HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-11-26 - Orange Coast Pilot_...oas wners
DAILY PILOT San . Ono.Ire Nuclear
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MONDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 26, 1973
Figure ·1:01n1nits Suicide
VOL, '4'NO. »I. t SICTtoNI, M·PUit
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Ron ·Caspers $20,000 Heist
Sunday_ Ban s~onts on the Mareh
•
Uf'l T ........
KNIFED IN PRISON
Albor! H. O.S.lvo
DeSalvo, 'Boston
Strangler,' Found
Slain in Cell
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lrks-WMt
Gas Owners
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI °' .. .,...., ""' ,...,. Service station opetators along the
Orange Coast today reacted unfavorably
to President Nixon's Sunday gasoline
sales ban beciiuse they believe It will
hurt business.
The sale ban, to take efrect alter
congressional approval, would stop
service stations from dispensing gasoline
between 9 p.m. Saturday and 12:01 a.m.
Monday to discourage loog-distance driv ..
ing. It is . estimated that the measure
'w\1ill save 50,000 barrels of guoline per
day .
"As far as I'm amcemed this is
the most childish and idiotic tiling I
NIXON DRUMS UP SUPPORT
FOR· PROGRAM-story, P1go 3
PRESIDENT OUTLINES
FUEL SAVING 'PLAN, P1go 10
NIXON'S ENERGY PLAN DRAWS
. MIXED REACTIONS, P1go 5
WALPOLE, Mass. (AP) -Albert DoSalvo, who coofessed to being tbe e11er beard ol,"• fumed Bob Smith.-o1
"Bostoo Strangler" of the 1960s, was Smith's ARCO, corner Bristol and Baker
found stabbed to death in his prison Street, Costa Mesa. •
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Ji"<i-<~ ... -~·. ~-;..;., ~ ~·· ::""
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pally Plllt .ltlft ,..._
cell today, corrections officials reported. "All this ls gqing to do is. insure ·
• Although DeSalvo confessed to killing that the stores will be sold out of
13 \\"Omen in the Boston area between three and four gallon gas ,~ this
1162 and 11164, be Jater retract"1 the weekend. It _,, stop any · driving on
confession and was never 'oonvicted of Sundays. The people will just-carry
Explorer &outs march to graduation following
completion. of--law enforceqieot training academy
conducted during the long Thanksgiving' weekend
at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, About 150 Ex-
plorer Scouts from 22· law enforcement Explorer
posts throughout · the county participated in the
academy. Many of the participants were girls.
their cans with them." any of the 13'dealhs. Smith, w1M> attracted naUoowide at·
. The former bBlldyman wu serving tention recen"" when be "ca~·-'" 1 life term at the mubilwn 90Cllrity ., ... ~~
prison for assaults on four other women. ' gas dellvefy tnick In pnolesl over
A prison sPot<esman said DeSalvo'a Wholesale pr!* lncroues, says be plans
PRICE OF SEED
\
SELLS BIRD, CAG,E body was found about 7 a.m. in • to·= =~tidal'~· gas to sell. ~"vothe .:;1:i"~!'°".J1~ wbere . I've already tbi government telling An ad wiorlh Jess than a pack of
DeSalvo, 42, died ol multiple ttab me how muc I 'con aell It lot and bird seed ts all It took to sell two --~ In the chest. No -·was the oil mnpoaleo telllllC me how much : blnts ll!d .. 'lircl<i110,Here'• the ad: . ~~ · ' I'm goinc lo ·gel I'm 'not going to - · .. · ·
found and the.re were no.-~ llie itve any ~ to l!O bucb out o1 my . llPOieoman said, ._ _,_. ,. , ... TALL gold _ blnlcage. (2)
• • During -ne_SaJv0'11.. ... u1t trial m· • .....:;.;;. -r..~ plllljne aho,.·-. '11-par11te'ets male, ~II J1D111t719l'l,:ils !...,..., I'. Lee Siilly, =>"" (i!Oa .,. l'loP II , :_;i•. . ~JIG. (l'hliile No.).
' 1ttempted to get .lb<, coafeSlion to tbt · • · ' ~The .11c1ver111er told ~r Daily Pilot lllrlllll!linf.I en~ mto. evidence. He • . -.., ,
"'' able only to present ouch teotlmony p l' Ch. f . .... IOld every bird "the first f1<m peychlatri1ts whom DeSalvo told 0 We le .'S cloy ·u, ad appeared." Action' doesn't 6e wu the strangler. • · • !Wve .ttc have an expensive price tag.
DeSalvo wu convicted of burglary, ' . Spend _,e "bin! 11eed" yourself, next
armed robbery and ,..uat moleltat!On. Home' Burgled . lbne l!!"'· hive something to sell. Dial · State, authorities hive IOllf ulllntalned · "'Ille dli'ect line to "8U!ts. Phone the
they did not haVe evidence to (ll'OleCllte • · ']?cily'Pllol at MU671.
lftYooe· for the strlllll!l!ngs. ,..-Westminster Police Chief Walter •
The cue ol the "Bolton Strangler' T. Sc:o11 ahould hive read Diet
eaOled a worldwide 1t1111Uon. The vio-Tracy'.. Q b1illlt>ippen TatboOk.,
t1m1 ranced In oge from 19 to 'IS. Moel Item In the &mday (Unny papen
.
Budget 'Deficient'
had been ISllOclated with bealth care,, before leaving his 'Cos!a . Meso
either as nurses, hospital volunteers, home. SAN JOSE (AP) -Nert year's pro-
.,...llers in physicians• offices, or friends A b=..entered bia Mesa peoed "81.9 .m!!liCJll budget for tlic
ol l\llrll!I ond doctors. All ll\oed within ~~ ,.~ ~ Calllomla state Qniven!ty and Colleges
a If.mile rodiut of Bootod. Ith flllO In loot _._ _ .. -~ -tem ii "·-~~ ... ~-.,. o't _, __ _ Tho lliqeol llllllhunt In Mwachuletta' w , _., _. -.,. -~ ·~
hiotor)' wu . touched ol! Feb. 2•. !WI coins, plus a dalJCbter'• Eolanda the 1tildent-le0Cbu ratio ml cuts out
when DeSah• and l1l'I trmates e!Clped High Scl!ool student boc!Y canl.\._. !IClllty ~ !undl, 11\8, United
from B~ sfi!e Hoapllal a month>. lie allO stole Illa ID-. . .., l'rof....,. al Callfonlll lald rooay. Dr.
after lll&llt -illt.trlll. •~-• :Z:. ... 1;."'D>lho. ........... · Bid~_... oecretary of ·~ m= at the -in'"' . , 1 • the ......... orpnllltlon, criUclzed
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(lllli P.lp I) , \!-_ _._...,. ___ ,_ _ _. • .tllo .,.,,.., olllcWI In a ltatemenl
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Opponent of Reactors
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Found Dead in H~ Car
Bruce Sharpe, the 42-year-old lawyer
who led the battle9 against plans to
buijd" two new San Onofre tiuclear reac-
tors was found dead in his car today,
the victim of suicide. fl_
Sb11111<, a prominent 18\fyer In the
Santa Barbara and Lompoc a"reas, was
found slumped over the steering wheel
ol bis car par1led along Highway 166
near Santa Maria. He had been missing
since lasi Th.~, author!~ said.
' 'Sharpe o1qc1oi!ly --tepresented Grolops
United Against Radiation D a n g er 11
(G.UARD) baaed In San Cle-. and
served · 811 legal """""! for thll l1'0UJ>
and ~ deeinetf fonnal intemlm
in lite dril-batUes against the plant_.. ..
Of!lcers In cbarg• of the cue In
Central California said lhlt they havo
loamed the lanky, llofHgoken lawyer
had been despondent over recent prol>-
lems In hit -" and had llad a btstory of thwlrled llUlclde attempta. ,
Ofllcers said death· come u a rtSUlt
of corbOll monoxide poisoning. Sharpe
had altacbed one end of a garden 00..
to the exhaust pipe ~ st.uFk pie other
through a windliw ell the car. N1Mlole
was found. ~ • .
His work for GUARD and the
californ.ia Ocean Shoreline Preservation
Conference · in the nuclear reactor
dispUtes lasted lor _years and involved
mootbs of research and presentations
before review boards usembled by the
U.S. Atomic Energy Commissioo.
As Jt turned oot, the lawyer's effom
and those. of. the groups be represented
were in vain.
The AEC overruled ail objections to
tbe react« proposal and granted licemet
to two utility finns earlier UUs fall
to allq,w construction of the new reactors.
Double Suicide?
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The bodies
of a S7·year>old ex..,,.vlct and his 22-
. year .. ld girllriend wert found Swiday
in a Mission Diatrlct hotel, and police
Aid lt,was a cloub~llllcide .
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Mysterious ~,
Phone Calls -
Probed
By' ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of .. Ody 1'11ot Steff
A series of mystery phone calls · to
the Ramona ranch of Orange County
Board of Superv~airman Rooald
L. Capsers today was considered a clue
to the $20,000 'lbanksgiying holiday
burglary of his Newport Beach home. ·
One ot the unexplained calls involved
someone apparently mimicking a small
child who said: "I wuv you."
The Caspers family returned to their
home at 119 Via Florence on Lido Isle
about 5::.l p.m. Swlday and immediately
sensed something was wrong when they
found a side door ajar.
Investigators said today a team of
highly professional thieves was probably
involved in looting the residence ot
dozens of items.
"They did a real job," said Newport
Beach Police Detective P a tr i ck
O'Sullivan, as be continued with his
investigation today.
Stolen items -mostly fairly small
and easily carried -included all .the
couple's personal jewelry, c b t n a.
silverware and anlique items, such as fl
table lamps.
1be burglars wbo pried open a sliding "
glass door opening onto the patio after
scaling a gate facing the street appeared.
to select the loot with taste and consid-
eration of value.·
Detective O'Sullivan said the pro.
fessional nature of the job indicates
·the strange calls to the Caspers ranch
in San Diego County, wbere"the family
spent the holidays, were probably con-
nected.
Invtstigators theorize the calls were
(See BURGLARY, Poge I)
Oruge
Weatller-· · -··
It'll be ~Y and cool Tuesday,
according to the weather service,
with beach temperatures in the
upper SOS rising to the mid 00s
inland. Overnight lows in the 40s.
JNSmE TODA. Y
Homose:ruals h au e . com·
plained ab9ut their portrayal
in movies and on television atld
it appears likely that gays will
be depicted di//n-entl11 in the
future. Sec stor11, Page 1. •
......... , s Mondaf, NOYtmbtr 26, 1973 .-
Watergate ()~e
Bid to Exclud·~
,-
Two Tapes Filed
BULLETIN
WASHINGTON (API -Tbe White
House filed with U.S. Dlslrlct Judge
Jobn J. Slrlca today a !Z..pagc analysis
aDd lade1 for tbe subp0e0aed Watergate
l ---"'pe~r~rdlng1 and other ntalertals_J!_nd
claimed that two of the tapes &bould
be witbbeld from the Watergate grand
Jury in entirety.
WASHINGTON (AP J -President Nix-
on's personal secretary, Rose Mar)
Woods, testified today that she listened
only to one part of a \Vatergate..related
tape recording that the White House
says is missing an 18-minute segment.
During Miss Woods' testimony, U.S.
1 District Judge John J. Sirica said that
subpoenaed White House tape recordings
were to be turned over to him later
• ln the day. He gave no details of the
transfer or the controversial tapes, long
~ght by federal prosecutors.
. Miss Woods testified that s h e
.. lninscrlbed the taped portion of a June
20, 1972 conversation that the President
bad with aide · John D. Ehrlichman in
;bis old Executive Office Building office.
'lbe red-haired secretary said she then
·also took down a portion when H. R.
· Haldeman first entered the office and
all three men were speaking. She said
she listened to the t.ape only long enough
'Donald Nixo11 " .
tMay Testify
:On Wiretaps
· BEVERLY HILLS (AP) - F. Donald
. Nixon or Newport Beach, brother of
. the President, may be called to testify
in federal court about Secret Service
" wiret.aps.
-• An attorney for a former aide to
'~billionaire Howard Hughes disclosed Sun·
·~Pay that he may cal l the ·President's
. brother in the Las Vegas case.
Testimony apparently would center on
the fact that President Nixon bad his
..f brother's Newport Beach home tapped
1. with his brother's knowledge.
Donald Nixon was not immediately
,. available for comment today.
The Las Vegas case involves John
Meier, the former Hughes aide, who
. is under indictment on federal income
tax evasion charges. Meier, who lives
. ·in British C.Olumbia, pleaded innocent
, to the charges and is scheduled to .go
, on trial Jan. 7, 'his attorneys said.
· "We hav.en't formulated our strategy
• ·Yet, but it's po~lble we might call
.. Donald Nixon to testify in Las Vegas.
~ primarily . on the question 0 r
.._ SJTVeillance," attorney Robert Wyshak
said in a telephone interview. "I couldnt'
said In a telephone interview. "J couldn't
Meier bas contended the tax charges
v are politically motivated and based on
evidence illegall y obtained during taps
of telephone conversations he had with
~ the President's younger brother.
The President recently acknowledged
that his brother's Newport Beach phone
was tapped by the Secret Service for
"security reasons'' and that Donald Nix·
on was aware of the measure and ap-
proved of it.
"The surveillance lnvolved not what
'he was doing," President Nixon said.
"The surveillance involved what others
who were trying to get to him , perhaps
to use improper influence and so forth,
might be doing and particularly anybody
who might be in a foreign country."
It was reported over the weekend
that Meier was questioned recently by
Senate Watergate investigators about his
relationship with Donald Nixon and cash
contributions made on Hughes' behalf
to the President's emissa ries .
Meier was fired by the Hughes
... organization in 1969. It was reported
that the action was laken because he
:: disregarded a White House command
;: that he disassoc iate himself from Donald
•· Nixon. .. ,.
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to be c@rtaln Ehrlichman left the room.
The White J-louse says 18 minutes
of Nixon's June 20 conversation wlth
former chie! of staff Haldeman Is
obliterated by an audible tone and no
coDversaUon can be heard.
There were published reports over the
weekend that Miss \Voods would teslify
that she accidentally erased the 18
minutes but questioning had not p11r
gressed to that point in a one-hour
rOOming session.
~1iss Woods testified that last week
she twice listened to a duplicate of
the June 20 tape and slid "we listened
to what bas been called a lot of other
names -a mistake.''
She offered to expla'.in but was in·
terrupted by Watergate prosecution force
lawyer Jill Volner, who was attempting
to est.ablish what portions of the tape
Miss Woods heard.
Miss \Voods, President N I x o n ' s
personal secretary ror 23 years, was
warned of her constitutional rights to
remain silent and to consult with her
lawye r as the questioning began. It was
only the second lime in the federal
court tapes hearings -'o\'hich resumed
today after a two-week receu -that
a witness wa s so warned. The other
\vitness was Haldeman.
Miss Woods said that she was under
the impression that the Haldeman por·
tion of the June 20 conveniaUon was
not included in the prosecutor's subpoena
for nine Watergate tapes. The White
House has said that tYiO of the nine
tapes do not exist, a disclosure that
led to the hearing in Sirica's courtroom .
-Frott• Page 1
BURGLARY . ••
placed to assUre that the family, in-
cluding chi1dren Kirk, 20, Rick, 17, Greg
and Kristen. both 15, and Blair, 12,
"'er~ still av.:ay from their Lido Isle
residence.
Caspers and his wife told Officer Tom
Ste"·art, \\'ho was f Ir st dispatched to
the crime scene, that the calls occurred
Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
The ca\l in which someone apparenlly
talked like a small child was mentioned.
plus tv.·o in which the phone rang but
was followed by silence when answered
by SQ me member of the family .
Caspers, 42, who heads Keystone Sav·
ings and LO"an Association, told lnv
vestigators many people and organ~
tions knew of his planned holiday
tibsence.
He was to confer again today with
police and provide a detailed list of
them. in addition to a roster of past
servants and other hired help.
Loss to the family was estimated
only at $10,IXXI to $20,000 pending a
complete inventory of the missing ltems,
"'hich the financier and controversial
county leader also planned to supply
today.
He said all househotd items were in·
\'entoried and appraised for exact value
onJy two weeks ago by his insurance
carrier.
From Pagel
STRANGLE R •••
a\Vaiting an appeal , was c8P.tured 1 ~2
da ys later in a Lynn, Mass., clothing
store, where he asked to u~ the
telephone.
DeSalvo was at the hospital before
the trial, undergoing observation for an
alleged sexual molestation offense, when
his cellmate. George Katar, persuaded
Bailey to represent DeSalvo .
Bailey at first resisted but agreed
to do it only a day before detectives
arrived at the hospital to question
DeSa!vo about the stranglings.
Bailey tape-recorded DeSalvo's story
under an agreement with the state at-
torney general 's office that it could not
be used against him. Detectives were
sai d to have found that most of what
he said tallied with the evidence of
the .crimes .•
DeSalvo also ~\aimed to be the "Green
lvlan," kno\vn to New· England law en-
forcement offi cia ls as the man responsi.
ble for an estimated 600 to 1,000 rapeJ
and other sexual offenses over several
~·ea rs.
No one was ever proset'\lted as th.e
"Green ~1an,'' ·who-"'as called that
because of the repairman's olltflt the
\lij:lims said he \\'Ore ir1 gaining entrance--
to their homes under the ruse of being
sent to fix something.
Before DeSalvo c-epudiated his con-
fession in 1968. he maintained he
desperately wanted psychiatric treat·
ment.
After DeSal,'O's conviction, Balley
commented, "~Tas~achusetts has just
burned another witclt"
Ted Kennedy Ahead
PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) -1be Gailup
PoU says its latest Survey of Democrats
pul! Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of
Massachusetts far ahead Of other possl·
ble oonlenders for the party's 1976
pmidential nomination, 1be poll lndl-
cau.d that Alabama Gov. Georg• C.
Walla<e and Sen. Edmund S. Muskle
of Maine wtre the neil leadlpg cbole!cs; ~far behind Kennedy. .
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Reindeer. Grotitaded
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Even St. Nicholas, the Dutch version of Santa Claus,
finds the going a little rough as he is forced to
travel by bicycle while visiting with children on a
carless Sunday in Holland. A number of industrial-
ized 11ations banned Sunday driving to save fuel in
the face of Arab oil cutbacks.
f'rom Pfl§e I
COAST DEALERS OPPOSED • • •
was manufactured and that with the
outbreak of the Mideast \Var the oil
companies now find that they have to
maintain th e posture of an even greater
shortage. "They can't say that we can
1ncet the oil requirements of th~ country
now after all," Smith said. "They've
created a monster."
For that reaaoo Smith will not volun-
tarily stop selling gasotine. "And as
soon as I'm forced to under the oe\v
law, I'm going to send President Nixon
a formal bill for each Sunday that
I haven't been able to sell my gas,"
he said.
Phil Evans, chairman of the Co6ta
and· reduce the amount allocated lo
the dealer by the necessary percentage.
This would allow the dealer to keep
the hours of operation which his
particular location demands."
Bay added that he was uncer~in what
stand, if any, his association "'ould take
on the Sunday ~ales ban.
However, he said he would stop stilling
gasoline on Sundays to comply with
the request, but that be would also
write a letter to PresldenlNixon urging
adoption of his allocatioo plan.
The current allocation plan, Bay main·
tains, is not fair because the quantity
of gasoline alloled lo each dealer is
determined by the oil companies, not
the government.
Energy Proposal
Higlilights Told
By President
WASHINGTON (AP) -Here at a
glance, are the ·highlights of actions
announced or proposed Sunday by Presi-
dent Nixon to cope 'with the nation's
energy crisis.
HOME HEATING OIL -Home
heating oil \\'ill be rationed begiMing
Jan. I. Deli\'eries lo residences will
be cut 15 percent, to commercial
C!!ilablishm ents 25 percent and to in·
Uustries 10 percent.
"'1esa Service Station and Garage Owners SERVICE STATIONS -Beginning
Commiltee aod QPerator of a Phillips Secttn'ty Guard Dee. '· the President asked service,,,. 66 station across the street, disagrees with Smith. He believes the shortage lions to slop selling gasoline between
is real. A 'd II Sh 9 p.m. Saturdays and 12 :01 a.m. Mon·
."I've be<ll closl)Jg Sunday• anyhow CCI enta y ot da ys. He said this will be made man-
ever since I couldn't get a.s fuuch gas datory when he ls gtven authority by
as I wanted," he explained. "I'm geared By Own Weapon Congress. Gasoline deliveries to to a seven day week but I've · had to scale things down. The Sunday sales wholesale and retail dealers will be
ban won't affect me that much, but A 49-year-old security guard for a cut by 15 percent •
it will.hurt a lot of other service statiom. San Clemente apartment complex ac-
belie the bould JET FUELS -Jet fuel allocations "Personally I ve Y s ra· cidentally shot himself in lhe stomach lion gasoline. That's the ultimate solu· to airlines \viii be cut five percent to
lion. It's the only fair way to spread over the weeekend ,when a pistol fell do1nestic Jines on Dec. 1, while in·
the. shortage around." from his hands and !ired . Police received a call from the man. ternational line.9 will be held to 1972
Evans said Co6ta Mesa service slaUon Sa I Elton u~--of 2701 Del levels·. on Jan. 7 fuel allocations to dealers are scheduled to meet 11tursday mue • ~
News Leak I
I
Attributed
To Jaworski
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WASlllNGTON (AP) -. The While
House today accused the ofijce of special
Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski of
responsibillly for what II lem}ed two
recent new leokl, one la~ed u atag·
1~as the n,".i open Critl<i.tn _by
the Whlte House ol JaWorskl's ~hon
slnce be took over the ot6ct from which
Archibald Cox was fired OCt. 2Q.
One of the Jl<lb!lsbed llems ciled by
White House Deputy Press Secretary
Gerald L Warren was a report in this
week's i~ue of Time magazile that
Jaworsk.i 's office i.s Jnvestigat.mg a
$100,000 contribution to the 1972 ~ixon
campaign by the Seaferers International
Union. Nixon addrtssed the union'• cm·
vention today. (Story Page 3)
The second Item cited by Warren
\\'as a colullUl, appearing in many
newspapers today, in which Rowland
Evans and Robert Novak reported that
White House lawyers pleaded In vain
last week with Jaworski to agree to
a delay in diSclosing that an 18-mlnute
segment of a taped presidential con-
versation apparently bad b e e n
obliterated. . Warren reminded that the 'Yhite
House a~ Cox of a breach of ethics
after he acknowledged he inadvertently
was the source of a publls¥d report
linking P r e s i d e n t Nixon with
Administration handJing of an anUtrust
case against ITT, was asked of Jaworski
v;•as guilty of violating ethical standards. w a.rren said he \\'ould not make such
a claim because, he said, the White
House has no evidence Jawonk! wa.s
personally res~nsible for the alleged
leaks to Time and Evans and Novak.
Warren, detlaring he spoke in part
from Jong years of experience a~ a
newsman and editor before he jomed
the \Vh ite House staff, said he found
an ol>vi(>us CQincidence In the fact tha t
Time reported an investigation of the
Seafarers cootribution at the time the
union was holding its convention here
and was being ·addressed by the Presi·
dent.
"I'm just pointing out a coincidence
that I find very obvious and staggering,"
said \Varren.
\Varren said Nixon feels that if there
are in\'estigations, they shouJd be hand!·
ed thoroughly and professionally and
"developed in the proper forwn ."
The White House spokesman said anew
that Nixon's lawyers are cooperating
fully with Jaworsld's office and that
the President has ."a great desire" that
all Watergatlll!laled inb:JnnaUcn "be
developed fully and become known.''
Asked U 1jlil meant the While llou!8
provided' 'Jaworski with docuni'.ents: he
sought two or more weeks 11go, Warren
said conversations between White House
attorneys and the proeecutors were
privileged and be could not dbcuss them.
Wome1i's Groups
Not tlie Same
Comerclo late Saturday all airlines will be cut 15 IV>rcent below everun· g to discuss whether to follow • · ,..~ Urban ..__.edly •-Id police to send 1972 levels . Fuel for private aviation CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -'I11e Pre.I.dent Nixon's suggestion to volun-.... .,.... • "' an ambul .. ..,.,. ""---use I'm bJ--"'-g \\'ill also be cut when Congress gives Women 's Federal Savings & Loan lan.ly begin the Sunday shutdown this to death.'' __ , ~ ~· him authority. Association says it will relocatt;, a branch
weekend. Firemen and police responding to the office because an abortion cllnll opened
But a third service staton leader is call from Urban lying on the ground, SPEED LIMITS -Nixon said that in t.he same building.
opposed to the idea of rationing. bleeding from an abdomlnal wound. "'hen he is given authority by Congress The Concerned \\'omen's Clinic began
"The black marketeers are ready to The guard said he had dropped a he 'viii impose nationwide speed limits performing abortions last week.
set up their (coupon) piesses," insisted .22-<:aliber magnum derringer and the o[ 50 miles per hour for automobiles Frank J. Stringer . executiVe vice 'presl-
William H. Bay, operator of Mission weapon went oH. and 55 for trucks and bu,,es. dent of th e savings and loan association,
Viejo Mobil Service and a director of The guard •was taken to San Clemente said the firm simply wanted to clarify
the International Service Station Dealeni General Hospital where the slug wa s ORNA?\1ENTAL IJGHTING -Nixon that the firm and the clinic were not
Association. removed. said he will ban residential ornamental connected .
"I think the only way to handle thiJ Nurses there said. Urban was "doing lighting and unnecessary commercial "\Ve refrain from making a moralistic
is through mandatory fed eral allocations 1_v;.:ery~;wel;~l"~toda;y;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l~ig~hali;ng~,;w;;i;th;;co0ng~re;ss;;io0na;l;;a~p~p;ro;v;a;l.;;;;;;ju;d~gmme~nt~,'~'~S;tr;in~g~e;r ~s~ai;d;. ~;;;~ to each service station. They should
allocate it equitably, possibly on the -n,.
1
ltl ~ h a~~":~ 0:h~~ :!i~ .. ~:;·"o~: :! Nobody Sells Amana for less than .vw~
much they need to cul consumption Where do VC1U want the freezer
in your new ilmono. refrigerator ... 'Plant Pilferer'
Strikes Agai~t
A bulky file in the Orange County
Sheriff's office became a little thicker
during th e weekend with a theft reported
in the San Juan Cspistr8ll0"'8rea.
1be file Is labeled "potted plant
pilferer." And the foli age footpad con·
tinues to baffle lawmen by seizing a
nu1nber of plants ·from the patio of
a home at 29691 Woodlake Co.urt, San
· Juan.
"His method was tlle same -as usual,"
commen.ted an investigator. "He walked
through an unl6c~ed gale, picked up
an the planl! he could •lllY ·hli !Janda
~on npct left." , , ..:. .
Glider Plunges;
Pilot Injured
A.San Diego hang gilder pilot oulfered
a brolten wrist when bll ldte-lllte craft ~lwnmeied Into Holy Jim Canyon · In
th• hlll.t above Mllalon Viejo Sunday
afternoon. Tony Hughes, 'll, !11D1ched hla glider
from Qito de ca.a ranch.•! a)>oul 3 p.m.
and landed In the ruQed ...,.. less
than a tninu!e later, a apok'"1!11n f0<
the Orange County Fire Depertm<!ilfsald
today. A unit of the Trabuoo Volunteer Fire
Departmeot r..CU. aquad wan! to tho
~ but Hughes ttlused ambulance
attention and · Jefl with friends , offlclala
said.
• ' '
I
on the-side? on the boffomf on the ms>.1
""'•~•gives ·~ a choice
90DAYSCASH
WITH APPll9'<(1D CllED.A' \.
1815 NEWPORT Bl YD.,
llawntlWn Costa Mesa -Pllene 541-7788 . . . ' . . . . . . . . . ' ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' . . . . . . . . . ,
"
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Monday, Navtmbtr 2f:i, 1~73
Nixon Seeks . Fuel Crisis I •
..
UPIT ..........
One Man's-Answer
Wa)'pe Jaynes of Batlle Creek, Mich., has solution to energy crisis
-motonzed rickshaw. Three-wheeled vehicle has a small motor that
goes up to. 20 m.p.h. and gels between 180 and 200 miles per ·gallon.
Jaynes built plastic covered cab that carries bis 2-year-old son.
•
Harm~rBUl
. .
For Staro
Post Aired I
' LOS ANGELES (AP)" -Sen. John '
L. Hanner, a Glendale Republican who
is chairman of the upper house's GOP
caucus, announced today be will run
for lieutenant governor In 1974.
r'"?e • annOuiicement eMed weeks of
· speCulaUoo, lb.at Hamier ,,_ considered a
conservative on fiscal and social service
issues, would make the move for the
post held presently by Republican Lt.
Gov. Ed Reinecke. . .
Reinecke has said he will run for
gov~rnor next year.
Harmer appeared last month on the
public television show .. The Advocate.s"
with Gov. Ronald Reagan in support
or Prop. 1. Harmer said today he will
continue to give voters every chance
possible to learn where be stands on
issues. . ProP: 1, Reagan's tax limitation
measure, was defeated at the polls Nov.
6.
"In the months ahead, every major
California issue ..• the energy cri!ls,
the inflation that is c r i pp 1 i n g
every working man and woman un-
controlled state spending, employ°ment
fluc::tuationa, accountability by elected
officials, the absence of uniform quality
education, and election and campaign
reforms ••. all will be subjects during
my statewide election effort/' Harmer
said in a statement •
·Ike Wanted to Divorce The lieutenant governor's duties re-
quire him to sery-e as the actirig governor
when the governor is out of 1lie slate.
He also oversees the state's tourism
efforts.
~alnie to Marry · Driver? Hanner, 39, said he would like to
see the post's traditional role expanded
to -be make the position t r u I y
"Califomia!s secood mo1t important . .
WASlllNGTON (UPI) -A letter from.
Gm.· Dwlgbt D. Eisenhower to Gen.
<lf«I' .C. Marshall stating Eileohower's
plans to cUvproe bis· Wife to marry
an9thfr woman proobably still exists,
the ·Washington Star·News bas reported.
'The. newspaper quoted retired Maj.
•
I ~y.p~ SoouJ
Located · After
~-county Search
. .
.,
•
A a.year-old Cypress Boy Scout, sub-
j«:t of a widespread, twv,co1111ty aearch,
.,.. f"'"'ll wander'.ig · aloog a railroad
right ti. w1y by 1 Garden Grove police
offlcJ!r ~Y night .. l'!Jllce· said Roger Spencer'Ju\d become
setJll:&ted fn>rn hia fellow Boy Scouts
.,ble .oo a bicycle outing in Los Angeles
CounlY · near Pioneer Street and the
Sln'Gallrlel ruver. _ rlk .,.. reportod milliJlc al 2 p.m.
ond Loo .An1tles Sherill's deputies were la!Md In the maastve search by the
~·Comity Search and 8'Scue Teorn, c,pras and La PalllU\ wnce and
Anallolm Bxpkftr Scouts. · . Late'Sund1l~fficer Steve Nelson found the s~ pear J?aie Street, Just
aobth of Kate A venue walk.Ing on
the P1cillc Electric tracks.
Gen. Harry Vaughan, military aide to
President Harry S Truman; as saying
the letter is probably at the Marshall
Library' at Virginia Military Institute.
Merle Miller, in a new book about
Trwnan pub:lished last week, said
Eisenhower's predecessor ln lhe White
HoU.se told him in an interview he
• desln>yed the letter. Miller , said that
... Eiaenbower, then supreme _cpmmander
ti. Allied forces In EID'Ope, wrote· that
he wanted to divorce wife Mamie' and
marry Kay . Summersby,· his driver in
l.oodon.
The stal°"Newii quoted Vaughan as
verifyiog Eisenhower wrote such a letter
to G<n: George C. Marshall, Army chief
Of staff during World War IL Vaughan
said Truman did not destroy the letter,
but seot it to Marshall, the Star-News
reported. •
The newspaper qooted Vaughan as
recalling: "Eisenhower was commander
of our forces in Europe, and he wrote
Gen. Marshall seeking advice. He wanted
. to know what getting a divorce wou1d
do . to his career. Marshan wrote back that' that was 'lhe most stupid ·thing
)'OU COUid think of doing'."
job." •
Hanner, a Mormon attorney who was
born in Salt Lake City, was elected
to the Senate in 1966 to represent a
statmehly Republican swatch of Los
Angelea County including parts or
Burtiailk and Glendale.
In 1970; Harmer. placed second behind
now_·Atty. Geil. Evelle Younger · in the
race for the Republican nominatiOQ for
attorney general.
Convicts Want
Their PJaybo)·
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) -
' Prtsooers al Ft. Pillow state prison farm mut be allowed to read
Playboy magazine, a fede<al judge
has ruled d e s p i t e authorities'
claims that it will increase
homosexuality among the cmvicts.
Playboy is approved prison rare
by the American COrrectional
Association. But inmates at Ft.
Pillow have been denied it. Three
o{ tbem, In aeporate actiCCls; filed
suil for liberalized mall privileges. 'nle· Miller-book, "Plain Speaking,"
quoted Truman as saying Marshall
"wrote-him back a letter the like of
which" you nev~ lee. He said , •.
1 ~ Ei.......,.N'jl!n •came 'clooe to doing
such a thing, he'd not only bust hhn
out ti. lhe Army, he'd·see to it•tbll\'.
never for the rest of bis life woufd""" ~
he be abte to draW" a peacerul breath." '
"Tbe presence or this periodical
in tbe instituUon will have an erotic
elfed on the prisoners,'' officials
told Judge ~wn.,
However, BrOwn NIM that if
the magazine ii approved by the
correctional association, it wlil
have to 'he allowed in the prison. •
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This nre earth or'llllsm can suntv. and grow ln an 1D'filot11U11t irW!, &lmllllities •to that belelved
IO nllt on Jupiter. 1'>111td In m alkaline-sprtnl In
northem1 .California, 1he unnamed organl!m clll
• ,,
swim, grow llld reproduce in an envlronmel\! 10
times· more alkaline Ihm the pmtous maximum
1'"1 of aIJrallllllJ ~ poalble for growth of
Jiving organlsnl.
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Teen Queen
.N
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L?ri Loi Matau~awa. (center) from Aica, Hawaii, has been crowned
wmner of the fi!iss Teenage .Amertca pageant in Ft. Worth, Tex. Top
runnerup _was Janet Louise Daince, Logan, Utah Oeft), 1973 honoree
Melissa 9albra1th, is at righl '
Solon Assails Pentagon's -
Musical GI Bonus Awards
WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Pentagon
critic Rep. Les Aspin (J>.Wis.) bas
become a music cri~ic as well, blasting
the 1:"fense Department brass f91' lettmg
,muctelans get special re--enlistment
bonuses designed !or Gls with a "critical
military skill ."
Aspin said Sunday he bas asked
Defense Secretary James Sdllesinger to
prove that "Piccolo players are vital
to the natiooal defense ."
" .•. The purpooe of . these bOOllSes
is to retain ~ with critical skills
Woman Killed
In Auto Crash
A young woman from Yorba Linda
was kllled SUnday in a two-car crash
in Anaheim bringing to six. the DDDlber
of persons who lost their lives in Orange
County traffic accidents during the four·
day Thanksgiving holidaY·
Deborah L. White, 21, of 5562 Pebble
Beach Lane, died at the scepe of the
accident, Jefferson Street and Miraloma
Avenue. Her cousin John A. 0tth; 22,
of the same address was injured.
Anaheim police said Otth was diivlng
a light foreign make oodan which collided
with a van. Jack D. }foffman, 29, of
Anaheim, dri ver of the van, was not
Injured.
for front.line fighting' or those directly
supporting froot,.line fighters ," he said, cit\"8 the language of a federal law.
"For the lffe of me, I can't imagine
what special fighting skill musicians
possess.''
Defense Department spokesmen said
Aspin's letter had not reached Schles-
inger. 1bey said they wou1d have no
other comment except to say that re-
enllstment bonuses are "autbor.i7.ed by
law." .
Aspin said a serviceman with an E-4
rank entitled to a musician bonus and
making the standard four-year re-enlist-
ment will receive an extra $3,564. He
pointed out that moot Gls reach E-1
rank during . an Initial tour of duty.
Many obtain higher rank and are thus
entitled to a higher boous, he said.
Aspin said the 110 musidans he cited
also are receiving the regular re-enlist-
ment boous of $1,700 In addition to
the extra special bonus.
Gulf Denies Story
PJTl'SBURGH, Pa. (AP) .:_ Gulf Oil
Corp. Sunday denied a newspaper stOry
that the company discovered a major
new oilfield off the west coast ·of Africa.
The l<>ndon S<mday Observe: said Gulf
made the big strike off the coast of
Cabinda, a part of the Portuguese colony
of Angola,
,
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s DAILY PILOT 3
Sufficien~y
In Energy
To Be Goal
WASIDNGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on moved today to drum up public
support for his solution to the energy
crisis, and declared that hls Jong.range
goal is to put this country "in a posiUon
where nobody can cut our lifeline."
Speaking to a convention of the
Seafarers International Union, AFL-ClO,
the President reiterated his goal of m~k
ing the nation self·sufficlent in energy
by 1980 and linked it with efforts to
build a strong merchant marine .
. TI\e United States will "never be
dependent on another part of the world
when there is a crisis," if his proposals
&Ucceed, Nixm said .
1be speech was Nixon's first public
appearance Since his national radio-
television address Sunday night In which
he unvelied his plans to deal with the
energy crisis,
'The President also repeated his in-
tention to remain In the White House.
referring to himself as the captain of
a ship whose job it is to bring that
vessel safely home.
"I'm going to stay at that helm until
we bring it into port," he declared.
Nixon was giv~ a wann welcome
by the delegates and praised by
Seafarers' President Paul Hall for past
efforts to revitalize the maritime In-
dustry ..
Halt, who headed an . industry sup-
porting Nixon's re-election, said the
industry ·~foWld on the basis of
wfonnance we can believe Richard
Nixon."
The union leader avoided any direct
reference to ND:on's Watergate troubles.
But in introducing the President Hall rlewri~ him as the courageous ~ptain
of the ship of state now "going through
troubled seas." And, Hall said, "We
are not fair.weather sailors and don't
believe the American people are fair-
weather sailors."
Hall was the only memher of Ille
35--man AFL-CIO Executive Council who
voted against a resolution at the labor
federation's recent convention which
.,called for Nixon's resignation or lm-
peactunent.
Time Magazine reported Sunday that
SP.felal Watergate prosecutot Leon
Jaworski wu looting Into a $100,000
gift · from the Seafarers Union to the
Committee for the Re-eletUon of the
President.
Sometime after the union made its
contribution, reportedly borrowed. rrom
a New York bank, indictments charging
Hall with violations of the Corrupt Prac-
tices Act were disniissed by a federal
court oo grounds that the Justice Depart-
ment has not pushed the prosecuUon.
The Justice Department did not appeal
the court's decision. .
Nixon said bis steps for combating '
the energy crisis will mean Americans
·will have to live in cooler rooms and
drive a little slower but "perhaps live
a little better."
This doesn't mean this country will
go bed< to the days when it didn't
have enough, he said.
"Our goal Is not to go Iiiick, our
goal IS to go forward," Nixon declared.
He referred to the energy crisis as
a temporary problem that would not
last much longer depending . on in·
ternational developments. .
But by 1980, he vowed, the Unlled
States no longer would be dependent
on foreign sources of petroleum.
He called_!>ls "Project Independence"
a great program but said its success
would depend on the support of the
American people.
for •
casual aft1rr10011 at
th1 Hu11ti11cit o11 Harbo1i1r
Y1cht Club,
Gin• ind C1pric1 luccol1
h1v1 cho11n
MiUbroo• '11p1r1tt1.
Gin1 111d C1pric1 •r• 1t1i1d1nh 1t
Harbour Vi1w
El1rn1nl1ry School.
Tll1y 1r1 th1 d1ucih t1r1 of
Mr , t M.t1 •. '!'.Jcfor l .iccol1,
Huntington H1rbo11r.
