens. The USO just decided there's a better '!f.lN"' ~ ,,~!~J -presen S will -operate only fol.lt times a Marilyn Monroe drawing roars transition to a volunteer mil~ has a vital role to fill in assur-way than this." ql/W~ the return 0.& F•~ this month and of approval from Gls in Korea .,.,...., hlch ra·sed the ques 1 the · unit .-•• he 'I year. u•~ J hn W tat••·• t J-..J, w i • ng man in orm W<l4 "Doc Elfiot" will be the fifth then In January, Mareh and · · · o ayne -.. 0 lion of whether l"'l<rtalnment is res~ed In the com· '""'·"" the Q reatest May. ~:i~t .. c~balll; ~ac~~ ·for the troops was sUU nee-munity'-" . ~~;iem:i::-r:t~elnJ~ef;;g!~ ::. Jove Stoni ,.8UT WE'LL be making 20 wise in any war . . . essary. VIETNAM IS no longer 3 the half·hourthvershnlon of 1 "Nak· 1 J pilots for new series this year. For 32 years USO shows "SHOW PEOPLE supported booking for USO entertainers, ed City" wt Jo Mc ntyre. Of all time, And we've got 1,300 produced have been sent to entertain the war from IM& to 1969, but but shows travel to Thailand, lt Jasted one year; and when it movies ._blch the studio still troops far away from home. after that a klnd of disen-the Philippines, Ta i w a 0 , was revived as an hour-long owns foi titles and Ideas, The need for such diversion chantment set in. It became Korea, remote posts i 0 show, be turned it down. Next, aJong with 5,000 unproduced contfnues despite the end of very chic to be antimilltary, Australia, Johnson I 5 I and, he "wae in "'Ille llwestigato.rs." NEW YORK (AP) -The novels and scripts. the war in Vi etnam, says a and there were few e r bases on tiny Islands in Alaska The Peabody winner, "!\1r. Metropalitan Opera. in an "It's ·an untapped gold USO official. volunteers for tours," he said. and Japan. Other tours include Novak," lasted two years; and economy inove . bas canceled 8 mine." KaUeman. who is vice "Now that the war is over, "We'll never be able to gear Denmark, Germany, Turkey, ''.Longstreet," in which he new production of M~t's president in char~e o f the need for entertainment is the uso· shows up to Mediterranean bases, Africa, played a blind insurance in- "Don GiovaMi" 85 well as telev.Woo at lbe studio, is a even greater," said Jimmy what it used to be, but we Iceland Md Greenland. vesttgator, lasted one ye~. future swnmer programs of differenL. sort ot man than s~ a pianist-composer 'bop:e we can convince big ,c·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;w free outdoor opera concerts. i.ow. B. Mayer. Neither he who. serves as directorof_Uso-:stars ~t ttJtttc is still a need 11 Schuyler G. Chapin , Met: Dot"":tbe ...... udlo can afford to sti>ws. '1Morale suffers·from for their support. •• general manager: laid ,that overlook the · revolU1ion in b o r e d o m , and w he 6. "Even though the>military is $200,000 would be sated by A m e r i c an entertainment servicemen have no a 11 • converting to en all-volunteer dispenling -1th new sets and prefeitnre. 1Ultleman a n d abidiiie" war m.lssion to per· force, it is not necessarily a costumes for "Don Giovanelli'' Metro are going where the ae-form , 'they get restless." professional force. That is which will~ presented Marchi .. ~tio~n~IS~· ~· .. ;.~---;;;;;;i\~-~-~~--~mmmiiiillEmni~·11 28. Ii QJapln, who called the steps "draatlc," aakl an equal amount will be saved by eliminating summer presen· tatlons of free opera concetp in tbe city parks. The company opens Its 89th season on Monday. L a s t season, the gap between in· come and expenses w a s reparted to be $'7,790,000 and the tou after c:OntributloM totaled '2,812,000. George S. M0ore, presi<Jent of the MetropaUtan Opera A.uodation. estimated that contributions for the upcoming season would be $5.6 million._ .rwe can absorb a loss of that much, but not ffi9re," Moore said . .~,··~ ~:r-;r~ .. ~ HILD OYlll Je"'" c.a.w. "HARRY IN YOUR POCKET" (PGJ 7:00 PM A 10:16 PM -._ .... "EVERYTHING YOU'VE ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW -ABOUT SEX" (R~ , 1:41 PM MATINll-SUHDAY Coif """-fot' s..-, Sclaed•le ~ \ .•••. ,, ... ~ •1111m11 "'fllUIU ~ ...... /\ P~-.i 11,l<tHDJ 2nd ii Center GEORGE C.SCOIT JACK (I . FMDUNAWAY NICHOLSON JOHNMIUS nw "''" JACK PAtANCE PIE/%8 (PGI OK HOMA CRUDE Al'° Ryin O'Ntal in ''WILD lOVIU" ' • ... -'•• SfADIUM·J . ' ............ ' . IW l-l!WWI ... TOUln:,ll V\11111. ~; J.laj •• >ill • "" " ""Afl(fNTO$~ " 'THI STOHi llLi.U" -"DOL.LAU" CIJ ''SOUND Of MUSIC .. -"CHAILOTTn WU" t•I '"LADY IUH•· PU" ... THE CHINISI CONNICTION' "THI NIW. CINTUllONS"' ... "FIYI IA.SY PIECl'S" (l, .. PAPEI MOON" . tPGJ ... "HAROLD & MAUD!" ""A-.RY IN YOUlt !'OCKl:T" l!'GJ ... "llVt:RYT"UtO YOU IVt:lt WANTID TO KNOW A90UT Sl:llC .. !It) .. PG · ~AM c; "O'TOOl.E IS AINHY, DISTURBING, IJEVASTATINGI" ---~., ............ " "A llRJlUANT fllltl...STllNNINGI" --0... .. , ............ t .. .1, ---,,.,. .... __ ' ---·· ::..rr: ] -um...,... AUUNCi 'Ci ASS ---• J..-ii __ .._. .. PA RAltOOMT PICltJu:5 ,.- ••~FU ...... FRAN co ZEmRE111 ........... ~ 11'-l'l:iolllll'l'.AW Ali·llac&raw • RyaaO'lul Tho Orit:inal U•cut Yer1io1 .. Together for The First Time * Two Beautiful Stories of Love IN HAit Ollt SHOf'PtNG CfMTtllt EDWARDS HARBOR c1i;:r:A2 ll-111011 •lYO JT WlllOll ST . COST• lllf!• 1'1'°'7! EDWARDS <l\11111 I\ 11 K H,,j.~!)k t•' A,1f\'-4 !f)il A Vt<,r. • '1'9 ~1-l l SIUllllG JU'tll INDRIWS CHRISIOPHEI Pulllm Entertainmtnt for the Entire Fam!Jy -0 . I I I • ' :J_(} DAILY PILOT s Tlltrt~daJ, September 20, 1~7J LA lntegt·ation S~ill Up in Ai1· San Qiego .Boord Rehires Teachers SllN DIEGO (AP) -The San Diego School Board, which fired 134 teachers in June, Is hiring them all baek and bas room for 18 more because a predicted enrollment decline hasn't materialized. L. Goodman told the board 1\1esday the higher enrollmenl mean.s the district will get $629,000 in state aid tt wasn't co.0nting on, allowing it to pay the teachers. LOS A'NGELes I n California, "'here there are more school children than in any other state, orders lo racially integrate are being held up by school board cha1Jenges, public protest and Jegal maneuvers. The rocus again is on Los Augeles where the school board is still trying to over- turn Superior Court Judge ,\1· rred E. Gitelson's historic rul- ing of 1970 ordering \his mam- n1oth 613,000-student district to bring schools into racial balance. A state appellate court has yet to decide whether to uphold the Gitelson decision. But whether it does, the case almos t certainly will be ap- pealed ultimately to the U.S. Supren1e Court .. Judge Gitelson's basic premise is that there is no dif- ference between "de jure" segregation (separation (Jf the races by law) and "de facto" stffegation (separation by chance or by housing pat· terns). BUT 111ERE have been no definitive high court rulings supporting this concept. And so far, the U.S. Supreme Court has termed only de jure segregation unconsUtutional. Meanwhile, despite prod· dings by integrationists and civil rights groups, Los Angeles school Officials have flatly rerused to obey the Gitelson order and adopt a master plan for racial , mi>.;. 'Mley say th.is would entail a massive busing program that CHPChief Backs Bike Citations SAN DIEGO (AP) -The California Highway Patrol is being criticized for banding out citations to childreo ()n bicycles, says Commissioner \\'alter Pudinski. "A bike must obey every law a car must obey," he said in a speech Tuesday night. But Pudinski said 2 percent or the state's 4,5001 fatal accidents expected this year will involve children On bikes. St ill Californians write in, he si.id, expressin~ anger at seeing big highway patrolmen writing citations for little OOys and girls. If a child is under 14. a 'vaming is given to his parents when a traffic law is violated. If he commits three bike- riding violations within a year, "we can him in for a talk," Pudinski said. T h e com· plaining citizens ask why patrolmen don't leave the kids alone and capture bank rob- bers, the commissioner noted, adding. "'I'o hell with the bank robbers. They'll be caught by the sheriff. \Ve want to save kids." REFLECTIONS by Reyn Sheffer "'Wise men learn . mor• from fools than fools learn from the wise • , ." Cato, the Elder This is as true no,,· as it doubtle::is was during the early Roman days. 'l'ht• fool- ish element in our (JOpula- tJon today provKl.cs many lessons in ho\V not to solve a problem or hO\V not to handle e. crisis. This is a somewhat negative bul cf· fective approach to ll'Urnin:,:. The wise lenrn much frorn observing the inefff'Ctual and inept deportment of the foolish element which is al-we..vs with us. Ttiat' (he fools do not learn something in tum 11 the .very reason that they are and \\'ill remain fools. \Vhencver our help i:o; 11'.'• quested, we provide it \Yith thf! compassion. promptni'!'S end detx•nd11billty that h~ aJw&)'S characterized ou r organlz.."lfion. FAmlllr!I or on.Y faith or crC<.-d. frorn anY"A'here In this IU"C?B, mny f!rth upon ll3 with ('f)nfl· dcn~-c. I Q:.'.H€FF€R : 1 ~ m<>1<TU.a.1ly f76 SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY I LA6UNA IEACH • 494-·l llS SAN CLEMENTE t SlJ NORTH El CAMINO REAL -'492·0100 would bankrupt the district. Instead, schools here are ex· panding co1npensatory pro- granlS in inner city facilities \\'ith almost totally black or Mexican-American enrollments. They also are broadening multicultural ex- change experin1ents, such as !lie Program for lnterculturnl Experience on the elementary level and the Area Progran1 Enrichment Exchange i n junior and senior hlgh schools. ADDITIONALLY, THIS sprawling district is tryif!g to · alter some lon g-standing black , brown. and white racial clusters by redistricting schools and changing at· tendance boundaries. However, here, as in ()ther innercity urban areas of the North, the minority school population continues to S\vcll, along with white flight to the suburbs. Statistics show that de facto segregation actually is increasing, rather than on the decline. MeanwhHe, these other. lnd11strial Burglary Project Supertintendent T h o m a s Anti1ioise Law Hit By Firms The district forecast earJier this year that October 19'n enrollment of 125,000 would <trop ~Y ·4,000 this October. Goodman said he now expects about 123,000 pupils to be enrolled in san DlegQ public schools Oct. 1. Two. teacher groups had fil· ed suit on behalf of the fired instructor's, alJ of them in grades kindergarten thr~gh six. The San Diego Teachers Association, representing most SAN DIEGO (AP) of the city's teachers, said Spokesmen for construction Tuesday lt expects t o firms says an antinoise .law withdraw its suit. adopted 7-0 Tuesday by .thc1.========;;:; City Council won't work. The ordinance limits con- struction to within 7 a.m. and 7 p,m., except with special permits. Decibel limits are set for different areas, and any noise exceeding that by five decibels for an hour is pro- hi bited. California districts also are embroiled in busing con- troversies. The Huntington Beach police are encouraging busi- PASADENA, which im-nessmen in their city's industrial areas to paint the firm's' name and address on their roof to aid the · three police dogs trained to help find intruders in· side lar~e buildings.-Chief Earle Robitaille said the addressmg and use of dogs is part of a program to An attorney representing the Co n struction Industry Coordinating Council s a i d heavy earth-moving equip-' ment would be unable to meet the' standards. Others in the industry agreed. plemented a busing program police helicopter in spotting the building, as in this two years ago as a resuJt of a reduce burglaries in the industrial area. · A wide range of noises in- cluding those from model airplanes, garbage t r u c k s , burglar alanns and animals would be controlled Y.·ith the l maximum penally a $500 fine and six months in jail. court-ordered mandate by U.S. simulated scene. The department has also acquired District Judge Manual Real, is-----------'---------=-------------------------- searchin g out alternatives to h•ir ody11•y 1]9-4144 this method of integrating 6 schools. Busing opponents recently - won a clear majority on the school board. They-·e:re-work·- ing with a citizens committee Onnly committed to a "no Contenders Agree Naval Base Commander Takes Post 161) I lrookhur•t •t Ecli11tJtr HOl,ln: 10.1 T,,,... • $11, busing" stance. INGLEWOOD, a di strict \Vith ia 47 percent black school papulation also is trying to get a 1970 integration order rescinded. However, it already has lost one appeal. Addi ti ona I Jy, several Ca lifornia communities are draggiiig anchor on integration plans, which include busing, until the courts· resolve the constitutionality of the socall~ ed Wakefield Amendment. Passed bf California voters last November, this voter in- itiative provides that "no public school student shall because of his race, creed, or color. be assigned to or be re- quired to attend a particular school," Opponents Qf the measure originally tried to block it off the ballot, 'maintaining it clearly violated the U.S. Constitution. Earlier this sum- mer a superior court judge in San Bemadino sustained this view, ordering the district to proceed with an experimental desegregation plan despite the initiative. EARLIER, HOWEVER, a Sacramento judge ruled that the measure, ratified by 63 percent of the voters, clearly meets state requirements. An appeal of the former court order is-pending. Older Pupils Still Need · A 'Cosigner' All the Capistrano Unified Sc hool District's 16-year-old pupils will have to hunt around for a cosigner for absence notes starting this week after trustees found a JQOphole in the system. The students, legally adults in the state these da ys. had been entitled last year to sign their own absence notes. But schoo l official s discovered that the absentee rate took a sudden tum for the worse. Trustees this week tackled the issue and agreed that henctforth the pupils could still sign the notes. But they need a -pcrient. guardian ()r physician to dQ the same. Democratic Hopefuls Assail Reagan Plan Special to the Do.Uy Pilot LOS ANGELES -In a po 1 i t i cally unprecedented move. the six leading con; tenders for California's D e mo cratic gubernatorial nomination and their state party chairman came together Wednesday to rip tbe Nov. 6 special tax initiative election. It is a "$20 million downpa y- ment by California taxpayers on Gov. Ronald Reagan's campaign !or the U . S . Environment presidency," they charged. The Republican governor Linked by telephone in was asked at his news con- Northern and So u t h e' r n ference in Sacrarriento 'if ,he California to Washington, the wasn 't being condescending to Democratic leaders termed the league by saying in a Prop. 1 "a Cruet hoax which speech that "the good ladies" would shlft the burden of stale of the league decided to battle government to local tax-. the tax plan "all on their payers, Republican a n d own." Democrat alike." · Reagan replied, "It wasn't In Los Angeles w e r e intended to be condenscending Secretary of State Edmund G. and il wasn't intended to be Brown Jr., Assembly Speaker insulting, buti tell you it was BQb Moretti, State S en . intended to be critical." George R. Moscone an d Reagan's proposal would Assemblyman John L. Burton. place a gradually declining lid Democratic state clWrman. on all state tax revenues over Speaking in San Francisco a 15'-year period. Wtte that city's mayor, Jn another development Joseph L. Alioto, a n d Reagan's tax limitation was University of California regent accused of dumping 8 bigger and former a m bass ado r share of the state's tax burden · LONG BEACH, (AP! Rear Adm. Ward s. Miller, former naval deputy· com· mandant of the NATO Defense CoRege in ROme, is the new commander of the L o s Angeles-Leng Beach Naval Base. JOHN P. CHARD. M.D.- •nnounces the Relocation of His General Practic~. lo 653 Camino de Los Mares -Suite I 05 San Clemente · Aero'' from San Clemente Gener1I Hospit1I 493-6113 Miller took command this week from Capt. Donald A. Smith, who is remaining in Long Beach as commanding officer of the Naval Station lr;i~;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; there. SCRTDGets NewChwf YOUR SUPPORTING GIFT GUARANTEES () 0 Panel Eyes Edison Bid William Matson Roth. ohto the backs of low income LOS ANGELES (AP} -At- YOU MORE INCOME ~-z; () T .. c..._..-..,....-ty-J.c••· Ai1T Congressman Jerome L. taxpayers, in iln analysiS bf tomey Thomas G. Neusom Waldie, unable to be in the Assembly's A$earch Staff. was ~leeted Tuesday as pres!· The Huntington B e a c h California b e c au s e of Moretti r ,e I e ,a s e d the dent of the Southern California Environmental Council has legislative business. was link-analysis, saying it shOwed that Rapid Transit District. reversed its previous policy ed to the two groups by phone Reagan's tax plan dia not Neusom, already a member and has decided to take a to express his opposition. have wide support among the of the SCRTD board, succeeds stand On the proposed ex-Gov. Reagan again accused nation's leading economists. Dr. Norman Topping of the pansion of Southern California the California League of The report includes comments University of Southern Edison's local power plant. Women V()ters Tuesday of by nine nationall,y known California, who was released ...., ad'•W ,_ ....... w\hit ... ,. ... • lill••I..._ cw tlrMff CALL Ml. JIM HIND ~ C-c-tiy H°'-' 4 9 9 • 1 3 1 1 MW "Limit TNlt "'°"9•·" Wrtte ., cellfer...,la.tffcrr. Ext. 600 SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL Members 0 ·r the being biased in its opposition economists. all critical of 'the from the post bY May« Tom Jlt72 Cwt HIP-y-, So• L.t•••· Cilll,_ale t2'77 environmental council will _.::•o:._hi::.:•_:la:x:_co=n::lr:.::o:_l .".pl:•:"-:_ __ _'.R'.'.e':a~gan'.'.'.'._~P'.'.lan'.'.'.:_. -------ll~fa'.'.dl"'e:!y':_. _______ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ decide what that position will be during their 7:30 p.m. meeting, Sept. 27 in the city hall administrative annex. Up to now, the council, which "acts as an advisory body to the city council, has remained silent, except on Edison's enrivorunental im- pact re~rt (EIRJ .. "Our council has been directed to review all EJRs in the city," Mrs. Margaret Carlberg. founder of the en· vironmental council, said to· day. "Until now we felt our du ty was limited to advising the ci- ty on stre n gths and \Veaknesses of the impact reports, We raised several questions about Edison's ElR, but took no stand on the plant expansion itself," she said. "But Several councilmen. cotmty supervisors and other officials have asked us to take a stand, so al the Sept. 13 meeting, council members decided to do that." A public hearing on the Edison expansion is scheduled for the city council's Oct. 1 meeting, so any decision made next week by t h e en- vironmental council will be sent to the city council in time for its hearing. FURNITURE SOMETHING SENSATIONAL HAS HAPPENED TO SECTIONALS! We dellgned I~ we m•ka It In our factory, Ifs clullc, nrNllle Md monetoully ®tftfortable. Thls clua;c tuxecto at)1e, In sofaa,. Joveseata and secUonals Of }UR about ever; size, has lncredlbty comfortab'e eeaUng on e• thick cushioning, k>oM pillow backs. and a atrtped fabric of durable Herculon to dramallze any room aetting. Our seventeen-foot 8~~~:~~:.~~l~B ;IC3e. will fltsmost floosr plans, arrangement tor your room. OellVered frM, of courH, with our tamouo RB _..my GI quality. . -0 • Tux Rentals & Mtns Wear 1..-SLACKS , ,,.. $1000 SPORT CO, t.oM 52'°.0 SUITS ,.... $4f>o ALTERATIONS FOR MEN & WOMEN lhr•• pl•~· .............. _ llS ~Mlll8' !121 Wil!ltlle Blvd. Mir1ele Mi~r 11040 II. Pico Biid, l84CI t Weslom Alt. -ti72 W. U1<oln LIWSflllO. 3010 Miii( Avt. C"UlA YISTAo 476-IY CLAllEMONT/PoMDMk 232 t. foolhiU COYIMk 945 ft. AMI DOWlrf, 94l5 ( funtOM . n CAJO .. 888 ~. Jo!Wlson Avt. ClENOAlEl 333 N. Central Ave. WltAOA "us, 10100 Bilbo> Blvd. HUMTINGTOM llACM• 19431 Bi>Clt BM!. LA llAlllAo 1721! w. Whlllltr 10111 WCM, 2189 L•kt-Blvd. MOltTH!Y,r111, 415 t All.,llc Blvd. rASAOIM• 85 S. Rosemead RIYIRSl1l~ 10,000 .M'I"°"' SANTA AllA/IUSTlll. 1703 t 17th SL SAii IUMA!llltO. 999 t "£" SL SAM 011111< 7475 Cl1fr1m0\I MtSI Blvd. $OllTM IAY' 15533 S. CrtmhlW Blvd. TltOUSAND OlllSo ~ 1'l1ouslnd D.lkl BIM. YDITUU. :Mat Tt~FIPh R~ WOOlllAllD MlLS, 2222J Vtnturo Blvd. I lt10r1 IMn A WllK . WUKl»i'n 10 UNTIL •• tAnHtOr-.Y 10 UNTIL. • IOfilM'I Ja:JO UNTIL •• '"" PAftktf'lll • mr DICOMTOlt lllMCt. rJt[[ DD.Min". COHVDllCMT utaC TOMI :;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I eltn• Ille: .. - ), • ' . r l ' PlllLIC NOl1Cll: PUBUC NOTICE PIJBUC l'iOTICI! ---------------- \• • ,· I • WANT TO CWll UP ON YOUR CLEAN OUT? FDR FAST! FASTI ACTION! CALL DAILY PILOT CLASS. IFIED OEPT. D I A L D I R E c T -- 6 4 2 - 5 6 7 8 • DAILY PILOT -I I DAILY PROT CLASSIFIED ,~l _iiiiiiiiiiiiiii ..... ..:.J~~ie [ .............. ]~[ _.__ I~ G.nor•I THE BEST OF Huntington ~~ l 'tt'tn•t ~·. 3 Btd.!'00\ns, 2 Batht. ~· br1rle -rt:n>plu~. ~ antic rile pa.Lio bar. S(rlnk· ltt systetn. \"ou. may as- sume existing loan. Offt'T'r'd for J-16.500. Call COLWELL &!6-0005. DANCE THE FLAMENCO! \"ou may ""'hen )'OU brhold 01.iR FL,£Sf ~ Bedroooi. Family &:: Dining Roo1ns, 3 Bath "'°1ne. Beautiful Fla· min.go Drive. '.\t ES A \-"ERDE. Your feathettd friends may coo in admin.· tion! Nev.· paint in and OU!, y,-allpe.per and OC\\' land· scaping. 400 sq, tt. FL.~· !SHED GARAGE • BONUS ROc:>~. HO\V ABOLn' YOU! Call COL\\'ELL &J6.Q.lj5, ASSUME 6% LOAN 'MESA VERDE Sharp 3 bedroon1, 2 bath home with new dish1o1·asher, water hNter aod C1U"pE1s. This home h&s just bttn listed at a nKldcst $35,!«l. Call 00\\". SIX UNITS 1V.'O story tour-pleit plus t \\l> story duplex, Ample park. ing, privare patios. oon\'en· imt to shopping and main ~ Eastside Costa ~iesa. $129,500. PETE BARRETT -REALTOR- '42-521111_ co:rs . WALLACE REALTORS _ _,.54,.,,.4141_ (Open Evonl1191) Newport Heights OPEN DAIL\'. 1·5 lSM Redl&nd:s. Cott 16th St. J 1 ~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~~-~-~·~1 .aR~ 2J:' t':~s11: 3 +POOL+ VA 0....-neJ' will pay points for nt'\\' VA loan, on this eute 3 Bd, 2 BA doll house "'/ It & r pool in Ne\\-port lle'\ghts. \Vants fast sale: Full price $49,500. 0 p e n House Fri/&tt /Sun 1·5. 508 ~':11ardino, or ell.II Bkr shops. New l"rpts, h"es:h paint. Owner 'viii help fin. e ANYTIME e 646-3921 or Eve 646 4543 Lochenmyer' Re.:i ltor Gene,. al ~II.\\ ,\ 111 :.lC'll lll'.ll.I \ I \I'. is· :,, ·'· -~-: * * * * * * EXEC. DREAMHOME FIVE BEDROQ.\!S -A BATHS Sl.lpremdy coiisfruc.'ted BaY- l'rest setting, hug~ H & F pool, sharp den &: dining nu '>•t/Y."('I bar for e-ntertaining, G1·and piano will sit beauti- fully in living rm, ldst-pd pro{'ly for lo maint'enance. Sec it ~ . S141,!XXI. • 9:f21 SJ5.1221 1733 \\'ESTCLlF'F DR. NE\l.'PORT BEACH * * * • • BEACH COTTAGE 1 BLOCK TO OCEAN Co;y dollbouse is S1one · s thrw• to blue Pacific. Oklt"r home in immaculate l'Ofldi. tion. Completely carpeted and modemi.zed. Alley ll\'- L'eSS f{)I" boat galt>, \'OU \\'00°1 tine! a better for just $33,500. Call now 847-0010. I'"·.~·"'"" .. ...,,,~ * 6 UNITS* Nt'll.l'Q' new 2 BR., 2 ba .. ckolu.-.:e-w1ils on -(k_'<'Aflhunt in Balboa; Elec. ftpk,-s .• heavy shag rarp., bltns: sundeck or boJcony w/each uni!; 7 L'OV'd. CtlrpOrl.! plus l·parking spa(.'(>. l330.£m. Call: 6il-J663, 64Z·.2Zl3 Eves. associated BROKERS -qfALTQq5 101<. W Bcilbo" 611 lfl) * N'PT HEIGHTS* 1.:f!OOM FORfJ!B~O'.iB"':+~1 .,;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;1 3 BR., lovely 1.,. liv nn. CAROL + TED + --HOME-ON w/dln. area. Blln. kll<h. ALICE INVESTMENT LAND Lge. b&ckyard. Dbl. gar. 4·bedroon1s in all, 2 of thent 1 ACRE WITH VIEW l>eeora10r's dT'E'l'lnt! t 47.;,oo. O\'Cl'Sizcd w 1 th b e d · Chllrn1\ng 2 bedroom, 1 balh BALBOA BAY PROP. roo1n-5i:t:ed·cl~lll. 311 baths cottage on one ncre of vlf\\' * '42-7491 * In thi.!1 cape cod <.'Or· la nd w ned for apartnwnts. * BEACH DUPLEX * ncr hon1e 'A'lth roon1 lol' n Only $61.500 buys both . IJOOI out front. Call R..., p~-no•• R~ C•-1 3 BR 2 BA ea. 1\g• 1, rte\\' ""-' '"''"" -~ ......... • Cnr,.....l. ll eallol'll &15-""""' oftalto-o.o ••• { 0 -pnlnt. D/\r. One .. ~ o>Ul;IV •w "' ............... Pen "b•-'".~c ,, 500 1ope11 e\<enlngsl even.ing5t IV\.'ft. to ocean. ..,7, . 0wn.1Agt. .na,., oo.<->n;. * 4-PLEX * PRIVATE ISLAND EV\': 968-G767. l DR. :l!a bll. 0\.\'1lcr'5 Apt. NEWPORT BEACH w/fpl. 1.6&1 sq. ll., big )'d. BY OWNER & pre.ti<) ! lhrtt 2-bdnt\. units. $85,COI. Lcflvlng 1u•ta, lmmedlale oc- ---•GEM,,___ cupan<y. 4 BR. 5 BA 1ux...., .... 2 ~a.r old home. 1'lany d~ OV\. •• lwct', custom teatut'e!!I have I....,...J.' 1\lgun A\!e .. N.B. OOen built into th'· ou• .... •nd· REALTOR &l246'23 l>I '""' --....--lna "'att'rft'On t borne . CUS· MESA VERDE VERMONT FARM HOUSE ACRE -REDUCED $29,950 1 11~1'1 I 111,11 \ . . 2200··IL\RBOR BLVD. SPYGl..ASS mu.·s belt \ritw of all resah!S. Gradous four ~ om 9'ary home. Owner v.111 CIUTY the 1st. T.O. SUbmit otftta! "HE.tP, I .need T.L.C.", This •!arbor ' View rui:er upper reallY oidy needs a little sp;ont ori it ·to make it a gn!(t.t fe.mily honte>. Avail· ab!e on lease/option at $460. month. Call 615-iZlS DON'T STEP IN THE PAINT BUCKET because this kwtoly homes' just been finished. It 's all new il spa.riding. New green shag c-ai11eting in 1\11 roon\L 3 huge OOdrooms "'ilh n1atching baths. y,·hite brick firepl&(.'t', LA~e tmck yitrd. Anyo·ne ran as.sun\£' this VA loan wilh total payment of S230 per/n10. St'Uer "'"' ht>lp flna1w.'t'. 1>ril'ed at $28,500. Call aG-!M9l Walker 6Lee ••.t.t.. •• ,,.,, ' BACK BAY Spacious trad.ihooal OOme vdth \'k-"· o( Back &y 4. Bedrooins + ranllly roont "'ilh ""°I bar and 11epan,tt• fl<'n OWNEJt \VIU.. FlNA.i"C~ 163.500 HAl'ltBOl'lt REALTORS SINCE 19-1-1 67:M400 DUPLEX 90°/o FINANCING 81/2°/o INTEREST An ld<-nl l!t1n1111rr ·v.·intrr rental ouLv Ii tioors 11'.l Ill super bt'il<'h. ()'!\•n for pro(\l or ()('Mll"'Y for piet\SUl'1'. Only $,<(,I.~. 4 BEDROOM $36,SOO Big trees e\'crywhctt. ''try sp1tciou! home he1111!1tull)• k'pt inskle •nd out. 2 bAths. b11!11-ln kitchen, value prit- f'd for •rt11 stt it for sul"f'. Call Red Carpet. ReAltors -EVER STOLEN-A to1n f\tmitw·e & 1967 Cnibttr DUPl.:EX? lnclutlrd. 1';.x(.-cUcut ternu. Tty th.is: h\-o 2 bedroom $279.000. l\\!IO ttv"ilO-blt un- TIME FOR-Ul\lt1 -double p.mgc In· turnl"ht'd. For into • call con'le Of S3TJO per yc1u·. i\9.k· 613--TIS2. Our f11.n1astit· lt'nns n1a,y nol la.rt kinir:, !!l> l'a.IJ f!Uick, CALL 644-7211 Ing S.'t;.9SO lry )i)t1r O\\·n SPACIOUS MANSION QUICK CASH price owntr says M'll ' Call $45 000 K.Nt C~t. R t nl1 o rs • &I~ lopcn t'~'f'nin_gsi You ·will rnjoy 1he ~pll'ndor 3 8drms-$28, 950 ('OUntl')' f'~a'''· 4 baUut off1tr THROUGH A or lhis huflt'l ;f. l~roon1 AYUnl~ 5~';. loon! Urcnt ~~r f&tuUy 0011vc11lence. l.uxury toy, lltOlbie. dc.h1.'\: DAILY PILOT y1u\1 \vln1 loolt11 of nov.1.'Ttl & VWJW', .. •"U.~ 'Su"b"'111mlll:!\y anxlOuir ,1u~ tur1>1.·1. bt11H -l11 kit• grec1wr)'. Dl nlnJ: rnoo1. l'wo v .... oo )'OUr h ~ ' '·· P I I I ' > tt'nns R-1 C 1 R• II ~· t•n, "'a~l't' drytr • 1 iua. 11.1"1\~ ci; 1v1ni:: rn1 • ~:IO '' l\rpt', a ors f J''ln..:~·rator lni'\Ul lfd. l,o\1• WANT AD tchf'n b:t.l'. Only $28,950. dov.n l»Q'nll•nt cxi•i>lhf'f\1 btil:. ~17'20. J tor tha1 firm u~ '30. tr)' t('MllJ! • ll1t11') Call ltfiJ ________ ;.. ___ T_A_R_B_E:-L:-C---''-"'"";:,,,:"'..::.:""""'-'Pl:..::::"""ber:::..__ C'..arptt. RcaJ111n s.1&-~t0 I I - J -I ! ' i I • • . . . . . -. . . . . . . . ..-. . ..-. . \ ' I , DAJLY PILOT Thundq, S.pt ..... 20, 197) I l~ 1 •• _;;;;:;:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Announcement\ . • • • . . ~ • Sl4 Autou~ , • • • , , • , QSO • 990 loon & Morine (quipnWnt 900 • 914 The Biggest Marketplace on· the Oranee Coast • l ·--., __ fu iploymertt • , , • • • • , 700 -199 finonc'o , • • • • • • • • 200 • m DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED .ADS ,.,~ •••••••••• Sl.S - p.i, ond Suppliet; • • • • • • 850 • Rtol lltol• Genetol. , , • . ISO -., jo· ' ' Rentol , • , , , • • • • • • JOO • One Cal I Service ---' . .. Hout.el for Sole , , , , • , 100 -124 I.mt & Found ••••• , • SSO • S74 -~--· ... ·~eoo -~i You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad ' - (642-5678) Fast Credit Approval ~-. Sd1ocl1 ond lmtruction • • • S7S • Ser..-iwl ond bpon •••• 600· l1Q(tlof)Oftallen... • • • • • • • 915 - ,, ERRORS. Adverli11rs shoUTd check their ~daily & report errors lmm.Sietely. The 'DAILY PILOT a11umt1 lla blllty for the first incorrect Insertion only . ~ _ ..... s... JleJ I ~ . ., .... l ---iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;;:;;;;~;;;. veneral Genera• General Gener11G __ •_ne_r_•_I ______ Gener11 General ~ i~~~~~~~~~1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;t;=J . . ' i:· _,.,.... ]le][ _ .. , .. s•1• ]le ] HAR BOR VIEW HOMES c!!°! ~I ~r ·~ " " 11 .. J1 ' II . I --I 11. !''.: • .,, I I -· I . I . " ·• 1~ .: General General A. U/'lli lClUI: li()MI: IN CORONA DEL MAR-Another new one ! Super deluxe duplex. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths. Brand new with fireplaces, family rooms, carpeting and open , bright feeling. First owner depreciation avatlable. Priced at $125,000. A listing of Bert Reedy . UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 645-6500 1649 Westcliff Drive, Newport Beach ~~~~~-~~~- IN THE BLUFFS-Lovely 4 bedroom end unit. Garden~Jike patio and proximity to a pool make this "W" Plan a choice home for the growing family . Terrific value at $54,950. A listing of Lyleen Ewing. H~ . a ~~~ Half gone in half a year and the rest will not last long. Hurry to see this .distinctive Newport Beach development of condominium homes, built-in clusters around handsome courtyards. Eight superb models, each a masterpiece of luxury. comfort, convenience and qucility construction. Sundecks, fireplace, wet-bar, elegant Master Suite, Sun-Litec kitchen, UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 675-6000 !~.. 2443 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar 1,.. Gener•I General private enclosed double g~rage. Recreational facilities include heated swimming pool, lighted tennis courts, sauna, therapy pool. ,.II ',. WALK TO SCHOOL All exterior building and grounds maintenance provided. Satisfy your curiosity-see Newport Crest today! 1 .. - • · 'J .. ,. i ~- I" " tfJ " IOC· 11·1 I 1,• " " AND THE MARKET -4 Bedroom with lam· ily room and bird ~aviary. Gate for trailer or dog run. See this today. $33,500. MESA VERDE DOLLHOUSE - 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace, big country kitchen. A real pleasure to show. Only 3'h years young. Asking $39,990. EXTRA NICE 4 B_EDROOM AND DINING, 2 bath, block wall fence, shingle roof. Big assumable 6% % loan. Asking $29,650. CALL to see. 540-1151 Open Eves. ~op:. HERITAGE • • REALTORS Two, Three, and Four Bedroom Condominium Homes from $62,995 =:'- Financing Available at 7>/4 °/o * Ji ·•1l~ ....... ~ .............................................. 1 --General General From Pacific Coast Highway and Superioc Avenue (Balboa Blvd.), drive up Superior to Ticonderoga, and directly lo Newport Crest Jnform11tlon I • f .. f i-:' I " ' --' 1-: (, ' '' ' •!I ' I· 1" ' I ' --' .. ll . BEACH TRIPLEX $53,950 Lo1,1·est priced triple:< in Ne\vport ~ach only 1 ~ block to beach, t h i s peninsula triplex hns 3-1 bedroom wrlts. Great for in· vestment, appreciation, and owner-use too. By ap. polntment onl y Red Carpet, Realtors 64f>..-8080 (o pe 11 evenings) TWO.ON-A-LOT \'A terms, 332,000. Rent 3170 each. Call 546--0022. Walker &lee •IAl llTAtl KISS YOUR LANDLORD GOODBYE And i'x.'('Otne one! 2 bedroon1 home plus an income unit above the large double gar. Cent~ Telephone: (n4J 645-6141 S11les Office open dally 10 a.m. to sunset a~·· 1 block trom Ne\vport * Typical convenUonal financing of 30 year loan : Beach Yachting L a n es. Cnsh price of Plan 1 $62,995; down payment Gt'Cal buy -just rt'(!ucc."d to $12,695; 360 monthly payments of $361.00 (prin4 [~~~r;~'°,"'"''"ii ~!;"i :.:~~'.rest) at 811% ANNUAL PERCENT- ~ ~ ~Ctntlee~elPldfllcN.C.,lloc. e . ~.=.::::c:.::::-=::.=~.:.::=~ CHOICE-4-P LEX-;:::'.,,.7.!':i:.;;:::~-;::.:.-;:,•~~~-:;.:,~ ..... THE REllL ESTATERS AVAILABLE NOW All new 4-pl~x in prime ren-General General << 1 ' TRIPLEX, C.ht. Owner's i-unit, fam. rm .: air cond, l ) F.A. heat. May exchange _,., F'ortin Co, Rltrs. 64 2-:iOOO 1al al't'/I.. 1-feld vuc.:1:1.nt forl-;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; fin;t owner tax benefits. I• Yours for only $8ll,OOO. Call Red Carpel R ea l to r s b-15--8080 fopen eveningsl r I " ,, ' ' ,. ·'· t i 1:: l. • 'or I • , General General BEAUTIF UL VIEW -CAMEO SHORES ~ceanside 4 private beach -huge lot . spa· c1ous home, \V/beamed ceilings & parquet floors. 4 Bdrms., 3 baths. $115,000. Carol Tatum I 601 CASTLE COVE, SPYGLASS # 1 View of bills & ocean in privacy. Outstand· ing Lusk 2-story 4 BR. home. Fam. rm. & bonus rm. Quick occupancy. $129,500. Cathryn Tennille BIG OANYON C.C. VIEW 5 Bdrm., 3 bath .Harbor View Horne with View of 3 greens & Big Canyon Country Club. Land inclu ded at $93,500. Howard Wells LIDO ISLE Sharp 1-bdrm., street to street. Room for expansJon. Immediate occupancy. Full price $57,500. Gene Vreeland SPACIOUS SPANISH 110ME 3 Yr. old, Emerald Bay exclusive , w/4 BR., sauna, den & wet bar. Beaut. view of ocean & m_Q.untalns. A great hom e for $275,000. Call Pat Hug. THE BLU FFS BEST BUY "X" Is this super fl oo r plan. One yr. ~Id condo is being offered fo r $69,500 INCL. LAND! 3 BR's., 21h ba. Fam. rm. 1800 Sq. Ft. Call Toni Escobar NEW -TRIPLilltrri>UPLEXES- IN COST A MESA 80/0 . INTEREST /I AVAILABLE ON CONTRACTS Open Dally Placentia Ave. at Wilson ORANGE COUNTY APARTMENT EXCLUSIVE AGENTS, 547-4791 General ASSUME 71/2 °/o BANK LOAN Troe! Assume 7~i% bank loan. Gorgeous ocean view lo Catalina and San Clcn1ente. Formal dln.ing. Coly den. lluge kitchen 1,1•/built-ins. Secluded bonus fiesta room. 5 bedrooms. Park-like groundt. Authen· tic Spanish. Walk In beach. Ca.11 to Preview!' 673-8550. Gener el Why Not a ''New'' Home? NEW range & oven • NEW hot water heater . N E W ca.rpetlnt, NEW clean patnt, NE\V dishwasher, 3 NEW bedroomt, family room~.!,iv· Ing room and 2 batht, w1th a JllEW detached 2 car-pt:· age, NEW landscaping and sprinklers, NE\Y fences and OPENTIL O•"IFUNl'OIJENICEI all for - 1$1lllll-YOU :~·ond loftd LIVE IN IRVINE s.. Lo Cuesto VIII• · Model 1 block west. of Btach $32,500 on Adam• ln Humlnifon Sharp l yr. old home & pric- ed r\gh1! The kkls eo to Turtlemck Grammar & Jtitncho-Jt"-HI, e.nd lM-new Uni v e r s ity HI -n e ar Univer-1Jty of Callfomta at IrvulC'. Call 546-0022. Beach. Qulclc OC<UponCf beca\{le ol credit rcJecHons! ! Co_n'(,eJlf}_Q:f]..e Eirt•ntlng * W-1445 * "\Vhlre Eleohants" over. nutnlna youi-hou.er Tum thern Into "Caitl" ••• iell thtm "thN a Dal!) PUOt .• ~laultltd ad! ' WE'RE STILL OPEN FOR BUSINESS I But .. ·. we're down to our last few Harbor View Homes in the final unit on 'the hill . , • and some of our beautilul model homes! So hurry if you'd like to live in one of these exciting 3 to 5 bedroom residences prictd from $61,190! HARBOR VIEW HOMES 1829 PORT SHEFFIELD ~LACE NEWPORT BEACH, OFF FORD RD. & MACARTHUR BLVD. (7141 833-0780. - DONALD L. BREN COMPANY BIG CANYON FOR SALE BY OWNER New 5 Bedroom home on 15th Fairway •2 Royal St. George Good Financing 7·~ % Also-- Large Custom lot on 2nd Fairway Cul-de-Sac. Fabulous View Price Reduced 642-5542 Gener•I EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED AND UNDER $34,000 400 sq. tt. secluded maaier suite with study. Huge ste~ up conversation gallery. Cus- tomized plan -fantastic space. F'ireplAce • Built-ins -Scrtt water and much more. Don't delay • call 963-6167 today. Auume 7'1. Loan On lhla sharp 4 bdrm, 2 bath home with family rm, fireplace. Built-ins a n d dl.!!hwubcr. Covered patio. Forced-air ht. Cu 1 tom cablnetry. Full pr l c e, 334,950. brk 5-fG..lm TARBELL SKINNY DIPPlN ANYONE? Hm! is a beautiful 3 heft. room home with sparkling pool -quiet Eastslde loca· tlon with, privacy. Lota of decking nicely landstaped, comfy brick fireplace all for an unbelievable $35,950. Call Red Carpet, .Re 11 tt or• ...._ 5 lines, 5 days tor-5 bucks. Gener el MACNAB .IRVINE NEWPORT SHORES Customized 3BR, 2 bath Z.story. Z.blo<:k• to beach! Near pool & tennis! $46,500. John Granath 642-8235. (J40) HARBOR VIEW-MONTEGO 4BR w /FR-tastelullr decorated. Beauti- ful gardens. Near pool & clubhouse. $79,500 lee. Lois Egan 644-6200. (J35) !ST OFFERING: 4-UNITS •• , OCEANFRONT! Immaculate, pride of ownership Ulllts on finest beach location. Palos Verdes stone fire,Places, shag carpeting. 2 spacious 'l· BR s + Z.BR + Bach. For Info. & appt. to see: Jack HOweU &f.M200. (J32) BIO CANYON BROADMOOR Sunken conversation area In LR. 3BR's, FR, DR. Pool. $188,500. Jane fraue 64U235. (J22) .. For ttM'.l8e who appi-eclate fine custom cunstructlon and 6Cellent tel'TI1!. 5 bedrooms, family robm, formal dining room, large' game room and a gk>rioo& panoramic ocean view. PLUS RelllO\lal of one non-lrfTUctur. al partition expands the game roonl to a full 2·1x2'i rumpus room. AND 80'10 financing currently available at aw,rox. 8"'%. Top value at $155.000. CALL 644-7211 /JD.NIGEL · • nMLEY I>. ASSIJC IATtS EXCEPTIONAL VALUE ·Quanty-bui.lt S &: S home, Dramatic entral'IC'e. S1cp- down living room. Formal dining area. Giant parquet ftoor family entertainment area. Spacious bedroon1s. VACANT • so you can nlOVt' in quickly! Som e thing special a'l $44,g'Xi. To see call 842-2535. OPEN TIL 11 • rr'S FVN rp 8E NIGEi A. U/'llilClUI: liCMI: IN MESA VERDE-Set on the golf course, bedrooms, including maid's quarters. Cla • sic architecture, Sycamore trees, 3-car g - rage and exciting decor with practical a - sigµ. Exclusive at $li5,000. A Listing of M - Iha Beynon. UNIQUE HOMES Realtors. 546-5990 2850 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa Me111 General oflnJa .!J<f/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT . Linda Isle Waterfront Custom 4 bdrm., 5 bath home with view f main channel. Soft colors, rich wood pane · ing & 3 frplcs., give a warm intimate fee - ing. \Vaterfronl mstr. suite has dbl. bath, j!~~~ a~~~~ .~i·e·~ .~~~~~·. ~~~i~.g-. 1;Js~ For Complete lntormation On All Homes & 'lots, Please Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR around this ad, because you 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-61 won't want to miss seeing 1"!!'"'""'~""'""'""'""'""'"'!:"'"""'~""'""'""'""'"""I this sharp 3 bdnn horn@ inl" Costa Pi1esa for juat $24,500. Genere1 General Close to schools. abo fenced 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j;;;;~I = ~;, ne: v ';';; ,}':,"; MESA VERDE RANCH STYLE , qualities for -with Slnl BEAUT. RAMBLING 4 BR., 2 BA. one:-slortf do~·n 1'8.Ymcn t. Call tor ap-home. Heavy shake roof, picturesque alriuni. pointment. lrg. mod. kitch., family rm ., beaut. carpetini· anq paneling. Spacious Jot on quiet cuJ-d sac close lo new regional park. Offered · t Walker & lee 0 n1y $49,9~o. . ~ • I lllAL lltATI A TOUCH OF Walker & lee COUNTRY 111aL ••t•t• Yet -ve ry close in -Newport C OUNTRY LIVING blit ~·· 1,.,.., y~rd•. 11..,. _ Load. of room In thia 3 ~~,nv bedroom. home. f'il'st lime Located c>n Cotla. 1tfesa'1 adverlh1ed -$ 31 , 9 5 O. Easltide -quiet tm-llned 646-71.n strtet, S larp bed.room 2 Ol//fN 11, batha,., hup ~ countey II • "'FUN 10 BE NICll ~~5~~~~•&ail1t1 Call Red carpet, Rtallon • ~ Copeo eventnp.l_ C BIDROOM BARG AIN BY~~'i:1i f\l~ED;;~~ EASTSIDE FIXER $30,000 STONE FlREPLAcE' 3 btr bedrooms, 2 baths, µ,cated' ln excellent Co11ta SIZED YARO. PRIN~ ll!pU'lllt roomy In m I l y Mesa al'ta, 2 1pa.ek>us . ONt. Y. 673·5970 rq>m, q\llet tree llncd balhl, cozy brlelC' flreplnce, B'l O\loner 3 ·Br lrVine-atreet, larae hrla:ht country torttd alt heat) la,ract w/bachelor apt hi k kltcbtn. ma..t~ bricl< covtred p,t10, deep tchae Rr-2 room lo build Ill c ' M11~1nfM RelltrCJRa.,..,..~.,.,-HE l·-!llreplace, ~ m In or Cllt:'Pf!I, bullt-ln kitchen. ~n~ 500 6~ ear. elt1,....up J40, 4 r-e.a . EVC!l')'thlruf OO!it lfke new • . ' · IOI Dover DrM 14a·USI II« llooM!lw N<l•UOI ~ !l!"ch,Ce!!f!!?>la ....!!!!_I_ .. Owner mwt cellrbrlne olftr Huny on this one! Cnll Red DUP1£X corner, 00 Red Carpet, !\talion Caq>et, Re.lllors 546-8640 • ~~rd,.1~ Polnee ·-"Make Room For Daddy" 111· Profit It attalned when ••• clean out lbt garage OOZY, ruallc 1 Br 4m ~ iijti.-'f"uali~'iAY&/!<lr~ patio; R·2 lot. l'f5.iio\. Ads. MJ.5678 ad. Call 64Y.Ai7'8. Need 11. "P11d"? l'1'k.-e an ldl I • -_ .... Gonion Grevo * TWO * 9111 TWOil'l'Y, ,_,,., 3 Colorful Cott-Bi-, 1% Ba, ,,.,. crpt A Rare ofterbla: of ocean side paint. S22,1SO. Owner {213) oI the h~'Y· property ot 2 "43"'°1"=o3505"'--~---­boulc• on one lot; live tn Hyntlrtgtoo Buch one, hAve lll<.'Ome from the -- . o\hu. Finl limo ollered at THE RAMBLING · 189•rc,RBIN-MARTIN ROSE ... 1lnaJe story 4 bedroom, REALTORS 644-7662 1% bath, tp•mal dining, * * CONDOS * * lamlly room, with 2000 sq ft und a huge pool. Chvner Brand new le bee.ut\f\.ll! Steps very an.'<lous; Is Installing to U~ beac..'b! 2 Bdrms., 2 new carpets thruou!. This ba.; &bundant."t! of •IOrag1?. home \vlll ·be in move-in con· Lots of extras. Carefree llv. dltion. FoWltain Valley area. hlJ. for onty '59.500. Immed. $45,995. CALL 846-3377. -· MORGAN REALTY LIVE IT UP 173-6642 675-6459 2500 sq rt of living erea. Two Ew Lis NG-story plus extra large pool. * N Tl * 5 Bedrooms. 3 ha'.'.,., family Chaiming l bdrm. 2 be. room, formal dining and all home wflh bachefor apt. the electric builtins. Profes· 8'st of area. Owner will sk>nally landscaped lronl & help Oil fmancing. Best buy rear wilh sprinkler systl'm. ·at $13,500. , Prestige area. $47,500. CA!.J.. CORBIN·MARTIN 963-5621.. Huntlnflon -h rike-tiYerPa-;meRts On this 3 BR, 2 BA home wt prlv Pfttio, bMludf\rl parii; du'flCtlY !4crmt; the street. Lo"' lntcrest gov't loa.n, low r,,1ymf•n11, better .cc it to- r.lay! HERBERT liA\VKJNS Rf:ALTORS 963-5681. rvine Hello Young Lovers whcre\l\·1· yQU are. You'K love thil l.!tt1c 2 bdrm. 1% bath condo wtth room for storage, laundry room, upgraded carpet~ and lots of recrea- tion. The Ideal home for yQu, see it today. $24.000. CALL 552-7500 VISION e red hill BALJOA COTTAGE "SPOILED BABY" """1oemt. pe1red, • s1rok<d. Qualily draped ... U>te<I . ca.rpeted -tiled • ftrepiaced • food pantrled • "'a.rdrobed -paUo _carpeted • ~ door autorgated -lovingly placed where her family ran walk to beach~.--.bay .. CaJI 546-2313. OPf.N r1L , .• IT'S FUN ro 8f NICE! [llfiill\ll BEACH DUPLl!X· Exterior newly painted, 3 BR &: 2 BR, units, firepl, db.I gar. ln process of comp ln- terior decorating. Best buy .on the beach. • GRANO OPENING Newport Boy T ...... 1 6 2 BEDROOM CONOOM'INIUM HOMES e .,yfront Homes Boat Slips . t"'ull Se-cur lly Hl.11:hrh1e -Steel &: roncrete OOMLrucUon Private Ba.lwnlt1 · 2 PQ!&C liJ>O.l"et Pfr unit. Roof top suncleck Unusual Oppor1unity to Dur· chase Bn,yl'.ront Pfr.Jperty in Newport Beach. 310 Fernando Rd.,.-N.B, 675-1551 DAil Y PILOT ~ --' l~ I .~~ l~I -l•I ---Jie Mobile Moonos ;lnmcommo-~P;roporty;;;;~~l~66;1~B-u1.lnetmm, mmiiiiii~m;:1,Ho~u;..,;;~F~u;rn;l~ohod~~;1 _F_o_r..;S..o..;I•----'"-" iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiii1 ~unity ~ Bolboo l•l•nd TRAVEL Season Clvtt! 11'1 Bread & Butter A CANOY SUPPL y Ji.at started for the old~r • ROUTE 7 an. winter, newly cllllen who kw~• to travel. Income Untts / "tei1hirinrt'' det'OratE!l'I, 4 house• 10 ~;frt~:"'r:ss11 *FIVE UNiT· / CERTS PRODUCTS R~~ ::. :~.~: '~::. Price reductd""'to $2850. Ju~t on lru_',>;c lt-4 lot/ ~x ~·. (No Selllng , fnvolv.clJ N<!· bay. Priv. patio. Yrly. hook up and )'O\l'rt on Your Consistu n1 lnt'frtl1e SSGO. 1>et \iale or fcmllli.', a.ge ii() har· $2:ill. 67:'-,..-0372 \\'flY. ~ Thurin (olJ &y) n1~. ONE 3·M. 1'0UH 2-ijP. ric-l' t'ftll hi• wrn"kcd tu.U or :11ARMING cherry Cape Costa Mesa ~:~f,,,~carr'1lt1J'btl1· ShopplJlll paii' tinil'. QuallfiNt PPrso r Cod Nicely rum, 2 BR frplc. to " 60 FLEET\VOOD-A-l .57 OO 1,1,·!.U bt.'(.'f').1rle dlstrlbuto1· tot wln~5 Amethyst. a:md. $4800. Mam-_ Extras -9,5 • thu1 -na00n<1.Uy ad\1~11iseC Balbo• Penlniul• Popout LR. Sha& carpet, pl'oduct. \'ou mtty k~cp your ---------relrig. shed, etc. Must be -· \II t 1"11NG p •--·t Pol moved for freewiiv. 54()..4879 ·* ELEVEN UNITS * prt'se nt position. i oi;•a. '.;ll A '"'' enua:w.1 a nt 1 BEA CH LOVER• s ..., rlon,;r at·e c01)1P1c1 i! I y homC'. \'rly. rental. 3 Bdm1., ' SPECIAL" -•~v_,.,iO·====~=--"-$129,500. lurnished by our Li.11npauy. I bath. $375 month. 6734786/ Imagine! You can assume an NEWPORT BAY Price Just redue('l(f SIS.000 tor Ver)' high j11(YH?1f' pmen1ial. lttJ.6621. cxlst:ing T~ VA loan on this New 2 BR, 1 BA llvinc nn. & t:a.sh-oul salr. This is 11 You n1ui;: hl!\'C' J.8 hrs. pc-1' -'-"'-''-'------- enonnous 4 bedroom, 3 bath Aduh pll'k w1privn,1~ beacb real opporlunity to niake ~·eek spare unit•. Can IJ(> Coron• del Mff · t \ t urf bay llll,500 ,. 540-3672 '-" .._.. · h worked days 01· l'\ t'JI. "II -JWI s eps 0 5 or. . tut! .,._.,,; lnl"Ume pul"t: ru.c she kisses )'O:J -01\''l'. \\Ill she O IJNA COVE CUTIE. ~ Owner must liquidate at this yeat'. Cu1·rent int"Ome kiss ~ou again. Bt· Cel1llirl bedrooms on lhe beach. $22a fl9.900. Submit your o!fer or P1405. per 1110. . h 'cER't'<'.'.. pr . n1on1h. trade! Surfs up!! R IE t t {._fl; 1'1 ~. '"' SPARKLING POOL nd 2 GRU:!~ •• ~LLIS ~--~-·_.:_·_· __, Newport $1750 REQUIRED ::1::;,• 1~;~· ~::, $76,500 REALTY REALTORS 0 CM "" im Univ. Park Center, lzvlne 1797 range, ' · ~ RHltors 644-7662 SPANISH VILLA 2863 E. Cst. Hwy., CdM It fn \·estrnen1 :ol"('ut'{'l'l. inlc-resr __!J~1225==-;;-;o:=--,,-·I 67S-7080 Bullne:ss Pros-rty 154 hi:.-e financi11o; available form HELIOTROPE 2 Br. Jlr NEAR CHINA COVE-Five year old home in beauti· New 2 bedt'OOm, 2 bath tu! beach area with a span. 14201 Ave. Mendocino -Open oondomlnium apt. Elt>e. lsh flair, 4 Bedrooms. 1% 1111 day Fri., Sat & Sun. Call ' bltn!I. dish~·astiM·. Frple. bath, with family area oil Vesta Redmon, 552-7883 for Carpeted & draped, Rc.11dy the kitchen, Lovely neighbor-directions lo new streets. to occupy. $59,500. hood. cul-de-sac street with Air cond., 3 & den, 2 BA, University Realty an excellent assumable Joan. pool, tennis courts, big lot. 1 E. Cat. Hwy. 67:i-6510 6% VA, $195 per mo, PITI. $43,300. OR phone Quintard Move in cond. $36,995. CALL i ,;Re.:;::•;;""s·:,:64~"-.;:"'"';I.':::::--..:;;-o Cotti MeN 841·3584. CALIFORNIA home 102-4 .. HEAR THE SCHOOL BELLS Tiley're just a block away from this super stuu'P 4 bdrm hon1e with lol s of roorn for lhc kids. lluge pool and genie room .al90. Nice carpels & drapes lhruout. Dbl. garage deiaeh- f'd. Gn'at kitchen area Mom! Priced to sell in Costa Mesa lor $26,500 -all terms. Call Walker&Lee llAl llf&f l 1 645-9491 -Open eves. · $209 PER MONTH VACA'NT Rambling 4 bedroom. 2 bath, two story home with load& of square footage, roaring 'stone nreplace, 'gourmet coontry kitchen. formal dln- lng room . Bia: back yard and boat gate. Just usume this 5%% VA loan balance and QB. per month pe,ys eVtTY· thing! Needs aom(! love and \ care • you doU ii Up and , reap the p1:ofh1! 0 n I y • I $36,000. BKR 962.5511. Expands 'Off.Shore Two resale offices opening now! Ground noor opportun. iry for ambi1ious sales pro. pie. Immediate floor time available. Immediate earn. ings possible. We have solid referrals from ncw home sub-divisions of the Chrlsli· a.na Companies. CALL BIU. COMSTOCK (714) 846-1361 & (213) 592·l361 WE BUY HOMES 1. Cash for yo11r equity 2. Will pick up back pa,ymts 3. No charge for appr. CALL US FOR AN ESTI:MATE NO WAITING CASH NOW Ji.U.9371 Br, 3 be, pool. $53,500. By Appointment only. 551-3834 Can assume VA. Laguna Be•ch FESTIVAL ExceUent-investment op. portunity! 3 Units with good Income. ~tion providf'!'I easy walk to Festival grounds, shopping & beac:hes. See this one & you'll want to mvn H. ll'l,000. ~Ian REAL ESTATE 1190 Glenneyre St. 494.9473 549-0316 Fant111tic Custom One of a k1nd contemporary 3 bedroom, 3 bath home-wit11 180 degree vic-.v from ever)' room. Underground utilities. J\.fassive living & famliy rms each 1vith imported r o c k fireplace. Just $30,000 down & owner \\'ill car1y first TD at 7~·,~ interest. Full price $120,000. brk. 494-8003. TARBELL Emer1ld S.y Lot Ocean vie"'s & ea.'ly building site & all the recreatJonal facil. of Emerald &y, are ' 136,950. MESA DEL MAR """T'u'RN'fri~ssoc. 3 BR 2 BA, tirepl, covered pa.Ho, brand-new con!l. $7500. UC6 N. Coast Hwy., Laguna cut\ do"'"· assume T~'%' 494-1177 loan at $262. per mo. Owner I Oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.. Oc:e•n View-$53,500 • • w/carry set.'Ond to help We. E' "'GANT Sponish st"le 2 Br & den, ' 2878 lt1ooterey. ~ ~ I C t ••-R I guert rm. or study; huge CK• nwisa ea ty SPANISH oc-ean view Jiv, rm., rrpl. * sq..n11 * BU L ERS REPl'\....L Central kit., W/bltns. opens After 6 PM, Ca.II 557-4617 * · I D .... .,..-to din. area. Loe. high up on J"'""""!'~~!I!!""""'!"""" 1 ~ Huge bedrms, cal.hedral Laguna's Riviera coaslline. * Large * ceiling!, t,.. lam m>. all MISSION REAL TY 491--0731 elec, Under priced at only BEAUTIFUL Hx:aUon FAMILY ROOM 134•900· . SOUTH LAGUNA. I block ••• ha.I been added to um I' to beaCh. Newly remodeled exceptional 4 bednn hotne 2 Bdrm, family rm, large .. ln \VHlJl:lde Costa Mesa. t•• ~11 1-1 RJIL •10J deck w/ocean view. Guest Bulltin kltch, 1~2 beth, cozy ,,.-..,,.~~~~-~·:": ..... !!!!!!!!"" apt. $62,500 firm. By OWhl'r. li~pl and a large enclosed 1· YANKEE Call 213.:771.su5 days , rear yanl. Only 103 down -213-464-4686 eves. Sun1mer s.:t>.900. Call 5 4 5-8 4 2 4. FARMHOUSE rentals COMide.red. SouthCo Realtors nestled among giant trees 'It $12,500 * $23 500 and h'l' oovem grounds. Sharp 2 BR. So. Loguna • }o~amily slze living room home. \\'alk to beach. ·: Cozy home on R-2 comer lot. with log burning ti.replace, * $54,950 * ~21 BLUFFS FEE ''E" Elega~ce in the Bluf!s! ! The protessionaJ touch is ob- vious. A spacious 2350 sq. n. 4 bedroom, family room home on fee land Only $&7,500 C_Al.L 644-7111 /Jn NIGEl BAILEY !.. ASSOCIATES Newport Hei9hts 2 BR, ne1,1,·ly decorared inside and out. Xlnt corner loca. tton' GN>at startl!r home. $35,500. ~I 64;).8400. Fairview expansion. Ba. 1 blk from beh. 9 mo. or ifEWPOR-i HEIGiffs . SALES.EXCliANGES.MGMT Fu1· iuorf' i•1for1111>11<u1 1vi·itc: l year lf'nse, a.dulls. no pets, CUSl'OM BLT 3 BR 2Y,i BA K.V. Ott.LS ro. 646-lll 1 Nationwide see Fri 6 P1tt or Sat & Sun. Formal entry to sunken (,..R. TIS-'l652 (1n~lme) Marketing System .06773-M=,_53.,..,,,.._._,,=....,,.=•I Huge Family Room whh Cemetery D{']llll'tn1;:o111 !13 HARBOR ViC'W !Ullg, 3 BR, 2 - beam ccillnR:, Den, 3 fire-. Lot1/C'rypt1 156 _ P. o . Box 5312. BA, fnm rm, children's plat."es, electric k:it<."hen with JUST REDUCED $7000 Sa n i\htll'O, c,1, !.'4402 ~·ard & equip. Be au t lun1inous celling & cabinets 2 CEMETERY lots $350. or 4 *NEWPORT BEACH* Pll'a."e in<:l~d"· phone niunUcr decornted. ,!:tnrdencr incld. galore. Large garage, se~ for $600. in Westminster DUPLEX ~ 300. fn>nl ocean. N. M. S. is 1ndcpendcn1 of $550. 644-489.~ arate boat or camper ent:ry, Memorial Park. Cal.I aft 5 2 bcdroon1 1 bath down· \\lai·ne r·Lan1ber1 C'o, O\Ylleo; I BEDROOf.f Pool size yard with oul.board PM 536-8666 stairs rents '$22.5. r>er nionth/ or ''Cl!rl<;''_!r1td~ark. 309 Goldenl'od, Cell-I' ~.l ::J\·anda 642-1447 PACIFIC ·View Memorial \\.'inter, $2Z>. per week/Sum· Jeff OiPalo * 557-2674 • _,,, Park. Choice plots In ocean n1cr. U~1Rirs is larger unit 2835 Terry 2 BR deluxe cotlnge, tirepl. CARMEL MObE~ view section, $265. 838-5149 • 1 ~.n1, 1 bath but can Laguna Beach 'Ill June 15th. $285/mo. 3210 VIEW Commercial sleep 9, .~ents for $300. per \'o;i ;ir . , ,., \. 'l .,,r nf S<'aview, CdM. ll42-2222. Outstanding H.V. I-Jomes; 3 Property 151 ~~~~~~'. PJ:i ~ TWO FREE TICKETS Huntington S..ch ! bdnns.. family rm., lush .,~ uv. f ·o I"• nu1rket a l .,.,,,,.NU. Ot' fast · · • ~ 1 gold carpeting, derorator * 59'x29' LOT * sale. RECREATION NEW 3 Br. home tor rent. nrl drapes. Valley view. First C-1 ZONE (714) 870-450D VEHICLE SHOW lr.h $315. mo. never oc·l time oUered. STl,500. Fee $32 1~ 64"3216 l lyoo o'vn the land). ,500. E-Z TERMS SEPT. 19TH-23R0 cup~ .- 1 CORBIN·MARTIN At the RHltors 644-7662 * 4 BEDROOM, 2 batM, ronson ANAHEIM STADIUM Laguna 8HCft NB DUPLEX double garage. Best ot 2000 Stale College Blvd ' OCEANFRONT $800 _910. 4! 0 H Fri "'-t & s ~e~Brf,9·:; story older Realty .\ Investments Anaheim BR, 4 ba., furnished. 1 .. 218· ... J~<th. St. Wl. 9J5 S. EUCLI D Please call 642-5678 ex-t 339 OCEANFRONT furn. •-:1~1 home, corner lot. $24,500. . 1 1 t k ts ........, 3 Br, & 2 Br. open beam ceil-FULLERTON ° c aim your 1c e · mo. I-BR. & Jol't .l deck. lngs, freshly painted inside Roy McCardle Realtor 20 NEW UNl"T~S~-1 ~:r~r i~o:l.220~~11 free Agt. CM-91<H 494-9729 & out. Nu crpt & drps. 1810 Ne'vpo11 P.lvrl., C.?.1. Cosw. MeSH. Accelerated UNUSUAL 3 Bdnn home on $76,500. $15,000 dwn. Bal. on ~7729 depreciation opportun ity.• Parking Lot Mninl'cnance cuJ-de-sac, xlnt vlew, lge agreement by ownr. Scheel. income ~.coo. Price • Boats, $l50~f ivill tui.ndle lot. $400. mo 497·2626 or DALE WOLLNER, ACT 8746 ,SUNSET, L.A. Street to $385,000 15% down. Over .• Mfgr . Must like \Vood. ~94-1735 Also unfum. BY Owner, Westcliif/Dover ~181 or 64Z-Il7l i;treet, approx 60'X280'X50', 50'Yo rented. For details call • R.E. Salesman needed O C E:ANFRONT $300/rno. area, luxurious adlt condo, NPT Crest, 3 Br, 2~S Ba, suhable for ht-rise. $231,000. CJS REAL ESTATE INo loan 11,onies) Brand' new, glasa, wood, 2 overlooking pool, & Grecian $3,000 below market. View. Sell or trade for inrome. 543-1168 or eve 557-6244 Holland Busln••• · bdrm, 2 bath. Winter, G ~ 3BR 2 ,_ BA 71.4'/o int. Owner,~. (213) 37&-2814 or write 308 B Ibo p • I 4M__Ntli;: 6""' 1912 a1-uens, . • ug ' Strand, Manhattan Beach, a a en1nsu a 645-tl70 SAL.ES 540.0608 ~. ,.,.. , xtra lrg master BR, 2 G Units, 5, 1 br & 2 br OCEANSIDE, view, lovely 2 trplcs, Marble in1ported Newport Heights 90'l66 · o\vners. Best area. $152,000. MUS!' SEU. BR, 2 ba, den honie Mod. 1 doors, expensive crpting NEWPORT BEACH A t "'"'203 u. Mulls ·~ thniout. $84,500. Call· Vacant-Ocean View Prime bayfront site gen·.,....,.... · Cillm!!'"\) app nces, ·.....,..mo.: 64Z-561Ei Great 2 BR, 2 BA, 2 tplcs, sa.I TA<;O STAND winter rerital. 496-5736 OCEANFRONT huge tarn rm, split-lewt Bi~oc~~: & ~161 Industrial Pros-rty 168 F~ff~tion. Asking S7,500. South Lagun• ' DUPLEX =l!~a~ei!~e~t~ * II ACRES * HERITAGE REAL ESTATE 2 BEDROOM&: Den. Ocea.nl Brand new, huge 4· Bdrm. with .?S'i~ down. Call Brkr Condominium• Newport Heights 5t)..ll51 View. Large deck, 1 block to up. 3 Bdrm. down. Xlnt fi· !or appt -l ....;;fo::'~· ::;••::I::•----.:.''°:.:. I Bluff Area Mon L 240 beach. All remode1ed andl nancing. 1st user tax ad-· · (S.st Buy In ey to CMln ftdecon.ted. Deluxe. $350 vantage. Sl&t,flOO. WANT to Lease or Buy 3 or 4 • 3;56 SQ FT • C 1 .. _ ) 1 JD L per month Sept. 15th thru HORVATH REALTY Br hse in Npt Hghts. Prln ..•. ~·ith magnificent view of Os• m9la st an~ June 15th. South Laguna.t 494-0615 Dave 675-1972 only. Immt"d. poss. 61:>-'195;J. the San Louis Rey Downs RIVIERA REAL TY 0 u 2U: 464-4686 eVH. 213': Newport Shores Thorobred Ttaining Center. 149 Broodwav, C.M. UP TO · 721'.-5115. d&)'a. WATERFRONT REOUCED $5000 WALK To BEACH ::: .. ;,..~~!\';~ 642.1001 41s-i141 Ev ... 2nd TD :L% '1;L:.:.1•=.,;.;111e"'. ;,.-----1 l·Story 3 BR., 2 ba. Frplc. ~le, r.?va~ g~e:~ ~ks~t:u:.i:~'!i:dh'. oans WI?m;R-..., beaut. So. Atrium. In spotless cond. uo::u.1•u su .... on c · 842-0691 536-4558 Bkr L 0 C ba)1ront home· 4 Ba. 5 be . p REFERRED PRO. : eves. · owest r•t•s ri1ng• o, a..:-.a .. __ _,_ Pier A ftoat · LOAN AVAIL • BROKER Close to pools & tennisi PERTIES (714) 758-0590 S•ttler Mtf. Co. "'°;'""y fi'&5Q Mont.ti 833-0780 CAYW~~EAL TY Lots for Solo 170 642-2171 . AS.061 i Bill p~ Rltr. ~&l * 548>1290 * $390 DOWN OCEANFRONT R-1, $120,000. S.ov;ng H"'l>ar '"'• 24 ""'· LIVE oN LIDO W •• tm.tnstor 2 Bedrm., 1~ Bath, new car-Approx. 78'X444'X51' on Ap. -00-N'T:-BOfiR-cfW-2 BR, 2 BA, brick frplc, dbl Charming Cape Cod pets & paint. $21,00>. Fair-Pf'l?X 20 degree &lope. Have 'TIL YOU CALL USI gar., wlhr/dryr. Winter Balboa Penin, steps from lane Gardens, an adult com. btilldlng clearance for 2 --rental $350 6 7 3 _ 2 2 2 7 beach & bay, paneled & VA TERMS--$32,SOO munity. Agent 836-4200. story from coastal com· Borrow on your home equity 213 . 79J-0m' • beamed liv m1, 2BR, ha, Stratford 3 BR, 2 BA, !rg. mission 213/376-2814 or for any KOOd purpo.se. Scn--1.=::.:,· ~:.::,::.;:.,· =~~~=-1 brick courtyard, $79,500, liv. rm., tam. nn., elec. NEWPORT RIVIERA Write aOs Strand, Manhattan ing Los Angeles County for COMFORTABLE 3 Br, 2 Jt: open house Sun 1-5, or appl. bltns., D/W, frplc, encl. 3 BR., 2% BA., fpl., tarn. rm., Beach 90266 over 20 years and NOW in house open Sun 10-5, 107 2 l 0 0 S. v ,. I I• Av• -•o. woik to -hool• & 2 ear gar. Immed . .......,," To ' . O""""'e Coun"'! Yella Udo or call (213) n4-6'1'3-7608 • Mi~ Square Park Present inspect call 642.9062..--OCEAN View Lot . ln siGNAL MORTGAGE co. 795-58116 F.'HA loan of $12,200 at 5% '7o Beautiful Laguna Niguel (TI4) 556-0106 t~N=--~--cll----· t PRIME OCEAN VIEW P .I.T. $145 mo. 531.5244 or Duplexes/Units Terrace. 100' front~. All 4500 Campus Drive, N.B. ewport PROPERTIES FOR SALE sale 162 new homes nearby. $34,500. ALK Bs h, - By State of California Watch ~53~1-6011~~-~~~~~~~ ,-='-------Owner help finance. Bia. $500 to $100,{XX) for W to water c ,,_. for our big ad in SUnday's DUPLEX _ Sharp Santa Ana 642-4155. Business or pcnonaJ needs Also 1 Br h.oie, C.M. util pd, Paper. ~ Heights. Principals on1y. BORREGO SPRINGS lot, No collateral required &: H~g ru~· Vacant (Oassification 100) ...._ Halnet ] JilllP Tenns. $37 ,500. 642-3729 90x200. l\lusl 5 e 11 Im· Upon proot of ability to pay "Agt"'"·-""-· _____ ...,. t f213) 620-3708 . Income Property 16' n1cdlately! $1500. 64&-62611 3 BR house. nr. the beach • ~1 Nice ti:ees A: large, cl~ country scyJe eat-in kitchen, 4 BR. home, North Laguna ··i ~dg. stte for another:" umt. 4 large bedrms, ape.cio~ PLACE REALTY OCEANFRONT Mobile Homes CALL Ci) , .. ,·l.t l• rumpus room. Don't 1,1,'ft.it? 494-97!H 494-9729 DUPLEX For Sal• 125 Ask for Mr. West eves. $300 per mo. No pets . BUILD.:R WITH The Action Broker * 673-4032 * RMI Estate W•nted 114 Collect 'Ul 213/3s&.7433 CHARMING 2 BR, Wlhter IMAGINATION · "' ~.!Ill. ~25fi~ Real Estate Fair $60.COO. 3 BR. ram rm, trees, SaftBox Landmark , • ..., seclusion. Also adj. white 2 BR, 11..si ba, 1 9 2 51 · I IA L TY waler vu lots. OY.nr 494-7284 ·2 BR, 1 ba, IOWET urrit. fi"plc, Brookhurst. Space 17. Hun- I U I WANTED: Lar'g!! old OOuse Rental. l~ blkl beach! Call s:.:m ~: t ~~taun!:~ to fl" up. Not over $50,00'J. 2ND Trust DH• alt. 6 pm, 213/274-3692. Investment opportunity for 114-593-416S. PRIVATE FUNDS A:VAIL. 3 BR. 2 Ba, lrg corner lot. ' Near M••P•rt ft1t Office TROUT STREAMI Logun• Hills b!Uns, dishY.•asber. Own!:-' tlngton Beach private par- ' • BROKER or ASSOCIATES E~rythiog but in these poir I!::::!!.:;!!:'-'-!!!!"