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1973-11-06 - Orange Coast Pilot
• • • 1 1.::c:- 1: 1: V .oters ·i ·n Irvine ,, ·--r--T" ·~ For~ed to Go to 2 Separate Sites ' -· DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * • ERNOON, NOVEMBER 6, :1973 VOL.. '6, No. )1 .. t SECTIONS, 24 PAGES Means Business UPI T.._... Pointing a .45 at the bead of a blindfolded Khmer Rouge suspect, a Cambodian offit:er walks him toward a command post for interroga-. . tio n Sunday. The man was captured neat Prek Thong, some six miles northwest of Phnom Penh, Tr-..~kipg , G~f-~ . . Panel Cliecks Nixon Donations . · W>\SHINGTON (UPI) -The ·Senate Watergate c\immfttee is checking into $600,000 in eontrihutioos by trucking company execu- tives to Pre~ide)tt;Nixon's 1972 campaign, the Washington Star-News •aid today. : " ' . . The newspaper said the amount.was the largest single industry contribution to the Nixon re-election effort and came at a time when truckers were fighting a government proposal that would haye gen- erated more competitiop in theii.,field: '. , " ' 1 According to the.Star-Newi!,.Joh!tRuan,of Des MQines, seeretary " of the American Trucking A~ations, acl<t)owledged headiqg the drive but said it was ~Od .• l , defe~ting: Nlfon s Democratic con-· tender, Sen. George S. ·McGOvent,'nitber than lnfluenclng>legisJation. Polk said executives of the following companies were among those making $25,000 contributions; Roadway Express, Akron, Ohio; Consolidated Freigbtways, San Francisco;_ Gateway Transportation Co., La Crosse,. W'JS.; Gordon Tra.!llport, Memphis; Lee Way Motor ··Freight Co., OllaHorila City; llraay Mo(orfrate, Des Moines, and" Schwerman Trucking Co., Milwaukee. Ilunt~gion To Limit Spending By TERRY COVILLE Of tlle Daity PINI 11.rf Future Huntington Beach City Council candidates probably won 't be allowed to spend more than $5,txXI in their effor:ts to win election." So far, no one has spent that much mmey anyway but councilmen agreed Mooday night there ought to be some kind of ceiling on campaign costs. .They scrapped proposals similar to Newport Beach and Sao Juan Capistrano which tie the liin.it to the number of registered vqters. Instead, they opted for a flat $5,000 maximum. "As far as I'm concerned you can limit it to $500 after what I went through last year," quipped Mayor Jerry Matney. In the ~lection of April, 1972, he ran up a campaign bill of nearly $2,000 -without the money to pay it off. After the electicn, Matney held a raf- fle, with himself as the prize to do the bidding of the winner. He wound up with two winners and found hirMelf facing a ride on the Colorado-River rapids with his slster·in· law and a ride on a bicycle-built-for-t wo -in a gorilla costume -with Hun- tington Beach High SchoOI Trustee Ralph Bauer .to support a school bond. The bond Jost. The $5,000 limit isn't established yet. Councilmen merely ordered City At- torney Don Bonfa to write an ordinance which would limit expenses to SS,000. Councilman also asked Borda to limit campaign contributions to $5.000, a re- quest Bonfa admitted may be a little more difficult to comply with. The question in Bonfa's mind was how do volunteer efforts, or donated items, add up as COntributions in lieu of cash. 1r a printer donates brochures at cost, should the contribution be counted at its full, normal value? Most councihnen said yes. Should the services of volunteers walk- ing door-to-door, handing out a can- didate's literature be calculated at some, fa ir tmurly rate?·:_ · · •·· , On that one, counc!ilmen generally (See LIMITS, Page !) ro J Sets CaJDpaign I Spending Lilllit l I J \' - I I • Two Precincts for lrvi1ie Voters DUAL POLLING PLACES plagued most Irvine voters today as landowners casting ballots in the Irvine Ranch Water District (IRWD) election did so at locations other than the places where they voted on Proposition I. Robert West, a candidate in the ffiWD race lives in the Colony. He voted at a precinct there in the statewide election. Then, at 8 a.m., he drove four miles up Culver Drive and back to cast his vote in the mwn election. FRANK HURD, an Irvine planning commissioner who lives in University Park, said he planned to voie on Proposition J at the usual polling place, University Park Elementary School. To cast bis ffiWD proxy votes, however, he'll have to drive nearly a .10.miJe round_ trip . to. the R.a~quet Club polling place on Typee Way. · Miles E. 11Pete" Peterson, a Racquet Club resident, waited around several hours before learning be could exercise bis landowner rights on his Cal-Vet financed home. For a time early today it ap- peared veterans whose land technically is "owned'' by Cal-Vet much as a bank 11owns" a car being bought on time, were to be disenfran- chised. · A DECISION OF IRWD attorney Alex Bowie, however, gave vet- erans the right to vote for IRWD candidates. Precinct workers were in structed to allow Cal-Vet homeowners to be treated as landow.ners, voting the assessed valuation of the land under their homes. One vote for each dollar of land value is given each landowner voter in the IRWD. HOWEVER, AFTER Peterson completed his ffiWD vote, he had to drive to the Colony Clubhouse in order to vote on the statewide ballot issue, Proposition One. ·An ffiWD spokesman said the dual polling places were set up by the county registrar· of voters which is handling the election for the first time, Nixon's Secretary Called Be~'!~·e_~irica Over Tape s WASIDNGTON (UPI) -Chief U.S. called arter it was disclosed in testimony by presidential assistani Stephen Bull that she had possession of some tapes ' ·Police Nab Boyf1·iend Of Mother SUN VALLEY (UPI) -Tile severed limbs and body of a 4-year.old girl were found today, strewn over a wide area-of-Sun-Valley•~-- It was the second dismembennent slaying in the Los Angeles area in less than a week. (Related story, page 5) PQlice~arrested a 31-year-<>ld man who lived with the victim's mother after he led officers to a gravel pit where one leg of Jittle Llsa Robin of North Hollywood was foond. The cause of death in the case has not been determined. But police said Perez admitted dismembering the body. All arm was found at the dead end of a street while another leg was fowxl in a wash at the bottom of La Tuna Canyon. A foot was found two miles up the canyon and the torso with the (See BODY, Page !) Orange •• Weadter Coast • ,,,,,.,._, . ·-···· ... -. Some high clouds at times other- wise mostly sunny Wednesday along the Orange Coast. Highs in the upper 60s at the beaches ris- ing to the low 70s inland. Lows to- night ,jn the low 50s. ·-'-. -. r. INSIDE 1'0Di\ Y Notice how much more you're payitig for lobster at restau- rants? And lloto much less you're getting for your 1noney1 The succulent seafood is joining the endangered list soon if poachers don't kn ock it. off. See story on Page 12. District Judge John J. Sirica today directed that Rose' Mary Woods, Pr,.;. dent Nixon's personal .secretary, be sum-of Watergate conversations for at lea st ~.~~r~ ~ :,~1~·~ ~ APPROVAL OF GERALD FORD tv.:o . w~ks this fall and possibly may c111•lfltc1 2t-N Mutv.1 l"uM• 11 APPEARS LIKELY, Page 4 still have them . ~:!':~~ ~; ~::::'c= 1: moned to testlf bo t NI , W 1 t ctT.he Wwoulhited Hbeouse declined to say what ::::,:~ •: ~ Mlrt•ts 1~~~ Y a u xon s a erga e 1 100 taken on request. e:nttrt•'-'.t' ,, rei..111o11 11 tapes and ·why tw,.-ef-..Uiem.-see6:i .f.Q-. -Tha-leslimonx na.me !l.e Sirica ruum~ PJ11•11t• 11.1J TIIN•-1• be . . ' , -;•1. • .......,_., :;......, • • -"'-f\t1"111t"~ "\It ,,.. WHtil>tr 4 · missing. a hearmg mto White House claims t~a · Hr o.,-..... · · 7 w--. Ntw1 1s." Slrica directed that 1t1W Woods be (See WITNF.SS, P•ge Z) Hw•sc.e ,, w"" Mn• • . Don't Forget To Vo·te; Polls Opeii Until 8 • • • ! •· • • 2 DAIL V PILDl s UP I Ttl.,.,.lt CHARGES DROPPED H. Rip Brown Rap Brown's Riot-Arson Rap Dropped ELLICOTT CITY, Md. "(AP) -Six, year.old riot and arson charges against"~ H. Rap Brown were dropped today and •. 1be onetime advocate of violence by blacks was sentenced on a misdemeanor charge for failin2 to appear for trial. The Dorchester County state·s at· tomey, William B. Yates, moved not lo prosecute Brown on a three-count indictment stemming from a summer '" night of disorders in 1967 in Cambridge, " Md. Brown had bee:n charged with arson, inciting lo riot and riot following an impassioned speech made to some 500 blacks that night. Violence followed and two blocks of the city were destroyed by fire . • Brown pleaded guilty _ to the misde- meanor of .failure lo appear ror trial in May 1970. lle was se ntenced to a maximum of one year, but the sentence was ruled to have begun on ~I. 16, 1971, and is now completed. Brown was a fugitive after failing to appear for the trial, but was captured. in 1971 during a robbery attempt. Howard <Aunty Circuit Court Judge James Macgill earlier today granted .. · the motion by the st.ate not to prosecute the riot and arson charges against the · rr ronner director of the Student Nonviolent • 1 Coordinating Committee. Yates, in an interview, expressed '.. reluctance to prosecute the felony '11"" charges. 1'"' "Alter 6'~·.years have elapsed ... I don't know why 1 should continue • IGssinger to Tunisia Con·fers 'in Morocco on Fragile Ce°:8e-fire . By TIELEN THOMAS . Ismail Fahml. in C.lro around 11 p.m. (I p.m. PD'!') TIJN IS (UPI) -Secretary of State · Belore Kls.slnger's arrival, Bouraulba Md the Kissinger·Sadat talks were set Henry A. Kissinger conferred twice in sa.ld he was willing to discuss his Tdeas for Wednesday morning. ' '. Rabal Wday wllh King Hassan II of oo peaco In the Middle East wllh any The Egyptian govemmenl spokemnn, Morocco on ways of strenglbening lhe Israeli repreoenlaUve, including Premier Ahmed Anis, said the resulls ol the fragil Middle East cease-flre, then new Golda Me1r. He also_ said he w~ willing Sadat-Kissinger talks will be "of para· here for a brief stop before going to to ~r on American televis1on with moWlt importance," but did o o t Galro and the most crucial phase of an Jsraeli interlocutor too discuss hls elaborate. Government sources said his quest (or peace. MiddJe East approach. Sadat would re.iterate bis demand that "The talks l had with his majesty These ideas, be told Parliament, are Israel wilhdraw to lJV! Oct. 22 cease-fire the king were very useful Md gave based on the United Nations' 1947 call lines and that Fahmi's Washington talks ror a partlUon of w~t was then c~~edb on thi s had been "encouraging." NINE EUROPEAN NATIONS Palestine inlD a Jew1Sh and an ~· They said an Israeli pullback had MEET ON OIL CRISIS, Pogo 4 slate. He said he would inlonn Kissinger been Ille primary aim of Faltmi 's of these ideas on the new Arab attnUde Washington talks but that there had me a greater understanding of the Arab point of view," Kissinger sai d before leaving the Moroccan capill . He v.•as expected to tal k briefly in Tunis with President Habib Bourguiba, one of the more moderate Arab leaders, before fl ying to Ca iro tonight for two days of conferences with President Anwar Sadat and Foreign Minister toward Ille t947 partltioo plan. •---·indi 1· J I Id J Bow'guiba said Sen. J. William ~' no ca ion srae w~?. . comp ~; Fullbright (!).Ark ) supported the t947 Sadat ha.• . threatened to fuµsh of! plan and "will ~'day perhaps become the Israeh~ if they.do oot pull back . president of the United States." 1ife~wh1le, Syria ~ported that two Sadat meanwhile met in Cai ro with formattons of Israeli planes attacked Fahrni 'to hear a ' report of FahmJ's Syrian Arm y ad vanced Positions on the Washington talks with Kissinger and Golan Heights today with "many" air President Nlxon Kissinger was expected to ground Shrike-type missiles but were · driven off by Syrian fighter planes and air defense systems. Nuclear Plant Disaster It w.as the first reported cease-fire violation on the Syrian front since the Oct. 22 cease-fire and coincided with Israeli reports of scattered fighting along the Suez Canal front where Israel said the EgypUan armed forces have been fully deployed for attack . Trustees Assail Lack Of Evacuation Plans By JAN WORTH Of tfle DallY Pit.t Sl•n Alarmed and irritated, trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District learn- ed Monday night that no evacuation plans have been offered yet for district schools in case of a lethal accident at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. Board Chairman George Whl\e lam· bast~_ the Atomic Energy Commission for "'apparently not having any concern for our children." "It's time the board took a very strong stand ," Trustee Robert HW'St aid • ' . .. The AEC owes us more information -they've given _ us almost nothing," he said. A proposed expansion of existing power generating facilities at the San Onofre plant south of San Clemente has been approved by every government agency except the State Coastal Zone Conserva- tion Commission. The existing plant Is three miles from Concordi a Elementary School. Three other school! are within six miles of the plant. Trustees said expansion of the plant might prompt them to abandon <An· cordia School A letter to the San Diego Regional 1.one Conservation Commission was drafted expressing the trustees' con- cerns. The commission has approved the expansion. "If satisfactory answers are not pro- vided regarding evacuation planning, the school district will have to consider the possibility of abandoning at least one of our schools," the !titer read. And the trostees mad.e it quite clear they believe the costs 10 the district of such a move should be borne by the AEC and the utility companies benefltlnglrom expaiWon at San Onofre. Board discussion Monday night began with a presentation by Lynn Harris Hicks, leader of a citizens ' group which so far bas . lost Its. battle 'to . stop the San Onofre expamion . "I'm feeling indignant aboul AEC I""' cesses these days," ~frs. Hicks said. "First they build the reactor, and then they decide bow to evacuate ~ en- dangered people. "The AEC bases Its decislom on how many people are involved," lhe ad ed. "the f~wer the people, the lest they An Israeli spokesm$ll in Tel Aviv said he bad "no lnfonnation" about the reported attack. The United States is kno\vn to have armed the Israeli Air Force with Shrikes, underning missiles that home on radar signals. U.S. pilots used them in the Indochina war in attacks on North Vietnamese surface-to-air missile sites. Reward for UFO Stirs Up Callers . CORVALLIS, Ore. (UPI) -The radio statk>n lhat offered $10,000 for any li ving space creature brought to its studio has been deluged with calls. Bob Houglum, owner and general manager of KLOO, said Monday that ooe caller from Penm:ylvania played a recording of a strange moan that he said was emitted by a nine-foot hairy thing-with red eyes running lhrough the woods. Houglum has had to imtall a speci al UFO telephone lo handle the calJs. He said numerous people have called to see if they can claim the reward for moon rocks or moon dust, but says he will only pay for a living creature. Listeners with information are in vited to phone (503) 753-5566, bu_t not collect. UPt Ttlttlfloto Northern California SAN FRANCISCO 'c API -Following up a ferocious blast of storrn y v.·eather 1.ha.t jnmmc:.'<1 traffic, cut Power and flooded many areas. lnterm ittellt rai n pe lted Northern califomla today .... ·hlle .heavy soow blan keted the mountains . The National Weather Service said the storm would ab11te by evening but pr edicted more showers and snow through Wednesda y. !\1inor flooding v.·ns reported lu Matin CoWlty and near Crescent Cily and heavy snow wamings \\'ere issued for the Sierra and the Mount Shasta.Siskiyou area. ' "We're going nuts in here." an ex· asperatL'CI California lllghv.·ay Patrol dispatcher said ~1onday as thousands of San Frp.ncisco evening commuters \vere stranded in traffic jams caused by numerou s accidents on rain·slicked streets. WARNING -Acting Attorney . General Robe.rt i1. Bork warns in testimony before the House Judiciary Committee that a Watergate prosecutor in de· pendent of the Justi ce Depart· ment could be, unconstitutional. . From Pnge I Brier power failures were reported in the Glen Park and . Twin Peaks nelghbor?w;>ods here and in . the Mill!> ~ Estate area Ol .Millbrea Monday night. ~1ore than 2.3 irlches of rain drenched dov.ntown San Francisco and the Oakland airport 1.tonday and early toda y. the National Weather Servi ce said. A total of l.13 inches of rsin fell at Stockton and one inch at Crescent City. WITNESS ... two of Nixon's conversatioll3 bearing on the acandal were not taped. The two con versations that the White House contends were not taped involved a telephone discussion Niuin bad with his campaign manager, John N. Mitchell, on J une 20, 1972 -three days after the \Vatergate arrests -and of a meeting with John \V. Dean Ill April 15. The \Vashington Post quoted tttlnamed White Ho use officials today as saying Nixon's lawyers might suggest to Sirica that he make public the substance of the tapes rather than only passing on reiev.ant portions to the Watergate grand jury. • Bull teSUfied that he had taken tapes apparently containing all of the con- versations subpoenaed by Watergate pro- secutors and the Senate Watergate com. mittee to Camp David, Md. for Nixon to review the weekend of Sept. 29. Bull said he returned "four or five" of them to the White House the following Monday but left the rest with ~fiss Woods. Sirica then intemipted to take over the queoliooing and asked Bull how long Miss Woods had Ille tapes in ber po6Session. "She kept them at least a week," Bull said. "Beyond that, 1 do not know." The weather service also reported .79 inch at Red Bluff, .69 at Sacramento and .39 at Eureka. The ismith River was back within its banks early today after some "very slight'' flooding Mondey evening at Dr. Fine Bridge. 10 miles nort h of Crescent City, the Del Nort e County sheriff's office said. No damage was reported as the water spilled into nearby low-lyi ng pastures. A travelers advisory was issued today in the ~tt. Shasta.Siskiyo u area for blow- ing and drifting snow above 3,000 and Sooof • ' , eel. - lntersi.te S was open , although a 20-mile section between Dunsmuir and Weed Was closed Monday due to bll1.:z:ard conditions. A weatherman said eiRht in· ches of snow, whipped by )5 mile-per· hour winds, fell in the area. Heaivy soow above lbe S.<XXI lo 7,00!'). foot level and strong soulherly winds are !....,.... through Wednesday In the Sierra Nevada north of Yosemite Na· tional Park. this (case), I don't have a vendetta." ... ,.1 The form er bla~~1 I!)\!itant 1e~er ls · ~---'-~-'-~----- serving a 5 to I5-yei!¥, term at New ZIEGL'ER TERMS cooalder Ille risk. · "A nuclear generatOr 11 mJles from Philadelphia was rejected as too close to a population center. But this one, two and a ball miles from the Capistrano Bay Area was approved because there are fewer people. Fret11P.ijeJ "Do You know what happened ID lho<o seven or dflht Ulpl!ll?!J~Slrlca ubd. ,,.. "No, sir," Bull replied. State routes 120 over Tioga Pass. 108 over Sonora Paa and 89 on the Lassen Loop were doled by snow Mooday, the state Division of Highways · said. Cbainl were required early today on U.S. 50 over ·Echo Swnmit, State Route f ·over Ebbete&i•Pllil IDd State 1 Route • over canon Pm. 1111 York's Attica Slate P(isQn following his · conviction for armed robbery of a New ;, ' York City liquor store in 1971 and the IT 'FOOLISHNESS' •r wounding of a policeman during the robbery. From Pqe I LIMITS ••• agreed no. "But tha t has lo be worth something," said Bonfa . "All we're really concerned about is the $5,000 spending limit." replied Coun· cilman Al Coen, who proposed the con- trol. "You ca n clarify the rest." 'Mle Newport ordinance limits cam- paign expenditures to 25 cents per registered voter, while the San Juan Capistrano law sets the limit at 15 cent_, per registered voter. Councilman Ted Bartlett. who began .-----the-whole""deb"ateafew v.·eeks ago after reading about the new Newport lav.•, had proposed a IO.cent-per-voter limit In Huntington Beach. c.oen suggested the flat $5,000 ceiling '" ., . ' .. " • ... • ,• ·fi• .~. "" :iu vj, "" . ... .41 .,,, since COWlcilmen could not agree on any more flexible fonnula . The most money spent in the 1972 election v.·as by George l.1cCracken, who was a mayor at the time and shelled out $3,980 in an effort to retain his council seat. lie lost. • OlAN•I COAST IT DAILY PILOT ni. Or1no• Cotti OAllY PILOT, wit!> wtll(:fl Ji f,Otnbl<!td 1'11t NtWl•Prnt, It PllbllshM II~ tt..t Or•no• Cot11 P1r1111111"'9 con1p9ny. se111· rtlt odllkllll t ro 1111Dlltllod, Mand•~ lhrougfl Prlll11, tor CDS!I Mt ... Ntwp0rl llffdt, H.,.,!11'19IOn llttth/FO\/lltl ln Vt U01, l ...... IHCll, lr.1~/Stdd!tbtck t i"d ~" Cltmtnlt/ ltn J\lll n C•11l1trt t10. A 1lnOlt l'flllo!WI Mtllofl It pAUsMll St h/1'1111"1 .ncl SunNn. f"41 11"lnci11tl pubtlshlno 11l•nt It 11 m Wftl 91y St~!, (Oii!• M ... , C•ll!Orllll, tHH. Rolt•ri N. Wttd P•ftldtnl .,., '""'llllllf J.,k R. C 11rl1y Vkt Ptftldtftl •nd Gtr>tt1I ~ Tito"'•' ic.,.,;1 fdl!Ot' TholG ... A. M11tphi110 M.tMtlll9 Edllll<' Ch1~11 H. Looi "ic:h•rJ 'p, Nill A11l1!1nt M..,._lnO El ilrln Offluo COtlf MM~ 1JO Well ltp S1rotl N_,, l t1e11 : nu ,,.,,.p011 91iu11w111 ~ ll1tdl: m Ffl'•I ,.....,..,. Hllllll!'rolall ltlCJI: 1111S fttd'I ~tl't $tft ci-"' JC! NOrfl\ II GeMIM 11: .. 1 Ttf111•••• 17141 Ml-4111 C ......... A"*fl .. 641·1671 ,,_ CM1!tl Attt• Sloll• tt UflM .... 4t2-44H •-~ Or•• C""'Y c-nltt 146-11.tf (#1rill!I ltll. Ottnot C-1 l"W!lthlftl C-•.' HI -••i.t. ll!wtr~tltlll, •1tw1tl ,...""' " 1111•• lb11Nt11' """' _, " ,~ wl"*'I tll"Cltl "" Mlultll OI t.ftft'fifll! _,,.,, ~ dau "'"'* ptlf .. Cottt MfMI, Ctll"""6. ~191"" ... <•"* .. u.u ""'"""'I "" IMH U If -"""1 Pft;htfo' ••fl11tU1t11 U.41 ._.w,. WASHINGTON (UPI) _-;-Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler to l d reporters aboard President Nixon's plane that, while the President is trying to work on matters other than Watergate, he "recognizes the importance of this foolishness." When newsmen , on the flight back from Key Biscayne, Fa., eipressed surprise Monday night at this aescrip- tion, Ziegler said : "I call it foolishneM and tragedy." "We reject Ibis as an immoral judg- ment .-ask the board to join us," she said. Truslees William EDquiit pointed oot that the threat ID local school children is already present. "If they can't give us an evacuation plan we'd better get drastic," he said. Dick Herr. principal of Capistrano School, said representatives of the district have been trying to get answers Imm the AEC on how ID evacuai. the school! sioce early spring. Firewood Fury Tree Cutting 'Burns' Mesan.s By RUDI NIEDZIEU>Kl 01 t111 D•ltr Piiot Stiff Let the cold winter come. Leonard Post has plenty of firewood. He'll be burning eucalyptus trees. The Jogs piled up behind his house at 1043 W. Center SL once were a stately stand of eucalyptu.s t~. About 65 of them stood behind a row of homes in the Ocean Vi ew Park tract of Costa Mesa until they were bulldozed lo make room for an industrial project. Post Isn't trying to fuel the controversy but he maintains the trees had to go. And were the irate homeowners to ex· amine the leltovers, their fury at the loss or the trees might be calmed, Post believes . "This is one of the !lumps I saved," sa id Post. point ing to the base of a eucalyptus tree which was rotted into two pieces. "About half of them were like that. These trees were standing within 40 feet of the homeowners' pro. pcrty and many of them were 50 feet tall . If just one or them had fallen over these people could have sued me." "The tops of some of them were dried out and full or termites which were flying around and could easily have invaded those homes over there," he added. But even though he has evidence to ,,,. prove that the trees were In bad shape, Post admits that this was not the major reason for razing them. A majority of tho,,e trees turned into firewood Oct. 26 were standing .alongside Center St reet, then a narrow strip of road leading from Whittier Street to Post's one acre plot to the rear. The 'road is designated as a private road on cily maps. Only 22 feet wide,· it required widening ID 50 teet before Posl could legally develop his property. "~ trees were litUng ln Center Street and Ibey woold have had ID go sooner or later," says Post. The trees went a little sooner because ' another property owner to the front of Post decided to put some indU!ltrial units on bis' land. Together Post and the other property owner decided to share the cost of widening the road. There were several more trees ln- eluding pines on the industrial site owned by Robert King which were nol in lhe way of the road. Some Costa Mesa city officials maintain the lndmtrlal p~ jecl could have been planned around them. Post believes the eucalyptus grove was originally planted as a windbreak for a fruit tree orchard. He said be maintained the trees over the years by cutting orr dead limbs when necessary. Eventually Post hopes to move out of his house and develop his property by putting up some slorage units. "Those trees would have had to go as soon as J developed my property," he said. · Nixon Parent Group Not PTA The pmot "°"" from Richard M. Nixon Elemeolary School that oerved soup at an Hlmpeech Nlxon" rally Satur.. day Isn't alllliated With lhe PTA (Parenl· Teacher Alsoclillon). A school o!ficial said today lhat its parents broke from the national PTA organization about one year ago to form the "Nixon Parent Assoclatlon." Parents from the YorbMUnda elem~ tary 1cbool sold aoup to raise money for a-visual equlpme.nt at a rally In Richard M. Nixon Parle, also In Yorba !Jnda, run by ihe Orange County Com- rtiiU.. tO Impeach Nixon. They were originally lnalrrectly Iden· Ufied .. being from lhe Pr A. 11te Daily Pilot regrell lhe error. \ BODY .•. head 3ttached was found at the summit or the canyon, another two miles away. Police searched through Ille early morning .hours for the missing arm ~hich was believed to be in the gravel pit. In custody ~ was William Perez, 31. an assembler for a Sun Valley trailer company. Police said Perez and his daughter lived with Gloria Vitali, 27, the mother of the vicUm and three other children . The suspect was picked up after his brother, Gilbert Perez, 25, of Arleta, told officers that Perez had gone to his' home, apparently telling him what happened. The older Perez then led officers to the gravel ptt. The dismembered body of a woman was found on a Topanga Beach area Friday. Her Identity was still unknown and a search was under way for the mising parts of the body -one leg, the head and both anns and breasts. I San Juan Council Tables Funding Plan for Adobe San Juan Capistrano city councilmen Monday night dealt a seJ_back lo___l!!e citizens group trying lo raise money to save a historic adobe house from destruction. The council voted 4-1 ID table a request by tbe Cilizens ID Save San Juan Adobes for pennission· to go door·to-door Cot- lectlng hinds !or their project. The structure in question is the Miguel Parra adobe on Ortep Highway, ooe of the city's oldest reflcs. The building is remarkably Intact although It was built in the early 1800s. The threat of des truction loomed when Leadership flomes decided to build a housing tract that includes the adobe site. The tabling J!Clioo headed o!J a S11g• geition-W-Coiillcilman Ed Cllel'l!lit" th>t the request for doo .No·dodr soliciting be rejected flally. "This is not the proper v.·ay to go about preserving these things, '1 ~rmak fumed. "1We've got lo get the cart behind the horse and get better organized. "Every time someone sees an old adobe wall, the citizens run helter skelte r to preserve it when what they shoud be doing Is building up some groundwork to an organized preservation effort ." Chermak also questioned the legal status of the Citizens to Save San Juan Adobes in tenns of collecting tax-deduc- tible don ations. The -Bright SUh • Shortages are occuring in industry is no exception. virtually every industry. The C<Jrpet Two factors are causing the shortage<. The demand is astrpnomical! Carpeting is no lon90r a luxury, but a necessity. Peopl<J are using corpeting in rooms which used to be tiled, such as kitchens, baths, dining rooms, and bedrooms. Ako, carpeting is installed outside, and even on the walls. Secondly, tho fibers .are in short supply due to overwhelming demand from not just the carpet industry, but ALL industry. We feel that there is a p o s i t i v e aspect to aO of this. The manufacturers are making bettor qualities with availabl<J yam, and much more of the junky stuff is di,.ppearing. It may appear that prices are higher. but actually you are just looking at BETTER CARPETING. - HOURS: Moo. 1'11111 TIJon.. t lo 5:JO ALDEN'S • CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 -NI. t lo t -SAT, t :JO lo 5 ( I I ' • ' TuHday, Novtmber fi , 1974 S DAILY PILOT .3 Grand Jury Urge·s Action on Campaign Limits By JACK B80BACK paip llmltations on contributions and °' "" ~11, l"l1et \1•" expendit1,1re1 . is clear unleu only the Citing the urgent need ror laws con-lndependenUy wealthy or those SUPl'Ql'led trolling political campaign speOding by special lntewt groops are to be limita an<L contributions, the Orange elected In Orange County.'.' County Grand Jury ha•· recommended The Jury requesta that the "'pervtaors that the Board of Supervisors set such seek the County Counsel's opinion on llmlts for county office secken. ., whether orange County, as 8 geoeral "Trad!Uonal methods or raising and Jaw co1mty, may, by ordinance impose expending huge sums of money to gaio ' on all elected county officers regulations elective office are under close scrutiny," on camwiJgn e1pendlt1;1res and con· · the Jury reoort read. "Pub1ic trust in tributions~ ·, govemmen~ officials has deteriorated If legai, lhe jury wants an ordinance as: news stories give substance tp the prepared at once . and If not }egaJ wants fear that acceptance of large campaign special state legislation sought to permit contributions Incur weighty obligations." such regulation. 'Ille jury added: "'Ille need for cam· '!lie i:eport points oul thal In 1972 A head of Schedule . Rapid Transjt Plans Narrowed Orange County Transit District's line following Beach Boulevard. alternative transit corridor study aimed -A bus.-0n·freeway plan which makes at providing hlg~speed rapid transporta· extensive use of freetA•ays Including San tion to the public is ahead of schedule. Diego, Garden Grove, Santa Ana and Transit district directors were told Newport freeways and the proposed Monday that 11 alternative plans have Corooa del Mar Freeway into the ex- been studied and reduced to four. The ls ting portion of the Newport Freeway. four will now be subject to further The Orange Freeway is also included evaluation and testing to select the best with its proposed. completion to the Garden Grove Freeway. one or comblnatioo. nie consultants said the selected plan In the first two stages ol the must include a network or mass transit alternative corridor study the actual ·and feeder transit routes designed to transportation vehicles (rail, bus or provide highly efficient p u b I i c other) are not being considered. The traMportaton service in 'j'O"ridors of initial pu~ is to establish the best heavy demand. corridors for sue~ high speed tra~it. . . The goal of the plan is to provide ·VTN, an Orange County .planning-cut· efficient public transportation to a major sullanl--flnn,_ and Alan .M. . Voorhees "sefmenl of the population thal need! &: Associates Inc., transportation con-it naw: to attract new riders thereby sultant.s, have come up wi\h these four alleviating automobile congestion and alternatives: pollution, and to assist in orderly and -1be minimal network plan which desirable growth and development. uliliz.es the old Pacific Electric right.of~ The consultants state that their evalua- way, the Santa Fe right-oC-~ay Crom lion process has made extensive use Santa Ana south to San Diego; the of. community participation through a Riverside Freeway from its western con-series of presentations and \\'Ork.shops nection with the Pacific Electric ali~ with numerous groups. ment to Riverside, and the Orange "Upcoming phases of the wor~ will Freeway to the Santa Ana River and continue. strmg utilization of community South on Fairview Street to the proposed interaction to evaluate alternative plans Corona de! Mar Freeway. and corridors," the plannen stated. -The maximum rail network which That process will take place during uses the Pactlic Eleebic right-of-way; November aod Decembtt 1'ith a finalized for the UJs AngeJes..Santa Ana connection technical plan produced early in January, and its existing spur lines to LOng Beach, they said. Huntington Beach, Fullerton and La The consultants cautioned that where Habra. 'Ibls attemd"9 ill said to have hMpOft•lfon oorridor9-<h1Ye been iden- good interregional service tying .Los lified with built-up urban are as , Angeles, Orange Ciounly and. San Diego coordinated new development a n d and Orange County to Riverside County. redevelopment planning and prcr Although existing railroad right-61-ways gramming techniques are very irn- are featured, a .rail mode assumption portanl. · Js not made. "Many opportunities may arise to prcr -A plan which makes extensive use mote new development and strengthen of the existing San Diego, santa Ana, the old," the consultants added. and Riverside Freeways aa well as the However, Martin Bourman of the con- Pl--1 Corona del Mar extension ol suiting team warned !hat ii is dilllcull the Orange Freeway. In addition, service to plan a transit corridor wiihOut over to Huntington Beach is provided on a encouraging new development. * * * * * * -Mini--buses Preferred Over Vans in System Use of mini-buses with capacity of 17-23 passengers rather than seven to 12 passenger vans is more suitable for Dial-A-Ride operations because the buses can be expected to last five years and the vans but two years. Orange County Transil District diree- * * * OCTD Patronage Shows Increase In Past Year Patronage on Orange County Transl! District bus lines serving Balboa Peninsula, Laguna Beach and Newport Ctnter-UCI have·lncreased dramatically in the past year, Gordon "Pete" Fielding, OCTO general m a n a g e r reports. The Sanla Ana·Balboa line bad 23,'lh passengers In September of this year compared with but 7 ,942 a year ago.' 'Ille Laguna Beach line had 42,5'11 paying riders in September compared to 10,300 in the same month in 1972, and the line which services Balboa, Newport Center, UC Irvine and South Coast Plaza had 101268 customen in September com· pared to 2,821 the same month in the prevk>us year. Overall patronage was down In Sep- tember compared to Augusl but Fielding attributed this to sludenta returned to school. "Young ~pie we~ not making tho usual trips to lhe Beach as they were In the summer," Fielding explained. "For example our Harbor Boultvard line was Cit from nine ICheduled trips to three In September.". Fielding allo said thal the ex- perimental Dlsl·A·Ride bus system In La Habra was gaining acceptance rapid- ly with an average patronage of over 400 a day and a peat ol mo"' lhan 500 l)MleOgera on some days. Th• district la· now lonnulatlng plans to extend the DlaJ.A·Rlde conctpl to otbtr county 1cHles .. tors were told Monday that buses are more cosUy to buy ($\4,000 to $32,000 per bus ) but this is not so critical when federal capital grant funds are used to pay 80 percent of the initial cost. Vans seating hl.tt seven to 12 passengers on the other hand cost only· $5,000 to 110,000 · bul can be depended upon to last only two years before replacement compared to the buses' five years. Operating coat per mlle is a~ul the same, the directors were told. Additional disadvantages of vans are the more cramped space making them unpopular with elderly patrons . or the disabled. The transit district staff recommended that the board authorize a vari-type vehicle to be leased so that more in- lormatipn could be eolrected in a side by aide comparison with minl-blDI!. · Such a trial would provide the district with actual operating costs figures on local runs and information oa user preferences of the two vehicle types. Directors decided, however, to get more infonnation on the varioos Vans offered be[ore approving the leasing or one for the test. - In other business Monday, the transit district directors: -Authorized the general ~manager to solicit proposals for a stu<b' on the proper location and size of a downtown Santa Ana bus tennlnal. -Approved a study a Dlal·A·Rlde expansion program to other county com- munities. At present only La Habra has Dial-A-Ride services. Charity Begim A t Home for Them NO'l'l'INGllAM;' England (UPI) - Richard Bloom[ield has objected· to the plan of hil daughter Llnda Mii a girl friend, both II, to sell kl..,.. ror a Christmas charity In a Nottingham 1q~are. ''l'm not having dirty old men kissing Llnda," llloomlield aaid Monday. "Some would have returned for more.,.,. } I candidates ror two .supervlsorial posts spent in excess of $600,000 with one candidate spending over $200,000. To correct such excesses the jury recommends: -Contributions by Individuals should be limited to l500. -Anonymous contributions should not exceed $50 per person. -Maximum expenditures for in- cumbents per district should be the total of registered voters times 45 cents. -Challengers should be limited to five cents more per voter, or 50 cents. The limitations on contributions and spending would apply to candidates for the Board of Superv1sors and all coun- tywide elected ofricials. Two Orange County cities already have enacted lin1itations for city . office seekers .. Newport Beach se t a limit or 25 cents per registered voter. San Juan Capistrano set a limit of 15 cents. the grand jLlry ana.lyied spending in the 1972 campaigns and applied the limitations figures for a comparison. In super1,1isorial district one, incumbent Robert Battin spent $210,688 last year. Under the proposals he would have been limited to $58, 168, a difference of $152,520. The jury made similar comparisons with spending by Battin's general elec· lion challenger, Willia m Wenke and fo r Fire Rages i n ltadia n apolis defeated incumbent \VUUam J. Phillips In supervlsorial district three and his successful challenger, Ralph Diedrich. PbUllps spenl 197,3 14 and Diedrich 1172,432. Under the proposed rormula Phllllps would have been limited to $69.127 and Diedrich to $77,586. The jury put aside proposed public financing of cam~lgns as "a possible long term answer' but warns that viable and enforceable expenditure limitations and full disclosure are needed today. To insure compliance with its proposed l!lw, the Grand Jury proposes "stringent penalties" on violators. Proposed is a fine of no less than $1 ,000 for violators of the proposed Firemen try to contain a fire (top pliot0) that swept through five buiJdings in downtown Indianapolis - apparently started by a welder's torch -as• resi- ". dents or the Washington Hotel (below) flee amidst a shower or water from fire hoses. The noon-hour blaze caused mi11ions of dollars in damages to at least seven buildings. • Dana Point Wine Shop App1·oved By Coast Panel A new wine shop in Dana Point was approved ~fonday by SOuth Coast Regional Zone C o n s e r v a t i o n Com- missioners. A permit to construct the 3,900 square foot building at 24292 Del Prado St. in Dana Point Village was granted Paul B. Hofer, after Commissioner Ronald Caspers' queStiOns were answered. Caspers, of Newport Beach, mentioned that the Brookside Winery Is already located across the street. Told !hat lhal would be abandoned for the new, more accessible store, Caspers replied, "I was afraid it would be the wine capital of the world. This is no Napa Valley." The project, to be done in "Mexican Colonial" architecture, includes 20 park- ing spaces, which meets the com• mission's retail parking requirements. Skull Dugg ery At Saddleback An anthropology instructor at Saddleback College may have to i lake the topic of today's le<::ture right off the top of his bead. He certainly won't be able to use the consignment of skulls that recently arrived at the school and were left in his classroom. Orange County Sheriff's officers are today investigating their theft. ordinnnce and lneligibillty for five years to hold eleetive o!IJC<. In con<luslon, the jury notes lhal Jn 1974 the county will experience a polllical contest involving three supuvisorial seatJ. "By paulng ao ordJJ\ance with a cell· ing on total campa.Jgn expenditures and on Individual contributions the Board of Supervisors would be returning the electoral process to the citizens and would be encouraging people-orienttd grass roots campaigns." The jury feels that such action could significantly raise the interest and con- fidence of the Orange CoWlty citizen in his government. Her Tr ys ts With Police 'Onl y 18?' MEMPms, Tenn. (UPI) -City police director Jay Hubbard has denied that a blonde teen-age girl from Arkansas had sexual relations with up to 300 l\femphis policemen in September and October. He said Monday that weekend lie detector tests showed many discrepan- cies in statements by Charlotte Tyler. 19, of Paris, Ark ., and that investigation has indicated "only" 18 officers might have had sexual encounters with the young woman. The fonn er Marine general said police learned that Miss Tyler, who had a press conference to discuss the sex scan· dal Sunday, has a "medical problem" which is part ·of the cause .for her sexual activities and that , she , needed 'sympathy -not exploitation. "l am still trying to · find someone. who will express sympathy or com- passion for this troubled young woman instead of feeling the need to can her 'Charlotte the Harlot', or playing games with her name in rhyme or song," said Hubbard. Hubbard and an Episcopal minister said the lie detector tests, given before the news conference and Miss Tyler·s retwn home late Sunday, showed that she did not know how many officers she had been involved with sexually. "She ·thought she had been here 91h weeks and had had sex with about two policemen a day," said the Rev. Donald Mowery. "But there is no way to know if she is telling the truth," adtled Mowery, director ol..,13. group which helps un- derprivileged youth here. Miss Tyler is the central figure in an official investigation of possible sex- ual misconduct on the 1,100-member police force. Building Permit Cutback Urged Until Approved In an attempt to resolve the confiict between jurisdiction of the Coastal zone Conservation Commission and local building and land use laws, Supervisor Ronald Caspers has suggested that no county building permits be issued until the State Conservation Commission has approved the projects in question . Caspers will forward his recom- mendation to lhe Board of Supervisors this week suggesting that the county Director or Building and Safety be directed lo hold up pennits until com· mission approval is given . The supervisor says much conrusion has been created in satisfying the regula- tions governing building construction in the l ,~year coastal wne because of the overlapping jurisdictions. Bank Hit-$10,000 SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -Police say three gunmen robbed a Bank of America branch of $10,338 l'1onday. Witnesses told officers the three entered the Fillmore and Clay streetS branch and one leaped onto a teller's counter, ord er i n g employes and customers to "Freeze, or we 'll blow your heads off!" Fede1·al Officials Diff e1-- On Policies Over Reb ozo WASHINGTON CAP! -Several [ederal o£licials concede that recent regulatory actions have given President Nixon ·s friend Charles G. "Bebe" Rebozo a financial monopoly in Key Biscayne, Fla . But another official disagrees and denies any impropriety. federal insurance to a. state-chartered savings and Joan association to be housed in Rebozo's building on Key Biscayne. Two directors from Rebozo' bank are also directors of the savings and loan association. Nine Citize~ Appointed To School Committee Thomas Bomar, chairman of the Federal Home Loan &nk Board , said Monday there was no Improper contact wJth 8nyone infuentlal. He also denied that the board knew ·when It approved insurance for a Rebozo- t'Ol'.Ulected saving and loan associati on that the 'Comptroner of the Currency was simultaneously con~ldering an ap- plication for a bank ,to compete with Rebozo's. Ultlriiately, the ,comptroller rejected the application, leaving Rebozo's bank as the only one In Key Biscayne. Bomar defended the decision to grant Anaheim !\fan Dies Of Cycle Injuries Gary Lc!e Baumgart, 'll, of Anahclm,. died ~1onday of lnjurits reeelved when his motorcycle lrashed on the Santa Ana Freeway Sundicy night . the Orange County Coroner's of£ice reported . Baumgart was northbound on lhe freeway near Ball Road in the Anaheim area when he evidently lost control and struck a gua rdrail . " Nine citizens from the Capistrano Unified School Di.strict were appointed Monday night to a new committee to help plan for growth In the schools. Named to the Growth Planning Advisory Commission COPAC) are Diane Watson, Laguna Niguel: John Flood, ~/ua;oi;;;pls~'r:; ~~i:i;'.'11e~ Cle~nte; and Phyllis Shainman, San Juan caplstrano. Also Mike Brady, C.plstrano Beach: Judy Davin, Mission Viejo: Barbara Kroglus, Laguna Niguel; and Bob Greco, Dana Point. Alternates include Herb Bowman and Marshall McClure, both or Oana Point, and Amelia Grant or Laguna Niguel. The cornmlsslon, selected from a field ' " of 19 applicants, will have a full-time secretary paid for by the distri ct. The new group will have the job of making recommendations to the board of trustees on site acquisition proposals for new schools, when and how to flnanc~ schools, and prosg>sals for attendance . boundary chanses. 8obert McCollum, chairman or the nominating committee that proposed the nine appointees, will be temporary chairman of the commission until permanent one Is elected. "We are very· gratified at the quaH1v of the· interest in this committee," said G<org• White, chairman or the trustees. McCollum urged the board '° "mo,·e expeditiously and accepl these recom- mendalions In their entlmy -before the distri ct double~ In s!zt again." · \ . ) 4 DAILY PILOT Tutsda~. Nowmber 6, 1974 I .... ~ ~ Coas tIDg ,~, ···~ "'" : •): '\~ ·::.~··,, ··h ,·.~·.'• .... .. ·,,_.,.. Tom "-urphine ., ··•.;,: ... ,., • Of Voters And Coyot es ELECTION DAY, '73: D~n\·n came on clear and cold on this balloting day :ilong olir Orange Coast and that's more than you can say for the politicians \\•ho ha ve spent recent times hooting at us all about ProPosition 1, the tax iniliative. The weather is clear but Prop. is muddled. Whatever it is. we either have it or haven 't got it by 8 o'clock tonight. That's when the polls close. Then we get to go on to the larger question. PROPOSITION I !hus d~patched, !hat bigger question becomes, "What will Governor Reagan and Assembly Speaker i1oretti find to verbally thrash ea ch other about now?" Frustrated in their efforts to really explain this tax thing we're voting on, the two protaa;onists in this high drama finally resorted to first political prin- ciples. They said bad things about each other Governor Reaga n, who favors Prop. I. declared that the opponents are just big.spending poliLicians "with their snouts in the publi c trough who. if not controlled, will approve $2.3 billion in new (tax> spending next }'ear." NOT TO BE OlITDONE, Speaker J\foretti said of Reagan, "Those arc the rantings of a desperate man who thought he had an absolute, sure winner and flow is petrified." Listening to all this, you wonder if Reagan or l\.1oretti really care that much about Prop. 1. You get the sneaking notion that maybe they care more about Reagan and Moretli. And which one might occupy the Big Throne in Sacramento for the next four years. Anyway, it's possible that both are simply attempting to drum up a lot or interest in today 's election. I ARRIVED AT my polling place aboul half an hour after it opened. Normally, I try to arrive about the time the election workers unlock the place in order to avoid the rush. This morning. I didn't figure it would be necessary. That \\Pas the best political prediction rve made in eight years. They had a half-dozen or those nev.' cardboard voting bootM set up. The kind you use once and then throw away. Chances are good by the time th is election is over, they'll still have fi ve brand-new booths. You could have fired a ca nnon through that precinct place and hit nary a Republican -much less a Democrat. WELL, TOO BAD if you can't get e~ited about this voting. Maybe you need a distraction , like \li'hat happened in Costa Mesa just yesterday. Th ree coyotes got loose from a local pet store and were out playing in early-morning commuter traffic. Costa Mesa police and hun1ane officers chased the wily ones for awhile and finally made good the capture. One of our photographers also captured the likeness or one beast on filn1. In the photo, there he was. being held by an officer. The coyote's front legs spread askev.·. his head hunched forward in disconsolate fashion . mou th turned down. ears flat out lo the sides. eyes glazed . Come to think or il. that old coyote 's expression seemed famil iar. 11e looked a lot like a typical California voter. C11rtail11ae 1at Seen Arabs Pressure Canada From Wire SerYlcta Arab lhreals may force Canadri to stop shlpments of some oil to the northeastem United States. The oil in question is ref ined in East Coast facilities speeifically set up to serve the United States. CANADA'S ENERGY minister, Donald l\lacDonald. said ~·londay that diplomatic contacts indicate the Arab ,nations st ill list Canada as "neutral" despite its oil exports to the United States. But he said the. Arabs might object to the re-exporting of oil to New England since over one-fourth is imported from the Arab slates. MacDonald said if exports to the Uni ted .states Is banned, the refineries could satisfy eas tern Canadian markets, which are expected to have a difficult time this winter meeting heating oil and gasoline needs. The nine Common ~1arket countries today called on Israel to pull back to the Oct. 22 Middle East cease-fire lines. THE COUNTRIES' fore ign ministers also said any ~Uddle East peace agree- ment should be based on !he 1967 U.N. resolution calling for Israeli withdrawal from Arab territory it oceupied in the 1967 war. The ministers' statement appeared to lean considerably further to the Arab side than most popular opinion in the member countries, v.•hich has shown sympathy for the Israeli cause. In other news of the international energy crisis: -Japan, racing a Joss of 40 percent of its entire oil imports due to the Arab oil production cutback, today urged immediate Israeli withdrawals to ter· on Oil ritory he!~ before_ the 1961 Middle East War. THE JAPANESE cabinet took the ac- tion at the request of foreign minister 1'1asayoshi Ohira. It edged the cOuntry further along the road to diplomatic support for the Arab countries in the 1973 conOict. -Rog er Dreyer, execuli\•e vice presi- dent of the Ohio Petroleum 1'1nrketcrs Association, predicted gasoline rationing would begin in the United States within 60 to 90 days. "It is a dead certainty ," Dreyer said. -Standard Oil of Ohio cut gasoline supplies to all customers by IO percent, at least for the rest of November. -Iowa Gov. Robert D. Ray said some Iowa schools .may have to close this winter because of the fuel shortage. He ordered thermostats turned down and lights turned off when not needed in the state house. -DENf\.f.WK'S provincial board of trade told;S1ibpkeepers not to turn on Christmas lights until the end of the month . The board also said a total ban on special Christmas lights may be possible. -President Nixon today sought bipartisan support for an energy policy in which all Americans v.•ill be asked to share sacrifices so that none "'ill suffer drastically from looming fuel shortages. The President. cen tering much of hi s attention on thi s proposal, which he expects to announce this week, called a cabinet meeting later today on energy and other matters and plaMed a meeting Wednesday with congressional leaders of both parties. Even Bayh Changes Ford Seen as Sure Thing At Windup of Heai·ings WASHINGTON fU PII -Two days cf nationally televised hearings on Rep. Gerald R. Ford's nomination for vice president left the House Republican leader today an apparenl shoo-in for confirmation. but scattered opposition continued to be heard. The Senate Rules Committee' finished two days of grilling Ford Monday and heard a Democratic senator say he has changed his mind and will probably support Ford. IN ADDmON, a parade of JO House members from both parties praised and endorsed Ford as the panel prepared to go behind closed doors \Vednesday to hear additional witnesses. The com· mitlee did not schedule a meeting today. Sen. Birch Bayh ([).Ind.). author of the Senate version of the 25th amend- ment which provides for Senate and House approval of a president's nomina- tion to fill a vacancy in the vice presidefl.. cy, told the committee Monday he had planned to vote against confirmation prior to Ford's appearance at the start of hearings Thursday. "I am prepared to say now that if this committee does not reveal anything nev.·. other than what you have already covered, I am prepared to go alon g \\'ith the nomination," said Bayh. "I was very pleased with the way he discu.ss- ed executive privilege." FORD lfAD said that if he v.·ere president and a court wanted Whit e Jfouse documents such as the Watergate tapes to prove or disprove allegations of criminal violations he "·ould comply v.·ith the cou rt order. "I \\·ould be more comfortable if v.·e had a man before us whose voting record v.·as more C()mpatible with my views on issues such as health care, education. end the war1 Supreme Court jsutices and such things, but as author of the 25th amendment I must say the intent was not to vote for con- firmation or against because or a voting recont but whether you feel the nominee. is qualified," said Bayh. bne House member who thinks "Ford's voting record should disqualify him said today Nixon should withdraw Ford's name and nominate instead former At- torney General Elliot Richardson. "Congress would confinn Richardson immediately. Then the President should resign," said Rep. Jerome Wald ie (0- Calif.), in a statement he inserted in the Congressional Record . "THE PEOPLE have ru; Jtlidence in the present administration, and any individual as closely identified with President Nixon as is Gerald Ford will suffer from that lack of confidence," said Waldie. Ten other House members, appeared in person 'before the Senate panel to endorse Ford and urge early action on his nomination. FIGHTING COCK KILLS MAN, 66 SINGAPORE (UPI) -Lim Ah Kim. a 66-year-old former pedicab driver, died Sunday from wounds inflicted by a fighting cock. neighbors reported tcxlay. They said the cock planted its spurs into Lin's leg in the backyard of his home. Lim waited two days before he sought treatment and the wounds became infected. He died after being admitted to the hospital for trea tmen t. Rocky Mountains Freeze Suo'w Bla1ikets Parts of Orego11, W cts hington State Tempe rature• Hltll Lo• ,..lll•n• .. " All•ntl " " 81kff!!o~ld " " l!losron .. " l ufl•lo " " Cl'llr!Oltl " ll ~l'llcf<lll ll " lnclnMll " te ... 11no " " 11111 " " r,::rt• ., " "'' " IS r1N111ll1 " ., . ., ... " N Honoll.llU " .. ~ktoftV~I' 11 " 1-1 IY ~ ~~· " l! • " " NI Wiii= ~ .. M l'lllfd • " NIW rlflM " ~ Ntw York .. ~lll'IOml Cllv " " moh> " .. ~I"' Jlr1 "' 11 ~ .. 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Jel1 2:0lt.m. • Hospitalb :ed Singer Pearl Bailey collapsed shorUy after her first show at the Tropicana Hotel Monday night and was rushed to a ho s· pita!. The 55-year·old enter· tainer was placed in intensive care -but only because she had a previous history of heart ... problem_s. ________ _ FBI Probing Saxbe Ties To Criminal? -DAYTON, Ohio (AP ) -The Dayt-0n Daily Ne ws says the FBI is probing ·a link betv•eeo. Sen. Wilµam B. Sax be, President Nixon's attorney general· designate, and slot machine manufac· turer Sam W. Klein of Cleveland. Kl ein, who donated $2,500 to Saxbe's 1968 U.S. Senate campaign, is the large.st shareholder in Bally Corp. of Chicago. "'hich !1lanufactures slot machines. ONE OF Klein's early associates in Bally "'as Gerardo Catena. The Daily News said police describe Catena. no longer with the firm. as a chief or organized crime on the East Coast. In a co pyright story on Monday. 1he Daily News said the FBI has asked for a copy of a letter the Ohio Republican wrote attesting to Klein's reputation. "I think him to be a person worthy of trust," the Daily News quoted Saxbe as writing about Klein . The paper said Saxbe's comment \\'as contained . in a Sept. 15, 1969, letter to the Nevada Gaming Control Board. THE DAILY News said Klein had listed Saxbe as a reference in an ap- plication for a Nevada gaming license. The Daily News said the Jetter states that Saxbe's acquaintance with Klein stems from a business deal while Saxbe was Ohio Attorney ~eneral. The newspaper said Saxbe wrote the letter while ownin~ 600 shares of Bally stock. Saxbe sold the stock in 1970, the paper added. Sk ylab 3 ·crew H.as Some Repair Work to Finish CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (APl Like almost everyone moving Into a used home, the Skylab 3 astronauts v.ill have a few repair jobs to handle wllen they rocket up to the orbiting space station Saturday. ' The chi er tasks will be , to serve a leaky refrigeration system and to fix a stuck antenna on one of. the earth resources experiments. The ]alter will require one or two space walks by two of the men. Astronauts Gerald P. Ca r r, William R. Pogue and Edward G. Gibson have been practicing repair jobs in simulators 31 the Johnson Space Center, Houston. Tex., and at the Marshall Space FUJ?:ht Center. Huntsville. Ala. Th ey are to fly here Wednesday fro1n. f-louston to make" final preparaLions for their launching at 8:40 a.m. PST Satur· day. Th ey hope to remain aloft a record 85 days during man·s third and final visit to the Skylab space station. Discussing the repair work, mlssion commander Carr told newsmen. that soon after the astronauts link up with the station they will service the refrigeration system with a fJuid called coolanol. Most of the fluid has leaked slowly from the system. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Otllvtry of the: Dally Piiot h vuarantttd . ~·•·'rW•rr II ''" .. 1111 .._,.. ffUr 1"11« .., Jilt Jt.m .. (t ll •11111 ,.., "" wm M N1utfll It '°"' (Ill• lrt hllll ... 111 '*"II·"'· Sllll~IY •11111 • .,..,.,, If 'I'" .. 11t1 l'ftllft Yf¥I' CtlY '" t 1.ffl , J11un11y, 1r t a,11'1, •11M1y. Cfll aftt 1 et,.-WIN M ~I It '"'· C:•lh .,.. lfllll'I ••11111 It t.11'1, I Ttlepl!Onts MMI Ortllllt (Miity AtlJs .. .,, • MNftl Nerlllw11I Mu11llfttlell ltl<ll •114 Wt1tml111!11' .... '*'lnf 5-11 Cit-It, Ct,111'1""' IHCll, It• J•lll CIJttlrlM, 'Ot111 lt'tM!, SfflJI l .. llllt, L .. -Mltlllt .... .,,_..it Ju ry' Acquits Mercy Ki ller ' -FREEllOJ.D, N.J. !AP) ~·"The only crime Lester l.s guilty o~ was havin~ l\18 power to reason ov~whelmOO by events,'' Lester ZvgmaniAk's attomev told a Suoorior Court jurv before It acquilted the young man of slaying his parolvzOO broth er. 1 THE JURY of seven men and Ci\'C women deliberated 2~ hours on Tuesday before ucquilting Zygmonlak, 23, on ~unds of temporary insanity. lie hud betn charJ:;ed with tlrst de~ree murder. Zygmaniak admitting killing his 26· yea r-old brother, George, wilh a shot~un blast last June as he lay in a hospital bed, paralyzed from the neck down as the result of a 1notorcyclc accident. The shooting was described by friends and relatives as a mercy killing. "J feel relieved a lilllc. bit." 7.y1?1naniak said after the verd ict. "I feel much better. That's all I want to sny no1v:· lN lllS CLOSING arguments, defense attorney Robert Ansell pleaded with the jury to release Lester "not on pit y, not on sympath y. but on th e evidence. h1alcolm Ca rton. First Asst. !1«lonmouth County Pro.c;ccutor. told the jury tho! the state had proved prcn1cditated murder, and he ask£!11 th<' jurors to ';do what's right ... do wh at's honest ... There is not hing in Ne\\P ·Jersey la\v th.it says you cn n take the la\\P into yo ur own hands.'' In his testimony, Lester admitted car· rying a concealed sawed-off shotgun into the hospital and shooting his brother in the head. "I \\'ALKED over and asked him ir he \\'as in pain," Lester told the jury '·He nodded he was. I asked. 'A lot of pain, Goorge?' He nodded again. ·•1 went to him and I said , '\\'el l. I'm here today to end you r pain. Is that all right \\'ilh you?' He nodded yes, and the next I knetv I had shot him." E11en1y R~cl{ets B o1nl1a~d Soi1th Viet11an1 Ai1· Base SAlGON (AP) -A rocket attack before dawn loday on the Bien Hoa alr base killed a soldier and a child, wounded 22 persons and destroyed three FS-fighter·bombers, the South Viet- namese military con1mand reported. The command said 23 . of the 122m1n rockets hit the ba~ 15 miles northeast or Saigon and 12 exploded in civilian areas near it. Among the wounded were four dcfcc· tors from the Viet Cong. TllE ATIACK, first on the South Vi et· namese government's biggest ai r hasc since the Jan. 28 cease.fire, v.·as believed to be in retalialion for government air attacks on Viet Cong territory. A Vi et Cong spokesman in Saigon rejected a government spokesman 's cla im that the shelling signa lled a new general offensive by North Vietna1n and !he Viel Cong. Bul the Conununist spokesman added that the Viet Cong "v.·ill not stanCI "'ilh arms folded" v.·hile government troops \1iolate the cease-fire. At least 100 or the 1''5 fighter-bombers are based at Bien Hoa, and throughout !he morning many of them were taking orr to bon1b suspected Viet Cong rocket sites. The Saigon gove rnment has been predicted a new Communist offen si ve for v.1eeks. and in the last six: weeks the North Vietnam ese and Viet Cong have captured a nun1be r of government camps and fire bases. Dul there has been no major increase in lhe general level of fighting and no sign of a general offensive like the one In the spring or 1972. T\\'O !'>EIG11BORING can1ps 125 miles nonheast of Saigon, Bu Bong and Bu 'Pran{l. were O\·errun ~•londay. The go,·ernment reported today that 44 of Bu Bong's 150-man garl'ison had reached goverrunent lines. ,\bout 260 more men fron1 lhe two can1ps are missing. In Cambodia, \Vestern diplomatic ,sources warneJ today that the North \'ie tnamese lm,·e anlassed enough sup- plies via the llo Chi !\1inh trail to carrv out simultaneous of fensives in both Canlbodia and South Vietna1n. The sources said Cambodian govern- ment troops have the su pplies to with- stand an offensive and recruitment of soldie rs "seems to bl:' going pretty well," the sources said. The gorernmcnt reported 1nilitary suc· cesses on th~ outskirts of Phnom Penh today but in the city a grenade explosion in the Olympic marketplace killed t}\'O persons and \1·ouralC'd ninr , poliei! of- ficial s said. It v.'<ls the sixth grenade l'x:plosion in nine days in Ptmom Penh. CA1\IBODIAS rcbt:'ls and North Viet· 11an1esc troop' are expected 10 launch an offensive \l'ithin about a month or !11·0. depending on ho1v Jong it take.:; for the ra iny season to <'nd and the diplomatic sources said "there is a sc ramb le on bolh sides for manpower." South Vietnamese President Ngyuen Van Thieu repeatedly has predicted the No rth \'ietnamese will launch an of- fensive in South Vietnam in early 1974. '• Bµby M oses Ad opte d Sister Joan Marie of Columbus hospital in Chiugo holds Baby Moses Ibc Infant who was abandoned on the bank s o! a lagoon July 30. Th~ Illinois Department of Children and Family Services said Monda).' .that Beby Moses has been adopted . Nurses named him after the B1bllcal bally because be was found on the water's edjle. • • ' Convict Suspect In Deaths MARTINEZ (UPI) -On the basis of finccrprints, the Contra Costa County district attomey has named a convict aS the prime suspect In the ..... mW'd eD of a 10Ciallle and I' her son. District Attorney Wllllarn O'Malley said Monday that the f i n ger pr i n t s of Leroy 1 Brec k e nr i d ge , ~. a hairdres&er, matched thoae ( BRIEFS ) \ 1ow1<1 in the s ocialite'• BART Service Begins· rans a ck e d home and automobile. Commuters line p\alfonn in the Bay Area Rapid Transit System's Daly City Sta- Breckenridge, convicted of t1on as service began Monday on the seven and one-half-mile Sa.p. Francisco-Daly lbe 12.:ioo holdup of a Pacillc City Line. Trains were filled on the first day and traffic on the freeway wbich Gu and Electric Co. offi"ce parallels the line was noticeably lighter. The final link of the 75-mile system will be put into operation in mid-1974. . IA RlchmOlld. curnnUy ls ' 1n ___ .:._ __ .:._ ___________ _:__ _______ _ the Calilomla MedlcarFacillly at Vacaville. I TuHdai, No"Jembtr 6, 1974 DAILY PILOT 5 Welcottaed Bottle Haldeman SupportsNixon . LOS ANGELES (API -the timing of \he tribute, Gri£- Former White House Chief of fin told reporters before enter-- Staff H. R. Haldeman, spea k· Ing the reslaurant : ing to friends and relatives at a privat~ hmchoon in his "lf you're going to do honor, reaffirmed his faith in ·something for a friend, this President Nixon and predicted · would be the time, don't you the Watergat e tapes will help thi nk so?" prove the lnnocence of himself Griffin said afterwards that and lhe President. Watergate was the primary topic of Haldeman's informal !J>C"Ch, whkh reportedly lasted about 40 minutes. The few-guests who would com- ment on the talk 'said Jfaldeman did not reveal any new information. The aU-male luncheon, P..lon- day at Perino's, one of the city's mo st elegant restaurants, attracted about 70 friends , former b u s i n e s s associates and relatives. They gathered in a private room that was not open to the news media. Haldeman's speech was "just generalities, He reaffirmed in the most intelligent ma nner his great fai th in the Presi· dent." Several guests who asked that their names not be used reported that Haldeman said in his talk that Nixon never int ended his tape rtt0rdings to be reviewed by anyone because they were for his personal use Jn the future . He was reported to have said that the President did not like stenographers at his private meetings and didn't feel staff members could ac- curately reconstruct an entire conversation. Among the guests ~'ere fonner presidential ad viser Robert Finch, former White llowe Communications Chie r Herbert Klein, Los Angeles City Counc;ilnu1n John Fer· raro, ChanctUor Ch a r I es Young of the University of California at Los Angelos, Publisher George Hearst Jr. or the Los Angeles Heratd·Ex- amincr and Franklin D . ~1urphy, board chairman of Times-Mirror Corp. Many of the guests declined to identify themselves to reporters who were trying to compile a guest list. One man v.•ho v.·as asked his name as he went into the restauran t turned lot the rf!porlers and. in a reference to llaldeman, snapped. "\\Thy don't you leave the guy alone?" Still No I den tity In Brutal Murder LOS ANGELES !AP) -Highway. The head. bo th Police were still trying toda y arms, one leg and both breasts to identify the victim and had been cut off. track down the murderer~ in "We're pretty certain she what a veteran police detec-is from out er town." sa id tive calls the most brutal kill· Del. John Edwards, who heads ing he has ever seen. the team of investigators on Olficers were appealing for the case. "And we have anyone who knew of a missing elim inated sale of those shoes woman fitting the victim's in the immediate Los. Angeles THE GUESTS s aid description to contact them. area." 'lbe victims were Mrs. Ellen Eccles Harrison, ftt, and her son, Warren Merrill , 44, whose bodies were found in her limousine Feb. 1 near the Richmond Goll and Country Club. e Crash Probed SACRAMENTO (UP!) Conflictlng and llllelplaincd accounts from witnesses left investigators· mystified today about the cause of _ the high- speed freeway bus crash that killed ihe -.!river and 12 weekend·gamblers and injured 31. Haldeman e x p r e s s e d con-The woman was believed to Edwards said in ho pes or fidence, as he has in the past, be bet"·een. 20 and 30 years finding a shoe clerk who might th at the tapes would help show old, about 5 feet 3 and with remember the woman, the that he and Nixon have done eit herblack or brown hair. shoe manufacturer ··is giving: nothing illegal. Police say the biggest clue us lists of stores in the San Asked how hi s fathe r's talk so far is a pair of v.·omen's Francisco Ba y area a nd went over. 15-year.()Jd Peter blue shoes, size 68, and a elsewhere in the \Vest Coast THE LUNCHEON to welcome Haldeman told reporters. "lt matching purse . who handled thi s shoe.'' The Haldemi n back to canrornia was received well. They're all An early mo rn ing jogger shoes were found by the County and southern San Joa-"we foresee a short period was organized by a longtime his [riends." Then, smiling, last Friday discovered the shoreline near the victim. The quin County all the way wbe~~.a.~orcement will friend, Uls Angeles investor he added, "Th ey 're a 11 body washed up on a beach purse was recovered in the Speed Reduction to AUl 'Energy Crisis' Efforts J:laldeman and presidential adviser John D. Ehrlichman resigned their White House positions last April am.id in· creasing reports that they were involved in the at· te mpted Watergate Cover-up. Both have denied any wrong· doing in appearances before the Senate Watergate C.Om· mittee . SACRAMENTO (UPI) - California, putting the brakes to gasoline comumption in the "energy cri sis." has ordered the maxi mum 70 m.p.h. speed limi t on certain freeways a.it back to 65 m.p.h. through Stanislaus, Merced, .......... aoi:u Z. Wayne Griffin. Asked about Republicans.'! near the Pacil1"c Coas t f b d" Fresno and Kings counties to•1-------------...c_ ________ _: ___________ __:_ __ __:=.:.:___:_.:..::__:__':.."'::.:...:.:Y:...::1:..v:::er_::s:_. ----- One survivor; apparently the only one to see the ·actions . of the driver, t o I d in- vestigators Monday the man behind the wheel was drinking a soda , clutched hi s chest and tried to stand up just an m... staot before the double-deck bus hurled into a massive con- crete pillar overpass o n Interstate M. e let Cra1he1 INDIO (UPI ) -The pilot and co-pilot of a Navy Ft04 Phantom Jet fighter wu kill- ed Monday when the plane slammed Into the side of a peak in the Oxlcolate Mollll- tain range during a practice low level bombing run. A &Pokesman for Miramar Naval Air Station in San Diego idenUfled the vlcthns as Lt. Cmdr. Donald S. McKilllp, 32, Solano Beach, the pilot, and U . Arnold E. Resz, 26, San Diego, the radar intercept of· ficer. They were attached to VFIS4 at Miramar. Lt. GQv. Ed Reinecke, chainnan of the newly created State Energy Plaooing Cotmcil which issued the order Mon- day, said an even further speed limit reduction may be in the works ·if It is found "desirable." The highway patrol reported it may step up enforcement on the affected stretches, at least for awhile. UNDER TIIE ORDER . designed to save an estimated 10 mi llion gallons of gasoline and diesel fuel annuall y, the reduct ioo will apply to 1.450 miles of rural f ree wa y statewide effective Dec. 1. One of the longest singl e stretches invol ved will be in- terstate 5 from north of Ardath Road to south of Basilone Road in San Dieto Body Theft Suspects Fined $3 00 LOS ANGELES (AP ) -e Comet Photo Two men who pleaded guil!y to charges connected with the the sou th of the grapevine undercro!Sing in Kern County. Also Interstate 405 -from north of the Route 5-405 separation to north 0 f Fairview Road in Orange Colinty: TQe energy council put the fi nal touches on the speed limit reduction order · after previously receiving broad ap- proval from Gov. Rooald Reagan's cabinet. Reinecke said both the state and federal governments are studyirig to "detemiine i! a further speed limit reduction v.'OUld be desirable." In a speech to t h e Sacramento Comstock Club later. he blamed the reductioo on the oil shortage caused by "the virtual blackmailing" by Arab COWltries who control 1'fidd1e East oil supplies. "THIS ACTION will postpone, not sol ve, the energy crunch," he said. "The real answer to the energy shortage in the short run is to change our Ute style." The highway patrol said It fores.aw "no problem" if motorists observed the curtail- ed speed limit but if not, 'Seagull' Clianges Ordered PASADENA (U PI) -The the ft an d burning of a coffin first photo taken by Hale containing the body of rock Observatories of the mnet singer Gram Parsons were KMoutet, captured while it given 30-day suspended jail was still nearly 200 million sentences and fined $.'MIO each . miles from earth, was reieas-Philip C. Kaufman. 38, of LOS ANGELES (UPI) ed Monday by Caltech.· Van Nuys, and Michael D. A Superior Court judge Mon- 'Ihe ph:>to was snapped in Martin, 26, of Hollywood were day ordered major changes the early morning hours of sentenced Monda y on misde-- Oct. 31 by Martin McCarthy, meanor theft ch a r g es. before Thanksgiving in the a Jesuit priest-astronomer Originally they had been movie "Jonathan Livingston with the Vatican Observatory charged \\'ilh grand theft. Seagull ." at Castel Gandolfo. the papal Richard Bach, author of the summer residence. He is cur-THEY WERE ordered also b es t . s e 11 in g novel and rcntly visiting the H a 1 e to pay $708 in expenses to Obse.rVatories. the fWleral home involved in 9Creenplay1 and Neil Diamond. I the burial The coffin was who composed and recorded • Falls /lgaln foond in the desert east of \he musical score for the film I.Os Angeles after it had been filed suit *1<Jng the changes. REDWOOD CITY (UPI) -burned. Bach dwted his ,.,,,,.,,play Edmund E. Kemper III, on Kaufman and Martin were was altered and Diamond trial for the slaying of eight former business associates of charged tbe amount of his women, attempted lldcide for the dead linger, a onetime music thaC was to be used the third Ume Mooday. but member ol The Byrds rock In the lllm""1• reduced. ,.., ru!hed to ;a hospital· and group. . . Hall Barl)ett, the producer pronounced unmjured. The coffin c o n t a 1 n 1 n g of the fllnt and Paramount Kemper, 24, used a paper Parson's body was stolen Sept. Pictures c.qrp., its distributor, clip to pull out the stitches 20 from a loading dock at were ordertd to omit wording tn his right wrist that were J,os A n g e I e s Intentiilional that Bach round objectionable, lhert as a result of Ns cutting Airport, officials said. It had to remove fhe author's name an artery with 1 a sharpened been en route to New Orleans, from the ~edits, and restore ball point pen 8 week ago, th e 27-year~ld s l n g e r ' s Diamond's 1 original m u s I c jallers.sald. ________ bo_1_n_et_ow_n_._r_or_b_u_n_·a_1. ____ scor_e_~_·y_N.,_ov_._20_. ___ _ I am a member of the United Mino Workers of America. .C.n you tell mo what death benefits will be paid to ;,,y su~ivors7 · -. 5--;...~- " by EUGENE 0 . BERGERON ' T• .W.wt et .,.,. ... ...,. Sl,000.00 ,.,.W.t L•"'P IMI .... lteMflt IJS0.00 .• M .. tttty llftefit ef 571.00 fer 62 JltOtlritl. 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I l 8 D ARY PROT E9ITORIAL PAGE Too Much At Stake Demands for the resignation of President Nixon reached a new high this past weekend with-a-top Repu~ Jican leader, a national magazine and three leading news- papers, two of which had staunchly backed the President, demanding that be step down . The charge that Mr. Nixon has almost totally Jost the confidence of the electorate cannot be denied. The fear that he has lost his ability to govern is very real. But the prospect of the ~ower vacuum that would result from a Presidential resignation at this time must be equally alarn1ing. 'Ve are without a vice president. The rest of the executive branch of the government in 'Vashington is in a state of disarray that could only be heightened if the last remaining vestige of leadership were removed. Jn the parliamentary system used in most other nations, that leadership already would have been changed. But this is not so simple under our system . So at this point, an unpopular President must be better than no President at all. It would be unreasonable to assume that the Soviet Union and the contenders in the ~1iddle East crisis would stand back and wait politely for the United States to re- group its political forces. Or that our allies would hold firm . And a settlement of the Middle East conflict is per· haps most vital to the future of humanity right now. There is no chance that this could be achieved by a lead· erless Unit~d _States. However s·uspect the leader's do- mestic position may be, he remains, in the eyes of the world, the voice of a great power, the only power capable of negotiating a Middle East settlement. On the home front, the Nixon administration has a great deal to answer for -to the Congress, to the courts and to the people of the United States. No administra- tion in history has faced the charges leveled at Nixon / and his appointees. 'Ole charges must be faced and an- swered. Having missed one opportunity alter another to do just t.his, and in less unsettled atmosphere, the Presi· dent must bring himself to appear, voluntarily and soon, before the Congress and the people and give them the a.nswers they deserve -on the tapes, on campaign fmanci ng, on espionage and all the other sordid affairs. When this is done, should Tesignation or impeaeh· ment seem to be required, so be it. At least in the Interim there may be time to pre(l:are for some reasonable con· tinuity of government until the next election so that the events of the past year do not lead to the ultlinate fall of the United States as a world power, and the decline of freedon1 everywhere in the world. Key Q11estions .\Vith the unseUling circumstances surrounding the P~es1dent, the examination by the Senate Rules Com- mittee of the fitness of vice president-designate Gerald R. Ford takes on even graver significance. It can be anticl~ated· that most aspects of Ford's ~ackground, from his health record to his personal !1nances, will be thoroughly scrutinized. But perhaps most· important to determine will be his personal interpretation of the meaning of executive privilege and the inherent powers of the Presidency. Profound differences-over-these two key issues have been responsi ble for much of the still·unresolved domes- tic conflict of recent months, and lie at the heart of Mr. Nixon's confidence crisis. Congressional approval of a new vice president must be preceded by an especially clear understanding in these areas. ,, . I j /J ,,.,..-_::;.. ..:>... '' __::~ \\\~~ ''--_;:;. ...... -_. 