Th1 ir clofftet -,,....... ' "
1v1il1bl1 In1i111 4 to 14 at :.
Thi k.4 Balloon ltd.,
in l'ttwport l11ch,
Huntington H11bout
111d Or1ng1 .
'All4IOM ISi.ANO Mftllk(llktl ........
TOWN • COUMTIY '>rtfltl 1n4l ~
MUNTIMOTOM ""•MUI ln41 ...,.,..,,
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'.f DAIL V PILOT Monday, November 26, 1973
• • COOL YULES DEPT. -So we've all
}\Cant President Nixon say so himself,
SQ we know it has to be true. The lhl,et foulup is upon us. We are playing
brinksmamh.!p with the fuse boxes. We
~~ve overloaded oor circuits. The gas
l.IJ.les are about to blow nothing but
Cold air.
Despite all this, yOu have to retain
the belief that ·the Christmas season
will come oor way regardless.
tfOh, there'll be some changes, all right.
likely won't see the Christmas
s ot lighted boats in Newport
that in past years have
4'"'bl«I young and old. Or the nightly
orama in the hills of l..agWla Beach.
tbe floodlighted Christmas scenes
' t abounded at homes in HW'ltington
ch or Costa Mesa. .
!!YEARS PAST, OUR coastline has been ~~ for its Yuletide electrical displays
~ the "Forty Mites of Christmas
~Jes" from Seal Beach to San ~mente. Not this year.
' i~i,, time, the Forty Miles does ·i1f smiling in daytime only. And it's
;going to be judg__ed as a daytime show
(-On the days of 1:>ec. 15, 16, and 17.
·you could have $40,000 worth of lights
on that YuJe display and it won't buy
you the sweepstakes this year.
All this is just as well. You recall
that the Forty Miles of Christmas Smiles
was started as a coastwide exhibit
calculated to bring a lot of tourists
down to our region to view all the
lights. Th1t notion was lha·t stores could
stay open end the good visitors might
drop a couple of nickels our way.
The Forty Miles contest got started
during the Depression. They figured
times were bad then. But at least in
the 1930s, they. could afford to tum
on the lights. ·
DO NOT DESPAIR. Figure that your
JXfi"Sona) circumstances could be worse.
Yoo migti't be the manager of an all-elec-
tric band. Or a used car dealer who
specializes in slightly worn 16 cylinder
limousines.
What about the merchant who just
found a bargain aod stocked in 400
cases ol Christmas tree light bulb.<!?
Or the gasoline station operator wbose
main· business was selling to skiers head-
1 ed hmne from the mountains on Sun-
days?
CLEARLY, YO~ could~ in worse
shape. Some folks are really going to
. get pinched in the energy squeeze. On
the other hand, do not d.iSCOWit American
ability to turn adversity into a dollar
profit.
Somewhere, you can bet some en-
terprislng chap has just-gone-into pro-
duction on a 30-day windup alarm clock.
Somebody is probably planning to revive
Ken Murray's "Blackouts of 1974."
· Another perceptive fellow just bought
16 railroad cars filled with firewood
-at $30 a carload.
...
And maybe you retain your stock
in the West Covina Buggy Whip Factory.
See? 'Things could be worse.
All you have to do i! wait for-the
President's next speech.
I
•
Greek Coup En~s '7 4 Election Plans
ATHENS IUPIJ -Sources close to
the new regime in Greece said today
they launched a bloodless coup to topple
President George Papadopoul4S because
the mill(ary government could never
win elections proml!M by Papadopoulos
for 1974.
The sourees said the 50-year-old leader
of lhe coup, Brig. Gtn. Dimllrlos loan-
nides. commander of the military police,
was opposed to the political liberalization
policy pursued by Papadopoulot since
Greece was declared a republlc Jut
May.
SPAIN
Madrid
Autos Banned
PAPAOOPOULOS b I ms elf was
reported held under house arrest by
the Army.
Although Papadopoulos was ill avowed
opponent of exiled King C<lnaiantine,
there waa no indication that the latest
coup, lhe aecond in six and a hall
yean, would lead to Consiantine's
rettim.
The new government has announced
no new Plaois for elections. Sources aaid
It wa5 unlikely any would he held by
1974 as Papadopoulous had prombed.
SOVIET UNION
... ,,,...........
Six European nations banned a total of nearly 30 million motor ve-
hicles Jrom the roads Sunday in efforts to save enough fuel to see
them through the winter. Little grumbling was reported among the
94 million inhabitants of West Gennany, Switzerland, Belgium, Den-
mark, The Netherlands and Luxembourg.
"Joannides, having hii own intelligence
service operating tbroua!l ESA (the
military jlollce), felt the pulse of th•
people 8Jld knew that free 8Jld fair
electionl promised by Papadopouloo by
1971 could not · baV< been wcm by tbe
regime," the aources said.
THE M!IJT ARY leadership Installed
Lt. Gen. Pbaedon GyxitJs, once a loyal
supporter of Papadopou)W, 11 president
ol the new regime.
Cre~k newspapers, published today
without prior WiSOnhlp, balled th< l'O\IP
with banner headlin., reading,
"Piipadopoulos 1brown Out" and
•• Papadopoulol Regime OVerthrown."
The IOUJ'eet said Joamidtl, com-
mander of the ESA for the tut six
yuro, pushed aside his own loyalty
to Papadopouloe to bring tbe president
down in the lace ol bis pledse to bold
. free parllamenlaty eleclloDs In 1971 •
"It electlons were to be unfair or
not free, wby l>old them at all," Ioan-
nld., wu'quoted by bis coll...,..._
'
Disease Claims
Laurence Harvey
LONDON (AP) -British movie star
Laurence Harvey died of cancer at his
Londm home Sunday nigh4 friends
reported today, He was 45.
The actor with tile soft, suave manner
had been Ill !or the past 18 months .
Friends called on him repeatedly in
recent weeks..
I
HARVEY WAS married for the third
time at the end of last year. Hi. biide
was faShion model Paulene Stone,
mother of his 3-year-old daughter
Domino.
The maniage .was at Beverly Hills.
Harvey's previous wives w ere
American mlllionalress Joan . Cohn aod Brilish actress Margaret LeightOn.' Both
marriages ended In divorce. '
....
to live like a jet ,.t star With 1tyllah
clothes, • blg·•pending llWlllU and •
fund ol llhowblz azlecdoles.
ON 11IE llCREEN he WU ·more ti·
lective in roleo that ,. .. him tile dlance
to exude quiet, well-bred menace.
Harvey apenl moet ol his childhood
with bis Pll'!nll in Jolwmesburg. Afttr
serving three years in the.South African
anny be made up hta mind to be a
star and came to Britain at 19 on
an army grant ol •ts a week.
He studied at the Royal Academy
of Dramatic Art for about three months
and then joined the Manchester Ubrary
'I11e~tre in 1946. ,
111' first Loodoo stage appeoran<>! wu
in "Has.san" In 1961. A year later lie
appeared in Shakespeare'a 1'0:lriolanus"
at StraUord on Avon.
Joannldes, Greece's new '1behind·lhe·
acenes" strongman, plarmed the takeover
which a conlrowilgue said was carried
out because Papadopoulos was "trying
to fool the Greek · people" with plans
!or lree elecllOM.
THE TOPPLED slrongman, wbo
crushed a student-worker uprising the
week before, fell victim to the same
type of bloodless coup he used to seize
power as an anny colonel 6~ years
ago.
U,ITtl .......
SUCCUMBS AT 45
Laurence Harvey
;
Egyptian, .Israel Talb
In Stall as Arabs Meet
Harvey never atta1ned the highest
ranlcl ol international "13nlom but his
perfonnances in such movies as "Room
at the Top," "The Manchurian can-
didate" and "Darling" established him
in the United States as well a.s this
country.
His brlde ·llf Im than a year tended
the Ulhuanlan-l>om actor dUrina months
of illness at bis elegant London Dome.
11 Perish as Twisters . --
HARVEY, BORN LanJshJCI ~l!'Cha
Skikne, underwent surgery and cobalt
ray treatment in Los Angeles last May.
Ravage Southwest U.S.
By United Prest International
While Arab ~aders gathered in Algiers
today for their first summit cOitference
in four years to align strategy against
lsrael, Israel and Egypt bjlrgained.
unsuccessfully for 90 minutes today over
the withdrawal of their armies on the
SUez front.
TIIE ISRAELI national radio quol«! ·
U.N., officials as saying the crucial talks
went well and that the next sessioo
between Maj. Gen. Aharon Yarlv of
Israel and Egyptian Maj. Gen. Moham·
med Gamassy would he held Wednesday.
But UPI Correspondent Raymond
Wilkinson rep:>rted from Kilometer 101
on the Cairo-Suez road that today's talks
ended with no sign of a break.
The Israeli military command reported
an exctiange of artillery and small anns
fire sooth of Jsma:llla on the Egyptian
front SUnday, the most serious incident
of the month-old cease-fire. The national
'
radio said one Jsraeli soldier was killed
in the lighting.
Officials in Jerusalem said Israeli
troops had been placed on alert on
both the Syrian and Egyptian fronts
"because of the tension that has existed
for the past few day~" Egyptian officials
have called the cease-tire talkS near
collapse and warned that Egypt may
renew the war unless Israel withdraws
to the Oct. 22 cease-fire lines.
JSRAEU PRESS reports said the troop
withdrawaL_deadlock result<d from
Egypt's insistence on keeping a force
of 400 tanks on the east bank of the
Suez canal instead of lhe small policing
force ~emanded by Israel.
The newspaper Ha'Aretz said the
Egyptians also demanded. an initial
Israeli withdrawal to six miles east
of the canal and a later pullback to
the strategic Mitla and Gidi passes in
the Sinai desert.
During the Jut month! at home
Harvey worked on a script for a film
he wanted to start shooting early next
year. Among the recent stream of callers
were Elizabeth Taylor, Rex Harrison
and one ol bis cro..st friendl, pla)'Wl'igbt
WoU Mankowitz. ·
Friends said Harvey "111 be cremated
at a private ceremony in Golders Green,
London on Wednesday. ·
• Harvey, a chain smoker, always tried
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dttlvtry of tht D•il1' Piiot
h guarantttd
~•rloNY• II Y9U ... llff Mft Y'tll•
Hlllr rt l:Jf •·""'· c1U lfllf .,.., ~ wlll a. .,....,.., " )'M. C11t1 ll'll tA.M ....
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S..111 ~. L .. -NlfMt •••• tfMGf
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-~
CLARKTON, Mo. (UPI) -Violent
weather ravaged much of t h e
southwestern United States during the
weekend, killing at least 11 persons.
Five persona dJed in tornadoes in
Miuouri aod a tornado killed one person
in Arkansas. Five persona died became
of !be weather in Oklahoma.
' ' TWISTERS AND v J o 1 e n t tbun-aentorms cauaed property damage in
Mi.saourl, Arbmaa, Okla b om a , Loulalaiia 8Jld Teiw Friday, Salurday '
and Slturday night. Fair weather
prevailed over most ol. the southwest
Sunday afternoon.
Three per10111 died Friday night in
a twiater near Eminence, Mo. Less lhan
24 houn later, Robert Miller, 61, and
his 88-year<>ld wlie Ruth, were killed
In a tornado that struck C1ar1tton.
Dunklin County deputy Sherill Bob
l\.fcDOnaJd said the Clarkton tornado
touched down "every mile and a half"
as it loped acroso the Mi.uouri Bootheel.
It bit the Miller home first, then
destroyed. four trailers, a brick home
8Jld damaged a cotton gin.
A tornado touched down near Rosebud,
Ark., Saturday killing J\uby Clayton,
C()MMHt()f24TINf7 Tlit: '31?4N()
UUNUilNf7 ()t=Ttll: 13~1\ a= NHW()l?T
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2_50 3RD PRIZES-,ti~NK OF. NEWPOEf-•.• 1Sf P~iE-.HOBIE CAT 14 FOOT SAILBOAT
80, and injuring sc'veral other residents.
Llghtning started a fire at Bixby,
Okla., that destroyed a $40,000 home
and its $50,000 in furnishings. Oil C.om-
pany executive Don C. Smith, 62, and
his wife, Ann, 60, suffocated inside.
~ WEATHER ~
/Ii, California .
Sun, Moon, Tides
~ 11llft ...,..,_
F;lrt.1 H'9h
f'lnt Low
5~ HlPll ,_,, ,_
MONDll.Y
TUISOAY
11:M o.m, 1f
•:2j p.m, .(I,,
t :)I .,,.,,_ $.f
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WITH PRIZES FOR THE WINNERS. TICKETS TO' ANY AIR ~RNIA DESflNATION
11> BICYCLE DECORATINO COMPETITION FOR ..... MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENt
KIDS OF ALL AGES. ALL ENTRIES RECEIVE WE:vE PLANNED A OREAT DAY OF FUN AND ... . A PRIZE. -1rs Ail FREE... . . ' '
.-, FREE HOT DOCS AND PEPSI. WE .LOO!c'FORWARD TO SEEINO YOU
SATURDAY, DECEMBER, 15]' .
,OOASr HIOHWAY NEAR MACARTHUR
FESTIVITIES FROM 1Q:OO>AM to 2:00 PM
• ofNeWport
CORONA DEL MAR ,GllPICI: cOAsr HfGHwAY NIAi MACAlTHUI MHllO
•
•
-' •
•
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I
.. .
"" Sy
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AI
the
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to
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on
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'
Arabian
Summit
To~ight
, Energy Use Cuts
Cited by Bradley
ALGJERS (UP!) -The big
four Arab leaders met today
to coonllnate strategy for the
summit rneeting or Arab na·
lions opening tonight.
King Faisal of Saudi Arabia,
whose oil wealth-lives him
a stranglehold on the western
economy, entertained Presi-
dent AnW>r Sadat ol Egypt
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Mayor Tom Bradley, predlc--
ting bard Umes for the next
several yeus, ca11ed Swuiay
night for both voluntary and
mandatory measures to cut
energy uae in the city by
20 percent, including gas ra-
tioning and reducing business
hours.
Bradley, in rem arks
( BRIEFS )
prepared for delivery in a
locally televised addms, did
not comment directJy on
'--------" President Nixon's nationwide
Bnd President Hafez Assad of
Syria and host President
lloua.ri Boumedien ne of
AJgeria at his villa jn the
grolmds of the Palace of Na·
"1tllos.
The mcel ing lasted one
hour. Officials declined to say
what decision.s were taken but
conference sources said the .
heads ol state outlined the
action they wanted the sum-
mit lo take. Syria and Egypt,
the principal combatanls in
last month's war, w~ said
to be asking ~ for a _stepup
of the J\rab oil boycott.
The conference ..,.,.,.. said
ooe of the chief Items on
the agenda · W88 summit SUJ>-
port for Egypt's decision to
meet with the Israeli! in peace
talks in Geneva next month. .
ewannWeleome
NEW DELlll (UP!) -
Soviet C.Ommunist Party Chief
Leonid Brezhnev aITived in
India to a wann welcome to-
day, but the government was
apprehensive over reported
Russian plans to press for
permanent port facilities.
Government sources Said
Brezhnev was expected to use
his fiv~y visit to press for
port facilities on the Indian
Ocean for Soviet naval ships
in exehange for a package
of aid and arms.
e R1111 Ga1111tlet
PHNOM PENH (UPI)
Twelve sbipo carrying fuel,
food and anununiliD!t up the
Mekong River ran a1 gauntiet ot Communist rocket fire to
reach Phnom Penh Sunday
night with vital supplies for
the refugee-swollen capital.
energy message.
He said, however, a proposal
for weekend closing of gas
stations or a ban on Sunday
driving was "ill-conceived."
"Instead, and only i t
absolutely necessaey -and -
I now think this should be
the case -a carefully struc-
tured system of gas rationing
should be adopted, 11 Bradley
said. "Any rationing plan
must. be fair to all."
BRADLEY ALJ!O called !or
possible regulation of the oil
indll8by to insure adequate
domestic reserves.
"When Congress and state
legislatures can't get facts
about oil reserves, pnxluction
plans and pricing information
from giant oil companies," he
said, "I think the time bas
come for the Congress to con-
sider st,rictly regulating such
companies as they do oth er
public utilities."
Bradley listed as some of
the voluntary measures that
should be adopted; a SG-hour
week for retail stores, shutting
off ol lights !or outdoor ad·
vertising, a 50 mile per hour
speed liml~ and the turning
down of thermostats for home
heating. ..
A symbolic measure, be ad-
ded, should be that "we all
not use' lighted Cbrilltmas
decorations this year."
Bradley said city residents
should ·cut their use of e1ectric
lighting by one-third.
HE RECOMMENDED only
one television set being on
at a time, turning off swim·
ming pool beaters, better in-
sulation of homes, turning off
unneeded lights and keeping
thermostats at between 55 and
88 dtsrees.
•iwe can no longer retreat
tow our home s and
automobiles and private--lives
bi th e knowledge th a t
unlimited, cheap energy will
be ours to oomwne at will,"
he said.
"'!bat era Is .,,... • It will
not come again for three,
per:J'laps five years; perhaps ·
more. We do not know. But
we do know that some of
our hablia, which in the past
have been simply wasteful,
are now habits that cannot
be followed any longer."
Bradley admitted It may
become necessary to use high-
sulphur oil , as proposed by
the city department ot water
and power in the event of
not having enough fueT to
preclude power blackouts.
0 It is true that we may
have to permit, however
reluctantiy, the burning of
some high-sulphur oil in our
power plants.~· · the mayor
said, ubut it shou1d be the
last te90l't and only under
the most carefully controlled
circumstances.
In SOUth Vietnam, the Viet
Cong accuaed the U.S. >Jr
Force today ol flying spy
planes over its ltnltory and
ilemanded the a 11 e g e d
mtssiolls by high-llying SR7l
jets be stopped.
* * * * * Topless, Bottomless
e Cnuade Asked
WASHINGTON -<AP>--A
federal crime commission t<>-
day appealed for a citizen
crusade aga!Mt government
corruption and the street
crime It promotes.
"The system of criminal
justice will break down unless
citizens come forward as com-
plainants, as witnesses, and
as jury member s to
participate actively lrl the pros-
ecution of o f f i c i a l COi""
ruplion," said the National
A.dvisory Commission on
Criminal Justice Standards
and Goals.
e Bank Robber11
BU'ITE. Mont. (UP!l -
Robbers surprised three Wells
Fargo guards ., they opened
a bank vault and escaped wllh
$140.000.
Bars to Cut Lights
SAN FRANC!Sco (AP) -
The borne ol toplm and bot-
tomless night club acts will
be a 1itUe darker this week
in deference to the energy
crisis.
The large;ilritlianily·lit neon
signs for six Broadway night
clubs will be turned olf at
a news conference Tuesday,
publicist Da.vey Rosenberg
said, with only smaller signs
left on. But be admltted the
move wasn't ·au conservation-
oriented. ·
•1 think it's good business,
good public Rlations and good
ecology,'' he said.
The clubs will aave about
40 percent on their Pacific
Gas and Electric Co. bills and
on maintenance although only
Gov.Reagan
Off to Asia
the "big overhead flickering
rotating lights" and the larger
signs will be darkened,
Rosenberg said.
For the first 11 JJ10Dths o!
the year, the clubs' electric
bills ran to fl3,600 with
aoolher fl2.SOO going for
maintenance, he said. The
clubs spent a total of $142,000
to put up the signs.
Liz Taylor
To Undergo
Examination
"Hold it right there,'' one
of the bandits shouted as Ille
guards opened the vault at
the First Metals Bank ' Satur·
day. The thieves loaded the
18 sacks ol money into a LOS ANGELES (UP!) -
stolen car .and escaped. 'The . Gov. Ronald Reagan and hi~
car was recovered a few hours wife Nancy left Sunday on
later, police said. a tlklay trip to promote
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Actress Ellzabeth Taylor. ls
scheduled to undergo three
days of tests at UCLA Medical
Center to determine -whether
she needs exploratory abdom-
inal surgery, her press agiint
says.
e Jrbfa Deaths Ameri can exports to Asia. . Reagan Is acting as Presi-
-·BELFAS'l"(UPl) -Securi ty
llOU1'COS aaid today Northern
Ireland's ftve weekend klllingS
could mark the beginning of
an attempt to wred< the prov-
ince's fledglinlo co a I it ion
;government through violence.
dent Nixon's special emissary
and the federal government
is paying for the t r i p ,
Reagan's aides-said. He left
In a presidential jet to confer
with· oUlclals in Singapore,
indonesia and Australia.
The 4l·year-old actress, who
is reported to have complained
of severe stoma ch cramps,
was scheduled to be admltted
today, the press agent said.
She was released from the
Scrlppo"Cllnlc In La Jolla, two ' ·
weeks ago after undergoing
a week of tesls there.
Press agent Donna-Quinn
said &inday that if surgery
Is required, it will probably
be performed Thursday.
THE STORE THAT BROUGHT LOWER PRICES
TO THE BEACH AREA
PHARMAC.Y
WE· QUOTE PRICES
. QVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME
-CH.ICI TMnl 5UHl IALI IPIC•-.u-'"'" lltt. ' ow ... Prld ~rm
100 VITAMIN "C" TAILETS, JOO MG ••••• ••···•••• $1.91 -1.lt 119
TAMPAX 40'1, R•t· or 'up•r ••• •••••••• •• •• ,, •••• • 1.9) l.4J •
COLGAT£ TOOTHPASTE. 1 ••· ••.•••••••••• ••••••• l,IJ 11¢ 71c
IRUT )J SPLASH.ON Aft•r Sha"'• 7 01 ••••• • •• •• •• • 2.50 2.ll 1.59
2700 l Coast Hilhwav. at femleaf. Cm 'del Mar
' • •
..
DAILV PILOf S
MISed Reaeti.ont •
Nixon':s Ener·gy Plan Eyed
\
By Tbe Associated Press
PrWclent Nixon's proposed
ban on Sunday g ... line sales
drew sharply dlllering reao-
ttons lrom Northern California
service station owners today.
There was no Immediate
protest from San Francisco
area statioo operators, many
of whom already are closed on_ Saturday night and Sonday. -
But in the tourist-minded
Lake Tahoe area where the
ski season is just getting
wider way, many station
owners were angry and con-
cerned.
"You're talking about my
bread and butter," aald
Gordon Nichols, a Texaco
owner at South Lake Tahoe.
"1 don't think anybody up here
will go along 'with tt volun·
tarily, not if they have the
gas."
"To depend on just weekday
business would be murder,"
added another Texaco dealer,
Paul Quilici.
F.d. Tuhey, a Sbe11 station
operator in Tahoe City, said:
"We'll try it. All our business
depends on tourists but we'll
probably do all right. We get
'Empty' Gun Kills
El Toro Marine
I
·'
. ,. \
• •
DON'T WAIT! CALL NOW!
To help you enjoy the Holidays Gloria Marshall
.orters her Christmas Certificate to apply toward
your lovely new slimmer figure. ................. ··$2.D ~· ............. . : :·~ .. Qtbr·i~tma~ Qtert.ift~~t·e.. .. " -~ :
• • ;; namt~~~~~~~~~~~~
: : ~luerttp ::mollar ~bristmas ~ertificatt
• • • • to apply tottJartl your Gloria ftfarslu1ll P.rogra1n. : : . . On1Ctrtllle.1t,.1penon l•~lmNOV.30,1973 • • 1~•~ ...................................... J: . ~· ............................................ .
. -.. _ .. ' THE GLORIA MARSHA!L METHOD -* per1onall1ecl attention * semi-prlYale facllltles
*no pill• or shots *no disrobing
*no muscle bullcllng exerci1e1 *no starvation diets --............ ~ ,.;,~-;.:
The Gloria Marshall meihod is pleasanl. Yoiir r'isutts are
achieved through a program of nutritional guidance and
Individually designed firming and toning techniques. Be-
cause /ndlvldusl figure problems differ. your ;esults may H dilfererit than. those achieved by someone else .
FIGURE CONTROL SALONS
NEWPORT . BEACH THE CITY-ORANGE
~ ~OJ'ACJFIC COAST HWY.
PHONE: 642-3630
59_1RAZILIA SOUTH
PHONI: 997.cJ21 I
Call llOW for d1mon1fr1tlon Ind tlgura 1111/yl/1. No o~!lg1tlon
•
so little gas anyway l already
clooe on meet Sundays."
A Greyhound Bus uries ex-
ecutive predicted the proposed
55-mile-per-hoUr ~peed limit
for buses "will, make our
vehicles use more gas. 11
He said the buses are tuned
to run best between 60 and
65 m,p.h. Recent tests found
buses consumed 9.5 percent
more gas at 50 m,p.h. than
at 65 m.p.h., he said.
The speed change also would
require extemive schedule
changes since current arrivals
and departures are based on
For the woman who cares, ..
' an average spec.-'<! or 60 m.p.M,
he added.
The President'• plan t11,~
hlb~ outdoor Christmas TighL•
also could darken a.?larfn
C.Olmty couple's a tl'ii u al
Yuletide display.
"\Ye're on the fence," said
Charles Stltham, who6e family
creates a Santa's workshop
outside their Mari n wood
home. "We're going to check
the neighbors and find out
what the public opinion is." ·
He said they may shorten
~e hours that lights burn~
or erect the dis play three days
later than usual.
Do Something Different
fur the Holidays! .
'· .
'' Alll4nlt$ tf
t uHttnticlty 11• 11 IHI i~ notlltlllt Oll1(t,"
t<J haren't me1 a woman yet,
whose tlgure I couldn't lmp rort."
I
•
..
\ ..
' .
• DAD.Y PILOT EbITORIAL PAGE .. ' I ~ , "; <I •• ., . . 'I • .. -· ..
Optimistic '
•
Die,el fuel shortages nolwithstandlpg, ,the Orange
County Transit District is proceeding with comprehen-
sive plans for _expanding bus service throughout the
county.
These include the purchase. of 63 new buses by
next April, to augment the 48 now in ..service, and e.x•
tension of bus routes to Huntington. Harbour, Laguna
Hills, West Newport, Monarch llay an,d San Clemente.
where in between.
However, it's a safe bet that if the Edison people
or the Atonl!c Energy Commission haq had the good
se nse to announce on Oct. 21 that the pjAnt would be
closed for minor repaii;s there probably wouldn't have
been anywhere near the fanfare and speculation that
was sparked-by the delay.
District directors also have agreed to lease interim
operations and maintenance quarters in Garden Grove
pending completion of a new head,quarters in 1975, and
~.;xpend $284,270 on a thief.proof fare colle~ction sys-
And the Al;C's failure to comply with the law that
says re-ports on the San Onofre operatlon--must be made -
available f<>r 'public inspection at the San Clemente JI.
brary could . only stimulate further concern.
Whether it was an oversight, misguided public rela-
tions or deliberate concealment, the credibility gap has
been further widened. This complex system will provide fare "es on
the buses which record the value of coins and depos.it
them in a vault, along with an automated coio,e ractor
to unload, sort and tally the far'es entirely by m chine.
Und,er present fuel allocation regulations, the
OCTD would ,receive only one-fourth of the diesel fuel
needed to keep the buses running. But district officials
are confident the government will look favorably on
providing transit districts with ~Ufficient fuel in order
to cut down us~ of private cars,
~
Snoopy • Ill the ·Act
Sometimes the .best intentions go astray. Now the
popular cartoon character Snoopy is in the official dog ..
house.
·-~~~....,..~-·---. •*7 I,.,.
Ni1clear Credibility Gap
It· all started when.· artist Charles Shultz donated a
cute ·sketch · of the little canine from his Peanuts strip
for use as the official symbol of the govei:nment's cam·
---paign-to-consetve-tµe . ' ,
Much bas been said and written about credibility
gaps in recent times, but officialdom at all IeVels seems
unable to get the message.
Last week Rep. Les Aspin (D-Wis.) received a let-
ter from the White· House con-sumer consultant with in-
fonnation on or~fring stick~rs with the Snoopy picture
from a Kansas .City ~rinting firm at a price of $47.72 per
·thousand for 10,000. ·
The' latest blooper was waiting a full month to re-
veal the shutdown of the San Onofre nuclear generating
station near san Clemente following a problem which
officials insist was "minor,"
Since the whole field of nuclear power is a mystery
to the layman, there's no way for the average person
to judge Crom techniCal description of the turbine "vi·
bration" incident wheth~r it was m!nor, major or some-
Top Brass Shuns
J ,_ -
Fuel-saving-Flap
WASHINGTON -To save critical
fuels, President Nixon has called upOO.
his fellow An1ericans to turn down their
thermostats, "That means ip lb.is room,
too," be said solemnly.
He also cu t back the allocations of
jet fuel for aircra!t and asked governors
to reduce highway speeds to 50 iniles
(JA~ ANDERSON)
declared on national television that
"energy has been too cheap" in the
United States, Gasoline is $1.35 a gallon
in Italy, h'e remarked, in an obvious
hint that American motorists shou1d be
paying more for -tbeiT gas.
' .
Aspin, who m~tains the identical stickers can .be
bought in . Washinilon, D.C. for $30 a thousand, now
accuses the administration consumer expert of "push-
ing overpriced goods on the American public." The con·
sumer exoert says this is nonsense because the stickers
will be distributeed fr~e to consumers by utility com·
panies .
~r?Jt1FP.,
'Slow do~ tu5,0,iella! Do~;ty~u kn.ow fhere's a fuel shorta~i,' Snoopy. reclining on his doghouse, was not avail-
able for comment. ' 0 \ • • ' I ' ' '
Dear
Gloo1ny
Gus
\Vhy is 90 percent of the material
in Gloomy Gu_, (like the rest of
· the paper) IlegatiVe, radical, left.
winr comments ~a;p~ Ol:lf great
country and the .adminiStration?
KING
' (Maybe my name has something
to do wilh it. 'GUS) . . . I
011111mr a. «fll-'I .• ,. 111llmlntt W
rMd.,. W .. Mt llfffllll'll'f NllKt ntt
vi"• of tbt MWtNIN'I'· S;ll!l<'.d Your "' PffVt '' oi.omy ~ O.llY Piiot.
'
Ir • • _,;. . -
' : . : • !
CAIRO -In a private talk with the 1 1 This ,time, Sad~t's, Courtship "Of.:the
British and French ambassadors · one King, whose oil reserves ~ , une-day~after.~the Oct . s war started,-Presi-. , E\'., '.t. NS. NQ.·'"' .l v_ _, qliilfed national · power, , has-cemented
dent Anwar Sadat gave 3 careIUl deflni.. l'J., 0-1'A . the Egyptian-Saudi alliance, brlnglhC,lnto
tion of his war aims: first, a short ad-•· _ , ljeing somehlng .apProachinc ·~~
vahce into Israeli-occupied Sinai follOwed : , . . .,.. . dream or ,Arab unlty. It. w ~ u l.'d tic.
by defensive action By . cqntrasf{ Sadat , is ma'nifesU,_Y. !oolhardy to· prediet ·that this uriify ·:trill .. ·
to hold his position; ~ashamedly, bo~geo1s,. non -.revolu· ,outlast , tl)t nexr p~ of, ~-,~.
next, a ceasefire ; t1onary and Western tn habit and but it exists ln 'rare form tOday.!Falsal,j
and fiilally, diplom· tboutt:ht: characteristics quite apparent · \':°hoke oil has more-useful ·c1out· than;
acy. ~ the rurrent . criSis., Last. year ·he · Americ'a's nuclear arsenal, is pla'Yiric the !
"We could go on kicked. the ~~s1an~ out or h~ country, leading ro!e. , . • f
fighting forever 1f then mten!i!1ed h15 courtship of the · · , , · · •
we bad to " Sadat Arabian.King, staffed in 1971. . IT WAS FAISAL who stro,.ty "!'mil
'd "b ' do • • ·• , Sadat to get rid of the , 14,lm, &mit sru • ut "'e n t , THAT CAl\.fPAIGN culminated :in a military adviser! last ,~ arld; ,It~
per hour. After·
wards, he showed up
late !or a dinner hon-
oring his \•:ife Pat
and cracked:, "l'm
sorry I'm late. I
could drive only, 50
miles an hour."
The truth is
that th e President
-and his aides haven't
mE TAXPAYERS, of coorse, pay
for Morton's gasoline. As a concess1on,
he has given up his While House Chrysler
and now gets around in a govemment-
owned Plymouth -chauf!eur~ven, of ·
course.
penonaUzea w9rldwide', flight service for
jWlketing congressmee and o t b e r
aS50rled VIPs.
Throughout the government, in·
deed, the bureaucrats are burn_ing mote
gas than ever. Government automobiles
bUmed ,34 million more ~gallons of
gasoline in 1973 tlian in 19n. And despite
'the oil squeeze, the projected increase
for · 1974 is an additional 30 million·
ga)J~ inc~ease.
gweatnt ~: Wocwnwanltan~ . :'I • rare, displily of=es . I : Greeting -the ~aisal who . predicted,, ~rlgl1 ';d It
........ u . ; ~nn·histri ·• ... u .. i thA -dell •i:r • ..:.....1 ·~'f'i'i',\~,..._. back by diplomacy: U we can't, we will -'···· .. , p_,., ,"'"'"-~ ... ~.!Ill._,~--.""~~ ·OU!.-lhat . "" . --.. have to fight." , .. of ... ·.""1:, lie, ,µ;e liJl':ol-Filsall< White · HDUS<; po11cy fOM· ta~ Jl'O-
The tr st 'th th I t G I nose and his foreb<ad-the highe91 ·muk fsr .. J to somelhi111l •'09er to eV~· con a WI e a e ama of Arab ~ • ' • r.! • _..., F11 I I' Abdel Nasser was stark : no threat to . "P..-~··~ . · . . ~ ,That erro~ stren~henoo l .• •. 1 t
"drive Israel into the sea" typiCal-A few ~Y~1-·were.i__!aised ~~ deterrrun.allon -n_!O give Sa,dat What· ~
Nasser hyperbole before the!~ six-<jay but the gesture maile eiactlYffie point nadly ~<ied~ m \ne-present. "'I'll!' thej
been practicing the austerity they have
been preaching. Be drafted hi• public ap-
peal in balmy Key Biscayne, FJa •. where
the wann sun kept the temperatures
comfortable. His luxury jet burned 8,000
gallons of fuel to make the round trip.
The following weekend, he helicoptered
to his Camp David retreat, which is
only about an hour Crom the Whi~e
House -at 50 miles per hour, The round
trip took an estimated 140 gallons of
fuel. · The President has made a few minor
concessions to the .fuel pinch. On his
trip to Florida last weekend, he ordered
his jet to rcdu,ee speeds from 525 miles
ptt hour to 474. and he cancelled his
oonnal back-up plane flight. His Irish
Setter, King Timahoe. who is a difficult
helicopter passenger and used. to . follow
the President to Camp DaVld 1n the
back seat of a cha uf feur-~riven
Hmousine. mw shares his car with low·
ranking White House aides.
FOR A. f\1AN WHO has devoted a life-
time to striving to reach the White House,
Richard Nixon spends less time there
than any past president. But a
spokesman told us the President has
no plans to curtail his travel.
The men around the President have
also displayed little spirit of sacrifice.
Ene,.gy czar John Love, who wants his
fellow citizens to drive slower and drive
less, is Ylhisked aroW1d Washington in
a Chrysler Nev• Yorker Crom the White
House motor poo1. His chauf'£eur picks
him up at his home in+ the morn ings
And deposits him at his doorstep at
night.
lnlerior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton
When he flies; the six-£oot-seven·inch
1.forton goes first class, cow1esy of
the taxpayers -because he is too
big, he complains,, "to fit into a coech
seat." He also makes me of Interior
Department airplanes , but only, said
a spokesman, "when his ~dyle is
screwed up."
The Pentagon has also made a big
show of reducing temperatures and cut-
ting back fuel «:onsumption. But this
hasn't cramped the lifestyle ·of the
military brass. The Pentagon still
operates its sleek fleet of chaufleui:·
driven cars to ferry arou"'1 the t>rass
and their bigwig friends: ...
THE DErt.1AND for VIP limousine
service is so great, in fact , that the
Pentagon is forced to rent cars to sup-
plement its motor pool.
Nor has the military curtailed its
Wicks
DOWN 1'HE UNE, the bureauctats
apparently.' take their· example from the
President who has his own fleet ot
five jetliners, '15 helicopters, 11 Jetstars,
23 limOusines aild a yacht.
Technically, the· aircraft are owned ·
by the ·-ritilitary · which has asked
Congress .for money to buy 17 new
choppers io' replace those now in use.
Two m'ote·jwnbo comrriwlications planes
are al$o being outfitted and the White
House is shopping for four more medium·
range jets.
WHEN ·THE PRESIDENT isn't using
his personal aif' force, the planes are
routinely taken aloft for test flights
so they will also be in top condi~ion
when he calls. Usually, a back-up plane
and a press plane accompany the Presi·
dent on . all , major flights , carrying
everything from the hot line phone to
the First Lady's hairdresser.
These Boeing 7rn jetliners each con-
sume about 2,000 .gal!ons .Qf fuel per
hour. A round-trip to San_ Clemente,
in other words, uses up 20,000 .gallons.
J! all three . presidential . planes make
the flight, as they normally do, tl;>e
fuel consumption adds up to a staggering·
60,000 gallons every time the President
decides to spend~ a few days at San
Clemente.
Meanwhile, Niion has lowered the 'tem-
perature ,at the· ·White House · 'Where . his
staU works while he is at San 'Clemente
or Key Biscayne.
True Education Must Teach Values
l am invited to take part in perhaps
more Conferences artd 1 syr:nP.Qsia ..on •
"education" than any other subject, or
all others put together. And m.ost of
them turn out to be a monumental
waste of time.
Whenever I hear the "'O rd "education"
intoned partentously,
l recall the late
Adlai Stevenson'! Jlt-
Ue tale about a
prisoner 'vho said to
his cellmate: "I'm
going to study and
improve myself. -
and when you're stUI
a comm on thief, r'l i
be an embeztler.''
"Education." as most people use the
\!.-Ord, is meaningless. You can "educate"
younelf to be a better embez:zler, or
safe-eracker, or despot, or whatever else
you deaire to be. And, Just as obviously,
tile better (and more ildocated) you itt to be in such tbingi, the worse
a penon you become.
' TUE UNSKJUED sale-cracker Is no
.-~ ......... -.
SYDN'EYJ.HARIUS
threat : the skilled one is. The bumbling
embezzler is just a joke; the educated
one is the problem. The tnore you learn
about what you·sbouldn't know=<>r isn't
worth learning-the less you fulrill the
human role. Indeed, the specialist or
any sort (even in useful knowledge )
is more often than not deficient as
a citizen and a participating member
ot the community.
Education, as Robert Hutchins has
been reiterating-ror 40 years, is educa-
tion about values, or It is nothing.
It may be schooling, or leamlng, br
trainlng, but It is not education in any
full, deep or meaningful sense or the word. ·
Now the rub liere b !hat, Jn the
past, those classical educators who
ur.dentood that values were what educa·
lion was all about were not content
to -teach Hab;>ut'.' · .values-tbe7 ·Went '.furlher-~mC neil to 11iipos<.'theil"ow~
values upon their students. This is why
such education got a bad name·: because
it was absOlutist and authorltariM, anC:l
'\>resupi"1 that the teachers and the
text~ h~d'all the' right answers f~rever.
TEACHING "ABOUT" va1ues means
opening the minds of young people-and
older ones, tocrto the alternative value-
systems of ,differing thinkers, and ex· pooil\il !hem to fresh winds of doctrine. ·
~h education should show people llow
·to lliinlr, not tell them what to think. It
should have ,enough confidence in their
ulUmate judgiilent to present all value-
systems, (lnclJKliDg those !hat deny !here
are eny'realvMuts~at all). ·
..But.J1¥ DU1tter,.!)ow badly values were
faught-'OI' , Imposed by the r I g i d
mo(allsts of Ille pMI, the fact rtm•ins
that an educatiOllal system ooncerned
only or largeiy with fact! anil date•
and processeo cannot engage the heart9
~ ,mlpds of YO<Ulg people-nor, most
Importantly-tum · the111 ' Into clUzens
worthy to liv~ in a democracy.