-----1 BR, 1 ba, frp!c, up}l<"r ty 963-250) ' fast capital appreciation. Any Amount Closed gar!. water paid, $400 Owner .Dexible & will J[i) * C•ll-675-44'4 BKR. per mo. &t;;...t832 I SouthCo Real Es!ate 111 In· ulnr "Balboas." IOt!ated in SPACIOUS 3-bi·, 2 ba., condo, Pu~i~~. ~~~59. SlSO.OCXl ~"•"o"'s"'.1L'°E="'"ho'-. -,,,-,---,~,-·xro=· lel'Elted in adding one E>:<· Tiburon's choicest park-like Crpt'd. pot'", d sh w h ", I 1 · 1 · e N • SALES & R.ENTALS w a ir cone. in rvm . ~ ~rienced!o s .u cc e s s f u I aurroundina.. Both "apple disposal -h Adult finance at 8%. Asking fNnc1a1 • · -I-louses Unfu,n. ~ $60,500 • Make OfJer. al -,-·~-· . , JW""'• \lo·as er, s tor lts staff. E:<· pie · conditlOfr& both rea--· ~ -· · , • dryer. drps, 2 car ga.r, 2 Bachelors ..•.•••••. $52,500 * 551-4737 * '--------' Mortg•ges, Gen•ral ::;:::::::"'"".' .... "".'~t~T~.,~u1~1~D~o~o~ds~;:;;;~260~,~~~~~--~,,.--1 -c e l I e n t co n1 miss I oo ture. 3 BR. 2n BA, private $2.7,900. t~HA. a11sume 7Yo. 2 + 1-Bedroom .•.... sn.soo schedule, private oUlce. -patio, total exterior main-By O\vner:SSG-1607 2 + l BR + vac. Jot. $97.500 8eCI'elary and profeu.lonal tenance electric builtins and 4 l·Beriroom ~1~.000 atmos"phere . r~or ap-air coud. Both low 7% as-L•guna Nt9uel BALBOA -BAY PROP. polnt:ment, call Al Black sumable loans: .No. Yard· -* BY O\VNER . Niguel Sea * 673-7420 * ,, , 545-8424-So.Jll1Co Realtors. work, go Jistung instead. Terrace IO\.\'tllx>usc. Priv. ,.,, EASTSIDE CALL • 2 BR i~ BA ,,,,,,., NPT Crest -Luxury oondo. 3 I I It • an!a. ' r.i ' ' Br. 2•\ bA. lofted cellln•, ,.,,_ •rw n rea ,y inc. jacuzzi hand ball beach COSTA MESA equAl housing oooty. etc. $42,500. 400-'7361 m. master suite W/Slm deck. 2 Brand Nev.> CuBtorn Homes. 968-4405 (24 hrs) 644-8250. Ck'!. 1st occup. \'1111 sell 4 BR, 2 BA, ~osc to Back 1.;,;..,;,;;.;.....,,.....;;;,;, ...... I ;'i;f,;='i;i;;;------$.100). 11ritler miirket nrice. II '). Bay, Cpti, drps, landscap. SELL THE Lido Isle Xlnt fi n.'lll<'ing for sale or Ina:. sprinklers, fence1 a 11 l:.AWNMOWER ONE OF A KIND lease 547-9673, l_ Included! $44,950. Drive by : -~ U6 Ii 218 E. 22nd St. ~177 . , . and enjoy yoor hobbies, Lido's last corner lot, ~tree! PORTAFINO fof1'el garden chOt"H! Tuu lo st.reel 35x88, acro!S beach Ft'tthJred m Home Tour YEAR old TownhollM!, 4 slory 3 bedroom Townhouse & tennis ct . $65,000. 4 BR, 3~ BA. a> x 40 Pool l"i Br., pool, dbl. gar .. • nr close to pool & clubhouse. VIA LIDO NORD Profe~kmallv Decorated I shopping &: schools. $29,500, Home-maker kitchen, built· 4 Bdrm • 5 Bat•-MANY EXTRAS • '•"·'· 5fiit ®'A·n. can 557-8267 •· "" 11•: ins gracious living room 1nagnWcent custom hOme. $89 950 644444() ! . , MESA de\ M8J'. Assume with formal dining Brett. J164,L500I"--REALTY ' Principals Oliy • r.,(j 6%% loan. 4 Br, covered Great value (or $26,500. Catt uu HARBOR VIEW HOMES tr patk>. $.i'7,700. 0 w n er• loday, The Real Estate Fair 3377 Via Udo, N'pt Beach --M(}..3000. 839-6133 or 536-2551. * 673-7300 * Monaco, fee land. Upgraded. I ;i;i;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii""''"" $59.500. Principals only. -BEAUT!FUBRI, 2Mc""sa WtrtOoda 2 BDRM. CONDO Moso Voru 644-0408. home ,. • ' a um , LUXURY • '1 BR, 2~ bR: con. fountain. 979-8380 nves. Assume lfils 'FHA !do.rt Of ASSUME 7~% e r ID&n on 3 do. Lrg. master suite. H BQRM home, Eo.st~dc ER nn. ll 4110. & $2,200 fuD dn. BR, ·111' BA, Mesa Verde D 0 w n stairs. Ownr/Agt. Larat yard. ..A.,. !!.o WN $2),500 ruu prlce. Pool Home. By owner. 64()..()166. Call •~ e 962-2456 e $36,!IOO. 546-3866 I '°";=:"""-=---:=,-.: .,-F V 11 BLUFFS X Plan, $00,000, 3 ~,,: ount1ln , • ey kiis1ion Vlelo BR, 2% Ba, •l yr old. am '""OLD WORLD CHARM I' A MANY Vlstn Tnlcha. Ownn ~m and an.-h1tecture 11tart1 60-l090. P" , Wttii , th• Ewvpean ltyle 8843 Adams, RB SPLENDORED aBR house near ocean, l0w _,,U eoul"tyard. 4 Lure bednn• fat Magnolia) down payment, Mt 1 e • ' Inc maJeotlc mut..-suite I'"""'""'""'"""""'"'""'"'' I THING IN Lal1!0n Reallo•. 6T.l-8563. with It• °"" wood·b<lml"C REPOSSESSIONS MESA VERDE TRACE Ne,._ B ••ch •-pla-. "Old ··-~ '"l· Ion ~. lo r Out..()f-Town utv ""' "'""UI •1 :'or inform.at~ and locat • •v" chen" wilh modtm bulltinl, of tbMe !111.L-6 VA bomta. Prop, Bkt, TI4/67J..2058. fonnal dining room, JP&ciou• co:it:Jct • wn.ll1 room wtth nrep1ace. K "'"ABIAN l near Mlle Sq"""· 3 Car ~ garap. 149.~. A mull to Re•I Ett•te "2"""" f, • I lff (:ftl.! The &-Al £m("e r /) r..ir J13Sj!J33, ,J, IMMED. POSSliSS. :fij;" 3 nR, 2 bi, Comp. n!det'or., . +1 new carpets, Flrtp).lce. . . ... ""a<b' yard. -T:-,, .... $35,750 -i0%DOWN 3 BR, -4 drll)ta, ,_ Uy room. Many ~xtru. Oose to -. ohoppiog " ""''"" $39,500. 53114'62. 3 BR Townhou&e. Rcl'rlg, pool, children ok. :Auume ~ FJfA:, tow down. ,,.. BALBOA BAY PROP. 1 ~11 * S5' llOO * 4 Bi-, 2 ba homt ' $25,000. 19"32 Mauna Ln. , it< ASWME 711% lonn $2900 54&-llG3 1168-1486 . t. ..J.J)I\ +2Ji 'ft + din !,Ike 10 trad<t our 'l'rad•I"• -..... iJ6i:iiilev... \a, Al'l'dl .. .,,,1~1'11!1i fiif;oii1 TI;; -.. I TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH ·A DAILY PllOT WANT AD -&42-511··&-- 8uslno11 ' $ LANDLORDS $ ~ratcdE~~:r. R: ~ Opportunity 200 WEt:L SECURED Let us rent UR prbpert~ •---'-'---"'---_--$8400, 2nd 'l'nist Deed 93 We work wtth yau. F location $85. incl. uUHUes M.EAT market In West. interestdue 3.-YTS Will d' F~E. Afan,y Olents. Call d8,Y9, 835-4864 eve. 837·7772. Colo., Gilbert's 1602 No. count $840 to-yl 1<i-u% ui-pnor to vaca~. ~ve $$. 1958 10' x 55' expando Snarll-Investment 15th Grand Junction, Colo. SIGNAL M·)R,.CAGE Co $ ALA RENTALS $ bedroom, $4500. Adult, no r-··• 8718 Hudson River Or., _. cn4) 55t¢0l06 · NeWport & Bay, CM 642-&18.1 pet parii:. CaJI 839-5266 Corp 133-3544 F.V. 4500 Campus Dr NB CM. Small Pad, $8:5. Malurt SACRIFICE $.i,950. Lido. 11 UNITS. Room for 3 more. BARBER Shop, exclusive ' ' · male. Util pd. Furn. Patio. Water Front Park, Furn. E/slde C,M, 1 & 2 Br. Corona del Mar area. $.l CdA1 • Nice yrd, gar, 2 Br, Dbl. Wide, aw/pool. 675-82'20 Gross $1875/mo. Call HC+.~ Low lease. Good nnty $250 Pel&: child. I Ow-· 64" 0"~ gron. 673-5'"" or . .,~., --. I I~ NL'WPORT . ~anv1ew 3 br! ~tOBILE Horr.e, rec ~hicle '"'"• ~. '-"" .,..,....~, _,.,_ -. -lo d k -~ I G "GMT LANDSCAPE/ Mt Int Tl:J s.....,.pa1 , ec ,'S'>&•3. , Insurance the best, call Ed SALES-EXCHAN ES-... 1 '-··-Inc ll J• __ , l'·mmm;i;mmm~· -~IHB • 4 Br 2 ba ~. grdnr; Lynch, 979-742'l K.V.~Itf~ CO. ~ts:~I ~;;·i!I! trpi, appl, child Se pet, CLEAN eight by forty trailer I ~~-=:.:::=~;:.-,,-,-:-c"° to. Houses Furnished 300 B. J~and . Unbelievable! carpeted, pat1.lally 'furnish-Need a "Pad"? Placq an ad! ""'-~~==----,, 1--..;..;, __ ....;.;.;.:.;;.....;;;;.;:1 4 bt-2 ba $425 wntr. a goodie-'"'~· ~oool~e~•~l~l550~.~-;;;;~7229=:;;·::,_.,r,;";,;ll:='4;;>-:56!11:=:· ====0..:.-"N"eed;:•:;'';P;•d;'='';P;l:'"""="'=•;d:;!I G I Laguna , 2 br & alcove $275 = .mere ? frpl. apJA. pct & child ok. l {jpti·l j I. 8 1'. CE L 1-! I used to feef·sorry for I I I I furmors who rna•kot beef cind l>O'k. No more, Thoy Gl9' r\ow drlvlog Rolla Roy<» --l URESOA I -~a...., hs:-T.li-,,,j;"T-1 -'1"'• .;.,lr-1 G) Comptote the dwdt. 'II-.! L-'.C--.1.. -1.-L . ...L . ...J by fill ... In the m"""' -•. Voll df'tlllop frotn tfep No. 3 below. Ed Lon'o 1450 Doouvllle. Pl. Cost• M.sa. You are t'i~ w1n11 :t> ( TWO FREE TICKETS tn the RECREATION VEHICLE SHOW SEPT. 19TH·23RD FOR MAt'IY, MANY 1t10RE CALL •..•.• ALA Rtnl•I• 642.a:JQ At the W.1ttft COSTA,..,_. ANAHEIM STADIUM FURN Baohe\o• Apt. Ncw- 2000 State College Blvd., port Beach, Sll5/mo. l child, Anaheim sngls ok Please c!'ll 642-5678 ext 339 BEAtrr. · stuctto apt. )'\tm lo claun your tickets. $170 Cd"'t (Nortl1 County Toll h1!e uNrimi~ ·2 BR. Apt $160. number ls 540-12a'.J). Cute tor rouple. Bolboo lslond BRANO New 2 BR. Un!Um Apt. $210. 2 chUdren Ofl;. SOU11f Baytront ~ o u 1 e ' FREE RENTAL BOOK 3BR. ~· fl\ntutic view, DROP IN .t: BROWSE t ide ue for &mall bOl'l.t, winter tease. $400 per mo. For example: 3 bdrm holm', Yurty len1t, M per mo. 2 ba.thS, <M:ta Me• a . MG Elliott Real Estate, 301 Cdll('~ Prk., ~. fcflC(!ff MArlne Ave, No. 1, Balboa yard, bu I l t-1n1 . .S.'lW laland 6~ Ptr/mo. WllW &: Lee. am> ' Harbot' 8'vd., at Ad•n1t 4 BR house 11vail now for 9 R~AL ESTATE mo. ,..... Loi< 01 "'!>'"· LANDLO DSI STUDENTS WELCOME.' R . .• PRINT NUM6EREO I' r r I{ ,. I' I' J' 1 .CRH f'llll '289-&166. lf no We sJ,eciatbe t.n Newport lETT,RS IN SQyARE$ - -. . -• -DnS\ver-l<'ave m c !J !I • i c • BcaC'.h • Corona dt1 )\tar • ! --'&~~-~ e u,QNSCRAM6!.l l!TI!IS I I I I I I I I I 3 BR. 2 Bo, ""'~· b\111! ""1 vleo r. rRJ;:F. lo You: Tty _g ANSWf~ • • • • • • . . . Rf't. Winier or year\)'. Cal Nu.Vltiw• -"SCRAM:-L!TS ANSWEIS-tN-Gl.ASSIFICA.JION...tOO.-•6r;!~, ·~ .: .,.., , =.!!..~ _!'~ f I • • 3 1 DlJl .. V PILOT (t·.....: ....... J~I I~[ ---_,.,_ I~ ~I .... ~-=--.... _ ... ~l~~·l l ~[ -~1-~ ... -· ... ·~1~:1 ;!~ ... ;;· I ·;;·"'-~l~rtl;\~I .~ .... ·-·~--.:;1~-=·:1 ~~~ Ho-Unfurn. 305 HoUMS •Un/urn. 305 Hou ... Unfvm. JO.IA;; _.._pn...;.;._F..;u.:.rn:.;;•c_ __ .,:3~60 AptJ. Furn. 360 • 1-;.;..;.~..:...-"'"'--= c==~==-= Condomlnl""" ~~=·..;U::;n~fv::;r~n::.. __ ..::MS=1 ~t. Unfurn. :MS B•v<rH1 Coit• Men Laguna S.Kh __ F_uc,r.;.n.;.· ____ ....:;3:.:.::15 G.neral · ·Huntington INc:h -Newport BHcti :1 I;;;;;;;:;:;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;; j~;::'~f;;f;;;;;-;-;.:: I :.:;:.:;:c:.:ir.:.::;...:::=~--Coron• del Mu Cosio -~ llJR. 1•. 11n. forml din rm.1 1 • UtU Pd. N"-' t Br. Lagune Nlgwl G. R. lievan LOW WEEKLY RATES 'i~~~iiii~iiiiiiii I'="°-=::;:;____ PARK NEWPORT 1\hl io:~ra.:•·. 9-12 rno 1.w, PRIVATE Stove, n!hi&:, crpta/drps, ==.;;...;.;;.o;:;:;_ ___ I 224 S•nt• Barbar• #2 Executive Suite• 1 East1lcM lrg 2 BR's APARTMENTS " ~·"11J oc 616-l<>l ENTERTAlNMt;NT POOC "'rport. 3 'BR, Coodomb;um on. th• S•n Clemente n7 Yorktown Blvd. ~ -B\tn., W/W, roh1<, patio, Bach•lor I O< 2 s.drooona I ••ysho ros 110.\IE. lJP!M'r Bay • newly Slfi5 · 1 Br. nr.er beach bl.II'. aoU coune. beautlfWly fun1. You .,. lh• w•·-r of n •.• ~ 81.~ v~-.. m~ Sl.65. Adil/no pets. 642-953J &nlf TownhOUteS 1 .--painted • 3 BR/lo'R •• .,c.n Jncd """-', c..illld/ ....... 'wr:I· $3.95. 6'15--3IXMJ '""" ut._ .... ·n 5"..~· :!ll..., ... llV""n ''· -•-· ~· TWO FREE TICKETS -" ores ms. -2 br, l~ ba, 3 car Fr. ll!W.00 Opeo 9-6 COrt:\\'.:n J.11, Ire 2 Bil, Mo. Loli Mllltr 64Z8m Jl!J come Condomintum1 r.o lhe 5 gar, crpl, drps, dshwlhr, Spa Pools 'l'eMI. fk'pl~. 1 x 1 r 111 , t'p!c:. appl., S250 • 'trg 2 Be. Ocean Vlew U I TUOIOS & 1 BR's. t1o 615--6467 ACl'OIJI horn Ji'~lon Isl ,.,.,., ... , •. ,. s~~~ ,,. 1 " 1 •• , a pt. Ji u"'" dec:il:. n urn. 320 RECREATION e l-~u>J k1tC"hen T OWNHOUSE pa • . J .. "" " . ..,.,, ~ ...... ..~ VE 2 en ~ d 1 at Jamhol'ee on Slln oaqut u.10-:)IJtl sm . Big old 2 + 1ten trple Eist Bluff HICLE SHOW • lf(·aii.'fl 111X>1 2 Br, lircplacc, pool, private · ~~ts, rps, b lni;, Jlllls Jtoad. . HP<D.lty Con1panv ~. !!\Cd )'NL View. SEPT. 19TH·23RD • Laurtdry fac.ilitles patios, <.<onllnen1al bi<eak· beam ced, $140. 1 ~hlld ok. (7l4 ) 644-lfOO Coron• dtl M~r 642-8235 644-6200 $3SO • Lrg 3 B~. 2 &, gor-3 BR. Condo EutbluU, Sil2S. At the • Free Utilhles h11t. Spal~lous ground11, near No pets. &16--3786, 545--0760. gcous ocean VK'W home, Call for11.ppolntment . ANAHEIM STADIUM • Fl'l'C! linenis shopplne: & tine beach. Fur. 2 BD, 1 Bth. Priv. gar. Adll New Cu1tom B•yfron OCEAN V IEW r VERY CLEAN s.KlO -Country Eistnte 3 VJ 640-0929. Avail Oct l5rh . 2000 St~te Colh~ge Blvd., e 1'.V. &: n1aid serv. avail. n.Lilied or W\fw·nlshcd l'.rom no pet Nr trwy & shp. 1v/PIUV BCI~ & PIER. inun11.c l l~H. 2 Bi\. 111 n 1 . nn. AND SHARP ru-. 2 Br. 2 Ba, lrg Jiv rm, Anaheim • Bar-B-Que . SZ-.:>O. Corona. del ' Mar 8o&a122, 846-4387. BR. 2 BA. Jl'rplc BBQ, I !j't()l'I" f.-lr, z·~ ~. Huntington Beach p • !'hone Sl'l'Vit."" DAij.26U • 2 $' 0 '/mo Y•uri" in ('anieo IHuhl11 nt s, fncd . 3 B" t 'th lo I ' •v• """"'' ""''""' lcasc call &12-5678 ""I .""" ·• ..,.. · BR, 2 BA upataJ~. Ma-l"d ''°" · .. or· .. . n . iomP \.\'I ve y car-NU.VIEW RENTALS """ ·''"' e l ~file to OCi:&n "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!tl "" 97• ~•1 ••• •510 )(I'd. ll1>eetacuhu vcea n fl\.'tJi:, bt.'ttut. psuieled walls, _, e TENNIS crts & pool + to claim your tlcket11. ~'='":;:;c,;;;.,.:::.:.::: ____ I.!!! adults only. $150. 642-ll.31 ~ or__..... 1 \'iff'~11, ~pit>, drps. lik1· nl">W. l'O\li!l'NI patio, trees and 3 u1.;i·40'JO or 494·32-ll! Iota! security in new 2 BR 2 !North Cour11y Toll fl'l.'e 2 BR, $1fA). built ioa, lnqulre * * * * * * e.tter 3 pm. BAYFRONT yrly lease 2 l.otll or i;1ori1i,:1.•. ActtS5 to 3 huge rCfl('l'd yard. Faml lies NEAR Ocean ~·-View, 3 BR, BA 1 sty w/priv patio & 11un1ber is ~1220 1. atl 6 PM VIEW HUCE 2 Br, 2 ba triplex BR, 2 BA, tri1lc, 2 yrs old. pvl. l)('iichi's. Avi11l. ()('t. only. S250./n10. CaJI Coats partially rum, $32J. nJO. gar. Adults. \Valk to beach. 1 BR. open bearl\s, shag • 961)..1126 * * NEAR BEACH * frplc, 11:ar, d\Mwasht'.'r, $230: Pvt bch. $450 1no. l>&yll 151h $650 ino. least'.' or lea.s.·/ & \liallace, Reattors 546-4141. ,a21a~·,c•c;""'6:..:::.:U:,,,,_~--$280 mo + lit & last o1t; carpet, stove, refrll:, son1e Laguno1 &.•ch DehL"'<e 3 BR, 21,~ BA. Huge mo. 7""J8 \V. 18th St. 52>-115.1, Eves 697-1336. v oprlon. 6U.:t177. S•J • Gets ll. small peel. Nl ~ MO. 3 BR. plus den, security tee. ~2376 fw11. 3M·B Dahlia, Cdi'i1. -=c.;c;;...;;;;.;;=----1 owjr's unit In rM!W euston1 1 & 2 BR $1:15 • Sl5S Stove 1..ARGE :mR, 2BA, flrepl, llARBOR \'rE\V 4 hedroo1n, rook, eat, sleep, util pd. 2-s!y. view homr VERY plush 2 Br, 2 Ba, full ,675-8603==::·------rAmVJE\~· S~t Studio. for dup ex, beam c e 111 n g, reJ., crpt/drps, htd pool' bltlns, dht~·shr. Nr Hoa1 \~'l11k tn ~1~n bt:lts & pool. $1 50 . 2 br dplx separat . 4!>1-9'rot 494-9729 Agt. appli, club & pool. Adult liv· adll, util pd, mini kilch, full pe.llU&, rplc, nr shopping, no Adults. no pets. 645-8965 . HOlp. $250/nio. Adu Its , $-IOO. 1>1·r niunth \ppl '-"Jl(/drp i~. Xlnt Joe. 1 mi. to beach. Balboo1 Island ha, l'tpting, SllOmo, Gale pets, $425 mo. ~ · 642-4387 CLOSE TO SHOPS 3 .~~~· 4 Br, '2 ~· yr\y. Laguu Nl11ue\ $2'l5 lease. 5.36-0092 or &~:ll85/6T;i-748'1 eve · 67).()960 Dina Point 2 BORP.t apt ~·Ip 1t r I 0 bcdJ,...,1n1 1.:utif', SJ.50 pr t ,., fncd . ••~ • 534-3896. NICELY furn bachelor, year OCEAN beach front , 2 BR, 2 * * • * tr • :-.... bl ' n1C1nll1. nkr. 6T:>-7"n'.i rt".:. • wi pa ....... Pet. Round, 1 adlt over 26, oon-Dana Point, nr Miuina, garage, 1 k 10 ocean ClfARMINt> 2 RR, 1 B•I ALA Ronl•ls 642~ CEASE:· 3 BR .. 2 ba. with CONDO. 3 Br., at Ad""' & •nookco", 00 stdnts. IUO ulil ra· $350 mo. m Or<ao· CGE. 2 BR •pt. Big ound~k. clean 2 BR apt. 1\> BA, I ll!;. Winter or yrly $250. LARGE 2 BR, 2 BA duplex !?°2..!~cil. ~Month Bushard. All l't!'C., $240. pd. 213-281~ ront, 494-4601, 49-1-1 279. patio, range & reC, \Yaslung Children OK. 831-1437 673-2l'L5. l1'lu~c. good locat1011. nr d • '1'7'1""'"'" 494-9729 J\sf.. Call aft. 5. BACH apt at Crescent Bay facil. $250 ftto . PENIN \\' t • ~'ro t S l park, So. or l·J\\·y, CdM. cpts, rps, OW, ideal Joe. 3 BR 3 BA $285 M • 962-99G2 * 602 S. Bayfront -2 Oft $15.5 up S50 k Colo NEW 2 BR. 2 ba. con· 2 BR, ocean vu, $185. \Vater . ; ci ~r n •. pac, 11 $2T:i. Pli'aS<' call 6·1·1-SCJ.?,.I. t::asts\de. gar olf alley, prkg First,· last ic ar&ni:.· Winter. Fabulous Bay View. TV.' 14J5 N. Co\l!st~ <194-2508~ domlnium apt All bltns & gas furni!ihed. Adults, B~. t2S ti<;~;,. slip ll.vlail. $325TI4J for trlr/camper, adults on· Newport Beach Call 67J...832f1, 838-3210. $400. ' · 493-W9. ~in er._ #<NV ~r. se. I 3 BH, 21 ~ BA. Pa11ially furn . ly, no pets. $265, nio. 1st & '""_,;:l"''°"·..:*~*:..*:._:4'6-0552~~:_-YEARLY STUDIO Apt, close in. Adults 3 BR. 3 ba. home ; all bu ilt· ;)'l8·4.°W'J/642·3559. ~~~~r. ~i~"er. ~~·ish~'f~ last +. $15 r;lng. 329 1 "L"ind=•'-'l::;•lc::•'-----EXQUISITE brand new con-2 Br, furn, or unfurn, bay w, ~~7,4\"'3 pets, $150. Utlls pd. ins. $450 Month Huntington Be1ch 2 BR duplex. $200 + utll.-, H Rochester, 642-1264. do near beach \vith \.iew, S2J50 Sl;r--"-""" University Rlt v 67l-65JO Call 979-7659 aft l or Da.r. · s:18Im.t !:a=· Ca 11 lMMEDIATE O cc u pe.n c y 1 OR 2 Yr. leue. Pier & slip. adjacent to pool, leimls. · ;..--."""'. Lido Jal• PLUSH E~EC. APT. Uniltcd Incon1e? j213) 338-S.114. ' 10 ·-\y 1 2 8 Condo 6 BR .. 41L ..... , air ""'nd. sauna, jacuzzi 2 Bdnn., 2 1 BR. Apt. Newly remodeled. c.o-.. ,·ai Se•uro'ty' 2 ~" rg r · 1,~ -. n~. 13~.~ Mo·."" ~th, sunk•"n m·a-~,. •·•. • Do'sh .. --•er. Yearly.·1195 + Fol' Lease. NU VIEW A""'. 4 ~ .. · BR. l ha. tU k. to oceaDl CHAR~11 NG home compl. Elside. $235. No children. uw oq wu ...., .,., • """ °' w.ui• TERRIFIC Bay ·v1~w. -2 Br, b 3 Ba f , ... ' Ad I ,..._ Yearly· $220 l\1 J.'ed(>C()ra ted, 3 br, 3 ha, frpl, Lr:a!;f option possible. Bkr. Bill Grundy Rltr. 675-6161 living rm,, din rn1., beamed utll.ilies. Call 675-7016. 1 Ba fµrn apl. Lido Island. r, • an1 rn1, All ""elect. · U t1 vnly..:..NO Peta • o. •: patio. gar, 2 blks rrom 83S-£:i.41 eves. ceilings, fpl, wet bar, G.E. Su1nmer rental or lease. bll.ns, crpl/drps. Sia> per , Ask For Mike beueh, 'h: blk to stores. Mesa Verde kilch w/trashma.sher, 2 sun Balboli Penlntula Ph: 548-78.'W or 646-4750. mo. Too many ext.ras to Close to Shopping & bus J ONES REALTY G7H210 Ll:a"f> $.125. 644-0924. SINGLES/Families -Va· I ~.:::::...:.:::.:;::_____ decks, dbl elec gar. Avail 1''7RN 1 BR, incld util, g.,.., mention!! Call 673-6992 :~· Unfur~tove, refrig 1700 WESTCLIFF DR.1, ;I JBDRM. 2 run BA. buitliru; cnnt 2 Br. $130. Also 3 BR, IMMEDIATE Occupancy .3 Oct 5th. Lease. 644-2117. $35 WEEK & UP 1 adull, no ""ls. •'llln ino., Spect1cular View Apt A. II Util' p Id '1 BR, t & 2 BA. Bltn. upp . -rlrepl. open beams . C""!S $9~;,A30klds/pets. Agt. i-~ee. Br, 2 &. $295. Option poss!-BRAND NEW • Sleeplng Rooms Y. early, 6~ ,,:;;7 _.,., ON OCEAN BLVD. -2 BR, 2 s " ancct. Pool. 642-6274. \1 J " :::'=~""------blc. Broker, 838-6341 eves. e Hous-" I R "~ BA I I I I drrs. Ganlcnt'r in~:luded. :!BR ZBA, fl.1esa Verde. Avail Lease .,...;th option to pur· • Ocea~~i~!g Af~ms Newpor t hach Ad~lts rp ':; bel~~n1y, llltns. 2 Br, l ba, 2nd floor, $144. 2 OCEANFllONT . Spacious/ Llkl' llC'\\'l $400 mo. on yrly Newport Beach chasE'! Top quality~ til 67 .. '!~!'.: '"""nio. incl Br, 2 ha & den, grpund floor unu sually nice 1 Br ap 1 lc·a.se. 644·&567. ' ~~~ Re~~~~~y 1;;::.::c:.:..::;:;:::::_ ___ e 2 & 3 Bedroon1s BALBOA NN OCEAN View-4,bedrooin, 2 u · a--"'11J •. $164. 714-842-962'J, Map-Sat. Yearly. $300/nio. &l5-00GS .. 1 3 BR. 2 BA. nr. bch, Eastbluff, 5BR, 3BA e 2 Car Garages l05 :~~treet bath. only steps to the SO. of H"'Y 3 br, 2 ha, D/\V, SPACIOUS · 3 BR. 2 Ba nr new duplex ' c;pt/drp, nr. achls & shp'g. $275. mo. 4 Br, 2 Ba, Home Executive home. Ne-A• painl $450. & $475. ocean. DishwaSher, built· bltns, se.rv!Cl' porch frplc sn· y 1 Ref · · $425. Bcf. lOAM or btwn 2 & E.C.M. Lrg fncd yd/gar in & out. \Valk 10 Cdfl.t High, NE\VPORT CREsr YEARLY lease $225 apt 4 ins, shag carpet, 2 porches, crpts, drps, deck & ·pa llo'. 3 Br, 2 Ba, crpts, drps, neYo'ly ~ B r1~ 81 ng; = 5 PM 6i5-4034 Eve/wknd. 548-4669. El hi BR 2 BA, steps to bay• & lots of close t space. Parking No pets. $395/mo. 317 ~· Pool. Child ok. n 89. u . · nm. 3BA, 1 blk from beach, w/~~.seto ~~~15Jrm1!': PHONE 64S.(i141 ocean, pref mature adlts, for 2 cars. Winter or Year-J asmine 6'7:r1957. l'421SJK~lson ~Beach yb~~RLY -2 + del300n, 2 ba, 3 ~le patio less the , .... ,,D;;,1;:;"':;.:..;.P.:0:;i:.:n;.I __ ~--Incl t & _ _. Townhouse U, nfvm. 335 008-6732. ly. Call Eric 1t'lueller, NEAR ocean 2 br bll a er. 0 r to ~an. · n-.o., ' uy • , n 4-¥• 1 • wa er . g .... .,,,enrr. 213/i24-5880 or TI4/6T>419I • ns, 847-7786 892-Mt2/67>0098 old, all bltlns, $400 per, nio. CLOSE TO DANA 6'14·1000. PENINSULA Poin1 1 BR. ftplc, neY.•ly decor, patios l'°"==~~~~---1,0:,:,::,:==="----<I 6/a-7481 Costa MeA partially furn., uti.I . pd., eves or \\'eekends. pool privl. $ 2 3 5 / m 0 ' NE\V apts. Hall b& from the S~IARP! 1 Bl', ocean 2 blkl. HARBOR View H 11 15 . POINT" MARINA BAY + mountain vu. Prime ;;.:;;;;c;;..:;o;::::.._____ yearly $.2.IO. mo, 673.7219 Sharp-Redecor•ted 644-0!10 · ocean. 6 units, l Br. $175. 2 shng, nu appli. no pets. Yr1~ ·J SJ>acloo11 5 Br/dcn/fam Na:i1t! !r·\,.~18:huJ~e~:~ ~e;;.~1:a!ioc:~~~: ~~~v~ ~:.~. ~u~f:ins: c~:~'. ;"""'~;;·""===--...,'""',-·I BR, 2 BA. F'rplc, front PRI, quiet l BR, \v/sml ~~ ~· AMfts·;J_=· ~r Sl7S. 5 7>21.24. 1 1 rm. pool, spectacular view. $275 per mo. Eves 1141 "R'' plan. Bluffs condo. 3 drapes, rec rm tac & pool. OCEANF"RONT·Shaip 2 Br, porch & lrg l'e.llr tcn·aCl'. Nr sundeck, yearly, No. of ~ San Clement• / SR50/Mo. 644-2359. 544 'ffi1B br, 21,~ ba, frplc, wet bar, Contact Mr. Que en, completely furn. $275 mo. ocean & bay. beaches. Hwy, Sl!IO pe r 1no. Avall ln1.l"'=.'7-'="-------~.::.;:_;c;:::::::;;:.:~--..;J • · pool. Lease $650 _ m 0 • 549-2132. Call 642-£277 aft 7 pm. Adults onl). Ren t $350/n10. med, &W-4064 Nl::W 2 Br, ~·ater pd. Crpt, • NO\Y AVAILABLE * 6h\Otd LARK\ ·~~UR .• .,2IOll BR. ·& 644-4133/''" -. . BAYFRONT I B•. uto'\ lo •l'd, \Vlnter. Aru1ually $ 3 8 0. B'UFFS I I 2 B 2 dl'ps, stove, garb. displ, priv Brand New Garden Apts ~ !i · poo · ....,ase ...,..,., J\to. Fount•in Viney O'IV'VOVU Huntington Buch • ... 64&-8211. ... 1 cus · uxury r, put, gar, wsh/dry hookup. 1 Xlnt San Clemente area BOYD Real!on1 6'75--0030 NEWPORT SHORES, l~i 1---.z..---C'---$210. Slip Avail. Ca 1 l -'2 car enc · gar. $325 Mo. child, no pcfs. \Vkdys tl!t 6, 2 BR 2 BA _Jl.95 .: 3 BR, 2 ba. clean, spacious, 3b~nsR,0 ',w1BAm, 2poo· car 1 , ldsda:··o•Kll, blks to ocean, 2 & den, 2 3 BR. 2 BA, $230 mo. Very 64&-5447 or 673-7923. .'SumTmoeSr,'s.,About a8:;:ci,!;:~.~-arm sJ:8 962-7295, &4a-J00'2 3 BR, 2 BA. wlih dshwr ·1 patio, gar. $425., hio, Yrly " BA. w/w cpl!, blbu, new clean! Pool/rec center. 213: 2 & 3 BR. Winter. $245 & a Very plush 2 Br, 2 Ba, full & fireplaoe, $25(1 •: JC'ase. &M-06ll. ~Ike 1ew, to~ mo. No DW & drps, adlt!, 00 pe ts 43{µ1914 $295/MO. 114 E. Balboa. NiC'e beactrlront Apt. 3-Br, 3 BR, 2 BA house, So., or appll, club & pool. Adult !iv· All apts. have private palk>a, 2 BR 11 ,/gar. No child. or ,.:;';:;'·~g,,;•c;no...:::=;:~:.,_--$325. Yearly. 213: 698-1383 :Dc;u;!:p:;.l•:;•::•:;•:..:.F.:u.:.m:.:·:__.:345:: -' ... ",..·.,.009.,,,l"or,,,s,,,1,,9.,,111~6·=~= 2 Ba. Bearon Bay. Avail lo H w Y · r PI c • Pat! o~, Ing. Xlnl loc. ) mi. lo beach. miuzy other features. See "1 ~ pets. 612 Polnse1lla. $275. Huntington Beach 696--0018. * * * OCEAN'f'RONT June 15. 1\ll utll's pd. washer/dryer area, $3'2a. S225 lease. S36-009"l or 686 Camino De Log M~ lt1ary 644-8616 646-0555 5 BR, 3 bath, 3 car gar, Blilboa P•nintU1a $325 incl ulll. \Vlnter ~n:: 673--3855 for appt. 'Call Agent, ~ 534-3896 Just ROUth or Sfn Oemr:ntf l Br fWTI $125; Neat condo de I u x r c r pt g , near * Call 673-472-1 • NE\V Luxurious ocean 2 BR, clean, frplc, gar, South DELUXE . Extra 1 -2 Br 2 General Hosp. • $175; 3 br 11;-fi Ba twnhse I bbou nd I NE\V 2 Bl', I...,. dduxe, ~ot/V' 3 & 4 B f or HWY Call ..... l'i ' Use Eslrella Ort-ramp " I 2 BEDR00l\1S, 2 baths, heated swimming pool, ;250/ QlQ, Calf 645-6610. "Weed it & Reap" From treasures to tra.&h Turn them Into cash CAU. Dally Pilot $250 3 cu se a poo . 1860 . .,, BAYFRONT BACHELOR ,-av iew r, rom * 1'213l431-U 95 * Ba. Pool11lde apt. $180. Nr, PhOne 49'J..HYll --• : br Home, FIR, $295; Port C••io"' NB "=/mo winter or yearly, steps to 1250 $300 visit 2004 \V. OC'E'an . '-a•h. New •ho• ·-t • ~~·~ 4 br 2 ba, $295. .,A..,_.......,""'. "• · ' """' " Ba Bch yearly, ulil paid, 926 F d ·1 "" " "' .... ,. ·NEW 2 -" LANDi.oRDS ~-~ Y or • (2131 699-7219 East Balboa, 6TJ-97-19 ront 8.1 Y or call 6-16-3ll4 2 BR, l ba , gar, yd, $230. per bltlns, etc. 2320 Florida. . an., 1.,. BA, LARGE luxury home _ new \vk days 6T;ZJ61 Sundays eves. mo., no children or pcls. 5.16-0082. VK'\.\', Top area, super d FREE ~ENTE ~~SEE' ~VICE . carpet, 3 Br. 2 Ba. Lrg OCEANFRONT, e.x lge 3 Br BoAvYFRI OldNT .. _1 Br,., ap t OCEANFRONT + bay vu. 5081~ Marigold. 83.1--0821 WALK TO BEACH IUlle, adults, $250. '49'l-2'2641 ... .,. ,-nu .. I U trp & den, 2 Ba, •-k, gar, ~ oo ng uoY, pa '°· gill', N 2 BR 2 BA C A I ALA Rentals 642..&313 am Y room, le. Adults winier. Util pd~, $ 4 0 0 . ulil pd. $225/mo. 673-6790. e\v • ondo. * 1 BR APT * Brand new l & 2 l:IR P I only $475. 642-Q89 avail. 846-863l Frplc, full security. Lse all ulil paid. $200. 67>1684 cru-pets, drapes & bttiltins Furn. or Unfurn. " BRAND NE\V 2 BR. Jn1m . I ''-""="-------BAYFRONT BACHELOR $450. (213) m-n76, (714) 221 • 16th St. 847-3957 ~~en~~Sh~ P s& 'c";;_.=s;....~B~R-Ra~t"'"---v-1.-w ~~ ~W~~: s:1=.1~~~f· 9'J> East~ ="'734"'oc-"'~~::1w~k-.-,.~0~P~.-,-B-R-., 2 Costa MaM WALK TO BEACH ••lbol Peninsula disposal. Beaut. pool. All for .. ' water gardener $250/mo. Call 675-5366. DELUXE 1 & 2 BR. Carpets, drapeA, FURN. 1 ·BR $165; 2 BR. 2 r:~ie~ ~V:e~t ~ ~nt or lrase opt. $M.5.10,;:=;EC::!CUXEC::::...:::FURN:::..=::,:o:B'.:.R-.-2 Coron1 del Matr ~~: :;.,~· ~~'. . APARTMENTS ~7-=7.16th St. 536--8548 -=. .. :.:: ~~urn_i,JR. 2 2 blks N. or \Varner, 1 blk * SH.ARP 4 BR, 3 BA, BA, t275/mo. WINTER. BEAUT. harbor & ~an vu ~~· Newport: Bl., N.B. Air Cond • Frplc'1 · 3 Swim· NE\V build' 2 C ' Advertisers may place W. of Beach. 847-9914, To~·nhouse Back Bay. Pool. 6'&5.166 or &1&1040 & prv. balcOny, no pets. $185 =='=1·==,.,.,-~~ mln& Pools • Health Spa • fro bching$235br apt. 1 blkl ;;.o;.;•:;.l•:...M;.;'":::;;":...----l ' 'tllt'.'lr ads b:" tele\Jhone 6T:>-150Ci. rrplc, N'lf clean oven, dbl Newport BeaCh & up. Ulll pd. 2500 Seavlew, OCEANFRONT Upper ·3 br, Tennis Courts • Gym and "'~"n.!c.." · mo. Call ' gac 0 "3 -4 o• 1\33-1°0° Cd'f 2 .. _ • .,~ ........ mo 0-an B!Uo···d Room, ;>.~..,. TiiE EXCITING $:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. LOVELY lamily home : 4BR . ""'·0 "' ' """· ". h.,,';( l=;. 'J~br. 1 bn.'$Joo~ i BR. From $150 l BR nr brach, shna rmt, PALM MESA APTS. 1 ' CLASSIFIED HOURS ?<1onday thru Friday 2~BA, lwo story, enclosed BEACON Bay winter-pvt WINTER Rental, !IC<.'luded SO. of Hwy. Lovely 2 BR., 213/596-1709 or 596-1712 1 BR & Den >~m ...iM t .... lc, gas & water pd~. 11-·65•. MINUTES TO NPT. SCH,, 8 to noon Saturday patio, close to schools & beach & tennis. 2 Br, 2 Ba, Newport Island. Clean, 2 fpl, 2 patios. S275·Mo. · "' "'""" ·" !!hopping. $325. Ask for ftplc, bltns, patio. Avail BR, furn . Garage. $250 per 67~97 or 67J-1()9:j 1 DOOR to beach, Jge 2 BR, 2 BR trom $2:10 ~1661 or 5.3&-6831. F1JRN. OR UNFURN. '• 1 COSTA MESA -omCE Dale. 962-4471 now. $350. 541·9534. mo. Drive by first? 503-38th BACH~' AR 11 new cpts. redecorated, furn 2 RR. Th>nhse!l From $250 LG. 3 br duplex. Gar Nr Unbelievably la.rec apt1 iJ 330 W. Bay St., N.B. then call collect s::.uv apt, ava noiv, or unfurn, yearly or MEDITERRANEAN Ele mt."ntary, $200. Ca 11 hua:e pool. Jacu.i::i elect bl 642 _ 5678 VERY plush 2 Br. 2 Ba, fu ll BRAND NEW 3 ~ Bay t-213: JTI-4640 or "Mike" at near ocean, privacy. $150. nlo/mo., Parking. 673-6640. . 675-6456 (Beach at Slater) ln1, 1hai ctpll'I, drpa, a&lJDIC appll, club & pool. Adult Jlv-View on Peninsula. 2 car 673-6210 nlD 644-4899 VILLAGE etc Adultt no pets. NE\VPORT BEACH Ing. Xlnt loc. l mil to beach. garage. $550.0CE ~;:;:;ANFR~·=-=o~NT~. -wrn~t-.-.,..-..__ Coi~I Mesa BA.L PENTN. 2 Br. nr. ocean. 2 BR. l 1 l Ba, nr freeway, SINGLES ' From •'l 3333 Newport Blvd. $225 lease. 536-0092 or l='°"'_..:G<G-~:::,Z,_,12':c·:____ ,_, 1 2 br furn~ '" ___ ...;,_____ Nu c.rpts .. panl'g & dl'ps. 2400 1-larbor Blvd .. C.M. Children welcome. $185 _mo. 1 BEDRM. From 6'12-5678 534-3896. BIG Canyon Condo new 3 Br, ......, ower , closed $30 WE Ek & UP \Vinttt rate $2'l5/n10. (714.) 557-!KJ20 16101 Malaga, 842-7339. 2 BEDRM. From COf\.lFY 2 BR, + cn•esl room 2800 sq. ft. Choice of crpts & garage. $.300/mo. &t2-J2'2!j e St d" & 1 BR 833--1288 OPEN' EVERYDAY 2 BR. bltin RIO, crpts dtp.!I Unfum Apts Avall From J-lUNTTNGTON BEACH "'" drps. $900/mo. Occupe.ncy or collect, G2!r25t6. e ~;:Maid ~~Avail. O C EA NF Ru NT , \V . !fours: Frl-Tues 11).6 good loc. $14). Ask for Dale: to SlS LESS. • 17875,!f~~0Blvd. ~ t".~~· ,:!::: rJ:!·;(:. approx. lO/IO. 963-213S 3 BR. 2 Ba. 1'g )'8t'd oo • P ho"" s.rv;oe _Hi d. Pool Ne.,,.rt. Winter n.ntal. 2 Woo. ~Thurs. Ul-7 962-MTI. You're right, they're undo!< .. .sm;;,::'~"'°::;;:·.;53&-""-.::.3507""-----IBACH 2 huge rms tr pl bath channel 2 blk from surf. e Children & Pet Section l..rg & 2 Smllil BDR1tts., PRIMA CASA APTS LRG 2 BR 1% BA srUOIO priced! 1561 r.tesa Dr. · 1 LAGUNA BEACH SETTING on acreage _ prv. porch, gar $175 available, c1215:;::c.IV=ln:ctec:r.;&t<H;:.:-...::282=: ___ j 2376 Newport Blvd., Ott laundry. $300. 642-3837. 1&18 Placenlia Ave. 01 encl gar, 0 infant ok. no pets'. (S blks lrom Newport Blvd.~ ' 2Z2 Forest Ave. home, dbl gar. $150. Also 31 c6'2-<889=,=::;·------3 BR duplex, lrg. sundeck, 2-548-9755 or 645-3967 OCEANrRONT 9mo ~inter ~n House 1-5 Dally $151.50/mo. M2--0~. 54&-9.160 :: I . 494-94.66 BR $180 CM. A.gt. Fee Harbor View Homes car garage. Yearly. Utils. (Ad good for $5 on rent I rental, 2BR, Jba, furn. ALL UTIUTIES PAID Sl65 1 BR shag crpt.e: ...,1 PREVIEW OPENIMtl' m'.8430 · · paid. 213· 944-4390 $l S E frplc. bltlns, $300 ineldlng Family Units -Oiildrcn 4 biocb t~ beach .... pa'"i~· A~·ard wirmlng ) 2 '= 'j1,t SAN CLEi\1E1'TE ~~ & ~ ritn~6"-0396F~ 2 BR. 2. Ba, nu · carpets, 4 •LG • 1 BR. util 642-2940 \V@'loome. Large 2 BR. l Call 539-9S9l. ' · apts w/famlly' nns. NO 305 N. El Camino Real 4 BR •. 2 "ba, fan1 rm, crpt, garage Newport shorea. FULLY FURNISHED. NEAR BA. Reflig, dahwhrs, bltns. lease Sorry 00 pe:ts. Frodi 492-4420 drps. patio, fenced yd, $3.iO., 4 BR. Year round rental. 113 $275. mon, yearly. 548-4802 SHOPPING. ADULTS, NO ~F~:~~~ ~~e~I= patios, t1.•alk-ln cl08et11, gar, t 3 BR, 2 BA STUDIO. just . $175.' OUR TOWlt NORTH COUNTY gardener indd 968-T.m blka to heh. Avail immd. D I PE'l'S. HF.ATED POOL. i:::nrage. $300/mo. &12--32'29 crpts, dflll & p 0 0 t.. n95tMO. fl.faturt-tamlly. Family Ap!B 1250 Adami I Irvine 673-8323. un exes Unturn. l50 CALL BKR. 67.S.5800 or collect 629-"""'. $Zl)-$230/MO. . Avail now. 8G-0350. Ave. IAdams' at Fairview) dlal free 540-1220 4 BR, Fam. rm, lrplc, brand 81lboli Pentn.ulol ...,.,., Call C.J.S. Real· Estate 2 BR, near-new. Water, gas Costa Mesa. Phone 556-0lti& CLASSIFIED 3 BR 2 ha 1400 nu luxury cond. nt ocee.n I;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;; ATIR.AC. Furn. 2 Br. $180. BEAOI Rental - 2 BR, 2 Ba, 548-U68 or 833-0084 paid. Child ok, no pelll. $160.l"'';•;'7C~~,i;;;;;;"7~~;11 DEADLINES . " . •.••••.•••• It I I &1~16.58 l• Bltns, w/w pool. Adults, no trp!c, sundcck w/occan T. IRED OF NOISE? 84Z--1652. 1, 2 & ~ABRVJ, CTOFurnRI~ *u-• 3 BR., 2)!1 ba •••.•..•.•• $450 w enn 9• poo • · OCEANFRONT pets. &12-9520. virw. Yearly. $400 per 1no. Wil G a ·~ ,l)(>adline for copy & kills 2 BR, 2 ba, den, A/C ••• $275 CONDO-Park Udo area. 3 * STUNN IN G 1 BR garden c0644-~1~51"7-~~-~--son arden Apt.s. 2 Br, 2 BR & 1 BR -$215 & $165. 2 Carpels, drape!', D/W, TY ii; 5:30 p.m. !he day be· 2 BR. 2 bat:hs fam rm. $350 Br, 21,!I ha, mod kit. Patio. L1L~W)' 3 Br, 2 Ba, palio, a pt. pool, rec. area, Slti5. $2!1.SO per "\\'k & up. Color tv, 1% Ba, crpll'I, drp11. PooJ, bl.ks from beach. Cpts, dtllS, anr. Pool , etc. 121 Vlctorfi fore 1it1bllcatlon, except 4 BR., 3 ba, .' .......... $425 Pool. $310 yi'ly. 54.8-3993. fireplace. built-ins. 710 \V. 18t h ~'I .. Costa Mesa. maid serv & kitchens. The Ma~~L~\lll~~ ~J;:~· & gar. 342-50'l3. St. at Harbor, CM. 642-S970 1 !fur Sunday & l\Ionday 4 BR. 2 baths ........... $475 BAYFRONT 4 Bdnn., 2 bath ONLY $425. Bayclltt Motel, 455 No. . · · SPACIOUS 2 Br. S 1.4 9 . 01n1 Point f Editions u•hen deadline 3 BR. 2 ba., aJ.l' cond ... $275 $550 Yrly pal.lo 30, dock PACIFIC PROPERTIES SUS CASITAS Ne,vport Blvd. NB. 646-326S.' 2283 Fount.aln Way East CPRTSi rlrps, pooL Chlldil '°';;;.;.:;..:..;;:;.:. ____ _;,11 1 is Saturday, 12 noon. 4 BR. 2~~ ba .•••.•••.. , "$475 Balboa Coves '6#-4340 675-6712 or 675-1632 Furn J br & bacht'lo1·s. 2110 LRG. dclux 2 BR, bltins. tW. Of ~jrbo.-on Wilson) OK. M2-354f) or 847-7786. BRAND new deluxe Bachelor CLASSIFIED CALL 552-7500 SEVERAL 2 &: 3 BR. beach NEW 3 BR, 2 BA, outstand· Newport Blvd., Cftt. frplc, 1 blk beach or bay. 1 646-284G 2 BR FENCED YARD Bch Apt. Jn 4-plex, Encl. gar. · REGULATIONS horn• yrl I tro . CLEAN 2 BR J\PT, furn., 127;;. mo, 6/;;,-""'10/S34·l4'9. NEW ADULT LIVING1! A Talbert $165 . good k>c. 675-1849. (. VISION 8• Y· ease, m mg vi-e'N ot bay, yrly, S600 adults, 00 pets inquire 179112 .... ""' BAOIELOR Units . .l 1 BR'11 538-a5-ts Huntington 8Mc" ERRORS: Advertisers S2'l5 Mo. Agent 5'\8-lZXJ. mo. 548-6761 or :>18-2103. Rochester. WlNTER rental, 2BR apt, on w/Lofls. f'rplc s, beam ~;u;;;;-j;;~----i:=::::~~~~~·~......; should check lhelr ads • d h II Corona del Mir !he ocean, pri patiQ, $225 ceil., patio & pool blUns, & Laguna Beacn DELUXE Adult Pool daily & ri.'port errors re j Newport Shores 2BR, Furn. $165. Single mo. 675-8726 retrig avaU. $160 to $225. Gard B ga1 • immediately. THE 3 + Den, $42S lease, new & story. Beam celllng. Couple DUPLEX .. 3 BR / 2 be., all Util pd No pet!! VERY deluxe. Very new & oce r:n Frpl un .lta:ow. N r . I DAILY PU.01' assumes REALTI" REALTORS CUSTOl\f 3 Br, Fam rm, So. of Hwy, 1700 sq. ft. of pref. 646-9243, 646-a882 bltins Blk to beach, nice 393. Hamllto~ CM beautiful. 2·story, 2 BR. 2 r· c, patio! 6 liability for the fi rst In· Univ. Park Center, Irvi-patio, all built Ins, nu el..,.ance. 673-4760 e·-. or NEAT, spacious bachelor, yrd _.,_,, 66-44ll or~ BA. Lge. decks. Few sleps ~ !-...,,, aauna, l I! n n s. ! correct insertion only. '"' carpets & drapes, 2% blks ~... • .. ., f til incld ' year •vwiu, l-827-2382 from Laguna's finest beach ,,_.,,IJ,:I, to bch, $300 mo Call aft 6 sec at 510% Avocado. ~i;,'1m~. 963-'1fcn nr ace, Sl50 BAOlELOR, yearly $150 WANT TRANQUILITY? Adults 'bnly. No pets. $425 1 Bdrm. From $135. C,\NCEll.ATIONS: YES, \\IE 1-lAVE RENTALS PM 548-Gl46 or ( 213) OCEAN view 2 BR. 2 BA, ~-~~'-'-=----1818 W. Ocean Front, adult! Here's the apt. for you. 2 BR, lease. 497-1617, lagun. S..ch \Vhcn killing an. ad be , 1 ~ _,790-·=.::""'"'-------private yard, garage, cpts, TRAILER for rent, Adlta oo-only 494-4029 encl, gar. w/storage & laun-SPANKING -"·No Sho-l d 1 ay ire ....., or '"'"'ce -d JI $350 ly ts hild ,...,.. ,.,. ~~"; h!' ,;Lt' :u•~':'R in .,lvinJ< ''I"" ul '· • "'°· 64+.16JO 5'ii.z:8:i .. °' c nm. P1''NINSU!.A POINT. 2 Br. l <hy ladUttes. Adi" oo\y. No oow renting. Delux; 2 br, 2 YEARC Y lease 13l\O, 3 B' , Your housing needs? San Juan Capi1tro1no Co.ti Mffa Ba. Pets ok $1'15-&15-0280 or pets. $165 mo. &46--0917 or ba. & 3 hr, 2 1>a-:-:Ptiany ex· 1% ba. new lo\\'t!:t' du i.:1ven you by your ad From $315-$450 BACllELDR Apt, suitable 66-2016 646-1809. tras. 420 Cypress Dr , blk to bch. 675--8839 aft" taker a~ rrceipt oC your l·AC. Hilltop ranch estae. ONE Story·2 BR Duplex. for 1 man. $100/month. 138 OCEANFRONT ''THE VICTORIAN" 494-4488 or 83()..4237 1 BR. l""' BA condo, occ ,I e11ncellntio n, Th is kill Lovely 8 nn. 3500 Ct home. Le th Jd Co Santa Isabel, Co!!la Mesa Id nun11Jer n1ust bt.• pl'e· Horses O.K. Views & trees. ve~~nt ~~~. ~d;tlts 0~~ \\'Inter or Yearly 2 br k/gar · aduJts. Crpt1, l aoun• Nlguel s e, pool, crpta, scntcd L,v !he ndvrrtiser Prl t d D1n1 Point Mod 3 BR, 2 BA, 642-6193 drps, bltns. Fncd yrd w/ balcony. $225 mo. va e roa , CO\lntry ftf-ly. $195. Ava.ii. Oct. 1. tlo W pd n-•\ bl SP 1.n l'O.st· ,,f ll dlspule. mo•phere. ~Min. lo Santa 010 •1~ HOUSE f 2 1 t pa · tr · ....... wn ACIOUS studio, l blk t " IA.I u-u.-o ;JJ, L1VE In the all new Dana or • s eps 0 ocean 1 & 5, 636-fll'O. SEA TrDDI m1lln beach.. $175. 64+84 ,C,\i\CELW\TION O R Ana or N.B. $700 Month, 'D'"1"n"'1"'=P"o~ln-t~----Point llarbor nt the Sl60 mo + utl1. 673-2671. 007-Vlctorla Ct. (J) •••• $160 IUMCE or 494-4791 CORHECTlON OF' NEW lease; water inc. Call , beautiful MARINA INN (Winter Rerrtall IDIDTUENTS ll;:i:::":'::'='";;:==--- AD BEFOHE Hl 1 !'\NING: "SINCE 1946" GEORGE GRUPE 2 BR, 2 Ba. frplc., lcnr.ed Motel. 31902 Del Obispo St. FURNISHED 2 BR apt, SPACIOUS 3 BR., 2 be .. nr. N"N\lln 1 Newport IHch C.vt>ry effort ls 1nade lo lst \\'estcrn Bank Bldg. 644-24:'m 6T.Hl429 Res. yrl .. gar, no pe1s. Adults. (49&-2353). Ki l c h e n, Ef· available September 29th. N'pt. J{ls. Like new, cpl!., II Calttnll'I 111WQt . l:IJJ (lr corrPct a nl'W nd Unlversil y Pork, Jrvtne Tu1tln $215. 499-4356. ticiencies & Ap11rtment11. 675-2656 or 737-1078 ~~· .. b\\0",1R,t&MOa'rudreuhawdalhrta. mstttn l BR. J'URN. $215. that ht1s h<' .. 11 t•rder!'d, Daya 552-7000 Nights Huntington lleoch Heated pool, direct dial DELUXE 2 13r, Super area, no ts ...,...· Gf6-."•t• ' BACHELOR FURN.~, 1 but \v~ cann<J1 g11111·0.n· ol BR. pool, 2 fp la, 2 Ba, ww phones, tclevi11ion, sauna pe · .,.._. "" • • N•._r Ide I 2 BR U F •M t ' d I h d I I d ""Iii\ bath', I au ''dr y facllltle•. petfJ: ok. Yrly $275, Call LARGE 2 Br, 2 Ba Stud~ + wCIH'll •""' 1 1 ocean ' N Uni~. h~ ~Pl~.~~r<ln~1ln t ~ ~ e I B2E~Al't~~: .• ~/~Jy ~~~'. ~~ !11001~:!i ~ppu':'. N:':. 2 ~~-.dup~~· l j/~~k5 Clmeeting room. close lo Slln AM;tk• U5'S-3861 9 or 979-1073650. Pt\llo. 2 New, crp,u, dl"'rp,, :::::.":::~rpet, ~:~ed v~. Z3!Ii~ O~e~ paper. drps. alr/cond.. dshwshr. $.TI5. mo. ~7367 crpts/drps, etc. 1 child OK, emente &: Laguna Beach. p • n urn. pant. chi dren im pr:I btMI Cflflnp, pallll llvinc LAS ilRISAS APTS." I "'any extr••'· Gnra••. ~1 Hou-Furn. .or 1115 8121 Ml~-I o Come play in ° u r bo ok. Irnmed. occupancy. Sl90. --1~-•E ••1• Rl·-r Av11e.MtNB DU.1E-A·UNE ADS : .. ,--,,., · uuo.e r., gporUlshing, shopping &. B al a ltl•ncl 1036 Mlaskln, ~11r97'9o-8719 ._,.."'VII.-,.. ON"' "" i.These ad~ an-strictly prh•I. No peta. $275/mo. Unfum. 310 J:l.B., call Mr. Peterson. rei tnurants. $60 week & Up~ lttd!M,lltfc:M.Mlt CALL '42-cash in lld\'!lf\ct' by mall :J.i2-9j.19 aft 3. days, 3t7-35ofl or 536-3638 Bring this ad Ii. receive $5 UNFURN deluxe 2 BR •pt, l BR, crpl, drps, . stove, dlshwllhlr, llc. 81cfl., pOOI, l!l!'J!!!!'!~l!l!!!l!!!!!l!~~!I! or at on.y one n! our of. UN IV E RS I T Y Park Gener•I ~ve1. oU on first Wff'<'a rent. boa.I dock oo Grand Canal, ref:r1g, balcony. S 14 0 · .llc:l&Di, tns. klunlL OCEAN view, new 3 BR, !ices. NO phone orders, to~·nhouse. 3 BR, 1~ 13.n. * DELUXE 2 Br._ Den. 1'4. Huntln...._ Be• h no pets or minors, yrly $300 ~C ;J-7 W. 18th St., =.1,'2~ ~~t: ha .. unr. Balbol.. $300. Oea~llne : 3 p,m. Friday, b!tra, l>/\V, lrplc, cpts, 2 BR 2 bo anfront J: Ba. w/d. carpets, drapes, •·-·· c per mo. call~ • • ' tell..,_ o Winter. tum., oceantronts. Costa 1'tua offl~ 12 drps, •patio. Acrou trom • oce: fenced ., .. .vi w/patio 2 car .. 1.~•l'" 2 BDRMS trpl Pri t NEW 2 .Bt apt. Ol>ll'I, drps, P11' mo. ,_ 4n.o50 • A 3 BR, S2SO mo. et. noon -•II branch or-tcnni~ 1."0urts & pool. 1 .yr. ~!~!t ~=· 3~~~2 be. cllrJKIJ1 "';'1~torage, 53s-2001 eAOtELO"R&l BR Uos Jana.I. All "e1cc.cbuu1~:. bltnl, ~· .$167.50. Nr. DlltECT!OflSt,..... ltd..1 Alt"!!~· ~·~~;:1~m~,..,,::"'f!c~1!f( ~tJc:es. I!'('. S.195 mo. 52&-9626 bet. 9 U 1 Yrl S37S alts. ftplc'• prlv. aa.nu: ~ Garage. Broktr 675-6700 Fr)' It ahop'g. l child oJt. no 1nLIOllttlofCrownYlfl11 ~'ii BLK from beach 2 1TJIE DAIL~JLOT rt· I l"A"''"'l·l:....:.P;.;;M,,. -----·I n urn, y. . N!!?'°'! Buch Ofvldt<l bath &: Iota of 81lbN PtnlMVI• pell. 64&-3796, 50-mSO. Pby..llhcffic~ Hwy. rear Upitaln, ttQw, ~'41 ~ tho right to clu-Lagun• S.acti clo1'Cts. Rec. ho.II, pool 11. 'NEW 2 br, 2 bi, 1215. ineld1 1 ·-u-.... crpt1, drpa, YearlY $2;0 •If)', edit. censor or * DELUXE dut>lex near beac'1 pool table., u.unl\ bAth1. UVE % block h'om the cu le wJttt. Malurr: ~dultl, ,,,...~ '".-1.Dcltldlng util Wlnt!I' fu.sr any advtrUtcrnent. f"...MERALD BAY, AvA!J now &: Lido shops. 3 BR, 2 Ba, Stt tor younelf. 1T.JOl oooan In new 3 BR. 2 BA, no pet., ll4 E. nh St. thedaolcecomllllllll)' mo. 127-271b SI. 6'13-35'72 ~ and tn ch1nge ita tat~ thru Jun<'. $850. mo. 3 BR frplc, blln11. <111hwshr, aha.a Keelton Ln. U blk \V. of la\lndry. duplex, Dellgned M&-C1$T/64&-«>95 ~ BLK to beach, 3 Br, 2 & ttaula1lon1 without ~riv beach a.rea &I Iaells. crplf . Yrly/mo. '$ 32 5 . Beach, l blk N. ot Slater). for f1mlly livinc $375 to $400 New .2BR 1pt1 ulll pd, Meta Verdi ·~. titt-tns. 1h11 prior notice. 1 4-682-11MO L BMCtt 543-3405 or 545-1346. MZ..7848 mo. Call f19..3165 wkdy11. chldren welioome. Crph, piw.p. $300. m 44th s -c SSI I OCEANFRONT g ro c loua eguno !.AR.GE 2BR, m.i, duplex, MEN, 9ma\l beach hotel. Coro111 del Mor drp1,,»etlo, 1960 Wallac._ Dl.x.2 A 3 BR .• 2 Ba, onc1 N.B. m.cm!. :MAIL~:G :~t.iESS w/labulous views, dee~•. OCEAN View beaut 2 BR 2 frplc, new ~t & drr.· $250 11ooma 12\.SO .. , wk. Apbo Apt T,'64>"89 pr. 1111) up. R<total Ole., OEJ.IJJ(E Lo-,><r D p Ix 1 !560. ~"1 rm • trplc. $400/mo. BA. rlcn, '!Arch ec.:C. y,,...,.., 615-400 all . ~per month. !136-7006 3 BR, 2 Ba or 2 BR. Patio, 116(), 2 BR, 1\1 Ba. P•tlo· 3lltlt! Mace Ave. 546-1034. Bayfrf>t, bch, 2 Br, 2 P.Coo;,!":1~a r y. 4'4--0615, 615-1"12. lltlghto) Sh>& crpta, opeo You don't -a 1'W> to "White E lephant"' ov... 1'1'311'· 422 lA.datJiur, alli Preler "'"pie; 1ma\I •hlkl MIH lon Vlelo~ 13'yrly, 221. 19th ~L ht FOR Ltase, lovely 3 BR, 2 beam cclllne, F.nca )It'd, "Dn.W J!'ut" when you running your hOuseT Tum 1'll"XI. door. h"'\'ft~ '1S-3&17. OK. No pet• '126 Joan · 233 §th St., ~. f-~--tt----'1126:111..--·-l+~bo.~ J!!!ILS.P~'L" 1~d~•+-Jch~l:::°ld or dO:R: ok, AvJ.11 ~ lace an ad tn the Dally them Into ''Cub" ••• tell BAY Front condo. 2 l1l' 2 Ba, &e--38J7 .. NJCW lBR TOM1b0Ute, whh SEPARATE Gut:SJ' HOU •·rrvre~~~va1l : m . ~ot aft 11 -~1: • ot-Want-Ada! Ctll-mw -tht m· .... n1-.-D&.Uy.-PU0L ..aUDs -"-JIOOl . -1Jkt to trdf OIP" Trader'• &Ir cmd. $250. mo. cSayi lncludn: dllhel, 11Uver. et lit. m .. 1359 wknc.IJ. ., -6C-6S1L " claulned ad! 6'7S-8a14 or f73..30b1' 7"f'ifllUFdtlml'm'ts fbt ,.,at ~M900. nu~ 686-8':19 41)...mcr, &'i •aee • , ' . ...... ·Furn. or Unfurn. m ..... An• J lt.fACULATE 2 Br, $14!>. it, (!!need JIOIJI , l child ok. I ~: s.tita Ana. r h : 1 .. 77. - t11GLE roon1, $00 mo. 1ngle adult anly. Call Bill anley Betv.·Ct?11 5-9, IMs-cmo. l~ROOM wllh k i t che n r.?vl nr. Brookhurst & IUlams; H.B. 962-7 52 0 """"kdays n.'t 7. iVt; at thf! beach, $25 week. 'inc Knot Mole! 6.?,02 West ~'It Hwy, 673--0440. OOM for girl stutlent, kit riv, share bath $ 7 O. c.airuna, 61--8784, eves. ti 'BR in new hon1e, carport, l~ lo.c, pool, Close to rq. & flhops. 491NJ.o\5 eves. UNFURN toom w/priv bath, p:irona <k"I ,_,ar, sep. ~ l.1125/mo UUI pd. GTh-29-lS I ~ .. st-. 415 RIV . & Senii, Ava nen.r !!':'<· Ubruy & Shpgn TLC ..,Ba)~ die-ta. 540-2562. t outlon Ront1l1 425 ,. _NEW HOl.tE • INDIAN WELLS rpioooJitotm"'n I Y' old. 195.000 • 3 BR. 1 converted o· a den, stereo lntereom, ,wuher. dryer, swimming , etc. Beaut furn. auto prinklers, every type con- lence imaginable, l'('nled low market, at 500/mo. During 0 c I . . Dec. Jan. Feb. March. ~ owner, 213-556-3010. :wIN. Big Bear. North llftate., ~ btk from lake. Wi. wkOO. 842--0187. ent1lt to Share 430 sGL "'Orking pcnon-llve in E'·Jeuant nlmosphere, ~2 blk from beach &: bay S30wk, 18 I~ 2 bt, SA Hgts, pr! ba, !~I pr v I gs, w/congenlal i~$95. + % Elec. Pool. hOOMMATE wanted to ~are 2 BR, oceanfront apt. Winter ttntal. Bal Pen, NB. Call 640-8863 ask for Bill. ~tALE 2 Br. 2 Ba, furn bowie. Penln. Quiet 11!. Sl25. Pref. degree, 833~3 0 30; 673-Qill. 'EMA·LE over 21 to share 3 br w/same.1135 mo. 549--0117 ..... 536-06<1 aJ! 6. "'pts., Furn. or Unfvm. 370 ~~I·- • • • • - ------. ) •• DAILY Oil.OT J I~ I '""-~ 1[$1 1---f~ '==~~--...~l~.:r;l ~ ..... _, __ , -~l[Il]~JI ~I ;;;;;. ;7;;;' ;;;;;' ;;ml;;•~:! -;;;;;;;~ ~ ~ ,I 500 C...1 . W C•.rpontor -lunl,. Help w..,19c1, M & F 111 Help W1-. M&P' 710 i: l~I l~ll - St•r Colon -VIII• B•llf• br. Hunt\....., llooch You att the wlnntt ol TWO FREE TICKETS JO ... RECREATION VEHICLE SHOW SEPT. 19TH-23RD Al the ANAHEIM STADIUM 2000 State College Blvd., Allllheim Pleaae call 642-5&"/8 ext 3.19 to claim your llckets .. (North County Toll free number is 541)..tzal). 530 •IDEIOUS• ".;r~-.i:~ F~'=' ACCOUNTING ~:~~~~t~~~ 1' .. ... of -""· Draw-S<. Ju-. CLERK to ,,30 pm Mon tlwu >'rl. enrwu.... lnaa. &Vailah~ Phone; ....,,=.,,*"=64~5-6917=''="*'==-i"'M------,._In Own trftnl. Wllllnr '° s-.7 4 "'"' u• Mi-1806. HOUSE OF CLEAN NA.,..-••""'-~~. VtTltorl' goocl salary for matun, a f· • • DOES derk. Addin&: machine fectlona te ,_,_." with 11erwe I For relum or any lntorrra.-WOODWORK. c ab I n e_ t a • EVER\"J'IUNG e touch system, ty~ & apd· ot humo:.-· p~ wrtle ' tlon I~ to return a.f a f::.~ ien repairs, Duke Jlome~ Olliooa. 6'2-6824 tude w/ttgures required. No •ta.tin.a: qualltlcatlonl le • aold four leaf clovrr pin, ,MS-'008. 84&-9495 1-lOUSfXLF..ANJNC Sal calls pl.use. salary requirements to I •pprox.21.ncheaindlameter, ALL types work. New, Day \York. Expe,r. Refs. GULTON ·Classified Ad No. 9.'t?, Dally ' ~~err~=. ~r;~k= :~·ft~ al~, ~=i Land1:.:~71$ * INDUSTRIES ~1: :ii& Box 15ti0, Costa : (was on cha!.n), approx. the C 5er'vlc9 l&W \Vhlttter Ave., CM BJ\BYsnTER • ~~ dayi my llze of a nickel, IMCrlbed •rpet LANDSCAPING, sprudden, 642-2400 hoinC" (M·F) Edlnitt A I tn· icrlPt, n..A.. 'nl.ese are JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery waterfalls & fish ponds, An F.qual Oppor. EmpiOyer Bca~h. Children 8 A 5., deeply lreUured family Dti Shampoo free Scotch· Reas. ~tr-s, A~ Landscape AecoWlting Oerk 1-1 !I k pg . Transport&tion. mement<>1 A ·the 1ou i& Ir-gard. (Sol.I. Retardant.), &m· Sprinkler Co. Uc. No. Ute Typing 642-9470 Rt>f'i . 842-41i65. replaceable. PL E A S E • Degreasers &: all color 546• &12-9780. Sam Lovegren BABYSl'ITER, l\londay thru PLEASE help IJ you ha~ brighteners & 10 minute P•inti"I & ADVERTISING Co. Neeilii 11'riday, 2:45 lo 6 PM. $1. hr. any infonnatJon -00-3589 bleach far '4'hite _carpets. P•JMrfNntlnt ntale or female sales people Catt 1 &: 11 yr old. CaU _!v_es. & weekends. Save yoor money by savillg . , for ~ ch .,.,•/xln't op. ~1rs. llauser 969-39-12 office; LOST -SHAGGY DOG me extra trips. Will man PAINTING-int. &: e xt. por. for advancenient. Ex-&tZ.5200 aft G. ''DAISY'' TYPE DOG livina rm. di.nlDe rm., • Hau 1 n g • m • 1 0 t • per. helptu1. Will train will-BABYSITI'ER -IJlll"t time Tan wavy hair, med. wize. ~b flJo_ ~ -:-15$7~'. :~~=-~·2>N:njo!~'i ing person. Call 536-2100 fl¥ 11 yr. ~Id boy, 9 yr. pi Own£r tearful.~. eXp. Is what counts, not Reu. rates. 645-0383 personal interview. lofon-f'"ri. 2 :Z0-6P~I. no 834-5809 or 646-2571 method. I do work m,yseU. 642-6079 a.ft 5. ; ' ...........,_, ¥-tt -V-~~~.;. 6Cdi\I It r e a . nru.Y LICENSED REWARD • •••, Good • n1 "'"1 °·~ '" .-. re .. ..., ~ · PROF. v.·allcover1J1i: slate After 5 PM Dy Anrnintment S · * SPIRITUALIST * LOSr black cat. Vic of CdM Ca'!: Clt•ni~ lie. no. 279':>14, Insur., all Civil En""neer .. ,........ $1 8K BABY I'ITER "·anted riixh1s Spiritual readipgs 10 am-10 high -~~·. Flea -liar. a~ _ 1 71 .t ... for 9 yr old girl Hunl•ngton Ad -11 ~ '" • Floor •re & WI 1 ...,.,...s o paper. .s: Sr Te9t Tedi ...... '""tal 1141< ' ~.,,, pm. vice on a matters Pean lo be balding btw. ea. 842-43B6 M ·~ & ~'?: Beach area. Call days. 312 N. El Camino Real, San 11. Pl __ , Dutch Maint. Serv. 531·1508 · eu1uuS ••V<--..uure& 536-2829 Clemente. 492-9136 49'l-9034 ~Tm:~a. ear. eaae o.;cul Steun Carpet CtHn No Wuting ~~stSec~L exp S~l'B"°A'°'B'°'Y"'s=r=i·=1£=R=-....,-.,.,.-,.-.,fo-,-,J PIRldeOBL.EM Pregnancyh. Coin-MATURE cat, b 1 a c k * 646-7811 * 't'Vb'!A.:~~!~~~c,'lt Tech l.ted Secy to $700 ~rls, 6 & 9 Y~· J."rom 2..fipm nt, • Y m Pal et c w/white at thl'OAI, spayed 548.1444 Secretaries 10 $700 in Corona del Mar area. ~fy~~ .. n:~=. f~rdryle~'. ~ pregnancy counseling. Abor· fem, notch mlasing ear, Cement, Concret• eves. Knitting P.'lach 'Opr $600 Good pay. 6T:,..S076 shampoo . units. N t c e tlOn &: adoptions ret. • white flea oollar, ltB. area. PAINTING & re~r. 3.5 yrs Payroll Clerks to $6()0 BABYSJTI'ER, iny home, nelghborllood loc, in East APCARE 642-44.16 ~9780 CUS1'0M Chncrete Work. "'-orlarutnshlp auar. Take AIP Skpr, Constr $650 Thurs. &: Fri. 1·10 pm, Hun· Costa Mesa, 644-1.333 or ARE you single &: alone, 45-w=sr=,-o;Whi=te,_,Pood,,,..°"tc-,·. -=3-,,,..-Remove uphall drivewys. advantage ol my exp. Sales Sec'y 10 S650 tington Beach. Call 846-4879 640-~. 55? Want._~ DaMte? Want t1o old, 20.. tall, Name eo. ReN pldaelce w/Freeconcrete 65c. ft. 536-7056. PBX/Recepttonist to $.550 -"',,'="""=n=. =--.,--,'"°' SP-A-CE~'av_alla_b_l_e_!o_r_l_o•-,.-,-n I get mamoou? any peop e quetle, or Coca. Vic Crown o ays. est. Walks, PAINTING: Int, exl Rea; Mkt Sec'y, no sh to $550+ BABYSITrER -from 8-6 this age group. Free· info. Valley Prkwy. Re w 8 rd, slabs, patios. No job too q:»nm. Clean & Rel. Ref's. Acctng Clerk to S5.5() pni, Mon.-Sat. 3 yr old girt ~~t::OJ.i:.~~citll Box 1148, Garden Grove. 837--0787. small. 638-3325. Uc. & insured. Paul; (213) Gen't Ofc. lite sh to $540 549--0717 days, 536-0043 aft 84&-U61. MAN, sa., in wheel chair REW~RD: .Lod long haired PbATakIOS, walks, drives. Sal w, 592--2.578 SUnsct Bch, O~ =T!_?ipt/F" il $-174 6 pm. wants "\o meet un-all black fem cat, Vie: re ' re~ &: rep ace INT. Painting & Carpet PS..'v .-.-.;e e S4CKI BA=Y=Sl=·r=·r=E=R-~--~, -CUTE ADOBE HOUSE, 1000 derstanding gal, any age, n--kh·-t .r, "--•ton HB. concrete. 548-8668 tor est. Cl•aning Free Est 548.-3574 CAU. TRISH HOPKtNS I B l\tature, ivf"· :S!'saadj; ~fl~ ~C.i:.° 646-3360. ;'~~Gl n_~, PATIOS, walks, driveways. or"oo-7059 , J ERRI \VHI'ITEP.10RE ~vel :r~y~aln~':ier~: 645-2020/642-6560. PREGNANT? Think t n g 213-5~28l9 Custom work. -Call for ~ PROF. painter, hooest ~'Orie, IRYJNE ~ quired. 5"3-6940 "THE Factory" has a lrg ~a1 ~all~ ~ci: $25 REWARD! Small Fem.I estimate 546-1184 or :;e1200. reu. Int/ext, free eat. ~·AGENCY BABYS!TI'ER . hou91!keeper, shop avail. $185/mo. In hrs SU-6.522 Siamese cat, flea col w/ID, CUSl'OAl Cement Wo r k, Refs. 548-2759, 60-3913. live in pri mi ha. 5 or 6 ~ Cannery Village 42S 30th St., -~·---·-----Ans ''C.C." Vic: Mesa del Drives, Walks, Patior. Lie. * PAINTING & ~AINING 488 E. 17th St.Cat Irvlne:JCM days. '$12 d~. CD M , NB. 673-9600 gr 642-8520. AlL'OHOlJCS Anonymous. :P.tar. ~Z29. No. 255915. 642-8514. INT/EXT, TRil\I, ACCOUS Suite 224 '42-1470 644-41;() BRANO __ 1 ,,,___ Phone 542-7217 or write P.O. * LOST: n-·· neutered cat. FREE ESI' Jim 919-8186 .-Al'-.A#-Al-Ba~b~.---~ho--~,-••• -1 nu awres Ol.lll.~, Box: 1223 Costa Mesa ~...., Child Care . , -.,-i • ,...,... nw.n=• ysitter, my me, ~.., $125. up. Elevator. 17301 ~~~~·~~~~~· ~~i Vic Newland & Adams, CUSI'OM paperhanging 21 for :ll mo. old child. Beach, Huntington Beach.· H.B. 1 notched e: a r , am.o Care my home, a&e• yrs. In Harbor al"l!a, State AMBITTOUS people 'vanted •548-7351• ~ I '~ ~ -la] 53&-8028. two and older, Vic. Beach Is I "°U=coo.=N,,•=· ~18328J"'"'~·c..64Z-=co2356=-~ ~~~a:n.$1~e:o~~· ~ BARTENDER. exp. Mat~, , ' 1600 aq ft JNDUS'T. ah op ..-~-LOST Golden Retriever, hu Slater. 84Z-O!MS. INTER/Exte:r, accous. cell· home. s:19-6l23. wishe!J !teady emplyml $22'3. Also 300 sq n. office tags, Vk: Logan Aw., C.M. Contractor lngs sprayed. Uc, ins, Joe. Home: owner this area, 12 OFFICE space _ top fioor, ~$95-· C~·~M~·~646-=21JO=-· =--Anlli "Josh '', Re war d, refs. Ji'ree ell 64&--0809. ANIMAL CONTROL yn1. Write Classified Ad No. w/oc'l'an view. 900 sq. ft. 1995 HARBOR, C.M. Found (free Ms) 550 B36-37l9 L.B.J. Asaoc., room additiora, p OFFICER :1 ~ally Piiot, la,0~ 444 Ne"•port Blvd. 3 blks N. 1440 sq. ft . each bay. ----------LOW, J<!01mdalvelclnla1tyb Sanpuptapy,Anta2 Patio 4 remodeling, con-la•ltr, Patai, ftepafr 08¥11 tor animal shelter. · • osta Mesa, · of Coast Hwy. CJoge to Hoag Automotive use. 548-9892. f FND: Blk fml poodle w/pur· ,..,,, c re: t e wo r k, Good oppor. for mature BARTENDER needed ' hospital. Bit-In m 0 d u 1 e SAN Juan Capo new prime pie collar & Rea collar long Ave: between 23rd &: 19th St., 642-86381841-SOSL * P ATCH PLASTER.lNG * man. Perm pos. Must h8.ve Henry's Newport Beach. 1 desks. 3 produq:lon rm, Joe, 657 sq', cptd/alr cond. tail Vic. Heil & Gothard O:ista Mesa. 648-4138 JACK Taulane, rep a ir, All. types. Free estimales good driving record & valid 2530 W. Cst Hwy, 54$-1177 ! recept. & conference rms. Lease 493-5155 l~pn1 H.B. ADULT neutered, decl&W\?d remod, add. Lie S..1 mm. =-,.-"Call~-',..._-"-='---1 Calif. drivers lie. Apply at\.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;i;;;;;;;;;;;f 'Utll pd. :nc sq. ft. &48-5300 ' 847-1525 1,~ Siamese female cat. M.y Way Co. 547-0036. Plumturie 200Lagl~ ~ Canr<>n 'Rd., BENCH ASSEMBLERS ,• a!t 5 pm. lndu1tri1I Rent1l 450 FOUND approx 1 month ago McFadden &: Springdale Drivew•ya -:;-;:-;::::;:-;:;-::::::::::-·lc~L'~:....._-----* COSTA MESA * ---------female shaggy white daisy area, H.B. 893--~. L.R. OTIS PLUMBING APPRENTICE P.1aintenance N-·· oroce build-ong T"--Jt,500 SQ. FT.-type dog, back bay area. RE'\.VA:RD. Male . .-....... As..i.'"'t·"""---~ "-ta--' Rehemodeud~ Repaln. Water • any age to learn the Srnali precis>on e I e c Ir o ' '" -••= N""W ul Please call It iden.i•.. Hr..-..-1.-1 5 mo-·-;:;1 ""-.. """11lVV1:"tl ·~,, \%\I atera, 111~, furnaces, •eneral n1aintenance field. mechanical devices. Exper. roomsuitc aVS:ilable, 700sq. c.· m. uv ug= •u•~ ...... withcustorncmcMe:,mc ft. dshwashn 642-6263 MIC & l ALSO 2000 ft all Good for boat f 1 545-2102 w/plnk collar, l.olt Balboa Free e I 63&-3:125 · Permanent position. pref'd. in small parts aa· t. ' sq. ' -mgr, or any. FOUND·. ·-all male 1L Isle. 644-o:""'l 8 ' BIA. Complete: Plumbing McNash Realty, 64Z...13.14. aenlbly. Trainees '°"okl.j , or part. All utilities, jani-Cool W. s;de C.M. lee rear ..... n1 ....,... Electrical Servlce Llc 272fi94 -ed. 1 tor !lt'rvice. 2706 Harbor fenced yard. Carpeted ot-Ab1ustralian ~-dog. VIOne M1NIA111RE Poodle, Sat., ~·s PLUMB~G APT40 UMgrnl · S.~p,.te Mover 40Cal!or1 STA.CO SWITCH INC Blvd. Robert Na ttress, Rltr. lices ..... 111 divide. Lease or ue & ooe wvwlLeye. c. while wearin& flea collar, ELECI'RICIAN·Uceaae No. ts, .....,., · esa. ' • ' 979-65n sale. ED RIDDLE REALTY Hotel Laguna & Coast Hwy vie. Orange and Crunelia zmca Sma1 jobs, malnt & SERVICE AND REPAIR ~1121 . 1139 Baker, Costa Mesa • NEW OFFICES 6l6-i8U Laguna. 497-=. 494-106! La.. CM. Reward. 548-1797 , -'-..,,.,,.=-=-· -'-~"--"=---LOWEST RATES 673-6571I c-··' ~ ....:..,..._ MISSION VIEJO SM. Blk !em. Cock·a·poo. • -• PLUMBING REPAIR ~-~~· ~--AIRPORT < MO. old blk puppy Germ No ~ too mWJ ASSEMBLY No lease req'd, full service, \Vht on chest. Vic. In-S h ep/Be•gle. 'I/le. Gerct.nf1111 * * ~ * BECOME d ,. --nd 1600 & 2400 SQ. FT. dianapolill It Magnolia, H.B. Goldenwest "" E d Jn e .;,;.z. -* ~ anrps~ sh~~jfi::. ~ AVAILABLE NOW Mon. AM. Yellow rottar 812-7971 1 r . MOW & EDGE BOAT CARPENTllR ~ $125. ""· ~s.ra:i!!~p~~ ~lml YORKSHIRE -Vle of EXP_ER'[ "-Sowl .. /Afterotlonl INvo•vED Do ftnjlhlng -on 37' PALISADES ~ FND: White Kitten w/grey Hell • Buachard F.V. Jie:a DEPENDABLE EXPERIENCED .Rnt)'lfns . ,I;" : -= Trawler~~ ~USI: Dn S. E. BriltW. 831-1600 beige I: spot on back. Vic:. cellar, I: w/bdl. Reward. Call Por Prompt, &: Alten.tlons Reaaonabte have expetience to do hiafl· 11 Newport Beacb 557-7010 114Q...4230 SQ. FT. Slatte!' & Los Cardinas F.V. Please call 531--0859. Froo Esti-..-.. e 963-6&os e . with C8t qlllllity ~'OOdworkfn&. J( (campus-Irvine: lntersection) New M 1 968-7239 "-1• Pacific Trawk!r Corp. SUB·LET New 1154 Sq. Ft. 3 Phaoe Wiring GRAY & white tiger ltrlpe REW~: Irish •ettcr. ~-117 Altw1tlonl '42-5145 VARIAN DATA 51HllOJI I Office Suite, tenant im-7'82 W. ~. C. 1\1esa kitten wearing Dea collar. ~i'. =· Beach, Fri. PROFESSIONAL gardener, Neat, accurate. 2t year. exp. MACHINES J~~~~~-!!!!11•"""1 ' provements. KoH Business J.B. Saundcnlon Vic: Main & A dams LOST rnal E Ush tree: work. prun jng , CUSTOM Dressmaking: BOOKKEEPER E x p'e r . Coniplex, Birch St. \Valk to &tZ-0212. Eves. 5t>-2277 aJG-6621 e ng PUJt, 11prlnklera, cleanUp jobs, Have ow a independent in needed ln retail sales. airport. Attractive 1ea 11 e SH & of f 1 1 C.M. Santa Clara Co. dog I and 11 cap t n g . George, ardrobe Call 97Ml.T2 ELECTRO• Under W. Jlefer. l"eqlliftd. lllTilngements $615/Mo Call c~rce Ml~=c·v~;, S:ut~ ~: :i~e;al1:{ ~ lie. Call 557-1612. 646-{i893. Tw I . . . L -. 1133-llTl. · pl.,.. Good Fwy oH ramp. Call gsj..1001 to identify & REWARD! Loot Pekeapoo 1---;;M°"o"'w,,...,.&"'E"'oo=E:--1 _•_w_l•_lon __ R_ ......... 1_r __ 1 MECHANICA BOOKKEEPER, part time. •, BUSIEST intersection t n Avery Parkway. Call owner, claim dog, ma.le on D. Bay Ave, CLEAN UPS COLOR TV n-·•• -ASSEMBLY exp in retail 'store, mature - Newport Harbor. Second Paul Brueau, 831-1400 '2~SILKY==,-.,,T,-orrle..,.-rs-~v"1c-. ~Bal~boa="'=Pec'-'n~ln~. "°61S-34""'="''-,,..,., • 5M-O&Sl • reuonable, "~in~'. ~~!-~!r;.!:.... ~ ... ~ ' story in UnJque Homes 4001 BIRCH, NB Fairview & San Diego LOST Flipper Sailboat, light EXPER. Japan!le Gardener. Free estimate, H.B. N.B. &: Due to rapid growth""' have1.,;;~iii;iii~i;;ii•=~·;;;~i0iii;;=iiii•ii;;f :~ Building. 800 sq. tL at Free •15 ~" 71< fUn latop,darkaquabottom, Yard ~--· D-IJa. CM Bert Gallem o r e l ·-r $350/mo; 000 sq. ft. at 2000• D», 3600 aq. fl or com. ~"f att1 P~t ~ : &iboa Island. ~ Ii: nea~~ "';,'~. 968-2m. ' ~ble'::'!nn ls~ ':xi ;;;:. DllrrllMS : : S300/ Both .th . oo. thereof. Avail. 1011m. .........." uurru ~ ~· WI VJCW!. Mr. Baumgardner, 541-5032. FOUND speckled dac:hshlmd • Gener•I S.rvlces Tll• shllta. We are 1ooklng for : l u1»"UIJIN. Rent1l1 W•nted 460 9/14 In Stater Bros. parktng people w1~ experience in China & Fine Glftt • PLtf~~~= 1 s8:ace LAGUNA Beaeh . Untum 2 ~~sa~7..:,mona, Costa I ~~..,_ Jr:cl :~ual~fune~e mi:=: ~C~L ~~joi! :. f=-m:n.i;::e8!1d;:~~ ~~~In li:~ It 1370 D U>gan Costa Mesa br 2 ha. home ror mat\J:re FND Perfectly tr al n e d ~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil·i~ii~ I Fut Setv. No job too sm. welcome. 536-2426~ 5.1f)..8589 and uaemhly·of PC ~s. dept. Md.lure e;tjier. Ptrion 64<-2228 646-lfil.252 roU,,t., no children. Wanted _,..,.an Oa-""" v<c A. A. S nt1•-?'.~-llome Repair. Tap Soll DON'T WAIT prelened. 340 SQ Ft. of air/cond 0 ce about Od. l!ith. UI0-$325 · Lei.sure World. Please call, • -'1 U't -.w. I_.._________ , Apply Penonnel Ofc spac:e:, attractive WiU 'Jease. Rd.! tum. Send can't keep, 8.l'.Hi966. 115 Crystal PORTABLE *QUALITY * FOR THESE No, 1 Fashion Ia!and decorating. Furn or unfum, info Classi11.ed ad no 005 TINY grey female shaggy &.lbcN lsl1nd WELDING SERVI~ * MULal A TOP SOIL * Newport Beach no lease. 64H400. c/o' Daily Pilot, P.O.' eo,; dog. Found by Catalina & You att the winner of \Vlll c:ome t~ )'OU everungs, 58&-6930 OUTSTANDING Equal Opper. Employer '. * Bay!ront o!ftc:e •pace lo 1560. Costa Mosa, Ca 111 . Cleo. Laguna Beach· I TWO PREE TICKETS •"fk•nd'-No job loo Small. BENEFITS•, """" Bay Udo Bldg. $150' ,,...;, 494-3369 to tbe 548-8212. 646-182< r------ omoLX. 67>-2 1220 ,, .. n-deal --D=E•se=E·RA=T'"E'"'I--MARMADUKE.smart.com· RECREATION ~R.?W's·mpalnt_-t_home ! .,., JI lfiil_, •• Com-ltlve · rm. o e . .DC'" Student Z... yn:, old needs pankmable, orange & whlte, VEHICLE SHOW ""l""'-<"• J01,11t a . -Jl!!J ,..--· In o.c. Airport area, 217'l bachelor ,or 1 BR apt in male cat, s wks. 545-1077 SEPT. 19TH-23RD specialty. 979-4636, 546-9723. Salaries DuPont No. 8. 833-32'23 Co!ta Mesa • .,...ferably nr. * * RAIN G tt Install·' ..... MIN. white Poodle, At the u ers =· J b ed 700 • Basic, Ma1·0r !ii:.a!ib~:tii.~! ~·pfe~~i1 ~~~ ~!!~21hur &_Bristol. ANAHEIMSTADiUM ~~sti:i~~.=~e, _o __ W_•_n_t_,_Ml __ l•---1 Medi I * prkg. $145 mo. 675-6900 * _962-1168=..=::.· ------~ 2000 State-College Blvd., .~'7'-===-='-"'=--B•rbar• C•ll•nan Ca ~ Sealpolnl S"'°'e,. Cat Anaheim Hiullng 3515 S..broom L•ne e· 1001 2 d Apts., Aph., Irvine Terrace Please call 642-5678 ext 339 --~-------/0 ft Fum. or Unfvm. :111 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 BT>-0665 10 claim yaur ticket•. LOCAL moving I< haullni by Coron• dol M•r shia. dl.u...