'Please don 't let it be a mirage!' Did . Earlier Tape Sway '68 Election? ·-· Dear Gloon1y Gus The \-'Ethics' Can Cover Corruption Climate Fo.r G6vernmeht Graft (JACK ANDERSON) WASlUNGTON -The hullabaloo over the White House tapes has raised reports of ,another secret tape, which could settle a great historical co ntroversy. Excellent sources tell us that Anna Chennault, the Ohinese widow or World War II hero Gen. Claire Chennault, was picked up on tape as she allegedJy lob- bied with the South Vietnamese an1- bassador to sabolage a peace conference on the eve of -the 1968 presidential elec- tion. This election-eve peace effort might have won the close election for Hubert Humphrey. Instead, Saigon issued a statement opposing the peace conference and refusing to participa'~. This made the abortive peace effort look like a last- min,ute political trick to save Humphrey from defeat. Humphrey now believes the Saigon statement cost him the election . WAS l'ttADAME Chennault responsible for disrupting the peace effort? The fa cts are in dispute, but this much is acknowledged by all sources. Richard Nixon's campaign manager, John Mitchell , had asked Madame Chennault to keep the campaign informed on developments in Southeast Asia. This quest took her to the South Viet- namese embassy, where she spoke to then-Ambassador Bui Diem. Our sources claim the embassy was bugged and her conversations were secretly taped. It is known that Amba ssador Diem com- plained to the State Departmen t that his embassy was v.iretapped. THE DISPUTE is over what \\'as said. ifadame CheMault insisted to us that she merely sought information but said nothing about boycotting the peace effort Our sources swear she was recorded as warning the ambassador that Humphrey would immediately pu11 U.S. forces out of Vietnam if he should be elected, that the Communists y,·ould take over the country and that govern- ment officials would be executed. Her alleged slatement to the am- bassador, given as a representative of Yellow journalism has taken on a ne\v dimension "''hen the New York Times (who started this whole mess by irresponsibly printing stolen gov· ernment documents) sancti monious. Jy calls for the resigation of Presi- dent Nixon. DISGUSTED Gloomr Gus eornmf!'llt art wbmlHMI' lrt ~•oeri '•llCI oo not nteuwrllr rtllt<t lllt vltw' 01 ttlt 11tWJ111111r. SH!d r11ur "" ptevt 10 Gloo"'r Gus, 01111 l"llol. Nixon, was communicated to Saigon. When Lyndon JOhnsOn leained of the taped conversation, say our sources, he was furious. His anger became more ex· plosive when a Nixon campaign aide, Robert Finch, accused President Johnson of announcing a peace conferencf!: before he had "gotten aU his ducks in a row." THE ENRAGED LBJ, believing the Nixon camp had upset the ducks ih Saigon, put through a phone call to Ni.J- on. Our sources say that Johnson declared he was still President, accused Nixon of instructing Madame Chennault to sabotage the peace conference and threatened to expase the whole affair on nationwide television. Johnson petulantly referred to Finch as "this guy Fink.'' Before Johnson hung up, Nixon was able to mollify him. They agreed that Sen. Everett Dirksen, R-111., would go to the South Vietnamese ambassador and declare that·Madame Chennault was not speaking for Nixon. Jn return, LBJ agreed not to take to television. But the damage had already been done. The peace-disrupting statement rrom Saigon, issued the weekend before the election,· was never repudiated. And Nlxon defeated Humphrey by a close one per ce11t of the vote. FOOTNOTE' Humphrey told us h< bad been informed of Madame Che.nnault's alleged intervention but not of the ex- istence of any secret tape. Humphrey said he sent one of his O\vn campaign aides, James Ro\ve, to the South Viet- namese ambassador with a message. Humphrey directed RO\\'e to tell the am- bassador that if South Vi etnam's Presi- dent Thi eu did not come to the truce tabl e and ifffuinplirey should be elected, Thieu "\\o'Ould rue the day." ' WASHINGTON -Spiro T. Agnew. according lo the government's case against him, "''as on the take for 10 years. But the resigned vice president thinks he did no wrong, at least by accepte·d standjlrds. There is a .point in following through on this contradiction because it leads in a direction sug· gesting that accepted standards created conditions for graft. pay~ff and.collusion on a much grander scale. Not just in rorrupt state capitals, eith· er, The U.S. govern- ment h aJ ,_,. been Jetting put rhUndredl~ of tnlllions in COO· tracts on 'tt>e same ·genera] basis that led to Agnew's disgrace. ACCORDING to the eVidence against him, Agnew as governor· of Maryland solicited and received continuing fman- ciaJ support from officers or architec- tural .and engineering firms (called A- E's) in consideration of their favorable treatment on state contracts. The classical function of an A-E finn is to act for the government in creating plans, drawings, designs and specifica- tions for construction projects. An established A-E f irm considers itself a creative force, i professional group whose se rvices should not be bargained for in the market place. Would you put an advertisement in the medical journal asking sealed bids on your need· ed appendectomy? Un til very rece'nlly, the professional societies in this· field held themselves equal to doctors and lawyers in denouncing as unethical of· fering up their services for competitive bidding. Quotes Jim Nutt, Canadian Counsul General . leaving California for new post -"[ always tell students not to lose their id~lism. As we get older we tend to give in to practicality and being realistic, but we should never lose sight of our idea ls. It makes what we have ac- complished by a certain age seem worthwhile." (rucHARD WILSO~ THE WAY it worked in Maryland , a half dozen or so A·E firms were considered of equal professional ability~ Agnew's agents picked them for specific jobs on a basis which toot into con- sideration their cooperative attitude on political flilancing. Agnew. a<XX>rding to the government's case, got a 50 per- cent cut of the proceeds. The federaJ system o\ake$ tha t kiad of Jhing harder. but tlot much. ' Comptroller general Elmer B. Sluts Im been fighting a losing lliltlle 1111<e tlll'I to get Congresa. t01tigbte!i up ~iaystem so that there will be'" fe af .price com- petition, and a federal agency he.ad can't select an A-E merely because of its repulation, popularity or coziness with government officials. . WITH SYMPATHETIC r~ard r ... the proud professionalism of the A-E's, Rep. . . Jack "Brooks (Dem., TexJ shepherded through' in 1m a bill making favoritism 2.nd arbitrariness a little harder. But since then a heavy\\'eight commission on gov~ent procurement procedure says tbq new law is fa r from enough and does not provide for adequate com· petition.' Theoretically, agency heads are re- quired tO negotiate with more than one A-E. The way it has "'-orked rMst of the time it wasn 't necessary to go beyond the first firm selected. ltlANY PEOPLE in the profession wring their hands in shame over the vices the Agnew incident exposed. It was all the more e~rras.sing that so- called "ethical" considerations covered up corrupt practices: In fmancing politie.:i and politicians. Comptroller-general Staats cites no ex- ample of corruption but speaks Of rumors of payoff and political corruption. He notes the $25 and $50 per plate fund raisin~ diMers for politicians while the inadeqpate changes in the law were under; consideration. The six percent a.r~itr?ry fee for A-E fi1 ms is ready- marte for collusion. Nothing in th~ "'·hole process increases ccnridence that A·F, nrms are being selected solely because. In contrast to their competitors, they arc best fitted to do a particular job at the least C06t and With the greatest utility, longest life and aesthetic value. TA.KE FOR EXA!\WLE. the new FBI building, a ·monstrous roost.ruction on Pennsylvania Avenue. In its present un· finished stage it represents a 100 per· cent cost overrun · with o r i g i n a I estimates. Now it will cost well over $100 million to put a roof over the l:lte J. Edgar Hoo\'er's G-men, complete wilh morgue ahd gymnasium. ' There are Some 200,000 A-E firm s In the big professional societies. They have been a power lobby against the comptroller general's insistence on more rompetition on both price and qualifica· tions. But the stink which has arisen from the Agnew affair has been , nauseating enouilt to change the mind of any true profisSional. Foreign Do1tors In U.S. Medif(ine Of.a~ the maladies troubling Amer_i<;an Labor Statistics projects an average an- medicme today, one or the most sens1hve EDITORIAL nual need or 22,000 new physi cians during concerns the enormous nmnber of fore16J1 the 1970s. American medical sctmls now doctors swelling the ranks or the U.S. RESEARCH graduate about half that number. The heallh .care system. The prognosis. is U.S. "doctor shortage" may be primarily unce~.n. .mainly bl'Cause , ~edicat. a distribution problem, as few physicians a~~hon~es disagre_e on whether this con-cri~ized "'hat he calls "the totally want lo live in rural or ghetto areas. dit1on 1s ,thre.at~1ng_ or therapeutic. A chatZVinistic discrimination . . . against But ·to fill these gaps with foreign doctors further comphcat1on 1s that no one knows foreign doctors. There's nothing wrong seems an ironic solution. "It is in· exactly how many foreign ~edical with a foreign-trai ned doctor. We're us-conceivable to me that poor oountries graduates are here, though estimates ing a lot of them , and will use 8 will continue to subsMiize the education range from 60,000 to . 70, 1 000 -~~t Jot more.,, of medical students so that they may one-~~ of the natton s prachcmg Many foreign medical students come alleviate the doctor shortage of the phys1c1ans. to t'his country for post-graduate work richest nation in the \l.'Orld,'" says Or. in Certain specialities, then stay on in-Alex Gerber of the University of "ISN'T mERE something awry when the United States must depend on the immigration of graduates of foreign medical schobls for its supply of pbysi· cians, while at the same time U.S. schools are forced to tutn away qualified applicants?" asks the prestigious Journal of the American Medical Association In a ree<nt editorial. On the other hand, HEW Secretary Caspar Weinberger has steid or returning to their na tive Jaruis. Southern California's medical sc hool. The This so-<:aUed "brain drain" is con-deUcate matter will be taken Up at troverslal because . .some believe it causes the Mlh annual meeting of the severe medical manpoy,'tr shortages in Association of America n Me di c a I poor countries. But others maintain these Colleges Hlls week in Washington, D.C. hidily-trained physicians mer e l y The AA.MC plays a key role because represent an overflow who could n 0 t broad expen.5ion of U.S. medical schools find suitable jobs at home. could solve the problem. But that may .. L... seem an overly drastic -and expensive '9-£ANWIDLE, the U.S. Bureau of -prescription. f Pessimism Reigns In the, One-time C.apital of Glamor producer. Not rar away a movie com· by awkward injectloos or politics in Lty ruling worries the savvy people or "sell-expressive.''. It's "wlnerabte." :.IAUBt'_ Cahf -Every night. minute! b!otl'or~ the setting sun drops behind tilt' promontory and turns the ocean s~· gray , the "vman comes oo the ttach. She is almost aJ one on the t\\'O miln tif sand. for this is pri- vate property that if Mid lO st>U for $4.IAXI a nmning foot. She ls baref001 1n old toreador pants i:ind a aweatshir1 over •'hidl her dyed mane lwlp. lbe holds l "'' o jewel • collared collared Russian wolf· boaDda on 1 lmb and, as she walks. l""O mJnlaturt French poodles clipped a la lomb chop flirt with her toes. Patrolled by pOlltt helicopters and beach tJucgles. the bead! on ••hicb •he walks ii a ~lasJ Ctntrat Park swtpt clear al blacU and the Spantstt-speaking where )'OU don't have to curb your dog becau~ lbe llicl> tide taltea care of the housekeep. Inc. 1be •'OfMR'I name is unknown. Maybe the LI a name in her own right or maybe the wtre or a cranky half·alrohclic pany is shooting a sequunce from ( J the Oscar ceremonies, is it any wonder? hf:re. The contemporary commuruty If you like him or you like her, you Nathaniel West's "Day ol the Locust." VON HOFFMAN standards the courts and the prosecutors say he's vulnerable. When applied to but the ~Tollyv.·ood he wrote about is THE MOVIE INDUSTRY conver1&tion ~ usine are the standards of the some of these howling egos, It knocks gone. Now the people on the beach from these expensive shore! up into t thirds ol the population who don't you back a little kbut, collectively, they are a puzzle. l~ave I seen the "''Oman the HOiiywood Hills is lityered through g to the movies .anymore. If the tastes are vulnerabl e. on TV or do 1 just think 1 have ....-Chinese houseboy, too old to seek other with ·uncertairity and· pessimism. 1bc ~ morals of· the non-payin g, non-Wounded or not , the money's 5ti11 The easily ree<ignizable stars _ employment, follows him with a dish perfonners complain · they can't' fmd a , tome~ are fastened on thl.!I ~fused here for those who takf! chances 00 Burgess Meredith in the I 0 c, 1 trying to catch the ashes. There . Is , decent scrip!; t~ produce,.. admit they gaspt11& Industry, nobody will b<Jy supermarket with his old rat dog "'aiting a power failure : the lights go otit. 1be can't make money copying aomebOdy · 1 ckel doing something rare and good and for for him outside_ have grown old beyond comic gets a · nashlight and goes on else's last hit, that if there ii a fol'mula current Hollywood vogue word those who do schlock . . . while the corres(>Olldcnce between the faces on talking, holding the light up to his face for box~fice success they no longer 't "relevant" or "senslUve" or "open" private sea tidies up after th<! dogs. the screen .and the faces of fact. Some while the two of them , him and the know it. Even · the Walt •. Dl~y, of the movie people still have the money houseboy shagging the ashes, stumble who!~ famJly entertainment formula for Russian y,·olf'hound~ In diamond over the ottomans and the coffee tables haJ ceued to produce profits. The ooly chokers; they say Henry Fonda got in the darkness. sure mcney is in television. $500,000 for lhat TV commen:lal for At Chasen'! it's still possible to see The smarter ones will tell yOu it's color film. But here In Malibu. where Johnny Carson and his perty at ooe Impossible to make a movie ror the stars used to keep their mistresM:S and booth and Carroll O'Connor and his American public OOw : you must make have their orgies. nil the scandals are party at another, but there'A no tourist It for an American public, young, upper- old ones. action, none or_ the ablvers the folks middle classi1'h, because the 1ports, the get when they lee Henry Kissinger free wbol~some entertainment an TV. THE BEST STORIES, lhe best told, lunching at Jhe Sana Soucl In Wuhington. the bowling, the flSh , the golf, have are of flamed-out dead star~. or the the ne w borne of the 1tan. Walter drawn the mass millions awa)'. The nearly f91'gotten, like TV eom1c Milton Cronkite's namt and rece are bigger IOdal and economic posiUoo of inovles Berle, now playing lhird ·r::itt clubs, than anyone left in tldl town , aod Is akin to the theater's. 1bere will abandoned by his sycophan t..; he has Archiblkl Cox bal .-11Maneous-fiime never be enother movie -unless It's lured ooe la•t persoo lo his out-ol·town recognition that • !left McQue<n or ohot primarily ror TV _ that all or motel room and walk., n:p and down 1ti Uz.a MinDelli Can work a career America wiU see. the room d«laim ing •bout, how llJ'llt lifetime tar tlnd nol ¢. tr they make he was, waving his ci1ar. while hi> JJ>C<lllllUOUI ttempls to compete here THAT'S WHY the Supreme Court . ' I . ' .. O,UNOI COAST DAI LY PILOT Robtrt N. \V t'\'1, PublUher Thotnt1J Keevil, Edftor -oarbora Krliblch Editorial Page Editor Tuesday, November 6, 1973 f The t!<!ltorlaJ PftK~ or the Dally Pilol &eeks to inlonn and &limulate reacter1 by prew.nUng on this page diverse commentary on topic• of in. tMnt by syndicated colu11Jni11ts IJl(" ca.rtoonlats, by pmvkling 11.Yon1rn r•• rciderg' views :tntl I\' 1:1'"'"•'?1'!• _, •' nl"WllJlAper'! '"''"•· -.•rront 11111!1 ~ Ilk' J ~ 1111.rlllf .,, I(•'• ,,, •\1 1Lld~ ... \I, l'f!(:f'll, al.ti • hi• 1111·nt of u1 1f ''" Piiot stM>uld l1t• ,k I I I I I I I I I ' I I ' I I .. • ' QUEENIE • Jy Phll lnterlandl • \1-6 O~f .. ,-~-., Lt1i\'.W1W.•-"4:- ''From here on back £he name of tbC\ame ts 'monkey business'." • Propositi~ed Ho.pe Says No To Center£ old By MARILYN AND HY GARDNER Q: ls It true tha t, of .all people, Bob Hope wW do one of those naughty nude centerfolds for CosmopoUtaa maga- zine? -K. T. M, (another oldtimer) Clevelud. A: No Hope. Miss Toni Holt, the magazine editor who . broached the pr~tion to Bob, represented Playgirl. She wanted to go on location in Palm Sprin_gs, paint the come- dian 's golf cart red, tie a red _ril?POO bow around his body and palm him off as "A ChrJtJ:nas Preset. to .All the Women In Amer\ca.'' "\Ye lauglied a lot," Toni said, ('Glad You Asked T"at ') · "but Bob finally admitted, 'It isn't right for me!'" In his stead, French sex symbol John Paul Vignon (who'll be starring In the new TV se ries "The ·Sensuous Man") will occupy the December centerfold with the caption: "Give Yourself a Sensuous P.1an for Christmas." Q: How old would Leopold SloiloMkl be loday 11 he were alive? -P. T. M., Lmtslng, Mich. A: The old maestro IS alive and still kicking. At 93, he just signed a deal with RCA lo record JO LP albums over the next JI months,' with several London orchestras. Though a genius, Stokrs always been a cantankerous ctiaracter. We recall 'he1once scolded us on TV for "mis- pronouncing"_ his nar!te., "'.J'.hc correc~ pronunciation," he brid1ed, "is noRK-owsi¢i!" • Q: Can you ftnd oat tbe real rea10o M...,.mad All turned down clole to $1 mUllon ·a. make his first movie? b be that rl~h? -M. W1rdell, Dtnftf. A: Jt had nothing to do with money. Ali reveals that, thanks to shrewd financial advice, in a few years he'll start collecting some '250,000 aiioually on annuities. He turned down the movie -be confided lo Dr. Ferdie Pacbeco, the fight doctor alwaya seen in his comer -because of hb rellgioo. The theme -of Ille ]li"opoled pictufe was a b o u t a white boxer who never had a chance to fight for lhe title. He's ktlled, then comes back in· the body of Muhammed Ali. Elijah Mohammed, his spiritual leader, forbade Ali to make· the movie. The reason? The Black .... .l.c Muslims do not believe ALI PACHECO in reincarnation. Q: What's Kalherine Hepburn's image of benelf? - Grlene D., Phoenix, Ariz. A: "I never had a man make a pass at me in my whole life unless he was drunk,'' the 63-year-old star recent- ly confessed on a talk show. Q: I'm ~urioas. R.Ua Hayworth and Orson Welles are 10 unlike in mbtds and personalltles, was Jl a genuine love affair between tbtm way back wben? -Mrs. Dona R., • Cleveland. A: Yes. It was one of the hottest headlin~ rom8.nces of the mid~. But then the couple spoiled It all by 'getting married. A mistake Miss Hayworth made five times. ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS YOU KEEP ASKING: No. Roddy McDowall has never been married. We suppose you'd have to say that ~pound comedi· enne Julie DeJohn holds the record for repeat perform- ances on a TV ~fc show. Her ne1t appearince on the Mike Douglas ahow ljllqbe ber 62nd. The very first videotape recording to be televised coast- to-coast was a show featuring that bot comic, Jonallian Winter!. On OCt. 23, 1956 -via WRCA in New York City. The reason Sonny sometimeL_ appears taller than Cher Is that he manages to stand sligllly in front of rather than alongside her to catch certain camera angles. - ¥!'!'·S4!ftd-.,....tJou questions to )111 Gard1ter, "Glad You Asked That," care of this newspaper, P. 0. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, 92626. Manlvn and Hy Gardner will answer cu many questiom as they can in tMir column, but the volume of mail makes personaJ re· plies impossible. 'Chad' Mitchell W ins One Count SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) -William "Chad" Mitch<ll the acloMlnger who org~ the Chad Mitchell Trio, has had one of two narcotics charges dismissed against hlm and bas been released on $25,000 bond here. Mitchell was arrested Oct. 21 and charged w 11 h --al 4GO powxlJ ol marijuana a n d conspiracy with Intent to distribute. . U.S. Magistrate John Giles dismissed the charge o I Jl<>'S<SSion against lhe 36-year- old Mitchell, who waived hls preliminary hearing. \ • Tursd~, ~O\ltmber 6, 1,74 DAILY PllOi 7 Reno Madam Takes Der: Fight to Court. RENO, Nev. •UPll Beverly }Jarrell will leave it up t9 the court s to decide whell\er her brothel Is a 11egltimate enterprise on federal land. "I've got a contract tha't say~ it is," she insists. 4 The. Burou. o( L a n d Management (BU.fl admits it did, indeed, grant hfr a lease with an option ,to buy. But later, after complaiQts about the nature ,0£ the business. it canceled the agreement and gave her '90 days,. until Nov. 18. to 11fiove out. NOW MISS Harrell has filed suit in federal District Court to bloc'k the order, She con- tend · her fi"'·trallci-·"Cot4 tontail Ran ch'' is conductl'd law!Ully, since prostitution is oot iUegal under Nevada law . In fact , in some rural coun· lies, prostitution is legaJJy licensed. In others, it is tolerated unless a nuisance complaint is fi led and upheld. In the Reno-Las Vegas areas , it is Illegal under ordinance. Miss Harrell began leasing the five barren desert acres 165 miles north of Las Vegas in 1970. She paid $100 a year. Despite its remote location, south of the old boom town Warning :. The Surgeon General Has Oatermined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous 10 Your Health. ' of Goldfield, ber dettn girls are kept bully, "'"'tly by customers who fly up from Las Vegas wtd land at the Cottontails' airstrip. WHEN A SYNDICATED newspa~r columnist wrote that a bordello is improper use. of public land;ihc ~bureau sought a legal og_inion 9ll whether a house of pros- titution fits the requirements of tlie Small Tract Act of 1938 that allows the sale of government land for residen- tial or commercial purposes. John Hil!samer, chief of lands and minerals at the Reno I ; , • _,. f ~ l~ .. BLA1 office, said "the opinion ago, the highway department . was that such use or federal ' started fencing off the en- land Is not in accordance with trance to her ranch after com·· state law. pleting a new stretch of "Bordellos are\!l_ nuisance, hl.ghwa,y nearby, She got a accord ing to the Nevada shOtgun, sat on the fence . and Suprenle Court," he said. demanded that the workmen "Tberc1s also an attorney stop. A compromise was work- . £~ner-al 's __winioQ to that ef· ed out _providing for another f~." entrance. BUT JITTSS Harrell says "everyone, including the BtM; has always known 1 the Cot· .tontail Ranch was a bor~llo. Now it (the BLM), is trying to renege on our agreem~f." , There's no doubt Miss Har· rell is a fighter . Two years " " ',A I -• • Broth.els are s c a t t e r e d throughout Nevada . There are legal bordellos a few miles from carson City, the state capital. Brothels also are legal in Storey County, where Joe Conforte's "fo.1ustang Ranch" , a few miles from Reno, has become a min<lr tourist at· . ~-~~-l ' I < ' : • traction . A FEW YEARS ago, Oln· lorte set up the "Triangle Ranch.'' where Store 'I , Washoe and Lyon counties meet 20 miles east of Reno. The district attorney at Reno, anned with a court onler, burned. the enJ.jr.e complex. At .Winnemucca, a pastor went to court to"'ban brothels under a nuisance complaint. He produced a detective who.5e testimony in~cated there was somethlng going on there, all right But a jury· ruled Iha~ whateve r it was, it wasn't a nuisance. ' ·- DAILY PILOT L. ltf. Boyd Pit·anl1a Bites True, numerous south Americans report they have been bitten by tfie Sa\'age little fish called the piranha, but there Is no authenticated case of piranhas actually kill· ing any human being. With almost perfect precision, they ~nd _tear in attack. \Vith almost perfect precision, they bite out neat little grape-sized chWJ ks. Goodnight now. Sweet dreams. Q. "How ca n other:s tails?" I keep my hogs from biting off each A. Jiang a length of chairi in their sty and thro1v some kindling in th ere. too. f'amll11 Clrcms 1>11 Bil Kea11e Dad~ Son Ca111paign 1....----i LET'S. BE FRIENDLY Town to Elect Hanse1i--No Mauer Wliat u , •• ·h•v• new ••1ghbo" or know or 811;yonc moving to our area. ptcase tell us From Wire Sfnictt offered a senior lectureship E1*'n:bower vlslted Mim.Je so t.hut y,·c may exlund a Voters 1n Quaaqueton, Jowa Jn 1972 as a moVe considered Eisenhower over th.e weekend friendly y,•ctcomc and help will have to cbooee between a compromise allowing him at GettyabW'g, Pa· them to bcCOme acquaint~ Reube. Rauea. 69, and his to continue Olltside activities Jn their new surroundings. 1 ""' RoDllld llaaeea, 13, for precipitated by hla book's sue-While President Nlxoq spent S C t YisitOr cess Wl'thout the add~ duties the weekend at Key Biscayne, 0. 03$ mayor. w Mrs. !llxon stayed at Comp f4.f3'1 Tiie younger. Hanaen, •. who o/. a.tenured position. ..David; the presidential retreat 494.e57' 4 has been the town's acting * in the M~ryland mountains. H ......, yj151'tor mayor since Lavonna Lee Actor Reic Harrbou will She traveled the 20 miles from 11 UUI resigned July !, -1dn't receive .. honorary doctor of Comp D 1 v Id to the '4Ul74 debate or argue wt.th hls humane letters degree from, _E~i~aenho~~w~e~r~f~arm~~b~y~c~ar~.=~~~~~~~~~~~ lather during the campaign. the Boston University Sch<lol,1• Instead, be said, he wanted of Fine and townspeople to vote today ac· Applied Arts cording to how well they think Friday. he's done the past lour Harrison ·/) TI\Qnths. will be cited ,;,l)f!-,, The elder Hansen •aid he for · his a· t"\MV[/ decided to. seek the post last ward -wi n· Authoritative autograph collectors .. ~~~.:.~\,"':;';,,, ® spring, belore the fonncr ning portray. say there is only one knou11 canceled mayor resigned, because 90 al of Henry check in existance bearing the signa· ''Grandma! Your stockings come in TWO PIECES I" many friends urged him t.o ltiggins in ture or President John F . Kennedy. nm. His only campaign pledge MA111sOH the stage had been to quit farming and and screen productions of "My It's estimat~ that the U.S. Post devote full time to numing Fair Lady" and "scores of Office cou ld make at least $100 million thls eastern Iowa community Qtber memorable characters a year by selling ad spare .. stamps. , Wo--...Jer Br __ ..1' o1 464. in his nearly 50 years .... PERSONAL NOTE tiu etUL * actor," the uni~ersity said. The highly personal conversation turned to our mothers , Ericla Segal, author of the * all ~eparted. What did we remember about them most highly successful book "Love Desplte a twit from Sen. clearly ? At lot of things. But one little scene, in pacticular, N s u • Story," resigned as a Yale Harold HaPts (0.lowa), Sen. slicks with me: She sat down on the edge of a cot with ot 0 nuiue University associate professor Walter Moodale (l>-MiM.), is ·tears in her eyes and said~ "I wish I could ask myself, of cl&¥ics. still expected to speak at the 'Can I afford it?' I am so weary of asking myself, 'Is Segal's resignaUon, effective Iowa DemocraUc party's Jef· _there___any ~~ _ _way l tanJl!LWith_o.uU!1~_" ____ 1 last June 30, was reveal~___fersdbJacksm Day_dinner_at -w-A:SHINGTO (UPil---cli3rge5fifVOIVirtg-itsad~ ln---aUSt jUSf-released by the Ames. Ave rage age or the Alaskan is about five years belo\V the nationa l average. A1n told this is because most wives move out or there when they become widows . The widow population elseY.'here rai ses the st.iitistics average consider· ab ly. • CLASSIFIED Writes a reminine San Franciscan : "Everytime my husband gets irritated at me, he takes a red felt marker and draws circles around the classified ads ror bachelor apartments, then leaves the paper lying about where I'll eventually see it. And he underlines those apartment ads for swinging singles. It's cruel." Remember, your collection of palindromes isn't com· plete, unless it contains: "Sit on a potato pan, Otis."., .. Another amorous activist.in Qiis country catches that plOSt common of all venereal diseases every 15 seconds • • .• Thought I already told you the average parking time on a meter is 29 minutes· . . . How can you claim murder is rampant in the streets? ... Only days of the week that are committed indoors? ... Only days ·of the week that aren't the Sabbath to somebody somewhere are Monday, \Vednesday and Thursda y. The federal trade commission vertising, and completely ex· school. ( PEOPLE has ruled that •'Wonder onerated its makert TIT C.On-Segal failed to gain tenure Bread," the largest selling tinental Baking C.O., of at Yale after a controversy white bread in the country, misleading advertising for its 31h years ago He had been has been falsely adver tised line of "Hostess" snack cakes. · ) for the past decade as an extraordinary food that will cause children to g r o w drama~cally. But at the same time Mon- day, the FTC cleared "Wonder Bread" of more seri ous Ex-Nixon Aide Denies Post Note THE FTC also ruled that the company \\ill not have to nm oorrective advertising to tell consumers t h a t previous com m ercials rn i s r e pr esented the ex· traordinary quality ol the bread. !TI Cootlnental said it felt ~t had "pretty much won the entlie case,".but woold appeot the "~irtraofdinsry food" ruJ. ing to the courts. Meat Wrap Tied to Illnesses "I don't know what thev're planning for you in Iowa Nov. IO, but this article doesn't look too good.'' Hughes wrote Mo,ndale of a dispatch from the Washington boreau of the St. Paul Pioneer Press. The story, noting that Mon- dale is a lonner attorney general who has served I~ CllICAGO'(UP)) -A.study the Senate since 1964, con· indicates .h_.\l t ~ h·e rs ~ eluded: workers who wrap pfe.eat, "SUrvivors include hi! wife, ~ meets with two children, his mother, four plastic may be exposed to brothers and a sister. '1 a new disease -"meat-wrap-* pers asdana." Pat Nbon anci_ her daughter William N. SOkol, Yossef · and son·in-law Jalle and David Aelony and Gilden N. Beall - lf!f~tAD Mister, name 10 couples with whom you and your wife associate. If you're typical, you'll have met seven out of those 10 through your wife. Or so report the sociology boys. SACRAMENTO (UPI) Former White House aide Lyn Nofziger says he does not remember a memorandwn calling for a campaign in ~fay 1970 to pester the Washington Post. The advertising campaign In question began in 1964 and featured television com· mercials with time sequence pictures of a child growing up rapidly with "Wonder Bread" helping -to "build strong bodies in 12 ways." The original FTC complaint kl the case charged that "Wonder Bread" was being falsely advertised because .it was not unique or different from any other enriched bread. Torrance, Cald., said Monday _!!!!!!!!!!! the illness WaS biggered by ol Harbor General IJospital, .... 11::1: GETAWAY ,;;;~··,. ' "" co.u1Q ; Address mail to L. ft.f. Boyd, P.O . Bo:c 1875, New· port Beacll, Calif. 92660. GOOD TASTE Tue. to Sun. 10. 5 JOSEPH K. CORTESE, O.V.M. CAPISTRANO VETERINARY CLINIC 31<101 Camino C1pillr•no San Jyari C ... pilh1no Offic• Hourl : Daily 9.6 S1furd1y 1/-1 2 Day or Nigh! Call <196·3731 .ivou guys have to un- derstand that was three years ago and there were probably 1,000 memos with my name on them," Nofziger said Mon· day. "There's just no way you can remember all that kind of crap." The Washington Po s t reported it obtained a memo from White Hou,,e aide Jeb Swart Magruder to prostder>- tial Otiel ol Staff R.R. Haldeman calling for a "talk· Ing letter" campaign against the paper and its POJbllsher, Katherine Graham. The letters, the newspaper said, were to criticize the Post for the "biased coverage the people in Washington receive of the·news, compared to that in the rest of lhe country." Nolziger b coordinating Lt. Gov. Ed ReJnecke's campaign for C.alifomia's Republican gubernatorial nominaUon in 1974. Serious about Losing~ MEDIC A IG T RE DUCTION Lindora MEDICAL CLINIC Lindora's unique program is a safe and practical method for the-entire family fo·lose wei ght and learn how to maintain p.roper weigM,, .under lhe stric t supervi sion of Medical Doctors., Call for i"ntormation • Monday thru Friday 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. • SAN BERNARDINO E. LONG BEACH MISSION HILLS HAWTHORNE ORANGE 888-4788 597-0378 365·1138 879·923B 538-2395 AffOWh•ll' Loi A!lo' M•11lon H1Wtho1n1 Tu1tln.¢h1pm1n M1dlc1I BldQ. M1dlt1I C•ni.r Medlt•I 8109. M1d1ca1 C.nt•r P1ot111lon11 BlclQ. ' NEWPORT BEACH GARDEN GROVE LONG BEACH PASADENA LA HABRA 845-3740 534-2051 42B-8549 7911-2814 894·1029 Pat• Ptolu11on11 Pl•ze KB Pro!111lon11 Crock1t HlllcrHt lldg. P10IN1!on•I Bldg. BldQ. 81n-BlclQ. MldiC1I 81df, WOODLAND HILLS SHERMAN OAKS WEST COVINA FULLERTDN RIVERSIDE 347.5547 799.7103 962·3438 87D·9501 717-8250 WlfMl·Vlt!ory Cirob/ri.von orit Ml•On St'1•C:Olln:• M1dl,1I M1dlt1I BlllQ. Prot1111on•1 e d!J. 811111. Mldlclt 81 f· SQu111 SANTA MONICA COSTA MESA POMONA CERRITOS 828-4513 557-1893 623·1855 924-5741 . frlflllln M•ll Vlldl Polf!Ont ll•HtY • C.rrlto1 1 Mldlt1l 8IO!J. P1ot1111on1t lldf, M1d1c•I Cfl\ltt P1ol•1t1on11 lldf. • I 11IE JOMPANY admitted that its bread may not contain more -ts than other brlnds, lllll lllUed !bat should not.,..... II from elfoliing its quaHlles ' tn advertising. The FI'C in Manday's r u I i n g qreed, l!at singled o u t lllOll\er ~ of the ad for critldsm. fumes released when workera COLLEGE cut the plastic wrapper with PHARMACY a hol wtre. The rep<rl was · published in the Journal ol • ,..,. Dr. It M1l'ller the American Med I ca I (1C111H f,_ '•lrvltw s1111 H~T•I) Associatkm. c .... ,_. ...._, The study said the disease I ""1sc11nt0Ns llCICIOOM llNTAt.S causes shortness of · bttath, MOL.t.1n1• OllOMY coughing and wheezing and ! ~ ~~~~s apparently disappears when •-CAMP SUP ... TS the worker is not expoeed '*'-' hn* • ......., CMree to the fumes. Three mkldl ... ged """""' workers developed respiratory problems, the report said , when exposed to !umes ol polyvinyl chloride cut with a hot wtre. It was pointed out the three women were cigaret· te srnolrers and might have inhaled the fumes while smok· '+"41.AGl ~ South Coast Village "Goof" ~ •. , · Sunflower at Plaza Drive ::; '°""' ~ next to Sou1h Coast Plaza : ~i Costa Mesa =ip=-~;#'·;;"~'{f;..;;;;.p.== I 714•556•8276 SEE OUR ORANCOE COUNTY SKI 100.TH, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER llltl, IOOTH 39 the ll &aid lt was false and misleading lo Imply that "Wonder Bread" is "an CX· . tnonlinafy lfOWll>producing food" 11111 ordered rrr eon. ing. tinelltal to !llql making such iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii claims. 'lbe order covers all foods turned out by m Con- ttnental and pomoted by the !inn's advertising agency, Ted Bates Inc. ol New York. The case bad been con- sidered a test ol whether the govEl"Dl110llt could clamp down on "uniqueness" claims for p<duots thal 'really are not unique. The commission chooe to address itM:lr, however, on· ly to the "extraordinary" claims issue. _., ____ _ ,,.._ .......... .. ------ '.' WEST CUFF CUSTOM TAILORS Ladlot & Men•' Expert Alterations Quick Service 645-1072 11JJ 1rw1M Aw. WettcrHf,._. " Clonll! 111 _., PREFERRED ACCOUNT la a MW concept In po-.. banltlng -gl.-,... • -pock-o1 baMlng ....i-at the lownt rateo In C.llfomlL And, ff,..~~ M PIJ lho pootago both wayol -··-""' got 1 + 1 = 4 with lho PREFERRED ACCOUNT: _,... -a Centlnota Bank (1) Chocking Accoun~ plus (1) Master Charge Ac c,...,""' quolllJ for (3) AutomaUC -Account ond (4) Chock GuoronlH cans, PREFERRED ~ a CHECKING O -. ACCOUNT "' OpeNng your personal chocking ICCOUnl ls the lirtl step In getting your PREFERRED ACCOUNT Slar1ed. You'll also become a PreJtmed Depositor," and we'U print I hat ~~signature. 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Of the 26 first-string extra-point and fie.Id-goal 1pecialists in the league, 10 are imports: Miami's Garo Yepremian , from Lanarcn, Green Bay's Chester Marco! from Opole, Dallas' Toni Fritsch from Petronell, the New York Giants' Pete Gogolak from BOdapest, Kansas City's Jan Stenerud from OSio, the New York Jets' Bobby Howfleld from Bushey, plus Cincinnati's Horst MuhlmaM of Dortmund, West Germany ; PlttJburgh's Roy Gerela of Sarrail, Alb., C8nada; San Diego's Raimund Wenching o[ ,Mondsee, Austria: and Atlanta's Nick Mlk .. Mayer of Bologna, Italy. But have the kickers taken over? Hardly. Last year there were 717 Ueld·goal aUempts and 499 made. At the halfway ·mark this season there were 435 at· tempta and 279 made. Project that lhrough the 14-week season and there Ul"ITll ...... N 'PITTSBURGH'S TERRY HANRATTY 15) FUMBLES AFTER BEING HIT. : ·~ ( I ;(•• \, .. ,.,. I Unknown qn Stars Big Plays on Offense, ' ' Luck Key for Pittsburgh PITI'SBURGH r AP) -The Pittsburgh Steelers. licking quarterback adversity with big offensive plays, a stubborn defense and a little good fortun e, have widened their lead in the American Football Conference Cenlral Division. Down to back-up quarterbacks TerrY Hanratty and Joe Gilliam because a£ Terry Bradshaw's separated shoulder. the Steelers held off a late charge to defeat the Washington Redskins, 21-16. MQftday nlght in a nationally televiSed National Football League game. "We've got somebody up there taking care of us," quipped Steelers tackle Joe Gr'eene. who recovered one Redskins' fumble and fell on t1,1,·o others by the Steelers. Hanratty lasted only a half before aggravating a rib injury, but he staked tbe Steelers to a 14-6 lead on touchdown passes to Preston Pearson and Ron Shanklin. When the ailing Hanratty left the game early in the third quarter, the lead was in the hands or Gilliam, a second- year man who was on the Steelers' tui squad last week. Steelers coach Chuck Noll said Gilliam threw some good pa~es. some bad ones and some when he shouldn't have. "We wanted to move on the growid oocc we got the lead," Noll said, ,;but Joe's talent lies in his ability to throw the football . "His passes were relatively con- servative," Nol.I continued , "but once he overthrew." Gilliam fired a 46-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Barry Pearson six minutes Jnto the fourth quarter to give the St~Jers a 21·9 lead. But on the next series, Gilliam passed on second· and-12 at the Steelers 22 - a time when Noll felt he should have stayed on the ground -and ex-Fullerton High star Brig C>-A·ens made his second in- terception of the night. Six plays later, Billy Kilmer hit Larry Brown with a 17-yard touchdov,.n pass to trim the Pitt!burgh lead to 21·16. Washington got. the ball with five minutes remaining, and a pass in· terfercnce call against safety Glen Edwards gave the Redskins a first down on the Steelers 17. Kilmer then tossed a pass to Brown, v.·ho was hit hard by safely Mike Wagner. The ball popped out of Brown's hands, and into the anns or Edwards. Edwards fumbled v.•hcn he was hit on the same play, but Greene came up with the ball on the Steelers seven, and Pittsburgh ran out the clock for its 13th straight regular se.isoo win at home. SCOlll" av OUAltTEltS Wt1lllr19ton 3 3 3 Pltl1bu~h 7 1 0 WHh -FG Kn loht lO Pllt -P. Pr•rion 1 O•ss from H•nr111y (G<'r,la kk lr.I WHh -FG ICnlgl'tl 12 PIH -Sh111k!h1 2• ,,.,, from Htr\rtJly CGtortll kk k) W•sll -FG 1Cn1gtlt 16 Pin - 8 . P11r1on ... PISI from Gl llllrr'I C~r•I• klekl w11t1 -Brown 11 pen lrom Kiimer tlCnlglll k.lck) A -•t,no. STATISTICS Piii, " ~9·H3 " " B-lt-4 .... '~ will be 810 attempts, about 4.1 tries per game, barely up from 197211 4.4 per game average. • And is place-klcklng so detrimental? Hardly. Ask the fans in Denver a few Monday ntghta ago. Their hearts sank u the "old man," Oakland's •year-old George Blanda, kicked a mammoth 49-yard field goal, apparenUy a game-winner with 36 seconds to play, then went nuts 33 seconds later as their own specialist, Jim Turner, booted a 35--yarder that gave the Broncos a 23-23 Ue. There's agony -Philadelphia's Tom Dempsey mis&ng an easy lut~play .. yard.er to permit Buffalo to win 27-28 a few weeks ago. And there's ecstasy -Dempsey clicking on a 12-yarder with 33 seconds to "go Sunday, giving the Eagles a 24-23 victory over New England. And there's a bit of bitterness, too, from some of the imports, reacting lo the complaint that foreigners have "taken over" an American sport. "Who's a foi"eigner?" says the outspoken Yepremian. "I'm an American citizen, I've served five years in the Army. I resent this 'foreigner' buslneu. "Where did football come ·from? For that matter, where did baseball, the national pastime, come f r o m ? Foreigners? Where was · R o b e r t o Clemente born? What about Jesus Alou? Or Bert Campaneris? Or Bert Bly1even?" Football, it turns out, is foreign, an Americanized version of Britain1s rul{by which, in tum, has its roots in similar sports going back to the ancient G~ks and Romans. Baseball? It's a derivitlve of En11:land's rounders. But the Idea ·of hittin.I( a ball around with ~ stick started 6,000 years ago as a religious rile in Egypt. · The late Roberto Clemente, one ·of baseball's greatest stars, was bom tn· Puerto Rico. Alou ls from-the Dominican Republic. Campaneris is Cuban. Blyleven was born in The Netherlands.·Yepremian has made his point well. "Listen." he says with an air of fmali- ty, ·•a kicker's a kicker no matter where he's born. And anybody here who ca11s me a foreigner is a foreigner himself -wiless he 's an Ameri!:an Indian!" Fritsch says he doesn't feel any resent- ment -at .least not from fans or critics. He's taken some razzing, though, from players on other teams. U that has any eUect, though, it's the positive kind. "Every time I am on the field I say, 'lam the beat.• 11 Pressure? It doesn 't bother Fritsch, form erly a star on the Austrian national soccer team. "I never feel the pressure because in Vienna I sometimes played before 100,000 persons in the stands. Crowds do not bother me." But A1arcol, the National Conference's AU-Star place-kicker and Rookie of the Year in 1972, knows about pressure. Not because he's from Poland, though, but because of the importance lhe game bu thrust upon him, the emphasis on field goals. "The way the game is today," he says, "a kicker feels he's likely to be called on three or four times. If he misses one or two, his team is likely lo lose by one point. That makes for pressure, sure. But you have to rulize no ticker i. perfect. II he was he'd be a robot,~ not a human. You can't let it worry you." "I have never felt iny resentment,'' says Stenerud, Kansas City's kicker since 1967. "But I had the opportunity to go to school in the United States and learn football before entering the pros. ~ "I can see that it would be dillicqlt for someone new in this country arid to the game to go through tralnlng camp learning what football is all about, getting used to the routine, while going through the pressures of competing for a job. I didn't have that problem 'cause I was on the football team at Montana State. "As for pressure," Stenerud adds, "it's a pressure job in the first place." Borowiak Wins STOCKHOLM -Jeff Borowiak gained the third round of the Stockholm Open tennis tournariient by beating England's Mark Cox JH;, H, 7·5, Monday. Seventh-seeded Niccl P 11 l c of Yugoslavia also advanced to the third round alter defeaUng Spanish Davis Cup. per Anlonio Munoz, H, 6'1, W . In a first-rowid match, Haroon Rahim ot Pakistan knocked oH Christopher f\lot· tram, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4. Also, Frew MoMillan of South Africa advanced to the second rowld by trim· ming Antonio Zugarelll of Italy 8-3, 8-3. . UPI Tt11111to10 JUDY CARLSON DIRECTS FOOi:BALL TRAFFIC. Gal Ref No Libber Apparel Big Problem at First NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) -She says she's not doing it for the sake of the women's liberation movement. She says she's doing it becaUse she 's a football nut. Judy Carlson, a 5-:foot4-inch blonde. ls Connecticut's first woman football official. "I'm about as far away £rom a woman's libber as you can get. I still appreciate a gentlemen opening the door for me," says Miss Carlson. The idea or officiating started dur- ing Super Bowl time last January when she quipped : "Wouldn't it be fun to be a football official?" Her t'()()mmate, Mary AM Buonome, said the line was good for laughs for months afterward until Miss C&rlson got a rule book. After studying it, the Yale-New Haven Hospital X-ray technician pass· ?d the New Haven Football Official's Association examinations with perfect scores. "I think that I will stick with the midget leagues and freshmen games that are assigned to nev.· officials. I've got a lot to learn," says Miss Carlson, whose only participation sport Is skiing. "Books tell you the rules, but I think a man's logic for football is much better than a woman's logic for foo tball . Most of the male officials have played the game." - Apparel of the new woman official was a problem at first. But Vin Reilly, Connecticut's commissioner of officials, resolved: the problem with a slight change in the required uniform. "I agreed to shorts because I knew no one carried size 24 knickers. Imagine the factory when the order comes in for her knickers next year," Reilly says. Waller Replaces Svare Quitting Was My Choice, Says Ex-Chargers Coach SAN DIEGO (API -The short. unhap. py reign of Harland Svare is over. 1lbe husky former linebacker resigned as roach of the San Diego Chargers Monday and resumed the general manager's job he · held before taking over coachlng duties from Sid Gillman with four games to play in 1971. Ron Waller, a fonner Los Angeles Rams running star who has beell the Chargers' special·teams coach since 1972, was named coach by · owner Eugene V. Klein for the rest of the season. Klein said he'd name a new coach next year. Svare, 43, the target of heated abuse by the home fans an season, appeared relieved as he made the announcement al a sportswriters' luncheon. "The losses have been very hard on me, hard on my pride and my dignity," he said. "I haven't shown my emotioos. I've kept it inside. "It was my decision. I think I'll find my general ,manager's chair very com- fortable. Al least !low I won't .have to explain why we turned the ball over.'' The Chargers were beaten 19--0 by the Kansas City Oiiefs Sunday, their third shutout loss this seasOn. They are 1-6-1 this year after a 4-~l record and their only last-place finish in 1972. The fans hung "Sack Svare" banners from the railtngs , booed a hurried m~ tioo of "the Chargers coaching staff'' at the pregarne introductioos, and watch- ed as a group pelted Svare with wads of paper at he ~strode off the field, head high, at the ·end of lhe game. Klein, who refused ~ give Svare a vote of confidence two weeks ago, prais· ed him as "a remarkable judge of talent," but added, "He wasn't getting it (winning) done." · Svare, linebacker on three conference champion NC\Y York Giant teams in the 1950s. coached the Los Angeles Rama from 1962 to 1965, spent a year as e stockbroker, then became an assistant coach with several clubs before joining the Chargers as general manager in 197t. Herrera's Future Up to Tea1111nates A year as defensive coach under Vince Lombardi at \VashingioQ. influenced hi1n to try to mold the Oiargers into a fundamental, Lombardi-type team. Waller, who played for the Rams horn 1955 to 1958, became the first player e\'er drafted by the-Chargers after turn- ing down an offer to buy the new franchise ln 1960. But his comeback attempt was thwarted by a knee injury. LOS ANGELES (AP) -The UCI,A Bruins lead the nation in scoHna. averag- ing 46. 7 points a game but one point they dldn't score Is ttie controverolal subject 't the Westwood campus. Efren llerrcra, UCLA's senior soccer- style kicking •pcclal~t. said he missed t1"' extra point kick on purpooe alter the last 9CON! of Saturday's 62--13 rout or Washington to show hls anger for not being allowed to kick a third.quarter field goal. Coach Pepper Rodgers s:tid Monday that Herrer1's future on the UCLA team i. up r. his teammates. "l !old him l would have an answer for him later as for liis situation on the team," Rodgers said . "I want him to sit down and talk with his classmates. They have to find ou\ what he meant. "He apotoglzed to me but It's a matter of whether Efren can regain the con- fidence of his teammates. It's hard to igoore-that-a-klek-w3' dellberalely miss· ed." The Bruins, leading 35-13, had driven lo the Washington 23 when on fourth down they ran instead or calling upon ~lerrera, the No. 2 all-time scorer 11 t UCLA who last week was listed by Rodgers •• among his players dcservi ng naUooal honors , \ In the locker room Saturday, Herrera's eyes wtrc misty as he said, "I've tried eight rield goals this year. That's ridiculous . . . they dOb't care about me. I want to !eel a part of the team but when they went for it on fourt~and- two, they cut me out of It.'' Rodgers said h.e would have been ac-- cuscd of running up I.he score agalnst Wash.ington if ·he'd allowed Herrera to attempt the field goal when the BrulM led 3H7. "I'm damned U l do and damned lf 1 don1t,1t said Rodgers, who added that he really doesn't mind Herrera's !leCO!ld·guessing his strategy. l 11Coaches' decisions have been ques- tioned from the beginning of time," he s1ld. "Heck, my wife and my 1~year old son question my decision.!." Earlier, at the Southern California Football Writers Association meeting, Rodgers was asked who else could kick for the Bruins. "We have a field £ull of kickers," he said. At Monday 's. practlct, Rodgers had three players involved in kicking drllb -John Sullivan, a reserve punter nnd fullback : Wally Leistner. a rresh.man, and Brad Kramer, a junior college transfer who ldcked barefoot. • After several years he v.·ound up coaching in the Continental l.cague and won three straight championships before Joining the Chargers ., assistant in charge of kick and kick-return teams. Woller 11ld he took the job "strictly en an Interim basis." He said he planned a more freewheeling attack, and would deactivate the injured Unitas in favor ol thlrd·year quartorback Weyn< Clark, who Is i. compete with rookie Dan Fools for the starting job,' • .DAILY Pilar 9 Lakers Test Oeveland Minu s Smith ' CLEVELAND . -'The Los Angeles Lakcrs will be without a large pllrl of thcir defense -7·!oot center Elmore Smith -when they meet the Cleveland Cavaliers in a National Basketball Association game here tonight. It'll be on radio (KFI, 6 o'clock). Smith. who leads the NBA in blocked shots with 8.5 per game, broke his cheekbone in a game Sunday night and is expected to be replaced by veteran l\Jel Counts. He should be read y Wednesday night against ~1ilwaukce, a Lakers spokesman said. The Cavaliers, like the Lakers . rely largely on their back court. Explosive Austin Carr, ~'ilh a 24.1 average, teams n·ith canny veteran Len Wiikins. Cleveland has added Jim Brewer. a S.foot·8 forward-center from th e University of l\1innesota, arter trading away starting forward John Johnson to get draft rights to him. Gail Goodrich and Jerry \\'est continue to lead the Lakcrs with averages or 28.5 and 24.0 res pcclivcly. e Baja Race Begins ENSENADA, l\texico -Two hundred assorted cars, motorcycles and dune buggies are being checked for fitne ss today for 875 miles of torture in the Baja 1,000 oflroad race. The fll'St drivers leave \Vednesday morning down a course that winds along the Baja California peninsula across rocks. mountains and sand to La Paz near the southern tip. Only a few sections are paved. Pamelli Jones, former Indianapolis 500 winner, tries for his third straight cham- pionship here in a custom-desigped pickup truck. Other competitors include former land speed record holdei: Mickey Thompson, motocross star Rolf Tl.bblin and two-time Baj$ 500 winner Bob Ferro. More than $68,000 in prize money is at stake in 12 classes with winners judged on elapsed time. Drivers start at one-minute intervals and must pass nine checkpoints. · e Decision Postponed SAN DIEGO -A meeting of National League club O\Yncrs to decide the future of the San Diego Padres baseball team has been postponed indefinitely, mayor Pete Wilson said Monday. ··1 spoke to Chub Feeney today, and he told me there Is no meeting ot the club owners scheduled,'' Wilson said. "He said there is nothing .to cooveno them for. He will convene them at the nquest of the present Padre ownership." e Landr11 Sldel111ed DETROIT -Detroit Lion quarterback Greg Landry has been lost for the rest of the Natlooal Football League season due to a knee injury originally thought to be only a minor ailment. An examination late Monday by team physician Dr. Edwin Guise revealed cartilage dama ge in Landry's left knee which will require .surgery, a team spokesman said. He suffered the injury in a 34-0 victory over the Green Bay Packers two weeks • ago. ' e Rlflhts Clarified ATLANTA -Atlanta Braves' home run star Hank Aaroo has received a oowt order clarifying his visiting tights with his children. Aarm had filed suit against his ex- w if e, Mrs. Barbara Lucas Aaron, complaining he had not been allowed "reasonable" visitation rights with the couple's four children. Fultoo Coonly Supenor Coor\ Judge Osgood 0. Williams said the two parties had agreed lo the tenns outlined in his order before the hearing was held last week. e De11 Retiring PINE!WRST, N.C. -Joseph C. Dey Jr .. 64, is retiring as boss of the $8 million golf tour at the end of next February, when his five-year contract expires. 1 A leading candidate to succeed him as commissloner of the ProfeMional 1 Golfers Association's Tournament Players division is Sam Gates, f/1, New York lawyer. Gates represented the tour· ing professionals in the bitter battle , when they threatened in 1968 to· break away from the PGA and go forth on their OV.TI. e Decker 'l'rh1mphs LA . MIRADA -Mary Decker, the Garden Grove youngster who runs for Jluntington Beach's Blue Angels track club, v;on the Southern Pacific AAU cross C0W1try championships for 14-17 year olds at L3 Mirada Park. clocking a 14:04 for 2'1 miles. Another Blue Angels runner. Kristi Wilson, captured the 9-wider tiUt. leading a 1-2-3 !IWttp. Andrea Kirttom and Carol Landry followed Miss Wilson. Football Ratings ly .\tMtl•IM ,f'ffl Thi too 10 co111H footbell lffmt.. '"* l't<O'dll Ind IOltl oolnll1 I.Ohio I t, 10.01,14' )1. t#ttlrltkt "l•I JlD 2, Al1116me M-4 l,OM lt . TUil fl(ll 1•14 13.J 3. 0111anom1 •+1 tlt 11.. T,1111 t-741 1'9 •• Mk tlto•n t+O .. 11, ""'· SI. ,.,.. 11' S. NCl!rt Din'lt 7+o 1• \l. HM\Ofl 7-1-0 n J ,, PtPlll St. H -0 ll' 1•. T~1.. •·t·O • r. LSU l.o-41 -11. Ml•'"'· Of!. M:O rs I. $o. Cll l •l•I 4MI 11. IC.•nt11 .S.l•I IS t. UCLA 1·1-4 CJI ll. l(tftf SI. 1·l4 14 10. M1~1 1·1-0 UJ 20. Piii )-J•l ll Otllt~ rtctlY+l'IJ wt-. t1tttd •IPNlll•lc1llt: Atll-. Avbun1. ColDrldo, Mtn•ol•h SllM, Mor• C~rtllln. Stell. 0-.l•l\l)ITl.fl $tell, St4t1fror"d. 11.>l.tM. • • •• ' J ' , ' J 0 DAil Y PILOT Start You r Engines! WITH DEKE HOULGATE ln the name or crolog~· a small federal agency has assumed po1rers that could nulkc il a repressive police force· in the fu. ture . another secn1ingly necessary encroachment on the personal liberties of all Arncrican citizens. The U.S. Bur~au of Land ~lanagement. y.•hich used to special- ize in the givea\11ay of this country 's dwindling natural resources. has su ddenly becornc a zealous n1is('r. protecting a huge desert area the BL~1 lried for many ye;irs lo dispose of, 1vith almost no success. Last 1veck a comprchens11·r land use plnn 1\'fnt Into effect in the CalifDrnia desert. If 11 1rorks. the format 1vill be extended to other parts ol the country until every aerc of federally O\\'!lcd "public" land is covered by use restrictions. The BLh1 is respons1\Jlr for that lt•dcral land Y.'hich. isn 't assigned to the military. isn't devoted to parks or public build- ings. Tradilionally, BLr-.1 land has been cons idered surplus. It belongs to the people. V>'hO pay taxes ror the privilege or 011·n- ing it. In the absence or any controls over the use of that land, once thought lo have very little value, recreation vehicle enthusiasts have been helping themselves to it. using BL~l land to ride around. race. ca mp on and explore. J. Russell Penny, BL~1 direc- tor in California, claimetl al a press conference last week that they have created "an emergency requirin g immediate action ." Henceforth, only 6 1:ierccnt or the dei;crt or !lli0,000 acres will be open to RV people 1vith no strings attached. Closed 1l'ilt be 3 pe rcent or about 500.000 acres (mostly in remote areas any- 1\'ay, Penny said), and the ren1aining 17.680,000 acres 11•ill be either limited to use by JllO!orists or C'xisting roads :ind !rails or y.•ill remain closed pending further study. • • • At Hrst glance, It seems to be n sensible plan. Ho\\'C\'Cr, the "'ay it was prese nted at the Press con.feren ce, "'here fi ve pro- fessionally designed brochures and 13 other pieces or prinled matter "'ere han ded out in a bul~ing press kil printed at tax· payer expense, we y.·ere lert "·Uh lhe uncontfortablc feeling that 1984 Is just around the corner. Penny, und er questioning, ad1nit1ed that there are only nine rangers to poli ce the enormous and e-01nplex land use pl an and that his agency has funding to hire only four more. He said Congress wi ll be asked lo gi \·e him more troopers to patrol the desert -many times th e num ber there are DO\\', That "'as the frightening revelation. Des pite Penny's cbarac· lerization of Bl!\f rangers as "good "'ill ontbassadors." one rou ldn 't help but conjure lh e vision of an arn1y of uniformed federal police roa1ning the dese rt loo king for trespassers. • • • _ Someone asked Penny to con1ment on lhe off-road enthus· iasls' claim that only the small minori!y or la\\'lcss 1notor- cyclists and dune buggy drivers arc carving up sections of the desert, not the majority of careful RV users. Penny wasn't buy· ing that argument. It is the increase in the R\' population itself that is respon· sible for desecraling the desert. he sa id. contending thal. ordinary families \l'ho love the desert and drive out on \\'eC'kends to enjoy it are llie cu,lprits. Unless his nine rangers can persuadt> them to obey the law of the desert. thi s group of 1vrekend 11·anderers 11•i\I Y.Titc a chapter of An1erican history as cont emptuous of federa l authority as th e dudes \\•ho patronized the speakeasies in the 1920s. Can you see the l\1afia muscling in and assigning territories in the 1tojave? • • • Nem Class of Dr11 g R11c i11g Nobody expects drag racing lo be 1vha1 it 11•as in the mid- 1960s. \1·hen funny cars were still considered fu~t !he Na· tional Hot Rod Assn. Is making an effort to reCaplure the en- thusiasm of some of Hs most colorful competitors with a nc'v class of racing next season. Called Pro Competition Elin1inator. th e new he:ids-up rac· ing category \\'iii be debuled at the NHRA Supcrnationals NO\'. 16-18 at Ontario 11otor Speedway. Actually. Pro Comp isn't ne11•. II is the malchup on equal terms of three Jong neglected classes of cars: It y.·as tried be- fore with some success under the banner of ·'combo eliminator.'' As it was then, it consis ts of junior fuel dragstcrs. top gas drag· sters and fuel-burning altered coupes. It seems like only yesterday. even though it 1vas a good five years ago, that each 9f these classes of co111pctition y.ras ex· citing enough lo drag the fans a1vay fron1 their TV ~et s at home to go out to the local strip and 'ratch a race built around one of them. The super stars 11·erc Bob J\1uravez in the gas-burni ng, t11·in- engine "Freight Train." \Vild \\'illie Borsch in his AA fuel altered ''\\linged Express" and Don Enriquez in the sensational 200 m.p.h. Adams and Enriquez junior fue!er. • • • Junior fuel dragsters, simply fuel-burning dragsters that are not supercharged, used to prov ide great lo1r-budget racing. A great deal of speed engineering knoY.·-how came from the class. and th e ackno\\•ledged master of thi s mysterious art 1vas En· rique1's car o"'ner and 1ntehanic, veteran hot rodder Gene Adams. \Ve expected to find Adan1s overjoved at the resurrection of junior fuel racing on a professional baSis. It's kind of a strange deal for us,'' sa id th e sp<'ed equip- men t factory foreman from l\lission Viejo. "I sold my single- engine dragster a year ago, because there ,1·asn't any racing for it. ··0on "·ill run the car for n1e for this race only. but then \re are going to go top fuel racing ntxt season. I think this riew 'super eliminator· is a great deal but "'e y.·on't be in it oext year." • • • Adams explained lh at even \l'i!h the big money meets there 1rori't be enough races lo justify maintaining a car. even though he calculates that it will cost one-tenth of 11·hat his top fuel drag· ster will in 1974. ''1 don 't think you'll see much of this type of racing next year." he continued. "There is a rumor going around that AHRA is going to start up one of these deals. too . and it looks like a bunch of people \Viii get involved. "fl will be very popular at fir st for people to see ho1I' ii goes, but there y.•on't be enough /oral meets around lo suppor' the cars. I don 't think.'' · Kno1vledgeable fans must think this is loo bad. Con1bo. super pro comp or whatever they call 11. the class used to ha1·e a great variety of cars. all running pretty equally. The appeal \Vas its diversity. By contrast, one funny car looks pretty 1nuch like another, and so do the top fuelers. Ada1:11s and his ~ery consistent dri1·er 11·ill join the top fuel parade 1n 1974, Their approach to \\"inning in a tough class is quite interesting. J C Gi rls Bctsketbal l llerrn.11"0¥1cll llrOOlkw•y ·--c ..... Dlot~ Pl11t9' Tol•lt Mulroy's Receptions Make Sailors Tough Pius X Can'i Get 011 Track DOWNEY -Plw X High Dy ROGER CARLSON School's football team is Of 1111 Dilly ,1111 11•11 Nr"'porl Harbor J! 1 g h • 5 WQndering ft this poinl what iniracle finish that upended it takes to defeat an An gelus Loorn Thursday night in League oppooent and irater II ~ 7 Del may b8 in ror trouble Sunset League foot ba , .,..,...1 • Thursday-~night as a resul~ \\'as triggered by a 174-pound when the tY.·o teams meet at junior receiver \\'ho caught Santa Ana Bowl. passes of 37. 48 and 39 yards in the rourth quarter. "Our kids have done a good Vinnie r-.tulro y wa ·s job each week but they quarterback Sieve Buk.ich 's haven't had quite eno.ugh to 1argcl and on each occ:ision ,Q;et ove r the hump," coach ~fulroy plucked the ball out Warren Simmons says. of 1hc air amidst double The Warriors have lost three col'erage. Angelus League games, all .to It 11'as a dcsocrate situation the top powers in the circuit for ~e"'oorl H:irbor 11'ilh the and all by one touchdown or clock ticki ng a"·ay the Sailors' Jess. They lost lo St. Paul, last shot at lhe circuit title. 7~; Bishop Amat, 16-12 ; and The Tars were pushed back to Servile, 2G-14. to llleir 13 afler a penalty "We 've been in every game and it \Vas see-0nd and 10. and if the ball had bounced Bukich fired to 11ulroy on the right way, we could have a streak p<1ttern and he came won them." do11•n on the Loara 39 for How da:es be look at i\later a 48-yard gain. Del? Mo111enLc; later it was third and 11. Buk ich ivent lo his "Definitely ''"'6 will ha ve to stop their running game. Tha,t favo rite target again. boy Jim Gardea is 8 good "f thought he was_ go ing one and they also-have a to throw to our secondary good passer in Steve htartin· target. Burdick Ray." says dale at quarterback. ~1ulroy. "But at! of a sudden J looked up and the ball y.·as "!\later Oei doesn't have the there. I just sort of found tremend®s size i~ has had an opening and Bukich picked in the past but it Isn't a 1ne up. . ·ii was almost small team. I think they are , a broken pattern." a little bigger overall than 8 d We." The result \Yas a 3 -yar gain and Ne1vport was at the \Vhat about the defense? Loara one-vard line. "They've changed l heir The SailOrs event u a 11 y defense this year and we're poun ded over for the y.•inning still evaluating them on Dim. louchdoY.'11 to tr a n sf o r m Some of the games they lost l\'e1,·port fro_m an also-ran into -Amat for instance, they a possible champion. still played \\'ell. Amat is the "\'irnie is just fa ntastic.'" type of team-.Jbat you can sa1·s coach Don Lent. "He's play good deferise against and a 't rack kfd. ran a 10.2 100. still get beat by a big score." as a sophomore and has great -Tile wan:Jors3.re paced. by potent ial. · ba k R · K 11 b "Our receivers coach Hank running c egg:te e oug • Cochrane and quarterback a 6-foot, 170-pound senior. coach Jim Bratten deserve NEWPORT HARBOR'S VINN IE MULROY. Kellough olso plays ob. a lot or credit for the success ----------------------defense and has intercepted y.•e'vc had in the passing .three passes this seaso,n. game. Th.is is the big problem for .. But it's been a combination P1"cke1·00 T1"es Galore Simmons and the Pius x Clf things. First the kids need team. Eight of the 11 offensive a basic talent and you have starters also perform on to ha\'e a kid lhrowing the i\Jassi\'e ties marked the y.•ith four misses OJl the 31). 'defense. causing problems late ball \1•cll. "And the summer latest Daily Pilot Pigskin ga me card. Second was Helyn in the game wl:Jen they begin passing: league has-been a Pickeroo football pred icting Bemard of Ne1vport Beach to tire. real factor." contest. Four people tied for \\'hile third place v:as shared The 'Varriors are directed ~lulroy has caught 22 passes first place and their ercntua\ by Larry Harada of Costa by junior quarterback Rick for 665 ya rds and a 30.2 placement was determined by ~lesa, Louise Collier o f Ponce . He is inexperienced but average per e-0mpletion in use of the tie-breaker . Nc,vport Beach and Ste\'e improving, according to Sim· NC\\'port's first seven games. And 31 entrants "'e r e Halverson of Newport Beach. mons. He's scored touchdowns on deadlocked for the remaining Firty dollars goes to the "Right now he has the plays of 66, 41 , 66, 18 and third place a1vard of $10. winner, $20 to tho runnerup potential of being a better 39 yards. lleading the i1st of \\'inn ers and $10 each to the third than average quarterback," And most of the success was Craig Hays of Costa l\·lesa place finishers. the coach says. has been on t·1ulroy's favorite ----------------------------------" pattern -the streak off play action. ~1ulrov and Bukich spend a Jot or ·time '"orking on their plavs. "Thev're bolh offensive specialists," says Lent, "so \1·hen 've go to defense in practice they spen d a lo.t of tin-..e toget her.'' .. \Ve v•orked together every da.v during the summer.'' adds :\'lulroy as the Sa ilors prepare for their final hurdles in the 1\·ay of the Sunset League championshio -'Vestem and Huntington Beach. Tars Clim b In County Grid Poll i\·e,1·oor1 Harhor lii<Th 1nov- cd bac k into third place in the official Orange County too 10 football ratings for high sc hool teams this 11·eek after .defeatin~ Loa ra. 20-17, Thurs- dav night. Santa Ana Val!ey remained l\'o-l with a 7-0 record after handing Los Alamitos its first loss last week. 21-14. Servile is second. Loara fourth and Los Alamitos firth. T\\'O weeks ren,ain ror the 1973 regular seaso n football c:>moaj11n. ORANGE COUNTY TOP tO Pos ... Tean1 , Record Poin ts 1 Santa Ana Valley (7-0 ! 50 2. SctVite (5-l·ll 45 3. Ne1\'J)Ort Harbor (6-1 ) 40 4. Loara (5-2) 35 5. Los Alamitos t6-1 f 28 6. Edison (6-l ) 23 7. Villa Park 17-0l 19 8. Anaheim !4-2-11 18 9. F'ountain Valley [5·2) 12 tO. El Dorado (5-21 4 Others: Foo thill tS-1-1). El Toro 16-0 ). Sii TH( NIW DATSUN 8-210 AT COSTA MESA DAnUN 1145 Har.., It.II., C.M. 540·6410 ese D $J,OOO D sJ,OOO,OOO Did you Check a thousand dollars? The best place to go is where the people who chec.ked a mil lion dollars oo. Commercial Credit. We make loans worth millions of dOllars to some of America's la rgest corparatlons. But for all the millions we lend big business, we lend Just as much to people. Because we feel the reasons you need money are Just as important as the reasons a big company needs money. Need S1000or more to pay off blllsor meet ar\ emeroency? Get it from the people who understa.nd all kinds Of money problems. commercial Credit. _.,,_ Credit The best way to borrow a thousand is from the people who lend milliool. CostaMe.. • • 645.8700 ' BON'T DISCARD THOSE OLD TENN IS SHOES!! Santa Ana • Westminster • 370 E. 17th Stree l 1228 E. 17th St. 6798 Westminstet· Blvd. • 647·6871• • 894-4461 Kids Like 1'o Ask Andv We rtNlr .... •t-Mlrtl'll •II ,, .... ,, Aetltll t .... Trtftf'll $flffL Cftdlt Ufe lnwrt.MI A•e11Ulc to Zllrfl>l1 Bom"'ml •t CrouJI R1tn •CAtnmfttl•I Credit Plf n.. IM'Ol'POr•t,..I ANTHONY'S SH OE SERVICE e WfST(l,.11"1' Pl.ALA e 1.100 e ~"'"toH 151.""D . COltOHA DIL • ..,. ., ,' ) I Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO Sponsored ly DAILY PILOT $100 ~ WEEK .IN PRIZES ! .. $50 TOP WEEKLY· PRIZE 1 .s20 s10 For Weekly Second Place Winne r Each for Third, Fourth and Fifth Place Winners , Here's how you c•n be a pigskin prophet for profit. Weekly cesh pri1es •r• offered to winners of the Pilot Pigskin Pickeroo 91ma. Top winner e•ch week gets $50 in cash. Second plactt winner gets $20 in cash end third, fourth and fifth pl•ce winners each get $10 in cash. All "cash" actually is delivered to winners in the form of checks to be pic ked up by winners at one of the 10 participating members of the Harbor Boultvard of Cars •ssociation. Checks ·foL this week1s contest will be prepared by.: Miracle .Ma1da '2-150 Harbor. Blvd;;-Costa Mesa~ Tht 10 part:cip•ting •uto dealerships •long Co_st1 Mtsa's " "H•rbor Boulevard of C ars" tr•: Atlas Chrysler-Pl)-mouth, Ba uer Buie~. ConntU Chevroltt, Cost• M•s• Olt1un, Dave Rosi Pont'ia~, J ohnson & Son Lincoln.Mercury, Miraclt M•zda, Nali'•rs Cadillac, Thtodor• Ro bins Ford and UniYtrsity Oldsmobile. Watch for this player's form each week in the DAILY PILOT Sports Section. Circle the teem you think will win in tach pairing in the li1t of 30 games •nd send in lht playtr's form entry bl•nk or 1 re•sonable fac. simile. Then watch the DAILY PILOT sports p•ges for ea ch week's list of five winners. . RUW 1. S~t tflll !'"'Y tllnlr ...,.. .,. • ,_... ... I~ .i 11 ... ,., !!It Ctlltffl, lt11_ ... f«slmlN" 11 ..,. ..... M "11Hf .,,.Cl,." l1ff"les lftW'I .. unllwm Ill t/11 IN .,._,,. .. t.ac1Ut1le llftiel"I n.it 'lllllcll ""'' tlflltrm wlll H dlMt1Mllfftd, • 2. Stnd It t.: 'ILOT ,IOSll:IN ,ICll:llOO CONTEST, Spitrt1 D.jlllrtm'"t, ,.0. h1 IHI!, C11l1 Mew, CA. '212 .. I. Only tne ltltry "'' ,.,_ """'""" Nldl WHiie. C""'l••h -IMIVIHld 11111 HllMI lffklt ll May llW .. tlta,. -m,At lflll'IH 1,.lfl 1 11fttM --" ..,..., .. 111"1epe •lei m•r lli~u•llty ,,,., "Me:tlll-11alnl"' "'.,... "n11 .iKn1,..,, o.ei1-. o1 IUllllfl "' lfllt ptlllt '""' M 1c-c II HI "" Ill c•lcsll•ll. ... :;.r" .. """' ...... tnwl'1rtoll "'' ~'" "'" n..-., .... M. ,, """' .. ¥tr ,. lllt D.t.tl.Y I'll.OT ellk1 lly 6 P.M. n.t'tdly. J. 1'1 .. rtkl,.11"1 lllfrlVf'I Ind llltlr em,11ytt1 111f OAll y "II.OT .......... .., .... • lllW l""""latt runilln ''' Mt •Htlbl• " "'"· f. Tll l ltU.kE• I U.HK MUST II P'll.1.EO IM 01 ENTllY IS VOI D, r--------., ENTRY B LANK I Clrcl• tams you think wlll win thli WMk't t1mn I (hOf'!'I• tum Is .Meo~ one lltted } I New OrleaM vs Rams I I Pittsburgh vs Oakland . Cincinnati vs Buffalo I I Stanford vs USC I UCLA vs Oregon I Cornell vs Brown I I San Jose State vs Cal Colorado vs Kansos I I Illinois vs Michigan I I Oklahoma vs Mi ssouri Notre Dame vs Pitt I I SMU _vs Texas A&M I N~y vs. T.ulane I LA Harbor vs Golden West I I Saddlebock vs San Berdoo OCC vs Cerritos I I Pius X vs Mater Del C.tlM vs Fountain Valley I I Dona Hills vs Brea I I El Dorado vs University I H.untington Beach vs Westminster I San Clemente vs Valenclo I I Costa Mesa vs Los Alamitos · Sonora ·vs Laguna Beach I I Marina vs hnta Ana I I Mission Viejo vs El Madena Mqnolla vs Estancia I I Edison vs SA Valley I Arlington vs El T 9ro 1 Western vs Newport I I Tit eltlAll:EI -My ...... tll .... ltttl ••lnlNr ., "'"" ICOl"M I Ill ilf W ""'" ILllM ... _., 11 --------- --• I IN-·--l c1rr I,_ .__ I II I I I Zip .... -------~ .. • • ' • 1 Coit• Exchange ~ s·1 i 1 ver: A_ Bright Investment? ~ ~ ~ :; ' By STEVE MITCHELL Of tllt DlllW" Pilot Jl1ll Remember. when a quarter went cllnk instead of clunk ? Roland C. Becker, dlreclor oJ markeUng for the American Coln Exchllllgc, does. The Laguna Beach executive Is a coin broker who makes a market 1in bulk silver coins, a recent investment fad. "To an investor, sU,er can play an important role in this portfolio," Becker c l a i m s , "Silver, and particularly Mlver co.ins in bulk quantity , are the safest long-term ~hedge against an lnnation cycle . WHAT MAKES silver so sale? "For one thing, bags of pre- 1965 silver coins are spend- able, so they can never sell for less than their face value," Becker says. · Tl)e Be v e r I y Hills-based firm sells bags of silver coins in $1,000 face value quantities, weighing 720 troy ounces. The eo:ins are .999 fine silver. T~e company also sells bars of silver in 200-ounce to 1.000- owice bars. "It used to be the r eal con- servatives who inves ted in silver bullion and coins,., Becker said, "the ones who didn't trust the banks or the stock market. "i . "RECENTLY, IT'S .been regular investors -people who want to show quick capital gains." 'l:hq silvet jnv\!,ltm~nJ revq_. has brought with it some unus~al 1a1,s. "Ybu'd be surprised at some of the places our investors keep t heir bags," Becker said. "We know or one man wbQ cemented his silver coins under !\.is swimming pool· Others bury them in t heir back yai'ds, and some even keep silver bars under their beds. You can't keep your investments any closer to you than that." 1 HOW MUCH does • fl,000 face v&lue bag co.st? Becker says the cost is determined by the cur.rent CJ.sh price plus 5 percent sales lax. · "The only other charge if an investor pays cash for his silver, is a brokerage com- mission of two perCent of the m arket price." To get an i~ca: of how the silver market is doing, Becker says a $1.000 bag oJ silver sold for $1.174 in Dccen1bcr, 1971. "By Dec. 29, 197'1. the bag \vent for $1 ,518 to 'show a 24 percent increase'; Today. the same bag goes for $2,080." OF TH E FIRM'S .2,300 • Dlltr Pit .. Staff P~oto 'SILVER'S SAFEST' Broker Roland Becker customers. 65 percent keel! their coins at the company warehousing banks on margin accounts. A customer can buy on margin by borrowing most of the cos t of each bag from the company -sometimes $300 down per bag. An investor can refinance to a higher m argin level as the v alue of the bags increase. "T his allows a customer to use the equity he gains in • l'.I rising marke t to make ad· dltiona l investments," Becker explainc:d. T'i\'O bags'. is the munmum orde r for a margin a ccount. Becker says the m:lin asset of silver coin investment is Its liquidity. -.J 1'It's really easy 10 resCfI the coins. You don't have to wait for a buyer as in most other markets, because bags in silver coins have shown to enjoy a salcabili1.y far in excess ·of· a ny other known investm ent." WHAT ABOUT r ecent charges of consumer fraud which have sprung up in Southern California frorn ~me silver investors \Yho claim that firms dealing in silver are1 not delivering bullio1,1 a s . quickly as promised after payme nt? "Many of these margin·ac- Count investors say the firms they deal with don't have enough silver coins on hand to back up margin accounts," Becker exp!ained· He sais several dozen silver ,brok~rages have sprout~ in the Los Angeles area in recent years and many or them may not have enough silver to back customer's accounts. State officials a r c in· •• vcstignting the charges and a recently enacted regulation gives the State Department of Corporations the power to crack down on these firms through control oJ licensin g. ''WE WELCOME s t a te Jicensing and s upervision." Beckel'! st1)'.s. 'i'lt's the <1nly way shady operators can be drive n out of the n1arket." Tbe new regula tion requires companies dealing in coin· mQdlties on a 1narg in-loan or def~rred purc hase basis to ap- ply for state licensing. As or last \veek. the An1erican Coin Exchange and the racilic Coast Coin Ex· change in Long Be a t h were the only fir ms which applied ior s tate, licenses. DowneyS&L Earnings. Vp Special to the Dally Pilot DOWNEY -Oo\Yfley Sav- ings & Loan Associatio n reported per s hare earnings of $1.50 for the nine months ended Sept. 30. · This represents a 17.2 per· cent increase over the like 1972 earnings of $1.28 per share. New Atlas Cushionaire whitewalls. Belted Atlas PacesetterMwhitewalls. ' ~ 2tor~295,,,..,,,, f"ed. Ex. TaK lor eacll E14·14 tulleless white- -¥tall. wi!ll 2 \fad&-in$. ~ ~,Our n-. tougheit 1Stii•"Pf9 llre . • l'wo reinforcing belts of fiberglass oord over two polyester cord body pl ies. • Popular Serie.s 78 Profile, • Four·ply polyester cord. • Compulor..<feslgned ::. tread pattern to help '~. resist skidding. • ·t · ' • . ·!I'~· ---. • ... '-It' ...........-,. ,.:;;.:;:. :;;,-, .. ~- . ., Wiper blades & washer • service. • Full, wide 7·rib tread. Atlas batteries for every power need. Economy powe~. High capacity, Ourbeot. .. lflstall 2 new wiper blade rs fills. t • Chlick washer eystem. • Aef\11 w•sher reservoir. s39s s1gso s299~ sagso Al ias K-23. With trade-in. .Atlas PA·23. Wllh trade-in. Atlas PHD~23. Wlth trade-In. llClng. I 2 Whffll $2.17 Wheel bala ' ~97 4Whfftl Wtlthtt Included. Keeping wheels balanced helps correct B common cause of vibration and premature tite wear. ValueCenters are Exxon stations that offer e contlnulngprogram otgood values on----- the thlnga your-car:nHds. Rl ght,Jn your neighborhood, you can shop for tires, bat•. terles, get an oil change,. and much more. Check out all the good values !his mo~th at tho Exxon ValueCenler near you;-. ., 11ne.,.1o-..n\naltVUC.dlts: w•= Trndtn'!O•~I • 'A1tnt'. 'Cu1hlo110l••'. Rf:O. u.s 1'111. Oii •• A!IO• Supplv Cotnponv. look for the ValueCenter sign. Blue ValueCenter signs identify stations operated by Exxon Company, U.S.A. Prices and offef'9 shown above are avail· able a t-these slalions located In many metropolitan areas and c o mmunities. Red VatueCenter signs Identify partic i· paling independent Ey:o ndealers.P rlcos and9ffers may vary at these stalions. , Tuesday, Nov,mb'r 6, 1~74 DAILY PILOT JI OVER THE COUNTER NASO Listings for November S, l973 TM" QllOtlUO~ l,IOl!I WI\ "/• '"' Mu'vr ,,,. ,u, Aoblt DI\ :.i r Orange County I \UD9114d tl'I' tlw NI• Doft•lcl\ ,.._ lO'o Mtatm 11'4 14 lilotlin' 8 t1on•I MMl<L•tlOfl ot OO•(h C.1 t•f ••o IMOltrn ~ n Ao~ Co S.<u1ltlt1 Dt•t••S. OOw .JOnl Mt•tllnt 11<o ,, ... Row• Fn• ••• bldt INI Of1trl •11\li ?I MflfVJ ;i. II lil111;~r Ph QllOltd by owr.!he· 0011• 09 11'~ 1l Mtyt• Ft 22~-. 21•~ Ru\! Stov I Business tounte• Ota!.,, to 011<0f'll'I u 14\• Mldl•• C II 11•• \IQf Ad\ 11cll otlltr fl of Our'1kin 0 1 .... 