J
hi h Sad t . t•...t..A told Sadat wahted : that the peninsula Arabs oil option. 'l war w c , one a m luldlC. , us and he Medft 1.-, ..... i..-t--~c1·f1 "Sadat' hm'"t · 1.r..w. the C'.-• ..:.. canal accurately, "cost, us so mu<;h." >t , erre.neC1.11 ru ~~· so 1 • s ~ 1 o s.,.,'. ... ~ • ,
But the , most significarit contrast ferent m cbatacter and history, must move ~t. a 1e~ ~~·.bold' and~ pln
between the two Egyptian 1eaders .1s hold tbgether: · ' · the · rest · ~t diP.k?macy and ' ~iir'
.Sadat's·briUiant courtship o! King Faisal Likewise, when Libyli'S r8dical leader, weakened 8Y ~ ·masterful _ lY,,
of Saudi Arabia. If Sadat is · to come Col. Moammar Khadafy; canie : here counterStro~ thil pu~ Israeli forces ·C!ft1
dose . to achieving his goal of "getting severnl weeks 1 before . the "'.31'." .in a . the west> s1de'1 of, -the canal .• But ~ ~i
our land back,'' the reasOn Will''be frenzied .~fort -to 'fO(:Ce his union \Yilh p~\stlU hol<l&: force the v,~ .. to.eome
his clarity in understanding how essential Egypt, ·Sadat · was 'Co~venit;'ntlY. ,in ~ lfh!~ ;'OJ. ~sra~l -:r ·J'eP,OSll'SI.'~!
Faisal's backingistohisownJ>UIWse .. Riyadh. 'Khadafy1s, .~mfiture was · ·o ~dDJ\· ~1?~8 8edi"b~I .. tee , • t3ken b&e as an ' amusing jo~e-just .,new ~~·.Wui C! . ~ ~i NASSER exuded charisma and spouted. rlght'·for· iri·'up6tait.· · WOriina: ~lb . wayS:-"against .£,ypuan,
revolutionary rhetoric which alw~ys , . · -· · Jnvas.ion.~ot1 Israel (~hich .has, not -~J>' i
played the grand theme of an Egyptian BEFORE 'THE 19!67 iwat, 1n, aootrast,, pened .s1rwe 1949) and lsrae\i -in•Jl.Slon ~
~ade leading the Arab dea~h strqggle ~.er ,had 1-is best ·.divisions in ~e,m~ of Egypt (which has· lu!ppepect ·twioe) l
agamst Israel. He . talked himself _~d supporting ,:Commuru~backed radiOl"ls' ,,_ ...:and tzy.peace·. · -. · •~
his COWltry into deep trouble, feeding 'against the royalists allied With Fats.ill.,., Bui Sadat may once ·. again ··~; un-!
the skillful propaganda maw of his ' lJttle ·wonder .that.when Israet .. la\mehM· <terestimating ,Jsrael's . iQDuence ··'1VfSJ
enemy in Tel Aviv. With enemies 'ljlte i~ inYasion -1 smashed Nasset's: ~i Washiiigton, a subject for a s~Utnt t
Nasser, Israel scarcely needed friends. force few tears wtte·Sbed by Faisal:-· ,' co1wnn. , ' · i 'i •
.. , j :. • i· . .. . I
The Great. Automobile. Ban: .• .... . .. . . ' .. . )
•j ••
. The fiendish scheme or the Arab coun-• " tries to deprive America of its desperate-
ly needed oil had a drastic effect on
the Nation's culture and economy. ART .HOPPE .
By.the spring of 1974, the Government
ilad nb choice but to invoke a complete d • • · f . :
. " . ,
ban on private auto-o. . · _ b"I , ,In f~et in ,som, · lamillesol the : ban m~~ e~lturai-snoi:k created occasional .~shes. .. " $tiOn. "Imagine, OUr 'son; ln'.fng, has· l~arped to the country -to. walk!" a proud Mrs. WUbur Wasp
long desCribed as 1'a toJd btr' bridge club. "And tiets .. only ruition on wheels'' 18 ,. ·
-was staggering. (,~!· 'I ' '
Indeed, a few less '111USI SOF!', flabby Americans had
sta61e members of 'll' ·~ce '•bu£ tii "lialk;· roller. 'sl(liie
the society failed to • O, .blci;;le to ·get where they """ aolng. ·
survive... . In six 'JllODt.bs they . bad ·Jost. -a • gross
"What I can't stand;" screa~ total -Of"ode nillllob .tom .0£-total grills
a distraught housewife, bci!lg ~id. flib. · · .; , · ...
across New York's desetted Fifll!. Wltb@ill 1J!i191' thflr .. !'0$'tumed .whJte • Aven~e "lo if!. ambulance ~Y sympa~~~, Uil 1bllr ,i;mo',~Wllal an al •
•ttendants,, 1S,(hi1.dealenmg ~! oiatus S)'ll!boli. It '""'"lll!l't'.'!f to loll
And in lps Angeles, the '1tbld of ,rtcb Ci-ol!i~•ond, a_nif .democnitte.'
94-year-<ild Elbert Quimby snapped when · splrjt mpi ,~ lalllr.r~ IQ the· liulel
the life-long resident or the; ck\l!nlOWll ~ the N:YJil cciliW..ll<in Jiourlihefj -
a·rea looked o~t his .windo',I( ~LJnOmlng ~Once ·again: ...._ • ,
i\lld !or the first tune clear!S> aw tile _..,.;, 1"111'_.. IWned.11$> ..,,..,
disposable inCome, lht 'economy ~ed.
~ A!flerica alrnrn;t. overnieht ~e
the lapd, Ifs .FOl!Odlng Fatb<(S :had
dJ:eamcd b,f ·-a nation of Jean, l'Q~;
alert, cl .. r-eyed , pro>pei:Ous; delMcl'iti~t citizens, · · i 1 ·' ·:
The lesson wasn't , 106t .on , tbe
Maitermlnds of the Kre'!l]ln; 'oo"!QQll'
they. 'Fbllowin1 l\loscoW"1 .. ~ '"t-h
unsnarlable ·traffic jam and 6511t anioct altlt; they called Jn <lie Arati leideia. ·
"¥ou· want more clesporately. •...sod
oil?" asked the Arab Jeaders. 11 • ••
_"No," .~al4 lhe Mistenninda, "we1w1Dt yoo to take what we're gett!Jir.·llld
sell it to the Ameriaans.!' . , ~; ·
• 1n 11.-monlhs; ·America retumlid to
nor,mal.
'" ' . ' '
~--OAllY PILOT
• ' ' ........ j ...
City Hall 14 blocks away. Bill despite' ~r~.-18 · ,,,.;J;·bow~· .,i.;.;r.m. the absence of horns, ohrleldng tires, . • • .. wl!lle .... , .• ~.. '
roaring engines and gas _fumel, m01t ~ -~~Pua<!-,'~~ .• ,
Americans managed somelio'lt I'! make cooverted 'Into~.., teonil' ciMli1c _ ' 8JSUriD "'5.·=" ~ , .. ...,. . thus , J , ., ·~·~ _,, l ge I
Q wait of eiliy r1 mJmitea. In >111:der: to notes I • p,. cour~: •the ~fec!J 61 the '~
II I were. to 'II)' to read, much 1 .... ! :.,~~=~~-
answer, au the attacks made oa me. OWnenl of lllfo• repiflir • .ttopt·1 went
t6111 lhop might as well he cloeed for ~ wtllch wordhetn U,.; ey"'1>atliy
aey_olber buslness,,.nlo the very bes~ o( their · lmmedllie families . -'If rio J know ho,_. -the very ,belt I can , one.-, ,., ,, · .~
and 1 mean-10 keep-doJn8 • unt1r i :.i.....:.:_ • • , _
the end If the end , brin&t me out ~ T,1IE '11111ER hilid,'<,_.,_ !oimot
au right, what is said a1alnit me -·t r~-1,~• ur a ilooi! •111Q. a ~th · amount to apythlng. If the'lend 'bt'lnp · iii dr ujili~p. AM the Gp...,....I
me out ,wrong, ten· an1els awearlni 1 ""ved ·liO,lloaa on ·hiChWIY • ..-. llllCI
was right would make no difference. , ~. '1llPlnl ,for tu· cuta." ,.,..,..
Alll'HI• U..· Wltlt tide 8llnt • lea In· • perm!
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·Portrayal
··.• -
Gold sald. But most members
of the movement feel It
presented a "hideous kind of
Imbalance." They particularly
objected to the line: "Show
me a 'happy homoseXOal and
I'll show you a gay corpse."
Nor did the television
breakthrough, "That Certain
Swnmer," fjnd comP.1ete aP:'
proval. Some gay organiza-
tions pralaed It, othera felt
"its compromises were of-
fensive."
Gold cited. the homosexual
father'! line "I don't know • whether I'm sick or not," and
added: "If the character had
been black, he wouldn't have
said, 'I do.n't know whether
l 'm lazy and ahiftless or not.' ''
He pralsecl a "Hawkins"
show for showing diversity by
depicting three kinds o f
homose,ruals but criticized the
murderer's line: "It's terrible
to be old and unloved."
Gold said, "Would the same
line hav.e been used if the
character had been heterosex-
ual?"
THE ONLY films oo which
there is apparent agreement
about accurate depiction of
homosexuals are ' 1 S u n d a y
Bloody Sunda.y 1 ' and
"Cabaret."
"We intend to keep monitor·
ing the film and television
product," said Gold, "and we
would . li_ke to work with the
industriea to help find ways
to present positive images."
WEATHER,
YESIREE
CANBERRA, Australia
(AP) -A wealher forecast
for the· Australian capital
said: "Canberra can exi>eei
the rain to continue increasing
' or decreasing a-little, or re-
maining unchanged."
--.-... Christmas Spirit Begins At Home
' " I
• I
"40 Miles of Christmas Smiles" could begin at
your d!><>r this· year. The Daily Piiot and Orange
. County Coast Association again ,will sponsor
• . . : the areawide holiday decorating contest with .. o· .. . prizes fi>r ·eest Residence (first, second,
·' , .i ' · ·tliirCI' placffi, Best Commercial (first,
· · · · • '• . . s~cind; third plates with all non-residen·
Clip ttie co.l\pon ··: " ·~A · · tial .·el\lr-ies competing together) and
-.
' be19w ~T! send i\ in as ·. . ·. ~."!', · , j .. .,Ch~i's1masvllle, 1973 . ( the one place in
a pron;i\~· to. h!llP your._ -. ~· the Orange.Coast area that exudes the :~a~~r'rg!°~o".i~h~~~a·~bls'' , -~ ~-· ·, [no.st, "fii'eling of Christmas" to . · " , . · . judges). . • Enter now or get the year. I you· iire-(part ·\>I ·anJ ··• \ . 1 .; :spo.11soringagency in :yourcomm· organizatfo~·itiai.could'be a spoh· -'. \ , 'Unity to enter.
sor (a. "homeowners' associ·a'lion, " 'P chamb!l~ o\ d1mm~rc,. iu.n1~r _Gti~m:_.. . '. . •
i·ber,, women's: dub, .etc:)', ~~·in -.a~~ ·\· .. · · ~;"
cbupon lo· s.,ay. yo.u Wa!)t :!,q·paitfoJ.l>~t~: ·; ·~ · H~lp wi~en :the:, "40. Mlles.01 -,Pir.istma~ · \~!," · · ;'.·
S 'le '' I :. , • ... . . • ,. , ml So ·< I ' · .•. ,. ,,· ! • t " •, ' •
• ' -" I ' I " '' •• ' • ) '1 /'' I '
N.oi:e:. 'l'~t;'.:~ ,,_,11e~'.'1Jyiiges1wllJ .bfse · i', '', ·......l ,
.. tl)eir~cie,elslons on. ~a)1im;.ap,~~ance~-"' ·"I"""'""" '
9! \lje '11trl~S/ 11ga~dle,ss.q.t .)oca1 r!l,l!is;: ·'I.; ',,\ · ~· :
and f!(lllci,~s ·rt!jl,r.dfn!l:'.ii54!:of,.ele·ctt!lj1)Y. • •'. ,
· in holid'IY detj:!~a'tipns lo ypur ar~a .. ; · . . · • ' . . l . ' . . . .... .• ' . . ' . . ' '.. . .-'• . \ . ,,_ ...... -.~ .. ----·-~~.~ .......... ,.. .. \,~: . '• •,f .. ,· ·~·-'.,• ...... •.,,,•
,ves; I want·~ ~me-(of busif'lisS, c"{(f~t!~ st~1,1~c:)td ~ I · . • ·
.. 1\ld98d ::.;"'!:'· .. :-"''' ... 31:.·~"''~·.~r;~~tr:~v:,~ I \. \I'' name .. "' 1 , s~:, . r1 ~~ :". 1~·~--s ~ . . ~r• 1 ,. •{! , . llstt,d ·~oW. I '"""'rsta!t<1•i~lng\WJll;bt ,~ ..... ,p .. ~. , • .
)lofr1n<e o1.t~ls-.try·dur1119<ioy1tght llOUrs 11n•Dtc. IS.-16 I . .~ 1·· ;r-11 ... ···.~ \ .. :i ... :·~··l 1', ... .._·· ............ ·""" .. ,,, l ~,; '., 1';• ,-... /\',.~~ °l'•""'lo\'~ •• -f~ ....... :!'ll4 .o , ~.r-·-,A ...... ..tL "<
r1 .. · . N•""'········~····~: ............ : .... : .. :: ....... ~·'. .... : ....... '.J:: .. \ .... 1 ~ ... ~ .,. ::.. . .. · , t ' I • \ • , • , ..,, .
! .. - . ' . ~ .. ; ., . . ~ -. ...,. . A~ ................ ,.~·· .. ·~· .. :-......... ·-·~ . ..,., .......... ,M ......... .
• '.\ ~· . . '' • , .. ' I ·. " -• :t -clty .................. : .......... -v······•·······:zip .............. ~; ..
•• ' ~ 4 ' \ ' • ' ' ... •n.. ~ . •' l \ • • • j" • I v.Y t"""" .. ·······················~-···1 ······· .. 1 ·~···................ l .
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•CMtANGl COClilJy . ·• tAs$0CIATloN . •
• A#.• ' DAILY PILOT
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' OllANGJ .. co~T·~l~Y ,tlOT
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Monday, NOYembtr· 2b, 1973 DAILY PILOT 7 : ~--'"'-~~~'--~~~~~~~~~~~--Lv
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· YARDLEY THINKS · · · ' '. -. I •
YOU'RE THE f.IRE ·
An .intoxicoting gift. Rich os burning in<ense, · •
exciting os o new flame . ·Y ordley's . . · .' ': '
Skin lnscents, You 're The Fire ... the h'eat, o'f 'her ·-.
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skin will release the see~+.! For ~ the most ,. ; ; ~ ~ ~· · .. ~ •
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impoij,?J nt :w6r..QMf pn )tour ist~!~'.· ."' --~·!1:.~.:~~~.:f; ._ ... -;;:...
Spray col~ne<· 2 o" 3.76; I oz .. 2:75 ·•
Gift set: 2 R oz. cologne f;lus boby po'wder, 7i2S •
Co smetics, 17
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THE BROADWAY
-'..,k ~N .,
,_ -7 ·~·-'91
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ANAHEIM NEWPORT t HUNTIN6TON tE°ACH
444 N. E11,ljd 1714-) 515·1121 •7 Fa1hic-" hland (7 1•1 644·1212 • 777 7 Edingir Av1l'lii• t714l lt2.Jlll
. O~AN&E, MALL OF ORANGE '' CERRITOS
2300 N, T~1tln Str11t 171 •l 991 · I J 11 500 Lo• C1rri101 Mill 111 Jl 140·041 I
SHOP 9tl 0 A.M. to f :lO P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY-iUNOAY 11 A.M. to 4 P.M • l . .•. . ,
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8 DAILY PILOT Monday, NO'l'tmbfr 26, 1973 .
L.M. Boyd It's Last Call for Alco~ol at Hearings
tainlng to A I c Q b o U c JACOBSON'S BOOK said said the cobaH wai ailded to
Nl!l!D€AR INIURANC£7
•• 7.4949
DON CRAWFORD
17171 l11ch It., HI Male Drive1·s
He Runs
Mating
Business
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -
Drinkers who peer into the
spa'rkling clarity of their
alcoholic beverages may flnd
out what actually goes into
them next month when
legislative hearings resume.
Beverages, Senbe. AlanhaJShort,l;~wooe~a~s~a~ddl1~~t~iv~e~to~~·be<~~r~,8~<oba~~~lt~,:Jenba~~~ne~ce~1~~~1~o~am~a~t:the~~l~op~J"~"~'~cd~"~D~~li~it~;~4~-~"~"~"'· (D-Stocktoo), t c man, .. · ....... -_, ..... --
announced. The committee
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More Impatient
tilaybe Iceland knows more about dealing with Ja•
breakers than any other country. ?.fostly, lt sentences firat..
lime offenders to a "suspended indictment" and plact1
them under "socli.I surveillance." No jail, not yet. More
than haU of these thereafter are never agaln caught In
crime. · 1
\Vbat., you've never heard of an absolutely waterproof
book? Nor bad I. Bui a British
naturalist named Peter Scott aays
he's about to pul ooe out. Called:
"The FiJb Watcher's Guide to Car!J>.
bean Roel Fishel." On polyethylene
paper. He says acuba !cl>otars will
read it underwater.
\Vas none other than the great Sigmund Freud who
claimed that no maniage ls secure until the wife devel·
ops at lea.at aome sort of maternal attitude about her
husband.
Greens and blues make things look smaller. Reds
and yellows make things Jook bigger. Or ao reports a
color psychologist. Coosider thl.s, young lady, when pick·
ing out shoes, belts, bloll!eS, whatever.
' COMMERCIAL
Q. "What does it cost to run a flO.secood commercial
on that TV :show called 'All in the Family'?"
A. About $120,000.
Jt's true that how long you live can depend a:>metimes
on how long your ancestors lived. Take that great inventor
Thomas A. F.dl>on, for instance. He lived to be 14. His
fatber,-to 91. Hls -grandfather,-to--100. His great·grand·
father, to 102. Believe I already told you the best way to
estimate your potential longevity. calculate the average
age at death of your deceased grandparents. That's it.
HORN HONKING
As drivers, men 'are more impatient than women, far
more impatient. The traffic boys found · that out in a· horn·
honking survey. '!'bey inlentionally stalled-a car at inter-
sectiOl)S, repeatedly. Then_ counted the born honlcs. M.ost or the ladies just sat there, waiting calmly. But .• ma-
jority of the malCUllne driven tooted away with large
abandon.
You know bow U-oompnaed·air doors on ,.,..,
buses go "shhh, shbh" when they're oj>ened and clo1ed?
That's why the Jamaicans call tlUCh vehicles there '1chi
chi buses."
Address nzoi! to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Boz 1875, New-
port Beach 92660.
MILPITAS (AP) -For only
$1, Henry Carter will put your
rabbit in the family way .
Carter, 38, nms an artificial
JnseminaUon service for rab-
bits. Despite the animal's
legendary talent for reprod\Jc..
tlon, be aays business ls boom-
ing.
They may also find o.ut why
California drinkers pay more
for their booze than those of
other states.
THE HEARINGS, open to
the public, are to be held
Dec. 4 and 5 by lbe Senate
Select Conunittee on Law Per·
last spring investigated pro-
blems of alcohol abuse.
Testifying on the contenb
of alcoholic beverages will be
Dr. Michael Jacobson, author or the bookie! "Chemlcal Ad·
ditives in Booze," Short said.
Short's announcement said
representatives of the alcohol
industry have aJso been in-
vited to testify.
0 Mosr PEOPLE don't like
to do It,.. Carter said or his
1pecialty, which involves
holding the rabbit down firmly
with one hand and ad·
.mlnlmrlng the sperm with
. the other.
The job usually requires two.
people, but Carter boasls,
'4l'm a on&man show, I do it
all myself."
His main customers are pro-
fessional breeders who sell
rabbltS to laboratories for
research at prices of up to.
$20 for a healthy adult male
and $12 for a female.
One of the
rare pleasures
of Christmas.
BREEDERS CALL o n
Carter because he "takes the
guess work" out of reproduc-
tion.
''They don't have to stand
around and watch the rabbits
mate and then wonder if the
female is pregnant." he said.
"With me, they know. If
a rabbit isn't pregnant after
dealing with me, it never will
be," said Carter, a reprodu~
tive physiologist. "I do each
cne twice."
CARTER SAID he usually
accepts a job only if the client
has at least 30 rabbits he
wantsimpreg.nated .He
charges a standard fee of $1
per rabbit and said he can
impregnate up •o 50 an hour.
He· guarantees the offspring -
of his labors 'have all the
right features to satisiv the
choosy laboratories -sllghUy
red eyes; alert, upright ears;
a deep, smooth ro.at; thick
footpads ; firm, broid but·
tocks, and a perky tail.
Impregnating rabbits is on1y
a spare-time job for Carter.
During the day. he works for
a firm that makes birth con·
trol pills for humans.
U.)W like scotch,}OO'll klYe J&B Rare Scotch.
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••• A PLACE TO FILL YOUR STOCKING
•.• \Vith all the great unique gifts that you have
been thinkini: a bout but wondering where to find.
These different shops present the ultimate in
Jong remembered presents no matter what you desire.
••• A PLACE TO TRIM YOUR TREE
••• Decorate your tree with gifts that show you
really care-distinctive, one of a kind gifts that will
be cherished for years to come. That's what
• Christmas is all about.
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• ..,. A PLACE· TO HAVE SOME FUN
• .. Enjoy your Christma~ shopping this year as you
leisurelrstroll the cobblestone walkways and
,,visit each of the unique shops brimming with ·
.special gifts for spedal P.eople.
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I ON SUNFLOWER BETWEEN l FAIRVIEW AND BRISTOL
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DAILY 10 TO 9,
SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9,
SUNDAY 12 TO 5
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Introducing the
new coast Federal
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sa~ 'tngs we11 pay you the highest interest L W in Coast ri!derals history with rates
I that range from 5X% to 7Y,X.
P ans. Chnu'>t! frun1 five ~.1v1n.:~ pl.ins, designed lu
gi ve ~·nu lhc be~I rt•ltHn for your saving~.
Highest guaranteed rates
Annual Annual Min. -Min.
ralt yield balanct ltrm
7.SOo/o 7.79°/o $1 ,000 4 ycJ r
cert.
6.75 6.98 1,000 2'/i year
cert.
' ·1 yea r 6.50 6.7l 1,000 cert.
S.1S ' S.92 1,000 90-day
bonus account
' Pa ssbook S.25 5.39 no min. account
Federal regulalions require a subs1an1ial
interesl penalty on all cer1if1catc account
withdronvals prior to mJtur ity.
The Insiders Club
Ju~! open·'" accou nt ,1 1 (0,1~1 fo r S 1,000,
and you 'c,1n gel ~pcci,1 1 lo\v ''ln~idcr" prices
• on con~umer good~ ;1nrl ((•rvicN. Ftnm
,1utomob1tes, appliance~. 1urn11urc l u tr,1vcl,
enterrainn1ent"and home dcco ratint;.
for a S1,000accou nt , you ge l fret' lt.1vel rr·s
thecks, money orders, not.!ry ~ervice, note
collections. Af~o free, for ;i minimum S2,SOO
balance," per.;unJI chcckinH accoun1 Jt d
miljOr b.ink, and ,1 SJ!c depo)it box.
saturday hours
Coast offices are open Saturdays, 9 ;i.m. lo
1 p.m.-Wce kdJy;', 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fr idays ,1!1
offices except dQ\VfllO\Vn Los Angeles arc
open to 6 p.m.
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COAST
FEDERAL SAVINGS
We want your money.
And we11 do more for it.
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Huntington Be•ch Office: 91 Huntington Cenlrt (71.i) 8'l7-10~7 • L.A. -'i•in Officf': 'llh !. tltll, (,!J· I }j 1
Con11en ient Offi<~S Throui;huu! C.il1 1or111,1
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Jliilph
thinks
<tone
l>etwee
M the
penter
r·He
board
Arthu
in in
!nedic
·billing
CoUec
: DIE
quest
the
unde
medic
the c
rapid
!he
soluti
action
solur·
1bll wante
In no
With
pcssib
follow
of the
itand
future
8.nd t
reven
Qth
co
trolle
the
He
prese
five
lbal
those
~ se ri
°"'K
H
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the
Su
la
and
lo or
ol
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an ...
qu
a
leg
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:Hospital
Audi.ting
:Approved
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Alter Debate ...
Nohl Ranch Bid
Delayed 3· Weeks
IF TR E SUPERVISORS
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> Mo<lday, N-btr 26, 1973
District SiJt!ahble
Board to 'Sp li t Ch.ildren
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of tllt C.llY f'llot Ii.ft
SANT A ANA -Like modem
day King Solomons, Orange
County School trustees will
decide the fate of children
Thursday, splitting t h e m
between two disagreeing
school districts.
students. This was usually the .decl.!ional and th•
equal to both d~tricts' base decisions probably will make
revenue from the state, but some ramlllff and students
since SB 90, these figures are unhappy."
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DAILY PILOT 8
324 N. NEWPORT BLVD. ,
NEWPORT BEACH ;
642-3766
23 Yeilrs Se.,... Location
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· SANTA ANA -supervisor
Jl.alph Diedrleh of Fullerton
~hinks something Ma to be
!k>ne abo.ut the big deficit
~tween reverwes and costs
"bt the Orange County Medical
I fenter. '·
~NT.A ANA -A decision.on
a request for cancel a lion of the
2.~ Nohl Ranch "8l'ICUI·
tunl p!'eser\'8 bas been put off
uniu next mdnth by lhe Orange
Co.unty Board of Supervisors.
should aUOw thf canceUaUon
tt could set a precedent for
the handling of the remaining
80,000 acres or county land '"--------~ Under state Jaw, the county
board is the mediator when
a ____student ques_ting a
transfer out of the district
in which he or she resides
is turned down by that
district. ...,
A district 7iith a base
revenue of $500 per child
doesn't want to pay more than
that to educate a student in
a district v;ith a base revenue
• SALES • SERVICE'
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T' He has won approval of the bo d f AT ISSUE IS the can-
t ar 0 supervisors to have cellation immediately of
!\rthur Young and Co. conduct preserve status on the acreage
~n lndependen~ ·a~dit of the-ooutb-oMbe-Sanla-Ana-Qlnyon ~ed1cal center's financial and and. east of the Anaheim city ·~11llng operations, including Unuts. It is a litlte more than ·collections. half of the 4,200-acre Anaheim
Hills development
~ DIEDRICH SAID his re-
ti.uest was made even though
the county has negotiations
underway with UC Irvine
ine.dical school to take over
the center. He called for "a
rapid and incisive analysis of
the problem.s, develo~ent of
solutions and a good deal of
acti~ in implementing the
solutions."
U supervisors allow the
cancellation of the preserve
agreement the Anaheim Bills
corpol'ation has agreed to pay
a penalty of $325,000 In taxes.
Under t h e agricultural
preserve status, a landowner
Is benefiting by having his
property assessed on Its actwil
use rather than its highest
and best use.
in preserve status largely
Irvine -Company property. ac-
cording to county officials.
Jame·s Barisic, vice presi·
dent of Anaheim Hiii.!, bas
argued that the land is
wo,rthless for farming or cat-
tle gra'zing' as it is largely
barren, hilly and short of
natural water. 1
He said if the suprvisors
agreed to cancellation $563,000
would be paid in taxes in
the next seven years rather
than the token agricultural use
tax rate.
Barislc said the county could
be inllch better off
economically if the agreement
is cancelled.
Westminster
Womanlleld
In Fraud
The board also must act
as ~between when two
districts can't come to terms
on the cost of .interdistrict
SANT A A N A A agreements.
Westminster woman accused of lalsely obtaining welfare A SERIES O~ hearings on
funds by slating that ber hus-such appeals has been set by
band had abandoned. her and the board for 1:30 p.m. Thurs-
her family has been ordered day at the cowity Department
to appear Nov. 27 in Orange of Education, 1250 S. Grand
County Superior Court to Ave., here.
answer fraud and perjury The problem arises out or
charges. ~ SB 90, the most recent school
Judge Jam<S Turner set the finance bill.
of s1.ooo, Assistant Oounty tho ''"' .. •• 1!,_ Kid• L;ke to
Superintendent of sch o o 1 s, FINE DIAMONDS " • Fred Koch erplalned. ~ Cl»" ,..,. -_,, !MM
Most county districts have "'' , ... ~ --Ask Andy
been able to agree on ac-l'riiiii:::iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii£-------~-;;;;; cepting the lowest revenueJI
figure, Koch said, but .. we
do have districts who feel they
should receive their (higher)
revenue limit."
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COUNTY OFFICIALS said
they expect trustees to hear
about 12 to 20 cases Thursday.
County Superintendent Ro-
Robert Peterson said the total
amount of money involved -
about $3,000 -"isn't stag·
gering but it does mean an
enormous amount or educa·
tional value to famllles and
students involved."
INTRODUCING-A DYNAMIC, NEW
PHILOSOPHY OF UFE , •• .
CONCEPT-THERAPY
A cornlatlolt of univ1n1I, scientific
prlncipl•1 •• •pplied to hum•ra perJOn·
1lity 1rad it1 --.Cem•t in eo11Klou"'
nns. Join us for • FREE lectu~e, ex•
pl1ining .CONCIPT • THE.,..PY on Tl1" supervisor said he
wanted the study completed
In not more than 90 days
with implementation ol the possible solutions in t h e
following 90 days. "Time is
~f the essence both from the
standpoint of the possible ~uture transfer of the facility
~nd the matter of recovering
revenues which ml g ht
o.therwise be Josi,'' he ·said.
If the landowners wishes to
renege on the agreement he
is subject to the penalty which
amounts to the difference in
taxes he would have · paid
rather than what he actually
paid. It is up to the
supervisors to decide whether
01 not the penalty is to be
paid.
OPPOSING TH E can·
cellation are the Or.ange Coun-
ty Grand Jury, the Orange
Unilied School District, the
Environmental Coalition, the
City of Orange and the League
of Women Voters.
arraignment date for Helen It JX'OVides that all average
Irene Burke, 'J:l, of 7322 21st daily attendance (AD A)
St., after being advised that generated . b y MD-resident
· she obtained. $972 from the · students will be credited. back
county under false Il'etenses. to the district or residence.
The trustees, Peterson said,
are "referees. No one in the
districts will be happy (with Wednesday, Nov. 28th, 8:00 P.M.
1161 Newman
' COUNTY AUDITOR· Cort
lroller Vic Heim will oversee
~he Young ~mpany's audit.
He said he jnstalled the
present accounting system
five years ago and admitted
that c h a n g e s . particularly
those involving Afedi-Cal had a serious impact since then.
; "The problems are well
known," Heim added "but it
Will _requir~ a syst~ms ap.
proach to find solution&."
Other Cities T_akin.g
Juvenile Programs
SANTA ANA - A program
that decentralizes the handling
of juvenile cases will be ex4
tended to Include Fountain
Valley ]Ind Westminster, the
Orange County Board of
Supervisors haa decided.
FOIB' cities -J;ewport
Beach, Fullerton, Orange and
trial program last June we
were told that it would reduce
the intake at Juvenile Hall
by 20 percent," he said, "Did
itJ I see no figures to prove
it.."
: OCMC administrator Robert
}Vhite took exception to some
!JI Diedrich's co~alnts but
!Jaid an audit would be helpful. · "But we don't need another Santa Ana -now are involved
h}t-and·run study which Iden-in~ pilot program of placing
l1fies. the,, problems without ..Jjeputy probation officers in
solutions, he coutloned, local pil1"" d<partments
A Pro1\3tion Department
report mentioned Newport
Beach, where juvenile arrests
were up 50 percent but refer·
rats to Juvenile Hall were
down six percent. Edward Clark, chiet -deputy
probation officer for field
services, replled that ex-
pansion was planned first
with reports to be made ai
the end of the year.
tefemng to criticism by the • • counfy Grand Jury In the past The:e they deal w 1 I h !le'Veral years. Juv~es direcUy rather than refemng them automatically
to the county Juvenile Hall.
Kelp. Case
Hearing
;. ' supervisors took the action
1·t ,alter expresaing aome reservat1on became pr0gress
reports weren't available on '
SUPERVISOR David Baker
""'*"<I <lark. aay1ng pilice
chiefs consider It a· good pro-
gram. ''They say it is im·
portant f<r police and pro-
batioo to understand each
Scheduled
SANTA ANA -An Orange
C:OUOty Supt;rior Court judge
has scheduled a pretrial hear·
ing on allegations that an
IrviDe firm hired a retired
senior chemist as a mean!
of learning trade secrets held
by a 5an · Diego kelp
harvesting company.
how the plan has worked In
all four cltiei
PROBATION department of-other and each o t h er ' s methods," he said. ficials want eventually to Before approving the ad·
offer the program countywide. d CUrrently, state Cr i rn i n a I ition, Diedrich got approval
Justice Council funds are used of a motion to require an for the program. independent study of the im·
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich pact of the program after six chal months. lenged expansion of the The. probation department
program. arguing there wasn't and the county Administrative
any data to support the re-Otfice are to hire a consultant
quest. f "When we approved this _..-_th_e_re_pi_ri_. _____ I
Judge Walter QlaraJll7.8 has set Dec. 7 as the date he tM...-tl~l
will rule on preliminary mat-Worried Abovl
ters . .in the actton file<! by Judge Named r•LSE TEETH
Kelco Inc., San Diego, against rft OC<lln-Labs Inc., 1632 McGaw LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Coming Loou!
SI Irv'"• Gov. Ronald Reagan appm'nted " ... • Afraid fllle teeth will drop at the Kelco claims that senior Lo.! Cerritos Municipal Judge wronc tlme1 A denture adbelfve can
chemist Arthur W. Saddington, M. Ross Bigelow to the Lo$ help. FASTEETB• Po•der cives
Who Is named as -,efendant, Angeles Superior Court bench. denturet • lon1er, finner, tteadief ~ bold.W~baemh.:nuled?Formore
was allowed to clalni early Bigelow, 49, succeeds retired aecurltY and eomfJ?rt1 <1.1e FAS·
retirement last Jan. 31 after Judge Kenneth Holland to the TEETH Df-ntlml Adbt111"9 Po•der. "7 Denture11 that ftt art -ntial to
27 years of service. ,... ,615 a year Jl0$l. health. See 7our deutSR recularl1.
The urm claims that h1sJr=========;:;~~~;;;;;~;;~J
subseq\lent hiring by Ocean-
Labs was improper . and part
of a move by the Irvine firm
to acquire details of methods Used by Kelco l<> extract
minerals and chemicals from
kelp.
UCI Health
Pact OK'd ·
SANTA ANA -A contract
with UC Irvine for etr
vlronmental health laboriltory ~;:;s~! ~:~:·~;
the Orange C9w1ty Board of
~lract calls for
• laboratory space, facmqes
and clerical help, acool'dillg
to Supervisor Ronald Caspers
of Newpori Beach.
easpers said the contract
with UCI compares favorably
with bids from conunerclal
laboratories which r a n g • d
!Jun flS,000 to $t58,000. ~ sald lo .addition to the
cooll:ad for the lab service.
the supervlaon have prevtou1·
.Jy appro~ blrllig of a public
health cbemlat at a salary
ol fia,1153 a year.
The new mice will provide
a full ranee of chemical
an11lyils o! county waler . sotrces to m<>nltor water
quality and wlll also provide
..,.iysts of food samples for
legal enforcement.
He said the cost ol the cot>-
lract ts to be peld from
federal revenues granted to
the •county, !or eavironmental
conltol.
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NO RERUNS, NO
COMMERCIALS
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Yov een ~•ff cot11ti11v011 hVf 1ctlot1 ~11iq •t k't htpp111ins, 011 R1s111cr ActiOft
R1d1111. ,
T11111 In lo '1otnd d11clock1~clM111tltl ol pollc11t woi~, or li1111h1 R11 dtptlt•
lllfflt, Ci•il 01f111H, bttln111 111d -1111 Nnd1,
R.j111cy Monltoi1dio/Sa11111t1 111to1t .. tlc1lly h1111t ror llv1 1l1111li, ttop '° htH
tlrit WI•, floit11 co..ti11111 .ce1111lt1t '°' 111o1h11 lr1111mh1io11.
Fl1th!iitt ll1ht1 d1t1ll th1 Mttdi. -
· P111h ltwttOll coftttol lttl y.., pinpoint 111y ,_.,i1111l0ft of cM11111lt yot w111l to
l.ttt Ofl JOYI chok• of 4, I or 16 di.nnff ttnW•o,,. th.,•11 111M1l lot ••"Y
'""'°" ... '"'' P\I"'·
s .. end~::: ~tC!j_acllon radio 1od•y •
BOLSA COMMUNICATIONS COOER
' 10411 IOLSA.-WDTMIMITH
. llt ... tl
u,,..1 ..._...,. If *""" ..... a C'flhilt'" °""'" ~
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It is alleged that Mrs. Burke Basically, all state and
told welfare officers that her federal funds will still go to
husband had left her and was the district in which the stu·
living in Nevada at a time deot resides, which may
when he was at home and not be the district in Which
contributing to the support of he or .she attends school.
in HUNTINGTON BEACH • MINIATUNU CIVIL WAIJ
01.D DO~ ·;. CU> ouf.i• Call 714-847·7862 !Gr furtt..r lnlormotlon
his family. Burke is reld in Orange AS A RESULT, districts
Q>un.cy Jail with bail set at mu.st negotiate a n~vment for
$5,000. · · the education · ::f tr"insfer. -
MANNING'S
COLLECTORS SHOP ~
2428 N~ BL.VD. por.-rA MsaA. CAa.11'" ••
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"'1ll(S. Ko HON I tM ....... ----
8• .• A::\~ H"•• tt••l90
Soat/Jem Calffamla EdifOll ComPfll1
fto...-eoo • .> ... ,.,
2M4'WMLMUT o..:wE #fDN& .· ·: l'.'·
AO&'Mr.N\~80'10
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D'ear · Edison custot11er:
The Califor~ia Public Utilities Co•lsston on RoYtlb•T' 13
Issued an order requiring utilities under its jurisdiction, fn-
luding Edison to as k their customers to volun.tar11Y reduce thl ~se of electri~lty. They also· urged publicly owned utilities to
roceed in support of the order. T.he ~011a1Ssion seeks to reduce ~sage by all customers--residential, com111ercial, industrial and agrlcul.tural~-to no more than 90S of the kilowatt-hour levels ·
they used during the same month 1 year ago, We fully support
this objective and seek your cooperation.
Edison mailed a conseryatfon-•check list• to a·ll cu ~to•eT'S
earlier this year recommending ways to save energy In the home. •
A free booklet, •conservation of Energy Is Everybody's Business,
has been widely distributed, also. It offers so•• 70 suggesti~ns
to curtail energy usage, such as tu~ning off unnecessary light•• ..__--
turning down thermostats on space _9.bnditlonlng equlp111ent, drawing · "
draperies to avoid heat transfer tllrough window .glass and weather •
stripping to cut down on drafts. If you would like &·COPY of the
booklet, write: conservation. Edison, P.O •. Box 800, llosuead, CA,
91770. •
Edison's Energy Services RepresentatiYeS over the past 18
aonths -have been meeting with large Industrial and cowaerclal 1 customers to point out ways to conserve energy f n their operat DnS
and to ·solicit pledges of reduction of de•and IA the event of an
emergency.
After a carefuf evalaat1on of our 01111 Co•p•nY opeT'&tlons,
we were able to reduce our use of electricity by 14S.
Wfth the critical energy shortage facing the nation at thfs
tfMe and the necessity to conserve all forms of energy, we ask you
to join 11 voluntlrfly eurtaflfng your use of electricity.