-·n· (North County Tull free student. Large truck. Reas. YOO are the wiMer or I' 1TWW Costa Men Co1t1 Mna Found; mbc:ed German Shep nuinber IS ~lttlJ. Sany. 534-1846 or673-0647. TWO FREE TICKETS tial fem. Laguna NigUel area. SKIPLOADER il. dump truck to thl! 83l-Z733. B•byslttl,. wori<. Coocrei.. uphalt, RECREAT'ION e 12 days Q FOUNOo Turtle !Wck, black sawmg. breaking. M&-7110 VEHICLE SHOW ati• male doe Lab-Wp cype. LIC. Daycare. my home. 32 FT. FURNITURE Van !or SEPT. lfTu ••ftD year YQC on friendly, young. 833-8221 ~1on-Fr:i, Lrg Pla.1 areas, local •-h ··'-& 'l ""'""" I diversified activtUes, reas. ...... a,,... gen At the ' P US FOUND '1>ow -Collie In rat .. , c.tlege Pri< """' hauling. 518-11162. 567-:1136. ANAHEIM STADIUM • One week Back Bay~ area, 549-0706 Housedunfng DX> State CoUege Blvd., nlUND Brown &: white pup- py at Lamb School, HWlt. Bch. 963-2979. SMALL ORANGE C AT • BALBOA ISLAND. 673-7133 Anaheim Christmas BABYsrITING, my home. DON'T talce chances wUh Please call 642-567& ext 339 Xlnt cond. Lo\tlng care. yoor earpet, I e t ~ to claim your Uckets. shutdown Newport Beach, 645--0068. fessionala who !mow what (North County Toq free: BABYSITI'ING. My home. they are doing help )'OU. number ii 5®-!Dl). ~ Day or night. CM, nr. Baker 546--5745 Job Winted, tllftMlle 702 &: Fairview, 919-1946. HOUSE OF CLEAN Please Apply In Penon Or C.ontact. J. r~uuer BUS Driver -for Pl"e-«hool ': approx. 3J hn wk. 3 Split • &hifta. over :n only. Clean driving rec. 548-2550,. Mon. I 1 j BUSBOYS Exper. 18· or over, Big Can- yon Country Club, •1 ma: ' Canyon Dr., NB. No phone , calia ph~lllie. Apply Mr. Hof. stetter. g..5 PM, BUS Boy. Le.Cave Rest., 16'!15 Irvine, Co8ta Mesa, Apply \ Thurs. ~pm. CABLE ASSEMBIER for unique co. Will be fully trained 10 operate a cabill collator, using same hand ' tools as in e:lectronk: field. No exp. nee. You can grow 1 with this c:o. Xlnt con- ditions. Best boA to wor.k for. ECHO JOB AGENCY 315 3nl St., Huntln:gtoo Beach 536-1439 CAR WASH JOBS FNDo Hunting dog Edward & Ellis, 842-2778 VIC. H.B. BABYSrI'TING, my home. H O USECLEAN I NG, Dayw, F\Ul t'ime. Girt 1-2%. J apanese La. d y . Ex· CM. 548-~-perlene<d. $20 a d a y . Cor-i.r 64U196 FOUND mans watch near i .;......:~..;;.;··;.;.;.______ DEPENDABLE Jady to do SeaclW golf counie Hun-WOOOWOftK. cab In e I 1, housework. 4 hrs per d-'"v, tington Beach. 84&-4nl ..,, ALL KINDS * rt.JU. Tl.ME ~ ~:a=r; = =:S~ VOM 2950 Hurbor, C."mta ?t.lf:St. 1 AvaUable afternoons, even· CASHIER/STOCKl\lAN in.gs or weekends for work $2.2' hr. to start. Pleuant· In stores, shop., restaurants wurk & surroundings. MWll or offkea h) Costa Mesa. or be bondRble Ii c~an cul ln 'ne...a.u. .. 111•01•0..I ..... ,_.,..._ paneling, gen rcpa.ln. Duke One day wk. Own trans. SIBERIAN Dusky ma l e, 646-'1598, Jack 846-9495 642-.2314 Near Simmona Sc h ool , Garden GroVt?. · 530-Tl84. FWD male Eng. setter Wht w/Uver spots Vic. H.B. ·-[213) 926-5630. Trader's Paradise South Coast Plaza areas. 2722 Michtilson Dr. nppcarance. Work in ;· 545-4240. • Gardt>n Grove area. Raise Irvine, California ;n ll ooy11. • BAL ble reakknt teek pt.· IJ3..2400, ext. 33' ECHO JOB AGENCY 1· lime empk>yment. Varied 315 3rd St., lluntifla{on Beach , bkgrd, clerical, re t a i 1 . £qual Oppor. Employer SJ&.1439 advert I 1 Ing . creativel.,!!!!""'""'~!!!!!!!!!!!!!"!'""l""iiiiiiilii;i;;i;;iiliiiiiiii9 J -·'Hl;:o'•Bld<Y •nd l'dlllto10-you w:u my tht Mlk:hell'1apertment. ~ ---I FNO: O:<l!e Sh<ploertl Mb< fml wht legs •A chm. Ttnd. Vic Irvine 833-1830 wrl.ttnc. 28 )'l'I. Attnctlve, ASSEMBLY \\-'Orl;en for CENSUS • reliable:. Salary o p e n · plutics thin to learn plutk: I I 673--6385. finishing operaUons. Good 4 I• nes NEED help •• home? We 0 pp 0 rt u n I t y !or ad-ENUMERATORS I have &Jdea, n u r 11 e s , vancement. Apply 630 \V. "It'• got two bldrooml, two blthl pful. fernlfy roomwherl I play Md watch T.V.wt'ltn l bltr/-~ ..) 1tt lf'MI MKchtll'• chlldrtn. lt't fun to Plrt t'ride N d~f L Ind -11 tl!I Mlt<hell'• booaUM their pi-~ I .! I W" eo f'OOmY Ind ha ~ of pi.c:tl 10 hide.' :.-.: Our Town alto rMtUfts lhrN bedroom, two bd'I .... C2 9J)lttmtntl wtth ftmHy rooml,and r.cf'Mdon I !il ftcltlttH torthtenthflfnlty. Thete'•• • .,.-ond pool lo< moinlnlll ond -" ' ,-/ ond ···•-""'wod'ng pool Jullfor lddl L'.2 ':::_/:::=:::::.......:._J • .•• pluoll10fhe<clul>IM>AllJuttlo<-...._ FND: QiUJe fml Sable: & white Vic: Mission Viejo -Loot SSS h o u I e:kpn, c:ornpnnions. 17th St., 01 · t "1mes Home:maken Upjohn, ASSEMBLY of electrorUC" 547..aill. parta. Ute pressv.-oric, will EXPERIENCED w r l t e r train. Days & ~~ !r\\'lng Ahllt. CITY OF IRVINE I dollars ......, pUt or full """' work Good cond• & boncfit!. AWGn.y 4 mo old C8t, WI.th ftmbh!i boun. ,Ex· &12,..U17 $2.10 Per Hour w/whlte flea ~ w to ' tremel)t C&D&ble. 642-8547• i..:.:;:.;:A"'V.;ON=~MA=~K~E=s~-;u.50 Nun1er&1.or.s are ~' Kitty Reward ..._ _________________ _.,I BACHELOR'• -Cl?cer Gals CJ-IRJ$TM 1 \S 11fE S&\SON to conduct a itpllc"-1 t."ftWlls LOST, Black wallet. Ala1ka MOBrLE home lot tn Palm NR new 1 hr. aJr, 100 x 175" • Your Pftmlael • E>cpmJ,y TO Bi: JOU..Y bet¥.>tell Oct. 3 A Oct. 15. Theft'• tu n forMl)'OM-eo oomt on outm:I mike Our Town )'Ollr IDWm todl)'. ' driven Uc, Vic:: 11untlnJ;ton ~ Gt'een9 loo Cll aolf In Bullhead C\ty, Arizona. maintained. Ref•· S.U.-1':197 -Elm exll"ll nioncy Jor gifts Eoon1cra.h'>n 111W1t be avaJI. , 1250AdlmtAYll'IUI Mall, ciU 53Erl627 courae, t11el m'bih1P, ~tf Tra<kl «fUJtY ft1r atr ~ PVT. duQt nune • x p , ll!l an AVON Representntlvt• to v.'Ork 6 hn. per dny. C"1LF1IMowj-Colta M-~UICK CASH 13.8110. Eq. 11.100. for_, or 8u,,... stroak. 11.000 geri•tric .,,., tn home or tn ,...., """"' time. Catt: " -·. -tlltl ... lty A-Wmrp • et<:. --S.nGi.briel V'1ley 1...... 511~ or f>l8..15U. LAGUNA 4!17~74 Apply City of I rvlno 4201 C:•mpv• Drive 133-·-~ (T1•1&Se-O.. ,. UGH A pd auto. 640-lO!lO. valuo only.-· holplW. dar•· 900-l955 '4l>mll. .!!:I!-_No ~.Botry,no pOlt. THRO ~VIDEO Tape Rc<:ordcn for TRIPLEX. C.M. ll<!au1. DAYWORK. ~ .. k or d".Y. BABY SlTrER IYA~'TEO '!§~ ~Tml9720A_Wl_nlol-Dilllnol.><.lon DAlltY-PILOT own TY..-~-· ...,,,,,. owner's unit, tam. rm.; ror General c1 .. n1 ... ReU•blo. ror "'"'• nlghlS, day•. nANT AD val. tndi tw '· lot 1 """"'1>. Fortin Co.. DAY Work."' ~•perl<ncecl. It'• 1 breefO ...... u yaur ':;;;;;;;~;~;;;~~;;~~~~~~~~4:~=~64~2~-~.S~~-~-== m.m Roa!O>r &l!l-5000 have -ref""'1<tt Md ll•J111 with ..... u1< O.ll.Y N""" a .. Pad"'! ru.e"' Mii ---~ • -1.9-~n car. 9'JMOOO, Ptlot Qa.qified. 60-661S. 1 .:::Cal=.! .o.60-lJl'll.=..::=c.....----I I " I l l ' I ' ----. --------.. ---------" -- • - ' - I • . - I - " ·- ,I ' - Ir I . ,. •' ' ·--~ • . ' . . . -• -- . J[IT .......... ][it [ --J[il] ! ~.-"•01 • J[J!l ll Lo....... l[Il]1 .;;' _ .... _, d l[fi1 I I j\j ', mJ I L:;IJ"""' l[fiJ I Lo .. ,_ ]1 1i H I W l>ielo Wo"ted, M I. F 710 • ';;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:1~~~-~~~~~1:;;.~~;;--~~~ op 1ntod, MI. F 710 ·--Help Wonted, MI. F 7)0 Hol• Wenia.L M & F 710 Help Wonted, MI. F no Help Wa-Ml fl no I ,1 · lll'"T' ,,,..,, ~ " ~ I ._-;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;';;;;,;;;;;;;; >loin We ntod. M & F 710 Halp W1nlod, M & P 710 Halp Wanlod. M & P 71 I Thurs<1a1, Stptembft 201 l <f/l .,._ • DAILV PIL.OT CHEF' -l!!ro pe m,. T" ' ~ ... ;.,,, C..ui•:• ,,;.,,. ". IMMEDIATE CASH LANDSCAPING HELP I' ' ' • Blue: eee •. C!!.ll bl>!. 1 ' I \1·1 11•1':\1 'h" I' '<l 1• r H llt.~I• lllLl"-1") .ht>-Oi24 MACH .... IST PARTS DISPENSER 0 SALESMAN &: M~ a.m. 642-06ll. ·r rad i 1 i 00 , 1 Odeotod E pl COMMISSIONS lft 12 hr. ,. llArt. Oispenoe RECEPTI NIST male • l•m. !8l5 Ao u CHE-MICAL <>l<'•m•"· F ' bu Io u' o1> • S.,11 .o.Joo.;,fy.famu.1 Knapp LIVEJ.ln compan ll>" f os moton:ycle ..,... behind Day or night, 010 exp. """" monthly guam. of qua!JOo< o OPERATORS portuni ty. S.nd romplel • ...._., ·""'· "<JU ll."~11<. Very ~~/:. '~ s::::,~1'C.'J:"','!i P•«·oel.•\Qo l mechanical com· counto<. Paid overtime. No '"'Y. fun )<lb. 1:111 trolo, no No exp<r. ,,..,..., Mr. Lee For ex ncf .. al ·cli""'"'' re• 11nc. Write Cl;Js.'llfled ad. Volt 'nstant .'ftgl\ uas..1 l'Omm111s~ia plu~ poitent parts. Set·UP &. oper-e)(p. nee. typina: or shorthand, etc. _,12~1:::!~1 _71"""3:::;.;=::.· ---~·I, ~11 · '* ~11• m~· 1 '""" No. 9'W Dally Pilot PO Box II boJ1tLse.;, bc11ell\S. YOOl' own 5:30, 562-7434 .. ----nto ".'."'1'iel~ ot macbint?i in. ECHO JOB AGENCY Apply in pcnon any aft or SALES girl, t.'OUntl'.r Ba.le h'I 0 Santa.'• Spring.•. Chem-1.1611,• Costa Me,;., Calif o;s\o...,. No U!Vfflmeh( · LYN d uding turret lathe, verti· 31$ 3nl St ., Huntiogtoo Bcaeh eve. al 2930 Wool Cst Hwy., "P· a muot Some c:.Oimi'I -J' stey background in sc~! 92626 f'ret> selltn;.:: and tr.ainlng Convalesttrtt Ho~A. full A cal m.W-Short ntn. Small 5.16-1439 rots. & tllm knowledge helpful 1or pafi\ t.>X pcr. nee. Good ro Personnel l(it. Ral.ph P. Kelle:y. Dept part Ume. caJJ b'U-0598 s~. Xln't working condl· Call intervlf'W &Pill . M2-101 i bcllC'fits. 213'9"!1.·7464. EXEC. SECRETARY C0012,.Knapp Centre, Brock •ion... P/tlmo E:mploy nt R D•-'• Camera "'-chanae ton, Ma. oitol. STACO SWITCH, INC reel me ec:tptlonlst $600 -.:._"'-"""' · ... - CLERK TYPIST Huoti°""on Beac'' u 0 i 0 n NEEDS * * * · 1139 Bmr, Co.;Ju Mesa Ollo By 1'0;., & SophisncaHM -SAL·ESLADY F /TIMI High School o;01c1c1. the • INSURANCE SALES 549-304). lrvl U ifi d ~" 'l':'l'W' EJ<per. ,,__.,.,, ·1 '"""" i:rowing >0 hool Secretaries An Equal Opport niy ne n 18 WESTCLIFF SHOW OFF ' •ll~riol on OO'ang• Couoiy, I• • Typists • MACHINISTS -Empf~ _ 1 School Distr ict p,,,., .•. ~1 '"'"cy 1 ..... 22 ...... ·"'ii' .. lo .. > ii''ii1.,. 00 ..... NB ... ., I Order Control Dept, Sales &: marketing ex per. req'it Exper. l't'C['d in t.al"5 order proc~slng & lflvoic· Ing . Custon1er contacl re- quired. Pleasant personalily, ~~~'i!ry~01·si:nrtin~e:11~;;1 • Keypunch ~~,::::~ '::.'::i ~\:.,w~~yo& MACHINIST 1 • Food A11l1tant '"f~:~!~J'}'~e~iA. S-HIPPIN~ ,, 1 $710 nm. + xlnt benelits. • fi:~s, full time when quali-Logan Turret L.athe Mach. Level I --. -~"' ~ -V Typing 70, shrlhand 120. Jn-PBX Oprs & Also Mach. Shop Trainee 2~-'\ hr ~ dr11 .. t2."i7 per hr RECEPTIONIST AND • terested applicants report 1'~arm('rs Insurance Group LOK-FAST, JNC. e Food Assistant · for Real Estate office In ~thc.~i~• ,\'t£. ~.;;. S.Jl: 3848T6:"'.:;;'l'.-s:'S:::;'; 100 Ed Laoi * 540-18,14 864 W. 16th SI., N.B. Level II C»sta Mesa. Pleasant work· Edison lligh School , 21400 Newport Beach 546--4741 INSURANCE Sec~tary, Fl.re MACHINE MACHINE OPERATORS 2~-4 ..,1 .. duilv $2.77 hr ing l.vodiOons, excetlent co. RECEIVING ' I • T)1le 65 w .p.ni. ell.'Clric tyJ)C\'·riter. Ma.....,..lifl, H.B. i;-,.ual Qn.. EquaJ Oppor. EmployCr .l Ca.suali ty Agency. Ei<p Exp'd ~· but will train. • Food. A . ·1 I tperl . benefits. phone Sally, , , ,,_ ~ r I Xlnt f e benefil1l II s an 833-193'1. I portuni y Employer. . -19 ~ easant 0 ff ice · La Barge \Vire & Cable Substitute RECEPTIONIST w/typing CLERK Call }''or Ap1>t. lndustria! P.elatio:is (714) 4"-9401 TELONIC INDUSTRIES EXECUTTVES HAIR DRESSER WANTED OPERATO'RS 301 E. Stevens, Santa Ana Avail. on call, $2.57 per l1r & 11. bkkp'g. needed for $l 2 ,000 to $ 7 S,OOO THE HAlR CHALE'f _ MAIDS lo< l!IOl<I, wkday• Apply lo ~~aw.t!rm. Sl"'I $400 , Send resume or call TODAY &44·7103 Janitorial only, Laguna Shores, 419 N. 14600 ~d CMyon l'°iioiiiiii;;;ii,iiiOiiOiiOiiOml Va1iun Data Machines ha.a HANDY Pe-"'"' f 1· hi Coallt flwy. Laguna. Easl '-"--~~ 1• \ d' nl r " I for l.'O nfidcntial NO COST '""'' or ig 494-8521. uvu1':, ;,-REC''IVING an mme late ope ng or • e:..C<'ulive interview. assen1bly wo11<, $2 lO $2.25 Exper"1enced ·~ shipping and receiving clel't I EXEClITIVE SERVICES, hour. Call 979-4755. Prefer Age 'J:0.25 MAIDS • No exper. nee. Ap-""!'Eq!!!!!u,.a\"!'O!!ppo;,,."·...,E~m,;,p,.lo,;,yc!!'..,/ CLERK with a minimum of tw.i" i INC. HOMEMAKER, half lirne 6 Oa A W k · ply In person, The Rodeway ~ yea1'S experience In the 000 "" ~· . .._ k I ys ee & Tra 1' nees Inn, 1400 S.E. Bristol, Costa P/time Service Station At-Ml . -ne!ving of e I e ct' 0 n l c I Laguna Beach Equal Oppor. F:n1ploycr ~' ·~7;;;~0";:.;;a,i~.Aoa :.;:!:; 1 .::'!0~1 ; O::~~; Apply in .. ,.., 0 Me,.. 557-8700. • "odanl. Niles & wkods rumum of 1 .Y"'"' """"' ;;;;;,.,.i.Js pO'efeITCd. Yo• I h'ld A Md 'DI I J I Must be cxper. Hrly waf~ fence .in a shippmg an~/OI" n1ust be attenUve to detail I c 1 ren. pprox 1-6. $<10 FAR WEST se sp a,y ewe ry + COnlnl. Doo'o Gu 1 ~lvtng deparl. m. enl. Fork-Ill\ ~ \\'k. ~2-7045 I d' t r $750 I ft H 1 ru St bl and w ng to w or mme 10 e 0 Exper. Service, 590 s. Coast Hwy I . eavy. I ng. a e overti.tne \\'hen required. I Cl.rk Typist Trainee Your avi:: t) pin; is a!! U1n1 1 ii; needed 10 Jnnd a lifetimf" ronrral.1 1v this realty ~er· vice. Xln't ndva n('l'ment po- tential 11·/co. paid bcn<>flts 7 EXPERIENCED ASSEMBLERS HONEST reliable young man O • WESTCLIFF Lag Bch ' manufacturing company. you meet these Te- to assist growing oUlce col· SERVICES pen1n9s P;:!rsonnl"l Agency · Paid insurance and benc-1 . fee service. Xln! future 1651 E. Edin""'r. S.A. PART Tl~ lunch cook. Ap-fHs. Lots ol overtime. Apply qul.rements and are ook1ng \ 642 -5400 For Experienced .. -ply Odle s Restaurant. 212 in per.t0n at Personnel De for a growing Orange Coun'l : & good S"tl'rl inl{ sal. · HOTEL-F'ront Desk Clerk, Jason Best Agency NEEDED IMMEO. cxper. prel'd, but not nee. 17400 Brooi<:hul'S., t-·. Vly VOLT Apply in person, Rodeway pnite·2l3 963-61'15 Inn, 1400 S.E. Brlstol, Costa 16n Reynolds Ave Santa Ana Equal Oppor. Employ~r MACHINISTS & MAI-~~:=.·: ddv-~.~;~~~;;~'.~ ~rtmcntAVERY : ';:~::t oHe'8: II 1ng record, mechanic a I PRODUCTS •1• • ·•· MACHINE OPERATORS ability, oon-•mQker. shcp & Busy N.B. stock brokcr de-facl 1t1es .. 1 1ruck ma int en an c e & sires steble lndivktual w/ CONSUMER DIVISION • 8aSl'C and delivery, able to lift, part good personality. Start $450. 2620 S. Susan In t t P I Mesa. 557-8700 COOK for Parkhurst Retire-S an erson_ne ment Rl"sidence, Fri, Sal, Tunporary Serv1~e 1-IOUSEKEEPER $250. 1\10 JUNIOR SALESMAN·. Sun & l\1on. 12-3:30. Inquire 3848 Campus Dr., Suite 106 Fre p11id. Uve-ln. Neat '9925 La Alame-da, Fountain Newpor t Beach 540--4741 nlOdest home. Private room Earn $20.$40 per 1veek \\'Ork· >Valley. Equal Oppor . Employer with meals. Llte cooking. Ing alter school and Salur· lime, stud€nt OK, Tues-Sat, Call Miki White, 540-6ffi5, Santa Ana. calif. Major Med1'caw H ardw a re Lln1ited, 3737 Coaslal Personn,,_>I. Agency, (Near Harbor & \Varnerl t 1 B. 2790 Harbo' BJ-~ .. ~i. . + Life .'. 1 irch, NB Intervie\\'S 9/21 vu "-" • 1 2nd Shilt 3PM·l1PM 3rd Shilt 11PM·7Af.I "&:_:9/"2.t-=9/"28"-'>-5"-"-P-"M"-. ---1 PBX Win train qualified an equal oppor empk>yer m1f • Stock Purch-..i MALE / Female Electronics person. Various shirta. Ap-....., Assemb ly wo,k. 11.65 "" ply ai. 155 Rochester, s1., Rocolvlng In-'°< • Profit Sharing f j Be con1panion to active, days seUing ne1v subscrip- ! COOK, EXPER. EXPER. chf'f·nights. Apply t'lderly lady. Weekends oU. lions for the DAILY PILOT. To Operate t.1ature, dependuble, neat. aft. J pni. Cyrano Rt'st, 600-l\1ust have transportation. This is not a paper route A.pply Immediately~ Surf & D Newport Center Dr, ECHO JOB AGENCY and does not include de-Mills Chucker hr start. EXSAR C 0 r p. C.M. Perform electro-mec;Wlical • 12 d""" G yea• 645-1021. inspection on parts for _ 1 _ , S1rloln, 5930 \V, Coos! H'vy., (Fashion lsland i Ne\\']Xlrt 315 3rd SI., Huntington Beach liveries or collecting. Open. NB. Beach. . ~~~-"5.'lf.-:::::;1'.::439"'---'-ings in Costa Mesa, Fountain COOK, f/time. \\/ill train. FACTORY WORKERS H 0 USE K EE p ER for Valley and South Huntington Engine Lathe Turret Lathe MAN lo \\'Ork f/time in ren- tal yard. Very neat ap- pearance & handwriting. Can train. Apply morns, '1930 NC'wport Blvd, CM Personal Secretary ~\:'"' =n-,.~d paid vacation 0 cle inspection on e 6 d II To Vice President mcehanical part•. Skil1' "' ays a yea I quire use of micrometer & paid sick leave:' j comparators. T:l"ue position ~ • Convalescent Hospital. Call to $2.25 hr. needed at once teacher, l school age child. ~~~iJ~pply now by calli.(lg 642-{)598. Chance to learn the pla•ti.: Live in, room, boa.rd & i;-~, " O ". 1 ... ~~ ••o;l;;iOilp~poii'ii·.:E:;:.m~p\~oy::':.o'-.1 N/C Drill1 Grinders TRAINEES CooK . F'ai!I food, , ex· indust ry & 1~ a machine mon i..,. wage. Requlre- JWrienc<>d, full tin1c, $2 tu·. operator. Able to \\'Ork any ments: References mu st KEYPUNCH r No breakfast. 6•12--0594. shift ol)('n. drive. Call 6 PM-9 PM, BECOME A i\olust have niin. f'Xpcr. in 111achi11e shop 01· metal trades background in school, military service or previous en1ployment. MANAGER TRAINEE Outstanding opportunity to advance to managt+lrtl posi· tion ln 30-60 days. OUr CUI'· rent managera earn $1000.$1500 mo. Must have door to door canvassing ex. perience. Shorthand Prcre1-red but not tolerancil.lg.-'t'ou niay bt' 1hc onC' ,,., a~i 1 necessary. l\1ust be at· M~ t S • II 1 · I tractive, neut In ap-81 er .pec1a t es looking for. ; 21 t 30 1 1&40 l\iourovu1, Costa l'dC'!\<I "1F ---- - -ECHO JOB AGENCY 962-7237. · C STOMER SERVICE 315 ;)rd St., 1-luntington Beach HOUSEKEEPER -babysit-po you enjoy working with 536-1439 • ter, live-in, 5 days, Dad & 2 •0 poople and would you like "''ddl . 111 R · Boy• < & 8 Sa J the oppor!unily 10 cum a ,. 1 ers . estaurant in -,, . n uan subst:anriaJ incom wh'\ '-:3-~lk'\ Hills Mall now Capo, art. 6, 496-1144. , e 1 e huill"· ,1 doing ~? lf ttie answer Is WAITRESSES COOKS yes & 1f you J>OSSC5"" n rol-I ' • ; lpge background and or BUSBOYS, , business exper., plt'ase call HOSTESSES · llr. GrcnkO"' at ~-::o23 10 & DISHWASHERS •arrange an fn!t>tvte\\'. FuU or p1 lime. Apply in person. Next to Sear:s. in· sidC' mall. DEBUHR FINISHER HOUSEKEEPER - Daily 2-7 pm or later. 3 children: &15-5690 or 5-i9-t2-11 HOUSEKEEPl!:R . live-in. 2 ch j ,J d re n. r.1ust have references. Spanish speak- ing OK, 64o-M.'i1. HOUSEKEEPERS. SIITERS Orange Co. ·Domestie Agcy 1046 N. Tustin, Org. 997--0500 l.JOUSEKEEPER / Compen· ion, must drive, no smok- ing, H.B. 962-5224. FIE'~L~D~M~=EN~­ Deburr .sman i.>lastics .t· Yoong men for field \\urk. metal parts. Be capable of 1\-1ust be able to work wknds using hand 1ools. Good eye-occu. SoJlle exper. in BS· s1.E:ht requil"f'<l. phalt or seals clesimbl,, bul STACO SWITCH INC not nee. Apply in pe1'30n I 1139 Baker, Costa Mesa only. Int<.>rviews 9 am-12 HOTEL BELLMAN 549·3041 noon, Sat., Sept. 22. No 1 Ec:fUal Oppor. Employer Phone CaJls. AIRPORTER INN 1 ~ t.io;i E. \VarllC'r, S.A. HOTEL \ O'ENTAL RECE-PT. FOOD service nttendant in· Con1at:I Dick Hanna.n Desirable Coastal Loca1ion. plant lunchroom located 1714) 833-2770 Good oppor. for sharp, Irvine Industrial Co111plex. ""'="":.:::.:.,:::'.:'.:::.:::. __ •1 th ... p 'd HYBRID mlcro c lrcu 'ot , p!easll.llt girl w.tmin. 2 "rs .. on 111 .1: ri. a 1 • \onllday• 0~•214 cnglnecl's. Lay oul, p-expcr. Responsibill1ies ill· · u.:><r"'I. -"~=--·~ 1 d --cessing, 1"'-packaging. Thick C" u e: Supen'lsing ofc pet· * GARDENER * & thin filn1. Posilions ol1el' sonnel. famtliarl1y w/ com· Be your own Boss xlnt growth opportunities, puter billing & ins. Appoint· t J rl & f · ing patients & making ~. run or p/th.ne i.n your op sa a es · r 1 n g e " 0 H h benefits. Reply In con-nan ~ i al arnmgement s ivn area. ig income. fldence to Classified Ad No. 645-6656. · Guaranteed Customers N C h D 909. Daily Pilot, P.O. Box DENTAL As s is lant o as own 1560,Cosral\fesa,Ca.~. Chall:side. at leasl 6 mo·~ Earn N5·~~·1"1·s"v7 Later J exper. H.B. area. 8-16-35-KI. '----------• ~!'l'deTi~~~":,jnLJ. ~m~~:~ MaiolGAR~;;]",!,';5 ,., 11 : INSPECTORS PART OF THE EXCITING COMPUTER INDUSTRY Long Term E111ployment \\1ith Hi~tory Of HO LAYOFFS tn Ow· 1\-lanufacturing Area Excellent Working Conditions Company Paid Benefits Call Mr. Newman 979-5222 MANICURISf exper, ?\Ir. Ron's Mens Hair Styling 2400 \V. Coast ti\\)'., .NB. f>48-9174 l\'li\RKETfNC Secretarv - SH. typing, aggresSive enger. 642-94i0, Davt>. ' MASSEUR peara!1ce. o • yrs o An Equnt Oppty ErnployC'r Plt•usc Appl y In Person .: : age, u1terested . In learning · Or Contact B. Kraika I resteurnnt business, unen· RELIABLE steady \v/expcr. ~ cumbered & able ro traveJ. ln lead acid battel'ies. Apply v D M I Apply in person, T h e ai Le\\1s Bros, l~ E. 16th · I Califttfnian Restaurant 1400 St., C.M. ' I , I So. Harbor Blvd, La Habra. RESTAURANT . PHOTO Lab Technician for J ! mapping rirm. Salary o~. SANDWICH MAKER 21n Mich•IS9" Dr. ! ~:Ord Thorn & A· . SHORT ORDERS Irvine, California _ 1 PL.ANT \\'ORKERS {Sl \\'omnn v.·anted lo \\'Ork r11 833-2400, ext. 336 ·1 I S2 h D ~• ·1 T do lw}Ch counter preparinii: !II.. . r. ay ,..-11 t o Ught sandwiches & short orderi:;. Equal' Oppor. En1p\oyei. assembly work. Happy at-40 hr wk. No Sat nite or Su11 l':::::::-:::::i:=:=::ll mosphere. No exp. nee Hur· work. No split shifts. Clea~I~~ ry on dO'l''ll for this. 1111 mod lunch counter. l\1ed. & ~"~tary come. lat hjred. hosp benefits. APP 1 Y TrairtL>c BERTEA ECHO JOB AGENCY Lindberg Nutrition, in rear (3.0-3.5 College GPAI 315 3rd St., Huntington Beach of the ;roy World Store Penioruwl Clerk 536-lC39 lower level, S..Coast Pl~ Dicta~ Opr ·Saturday I ntervlews Sopt. 22nd .. &AM-Noon F/tj.n1e w/Uc. ?.11,!n:s Spa. Balbo• Bay Club - 1221 \V. Coast Hwy, N.B. MECHANIC CORPORATION PRACTICAL Nunoc -Com· Shopping Ceote< C 0 , I a Koypunch 01~ 1565 Experienced; to work on panlon. Mature lady to care r.1e&a. Ask for Al,Casbara Test Technician 1 • Modem U;Wd cars. All bene:fit.11. pen. for older lady from Fri. AM RETIRED lean & han Electro-Mechanical $4.25 hr ston nli>.n. r'ODd oay. to 1\1es. AM ln Bethel dyman r c ed_up 1 ffl • Exec. Sl>cretary to $700 Facilities 18001 Von Karman STAMP FORD To\\·e1'S, CM 673-8.125 Hours g"exl~le. •ca P ~ 0 ~~ !'.'~'y 10 Es~ Ofer $625 j • Ir vine, Calif,· in San Clemente PRESSER -dry cleaning, 833-:zi28 1 BX Reeep,. $425 Varian Data Machines, a leader in the n1i11i~n1puter industry has an Immediate opening for akeypunch operator on second shift. You will be responsible for a vB.li<>ty of duties including some data control, softv.·a1-e pre~aration pl keypunch. If you are bored 1vith straight keypUnCb an d desire a chttllenge with a growing Orange C o u n t y com puter company that of· fers. Basic and 83'1424 -· Ph: 492-ll37 ask for l\Jgr. pa11 time, some counter . NEWPORT M • M d• I ";r 133.~~~5·-MECHANIC, Bicydo Ei<p'd. •0<k. Apply Seo la·m a o * SALESMEN * Personnel Agency Cl(Ot e ICG Full tim~. Mission Viejo Cleaners. ~1 E. 17th St. CM Do you take ;,Salesmen 833 Dover Dr., N.B. + Ufe Equal Opp, Employer 49a-5m, 8.11-2861. ' wanted!' ads v.ith a graln ol '42·3870 • Stock Purchase MEDICAL ""i•tant, !root & PR.ODUCTIOH .alt? can't..,, I blame you.1 ..,...,..,....,...,...,...,~ll back office, experienced on-I followed up a few mysel1I" • Profit Sharing M , h' • ly . »ouotain Vall•y 979--0313 in !he past. The job acldom SECRETARY • 12 d ac lnlsts MEDICAL Back O 11 ice TECHNICIAN l~od up ID the claim In the F"' Paid. rru.IO'atcd v .P. ays a year P/time. Call betwn 2 & ,i a ' seeking sharp ind lv. v>ho pal 'd v~c.~·t1•011 • pm. 642-85Ei6. ~ .... younlh.esll a fliavor ·"d l!"k· enjoys PR. Avg typing & sh R.M. .._ . $S p f P 1 one. yoU •1 e na'tk:l for lhc rhallenge of • 6 d + MEN!S S~A er OQTI electronic checkout to make $250 a week im-markeling ifulic..,s.· Xln't~ ays a year · -----ohntcrowave productir.l RF medlatelv. with t P/t1me attendants. over 21, components. TC'Chnlcal or much ~ in 1:-7~~~ ~~mr-1potmfhrl. G paid sick leave, , Sat & Sun. No e.'Cper. nee. !fe~ M:hool training in I'd like to talk to you. If s,a, .... ng sa ary. Am Fee e 1 Q0/ 0 • 2nd Secure yqur tutuie with us. Balboa S.y Club electronics & minimum 1 your qualifications match Jobs. I "~e are an expanding non-1221 W. Coast H"'Y· NB. yr related exper. our requirements. this could ~ason Best Agency~-I Varian Data Machines, a shift differen• defense valve manufacturer. ~fODELS-~10DELS-c 11 F A be the career you've been 1•400 Uro.. . .aur 11 ., F. Vly leader in the mini-computer \Ve offer a combination or MODELS a or ppt. looking far. Suite 213 963-' : Newpcn1 Bch h o 01 <' s ~ for informalion. I 'Permanent part lin1e, s200 • 1st & 2nd shifts per mo + bonus. P..1ust be IH & have dependnblc insured GENERAL LABORERS industry h a s immediate tial steady work (we have Women, l\len, Otildren Industrial Relations lnterviev.' appointment 1().4 car. 642-4800 I Designer Graphics Estab. int er design firm in N.8. aren seeks designer exper. in di mens ion a I graphics rendrrin~ & architec1w·al inter. 540-2860. 250 Fischel', C.M. Skilled & Unskillod ·rcmpor..Jl'Y Employmen t Apply 6:30 nr:1 -Mon-Fri. MANPOWER, INC. openings on 1st & 2nd shifts never had a lay ort), excel-Models wanted for Fall and (714) 494-'401 PM, weekdays, ssg.a182. SECRETARIES lo~ . individuals having a Please Apply In Person lent beMfits and competi-Winter Fashions AlftD -& nun1n1um of lour years ex-Or Contact B. Krafka rive waaes. AMERICAN BEAUTIES TELONIC SALESMEN KE p Pi' perience In a receiving in-l\JODELING .~.CADEMY GE Y UNCH OP"S spcction aclivity. You n1usl y DM \Ve have Immediate openings 675-8442 * 3700 r.pt Blvd., INDUSTRIES T SET FOR 1 74 Irvine 54Jl...,il/l l have a knowledge 0 f I rol' A. & B J~·~chinists with · N.B. Ncwpor1 Beacil Chevy dlr. 17802 Sky Park .J. I re!):is!ors, cap a c 1 t 0 rs, experience 111 L11guna Beach will add 3 co n1t>inallon ex· NEVER A FEE AT TE!lo1Pd I transistors, sticet 1 n et a 11 perlenced salesmen. Exccl· Tempo Temporary .1-felp? paru aod job ,..Jato<! equip. ENGINE LATHE MOLD PRESS Equol Opi'OO'. Em~oycr lont grow:JI opporlunily in I 111en1. If , .vou n1eet these 2722 M" h I D . nt'\V facilities ii~ the heart Secretary to -'5~ ' qualifications and art> in· IC • son r. PRODUCTION Helper, assist of Irvine Industriel and Atr· Fee Paid Lots of publle ··~ _ I te,..oted io jo\niog a grow-Irvine, California YTL 55" · OPERATOR In mfg. of v\lnmln tablelo. port a~tiv!ty. Stt Sales Mgc. tact. Worl< w/mana~ I PH1eylpebc"l "~ut91 & p/time. A'l--GENERAL OFFICE I ing Ornnge County com-IJJ..2•~, ext. •Mil. • Wo~k floater position In Howard O:iC\<TOlet. Mac· learn ne\V accounts. Lite ' 1 "" am .f.. 3 pm, puter oompany that offers: """ -sh• PP Ing• warebous!ng, Arthw· &: Ja~, New-Ing, Sh RO. Ahlo 'Fee I r.1esa VC'rde Conv. Hosp , ~a.n~as.i._. oppor. for tr...1bbly / , Equal Oppor. Employer MILL MACH OP Small plastic mold shOp. \\'t'lghlng & compressmg. port &a.ch. SJ3.0055. tlans Call Ann Christi 1661 C<>nter SL, C. M . 1nd1v. \Vho enjoys lot!!: or • Modem Musi be exper. in transfer Lln\\'llco Lab 7148 Nl!WPOrt _S ___ -----5511-• 541'-008.i public coolac\ 10 be ccntor' , • , ·• o· 1,1,-·;,,-"""°""" Blvd., CM. Apply '""""""" oleo-Mon & Women 8'<X;, Cootro\ Ca re• , po MES'ffC Help G--.e of ac'vily. Avg lypiog ·"I Fac1ht1es KEY PU NCH TOOL & CUTTER STAC<f SWITCH:· INC. anly, 8:>l-l0:30em. j'.;ri>u"d lloor oppo,Ju;ut)' lo T~BI·~ """""" . ....... ,. fit h I f 1 Xi -""£-,==,,:""'="-~~-I the booming Home Security ne vu., ?'ffi. • ! Allen Byland Agency, 106-B 1 e exper, e Pu · ' n't • Basic and u:;:;> Baker, Costa Mesa RF.AL F'SfA J'r •• .;ALES Jndua~. Dedicated hard SECRETARY For saJei de t E. 16th St .. S.A. 547--03~'(i starling salary & advancc-j OPERATOR GRINDER 54$-3041 SU~ CAREE~ ¥/Ol'k ean put you &t sal,000-of agg:rftS!ve fr a ri ""Lape D , A • ;:i';;;' ,i:t~\~~0~· >w Nego. Major Medical F,qual Oppo" .Employ« New 0~ cxperoe<ocod. Jooo tbe 125,000 earning• rate In a bu1locsa Must ~''-"'1 r 5 ss1stant J~5on Best. Agency + Life Pi10TEL MAID wANRD \Vorld II largest and tastnt few V.'eeks. Full training motiveted w/Jmowledge bf y 1 d 11 , 28 NITE SHIFT growtw!th ang_'.!'work1181e orprllmof I~ provided. Integrity, willing· advertising ·p I ace men 1 · .oung a y <'"" ) to assist 17400 Brookhurs,, F. Vly e Stock p h Pertee offers pennan<>nt cm-will train, apply in person ,,.,., over ~ ness to lea.m & work hard helpluJ, but not nee. ·Must ~1n ht.>allh spa. \\'IU train, no Suite 213 963-6775 Ure G5e ployment, pald vacation S DAY SO HOURS Costa Mesa Inn. ottlce1 and ~ a more important than exper-be able ID cominunlcate . I ~!· ~fie. 0~P~~~ in 2930 """"'ivn GENERAL '?llice, must • Profit Sharing afte r 6 months plus 1 week NEED musician for Con-member of our Pi 1 1llionaitt lence. PH 714-557-5662 ror well on the 'telephone. Sh l , &st I-I NB· · type. Versatile self starter • 12 d paid time off 8.t Chris!mas. Co. pd. benefits indude: tinental band, eail 8474845 Club. MulU-mlllion dollar more lnforlmation typing-" mWtt. S:alary com- 1 wy., · · needed. Call 5-1tH511 ays G year Company paid life, hospital, e 9~ PAID HOUDAYS a!ter 7 p.m. ftdYel'tbring O\'CIK!'M'· tree . mensurale w/ablllty &: "t • ----~ -d '"'gteal, medical, and dental • $10,tn:l LlF'E !N'SURANCE I ",=."--'~=--~~--· I guaranteed licensing .tehool Sale& ...,, "" ~10 "'t ' DRAFTING. Trnioec foe mop GIRL PART TIME pai vacation bcneffls and al., educallonal O MEDICAL INSURANCE NITE Manager. Ex P • r · E>«:<!lltot sale• tralnlnr: TOY & GIJT PARTIES .<0.:.... ~ ' ,) drafting hr111 . l\lusl have Young, sharp, attractive. e 6 d assistance. Exctol1€'nt \VOrk· e PENSION PLAN Salary open. Apply in What is your license wort11 J-Jousewtvea demonstrators, SECRETARY 1 PXJler. "·/ink. Full or Small snle<i ollice in Irvine ays a year Ing conditions and growth e EDUCATIONAL REFUND person. bet. noon, 3041 s. t~ you? Check our monthl)' earn to $2,000 by Dec. 1. No Rapidly growlni well esta-., 'Dl!lme. ll. Oi!ford 1'horne tndust. Park. Must have paid sick leave p-Jtential . e SICK LEAVE _Bri_·m_o_l.~S0 •. A_._____ bonus pnmrnm which mean• delivery -no t'OllecUod. rtrm seeks JJit'tilOnable 11¥ ' A AuoclH1f'i;, .i40-44!lt good lyplng skills & phone • • e VACl\TION PAY NURSES Aides & OrdE?rlles, SP to you? Please caU Free Hostess gifts, need dJv. who.Tikn vat'lcty & PB.1 EARLY mom """papec voiC', !2;30 lo 5:00 Moo • 10°/o • 2nd Opening available f' om O AND MANY MORE will tialn, all •hllt•. P/tlme Vloginl• Jones 'Jl3S.48U. car. 523-5484 Gills 'n Ltto &to ~\p!UI. !;tart 152!1, !~;"7': ~~'\op~':,! ~ ;1;;"23~° Call, Lou B\sbal shift dlfferen· ~i:· ~ l~fy !ii~ 'M~ IT'S YOUR FUTURE t~P'." 11!1.;9 &':'..;, p':i'G ifEAL ESTAT:,,.st.t-• 1 ~":els ~1ai"1Z.::~1 = , mo. Hun1. Reh a r 0 a . tial data recorder. (Related ex· LET'S TALK IT OVER f"lagship Rd, N.B. 642-8M4. FRTEREALINICING Full time positions available 2'790 Harbor Blvd., Cl\t. i &47-2300 be! 10 am . GIRL· FllDA Y periern:• not rcquiO'Cd, will CALL RICH LANDY NURSES Aides -Will tra\o. for cxper. .alcopeop\e lo SECRETA!tY · marketl<e EARLY momin'I: delivC'ry SE>cre. ta"' _ ....... 1 ...... shrthnd, YO\I may be the one we are t.i;8ij1· Rcqukl~ a minimum '' 9""'600 All shifts. Intervw Mon-Fri. Famous Real Eatat.e Ucenl'. lp!>rting goods & hardware. Local O)J'flptany • e e Ir In' 1 0 Tnlck k-d \ 'J •.:rt-.. r. 1 k o year eypunch exper-~ 8am-4pm. Me.a Verde illR Counse now atallabJe Al,10 full time 11\arp individual to ·";,;atl • pen. nee< • . VL'Ck pos1rion requires good office oo Ing for. lenet>. Must be exceptionally OR APPLY .. u 7PM thru Tarbtll Realtors. Free wanibousetnan needed. Call extttmcly bul:)o ~"ftlc ~A weekend.'!~ 5:,7--2710 _ skills, xlnt salary, fringe fast and accu rate. Apply '"""""' Conv., 661 Center st, C.M. l?l:.cement Service. Free. Jor an appt. Hea"" typl-. 5 ..__... ~.1 • ..., ELECTR,ONIC DEVEL tw-·1cfils & ,vorking condi· POrlea~oo~apcpllyBl.nV'~~n 54&-5.585 1ntn! Prog Eafil ., ·• ...... ~-, ..,., • I TECHNICIAN :Joos. S.oo r"'ume & sal8'1' ~-PERT EC I Saturdoy lewt1, S.pt. NURSES A Ides' eo .. While n~ ...::.'"'can Al WHnE FRONT =:/<'.!::1':1..":!::~i besian l~y-oot, test & build ~~ory. ~ri1e .. Cla.sglfied Ad VDM 2:h1, 8 ~ .llD 3 PM. v&lcscent . home~ all shlft1. ·Sloan (7.\4) ~ ·-COSTA MESA fast pa~ ol1k.'t. Tri ~id stale test equip to' 542, Daily Po\01, P,O. Box eu,.;..., S,...ems ·, ~0NtROL Please call 642-<l598. R. E. BROKER 5401615 Inc .. 516-7181. oxt 225 ' -waml .. syltml. n .. 1560 Co< a M•M, Calil. 926l6 ' !TlU Armsirong Avendc COMP tiiENTS 2 OFFICI;, o;IRLS !f<od R. E. dlvlslolt -be-SALESMAN -"No Age SECTY PART TIME !jl q'Ulred rnln. 4 yrs exper. • GUARDS Sanll Ana. :am. 2581 f. i.:. r. n St:.1.:_~nt, _ -NEEDED Ing tomwd. Fut ~rw Limit". Full or p/tlme. 8 hrs d83. Stcretu'Y fii1r Somt mllfl' electronl~ Irvint! 11du8trilill_ Com_ plex N. or 9'n ' t'gG rrw1. at Ra.:tio telephone atsPl(tcb corp. Intertlrt in MVeral MALTBY lNTtRNATJON· ?resbyteriM Churdt lril c;ksll"tlble. lm~NI. OJ)('ni.r;,1 t ""dme or 2 722 M ichelson Or. Jamooree· '\!'t:tt be 25. Able to (hive areas. Mull. be t1tab. A AL OllZ:M_ICAL will bclp')'Ol.I Newport Bea.ch, Mutt te Me-Spoclalitlos P umc work. Any "1\lt. lrvlna, Collfomla '" equol oppor omploytr 'PPIY In p,,,...., •etlve member of a local build your own buMt"""· 1\dlled typlll " be able 1111 -Mo•rov1" <0n Mc .. 01 N.BJ S.A . an:a. Prcfc• 00 Ao Equal Oppor. Empl(>y<r YELLOW CAB CO. Rlty brd. 5!!8-1516, NI< for S.11 Chemical pn>duclJ to tal« d\ctatton , Call ,,... '"" ~ 0pP.,. Emplot."" "'' .:;, ';:;;;,0~n11~:.11u~; 133-2400, ext. :136 KITCHEN HELPER • ~f.f' !86 ~. 1Glh. c..,.1. M""" Mr. c.,,.. • l"""'''J!'' ur Proteclod ~:n;°i'li.mf:.' ~unit D..ECJ'RO~C Tnl Tf"·•,, Vl .\;('11 Univcn.-i.l Pro -EquR] Oppor. Employer ' ---·---OLDER c&IPLE RWEP'MON'lST I Typist, fi"· Fiber&. comm, sue--· tr p~ ~Orange Co. Mr" ,.. ... ,. -V"'t' 401 N .Hnr·l -,_.__-.,.._..;.,,,;.;~j Mature Indy w/eooldng f!X· MACHINE OPERATOR BoOOable, handy, 38 unJi•, part ttme. Murt be A ow. or appt c-11 an ~iAR.Y' •Steno PIMP.' ftnn _.., In """ ''!!I• • ·~·a. lnt~IV~• ~ P"..'" M Oii be "10<\J\· & noo 1. Machin<> 0..,..1..., oW!lng Nrwport H••'lhts. 646-466<. pel'llOnable. a •bl< 1o·wor1< pm. 49'>-4309 tloos '111","· Peraonal ~ -o/c ltldl dcsir<I \ov ~l 1'\"M 5 ~: TIME FOR fl•pr •·lol1l•. !-1.10hr.·OIAUonolnlll'O)Vth l<:-177-1£06 ~gm S\oJ>day• I< be avel!able.SALES Clerk>. full A part relt reqd. Muoi lypa wt•-"" fm ln lo • • .. 10 , Pm. ,..... DIS H WASH.,R pol<!nUal In th• "'°lktt1t --= • · C.11 Mrs. R-11. 962-<ll0'!0 llml for HaUmorl< carcl & w.p.m.. •h 80. Ml , "'°' -· lOo'l 0\)1'•' ---U!CK C A SH " l'Mn"'rced lil'•trtl' llidlli!try u=1'1mG..Jtew,_be!iil;I Soloo pletise leaV< Mm< a pftolte nttt obop. 1-HW• Irvine '"""'' Complex . .._ 1 .. ..., ,. ~bl 01".c r lt tiri. pm ~ d1·Ptnrt~hlc w/a lffdJ,,. 25 yr old co. tn E.V ..Plw.. J\PPllcaUona nuri\ber. ·• . Mall. Some ~.xp .-1 ~-for a~ .• -~-ii _. .... I 2 •• E... ~r • t·lcan I \ I the I~~~: .. , ] ;';1,0 UGH A A•111h • iu 1)"1~'"1 Apply ln pcrten · 110 t:ft. 131f,'1'l r.,,. ... 1Xld 11:rfll'ff. flF:CEPT'IONIST for beaut,v can JU\!e, 111)..1961. ....,... "Equal Oppor~ ~ ~ 1--· 1----ll:'~;;.:"'~.=••· ~-n::a;;;;J . turn 11><11 ~onk Into cash DAIL y PILOT 1 s~,'::'w &, c!1.~~~-N ·nrmm~Mltta"k""i•I~· Dtvl.1\olt OCllRD\ M>.rur:,trn (Tiil ?J6-3017, 0 .,,1on, 3 di.I" wk. Nice s ALE s w o M 4 N, Btul SICRITAR!_._..'..e _ ..,._ I!' -wtttrrDttttrPftor-Ctn!df'h!d-t--.,,--1 _ ~ ., · 6 ' ~ ... C.'CP't, ·~· San worktn1 conda, Good loc. Be.Hoon, Sa. Coul VJJ)Me, Type 80, ah or ~~~ call _. Ad. e~ _. WANT-A:., 11-;;,;~N=•~"PO=·-:;·::;;;;l~~i;t)l)~~J\c:!i1o!!'rla~, ..!c~. !>!!!'~'"~..:~:!Cl~c::m!!e~oto~!:G<~nmt::!~=".:.°'..:p, ... l_&A~pploy~lm~:!!l\'vlne.!!!!'!ALve_:._:· _:N_:B owr 21, must have Ale'S Gttt'I otc exper. &:30-5 ~ , '-'--'-"~:!!::!!!~-..:...--o ____ ....:,.....:.....;...:.= __ 111 i:.nnil~ Ent1 ... J• -1-114 tali 1122 ext 214 .• , , .<At WurCJlff Plua) ~-(n4J 51J&..'m0, • dt.YI wk. 833-8285. ' ~ ., • • I f ( . ' I I ( -· . - FREE PASSES ,. l You Could le On• of Today's Wlnliin 10 Pairs of $2 Tickets Given Dally FOR THE BIG RECREATION VEHICLE SHOW [jJ] I fill 1 ___ .. _ .... ,_··~l[U Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M&F 7lO SERVICE Sta. hianqer. SECRETARY Mu•thavemechanlcal knowledge. Good benellts. 'lr',e are looklng for a top Pd Yac. On the job training. notch 5eef'etary to leam the Sal + comm. Apply 8-Spm, ad biz. ll you ta k e 15922 Pacific Coast Hwy, shortMnd, type Inst & ac-H Stenographer Due to our f'll.pld growth, Varian Data ?ttachines has an immediate opening in curately & would likC' a .B. -OA>~Y Pll.OT • Find Your Name- II your name Is lh!M In • 1poclol od -It could oppur unclor ony cloulflcollon, so look ot them oll-i>hont 642-5671, Extonslon 314, i. twffft 9 a.m. •nd I p.m. to m.k• •rr•ngementt: to pick up your 2 free show tickets ot ony convenient DAILY PILOT .me.. Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT I~! Mwdwi «. I~ !...___ ...... _v .. __,J[i. 111 *Public: Auction DEALERS WELCOME I FRIDAY 7:30 PM SEPT. 21ST MiKellaneou1 Wanted 120 ORIENTAL RUGS J>rivtl.le party ncecl1 several used rugs. 64 ~ 83S--2700 Musical ln1trument1112 3 Llhts, 2 Time&, $1.00 * * DAR.LING, llltNi temalie Slan1ese kinen, box tratnf'd, 83.1-iH91 COCKAPoo·~=,..-.-..,,,,.----, ~,~,-mo-.1 lov~ t·h11dren, howte-broken, shots, nto\ing '19J...ml6. challenge, send UJ your 2 Sl'.."'RVICE Slll.. Attendants. n.>swne today. P.O. Box l Full & l p/time. Lile )691, Newport Beuch, Calil. "'ech. ~r. Apply Laguna ~· Chevron, 604 S. Coast 1-lwy; out Engineering area for a f.U:ET ~E\\I O\\'i\'ERS: Steno. You must be able to Rudy Larkin & Bob Brol-''11 CLASSICAL Guitar by ~1ontero Granada Sp.'iin $300. New-&H $200. Hardll'y used. 1800 Park Nev.-port, N.B. Laguna Beach. type 60wpm, have ex- perience in typlng technical NC\1·, used and ~·ned y .. Recepts $42.5-$800 SE \Y t N G t.1 A C ll l N E 1 With or y,•\thout shorthand OPERATORS, single nee-specitications and s I h1~======~~;;~;;~~~~~~;1-::::;;;;;;;;::=:1 lwTii.ture, applianct>s and should be at least 80. U you nilscellaneous! Llving roon\ meet these qualifications l -l[I] ~ sets, dinettes, lots ot maple, 5 P 1ECE drum set (pParl ) $50. For sale pbone 837-5945 MlWon ·Viejo Schwiru1 10 spd, Be$t offer. Dogs 854 1 · Small or lary:e ofrlees die, ov<!rlock, top rates, exp ~cct Clk, 1/p $36>$650 only 863 Production PL, and are looking for a <0m--· i I I -l " I II~· ) soeo.,_.o,, TV'•, w......,, dry. e PUPPY WORLD e Chihua_hUILS, Tiny Poodlta;, 1~encan Eskimo tSpHi>, Pit Bulls, Bull Tttrier, Otpw, Cockapoo, Keeshond and En&lish Bull Dogs. 100 l\1IXED PUPS1 ! S t u d S..'rvice r-.tost Breeds. pany that oHers: f _ V ~ -er. stOVt>S, retrlg's, tablrs, I ~--;;;;;;;;;;; :1 ~iiiiiiiiiiii~ii~I hidcabcd, IOl8 and lots ot • Modem Help Wanted, M & F 710 11 Ml&: itom•!! lh Con!l!t1 1t•tk>n N.B. 6-16-0008. JfREE F.REE FREE •SEWING MACHINE REYNOLDS !lute Y.'ilh case $75 531-13.17 11.J, Lil: ReinQer's Agency OPERATORS, swim wear. t<t' 4121 \Yesterly Plac-e 3760 Cllmpus Dr.. N.B. ~\lite l.15, NB 833-8190 54Q-4511. Facilities 1-~-----A_,P,_Pl_la_n<_ .. ___ 80_2 Giroge Salo 812 MASTERS AUCTION \V AIT~Bluc Beet, Ap-- 12 STRING Martin hard case DeAmond pick-up $ 3 7 5. firm. 675-7444. • Basic and ply in person. art 4pm 101 BRING eash $35. Frigidaire. QUALITY -Housebold items M • Medlc:al 21st Place. N.B. Super. 8 cu. fl. & 3 cu. ft. incl contempo tum, .lamps, ifornierly \\lindy'sl a1or WHO WANTS TO W~RK? freezer. ln use now, Avail. tables, small a~pliance~, C0lt1E BRO\VSE ,\ROUND + Ufe DRIVE A CAB! Mon. 9/24. 673-19?9. col.or TV, bike, antiques, 011 20Th!n ~ewpot·t Blvd. SHOE SALESMAN I IMMEDIATE CASH OR SALESLADY ~ COMMISSIONS P/Un1e, l'xper. prerd, but Open Eves: 53.1·5011 GUILD Acoustic Guitar , Mcxlel Dl5, Xlnt guitar \v/case. ~. 644-681li DOBIE, 2 male, 1 red. 1 blk. Gr. Pyreneei;:. 2 shaw, 2 pet. $75 Love Priced. lilartlncrest ;:rs Kennels. 546--0989 I natiooally-lamous Knapp not nt"c. Salary open. • S k P h CHOOSE your hours, W'Dl"k ~uilding Mllter.1als 806 pa.m~gs, water bed, man)' Behind Tony's Bldg. ~lad's. toe WC GSe for Youraell, be .....,, .. own misc items. See at Alh;pace Cos1a Mesa * 646-8686 Shoes part Of' wn time. Apply In r.;son only ery high cash commis,,ions Th t I '1lus bonuses. benefits. Your e ery 6\\<n business. No Invest-=~"'~-~E=·=· ~177lh~S~t,_C~M~= ment. Fn!e selling and train-STATIONERY Store in CdM I ing kit. Ralph P. Kelley, needs saleslady f/time,-5 gept, OXll 2, Knapp Centre, days. Xlnt working conds. J-e Surplu1 .Bullding \Vhse, Corner llarnilton &,.,...,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,~ • Profrt Sharinn bossbe • Men or \\.'Om!"n· Can ?-.IATERIAL. lOOO's of NEW Newland, H.B. 11-6 Daily,1~ '21 slightly handicapped. Space· S..21. Call 968-8696 • 12 days a year Ne a 1-<;z_:~ AgAp~arance70. ='. ~~~~~. r~~i~~ aft 6. ~fust sell immed. • • Vis, rel'""-', e ~ to . ~-. C paid YGCatlOft Supplement your income. ing, windows, etc. ASSETTES G A R A G E SIDEWALK Bundy F1ute Artley 1'1ute 545-6288 --A~L~-TO SAX __ _ ""'' 721 BASSET Hound puppies, AKC Registered Champion ~-0070 beauWul. ( 7 1 4 ) kl!t'OCkton, Ma. 02..:n. Especially floe clientele. Pbone Francis-Orr, 6T:>-1010 ERVlCE Slation Attendant for appointment. .FJtime day shift. Must do Hte mech. 1-''ork. Prefer smog Ile. Sal + comm. Don's Guil Service. 590 s. O::iest Hwy, Lag Bch. • 6 d -r Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a BUILDERS SURPLUS SALE C-60, C·!ll 5IX: up SALE ays . a Y-day. Apply In per.on, 2406 So M . St s A. Blank or c h r i s t i a ~ • I Y U Cab Co 186 E 16th · am " · speakers, Chuck Smith, HaJ pa id SICk eave, e .JW ., . Mon thru Sat lO-S Linsey and others. Vinyl lOCO's ot it'ems, % price or St .. Costa Mesa. TI4 : 546-1032 cassett~ hoJittrs 75c up. Sat Jess. Sa'lurday only 10 AM- Office Furniture/ Equip. 124 EXECUTIVE Spindle Top Golden Maple desk, w/bllln bookcase ptus s~· klf\i matching credellUl $615, offict:-rt'frig. $80. 6«>-4400. SA VE A HOMELESS PET Black Lab, Dalmatian, -~ Afghan, Pit Bull. 49'-<853 I You !JU'Y be the one ~ are \VOMAN 35 or over. No ex-C•meras & only 9-4 ONE WA y S PM. Bayside Center on looking ror. per. necess. Min. wage dur-Equipment 808 LIBRARY & PROMEDIA, ~de Dr. at Jamboree. Plea•• Apply Iri Penon in.. t r a i n I n g . Deal 1533· Monrovia NB -l\IOVING Saler-Green cormr STOCK CLERKS SILKY Tcrrier.5 ttrnalea. No 1 reaa. otter rehmed. cau 832-~ or ~178. ~PVICE St.a: Attendants. 1 1f'"ull 12·9 pm & 1 p/time. I ~eat in appear. Can tra , Sharp man. Aj;ply moms. 12:>90 Newport Blvd .. CM ' SERVICE Sta. Attendant Some exp. prefen-ed ""Ortqng \vith electronic components. ~Id krow color code. Ap. ply in perso"l. COMPUTER AUTOMATION, INC 18651 Von Karman Irvine, Calil. 92664 .-... -... KOWA 6. camera. 4 F" Uo--'/walnu bl OrO>ntact B. Kralka w/medical profession by ~·flLY: Daniah din rm sec u1u t ta e, phone from office in Ncwpt w/telephoto & wide angle set w/bufiet, bunk beds, Chen;> Magnavox Hi-Fi, lenses. $.175. Call 673--8151. 1 win h'--••-- EXEC $\YVI chrs $15/25 Sc-c ohrs $8/24 Desks $20/90 Pien.-e 867. \Y 19 Clif 642-3408 AKC Silky Terrier, males, $100. 6 wk!, darling!!! -Bc:h. No selling. ~ hrs. e ee edger, lamp, much se &' mac 111e cauu111:t, Start 3:Mpm. 6 4 6-4 O 7 I '72 POLOROID 440 Camera, more! 17351 Santa ?\-tali.a dral'tlng table. Portacrlb, l·YEAR old female AKC beh\'119 am & 4pm hardly used, f70. St., F.V. pr~ child's chain, dresser. Plano1/0i;rn1 126 Lhasa AJ>IO. ~ )dda VDM \VOMAN "'ho works day 842-9460 anytime Double bed, ex. IGng mat-$100. Call: 645-4377 I p/tlme nltes &: wknds. ?.lust be e:tper. Hourly wage + 'comm. Don's GI.lit SelVice, 590 S. Coast Hwy, Lag. Bch. ERVJCE Station He Ip l wanted, ExP'd, Top pay, lmmed opening. 300 East 17th St., C,M. Sl'UDENT I Mdow I Alone? Want p/time job, dirmer incld? S2 hr, 4-8pm, Mon-- Fri. Cook d in n er . hoUSC?kecplng, Own transp. ~134 aft 6pm STIJDENTS WANTED Hourly WRgl!, + bonus. Part time. 835-0566 2m Michel-Dr. Irvine, Califoml• 133-2400, oxt. 336 time to be companion for 11 RETINA IlA. 35mm HouMhold Goods 814 tress & box 8 Pr i n g 5 • f ~ Organ lessons BEAUTIFUL female SprirW· )T old girl eves. Free rent, & case. Xlnt. $4.l. PATIO chai It pad$~ 24 546-34l3 er Spenlei, 18 mond\ old. w room. 6'5-5918 67J.-0734 nd 1 ,ae 1 b · " WANTED-FREE, As L-As You Like I ~aj>en. 642-4907. rou pa e g ass ta le top BROKEN UP -··• -YARD MAINT. TRNE Furniture 810 $12. 673-lm. 1 SIDEWALKS Non·players. & pla)'ers wel-GERMAN Shepherd, male. Good opportunity for young Jewelrv llS t.~mc to attend Tuesda)' Beige tan A blk. Shots A Equal Oppor. Employer roMcicntlous man. Health BEAt.rrYREST spring and · 1 WILL HAUL AWAY night a1 7:30 PM. We wan! llcenae. $50. 847-7029. ""'"""""""""""""""""'I & lif(' ins. Boat !{Specialist's. mattress, full size. Chain, e 6£N£ROUS Can S37-5003 aft 6 pm & wk-evccyone to learn to play SAMOYD. Female, 14 wits . 2439 \V. Coast \\')'., N.B. J a m.p s, ch 1 n aware, • ends. the orxanr All materials old. Needs a good fam!b'. TAKING1 applicatioCns for: 645-0901 . silverware, king.size ~~ lw:nished. $50. Call 60-7567 5 lines, 5 days for as. Call i today • • • 6(2..6878 Want ad resUlts ••••. 642-5678 ~~s~.ryUp~~~: YARD rental man, mid 2>'s bedspread, Bicycle Ex-e REWARD e WATER SOFTENER Tooi ~cl~~_crhargl e. SABµ;_ COLUE PUPS. J', Outsiders. New plant, many prerd. Some mechanical ercisor, Mink stole (Natural ~ Never Been UHdl ' COAST-M•U-S·IC 6 wbCallo~Jt ~· ' I A CONWNlort' tMOf91'\NG SEWING cua FOlt THE CAl. ON-ntt'GO.: For an ad Jn Woman~• World Coll Mory Beth 642-5678, ext. 330 Seamed·To-Sllm Belted Topper! 7000 benefits. Apply at 2323 South exp c r . 4 08.)' wk. pastel). Many ot her LU "!_,iW East Main St'. !-"--Mo" Red-E-Re-ntals, 646-7401. household items. 302 Morn-For return or any tn· etime factory guaranttt. Nel-'·port Blvd. at Harbor IRlSH , <>~-" l Ca Rd formation Je.,n.-to retum Regu1arty tells for $695. Will "-.... a lllesa Setter, F, AICC $4 1 Fri.~--n9am'4pm_ ng nyo n . ........r. ·1 ""~ ~· c•·-1"-~10~-~~~~'"~=~~~~!'_:'!'!!'C,. ~I••·-------· (ShottclitfsJ CdM. 9-Q>M of a gold !our leaf clover se: I cheap! _..,.,,o. .-..ur-7W J• .. _.. ,.,.uo: TELEPHONE appt. FINE d t •·-••·-pin, approx. 2 incl>es In --PIANOS-ORGANS w/yud51&-3618altortpm (· secretaries or _·solicitors I ... d,._ II~-I Drexl 1~f:o or ..:_~u·u;~";_ diameter wtth I e w e I e d -IS6 ____ """"Ii;& ..,,.. • DISHWASHER, Kenmore Newaused. Greatte.lection: -needed 16 yrs & above, no Annoin! cilrved dome top ~ In center; alao, combo. Outdoor abed, cor--Co ----------exp. ~· Good pay & S41S, Sota-a-·~--. gold loCket (was on chain), · 2 wardrobH, .2 mpet:etiw prices. Open OlDER Gentle Ce l din I benefits. For appL call Ci~ ...,.., approx. Ute sb:e of a nickel, 1 ~bl ' 1 ~~ 1 3 EYea. &: SUndays, The bcsf Mor I an /Qydeedale m. _ . Cbtld's or ~e Chest $.l}. -'---~bed , In ~p• FLA. ru e ta esla, ,ca..._ tv, Cleals a.re alw•"S a.t' • terosted in ~ bo'me In -~~Th~ 510 S--Tues, AnilqU.s -.. --a«r -~~rf J4Je g u-r tar• . ~ are deePi;~ ~ured !::.'· &>i~~Jm§-"N1g..~ -WaU1chs-~Mu11C City country call ~- Fay St---family memenlUii & the k>Sll port Bl., C.M. South Corurt Plaza 540-2830 BACK Bay borwt, st&b&ed I Tool & Die Maker . -·~ EARLY Amer. lov<>sea~ $.15. la lrreplacea,.., PLEASE, FAC 0 boorded Exercfle .,... -11688 San Felipe St. Naugh. ea,,, chair w/ot-PLEASE help ll Yo• hav<> T RY· CLOSEOUT -1 s iv s•~ s A u-.' 1 : ~. build & ~~pre-. Fountain Valley toman, $65. Cust -Span any infnrmatlon -642-3589 Dresles, tops, fabrtcs. trims. WURUTZER, m electric 57199 · ..... ,., · · ...... : cislon progressive dies 8..'I You nre the 11,,tnner of breakfast set w I up ho I Eves. &: weekends. SeJe starts Thun., Sept. lOl:h.. ~ 0~ best oUer. : wdl ':' "'°"' run form & TWO FREE TICKETS """"""' $300. Sett clean gu QUAIJTY Indian Je..iry Gypsy o! Callf., 817 w. l'llh PIAN_ O erW_A _ _PNTm.E_D ~AraColblant, 111~.~· -stamping dies. Ahlo, make to the stOV\!: $250. 963--:liOl Squagh concho, bracelets; St., O:lsta Mesa, writ 8.. ....... .,. • .. ~ .... K:U. f-1 jigs, fl'Ctllres & models. RECREATION MEDIT. &?la & loveseat, rings CB!sbeeJ. signed. 548-9ei. <n4l 9'3'l-O"J59 Best oner. 963-21.31 I t ~~= .. ~ct"ll<'nt \\'Ork.-VEHICLE SHOW lamps, pictures, area rup. Reasonable. Pvt pty, ESl'ATE Sale: Entire Sportlftf Goods l30 jl STACO SWITCH, INC. SEPT. 19TH·23RO ~imat~~cl~~t ~~ =~=· Ill ~~~ ~: GOLF, matched, reef.stued, lf•JP) 1 1139 Baker, Costa Mesa ANAHEIAMt 's"'TADIUM cond. 673--5f78 tures. Kinas Place, •pro Irons No1'1 2, :r, 4, 6, 7, l !.i·~t'Ol~~"'~=~-~jj-~1'.~·~11 · ~mu · DUNCANPh,yfedlningsulte, Exotic African ApParell N!wport Heights. 8", 9 plus dbl wedp putter. Equal Oppor, Employer 2000 State College Blvd., 4 chairs{ Westinghouse eye cln::>9e t.rom elegant gowns Friday/Saturday 1().5. $25. or 1 96&--21.11 ----· Please cal~ ext 339 level oven range, electric, or Kattans' tops w/hot DECORATOR baa 119 ydg. 5'2" Bonier Knee Boord Boeh, Gener1I TRAINEES to clalm your tickets. other Items. 556-719'9. :n10l pan~, cottons & ailb, Sott lime creen eykln short like new cond., J. ·WiH---tratrr--d.......,.dabl-en •North Count...~Toll~ b'Ce SW Birch, S.A. Hghta. ~ .... __,.~~· ah~g..:~1U _)'.,l'd~~ -S65.-*-67""1.9&~. .-A.-C rk-~ ~..-·-'"""''' 'T -KING siie""""lfea u t-yrest ---of'M!~w a ...... -.i, or-Gtaeles t~ ~ lSli ya& Off-TV R-~· HIFI 24232 L1P1I• L•ne to become injection molding number is ~1220). Su ttres5 1 own Kattans & De.shlkis white pJUlb. ~ or , -•o, ' Ml ion V'·j operators. Afust have own LOADEDI TERRIFICI ldp~~! ma M-1 "'°11n trom $12 to SlSO. See us at 54IJ..465(. . 5..,_ 136 •• ,. o <'ar be able to stand entire o ~-new. us se . Pepper Tree Faire 1514 W -'\'ou are t.he wtnner or shlit & be able to \\'Ork NEW LOAD INl l Makeoffer.55U7'36 Broad A 'bi ·CONVENTIONAL cab RCA, Zenith, Sylvania; TWO FREE TICKETS j1 weekends if necessary. American & E~l!sh oak j MAPLE dropleaf table Thurs~iSat J,,~ ~ ~ ~r for dietel truck. Lartut• aelect6on co Io r, to I.he . Openings on Dayshlft ($1.95 tables. chairs, sideboards. w/1a.zy susan, 6 c:haira, 6. Santa Ana Fry to built 16 u 4 wooden blaclc: A white TV a: steftOS RECREATION I to start), Swing shift ($2.08 French loveseats._ corn-matching hutch $15 0. Manchester. ~~=ts6 :· N~ = in. So. Calll. Priced leu VEHICLE SHOW to start) & graveyard shift modes, tables, cha:irs, ere-549-1773 • me 8 than the diaoountera w/3 )T $ I ($2 23 to sUu1) "D~•--. 30 dcnzas. Oriental art Rue KENMORE Sewtn& machine xlnt cond. 645-4302. pkture tube, 1 yr partt a: EPT. 19TH-23_RD I' d , . ,......_, in Rosel'-ood Burl piano,· at The FOR sale: small convertible $60. Attachments. Polaroid CORTIS Mathes Stereo aeivice. Most '74 models In At the ' a,ysAppty 1 e.m-4 pm Bizarre Antiques, 2500 New-f;r~~S25~~i~~ a::;~ ~~erat.en~~r' ~ Thomasville bedroom set: stock. •73 models priced to ANAHEIM STADIUM I'. * Orahge Coast Plastics * port Blvd., CM. JuUe 962_7865 $lOO li18· W ~ triple dresse.r .I: tv.-o night clear. Caah 90 plan or terms X(I() St.ate Colleee Blvd., 850 Wem: 18th St. THEO. Haviland, cyt glass, Na' . nt, stands & Pll.tiO furniture, All to 36 mo. ABC Color TV, Anaheim f Costa Mesa Calif misc 8' GOLD leatherette sofa, · · In exctllent c 'ondltlon. 9)21 Atluta, or 19046 Pleue call 642-:iSTS ext 339 I, ""!!!!l!!!!!..,!!!!!,!!!!!!!!·..,.,,I · Call S42-899J walnut trim, reclining chair SURF-a-aft surfboard for 900-1124 Bro o khlU'St, H1mtbwton to claim .)'OW" tldcf:t.. r • ~ nAINEES after 5,~ lrg. ottoman. 2 yn. old. sale, 7' burgandy/><llow AUTOMATIC GA RAGE Bach, 963-3329 or 116J.$9, !North County Toti ir.e 1. OAK ~·ble· Sleigh bed Cost $600, sell S200. 6U-9006. !~~....., xlnt cond, S 6 5, IX>OR OPENER. Ftnelt B&:W Motoroht. T.V. Exe. number is 54~1DJJ, Immed openings for en . """' . ' C _, n W I ut _., known brand 0 -•-•• _ .... , · __.__ VHF UHF SCRAM LETS • all ,_, .. _ worn Hi-Boy & dreuer w/mtr. rwue u a n . . 4..::5. .-v. ........iung ox-uei-. ' . on s1"!u;· Acce~!lng ex-rors, foot stool, xlnt cond. like new $100 A new black metal office Special $139.95 installed Rtteiver $25. phone 497-2142 • \·, per. molding machine opn. 6#-0962 67>2328 desk, chair, file cabinet, w/S yr guar, 893-3571 Ol' John & trainees. Oean. lite work * COUCH & LOVESEAT * also %. HP Sears paint 530-1415. "·12""STEREO===--eom=--po-nc-n"t~S"'y-1. ANSWERS I in new bldg. Shift bonus FOR. sale Solid Oak Hoosier sed both f 1155 sprayer, 540-7212. FALL clothes, g 1 f 1 w a re ,• .11''. Call Min, alt 5 pm or • ,'· prem. paid for nite work. cabutet & Oak Hall Tree never u , or · :lid Fri 9fi8..2211. OJll)or. for advancement, *~* Usually home. 968-7910 'f"~~· ne;ij;. G~~ == fu;_,:11~.ti:;.,e . 1Y ·• Throa.t _Paper_ Cable-il Tam-Jpm, 3 p m -11 p m , A , 2 FIRM twin beds $35. ea. an.I , __ , ra I f ... !~.: .,,.....,lO 10w; CURTIS Mat h ea TV, Af'OUlll! -TRACTORS 1 llpm-7am pphencM 802 sofa, Jove-seat corner group arm aaw w swu ... , new ngs or J'L""'1 am .. AF/FM, recorded player I used to feel s:irry tot 1 : calU. lnjeclk>n Molding $100. 645-6858 S17S. 551-8380. pm. New Thrilt Shop, lt.5 E.' all tasether. ~. 557-'IJOO fannen who market beef and ' Irvine Indus. Complex FREIG!ff Damage Sale, DINlNG room set, Chip-MAGNUS Elect. Organ $15. 18th St., C.M. · pork, No more. They lll"e' now J 200 Briggs, c . Mesa washers. dryers, retrlgs, pendale, like new, xlnt cond. $3XJ Lu Vegas trip package STURDY chrome dreu driving Rolls Ro y e e . 900 TRAINEE TO S2.ri> HR ~sh~~.., Re~~ Call 644--4221 ~~~ lot $100 or bst ottr. f!~~. ~OC: f.i:u.sti; I ,,.. to You If I ' ~~~E Fr s HER 4 !: C 0 10 r fu 1, cozy atop Company wants. type of $39.95, Beach City Ap-EARLY American Sofa, good MOVING : E\lt't'ything °""S, input. Ideal for small lhop. _ . ,__ J _.:.., ' penon who want! U? learn pliance, 31i23 W. Warner, condition, $50. TV lo 0 -$25. 642-2399 an 5 PM • LI 2 Tl .. 00 ,....,.__,poWU OhnM>n, ull'tOp -t: ll!'PR"ltes all thru the year! the wire & cable business&: S.A. (1 Bick E. of Harbor) 567-5742 & , veseat. records, piano ., Mt, mes, .,.. rack, xtru uk:lna $350, •' ~ 41" ..,u Crochet fashionable belled grow with the co. Best of . more. Low pr I c e s . NEW Blcco sewtna; machine Lowrance F\sh L 0 • k . t 0 r 1, \lt""'iMt lllM-r... topper. Make easy 4-.lnch woridng conditions RaJses KENMORE washer, GE FURN: Complete hsetul Incl, 64&-1741 with attachments will tell LOVABLE 1 yr. old bllc/wht w/wand S120. 5 s 1-3 8 2 9 ·'. granny 1 squarer while you bene!l:itB &: unuwal ~ ro; washer, Whirlpool e 1 e c dishes. beds & toys. 130 WON on TV show _ $244 or trade for Rood carpet, female, "people" cat Slx>ts, Evt1. ·look pounds lighter in thl! ~ ..... TVP. a_Emae 7tag~O ·. right person. d~r, 175all la~odf ~i xlnt Pearl Bal. Is. 675-0158. World Book encl. ·set, $170. ~:S etc. 10382 Samou box tmd., will • p a Y . Li"&'°· ""ro=WE=R,.---.,.boa--:t-.,"'7'1 "'t b .i -·~~-sLIM ,_, .......... ..,.. uo: mlO JOB AGENCY co . . ~·""' every, 6' COUCH, blue, like 9£?W $35 Washington Forge ·• · · 644--0139 trailer, --~, ·-~.de paint •' 111<A1n£ou·•1v-u.n:: s "" •••-~•Si,..• t• lncJ--uded. guat 546-8672 847-Bll5 rm 'nl ~ ~ °" •JO;:'-"U Mllll • tsWt thanks to seaming •gn:MTY.VaVg CENTS 3153nlSt.,Hunt1ngtonBeach · conct ~·u· still ess set_.. i1<M""O.l12. BEAUTIFtn. fmported FREE Gennan Shepherd, $120. 3~ hp motor, $35. ctreaks cbwn the fron'l for each pattern ... add 25 536-1439 WESTJl'iGHOUSE frost-tree 6'5-140"J * * BEAUTY SaJon equl~ ladles hand begs:; casual to fem. 4 yrs. old, l<M!s 919-1341. I ut intemiptlon! cent• for each patttrn for TRAINEE-Young man for retrlgt, avocado grttn, only G1rage 5111 112 1nen1, xlnt cond., prlv ~. forma.1 a'I kolon, wbolnale children, well trained. * BOAT WA.XING * .j \1'1nled Pattern 9 3 4 0 : Air Mall and Special H:andl· drapery installation. Apply 3 mos. old. Reas. ~7-5930 213: 923--1"5"5 ~ thru ~pt: only. 962-18ll Eves. Will polish & wu 1J'I slip or • omcn'8 Sltes 34, 36. 38, 40, trut· Otherwi9e lhird-claa 1618 Ohms \Vay, Costa ft1na aft. 6 PM BABY Item a : furniture: POOL Table 3*x7 Slate * PUPPIES, Dane • Dober. on traller 919-1451. il .--44, 46, 48. Slardze it1l.,}1nc"""h ddelivery , will take thret! TYPIST w/transc•o'bing ex· W A SH E RS , d rye r , clothes: tons and tona of '&: ' n~•-' LIQUOR Cabinet light wood :?I--5/8 ;rr • Rcbl mJsc. 1603 Haven Pl .. Nwp new cover new •wih, louve doot. rf" hlah 56.: man-Shepherd mix. 8 wks. BCNts/Mlrln• t~.,.:ir. s CEN'l'f! AfT': B~~~he Seo°fn.~ ~~·. te='; &&ge~~ 5t~· 839-ii2o gu:"r ~~ts, 645-5635, Frl lhru ~n;::·:~-:Stenld ~7~9'' 'deep, $ it5. :!;:!u::·2 male, 1 Equip. 904 •• ch pattem _ add 25 Pltm'. 1115• Needlecraft -Freeway S.A. Mrs. Hosklns $20. Refrigerator $35. Tom feml. Black & wht. -Poodle NEW outboard At o tor 1 Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsea sss..8333 TRINKETS l.c Treasures, Sat ~l· SCZ..1464 MISC. Items for sale Incl, mlx 4 ks ld ·b~. $1J"()rG, d\n.b!:e, M:Jira:ic~~~eifan3l~ Statk>n, New York, ~N.Y.\.iiiioiiii""iii"'"'"'iiiiiiiii\ Rent We1her1/Dryer1 & Su\c17432 Madera Ln. ' room rug a, po r t . · w ~. Anodlzt'd &I JTeQ • otL----'•-•L"-" -1--10011. Print N•unc, AcWreY. URGENTLY $2. \Vk. 1'"ull malnt. Hunt. h. Ewrything from q_9_1neL F ""~-E MCnBERSHIP0. , dishwasher, b al hr 0 0 m block_' A! 11 i::iJ. ;_ $'1K 1ft'nor'-ul-U'u~ ,Ztp. Plteen N'.mW . * 639-1202 * baby clothes to a dune bug-u v .......at try ub. ~lve1 962-9767 3 KTITENS. Just Jcrt mother '"' 'very wW tPe thl'ef NEED L ECRAF1' '12'1 gy. Asking $1-akl. 497-1213. (2l 1973 SUZUKI TS-l2'S Gift to good hon\e. i:.cll $30. 546-700& aft 5 pm. ~it:n ~,.:theSeD3i.~ Crochet, >mil, etc. 1'ret NEEDED WA$HEk • DRYER HOUSEHOLD Jte11111, 10fa, 12.\'.15' AREA rug. Shng, light uMet 600 ml. e11i. Xlnt conc1'. Call 673-6403. -BONZER RADAR Jltt.OT, 442, Pattern Dept., dlrectlontl, SOc. Portable Dishwasher desk, mlntbtke./ 3607 oran~: Good cond. $ll5. S9'T5 both, or $500 ea. MARMADUKE, amart, oom· $1.4!Xi. complete. MIU.ER ml West 18th st., New 1••taat Mliaune lktot. -$50 each * OC&-6848 Sauulito Dr. f f or m e.1' l v Ca11 9li8:000! &'D-172'1 panlonftble, orange & white. ~L-\RINE SALES . 64&-CSl ~ N.Y. lOOU. Pr\nt ~~· S1 ~ knots, p&t· 50 TRAINEE SMAU.. good Cheflt freezer, Seatoam), CdM. Sat l SUn, SLIDING g!U1 doors OI" used Miscell•n"vs male cat, 8 ,vQ, Sof>.1077 SMAU. 4 cyl Cra.y Martne WAD .&DDRl:IS with 1....U. · 0.-...t 8oelt • $!r0. 9/2'l & 9123. glass to replace,broken win-W ted 820 OALMA110N 5 )'I' old tree lo lnboani engine-. Cm.t tar !!\'.i_~m: and Sl'Yt.11 Ltnn bY ¢""'"' Pat· ASSEMBLERS 847-&23 < Fl).MILY SALE' DL<beo, dows. $1~ Panel. 5511010. on _ &ood horn<. ~or awo aall. !W8-3161- ...,.,....a. temo. $1.00. KENMORE Elect dry<r, &d trunks, old fuml!urn. Y0t1 21 " 7.F:r<ml b/w Coolol• WANTED-FREE S57-3009 BUDA < Cyl. dll eng. $m SEE' ~ ~ l ck OoinpWe l1tda.C Gift e.olc Q)nd $35. Hoover Vacuum no.me II! 17$32 Van burc!n, TV. $35. workl. 646-2393, '-ft BROKEN UP FREE Love Kittens, nll f'ol-CMC &-Tl Blocks A paru ~~·-trom =--"'°"' than 100 allto --VOLT $15. !67-7300. ~i:;::11~on Beoeh 1°1!""' 6 pm. SIDEWALKS on. Call 956-rns or bn1Jruns, M&-2\Wl ng.Summ ... catalog. AU 1l;:ptat• All ... -• lnttont Poroonntl TIME FOR WANTED USED COMPTON'• •ncyc!opedla. WILL HAUL AWAY ~-Small Boot Troller irZJl ~ING BOOK r.·~irrt ft111 Boole• • 50c:. 38f1Tean:~::e=106 BRICKS -CALL fi:'~~. ~v:Wr.F.d1· ':.ts B37.$))3 Aft 6 pm a: wk· ~'tc~~t:r:~1~~1~i~fl\"i'n~~~ :., •• Power se:: today, """' 11>1nom1w. !loot ot It Prtlo .lf&1'aOL Newport-Beach 546-1141 QUICK CASH 17CM564 SURFBOARD. Gorden & ~ fem w/1hort ho lr. 592-2·122 """'-Ai<rv As HI 0 N 50<:.-F.qual -~ Empl~ THROUGH A Fill. Sal onty-i<MU,11 of Stnith ,. Watonkot• DI•· WANTED USED FOUND Gra,y Mau ... M•l• %>' M13ERGLASS "ll ~·· Qntll llook t . 