3 Mil14!t M$ U u >, Schsrlt (10\t \fl\ltr'l'I Et'""' ~·" n~ Ml lliJ)OI' S7 ~ Scl\011 In time 1 Tilt q'"11f· ECOfl U b JS', J)\, M11!1 G11 lJ 21''1 Scon II\~ IOOfl\ do "°' Incl"°" £OS MIK ,. u Minn F•b s•. •I• \(olhl. G ltltil rNrkup ,...,. fl PilO 1)1) U'h Min NI G\ I•'> II Sctlpp-, H oown or cOmtni\· El Muell I'• •~· Mlsl{~ T• o l\Vt it• ~rl<t ~on • ~<I oo not EllttQY c t\o t \o MObt .a.m •" I'• Sv Mt•<ll t. Tom "'aUer has been named manager ol. engineering and construction for the Southwest region of Kaiser Aetna's Business Centers Division. rtort.w111 •ttu•I e:4'ui\'f __ OI ttl1 1C1 Molli Hm 11 11 11<'o Sv"""str 1r1nst<Uon$, Equ K\. 1J 11°h Moqul Co 21~• J9Vt S.ven uo INOUSTltlALI E!lwll\ A 1Sl'1 1611) Molt• In SO Siii) Sl>ortw ANO UTILITIEI E••<u Ln l 'r\ J'h MOOt'I ~ ~· SO Sl moloOl'I E•lfl(O 21\o ll'o Mo•1n Br t • > 10'• Sn~p TOI\ •111 Atll F11r lnf 911 8\-, MOHi\.11 It>, 10' > SO Ct! W1 Ac.iallnl 1• 19 F1rlon El l) :J4 M!g .lo)\( 11 ... IJ ... SO CMGS "d M•t•O 1~''1 11 Fftm Br 11 11 ... Mo\10; C.0 l S J.6 SIN! PIO AdYnL (.p 11 11\'o Ftl<I L\9 l ''t 9'1 MOtion In 19'' 20'~ Sr:t lril "le• .AIA ](O, is Fll'l'!lflll 6'1 70, Mo\Of Cl '" ·~· s •n•Ov I .a.o~• B•I 1J>;. 1Jl~ fs\ &oiln 1Q'h 200, M\ Sm!tll 9'• •~• S!<I R1QI\ Ali ca 1-nll 1l 13-i, 1\1 CiOlll 36\o JI'• MSI 01!1 '" 9i, !>11111 Hm Alleq ~v l't 2''> h t M!s~c U \'• U'V• Mulllme 11• 1 II'• St• Ill Ale Align Phr 19lo 10'M hi T•Fon 2(" 21 NU CnvSI I 11• St~N B•w Alll•d r.1 110, 11 F•~to Int l'• J .... N•I Ubly •'• s si.1klll s Am Ar>•SO ~ &'' Fii Ttltp 1e 19' I NI Md l(r I ' Slrge TK Am fXI)!' !Ill~ S9'o FOOd T-... 19' >?I NI P1tenl 11'1 II'• Strwb COO Am Ex pf F-<:ltt\I 01 11 11~1 Ntfllnm f t, 9"• Suorr £1 He will work out of the firm's new Business Cente r s Division regional office in Newport Beach. * Dale Johnston, of Newport Beach, has been na1ned presi· de nt of llall Coach , Inc., Foun- tain Valley-based manufac- t urer of mo- torhomes. J o h n ston has held n1anage - n1ent posi- tions with a number of firms involv- ed in recrea- tion related JOHNSTON products, more recently Luhrs Boat Co. 'vhere he served as general manager. * I rvine -based I CN Pharmaceuticals, Inc. has ap- pointed Dr. Jacques J . Kestelyn senior vice president of marketing. Dr. Kestelyn joined lCN after 13 years with Merck and Co., Inc. where he served as vice presi d e nt of marketing. Previously, he was manag- ing director of a surgical pharmaceutica l company in B elgium. * Newport Beach r e s i d e n t \\'llliam J. Lang, president of Symbolic Displays, Inc. of Irvine tlas been elected to chair the Orange County Couhcil of WEMA, an associa- tion ser ving high-technology firms. Assisting Lang ..yill be James L. vonH~. president of ITT Cannon Electric, Santa Ana and John \Vym an, presi- dent of DataneUcs Corp., F ountain Valley. HS'• !IH~ Fr11rne H 11 IP, Ne-...•I Co ••• 9\. sr11e• (p Am Fine! If" n" F•11n~ El ei. 10 • NE'n~ GE C•) Ill T1Hy (tp Am Fltlll )]>• 3l'o Fr•n10• 18' 1 1~'', NJ M"ll G U'o Ui, T<ltnPll~ Am f u•n •lo 6~ Frotnd lc 12 H'• N!colel in 10'• II '\ l•yOOr W Am Grtt •1'" •l'~ Fto1 FoE ~'o ~~. Nl•lr.tn /4 31 11°, Ttlttm AMirt sw 2&'1l f9 Ful\•r H 9•, 10 lll!tlr.tn B Jl'.• JJh Ttnn1nt Am Telev " l~ run~ Se<! /'' I'• No•O~!r 21' • 13 Terry C:n Am we10 10'• 11 G•11>rth u •, 1s•, Nw~ N!G • 9•. T!ltany ,.nl>eus• 31\t 38'-\ G-ol•hn~ 1]\, 14'• lllOWtll (p •I •1' I TL~ OC Aor•~o u 14•, c.111e L•J ''•in•, Olkwd H 8'· a-. Towlt Mt APS !n<P H~. 18'• G11te-... Tr 8" 9 Ottln Dr 10 11 Trn (){en A•dn Myt 2 Jl~ Gel<o (p 10 10~• O<til\ El 13'< U Trnoti Fn A"ow 1-lr 16"• 11 Gn Aulm JS lfl Ck:nqr Ml 2\0 1h Trlto Pro Arvida 1i. 8'• Gn Au~oP 18''.o 19:;;, 011~11 LQS !6lo 16~• Twon 01\ A•\O COia "" 11'• ~n Bond J J Jo DQllvy M 10•·, ll'n Uni (apt A!I G\ LI ll'• U'o Gn (•udl! 38°~ ]9', Opu (o;tl 11"1 11V1 Union !.QI All f>1eotl 16~, 110,. C.nl Shalt 11'• 11'• Orman! 6 6'h Un""-. Th .Auto Tfn 1010 IO~t Gold SFd 19'' '1 0Wt) NA J>.:. J~o US Ellvtl Bli•<I Alo l'o 0'• Grllm 1-M 11 •.-• 12"• 0/0le (rp Sfo 6~ US SU91r Bal<d Wt 18', ,9 C.•aP<I '!.c 6'• I' o P•b~I Br •16V. '' US Trk L Biktr Br lf'I> 19"> G•ey Adv S\, 9V, Pl<<it 00 '1 Univ f<ll Bl!ktr Fe J.l'h lS" H•(ll (II 26 21'.> P1c Gam 21"• 1lV. Unv Mol>I B•ldwn L ~\lo 10'1• Hahn ,EW 16 11 Poe LYm "°" Jl Vl';IM Ho Biiiy M!! SS'• S6"• H•ll Fnk Ul'o 1•~ Par. OcQl 11'• 11°• Vince Sn Ban>; At l 7•\i. 16~· Hl!mil n. 3• JS P1ul Aev "'" 1s~. VII\ Dyk 6•lStt1 F H•n SqRI "'" 11"• Pyh\ c.n 18'1• 1' V•n Stick •12'.• 2l''o H1ri>tr q ~·• 1'• Pay N Sv IJl'o U'I\ Vlclorl '!.! Bl!y\f\~ n 12"1 Hiii•• Sc "'• 1910 PIVl& w 1'\o 11 \lo Vldto Sy• Bekln Cp 6,.0 6.,_ H•wtll F-1 Jlo l~o Pet H&H 'Xl'" 11141 Vilu•I Sc Bently L\ 19', 10', Htllig Ms b' • I Petro Lw 9' • ~\i Val $1\oe Best Prd 2S'o 261• He•cel C I\'• 16''> Pink•ln 19\• 30\~ WI!• EBk Btll L•b •S •b H•qbo Co 18'i 1q'' Plontr W q 9'i1 Wllll NG B•bb Co ~ •• ' Hine!> EL •l"1 0\'' Pliml Mk 28'" 'l'J'i• W1xmn I Bi~ O•m H' 1 IS" Hoover 11 » 18 Progre1 U 'l'r 1) Weelkn Bio MedS Jl' , J6, 1 Hunt M!Q ll" 1'' 0 PSH Cat Hil o 10~~ well< W< ll"d Son~ ll'• 16'• Hy11t C ~ • t•r, Pi.lln Cap 0 11·16 S Wei nq M Bl kH I Pw Jl 3•'"' Hy\ I tr ( 11' o 7]\1 Oull\• Cll 1'V, 20'h Wl!Cll pt Block [)ci IS''o IS>o IMS lntnl IS IS>1 QueeM Ca 91;, 10 .... W!> KyGs 611.11'(1\ !> q•, 10•. ln.d.tl Wat '°'')I Ratnr (p 11'1 I W!>IPU!l I\ BMA(p 11 21•·, Ind• NY<l l(l'o JI Aly<m Well• Fd Bob Evn• 11'io 211 2 lnlor~• O•o S1< 11' 278 Wlllaml I Boo111 Np 111, l8\11 In!>!• LAD 11'" 18" Aavmd 70 ll Wll•n H J Bf~nco 1 7J',, 1\ lntt l (•p e11n lJ Rl\M Pac 11 1'Vt -Nlnnl Sir Brin~~ 1" lO lO\O ln1ert En 11"1 11 'it R•tDQ €q 4'~ •V1 Wint P~T Brocn C.\ 1S 1b ln1ml G<. 1~\1 lb A'g El•< 11•o 11'1 Wlic PLI Brgwn N \'• ~ Int Alym S S\~ Rtll UnlY 11"• 11>,,, !Nood Llh Buckbe JO;.. I I\~ In BkW A 6"''o l•o Rt• Pl11 )'t SI• World SY Buc~~V 4• .. S\o ln!ertol ll•o 1•'• Reyn &R U ••Vt Nl'IQlll W Burnp SI 1ai, 19"• ln!t\I Co lllo 111, Aivat Ml 19'11 30''• Xomx (p Buller M SO\~ SH~ 11 So UHi 1S>., 1~ Aoll'l Ex JS'lo 3S'4 Y1Uo Frl OTC 10 !lfo~t Actil·e. C~IWI Sw 211. 181'! 1...,v &Co 10"-11°~ C11m Tia 20Yt 2so', J1me•b 10"• 111. C1n\lfl Ml 11\• 14'• Ja•n Em I I'• 11" (•ph1rl 7',) 11'< JOllM EF ll''> 16'• VOhlfftt llid.l1ket1Cht. ca,man •'• •'t• Jo\IYn M 1,~:~ ,",)', P1btl B~w lit.JOO 2~Y. 11 -1'• CnMIQ Al 19''> 1~\o JU\MQ 1v " 0·1 511 1 C 119100 1+, 1t'1+ '• Cen VIPS U\\ IS"-Kai§l!r s~ 11'• 18'• T~n11tc~'O!rYI 101:200 q•• 9'1· '• Centtn D 18°·. 1~ Kalvir ''• S'' R1nkO•an AD 89,SOO 11'• 12 -0 • CFS (ntt ll'o lft K•rn;an ( JS 1''• Am Etp 81,900 !>&'• 59'•-P o ~::a":::.e ~ 11•., 1s·~ ~:1'i:ooTk ,;~: ,t~' Anhllu$ But(ll "·900 Jl•i 38\fo-· '• Chan I Co 1;~: 1~"' l(,fllV ~r ll u • ~ ~u·~~·F c (Ilk kn ir·= a~· H" -~. Clltm co 2'"1 30'h Kon Cohn 10•:. 11 '« c""o ~1 ~A io'l"" 11 ' 11 ,!.:_:";, (hi B• Ir Kfull Eit lt'o 10 om Mu• m , "" iu•,) llS'h Kt'f O••a 6i" 61• Penn Otkll -••;_~ e•• 8'•-\-1 Chril Ste ~=~''c~~ '1f,~ 1f' NASO VPl~-Tiil!ay •.T81,'® (ltmt UI 1!~1,11~t'll Key1I 1111 2• 24>, Ad•a.nctl lll Unc:ll•'!oe'd -H19 ti!ll U A 360:, JI KMS In<! 111 ,., Otcl111t1 1209 T.cit•I USI Goi11 ers a11d losers c1•1K Ml 11¥. 1••• Knaor Vt 11\/J u •. (levtpk 11 n Knlld• 12'• 13 (lev Trlv 18'• 1qJ0 KoQer Pr 19 10 (IOw (rp 90,; 10 KtutQtt" i~1o 10" Co!>e Lflb 11 19 Kultm El 1•10 (1. GAINElllS Coburn o 110·, 11•1, Ll<!fd St 3• 37 1 B&\\ Flna11c11 1'•+ 1 Up u .1 totaC La 1•'• n o.'o Ltdd Pft ""' 17'• 2 sovline Oil(o uv, +-"' Up 10.s com m Cl 73~, 11•1> Llnt•11 11 1P. l Nuclear Serv~ ll~~ .. 1''1 Up 9.8 Cml s.1'1•11 JI> ll'h Ltnc:e ?S•; 16•• • 011 S..le Corp ''• + '• Up •.o Cw MIG• 1J 2l'r. Lawi.n Pr 10'> ll ~ We~!morld .llO 2l l1• l'o UO 8.6 CmwTI p 27:0,, 73>, Lawler ( 36>,1 JB b Dlm'>On0il Co 6~1 -~ ~. Up 8.S Cplr Auto lb 16'11 Wll Y 601 20 11 1S~ I W•IQll!Wm .11 •'o+ '• Up l .l Cp\rvl' 11 \8 Lf<ldr Nit 10 II 8 AddW1Hloy ,10 •io • '1 Up 1.1 (\llln Fcl 1610 lb1o leQQel P1 wu•11 U\t 9 Soutnn UnP•O lJ O, • 1°~ Up 18 (n• Papr J~''' JI'., LltNl•IY H 1''> J 10 Petro Lewis ~·, • '• Up I J All three men \\•ill serve on WEMAs's board or direc- tors for the coming year. Can~u wt 11 11 UI Cllmp J • l'/'I 11 Aid .Auto Sir\ 1 ·• '• Up 6.1 Cordi\ to 6l''1 6\'l limld Sl• 17'\ 18'/• 11 All~nt o< Conlr O .. '• Up 6 I Cou~n• 22" 21' 1 Linc Rdll J' 0 )'11 11 Cam Brw wh 2 + '• Up 6.1 C•O\\ Co 21"• 76 Lion C\Sa 1'• 3•, 11 Swed!ow. lntp 9°', ... •-, Up 1,7 Crut<h R J\o U L<>e!i!e 4I'" •I'·• IS Berkly Boo En I V,-.. \• UO I I Cun Noll 11 18 Le>ne Sl<lt 10', 11 LOSERS * Veteran Orange C ount y banking executive R o b e r t l.Teighton has been elected Omy, Oil 6'o b\, LOll'JV FD 1 Wll il""Y Fidl!I I -1 Off U 1 Dani lnll J1'' 4l"• \lJ II? l AmO~nc!lli .IO 10 -J\0 011 11.1 O•nly M 9'.t lll'o LOlws Co SI S1'>-3 Nat MedlC1re I -1' 1 011 II.I 0..rt l)rg 6,.. 6\·, MOtrmi 1604 11'• O Gtl<O Corp 10 -1'.o Ott 11.• Oat1 Gl!n ((~~ •S~1 Miid GI\ 14'!1 u 1, S AmLIFtn .OSb · S~ I Off II.I Oa1a 100 1J"° u11, Ml[ Riiy o•,1 o>, • Kenndl eonen 1ov..-i>• .ott 1';, [)aytn Mt 21'4 JI\> Ml !Ck! "'" 19'/, 1 Nl\MQFO 1.Ull 10~<-p , Otf 10.0 Decis OJ 1~\, ll'.'• "'-•'~ c 1'J 30 a Nat OatComm s -3-o Off U.o v ice presi· Oekl b AA •9', so~. "'-•ii Frt 11~. '''• 9 S.qa AdfT'i'llst a1-.... 11~ 2!1 11.• dent Or the 0t1111 Intl •'II. 5'1• Mark Tw 11v, 19 10 Burns RLCoro 19 -21~ "'" 12.6 Otlu•e C l6 lt.~o Mary l(,y 32 JJ 11 ACM AT Corp 10"1,-11/J 'Off 12.2 I • Ol•m Cr• 11"• ll'• M< (m<;k 3'J 00 11 Ml.l•MolF .iqb j l.t->, Off 11.Z .. new rv1ne 01.m 1-td 90:. 9~• Mt o-...1 E 1ni 11 v. 11 ""'"" eorpor1n 4"1-~ Off 11.2 N a tion 11 I O•v•s Sci 6''' ,.,, McMi1111 ll 10°, u F•o1 FoE• .21 ll-~. Off 12,1 !?O~.uttl \JV'I 1l McQu1y IS~• 16\1> 1S Clevtpak ,•Sb 11 -11/J Olf 12.0 &nk. th~:~e;~~ I MUTUAL FU.NDS 1. dent banking i ... .;.;~ .............. ~~~--~~~ .... ~~~-. facility Since New York -Fol· GwCll f I].~ 15.ll Cun 82 19.l• IL Spf(1I 29.Jt 2'.SI . la-...lng I' a II\\ ol 11\C<M 6.16 6.11 CU\! 8( &.4 t ,30 llA•D GlllP: its apening lli<I •ml askfd prl· ~cil F 1.t1o '·'0 Clftt Kl ,,11 1.1s AO Gw 4.21 •.68 ce~ on Mut111I Stck FO 11.'01'.10 (U\I K2 6.11 l.70 Ad Inc 3.St J.el CREIGHTON in August, Fur.ds as quotert Dy EOIE Sp 11.SI 22.Sl Cu\t $1 12.0I 21.11 AO Ins ' 7.90 1.6' • Creighton will contm' ue to be the NASO In<. EQtfl Gt ll.SI U.116 (lftt 52 11.0911.1S Cm C•P '·"' S.11 lid Alli Ellun Trt 16.U •. (Ulol S3 1.19 1.91 Inc: Fd8 S,9S 6.SZ re.ponsl.ble for bank operali'ons Emtro 3.ll J,11 cus1 St •.t& •.91 sw Lev '·'° s.o.t .Advi~r I 3' • 7' Eneroy U.1112.21 APOUO 4.19 5.;16 SECUliliTY FDS; and personel. ~:ga, ~'" •,.•J·,'·!l F11r110 a.116 9.6' Po11rs J.t J 4.:JO e.:iu11v 3.62 J.97 "" 1 I '·'"" Fm Burt t ... t I! Knl<k• 6,18 •.11 ln,,.sl 6.ll 1.3' * A!uture 1036 1036 Fed AR~ 909 , , Knkr V!h '·13 I.ii Ul\ro F 7.31 1.01! AVE Fd 5 09 S 19 FIOELITY GAOUP ; Lndmrk 1.19 1.111 SELECTEO FOS : Joseph ~1. Kle in, executive vice president of Cyprus Mines Corp., has been elected a mem ber o r the board of directors of Smith lntema· tlonal Inc. of Newport Beach. * Four businesswomen have been promoted to executive positions at Bank of Newport, according to president Ronald L. Rodgers, Bern.Jee Ballard has been apPointed vice-president of new accounts ; Josephine Blough has been n a med vice preSident, senior escrow. L of. ficer: Joan Rambo has oeen advanced to assistant vice president, loan officer a nd Mary Ale has been prom oted to bank office!" status, assis..- tant cashier. All four officers we r e original m ember s of the B ank of Newport staff, joining the bank during its organizational period. * Costa M esa jeweler Joseph I. Hartstein ol Jewels by Joseph, has been elected g enera1\ • ~hairman of the 1974 Pa- cific J ewelry ShO\V. AAlht8!e,. <3> 01S 14,!! Bno deb 8 •S 9 18 Len~ Fd S.SI S.Sl Am Shr I.II 1.2• lf>l\a " 1 . 1 U.uu • · LEll GROUP : Opp Fd 10.3] 10.3l Amca!' F S.2S S.1' ~~:~~ l~.SSl1.61 Cp Ledr \6.0017.SO Spl Stir\ ll,1111,11 Am Bor!ll q,18 10.15 1 .14 .. , Grw!ll 6.SO 1.10 Sf!nli~l 11.01! 11 .91 Am Ovrs 9.21 10.01 (v Sset 1.16 1,19 Rf\r(ll 13,1S 15.Cll S.nlry F 13.67 U .M Am Eqty 4.'3 S.00 Ot$1 1,01 ... Ubly Fd S.16 S.M SHAR£Hl.D GllP : AM EXPRESS ~~~~t 1lM u'i,j Liit 1n1v 1.)9 t .11 tom~t 3.61 J.01 FUNOS: , .. ,,, 31·10 ,,·,, Linc: Cao 7.•S •,U Enlrpt 6.02 6.SB Caplal 7.S1 1.21 ¥ • • • LOOMIS Fiii FO •.11 •.62 lncom 8.S8 9.l8 Pu,,ln 9.62 10.SI SAYLES: Harbr 7.llCI 8.S2 lnv\lm 7.97 8.11 S1lt!m F . J.12 4.•1 C:.p ov 13.60 13.60 LtQll L. 1.62 7.1l Specl 1.92 8.66 Trend 24.U26.)9 Mutu,11 14,'614:1i> Pa<t Fd I.JS 9,23 Sl0<ll I.St &.JG l'INAllCIAI. I.ORO All: SHt:AJlSON f"DS: Am Grlh S.12 •.3' l'AOGRAMS: Atllltl 6.110 7.)6 ,.OOf'C lf,:1311.13 Am lntln S.20 S.61 Fin Dyn •.40 4.00 .Am Bu• 3.0J 3.21 ln<om Jl.SO 19.13 Amlnot$1 s.•I S.41 Fin lnd _J.lS o.15 Bllddeb 10.1111.os 1nw st t811on .Am Mui l.2S 9.02 Fin Inc S.91 S.t1 Lu!lltrn 10 Mo II 6S Sh Dtl!I 11:0111'01 Amil!! Gr 2.30 2.SI l~~"J V 1~·r. 1t~ Lu!nn In 9:3'. 10:13 Side F<I 7.!S 1:0 ~~g~~~ FllRST a · ' "'-nhtn 3.81 •.14 SIGMA l'UNOS: Capi.I 0.10 s.n INVESTORS: MF~::mco: 1.1' t.OI f:: Stir 1~:~1t;! Fnd Inv l.6S 8.l8 Oise Fd S.30 S.11 11\dp F I J1 t ?l Trst 7 n I" Grwtll 8.01 8.9'1 Grlh Fd 1,6' 8.31 Man F 11:"3 11)1 Ventur 1:110 ~:61 ln<om J.O't 1.11 lncom 8.34 9.14 MASS FNCL : Smllll 8 10.76 10.16 Ventur 9,()0 9.•1 Slot.k F 1.8' 1.61 MIT 11.SS 12.62 SB !&Gr 11,2J 11 23 Wa Nall 1l.Ol 1l.U Ht MulU 8.36 8.36 M!V U.U 1'.:16 So GenF \2.tJ 13's,o Astron o.c3 O.llO ~ .... utrG~~~~,M MIO IJ.28 \O,ST SW\\ Inv 7.S6 1:11 AYdlX F 8.11 I.Ill lOO Fnd lltllliGO MFO 1l.S9U.ISSwtnvG 6.33 6.IM ~~~GHTON: 10I FNI 8·,J 1·04 MCD U.•6 16.JS Sovr In 11.W. 11.17 ' .. ,,, A •.ll '"' O"' •'n• Male' h 2.11 2.17 SOKl•a 4,11 S.ll u S.18 '-"um ·"" ·"" Mttl'ler 11.04 11 .GO S&P lnO l.O'I 1.0'I fund B 1,02 1,6l 15 Fund 6.lS 6,15 Mid ,.m S.•I S,91 STATE INO GlilP: Stoc:• 6.02 &.!>& Fdn Gr •.60 5.01 MQn1 FO 11.0I U.11 Com FO •.90 S JO Axe Sci 0.ll 0.61! FOUNOERS MSB Fd 1'.SS u .ss OiwSll S.lS s:es BLC Gtll 11.1l 11.81 GR OUP; MU BnG 9.111 10.16 Pl'OOJrt S 11 S 10 6a~n \l,!.6 ll.S6 Grw!h 5.31 5.87 MIF Fd 7.118 I.JO St Fr Gr s:o1 s°O I Bovroc 7.0S 1.10 lncom 11.:J41l.l'I M!F Gro 4311 41' SI Fr Inc 912 t'11 B•J•k or 6.19 6.81 F Mtual ft.to 9.1l MuOm Qt •'.81 s:JO Sla1e Sir •6:" •1:00 BeKn kl -a.BS ·l.M ipKll ll.2S n .30 MUO!'rl "ll\ 8-.t r-t;fS $Tl!AOMAN ---..os: Be1ton 10.1610.1b Riur~ F t.JI 9.31 Mut Slits 16.01 tt.01 Am Ind J.21 3.Jl ~r-\ht 4.00 0.31 FRANICLIN Mull T•I 1.89 1.89 .A.ISO F<I 1.1CI 1.20 Bcnds1k 4.IS S.19 GROUP: Nal lndu lC.41 10.•7 lnvtst 1.l'I 1.l'I Bou Fdn 9,18 10.69 ONT( 1.10 &.811 NAT S£C PM; Ottin 1.25 l.1S Brown 3.3S 3.14 GWlll Sr 1,61 8.•2 B1l1nc 1.14 9.SS STEI N ROI! l'M: Brnl\m (1J U) Fr lncm 1.99 2.01 Bond Sr •.12 S.27 e11•n< 11 ... 21.4' CALVIN FU~OS : US Gv S 9." 10.13 O!vldn 3.St 3.91 C•Oill 10.•S 10 6S Bull Fil U.•I U.ll u1111ue ··" S.36 Pref Stk 6.ll 6.92 S\oc:k 15.46 1s:•1o Cdn Fd l3.202S.OI Rt\ Cap S.OS S.» lncom •.10 S,1' SIS GltOUf': Olv Shr 3.0 3,8\, R1 £11ty l,tt l,'3 S!oc:k Sr 6.llCI I.OJ G<"wtll 6.48 7_10 Ntlwd t.IJ 10.M Fkl LIEq 11.S911.6J Grw\11 l.•7 f .?'l ln<om llft.4S t.26 lll Y Ven \1 .40 11.41 F-0 Ml (Ip ,.31 9.11 NIW ENO LI': Smmit 9.•2 to.n CG Fuf!C! 10,19 11.23 l'UNOS .1NCP fqully 11,00 1t.4S Tt(llnl ~6 . .0 1.13 C1p Tron 11.t11J.02 GtlOUP. Grwlh 10,90 11 .U iur~w F 10.Jt 11.>i Cent Sh\ !J.69 10.96 Comm 1.90 •.73 Slc:le 16.61 11.os Syncro G _ 6.92 1,si. CHANNING Imp.it 1.21 1.91 N£A Ml 9.<lf t.6S TMR /4p 1.67 t . .a FUHOS; 11\du~ tr 11.01 11.0l Neu Cent S.•J S.03 Ttn"OI G (U IU Bl!lnc:O 10.1111.SO Polo• l.9S 1.69 N•uWlh 9 ....... TllWlr c (II Ill Bnd Fd 9.13 10.0' VftlfWY 6.9J 1.4• Newlon 10.06 "·'° Tran C•p l.•l t .16 Com Stk 1,33 1.•S ~!O S·~.P (ll 011 Nw Pert 1•.SS lS.'fO Tr•vl fll 11.10 U.1& Eqty Gr 1,12 8,81 ""'" ,.,c !II U New WIO 11.0lo ll.11 TudOI" H 11 ... 11 .18 Eq!y Pl' J 12 l.~I GROUI' SEC; lllithlll 16.4" 16.« 20\11 CG 3,15 3.JS Fno Am B,01 8.15 A~x F-•1.(1 S.91 Nell lvtr IS.21 n .11 totll Cl 4,16 •.~ Grwth !.32 1.81 Bill F~d d .S6 8.11 QIMqa t.11 8.2'1 Un!litd UI Ill lntom · 6.7'1 l.S6 Com St~ •11.0112.0I O Nt11 10 U.1111.ll Unilund 1.10 1.IZ Speo;I 1 q/ 1 10 Giii FAm (,SS (.91 Ont Will 11,02 11.02 UNION SElilVICIE Vt nlur 9.61 10,Sll Gttn ln<I 10,90 20,91 OPPEHHM FO· OROUft · CHASE. Guerd 23.3913,39 OP Alm \C.•1'11.t.0 9rCI S I~ U,11 IS.OS j.f nt •OSTON: HAMILTON (;Rf': OP Fnd 1•4 8.ll Nill In~ l.S• 9.ll ecurre • Fnd ecs e.63 t .01 Fund •.11 o.s6 op rme 1.01 1.1• un '•rt •.«>10.11 ll' serves as Fron (p s.s• &.11 G!Wlh 6.M 1.48 OTC Sec lCl,loll II.II Wlltht 13.IM14.1S SllTr Bs I.SI 9.11 lncom •.SJ 1.11 P~rlmt 1.S1 1.11 UNITIO l'UNOS' first v i ce soec1 6.611.21 Har1~1 10.S3lO.U p11ul Aev 1.19 1.a. 1"tcum 1.:1'11.tt Cllem F<I 10.16 11.16 Ht•t t.v 9,ll 9,l.I P~sus ' S.OJ S.Sl Bnd Fd 1.n 8.01> president Of COLONIAi. ~dbell l.ll •.10 F't'nn Mt l.K COn t gw 10,,J 11.20 [ FUHOS; ~c!Qt 6.4' · ·, Penn Sq 1.1• 1ji COnt Inc 9,10 10.63 th~ Cali or-J C.Onvt• t ,791Cl.70 ~fltQI 1.lt I.% Pllll• FO J.OS 1.IJ •n<om 1l.2tl u .ss nl •• Jewelers HAlllTSTeu• Equity 3.21 3.SI Hori{f 19.JI lt.n PILGRIM GP: S<1t~ 7.0lo 1.70 Fund IO,S111,tt lmor• Co •.6110.~ (1pt11 ),JO •.OS V1nod 6.Jl 7,)1 A · ti' d has •-on Grwlh 6.U 6.11 lmr> Gr l.S't B JO tncom 1,91 9.1• USA~ C• \0.4S \O.•J ssoc1a on an uco,:n inc.om •.1~10.•11ncfdAm u.osu.1~ PIHJm'I 1.1• e.•s us Gv1s 100&10.11 the board 0£ directors since Vtntur l.1• l.M Ind FAm l .M l.t'I l'ine St 10.ll IO.l1 VALUI. 1..INI. ,OS: COl\lfl\ G 11.IJ 11.IJ lnltQOfl 1.96 '''Pin Trt 2.91 , .. \Ill Lnt S,9S 6.01 1971, CO~NWLTH Ill lllO'tSI 11.69 ll,11 PIONEElll .. 0 : V•I Inc 1 ... •.9? TRUST: lnottrn G 1% •. ti> Pion Ell 1.IS •.•I Lev Gth 1.0t ,,0 Hartstein ls a member of A 's 1.12 1.11 111v co A u .01 u .10 P1on Fo 12.1s 13.n v.1 -Spe;, ~26 i..sr h 0 Co ha be C L•6 j·Sll lny Guld 1.(IJ 1.63 Pionr II 10.U 11.'4 VANCE t e range unty c m r COl\'lp ~ •·•' .11 •nv 1no1c ?.fl •.. Pltnnd 9,S, 10.•6 sANOllU: Of Conunerce and active in Comp S.U 9.21 ln,',,"",, 10.9' 11.'8 PLI GRO 12.t.I 1),11 1n .... 11 1.21 7,tt Comp Fd J.02 1.07 t PtllCI. fl;0Wl t V$ Com 1.s& 116 the Gosta Mesa chamber. eon~rd 10.lJIO.lS COUNSEL c;....,,h ll.•1 U.•I SPKI , .. •'n l -::~==-==========:;I Cont Inv II.ii 11.00 C:.~m 1.61 1.M Nw Er• 12.11 U.J3 V"°1'blt .:s1 itJ II (nil" 'JW s SI 6,09 c.~. Iv , ... l.11 Nw HOr IC.CO 10.00 V•n9rd 1.n 1 44 ConMI '" • IC I.IC (apll Sh S.11 •.11 Pro flt I lS e.u V.tnl lO'<I 60lo • For W'eekender Advertising Phone 6424321 Contrv c n 11081 INVlS9 ~JIOUP: Pl'oV•dt i11 •.S6 V•rlfd • 3'.n .·.»· (wn Olli • Sl '·" tOS Gt~ , II '. Provo GI • to t.(Q vu.-119 Gr ,, .. ), Cwn Olw SM 6 ,. IDS NO 6 lO •. IS Pru<I S1,. 10.14 11.J6 ~IHSI gr J 61 t.~ &:~tJci hr c11 ~;,:. :.:; 1:.i~ ;~i~~~ ::~ ~ H] H· OELAWARE Slo<k 10 0011 7• COllVlf 1111111' WELl,.IMGTGll GROUP; !.Ill<.\ •.«> 10.10 ((lullJ •,01 •.tS OltOU•.. -Dttll •.1110.1• V•r P4y Ill ,.H G.o 1S.1016.SO 'IE:~OIOI'. tl,,St!·" Dtlw F •.,. 10 os •~v At\ S.Ot S.-56 Gfwth n .u l?,21 \vtll • H -~~I,• lo T .~:~ .f ~ I t!~11 •.JI 4,10 :~ ::U 1&:~ ¥t~'t 'f~ h:11 Oft>< (p • ... S :i. ll'(.om 3.'" i ,a. VISll " 10.Sl 11.~ Trldl 11:tt 1fl OodCIClo I, ... U '1 l•~I UI 3.4' ·' · VOYIO 10,7• 11,lt Wl!t.l'f U 1111 t Or•Jiel fi !rl UJ T•lt $1'1 U.'4 H,U !l•v.r1 I" 6 JS 11• W.11111 10:tl 11' ORt:YrUS OA,. 1\!tl Fnd 2J.11l2.1S !t1nlrt 11)7 : , vitttrM 10ot1t' l)fvf ~ fl! (II 1•1 Fund J.10 1.10 S.ltt EQ 14 t iJ WIMY' J:I! lo "~ Fd Ul IH J P G«lh '·'l 10.11 Sitqlll•t i» fU Wt" Ind J l S Or Lv !II !fl J•nll'I J"d 11,Sf11.~l kll111 f"d 1'is 1'11 W)fld CW t•S t' E& Mu 11' l ~ JH1n 9111 f,tJ 1.66 S(llu1 So ft) '•1 'ol!lk°"" i:14 •• IMlf GI' 1•t l.il JH•n~ a.:it t,•1Kuoot111ros:' ~· 1,,.11 Ill.TON & .klhn\111 14.p ?o. lnlf Inv tU OJ ' ' -------_;,---------------'--------------------------------------------------llL--...,.----------_11 MOWARO: ICIYSTOftl.: 8f!HO< 16 lj I• ll •••••<ll'fl~ _ U11 f(d t .IJ IO~ (11\\ 11 11;"' ltlS c'om '4)·~ 10'•S r·u~lv•n.ot~ " ( ' ' .. , l • .- ·• ~ I 12 DAILY PILOT Tuesday, N0vtmber 6, <1974 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ,la'ITtOUJ •U,INISS I Ifft .. Mii ITATIMlllT SfJ,lllOl COUIT Of' THI ~::... +:.~"' ,.,_ .,. dOlno ,, ... ,, 011' CALlll'OIUrUA ,o. Clt-'NACK CAft.PETING, 601 W THI COUN" 011' OltAHOI! °'•""lhol"' Fvtltrtwi Ctlll ' .... A·JIOU 1. Drtld .:.. Cr•l11.. Mi1 w'. ar. ..... NOTJC! OF HEARING 011' PETITION ltlorjN, ,ulffftol\, (•HI, frOlt PltOIATE OF WIL.l. ANO FOA 1. Sl•illt'( Ft lt(k, 201j w, CllilffU, LETTERS TESTAMENTARY ANMIM (•llf Etllft of Miry A. fl•rrv. Oot••*· ll'll• 111.r~Ntt' la (OlldUC!td b\I 1 NOTICE 1$ HfillEIY GIVEN lhll ptrlntl'"tl'llp WILLIAM F, IAltlllY 1111 flltcl Mr1!ri Dt~O L (rtl,, I pelflfon tor Proo.rt of Wiii tnd Tlllt sl1t1~~t w•t liltd WOii the IOI' l1111111et of ltll1r1 T1•t1menl1r~ Cou11ty C!t fk Got °'~ (Ollflh'-9" :L~_,..Pt111'CPW ttler~· lo Wllltll October K 1m • ,,_ tor h1rll111 H•tkul1rs, 1nd ' ' 'ttUf '"-' Ille llmt Ind pl1ct of 11t1rl119 ' • 0 tr '_ ll'lf -,.mt "~' bfftt. tt:I IOt Notll!f'))/fr •-· I I, Alt'i". 10. ltn, 11 f:OO 1.lft .. 111 '"' 1 -•rt--'2" lllllM't 11¥11. Nt. IM ......, '""'" N .. I,...... Cl llf. tect ot OePirl""9!'11 No. l ot t.1ld COi.ir!. "ublllolled Or•no• Coiut Diiiy p·ioi •1 100 Civic Cenltr Drlv1 Wet!, In Dc:toblor 30. •lld Nowmber '· 13 110' IM Cttv ot S1n11 A.n1. C1Utorttlt. 1113 3•' >n' D1rt11 Nowm9tr 1, ltr.L Wlllltm E. SI Jonti. c-1y c1tf1r. PUBLIC NOTICE PAUL "· MOO••· --~~---------1 CNCkll' l ink Pllll, 11111'9 :Mst ;IC'TITIOUS I USINESS fll w .. 1 11•111 II, NAMI ITATIUrlllJllT lit AllftMI, C_.ff. toll11 Tiit IOllowlflt ptrtooU a~ dolno avsi~ rih Ul)J '2HUI 11 , AttOf'tlft' fw il'lflrl- . il'A.TTEll:Nl!D CONCRETE, , 30 S? Pul)lll.l'led Or11191 Coa11 Dilly PllcT. M1r1 ... Vl1t1, DIM Poll\I ~,,, ND'l~r s. ,, n, 19n 3:iat-n Wllllt lft V. Moorllead Corli'f'"1llon. • C1Ulor11!1 corpor1Uon, 33052 M1rin1 PUBIJC NOTICE v1111, D1"1 f'olnl 9162' 1-::-==;;;:=:-=:c-:::o-===~--I Tlll1 t>u.irie1a Is bllng conch;cted bv CEltTl,ICATI 0, OISCONTINUANCE I Cotpoi'lhon 01" USI ANDIO• AIANDONMl!NT WUll11ft V, M-ht ad Co>rPO<lflon 0" ,.ICTITIOUI NAM( Wtlllln"I V, MOOl'Nod, President T~E UNDERSIGNED Cl~I riereby Tnb 111t~IN'll filed with 1111 ci1u"!v tltfl!fy lhtt. t11tc11vt October :mh tlt•k ol Or•no• County °" Noll. 2. IT tH '8d lo CIO bu1lnet1 Undltl' Ille l,7J flctlllou1 fir~ J\lrnt of IR V1N E CON· "•:lt>OI iOl..IDA.TEO FllEICiNTWA.YS ti 1111s-J f'11bll1htd' Or1ngt CCIII! Dilly Pilot Skyp1rk Circle, lrvlnt. C1IUorn!1 '2Hll Novembltf '· IJ, 20, 27, 19'3 33SS.13 w.tilcll b;uh•tt1 11111 lormtrlY compostd of 11'11 toltowil'IO Pt•Wll'I. whole n1me In full Ind pl1tt of rtsld1nc:t II 11 lotlo""' lo-wit: PUBLIC NOTICE --------------1 LIGHTING DISTR1 8VTORS, INC., 1 "'CTITIOUS •UStN•ss Cllltorr>ia Corpor1tlon, 17•7w Si.yplrk NAM• ITATIMINT Cl rci.. lrvlrll!, C1lllornl1 '21117 The lollowlnt pffSClfl 11 dl)!nf blnlnn1 Ctrtlllc111 tor 1r•n1<'1Cllon of business I I: undtr tfle tbovl llC!ltlOlll flol.n'>e, 11>d INSURED QUA. l IT y MAIN· 11tld11111 ol PV!"llc .. 100 tt>treot, 1r1 on TENA.NC£, 1452 Trad1 Winch, Mun. ffle In lllt olllct of ll>e C-ty Cl9rk tlnelon l eech, C1Ht. ot Or.tfll19 Counrv. llll<ltlr lht provt slons iltve R. Ptlffttn, «» Tr1d1 Winds. Of SKllon 1192~ 111 Ill• 8uliness 1. Hunllnoton lltlch. CtHI. Proltssl1111s Codt. • • .. Pay More for Less Lobster This Year? By TIJO)li\S O. ELIAS If Lbe lobster and abalone nt your favGrlte restaurant are not quite as succulent as they h ave been and if they're also 1norc expensive than usual, it Is beca~e of two new shortagt>S. These. however may not be caused by pollutiori or in· SOUTHERN CAU FORNIA FOCUS ternalional crises. The lobster shortage, al least, was largely created by greed. THE LEGAL lobster-netting srason of the S outhern California coast .opened just a month ago and will run until mid-March, but ex- perienced fishermen report catches a r e considerably below last year 's. And las t year 's Southland lobsler catch of 398,000 pounds was down' almost 50 percent Penalties up lo a l50ll line and six months ln jail are possible, bui some judges don't even fine the offenders. This year'a abalone take has also been smaller tha n usual~ though l~h aJl\I game olllclals aren't so sure why. "THERE ARE really big beds in the ChaMel Islands," said Ralph Young , ch 1 e I spokesman for the-fish and game agency. "We also u~ed lo have a luge bed In J\.1orro Bay, but the abalone there ha\'e ct~ clined bec8use the sea otter population is increasing and they feed on the a balone." But Young says the poachers and the sea otters alone stilt don't account for the entire shortage. So the department has begun a study of possible new management methods for the two types of seafood. "These species h a v e n ' t disappeared," Young said, "and they're not rare or en· d angered -yet ." from the high-water mark in BUT SO!\tE new fonn of permits issued in the last two years for legal ·catches than In the big years of the 1964ls. So far, 2.64 ~ter pennlts have been taken out th ls year, compared with 613 Jn 1068. Even so, Southern C8llfomla'1 gounnets are suf· lering lar moi;e ~1rom the shortage than lhe region's llshlng Industry. Lobster may be a glamour catch, but the bread and but· ter of the Southland 's fishennen is sun tuna, caught far out at sea. lN THE FIRST six months of thiS year, Southern California fishermen netted 15 million pounds of albacore tuna , 4.6 million pounds of blue:fin tuna, 33 m 111 i on pounds of skipjac k tuna and 17 million pounds of yellow·fin tuna. Clearly, then, the fishing in· dll3try has no over -a ll shortage. "Lobster and abalone are big," says Young, "but in Southern Ca1ilomia they are only incidental compared with • • Thh bVslntU 11 tond!Kll!d b'f' •n WITNESS my hind 1nis 29th d1y lndlvldu1,I ot October. 1t13. tuna." C•rfotll .., Stiff Ar!Ul '"" ""'""" Normally, su p p I y-and-<ie---------------------==='--------1965. management is 'O b v i o u s 1 y Poachers apparently are ., needed to prevent that even· st ..... JI:. Ptlllr1tn LIGHTING DISfRl8UTOll$, INC. Thl• 1!1temt11! w1s llll!d with tht ll:on11d D. Brown, Prt~ld1111 ·c-rv Cltrk of Orlllltf County on IOl"FICIAl SEAL) N11vttnbtr 2, 1t7) L1vton L. G1rC1ntf' ,..,,,., Notary ,.ubllc -C1llklrni1 PubUi.hld Orl"9f Co11' 01lfy PUC! Or1nge Counly NovtmMr 6. ll. l'O, 27, 1973 336-1·13 MY CorT1ml11lon Explre1 A.prlt \(, 197• largely responsible fdr the tuality. steep d ecline in the lobster In the meantime, 'vith c a tch, stale Department of lobster catches dGwn about Fish and Game officials say. two-thirds from last year's mand would insure t h a I today's situation would pro- duce price increases for lob- ster anctabalone. F or abalone, this -will apparently be the case. l{unzel Takes Westgate Post "Illegal lobster fIShing is already slim pickings , clearly the main r ea.5Qn for customers of pooh, expensive SAN DfEGO (AP) nVE OF THE seven direc-the now-defunct, Smith-<:on· -___ P_U_B_Ll_C __ N_OT_l_C_E ___ 1 ,.ubllshl!d O<'tnge ce11it o.11y'"·i~~ OCtabl'r 30 •na NaYtmotr ,, ll, .-o. l'IC11TIOUS •USIJlll SI lt73 32tS-n NA.Ml STATIMENT the lobster shortage ," says restaurants can look forward Robert Kaneen of t h e to either higher lobster prices BUT, SAVS a L 0 b st er Herbert Kunzel is the new tors, including Kunzel, were trolled U.S. National Bank. Association .spokesman, his president of the \Vest.gate-appointed by U.S. District In a related development Tht lollowlng ptnon ls doing business 11 : PUBLIC NOTICE Cl!NTURION MUSIC CO .. l&OJI lrvine•l--------------1 depart men l 's marine or to a change in the menu. IOU .. ¥1r<t, T.uslln, C1Ut. 926'0 11:...citU C1rflon WoUt, lJOO M1rl111 Ll'I., Htwpart 811ch, Citir. f'lMO SUPIEllOI COU•T 0, THI STATI 01" CALl,O•NIA, COUNTY 0,. OllANGIE N•. A·rn t4 CITATION resources division. "Too many "The cheaper, mass -service people are taking 'short' steak·and·lobster places won't product will most likely not California Corp., replacing Court JUdge Leland Nielsen ~ionday: rise much in price. Philip A. Toft who wa_ s forced nd ed by the SEC -Crocker Bank. w h I c h "The chances are fresh a approv purchased the assets of U.S. Thi• bu.i11irs1 Is conelucled by 1n indl11ICl1H1/. R1ndall C. Wotrz Thi• 1t1temenl was flltd willl the Counlv Clf!'-of Ortnot County on N111embfr 1, lt7l. NOTICI OF NIAJl lNO 0 ,. AP,.l lCATION fOJt Af'f'OI NTMENT 01" ot.IAltOIAN lmlftOI') lobster will just be h a rd to to resign in .settlement of a under _terms of last month's Nationa l Ban k, agreed with get. Prices may not go up Securities & Exchange Com-settlement. Besides T o f I • Nielsen '.s approval to honor appreciably because they're mission lawsuit. Chairman c. Amhott Smith nearly $5 m i 111 on In IGbsters which h a v e n ' t feel this," said a s pokesman ·matured fully and haven't yet for Southern CaJifomia's spawned. Lobse ter Association. "Aiost of ... tt214 In lht Mltttr ot Gu1rCll1nshlp 11! 'PutllJIM'd Or1no• COii! 011rv Piiot, Int ptrWll'I of CA.NOE.I. WILSON, Minor. Nov1mtie<' ,, 13, 20. 21, 19n ms.n Tiie PIOPlt of ftll! s1111 of C1litotnl1 -------------ITo 8A.ll8A.ll:A JEA.N CAIN evr1u.nt.~10 lhe l1w YOl.I 1•1 l'ttrtbv cl led 1nd ftttulrld lo 1ppear befort -------------lltt Juc!gt of 11>11 court, IOClll!d 11 FICT1TIGUr lutlNl'S'I Courlhoust, 700 Civic C1111er Drive WtSI, NAM E I TATlrMI NT In It'll City ot Sanl1 A.n1, Counly of PUBLIC NOTICE "WE SI~tPLY can't catch all these people, but we ha\'e had quite a few ccurt cases; particularly in the san Diego • area. And y.·e've had little the lobster they use is from Australia any way. It is the restaurants that se rve fresh lobster \Vhich Will feel_ the ~~rtage." already sky high." Kunzel, 65, former president was forced to resign as an of· certificates deposited al U.S . So lobster-lovers had better of International Jlarvester's ficer of the company' his fami-National by two Westgate get ust'd to doing without or, solar divisjon, also was named ·ly formecl"ln 1980.. subsidiaries, Westgate Life at best , .making do with tbe chairman of t h e con-The SEC suit accused Smith, Insurance Co. and Westgate- less succulent, less f ~e.s..b.-glomerate's.~e-member ex-Toft ai>d several ti>mpanies CalifOmia Insurance Co . Ausfralian variety .of .their ecutive committee by-its new o f scheming to drain millions Crocker·has:refused to assume TM followlnsr P<ft"S0!1 It doing t>uslnt11 Ol'1ng1. Sllrt ot C1lltornl1, 11-1ri. 1s: Courtroom ot Ot~rtmenl No. l on • success in those cases beeause the judges don't seem lo take this offense seriously." WITH LOBSTER in small favorite crustacean. board of d irectors Mooday. of dollars from Westgate •and moSt SmltlMx>onected debts. supply, the stale clso reports -;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ PANDA. ~UMlllNG. 1515 W. OtclftlMr \1, 1913, 11 9:00 o'clock A.M., there have been far fewer 1 fJ11cArlllur 81vd., Sult• No. 16, C111t1 tnen and lntrt 111 lhow c1ust, If tnv, Mtsa, C1Uf. 9262• whV ll:A.Y MA.RTIN HAMMONTREE ar H-1rC1 O. K1nw •. 10222 80Wl'Nln -olhtr 1ult1blt prrson shovld !IOI A.W., Soutll Gitt, Clllt. f*O bl 1ppolnted Gu1rCll1n ol the ptrSOt> This t1111l11H11 11 o:INklcild bV 1n 1nd 11111• ol Siie! minor •«orClll'lljl lnC1lvldu11. 10 tl'll verified ptllllon Ol'I flit. to How1rd D. K1n1e which re!trence Is mlelt tor lurlller Thi• 1t1tement w1s Hiid with tllt P1rlkul1rs. ' Cite Fuel Crisis Complete .Mid~day A~erican Stock List C::ovnty Cltrlr. ol Ot'1ns11 COi.iniy on Dated No,., 2, 1973. Novtmbltf l, 1,73. (SEAll "·291"1 WILLIAM E. ST JOHN f'ubllWltd ~•not Cotti D1ily Piiot, Coun1y Cltr~ 1nd Cltrk Novlftlber •· 13, 20, 11. 1'7l na-13 of Tiit Sur>trlor courr af the S1a1e of C1litornle. 111 •lld tor t:i. (cull~" o: O•"i!IQf. Auto Men Seek \lol. Nel VO!. Net VOL Ntl PUBLIC NOTICE Sy P. K. GANDALL, List C1>9. Lit! Cf>Q. I.Isl Cht. -•A-C1r Pin .Mo l 1Jlt_,, '• Ftl\wa, ,:n l S't .. \o MRCl .02b l ll'•-'•t C1tPwLpf S 11.0 1rA -1'h Flbrtbd Wis 11 6to,. !.o M Y O .?0 2 6\, ... C1rrltrCWI ( (''t-\'o FIC11to2.(~ 'll'o ... ,ICTITIOUI I USIMESS Depufy NAME STATEM ENT OEO•Gl L ll:OGE•S . AUctn"V it LflW Tht fol tOWll'lll person 11 Clolnsr buslntn 17171 •••ell a tvd. 11: SOUTHCOAST INTERIORS 105 2 "l'fl:ino;lc" ae"'!ll, C11llomll tu47 G l C ' T1litpl!OM1 ln4J '47"'°41 trdel\ Int, Olll MtSll. Cli!I, '2627 Publl,lled Ortn'le Ctw1st D1ily Pllol Jotepll Gu1rn1ccl. 2052 G1rdtn Line, '' 0 Mr 6 13 2'0 27 197J 3394-7J UE Pl«i\0.. ·• I 7" . . CMN I\ Dev 1 JI;, Fil'"(pA .06 1 II A.btrMI <rOq 1 t • • C..s\ltlOn IR ( 1'\ ... Fil'""Y lr>t I •I'>-\, Aber ~t•01 • 1 -\, C•illtwel nt , S 11\-\0 FlllrOV .Old I 11\t-'\ Attlon lnCl\I J ~·· ... CIYitninGct 11 10'.'o+ "• FlllCI S8 .10 ll 111/1-'to "°'"l!ntl .so 10 1''• ... Celh1 Ct1tt s 1~ V1 Fln<ifn .llie s.i nv.-\o oldllo. Corp 11 ll'o+ '·• Ctn S.c .Cl'IO 1 S\~ ... FlnGnA. .JM 3 11\o) ... A.erv l'lo OV 1 ''• ... C....'tlll Gorn s 10>~-t-1\ Flr~t Corm 1. 1 IJ.\o-\\ Clean Air Delay Cosll Mt$1, C1tll. 9U27 v m • • · • This bu1trie11 b Conducll!d by In Jndlvldual. J11$tpll Gu1rneccl This 1t11emen1 WIS l!led wlrl'I Ille Counrv Cler-ol Orang• Cou~ly on N011"'1btr 1, Im Published Or1n111 C111st N111tmbtf 6, 13. 20, 27, 1t7l ·--Dtily Piia!, PUBLIC NOTICE FICTfT IOUS •uSIJllEIS NAMI STATEMENT 3:Ml·73 TM totlowlng ptflonS 1r1 doing bu1lnet1 11: LEISURE PUBLICATIONS, 2JB E. 17111 SI., C05ll Mts1, C1t!I. '2621 CNrlts Doug111 Jw. ~111 8r1ntore1. Huntington h1cll, Cllll, 12"9 This bu•I-11 conducted by a llml1td p.rtnerlh!p, Clltrlff O. Joy This at11emtnt Wit filed with the County Clerlr. ol Orll'lllf Coun1r on Novtmbtf I, 1973. ,_,.,.. f'ubllshtd Or•no• COid D11ty Piiot, NOlllftlber ,, ll, 20, 27, 1913 3»1·73 PUBLIC NOTICE ---s rATIMl"NT o .. A•ANOONMIENT 01' U51 OF f'ICTITIOVS aUSINllS Ill.I.Ml Tiii foflowlng persons 111¥t 1Mndontd lht ust ol the flctllle11n butlnt11 n1me PATTERNED CONCRET E I t llO.sl Mtrlnt Vl1l1, 0111<1 Point. ' mobile phoce --·--place fl receive telephone calls ln~rcar ---·--- -11 ..... --·--No C1pif11 ln¥tlt!l!en' ,Month to Mci"th R1nt1I 811ii OR.\\Gf ruu~n 11\UIOHLEPHU~l Slll\'llE "· WA SlllNGTON (UPI) Top automotive exeaitlves have asked Congres s again to delay clean air standards so chemical smog-rontrol devic.es -at a cost of about $150 a ca r -won't be needed on 1975 models. T hey raised the specter Monday of a v.'Orsening fuel situation as well as the possibility that a nonpolluting eng ine can be r eady for use by late 1977. But unlike Ford and Chrysler, General I\Iotors President Edv.'ard N. Cole spoke in favor of the catalytic converter as a m eans of con- trolling emissions. Tiit fictitious t1111lness n1mt rtterrtd ,.01 5 •~ •~ to 111ov1 wts flied fn or1r111• County "' · • ~ rs, THE TIIRE£..DA V h earings were called by the Senate Public Works Committee, whose air and water pollution subcommittee headed b y Maine Sen. Edmund Muskie wrote the clean air legislation on M•Y 15, 19n . S-ra AIKI I. WIU!1m V. Moorlle6d, 330J2 M1rln1 Viste. D1rie Point 835 3305 ?. Miry L. Moorhtld, 330S2 M1rln1 • Visit, D1n1 Point I ~~~~~~~~~~~~ This buslne)s 11111 cooducted by •nl; indlVIClu1I. Wllll1m V. Moorl'lfld ~ubt!sl>td Orange CN51 Novtm~r 6, ll, 10, 27. l9n ,Intl Dtlly Piiot lJJJ-13 PUBLIC NOTICE ""' SUPERIOR COURT 01" THlr 5TATE 01' CALl,OJl:NIA l'OJt THE" COUNTY OF OJIANGlr N1, A-710ll VELVET FOG HAIJlSTYLING IS NOW! 8466 INDIANAPOLIS AVE. HUNTINGTON BEACH, 536-8829 NOTICE OF HEARING 0, PET!· TION FOfl. ,.R08ATE OF= Will AND COOICILS A.NO FOii: l ET TE• S TESTAMENTARY E1t1te ot G. ADOLI' Gll:JE/JI, Otct1Hd.1~:;;:;;:;;:;;iiiiiiiiii;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii HOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN 1111111 llA.NK OF A.MERICA NATIO"A.L TJl:UST I. SA.VINGS Of ORANGE COUNTY hts fltl'd lier.in 1 plfltlon for Pr11Mt1 of Wiii 1ne1 codkit• 1nd for h 1utnc:1 of L1!ler1 T1st1men11rr, to"tllt pelltt-r rtlerente 111 wn1c11 1 m1d1 for lllt!Mr p1r!lcul•f1, Ind tllet tilt time 1nCI pl1c1 ot lltlrlnsr the 11mt n.1 t>ffn HI for NCO¥tmMr :io. l9n, II 9:00 l .n'I .. In t1'>I! courtroom ot Dtparlrntnl ND. l al s1id caurT, 11 JOO Civic C111t1r Drlv, Wt1t, In lllt CllY ol S1nt1 An1, Calllornl1, Oiltd NOVl'mbtr ), ltn WILLIAM E. sr JOHN. CllllnlV Cltr- HVTTEJI, WAUEJt, WEINSTOCK, MANION • KINe I .. C1N'111H"J' 1'1ttrr R11t, 511111 .. Loe A ...... Cllll. '*7 12111 lrt-4411 "'"'"""' ftr: petltf_,.. ,ublllhtd Or1n11t Cotti '01Jly Piiot Novtmber •· 1, 13, lt7J 3Jr9'1•7J PUBLIC NOTICE . "" I Ul'lt lOll COUlllT 0" TNlr STAT• 0, CAll"OtNIA Fot TNI COUNTY OP OllANO• Nt. A•nt1t NOTICE OF HEAll:ING OF PETITION l"DR PltOllATE OF WILL A.NO FO .. lETTEltS TESTM\ENTA.ll:Y (stilt ot IDA l . O•A.88LE, Dttt1Hd, N011CE 1& HERE6'1' Gl'IEH 11111 SECUftlTY ,A,(IFIC HATIONAl IANK, I Nl\tflll b9nld119 l,1«i.t1on l'ltt tl!H """" • Ptfl1lotl for il'robllll of Wiii 111d tor ltll'" T1111-t1ry rtltnnCt to -lcn It mH4 fOt fvrll>tr ci.rtlcul1rs, Miii !Not tl'll Tlmt Ind pll(f of llt1rt,. , ... Mlftt .... bltn Ill tor JllOWf'nMr JJ, "1J, •I •:00 l ,fn., 111 tllt c_,.._, Of Dtotftmrtnl No. J of 11ld COl,lrf, 1t 100 Cllrl'lc c .... 1er Oflw w .. 1, In ftlt Clry of ht\11 ..._,., C.Hforftlt. D1IMI NO\'t'ft'IW I, 19n. Wlllttm I , SI Jolln, CWl'llV Cttn CM.0.11. M•1tR1Ne I. FaANICl.Ut UI e. 11"1 lrrMt, klllt M ~ Mtrte,.c.ttlf. ,,.,, T1+1 cn4l .._"" AtlW'tlw hr il'lfl*- FREE Seminar On SILVER learn how the short1ge of 1ilver ii prices •nd cre1tin9 opportunltits profit. causing soarin9 for su bstentiel Set • Full Color presentt tion on "Mon1 y vs Wt t lth'' l earn how mt ny of your fri t nds t nd neighbors er• protecting their hard earned money egeinst los• from inflati on and a nother d1 pr1ssion. AIRPORTER INN 18700 Moc>.r!hur Blvd. (Oppo1it• O t1tr9• Covnty Airport) Thu,.d1y Nov. 8, 1973 8:00 p.m. No R.e11rvatlons rtquired, but if you c1ll we will 1av1 a st et for you. MARSH & co. H71 Vii Lido Ste . 202 N•wport B1•ch, Cel. 92660 714/675.6200 ·- ... AefOllC1!nt 1 P< ... Cer!llll!d C11 l , l._ \. FsC.nL2SIJ . 11 2n,~ "4 Ae•O!.Ol l~c 1 1 Ctrl1on Cp S 1\13 FSI 0.n¥wt l l ._ '-< in 1970 that set e>..ilawt limits :~11 ~::.: 1: t.,_·;; ~=~~p ~ s: m:'i! fJ\~t;: f ::.,,-.'.~ for 1975 and 1976. :r~·~\oO: ; ~::+.~~ g:jfJ~~ ,~ 1t~ ~~ ~f:C":!~1t i a\\-·;; While a sking for a "freeze" :1~~~~1 ~ ~ :"·•+;; ~1~111·'~ 1~ ~~ ::: ~:~1 1~ 1~ '~~!:~~ on automotive emission limits :11~~:~ : :~~.'.~ ''"• •-'"" 1 ,;••_.,, F11ROK-1n '' 1~1':1!, I lb r-1 "dG'!A.tnWoocts. 7 IS'.._ll ~l:_.,~....u 3i I ... ~J!;m;, l~ l~O-'O o r reeyears,\Alesa1 1' A.l<Kk1 Air1 n •'4-\• c1rc1tK ,2' 10 11 ~~. Fo1St•n .21 ts u •o-•.a research has shown that ::~:~ci~~ 11· :r,_"ji 8Wlt1~.;1t 1! ,:Yi ;¥; ~~=~~1~::~. 1l ,;~:-.~~ em-ISSIO-ns of .-,,he pl t• Arte!Jl>Cpwt , .... \!, Cl1yGsFl .so 1 1 ... Flitt ll'IOul 1 s .. , r a 1num "''~" 1.1 .1, 11 1'1+ h CL Flnc1 Cp ~ ,\,._ \\ Friottroni1: s. 1n:.-w II d. AU11 fl11 Mt 2 10' < + lo Cl.iorlr.son . 16 2 U'lio . . . Fri WM ,)'.IQ 1 \J\f-\' or pa a 1um or suUates from .AUit<! Artist 11 •'~ .. c11rost11 M 2 ...,. v. FronliH Air 11 s.i,+ 11 _ ped "th the GM "11Tf>tr I.I• 1 Iii..-"• Cllry Cotp s 1t11 ... -Go- cars equip WI ::r!'!s\"t; . ,7,s ~~~ ::: f":'r ~ ~ ~+ ·;.; ~!~Inc:: : ;',._ ~- catalyst system will be a prob-::::~Fci~°:'sC , ;;.~·;: ~~~en""'' l! !Ji:::: g:~~.1&~ ~ ~:.=--.'.~ Iem. ....~ .... •,~: oo Sl•:.-\1 Coclts(o .11 it 1 -l• Gtylor4S .:Kl ' 110-\\ "~ ....,. S l '• ... Cott Mil .5' ' u ... Gtvnor St" 1S J' >-\o AmHtss wts 100 17~ \o '°"'" t>Mlfd 2 2'1' .. . G11rl>t .Jib 2 9lo ... Am811trt .SO 1 l'.o-t '4 Co111.1ln .ISb s .,._,,, GlnOnt . .O 60 1111> ... AmFlt 1,01b I 21 -'lo Coil lnll Inc J'I 31< ... Gn Houwllll' l 1\~-"' A FlttCllwS • ( J -,_. COlf!'l'>IN'I " ];I 11 -'i Gn Rt-ti'\ l S-V• AmG•t .M I 17'·i -t-'o C.11llt91 iill ..•• -·~ Gftftew .CH • H1 ... AmGlrt F\11 ' II>-\~ ColConll .10 l ,,,, Gtn9t tnc 11 s• .... Am l~rll .76b ,,1 •••-'• ComlMICOm 1 20 -\o Gton lnelu1t 4l n'-•t '!• .AMllnA .l3 110 t \1 Comb Equlf ,. 191'> .. 1 GlrMrSc 1n l 1'11 ••• AMli"B .3:) 10 1 . .. Cornlr>ea 1 31, .. ''t Glint F .lrOQ 1 Ullo-V. " Ml9 l.11b 1 .0\.-\~ OHnl M ,609 5 U\lo -t-\4 Gltn1Y1 . .0. S t~ t 1-16 AMOUn .10d 1JJ 11'0+ >1 COmmodof I 1~ ... Gllddlno11r. ?• l -1\ .. Pel"' 1.20 5 l'l'•t v. Com~ Pli';'I: 10 . l 'h-~· ~k"" 10 11.~+ \\ A1'1R!t l.lltl 1 10\'o •·· COtn PS 1.62 1 11~0 + llo GltnGI .a 1 Sit--\i Am IUty wt 1 H1 .. . Comp.IC Cp 2 l'i-+-\\ GltnOlsU a. 1 •'Ai-\o\ Nn ll:tcGrp 517 4!'-i+ '" Cornpoln .32 JS ,.__ "" G!Otll s.tur 2 61'1-~ AmSllt!y II 16 1 ... eornp.,gr1 .. 310,:,-i, Gloutr8 .21 1 9~ Co •-T••lnl'llll u 10•:.-\~ r-... _,.. ·o ,,. Gor .. c-• o '' A.M1 cc11 .01 1 11:i-v. (;,~rd Fib s ,,,_·~~ GoodLs'.iw, 11 ,y,._·y,; A.nll'lonT Ind . 1 6\4 .. . ConCllC Cp 1 2'--l'o Goulellnc: wt JI 7V. .. , Avco Files Statement With SEC ... 0 l!ICI Inc ., II\ •. . Conntlly en ' ' -~-.. Gouklrt .Mb ' I;\!, •.. Avco Financial Services Inc . ::;~':"'1: \1 ,i~1::1.tt ~~. ~ ~ :~ ::: ~::T...ui~ '! ':~'~ announced it has filed with A.r1CLC1 .0lb s 1s1:.-"• cons11:e1 .20 1 u + v. Gr1ntt1MOt ,o l -\o\ the Securities & Exchange Commission a registration statement covering t~ pro- Posed public offering o( $75 million senior debentures due Nov. 15, 1998. Kidder, Peabody & Co. Inc and Salomon Brothers have been designated as joint m anagers of the underwriting group that will market the d ebentures to the public . Net proceeds from the pro- posed financing will he added to the General Funds of the company and will be applied initially to the reduction of short·tenn borrowings. The debentures will be redeemable on and a fter Nov. 15, 1983, al the option of the company. Under certain con- d i ti o n s of d eclini n g r eceivables, they will be redeemable on and ru."ter Nov. 15, 1978. Occidental Chief To'ld LOS ANGELES (AP) - Joseph E. Bain! has been elected pre.!ldenl and chief operating officer of Oc· cldental Petroleum Corp. Bain!, 39, has been managing director and chief executive officer cf We.item American Bank Ud. In Europe from his base in London. Baird replaced Dr. Ar- mand )lammer, who will remain board chairman 11nd chief executive of· ficcr. A.rl1C pf .41 l •~1-\Ii Consyne Cp s •'•+ \\ Gr1uv .Hb 11 11n t !lo A.rtLIG I.JO 1JO 71 + \'J .co.it Mlterr t 1\'o .. , Grt Am Incl · I 1S-I• ... A.rm.IC: Ent }1 11 -~~ ConlTll WU lD 2'11 ... Grt a., Pit 60 ,,_ ..... Atml.,c;orp . 20 ll\\+\'1 COOl!ln .a tt 21'ht .'>!i GtltCh ,11b 110 tll\t \\ A.rrow eiect 2 6\'tT 1< Cooptr J .20 1 •'l!o ••• GIS<ott s .st 1 t + v. Atune!ICP St 2 10',\+ ,. COriMI Intl 21 tl'i + \\ Grtenmn.st "' 6.1(,T ... ..U1rMr1 0 796 """+ \. COit Cerp II Jh ~ Vo GREil 1.20 ( 10V. ... ..Uf>ldOil C.11 . t IC ;T \t• COttC..pwt 10 ~•+ V. Grtyf!C .20d 16 II•-l'o Alco lnckr\t 2 '"' •.. CO• C1blt 11 1\\\-.,.. 9.~,',,',',·_!:!i •, ',,""--~ A.11coMt9 wt s 1i..-t\ er1r1 car~ 10 1 -•11i ...,.., ... v• AtrCM 1.1sei "9 30 + \~ Crtltlw 1 s~o t v. Gtow c .no 1 6VJ ... Atl1SCPW'tt 20 1'>\-t-\\ CrtoleP1. ):J 211i · ... Gfvtn llldu$ •J )'~t \\ A'*l In .10 2 7''4-t-i. Crtsl ll'olm 1 1~0 ... GSC En .OSb 2S n o . A.uslr11 Oil 12 7llo\t \It Cross A .m 2 62 . ,.. GuUM 1.19tr 3 11~+ \lo :~:"'11:~~ ~ ~::: ~ E;.~,~-R:!+ ·~ ~:: ~F~ 1~· 3!:1: n AuloSK .10 20 1 ..• C..OkCp .20 S 7'/. •.. GulfSO!.lWI S 11>.t Y. Auto Sw .65 1 S.'111 + \\ ClltttrA .2211 .. 11"1+ \' GvllSOM wt • n ••.. A.wmco .H IJ ~'+ \olo Clil11tr8 .mi 1 11tt-v. -H tt--Avondl 1.Ut 1 n~ ... -0 0--Hll1t••fl H 1 ~'·-•,\ AVX Corptn l H -~ °'"'°" .l'Oll 1 •V. , , • HllllMol .IO 1 11, • , • -I 1---Ollll Doc: Jn 1 2''M t l(o Klmp1 D 5lt 11 S -+-\'o BICIQitf' ·'°" 1 ,,., .. • 0.11 f'rOllct ·It 'lt . . . w.,.,,un .n 1 s -1, liicfSt .161> s 5'• ... 0.l'Mn ,10d 6 ,,_. .. , Hlnov PllN'I 11• 11 + 14 &ncrtt 1.•Sb s ln • . . . O.yl!" wt1 J 2\li . . . tolirt• Mt Cp n :n~•+ \o BlnWPwt S 1~;. .. D11rbo\S .2S •011 +,\lo ~ ..... yGrp 1' 1"•-\\ Blnfi.ttr l1 :W. 25U.+ 10 DtJur ,1,,,,, 2 .;tT \0 Ht,.....JlStr f " 2\'it .\t 8¥11rl lY" 12 I .. , Dell.tb .OSb I I ,,, HtllM'O Ind 2 6\•-\lo B•r"""lt 11' 4 ~+ \\ 0.111 (.orp t 1.-.. .. . NNl!h Olm 2 SI'• •. , e1rryRGSi. '' S'• ,,. 0.1111 Fd .SO ' 1~+ ..... 14tfl!ltkl In 6 "" •.. hrryWr .J:! 10 6'•-'.\ DnT IEI .DSll .Q 1l'l'i+ ~· Mlll.atr 1.IWb S 1l l!lft!n' Pltrt 113 •'II-+-'Ml D111rt1 Pl! 10 27~+ h Her Mii -• 11 10 , .. e..l"K .Gb lO 1~ ~ Dew lop Cp 3 U'h + Vt Ht G lnc:orp I 7~ \:1 ltfl JM .OI ' 1~~ ... Dev AP I .OSll 11 l :n .. . HIOllllld Clio • 2 -~ 8tlstoifl. •1r. 2 1V, ... DHJlnd ,10b s 1~+ ~• "lflh1~n Sk 2 3!/11 ... 8tn SI 2.0» 30 %1!\t ';\ !?f~~ ... ~ ..o, ~... .1,1, H!polronlc 6 (';\-~ kl!ffStdWS 11 a~+ \lo .....,......, ~ ._ HOiiy Corp 1 2\'t ... BtntvS c, s · •v.-1,(, om1re1 .a 1 15\~ •. . 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'"91r 1, '· n, 1t7J a.1-n .. _________________________ ~'L------------..J • f • l 1 u ...... J 1•'1-.. • ]1•-'·· ' "' -1 ,, • ' I 11>.-'• l ll'ot \o ,! ~"-·;.· J '" 10 H -l o J ,t, ... 11 Sh •. • 11-" ... J 1'"• ' ·n ;:: t . '.o 6" 1Ut • '• JI ...... '. ' . -.. 1 ~ ... 1 6'• . ' • Kl -'• S liK>-'• .. 3111.,_ '• " ,. ·-'• 2111(11!0~21 , J•l t \o -U U-UlPCp ,0211 S 1'~ •.. UntMI 1.llb I 20•-•o' l.lftMIQWIJ 5 l'> ... UnA\DI .Olb t l'o • 1·1& unerll'lllwt n 1•, ... U11CoFl11f fi 3 1t' o . Un Dau.st 1 •to• 11 UnFOOM1n u 1 -'• UflfWl-wtH--S ..._-+l·I•. UIC!Nt pt .10 1 10•0 , •. UnPOy .lrOI 1 1>.J. • • ,. USFllttr .10 2t UI._ • .. USLJll \.,_. ' \IU-\oo u1N1t Res 1 1 -v. U fttMI" 1 11¥>-l'o USll:ubR ,}ol I · 9'~+ '• Unlttt Cor~ s tt ... Vfll1, 1u , u·~ ~. Unl'l(ont 1 ,., Ul'llvAtt Co 1 ••··+·•· URS Sf~ll'llS 1 J(i -.._ ' u v ......... , t? •»· ... I " ' ' ' •' " •' ·' .. • .. " • . ': ., ' I • ' .. , ' Monday's Closing Prices ~, I NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE ,\ , • "'· Novembtr im DAILY PILOT Year's High-Lows Appear Every Saturday Market Staggers Under Bad News Sale• • • < 1 • 4 DAILY PILOT Ttttsday Nowmbtr 6, 1 q13 Political Notes Homeowners: Otlier Deaths' MOU~"l'AIN.viEW (API - Funers.I services arc schedul· ~ \Vednesday ror Andres A. BorJun, 86, a captain in Pancho Villa's revolutionary J\1exican Army. lie died t~ri· day of a heart attack. School Elections Limited By 0. C. HUSTINGS serve OW' critical r u e I supplies. of StAndards, the National Science FoWldation and HUD to cooperate in a program to demonstrate commercial applications or sola r heating techniques for buildings. executive assistant 'to Supervisor Ralph Clark for the past two years, has been nam· ed intergovernmental relations ofticer with the Orange County Transit Dlstr'°t. if there's Gll'f lling adYertised in today\ pi ... you'd •to~'~ who can help you buy it. ORANGE COUNTY Of tilt OlllY l'lllt ll11f School districts can no * CONGRESSMAN A n d r e w longer call finance elections any time they want to under Hinshaw CR-Newport Beach) will be the principal speaker new legislation signed by Nov. ll at a nlemorial service Governor Reagan. honoring veterans of World The bill, SB 230• applies only War I. The service is schedul· to ev.en~umbered years. In ed for 11 a.m. ln the Assembly Burge.ner 's bill has been referred to the House. c.om. mittee on Science a n d · Astronautics. * - Grtg Sanden wlll.take Mrs. Bryden's \}>lace on th e supervisor's staff. lie ls a resident of Anaheim and a gradui te or Cal S l a t f: , NEW YORK (AP ) -.Dr. llalm G. GlnoU, 51, child psychologist and author, died Sunday. He was the author of several books on · child psychology, Including "9roup Psychotherapy with Children" and "Parent an d Child.·· Schoolmen Hire Mon.e'Y Fuller.ton. 1974, for instance, school Hall or American Legion Post districts will be limited to 131 , 313 N. Birch St., Santa•::====================,! Feb. 5, March 5 or Nov. 5 11 for bond or tax rate elections. Ana. * MARY EVELYN Bryden, FRESNO (AP J -Funeral services are pending for R. E. Bergstrom, 49, Fresno County director o f en· viroqmental health, who died of an apparent heart attack afler playing golf Saturday, ~ Co11.sulta1it Those dates coincide with C 0 NG ll ESSMAN Clair lhe limes of possible statewide Burge!ler (R·Rancho Santa elections. Fe) is pushing solar energy The bill still Bllows districts as part of what he calls a lo call elections at any time long range attack on the during odd-numbered years on energy shortage. only 90 days notice. He has introduced a bill By CANDACE PEARSON Author~ by state Sen. Craig (HR ll056) calling up 0 n PLAZA ART CENTER IL A.DOii PLAZA. $UITI 11 s. ,, .. c., ...... P1intin91, Ari M•f•ti1lt, fr1m11 \Ve Frame tht Usual and tht U'tusual Art C11s111 Mon. thrw S11t, 20% OFF Oto All Art S.ppllos Phone 493.1950 NEWTON, Mass. (UPI) - Maurice Gordon , 63, one of Boston's biggest real estate owners, died A1 o n d a y . Gordon's property holdings in Boston and Miami, Fla. are estimated to be worth in ex· cess of $30 million. of"'-o..1ry Piiot 11.n Biddle (R~Riverslde), it is NASA, the National Bureau SANTA ANA -The Orange designed to cut down costs lii0~~~~~~~:;;_~~2;:;;;;;~~;:;;~iiiiiiiiiiiiii;i~ii;iii;i:ii~~ii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~I CoWlty School Board is going by consolidation or elections. to pay a consultant $3,000 to * HAMS find ASSEMBLYMAN John V. · money. . Peat, Marwick, Mitch ell and Briggs (R·Fullerton) is urging , ' Co. of Santa Ana ha s been Congress to swiftly adopt hired to survey needs of the legislaticn mandating year· Orange County Department o{ round day light savings time. Education and other school "The Federal Uniform Time districts and find priva te fund-Act," said Briggs. "has pre-Death l\'ot·lces Ei..n F. evmei~"R"t:i1::n1 of Hunu11111on ing to meet them. empted the Ca I i [or n i a BeeCh; di'' of de1th. NOYember •· The firm also \Viii develop Legislature from mandating 197l. Surv ved bv wlle. Met'Q9 Bvrntt; d d 1· ht · son. 1C1vln1 d1uahter. Ml~P1el11 Bvrn'"I. federa l revenue·sharing plans ycar·rOllR ay 1g &av1ngs ROW<"\', lofllciht. Tllftd1v. 1:10 PIA: Rt-d l 11·me 1·n cur state. Congre~s. Qulem Miss. WK1MMl1v. 11 AM, t>oth in case Ole c part men "' s1 eon1ven1ur1 C1thon~ Church. • b therefore holds the --Femu; ~rs thoH wishllKI. Dl1 ... se i:arlicipates m t at program. . .. v .. - mak• memorl•I contribulloiH 10 the The -ntract approved by stitutiona.I authority to change Jlrnl'•lcen He•rt M v•l•tlon, r>ll•<av ... v eroin.n H1,1nttnoron B1•~ Mortu•rv. trustees covers 10 working the limits placed upon daylight ... 2.n11. Dlrecto<~'t:LTON days, at $2,500 and $500 ex· savings lime. Ron1ld E WeUOll. AQe lf: rnldltlt d I th · · "Several studies on energy of L1QU111 &uc.h. D11e DI 0e11h, penses to eve op c ·money . Nevtmtllrr 4, lt7l. Sur'li'ltd bY wlf1. book." conservation." Briggs COil• EY .. ¥"'11 deuqhttt. l ¥,,,.. Hl¥1S. L~una NIQuel1 11n1t111r. Robert c. wtuon. Fred Koch, assis tant tinued, "have concluded that C.nldt; MMHn-lew. Jim Haves, Lac1un1 Nlo1111; twD nepheW$. Prlv111 Mtrv1.c1s county 5upcrinlendent, said year·roWld daylight savings Spiral Sliced Whole or Half ... ,.:-:-~ -"So Good ... It Will "Haunt'' You 'til It's Gone" ORDEI U.llLT HONEY BAKED HAMS ,. TURKEY BREASTS For yo•r 111-";stl'I .. Dl11•r! Ako, Order Now hf CllrlltMOS e Reody to S«ve. wltll Ho..,. '• Spke Glue e Spir•I Sliced froM T.op to l•rto• e We Paclto,e ud Slrilp fT011t c-st t• Coost e F11ll Se"i<• Detk•tnlff e Imparted CllHMs .. d Wl11n \t Ccrterl1t9--A Spec!Glty 3700 L COOlt H...._.,, Cote. clel M• -67J.f000 I alodl WHI of J c..-llnllttrhl • Avco. You may convert the built-up equity In your· hou11 Into cash In your hands. Cash to do whatever you want to do, and pay baCk conveniently over a pe~ of years, HOMEOWNER LOANS TO '25,000. Loano OMr SS,000 on 1 comblnlllon of R••I Ell•I• and Penonol Propet1Y. .AIAVCO FINANCIAL SERVICES 2106-D H•rbof. llvd., Costa MHI 500 No. Anaheim llvd., An.ahelm 250 So. Euclid St., AMholm 171n lrookhurst, Fount1ln V1llty (lrookhur1t Pl111) 12091 lrookhurst St., Gardon Grove 17422 l•ch llvd .. Huntington h•<h 2017 S.. ~In St., S•nt• An1 513 W. •17th St., Santa An• 6411 Wtstmlnater An., W•tmlnat.,. 556-1000 535-2116 77'-5150 ·~5602 5'0-4:100 147""°71 549-ml 547-M31 lt3-500I -·• held. 1n1 ... men•. P•clllc view th l · Id be f t1'me .. -·Id reduce our el-MtmOrl•I Perk. F1m11v W11Qt1•1 ,,,,_ e in ormat1on wou o -"""' .,... 1222 s. INoktilttlt, et W lcl .. AMllel• 631-1461 wlihlllQ, l)INM rN~• ~morlal CDll-·_f'.~~>_.!'.~l~:IJ~l_'~·~t:·~~~~~· ~·t~d~~~ ~··<I..'.~..'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..,,,.;~..,,,.;..,,,.;~..,,,.;;,,...,~~..,,,.;~~~~~~~~~======================= 1r11iv11on1 10 1111 Am1r1c1n C1nltl' Socl• fered to )oca sc oo IS rl . 1c1 y eman Shu a .. v • '"· Shtfftt L9Q1n11 Buch Mort111rv. Di<ICI01'1. Zl•WAS Emfl F. Zlrwl'I-lSlO S. Birt~ SI .. S111te Anl. Dllt DI dtllh, ND'ltmbsr 2 1tn survived bv will. Jt~ne'I" ~o .an·1. EmH o .• of Coron11 Char n N Zlrwa•. Yorbe Llnda1 f Iv 1 Qiandl;hlld~n; oarenls, Mr. end Mrs. Emil J, H, ~lrw1111, PlllClnll•: brnl"9~, Norman L rw.at._ AllMl!lutr~1 1L111r. Laur• ,.,;1t' A Ml!';--.,-or.,~1:.ffi!I!. Me...,-·I·' slr'lllces -• htld MDnrtav 11 Peclflc View Chaotl. Pacific View MDrlue•v. DlrtelDrl. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 427 E. 171h SI., Costa 1\.1esa MlH888 • BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar S73-NSI Costa Mesa 64&.2414 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broad"·ay. Costa rt1esa LI g.3433 • DILDAY BROTHERS · MORTUARIES 17911 Beach Blvd. Hunllngton Beach SC.7771 %44 Redondo Ave. Long Beacb %13---438-1145 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1706 Lagmui Canyon Rd. Df.Mli • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery 1\.tortuary Chapel 3500 PacUlc View Drive Newport Beach, CaWomla M4-Z700 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave. l\'estrnlnster 893-3515 ~ SMITH'S MORTUARY .--627 Main St. Huntiagton Beach 53&-6539 PUBLIC NOTICE ""' 1u~e•10• COU•T o~ THE STATE OF CALl~O•NtA FOil THE COUNTY OF ORANGE No. A·1IOU NOTICE OF HEAllNG OF PETITION FOR PROBATE or WILL ANO FOR LETTEllS TESTAMENTARY E1l1!1 DI EDITH $. CHAMBERLIN. 01C11Sld. NOTICE IS HEREaY GIVEN !hit DICK COWAN 1!11 llltd l!erl'ln 1 petition for Proa.11 of Wiii 1nd '°' h$ulnct .-· of Ltlter1 Tn1tment1ry ID , ... Pllllioner ret1r11K1 ID wlllch Is mldf! fD!' lurllllr P<tl'flcular1. Ind 11111 Ille lime .1nd pl11e1 of ... 1rl1111. !hi Hrnt l11s bHn set tor NDYlmbtr 211. 1913, 11 9:00 1.m .. In the courtroom ot Oeparlmtn! No. 3 of Ufd tour!. 11 700 Cl'llc Ce"ltr Dr!,,. W11t, !n lttt Cltv al Senlm Ana, C1llforn!1. Oiied NO'nmbl'f' 2, 1t13. Wlllllf!'I E. SI. Jo/In, Coun•v Cl1rll KELLY a Gll:ANAM LAW CORPOll.l.TION 21111 H1wthDnl1 Blvd,, Sul!• 1u• TDrrlftCI, C1Uforn11 (2U) ~11·3UJ Attor11ttv1 1111' ~11111-r Pubt!shld Ora1"99 COlll Oeily Pllct, Novt ml!lr s. '· U. 1'7l llU·Tl PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS au11111Ess NAME STATEMENT Tiii loll-'J'lfl otrlllft II doing buslntH II ; AIRWAY POLISHING. 10650-D Fern A111 .. Sl•nton, C.lllornl1 JOMpll I ncl/Dr Dlnl1e1 C1rdDu, ~l Senti An.I Ave .• Ntwporl 8Ntfl. C1/lt, ""' This buslnes1 1, tonducltd b'f 1n ln- dlvlduoml. 0...llCI C1t0o11 Tiii• Jllltmtnl "'I filed wlll'I fht Counfy Cit ... of 0<•"'91 County Dl'I October ,,, ""' Fltl!W l'\lblllhtd Or1nge Coe1t Dlll'f' PUol, OtfOtllt' lO, INI NOVfl'nt'.ltl" •• 11. 70. 1'7l 1277·73 PUBLIC NOTICE flCflTIOUS BUSINlli5S NAME STATaMINT lMI lolloWlng ptrion 11 doll'tl bu1lnff1 ••: IJl\llNP.: CON.SOLIOATEO P:• ElGlfJWA Y$; l»Oi N o r m 1 l'I d 11 Avenue. lrvln1. C.tltor11l1 '770S \lhK• Vlnm11'1$, lSJOS NOr'r'l'llndle AVlftW, lrYll'lf, C1IUarn41 tt'105 Tnb llvtil'lett., It: conducled bt" 1n llldlwl6!NI. Vinet Ylnmtni , Thlt tltle!ntnl w11 n11c1 with tttt c-w CllR of Drll!VI CCNntv Clll OctllMr "· 191). ·. • • .. ' f . ... ' !~ . ,., ...... t ~~· ;., .. I ' . ,, ·~·: : -. ' I ' ' 1 w, WI , The Bank of Califo Conne guaranteed-good check J 1 ays a wee.I{, Now you-don 't have to wait for "banker's · ll's like having your bank on just a~ hours" to write a check. Or be a friend of every street corner. Only better ... bee , · the store manager's brother·in-law to get r"' many qf th ese "telle r's. windows" are op it OK'd. When you have Tlie Bank of . 7 days a week! \ California Connection there's no-h ~ut there is a lot more. The Bank of no credit check, no embarrassin. l fornia Connection is a whole R,ackage turn·down. he most useful personal banking Because with The Connection yo, services ever put together: Check Guaran tee Card. This card lets Like unlimited checking. Write as many the worl,d know that The Ban~f California as you want. There 's no additional charge. guarantees· your personal cheek p to And no minimum balance required. $100.00. Your card is honored ores Then there's Moneychec k•. That lels operated by Safeway y Les Drug you write yoursell a loan in the privacy of Stores, J: Magnin-.1housands of your own checkbook. And also gives other retail establish ~nts thi'oughout the· .<Y automatic ove rdraft protection. U.&·and Canada. ~ ,. ut then, when you're wall connecled at ' ' a i e Ban~ of Cal iforn ia, you t ni~e ings to happen. . I ,! Like getting a safe deposit box at no I extra charge. , 1 *1e for traveler's checks' _, oney olWI!.. l You get reduced rates on persona l IOalJ. Masler Charge• Card. Even pos lage. l paid Bank-by-Mail Service. They're all included .in The Connection. Best of all, The Bank of California ConnectiQn costs only $2.50 a monlh. What many peopleiipay for a checking account alone. For an application just fill out the coupon. ·or stop in at any of our convenient offices. ··································-~·-·········································-······················ I am interested In The Bank of California Connection. Please send me mo.re~nlormation and an applicalion: The Bank of Cllifornja Bank of c.alifomia Please clip and mail to: ® A good solid connection. Ol'nl1, N.A. Member F.O. AOORES,:i----"----------"PT .. -- The Bank of Californ ia 550 South Flower Slreet Los Ang~les . California 90017 Attenlion: Mr. John Owens -. -···············-························ ., 1 • . . Jesting Foreign-style • • BEA ANDERSON, Editor lundar, Novem"r '· 1tn "'" 1S Instead of Bride Thanks Given DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have rtever seen this problem in your column. Maybe no one else has ever had it. It is quite unusua1 . We lost Dad when I was 15. I am 20 now. When Dad dil'd, one of my men teachers became like a {ather to me. I went to him wilh my problems and he was just wonderful My boyfriend and I plan to marry next year. I want this teacher to give me in marriage, bot I'm afraid it nlight create hard feelings in the family. I have an uncle who might feel put out. But I do want to give this 'te8cher the honor~ let him know what be bas meant to me. What do you say?· - OXNARD DEAR OXNARD: Your molher 1boald • be comalted. Her feelings .,.. lmporlanl. I 1u1pect she'd prefer U.at yow uncle glye }'OU ln manlage, particularly U be ii your dad's brother. • The teitcber could be invited to sit wltlti the family and be Included In lhe pre-nuptial affairs, as If ~e were an WICle. (ll be Is married, bl! wUC mast, or course, be Included. I . DEAR ANN LANDERS: How old does ' a man have to be' before he gets some brains? t was happily married for 38 t years. We always worked on the farm together. The ~ught never crossed m~ · mind that my husband would cheat on me. 'lben 1on>e nice neighborly people bougt\t the place next to ours ancJ. the next thing I knew my husband had quite an affair going with thelr 30-~ar--ald unmarried daughter. It went on !or two years (me dumb as a doorpost until I caught them in the . hay loft ). The following week my hus- band had a heart attack that kept him In bed for eight. months, plus another year to recuperate. . He promised the· Lord ii be ever got well he'd lead a Christian life, Well, AM, }le behaved for the next few years, -and lhcn another couple moved into - the vicinity. We met them at church. The woman is in her mid-SOS and plays the piaM rather well so we invited them over for a musical evening. (My husband ls good on the guitar and I play the zither.) , 1 walked out. or the room for a minute and when 1 returned I saw my husband give' her~a lov:e-pat O{l the rear. Ann. it can't be sex in any other way bU\ in his head , but It shocked me that be would act up again-ii he could. Please tell me bow to think about this. I am upset and need guldanct.- RED ROCK, OKI.A. DEAR RED: Jut lell blm lo keep his b...i, to blmlelf beeaaie tbal woman's llmband. isn't blind and he mlgbt not take kindly to such gestures, in addition to whlch It's an insalt to you. .DEAR ANN LANDERS: I think you are fair to both sexe~ spite or oc- casional reader comments lo the .con- trary. This question win require total detachment. ' Is a wife entitled to a night out with the glrb-just as a husband is entitled to hiJ night out with the boys? -LET ME BE ME DEAR YOU: I -•m•· bJ a "llcbt . Olt wtdt tbe Pis" yea .... • hn ... ~ .. jolt ......... at a home for gir(.talk. U M, Ille -wer Is yea. If yo1 meaa bar-hopping er going IO a cock111l loange ud daa<lnl wltb 1~e answer 11 no. Got ~e wedding bell blues over co.sts . . • guest list ... what to wear •.. and other details? Ann Landers's completely new "1be Bride's Guide" will .help. For a copy, aencl a dollar bill, plus a long, self-addr-, stamped envelope (II cenll postage) to AM Lend· erSi Box 334&, 222 W. Bank Dr., Otlcago Ill. 606$4. • I ' . I Unusual fashions are offered by designers around the world. Tickling milady's fancy is the ostrich feather stofe (far left) worn with ·a see-through waistcoat by Michelle Tellin of Paris. Dior (left) suggests high · fur C'ollared wrap to ward off drafts· from .air conditi'oners. If going incognito is your style this Japanese executioner's type helmet with jumpsuit might suit you (right). I Who Has -~th .e Last Laugh?. • .. • Aloiig the Orange Coast, ' mila·dy says 'Make mine simple and casual for comfort.' To prove the point, Daily Pilot Photographer Patrick O'Donnell spent an afternoon taking pictures of local shoppers. Short skirts are as popular as pants. Most favor the layered look, and all " insist on comfort right down to their shoes. .. • • , " . . . ' . , • l l ' I ,. • I 6 llAILV PIL01 UPI Ttlt~olo Preparing for a Royal Match Capt. Mark Phillips of the Queen's Dragoon Guards ad)USts the stock ·On the riding outfit Of his future bnde, Her Royal Highness Princess Anne of Eng- land. They will wed Wednesday, Nov. 14, in West- minster Abbey in the marriage of the year. Daddy, long legs Trapped Tall Victim Spied Her .. I J J · By ERMA BOMBECK I I am 5'2"· tall: My husband• is just under 6' tall . Accordiilg to him. I get my kicks out of life by 1noving the car S':!al up to within three inches of the steer ing column and leaving it there. I The other morning, he stag· Ir gered into the k·i t c h en , slumped into a cllair,, panted heavily and ann ounced 1 "Okay, you win." · "What are you talking about-?"~ "I am too \\'Cak to fight ( you anymore. My kidneys have been destroye<l by a door handle. l have burns on my ' neck from being flogged with a shoulder seat belt. My head is bleeding from a clip by the mirror and I tore my · pants on the tum signal." "Is that "'hat you \Vere blowing the horn about?" "I was blowing the horn because every time I exhaied, my belt. buckle blew the horn." "You are upset." AT WIT'S END .. What ba.ppened?" ''I was auacked_py a sun visor and in the skirmi~h my foot \Vas half eate n by the glove compart ment.'.' · "I don't leave the sent up on purpose,'' 1 began. He jumped from his chair. and 'dro p' int.O' your own car "Oh, but you do. You before. Look at thes4.'' 'he have never really gotten shouted . putting his feet on over not marrying the the tabl e under my nose . "Do,, .. Hunchback of Notre Da_me, you know v•hat these are?" have you? Now, HE could "They are feet " I said have fit in your mini.car, softly. ' couldn't be?" "That's right. They were "Or Ken . You'd like one never meant to be folded or those cardboard cars whip. spindled or mutialted.'.' ' ping around with Barbie and "Then why are they A-1idge. Or Eddie Arcaro. You forked ?" should have marMed a jockey. ''Because I have just ''Or Mickey Rooney. What rescued them from the jaws• a two you would have made of the glove compartment. I sitting on your pillo~ ! Or thought perhaps if 1 crawled Dick Cavett. Storing a picnic in from the p3Ssenger seat basket under your feet. Or I could \Vind my legs around what about that guy on 'top my neck and then unwind of the wedding cake?" them under the ste eri ng He'll feel better when his wheel." legs heal. 'Discoveries' a Happy Find By HILARY KAYE 01 11141 OlllY l'Uet Slall Nearly 150 women aban· doned their kitchen sinks, ·rv soa p opera and neighborhood bridge games Wedn esday morning to attend Discoveries Unlimited at Golden \Vest College. Not au of tho 1:>0 consider themselves totally h o m e • oriented, but many have had few, if any, opportunities to participate in o u t s i d e , stimulating activities. Discoveries Unlimited is a weekly series of lectures, seminars and field trips on a variety of topics, open only to \Vomen. There are no fees or registration p ro e e du re s. Unlike other college classes bogged down in red tape, women may come and go as they please during this series. "This 11exlbllity ls one of refinishing. square dancing, includin( young mothers in the reasons for the program·~ transcendenta l medlt3Uon. or their earlY 208, older ""'Omen success.'' said C o n n i e just about any other topic. and even some grandmothers. McCausland, director of ac~ The firsl 1neeting was con· One older woman said, when tlvltlcs at GWC, and the sidered. an orien tal Ion asked why she came, "I called person most resp:>nsible (or meetirig, and the attendance the school to ask about classes the series. surprised evqyone. A )'OOm ror grandmothers like myself, UP FOR GRABS divider had to be removed and tbe;Uuggested I come Flexibility runs throuc;hout to OPJID a ,~ua -_room~ to -to thJs." the series of events. with ooJy accommodatl all the women The first meeting focused the first s11: week& having set who came .. , J on Jon Smedley, a speech in· sc hedules. The rest of the Close to 150 women-attended--structor at · the college who semester, Mrs. McCausland -nearly twice as many as heads a program of encounter· explained, is "up for grabs." the 80 women who attended type groups. His advanced A survey will be taken to the largest session last spring speech students serve as determine what the women when the series'originated. group leaders. want to do. They may choose NERVOUS Smedley's talk about his to take .excursions to such There· was a nervous air groups was enthusiastically attractions as the Music in the room as the women received, and more than half Center in Los Angeles, Griffith sat waiting for the program of the w~men indicated they Park Observatory, a clothing to begin. Most were ap-would sign up for next manufacturer, a health farm prehensive about . what this semester's groups. or any other nearby locality, "women only" series would TREMENDOUS NEED Or, women may decide to be·about, and how they would "This was more than anyone schedule sess~~s in f~anclal . fit into it. hoped for," said M rs . management, . furn 1 tu re Women of all ages came, McCausland. "It indicates the tremendous need for activities for women not otherwise In· volved at the college. "Some women will wan~to take courses at the college aller being exposed le our .series," she said, ex:plalning li)e reasoning behind !Jiocoverles Unllmltec!. "Others will be Intellectually stimulated by some of the sessioos, and that wllr be enough. Others may want to develop part-tlm'e and full· time careers outside the home." The symbof of Discoveries Unlimited is the butterfly. 0 0Ur motto Js 'You can fly -but the cocoon has to go'," explained Mrs. McCausl•nd· Meetings: will be every Wednesday, from 9 a.rn. to noon, in the College Center of Golden West College. I Metho·d~ Varied for Raising Funds Auction American Indian j e 'v e Ir y and 'artifacts \viii be auctioned during a benefit. planned to begin at 6:30 p.m. Friday. Nov. 9, in the Tale of the Whale reStaurant, Balbo.a. Sponsor is the Women's Auxiliary for the Harbor Area Boys Club. Jewelry making will be demonstrated during '3le cocktail hour. and after din- ner, authentic dances will be performed. B ' t' . ~ ou 1que United hfethodist \Vomeil will present the ir annual bouti-· que at noon Friday, Nov. 9. in Thompson Hall, Firs t United Methodist C h u r c h , Costa ~fesa. Chris tmas gifts and deco ra- tions. plants and'bake;<t goods will be sold during tbe day and et 5:30 p.m. a steak din· ner will be served. Tres Osos· Personal fashions and home accessories from all over the world will be shown during a luncheon fashlon . show to begin at 10 a.m. Friday, Nov. 9, in the Laguna Niguel Com· munity Club. Sponsoring the event is the Tres Osos Guild of A-fission Viejo:, and proceeds w i 11 benefit Children's Hospital o[ Orange County. Sale San Juan Capis trano Woma_nis ~lu__b will copduct a rummage and bake sale from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday, Nov. 9, and Saturday, Nov. 10, in the clubhouse. OC District Orange District, California Federation oJ Women's Clubs will honor the Junior mem- J>ership at a council meeting, slated at 9 a.m. Friday, Nov.· 9, in the Santa Ana Elks Club . LB Gardeners -A Green Thwnb workshop is · plann~ for members of !he lf!suna ~acb Garden Club Friday, Nov. 9, in the \Von1an's Clubhouse. Mrs. Philip Brueckner, an accredited state flower sho.w judge. will conduct th e workshop af¥l y,·ill give her Madonna story and exhibit her collectio n: MV Women Two major events will be presented by the Mission Viejo Women's Club in the Swim an d Racquet Club. On Saturday, NQv. 10. at 10 a.m. members. will have an Arls and Crafts ChriStmas Boutiq.ue and on the following Tuesday a fa shion show \\'ill be presented at 8 p.m. . " Clipped Wings1 lJlo rm e r Uni ted Airlines stewardesses, of Orange County will joii'I Los Angeles members in cerebrating Founders D a y aboard the SS Princess Louise at 11 a.n1. Saturd!ty, No.v. 10. Twins' Moms Their Aspirations and Contplishments: AAUW .In -support ol the national fel l ows hip s program, Westmin,,ter-Fountain Valley Branch, American Assocr.ition of Universi ty Women will present a fund·raising card party. !he Fountain Valley Com- munity~centcr. Irvine Juniors Irvine Junior Women and their husbands will have a hayride and pizza party Satur· day, Nov. 10, at ·6:30 p.m. They will start at the Irvine Park Riding Sta bles. Orange Coast hfothers of Twins will provide hostesses for the annual workshop of Southern California Mothers or Twins Clubs . The event will begin at 12 : 30 i -:::~~~~;;;;:~ p.m. Saturday, Nov. 10, in ~ FMNCIS- '\,,ORR .f The sess ion will take place Saturday·, Nov. 10, at the Holi-1 -;;s;:::-=:;:;;;;;;;;:--:-;~ !~~~ ~~Y. Inn, Buena fark. - - · H I d . \~ . 3 Full serVice . 0 i ay Tea 'j: Locations in Christmas Fantasy is the , .~ Huntington Beach Iheme selecled f 0 r a . PRESCRIPTIONS 1 e C1141rte Afctu11h e oeu ... ri.1 •• Christmas Bootique and Tea, Ltl ut reflll 'ft'ljf prnent ., ... lillliMll to be presented by the Lutheran High School Aux-'\ tile. FINE STATl<iNEllY /!!. .. _. l f!tOJlto1 •nd~= CHRISTMAS CAlOS Ntw ltMdy .,.Mr fttw CALLIEltV OF GIFTS C:ATALOOU•. Manv ntW t lll ldM• fW Cllrk11n111. iliary of Orange County. ~ ' DRllGGISJ". The event will begin at 10 ·111 Slh s"'"' .. ." ..... ~ H11ntintlooi Htl1"11r •• ......... JIU Ltl.lU •••A' IU-tlll a.m. Saturda y. Nov. 10. in 1roM1111n1 a Ham1tton HMSU c••••••n •••·tt•rt l l!ll ,,1111• the school, Orange. l~f;""""~-'~·-~-.. ~,~~~·~..-e.,;z:-~-~· ~··.~c~~· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Alumnae For the woma n who cores .•• Do Sometliing Different for the Holidays! "Aren 't you quick? Next year, you may even get tie shoes." ''There is no need to be sa rcastic.'' "That's easy for you to say. Horoscope: Virgo Probes for Answer Toloe o town• at Jilt for !hor norlteoblt dTllerenc,, o.wlop your own i .. di.-icl<>0li1y ond impro•t VO"' oppeoro1'<• eo1ily & naturally in O u~ique en•i•onfl'ltnl tho! w0<ki for )'OU. Enjoy the holldoy1 "'°'• lhan • ._rt You have never tried to fold a pair of legs into a parachute RU Ff ELL'S UPHOLSTERY W)len Yo1 Wont The .... 1922 H1ubor 11¥d. WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 7 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): A void needless spending. Some things have to be removed and replaced. D e m a n d verification of facts. Key is Co5h:I ~eso -548-0259 ~===.I PROFESSIONAL PEDICURES and MANICURES by Mary 548°8330 2400 W. Coa~t H'wy. -Suife "90", Newport B•1ch ~I PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE ON CUSTOM DRAPERY Ret11lar $4.00 fet>rks Storti.. •t • . , FREE INSTALLATION e WIDl Sll.ICTION e NEWEST FAIRICS e DICORATOR COLORS FIU!f! Con•lllfJOfl .,. wlftClow tr .. tmtntt. ANTOINmE'S 2038 Malo St. Santa Ana Phone 919-9~ SAVE 20°/o ON WOVEN WOODS Tllln \lr{p~ of WOOCI In tolor• Of n1tlll'li flr1!111ts, WO'f'tn Wl!ll tolorfU1 t•rn1 tno IM!tlllea, A• sl\adeJ, dr•Jll!'ln er fOOm di•ldtrs. t!lty wm tOcl Iii. •rid c'*'1 10 •l'IY reon\ 11'1 1111 ~. s" lllif 1tltc:tlon IOllty, • confidence, forthright attitude. Cancer and Libra individuals could play dynamic roles. Family member needs special consideration. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Don't be sidetracked by a superficial indi vidual. Keep on solid ground , not rosc--mist v.·onderland. A desire is fuUill- ed in a round-about way. Know what to ask for when asked. Come out of shell. \Velcome wholesome challenges, GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Original methods are most like1y to succeed. Broaden in· spirational horizons. Build on a solid base. Gain sho\VO through velvet tact, Trust in· ner sentinel. You hold the aces. Ghosts or the past should be dismissed . Virgo a n d Scorpio prominent today. CANCER (June 21.Jul y 221: · TaDtwl and Pise5 people could be in the picture. Persons who try to fox you are in for a sharp awakening. Know th e needs of family. Highlight security, Sign no legal documents. Don't press tuck. Time is your ally. Look ahead with hOpe. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Your ability to overcome trying problems put to the test. Dif.· play ingenuity and resourcCo fulness. Hold gains previously made. Prudent action protects. • CURll:INT FASHIONS AT DISCOUNT PllCIS 1•J MelM ., '""*'"'"' l'fllflll! .. ll'OITI COit• M•• lrod NtW$19rt ._,. o.n., tM 'rlday Ill t l'.M. ., .. ,, .. Revel in self-discovery. The past is past and the immedi· ate future looks bright VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221: off on a trip if you can. Learn by listening. Falling out with friends should be regarded as temporary. Love has a price opposite sex finds you most attractive. !\'foney will be on the upgrade. Re<:ent setbacks reversed before Jong. Have C•ll te4oy fer• t-,11-"lo"f onol}'lil & llolidoy t•1111e tch,d11lt. A Beouliful WoyroCo ..• Joly, Robert Fbwers Obtain hint from Taurus message. Probe for useful answers. Reject superficiality in word and deed. News of a legacy may be in offing. Answer belated mail. Be ex· pressive but w i t h o u t ar· rogance. Take nothing for granted. Make up for 1ost time. confidence. tag. $c:hool1 for Wo"''" ot Atl Ageo . CAPRICORN {Dec. 22-Jan. ORANGE 3 Town&. Co!!t1try • ~47-8228 19): Your psychic mind works -----;;.~~.-;;:;;;-;;d~;=;;~;:;;;;=============== UBRA (Sept. 23 • Ocl. 221: \Vait. Think. Don't give up something for nothing. Dispel illusion. If you are tem·ptOO to take a flyer in the stock market, think twice. Though bored. do not reach for ex· citement. A flexibl e attitude helps negate a troublesome domestic situation. • SCORPIO (Ocl. 23-Nov. 21): Resist temptaUon to nurse old hurts, grudges. Avoid schemes that promise quick success. Don't seek the limelight, your effectiveness lies in backing up those in hi gh places. Glamorization or decoration is better deferred. SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22- Dcc. 21): A void one who is dashing with a devil·may-care approach. Real estate comes up for mature discussion. Hold overtime and accurately. Promises are made, broken and revised. Get perspective where ambitions are involved . Older person, perhaps of your sign, plays a' prominent part. Relegate the past to limbo. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Look forward and backward . Avoid wish f ii l thlnldng. ·tet·others·know"}'OO are familiar with score. Get rid of burden not .of your making. Follow through on ap- pointments. One who depends on you confide! a dUemma. Expect to be busy. PI8CES (Feb. Ill-March 20): Keep beaJth resolutions. U single, question of marriage could be paramount. If mar· ried, domestic adjustment i highli ghted. Visit one confined lo home, hospital. Seek fresh viewpoints and interests . SociaJ pace accelerates. IF TODAY IS YOUR BmTllDAY this is a power: plus year w1th March, July and November your most significant months in 1974. The Golden Needle's S~t oj tk '11/ed Elegance is ... Salin-tac£ Crepe Perfect for rormaJs or bolld1y wear. • Reg. 11.H. ':,t~ $1 .47 yd. Golden 'needle FAen1cs ' IOUTM COAtT '~AIA • CA"OUllL LlVIL Of'lM 1\11-.01 I IUNOA'f'I CHEESE OF THE WEEK AGED GOUDA Regular $2.09 lb. 20C OFF. N 0 w tntr '"' NO'f'. I tftl'll Nl'f'. 11 1 ·~· lb. A speclol chffse mode tho Dutch woy. Ono of tho wholooome buttery ch"-that Hollond modt famous. This do.,.stlc ogod Gouda Is an Ideal Choose far fill footboll pertlot. Como In and tasto bolart"y<IU .. , 1ctk•1 t'!!!I. . ·51atb toast ?iBJ• . . . Co.STlMESl _,_}!.,.._ . .. __ ,J1P1t1DlllY · ·" -........ -~ _ • ..,..,.AllotC-115'" ..... ·--1 .,.. • • TUMBLEWEEDS Arf!1N110N1 &U\"Sl I JUSI GOl !N 2 (VIA M\" SUPPLIER) A LIM!f!OP u NUMIJER OF IHESE: GOR&l!OUS Nf:W 1 l'OFFAJ.0 HIP!O ~ SHlfLPSl MUTI AND JEFF ,:JEANIE, I lOVE YOU 'FOR W~AT YOU ARE! I 'D SWIM i'+-IE OCEAN JUSTTo'BE t-IEARYOO - FIGMENTS NANCY ONL\" 5 SKINS APIE'CE! IHEY'LL SlOP ANV'llUN&! WHAT? WMY DON'T 1 COME OVER TO YOUR. l10USE TONIGKT? --- I WILi-, BABY, IF IT STOPS RAINING I 'LL-· HOW D ID THINGS GO IN SCHOOL TODAY? THE GIRLS HAD THEIR FIRST LESSON IN COOKING PEANUTS by Do119 Wildey fEY. M\BURI )00 MANAGEO TO STAY OUT Of" JAIL, H\)H r by Tom K. Ryan NEGOl!Af/ONS ARE UtJPeR WA\" 10 f'l;RSUAPE ™E SOLPIERS 1D LJSE: l'OWSANP ARROWS! by Al Smith ~ELLO, HELLO-- JEANIE! HELL"-· by Emie lushmiller AND THE BOYS HAD TO EAT THEIR LESSON 0: -v-t'" DOOLEY'S WORLD 1\/E: P'Cl()S;D TO 1liRN MY CWCK 8ACK SALLY BANANAS 1 t l Tuesday, Novtmber b, 1974 DAIL P1LOT J 7 IN F'ACT, 1M c;o.NG 101lJRN rr BACK Z'I irouRS EVERY DAY by R09er Brcidfleld By Charles Barsotti T1--IClT 'lc. Keep You oUT OF" Q •PoS1T1oN or ResFbf'V51 Blf.ITY. /Cf'f~.N~ . .:..w..'-•·T·"'"'\ s ..... 01c1TC--''"''·•..__,__, L-L----------------''--' GORDO H#!E CQ4olES /CEO ~IJD A1 11-1rf ANIMAL CRACKERS 0 54LJ:WE''1f z """" tAIF-ILTRATEE THE ARMY AIJO PULL A COVPf 0 by Charles M. Schulz PEO-AJJT ANO MILtr·ANTf • by Gus Arriola ---..:... C> D by Ferd Johnson ... AND THc OTHER Hi'LF MUST H,AVE~OT LOST IN THE M,AIL, . SES? by Rc9er Bollen ... 1 G0e5S I'LL HAVE 10 cec1~ SETWEEl..l lHIS 0CB AAJD ~lJ61/J€> LEAD E\ERCI IJl6llT" FOR "T>l E COSMIC RlllCES. ELECTI<IC eilJES e,\ID. THE GIRLS .. • ----~ ......................... -----, 'TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZILE ACROSS 47 ArOHilSI Yesterd1y's Puide Solved: Je1ult 1 Ralph ···-· 51 Kind of 6 Maple gent.II notice 10 0.p(y 52 Doctors' absorbed conccrn1 14 Side oneseff 154 Gardening with: Var. implemenl 15 Walking stick. 58 He raised 16 Greenland ca in .... !i9 Poker holding 17 Germen! 81 Thermop181· 18 Golf cour1• tic resin -feature 62. Infrequent 19 Ma<:hlnilt's 63 King of ecce11ory Germ•ny 20 Win• over-64 African whelmlngly •ntelope ' • 22 Appeart to 65 God l)f0Y9 66 Pronoun 11 Once upon 39 Palnlul ere1: 2A Haf\lest a e1 Vehicles tor 2.words crop ""' ... 