" <:t~--.''-'rt~
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t tJ UAIL V PILOT Monday, Novembft 26, 1'13
Japane se on West. Coast
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Japanese business men are
on an investment spree on
the U.S. West Coast.
They are snapping up hotels,
golf courses and o t h e r
businesses and establishing
subsidiaries of their own cot·
porations.
'\'hile total Japanese ln·
vestment in the United States
ls estimated at only about
$1 billion, It has increased
by 40 percent In the last two
years. And about 25 percent
of the total ls in California.
ALmOVGH NEW money Is
wt.lcome1 some A m e ri c a n
busintss men express a~
preheaslOll that the Japanese
C0<1ld establish too rtroog a
position h e r e. But others.
disagree. Among them Is
Ric.hard cannon, s a 1 e s
manager of the Irv In e
Industrial Complex. where 14
Japanese companiea or their
subsldia'ries have b o u g h t
facilities for manufacturing or
assembly a n 'd distribution
operations.
;'It just sends me up the
wall when I hear this term,
'Japanese inva s.ion,' ''be says.
"They~ forming new cor·
porallons. Jhey're hiring I 00
percent of their work force !o-
cally, 1hey're paying local tax·
es and the benefits to the com·
munlty are Phenomenal.
"The Japanese are very
quatity-con5elous. Ttiey want
to buy prime properties and
they do l!>eir homeworlt. They
knoll' wbit Ibey are looking
for. '
"'nlEY'RE FANTASTIC
people. They're ao dam moral
and very forthright. Once they
decide something, they go
throogh with It. You shake
han1ts and you have a deal.
As business men, they're top
Y f>ur Money's Wort h
DQtch."
Among firms In the Irvine
complex are Mazda Molnrs
of America. Canon Optics,
llortba, Ltd., U.S. Suz\Jlti
A10ton Corp., Ka W ISi ki
MotOl'I Corp., and Subaru.
The Japane1e are
particularly interested i n
hotels and goU couraes.
l<yQ-Ya Co., Ltd., a Hawaii·
. !' Spree
bued .,bsldlary ot Kolrusal
Kogyo Co. ol Toll)'o, baa
purctiased lhe Sheratoo'W.,t
llotel In Loo Ancel.. and the
Sberaton Palace In San Fran-
cloco.
Japanese interests h a v e
boucllt the Miramar Kotel In
Santa Monlca, and Kajima
lntema.Uonal, Inc., plans to
build ·a !~story, 40Q.room
hotel In. Los Angeles' .Utile
Tokyo.
JAPAN GOLF Promotlo.,,
toe., lw: owned the Mesa
Verde Coontry Club al CQlta
Meu In Southern C.lllomla
lot two years.
The same company recently
bought from Boise Cascak
a m.ac:re aid area , two 19-
hole golf courses, a bowling
alley and a rood service area
near Nevada's Lake TabQe. ,
Mail Services Imp r oving With Hikes? Tsukamoto Sogyo Co .. Ud,,
a steel processing ( i r m •
recently purchased the
Monleeilo country Club at
Santa Barbara. Los Coyotes
Country Club at Buena Park
was bought by Sowa USA
several months ago. The
Peacock Ga p Golf and Country
Club at San Rafael 1 n
Northern California WM ac·
quired by Nllto Hawaii for
$2.5 !Oillion.
Ul"I TtleflMTt
Spectacular-· Now
By SYLVIA PORTER
New Yorks Consolidated
Edison Co. wa recently forced
to send apologies to electricity
customers to whom the com-
pany had sent demand for
payment letters. Many of the
customers hadn't even receiv·
eel the orig·
inal bills' be·
cause of foul·
ups in the
mails.
A pair or
opera tickets
n1ailed from ~
Manhattan to I(,.,_ ·
Drooklvn~ \;(; took seven l'ORTIOK
days to arrive -reaching the
recipients three days after the
opera.
much as 3.11,!t percent for
letters, Crom 6 to a cents).
II lhe Cost ol Living Cowlcil
doesn't block the new rates.
they are currently sc}le:duled
to go into eUect Jan. 5.
The timetable for the in-
creases might be stretched out
-but lh. brutal facl Is we'll
he lacing the highest postal
rates ever at a time \vben
we're more disgusted with
service than ever.
Is there any hope for im-
provement in the U.S. mails?
Yes, insists the Postal
Service, and it cites these
highlights of Its 13 billion
three-year improvement ~
gram.
mE DEVELOPMENT ol a
new, streamlined national bulk
mail system to hand 1 e
packages, magazines, boob,
catalogs, "junk mail" -con·
sistlng of 21 major centers
and 12 "satellite" bulk mail
handling depots.
Automatiion and mechaniza.
lion all along the line. In
fiscal 1m, spending f o r
facilities, mechanization and
equipment hlt $808 million
against J23S million in 1971.
Development of a network
of hlgh speed "preferential
mail centers" -h I g h 1 y
automated facilities which can
code, read, scan, cancel and
dispatch rr.ail. Among the new
equipment now in 'operation:
a machine which auto-
matically stacks sacks of
letters so they all face the
same way and which cancels
\he . stamps at the rale ol
1~,000 an hour.
.The P06t Office also plans
to-expand several new types
or mail service. For instance,
11Express Mail" sUvice, pro-
mising next morning delivery,
pi>st omce In post omc;e,
between 56 U.S. cities if you
get your mail to the post
orflce before 5 p.m. and. pay
a pre mium charge:
"Mallgrams" or We s t er n
Union messages you can now
send from 111 postal stations.
which are delivered by mail
carriers the following day at
a coot from 11.10 to lt.61l;
facsimile traosnisslon, cost·
ing $5 per page, between Ne\v
York and Washington, taking
six minutes and combining ~
pying machine and phone.
,
Sony Corp. ol America has
erected ·• television assembly
plant near San Diego.
Japanese real . estate ln-
vestmenlS range from nw
land In potential Industrial
areas to housing develop-
ments.
J APANESE RECENTLY
purchased a 502-unit complex
of garden apartments In San
Diego and have made similar
purchases In Orange County.
The unlighted y.s. J\ppraisers B.uildin g (left) in tbjs nightime panorama of
downtown San. Fran~1sco looks .like the dowdy relative of a brilliant family.
But soon the llghts tn the glowing towers around it will dim if private enter-
prise follows the energy crisis example of the federal government. In c·enter
is Transamerica building.
A CONGRATULATORY lei·
ter from , President Nixon to
a New Jersey community on
its 175th anniversary arrived
at ilS destination six days
after the celebration ..
You probably have stories
to mat~h these, for this sampl·
ing merely suggests the mall
problems in which all of us
have been mired since the
semi-public, semi-private U.S.
Postal Service took over the
U.S. mails two years ago.
Complete Mid-day American Stock List
"
President Outlines Energy
. ----------
_Plan; Asks·-¥-oluntnry Help
WASHINGTON (AP)
President Nixon says he is
cutting 15 percent. f r o m
deliveries of gasoline and
home healing oil to stave off
severe fuel -sho11age damage
to the nation 's economy.
The moves "'ill mean homes
six degrees cooler than normal
this winter and not enough
gasoline to go around.
announced Sunday w o u I d
reduce an expected 17 percent
petroleum shortage to perhaps
7 percent, Nixon said, but the
remaining shortage will re-
quire additional measures to
close the energy gap and avoid
economic damage.
Nixon continued to hold in
reserve. as a last resort, the
PoSsibility of direct consumer
gasoline rationing or high fuel
TO START saving gasoline, taxes.
Nixon asked filling stations
to stop seiling it on &mdays, "' UNDER EXISTING authori-
and pledged he. "'OUld order ty , Nixon announced these
sucb a ban once Congress steps:
gives him the authority. -Publication, due Tuesday,
issuing fuel coupons.
Proposal of regulations in
December to impose controls
on distribution of gasoline to
wholesale and retail dealers,
cutting deliveries 15 percent
below the anticipated demand
for the ·fll'St quarter or 1974.
Refineries will be asked to
start making such cuts im-
mediately on a voluntary
basis, the White House said.
&:ast ear. nearly 3 billion
pieces of mail were officially
acknowledged to be late, lost
or stoleri, and this year, the
figure surely win be even big-
ger. Moreover, despite Post
office denials, mail which goes
astray seems to stay astray
longer.
We're now well into the
Christmas mail crisis. lvhen
all or the year's usual prot>-
lems are multiplied. This
year the snafus. the delays,
l he non· deliveries. the
dama~es to perishable or
breakable products are certain
to be even worse than feared
because of slowdowns or other
setbacks caused by the energy
crisis.
Vol. Net \lol. Net Vol, Nel U S! Chg. l .. sl Clli-teit Cf19.
NEW YORIC lUPll _ Carrqls DIY 26 J~i+ \. Fed RtSlll.lr 4t • -\o
Fouaw1na ••• l"'l(tl on Jiit c .. s111· AM 1 1 2H•-v. Ftimont Oil 1• 11,._ ~. AmtrkMiS!ackE•tllMI~: c..i.11t1onln JI ,,,_.,. Ftl''"'•V .12 l 4J,+q Silft Net Cntle'*4 Ill l 11'•-\fa Fittttbd WIS 1' • ..__ \'1
Lisi Olg. Clvi1ror1Cp 17 t l..-\;lo Flillh Pl.SI I 11•-"
-A,,,_ • C"Mpf )Vt 11..a a •.. FtlmCoA ·°" 21 11.--3t
MllCp,Cb J 11....,_ 'Mt C"5e't .09b U 4!• •·· FllmWl' !flt 1 l '•->1 MY Ca .20 16 S•~+ \~ Ce!MH C-37 10W-'lo FlltrO.. .Old l ltt-t-~•
A&E Pl.stk 11 1{o , •• CeflilifodCp ll1 1'4-\lo FiftCI 58 .20 7 II ••• "'btrMI AlQ • 1\•-3' C""1pt4 .02ti 2lt l ll-\'t Fill(ieft .Jiii I ,.._ ~ •
...
...' ' ' '
' ,. Clllrlll Incl • 1 Fi~t CllM l 1 ll , •.
.. t~H.~ 4 1ir" •. ~ b.~i~CI.~ 1: ~l~·i.:j ~::iec:~~z: ~~ ~~ ~! "'(lion lndSt 4 4 •·· CN Rlw 1.llO.I xi 2J'h+ V. Fir$! H1rtfCI 2 2:\0-'·0
HIObe Corp 12 11 -\, Cllltk Un Sii. ' Jl.-\IJ Flt Rnr lnY • 4'·o-'" ""rode• Inc 1 I.,.,_ ~ CN1d World t 10'11-\It Fst S& .4 l U 'lt-t"' !:~:..~:'1~ ~ f~+'~ Cllrb lne Ca 21 2,,_ ... l~VM l.'1911 7S UI•+ V. M raM:ll Tee n I'•-~. c I Mt• •Ii 1S 1*-"' Fitmrk .Ult 20 ,,,_ It Aflll C1,p Sii, IQ l*-\4 CiMIN S LI 2 2,,.._ ... Fi$(11frPt Si II l0-1.o-, ..
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'-• w< • I Ci....,._ 17 '"' ••• Fiil'tlftlWI .10 10 J -\lo .__ •·· Clrt lt K.lt U 7.\P-\IJ F .. lnd.IJ I 2._ •·• .. u HaSQ .20 s ''--"' 01 ,. c "'ffilPbl .OSO J J!:o-"' l1I 111 .1• • l \'t-t'I Fl19~1I <.p Ii •l'o-~-AIC Pltlo Sii. 1 4 + ... Clt1Mt I.I ll) 11 11~-... A1world .JO. 2 '"'""" v.
"'lk" lndulo 11 23• ••. CltmM!I wts 21 H~ -·· Flack ,,..,.,, 2 21 .... "" "'irborne Fr 11 J'h-I~ Cl Find Cl) 4 l~•+ \Ill A .. Opilll 11 2'4 •.• Alr1>11tEI 51< 1 6',:,-\~ Clfrk Cons 2 II'• ••• Fie Roe~ In ]I ii~ , ..
Airwi(k .16 31 U l:t-\~ Cl1rk1o011 .16 10 t~·-V. Flul<e.JClll lit I 16>.-\'o .111,n Wooc!S 1 11 •.. Cl1rv Corp 1 1\o-\o FlwTl~r wt II t \w-Vi
A!itkl Alrl lS 6'•-\lo Cloc>ll .o~ 3 4\t-\0 Foaclr•IN 1 2h+ '·• A!col...c: .Q~ 9 61, + V• C M Carp 11 2 -·• ForCIC J...0.-llG 16--2\~
A11e.;.c11wt 1 s..._ l~ e:,~::;~ 1; ~tr; ~f ~:.~:r't,;:.' ~ ~~'!-·~
Aflegll Airi, •1 6\-..;, CoOeKo • lO .J.C ,.,,._ •• Fax SIMI .21 12 11 -\0
Alie• "'ir ..., l 3l o--\'t Caff Mfl 36 t 1l>t-\lo FrlnkRI . .a J S -°" Al"'9" WI n 1 2'1--'>I> Cof1¥1n .l» 14 3\it-\lo Frtsn!Lla . ..O 1 16~0-l.t All~ Ar"li~\ 1J ~ ••• Coil Intl Inc 111 tV.-Yo Ftltr 1""'4 1 l'o-\• ::~..:;: 1& 1~:Z:::; CokH1U ,SJ 1 11 '.~-'!'I Frlvitranic JS ll l't-~
"'llimil Cp 10 'l't-\'It Col-n ·" X.O t tt-Vt Fronller Air " •1'1-\o
"'lltC Cp pt 2 1'.lo ••· COl119t .Db J ~+ VI Fr11111Air WS 1 2\t-I•
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oL Col(omf .20 JI 2\i + "' -G G--!leC P wt · + •• Calw1 CO .11 4 7 -V. Gltlril '" Sit 2 6\:.-\l "'llerFds .~ I n· ••.. ,.._,•M•i;; '' 7,. '··> ,_, ' ,. , AlumSpc .u 10 t •I)+ \'I ""' ... ·• •• • ... ••v .... ,.,_ • Amco lnclM 21 'i -y. COmbCI S1 ll\'l-11'> G .. rt11Carp I 6 -~. Amtteu wi1 11 11'"-IN Comb EQl.llp ll 11\io-~ c;,.y1oro1,.,20. 10 2~) •••
Am .rivronm 16 2 _ '4 Conllnco 1 l l7~ i·, c;,.ynar Snf s 2\'ll ... AND ON TOP of it all, ,t.m8;11n .so 1 1,,.._"' c.oon1..,11; .» 11 110--w Ge•rtrt .Hb • iov.-v.
I "' '"·Mtg -I '" COml M .t0g 6 "'-10 Gen lkll~ 6 I\, ... a huge new round of c ose ..,. 2. -· ... • --c.err-cror 2 21~+ 11 Gtt1 c1ne . ..o 5s ,...,_ •, to 12 billion of postal rate !Fr~:<h'~ ~ 2;V.:: ~ c-Me•ltll 3 2"" ... c..nEd ~ • .., 2s 11.-'• AmGlr .060 1 10 , •• ~PS 1.'2 • 2'l• ••· GnEmp .12b S 2 -'·• increases is in the works. Amlir1i .M :n •*-v. .....,,"t Cp 11 l Yt + v. Gn Hou-s I'• ... In a rad~elevision address of regulations to take effect
Sunday. Nixon said deliveries next Jan. 1, ordering heating;
.., C>f' airline jet fuel also will oil dealers to sell householders
be cut 15 percent, industries 15 percent Jess heating oil
will be denied 10 percent of than they got in 1972, com-
their oil ~·ants and com· mercial establistnnenlS 25 per-,
-GOVERNMENT control·
Jed allocations of jet fuel to
airlines will ·be cut Dec. 1,
limiting international lines to
their 1972 fuel consumption
and domestic lines to 95 per·
cent of their Im levels. A11
airlines will be cut back IS
percent below last year's sup-
plies starting Jan. 7.
-Final regulations were
scheduled ( 0 r publication
Tuesday, to take effect · Dec.
7 , forbidding coal·buming
power plants from switching
to oil.
Specl·11·c1·a11y, lhe P·o s t a I "'M.1;re"' .n 1 6' • ·· =~~ : ~~ ~ ~n A~~~ } !;:::: ~~ 'M>j l.llb l lS\'o ... '"·-::-r.• " 2''"1'" G ,. •• '' '' ..,.....,t n ,lCICI 6 1v.-"" .....,,, .-·• n ewr .... ., •.. Service would like to: .r. 1>e1ra 1.10 10 l:IVt-.,., ~ quJo 2 '"'-+ v. Geon 1nc1~1 • l'lw-"' ·1· "'Pree .OSO 1 2:W.+ \lo COmp ln$lt 5 1\o , •• C:..rll«S.C. In 2 ,,,._ ~. • Hike the cost (If ma1 1ng AmAlt 1.llb 61 1v.-~ Comp •nn t 11 1·.~ ... G11n1 F .SOq lJ 11 0:.--1
(. I I ll 25 t .Am Aec:Gf": 1• l -"' canc:r.e .1.it l 1\9-11 Gl•nl't'l ...,. 31 ' + Vo a u-st-c ass e er percen , ·-•. ,,,, ,, •• cane.rd F.i. 10 2 1~ •.• G1TR1 1.20b 1 ''•-1. "'" -••• ~ r~ '' ,,._ • G, __ 2k 11 ''·-.. from 8 to 10 cents. Am Tr.-lnnt1 11 1i.:.-v. -... ~ mercial buildings must do cent less; and industries 10
without 25 percent of their percent less. This move im-
heating oil. poses consumer rationing, but
These and other measures without the complications of
PUC Orders A ccurate
Mo ver Estimations
College Chief
AMIC(.p .CW 10 11'--~ CanMllyCn 11 ·~ ,,, Gl.luoc:k Pr l' l , .. • Raise ainnail letters ....,,910 .10tt 1J Ito--.,. Canroc:k ·'° • 11 c.lenGe .llle 4 ~·'t-\o AlllllanV Incl 26 ,.,.._ ~. Conroy IFK 1 J •.. GIMwrB .n" 1 I ••. from 11 to 13 cenlS. "o Ind inc: JoO 1 ••. ~ioOi• ,.',°"..... "' ~·'t-.,.. Gla\Ke'1• E 2 12 -lo
h · t rd "'POliecl DI! 6 ?Vo-'-'I ...,., •~ 2 10\1 •.• Gl<IYfr IMP 1 1\)-lo ~ Boost t e J>0S ca Aqultent .io 1 2.H.-\o COnsyne Cp 1• 1l•-Vo UolObl11 ,J;o 1 5' > •••
t l f 6to8 cenls "'''Ctd .Olb 1• *'+\I can1M1t1r1 30 ,., ••. Ga1e1nc,c1e l'I 11••+ '• pos age cos rom , Arlie pt... , ,.,.,_ v. eontret wb 36 11, •. • Golden Hom " 2•. + 1.
and 10· r airmail poliltcards "'••LIG 1.JO 1• 1•10--~. "'°" EL . .a 2 111,,_.. .,., GoadLS .is1t 15 JVJ ••• Armic Enl 6 7h-:w, Coall 1n .«lb ll io -to Gaodridl wt • 17 J\:..-V> from 9 to 11 cents. .r.rmin Corp 11 f.1•-I CoakP .. lnt 1 10 nv.-"" Gouldlnc wt uo 1~ ••••
I .'
,_ •1-... 11 .. ,_ • (.oaptr .J .10 I 4111-t-loll Grlill!ltt .JI ' I ~ ~ " ,.-~~"~ the cost of mai · ~· ~ co.oon 1nu l .--. * Graner "'* 2 • .,..._ \i UIU co.x; Nundl(.p Sit ll ,...,_ ~ COrrlB .'1.. 4 111'1-\ii GrMI• MGt • I 21·.--\.'• ing magazint:S and newspapers ~=• 't" 11f 1i}1 ...... r -c.au Corp 10 2~+ ¥t Grauv .1111 ,, 10-.-.,., 40 percent and also raise the "'sPRo AGg 1• •• ,..__. ~ coueorp w1 1 " ••• c.r1vMt 1011: 6 ~ ... \• A<!.GFd OSI! 1 !lit ColnlnM w'I 1 J"' •·• Grt .Am Ind 10 l:t.16 ••• costof·mailingpaclr""eS. "'s••e•.lflC 1 ,.,. ::: Cl• Cable s 11"-"" c.rtBft.._t a JV!-"" ""'ti "'tea Indus! ' 1\1 , .. Crfig Corp J 2'h-\'• C.ILkCh .1\lt 11t 1~1'"
llAYWARD (UPI) -The
Re v. Cbri,stian Mondor, 48,
who resigned as president of
Ml. Angel (Ore.) College. an-nounced he will become direc· AS RECENTLY as 1971, a
"'tlcoMt•wt l 2fo--""' ~~::;f!eE~ 1~ !~::. ~ Grt«tm~Sll. 7 • ...
"'!ICM 1.ISO 39 1•~•-1'"' CrealtP 2,;6 21 It'•+ V> GREIT 1.:10 IS t -'n
SAN FRANCISCO ( APl -
The California Public Utililies
Commission has ordered stif-
fer regulations penalizing
household goods movers for
underestimating char~es.
ior of Franciscan College ·previous round of postal rate
lion asked for a rehearing. Center in Haywa~d . hikes went into effect (as
The PUC denied that petition-----''--'---------------
Oot . 24.
At1a1Cp wtl 2G ,.,.,_ "' Crll"""IOl'I I J I•''"-If, Gre,h('. ,lQd 13 ' -•• "'ugat In .10 lJ U'h-\;, .. .,. C. R,1 Cp .i» 21 10\P--V1 "'u1tra1 OU 3S 151?-'It Cra11 A .'31t 6 »l>I+ ~-. Gtau Ttl .90 6 10\lo+ ~
Au1om BIOg s 411+ ~i CrawMil . ..a 4• I -11o Gr-C .no I 11,._ \'i
Allla Aidia ' 2'1t •. , &=In'.~ • 1f"':: ~ Grllell 1 ...... 1 n 2111 •••
.. UICI S.t .io 2 6\lt-\lo Cryst1l Oil S1 13~1 GSC Ell .OSI> 3 1\t ••• A V C Corp S tVi ,. • Cubic ,..~ .io U ~ G T I Corp 20 2to-V.
"'wmo:a .1• S6 l 'H-.,. Cu!.lerA'.m 1,1 tJ~+ 'it Gu.lrctsC . ..0 15 7 -.,..
The PUC ordered that they
be put into effect by Ot>C'.
23.
THE REGULATIONS had
been adopted last June. but
their effective date \\.as
delayed ~·hen the California
Moving and Storage Associa-
LEASE
DIRECT!
' e FIMt 011d P1r1011oli1ed
LffMI
e All popwlor 1110111 con Giid
. Tt.U1
e frM LoOll Co"
,. e ComfftJ.tl" ~fft
hcked by Colftplot1 Port1
o•d W•lc.o Foc.llhl1s
.k9 1!1m~u!I
•
SPECIAL
'74 MUSTANG II
$7520 Mo.+ UL • An l~ ffft11rf'ti ,, ......
0 .LL. 0. 1.#f. CMlt
\
The new regulations reduce
the allowable rate over an
esti mate that a moving com-
pany can charge and also sets
penalties fo r underestimating.
On a distance move -50
mi les or more - a shipper
"'ill have to pay only the
original estimate plus 2 ~ per·
acnt of that figure or s·1s,
\\'hicheve r is greater. Added
to this would be the charge,
if an)'. for any extra service
requested.
THE LA TfER wowkf cover
!'luch things as additional pack·
ing or unpacking not covered
by the original estimate.
The new !'Ille, said the PUC,
''will provide maximum pro-
tection for shippers without
undennining the minimum
rates for -household goods
-m6\tlng ~erviCe!. '?: .... ~
The l'UC oulHned what it
satd was a reasonable penally
for underestimating.
ON LONG distance moves,
il v;puld be the difference
belween charges undtt ap-
plicable ·mfnlmum rates on the
one hand and charges based
on Hie estimate pf"us 2'h per..
cent or 115, plus addilional
charges for extra service .
~ .. or local moves the penalty
would be the diff ereb 'e
bet~-een minimum Clnd 10 pe:r·
ct!1I ol the estimate or .lo
plus extra aervlce charges .
Penalties for underestimates
are to go to the PUC for
depogK In tho illle'• general
fund . E a c h underestimate
call~ lor a penally must
be "'portOd on preacribed
'"""' within 30 days aner the moving ls compleled.
•
I
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Rough weather tests of trus inflatable escape slide ~S.,:,: J ,Rt!. ~ ,.. iriMt'" 'iJ '"'"" ~ 1~1~ ~ i\ ... :~ system developed by B.F. Goodrich prove to be a Oil , ,.-... .,,. ,.. • .,,., ·"° • '~ ... •r1t or. " 4!0. •••
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deployed off the coast of Michigan ln a headwind :t: :I ll ,:t;...·\i =&rt ll ~ ~ =:" • J t~":~ of 40 m.p.b. with severe seas and subfreezi ng tem· !: P111 ..... , "'-"" '-. '1f.W 1 1a-~ Jlf'W'I• ee> • • 1l~" r Pwlllf S 110 t.J • l f.WOO' • I J*-Ill .lltrollk lllCI J Jiit perat.ures. Brrr. r1tt<?t , ,..._~ "9rllW't,.. t 11i.-~ "°"""'''" 1J t4 -·"
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Reason?
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In· fact,Jaere are 5 good reasons · for shopping early:
J. Stretching out the Christmas shopping season gives retailers a chance to function mo.re
efficiently. When clerks are less harried, shopping is more Rleasant for everyone.
2. Many ~etallers offer their really special "specials." early in the season to encourage the
public to shop early • to help alleviate the last-minute "panic" buying .
3. Just in case your favotite Christmas gift merchant has underestimated your enthusiasm for
the season, a longer period .of shopping gives him a chance to re-order popular items
so he doesn't haveJo disappoint shoppers later in the season .
4. When you take more days to . shop you can do the job more thoroughly, visit more stores,
compa,re prices and quality and be more satisfied with .fh!Y gifts you finally decide to buy .
•
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5. And there's no sec:~# about if, the Christmas shopping season is the biggest sales period of . .
the '/90r for most retailers. Support local. merchants now and 'you'll ·help make them
enollflh profit 'fo keep their prices reasonable all year long:(And prices will never be more
_ reason.ab/e.Jha~ they-are riow .) _ . ·~
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Tlail maqe prwenud ma pUhlic aenJicf? on ~half of our friendl and your1, ihe retail -· . merclaanta of tile Oron(e coo.~ Area, by the DAILY PILOl' .
• DAILY PILOT
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SUPER
SAYllllS
SAL~
-·
r;:::-:-_ SALTED
Sunflower
SEEDS
LOG
CABIN
SYRUP
·24 oz.
97c 38 8 ~-
flllTIOlllS syrup with David & SollS sttds
free servi ... -a pitcher. s.alted it shell. 16 01.
~-----------... ----------·----I FISHER SAL T£u:iN · I THE SHELL PEANUTS
MILANI SALAD
DRESSING-8 OZ.
O<igioal F•~•. Ital;,, 3 I C or 1000 lstalll salad
dressi111. Bllf u~eral al this low pnce!
1
1
11• og 11 " bm>~ pxl-. 3 I C age nf ~lied in Ille shell
JeJlllllS. Everyone loves 'em.
I • I Ill. 47c
-~
. . .-. . . .
-. -· ' tbe V4eek Oay Ol • •
ladies' 8ik1i"'
\le9· e~t ''
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2.'19 : '
·sAVE 40c
DOG FOOD
COM:r· .. 1os1 ~ 14c ea. . ·
for
• Vet 's dog" lood is loade<I with.,.
' . meat and vitamins to give your
pet the rich nutrition he nee<ls.-
Stock up al savingtil . ..
Days Ease
Freshener
....
19c 59c
Choice-of lemon " llO!al scnts.
It's as pretty to look at as it ls
fur<tional. Buy one for every
rooru in your hou se at this'ilo.w di~oont price. ·1
Play-Doh Super Zoo
Stt has 6 ••u -· 6 • 311 , bases, 18•24~ mit. ·2 ca1es. · lif.,
three 6 or. cans of Play·Oob. 5.44 • . ' . .
'SAVE 32%
.EASY Off .... sac . 1.29
The oven cleanet · tlial makes
quick thorough work of 30 other-
wise tedious task. Just spray on
and wipe off. 16 oz. lemon or
'
COAfp AT $14 •
fully 'b QUiiied lo th
i rant florals e floor spread . so'1ds. A mo and contem s "' won't want t ney saving oft Porary . ---o miss er You ----. ~----
· 8utter-·up
POPPER
flow
Oolj • 1~·
• The·Princess !Y.Regal 4 qt. po~
-·
regular. · _ .... ~ --·
Corn popper.' Dispenses butter 1 as jtJIOjlS CPfll. Teflon II popper
plate. l~ C3!J biuse<I as seiver.
67278
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LIQUID.
·WOOl.:ITE
....
77• 59c
The famous cold waler soap for
all fine wasliables. Made lo order
for cleaning wools and all of to-
day's new fabrics. 8 ~z. bottle.
Don't miss this -sale!
METAL9''
-911E·PAN
-5f.~ . . .
Ovr lit. Price 4 for $1
Heavy duty mel•I lor years of
service. Not only • necessity
for baking 'pies, but h111dy for
warming food. -
HOLIDA.Y STORE HOURS: MONDAY thru SATURDAY lOAM to lOPM •SUNDAY 10AM to 7PM
COSTA ·MESA JP.88 BR I ~TPL ST_.,.
San Di eqo -Freeway at Bristol
' , • \ •• '
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SAVE_3$
Picket .
IA010
21!!
lePage's 1/2'' TAPE
comp· 19C at44c
Just in time lor the holiday
wrapping. Big ·J 500 fl. spool
of \7'' wide tape. Roll oll
tape easily. .
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GLUE
STICK · .... ·3 ~-69c
"· . for
A neal.glue for neat people
Just draw it on and presS
pieces together; 'it won't
ooze, leak or spill.
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I By 7.mJSON"l>EERR f Of fff O.ll'f' 'lllt St•lf
·~Who are our models for being 80
<r 70 or 80!
• Wh•L about ll!X alter 801 •
I' How do we prepare for the tut ball
our lives? ~ Wha:t bas bap~ned to the extended ,, mily? •
: In what ways should the aged relate
parentS, chlldre~ and reJatives in
I own &ge bracket? .
'Jbere were many questions and not
y clear cut answers when Dr. James
teraon spoke at the UC! Extension
.. i;les on Aging: Origil\i, Effects and
qontrol.
f But 1here' was a Jot of thlnking going
GI\. , Dr. Petersog,1 USC profesSor of
.l!peiology and liaison with the American
. ~iation of· Retired Persons and the
'.National Retired Teachers Association,
~ered some thoughts on these subjects. :i
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BEA ANDERSON, Editor
-...;-MoftNY,-N•,,.mW-16.-ltll .-~, II _
Active area sen iors
't.Ars. Ric hard Conlon
• ".)
(right ) Isabel
-~paci o n_ ond_Miril!. __ _
Hughes (below)
attend lunc heon.
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" l_ssu~es
By BEA ANDERSON
Of "" D•llY ltnet St.ti
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Br ings E anging1------R-o e·s-
"We have" no--models for'. grow;ng
older,'' be said. "One b~ years
ago one or both pamts died before
the last child left homt. Our life ex·
ptCtancy was aborter and leiSure time
or women are through with motberinf
\around age 17 and.Jnen, ·a.s mentioned,
could retire as early as 50.
ROtES REVERSED
Among P~'s. auggeotlona· ror
'preparation for this new role was
· . • · 11 In cushioning of the shock of this loss Today, with many comparues 0 ~ g of lifelqng roles. .-.
less."
_retirement. aftet" 30 years ~f servi~. Of . . "Often," he said, "the woman and
•l age ss,, ute. plct~ ~ · cb~~lng. man reverse roles. He has · been th~
Women, toO: are· working for .11P,i(icant iristrumental orie, 'bringing home the len~tb;s of time, and m~. ~uples . are _., "'.money, ac~. as gatekeeper. 'lbe wife
opting for non·pa~~· . has played t~ expressive role, acting ·
The extended family 15 on~ dec~e,' as a balance in the family."
-he-added. We see ~ ,p~ear family With retirement, the wife can "become o~ a couple and ttie1r chikb:en ~ ~e · the stronger of the two, with a
rise. Contact with other generations .is vengence," and the husband "I01es his
much less than in the past. . self~~m along with his. hair and falls
So, in essence, we are losmg, con?ct into a more emotional stage."
with the very models we need to cope And, be . 'no.ted, there iS a higll rate
with the·aging process. of div9rce .?:t tl'_tls stageJ as high or
On the other hand, older people,, faced: higher thin the first few years of mar·
with many years of ·active· living, ha Ve riage ("the-period of · surptises when the
given up the other, rotes-.tbe majority masks fall way.")
"When these two need each other
for support, it ju.st isn't there. They
can't handle the new roles thrust upon
tbem.0
REIATIONBBIPS"'CllANGE
Relatiombipl with relatives change.
We become 1'parenb to our parent!J,"
he said, 1 a trallm~Uc and guilt-ridden
• ,role reverlal. ,
With liie arrivil. of· granjlchlldren we
want to re..stabllsb 'relationships with
children and_ J>rothe:s, sisters and
coii.!lns~iSiiiliiiUy unsuccess!ul:-
Studies of oldef"people, he said, reveal·
ed what-they wanted was not a physical
but a psychological closeness. In one
· study, thoee who fared best In the later
years had an_ "intimate,'' someone to
share laughter and ~ars with, .someone
who could be physically close.
But also needed·wai .a telephone call,
letter, Soine ' kihd: o.f helping from the
family. HaU of (amities surveyed bad
lhis kind of relationship.
EducaUonal programs, be said, should
be o~ to th06C over eo, who show
great Interest In spending their new
lelsure in learning.
il'o"TERACllON OpportwUties for inter-generation ln-
teraUon, he· said, could close the gap
between adolescents and their grand·
parents.
Mobility has divided many families.
he said, but growing numbers of
organizations and new kinds o (
"familial" relatioi\Sliips may be replac-
ing the extended family.
Sex after 60?
Of course, be said. Studies have shown
that there is no reason why a m~.jority
of •people can't have sexual relations
and close relationships almost until
death.
What has happened in the past, he
added, is the self.fulfilling prophecy.
Puritanical codes said that sex was
alright after marriage and up until the
mld-408 and then it was a nasty business.
"There is no reason why anyone. man
or woman , shouldn't have a long and
rewarding life sexually.
ROADBLOCK FACED
But there is one roadblock. Often
women outnumber men 6 or 8 to J.
This too is changing, however, because
working women are being afflicted with
heart attack and ulcers at rates more
ruid more aQproximating those for men .
The giving of a{feetlon was a consensus
of the greatest need of the older person.
A visiting professor from Georgia Stat'e
University told the story of .a radlo pro-
gram on which she appeared.
Her granddaughter called to ask what
she should do when a 50ish grandmother
came home from a date.
Her answer: ••09 what you'd want ·
her to do for you in the same situation •
Get out of the living room and leave
her alone ."
Aging Context Viewed
Society -Adopts Goals
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By JO OLSON
Of ttlt D•ltw f'U.t Steff
Who witl 'take care of older people
if they have no children because of
a homosexual marriage? '
, U the percentages of older people
in America increases, who will pay the
·extra bills for their needS?
Wou1d an older person keep l~ming
if he had the chance ta stimulate his
mind?
These were the · kind,& of questions .
asked' by Dean Black, PhD, at a lecture
in the · UCI Extension series, Ag·
1-_;·ng.~~Ellects and;tlx!trol,
Dr. Black's topic was Origins and
Effects of aianging Social Role! of
the Elderly.
"Today is a time of rapid change
in our society,'' said Dr. Black, an
assistant professor of sociology at the
University of Southern califomia. "But
we usually don't think of aging in this
social ·context."
Social,-,Not Medical
...
"We were introduced to·tob8cco earlier countries, they al.so spent less days in
and our soci~ had a·higher·percentage a hospital."
GOALS -NEEDED
Dr. Black noted that humans "can't
behave without goals of some sort."
Where does the older person get his
goals? From bis social envirorunent,
he .said. "Our body systems pennit us
to adapt. 1be social context determines
what our behavior will be. The social
context of life is vitally important.''
Dr. Black, also associated with USC's
qerontology Center, quoted John
McHale's statement that "social changes
now ·ere global and they are most imM poi:lant l<t.Qlder..people." __ _
lie turned back the clock to 1873
to see what change.!i wouJd lie ahead
if it actually were a century ago. In
1873 there was a financial panic. In
1874 the pressure cooking method for
canning food was developed.
PENSIONS PROPOSED
In 1875 the patent on the telephone
was issueCI. In 1878 the process of steel
productlon was revolutionized. Old age
pensions were proposed in 1879. In 1881
the American Federation of Labor was
founded: 1885 brought th e single com·
'bustion engine and 1887 saw the disoovery
of radio waves.
"There are many more changes to
come," Dr. Black said. "What changes
will af!ect the elderly most?"
He commented that be had hoped
to find-New York Times headlines to
illustrate· each ,of these discoveries, but
found they did not-make front page
news .at their. initiation. -
"The things we find exciting weren't
even in the public eye, 11 be said.
Dr. Black discussed three major
changes that he believes will be most
important to older people: changes in
the nature of the family structure,
changes . in population and advances in
telecommllllication.
·tr the cowitry-achieves a zero popula·
tion growth too rapidly, he stated, the
population will be unstable and will
fluctuate for a while between large
groups of older people and large groupo
of younger people. .
Larger numbers of o. l d er people Will
mean that greater amounts of resources
will have to be dedicate'.d to them, he
explained. "Working people will have
to put out more money."
In discussing changing family strue-
tures, he first said he believes the
nuclear family structure will never
disa ppear.,.,ITTiw---------,,----U RllEll• 0
"Alternative family forms suggested
are serial monogamy (several spouses
one right after another), where it may
be appropriate to bavl spOuses for each
period of life; role equality; homosexual
marriage; cohabitation (growing in
popu1arity): mu1tilateral or group mar·
riage and oommtmal families."
"Will these prevail? U so, what impact
will they have on older people?"
Dr. Black said "It may be that chabge
is more illusive than real. we· think
that we are different toda).:. I thi.Dk
there is serious doubt that we are goiqg
through family changes." i -'
Older people use their families for
companionship, direct aid and linkage
to society, t}\e professor said.
Contrary lo what is generally believed
about poor proximity of family members,
studies show that f!0..84 percent of all
old people have a' child within one hour's
drive, he added. "Sixty·two percent in
one survey had seen a child the previous
day.
"What would happen to these three
functions if other forms of marriage
and family structure came about?"
Next, Dr. Black discussed new develop.-
ments in tele-communications.
(See ROLES CHANGING, Page II)
, I! our health services are so bad, M.en why is the life expectancy for ,.i.meo. 1n the unite<!v-Slates,,,.,as..ro~ . -es aaywhere b\.the :world?--....,;;~ · •
the 1a00s rot that figure to dooble and
by 1945 in ·westmi societies the f.igure
increas~ to · 70. ~·However,"_ tie said,
.. we cannot. expect tltls rate of iJlcrea$C
.tA!,,J.Mtinue., ,\.we-are reaching the lliiillS°:,,----:-~ • -f -:
of smokers earlier than otber countn"lf." · Prior to Dr. Goldman's lecture, Peggy
ln. infant' mortality studies, he said, Lane of ·tbe Orange County Department
an important fact.or to consider is the of Mental Health discussed Death, Dying
.difference In.ages .of rnotllen in variou.. 'and Relultlng Criset. ,
countrie! and cultures." ' • "Altbouih we are ·prepared for .u-• ! Although the figure for men is lower W l!1e gap Is only exceeded by France, are bealth services to blame? '
Ralph Goldman, MD, .assistant d~an .
of UCLA School of Medicine, claimed
"it is something else."