18 .. It..... DAIL" PILOT llOOdl<•. To,. " Mlac. 5n mond Tall. m-=: BRICKS --CALL tlttilf'V«rfovtnlt."'l!..arir rwc~ ' jjij--- BOOK ,,; l~tndteds 0 1 50r. "Make Roon1 ror O..ddy" 1 rrts Ave, CdM Un alley) CJULDRENS play ho u 11 e 870-4564 good home. ~ Cort · Mtake otter. &46-6344. l'Mlll:"arc ju1t a phono :;:asm q.ut 9:-' 1 ... : : : ~~haffu~ni~ WA.NT AD LIDO Carago Sale/moving, wanted,· please Ph 0 n e • WUn.t.JTZER. 120 elcctrtc * N~ home · black pup-50" ~IAltOGANY dillpl•c:e-- ta11 away -fC..5678. Quftt. tor 1'1MllJ'• Uttnc , · wttb a Dally Pilot Cl•s•lfied 642-&6 7I = ~ e:--Lldo ~~' =ED ••• •• •• eo.MI =::t"' ~ p~t oUtr. ~I~ wkll, l\OOnt.bl\l! ~ent hulls:= .... CaU-11. • • • .. ) ' • . - .... , ( ti , _DAILY PILOT Thu~y, Stplember 20, 1973 .• • • ' " , .. ~ ., . '~?!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'F!! .... ~ .... ~.~ .. ~!!!!'!!!! -~=-~I _..~ llil .._I ._ .... "'_ .... __.!~ I 1§1 I lf~l ~' ___ ..... ~,§J~1 ·[-l§l I I~ I -..... • C:tt, Power Cyclu, BikH Trucks 962 Autot, 1"'f0!'!!'.. '70 Autos, Imported 970 --· lmponM TOYOTA '70 Autos, Ustcl 990 Autot, Usid 9o0 Auto•· UHd MAVERICK 2f' S£A RAy 'Tl, CUddy cabtn, l!O, 235hp, 01.tC, ~Coven, !taller, CG tQutp- ped. VJ-IF radio. $6600. OayJt .586-1610, e~~ & "'k(!l'ldll '544-3574. S t ~s 1 ------BMW __ c_oo_,_,. ______ ,._ 1 ·64 CHEVY plckur) 1; ton. 18' CHRIS.CRAFT In n1 lnt condition. Full canvas top, m mplete galley, ht>ad. Mu.!11. ~ lu appreciate. $4995 firm. \Viii 11rrange easy financing. Private party. 673-ZllJ or 871-42:24. • :li' O\\rENS Sedan, im· mac., live aboard, Galley, aalon. head w/shawer. Sips G. Lois of n1ahoga n y 846-8173 14' BOAT -Fish & Ski, .nav. lit<'s, 30 hp. Johnson, remote conlrol, elec !tarter . Incl. trlr & <'IC'Cl"~. $390, 220 Vic- loriA, C.l\t. * 20' COCKTAIL TUG • 4 Cy!. inboard · Air Whistle A·l sl\apc • $1495 Bogardus • 548-Z'J92 Boats, Rent/Ch1rYr 908 LUXURY 103' Sailing Yacht, full y equipped, winter r ales. 213: 47~. Boats, Sail 909 ** 14' F I Bl!RGL ASS sailboat. Good condition. \V/tr aite1•. $275. 833-S209 eveui.ngs. itHODES 33-Classic racing champion "llANAHULL" ·Top condition. $6fi00. Ph: .673-1232. 14' SKIP J ark Sloop. F ully equip. w/trailer. Go od cond. Must sell. $ 8 0 0 . G'ra-4477 • GHOST 13 fbgl sloop. 1 n10. old. Used once. Race equip. trlr. Sac. ,846-291.3 DRAGON 30' SLOOP *MINT CONDITION* $2400. 962-3402 HOBIE 14 Late niodel. perfeet cond . Best otr. 646-9303, 675-09!!3 LI.DO 14. I \\'/cover & trailer. $600. Call 644-2823 CATALINA 22, Pop-top, out-I bM, 1 yr old, extras, trlr. Excel cond. 837-28.10. 36' TRI. Hulls & plans. $1250. Also Ul' outrigger, Sail away $150. 673-8043 &o5 SAILBOAT. Xlnt cond. Built in 1971. Brand new sails. 2 rudders. 613-0139. • BfCYCLE SP!'JCIALS * Nfl\\' 10 IP from ....... $59.95 Used 10 ~P lrorn ....... $25.CXI Bike cleaning .......... $4.50 Beach Blcyi;:le 806 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa. 6'ia-7282 IDEOn Track Bike, 21%" Irame, Campy equip., silks, \\'OOI ~·eat s.uit, glows; lihOcs, all At! new. $2fi0. for 1111 . 642--21)0!) eves. 2S" "ROLLF'AST" slandar<l bl ue V.'oman.~ bicycle rarely used excellent· condition, call after 6 pn1, 646-3444. '73 CB 350 IJonda, low miles. run.'I and looks excellent, ln1maculatc c..'Ond. $600. Matt 8.1.1.Jtl6 '72 HONDA CB 500 custom m uJners 15 lnch re8r wheel \\'Ith Pirelli radial 8,000 n1i. Very clean, $1,100, 557-9239. '69 KAWASAKI 350, 200 n1i on rl'blt eng, new pa int. Xlnt cottd $450/ofr 548-29'.iS Bill, or 642-4073 Tina i2) 1973 SUZUKI 1'S·l25, under 600 mi. ea Xlnt cond. $97;) IX>t'h, or $500 ea. 673-tm - '72 KA WASAKI 350 F9, Bel· Star helmet, many f'Xtras, 2200 nii., $750. Mint con- dition! 548-89Zl YAMAHA 125 ATI $200. 673·4i17 Mobile Homes 935 !972 EXPLORER. Complete· ly ,self-contained. Top air conditioning. Excellent con· dition, under 10,000 mi. Still under warranty. $300. lake over payments. 963-5421. Motar Home• Salt/Rtnt e SALl:S e 940 • SERJICE • e RENTALS e EXPLORER or HUNTINGTON BEACH 18!..01 "lAll< Ill\;, B~? 800] HU~.TIN( Tr.:>N Rff•lH GMC Matorhomes 23' & ~· IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Orange Co.'s Exclusive Dealer SOLING Bill Barry Pontiac .~11 sa~lt ~a!~~ $2500. G~1C REC. CENTER 2000 E, 1st St., Santa Ana 14' Hobia <;at $st! 558-llJOO 847-1822 or (213) 592-5133 HOUSE on wheels, converted 26' NAVY WHALER '56 Chevy School Bus. rug- Live aboard 542-80I2 ged, beaut equipped, slps 6, '--~-~-----, $1800. 642-0034 Mt 6. bht 6 cyl. 3 lriOO. good cond. $G!i0. firn1, 49'2-9594 aft. 6: 30 pn1 except Mon & WOO, '59 OGDG E If.I Ton with sMll, V-8, 4 gpd, $350. 548--0!05 Vant 963 '68 tbevy Van 108. mags, custom paint & inte1·ior. $1750 * 846-90'17 '66 1'"'0RD Super Van w/'73 eng. Under v."'rranty. New paint , good tlres. 968-4837 Auto Leasing 964 Month~ Car Rentals $5. PER DAY 1st 1000 n1iles no charge Late models "'ith air. Sooth Coast Car Leasing 3000 West Cst. Hwy .. N.B. &6-2182, aft 5, 673-8269 Autos Wanted 968 TOP DOLLAR PAID IMMEDIATELY FOR ALL FOREIGN CARS WE ARE IN DESPERATE NEEO OF GOOD, CLEAN FOREtGN CARS TOP DO LAR-PAID FOR OR NOT! Call or come in to see us. NEWPORT IMPORTS 31{1(1 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. .U-9405 TOP'CASH · for clean late model cars and trucks ! Howcird Chevrolet MacArthur and Jan1boree Newport Beach 833-0555 \YE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS If your car is extra clean, see us first. BAUER BUICK 2925 Harbor Blvd. · Costa Mesa. 979-2500 WE BUY IMPORTED AUTOS BEST PRICES PAIDI Dean Lewis Imports · 1966 Harbor, C.ld, 646-9303 ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST G Excellent selection of pre- price re-evaluation 1nodels, DEMO SALE SAl.ES.SERVICE-LElA.SIN G OVERSEAS DELIVERY ROY CARVER, Inc. 234 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 546-4444 '73 BMW Ba vari a $1100 714: 735-7326 Corona CAPRI ~ NOW OWN THE FABULOUS 1973 CAPRI Sport coupe decor, body side mouldings, reclinin? front seats, contour rear seats, 4 speed transmission, po\ver front disc brakes, style steel \\!h eels, bucket seats, radial ply lil'eS. 2000cc eng. (GAECNB42801L OVERSTOCKEDl IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ~USTAFSON Lincoln-Mercury 16800 Beach at Warner Huntington Beach 842-8844 * (213) 592-5544 ' 1Home of the Viking" DATSUN WFRE HERE See us at ~tacARTHUR & JAMBOREE BIG SAVINGS ON '73 Den10s 510's Pickups 610's 888 Dove Newport Bch 833-1300 Open Sunday 1973 DATS~NS ALL MODELS IN STOCK BARWICK IMPORTS 33375 Camino Capistrano San Juan Capistrano 493-3375 or 831-1375 Boats Slips/Lloeks 910 e oale's J\folor Ho1ne Rentals ' 'T.J 23·26' M.H. & J\rinis IMPORTS WANTED '73 DATSUN p/u, shell camp. \VANTED: Slip or Side Tie Free n1iles 9 tiJ 9, 838-0900 for a 36' Sail OOat. PeninsuJa Trailers Travel 945 pret'd. 675-4691 --~·------ Orange County's er, am/fn1, mags, m any ex· TOP $ BUYER tras. Call aft er 4 p.m. Pri. BILL MAXEY TOYOTA Prty, 847-0077. Baats. Spee.;I & Ski 91l TRAILER-C lean 2'2' 18881 Beach Blv l. '72 Datsun P.U. Xtras H. Beach Ph. 847-8555 Cail 842-197'1 wknds 14 FT Boat' "·-trail er, 25 HP outboard, new paint $285. Call 586-1632 Kenskill, ashwood int. S.C. trees, grass in Newport Pk. 540-3880 WANTED ' Cadill a c ---~F~IA_T __ _ Fleetwood or Sedan DeVllle. Trailers, Utility 947 Low mileage, late model . --------- NEW 13' English Dory, 40 hp Private Porty. C., h '71 FIAT 124 SPIDER .Evinrude, new trlr, $1300. HEAVY duty 2 wheel utility 83G-9234 convert., red w/blk Interior, 642-6062: 642-3324 eves. trailer, $65. '~~~~~~~~~ 548--0416 I~ Auto Service, Parts 949 11•11961 FALCON transmission. • T111nsportatlon l';mmmmmiiiiii;~~ 3 speed stick $2.1. 1962 II Falcon radio $7. 963-4971 Campers, Sale/Rent 920 l\WVING~..musL sell '1Q \Veek-Ender ll ~S ' fully self.-contained camper inc jacks, die dow115 etc. Im· mac. $1700. 549-1547 14 IT. F ield & Strea1n 1959 camp trailer, good condition $375. 9022 Gettysburg Hunt. Bch., 968-9739 8' CAMPER, water, ice, stove. Make offer. 548-51ll 3'ZZf Broad St., N.B. Cycles, Bikes Scooters 925 Autos fur S. General 950 WANTED USED BRICKS -CALL 87(1.4564 Antiques/Classics 953 ---UNBELIEVABLE '50 F'ord Flathead Conv. G r eat shape. M i 11 , restoration $1095 Firm 675-ll69 '71 YAMAHA 90, only 800 mi. Recreatlonat Autos, Imported 970 ALFA ROMEO ALFA ROMEO SAAB , Buy ar Lease Sales -Sel'\'ice -Leasing • Rentals Fuel injection , 5 spd, All original, like new {690AFRJ T!lrar li ]lmpnt1!i f:.! '·' " "'''"'" ••• • • "' ' l h '°" ANGLIA '60 ANGLIA Engltsh Ford. Good condition $300 • 642-1708 • BMW CREVIER BMW Like new. Call Ken, 494-0052 Vehicles 956 or eves, 497-1832. ----'----'-'--Sales • Service. e Leasing l -';,=70C7.Y'CAM~AHA""~360=~E~n~d-w-o-STEP Va n, slove, hot \\'alet , 208 W. 1st., S.A. 853-3171 Many ex.tras. Xlnt conct. $551). monomatic, J:iea ter, new USED BMW'S 64&-0430 paint, rool rack. Just built, '73 BAVARIA (DEMO) must sell! Make offer! '68 XLCH SIJ TJ or offer. Xlnt 645-4336 or 557-9-11 7 '71 BAVARIA . running concl. 54(}-1312 days, '72 Tll Zl.J!..S43-0587 nites. Trucks 962 ,72, 200z. 1969 360 HUSKY J\1X Runs '66 CHEVY ~~T pickup, 327 169 200Z s trong & reJ.iablc. Only $-150. stick, good cond. ~ firm. '68 200Z 496-1422. ...._. ...................... .... CHOPPER, '53, Harley 74 l ,-C67c=.,F;;Oc,RD'.,.-.~~~~T~.~Pl~c~k-u-p Bob Mclaren, BMW reblt, needs little \\!Ork, Gem top, air con<l, good $700. 979-0449 aft 5 pm. cond $1200. 494-5875 Inc. '12 HOND CB 4~ J han Sales • Service • Leasing A ....,, ess t '70, 1 ton Chevy Truck. Cab 850 No rth Beach Blvd., 9(XXI m l. New engine. Must & chassis. duals, p/b, p/s. La Habr a 5 i.-pd, Exc~llent cond. (839- DFA). $2249 ~llla rn11E; llln1t11 "!i l(lr(Jl1' J!UJ1ll 1.1\11 ~ 't~.(I ' ' . . ' ,, . ' * '69 'Ji'IAT * Runs Xlnt. Must Sell. $850 * 549-1555 JAGUAR '69 XKE Coupe, $30,000 m i., Xlnt cond., maroon. Wr. whis, S3400, Ask for Ali, 642-0037. MAZDA * Maid.a '73 Rotary * $66 MONTH 36 MONTHS O?EN LEASE Will accept trade-ins CALL MR. FRY 842-6666 Hunt. Beach MAZDA 173.ll Beach Bl. 842-6636 BOB LONGPRE- MAZDA -SERVICE FIRST- EXCLUSIVE MAmALEASE Demonstrator Sale Now In P rogress sell! $775. 894--0817. $1550. 176 E. 17th St., C.M. (TI4J 879-5624 250 OSSA STILLETO, In LEASE A NE\V TRUCK 1st St. at !he S.A. F1'\vy. 'I'be fast est draw in the West. 2000 E. 1st St.. S.A 55.9-1871 . .a Daily Pilot Clnssilled You'll find it in CIW!sifle<! perfect condition. S:l.85. Ph: All niakes . types -sizes 546-1328. Purchloption 64S.7030. '70 P ENTON r-.·LX MANY EXTRAS $425. or Best Ofier? 546-8965 SUZUKI 8() CC, 4 spd, Slree! legal, dirt sprocket, runs good! 546-5057 MAZDA CADlu.AC' '13 MAZDA AA·2, Auto, air, $2021J5 Angel a1 .... 2200 m1, $ri00. EL DORADOS Orfit °""''-494-1892. 14 TO CHOOSE MERCEDE,-!IENi plusi:'1tJ! Uc. COUPES-CONVERTIBLES · · Delivered Ptlce • 50 USED tor a DE YILW C .. YS~ER '63 Qu')'aler gd trampo. car, aaJdng $$. · •Call 54&+3209* 1970 AtAVERICK, ~;o o d com!. Good gns ! n11learo· $l:ll0 or bc~t ofle1·. 61'3-73 0 t MERCURY -~ MERCEDES '73 TOYOTA 11 T£~~s1 ON DISPLA y SEDANS • . . CONTINENT'AL '73 MARK ' IV .71 l\1ERC Colony Ptirk. Sia Wagon. X/nl . t.'Onrl. R~c~ air, pwr Jo<:ks, s.2 6 ;,0 . Goodrich Ll fe S a v e r Radials, 540-:3278. Sh!'rp New Car COROLIA CONVERTIBLES Trade-ins Many exceU~t color1 Choice ot Interiors -Coml"I In Every Day at (Cloth & leather} Ask About Our Unique ft ... -L • F'actOiy air condlUoning Used Merced•1 Lean -llAIA fAltiA Full power. Choice of: Plant Stereo AM/FM radio House of Imports TOYOTA Tnmk~,= ... ~4"!... 6862 Manchester Buena Park 1966 H. ho -AU in immaculate condition th San-'1.-~ , ar r, C.M. 646-9303 1 °--st selection in , vn e ta ~ Frwy o~ y "·' Tod -•· ~1250 •uer our \..ULOr ay! Orange County JIM SLEMONS '70 TOYOTA Corona. 4-<ir., Nabltrs Cadillac auto A -eam putt• AtrrHORIZED PEALER. IMPORTS $1500 494-5924 ' 2600 HARBOR BL., MERCEDES BENZ YOLK 541).9100 COSTA .'if~ Sund•• AUTiiOIUZEI) SW A GEN ~ SALES & SERVICE '62 Coupe cM Vlllt Jim Slemo"c ·70 VW 9 pass bus, new )<Int cond. $495/ottor. ·~ paint, new tires, AM/Fl\f. 548-2687 or 646+2398 lnlports ~7780~e<:hanical c 0 n d · '73 CAD.WEhl, Dora'/viio-: ~Pril va_t~ (\1l e're top buyer for any p;art:y. 1te w !l1Y top, used ~fercedes Benz.) VW Dune bUggy. Long body, stereo. tape. All extras. , 1301 Quail loP'. mags, Indys, See to ap-Michelin tires. .J4,000 m l. Newport Beach prec. Must sell. Sac. for '°C"a°"llc'833'0'-·cc8298'7'-~~=~~ 833-9300 $950. 968-9307 '73 CAO Sedan de Ville, like ENTER FROl\.1 l\1acARTHUR '66 VW Bus, new eng, ne\v nu, 4500 mi, fully equip, Now OPEN clutch, new tires, xlnt cond Pvt. pty, $6950, 644-73ll eve, $1300 or best ofr, 675-6368 673-1010, l-5 Missin Viejo Imports '72 VW BUS Like new. 18,000 .~12~C~AD~-De~-V~il-le-,-load-ed-, fe:ituring mi. Sunroof, radials, $2850. Eldorado trim, like new. MERCEDES BENZ * Call: 837-9622 * $6195. bet 10 am, aft 3pm, & '64 V\V Sedan 646-4962 FIAT Good Condition '71 "C?\ti. -cov, teathei', Conrplete Sales & Service 546-1856 stereo A!\1/f'.M, all xtras. Visit Us Soon At '66 VW SQUAREBACK, reblt shal'p, 45.000 mi, $3795 00-01 M · eng. clean 673-8873 or 833-1316. ..... ~ 1 arguar1te Park\vay Mission Viejo 495-1700 673-7908 aft 6 CAMARO (USE A VER'{ PWY. EXIT) '68 VW Bug, auto, ne\V paint, ROADSTER new battery, good tires,l•,-------.-- 19 6 9 ~IE RC EDE s good cond. $850. 675-1112. 70 C~lARO .. RS, ~. air, ROADSTER 1971 VW s Beetl , nu Mich .. radw.ls. Like ~w . uper e, 36 000 m1 1 owner ;2550 280 S.L. Po\\·.er steenng, fac/alr, am/fm r adio, best M' t l.J '645-4565 a.it 5 · b1·akes, auto trans. $4950. offer over $1650. 551....3268 us se ' pm. ~ir."l.tl:'.l~~ 0~,f~: -,71 vW BUS $1IOO CHEVROLET Owner, 0 . Shaw. Call 673·TI64 aft 5 PM. '69' CHEVROLET Impala LATE '72 350SL. 41,'i litre. 110 VW CAMPER Custom 350, powe'l' steering, full P'l\T, lo mileage, Royal factory air, tinted glass, blut>, like new $11,300. Good cond. $1500. 493-1084 complete, automatic trans. 7 1 4 -16 1 3 -9 1 4 1 d a y s . '69 BUS . Absol~tely perfect in console, strato Bucket 714-998--0196 t>Vt> in all respects. !\lust see! seats, Vinyl roof, radial Ille 1972 350 SL Coupe Roadster $2300/offer. 645-3498. saver tires, radio, heater, Signal Red, lmmac, 12,700 '70 VAN, low· mileage good condition. Best of:l?r, n1i Dunlap Radials. 2 tops, New tires, $200}. phone 644-4687. stereo, p/\vind, S 1 0 , 9 0 0 . 557-5039 after 6 pm '65 CHEVY Malibu · S S 67:>-7481 .64 ·VW runs good $30Q hardtop coupe. VS, auto, '72 M.B. 280 SE, 4.5. Sedan, Please ~all Tom ~201 0; p/s, p/b, a.Ir cond, bucket 23,000 mi, sw1roof. l\1ichelin 642-1464 seats, console. $ 7 7 5 . tires, $8650. 6Ta-5620, eve '64 V\V bus, new carb., muf· '645-41614, 443 Bay St., CM 673--0728. fler & tires $530 67 IMPALA Wag. 9 pass., MB '72 280 SE 4.5, xlnt cond, ' s6o.-18Si · xlnt cond. V8 all:to trans, m•••t ••ll alt --· •= 0.. FIA, P/s., radio, tent. "" "" · "" °" ~ • * * '72 VW Bu11 16 ID) mi. lass blk . 1 in $1195 bst oUt. 673-7220 or 524--032'4 AM/FM. trailer hitch' ~1-3317 viny t. • MGB S2800. 536-l?96 1969 MALIBU Chevelle 350. '64 VW Sunroof, am/lm. Radio, vinyl, air, buckets. 1964 Uf<,iB ~dstr, '69 eng, ovr good body, runs great, $480. Extra ctea.P!. ~ust see to dr. Wu<e whls,. rad. R&H, 536-4313 appreciate! $1600. 5to-292.8 xlnt cond. 673-9:i25. '67 VW Bus. Reblt engine, '55 CHEVY. Chen'y. 'tu-dor *'65 MGB, xlnt running con· Best otter. 833-8423 or Coupe 327 4 b b 1, dition. $800. 548-1635 Eves, MS-1152, Rick mechanically° fit, new paint. 557-5770 days. '71 VW cam}')(!r. Xlnt cond, 1914 Fuiler't'on. CM ~ PORSCHE FM. musl seU. $2400. CaU •72 JONGSWOOD Eat a I e 673-4743 Wgon. Auto, full .pwr,-tilt '73 TARGA '67 MINT corxl, new tires. 'Vhl, lo mi Xlol CON!. $3750 • , brakes point reblt orbestoffer.979-1152 ' Silver Moon-dust metallic \vlth vinyl roof and real leather interior. F'ull po11.·er lnclud'ing air conditioning, tilt sreering wheel,'.AM/FM stereo multi·plex radio with tape player, automatic speed control, recllning seat, and silver luxury grolll?. Lesli than 6,000 inilt'S and loaded with much more! Ask for Mr. Walsh af 842.fi666. A Sacrifice At $8250 '71 CONTINEN·TAL 4 di'. Dk green, blk vinyl I o p . Ar-.f/FM stereo. Tilt whl, air, almost new stoel belted trs: LeaUfer int. Must sell quick at $3100. Approx 43M mi, May finance. HURRY! 501 , No. Bayfront Bal. ls. 6~66 '72 MARK IV. Pale Yello1\'. wltobiµ:co leather & !op. Every Continental extra. Local car. That has had 100% warranty. ffil-9349. '73 MARK IV. assume lease $195 mo., 21 months l't'· mail'ling, Dark brown, im- mac! M:r:. Smith. 541-5155 days; 496-7598 ews. MUSTANG •11 MTJST ANG Coupe. ,Auto, \ Rir cond, all extras. :U,fn> ·nti. \Vite's C'dl'. \\'il l con• ~ sider selling ii to someone l who \\•ill 1reat It as she has. , 551·'"'· I MUST ANG 'b':l Con,•e11ibl0, i pl's, plb. radio, 60,fOO IJll, 1 \l'hitc wtblk 1op. blk ltltt l int. Sl .200, cull D Crowell 833-82·16 '65 ~fUSfANG. looks ~'1-eat, J needs nierlianlcal work. $375. 645-013.; ' '65 MUSTANG. V8. auto, 1 Pis nu paint, "'/air shockl • ' r .1< <UO:O J & nmgs, $600. ~ ~ 1 ' '67 l\1USTANG. Loaded w/n~ 1 top. 557.ffi98. 3:lt.l ~ Towner, Sanla Arui. l OLDSMOBILE 1 1971 OLDS Vista Cru!i1 ~ Yign. 3 s~11ts, air, AM/F , stcrl"O. ltij;. rark. Ex co ' $2900/ofr. 67.i--0557 t1fl 6: . p.n1. -'..: '62 OLDS Starflre. New Ii clean. good cone!. $3o( ....... ,25. ~. o~~s:!.~'.LE ~ . OLDSMOBILE r GMC TRUCKS r HONDA CARS ' UNIVERSITY OLD I '69 CONT, al! pwr •. stereo, · 2850 Harbor Blvd. ,. sunroof, trader hitch, lo Cos*tl 1\1esa. 540. mi .. nu paint, $2495. 644-1755 ~""-.=· ""'===--""::.:: PINTO CORVETTE 'TI CORVE'M'E excl. Low miles mags good tires 350 4· spd, blue cpe, $4500. After 5, 551-1087. . COUGAR '68 COUGAR XR7, Xlnt cond. lo mileage, air, leather, landau, stereo, tilt whl, $1995. 495-5371 aft 7 wkdays. '67 COUGAR, auto, pis, p/b, r/h, air, IO ml. Xlnt cond. $1395. ~. 1967 COUGAR XR7, "'hite w/blk. vinyl top, p/s, p/b, tltlr. upfioi. Sl.350 540-9542. PINTO ''n Squire. Auto, a~ lugg rack. Jnunac. thruout'.: S2670. !\1rs. An rl resort_, fi.15-6500 or &15-1410 e\'es. !! · '72 \Vl-IJT!!: Pinto , \\'a 1\/C, radio, top rack, , ·mi. 4-spd. J\1ake off!'r, '!1J. ov.'ner. AIL 5 pn1, &1~ 1 '72 PINTO, stick. lea srnte. 23.oo;i'miles $1800. 812-1933 PLYMOUTH 19TI Road Runner Sacrifice : 545-1802 --cP~O'i';;NT""'IA:;.,c=--4i,l: -------i:!' DODGE '66 PONTIAC Tempesl, 4 . , 326, p/.,;, auto Iran.~. ru' ' '70 CHALLENGER 4 llR!, good, $300, 879 Center A air-Cond. 8 track tp dk, 10. cr.t rndlals. $16tltl. 8311-3276 '69 GRAND PRIX FALCON Xlnt . ''°""· w/air "'""' ---------p/~·1ndowll, Sl&'OO. 642·b'989. 1965 FORD Falcon Wagon, air, heater, radio. $200. Call 837-41!11 FOllD 'iO GRAND Prix. loaded, $2100 or best <lfier. CaU &la-74:17. . '73 PORSCliE 9UT Targa. 5 eng/trans. $850. 492-0437 '68 EL Camino ·SS, A/C. speed, factory •alloy ,wheels, .69 vw Bug, engine just $1,090. '69 FORD GaJaxie 500 4 door AM·F'~t Ste~. Spet:'lal gold overhauled, looks and runs '73 EL Camino SS. All Ex-hardtop. Factory air con- metalhc prun1. great $1 l50 846--0809 tras $3 950 Ph· ~1317 dltlonlng, new tire-a, power '67 PONTIAC Catalina. $700, pun-feet running condition. 673-3803 RAMBLER THEODORE ROBINS ' ' ' · '67 CHM · com:en.. Need11 ~~=fil~ ro~~ri um ~tATADOR "·agon AIC, FORD V\V Bus '69 Xlnt cond. engine work. $100. Call and I'llnS very well. Private AM~I srerro, roof rack, 2060 Harbor B lvd., A sleeper at $1395. Kevin, 837-8402. 2 3 2 81 party must sell. $ 9 9 5 . 3rd Sl'al, PIS, P/B, Pl\\', Costa Mesa 642.00lO * ~1632 * Guinea, El Toro 644-&84. 8500 miles. X1nt cone!. Sell '66 PORSCHE 9U, good con· VOLVO '62 l~tPALA, auto, 4 dr. $22a. '58 RANCHERO, Ch er r Y under Blue Book. 847~588.1.~ dition, neiv tires. needs Cail 646-5695, cond. Good eng, tires & '65 RAMBLER Classic Sta engine work, best ofier,l--;~;-;;;;;-:;;;;;;--1=~=='""~·~5~~~-~New frnt -shocks, hi· Wgn Xlnt cond. Nu re.bit 645-3118. WHILE THEY 1964 ruli'U'V Station Wagon jack. ~ .. to apprec. $00). tran11, good tires, lmnme, -~"$100 675-781S. · $500. After6, 837-1561 '13 914 NEW Gold met. I.AST•. · A I( I 842-8157 '69 C 0, RT J N A auto, '63 RAMBLER, 6 cyl., S150: m m s ereo, a pp e r . ,73 VOLVOS -··-•-• d Good •-~-•· group 5-50,000 Guar. Best '69 CHEVY VAN eo.uuuuucai, ependable. See u anspo, ... ...,n car. otr. 536-0430, 7-10 "pm. e 164's Good engihe-New Tltt11 to appretiateo 31,600 orig 1 ~64~>-6'-"297"'-=~~--- '68 PO RSCH. E 912 · t • 145'• S8Stt * m.9tm ml. 536-64l6. VEGA . ne w prun • 144'• UNCOl:N & engine. $4100. Ca It e l42's CHRYSLER 548-8612. e l800's LEAVING -t.1ust Sell 'll, PORSCHE '7'1, 911T, Sepia Now Is The Time To 55 CHRYSLER '73 MARK IV. Lo ml, vinyl ~~=~ ~~J·~·,:';,Contact brown. E.-<cel eood, must SAY[I $150. F IRM top, mint cond 644-.5967 aft •"" sell, best <lifer, 494-4968 • e 543-3691 e lOpm or Write Classified Ad '72 VEGA GT wagon, .fi l!pd.' 1968 PORSCHE 912, Orange, CHRYSLER 300, 1970. 1 ::~ :0. DJ!!1a 1it~ p~: custom int, new tires, exlrlt new tires, 33.000 ml, for sale ;o L owner, Joaded w / x tr as, 92626 rond. Sl990., ~ •70 PORSCHE M 4 6 ~ Ull.. .I.ii''" . m es. you se I throUgh result~-by owner. 67f!:-1114/645-7556 -•a.11 •1..:1 _good cond. 532--6558. ~-~==MARK==~JV~~Lo-~U~ Fat Pro1tit is attained when ,. · VOLVO ' '66 Chrv Newport Viny:t tQR.~mkit cond. Call ting Daily p·1o1 eta ill-~ Xlnt cond. Low miles, eves. 4 dr _nu.:__lr.::. .,...,. "''36-· 1 sa ""' 114: 536-5862 , ures, ooorv..1. 64()-8073 all d~y 1.:;-A:cd',.,·..,64_20-.,."'1_S ___ =~l A • .-. New 980 Autos, New 980 '67 PORSCHE 911$, 5 spd, 1966 Harbor, C:M. 646-9303 "'''"'"'' lo\v m;.!es, sunroof, vecy Clean, $3800., 496-f;638. '73 VOLVO. 164, a ir, auto, '60 PORSOIE, Xlnt mech. AM/FM stereo, Good car cond, xtrs, Sl600 6000 miles. 586-4201 • 979-9144 * 1967 VOLVO 122S Wagon, RENAULT RENAULT R-12 4 DOOR'S Autonuitic TrAnsmission SALE $2449 R·lS ( •5U2l SALE $2799 Dick Miiier Motors 120 W. Warner, S.A. 551-2132 '67 RENAU·LT RlO, lo miles, Needs work, $200 A ft 5, 979-0449 auto, R&H, service record. $950. 551-1368. 1965 Volvo 12'ZS, 2 dr 11edan new tires, new brakes; new paint, prt pry, $795, 675-5359. Autos. Uwd Craig Wiison 8871 Elvira Westminster You ru-e the wtnper or TWO FREE TIC~ETS to fut • SEPT. 20 . I , SEE THE FABULOUS . '74 BUI 250CC YAMAHA End. Reblt Will trade for 17j lfonda call aft 7. 551-5995 1973 250VR l\fontessa, $1 000 or best offer . Xlnt cond call 545--7216 1.967 RENAULT RlO, very gd cond, orig. owner, $575. 675-41885 or 675-3343 RECREATION ' VEHICLE SHOW SEPT. 19TH·23RD At the ANAHEIM STADIUM 2000 State CoUege Blvd., PRICES ARE ALWAYS LOWER AT YAMAHA '11 125 Enduro, $32i call 968-8179 '10 TR·IUMPH 0 .JOPPER 650cc !!JOO * 645-6468 .. * '72 '\'AMI l 7ii * New t ng, xlnt C()ndjtion. Call 644-57<0 '70 HONDA CIAS<I. Xlnt COO<). $5.i'J. ·-· •70 HONDA 150. Now tlrc.s, clutch I: chain. !U!!O *' !IGS-2752 1971 360 MX ... motOCS"OQ: Yahanl11. ahnoet Jike new !850. Call 141.71311, .I \\ 1anl ad multi •••.. 6.fi.2..,~ ·------------------------------ ( ' 'SAAB Orange ('.()unty's Newest Anaheim Please call 64>-5678 ext 339 to clalm )'QUI' tickets. (North COuntY. Toll trte number ts ~lDJ). 1u1cl(--SUB o..i.,. 1~~~~--~- CLEAJW<CE SALE '72 ELECTRA Cpo. LTD. '73 SAABS STARTING AT trim, A.C., full pwr, stereo Mi1.1111. !ape d<ck, 2 trnt $2995 pwf seata, ~ mileage, new ut> to 24 rnlles per gallon 11J;'es. Must sell.-644-2336. Dick Miiier Motors '61> GRAN Sl>drt coupe, air A 120 W. Wam<r, S.A. C' mechanic ~· 56"2U2 ·--~ M na: •..... ~· . TIME FQR · 1"6 ·Rl¥ler• 9UICK <;ASH l600 firm, 96Urin "" 5 pm THROUGH A "lllake &Om 'For-Dadd)!" Ly l'ILOT . . . clr:an out tbe prap 1 DAI ... tum that Junk Into cash CLASSIFIED AD :J~c~~C1wUlotl • I .TERRY :BUICK ' WE STILL HAYE ~'LARGE SELECTION OF BRA~ND NEW , '~3 BUICKS i'HIUGE:. DISCOUNTS . ' .Stli . Ir Walnllf,· Huntington Beach. 536-651B I • •. ' ·r San Clemente Today's Final • Capistrano EDITION N~Y. Stocks VOL 66, NO. 263, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1973 TEN CENTS Grand Jury Attacks Lobbying by .Dr. Bremer By JAN WORm Of .... n.ltr '"llol Stiff '!be Orange County Grand Jury bas criticized Saddleback Community College President Dr. Fred H. Bremer for lob- bying .for coastline development. Alfred Flores, ]W'f foreman pro tern said the jury "baa particular concern that Bremer's coHeie district would blatantjy undermine another governmen- us I A Stringing Time tal entity's functions and responsibilities.'' is ~~es~~~s~, !111~~t~~1:~e~~ w~; ~ late June urging multiple unit residential development for the Capistrano Beach coast. Saddleback Board or Trustees Presi- dent John Lund of Laguna Beach later admitted he asked Bremer to write the letter based on his concerns for valuable • Trabuco School doosn't.Jia .. nry g!IO<l,plluabiJ>a•but the·stjiepuling is _,.poldblO. Olte ·of,t!le .• thiiigs i~doM baie,surroundjng the l!>ree' rooln sdulOI hoUBe·ate.Mlllle tiiassive..old oak.trees that.make dandy swings. The story and additional •pictures of the rural school are on Page 3. · -· ' .. ' ' . Clemente -Passes Nudism No-nos . , ' 8an cJemente today has a new ordi- ance bannirig nude or lem14Dude exlllbi· tioo.s by waitresses 0r others, but several top-ranking city olllclals and policemen aren't sure they understand eveey anatomical Item in .the Oc;no USt. • Beskfa ·breutJ, pubtc hair and the more familiar forbiddtn partS of the human form , councilmen In a unanimous actioll Wednesday banned ezhlbltiee of the natal clefl But IO far •no one knows what -ex- actly -a natal cl~t Is. 11You mean tha\'a Jn the ordinance,· too?" City Manager Kenneth Carr said tode,y. "l don't actually know what It 18. I'll r;erer YO!' to a medical dlctiopary ." Willie Says' 'This ls It' . ConvenUonat dictionaries don 't 'have the item listed. "Natal'! refers (o birth, lhey say. "Cleit" ls any separation .. Police, ~eluding detectives who would / enforce such offenses in the ordinance, ~were ju,,t.!as v&gue. · 01 heard the doctor 11Se<the word once when my' wile was pregnant," said one officer, but his explanaUon of the cleft (See NUDE BAN, Page I) Cdr penter Raps Remapping Plan. To Women's Club By JACK CHAPPELL NEW YORK (AP) -Willie Mays 1~-.-~1·~~-New Yort-Mets;-buebal 42-yea.Mld superstar, announced hit retirement today , effective at the end ol the Im seeson. (Story, Ptge 31) · 11TblJ ls lt," said Willie. 11l'm rotlr\ng alter the ....... l only hope I cap make some contribution toward Another champleesblp In New York In the Utile time left." ' Of .. DellY ~ .... '"" Reappartionment of C a 11 f o r n I a ' 1 le8is1Alure hlttorJcally bu fallen Into a -"d&-uoto othm,-then cut out-.ttual!Oo and that's why the whole can of _,,.. got tolled Into the lap ol the state supreme .court this year, State Sen. DeJ>- Dll E. Carpenter aald .Wodnetday . Carpenter (fl.Newjort 116tch) .-ad· dreating pearly 100 pet'OOlll at a luncheon meeting of the Laguna Nlcuel Republican Wom.,.·s Club In Laguna NliueJ. Ma)'I his played 116 games this 1eason wU.h a .211 battlng average and slx borne run1, Increasing bi1 career totol to llO, · thin! behind only S.be Ruth and Henry Aaron. • '!be state legislator 1ald that on'. the whole, <:rango County bcnelltted lll'eatly In the reapportionment plan prepared by "routers'' appointed by the court to rcdtllne the ttate's assembly, senate and congretalonal dlstrtcls, as a result of the (See IUl:lllAP, Pop II .I undeveloped land be owns on Pacific Coast Highway in Capistrano Beach. Though Bremer, also the district superintendent was on the Saddleback campus in MWion Viejo today, he was not available for comment to reporters . The Grand Jury took issue with a charge in Bremer's letter that "the coastal conservation commission Is prone to succumb to pressure exerted by in· Plea Filed On Nixo·n Assessment· By JACK BROBACK Of .. DallY .......... First District Supervisor Robert Battin of .San la .Ana file1f a complaint with the Orange Coun" Assessment Appeals Board alleging that the Western White H~ property in San Clemente is under- assessed by about $1 milliQD. The complaint was filed Wednesday wilb.the..¢lerk,of.tbe appeals b\l&rd ID the -eciuntJ :Ill »hi ~ l Battin in the 8'JpeaI is acµo, 81 an lit- -·· ...... ~.lie ttlil he did lflo "put the apj>ealB board on the spot:" · '!be .. validity of B~!tin's complaint Is in question as the lliw states an appeal may only be filed by an owner of comparable property who· was injured by the tmder- assessment. Battin owns no comparable property, The appeals board meets next on Mon- day and may, hear the complaint at that time alt¥ugh it is not on the agenda. The qU(estjon of assessment of Presi- dent Nixon's Sap Clemente property was first broached by S t a t e Board of Equalizatlon Chairman William Bennett several weeks ago. · Al that time, ,he requested that tfie hoard lnvestiga~ the $1.37 million assessment placed on the property by Orange County ~r Jack Vallerga. But the board ~ to act. Four members declared they had no legal · right to cheek locaJ•assessments. Later, the board, tc quiet Bennett, agreed to ask the Orange COwiti Appeals (See PROPERTY, Page Z) SNOW FORECAST FOR RENO A.REA. REN!l;-Ner.-(,u>) -'!be Natlonal Weather Service office here has issued its first for~ for snow of the season. The forecast calls for ln;creasing chance of sOOwers·in the Reno area, with the snow level near 7 ,000 or 8,000 in the Sierra. The siiow fiurries are likely in the Lake Tahoe Basin and in the Sierra generally from Echo Summit on U.S. Highway 50 northwilrd, forecasters said. dividiials and groups who apparently are • attempting to thwart types of develop- ment which can be beneficial to a particular locality." Bremer contended in his letter that development 'o( the flat land under the bluffs between Doheny Park and Shorecliff in Capistrano Beach would in- crease the tax base of his college district "without adversely affecting the en- vironment.'' . The Grand Jury responded, "your (Bremer's) contention that increased development can lake place in this area without adversely affecting the en· vironment does not appear to have a basis in fact , and, irt fact, seems to be a judgment better left to those whose con- cern with environmental quality has a broader base and specialized knowledge.'' Show Not Going On Sebastian's West, San Clemente's. new dinner playhouse at the city's old Moose lodge, won't · be· OP."ninll next Wedjlesday as originally scbeduJed. Work on 'the theater's si,dewalk )las been halted by the South.-.Co11st:-Regionfil--ZOne Conservation Commission -postponing opebing'night of. "Milo of La· Mancha" at I.east a month. (See lnter- m~s~iQri, c.olb~n. Page 38.} Clemente Holds Off Rock Concert Decision 0 • San Clemente city councilmen held orf a decision on proposals by a £olk-rock theater owner who plans a free rock con- cert !1ear the. city's north bel\c,h thiS fal! Already the proposal by James Jenkins Ior the free show fe8turing a group known as "Hook" bas· drawn disapProval from poli<f.9lflcials an_d the city staH: Expansion at ,San Onofre Plant Set for Hearing .. In a .... ~.tppea~c~ before~ , cilmen, 3'illdnf-that a ll!l"ge "'II· ment or t& city's' citizens --young lovers of ~A~~afy rtiU81C -are being lgMri!d and h.IS Con~ert Is an -at- tempt to provide them with their favorite recreation. But councilmen hesitated on granting a decision on the proposal for the North Beach parking lot and instead ordered that the request go to parks and recrea- tion commissioners early ne1t month for a recommendation. A public hearing on the addition of two nuclear·reactors to the San Onofre power Rlaot may be scheduled Oct. 17, a State Coastal Zone Conservation Commission oUicial said toda)'. Three_.,ppeals have been Uled of the San Diego regional coastal commission's tpproval .ot,.tbe..reacton.. · Amiellaat. are the Environmental Coali\ton of Orange County, GUARD (Groupt tllllted Agailill R t.d lat ion Danger) el ~ aetnenfo and Ruth Pe)>ton of tll•'llln Ditto Coast Watchers. The uoltl Jilannecl bf S o u t h er n CaUfo1'111• Edlton Company and San Diego Gu llld Blcclric would each _operate with 11400 megawatts at the plant three-miles soutb olSan Clcmenic. 'Mio Oct. 17 state commission meeting wUI Ukl! place in the Loa Angc1cs area. A spetjfic site hasn't been selected yet. Mildren Reid, commi1Sl"'1 appeels P'°"' "'°" said today • prclll)llnary hearing • ' on the controversial project will probably be set for the d.ie. If commission planners decide they need more time to study the · plant ex- pansion, the hearing might be delayed two more weeks to a San Fra:ncisco-area meeting, she added. Dal~ Serord ol th viroruneotal O>alitlon and LYM HarriS Hicks of GUARD hand delivered their appeals at the co.mmlM'lon meeting Wednesday in Inglewood. -' sAfety factors in the $l billlon project are the main concern of the a.ppellanUI. Possible dangers from rad l'a t ion leakage. aqd transportation and storage or radioactlye wastes haven't been ameliorated by the utility companies, the appeals charge. The adverse eU~ts of thermal dlschsrgc r~m the oceanside plant on marine life are abo listed as reasons for the rehearing. ' . \ • Jenkins stressed that what he proposes would be an event catering primarily to South Coast music fans aild he said be never intended for the show to become a "supertrlp." Advertlsirig, which began thl3 .week in a weekly want-ad circular, would only stretch as far away as Laguna Beach, Jenkins said. No admission would be charged if the concert went off, but donations for ex- penses would be accepted. 'I don't expect to make dollar one-out of this." Jenkins said, ."only a little in- stitutional advertising for the theater (th• Four Muses)." The Impresario a d d e d that rock music "aerves as great a need for our young people as your golf course does ~or the older element in this clty," ( Earlier, Bremer commented that he "assumed" Lund has a vested interest in Capistrano Beach but did not discuss it with biJ.n, because he believed Lund had the best interests of the district at heart. The rest of the trustees did not hear of Bremer's letter until late Augl1St when the Environmental Coalition of Orange County saw the letter and issued an angry reply. ; ' City Leader Terms Idea h1feasihle By JOUN VALTEl\ZA ot -. D.il'r "'°' SWI . ' San Clemente City Manager Kenneth Carr cast strong doubt Wednesday that the city would contract with any agency for the rental of buses for a pilot transport system and tenned the Idea ~•fiscal irresponsibility." · Carr reported to councilmen that after exhaustive inquiries about t h e possible · rental of ,a tram from Laguna Beach <r a regular bus from other purveyon:, be recommendll that the city Instead launch an Intensified lobbying campalcn to assure that tile· Orange Counly Transit DIBtrlCt all•ll -to the South County. The Lagun'a rental lde!Hor a Pilot proj- 'ect to a5'eS8 ac:ceplana! of a local bus service would coat about $1,llOO a month, but Carr stressed that officials of the Art Colony predicted problems with assess-- ing the local acceptance because of the very nature of' the vehicle. "In their strongest terms they deterred us from pursuing the lease only because they belieevd we would not get an ac· curate reading. "They said that they have sensed a strong reluctance by the public to use these open-air buses during c o o l weather," Carr told councilmen. Altboul!h the council took no official action after the report they gave strong indications that the plans for a pilot trial project should not take place. Instead, a task force of local advocates of bus service should be formed to lead a strong campaign to convince Transit District directors Olis winter-to allocate one of thC district's 63 new buses to a complete South County system. Plans for .the lobbying group will be dra!t~ by Carr's office in coming days, councilmen suggested. Carr's stand was unusually strong at Wednesday 's session as the official stres.sed that San Clementeans already pay $30,000 a year in taxes to the district For them to bear an additiooal burden of several thousand dollars on a trial system would be a disservice to the residents who already pay, he added. What the city should do in coming weeks, he said, is to recruit supporters from surrounding communities and launch the drive to convince the directors that a network of buses would be valuable to the South County. "There shouldn 't be any reason why we couldn't get a group together from all the communities and begin a strong cam~ paign to get a bus for the South County," {See BUSES, Page I) Orange • Weatlter Cout - Mostly sunny Friday, following the usual low clouds along the coast. Highs In the upper 60s at _ the beaches rising to 75 inland. Ovem1ght lows in the 60s. lNSIDE TODAY . ' A/ler most of_ her Hfe wltl1 white foster paTenti, an aOong- ine girJ h<u been taken back to bush for an arra-nged marriage 10ith mldd!Hged trlbeamon. Set story, photo Page 4. L.M.19" .. ~ .. Callftl'WI• lo I MvtMI ,_.. a Clt•tlfl• 41-4t ... ..._. .._ t.I Coll'tlu -2' or.,._ CMllltY a CrOl'IWlnl 41 ~TA a CN•lll MtMC• 1J I ,..,.. ... £ill~ ..... .., '*' ....... ..,. IE11"'1........ ~ TtMtW. a '"'""" a.a.n ~ .. ..... .... .... JJ ....... • Mttn••• u ._., ..._ .. ,,...~ u WW. ....... I • • ~ Z, OAIL Y PILOl • • .. _ sc ____ ~11111Mlay, Stpttmbcr 2~, lfJ7J Speaks it• l\1iguel- Carpenter Hits ~;:•criticism Orgy' -. .... ;--~ ":· •. Slate Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter hlt at ... 'ifhat ~ called en "orgy of criticism" in ~~poUUcs, lamen'ted that all good bilb: don't 1 4 get the public ptt5.$ure the death penalty ~:-·dld. and gave qualified support for Gov. :~nald Reagan's tax initiative measure. ' Speaking Wedntsday before the ~ Laguna Niguel Republican Women's ·,Club, ,Carpenter (R-N ewport Beach), -launched Into a diseussion of what he .. ;termed "general problems," a ( t e r ' discussing the recent court-ordered resp. portlonment of state and congressional • .. JtgislaUve districts. .... Of criticism, Carpenter said "we can't be that bad as a people or an ad· ministration ." He sald he supported measures pro- Front Page 1 REMAP • • • 1970 census. Seri. Carpenter said the hassle over reapporUonment hadn 't historically reached the dimensions it did recently because present political climate was somewhat unique -with the Democrats controlling the legislature , and the Republicans in charge of the state ad- ministration. Therefore, an apportionment plan drawn to suit the Democratic legislators would simply be vetoed by Gov. Ronald Reagan. Republicans couldn't muster strength necessary in the legislature to suit the GOP. Before when the Democrats controlled both the ' state house and the legislature, they reapportioned to their own ad- vantage, and the anquish ol the Republicans, he said. Carpenter wryly noted however, that in the 100 years before the Democrats took over the Republicans played the same reapPortlonment tricks on therh. The U.S. Constitution provides for a ·census each 10 years with representation to the House of RepresentatiVes based on population. U.S. Supreme Court rulings have car· ried the doctrine through stale levels, t " and ordered "one man, one vo e representation. Prior to the reapportionment plan prepared by the masters, Carpenter's state senate district included about a million persons, wh ile some colleagues .represented only a quarter that many persons, he said. In essence, that made the vote , of lhose senators' consUtuents 1 worth (our Orllnge County votes. . The masters wer~ charged with redrawing the Jines to eliminate groSs population discrepancies, but to pre~rve 'political units and social where possible . Carpenter a member of the Senate reapportlon~ent committee, said that he and a legislator with whom he does ~ot often agree, did agree th~t after trying Jor three years the legislature w a s "incompetent" tO reapportion itself. . 'l'he reason is that legislators Jong ago · :found oUt that by redrawing the distrl~t Jines In certain ways, they could benefit 1heir own position and pa rty at the ex· · ~ pense of the opposition. ,. That 's called gerrymandering, after enterPri.sing Mass a cb u se t ts Gov. Elbridge Gerry. whose party in 1812 formed a reptile shaped district, to capitalize on political party strengths. A political cartoonist of the day drew " wings, eyes and a forked tongue on an outline of the district and called the resulting d rag o n shape "a' gerryman- der." ··There is no nonpartisan rea~ portlonment, not unless you fin~ .~ guy living on another planet to do 11, Sen. Carpenter said. He said it \\'as c.unfair" to ask a . legislator to rise above PE:rson~I self in- -terest and his pa rty to write himself out ol office. Under thf' plan drawn up by the masters, half the legislators will ~ rw1- ning in opposition to colleagues 1n the same redrawn districts. while other districts are open , empty and up for grabs . OIAN•I COAST " viding for campaign rUnd disclosu,res , but was against liwa requlrJn, disclosure of lawmaktn' p e rs on a finances. ··1 don 't fee l I have given up my Constitutional rights to privacy because I hold pubJic office," Carpenter said. He added that he had recently refused a re- quest by the Los Angeles Tlrnea for a financial statement. "I resent the int rusion," he said. He said the innuendo is that if a successful man runs for public olfice, be is going to have connicts or interest. '"I'11ere is no relatiOMhip between quallticatlon to serve and make thla type of disclosure," Sen. Carpenter said. Shifting to the governor's tax initiative setting an income tax ceiling, Carpenter said he was in general phlloaoPhlcal agreement with the measure, but hadn't made up his mind yet. l·fe said he. wa sn't sure the machinery established in the initiative was the best to do the job . lie said the matter was extremely complicated, but that both the governo r and his Democratic opposition were over- simplifying the matter in selling it to the people. Of public pressure, Carpenter said that although ·some legislators were personally opposed to the death penalty, they were forced to support it because of the 70 percent favorable vote in the November election. However , he said other good legislation sometimes dies on the vine because public interest can't be mobilized as it was in the death · penalty case. He cited his own bill dealing With court ucluslon of '°""'lied tainted evidence picked up In what may be unlawful searches. He Said that the bill would nJle out uae of the evidence in the case of the in- dividual whose rights may have been bPeached in the search, but not agaiilst other persons in cases which the evidence may apply. He said t~ courts were using the ex· clusions by rule to tum crirnlnala looee. "'Ibey have turned lbouBand> of people out on the streets that would have been In jail," Carpenter, a former FBI agent said. Switching to his poIHical a.im!, Carpenter said. "Jn case they there's any doubt about it, I'll be running for reelec- tion next year." Carpenter, who was elected to hia post In 1970 saJd he had grown philosophical about cr!Ucism per!Ollllly. "All you can do 1' rise up and throw me out of office, and I can live with that on certain days," Carpenter quipped. Trial Scheduled For Clementean In Murder Try A San Clemente woman has been Ordered to face trial Sept. 24 ln Orange county Superior Court on charges that she and a Long Beach businetmlan ,plan- ned the killing of his partner. Orange COunty Superior Court Judge James Turner set the trial date for Betty Love Flatley, 46. of 1880 N. El Camino Real, after denying defense motions for the psychiatric examination of a key pros· ecution "'i tness. The witness, "'·hose infonnation led police to charge Mrs. Flatley and ~ defendant Carl Leo Osowski, 50, of. Anaheim, with soliciting commission ot·a murder, was described by the defense as "gaining ego salisfactlon from playing fantasy roles.'' The pair was arrested arter taped telephone ·conversations allegedly in- dicated that Osowski wa s prepared to pay a substantial sum of mooey for the elimination of business partner George "'linkian. It was alleged in munici pal court that the plan to kHI ~1inkian was discussed over bruncll at the Laguna Niguel Coiro. try Club. It was testified that a figure of $10,000 was quoted as the appropriate fee for his demise. ,. AL tow LEGEND F'f'ont Pflfe l . I BUSES ~ · • said Cctuncllman Arthur ttomes '!' cor- roboration of Carr's recommendation. Holmes became the first volunteer from lhe cquncll to )Ofn the task !oroe, and felJOw councilman ~1nas o·~eere. ·who launched the pilot proJect ldea tn the first p1iee. promlaed to work on the cam· palJ111 •• W<!ll. ' ' O;Kcefe, a lawyer with a practice 1n central orange county, serves on several county goveniment a d v i s o r y . com· m!asions and said he eou ld lend h11 ex- pertise to the lobbyi ng tfforts. . can: said a decision on the a~at~n of the new -buSCS Ort!ercd by the d1str1ct could come late this year or early next year, depending on the delivery date for the new coaches. From Pagf! l NUDE BAN. • • was different from a rellow detective's. Emm RlOIOMAL~lrill!ACIAL ANO 11£.SK>(KTlAL AAf:AS City Attorney F. MacKe~lc Brown, familiar with similar semantic problems ~·Ith the natal cleft in other cities enac- ting the ordinance, replied si mply, "don't ask" to queries about the anatomical region. MAP SHOWS PROPOSEO IRVINE CENTER REGIONAL SHO_PPING, !'PARTMENT DEVELOPMENT Irvine Company Seeking City Pre·zonlng on 4SO..cr• P•rcel 1n County Ttrrltory Clemente Condominium Fate Up io Commission By CANDACE PEARSON Of .. c.lb' 1'1111 '''" The fate of a partially completed 4J>. unit condominium above a San Clemente beach now resta wtth the State Coastal 7.one Conservation Commission. Aries Development company attorney Richard COilins argued Wednesday !bat the project at.407 Puadena COUrt should be exempted from requirements of Proposition 20, the coastline lltitiatlve which became law Nov. ·s. 'Mle state panel two~ weeks a10 denied a permit for the building. If it isn't exempted from tbe ·new law, Aries officials may have to go to court or take It down. Tho conunlsSiott will vote on II Oct. 3 In Eurtb. COilins said the projecl waa awro...t by San Clemtnte In early !'10 1<r M uni!>, bul -Arieo boug!Jt the prop-erly In June, 1172, I h e unill planned were reduced to .ts. A use permit and a tentative. 'tract map Death Sentence Lifted for Aged 'Vicious' Mutt APOPKA, Fla. (AP) -Mayor, an arthritic cocker spaniel, would have died Wenesday if not f~ the eHorts of C.ora Lee Marden. Mrs. Marden, 66 and· a widow, said she just couldn't let Mayor die. "The dog b¥f no defense, ao I came to his rescue," f!he said while preparing to sign adoption papers. Mra. Marden Intends lo give the 11· year-old mutt a home in the middle of an orange grove, a mile from the nearest neighbor. fi.tayor was sentenced to death under the state's vicious dog act last month by Seminole County comD'll!sionerS who received 18 complaint! about the anial biting several youngsters. were apprQved by the city in October. Collins said, and demolition· and grading began. To get an exemption, a developer ~ust have a building permit or other final local approval, have done substantial on· site work and expended substantial funds prior to Nov. 8. A recent State Supreme Court ruling, which doesn't become final until Oct. 19, indicates that some other proje cts with work done prior to Feb. 1 might also be exempled. · The commissions created by Prop. 20 didn 't start operatin~ until Feb. 1. The court said a moratonum wasn't intended between Nov. 8 and Feb. 1. .• San Clemente city council approved an environmental Jmpact statemertl for Aries Nov. 15. A building permit Was Issued JIJI, 23, 1973. New seismic requlrementa by the city then caused a redesign of the building&. A second permit was issued April 13. Attorneys Pat Lane abd Joe Wyatt, r.epresenUng San Clemeitte·resldeots Mr. and Mrs. Richard Charles, charged that Aries hadn't proceeded in good faith . "There was a great deal of pressure brought to bear on San Clemente to issue a permit prior to passage of Prop. 20," Lane said. Lane said a grading pennit Issued Nov. 6 for a parking structure wasn't supposed to take effect until Dec. 14, but Aries of- ficials moved 50 percent of the earth on the site by Nov. 8. "This isn't one of those cases.'' Wy~tt added, "where someone Invested a lot of money and was caught otf base by Prop. 20. "This is someone that tried to beat Prop. 20' to the draw -or to the date - and didn't succeed," he added. The only money spent" before Feb. I was on demolition of an old Spanish home and on grading, Wyatt said, adding that doesn 't qualify the building. Collins, speaking for Aries, said the company had invested more than '5()0.000 in the project by Feb. I and had built drainage systems. retaining walls a n d shoring. Irvine Company Filing Signals More Annexes By GEORGE LEIDAL Of ,... a.ll't ''"' ·-Irvine Company filing for regional "commercial and resldenUal" pre-zoning for the golden triangle suggests another city of Irvine annexation is forthcoming by the etid of the year. Within 10 weeks, city planning oom· missioners will formally review a requeat to pre-1.0ne 0l acr.es of land bounded by the Santa Ana, San Diego and Laguna Freeways. .Half the area Is to be developed by 1982 With two million square feet Of com· · mercial space. There are to be aeven major department 1torea1 200 analler ahopa, a 350 to 400-room hotel, theaters, an lee rink and public events area within two, sausage shaped, oovertd malls. Gtty Plumer Mike Hanis aald.tlie.pre- "'nlng applleatlon for land l)Ot presenUy within the dty of ,Irvine will be treated Just as other zonings: are. It will be beard publlcly by the planning commll!Slon. Cornmlaslonera will m a k e recotn· mendation to the city council. Ccnan- cilmen will likely act on the pre-zonlng and the necessary annexation probably in late December, after the city gtneral plan is completed, Harris noted. General plan alternatives studied to ,date, Harris aaid , "all envision com- me~al development of the triangle." , When Irvine waa barely six months old it1 launched a successful annexation - Uie largest In state history. That action ewetled the 18,200 acre size of the city to J;S,600 acres, or 41 square miles, making Irvine the largest city In Orange County in terms of land area. The rreeway triangle parcel was deliberately left out of the annexation, according to City Manager William Woollett Jr. He explained that the tax rich commercial development then plan· ne.d for the site would "balance" any future annexation within Irvine's 53,000- acre sphere of influence. The majority of the remaining acreage Irvine has formally reserved for future growth is destined tor residential development. Homes create demands for city services, industrial and commercial property an~ sales taxes help pay the cost. "Most of the time in codes tike this they (councilmen) ask 'wlll it work?' and I'll answer 'yes ... i{'ll work' and then they'll pass it unanimously. . Roughly, that is w h a t transpifW \Vednesday with the code which ta· an attempt to make sure no topless or bot- to rnless bars establish in San Clemente. The code does,· however, exempt bonafide thea te rs from falling Wlder the strict rules of the code From Pagel PROPERTY. • • Board to check the assessment. Battin cla!ma the San Clemente ,prop- erly ahould be a ss • ss e ~ at 12.1126 million. To the 11.s million purchase price, he ad~s 1703,000 In lmprovemeni. made by the federal government and IJJtOOO In cl.anges the 'President made. Vallerga ooote.'ds that · I be Im· provementa made by the gov~ent are federal property and not 11Se1Slble by the COW!ly. Frank Manzo, a Battin appointee lo the appeals board and hi> finance chairman In laal {ear's f)ecllon, bas aaid he la In favor o the. 1nve..t1gaUon. The atUlude or th..: other two members ls not known. Nixon Plans Japan Visit In November W ASffiNGTON (UPI) -Preeldenl Nixon is conskier'ing an oUiclal visit to Ja(an some tinie this: year, lt was learn- ed today. A Japanese government official made first disclosure of the plans in Tokyo, saying Nixon would make a vlJlt before the end of the year. A White House spokesman, Gerald L. Warren, sald there were no definite plans !et for such a visit. However, other Adminl.stratlon orficials said the first half of November was a target for such a visit. There was no immediate word on bow this might affect Nixon's long-planned trip this year to EUrope, A published report in Tokyo speculated that Nixon might tie in a tr ip to Japan with his European tour, or would go to Japan after returning from Europe. In Tokyo, Ganri Yamashita, deputy Cabinet secreta ry. told a news con- ference that Prime r-.1inister Kakuei Tanaka's government has not received any official information on when Nixon is expected to come to Japan. But Yamashita said the visit may con1e before the end of the year. "t's all so ridicu1ous the way this case developed and bow this dog came so close to death," said Mrs. Marden, who already bas three dogs at her secluded Apopka home. "I just couldn't see it ha~ pen ." See 1>1lltW' for SPEED OUE_EN DAILY PILOT -,,. Or-tollll DAILY •II.OT, wlltl "'!ldl • __...,. 11>• ,,,,.,...p, ... , It Sl!Jbll ....... bY "" er..,.. co111 ,....,.11~1,. Col'flHn'f. s~ .... --.,. Pll~lfs~ed. MOl'IN'I' lll•OUGl'I .........,, ..,. Costa Mew, ,.......,.,. lltlcll, -~ h.ChlFOOOlll~ VIUt'(, L.tO-"""°"' IN~INdall~~ tnd kft ("'""'II/ Byrd Questions Safety Of Nuclear Power Pla11ts Stainless Steel Fabric Car• Tub I FULL 2 YEAR PARTS and LABOR WARRANTY uall ·• • .. -'-~''"'°· .... ""'.. Nllollll _..,... • ~lllltd S.1un11y1 otlllll l!Al•Y•· -.,. ,.-;.,.:;,.1 Pllllllthiftll Jlllnl IS t i J» Wnl k• :,.....,.., ~· MtM, Ct lt!Omlt, m l' .. Mrt H. W1acl ,.,_, ..... •111111.nr J•.t k It C11,l1y r,4 •·-..itr11 t ..C CtM•ll Ml,..... Tlio•111•1 Ktt'l'll '""' T\_,, A. Mw1,hi111 ~i.,. Ef !IW ClM' .. H, lHt lJ~1ril I', N•ll ..... ~ M.t"""'lflt E-11.,.. ._ ci. ..... Offk• J# Hwt\ El C•111l110 •••I, t2l72 --c... ._,......WW ll't Stitt! ........ hiW!o: WJ """""' loulft••• ......... '-": INU •Mell llOutl'l'1 ... ......,. '4ilelt1 m , .... , •- '"••• • •• 1714) Ml.4Jll au .,,.. MsaFI • ; M:t..1611 .. a.-.. AJ ..... , •• SJ , ....... 4tlo441t ~.... lfh. MNt Gehl l"\llllltll"" ~. ,,.. -"""'-lllWl111""6. ......... _..., W' ..... t'-11 Wllll ..... -~ wllt!M _ ... ,... ,....,.._ .. ~ -· ..... CMltJ _, ... ,.111 ~ C•I• #HM, (1'"'""9, ~lflfllll -U•rlff H.U _,,...,) ., N il u.11 IMll#ll'l'1 "''11"'" --'-'-............ ~. ' WASH INGTON (UP!) -Sena te Democratic whip Robert C. Byrd said tir day he is "sufficiently lmpres.sed" by th e doubts of some &elentlsts to question· whether nuclear power plants are a ma· jor risk to the safety of the United SI.ates. Byrd said It was lime the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) and the Ni1- on administration "make clear to the American people whether the fears ex- prtftsed hAve foundation ln f1et, or are \\•holly unfounded.'' ln a speech prepared for Senate delivery, the weal Virginia senator cited reports that dla:perSal of certain fumes from the reactorA could kltl more than live million people . The AEC bis said such an accident would be "unlikely'' . Byrd said he . was neither a tclentist nor an olarmtat, "but I have been auf· ficlently ti:npre11ed by what t have read, ond by what I have been !old by oom- petent scientizts, to raise the quealion of whether surface-emplaced nuclear power r¢actors constitute a major risk to the security of this nat ion." In a separate letter to AEC chairman Dixie Lee Ray, Byrd asked for answers to several questions, including : -"Just how 'unlikely' is an 'unlikely accident~· as described by the AEC? -"Is the AEC confident that the security plans against subversive acti on at 8llrface nuclear reactor plants by coemjes of this nation are totally ade- quate to prevent a disaster of almost in· conceivable magnitude? -"Are the AEC and the ad- minJ1tratton 1atl11Red that in the event of war, thia proli(eratlqn .or surface nuclear reactor plants does not present a target for demolition by enemy action, the IUC· cessful completion of .which would cause a population lo s 1 IO devutaUng that defense of the United States would become meanina:lea?" Byrd said If the apprehensions are without toundatJon, he would feel better II the Admlnlatratlon or 110me other body would reAQUre the pt0ple . "If, on the olher hand, these air 'prehenslons have validity, It becomet Im· paratlve that the appropriate authorities tell the CongreH ond lhe people uaclly what h1zerd1 we face ." I e Smooth, Ru1t0Proof, Chip-Proof e ldNI for 111 W1th- 1bl1 Fobrlc• • LHll tho L!1-llm• oltho Wither l'WS •• , a wcnhabl• knits c:yc:le ....... -... =-,... .... ,.,. . ....... ..... ~ ., ·' 4tlk ... .......... f'M_._..,. ,-.i1ty --~lml . ' YOU CAN IUT A IPilD 9UllN WAIHl•1 AND D~Yll '°' AS LOW' Al 1369" =~==r-S-PE_E_D_O-:IJE=::E::-::-N.:r.. [tt]= • MoGPaw~E'dl•on Company OIVlaion DAY cAsH WITH A~:~r:p _ E EE 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. DowntiJwn Costa MesHhane ~41-7788 • ' - ' p doll tum rcn new T lloo Ge f ra The 1ral to k ping the toty expe pen P3pe HER s Be )IOUI" the fer fuse. M c • • • SC Do~lar,. Franc Fall Devaluatiori Runiors Feed Speculaiio1i PAn1s (AP) -The U.S. dollar and the Frtnch franc tumbled on European cur. rcory marketi Thursday in 1 new wave oC speeulation. TllE FRANC was at its floor level against the West f:crman mark, the ·Belgian Jranc and the Danish kroner. The French and Ger1nan cen- 1 ral banks were buflng heavily to keep the franc from drop- ping below Its floor level, and the Bundesbank was also ,.. ~., IV . buying dollars as a pn>p. The franc wu under heavy pressure for the lour th,. straight day. SpeoulaUon was led by nimors of a poaslble devaluation. The rumors also ta1ked of a revaluation of the Belgian franc. I • THE OOIJAR opened strong this morning then plummeted in later trading, ilppareQUr because of the nervousness over the franc. 1be opening dollar quotation in Frankfurt was 2 , -4 1 5 o -· 11.·,. ..t•;,--L .,,_._, .,,. -,, . -- marks, but later sUpped lo 2.1700, lbe lowest since AuJ. I. lo Paris on the olflclaJ foreign exchange markel. the commercial franc closed at -4.18-.21 to the dollar, down from l.2&7$-,Z72S WeJ!nesday. TUE FRANC was on the floor in Frankfurt, and the mark at the ceiling in Paris. There was no indication how much the central banks had poured into the market during tbe hectic trading where rates shifted frequently. Datatron's Saws Up 'TALKING' BALLPOINT PEN ENDS ROUTINE REWRITING St1nford Engl'nHr1 Use P•n to RH ord Information Computerized Stanford Pen Re~lly 'Wired'.for Sound Spedal .. The Dally pilo( MENW PARK -A pro- totype mQdcl or a simple, in-- expensive ''talking"' baUpoint pen that coold reduce massive paperwork and delay i n routine business ~ctions is under development at Stan. ford Research Institute. THE PEN IS similar to an ordinary pen in site and abape HEll'S AN OfFEI TOU SHOULl>N'T IEFUSE ·'! .. ~m1Y•u.1r1,1." Belter h('alth can for your family is now yours for the asking. And it is an of· Cf'r that you should not re- fuse. l\'ledlcal kno"•lcdge is increasing al o. rapid rate and new techniques and de· vic<'s make il possible for )"OW' physician to dia'gnose diseases and to treB-l you more effectively than ever befO<'<. Our pharmacy also has an otter for you -we will ai.. WI.YI stock any new medi· c1ne as soon as It 15 released for public u.te. We work closel.Y with the physicians In thl• community to bring you the bctt ln heal th care service. YOU OR YOIJR DOC'l'OR CAN PHONE US when y~ need a delivery. We will de- liver promptly without extrti charge, A great many peoole rely On Us for the.Ir heafth- n~. We welcome ~uests for dellfff'Y s e r v I c e and charge accounts. PARK LIDO PHARMACY S51 He1plt•I Roatl _,.... -h 642-lSIO ,,.. Dell"'Y' except that it is wired to a computer system. 