12 Loses color 40 EMpos' 26 "The---··· 13 People just game Fe loon" DOWN llt•ntioned 42 Menu Item 27 Ponraved 21 W•s in 43· Edlt1 31 Unturtti l Siest• ........ 44 Par11 of 32 With rflgerd 2 "There oyght 23 Tear spectacle• to to be • ••• " 25 RoH leatu11 46 Mild oath 33 Doc:ttlne 3 Enjoy • feast 'I1 Valley 47 Mactw 35 ChurchlH's 4 Penetrating 28 Slugger ···· 48 Tree "'So few" S HcMd in Slaughter 49 Pait of 38 --Island esteem 29 Closely lrollnd 39 Menu item 0 Do con.lined 50 TaMel' 40 Lerge bundle soma thing 30 Erased side-kick 41 ASTleuone 7 ftsh 34 Low point 53 Loc1tlon ... , 8 Equip with 35 Te!k 55 Scandinavian 42 Fh11d a shoe weapons 1ensele1s1y glacier 43 lndlln 9 Removed 36 Ahead of 56 Disembark princess from the movement 67 Footblll 44 "-Sele" s11tut1s 37 Rancher'• players •S-10 Diaprove purehiu BO Man'1 nam1 • MISS !'EACH . • KE i..t.:f : \<L.AR10N • -\ i:,i:>flOfll~L. 6<f1C£6. • . ".WI'" >-- • • . . DICK TRACY I '"·-•• • _ _,.. •• THAT W<IS PJlffi~ 6000 SLADE RO&EIUS ARRIVED . IN CHICAGO WITH THE TEAM FOR SUNDAY'S GAME! HE RECEIVED TWO ANON't'MOUS NOTES, T>IREATEN1NG .,- HIS LIFE! . l'M SOR.RY TO HEAR THAT! I HOPE HE WENT TO THE POLICE! CON5t0ERIN6 HE . NEVER EVEN 1.VOKE UP !.!;:_=::J by Harold Le Doux NOT YET •.• eUT R06ERTS !S CERTAINLY FORTUNATE TO ·HAVE A LAWYER LIKE YOU TAK!NG CARE OF HIM! t 'M FLYING UP THERE TO SEE THAT HE PLACES TMOSE NOTES INTO THE HAI-IDS OF TME PROPER l-AW ENFORCEMENT AGENCIES.' by Mell OO'f" .!! TH~ WIND JIA'T !!!.!W MY STOltY O\AT I HI<. WINDOW •.. .' LJ DON 1f WOltltY Al!IOt.!T If, AitfH!.111: ... -THAT'S Jt.f~T NATIAG'~ WAY 01' f&LLING YO!( IT WA~ !JADLY WJ<ITTEN ... %,·~ 1 :.I ~- by Chester Gould w~! I I '• .. . . I ' • HBut \\"OD't tbe fetl depressed that I got her free 9.'ltb three boxes of fish food?" DENNIS THE MENACE -1, I •. ' i l • • ' . ~ ' ' ' • , J 8 DAILY PILOT TONIGIIT'S TV HIGHLIGHTS KCET Ell) 8:00 -"Montse rrat" Keir Dullea stars in Lillia n Helhnan's adaptation or the French drama with Rip Torn and Geraldine Page. ABC 0 8:30 -''The Girl Mist Likely To " An ugly girl becomes beautiful after plastic su rgery j and gets revenge on three me n who spurned her. j 1 Stockard Channing, Edward Anser, Jim Backus. NBC O 10:00 -Police Story. A policeman is yanked out of the academy before gra duation to be- come an underCover agent. George fl.1aharis, Clif· ton Davis, Herb Edelman, Jlaymond St. Jacque s. ....., __ ..... _,,. TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Evening D A hilarious comedy by * Joan Rivers "The Girl Most likely To .•. " ABC Movie of the w .. k Wednesday -Jolln Hodiak, Franus Gittord. 1:00 O (C) ''Wl'L1fs So lid About Fetl· 1 12:30 m "Tht Amello Allah" (mys) '47 DAYTIME MOVIES ln1 Good!"' (com) '68-t':eor1e Pep. pard, Mary Tyler Moore. ., .. J:OO 00 (C) "P11mlst Her A11)'thln1" !:00 (i7J CD Jllll u~." Wo111an (com} (com) '66-Warren 81atty tesh• .... 'l-i.:Garlrudt Michitl, John Lod&e.I c.uon. • l :JO D "My c-ln Rxhel" (dr•) '53-riO) (C) "Thi B•Utd af losle" (com) Olivia de H1vitland. Richard Bur1an. 'u..:.-Oar!s Day, Peter Gra~ts. 10:00 00 "Jlllfl!t Cnaluni" (mys) '6Z _ 3:30 iJl (jJ (C) "D11d Run" (dr1) '69 Peter Cusllina Y\IOn~ Romiin -Peter l1wford, Gtori:t Ge re!, O "Murdtf bf the Clod" (drti 'J l 4:00 f> (C), "Far1y Pounds ~f Trtuble" -William &,d Lil)'ln Tisllman, (com) 63 -Tonr Curtis. Suzanne · Pleshette. 12:009 .... rdtf A1nprs" {wes) '50-C :l0 (3)~1111 11 lOAlil llltlni. Don 81rry. "Chit1p Dtadline" !29; (j) '1ht Fuller lmll Min" (mys) 'Ci--Al1n Ltdd, Donna Reed. (tom) '48--Rtd Sllltlon, J1n1t Bl11r. KOCE TELEVISION LOG 3:00 .&.1 Miii a t'flayet IC! LH!Oll 1J "Tilt f.'lnd ol M•~ Ptrl I" - P1vcl'lol09y courtt1 "lOf" colli;e credit. J ,)Q Cl\f....W Way !Cl M•,ter Chet TllL01 r r.en 1twiws PIN how to '""'* CNMH "Tu 111d Wint." 4!00 CtrT"•tcoklldt1 IC) 19 11 in 9 u •I l111truc!lon tor Me11lt 1.,..Amerlc•11 (ltliOrln. ,,lO !t«trtc c_,."' ICJ L11ttl'9uy ft•s fM bell lftt1r o-mc ltll1 •1411 of Cumberl•nd. MArv11no. 1nd Ill w•nll 10 p1,, with Skill Hl11,..n1, 5:00 s~ $Ir.et ICI Boe pour1 • OllcN r ot w1Mr on • dry ~ lrtt to dft!IC111Sl•1t1 wtt 1...i drv, •:OO Ot•fltf Ctv11fy ltlYllW (CJ Tiii "ll'llt•lfM of TM 11t" for Or•"llf C-'Y· ''*k •lf•lrt, cullvr•t. IOtltl. ~nd P11lttc11 '"""'' ar1 IJlttrl.IMll ffdi ...... •.• ,......, .. An CC) LnMlll ,, "E'llt"'l!Clfl' of lndl•n Ari" 7.00 Tiit Oni•I (MMllMf C•nltll (() • LH10ll 1' "COPln!J Wit~ lllt R J1~" T1~(ng Ille crhJ1 out of ell•~· and !h1 limn, cvcl1. 7:30 ... Mlfl Bt>lltws ICI Lll!Oft 13 "Tr.. Mll'ld of Mtn, P1rl !" P$VCllGIO(ly COUt~ tor coli.u• uldlt, 1:00 s"'''' 01 t,_ wn1r 1 c 1 "W•lnkln. Blr!lld1y1, •nd Qlller F1111t1" fl!p Wiiton II lalnta ti'( I 1l1blt " llMI IO hun\Or-lv •"1llllllt Thi mvth1 Ind 1ltl't'Cll'fPI• •noc!1tet1 wllh Th• tld1rly '"" orowl"9 old •:OD Cl'lff11111f Otller '1lllt1 (Cl S11«l1! A IOll'fNIO l>roQrlm to IP!t 1119(111 "Wrl11k1t1. Blrlh0•¥1, Intl °"'*' F1bl,1," S" 111111111 !Odlf 11 1:00 11.m. t:lO BOllll ... , ICI "Sur<rlYI !flt 5•Yll91 StlN b'Y Oollo•I lllGOerhon Tti. tNt 11or, et • ••l"!llr'• ... -· tl'OllllCI 11'19 world """ .i,.1 ~I lo lllfnl Wfl*'1 Jllflr llOOP Ctl)l!lt .. 00 m1"1 • • OCC's 'Fifth Victim' Probes Alienation - It's doubtful that anybody will look back on th e Sixties \Vith any o! the warm, v.·lstful nostalgia currently b t? I n g lavished on the Fifties. The Si xties v.•cre a decade torn by po I I tic al assassination. flaming cities, a n in· terminable, senseless war and violent upheaval on many American college campuses. The latter aspect of the perlod SCl'\ICS as the backdrop for Laura Olsher 's vita l and compelling original drama. "The Fifth Victim." ciirrently running in repertory with "Dames at Sea" at Orange Coast . ColJege. But campus violence is only the catalyst for a deeper. more lraumatic v.·ound. -the alienation of our young people -v.•hich is what f\Uss Olsher's play ls really all about. UNDER TH E skillful dlr· ecl ion ot OCC drama in· structor William Purkis:1. "The Fifth Victim" unfold$ us sort of a modern-day "Our ._T.o.~n" with characters talking lo the audience and utilizing Invisible props. Set pieces are composed of stark, white police barriers -indelible symbolism employed to tremendous effect, particular· ly in the closing sequence. Miss Olsher plays up the lack of comm un le a ti on between her heroine, Terry capetano. ·and her parentJ, brother. teach er and friends upon her return to the in- credibly stiOing atmosphere of small town America. "Be.Ing home is what makes the other part real." an elated Terry e:icclalms in an early scene, but the tide of events turns. upon hcrlike those or-a-Gree tragedy and ultimately engulfs her. MISS 01.SHER is a veteran v.·riter skilled in the creation \ lnterml••lon *** f<f<~ *** of ch<tracter and she strives to substitute true charac-- teriution for the cliche-rldden construclion with which so many authors have sym- bolized the Slxtie!. Y e t , artificiality is allowed to slip Into the script from lime to time, most noticably in the character or the father -a qui ck· te m pcred, poorly educated Italian g a r a g e 1nechanic whose overt reac· tions reduce him to overstated caricature. 'Dames' Lighthearted Spoof If this is the v.·eakest aspeet of the OCC production, the performance of M o n i c a MacLean in tho pivotal role of Terry is certainly the strongest. Miss 111 a c L e a n delivers a superb and ex- tremely thoughtful portrayal of an idealistic teen-age girl battered about in a Kafka· esque maze of circumstances which she cannot control. only protest against, l hereby hastening her O\vn destruction. BLANCHE MICKELSON, a funniest character in the cast, community theater veteran even though he borrov.·s h.is currently studying at OCC who interpretation from a later possesses one of the ' most melodious voices in this area. period. is the standout performer (as "Dames at Sea" is a fine might be expected)· as the -and brief -evening's prin1a donna Broadway star ent~rtainment which plays \\'ho orders directors and aga1'! W~nesday and Friday ship's captains around like so evenmgs m repertory with the many lackeys. original drama ''The Fifth Playing the Ruby Keeler Victim" Jn the o cc stereotype is Ruth Quick, who auditorium. Admission is free . displays all the now-familiar1 ===========~1 sweet ingenue mannerisms ("111 don't know the routines. the music or the lyrics, but I'll try") in a most pleasing performance. Steve Thomas as her guileless sailor beau is very nearly as good. The traditional seco nd banana, c:omedy relief couple arc well played by Leslie Smith, an excellent comic with a weak singi ng Voice, and Rick Golson, whose moves are skillfu11y executed. Cesareo Perez as the captain is th'e FA MILY TWI N CINEMA .. ' . . . OPEN 4:U W11;KDA'l'S 5AT/SUN -CONTINUOUS U NOON CINEMA I "CAMELOT" (G} ... ''TOM SAWYER" CINEMA 11 0 '0UNI AIN VAU('I' ow ~.~~J .....,,;,,"c,;;;;;;;-, ;;1,c;,;;c t~ llLLY JACl <PGI • WHITE LIGHTNING IPGol CAIAlET I PG I • HELLO DOLLY IGI LIDO NEWPORT • BEACH "LAST TANG-0 IN PARIS'• IXI ... "AYANTI" 111:1 ENTRANCE fO UDO ISLE • 673-8350 NOW THRU THURSDAY LAST TIMI TONIGHT ! ··~ "THE GETAWAY" & "JUDGE ROY BEAN" ~TA"TS WEDNESDAY "NORTH COUNTRY" & '~MANOfll .. AST? •Llctll 0ccvmenwy "BIG FOOT" tGl SPECIAL MATINEE WEDNESDAY -1 P.M. • Aepgti Otl • Amina!~--.. ~--~~ .2. ..... '••0•111... .P•O<IU<!of .,., .. " ... N~,, .... u EM••P<·-l'I(.: tillf.AT 'llMll.'t' f.HTlllTAlfUlllNTI "THE STONE KILLER" ... "DILLINGER" Cll "SOUND OF MUSIC"~ ... "CHARLOTTE'S WEI" FELLINI'S MASTERPIECE "JULIET OF THE SPIRITS" • "RED DESERT" with Richard Honl' & Mo11lca Vitti loth i11 Color IRI 7 ' 10 :1,2 "THE OUTSIDE MAN " 1:58 CALL THEATRE FOR SUNDAY MATINEE SCHEDULE U.A. cm ANO SOUTH COAST CINEMAl-TUESDA'I' JOc CLAOIEJ AfllD GOLDIN AGEISl--OPEN 'TIL 2:00 P.M. a Ac161rny Aw1rt111 Ltl1 Ml11Mlll "CABAIET" B1rbr1 11,..l~ntl "HELLO OOL\.'t'!" Botti In Color! IPG) 101 A Detlglltfvl L•m!IOOl'I 011 • Pom119r1plllc Movies! ''l E SEX SHOP" UO Jacll L1m.mon "AVANTI" Botti 111 Colllrl ;;;;;;;:ii;;=;::~ l>lttlill Hoffma11 f11y1 Oun1w1y • "LITTLE llG MAN " Rlcll1nl M1trrl1 "Jli MA,,. CALLED H01t5EH,llt) TALBOT SIMONS appears young principal who 11runs a u n c 0 m r o r t a b I e in the tight ship," while Corrin& Ehlers Is even better as a atA·kwardly written role or the rigid teacher. Jack Grubilh father 1 while Barbara Bcld Is is a glggllng throwback to more believable as the ln· "Peyton P1ace's1' Rodney c o m m u n I c alive mother Harrington as the Big l\ian snlothcred by religion and on Campus. devoid of true hun1anlty. Also "The Filth VicUm" ls not credlti1e rs Alan Rearick as . without Its structural flaws , Terry's brother, surprisingly ·yet it delivers it.s meuage more up tight than Wl· In powerful, poignant terms derstandlng. behind the • u p er I a t I v e -''Guest stars" Robert Wentz performance or Mon I ca and ?i.1arthella Randell display MacLean. IL continUcs tonight, the strength of theatrical ex-Thursday and Saturday ln lhe perience as the \Vise old judge OCC auditorium, and It should and his sympathetic wife, be seen. though their expertise poses ------------ an additional cllallenge to the *********** student cast men1bers. Les tl-lcDonough is lint~ as a stuffy Surfing Film Festival Tlllt W ... '1 ~how "ISLAND MAGIC" Ph1J Betty Boop C1rtoons CoMplet9 Shows 7:JD t. 9:]0 -WIN A $UP.,IOA"D! I On1 0 1¥1'11 Aw1y l:•dl Wffll Your Clllk1 BffA '"'"' DyM Coupon A 0111111 At Tft111r1 ...., ........ -..). ... .....,.. °"' Y1 +-, ) \ "Jiddler i3 ~·~- TI>l'OL -·--~ ·.OUY- aOTH IN 70 MM llMIOfMOMC ..... --(S)<e WI: DAn 7 , ... QM.Y C!L~ Wll.,.,, ...... Ill~ ..... l:JW:Jt.WI ,,,...,,. I I f. ~ M11l~~ iii~~~ lJ.<J<> '*lliioi' 11•1111 2 GREAT HITS! ... ~!-;ii-~;;:., WIS1'WORLD /NJ SOYLINf GlllN !NI --·-· 1.M.•-·1- MOfWll Oftlil .... , ... ll/2 U.t. & IUN. OflH 11'1 '-' lllOl¥S 11All' tlta • l*Oll 1 l ... , ....... , •IL~ll, 5!$.J5M UU1lVS.~~ ICUNCJ..fU THI IHVISllLI fllT DUil Of THI llOH flST 1111 u .... ," "'"' .... , ,, .... o 121·•070 T\ll WYNNa ......... ....... ._ WllTWOILD !NI • SOYLINT GIDN !NI .... OWll• , ....... •1 ''""'"..,*'IS...! 967·2••• 'M-•lllMllOl.ll --WISTWOILD (NJ ·SOYLINT OlllN ll'OI .... ~ .. .... ... ., ..... .. Gr-,, .... . 5W·&nf :4Riiiiii~·-~ ... ~.-~. I ........... . ""'"" ...... 111·1M2 """' ..... llfCTRA GLIDE IN ILUI ,_ Plll\ I ....... , T .... , ........ ~J.f;t!J (l ) NO OM tlN'Xl 11 .u.ffY (IQ (1). WIFE IXCHt.HOI ClUI~ 12J, Fl/\t\~.( l!E5 PONSI ()). SWIOl~H fLY CMlU ""'llM• ·--11 ... c.-... SM-70!2 -· ,,_" ., '"w IC. StS-JJl.l w ........... . -··' •••d•l l ... '47·l5tl Sl.00 •IB cA•U>AO (I.) 200 MOTfll Ill ft.) -U 1'111 10'¥!"40 COUftD ,I ltOW 10 l!.ICCUO Wllll ~ 11:1 J. YUL BRYNNER R!CHARO BENJAMIN "a: •. ""'. CHARLTOH HESTO I ,vs-STEVE McOUEEN IN "SOYLENT GREEN'f JN "LE MANS" INT .... W•ITMIHITllt C:l~flll; (PG} tPG} i(D; .,...,,..;1·~···,"i.\"Af"t'O~o•., -•l (G} i'°I ., .. ,. uaou 1•1 '"" .,." •••t. ....... ~ . ...._ .. ROBERT BLAKE MllCH RYAN in ~in '~:..::-~ ~ i~ I WE 'plut~ ANN MARci.AAET ANGIE DICKINSON J£N< LOUIS mMlGtWIT "THE OUTSIDE MAN" PG) l NOW , ... ==•":"~·~·;·~·;·~·~·~ .. :·l·~ ~ ,, , : : •" "fATlt • ., ' ·~··· ... ·»••• ·"··· """ o• •T ••••• co••• •••• ............. -.... -·~.,-· .,,;,,;L';--· ENTERTAJNIN~" ·ALAN It HO'NARO t.tOLL YWOOO RE"POR.TE "INCREDI& r 8fMl1lfVI. --80)( OFFICE MAGAZINE Pk»<:HARt TON HESTON • LEIGH TAYLOA·YOONG SOVLE~.GR&N ST ARTS WED. NOV, 7 ..... " 1.. "f\ NEWPORT <-·-· . . . , .. ,,.~ , -STll'EISUID &REDFORD .. 'llll-•1111111 · •" "''. "' " .,,, "THE WAY WE WERE" """ . ·:' .,, " · iA"t<l!fl 'l•ll'>Ar,1 1 .-.10 NO V • , • LIZA MlNNEW JOEL GREY • l'LU$ EOWAlllD CC),1( . .. 'l'DDllOI' .'l'DaaD!. --- ' PUBLIC NOTICE ----:==7"""~_:._-. PUBIJC NOTICE PICTITIOUS I USINISS 1------------ NAMI: STATI MINT "l«ITJOUS I USINI SS ,,~"' lollowJ119 Pf!Wfl I• clol11g bvtlllf11 NAMI STATIMINT ·A & 0 "'''''' , Tiit lollowlnt ptr-II dolJl(J Mlneu , tot NtwpOl'I 1s: l lvd.,Cor.!1 Mew,C1.'2•21 W E llNER STRAU SS I N· , .... ~~~Gfl Rtnlll Strv1c1, Inc. TEllNATIOHALE. "' Wn l Com. --......... <°'llOl'•tlon), ID New· ll'MlftW9111h Avtnu., •utllf'IOll, C1tlf, ,.... • l\ld., COil• Mt11, C1. '2611 '2m Tt.11 bu1lnt11 Is cOl'IGucted by 1 sy-r lncorpcratld, 1 OtStw1t1 corpor1t11111. C111P01"1t1ot1. ADOBE MISSION Tblt b!.1$1-I• conducl9d b't 1 cor- RENTAI.. SERVICE, INC. por11ian. f', J, M&ur, Pr11ldtnl SYMMAR INCORPDaATEO T>ilt lft lwntnl w11 llltd wllh !ht Chtlih G. 2Ckmtn, PrHldcnt Count"I' c .. rk ol Or1ng1 COl.lnlY on 1"'1« OclolMr U, Im , DONALD ... STtLWI LL p ..... llt ·~ AW!IM, Publllhtd Or1ng1 Coa1t Diiiy Pllol l"ltot11tt1, (L ~Jt Odoblr U, 2J, lO •nd Nowmblr ,: ' ,_hllt Hll 3141·11 Publlttltd Or1ngt Cotti OtllY Piiot OttOblr lt, 2l. 30 I nd Novemllor 6, 1973 31,5-7] PUBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE 'ICTITIOUI •Ul lNllS NMt• ITATIMIHT f<ICTITIOUI •USI HIESS 1~• follawlno per.$0!! 11 0011111 bu•lnn1 MAMIE STATIMl:NT II: l llt lollowlng pel'IO!'ll llf cklll'lll CANNElil:Y VILLAG E MA RINA, 2900 bu$IM$S 11; LI~,.., •. Newporl llttch, c 1111. ttwo TV FACTS • NEWPOflT, One Twin IDur OIHM Sdlotll;, 212 vi, l ido l"'" Clrclt. CorON Gtl Mir, c •• Nora. Ntwport "tch, Cellf. m.o. nm I Tl>b Ml11111 11 concluc:t.a bV 1n l, IEctw.rd 0. IEll'llW, Ont Twin l lkH nCllYICli.NI. Clrde, c-del Mir, O . W. D. Sdlock 1. HMll M. E'lhtlL 0.. Twin Like$ Tl'll1 1t1lt rrllfll w11 fl l..:I Wiii> !tit Clrci., Coron115.i M«, Ct. c-, ty Cltrk OI Or111111 C""'1ty on 3.. J-a. Efl*I Ont Twin L.lkll OC ootr \J, lf7l. Clrci.. cw ..... Mir Ct. ·-. P...c.11\J'ltd 0rlf'l8't (Otlt Dt ltr Piiot, ~lllU II coMucled by t Gtntrel ?;~ober ZI. 30, Incl N0vtmbtr '· 13, EOW.d O. EIMl1 -----------"-'•_n_1 Tl'll1 tlt'-1 Wl l fl ltcl wllft the CIM!ty Cllrt ol Orange County on PUBLIC NOTICE .. , ... IUPlll!Olt COUllT OP THI ITATI Of' CALll"OllNIA 1"011 TNlt COUNTY 01" OlAHOI Ht.A·Um OCtobef' 12, 197:,\ 1"·2•1 l"llDllW!td Ot*IOI Coalt Dtll't' Piiot OC1ober 16. 23, 30 i nd NCMimlMr ,, nn 515'--tl PUBIJC NOTICE lilOTICI OI" HIAalfile OI" PI TITION Sll"-1'4 TO IXICUTI A PlOMISIOlY NOTI PICTITIOUI •Ullltl!SI • •NO A ntUST o••o ON •Ut. ... o... NA.Ml STATIMIEHT l llTY Tiie following ll«.$0!!1 1r1 601 In the Mttl., of! DAISY S, l . DITT-tNllMU 11 Ill MAii, An lncomotllfll P1r1011. l\CT ION MOl11tE HOME, 117'5 NOT ICE IS HliRE8Y GIVEN 11111 EGlnv« A-. F-l•ln v.11..,. GLENN ClOVElt, t bo known t i Gltfin C.lll«nlt c. Clowr, •• (llllrdltn of tllt E11111 R.Offl' o. Mlllllkln, inn &olH Chic.I 111d ,..,_ of D1l1y S. L Dlfln11r, 1l10 ltotd, Hlll'lffllllton &lid!. Ctlltornlt k-n •• D•l•Y C'-r or O.l•Y l fl Tiii• bu•IMSI II being conducted bl' CloYI<', I ll IN'.OITIP'f'"' ...._ lltt "lltd Mobilt H-AINI• 9rOll:., l'ltr'tln I Ptlllloll for Ill Ordllr lltflh«itlng RGOll'" D. M¥111kln In. ~lit-to llltcvll I ~ Thl t 1t1t-t w11 flkd Wl tfl f1'lt not• •lld t DHd of Tn111 to NewlMll c-~ c*""t of Or1ng1 c-ty on: Hvr1lroo ~-. ll'lt.. \IPOft '"' 1trm1 oc1. n. 1tn t nd (Ondltl1111S Mt lorll'I In rn. Olfllton l'·mM "iffMKI IO wllldl II rntdil lor fvrll'llr Plltoll&Md Orlnot COMI Dtl1y Pjlot, Ptrllcvlt rs. t!ld Thi! 1111 u ..... tnd pltct OCtOtllr ''' n. 30 I nd Nowrnbw t, of 1111rll!lll '"' ''"" flt• llftn M1 ,•_m_~~-~------'~'~".::·n for NOY'tmblr J, 1m . 1r t~OD 1.m .. 1. In rn. coo;rtn1om of o.ptf1ment NO. PUBLIC NOTICE :S of 11111 COi/fi, 11 100 Cl'\llc Ceflt•r Dr1ve Wtll. In flit City of :ltntt An&,1------------Ctlltornlt . PICTJTIOUI IUSINISI Ot t.a OCttlltr 2'. 1t7l MA.Ma ITATIMl"WT • WILLIAM l . St JOHN, Tiie followllll ._ 11 dolftll llwlna1 C-ty Cltf'k I t: JCAllMO, lil:UOfOCI( & l'ISHl!lt SCANDIA S"AS, 317 W. 11'1' Mo. 1UU Vlltlwrt ...,._ a, COiii Miii, C1llf. '16l7 ...... Ctlll. tl:ri• Dtrlcl C. Uvl119fion, '34-c: Cider 1'1h 111JJ ,.,.,_ ,.. Ave., El ~ Ctlll. ...,......,. tw .... .._. ~ Ttll1 bllslntU It cOl'ICluct..:I by In l"Vb!llMll Ortllfl COl\I Dtltv "llot, lncll~tdu1I. Oc:tol:ltr 30, •llCI NO'Wl"llber 4 1J1l 3.JIM..n O..v1d c. U11l1191ton TPll1 1marnttrt Wtl llled wllll trit PUBLIC NO'llCE County Cltr"k of Ot11191 CC11,1ntr on OtlOtltr lJ, 1Jn. ~----------~I '""' l"ICTITIOUS •USIN•SS P'utlllllltd Ortntt Co.it 0.llY "llot, NAM• ITATIM•NT Ociolw U. )I> Incl Nowmlltr 6, IS. lllt following perton• 1r1 cto11111 19n m 1.n bl.nl1111• 11; NOW PU•LICATIONS. 21~ fllytnldt PUBLIC NOTICE Aw .. N~ htcll. Ctllt. m.a Clllrffl l1wt011, llOO 1'111, Apt. H~ll. PtcTITIOVS •UllNl!SS NIWPOff htcfl, C1HI. ~ NA.Ml STATI Ml:NT Cfttr111 Sfl'M '21 E. a.lbOI 8hld., TM tc1Uowl119 penon II dtlllt tMll'llll e1111ot. Ctlll. 11: . TN• MIMll 11 clllf'lfV(.lld by I vtntrt t HOP &NGLl5tt PltOOUCTIONS. »SC2 ptrll'llrW!lp. MlftlfYt Ul'll, H~ 811ct\, Clltrlll ltwton Ct Mlornlt n..... P.O. eox 1"1 Ntw-Thl• 1!1ttment Wt• flltd Wiit! 11'11 port e.tcf1. Ct llf, "*3.. County Cllr~ of OrMl!ll COlll'lfr on H1rokf IE. Enolbll. 2GS42 MJntn11 OCIODtf 1 .. 1911 UM. HynMllDtOn I~. C.111, '2M6 P.ttu• Ttlls ~ Is condVctld by 1n "lltoll..... 0rlr'IOI Cont Di lly P'llol, ll'ldlvldu•I. Octobl'r lO, l f'lllS NOY•mbft" '· 1). 20. Httdd E. Enollsl'r lm 3271)..11 Thi• 1!1temtnt WIS 111..:1 wlltl the --COUnlY Cttno; ol Ortng1 County on PUBLJC NOTICE Octoblr 19, 1911 --,1,11>1t1hld Ottnte C011t Dt11y Piiot, SU PllllC* COURT Of" TMI STATI OP CA.all,OllNIA 1'011 TMI COUNTT CN' OllAN•I OctolMr 2i. lO, ll'ld NOY'tmber 6. 11. 1•n 3tts-7l NO. A·mM NOTICI 0, NIAltlNO OP P'ITITIOff PUBUC NOTICE 'Oii PllO•ATI 01' POllllON WllL.1------------ANO FOii l l TTl lil:I 0 P AD-MUNICIPAL COURT 011 CAll,OltfiltA, MIMISTitATIOM WITM ·TH l-Wll L AN· COUNTY 0 , Ol ANOI NIXID OH JI"""" ltNf, NtwpOl"f •IKfL. E11tt1 of KENN ETH 5 A MU E L C111t1n111 ~ SCOVILLE, t~t It E N N E T H S. MAltM>tl: ..tUOKtAL-Olft""lld SCOVILLE. DK11Md. CASI. NUMllll IM61 NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN 11>11 SUMMONS DENNIS K HMITZ l'rll lllld llertln I Pltlnlltt: J, P, COMNOl E, O.D. pltllon tor Prol>tlt of ,ort lgn Wltl ~tndtnt: FRANK O'NEILL •nd fi)I' lssu1nc• ol l •ll•r• ot To '"' Dtftndtflt: A dYll compltlnl Admlnb lrt!lon wlll>·IM-wll1 1n11txltd to Ill• bten fllld by tl'll pltlnlltt tgt ln11 ttll pe111i-r "'•l'Wl'<I to wlllcll It '(OU. II YO\/ wlll'r lo Clllitnd ll'lb ltWIUI!, mlClt tor turllllr p1rlleult r1, tnd tl'lt l Voll rn111t flit In 11111 court I wr11t111 tM tlmt t nd pltct of llHrll'llJ llM pltadlllll In •ISOOl'!st lo 1111 compl1lnt wmt 1'111 bfffl Ml kw NO'llfl"lbtr 10. lor 1 written or orll pltedlng, II 1 itn, ti t :OO 1.m.. In tM cor.trtr--. Judice Courtl wlll>ln ,. dlY• 1tt1r of ()tfllrlrntnl No. J of It.Id court, tllfs wmmon1 l.f l¥Vld Otl you. 11 100 Clvk C•nttr Orl\l't Wfll, In Otl'llfWliie, 'f'OUI' d•lllllt will bl iMlwld lht City of Stllll Ant. C1Utornl1. on IOP!k1Uon Dr Ille Pllll"lllfl I ncl Ille Otlld QctoDtr 29, 1m Cl)Ul'I nllY tfll•r • JUOgrntflt 11111lnsl WILLIAM E. SI JOHN, YOU tor lhe l'r'IOlle'I or ollltr rtUll c-IY Cltrk f~llld In J1'1t bmpltlrtl. SCHMITL AMATO, II "" wlWI to -' .. ~ el l"llTTLllt ... SCHMITZ .. t tttrwf 111 fllll mett.r, yw .,_.. Atttirllft'I ti leW fe II ,.......... 19 !Mt .,.... ........... MSJ TtrnlKI •1wt1, II llfY, IM'I' Ill fltM t11 tllftl. TOl'l'I -CIUMnlll Dllld NoY. 2. ltn. • Tth till) ....... 1' M. HAMLIN, Cltrll A"'"""' tw P't11t.....,. l y Jotn Ci.rtMI., DtPUIY Putillll'rtd Or111111 COii! Diiiy Piiot. !SEAL) ..... , .... 31 tnc:I NOY. '· 1m ,.1.n DAVID •• HANDOfll ..... . .... A"'"""' ti Ww -~uc NO'llCE "' .... ,.,. c ... ..-Dr •• s.tt• ,.,. ruu ----u11i. ••'* 1"114111t --===-=--N..-..rt a.di, ClllttrMI nut NDTIC• 0, PU•LIC HllAlllNO Tth cn4) ..... ,.. •11"0111 THI PLANH INO COMMISSION AtlomtY fir Plltllt!N 01' THI CITY 01' P'OUNTAtlf VALLllY Publlsllld Ortr\91! Cotti Dtl11 Piio t, NOllCE IS HEREBY OIVIN ,,.., OCtoblr "· JO, 11'14 NOY'tmbtr '· IJ. on wec1111~1v, N~mblt' 14, 1973 11 1913 J:l10.1l 1:JO p,m. In !flt Councll C111ml)lr1, ------------ City Hill. 10280 Sitter A11tfl111, F1111nt•ln PUBLJC NOTICE Vtll•Y· c e111«11l1. Ille Pl1nnl~ Com , ___________ _ ml11lon v.'111 llokl publlc hfff 119 on ,.ICTITIOUS SU11Nl lS !I'll ~'::1bf~o THl!I MASTER PLAN MAMIE STATIMllNT " I lnltll f'lcl by 11\1 Pltnnln; The lollO'#lng penon 11 doing b1.11lnt11 l'OflGll Ill the llY'I 11; COfl'lflll1olon to c noe c .... ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS 171 tl•tcl'I Gtnll'l l l'ltn of ltnd Ust "' • 1 11 1119 prOPlftil' 1111111.a ,, St reet, Leoun• l!lttcll. Ctllt. ms'! = 0111 .;:.., CO'Mf of EClll'ltllf Ind Robrrt TP!on\11 Frtltg, 16117 S01tN ~ $1T'llt II tltlltr •lnol• l•mlly W1y, ltOUn'" &Hdl. C.lff. •1651 rnkitf'ltl•I or to'#nl\oU!ll l111INCI ol Tllll bl.It' lt'llU II «rnC!vtted b'( 111 II II tornomlf'Clll 1fMl lvldut , '.:...ENDING THiii MMTER Pl.AN Robert T, Fttl" " I lflltllfld by 1111 Pltnnl"9 Tiiis t ltllfnenf Wll fll..:1 Wiii'! the c=..-:..... to dltnot IM ,,,.,., COunly Cln °' Orlr'IOI County on a.Mr•! 11191'1 of . LMd U11 b1 OC!«llr If, ltn. flltttl OtllfMlinl Ille propertY lltlNttd l lOfll PvOtlllltd Ot'tntf Co.ti 0.lly I l'llol Ille llOtf1'I .... of Wtrl'lll' Awnw 0c zi. SO Ind ' ....-OMlfnt191Y .w Wiii If •~unt t«llr • NOV91'lllllir " 13, StrMt 11 tlltwr llntlt 111t1l'Y r .. ldtfl1111 ltn m+n or eomrntreltl lftttMCI tf tlnll• l•mlly r•lffnlltl only, PUBLIC NOTICE THOSE Dt!S:IAINIJ to leltlf1 In ftvor'l------------ or In oppolltltfl to ttwM mtttert w111 f<1CJITIOUS •USIMlll IN Ol'lffl I ll '"°"""'lly to do M MA.Ml n ATI MINT 11 f\lrtllel' !n~tle!or I• Mir.a 10U Tiit follow1"9 ptnOnl IN dolnt ma:Y '(onlKt ttlf Pltnnlnt DtMrtment busll'ltlt 11: ti M-W-' Incl ,...,. to tllt l tlOVt CAl lll'otlNIA CAMPGROUNDS. 'D ltfmt, lltcon l1y, N"""*I ••tell, C1lltornl1 THE PL.ANNIN!) COr\Wl$SION wm t1HO • CO!ltk'I., llWl'°""""lll l1111tt In con-OoMkl E. Hllft'IPl'rrwys, Jr. I nd ~tlon 'fl'ltl'I 1M OWllC hllrlnt kltnlllltritl !1rtMrl I(, MUft'\fllll'IYI• l'MDlnd & lfl tf'rll p,lbllc ' notla. C.111 ot 1111 wlft', 13 lffCOn ltv. NIWPOrl 9Hcl'I, t11vli'OM*lltl lt'llPICI l'f90!'\t or 1119111'11 Clllf, 9* ftcl•r•Tlonl ''' Ol'I flit In tM Pleflnlnt t l'll• bulll'lelt 1t l>lll'IO coMuc.l.cl by Dtpertrnlf!f 11 well " 11 11'11 Offlcl HUSl>ll'ld lfMI Wiit', of tilt CWlllY C!Mt end rl'llY bl ••tmlntd Don11d E. Hllfl'lpllt'm, J r. oy '"" Inter ..... ,.,.ai... ..,.,.,. IC. Muml*t•YI P'LANNINO COMMISSION Tl'lh att""'9flf flltd wttl'I the Covnty 0, THI CtTY Of' Clttk of OrtllOI Coutlf'f Ofl : Ott. 2'. POUNTAIN VAlLfY 1tn. CllMlfl ll'Mnd, l'tt1Al PllM!"' Ot~lor l'lltrJl"*ll °"""9 Coltf Delly l'llot, PUbll""1d 0r..... (OQI DlllY "°' OdObtt 30. lflll Newmblr .. I), '°' NOVll'nlllr " 1m »M-n 1m aa..n 6 4 2 - 5 6 7 8 D . A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s ·1 F I E D 6 4 2 - 5 6 7 . 8 ( Tutsdiy, NOVtnlb<r 6, 1974 DAILY PILOT J9 DAILY PILO.T WANT ADS TUE BIGGEST S I NGLE MARKETPIACE ON TUE ORANGE COAST -CALL DIRECT 642·5fl78 . . :n;~· - Gener ii FOURPLEX Close to Orange Cout eon0'a:e and shopping. Excellent rental area. Assumable 1st. Deed of Trust. Owner will sell or exchange for more units. Offered for $&4,500. Call COLWELL - OUR RNEST 5 BEDROOM Prestige Mean Verde. Thl! Home has 3 baths, Family room. Dining room , Fireplace, Newly painted Inside and out. $57,950. CaU t'OLWEU... 646--0555 REDUCED $4,000.00 Potential Plus. This is a must to see, for then! is no way to describe this prop- erty. Over 18,<XXI \q. tt. in the Upper Newport Bay Area, 'Presently tht>re ,are 3 structures on the prflJX'rty. Offered for S.iO.OOJ. C' a 11 COLWELL~. DUPLEX· NEWPORT Ocean viC'\\' from upper apa.rtn1cnt. 4 Bedroom and 2 Bedroom. 0v.'l'le1' very !lt'x.iblc. \ViU carry 2nd. 0 1· e.xchange, N('\Y on l\larket. 1-IURRY! $82,500. Call COL- \\'EU. 645-(fi65, BIG DEAL! 3 BR &2DENS HUGE 100 X 140· LOT Nearly 1/3 acre lot . Boat/trai1£>r access useful for storage of trucks, campers, boats, etc. P lus fenced rambling custon1 home featuring 2250 sq. ft. or living i;pace, 3 large bedrooms, 2 b a t h s , han:lwood floors, fireplace, 2 dens, (one -22x22) dining room, heavy 11hake roof, I covered patkl. And best.cl all , a lo'" 7% assumable loan. $42,500 full price & I $3600 takes:! larwin realty inc. equal housing oppty. 968-4405 -(24 hrs) LET'S TALK TURKEY if you're looking for a New· port Beach duplex only 6 doors to the bcad 1 with an ]~( _,,. ... ]~ ERRORS, Adv1rti11rs should chock their 1d1 dolly & report errors lmmodl1t1ly. Tho 'DAILY P ILOT assumes llablll!y for tho first Incorrect insertion only. A new concept in Home Ownership by Ayres Construction Company You Own The Land and the Hi>me Not a Condomlninum No Monthly Maintenance Fee 4 Beautiful Exteriors 12 UNITS AVAILABLE : 3 BR. 2 BA & HUGE farm kitchen + separa te 2 car ga r. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY NO PAYMENTS UNTIL JANUARY Models at corner of Adams & Florida I block W. of Beach Blvd. in Huntington Beach AYRES SINCE 1905 536-1445 General MESA VERDE FIXER-UPPER SAVE $$$-Do your own cleanl ng, decorating & minor repairs on this 3 BR., 2 BA. home. Large added fa mily room, perfect !or pool table, teenagers, elc. Vacant, neglected & ready for your in spection. Call us for further Information. ~,.§, HERITAGE ' . REALTORS 546-5880 Open Eves. General General ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:=;;;I VACANT & READY Big 5 Bedroom, !onnnl din- ing roon1, 18' x 36' pool. la1nily ho1ne, cloS(> to 1.hl· Back Bay. O\\rncr 1vill JcaSC' option 01· sell 1vith f'S('L'011• i·losing aft(•r thl' fit-::;1 o{ 1 lh~ year. Interest ratt!s are on the 11-ay 11.o"·n. Hv no\\', as priel.'S ·will bl' uP next yc&r. Submit .)'Ollr otft>r. $62,930. Lease or IPl\Se/ option OK, too. COATS .. ' WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- (0pon Evenings) WESTSIDE BARGAIN $26,500 3 Bn, 2 BA, n1odern home. 11·ith forced air h~at , raised hl'i'U1h fireplace &. a buiUin kitd1en. Propetiy has ne\\' roof. newly pe.jnted inside & out. Has long curving drlv~ way to a large dotible gar · age. Boat plus cai11per stor· age area In th is huge back- ya1'll. WHO'S FIRST? Newport 1t I * 59'x290' LOT * C-1 ZONE $32,500 E-Z TERJtts exccllent summcr /wir-.er re n 1 a I record i n the $84 , 500 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! range \Yith a min. of only General General THE PERFECT F1lnl1w POOL HOME 646-1111 * 4 Bedroom hon1C' (h uge master BR) + family room + den, 3 baths:, many ex- ~ .. Quiet strec-t. $58,700 HYA, down and 11uper terms ;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; CALL US On oversi'Lcd cul-<le-..W.c lot. (1nytimt) Rich landscaping. Large 2 '!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! * C·2 Property -Nel'.•port Blvd. With 30' x 3()' building, $36,000. 1\·e'rc ready to talk 644-7211 r.JD.NIGEL llAILlY &. ASSOCIATES Roy McCanllo Roaltor TAKE OVER 1810 Newport Blvd., C.?.1, 541-7729· PAYMENTS '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! J $25-1.00 Is the total monthly ASSUME 71/2 •/o in v •st m e "' on this LOAN • CORONA doc<><ato"' charm. 4 Jo,·dy bedroon1s--2 ba and a DEL MAR VIEW huge family room accented by cathedral. beamed ,..,;r. Old Spanish 5-bedroom, den, logs. So nluch more to offer. formal dining room , family Lefs take a look! Call room on over-sized lot just 963-fil67. steps from the beach \\ilh a fabulous ocean vie\Y. Spacious authentic Spanish home with all of the charm of Corona dcl Mar. call now for·a.PPO i nt me n t . 673-8550. A-RlAME BY-THE-SEA Want a combination of moun· ta.in seclusion plus seashore living! You must see this 3 bedroom, 2 b a t h hidea\\·ay. Ulti111ate i n pri\lacy -exclusive com- munity. Only $47 ,95 0 . 646-77U -Open eves. Walker &Lee lfAl l lTATI ONE STORY 2 BR adult condo with Tie\V carpets, drapes & lots of wallpaper. Needs fast sale or will lease \\ith option. Asking $23,950. 8 3 6 -4 2 0 6 Cul -de-sac street provides quiet atmosphere f o r private living in this almost new home with 1 a r g e rect'elltion room and IO\Y in. te re sl GI loan that can be RS.1rul1led by anyone. Better see this loday. 646-7711 Open eves. Walker &Lee Jll AL llTI TI BLUFFS ONE OF A KIND ANGELITA Just listed, 2 bedroom - one level, on picturesque green- belt. Open beam ceilings, newly painted & pa1>e!Yd, custom ca rpeted & draped. $67,500. C. F. Colesworthy Realtor 640-0020 .,A&en...,,,.l !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ J PRIME OCEAN VIEW CONDO, Carpenteda. $4500 ~ROPERTIES equity. \''ill take VW square-FOR SALE back es part paymt. BY SfATE OF CALJl''. Capri Ree.lty &H-7525 Ask for Mr. We:st The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace 1213) 620-3708 Linda. Isle By Owner /Builder $250,000 Excellent Terms ?.fay lease option f>73-7782 * 673-7784 BUY A BARGAIN! Liquidation forces sale or 3 BR, 2 BA, Newport Hghls home, gas BI, fireplace, fnm rm. 15x30 H&F Pool, 8~1t% fin avail. All offeni 'viii be considered. Call Realtor for info. 645-6646 .. EVER STOLEN A DUPLEX Try this: lwo 2 bedrootn units • double garage in- come of $37:i0 per year. Asking $35,950. Try your own price owner says SELL! Call Red Carpet, Realtors, ~8080. DON'T BUY THIS HOME Unlesa you want the chann 11.nd value of an S&S home. Dram&tlc courtyard entry. Sunken living room. Formal tllnlng. Giant parquet floor f1'1nily room. 3 family·Siied bt'drool1l!I, Too good to Jail at St.1.900. Call '1.oday -B42-2r>35. -ofinJa .J,i/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES - Linda Isle Waterfront Lovely 4 bdrm., 41h ba. home \Vith swim- ming pool, pier & slip, panoramic view of main channel. Lge. family rm. w/space for billiards & family dining.~ Waterfront formal dining & Jiving rm. $290,000. For Complete Information On All Homes & Lois, Pl1111 Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boysldo Dr., Suite I, N.B. 675-4161 EASTBLUFF E1(ceptional Price $59,500 Large 4 bedroom home large living room with fire- pla<:e • family room • newly ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,.,;;;;;~I painted In & out . may have immedia te occupancy. PLEASE CALL 675-3000 m II.\\ ,\ 111:.\l'll Need e "Pad"! Pta~ an atl! General 4 BDRM-LUCKY GI NO DOWN TERMS or low down to a.II others on this Immaculate 4 bdrn1., 3 baths, Dining rm, built-ins, dishwasher . PY s tone fireplace. · Covered patio, ru s h i ng waterfa ll. Sprinklers front & rear $31,750. 540-1720 TARBI;;LL, Raaltors General BIG CANYON CONDOMINIUM Beautiful 3 bedroom Monaco in original section. Air conditioned. All upgraded. Fan- tastic view. $149,000. NEVER OCCUPIED But you can move in today! Yes, the land- scaping and drapes are in. and this 3 bed- room 2'h bath home is near the pool and tennis courts in University Park. Just listed at only $67,000. HARBOR VIEW HOMES Somerset model, 15 bedrooms, 3 baths. Large family room, 3 car garage. All this plus a view of Big Canyon Country Club. $93,500. TOUCH THE STARS Top o! Spyglass Hill. Ocean view. Elegant 4 bedroom borne. 1' .. amily room and bonu s room . Professionally decorated and land- scaped. $189,500. ' YACHTSMAN 'S DREAM Berth your Grand Banks, ketch and whaler in you r front yard, and still have room for more. 5 bedrooms 8 baths. 8 years old. Fee land. $395,000. CAMEO SHORES Ocean view, very large living room and master bedroom with beauUlul parquet floors , beamed ceil ings. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths. $115,000. · _._ 644-1766 Coldwell,Banker ........... 2161 San Jooquln Hiiis Rd., H.B. - stru:y home. T a s t c fu 11 y "! decorated. 4 s pa c i o u s bedroonts. Giant, separate n1astt>r suite_ \\'ilh ct~sing area. Lo\'ely pool area com- plelely fenced foi:-privacy. The ultima te in po o I homes. Priced at $45,0CK>. Call no1v. 842-2535. ALMOST COMPLETED DUl'LEX CORONA DEL OPEii nl g • JT'S FUN TO SE NICE/ MAR ~~ ~ ALPHA BETA Alpha &>ta is the main !('fl· ant in this established shop- ping C('flter . The four stom next to Alpha Beta are for sale fOr" $99,500 . g1'0ss is over $12,00'.) and owe at 8%. 675-7225. Exrellent floor plan. :\ bedroom Wllt plus a 2 bedroom unit. Near park. Steps to the beacti. This is, \\<lthoul doubt, the finest new duplex we have t)l{' privilege to oUer. Call now, it's a pleasure to ahow. 6J3..8550. WE tlAVE Early Calif. styled Let us show you the six morttha new 3 bedroom & 2\! bath home. 313 E. 22nd St. ONLY $54,500 We have financing Call for aPPOintment e CALL AHYTIME-e r 646'3'21 or Eve. 646 4543 Lachenmyer ~l' il t .>r VA OFFERING FOR SALE 'l1flS 2 BEDROOM STORYBOOK HOME BRICK B-B-Q IN EX· CE U.ENT CONDm ON. 1UfAL PRICE S:!0,500. $250 00\VN, $191 PER MO. IN- CLUDES ALL. VA AP· OCEAN VIEW _ $25,950. PROVED BROKER, Circular street of fine VILLAGE REAL E STATE, homes. 3 Bedrooms in· 531-5800. eluding guest facility. Parly 1 ~~·-O~pcn--E~v_es_7_Da~y~s __ room, entertainers palio. Uk'? to trade? Our Trader's Breathtaking \•ie,v. Agt. Paradise column is for you! 64[).0303. 5 lines, 5 days (or 5 bucks. General General MACNAB IRVINE IMMEQIATE OCCUPANCY Owner transferred to San Francisco. Adopt this lo vely 4BR immaculate home NOW! Steps l<> nearby park. $69,900. Joyce Ed- lund 642·8235. (s41) DELIGHTFULLY NEW Fn?sh 2B R + den-'-new carpets & drapes -immediate occupancy. Lease (@ $650/ mo. or purchase (r,, $85,000_ Betty Kerr &14-6200. (s23) BIG CANYON ELEGANCE Circular driveway approach to handsome Fainvay Ho1ne. Ma ster suite \v/expansive deck-4 additional BR's, 4'h baths, FR & fo rmal DR. $265,000. Polly Johnston 642-8235. ( s28J THE CHEERY TOUCH You will find inviting sunny cheer in this adorable Corona del Mar dupleir1 <So, of the Highway. P riced w sell at $84,•50 . Lots Miller 642·8235. (s26) ~-.· ~ I Irvine_ I Motn1b·trtlnotlolttyco:"-I IOI DovtrDrlY8 t41•12ll 1144 Mac.ArtJM ...... 200 "-'1 loocll,Cll-U Hi ' l • • ~o DAILY PILOr Gt:r"1e r1I G eneral G1ntr1I Gtrt*rel 1====:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= * BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * C H · Be ch ~rt SliOros lncomo Property 16' ..;.;;o.;.•t'-'o'--Mo~•.;.•----j untlngton 8Mch L!fun1 a POOL 1v, ASSU/MBLE SOUD B[OC9'T0 OCEAN RED CARPET IN CORONA DEL MAR -Unbelievable! 9 bedroom home, south o! the highway or shall we say a duplex with a 5 bedroom unit and a 4 bedroom unit. That's more like it. Anyway, perfect !or the big family,· big in- vestor. Now vacant & newly painted. Easy to see. Call us ! $139,000. A listing of Man· lyn Hodges. UNIQUE· HOMES Reolton , 67S-4000 2443 .E. Coast. Hwy., Corona del Mar VA REPOSSESSION BIDS OPEN on spacious 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, builtins, dining, fireplace, double garage, slate entry, new carJ?ets & paint. Large lot with room for family orchard. Priced at $26,500. with $1000 down to anyone. Hurry, CALL 540-1151 MESA VERDE $23,500 SUPER VALUE-,Just listed-cond o- minium, builtins, garage door opener, extra nice ca rpet & drapes. 2 patios. End unit. Lots o! privacy. Ask i n g only $23,500. CALL 540-1151. ' NEWPORT ISLAND Pier & slip. Dix. du- plex . 3 BR , 2 ba., 2 BR, 2 ba. 3 Car park· Ing. $125,000. 675-7060 NEWPORT HEIGHTS Reduced! Spanish 3 BR., 2 ba. spllt·level. Extra lge. lb!. Owner extremely anxious ! Call & submit 642·7491. UNUSUAL FIND Lux urious d u p I e x. V. A. REPO. Owner's unit 5 BR. + Lge. lot. 3 BR, 2 ba. 3 BR rental. Secluded $26,500-$1,000 Down Newport Island. Call Costs & impounds $750 !or fu rther Inform•· $254 Mo ., 'PIT! Uo~673-7420. 556-8800 BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * 4 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU DARK ROOM •Tiburon <.'Ondo. E><e<Umt uov'"'"""' opoor. 2;.5l!;i¢=.•in3&8!J,2!\: EXCLUSIVES GAME ROOM •* 3MBodeR.t ~~~;tlon tunlty: North end ~ new Wll"ll & arapes. $33,950. TWo 2 bdr. I ba. ._"""" No vacancy, \\rlth Ion& time $49,SOO. • on 1 lot : 10% Down. Jn<:0n1e $35 500 * LuJh ahag !!wnann,tJi:,_~ch .. 11.·allt! e•"'tdown-1• v •I CAYWOOD REAL TY $3,'r.JO. Yearly now and • • Custo>m shutters w --111111• * 541-l290 * ,..n~ need ral•ln1" Great Dramatic 2 story Uvfng room* S Pools groundt .• ,,,, · ~-":,..--'~-~-''--I law s tiral Ume investor hlfhllgtrts this ...,... lh"1' larl!(ln reolty Inc. .AfJ~a.:n Son Juon Coplstrono atartor untt1. NewPort Rlvl~rn. PrPm1um 968-4405 (14 hrs) m,950. Beach T r I P I ex . grade wall coverings, cus· Equal l!oosing Oppty HORSE PROPERTY I riwe11t priced triplex in tom window ohuu.,., """ · REAL ESTATE 2 Br houle on 1 acr<, len<ed, Newoort B<nch •nd ~ block greded carpetinJ. huge rnas. !Oned ·ior horte• $45,001 Wk to t>tach. Great ror. In- ter bedroom 1u1te, iourmet , * FREE UST 1190 Glenneyre St. dwn, call HB, ( 114 ) wlll~nt, appre<:Latlon and kltc)lcn, 40' private palio 494.9413 54!).-0316_ ~-o~ner use._toQ..__,~"°""' and l'xtras too numerous to Lido ltl• $52,000. Fourplex. Only 2 e mention. Short w•lk to Gov't reposseaed bometi, ~ of these 2 bdr. l ba. hooted, gUlll'ded swimming BOn1e have pOola some no A FAMILY HOME tlcltllle"°"* I~ tourplexes. 10~' Down, .wn1 pool. Pr1ced for last sale. down pymt variOua areas 4 BR., lamlly rm., 3 ba. with . sell on contra.cl or con· Cali &46-2313. & p)'mts. No obligation. lge. po.Uc. Via Udo Soud. ventionat Rents on way to F.qual-Housing Om>ortunitles $l2'l,500 Jtlii1e Hamn 160Q. per month. -HERBERT HAWKINS PIER .. SLIP F ·-1 125 $59,850. Fourplex. 2 brm. 1 REALTORS * !)63.5681 or .,. • bA. bll.ckl on goll coune. ~~""!"'"""""""'!"'!" 14 BR., 3 be.. S270.000. \Vil! ll>"i' down. Will sell con· 600 Sq. ft I.am rm, 3 , br lease with nm\ option. MOBILE Home-Budger Ex· tract or convenliona.I. G-::;en::o::r::a:_l ______ ..:G;.;•:;;no;;r;.;•:.;1 _______ 1:;::;=;;:::;::;=;:;;=;;:==:;: 2 ba, 2 story. 3 car gar. 'LIDO LOTS ~ot l~4;1'_2~~T· SlTS,cro. Eaatside 12 Unit1. -next to new huge regional Only interior lots avail. ~128 · ' Attractive complex with SHOULD A HUSBAND park, l blk to Golden View 57 Ff. !or r<'!ildC'nce, w/pOOI· · pol. 'l\t.'O °"'Tlet' apts. Walk. AND ASSOCIATES REALTORS 644-7270 BLUFFS CONDOMINIUM New C & D, 2-slory, 3 BR, I \h BA., Bl kitc hen, brk . fr plc., enclosed patio. Priced to sell at $57,500. W£ CAN HELP YOU BUY, SELL, OR TRADE A HOME ANYPLACE IN THE NATION TELL HIS WIFE School. $45.500. 842-8009 patio $74,000. 35 Ft. oord 20x60 3 BR, 2 BA, 1t1oblle 'lng distance to stx>pping and THE SCHOOL BELLS 1'"0R Sale by owner lovely comer {40 It. bWldable site) Home \Vaterfrom at Salton bui servlccs. are just a block away from 3 br, 2 ba, frplc, bltins, $65,000. Sea, $7500 or trade lot house For detailed lnlormallon on th.ls super sharp 4 bdi·nt take over 6'1o GI loan. Call or land ~3278 eves/wknds. these and othl'r pnlts Cull home with lots or room for bef. 11 or aft 4pm or appnt' 2 BR. Great Lakes, 10x56 Don Bennan, Broker and Ule kids. Huge pool and 842--0704 Moblle home with shed & unit specialist. Red C~t, game room also. Nice H .'C'u~n-cti~n~gt"'o-n~H~a~rboo,.-u_r_ -==~=~-=~-awning. 646--2988, 900-1·110. Realtors 645-BMS m E. 7th carpets & drapes thruout . ·..::==;.::;c.:.:==;.;...-BEST BUY LIDO NE;W 2 BR. 1 BA. living St .. Costa 1tlesa. Obie garage detached . ~ 3 BA, 4 BR +, Bay View. rm . Adult park w/private ll Units, roon1 for 3 n1ore. Great kitchen lll'Ca MOl\I! 88. to bch, 425 Via Lido beach . $16 500. 540-3672. 1 &. 2 BR. Grou $1875/mo. Priced to sen in Costa 1t1esa '11!;!, Nord. $ll 7,500. 675-7414 Bki". ' Prine only. See 187 E. 21st for $26,900 -all tenns. Call _ St, Elslde C.M.. or call 54<H>t9l. OCE IEW ~ewport ::lle.;.•:.;<:.;h___ llHl Est..., I [j] Owner. 642-1960 Al'! V GoMr•l EASfS!DE, thirteen I Br ~-..; ..... --.... Hard to believe but only GRAND OPENING iiiii.iiiiiil units, inc, $1960 per mo. Walker 0 lee $30,900 fuU price. Sit on your Ne wport Bay, Towers Cpts, drps. stoves, rcfrig!I, tr deck, \\•atch the boats & en· l & 2 BEDROOM Acreage for sale 150 pool. $176.(XXI. By Owner. 111.t~ '''"'' joy the good life. CONDOMINIUf.1.HOMES 548-9695 Open """'· HUNT1NGlON HARBOUR llay!ront Homes 135 ACRES -COSTA MESA 4 plex. $62,500 -~"""'=-',,'"=-=-I Boat SHps SLEEPER Income pays pnn lnt lax, LIGHT YOUR llfAl.lY Fuls I Seeurlly Hlghrtse in1 • "til. 10% dn, no pts. PIPE 17Z14 COAST H\\rv. terl & concrete ronstrucUon Mobile Estate property • 615-1669 or I-728-7149 . . (7l4) 846-13S4 & (2l3) 592•2845 Private Balconies only $3,500 .per aCN!. Near eeDUPLEX, 2-2 BR's. Lrg Lean back and Cl\JOY this 2 garage spaces per unit. Lake Pains. Jones. 336. yards. Assume FHA loan. largr beam Cl'iling den with Irvine Roof top sundeck Phone 639-1501. Owner/Agent, ~ ERITAGE j 2828 E Coast Highway, Coron• del Mar ~G-en~or~al:_::,·~::..:.:'.!:.:.:~Ge~ne~rayl=...:=...c~ used brick fireplace and all. 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ I Unusual Opportunity to Pur-FORCE D SALE-1st TIME E.'" •ide Co•ta Mesa -1• chase llayfront Properly in DANA Point new duplexes 1~==::::====::'.::::'.::;'=::'.::~~~~~,,,,! OFFERED 127.500. can 646-nn, !or D'RAMATIC LASALLE Newport Beaeh. e1491000,.159,ooo. 1, I 81/2°/o LOAN .... k. In-· umvemty Pru1<. 310 Fernando Rd., N.B. •Webb Realty 831-2t70 LG-;;:•;,;••:.;•,;;•;_I _, ____ Gonoral I NEW POOL-MESA DEL MAR OPEN•LO • ••FUN10BENICEI You'U catch your brealh as 675-155! Lots for Siio REALTORS 170 ·-NEW PAINT ASSUME 6112°/0 iM. ~ ~; ":.:' ~.:t';'Z Baycrest -LA COSTA * * * * * * SELLER TRANSFERRED ~ Immaculate 3 bedroom one home. 4 Bdnns., 2111: baths, Newport Beach Beautiful R-1 lol. out of state: Forced to sell! New $6,000 sto~ hoine with premium 2 firepla~ beautiful land· GrcRt family home -4 ;;~~~~~~~-1 O\\•ner. Asking S 18 ,00 0. * TAYLOR Co * pool -loods of decking! grade carpeting and wall ~~~~~~";""::";=; .scaping and a view. $59.500. bedroom -2-"~ baths -very ; Jones. 368 Phone ~1501. • New paint in & out! S"·eep-coverings, garden patio, 3 BR, l\i ba. Brick frpl, Cj\Ll 552·7500 functional floorplan -many REAL HORSE ing curved d I' iv e way . shake roof, sprinkl~rs front lg. L.R.; ne\11ly dee. $27,000 vis· ION lovely features on quiet Covered entry. Giant living & back. Fortin Co .. Rltrs. 642-fJ(XXI street -seller will help PRQPERTY IRVINE TERRACE BEAUTY-$182,500 Greatest view of bay, ocean & .Catalin a! Custom quality lge 3 BR home w /FR, formal dining, 3 baths, 3 frpls &-beautiful pool. ,·;our 28th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hiiis Rood NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-C910 General NEAR OCEAN . * BEST BUYS * POOL. ASSUME Lag Bch Lot $8500 Canyon Lake Lot $18,500 2 BR Duplex $36,500 Beach Home $59,500 7 Inc Units $59,500 Beoch Duplex $76,500 Call 1'IO\V for details. 642-Jm 1797 Orange Ave., C.M. Sells More Homes Than Anybody! Two area offices serving you --- COSTA MESA 546 8640 2629 HARBOR BLVD. NEWPORT BEACH 64~ 2n EAST 17th Open Evenings Until 9:00 Call and get tho RED CARPET TREATMENT EASTSIDE TRl-PLEX $39,000 Anxiou~ubmit reasonable offe r 2 JIEDROOM 2 BATH Beautiful to•n house-sunken living rooln $23,950 1/4 ACRE-VIEW 2 bedroom one bath-cute R-4 zone $301000 BACK BAY BEAUTY 1/3 ACRE 4 bedrooms 1900 square fee t, custom home secluded $54,500 3 BEDROOM 21/2 BATHS DELUXE TOWNHOUSE FHA-VA terms $25,500 MESA VERDE EXECUTIVE HOME 4 Bedrooms, dining room, large lot, 3 yrs old, extra nice, $45,500 MESA VERDE SLEEPER 4 bedroom & ,family room beautiful home near shopping $36;500" EASTSIDE BARGAIN 3 bedrooms pool borne huge •family room wilh massive brick fireplace. Large private lot $35,950 BACK BAY CHARMER 3 bedroom cul-de-sac lot. Quiet-private, owner must sell-tail<ing $39,900 softly BRADFORD TOWNHOUSE Beautiful 3 bedroom 2 bath priced below market at $27,495 r FAMILY DELIGHT 3 large bedrooma family room 2 brick llre- plllClll ftl,500 room overloo king pool. Cozy Walk to all schools, 6hopping Fountain Valley finance -$75.000. Submit formal fireplace. H ,u g e and transportation. A super • red h•rll exchanges. Call 646-TITI. kitchen -Jots of cupboards. sharp home. Priced at Qu-,, size bedrooins. \Valk. $36,500. & super terms. Bet-51{ OL OPEN1/L.O • "'S FUN TO BE NICE/ ~ ' 14 10 REAL~~ R~".''l'ORS -I ~ ~~u~hoo~~J:~d T~';'j>Pi~a: ~N~~·,~'UN~2:";a, 4 Bedroom plus bonus room , l1niv~··~ark Center~'ine . , • ,Vilf,•ll'::l!I vantage. NO QUALIFYING I ~ I 2-Onl $35 90)" l;lr\ii ~ to . ass~mc V.A. loan. Full i1 ·~il :J'.filJ ~M. MccABE Cha11cellor Home pnce '"'' $38,500. Call now ~ ;j ••i~•'J; REAL TY IRVINE -8~7~10, ' > I j OPE!i r1L o • rrs F-UH ro BE NICE! I ~""'~" 8740 w ARNER A VE. University Park BIG CANYON -MESA DEL MAR ffiUNTAIN VALLEY Only S Bedroom home avail· ' Lowly 4 bdnn. home tn * 842-4405 * able in this area. Decora. 1 I beautiful l.Iesa det Mar, on G --0-,d"e-n.....:.G::rc.o:.:>0.::..-'>--tor's delight • prof~lly 1. ., quiet, tree lined street. Bit-;;,.:;:.:;;C'-.;;..;..;.;,;;.... ___ I la.ndscaped. Quiet cul-de-sac $89,500 ins, carp .. drapes, concrete 85TI STANFORD, vacant, -steps to pool & tennis drive, double garage. Nicely custom built, 3 + den, courts. Bonus \\-'Orkshop! ! landscaped. Priced to sel1! 00xl50 lot, b.ugc garage, Dtt>am home -private & se- MORGAN REAL TY crpt, drp!. $31,950 .. Submit eluded. $57,500. Call 545-8424 ALJIAMBRA -=---1Tl"ade • 2 Bedroom house 1 OCEAN VIEW 3 + GUEST $31,500 673-4641 675-6459 terms. Qv.·ner t213)431-3505 1~Sou~'"°'~~"~•-•tt_o_rs~---~ Comfy Cozy Condo I I -near L.A. for house In t this area. Full price $19,9.'JO. I Ownr/Brkr 644-8668 Re sto r e. SAVE Tl !OU- ~DS. Private tree lined slr<'<rt "on the Bluff." 3 bedrooms including hide·a· way master suite lvilh view, cozy den and chrut bouse. Large living roorn wJ.th garden picture \V i n cl o "" • C4lpta'ins kitchen. GUEST FACILITY Y•ilfi separate en'lrance, priva te bath. 2 COVt'red patios. Breattrtak· ii"€ view overlooking mnes of !teenic ocean. BETTER mm.RY. Call 64&0003. I Ol{I \I L OI \0 \ .., f 4 ( ~· , 2299 Hatbt>r Blvd. EASTSIDE HOME+ TRIPLEX COUNTRY SETTING Balboa Peninsula MINI COMMERCIAL Convert this channing Cot- tage to oUice or business. Only 00' from the ocean· lront on Bal Peninsula. Rare opportunity at only $67,500. · Pacific Properties 675-<ITI2 or 548-8796 Corona dtl Mar BUY NOW EXPAND LATER Consider this 2 BR home in an ideal Cor o na Highlands, \\•alk to p1ivate beaCh, location ~1th yard space and floo r plan that make it a natural for an addition .•... Or Enjoy this sunny, "'ell kept little doll house as is. Only $56,500 CALL 644-7211 Huntington lluc:h o.~,, tran'1en'ed, m" 't HtGHLANDS Huntington Beach's .-.ce!! 2 Br, 2 BA. plus den, Nice home in quiet Harbor I s<'Cluded patio, best loca-Highlands. 3 BR ., 2 ha., lgc. lfi]' Most Popu ar tion! ! Just listed & llot! living rm. "'ith frplc., lge. :;~~~~==~~:1~.~n~•~Jdol=iiiiiiiiii~·~·I, 2. Bdnn condo. l1i; years $32,500. CALL 6-1~ lmck yard for the kids. Comn1er't1al 1 ' new, Freshly Paicted, with TIL $46,500. tastefully paneled and mlr· CALL '-"" f4f·J41f ProP,erty 151 Bus' lnOll I rored living room, plush V. E. Jlo,.aid & Co. ,,..,, · waUpapered dlnlng ...... .... .... ........ .. .. _ Commerc:,iol Opportunity 200 I shag carpets & custom " .,...., 'drapes. oversized pantry &£.4.LTY Prime Comer AJ Wia.te are.' near --~1s. , .. alking Irvine N111•r Ne•••rt Pest Office N OUR O ~~ • Choke rommercial building. OW Y WN distance to.H u .ntington BY O\lo'ller. Ranch 3 BR CARMEL MODEL. 1800 sin. Prime corner to-BUSINESS Center Swunmmg pool and 2 BA ' belt i, . callon. Plenty .°' parking. Mob.ti Wash many 'parl< areas Asking cul~ own ~ be Xlnt buy in Harbor View Heavy foot traffic. Take ad· on1y $24,495 cali today ed ~rlg ca ~i b~: H.omes -on1y. $69,9;(); 3 BR.., ....,_ _,: . ..,.., cm Call 847.3005. ce · ~·vc, ,-)(;"' dining&lanulyrooms, load-van._ .. 546..J.OO' · No fancy projection here,: patio & walks. Underground ed ,,.Jextras Adult occupied ,..,..,..,....,~ just CPA's: Figures. wen: WALK To sprinklers,~:; +. $230 Pm, & better than new! Call TNv£.o31 1n.c..NT DMSION estab. working ?o.lobil model.: assume 81h:.ri GJ. at $39.900. now! ; I NETS up to $2500 month,• BEACH 5211 Cl>ablis Cir., SS1-Sl89, CORBIN·MARTIN .llJ~'!!'l! U hel Servi all ; Bedroo'!", only 137,!00. ~~ERSITY PARK REALTORS 644-7662 . Jtf{jj~ =~ =~:i::: Formal di!1"1g. Large scp.Oianning nc\\' house with OUCEO ~~~~-!~-~-~··~-~-~"'~'! Alrl>lanes., Boats, Flee ti ata'le family. Block walls. 3 BR 2 BA den family RE ..: Truck Co's, Motor & Mobile~ o~ 2 Years ~Id. ~ard to room.' Ideally Joci..ted nr. WESTCLIFF * c .. 1 * homes. believe for this price. No recreation center schoois 3 br, 2 be, xln't cood. HOUSE &: SHOP down G1'. park. S59.500. 673-Jl77. ' $62,500. o..,, Sun l·S * M-1 * HERE'S J USf A FEW I' 1600 Cornwall 73 300 DEcrAll.S L.gun. D-ach x . NEWPOR':' -Your ln·-tment Is -·~ -A. Send & Sea Roal1y RIVIERA REALTY ... -~~~ 61>-8800 -No ..,u;ng Involved t'2-4471 ( ::::) 5444103 COLONIAL BEAUTY I 149 BroadwaY. C.M. _Work !rom you home "!!!!!!!!~"'!'~~~!!!!•12-stry 4 bdrm in one of WATERFRONT '42·7007 64.S..5609 Eves._ Part or full Ume available VACANT Laguna's finest sectio"'. PIER a FLOAT NEWPORT BEACH -No experience necessacy Pool-sized lot is pro· Prime bayfront site COMPANY PROVIDES situated on a large 130x150 lot with towering shade trees, a comfortable 3 BR 2 BA home wlth den and lront porch for your rocker Plus Rambling 4 Bdrm. just blks I e s s i onally landscaped. $94,500 F boa ..,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim to beach. Assume 7% VA Features 3 baths:, family BROKER 833-071G or 1 repairs &: sales FULL ON THE JOB Joan w'lth flexible down. rm, massive f I re p l a c e . Bill Grundy Rltr 675--6161 TRAINING PROGRAM /Jxl NIGEL· (!AILEY & ASSOCIATES separated away from the house a triplex with Income potential or $440/mo. only $69,950 for all CALL 642-7211 IJxi NIGE L ·- (!AILE Y & ASSOCIATES "BEACH 'n COIDfffiY" Perfect Combo! The warm cou ntry decor of this rustle 3 bedroom, 2 bath split-level accentuates a spectacular vie\v of Newport Harbor! \\'t'athered open beams; larm style dining room, rozy family room, with its 01\"n fireplace and patio - secluded master bedroom SUNSHINE AND wite · · • a "NO-NON-SENSE" value at $83,500. FREEDOM U>w doom OK' Don't miss this! surrounds this gorgeous 4 br GRUBB & ELLIS CO. & 2 ba beauty. Also includes separate family room with 67.S..7080 massive red brick fireplace. '!!~~!"l!'~~~"""" As.sume IBA 7% loan and LARGE LOTS have a low monthly pay· 45 x ll8 IS THE SIZE of this ment of $226 includes all. valuable dose to evet;1:hing This home is a beauty and .Jot. Solid 2 bdrm. cottage + you must see today. Call guest unit, vacant now. Walker &Lee lllAl ltTATI • • * * * * * 60 x 100 FI'. W'I' surrounds this like new Corona Hlds. home. 3 Spac)ous bdrms., 2 baths, large patio & yard area. YOUR OIOICE $69,500 University Realty 150 ACRES • mt E. est. Hwy. 673-6510 SAN DIEGO co. FIRST USER BENEFITS Pines, oak & syca.mpres on N 3 ~-d 1 · creek. Rolllng hills, nk:e:ly ew ....... '"· up ex with balaiw:ed with level areu. 2 bdrm Apt. Nr. beach. 90 acres one aide Highway Owner will help finance 67 • 60 on other. I mile So. w mL PINCHIN of Pov."&)' Rd. Cali Ed Chap. REALTOR _ ·-man or Elaine Demond . ~11..,......,..,• PETE BARRETI DUPLEX, by ownor, 2 BR + den le: 2 BR apt., xlnt -REALTOR-toe 176,111111 ·~ Open Sun JU 0 642.-5200 I :~:::-;:-:~:.=:-:-=:;-:::-.:-~:::-;:-~-=~-~! p~~ :~ewre~~nw~e:,! Blvd, $189,500. 675-4048. OCEAN VIEW Duplex. 2 Sdrm11. eldl. Leased land, 4 Car porldna. X1nt. rental history. J79,950. Call: fr.1-3663 673-0088 (!\'ti, DUPLEX corner, charming, by owner. 500 PolneettJa, Open J.S dally. 1%% ioL Co1ta Me11 $300 mo. pays it a1.l! Prof. Dining rm. Oversized patio ·Harbor Vu Sorri1i"11t Condominiums 60 Total lnvostment $15.SOO decorated wilh brand new with BBQ. $59,950. 494.-8003 5 br, 3 ba, 2 frplcs, nu sec· _.,:f,;;o;_r..:11;;1;.;• ____ 1:.:.::i Required Cash $10,<m ankle-deep cut pile carpets TARBELL, Rultors tion. High up w/big view. Send name. addresr; & thruout. Painters just left! 1920 Sm Coast Hwy., L.B. Comp. approx Dec. 7th. Full DUIT NOW telephone No. to: District Huge isolated master suite. Emerald Bay Lot Prloe $81,500. Owner DON'T WAIT FOR Office Mobil Wash, Inc .. Extensive use of glass. mas· '99-.1101. PO Box 6500 TOIT sive brick firepJace, grur· One of th~ ~· near~y PRICES TO RISE 6.u'r, ~-Or' phone ~i met kitchen. SUBMIT YOUR level building pads in NEWPORT Crest Condo $21,00J far these spack>us, .::~~;:;::·'=~===~ 00\VN PAYNfENT!!! Bkr· Emerald Bay. Over 12,00l deluxe new 3 Br, dln rm, 2 BR. 1% BA adult oondos.i· owner ~ll. square fee~Qwne:shlP pro-3 ba. dbl gar. Below 01oice oL locations still avail. UNIQUE BUSINESS .:::=..::;:o==-:2---1 vides access to pnv. beach, market. $'12,500 .. Owner. able. A& 1ow as $390 down OPPORTUNITIES 4 + JenJ?is cts., pool.5 &: parks. _61Z-5583.=.="-------to move in, with $2'JJ mo. Unique Homes has ICveral $38,500. -DUPLEX nr OO!an $62,500 pays all. 836-4206 Agen t. excellent bu s t n e 1 1 op. 4 Bedrooms+ 2 Bedrooms TURNER ASSOC . Mlles Lano.~ Realtor Income Pr-rty 166 portuni~ available : l* Bath back unit. 94• X ll!X> N. Cout Hwy., Laguna 6T.H5f.3 ::.:;::.;;:.;:..;..:.;;·•=·.:.t.-.:.::1 8\1.remons I~ Cream 155' lot. Zone R-2. Room tor 494-1177 1betutest drawtnthe West. 6 UNITS, CORONA DEL Partor, a Uquor st.ore & duplex. The fastest draw ln the West. . •. a DllUy Pilot C!a.uilled MAR FOR SALE OR heatth ~bar among WM. McCABE . , .a ~ly Pilot Classlfletl Ad . 642-5678. TRADE. OWNER 833-3894. ~. Bert Reedy REALTY 8740 WARNER AVE. FOUNTAIN VALLEY * 842-4405 * VA~HA Repossessions. Latest prices. WM. McCABE REALTY 8740 WARNER AVE. FOUNTAIN VAu.EY * 142-4405 * REPOSSESSIONS • '1Jr lnformnUon and location of th~ 1111' &: VA homes, ro:·'.act • KASABIAN Rool Estate 962- WALK T.0 BEACH VA REPOSESSION 3 BR, 2 BA. Ukt new. Only $27,500 SCOTT REAL TY 536-7533 CALL ANYTIME S©\\~\i\-J&$trs· That lotriguing Word Game with a Chuckle ldhtl .. , CLA T I. POU.AN 0 ...,.,..., !etlon of . "'' f°"r tctclmbled wotd1 b.-Jow to form fovr tllflPlt word&. I L 0 y E r I ! Investment I 'I 11 lnflotlon ho1 oven offecfod Opportunl!J: 220 . . . . the kids, They'ro now u1l119 *' Sllvir Bullion + · 1 _..._ _______ -letter words. ,,~, 009 + l'l'NE BAns 8J5..83oo I FALOTA I MoMyteLoon 240 'f.....,1"'•--, ....,.,_,,.....,,.-l A Compl,,. '"'4 dwdl• ·-DON'T •u•Raw MODEL HOME RESALE V by fl!l'"o In "'4 mllllng -d -~ 3 BR, 2 BA, l•m. rm., eov. ,__.__.._._..__.,,_.. ,.. d,..iop r.om .... No, 3 below. 'TIL YOU CALL USI patio, aheg thruciut, frplc. A BorTOw on ;your home equjty associated 'bllns,. D/W, II ml. fnim • PRINT NUMIE!ED LE nus IN I' r I' ,. I "" . .,, &OOd purpoae. serv. I b<h. 1 blk. el, 11Ch1. 210l2 THESE SQU~IES • _ • • • In& Loi Ansel,. Cow!ty for WESTCLIFF Mlmmr Ln. 536-7U9. ovtt 21 yean ud NOW In j BY OWNER roR Sale By ,<>wner. N1ee 0 "';~lN~~~E LEHEIS I I I I I ~~~:L~?-iGAGE co. '1 BR O K FQ<;.llff\•.T'J~<; ~-l ~ W ~.ilt> ~•'I>•/' $36,500. Lee 2 BR, 2 BA, I 2 ....... w / 40 ft. . . • -. Cn4) 111&-0Wll -blt. 4!0 Sba<lt Dr. ....-... .. m.900• PH, SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION BOO ·~ Camp111 Drive, N.B. ' 64S-!IQ'J8. ~9U-Ot81.~~-----1--=-::.:.::.:.::::...:::.:..=....::..::..::=.:.:..=:~...:..;_~---c.,...:..:.-~---'•-"""-=--~-~""'--1 ' AVCO THRIFT 620 Newport Ct'n!er Dr. Suit~ lOl $~ ~ & Up. Furn Bach's. Newport Beach Son1e w/~klng, Ideal for 833-.'#4G studenu. T $1~ · Coey 1 Br. Uaf. Apt. 1st D ·loa·ns 11:·.C:..;lN~·1·~~A':.: • UP TO 90% unr. Gar & yaro. Child & Sl1ll pet ok -~ . . B'h'/'> INTEREST ml · Ilse ·3 DI\. 2 ba, W\f, 2nd TD Loa Ar ~ & , • ...i 10 '. ••lid. """ ~-.. I-lse a &: Den bltns Lowest rates Ortnge Co. 1:rpli1, drps, ur. lli schl: Sottler Mtg. Co. Child ok. 642·2171 545·0611 We Al'° llav. Furnish«! Serving Harbor •~a "' ~. Bach.. 1, ~ 3 br Apts, -, ~ ,.. LANDLOi<DS FREE Mc;.~e=~~eds 260 ALA ' 1.!!NTALS J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: WI ~IUtAUZI IN SfRV1Cf PUT YOUR MONEY TO WORK FOR YOUI 6ffil~i~ l;;arn 10'i'c or n1orc on w.efi· S>?CUred 2nd Trust Deeds '6n Orange County real es!atc. SIGNAL ft10H.TCACE CO, (714) 556-0106 NEAT 1 br duplex $115 now, 4500 C.mpu• n NB has i.iv/refr, C &·D, g•rage. ,.,.,..,..,..,..·',..',.··,..·,.·..,.lsruo16 l br $175 .beach I" new pa.int, stv/refr, 'child ok'. \VJLL Buy l st and 2nd TO's AVAIL 2 br $150 Close in up to $100,000. Call betwn 5 Bring smJ pet & ·Child MoW &9PMor7 to~AMnow ' 644-5511 aRANn nu !? br 2 ba $2'lS $5,200 2nd TD for sale $4160, fncd patio, D/\V, high crpts'. 10"/o int., 3 yrs due. VACANT 3 br &•FM $265 ·nu 83.1-U29; 546-9T:>4 eves. paint, patio, fncd, gar. ' ..... I~ JllVINE 3 br 2 ba $295 now i\.11 xtras. Bring family. ' CHOICE fl.B. 4 br 2 ba $210, close to frwy & schools NEWPORT 4 br 3 ha $m Se-e to appl'C'Ciale . singles. ' Housos Furnishod 300 ALA Rontol1 . 642-8383 On•story 2 BR odult condo, new carJMtl, dropes & wallpoper. Only odults who op- preclat• a clean, pro- fessionally decorat.d home will "-occopt· able. Fast occupancy. $19S per mo, General $ LANDLORDS $ Let US rent UR propertk>s. \\'c Sl'lVlcc all the beach Cities & inland Orange Co. FEE FREE. Save Time & SS $ ALA RENTALS $ Newport & Bay, CM BACH unit $85, $100 & lllO _ _:_8J4.4:..:....c:206:..:....A:..:g!Ct::n::I __ now, beach, incld util, sin - gles. ,_S.~l;::.bo:..:•;...;.:l •;;;lf;;:n:::dc.. -'--- NICER 1 br.duplt'X $150 Cdlo.f, 1 util pd, child or pet "Ok. C'HOICE 1 br duplex $18.5 NB, ocean w, move in now. BAYFRONT 2 br 2 ha $250, utit pd, gar w/patio. $EACON Bay 2 br 2 ba sm. lrg LR & kit, garage. VIEW 3 br only $295 now, deck, patio & gar-singles. LAGUN·A 2 br $295 choice b. cation, niee frplc, gar. NEWER 3 br 2 ba $375, niccly furn w/bay view. ALA Rentals 642-8383 $115 -Util pd. Lrg bach, full kitch, 1 blk beach, Balboa $1.3a -Util pd. Bach. full kitch .. patio sml J>Cf. Cdi'1 $145 -Lrg &: nice bach, full kit .J garage. ~ S235 -1 br, sep rear uuit, !rplc, poo(, ·-· Cd>! NU·VIEW RENTALS 67l4030 or 494-3248 $110 UTIL Pd. $125 Mobile, 01. $125 San Clemente. 1 . BR. ocean view, Lag. Bch. 3 Br Mobile $145, CM. Many Bachelor units $90, util pd. Agt. Fee. 979-8430. B1lbo1 lsl1na BALBOA Island Channing 3 BR, 2 story. Nicely furn, $$30 per mo. Including sum· mer. 197·1. 64'1·222'l, 540-0395 or G«-1295. CHARMING 3 BR, 2 ba. home>, frpl .. lovely patio. furn., yrly. $530 mo. \\'il\iam Winton Real Estate 675-3331 Balboa Pen1n1ula flurry! $125 1 BR &lobile Hom('. J<ids & Pets. Calif's I...rgest Rental Agcy Homefindert 547°9641 Singles OK. $125. 2 BR . . Mobile Home. Util paid. Calirs Lrgest Rentsl.1 Ar!.cy H.omeflnders 547·9641 Lido lslo RUSTIC CHARMER Darling 2 br 2 b.1, beam cl. nu shag & drp, rp1. \Vntr 1$.WI, 673·2227, 213/793-0427. Pd• l•I• 2 BR, 2 BA, 1 block trom beach, bltn kit., din nn., patlo;$450. yrly. Udl incld. 6TJ...2m. . Corona del Mar ....;.. __ 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 car g:ar .• all bltns, swim pool, JddJ OK, like new, only $249 mo. No fee,_Agent 842-442l 3 BR., 2 ba., crpt/drps, blln5. Family room. Dbl garage. Call 968--1021. Huntington Beach " .. ltl 365 Black to beach & bay, t BR., l·ba., trpl., rncl. 1i.aHo. NC'\\'· ly ckx.'Ot', ca.rpel(.'<i & (J\•&ped. Yrly .. $2"".iO l\fo. Call: 673-3663 642·2'~ Evt.-s. associated BROKERS -A E Al TORS 1015 W lalboci 611 1t:.tl . • ' . •• :: DAILY PILOT Tl!flday NOYtmbtr 6, 1973 _.,, w .......... Mio p7 .. ,,.,,, ......... "ttnl' t•O "~'P W1.~.Mlf ........ 1110"'1H~· ,011~,-m .... ~n::;:ted~.-rr _,'M .,..r ,911ii1T,..a::,fr.:p-;wu:.::n:;tod:::i","iMO.&:iri Tli 110iT"M.1111r.1,~wV.airnii:toaid:,iMril .. rr'fli1•1t R:.:•:.:n:.:t•:.:•":.:'..;t;:;o..;S:.:>h:.:'':.:'":....-•.:.°"';.;. Rentals wan..., -B~•~b·y;•l~lt~lnt~:-j;;;;;;-;;;:!ii~-i'iiiiiiii~'""'i:iiiii~iiii~iiiiiiiiii~~iiij,,..iiijr~~· 1\ .!~~=:::::::..:::::.....::.:.::..:::!!:.:::.:::::::::..::::.::.;..:..:;:I ~G;;£T.:.!:..INTO:.;o,::.:Sll~OW~B~USIN'::::::r.ss= McDONALDS FEMALE roon1 1uatc to Tt;..\OIL'i0 .stu¢io !Yi'O srand 81\.BYSIT my home day· Oi.ndy a1z'11 • UibtrettH NOW JllRING ,,,.,. 2BR, 2 BA. ••/ 1 pianos, iaz... Corona d•I ntabu·wmml. By hour day DEUVER .-. MUii be ,. e 11 AWLY WE!>l'RI. 1·$ 0,,,., gftl. Clean, 1 howc Mar. J.8. )II d d I el on. or .... ldy play room-fenctd CISCO'S MEXICAN RESTllJRANJ ...., rllHONE DIRECTORIES ..,_.... 4 attractive I< S/\T ALL DAY h-om bee.ch. Light or f10fl · ~ext T. yard. Neu Eader School •~ ovtr 18. App1y 1.n penon. ~ AvmNDA Proo amoktt pref. &V>-1309 aft ~~~~~~~~~I 968-m SOulh c.out Plua. Theater SAN CLEM£N'l'E 6 ;:: wtLL CARE FOR YOUR South Coast Vlllap Men or women 18 or over with cars, station No. 1, 3410 s. Brlotol, Ooota Med. 'ITlnlOl'lbor fr.ilti m"'°'ro=--1"'u;"'·t"'·1"N"Eo,,--"'1 .-d"'y"'.1 I ~---~ j~ Cl11LD tN MY HOME. 1w ·-• •-~--Dr 1 wagom, or light trucks. Pleosant outdoor Meu No more hospitals kitchen prlvlle~tl!, prlv. ,.... __ • . ~ WEEKD·A~~ e ' • ""' • -· -'"-' woik, your available daylight houn. Call~ Wonderful fr'OUP or doc.ton I•""· q.,1,. homo 1" CM. -.mmmmm;;; :--.;,:==""---I Santa Ana fornla license .plates required. Agp~ for job GIRL PRIOAY ,..,.. txper. & capable ln- Refe'f't'nC(.>s & no s1uokU1i;. • S30 Car-ter desc'"'r:on and training&·.-, 1 .. AM or N~ Immedlatcl)r . Make div. Benclltl include 541)..7195. P I """'.. ,. • w )'OUf O'o\'D decblons. Mor. m...1;1ca1 lna., pem5on + orson• 1 NEW, re-~-1. ,.pair.•--• Applications Now Being Taken For: 1:30 P at the locaUon nearest you, daily. • , .. , Job ~ 1 / ·~ •• ,.. Call ~-r?itL \van1l"<I h) 5hr apt """'"" u .. u ui&n ,_ a iur P w protlt ., ...... .._... n.uu ,,,,.,.,. 192/nio. Mod . PALM & CARD & llnllh, Store1, olfl<es & Cocktail l('fott,.....s Bartendon BEOINNINO NOVEMBER 7th aood typing lo pteulng per. Clark, 833-:rn>O. Donni• & compll;ix w/rcc facl. Lori, READER • homeai, etc, Llcen1ed , , !Kmllil:y.Goodhn.Topptl¥. DennllPetlOflncl~ncyof ;,m-'="1'"''67"-'"1"1-'>'-. .,..,.~--c-1-lt'lp in U>vc, P.h1n·lage, & 962-196L Hotte11•• Watt.rt 1940 N. Gl•IH11 Ave.# Orange Xtrt. Jon& ttnn a&qnmtnt. Irvine, ~ f\.Uchelson Or. PE:ru.1, respoMtb\e fcn1. shr. Bu11incu. Spf>r.lal n.ca.dings CUS'l'OJ.t WOOD\\'ORK 1134 Gilbert Ave., 4n•htlm Irvine l'ran Sky Park 'fl«>.W:IJ Medical Front O!Uce 1 BR npt. $80 nlo. !tent ff. Daily, 10 Al\1-10 Pi\!. Cabinets, paneling, patm. C1shitr1 lknboy1 332I W. lit StrMt, S•nt• Anl NEVER. A FEE AT TEMPO DOCTORS ORO~RS due 15th. l\1ov<' no\.\'. 73Z2 \VestminSler Ave., \Vcr;t. Duke Dadutkll 646-7598 -L-I Tempo Tempo--•tetp Llwty ofc tceka attractlve1 616--S(m. n1instcr 893·98.54. Jack Bergman 84&-9495 And Kit,.,...n He P . II F•lr Drive, Bklg 16, Coit• Mei• ,.._Ml!!!!!!!!!!!,_!!!!,!!!!!!!!!!!\ penonable lndlv. to pe Giriges for "kent 435 --,.~U~L~LY~~L~ICEN=-s~EO--•AU. TYPES• (Orange County F_airgtounds, enter from HE.u:m It nutrlllon club pe.tient1, handle phones. f\C. • SP1R1TUAL1ST . Big" Small Antr l1r-M ___ 10-1,. Newport Blvd.) forming, need ""'" or Ctll lli Blake, 833-:rn>O, MINI WAREHOUSES Spiritual readings 10 am-10 --~,.:5=:36-:,.1::649.::..---I~ o,,.m..,, ,.,...,_. ,./f women Put or tun tm. Pennis & Dtnnl• PenKlnnel STORAGE pin. Advice on all matters • BUILD-ALL * Equ,el Opportunity Employer \Voric Your home-mem· Ag:%o ot Irvlnt, m .~o 1\!o\'e·ln or l\fO\'C-OUt 312 N. El Camino Real, * CARPl-...,...'TRY * l~I brnh.tpe. 963-5878 liflche n Dr. thari.~i: i.·roni $7.SO per San Clemente, 492--9136, * MS-1837 * !iiiiiiiiiiiiiii Hll W ttcl M & fl 710 Hele W•nted, M & P 710 Help W•nt_,, M & F 710 HELP ted for be ut1 MEDICAL Stcuogra.phcr · 'h 49Z-90J.I. C -a lie__,. p •11t , ,.... Yi'IJ'l -'-·b "w ~; Bkkpr Rad>oloi)' ottlcc. mon · •r,..... __,_,,,~ I~ , ..... IUppe!' \;Al • e ~ ..._ __ . lot' In t e rv iew llamlltoA~.L~'PlC~ St., JlB Let o1u'!.F~~:s ~~~'I'~or al· JOltN'S carpet & Uphcl1ttty I ..,..._...,.. Exptr~~T~P:!~~OUl1&. =:1 oy':1~ = 64.Hm. · 960-1970 i.rnauv... lo ABORTION, Drl Slwn-,, .. Scotch· embltloll', fast learner. Call Delivery-Sunday Only • ...i..;.. Female a()lllkanu M 0 0 EL s . "0 0 EL s. Office Rental PRESTIGE OFFICES Fountain Valley, Beautl· ful new building, ground floor, 3,000 square teet, will divide into smaller offices. 50c per llqUare foot, Includes carpets, drapes, all utilities, Jani· tor service. Call Marilyn Stovall <n4l 832-5440. '. PROFESSIONAL call Ll1'~E LINE 551-5522, 24 gard (Soll Retardants). oay or eves. 531-n*>. must be attradive l natur-MOOELS :;BLEM Pregnancy. Con-==:~ t 10" ~: Pl••hr, P•tch, Rep11lr BABYSITI'ER needed !or 8 OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE-~~ "ro:.K= Wantedwi~~·1 ~winter f 1 dent , s y m p a thetlc bleach for while carpetft. * PATCH PLASTERING * yr old boy, 2 to .f days QUIRES THE USE OF A LARGE STATION N.B. Ask tor Eric. 66-~ Jasblon.s. can tor appt! . II bor $1,ve yoor m_oney by l!l\'inK All~. F,... estimates at a time, wtlile Mom & HARRY ~ P"gnancy counsc ng. A • >& ~ tri WUI 1 v~· Dad &O on b...in..a trips, WAGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR. HELP wonted, full time. AMERICAN BEAUTIES tlon & adoptions re!. ex... pa. '"" Call 540-68l5 prefer old<r. woman. Be&eh SEELEv, ·-WEST BAY STREETbCOSTA Gulf Statlo 2<16 Newpon APCARE 642-4136 llving nn., dlnlng nn.. & Pl lk HD call ro .. -x ~ """' n, l\'lodela AcadcmY hall $15. Any rm. $7.50, umDtnt wa area ~·~ MESA. TELEPHONE 642-4321 F R AP· Blvd. -1711 31.00 Newport Blvd N.B. BEST MASSAGE JN N.B. couch $10. Chair $5. 15 yrs. -1...R OTIS PLUMBING BABYSITl'ER needed • POINTMENT. HOSJt8S, days. Apply aft M~L Maid to Uve-ln 3400 Irvine Ave. Suite l09A exp. Is \Vhal counts, not · mature. Lale aftnl I: eves. 5pm Petite Aub er I' e v•..:. _, (at Briston Open s AM. method. I do \\'Ork myself. Remodels & Repairs. Water s Yr. old. OUr home. Meals Restaurant, 3SOO S. Plaza St49~~1t~a~rci:1~~;~{. AM. Good ref. 531-0101. heaters, dl.sposalt, furnaces, & tranap. prov. ace area. An Equ.I Opportunity Employer Dr., S.A. C!b. O:iast Villaee) s c ' MALE 25, research \\'Orlcer -"'c=='===='"==,.,--1 dahwaahn. 64~ MIC & 557-6692 :;·~· ~=~=:;:--;;::;:;;I wanls to meet females, 17· CERTIFIED STEAl\1 B/A. Complete Plwnblng ""'""""'·==-.,.---,-,= llOUSEKEEPER. llve In, MOTEL Desk Clerk Detail CARPET CLEANING Service. Uc. 272694. 8ABYSfM"Ell 1 aml child, I cook, SttVe meals, must ort led Som typ~ \Vlll 25, for friendship. 546-4956. •646-7811 • PLUMBING REPAIR Thurs & Fri, nr. Adams Help W1nted, M&F 710 Help W•ntecl, Ma F 7 • ~~~.~ Laauna/beach tra~~. Ott S~ll.)' "'l\ton- Ak~~IO~b1 ~rnyn!;u:'~ C•c.r: Cle•nl:Jow No job too small & l\faanolfa 96U023 Credit 01ecking to $52$ EXCITING new sales op. J-IOUSEKEEPER I O::impan. dll)'. $.85Z1. P.O. Box 1223, ·O>sta Mesa. Floor •r• & WI 1 ** 642-3128 ** ~~ro~ ~e~~· ! 1,1 I I Counter Intelligence ~unity98Z-~~~ men &: ion live in./out. Must drive l\°"<OT~E~L=;::M;:;Al';;D;:--"w"'ANTED'"";;;;;I Dutch Main!. Setv. M7·150! Remodel & Rep•ir call 6n-8686 Needs You. Fun general ofc n1en. no 'smoklJlg. 96'"'522-I HB ' will .train, apply in person, _Soc_i_•l_C_lu_bs ____ S_3_5 Cement, Concrete HOME REPAIR-REMODEL BOAT salesman, full time ' :~r ~~ ~util:MO:. Ex~. ::W:::J Eltt1nr' HOUSEKEEPER wa~ted for Costa Mesa Inn. LADIES want to meet men CEMENT & Block \York. CARPENTRY, CONCRETE & marine har dware Call Sue Nott, 83.l-2700i Fee Paid P1U5h ottlcet father & 11 yr. old IOn. MOTOR ROUTE for companionship & mar-Wa1ls, patios, sidewalks, fi46...6030e salesman, part time. can Dennis A: Dennis Penonne w/lux~ appointments ?-1odest salary but C!asy. We have nn openi1*' for a riage? "PartnP.r" 83&-1211 etc. By hr. or job. 646-6915 Sewi-/ Alttr•tion1 for interview. Schock Boats, Agency of lrv1ne, 2182 await glamorous I n d iv. Muat drive. Pb>ne 963-6765. rnoror route carrirr In Sou~h or 5-1-. ··• 2900 La 1'.,..ayette, ~ MJ"""-1-Dr. F•-•• •-otte-xln't Hou~~ER.· xln't ~.. Lag\Ula • Laguna Niau ' ._,... "1" ~fEN'I': Patio, drives, SEWING male __ , BUSBOYS '-·-,_,,, t ~~ -·-fi =~:, Su•• N , •• 0 ~N~B Call ~· Novrmbcr 1st. Pies.~ call "'alks·Repain: saw It -e ... ..,. .... ng • .....,.. "I'....,. a CNClft lnveat'9•tor bene u. ...au e ot.. .1Vft. • area. ........,s Harry Seely, &l2-4l21. tor l.n- R«eptlon plus 4 o!fiCt>S. 1 l[S] remove. Frff 'm . 544-8998 from pattern and altera· Petite Aubera:e Restaurant Uai finn Reks penona.ble &n-2700. Aho i~ee Jobi. (213) 33G-8866. Ask for Mn. formation and appolmnenl. Xlnt for medical, clent.a1, ar. LOlt Ind Fwd DRIVEWAYS_ SIDEWAI.XS tlons. 3llXJ S. Pla%a Dr., S.A. (So. lndMdual w/good phone Dennis ii: Oennls Penomel ~ F.qua1 OJ>l)Ol'tunlt)' Employ-~:!nt ~~g've::: 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;~;mm; ~~Jea A n zaldua, ~M.3.1 c~~N~m:~= film =~=IE·~ :tf~°&..hvioe, m INSURANCE SALES 1..::"'.:.·------- North Costa Me!!e. Lease I · Televl1Jon R.-lr need males & females from Peta::mel Agency, :i7oo Har-EXEC. SECRETARY $450/mo. Call 5 4 5 · 8 4 2 4, Found (frH Mis) 550 Contractor »75+ yrs. No exper. bor Blvd., CM. Fee Paid $100 No --., --while _, NCR OPERATOR SoolhCo Reallors. t'OLOR TV Repair, expert, ..... ., $3 -hr Ap'?.'iy -r ·~ ....... .,¥W 1r1-•-FND • Black /Cat, please ---------1 reuonable, most in home. ne .. -.. · r-• ' DEUVERY man for early Excitin& Cartti' for !harp leam, put time, ewi I We are Joo ..... wr an exJX?f. FOR rent or lease $175 mo. id ·r v· H JAO< 'I'aulane, r ep a Ir' Free estimate, H.B. N.B. Fri. Nov. 9th, 1-3 p . morning LA Times Home penrin w/land developer. wlmds. lull time when quail-NCR operator, ~vcr, we reception rm. 2 oflices. entJ Y ic. .B. area, mod dd Ll• B-1 269072 all Concept Media, 1500 Adams n-•·.,...... Route Mwit have Xhl't benefitz. Al80 Fee Po-.,ed "i ll train. P/tin1e only. Atlanta & Bu shard , re • a · ... · & C.M. Bert G emore, Ave., near Harbor, Suite •-~11 ·-.r • u work room, priv ba. FA 968-3l82. My \\'ay Co. 547-0036. 968-27B3. economical car, 23~ old, sltlons. Cajl EHy Ellia, Faftners Insurance Group Approx. be™-'D 3l & 24 hrs heat, 750 ""'· fl. in shopping 306, Costa Mesa. No soll-i'Ung, no -u·ng, ~ ·~ ~-·~-Em Ed Lani ·~ ..,, -week .,., FNP 1.rg white fml German GER\VICK & SON Tile FFEUR .....,,1., ,.. " "" ~ .......... ,u,... """""~ • * .....,..10..>'9 ,....... ' center, 3.13 E. 11th St., CM. Shepherd 1114, vie. Slater Bldg Contr. Addlt & Remod • CHAU ' extre .. ......, ~~~ h1's daily, \\'estminster ployment Aiency, 3400 Pleue Contact 645-2450, 673--0l40, 6T:HJ707. & Springdale H.B. S.12-6478 State -Lie: ID-ll4321 CERAMIC TILE NEW &: odd hrs. Muc'"11beo boodabl2!3e). GG, HB,_ar_ea, Good 5llP:: IrVine Bl~ .• -tLB. lnveatft•tor to $650 Grtg Newland 836-3500 FOIJ,l\-1ER .Architect olflce 8.lt 2:30. . 673-6041 549-2170 remodel. Free est. Sm jobs N.B. M"Ca. a ays ( pleme9tary income. 638-2924. EJCec. S.Cret•ry Ma.jar -t"OfP seeks super B•nk. of AnMrlc• Coast lt\\I' So. Laguna, 700 G•rdeninn , .-welcome. ~24ai. p~' ask for Mn. DELIVERY Fee Paid. N'attonal head-lhatp person for complete uon N-.....-Center rfr. Sq. Fl., suitable !O!' pro-FNO male blk Chihuahua. ··• ..., .. ~. Delivery-Driver • part.time, quarten of fut grow!n& co. training In credit reporttne N'~&ach Calit. fessional or business , wbt/dhest w/fica collar, PROFESSIONAL gardener, Top Soll over ·2l In. Huntington otfen eood sal., beaudtul field, Call Sam Rider ' 04ESK94-2417 e"-bl ~~ ~i·~· ~~~· Brookhurst, ttte ~'Ork, pr u n Ing . * QUALITY-* CHECKER AUTO -Bl·~ H ~~.2.&SE .... Beach.. Ofct & exciting ab:mlphett, ~'.... ~ lif ~~~1 • ..,,Equal ....... °"""' .......... "Em!!!!p!!!loy!!!er~·I space a v ....... e ...,., 1prinklers, cleanup jobs, *MULCH & TOP son.* YU· unua ....... EM::-. Good llkilb will !and tta ~ ~...._., 0 u vwi:,1'!' mo. Will provide furniture 6 1'110. old, standard, male, l a nd s ca p I ng . Geofit!, 586-6930 DENTAL OFC. MGR. outltand:lng oppor. Ca l J 2182 Michel9on Dr. NEED 6 couples. Eun al $5 mo. An5'vering service all hlk poodle, vlc 5th It 64fr5893. ' STORES Dental speda1bt n e e d a Heim Muon. 5 4 0 · 6 OS 5 , JANITORIAL Hrlp wanted, $100-nOOO mo u 2nd In- available. 17875 Beach Blvd. !~al~~-Realty, 842-~ Exper. Amer. someone wbo enjoys work-O>astal Pau•M:l Agency, Aten. Women or Couples, come. Appt. S..11 am, Huntington Beach. 642-4321 G rdene I 111•1 tn:g w/pubtlc to handle busy 2790 Harbor BJvd., CM. for pltlme eves. Apply 8-t,l.:;>1'>-5:;..:189=·-,...,.===-:-I Ol,~C~~ce :iv~ D~~e~~~~e~ Vi1~ ~.!. .. ~ ~8t0i ktkJMlll ~ ~o~!~eriopngpoe;;:~ ~uNt~ & ~ ~: ';7t!;, u~:e=~io~ ~~n: ~~ Ea• t ~w~:i~~-:;ar, Carpeting, drapes, air, 460 2D!h & Tustin, C.M. -TI4: 962-9i71 . 6 P1\I. Tat't, 230 Newport JANITOR, pltlme A laun-Over 21. Pay awrox. m ~ a~r ~ Sq. Ft. 548-025. COl\fP'EW°~CE LAWN Job W•nted, Female 702 ty to persons in· DENTAL Assr/ Center Dr., NB drea f/ttme. Mesa Verde 100. ltllllt. Bch area. sn-n>o ==""='~~=c,..,,_= LARGE Irish Setter, Coast MOWS AND EDGE I terested In retail <:XlNtROL NURSE nJRNmJRE repair .I: ban-O:lnv. Hc8p. en Center St.,l.,.bcii'ii' iilDiiamiiii ................ I DESK Space available $50 H\I.')', Dana Point, CLEAN UPS 536-5139 NEED help at home? We Happy intelligent, motivated d;yman, Stead:)-or pt-time. _CM=~~=~~=~~-I' mo. Wiii provide furniture 496-1252 ANY ANO .... G-~-n1 .... have aides, nur 1.e1 , careers. We hove tndMdual wanted for pn>-548-7583. JUNIOR SALESMAN: NOTEI :~a~~-~::chBi'~ \\'A'I'CH found. """"" cur.n: .. '6, --ho u aekpn, comparuom.1 ~ve office. Roura 7-3, GAL FRIDAY Earn s»-$1> per WMk 9.'0t'k· Re•I Estate S•le1m•n H 1 Call 641-2156 Trash Haullng . .,..,.qi~plete Homema k er 1 Upjohn openings for cash-salary open 979-6510. This co. needs 9.'ell organhled in& alter ldlool and Satur-It you have a license or want unt ngton Beach, 64Z-4.'rlL betwn. s &:-7 p.m. Se894-rvt23ce12. Glen t ""'1Y"">U40 or 541 ~•l. 0 E NT A L R -pt1o-'·t daya ,,,_ •-~ "Vl.00 iers, cou nter sales ........ iua • individual w/general ofc se ..... new tu-.Ti~ one 11ee Per Bolinger for 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB 1'"'ND B11re Vic: Hamilton & ~----~---'HOUSEWORK by the-hour. Laguna Hills, E1 Toro atta, e.xper. & math aptltud,e to tiona tor the DAILY PILOT. conhdenllaJ. intenrlcw. Red 2300. ll'OO &-S.10 sq. n .0fl9c Bushard, H.B. EXP. J apanese Gardrner. Week days. Call after 6:00 clerks & me nage· exp'd, aJI phases mastered. handle variety of d\lti,1. Thia I.a not a paper route Carpet, 497-1161. per sq, fl. Ample prk'g! :tiL 96'2-5046 Comp. Yard mal.nt. Shrol>-673-4Cfi,L Salary open, replies con-Fartutlc starting: Al & co. and don not include de·i-,....,!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!,..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!\ Baun1gardner, 541·5032. FND. Yng cat, grey & whle ~ ~l. Free est. DAY work. Gen'l clng. and ment troi nees. Ro-fidential, 83(l..11.]). beneftta. % Fee Paid, in. Uverla or collecttna. 0pt0.1! OFFICE space w/Jiarbor hair w/fiea collar, Vic MOW •. "OGE housekeeping. Rel. tnu'll. pid adva ncement, DESK Clerk, nlte shilt 8 Relmbur's:'.: Fee .. !~• Also. lvn~~ In ~SoMlh•sa.H ~~in NURSES view, no"· available to suit Beach & Hell H.B. 842-9628. ~ .1:.o S43-7ll)i or 541·9330 .... pm. Ask for J ackie J•son uwlt .,..ncy auey...,.,. \l un~ ... on RN al The Lido Building. GREY male manx type cat, CLEAN UPS . xlnt be nefits. Inter-Westbrook. Surf It Sand 17400 Brookhunt. F. Vly. Beach. Apply DOW by caJUnc Aulatant DNS, p M' •• 61&-4156 vie. Mesa Verde Costa • 554-0657 • Help W•nted, M & F 710 hotel. Call Mon tbru Frt Suite 213' 963-6775 543-3013. Supervbory exper. req'd. 300 SQ. FT. ?ttesa. Call 557-0627. Gentr•I S.rvlcH Ir • ¥ r 11 • 1 viewing Fri. I pm~ only .fM:-6574 GARDENER fllimc" main-F.quaJ Oppor. Emptey'r Sal lll!IO. Xln't trlngr Crpts, drps. $95. mo. O>sta ,» 4 -5 pm ot 11 I E. DISHWASHER needed. Ex· ._. ............ me.ii tor a--KEYPUNat 5496 or 9G10 beneftt!I. Skilled nuning P.tesa.. 646-7130 Lost 555 "THINGS" by Moose. Ge-i'l Accountant 1 $1.fK perienced Good pay & eood ;;~. Do not~; exp. Perm p/tirqe nttea. facility. PM'k Udo Health OFFICE suite, 650 sq fl , ---------1 Carpentry, Repaln, Plum-Sales Reps (So. State)$16K+ 19th St., Coste houri. References wanted. le• !ul\y qualified. Good Sys 3 opr. exper pref, Care, 466 Fiagship Rd, N.B. DnloWn Laguna, cpl, drps, Vicinity of Alpha. Beta, blng, Elec. Rem ode I Ing Sr. Chemist to $16K Meso. CarrD'l's Dining & Pie salary. Refer. 64.f-0494 56-0331. ~ Reasonable, 494-3028 Hamilton at Brookhurst, &U-5613 Maint. Engr ME EE S15K !mp, 628 N. Coast llwy., GENERAL OFFICE LADIES -earn $10 a da.,y NURSES Aide, 7-3 & 11-7 8u1in .. 1 Rent•• 44S OFFICE on Newport Blvd. Ava.ii. on lease. Partially furn, carpeted, alr/cond. parking. Approx. liXX) sq. ft. $1.50/mo. Warehouse also avail. Ideal for contractor. 548-2616. DOWNTOWN Costa Mesa. Ott!ce storage & rom- merclal. Nc\Y bldg, 16' ceil· Ing. From 800 to 7800 sq. tt. Call 548-3401 days, 54S-3270 eves. "THE Factory'' has a lrg shop avail. $185/nm. In Cannery Village 425 30th St., NB. 673-9606 or 642-8520. STORAGE 1260 sq ft 10' ceil. OH doors. nr NB Post Ofc 12c ft. 642-$20 Sl 15/UP, NU slores, ofliCi'!I, indiv air & heat. elevator:;, li301 8('ach, HB. 842-2834 1'~0R !ease: shop adjacent to Nf'\\-p()rt pier. Approx. 15'x20'. 675-8140. Industrial Rent1I 450 NOW LEASING Huntington Beach NEW M-1 !>IO Sq. Ft. & UP !Ismilton ..\'.: NPl\'land Sr. 960-1970 1140 SQ FT & UP NEW M-1 ~ pha.<ie \Viring. 782 \\'. 20th, Costa ;\lesa 3 doors Off PlacerUiA. J, B. SAU:\'DERSO~. 642-0Zi2 f'\'f'i'>, S4(}.2Z'i7 * COSTA MESA* 1300-1750-7400 ~. (l. Pri\'ate offices. Plenty of parking. Ready for occupancy. C. ROBERT NATfRESS, RLT. Costa J\1t"s.\ 979-6571 4001 BIRCH, NB 3600 ,..;r. fl. l5c per lq ft bek>\v golnJt ratt, II. mfg. "'hsle, strg. Baumgardner 541-S0.12. 600 SQ, IT. nu ~l·l Morage 11.·/crpt. fron! office. Jr rear door. $175 mo. 721 "'· 16th, 0 1. 6i"a-~7 dys & eves. 1300 Sq. fl. !\1-1 apoce w/lront ofll<X' lgc n!lr door $1AO mo. 1i93 \\lhlt!ICT, CM 646-&13 da)'11; 646-0081 e:ws M-1 1?20 1<1· ft. 786 Newtoo lady's ring, smoky topaz in CARPENTRY, electrica:I, Sr. Cost AccoUn~l to $12K An Equal Oppty. Employer L.B. X 1 , in your own home, part ahlfll. We will traln ne"'' gold mounting, re w a rd · plumblng, fix-It. F & B 1'~/C Bookkeeper lo S700 DOMESTIC Help G e 0 r g e Fee reimbursed. • n 1 ~me apply in penon on .... .....