His lecture waa part ol the UCI• Ex·
tensioo Series, enillled Aging .•• Origins,
K!lccts and Control. •
A-tn tht1> catalog his tOpic was listed
aa ·In Sickness an4 In Health: The lnade-~cLOf Present Health care Delivery ~ms, but. he said he <lid not like
~ title because "things are not that
Wiiy."
'Today 96, percent ol white ....,,.,
live to age 40; 81 J!«C"1I to !$ mid
ilmost two-tbir\ls reach 15.
"Whaleftr rs wrong with !he health
~tern," the lecturer said, "we won't
linprove on this very much." ·
tiBACiliNG IJM1TS 1
' Ufe expe<tancy of ancient man was
18, Dr. Goldman said. It 111c>k unlil
;
. '
other studies, ht explained, slow the.
g'ap is closing between men and women
•and of various races. White men and
black women are Jiving about the same
nwnbp' of ytars, and there is a similarity
between . white male nOn·smokers . and
whlle......... • .
"So. l submit·\ we are dealing with
social and no\ medibal problems."
Dr. Goldman said that In areas Where
a, specific problem.; such as environment,
bas hem improved; "death rate figures
have been pulled down. ' . • 0 When we fOC\lled on vitamin deli·
c:iendes here. the pro!>Jem bas beoome .0 nil !hat we can harilty find examRles fl. beriberi to show medical students.
Btlore drawing conclusions 'about
death ra.tes In the U.S. as compar<d
to other countries, Dr. Goldman stressed
that "'°' must OOllllider the cultural
llllup thil are Involved.
"For 'instance, we bavc m o·r e
aulolnobles, ... we•bave mort accldent.t.
!
PHENOMJ:NON of tbe major ~ in life;'" s h"e said,
"we are totally Unprepared for death." ~ A-soci81 phenomenon, be said, is that _in_Scandi.nayian_C91!!'1rf~ the @YJ!rage ISOLA.TION
age for giiis lo marry ,is 24, but here, Ms: Lane said she thinks the reason -
when Lbey reach that age they are i$ that we Isolate t~e dying: we won't
haV:ing theil'' last baby.. diScuss it with them because we fear
"And, while we are coUntlng, let's the \Dlknown. ,
ht sure we 811 count the llmC," he Dr. Goldman said that we could only
cautioned. discuss dying with those Who have
"There are differ.ences in different diseases. such as malignancies, ihafbave
countries," he Mid, explaining that aome predictability of death.
don't consider it a 'de:llh if an infant Only one out of four will have cancer,
dies within tho lint zt h<>un, as this he said, but one out of _two will have
1s never recorded as a hirlh, a heart related disease.
Dr. Goldman also defended health care "With· heart patients we have to en·
given. oeni!Jr ciliaens. · • courage lhem to bargain with life. , •
not talk abwt. dying." In 11182, before Medicare, he~ tare He said he feels the reason It is
. for this age group in the U.S., Denmark so d~llcult for us to face death Is
and England was studied. beca-"we (medicine) have such a
GOOD CARE goed track record (Jn lncreaains Ule
"Across the boanl," he said, expectanoy) and we (the J>Ol'l]ation)
"Americans not only were gelling as upect It to continue. But,'1 he rtlpellted,
llMlCh. health.care as they were ·ln other ")1¥e are,reacblng our lil?its."
•
-
' -!
Augu sto Merrill, a 50-yeeri ·
-resident of Coste Mesa,'
enjoys lunch with friends
at Church Women Ul)itecl'
"' Thursday seniors luncheon.
"
I
I
•
Ji DAIL V PILOT
I
String s
Attached
Pulling strings to raise
funds for Children's
Home Society, the larg-
est private adoption
agency in California,
are members of the
Tiara de Ninos Auxil-
iary who will present
Fashion Holly-days at 9
a.m. Saturday, Dec. 11 in the Airporter Inn.
The fund-raiser will in-
clude a fashion show-
ing, brunch and bou-
tique sale. Mrs. Lee
Camp and Mrs. Ste-
phen North (left lo
right) pull strings for
Pamela Clark (left) and
Christy Camp.
. ' . . . . . .. ' ...... ,, ' . :.:t.!• .·"
'
.
Impossible Study Assigned ,
DAR ANN LANDERS : I am so mad
1 can 't see straight. Listen to this :
A beautiful yolDlg girl who b a senior
ln our high scOOol was kicked off the
ballot for homecoming queen just
because she happens lo have a six·
month-old child and is not married.
The girl's parents stood behind her
and filed a suit in federal court to
invalidate the election unless the school
authorities Jet their daughter nm in the
election.
Our high school principal, when he
ordered the name of the unwed mother
off the ballot, said, "Only virgins can
run for homecoming queen!"
What do you think of this, Ann Lan-
de rs? -FURIOUS STUDENT GROUP
DEAR GROUP: Your prlncipal has
carved out qu1te an asslgoement for
hlmseU. How does he plan to tell lbe
difference?
There are plenty or high school girls
who don't have babies buf'/wbo aren't
vlrgins. lf your principal doesn't know
this, be had better eru;oll In the ninth
grade Family Uvlng f,ourse.
these reactions and came up wtih some
fascinating conclusions.
Several kids at school participated In
the same poll. Their fin,!tings were quite
similar. Here are some of the names
and the instant reactions. Please tell
us lf yoo agree.
Allan: Serious .. sincere, semitive.
Andrew: Sincere but inunature.
Anthony: Tall. wiry and elegant.
Benjamin : Dishonest.
Daniel: Manly.
Dennis: Clumsy.
Donald: S!nooth and charming.
Paul: Cheerful, honest and proud.
Edward: Thoughtlul.
Harold : Coarse.
Joseph: Intelligent, earnest, but dull.
l\lark : Spoiled
Louise : Pretty.
Maureen: Sultry and surly.
Nancy: Spiteful.
Pamela: Han! and domineering.
Patricia: Plain.
Sally: Childlsh. '
Sarah: Sensual and sellish. -NEW
YORK READER
DEAR READER: I boW several peo-
ple whose names ·1ppear Jn the tan:ey
and tbey ....... , onctly the .,_ite
qualities dffcrlbeil lD the poU. I say,
bull feathers, dearte.
Are your parents too strict? Hard
to reach? Ann Landers' booklet,
"Bugged by Parents? How to Get More
Freedom,''' cou1d help you bridge the
generation gap. Send 50 cents in coin
with your request and a long, stamped
self-addressed envelope to Ann Landers,
P.O. Box 3346, 222 W. Bank Dr., Chicago,
Ill. 60654.
•
IMAGINE SWIMMING,
SLEEPING, SHOWER·
JNG OR EVEN CRYING
WITH BEAUTIFUL
LASHES. THESE ARE
THE SAME LASHES
THAT YOU WOULD
PAY $15 OR MORE FOR
E LSEWHERE .
•owSS + ur ONLY
441 1,l1TH
COSTA MUA sun11
MON ... $AT. •·6
642-2880
IY APPOINTMIHT ONLY
Are you, or is someone you care about
messing around with drugs -or con-
sidering ii? Arc all drugs bad? \\'hat
about pal -in modeiation? Ann Lan·
ders's new book1et, "Straight Dope on,[~""""""""""""""""~~""""""""~ As a matter of tuste, however, I
believe an unwed mot her In high school
should stay In the background.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I read
recently that a psychologist polled nearly
I,500 people to learn their instant reac-
tions to certain names. He then analyzed
Simon: Introverted and mean.
Keith; Hard, self-reliant and am-
bitious.
Tho:mas : Large, soft and cuddly.
Barbara: Fat but sexy.
Drugs," separates the facts from tj>e fic-
tion. For each booklet ordered, send a
dollar bill, plus a long, stamped, self-ad·
dressed envelope, (16 cents postage ) to
Ann Landers, Box 3346, Clllcago, Ill.
Kids Like To ·:
'
Emma: Pretty but silly.
Florence:. Masculine. iOOSI. Ask Andy
Conferences, Fund-raising Head Agendas RENT A RUG DOCTOR
"STEAM;' CARPET CLEANER
Conference
A two-day conference on Ag-·
Ing: Concepts and Issues will
be conducted by the Universi-
ty of Southern California's
Ethel Percy Andrus Geron-
tology Center.
The scss.ions will be from
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday
and Frid!!)'., N~v. 2~30, in the
Sheraton AnaJielm Ho.tel.
· Representing the center as
cpnference speakers will be r>r. Caleb E. Finch, chief,
newt>bioi()f{y laboratory; Dr.
Vern L. &ngston, associate
professor of sociology; Dr.
James E. Birren, <:i!nter direc-
tor, and Rosalyn Benitez, field
instructor. ~
Others are Dr. Dean Black.
assistant professor of
sociology ; Robert Newcomer ,
lecturer in the center's
graduate program; t r e n e
Burnside, coordinator f o r
nursing education, and Dr.
Theodore Ko.ff, associate pro-
Your Horoscope
lessor of
ministration,
Arizona.
pub Ii c ad-Harbor Refonn Temple's an·
University of nual fund-raiser.
NB Junio rs
Eileen Fitzgerald f r o m
Southern California Edison Co.
will presen t 1he program for
the next meeting of Newport
Beach J unior Ebel! L1ub at
10 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 2!1,
in the clubhouse.
She will o(fer tips on nutri·
lion and how to buy, package
and freeze foods.
As an international project.
members adopted a preschool
in Teeate ~·l1ich just received
a collection of needed items.·
Family Pack for Christmas
also will be provided.
Sisterhood
A complete line of Hanukah
ite1ns as well as boutique
articles \viii be offered for
sale during the .Sisterhood of
Tomorrow
The •l~nukah Boutique \\'ill
take place in the Ne\vport
Beach home of _Lynne Koffler
bet"·ccn 10 a.m. and S p.nl.
and 7·9 p.m. Thursday, Nov.
29, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.n1.
Friday, Nov. JO.
Democrat s
Nominating commit~ee will
})e elected during the meeting
,..l the Democratic \Vomen of
"range County at 8 p.m.
'T'hursday, Nov. 29. in the San-
1~ Ana headquarters.
AAUW
\V est min st e r·f ountain
Valley and ~luntington Beach
branches of the American
Association of University
Women have invited the public
to hear a panel t.liscussion
entitled, National \\'omen's
Aries: Be Flexible
TUESDAY
NOVEMBER 27
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (Marcil 21-April 191:
One you admire professionally
may be having legal dif-
ficulties. Know it and don 't
press demands. Be flexible.
TAURUS (April ~')-~lay 20l:
Light touch wins. Accent
di plomacy. Look ahead. Be
aware of potential. Deal with
Llbnl.
GEMINI (~fay 21-Junc 20):
-but don't throw caution
to winds.
U BRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ):
Much of what was routine
is overhauled. Plenty of the
past is tossed aside as habit
patterns are smashed.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 211:
Avoid tendency lo scatter
forces. Relative is confused.
Know it and experiment.
Refuse to be painted into cor-
ner . Highli ght versJtility.
IF TODAY JS YOUR
BffiTHDAY you arc capable
of being aggressive "'hen
necessary; you also fight for
fair play. You have way 0£
almost communicating with
animals. You draw to you peo-
ple born under Aries and
Libra. 'r"ot1 v.'il! be more
popular iu 1974 and hiarch
and December will be your
significant months in that
year.
From Page 13
Political Caucus: A \Vay to
\Vin.
Vivian Hall will discuss the
history of the mo.vement ;
Kathy O'Neill will tell of her
experiences as a political can-
didate, and Dorothy !\lusfell.
Laguna Beach city clerk, "·ill
talk about her election ex-
periences.
The meeting will be at 7:30
p.m. Thursday, Nov. 29. in
the Murdy Park Recreation
Center.
Q ueen of Hearts
Wally Franken. an interior
derorator for 30 years, Y.ill
be the main speaker at the
next in a series of lectures,
sponsored by the Laguna
Beach Queen of Hearts Guild
of Orange County Children's
Hospita l.
The talk will begin at 1 t
:i.1n. Thursday. Nov . 29. in
the !\loulton Playhouse.
Also spealung will be Mrs.
Ff'rn Cooper. V.'ho \l'il ~ discuss
decorating ideas for home or
apartment.
Buy Ways is the topic of
Franken who will concentrate
on contemporary and antique
tulnishings.
Alumnae
Details concerning a
sc holarship now available lo
an Orange County girl will
be revealed to members of
the Smith College Club of
Orange County.
The group will meet at 10:30
a.m. Thursday, NQv. 29, in
the Newport Beath home of
Mrs. Frederick McBrien .
Luncheon
Jielen Kooiman, author and
lecturer, will speak at the Teen
Challenge Women's luncheon
at noon Thursday, Nov. 29,
in the Orange facility.
Boutique
The &.ardwalk Shopping
Center, Huntington Harbour,
will be the setting for a two-
<lay boutique sale. sponsored
by Huntington Beach Little
l\-1ermaid Guild.
Hours will be from to a.m.
to 4 p.m. Thursday and Fri·
day, Nov. 29 and 30. Proceeds
will benefit the Children's
Hospital of orange County.
~embers alSQ are selling
Ch ris tmas cards until Satur.·
day. Dec. 1, as a hospital
benefit.
Bazaar
A Christmas bazaar \Vil\
take place rrom 8:30 a.m. to
5:30 p.m. F"riday, Nov. 30,
in the f!'!lo1\•ship hall of the
fl;lcsa Bible ChaJ>el.
Adoption Guild .
1'1ew members will b e
---..--r-
9 Suaday, Dec. 2. at St.
Joachim's Parish Hall, eoSta
Mesa.
Dolphins
' Ne\v officers were electe'd
by the Dolphins . Women's
Divisio.n of the New p ort
Harbor Chamber of Com·
meree.
They are Pat.-Krone. presl·
dent; l\.1ary Pearson and Veta
Behr, vice presidents; Earline
Loop, treasurer, and Pat
Macy and ~tary H o y t ,
secretaries.
Philharmonic
A new women·s working
committee has been formed
in the Spyglass Hills area to
raise funds for the Orange
County Philharmo.nic Society.
.
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you pick up •t our stor•.
FOR LOW
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RUG DOCTOR RENTS
IN LOS ANCllLIS
I 113 I 423·0454
~tern officers include the
f\1me s. Leonard ll.asmussen.
president: Robert Pike and
James West ho ff, \•ice
presidents John T. Forte, seeret-ary, and K1:nneth Chong, 1232 S. lrbtol, Soito A•• 1061 I. Artotlo, Lo .. looctl
-~t:'.'":'.''."'"lllr::cri::. ______ ...'.!""""""""""""""""""""~o'.'.'~'"~'·' MOH. THlU SAT.
honored by the Adoption Guild r -----------------------------
of Southern Orange County
during a "just for fun" party
tQ take place Friday, Nov.
30, in the Corona del Mar
home of ?\frs. James Hines.
Holiday Sale
~1embers or Court Stella
Maris, Catholic Daughters of
America, who have Y..'Orked
diligently for a year making
holiday gifts, will sell their
wares during a Christmas
Bou!ique.
The event will be staged
from noo.n to 4 p.m. Friday,
Nov. 30; noon to 8 p.m. Satur-
day, Dec. 1, and from 9 to
' ,., You may have to backtrack.
Emotional response cuuld be
opposite from logical move.
Know what is actual, what
ii wi!bful, what is illusion.
CANCER (June 2hluly 221:
Lie low. Gather force s. Seek
report, counsel of older, ex-
perienced individual. Accent
the practJca l. Take nothing for
granted. Be a newsman.
SAGfITARIUS !Nov. 22·
Dec. 21): Don't mix money
and friends. You could lose
both. Key now is practical
approach. Take stock. Size up
situation and act accordingly.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): cycle is such that you
can make beneficial changes.
You are capable now of
analyzing and coming up with
constructive answers.
• • .Roles Changing
OUR BEAUTY
SALON'S <;?
Y2 PRI CE ~
SALE!· THE NO-SET~~. _
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 1:
Finish what you start. Deal
with Libra, Aries persons.
Find ways of gelling message
across.
• VIRGO I Aug. 23·Sept. 22 ):
Take a charlee but don't be
reckle.ss. ~feans b e in-
dependent, confident , crea tive
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21>-Feb.
18): Trying to keep a secret
now could prove a major task.
Applies especially mtere fami-
ly is concerned. Questions
about money !lJld budget ap-
pear· almost certain to arise.
Purchase of luxury item could
be in question.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
He cited a system no'v in
use in Reston, Va .. ""'here
homes are equipped \vith a
telephone and c o m p u t c r
tenninal.
, First, he noted that older
people generally lack new
things to become inv.olved in.
Then be pointed out that
learning takes place when "we
engage in situations that are
more complex than we are."
A bed-ridden person, for ex-
ample, mighL.tupi'Tln on an
educaliunal progran1. or
participate in a !o"·n ffiecling.
Or, a retired professional
might find a student to share
his knowledge with .
"There will be a capacity
for-opening up old people's
minds," he said. "There are
tremendous implications."
This may soon be the cheapest
fonn of information receiving,
according to a study by
several Stanford professors,
Dr. Black asserted.
"This could bring changes
in life cycle fro1n the .tradi-
tional sdiool, work and reitre-
ment pattern. I'm very ex-
cited abOut it."
Open line of co.mmun:lcatlon
with one 'who can aid in·
professional endeavors. Gtve
full play lo intuitive intellect.
• "If the mind is not challeng •. 1------~--------------
A-You know without know\ng ;
__ · y~u 1 are pthobl to1 detect1• __ pcrceve wi ul orma
~ -mcthQd_.or._ pr_ocedyre. Trust
emorrs ll [r~~=' .. ="~! o.~=.=d~=~
Sl'Oll"TSY. EA& make the scene
&mays
ed, lhe world situalion is tuned
out.
''It is important to older
peopl~ use their CO{lscious
mind. The "feeding of the mind
is as important as feeding
the body." •
Wcstclif '1ira. t7dl Ind~
Newpon lkacA.Ctlifomia9'2660 in the l1Qlflijlt1ll ~~==~~ ~======. F.OR
In the telephone-computer
hookup Dr. Black described,
infonnation would be ex-
cbanged and sen'ice wold be
dispensed.
Blackman,
EaperiellC>Od Qulil7 J,,.olen
Coffee. Bean ·#7
Colleo &ad Tu l'roOI Aoywhen
DRUG
PRICES •••
Call
642-4104
J'O I. 17rfl St. et Tfttl• A ...
Hen to 1.1,-M•t. -c.... ..... 141 ..... 104
•
·. ELEC'TROLYS IS AS
PERMANENTLY ARCHED
BROWS. AN INTRIGUI NG
w1oow's PEAK. THE ENO OF'
UNWANTED FACIAL HAIR. THEN LET OUR
LICENSED TECHNICIAN SHOW YOU HOW
SAFE' AND E~Y IT IS,
$~ IN OUR BEAUTY SALON ,
•
BR US H 'N GO PERM .' ~
PLUS A COMPLIM EN ~Jl°-Y ......-
PROFESS IO N AL BRUSl-I. I
THE CUT1S SHORT ANO SH APELY. ABOUT 2" LONG . ANO
OUH STAFF IS TRAINEO TO LIFT, SHAPE ANO CUT YOU
HA I R ON THC BI AS TO GI VE EXT RA eo ov . COMBINED
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•
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" • '
" ' '
I' ,,
loth ot the entf'OllU .. Udo kl•. Men. tllnl ""· , " "-'$••· t " , L-----------------'SHOP MONDAY THROUGH SATURD AY 10:00-9:30. SUNDAY IZ :Oo-s,oo . '
' I • t \"
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MU11' AND ·. JEFF ·
...! • ~,~ • , , ~ r
. .
FIGMENTS
NANCY
0---'-----·
. . ' .
· I . HEAR · 'YOLJ!RE .
JN TRAll'llN' ··FOR A .
··FIGHT·
W IT' ME '·.
, ~ .. '
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" '
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~..,~ .. -"""" •.
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; TllAT~S ~llOSSIDU-PUl.ZLB · . .
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. .
(,, .......... + .... -"-
\
•
..
by Dqug Wildey
VIHOCOEEEE!
AND WE'RE
AUIEADY UNO£•·
'MY FILMING Tl-! <.OMMER<JAL {
by Al Smith
'
by· Dale Hale .
by Ernie Bushmiller
-=Iii,.;,..---~ ·-· -~-... ~ NOTICE MY FAST
FOOTWORK
MISS PEACH
..
DOOLEY 'S WORLD
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
TIME TO tET UNCL!'
CASHEW KNOW THAT
CHRISTMAS
IS COMIN'.
ANIMAL CRACKERS
-~CAN
fl'MtT IJY
6tTT1N6
OUT OF
0<.111: •
. <SIWHTI
Monday, Novembei-26, I973 DAILY PILOT JJi._
by Roger Bradfield-
by Mell
by Gus Arriola
brFerd--.lohnsan
by Roger BoUen
4E~~1BUT~
CA!.l'T· J'!!eP
IT I.IT/
11·26 ~ . .
"Having proceeded tbls far, you are now in complete.· ...., I
mastery of your mind -yoa bave said 1oodbye_, · ·
forever, &o your cravint for rl~b fattealug foods ." .,_
DENNIS THE MENACE
'IF SOH£fl!Jf SUES YA ••. ()()l;S IT HURT ?.
1 I
.. -' . . . . . ;.. -· .. .
' • J6 DAILY PllOT Monday, NOVtmber 26. 1973 ·
l;Jrowns Trip Steelers;
Atlanta Subdues Jet:s
••
Qeveland Browns quarterba ck Mike
Phipps is apparently coming into his
O\\-p.-The same goes for Atlanta Falcons
quarterback Bob Lee.
At1d for those reasons, the BroYlns
and the Falcons may be tbe hottest
teams. In professional football.
Phipps scrambled for a ·first down
on ~ key third down situation to keep
a ile drive alive and Greg Pruitt raced
• 19 :jards for a touchdown with l :01
reelilning in the game as the Browns
defeated Pittsburgh 21·16 Sund ay in
Cleveland.
The win moves Cleveland to a half
ga •. behind Pittsburgh in th e Eastern
Di~on of the American Conference
with a 7-3 record. P ittsburgh is 8-3.
The Steelers played without the
services of quarterback Terry Hanratty
ex~t for three plays in the game,'
but 1almost pulled out a win behind
third-string quarterback Joe Gilliam.
ff:tnratty suffered an injury IG . his
thcpwlng wrist and although x-rays show·
ed ir was not broken. the team is
unc~in '!"hen Hanralty will be able
to ~Y again.
Gilliam hit wide receiver Ron Shanklin
\\'ith a nine-yard touchdown pass to
put Pittsburgh out in front but Cleveland
came back with a one--yard sneak by
Ph"'ps and 15--yard pass from Phipps
to P1uitt to go ahead 14·7. 'llrree field goats by Roy Gerela put
Pittsburgh back on top 16--14 before
Phipps englnllered lhe final drive.
A scrambling. 42-yard pass play from
Pili! to Pruitt on a third·and-eight
sit Uon set up Pruitt's winning run.
, tht:r games Sunday:
NTA AT NEW YORK JETS -
Le ayed the New York Jet.S Joe
Na th to a standstill in a steady
rai.torm as the Atlanta Falcons scored
a 28-20-victory for_~eir-seventh-straight'.-
win.
Lee. a. castoff from the Minnesota
Vikings, passed for two touchdowns and
fulijtack: F.ddie Ray scored on dives
of fone and two yards for Atlanta 's
toudldowns.
The win keeps Atlanta hot on the
heels ol lhe Los Angeles Rams in the
Nationel Football Conference West, and
assures the f'alcons of their best season
ever. The team's record is now S.3.
Lee's touchdown passes covered 38
yards to Tom Geredine and 47 ya rds
to Louis Neal to equal Namath's
touchdown passes of two yards to
RJchard caster and 38 yards lo Eddie
Bell.
Namath threw three interceptions,
however, in his first starting assignment
for the Jets since su!tering a shoulder
injury in September.
CHICAGO AT MINNESOTA -The
Minnesota Vikings, playing on 'tarl
Kassulke Day at Metropolitan Stadium,
made their injured teammate happy by
pa~ti!!g the Bears 31·13. Kassullie, liijUrOO .. TaSt'~su~~mm~e~r~~1n
motorcycle accident , made his first
public appearance since the mishap
which has left him in a wheelchair
and paralyzed from the chest down.
John Gilliam caught two touchdown
passes for the Vikings and had another
long reception to set up an eight-yard
run by Fran Tarkenton for another score.
Chuck Foreman taUied from a yard
out and Fred COx booted a field goal
for the Vikings. Gary Huff, replac ing
injured Bobby Douglass at quarterback
for the Bears, passed 29 yards for hi s
team's only touchdown.
KANSAS CITY AT DENVER -Look
Who's in first place bl the AFC's Western
Division. In case you hadn't noticed
it's Denver, followi ng a 14·10 victory
over the Kansas City Chiefs.
The lop spot in lhe AFC West used
to be the exclusive domain of either
Kansas City or Oakland. But the upstart
Broncm, shooting for the club's first
winning season, are now &-3-2 and have
a seven-game unbeaten streak going.
T-he Broocos, v.·ho lead the confer_ence
in passing, hit for two quick scores
just before halftime and made them
stand against the Chiefs.
Charlie Johnson passed to Haven
Moses for touchdowns of 18 and 40
yards, the final coming just 35 seconds
before halftime.
Raiders Slam Chargers
T~ Snap Losing Streak
'QA~LAND (AP) -Safely George
Atkinson picked up a wet ball fumbled
by .Robert Holmes of San Diego and
ran 59 yards Sunday for the Oakland
Raiders' opening touchdown in a 31·3 . . National Football League victory over
the Chargers.
Ken Stabler threw two touchdown
passes, 16 yards to Fred Biletnikoff
in the second quarter and one yard
to .Bob Moore ln the third, after the
R~ders got possession of the ball inside
the luckless Chargers' 2Q..yard line.
the first half of the game was played
in • the rain. and the weather helped
ke<1> 13,367 fans with lickets home. The
game was sold out in advance and.
shown locally on television.
The Raiders broke a two-game losing
stteak and ma4e th eir record 6-4-~, mov·
ing ·them into second place in the
Western Division of the American Fool·
ball Conference. The last-place Chargers
are 2·8-1.
Atk.inson·s touchdown run ·-ca me <ln
San Diego's sixth pla y of the game.
Defensive tackle Otis Sistrunk tackled
Holmes who lost another fumble in the
third quarter at the San Diego 13 to
set up Oakland for its final touchdown.
Late in the second period, Chargers'
punter Dennis Partee bobbled a center
snap, tried to get a kick off on the
run and virtually missed the ball tG
give Oakland possession at the 16.
Stabler threw to Biletnikoff at the goal
line on the next play. '"
'The Raiders had moved ahead -17-3
two minutes earlier on a seven·yard
tou chdown run by Charlie Smith. Mike
Siani gained SO-yards on a pass play
from Stabler to set up that score.
Kansas Cily, which had gooe ahead
3-0 before the Denver outburst, trimmed
the lead on a seven.yard touchdown -
pass from Mike Livingston to Otis Taylor
in the fourth quarter.
NEW YORK GIANTS AT
PHILADELPHIA -Roman .Gabl1el's
sore elbow wasn't much of a factor
as the Eagles went to a ground game
to defeat tbe Giants, ~UI.
Afore more
Tom Sullivan rushed for 156 yards
~d the winning touchdown as the Eagles
racked up 253 yards on the ground.
Gabriel threw just 15 times, oompleting
10 for 156 yards.
Gabriel passed 29 yards lo Don Zim-
merman in the first period and
_engineeredJ>Jl2.yard scoring drive which
ate up over seven minutes of the third
period and Tum Dempsey kicked two
field goals for the Eagles.
New York got three field goals from
Pete Gogolak and a four.yard touchdown
pass from Randy Jolmson to Johnny
Roland lo close the gap. ·
ST. LOUIS AT CINCINNATI -Lenvil
Elliott, a lOth--round draft choice, came
off the bench to score two touchdovms as Cincinnati exploded in the third
quarter to a 42-24 victory over the
cardinals.
~ The win moved Cincinnati one game
behind division leading Pittsburgh in
the AFC East.
Quarterback Ken Anderson passed for
three touchdowns in Cincinnati's biggest
offensive day of the season. The Bengals
were clinging to a 14-10 third quarter
lead when Elliott entered the game to
score twice and the Bengals pulled away.
The Cardinals were Jed by Donny
Andersen who rushed for 103 yards.
.NEW ENGLAND-AT-HOUSTON -
Jim Plunkett passed for two fuuchdowns
and the New England defense manhandl·
ed Houston in a 32-0 win.
New England was ahead 24-0 by
halftime on the touchdown. passes, a
one-yard run by Mack Herron arid the
first of three field goals by Jeff White.
Linebacker Steve Kiner tack.led Dan
Pastorini in the end zone with -4 : 18
left for the final insult. Houston got
out of its own territol)' only three times
in the game, and its one scoring op-
portunity was thwarted when a field
goal attempt was blocked by Arthur
Moore.
DeCensive back Ralph · Anderson
recovered a fumble and intercepted a
pass for the Patriots.
'· BUFFALO AT BALTIMORE-Buffalo
•scored a pair of touchdowns in the
final 1:34 of play lo hand the hapless
C.Olts a 24-17 defeat.
Buffalo tied the game at 17 when
Joe Ferguson threw a 37·yard touehdo\\'n
pass to Bob ChandJer, and defensive
back Dwight Harrison scored the winning
touchdown 23 seconds later when he
picked off a ~Wiy Domres pass and
went 31 yards down the sideline.
The Colts, woo have now lo.st five
in a row, got their touchdowm on a
IOI·yard kickoff return by C<ltton Speyrer
and an ll·yard pass from Domres to
Tom-Mitchell hrthe-final period.
0. J. Simpson gaintd 124 yards, 59
of them coming on a touchdov.n run
in the second quarter, his loth touchdo"11
jaunt of the season.
; Gelker Top Litaemun
Oak-A!klnton ~fumble rtlurn (fl l•nd• kick)
SD-FG Parlff U Oak-FG-Blanda Sol
0.k-Sm!th 7 run (Blanda kick) O•k-Bll"nlkotf 16 P!I•• from Slabl1r (81•nd•
kick\ Opk-Moore l l)IJSI from Sl•b!lll" <Bl•n<l• kick)
O.ID1VIDUAl. LEADERS
Five Pirates Selected
RUSHING -S&n O!fflO, EdWa"'1 16-111, J<m~I
6-16, Hol~I 1.1t; Oakland, Smlltl 14"'6, Hubtl•rd
12·31, DaYIJ 8·11. RECEIVING -San OltQO, Ectw•rdS J.21 Jon.e1
,__.,, HOlmei 2·161 Ot kland, Slanl ~-90. Moora
•·3l, BJl•lnlkoff 1-16. PASSING -San Ol~o. Ci.rk 6-lS-1, 121 Y•rd1, F0\111 4+o 2S; Otltlar>d, S!tbler, 12-21·1, 165,
l.•monlca 1-2~. 1'.
T~ All-conference Team
Pro F oothall Orange Coast College·s John Dixon,
Mike Barth, Gary Balch. Grant Gelker
and Mike Lacy have been named to
the Daily Pilofs All-South Coast Con· Standings ' ference football team.
Dixon, a first team selection last year,
NATtONAl. FOOTBALL LEAGUE was the Pirates' ttading rusher with
AMERICAN CONFEltENCE nearly 700 yards, becoming the all-tim e
E1t1 Dlvlllofl
lt-Mltmi 8uf!1lo
New f~land New York Je11
B•frlmore
w Lr ,.c1 ,.,. ,.,, rusher in OCC history.
10 1 0 .m '76 101 Barth was a steady performer all 6 S D .~ ln 191 ; j ~ :m ~~ ~~) season long for OCC at offensive tackle,
2 ' o , 111 1 ~ 30S as was Lacy at a defensive back spot. CltllrJI Olv1'lo11 .i1~btn"o11 2 J o .n1 2s1 H9 Balch was a standout at defensive
2~~~!.'1i ; ~ ~ :~~ l: l~ end and also handled the Bucs' place·
~ton w u i oiv1~io!i 10·0 .11'1 , 161 i1o ·-kicking cbi:>res. .. \,'
ee.wr ' i 1 .•l' ;.s '2s Gelker, called by Tucker one of t e
Olllfltnd ' • 1 .591 211 HS be 0CC d j' ed K•JtS•s cuv 6 • 1 .S91 111 12• st own memen ever , was narn
~ ... Oleoo HATIONAL CDNFill:N~E·'21 u~ 181 tire conlereoce lineman of the year.
\''•stilnr;iion • E•11 Divr.i~11 3 0 .m ,n 127 OCC rlUlning back Mike Nanko, middle
~~t~elDlll• l : ~ :~ ~ ~:! guard Kelly Stroich and defensive end
st .LDVI• 32 ,' 1, .311 '" 30s Jon Marchiorlatti were named to the N-York Gl•nh .2n lit 26' d · c .. 11,•t 01 ... 1t1on secon wut. ir~lflflttot• 10 1 O .909 2J..I 1"
Detroit • • 1 ·'"" 204 190 G~" flay 3 ~ 2 .@ 138 191 c111t•oo ' 1 o .2n 111 111 W1t1 Divilitn ; 1 0 .111 'n l SS
8 3 0 ·"' 1111 16.S • , e .364 111 'Vi · 1 1 0 .SOD HO 2"32
'
Defense
First Team
E-Achoe. Fullerlon 190 So.
E. G. Balch, Orange Coast 212: So.
T-Gelker. Orange Coast %30 So.
T-DeFelice, San Diego Mesa 215 So.
MG-Johnson, Cerritos 225 So.
LB-Kalatl, Sanla Ana 215 So.
DB-Feeney, Fullcrlon 188 So.
DB-Lundstrom, Sanla Ana 185 So.
DB-Canfield, Fullerton 185 So.
DS-Lley, Orange Coasl ........ Ut So.
Second Team
E-Marchlorlattl, Oraa1e C.L Zllt So.
E-Hamllton, Cerriloo 210 So.
T-Vance, Fullerton l!O So.
T-Gobl, Mt. San Antonio 230 So.
MG-Strolch; Orange Coal! 2't Fr.
LB-Davison, Fullerton 19$ So.
LB-Morganti, Santa Ana 210 So. ~II-Matson, San Diego Mefl .. 175 So.
•
DS-McKenzie, Ml.San Antonio 175 So.
DB-Alaman, Sanla Ana 195 So.
DB-Hutchinson , Fullerton 172 So.
All-5oath Coasl
Offense
. First Team
Pos. Player College Wt. Yr.
E-Mclntyre, Mt. San Antonio 170 So.
E--Caldwell , Fullerton 182 So.
T-Balch, Orange Coast 215 So.
T-Rule. San Diego Mesa 205 Fr.
G-Tipton, Cerritos. 210 So.
G-Martinez, Fullerton 215 So.
C-Kincaid. Saiita Ana 203 SO.
B--Myer. Mt. San Antonio 185 So.
B-DeBerg, ·Fullerton 190 So.
.B-Dixon. Orange Coast !05 So.
B-Randall , Santa Ana 200 So.
Second Te8m
E-Donovan, Fullerton 195 So.
E-Murvin, Cerritos 170 SO.
T-Heida, Cerrilos 215 So.
T-O'Hara, Mt. San Antonio 222 So.
G-Ledbelter, Santa Ana 230 So.
G-Haley, Fullerlon 200 So.
C-Fragie, Fullerton 230 So.
B-Fitcb. San Diego M... 195 So.
B-Polk, Fullerton 200 So.
8-Cortez, Cerritois 175 ·SO.
B-Nanko, Orange Coa1& •....... llO Fr.
Back of year -Myer (Mt. SAC).
Coach of year -Hal Sherbeck
(Fullerton).
Mustangs Banquet
Costa Mesa Hlgb'• vani&y football
team wlll be feted at lhe Tate ol lhe
Whale Restaurailt Tuesday night wilh
n sports award banquet.
It starts at 6:30 and !be restaurant
I• located nonr lhe Dllboa Pavilion, '
........ ~..t ••••. ,,,,,.,~,,. ' .
SoCal fionference Champions ·~
Golden West College's Southern California Confer· Ron Maurstad, Rich Leonis, Kurt McGill, Bill Gue-',
ence championship team is pictured above. In the gler and assistant coach Ross Mcintyre. In the back
bottom row, from the lef~ are John Maltby, Pele row are Jim McAdams, Mike Rudd. Doug Dunn,
Noah, Mike Eich, Frank Hazelton and Mike Hickey. Larry Roberti;on, Kurt Westerfeld, Keith ~II.on, '\
In tbe middle row are head coach Tom Hermstad, Frank Browne, Tom Burgoyne and Ray Storti.
CdM Tangles With Upland
In CIF Water Polo Playoffs ·
Chargers
Next Foe
For Tars
Upland High's Highlanders
invade Newport Harbor High
Tuesday to duel Corona del
Mar.High's Sea Kings in the
second round of the CIF water
polo playoffs.
lt's a 4:30 start following
a 3 o'clock clash between
Newport -Harbor -·Dos
Pueblos.
The Hlghlanders advanced
with a 6--5 win over University
while Corona del Mar con-
tinued in the eliminations with
an easy S.1 rout of Harvard.
Comparable scores favor
Corona de! Mar, but Upland's
physical and disciplined outfit
could give lhe Sea Kings aome
real trouble.
Upland was handed a 15-3
thrashing by Newport Harbor
in the latter's season opener.
And Corona del Mar has split
with Ne.wport, winning, 6--1,
and losing, 9-2.
Upland's big gun is Vic
Miller in Ille hole, but It als0
bas scoring threats on the
break from any number of
players.-
Newport Harbor H i g h ' s
Sunset League water po1o
diampions return to their
c~mpus pool .Tuelday _af.
ternoon and racing coach Bill
Bame1rs outfil will be Dos
Puebloi. in the second round
otlhe CIF.playolfs.
Downey Big Obstacle
For Estancia Poloists
Miller likes lo sit in lhe
hole, but It wu Dcrml! Miller
who did lhe most damage
Wednesday· wilh lhree tallies
on the break. ·
Coach Clilf Hooper rotates
his hole man between Mark
Watsoo, Dan Pennington and
Frank Browne.
Watson has connected for
70 goals including t h re e
The Golela-based tbargm
or Dos Pueblos march in wilh
en 18-2 overall mark and
lhe Northern League co-dwn·
pionshlp in band.
Coach Jim Ranta's Chargers
meet Newport Harbor at 3,
preceedlng lhe Cvrooa del Mar-Upland tilt at 4:30.
Dos Pueblos operates a con--
ventional offense and it's
usuall y co-captains K i t
Follmer and Frank Clark
teaming up with B u d
Williamson. One goes to the
hole and lhe olher two breAk
from lhe wings.
A.r:-, long as there are CIF
water Polo playoffs it appears
you can count on Downey
High's Vikings as a major
factor in the race for the
crown.
Coach Bill Sexton's Vikes
have been to the finals four
times, semis four times and
quarterfinals four times in the
· past 12 years.
Tue.sd'ay afternoon his crew
'viJJ try to make it into the
quarterfinals again. but · ftrst
it must overcome Irvine
League co-champion Estancia
The game is scheduled for
3 at Cerritos College.
Coach Steve Farmer 's
Estancia team qualified for
its second·round berth with
an impressive 1S.5 rout of
Rowland.
Downey's juggernaut routed
Rio Hondo champ La canada,
16-5, and led. IH at lhe hall
in qualifying for Tuesday's
clash.
Pacing DoWl'f!Y is T i m
Hooper (who didn't even play
Mel Marriot (a &-1, !SS.pound
against La canada), goalie
junior), Dave Egan and Rob
Arnold.
Arnold was an A11·American
as a sophomore but a major
operation cut down his ef·
fecUveness until recenUy. He
laught blmsell lo play left
handed after fiV'e months in
a cast and bas just recently
rounded into nearly 100 per·
cent shape.