'l1ie com· puter is programmed t o receive signals generated in- stantaneously as a person hand·prints characfers with the peq to. reCord information. "Such instantaneous and remote processing of data might be invaluable to large businesses engaged in daily consumer<>riented service!!,· sucb as banks, insurance com- panies and utUities," said staH scientist Dr. Hewitt D. Crane, the inventor. The pen could be used , fOr example, by a bank teller crediting a savings or check· tng account. In lhis case, according to Dr. Crane, the data would not have to be retranscribed froJn a piece of paper by another employe; ~ t~ paper i~lf put through expensive automatic reading equipment. Thllll. cost and delays could be reduced in "crediting accounts, or establishing cash re· quirements. IN ANOTHER case, a meter YOUR NEWSPAPER CARRIER IS A CREDIT MANAGER .. .,.. .... ,, 11-........ 4-41 -......... '" ....... ,..,,,.,..._..,..,..,__ .. ..,_ .... ..... tr Wll ,_...., .t,.., ......... a. DAILT PILOT urrfln '"' .. ~ ,., ... _ ..... ,.., "'"" ,.. .. ,., ........ ...., ....... ,., "" .......... , . .., ...... ,... c...,... .. ....., .................... , ........ ""' ..... 1ltli., .... _...., ......... " ........ .... ·-"-...................... __ ..... -..... --" ........ ,__ .. _ .............. ___ ....... . ASSURE PROMPT COURTEOUS SERVICE DAILY PILOT CIRCULATION DEPARTMINT • • • . . I . Erigines DETROIT (API Tbe Chrysler Corp. bas bought rlgtits to the Use and s:ale of Honda Motor Co. 's CVCC engine system, the American auto maker reports. 'Itte agreement announced Wednesday with the Japanese Orm is for nonei:clusive use of the engine, which Chrysler hopes will contribute to its meeting tighter d o m e s l i c emission standards. Chrysler shares rights to the engine with the Ford Motor Co., wruch concluded a similar agreement with Honda in July. Neither of the auto makers would reveal the llnanelal terms of itS Honda contracts. General Motors paid $50 mlllion to the German in· ventors of the Wankel engine two years ago in its effort to procure an engine which will cut emfssiom. The first GM Wankels are sdleduled to go on sale late in 1974. Pnffin~s Up Adult Smoki1ig ori Rise \ WASHINGTON (AP) -Cigarette smoking is on tbe rise again, equal to about 205 packs this year for each adult American 18 years and older, says the Agriculture Department That Is up nearly three packs !rom 1972 and is tbe most-Cigarettes smoked per adult since· tbe average was nearly 210 packs o! 20 cigarettes each ln 1968. The 1973 smoking estimate was included In a report Wednesday by the department's OuUook and SJCuaUon Board. Based on total use of cigarettes in the United States, estimated at 583 billion this year, tho aver- age per ad ult is on ly a staUsUcaJ ngure since it In· cfudM both smoI<ers ihd nonstpokers. lt also In· eludes cigarettes smoked by thooe younger than 18 . • Complete New .York Stock List • . \ • I l I • \. I ' ! I I ( • TUMBLEWEEDS GOT #N SCOOPS FOR 11JE •pi;s~R1 P2NOLJNCER"?! MUTI AND JEFF FIGMENTS - QUICK, AIOtt..C'~ aJr Alt> SEE 1PN Hl0l-I IP IN lllE PINE l11£E KJT QJMBEb/ : NANCY ' WHAT'S • ' ' ' • b.y Doug Wildey UP 'ID 11>W·1-w HAO ALL.1'1W IOMMjll TUE ~ ... HOT Jtt IT! ves, 6AJ.l.~! l J v SAY I Pl.AN SWff PINlr CHANffS WITHIN MY by Tom K. Ryan eAP! l'Ml\T A 511lRY! I CAN SEE IT NCJN ~REAKIN<; ACFOSS PAGE ; ONE!:'SHAKE·UF' IN COURT! JORISPICTION! JUA!;E 10 l'IJR6E JANl-roR"!! BEFORE WE WERE MARRIEO')t)UTOlD ME 'ibU'C BRING HOMElliEBACON BUT THAT W/ltS JUST 80l.ONEY.' ~·:t PEANUTS · YOU'RE HO EAR.TMLY GOOO.' WMY OOH'TVO\J VOl..UNTEER FOR. SKYLAB! by Dale Hale by Emie Bushmiller r DOOLEY'S WORLD S~LLY BANANAS 'Me,.,P>tR, FILC.a.ou~ Mol'ro 'l<i1fll aT BNY cosT': t---'-' GORDO "' MOON MUL!.INS Wl\AT Do£5 ONE Tll<'EO l!lJSINESS L#>Y HAYe10 Do10GET SOME 'DINMeR? . ANIMAL CRACKERS • by Charles M. Schulz . TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLB weu.,~! AM A6AIN-1HE ANXIOUS LET'S LEARN ACROSS 1 Kind of , buikfmg 5 Yellowhe1d or Donner-· 9 Open· mouthed 14 Europhn juniper 15 Coun.tctr· t tenor 16 Nonmetalllc I element \ 17 Effusive l prl~ 19 Twi'ltlf ~ 20 DeliCate '\ fabrics r 21 Cherl1'o1tont l 23 Mr:Carnegte ( 24 Doggoned 27 "-····or charge?" ( 29 Move .' 31 ~:~1:~ly \ knot• t 35 Cale ndar ~ abbt. 37 SpeaU \ wldly 39 Fucinetion ( 40 Region ot s,.1n , .. 2 Not bf'Ofd 44 Asum .-worm 45 Occurring whhln 47 Of an •rmed force 49 Hum.nhand: lnfOfm•I 60 Legal lorcu 52.small, Slender 1nd 1rim Yesterday's PuWe Solved: 54 Gadget 56 Driv9s mad 59 Ab1ent GI 62 Nocturnill mammal 64 Prohibit 65 Rus5ian revolutionary 67 A sian couriuy 70 Supine 71 PromgtlV 72 Blue grape pigment 73 Woolen !abri( 74 Italian community 75 R!CIOf: Abbr. DOWN Y I 11 A' E D I T 0 T 11 Melody 12 Gallup - 13 Noun ending 18 Star: Pefhf 22 Thrash: Informal 25 And else· 1 Bur11 wi1h ho'i where:2 liquid 2 Star in Centaurus words 26 Breed of reddish cattSe 3 Acquisitions ol knowle<lge 28 Help! 4 Cancel JO Recondition- s Tap gen11y ed tire 6 Moslem leader 7Cometoa halt 32 Snakelike 33 Ckartes Lamb 34 Vegetable dish 35 Somersault 8 Of audible sound 9 Elementary 36 We1tern US tacts city 10 C1pe ol ••·• 38 Rescued from danger • 41 Young blul 43 Overdue 46 Early auto 48 Linden tree• 51 Weep aloud 53 Canopy 0Y1r '"""' 55 M ioor slip 57 Carbonated bever.;a 58 Depleted of energy 59 Eur. mountain ~ ... 60 Part of "&o .... til ·--about 63 Indian of New Mexico 66 Born: Franc 68 Abraham'• nephew 69 Compa11 point Pt/PU.~ JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH Piillell!I~ ! ;..· _ _, I f] DICK TRACY r HE-TOl.O Mi ~It ilp";~~ ~"1(io A~i TMil L-OWl<$T IN Cl...44$, ANC> • YOll'R~ N l>ANGilt OF FA l~IN6' ,\\ATM, A, '"~! ' ANO THAT'$ WHY Mi WANTID TO ·~11 Mf. ! · OSE-CAPITAJSE (l "-..\ ll' by Harpld Le Doux by Mel 1l<AT St.Y Cl.I> PIVIL J! IT'f TMf. OW ~1-0W·~Ll~·AND· FAl~lf\)(i. ·MATM . ~OIA'T'INE !! ' -· --· by ·Chester Gould PAN:::::O~OUll=-=.~ue=BER="'GLO\lli=~,..... .. ·-------wru. Pll01"0GRAPM TURNED INSIDE·OUT EACH l'INC.ER,&M? IS Al-1' llEAOY. ' ., J ' .!UfM!ilY, Septtinbl:r 2:0, 1973 OAtL I PILOT . ' By Charles Barsotti (,J;lll.. t.160/a fllUr:>&O a ,,.<.i C<lilcM re• 5c>'1e T11>1e No<J. I by Ferd Johnson by Roger Bohn THE GIRLS ~ "Reprdlq ____ .. 111e .. __ top, Ille-.-·-........ JIM .......... wti.11 tomethhc ....... , •. ...,.. ......... BMer ii darllq." DENNIS THE MENACE • I I I I fA15 M" Moo "" Mw M"' M"' M O M~ "" •• ti•r •• ... ... "' ., •• •• ... NtlF · Nau NU "' ... ... NP< NU "'' N• NISI N" N•ll N•i N" N .. N .. N .. ~! NEa NE N-Nw ,. NYO NY• "' N" "" "' "" N" "" NU NM• NMO NM NA NA .. "' NoC .N '"' Jo:oU "" No• "'" NoN "'" NoS "" Nott NM• ., N•• •• N•• N•• N•• ·~ ••• •• " " " Mrt " ... ... "'' 0« "'' 8:' "" °"' ... o•u 8~ ""' ... . , °''' ... '"" ., ·~ Ow Ow ... " . ' " ••• • '·. .,. •• " .. .. ~. p p •• p p •• p .. •• Po .. .. p p p .. •• .. .. .. .. •• .. .. "' p .. .. " p p •• p p p ~ .. PO Pl ' ' • • ' • • • ' " ; ' ' • ... Stocks Continue Majo1· '.Advances NEW YORK (AP)-Stock market pnces moved higher again Thursday m some of the heaviest trad- ing or the year as the market's recent powerful per- formance pulled many pr1vate investors back tnto the market b1 oker$ said The odvance extended Wednesday's rally, which added more than 19 polnl.>i to the Dow Volume con t1nued ahead of the previous session which totaled 24 57 million .shares Advances overpowered declines by more than 3 to one during the day ,.-,..=---""""""' __ ..,._-=a= - • • ' SC • DAILY PILOT JI J• • • • ' 1 ' I MUTUAL FUNDS ~ ),.0 ,,,, ?l.~ ?l.6 ,, ' 71 .6· '" '" ?l., U.1 ,,.1 11,6 11.~ 11.1 16.l U .D 11.• 11.1 '" H .9 H .t 11.0 ll.• n .1 1l.O Ne"' 'Vorll ~ol Et.TOM & Joftn\ln ,4.U 24.Mt KUDOIEll "DS: l~wlnQ i\ 11 lh l o MOWAll:D: E'l'STOMIE: lnlr lflY 15.Sl 15,51 bi., ano &\-"i prl 8111., F<! •-64 10.~4 Cu\! 81 H.61 lt.46 8a1ant 16.?5 16.15 Ce\ Oii Mu\1HI Q..,111 F 1-1..5•1S.t5 Cu\I 82 lt.6011.48 Com 10.8810,U l"und\ a\ Quole!S bv 1ncme • 01 6 S'I Cu\I 84 1.11 8.96 Soecel l~.t? l0.91 Ille r.-.so '""· . S~til F 1:9? .:., C1nt Kl 7.09 7.16 5EABD GJIP: Stt k F~ 11.tl U .H CU\I Kl 6.15 6.11 Ad Gw 4 14 4 65 Bid A'lll EDIE Si:t 21.U 11.41 Cu\! Sl 11.1114.4S Ad t<1c 1,1) 4.DS Advt.er 4,15 4.64 l!!f'C MGMT GllP: Cu\t S1 11.04 11.0'I Ad In\ l.99 BI~ Aelfla Fd 8 11 9.~ fqly Gr A.04 A.79 Cu\I ';J 1.17 t.07 Cm Can 4.80 S 1\ Aeln• In 1).S! u .n EQIY Pr l ll l.41 C11\t S4 4.61 s.os Inc Fd6 6.00 6 ;a "ltJ!ure 10.15 10.IS Fnd "'" I.ti I.SS Apallo •.91 S,18 t;lld Lev • t 1 •.11 AGE Fd '99 I.ti'! Eqret Gt 11.IS ll.86 Pol1r5 J.16 l.11 SECU•ITV FD5: AUs11te 1).19 U.11 El!un Tri 16.11 ... l(nlcl<.r 6.]6 6.91 Eoully 3.~8 l .0) Alohl Fd ll.11 U l6 EmenJ 3.13 •.1111 l(nl<.r Giii 1.81 1.16 Invest· 6.6l 719 Amc10 F s.os 5.11 Ener!v 1!.tl'l 17.tl'I Lndrrirl<. 6.89 7.n u11r1 F 7.11 8.11 "'" Dvrs t.l6 10.Jt F1lrl d 1.11 t.ll Lent Fd I .II 5.15 SELECTED l'DS: Arri Eqty t.!Q 1.1& Fm Bure t.18 t.71 LEX G•OUP' Am Sllr 8,11 t .41 AM EXPlltESS Fed RA\ 9.11 CD Ledr 11.1lU.18 Ooo Fd 991 9.91 l'UNDS; l'IDEL.ITV Grwth 6 71 7.t1 Sot Shrs 11.11 ll JI Caot11 7 67 9.15 GROUP: ':letrch 13.69 U.tl Sf/nlinl!I 10.IJ 11.A5 lncom l ,Sl t.10 Bnd ~ 8.91 t .&t l •bty Fd l.tt 1.91 sentry F U .Ot 15.26 l!b')\m '·"' 1.61 CIPlll 11.65 12..77 Liiie 'c"lv '•"', ·,·", •,HAAEHLD GRP ti Soed--7.96 8.70 Conlra t .61 ... l&6Nli r " ,t .1 """" l.St l. A~oc~rlfl ~:;~ ::g ~,(Ste ~J; 1;~~ kAYL.~S: ~~1{0f:-d t~ : ;~ Am lntln I.ti'! I.Sii E\te• 10.lt ... C•P D-t 1l.S01l.'SO Harbr' 1.IS 1.11 Am tn~t S.Ji S.16 E'lt•~t 11.11 11.Mi Mutual U.111l.'7 LeQ•I L 6.?9 6.91 .r.m Mui t .ll 9.11 Fu"d 11.1611.11 LDRO .t.••: P~ce Fd 1.76 I.I! "rnNt G~ t .lt 1.6! Purl!n t.•~ 10.17 A.flllat 6.11 7.ll SHE .. RSOH l"DS: ANCHOR Saltrn F t.l! I.It Am Bus 2.99 l.1• A11prc 19.1?11.n GlltOUP: Trend 11.\6 26.U Bnd deb 9.9! 10.'1 lncom 11.11 U.Sl CBDlll SOI S.$6 l'INANC1AL. lulllern 10.1)11.ll lnvtll 9.11 10.69 Fnct I"" 7.11 1.16 PROGllAM.S: Lullln In t.1610.ll t;11 Oe~n n.11 n.n Gr,,.111 1.11 t .01 l'"in 0"(n tJI •.lB Manhtn •.02 l .l? Sid! Fd 1.16 I.BS lncorn 7,16 7,1! Fin Ind 1.11 •.2S M..t.SS CO: SIGMA l"UNDS : Ventur t .10 10.0ll Fin Inc 5 u !.1• F•eem 7.99 9.76 Cao !.hr 7.11 a.IS w~ Nall 1111 U.11 vent '11 t .ll lndo F l.lt 9." tnv 10.\611.S• .r.\lron l.'19 I JS !\tFd Va 11.6) 11.68 M.1s' F 11.6911.11 Tr<t 1.11 9.ll Au da• F 110 I 96 FllltST MASS l"NCL.: Ventur t.16 10.01 A11 E ' " INVESTORS· MIT 11.SJ 11.llG t;milh B 10.1) 10.IJ HOUGHTON · Dl\C Fd S&t 61~ MIG 13.191'.Sl SEI II.Gr 1a.u 10.l6 Fu"ct A i .11 5,1J G•!ll Fct 1:0 1:1t MIO • 13.!9 U.95 So GenF 11.lt 13.tt Fun~ B 7.09 1.10 S!IX-F 7.91 B.13 MFO ll.9911.17 Swsl In-B.11 l.ll Slot~ S.81 6,ll tst M.ulU 1.70 9.10 MCD lS.1111.?9 Sw tnv G 6.1? 6.ll A•e Sci I 11 •.II FOlltUM GROUP: M111e1 1v ? 11 1.H So¥r In 11.S~ U,66 100 Fnd 11.11 11 .Sl Ma11\fr 11.0111.01 Sl>ttlril 1.11 S.61 BLC Giii 11 ,Sl"11.61 101 Fnd a.u 9.U Mid A'" S.l'I s.n SI.I' tnO 1.16 116 B•bson 11 SI 11 St ·Cl)lurn' 9.\8 t .SB M:'>ll'f Fd 1~.88 1'.n ST•TE IND Gfl_P: Bl~•111: 1·11 1"16 1S Fund 61~ 6 38 MSB Fd /!) fll Corn Fd l lJ) S.39 811•k 11r s'99 &:s1 Fdn Gr t:s2 ,:9' Mn BnG 1D.12 11.tl'I Oivesu 117 S,I& Btacn HI a·<Jt lttl'"OUNOEllS MIF Fd 7.SD I.fl ProQrS S.11 169 8eacOI\ . . GROUP· MIF G•o f.K I.Of 51 Fr Gr f 89 1.89 -c11U111• Grwth" Sfl 591 Mu0'"<1I f,97 S.•O St Fri~ •.1' 9.1t Btr~er 11; 11·6, 11"61 1nco'" 11 '91 u·u MuOrn fn 1.99 t .n State St• '6.11 u,o~ Ber~~lll" .·,~ ··ss F M!Ull .:u '"Mui Sllrt fll fl) STEADMAN l'"OS : Bl)lldSI-117 Sl? F S~clt f1111111Mu!I Trs 1.171.17 firnlnd J.lt l.19 Bos! Fdll '1! 10:66 Fourso F t.OI t'.n 111111 lndu 10 11 10 i2 r:i~so t""11 i·l~ J !~ Brown J.31 l.69 FRANlt~IN ,. .. T SEC FDS: . sTEf~ ROf. 01'DS i :~~~~~It GollJ>rU[. f()8 1 ~1 e111anc 903 t .tt B1l1nc 1D.911~tl Bull Fit 11 ]9 1t 66 G,,.th Sr 7 51 1 Jl 9?<>~ Sr I.II S.11 Caolll 1~.ll 10.!l Cd Fd 11"a; n 'llO Fr 1ncrn 1 91 1 10 Oivldn l.S6 3.,IJ Slot-1S,OS 1S,OS D!nShr J'~s l tl'J US GvS t 11 10"11 PrelS111;· 6,1l 6.70 StSGAOUI': Nii#11 9&1 101• U!i!llit s:n s:6o l~com .•.67 s.10 Grwr~ &_JJ lt• NY V n 11 '112 SI Res Cao t.IS 1 l! S11X-Sr 6.1S 7.11 lncom B.l ' IJ.1' 8 tim' 10.ltl0.1• Rs Eqtv IC5 1.81 Grwth 6,81 1.12 S.rnmlt •.1•10.18 C1I • " F-1 LIEQ 11'111111 NEW ENG LF: Technt 6 IS 7.11 • FdMt do •sa tss E<1~Hv 1~s&1100 s11r-ev F 1061 11.&1 CG Fund 1~ St n .1• l'UHD!. INCP ' Gr"''" ''·'G 11.11 Syncro F II) Ill Gao Trin 11.0113 1$ GROUP· 51de 16 91 11.19 TMR AP • 01 9 91 Ce-nl Sii\ 11.8 11.16 Comm" • 16 10 01 NEA Ml 9.~8 t.8~ Temol G 1:11 S.97 CM ANNING lmD<'C 9·?l I" Neu Cent S.61 S.61 Tower C S.91 ... llUNOS; !ndu\ tr 11 ·1~ 11"11 Neuwth · •.ll 9.ll Tran C111 t.'l •.16 t1111ncd l~.Sl 11.!1 Piiot 111 1 50 N~,,.ton 1'.IS 16.2) T••-1 E<1 10.9~ 11 tl find Fd •.O! t.St , · N"' Pe" 1'.0111.3• Tudor H ·11.•l 11.91 Com SllO; 1.11 I.fl G11tewy I u I.QC New Wld 11.f~ 1J.6S 10111 CG J.!IO JI~ Grwth S.tl S.119 GE S.·S P l~l' •·· Nltllll\ 1',UU.•• ?tlth (I l Ot t.tl 1ncom 6,18 7.U Gen Sec 6.11 6.11 N!st lvlr 1'.91 u ,11 Unlfle-d l.tl 9 IS Soec1 1,11 1.01 GROU P SEC: Oc:e~no &.91 6.•I Uflllfund 8 6' t U V~!ur 91)10." Alie• F 'i.&S 6.11Qmeoa 1,91 I.OJ UN•DNSERV1ce" CHASE Bal Fnd 1.18 I Sl 0 Nell Id' n 11 11 $7 GROU,.· BOSTON: COm St-11 ll n .11 One Wiii 16 91 16:91 Brd s 1"v 13 1811.06 Fnd B~ t ,07 9.91 Gth FAm 1 l• I.I~ OPPl!NHM FD : N~tl In¥ I 1' t ,61 Fron Co s 90 6.'S Grlh Ind 10.•~ 20 9a OD .,lrn 10.8' 11 IS Un Cal)! t.:IO 10 16 Sl\Tr 81 7 18 1.11 Guard 21.19 11.B~ OP Frid 7,~S 1.16 Wll!Plll 1111 tl.t6 ,,,..cl 6,tl 1.118 HAMILTON Gll:P : OD Tmr 9.11 8.116 UN ITIO FUNDS: en"" ,d 10.88 lt.!9 Fund • t~ t.S• OTC $le tO.DI to.to "ccum 1.?9 l,t9 COL.DHIAL. Gr'wtll 7,1? I.IS Bnd Fd 7.6' S.ll f'UNOS: lncom 6 \1 I.ID P•rarnl 1.13 I ti Cont qw 10 ID 11 U Conver 9.•~ 10.31 Hartwel 11It11.1• P1ul Rrv 7.17 1:•s c.,,,, l~ t'i. 10'61 EQu!tv J.19 l.69 Hart Lv •.I\ •ts Pq1su' F ~ u 1.64 1n~o'" n .16 U.61 Fund tO.ttlt.11 Hedbeq IH t.M ~Ml Mt 1.lt t;clenc 70f, 7,lt · ?~~!: ::I~ 1~:~ ~:~;e ~~ i.ii ~~. ~~ .:-?: f~; u~~7dc. ,:·~~ 1~-r~ Ve11tur !.'1 J,11 HllfilCe 11 )619,9S Pi~GIUM GP: us G¥!S •:to 10'.os (.e!urn G 11.66 U.116 ''"°'' Co t 111~ "6 Cllllal J.61 l.Ol V•L.U! LIN E l'"DS: (OMMONWL.TH ll'l'lb Gr 1 1~ 1.0! lncom I.IS 9.S6 VII Lne I U 6 u TRUST· tnc fdAm 11 96 It OS P11qrrn t.17 't.lM VII Inc 411 1"79 Al.8 ° t.tS 1.2S Ind F.f.m J,11 l.6l Pl11e St 1D,1t10.U Le¥ GIPI 7'15 1'•1 C 1.tS 1 S7 tnt~ I~ t ,n Piii Trt ) OS ••• Val SOC J°JS J°61 Cl)lfld Qr 6.11 1:J1 Ill ln¥est 11 JI 1?.16 PIDNEIJI: 'D: VANCE ' ' C.1tmP lld l ,t, f ,11 tnwern G 9 11 t 11 Pion E,, 1.6) 1.3' SANDl•S· CemP Fd I.St 1.1• I,,_ C11 A UtD 11 61 Pion Fd 11.76 11.81 1nvttt • 119 7., Com:rd t .6S t.6S 111¥ Guld 1.4 1.'6 PIO<tr H t.7t 10.10 VS Cllrn 1"19 f t l Con\ ll!V 11.UU.62 tfll¥ lndlc ).1'_ ,., Pltnnd t.O'I t.tl SDtcl 793 161 CMln If# S 11 .,JS 11'1¥ 8M 11.0$ 11.0ll PL! GRO 11.IJ 1J.to. Vnd•blt ,·6) S OfJ ConMI In ,:., 1.ll IM'ittlT PRICE Jl:OWE: V~•d t'•s 1'tt COf'lt••ll l '6 7.90 OUNSIL "'"'h 1).'6 1!.'6 V•nf !Ott! •os . Conlry C tftlH.tt C.0."I J,11 1,13 Nw E,1 17.0!11.0l Vlri.d 1 flS iii '"" 0111 ,:,, 1.01 C.Nlt .," •1·21 l .U 111w Hllf t0.1510.JS Vlkno Gr s"n s'12 ("'#fl Dl'I' S.63 •.11 CilOll ., ••• l\ Pto Fd 1.12 1.3! Will5t i1• ·l "tt Otlln J,17 •'. llllt/IST O•OUP: Provldl •-~ •.it Wat,11 ~ 11"10 n "t4 o,.,111t t.oo t.00 llg8f 'f.'S ::f~ .-;o ~~ddsf~ 1i:~ 1i:~ w~1no eq n :4s u :o tlELAWAR I ... "l 11' F'UTNAM W!Ll!NOTON OllOUP: " o· GJIOUP• Ott•t .... 10.% Mi.11~1 t .6 1 ... PUHDS: e.01or. ,, SS''·" o.i .. F t ·~ 10 St S.toct 1t.1111.ll Co-nver 101• 11.IS lvt 1 iO 11 l1 Oil 0tn1 T ·!:os. s:!t Stt•<L •,·' .. '•·:ii, !~~1,., •1t10.1s Mo~o~ •11:1,u'.1>1 ft~V~ • ,It ti.fl V1r r•• • i '""" 1t )t lt.11 .TCl'lf'llw 7, t •.. OfKI Co .>1 S.'1 II\• Rn J.1l J,61 Grwth 11 ll U.38 Trun u u 111J Pfld9C~ 1S.9'1S,9' It t: I• U) Ill( lQi 1,1(1 Wfl\IY 11 '911f H Dtt~e1 E 10.11 10.n Grw111 4. • !~v t.t11~.1> wt111n 1o:tt n :o1 DlllT'US GltP 't,_comu4_,·!L l.H Vl~ll F 10.tl 11 ti Wil!dtt· 1 II it) Dr~I Fit 10.tt n •. ll l~J Setl ';itt'ti 1'~~~= , 10.tl 11.ff w,,, Ind >'.n s'.ts '"T .. , .•••. I , t1••i '•!Rt I I ,t u ,,, W\rtd Gr Iii,., O•• L.W 1 .!M11,48 11111,i:;: ,.. r.~~' t 66 1i i" WIK:'>ll\ s:i1 1:n 1:.'CC"t 10·t; 1f !f j1:-J (';'#flt t• 11' i-11, ~ ~1~1 t.l• Zl~ltr 10." U.11 c:. i: J'.n i~ J=::. 1:'.u '(1 IM ~ ::~: :.:i :::;~':/~":: • r .. Cedar Grapestakes S' High For Fences Make a ch arming, durable, Cedar Grapestake ·Fence. It's easy to do ond so dec- orative. Cedar 5ilvers with oge. 29~ach Fluidmaster Toilet Ballcock Stop dripping toilets. Comes in 2 sizes, 11 ~" or 13". Easy to install. Witti all lifling•. #400. ' 1 r ' Black & Decl&er 3/4 H.P. Router Router kit includes /17610 rauterplus2 wrenches, stroight and circular guide, bit, case. Model 7611 . 4499 f ·"""""'" 3 Piece Nylon Brush Set Most popular sizes; 1", t Yi" 2" brushes. Nylon handles For oll pointing jobs. Handy Wiss . Pruning Shears Thewoy io easily keep shrubs and bushes pruned just right. Easy grip handle. Model T78. I Handsome loBoy Wh·ite Toilet Mode of white vitreous chino with special low profile design. Feo· lures includ,e reverse trap, dose· 1 couple, .bollcock ,ind~de~. Toilet seot not 1ndude~ ot this pri\:e. \ Black & Decker Belt Sander Belt installs easily on this 3" x .24" lCG belt s.ander. No tilting, gouging or rocking. Model7450. ·4999 Wiss Special Grass Shears Ideal woy to trim your gros.s neatly ond reach into those hard to get at areas. Model 717. • Wiss Special Hedge Shears Designed cind balanced Just right ·so you keep those hedges straight and lush looking. Model 8-HT. 4•9 • SAU PRICES GOOD THRU SEPT. 26 Waste King Fo11d Waste Disposer Patented anti-jam mech'o- niSm of stoinless steel, rub- ber compression ·mount. Model 2500. 2688 'Doorkeeper' Automatic garage Door Operator Opens ond closes your garage dobr electronically. Turns lights on and off. An~, it's safe, quiet ond easy to install. 1/4 H.P. mo- tor, safety stop. so~ 'Werking rodius. ' ~ I I 7 ' • • I v 0(1 Pr by' •al tl\a bla : l " Jo d -· ~ .:1 .. ' Laguna Be a~h . • ED IT 10.N • ' . . VOL 66, NO. 261, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES .,, JAN WOR'tff Df .. DllW """ S'9ff 1bO Orange County GWld Juiy has Cl'IUcized Saddleback Community College President Dr. Fred H. Bl)!mer for lob- bying !or coastline development. ·.Alfred Flores, jury forem!lll pro tem said ~e jury "has parUcular concern that Bremer'! college district would btatanUy undermine another governmen- ta_L en~tj.t y 's fun c t i ons an.d responsibilities.'' The criticism, in a letter dated Sept. 5, is a resPon.se to a letter Bremer wrote in late June urging multiple unit residential deyelopment for the Capistrano Beach coast. Saddleback Board of Trustees Presi- dent John Lund of Laguna Beach later admitted he asked Bremer to write lhe letter based on his concerns for valuable undeveloped 1and he owns on Pacific Coast Highway in Capistrano Beach. 1bougb Bremer, also the district supqlntend~t was on the Saddleback: campus in Mission Viejo today, he was not available for comment to repc.rters. The Grand Jury took issue with a charge in Bremer's letter ihat "the coastal conservation commission is prone to succumb to pressure exerted by in- dividua ls and groups who apparently ilre attempting to thwart types of develop- ment which can be beneficial to a ·particular locality." Bremer contended in his letter that development of the fl at land under the bluffs betwee n Doheny Park and Shoreclill In Capistrano Beach would in- crease the tax base of his college district "without advel'3ely affecting the en· vironment." ' The Grand Jury responded, "your (Bremer's) contention that increased development can take place in this area without adve1'3fly affecting the en-- vlronment does not appea r to have · a basis in fact, aod, in fact, seems to be a judgment better left to those whose con· cem with environmental quality has a broader base and sp ec i a l ize d knowledge." Council Reverses /'".'l'oday'~ Final N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS Earlier, Bremer commented that be ';assumed" Lund has a vested interest in Capistrano Beach but did not discllss it with hi1n, because he believed Lund bad the best interests of the district at heart. The rest o( lhe trustees did not hear of Bremer's letter until late August when the Environmental Coalition of Orange County -saw the Jetter and issued an angry reply. Stand On Parking Meter Plan A' SdngillfJ Time . . Ti'abuco School doesn't have very good plumbing but the scheduling is very flexible. One ol the thlngs it does have surrounding the tbree- room school bowe are oome 1118JSive old oak trees that make dandy swings. The story and additional pictures of the rural school are on Page 3. Osmonds, ,400 Escape Blll7£ iti:··caesar's Palace ,. .. LAS v E G,A s (AP) About 400 -~including tJie Osmond Brothers -~ £l:OUP1 were !lvacuated from ttielr mollll eal1Y' -"today as. a !~ swept tlu)>u&h.lhe ~-th<floor ·ol one Wing of m·• ~ lliil«" heAt, cousing an :ie<nr~~-Tbere' were ~oo lnfuries reported, altbough a Maasachuoetla WOlll8ll was od!lllttlld to •• bOopltal for treatment or imoke Inhalation, sald offlCer Don Pmiatore, Lu; V-Melroflolitan f!>llce Departmenl spokesman. : '!be blue erupted about I a.m. In a "4te of rooms _.Plecl by the Insurance """PIDY which .ani<!1 the botel'a fire, ~ l'lllllatore ~ A natlonol. ~lion ~ Imurance •agenll ,II uildier Wr/ at .the ·liolal., · , ......... 'lfld the bfue .... believed. . . . ' . . .. 1=rv,i~ Co_mpany to have started in.a mattress, but said the suite was unoccupied at the time. Sidney Galhrlt, exe<:1.1Uve director of public relations for the hotel, said the alarm, was1 turned 1n by a passing cab -dn.ver wlil saw ·names shooting from the stven'tb hoot of the north wing. • '!be wing, which contains 300 rooms, was bqoked solid and all guesll, including the OsmOnds, lhe •m&ll1g_group of five brothers wfiO are· appell'ing arthe hotel, were evacuated, many in nightclothes. Paaslatore said Ellen Falzone, ao, Walflla, Maaf., was admitted to a hospital imalre-lnbalall«b . ll:lri lllilta of the Clark Collnly Fire ·~, IJo.cbd.\JP'Dy 1-VfCa!Cl· ty rireriien, responded 'tO the almn and haO the blaze under cilntrol in I~ minutes, PUsiatore saii:I. Cost Uni t - Okays .Gas Price Hike W ASlllNGTON (UPI) -The Cost of Living Council said today It would allow a boolt ln retail gasoline prices, possibly within I woel:. • Chairman Jotm T. Dunlop, in testimony O!l C.pltol lfJfl ... talking later with reportetg, said die council would grant ga!Oline station operators permission to raise prices by a specific amount to r~flect higher charges by the major sup- pliers. But Dunlop said he did not think the couricll would· diange Phase IV economic rules to Jet retailers continue to pass along future wholesale price hikes to con- sumers, despite the shutdown of many stations by operators protesting the regulations .· Such a decision, be said, would create a "chaotic price situation" bound to con- tribute to inflationary pressures. Gas station operators in Massachusetts prior to Dunlop's announcement said to- day they would end their protest shu~ down, but vowed they wou1d do it again if the N'lJl:on administration refused to change it.s mind on price controls. "We've proven our point and we don't want the pµbUc to suffer any more, 11 said John Bell, a Mobil station operator in the (See GAS, Pale" I) Will ie Says . 'Th is ls It' ' . NEW VORK (AP ) -Willie Mays of: the New York Mets, baseball's 42-year-old superslar, announced his retirement today, effective at the end of the 1973 season. (Story1 Page 33) "lbis is it," said Willle. "I'm retiring after the season. I only hope I can make some contribution · toward another championship in New York in the little time left." Mays has played 66 games thls. season with a .211 batting average and s1x home runs, increasing his eareer tolal, to 660, third behind ooly Babe Ruth and Henry Aaron. 'Can of Wonns' Carpenter Mulls Remappii;ig Plans By JACK CHAPPELL Of .. Deltr ...... s .. Reapportionment of C a 1 i f o r n i a '. s 1egblature historically bas fallen into -a ''do unto others, tben cut -°'4 aitllltioa" and that's why the. wllolt can of wwms got tossed into the lap of the atate supreme court this year, State Sen. Den- nis E . Carpenter said Wedoesday. Carpenter (R·Ne"P!lrl Beach) was ad- dressing nearly 100 persons at a luncheon meeting ol the LagunaNlguel Republican Women's Club in Lagtma Niguel. The state legislator said that oo the whole, Orange County benefilted greaUy in lhe reapportionment plan prepared by "masten" appointed by the coor\ to I redefine the state's assembly, senate and ~ngrwional districts, as a result of the 1970 cemus. Sen. Carpenter said the hassle over reapportionment b a d n ' t historically reached lhe dimensions It did recently because present political climate was somewhat unique -with the Democral!I controlling the legislature, and the Republicans in charge of the state ad- ministration. Therefore , an apportionment plan drawn to suit the Democratic legis1ators wou1d simply be vetoed by Gov. Rona1d Reagan. Republicans couldn't muster strength necessary in the legislature to suit the GOP. Before, when the Democrats controlled both the state house aoo the legislature, they reapportioned to their -own-ad- vantage, and the a n q u i s h of lb e Republicans, he said . Carpen ter wryly noted however, Uiat in the 100 years before the Democrats took over, the Republicans played the same reapportionment tricks on them. The U.S. Constitution provides for a Ci!RSUS each 10 years with representation to the House of Representatives based on population. U.S. Supreme Court rulings have car- ried the doctrine through state leveb, and ordered "one man, one vote " representation. Prior to the reapportionment plan prepared by the masters, Carpenter's state senate district included about a million pel'3ons, while some colleagues represented only a quarter that many sPt AKS T0-1ssue·- sr1te S.n. Carpenter persons, he said. In essence, that made the vote of those senators' constituents worth four Oran8:e County votes . ~masters-were charged with redra#ing the lines to eliminate groSs population discrepancies, but to preserv e political units and sOc:lal where possible. Carpenter, a member or the Sen ate reapportionment committee, said that he and a legislator with whom he does not often agree, did agree that after trying for three years, lhe legislature w a s "incompetent" to reapportion itself. The reasoo is that legislators long ago found out that by redr awing the district lines In certain ways, they could benefit their own position and party at the ex- pense of the opposition. That's called gerrymandering, after enterprlslDg Massa c hu se tts Gov. Elbridge Gerry, whose party in t812 formed a reptile shaped district to (See REMAP, Page I) f iling .Sig,nals More ,Annexes I . An unideiilified co'°'ple climbed-out onto a three-foot 1edge overlooking the "slrlp" and stayed there until res~ by firemen . J?ecorailve grillwork on the outside of Cesar's Palace prevented the uli of rescue ladders. Police Nab ·Four Laguna Nudies . R~k Con~ert Dela,yed · By GEORGE LE!DAL .............. : Irvine ~mpany filing lor "Ilona! "commeretol and raldentlal" preoJOOlng Jor the llOldeo trl.qle ~ another City of Irvlna lllllOUtlon u (ortllcqmlng by the eod ol the year. ' Within 10 ~. city planning com-rnUolofterl will formally review a request to -4'° IC"8 el -bounded by 111o Santa Ana, s.a llllp> and 1.agun0 i'reewaJI. • ' 1!'!11 the area la' lrl11"&.vetoped by 11111 wl~ two ~ oquare feet of com- .,,.....1 •• 'Ibero are to be oeven maJi1r deilarlmenl stores, 200 "!"'lier ihoPI. a io to 40IJ.room hotel, theilt•n, 1iil Ice rink and public evenll are• within · lwO, sausage lhapod, covered malls. City Planner Mike HlrrU lsald the pre- 10D1n1 1ppllc1lloo lor land not ~Uy • (ke TIUANGLB, Page I) . · .. 'I • Coucilm en Pos tpo ne Decision on Sa n Clemente Fete Orange County Sheriff's officers called San Clemente city councilmen held off -to the SO.th Laguna area Wedneotlay by 1 decision on proposals by a folk·rock lhe llllI'Y protesta of a 7 .. y.....,ld local thalter 0,...r who plans a free rock con- relldenl Cited four per90ns afltt alleged· ~ ...... Ille City's oorth beach this fall. ly finding them sunbathing In the nude OD ..... I a local be>ch. ' ~ ibii ir:oP.sal by James Jenkins Booked for lndecetll exposure were 'for . the 6'e '·'show featuring a group Kathy Elizabeth Coffey, 20, of 32192 lcnolllf as ':flonk" has drawn cliupproval Pac!IIc Cou1 Highway, Soulll Lllunl: ~ pbill:eoffltlalJ and uie.c1ty ata!L Thomaa Howard Maxwell 17, 118'1 0.... Iii ·• llrtef appearance before coun· Fron~ Lait\na Beach; Richard Bryan cllm•• ~-lnaisted thlt 1 large aeg· Albrecht, 11; 409 w:Bay SI., Coota'M'eaa . in,o! el the city's clUzena -young •nd::"lloiiald Wayne Auatln, lD, al w lovoi's ·af ~!Jlporary music -are Front SI., El Ton>. belilc IF<!rCI''* hlJ amcei1 Is an at· Depotla •Id the i1c1er1,...oompWnant tempt to P,.ovlde them wllh their favorite told thorn be spottad tho four sunbathing recreaUon. Jn the nudt on the lllMf adjoining his But councilmen hesitated on rrantlng a pn111erty. He Nld U.., i...,..i blJ ob-declllon on the ~ for the North jectloos to the pra<tlce. Beach parkinl lot and Instead ordered . • that the request go to parks and recrea- tlon~ commissionera early next month for a recommendaUon. Jenkins stressed that what he proposes would be an event catering primarily to South Coast music fans and be said be never Intended for the show to become a "IU~rtrlp." • _ Ad'"11islng, which began this w .. k In a weekly want-ad circular, would only stretch as far away as Laguna Beach, Jenkins said. No admission would .be charged If the cozu:orl wenr oil, but donlilons for ex· penaes would be accepted. "I don'l expect to make dollar one oul of this," Jenkins 18.ld, "oqly a litUe in- 1Ututlonal ld~ertlslng lot' 'the theater (the Four Muses)." '!be Impresario a d d e d that rock music "serves as great a need for our young people as your golf course does for the older element In this city." He promised to work along ~ police officials and parks comrhlsstoners to achieve a compromise In hls bid. The parking lot, a little-used facility at the northerly end of the city, served as a spot roe-a rock dance last year as dozens of San Clemente High School youngsters climaxed a special cleanup· d a y tbroughoul the city. Jenklm Insisted that the lot ts• one or very few places In San Cle1nentc suitable for such an event. Attempts to use the San Clemente !Ugh School football stadium failed, he added . Committee To Hash.Out Di fferences Tbe Laguna Beach City Council Jl'<dnesday made a 18lklegtte change In its public stance regarding parting meter revenue plans1 opting for con- ciliation with foes of the current meter rate increase measure. 1be ·furnabout came under the .. ex~ traon:Unary business" portion of the ' -Wednesday night council m e e l I n g • Previously, the council seemed inclbted to· fight a referendum action seeking repeal of the law, or a specl81 election. The council approved formation of a "small working committee" to hash out differences between referendum sup- porters, afid the city. It also agreed to a special budget study session at 9 a.m. Saturday to consider what cuts may be made in light of the loss of $168,000 in anticipated meter revenues. "It is my genuine hope we can avoid the costs in' time, money and emoUons that such an electlon w o.u Id incur," Mayor Roy Ho1m said Wednesday night. The council took no action repealing the ordinance which raised a storm of protest primarily among ck>wntown merchants who opposed it saying an In- crease in meter fees from 10 centa: to 20 cents an hour would drive away their customers. But councilmen left no doubt that they were reaay to seek a common ground with meter ordinance foes. After discussion of the matter, the council retired to an executive (closed door ) session to suggest possible members to the committee. Names were not made public pending notification ot the persons involved and acceptance. The committee would investigate !_ -Revenue sources to make up funds lost by revoking the meter revenue pro- posal. -Equating finan<:ing of the Glenneyre Street parking structure with parking fees at meters. -Possible review of the city budget wi th recommendations for cuts in light of decreased revenues. "The committee idea is an excellent one. Perhaps it could come up with some compromise," Councilwoman P h y 111 s (See METERS, Pap I) Oraage • Welidter • Mostly SWUly Friday, following the usual low clouds along the coast. Highs in the upper eos at the beaches rising to 7> Inland. Overnight lows in the eos. INSIDE TOD-' Y Afle1' l!l-0>1 of ker life with whi te fo ster parnts, an aborig- ine girl has bel'n taken bacll: to bush for an ammged ""'""'g• with m.iddlffQtd tribeamon. See storv, photo Page 4. l,.M. 1"'41 ti Ml'tM .. C11il0nll1 I, I ..,..... ,.-• CYIUlfltt 41.. Ml..... .... 4, t Ctnlltt 2' Of .... C.., 11 CNlllWWll ll l"tA • Olltll ..... u '""' ... s•1t...Ll6 ..... .., , ... _...... an lnt.rlfllltfMM a4t T~ 1 • l'llMllft 11. IWJ .,........ .. .............. ,,_..... . ....,111:e 11 _,...,.. --~ II ........ &.I \ t ' ' , DAILY PILOT LB Thur'$da.)', Sf ttmbtr 20, 1973 . l'ro11t Page 1 l . TRIANGLE •.• ' ... within the city oC Jrvme will ht tttated • }ust as other zonings are. Jt will be heard +-publicly by the planning comnUssion. Commissioners \\'iii m a k c rerom· mendation to the city council. Coun· ilmen will likely aet ·on-the ·pre-zoning .and the necessary annexation probably in . late December, after the city general plan is completed, Harris noted. • Ge~ral plan alternath·es studied to ~ate Harris said. "all envision com· m.erCial development of the triangle." When lr\·ine "''as barel y six months old Jt launched a successful annexation - the Iare:est in state history .. That action swelled the 18,200 acre size of lhe c:ity to 26.600 acres, or 41 square miles, making .Irvi ne the largest city in Or:inge County In lerms of land area. The freeway triangle parcel was deliberately left ?ut of the annex~t.ion. according to City ~1anager Wilham Woollett Jr. He explained that the tax rich commercial development then plan· ned for the si te would "balance" any future annexation within Irvine's 53,000.. acre sphere of influence. The majority of the remaining acreage Irvine has formally reserved for future growth is destined for residen tial development. Homes create demands ~or city· services. industrial and commemal property and sales taxes help pay the cost. In the case of Irvine Center, proposed development will amount to a CQm· mercial center more than twice the size of Fashion Island in Newport Beach . The first phase development alone, will produce more stores and shops than are presently operating in Fashion Island. a c.'Om pany spokesman sa id . By 1976 ln'ine Center is to have three departme~t stores open with another under construction. The hotel and 100 sma ller shops also are due to be opened. By comparison, Fashion Island has three major department stores and 75 shops. Outside the covered mall are;a will be furniture stores and two and three story office buildings located at t h e southeasterly point of the triangle where the Santa Ana and San Diego Freeways join. · · Phase two construction will add four depa rtment stores, 100 m_ore shops .a nd other regional commercial attractions for a total of $100 million worth or buildings enclosing more than two million· square feet. On completion of phase two develop- n1ent in 1981 or early 1982, development of the northern hair of the site may begin. That property destined for poss.i· ble high rise apartment development is presently in agricultural preserves. Notice of intention to remove lands from the special tax reduction status must given 10 years in advance. About half the property is fanned an~ under provisions of lhe Williamson Act 1s taxed at the ag preserve rate, one-fourth the ordinary rate. . A company spokesm3!' said negotia- tions are under way Wlth tet:i~ who will rent the Irvine Center buddings. Front Page I GAS ... Boston suburb of Lexington. Hundreds of stations a c r o s s "Massachusetts were closed Wednesday 'for a second day despite a court order to stay open. . The gasoline dealers v.•ere protesting the Cost of Living Council ruling that barred stations from passing on to customers a penny-a-gallon increase charged by the oil companies. The council has over-all authority for administering th e Administration 's economic stabili:r.alion program, which went into its fourth phase gradually over the summer. Dunlop declined to predict how much gasoline price inccease would b .e authorized: "I don't know how much 1t will go up." He said the council would take up the question Tuesday and make a decision "shortly -in a matter of days, no longer than a week." Dunlop served notice of "an upward adjustment in these prices" and said "it _ can be implement ed. in a matter of davs." He testified on the over-all petroleum situation before the House-Senate Joint Economic Subcommittee on Consumer Economics. • OIANGI COAST LI DAILY PILOT Tiie Orange to.II D.li!LY "llOT, Wlfll wtri(ll ft combll*I ttM N....,_ P<"t, II Mlbflell 11''1 ...,. ~ to.Jt Put>lilhll!IJ ~. S-. r1I• «!Ilion, 1rt Wbll1l>ecl, M-IY througft l'rldly, IW CO.la Mew, H9WP01"t 8"efl, H"'"tlf'llllloll • BtltCl\/Fountaln V1lley, LIOUnit 6"<11, ltvlM/SaOCllt""c~ •!Id s.,, Ci.m.t.lll/ .S.1t J..-fl (1nl1tr11'0, A 11t19le "90'°""'1 •llflon ho put11l111W S.l\ln11y1 n Sourld•\'1. fll,f JWlflc.ipel Plllll~IHn9 pl1nl 11 11 JllO Wtll lay ltr.tt, Cot.la Mn1. c.1~11, fM)I. Rob1rt N. We.d f>rt1i0t<!I Ind f>llt!l~htt Jae• R. Cutl•y • VIU rre1c1wi1 ancl ~··· Mfflllttr Thoma1 ic.,.,u Edhor Til.-na1 A. Murph;ft• M41MOlf!t !Oltot Clt•rle1 H. Leot Ric l!1rd P. N1 U Nlkt• ~'"' &01ior. ............ Offtc. 222 · F•r.1t A••ll~• f!11 lllflt .A.Wre111 P.O. l oa 666, 926SZ --.c:.te MtMI U0 Well 81fllr"1 '"""'"1 e.cti: »» N....-port Boultw"• ~ '-d!J l'PJ lttdl '°"'"'•rd IM•OllNMll ....... II El C.ml"' llMI M4l1·r (f14il MJ-4.121 ~d tW M:wtW.u1 M2·S471 ........... ao.,..11....,.: Ti s' H 4N•t4ll ~t ""' ~ C..51 'Wlllll"'41 ~! • .., J.-::f' lllv11t1t""", ......... -""' ., ~fl llertlri _.. i. , .. 1 I ' ""'-" lillttltl flff· ...... ., Cllll'ft'tlM ...... --=-•C•llMIM, ~ I ---... ctrrltt AAS ._.,.,., .......... ....mtr1 mlli""'' ......................... • ' ..... ,. .. LEGEND ~ AEGIONAL COMMERCIAL ANO AESIOENTIAL AA£A$ S peaks in Niguel Carpenter Hits 'Criticism Orgy' .. State Sen. Dennis E. carpenter hit at what he called an "orgy of crttlci!m" ln · polillcs, lamented that all good bills don't get the public pressure Uie death penalty did, and gave qualified Support for G9v. Ronald Reagan's tax initiative measure. Speaking Wednesday before th e Laguna Niguel Republican Women's Club, Carpenter (R·Newport Beach), launched into a discussion of what he tenned "general problems," a ft c r discussing the recent court-ordered reap- portionment of state and congressional legislative districts. or criticism, Carpenter said "we can't be that bad as a people or . an ad- ministration." He said he supported measures pro- viding for campaign fund disclosures, but was against laws requiring From Pqe 1 REMAP • • • capitalize on political party strengths. disclosure of lawmakers' Per li o o a I 'ftnanc!s . "I don't feel I have given up m) Constitutlonal rights to privacy be~~u~le hold public office /' Carpenter sa , dded that he had recently refused a re-~uest by the Los Angeles Times for a flnanciitl statement. , H "I resent the tntrusion," he said. f ~ said the innuendo is that if a succ!?Ss ~ man runs for public office, he i!Joing 0 have conflicts or interest. "There is no relationship ~tween qualification to serve and rnake ~!us type of disclosure," Sen. Carpenter said., . Shifting to the governor's tax iniUahve setting an irlcome tax ce iling .. carpenter said he was ln general philosopbic~I agreement wlth the measure, but hadn t made up his mind yet. . He said he wasn't sure the machinery established in the initiative was the best to· do the job. He said the matter '\'as extremely complicated, but that ho~. the governor and bis Detnocratic opposition were over-- simplifying the matter in selling it to the people. MAP SHOWS PROPOSED IRVINE CENTER REGIONAL SHOPPING, APARTMENT .DEVELOPMENT Irvine Company Seeking City Pre-zoning on 480"'8cre Parcel 1n Cou nty Territory A political cartoonist of the day drew \vlngs, eyes and a forked tongue on an outline of the district ~d call~ the resulting dragon shape "a gerryman- ~r." Of public pressure, Carpenter said that although some legislators w e r e personally opposed to the death penalty. they were forced to support it bec~use of the 70 percent favorable vo te in the Nove mber election. Coa stal Panel Study ing Beacli Purchase Bills Beach purchase bills by State Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport Beach) and Senator Randolph Coll ier (D-Yreka ) are undergoing study by the chairman of the Slate. Coastal Zone Conservation Co mmission. Both bills were passed legislature and await Gov. Reagan's · sigi1ature. by the Ronald Carpe nter's bill , SB .1089, makes $7.6 1nillion available for purchase or beach property owned by the Irvine Company between Corona del Mar and L a g u n a Beacl:t. The measure also indicates the land deal won't be closed un til the company has approval in concept from all govern- ment agencies involved for ils plans to develop the ·10,000 upland acres .. Sen. cOllier's bill provides "$14.S-mlllion for beach and park acquisi tion and pin- points ~c ~ites. at Leo,Carri!Jo state beach, Van Dame state park and Sonoma Coast park. state coastal cornm1ss1oners weren't sure how they felt about either bill at their meeting in Inglewood Wednesday. Chairman Melvin Lane was authorized by-his fellow commissioners to study the bills and make any recommendations to the Governor. · The main concern of the com.misfilon is that beach sites and other coastal t.one development plans will be decided by the Legislature and won't come before the commission. Under Proposition 20, the coastline in· itiative passed last November, the com- mission has pennit jurisdiction within 1,000 yards of mean high tide line. The planning area extends five miles inland . "We might be falling into a trap if we choose particular parcels (of beach parks) before we do our plannin~," Co~­ missioner Ellen Stem Hams satd Wednesday. "Do we want coastal acquisition to go on without our being involved?" Lane asked Harris. "That 's the nagging ques- tion." Executive Director Joseph Bodovitz ex- pressed reservations about Carpenter's bill "preempting pla·nning options" by tying the purchase to approval of plans and realignment of Pacific _ Coast Highway. "That one I have to read," said Lane . From Page 1 METE RS ... Sweeney said. She said if the matter were to be forc- ed to an election, passage of the meter revenue plan by the voters was ques- tionable. "It is a very popular sort of issue. You can 't get anybody to be in favor of meters . "I think we just have to face th e fact that that n1oney is gone. The parking structure is in dire danger.'' Mrs. Sweeney said. Jt had been estimated that . the plan ordinance approved by the council in- creasing the fees from 10 cenls an hour and providing for installation of 680 new meters in conunercial areas wouJd raise an additional $300.000 each full fisca l year above current meter receipts. 'thls year, had the meters been put in, and rates increased by October as the council planned. some $168,000 additional money would have been realized. Mrs. Sweeney suggested · that the $50,000 the cit y council r e c e n t I y transferred to the parking authority for facility development may have to be taken backt ''to handle day to day ex- pense11." Councilman Charlton Boyd said the cl· ty may have "moved too fMt" in passing the meteri plan . "If the city has made a mistake, and tt would appcf(Jn this area it bas, admit it and restorC any groM gap In com- munication between the council and the business community ,'1 Boyd said. Clemente City Ma11ager Puts Do11ht on Bus Rental "There is no non p artis an reap- parUonment, not unless you find a guy living on another planet to do It," Sen. Carpenter ' said. He said it was "unfair" to ask · a . legislator to rise above personal .self in- terest and his party to write himself out of office. However, he said other g~ legislaUon someUmes dies on the Ville because public il)terest can't 'be mobilized. as it was in the death penalty case. He cited his own bill dealing with court exclullon ol SIH:all«I tainted evidence .picked uP ID what may be unlawful searches. • , By JOHN VALTERZA 01 ""' D911Y Plkil St9ff San Clemente City M~nager Kenneth Carr cast strong doubt \Vednesday that the city would contract .with any agency for the rental of buses for a pilot transport system and termed the idea ''fiscal irresponsibility." Carr reported to councilmen that a.ftel' exhaustive inquiries about t h e possible rental of a tram from Laguna Beach or a regular bu s from other purveyors, he recommends that the city instead launch an intensified lobbying campaign to assure that the Orange County Transit Di~trict aUOts buses to the South. Count~. The Laguna rental idea for a pilot proJ- ect to assess a~ of. a local bus service would cOst about $1,800 a month, but Carr stressed that officiafs of the Art Colony "Predicted problems with assess- ing the JocaJ acceptance because of the very nature of the vehicle. "In their strongest terms they deterred us from pursuing the leese only because they belieevd we would not get an ac- curate reading. "They said that they have sensed a strong reluctance by the pu~lic to use these open-air buses durmg c o o I weather," Carr told cotmcilmen. Although the council ·took no official action after the report they gave strong indications that the plans for a pilot tri al project should not take place. Instead, a task force of local advocates of bus service should be formed to lead a -strong cam paign to convince Tran.sit Dist rict directo rs this winter to alloca~e one Or the district's 63 new buses to a complete South County system. Plans for the lobbying group will be draft0 rl by Carr's office in coming days, cou ncilmen suggested. Carr's stand was unusually strong at Wednesday's session as the official stressed that San Clementeans already pay $30,000 a year in taxes to the di{ltrict For them to bear an additional burden of several thousand dollars on a trial system would be a disservice to the residents who al ready pay, he added. What tbi city should do in coming weeks, he said, is to recruit supporters Under the plan drawn up by the masters, hilf tbe legislators will be· run- ning in oppositioTI to colleagues in the , same redr~wn J!istricts, while o~er districts" are open, empty and up for grabs. • He said that lhe bill would.rule bill me of the evidence in the case ol the ~ dividual. whose rights may · have . been breached 'in the search, but llOI. against other persons in cases whlch the evidence may apply. ~ He,.sald1he courts were Using t~. ex- clusions bf rule to turn criminals loose. Battin SubmitS Appeal ' On Nixon Tax . V aluatio11 from surrounding communities and By JACK BROBACK property '!'ho vlas injured by.,lhe under- launch the drive to convince lhe directors . Of ,... Dlllr ,..... ti.ft. _ assessment . .Battin owns no comparable tha t a network of buses w<fuld be First District Supervisor Robert Battin property. -· valuable to the Sou°' County. of Santa Ana filed a complaint with the The appeals board -meet.s Qext on Mon- "There shouldn't be any reason why we orange County Assessment Appeals day and may bear the co111plaint at that couldn't get a group together from all the Board alleging that the Western White time althol,Jgh it_is no~, on Uie agenda. communities and begin a strong cam-House property ic San Clemente ls wpr· 'l'he question of assessment of Prest· paign to get a bus for the South ~ty." assessed by about $1 million . dent N'lXori's San Clemente property was said Councilman Arthur Homes In cor-The complaint was filed Wednesday first broached by St ate Boord of roboration of Carr'i> recommendation. with the clerk of the appeals board in the Equalization Chairman William Bennett Holmes became the first volunteer county assessor's office. . ·several ·weeks ago. from the council to join the task force, Battin in the appeal is acting as an in· At that time, he requested that the and fellow councilman Thomas O'Keefe, dividual not a county supervisor. He said board investigate the $1 .37 million who laun ched the pilot project idea in the he did it to "put the appeals board on the assessment placed 9n the property by first place. promised to work on the cam-sPot." . . . Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga. paign as well. The validity of Battin's complamt is m But the board refused to act. Four O'Keefe, a lawyer with a practice in question as the law states an appeal may n1embers decla,red they had no legal central Orange County, serves on several only be filed by an owner of comparable right to check local assessments. county government advisor Y com-Later, the board, le quiet BeMett, • missions and said he could lend ru, ex· agreed to ask the Orange County Appeals Laguna Honors pe~~ :~i~h';. 1~~~:0~ ~!0;1!; auocauon SNOW FORECAS T ~1~0 ~l:! ~.~a:e.ie prop. of the new buses ordered by the district FOR RENO ARE A erty shoold be assesse d al $2.1126 T Empl -yes could come late thiS year or early next million. , W O W year, depending on the delivery dale for To the $1.5 million purchase price, he the new coaches. RENO, Nev. (AP) -The N~tional adds $?03,000 in improvements made by F L S • Weather Service office here has lSSUed the federal government lind $123,000 in or 01·ig ervice its first forecast for snow of the season. cl.anges the President made. woman Dies of Smoke The forecast calls for increasing Vallerga conle:ds that th e Im· The Laguna Beach City Council chance of showers in the Reno area, with provements made by the government are honor~ two city employes \Vednesday SAN DIEGO (AP) _ A 68-yearo-0ld the snow level near 7,000 or 8,000 in the federal property and not assessable by k · Sierra. the cowity. for their long tenure of city service and v.·oman died of apparent smo e 10• The snow flurries are likely in the Lake Frank Manzo, a Battin appointee to the excellence in performance of their jobs. halation in fire that destroyed her one· Tahoe Basin and in the Sierra generally appeals board and his ftnance chairman Resolutions of commendation were bedroom home Wednesday night. A from Echo Summit on U.S. Highway 50 in last year's election, has said he is in passed unanimously lauding Clyde A. faulty electrical extension cord was northward, forecaste rs said. favor of the investigation. The attitude of Sweetser, publi c works superintendent !b~la;m~e:d~=fo:r::t:he~iidiieaiitiibiiiiioliiiiii;iGiie~riitruiidiie~ii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~th~·~o~lh~e~r~t~w~o~m~em~bc~r~s~is~no~L~lmo~wn~.~ "' I d J S '-~ Barbarbano.~ and ""'year emp oye; an uan ............. ~~.-1 motor sweeper operator, a ~year em ploye. Sweetser was commended for 11an outstanding job of maintaining the beau- ty of the city's parks" and tha t it was largely through his efforts "the city of Laguna Beach has won four first prizes for the Christmas decorations contest sponsored by the Orange Coast Associa- tion." Lopez, whose wife and eight children filled a rear row of seats in the council chambers, was . commended for his dedicated service. "Mr. Lopez is to be commended for the conscientious manner in which he main- tains his machinery and equipment and for the diligent way in which he perfonns his job," the council proclaimed. Leisure World Store Rifled A Laguna Hills Leisure World health food store's financial records took on 11 d<cidedly unheslthy look Wednesday following the operations of unknown customers who Indulged in a little self service;-Orange County Sheriff's officers said. Deputies said nearly $300 in cash was taken from the desk In the rear of the CoBSlline Heallh Food Store, 241J12 El Toro Road, while owner WUliam Howa~ McClory of Laguna Beach was busy serving customers at the front of the premises. --om..,. believe the lhelt was lhe worl< 61 a team using the traditional melbod of one member "1(\lglng a store owner ln conversation while biJ accomplice rUI'" 'tbe cash resister. • ' ' Stainless Steel Fabric Care Tub FULL 2 . YIAR PARTS .and LABOR W ARRANTY • e Smooth, Ru11:Proof, Chip-Proof • ldul fot •ll Wosfi. oblo Fobrlcs • LHts the Lifetlmo of the W11ht r PWS ••• a washabl.• knits cycle ::'!1"1!.""..:::.:°.:::: ..-...... -fciltirin.' .... ..,. ..... "'· --·i...1 • YOU CA N IUY A SPl l D fUlllt WASHD --...:::'."'-~ AND Dlfll-fOl --~ -' AS LOW AS '3691' =1~=j-SP-E-'ED__,,O-::-::" UE::='E::::· M:lii.IDIJWiill a McGraw~Edleon ComP'¥'Y Div!slor\ 'I ' ~ f' 1 , DAY CASH WtTH ·~:i:o -J!!!i 8SJ 1115 NtiPoRT BLVD. 0owntawn eam Mm-PUae 549.nae < ' I • • c 7 ' ' \ l . I • T • bl 4 I ' I -I '[ I I .:1 I !~ ~ n' 1'( In " ' . • • ---' . ' . ~ Saddlebaek EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 263, 4 SECTIONS, '48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY! CALIFORNIA THURSDAY,' SE~BER 20, 1973 TEN CENTS ~ Grand Jury Attacks Lobbying bY Dr. Bremer By JAN WORTH Of 11111 Dllf1 Plltl St.fl The Orange County Grand Jw-y bas criticized Saddleback Community Collea• President Dr. Fred H. Bremer for lob- bying for coasUlne develop~ent. Allred Flores, jw-y foreman pro tem said the Jury "bas particular concern that Bremer's college diatrict would blatantly undermine another governmen- .-t _stC,J,..1t.g I'•~ tal entity 's funct i ons and responsibilities.'' The criticism, in a Jetter dated Sept. 5, i.9 a response to a letter Bremer wrote ln late Jtme urging multiple unit residential development for the Capistrano Beach coasl 5addleback Board of Triatee• Pres!· dent John Lund of Laguna Beach later a4mitt~ be asked Bremer to write the letter based on his concerns for valuable · Trabuco School doesn't have very gOQd plll!llbing but the scheduling is very flexible. One of tbe tbings it does bave surrounding tbe three- room school bouse are aome JDa.SSive old oak trees"that make dandy llWings. The story and additional pictures of the rural school are on Page 3. undeveloped tand he owns on Pacific Coast Highway in capistrano Bea~. Though Bremer, also the district superintendent wis on the Saddleback campus in Mission Viejo today, he was not available for comment to repG rters. nie Grand Jury took issue with a charge in Bremer's letter that "the coastal conservation commission is prone to succumb to pressure exerted by in· dividuals and groups who apparently are attempting to thwart types of develop- ment whi ch can be beneficial to a particular locality." Bremer contended in his letter that development of the flat land under the bluffs between Doheny Park and Shorecllff in ~pistrano Beach would in- crease the tax base of his college district "without adversely affecting the ert- vironn1ent." The Grand Jury responded, "your (Bremer's) contention that increased development can take place in this area without adversely affecting the en- vironment does not appear to have a basis in fact , and, in fact, seems to be a judgment better left to those whose con- cern with environmental quali ty has a broader base and s p ecial i zed knowledge." Earlier. Bremer commented that he "assumed " Lund has a vested interest in Capistrano Beach but did not discuss it with hiin, because he believed Lund had the best interests of the district at heart. The rest of the trustees did not hear of Bremer's Jetter until late August when the Enviro nmental Coalition of Orange County saw the letter and issued an angry reply. ,Parcel Prezone · Asked Golden Triangle Annexation to Irvine Hinted By· GEORGE LEID AL ' Of !tit o.llY Piiot Sltff Irvine . Compcµly 1 fllirlg fOr ·regional ''commttcial ·and residentlal" '.pre-mning for the golden triangle suggests another city of Irvine annexation is · forthcoining by the ~nd of the year: Within 10 weeks, city planning Com- missioners will formally review a request to pre-zone 480 aCres of land bounded by the Santa Ana, San Diego and Laguna Freeways. , Half the area is to be developed by 1982 with two million square feet of com- mercial space. There are to be seven major department stores, 200 sm<iller shops, a 350 to 400-room hotel, theaters, an Ice rink and public events area within two, sausage shaped, covered malls. City Planner Mike Harris Said the pre- zoning application for land not presently within the city of Irvine will be treated just as oth er zonings arc. It will be heard publicly by the planning commission. Palo Alto Exatnple Commissioners will m a k e recom- mendation to the city council. Coun- cilmen will likely act on the pre-zoning and the necessary annexation probably in late December, after the city general . plan is completed, Harris noted .. General plan alternatives studied to date, Harris said, "all envision com- mercial development of the triangle." When Irvine was barely six months old it launched a successful annexation - the largest in state history. That action .Advisory Councils Plagued If. Municipal. Advisory Councils are formed in the S..ddlebat>~ Valley or Laguna Niguel, they willlfikely be grap- pling wH.b the same prOIJJeriis such coun- cils face· elsewhere in the state. This was the obserVaUon of Robert Van Hom, administi:ator of" the Municipal Advisory r.ouncil fcir East -Palo Alto on the San Francisco Peninsula. It was the first MAC ever esta.blis.hed when formed six years aF.o. Van Roms remarks were delivered to the Saddleback Area 'Coordinating Coun- cil Wednesday night as part of the group's continued study on possible formation of municipal advisory councils. While problems of recogniUon and sup- port.1111JY be similar, V8f\ !IOl'I! jll_~lell thal any such. council established aloog the Orange Qiast will be operating in an area much dltterent from East Palo Alto. . East Palo Alto is two and one-half square miles of unincorporated area squeezed between cities that don't want it basically because it is a low-income area with a skimpy tax base. Its population of JS,500 per_sons ls 80 percent black. All these conditions combined to create a situation offering residents little in the way or fruiUul communication with any local government. Since its formation, the five-member East Palo Alto ri.tAC has succeeded in getting $16..5 million in federal grants. said. "Your situatioo don here would be quite dlff!rmt .. - A 33 percent voter jurnout elected the first lftve council members in 1987, Van Hol'.11 said. . Pn>biems ol selling the community on the CounclJ came later' when ICIUle f1!:Sident.s charged the members were "Uncle TOms" and tools for an un- ~ white community. The MAC concept, which now has been adopted in five unincorporated areas statewide, was proposed last spring for the 100-aquare mile area including Lake Forest, El Toro, Mission Viejo, Laguna Hills, and Laguna Niguel. swelled the 18,200 acre size of the city to 26,600 acres, or 41 square miles, mating ·Irvine the largest city in Orange CoWlty in terms of land area. The freeway triangle parcel was deliberately left out of the annexation, according to City Manager William Woollett Jr. He explal.ned that the tax rich commercial development then plan- ned for the site would "balance" any future .;lnnexatlon. within 1rvine's 53,000- (See TRIANGLE, Page Z) Willie Says 'This ls It' NEW YORK IAl'l -Wlllie Mays of the New York Mets, baseball's 42-year-old superstar, announced _bis .retirement today, effectlve at ·~ the-eod ol tbe 1973 -(Story, Page 33) · "This is it," said Willie: .. I'm ~~~g~f:u'ehesc:::;;trilb~ toward another cbampicmb.ip In New York in the little time left." Mays has played 66 games this season with a .211 batting avelage and six home runs, increaslng his ::areer tota1 to 660, third behind :>nly Babe Ruth and Henry Aaron. Carpenter Mulls Remap It has begun an urban renewal pro- gram and worked out a new way to deal with first-time juvenife law breakers. "You might say that our council was formed as 'riot insurance,' '' Van Hom Studies are under way to determine bow many MACS, if any, should be form- ed In the Saddleback Valley, bow they should Ito funded, and wbat their legal powers would be. The East Palo Alto MAC has been operaUng oil a budget of $190,000 per year, with close to ball coming from federal funds and $100,000 paid for from county taxes . Gasoline Prices Will Be Raised Within a. Week • . Cou-µ,ty Bemffiued. ·'On: tire Whole ' -:: . . _.... .. •·. --. _,,.. ..... ~---. . 