-J Xlnt beM'fi~ ~ -963~ k f 1 ""·1403 to..._,, starting saJ Gttat co ' ,.......-.~~ · · .,._.,,,.,.,,, CJr "1111 as or home Repa r, IO'W"' Exec. SecretarY •'""' Allen Byland Agency, UJ&.B benefits lncl~ding pr 0 f: !.fonday lhru. F 1t' day ~1Uch include in c CJ,n1 e Peggy. Hauling SecJr. 'Sey/~~ t: ~ ~.ooo per ~F. Blue u-, E. 16th St., S.A. 547~. sharing Fantutlc fututt 9am-5p.m. Gold oa st replacement I 2 wka v.ca· LOST Oct 31St. litale Tabby :.:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I ........ ._., ~.-.J •~ u""'~ ~ DRAPERY manufacturer for ~ indiv. w/aome ~':!,~':!'.. 15(8 S. Grand, 1'""'•·~ ~~.! Ayr. ANpply-at cat, neutered. Vic. Bcti & • Jr.Landscaper . to$600 642-55llbet'10am. needs e xperie n ced or afc exper who enjoys lots ..,. vc., t'\\ lleil, striped legs-, white YARD CLEAN~UP Out Sales art/aesi~ S00J OIILD care ln my home trainees tabling It machlne crt ~.'Ahlo Fee Jobs. LAGUN:A Bch. U.~in. Lov-Beach, orcall 642-2410 • chin,,neck, stomach & feet. Student v.-anted to deanl>Mit1ack ~~ng :~ near Pleuant View Scbxil operatDn. Good pay, J•son Best ~y Ing duld care + lite hou9e-NURSES • ~~:~ z:f1 S:l.::~ ~: yard ~Call~l2.s · Recept/Typist to $500 or pert-time babysitting Job holidayp &: vacations. Beach 17«X> Brookhurst, F. Vly ~front ~e, room LVN ;your · Ocrk Typist to $500 847·568L Drapery Service, 1K» W. Suile 213 963-6775 ~P • .e'-8466 Medicine &-charge exper. SML mix Terrier lem dog, blk w/white on chest, wear- ing _J>late w/W. L.A. name plate "J\1ariah". Lost BeRch & Adams, H.B. 960-2047 Reward. LOST black cat "Ashley" neutered male. while rollar, vie. 18th & Placentia, Costa J\lesa. Re,varrl. &12-7296 or &14-5292. RE\VARD. ntlssing since i1allo\veen, Kitten, /"Joshua") fluffy. \\itite, ~ rolor, spayed, flea collar, sai~ aft 5. IRISH Setter, 31:: YTS old. Dark mahogany color. Vic. of Capis1rano Bch. Broken tail. Braided leather collar. 496-1889 J\IALE sht>ep dog', Terrier mix, tan, 8l pounds, nns, to A1al achi Cl\1 lie 1813 516-4195 SMALL ,vhife Persian with .grey tipping, Re public homes area. 2763 Tern Cir. c.~f. 962-746-1. Reward. •1-~ .... ~ ~~ 50 hr CHURCH cult.odian approx 17th St. CM. · .m. Progressive skilled nuntng LOCAL moving &-hauling i•IAUUI~ ~· EMPLOYMENT OFFERED Gentr•I Ofc to $600 Landscir: Architect 1adlrty' . Xin't ---benef!tJ;,! by student. Large truck. Office Bo.Y-~ $2.25 hr. ~ hn per week, call G pportunl"' t sharp "'"15"' Reas BarTy 534-1846 or Dental/Gi11 Friday to $43.1.33 646-974.2 or ~ after Male, small lite mfg co. ~!. o w/aome 'J CJt': exper. or •ltntr P,,.,ark .hlLldoRdHeNalBth ~i:e..;...~ 6'73--0647 . CAIL TRISH HOPKINS 6 pm. needs reliable f I ttme &: tng. 11 you like Exp'd, Eary onen '•Bgl P • · '_.-(JU"N. CLEAN~P-Haullng. Garage, ~JERRI PER.500NB-WHm EMORE employee. Oppor. to grow a~ ~ u the job f<>r Flintridge Land.capo O>mp. NURSES AIDES I h \Vh t CLERICAL ¥1'/CO. Min. expcr. req'd. """'· 546-0791 Mature, eY1"11'1", -·d. I! you yart tras , trees -a ...... 2290 J' c 11 ,__ "~' ~--have you? Prompt, tree Cl:D\N""CC:•Arrlt.V""V TIME .,,.,.. · mt n e • J•aon hit Agency LOT man. Full time. Allen care we want you to joln. estimates. 847-SIZ .xJVl'wLJ r• ••• ~.f~I PART weekdays. 17400 Brookhunt, F . vty Oldsmoblle Cadillac. A&k us. F/time & p/tlme open-1· SKIPLOADER & dump truck 488 E. 17th St. (at Irvine) 0 1 (TEMPORARY ESTABUSHED I.Deal OJ. Suite 213 963-6T1'5 tor Mr. Stevens. ~ ingl. Paril: Lido Heallh v.'ork. Concrete. asphalt, Suite 224 642·1470 5 WKS.) ~s~%~t~':~ Gener•I Ofc. Tr•lnH LIVE-IN hou5ekeepe; I baby. ~?,Flagship Rd, N.B.: sa'ving breaking ~7110 ., ... 111 J/il' r ..,Jiili r4 """"" driving -rd , know Great ---. level. -for aitter. Afature. Will have I , . 9910 1J~ '"'II &"""" , .. ...., « hr ---.. ~:;:.! ..........._.. Great own room &: TV. 643-SQ), NURSES Aide• & Orderlies, 32 IT. FURNITURE Van General clerical d e tat I , Orange Co. att:a. 40 . ...~ UI'•'"' ""'•......... . all lhltts. Exper CJ r• tor local furn hauls & gen'I ACCOUNTING CLERK Hours: Mon thN Thun. 4--3 week. Company benefits. d18nce tor a~ LVN -L'ballengtng position trainees. lntef'V\eo.v 1\fon· hauling. 543-1862, 557-2736. Asstst cndit manager in pm, Sat 8-.f pm. Write Oa.ssllied Ad NO. 999, Ca1l Unda Ray, 54f).6(fi5, for tuII or p/lime employ-Fri 8a.m-4pm l!.fe1& Verde FREE Piclc-up Appllancn verilying credit applications, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Coastal Pet:ouiel ~. ment. ~nlng on ll PM-7 Conv. Hosp, 001 Center St.. scray metal. Can anytime'. ~rs.1:~irx= ,.: Interviewinc hrs 0 N L Y O:ista Mesa, Ca. 9'E.li. 2190 Harb:r Blvd., CM. AM ahlft. Top saJ & CM 543-5585 6T:>-a258 diliie, etc. Many fine com-12-2;30 Thun, November 8th. Help W•nted, M & F 710 Help W•nhld, M & f 710 =~~~: forp~~~n~.11 N,;U;,RSESo-='=""a7cld"e1-.-calc.-l -'11il"""' Uc-, HouMCIHnlnt pany benefits. Call Mn. PACIFIC MUTUAL LlVEinHousekeeper , Coav~sces:~~tal Greenman !or interview. 700 Newport Center Dr. rvrNrnurt' Ullll~ f.fature for elderly woman,1~~-"""'"-"'-:-~.,-.,-1 " 642-4321 or aptiy al the NewPort Beach tAUIUlll~t1 Must have ear, call from Ph•rm•cist Al1l1t•nt DAILY Pll.O'I', 330 West 12-6, ~um NEWPORT BEA.al • • Of • • • Bay Street, O>s1ll M.... CLERK TYPIST 1511. 2511. 751( MAClllNlrni expcr .-led PHARMACY Accountfng/Bkkpr $100 Great atatting aalary l<>r SALARIU • NIGOTIAU 1or small mMut. ~ Xln't Muot be able "' ~ .,.. GO FROM RED sharp indlv, w/a'!j_ typlng Are You UnempW,o ed Now-Are You Seeking working conds ii: co ICl'iptk>ns and type Jft- To BLACK A: lite 'xper. Xln t oppor y • ~..... Apply Tapma"-,· tcrl_pUom labels. Recent ex· 1 d nt A Chang• -orried About our n9e -ucin:u.. ...,. Contact Super high paying sp:>t tor orJ;,;_ancea:.f A-ncv T'ored of Broken Promisei-Undeclded As To Corp, ll'>l KeUerlng St, ~:C; ~lred22ll . • &table friendly lndJv. SmaJI •-Irvine. 97&-«8>. · Y r, · 1-;:;;::;;::;::;:::~:;=::;::;:;;;=1 &: congenial firm. Xln't ~ 17400 Brookhunt, F. Vly. A Proper Cours e of Action-MALE help wanted, apply PHARMACY salesgirl, run ~~;~~h. w~~~I roh:k HOUSE OF CLEAN por. Call Barbara Mac, Sulle 213 ~775 ARE YOU UNDER PAID7 1-4 pm, Kentucky Fried ttme. F.xperlcnced only. "'ith green trim. Gi&-l287 :->ror. care tor home or olc. 833-2700, Denni.I & DeM il COMMERCIAL If Yott Ca11 Anwer Tlte FollowllMJ c.t...,S• Oitcken, 693 s. Coast iiwy, ;,61'C'>--064-"-"-G.~-----I after 2 pm. Cat"J)ctii, upholstery & floors. Personnel Agency of Irvine, • lo --Affl • .,._tlwo, We'd Ull.t Al lttll'Yfew LaJUM Beach. PR Asst-Secretary 546-5745. ll'.182 Mlcbclaon or. 'TELLER •-MAN-TRAIN •-w'·'-"' ti·· Tha CrHtlvo Touch $2j. RE\VARD for lost cal. Wlttt YOI w• •nuvw ,,. JI.Tait>, Part Siamese. Blue Masonry ADl\fl'ITING Clerk, exper Expni M ~ IMt.&.ller. Start $2.25 hr. Tlllented indlv. will compoae t>yrs. Rhinestone col lar. !/Ume. 3-11:30 pm shift. enc IF YOUI AN5"dS All TIUTHFUL Railes to $4..50 within 1 yr. pttU releucs in lhl1 ex· ./l~l-7198. Brick-Block-Stone l\1on thru Fri. Hospital ex· UNITED 1 _ WI CAN HILP YOU Over 25, tall, neat. Sorry, pandl8' co. AttractlVt! k LOST car, male, t iger * &6-8266 * per a must. p 8 c 11 i c • CALIFORNIA BANK A. Do yo• h~"• 1tron9 •ocetlo11el 4tl¥11? no long ha.ln. 64.f..3494 artlcu1ate ind.Iv. eought. Cl.JI P I . A Hospital, 842--0611, ext 211 I. Do you heYO tood 111tl•• hrtelll9•11e•1 MAN nffded to 1 earn L,ynn Manch, 8 3 3-2 7 0 0' ~~!:~.~~: Generous 1 pntinghai I ADMITI'lNG I: PBX clerk, 2301 S. M4tn St. C. Do v•u fMl 111fftcl11ntly M•tl••t-4 to ••ltl•••1 It• t Ion e r y bualnea. Dennlt A DeMil Pulonnel •per !?9 nt p/tlme 11PM-7:30AM, Sat Santa Ana D. Do yo• h•"• tfl• eblllty to rii•k• 4•chlo11tf Pleasant work. F/tlme. ~of Irvine, m REWARD for return or \\'hitc ma1' German Shep. lmt in So. Laguna. 499-3665. BLACK mal' cat, short hair, altred. Vic:. 23rd &-Qranee, C.M. Re'A"oll'd . 64H(ll!. LOST, Irish Setter. P.tale Fountain Valley 96.J..1536 PROF. wallcove:r!ng !!late & Sun. Hospital exper. I 5"47·9681 E. At• you r••4v to 11t • N•llritc c1rMr oblectl ,.f Stach Stationerl, 1 801 Dr. lie. No. 279514, Insur., all must Pacilica Ho a P 1 ta I, i;o_ ... , """-'-'"';"' f . /f Y•• woto co!M11cocl tliet liol, w11 •••il1!.l•1 ••ultl Newport Blvd, CM types ot paper. 7 14.: 842-0611. ext ?U. ~-'"'l'l""'··-.. v you ecu,t rt without 41 l1yf MARINE Malnt Co acekl Program Mar $2'lK 84:1-1.1$. ARE YOU Dnpioyer YOU SHOULD KNOW fllll • Jlirt'timo '111Plo>-. ~;m".:! =:-~ PAINTER, hl~hly qualified, AMBfTJOUS ·MATURET COOK for '4,mily o vtr e Th• Mttet f•IM .,. 11ot 14 .. tfftetl most have .,me Pa1ntinc DI.ta Communktdonl efficient, ¥i'OU1d llke your ~ten ~-":.'°'!-~ OuistmN ~ ~. e Thlnil P,•rtt profot•lon1l l11flu.•11c1 11 1om1tim11 ~~~ exFripsr1,1 a1~AMtn 0ettp Encr (mt<:h) to $1tK bu.')ness. Reas. 6-12.-3158. your UIAU'lll P 1unot::. """ u~ .f II H\D'IL Harbour n1c1111ry ,__,, _.. ;30 · Cost Aernt Manut to $12K ~·1 W111 -....1 For hltttY'ieW • ~m., · • • a.tt'••t d 0 •lt hl 4"" ..... fl, 1111 tli• rl9ht 111¥11 r•· Sea Lancen Xll E Cout ..,--.,I ~·-•-PROF. Wallcovering. SI. Uc. !'." 'iM. =-ot :;11).()928 :nJ, ~~:1681. ~ m •· ~·~· u~ -no 279514, Ins, all ~ of &M1, _........,,,, • .,,.. qifft•• ttth11iqt1el 1 Hwy NB Glrl ~:___!uena Pie to $150 LOST: ?>tale Silky Terrier, paper, 71'/8~··•-. APT. u -. 'C"v..'d. fCJr 15 COOK f/tlme, eve1 o.,.,.. e EsecuflYe ,otltl•111 •t• fl lle4 thro1.1gh i 1tcutlv1 "" MARRIED pencn over 21 F/C DllAP", F, Vl,y $700 rd M ~ " ~·-,..xiv ..... ""I' Con.set,nOou1, reliable, ta 1 ~--" ...._ i·-·-~ -Afes!'I Ve e area, t .1 ::P"'RO~F-;:'-...,.,., .,-~..,-"ln,..>es!-.,.-.. ~-.-unit&, O>lta MeA. I '· "----"·" lfl'V 11wt: ,.1 I ~ ,.,~ nece.. ~ ~"' to -pm, 5'49-3293. REWARD! . p&Jn."'r• WVl"• "-II CC Doyle ~11611. . earn ~ auv._.....,.., '-&I.I _., M111 rotlilfl'IO M•llln9, I• 11ot i ' •n1w1r .....ic. to It.art. BN-f(O). Jeannie Sllco .... •. ln!'/ext, rre. estlmat<. ~ . • • ~20$1 •fl 3 pm. SERVICES, INC -~Id Hofhn Refs. 548-7To9 642-~•. ASSEMBLERS, f/llm< daya. EXECUTIYE , MASSAOETICH, 6. • ...,... an °""=-.::.,;.='-' =;;:°'.=.~-, ly ,_,, ManulactiJr. COOK. !/time, wlll !rain. '-T"•INll NlnrvltT [ -~-Jl5J Store Fronts, room1 & ,.pp~J.-"'"''VW c.onvalescent bo1 pl tal . .._ H ... Al AllW'•,.. '"' ""' p I rn -bldM, ~-p. le~rin • 11111• """C Lopn Av .. , CM. ···---r C I T ' YNM• .__ (13-2!) .... t..i or-· ,,~ ~ ... ~. So11cl R••utn• Or 11 •••Y w""l .. ,_,. I_ m Dovlf' Dr N Expert work. AVON MAICIS COSMETICS con 111 I tan t -Fo-· lor loeltlmat< full lime J>OI• " ' • HI QUALITY LOW $ CHRISTMAS THE SEASON needed by Thi ~· no NO COST IXICUTlYI INTllTll'lf Uon. No exp. nee. W• atnd '6a1ll . ' E OLLY -• ...,.. SIRYICIS IN~-•TID '° achool ... ,,, ..ttlt. i..rn.1"!"m!'!~~'"!'!'--!!!!!•I Uc, Ins, Rd1 • $42-1101 TO B ' J . exper. MC., we u~n. mCU n•• _R,_ Apply In -U11 all. or1you don'! need a gun 1o EXTER. PAINTING Eamu anexAtravou.....,.nepce,.f""nta·~ Mutt haw ... of..,., Call < •• II. 1.IAIN 'T, -HOMI Ol'fllCI 1-IAllTA AMA evo. l930 W. Clot. Hwy., "Draw Fut" when )OU Way, Cllt. $200/mo. i.e .... Accountint Cati &1;.2.'tlO, u . ..;.;.;..;..._-""---- F': ._ Ji MU7.l2 1~ uv"C 963--4552 for lntftVW appt. St curlty l t11it l w lilllflt Newport Be4ch. , place an ad In the DalJ.y n!I! ._ m in >wr spare time. Call: Al:k tor Janelle. S1i1I .. 702 IUt ..-lta IN JUI\ a _.,. Pllol Want .Adlt Call now *Wollpapor Hangar* 540-lOll. 6 U-. I daya lo< Ill· Call PM0•1 17141 147.fUI ..u •--· • - ca!1 Rtl>lto 616-3149 Nttd a "l'M"T Pha u &di !Odo{ • • • --_="'-='----,---1 SQ SQ. FT. tum or untum ACCOUNTING & omc<. C1i>1 " dfl'I. N.B. TAX SERVICES lllO. &16-1lt!1. Reuon&llle. C 1 11 1114) Want ad rtl\dt. ..... 6Q.S71 ~ utc for Jtlck. ' -, -·~ • I ' Tut!day, N°""'btt 6, 1974 Hoip Wont;i, M .... ~-1 Hole W1ntod, M .. F 710 Holp Wonted, M .. F 7lo tlelp Wentecl, M & . 710 1 elp Wented, & 10 iano1/0r1•!" SUBSTITUTE Cafoter lu I •tto . Jll'I. JI -•• Jl l!l. l • PIANOS 12 TWO ~tine MaUter 7mm riOrs. Coorl condltloo. $50 --~). ALL POSITIONS 100% FR.EE S CASH S Penonnel Agency 833-9700 ALL BEAUTI FUL CO'S, ORANGE, NWP T BCH l FASHION ISL. ALL FEES PAID BY EMPLOYERS Bonds Gal $700 A.~urance I: 1'~\drl ity cte. Top Company ... NO\\t! File Supervisor $500+ *Print Shop Coordinator* GIVE US YOUR BEST AND WE'LL GIVE YOU OURS! "" ~ SECRETARY \Yorker. Short hou". ~ -v * v • ORGAN S HH I., ,_.,_, ~. top ru.. u needed. $2.!ii anil ~;;;;;;:;;;;;::;~:;;;;;;;;;iiiii;;::.~1 ~ .... e are ......,......, •u• a hollr. tn Costa Me• a .11 FULLERTON MUSIC ,:z:; notch lleC'f'ttary lo learn 1be Newport Beach. Corona de! a ti 800 • ad b1i. U )'OU take Mar arta. Apply at """ quet IOO Antlquet Our Newest Location shorthand, type fut &: 8.C· Newport·MHa u n It led 18191 Euclid, 1-"ountnln Valley ~HARBOUl =~· &R:'b!':f1..:l School Dbtrlct, UST Ptacen. ANTIQUE AUCTION I Blk. N~,,~ DloaoFtt•· REAL.TY Ad 'no. 964 clo D&Uy Pilot, ~la~':'!:· Costa PtlHa, \Ved. Wtdnesdey Night November 71h,'7pm way at 557-4136 Expands Off-Shore P.O. Bo• 1560. C.•ta Mesa, ~ .. =.. LOCATION : Orango Counly Fair Grounds R ntal f ,5 Ca 9'JS26, SUPER ,;pcr<tary wanted. in the Sports Bulliling , 88 Falr Dr., Costa e S tOm f Nfw Ir. UIOO dl\ing equip. mcnt SACRIF1CE! Call E\'ell Ii. .,.,ltnda 96l-<US3. TV, Rad io, HiFI, Stereo ZENITll, RCA &: Sylvania. T\' F· sttt"\."03. priefll les~ than U1(• diaoountt'rs, \\l'ith 3 1'1.-o ~le onces opening ~~!'!!!'!"!!'!'!"'!!'~~~~I Newport Beach publisher Mesa, (off Newport Blvd.) now! Ground noor ol)OOC"IUn· SECRETARY/MARKETING needl 11kllllul, cheerful pro- H,v for ambitious &ales ~ Proitttssive developer In fessional girl v.•ho enjoys pie, ln11n<!dlate Ooor time Orangt! Co. desires a being a good secretary. Xlnt uvallable. Immediate-ean1-Sec/assist to the markcllng salary &, benef\11. ld<':al lngs possibte. \Ve have solid manager. Mu•t be able to working c n v Iron men t re!emlls from new home. take . shorthand &: rel&led w/"'°·ondcrful people. Appb' sub-dlvlstoM or the 01risll· secretarial 5kills. Must be ln person 335M Via l.ldo, • P. & G d )'r. pi<'ture tubes. l yr poru b 'd d t1nos r1n s & ~,, ... ,1, .. e. All •""•liable Huge assortment o! Antiques to e llqu1 ate N •--1 ·--""' ~ ... • ew •Putt:<• u.vu• #'liJ>I 1nodels In stock & on by leading European Antique Importer. s stylCli and finishes dtiplay •• 73 modell priced Fine collection oi Furnlture, Clocks&: Glass-\VurULier Grand s1rnusl\ 10 cleAr .. caih oo plan ot ware. Uptight piano • · ·•· •••· • $G9 tmms to 36 1nos. ABC Colol' SPECIAL NOT E : ,. \Veavt-r Spinet········· $l4Q TV. ~2l Atlanta. or 19046 Fr b • du M · bo S' & Player piallOS • • •• from $999 Bro o khunrt, Jiunlington enc •Jazz Ban us1c x, unoens e 20 Grands in stock. Nev.•. Beach, 968-3329 or 962-~. Lorez. Plays 10 tunes, 94" high, 4511 v.•ide, Used and rebuilt. Prlcrd ana Con1pa11ies. a sell starter w/marketing 0N;;•i;•;;;·poiii;rtiii8eiiaiiobiii. iiiiiiiiiml CALL BILL COMSTOCK exper. Please ll'nd resume (7141 846·1384 & (213) 592-2845 or contact Sharon Halstt'd TECHNICIANS VARIAN DATA MACllNES lhe big conipany in small computer!! hu an in1- n1cdlate OJX'nlng in our In. :-hOuse print Shop tor u coordinator. Responslbilitleii Include coordinaUng a 11 phases of printing and ---------• reproduction. You wlll be at Ponderosa Homes, 2082 Business Center Dr., Irvine Electronic· Technicians Positions available for in- dividuals w/milltary elec- tronic background -or col· Jege level t.lectronk:.courses -or at-lealt 1 year of electronic exper. restored to mint cond.-Early Dutch Sleigh from $395. Yamaha -Kna br STEREO, Pan a ' 0 n 1 c · -Very Large Bronze Clock Set with figures fuz~~~n Sto~aml:inct~'u:: ~1~~re. ri:'i!rlSet. 3 2 '::_ responsible for ordering and maintaining materials ro-~uircd ~ produce oopies of final prmted publicationt. Determine ty])(' of plates required for each printed .tob etc. You \VIII also direct and supervise collation and ~mbly ot publications. A thorough knov.·iedge of offset printing, plate mak- ing and ffiated bindery o~ratlons necessary. If you meet these qualifications 11nd are looking for a com·· pany that oHers: * ModC'm Facilities * EXCC'lkont BC'nefits * Competitive puy Please apply in person or t'Ontact B. K1:a!ka. VDM VARIAN DATA MACHINES" 2722 Michelson Drive llvlne, Calif., ~I (714) 833-2.icx> Robinson's Fashion Island im-2180. SECRETARY-EXEC . Shrthnd, typing & ......-al yrs. Pxp. lX'C. to handle ti.Us challenging po«ition foc dental specialist. Den1at ofc, exper/not nee. but must en- joy '\o\'Orking w/pubUc. Sal. open. Hunt Bch. n4: 962-6671 & ornate candelabras signed Math. Moreau Kawai _ s ieinv.•ny -Cable 0100175=. -'-G-7•~-'~116':,-,,,..-= Societe Des Bronzes De Par is -Highly · Nelson -Kincaid -Cable RCA rolor TV \l.'ilh tt1notc Carved Oak Sideboard, restored to mint -Bal<h,'in -Chlckf'ring -ro1urol. \\'orks Xlnt. \Valnut cond-Highly Carved Oak Sideboard \Vith Sohmu. <'abin~t. Sl21J. 558-1782. glass front bookcase top-Set of 6 chairs • Organs . Now Hiring For ·Christmas All Areas Please Apply DANA 2401 ClllllPUJ Or .. Irvine (Near O.C. Airport) Equal Oppor. Employer mlt with different carved figures on each back-100 to choos" from Highly Carved Oak Sideboard dated 1612-Nev.-, usro and Trade-In~ Free to You I!' Early highly carved Oak drop front d esk., ~~~~~nd .. ~i·rt;;;,;~; ·:: · S: '-------' + Security SECURITY GUARD with carved figures-Pair of signed Tiffany Kin1ball s,\•ingcr .....•. S'illi $l 00 candlesticks, 11" high-Fine roll top desk-\Vurlllzer 3 KeybolU'd .• $1195 3 lines, 1 Tlm11, • Apply ' in pe.;_,n 10-S No. 2 Fashion ls!., NB Equal Oppor. Employer Pump organ-Fine assortment of clocks & L<w.TC'Y Holiday · •• .. •• · $495 URGENTLY much more. All items to be sold with no ~~;:ricS~i~~t·~::: m; reserves. Doors open at 2 pm for vie\ving. i.ranunond-Bal<hvin-Conn \Vurlitzer-l.o\\'l"ey-KimbaJI VARIAN DATA MACHINES NEEDED C & L AUCTION SERVICE . Yamaha-Gulbran"n I ·--------•I has an imn1ediate opening Ontario, California FULLERTON MUSIC, SALES for a Sc<'urity Guard to APPRAISERS-LIQUIDATORS-AUCTIONEE RS 122 N. Ht1rbor. Fullerton $400 WEEK Work 4 Hrs D1y New Cad Furnished >,1,·ork Ja to 40 hours per (25) Trai·nee 871-1805 'vcek. Prior postal ex· FOR INFORMATION 714-62:8-0516 hrs: Or>c'n Nights 'til 9 perience desired, but not Sat. 'ti! 5:30, Sun. 12·5 mandatory. Th~ po•itlon !'<'-Assemblers Applioncos 802Ml1coll1noou1 818 F 0 L """"' • rel\able P''"'" to ree rgan essons \\'Qrk independently and FRN' EIGHHTtpoDAM1 Ab1E . S~E NO LIE • • .• • • • handle a variety of plant VOLT ew o m re rig s, A 1 A y L 'k I Protection and safet y dlsh,vashers &: range" , I BUY'' I ... ong S OU I e assignments. The nom1al Instant Personnel \\'RShers &: dryers, Jactory •• Non-players & playl'rs y,·eJ· FREE kittens. long hair. ttdornble. Call berore 6::ro, 213/174-1880 or aft 6:30 pm, 714/8'17...g.\85. 1 YR 1.falc Gcklen Rctrie1."<'r Sht'p mix dog, to good hon1c, gent\e. 5'1.~·516.1. GRAY poodle lo gd home, 4 nlO. Call Animal Control 536-2311 or s.17-:;1)2() [ ""'""-][B \'ou'vl' read these ridiculous •schedule v"ill be Saturday Temporary Service warranty. Good, late model ful'nitlll'f' & come to attend Tuesday ads ~---·. Now, flore ,., p '1 3848 ~--Dr 9.Jt•-100 BEACH CITY APPLIANCE appl.iMCf'! or aell for you !! night al 7:30 P~I. \Ve "''ant Cats 852 ......... v • ., and Sunday l0:30 ·" · to ......... ....,. ., "'" MASTERS AUCTION :::;;,;;;,, _______ _ 1v1\at 11·e have to offer. AA 6:30 A.lo.I., \\'ednesday and Nl!\l'JlOrt Beach S.16-4741 3623 W. \Varner, SA !).6..-0780 everyone to learn to play company is expanding o~ Thursday 12 noon to 6 P.M., Equal Oppor. Employer 2062 N. Tustin. Orange 2075~ Newport, C?o.t 6''6-8686 the organ! Ali materials e-ration In 0,.......,... Co \Ve F 'd 11 A'' t 6 p M !!!!!!!!!~~~!'!!""""""'! 998-5656 839-0974 aft. 6 or Sutvlay furnished. need 00\\", 10·~~duais to w~~8~1oooaY ~o Tuesda,Y WANTED MAYTAG washer le elecbic Behlnd Tony's Bldg. itat'l. Tom Dieterich· in charge. help open offices thruoul. oil. Individual chosen may Semi conductor wafer pro-dryer $17'5. Kenmore elec REFRIG-Freezer -no frost, Phone 641·1851 PERSIAN kittens , CFA reg., $30 & up. Xlnt. quality. * 892-2970 * 154 (10 Girls) Beautiful pany. All benc(l!s. An equal opportunity employer m/1 rom-..,..,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Our co. has given U.'i un-be asked to >,1,•ork other cesstng penonnel. Polishers, dryer $50. Kenmore washer Gen. Elect. 18 cu. It COAST MUSIC limited finances for this pur. schedule:1 to cover vaca· etchen;, gagers, inspectors. $40. Guar. &: delivered. aVOC8.do cost $400, Sell $260. Newport Blvd, at Harbor GERMAN Shepherd puppit!a, pose. Come In for interview tions. Etc., This position of-All shifts avail. Expel'. not 546-8672 847-8ll5 Sofa 100" goldf.green. Cost Costa ltfrsa 9" wks old, weaned, need Secretary $500 .Bright c11.t'l'E'r gal \l.'ith light secretarial !kllls. C~ims Examiner Salary Open ltealth &: accident. Good ex· per. Name your$$$. Secretary $550 2 Busy VP' s !M!'C:k gal to take o .. -er. Typist $450 PUBLIC relations agency & we'll see v.tiere \\'C go fers: necess, 'but reHabili"' ess61. W h /D !650, sell Ma'\. Garmen.I F!SllER n-by Grand, l'=e"'nccd""'°'y""anl""""'54&-"-"2464""""'""" ' •• k . ·-•·-! · 1 1 1 1 v Rent as ers ryer1 "MN oo -: ......... '" ...... ,, assis an rom iere. 1'"ast growing electronic ma. fol~over travel case, Lee'}_s-\Valnut finish, xlnt CQnti. AKC Champion sired Black with writing ability. Send *RESPONSIBILITY terials co. Silcoa, Inc. 4100 $2. \Vk . Full malnt. plaid-never used. $19 . ;,_O $950 or best olfer. Please Standard Poodle Puppies ~!~~ ~!'~· Box 1903, lnte~~~~'in:t the *JOB SALLTISFTACTION i tacArthur Blvd., ·Nev:port * 639-l202 * lfair dryer, Sunbean1, ~· call 645-3.)53' aft 7pm or l\fales, 646--7555 *EXCE EN Beach. 8J3.38d3. 'Id ' M • I 806 Wig case, blk patent $5, wkends .. ~IEL~E . ARC reg PUN'Cll PRF.SS TRAINEE Suite 301 -BENEFITS WANTED male or remah.• Bui 1n9 at1r1a I Travel ironing board $3.50. ='"'::::"'.'--=-~--:"' .,.. •t-puppies. · 'J'o $3 hr. for large na-25205 La Pa'l, Lag;'Hill s . J\lANAG~· TRAINEES/ e Surplu1 .Bulldlng Call, 644-4584 or 644-7007. Sporting ~d s 830 :~~~~nd :1i~iist Champ . Uonvride corp. seeking (A '-Sano· ,_, ) *COMPETITIVE ASS'~ MANAGERS t M CHIN!~ • · I _ .. career minded person. ~~tusl 1 1'~ K"gO ""'''Y· PAY · '~ 1 · 0 r r.1ATERIAL 1000' Of NE\V A ~•. " mise, too s; THE F IRING POINT SJLJ<Y terri ers -2 females. Thu1·s .. Nov. 81.h. 1:55 FM KENTIJCKY FRIED CHIC ......,,,._IS' !loo. I 5 ,_ pl 2 tool chests, 1 drav:ers B o.1 & Trad ~ bl ff f __ , be high school grad & have Ask for Joe Brookes *MODERN KEN stores 'in So. Orarige ••Loi•· . rs, ~IA"r, Y·. roll-away, $.150. Like neiv uy, ~ 1 e . ,,o rea!Ol1a e o er re u"""'. neat appear. Be able to No Phone Call PIOO&C. 1 FACILITIES County Coast locations. Call ~·.alum sheeting, mold· mattress&: springs w/older G1ms. Amm~ & Accessones CaD 832-9422 or ·~118. work overtime. Happy to •!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! for appointment~ B'"u"ILwindowDER's"s'uc.RPLUS pineapple dH!gn 4 po!!ter . All m8:JOT brands OLD English Sheep, AKC Lra.ln you . Co. promotes peo-If you meet these re-WANTED de p en dab I e single bed $8.'i. 673-ii.127 T .. ~mg Olnstmas ~way puppies, call pie from wilhin th c SALES POSITION quirenients and are in-2406 So. Main St., S.A. before 5 pm. i~ow. Mon thru Fn 10 am-* 960-Ui88 * organization. Work in their tcrested in joining a grow. mature man for night l!ihift f.Ion thru Sat 10.a 9 pm, Sat 9 am-6 pm, Sun ..,...,...,:""'"'""'"";-;;= dental prod div. OCcidental Lile in NeWport ing Orange County com· at liquor store. Palisades n t : 546-l03'.1 AUTOMATIC ·c A R A.GE 10 am·S pm. 979-2171 . 2107 *AKC BOXER PUPS* EOIO JOB AGENCY Bench has a position open puter company, please ap-Liqoor, 2072 S. E. Bristol, DOOR OPENER. Finest s. Main St .. Santa Ana. Private Party 496-9381 315 3td St., Suite 503 lor an enthuslltl!itic indiv. ply in person or contact: (near 0C Airport) Furniture 810 known brand. Reg. $200. __ ~ __ .imi ---• -<TN- Huntington Beach 536-1439 7;~~=ia1Pos~~~u~t The Pcrmnnel Department WAREHOUSE OF.CORATOR'S Italian style ~ s::. ~:J ':: WUXVWVJ£G.\LVLM&_ - REAL ESTATE SALES ne'v commWion contract TRAINEE desk· white console table 533-1415 $49 that is top in indui1try. VDM Looking for mature alert in· w/4 'yellow velvet stooU·G c=EN:.,:,UJNE:::,~.~.Ex~erey-~d-e'~' ~,-,P LICENSING SCHOOL Jnitia1 financing & direct divldual v.•illing to learn & I m· p o r led cha:Melien'. $290. Wfllton massage roller $49 Includes books, materials mall yrogram. Call f.tr. accept respoosiblllty in 646-J231 $100. Walton belt vibrator and all classroom sessions. Freund!, 644-5600. estab~ N.B. finn involved in FINE quality \rg Oak dining $75, like nu, 235 Poppy, N cost " SALES CLERK VARIAN DATA }'&do!Ulg, baol<pack!ng, ""' I -~· o to you -u you . v.·ear textiles.. Good future room se~. coHee tab e, com· _,c"de:M::._,•:::•~"-""""-----I joln a Tarbell office alter ~ading pharmacy st' ck s MACHINES for right' perQt Gen'I ware-~. 8 couch, gold vclvet passing your state exam & sales orie"nttd iodiv. to M."11 2722 Mlchel!On Drive house & shi-· duties. Call ch&lr, all xlnt. 673-2483. your tee ol $49• will be cosmetics &: sundries. f.fust _.. Cal" -· OAK ~ bl 2 ,,,,._ refunded If -,'OU ... -.~11 ... Ca.II J .. ,,.iie, u ; ~--661066. \\VU\l ta e, UUl.I..,... .,, ..... .....,, be a:ble-to '\o\'Orl< 2 eves a (714) 833--2400 m7 Oranee Ave ,Cdif Misc1lleneou1 W1ntod 120 A CONVIHIDIT SHOPf'INC Sf.WING GUIDE fOft THE CAI.ON THE GO. Al -~· ,\-eek. cau Mild \Vhite. Warehou.-Foreman * 642.1353,.. •· ' Join 8 group af lovely ga1i tRBE~L 0 ' I 540r605.1i. CooslaJ Personnel nn equal o pp o rt u~ity Fee Paid. Rapklly growing 12, . al 1100 ~. 511 TA ..; , R11 tors Agency, 2790 Jfarbor' Blvd., employer m/1 O>sta Mesa firm seeks ex· orange seciJOn · PRIVATE PARTY NEEDS & super guys. ~,.pe 67 offices. It .growing O f '!!!"!"!'~~!,!!!! ... !!!!!!~!!!!!!"" per "''tl1"ehou1Jema w/oome game table & chairs $100. SEVERAL USED RUGS, ORIENTAL RUGS For en ad In WOl'h•n~a World Coll Miry Both 642-5671, ext. 330 Fool-111e-Eye! Afghan Decor! w.p.m. Advancement potcn· --"'-"'""':Z..."'-'""-="-· ~ · A bottles 551 •736 ... ·-** 6~8773 la1 REAL F.STAl·r,; SALES S I Ou Id $600+ SERVICE StaOon .sale11:man s1Jfle'IV\Slon cxpcr. Salary to von · .., · ~'1..:>w * 1.,. t ' SUCCESS CAREER a e s-ts 1 & lubeman. Top pay & fringe tGf;O. Ca11 F.d WoU, 54()..Qfi6, BEAUTIF1JL-Decker dining WANTED ·· to buy: 1965 Secretary ~•ew or experienced. Join the At1 be~, Some coll~t' benefits. Experienced man CoUtal Penonnel Agency, room table. 4 valour chairs. Chevelle or Chevelle Ma1ibu world's tarze1t and fallellt WE TCLIFF preferred full or part time. 2190 Harbor mvd., CM. $450. 545--1513. -left front fender. grille J:J"Owil'lg resale orpnizaUon Per.fonne!. Agency Shell, i 1th &: Irvine, WHO WANTS 'ru WORK ? SOFA 9' Contp matching and front bumper. Call ask t~50 with a netv.'Ork o! over 500 16.'il E. Edi~, S.A. Ne\\•port Beach. DRIVE A CAB! 4~i' Joveseat xtni cond for Larry, 968-497L .,., !fl __ .. ._._ (~dark UI Center) o ctt &111.1 u=u1ne a ~ SERVICE Stn attendant full CHOOSE your ho\al, work *536-3359* OUTDOOR carpeting wanted \Vork on ov.•n ln }ovcly ot· ftces. Greal boS!. Fantastic bel'IC'(tts. Receptionist $500 Be The Queen Bee! Airport ofc. Large corporation. Receptionist $500 Large new building. Irvine. Poise, excellent on phones. Keypunch $500 Six months cxper. C.Orgeous building. 1\ll c o 111 pan y beneUls. Commercial Insurance Salary Open member of our Millionaire time, exper, well groomed. for yourself, be your own KNG Sz Cane Hdbrd He~ used inexpensive approx 4' Club. lifultl-m1lllon dollar ~PERSON, for l':it· Apply in penon, Chevron boss. ~ten or women. Can droden. 2 Wrought' iron x 9' 'and/or 9' x 15', advertlstni program. Free1 pandi.ng young de Ii g n Stn. 26988 Ortega Highway, be slightly handicapped. tables &. chair sets. Ames GT::i-1942 CdM. guarantet'd lloenling scboo . oriented firm, pnrt or full San Juan Capo. N e a t-Oean Appearance. Aire patio furn. Settle t::xcellent Wes training. time. H.U.D.O.L.E. So . SERVICE Station, 6-11 shift. '?ts. retired. Age ~ to 70. benches etc. Call 644-(8)9 Musical Instruments 122 Please call 542-:-i689. '°""':::::!...Vil:.:'::1"1!~•'-. ::"56-:::,:Tn,:;::O:,· --I Supplement your income . ..::.:=:=:'.''C::.::;,.::::::~;..;,. O"--1;c.;;:.:.::;o.:..:.;;:oc.:;o;.;,;,;;c.;;....._ 1 Ren\ Estate Sales SALESPERSON, exper in ~e .... ~~·Bl~I 19th &. Drive a cab 6 hrs or~ a * SOFA & LOVESEAT * RENT FOR ONLY $3 OPENING FOR retail gill store. nay,, •""" day. Apply In P''"'"· ""'"' u..<J, $155. OR BUY WITH NOTHING & v.·kends. Must have refs. SERVICE Station Mechanic, Yellow cab Co., 186 E . 16th Vacuum cleaner $IO. 968-79lO OOWN. Orum, PA'1, ~1ikcs, Neo.v or experienced real Buggs International. 2043 exper . Class A lie. F/thnc. St .. Costa Mesa. EARLY American S' sofa, Guitars, Amps, Roe-organs estate people. Your O\i·n \Vestclllf Dr .. N.B. ~op Pay'or.Areo, 19th & WIRE OPERATOR $50. 366 Esther St., Costa &: Pianos, all brands. private desk & phone, good SALESGIRLS wanted, $2.00 ev.'PQrt, · I Experience required. Na· Mesa, 5e42'l1. No &&e limit. no parent need· walk·ins, free advertising, hr, part time, Singer Studk>s SERVICE Sta .. Employee. tlonnl flnn located in the Gerena Sale ll2 l!d. OPEN NIGHTS TILL 9, same location 18 yrs. Call 645-().172 Must do repalr work & Newport Center. Call for •-SAT. TIL 5:30, SUN. 12·5. : ~AITANYTIME e SAILBOAT, quality 8S!lur· drive tow tnick. 2800 \V. an appointment, ~1850. SACRlFICE gocxl Quist.mu Now TWO Convenient ance man w/background in Coa.'lt Hwy., N.B. gift Items, all new. Ex· Locations to S.rv. You 646-3928 or E·v1. 673-4577 90me of tilt' 10110.,.,ing ~: S~G Machine Operators YARD C'LEAN-UP pen!i.lve metal det.eetors, FULLERTON MUSIC W. E. LACHENMYER Teaching, sailing, college, Sw1n1 'vear. 3760 Caml!U9 Student wantro to clean back marine ~dio, CB radio, div· lS19l Euclid, Fountain Valley RfAL ES-TATE SALES gelcoat. Xlnt entry level Or., Newport Beach 5'1<M5ll yard on part-time be~ -ing equip .. depth reeorder , 1 Blk N San Diean }"rl\'Y ! ._ __ , ,,_.., "'-36 aatronomic&.I telescope, elec · · .. -· position for scl! starter. SEWING ?o achine o~rators, your 1ivw ... \..WI ~ • marine head, truck or jeep & Euclid. Judy, &12--0.>44. ('xp!'r. Top pay. Apply 800 winCh, AC/DC port. combo. • 557-4836 • Nl'w oUic-e In Laguna Beach. ·-SECRETARY W. 18th St, CM Xln't Opportunity TV radio, fm. & other misc 1l2 N. Harbor Fullerton ~~:d:; ~~C:~~ne!u~~~~~ Fast, paced young m!ndl'd SHIPPING CLERK 'i yorr ~unlcate easily sporting goods. Eves &: e 871-1805 e I '1 d I ~ <kpt. !leeks self moti-Receiving, Inven'IOl'y. ExJ)e2'. e ec ve Y are suc· wk:nds 962-4283 SLINGERLAND drum set. 6 peop e, " B'l)' a van a~es. .• .....__dy ,.,..,. "A72 NB CPssful Jn your current job, ' · . · Contict: Dorie Smith vated sec'y. Great benefits 01uy. ~,.,..._ · O"U"J'I • • you O\\'C' it to yourself 10 QUALITY furn., dishes, elec. pc, Xlnt condition. Red AmerlcenHomeRea ltor including dt>ntal ins. Start SHIPPING Clerk w/typing investia:ate an outstanding train, 2 din. nn sets & pearllzed finish. Pri. Pty. 01. N ,. H , ~ .... t. $$0. Call llek!n 1.lason, e.'<perience. career opportunity for o. m_lsc. Open all week. 8-5, 547-4305 ~:~v~ 0 " ..... &r. wy., ..... !i ... 1a 54().6(155 Coastal Pcrsonnel Phone -•Kt •<7 ~ .. , A NB * 494-1001 * · ~v;;o.w sales trainee. Individua1 .., 'W> m ve., · · GILD Starfire Mark 4, like REAL ESTATE ~~re>'· 2790 Harbor Blvd,. must he local resident GARAGE Sale. Fri-Sat...Sun.• nu w/case sm or bst otfr ' . *STOCK ,v/managerial ability, am-2994 P.Wbro off Baker. Furn, 6~ SALESMEN SECRETARY I bit<m A !tell discipli,... Bikes, Misc. :::=="------! \Vhy not work In the hottest RECEPT. Sales or administrative J ewelry 115 o.rea · Huntington Beach · J.·ast growing Nnl'I sallboat CLERKS* n1 a nagement background :.:c:.:..:.:c..!.-----= Fountain Valley. Let us n10.nuf. hiring for hend of· pre.f'd. PI e.a s e Call Honchell-BrowM 8kr1 Office Furniture/ Equip. 7102 SUJ)'r opportunity In large corp. Name your price. train you. Ca11 Ehil Mc-ficc. Good front of! ap-Grenkow. ~ for a . 290 Anon~••~-·• I 900 Namee, VllLAGE REAL pearance, IBf.1 Exec. typ-VARIAN DATA ~IA.CHINES confldentia1 interview. Basket Ruig 8 dia. ~ ... .,,, c au Cre«te a colorful, country ESTATE. 96.3-4561. Ing, 00/70 wpm, no sh. ~m:!fe:i::~ ~nJ°1~~ ~~~~~~~~~~1 ~~~ ~~~~flawless~ :fi'~ oo:J:;~ $= i:i . SIZES 8-18 looN\\J~h ~d'"1!~:t. and ,. Medical $475 R11I Estate Salt s req'd. 2 Yn. exp rcq'd. mediate openings for , in· ; J~ Loose Blue dias 3) reuwable plates w/cablnet. '-· -t1f. • ""11" . .-l charm to a bedroom "ith New offtce needs better than J.:,1rg~~~!1~~ployer dlvidua1s \Vlth pr ior ex· ......._ ~ ~,,t!!treonl~~ GeNm8 opa1 26dT3-la2924076 646-6411 9 to 4. "'l lllM•"" lllMI.,.. s p r1e a d . o r -~an plus average sa:les people want. perience \\11th an electronics . """"' UI •• , EXEC SWVL CHRS '1'/%> One piece dres& y,'ith the drapes, all in popular shell ing .better than a~ com. S.C1y1, Girl Fridays firm or will train. You n1ust ;;;;;;;;;;;1,~~l~b~loc~k~fro~m~th!t;ejp~ler;~ Sec chn $8/24 Oeaks r.l)/90 look of companion layers _ stitch. Crochet of \\'Ol'Sled ' • ' ... Back office orthopaedic. Ex· per, Caslli & Injections. Fire Raters $650 Casualty Raters $650 All Bcnttlts 4019 Westerly Pl Suite 201 • Newport . Beach (MacArthur & Birch) Pleas• can 'For i;>lrectlatls • • 1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .............. • ~~~IL splits. Tom Miller, BookkH ptrs have a sincere desire to Antiques 800 Miscellaneous 811 Pierce 867 . \V. 19, Cf.I smooth ,vay 10 achieve ln 4 co\oni. Pattern n 02: V'fV'IO . learn and be \vl.lllng to \VOrk 642-3408 luhion's fawrite I 0 0 k ! easy directions. Ent!~~p~~l~n~o the N~i 'it~~i2~ T~u ~~:~·:;r;:t~~:°~m:;! ~S:. SCRAM-LETS '\;ld~spoholt~rnRel~;g: $501_f. :uE'°ndrt ~P:l•;";•;•;/;;0;';9•;";';;;;;:;;;;;8;;2;;6 ~~·so~1~ one fabric or r:rE::::;r~!?e~'.~ -~ f . ting field f 1 4121 Westerly Place ing for a position \vith a \.Al u • • Printed Po.ttei-n 94 44: cents for each ~ttem for 1.=ave goo<t\ypi~ ~~~ Suite 115, NB 833-8190 growing Orange Count Y ANSW£RS tables, coffee 1ables. Aft 6, PIANOS -ORGANS t.fisses' Sizes S, JO, 12, 14. ~Ir Mall and. Spec1a1 Handl· & lite ah. C.all Mild White! __ :;E::,st::;•~bU:::lh"'°'ed:....,1:o965:::.,__ compn.ny that oUers; 673-2004 Ne\v A Used. Great S('!ection. 16 18 Size 12 !bust 34) 1~: otherv.·11!ie tJ'inl= 540-0055, Coastal Per1onne SECRETARY * 12, flays per year paid HANGING lamp brand ne'\', Competitlvt? prices. Open takes '2 5/8 yards f>l.inch de Ivery \\•Ul Send to Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd, Immed, opening in n1anuf. vacation Vacant -Dirty -Yodel -Elect shaver, Norelco, used, Eve!i. &. Sundays, The best (abric. ~ks B~~~he DAILY CM. facility for· a mature, 'A-ell * 6 days per year paid Afloot -FIVE Keystone camera. projector, deals a.re ahvays at: SEVENT\.0t 1v;; CE?'ll'TS pytJrr 105 ' Needlecraft REC. needed lor growing groomed t'Xpet. lndiv. Above sick ti~ Inflation has even affected Ught bar &: acreen, 00 eon· W allic hs Music City for each pattem ~ add 25 Dept Box 163, Old Chelsea young Co. TelephOne, typing avg~&: sh. Rosan Inc. * Holiday shutdown at the kids. They're 00\v usin8 crete edging, 2 feet. 646-6590 Sooth Coast Plam 540-2S3ll ce.nts for each ~llem for siauOn. New York, N.Y. filing, opportUnity for adv.~ 545533. Equal Oppor. Em-Chri~tmas FIVE ll"ttcr "''Ords. UOlES diamond ring. '4 ::.,,~~~!!!!!'~~~""l'"i PA!L01r J\~all~nd ~Jftial ~ndptl· 1oou. Print N•me. Aaar.ti. $400 start. CaJI Janet at -"'°"='-'•c.r·'-------* Major and Baste MtX!ical ANTIQUE 10' nautical bar. karat l!iOlitalre w/baguettes !!!* CONN ORGANS * · · . a em ·• Zip. Palterll Minnber. 1 833-2574 SECRETARY for s ma 11 * J\1odem facilities Need lrg. rec:reaUon room. ln white-gold selling. Ap-~ otherwise thlrd-claa N £E D L ECRAFT, '72t R™ ION!ST 1 d manuf. firm. Must be v-* Competitive pay Ideal for co m m c r c ta 1 pniscd this week at $1300. • lmme<Ha~ delivery d Vert wlU take three CroChet, knit, ttc. hte ~I a,y a ROOd .... ,, ~ta.le. on 548-5929 fl 6 pm • Low~ prl~ weeks or more. Send to directk>IU 50c week, Apply 1916 Harbor atclf typist, have .exper. on Plel\se apply in pecson or display. Only pio, 6'7r3117. e r · a · GOULD MUSfC co. MarlM Martin, the DAILY tnitt:ot 'Mli~rM 8"t. Blvd, a.ta Mesa. le &phone I: be able lo contact BLACK MAHOGANY 1' HrnCULON at vel~t 90fa &: ~ N. ~1ain, SA &&7-0081 132 WHt 18th St., New Ba.lie, fancy knots, -t· RttEPTlONTSI' / G 0 0 d compose efficient lctte1'11. Sh B. KrafkA H\a:hboy · · w Im at ch t n 1 lovcseats, coff tbl sc!J, \VURUTZER O>nn Thomas York. N.Y. IOOU. Prtnt t~nis $1 00 - typist, lrVlne Complex area, h'lpfu!, but not rtq'd. Tl\p. dresser lamps, used l'or display only IO'!'<est overhead, lowest NAME, AODRF.88 with tn1td1 . Croebet 9ocllr: .. Ca.It Mn. Sugan, 546-31'70 matJc, Corp, J.Sill Kettering VDM 846-6152 Pacific Construction Co. pn-1, snve salesman con1 . ZIP, !IZE and 81'YLS Ltam by plct\ll'MI Pat• St, Irvine. 979-$080 OAK roll top desk. Beautlf\ll 5.18-9833 '"" * 496-3661 fr NUMBER. tem11 $1 .00. ~~~~="~ ~rvlce Tffh $9360 cbndltion. 'Just rcnnlshed. NEW cabinets. kit. Bnth & PIANO WANTED. SEE MORE Q u I c '« ~e llbtlillt Qlft .... • 96:1-4=::283::::.· ------1 Very fbf 1nt1""1· HI~ VARIAN DATA Privote Party. 547-4305 edmlsc. Some,sHghlndly dPrlam~,¥; \VILL GO ANYWHERE:. Fr,~~~ns ~ c::: ~~ .. more than 100 ritnl .. -pcl'!IOnl\ e v. w """" A II I02 ; some x nt oo . \.'l:\I p 0 BOX 1·~ rl ~ S Catal • . All $1.00. REl'AJL ~ n1cchanlclll aptitude (or •MACHINES PP l ncM to sell . 842--3545. · · · 0».1 'P '""" umml!r og. Complele &rPu 8o* .. Mt r T r1inH to $800 bright spot. Cttat career _;Sl'U::..;:;;D:,:10:.,::CIT:..:..:Y.!.' -"CA"=L!Fo.;,,:,· ~I alies! Only OOc. S1 OO Fa.mtd co. tetkl lndlv. able oppor. Call Burt Long, 2722 Mlchel10n Drive. SEAR'S Kenmore sort heat OAK wood table, 2 buHets. LO\VERY ~an dO"u bl e INSTANT SF.WtNG BOOK ii •itcy a-'Sooka • 5&. 4 eager to •¥Ume the 833-2700, Dennis A Dennis Irvine, Calif .. 984 cle<i dryer 3 yrs old xlnt ~ Orange Ave., C.~I. keyboard, . eew today, wear tomorrow. lloell: of u"""rrt.a .,..._ reooonalbWtiu 1hat eom• Pel'IOn,..l A...,ey ol lrvlnc, <n4l im-2400 ~. 113· Ph: ll61-274i. * &12-l:i;J * !ii1-3108 • $1. !iOc w/rapld Mtvanctmem. Call .W=:..:M::.l:.:ch<=l'°::n=Dr::;·'---An equal 0 pp 0 rt u n l t y WESTINGHOUSE washer MEX."HANICS tools $400. Air PIANO WANT·&·D-INSTANT FASH I 0 ~ ~Ut .,_. t ·la ..,..,, Slm llldcr. 833--2100, Dennis ;:Make Hoom For n. .. A..t •• " employer m/I "4(). Compreuor Ot'I(' l!P $170 BOOK .. ltundred1 o I S'.k- and Dennis Pemnnel~n· .,...,., ~~~'""!'~~!!!!!'!!'~I * 613-0252 * call 54MS41 1110 !l92--025e f~"'1on !acts. St. M;._ Qo11 -I • f •-•---·Ml • • . clean out ~ Pl'llf! i:;: ABE -' F •• t • nd •~ -cy o U"Vu-.:, -6 c IOn • , , tum that )lnk ll'lto cuh Sl'ENOGRAPKER. Jea:Jl of, KENMORE tlect. drytr, lhlt WHIJUJ'OOL. bath, fi1s in KAN Con-e, bl'aut. or u1a ••etn u tl ....... w:, """'"' Dr. with a DallY PUot Clulltled Uce, JBM Executlve, lhort cond, rttOlld motor eall ).ft tub. New w/wa1Tanty. reg. cond. 19-13. f700, the Penny Ptnchf'r. Q•llh •• t'lllQ'1 U..C • You'll find 11 m Pullllled ad. Call ~-. h•nd. N.B. al'ta. 675-153) S r.:I0-1231 ~: Sac. $150. !ii1-1161 "'""ml • ' • -- I ,., D1'1L v PILOT Tunt!ay ""'m"" 6, 1973• ------~--=-----=.....,--.,._-_;·:;.· -=,.....,,....,.-·-.,.--,...,.-"""==--:-c--.-":"""-:===~=-:----:;;g;;.:::::;-;;::::Jl--ao;;: '?!fl• 8:14 CyclH, BikOI ~T;.;ruc:::;;k•;_ ___ ....;.9,::62;IAu:::;los.:;;..W=••;;;t9d;:::._....,..:.ffi;: I A=ut.:.o•;;.:•_,.l .... m;;.:po;;.;.;rt..;.;(j:;.........;.970;.; Autos, lmporttd 9fo Autos, lmporttd fio Autos, UMCI 9iQ Autos. Usocl 996 E e P 1 UPPhY WORLD• Scootors 925 *SPECIAL* . TOP JAGUAR MERCEDES BENZ TOYOTA BUICK FORD ng 1M Bull DORI, 011hlll'11U•>. Th1y Poodle•, DOLLAR '67 JAGUAR XKE Type 4.2 '67 MB 200D, 31 m .. , a1no, '70 TOYOTA 1970 BUICK RIVIERA 1971 T·BIRD LANDAU Arner. Esk . (spit• I. *Of the Week PAID .,,.,.. blk. 24,000 m I' ~-H..:..!."',.. •l••n. $2595. • CORONA·• Factory.,, condillonlng, lull 4 door h~rdtop. Factory .,, Doberman, Pit Buns: Bull ORANGE COUNTY · AM/Fr-1, radlalK, chrome v..><J _,. JlO\\'Cr, vinyl top, mrttchlna condlll~n1ngl ful~ p!)\\'Cr. ~tm,,·re.r,100q>c0kxa,~0 'pulpr81~.~. IMMEDIATELY wires. 1 eat h c r. int. FOR Sale •72 220 Diesel MB. Met~lllc arcert with black ln1-tapestry intertor, waw, tilt vlll)'l linter or, tilt '"hee!· """. " _ '71 DATSUN metlculOUlll ma.it, concoune ~ to apprec. leJ"?r. 4 speed, AM.IF'-whet!. AM/Fl\i 5 t er c 0 . stcroo, door Jocks, all d~· Stud S<rvie< M°'l BrO<ds. SUZUKl-BULTACO PICKUP & CAMPER FOR ALL cond. 67S-2l68. • ** 83H095 ** radoo& •1ltt• &ld<>wall tires. (529EXCI I~«; '"""· (30-IEXV) Open E"''' 5.11_...,., f443BSXl FOREIGN '59 JAG, 4 dr sedan, !< _....:.:;..:.==-=--I (969DMJ). $2~33 $2999 \\fM'T lnft) regarding femall.• liter, auto trans, as Is $500. :;;--;:;;:;~M;;::G::-;;::-:=;\ , ___ $:_1~1_:9_:5:_~--" Great Dan c "Brindle". (Johns Racin~ Cycles) $2199 CARS ph. 837-3036 aft 6 PM, or Over 80 ;~U\C Ui«!d Ca.rs to Over 80 f"tne Used Con lo Plt1Ct'd w/Laguna Beach WE N wkend. 'SJ MCB Clean. Rww good IE: I Stll!Ct Fro1n ~,...!,.ct From. Humane Soci•ty Approx ARE I New-i..'~tery. $500 or best Nabers Cadillac: Nabers CadiDac: ~73. S."!1-,,..,. "· •TnONDOPDIGCKEUP DESPERATE NEED ELEGANq_; ECOlo NOIMI y off0 r "' ·-~ AU'fllORIZED DEALER .. ~ 0 C N S kl ,,.. OF GOOD CLEAN '71 Ja.~r ~an, w m es. "' • ~· AUTIIORIZED OEALF..R -AFCHAN pups. AK C, • • ewes! u ru <77333L) • Pvt ply (711) 'lllHOOI OPEL fDc. 2600 !Mll\lOR BLVD. 2600 HARBOR BLVD. platinu m, black masked. 7 deal•r 53299 FOREIGN CARS XKE 2+2 Cou-, 1966, COSTA MESA COSTA MESA \\'ka old. 89~7996 wkdays _ TOP DOLLAR-PAID r• 540-9100 Open Sunday 540-9100 Open SUndny art 6 pm. FOR OR NOTI Ol1ly $2150 Don 615-1()47 '67 OPEL Good cheap trnn-28402 1'1at'g'Uet'itl' Pa.rkw'a.y 11 PINTO Radio he I OLD E jish S•-•"" '73 MALIBU pormion. $450. Mission Viejo C&IOIL' AC ·, •d I ' "~loer, ng •~P UVl!i Call or__Cf!'mL!!!J!_._aee ~us. JENSEN Clt.ll 963-373(1 831·»tcl e 4.95-49'19 #fliV '-f" s pt' e ransm_. n. pups. Champion sired. AKC, SolH. Service. Ports COUPE -USE AVERrP\VY. EXIT 1------"---I <5.19CJBI 11495. Thoodol~ PR.l'Cnts OFA, Shots. Quallty (Stk. #l087) PORSCHE 1967 CADILLAC Robins Ford., 2060 llartxir pups. 1710 962-<860. '73 clHranco on $3424 YOUR NEWLY '67 TOYOTA COUPE DE VILLE Blvd., Costa Mesa. 6'2.<1010. ST. Bernard AKC. 7 """'· APPQINTED ,66 911 PORSCHE, ,67 eng. CORONA. DELUXE. t'111 power, factory air, 'TJ FORD LTD old, male, Sanctuary Wood Suzuki's & Bultacos. JENSEN Weber carbs.-K onls,Au~om att c~~· Sa.lepnce.$899 2 door. like nu cond, e.lr. line, xlnt markings. Pvt. , S k'' h '71 FORD ~ TON Semperet radials, c h rm raruo, heater & air conch· 2026 Harbor Blvd. PfS. t>JB. l41500 ml, b\.lYirut ply. 644-4018 74 uiu I s ere. CAMPER SPECIAL 310C' \V, Coast Hwy,. N.JI. whls, am/fm rad. AU other tion:ing. (~Ll. Costa 1'1esa '74. $3500. aft 4 PA1. PEMBROKE \\relsh Corgi. 11 (2210'JK) 641·9405 HEALEY options of do m 0 st\ c, $699 Dooler S.ttl·3243 96,'Hi025. ' "'ks. AKC, 646-2428 or ~ $3599 Germen (L Se rles) $4000 '73 CAD SDV, like· nu, 4500 1972 FORD LTD Call a.16-4928 Autos, Imported 970 DEALER 6'(3....~l aft 6 pm. ' 1$:: I ml, fully equip. Pvt. ply Full cquipf. Good cond. $2195. POODLE, black & white, 2155 Ha rbor Blvd. C.M. IN NEWPORT BEACH '65 356C me ch perfect $6250/or oh". 644-73U eve. ff interested Set' pertonnl'I male. 3 n\OS old. $35. 200 '72' CHEV. ALFA ROMEO 20.~ since o~rhaul Jlee<.!s octLey fi73..!1010, 1·5. 1nanagc-1\ Balboa Bay Club, Kings Place. NB. (Hatbor at Wiison} 1fl TON PICKUP FJeaEtuNriugSEtNhe fuHll ElinAe LEofy paint $2500. Firm 644-69~ ....._ '73 E ID OR A DO. Lo1v 1221 \V. Coast lfl1•y., N.B. OOCKAPOO puppies 8 "'ks 17303...'>LI * ALFA ROMEO eves ILA.o. mileage, rully equip. $6800. '70 FORD Countni Squire old. Black C2l fcni.alcs $5 !!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.., $2999 Best d<'al always! Berllnas JENSEN I ·,-69~9-U_T_T_AR_G_A_, -ye-llo-w 2S102 ?\farguerite Parlrn•ay Call 968-3436 i1•flgo n. !kige. Xlnt cond. "ch. 557-7'17 $5 LAY AWA y $5 rmm $3>J5 (Ser. #02S8J. INTERCEPTOR w/blaek, xlnt cond. $5600 Mission Viejo 1969 CADILLAC Luggage rack, full pwr .. low 856 Centurion Le h1ans '68 VW CAMPER '72's & '73's, Complell! se-673--9562 831·20.ic> e 49:HM9 ELDORADO mile. S2lOO. 67H821 · H . .;;c•r:.;•;:05;:._______ s un Tour Gear Sylitcm CXYG877) leclion now. Buy or lease Large Selection USE AVERY P\VY. :£x:IT Full pol-\'er. factory air. 10 '67 FORD \V~on, PDB, PS, CORRAL tor rent: 25' x 100· Alloy cotterless crank $1999 [ronl of Colors RENAULT JUST ARRIVED mlles, xtra sharp, $2!)99, Auto Air, Vinyl top, Ne1v 1 [ Gold ·-I 11,·gh pr ,. Jim Parkin•-'• lmm·,1-•o Dellverv 2026 li,arbor Blvd.. c1n1X't and paint. $695. fenced ot o f en1v~.,., n -cssure ires _,, ..,. •• • r ,74 TOYOTAS Cilta ~1esa 842-9505. H.B. $50 per mo. Call 5-10-I I Center pull brakes FULL SERVICE RENA' ULT l)('nler 54s.3243·L,.;;;:66...:t'O~R°"D~C~o-u•-,~-.~,~"~ui-,.I 1542 or 546-9460. • FE'T'lli!E GUARANTEE GROTH DEPARTMENT New Models. New Colors St ti \V 9 u;r ""} n STABLES-$.30 mo. \\'e fecrl, Corona del Mar Bike Shop SAVE$ ON REMAINING CAD '72, CDV. lOOdcd. orb? a on agon, pass, u Y 3032 E. Coast Highway NEW 73., & D~ios ownt'r, 15.IXXI mi, $5500/o[· equipped, perf <:onfl, $1,100 you buy, exercise area. 64G-09ll ' R·l2 4 DOOR M.i• fer 5.;2-8766 or be-st offer, S.~1-2962 556-n 99. 10301 $.\V. Birch. LAMBE TOO SA Hgts RT ! CHEVROLET ~&-IOO or 645-MOO Automatic Tr:msnlission '68.CAD. Sed. de Ville 68.~ MAVERICK ~ A~y GeldinR: good * BICYCLES * CLASSIC '67 Alfa Romeo SALE "1111111 [a••• m1. Excel cond $1350. --1 looking. shows \Vesieni. & . Cl-IRIST!\-1AS LA,YA\VA.YS Ductta Spydcr convertible. $2499 -WA Ul/UI 4!»-4366 ·70 1\IAVERlCK C'Xl'rllt'nl ron. English Xlnt jumper $600 $10. MOLDS ANY BIKE The I on g. s I eek. TOYOTA '12 CDV, all pv.'l' & t'xtrns! dilion. nuto, air <.'Ond. $1-300.1 pri ply·~ • New Italian 1n sp .•..• $39.95 18211 BEACH BLVD hard-to-find n1odel. Good 3100 \V. Coast Hwy .. N.B. Dick Miller Motors 25,962 iniles, $449S. &ffi....8.S9S 830-T086. • 'bbo SuntouL· Ea Co\oi .•.• S.S9.95 847..6087 549 3331 condi11on. Regrettably, niust ____ 64_2_·940_5___ 120 \V. \Vanirr, S.A. 1966 Harbor, C.'l. 646_.,,3 d ·:c";,:.YS:;;·~~~-~~~ --------- LEASE beaut. TB r1 n Nlshiki 10 Sp •••• fronl $99.95 • sell, aio I can't su pport 111-0 l ---~557"'·>::·21~3~2~---lio;-mmrT'i"-;;;;;;-;;;;;;~,;;;; ~ MERCURY winner; $40 mo. ~ Exper., u~d bikes ...... AU 1'ypes HUNTINGTON BEACH c11rs. $500. and take over LAMBORGHINI '69 TOYOTA Land Cruiser ·n EL D 0 RA D 0 Con· Eng. n der. lnfo 540-1769 I Beach Bic..'Ycles, 806 E. Balboa µayn1ents of $78 per month. ---------SAAB 4x4 (967AF\V) s 1 9 9 5. vt'rtible, xlnt cond, µriv ---------Blvd., Balboa 675·72112 1972 CHEV. '!2 TON Balance 01ved: $119'1. Call Theodore Robins Ford., 2000 party bst offr M-t--2336. '61 ~·l~R~URY. N e·e-d·i; · PICKUP for ll'Cekend appointment, '67 LAMBORGHINI 400 G.T * SAAB H bo Bl d C M transnussion "-'Ork, best of- * BICYCLES * , 2+2 V 12 I ar r v ., o61a csa. CAMARO l•r. Call <'-"•--"! 0 I 12 . 192-4744 San Clemente · • super c as.•nc. 642--0010. ~ "" ""°-Raleigh Records .•. $99.95 n Y ,000 Careful Miles, ' · Needs valve work Serious Best deal always. Complete :.c::..:::=------1---------1 While Supplies Last V·S engine, custom cab. 3 1971 ALFA, neiv paint job, I inquiries only Re8.sonablc. selection now. Buy or lease TRIUMPH 1970 CA1ttARO, PIS, PfB, MUSTANG Other models from $&t9S. ~peed tr~nsmiss~on, r~dio, ove~aul~gf3~~· Ask for Tony. 67:t-3407 or from air, auto, new paint. $2350.r ---------I~ Peugeot in all sizes & colors. eater,. eaV¥ uty tu'C's, '6 •::;T"'::..:c7""::.:..-----,.,-: Jim Parkinson's TR 4 . cu. t 0 m ,. , e d •, 4!»-3661.. 1967 ~1USTANG, k>\\' milcagt; I 900 Christmas Jay-a-1v-..1.ys stl'P umper, many xtras -. ,, 390 Cb i i ,Boa;.;...t_•;..• _Ge_n_e_r_•___ CYCLE WORKS LTD & '"''' be told !mm the AUSTIN HEALEY KARMANN GHIA Beautiful!! Xlnt me<h. CHEVROLET o ra Jet engne, •>-. " 12 "·JI 1882 Ne\vpct• Blvd, Costa day it ~lei ne1v! (72U31LJ. cond. l\tust Sc-II! Best Offer! i-ehllrnthoomcche,nlcal condition1 \VANTED: used ' ....., aps. • 52888 835-6464 t roug . t. N~\V bn1kes.[ able n>bber. 1~ I-IP out· Mesa. 548-578~ '67 .4.USTIN Healey 3000. '67 KARMAN Ghia a/q, R ---------l'66 CHEVROLET n1ags., tu-es, aU" shoc.~ks &. board. 675-8008. NOSTALGIA '66 Honda Over SO Fine Used Cal's to White,. wire whe:.els, Pri. & H. Nu paint, nu hres, VOLKSWAGEN PANEL VAN paint. l\1ust see to as>'. Boats, Maint./ C&150 nu eng 6000 n1i, many Select from. Pty. $1500. 96:>-6115 etc. $850. ~95• 979-ClS5j • c645::.&J=OO=-_..:o;..r_....:64.::5.&Jll6:.::..::::i 6 1. d~ -1 preciate, 5-15--2083 nftrr r1:?.0 .1 - ..;Sc;;ec..r•;..i.cc•'------90-2 ~~-,_77P68"''.' ,51P29M5 FIRM •· Nabers Cadillac: BMW MASE!lATI Orange Gounty" Ne.esl '66 VW BUG <'Y'" "" 3 """"'· "" 0 ' -i o-t "'" ~~i S 'al onl '"'9!l . 65 M~STANG . . I IS your bottom di11y? Hull cleaning for 30c per water line ft. M5-lr.!Ci BOAT Owners, tired of hi maint. co:;t? Refinishing & monthly service. 645-1320. Boats/Marin• Equip. 904 300 Y.Af.I,\HA Enduro. 1972. AUTHORIZED-DEALER ORANGE COUNTY'S S1JPER Leggera. 3jlX) G.T. . BJ.irnl orange. \\'..iJh blal'k in. , 20i6 fa;1bor B!:d.,., \ ~. au!cmat1c u-.in,1;11111.~100. Mint l.'Or:diiion. Lo1v 1ni!cage. 2600 1-L<\RBOR Bl~VD. Lo mileage, fuel injection, teri~r. sun roof, 4 iipced, Costa litt'sa ' r:irtlo & hea!t'r! S375. 't'~tll SSOO. "''•·'"""'· COSTA i\IESA OLDEST •~l'VV'I Do 673 1007 i-<1.d10 & hl.'l1ter. (SYB26SJ. "t!C'r 3 \ "" ..... .,., ~0-9100 Open SunriRy .,,....,...,, n, :i-.,., • SUPER SHARP Dt>aler fi.16-32-13 " . tHG-~ TRIUMPH 650 Bonnc.iile '73 GMC MAZDA CLEA~& SALE $795 '69 CHEV IMPALA CUSTOM ~.~s~~~~-~i~ mi. S'i T. Camp<>r Special, 19,000 'i3 SMBS STARTING AT I ~---~----....-2 Door J-!ardtop. ~ _vs, '72 ~fUSTANG. Jile bhlt', '7'l TRIUMPH Bonnevillt', $66 MONTH like new. $1100. CaJJ eves, foam l'E'at, (Haulin!::" shell Excellent selection of P"e· SE up to 24 miles per gallon complete. ·Strato bu cke t inlles 963-:543 536-3394. nlso avnill 1\1ust s€-ll this price re.evaluation models. 36 ?o.IONTHS OPEN LEA Dick Miller Motors seat11, vinyl top. FactOry air l===~-----1 n1i, loaded w/e-.:tr~s. 30 *Mazda '73 Rotary * $2995 1~=::·1 nut omallc_ lf<!nsm1Sl)1on, P/S. P/B, A/T, A/C, SCJ-fWINN Tandeni Bike, \\•eek! 497-1944 days or DEMO $ALE CAWLLiU MacRc:pFRt tryad842e-i.';k 120 \V. \Varner, S.A. cond. "'ill sell for Kelly ~sfVENRTIBILl!: M.su ",' aTn g VHF radio, Cli radio, depth 4n•.con3 aft 6. SALES-SERV!CE·LEAS!NG s;j7-2132 blue book "'holes a I e · c, ape uet~ • oo I h d fully equipped, brand new "" """' H t B h 644-4687 ' many cars. S a e r i f I ct" recorder, e ec-. ea • new $100 54f>-0018 '64 CHEV El Caniino. VS, OVERSEAS DE!JIVERY un • eac SUBARU 2840'1 r.1nrguerite Parkway . • 49·1-698G &po-~esedred dslivme.lghg ""'1or1Pciiv~~ .~n=H.::0.::N:.;D::A=. '-sL-_350_1_0_1000-aU1omatic, air conditioning ROY CARVER, Inc. ---"'------1 l\f1SSion Viejo 65 11\r?ALA 327· 4 dr. New .. ~,.~.~ru-ST~~G~.-pd~-1 " 1 97 831·20-10 • 495-4949 battery & starter. Good " Ai'i ~. 'J s , a r, or f()r run. Eves/wknds ml. Super cond., $695. N944. J $895. Theodore 234 E 17'.h St MAZDA Drive A USE AVERY PWY. EXIT body. tires, paint. Trnn.". xlnl cond·$§95- 962-4283. 673-8876 aft 6 during week. Robins Ford. 2060 Harbor Costa l\iesa' ·546-4444 SUBARU needs engine work. NC. 557-726.1 7.5 HP MJ<RCURY outboard, MINI BIKE . Zeb1-a. Blvd., Cosla Mesa 642-0010. 1971 YW 411 P/S P/B $250 If OLD OBILE •till In warranty p 1 u, Xlnt condition! $75. '70 SCOUT, 4 wheel drive, CREVIER BMW · or irad•. · 642-Jm 0 ,rus.f SM good\ . ., •=,. 962"6212 GID-1824 V-8, auto. pov:er bJ'nkes, Sales e Service e Leasing 17331 Beach BJ. 84UE'.i6 at • .. _ --'"' I SEU..! · -19-7-1-0-L-D_S_T_O_R_ON __ A_D_O_I ~·· II •~-h b MAZDA RX 3 Dt'ck M'tller Motors "' uuua-M'\•an. antomat c, ro U<U, 11 s, many extras. :m \V. lst., S.r\. 835-3~TI '72 x sh ,.Bo::.::.:•:;.l•:;•_P;..o.;.w_e:.:r ___ 90.._6 Motor Homos Good condition. $2:300. or USED BMW'S nd -•M 6= ~,.· Sales & Seivice ;J?;.3 H arp, SlOO'J '63 Cl-IEVY ii·agon. V·8, aulo, Fnctory air conditioning, ·full " S I /R I 940 offer. 893-6460 xlnt co .,_,,, •.ro<U Visit Us Soon At u.1.u arbor Bll"t!. P"T strng, R ~.II. Ne3r nu ()O\\'C'r, vinyl top. tapestry '_.:..:;a.;.•;:..;.;;;•.;.n;._ __ _c..;.;; 191tl EL CA'llNO. PIS. '71 BAVARIA MERCEDES BENZ 120 W Costa Mesa l!.S. •nags, 1'!.restnne 500 interior. lilt 11"he<'I, stel't'O, i . " • \Varner, S.A. Dealer 646-32-13 tit'CS, ~fom'OC au· shocks.-8 dur1l fl'Onl seat, loaded, • DANA POINT HARBOR R.V. Staats Ya cht Brokerage. New Uniflites &. Ranger Yachts. Small or Large; PO\\-er or Sail. \~'e Have Them All. For in· formation or to make ttn appt. to see boats in the even ing , phone n4/493-510l. 21 lh' custom boat. 150 h.p., IB fresh water cooled eng, head, ha.It tank, sis rad!o, compass & extras. 963·2551. O\VENS XL 19, Bimini lop, new cqvers, lo hours. Xlnt 673-2828/558--0424 15' CHRJS inboard, recen1 overhaul, new trailer, bait pUmp, sac. 646-2365. 13' BOSTON \VhaJer \V/trail· er. 35hp Evinrude. S850. Call 645-5888. Boats, Sail --909 LIDO 14. Trailer + dolly. Xlnt cond. 67>-0371 2'1' ALBATROSS sloop, dacron sailS, boat cover. $300. as is Pvt ply. &t2-S735 Bo•I•, Slips/Docks 910 e SALl:S e P/B, flir. vinyl rool. Under '70 2800 CS COUPE JIM SLEMONS ___ ..;55~7:.c-2:.:132=. ___ '68 V.\\'. VAN. \\'ide radial ll1!.c:k tape deck, 2 tone pain!. Al'\l/Ffll steM"O multiplex. e SERVICE e 30,000 mil.,, new tires. Xi.rt '69 2002 TOYOTA tu·e., U.S. MAGS, Shnrp. $650. or bst offer. 968-21!15. 1325CXDl cond. $259:>. 673-16a8. '69 1600 fl79JEPJ $1'~ T • RENTALS • IMPORTS · ~. hoodore '71 MONTE CARLO. VS, "''· $2999 '57 FORD PU, Mat; whls, '68 2002 MERCEDES BENZ '69 La d • Robins Ford .. 2060 Harbor P.S .. vinyl top. (T:>!IDSWI . S200. V..S, Y.z. T, 3 spd, phone '67 2000 CA COUPE ft Cruller Blvd., Costa Mesa 642-0010. Sl-IARP. Theodore Robins Over RO f'lne Used cars to EXPLORER O, HUNTINGTON BEACH 18fU)I ~[,\(H 11,[) 8-l2 880) HI J'•T•N' l<J'J flt ACH 64Z-5251 or s.t&-4757 AtITHORIZED REMOVABLE H~T. ·~ VW. Reblt engine, Runs Ford., n-.o Harbor Bl\•d., &-lcct From. 963 Bob Mclaren, BMW SALES & SERVICE • • Wheel Drive good. Needs minor repair. Costa Mesa. 642.-0010. Nabers Cadiftac: v~.:;•.;.ns'------= I Jim Slemqns • Radio 33562 Blue Lantern Dr, Apt 1973 :U.1PALA Custom coupe AUTI-IORIZED DEALER '69 FORD VA.i'l Sales • Se~; . Leas;.,., I • Heater 3, Dana Point. aft 6pm . Uke new. Lo mileage. 2600 HARBOR BLVD. -~ mports e 2 Set.s or Tirts '71 VW FASTBACK Lo&ded. Leaving for Orient. COSTA MESA CONVERSION 850 North Beach !llvd., $2195 6 cyl, H.D. Shocks, 1 TQn La Habra (\Ve're top buyer for any Auto, air, new brakes, xlnt SacrifiCC!! 499-3702 540-!HOO Open Sunday O'D COUNTRY Chassis, Can1p. P::::t•lcd. (714) 879-5624 used MerC('!()es Benz.) {ZNL937) buy & cond. Be I o\\' * 'TI CHEV A10NTE CARLO Sales k SP=vtl."e WASHBURNE Large Tire<: , .. 1"1 lli:U1, I'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,,;.""".;,,.""'""' 1301 Quail \\•holesale Pvt pty 67:4666 air, bucket seats, vinyl rool. OLDSMOBILE has lh e nu GlifC Motor l101ne $2489 CAPRI N~~ach I~~ I '70 B~G. im.mac. ~n~ run-tilt \\•heel, 38,000 nli, $2,895. GMC TRUCKS at Service Oldsn1obile GUSTAFSON ---------·I val.Ley ning cond. Radio. mags. 673-lOOl. HONDA CARS in Long Beach, \Vl'd-Sun. Lln I lif ENTER rnOM MacARTIIUR b" 1· M I $ '72 EL CAMINO I ll figures 1()..6 Business Pl-I: 16800 B~a~h :~c\~er '"''73 CA~RI, ZKKl eng, 4-spd. 50 USED tJC ~~ .... ;;,.,~· ust sel · lJ95. lmmac cond. D-u1~Y:r!!t UNIVERSITY OLDS CZl3l 531·2440, Jfon1e CTI4J Huntington Beach red v./blk. _luxury decor . ~ . Lo milea'"" • .,..l'V\ """"142 2850 I 342.8844 * 1213, 592.5544 group. Red1mng front seats, MERCEDES . '69 VW Pop tup Camper, -,.=· ~· ,.~ farbor Blvd. 97!Hi0l9 "l-lome of the Viking·• AM/FM stereo, air COf!d., 28402 ~farguente Parkway nu eng, clutch & tires xlnt 1950 CHEVY. 6, \'ery good Costa ~fl'sa 540-9640 -tExclusive to Vegas*" --"'=-"--=~="--1 only used 3 months. Asking ON DISPLAY Mission Viejo $2150 or ofir, 592-311-l or cond. Radials, C 213) '71 98 LUX. SON. FP, air ' 'C h au ff ere d • • 3 day '72 DODGE !)portsmnn Van $3500. 557~1 aft 5 pm. 831·2040 e 495-4M9 592-2169. 964-8260, ln4J 642-8762 "· roof. Ut whl, tr. dlsC v.•cekend. New 26' Luxury 318 cu in. auto r/h tp/dk ,72 CAPRI 2000 A/C 511 k Sharp New Car USE AVERY P\VY. E.XIT '"A '"V o.>an, en'"ne good ,72 CHEV'v 1m-•a 2 dr lIT. brks. S2450. 89 4-0523, l\.1otor Honie . ·wet bar + cpted; 2 bone hody, % ton • . c • Tr d in o-t v' ~ ... .a ...,.. "Complete'--'-6 Perso n xlnt.. cond asking $2900 xlnt cond. am/fm, lo miles, a e-S '70 TOYOTA MK II, radials cond. Needs paint, $450. Red, a/c, Mig owner. Must 1~646-5:~7!ll6~. ~~~~-- Package $64 each. 894--0820 ~ • $2600, 645-5.595, 979-0855 Coming In Every Day very clean, must s e 11 ~ eves or ~7500 sell $1975. 4~ ·68 OLDS S85, 6 cyl, orig Dale's l.1otor Honie Rentals 'TI DODGE con 1cmP0 DATSUN Ask About Our Unique Slr"JO/bst oft Pri ply. days. '65 IMPALA Clean, auro. O\\T~r. good cond. S900 OT 838--0900 camper \•an, raised roof,, I ---':..:..;.:.:~.:..:.--Used Mercedes Lease 963--l587 eves. '66 VW Bug, good condition. p/s, p/b, a/c, 327 eng. good offer, 968-157•1. '73 LANDAU. Brand new 25' full cquipt, sac for bal due, 1973 DATSUNS Plan,1 '70 TOYIOTA Corona Sedan. Good tires, r/h. $550 cash. trans car, $600, 645-0668. PINTO ltfotorhome. Beautifully cle:28::90::·..:P.::h::.'.::6'.>-0856::·=·=----l H f lmpo Nu paint & tires. Good con· 5.'>7-3688. \VILL take 1 carat, 2 carat,1--------- equippcd. Close out Sfl!e. ·71 FORD Super Van . Good ALL MODELS ouse 0 rts dition 6-16-3692 ·n vw SQUAREBACK. 3 carat dia.mond in on trarlc •19n PLVJ'O locallv dri\'f'n Reduced over $4000. ft.lust cond., custom int., mags, IN STOCK ~ r.tanc:~ter,AnaBue~ark '71 nd~ROLLA8 Wag~n, t xlnl Radio Heater. Xlnt cond. for ne1v car. 892-4444 2nd car. ori'g mvner. f.ilni sell. See at Johnson &. Son 6 cyl. slick, $2150, 642-3143 on the ~nta r•-... 'Y co 1bon. trac ape. $1550. 49-i-70ro Must Sell. CONTINENTAL cond, lo mileagl', many Lincoln Mercury. 2 6 2 6 eves. BARWICK IMPORTS 523-7250 $1500 Cash. 548-7612· 1972 SQBCK, air cond, Stereo xl'ras, pri pty. 5'52-9-112 * SLIP nr City Hall for Harbor Blvd., Costa lifesa •. cn=oo::....OG_E_V __ JOO--,d-1 ·m75 Camino Cap1·.~-NOW OPEN '69 TOYOTA tape new .. _, 12400.Make renl. Will toke up to 28' c!>'-'10'--5630"=°'. =~--~ an cp ' ~San Juan Cap;,~~ offer.673-llii' ~r 58;.1067. 1969 CONTINENTAL PLYMOUTH boat. $40. mo. 673-8145 eves. 10 LEVELED acres No. $~ t~'. :~~1~5 4.q3--3l7S or S3l·l3i5 Mission Viejo Imports • Station Wagon • 66 VW V 1 b . SEDAN NEWPORT slips for rt'nt for Calif. for motor home. '63 fe:itu ring 4 speed, radio, heater . $850 ANbesnew Y re 11 Factory air conditioning. full 1970 PLYMOUTit Dustt'r, clean boats listed with us lite travel trail<'r, king bed, '72 DODGE V·S custom pnt •n Datsun 240Z. 28,000 mi, MERCEDES BENZ f579ABEl e-ng., ~757i oner. J)O\\'E!r, vinyl 10P. le11thc:!r xlnt shn pt". $1450. Wiil for salt', priced 10 sell. Bkr $550. 540--5589. + button tuck int, mags, auto, mags, air, white, & $1095 interior, tilt ivhcel. steroo, trade. :~rank !>15-3566 335;i 548•2592 slereo, xlras! 846-4246 $3750. Aft 6 pn1 837·5370. FIAT ·10 BUG, orig ownr~ runs door Jocks. (XS\V541) ,N_c•_vn~d-=a.'-C='."'>'::.· ~----I •Dale's Motor Hunic Rentals 69 D TSUN p; Good ----~---~,! xlnl, =~ clean. $1400. $1777 -B S d & Sk' 911 '73 23-26' ?\f & M' l 12 DODGE Van. All chrome,, A ·ck-up. IE: I ._,, PONTIAC ~i;'~:j~d~~,~~~ ~: ~~;E~E~~u~~ f ~·1'i~~:t:i~: condit:~tl~ ~~::~~:g:,~. : :!160-~~~1690=~V==O=L=V==O====== :OS:,N~~~~~rs·~~ Cusedadcll7a'c:10.1·G-!""-a-.-~-1'.'-."'-m-~-.-;..-~-~n-':.i-11'-1~-~: ~llenl cond. 842-4108. ness. 64&-~. Mechanically xlnt, New CUSE AVERY PWY. EXIT) .~. '74 VOLVO'S Xlnt cond. Must sell. $1650 tires. S700 Ken, 644-8494 'TI JAGUAR XJ 6, white AU11I ZED DEALER or offer 6Ta-2696. FREE WEEKEND '65 DODGE VAN R good 1971 250 c MB, air, ...... 28402 .. .,...,,... ... Parl<way HERE NOW 2600 HARBOR BLVD. ·73 LE MANS o .. ,.. v 8 I ... Recreational Vehicl<' Rental $800 be · UWIS Call. \V/belge 1interlor. Xlnt cond. windO'.vs, auto tram. gray, Mission Viejo COSTA 1'!.ESA 1 '-Al\ , • • Traosportation ml Bureau. f714) 842-9922. or st o er. Mu:st sel • 842-3XJO. 52M miles, Reg Slemons 831-~ • 495--<19-19 Immediate DeHvery 540-9100 Open SUnda.y auto, P s, p/disc brkR, 9,000 1~-------' ""=r"'0,=,.'-n"t.-C27':=-'C:p,:..ce=arro"-w-I ~R"o"m"a"'n,c..6:..45-0927~='----Classified Au:. ... 642·56'nl serviced. $7300 673-3472 USE AVERY PWY. EXIT On All Models ml under war. fmmac, Loaded \\rllh xtras. 1973 DODG E van \V/a!Jr &,1===~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~=-~;~;~===~1 SAVE$ ON REMAINING 'Tl SEDAN. $5550. Gold $$1)00. 846-8874. ' Campers, Sale/Rent 920 :>40-77!!6 548-4037 many c-.:tras. Clean. $600. 73's & DEMOS w/blk. llhr. vln. air, P'YI'• J973 GRAND P r ix Trailers, Travel 945 ~;,...':,:;''da,c.~6a STAR GA'ZEK~~:1 ~f.OllYOl.fADi&~YO• J~,J;·~1~3lfs: 1111 ' :Jr.''m;~;, '~~ ... ~~:;';: 196.i VOU\S\VAGON Sundhd Camper rebuilt eng:., radio. heater, chrome rin1s. Fine cond. $650. 53<Hl4'6. Cycles, Bikes Scooters 925 .73 HOLIDAY Vac-alioneer, l!:~:!.,.!.!!1u!.,:---!rCLAY Jt. UI'"• '71 Af ARK Ill, fully equip. mnc. Best offer. 673-3700 , Id 22 6 Jf\tPORTS \VA?\'TED ~ )/.. y "-'I .a~ --..... )f.. -ped. $5;5350. &12-0590, eves ,65 GTO. • •pd, -~-v, .. mf). o . ·. sJec-ps . >IM. J . 0111'....., 'f .......... , -. SlfT. ll~ & wknd 6444746 ., "' "~ '-'1'!' Bal Jacks, extras 962-<13&1 Ornnge County's ~~,, Attordln§to th• $fo,... oc'-11 966 H bo CM "' ~··i · engine. American mags, TOP $ BUYER '"-""" .J __ lcp ~-wed-"'-• •· l ar r, ' · vsv·'7o)Uo. '69 CONTINENTAL Mnrk III Ansen Spring 11.strm, Call Auto Service, Parts 949 BILL M' v~. TOYOTA '-l6-l9'; io vnt:i t1'"5Qge ~ ,_,, '3-10.12-24 • VO VO '1tl S W 48 000 d -H.Ar•• u..eJ6 reodwordscorresponch~tol'lJ'tlbm 1"°"7.S L · ta ag. • tt/c, stereo, lthr. xlnt con . bef ll or aft 4. 84~ml REPLACEMENT & au>-18881 Beacll Blv '. of"°"'Zodlocl>rthsign. ml, air cond, aulo, Mil $3395, 67'o-$85 RAMBLER I. H. &•cl! · Ph. 1147.t555 "-"""' ,. """"" ., ...., $2400. 494-9679 CORVmE i 1ary i::as tanks, pick-ups. 2-~-"'... 32Y '"V ... ~. '70 HONDA, CL 175 set up 4 \\'hi drives, vans & motor \VE BUY 3 £::;"""' JJA::;_,111,t1,.6j~"""""' 1 '71VOLVO142 S, 24,000 nil. .62 RAMBLER for dirt, good condition $2j(). homes. ~14 Jl\1"PORTED Atrl'OS •Add 3-4 Yow: 44 0ld ExCel cond. Ot1g OWtlC!r call 586-4918 ~~~~~~~~~I BEST PRICES PAIDI •Mor i5A "'" 4!>1-8637 '64 CORVE:ITE 327, VERY TRANSPORTATION CAR ,71 !IOND CN\ ti~ 36~ 66 Today NICE call 646-1189 after 7 pm "·eat Bill YaAtes-Volks ~ Dean Lewis Imports 7Get 37CouW 67The s.AGIJT.WUS '69 VOLVQ..124, Xlnt cond. "-~·~1~843~· ;,=;~~~·~11_;~~PM~J--'""'ytli111)='-- .,.,; Capistrano Aulosf0f'"Sal9 I M 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9~ :'Si;: =~ :=¢otld>i. #~.u-~ so.cm mi: aft 5 call 979-2'» :; -BIRD Top CASH 20 ,., .,~ 10•• ·-21 asking $1800. CDllGAR '73 HONDA mini trall 50, JIO-•10~ 11i:o.nkwtoMt ·~ Autos, New 980 S: '72 T-SIRD , fulty loaded: GoJd color, xlnt cond $2'l5. A 1 /Cl I 953 for clean late model cm 1,2~ A2Sc~ nCofttoct ~.,;'·"70-83,~~"I '70 COUGAR p/s, p/b, air, poM1' teats, windoi.va, etc. 846-S874 nt quel 111 Cl and trucks! ~4 ~ !! =. ~ ~ r CArttcOlK CHEVROLET beaut cond, 4 nu Urn. Cojor AM/FM stereo, vinyl top, 13 KAWASAKI. Enduro, like ·57 PORSCHE ,~~ ... Howard Chevrolet """'"" .,.,_ " .... n <$ Red . 544-«17. radl3367al """· low m0'9. Call , • mil $380 I I ~--wl• 16Conc•m "6Moke 76Clalhn '· FO"" -546-~::;;;.;;;,• =:---=-=:-.-~ rte\\'. .....,w caee. . nc show rm cond, $5500 II htacArthur and Jantboree 17 timp1fl:llify A7 Ar.id n Shcrrirlg JAN.'' B~ND Jllt\V •74 IHI ;; hclmtl. 4g.J-2859, con11ider partial I rad c Newpo1't Beach 18 Frlendr .o1a, 1, 7tv-7. ~ EL CAMINO CLASSIC ---------1 ·73 T-BIRD, grecn/whl '68 JIONDA 305, just reblr mW>I &ee 539-il396 833-0555 19 For " f'toPe 79T"""'I· 1"6 )'ACTORY PRICE RED '71 FORD LTD Wagon top, Joodcd. Pvt. Ply. 1tfus __, . d ~""'° 20Sav. 50Sotl•fy1no IOFl•rdlnl low mUea-, 8uper cond. sell, below book, 6#0047. "'"'" runn1~ con ... , or Recreational \VE PAY TOP OOLLAR 2.1 To !rl Fot •1 Fommor $4284 J\" beat otr, aft"'·~. Vehicles 956 FOR TOP USED tAns ~~=" ~i ~r. g=1re OUR 0 i::ttCE $7750. 67H876 all 6 durlng VEGA '86 600 TRIUMPH Don-If your car bl extra C.:ellQ, 2AJPnl• !r• poi:>e,.., I• u11 $3714 . week. nt'\'Ulr:, ~ COl1tl. Extra 'GS SCOtrr, V.S, •I Spd. sec WI first. 2STo .55 A,.. 8'~ Call MacPhCt'80rt Chevn>lfk r71 FORD LTO, 2 dr, Xlnt '71 VEGA GT \Vagon, .... --.... -.. ~ ~-'"1281. ·-$17550 Pvt Mv c II 26 In 56 UWf'lllol 116 Hauntt ""'""''-'"" 837·2771 e •M1J57 L-1, air, am/fm, alt engln•, new clutch, , .. iuun .... ~. """'" xu,,.s. . p:i • ._,. ll BAUER BUICK 27<.--'-S7 W'I 17'"-"·" ~ ~~ 9001 962--027'0 ""~ u A...._ ......_ ....,...,_ powtr, lo m:IJe, 83()-C:Ond., (speed, radlf,lt.Vl!I') 1971 YAMAHA 360 M.X Of(. ""'""' nwwr Blvd. :28FOl'l'll!r 58A uni.,. Autos, UMd 990 ,69 CAl,.A..XY 500, C dt., HT. cle81\. $1495. 536·6209 rtlld bikt. ~ new. $650. '60 CHEV lid!Ool bus. Make Costa Mesa 9'79·25CO ~~~ =~ :.r,:r. nd s:n l2t2 61.,...., your O'ft'n molorhome. "Weed it & tteap" @ () . ..tlJT. Ul6e RANCH Wqon need• A/I,~, pb, ttlr, xlnt co ·.::-..-·=,.,·-::=-=:,---I 'iO ~I 250 Enduro like-516-.UtO From treasures to trash Gaoa Ad'l'Cftl: NCutt.Ll tire• A. paint. Great tran1. ' Orig t'nlfMl" SlDJ. 919-67.CS "12 VEGA Wm. New tni: nu, xlnt 1.Uid $Ci1J Need a "Pad"! .Ptaoit an ad! Turn thtm J.nto cash $75 or best ofter. 1'1042 White Elepl\allt Olme-A·Line a.Ir,. F>.f atttt0, 27,IQ) nd --*-837~·77-"41-* __ _,_ .::Cal:::..I :0642:,-5673;:::::::.·----· ',-....::CA=LL:..::Dally~..:Pi..:lo::t,___ ---------------------------' Emenlld t;n, >lo. D. eaU lOtfoY 142.P. Jl!l50. GH433 I .,.· • -t • .,._ ~~ ). ' • • ' . . . • ' ' • San Clemen1e • . . C~pis1rano EDITION VOL. ll6, NO. 310, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNI>: TUESDAY, NOVEMBElt 6,_ 1973 Assail No Nuclear By JAN WORTH Of .... O.lly ........ ,,.,, Alarmed and irritated, trustees of the Capistrano Unilied School Dlslricl learn, ed Monday night that no evacuation plans have been offered yet for district schools in case of a lethal accident at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. Board Chairman George White lam~ basted the Atomic Energy Commission for "apparently not having any concern for our children." "It's ltme the board took' a very strong stand," Trustee Robert Hurst said. "The AEC owes us more information -they 've given us almost nothing," he said. A proposed expansion of existing power generating facilities at the San Onofre plant. south of San Clemente has been approved by every government agency except the State Coastal Zone Conserva- tion Commission. 'Ille existing plant Is three mUes from Concordia Elementary School. Three other schools are within six miles of the plant. , Trustees said expansion of the ptant might prompt them to abandon Con- cordia School. A leller lo lhe California Zone Con· servation Commission Was drafted ex· pressing the trustees' concerns. The commission has not yet approved the the expansion. "If satisfactory answers are not pl'06 vided regarding evacuation planning, the school district will have to consider • the possibility of abandoning at least one of our schools," the letter read. · And the trustees made it quite clear they believe the costs to the district of such a move should be borne by the AEC and the utility companies benefiting from expa nsion at San Onofre. Board discussion Monday night began with a presentation by Lynn Harris Hicks, leader or a citizens' group which so far has lost its battle to stop the San Onofre expansion. , "I'm feeling indignant about AEG pr<r cesses these days," Mrs. Hicks said. en1a House Unit San Juan Adopts New Action Scheduled Asks -Boost In Security WASHINGTON (AP) -The Hoa.e Ways and M~ Committee voled loday 13 lo 12 lo boost Social Security beneljta 10 percent effective wilh next July's check!: and to finance this through a hike in the payroll-tax wage base. But \he decision c:ould he subject to change. 'lbe panel immediately ar- ranged a meeting later in the day to act on the formal legisiallon. Aller lengthy debate by the committee Limit··on A general plan policy statement calling for a papulation limit of U,000 persona by 1983 was unanimously adopted Morr day night by San Juan Capistrano city councilmen. Tbe lolll!thY policy plan document, prepared by the consulting firm of Hayworth and Anderson, was brought Small Girl Monday, proposals emer&lal • chief B • optionl for final •~1iiliiilil e&llw~ · -. • • 10 pereenl benefit boost .aec11 .. 1n isrnembered, July or a two-step hllte of a total 11 · percent, with seven percent due next M s • -d March and the rest !"ming the following an eize November. These Included financing . changes ;,,, volving the payroll tax rate formula SUN VALLEY (UPI) -The severed ahd boosting the top salary on . whic_h . limbs ~nd body of a f.year~Jd girl 1 the tu is levied. · "·ere f6ilnd today, atrewn over a wide · Rep. Al Ullman (D--Ore.), acting com-area of Sun Valley. mittee cbainnan, said be wanted the It was the second dismembennent ·panel ready to offer a bill to lhe House slaying in the Los Angeles area in later \his week. The Senate Finance less than a week. (Related story, page c.ommittee already has approved a seven 5) percent Social Security benefit boost ef· Police arrested a Sl·year-old man who feclive· upon enactment of legislatlon, lived with the victim's mother after although the panel did no\ offer any he led officers lo a gravel pi\ where financing changes. one leg of lillle Lisa Robin of North The Nixon administration bas been Hollywood was found. People · to the council after two months of public bearings before the p131Uling commi.ssion. and various citizens committees. ConsuJtant Ed Hayworth told the cowr cil bis discussions with residents of the 14.,000-population city revealed that most want to limit ROPWatioa to· just about double its current size and retain as much of 35 percent of the land as open space. He also · reminded the council that the i>olley plan is only the firs\ step In the general plan CO!Dpietian and im· plementaUon. · ' • 'ult , IJily be Iha\ doWn the line some of the tbinf!s we are recommendlng (See LIMIT, Pap I) < Stude1its Given Excliange Trip 'For a Song' Three Dana Hills High School students used some good public relations techni- ques Monday Bight: they presented their request lo the Capistrano Unified School District trustees in a song. ' -.O.. . . Next Week By CANDACE PEARSON Of t1M O.lly PUii Sl~f! A new hearing by the regional coastal commission on a plan to add 234 overnight campsites to Doheny State Beach -initially denied in a stormy session Monday night -wiU take place next week. Commission chairman Donald Bright said this morning the Capistrano Beac~ project will be reconsidered. next Monday. The meeting will begin at 9 a.m. in Long Beach Harbor Department bead· quarters,. 91.5 Harbor Plaza Drive . Fo!lowlog the.' clooe denial Monday, angry cornmeu~ by a state parks official spurred the comminissioo to agree to rehear the plan Dec. 12. But Dr. Bright, a marine biology pro. fessor at Cal State Fullerton, said State Parks Director William Penn Mott had already called him on the _p~e .trus morning. · The hearing was jjJsli.a up to "get the state parks people off our backs," Bright said. The plan for permanent campsites with trailer hookups, sanitary facilities and an amphitheatre was denied 6-4. It needed seven votes for approval. Comissioners Carmen Warschaw and James Hayes were absent. "First they build the reactor, and then they decide how to eva cuate the en· dangered people. "The AEC bases its decisions on how many people are involved," she ad ed. ''the fewer the people, the less they consider the risk. "A nuclear generator 11 miles from Philadelphia was rejected as too close to a population center. But this one, two and a hatf miles from the Capistrano Bay Area was approved because there are fewer people, "We reject this as an immoral judg· Viking Goodies Today's Final N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS ment -ask the board to join us," she said. Trustees \Villiam Enquist poin~ out that the threat to local school r.:hildren is already present. "If they ca.n't give us an evacuation plan we'd better get draslic," he said . Dick Herr, principal of Capistrano School, said representatives of the district have been trying lo ge t answers from the AEC on bow to evacuate the schools since early spring. "We have yet to receive any com- munication from them/' he said. Dlll'f Pilot Sllff Pllole I trying lo bold down spendillj! during The cause of death in the cose has the fiscal year ending Jwie 30. An ad· not been-determined. BU\ police said mlnlslralion spokesman \old the House Perez admitted dismembering the body. panel he would suggest the President An arm was found al the dead end The trustees smiled broadly as Steve \\'ormser, David Paulson, and Katie Bales sang out information ali>Ut a pro- posed exchange trip to Aurora, Colo. Voting against the project were Com- missioners Robert Rooney of Huntington Beach; Don Pbillips of Long Beach; IAuis Nowell of Los Angeles and Art Holmes of San Clemente. ~ •· A taste of Viking heritage will be served by wo men of fueTeiemark Lodge, Sons of Norway in San Clemente Sunday at an authentic Nor- wegian dinner. Ragnhild Lee ana Martha Okland cook Kumkaker and Leise. The dinner will be from 2 to 6 p.m. at the Community Club- house. There will also be a bazaar of Norwegian handicrafts. - ~ sign 1he -10 percent-t>enefit increase of a street while another lej was found option since its impact comes in the jo a wash at the bottom of La Tuna year starting July 1, 1974. Canyon. A foot was found two mHes Bui the spokesman' suggested he would up \he canyon and the torso with the call· for a veto of the twCHtep plan head attached was found at the summit for a· total U percent ~t increase, of th~ canyon, another two miles away. a proposal Iha\ appeared lo be gathering Pohce searched through the early t>acttng among committee Democrats morning hours for the missing arm who lndlcated lhey oould eollect enough which was believed to be in the gravel House votes to o~·erride any veto. pit. Orpge . • weaiher Some high clouds al \lme3 other- wise moaliy sunny W-y along the Orange ~I. IDgbs in the upper llOa, at t&i! beaches ris- ing lo the low 70s inland. Lows to- night In the low 503. INSIDE TODi\ V Notict h9W much +nore you"re paying for lobster at restau, rants?· And how much leis gou're getting 'for your ,..,..y? The succulent seafood is Joining the endangered list 1oon i/ podchers don't knock it off. See stprtl on Page 12. L.M. a..-t · • C1ll""1l11 I Cl....... Jt.M """" " -" ~ Dtlfll lllftk• 14 ...... , .. ' ................ .., .. ,....., • 11·11 ,., .... _,. 14 "'..,.....,. ' i 1Mr11c•1 11 ' ' """ '"""" ti --11 MwtM1 ,__ _ It N11t1MI..... 4 °""' CM!ltr 14 ........ ,.1, .... Mlftlttf tt-11 T......_ II -" ·-. .....,.,..., .. ,. --. In cus~ was William Perez, 31. an .assembler for a Suo Valley trailer company. Capo Councilmen Table Fund Plan For Adobe House San Juan capistrano city councilmen Mooday nigh\ dealt a setback lo \he ci~ group trying to raise money to save a historic adobe bowie from destruction. · . The coundl voled 4-f\o I.able a request by \he Citizens lo Save San Juan Adobes for permission · 10 go door,i<>«lor col· lecling funds for their project. Tlie structure In question Is the Miguel Parra adobe on Orleaa Hiahway, one of the city's oldest refles. 'l'he building -is remarkably lntacl although ii ~was built in the early 1800s. The threat of des1ruc1ion loomed when Leadership Homes decided lo build a housing lracl Iha\ Includes ' the adobe alle. Tile tabllna aclion )te8ded off a · sug· gestlon by Councilman Ed Chermak Iba\ (llee ADOBE, Pip I) After the presentation, the board unanimously approved. the unique plan. In · the program, helng planned by committees of parents, teachers, and students, 30 Dana Hills sophomores, juniors, and seniors will spend two weeks studying the ecology, geology, history,· and culture of Colorado. Thirty students from A u r o r a ' s Gateway High School ,wiU spend the same two weeks in Dana Point, hosted by local families. All expenses for the trip, including (See COLORADO, Page I) Rooney said he wouldn't vote for anything that put recreational Vehicles on 'the beach and Nowell criticized the state parks department as "one. F.rl of the state government that. rides roughshod over people and does a minimum job." · But th.e objections of Holm es and Phillips stemmed from the lack of public input into the plan. Holmes, who said neilrby residents told him lhey received little or no public notice of any hearings on the idea, tried to have the project continued before (See DOHENY, Page 2) Trneking Gifts_ Panel Checks Nixon Do1iations WASIDNGTON (UPI) -The Seoate Watergate Committee is checking into $600,000 in contributions by lruckin·g company execu- tives to President Nixon's 1972 campaign, the Wa shington Star,News •aid today. The newspaper said the amount was the largest si ngle industry contribution. to the Nixon re-election effort and came at a time when truckers were fight,ing a government proposal that would have gen, erated more competition in their field. · According to the Star-News, John Ruan of Des Moines, secretary of the American Trucking Associ ations, acknowledged heading the drive but said it was aimed at defeating Nixon's Democratic con· tender, Sen. George S. McGovern, rather than· influencing legislation. Polk .said executives of the following companies we re among those making $25,000 contributions; Roadwa~ Express, Akron, Ohio; Consolidated Frelghtways, San Francisco; (,iateway Transportatlon Co., La Crosse, Wis.; Gordon Transport, Memphis; Lee Way Motor Fmjbt Co., Oklahoma City; Brady Motorfrate, Des Moines, and Scbwerman-Truclting Co., Milwaukee. ' Southern Orange County Shows.Light Vote Turnout As of mid-morning today, voters in southern Orange County were living up: to statewide predictions of a light turnout at the polls. In Capistrano· Beach, where b8Uoters faced three special district elections an addition to Proposition l, onJy 10 percent or the registered votertt'had turned oul, according to a check of two of the six precincts. ·Besides Gov. Ronald Reagan's tax and spending limitation law, Capistraoo Beach voters are being asked to choose representatives on the water district and sanitary district board of directors. A1so on the ballot is a proposed tax override for the Capistrano Bay Parks and Recreation District that would dou· ble the special tax rate to 20 cents per $100 assessed va luation. Only about 30 of the 2:50 registered voters at the Palisades School polling place had voted by 10·:30 a.m. and on ly 28 out of 233 registered had voted at the headquarters of the Capistrano tlnllied School District, precint workers said. In San Juan C.pistrano1 where voters face only the choice on Proposition One, the San Juan School polling place reported more than one quarter of the 400 registered voters bad ~ted. Israeli Deatli Total 1,854 TEL AVIV (AP) -Israel an· nounced today that t,854 Israelis soldiers were killed in the Middle East war. It \\'as the highest death toll Israel has suffered in a war since its first conflict with the Arabs in 19_!8, when the figure neared 5,000. The announcement of t h e previously secret casualty figures said about J,000 Israeli soldiers were wounded and still hospitaliz- ed. Many Israelis had expected the number ol wounded to be much higher and the disclosure was greeted with some relief. ;Don't _,,. t··-··~ .. Forget To Vote;· Polls Open Until . 