Others In the Downey attack
include.Steve Halas, Gunther
11olob and Randy Hower. Wednesday and Pennington
"We know enough about "has 44 to his credit (also with
Estancia to project three Wednesday against
ourselves/' says Sexton. Harvard).
Estancia's big we~e Browne's totals include 38
goalie Tony Sawaya and goals and the overall depth
Newport HarOOr t r an s f e r in the O:>rona del Mar attack
steve Smith. Smith does most shows additional strength with
of the scoring and Sawaya's Jack Lorenz (57), John Crimp
defense has been a large lac-(32) and Simon Boughey (17)
tor in Estancia's aMexation adding to the totals.
of lhe co-diamplonship in Upland's major worry Is
Irvine League warfare. C<lrona del Mar's blanketing
Others instrumental i n man·to-man defense, -while
Estancia's best-ever season . Hooper's crew must be con·
are Jim Sallaghan, RaDcl:y cemed with the overall physi·
DeRusha, Mike Swenson, Bill cal stature and occasional
Lee and Ron Smilh. lin'O-timing tactics of Upland .
Laguna Beach S~ks
Another Polo Upset
Speedsters Evan MarkiewiC'l
and Bill Bradley, a couple
or 23.o sprinters wilh good
size, anchor the defense.
All·league goalie S co t t
Hickman rounds out the Dos
Pueblos· arsenal
Ranta bam't seen Newport
this year but he's aware of
the Sailors' attack.
"We're aware of Jeff Ouyn--
dam, their goalie. He's a super
"player and we're going to have
to take good percentage shots
if we are to stay with them,"
says Ranta.
Hls team's only two looses
were-to-Buena-(M)-end-La
Puenle (9-3). Dos Pueblos led,
3-ll. in the La Puente loss
before its two leading scorers
fouled out in the secoml
Laguna Beach Hlgh'• Artists
barged inlo lhe second round
of the CIF water polo cham·
pionships with their 11 • 8
trlwnph over Foothill Wed·
nesday.
Sprint is at 3 :~ and coach quarter.
Ralph Hahn's La Serna "We'll try to Cast break as
Lancen move in with an im· much as we can," says Ranta,
pressive I~ record. The an ex-UC Sanla Barbara and
Lancen have outscored the Riverside City College athlete.
opposition, IK-93, and lhe only Newport's JhreAI ts Dlzyn-
1 ..... are lo Sunny Hllla (16-7) dam in the net. who recorded
and Long Beach Wllson and his first shutoul or lhe S<a!On
Whittler in sudden death in Wednesday's 24.0 slaughter some suggest it was an
upset, but pound for pound
Wednesday the Artists were
better lhan Foolhill.
ach Walt Otlo's
ho his Laguna Beach
te be up lo lhe same
performance Tueoday a t
Moote Vista Hlgh where his
team plays Whitmore League
champion La Serna.
overtime, each by a 7-8 soore. of Riverside North. ·
Bill Blackwlll and Dan In addition Newport hal lhe
Elliott are La Serna's leading tremendous balance. 'Ibirteen
scorers. Blackwill scored six sailors figured in Newport's
in La Smut's 10.9 first round scoring against Rivers 1 de
victory over Garden Grove. North. 1 i
Reterve Dave Belzer hit the Marc Kaurian led the rout .
winning goal in sudden clealh wilh four goals. while Greg
overtime after six Lancers Fults and Pete Harrl.s had
starters had fouled out. lbree apiece.
Laguna'a JU reoord haslp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ·p C H k been paced by Doug Johnson ro age, oc ey · ::~i!et"wiil:'r1:;.i• ~=in~ IUY A NIW 71 DATSUN
AllD SAVE AT
COSTA MW ilATSUN
1141 HAllOI IL'f'O. C.M.
540-6410
W"t Dlvi11o!t ability. -'"""' "l!fer'tflt, Pt111adtlo111. 1J , t ,, Sii 3l But It's been a team effort At~nc ~'11111~ Ptt. o• At11nt1 10 ' • ,~ 65 s2 at Laguna Beach In its drive
Boston 15 3 .m Ctlk:tOO ' s 6 " 61 1' fQr the .lea"""' "'co-ti"tle.
N•w York • 12 10 .!14S s, st. , .... , ' 7 3 21 5l 't-F~~~~·~-~~~;;!~~~~~;;;;;;:;;;;;;~~ Bulfl!IO 10 12 ,t» ""' Ptlllad•IDl'lll 7 14 .333 t ''> P!ltabUrOl'I 7 10 3 17 51 U
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CJ"AXDVG HEil CJ'O DrNNER?
She'll tow
oriperle-
the 9nly 0<•111" County restaurant serving a wide choice of ~repe entrees and
desserts for lunch, dinner and supper
J.BY BEEF BOURCUICNON · • .
f!e!'.d" chunlc1 of beel, prepartd Bourguignon, In 1 delicious wine sabct,
lofdtd In a c.Ope and lopped wlrh mulhroom .. -.
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MO!ldllY, NMmbtr 26, 1973 OAflY PILOT J7
Angry Bo Lashes Out After Losing Vot~
WOODY HAYES
Winner by TKO
BO SCHEMBECHLER
Victim of • Voto
OCCCoach
Warins Up
.
J -Hut Rivalry
J .
Deteriorating a t h I e· t i c relationships
between Orange Coast C.OJlege and
Golden_ West College may have reached
a new low after OCC water polo coach
Jack Fullerton refmed to shake hands
with GWC coach Tom Hermstad.
ANN ARBOR, Afich. <APl
Repereusslons over the UnivfJ"SitY of
Michigan's failure IO ~ct a Rooe Bowl
bid SUoday may reverberate for many
y~ara t~ come in the Big.Ten.
Michigan coach Bo Schembechler C.11·
ed ·Silllday "the darkest day in my
alhleti.c caree:r!• after Big Ten athletic
directors 'voted lo send Ohio Stale to
the Jan. 1 football classic.
The two football power, Ohio and Michi·
gan, battled to a 10.10 tie Saturday.
Loyalties built -.ip by U-M's Don
Canham among bis fellow athletic direc-
tors in the league may be completely
•
revised arter the surprislng, even shock·
Ing de•elopmebt announced by Wayne
Duke. conference commissioner.
Athletic directors agreed earlier that
the winner Would . go to the' Rose Bowl.
In the event.-of a tie1 a 5-5 vote would
give the hod to Michigan since Ohio
State was the bowl representative last
year. .
,Why the Wolverines didn 't get five
votes is the puuler that had &:hem -
bechler bristtin·g wilh anger Sunday.
.. l'm bitter. I'm really-bitter" he
sald, bis voice quivering with effiotlon.
"~1y team earned the right to go to
Lauds B uckeyes
McKay Surprised
' .
By.Big Ten €-hoice
LOS ANGELES (AP) -sOuthem
C&lifornia coach John McKay says he
had no preference for his club's foe
In the Rose Bowl but figures Ohio State
must have been considered a better
team than Michigan.
1be two 1ied 1~10 Sunday and.,share
the Big Ten title, but athletic dii'ectors
of schools in the conference voted to
send Ohlo State ba ck to the bowl where
it lost to Southern C&lifomia 42·1'7 last
Jan. 1.
Asked if the selection o( Ohio State
startled him, McKay answered , "Yes.
but I assume the athletic directors sat
down and asked which was the better."
Pacific-& representatives have beaten
the Big Ten representati ve the last four
Rose Bowl meetings and t h e
midwestemers doO•t want a fifth straight dereat · ··· ··· ···-,
Another factor. thinks McKay. was
the broken collarbone suffered by
~ Mlcbigan...quarterbacjr; Jlennio Franklin
in the rmal quarter saturday.
"If the Michigan quarterback can't
play, then Ohio State would be the
better team ," declared the Trojans Coach
whose clutt won the right to play in J
the bowl by beating cros.stown foe UCLA
23-13 Saturday.
After that game, McKay said he
figured the Trojans would be playing
Michigan because the &ckeyes of OSU
had been in the bowl last.
•i1 don't think revenge will be much
of a factor."
. Ohio State beat USC in the 1955 Rose
Bowl, 20-7, and in the 1969 game 27-16
but has lost twice in Pasadena since
then -to Stanford 27-17 in 1971 and
to USC last year.
Several of the victorious Trojam said
after Saturday's victory that. pregame
remarks by UCLA players during the
preceding .week. had aclually worked to
the advantage of use.
Woody Sang
A 1.Iappy Tune
To Tell News
COLUMBUS, Ohio -Woody Hayes
found a unique way to tell his wife,
Anne, of Ohio State's Rose Bowl selectien
Sunday in advance of the o[ficial an--
nouncement.
Sworn to secrecy by school officials,
the Ohio Stale coach ' telophooed his
wire and bummed a few bars ~ of
"California, Here I O:me."
"I hummed a few bars. I didn't say
·a single 'lord, and I just htmg up,''
the Rose Bowl.
!'Wby WaSl\'t Michigan voted lo go
after the 19]2: seasan1 We lo.\t to Ohio
State, 14-11, bht \\'e outplayed them
the whole game. We would have been
the best repreSmtative then ...
"Blg Teo administration hasn't been
very toogh and ii basn'l been very
good, .. he said.
•11 would reall y like to know how
those lldloob voted and particularly how
OW" aiater • school (Michigan Slate)
voted:" rt ls believed Michigan ,State athletic
di.rector Burl Smith may have cast his
ballot Ice Ohio Stale.
Besld'" Omham's yes ballot, Michigan
followers anttclpated at least four other
votes in the school's favor. Bill' Orwig
of lndlana, Bump Elliott of Iowa, Smith
and Elroy lllrsch of Wlsoonsin were
expected to favor the Wolverines.
• Qrwlg, Elliott and Smith all are
Mlchlgan graduates while Hirsch went
to U·M In 1943 and starred on the
football team.
Smllh was quoted Saturday as sug-
gesting he might favor Ohio· State
because quarterback Dennis Franklin
broke his right collarbone in the closing
minutes and was replaced by Larry
CiP•· -·-.•
Athletic directort mllf have ftlt
Michigan wouldn't be the nl081. repreMi-
tative bowl team without Franklin,
although lt was Clpa who came off
the bench two ·years ago • to lead t
Wolverines to a 10-7 victory over the
Buckeyes.
"Theyi used Franklin as a scapegoat,"
Schembech1er said, referring to those
\\'ho voted against U-M. "I feel sorry
for him and the 30 seniors who batiled
to go back there {Pasadena) •
"I'll have the opportWlity again bub
they won't." <¥ •
Hermstad's Rustlers bad just finished
mopping up the pool with :Fullerton's
forces and the GWC coach went over
to offer the customary g o o d
apommansbip geslure of lhaking bands
with the vanquished coach.
Before Saturday's game. McK·ay had
predicted that if his Trojans beat lJCLA,
they woukl be facing Ohio State again.
He predicted the No. 1 nationally ranked
Buckeyes would down the Wolverines.
explained Hayes. . '
' LA'S KEN GEDDES (38) STOPS JOE PROFIT FOR A YARD LOSS WHILE FRED DRYE!l (89) CLOSES I
However,' sourees at the scene say
e Death Eseape •
Fullerton refu><d Ii> shake. ·
1 can't believe Fuilerton •would be
And looking ahead, he recalled ooach
Woody Hayes of OSU had termed this
year's defensive club the best he's had.
. "U that's true, they must be tremen·
dous," commented McKay. who'll give
his team a couple of weeks off before
going into practice sessions.
COLUMB~ Mq, -Missouri football
star John Moseley bad a brush with
death early Sunday whe6 the rented
home he shared with three other students
caught fire.
Had to Work, Scratch, D·ig:~
.;I)~
WHITE
WA SH
Sunday be was asked if Ohio State
might be a more revengeful opponent
than Michigan and answered. in the
negative.
The early morning fire near the
Afissouri campus forced tile senior
delensive back and kick retlll1}.specialist
. ~
lo jump from a seC<lQd.story ledge.. .
Fire officials said the • -lazO qulfed
the -floor of u..· boqle and blocl<ed Moseley's attempt .lo es'ea~·· by the
For Everything, Says--Knox~
GLI M WWIT8
st.airs. He crawled out a ~ to v1·01ence Erupts a ledge, 'and jumped about 15 feel lo l\iEW ORLEANS (AP) -It may not so diJappointed over what shoUtan'I have the ground. He was uninjured. He had have beeb an artislic success, but the
been a crushing loss. He had told. me been awakened by a neighbor's shouts. Los Angeks Rams' ~13 victory over
earlier that ·this year·s Pirates team At so· ccer Ti.ffs • Lakerit Wi n the Ni>w Orleans Sainl< was good enough wpn't as strong as ~ OCC J>l;!lO to ~ them out front in the Western
prodUctions, ollering the exPlana1Ion he LOS -ANGELES -Gail Goodrich Di.vWOn title race. ·
.hadn't dooe much reenn.·ting because he •!<'red 40 pojrits in three· quarters, Sho ti fie< the R boosted ther MILAN, Italy (AP) -An outburst leadiog lhe Im •-!es Lake-to an -' Y 8 · ams -1
'thought he was gojna to be given sab-, ~"' '" r--~ to•• •"oday the Atlanta Falcons ·batical leave from ~I. ' . of violence marred soccer games in easy 137-109 victory over the Poriland ~viu ,,..,,. 'I"" • · • Italian stadiums Sunday resulting in Trail Blazers Sunday in National Basket-.dispatch~ the New Y9_rk Jets 2.8-20,
' Tuesdayn.ightthebltterrivairybetween two fans bcing shot in Southern Italy: ball AssoCiation play. moving to 3-3 for the season and re-
'OCC and GWC resumes·-thi! time rocks, bQttles and iron bars being hurletl Goodrich's points included his 12,oooth rnaining on1y one game behind the Rams.
In basketball. But the coaches of the lo th fi Id 1 t d' . M'I career NBA pom· ts. The Laker guard "We had tO 'work and hit and scratch • t (·•· p h on e 1e a a s a 1um 1n 1 an, and dig for every damn thing we got .cage ttams are no war· ta.c::. · er aps and a referee be~ badly beaten during has 157 points in four games against out there," sai'd Ra-coacb Chuck
they'll even shake hands. a match in North~ Italy. the Trail Bluers this season, including ......, . * Some Italian newspapers called it .ia . a career high 49. Kno~ thing , that ma~ it harder than r 1 wave of hooJiganism in s o cc e r He did not play in the fourth quarter end
Bob Salemo of Anaheim is the leading stadiums." as Laker reserves finished the coot.est. usual for the Rams was a t ency
candidate for classless coach of the The most bloody episode was reparted The Lakers' triumph ran their career ' to make bad snaps from center.
ho fie ref . , t parti t I V P t d . f rth r"""rd against Portland to 18-1 and their One or ~ three bad snaps on field year nors a r wnng o cpa e n enosa. near o enza, ur1ng a ou -.... v goal tries didn't hurt since the Saints
ln fact it was such a frustrating
day in many ways for the Rams that
Knox said the mqst encouraging thing
was "the fact that we didn't fold our
tent and quit when they had us down
13-10 late in the third quarter. The
fact that we came back makes me
pretty proud of-these guys." -
Trailing 13--10, the Rams drove 80
yards in nine plays with Had.I passing
to tight end Bob Klein for the final
f<lllf yards.
They came right back with a SI-yard
drive which Tony Baker climaxed with
a five-yard run.
Jn the first hall, Had! had hit running
back Jim Bertelsen 'on a 17-yard. scoring
play and David Ray had Kicked a 20-yard
field goal.
. n
The saints, who fell to 4-7 for the t..t
season, got a fl-yard touchdown pad ~
from quarterback . Archie Manning to .. '1.'
wide receiyer Bob Newland and field "='
goals of 37 and 24 yards by Bill McClani<
Saints coach John North said he-1,i
tmught in the-first hall hw team would ·'
win. .
"I thought we played about as well,~
as we could in the first half," sighed ·
North, "but we were playing against
some people who can play football." .
"They're going a long way,'' a~·
North. "We tried overshilting and un-..
dershUting. We changed people .•• ,.
everything. They just koock you oul•
of there."
Me Ewen, .Enriquez in all-Slinset League football selections, division match between Venosa and Pacific Division record to 15-7, main-an act based on personal Jnisaivlngs Pergolese. taining their lead in the division.· "Were offside and the Rams got a first "" J w t red 8 · ts d eon. down and went on to score a touchdown. and one \lhich may have denied deserV· According to police, some ticket-less erry es sco 1 porn ' an But the otb'er three miscues cou1d
ing youngsters recognition on the elite Pergolese fans armed with pistols shot nie Hawkins and Stan Lo'(e had 15 have been ratal. The first resulted in
Two Coast Area Drivers squad. five . bullets at host rans trying to prevent each. a blocked fi eld goal attempt and the
Speaking or Anaheim, which I bate them from illegally entering the stadium. • c ... ners Rolls second gave the Saints the field position
to do on a Monday, it looks like the Two persons were wounded f and .. he -~ed t t · d ·
Col lly b . h . h 'talized. . d't' JORANNESBURG, South Afri·ca -t Y '~ o genera ea sconng nve. ony .rea as an m somew ere 1n osp1 tn senous con 1 ion. --Th bad · the t' ·t 1· '
Win at Supernationals th F I tsy. I th CIF · r.:._ \.,. M'I J h · J'1mmy Connors" of Bellev1·11e, Ill.. e snap m pun mg si ua 100
e CJ , gett ng a pa n e uw·ing tue-1 an· uventus mate in came in the fourth period with the
football playoffs for the ·nnt round and Milan, rocks, bottles and iron bars -overpowered Atthur A$he, 6-4., 7-6, 6-3, Rams ahead 24-13 and started the Saints
being seeded despite an Wlimposing. which bare1y missed players -were and won the ·men~. sihgl~ title in the 00 a SO-yard drive that ended at the
record of 6-2-1. burled onto ·the field by irate fans. • Sotoduth Afriel!I Opeh ~ tournament Rams t~yard line when a fourth down
Three years ago when Anaheim tied The glme, which ended in a 2-2 tic , ay. · ·-·1'-,--_-,------PP8".sasa-was....dropped in the end zone.
for the title with . Newport Harbor and wa! rfillrked by controversial referee •·
lost to Newport In regular aeuon play, decisions and by the expulsion of two • Bof'fJ Def•tdts * * -tf
Anaheim 1till got a home game while play~. . . BUENOS AIRES, Argentina -Swed-R•m•" • 0 10 11-2~ 0 10 3 0-13 Newport had to travel in P.la>'of! optners. During that mat.ch, two fans died ish . tennis star Bjorn _ Borg injured his !.11nti
This Ume Anaheim and Newport again of heart 11.'rokes. These fatalities, hand ddting the fourth· eet oi Sunday's tl::'G ~~:-:-'1
•
1n • ,
shared tbe title wilb Anal\eim defe&~g •howeter, bad no connection with the Argentine Open~· . match and k1~'1tt-N-.. nd 21 pau ~om M1nn1119 IM<Cllrd
Newport in thfir seaaonal meeting. violence_ . -~ lost to Guilfermo Vilas ·of entlna by •u.-eert•iten 11 "" lrom H•dl <R•Y tlcii:J NO-FG ~lerd )l •
NcWpcjtt bad an 1-1 Seaaon reconL-¥et .4...: ... Mtamrhile. angry p1'y~ ~-fan... __ a..Judge"s decision. • h!":. ~-=-· ~~1,. 4 ::l~·H•d• IR•Y k _
again Anahtlm got the ~ p@yo(f J!adly .~t the r.eleree during a game Borg, the tournament's ""' seea, wolr _. ..... s ~ "'~ ""' g~ and ditw a flunkle. Newport -bi'NOrtbem Italy. the first two sets, &-3 and 7-4. dropped RUSHING .!_N~~D ..!!'e1~~~~~1c11eon ,.u2,
traveled to play an unbeaten .team and ,,. referee was assaulted by members the third, 4-6. and waa tied at M me., ,.;3~ TZ1~1$eft 12.n; Ntw Orltfns. Profit
was umeeded. of tbe ~t .Sunostrasa team and by ln the fourth. The Ue.breaker was al!O e!~~v·r:_~ .. -IC~ ~~"'~~ ~!!;
Tell rile that isn't preferential treat~ fa who poured onto the field alter tied when the 17·ye.a.r.old ,Swede smashed 0t1HnS, Olio'INr M-4, Nn .. nd ~-46-
ment for Anaheim. be granted a free kick to Strasa. into • judge's a:tand. •lubing bis hand. ,:_~~".; ;i.J.':' ~1111•2.~\i"n·u-7• 176
-.
ONTARIO, Calif. (AP) -Veteran drag
racer Don Garlits of Feffner, Fla., ca~
ped a record-aetting spree Sitnday with
a $20,000 victoey in the postponed
Supemationals at Ontario M o t o r
Spe<dway.
The 4Z.year-old driver sailed through
four rotmds of competition. setting
records with each outing until the final
when he was closed at an all-time low
al. 5. 78 seconds for the quarter mile.
An accident enabled .Tom McEwen
of Fountain Valley to win the funny
car championship on a solo run. 1.1cEwen
had started the event as an alternate
qualifier. Gre~n Bay~ 49ers ·tio .. at ~t 'Tonight
•
\Vorld champion Wayne Gapp, Binn·
ingbam, ?tlich., wu the pro stock winner,
driving a 1973 Pinto while Don Enriquez
'-of Dana Point won the new -Pro Comp
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The GniOll
Boy Packer> and Son' Frlndc 49ora,
two teams with mome111um In tlte wning
direction; m«t In 1Mlght:1 nationally
televiaed Nollonal Footblll ~game.
"We have to get that ' ccnsilleDcY
tiaclt," sayt 49'rs coach Dick Nolan,
relerrl111 lo the wlmlnC ways which
carried his team lo three sltal&ht Na.
tlonal Football c.nr ...... Wat t!Ues.
The San Franctacans """"1Uy ore
( S.7, and four" straight loues .ha~ put
-t
thelil oo! of piayolf contention. They
bavo neV.r """ a Monday night game,
O.T.V Toalt•t
c• ... '"'11.t s
losing 26-16 lo Loo Antitles last year
and 16-17 to Kamas City in l9'1l.
"The Pllck Is Baclt," 11opn or Green
Bay f""' became a reality 1811 sealOO,
wllb a llH record and NFC Central
t!Ue. Bvt coach Oil> Devino'• team b
3-5-2 now, with just one victory in Its
last 8i1 pmes.
"We'vo bad too .llUID1 tllliip ao wrong,'"
Devine 1aicl ofter last ....... 3$-24 loss
to New England. 11Now la tho time
wt'll Ctf. a leot of people lo see If
they hive football characltr."
The Pacl<en' on.... 111111 depends
heavily on the ruahln& attaclt led by
Jolm Bt'ocldngton. 'J'be'former Ohio State
atar, shooting for a tblrd straight 1,000.
•
yard season1,has J.~ yards this seoson category.
but was held to 35 on 1& cirties last "Tli~ oth·c.r winner was T. · C .
week. Christensen.· Kenosha, Wis., who won
MacArthur Lane, the other regular the bike eliminator.
running back, missed the New Eiijland Attendance was estim•le!l al 22,000.
game because cir a sprained knee but · Earlier Ganlits set the national spe<d
may start tonight. standanf of 247.25 mile> an hour.
Although Broc:klnglOn Is averaging 4.2 Garlits' victory, his 10th in major
yards per carry, the team ruahing competition, came on a siogle nm for
averaae is an unimpressive S.4. The lbe money. He was to meet R. Gaines
49erS nmlng game, considered weak, Markley In the llnal, but the Federal
Is averaging 3.9 yards a play. Way. Wash., driver demolished h~ Juel
dragster in a spectacular crash during-~
,., the semifinals. Markley was not injured.~.~
Before that. Garlits defeated Carf. ·t
Olson with a 5.98, then took on 21·year· •
old Randy Allison with a 5.86 beforB.-!
beating Dan Ric~ in the quarterfinals::
with a 5.79.
Markley's aceident was 'the first oe:':
two spectacular crashes that marr~ ~
the $177 ,000 event and came as Mark1ey
crossed the ena of the quarter mile. ':':;
~e ::a~feUi~xp!:!~~~~:~::3
out of control and barely missed era.shin& ~
into "'John Stewart, 17, of Sacrameni.o., ...
Mark.Jey's opponent on the nin.
A short time later, again on the -1
quarterfinal run, a supercharger U:
plosion tore the body from Dale Emery's
funny car and caUSl'd him to crash, '
bul he .too waa wiinjured: J
King Overpowered 4
BAL TlMORE -Ro .. mary caaai.J
relying on a powerh1l overhand., Upeel'
Bil!!• Jean .Klng lo win the lin&leo>
finals In the Lady Battimanl kllDli
toumament.
Miss casaa defeated Mn. ~ Sol,,
7-f, 6-4 lor the $7,000.fint pPJ.e.
•
•
•
J8 DAILY PILOT
TONIGHT'S
TV HIGHLIGHTS
ABC 0 6:00 -Mondny Night Football. To-
night's evening matchup is between the Green Bay
Packers and the SaJ1 Francisco 49ers.
NBC O 9:00 -"Loving You." A movie musical
from 1958 about the rise to fame of a singing
idol -played by Elvis Presley. Lizabeth Scott and
Dolores Hart ro-star.
CBS U I (:30 -"Enter Laughing." Carl Reiner's
1967 comedy about a klutzy kid breaking into show
business. Rene Santoni, Jose Ferrer, Shelly \Vin-
ters.
: TV DAILY LOG
Monday
Evening
HOVEMBER 26i
1:00 I 0 ID m. lilil Non .... NO
Co111tslll, ol Cdcllt'1 Flllltr
· IHJCD Gl•"'" Mpt"' FeolDIU Green Bir Packtn YI. San
ol HI• C.0111111"1" (tom) '61-f'Rd
Asl•lre, Oebbi•-11.eynolds.
(() Notrt Danit fMtball CilJ CD Movie: (Cl (Ztlr) "'T1lt Pr.
duart" (com) '68-Ztro MCltel,
ti) Ron1r G1m11
IH (J) Kirk Doug1a1 Hosts * Amer ican Heritace, KERO
I @ Mr Flttllr IM Mt Alttrd.
Movlt: (Zf'lr) "'TM Lltl JI .....
( 1) '61-Bobby DlrhL
I"'";"' ii'-m111m
Tiit flillbtollll
star Trd
Si•pM1111rrt1 M1ri1
"'"" (l~l "l'A" (Ion) '63-rcello M1stroi1nnf. llil"''""'"Lodp m TllrH saoores
I Aplrt ,,.. Ute CnW
Emrt blip .
Mewlt:-(Zltr) .!!flit ~ (dra)
'66-Mallon Br1ndo, J1n1 fond1.
•:JO Hop11'1 NIRlll ~ @ (ll!J IJ)) "'"' DTCk Vin DP•
1:15 a+l Nm/Sports
9:SDIJ<a()))N .. Diet Yaw DJt• ~ Dick is c1ucht between tryine
lo kei; 11is mother happy "Ind ful-
filUnt 1 dutb-btd promfst to con·
dlltt a "fun fun1r11" for .llctlt,
his recently dtpJrted uncle. ~n
Blondell cuest,s.
Mm lrlffin Show
Mdy lrlttltll
"""""'" . lMn1 tuy
. -· """"I"''
I
... __ .... _
Loi """"' Collectlft LI Hltu
Variety -
'''°lom,,... a..titlllfDollm
6 lrlowit: (2111) "'Q\rt 11 Wllltl
dr1) '52-.hl111 Allyson. -wu-WerW-1t AlllUl-
WW1111J U1t?
10:00 II (9 (j)) Mtclluf Cttltlr ''A Lile
at St.1k1" Br1dford Oillm1n 1uasts
1s 1 surreon whose compulsM 1•m·
btinc Is destro)'fn1 his c.tret( 1nd
m1rri111. Stef1nl1 Powell also
auests.
i ·-··-
• •
I Ll'l't Luq ........
r-er1ld1
m~ m>....,.--ohtl'lltl'Amor .._ ..... -.
l illJ Ct1ha111 Crusadt
Nlpt Callery
0 FORD MOTOR COMPANY * Presents "MY FATHER
GAVE ME AMERICA"
With KIRK DOUGLAS
')!JG fJ WKkJ WllW If Jol:dln ttn ill Zst Gabor and Mcl.dn
Stewn'°n 111est
fJ 00 I S"IC:ll\J MJ fltlltf CM
Mt A•trica Kirk Douf1u lllitntes
with Greer GafJOn and Ossi1 01Yls.
The story" of the lmmictlfll:s, the
promise America held for them and
th• strugle it took lo 11m thOSt
rewards. O l'llltt Stlrt• "FOi' an Encon.
Murdef' Ptter 11:11tMr suests 1s 1
JOU"I smaer livin1 ln the 11t1dow
of hi$ lunous lither.
I""'"" ......... Thi TI11lllsttUn. -Wild Kln1dom
omm a-
9 @ Mexican History, Cul. * lure In America on 23
l @ IARw
Wsslllactoe stnlrht 11111
lntem1tiontl V1rittJ'
1 ........
CI) The Pritt Is RIP\ 10:30 i Dr1(11d I {I)) Mnlrvltle Mulic T.Uleflt ZoN
Billy lrahlm CrllS*dl TOl'IJ' l Sn111 Al ...
Rell)'woOd S11oW . DEJUT Ch1afln1 Mllic "ReYll-
Tbe Ghoul l1n1 lutlon or Evolution: Musk in Pro1· ~ ress" This pro1r1m provides 1 brief
1·00 O (I) Cun1moU Htwly's skill wilh t.istory of music's evolution up lo
• both piwpla ind medici"9 Is put to 1910 ind 111 introduction to revolu·
the test when Doc sends him Ou! tion thit took pltce 1tler tblt re1r.
to r.htck on f1miliet ·in the b1ck al Nns/RoUtr c1mes
coun_!!:l. m Pnibe tlM Lord Club O OJ@~ Lotu L11ct e Movie: (Zllr) "'th• Third Seem" 11:00 6 0 e D mm"...,
(dra) '64-Slephen Boyd. Q)@ @)EE ~ 00 9 Nm
0 Miiiion $ Movit: (2111) -C.11· IPtfTJ Mwn blllltl" (dr1) '43 -Hump~rey · Phll Don1h111 SltOW
801art, lntrid Ber1m.1n. • To Tell ttlt Trvtll
l lllt I host l!ld liltl. M111r Gr! Sm•rt
The Bold Ones (3) The Mldk
U Sei6r1 Jott1 ( @ ) T r1ib Wut
I Slils!At l l eoawmt!H Wltll AmeJt Harrlmlfl Rtm iniscenCes11:306tQ:1J rI!)(j)C8S Ute Morir.
from the stattsman'a lant ind (C) "Eltttr L111plna" {com) ·s1 -
unlqua wttr,_ lncl11dil\I meetin1s Jose fer:1r, ~he\\eJ Winters. •
wilh Churchill S!1till 1nd ROOStYtll @ Mmt: 'Slfll'J 011 Pa1t Olll
15 told to h~t John Schrttke1. (mys) '59-Rita H1porth.
(!ff; Ci)) Biiiy Cr1t11111 Cn1Md1 0 Q) 00@) m !o~a11y C.1111 tD~El Com•lldl• · Mclean Stevenson Is guest host. m Mlpelito V11dts Show 9 Movie: (C) "TlntiR I the Blut m MO¥ie: (2hr) "Men Art Such Or1n1ts" (com) 'ti5 -Je1n·P!err1
fooh" {dra) '38--Humphrty Bot•rt. Talbot. 1·30 0 ~@ @l €D Dt1n1 "Pest in 0 Mavit: (C) "Sllpt!Y Hononbll"
' the House" Howa1d. tvicttd from (d11) '39-Pat O'Bnen.
his home after I fish! with his wlle. m Allred Hitdlcotk Pnltfltl
comts 10 Oiana"s ap1rtmtnt to WJ. aJ Mo,ie: "Th• fore1111n Witt fll m Merv Griff\ft Show franct" (dr1) "41 -Robtrt MOf•
1$) Nove11 f_!l. Con5lll!Ct Cqmmlnp.
(l1J@ Cl1uic W1sl1111 Tht1\11 9:00 fJ (~ (j)) ® Here's luCJ' G1ry C1osb~ and Oick S1rgent guest 15 12:00 @ One Step Bryond
two policeman who enlisl Lucy and 0 Boris Karloff P1tset1ls
tier friends in the "ne tghbo1hood m Movit: "Qu.ld:sand" (mys) '50
watch" to foil burglaries. ind then -Mickey Rooney, Je1nn1 Calfley.
l1nd themselves in 1 series ol tm· ® PhH Oon1h11t1 51\ow
b1rr1ssing predit1mtnls. 1:00~llO)19 m Totnornw 0 m MBC M~d•1 Movie: (Cl a ti)@ Nnrs
(21tr) ''Lllvl111 folf" (mus) '5! -, . Wanted Dud or AIM [lvis P1eiley, Lil1beth Scott
\6J The Bold Ones 1:30 0 Mm
0 rn ABC Nm t!ost-Up On Fires 1:-45 6 Movie: ''You'll Never Gel Rich"
An ABC news spectal document1n1 (mus ) '41-fred Ast1ire. the needless de ath and burn In· ,
ju11es in th• Unili!d St11ts. l:10 IHI•• "MKM" (1dv) 52 -og, Movit: (C) (Zlir) "The Pleasure Robert ~ittllum, Jant Ru"ell,
Tuesday
DAYTIME MOVIES
12:30 m "fht l1rblr, Cont ltftt" ('lllS)
'44--W1llac1 Beery, Binnie Barnes.
1:00 0 (Cl "fllWI Tot Litt" (com) 'fiS
-M1u1een O'SulliYan, P1ul ford,
Connie Stevens.
t:OO !ffl(])''Tedlf I Km1" (mys) '42
Yfalltr Wooll IYnL M<W Barrlt.
t-.JO 0 "TN GoHeu" (dra) '58-Kim
Sl1nl1y. Uoyd Bridget.
1:00 (l) "Thunder I~ the £Jst" (1dV) '53
-Ala~ Ladd. 0tbo11h Ka n'O' (Cl "B11s Ril«(t la5 hi Town"
tdra) '65 -km-M•r&ret, Michael
P•rks.
3:30 !»@ (C) "1'111 Pllmoll's WOftl•n"
(1d¥) '6l-lind1 Cristal, .lohn Ort"
9arrymore.
10:00 m..,... Ill ttre Darr' {dr•) '6S-
WIT111m Sylvtsltr. ~ -g "ltlkl Will( (du) '32-lupe
Veltz. Leo Clfflllo.
ll:OO 11 ..... Trocy, -· (""') '45-Morcin Conw1y. "lunmen of
tftl "" ltllMI•'" (WIS) ·~ -G
Madisol'I.
4:00 0 "StUOI ti Pwlotl" (dfl) '61
-U11esl Bor1niM, Ann• Baxter.
4:30 (})Sime 11 lOAM lfstln& (~({I) "TM W1lki11.1 Hills" (1dV)
'49-R•ndolph Scott, ai, Rlins.
KOCE TELEVISION LOG
I I
Hll'IO ftllllled "ttaw DCi1 You Do!'
loo1v•1 1llow lttllll'fl lilt \tllll" o
•!Id ti.. hurl'lbtf t ('4 ml"\ •itt TM Or"f C"'-COlllHI jC) LHMlfl 21 f!.O. c.1. Contortluml
•:• P'otW o,..,.., COWlltw IC\
?illl TM OA1t SOflwmt' C011t11t !Cl L."'°" 2' U.o. Ctl COlltorllvml ""tlk 'N ,.,.,, -"' ,.,,,., '•JOits•• -s.t
U1llf1P IOOlly 11 •100 p.m.
1 ~ • °'1"'11 M !oD I C I
11• M"' WM Mfllllt Thi Movlft 1'1 ..
t 1a Al M11t lfflll"'" !Cl LttlO'I It
"IJnoiflKlout Mollv1llOl'I" -Ste lhtln;
l'Olll•r II •:OO p.m,
. -
•
Here's McLean
M•A•S•H star McLean Stevenson takes over as
ho st or the Tonight Sbow tonight at 11 :30 on Chan·
nel 4, NBC. He's.shown here clowning with Johnny
Carson on one of his many appearances on the show.
Cateh These
TV Logs We'd Like ro See
By JAY SHARBIJTI'
NEW YORK (AP) -Every
now and then we get the !eel·
ing that this season's daily
television lists are too predic--
table. So here are a few
listings we1d Uke to see, but
probably never will.
MONDAY:
7 KWIB' Fu: Caine picks a
light.
2 Kojak: Kojak grows hair.
4 Colwnbo: Columbo shaves,
gets raincoat cleaned, gets
suit pressed, puts out cigar,
stops scratching head.andlail•
to solve crime.
TUESDAY:
7 Marcus Welby, M.D.:
Puzzled by strange disease,
Dr. Welby shrugs and recom·
mends good mOrtician.
2 Gunsmoke: Miss Kilty
gets blotto .
4 Brian Keith Showt
PediatricUID rum amok, kicks
child.
-... ,,_,_ .. u...•
"LIQUID SPACE" ..........
7:10. 9:10 , .........
.,,.,, strei.-
lt-.rt • ..,.,,. CINEDDME l D:.:.
'"_;:;.~·..!.·--··· ·~ "THI WAY WI w1•r (POI
J
-... "·-· l>i.• CINEDDME 21 ::.
' ,.;;:_·~·!'.ll:1'.~~.o:.-..
., '·"· ""'. STADIUM " I ;!:
"' .._,.lU!.!L t.'.-1'1•;:•.:.o
_.,. ..... -...
STADIUM ' l :.'.:
'" _.Uil\~r·~
_ •. ,.,_ ~ ...
STADIUM •!:.,;;,
lo. .. .LILlll. UJ.!.11.C:."11; •
.. M>UND OF MUSIC" (GI ...
"lOMIO l JUILIT' IGPJ
'"JlllMY" ...
"OKLAHOMA c•UDI" CPIJI
"IAnLI OF THI AMAZONS" ••• "SHANCJHAI llLUIS" ll1
"ASH WIDNUDA.Y .. lll
AND
"STRAW DOG-S" lll
"Somethn• A GN9t Nett.ti" IPGJ ••• "IA.GI" IPGI
HOW
AT IOTN CIHIMAS A sassy Siamese cat
leads the F .B.I. on lhe
wildest chase of all! EAN JONES • HAYLEY MILLS •EDWV
•
•
•
-
~ . . . •
-Corpenien, A&M.
4. PHOTOGRAPH -Ringo
SlarT, Awle.
5. PAPER ROSEs -Marie
Osmond, MGM.
I. I GOT A NAME -Jim
Croce, ABC.
7. CORAWN-Can>le King,
Ode.
a. JUST YOU 'N' ME -
Ollcago, Ollumbla.
9. WE MAYNEVER PASS
THIS 'WAY AGAIN -Seal.I
and Crofts, W.amer Brothers.
----
NOW TMIU
JUISDAY --"BLUME IN
LOVE"
-
-.
a,_ O'Nfff
"THE THIEF
WHO CAME
left •• Celw ,.,
ta. ALL I KNOW I====
Garfunkel, Columbia.
COUNTRY SINGLES
I. THE MOST BEAlmFUL
GIRL -Charlie Rich, Epic.
2. LITl'LE GIRi, GONF; -
Donna Fargo, Dot
3. SING ABOUT LOVE -
Lynn Anderson, CQ!umbla.
4. COUNTRY SUNSHINE -
DotUe West, RCA.
S. AMAZING LOVE -
Charley Pride, RCA.
6. IF YOU CAN'T FEEL
rr ll Aln't 'lllere -Freddie
Hart, Capitol.
7. SOMETIMES A MEM().
RY AIN'T ENOUGH -Jerry
lee Lewi>, Mercury.
a. PAPER ROSES -Marie
Os!mnd, GM.