'ii~"* ,CJiAfJ'nt . reapportionment b a d n ' t hislorically Of, .. IMllY t'tltl &e.n, • reached the dimensions it did recenUy Reapportionment of Cat If o r.n·l a , s because 'present political climate was legislature hlstorlcally has fallen into a aomewhit ~ique -wi'1i the Democrats "d6'unto. others, then cut out situation" c;gntrol!illl the . legislature, and the mi tbat'a ·wby1 the whole can of 1worms Republicans in charge of the state ad- got tooRif• •tl>to 1he lap Ill the state mlnistratiO\I. supreme oourt th1' y~r. ·state Sm. J>en... lberefore, an~ apportionment plan nis E. Carpenter aakt'Wedne9day. drawn to suit the Democratic legislators Corpenttt (R·t;ewJ>on Beadll"'lraa ad· ' would.limply be vetoed b7 Gov. Ronald dressing nearly 100 perlOll5 at a \ullche'!n RNan. Repuhl!~ couldn't muster ~Ill the Llgtma Nliuel Jlet>Ubllcan s~ ru!cessafy In the~leglslature to W'f>!nen s Club Jn ~ Nlgiiel. • ' ' lllit tJie GOP. • • • _ nie state leglslatGr aaid that 00 the Before, when the Democrals controlled •·• Or ~-~· · " ~ u botq the state house and the legWature, . w...,e, ange _,,....,. -ut-grea y: t"'1' ... pportloned to their 9"1 ad· m ,,,..reappor)IOllJ!lml plln proporo,d bt •;-..'"""'the' ·•· q"ul•' ~ t'h "masters" appplpted by jbe court •tO ·'·""" ' -1 .• • w • • redefine the !!ale's UIO!Db\Y, oenate·OIJd ·~J1·~"1!i..r ~e:....' tin ~I di,trlctll, u a l't!lult· ~ llli. the ,1Qll' jean .before'the·I>Oinocr&tt \oCJk 11n_ · carpenter sald the ha9Sle ov~ over, th~ Republicans played the .fame T · · · "reapportiOliment tricka on them. · ,-The U.S. Constliutron provides for a census eacll 10 years w~lb repiesentaUon 'C:eU't , .to the Houae of Repretentatlves based on pOpulation.: • W~er Moitly -Friday, following tho u.u.I low clouds 1long the cout. ill&ba In the upper 11111 It tbe beacbel rllinf to Ill Inland. Oveml&ht Iowa In the 11111. , . ~SIDE . TODAV After !ll0.11 of ~.,. Uf• toith !Dhite fotitr pormtJ, Oft aborig- iftt Qirl hol been ta1u<n back to· bwh for an arronatd rnarrfagt ,. toith mlddle-ag<d tribe....,., SH ' atory, photo Page 4, • U.S. Sup;eme Court rulings have Car- ried the. dOctrii\e Uu:ougb state levels, and ·ordered "one man ooe vote" •• ' , • I ' repnMhtatlon. J>rlor to the reapporUorunent plan prep&wd by the masters, Carpenter's state lelllte district included' about a ri:tllUon penool, 1'hile some coD.eagues repreaented> only a quarter that 'D\IJI)' persons, be said. In eueoce, that made the vote of thole aenaton' constltuertt.s ·worth lour Orqe County vot<o. •• Tiie ...-. were dwsed with redrawtnc u..u.. 'to .... , ........ popeiau.., ~ but Jo in-v• pol!Ucal unlta and IOClol -p .. - Clrpenter I member Ill 11111 -le -rea~t committee, llld that ht mcf Ii lejillator wllh wi.m ba ..... not often 1gtee, did agree that Iller trying for thnoe yean, the 1...... WI I • .. incompetent" to reapportion ltlllf. Tlie r.1m Is that lefliloton lq qo found 9ut that by redrawinc t11e\dlillrict lines bl cerllln w1111, they could benefit their own poolUon and party st the ... penoe ot the opposltlen. Tbat's called ~ •• alter «!nterpri!ing Mais a· ch u 'a e tl s Gov. , ' SPEAKS TO ISSUE 51ate S.n. Carpenter Elbridge Gerry, who~ party in 1812 form ed a reptile shaped district to capltaliie on political party strengths. A political cartoonist of the day drew wings, eyes and a forked tongue on an outllne of the district and call~ the resulting d r a.11.0 o shape "a gerryman-der." _ 0 1bere ls no nonp artisan rea~ potUonment1 not unless you find a guy ll'rine oo another planet to do It.'' Sen. Carpenter aald. . He aald it was uunfalr" to ask a Jept1tor IO rise above personal aell in- t .. cst 1nd his party to write himself out of .office. , 1liide' -the l!laD dra"I' ¥P by the muten, half the legblators wlll be run· nlng In opposlUon to colleagues in the aame ,. redrawn dlstrk:ts, while other dl~trtcts are open, empty and up for If aha. · Clrpenter was larg<ly unscathed In the reapportionment. Jnland areal!I or santa !See REMAP, Pip I) l \ Leisure World Store Rifled · A Laguna Hills Leisure World health food store 's financial records took on a decidedly unhealthy look Wednesday following the operations of unknown customers who indulged in a little self service, Orange County Sheriff's officers said. · Deputies said nearl y $300 in cash was taken from the desk in the rear of the Coast line Health Food Store, 24102 El Toro Road. while owner William Howard McCJory of Laguna Beach was busy serving customers at the front of the premlSes. Officers believe the thelt was the work of a t~am using the traditional method of one member engaging a store owner in conversation while his accomplice rirJ es the cash register. "But considering our wtique needs, I would say that a staff as rich as ours could not be justified anywbere else,'' Van Hom said. His staff includes himself, an assistant (See ADVISORY, Page I) SNOW FORECAST FOR RENO AREA RENO, Nev. (AP) -The National Weather Service office here has issued its first forecast for snow of the season. The forecast calls for increasing chance of showers in the Reno area, with the snow level near 7,000 or 8,000 in the Sierra. The snow flurries are likely in the Lake Tahoe Basin and in the Sierra generally from Echo Summit on U.S. Highway so northward, forecasters said . Irvine Planners Review Douglas-Crow Use Permit Irvine city planning commissioners tonight will review a use permit p~ vlding for a six-story hotel and a campus cluster or shops, offices and financial in- stitutions on so-acres near Orange Coun- ty Airport. Nearly two years after McDonnell Douglas Corpo.raUoo won county com· merclal zoning for a parcel now 1n the ci- ty of Irvine. the dcvtlopment subsidiary, Douglo..Crow, looka for permission to begin building. Commissioners meet at 7:30 in University High School, CUiver and Cam· pus drives. The Douglas ,use permit follows commlasioo consideration of the TurOe Rock Village zone plan. The CQmmisslon may approve the nearly half·mltOon square foot com· merclal development to be constructed at MacArthur Boulcvara and Clmpus Drive. Action on two volume.1 which discuss environmental impacts of the develop- ment also Is expected. City planning staff """!mmended sp- provai u proposed. However, a move to reduce the size of parking spaces Is op- posed by city staff members who favor lull, nlno-loot wide parking stalls. Planning Commtaalon Chainnan Harry Shuptrine said he favors fewer parking spaces rather than approval of parking Jots with more spaces of substandard width . . 'fhe use permit for which approval Is sought covers only about half of the 51). acre site. Shuptrine believes more parking might be added In the aecond stage of develop- , ment II experience with the !Int portion proves ll 11 needed . • WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Colt of Living Council said today it ·would allow a boost in retail gasoline prices, possibly within a week. Chairman John T. Dunlop, in testimony on Capitol Hill and talking later with · reporters, said the council would, grant gasoline station operators permission to raise prices by a specific amount to reflect-higher charges by the major sup- pliers. But Dunlop said he did not think the council would change Phase IV economic rules to Jet retailers continue to pass along future wholesale price hikes to con- sum~rs, despite the shutdo\vn of many stations by operators protesting the regulations. Such a decision, he said, would create. a "chaotic price situation" b:>und to con- tribute to inflationary pressures. Gas station operators in ~1assachusetts prior to Dunlop's announcement said. to- day they would end their protest IMd· down, but vowed they would do it again if the Nixon administration refused to change its mind on price controls. ' 1We1ve proven our point and we don't want the public to suffer any more," said John Bell, a Mobil station operater in the Boston suburb of Lexington. Hundred.!! of stations a c r o s s Massachusetts were closed Wednesday for a second day despite a court order to stay open. The gasolipe dealers were protesting the Cost of Livilig Council ruling that barred stations from passing m to customers a penny~a-gallon lncrtue charged by the oil companies. The council bas over-all authority ror administering t h e Admin istration's economic stabilization program1 which. went into its fourth phue graduaUy over the summer. Dunlop declined to predict bow mucb gasoline price Increase would b e authorized : 111 don't know how much lt will go up." He said the council would take up the • ' question Tu<sday and mah 1 clod"""' "shertly -In D matter Of days, fto loop,r than a week.'' ~ Dunlop -llOllce ot .... --adjustment In tl!oae ""*" 111111 llld "t lS..GAS, l'lpl\ • ' . . • • • I I • ... .. , ;,e, O.-JLY PILOI IS Thursday, Sepurnbtr 20. 1973 .-- Fro• Pagel TRIANGLE:. • • ... acre sphere ot influence. 'Mle majority ol lhe remaining acreage lrViOf" has formally reSl'rved for future growth Is destined for residential • -llevelopmcmk.Jl0n1es crCJte demands for ~ dty tervices, Industrial and commerdal ~Property and salc.s taxes help pay the :·llost. .--1,_ln the ease of Irvine Center. propcised • -~velopment will amount 1!) a com· :.:blercial center more than '"'ice the size ; pf Fasllion Island in Ne~"J>ort Beach. • --: The first phase development :llone, ·will : -produce more stores and shops than are , presently operating in Fashion Island, a company spokesman said. By 1976, Irvine Center is to have three · ilepartn1ent stores open with another · tinder construction. The hotel and 100 ··~mailer shops also are duf' to be opened. • f3y comparison, ~'ashion Island has three •. plRjor department stores and 75 shops. · Outside the covered 1nall area \\'iii be furniture stores and l\\'O and three story office buildings located 411 at t he southe:islerly point or the triangle where the Santa Ana and San Diego free\vays join. Phase two construction will add four department stores, 100 more shops and ' other regional commercial attractions for a total of $100 million worth of buildings enclosing more than two million square feet. On completion of phase two develop- inent in 1981 or early 1982. development of the northern half of the site n1ay begin. That property .destined for possi- ble high rise apartment development is presently in agricultural preserves. Notice of intention to remove lands from the special tax: reduction status must given 10 years in advance. Alxlut half the property is farmed and under provisions of the Williamson Act is taxed at the ag preserve rate, one-fourth the ordinary rate. Coastal Panel Studyi1ig Beacli Purchase Bills Beach purchase bills by State Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport Beach ) and Senator Randolph Collier (D-Yrekal are undergoing study by the chairman or the State C.oastal Zone C.onservation Commission. Both bills , were passed by the legislature and await Gov. Ronald Reagan's signature. Carpenter's bill, SB 1089, makes $7.6 million available !or purchase of beach property owned by the Irvine Company between Corona del Mar and L a g u n a Beach. The measure also .indlcates the land deal won't . be closed-until the company has approval in concept from all govern- ment agencies involved for its plans to I develop the 10,000 upland acfes. Sen. Collier's bill provides $14.5 million for beach and park acquisition and pin· points specific sites at Leo Carrillo state beach, Van Dame state park and Sonoma -Coast park. State coastal commissioners weren't sure how they felt about either bill at .their meeting in Inglewood Wednesday. Chairman Melvin Lane y,·as authorized by his fellow commissioners lo study the bills and 1nake any recommendations to the Governor. · The maiO concern of the e-0mmission is that beach sites and other coastal zone development plans will be decided by the Legislature and won't come before the commission. Under PrQposition 20, the coastline in- itiative passed last November, the com- mission has permit jurisdiction within .1.000 yards of mean high pde line. The planning area extends five miles inland. -"Wt: mighr-be !itlling-into a trap if we choose particular parcels (of beach parks) before we do our planning,'' C-Om· missioner Ellen Stem Harris said Wednesday. "Qo we want coastal acquisilion to go on without our being involved?" Lane asked Harris. "That's the nagging ques· tion." Executi\·e Director Joseph Bodovitz ex- pressed reservations· about Carpenter's bill "preempling planning options" by tying the purchase to approval of plans ant.I realignment of Pacific Coast J1igh\Va,\·. "That one l have to read," said Lane. OllANG.l COAST IS DAILY PILOT Tnt 0•~....,. Co~>t DA!LV PILOT, willl wtlki't IS comb!-.ed fl'• N•-Prn•. 11 pUbl!shed l)y ,,,. o ....... c~ .. , Publi1MnQ ComN flV. S•INI· r•tt .illklf,1 e,... P11Ml1h«J. 111\ondJY lhrlll,OOll Frld•Y· far . COiie M• ... NOWl'Oft llHtll. Hunll11<11an tl t•tfl/F"""'";" v111ev. LiJVUna e..-c:h, 1,...;~l~ltbacl '"" S•n Cl•.....,tt/ 'S..n Juen ~O•llreno. • 11"91t r191of\tt .iltiort ii Nblf11!..,-S•IUtdtVI tfld $vfldtys. fllt prtnc:IPl'I Pll01'1h"'9 Pl•"' 11 ti no Wtst ""v SlfMI, c ... 1. ,.., .... C•fllo,,,i.. n.K. Rob .. 1 N. w.,d p,.,.,...,, troO Publi111t• . J,,~ It Curl,., Vk.t P"";o"'' eroO Gt,..t•I Mt"*Ot'r Thefl'•1 Ktt •U Ealt(lt Thom•• A. h!\11pl!1111 MINOlng E.tlilor Ch•it11 H. loo1 Ri(~t•d P. Ntll Alltlll•nt Mtn1oi!IO E~llO'I Offk• eoti. Mff.11 l:IO Wnt 9_, '"'"' H..,.,. e"tfl; Ill) N"'"rt t1ou!..,1•t1 Liii-tf'l(l'I: m l'O<'fll A-Hi.t11ll...,... lttdl: 17'1J 811t11 iaovltv1•• JM (le-te: * Hor!h El C.m1ne 11:111 , ......... 17t41 142-4121 n 'fW ....,..... '41·1171 s.. c...... •• hp9'fN9'1: Mlt -I 4f1-4421 ~··· 1•rl. ~"" C..,• "'1111...,1111 c~. No """' ••'"' lll"'trt tltftt. 9fllltfel ,..,., ., .....,lttfnentt. htrtM ... .. ...... WOlll .,...., tHC'*I .... ll'llMIM Of <llf'l'TllM ....,..,, ..... datt _, ... ,.W II C•t1 ~. Cllll'-1'11•. il*lolll'tllfl .,. ctl'l'ltr 11.&J --.w1 11¥ -!I U.19 -'11~1 Pll!Mtlr, ............ "II. .. --"'Ir· ' • I "' • • • LEGEND Speaks in Niguel Carpenter Hits ' 'Critjcism ·-Orgy' • Stale Sen. Dennis E. carpenter hit at w~t be called an "orgy of criticism" in politics, lamented that all good bills don't get the public pre$f1ure the .death penalty did, and gave qua lilied support for Gov. Ronald Reagan's tax l,niUaUve measure. -Speaking -w ednesday before t h e Lagwia Niguel Republican Women's Club, Carpenter (R·Newport Beach), launched Into a discussion of what he From Page J ADVISORY ... termed "general problems." a ft er discussing the recent court-ordered reap- portionment of state and congressional legislative districts. Of criticism, Carpenter .said "we can't be that bad as a people . or an ad· minlslrition." He said he supported measures pro- viding for campaign fund discl.os~rcs, but was against laws requ1r1ng disclosure of lawmakers' p e r s on al finances. "I don't feel I have given up my Constitutional rights to privacy because I hold public office," Carpenter said. He added that he had recently refused a re- quest by the Los Angeles Times for a financial statement. mm f1£0l()HALCOMMERCIAL AHD RESIOENTIAL "REAS administrator, a planner, aruJ... three secretaries. ;'The most critical factor l~ the suc- cess ot a municlpal council is the com· mitment from your Board of Supervisors and county administration/' Van Horn said. "[ resent the intrusion ,'' he said. He said the innuendo Is' that If a successful man runs for public: office, he is going to have conflicts of interest. He said the San Mateo County board had cooperated by requiring lnfonnally that all matters dealing with the Easl Palo Alto area be presented to the MAC before they came to the board. "There is no relationship between qualification to serve and make .this type of disclosure," Sen. caroenter said. MAP SHOWS PROPOSED-IRVINE CENTER REGIONAL SHOPPING, APARTMENT OEVELOPMENT Irvine Company Seeking City Pre-zoning on 480.acre Parcel in County Territory The county has accepted the MAC recommendations almost without tail, Van Hom said. Shifting to the gOvemor's tax initiative setting an income tax ceiling, Carpenter said he was in general philosophical agreement with the measure, but hadn't made up his mind yet. He said he wasn't sure the machinery established in the iriltTallve was {he best to do the job. ----- Planners Asked "You can have some influence as a homeowners' group, but when it comes to dealing with the group that has the policy-making function, you need help," be said. . .. Battin Submi~ Appeal To Delay Action 0 -n Nixon Tax Valuation On Village Zone "The MAC does provide a structured process for communicating to that body on your local needs and issues. ()( course unless you bave ·responsiveness and su~ pQrt, you won't hfve success." . He said be lelt·a paid prolessional stall was nec.ssary to provide the expertise lo give MAC recommendaUoos credibility before the board. He aaid ·the matter was extremely compUcated, but that .both the governor and bis Democratic opposition were over- simpltlylng the matter in selling It lo the people. Of pubUc p\'easllre, Carpenler said that althqUib some legislators were personally~ to the death penalty, they were forced lo support ~If because of the 10 percent favorable vote In the November election. By JACK BROBACK -Rf rlMt Oell't' Piiot S!.tf First DistrlCfSUj}ervisor Robert Battin of Sanla Ana filed a complaint with the Orange County Assessment Appeals Board alleging that the Western White House propert} ir San Clemente is under- assessed by about $1 million. The complaint was filed \Vednesday with the clerk of the appeals board in the county assessor's office. Battin in the appeal is acting as.an in- dividual not a county supervisor. He said he did it to ~·put the appeals board on the spot" The validity of Battin's complaint is in question as the law states an appeal may only be filed by an owner of comparable property who )¥as injured by the under- assessment. Battin· owns no comparable property. The appeals boar.d meets next on Mon- day and may hear the complaint at that time although it is not on the agenda. The · question of assessment of Presi· dent Nixon's San Clemente property was first broached by S t a t e Board of Equalization Cbainnan William Bennett several weeks ago. At that time, he requested that the board investigate the $1.37 million assessment placed on the property by Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga. But the board refused to act. Four members declared they had no legal right to check local assessments. Later, the board, tc Qliiet Bennett, agreed to ask the Orange County Appeals Board to check the assessment. Battin claims the San Clemente prolf-. erty should be a s s es s e d at $2.826 million. To the $1.S million purchase price, he Police Nab Four Lagm1a Nudi~s Orange County Sheriff's officers cal\ed to tHe Sou.th Laguna area Wednesday by the angry protests of a 74-year-old local resident cited four persons after alleged- ly finding them sunbathing in the nude on a local beach. Booked for indecent expQsure were Kathy Elizabeth Coffey, 20, of 32192 Pacific Coast Highway, South Laguna; Thomas Howard Maxwell , 27. 967 Ocean Front, Laguna Beach; Richard Bryan Alb recht, 27, 409 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa and Ronald \Vayne Austin, 23, of 25295 Front St.. El Toro. Deputies said the elderly complainant told them he spotted the four sunbathing in the nude on the sand adjoining his property. He said they ignored his ob- jections to· the practice. Schools Remai11 Sl1ut in Strike By United Pres1' International Flundreds of thousands of children - Dlmosl half a million in 1Michigan alone -remained on extended summer vaca- tions t~day while school boards and teachers union negotiators sought to write new contracts. Despite a $7 ,soo-a-day fine issued against the striking Kenosha , Wis. Educational Associati<>n, teachers there again defied a judge's order to return to work Wednesday. Only 2,225 o( Ktn00ha's 22,000 publi c 1ehool students attended classes. The strikes continued in 20 Michigan communities, including Detroit, the na- tion's fourth largest school district, but teachers at the Detroit suburbs ol Birm· ingham and St. Clair Shores went back lo work Wedncdday. ' ~dds $703,000 in improvements made by the federal government and $123,000 in cl.anges the President made. Vallerga cont~>;ds that t b e Im- provements made by the government are federal property and not assessable by lhe county. Frank Manzo, a Battin appointee to the appeals board and his finance chairman in last year's election, bas said he is in favor of the invesUgation. The attitude of th.: other two members is not known. Trial Scheduled For Clementean In Murder Try A San Clemente woman has been ordered to face trial Sepi. 24 in Orange County Superior Court on charges that she and a Long Beach bus_inessg:iari plan· ned the killing of his partner. Orange cOunty Superior Court Judge James Turner set the trial date for Betty Love Flatley, 46, of 1880 N. El Camino Real , after denying defense motions for the psychiatric examination of a key pros- ecution witness. The witness, whose information led police to charge Mrs. Flatley and co- defendant Carl Leo Osowski, 50, of Anaheim, with soliciting commission of a murder, was described by the defense as "gaining ego satisfaction from playing fantasy roles." The pair was arrested after taped telephone conversations allegedly in- dicated that Osowski was prepared to pay a substantial ~ of money for the elimination of business partner George Minkian. It was alleged in municipal court that the plan to kill Minkian was discussed over brunch at tbe Laguna Niguel Coun- try Club. It was testified that a figure of .$10,000 was quoted as the appropriate fee for his demise. Open House Set At Retard Home Dedication week for Good Shepherd Lutheran Home in El Toro. a center for the retarded, will close with an open house of the remodeled facility from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday. Some 2,000 visitors attended the formal dedication of the home last Sunday, with Congressman Clair \V. Burgener (R-San Diego) speaking. A total of 65 residents have moved into the borne so far, with 105 expected even- tually. The Good Shepherd program has homes in Apple Valley, Terra Bella, and Cornelius, Ore_gon, as well as the new El Toro location. L. Harold Bagby is administrator of the home. Mild Temblor Felt in State BORREGO SPRINGS (AP) -The !et· ond mild earthquake in a week has hit the dese_rl area near the San Diego- lmperial County line. No damage was reported. The-quake, which was !cit Tuesday night, registered 3.2 on the Richter scale, caJteeh selamologtela aald In Puadena. Ju eple<nter was placed at five miles southwest ol Borrego Springs along the Aqua Tibia Faull L;ast week's temblor was rated s on the open .. nded Richter scale and al.lo did no reported damage. · I Irvine community · s e r v i c e s com· missioners voted unanimously Wednes- day to ask city planning commissioners tonight to delay Sction on the proposed Turtle Rock Village zooe plan. Commissioner Miles E. • · Pe t e ' ' Peterson moved to . request the delay so the commission whicn governs parks and recreation facilities might judge the ade- quacy of parks to be provided under the · zoning plan. Village zoning texts do oot identify specific parks locations. As a rule, only amowits of park land to ulti mately be developed within tracts are set by zoning action. Planned community wnings deal with amounts of land to be reserved for specific uses. Tract maps reviewed and approved later by city bodies.-including the community services commission, pin- point relationships of parks to streets, schools and residential neighborhoods. " Potluck Dinner Set by Helpline The Saddleback V8Uey Helpline will hold a potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m. Friday at St. George's Episcopal Church in Laguna Hills. All counselors and their guests are in· vited, a helpline spokesman said. Following the dini1er, Mrs. Virgil Brown, ~raining supervisor, will discuss preparations for a counselor training class set to begin at 8 p.m. Oct. I at Los Alisos Jntermediate School in Mission Viejo. More fnfonnation may be obtained by calling Mrs. Brown at 830-2152 or 830- ~522. Santa Rosa in Dark . SANTA ROSA (AP) -A cable failure during a heavy rainstorm left much of this city without electrical power for 21h hours early today, the Pacific Gas & Electric Co. said. Stainless StHI Fabric ~are Tub F..0...Page J GAS ... can be implemented in a matter of days." He testified 'on the over-all petroleum situation-before the House-Senate Joint . Econoniic SUbcommittee ori Coosumer E<onomlc:s. Nixon Studies Japan, Visit J • In (Novembi{r WASHINGTON (UPI ) -President Ni.I.on is considering an official visit to Japan some time this year, it was learn· ed today. A Japanese government official made first disclosure of the plans in Tokyo, saying Nixon would make a visit before the end of the year. A White House spokesman, Gerald L. \Varren, said there were no definite plans set for such ·-a visit. However, other A0miillStr8tion officials saia thtfftfSf tialr of November was a target for auch a visit. There was no immediate word on how this might affect Nixon's long-planned trip this year to Europe. A published report in Tokyo speculated that Nixon might tie in a trip to Japan with his European · tour, or would go to Japan after returning from Europe. To Tokyo , Ganri Yamashita. deputy Cabinet secretary, told a news con- ference that Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka's government has not received any official infonnation on when Nixon is expected to come to Japan. But Yamashita said the visit may come before the end of the year. FU&.L 2 YEAR ,,. PARTS and LABOR -WARRANTY • Smooth, Rllll·Proof, Chl,..Proof • ldul for 111 W11h- 1ble F1bt-lct • L1111 the Lilotlme of the W11h1r PWS ••• ' a washobi._- knits cycle . ,,.. .... OOl!IOI -,... \[llllH; MM fer .. b .. la '"'"" ~,..... ., .......... ...... A_. _.,. ~ YQU CAM IUY· A ~ ~-W.I ' frtlD 9URN WAIHll' -~ ~ AND Dltrtl FOi Al LOW Al '369" However, be said other good l'lllslation sometlnies dies on . th&. vine because pubilc interest can't be mObillzed as it was in the death penalty case. He cited his own bill dealing with court exclusion ol so-called tainted 'evidence picked up In what may be unlawful searches. He said that the bill would rule out use of the evidence ln the case of the in· dividual whose right. may have been breached Jn the search, but not against other penoM -in cases -'-which the evidence may apply. He said the courts were using the es:· cluslons by rule lo turn criminals 1 ..... "They have turned tboclaands or people out on the street. that would have been in jail," Carpenter, a former FBI agent said. Switching to bis political , aims, Carpenter said. "In case they there's any doubt about It, I'll be nu:mlng for reelec- tion next year." From Page 1 REMAP • • • Ana, Tustin, Orange and Anaheim were cut out of his district, but a small 70,000 population area of coastal San Diego County was added. carpenter said he believes the redrawi ng provides for bet· ter re{l:resenlation. Carpenter said even ll1eCow:t 's ap- painted "nonpartisan" masters were did not produce a plan without hint or politics. He said that the masters selected by the court were all retired judges, Democratic judges appointed by a Democrat~ _adminis.tration. And. they were aided significenlly by a Democratic staff of Democratic lawmakers. "Funny little things happerled ." Sen. Carpenter ·said with a wink and a know- ing smile as he addressed the Republican Y.'Omen . However. he said that Republican Orange County will come ol.f better under the masters' plan than under proposals previously attempted by the legislature. l~JSPEED OllEEN.J atl e MoC3rew-EC:U•on Company Ot\tie!on • 90 DAY CASH WITH "~:::11 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mm-l'tln 548-7788 • • ---' ,, '. • 1 I . I ' v N Me bey ace cil 0\ tel set the pos sev but me or 'I M abl ti Me ail ta .. at le w • ' -· I d 0 I I • • r llnotington Beaeh Foon~n ·Valley · . . EDITION * ' Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks • voi:. 66, NO. 263, .. SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY ,. SEPTEMBER 20, 1973 TEN CENTS D ~ . lSCUSSWn Possibly 1Next Week Continues On Course Gas -Hike Qkayed By TERRY oovtLi.£ Of .. D11Ur "91 S• Negotiations for the city purdlase of Meadowlark Golf Course will extend beyond Saturday's announced deadline, according to Huntington Beach Coun- cilman Henry Duke. Duke said the city and the Meadowlark O\vr.ers have Informally agreed to keep talking, even though Saturday had been set as the deadline for the city to make the purchase. The l\VO sides have been dlscu.ssing the J>OSSible sale of the 96.6-acre courae for · several months oow with litUe results, but Duke says be b confident an agree. ment will be worked out a:i .aoon as a lot of legal delalls are -oveicoine. It was llUIOUnced last April that Meedowlart -fw lo1e and lbeoprol> able buyer -.Id .be •· Ii S. ()Julruc- Uon Company, a 8tWt11 ,lllJla ~op. ment firm which ........, ,builds tract homes. •• Meadowlark owne -also nvealed a clau.e in the elCl'OW gave the city the fll;lt chance lo buy. Since th.it Ume. however, the dty and Meadowlark owners have not reached an aireement on the price or method of the take over. A Swinging Time • A few weeks ago, Orange County Supervisors gave the city '900,000 from \he county's portion of federal revenue sharing lo help buy the Warner Avenue c!ourse. • City Administrator Dlvld Rowlands 1ald today the city bas aimolt l'I00.000 of tis own mooey fnim federal +ewnue sharing which can be used Irr the . aoll course purchue. Trabuco School doesn't have very gooq plumbing but the scheduling isvery flexible. One of the things it does have surrounding the thre .. room school house are some massive old oak trees that make dandy swings. Tbe story and additional pictures of the rural school are on P~~s. Rowlands said be !lopes wttb the ,1.3 million ready, the city can reed> ..,... ment to P"J that dol!llrlDd let pnilila from the .,U OOC1t Ptl olf Ille l'llt of the purchase price. 9s~o~ds, 400 Escape ' . TllO actual pm of the caane • la another mall« wldll) 11 11111=~ Tllfl asking price bli • 11 • . .& 'r Bla7£in-Caesar's Palace ~-·mmi.· ...... but no one cm eJthor tide b taWDc· "We hope lo come up with a fair ad equitable pricO to both tldoo," 111' Rowlands. "We're as anxious as the peOOle an to save the golf coune," added DOU. "But It this point there are still a>me JtiaUUea to overtOOle and all we Pow Is we will negotl1te further." L A S V E G A S (AP) -About IOO penooa, including the Om>ond Brothers ~ croup. were evacuated from their rQQmS u.rly today as a fire swept through 1he .. ventb floor of one w!J1g of Clesar's Palace Hotel here, causing an eotimlted 1100,000 damage. There were no ibjurles reparted, 1ltbougb a Massachusetts woman was admitted lo a boopltal for treabnent of N Co arnote inbalaUon, said officer Don 0 ID Palialore, Las Vegaa Metropolllali -=-~------Poli<e IJepartment-l(>Okelnlan_..: In Watergate Tbt blau erupted about S a.m. IJ1 a IUlte of room occupied by the lilsurance _ compoa,y which carries the hotel's fire • hed lnlurance, Passlalore said. A natiooal ,·Tapes Reac eoaventloll of insurance agents 1s Wider way at the hotel. Buu.ETIN -WASHINGTON (UPI) -ne nile -oclvlled Ille U.S. Coarl ol A,,.ak tbballerMoolllllltUdbe<o-to lo ruch .. •Hf-rt --wt~ • special ... --ArcMllold Ca ...,. Prealdeot -·• -Wollrplffe-laled tapes. WASHINGTON (UPI) -WQfking riJbt up 1o a c:ourt·lmpooed deodlme, the !fhlte ·House and Specla1 "'-<utor Ar<hlbald Cox tried lodsy lo find a com- pnmlse lo their dlspu1e ..... Pr- Nixon's Watorgate tapes. ' A few hours before lawym for the two aides were lo go before a federal •-11 court to report on their effortl, • IOUl'CI close lo the lituatloo said "wo'ft llW working ou it" ·and it wu leufted.a tlikd ineeUng lo try lo molve the dilemma was held Wednesday. Cox insl•ls that a federal grand jury Considetlng._turther Watergate in· dlctmenla mllll hear the tape reconllnp of -pmldentlll convenatlona about lhe scandal before taking -· · · Nixon contends that surrendering the tapes would violate esaentlal ~ Pualalofe said the blaze wu believed lo have tlarted in a motlHls, but said the suite wu unoccupied at the tiine. Sidney Gathrit, executive director of public relationl for the hotel, said the atarm wu turned in by a passing cab Preacher Blasts FCC ~Freedom' CAPE MAY, N.J. (UPI) -Fun· damentailst (Jl'Ucher <larl MciDUre bas opeiied hi• floating radio otatlon in IJ1. ternaltoaaJ .-ten with a blut at the Federal Oommunlcatlom Comml.Won. '"*'e· · ahut c1ow11 lib....-. ··ta-u ... ai. p_, 1or illesed >lolationl of the If . doctrine", •' ., ~. betw"°" Cllpe )iitf and AJbary Park, N.J., the mbtlster from ColllDPwood, N.J., said Wednelday,, "I w~ lo speot about freedom, rr...lom that tj1e f<X; and the bureaucrala bave taken away from' ul.1' driver who saw flames shooting from the seventh floor of the north wing. 1be wing, which contains 300 rooms, was booked solid and all guests, including the Osmonds, the singing group of five brothers who are appearing at the hotel, were evacuated, many in nightclothes. Pa5#iiatore said Ellen Falzone, 60, Waltoo, Mass., was admitted to a bospllal smote inbalatioo.. Eleven tmib of the Clark COunty Fire Department, backed up by Las Vegas ci- ty-flf'emen, responded to the alarm and bad the blue under control in 15 minutes, Puslatore said. 'An UDldentified couple climbed out onto a t.bree-foot ledge ov.erlooking the "strip" and stayed there until rescued by firemen . Decorative grillwork on the out&.de of Cesar's palace prevented the use of rescue ladders. Willie Says 'This ls It' NEW YORK (AP) -Willie Mays of the New York Mets, baseball's C-year-old superstar, afmounced hiJ retirement today, effective at the end of the 1973 season. (Story, Page 33) . '"Ibis is it,'' said Willie. "I'm retlring after the oeason. I ooly hope I can make some conlribution toward • anOthe"t chaoipiOnship in New York in t~e little time ten." Mays has played f!6 games, this season with a .211 batting average and six home runs, increasing his ::areer totat to 660, third behind l)Q]y Babe Rulh and Henry Aaron. WASHING TON (UPI) -The C...t of Living Council said today ·u would allow a boosf In retail gasoline prices, passibly within a week. Chairman John T. Dunlop, in testimony on Capitol Hill and talking lat~ with reporters, said the council would grant gasoline station operators permiss ion to . raise prices by a specific amount to reflect higher charges by the major sup- pliers. · But Dunlop said he did not think the council would change Phase IV economic rules to let retailers continue to pass along future wholesale price hikes to CQ.n- S\llfters, despite the shutdown of many stations by operators protesting the regulations. Such a decision , he said, would create a "chaotic price situation" bound to con· Apollo Ship Reportedly .. Ready to Go SPACE CENTER, Houston (APJ-The Apollo spaceship lhat will carry the men of Skylab 2 home next Week was given its first checks in almost eight weeks today and astronaut Alan L. Bean reported "ever-)rthing -lookl-excellenL-'-'-- - Bean, the Sky:lab 2 commander, spent more than three hours aboard the Apollo craft, turning on major systems that have been idle since shortly after the astronauts moved intO tbe lpaq! station July 28. · "Everything looks excellent in here/' said Boan -!lio Apollo ferry llJfp. He turned .on guidance and navigation. electrical, comRUter and propulsion systems and fowid all were .,orlilJ1g well. Bean said the spacecraft appeared ready to fly him and his crewmates, Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. l.ousma, bai:k to earth and a Pacific Ocean splashdown Tuesday. . Tbe Apollo craft, docked to ane end af the Skylab orbiting lab, Is partlaUy crip- pled, with two of four steering rockets disabled. One steering rocket developtd a 1 e a k shorUy after the July 28 launch. Later, a second rocket failed. This prompted space officials to order preparaUpn of a rescue spaceship. Officials ~d_a rescue mission could be launched withln seven days if the Apollo craft experiences ad- ditiooal failures. Tests on the ground Indicate the astronauts should be able to guide the spaceship to earth using only two 1teer· ing rockets. Bean conducted a partial test of the two good steering l'OCkets and reported they seemed in good condition. Officials said that a true test or the two rockets wi11 not come until Tuesday, just before the astronauts undock the spacecraft from· Skylab. At that point, the astronauts will con- duct a "hot fire" test of the two rockets. If they work as planned, Bean, Garriott and Lousma will undock and return to earth. II both rockef.3 fail lo work prop- erly, a rescue mission may be ~ed. Probe Clears Banker LOS ANGELES (AP) -Frank Andreo1i, a former Union Bank vice president, has been cleared of . ac· cusations that h e misappropriated $150,000 from a holding company. Grand theft charges against Andreoli, 40, were dismissed by Municipal COurt Com· missioner Reuben Rosensweig at a pr:eliminary hearing Wednesday because of insuffi cient evidence. I lldenlialily in the o11Jce an _.,. the prealdency. lndicatlona were the two lldel wse stlll far apart, lltbou1h ~Uan aourcea lndJcated that the PrllldlDt wu wllllili lo compromlae Ill' ollotb!I Ca ediled·-iplt ol the tai:;,t•hted of •D1fln~t Alialiilon B ·oy" materill tllat he leeII remabl Semi IJ1 the pobllc -, ' ' SNOW FORECA.S'I' FOR RENO A.RE:A to Claim Son I ~ ~ • • ,t) 'Family Dri~es Down From .M00esto , . .,.,All'l'llUlt\ili mlia. . . • u;.,.. . . ' •-·• ,-... ... ,.. There was-ia 'mlsunderst111dlng. A =~· .... m a 11mid . "! haven't abandoned that boy," 11111 ~ ..... le.ttiMld -dip,.. Mlpl Sr, declared Tuesday to Orange J>liil al lhll )io.1*cl Ille•• of tili1 Oallll1 ~ _llePirtment authorities oa11•·-l(lllillJ .._ Clllla.... 1nd'O>lla -·Pollce llotect\ve Linda he had to learn to be a man early. "I wasn't trying to dump· the boy. I have ll brothers 'and sisters who would take my kids U I didn't want them," said Miguel Sr. pollceo~U. ... ..,. ' Gellller ••• , · RENO, Nev. (/IP) -Tbe National Mlcuel-' llr. c •.m.~ .... MiiUel Jr,, Hew.. lalidinl,t~ at Unda's d"lk .• A few days ago, a Los Angeles newspaper carried an As9oclated Pres.. story abooul a boy suppo!edly abandoned IJ1 Costa Meaa by his pnrentr. • Weather Sorvice office hero bu 1uuoc1 ~.Ibo wbole ,_ ......_ ' • ~So 'wt• ~ueT Sr.'• w!N-W "their Its 11n1 forecast ror ..-o1 the -· ,,,.,. droD t10"" hlii llidoilo-to-m 4ou8!llell a, &, 1 ad 1. · ., Tbe forecaat caUs for Inc:rnllnl the lttllt "°' ltJl1llllotlp _....., lei\ Mlpel Sr. bad just found , what •P- ·Miguel Sr. saw that atory a day or two later and recognized the facr-it w .. his own family 's story. chance of lilo1Ye(11 ln the~-· wttli btbilid bllcJHed lo thetn. -pend ta be the. llart, -,of a solid tho snow level near 7,000 or 8,000-In lht A polr of. -on ,..VW., w11o 1*f 1Ulillstence for bb family When he got a Siena. _ ~lo ...... &tr MllUll Jr:, 111111-~ jolfilla lood-,lant.ln Modesto. Tbe ..-fluni .. are Ukely := ed him .,...lo pi)Uce ud or-Cllanly Tbe family-had b<en pressured t~ Tahoe Buln md IJ1 the SjerTI ~ .,.u.!tiea -· tbui a w.olt move from 1111 Anaheim motel, because lrom I!:cbo llummlt "' U.S. IO qo. 1 , Ille ...._,..1 said that five children northward, ~ Mid. TheJ Mid U.. clllld 11114 Mm aND-_. j111t too many. dolled, Iller Ibey •creed to babyalt ~r a Miguel Jr., f , got left behind ~ • , He came to straighten out th( mess. Things look better now r .. tbe family and Miguel Jr. has rcjotnod tbem. "In my prof.,.lonal opinion," said Detective Gebler, "this b a family of poverty. But certainly not 1 fomlly ol neglect." • • tribute to Inflationary pressures. Gas station operators in Massachusett.:; prier 'to Dunlop's aMaunt-e ment said tcr day t.heY would end their protest shut· down, but vort..:d they wouJd do it again if the Nixan ad.'llinistration refused ta change its mind on price controls. "We've proven our paint and we don't w?.nt the public.. to suffer any more," said Jahn Bell, a Mobil station aperatcr in the Boston suburb of Lexington. Hundreds of stations a c ~ o s s Massachusetts were closed Wednesday far a second clay despite a oourt ardcr lo stay apen . The gasoline dealers were protesting the Cost of Living Council ruling that barred stations from passing on to customers a penny-a-gallon increase charged by. the oil companies. Vietim at 26 The council has over-all authority £or administering the Administration's economic stabilization program, which "·ent into its Courth phase gradually over the summer. Dunlop declined to predict how much gasoline price increase would b e authorized : "I don't know how much it will go up." He said the council v .. ould take up the question Tuesday and make a decision "shortly -in a matter of days, no longer · th:in a week." · Dunlap served notice or "an upward adjustment in these prices" and said "it can be implemented in a matter of days." He testified on the over-all petroleum situation. before-the House-Senate Joint Economic Subcommittee an Consumer Economics. • School Mourns Death Of Tamura Teacher Linda Catapano, 26, was a warm, soft· spoken, third grade teacher at Tamura School in Fountain Valley. When she died -~onday, the _eratire s<;_hool _~.children, teachers and staff -mourned her pass- ing. "IJnda simply loved kJds," said Prin- cipal Gary Smith. "There's no doubt that wu why she was teaching." .. She was a quiet woman, and iL took a little time before you realli:ed the great wamith and deep feeling: she had for ber cbildr<n," explained Smith. Thole who worked with her at the school say Mrs. Catapano, of Huntington Beach, apent long hours working with her cbildren, both before and after school. She' tutored the children, and just spent time talking to them outskle af class. Mrs. catapano t a u g h t at Tamura School for two years. She became ill last May with what doctors believed was pnewnonia. A later diagoosis revealed she was suffering from hmg and bone cancer. Although she battled against the lllneSlf for over four months, determined to beat it, she Jost the fight in the end. . Tamura School refuses to let her memory die. A Linda Cat ap an o Memorial Fund has been started at the school by staff and teachers lo pur<hase books and library equl-t IJ1 ber name. 1 "Our object.is lo keep her name alive ta the kids, and to give her a chance to touch kids she never bad a cbance to know," Smith said. Funeral services are being conducted. today in Mrs. catapano's hometown, Yucaipa . Mrs. Catapano is survived by her hus- band, SaJvatore, a · junior high school counselor in Long Beach. Those who wish to honor her may con· tribute to the memorial fund, in care of the Tamura Parent-Teacher Organlza· tion. Girls at Edison Raise $18,000 for Russ Trip Fifty-six young girls rrom Edison High School in Huntington Beach have raised $18,000 of the $24,000 they need for a trip to Russia. If they can eam the full amount before Nov. 20, the members of the Edison Charger drill team will spend seven days touring the Soviet Union with the drill team from Western High in Anaheim. They have been working all summer to collect the cash, sporooring various fund raising events such as car washes, boat tours of Newport Harbor and Uckets for raffles. Nixon Studies Japan Visit In November WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Presidl'nt Nixon ls considering an official visit to Japan some time this year. it was learn· ed today. A Japanese government official made first di!Closure of the plans in Tokyo, saying Nixon would make a visit befare the end of the year. A White House spokesman, Gerald L. Warren, aaid there were no definite plans set for such ·a visit. However, alher AdmlnistraUon officials said the first half of November was a target for such a visit. There was no immediate word on how this might affect Nlxan's long-plan n«t trip thb year lo Europe. A published report In Tokyo speculated that Nixon might Lie In .a trip to Japan with hls European tour. or woUld go to Japan after returning from Europe. In Tokyo, Ganrl Yamashita, depuly Gabinet se(retary, told a news con· ference .that Prim a Minister-Kakuei Tanaka1s government has not received any official information on when Nixon is expected to come to · Japan. But :viln8shlt:a said UMi visit may come before the end of the year. • Three more charity events remain: --A Datsun 1200 will be given awa.y during halftime at the Edison-Orange footba ll game, Sept. 28, in the Orange Coast College sj@i\,(m. Tickets can be purch8sed at the game. -The Edison and Western drill teams will put on two special shows, Oct. 10 and 11 , at 7:30 p.m. at Edison High, Tlcket.s can be bought at the school. -A benefit celebrity dinner b being prepared for Oct. 20 at the Sheraton Beach Inn with such guests as Macdooald C.rey. Details of the celebrity dinner wlll be revealed soon, as more celebrities are in- vited. • The planned drill team lour of Russia is considered one. of the first of its type. Western High was invited first, then ask· e~ the Edison team to join to round out the show. ' Weatller Mostly sUMy Friday, following the usual low clouds along tbe coast. Highs In the upper 60s at the beaches rising lo 75 inland. Overnight Iowa in the 60s. INSIDE TODA l' After mose of her ltf• toilh whi te f oster parents, an aborlg:. ine girl has be1n taken bock to bush for 1rn o·rra·nged ·marrfoge· 1ui th middle~oed &ribesman. Ste storv. photo f'aflt'4. --1 L.M. •*'Yf 1' CoM~ S,, C~ulfl..il a• """" .. c,...-• 41 Otaltl Nollc•i U E•llW\11 floM •t E11toftofn1M111t ~ ,lllHCt · 21. »JI "" "' ....... ts .......... 11 ----u • " • --.. ......... -.. or .... c....rw :It flTA ,. ,_ ..... .... *""' a.at Tl'lt'ri.... a ----. ---..,..... ... - ll-OH----•f--- Pai·king Ban .Action Nea1· '.:In· Valley : .! A ~tier parking ordinance that was ~\\'O years In the making has been slated ; 'fOr final action Oc!. 2 by the Fountain -Val.ley City Council. • The action was taken \\'hen counciln1en allered the proposed law ut their meeting Tuesday night. That meeting "'as to ha\'e marked !hr final approval or the lav1• banning !ht• trailers from parking overnight on city streets, but the deletion suggested by CouDdlman Al Holllnden was important enough to reschedule the final hearing, • '3ecording to City AtlOrney To m • Woodruff. The council began working on the la\~' in July 1971. At the time, the proposal was to ban all large vehicles such as campers and trailers from parking on residential streets overnight. There was a lot of citizen opposition to the proposal and it was honed to en· compass only non-motori zed vehicles. 'Mlal ordinance received preliminary approval on July 17 of this year becau se or provisions which allow trailer owners to obtain police permits to leave their trailers in front of their hou.ses fo r 72 .. hours for purposes of loading or unloading. However, the permit pro ced ur e established by the city staff \\'ould have allov.·ed the use of lhe special permit only 12 times per calendar year. Hollinden ob- jected to that. When the other councilmen agreed, the final approval of the ordinance was set for Oct. 2. No Firi!works For Valley Kids Next Jul y Fourtli July 4, 1974, will mai-k the first time in Fountain Valley th8t children under 18 · • will not be allowed to buy or use fireworks. . ' City councilmen have approved a law banning the use of fireworks by children . The ordinance carries a misdemeanor penalty for both the seller and the un- derage child who purchases t h e fireworks. The law was passed on a 3-2 vote with Councilmen Bernie Svalstad and Ed Just dissenting. . Bath men said they felt the control of children with fireworks is a parental problem, not a governmental function. Just tried to have the ordinance amended to delete the portions pro- hibiting the sale of fireworks to children , but the motion failed when only he and Sv11lst ad support it. Scouts to Vi sit ·Baja Orpl1ana ge Hunt ington Beach Boy Scout Troop l will spend Friday lhrough Sw1day in Ba- ja California visiting the Casa De Luz orphanage. Before the scouts leave , however, they are hoping to t'Ollect items of all types - clothes, toys, lumber, food, bedding and money -to bring to the orphanage. Anyone who can support this project is asked to bring their donations to f\.1 erle Cade's Shell Service S!ations a t Golden West and Warner, and l\1ain and Delaware. both in Hunti ngton Be-ach. tn addition to bringing the orphanage these needed items. the scouts plan to participate in projects over the weekend to assist the orphanuge operations. Santa Rosa in Dark SANTA ROSA (AP) -A cable failure during a heavy rainstorm left much of Otis clly without electrical power for 2t.~ hours early today, the Pacific Gas & Electric Co. sa id. OI Af"Sl COAST Ml DAILY PILOT Tiit Of ...... Col•! DAILY PILOT wllll Mlkll h qim•lntd ""-N•r ·"••u. II IMtlllMll 11'1' ll'tt o··-(NII l'11Ch1lllflll ComNll'f, "'- '"" t<hl lont 1r1 puOll1Md, M~y 111""'9PI FrTO•v. "'' Cotll MtH, Ntwllllrl 8'•dl, "'""'ln9!0!'o !tK"l'Oll'llfon Va!ltr, lat....., 8MCll, lrvlnt rl.odleWc1l ind k n Clt,,..,..1•1 Stn J ... n C1Dl•tt111Q. A 1l"9ID nt~I l<!o!ion !Ii p,iDl•lllfd S.t11<d•J11 11111 5,.,...,.l'S- T,.. prlroc iPtl 11Ulil1hl"9 Dl•"I lo et JJO We.I 81r S!rftl, to•I• MllH, CIJllor"lt. •M:it. Robert N, w,,c1 PtHlat r\I tl'lrll P'..Oli>~ort J1c ~ II. C11rl1r lll(t "'"'°"'' 11'111 C.tntr1I Mtn.91r 1110 ... 11 K11¥il l!lh!M Tloo"''' A. M11rphi"' ~·f\tf~ ll•IOt Cti•tlH H. Looi l i1h••i r. N1 fl AlllMtn• M--i"'t El110"1 y,,.., Co~i111 W9lt Ort .... C101•Hf Et!1tt " ............. OMc. 17171 l11ch a.11l•¥•r.i M1lll111i A4Wt1n1 ,.0 . l o• 1•0. •Zl41 ~ --~ ltlO'I' 127 """' """"w CHf9 ... I "9 w.t.1 ._, '"°" ........... llOC.ill JW N..._, &llu1tY1rd' ... ~I JU ........ 11 C.noll'll flNI ,., fl its 17141 M2+4111 a ••• ~ 641-1•11 ...-... CW.... C-'l' Ctni"-lt ... ........ c.,¥,..t, TJn. M• _ c-1 "llllllllhlflt UoNnY NI """"' 119'1M, lllwtno11tttl. ........ 'f'llMr W Hrtr!'*-tf ,..,.e1n tilwf • t• *'' ctf • •"'*11 lllttl&I °"' ......... "' .,,...""" .-. ........... ,....... N 1'111 11 C.tt Mew, ( .. If .... •••cri•ll•fl .., c.tt"ltf ., u .,.._,.~ W ,_.. IS,11 ..-lllllWI l!!Hlttrr ........... &61"'*""'''· • FUNERAL SE RVICES SET Lewis Whitmore Lewis Whitmore Dies; Ex-leader Of Social Group Funeral Services are scheduled Sa tur· day for Lewis \Vhitmore , 68, the rormcr international president and chairman of the board of Parents Without Partners. \\'ho died Monday in Costa Mesa. His work beginning 10 years ago in Orange County's Chapter 26 of the parents group quickly sent Mr. Whitmore to the top of the worldwide mutual help and social organimtion. He took over in 1965 as international president of the group, now numbering 400 chapters including those in Australia, New Zealand and England. During the period from 1966 to 1968, ~ .. fr. Whitmore \.\'as chairman or the board and remained a member of .the- International board at the · time of his death. He had been local membership chairman. !hen chapter president, and regional president for the southwestern u.s·. states. 11is wofk in Parents Without Partners v.·on him several community service awards during that period. He was an engineer in the Radio Department of Philco-Ford's Aerooutronic Division. Newport Beach. "He was extremely intelligent and devoted to the organization," says Mrs. Barbara Ritchie. who served as in- ternational membership chairman. She said today she recalls how its ex· pansion throughout the western states began under Whitmore's guidance, as they walked neighborhoods with petitions seeking single parents. The heavy demand for Parents Without Partners chapters led the organization's headquarters on the east coast to branch out. Funeral services for Mr. Whitmore, \.\'ho lived at 1845 Monrovia Ave., Costa Mesa, will be Saturday at 10 a.m. in \Vestcliff Chapel Mortuary, Costa Mesa. Burial will follow in Pacific View Memorial Park. with Westcliff Chapel Mortuary directing. Friends say they belive ~1r. Whitmore is survived by a so n living in Syracuse, N.Y., but they were uncertain. They were trying to contact him today. Decith Se 1ite nce Li fted for Aged 'Vicious' Mu tt APOPKA. Fla . (AP) -Mayor, an arthritic cocker spaniel. would have died \Venesday if not for the efforts of Cora Lee Marden. Mrs. Marden, 66 and a widow, said she just couldn't let Mayor die. "The dog had no defense, so I came to his rescue," she said while preparing to sign adoption papers. Mrs. Marden iDtends to give the 11· year-old mutt a home in the middle or an orange grove, a mile from !he nearest neighbor. i\Iayor was sentenced lo death under the state's vicious dog act last month by Seminole County commi ssioners who received 18 complain ts about the an ial biting several youngsters. ;,t's all so ridiculous the way this case developed and how this dog came so close to death," said l\lrs. Marden ,' ·who already has three dogs at her secluded Apopka home. "I just couldn 't see it hap- pen." Besieged by l\lrs. l\tarden-inspired let- ters and telephone calls, the commission modified its original exec ut ion order and said Mayor would be spared lr a good home in a rural. fenced-in area was found. While Mayor sat in the pound , his fate undecided . offers poured in from around the stale and as far off as .. orth Caro- liria. Even county pound officer Sam Martin volunteered to take him home. "I haven 't seen the dog yet," said ~1rs. P..farden. "but l'm ready to take him. I just love animals." She said feeding the dog 1houldn ·1 cause many nnanci3J problems because "tv.·o of my ctngs are Chlhuahuu and don't eat much. And I'm sure they'll all get iilong just fine ." 70-MPH Lun it Set CARSON CITY (AP) -"A 70-rnlle-an· hoc. speed llmll along a blgb-!alllity stretch of lnteratate 80 from the C31ifomHl~Nevada line lo Reno was ap- prove<! Wednesday by the allte lll&b••Y Board. ' Crime Ring Broken? Valw y Pay Dragnet Arrests I Impas se "~:tudy Set ' Net I 0 Suspects . A series or arrests m.de following secret Indictments by a federal grand Jury In Los Angeles has shattered what authorities allege was an organized crime ring which pocketed millions of i. dollars annually in the Orange County. L<lng Beach and L<ls Angeles area. The dragnet netted 10 p e r s o n s suspected of involvement in bookmaking and loar. shark activities over an 18- month period, several of them all members ol tb.e same family. Spokesmen for lhe FBI, Internal Revenue service and the J u s l i c e Department's Organized Crime Strike Force did not specify any individual cases that came to light in their probe. Incidents were tabulated, they said, in Orange County, Long Beach, East Los Angeles and Whittier. Bookmaking activities alone netted the alleged criminal cartel $3.5 million an- nually. Newport Beach Police Detective Sgt. John Simon, head of the vice detail, said he had heard or only one of the in- dlvid1.1als indlcte4 on multiple charges when contacted today. Indictees include: Joseph Dar rell DhtOl'h 33, Nancy llunt, 15, William Ronald Olxon, 29, Robert Harold Dixon, 44, Charley Ray Dixon, 19, Kale Kalustian, 41, Edith Mae Terver, S9, Prentiss Lee Tarver, 41, all of Whittier, Albert Frank Miller, 38, of Los AJ1iel .. and Bobby Neal Hicks, 40, addrus unknown. Addltiomilly, Joseph Dixon wu cbarg· ed wlih two felony counta of m1ng a fnudulent income tai: return for the years 1959 and 1970. The federal grand jucy lodietment charged the 10 with running a ring over a six-week period In late Im that accepted more than $2,000 per day in wqen. The lndietmenl also cbarged five ol the per!Ons With extending credit in tbe form of large cash loans "under terlns and conditions which instilled fear in the debt· · ors that delay or fallufe 1n making repayment ... could result in the use of violence." • VISITING FROM JAPAN"' AFS Stljdont S.Nld·. -,, I • \_ Japanese Y Quth Exchange Pupil For Huntington 'hrOmendations of a fact·findi~g <l;iMijl)ee'. ituilyinl lhe \J!\passe m te·ache( eatary negotiations wi.U be heard at tonight's Fountain Va!Tcy School Board meeting. Negoliatlons between the 500-member Fountain Valley Educators Association and school trustees hnve been stalled since July, when trustees decla~ed a state ol "persistent disagreement. ' According to the state Education COde. a three-man fact-rinding oommittee must be brouiht in to study th e situation and provide recommendations when this state is reached. The board i5 under no obliga- tion to accept the suggested solutions . howe\ter. The committee has been studylng the problem fer several weekS, and its find· ings will be the flr~t item, on tonight's agenda. ~b Read. assbtant superintendent for Mel, explained today that no one k ow~ what the committee, called the board'~ review, will present to trustees. Expa11sion at San Onofre Plant Set for Hearing Huntington Beach has a new visitor - Ken Sasaki from Japan. Sasaki ls in t¥ United States participating in tlie American Field Service (AFS) program. The1 John Jackson house is Sasakl's new home for the year while be at~ school at Ediaon lfigh where he is a senior. 