8 . . • • . . • - I • • " • " -• ' ' . • " Z DAILY PILOT SC Turidtr No"ttmbtr 6, 1973 ~.~ ~~~--~~~~~~~~~...:..;: ::. .. Storm Rips ('• F ..... P .. el LIMIT . • • 'Christmas Earl1' N·orthern will be Impossible or too cosily/' be - said. "'This polley plan IJ like a basket and we must pick out whlcb Items Ca-pi-stra~o Gets , ::.'California "I '": SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Following '• up a ferocious blast of stormy weather • 1• that jammed tratfic, cut power and · • flooded many areu, Intermittent rain 11..i Northern Calilornla today while vy "'°" blanketed the mountains. we want to fill tt with." The policy plan lnclu<fes six 1111.lor ..ctlons, includJni land use, public laclliUes and oervlcu. community design and historic preservation, environmental reso,~e manag:ement, transEtation and open spnee. The land use policy is the Dl05t all-in- clusive part of the plan and include$ statements about the future city or San Juan Capistrano wider the general plan. _ 1be National Weather Service said Among other things. the land use policy statement predicts increasing pressures !or growth and recommends care(ul coo~ trols t~ make the growth as proCitable as pGSS1ble to the city and its residents. term would abate by evening but · -pr cted more showers and snow •h Wednesday. · ir flooding was reported in f\.1arin Count and near Crescent City and heavy soow unings were issued for the Sierra and tbe \Mount Shasta-Siskiyou area. "We~ going nuta: in here," an ex· operated California lnghway Patrol dispatcher said Monday as thousands of San FJ'\mcisco evening commuters ·were stranded in traffic jarm caused ' l 'by numerous accidents on rain-slicked •slr<ets. Brief power failures were reported in the Glen Park and Twin Peaks neighborhoOds here and in the Mill s Estate area of Millbrea Monday night. More than 2.3 inches of rain drenched downtown Sao Francisco and the Oakland airport Monday and early today, ~ the National Weather Serviee said. A • "-r; total of l .13 inebe50f rain rell at Stockton - o.11y 'Jlot ll•H '111111 Heads Chat,aber Valerie Powers of San Cle- mente has been hired ·to man- age the San Juan Capistrano Chamber of Commerce . suc- ceeding 11argaret Olsen. ~lrs. Powers has been publicity di- rector of the Dana Point Cham- ber of Commerce for the past year. " and one inch at Crescent City. R B. ' ·~ The weather service al!o reported .'l<J ap rown s inch at Red Bluff, .69 at Sacramento and .39 at Eureka. · The Smith River was back within R • t A · ii. hanks early today alter some "'v•ry lO • rson slight" flooding Mondey evening at Dr. Fine Bridge, 10 miles north of Crescent . City, the DeJ Norte County sheriff's Rap Dropped ... office said. No damage was reported as the water spilled into nearby low-lying . ). >astures. • t~ travelers advisory was issued today ~ in the Mt. Shasta.Siskiyou area for blow- ing 2'.00 drifting snow above 3,000 and ' 5,000 f\"'I. . _ Jntera~te-5-was open, although a 2B-m.Ue !1.-.ection between Dunsmuir and · Weed was closed Monday due to blizzanl coaditions• A weatherman said eight in- • cbeo of BnOW. whipped by 35 mile-per· hour winds, fell in the area. Heavy snow above the 5,000 to 7 .~ foot level and strong southerly winds are forecast through Wednesday in the Sierra Nevada north of Yosemite Na- . tional Partc:. ~ State routes 120 over Tioga Pass, 108 · over Sonora Pass and 89 on the Lassen " Loop were closed by snow Mo~ay, the state Divis.ion of Highways said. , Chains were required early today on " U.S. 50 over Echo Summit, State Route .. : 4 over Ebbetts P .. s and State Route &l over Carson Pass. ELLJCOTI CITY. Md. (AP) -Six- year-old riot and arson charges against H. Rap Brown were dropped today and the . onetime advocate of violence by blacks was sentenced on 8 misdf:meanor charge for !~,.to-appear for trial. The Dorchester. Cowity state's at- torney, William B. Yates, moved not to prosecute Brown on a three-count indictment stemming from a summer night of disorders in 1967 in Cambridge, Md. Brown had been charged with arson, inciting to riot and riot following an impassioned speech made to some 500 blacks that night. Violence follov.·ed and two blocks of the city were destroyed by Dre. "'The underlying growth philosophy should be to preserve the present character of a small self-contained village-like community with abundant open space," the policy reads. '.l'he land use section suggesb such thln~s as a reduction in overall housing density ,from the current 4.5 units per acre to 2.5 units per acre by controlling development on land that is still open. The land use element also suggests that' the city should consider such tools . as building permit quotas to insure a .rate of growth that will keep pace with the public services and facilities. Councilmen Jim Thorpe protested the wording of a statement in the land use policy segment covering industrial growth. The statement called on the city to ''agg r essively seek industrial establishments that meet high standards of quality." Councilmen agreed and v o t e d unanimously to strike the word "ag. gressively" from the statement, leaving the city a free rein to pick and choose its industry or the future. The open space section of the policy plan makes provisions for adequate com- pensation to landowners whose property is eventually specified as open space, Hayworth said. Other items contained in the policy plan i,nclude a suggestion that permanent civic center facilities be considered sometime in the future, that commercial developments be limited to centers rather ·than in strips and that the city de-emphasize the use of cars and strong· ly support public tramit systems. From Pagel DOHENY. • • the hearing began. He didn't receive any support for his request. 11 U.S. IO over-Doonor Pw was open ... ea·ly today , but motorists were advised · to tvry chains. Brown pleaded guilty to the misde- meanor of failure to appear for trial in May 1970. He was sentenced to a maximum of one year, but the sentence was ruled to have begun on Oct. 16, 1971, and is now completed. Brown was a fugitive -iher failing to appear for the trial, but was captured in 1971 during a robbery attempt. Holmes also complained that the parks department held its public hearing in Los Angeles. Park official Lee Warren said, "We didn't set up the law" that requires a hearing be in Im Angeles, San Diego, San Francilco or Sacramento. . . Gille winds ranging from 24 to 42 . " mile\' per bou,r, with sea swells from • eigllt to 13 feet, will o;mtinue from ~. ·-1111 .Moon Bay northward along the · ' .-throoib Wednesday, forecasters said. A small craft advisory was"posted belft<n Hall Moon Bay and Point Sur. 'Clemente Council Eyes Plan Action SneraJ. key general p1an actions will face San Clemente city councilmen at " their meeting Wednesday at 7:30 p.1n. in city hall. Councilmen ydll be asked to set for public bearing Nov . 21 amendme'nts to the city's recently adopted land use elemeut of the general plan that will make it conform to specific zoning laws. That action has been mandated by .. st.ate law and cities must complete it , before the first of the year. Q>uncllmen will set a hearing for the same date on the proposal by plan· , ,·_ .ning conunissioners to establish a special '• -<Jl>fn space zone in the city allo\\'ing ·-equitable compensation to land owners wOOse property is designated as open space. ' ' ' • • DAILY PILOT 'flle Or'liflee C...I DAILY "ILOT, willl .... lcll ll c,,.... tflt '"'"""r-. II M Oll'led h lt>e °""'" Coesl Pllblllllfna CO~nr. Stpt,. rite lldllionl 1r1 Mtl1111d, Morodly ttlrwgll Frljl•w. '°' Clidl M"'9. NfW910tt ltM:fl, Hl.OlllllO!ofl S..OVF-1111'1 VlllW, ~ a.di. lrvlnf/s.dd'i.btdl ....:! SM! Clt!M!>lt/ kn Julfl c.p1arr-. A llntlt r~icltMI ~ ... f ... S.Nn11yi .,... Suno•rs- fllt 111"illci,.1 Mllflllftt p .. nl It 11 »t W..1 a.y 11rwt, eo.t. ~. etN1or1111, nu• • ltob.rt N. W1M ,.tnlNr>I INI 'vllli.l'lw Jee~ It. Curl1y Vkf ,,.111n1 .,.,_ G9Mr1f MMtttr Tho1t111 k11•ll '""' Thofl'ltl A, Murph ine MMllO!fte Edl10r Clt1rl11 H. Loot ltldt•rd P. Nill ................. Edilor1 s. M lilfS OMM JOI NHffl El C1Ml110 1.,1. '1l71 : Howar4 Co~x .Circuit~ ~t Judge :lam1!f Macgip' ~i'rller today ' granted the motion by the state not to prosecute the riot and arson charges against the fonner director of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Yates, in an interview, expressed reluctance to prosecute the felony charges. "After 61h years have elapsed ... I don 't know why I should continue this (case), I don 't have a vendetta." The former black militant leader Is serving a five to 1$-year tenn at New York's Attica State Prison following his conviction for armed robbery of a New York City liquor store in 1971 and the \~'ounding of a policeman during the ' robbery. Brown "·as brought to the l-loward C.Ounty court today by state police. Wear- ing blue jeans. a blue turtleneck sweater and a red bandana covering his head , Brown sat lacooically at the defeme table chewing a toothpick. BroWTI accompanied attorneys to the judge's chambers afler which Yates made his molion not to prosecute. Obviously exasperated after the denial, Warren told the commission, 0 We are trying to provide facilities for the public." - The emphasis at the commission hear· ings, he said, seems to be on whether or not the commission llkes the project. He contended that isn't why the panel was formed by Proposition 20. "It seems for some reason ," Warren charged, "the commission wants to deny public acce~ to the beach." That statement stwtned some of the commissioners. Prop. 20, the 1~ coastal zone act, mandates the commission with providing aod increasing accesa to beaches. Commissioner Judy Rosener o t Newport Beach called the denial "Ir· responsible. '1 Commissioner Rimmon C. Fay spoke even more strongly. Rooney might not like people getting to the beach in campers, Fay said, but "I'd move them on elephant.a. I'd take them down on sleds. I'd move them anyway I cou1d l! it would get them to the beaches." \Varren said the department might lose the $855,000 funded for the project by the legislature if delayed too long. Splitting Ti~ket Tt.vo Precincts for lrvi1ie Voters DUAL POLLING PLACES plagued most Irvine voters today as landowners casting ballots in the Irvine Ranch Water District (IRWD) election did so at locations other than the places where they voted on Proposition 1. Robert West, a candidate in the IRWD race lives in the Colony. fie voted at a precinct there in the statewide election. Then, at 8 a.m., he drove four miles up Culver Drive and back to cast his vote in the JR\VD election. FRANK HURD, an Irvine/lanning commlssioner'1'1Vho lives in University Park. said he planne to vote on Proposition I at the usual polling place, University Park Elementary School. To cast his lRWD proxy votes, however, he'l l have to drive nearly a IO·mile round trip to the Racquet Club polling place on Typee Way. Miles E. "Pete" Peterson. a Racquet Club resident. waited around several hours before learning he could exercise his landowner rights on his Cal-Vet financed home. For a time early today It ap- peared veterans whose land technically ts "owned" by Cal·Vet much as a bank ''owns'' a car being bought on time, were to be disenfran· thised. . .. '"' " --- A DECISION OF IRWD attorney Alex Bowle, however, gave vet· crans the right to vote for IRWD candidates. -. -· . .. C..te -..., l3I w"' .. ,. slf'ftt• """*" ~: »U H...,.,, ,__..,.,, """'...,. IMdl: 1111• hfcfl' lltvlh ... • u. ~ ,_..: m ,.,.., •-•<l ' • Tel.,.._ fn41 642-4121 a #1'4 A4"rtllhs1 '42·1671 Precinct workers were instructed ta allow cat-Vet homeowners to be treated as landowners, voting the assessed valuation of tbe land under their homes. One vote for each dollar of land value is given each landowner . . . voler in the IRWD. - ,. " .. , ~ .... , HOWEVER, AFTER Peterson completed hiJ IRWD vote. he had to drive to the Colony Clubh ouse in order to vote on the statewide ballot Issue, Proposition One. An IRWD spokesman said the dual polling places were set up by tbe &iunty registrar of voters which is handling the election for the first time. U,I TlllHlllolO WARNING -Acting Attorney General Robert H. Bork warns in testimony before the House Judiciary Committee that a 'Vatergate prosecutor inde- pendent of the Just(ce Depart· menl could be unconstitutional. Check of $89 ,000 Christmas came a little early to san Juan Capistrano Monday night when city councilmen were presented with a check for 18,321 from the Coontj o! Orange. Tom Fuentes, admlnlstrative nssistant to Board of Supervisors Chairman Ronald Caspers, gave the check lo the city with the comment that, "The supervisor y,•anted to do this himself but he is attending something called the coastal commission and taking abuse up. there." , The money represents the county s prolits from the permit and building inspection services it provides to San Juan under a contract. City Manager Donald Weidner said the contract calls for the city to pay the county 106 percent ol its cost! for building permit services, inspections ~nd other such building and safety duties that small cities cannot support. ·'The $89,000 is what the COWlty made over :ind above the 106 percenl rrom the fee structure," "'eldncr said. "Because of the rnpld growth :ind great volume or ptnnits and. inspections Dere the C!IWll.Y made m0rt than ~ contract called for."" Under tenns or the contract. the city gets all fl'e money over the 106 percent. \\'eidne r said the six percent extra rovers such things as the cowlly'.s overhead and other expeiues. Weidner said today the $89,000 \vindfall, "Isn't all gravy !or us because v.·e ha\•c a considerable amount of staff time in the city in support of the permit procedures." 11lc money automatlcaUy reverts to the city's general fWld and Mayor Roy Byrnes told Fuentes, "You are ~·elcome here anytime v.'hen you brtng checks like this one." Nixo11's Se~retru·y Called Bazaar, Fun Zone Going to State Coastal Panel Befo1·e Sirica Over Tapes Proposals for the Laguna Vlllagc Bazaar and the BaJboa Fun Zone con· domin.iums will be heard Wednesday by State Coastal Zone Conser\'ation Com· rnissiooe~ in Burlingame. WASHING)"ON (UPI) -Chicl U.S. District Judge John J. Siric.:i today directed that Rose "1ary Woods. Presl· dent Nixon's personal secretary, be sutn· APPROVAL OF GERALD FORD APPEARS LIK~LY, P1ge 4 'moned lo testify about Nixon's \Vatergate tapes and why t\vo or them seem to be missing. Sirica directed that Miss Woods be called after it was disclosed in testimony by presidential assistant Stephen Bull that she had possession of some tripes of Watergate conversations for at least ty,·o weeks this fall and possibly may still have them. The White House declined to say what action would be taken on request. The testimony came as Sirica resumed a hearing into White House claims that two of Nixon's conversation:; bearing on the scandal were not taped. The two conversations that the \Vhite House contends were not taped involved a telephone discussion Nixon had with his campaign manager, John N. liiltchell, on June 20, 1972 -three days after the Watergate arrests -and of a m .. ting with John W. Dean lil April 15. The Washington Post quoted winamed White House officials .M:lay as saying Nixon 's lawyers might suggest to Sirica that he make public the substance of the tapes rather than only passing on Clothing D1ive For Mexico Set Colletlions for the Mexiro for Christ Thanksgiving food and clothing drive are under way and donations may be left at 34692 Calle Los Robles in Capi!trano ~ach any day after 6 p.m. The organization takes the donations to needy families in Mexico and a delega- tion with supplies wlll leave over the long Thanksgiving weekend. The South Count y drive_ has been organized by the San Clemente General Hospital Christian Fellowship and the group i! seeking food -preferably can· ned -clothing and financial con· tributlons. relevant po,rtions to the Watergate grand jury. Bull testified that he had taken tapes apparently containing all of the con- versations subpoenaed by Watergate pr. secutors and the Senate Watergate com- mittee to Camp David, Md. for Nixon to review the weekend of Sept. 29. Bull said he returned "four or five" of them to the White House the following f\.fonday but left ' the rest with Miss Woods . Sirica then lnterrapted tO take over the questioning and asked Bull how long ~liss Woods had the tapes in her possession. "She kept them at least a week," Bull said. "'Beyond that, 1 do not know." "'Do you know ·what happened to those seven or eifit tapes?" Sirica asked . "No, sir,' Bull replied. From Page 1 ADOBE • • • the reqUest for door-to-door soliciting be rejected flatly. "This ii oot the · proper way ~ go about prewvlng t!Mte tblnp." Cbennal< fumed. "We've got to get the cart behind the horse and get better organized. "E\'cry time somtone sees an old adobe "'all. the citizens run helter skelter to preserve it when v.·hat they shoud be doing is building up some groundwork to an organized preservation effort." Chennak also questioned the legal status of tl're Citizens to Sa\'e San Juan Adobes in terms of collecting tax-deduc- tible don ations. Councilman James Weathers joined Chennak's protest by saying the job of preserving the old adobe should better be performed by the san Juan C.pislrllno Historical Society. He said he isn't sure if the two preservation groups are con- nected . "This is a slap to the tace of tbe historical -society it-another group-has-- taken over this task," Weathers said. Mayor Roy L. Byrnes said the council should be sure of the COMection between the two groups before granting a soliciting pennit to the Citizens to Save San Juan Adobes. But Chermak disagreed, saying, "'It'a not the place of the council to make that kind or determination." The meeting v.·ill begin ~:30 a.m. in the llfarquee Room at the · ame Hyatt House, 1333 Old B a y o re Highway. The state comm1ss1on hears appeals of actions taken by six regiooal com~ mission established by the t912 coastal zone act. A vote is scheduled \Vedncsday on a pemUt application by Robert H. Grant Corp. for 1.llra Costa \o"illas, 213 COil· dorninlums at Camino E,,trella and Camino C3pistrano in San Clemente. This bas been delayed several times. Grant received a pennit from the South coast regional commission. ,,,at was appealed by the Capistrano Beach Community Association. Public bearings, but not \·oting, are set on the 75,000 square loot Bazaar shop. ping center by Marl< Gumbiner In Laguna Beach and 33 . condominium! planned by Joo Konwtset in place ol the Fun 1.one . amusement pork in Newport Bellclt Both were tumed down at the regional level . From Pngel COLORADO. • • bus transportation, would be raised by ... the lluclenta. The only cost to the district, said assistant principal Phil Grignon, would be the pay to substitute teachers roplac-- ing the two Dana Hills: stan members who would accompany the atudents. AD echoolwork would have to be done ahead of time on a contractual basis agreed upon between each student and hls teache~, Grignon sa1d. Some llO l!l'Pllcatlons·lor the 30 spots have -l>een-tumed 1n·aJready. Grttnon said. Students will be chosen partly on three letters of recommendation and through a required composition on "\Vhat I can contribute to the domestic ex· change program." · A aid trip will be included in, the tWl>'Weelt period. A total o! 1$ ..,,ion. 10 juniors, and 5 8QPhomorca will be choaen. The Bright Sme Shertages are occuring in virtually every industry. The corpot industry is no exception. Two factors are causing the shortages. The demand is oslronomicol! Carpeting is no longer a luxury, but• nocossity. People are using corpeting in rooms which used lo be tiled, such as kitchens, baths, dining rooms, ond bedrooms. Also, carpeting is instilled ouhide, end ..,en on the walls. Secondly, the filiors aro In 1hort supply duo to ovorwholmlng demand from no~ just the carpet industry, but ALL industry. We feel that tho re is a p o s i I i v o oapocl lo 111 of this. Tho manufacturers are m~king bettor qu.Uties with 1vail<ible yarn, ond much more of tho junky stuff is di11ppoarlng. It may 1ppoar that prices aro higher, but actually you ero just looking at BETTER CARPETING. • ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 ri.centla Aft, COSTA MISA . . 6'f6-4838 HOURS: Mon. 1'nl Thon., 9 to 5:30 -RI. t M t -SAT., t :JO M 5 \ I I I ' I I Tuesday's Cl osiµg_ Prices •• • ' - NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE SC DAILY PILOT J ;i Ye~'8High-Lows Appear Every'Saturday f".I = Hlotl 1..ow l,..hl c':t,1.:i'•·------------------=" • Rally by Market La~ei· Dissipates NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks declined broadly Tuesday for the seventh consecutive day on the New York Stock Exchange, more than cancelling the gains ol an early rally. ~ Minutes beforcthe close, the Dow Jones Indus- trial average had dropped 6 02 points to 913 .46, after being more than 10 points ahead in the first trading hour. With nothing in the news lo support a buying spree, the list's.strong early gains largely faded by mid-day and turned to losses later • \ (4 DAILY PILOT Otlier Deatlis MOUNTAIN VIEW (AP ) - Funeral services are schcduJ. ed Wednesday tor Andres A. Borjon, 88, a captain in Pancho Villa's re\•olutlonary Mexican Army. He died Fri· day of a heart attack. -~~ NEW YORK (AP\ -Dr. llalm G. Ginotl, 51, child psychologist and author, died Sunday. He was the author or several books on child psychology, including "Group Psychotherapy with Children'' and ''Parent and Child." FRESNO (AP) -Funeral services are pending for R. E. Bergstrom, 49, Fresno County director o f en- vironmental health, who died of an apparent heart attack after playing golf Saturday. NEWTON, Mass. (UPI ) - 1\1.aUrice Gordon, 68. one of Boston's biggest real estate owners, died M o n d a y . Gordon's property holdings in Boston and Miami, Fla. are esti mated to be worth in ex- cess of $30 million. Deat.h Notl<!es ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MOR'l'UARY m E. 17th St., Costa l\tesa 64M8S8 • BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del ltfar 173-MSO Costa l\tesa ~zru • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa l\Iesa LI Jl.:IID • DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUARIES 17911 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach UZ.7771 %44 Redondo Ave. Long Beacb U:l-138-1115 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1706 Laguna Can yon Rd. IM-9415 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery l\fertuary Cbapel 3SOt PaclOc View Drive Newport Beach, California 611-%700 • PEEK FAMil.Y COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893-35!5 • SMITil'S MORTUARY 8%7 l\taln St. Huntington Beach 536-6539 PUBLIC NOTICE . "" SUl"E•IO• COUlfT 01' THI! STATE 01' CALll•OJUUA FOil THI! COUNTY OF ORANGE No. A·11DU NOTICE OF HEAltNG OF PETITION FOR PROBATE Of' WILL ANO FOR LETTERS TESTAMENTARY Esl1l1 ol EDITH S. CHAMBERLIN, Oece1sed. NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN 11111 DICK COWAN 11111 filed lltrtln 1 petition tor Proo.11 of Wiii •rid for lssu1111ce o! Ltl!t•• Tesl11menl11')f lo the petllion1r relerlr!Ce to wllich 11 mildt fOf h1rther p•rllcvl11r1. lricl t1'11t 1111 time 1nd pt11ce of rie1rlng lhe wme has bte11 ~I ~ Nov.-mbtf' :io. 1tn. II t :OO 11.m .. ~~ llM courlroom of Dep1rtment Ho. 'of u lcl court, •I 100 Civic Cerittf' ~Qtl" wesl, In the Cltv of Sanl1 An,,, Ollfornt•. ~tea NOYilmber 2, 1tn. • wn111m e. st. J®n, Count" Cltr~ l •LL Y & Ga A HAM I COlltPOllATION 5 HilwlhorM a1v11 .• lullt IUO 1111c1, C11llt..-nl1 ) 37\·l"t mev1 for 1"1Htt-r 11bU1hed Or1nge COllll Dilly 1"1101, ,:..mbllr s, t. n , lt7l nun PUBLIC NOTICE ,..ICTIJIOUS 1uso1r.s1 NAM• ITATIMINT followh19 Ptrwll I• doing bulll'IH.I UtWAY PO\.ISHING, 1a.so.o Fffn ., s11n1on, c1111orn111 Jos,e.ph •rtd/or o.nle(;11 C1rdou , 201 Sim• An• Aw .. Ntw90'1 BIKll. C1llf. ,, ... \ Tllh bultnts& 11 conduc;leci by 111 In· lvlcl1111. Dellltct (tf'dOll 'Q't1l1 llillflnlftl ...... llled wllll ftlt CGl/fll't' Cl•-of Or•lllle COunlv on OdtiOer" 2'. ,..,.. ''"S4 Nbll"'9d or111111 COid DlllY Piiot, -Oct..,. ». _, HOll'Mlbtt" •• I), 20. tm 3211·13 PUBLIC NOTICE Tuesday Novtmber 6, 1~73 ORANGE COUNTY Sclioolmen Hire Mo1ie y Co1isulta11t . ' " ., \ ' • . . . • ' Poliaeal Notes School Elections Limited .-owners: if there's anylling advertised ii today's p«~aer you'd• to own, ....... who can ._,you buy it. Spiral Sliced Whole or Ualt of Standards. the National Science Folllldation and HUD to cooperate in a program to demonstrate commercial applications or solar heating techniques for buildings. Burgener's bill has been referred to the House Com- mittee on Science and Astronautics. * ~iARY EVELYN Bryden, executive assistant to Supervisor Ralph Clark !or the past two years, has been nam- ed intergovernmental relations officer with the Orange County Transit District. Greg sanders will take Mrs. Bryden's place on the supervisor's staft He ls a resident of· Anaheim and a graduate of Cal S t a t e , Fullerton. PLAZA ART CENTER IL ADOll PLAZA, SUtTI 15 • s.J .. Co,..,... P1inti1191, Art M•t1ri1l1, Fr1m11 \Ve Frame. the Usual. and the U1&usual f . 0 "So Good . '. . It Will "Haunt" You 'tll It's Gone" ORDEI U.ILY HONEY BAKED HAMS M TURKEY BREASTS For yo•r n..U.IYI .. Dl•Mtl Al10. Order N•w for CllrllhHI a ·Avco. You may convert the bullt·up equity Jn your house Into cash In your hands. Cash to do whatever you want to cto, and pay beck convenlently over a period of years. HOMEOWNER LOANS TO $25,qGO. l.oMa oyer $5,000 on I combl .. llon of Riii Etl•I• Ind P1no .. 1 Proper!J. ..t//IAV CO FIN ANCIAL SERV ICES 2~D Harbor llvd., Costa M ... 5tO Ne. Anaheim llvd., An~helm 25t S.. lr.acUd St., Anaheim 171" l..-khur1t, fountain Valley (lrookhvnt Plua) 12111 lrookhvnt S! .. Garcl•n Greve 17422 IMch 11¥4--'I Huntington leach 2017 So. ~In St., Santa Ana 513 W. 17th St,. Santa Ana '411 W•tmlnstar Ave., w .. tmln1t1r 556-1000 535-2116 77 ... 5250 ' f0·5'0Z '"'""' ·147-6171 S4f.JU1 547-4431 .,,_,... . \ erS "-ows a· '1 Now you don't have to wait for "banker's hours " to write a check. Or be a friend of the store manager's brolher·in-law to get ,, · · it OK 'd. When you have The Bank of . California Connection there's no ha • I f !l's like having your bank on just abo.<a! every street corner. Only better ... becat:B many of these "teller's windows" are o 7 days a week! · ~ no credit check, no embarrassin~ f:ut there is a lot more . The Bank of ·l fornia Connection is a whole package turn-down . .• ,. , he most useful personal banking ta " services ever put together; Because with The Connection you Check Guarantee Card. This card lets' the world know lhal The Banl<Ji.f Californi guarantees· your personal che'Ck p to $100.00. Your card is honored ores operated by Saleway!y Les§ Drug Slores, J." 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' Or stop in at any of our convenient offices. -····································································································· _ I am Interested in The Bank of California Connection. Please send me mo_re information and an applicalion: The Bank of CalifOmia Bank of California Please clip and mail to: ® A good s!>lid COnnection. omia, N,A. ADDRES'i-------------~-"PT.-- TE p ZIP---- ••••••••••••••••••••••• The Bank of California 550 South Flower Street Los Angeles, California 90017 Atlentlon : Mr. John Owans '••····························-········· • • • ' ' . ( I r -- .Laguna. Beaeh EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stocks· VOL 66, NO. 31 (), 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES •• ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 'TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1973 TEN CENTS Doheny Beach Campsite Denial Riles State By CANDACE PEARSON 01 tlMI o.nr l"llot '"" A new hearing by the regional coastal commission on a plan to add 234 overnight campsites to Doheny .State Beach -initially denied in a stormy session Monday night -will take place next week. Commission chairman Donald Bright said this morning the Capistrano Beach proje<:t will be reconsidered next Monday. The meeting will begin at 9 a.m. in U>ng Beach Harbor Department head- quarters. 925 Harbor Plaza Drive. Following the close denial Monday. angry comments by a state parks official spurred the commmission to agree to rehear the plan Dec. 12. But Dr. Bright, a marine biology pro- fessor at Cal State Fullerton, said State ParkS' Director William Penn Mott had already 'called him on the phone this morning. The hearing was pushed up ore to "get the state parks people off our backs," Bright said. The plan for pennanent campsites with trailer hookups, sanitary facilities and an amphitheatre Was denied 6-4. It needed seven votes for approval. Comissioners Cannen. Warschaw and James Hayes w'ere absent. Voting against the project were Com- missioners Robert Rooney of Huntington Beach: Don Phillips of Long Beach; ·June Opening 'Dead' Louis Nowell of Los Angeles and Art Holmes of San Clemente. Rooney said he wouldn't vote for anything that put recreational vehicles on the beach and Nowell criticized the slate parks department as "one F,rt of the state government that rides rough!hod over ~pie and does a minimum job." But lhe objections of Holmes and Phillips stemmed from lhe lack of public input into the plan. Holmes, who said nearby residents told him they received little or no public notice of any hearings on the idea, tried to have th e project continued before the hearing began. He didn •t receive any support for his request. Hotmes also complained that the parks department held its public hearing in Los Angeles. Park official Lee Warr en said, "We didn't set up the law" that requires a hearing be in Los Angeles. San Diego, San Francisco or S<icramento. • -eac Demolition Of Station, Lawsuits Hold ' Up Main Beach l)evelopment -Eatery Eyed The first court appearance tor the "There are enough issues involved time when crowds throng to the sands. lawsuit snarling the development of that the court isn't going to summarily Gabriels said today he brought the Laguna Btaclt's Main Beach park will dismiss it." Seymour said. action to force the C.Oastal Co~sions be ~fondar at . v.·hich a hearing date He predicted that the earliest hearing to follow what be . charg~ were the for the action will be set. date that could be set would be in early prope! procedures m the issuance of It is possible the law suit brought or mid-December. perll)llS. · by John Gabriels against issuance or That delay would probably !till any In the Main Beach Park case, he coastal conservation permits for the pqrk chance of development or the park as said the regional commission did not could be tossed out by the judge at planned before the start of the summer review the city's environmental impact that time. However, City Attorney Tulley season. report. Seymour sai~ today that was "extremely In the past, the city has been unwilling In addition, Ga·briels said. he oppose! unlikely." to undertake construction during the (See DELAYS, Page Z) N~ Laguna Newspaper To Dea~ With Gay Life Laguna Beach's newest newspaper may finance ltself with m a s s a g e workshops and yoga seminars, it was reported today. . It's the "Laguna Newsworks," schedul- ed to make its 16-page debut Nov. 15 with articles about the gay life in Laguna, possible effects of the comet J»aded our way, an interview with junk dealer Charlie Peddicord and a feature on the Laguna food coop. ''The trouble with othe~ publications in Laguna is that they don't recognize that this is a crazy place," said John BieMan, co-producer of the venture. \rorkshops, if a new urgency ordinance ~nning massage parlors in Laguna doesn't get in their way. "Our paper will be funky and tasty," he promised. Brennan, 29, is a native or New York City. He is a former public relations writer for Xerox Corporation. Of ficia'.ls Find .. Sivered ljmhs, Body of Girl, 3 SUN VALLEY (UPI) -The severed limbs and body of a 3-year-old ~l were found today, strewn over a wide area of Sun Valley. It was the second dismembennent slaying in the Los Angeles area in less than a week. (Related story, page 5) Police arrested a 31-year-old man who lived with the victim's mother after he led officers to a gravel pit where one leg of little Lisa Vitale of Norttr Hollywood was found. He was charge<t the suspect admiUed dismembering the body. Hopes for . completion of the Laguna Beach Park by summer are tumbling like a house of cards today. A further lawsuit -against the Main Beach park project will be med to prevent demolition of the old service stations, Benton's restaurant and parking lot, said Richard Willetts, armounced candidate for ·city Council. Willetta' threatened legal action follows that of Lagunan John Gabriels challeng- ing the issuance of--a Coastal-Cooser.va- tion Commission permit !or development bl the park. . ' Gabriefs charges that the South Coast R<lional Comervation Commisllon when it heard the city's proposal in August did not l'UlSider the environmental im- pact report of the park. In a lawsuit be seeks to revoke coastal commission permits granted to the city because he says the .commisaion is re- quired to review project BIRs. Delay caused by cou:r.t deliberations would set back the start of construction, and push the completion now scheduled for June 21 into summer - a situation deemed "imJMl)sible" by Mayor Roy Holm today. "We are all just very disappointed. Apparently we are held up !or a year. There doesn't appear to be any way of getting around that," Holm said. The city -was due to open bids for construction of tbe project Wednesday. Nation at War Obviously exasperated after the denial. \Varren told the commission, "We are trying to provide facilities for the public.'' The emphasis at the commission hear· ings. he said. seems to be on whether or not the commission likes the project. He contended that isn't why the panel was form ed by Proposition ZU. "ll seems for some reason ." \Varren charged, "thC' commission wants to deny (See OOllENY, Page 21 Brennan's partner in the undertaking k Roger Carter, former Laguna YMCA director. They say they will be aided Jw 25 valu1i\eers. Court Test Seen In Laguna Beach Smoking Hassle The cause of death in the case has not been determined. But Police said with suspicion of murder, as was the mother. An arm was found at the dead end of a street while another leg was found in a wash at the lx>ttom of La Tuna Canyon. A foot was found two miles up the canyon and the torso with Uie head attached was found at the summit or the canyon, another two miles away. "W.e don't tnow what the bids are yet, but und~ly they'll be higher when they come in a year from now,'' Mayor Holm said. Mayor Holm said the city had the permit for demolition of the structures and asphalt surfaces on the park land and that it was issued independently from the construction permits. 1'.ointin~ a .45 at the head __ o! a blindfolded Khmer Rouge suspect, a Cambodian officer walks li1m-10-ward-a command post for 1nterroga-----1 tion Sunday. The man was captured near Prek Thong, some six miles .. said the first issue of the be free. Alter that, the bi· ssues ill cost 25 cents. ban se'ting ads to support the -pajier, BreMan said the staff plans .. 'to -schedu1e movies series and seminars. 'ibey may even offer m a s s a g e or .. ge • Weather Coast • Some high clouds at times other- wise mostly suMy Wednesday along the Orange Coast. Highs in the upper 60s at the beaches ris- ing to the low 70s Inland. Lows t~ night In the low 50s. INSIDl: TODA. V Notice how much more vou're · paying for lobster at re&tau- rant.s? And how much less you're getttng for youT mot1e11? Th.t aucculent seafood is ;oining ~ the e1uiangered list socni. if poachers don't knock it Off. See sto1'JI on Page 12. • L.M, 1..,-I Callftnlll J Cifttl.... ,._,_. c.Mk:• 11 Cm1~ 17 DMfl N91icH 14 ••'91111 ,.... ' 1111t9111-..it 11 '"'""' 1141 ,II' .. ltc91'11 11 H't 8.,dnfr 1 .......... 1• The Kalos Kagathos Foundation of Laguna Beach will go to court-possibly with.in a week -seeking an order to force a smoking ban at meetings of the Laguna Beach school board . The announcement follows faifures or the foundation to force a smoking ban through the school board, the Orange County Health Department, tile Air Pollution Control District and Ure state Department or F.ducation. The lawsuit seeking an injunction against smoking at school b o a r d meetings is being prepared by Santa Ana attorney William Sheffield who recently represented mining magnate G. Domipic Shelton in the flamboyant Three Arch Bay dog leash law lrl31. Sbefrield, wtio is volunteering his services, is pinning his case against the school board on Section 375 of the state l!rnal Code, entitled: "Offensive substantWs in places or assemblage." The seCtion, in part, reads, "It shall be lDllawful to throw, drop, pour, deposit, release, discharge or expose ... in, upon or about any theater, restaurant, place of business, places or amusement or any place of public assemblage, any liquid, gaseous, or solid substance or matter of any kind which Is injurious to per90M or property, or is nauseous, sickening, irritating or offensive to any · of the senses." The section provides for three months to one year imprisonment or a line ol $500 to $2,000 for each vi,olalion . Sheffield said the suit will ask the court to order the board to ban smoking at tcbool board meetings In the interest of the health and welfare or the students (S.. SMOKING, Page II) Police searched through the early . morning hours for the missing arm which was believed to be in the gravel pit. In custody was William Perez, 31, (See BODY, Page !i He said the City Council will discuss demo.lition at its session starting at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday. The start of that session will be preceeded by a 3:30 p.m. executive sessioo to discuss pending litigation. (This is an earlier start for the council meetings.) Willetts, who fought the council in IS.. MAIN BEACH, Page !) Tru~king Gifts Pa11el Checks Nixon Donations \l'ASIIlNGTON (UPI) -The Senate Watergate Committee is checking into $600,000 in contributions by trucking company execu· lives to President Nixon 's 1972 campaign, the Washington Star·News said today. The newspaper said the amount was the largest single industry contribution to.J!l~J'iillon te-eleclipq ef,(oi'\Jipd call!J at a time when tl'.Ucl<ers were fightin~ a go 'Unment.,,roposal that would fiave gen- erated more competition in \)leir field. . According to the Star-News, John Ruan of Des Moines, secretary of the American Trucking Associations, acknowledged beading the drive but said it was aimed at defeating Nixon's Democratic con- tender, Sen. George S. McGovern, rather than influencing legislation. Polk said executives of the following companies were among those making $25,000 ,contributions; Roadway Express, Akron, Ohio; Consolidated Freight.Ways, San' Francisco; Gateway Transportation Co., La Crosse, Wis.; Gordon Transport, Memphis; Lee Way Motor Freight Co., Oklahoma City; Brady Motorfrate, Des Moines, and SChwermlin Trucking Co., Milwaukee. ' . I . . . northwest of Phnom Penh. Erosion Cont1·ol Project For Laguna Niguel Ol('d Avco Community Developers received approval Monday of erosion control plans to stave off mud slides on two Laguna Niguel tracts. But the developers couldn't convince South Coast Regional Zone Conservation commissioners they needed to put in streets, storm drains, gutters and un- derground utilities on the still unap- proved projects.• The temporary measures include sandbagging, seeding, desilting bastns and backfilling of existing curbs. The emergency permit was granted to prevent damage to private property and the Laguna Niguel marine preserve from potentially hazardous w i n t e r runoffs. Despite warnings from Avco general manager Ray Peloso that an independent meterologist predicts unusually heavy rains this winter, the "additional preven- tive" measures the company wanted were turned down. A £ew commissioners in Long Beach pointed out that the erosion danger from the heavily graded slopes, denlljled ol vegetation, only exists because Avco proceeded without a commission perm.It. 11Thc comp8ny was very quick to hack it up down there to get it Wlder the wire,'' Commissioner Judy Rosener of (S.. AVCO, Page%) Israeli Death Total 1,854 TEL AVIV (AP) -Israel an- nounced today that 1,854: 1sraelis soldiers were killed in the Middle East war. It was the highest death toll Israel has suffered in a war since its first con.met with the Arabs in 1948, when the figure neared S,000. 'The announcement of t h e previously secret casualty figures said about 1,000 Israeli soldiers were wounded and still hospitaliz- ed . Many Israelis had expected the number or ¥.'ounded to be much higher and the disclosure was greeted with son1e relief. - Don't Forget '';fo ,'i Vote; Polls Open Until 8 · ·' . ' ' • ..a .... • \ 'f • ..; ' I ' • ' , \ .House Uni t Asks Boost In Security WASIIlNGTON (AP) -The House Ways AJld Afeans CommiUee voted today 13 to 12 to boost Social Security ben efits 10 percent effective with next July's cheeks and to finance this through a hike in the payroll-tax wage base. But the decision could be subject to change. The panel immemately ar- ranged a n1eeting later in the day to act on the form al legislation. After lengthy debate by the committee Monday, proposals emerging as chief options for final action included either ,.,.._P .. eJ DOHE NY .. • pubUc acctsa to the beach," That stolement atwuied aome of tho com.mlssionen.-Prop. 20, the 1072 coastal zone act, m.andltel the commisalon with providing ond locrellllng acceu to beaches. Commissioner Judy Rosener o f Newport Beach called the denial "ir- responsible." Commissioner Rimmon C. Fay 11poke even more strongly. Rooney might not like people getting to the beach Jn campers, Fay said, but "I'd move them on elephants. l'd take them down on sleds. I'd move them anyway t couJd if it would get them to the beaches." a 10 percent benefit boost effective in July or a two-step hike of a total 12 , percent, with seven percent due next March and th e rest coming the following November. WARNING -Acting Atlorney General Robert H. Bork warns in testimony before the House Judiciary Committee that a Watergate prosecutor inde-- pendent of the Justice Depart· ment could be unconstitutional. Warren said the department might lose the $865,000 funded for the project by the legislature if delayed too long. At the onse t of the hearing, Warren said by 1980 there will be a deficiency of 19,000 campsites from Santa Barbara to Mexico. A few commissioners objected to the conversion of the day use beach to cam· ping, but Warren said there is more demand for the site as a campground. These included financing changes in- volving the payroll tax rate formula and boosttng the top salary on whlch the tax is levied. Rep. Al Ullman (D-Ore.), acting com- mittee chairman, said he wanted the panel ready to offer a bill to the House later this v.·eek. The Senate Finance Committee already has approved a seven percent Social Security benefit boost ef· fective upon .enactment of legislation, although the panel did not offer any financing changes. The Nixon administration has been · trying to · bo1d down spending during the fiscal year ending June 30. An ad· ministration spokesman told the House panel he would suggest the President sign the 10 percent benefit increase option since its impact comes in the ' year starting July l, 1974. But the spokesman suggested he would call for a veto of the two-step plan for a total 12 percent benefit increase, a proposal that appeared to be gathering backing among committee Democrats who lnd.lcated they couJd collect enough House votes tuaverride any veto. • -Current law-calls for a 5.9 percent- Social Security benefit boo.<t to take effect next July and for the amount of earnings against which Social Security taxes are paid to go from $10,800 this year to $12,600 next year. It was estimated a seven percent flat increase in benefits payable in r.rarch would cost $1.3 billion during the year ending June 30, 1974. There was no immediate estimate on the total cost of the two-step 12 percent benefit in· crease during 1974. The estimate for the 10 percent plan was $1.4 billion for the year starting next July. Rosary Slated For Laguna Man, Michael Cullen Rosary will be recited at 7; 30 tonight - at St. Catherine's Catholic Church for Michael B. Cullen, a Laguna Beach resident who died Saturday following a brief illness. He was 38. Mr. Cullen was the owner of Cullen Laboratories, F u 11 e rt o n , which specializes in veterinary me d i c i n e services. 1 Requiem Mass for Mr. Cullen will be offered at 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Catherine's. Burial will follow at Ascension· Cemetery, El Toro. Mrs. Cullen ls survived by his widow, Germayne, of lhe family home, 675 . Balboa Ave.; three daughter, Candace, . Cynthia, and Corrine ; two sisters, :ft1rs. -~Mary Hoffman, of Corona and Mrs. , Patricia -Crogan or·""Tun.g ·Bea.Ch-;-alicf a half.brother, James Gillespie of Red Bluff. Mr. Cullen was a member of the National Association of Ve ter in a r y Medicine and the Laguna Beach Country Club. Blacks Seize Office PISCATAWAY, N.J. (UPI ) -At least 100 black students barricaded themselves inside the dean's office at Piscataway COilege Monday with at least seven administrators. OIANN co.t.n I.I DAILY PILOT Tiie DI'".,.. CO.! DA ILY "II.OT. wlltl -..iktl • QlfllllhMI Ille "'-"'"'· " MlllMd bl' tlle Dl'"anoe CO.II l'llbll1~lrog CD""Pflll'. Se!* rtt. edltlO!lt tr. JIUllH"'9d, ~ty thra1111h l'rlcl1y, flll' C.11 Mne, News>ort ·~ Huntl,..,.,.' IHdVl'1111nttlrl V1lley, LI..,,,; Bwcll, INIM/5addi<911Kt tond s.,. C~ll/ • St" JIM!! C'~tt-. A 11119.. •lliooMI ,. I edl!IM II. llUOlltl!ld lalvnl11'1 end ~~ TIM Pl'lrlCIPll Pllblitl!llll p~"' 11 11 llO Wnt .. ,. llf'Wf, Coslt M ... , Ctllfor~lt, "'"· ltoMrl N, WoH ,,_IHrtf tflll '""ltl!ot J1d1 It. C11rley Vb ,,_ldtt1I Ind GtMrtt MtntMr n.,,_,, K ..... u ECllMr TllMt1 A. M11rpli i"o M1N191r!e fll!Mr Ch1rle1 H. L.01 Atclit rcl '· Nill ..... ...,., Mt,.._ltle 1!1111"'11 ~--212 hrnf A•D"llt Mtllittt A.lllro111 P.O . lei 666, t26S2 --C.lt M-: nt Wnt It'( llfM! ,....,..,.. &Mdl! lW "'....,..,., """"''"' ""'"fl119t.. ltlOI: 11'1J llNCtl ~·~ "'" Cltrr.riwr ., Hortfl El c."""" RMI , ........ ,,,., '42 ... J2t ClwlflN A'9MI '11 '42·167t a..-. ..... Al D1.a11...,.: ....•. ... ........ c..rr.... tm. °".... C.00.t "lilblltll!tit "'-", • 'I'. Ht ""'" 1JOri.. 1ti.1rtliDrll, • "" I -ttor " Hnrtltofnttl11 .... Ill =--.. ,....,..._,, ""'-' ...... ...... If al!IYrilftt .,.__. _ ..... dMi _, ....... It , ... Mnt, ~ ~-~ "'".... U.6' _..,.; ~ !NII t.1.U "'9ltltl1'1'1 flllliretv .. ,ilrlt""-., .... """'"""· It is already being used for overflow camping from the existing Doheny Beach campsite and has paving. Nixo11's Sec1·etary Called Befo1·e Sirica-Over Tapes WASmNGTON (UPI) -Chief U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica today directed that Rose ~1ary Woods, Presi- dent Nixon's personal secretary, be sum· APPROVAL OF GERALD FORD APP.EARS LIKELY, Poge 4 moned to testify about Nixon's Watergate tapes and why two of them seem · to be missing. · Sirica directed that Miss Woods be called after it was disclosed in testimony by presidential assistant Stephen Bull that she bad possession of some tapes of Watergate conversations for at least two weeks this fall and possibly may still have them. The White House declined to say what action would be taken on request. The testlmon e as Sirica resumed a hearing in White e claims that two of · on's conversation:; bearing on the scandal were not taped. The two conversations that the White House contends were not taped involved a telephone discussion Nixon had with rus· campaign manaier, John N. MitChell, on June 20, 1972 -three days after ~e .Watergate arrests -and of a meeting· with John w. Dean Ill April 15. The Washington Post quoted W103med White House officials today as saying Nixon's lawyers might Suggest to Sirica that he make public the substance of the tapes rather than only passing on relevant portions to the Watergate grand jury. Bull testified thit he had taken tapes From Pagel MAINBEACH ... the increasing of parking meter fees, announced today he will seek an in· junction against any demolition of the park area structures. He said he did not believe the city S hOOld tear ck>wn--the-structures-if development of the park is delayed a year. He criticized the city for tearing out. the El Paseo parking lot and said that this should not happen to th e ocean front parking area at Benton's. apparently containing all of the con· versations subpoenaed by Watergate pro- secutors and the Senate Watergate com· mittee to Camp David, ~1d. for Nixon to review the weekend of Sept. 29. Bull said he returned "four or five" of them to the White House the following Monday but left the rest with Miss Woods. · Sirlca then · interrupted' to take over the questioning and 3sked 'Bull how long Miss Woods had the tapes in her possession. "She kept them at least a week," Bull said. "Beyond that, I do not know." "'Do )'OU know what happened to those sevea or eight tapes?" Sirica asked. "No, sir," Bull replied. Under questioning by assistant special proSecutor Richard Ben·Venlste, Bull said he had seen Miss Woods typing as she listened to some tapes at Camp David that weekend in September. 'Someone get word to Miss Woods that she will be called as a witness in this case," Siric:a interjected. Bull said Miss Woods continued to work with the tapes throughout the week and "seven or eight" of the tapes were taken to Key Biscayne, Fla. The follow· ing weekend. Asked If he knew when the tapes were returned, Bull said, "No, sir. l don't know if they have been returned." Sirica had ordered the President to turn over the tapes to him for private screening to detennine what portions should be provided to the grand jury. Blind Murder Suspect Dead EL CAJON (AP) -A blind college student free on bond while awaiting trial for murder was found dead of what coroner's oUice called an apparent miXture of overdose of drugs. The body of Perry McKinney, 38, was found Monday by his brother with whom he had been living since being freed "ff6fif"COun tyJall-1ast-month -on-bail. He was awaiting trial on a charge of murdering Donald H. Downs, 59. Downs was shot to death in a vacant lot Sept. 26 after an argument in a bar. Witnesses said a man with a seeing· eye dog fled the scene. Splitting Ti~ket Two Precincts for Irvine Vorers DUAL POLLING PLACES plagued most Irvine voters today as landowners casting ballots in the Irvine Ranch Water District (lRWD) election did so at locations other than the places where they voted on Proposition 1. Robert West, a candidate in the IRWD race lives in the Colony . He voted at a precinct there in the statewide election. Then, at 8 a.m., he drove four miles up Culver Drive and back to cast his vote in lhe IRWD election. FRANK HURO, an Irvine/tanning commissioner who lives in Universily Park, said he planne to vote on Proposition I at the usual polling place, University Park Elementary School. To cast his ffiWD proxy votes, however, he'll ha\re to drive nearly a IO-mile round trip to the Racquei Club polling place on Typee Way. Miles E. 11Pete" Peterson, a Racquel Club resident, waited around several hours before learning he could exercise his landowner righ ts on his Cal-Vet financed borne. For a time early today It ap- peared veterans whose land technically ls "owned" by Cal·Vet much as a bank "owns" a car being boUjht on time, were to be disenfran· chised . A DECISION OF IRWD attorney Alex Bowie, howeve r, gave vet· erans the right to vote for JRWD candidates. Precinct workers were instructed to allow Cal-Ve\ homeowners lo be treated as landowners, voting the assessed valuation of the land under their homes. One vote for each dollar of land value ls .given each landowner voler In the IRWD. HOWEVER, AFTER Peterson completed his IRWD vote, he had to drive lo the Colony Clubhouse In order to vote on the statewide ballot Issue , Propositi on One. An IRWD spokesman said the dual polling places were set up by the co unty registrar of voters which Is handling the election for lhe first time. ---... • 'or San Otaofre From Page J Evacuation Plan AVCO ••• Newport Beach said, referring to the Nov. 1 paaage of Proposition 20. Absence Ripped Prop. 20, t.be 197# coastal zone act, .. u.blill)ed die couta) conimlsslon with Jurladi~lon within J,000 yards of the hip tide line. What Avco wanted to do amounted to putting in most or the improvements for tract 7885, inland of Pacific Coas\ !Ughway at Niguel Shores Road, and tract 7479, on the oceanside of the highway at Crown Valley Parkway. By JAN WORTH Of '"" o.nr 'llot s"tf AJarmed and irritated, trustw_oLtbe C&ptstrano Unified SChool District learn· eel Monday night that no evacuation plans have been offered yet ror district school.! Jn case of a lethal accident at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. 1 Board Chairman George White Jam· basted the Atomic Energy Commission for "apparenUy not having any concern for our children." "It's time the board fook a very strong stand," Trustee Robert Hurst said . "The AEC owes us more Information -they've given us almost nothing," he said. A proposed expanSioq of existing power generating facilities at the San Onofre plant south of San Clemente has been approved by every government agency except the State Coastal Zone Conserva· lion Commission. The exiSting plant is three miles from Concordia Elementary School. 'l)lree other schools are within six miles of the plant. Trustees said expansion of the plant might prompt them to abandon Con· cordia School. A letter to the California Zone Con· servation Commission was drafted ex· pressing the trustees' concerns. The commission has not yet approved the the expansion. "If satisfactory answers arc not prir vided regarding evacuation planning, the school district will have to consider the possibility of abandoning at least one of our schools," the Jetter read. And the trustees made it quite clear they believe the costs to the district ··Fr-Pagel SMOKING ... in the school district. He argues that the school board, as the governing body or the district, should set an example for the students. "\Ve want to stress the educational nature of this action," said Bruce Hop- ping, chairman or the healllH>riented foundation . The suit will demand the school board to redesign the high school physical education program "to motivate \'igorous student participation in positive, social activities as a viable antidote for their antisociology (smoking)," Hopping said. Hopping also · has requested Sheffield to pcepare a lawsuit again!t the liealth department and pollu!lon "ciMrtrol district for their alleged refusals "to respond to a legitimate citizen's complaint and failure to enforce compliance with California Penal Code section 375." From Page 1 BODY ..• an assembler for a Sun Valley trailer company. Police said Perez and hls daughter lived with Mary Vitali, 27, the mother ol the victim and four other children. The suspect was picked up after his brother, Gilbert Perez, 25, of Arleta, told officers that Perez had gone fu his home, apparently telling him what happened. The older _£erez thenJ~ officer.LIO the gravel pit. The dismembered body of a woman was found on a Topanga Beach area Friday. Her identity was still unknown and a search was under way for the raising parts of the body -one leg, Ure bead and both anns and breasts. or such a move should be borne by the AEC and the utility companie$ benefiting from expansion at San Onofre. Board dioCU!Slon Monday nl&ht began with a presentation by Lynn Harris Hicks, 1eader of a citizens' group which so far bu lost !ta battle to stop the San Onofre expansion. ·"I'm feeling indignant about AEC p~ cesses these days," Mrs. Hicks said. "First they bWld the reactor, and then they ·decide bow to evacuate the en- dangered people. "The AEC bases its decl.sioM on how many people are Involved," she ad ed. ''the fewer the people, the less they consider the risk. "A nuclear generator 11 miles from Philadelphia was rejected 8.1 too clo.se to a population center. But Ibis one, two and a half miles from the Capistrano ~Y Area was approved becau,,e there ai:e fewer people. "We reject this as an immoral judg· ment -ask . the board to join us,·• she said. Trustees William Enqulst pointed out that the threat to local school children is already present. "U they can't give us an evacuation plan we'd better get drastic," he said. Dick Herr, principal of Caplstrano School, said representa'tives of the district have been trying to get answers from the AEC on how to evacuate the schools since early SP.ring. ··we have yet to 1receive any com· munication from them,'' he said. Studerits Given Exch.9nge Trip 'For a Song"' • Three Dana Hilla lllgb School atudents used Some good public relatiom techni· ques Monday night: they presented their req uest to the Ca;>istrano Unified School District trustees in a song. The trustees smiled broadly as Steve \\'ormser, David Paulson, and Katie Bales sang out information about 1 pro- posed exchange trip to Aurora, Colo. Alter the presentoUon. the board unanimously approved the unique plan. In the program, being planned by committ.fes of parents, teachers, and students, 30 Dana i1l1lls IOpbomores, juniors, and seniors will spend two week,, studying the ecology, geology, hbtory, and culture of Colondo. Thirty students from A u r o r a ' s Gateway lllgh School •ill spend the same two weeks in Dana Point, hosted by local fam ilies. All upenses for the trip, Including bus transportation, would be railed by the students. The only coot to the dlatrict, uld assistan t principal Phil Grignon, would be the pay to substitute teachen replac- ing the two Dana Hills staff members y,•ho would accompany the studenta. All schoolwork wouJd have to be done ahead of time on a contractual basis agreed upon between each student and his teachers, Grignon said. Some 120 applications for the 30 spots have been turned In alre811y, Grignon said . Studenta wUI be chosen partly on three letters of recommendation and through a reqUited compoaiUon on ''Wliit- I can contribute to the don\esilc ex· change program." A ski trip will be included In the two-week period. A total of 15 seniors, IO juniors, and 5 sophomores will be chosen. The almost 900 condominium Wlits planned on tract 7885 have been den.led by the atato, coastol comm1ssl011. The plan for l,218 units on the 96 oceanside acru is still pending at the state level. Dale Secord of the Environmental Coalition of Orango County opposed !he additiona l work asked by Avco because it "v.-ould commit the comm!Slllon and all other bodies to the development plans Avco originally.proposed." The temporary erosion plans, which Avco said aren't guaranteed to be suc-- cess fuJ , were drawn up in meetings of COW1ty flood control. building and safety, envirorvnental coalition and Avco r~presentatlvcs. The \Vork will cost $100,000. Tbe county Building and Safety Department cited Avco for violations of the unilorm. building code for the hazardous condition of the hillsides last April. UnLil Monday, Avco officials had ap- plied for only one other emergency permit to stop erosion on a proposed goU coune area. 1bat was granted by the commlssion. Avco representative Robert Theal Monday said erosion dangers could only be "fully minimized '' ..• by the com· plelion of our plans." VTN engineer Paul Barrios, who work· ed on the temporary plan for Avco, said he y,·ould "stand behind ii." Avco's Theal admitted that if the hills hadn't been gra<led, the natural drainage syatem \\'ould take over. He added . ho"'·ever, that 5,000 acres of upland watershed drain through ,the two tracts. It could result in damage to Salt Creek Beach, Ii marine presen·e, ocean waters and already constructed homes , depending on which dir«tlon the rur><>U took. · The Orange County Flood Control District will be the contact agency in case an emergency takes place. The district alrtady has a blanket pennll from the coutal comrni»lon for repair and maintenance ~·ork. Frot11 P .. e J DELAYS. • • the design of the park. ''Over the last two months l've talk~ with any nwnber of people who wee not the least bit satlslled with the nwnber of bulldings going up on Main Beach,'' Gabriels said. T'ft·o new Jtructures are planned for the perk, a lifeguard fadlity at th< south end by the Hotel Laguna and a snackbar-ga:.ebo between Main Beach Park and Heisler Park. Gabrt<ls said he did not-have any oonnectlon with Richard WUletts v.·ho today aMOUnced hls own legal action to halt any demolition of the old buildings and asphalt surfaces on the beacb park land. · • : Gabriels said he pceferred a simpler park. He refused to say how much the legal battle was costing. -, .. "I'd be embarassed l6 say,~' he ex· plained. Lagal etpert11 have suggested that-to go this-far with le,al action against the Main Beach Park, costs wUI have totaled "several thousand dollars." Gabriels said he was fooling the bill hlmself. The Bright SUle - ' ' Shortages are occuring in virtuolly every industry. Tho carpet · _ industry is no exception. Two factors are causing tho shortages. The demond is astronomicoll Carpeting is no longer a luxury, but a necessity. People are using corpeting in rooms which used to be tiled, such as kitchens, baths, dining rooms, end bedrooms. Aho, carpeting is inriafted outside, ind even on the weAs. Secondly, tho fibers are in shori supply duo lo overwhelming demand from not iuJI tho carpet industry, but ALL industry. ' ' We feel that there is a posit iv o upect to an of this. The manufacturers are making bolter quolltift with av1i11blo y~, and much more of the iunky stuff is dise ppearing. It ""'Y appear !hot prices are higher, but actually you are just looking at BETTER CARPETING. . . HOURS: Moo. 1'hno Tloun., t le 5:JO ALDEN~S CARPETS e DRAPES • ,: 1663 Plac:•ntla Awe • COST.A MESA 646-4838 Al., t to t -SAT., t :JO le 5 J Saddlebaek VOL 66, NO. 310, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES Suspects N abbed Butchered ·Body Of Tot Found SUN VALLEY (UPI) -The severed limbs and body of a 3-year-old ~irl were found today, strewn over a wide area of Sun Valley. It was the second dismemberment slaying in the Los Angeles area in less than a week. (Related story, page S) Police arrested a 31-year-old man who Jived with the victim's mother after he Jed officers to a gravel pit where one 1eg of little Llsa Vitale or North Hollywood was found. He was charged with suspicion of murder, as wa s the mot.her. Tbe cause of death in the case has not been determined·. But police said tt?e suspect admitted dismembering the body. An arm was found at the dead end of a ·street while another leg was found in a wash at the bottom of La Tuna Canyon. A foot was found two miles up the canyon and the torso with the head attached was found al the summit of the canyon, another two miles away. Police searched through the early morning hours for the missing arm which was believed to be in the gravel pit." In custody was William Perez, 31, an assembler for a Sun Valley trailer company. Pol ice said Perez and his daughter lived with Mary Vitali, 'J:l, the mother cf the victim and four other children . The suspect was picked up aftet his brothe.r..__ Gill;>ert Perez, 25, of Arleta., told officers that Pefez had gone to his home, apparently telling him what happened.· The older Perez then led officers to the gravel pit. The dismembered body of a woman was found on a Topanga Beach area I•'riday. Her identily was still unknown and a sea rch was under way for the mi sing parts of the body -one leg, the head and both arm s and breasts. Nixo11's Sec1·etary Called Bef 01·e Sirica Over Tapes BULLETIN WASIDNGTON (UPI) -President Nixon's personal secretary, Rose ~tary Woods, bas 14 secret Watergate tape1 in her poues1ion, lnclucUng six given to her on MODday, a White House aide te1tifitd today. WASHINGTON !UPI\ -Chief U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica today . directed that Rose ~fary Woods. Presi· dent Nixon's personal secretary, be sum· APPROVAL OF GERALD FORD APPEARS LIKELY, Pago 4 mooed to testify about Nixon's Watergate tapes and why two of them seem to be missing. Sirica directed lhal Miss Woods be called after it was disclosed in testimony by presidential wistant Stephen Bull that she ~had posses.ston of some tapes of Watergate conversations for at least two weeks this fall and possibly may still have them. The White House declined to say what action would be taken on request. The testimony came as Sirica resumed a hearing into White House claims that two of Nixon's converSatloM bearing (See WATERGATE, Page!) Orange 8 Coast • Weather Some high ,clouds at times other- wise mostly sunny Wednesday along the Orange Coa$t. Highs in the upper 60s at the beaches ris· ing to the low 705 inland. Lows to- night in the low 50s. INSIDE 1'0DA Y Notice hoio much more you're paying for lobster at restau- rants? And h.ow much less you're getttng jor your money? The succulent seafood is ;oining the endangered list soon i/ poachers don't knock it off. See story on Page 12. A•tt LllllMn 11 Morits It Mlllvtl l'lllMll 11 NttleNI Nt'ft 4 Or•fltt Cou11ty 14 s..rt• .. 1. Stldl MMltfl lJ·ll T~ II -11 ·-. w.....,.•1 ....,., tJ.H W""41 ...., 4 UPI Telll'MI• WARNING -Acting Attorney General Robert H. Bork warns in testimony bef9J:e the Hou se Judiciary Committee that a Watergate prosecutor inde. pendent or the Justice Depart· ment could be unconstitutional. Fire Sprinkler Heads Burgled Burglars who had a lot of brass and must have wanted more raided an Irvine construction site and stole a large supply of firefighting equipment, it w a s discovered Monday. Bob Hunsakef, spokesman for Security Fire Protection Agency of San Diego, said the firm lost 705 brass fire sprinkler he..W valued at $1,300 from the ·bllllding job. PoHcc said pilferage has been a major problem during the past few days at 19001 Jamboree koad, where the in· dustrlat and office plant is being erected. The loss included 475 upright sprinklers Whtcb spray on a straight trajectory and 230 which shoot water at angles to thoroughly drench names. . . . . Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNI A , TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1973 TEN CENTS Reinecke Perjury Link Seen? SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Al the time he \Vas fired , special Watergate prosecu· tor Archibald Cox: had evidence "point- ing to perjury" by Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke in the ITT case, Washington columnist Jack Anderson said today. Lyn Nqfziger, a spokesman aod political adviser to Reinecke, said there would be no comment on the Anderson column from the lieutenant governor. "l just don't think we're going to reply to Jack Anderson colwnns. In addition, the 11T thing Is still Wlder investigation, and I don 't think the lieute·nant governor should comment under these circumstances;" Nofziger said. , Reinecke is . seeking the Republican nomination for governor next year. The Jnternational Telephone & Telegraph Corporation pledged a $400,000 contribution to help defray the costs tlf the 1912 Republican national con· ventiQn. In testimony before the U.S. Senate Ju diciary Committee, . Reinecke and others denied that the pledge was linked to an antitrust settlement between the Justice Department and the giant cor· po ration. Ahlierson said Reinecke supported testimony from former A Uy. Gen. John Mitchell, who tcild the committee be knew nothlnc of JTI's pledge. Reinecke ><reversed the pooiUon he had takeli With several newsmen. and swore he never di9Cussed the matter of l'IT's pledge with Mitchell or anyone else at the Justice Department," Anderson said. "Subsequently, Reinecke changed his mind again and said publicly that he had told Mitchell of !'IT'S commitment by telephone in May-1971 ........... weeks before the m antitrust settlement was reached. Reinecke's latest statement is not only strong evidence against Mitchell but is an outright acknowledgement that his own testimony was not so," Anderson said. Irvine Traffic Si g1ial 'Goof' Causes Crashes A maUunctioning traffic signal at a busy lrvine intersection triggered two traffic accidents today which sent two men to the hospital and demolished (bur cars. The first accident at 8:55 a.m. was blamed on a red signal stuck out of its normal cycle on Redhill Avenue at MacArthur boulevard. Patrolman H89')' Ehrlich witnessed the second collision, while investigating the first. He said the signal had been reset to fiash a red stop warning. Motorist Arlen D. Krenz, 36, of 14712 Featherhill Ave., Tustin, and Ramon Gutierrez, 26, of La Puente;·were taken to Tustin Commwtity Hospital with scalp Jacerations after the first crash. Police said Gutierrez was a passenger in a car drive eastbound on A-1acArthur Boulevard by lrino G. Jauregui, 24, of Baldwin Park, when it struck Kreru:'s car broadside. A few minutes later a virtually iden-- ticaJ accident occured when a car driven northbound on Redhill Avenue was bit broadside by a smaller compact car. The larger vehicle driven by Frank H. Barrett, Jr., 57, of Riverside, was the only vehicle not totally destroyed in the morning accidents. Barrett and his wife, whom he was taking to catch a plane at Orange County Airport, were shaken up but did not require hospitalization, while the other driver, George C. Petty, 35, or 14802. Hyannis Port Road, Tustin , escaped in- jury. Officer Ehrlich blamed both accidents on rl&ht-of•way violations, appareuUy in-- flllOnctd by the malfunctioning tralfic signal. D•ily Pilot Sl•ff Piiot• IRWD HOPEFUL VOTES Candidate West Casts Ballot Irvine Company Executive Set To 'Cast Votes An Irvine Company executive spent the day at a Racquet Club voting precinct waiting to cast the company's 50 million votes in the Irvine Ranch Water District. The precinct in the Norris J. McDonald residence at 13731 Typee Way is the location ·to which most votes in the landowner election have been assigned. The Irvine Company distributed nearly 2,000 proxies to landowners Who bought after the tax assessor made final rolls for the unusual election. William Bivens, au~it manager for the Irvine Company was on hand to help proxy voters solve any problems related to the IRWD election. Then, at the end of ·the day following instructioiis from the company, Bivens is to cast the vote bloc which will decide which of 12 active candidates will fill three director seats and the post of IRWD auditor·treasurer-tax col· lector. Woman Treated After Rear-end Irvine Accident A driver who police allege stopped suddenly in an intersection was blamed for a rear~od collJsioo bl Irvine that sent one woman to the hospital Monday afternoon. ' Elizabeth S. Arnold, 50, of 13502 Honor Farm Road, El Toro, was driven to Mission Community Hospital by a passerby following the 4:45 p.m. crash at Irvine Boulevard and Jeffrey Road. She was treated and released, suffering loss of a tooth with five stitches also taken in a laceration of her upper lip, police said. " In vestigators sa id Mrs. Arnold and Thomas E. Darling, 23, of 1207 E. First St., Santa Ana, were 00~ eastbound when her car rammed the rear of DarI- inJt'S car. He had to stop suddenly for the foreiP car wh1ch hafted in the intersection. Neither Darling nor Mrs. Arnold was cited. ' Nixon Given Backing SAN DIEGO (AP ) -The 8an Diego County Republican Central Committee said Monday it supports Presi dent Nix· ·on·s Watergate-related actions and urged him not to resign. The committee sent a letter and a telegram to the President telling him to "hang in there." • ' rv1n,e Prop. 1, Water Polls Divided DUAL POLLING PLACES plagued most Irvine voters today as landowners casting ballots in the Irvine Ranch Water District (IRWDI election did so at locations other than the places where they voted on Propo~tion 1. Robert We st, a candidate in the IRWD race lives in the Colony. He voted at a precinct there in the statewide election. Then, at 8 a.m., he drove four miles up Culver Drive and back to cast his vote in the IRWD election. FRANK HURO, an Irvine planning commissioner who lives in University Park, said he planned to vote on Proposition 1 at the usual polling· place, University Park Elementary School. To cast his ffiWD proxy votes, however, he'll have to. drive nearly a 10.mile round trip to the Racquet Club polling place on Typee Way. Miles E. "Pete" Peterson, a Racquet Club resident, waited around several hours before learning he could exercise his landowner rights on his Cal·Vet fin anced home. For a time early today it ap· ~~.;u:ed veterans whose land technically is 11owned11 by Cal·Vet much ' as a bank "owns" ...-car being bought on time, were-to be disenfran~ cbised. · · A DECISION OF IRWD attorney Alex Bowie, however, gave vet· erans the right to vote for IRWD candidates. Precinct workers were instructed to allow Cal·Vet homeowners to be treated is fandowners, voting the assessed valuation of the land under their homes. One vote for each dollar of land value is given each landowner voter in the IRWD. · HOWEVER, AFTER Peterson completed his IRWD vole, he had to drive to the Colony Clubhouse in order to vote on the statewide ballot issue, Proposition One. An IRWD spokesman said !he dual polling places were set up by the county registrar of voters which is handling the election for the first time. • Doheny .Camp Hearings To Panel Next Week By CANDACE PEARSON Df .... 1>91'° PIW Steff A new bearing by the regional coastal commission on a plan to add 234 overnight campsites to Doheny State Beach -initially denied in a stormy session Monday night -will take place next week. Commission chairman Donatd Bright said this morning the Cspistrano Bead& project will be reconsidered next Mooday. 1be meeting will begin at 9 a.m. in Long Beach Harbor Department bead· quarters, 925· Harbor Plaza Drive. Following the close denial Monday, angry comments by a state parks official spurred the cornmmission to agree to rehear the plan Dec. 12. But Dr. Bright, a marine biology p~ fessor at Cs! State 'Fullerton, said State Parks Director William Penn l\.1ott had already called him on the phone this morning. The hearing was pushed up · to "get the state parks people off our backs," Bright said. The plan for permanent campsites with trailer hookups, sanitary facilities and an amphitheatre was denied 6-4. It needed seven votes for approval. Cornissloners Carmen Warschaw and James Hayes were absent. Voting against the project were Com· missioners Robert Rooney of Huntington Besth; Don Phillips or Long Beach: Louis-Nowell of Los Angeles and Art Holmes of San Clemente. Rooney said he wou1dn't vote for anything that put recreational vehiclfs on the beach and Nowell criticized the state parks department as Hone ~rt of the sY.te government that rides roughshod over people and does ·a minimum job." But the objections of Holmes and Phillips stemmed from the lack of public input into the plan. Holmes, who said nearby residents told him they received little or no public notice of any hearings on the idea, tried tot.ave the project continued before the hearing began. He didn't receive any support for his request. Holmes also complained that the parks department held its public hearing in Los Angeles. Park official Lee Warren "Said, "We didn't set up the law'1 that (See DOHENY, Page I) Troeking Gifts Pwiel Checks Nixon Donations WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -The Senate Watergate Committee is c.hecking inw $600,000 in contributio~s by trucking company execu· lives to President ·NIXon's 1972 campaign, the Washington Star-News said today. The .newspaper !Wd the amount was the largest single industry contribution to the Nixon re.election effort and came at a time when truckers were fighting a government proposal that would have gen· erated more competition in their field. According lo tl!e Star-News, John Ruan or Des Moines, secretary' or . the Amencan 'J'ruckllig Associations, acknowle<IJ1ed heading the dnve but said it was 11Dted at defeating Nixon's bemocratic con· lender, Sen. George S. McGovern, rather than influencing legislation. folk ~aid executives of th.• following companies were among those makllig •$25,000 contributions; Roadway Express, Akron, Ohio; Consolidated Fre1~htways, Sal) Francisco; Gateway Transportation Co . ._ La Crosse. WIS.; Gordon Transpor~ Memphis; Lee Way Motor Freight Co., Oklahoma City; Brady Molorfrate Des Moines and Scbwennan Truckllig Co., Milwaukee. ' ' . Don't Forget 'Fo Vote; Polls Open · Until 8 • ,.. --. . • .. • • ., ' . ' l ": I DAILY PJLOT IS ·Tllrsday Novtmblr 6, 1973 -' For Sata Onof r e Evacuation Plan' Absence Ripped By JAN WORTII Of ttlf ~11Y Pllol Stltf Alarmed and irritated_, trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District learn· ed Monday night that no evacuation plans have been offered yet for district schools in case of a lethal accident . at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. Board Chairman George White lam· basted the Atomic Energy Commission for "apparently not having any concern for our children." ''It's tin1e the board took a very strong stand/' Trustee Robert Hurst said. "The AEC owes us more information -they've given us almost nolhing," • he said. · A proposed expansion of existing power generating facilities at the San Onofre plant south of San Clemente has been approved by every government agency exce pt ·the State Coastal Zone Conserva· · tion Commission. The existing plant is three miles from From Page 1 'WATERGATE ... on the scandal were not taped. The two conversations that the White House contends were not taped involved a telephone discussion Nixon had with his campaign manager, John N. Mitchell, on Jwie 2'), 1971 -three days after the Watergate arrests -and of a meeting with John W. Dean III April 15. The Washington Post quoted unnamed -White House officials today · as saying Nixon's lawyers might suggest to Sirica that be make public the substance of the tapes rather than only pas&ng on relevant portions to the Watergate grand jury. Bull testified that he had taken tapes apparently containing all of the con- versations subpoenaed by Watergate pro- secutors and the Senate Watergate com· mittee to Camp -David, Md. !or Nixon to review the weekend of Sept. 29. Bull said he returned "four or five" of them to the White House the following Monday but left the rest with Miss Woods. Sirica then interrupted to take over the questioning and asked Bull how long Miss Woods had · the tapes in her ,1 possess ion. . ;'She kept them at least a week,'' Bull said. "Beyond that, I do not know." I '~· "Do you know what happened to those seven or eight tapes?" Sirica asked. "No, sir," Bull replied. Under questioning by assistant special prosecutor Richard Ben-Veniste, Bull said he had seen Miss Woods typing as she listened to some tapes at Camp David that weekend in September. 