THI OUTSTANDIN•
FAMILY SHOW OF
THI HOUDAY SIA.SONI
"BIG FOOT"
•
"NORTH COUNTRY"
Wed.·Thurt. From
Frl.-Sai.-Sun.
From 12:30
4:30
9. YOU ASK ME TO -
Waylon Jennings, RCA. l~========:=!I
10. I'LL NEVER BREAK -m THESE CHAINS -Tommy
Overstreet, Dot.
MANN
THEATRES
Title Switch
'"' .... C.ld Nwy, , ~ CO•OMA Oii. MAil
"JEREMY'' IPGl
At 7 & 10:13 P.M. .....
''THE STERILE
CUCKOO" IPGI
At 1:41
CALL THIA.TRI
FOi' SUNDAY
MATINll SC:HIDUU
·-.. _ .. .......... ." .. , ..... ..... ,_, ...
~~~
WALlDISNEY'S
hil1rious comedy
Tt«AT DARl\I ,,. -CAT
..... Met!.'""
1115. Tllurl. "'"' S.,.•1:ft.M1i ........
"DUMIO
The Fly1"9·11ephant"
WS:D. MOM. TUIS.·7 & lti•
THUltS. Thrv SUM.·U :JO..
l ••7 .. 1•:•
m~~!.~"J ~Sff.Ull ...
ILIIAll!TH TAYLOll HINltY l'OHOA
"ASH
WIDNESDAY" IR l
-·· •
"L• •••
SMOP"' (X) ...............
"M'A'S'H"
!Mill)' Al
1!1......,1M f rlt-1:1t
1:11 "M
-+ .. ,. ""''lfM"" 11111' NOIMAN aOCKWELL
WID. MON.·TUl:l.·711$-t :IS
THURS l'llni SUH,•lol110-
.l11$-1:1M :)I
""",,,..
IR Ctlff'I
1-.jf ... I'('''
LID 0 """'
1 ,.,~ ... ,, '•Pl< I"
' I' 0
llCLUSIYll
"THE BATTLE OP
THE AMAZONS" -''CATCH 22''
Bolh In Color (RI
I"'° .r 1 PM. CMlf•••• _,_., ..
llC*" ~ t IOI fAnOI
TMIDUDlY
TUCKllS "" TMIOIMIR"°' ·M-,,._, II
.. ~Ilk.I
tt.2·1tll ..... ...-.---
THI WAY WI Wiil 1'"1
•••• ~ l l•'· , 14 . .!GM .. ,. .. ~,. .....
~.U-6111 ----.........
TMAT DAlN CAT •J
f'l.US • DUMIO 111 _ .......... . : . ' :.::::.. ~ ..
111 -IMZ _ _, ....
"""-THAT DAIN CAT "'
'"" • DUMIO 111
LiM••---1.-51~·111)
-,,_, ., ..........
~lo.Jl ll . .......... .. JRIMT.. IN)
+JI-C..111 .. ....., •• y .. rtdliet"' IN) ·--.-~ -·-M7.JMI
12.00 "' Cd\OM
( 1.m"IN BLOWS Of Ttll
11. outl °' "°" nsn 1111 (~ -:'l""l;;:':o'"~:;~ ......... ,., .
., It~-· M•-41.1••141 ____ ....,_
M1A.•s•H f'lll
Svo111r1 Yttir Ltc:•I Ow!fl"""
"\I, THI JAMOIOXH
htll 111 CMrVI lltl • •Hi.1aw1t
"M'A'S'H"
'" c.itfl (~01 Kids Like To . ....,. ·-"JIR•MY"
'1.AIT SUMM•ll"
Btflt Ill C ..... I l"GI Ask4ndy
I
•
I' Monday, N....,.btt 2~. 1973 DAILY PILOT ]9
' ll-...:i:=~-:.-t::m:i"""' ~--------------~~sing.~
{(~ssing
Awarded
PUBUC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE ~.:-:-::=:::-:::--====:~l ·--....:..:::=:::...:.::.:.::=---IU,111:10111 COU•T OP' CM.1'"°4lM1A. NOTjCI 0' THI TIMI MD PU.Cl Fo1~ the
Record
Dissol11ti0ns
Of Marriage
Death Noti~e•
lllEL.L Soohl• Brll. Aile llO: rn!dtnl ot H1111·
lll!lllO!'l ac~h. O•I• ot dNll'I, November n, !t73, Sllrvlvld bY IO!I, Jltl'li. ertt. ol Pll1cen111; two d1u11h1'tri. Ardvca Grt00r'f and Valerie of Owl'llNI ltlrH
bl'l'lhet•. J. T. tither, John B•htr 1nd V.G. Baher; lour •!tie"-Mt1. H.A. r11rll;, Mrs. A.H .. JKkloO!'l· Mrs. <..I . Palme<" 1nd Mr$. J.E. St-art; eight
1>r1n<id1l1dr,.n1 flv• <1r•al-o•,.lldc~H!"•"fl. Srrvlt.n.. TUflday, J;:ID PM, Sml!l'l'I
CIWll>l'I. l11!r•me1111 Wn lmtm'tr ~morl•I P1rk. Smlltu. Morru1ry, Olrtc.lors. KEELfJt J1met C. Keeler Jr. All" ,5, ol 2295 AulQrrs Or1w, Cost• Mesa. Dal• of dHlh, NoY"mbel" 11\ 1f73. SIKYlvtd bY n.,:ihew. Jtoy Sii t'f• Coll• M...,. Servli:rs, TUftd1y, l PM. 8rll 9~1111¥
r111iie1. 1n1••,...nt. s .. wt•ll• N•llor>al CemrftrY. 8rtl Bl'OtdwlY Mortvery,
DI rec:: ton. KltE•S
Rkhtrd Kttbl Jr. AOt r.• • "' E. l5!h SI .. Coste Metl. 0. t of dPll\,
Novembtr ts, 1973. Survlvtd bV wile, Emma; two n~. A titrt, of New York; J1ck Kr.OS, L-811c11 .~rvic.s. Tu.-sd1v, 10 AM, 8111 BroadwlV CN~I,
with Dr. E1rt w. 1~11 <1lllcl11r"", lnttrmtnt, S.n G1tM'let Ce~...,. 8ett
Bro.aw1'f Morluarv. DlrKlors.
li:EQiJA
Stepfather's
Lile ~ Recalled
By ARTIIUR R. VISEL
Of ... Dlli.-,.. ... , ....
•
Somewhere In the closet clutter ol my dl!carded poems
and paintings is a sketch ol a grinning, gray-haired old
guy wiUt a big belly, bib overalla and a straw hat, watch-
Jng a new water well being bJm. Ile was all the hraW and 90 percent ol the muocle
behind that Summer ol '64 drilling
operation. I was the rest or what liUle
expertise and muscle there was.
We brought In one well, to 'a1tow
for three months' work.
' LELAND "STONEY" Stonebarger
had been drilling water wells in Cen·
tral caufornia with his own father for
moat of 40 years.
v1J1S•L He was my stepl'alher at the time.
I sketched !hat picture .ol him at the rig lite grin·
ning, the way he usually was when be wasn't grimacing
over some piece of broken equipment.
He did' ·not understand that there was no more de-.
niand for small !arm wells; that the equl wu tlrod
and worn-out, jut like his own 90-y who
stalled the Stonebarger and Son dri · many
years before.
THEY \!ERE THE biggest ope rs 8J!!UDd In_ their
time. Stoney and I just kept • g togetlier out of a·
asperation, faith and necessi that summu when 1 was
fresh out of the Army, without a newspaper job.
We got along, perhaps, because we were both answer·
able to_my mother, who believed lD llle_BlbllCJI inl""°'
tion that man will ooly eat bread by the sweat of h1I bnlw.
Ile could twirl her around the floor at the Grange Hall
dances every Saturday night like Prince Channing, but
that didn't pay the bills. .
"He was a wonderfu1 dancer •.. " she recalll.
Our well-drilling 1 travel around Central California tn
a hroket><lown '53 Dodge flaUted -I think -was a bunt
for a time and a way of life that bad passed him by. IDs
hair was gfay. His pastur~ were no longer green.
HE SOMETIMES SAID it would he nice to go into a
father-81Kkon drilling partnership, hut I doli't go witch-
ing-for water. My-feel 11 more-for _teJling ahouLpeople._
One ol the wa)'> I recall him best wu marching clown
the aisle of the Methodist Church in his blue Satin choir
robe, baritone voice booming. Sometimes on late, gOlden
summer afternoons, rumbling down some coastal back
rood In the Dodge flatbed he would begin humming, then
bellowing a hymn over the knock of the engine,
The loOis and oil cans In the hack ratued along In
rhythm.
Stooey was great for stopping at roadside cafes. He
loved pie,and coffee and kids and people:
HE WAS A GREAT old guy -.. men go -he WU
jusl not perfect, and that ii a fault of many human
beings.
Stoney finally had to go h1I own way with hil old
truck , the clutter of busted welklr1llillg gear, hil broken
domestic dreams and -I am llUfe -plans to find green.
er ]>llSture> and revtvnr boomln& buslnesll: .
Ile was a good·natu1'd, IOll-lttunored old guy whole
life just seemed to he perpetually driving down a country
road, humming a hymn and wishing for everyone the sue-
..,. and prosperity that eluded his grasp.
A STORY OF somoone's misfortune actually and often
brought tears to his eyes.
The name Leland Stonebarger jumped otit of ·a UPI
wire story with a Bakerfield dateline the other day. The
name of someone you know always seems to jump out of
the copy, under a newsman's trained eye.
Stoney !lnally came to the end of bis perpetual country
road. He must have been humming and day-dreaming.
He missed a Stop sign, according to the . caDlomta
!Ilghway Patrol, and the fiery broadside collision killed
him Jnd seven of nine people in the other car, four of
them small children.
My real old man was killed in a traffic accident too,
and 80 lt seems strange a second time around. -ONE ALSO FINDS It bani to say It Is better this way,
hut"Stoney coulcln' have stood surviving to think about all
those poor kids and -le In that other car.
I tblnk I got to know my se<Uld lather pretty well.
Flom Wire Sent<ea
J""IHlhte Tllom-. a 211-
y..,...ld bloode who says she
.loll the pleasure ol kissing
alter facial Injuries In a road
crash, was awarded damages
ol $12,240 by England's !Ilgh
Court.
Her attorney said the Jn.
Juries made her llJ>I rnultb
and left scars on her face
and knees.
The damages were awarded
against Ute driver of a car
l-!~!!!:~__.J· ____ r,:..::._1;"-_-~~~~~~~~--~ ''I con't git this darn child· proof top off the aspirin."
COUNTY 01' OllAffl Oil MlA•OUI Ot' TMI LOCAL loMH·
MO. &"1tt cY.: P--<MIMA.TIO.......C.CWMl:tSIOM IOI''
-Ol:OI• TO tM0W CAUSI ottAMGS C 0 UN TY, CALIPOtUUA. («fl.-11 7) WMIN A PIOf"OlllO AMNIXATIO!( llt tflt Mint' AppllutlOl'I of TO TMR COlTA Ma.IA U.MllAJtY JUDITH MA•• iltTH for Cl\lnee DllTllltCT Oii Ol:AMtl t;OVllTY, AMG
of Ntm. OlJICTIO.t OJI , Jt 0 T I I T t WHEltlA JU OJT H l/.A•I E THlllTO, WIU. Bl ,lllllllftCO 90SWOATH, ltlontr, Mt "kid t IMff• flOll HIAJtlNO lion wltll IP!;t 111 ol fllla Cour1 fOr NOTICE IJ HEJtEIY GIVl.N tt11t an onltf eNno nt petltfont!''• "t"°" ifl aoptk:etlOl'I ,.., ~ 111.t wJll'I ft'ltc
trom JUDITH MARllE BOIWOllTH '° Lotti A{ltfKV Fotll'llllon COJM'llulon ot JUDITH MAJtll! THlllTEl!'NI lhe COUflfY ot O!'ane-L. 51111 ot CtlllOl'!lla.
IT IS OltOEREO t~ •11 ptl'Moflf PllQ-1109 11\lt Mid commlulon IPIWO'lt lnl..-Hltd 111 the ·--llfltd mllfl" Ille ,...,.Id ·-•HOii ciftlft\illtd •• • ,,.., btfor. lhl• COll•I at 1:00 P.M., £1191.......r'• NO. iso· AnMlltllon ,. , ...
M o.ctmDtt' 1L 1m, '" ttlit ~ Cotti Mt .. s.n111,;.J Ol1trlct " °""" of 0.1Hrlm1nl No. :J of the Otll• COl.onty County, Ctll!ornla. Th9 P'Ol)Otal e11•
$\lpttlor Court kK•ltd •t 100 Civic eotnPlttft tht lollowll'l!I 9 • n • r •I I y CtnfH Ori.,. Wffl. ""'a Ana, Orlt'IM dtKrltl«I ''" wtilch It ~ ptrllc\/f•r1v COVftlY, Calltornla. and •llow (Ill"• If dncrltl«I tw • ltt•I dft<rlptlon •r4 111v, Wh'f ,,.. Otflllon tor Cl!U'llJ• of MIP on fl .. wlltl ""Cornm!Mlon !
lllfnt 1110t.old not be oranttd.. S•ld '"llPlllDfl con 1 a I n 1 •P-IT 1$ FURTHER ORDERED ff'llt a proxlmatrtv $42 tcr.t 1nd It loultcl
COPV ot !hit Gld•• '° .now CllllM bl IMMtdlaltly IOUl1'I of ,,,. Ian Olavo putlllthecl !11 1119 Or•no• COlll 0•1"1 FrNWIY bltwt.11 Red Hiii lt.vtnt.lt Pllol, a IWWtPIPt:r of 9'Nl'•I clrcvl•ttori af!CI !tie W9'1 "°'-"'dary ol ltlt Or•ncte
prl11tld In °'""""' County, Call!Omlt. Ol'ICt CovnlV Airport, In ""' "°"""'' C•I• a -k tor twr wo::ct..S.,. -k• prior "'°"' ar,.. 10 1119 d•'• Mt. for Marine on tflt Al "" tlmt of the 1111rlno nottctd
l>t'llllon. '*""'" ulG boullcllrlM '"'Y bt 1'10d!lltcl OATIEO: NovtmtNr •• 1m. b'f tM aGdltton of oltltl' '""'orv In CLAUDIE M. OWE.NS IN vrcl"lty °' 11\f pl'OflONI. JWll ol llW NOTICE IS FURTH EJt GIVEN lh•t su111rlor Covrt ,.k:I CornmlHlon h•1 ll~itG WldllftOfiv Ll,,OLO, HINOIASON "'9 IJlh dl'I ol O.Cemblf', 1973. ,1 tMI DlNSMOOllt 1~ llo\lr o1 2:00 11'clock P .M, ol .-Id Al"'"""' tt Law di'/ or •s :aoon •• owold matt.to can ut 1111 11ttt StrHt, S11it1 111 be he1rd 111 Room 503 111 ,,_ Ononoa c .. 11 Mf&I, Callf(ttllil tU21 COUnlY Admlnlt1r1tlon 8ulk;trne, SIS Nortn
T...,.._ en•> '*'11M svcarnora StrHt, Stftt• A111, C•llforlll•. AltorMYt fer P"'lll-•• ti. tlmt and ptac• for tM hNr'lno1 o1 Mild ~I tooet1>ar with atl prol91tt
Pvtlll,htcl Orall!ll• Coad Dtll'( PUol and oblK!klns ttttnto wl'llcl'I ll'llY "' Novtmber 12. l~. :U and Dt«mDrr 111.0 and 1t wtlkh 1!.Mt •nd place
blamed for causing the crash. G D~ D b 3• 1•7l '4»-13 :::.,~;;,"'"t.i th-In ""'Y •l'P'W * et egree e ater PUBIJC NOTICE .~:::h:~~~ t~.L AGENCY
" S bl ff 22 •. .1.... FORMATION COMMISSION °' ORANGE roary c a , , w1u was Aid USC p1~1T1ou1 1us1N11s couNTY, CALIFORNIA
injured when a car driven At Home s NAMI ITATIMINT RICHARD 'f. TUJINER
b" Jose_., P. Keuedy Ill Tl>• fot1ow1iio p.1rton• ''' doing Exec::ut1..,. Offlaor ./ ru bll•lneu 1s : Local """"" Formation
crashed on Nantucket Island, Larry Solum, a sopho-EDITH Moss SMAJtTSET. 424 South camm1 .. 1on o1 0.-•1111• "-her G Po' N y H Coast Hwy., L19un1 e .. ch, Ctllfornl• county, carrtomla ·aua:m., is at J'O§Se mt, ext more at USC Crom unUng· 926.SI ~IWd Or11111e (Ollt Dally Piiot. Mich. h:>me after t b r e e ear ton Beach, helped his de-. Oushya11t K11rnar, Krl511n• KVmlr, Novtmtlol'I' 26, ltn 1S71·13
Ca . . 2912 Alfa LlfUll•• Uewll 811ch, months in a pe Cod · b a t l n g teammates wm a c1111or111a 9'2651 CE
Hospital. SAN FRANCISCO (A,P) _ second place trophy in the Pl~~~i!"'*' 1, conc111<ttc1 lrr' a orner111 __ ~P=UB __ L_IC~=N=OTl,.,-=co---
Miss Schlaff suffered a frao-Stale Unlve-1'ty Chancellor University ol Wyo,ming's Top Kr11tin1 Kumar NoT1c1 JNVITIM8 BIDS · '" . Thi• 1t111mrn1 w11 fUtd with It'll TIW County $anll1!1on Olstrfcfs of
tui:e<f pelvi~ and leg. Doc~rs ': Glenn S. Dumke has anDO~ of the Rockies Debate Touma· coon1~ c1~k Of Or•noe county on °''1">111 County, c111torni.1, w111 ractlw
Said she Is OUt Of traction -nt NOYtm• 16, ltl'J Hltltd bids untll 'fhurMlay, 01<:1:mblr ed that tud ts will be bl ""· ' l'tt4'1 6, 1m. at 11:00 1.111. alctti mvst be and able to get around on s en a e Earlier this year I Solum l'ul>Ushed °''"" C011t Dally PllOI, fKIL~ld ,, !ht Dl1!rkl1' AclMln!1tr1!1vr crut-'---. to earn bachelor degrees in finished second at the Western No¥Hnt11r 19, 26. lll!d Drc.tmi:-J. o111c•• bY "'' d1tr •nd 11me """"'P• l.'l~ l(t 1973 lUl)-73 HI torth, •I Wflkh t1mt ll'lly Wiii
K.Medy was fined •too !or humanities and liberal arts at Washington state Co 11 e g e ' "' Plolbllcl'f optntc1 llld u1m1Md •' • . -• "'' office of ti. Ol1trldt. le&u e1111 motor vehicle v-1 o lat lo n s home ...,_;....,1 .. g next year. tournament, and third at the PUBl.JC NOTICE -Avenue. Fovni11n van.v. c11110~1a. 1or ~•··-B I U · ' In 'ta · I '"' 1o11owt1111 · associated with lhe accident. "'lbe first offer'ing of·state· ay or niversity Vl uona JllCTITIOUI BUllNISI FIBERGLA!S .. NGL!S S'ECIFICA-* Tournament in Texas. NAM• STATIMINT 'flON NO. P.Olf
wide curricular programs is a Solum the son of Clayton The followlng P'rt«I Is dolno business Bids fl'lllst '"' wbtl'lltttcl on ttw torrn
Prince Charles and Lady signal achievement in behalf and P~mela Solum, 3321 ••: G AND M tMPOltT co .. 1stt svperlor ::'~'11 ~~-o~t~1~t!1n':!ri~:~· Jane?-~ f -~ ~ f Cailf Ad · lty Dri ta to t Av• .• Costa /MM, Ca. 911121 Spaclflcatl_, bid blltl'tkt and fllftMI' Buckingham Palace says o v~ numlJl:l., o om-mira ve, wan ·a -Geo·r1111 o. AWd<lu. :m wiinvt 11,., tntormatlon-ll'llY be-obtt!Md •• ,Iha
re...... romantically linking ians whose g~'-in t.1 .. h...r edu-tend Harvard Law School Newport 9"cfl. c.. t2660 abOYt addr.st. 1t1epi-"2·'411 or yv• -~ IU&'"'"' aft USC Thi• bu'I""' I• conduclld bV an U0-2'10.
the British cation can now be served !' er • 1nc11vld1H11. · J, W•vne sv1.,..1 ... • -Gaoroe o. Mtfldol• Ster"' arr flf ~ BOard
heir with the Dumke said. PUBUC NOTICE 'fl\f$ 1t1temen1 was llled with the of Directors ~ -~ old Cou111v Cltrk 01 Or1ng1 County on Publlsl\tcl Orall!ll• Coest Ololl'f Piiot,
MV r-" FICTITIOUS BUllNISS Novemllotr 1, 1J73, NO'f'tmllotr 24, lt1l lU0-13
daughter of HE SAID 11IE new curric-NAMI sTAT•M1NT ,..,.421 -
th. Duke 01
Th• followlna Hl'IOf!S 1,, <lollll Publl5~rd Dr•not Coast D1i1Y Pilot PUBUC NOTICE ula wouJd debut at catifornia bll1Jnes1 11: N11vtmw 12. 1t, 26 •nG oec::embe•:l------------W el lington PETOWN EL TORO, ml<tl Sul!• 3, 1'73 3"4S6-73 • UH
.re "pure State Colleges at Domlnguei ::£'..:... El Tore. Rd.. El Toro. Cl., MOTIC• TO CllDITOlll y-PUBUC NOTICE SUP'IJtlOR COURT 01' TN• -..-,latioo." ffillS and Sonoma. Olln Jlll"Ol'l'lt Laptiam, ~(1161 Tllestu1 ITATIE 0" CALlflORNIA 11011 •I""~ Carefully structured pro-Drlv1, H11nlln11lllrl 9'&d'I, Ca. niMd JllCTITIOUS aUSINaSS THE COUNTY 01' OltA .... But bea 8ettY Jttll L•phaM, 101•1 Tl'luevs MAME ITATIMINT .... ,,.,,.,, t· rrrams will be open to mature or., Hvm111111on Bt1eh, c1. 926". The rouowlflQ Pl'f10tl$ are dolno E1t1t• of F R A N c El MAii era &CCOlllp-&•· Thi• l>u1lneu I• eondllCltd ~ an blltlntl5 ill' CHENOWETH, DacuMd.
anymg. the -students everywhere and "'"""' lncll111du11. CASA ciEL MAIJ ~P~Rl'.MENTS. 114 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tO r•~ Olin J. LaPll&m Ith st .. H1Mtlng1on.811dl, Cilll. 924'6 tt.-cradllOl'to ol-tne-.eiow-nafM<l'-4-
CNARLll ,.,,,;,. 00 re-vlde SnN'i~l radio broadcasts 'fh11 1tafffrlrnt wes flied wl11'1 the Fr111klln J. ll1Kc•ll•. 11N6 Rllcld" cltllt ll'llt 111 PM"Ol'I• l!tvlno claims ....,... r~ ' Countv Cl•rk of Oraner c:ouniy on Drive, Cost• Mase, Call!, r.1626 1111111111 ltlt wld dle90lnt are Nql.llAd
cent partridge hunts at the telephone contact with pro-Novtmber •· 1m . virolnl• Marl• IV«t111, 1166 JtlMMMI 10 flit "*"• wtll'I ttw ""°'"'rr vouctllr• w .. 11;.,..t-estates 2Q ·1 F1M34 Dr .. Cotti M-. C.Lit. ,,.U. !11 llW offlu ol ll'lt cltrlr. of th• ~--nu es fessors and use of all Wli.versi· Published Or1n-&1t Coatt DtUy P1101, Tnis tKJsll'lrS• l& ~uc:ttcl 1w an •bOVt tnlltltd eo11rt, or to pr_, "*'"· aouthwelt rl. Granada, Spain, . . . Nov•mbtr 12, 19, » Md o-notf tnc1!vld1111. with '"' ~rY VOl.fCtllrs, to tn.
.. y the COUpie Ce~·'·ly like ty libranes, he said . l, 197l M46-13 Franknn J. euc:ct111 unotn111• •I lht offlu o1 til1 •ttor!le'f· lWLLJ.1 This 111trm1111 w11 flltd with lh• lyron R. Btnltn", m WHI 'Slxtn $1.,
to talk anyway PUBIJC NOTICE COlll'llY Cltrk of Or11199 County OCtolltr LOI t.nolln. C•llfor.O. wlllcl'I I• th• ' • THE PROGRAMS a re 31, 1n3. r,11c:1 of lMlllntt• of "" Ufld9nl0Md "Between partridge they MOTIC• Ofl IMTBMTION TO 1'·2'MO n all "'41f• ""'~nine-to llMo-•"1••--.-chat and chat," the men said. designed primarily for adult DIDtCATI: IAS•M•MT Pvbllslled Orlll(ll Cont Dally Pilot, of u ld dkldfttl, 1'11tlll11 foUI" "'°'11115 • NOTICE IS HEJtE&Y GIVEN tn.I Novltl'll>tr !. 12. If, :U. 1t13 J'lJ0.73 •flw IM first pl,lb/lullon of W. Mtkl. * wage earners ~_bowew1ves on t11t 141h 41.,. °' Nowrni.. lfn. oatld NOVWl'lbtr 11, 1m
who have completed the fifst "" Boarc1 o1 TrudMl Of ttw co.11 PUBUC' NOTICE ~'r.:~~ ~ Rebert S. McNamara, presi· t I coll b t Cc:wnm11nfty Colltue Dlstrfct of Ot•llQll ''" abov• Mmld clle9dtnt dent d the w 0 r l d Bank, WO years 0 ege u are County. California. lcftptlCI I RffOlutLon l'ICTITIOUI BUSIMll& u.w Ol'l'ICU OP
lmbed ·~1 1 unable to spend large amounts of Intention to dlclleli. 111 ~I MAMI IT«TIM•NT •YllOH .. NNTUY c) the 18,'SIN"' OOt l, t. ol t " to Clly of Colt• MUI, I munlclpal TIW folk;JWlng persons 8(9 dolr.e JU w..e Md! 91 • Kalapatar In Nepal· but said une on campus. cOl'90l'•t1011. 1or JM'lc ....... •nd l'llO!tWaY Mlnau as i L•...,...... c..if _.,. • StudentswiD.beabletoeam pVtpoMS. &aid Cttsement lo b9 loc:•led GLENHAVEN OF NEW,OJIT. lSSS A""9W.w • ..-6e wa.! cxmtent to just look .......... . three I owr, on Ind ICl'OU portt-of It'll! SuPtrfor Avllflllf, Nawport IMdt. Cati!. P\lbllll'llCI Ol'WllM cont Diily' Pdut the ~ -loot Ml E·----' uqw\ees m or our years 1tld pare" of 1100· 1oca1.e<1 at tM '2660 NO'V9111b9r If v. w o-• ,; at .,,_. • YQ---.. and Will not •· -•i•ed to ~ltrlY bollMary 11t F1lrvltw ROIG Harb)!' (:onYtlltcer!t Hoapltal, llK'.1 • 10, 1m ' 1 aqr.71 "lt.!1 too.bigh__for .zne," said. Ll'C ''"'"l.... on rllt Or•l">!ll Cont ColS.0-Pf'OPtl"IY C•llfornla C\ll'llOl'tllon 1555 lllptrlorl-----------'-'-'
lh. 17•-••-old '·-·· U.S. make frequent visits to the In"" City of C0$1• Mesa. · A-.-·~-9"cll. .. C.Utom1•~n.6'0 --mmr 'C ~~-. ·"··-·-,_ ~~~ t h ·c1. A putt.lie nMfll!lll Upon tl!IP Clllf'lllon Tl'lll bWillff.I 11 conGutftd b'f • COi'• 1 VUfoM RU'A.IKIA
])el ,,...., who a18o WO campuses, e S8I Of m1kl1111 IUCll dedication wlll be Mid por•ll°" 1---===,-,===--ense secre ..... ,,, 11 1310 Adams Avenue, Cotti Mftl, Htrbor CorivlMsctftt HM!lllal, Inc. PICTITIOUS BUllMID has climbed the lf,690-foot C1tlfornl1, on "" 21th d•Y °' Novemllotr, LVll R. Olrls. Sla8t•rr NAM• ITATllMalfT Mat•-~ in the II'..--.... 1m •' thtt tiovr of tl9ht o'clock P.M. This 111temt11t W•• flltcl with lilt TM tonow111111 P9"'IOll 11 c1o111111 _.,.. =~· --...-23 p Ii eOARO OF TRUSTEES County Cltrlt of Or•no• COl,lllty on 11: AJpo. O ce COAST COMMUNITY COLL.EGE Ociotltr 3\, Im LEISURE TIME GAMES..OAG""RTS. DISTRICT ~ 369' Sovth llrlltol StrNI, SMtli AN. McNamara and Dr. Goodwin By NOR/MN ~. WATSON Plltlllll'ltd Ora"" CCMlll Dall'( Piiot. C•Llf, n1'M Wlllanl, a professor of <:llNrDPV SIC'y °' aa!d Botr<I of Trvtlftt NOV•Ml)tr s, 12. lf, 2&. ltl'l •UU-13 H•n• HllM eacim-. ,,.. 1•11'1 --·-, Recnn•ts Publl"*' °''""' coa$t o•nv ,.,1o1, si .• H.wpor• ... c11. caur. ""° at UCLA. reached Kalapatar's Novtml)tr 2.6, 1fn 3530-13 PUBUC NOTICE Thi• Mint» 11 COl"ICNctld 111 '"
smnmlt after a fast, thre&day lndl~~"' ~
climb. PUBUC NOTICE "~C!!.'•'"•"T'•:~~1: .. ••s ™• 11111fT1111t w•• fllld win. ""
G d d , ., __, COIJl'lty CleT'k ot Or•nt• COIJl'lty Oii * :ra ua,te l....-•fl7 -''T'IM fo»owlno PM'IOll It dolnt 11\!llMM OclOIMr It, Jtn .. _ SUPERIOR COURT 01' THI
Duitl E1Jsberg and Andrei STATE 01' CALlllDllNIA l'OR 1$\.ANOER ACCENTS, 17'1 Plarintla Publlll'lld Or•not Coatt D•llY Piiot SakbaroY So . t . THE COUNTY 01' ORANGE Avt., c°"' ,,...., m21 NO'V9111blr If 26 •lld Dtctfllbtt J. 10'
' a vie scientist, Twenty-three police recruits MOT1cl: oir 111":.t.t.=11 oP ,n1T10N c:i:n..!:'.:!: g:r,,!2,.21» 1:1nion A.,.., im ' am.l'i
will be present.eel the Eleanor were graduated from the 48th flOJt PltOBATI OP WILL AMO l'OJI Tn11 bll•IMll I• conchlmcl b'f 1n·1---r=uu=u~c""'NOT1""'=CE=---R.oosevdt Peace Awards for ual 1 f th Oran LITTERS TISTAMENTAJtY 1ncr1v1d1111 ann c ass 0 e ge E1!1tt of BAUCE H E It e E R 'f· Dtnnll' 0. CaMpbell 1973 by • SANE, w h i c h County Peace 0 ff i c er • s CROMPTON, 0.C••Wd. Thi• .i1ttmrnt Wll tiled with "" MUMIClf'AL. COUJIT 01' CALll'OttlllA.
describes itself as a citizens' Academy at Golden West .,:.?~1~: AkseRfC:.~E:XT,g~~,.TRiJS'f ~~ 3~~6 of °"'"" coun1r Oii oe1 J•~=TY.=. o~ 9M&., ~=:ms:~ wo:1:·s College earlier this month. ~~~n 5~"1:;1~1on~1~~~ .. "'J 1~~ Pllbll.n.d . Oran;• Cont o.11y ~ OtlAN•• ~:,*:;'.; HAlt~lt ~. and for illVlllCt ot Lall.n T11ltmtnlary Nov.Mb« s, 12, lt, 26, 1t73 l31 .. 1l JUDICIAL Ol&TIUCT made by former U .S. Sen. RECRUITS went 16 Jive to '"' .,.11i1~*" l'lfll"enct 10 Y1t1tc11 · c.a.se t1uM1•111 1 ..
Wayne-Mone and P r of • de""..+ .......... ts including three. :~~.'°';~;!'"~~r=-'= -PUBUC NOTICE Pt,1n1111: oo:gfH~~hRte:~
Seymour Melman. Morse bas ...... ......... ' I • uma he• bffn set for O«. •• 1913, OEFENDANTl WALLACE .... C .. NNON
l
·ust •--elected _ -'--'-"-O r a n g e C Q a s't p O I Ce at ,:oo a.m.. In th• courtroom o1 l'ICTITIOUl BUSIMISS To ti. Deltlld•lll! A c1v11 complllt11
St1nl1v C. RM11;1. Alie l6: rn!<1ent of LR\lnl BtKh, 0•1• of cs.1111. N;ovemt>tr 22. 1'73. Survlvl!d bV wlfO. Join L. Reciuai "lhres d11uan11n, Vlro!n 1,-
LlllCll 11nd Andre•; mo'!IMr, Mn. Nor-P.s~1. Soa..,.I, C11l~nl1; 1111.,-, Miii Sui1nne Rtoua. Funtral Hrvlc.,,, lu.,.. ,.~,,. 2 PM. M~orm'ck Leer..,,., Belldl
CPllPtl w!T!'I Rtv Rotlerf L. Bonhtll o! SI C.-Oroe'• f(llKOPtl Church ol'· 1.,.,.._,,.,.....,,..., _ _..._,,. ....... ,. ............ ,..., ... .,"4.
nc1111i.<i. Interment, Pacific V I• w ...,
~· UM.aW11.1u1oo.u departments, the harbor ~~~~1 c!!.t~ 30~ve .. ~,.,~·.:; TM fot~,: '':.'=~,... c11111111 ~ ~:1:t11~o-n:1!:1~~~ ~
d ~ANEc'tremooy will take dCoe~t and the Marine c1~,::osa~!: --:·~::ornla. llUsl~a."P. SERVICES, ltl't Orll\Oll :'ld::''i11111:"'~1s,.,c.ou~ ~om~~~
Mtmor111 Ptrk, MC(Ol'f!'l1Ck Leo;iunt Belch Mortuar~. Olredors.
SINGFllt
MJllClll C. $1119..-. 3'274-8 S.n Am9dco,
L111un1 Hiii~. Ottt ot dlMlll'I, NO\ltmt>er
1~. 1971 SurvivM ~¥ wi•e, 8tt1r...: son, Rol>trl , ol HvnllnQIOI\ 8ncl,, bl'otller,
Aotitrl C. SIM!lr, Mir• Lon"•. Servkff, 'fl/HdlY. 1 PM, Pacific v1-ChtPl'I. lntrrment, P.clnc View Memorltl Perk. Pac!llc View Mort111ry, 01rec:IOI"$.
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
1%7 E. 17lh SL, Costa Mesa
' 6"'4888 •• BAL tz.BERGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona dtl Mar 173-NSG
Costa Mesa 14&-UU • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa Mesa
LI Hl33 • DILDAY BROTHERS
MORTUARIES
171ll'Beacb Blvd.
lluntlnglOo Beach &e7771
-:'2U-R.-.Avt.
Loni Beach • tll-433-1141 • • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1706 Laguna Canyon Rd.
llM-NIS • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery Mortuary
Cbaptl
3$00 PaclfJc View Drive
Newport Beacb, Colllorala -fU.2700 . • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7801 Bolsa Ave.
Westminster 113.ml
~
SMITII'S MORl'UARY
U'I Mala St.
lluntlnglon .Ileac-
13Hl3t
Other Deaths
. LOS ANGELES (AP) -ford, Conn., died Sonday at
Constance Talmadge, a blonde, .M em or i al Sloan-Kettering
star of the •ilent screen and 'Cancer Center bett. His
Inst ol the three Talmadge career Included such jobs u
sisters, died Friday at age " newaip11per reporter, theatrical
73. Services In Hollywood are producer, Army o I fl c e r ,
scltedu!E"y, diplomat, land developer, art
collf1Ctor, author and compiler
LOS GELES (AP) ol word games.
Former chUd star Rohtrl R. . -
Ellls, 40, wbo pined lame MEXICO CITY· (AP) -J-
!or his nasal·tooed · Henry Alfndo Jlmean, 17, compooer
Aldrich role In the radio and of more than IOO popular Latin
television comedy aeries, died American songs, died Friday,
Friday. He made bis" acting In 1 Mexico City hospital.
debut at age ~ .00 lll>Ptl"•d •-· the -~ he wrote in more than so m>vies. ·-ntWO _ ..
were "Ella,'' ''Paloma
Querl.la" Md "Alllenecl etf NEW ORLEANS (AP)
Josepb La Croix 0 De De"
Pltrce, 69, a jazz tnunpeter
who led !he Preservation Hall
Jau Band on toun In America
and Europe In !he 1960s, died
Friday. The s e 11 .. t.a ugh t
tnunpeter played m o ' I"! y
clallSical work In Ne'!' .111"1..ns
night spolS until JtJJ eyes
began !ailing In !he 195Gs.
' LA MESA (AP) -J'uneral .
aervlces for re~. Rur
Adm. Cllarlet J. Wldllng, a
lawyer here alter retil-eritent
from the Navy, will he hcld
Tuolday at Ft..-RoHcran1
• Ceme~ Wb!Unr. 87, died
at his. •
NEW YORK iAPl -J ... pb
Vener Reed, 71, a founder
and chairman of the American
~bakespeare FesUval Jn Stra~
' Tus Brazos." • ,,.