4 Rec~ational Leaders Needed In Huntlrtgton ~-' Four male playgrolDld \recreatl(ll8]. leaders are needed by lho \Huntington Beach Recreation and Park> ~rtmmt for the !97S-74 playground program beginning Oc\~ !.. A public hearing on the addition of two nuclear reactors to the San Onorre power plant may be scheduled Oct. 17, a State Coastal 7.one Conservation Commission official said today. Three appeals have been filed or the San Diego regional coastal commission's approval of the reactors. Appellants are the Environmental C'.pa\ition of Orange. County, _GU~RD (Groups United Against R ad 1at1 on Danger) of San Clemente and Ruth Peyton of the San Diego Coast Watchers. The units planned by S o u t h e r n California Ed ison Company and San Diego Gas and Electric would each operate with 1,400 megawatts at the plant three miles south of San Clemente. The Oct. 17 state commission meeting will take place in the Los Angeles area. A specific site hasn't been selected yet. Mildren Held , comrnlssioo appeals proc· Woman Suffers Knife Injuries; • Friend Charged A 31-year-old waitress is recovering from cuts on her ,hands and arm she suf- fered WC<41esday night when hel' boy friend allegedly attacked her with a knife. The suspect, William Norwood, 42, of T/01 \Varner Ave., was booked by police on charges of assault with a deadly weapon. The waitress, Mardelle Patrie, of 7662 Commodore Circle, said she was driving NGrwood'S car on Warner Avenue near the Meadowlark Golf Course when the at· tack occurred. She said Norwood had met her as she a:ot off work and as she drove they began to argue. She alleged to police he drew a knife and said, "I'm going to kill you ." She said she put up her hand to ward off the blows, stopped the car and ran for help. A passerby called police who ar- rested Norwood a few hours later at his apartment. Huntington Man Jailed in Incest A Huntington Beach man \\'as schedul- ed to appear in court today on charges tha t he had repeatedly raped and beaten his 16-year-old daughter over a l\\·o-year period. The man was booked into Huntington Beach City Jail Wednesday on charges of child beating, raise imprisonment, incest, sex perversion and forcible rape. Police saJd the arrest was made afte r an extensive interview with the man's daughter who alleged that her rather had periodically attacked her since July of 1971. Police were called in by the girl who ran to a neighbor for help after being severely beaten Wednesday morning. Huntington Sets F oothall Signups Slgnups for llag.rootbell wlll be held from 10 a.m. to noon, saturday, at 29 Huntington Be•ch playgroundo. Young boys in the ihird through eighth . grades are ellgtble to play In tho city recreation departmtnt program. The fee Is $1.!0 for boys In the ihlrd and rourih grades and $2.50 for tho older youths. All city playground• are located at local elementary Schools. l.asl year IOme 1,900 boys played 0Ai football. according to the recreation department. Play staria Sept. 29, and all. gameo will be played on Saturday mom- . inJ'.;.. furthu lnlormallon ~ tho recreation department al ~. • essor, said today a preliminlJY hearing on ihe controvenlal project will probably be set for the date. If commission planners decide they need more time to study the plant ex· pansion, the hearing m\ght be delayed two more weeks tQ a San Francisco-area meeting, she added. Dale Secord of the EDvironmental Coallbon and Lynn Harris Hicks of GUARD hand delivered their appeals at the commission meeting Wednesday in Inglewood. Sa fety factors in the $1 billion project are the main concern of the appellants. Possible dangers from r a d i a t i o n leakage and transportation and storage of radioactive wastes haven 't ~ ameliorated by the utility companies, the appeals charge. The adverse effects or thermal discharge from the oceanside plant on marine life are also listed as reasons for the rehearing. County Nar.fotic Officers Study 'Red Notebook' A small '!ed notebook that Orange County Sheriff's officers believe may prove w be a gold mine in terms or details of narcotics dealers and drug transactions in and beyond California is being eagerly studied today by the department's drug investigators. lt came into their hands Wednesday when deputies moved in on a car oc- cupied by James Raleigh Chapman, 28, of Washington, D.C. and Herbert Louis Goldblum, 25, of Abington, Pa . with the intention of booking both men on a drunken drivin£ infraction. They halted the car on the San Diego Freeway about one-half mile north of Sand Canyon Road after watching what they said was some erratic driving on the part of Chapman. But they stepped up the charges to transportation of controlled substances (narcotlcs) when they found the notebook and nearl y $'l5,000 in cash on the persons of the two suspects. Both men were lodg- ed in Orange County Jail. Stainless Steel Fabric Care Tub Sasald Is a bicycling enthusiast, and bas already enjoyed cycling through the area. His • first impression Is that everything is dh a "big scale," There are three children in the Jackson family who are acting as sisters and brothers to Sasaki. Rick Jackson attends Edison High with Sasaki. The other two are Judi , a student at Orange Coast College, and Jan, who attends Gisler Intennediate. ., Sasaki will be available for speaking engagements in the community after Dec. I. ~1rs. Deits, at 968-0917, will make arrangen1cnts. · Fishing Vessel, Tanker Collide ·The dej)artment Is hoping to find tlien with a college background and previous paid experience working with children. These persons will beglri at $2.85 an hour. Persons with only a high school diploma and nlinlmal expe:rlence will also be considered, but will start at $2.40 an hour. Knowledge of first aid, clemen· tary sports and crafts is also desired . The new recreational lenders will be assigned to one' of 39 elementary school playgrounds operated by the Recreation and Parks Department. Hours will be from a~30 to 5 p.m. M<ln4 day through Friday. with emploi<s oepnd· ing an additiooal hour every two weeks at a staff meeting. The job includes conducting a-aft LONG BEACH (AP) -The skipper or classes and supervising chlldren in sports the 42-foot fishing boat said his radar and special even ts. showed clear sailing abe.id. That was Applications should be made to the before he coUided . with an 810-foot Huntington Beach ParlCs and Rm-talion tanker. De)>Mtment, -1106 Orange -Ave. More m. formation is available at 538-5485. :; • ~ W~lll:J ,4_04 .penon.s ~ the J,,.,, Pioneer Wednesday when the YpRts col-,.,, , , · "'. I· 1 lided in the pl'Hav.'tl hours near C:Omm • l Aid Anacapa Island. The Coast Guard said no Ulll y injuries were reported. , The Pioneer, a"commercial .'°8t Out or p K t Ventura, began taking on water, but the rogram ep Coast Guard arrived In time to deliver a bilge pump to the stricken 'essel and escort it to Channel Islands lor repairs. Marine Arr~ted ' In Aunt's Death SAN DIEGO (AP) -A Marine from Twentynine Palms has been jailed for in· vesligaUon of the murder of his atmt. who was found stabbed to death in her Oceanside home. · Police said Lenee Cpl. George S. Scriv- ner, 20, was antited at .tbe Riverside County base Tuesday night and brought here from Oceanside Wednesday. He was to be arraigned today. Polii;e said the body of-Vicki Sue Seri~ ner. 31, \Vas found Monday with more than 40 stab wounds. Her nephew had been a weekend guest ol ~lrs. Sa'ivner and her husband. ~ The officer in charge ol the Com· muntty Services Program Jn Fountain Valley will stay on the payroll until March 18, 1974. The Board of Supervisors Tuesday agreed to an extension to cost $9,380 for services of the officer for the extended period. The total grant award is increased to $18,720. All Community Services Projecl action programs are subsidized by the fe4eral government through the county J>roba.. tion Department. They are designed to prevent juvenile delinquency. Hurricane on Move MIAMI (UPI) -Hurricane Ellen, with wJQds 9.f 85 m.p.h., churned westward through the Atlanti c today and posed no Immediate threat to land. For three days, Ellen has moved almost constantly westward at 15 m.p.h. FULL 2 YEAR PARTS and LABOR WARRANTY • Smooth, Rust-Proof, Chip-Proof • ldoal for 111 W11h· able F1bric1 e L11t• the Lifetime of thtW11htr PWS ••• a washable knits cyc:le ....lo,_ .. ,...,..,... ,... c.,. .., ...... •.tt.r 4miMe,..... er ....... '*ks. AMI ..,.. ~Hltty .....,. wertll ....... llhl YOU CAM iUY A sn•D fUID WASHll AND m 9' l'OI Al LOW Al ''369" l~isPEED OUEEN.IM] e M cGraw .. Edison Company Olvlslon 90 DAY CAIH W1TK ·:~:J.0 • Iii. BB 1815 NEWPORT BLYD. Da11rtown -......-.548-7711 • ' • • , y I "· ' DAILV PU,OT i 1-Tra.bueo_...~ By JAN WORTH Of .. ...., ..... ""' ~ ii .WI a place in Orange County where clllldnn can,ride their horao> to adloel, have the $lme teacher three years in a row, and know all their feJIOw studenls. Il ls the tiny three-room Trabuco ScbdOI In ru~I Trabuco Canyon. Pri~ d]lll Tooy Dube, who alao teaches Saddleback's Chref Chided By Jury Unit · ' 'l1>e Or-Cqunty Grand Jury baa. crilicbed -Commllllity College l'nlldmt Dr. Frtd H. Bnmer ior lob- ~ for cu•Une devekJpmenL Allred Flom, jury f......,. pro tern said Ille jury "has ~cular c:oacern tbol llnmer'a coU. -would blatully Wldermine another govern.rDen- t al entity's functlona·.and .._,.ibllilleo ... Tho criticism, in a lett.r dot..! Sept 5, is· I ree:pome to I letter Bremer wrote in !ale June urpig malliple lllit -.i -lopment for the Caplllrano Bolch -· -Boan! of Trllsleel Presi· • · -.lalm Lund of Laguno Bolch liter ldlnlttal be ubll Bn!mer to write the Jetter bued on bls coocems for valuable ll8deYeloped Jud be owna m Pldll< CGOlf1llclnnY in Caplltrauo Belch. "'"""' ·-· alJo the -.... rfnteelrt .. • the SedflWMct ....... II V 'o• ~ ladq, be WU llll 1Yllllble ... --to ...,,.nera. ,,,. Gnad Jury . --with I cbarfle in Bmnet'a letter !bit "the c:omtal cemm-,.uon commissklo ii prone tO ouccumb to pressure exert..! by ln- dlvidual.!I and groups who apparenUy are attempting to thwart types of develop- .. meat which can be beneficial to a n • pmt!cular locality," Bremer contend<d In bis letter that development of the Oat land .-r the ,. . blulfl -Dobeoy Part and Sberecllff li!'CapiJlrano Beach wwld in- --the tu -of bis coll ... diatrict ' ''wltboul ldvtneiy lfloctlac Ille .... . .trtalnent." : Tho' Grand Jury ._.sod, .,.... . (Bremer'•) contentlm !bit - • developmenl ean toke place In tbls area :· without ldvenely allectlng the en- : •b-t -not 1ppeor to haft a : __ In flcl, and, In fact,.....,. to'be I : Ju<!cment better left to thole ..-coo-: eoiii with envlroDmeotal qllllity bal a ; bnJader baae and specl1llzed l llnowledgo." · ' grades five, m. l!Ven, and eight, likes to say the 8Cbool 11 locoted "where the road ends'~ in the canyon next to O'Neill Park. This year the school bas l6 students in gradet kindergarten to tight, a part-lime custodian, three teachers, including Bube, and· a aec:retary. · It also boasts two donkeys (due to become three soon), ·a pasael ol chickens and ducks, several goats and sheep, and File• Complaint a hitch lull ol rabbits. So the school doesn't have modem plumbing or bot water. So there's no fan- cy auditorium ror graduating the eighth graden. It bas Its compensations. Like huge oak trees with thick rope swinfs. Like no school bells -just a casual y organized day that begins at 8:30 and ends with calistl)enics on the liasketball courts somewhere around three. No w Bube, a retired career Marine, finding enough people to produce th1 foocl Many of the sb.ldents say they wouldn't doesn't have to do the custodial work. we need," be said. want to go anywhere else. Most have In the five years he's bee.n with the "If we can iQSpire an interese '" always gone there .. But some of the . school, he and the eighth grade boys did agriculture here and make it fun to bool strongest supporters are the new most of the sweeping and maintenance. we might contribute a few more to the students -who find a different feeling at They also put in a sidewalk and built a field ." Trabuco than their previous school. pen for the donkeys. His students take the school's animals 'Ibis year there is only one third grader "I feel that we ha ve the best of all home during tl)e summer, after learning and one eighth grader. Bruce Priddy. worlds educationally here ," said Bube. a how to care (or and feed them . That presents some problems to the resident of Orange. Most of the animals were donated. teachers -who fin d themselves making The other two teachers, Carolyn Bube has found many local citizens in~ lessons plans that look like a 10-genera-Sullivan and Charlene Ponder, agree. terested in helping. . lion genealogy. · Mrs. Sullivan, a Tustin resident. Parents take , an active role. It's not It forces students to follow through on teaches 11 students in kindergarten and unusual to see ·a father making repai"' their own - a necessity which neither first grade. on something f•J:'OUnd the property. the teachers nor students see as bad. "1bese kids are different from kids al One day last week, a group of fOUI "It's tougb being Lbe only eighth lhe bottom of the hill," she said. "They're fathe rs and one grandfather came t.o the grader," Bruce said with a grin. "You canyon kids. They don't seem to grow up school to build a new corral for th9 get stuck with all tbe work, · .I wasn't so fast. Their lives are more stable. horses the kids ride to school I Battin Oaiins Oemente =' !11'~, like it, but so far it's working "They're not afraid when they come to "Our parenls are (llU' biggest llUP" school," she added. "They may be in porters They want the 11ehool •· ~-• Last year the school had 1° e1'gh'1.. · '"' "14 J' » "' class with their brothers and sisters -pretty much the way JI Is mo t ol graders who took a traditional trip to -s and there's a good chance they've had them moved out here to oive ·~ .. · Estate 'Underassessed' . ' • -»~-~c~BROBACK Of -..... Iliff -4~ Finl Diltrlcl Supervlaor Robert Baltin of &mte Ana filed 1 _,plolnt rill the Orange County AIM.men! • ApPellls * . fr * Julie Brands Estµ,t.e Reports 'Vnfair., Vntrne' WASHINGTON (UPI) -Jolie Nixon Elseobower Ill'• moot of the expensive cbanaea 11 -ldential estatea were midi In the Interests of the F1rsl Famllr'• alety. She llbeled u "completely unfair aod Ullll'Ue" reportl tmt .Presldent NIJ:cm bas benefited financially from the eo~a muent-paid improvements on his private ~1 ... "We could care less if we have a gazebo or a.:. spoUight on the flagpol e," she said Indignantly. The White HOUie bas said most of the cbanpl -at presidential compounds in San Clemente and Key Biscayne, Fla., were to improve the President's security. "The recent atorles tbll oor family bas beneftted. from aecurity at the homes have bothered Ibo eatlre family," she told I luncheon -.. of the Capitol !DD Clllb w-.,. "Somellmet we do get !rualraled wltll Ibo Secret llorYloe, bul they do a line job when you think tbll tliey have the l1urden of protectlnc the Ille of , tbe most, 1111- por!anl mao In the counlty." The 1111lte -blia aid !bit f!0.5 mlllion wu l!>eDt oa various reoovatlonl 1t the prealclentlal estatea : lo • San Clemente and Key Biscayne, Fla. Sacramento. Young Priddy isn't sure if &-""'° ·.Board alleging that the Western White be'N get to go1o tbe capital himself, but the same teacher before." chil,dren Ibis nelgbborhood feeUng. They ~property in San Clemente is under-Principal Bub"e. has a~ured him he will. Mrs. Sullivan said Trabuco students don't want lo lose it," Bu be said. u~ by about St~ Like m06t graduates of Trabuco, Bruce don't develop-cliques of'their peers. Fortunately, Saddleback Un if I e d .... Tbe dmpraint was rded . ednes:lay is ~.Y ~' rpaking ·~ frans.itl<m to ''The o~r tids help the younger," she distric\ administrators support the Wtth i clerk of the appeals board in the "a big schOol " '1ext year. said .... We banldn't do without the help neighborhood concept and IQ far are err cowU ~s office. 1 _"I'm not ready ror the big schools our older' students give us." couraging the agriculture pn?graol and 8't ··in the appeal is acting as an in· yet," he said. : ' t "I suspect it would be a tot easier other unique features. · dividUal not 8 county supervisor. He said But Bube said the record of the somewhere else -but there are many Besides provi~g a custOdtan and fult- be. did.it to "put the appeals board 00 the school's graduates, while not always tops advantages you just couldn't find time secretary, unification has meant spot." _ .• in grades, shoWs them h~ds above the el!ewhere,'1 Bube said. · better music programs can be offered, a The validity or Battin's. complaint is in crowd in independence. moti\ration, and Dube (prouclt.mced byu-bee) said he psychologist now visits occasionally, and question as tbe law states an appeal may responsibility. ' ' believes strongly in the sc h o,o I ' s busing is available for youngsters who only be filed by an owner of comparable Until this year, the schobl was run by agricultural emphasis, in its second year. need it. property w~ was injured by the under-an independent district, headed by a Himself raised on a farm, Bube "You'd never see any of our girls assessment. Battin owns no comparable three-member board of education. became interested in agriculture a few wearing dresses or hose,'' Mrs. SDWvan property. But with the unification of. the Sad· years ago when he read that fewer and said. "Sure kids wear pants to school The appeals board meets next on Mon· dleback schools into one district, Trabuco fewe r students are opting for agriculture elsewhere. But here they have to _ day and may bear the complaint at that School joined in. The decision bas been a as a career. cleaning out the pens and riding horses is time although it is not on the agenda. 1_ha~p~py;':ooe~~· ~f!j~~~L;::;==;::;l,ir"So~m~e~d~a~y=w~e~m~a~y~h~a~ve~a~)l~a~rd~lim~e=~·~no~rm~a;l;part;;;;~o~f~th~e~d;a~y;;.';:' ;;;:;':---: The question of assessment of Presi- dent Nixon's San Clemente property was fim broached by S t'a t e Boon! of Equalization Olairman William Bennett several weeks ago . At that time, be requested that tb€ board investigate the $1.37 million assessment placed on the preperty by Orange C.OUOty Assessor Jack Vallerga. But the boatd refU!ed to act. Four members declared they had no legal right to check loca1 assessments. · Later, the board, tc quiet Bennett. agreed to ask the Orange County Appeals Board to check the assessment. Battin claims the San Clemente prop- erty should be a s s e s s e d at $2.826 millk>n. To the lt.5 million p.irchase price, be adds flo:J,000 in improvements made by the. federal government and 1123,000 in 'cllanges tbe President made. · Vallerga conte.~ds that the bn· provements made by lhe government are federal property and not · assessable by the county. Frank Manzo, a Battin appointee to the appeals board and his finance chairman in last ytar's election. bas said he is in favor of the investigation. The attitude or th.: other two members is not known. · .J.J.J. (}arrell6 SEPTEMBER Last 10 Days of DREXEL UPHOLS T ERY ~ .) ~ ! Divnr.c~ Not Fo.o~proof , )- , A blmhlnl Coonty Clerk WU1i1m E. SI • Jolm bad to' -·~ lbaC : -, !""I riman1qe, OnnP Coanty : lllyle, llli'l qulte 11 error !no u be bal • oneked • up le be. i · Boat ..-r J-c: -ol ; Co1t1 M-ml!Cbd 1 i.,... -In the ~ middle of 181 Jolin'• ~· ploctd ~ lllllital pond "1 rmallnl· tbl!illo ·loam- : ed 1ftor m...,m, hll aeeoncl wife tbll ha : WU• not lopibo 'Clhon:ed from Illa ltnt ~ .... • DlltiGD, of !124 Coolldp """·· bal : ......Ued the legal omlaalon but not • ..-bitterly recallinl SI John't -. : of ftV. montbl ago: "It could nov<!r bap- t plll heh." C 1'114t comment followed the dltcovety : by -ol the county clerlt'• worlten !bit I 11 ~ l,OfO ·dlvorco actlooe In onnp· i COllnlJ bad -been legolly ......-. • Tiit parlitl Involved bad'-'.- l ·~-ol---Bal • -bad ""' ...... tht Yitai llllll ludc-i · --... '"""11 tbll l!llllY .... , .... remarried and tocbnically committed ~ 11 that point Cllmed the !un ., __ c11 ....... ..,-., -that bit murtqe u..u. diVislon ...... lllloolulll1 .... -.lbe -wu llkm-oat llat 1 ODii Judimeat ol di"""' WU -'"I the -Damraa --that l )I u •I 0 D. W-.Y bJ painting out lhll bis ox- wtlt -ilioi lbe reoUy-·t ..... wife -.... -Into • propetfy dell llld hid lo wllnlt ~ tlllt she wu'leplq c11-. • "Sbe bel'lolf made oare r!pl then ind there tbet tht flnll "1::1""1' WU ob-tained," Dmnnll 11ill'. • t ,. can lm- ulne how my -wife, Joon,.llld 1 flit when .we IMmed that we'd .,_ Uv!ttc In ""· u Ole DOYell aay.11 ' "YO\I ~ to ~ 11111 Mr. lllmnll tlpod 1 w• -.. ponolt)' ol perjury tbel be Wll llnllb' dl•Ol'llOll," tho iluilend St John'Ald, Bat be nodllY -!bit bla llllnlatt l I S4VE 20% on selected collection of • SOFAS • LOVE SEATS • CHAIRS in your choice of fabrics H .JI GAI\l\~TT f U RN11U RE PROFESSIONAL e ·pen Mon. 1215 HARIOR IL'>'O. INTERIOR OESISNERS lhurs. l Frt Eves. COSTA MESA, CALIF. -, .\ • • ., ' 4 DAILY PILOT Thursday, 5~ptlmbf'r 20, 1973 Hushi ng Up Our Country .Networks lo ltotate • NEW YORK (UPI) -The commercial television networks will resume their rotating coverage or the Sen at e Watergate hearings when the public sessioos resume Monday, n e two r k spokesmen said \Vednesday. "NOLA.WAS BROUGHT up our way," said Mrs. Brown, who is 45. "She doesn't even know the aboriginal ways. She C3Mot speak their language and knows nothing ol. life in a bush camp. Nola has been used to living in her own room with all the facilities of a modem home. Sbe must be terrified and confused. ••. Mrs. Brown claimed that rioia's natural parents wanted bet •returned to prove to her husband-to-be that she existed SD he would continue paying them the bride price of tobacco and food. Mrs. Brown said Nola was 8 months okl when she came to their borne. I Nola's tnbe lives fn Arnhem Land, 300 miles east of Darwin. ? llla .... """"""'""""'"""1"""'"""'..., ... ..,.. ......... .,,."""'"""'l'J:ElE.. Soldiers Encounter Fire From Snipers in Santiago SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI) -Soldiers armed with automatic weapons patroll- ing the streets of downtown Santiago ear- ly today encountered sporadi c fire from snipers resisting the nine-day-old ruling military junt.a. Shots echoed through the streets despite a warning Wednesda y night by Air Force Gen. Gustavo Leigh, a ( IN SHORT ..• ) member of the four-man junta. that "any man \\'ho. fires against our forces, dies; any man v.·ho shoots innocent persons, dies." e Sa igo11Air s 1•r otest SAIGON (UPI ) -The Saigon govern· ment said today it has protested to the 12-oation International Conference on Vietnam about Hanoi's alleged rebuilding of v.s. airfields in South Vietnam. The government, in a diplomatic note released today, called on the conference "to take effective action" to force North Vietnam "to immediately stop its con- struction and improvement of airfields south of the 17th parallel." e Skylab Shoots Stars HOUSTON (UPI) -The Skylab 2 astronauts today phtographed X-ray light sources several thousand I i g h t years from earth and tested their disabled Apollo command ship to make sure they have a way to get back home Tuesday. Packing as muCh scientific in· vestigation as they can into the fina l days of their two-month voyage, Al'an L. Bean. Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma used the ir solar observatory tc lesc()pCs tci make a dozen pictures of an unusual blue star in the Scorpio con· stellation. e Pe11siott Vote. 93·0 WASHlNGTON (UPI) ,_ The Senate has passed a bill to assure 38 million working people that the pensions they an- ticipate v.ill be available when they retire. Heat Grips Southwest Parclied, Dry Pacific Nortliwest Gets Dow1ipour Gull'/ Wlndli wlll blow -the nortMr" deMl"ll lfld moun11rn1. of;'"IOl'I' 1ow1 w111 111 " the llPlll!' lOI " tlNtl11' ., ... 11111 '" ..... :)Gt •nd "°' " the "'°"'"'"'"· J, Cn utal We ather Molll'f' W11!1Y llCMY. Llgtit ¥.,-lft>lt wil'ldt l'llOlll tnd momlng 11o11ra bKom-1119 wnt to twthwell 10 to 11 t1110tt In 1tte,_ toclll'f' and flrfdey, Hltll todly, mid 10s. Coest1I tetnptrltutft ral'tf fl'trft 5t to 61. lnl•fld ""'"'1h1ns r1nge 'rom S7 to n. w1m lemperahH"• ... Sun, Moon , Tide• TMUaSOAY S.Cllfld l'lftll , . ., . , ...... •::M O.f'l'I, Stcond low ............ lt:l5 1.m. •alOAY Fl,..! l'lltft .............. 110ll•1.m. ,,,..,kw .............. ll:S.1.m. Seccnd """ •.. ,. ....... &1~ •·"'· s.1 lun •••t1t1.m. S.lil l :S3p.m. MOO!! ................ $th 1:56 p.m. • T ost 1n on on 1 • ..,,,.,. """ • -blast anl tJ/i, ' :mg POLICE WOULDN'T say how • whole buJJdlng teemed to erupt," Kevi!I , .. ~b eip!o&lve was packed Into the Lovett, 1$ •Id. ;'Two of my frien~1 bomb but•Jt was "certainly the largest were bl~ off their feet. I just' sank: we've1 'COl'!lt across yet," a spokesman against a wall shaking." aald. . ' Dang~ R~maln Two Sextuplet Babies Improve During Night born by caesarian section Sunday night within a four-mln~o Interval lo the M- year-old mothel' we'" fair. '!be fifth child, John, the first one born, was in good condition. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE NEW FOR 1974 ·QI o ( 19'remote control compact tv - Your Choice from $27995 EA-"M RCA's~ coto< portulO thll'• ...,._,. • F1mily·aiz• c:olor viewing- 11 I porub{e price • OM•Mt VHF fiM tuning • Two plug-In AccuCirc:ult9 modulol •Vivid color Bo,th models corry the AA&D warronly RCA put1 color ona pednt11! • RCA perfonnsnce Ind dependability • Generou• tc:reen alzt • POftlblllty • Ptdettal tttnd • SO{id 1t1tt compontnts in menv1rN1 Stond included MODEL ES·l61WEN 16" DIAGONAL. PICTURE Final close outs on 1973 models -call for the best prices of the year. ' QUALITY PRODUCTS PROFISSIONAL SIRVIC I 275 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA 642-888~ CAl.1. l'OR SIRVICI Hours : Dally 9 • 6-Thurs. 9 • 9 Senf .. Tt. ti-'"" A'" lt111C• 1th {, • • WIJy Buy From AA&O e 10n1 y11r l1bor guerenttt e-On·e y11r p1rt1-w1 rr1nty e 'Five y••r picture tubt werrenty e Discount prices e Ont y11r lpt•~•r 111chen9e e 60 dey tuner 1xch1n~1 e f'f'itndly , ptrsontl strYlc....,. we KNOW our P'roc:lucts end 'back them wilh SERVI CE I ~ I I ' " ' '\ I • • • • Or.aode· Coast e EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stocks' , VOL 66, NO. 263 , 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,' CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1973 N TEN CENTS Harbor J{ i~dergarten Without Tears By JOHN .ZAU.ER Of Hit o.llY Plitt Stiff Fifteen children barely 4 years old reported for the first day of Classes" at Victoria School last week and much to everyone's surprise, not one of ihem was crying. Even w h e n their mothers left them, the tots kept a stiff lipper Up and refrain- ed from shei:lding any tears. At fiJ:'.Sl, it· was puzzling. Kin- dergarlnm and even lirsi grader! often cry. What was .dJllerent about these 4-year- ·old u they began their first day of classes In the Newport-Mesa Unjfled, School Dialrlct expei'lmental pre«bool progrim? . lt,dldn't like long to find the answer. In the week before classes, teacheq' · had · visited every one of thio" cbildren In their home, talked to uie parents, and in many ca.es brought mother and cbild ~ ledfl Vlc!tftia Reset.ed down to the school to see the classroom. So when !he lirst day ol school came, the children weren't afraid. "It showOd QI right lrom the start how hnportant It ls to have involvement of the child'• lioine .one! parents In the school' pn>gram;0 says Janeen Badard, coordinator of' the program. Newport Mesa's program for 4-year- olds Is beginning !Is second year .of operation this fall on a $38,000 budget. It operates at only two schools -Victoria . Bandaged victim JdicbMf D. Jlyan, 20, ~Anaheim, is assis~ from ~ .P~ boat attet accldent Wedn..c!AJ at ~rt HarbOr jetty. l!Yan. a Jani· tor at Disneyland, fell on the jetfy, cuttlng·bis scalp. U. .... Gff!cen be wu.tlred flom ·bis all-olghl job and &P.PIJ."llUY becam• mesmerued while staring at rbytllmlc waves and toppled ovet. He was treated at Hoag Memorial Hospital and released. No Compromise . Met in 'Tape' $e ttlement Newport Planners Review Cannery Village High Rise BULLETIN . WASHINGTON (UPI) -ne White a-. advised t1ie u.s. Coan of Appeal• lhls al-• tbl H bad bee1I -lo te reach an out-el-court setUement with 1peclal. prooecalo< Ardllbald Cox over Prelideat Nlxoa'I secret WllucllH'e- lated tapes. A request to build two, three-story of. fice buildlnp that exceed the city's basic 26-foot height limitation will be reviewed tonight by the Newport Beach Planning Commission. '73 Lobster-Bake WASIDNGTON (UPI) -Workfni rlaht up to a cqurl·imposed deadline, ilie B' B Jho Li White House and Special . Prosecutor . y a a ODS Archibald Cor: tried today to rind a com- promise to their dispute over. Prtsideilt T Nixon's Wate1gate tapes. .· O Open Sept 28 A lew houA before lawyers .for the two · . · · • · aides were to go before a federal appeals . court. to r,e~,rt.on-tbeir.-ettorts ... a.:sour.ce_ .,. The 24~ .. Anl!_uat Bal~ Lions Club close to the · situation said "we'fe sUll LoSSfer J!ake Is gearing up for a lvorklng on ii" and ii was leatned a third weekend of IOOd games 81\d paracling mee~ to ti'y to resolve the clfW!upa 0 llarting s.pi_,11 ·;lth ·• -toboier !Oed ·at "as. d Wednesday. (Related editorial Fashion Island In N rt Beach ~E. ' ~ ~·· : :eox Insists that a federal grand jury • '1t'• gulag to be bigger and oetter th"!' cons1der1ng Ju.rther" Water g at e .. Jn. ever:.'' said·Newpoit Beecb.P.HCe Lt . ..Sfu dlclf!1enls must bear the tape """"111nc• Bluo, Llolll .cluti president. "It will really Of rune pfesidenUal conversa• about be,a blige,eveni." • I ' ttie scand~l-l>elore taking action. !;t!olMU.illrt wbeo:~lhe caraival and Nixon contend! that surrenderiliC the foott~,.,.·SeptiW.al S p;ni oo the tapes would violate essential !lOll· 1"l'li!nil,Jcif 'Of· fasbldlJ llibuid' lll!xt to JfdeqtialitY, m the office an destroy the B\;;eC)way· llepartmoat • st~, ' T he presi,dency. · Cl\"llViL will 'Include i'id , games and I I oran11e Ceut • I ., ' ·W:c:er I ' ¥CJ!llY sunoy' if, followJni ,, --~usual lolF,!;.atiMll olq llM ·. . colll. Hlghs Jn die upper eoo at the bellclln-~ to 71 inland. ~ Oyemi~'l.owl In the IOI. • INSWE TODAY After most of her life with white Jolter parenti, an aborig· In• girt M< boen tok~n . bock to bush fo~.?n orrong•d marrlog• with miacue-aoea trl~•nnan. S•• llory,,p IQ Page 4 •• -.. Mutv.I 11.-» ... , ........... "·' Otlllft C'"" 1:1 rTA • .,...... ... It.cit Mmttt »11 Telewt...,, • --........, • •4 w ............ ... ...,. ,. ... 4.1 . otber midway attractions, Blue said. HJghllghllng the Lobster Bake will he a parade &:pt. 29 :around Fashion Island, featilring more than 120,1? entries from clubs and organizations ol : the )larbor Area. _ .~ Grlu\d maraha1 of the parade will be Newp<lrt,Harbor Chamber ol Commerce ManalJU Jack .llamett. • • ,Aller ~-plrade, Which Is due 1lo llsrt al IO'"a.ili.,..the-midway-and .!obottr hoothx wU1 .operi (9r bllllnesugiln and sla)1 ope~ 111111 mldnlibt, Blue1..t11. Clrnlval adMU .. ·and more lilboter~ which Blue Aid wlll amount to "about a ton" before the -end Is ... , ~ Will ........, &mclay al 11 a.In. add lall until 10 p.m. ProOtl ol the annual fund.ralainc mnl go to Lioal Club chartllel 11114 to Pl1 !or othlr I.Iona Club collllllllllll)' actlvlUes, • Blue iald. ' Hurricane on Move • MIAMI ·(UPI) --Ellen, wllh winds ol 111. m.p.h., ebumecl -\hrooil! Ibo• Atlenlla todn ud pooed no tmmedlate throat to tand. For '-days, Ellen hu mo""lf almOll C<lllllantly westward at II m.p.h. • I The city planning staff bas recommend- ed approval fOr the buildings, planned in the Old cannery Village, provided they stay within the 35-foot maximum height limit of the surrounding commercial dis-- tri ct. "The staff feels that the increased building height does result in more public open space...:Since the project will corr sist of approximately 30 percent land- scaping and, walks, 0 states a report writ- ten by Senior Planner William Laycock. The two buildings, which would include about 57,000 square feet of floor space, will be. located at the intersection of Lafayette Avenue and 32nd Street. The planning commission will meet at 7:30 p.m. in city council chambers. The commiSsion" al91t will consider re-- . quests to: -Seti alcoholic bev~e within 200 · !eel ol a te!ldential area at a proposed new restaurant at the Balboa Inn. -Con,,truct four residential condo- miniums on two lots located at 413 and · 415 East Balboa Boulevar<I. ....-Enlarge ah existing ·duplex to ex- deed the R-1.5 standat<IS o( .the city's Einergency Ordinance. The buildlog re- quest is fur 1103·West Bay Avenue. A, request from the Irvine Comany to . ~Id an. apartment complex near the Newporter Inn has been delayed at the request ol· th~ company. The cpmmission also will consider ex- tensive amendments to its poUcles for . advertising subdivisions and resubdivi- sions within existing residential com- munities. Willie Says 'Tkis Is · It' NEW YORK !AP.I -Willie Mays of tbe New York Mets, base ball's a.,,.....oict llq>ltltar, annowiced . his rellre-t today, ellectlv1 at the.and ol the .lt'l3 ..... tsiory, Pa~ II) • , ''1118 ls It," said Wllllt.' "I'ift · #JnS alter the season. I 'GllY ,)lipe I can mtlke aome conlrtbution -rd anoltler championship Jn il9w York in the little time left." !layl bas pla)'.ed 116 games this ' season with a .211" batting average. and lb< home TW1S; Increasing hl1 eare•!r total to "80 third b<b1nd only Babe Ruth ;;;/ H0nry Alil'C>O. I and Canyon, bolh on the west side of Costa Mesa -but officials are hopeful that experience from the program will enable them to expand it throughout the district lf state funding for education of four-year~lds becomes available. Mlss Badard presented an analysis of the program's first year Of operation to the board of education earlier this week. Among her findings were: -Standardized tests showed that 4- year-olds completing the program have a significantly higher level of skills than. the average five-year-old e l\ t e r in g kindergarten. ' -Every child in the program has passed tests indicating he or she is fully prepared to enter kindergarten. By con- trast, only about 20 percent of childr;en entering kindergarten at Victoria and canyon without help of lhe preschool pro- gram are fully prepared to start kin- dergarten, Miss Badard said. -Every child entering the program was screened for learning problems, in- cluding tests for everything from tooth decay to behavior to pe re e ptu a I disorders. Then the various problems were treated regularly thr?ugh the year and Miss Badard said the vast majority of the problems were solved. "This was one of our most important goals," Miss Badard said. "Wlly wait un- til a child is 10 years old to find out that he has an emotional problem that is im- (See NO TEARS, Page Z) Possibly Next W ~ek ~ . Gas Hike Okared WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Cost ol Llv.ing C.Ouncil said today it would allow a boost-in retail gasoline prices, possibly within a week. Chainnan John T. DunJOp, in testimony on Capitol Hill· and talking later with reporters, said the council would grant gasoline station operators permission to raise prices by a specUic amount to reflect higher charges by the major sup- pliers. (The Associated Press quoted Dunlop $650;,000 Building Hearing Set Newport Beach planning· OOllllllission- ers will be asked tonight to approve ---· cif.JL#I0.(100 ollice buil-Dext to the Versailles m the B1uffi · apartment complex. A spotesniaD ·for Mariners Savings and Loan said the land, owned in part by William cagney, is partly within an un- incorporated county "island" surround-- ed by Newport Beach. The spokesman said annexation proceedings are under way. The land is ·part of a larger parcel of county land along Superior Avenue that last Week was included in Newport Beach's sphere ol inlluence by the' L<x:al Agency Formation Commiasion. The triangle of land is bounded by Placentia Avenue, Hospital Road and Superior A venue. Planning commissioners also will be asked to resubdivide another ttiree-acre parcel in that triangle. Mariners officials said they are "nego- tiating" for use of that land for more professional office buildings . The building coming before Commis- sioners tonight would includt>: a restaurant and would er:ceed the basic height limit in the area by 12 feet. '111e land is in a 32-foot height limit area but use pennits allow structures to go up to 50 feet. 'Ille three-story building is planned for 4-4 feet. Planners will be asked by. the develoi;r er to allow the building to have 20 per- cent of its required parking spaces set aside. for compact cars -thus requiring less land area . The city's planning staff is recommend· ing approval of the project, subject to 14 conditions. Among them is a requirement to bring parking up to the 160-space minimwn requirements by adding at least two JJ!.or~ sp~~~ The Mi'ilners spokesman said the build- ing should be built by next June, barring unforeseen delays before the South Coall Regional ?.one conservation Commission. Russ Test Indicated WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Atomic Energy Commission said Wednesday the Soviet Union apparently conducted a new underground nuclear test~ The AEC, said signals indicating an explosion, detected by a seismograph, originated Tuesday night in the central Kazakh desert area of Russia. SNOW FORECAST FOR RENO AREA I • t!S,NO;' Nev,, (AP) . -The National We)!.~r, Service ortlCe here has isSUed ... ifs nra1 forecast for snow of the-season. The forecast calls for increasing c~ce of abqwers In the Reno area, with the snO'ff lefel ne1r '7,000 or 8,000 in the Sierra. 11 The snow flurries arc Uiely in the Lake 'l'ahoc Basin and In the Sierra generally lrom Echo Summit on U.S. Highway 50 . northward, l0tecasteA•aald. as saying "I would hope it would requ ire no longer than a week" ~yond Tuesday, wihch would be by Oct. 2.) But Dunlop said he did not think the council ~uld change Phase IV economic rules to let retailers continue to pass along future wholesale price hikes to con- sumers, despite the shutdo\vn of many stations by operators protesting the regulations. Such a decision, he said, would create Lists Gripes a "chaotic price situation" bound to con- tribute to' inflationary pressures. Gas· station operators ln Massacbusett~ prior to Dunlop's announcement said to-- day they wouid end their protest shut· down , but vov, ..:d they wouJd do it agaifi if the Nixon administration refused to change its mind on price controls. "We've proven our point and we don't \V?nt the public to suffer any more," said John Bell, a Mobil station operater in the {See GAS, Page Z) Sen. Carpenter Criti.~ . . • . . I· , . • .. Of Political Criticism~~,~.' ~ Stllte Son. Dennis E .. Carpenter hit at whii"Le called an "orgy of crlllclsm" In polltlcs, lamented that 1\11 good bills don't get tllO public pressur<the dcat~ penalty did, and gave qualified support for Gov. Ronald Reagan's tax initiative measure. Speaking Wednesday before th e Laguna Niguel Republican Women's Club, Carpenter CR-Newport Beach), lallltched into a discussion 'of what he termed "general problems," after discussing the recent coUrt-ordered reap- portioriment of state and congressional legislative districts. Of Criticism, Carpenter said "we can't be that bad as 311 people or . an ad- ministration .~· _ He said be supported measures pro- viding for campaign fund disclosures, but was against laws l'e qu lrlng . disclosure of lawmakers' person a I finances. "I don't feel I have given up my Constitutional rights to privacy because I hold public office," Carpenter said. He added that he had recently refu sed a re· quest by the Los Angeles Times fdr a financial statement. "I resent the intrusion," he said. He said the innuendo is that if a successful man runs for public office, be is going to have conOicts of interest. "There is no relationship between qualification. tQ s~:ve :u;id make this type of disclosure," Sen. Carpenter said. Shifting to the governor's tax initiative setting an income tax ceiling, Carpenter said he was in general philosophical agreement with the measure, but hadn't SPEAKS TO ISSUE State Sen. Carpenter made up his mind yet. He said be wasn't sure the machinery established in1tbe initiative was the best to do the job. He said the matter was extremely (See TALKS, Page Z) State <;oast Panel Eyes 2 Beach Purchase Bil'ls Beach purchase bills by State Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport Beach) and Senator Randolph Collier (D-Yreka ) are undergoing study by the chairman of the State <:oastal Zone Conservation Commission. Both bills were passed by · lhe legislature and await Gov: Ronald Reagan's s1gn{:lh.1re. Carpenter's bill, SB 1089, makes $7.6 million available for purchase of beach property owned by the Irvine Company between Coroha del Mar and L a g u n a Beach. The measure also indicates the land deal won't be closed until the company has approval In concept Crom all govern· ment agencies \nvolved for' its plans te develop the !0,000 upland acres. Sen. CO!lier's bill provides SIU million for beach and park acquisition and pin· points specific sites at Leo CarriUo state beach, Van Dame state park and Sonom11 Coast park. State coastal commissioners weren't sure how they lelt aboul tlihcr bill ar their meeting in Inglewood Wednesday. Chairman Melvin Lane was authorlzed by his renow commissioners to study the " r. bills and make any recommendations to the Go.vernor. The main concern of the commJssion•IS that beach sites and other coastal zone development plarui will be decided by the Legislature and won't come before the commission. Under P.r9posilion 20, the coastline in- itiative passed last' November, the com- mission has permit jurisdiction Within l ,000 yards of mean high tide ,itne. The planning area extends five miles inland.. "We might be falling into a trap if we choose particular parcels (o[ 'beach pru-ks l before we do our planning," Com- missioner Ellen Stern Harris said Wednesday. - "Do we want coastal acqulsltlon to-go on without our being involved?" Lane asked Harris. "That's the nagging ques- tion." Executive Director Joseph Bodoviiz ex- pr~ed re.serj/al\Oris about carpenter's bill "preempting plenning option&" by tying the purchase to approval ol plans and realignment of Pacific Coaa Highw ay. "That one I have to read;' said Laoe:. • ' . ee Las_ Vegas !Hotel Blaze 1 ' Theater Manager Died of Stroke, A:rto•)SV Reveals • A roroner·~ autqi.'iy has rc•:e1ll'<l a , C'oron1 t'lcl M ·1 r theatcr·s .1s.c:is!a 'I ni<ln· . ager \'.ho 1!lc.:I un<h:r Slli-ipiciou-. rir "u;n- stanccs actu:llly sul fcrc:I a t~rehn:l hC'n1- orrhA~c. or stroke. Budd Beaman, 8~. was found "'andcr· • ing incoherently in the Port 1'he;1tcr. 2905 E. Coast ffjghv.•ay . early Tuesday by P.Olice after his v.·orried \\'ifc called ~ them vr'hen he failed 10 come home. The victim had a cut on his h~ad an:f police feared he may have lx>en the vie- ·. lim of a slrongarm robbery attempl a!tt?r . closing time. Doctors at Hoag Memorial Hospita l. told police and C()roner's dcr uties they at first b::-licvcd Bcam:tn dlt'd <luc to a skull fracture. perhaps caused in a fall after a mUd rtroke. Punerl'll services (or Mr. Beam.in. nf 1%20 Park N'ewport. Nc\vport ~ach. \Yi!\ be S:iturd:iy at 11 a.m .• in Pacific \'icw Memol'ial Park, Newport Beach. Sunivors include his wi£e Kathleen, of the home. a son Robert. of Woodland Hills and three gr11ndchildren. From Pqe J GAS ... Boston suburb of Lexington. Hundreds or stations a c • o s s t.{aaachuseUs \l:erc closed \\'ednesdE!S for a· second day despite :i court order lo stav open. : The gasoline <le11lers were protesting : the <:ost of Uving CDuncil ruling Iha! : barred stations rro1n passing on tu ·customers a penn_v-a-gallon increasC' ~charged by the oil companies. ~ The council has over-a ll authority for •administering th c Admln ist ra!ion·s economi c slabiliz:-ition program. \vhich \\enl into its fourth phase gradua lly over the summer. Dunlop doclined to predict how much . gasoline prtce increase would b c authorized : "\ don't ~no\v ho\\' n1uch it v.111 go up." • He said rh~ counC'il "oold toke up the question Tuesday :ind n1ake a decision .. shortly -in matter (If <lays. n.> I nge1 lh JO 3 \\"l'e~ ·• OllANGI COAST ' DAILY PILOT T~t 0•1"~" C"' 1! l"!!llL 'I' P!lOl , w1!~ w~ -~ '> corr.Olne!I ·~• "'"""• "'""'· I• 1111lllh/\!'C! bl Int Cron~ ~ .. ·,t 1'1111111/\lllfl Como•n' So,.. ••!I llllli!W'I 1rt -11,1\td. MGnd•~ 1/\,~Uffl Fr••v. ,... (111111 M~-•. Ht'"""'' ,.,,~. ""'"ln110• le•cll/F"...,n••ln Vlll!y, L••v~• lt•<n, 1,.1ne ~•d~ltllicK 1n!I S4n Clt~>tn••' $1n Juan C111ls1r1"0 ,. 11ngl• •t"J•cn•! tail•"" 11 rubll•/\«I s~1urd1y1 1n\! SU~!l•'li t lltl O'<nt!p..I l!U'tlhS/\lnf plfnl Ii ~I lJO w .. 1 11' i••••I, Co~·• 11.111, (•l!tc•n+1. f11lt . Robt rl N. W11d f>1e.:d~n• •rid! l'u~Ji}her J1 c~ R. C11d1y YICI "'"'""er>' 1..0 Gfftll••I MtrwoQlt< Tho,.,11 1<11¥11 Ea1!0• lho"''' "'· M ~•ph 1n 1 M•!lloCI ng 'E~htot l . Pott r ICritq H4-'"P:'' ...... l•!t l1111~· Nn""1 '-ch OHlce JJl J N,.,..,,,, 101111~114 M1ilifllf Acfd,111 : ,,0 . l o• 1175, 91'6J Otkr Offket GMf1 Mnt: l» w.-1 loy St.Ml "''"""' IHdl: 211 fl'-1 Allti'lyf """"""'"" ltl<;JI: 11171 INCll ltl,llwl-.ll Sin Clo!Nfltt: JDJ t.lorm El (•lftltlt •1o11 , ......... 17141 64Jo4Jt1 CS.NW i.""'1W .. "4Wn c.,rieM. ,.,.. Onf'lft C-.t l't.IM!tlllflt ~. Nt ,....,. '"''"· lniMll"'"°"'" Mlfll"lll fNtttf" .,-....... rtl~ """"' _, .. ~ wl"*ilt ~191 .... f!llotllM ell (I~! -·· ~ ~i.M --Nltl II (Ufa ,,,,. ... c 1n,.,11i.. ""'*""'It" °" tefl'lilr a&1 ""'*"'""1.,, -., -•• w.11 '""'11'"'' ""',..,., -.ilf1116Wlt Q .61 ,...,.,.,,,., Last Rites Held For Ad Executive Walter Mayer Fu ·1er:il services "'ere held !his \Vcck in i\e11:port Bearh for for1ner Orun~e Coetsl a:lvc rtisiltq cxecuth•e Walter Pilaycr. \\•ho died Saturday RI the age of 62. !\Ir. ~layer rc•.ide 1 1·:llh his 1v!fe , Al lee. iit !:!al l:u:l;ind R!lad. Nev.·port Bcoch for eigh years . \\'heo Ile rirsl n10\'ed lo lhc !;.irJ.,or area in 196.;. i\.·lc. /\!J ye r 1rorl-.c<l hi th ::? an•.-cr11.;in.; department of ih:: Q, UJli!;e (h.,;;: fJ, i i~· i'ilot Rnrl 1\cnl on \o op~1; h's 01· n ;.1nvl·r1:~1n::i .1gc11~ 1. ~I.-~i<J\t•1· 1<11<"l1t :1rt1c•·1 ~:;:" lassri;; :'II !'Olli 1;ra·•" i·i ... :-· ('1l'cv...i ";n Cost;r i\1e<;n <t nrl <:.Olc1cn \' r~t Colleke in lfuu· (• • • h I ,,,. 1 . '.' tU<.,. \.'. h.-rt.I ·ot.lc,i (,,'1Jr.1·li'' 1 ;:,\,I,)( . .\i1· :'11.t\Cl' i•· ;..'.so survi \'e~ : J. hi ~: • .. 1,1,..1 1' Iii, 1111r: :1 1d ~t:·:·v ~!~·:er of !hi.: "1.111c ii 1('1"t·~ ~ .• •1. Jnh1i ~111\·rr or i'\U•!" 1i~ !'I\\.~., •... Ill IJl'<Jfj},!,., . : .lp:1 f\1fl\u · i,! ,\1~11 \'or1• Ci ty nnd J.11\\"!"cucc :\l .. :te1 u1 5'i1\J1:1.:1!>. Crorgi ;1, The r:1n1ily $Ugge:)/S <111y JllL'ffiOrifJI Cf>1ol l'il0UliOOS iJC 1n;ia~ lo the Qf<ingt.' Ct.11;11~ .-\rt Fede1 <tlicn i:cholarshlp fund . P. \•. ~;u,. 'i,,J. ();;,n;;:c. (':11i( .. 9lG66. Tickets Rc111aiuing For FootJ1all Ga111c The i\(nvport Uc:1eh R c r r l' 11 I t n 11 OtJ)ar11ncn1 still h11s 100 lickets left iar i falhcr·son ou1ing 10 !he liSC-O"trihoma footbnll ga1T1t? i11 Los Anleles on Sep t 29. Tickets, \\"hich arc '6 each, ere available at the recreation department office, 1714 \V. Balboa Blvd,, until~ p.m. Fnd•y. Sept. 21 and at the Commomlty Youth C.:enter in (,'orona del Mar from 9 11 .m. to noon Sal.urday, Sept. U. Bus transporta llon to Lo5 Angele• wil l be pr~ vided by tilt city. • Carpente1· Hits Remap Sitgation . •• l 'ro111 Puge I 1',\LI\S ... Cflt1•ri1>r:1'':'''. l--1.:· tll'1' l>'l'h the •;<"l'""rnr r and his !Jcntocrar1c opposition \\'Cre O\'C1· !i':1r .. 11ii~'ill , 1h'2. nn1'.1· r i11 !.-UJ!i.1g ii to 1hic people. Or publi: pressure. C3 rpcntcr s:1id that aHh<lu::h some legislators \Ver c pcrsoo;1lly opPQSt.'<.i t.o the dealh oenHll)'. they 'u'ere lorood to su pport it beeiiusc ol the 70 percent htvorullle vole in the Not1embcr election. Hnwever. he said olher good lep-i~l ation sometimes di t'S on the ,·too because puOlll.: in!Crest c:m 't be mob ilized as it was in the death penalty case. He cited hi11 own bill lieallug wj111 t'0011 exclusion or so-called t:ilntod evidence pi cked up in v:hal nu~y be unlawrul searches. Uc said th"t the bill \'JOU'd ru:e oul usi.· ot !hi;: Cl'idCnCC lo !hl' el!:'C or lhe in· dh·inu·1l ,·.-hose right.\ mny Jijtvc been breached iu the sea1·ch. Lut nQ: ttgal11!.t other persons ln cases which the evidence may apply. lie 1111id tht courts "'ete u3ing the ex- chWons by rule to tum criminals loose . "Th<y have !urned tboll5'lnds of people out on tbe streels that would have been in jail," Carpenter. a ronner FBI qent said. Switching to his political alms. Carpenter s·aJd. "In case they there'• any doubt abou! It, I'll be runnlns for -. lion next yeor.'' • I S+al11less Steel r:a rJr ic C.:ir e -;·.," •. .,,,,,.. , I" .L ... l ·• PAr ~·;;-z at,,.;. P,J.,~OR 'tf..i'Af·~~· -,..n • Smooth, R~st·Proof, Chip-Proof • Ideal for all Wa5h· •bl• Fabrlcs e l a1t1 th• Ll!"etinMi of th• V.Jashor PLUS ••• a washable hnl<s cycle Specie.I tettl .. ~ ,,. ,., c .... '"' .,........,. bltt. d""1•I• rnM er lelk...i. fo-bffc.s. "'"' ..., • 11 .. nty ft 2f'l,,••1 ..... •'*I .... YOU CAN IUT A SNIO $iUllN WAIHD AND Dl'lll FOi ' AS LOW Al '3691 • ressm·e OnAgnew- NixonAide , "WASBJNGTON I UP!l -The While Houe denied dpin todaJ that ln)'Oflt in authority ts pressuring Viet President Spiro T. Agn<w to mign be<aU.. he 1! under federal investigation In com1cc1lon with alleged political oorrupllon in his home stale of Maryland. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren a Is o dl1mlssed a Washington Post report quoUng an unidentified DEMOCRATS DISCUSSING AGENEW SITUATJON-Pago 8 In Knifing Case =1rE=>l-SP-'E-ED_O_U_EE-N.-=.1·""'=1 a McG~ew .. Ediaon Company Dlvlaion - DAY CASH WITH AP ... OVIO .C•IDtT 1115 NlWPllRT BiVO. Dante• C1Sta Mm-PhDll 548·7788 ( i I' u bee hav , ""' M. hi orr " lat it." he lea " all w say lv:t .. ty cla 00 w ... bu .. !u " w • lfl OAIL Y PILOT N Thursday, Suittmbtr 20, 1973 Midwife • Put Out Of Work Capitol -s.me. SAN DIEGO -!l's dlincult to draw unemployment lf your ll!e'a work bas been midwifery, especially If the courts bfve ruled th at you may TIO longer prac- tice that pro£ession unless you obtain an l\t.0. license. Norman Casserley round hi mself in this predicament and is living off the welfare rolls of Sa n Dlcgo County. Casserley. a lay noo-medico.I midwife, ha.s del ivered more than 3,500 babies since 1949. but was stopped in 1971 by a ctiminal conviction for pr a et i e i 11 g medicine "'ithout a lleenscv-fle uses no drugs and no apparatus. BUT DUE TO a court detennination ~t pregnancy is an "abnormal con- dition," and that only an M.D. is qualified to "treat" such a condition, Casserley is confined to San Diego Coun· ty until April 1975. Under ·an agree ment with the court, he is cooperating with work projects provided by the welfare · department. No Parking·· Yet D .. ly Piiot Slffl PM!lo • hifllJlg"S-----------~ Chinese Gangs SF • Ill Compete SAN FRANCISCO (~Pl ! -The t970's ha ve brought something new to San Francisco's hist-Ori e old Chinato wn - murderous gang warfare reminisce nt of the AJ Capone era in Chicago. But the prize sought is not cont rol or it- llcit booze. or drugs. or proslituli on. IT IS, INSTEAD, a war of ri val ry among jobless young Cltinese -n1any recent immigran1s fro m ~loog Kon g, for power and prestige within their 0\1.11 tat- tered ranks in the world 's biggest Chinese community outside Asia. Fifteen victims have fallen since 1970. slain in the streets in broad daylight or hogli ed and strangled in remote spots. At least one \Vas an innocent bystander. Vengeance, in tense group loyallies and a sense of ··righteousness" are endemic to the loosely organized groups. "S0l\1E llAV E CllOSEN the Chinese na mes for 'Loyalty' or 'Ri ghteousness' T crime rate is minimal, very low com- pared to the city over-all. 11 The s h o o t i n g s .nave recalled the 01inatown Toog wars of more than l\\'O generations ago. \.\1hen rival groups ba tlled v.·ith hatchets and knives over control of slavery or young women and gambling. Since !hat era. peace has been kept under tho leadership of the Chinese Six Companies. an association ol com- muni ty elders. ~tore than a century ago. the glitter of the Cali fornia gold rush lured the fi r.;t adventurous Chinese from their home~ on the South China coast. But they sensed tho westerners' hostili- ty to minorities and a strange language, banding together here for their mutual protection and interest. And they broughl with them an ancient tradition : the honor of the group is more important than the ri ghts of the individual. "Most recently, I was out cleaning latrines_," Casserley said. "I just hate it." Casserley, would have more work lhan he could handle If he were allowed to leave the state. Workers building Hoag Memorial Hospital's fi ve. level, $1.5 million parking structure look like ants in this view from the roof of the n~w Hoag tower. Hospital o~ficials say the new parking fa cility wi ll house patient, staff and visitors' cars. It should be finished !y late spring next year. they are trying to r<'inforce the!nselves in a bad si tuation," one Chinato"'" observer said . "They believe in £earlcss ness. in being 'gutsy.' There 's a lot of appeal in THE TRA.DmON generally has kept Chinatown one of the most law-abiding conlmunit ics in the \foiled States. But part of the rerent problem, according to elders, is that n>ung persons are not "humble" enough, unwilling to accept the status quo while quietly working toward betterment. Chinatoy,•n for th is. There have been at "I've had calls from Te:itas, New York, all over the country, rrom mothers wh6 want me to deliver babies," C4Serley Organizing Ain!lt Easy least 50 Chinese language movies on the sa me themes: revenge, l o ya 11 y, righteousness.'' ~lany Chinese describe C)>lnatown as a ghetto, overcrowded and ri fe with pover- ty. \Vit h libe ralizing in recen t years or immiP!ation laws that allowed Olinese farililiesto jolil ffiltierr-wfiirtraveled- here, new pressu res were created in Chinatown. · says. -------"'--------Hut..excepUor the...pcriodic..oulbursts_oL SINCE LAST year, however, he hlls only been allowed lo leave San Diego County twJce, to look for work in Los Angeles and San Francisco. It's 1973 a1ul Where Have All the Yippies Gone? violence among mostly youthful gang membe rs , Chinatown retains its placid and colorful -if perhaps misleading - exterior. "It a11 began in the late '60s when a lot of young men came here from Hq Kong. 'Ibey banded togetbe<, primarily because of language barriers am. Jack of affiliation with the established famil y organizations," McKeMa said. "~tting permission to leave the coun- ty is a court battle in itseU,'' Casserley claims. His appeals to Superior C'.ourt on the civil infunction ending his practice and tG the appellate department on his crim inal conviction have been re latively cost-fr ee since he's been able to prove his in· digcnce in the race of un employn1ent. AND TIIE COURT battles are no! over, even thOugh appeals through the caJifomia Supre_me Court \Vere either thr°"'n oul or not allowed on the calen· dar. "I've gcme through all the state remedies," says the 46 -y e ar ·old CUserley. "and I'nl ready to go to federal district court ln Los Angeles." NEW YORK (AP) -IU!member the Yippies, those agents of chaos ot the 19605? Well, they're alive and trying a ne~ tack : organizaJion. But, as the song says, it don't come easy. · Take this:· Eight o'clock at night on a street in the East Village and 16 people are wa iting for a meeting of the Youth International Party (VIP). The old revolutionary fervor abounds. There is a lot to talk abOut high school recruitment, new pro- test actions ••• '11IE a.ocK DRAGS past the schedul· ed starting time. "Hey, wllen are they going to open JJP?" someone asks. No answer. Much foot shuffling. A few people drift ell. word. There will be a further delay. Somebody loot tbe key to tbe building. When the key to the building was found and the meeting finally got under way that night, there were 12 people on hand -Beal and his girl friend, Weberman and his girl friend, the four workers and four newcomers. SO MUCH FOR ORGANIZATION ibis night . So much, pe!'haps, forever. The Yippies were dreamed up back in 1~ by Paul Krassner, Ed Sanders, Ab- bie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin. It was to be a "non-exi.stent organization.. ac- cording to Kras.mer, for the growing He figures it will take him six months to finish writing-his brief for presentation _to Ibo U.S. .:our!. U turned down there the Irish-born bachelor is prepared to go to tbe U.S. Supreme Court. CASSERlEV WAS able lo reduce the charges of 3,500 counts of illegal medical practice (one for each delivery) l.-0 three counts of pre-natal visitation or a mother whose baby be never did deliver. "Don~ Jook. at it as 16 people, look at it ~ as one 500,000th ol. the city's populaUon ," says David Spancr, an undaunted 23· year~ld organizer from Vancouver. 'Mfl pen-al elllllua- tl-of the scene u that ulitlaotlt ., ..... per•-•l- lties, VIP is golllfJ to dis· appear.' ,. coalition of psyc,..lic dropouts and new-left. acti1(1ils. ' Casserley made what he describes as "a good little fortune" while in business, but never saved much of it. He claims he 8't.Uck ii back into his professioo by tak- ing additional courses and expanding his kDGwledge of midwifery. He said his reluctance to get a medical doctor's license grew out or a basic disbelief in ~ popular conception by the medical world of bow babies should be delivered. "I COULDN'T graduite from medical tchool unless I had surgery practice," casserley recalls. He dropped out before performing surgery and says he bu been the world's only £ull·lime male nc:in-medical midwife ~r since. The Board of Medical Ex· aminers stopped gl vtng licenses to non· medical midwives in 1949. and only three older women are legally sllowi!d to prac- ti ce midwirery in California under the •·grandfather clause." "[ define normal bi rth as one that tu med out nonnal." Casserley says. "Real problem births account for only one half ol l percent of all births. It bu always been my policy to take -au co- mers; especially the more challenging cases. The only paUenta I ever turned d-wcra those I couldn't fit into my schedule, II A L1'1'11.&publlc1Jed !actar l n c ...... tey's natural homeblrtb method ~ that it nearly always lnduces an oraasm In the mother as she Is giving birth. "llY eliminating pain, and ln the plcuant !U!'roundmgs of the home, it's imp;Oelible for the mother to avoid tt." Ca-ley claims. "A baby passing 1hrough the birth canal touches and stimulates ' the same areas that are sthD.u!8ted in sexual lnteroourse. Th.ls phenomenon has been noted in many h0spltal births, bur the experienoe, beCause of pa in and the surroWldlngs, was never complete." Trustees Appeal Reinstate Order ' EL CAJON (Al') -An ordtr rtlnltatlng a lleU• lliah Scllool teacher who -aiomlued alltr ""'"' acquitted of a martjuaaa ,..,plilll <har\i• ls being ilppealed by trustees ol the Gross- mont Union lllgh School District. Chf'lcs Kahan, 40, took ·up ~gllsh classet · again last 'rhursda.y. H ls reinstatement was ordered by ,. hearing ollieu-ol tho Call(omln .Commission ol ·Prolesalonal Competency. ln L971 n state chnr'ge or ma rijuana smuggling was filed In Ariztina against Kahan but later was Bi.smls~d. A fedc.l'al charge later was brought, ~t he won ac- quittal ln a trial. More loot shullllng. 'lben comes the Six Democratic Candidates Rip Reagan Tax Plan Special to !be Daily Pilot LOS ANGEL~ -In a politically un- precedented move , the sl1 leading con- tenders for Califotnia's Democratic gubernatorial nomination aod their state party chairman came together Wednes- day to rip the Nov. 6 special tax initiative election. It is a "$20 million downpayment by California taxpayers on Gov. Ronald Reagan's campaign for the U . S . presidency," they charged. Linked by telephoDe in Northern and Southern California to Washington, the Democratic leaders termed Prop. I "a cruel hoax which would shift the burden or state government to local taxpayers, Republican and Democrat alike." in Los Angeles were Secretary of·State Edmund G. Brown Jr., Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti, Staie Sen. George R. Moscone and Assemblyman John L. Burton, Democratic state chalrman. Speaking in San Frand!