'Someone get word to Miss Woods that she will be called as a witness in this case,'' Sirica interjected. Bull said Miss Woods continued to work with the tapes throughout the week and "seven or eight" of the tapes were taken to Key Biscayne, Fla. The follow· iug weekend. Asked if he knew when the tapes were returned, Bull said, "No, sir. I don't know if they have been returned." Sirica had ordered the President to tum over the tapes to him for private screening to determine what portions should be provided to the grand jury, Meanwhile, the Senate Watergate Com· mittee voted today to seek an informal meeting with President Nixon on the Watergate affair. The Whlte House would not say whether the President would go along with the request. During a lengthy, closed session. the committee decided to send lawyers to the White House to explore the possibility of a conference. The committee set up no advance conditions for such a meeting. • OIAMGI co.t.n 1$ DAILY PILOT TM Ott,,_ Cot1t DAILY PILOT, wilt! wllldl ti (Orftbl""' fllt New1.Prn1, Ii Pllbf!'11td W "'' Ol"•ntto coe1t Pubtl111"'9 CO,,.,lllllY. kltf· rl .. 9dl!lor!t Ire Pllbll1llto:1, MDl'l1hy ttlr"'1gfl Frld1y. kif" CO.II Mf11, 1'ltwport 8ffdl, Hlllltlfllloll 8HCll!Fount111\ v.11...,, LIOVN "'4:11, lrvltMlllcldlt~rt 1rlll Sift Cltl'Wlltl/ S.11 J-C.pllitf1"°. A 1!r.tl1 r19lonll Mltloft h ll'Ullti.llM S.lvtdl'fl lrd Sllnclt'fl, TM prlMIPfll llUlllW."'9 plant b fl Ull Wf11 l •r Slrwt, C:0.11 Mtw, Ctlllornlt, t2'M, ltobt rf N, Wt.d l'rK ldtnl •NI Pub111"Mr J1~k R, Curl1y \l'iq PIWild9"1 1NI GtMrtl Mln<tttf 1'11011111 K11vil Editor Tho"''' A. Mvrph i11e Mlrofllltlf EdllOf Ch11f1s H. Looi lt!ch1rd ~. Nill Aal1t1111 "'""""" f.dlll:lo Otflo• Colli M"': l)O W"I hr llf .. t Ntwfllft 6"(111 ml Hf'#lltl'I lovlfvlrtl Llf!IN l•#C~; m ,,,,.,, •- Hun11r1111o11 IMCt\I 11t'S llld'I IOll!tv.,d Siii Cl-•"'t! )11 Htrtfl e1 Ctmltlo lltll f ll.,.._ ln41 "4Z..,YJ1 c ................ ,., .• ,,. S.. Cle--. All 0•1'•,._., .. T•l•1•11i1 4fJ-4420 <.tP\'flofll, lt1&. Ort• C...t ''*~lrlf ( ...... llJ, Ht -••lef., ltlllltrtlltftt. ... '"""'' ,,..,tw ... ldlf'tl'll"'""""' "'""" _, -~ •lll'IDvl N*ltl - .......... tt ~llM ·-· ~ (110 .. , ..... w ., (Ollf Mft,f,, ''""""11. S...bto'l.ilol'I li'r cen1t·r a ,u "*'""tr1 11¥' #NII U.11 -ltlfilo1 rflll(tary Clfttlllllleftt·U.61 l!'llllltl/,, • • ' Concordia Elementary School. Three (lther schools are within six miles of the J>lant. Trustees said cxpansi(ln of the plant might prompt them to abandon Con· cordia School. A letter to the Calilomia Zone Con- servati(ln Commission was drafted ex· pressing the trustees' concerns. The commission has not yet · approved the the expansion. "If satisfactory answers are not pro- vided regarding evacuation pl81Uling, the school district will have to consider the possibility of abandoning at least one of our schools," the letter read. And the trustees made it quite clear they believe the costs to _the district of such a move should be borne by the AEC and the utility companies benefiting from expansion at San Onofre. Board discussion Monday night began with a presentation by Lynn· Harris Hicks , leader of a citizens' group whi ch so far has Jost its battle to stop the San Onofre expansion. "I'm feeling indignant about AEC pro- cesses these days." Mrs. Hicks said. "First they build the reactor, and then they decide how to evacuate the en· dangered people. -"The AEC bases its decisions on how many people are involved," she aded. "the fewer the people, the less they consider the risk. "A nuclear generator 11 miles from Philadelphia was rejected as too close to a population center. But this one, two and a half miles from the Capistrano Bay Area was approved because there are fewer people. "We reject ·this as an immoral judg· ment -ask the board to join us," she said. Trustees William Enquist pointed out that the threat to -local school children is already present. ','If they can 't give us an evacuation plan we 'd better get drastic," he said .. Dick Herr, principal or Capistrano School, said representatives of the district have been trying to get answers from the AEC on how to evacuate the schools since early spring. "We have yet to receive any com· municalion from them ," he said. Arson-Rioting C1iar ge Dropped Against Brown ELLICOTI CITY, Md. (AP) -Six· year-old riot and arson charges against H. Rap Brown were dropped today and the onetime advocate of violence by blacks was sentenced on a misdemeanor charge for failing to appear for trial. The Dorchester County state's at· torney, William B. Yates, moved not to prosecute Brown on a three·count indictment stemming from a summer nigh t of disorders in 1967 in Pfimbridge, Md. "~ Brown had been charged -h arson, inciting to riot and riot foU ing al'! impassioned speech made to • me 500 blacks that night. Violence followed and two blocks of the city were destroyed by fire. Brown pleaded guilty to the misde· meanor of failure to appear for trial in May 1970. He was sentenced to a maximum of one year, but the sentence was ruled to have begun on Oct. 16, 1971, and is now completed. Broy,.11 was a fugitive after failing to appear for the trial, but was captured in 1971 during a roQbery attempt. Howard County Circuit Court Judge James Macgill earlier today granted the motion by the state not to prosecute the riot 8Ild arson charges against the former director of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Yates, in an interview, expressed reluctance to prosecute the felony charges. "After 61f, years have elapsed ... I don't know v:hy I should continue th1s (case), I don't have a vendetta." The former black militant leader is serving a five to IS.year term at New York's Attica State Prison following his conviction for anned robbery of a New York City liquor stcire in 1971 and the ¥.'oonding of a policeman during the robbery. Brown was brought to the floward County court today by state police. Wear· ing blue jeans, a blue turtleneck sweater and a red bandana covering his head, Brown sat laconically at the defense table chewing a toothpick. Brown accompanied attorneys to the judge's chambers after which Yates made his motion not to prosecute. Jazz Band Plays For United Wa y The New Irvine Jazi Band will en- tertain at the "halfUme huddle" United Way campaign meeting at 11 :30 a.m. Thursday in the Trabuco Room of the Saddleback lnn, Santa Ana •. Campaigners from South Orange Coun· tv communJties wilt be rtcognlzed fer their "outstanding play e1eci.1Uons" In the first combined fundraising campaign. A goal ol $1.5 millton thfs year has been set· as the amount needed to support 55 member agencies of the South Oraage <'ounty Unit'ed \Vay. . ~. . .. D•ll~ f'ilol St•lf PhOIO Ownership Check ZIEGLER rE~S ' . Storm Rips -.--I T ~FOOLISHNESS' NJ he - WASlllNG'(ON (UP!) -Press ort rn Secretary · RoG&ld L. Ziegler 1 t o Id reporters aboal'd President Nlxon s plane that, while the Pre.sJdent ls trying to work on matters Other than ·watergat~. he "rccogniies the importance or this foolishness ." , When newsmen\_on the flight back from Key Bisca/!'e, Fa., expreMed surprise Monday night at thl.S ~escrip tion. Ziegler said; "I call It roobshness and tragedy ." ' f\rom P119e 1 . . DOH ENY • • • requires a hearing be in Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco or Sacramento. Obviously exasperated after the denial, Warren told the commission, "We are b;'ing to provide facilities for the public." The e1nph:isis at the commission hear· ings, he safl,, se~~s to. -be cin whe!-her or not the oom:m1ss1on hkes the proJect. He contended that isn't why the panel was formed by Propositlon 20. •·Jt seems for some reason,'' Warren charged, "th~ commission wants to deny public access to the beach." That statethent stunned some of the commissioners. Prop. 20, the 1972 coastal zone act. mandates the commission with providing and increasing sccess to beaches. ~ California ' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Following up a ferocious blast of stormy weather that ja1nmcd traffic, tut power and flooded many .areas, lntennittcnt ralu pelted Northern Californl(l toda~~hi\e heavy snow blanketed the mowitatpF. The National Weather service said the storm would abate by evening but · predicted more shower~ ttncf sno1v through \Vcdiicsday. f\flnor flooding Y.'as reported in !\1arln Cou.n~ and near Crescent Citf and_ heavy SJ)(lW warnings were issued for the Sierra • and Ute f\1ount Shasta-Siskiyou area. "We're gobig nuts in here;" an ex· asperated caUfomin •nghway Patrol dispatcher said f\o1ondoy as thousands of San Francisco evening conunuters were stranded in traffic jams caused by numerous accidents on rain-slicked streets. . . Brief pov.•cr failures were reported in the Glen Park a'1d T\1•in Peaks neighborhoods here and in the Mills Estate area of Millbrea Monday night. Racquet · Club polling workers check land ownership lists of voter and Irvine Ranch Wa ter District board candidates Robert \Vest prior to his voting in the landowner election. All proxies were ass igned to the north Irvine polling place where the Irvine Company is to cast its 50 million votes of the 104 million total votes eligible. From left are election officials Shirley Peterson, Kay McNaily and Jo Ann Glenn, all of the Racquet Club in Irvine. West voted in the statewide election at a ballot box in the Colony Clubhouse, nearer his home. Con1missioner Judy Rosener of Newport Beach called the denial "ir· responsible." Commissioner Rimmon C. Fay spoke even more strongly. Rooney might not like people getting to the beach in campers, Fay said, but "I'd move them on elephants. I'd take them down on sleds. I'd move them anyway .1 couJd if it would get them to the beaches." ~lore than 2.3_ inches of rain_ drenched downtown San Francisco and the Oakland airport ~1onday and early today, the National \\'eather Service said. A total of 1.13 inches of rain fell at Stockton and one inch at Crescent City. The weather service also reported . 79 inch at Red Bluff, .69 at SacralllCflto and .39 at Eureka. 'Ibe Smith River was back within its banks early today after some "very slight" flooding Mondey evening at Or. Fine Bridge, 10 miles north of Cresctnt City, the Del Norte County sherill's office said. No damage was reported as the water spilled into nearby low-lying pastures: l(issing~r Stops n1 Tunisia On Way to Egypt Parley Warren said the department might lose the $865,000 funded for th e project by the legislal!lre il delayed too long. At the onset of the hearing, Warren said by 1980 there will be a deficiency o! 19,~ campsites .Jrom. ~ot~p; to Me1.1co. · . Social Security , -A travelers advisory was issued today In the Mt. Shasta-Siskiyou area fOr blow- . ing and drifting snow above 3,llOll and S,llOll feet. By HELEN TIIOMAS TUNIS (UPI) -Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger conferred twice in Rabat today with King Hassan 11 of Morocco on ways of strengthening the fragil Middle East cease-fire, then flev.• here for a brief stop before going to Cairo and the most crucial phase of his quest for peace. "The talks l had with his 1najesty the king were very useful and gave NINE EUROPEAN NATIONS MEET ON OIL CRISIS, Page 4 me a greater understandhlg of the Arab point of View," Kissinger said before leaving the Monxcan capital. Kissinger, who arrived to strict secur· ily at Tunis Aiq>ort, drove straight to President Habib Bourguiba's palace in Carthage for two hours of I ilks before flying to Cairo tonight for even more crucial talks with President Anwar Sadat and Foreign Minister Ismail Fahrni. The Tunisian leader showed photo- graphs taken of himself in prison dur- ing his fight for Tunisian independence, then the two started talks at 6:40 p.m. (10:40 a.m. PST), government (lfficials said. He was expected to talk briefly in Tunis with President Habib Bourguiba, one of the more moderate Arab leaders, before flying to Cairo tonight for two days of conferences with President Anwar Sadat and Foreign Minister Ismail Fahrni. Before Kissinger's arrival, Bourguiba Strong Program Evidenced In Capo School A review of scores from tests given to all first, slxth, and 12th graders in the Capistrano Unified School District "gives evidence of a good strong in- structional program." That was the message of Dr. Robley Geis, director of pupll services, to the district board of trustees in a special report Monday night. "In general, IQ tests in this district show that we have ~very high percen· tage (1£ very bright youngsters," DI'. Geia said. "Overall, we have average, normal students with good basic skills for schoolwork." IQ {intelligence quotient) scores show an average of 102 for district students. "I wouldn't want to say that's in· telligence -but rather a child's aptitude for schoolwork," she said. Primary grades tests showed, an above average aptitude in reading skills, com· pared to state nonns. Sixth grade test scores this year were slightly lower than last year's local results, wllh weaknesses shown in mathematics skills. "Testing done this faU will be sub- j~ted to item ' analysis available to use .with (lUt change of data processors," Mrs. Geis satd. "This will enable teacher and ad· ministrators to detennine with fine ac- curacy exactly where we need to provide further bolstering in the math program." At the tweUth grade level, a slight drop 1n reading abiHUe.. was noted, with language and ma!hOmatics ·holding at exactly the same level& as those found lMt year. '1Whlle the language SC(lttS are cer- tainly within range <1n a national scale, tt does seem to be the arM ,Jn whit'h there m~y be a degree of un~ dernchlevement" she said. said he was willing to discuss his ideas on peace in the ~liddle East v.·ith any Israeli repreSentative, including Premier Golda Meir. He also said he \Vas willing to appear on American television \vith an Israeli interlocutor to discuss his Middle East approach. These ideas, he told Parliament, are based on the United Nations' 1947 call for a p<i.'rtition of what \\'as then called Palestine into a Jewish and an Arab state. He said he would infoim Kissinger of these ideas on the new Arab attitude toward the 1947 partition plan. Bourguiba said Sen. J. William Fullbright (D-Ark.), supported the 1!>17 plan and "\viii one day perhaps become president of the United States." Sadat, meanwhile, met in Cairo with Fahrni to hear a report of Fahmi 's Washington talks with Kissinger and President Nixon. Kissinger was expected in Cairo around 11 p.m. (3 p.m. PDTJ and the K.i ssinger..Sada t talks were set for Wednesday morning. The Egyptian government spokesman, Ahmed Anis, said the results of the Sadat-Kissinger talks will be "of para- mount importance," but did not elaborate . Government sources said Sadat would reiterate his demand that Israel \Vithdra\v to the Oct. 22 cease-fire lines and that Fahmi's \Vashington talks on lhis had been "encouraging ." They said an Israeli pullback had been the prim ary aim of Fahmi 's \Vashington talks but that there had been no indication Israel would comply. Sadat has threatened to "finish off" the Israelis iI they do not pull back. ~leanwhi!e, Syria reported that t\\'O formation s of Israeli planes attacked Syrian Army advanced positions on the Golan Heights today with "many" air to ground Shrike-type missiles but were driven off by Syrian fighter platies and air defense systems. Boost Approved By House Unit WASfflNGTON CAP) -The House Ways and Means Committee voted today 13 to 12 to tiOost Social Security benefi ts 10 percent effective wi th next July's checks and to finance this through a hike in ~e p,ayroU-ta1. \Y&ge base. But the .decision could be subject to change. 'lbc pant!l tmmedlatt!ly ar- ranged a meeting· 13tei iii the day to act on the fo'rmal le&slation. After lengtb,y debate by the committee Monday, proposala emerging as chief options for fmal action included either a 10 perctnt benefit boost effective in July or a t'l'. .. step hike of a total 12 percent, with" seven percent due next March and th9 rest CQming the following November. , These included financing changes in· valving the payroll tax rate formula and boosting th~ top salary on which the tax ls levied., Rep. Al Ullman (O.Ore. ), ac ting coin· mittee chainiian,~ said he wanted the panel readf to offer a bill to the House later this week. The Senate Finance Commit~e already has approved a seven percent Social Secu<ity benefit boost ef- fective . upon :.macftnent of legislAUon, although tlie ·panel did nol offer any fi nancing changes. The Nixon administration has been trying to hold down spending durtng 'the fisca l year ending June 30. An ad· ministration spokesman told the House panel he would suggest the Prcsldent sign the 10 pereent benefit increue option since its impact comes in the year starting July 1, 1971. ' Interstate 5 was open, although a ~mile section between Dunsmuir and Weed was closed Monday due to blizzard conditions:. A weathennan said eight in· cbea of snow, whlpped by 35 mile-per· hour winds, fetl in the area. Heavy snow above the 5,000 to 7 ,000. foot level and strong southerly winds are forecast through Wednesday In the Sierra Nevada north of Yose mite Na- tional Park. State routes 120 over Tioga Pass, 108 over Sonora Pass and 89 on the Lassen Loop were closed by snow Monday, the state Division of Highways said. Otaim were required early lr(day on V.S. SO over ~ Swnmit, State Route 4 over Ebbetts Pass and State Route 88 over carson Pass. U.S. 80 over Oonnor Pass was open early today, but motorists were advised to carry chains. Nixon Parent Group Not ·PTA 'The parent group from Richard M. Nixon Elementary School that served soup at an "Impeach Nixon" rally Satur· day isn't affiliated with the PTA (Parent· Teacher Association). A school official said today that Its parents broke from the ~lonal PTA -organizaUon..about one year ego to form the "tfixoD Pirent Association." Parents from the Yorba Linda elemen· tary school sold soup to raise money for audio-visual equipment at a rally in Richard M. Nixon Park, also In Yorba Linda, run by th e Orange County Com· mittee to Impeach Nixon . They were originally incorrectly iden· tilled as being from the PTA. The Daily Pilot regrets the error. The Bright Side ' Shortages are occuring in virtually every industry. The carpet indu5try is no exception. Two factors are causing the shortag .. ,,The demand is 1sironomicall Carpeting is no longer a lux ury, but• ""ctS1ity. People.,. using carpeting in room s which used to be tileCI; siich 11 kitchens, baths, dining rooms, ind bedrooms. Also, carpeting is· installed outside, '.•nd even on the walls. Secondly, the fibers ·~re in 'short "'pply due to overwhelming demand from not just !ht .carpet indu stry, but ALL· industry. We feel that there is a p o s l t i v e aspect to all of this. The manufacturers are ma king 'betttr ·qualiti .. wit~ 1v1il.ble yam, tnd much more of the junky stuff is disappearing. It m1y 1ppe1r that prices are higher, but oclually you are just looking at BETTER CARPETlblG. ALD·EN.~S ... 'CARPETS. DRAP~.$ 1663 Placentia A••· COST A MUA .; ' ·~ 646-4838 Houns: Mon. n;. Tfiun., ' to 5:JO -~···· ' lo ' -SAT. t rJO lo 5 , l • • • .--... -. . • Buqtington Beaeh Fountain ·Valle * * * VOL 66, NO·. 310, 2 SECTIONS.-24 PAGES -... , .. • Todqy's Final N.Y. Stoeks . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1973 TEN CENTS Huntington Council to Set Campaign Ceiling By TERRY COVILLE Of "" .,..,, ..... 51.tf Future Huntington Beach City council candidates probably won't be allowed to spend more than $5,000 in their efforts to win election. (Related story Page 3.) So far, no one haa spent that much money anyway but councilmen agreed Monday night there ought to be some kind of ceiling on campaign costs. They scrapped proPQSals similar to Newport Beach and San Juan Capistrano which tie· the limit lo the number of Watergate Tapes registered voters. Instead, they opted for a flat $5,000 maximum. "As far as I'm ooncemed you can lim1t it' to $500 after what 1 went through last year," quipped Mayor Jerry Matney. In the election of April, urn, be ran up a campaign bill of nearly $2,000 -without the money to pay it off. Aftei-the election, Matney held a raf- fle, with himself as the prize to do the bidding of the winner. He wound up with two winners and found himself facing a ride on the Voter Nixon Secretary . . . Asked to Appear BULLETIN WASfilNGTON (UPI) -President Nixon's pe:nonal secretary, Rose Mary Woods, bu 14 secret W1tergale tapes in l:ter posseuioa, lachtdill1 ill: 1tven to ber oa Mooday, 1 White H0411e aide testified lodoy. WASIDNGTON (UPI) -Chief U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica today Small Girl ' Dismemberecl; Man Seized SUN VALLEY (UPll -The severed limbs and body or a 3-year-old girl \\'ere found todily, strewn over a wide area of Sun Valley. It was the second dismembennent slaying in the Los Angeles area in less than a week. (Related story, page SJ Police arrested a 31-year-old man who lived with the victim's mother after he led officers to a gravel pit where one leg or little Lisa Vitale of North Hollywood was found . He was charged with suspicion or murder, as was the niothef. The cause of death in the case has not been determined. But police said the suspect admitted dismembering .the.. body. An arm was found at the dead end of a street while another leg was found in a wash at the bottom of La Tuna Canyon. A foot was found two miles up the canyoo and the torso with the head attached was found a~ the summit of the canyon, another two miles away. Police searched through the early morning hours for the missing ann (See BODY, Page %) directed that Rose Mary Woods, Presi· dent Nixon's personal secretary, be sum· moned to testify about Nixon's Watergate tapes and why iwo of them seem to be missing. Sirica directed that Mias Woods be called after it was disclosed in testimony APPROVAL OF GERALD FORD APPEARS LIKELY, Page 4 by presidential assl.stant SleiiieG Bull U.t she Md pa11ewion of 1001e tapes of Watergate coovtmtlolll for at least .two weeu thls fall 'and · possibly may still ha\'e them. The White House declined to say what action would be taken on requesL The testimony came as Slrica resumed a bearing into White House claims that two of..,.Nixon's conversations bearing on the scandal were not taped. the two conversations that the White House contends were not taped involved a telephone discussion Nixon bad with hi.s campaign manager, John N. MitcheU, on June 20, 1972 -three days after the Wate?gate arrests -and of a meeting with John W. Dean III April 15. The Washington P"'t quoted unnamed \Vhite House officials today as saying Nixon's lawyers might suggest to Sirica that he make public the substance of the tapes rather than only passing on relevant portions to the Watergate grand jury. Dull t~tified that he had taken tapes appare ntly containing all of the con- versation s subpoenaed by Watergate pro- secutors and the Senate Watergate com- mittee to Camp David, Md. for Nixon to review the weekend of Sept. 29. Bull said he returned "four or five" of them to the White House the following Monday but left the ~t witb Miss Woods. - Sirlca then ~pted to take over (See WATEllGATE, Pagt %) Tro~king Giit·s Pa1iel Checks Nixon. Donations WASHING.TON (UPI) -The Senate Watergate Committee is checking into $600,000 in contributions by trucking company execu- tives to President.Nixon's 1972 campaign, the Washington Star-News said today. · . . The newspaper said the amount was the largest single industry contribution to t~e Nixon re-election effort and came at a time when truckers were fighting a goyemment proposal; that would have gen: erated more competition in their field. • According to the Star-News, John Ruan of Des Moines, Secretary of the American Trucking Associations, acknowledged heading the drive but said it was aimed at defeating Nixon's Dem()l'ratic con- teµder, Sen. George S. McGovern, rather than Influencing ,legislation. Polk said executives of the following companies were among those making $251000 contributions; Roadway Express, Akron, Ohio; C-Onsolldate<f Frerghtways, San Franci!!CO; Gateway Transportation Co .. La Crone. Wis.; Gordon Transport, Memphis; Lee Way Motor Freight Co .. Oklahoma City; Brady Motortnte, Des Moines. and Schwerman Trucking Co., Milwaukee. Colorado River rapids with his sister7in· law and a ride on a bicycle-boiltJor·two -in a gorilla costume -wilh Hun- tington Beach High School Trustee Ralph Bauer to support a school bond. The bend lost. The 15,000 limit Isn't eslabllshed yet. COuncilmen merely ordered City At· torney Don Bonfa to write an ordinance which would limit ·expehses to 15,000. Councilman also asked Bonfa to limit campaign contributions tO $5,000, a re- quest Bonfa admitted may be a little more difficult to comply \vith. The question in Bonfa's mind was, bow do volunteer efforts, or dona ted items, add up as contributions in lieu of cash. U a printer donates brochures at cost, abould the contribution be counted at its full, nonnal value? Most councilmen said yes. Should the serviees of volunteers walk· Ing door-to-door, handing out a can· di.date 's literature be calculated at some, fair hourly rate? On that one, councilmen generally agreed no. "But that has to be worth something," said Bonfa. • ·"All we're really concerned about is the $5,000 spending limit," replied C.Oun· cilman Al Coen, who proposed the con· trol. "You can clarify the rest." The Newport ordinance limits cam· palgn expenditures to 25 cents per registered voter, while the San Juan Capistrano law sets the li mit at 15 cents per registered voter. C.Ouncilman Ted Bartlett, Yi'ho began the whole debate a few weeks ago after reading about the new Newport law. had proposed a 10-cent-per-vot.er limit in Huntington Beach. Coen sugge!ited the flat $5,000 ceiling since e<>uncilmen could not agree · on any more flexible formula . The most money spent in the 1972 election Vi'as by George l\1cCracken, who \vas a mayo r at the time and shelled out $3.980 in an effort to retain his council seat. He losl. Turno-u-t -• Ill Huntington Sign -of the Future Ron Hein Oeft) and. Earl Laupl"'., wildlife managers for the state Department of Fish and Game, install sign announcing d'evelopment of Bolsa Chica Eco-- logical Preserve. Sign on C-Oast Highway near old Dtlly rllot Stiff l"Ni. Bolsa Chica Gun Club is ~t {ward indication of state plans to re~tore th~ir~~at-er marsh. State acquired 536 acres earlier this year in swap with Signal Gas and Oil Company. 'Living Desert' Planned For School in Huntington By lllLARY KAYE Of flle o.!IY Pllof Stiff Students soon will be able to step out of their classrooms and into a true.to-- life desert at Huntington Beach's Goklen View School. They will be surrounded by cactus, desert tortoises, horned frogs , and lizards. lbey will be able to experience and understand the desert habitat, without having to move one inch from their school. Go1den View's two and. one-half acre backyard is called SELF, short for Stu-- dent· Environmental Learning Facility. Not only will ttiere be a desert, but also grasslands, a pine forest, a meandering stream, a pond filled with ducks. geese, frogs and fish , and an organic garden. Near-drowning Victim 'Stable' Six-year-old Tracy Westenberg, victim of a near-drowning in Huntington Beach 'Mli.u'sday, was reported in stable con· dlU111 today by spokesmen at HuntinJ!OO lntercommunity HO!pital. . '!'be West..berg girl. of 5651 Castle Drive, ls in the hospital's inteMive care unit.. She has been In Intensive core since being brought to the hoopital by city wamedics. Tracy fell into a neighbor 's swimming pool Thursday afim-while visi ting with 'her mother. She. was rescued by a iielpbor and revived on the sOllJC by the paramedjp. SELF is beginning to take shape. Quacking green mallard ducks and fat geese swim in the pond. The narrow · (See HABITAT, Page Z) Long Beach Man To Face Trial 111 Fatal Crash A Long BeaCh man, arrested on manslaugh ter charges in connection with a traffic accident in Hun tington Beach that took two lives. \Yill appear in court Jan. 10 for a jury tria l. , Steven Rowe. 18, will .be tried in \Vest Orange County Judlcidl District Court on misdemeanor charges of manslaughter and drunken driving in connection with the June 8 crash on Pacific Coast Highway. . Police allege that Rowe"s car slammed into , the· back of a van parked beside the roadway in the bluffs area. The van burst,. into flames , killing lleborab Ziolkowski, 18, of Glendora. who was sleeping inside it with her husband, Daryl. The husband escaped with the aid of ·oil· ficld workers who , beard the ciash. BY,ron · Thornton, ,76, -o( Huntington BeaCfi, also waa · killed ln the crash. He was standJng. between Uie Ziolkowski van and bis car getting fishing gear out of his tnmk when the Rowe car rammed the van into his auto, crushing him between them. Ba1id to Raffle Auto to Raise Uniform Funds The 106 mem bers of Fountain Valley High School's band will give away a new Datsun automobile Friday night in an effort to raise the $8,000 they need ror new band uniforms. The car will be given away after the foot ball game between Corona del Mar High School and Fountain Valley. Band Director Frank Barnes, explained that the band needs new uniforms to replace the old, worn out ones and to accommodate approximately 100 ad· ditional youngsters who want to be part of the band but who can't join because (See RAFFLE, Page Z) Police Support Jzuiior Gridders Football players in the three divisions or Huntington Beach Jun ior All American Football program have 1 a u n ch e d th emselves into another season, thanks in part to the local police. The Huntington Beach Police Officers' >:ssociation this year donated $350 to each of lhe three divisions to help defray the cost ol outfitting and equipping the boys, according to an asociation spokesman. The football progr311\ is open to ·boys eight to 14 and is staffed by volunteers. Cost are funded through donations such as the one made· by the police associa· tion. The HBPOA donates more than $3,000 each year to youth activities such as the football program, Little League and Bobby Sox soltball Biggest Rate Recorded In Harbour A sampling of precincts in Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley this morning indicated voter turnoul in today's elec- tion may be heavier than anticipated. Ten precincts averaged a 13 percent turnout by 10:30 a.m. and poll workers agreed the turnout was more than they had expected for an election of this type. Voters in Huntington Harbour showed the highest voting rate this ~orning, with a 23 percent figure reported. In contrast, voters at the Marina High School precinct in Huntington Beach were noticeably absent from the polls. with onl y about five percent voting by 10:30 a.m. Fountain Valley voters were running several percentage points behind voters in Huntington Beach this morning. In addition to the lure of Proposition J, Governor . Rea gan's tax in- itiative, voters in Hwllington Beach and Fountain Valley have local elections to decide. Huntington Beach Is deciding today whether or n~ the offices of city attorney, city clerk and treasurer will be changed from .elective to appointive. 1 This involves a change in the city charter. Fountain Valley School District votcrs - are electing a new trustee for tbe district. Karen Ackley, Donald Frank. Kris Roggenkamp and Helen Schoelzel are ttre four candidates running. . Polls will remain open . until 8 p.m. Results on the charter election in Hun- tington Beach will be available tonight at the city's clerk's office, telephone 536-5229, 53&-5220 or 536-5226. Results of the school board race will be available at the school district office, telephone 842-6651. Orange • Coast • Weather Some high clouds at times other· wise mostly sunny Wednesday along the Orange Coast. Highs in the upper 60s at the beaches ris· ing to the low 70s inland. Lows IC.- ni ght in the low 50s. INSIDi: 1'001\ Y Notice how 111uch more you're paying for lobster at restou· rants? A·nd how much less you're getting for yo11r mo11ey? Tile succulent seafood is joi1tino the endangered list soon if poachers don't knock it off. See story o_n Page 12._ L.M. ll'l'd • All' Undtrt u C11tlfonlla • ""'" " ci.11lft.1 ,.,. Mll!ull Fvnds " CMfll~I " N1llon11I N.WS • CrOBwort " Or•nt• Counl'f' .. Dt1t~ N•llCff .. ....... . .. Elllll..-ifll I'-• Sttdl Mertfth ll-1~ •ni.rt11MM"' 11 Ttlt\llW11 11 Jl'IMnc:t ll·ll -·~ " , ... !tie lltc:.,.111 .. wn-• My G1rdl!ll' • W-•1 N1W5 1~16 ·-" Wtrltl NtwS • Don't Forget To Vote; J;>olls ·open Until 8 . . • - ._ •· . . % DAILY PILOT H Tu..,iy N<Wtmbtt 6, 1971 r.===========:======--~~ • . . ' C.ap sule Council Action '' .. Here In capsule form are major acUomt talleti Mooday nlibt by tile Jl\JDo Uqloo Beacb City Co<mcil: PEACE~iAKER: Amended a proposed contract 'l!lth an outatde architoct ., be has tho power to spe<d up construcUoo or the $2.9 rnlllloo central library and !title disputes between the city and library architect Dion 'Neutra. STORM DRAINS: Authorized creation of a $2 million assessment district to build storm drains for a ®acre section of town bounded by Beach Boule· vard, the Southern Pacific Railroad, Memphis and Ma in Slreets. C.UfPAIGNS: Ordered the city atto rney to write an ordinance v.1h.ich would limit council candidates to spending a maximum of $5,000 (each) for election. BEACH: Raised the price or an annual beacb parking pass rrom $10 to 120 to h<lp boost declining revenue. FIREMEN : Amended the city charter to officially establish the fire de· partment, correcting an oversight made in 1909. ELDERLY: Adopted a set or bylaws for the newly formed Huntington Beach Council on Aging and appointed C.Ouncllman Ted Bartlett as city repre- sentative on the councU. Riot · and Arson Charges Dropped Again st Brown ELLICOTf CIT¥.-Md. (AP) -Six- year~ld riot and arson charges against H. Rap Brown were dropped today and the onetime advocate 0£ violence by .. blacks was sentenced on a misdemeanor ... charge for failing to appear for trial. • The Dorchester County state's at- ' tomey, William B. Yates, moved not to prosecute Brown on a three-count indictment stemming from a swnmer night of disorders in 1967 in Cambridge, Md. Brown had been charged with arson, inciting to riot and riot following an impassioned speech made to some 500 blacks that night. Violence followed and two blocks of the city were destroyed by fire. Brown pleaded guilty to the misde- meanor of failure to appear for trial in May 1970. He was sentenced to a maximum of one year, but the sentence was ruled to have begun on Oct. 16, 1971, and is now completed. Brown was a fugitive after failing to appear for the trial, but was captured in 1'71 during a robbery attempt. · ,.. Howard County Circuit Court Judge James Macgill earlier today granted the motion by the state not to· prosecute . ,, the riot and arson charges against the Conner director of the Student Nonviolent· Coordinating Committee. Yates, in an interview , expressed reluctance to prosecute the felony charges. "After 61h years have elapsed ... I don't know why I should continue this (case), I don't have a yendetta." The former black militant leader is serving a five to l~year tenn at New '1' York's Attica State Prison fQllowing his ·•1 conviction for anned robbery of a New York City liquor store in 1971 and the wounding of a policeman during the robbery. Brovm was brought to the Howard County court today by state police. Wear· iog blue jeans, a blue turtleneck sweater and a red bandana ·covering his head, Brown sat laconically at the defense table chewing a toothpick . Services Slated For Eben Byrnes Rosary will be recited tonigf1t for HlUltington Beach resident Eben Byrnes who died Sunday night during a family party. An autopsy conducted by the county coroner revealed that Mr. Byrnes, 37, died of a heart attack. The rosary services will be conducted at 7:30 p.m. at St. Bonaventure Catholic Church and requ.iem mass will be celebrated there for Mr. Byrnes at 11 a.m. Wednesday. Funeral arrangements are being handl· eel by Dilday Brothers Mortuary . fl.fr. Byrnes is survived by his widow, ~large, his son, Kevin and daughter, fl.iichelle, all or the family home at 155i2 \\1ild Cherry Drive. DAILY PILOT T~• 0•1,... c;a11I DAILY 'ILOT Wiii! ..... ldl 11 com•lneo:I "'' Hl'W1·'r1u, 11 Plllllltfted trv Ill• 0••"9• CO.II P111t1lll'lt111 (llfnlMnv. $.,,.. ''" tdltllll'll ••• pUltllt/lld, MOndlf lhl'1IU9fl FroC11y, tar C01!t Mttl, NIWPClrt le•tfl, H""!lnglon lltach/1'1t1111111n V•lfey, LIOUN 11 .. d'I, lrvlneliMlll1bKk and S./'I Clftnlftll/ Sin J,..n C11tlt1r1no. A 1111111 ~JONI Mlllol! 11 P\lllllll'lld S..""111.,. t111111 S1,111c11.,... Tiii prlnelptl M llll'lll'lo pll"' 11. 11 »II w .. t 11v •trwl, Ctll1 M.u, Cllllo.,•le, tH:lll. RoHrt N. W 11cl Prti~tnt '"" l'Wlhhtr Jtc~ II. Cyrl1y Viet l'rn .,_,I 1111111 Gtl'ler1t Mt!lfff'I' Th-11 K11ril '""' Tho1111t A. MYtphi111 M""'tlna f:O llOo' 01rlM H. l.eot Rlch114 P. Nall Mtl11111t M111191nt lf!IOr1 T1rry C1vill1 Wnl 0..tllOf Cful'llW Editor " ............ OHk.e 17171 Inch loYl1v11'11 1!11 Uinf A.t14r111: P.O. 101 790, t2441 °""' ....... UIUM ..,ell: m , ..... , ,.,_ COtll M ... ~ UO W11! ll1y S!rM N_,.,.t lttdli aw N.-.,wl '°"'*"''~ s..n Cllf'*'lt! JOI """' ll c1m1110 Jl .. 1 , .. .,.... 11141 '42-4121 C'-"'M .... , ... 642·1411 . ,_,..,.., .... ~~ ....... C#r'lrfl'll, ltn, ~ C.I ~i.tllflll ~J. lq "'"' 1"'"8. IH•ttt!llM, .,,....... ...... ., ..._.......... ""* _, .. ,..,,...... wrn.t ..-c:ltl ,..... l'lll..... ., cwt""llN .-.. *9M Ntl ... \... ...... mt , .. ,. #MM, C.'"'""'· ..._.._... W ~-SUI ~1 W !NH U.11 -lfll'l'I f!-'I~ ...... 11 ....... -"'"· V,.IT ........ CHARGES DROPPED H. Ri p Brown Da ylight Theft Nets Jewelry A Huntington Beach woman lost jewelcy valued at more than $1,700 Mon- day when thieves mhde a daylight break· in of her home. Mrs. Don Presley told police she discovered the burglary of her home at 7622 Juliet Low Drive at about 1 :30 p.m. after she had returned from a tw~hour outing. Mrs. Presley said the thieves took several pieces of jewelry in the burglary including a diamond ring and watch worth $1 ,100. From Page l HAaITAT ... stream winds through SELF'. And the bare bones of the desert, grasslands and pine forest arc in place. Still, much needs to be done. Last month Golden View teachers were joined by environmental students from Cal State Long Beach in a new program aimed at teaching children about the environment, giving college students a chance to work with youngsters, and turning the SELF into a teaching tool Rick ~ier is a health science p~ fessor at the coll ege. He has 100 students representing 57 majors in the nat\U'al sciences. Several or his students are at Golden View every day, teach ing or just working in the SELF. "\Ve're teaching the kids about the environment in its natural state, not preserv ed in a bottle or jar," Lussie:' commented. "And it's real enrichment for my students, too," he added. "They've been learning about botany, for example, for three years in the classroo m, and this gives them a chance to learn In the field and learn how to teach children." As for the Go lden \1iew children, the educational plan for the school states that environmental science will be in- troduced to all children. In some way or another, the SELF is worked into the daily curriculum. "Somtday, the teacher may take the kids Into tbe SELF and they can just lay in the gra53 and read," Joe Condon, principal. explained. "Or another day, the teacher will take them out and they will bury things they've brought rom home in· a "biodegradeable Je:saon'. They'll keep track of everything, and learn what's biodegradeable and what isn't." ' To supplem ent the: teachers Md the college students, Golden View hired an environmental consultant, Y v o n n e Deloyola, who spends four hours every day ln the SELF . Last week, Mrs. Dtloyola, who has worked with anlma!J IOI" 25 years , sat at the pond and explained to th< children differences betw..,. ducks and geese. The SELF has g"""n from effor1& of Golden View staff members and parent&, according to Condon. Kissinger En Route 'fo Cairo By HELEN TIIOMAS TUNIS (UPI) -Se<:retary of State Henry A. Kissinger conferred twice In Rabat today with King Hassan U oC Morocco on ways ol strengtbeni.ng the fragil Middle East ceue-fire, then fl ew here for a brief slop before going to Cairo and the most crucial phue of his quest for peace. "The talks I had with his majesty the king were very useful and gave NINE EUROPEAN NATIONS MEET ON OIL CRISIS, P1go 4 me a gnoeter underatanding of the Arab point d view," Kisllnge.r said before leaving the Moroccan capital. Kissinger, 'Who arrived to strict secur· ity at Tunis Airport, drove straight to President Habib Bourguiba's palace in Carthage for two hours of ! ilks before flying to Cairo tonight for even more crucial talks with President Anwar Sa dat and Foreign Minister Ismail 1'~ahmi. The Tunisian leader showed phot~ graphs taken ol. himself in prison dur- ing his flaht for Tunisian independence, then the Iwo started talks at 6:40 p.m. (10:40 a.m. PST), govemme:nt officials said. He was expected to ta1k briefly in Ttmis with President Habib Bourguiba, one d.. the more moderate Arab leaders, be.fore flying to Cairo tonight for two days of conferences with President Anwar Sadat and Foreign Minister Ismail Fahrni. Before Kissinger's arrival, Bourgulba said be was willing to discuss his Ideas m peace in the Middle East with any Israeli representative, including Premier Golda Meir. He also 14id he was willing to appear on American television with an Israeli interloCutor to discuss his Middle East apProacb. These ideas, be told Parliament, are based on the United NatlOlll' ·1947 call for a partition. of v.·hat was then ca'lled Palestine into a Jewish and an Arab state. He said be would infonn Kiuinger of these ideas OD the new Arab attitude toward tile 1947 parUtlon plan. Bourguibe A id Sen. J. William Fullbright (!>-Arie.), supported the 1947 pl an and "wlll one day perhaps become president of the United Slates." Sadat, meanwhile, met in Cairo with Fahrni to bear a report of FabmJ 'a Waahingtoo tal ks with Kissinger and President Nixon. Kissinger was ez:pected In catro around 11 p,m. (3 p.m. PDT) and the Klsatnger-8adat talks were set for Wednesday morning. The EQPUan government apokesman, Ahmed Anis, lald the results of th< Sadat·Kluinger talk• will he "of para- mount importance," but did not elaborate. Government 80W'ces; said Sadat would reiterate his demand that Israel withdraw to the Oct. 22 cease-frre lines .and that Fahmi's Washington talks on this had been "encouraging." They said an Israeli pullback had been the primary aim of Fahrnl'1 Washington talks but that there had been no indication Israel would comply. Sadat bas threatened to "finish off" the Israelis if they do not pull back. :Ptfeanwhile, Syria reported that two formations of Israeli planes attacked Syrian Army advanced positions on the Golan Heights today with "many" air to ground Shrike-type missiles but were driven off by Syrian fighter planes and air defense systems. It was the first reported cease-fire violation on the Syrian front since the Oct. 22 cease-fire and coincided with Israeli reports or scattered fighting along the Suez Canal £ront where Israel said the Egyptian armed forces have been fully deployed for attack. An Israeli spokesman in Tel Aviv said he had "no infonnation" about the reported att8(k. Tbe United State• ta known to have armed the Israeli Air Force with Shrikes, underwing missiles that home on radar signals. U.S. pilots used them in the Indochina war In attacks on North Vietnamese surface-to-air missile sites. From Pagel RAFFLE ... there are no uniforms for them. Tickets, available with a $1 donation, can be obtained from any band member or by calling the school and asking for the band room. Tickets win al!o be sold at the gate to the football game. The Baron band and drill team took a series of prizes Saturday in the Montclair Band Rev!.,.. In that contest, th< band and drlll team each fin1Jbed third out of 2i entries and the band's drum major, Jeff Burton, won first place In the drum major cornpeUUnn. Barnes. aaid the band haa 11!0 been Invited to march In the HunUngton Park Chrtatmu Parade which wlll be televlaed live oo Dec. 1. From Page 1 BODY ..• whlcb was believed to be In the fP'lvel ptl. In CUllod1 was WWlam Pem. 31, an assembler for a Sun Valley trailer company. Police lald Perez and his daughter Uved ~ith Mary VitaU, 27, the mother of the vlcUm and four other children. VPIT ...... WARNING -Acting Attorney General Robert H. Bork warns in testimony before the House Judiciary Committee that a \Vatergate prosecutor inde· pendent of the Justice Depart· n1ent could be unconstitutio nal. City, County Offices Remain Open Today City and county offices in Orange County stayed open today, tmllke other areas where ll-'Orkers had a holiday because of the special election OD Gov. Rona ld Reagan's tax initiative. The state's 100,000 workers and lhousands of local government employes had the day off. Today 's vote on Proposition 1 marked the flrlt ..special statewide election in 24 years. The cost or the election could run as high as $25 million, Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown Jr. estimated. because the state could be required to reimburse local governments for the cost of time off under a law passed last year. Reagan has said the election would cost $6 million. ~ Workers in San Diego city and coun ty also were on the job. College and wtiversity employes were at work, but will be given a compensatory day o(( later. A spot check with local officia1s show· ed 14,000 of the 25,000 San Francisco emeloyes will have the day off to vote on Prop: 1. Most of the 49,000 workers in the City of Los Angeles likewise will be off. ~~ A spokesman for Brown said 0 man y'' other local govemmeots were giving their workers time -off. Israeli Death Total 1,854 TEL AVIV (AP) -Israel ... nounced today that 1,854 Israelis soldiers were killed in the Middle East ·war. It was the highest death toll Israel has suffered in a war since its first conflict with the Arabs in 1948, ll-·hen the figure neared 5,000. The annoWlcement of t h e previously secret casualty figures said about 1,000 Israeli soldiers were wounded and still hospitaliz· ed. Many Israelis had expected the number of wounded to be much higher and the disclosure was greeted with some relief. , Hous e Unit Asks Boost In Security WASlllNGTON (AP) -The Ho use Ways and Means Committee voted today 13 to 12 to boost Social Security benefits 10 percent effective with next Jul y's checks and to finance this through a hike In the payroll·tax wage base. But the declsion could be subject to change. The panel immediately ar .. ranged a meeUng later in the day to act on the formal legislation. After lengthy debate by the committee Mooday, proposals emerging .. chief options for final action included either a 10 percent benefit boost eUecUve in July or a two-step bike of a total 12 percent, with seven percent due next March and the rest corning the following November. These Included financing changes in· volving the payroll tax rate formula and boosting the top salary on ·which the tax ts· levied. · Rep. Al unman (D-Ore. ), acting com· n1ittee chairman. sa id he wanted the panel ready to offer a bill to the House later this week . The Senate Finance Coin mittee already has approved a aev.en percent Social Security benefit boost ef· fective upon enactment of legislation, although the panel did not offer any financing changes. The Nixon administration has been trying to hold down spending during the fiscal year ending June 30. An ad· ministration spokesman told the House panel he would suggest the President sign the 10 percent benefit increase option since its impact comes in the year starting July l, 1974. But the spokesman suggested he would call for a veto of the two-step plan for a total lZ percent benefit increue, a proposal that appeared to be gathering backing among committee Democrats who indicated they could collect enough House votes to override any veto. Current law calls for a 5.9 percent Social Security benefit boost to take effect next July and for the amount of earnings against which SOC:ial Security taxes are paid to go fronl $10,800 this year to $12,00J next year. It wu estimated a seven percent flat Increase in benefits payable in March would coot $1,3 bllllon during the year ending June ~. 197t. 1bere was no immediate estimate on the total cost of the tw~tep 12 percent benefit in- crease during 1974. The estimate fo r the 10 percent plan was $1.4 billion for the year 6tarting next July. Trust.ees Approve Appeal for Funds Trustees o( the Ocean View Schoot District in Huntington Beach gave their approva l Monday night to an application requesting $300,000 lh federal money under the state's ntle 3 program. Title 3 money 1J granted by the 1tate to fund innovative programs designed by individual Jlcbool dlltrtcta. Ocean View submitted an application for money to fWld two prognun1. Metrics Made Easy and the Child Dtveloixnent Center. Metrics Made Easy ta a propoul to test the belt way to teach cbildttn the metric syatem. The Chiid Dtvelo!>' ment Center proposes to make teams of early teaming specialists available to pre-school parenta. The district will know within three months whether the projects will be funded. Blacks Seize Office PISCATAWAY, N,J. (UPI) -At least 100 black studenll barricaded themselves inside the dean's office at Piscataway Collete Monday with at least aeven administrators. . v,. ,......,. .. CALLED TO TESTIFY ·l Nixon srret1ry Woods ' Froin Pa,,e 1 W ATERG.4 TE ... the questioning and asked Bull how long fl.>tiss Wdpds h.a<I the tapes in her possession. "She kept then1 al least a week." Bull said. "Beyond that , 1 do not know." "Do you know what happened to those seven or eight tapes?'' Sirica asked. "No, sir," Bull replied. Under questioning by assistant special prosecutor Richard Ben·Veniste, Bull said he had seen Miss Woods typing as she listened lo some tapes at Camp David that weekend-In September. 'Someone get v.·ord to ~1iss Woods that she will be called as a witness in this case," Sir lea interjected. Bull aaid Miss \Yoods continued to work with the tapes throughout the wrck and "seven or eight'' of the tapes were taken to Key Biscayne, Fla. The follow- ..iug weekend. . Asked if he kn(W y,·hen the lapc.s *ere returned. Bull said, ''No, si r. I don't know if they have been returned." Sirica had ordered the: President lo turn over the tapes lO him for private screening tQ determine what portions shouid be provided to the grand jury. Meanwhil e, the: Senate Watergate Com- mittee voted today to seek an informal meeting with President Nixon on the Watergate affair. The Whlte House would not say whether the President would go along with the: request. During a lengthy, closed session," the committee decided to send lawyers to the \Vhite House to explore the possibility of a conference. The oommitte-c set up no ad\·ance conditions for such a meeting . Presidential · sjiokesman · Gerald L. Warren , would not discuss the matter bu.t said Nixon had a '·complete and full understanding" or the problems pos- ed for him and the country by Watergate an d would meet it "bead on." Nixon Parent Group Not PTA The parent group from Ricbard M. N'lion Elementary School that served soup at aa "Impeach Ni.Jon" rally Satur· day isn't aUiliated with the PTA (Parent· Teacher Association). A school official said today that I~ parents broke from the national PT A organization about one year ago to form the "Nixon Parent Association." Parents from the Yorba Linda elemen- tary school sold soup to raise money for audi~visual equipment at a rally in Richard M. Nixon Park, also in Yorba Linda, run by the Orange Cowtty Com· mittee to Impeach Nixon. ' They were originally incorrectly iden- tllled u being !tom the PTA. The Dally Pilot regret! the error. The Bright SUle . . • Shortages are occuring in virtu1lly every indu<try. The carpet industry is no exception. Two fa ctort are causing the shortagts. The demand is astronomical! Carpeting is no long er a lux~ry, but 1 ntcessity . People ore usin9 carpeting in rooms which ustd to be tiled, such as kitchens, baths, dining rooms, and bedrooms. Also, carpeting i1 installed outside, and even on tho walls. ' Secondly, !ht fibers eN in sh...t 1Upply due to 'overwhelming demand from not jud the c<1r!>ft indu1try, b..t ALL industry. We Itel that thete Is 1 p o s i t i v • a sped to 11 of this. The , man ufac!ur8" are m1kin9 better qu1h~ with 1v1iloble yarn , ind much more of the junky stuff ls dillppe1rlng. It rn1y 1ppe1r that prlc<1s aN higher, but actualy 'you .... ju<t looking et BETTER ~ARPETING. ALDEN'S • CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Aff • COSTA MISA 646-4138 HOU H t ,._ n.. n.n.. t to l :JO -RI.. t to t -SAT. t :JO to 5 • • I • ' ..i. ~. NoVf!mbtr 6, 1974 H DAILY PILOT :J Gi;alld Jury Urges Action on Campaign Limits By JACK BROBACK ot lllt Olllr P'IMI Slell Citing the urgent need for laws con· trolling polilkal campaign spending lllnlt• andJQntlibutl~ the Oraoge County Grand Jury bas recommended that the Board of Supervisors act such llmlts for county office seekers. "'Fraditional melhods of railing and expending huga sums of money to gain elective office ~re under close·ScrUtiny~" the JW'Y report read. ''Publlo trust in govemmentaJ olficials has deterlorated as news storiea give substanCe to the fear thal ae<eptance ·or large campaign contrlbullcns in¥. weighty obllgalions." The jury added : "The need for cam· paign limllalions on contrlbullons and expenditures Is clear unless only the Independently weallhy or those supported by special interest groups are to be elected in Orange County." The JW'y requests that the supervisors seek the County Counsel's opinion on whether Orange County, as a general law count y, may, by ordinance impose on all elected county officerstregulalions on campaign expenditures and con- tributions. If legal, the jury wants an ordinance prepared at once and if not legal wants special stare legislation sought to (>errriit such regulation. The report poinls out that In 1972 Ahead of Schedule Rapid Transit • • Plans Narrowed orange County Transit Dist~lct's alternative transit corridor study aimed al providing high-speed rapid transporta· • lion to the public is ahead of schedule. Transit district directors were told Monday that 11 alternative plans have been studied and reduced lo four. The four wiU now be subject to further evaluation and testing lo select the best one or combination. lo the first two stages of the alternative corridor study the actual transportation vehicles (rail , bus or other) are not being considered. The initial purpose is to establish the best oorridors for such high speed transit. VTN, an Orange County planning-con- sllltant finn, and Alan M. Voorhees & . Associates Inc., transportation con- sultants, have come up. with these four alternatives: -1be minimal network plan which utilizes the old Pacific Electric right-of· way, the Santa Fe right-of-way from Santa Ana south to San Diego; the Riverside Freeway from its western con- nection with lhe Pacific Electric align- ment to Riverside , and the Orange Freeway to the Santa A'na River and South on Fairview Street to the proposed Corona del Mar Freeway. -The maximwn rail network which uses the Pacific Electric right-of-way; for the Los Angeles-Santa Ana connection and its existing spur lines to Long Beach, Huntington Beach, Fullerton and La Habra. This alternative is said to ha\•e good interreglbnlll servic!e tying Los 1 Angeles, Orange County and San Diego ~ and Orange County to Rivfrslde County. Although ei:isting rai~~ right-of-ways are featured , a rail mode assumption is not made. -A plan which makes extensive use or the existing San Diego. Santa Ana, and Riverside Frteways as well-as the propcL9ed Corona '1el Mar· extension of the Orange Freeway. In addition. service to Huntington Beach is provided on a • line following Beach Boulevard. - A bus-on-freeway plan which makes extensive use of freeways including San Diego, Garden Grove, santa Ana and Newport freeways and the proposed Corona del Mar Freeway into the ex· isling portion of the Newport Freeway. the Orange Freeway is also included wilh Its proposed ccmpleUon to the Garden Grove Freeway. The consultants said the selected plan must include a network of mass transit and feeder transit routes designed to provide highly e[ficient p ll b I i c transportaton service in corridor! of heavy demand. The goal of the plan is to provide efficient public transpprtation to a major segment of the population that need! ~ it now; to attract _pew riders thereby alleviating automobile congestion and pcllution, and to assist in orderly and desirable growth and development. The consultants state that their evalua- tion process has made extensive use of community participation through a aeries of presentations and workshops with numel'OU! groups. "Upcoming phases of the work will .continue stroog utilization of community interaction to evaluate alternative plans and corridors,'' !he planners stated. Tirat process will take place during November and December with a finalized technical plan produced early in January, they said. 'The cons&iltants cauUOned that where tran.spcrtation conidon have been iden- tified ~th bWlt-up urban a r e a s , coordin&led new development a n d redevelopment planning a n d pro- gramming techniques are very im- portant. "Many opportunities may arise: to p~ rilote new development and strengthen the old," the consultants added. However, Martin Bounnan of the con- sulting team warned that it Is difficult to plan a transit corridor without over encouraging new development. * * '* * * * Mini-buses Preferred Over Vans in System Use or mini-buses with capacity of 17-13 passengers rather than seven to 12 passenger vans ls more suitable . for Dial-A-Ride operations becau.se the buses can be expected to last five years and the vans but two years . Orange Comity Transit District direc- * * *' OCTD Patronage Shows Increase ·' In Past ~Year Patronage on Orange County Transit District bus 11..., serving BalbOa Peninsu1a, Lllgi.qia Beach and Newport Center-UCI have' increased dramatically in' the past year, Gordon "Pete" Fle1dlng, OCTD general m a n a g er reports. The Santa Ana-Balboa line had 23.793 passengers in September of this year compared with but. 7 ,942 a year ago. The Laguna Beach line had 42.S71 paying riders 1n September compared to 101300 in the · same month in 1972, and the line which serv~ Balboa, Newport Center, UC Irvine and Soulh Coast Plaza had 10,7.68 cmtomers in September com- pared to 2,821 the same month ln Ute previous year. Overall patronage was down in Se~ tember compared to Augusl but Fielding atllibuled lhls to studenta relumed to school. · "Young people were not making lh• usual trips Jo the Beach .. they """' In lhe summer," .Fielding 11plained. °For example our Harbor , Boulevard line wu cut from jllne scheduled tripa to lhree Jn September." Fielding also said that lhe e•· perlmental Dtal·A·,lllde bus 1ystem in La Habra was galning 1acceptance rapid· ly wllh an ~verage pa~&e of over 400 a day Ind a peak of more lhan ~ passengers on aome da1.s. The dtallict Is now !onn\ilatlng plana to .. 1enc1 lhe Dill·A·Rlde ooacept to olber county cities. • tors were told Monday that buses are more costly to buy 1$14,000 to $32,000 per bus) but this is not so critical when federal capital grant ftmds are used to pay 80 percent of the initial cost. Vans seating bul seven to 12 pesoengm on the other hand cost only fS,000 to ft0,000 but can be depended upon to last only two years belor< "Placement compared to the bu!es' five yean. Operatmg cost per mile Is aboul lhe same, the directors were told. Additional disadvantages of vans are the more cramped space making them unpopular with elderly patrons or the disabled. 'lbe transit district staff recommended that the board authorize a van-type vehlcle to be leased so that more in· formation could be collected in a side by side comparilon With mini-buses. Such a trial would provide the district with actual operating costs ,figures on local runs and information on user preferences of the tW<>vehicle types. Directors decided, however, to get more information on the various vans offered be!Ore approving the leasing of one for the test. In other business Monday, the lran!lt dlslrlct dlrecton: -Authorlud the general manager to solicit proposals for a study on the · proper locaUon and size of a dotntown Santa Ana bU! tennlniJ. -Approved a study a Dlal·A·Ride e1penslon proeram .to other county com· mun!Ues . .At present Mly La Habra ha,s Dla~A·Rlde aervices. • ~harity BegiM A& Home' for Them ' . NomNGHAM, • England (UPI} Richard Bloomlield bu objected to the plan of his dngbter 1Jnda and a &lrl friend, bolh 14, to sell Id,... for a Chri!tmaa charlljl In a Nottingham aqoare. ~ "I'm not having dirty old men ld181ng Linda," Bloom!Jald said Monday. "Some would bal'I! retumed for more.' • candidates for two aupervisorfal posts spent in excess of $900,000 with one candidate spending over $200,000. To correct such excesses the Jury recommends: -Conlribulions by individuals should be limited to li!OO. -Aoooymous contributions should not exceed $50 per person. -Maximum expenditures for In- cumbents per district should be the total of registered voters times f5 cents. -Challengers should be limited to five cents more per voter, or 50 cents. The llmltations on contributions and spending would apply lo candldales for the Boord of Supervl.!ors and all coun· tywide elected officials. Two 0rl'.1111e County cities already have enacted llmlJations for city office S«kers. Newport Beach set a Umlt of 25 cents per registered voter. San Juan Capistrano set a lhn.it of JS s:ents. The grand jury analyzed spending in the 1972 campaigns and applied the limitations figures for a comparison . In supervisoria l district one, incumbent Robert -Battin spent $210,688 last year. Under the proposals he would have been limited to $58,168, a difference of flS2,S20. · The jury made si milar comparisons with spending by Battin's general elec- tion challenger, William Wenke and for • .Fire Rages in ·Indianapolis defeated Incumbent Wiiiiam J. Phllllps in supervisorlal district three and his successlul challenger, Ralph Diedrich. Phillips spent 197.3t4 and Diedrich $172,432. Under the proposed rohnula PhiUips would have been limited to $69,827 aod Diedrich to $77 ,586. The jury put aside proposed public financing of campaigns as "a possible Jong term answer " but warns that viable and enforceable expenditure limitations and full djsclosure are needed today. To insure compliance with Its proposed law, the Grand Jury proposes "stringent penalties" on violators. Proposed is a fine or no less than $1,000 for violators of the proposed ordinance and ineligibility for five years to hold elective orfice. Jn conclusion, the jury notes that Jn 1974 the county wUJ experience a polltlcul contest Involving three supervisorlal seais. l "By passing an ordin::ince with~a cell· ing on total campaign expenditures artd On individual contributions the Board of Supervisors would be returning the electoral process to the citizens and would be encouraging people-oriented grass roots ca mpaigns.'' The jury feels that such action cou ld significantly raise the interest and con- fidence of the Orange Count y cit izen in his government. Storm Rips Northern California SAN FRANCISCO (APl -Fo\lo\\'ini; up a ferocious blast of stormy weather that jammed traffic, cut pcwer and flooded many areas. intennittent rain pelted Northern California today while heavy snow blanketed the mountains. The National Weather Service said the stonn would abate by evening but predicted more showers and snow through Wednesday. ,,_1inor flooding was reported in Marin County and near Crescent City and heavy snow warnings were issued for the Sierra and the l.1ount Shasta-Siskiyou area. "We 're going nuts in here," an ex· asperated California Highway Patrol dispatcher said Monday as thousands or San Francisco evening._ commuters were stranded in traffic jams caused . by numerollS act::idents on rain-slicked streets. . Brier power failures were reported in the Glen Park and Twin Peaks neighborhoods , here and in the Mills Estate area of Millbrea Monday night. Fire111en try to contain a fire (top photo) that swept through five buildings in downtown Indianapolis - apparently started by a welder's torch -as resi- dents of the Washington Hotel (below ) flee amidst a shower of water from fire hoses. The Mo n day blaze caused millions of dollars In damages to at least seven buildings. More than 2.3 inches of rain drenched downtown San Francisco and the Oak.land airpoit Monday and early today, the National Weather Service said. A tot.ct! of 1.13 inches of rain fell at Stockton and one inch at CresCent City. · The weather service also reported .'19 inch at Red Bluff, .69 at Sacramento and .39 at Eureka. -, Federal Officials Diffe1-- On Policies Over Rehozo WASHINGTON CAP) -Several federal officials concede that recent regulatory actions have given President Nixon's Mend Olarles G. "Bebe" Reboz.o a financial monopoly In Key Biscayne, Fla. But aoother official disagrees and denies any impropriety. · Thomas Bomar, chainnan o( the Federal Home Loan. Bank Board, said Monday there was rio improper contact wltb anyone infuential. · He also denied lhat lhe board knew when It approved insurance for a Rebozo- t'Onnected savtng and Joan association that the Comptroller of the Currency was simulta(\eously considering an a~ pllcatkm. for a bani to compete with Rebozo'a. Ultimately, the comptroller rejected the appllcaUon, leaving Rebozo's bank a! the only one In Key Biscayne. Bomar defended the decision to grant I ' • federal insurance to a state-chartered savings and loan association to be housed in Rebozo's buildlng on Key Biscayne. Two directors from Rebozo' bank are also directors of the savings and loan association. Anaheirµ Man Dies • Of Cycle Injuries Gary Lee Baumgart, 'll. of Anaheim, died Monday of injuries received when his motorcycle crulted on the Santa Ana Freeway Sunday night , the Orange County Coroner's office reported. Baumgart was Mrlhbound on lhe freeway near Ball &ad In the Anaheim area when be evtdenUy losl control and struck a guardrail . Blind Murder Suspect Dead EL CAJON. (AP) -A blind college student free on bond while awaiting trial for murder was found dead of what coroner's office called an apparent mixture of overdose of drugs. The body of Perry McKinney, 38, was foWJd Monday by his brother with whom he had been living since being freed from county jail last month on bail . He was awaiting trial on a charge of murdering Donald H. Downs, 59. Downs was shot to death in 'a vacant lot Sept. 26 arter an argument in a bar. Witnesses said a man with a seeing- eye dog fled the scene. Bank Hit-$10,000 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Police say three gunmen robbed a Bank of America branch of $10,333 Monday. ,Witn..,.. told officers the three entered the Fillmore and Clay streets branch and one leaped onto a teller 's cowiter, ordering employes and customers to "Freeze, or we'll blow your beads off!" The Smith River was back within its banks early today after some "very slight" flooding Mondey evening at Dr. Fine Bridge, 10 miles north of Crescent City, the Del Norte County sheriff's office sai;d .• ~o damage was reported as the water epilled. into nearby low-lying pastures. A travelers advisory was issued today in the Ml Shasta-Siskiyou area for blow· ing and drifting snow above 3,0CKI and 5,000 feet. Interstate 5 was open. although a ~mile section between Dunsmuir and Weed was closed Monday due to bliz:zard conditions. A weathennan said eight in- ches of snow, whipped by 35 mile-per· hour winds, fell in the area. Heavy ·snow above the 5.000 to 7,000- foot level and strong southerly winds are forecast through Wednesday in the , Sierra Nevada north or Yosemite Na- tional Park. State routes 120 over Tioga Pass, 108 over Sonora Pass and 89 on the Lassen Loop were c1osed by snow Monday. lhe state Division of HighwaY.s said. Chains were required early today on U.S. 50 over Echo Summit , State Route 4 over Ebbetts Pass and State Route 88 over Carson Pass. U.S. 80 over Donner Pass was open early today, but motorists were advised to carry chains. Splitting Tieket Two Precincts for Irvine f oters DUAL POLLING PLACES plagued most Irvine voters today as landowners casting ballots in the Irvine Ranch Water District (IRWD ) election did so at locations other than the places where they voted on Proposition 1. Robert West, a candidate in the IRWD race lives in·the Colony. He voted at a precinct there in ttre statewide election. Then, at 8 a.m·., he drove four miles up Culver Drive and back to cast his vote in the IRWD election. FRANK HURD, an Irvine planning commissioner who lives in University Park, said he planned to vote on Proposition 1 at the usual polling place, University Park Elementary School. To cast his IRWD proxy votes, however, he'll have to drive nearly a 10.mile round trip to the Racquet Club polling place on Typee Way. Miles E. <lfete" Peterson, a Ra cquet Club resident, waited around several hours before learning he could exercise his landowner rights on his Cal-Vet financed home. For a time early today it ap- peared veterans whose land technically is "owned" by Cal·Vet much as a bank "owns" a car being bought on time, were to be disenfran- chlsetl. A DECISION OF IRWD attorney Alex Bowle, however, gave vet· erans the righr to vote for IRWD candidates. • Precinct workers were instructed to allow Ca l-Vet homeowners to be treated as landowners, voting the assessed valuation of the land under their homes. One vote tor each dollar of land value is given each landowner voter in the IRWD. HOWEVER, AFTER Peterson completed his IRWD vote. he had to drive to the Colony Clubhouse ln order to vote on the statewide ballot Issue, Proposition One. An IRWD spokesman sald the dual polling places were set up by the county registrar of voters whlch ts handling the election for the first time. • ' ' • ' 4 DAILY PILOT Tuesday, Nottmbtr 6~ 1974 with Tom urphine ·~ ., . •:• .. ,., Of Voters ,. l\nd Coyot es ELEC'l'ION DAY, '73: Dawn came on clear and cold on this balloting day along our Orange Coast and that's more than you can say for the Politicia~ \\'hO have spent recent times hooting at us all aOOut Proposition I, the .tax initiative. The weather is clear but ·Prop. l is muddled. Whatever ' it is, we either have it or haven't got it by 8 o'clock tonight. That's when the polls close. Then we · get to go on lo the larger question. PROPOS ITION l thus dispatched , that bigger question becomes, "What will Governor Reagan and Assembly Speaker Moretti find to verbally thrash each other about now?" Frustrated in their efforts to really explain this tax thing we're voting on, the two protagonists in this high drama finally resorted to first political prin- . ciples. They said bad things about each other Governor Reagan, who favors Prop. 1, declared that the opPonents are just big.spending poHtlciaM "with their #snouts in the public trough who, if not controlled, will epprove t,!.3 billion in new (taxi spending next year." NOT TO BE OUTDONE, Speaker Moretti said of Reagan;· "Those are the rantings of a desperate man who thought he had an absolute, sure winner and mw is petrified." Listening to all this, you wonde r if Reagan or Moretti really care that much about Prop. 1. You get the sneaking notion that maybe they care more about Reagan cind Moretti. And which one might occupy the Big Throne in Sacramento for the next four years. Anyway, it's possible that both are simply attempting to drum up a lot of interest in today's election. I ARRIVED AT my polling place about half an hour after It opened. Normally, I try to arrive about the time the election workers . unlock the place in order to avoid the rush. This morning, I didn't figure it would be necessary. That was the best political prediction I've made in eight years. They had a hall-dozen of those new cardboard voting booth! set up. The kind you use once and then throw away. Chances are gOod by the time this election Is over, they'll still have five brand-new booths. You could have fired a cannon through that precinct place and hit nary a Republican -much less a Democrat. WELL, TOO BAD if you can't get excited about this voting. Maybe you need a distraction, like what happened in Costa lt1esa just yesterday. Three coyotes got 1006e from a local pet store and were out playing in early-morning commuter traffic. Costa Mesa poli~e and humane officers chased the wily ones fo r B\Yhile and finally made good the capture. One of our photographers also captured the likeness of one beast on film. Jn the photo. there he was, being held by an officer. The coyote's front legs spread askew , his head ' hunched forward in disconsolate fashion, mouth turned down, ears flat out to the sides, eyes glazed. Come to think or it. that old coyote's expression seemed familiar. He looked a lot like a typical California voter. Curt a i lnient Seen ·Arabs Pressure Canada From Wire Services Arab threats may force Canada to stop shipments of some on to the north.eastern United States. The oil in question is refined in East Coast facilities specifically set up to serve the United States . · CANADA'S ENERGY minister, Donald MacDonald, said Monday that diplomatic contacts inrucate the Arab nations still list Canada as "neutral'' despite il~ oil exports to the United Stales. But he said the Arabs might object to the re-exporting of oil to New England since over one-fourth is: imported from the Arab states. MacDonald said if exports to the United States is banned, the refineries could satisfy eastern Canadian markets, which are expected to have a difficult time this winte r meeting heating oil and gasoline needs. The nine Common Market countries today called on Israel to pull back to the Oct. 22 ~fiddle East cease-fire lines. THE COUNTRIES' foreign ministers also said any Middle East peace agree· ment should be based on the 1967 U.N. resolution calling for Israeli withdrawal from Arab territory it occupied in the 1967 war. The minis~' statement appeared to lean considerably further to the Arab side than most popular opinion in the member countries, which has shown sympathy for the Israeli cause. In other news of the international energy crisis: -Japan. facing a loss of 40 percent of its entire oil imports du e to the Arab oil production.cutback, today urged immediate Israeli withdrawals to ter· on Oil rllory held before the 1007 Middle East \Var. THE JAPANESE cabinet took the ac- 1 ion at the request or foreign minister ~1asayoshi Ohira. It edged the country furttier along the road to diplomatic support for the Arab countries in the 1973 conflict. -Roger Dreyer, executive vice presi· dl'11t of the Ohio Petroleum ~1a.rketers Association, predicted gasoline rationing would begin in the United States within 60 to 90 days. "It is a dead certainty," Dreyer said. -Standard Oil or Ohio o;ut gasoline supplies to all customers by 10 percent, at least for the rest of November. -fowa Gov. Robert D. Ray said some Iowa schools ·may have to close this winter because of the fuel shortage. He ordered thermostats turned dov.'ll and lights turned off when not needed in the state house. -DEM\tARK'S provincial board of trade told shopkeepers not to turn on Christmas lights tmtil the end of the month. The board also said a total ban on special Christmas lights may be possible. ..:.. President Nixon today sought bipartisan support for an energy policy in which all Americans will be asked to share sacrifices so that none will suffer drastically from looming fuel shortages. The President. centering much of his attention on this proposal, v.·hich he expects lo announce this week, called a cabinet meeting later today on energy and other matters and planned a meeting Wednesday with congressional lead~rs or both parties. Even -liayh Changes Ford Seen as Sure Thing At Windup of Hearings WASHINGTON fUPI) -T1"-·o days ol nationally televised hearings on Rep. Gerald R. Ford 's nomination for vice president left the Hou~e Republican leader today an apparent shoo-in for confirmation. but scattered opposition continued to be heard. The Senate Rules Committee finished two days of grilling Ford Monday and heard a Democra tic senator say he ha s changed his mind and will probably support Forcl. IN ADDmON, a parade of JO House members from both parties praised and endorsed Ford as the panel prepared to go behind closed doors Wednesday to hear additional witnesses. The com· mittee did not schedule a meeting today. Sen. Birch Bayh ID-Ind.), aulhoc or the Senate version of the 25th amend· ment which pro vides for Senate and House approval of a president's nomina· lion to fill a vacancy in the vice presiden· cy, told the committee Monday he had planned to vote against confirmation prior to Ford 's appearance at the start of hearings Thursday. ''I am prepared to say now that if this committee docs not reveal anything new. other than what you have already cove red. I am prepared to go along with the nomination," said Bayh. "I was very pleased with the way he discuss· ed executive privilege." FORD HAD said that it he were president and a court wanted White House documents such as the Watergate tapes to prove or disprove allegations or criminal violations he would comply with the court order. ''I would be more comfortable if we had a man before us whose voting record '"-'as more compatible with my views on issues such as heallh care. education. end the V.'al', Supreme Court jsutices and such things. b\it as author of the 25th amendment 1 must say the intent v.·as not to vote for con· firmation or against because of a voting record but whether you feel the nominee is qualified.'' aaid Bayh. ~ One House member who thinks "Ford's YOting record shou1d disqualify him said today Nixon should withdraw Ford 's name and nominate instead fonner Al· torney General Elliot Richardson. · "Congress would confirm Richardson immediately. Then the President should resign," said Rep. Jerome Waldie (D- Calif.), in a statement he inserted in the Congressional Record . "THE PEOPLE have no cmfidence in the present administration, and any individual as closely identified with President Nixon as is ~raid Ford will suffer from that lack of confidence," said Waldie. Ten other House members, appeared in person before the Senate panel to endorse Ford and urge early action on his nomination. . FIGHTING COCK KILL S MA N, 66 SINGAPORE (UP!) -Lim Ah Kim, a 66-year~ld former pedicab driver. died Sunday from wounds inflicted by a fighting cock, neighbors reported today. They said the cock planted its spurs into Lin's leg in the backyard of his home. Lim waited two days before he sought treatment and the wounds became infected. He: died after being admitted to the hospital for treatment. Rocky Mountains Freeze Sno1.v Blankets Parts of Orego1i , W asliington State Tempe l'nture• • Hl•h Lew ~ M 14 3) ,, n ... ~ " ~ ~~ " " ,, ~ ~s d ,, 16 ~ " " .. " ~ " l1 l"cp. ... ·" •• •llllWl'ttff. m il.IN 1 .. ~~·;)$NOW ..... 