<O were that city's mayor, Joseph L. Alioto.i and Universlty of California regent and former ambassador William Matson Roth. Q>ngressman Jerome L. W a I d i e • unable to be in California because ol legislative business, was linked to the two groups by phone to express his oi>- posltlon. Gov. Reagan agaln act'Used the California League of Women Voters 'l'Uesday or being biased in Its opposition to his tax.control plan. The Rej,ublican eovcmor was asked at his news cotUerence in Sacramento if he wasn't be.Ir~ condescending to the league • by saying in a speeeh that "the good ladies" ol the league decided I~ battle th& tu plan "all on their own." The main commitment, however, was lo the art ol the put .... Theatrical stunts like drop-ping dollars on the floor of the New York Stock Er· change v.-oo headlines. Next came the Democratic National COovenUon inChi· ca go. Before the blood, there was a "threat" to put LSD in the city's water supply. Young people recogni1.ed the satire; authorities scurried to guard the reservoirs. 1ben came the Ol.lcago can- spiracy trial and the Yippies moYed from theater to circus. BUT HOFFMAN AND Rugln, tbe best· known YIP strategists, have been ousted as spokesmen for the group: Hoffman was arrested in New Ycrk recenUy and charged with selling cocaine to un- dercover police agents. And YlP has moved from a small, spontaneous core group to a honeycomb o{ cells in different cities across the country, guided by relative Wlknowns. With the high pitch of the 1960s long gone. the Yippies are struggling to survive. They lack money and media coverage. The latter is a serious setback to a group dedicated to .actions tailored meticulously for televisioo cameras. "MY PERSONAL eva!Uatloo ol the scene Is that without strong personalities, YIP is going to disappear/' said A.J. Webertnan, disgruntled Ylppie and sett· proclaimed Bob Dylan expert, who has analyzed the mighty by 80rtlng through the!_r garbage. "They're anoJ\ymous over t h e r e • They're fallin& to capture people's in- terest, the interest of inteUectuals~ col- lege students, Rolling stone readers," the 28-year-old \Vebennan went on. "What we need is an angle. I don't believe in just standing on a street comer giving out pamphlets." The current nati.Q.nal organizer of YIP is Dana Beal, 26, whet was ·a radical leader in the Village iJl'. 1967. Charted with dealing In marijuana and LSD in 1968, he went underground for 2'AI years. During that time, he. organized YIP chapters in cities .such as Vancouver and Milw1ukee, as well as the first naUonal YIP action -a 1m marijuana -ln. Reagan replied, "It wun~ Intended to be eondescendlng and It W)lsn' Intended to be Insulting, but I tell you It was Ip-HE WAS PICKED up in t971 and oerv· tended to be critical.'' ed to monllil In jail. Released before tbe a....,,•, • proposal would place a 1912 conv .. tions, be helped I e ~ d gradually declining Ud on all state tax demonstrations ln lllarnl where he, .1om rev-·OVer a tt.yeor po;!Od. Forcade and otben, broke with HoUlnan In another development Reagan's lax and formed the Zlppies. They complalnei! limitation was acculed ol dumping a hlg· that Hallman and Rubin encloned ger share ol the stete'.9 tax burden onto Democrat George S. McGovern ond the backs or lqw Income taitpeyer1. In an . cancelled their demonstrations out from analysis by the 4\uembly's research under them . ataff. "I look at myself as 1 custodian, but ¥ .... Ill released tbe analyals, saying lJ 1"111 100 s\Ol\ed to do a good job. We need shtlwed that Reagan'• ta• plan did not · 1 pe<!j>I• Iha< tho media can locus on, . have wide support. among, the ·nation's !IO!JlebodY to get funds/' said &al. ad· leading economla1'. TM report tncluct.s ding t~at ctllectl•e lcadcrehlp may b< coJTimcnts by nine nationally known the only Way to SW'Vlve ~d times. economists, .all critical ol the Reaaan To Beal, the YW goal ls to fight for plan. . ''!ttaks'" rlebts, and to work for personal freedom. This year's fight has been full of ~marijuana and anti-Nixon actions. "WE'RE COMMITI'ED to neither violence or non-viOlcnce at · this stage. We're committed to self-deiermination," said Beal, son of a Michigan hi stdr4m. · Beal foresees !he next protes t issue for freaks as an economic one. "We were always plugged into ex· perimential reality. We could go from a struggle against police and repression to a slruggle for food," he said. The focus of the Yippies these days is their naliooal paper, "The Yipster Times." 'Ibey claim cin:ulatioo ol the 2.> cent, monthly paper has jumped from 1,000 to 15,000 in less than a year. Beal said the paper is supported by donations, . noting that· John Lennon and Yoko Ono are among contributors. THE PARTY ALSO claims 30 ac- credited chapters across the country, with others in the works. Beal estimates hard«>re membership at 500 tG t,000. Forcade, a member of the Underground Press Syndicate, said members ·are "ex- Weathcr people. old White Panthers and others -a pot pourri." The YIP home-office is in the East ViUage, down the block from the Hell 's Angels apartment. on a street where children play around the bodies ol lallen winos. ' The tiny, hot dark office Is above a darker, danker two-room ba5ement with bare mattresses, rats, roaches, stacked newspapers and a showet stall with a view -a gaping .hole to. the.alley above. When it rains, the apartment floods. IT IS HOME for fOlD' YIP workers. im· ported from Boulder, Colo., Vancouver, Brooklyn and C.Olumbus, Ohio, to v.'Ork on 1he paper. Their' spirits are high. "People expected a rev o l.u ti on overnight in 1970;" said Steve;-a 23-year~ old from Columbus. "But revolution is a !orig process. The government is feeling the kicks we gave them in the 1960s." "YOU'VE GO'T TO understand this." homicide Inspector John McKenna said. "People think there's a big breakdown of law and order in Chinatown bu t it's not true. Except for thC. gang killings the Con·ectional Officers Backll1g T T• • • ax.1m1tation SACRAMENTO (AP) -The California Correctional Officers Association en- dorsed Gov. Ronald Reagan's con- troversial tax limitation ballot proposal Wednesday. The OCOA, made up ol 3,200 prisoo guards, zww stands in...the ~te comer from the 102.,000.member California State EmploYcs 'AsSociation. The CSEA's boa.rd of directors has voted to fight Reagan's proposal and says it plans to contribut e $50,000 to the campaign against it. Roscoe Antrim, CCOA. president, told Reagan in a telegram that state workers'. ere concerned about what is left in their paychecks after deductioos are taken out. "Our congratulations to you rOr pro- posing to provide a pennanent fiscal budget within which slate government may function, in the same manner as we working men and women must do to meet our obligations of raising families and supporting ,,, o u r com.muniti~." Antrim said. Reagan's plan gradually would cut back the percentage of state personal in· oome state government could take in taxes. Reagan says the state takes about 8.75 percent now and !bat would drop to slightly more than seven percent. Reagan says that would slill leave .room £or a $27 billion state budget at the end of the JS-year period because of economic growth. GreeJa Light . Alaea4 i"TllEY WERE QUIET at ftrst, but !hey began falling out among themselves. There \Vas a lot of jealousy and power stru ggles, S\l.1itches in allegiance and fights for leadership. "During the time they were surging in- to power. t~y were extorting and rob- bing Chinatown merchants, eating in restaurants and refu sing to pay, refusing to buy tickets at theaters, trying to run gam bling. . "The jealousies have been tremendous, and the urge for reta1iation bas ~n tremendous. If tbe member al one group dies, then the group has to bave ,..,,..,,._ It's sort of snowballed. ,''TllESE PEOPLE RA VE tried to co.,. trol ~rtaln 8rell! ol am-., the theaters, the" ~mailer sho~ a n d restaurants. They wanted thing• for free, . apd they offered protection.'' 't'he 17-block downtown area known as Chlnatown shows an exotic face to the thousands or tourlstS who stroll end shop on narrow Gran t Avenue, Chinatown's main street, but quite another to its - residents. Overcrowding is nearly intolerable. One study showed a population equivalent to 98,000 pcrson.s per aqua.re mile, compared to 16,000 for the rest of the city. , Average education of C h i n a to w n residents is about two years American schooling, compared lo 12 for the rest of the city. With tbe highest yooth density in the city, Chinatown has I-20th of the recreation space it needs. MANY F AADIJES UVE ln rooming , houses built a half century ago that were occupied by a slngle man ~ to earn his fortune and return t-O·China. Now, whole families often live in two l'QOl1lS and share toilet and kitchen facilities with others. Many live in commercial areas. above shops and thea ters. Richard Graham (lei!) and Ray Serna prepare lo Install a magnetic device that evcnhially will trip traffi c signals planned at 20th Street and Irvine Ave- nuc on the Costa ~1 esa-Newport Beach border. Signals are scheduled lo go in within the next two months at the busy intersection. • I • ---- With 4 Serles MGM Gives Up, '~ecognizes' TV By VERNON SCOTT ,HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Melro-OoldW)'l>-Mayer o n c e :.1 WU the·IDOlt il)fluential studio ~.earth. \'uled by the iron fist • Ol 'Lou!-• .B. Mayer, the t -~movie mogul who ig· • • ' no(!ed television like a lion ig· l mies a gnat. ·. But Mayer Is dead and , MGM has been in the in· tenstve care unit for years, ICl'lping along selling its real etltate; auctioning off its props lll!ll wanlrobe and making so- IO movies. Now 'lbe MGM lion, the studio's famlliar trademark, ls being revived by so"me box-of- fice movies, "Westworld" and "Skyjacked," end full recogni· tlon of television . At hlng last ~GM is convinced the tube is here to stay. called the MGM Famil y Network. signing 144 stations to carry old MGM family films from ~7 p.m. several times a year. "WE HAVE 14 films earlll3rked for the network ," he said, ''and then we'll start making our own projects for the MGM network. "'the two hours between 5 and 7 in the evening are fami- ly hours and they 've been ig- nored. We are going to show the kind of pictures that 8J>- peal to the entire famlty, not just to segments of it." The first offering Sept. 9 is "The Yearling,'' which receiv~ ed three Academy Awards ,n!llft back in 1947. It has been U• of.Ute shown on television in the .. past, as have such other MGM John Boy (Richard Thomas) _see ks pn~acy !or ,his network -candidates as "Na-writing at an abandoned cabin and amves 1n time tional Velvet.'' and "Lili." to help a young glrl (Sissy Spacek) have a baby on Each show will be hosted by tonight's episode of "The Waltons," at B o'clock a famous star known to kid-on CBS (2). dies and parents alike. -'-'--'----'-'------------------ -. -.. I . ~ r DAtl Y Pila!'· • Ife's a Doctor Now ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -People·t01>00ple rela- James rranctacus, television's tionshipl. People and lbeir prob!~. Jr YOU think that Pe ab o d y Award-winning sounds Uk• "'!be Waltons," ~I~, ·"MJ:· Novak/' YO:U are right. 11'Doc Elliot" IS ,. now 10to tbe medical bag. • from Lorimar Productions Just before going.~ "Doc · the folks Who brought you thai Elliot" lor ABC, Franciscus Etnn\Y and Peabody Award· spent days l'IJlllling through winning aeries or the past medical drills -learning to season. · handle the bag pro~rly, how Producing the show will be ·to use ~en~, give a shot Sandor Stem, who gave up his -so that it will be second medical practice tn Canada nature before the camera. several years ago to write for "It's just the mechanics of such shows as • 'Mare us tt," be said. "In a sense it's Welby, M.D." He la.st was pl'Q-- almost secondary to tbe show ducer of "The Mod Squad." because if we were a medical """" Elliot" was 1 Jate ad-show Pol' ,. you could throw . ...,,.. our whole heart·bebind it. _ditionto the ABC schedule and • . · will appear once a month in 'But this is not a medical rotation with 00wen Milrsball, show in, that sense ,of. the O:>unselor at Law," o n wmi. It s much more about Wednesday nightl. the people who live In the . C.Olorado mountains and the ABC had g~ luck w1~ that people-to-people relationships. system with K~ng Fu, and · at rrudseason 1t became a ' 4WE BA V,f!: the medicine as regular weekly series. The part ol the show, but you get network also will ro t ate into the medicine and you "G)ibo.rg'' with ·~The ABC forget it for the rest of the Suspense J\.fovie" on Saturday show. You talk ,about people nights. and their problems." • .. "l'M NM' KNOWN for my longevity," he said, g~nning. "One year, two years, that's about It. jlut I've been pleased with the shows I've done, I must aay. I have no regrets. 0 LQnge\rlty to me isn't the rneu~ of success anyway: l ·think if you do a year and it's so,methlng you can hold your head.up about a year's as good as half a year or 10 years." After tbe cancellaion of "Mr. Novak.'' he turned from television in disillusionment ... , ....._.. and made such movies as A DOCTOR NOW 1 "You n g b 1 o o d Hawk," Ac~r Frinclscus "Marooned,'' "Beneath the •v Planet of the Apes," "Hell 1kials" and a half -do,zen· was over I kind of said, well, movies for television. · television is loo damned "I was disappointed in the limiting. . horizons television offered," "You can't take a sub1ect Franciscus said. "We had so and treat ii. and the only place many shows on 'Mr. Novak' to do that in fllm ls fea tures. that We weren't allowed to do. But now I think that's changed Shows that dealt with life in considerably. Now there's next an adult manner. And we just tQ noth ing you can't talk about were not allowed to do them. on television. And I thlnk "And t think when the showl~tba~t·~s~a~ll~t~oth§e~bet~t~er.'§' §ii FAMILY TWIN CINEMA O 'OUNTAIN V.llllll ,.1~~1 ....... ;";.;;:;y.1, -;.;-;;,;;(" LAsr YEAR it bad only a single series in prime time, "Medical Center.'' This year it has four : "Adam's Rib," "Hawkins," "Shaft" and "Medical Center." Next season it hopes to add to the list. OTIIER OLD nicks headed for the program· are "The GI a s s Slipper," "Sleeping Beauty," "Wonderful World of the !Brothers Grimm," "Tom Postw.ar USO Revitalizing "DOC ELLIOT" -is about a doctor who moves from New York City to the mountains of Colorado. ''THI NIW CENTURIONS" Ill P-tunll lll Y11r.y -fft.IMI Hut Te Gemc• Stire Acro11 ''°"' LIMll"OOll H•Nw•~ "Well. you can say he came CINEMA I from Missouri or so.mewhere ;'BIL~ Y& JACK" A3 is often the case in a cor- porate-turnaround, one man is responsi ble. At MGM ---J--T.erevJSiOillhe man ts Harris Kau'eman, a former agent who joined Metro a year ago. Essentially a businessman with a sure gmsp of sb>w business, KaUeman is in his 40s, tough minded a n d optmlstic. Thumb," "Knights of .the F M ,.._ J J_ • IT/ k ::~.J:~~~bbd~it 1he~an~J81=f~~~o~r-_arJu&uaast_ing_u_or · and ended up practicing in "m .. tfM '""' New York," Franciscus said. Altd Clllkl,.... IPG, "Then he 1ooked up one day after-the-third-junkie---trie<tt...l-1--NEMA-1 • fi .... ~ . ~- -~ l He's put tog<tber a project Met Opera . Canceling 'Giovanni' Tales of Beatrix Potter." "If we put these pictures on at 9 p.m., when mo s t By BOB THOMAS Sheldon said he is in the television movies are shown, LOS ANGELES '(AP) process of revitalizing the we'd be murdered in the USO show operation in the ratings," Katleman said. "But Fred Astaire dancing on ~ face of two major deterrents: our 'Wizard of Oz' on Us 15th truck llatbed in the middle of The long, unpopular Vietnam shoWing on the air got a SO war.torn France · · · Joe E. war, which caused unwilling· percent share. . Brown telling jokes to invasion ness by some entertainers to "Our MGM Family Network trooJ_>S in the Philipp!nes · · · donate their talents, and the will operate on]y four times a Marilyn Monroe drawing roars transition to a volunteer mil- year. First this month and of approval from Gls in _Korea l itary, which raised the ques- then in January, March and · · · Jolm Wa~ t~kmg _ to tion of whether entertainment May. combat casualttJes lll ~et for the troops was sUU nec-N''.1111 ..•• Bpb Hope crackmg essary. "BUT WE'U. be making 20 wtSe 1n any war ... pilots for new series this year. For 32 years USO shows "SHOW PEOPLE SUPPorted And we've got 1,300 produced have been sent to entertain the war froni 1966 to 1969, but movies which the studio still rtroops far away from' home. after that a kind of disen- owns for titles and ideas, The need for such diversion chantment set in. It became NEW YORK (AP) _ The along with 5,~ unproduced , continues despite the end of very chic to be antimilitary, novels and scnpts. the war in Vietnam, says a and there were f e w e r Metropolitan Opera, in an "It's an untapped gold USO official. volu nteers for tours." he said. economy move, h<l,s canceled a mine." Katleman, who is vice "Now that the war is over, "We'll never be able t9 gear demonstrated by the fact that there is a 400,000 annual turnover among the 2¥.: million in wlifonn. "Many young J>COPie believe that being in the military automatically makes them second-class citir.ens. 'Ibe USO has a vital role to fill in assUJ'· ing the man in unifonn that he is respected in the com- munity." slit his throat and the fourth & ''40 CARATS'' dled m. his • .....,, an•he "LADY KUNG-PU" II) & guy . r , .. , ":-"1-te. ,.,. ,_ .. just said there's a better way.,j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "And whether he ran Crom or to the mountains is a ques- tion the series will deal with. Did he run from New York or go to the mountains? My opin- ion ls he looked arotmd and just decided there's a better ~ Paramount way than th!s." "Doc Elliot" will be the fifth series for tbe 39-year-old ac- tor.1 His first, in the 19505, was the hair-hour version of "Nak· ed City" with John Mcintyre. It las ted one year; and when it was revived as an hour·long show, he turned it down . Next. he was in "The Inv:estigalors." The Peabody wiruler, "Mr. /fo~fi$'( ~~,Jo1fitr 9 . Pi ctures presents the retu rn of th e greatest love story of all time, PAlA.llOtMPICl\JUS,__ ~•lflUt "' FRANCO ZEFFIRELIJ new production of Mozart'g president in charge o C the need for entertainmetlt is the USO shows up to "Don Giovanni'' as well as television at the studio, is a even greater," said Jimmy what it used to be, but we future swnmer programs of differen t sort of man than Sheldon, a pianist-composer hope we ~n convince big•-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ij free outdoor opera concerts. Louis B. Mayer. Neither: he who serves as director of USO stars that there is still a need II Schuyler G. Chapin, Met · nor the studio can afford to shows .• "Morale suffers from for their support. Novak." lasted two years: and "Longstreet," in which he played a blind insurance in- vest1gator, lasted one year. VIETNAM JS no longer a booking for USO entertainers, but shows travel to Thailand, the Philippines, Ta i w a n , Korea, remote post~ i n Australia, Jotmson I s l a n d , bas.es on tiny islands in Alaska and Japan. Other tours include Oemnark, Germany,. Turkey, Mediterranean bases, Africa, Icel.8.nd and Greenland. --~ general manager, said that overlook the revolution in ,b,o« do m, and w h.e n "Even though the 111.ilitary is $200,000 .. woukf··be ·savect by ~A m.e r-i .e a n entertainment Servicemen have no a 11 • conVert:ing to an all-Volunteer dispensing with new sets and preference. · &itleman a n d abiding war mission to per-force, it is not necessarily a costumes for "Don.Giovanni," Metro are going where the ac-form , they get restless." professional force. That is which will be presented March ~t~io~n~is~. ~~.;;----~i~~i~~ml!miimli~iiiiiiiiiii;~\I 21!. .Ii Chapl,o, who called the steps w· . "drastic," said an equal '7J.UHf amount will be saved by i11•111111 eliminating summer . presen-... :u~'!8 ~~f~~~ra concerts ~ ~:,:A' DC:~·~::-1· The company opens its 89th HELD OYER! season on Monday. Last J•"'" Collini season, the gap between in-"HARRY IN YOUR come and expenses was POCKET" tPG) reported to be $7,790,000 and 7:00 P'M & 10:16 PM the 1oss ·after contributions totaled 12,812,000. Abo Woody-.t.lr.n George s. Moore, president "EVERYTHING YOU'VE of the Metropolitan Opera ALWAYS WANTED TD Association, estimated that KNOW ABOUT SEX" !RI contributions for the upcoming a:4a PM season would be $5.6 million. "We can absorb a loss of MATINEE SUND.t.Y u .. -t much, but not more," Coll T'Ho,,. h r Will Soltdcry k lled11ht Moore said. GEORGE C. SCOTT FAYE DUNAWAY JOHN MILLS JACK PALANGE (PG) f . OKL •HOMA CRUDE Also Ryan o Neal ln 'WILD ROVIRS" --,.c-1-.i.U..:• CINEOOME 20,\:·, ~ .. ·::.....:.»• ~ _,,_,. -·"·"· CINEDDME 21 :~ .. ..!:.!~.":.-· ·=cr=.1 -"' . ,. .... SrAotuM · 1 :" ..... '.1HlU..~l >L"~'..I -... -.... S fADIUM ·? :·•; .. .. ''' 1'~1. f ~"'-' "1!::9 • ''THI STONE KILLll'" ... "'DOLU.IS" Ill .. SOUND OF MUSIC .. ... "CHAILO'."''S Wlr CGI "U.DY kUNC. Fii" Ill ..... 'THI CHINISE CONNECTION' ''THI NIW CINTUllONS" ... "FIV! fASY Pll CES'.' lltl "PAPll MOON" t•GI ... "HAROLD ' MAUDE" "HARl.Y IN YOUI. POCKET" (,Gi i .... "£Yell:YTitlNGI YOU _eve• WANTED TO KNOW A•OUT SEX" nu .IOSEPll t. UWlll: ,....,. A MU!Mlm ~ ~i11autfi;wuri . ~!!:.. . Ut,L!UU!fl • -..Assaf'lfitymt •0100LE IS FUNNY, DISTURBING, DEVASTATING!" ,__,.,Coe-a.,..., 11111,111.,. " "A BR11.UAllT FILM-STUNNING!" ~C.-. ... l'IRllllOI,_ ( . ---·----··-·· JlllUrTIU ·~ THE ~ RUU NGCIASS ---- B • ICllrl . ____ ._. • • --~ ....... ICIW5 °"""" lli·Mac&raw • Ryan O'leal Tl• Driiinal U11r.¥t Yersil)I Together for The First Time * Two Beautiful Stories of Love IN HARIOR SHO ... NG ClNTt:lt EDWARDS HARBOR c~':':,2 1U11!IOll •lYO Af WfllON Sf. CO$Tilo •l$4 6•6·11$1) STiii!!& JUU£ llDl!WS CHllSTOPllU PlUIHllR £ntertatnriitnt for th• Entire Family ·O· F~ re Vic eve cry· E the ed A ' R I "do and got •up ni3 .. = ~ dra WO Rea •tre suit bot • the J ed A firs • the A w set ~ of· vis! • • . , • ~ • • .. Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks * * VOL. 66, N'O. 263, 4 'SECTIONS, 48 PAGES c TEN .CENTS Harbor I indergarten Without Tears By JOHN ZALLER Of .. ~.,....,,,... Fifteen children barely 4 years old reported for the first day of classes at Victoria School last week aDd much to everyone's surprise, not one of them was crying. Even w b e n their mothers Jett them the lots kept a stir! upper lip and relram'. ed from shedding any tears. At first, It was puzzling. Kin· . . - dergartnets and even first graders often cry. What was different about these 4-year- olds as they began their first day ol classes in the Newport·Mesa . Unified School District experimental pre-school program? It didn't take long .to find the answer. "In the week before classes, teachers had visited every one of the children in their home , talked to the parents, and in many cases brought mother and child down to !be ichool to aee the classroom. So wben the first day of school came, the children weren't ltfraid. ~ 0 Jt showed uS right from the start ~ impcirtant 'It ls to baVe involvement of the child's home and parents in the school . program,". says Janeen Badarcl, coordinator of the program. Newport Mesa's program for 4-year- olds is beginning its second year o( operation this fall on a $38,000 budget. It operates at only two schools -Victoria and Canyon, both on the west side of Costa Mesa -but officialS are hopeful that experience from the program will enable them to expand it lhroughout the district If state funding for education of four·year.(llds becomes available. Miss Badard presented an analysis of the program's fll'St year of operation to the board of education earlier this week. Among her findings were: -Standardized tests lihowed that 4- yeaf.(llds completing the program have a signifi canUy higher level or skills than the average llv~year-<ild e n t e r in g kindergarten. -Every child In the program has passed tests Indicating he or she is fully prepared to enter kindergarten . By con- trast, only about 20 percent of children entering kindergarten at Victoria and Canyon without help of the preschool pnr gram are fully prepared to start kin· dergarten, Miss Badard said. -Every child entering the program Possibly Next Week was screened for learning problems, in- cluding tests for everything from tooth decay to behavjor to per cept u al disorders. 1ben the various problems were treated regularly through the year and Miss Badard said the vast majority of the problems were solved. "This was one of our most impcirtant goals," Miss Badard said. "Why wait un- til a child is 10 years old to find out that he has an emotional problem that Is bn· (See NO TEARS, Page 2) •. Carpenter Hits Remap Situation -S-;--d-..' By JACK CHAPPELL Of ... ~-f'fltot ..... Reapportionment of C a ! I f o r n I a ' s leglsJature historica11y ha.! fallen into a "do unto others, then cut out situation" and that's why the whollj: can of worms cot tossed in~ the' lap· of the state supreme court this year, Slate Sen. Oen· nis E. Carpenter said Wednesday. Qlrpenter (R-Newport Beach) was ad· dressing nearly 100 persons at a lwtcheim._ meetln~ of the Laguna Niguel Republican Womens Club in Lagwta Niguel. The .state legis1ator said lhat on the whole, Orange County. benefitted greaUy in t¥ reapportionment plan prepared by "mA!tirs" appointed by the COW"l to redefine the state's assembly, senate and coagressiooal districts, u a result of lbe 19'10_ Sen. Carpenter said lbe basslF over r<apportlonment h a d n ' t. htstortcally reached the ~ ft did .....,.tly because present pollUcal cltmata WU IOlllewhat unlque· -wllb the lleliocrlls conlrollin& the lqislatun!, aad lbe Republicans in charge of the llate ad· mlnlstration. . - Therefore, an apportionment plan drawn to suit the Democratic lests1ators would simply be vetoed by Gov. Ronald Reagan. Republicans couldn't muster strength necessary in lbe legislature to suit the GOP. Before, when !be Democrats controlled both lbe state house and !be Jnis!ature, • they reapportioned to lbelr own ad· (See REMAP, Pqe Z) A Swinging Time. . Trabuco School doesn't have very good plunioil!g ourth:e-scheduling- is very flexible. One of the things it does have surrounding the tbree- room school house are some massive old oak trees that make dandy swings. The story and additional pictures of the rural school are on Page S. WASHINGTON (UPI) r_ 'Ille C.St of Living Council said today it would allow a boost in retail gasoline prices, possibly within a week. Chairman John T. Dunlop, ln testimony on Capitol Hill and talking lil.ter with reporters, said the council would grant .. gasoline slation operators permission to raise prices by a 'specific amount to reflect bi'gher charges by the major sup- pliers. (The Associated Press quoted Dunlop Slocum, Jury Told 'More Yet to Come' An Orange County Superior Coull jury was told today that tbe prooeartlln has only 11acratched the surface" ill putting toge.lher lls fraud case against Dr. Wesley Gamer Slocum: · · Deputy District' Attorney Richard Farnell asserted to the panel the former Costa Mesa physician padded the Medi- cal bills of at least :ZS families. Slocum, 46, who now lives and practices in Santa Ana, looked on impassively as Farnell offered in bis open.i4g statement a sununary of the mountalri of evidence !bat led to the filing of :ZS felony counts against lbe physician. Nixon Studies . Japan Vi.Sit Talks .Over Presidential Slocum Is sitting in the courtroom he od::Upied three years ago when he was • tried !IJ1d cleared ol dlarges !bat be munlered and dismembered his infant daughter. The dllld's wrapped remains were IOUDd in a freezer at Slocum's Mesa Verde home. lnNove ... -WASllINGTO!j (iff'i) -· President N-. iS CODlidcing ·an official visit to Japtin·tome time this year, it was team- ed today. A Japaoes~ government official made lint discloaure of the plans in Tokyo, saying Nixon would mate a visit be(ore the .end of Uje year. A White House spokesman, Gerald L. Warren, said there were no definite plans set for such a visit. However, other Mmintstration officials said lbe first hatt of November was a target f6r sucb a vblt. •'Ibere was no immediate word on bow this· mlgbt al/eel l!Wln's long-planned trip Ibis year to Europe. A publilbocl report in Tokyo apeculatea !bat Nixon mJght tie 1n a 'trip to Japan wltb his European tour, or would go to Japan after returning from Europe. In Tokyo, Ganrl Yamashita, deputy · C8\>lnet secretary, told a news con- ference that Prime Minister Kakuel - Tanaka's rovernmenl has not received any officia lnfonnatlon on When Nll:on ls '!l!JlOCtad to come to Japan. But Yaqia.sblta said the visit may come ,,,,ore the end of the year . • • Tapes End in ~pJtsse WASHINGT!)N ,(AP) -President Nix- on's lawyers advfsed the U.S. Court of Appeals this aftenwon that they were wiable ,to reach ·a oourt·suggested com- pl"Olnise !'ith special Watergate pros- ecutor Archibald Cox o v·e r the con· troversial White House tape recordings. "I regret to advise. the court that sincere effQrts were not fruitful ," Charles Alan Wrilht , !be President's lawyer, fold the Court. (Related editorial Pace 6.) 'Ille appeal coort .~uested last week !bat !be two parties (!luld get togelber and r:esolve the tapes quesUOn between t!lemte!V.S without tbe need fot a ruling by !be COU{I, , . Wright "1d ~t , ht\, Cox and White -~..,.rJ. fted~t inet Moo· day, 'l'tiesdl)l lllCI Tburid8y but were unable to ,.fesolve the isSue. Wrlgbt aaldJhat both. parties agreed to say·nOlblng more about the efforts. A lelter'lroll' Wright to· the court said, "All participants-hi these conversations ' Ji'anailg 'Returns • have agreed that we shall ·say nothing about them except to niake this report to the court. "I understand that Mr. Cox . will similarly adYise you .of these meetings and of their unsuccessful outcome." SNOW FORECAST FOR RENO AREA. RENO, Nev. (AP) -The N•Uonal Weather· Service office here bas isSued lts first forecast for snow of the season. The forecast• calls for' .incre;!lfng chance of showers in tbe ;Reno area, ~Uh· the snow level near 71~ or 8,000 in the ' .. ·Sierra. . , · • · The snow flurries are:\ikely in the La~e Tahoe Basin and in. the Sierra jenerally from F.cho Summit on .U.S. Hlghway ... 50 nOrtliward, forecasters ·said.' · ·Famell-alleged-today Iha.I hts-fraud in- vestigation into Slocum "could have gone on for years" but was baited when bis of- fice fe1t lhat it bad sufficient .evidence to otbaln a conviction from a jury. In one year alone, Farnell claimed, Slocum submitted $182,000 in bills to the Medi-Cal organization -the state agency which approves the payment of medical bills to physicians who treat certified m.. digent patients. Farnell said that many of the persons whose names appeared on Medi.CS! bill· ings had never seen or heard of Slocum. In other cases, he said, Slocum su~ milted beavily padded bills for whole families receiving Medi-C.I benefits. C.Onviction on grand theft and any one of tbe 21 fraud allegations filed against him could put Slocum in state prisdn·for up to 10 years. Hurricane on Move MIAMI (UPI) -Hurricane Ellen, with winds of 85 m.p.h.1 churned westward through lbe AUantic today and pooed no immediate threat to land. For three days, Ellen has moved almost constantly westward at 15 m.p.h. Willie Says 'This ls It' Abandoned Tot Reunited .. BJ ARTHUR R. VINSEL time. °' .. Dlltr ,.... ...,. There was allllsunderstandlng. • NEW YOllX (AP) -Willi• May1 "A lhon, -,..artlly m...-with a timid "I ha~en't abandoned !bat boy," i of the Ne)f York Meis, blleblll'• type ct "11Walid i 1~ay.old new• clip-Miguel Sr. declared Tuesday to Orange 42-year-<>ld oupentar, aMOWICed pins ol clalml tbal be·hed obandoned his Cowity ProlJaUon Department authortUes • Ills retirement today, effective at only 1011 -quietly into Costa Mesa and Costa Mesa P.oUce Detecllve Linda · the end of the 1973 .. ason. (Story, police ~ the ot~ day, Geisler. '•.Pue 33) , Ml=! Sr. •am e for 111~~1 Jr. He was slan~ there at Unda's desk. '·. · ''This il.:.Jl," said Wiilie. "I'm brin g·lbe ~-•e family ,,_:·· ' nd -, . ., w~ --. So WIS Mlgue Sr:s wife 8 their r:-llrlna ofter tbe season. I only They drove down from M_-. to uy daughters aged 6, 6, I and 1. hope I can make some coiltrlbuUon , the little'-boy somebody ~Y Jell M,lguel Sr. bad Jusl found what op. ~ toward .another champlonal>lp In · -belilnif~tonged ·to theio peared to he the .tart o~ a solid New York ln the little Ume lett." A P'ir of women on w'elraro wbo had subliltence fqr hts flmll1 when he got a .Mays baa played 116 games lbl1 volunteered to caro for Mlguet' JI'.,-. Job in a food plant In Modoato. 1eason wllb a .211 batting avera11e ed him over to police and Ora.,,. County , Thi fomlly had been prouured to I> and al• home runs. increaalni his juvenil~ autbortU.. moro lbaD a Mk move from an Anaheim motel, becauee • ,....,. total to 11611, thin! behind , ago. Iha IDMapmeDt uld !bat five children only Babe Rulb and Hmiry Aaron. 'nley, uld Iba dlnd bad beml -. weni j111t too lllloy. cloaed, after Ibey acreecl to babylit for &-, lll8ual Jr .. 4, Col Jolt behind meanlq ' • he bad to learn to be a man early. "r wasn't trying to dump the boy. I have 11 brother1 and sisters who would take my ttds If I didn't want them," said Miguel Sr. • A few days ago, a Los Angeles Jtewspaper carried an Associated Press story abooot a boy suppooedly abandoned in Costa Mesa by his parents. Miguel Sr. saw that story I day or two later and recognized tha fact it was his own family's atozy. · He came tO straighten out the mess. Things look better now for the famil y and Miguel Jr. has rejoined them. 11In my protesslontll ·optnlon," said Detective Geisler, "this Is a family of poverty. But cttta1n1y· not a family of neglect." ,, as saying "I would hope it would require ,, no longer than a week" beyond Tuesday, wihch would be by Oct. 2.) But Dunlop said he did not think the council would change Phase IV economic rules to let retailers continue to pass along future wholesale price hikes to con- sumers, despite the shutdo\vn of many stations .by operators protesting the regulations. Such a decision, he said, would create a "chaotic price situation" bound to COl>- tribute to inflationary pressures. Gas station operators in MassacbusettG prior to Dunlop's announcement said to- day they would end their protest shut· down, but vovt.:d they would do It again if the Nixon administration refused -to change its mind on price controls. "We've proven our pciint and we don't w2nt the public to suffer any more," said John Bell, a Mobil station operater in the (See GAS, Page I) Mesan, 68, Sucea1mfJs ·Rites Slated fqr Form&& .. '. . . . . Singles Chief Whiln)ore. Funtrat services are scheduled Satur- day for Lewis Whitmore, 68, the former International presideqt and chairman of the board of Paiflnts Without Partners, who died' Monday in Costa Mesa. His ~rk beginning 10 years ago in Orange County's Chapter 26 of the parent! group quickly sent Mr. Whitmore to the top of the worldwide mutual help and social organization. He took over in 1965 as international president of the grou p, now nmnbering 400 chapters including those ln Australia, New 1.ealand and England. During !be period from 19118 lo 1968, Mr. Whitmore was chairman of the board and remained a member of the international board at the time of 0his7' -- death. He had been lochl membership chairman, then chapter president, and · regional president for the southwestern U.S. states. His work in Parents Without Partners won him several community service awards during that period. He was an engineer in the Radio Department of Philco-Ford's Aerooutronic Division, rtewport Bpch. "He was extremely intelligent and devoted to the organization," says Mrs. Barbara Ritchie, who served as in· temational membership chairman. She said today she recalls how its ex· pansion throughout the western states began under Whitmore's guidance, as they walked neighborhoods with petitions seeking single parents. The heavy demand for Parents Without Partners chapters led the organization's Girl, 9, Freed On $2.5 0 Bail In Knifing Case EDINBURGH, Scotland (AP) -A 9- year.(lld girl sentenced to 18 months' detention 1or stabbing a playmate with a breadknlfe was sent borne today on $2.00 batl while her sentence Is appealed . A ScotUsh hlgb court judge onlered the release of Mary Calms of Glasgow. The girl had been placed In a home for delin· quent children TUesday after ~ing sentenced-by a Glasgo1f sherifrs court. The length of the sentence for such a young chifd raised a storm of protest ln' Britain. English lawyers pointed out no child under 10 could be arraigned under Engllsh law, which differs from the Scot· tbh code. They also noted that in England the newspapers would not have been allowed · to publish ~er ldentily because of her age. Mary stabbed 11-year.old Morag Brown In the chest during a qu arrel. h-torag suf· fered a partially collapsed lung. SootUsh legal aulborltles 11id the 111· month detenllon order could be shortened If Mary behaved satbfactorlly: FUNERAL SERVICES SET , Lewis Whitmore headquarters on the east coast to branch out. Funeral services for Mr. Whitmore, who lived at 1845 Monrovia Ave" COsta Mesa, will be Saturday at 10 a.m. in Westcliff Chapel Mortuary, Costa Mesa. Burial wiJI follow in Pacific View Memori al Park, with Westcliff Cliapel Mortuary directing. · Friends say they belive Mr. Whitmore is survived by a son living in Syracuse, N. Y .. but they were uncertain. They were trying to contact him today. Orange Coat • • .- Weatller Mostly sunny Friday, following the usual low clouds along the coasL Highs in the upper 60s at tbe beaches · rising' to 7S inland. OVemlgbt lows in lbe 60s. INSIDE TODA. V After mosl of litr IJ/e wilh white foster parents, OJJ aborig- ine girl has been take'n back to bmh for a?l arranged marriage with middle-aged tribe3mQn. s,e story, photo Page 4. L.M, am tt ca11t.n111 s.• Clfftl".. •t .... '"""' " Cros1-11 •I Dt•tll Molfc• U l!•U~ll "'" .. , Ell .. tl!MMfll ... l'l!MIACI .. ... '°' tM ....... . ... _ " AM L.fMldtn II , .. ' , • 2 DilUd!lLDl "--o Thursd.w. StpttmlM'r 20. 1~71 • o.lly ,. ... 11111 , ... ,. FOUR-YEAR-OLO CHRIS SMITH EXPERIMENTS WITH At Victoria School, No Tear.son Opening Day LETTERS Last Rites Held • f '1•om Page I N 0 1'E.-\.RS • • • Fc;n· Ad }~xecutive pedi•" his too n•inc "bii ity"! -------------------"'''\\'e-£an--Sa.V-t\-lhs..chUd..en.or.mvus..gi:· W. }t M ir \\'C get lo !h~ pl'oblem before it has ' a e1• a ve1• a lreaci~: S]O\\'cd l~OWA his learning for .; ycri rs. Funernl services 1vc:·c tv:o1d !his 11·£>rk Anothe r key go:it or the pro{;ra1n is to in Ne\\'port Bench for forn1er Orange invoh·e p3rcnis in the education or their ~Coast advertising cxeculive \\'alter children. Mayer. \Vho died Saturday at the age of ·'This is something \\'e'rc really serious 62. about." says i\Uss Bed:ird. "No child can ' Mr. Mayer resided with hi s wife. Alice, remain in ·th~ prograrn unless the at 1201 Rutland Road, Nc\vPort Bench for parents co1nc do\'."n to the school and eigh'.. years. help out." When he first 1novc(I to the Har~:MJI' Purl oi thi s involvc1nent is a rcgn'nr . area in 1965. ~tr. l\ta vC'r 11·orked in the rneeting b~t\1·cen a school psycholo;;:ist advertisi ng departmei1t <if th::-Qi an•Te a!1d pnrc:1ts to help the pnrent s un· Coa st D!'lily Pilot aflcl 1rent on 10 open his derstnnd 1hc.ir child's problems. 0\111 acivertislng 1t$!ency. 111 :lcidit iou. ncn·11·orkin!:t 1nothers 11rf' hlr. \1a.ver taup:hl :1:h·e"iisin :: r lnf~.r:; exu:-cll'cl to he!;> out ~-e;:u!;irly i:1 the , a1 1 ~•ii 0r;r1 ··<' r~:•·'" ('r ''t" r "111 r·rsin clas<;room . And lo nccommod:ne 11·0,.king l\iesu ;i nd Golden \Ves! CollCr;e in Jiun· P11ren!s. sµ:.·cia l scs5ions arc> held t.111 1h~· r,r· "11 Hl':i rh . ..cch · 1 '' ;.11. i.1 lnc e1'l'llil1'.~s. !:::0:11 i•1 Svrncu.s_., .\.Y .. h ~ ;:ncnde.:I "If :his progran1 ncco1nplis hcs nothin;i: .Colurn bi:1 uri il"crsitr. e!s:. il get~ p!'!ren!s to understHnd their ritr. ~iayc.•· i." :i!sa !)1.Jrvil·ej by hi~ chilGri' 1 and their schools better." ~liss daughters, Johann1:1 .J•1L l\l:H:.1 f\.iuyer cf Bed;.1rtl Suys. the hon1c address; son, joh n Maver or Miss Dedard admits that n1any of the •. North ~Tolly11•ood. <ind brothers. ·n ~ilph thing~ done in lhe progrnm £or 4-year-~ h1a ycr or Nc1v York City and Lai~·rencc olds could also be done in kindergarten "fayer rf Savannah. Georgia . as p::nt of the regular school prograrn. The (amily suggests any memorial "Bul in n1any cases. \\·e find there just conlributions be made to 1he Orange isn 't tin1c 1:-i kindergarten." she says. Coun1 v Ad Federation .«cholnrship fund . "Thi s progra m makes sure thAI there is ·• P. 0. B..:x 783. 0;-:inge. ( ·:i!if .. 92656. tin1e. tha! all children get off lo a good start 1tht•n they stort kindergarten ." TONIGHT COLLEf:E PAR!\ HO\!EO\\'NER"i ASSOCIATION General n1cetin;,;. College Park School,,i :IS p.n1. FRIDAY. SEPT. :ll COSTA ?11ESA CIVIC.: PLA YHOt;S E - "Her Fatal Beauty" or .. A Shop Girl's Honor." Friday and Sal. 8 :3~ p.1n. Tickets $2. Reservations r34·5300 . OCC FRIDAY NIGHT f lLi\IS -"!\·Jan in thC Wilderncss:· Forum 7 p.m. Adn1 . $1. _,. "WONDERFUL WORLD OP ORGAN r..1USIC " -"The \\'nltz . . .. Or\'il'c Foster, Lecturer, DCC Science }fall. 7:31}. 9:3!.l p.m. "EAT THf. \\'ES!)S-EDI BL!~ \VILD PLANTS'' -"fo,raging in the rorest." Charlotte Clarke. lecturer. OCC Science L"cl Ul'f" 2. 7-9 1>.111 . i\IOTORCYCLE SPEED\\'AY 11ACING -Fairgrounds 6: 15 p.m. FOOT BALL -Co<th1 :\1•'Sil \'~. Foo1hi'I al Tustin Hi•.:1. :; p.n). ~stLJocill nl \'isl<L i :45 p.nl. Nc1rport H8rhor v~. Coron:i <l('I /\1a r ::it Harbor. ;; p.Jn. '· ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Tl•I Or•• CH•I 0Alt.'I' PILOl, wl"' ..... lt<I It comtt1<1.S llM Newt-Pr"'· h ...,n111~ . ..i •v 11\f O•lf\Ot' Co••' PuOli>~«•Q tomP11ny. S.~· t•M "'lllo"s •re OUbllJ~MI. MoM&y 111,._~ J'rk:11y. tof (D•ll Ml>I ~.,.,'O•! B•1r ... "'~"!l"910n lle1te~/FOU<•!loc V•lley, L .. !u~• IH>tll, ""!Ml SICIClll!lel"t ••><I S1" Clln>ffi•et S•n Ju111 C•p!~1 r•l'IO A ''"<;le ·~~·onil Klltlon •• llUO!iV•KI $.l!u•C•" ~"° s .... 11~ .. f~e pr!ntlOAI outilllh!ng p1a111 " ti )lO 1•. , 8•Y '""'' (0&!1 M1•1, C1lilo•,.i1. 111,1 Rohe•I N. w~•d PrM"'.-rl' 11111 P111.11l1<1e' J•e~ R. Curley Yk• Prn1<1en1 ,,.. Ciene,11 M1,.•01r l hofl'lll Kto •il EllllCI• Thol'l'l•I A.• M.u11h'"' Me<1IUlfl9 Ellllo• Ch1rl11 H. Looi R1th••cl '· Nill Aiol"l "I M1 ne<1if\O ~a'~'' c .... M.,. Office 3JO Wott l 1y She1• Melllt1t Achlre11:',.0 , l o• IS~O. •ltlt ·o.Mr Of'fk .. llj..,...t 1"'11 ! JJ» H""11Qrt IOV~•rt 1,.tt11M a.d\t nt "K••I A~111i.i. """tllltl1911 IM¢'1l Ul1S I N.th lolll .... ••• .. ~ Cit""" .. : I05 Htrr111 f:I C1""'I"° 111! , ........ f114J 642-4)21 ~ A4¥@id .... 642·1671 """''''· ,.,,. 0..lltl ~ll J'\lllllllllt ~. ... ..... .,la, Hlllltrt11'1M. ~ ,..,... • Hwf'fl•..,...11 ""'"" ,,., .. ,.,........ wtlMut "9(11! ..,. ""'""" ef .,., .... , ..... ' ~ c,_• ....... Hlf .. C•t1 -.... .C.llllf't'llt, ~ IW -rltr lt.61 "*""'"' ... -a N,lf .ftlOt'lll'llW'J "'l11f1,., ............. ..... """"'''" • l\liss ;.i.ednrd ::ilso poinls out that youn~ children h1.\"C' 11 gre:1 tc r IC!"3rning pot cn· :i<11 t:1 .... \ th>!\ do !·Her in their Ji\·es. This fl0!··'1 ·1 1. s!lc n111ntn ius. should not be \'."[IS\Cd. • i, ., ;, rcnl ~han1c 1h.1t some childr~ ina ·.\' ,.c y litt le prop:ress between their lour:h J tl'.I ('if1h birth(lays:· she says. '"S:>1nl..' al:lUally reJrcss ... ~\l" ~r·id \11 :11 childrr 'l in th'! progr1Tn1 lo: -: l' 'r-o!d~ .'.'!I Vic1orin School gained ::u ~. t' <!~~ t.1. 14 1nonths ln mental aQC t•llri '~ lne ninc·u1un1h program. ., "l~1 ~~ho,\:.; 1.hat 1.:an be Uonc 11ith the 1 i;;_h1 kin:I u. ;J:,1;;r~ r.1."' she saitl. .<\gne\\' Pressure D<'11ie<l bv Nixo11 • PI"e~s Seeretary , \\'A SJ ll:\GTOI\' t LiP' · -The White llousc denim! a.gain todLJy llial anyone in authority is preslu1·i"" Vice Presid'.!flt Sriro T. A.en"'w to r·";i !n b·~ra111 ~· he is undt>•" f d"r:'.11 Jr•n·e3ti.,.:il'vn i•1 eon nC<'ti on --DEMOCRATS DISCUSSING . AGENEW SITUATION-Pago ~ \l'lth alle"cd politir·: ! rort11!1lion in his horr·~ s1 1:1 •~ nf :'vlarvl<i11d. f1t•r"11•!y Pres'l i;"l'rf'T ;~rv r;crnld L. \\'arren a Is o dis rnlssed ';; \~·:~shing1on Post re1J0rl l']uotln :'.! an unid :!nf lfi rd f.a"i!c•·n Ti cpu ?Jican H<:: S'lvin t.: he had bee n 101d b1· n tn11 \Vhi!c Hous0 off!,.i:1I that A1!11"1\··1; rr.,ian:11ion wos expected within 111>: '·n c.'~·t f ·!1Y l\"'eks."' · 'The rt•s!.irn•1tion 1ro ,/d give Presid:-n1 t\ixnn ":-iri n·1·11n·t""'"· •., o: .. t n \l'h olc nc11· tonr ln Ilic .\Jn1i~1i ~trnt ion ... th e "tfl"\' 8:1:11. . "'n:·t SI.,, ·r·"1' \'."11rrcn "a i d . "~·h"r"11 ' i.. <!n:·: 11'11 1"_·:~~l the t!linkin; I ',·,,, ''l'l'."··I "' .. \<:~· u ciircctlr i( \'iXl'IFI \\'8nts Agnew to rui· ~··· "i ~·tl ··11:, \'1'111 ~ •. ,,, .. no <.O'•" 11 '' i...:l :hiii • 11ILl'l' rn11tt.cr until Iii'! :; '·' u . h n· .,• '~·n·itPll'l' hl<s 1"orJ.:. r\111· "I.I' ·1n.?1t 1\·o.t1d C.: iinpropcr ;:;,1d un- fuii•." i\"n1'\V v.·ho rcpentC<il.Y h:is denied ony 111rc.n· fi 1'i!l". is under· lnvclltip:ation for pos:;iblL" \'iol:itio:1 uf !J:·lii"l'Y. l:ix frn ud. exiorJ:r.n l!!'d ~'On~p!r:.icy la1VJ. .... 1'ht> ll!l cgation~ suy ht!. \\'as involved In a polil i~·11 1 l'i<'~baci: S"~V'n1e in which sonic \111 ·y'.n11d pul!Uclans received 11100.:~· tri:r architcc!ural und engineer· ing n1·1n; doi:~~ 0·1si111;ss 1\•lth 1hc state Qnd loc:: J '.l"CJ\'C ."ll1ll.!t1 t:;. \, artcn'.:; ('0;11111cnlS ot the rcgul:lr \\'hiL:! 11 ·u;;c t'l:.i:'U!ni; nC\v~ b!'leflng cun1c :l ft::ir Scnt.t • Oc1nocratlc Leackir ~li ke M3t1SO::~cl s:.klo AgllO\V n1ust be COil· sldered "innocent unt il proven gufJty" and given '·the benefit of the doubt'' now. The Montana senator aJ90 aald he believed Al.tomey General Elliot L. nichardson would consult with · con- gressional leaders of both parties before deciding to aub1nl l information about A&nev.· to the House for use in con· sidering \\'hclhcr to lnlUate impeachment procccdlng11. ---• Speaks in • Niguel Si e ' " 400 Flee La~ Vegas Hotel Blaze Carpenter Hits 'Criticism ·~rgy' • LAS VE GAS •tAPJ -Ahoul 400 persons:. including the Osmond Brothers ..,.. singing group, Yi'ere evacuated from their Stale Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter hit at room& early today as a fire swept v.•hat he called an ''orgy of criticism" in through the seventh noor or ooe 1\1ns: or politics, lamented that all good bills: don't cae¥tr's Palace Hotel here, causing an get the publlc pressure the death penalty estimated $100,000 damage. did, and gave qualified .support for Gov. There \Vere no injufics rfi>ported. although a /\lassachusetts wonian "-'as Ronald Reagan's tax initiative measure. admitted to a hospital for treatn)ent of Speaking Wednesday belore th e smoke inhalation , said officer Don Laguna Niguel Republican Women's Passiatore. Las Vegas l\1ctropolitlln Club. Carpenter (R·Newport Beach), Police Department spokcs1nan. launched into a discussion of what be The blaze erupted about 3 u.m. in a termed "general problems," alter suite or roonis occupied by the insurance discussing lhe recent court-ordered reap- compun)' which c.i:rri es the hotel's f\rt' SPEAKS TO 1SSUE portioninent of state and congressional insurance, Passiatore said . A national Stat& Stn. Carpenter. legislative distric~s. conv<'nllon of insurance a;:ents is under Of criticism, Catpenter said "we can't way at the hotel. be that bad as a people or an ad- Passiatore said the bla ze \Vas believed Front Page J ministration." to have started in a mattress. but said He said. he supported measures pnr the suite \l'as unocc upied at the time. R £·j\ifAP viding for campalgn fund disclosures, Sidney Gitthrit. executive director or 'l • • • but \Vas agalnst laws re q u l ring public rcl4.11iOJls for-the hoteL said thl' diSclosure o'f Iawmakeni' Per s on a I alarn) \\'as turned in by a passing cab 1•ant;1gc. and the a n q u l s h of t he fi nances. '"nley have turned 1nousands of people out on the streets that would have been in jail," Carpenter , a former FBI agent said. . Switching to his political auns. Carpenter said. "In case they there's any doubt ebollt tt, I'll be running for re·elcc· lion next year." Annexation Hinted in Prezone Bid By GEORGE LEU>AL or th• ~IY I'll•• s1111 J ' drivet· \\'110 SR\\' 'na111es shooting front the Republicans, he said. "I don't feel 1 bave given up my se,·enth floor of the north \vlng. Carpentel' wryly noted however, that in Constitutional rights to privacy because~ The 1\"ing. 1\·hich contains 330 roo1ns. the 10~ years before the Democrats took hold public office," carpenter said. He "'as booked solid and ::ill guests. including over. the Republicans played the same added bthatlhhe Lohad ~e;en!Uy rTirn~fused,a re-the Os1nontls, the singing group of fiv e quest Y e s ~.gees es or a b h "-. h reap1>0rtlonment tricks on th 2nl. financial .IL\tatement. Irvine Company tiling tor. regiooal ''commerciul and residential" pre-zoning for the golden triangle suggests another city of Irvine aMexation is forthcoming by the end of the year. 1 Within 10 weeks, city plannin"g com~ missioners will £or1nally review a request I to pre-z.one 480 acres of land bounded by rot crs \\'1K1 <1re appearing at the oiel, US C f· d f "I resent ihe 1"nlrusl.on," he sa1·d. He 1\'ere c\ :\C'uatt!d. niany in ni g!nclothes. The . . ons Uution prov! es or a .... census each 10 years wllh representation said the innuendo is that if a successful the 5anla Ana, San Diego and Laguna ! • Freeways. _______J. P 1 n!:'si.'.l tore · saii.r"Ellcn F aiwrre-, -oo·c. -~to":l~h'"e ','Hr:'o~us!'e"o'if-'lR~e!!!p.!!res~'!'i;. 1a'::_ ~tiv'l<es~b~a"!sed~o'"-n~-;;ma:;:.n-;ni:;;n~l;:ror~publtc;-offlce;-heis-going-to Wa ton. Mass., \\'SS admitted to a hospital population . · have conflicts of interest. smoke inhalat ion. "There is no relationship between Ele,·cn un1"ls of the Clark c 1 ,,.. U.S. Supre1ne Court rulings have car· · · · oun Y r ire qualification to serve and make this type Dep. I t b k d b 1 I' · ried the doctrine through state levels , d ) 111 ::11 . ar ·c up Y .as egas c1· of disclosure," Sen . Carpenter said. ty f. d d t th I d and ordered •·one man, one vote" ir.:?nie n. respon e o t: a arm ao Shifting to the governor's tax initiative had the blaze under control in 15 representation. settint an income tu celling, Carpenter minutes. Passialore said. Prio'r lo the reapportionment plan said he was in .general pblloeophical An 1midenlificd couple climbed out onto pr:epared by the mastets, carpenter's agreement wt.th the measure, but hadn't a three-foot ledge ovCrlooking-the •;s trip" state s~nate district included about a made up his mind yet. ~nd stayed there until rescued by million persons. while some colleagu.es He said he wasn't sure the machinery firemen, Decorali\'C grillwork on the represented only 3 quarter that many established In the inlUatlve was the best outside of Cesar's Palace prevented the persons . he said. 'In essence, ·that made to do the job. ~ __ use of rescue ladders. the vote of those senators' constituents He said the matter was extremely \.\'Orth four Orange County votes. complicated. but that both the governor Hearin qs Slated '-' For T,vo Won1en ' En11co Suspects The n1asters \\'ere . charged 1rith and his Democratic Opposition were ove~ redra1vinJ the lines to eliminate gro Ss simPllfying the matter in selling It to the popul r li on discre pancies, but to preserve people. · political units nnd social where possible. Oi publ ic.pressure, Carpenter said that Carpenter. a member of the Senate although some legislators were reappor1ionmcnt committee, said that he perSOnally opposed to the death penalty, and a legislator "'ith 1vhom he does not they were forced to support it because of often a'irce. did aJrec that after "trying the 70 percent favorable vote in the for three years, the ~g'islature w a s November election. "incompetent" to reapportion itself. However, he said other good legislation The reason is that legislators long ago sometimes dies on the vine because A pair of 1romen \\·ho auth_ ori!ies allel!e ubl" · 1 l 'I ,-b'"'-~ It found out that by redrawing the district P 1c m eres CID De mo WM;:!.! as tried to rraudulently \li thdra\\' $25,000 Jines in certain ways, they could benefit was in the death penalty case. He cited from !be account of a Newport Beach their 01,11 position and party at the ex· . his oWn J:>lll dealing with court exclusion \\'Oman nearly disabled and confined to a pense of the opPoSition . of so.called tainted evidence picked up in what maY be u'nlawful searches. Convalescent hospital for 18 months are That's called gerrymandering, after He said that the bill would rule out UBe due back in court Friday. · enterprising Mass a ch u)s et ts Gov. ot· the ,,evidepce Jn the cue of 1the ~ Hearings are 6ct in Harbor Judicial Elbridge Gerry. whose party in 1812 di~idual whose rights may• batt been D . 1 . r , rt f formed a re pl Ile shitped district lo b-ached 1·0 lhe search, bul ··l ·a· gam· sl 1s net ...... iu or arguments on proposed · I" . I"" 1 hs " •w \!ap1ta rte on po 111ca party strengt . other persOns in cases whiCh the b;i il bona re~i·ction !roin $20,00... eac h. to I"" I · f d d A po 1lica cartoonist o the ay rew evidence may apply. a figure lhe t\\·o suspects might be able v<i!1gs. e)·es and a for ked ton;;:u~ on an He said the courts wei'e using the ex· to rnise to gain rreedom . ou;line or lhc district and c.aUcd the clusions by rule to turn criminals loose . The suspects, Ruth MacPhee . 2.3, land resulting drago n shape ··a gerryma n-der." Sent ori \Vright. 30, both o! Los Angeles. arc confined in orange county Jnil . "There is no no n pa 1· I i s a n reap-. fo:·rr.nlly charged \\'ilh conspiracy to portionmenl. not unless you find a guy con1mit grand theft. living on another planet to do it .'' Sen. Carpenter sa id. The-~· 1\·er>:' t 1ken into custod~· and held in lieu of ~20.000 bail each on tbe felony H:! siiid it 11·0~ ··unf<tif" lo ask a Police Checking Nudes in Mesa ch:irges filed fo\10¥.'ing their arrest one lt>~islntor lo rise above pc,·sonal self in· week a~o. te res: <.nc1 his 11arty 10 1\rite himself out Police arc investigating three reports of office. r 1 · J r de · ln\·cstlgalors entered the case last ronl een-age g1r s o nu men m Thursrlay afler t\\'O women using \Yhat Cnde: the plan dra1·:n up by the eastside COsta Mesa Wednesday. irl'S drso:ribed as a forged deposit slip masters. half the legislators "'ill be rt1n-Two of the reports described a yoWlg Tliief Hung Up 01i Weird Goods lriC'C to obtain funds from United ning 'n O;Jpo!=Oition 10 .collea;;ue~ in thC' man with shpulder·length hair. One loca· Calif ~rn i:i B:lnk. 2i 12 \\'.Coast }lighway . sainr re:!ra\1·.1 distr·icls. \'.hile other lion was El Camino Drive near Fairview· ... ~·de from lhe proxi"mi"I• lhe coml1lOll d1s1ritts a:c cpcn. empty an::i up lor Road. Another was Fair Dri ve and Little '~1 •• A key r•ue!<tion yet to be determined in gr;obs. Pia~. denominator !or burglaries at a Costa tbe C::!Se is \l·hether any other (" 1 1 1 h d 1 h Another report involved 8 middle-aged Mesa a~ •complex Wednesday 1v'th:1r a"'a!s m·11.v have been made at any urpl''' C'r \\'as a~ge Y unsea t e n 1 c seemed to bi tl>e thief's fondness for otl·Cl' L"CB bank br:-n ::hes an\•\vhcre else reappor:ionrn ~nt. lnlan<I :1 reas of Santa mnn in an upstairs apartment window. socks and bedspreM!s. from· the account of the alleged victim . Aiu •. l •.1sti n. Oran£c and Anuhcim ll"CrC' Stanley H. Uchir.ono, 25, a designer llv-i\Ir~. Agnes \Vitld. cut o 1 ut _cf his distr1f'ct. hut a1 s 5 :naH 70,IJOO M ing at the Pine Creek Apartments, 2300 po1>u at10n area o coasto an nic30 70· . PH Limit Set al Road f bis 1\"e11·p::rt Be1:1ch Dc1ecti\·c Todd Co11r1y i1·;ls added. C~rpenter said he F rvtew ' ound apartmenl '\"!"•" · 1·11 1 · · t 1 1· ransacked. The $1 ,164 loss included a L '.Jnipu lations 1>0~~ibly involved . le t rcp1esent a1i on. hoL speed 'limit along a high-fatality ~~~of :occ::.1era, his bedspread and a ~ 1 "nsou 1 ~ ~ i pro i1nq 1n o pRs u1nn-behc1·cs rh~· redr111.•ing provides for bet-CARSON CITY (AP ) _ A 70-mil&a~ A subseq uent probe of· the alleged C:i rt'Jen1er sn1.'.I even !he courl 's a1>..-stretch of Intersta te 30 from the Robert C. Clark, in the adjacent apart· financial conspiracy case led tQ contact pointed ""nonparli·nn " nlD"!Crs \'·erC' cJi..i Ca llfomia-Nevada line to Reno was ap-ment, had·tost $5S6 worth to the burglar-. 1ritl the asferted 1'ic1i1n'.s ntothe, -h1-b111·. no· P' or!uC'~ a pl:i 11 1· ;·h~:1l hi tlt l: proved Wednesday by. the state Highway The loss included socks and a fur She tul J police her da11g hter·in·la w hns p:i'i \•·°'· Board. bedspread. been a con1·a1csrrn l h.;mt• palient ho1nc 1 r-------~-~-.--.-;;o;;;;-""".:"""'"~"'"----------------o;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Oij p:itlf'rit s!•1ce l\tarC'h ~'r 1fli2 11nd has given :o.~;yc i~>e~~:i~s!~~c.1 0 lllkC out ~avings See '\~:t j4!2P for SPEED OUEEN· ~\U<111i~., fric'a· 's Lai! "e:lu::-tion hcBr· J.J in '.!. ~!iss P.:ic PheC ;1·1tl .Jl!s.'i Senior!. both l.u:"I ,\11 .c·,..~ r"-'i,:eP!-.. ;1rC' d1 :>: for a St p'. :::~ :1rc1hnin · r; hl'~ring. l•'rom PllflC! I ,., ·'s·· \J ... "l. • • • B~!·IO" "11l•11rb or Lt>\:na'o'l . iJu1rlred."> of -'i'.l!ions a c "" s ~:. ~'-<1chusc1:,q 11·rrc elo~cd \Vedn~sdtl\ for 11 seernl\ cla.\' dcwpi!t• n court order to til:1• open. The g:isuline tlr;•lt'r~ Wl'l'C prritestlng th~ Cost of Living Council ruling that barred stations front passing on to customers a pcnnv·a·gallon increase. ch'lr!?ed by the oil cflmnsnies. Tbe council htis over-all aul hori tv for administering th c Administralion's economic i.hi biliz'ltion progr~m. \\·hich y;cntoinlo its: fourll1 phase gr'1.dually ovel' the summer. Dunlop decli ned 10 predict hov1• tnui.:h gasoline prlrc lnc!'ca.sc \VOlild be authorlted : "I don't kno1v how much It will go u :· He alilf the councll wotrld take UP' thQ question Tuesday and make. a dcclalon "shortly -in :i matter of days. no I n;,ei l~~· a w .. k." Dunlop served-notice of~ "an upward adjustment in these prices" and 11.ld "It can ·be lmplen1ented in a mattc,r of days" • . . fie te11tlfied on the over-all petroleum .situatlon before t~ }louse.senate Join t EconomJc SUbcommittce on Cousumu Economics. I r . ,. • S"'ainless Steel r-cl:ri~ Care Tu'.> uall .1.1.;... ~ 'i.i~r.t P.il\l'.'!'!r3 1;r.11?<1 i.'t~IOR \••''"'i!l i'll\~~·v . • Smooth, Rust-Proof, Chip·Proof • fdeof for ·•fl W11h· ablt Fabrics e L11t1 tht Lifttimt of lho WH'1e f " PLUS • • • a washable knits cycle · ''" ... """"' ,,. ....... ,,.. ,., c•N for woshtiW. klltt. .,.... ,,,... ., 11$1ktlt9 ......._ A•d _.,. 411M11ty .....,.. w.n\ 1 ... 1 .. 1 ... 1 ' YOU CAN IU'Y A Sl'Hb 9UllN WASHll AND DlYll FOl Al LOW Al 1369" l~jSPEED OUEEN.l•ll a McGrew·Ediion Compeny C:llvision 90 DA y CASH WITH A~:~:i':D 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa MesHbanl 548-7788 • I • •