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The 55-year-old enter- tainer was placed in intensive care ~ but only because she had a previous history of heart problems. - FBI Probing Saxbe Ties To Criminal? DAYTON. Ohio (A P) -The . Dayton Daily News ·sayS the FBI is probing a link between Sen. Willi_am B. Sax~. President Nixon's attorney general- designate. and slot machine manufac· turer Sam W. Klein of Cleveland. KJein, who don~ to Saxbe's 1968 U.S. Senate campaign, is the largest shareholder in Bally Corp. ti. Chicago, which manufactures slot machines. ONE OF Klein's early associates in Bally was Gerardo Ciltena. The Daily News said police describe Catena, no longer with the firm. as a chief of organized crime on the East Coast. In a copyright story on Monday, the Daily News said the FBI has asked for a copy of a letler the Ohio Republican wrote attesting to Klein's reputation. "I think him to be a person worthy of trust." the Daily News quoted Saxbe as writing about Klein. The paper said Saxbc's comment was contained in a Sept. 15, 1969.. letter to the Nevada Gaming Control Board. THE DAILY News said Klein had listed Saxbe as a reference in an ap- plication for a Nevada gaming license. The ·oally News said the letter stales tbat Saxbe's acquaintance with Klein stems from a business deal while Saxbe Was Ohio Attorney genera1. The newspaper said Saxbe wrote the letter while owning 600 shares of Bally stock. Sa:s:be sold the stock in l!nt>, the paper added. Skylab 3 Crew H.as Some Repair Work to Finish CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) Like almost everyone moving into a used home, the Skylab 3 astronauts will have a few repair jobs to handle when they rocket up ta the orbiting space station Saturday. The chief tasks will be to serve a 1eaky refrigeration system and to fix a stuck antenna on . one of the .earth resources experiments. The latter will require one or two space walks by two of the men. Astronauts Gerald P. C a r r , William R. Pogue and Edward G. Gibson have been practicing repair job,, ,in simulators at the Johnson Space Center, Houston. Tex., and at the Marshall Space FliJ{ht Center, Huntsville. Ala. They are to fly here Wednesday front Houston to make final preparations for their launching at 8:40 a.m. PST Satur· day. They hope to remain aloft a record 8.l days during man 's third and flhal visit to the Skylab space station. Discussing the repair work, misaion commander Carr told newsmen tNt IOOl1 after the astronauts link up with the station they will service the refrigeration system with a fluid called coolanoL Mo.'lt or the r1uld has leaked slowly from the.system. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtllmy of lht Dally Piiot I! gu1ranlttd -Mttlll•,·•rMl•ri II n• .. llfl llt\'t '""' ::W .., J i)t ''""' CtH .... '"' ""'f Wlff '""9111 M ,.., Ct•~ tn t-.. Mii ,, ..... ....... ,. .......... .,.! " '" • flff nctm r.:: Cf,., .., t t ,111, flt.Nll fo « I l .llt, ...,.,,, Clft t lMI I Ctn •II ... ,..,.., " Pl"• Cl ltl trt ll kM ..m II t·"'· Ttft9tlont1 -.1 o,.... C.-ty Al'HI ...... , '°'°" """"""'' NwrilllltfWI l tt(ll lllf Wfltfnlllltw . ... .. ., ,. ....... 1t11 C~i., Ctli•l'r"" 1-11, SM ,_,. C•lllth'-, 0-....... ... flll. ....... ut-eMltwl ,.,..,._ I • • . \ •Ended Pai11~ . ' izz Jury Acquits ~er~ K ei; , FREEHOI,D, N.J. (AP) -"The only I r.rlme Lester ls guilty of was bavlni his oower to rea1<>n ov¥rwhelmed by events," Lester ZvJmanlak's attomev told a Suoerlor Court jurv before Jt RC'(luitted the young man of slaying his J>l.rAlvzed hrother. THE JIJRY of seven men and five women deliberated 2Ya hours on Tuesday before acquitting Zygmaniak, 23, on grounds of temoorary insanity. He had been charRed with first de1t:ree murder. Zygmaniak admitting killing his 26- year-old brother, George, with a shotll!:un blast last June as he lay ln a hospital bed, paralyzed from the neck down u ..,. the result of a motorcycle ·accident. The shooting was descMbed by friends and relatives as a mercy killing. "I feel relieved a little bit," Zygmanlak said after tha. verdict. "I feel much better. That's all I want to say now." IN ms CLOSING arguments, deferuie attorney Robert Ansell pleaded with the jury to release Lester "not on pity, not on sympa thy, but' on the evidence. Malcolm Carton, First Asst. Monmouth County Prosecutor, told the jury that the state had proved premeditated murder, and he asked the jurors to "do what's right ... do what's honest . . . There is nothing in New Jersey law that says you can take the law into -your own hands." Jn his testimony, Lester admitted car· rying a concealed sawed~ff shotgun into the hospital and shooting his brother in the head. "I WALKED over atld asked him it he was in pain," Lester told the jury. "He nodded he was. I asked, 'A lot of pain, George?' He nodded again. "l went to him and I said, 'Well, I'm here today to end your pain. Is that all right with you?' He nodded yes, and the next I knew I had shot him." , U'I T.._.... ADMITS KILLING BROTHER Lester Zygm1nl1k, 23 Enemy Rockets Bombard South Vietnam Air Base SAIGON (AP) -A rocket aUack before dawn today on the Bien Hoa air base killed a soldier and a child, wounded 22 persons and destroyed three F5 fighter·bombel'3, the Sooth Viel· namese military command reported. The command said 23 of the 122mm rockets hit the base 15 miles northeast of Saigon and 12 exploded in civilian areas near it. Among the wounded were four defec- tors Crom the Viet Cong. TllE ATI'ACK, first on the South Viet· namese government's biggest air hase since the Jan. 28 cease-fire, was believed to be in retaliation for government air attacks on Viet Cong territory. A Viet Cong spokesman in Saigon rejected a government spokesman's claim thal the shelling signalled a new general offen.!lve by North Vietnam and lhe Viet Cong. Bui the Cooununist spokesman added that the Viet Cong "will not stand with arms folded" while government troops violate the ce~fire. At least 100 of the F5 fighter-bombers are based at Bien Hoa, and throughout the morning many of them were taking of( to bomb suspected Viet Cong rocket sites. The Saigon govemment has been predicted a new Communist offeMive for weeks, and in the last six weeks the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong ha ve captured a number of government camps and fire bases. But there has been no major increase in the genera l level o( fighting and no sign or a general offensive like the one In the apring of 1972. TWO NEIGHBORING camps !IS mile< northeast of Saigon, Bu Bong and Bu Prang. were overrun ~tonday . The government repor1ed today that 4-4 of Bu Bong's 150-man garrison had reached government lines. About 260 more men from the two camp! are missing. In Cambodia , Western diplomatic sources warned today thnt the North Vietnamese have amassed enough au~ plies via the Ho Chi Minh trail to carry out simultaneous offensives in both Cambodia and South Vietnam. The sources said Cambodian govern- ment troops have the supplies lo ~ stand an offensive and reaultment of soldiers "seems to be going pretty well," the sources said. The government reported military sue- cesses on the outskirts of Phnom Penh today but in the city a grenade explosion in the Olympi c marketplace killed two persons and wounded nine, police of· ficials said. It w~ the sixth grenade explosion in nine days in Phnom Penh. CAl\.fBODlAN rebels and North Viel· nau1cse b'OOps are expected to launch en offensive ~'ithin about a montll or two, depending on how long it takes for the rainy season to end and µte diplomatic sources said "there is a scramble on both sides for manpower." South Vietnamese President Ngyuen Van Thieu repeatedly has predicted the North Vietnamese will launch an of· fensive in South Vietnam in early 1974. B~bfl Mo•e• Al,lopted Sister Joan Marie of Colum b\1$ hospital ln Cl\lcago ~olds Baby Mo1t1, the infant who was abandoned on the bankt of a llloon July 30. The Wlno!s Department or Children and F11Ully servtces said Mond~.~~ Baby Moses bu been adopted. Nurses nam,ed him after-the Bl~ baby because be .,.., found on the water's edge. · • • l ' • • ' • . 'l. Orange Coast , , VOL. 66, NO. 310, 2 SECTIONS, 2'4 PAGES ' By CANDACE PEARSON Of ttle Diiiy Plltt ll•lf ' A new bearing by the regional coastal ... Commis.skln on a plan to add 234 'Overnight campsites lo Doheny State Beach -initially denied in a stormy session Monday night -will take place next week. Commission chairman Don81d Bright said this morning the Capistrano Beach project. will be · reconsidered next Monday, .... The meeting will begin at 9 a.m. in Long Beach Harbor Department bead· quarters, 925 Harbor Plaza Drive. Following the close denial Monday, angry comments by a state parks official spurred the oommmission to agree to --Yebear the plan Dec. 12. But Dr. Bright, a marine biology pro- fessor at Cal State Fullerton, said State Parks Director William PeM Pwtott had already called him on 1.he phone ,this morning. The hearing was pushed up ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEM BER 6, 1973 to "get the state parks people off our backs," Bright said. The plan for permanent campsites with trailer hookups, sanitary facilities and an amphitheater was denied 6-4. It needed seven votes for approval. Comissioners Carmen Warschaw and James Hayes were absent. Voting against the project were Com· missioners Robert Roooef of Huntington Beach ; Don Phillips o Long Beachi Louis Nowell of Los Angeles a!l<f Art Holmes of San Clemence. Rooney said he wouldn't vote !or anything tbal put recreat ional vehicles on the beach and Nowell criticized the state parks department as "one J>!lrl of the state govenunent that rides roughshod over people and does a minimum job." But the abjections of Holmes and Phillips stemmed from the I.ii.ck of public input into the plan. Holmes, who said nearby r~sidents told him they received little or no public notice of any hearings on the idea, tried to have the project continued before the hearing began. He didn't receive any support for bis reques t. Holmes also complained that th e parks department held its public hearing in Los Angeles. Park official -Lee Warren said, "We didn't set up the law" that requires a hearing be in Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco or Sacramento. Obvious!)' exasperated after the denial, Today's Final N.Y. Stocks N TEN CENTS \Varren told t,he comm ission, "\Ve are trying to provide facilities for the public." The.emphasis at the com1nission hear - ings, he said, seems to be on whether or not the commission likes the project. He contended that isn't why the panel was formed by Proposition 20. • "It seen1s for some reason ," \\far ren charged. "the commission y,·ants to deny (See DOllENY, Page Zl Secretary Has Tapes Nation at War '14 in Custody. of Nixon's Aide' BULLETIN dent Nixon's personal secretary. be sum· WASHINGTON (UPI) -President moned to testify about Nixon's Watergate Nixon's personal secretary, Rose Mary tapes. ~ why two of them seem to Woods, bu 14 secret Watergate tapes in be nussmg. ber poueasloa, Including six given k> ber Sirica directed that ~1iss Woods be on Monday, a White Bouse aide teltlftecl-· .dled.after it was~disclosed in testimony -loday. · ---•• , by presidential assistant Stephen Bull~ WASHINGTON (UPI) -Chief U.S. Districf Judge John J. Sirica today d\ecled that RO!!e Mary Woods, Presi- 'Real Busy' that &be had pJSSeSSion OJ .smne ~tapes of Watergate ·conversaticns for at least two \veeks this fall and possibly may still have them. Heavy Voting Turnout . . Reported _for Newport Newport Beach voters were turning ou't in large numbers today to cast ballots on Propo&tion l, Governor Reagan's tax: limitation initiative, elec- tion workers said today. A ctlywide spot checlc indicated about 15 percent of the 38,000 eligible voters bad cast ballots before noon. residenti were taking their time, sometbing traditional for Newport Beach, according to Mrs. Jane Sands, an official at Prectnct m ·at Newport Harbor High Schoof. She said 72 of the 478 registered voters in her precinct bad cast their vote on the initiative in early balloting. The Whlte House declined to say what action would be taken on request. The testimony came as Sirica resumed a hearing into White House claims that two of Nixon's conversations bea.ring on the scandal were not _taped .. The two conversations that the White House" contends were not taped involved a telephone discussion Nixon bad with his campaign manager, John N. Mitchell, on June 2.0, 1972 -three days aCter the Watergate arres ts -and of a APPROVAL OF GERALD FORD APPEARS LIKELY, Pogo 4 meeting with John W. Dean III April 15. The Washington Post quoted unnamed White House officials today as saying Nixon's lawyers might suggest to Sirica that he make public the substance of the tapes rather than only passing on relevant portions to the Watergate grand jury. Bull testified that be bad taken tapes 1pport11Uy containing all of the con- versations subpoenaed by Watergate pro- secutors and the Senate Watergate com· mitlee to camp David, Md. for Nixon to review the weekend-of Sept. 29. Bull said be returned "four or five" of them to the White House ·the following Monday but left the rest with Miss Woods. Pointing a .45 at the head of a blindfolded Khmer Rouge suspect, a Cam bodian officer walks him toward a command post for interroga- tion Sunday. The man was captured near Prek Thong, some six mile s northwest of Phnom Penh. Polling places will remain open until 8 o'clock tooight. t'We've been real busy," said Mrs. Garnett Riley, an official at Precinct 397 at the Newport Center Fire Station, where voting was especially high. She said 133 of the 700 registered voters in Big Canyon and Ha rbor View Hills -about 19 percent -had cast ballots by noon. Newport · Hiker To Reach East Next Month Sirica then interrupted to take over the questjontng and asked Bull bow long Miss Woods had the tapes to her possession. Help Needed Family Wants Turkisli Tran~lator "We really expect them in large numbers this evening," said Mrs. Eudora Redmon, a poll worker at Precinct m at Newport Beach City Halt. 1be parents of Malkara Smilh, a 1~ monll>old Newport Beach toddler, want to underStand the full idenllly of their daughter. But they're beginning to fear that only a native-born TW'k can J>enetrate the mystery of her name . Susan and Gary Smith, of 1827 Port Seabourne, named their f i f st -b o.r.n daughter in honor of the Turkish town of Malk.aJ"a, whose inhabitants befriended Coast •· Weather Some high ctoudJ at time> other- wise l!IOS!IY sunny Wednellday alq the Orange Coasl Highs In the upper llOs at the beaches riJ- lng lo the low 70s Inland. Lows to- . tlliht to the low 50s. INSIDE TODAY Notice how much more JIOU're l'Giilng-for,, lobs~ .QJ rulou· nm.ti? And' how much lts1 you're getting for t10Ur monet1? The succulent seafood is joi11ing the endangered list aoon lf pooclurs don't knock ii off. See• .storv on Page 12. them when they were stranded there four years ago. To the Smiths, the name seemed perfect -wiusual, melodic, a ·n d feminine. - But now that Malkara's getting older, the Smiths want to know the history of their daughter's name. To find out, they wrote the Turkish government for informatico. In response came three pages or of. ficial 'ciocJments, one of which was sign. ed by seven dignitaries. But all Were written in Turkish. Susan, who works as a nurse at St. JoSeph's hospital in Orange. checked "ith all her ~workers and couldn't fmd one who reads Turkish. Likewise, Gary looked for an interpreter among hi! fellow businesSmen in Santa Ana but without luck. If anyone can help young Malkara by translating documents that oontaln the bi.story of ht,r name, the Smiths would appreciate it. They can be reached at 644-1379. U:S. Apprehends Fugitive Vesco She said that of 518 registered voters living in the Old Newport area, 76 bad voted early today. "We think the turnout is real good," said Ruth Remley, election official at Newport Elementary School, where 127 of the 906 registered. Central Newport voters cast early ballots. Newport Heights and Cliff Haven Officials Find Severed Limbs, Bod y of Girl, 3 SUN VALLEY (UPI ) -The severed limbs and body of a 3-year-old girl were found today, strewn over a wide area of Sun Valley. lt was the second dismembennent slaying in the Los Angeles area in less than a week. (Related story, page 5) Police arre9ted a 31·year-old man who lived tilth the victim's mother after he Jed officers to a gravel pit where one leg of little Lisa Vitale of North Hollywood was found. He was charged with susptcioo of murder, as was the mother. NEW YORK (UPI ) -Fugitive flnan-"' , The cause of death in the case bas cler Robert L. vc;co, a co-defendant not been determined. But police said 1n the conspiracy·purgery case against the suspect admitted dismembering the former Cabinet offlctats John N. Mitchell body. . and Maurice N. Stans, was arrested An arm was fowid at the dead end tpday to the Bahama.. in 175,000 ball of a street while another leg WBJ found pending H!raditlon to New York, U.S. In a wash at the bottom of La Tuna Attomey Paul CUmn said. canyon. A foot was found· two miles Veoco has been sought stnec hia In-up the canyon lllld the torso with the tllctment lut May on charges of cco-head attached wu found at the summit splracy and obstruction of justice, ' '(See SLAYING, Pap I) PORT JERVIS, N.Y. (AP) -Without the ~ of cars and after being shot at four times, Bruce Plasse IS on the last stretch of his cross-country bike from Newport Beach, caut., to Newport, R.I. Plasse, 24, expected to fulfill a long· standing wish to hike acroos the con· tinental U.S. next month when he walks into ttie East Coast Newport. U all goes well, the trip will have taken him a year and 9 months, and a cost of more than $3,000, Plasse said he bas been shot at three times by hunters and once by a frighten· ed woman who heard a noise near her house. All were bad marksmen. A former program director for station KKAR, Pomona, Plasse 's hometown is Whittier. "She kept them at least a week," Bull said. "Beyond that, I do not know." "Do you know what bappeoed to those seven or ei~t tapes?" Sirlca asked. "No, sir,' Bull replied. Under questioning by assistant special prosecutor Richard Ben·Veniste, Bull said he bad seen Miss Woods typing as she listened to some tapes at Camp David that weekend in September. 'Someone get word to Miss Woods that she wm be called as a witness in this case," Sirica interjected. Bull said Miss Woods continued to work with lhe tapes throughout the week and "seven or eight" of the tapes were taken to Key Biscayne, Fla. The follow· iug weekend. Asked if he knew when the tapes were returned, Bull said, "No, sir. [ don't know if they have been returned." Sirica bad ordered the President to turn over the tapes to him for private screening to determine what portiOns should be provided to the grand jury. Tru~king Gifts Pan.el Che cks Nixon Donations WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate Watergate Committee is checki!tg_ into $600,000 in contributions by trucking company execu- tives to President Nixon's 1972 campaign, the Washington Star-News said today. JThe newspaper said the amount was the largest single industry· contribution to the Nixon re-election eUort and came at a time when truckers were fighting a government proposal that would have gen- erated more competition in their fieJd. _ According to the Star-News, John Ruan ol Des Moines, secretary of the American Trucking Associations, acknowledged heading the drive but said it was aimed at defeating Nixon's Democratic con· tender, Sen. George S. McGovern , rather than influencing legislation. Polk said executives of the following cpmpanies were among those making $25,000 contributions; Roadway Express, Akron, Ohio; Consolidated Freightways, San Francisco; Gateway Transportation Co., La Crosse, Wis.; Gordon Transport, Memphis· Lee Way .MJ>tor .Freight Co., Oklahoma City; Brady Motorfrate, bes Moines, and Schwerman Trucking Co., Milwaukee. CALLED TO TESTIFY Nixon Secretary Woods Huntington's Coun,cil Sets Campaign Limit By TERRY COVILLE Of rM Dally Pllol Stiff Future Huntington Beach City Council candidates probably won't be allowed to spend more than $5,000 in ~ir efforts to win election. (Related story Page 3.) So far, no one has spent that much money anyway but councilmen agreed Monday night there ought to be some kind of celling on campaign costs. They scrapped proposals similar to Newport Beach and San Juan Capistrano which tie the limit to the number of registered voters. Instead, they opted for a fiat $5,000 maximum. "As far as I'm concerned you can limit it to $500 after what I went through last year," quipped Mayor Jerry Matney. In the election or April, 1972. be ran up a campaign bill of nearly $2,QOO -without the money to pay it orr. Alter the election. fl.1atney held a raf· Oe, with himself as the prize to do the bidding of the winner. He wound up with l\\'O win ners and found himself facing a ride on the Colorado River rapids with his sister-in- law and a ride on a bicycle-built-for·two -in a gorilla costwne -with Hun· · tington Beach High ScboQI Trustee Ralph Bauer to support a school bond. The bond lost. 'The $5,000 limit isn't established yet. C.Ouncilmen merely ordered City At- to.'rney Don Bonfa to write an ord inance \ which would limit e1penses to $5,000. -{ Councilman also asked Bonfa to limit campaign contributions to $5.000, a re-- ques t Bonfa admitted may !Je a litUe more difficult to comply Y.'ilh. The question In Bonfa's mind was. how do volunteer efforts, or donated items, add up as contributions in lieu of cash. 1 lf a printer donates brochures at cost. should the contribution be counted a1 its full, normal value? Most councilmen said yes. 1 Should lhe se rvices of volunteers walk· Ing door· to-door. handing out a can- didate's literature be calculated at some , fair hourly rate? On that one, council men generally agreed no. "But that has to be wort h something ," (See LmUTS, Page I) Don't Forget To Vote; Polls Open Until 8 . ... . . . ..... _. ' '"· • • •• ~ I ' I '• .. .. , • ~ • • " • ' • • I • .. . '. " .. ' " " " .. • •• .2 DAILY PILOT " Tutst!aY Novtmbtr 6, l 971 ZIEGLER TEIUIS IT 'FOOL ISHNESS' WASHINGTON (UPI I -Pr es s secretary Ronald L. Ziegler t o I d reporters aboard Presldent Nl1on'1 plane that, while the President is trying to work on matters other Utan Watergat e. he "recognizes the importance ol this foolishness.'' When newsmen, on the flight back from Key Biscayne . Fa .. exprc$Sed surprise Monday night at this ~escrlp tion, Ziegler sa.id : i· I call It foohshncss and tragedy." Reinecke Perjur y Link Seen? SACRAMENTO (AP) -At the time he was fired, special Wiilergate pros~u tor Archibald Cox had evidence "point- ing to perjury0 by Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke in the ITf case; Washington col'umnist Jack Anderson said today. 1.#n Nofziger, a spokesman and political adviser to Reinecke, said there would be-no comment on the Anderson column from the lieutenant governor. "I just don't think we're going to ; reply to Jack Anderson columns. In addition , the ITI' thing is still under investigation, and I don't think the lieut.enant governor should comment under these circumstances," Nofziger said. Reinecke is see.king the Republican nomination for governor next year. The International Telephone & Telegraph Corporation pledged a '4()0,000 contribution to help defray the cosls of the 1972 Republican national con- • vention. Jn testimony before the U.S. '"Sena~ Judiciary. Committee, Reinecke and others denied that the pledge was linked to an antitrust .settlement between the Justice .Department and the giant cor- poration. Anderson said Relneeke supported testimony from fonner Atty. Gen. John Mitchell, who told the committee he knew nothing of I1T's pledge. Reinecke "reversed the position He had taken wlth several newsmen and swore he never discussed the matter of l'IT's pledge with Mitchell or anyone else at the Justice Department," Anderson said. "Subsequently, Reinecke changed his mind again and said publicly that he had told Mitchell of ITI''S commitment by telephone in May 1971 -weeks before the I'IT antitrust settlement was reached. Reinecke's latest statement is not only strong evidence against Mitchell but is an outright acknowledgement that -' his own testimony was not so," Anderson said. ,) I From Page 1 LIMITS ..• said Bonfa. "All we're really concerned about is the $5,000 spending limit," replied Coun- cilman Al Coen, who proposed the con· tro1. "You can clarify the rest." The Newport ordinance limits cam· palgn expenditures to 25 cents per registered voter, v.·hile the San Juan Capistrano Jaw sets the limit at 15 cents per registered voter. Councilman Ted Bartlett, who began the whole debate a few we eks ago after reading about the new Newport law, had proposed a 10-cent-per-voter limit in Huntington Beach. Cioen suggested the Oat $5,000 ceiling since councilmen could not agree on any more flexible fonnula . The most money spent in the 1972 election was by George McCracken , who was a mayor at the time and shell ed out $3,980 in an effort to retain his council seat. lie lost. OlANGI COAST N DAILY PILOT T11e .Or1n11<1 Co1s1 DA1L 'I' PILOT will\ wllldl ls comlli'rtlCI lh• NIWl•Prn1, r. ~-1111\td b)' Ille Ori~ Co.11 Publl1hl119 Companr. StPI- ,., • .Olllon1 ••• PUbll111td, MDl'ICl•r ihrovgrt FrldlJ', for Colli MtH, N.wptrl 811ch, H11r1tlnglon l1tc:hlF01111111n V1!1ey, Lea""' S•cll, INIMl,.odleblck tnd Stn (~It/ $trt Ju1n t1p!ltr1na A 1lnv11 reogiCflll •llllon It PUOll•hlCI 1tlurd1y1 1Pld SllnOtl'I, TN prlnclooll P11llll1M119 Jloiahl 11,11 Ull WHI St y Str111, coa11 M111. t 1ll!or11J1, nt1'. R.ob1d N. w,,c1 Ptn ld1n1 tncl PLlllllllou J1,k R. C urler Vk.t PrniCl.nl Ind (i.fn .. 11 Mtnllttf Th'"''' K11wil Efllol" Tloio1'l11 "'· M11rphirte Mt....,11'11 Etllttr L P1t1r Kri1{ N.,,.,., ~ttcft (II~ tllttr N..,.n .._. Offlu JJJJ Ntwport lt11lew1r4 Meilin9 Adclr•n1 P.O. 1011 I l7S, 92661 .,_ .,_ Cottt Mnt: »O Wnl •• ., Street ~ •t-tcl'I: m ,., .. , A_..,. H11nt1~"" 8t1ch: 1"7J 9.-dl &ovit'w1re S.h cie~t.l •1 Hortll IJ (amlfte Rffl , .. ......_ C71•t '4Jo4JJI C'-Hle4 An.rthlltt MJ·S671 (.eiprr1011t, 1'71. Of11111 C..11 Pllllllltl'"' """'"'""· '"' -'"''"· UJ""ltlllOftl, Mlllntl ""'""' tt 611'1'111"-tl l!lrtlft -.. .. ....ii(.. Wlt!IM ..... ,..,.. l'lth11M1. _......., -· ~ dell MP..-, Mkl II Ckll Mitt, Callfitr:ftlll, ~""' iw ""!in" n.u ~I .... !NI ti.IS mMlllm1 mlnttrr • ... IN! ... tlM MMdlllf. " . l(issinger to Tunisia l srk li Deatli TQtal 1,854 F r om P.age J DOH ENY • • • public access to the beach.'' That statement stwmed some of the commlastoners. Prop. 20, the 1972 coastal zone act, mandate1 the comm!S3lon with providing and increasing access to beaches. Confers in Morocco on Fragile Cease-f ire TEL ,AVl'I' (AP) -1sr .. 1 an. nounqed today that 1,154 Israelis soldiers were killed iD the Middle East war. By HELEN THOMAS TUNIS (UPI) -Secretary of Stale llenry A. Kissinger conferred twice In Rabat today with King Hassan ti or Morocco on ways of strengthening the fragil P.ilddle East ce~se·fire, then flew NINE EUROPEAN NATI ONS MEET ON OIL CRISIS, Pago 4 here for a brier stop before going to Cair~ and the most crucial phase of his quest for peace . ··The talks I had with his majesty the king were very useful and gave me a greater understanding of the Ar;tb point of view,'' Kissinger said before leavin~ the Moroccan capital. Kissinger, who arrived to strict secur- ity at Tunis Airport, drove straight to President Habib Bourgulba'1 palace in Carthage for two houn of • 1Jks before flying to Cai ro tonight for even more cruclnJ talks wllh President Anwar Sadat and Forelgn Minlster Ismail FahmL The Tunisian leader showed photo- graphs taken oi himself in prison dur· ing his fight for TUnisian independence, then the two started talks at IS:.O p.m. (10:40 a.m. PST), government offldals said. He was expected to taJk briefly in Tunis with President Habib Bourgulba, one of the more moderate Arab leaders, before flying to Cairo tonight for two days of conferences with President Anwar Sadat and Foreign Minister Ismail Fahrni. Before Kissinger's arrivaJ, Bourguiba said .he was willing to discuss his ideas Newport Sta1idards Two Variances Granted; Controls Just Week .Old Newport Beach's heralded new set of residential "development standards aren't getting off to a very auspicious start. Planning commissioners T h u r s d a y granted variances to the first two persons who appealed them. They'd approved the tough new con· trols exactly one week ago. The first case Involved an e11- traordinarily small' lot on Balboa Peninsula. Commissioners, in ignoring the s{~ards, said ~ey weren't 1ikely to see sus::h a case again. But the second proj~t .- a fourplex built oo two plots lwnped together - is tbe kind of proposal that may come back to haunt them. The developer, Donald F. Haskin of Pia ya de! Rey, offered to build un- derground parking spaces for eight cars to take care of the four units he wants to build at 413-415 East Ballxla Boulevard. With the underground parking, com- missioners agreed that his fourpl ex would have the architectural appearance of a single family residence. However, under the new development standards adopted last week, Haskin's multi-unit project would require 12 park· ing spaces. Haskin told commi$S~.el'S.; \that he didn't have room undergrourid for 12 1paces. If commissioners insisted on enforcing the.ordinance, he said be could Linda Mottin Will Do Hoa g Communications Hoag f\.1emorial Hospital Administrator Scott Parker has announced the ap- pointment 0£ Linda M. Mottin as director of public relations. ~Is. Mottin was formerly director or advertising and public relations ror th e Milton W. Jones Agency in Palm Springs, and in that position she handled the public relations program for Desert Hospital . A graduate of Southern Illinois University, she served as associate editor of Decorating Retailer, a St. Louis-based, trade publication, from 1964-1967. Before moving to CaJifomia, Ms. f\.-Iot- tin served as communications manage r for the National Hairdressers and Cosmetologists ·Association. She is a member or Women in Com- munication s, formerly Theta Sigma Phi, national fraternit y for women i n journalism. She resides in Huntington Beach. Jaz z Band Plays For United Wa y The New Irvine Jazz Band v.•111 en- tertain at the "halftime huddle'' United \Vay campaign meeting at 11 :30 a.m. Thursday in the Trabuco Room of the Saddleback Inn, Santa Ana. Campaigners from South Orange Coun- ty communities will be recognized for their "outstanding play executions" in the first combined fundraisin¥ campaign. A goal of $1.5 million this year has been set as the amount needed to support 55 member agencies of the South Orange County United \Vay. Wine, $90 Gone In Church Theft get around It by instead building two duplexes, which would require only eight spaces. f1i"'" But Haskin also pointed out that t"·o side-by-side duplexes would not have the same desireable architecture that his fourplex yrould have. "I'm very much disturbed by the way the new standards affect this prtject," said Commissioner Hall Seely in sug- gesting that the standards be set aside for this case. "I find this project unique and in- teresting," agreed Com m I s s 1 o n Chairman William Agee. "But I fin~ it diffiCUit ti:> igtlOfe the new standards after all the time we spent on them." In adopting the new standards com- missioners tried to find· formulas that would allow duplex development, but would make development of multi-family units very difficult. • But in this case, they agreed that one four plex was more desirable than lwo duplexes. "I think you should allow the proj~t 'because it is head and shoulders above all the other units in the area," Haskin told commissioners. The -commission yote was ? to 2. C ommissioners Seely, William Hazewinkel, Donald Beckley, Jackie Heather, and James Parker favored it. Agee and Joseph Rosener opposed the project. . Qmunissioners didn't discuss how they would handJe similar requests in the future. Cit y, County Offices Remain Open Toda y City and county offices in Orange County stayed open today, unlike other areas where \o;orkers had a holiday because of the special election on Gov. Ronald Reagan's tax initiative. The state's 100,000 workers and thousands or locaJ government employes had the day off. Today's vote on Proposition 1 marked the fir st special statewide election in 24 years. The cost of the election could run as high as $2.S million, Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown Jr. estimated, beca use the state could be required to reimburse local governments for the cost of time of( under a law passed last year. Reagan has sa id the election would cost $6 million. Worker:s in San Diego city and county also were on the job. College and university employes were at work, but "'ill be given a compensatory day off later. A spot check with local officials show- ed 14,!MXI of the 25,000 San Francisco employes will have the day off to vote on Prop. 1. Most or the 49,000 workers in the City of Los Angeles likewise will be off. A spokesman for Brown said "many" other local governments were giving lheir workers time off. The Brown aide also reminded private employers they are required to give a worker up to two hours to get to the polls • if they are unable to vote during normal hours ofr. Prom Page 1 SLAYI NG ... of the canyon, another two miles away. Police search<d through the early morning hours for the missing arm which was believed to be in lbe gravel • pit . A burglar slipped Into Our Lady Queen of Angels Cathollc Church tn Newport In custody Wa!i William Perez, 31, Beach Sunday and stole $90 plus a an asstmbler for a Sun Valley trailer haU gallon of Cold Du ck sparkllng wine,' comp~ny. . it was reported today Police sald Perez and hls daughter Jloti ce learned upon arrival at the Jived with Mary Vitali, 27, the mother shnctuary at 21>46 Mar Vista Drive, of the victim and four other children. however that it dJdn 't Involve offering 1be suspe<:t wu picked up after his money. brother, Gilbert Perez, 25, of Arleta, Cuatodlan Robert L. Valois, wo has told officers that Perez had gone to living q~arters . in th< cln~cb. hall, said his home, apparenUy Idling him what lt'was part of his pay and that th< happenOd. wine was" a gift, not · even uncorked The older Perez then led o£flcen to yet. !he gravel pi!. - m peace in the Middle East with any Israeli representative, lncludint_ Premier Golda "Meir. He also said he was willing to appear on American television with an Israeli interlocutor to discuss his Middle Ea.it approoch. These Ideas, he told Parliament, are based on the Uniled Nations' 1947 call for a partition of ~'bat was then called Palestine Into a Jewish and an Arab state. He said he would inform Kissinger of these Ideas on the new Arab attitude toward the 1947 partition plan. Bourguiba said Sen. J , William Fullbright (0.Ark.), supported the 1947 plan and "will one day perhaps become president of the United States." Sadat, meanwhile, met in Cairo with Fahrni to hear a report of Fahml's Wa~hlngton talks with Kissinger and President Nixon . Kissinger was expected in Cairo around 11 p.m. (3 p.m. PDT) and the Kissinger-Sadat talks were set for Wednesday morning. The Egyptian government spok"esman. Ahmed Anis, said the results of the Sadat-Kissinger t"alks will be "of para- mount importance," but did not elaborate. Government sources said Sadat would reiterate his demand that Israel withdraw to the Ocr:-22 cease-fire lines and that Fahmi's Washington talks on this had been "encouraging." They said an Israeli pullback had been the primary aim of Fahrni 's Washington talks but that there had been no indication Israel ~·ould comply. Sadat has threatened to "finish off" the Israelis if they do not pull back. A1eanwbile, Syria reported that l\\'O formations of Israeli planes auacked Syrian Army advanced positions on the Golan Heights today with f•many" air to ground Shrike-type missiles but were driven off by Syrian fighter planes and air defense systems. It was the ftrst reported ce'ase-fire violation on the Syrian front siJ)ce the · Oct, 22 cease-fire and coincided with Israeli reports of scattered figbtiJlg aklng , the Suez canal front where Israel said the Egyptian armed forces have been fully deployed for .attack. An Israeli spokesman in Tel· Aviv said he had "no information" about the reported attack. Bazaar, Fun Zone Going to State Coa stal Panel Proposals for the Laguna Village Bazaar and the Balboa Fun Zooe con· dominlums will be heard Wednesday · by State Coastal Zone conservation Com- missiooers in Burlingame. The meeting will begin at 9:30 a.m. in the Marquee Room at the.Burlingame Hyatt House, 1333 Old B-a y shore Highway. The state commission hears appeals of actions taken by six regional com· mission established by the 1972 coastal zone act. A vote is scheduled Wednesday on a permit application by Robert H. Grant Corp. for Mira Costa "Villas, 213 con- dominiums at . Camino Estrella and Camino Capistrano in San Clemente. This has been delayed several times. Grant received a permit from the Soulh roast regional oommission. That was appealed by the Capistrano Beach Community Association. Public hearings, but not voting, are set oo the 75,000 square foot Bazaar shop- ping c.enter by Mark Gwnbiner in Laguna Beach and 33 condominiums planned by Jon Konwiser in place of the Fun l.<lne amusement park in Newport Beach. Both were turned down at the regional level. It wa• the highest-death _toll_ IiraeJ. has iuffered in a war since Its first conOlct with the Arabs in 1948, when the figure neared S,000. The announcement of t h e previously secret casualty figures sa1d about 1,000 Israeli, soldiers wen wounded and sUU hospitaliz- ed. Many Israelis bad eipected the number of wounded to be much higher and the disclosure was greeted with some relief. Rap Brown's Riot-Arson Rap Dropped ELLICOTT CITY, Md. (AP) -Six- year-old riot and arson· chargi?s against H. Rap Brown were dropped today and the ,onetime advocate of violence by blacks was sentenced on .a mlsdemeanor charge for failing to appear for trial. The Dorchester County state's at- torney, William B. Yates, moved not to prosecute Brown on a three-count indictment stemming from a summer night of disorders in 1967 in Cambridge, Md. Brown had been charged with arson, inciting to riot and riot following an impassioned speech made lo some 500 blacks that night. Violence followed and two blocks of the city were destroyed by fire. · Brown pleaded guilty to the mi.5de- . meanor ot failure to appear for trtar in May 1970. He was sentenced to a maximum of one year, but the sentence was ruled to have begun on Oct. 16, 1971, and ls now completed. · . Brown was a fuJdtive after failing to appear for the triil, but was captured in 1971 .during a robbery attempt. · Howard County Circuit Court J udge James litacgill earlier today granted the motion by the state not to prosecute the riot and arson charges agaiMt the Conner director of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Yates, in an interview, expressed reluctance to prosecute the felony charges. "After 6\) years have elapsed .•• I don't know why I should continue this .(case), I don't have a vtndetla." Tbe former ~ck militant leader is serving a five to l>,year tenn at New York's Attica State Prison foll<iwing his conviction for armed robbery Of a New York City liquor store in ·1971 and the wounding of a policeman during the robbery. Ni~on Parent Group Not PTA The parent group from Richard M. Nixon Elementary School that served soup at an "Impeach Nixon'' rally Satur- day isn't afflliated with the PTA (Parent- Teacher Association). A school official said today that its part!nts broke from the natipnal PTA organization ttbout one year ago to form the "Nixon Parent Association." Parents from the Yorba Linda elemen- tary school sold soup to raise money for audio-visu8I equipment at a rally in Richard M. Nixon Park, also in Yorba LlnCJa, run by the Orange C.Ounty Com- mittee to Impeach Nixon. · They were originally incorrectly iden- tified as be.Ing from the PT A. The Daily Pilot regrets the error. Commls!loner Judy Rosener or Newport"'"Beach called the denial "ir· responsible." Commissioner Rlmmon C. Fay spoke even more strongly. Rooney might not Ilka people gelling to the beach ln campers, Fay said. but nl'd m,ove them on elephants. I'd take them down on sleds. I'd move them anyway 1 could if it would .get the:m to the benches." Warren said the department might lose the "65,000 funded for the project by the legislature if delayed too long. At the onset of the hearing, Warren said by 1980 there will be a deficiency of 19,000 campsites from Santa Barbara to Mexico. A few commissioners objected to th e conversion of the day use beach to cam- ping, but Warren said there is more demand for the site as a campground. It is already· being used for overflow camping from the existing Doheny Beach · campsite and has paving. Commissioner Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach pointed ·out that th e "overlfow of the overnow " has been camping at a temporary site In Danu Point Harbor all summer. SocUrl Securit y Boost Appr0ved By House Un.it WASHINGTON (AP ) -The House Ways and Means Committee voted today 13 lo 12 to boost SOcial Security benefits 10 percent effective with next July's checks and to finance this through a hike in the payroll-tax wage base. But the decision could be subject to change. The panel immediately ar- ranged .. 4 ·meeting latew in the_day to act 91:1 the formal legislaticn. Alter lengthy 'debate by the committee Monday, proposals emerging as chief options for final action included either a 10 percent benefit boost effective in J uly or a two-step hike of a tot.al 12 percent, with seven percent due next March and the rest coming the following November. These included financing changes in- volving the payroll tax rate formula and boosting the top salary on which the tax i! levied. Rep. Al Ullman (D-Ore.), acting com· mittee chairman, said he wanted the panel ready to offer a bill to the Hous e later this week. The Senate Finance Committee already has approved a seven percent Social Security benefit boost ef· fective upon enactment of iegislation, although the panel did not offer any financing changes. The Nixon administration has been trying to hold ·down spending during the fiscal year ending JWle 30. An ad- ministration spokesman told the House panel he would suggest the President sign the 10 percent benefit increase option since Its impact comes in the year starting July l, 1974. But the spokesman suggested he would call for a veto of the two-step plan for a total 12 percent benefit increase, a proposal that appeared to be gathering backing among committee Democrats who indicated they could coll~ enough House votes to ov erride any veto. Current law calls for a S.9 percent Social Security benefit boost to take effect next July and for the amount of earnings against which Social Security taxes are. paid to go Crom $10,800 this year to Sl2,600 next year. It was estimated a seven percent Oat increase in benefit! payable in blarch would cost $1.3 billion during the year ending JWle 30, 1974. There was. no immediate estimate oo the total cost of the two-step 12 percent benefit in· crease during 1974. The estimate for the 10 percent plan was $1.4 billion for the year starting next July. The Bright Side Shortages are occuring ind ustry is no 'exc eption. on virtually every industry. The eorpet Two fa ctors are causing the shortages. The demand is astronomical! c a,peting is no longer a luxury, but a neeouity. People are using carpeting in rooms wh ich used to be tiled, such 11 kitchens, baths, dining rooms, and bedrooms. Also, carpeting is installed outside, and even on the walls. Secondly, the fibers are in short supply due lo overwhelming demand from not just the carpet industry , but ALL i~dustry. , We feel that there is a po s i Ii v e espect lo ell of this. The manufacturers are making bettor quarrties with· 'available yarn, and mu ch more of tho junky stuff is disa ppearing. It m1 y appear lhtt prices are higher, but actually you are just looking at BElTER CARPETING., HOUIS: MOii. Tlonl '""""' t te l :M • ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MI S/I. •' 6i6o4838 -A L. t te t -SAT. t :JO te 5 I \ j \ ' ( ~ \ • I I l ' ' • Orange C~!!t Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL 66,. NO. 310. 2·SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1973 c TEN CENTS <;~st~ Mesa Trees Had to Go-Developer .. •, .. ' .. . . ,.-' lly·.RUDI NIEDZIELSKI <'· •Of ... D•llY Plleit Ii.ff ."i,et the !'Old '!!inter come. LeoPard Poot ~ pleilty of fir.wood. He'll be bomlo8'iualyptus tnes. The . Ioca • piled up behind his houae at tMf.~W. CeoCer St. once were a •lately stand of eucalyptus trees. About 65 of them 1to0d behind a row of homes in the ex:ean View Park tract of Costa Mesa ,until the)'. were bulldozed to make room for. an Industrial project. Nation at Wat• Post isn't trying to fuel the controversy but he rnaintaim the trees had to· go. And were the irate bomeoWners to ex .. :mwJe the leftovers, their fury at the loq , QI the trees might be calmed, POii ~ieves, '"Ibis is one of the stumps I saved," said Posl, pointtng to the base of a eucalyptus tree which was rotted in~ two pieces. "About half of them were like that. These · trees were standing within 40 fct;t of the homeowners' pr~ Ultl Ttl ..... lt Pointing a .45 at the head of a blindfolded Khmer Rouge suspect, a Cambodian officer,walks him toward a command post for interroga- tion Sunday. The man was captured near Prek Thong, some six miles northWest of Phnom Penh. House Unit Votes to Boost • Social Security Benefits WASHINGTON !AP ) -The House Wa ys and flfeans Committee voted today 13 to 12 to boost Social Security benefits 10 percent effective with next July's checks and to financ, this through a hike in the payroll-tax wage base. But the decision could be subject to change. The panel immediately ar· ranged a meeting ·later in the day to Orange Coast • • We~tber Some high clouds at times· other· wise mostly sunny ~Wednesday along the Orange Coast. Highs in the upper 60s at the beaches ris- ing to the low 70s inland. Lows to- night in the low 50s. INSmE 1'0DA 'l' · Notice how much more 71oµ're paying for lobster at restau- rQnts? And. how. m11-ch, less you're getttng for your money? The succulent seafood is ;oining the endangered list· soon if poachers don't kttock it off. See stOrv on Page 12. L.M...,. • AMI La•n 11 Cati,.,.,. • -· " , .... ., ... .. .. Mt.tll .. I f1111t111 " ..... " NltlOMI N.wl • <_ .. " Ortittt Ctt.tlltY " ... ~-" -· ... ••""-' , ... • ~==tt• lt•lJ '""".._.... " " -11·U ......... " Hr"'._ ... " W•-• "' .. ,...., ' w...-•t Mtwl IS-H -" w--• act on the formal legislation. After lengthy debate by the committee Monday, proposals emerging as chief options for final action included either a 10 percent benefit boost effective in July or a tw~step hike of a total 12 percent, with seven percent due next March and the rest coming the following November. These included ftnancing changes in- volving the payroll tax rate formula and boosting the top salary on which the tax is levied . Rep. Al Ullman (D-Ore.), acting com- mittee chairman, said he wanted the panel ready to offer a bill to the House • later thls week. The Senate Finance Committee already has approved a seven perce11t Social Security benefit boost ef- fective upan enactment of legislation, althou gh the panel did not offer any financing Changes. The Nlx'.on administration has been trying to hc?ld .down spending during the fiscal yea~ing J\Ule 30. An ad- miniatraUon spokesman told the House panel he wou1d suggest the President sign the 10 percent benefit -increase option since· it§ imp~ comes in the year starting July I, 1971.'>f- But the spokesman suggested he would call for a , veto ·of the two-step plan for a total ll percent benefit Increase, a propooal that appeared to be gathering backing among committee Democrats who indicated they cou1d collect enough House votes to override any veto. Current Jaw calls for a 5.9 percent Social Securil)" benefit boost to take effect ~ext July and for the amount of earnings against which Social"Securlty taxes are paid to go from $10,(l)t) this year to $121600 n~xt year. perty and many of them were 50 feet tall. If just one of them had fallen over these people could have sued me." "The tops of some of them were dried out and full " of termites which were nyqig around and could easily have invaded those homes over there ," be added. Bu\ even though he has evidence to prove that the trees were in bad shape, Post admits that this was not the major reason for razing them. A majority of those trees turned into firewood Oct. 26 were standing alongside Center Street, then a narrow strip of road leading from Whittier Street to Post's one acre plot to the rear. The road is designated. as a private road on city maps. Only 22 feet wide, it required widening to SO feet before Post could legally develop his property. "11lose trees were sitting in Center Street and they would have had to go sooner or later," says Post. Tbe trees went a little sooner because another property owner to the front of Post decided to put some Industrial units on his land. Together Post and the other property owner decided to share the cost of widening the road. There were several more trees in· cluding pines on the industrial site owned by Robert King which were not in the way of the road. Some Costa Mesa city officials maintain the industrial pro- (See TREES, Page Zl Tapes' Testimony Nixon Secretnry 'Has Recordings' WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon's personal secretary, Rose Mary Woods, has 14 secret Watergate tapes in her possession, including six given to her on Monday. a White House aide testified. today. (Editorial Comment Page 6.J ..,_.:: _ CbieLU.S~ Distfict Judge John J. Sirica ordered Miss-Woods to testify after an earlier witness indicated she stilt might have seven or eight tapes which she first obtained during the weekend of Sept. 29 al Camp David, Md. But the White House gave no indication whether the President would allow her to testify. At a federal court bearing into the nonexistence of two crucial Watergate tapes, John C. Benhett, a deputy to White House Chier of Staff Alexander M. Haig, said Miss Woods was given a ha:lf-dozen lapes to transcribe Monday Qn ordets telephoped by Haig from Key Biscayne, Fla. Bennett said the six , tapes all relat.e<l to a conversation the President had with former White House Cowisel John W. Dean 111 on April 16. That was the day after a 55-minute Nixon-Dean meeting at the Executive Office Building which the White House insists was never recorded. Bennett, . a retired Army major general, indicated ~1iss Woods has kept the other eight tapes since the Sept. 29 weekend when they were taken to the presidential retreat in Maryland for NixoQ to review. • "I wXiersfand the purpose was that Rose Woods and Steve Bull were to take them to Camp David for the preparation of transcripts," Bennett testified. Before ·Bennett took the witness stand, Improve West Side APPROVAL OF GERALD FORD APPEARS LlKEL Y, Poge 4 HALDEMAN HONORED, BACKS NIXON-Story, Poge S Mesa Council Endorses White HouSe aid€ Stephen Bull testified he had taken a number of tapes to Camp David that weekend, and had seen Miss Woods typing as she llstened to some of them . Bull said he did not know whether she was making verbatim tr~cripts or merely taking notes. Seven-ma11 Task Force Bull'• testimony prompted SiriCa to sumfon Miss Woods as a witriess, but a White House spokesman gave no ln.- dicalion whether the President wouJd permit her to testify. The creation or a seven-man tasli:: force to tackle the job of improving the west side of Costa Mesa was of- fi cially endOrsed 6y a unanimous vote of the Costa Mesa City Council Monday night. Task force members will be appointed from a list of nominees submitted by individual councilmen and will include residents, businessmen and one industry representative. The task force was suggested by Coun- cilman Dominic Raciti as a means of getting started with the planning for a bridge crossing into Huntington Beach at the foot of 19th Street, eliminating blight and spot zoning, reducing crime, and generally upgrading the area . Raciti proposed creation of the task force earlier this year but found no immediate support from other members of the council. Monday he brought it up again and followed up with a formal motion. Although they agreed with Raciti's goal, several councilmen questioned the advisability of creating yet another com- mittee. City Manager Fred Sorsabal pointed out that planning department aides al ready are involved in so many projects and committees that they "are running r little Olin." A suggestion by Mayor Jack Hammett that the task force be appointed as a subcommittee to the already existing city Goa1s and Objectives Committee brought a response from Raciti that no existing committee "has the interest that the area needs. and this part of Costa fl1esa needs attention now." Officials Find Severed Limbs, Bod y of Girl, 3 "'SllN VAJ'LJW•(lmr &"l'he oete1td Jimbs and body of a 3-year-old girl were found today, strewn over a wide area of Sun Valley. It was the second dismemberment slaying lo the Los Angeles area in less than a week. (Related story, page ~) Police arrested a 31-year-old man who lived With the victim's mother after he It'd officers' to a gravel pit where one leg of little Lisa Vitale of North Hollywood was found. He was charged with suspicion of murder, .as was the mother . (See SLAYING, Page I) Following Raciti 's suggestion , members of the council agreed to con- stitute the task force exclusive,ly of peo- ple who~ either live or do business on the west side. Newport Hiker To Reach East Next Month PORT JERVIS, N. Y. (AP) -Without the use of cars and after being shot at four times, Bruce Plasse is on the last stretch of his cross~try hike from Newport Beach, Calif., to Newport, R.l. Plasse, 24. expected to fulfill a long- standi ng wish to hike across the con- tinental U.S. next month when he walks into the East Coast Newport. If all goes well , the trjp will have taken him a year and 9 months, and a cost of more than $3,000. Plasse said he bas been shot at three times by hunters and once by a frighten- ed woman who heard a noise near her house. All were bad marksmen. A former program director for station KKAR, Pomona, Plasse's hometown is Whittier. Later_!_ Bennett said be had had custody of all Nixon 's tapes since July· 18, when the Secret Service was ordered to relin· · quish responsibility for them to White House officials. Bennett's notes about access to the tapes, introduced as evidence, seemed to indicate that none of the lt tapes Miss Woods has In her possession covers the April 15 date at issue. Bennett said he had given 13 tapes to Bull to take to Camp David on Sept. 29. He said be drove to the camp that evening with a 14th recording Bull requested after Bull informed him a recording of the Nixon-Dean meeting of April 15 could not be fowld . He said Bull returned six of the 14 tapes to the White House Monday mom· ing, Oct. 10, and that the remaining eight tapes were retained by Miss woods. Bennett testified that the morning of Oct. 31, three of the six tapes he kept in his personal safe were transferred to a vault and that the other three \\'ere retained by White House lawyers. The three kept by the lawyers c!overed the dates for which the White House contends there &re. no recordings of conversations between Nixon and Dean on April 15 and between Nixon and former Attorney General John N. Mitchell on June 20, 1972. Tru~king Gifts Pariel Checks Nixon Doriations WASIUNGTON (UPI) -The Senate Watergate Committee is checking into $600,000 in contributions by trucking company execu· lives to President Nixon's 1972 campaign, the Washington Star-News said today. The newspaper said the amount was the largest single industry contribution to.the Nixon re-election effort.and came at a time when truck<ll"S were fighting a government proposal that would have gen· erated more competition in their field. According to the Star-News, John Ruan of Des Moines, secretary of the American Trucking Associations, acknowledged heading the drive but said it was aimed at defeating Nixon's Democratic con- tender, Sen. George S. McGovern, rather than influencing legislation. Polk 6aid executives of the following companies were among those making $25,000 contributions; Roadway Express, Akron, Ohio; Consolidated Freightways, San Francisco; Gateway Transportation Co., La Crosse, Wis.; Gordon Transport, Memphis; Lee Way Motor Freight Co., Oklaho111a City; Brady Motorfrate, Des Moines, and Schwerrnan Trucking Co., Milwaukee. .. Diiiy ~Hot Stiff PlleN 'THEY HAD TO GO' Leonard Post ind Rotten Trunk Voters Reach 20 Percent By Noon Toda)· Roughly 20 percent of the city's registered voters had turned out by noon today to decide the fate ol Proposi- tion I and to elect new directors for the Costa Mesa County Water District and Costa Mesa Sanitary District, a spot check of precincts revealed. Election workers said the turnout was rather high and that the two spt_cial district races probably helped dra'if the . voters to the Polls. · At the Mesa Verde Library precinct, '. inspector Violet Millar reported that 110 of the 551 registered voters had cast . their ballots. In the Monticello Townhouse clubhouse 81 of the· 475 registered voters had cast their ballots by noon. "better than the last election," aecording to precinct inspector Jimmie Kramer. At Costa Mesa City Hall only 15 oul of 162 eligible voters had cast ballots and at Estancia High School it ~·as 45 out of 200. On the ballot along with Governor Reagan's tax limitation initiative are three vacancies on the sanitary board and one on the water board. Water district . candidates are Alvin Pinkley, incumbent. and Dale Secord. environmental consultant. S a n i t a r Y district candidates are Secord, C. Thatcher Warren, incumbent; Kenn Rima. incumbent, and Ellis Porter, in- cumbent. U.S. Apprehends Fugitive Vesco NEW YORK (U PI ! -Jo"'ugitive finan- cier Robert L. Vesco, a co-defendant in the conspiracy-purgery case against fo rmer Cabinet officials John N. l\litchell and Maurice N. Stans, was arrested today in the Bahamas in $75,000 bail pending extradition to New York, U.S. Attorney Paul Curran said. Vesco has been sought since his in- dictment last ~1ay on charges of con· spiracy and obstruction of justice. Gov. Wallace Rests MONTG!JMERY. Ala. !UPI) -Gov. George C. Wallace rested at home today . three days after undergoing minor surgery in Birmingham. Ala. He saiJ he will be back at his ornce Thursday. "I feel fine," the partially paralyied Wallace, \\·earing a blue and white doublJ knit business suit, told newsmen l\1onday, Don't Forget To Vote;, Polls Open Until 8 ' ' l l • • 4:' ...,..._, t'll.0 1 c --- ZIEGLER TERMS , · .IT 'FOOLISHNESS' WASHIN GTON (U PI) -Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler t o I d reporters aboard President NJ.ion's plane that, whlle the President ls trying to work on n\atters other than Watergate, he "recognizc5 the importance of this fooli shness.·• When pcwsmcn, on the flight back from Key Biscayne, r~u., . expres~ surprise Monday night at this desc rip- tion , Ziegler said: "I call it foolishness and tragedy." Reinecke Perjur y Link Seen? SACRAMENTO (AP) -At the time he was fired special Watergat e prosecU· tor Archibald ·Cox. had evidence "point· ing to perjury" by Lt. Gov. Ed Reinec~e in the In' case, Washington columnist Jack Anderson said today. Lyn Nofziger, a spokesman and political adviser to Reineck e, said there would be no comment on the Anderson column from the lieutenant governor. "I just don't think we're going to reply to Jack Anderson colwnM. Jn addition, the m thing is sti~ under investigation, and I don't ~ the lieutenant governor should comment under these circumstances," Nofziger said. Reinecke ls seeking the Republican nomination for governor next year. The International Telephone & Telegraph Corporation pledged a $400,000 contri bution to he lp defray the costs cf the 1972 Republican national c;on- vention. In testimony before the U.S. Senate Judicl~ COmmlttee, Reinecke and other! denJed that the pledge was linked to an antitrust settlement between the Justice Department and the giant cor- poration. Anderson said Reinecke supported testimony from former Atty. Gen. John Mitchell , who told the committee he knew nothing of 11T's pledge. - . TONIGHT "COMMUNITY '73" -Series of sym- posiums sponsored by Junior League of Newport Harbor. Room 174 computer Scienc< Bldg. 7:J0.9:3Q p.m. "THE FIFTH VICTIM" -OCC Drama Dept., Auditorium, 8 p.m. Also Nov. 8 and 10. DANCE CONCERT -Paul Taylor Dance Company, UCI Fine Arts Village Theater, 8 p.m. Nov. 6 and 7, Tickets $3.75. UCf LECTURE -Series on "Aging. Origins, Effects and Control," Room 161 Humanities Hall, 7-9:30 p . m . Admission $5.50. WEDNESDAY. NOV. 7 NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL BOARD - Regular meeting. Costa Mesa City Coun· cil chambers, 7:30 p.m. ESTANCIA BAND BOOSTERS - General meeting for parents of all band members, Estancia High band room, 7:30 p.m. "DAMES AT SEA" -OCC Drama Dept. Auditorium , 8 p.m. Also Nov. 9. UC! COMMUNITY LECTURE SER IES -Dr. John Connolly "New Develop. ments in Heart Disea se," Science Lec- ture Hall , 8 p.m. UCI LECTIJR~ -"The Classic Cinema" series. Science Lecture Hall. 8 p.m. "Education to t¥teet the Future" series, Room 100, Soclril Science Hall, 7-10 p.m. Admission $5.50. OlAN&E CO.AST CM DAILY PILOT nt. Ortnt• CNll DAILY PILOT, will! -.lllcl'I /l COWfttl!nm 11>9 lfftn.Prt11, 11 llUDllilled ... ,... Or•"'ll• c ... 11 Pullllsll"'e CO"'Pollny. StPll· r•N "111on1 •r• PVbll)lleo, MOflll1y tllrqll Prld••· for Co.ti Mt11, ,.., .. POrl •••di, tll1t1tl"''°" ltKll/FIH,lrltlln v1111v, L"- •9Kil. lrvln1/S.~l1Met< Ind kll C'-tllt/ left J ll9n C.pl11r111G. A 1lntlt r"lol\tl lflllt!I It M lil,,111 S..lllllNya tNI ~Ulldty .. TM ,nnelNI putiU911'"9 pi.nt 11 ti 110 W1tl h 1 ltrttl, Cotti Mftf, C11!1.,-11Wo, ~. ltol.1rf N. W11d '°rMillfl'll tiw:I Pubtli.l>tf J1t~ It. Curl1y 'lllu p,,,._,.,., ,.,. Gtfttrtl Mtntqff" Tho11111 K11wil li(l<IGt 11.ol'lltt A. Murphi111 Ml""llllnll Ell! .. Ch1tl11 H, l111 Ritht.4 '· Ni ll Ait!Mtlll MliMtlflt flfllln c.-. ..... om... JJO WtO lty Str11t Mi lling A4ir111:"P.O. to .. 11~0, 9262• °'""°'"'" "'""''°'"' hK111 WJ Nftf*'I IMl!naN w..-tlMdl: m ,. ... , ... ......,. ~lrlt!Ofl IMC!'I: 1'ttl tMCll IO\llt¥tnl Mn C"""""! m P*lfl II C.min. ._. , .. .,.... 17141 64l-4Jl1 c......w .......... '41·1671 C.,.-11111, ltn. Ort• CNN l"llMWllM ~. Ht M.. ••i... m•t~I-.,. •11tri.t IN-ft _.,.,....,,... llwffl _, .. ~ """'*" ...... ,.,.. ....... CW\"r...., -· ...,... ctHt .., ... MN • C:Mlt MtM. Ceft......i. •. ~-9' etn"IH b.65 .......WI .,. "'411 5',11 -"'"1 mllltlf't ....... u ... ....w. • Huntington To Limit Spending By TERRV COVILLE 01 IM O.il~ Piiot lttff f.'utu rc Hw1tington Beach City Councl.1 candidates probably \\'On 't be allowed to spend more than $5,000 in their efforts to Win election. (Related story Page 3.) So far, no one has spent that much money anyway but councilmen agreed ~tonday night there ought to be some kind of ceiling on campaign costs. They scrapped proposals similar to Newport Beach and San Juan Capistrano which tie the limit to the ntnnbcr ol registered voters . Instead, they opted for a f1at $5,000 maximum. "As far as I'm concerned you can limit it to $500 after what I went through last year," quipped Mayor Jerry Matney. In the election of April, 1972, he ran up a campaign bill or nearly $2.000 -without the money to ·pa y it off. i\Jter the election, t¥1atney held a raf- fle, v.•ith himself as the prize lo do the bidd ing of the winner. fie wound up "'ith two \Vinners and found himself fa cing a ride on the Colorado River rapids with his sister-in· la\v and a ride on a bicycle-built·for-two -in a gorilla costume -with Hun· tington Beach High School Trustee Ralph Bauer to support a school bond. The bond lost. The $5,000 limit isn't established yet. CoWlcilmen merely ordered City At- torney Don Bonfa to write an ordinance which "·ould limit expenses to $5,000. Councilman also asked Bonfa to limit campaign contributions to SS.000, a re- quest Bonfa admitted may be a little more difficult to comply with. The question in Bonfa's mind was how do volunteer efforts, or donated items, add up as contributions in lieu of. cash. If a printer donates brochures at cost. should the contribution be counted at its full, normal value? Most cowtcilmen said yes. Should the services of volunteers walk· ing door-to-door, handing out a can· didate's literature be calculated at some, fair OOurly rate? On that one, councilmen generally agreed no. hBut that has to be worth something." said Bonfa. "All we're really concerned about is the $.S,000 spending limit ," replied CoWl· cilman Al Coen , who proposed the con· trol. "You can clarify the rest." The. NewporJ or,!linance iimits •cam- paign expenditures to 25 cents per registered voter, while the San Ju an Capistrano Jaw sets tho limit st 15 cents per registered voter. Councilman Ted Bartlett, who began the whole debate a few weeks ago after reading about the new Newport law, had proposed a 10.Cent-per·vot.er limit in Huntington Beach. Coen suggested the flat $5,000 ceiling since C01II1cilmen could not agree on any more flexible fonnula . The most money spent in the tm electioo was by George McCracken, who was a mayor :?t the time and shelled out $3,980 in An effort to reta in his council seat. He lost. Total 1,854 Israeli Deatli TEL AVIV (AP) -Israel on· nounced today lhat l,IM l!raelis soldiers were killed in !he Mlddle East war. It was the highest death toll Israel has suffered in a war since Its rirst ronfliCt' with the Arabs In 1948, when the figure neared 5,000. The annoW1cement of t h e previously secret casualty figures said about 1,000 Israeli soldiers were wounded and still hospltallz. ed. Many Israelis had expected the number of wounded to be much higher and the disclosure was greeted with some relief. Redeveloping , Meeting Set For Dec.17 Costa Mesa residents will get the ir say on downtown redevelopment Dec. 17 when the Costa Mesa City Council and the C.OSta ~fesa Redevelopment Agency hold joint public hearings on the redevelopment plan in city hall. The public hearing date and the 6:30 p.m. starting time were chosen by Costa Mesa city councilmen Monday night. Redevelopment would involve the remodeling of the downtown area sur· rounding the junction of Newport Boulevard and Harbor Boulevard through the improvement of the road network and the creation of a shopping mall. City officials hope to finance the first $4 million of the $12 million redevelo p- ment project from taxes collected in the downtown area. They are working to"'ard eStablish· ment of a tax freeze in the project · area as of Jan. 1, 1974. The plan is to put any revenue retWTis above the Jan. 1 level into a redevelcpment con· st ruction fund . Actual redevelopment is not expected to begin fo'r three to five years. The redevelopment project is being handled by three different panels. The roles played by members of these panels often confuse the public and the panelists themselves. One of the panels. the project Area Committee is a citizens group advising OOth the Redevelopment Agency and the Costa ].,1esa City Council. The con· fusion is caused because the persons sitting as members of the Redevelopment Agency and the City Council are the same five men. Monday's meeting of the Redevelopment Agency and the City Council got bogged down when the agen· da called on directors of the agency to approve a .redevelopment report from the planning commission and to transmit the report to the city council. City Attorney Roy E. June described the fonnality as "something like taking it from your right hand and putting it in the left hand," but the councilmen -directors were still concerned about inadvertently adopting a redevelopment plan they might wish to oppose later as members of the city council. A technical change in the formal resolutions accompanying report finally allowed the item. to be placed on the Dec. 17 agenda. IGssinger Stops in Tunisia 011 Way to Egypt Parley By HELEN THOMAS TUNIS (UPI) -Secretary of State Henry A. Kissing er conferred twi ce in Rabat today with King Hassan II of ?..forocro on ways of strengthening the fragil Middle East cease-fire, then new NINE EUROPEAN NATIONS MEET ON OIL CRISIS, Page 4 here for a br ief stop before going to Cairo and the most crucial phase of his quest for peace. "The t.alks I had with his 1najcsty the king 'vere very useful and gave me a greater understanding of the Arab point of vic,v," Kissinger said before leaving the Moroccan capital. Kissinger, who arrived to strict secur- ity at Tunis Airport , drove straight to Ni~on Parent Group Not PTA The parent group from Richard M. Nixon Elementary School that senred soup at an "Impeach Nlion" rally Salur· day isn't affiliated with the PTA (Parent· Teacher Association). A school official said today thal its parents l\rokc fro m the national PTA organization about one yea r ago to form the "Nixon Parent Association." Paren~ from the Yorba Linda elcmen- t8ry school sold soup to raise money for audio-visua l equipment at a rally in Richard M. Nixon Park. ol!O \n Yorba Linda, run by the Orange County Com· mitfee lo Impeach Nixon. They v.·ere origiunlly Incorrectly Iden· t!Ued· as bcing from !lie PTA. The Daily· Pilo:l-rcgrets the error. ' ' President Habib Bourguiba's palace in Carthage for two hours of ' tlks be!ore flying to Cairo tonight for even more crucial talks with President Anwar Sadat and Foreign ?..1inister Ismail Fahrni. The Tunisian leader shewed photo- graphs taken cf himself in prison dur- ing his fight for Tunisian independence, then the two started talks at 6:40 p.m. (10:40 a.m. PST), government officials sa id. fi e was expected to talk briefly in TWlis with President Habib Bourguiba, one of the more moderate Arab leaders, before flying to Cairo tonight for two days of conferences with President J Anwar Sadat and Foreign Minister Ismail Fahrni. Before Kissinger's arrival, Bourguiba said he was willing to discuss his ideas oo peace in the Middle East with any Israeli representative, including Premier Golda Meir. He also said he was willing to appear on American television with an Israeli interlocutor to discuss bls Middle East approach. These ideas, he told Parliament, are based on the Uniled Nation3' 1947 call for a partition of what was then called Palestine into a Jewish and an Arab state. lie said he would inform Kissinger of .these ideas on the new Arab attllUde toward the 1947 partition plan. Bourguiba said Sen. J . William Fullbright (0.Ark.), supported the 1947 plan and "will one day perhaps become pl"C$ldent of the United SJ.ates." Sadat, meanwhile, met rtn Cairo with Fahmi ta: bear a report of Fahm111 Washington talb with Kissinger and President Nixon . Kissinger was .. peeled In Gairo around 11 p.m. (3 p.m-PDT) and the Kissillger-S.dat ..Lalko were set for Wednesday morning. Costa Mesa Exempts Two Acre s An industrlaJ develQper Monday nlghl persuaded the Cosla Mesa City Council lo exclude two a.cres from ~ zoning freeze blanketing about 30 acres on the westside of Costa Mesa. The lifting or the freeze was opposed by a petition from 108 area residents.. rnostly mobile home dwellers, who favored residential development on the property. Councilme n froze the zoning on th·e land last month to allow completion of a planning department study to determine the best use of the property , located at 17th Stree~ and Whittier Avenue. The two acres was the second parcel to be excluded from the freeze, the first being a lot at 19th Street and Whittler Avenue. That action was pro- tested by homeoWners from the Ocean View Park tract. Councilmen relaxed the freeze a second Ii.me after developer William Davis con· vincrd them that he and tando\\o·ner James Ikeda had invested considerable money in the planning of an industrial tract and were parties to a 75-year lease agreement. Davis told city councilmen the money was invested and the lease signed on the assu1nption the land was zoned for industrial purposes. The current zoning is M· 1 industrial but could have been changed to residential , pending tbe out- come of the planning study. Councilman Robert M. Wilson, who declared that he personally would have liked the area rezoned to residential, nonetheless Jed the move to withdraw the land from the freeze. "This man has paid taxes on this land ·for 40 years. I believe in the integrity of zoning. I don't see how you can tum your back on a man after he ·has committed dollars,'' he said. Councilman Dominic Raciti, lo'ne dissenter in a 4-1 vote, disagreed. He argued that there was nothing in the land lease which would have prevented the partners from putting housing, not industry on the property. · · • To Glitte1• City Sharing a train compartn1ent \Vith a fa1nous lad y journalist va ull c· ville actors llandy 1-Iolland {left) and Gail Brower (right) get so1ne tips on how they can make it big in the "talkies ." [.isa 1\-tonahan plays the journalist in "Once in a Lifetime," a student production running Thursday through Saturday at Costa f.le sa lligh School. For tickets, call 545·9431, Exl. 32. Delp Needed Family Wants Turk~sli Translator The parents of l-.talkara Smith, a 19-- month·old Newport Beach toddler, want to understand the full identity of their daughter. But they're begiMing lo fear that only a native--born Turk . can penetrate the mystery of her nlime .. Susan and Gary Smith, of 1827 Port Seabourne, named their first· born daughter ·in honor of the Turkish town of Malkara, whose inhabitants befriended them -when they were stranded there four years ago. b.Y translating documents that contAin the history of her name, the Smiths Would ~ppre~iate it. They can be·reached at 644-1379. Linda Mottin Will Do Hoag Communications J ~ 1 I ' . Since the value of manufacturing and residential property are about equal in value, RaCiti said, it was a "tragedy '' not to wait un~I planning experts had completed the study. Fron• Page 1 To the Smiths, the name seemed perfect -WIUsual, melodic, a ·n d feminine . But now that Malkara's getting older, the Smiths want to know tbe history of their daughter's name. To find out. they wrote the Turkish government for information. Hoag Memorial llospital Administrator I ScoU Parker has announced the ap-I pointment of Linda ll-f. Mott in as director of poblic relation.!I. TREE S ... ject could have been plaMed. ·around them . . Post believes the eucalyptll! grove was originally planted as a windbreak for a fruit tree orchard. He said he maintained the trees over the years by cutting off dead limbs when necessary. Eventually Post hopes to move out of his house and develop his property by putting up some storage units. "Tho,,e trees would have bad to go as soon as I developed my property," he said. From Page 1 SLAYING ... of lhe canyon, another two miles away. Police searched through the early morning hours !or the missing arm which was believed to be in the gravel pit. Jn custody was William Perez, 31, an assembler for a Sun Valley trailer company. Police said Perez and his dau_ghter lived with Mary Vitali, 27, the mother of the victim and four other children. In response came three pages of ol· !icial documents. one of which was sign- ed by se~en dig_~itaries. , BUl all \\'ere Written in Turkish. SUsan, who works as a nurse at St. Joseph's hospital in Orange, checked \\'ith all her co-workers and couldn't find one who reads TUrld!h. Likewise, Gary looked for an interpreter among his fellow businessmen in Santa Ana but without luck. If anyone can help young ?.ialkara Jazz Band Plays For United Wa y The New Irvine Jazz Band will en· tertaln at lhe ''halftime huddle'' United Way campaign meeting at 11:30 a.m. Thursday hi the Trabuco Room of the Saddleback Inn, Santa Ana . Ca mpaigners Crom South Orange Coun· ty communities \\•ill be recognized for thei r "outstanding play executions" in the first combined fundraisinJ campaign. A goal of $1.5 million this year has been set as the amount needed to support 55 member agencies of the South Orange County United Way. Ms. Mottin was formerly director of advertising and public relations for the Milton W. Jones 1Agency in Palm Springs. and in that position she handled the public relations program for Desert HoopitaL A graduate of Southern Illinois University , she served as associate editor of Decorating Retailer, a St. Louis-based, trade publication , from 1964·1967. Before moving to California, Ms. lttot· tin served as communications manager for the National Hairdressers and Cosmetologists Association. She is a member of \Vomen in Com- munications, Connerly Theta Sigma Phi. national fraternity for women i )) journalism. She resi d<'s in Huntington Beach. Weinberger J eered SAN FRANCISCO ( UPll -Caspar A. \\'einberger, th e secretary of Health . Education and Welfare, was booed and picketed Monday \\'hen he appeared before the American Public Health Association to discuss a national in· surance plan. Shouts and boos came from the rear of the hall which was jammed with 3,000 persons al the associa· lion's annual meeting. The Bright Side Shortages are occuring 1n virtually every industry. The carpet industry is no exception. Two facto rs ore causi ng the shortages. The demand is astronomi cal! Car peting is no longer a luxury. but a necessity. People are using carpeting in rooms which used to be tiled, such as kitchens, baths, dining rooms; and bedrooms. A~o, carpeting is installed outside, and even on the wall s. Secondly, the fibers are in .hort supply due to overwhelming demand from not just the carpet industry, but ALL industry. We feel that there is a p o s i t i v 1 aspect to all of t his. The man ufacturers are making bolter qualities withl availoble yarn, ind mJJch more of the junky stuff is di .. ppearing. It may appear that p;ices are hi gher, but actually you are just looking et BETIER CARPETING. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Pleicentla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Moo. 1'11n1 Tloin., 9 1o 5:30 -1'111., 9 lo 9 -SAT., 9:30 lo 5 ~ t , . • -. ' I I ' I I ' ' , • ' .