.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
Memorlal 1ervices will be hel4
ThurldaY for Ro.berl A. BrtaPam, a V~terans
Admlnillratlon ollicial who
haltltd city olllclal• ·over
rackets that preyed on
veltrar11. Bringham, director
of the West Los Angeles
Ve t e r on s Administration
O!ntei' !or 25· years, dfed Jut
week In Bethesda, Md., Naval
Hospital, tt wls atlllOWlCed
ltue. Ile was Ii. -BUFFALO, •N.Y. (AP) -
lllarprel E. -Pritt, 84,
desiper of the l1nt children'•
toys·manufactured by_ Flllter·
Prlee Toys, dled. lilte · iloo
::l~~·:b'."' illustrated
place In N y k F b 10 rps. WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, Avt .. COtt• """'' Call!. '2627 (or a wrltt1n or oral IMldln;. 11 , t'W or e • · Graduates fnclude: Gary S. County Clerk sn.rry N•v• Siewert, tm Or•• J1n1tlao court! within :.io N 'i• afttr thb * C"'· KINIHIL .. ANDl!JtSON Aw .• Colt• MtM, C•lll. '2927 .. wmn'IOl'll 11 ....,.... on YOll. OttMf'WIM, Bennett, Robert G. 11t:ney, IY1 CAJIL MITCHaLL Paul• Jean Crlll, 1'79 °''"'" Aw;, your drt'1llll Wiii lit'"'*"'° on app11Cltlon Opera singer Maria Callas Dennis w Cost Phil Dickens It» NORTH IROADWAY Costa Mftl, Calif. 92'27. llY "" plal111lff Incl thto court m-r
new to '~-to aive t•.... • ' • SANT .. ANA. CALIF. nm 'fl'll• tM.lslntU I• COndUC:llll by. gtMtl t '"'"' • fl.ldlmtnl ff•lnd '°" IOI" the
MIUUVU ~· nv Larry D. Fuqua, Neal M. 17141 ISt-1177 Pll'fnen~~~· N •• rt moMY or oll'itr rrtlllf ,......,., ll'I
)nn" awaited concerts at the II 't Arthur w v--ell ."'°""" ton """""""' .,,..tty ' WI the complalnt ""& ewi t, . ~ , Published Or•ll!ll'I CCMitt oany Piiot 11111 •l•ttfl'lllnt w11 fl~ witl! the 11 ,.., wr.:i. ._ _. ,... llillvta " Royal Festival Hall. Matthew D. Letteriello, Den-Novem1>1r 20, 21. 26, 1'73 iso.n Ceuntv Cllrk of Or•nve Co1mrv on an "'°'MY 111 11111 matm, 1 .. ..._
'Ibe coooerts Dec 1 and "'ll OCtobtr l1, Im de M """"Ir " t1111 nur ""''"'-• nis H. McNelty, Jeff A. "'" er, PUBLIC NOTICE · 1'·"141 1t 1nr, may• 11"'"' 11,.... Dec. 2, her 50th , blrthday, 11\omas L Owen Wayne R NPllbllsl'ltd °''"°' coast o.11y Pnot, 011.o Ocl«ltr.., im
on.ginal'" Were ••heduJed five ' . • ' . owml>ar 5, It, 1~. U, lt73 Ul1·73 M, Htmlln, Ci.rte.
v -. Riedmann, Victor R. Thies, F~:J:~0~/A:~~':NeTu er v1,.1n11 G1ncll•, °'9lltY
weeks ago, 'but ~ callas and Floyd A. Waldron, .all ,,r_r.. fol1owlll!ll 1Mr1«1 I• c1111no bUllMU PUBLIC NOTICE := ~ e-:uy,
developed a throat eCtion. of the Costa Mesa Police . RENT-ME It v. llEN'fAt. CENTERS, FICTITIOUS BUStN•ss .,. '"""' c ...... Df. Mist C8ilas'S rec«lt ap-· Department MOTORHOME RENTAL CENTERS NAME 'STATEM•MT ltlttt M .....a ... ..,.. at Hamburg was her · 111242 a11el'I Blvd.. Huntington atte11'. Tiit toriowtnu pw1ons •TT dolne ....,.... ...._ Ullt. r<--... Ctl!lornl• 9"l6ol7 buslnes• 111 . AttwMf ':I;/:,,,_ _
first ctmeet1 in eight years. ALSO ftfiCBAEL ferris w11nam Hirrls, 1551 w. 21tlh, Tor-' INTERNATIONAL MUSIC CO., 17'..S Pllb&llhld ' •"119 Co.ti Otlly l'llcl, Ticke~ selling at $24. for t ' nncr, C•lllor11l1 qctS01 ~~m·~r.. Svll9 G &. H, lrYIM, NOvtn!blr , If, 26 and Oec:emtiw
.-. (·~val are let~•·g up and Michael C. Slusher, of Tiiis tl\jllne5' '' concructtd by en .. _·., M ,_ 1,..2 "•'·st T 11 1. 1m l4tl·13 -~u ~· the La Be h PoHc rnc11v1e1ua1 "" • ,...,,.v, .. VI n,,. ___________ _
guna ac e w1111am H1rr11 C•. 926eo PUBUC CE to $100 OD the black market. Department· Robert w Tnls 11a1em1nl WIS flltcl with the LH Collins, 6$62 Oxlord Or .. Hun-• NO'Il * · ' Ha 00 ' Countv Clerk of Oreng• C01tntv Oii t1not011 l 11tch, Ca. White Orang~ County r f t;ov•mllotr 16 1'73 01vld 8r•11d011, 110l S111 l!or.•,. NOTICE HEREIY IS GIVEN THAT
Amert ••-• D • De ;_ t '" h I J Cur ' p2KQ NIWPOrt h1cl'I, C.. 91"4 • pu11Uc tlffrlng wm be held cetore CIJ\ ,.._ ..... n Dae pa,w .. en ; •~uc ae · • \.ubll"*l orinoe c·asr Daltv Piiot Tttr• 111n1""' I• conducttcl ll'f 1 1.,..r11 tl'lt Pl•nnlnt' comml11IM rtt 1119 cuy EillD&tee 8nd hb band gave rell, Harold S. Downey and Novrmb9r 19, :u. ,00 o.c.mw.-). P1rtr11tr1hlp. of '"''."' on Thur$d•v. Otcrmbtr ''
t-·-~,·t -~-for !he ru-•-d E Do . San 10. 1973 un-n Htttll Mlloney lfn. 7,30 p,m,, U"lv1r11tv Htgh SCIWlol nv UClll:l ~ ~ uklr • wrung, Thi• •lattnwnt w11 fllecl With llW M\1111-purposa room• A and •· an YMCA of E'\,L;.....l .. , Clemente Police Department· PUBIJC NOTICE COltfll'f ci.rk o1 0ranoe County on C•MPYI or1vt. 1 .... 1,., c111fonll1, 1e "'~ ' Novlfl\btr 1, 1'73. consider tM adoption of Ille proposed Ellington was h:>nored by and William M. Ehart and "'4n c-r•I Pl1n for the Cll)' of Irvine. Emr.mr HalJe Selassie lo. a I "Ster L. Hall us Mariiie IU,•JllOJt COUJtT OF CALIFOJINIA PuOll•l'ltd Or•no• G~ll D•llY Pllol, Said Gentr•I Plan lncl\ICll11111 ,11 tht ..-~ .u<' • • • COUNTY 01" OJIAMG! Novttl'lbfr 12. lf U, Ind 0.Clfnber MCHtlrY tltmtnll 11IntrI11 Y -
reception at the Ju b 11 e e Corps. 1to. A-1111s J. itn ' W1-n corn1>1sHt an •r•• from 111e Lom.1
P ·•--af OllOIEJI TO SHOW CAUi• de S111t11~ Hiiis In !ht north, Ille
_MJWl\."I:)' ttr.. ooe ~-.• ~ ... In th• ."'81(1t'. Of IN AH'lutron Of ' PUBUC .NOTICE trilM Alf'Ch'llound•!rn ••ont the •• ,
SeJasste d~ted him for LINDA LA VOHNE IURGE$$'fof en.~· ~ . •ncl ~'· ~•nd ""' Pacllle 0¢Ntt -
··---·--I B 1 c d of N•l'rlf· . 1111 ~Sfh, ~ucvt:u11;;nts mus C. WHEltEAl LINDA LA V 0 N NI NOTIC• °' MOM·ltlS,OWSIBlt.ITY Fllflher lnlorM8tlon r--a1rcllti11 llllP ,,._ And the 74-ye&Mld musician ea.c l oe l!IUAGES$, petitioner, has llled 1 Ptllllon N11tk9 b ller•b'I e1vtn !Nt tl'le un-POt1Ct Gentrtl Pl111 for tllt CllY of , wlll'I tM c"rk of this court tor an Wlllefltld wfll not a.. ~1111• for 1rvl111 c•n tit Obl1llltd from !he City WU given an h On Or a r y orcrar cn•ngln; pe1111011e1"1 Mnw fl"OI!'! any dtl:!ts or 111tt.11n1n con1r1cted bY of lr vlntr p1,"11!1"111 OtrMrtfMfll, a»:a«i.
diploma of the capital city In DSC Post tte~NLN\ "..'!.~t\fs~ROEU. to LINDA ~~r::~IMr ll'lln m)'lflt, °" OI' '"" ~· • COPY OI Mid pltn l• Oii
by the lord mayor at City IT IS OtlOEREO tn.t 111 ~ D•lld !hi• l,ttl'I dly of NO'WMtMr. .. CI TY 0':<.IRVI NE
llall . lf!ltretltd In "" •llOY...ntllled m1t11r 1m PLAHN trG COMMISSION -• ·~·r f>tfor• thb Court 1t 2:0G P.M.. KalhlMn Nlf\CY ..... ,. /s/Jtrt L. WlllOll * G r-1 H t' gton on Jtnu•ry I, lf7•, Oep.artrilrnt No. 11711 LA ltOM LA As1l•l1111 Stcrttary wyt\11 ~ ger, UD 1n 3, 11 100 Civic C111ttr Orlvt, Jn lht Fount•ln Vtlley, CA '27(1t P11blls1Md Or~• Coad Otlly Pilot, Ev~elist BWy Graham Beach. has been selected co· cr1v o1 s1t11a Ana, cOVftty of Or•not. Publlsl'ltd °''"'" CM1t o.ny "''°'· Novemotr '"' is. u. 1m . 360t).J1
hu restated bis Jong·Ume suir chairman of Trojan-Temp()S, ~11~,~0:"tor "=.~:':· ~;:"~hll"':::~ Nowl'lllltf 21' 2t 2'. ''n is.s.n PUBLIC NOTJci-
pxt (Of President Nllon and Forums and ·Previews at not bt llf•nttc1. 1---~P~UB~IJ~C~N~OTl~C~E:_ __ , __ ;;cir,;:;;~~"!'iijl--
id W · t USC 'Mi r.i .' • IT IS FUR THE~ oi.0t1tlD 11'111 I fllCTITIOUS BU&INlloS sa' be betleve the aterga e • ISS ~ ger. a 1un1or CoPY ol !ht• order to ll!ow (8""• bt l'ICTITIOUS BUllNIU NAMI STATIMIN! acandals' wt 11 "proOObly majoring in lnt,1?matiooa1 rela -1111tt.1lslled_ tn '"' °''"" . Coast Dilly Mt.Ml STATIMaMT Tiit tollowl!'!t PHMM ,,. dotnt
ti · nd R . I I I Piiot, • -•••~•r of .....,,, clrtr.rt•llori Tl't 1011ow;,.. '*""' ,,, dolnv bwll'll'A ••: · make him a ltraoger man ons a UISiAila, w pr1n1.i 111 Or•llClt Count\" c.u1om11, 1Wt11tt1• u : ,£TOWN t:L TORO, nna lllltrt and • '--tter rri>t:ldeftt.'' coordinate these three pro-ot1e• • Wffk for fOUt' WC.CIU(llt "'""' Gt..INHAVEN OF OAAOEN GRO't'i. ·~". El Toro Rd.. Iii Tor .. Ca..
1,11; ..--• • IVIOf' lo TM Giit Ml fOf Marin; Oii 13392 T•ll SITfff, Otrdtll Grovt t'26oll '26JO 1" f 1
11 ( do not llwayl agret. wilh gr&JnS, whJCh alloW (;eh£orn18 I~ petition, lA!ltlllWfll CO!IYl .. tc"tfll ~lal, Olin Jerome Lapham, 101'1 ThtMln, '""" .,;........_.. _aQd pollcles of high school stllden\I .... ,earn Ot\Teo~ N-w u. 1911. llK',. • Ctt1~ CWJIOl'•tltfl. 1• ra11 onv1, Hwnuno'°" lltldl, c1• nw ~ J~.. . -_w_J CLAUDE M. OWEN$ ~""'· Ganttn OtCIYI C•llflll"fl/a 92+43 "'"' JNll t.•PNm, 101,1 TMtllJt, bis adminlstration," Qrabam about U$C, J\ldgt ol·tn.1Uptr1or Court Th!1-..... h cond\ICttd toy 1 'or• Dr., H1111t1ne1on l!l tKh, Ct, nt"4 __ ,, In. sta•·-·t from his o~ ..... d ht I ...... JAMii l. klLLY '"' OOr•tton. Thlt bu•lnn1 I• collduc:tM ,., '" ocuv. u::urw• ""~ J.s Yftl aug et 0 1'U , IJtMllT L. 81S~ t.lffttlfWlll ConvaltKll'lt ll'lllllvldu•I.
home In MCll•-·t N r "But and .. _ William J Gelger A~ " .... Ho¥!•••· Ifie. Olin J . LotPMM U.:11 I •'-·~Do •. • • '1t N......., Ctiltlf Orin Lrit °"'" Stcrttarr Tl'lll •l•tttnlfll wal flltcl wltlt "'9 President Nlxoft has my sup-8162 ournham Circle, Hun· N....., tutti. caHIOrn•• n.-"°rnt• .;11t1Mr.1 "' 111.i w1ttt "" coun1r Cterk ot Otano-touMy "'
port and prl)'el'I. [ think he t.lnjfOn Beach. Mrs. Geiger ~~:! """"'*" ~°':"O:,' ~m « °''"" CN11¥ '" Ntwmw •· lm. , ,....
should have lhe prayers of ls a Huntington Beach Plan-Publltl'lld Or•• C011t 01uy ,1101. , l'·m.• l'llllt!shed Dr•noe c .. s1 oa11y ,.... aJJ Americans." nlhg Co--•sst'oo'er November If, 2' ~ O.Ctmlltf' l. 10. Pt,1bllthtd Oflf!Clt Co.II Oltl'f ,llol, """'"'*' 12. If, 21t, IN ~, U .. LU • 1m lU..n NovtM'*' ${ U, ,,, .. '"' "45-1) t ,,,, ~11
I
• • '
'
_s
'"f ......
J
: ~ ••
•• '
'
•
• 1'•
. •· •
~tmenrl . • • • • . SQQ • 514
Automobiln . ' . • • • • • Q50 • 990
loots & Morine lqulpment 900 • 9W
(1~nt •••••••• 100 · '99
The Blggett Marketplace on· the' e>ninae Coast .,... -i.. Sole ••• m • ..,
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS a.ntot . • . . • • . • • • . 300 • 499
~-• • • • • • • • • 5l.5 • S-419
"" .... s.,p;.. . . . • • . llO • 199 . ' Ilea& l11GM Genlfol, • • •• ISO • 199
Financial • • • • • • • • • 200 • m
HcMes for Sole • • • • • • 100 • 114
Lott & found . . . • . . • .550 • 574
Merchandise. . • . . • • , 800 • 149
You Can Sell It, Find It,
Trade It With a Want Ad (642~5678) ·One . Call . Service
Fast Credit Approval
Schools ond Wtruttiof. • • • .575 • m
S.,.,M:ft ond llpoirl • • • . 600 . 699
'lrcwporlalion. • • , • , • , 9tS • 949
General General _,,,.,,., 11 ~1 1 .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;~;;.;;; .=M;;;;.;;.;ES_A_V_E-RD_E_ !:~~~~~~~~~~ 4 BEDROOM REPUBLIC HiGH FAMILY CONDO
..,.._-....,......._,._. ~-Here's yo11< Condo with all ON TlifE HILL
ERRORS. Advertisers should check their t~ con\lorts of h 0 m e Gracious entry with winding
•ds d•fly & repcrt e rrors immtdi•tely. The ,vJthout the maintenance. slalrcase. Exquisite deoor
DAILY PILOT assumes llabllity for the first 21~ na1hs. 1Jat10. fireplace. throughout spacious 2400 Incorrect Insertion only. and 2 car garage. Pool and squ.are-foot-''most popular Clubhoosc I a c \·11tIe 1 In· design''. -Fonnal dining.
el uded. 'Near "TI1e City" Enormous family room
Shopping Centrr, school• boasts "'·et bar and crackl·
and a park close by. Great ing fireplace. 1 bedroom
Garden Grove location. Can down. 3 up, tip top condition
assume 5:V. 'Ai loao. Tora! at $63,950. Call 546-Zlll
1>aymen1, S21)j per month, today!
GtrMral General ·
WESLEY N .
TAYLOR CO. sale price $28,:iOO. Ol'ENTIL 9 • IT'S Fl.JN ro 8E Na/ I ti~$·111tl !{EAL TORS since 1946
. IRVINE TERRACE BEAUTY-$182,500
Greatesl view of bay , ocean & Catalina!
.c~~tom quality lge 3 BR home w/FR, formal
dmmg, 3 baths, 3 frpls & beautiful pool.
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO,, Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hills 'Rd.
NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910
rca.,, co:Ts
'~WALLACE
REALTORS
-546-4141-
(0ptn Evenings)
PRICE SLASHED!
NEAR NEW
HOME
I"'=-:--.-------,;---,,-------011;ner says SEU. IT FAST! Gener•I General Price reduced $1,IXX>!
-COMPANY OWNED AND VACANT
MUST SELL THIS NEWPORT BEACH -2
Story Cape Cod home. A terrific value fea-
turing 4 huge bedrms, den, lge. beated pool,
separate laundry area and much , much more!
· 2~0 Sq. Ft. of livin~ in a beautiful setting.
Priced only $67,200 . Call for complete de ta ils.
CALL 546-5880.
• -.5.,.. HERITAGE
REALTORS
546-5UO
Open Eves.
S";ecptng curved drive to
v.·ide ccr~n1ic lile entry.
Garden kitchen. Oversized
living rootn views
manicured grounds. FOUR
family size bed.rooms~ Quiet
cul.cl~.11_ac lQcation. Side
yard for mo tor home. Pric-
ed to sell at $4-0,500. Take
advantage -call now!
847...£.010
OPEN TIL g • rr'S l'UN TO BE NICEI
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
General : General SANTA ANA
I 2 ON 1 HEIGHTS . OLD ENGLISH . """' lol 6i;xJOQ with ., ... t
CASTLE I Tv.·o, 2 Bedroom home:s polcnlial. Hai; <l su11ctures
, separated by a sparkling 011 it. Zoned A·l Offered
Executive area. Tree lined pool Excellent coodition, for $50,000. Call Coh1-ell
street. Dramatic e n Ir y . Ea,stside C.r.t Walk to shop-646---0555.
Raised living room. ~farble ping. Offered for $59,500. ---~
fireplace. Sunken formal Call Col\ .... ell ~.
dining room. B~thtaking
family room. Overhead
balcony. UnbeliC\•ablc floor
plan. King Arthur's slrepini::
quarters. Separate uUllty I
room. Old English Castle
only $56,950! Huf-ry -Call
now! 842-2.535
OPEN TIL 9 • ff'S FUN 70 BE NICE/
THE REAL
ESTATERS
HORSES OK I
Creal area for the kids! 'this
country 3 bdrn~is on 1 ~
.. aore .. of ... lovely U-yside.
$1800 00\VN -Buys ncv.' Nicely d~rated h e with
beautifuJ 3 br J yr old 2 baths. Dining r m ,
townhouse in Sandpointe -homMnaker'·s k i t c h e n .
burnt orange shags -Va-Fireplace, Patio. $49,950.
cant too! Hurry! Bk r 5<10-I720
546-«122 TARBELL . Realtors
General 1 General
SPYGLASS HILL
Lovely 6 bedroom traditional home. Cozy
famil y room with fireplace and wet bar.
Bonus roon1. Swimming pool, gaze bo, view.
$225,000.
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
Somerset model, 5 bedroon1s, 3 baths. Large
family room , 3 car ga rage. All this plus a
view of Big Canyon Country Club. $93,500.
BAYFRONT VACANT LOT
50 feet of bayfrontage with pier and slip
privileges. Fee title O\v ner '"ill consider
trade. $200,000.
VERSATILE BONUS ROOM
Popular "Oxford" tow nh ouse in University
Park. 3 bedrooms and dining room, 2lh
baths plus big bonus room . Very sharp
with great location. ~,900.
ADDED ATTRACTION
Smash hit. Custom built Baycrest 3 bed·
room . 20' . x 14' freestanding p layroom in
pool size back yard. Quiet prestigious "U"
s[reet. ~75,000.
DOVER SHORES WATERFRONT
Very l~r.ge home \Vith 6 bedrooms plus den
pl_us b.1ll.1ard room .. Large Jiving room, for-.
mal d1run g room. Pier and slip , \Vater view
from man y rooms. An unusual property.
$190,000.
BROADMOOR BIG GANYON
Exceptional val.ue. at only-$ll9.500, -Fully
landscaped, draped, and decorated. Ideally
suited for family living: 4 bedrooms 3
baths, family room. · · ' ,
DOYE R MOOEL BIG CANYON
Sparkling new 2 bedroom Dover condomin-
ium in Big Canyon-ready for fast OttU·
pane)'. De{ightful end location in new sec·
t:ion. Family room. $89,500.
CAMEO SHORES
Ocean view, very large living room and
master bedroom . with beautiftll parquet
iloors, beamed ceilings. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths.
$115,000.-. -· --.
MESA VERDE
$1795 BUYS!
PUBLIC AUCTION
STATE OF CALIF:
Residences in
Corona del Mar
F1 NANCING AVAILABLE Mr. West 620-3708
CONDO
Immed. possess. on this love-
ly 2 bdrm. condominlwn in
beautiful Irvine. Bit-ins,
diswhr., carp., drapes &
shutters. Owner anxious &
priced lo sell!
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 67S.6459
The fastest dral\' In the West.
•.. a Dally Pilot Classified
See
want ad
EASTSIDE
HOME ·+
· TRIPL.EX
COUNTRY
smlNG
situated on a large 130xl50
Jot v.·ith tov.•ering shade
trees, a comfortable 3 BR
2 BA hon1e with den and
front porch for your rocker
Plus
separated away from the
house a triplex with income
potential or $440/mo.
only $69.950 for-all
CALL 644-7211
/Jn NILLL
UAILEI &
ASSOCIATES
BIKE TO BEACH
$1550 DOWN
Prime beach town location.
Bike to beach. in ininutes.
Huge corner lot. Boat &
!railer gate PLUS storage.
Tiled .... entry;-Bright -sunny
kitchen. Queen size bed·
rooms. New appliances &
soft v.·ater plumbing. Large
covered patio. $1550 beys
it -don't v.'&it -call
a.16-2313
OPEN TIL 9 • IT'S FUN 70 SE NICE/
11
LET'S TALK
TURKEY
ii you're looking for a New.
port Beach duplex· only 6 ·
doors to the beach with an 1
exccllertt summer/winter
rental recoi-d in _the $84,500
range with a min. of · only
l(r,:~ down and super terms
CALL US
v.·c'rc ready to talk '44-nn
/Jn NICEL
OA ILEY &
ASSUUAI ES
SPEND
CHRISTMAS
IN YOUR IRVINE
TERRACE HOME
Newly listed Jnlohnal home
in prime location. Flexible
terms on this 4 bedroom
home \\'ith Oversized pool.
Large Jot v.ith great privacy
and lovely trees. Priced at
$89,500. fm-8550,
11111~111111
EVER STOLEN
A DUPLEX
Try this: two 2 bedn:J9m
units -double garage I~
come of SlT:JO per year.
Asking $35,950. Try your
O\vn price ov.·ner &ays
SELL! Call Red Carpel,
ne·altors, 64~.
CLASS SELLS -642-fi678
Gener•I GerMr•I Generol G~niral
FREEDO * IALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * EASY LIVING ' M , · " ' · NICE 3 BEDROOM-all Qltns, dble. gar.,
. 'LIDO ISLE NEWPORT -HEJGHf.S clubhouse & pool Condominium, excellent lo-HO'ME Super 'clean! Extra Reduced! . Spanish 3 , cation. Vacant · move in quick. Owner will
1 2 B J'L b BR.,' 2 ba. spllt·level. help with financing. Aski ng $24,500. CALL
SPECIAL ge., · r., r< · a., ,F;x!r~ _lge.,lot. Owner . 540-lUl. '
frpJ., pauo. fast es· · extremely anxious ! ~t~ on ,;,..ctow< ..... 11 .. crow o.K. Try $71,500 Call & submit 642-7491. PEEK·A·BOO
ed Continental Stre<t - 3 67f>.7060 . , · A LITILE OCEAN VIEW IS BETIER THAN
BR + ft-pie FI>.'ER UPPER l INCOME NONE. See this absolutely charming custom ~1";fti•U'!,~1.,,J1r8T~: WATERFRONT . Two 2 Bdrm. Units holl!e in Ne_wport Heights. 2 Bedrm and
Available to anyone Newport.Island i)om.e .. , Near Harbor ijlvd. large den. Dining area, 2lh baths, 2 (ire-
regardJess ol qe, race, 2 BR. & den Pier & $39,500 places, beamed ceiling~. dble. garage, heavy
cm.Id or job: Full price float. Call for' appoint· · $3,500 Down shake roof, enjoy a mini view of the spark-$23,950 ment to see. 556-8800 ling blue Pacific. Our exclusive at $56,500. · CALL 540-115 1. .
4 Loe•': =~.~Tt~~~ .. Y•• .. [B i .-~-------------.i
•t
Fairview f;G;;';;"";;;'~'l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;G;;;•;"';;r;;•;I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.fl
* 5t'x290' LOT '*
C-1 -ZONE
$32,500 E·Z TERMS
* 4 Bedroom home (hUge · ' '"""er BRl + ramily room A U/tltll()(I ~ + den, 3 baths, many ex·
nu. Quiet sti:eet.158,100 IN MESA VERDE -2nd newest listing! Five * C-2 Zone • Huho< Blvd. bedroom home with almo st 3,000 sq. fl and
100 x 35(1, acceu to adjoin-a close to golf course location. This is the
ing street, $115,000. floor plan e'Verjone wants and on a big tot * c.2 wr too! Owner invested over $10,000 in upgrad-
50 x 150 New~rt Blvd. ing this property. Presented at $79,950. A
$38,500. listing.o( Ogden Sogn.
UNIQUE HOMES R11ltors, 546-5990
Roy McCarclle R••ltor 2850 Men Verde Ori.Ye, Costa Mesa
1810 Ne\vport Blvd., C.M. 1.,,.,. ................................................. 1 548-7m I"
General
"I.A lCREST'' Real Estate
c;.;'"'df "'~ '=m: t~ *Great OppOftunity
ERITAGE
REALTORS
General
~
AND ASSOCIATES -REALTORS
2 OF A KIND
Identical 2 BR. duplexes, side by side, close
to everything! One h?s an extra room off the
patio for room or' offi ce. A LIST 1 NG of
Dorothy Nelson. Asking $74,500 and $73,500.
CALL 644-7270
· 2828 E. Ce>1st Highway, Coron• dtl Mar
WE CAN HELP YOU BUY, .
SEU. OR TRAOE '--A-HOME
ANYPLACE tN THE NATION
v.·ann fireplaces, 1 a rc e
quality home -gourmet New 0 < experienced real ASSUMABLE Gonorol Gonerol
kitchen. Possible to assume es~te people. Your own Total payments APPROx.1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J loan -$75.cm. pnva~e desk &: phone, g_ood $296 mo it's so new tt l• 646-7171 walk·lJlS, free advertising, ·-'·' ,· dou same location 18 )'I'S. Call sp1U·11.1es. Huge ble door
OPf.N Tll 9 • "'S r:UH ro tJE Nat-torintervtew. t;nlry-Step 00....>n to el~ant ,., -• · E 67,. ,,.r living. Fonnal d In 1 n g .
CLASSIFIEO
HOURS
.,_...,7.w or ve. ~11 Family room .with wet bar.
• . FOUR bedrooms. HUGE
Loche nmyer.
i<ralt.--,,
"Brand New'.~.
VACANT. _:MOVE TN
n\aster ·suite. THREE
FULl.. BATHS. Largest lot
in qUlet hidden area. Close
to ~an. CaU .now to see!
847-6010.
OlfR TJl't .: nsFIM1o. NICE/
oflJo .J:Jfe
LIDO waterfront. 3 Bdrm. & lge . family rm.,
or 5 bdrms., with 6 baths. Lido Nord. Spec-
tacular view ! \Vaterfront living rm. with
steJr<!own wet bar. 'Pier & float. $275,000.
* * * * WATERFRONT LOT ONLlDO NORD
30'x105'. Magnificent View! $165,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Boysldo Dr., Suilo 1, N.B. 675-6161 Advertisen .. may place
their ads by telephone
8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
3 large bedrooms, 2 full
baths large fantily , kitchen,
huge 50xll5 lot, b o a t1,
camper gate easy terms.·
$32.950. 541>-1154
~' ~ftijlilfll
. , ''!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;
General Monday thru Friday
8 to noon Saturday
COSTA MESA 'omcE 330 w. Bay .
LEAsE OR
LEASE OPTION
Gener•I
FOUNTAIN
VALLEY Living
"
642·56<'8 Walker &Lee
llAL llTAfl
Lakeside
In Price rtdUctd
$3000. to $59,950 s se.room poo1 home with Newport Beach
pool service and la\\'n Picture your family around
~rv.lce included. Great one of your lire places took·
Bae~ Bay locat~n~ 1 Im· ing out over the Jake, in
mediate postessW>n. · 2 the secluded abnosphere of
Story and BIG?! S475 a Cherry Lake. Your 4
Mon\h, vacant and ready. bedroorn, 2~ bath home ls
SUPER MANSION "
CANCEILATION 0 R
CORRECTION OF NE:,W
AD BEFORE RUNNINQ'
Every effort is made to ·kill or correct-a ~
that has been ·oroeretl,
l>ut we cannot guaran-
tee to do so until the ad
has appeared ln the
paper.
DIME-A·LINE ADS :
Thest ads are atrlctly·
ca.•~ In advance by mall ·or at any one of our of·
fices. NO phone orden.
Dee4Jlne: 3 p.m. Frlcloy,
Costa h.Yesa otflce 12
noon -all brsnch of·
fices.
THE DAILY PILOT ,...
serveS' the right! to clu·
t1fJI, ·edit, Cll!O•or or rt-
fuse any l,dvtrtltement,
and to ch1nre Ill n.ttt l regulatlou without
prior ootlce. •
Eastridge, CM
Open Doily 1.5
21.CO Aster
a blooming good home! This
lovely 4 bedrm home is on a
secluded <:u1desac strfft.
Fresh pab'it inside ~ out.
, 646-3921 or Eve. 646-4541
Lo chenmy er:
R•"1ltor
H'Vbor View Home
Charming 2 bdrm,, den, 2
baths; 'blt-ln elec. kitch.,
nev•ly decor. & ready to
move Into! Corner lot on
quiet cul d~ sac. $66,900.
Call:,673-3663 , 642.2253£""
asso ciated
BROKER S-RfALTC~S
:"2~ W Br.i1bo<" 1>7111.ll
COATS ..
WALLACE
. . REALTORS
.. 5414141-'
l!)Pon Evonl"lol ,
NEW LISTING
CORONA DEL
MAR
N•e4
,,.itqiitrt•,fon t
'\
one of only eighteen on the
lake. Now avilable at
$94,900. 'Call · COLWELL
646-0565.
Eminent 2 story entry. Aztec
tile: Large living area. 1 Huge famlly room. Coklssal i1i
unfinished b a I I r oo m ! ·
Rambling muter a: u i t e .
FormAI dine. Taslefully ap.
pointed. -Don't delay, CaI1 '
today-342-25.35. '
OPEN TIL 9 • "'S FUN 10 BE MCEI ' I 11~1·11 :'
--'ti
Newport Heights ~
Area
BIG
FAMILY?
the right home! S
3 Bdrms., 1~~ baths.
MACNAB
·IRVINE
-~~~~~~·· .......... ·~~~~~"' y '.
UNIVERSITY PARK -$59,sOo
4 BR/FR., model condition ; professional
landscap!Jlg.-Overlooking park, close to'
pools, tennis courts. Laszlo Sharkany 64+'
6200.(V21)
SPACIOUS BAYFRONT DUPLEX
, 3 BR's up -2 BR's down. Lg. stone fire-
places -sun deck -inter-eom -BBQ.
Price incl. & slip. $225 ,000. P. Johnston/J.
Smith 642-8235.~28 )
I . "HIGHLANDS" DELIGHT
.Ideal family 4 BR. home In Cameo High-·
,lands . Partial Ocean View. Sparkling Inside
& out. BeautuuUy landscaped . $73,950.
J¥<k Custer 642-8235. (V36)
[lmnal
•
•
Coldwell,Bankt .......... 644-17~6
SERVICE DIRECTORY
FOR EXPERT HELP
111 tlle , CLASSiFl!O ' ffl 0-ll<lwo Ml•llU . ~:!'J.-1111'. \ e iJ'.I.
2161 San Joequln Hl111 Rdl, N.B.
' ,
•
DAILY PILOT
'
j MAILING' AOOlllSS
P. <r.Box 1560, ·
C01ta Mesa.
92&~
•
For Cluai!)<d Ad , ACTION
. ·CiJJ
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~~-·--:--~~~""'.'"-~--'~~~-~~~~~-~~~~~~~-~~-~~---~~---~~-------~~--~M·:'""'::::::'~·~N°":.:.::."""';:c.~2~~~1~9~73;__~~---,,--~--'D~~~l~Y~P~IL~O~T ~%~
·a-rel Gonorol Balboa Penln1ule Huntl"91on Beach I Huntington Beach Letuna 8oech Newport Beech C min um1 I Income Property 16f 1 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;~-;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I ;;,;=;-;~;::=~-;:::-I ;;=::;~::.:...~;;--~ ' ---------'~or_ ..... 1~·---1~60 OWNER +
• ~.~~.4N~~·~ nn., Ip. 2 Brand New ' 5 llG BEDROOMS ENTICINGLY .:= ~E~= ..
WALK-TD NEW GOLF COURSE
-NEW $500,000 REC REA Tiii CENTER
Enjoy the new llfe style and llve carefree In
this 2 bedroom 2 bath (large maarer suite)
air conditioning, luxurloUJ carpeting, drapes,
electric kitchen with built-In barbeque. Din·
Ing area plus a breakfast nook. Covered patio
with panoramic view, 24 hour Security Guard.
All l)ll!lntenance free In U!e new adult' com-
munity of Costa del Sol in beautiful Mission
Viejo. · ·
$42,900 Full Price
SECLUDED
ESTATE
General
In the heart of Costa Mesa. Surroun ed by
100 trees. European design. 5 Bedrms., 4
baths, approx. 5000 sq. ft. Large pool and
many 0th.er extras. $107,000.
ROY McCARDLE REALTOR
1810 Newport Blvd., Co1t1 Mota
General
OLD CORONA
PRIVATE IEACH
$58,950!
Genera1
Marshall Realty STh-4600 GOLF AND ... doslrable. Humonlo\ls 1 " 2 REDROOM DUIT NOW 8 UNITS
c or°"• •1 11111r 4 Plex's BOATING • ~001~~.:rn.: ~'/:1,t~ ~=t::.~M "0MU ~:ci.:':bT :.~: 1.0 .t"/o RETURN
...... ·CON •• AY c1..-. to barlior. Pride and amartly orranged s bdrm. Boat Slips $'1 000 !Or these ......... Owncn home (Jiu• •ltl:ht . -Beach -•""e na1~Mrhood J"~ home. ~l'lllte ........ "'°"'· Full So<:urlru Hl~rlse 2 BR, , .. BA adult condos. Wrp units! Zoned R4. Charm1ne" 3 bedrootn home J,;in7ed. ~'EW p,I u ;-b ow:rkxlku• city, too $9S,SOO. Steel " ~U.r:~cUon Ololct of IocaOOni stUra,•all. Build three more untt1 ror
plus 1 bedroom renlal. 4 BI k carpets. Lota of mln'on and .AS/. Prlva1e Ba.lconlc1 able. Al low at $300_ dow.n addro Income, ;J.1tallzed Large patio with k>Jdl ot OC S expensive ,.,.._i1 cowrs. Stone '~.ff ~ prage space• per unit. to move in, wilh $220 mo. rale_ return ii JO. • Srller
entert.a.lnlnt teature1. Load• !acing. Terrazzo enlry. ..,, ., Roof top sundeclc pays all. 836-4206 Ag~t. anxtoU!", asking 0 n 1 Y
of extra1 and many ap-Beautllul Spanlah Slyle units Lari!• IMng. PalOI Verdes IEAL ESTAT·E Unuaual Opportunity to J>ur. NEWPORT RMERA &;II·':;,. Take advantage.
pllancea and turnlshlnas tn-90 dote 10 the water 4 •time, celllnK h!a:h fireplace. 1190 Gl ""'"""""St chue Bayfront Proper".y ln Graciou.I 3 Br. 2in Ba. fpl, 11 .. 6.1600 eluded. $87-!'00· fantastic units wtth 2 Counuy kitchen wt t h · e ... -;-,,-•v ' Newport Beach. 2 I ed ~
SPYGLASS
ftreplaces, 2% baths, tam.Uy breakfast bar and loads ot 4%-9473 549-00l6 310 Fema.ndo Rd., N.B. ~.nn.$32,c::;, garf•in'!:l,,g 1NVESTMENT DIVISION
room, plu, much more! pantry space. Great covered Monarch Bay Ttrr. '75-ISSl avail. To inspect call !
IE,AUTY n .. y ~·~J2ast so hur· paLollo. Fire prdll a~ benches. An attr.; nearly new con· IEST BUY IN &IZ-0062. ry! P."'ne o;io1-w l._ w 1:are ya . u.Jl more! temp. with 4 bdrms., 3 CORNER Condo. 2 Bedroom. V~~.~~~1~;!:t:'~ ~:ive~ i~~"!d1~an~~: ~t~ormr!!.: d~~~ B'AYCREST , New cpta, drapes, DW,
TH E REAL
ESTATE RS
make -.n ottf r on hls Call now! !JG3....6167. pool Jacuzzi· 1:enerotl3 out· Lage uvt.._ room, tonnal IJreplace, patio, pool. Adults
charminf • bedroom home Walker· o lee """"" · "''"''°"'-' ~· uv1na 'with pettos , run!Jli. Large kitchen and .... r is, 123,ooo. MS.18981$1 HOUSE + ' UNITS
with that great Spyalau 11..,'" ... ,¥,'. i , ! deckJ &; a NJ! ocean view. family l'OQm.. new ~ts Santa.Isabel, CM New units at 2637 Eldt!n,
VSew. Beautifully decorated! ~;;:;;:;;:~!;!~~:;;::;;; , ' $149,500. _ &: pa),N, • bedrooms p1us CM . .lst user_ wl200% write and landscaped -$1441901).j• , TURNER ASSOC. rumpus room. Easy care Duplexts/Unlh off. Call Builder 64&44l4.
submit your belt otter! CONOO'SPECIALISTSI 11ll5 N. C.Ut Hwy., Laguna yal)I, room tor pool, at tale 162 Industrial P roperty 161
HAR.OR VIEW Have one to "'"' We can I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 494-lln $57,500. For a rare value
do lt t Wanna ·00y one! 11 call 646-nn. **TAX REFUGE *·*
The ¥lovely area on the hl!l \\'e've gottem~ One or two HONEYMOON PANORAMIC VIEW ot£N11l•• rrs FUH1DBENICEI Little Je\\·el duplex. 2 Bed-
clo,,est to "old Corona" -stories, 2-4 Bedrooms, in COTTAGE Exquisite 3 bdrm home wtth I ~ room, I bath each. Built-In ~~~~:~~· ~l::E ~~i:~ :a?=:~' B!11~hed!~~t!fe c~~"& Ela_:f.;,.<tpednc 0Y0~.,.;;,titu1bu·ewil!!t ll~"lllll E?~:Ia~t~'1a~
pool we yard. See tor selling Condos. buyers wail· drapes. Waters oftener, • ....,..,. u ... ~ • -lot, fenced back yard.
yot.11'5e11 tbe flexible room lng now! Oloice resales BBQ pit, and pane.ling. In I~. dishwasher. Family rm, DUPLEX 10 " DOWN $37,250. $6500 do\vn and as· arrangement. available In prime locations absolute model condition. fireplace. Patio. Move in fo sume loan. Drive by 751·75.1
ot Villa Pacific, Tiburon Imme d i ate possesskm! ~ndiUon! .Owner will con-WALK TO BEACH &.-ott Place, CM. then ca.II
* M-1 *
73 X 300 FEET
NEWPORT BEACH
RIVIERA REAL T Y
t.f!) Broadway, c.a·t.
642-7007 645-5609 Eves.
Lots for Sile 170
NEW
TOWNHOUSE
etc. Our salesmen a r~ Assume 7% FHA. I-furry, sider leasing, $ 5 7 • 0 0 0 · 548·3036 for appointment to
bonded. Best protection for only $38,500. 494-8003. Completely redecorated 3 see. DO NOT DISTURB LAGUNA BEACH
you when selling or listing 1, TARBELL, Realtors bedroom and 2 bedroom TENANTS. By 0,vner. Prin-
Just steps from the beach your home or Income prop.' 1920 S. Coast Hwy, L. B. units. One block to sandy ctpals only, please. R·2. 17,000 sq. ft. Suitable
on a choice cul de sac erly. Call: L 'd 1 1 beach. 'Hurry, won't last! ..:c::::;~;.:~o=-~~-for 8 Unils. Ocf.'11.n Vle,v.
street 1~ a beauUful Alplne Jarwin raalty Inc. 962-4471 ( :=,) 146-tJOJ 1 0 1 e Only $76,500. GREENTREE One block beaches and
setU-n&: _ a charming two 968-4405 {24 hrs) CENTURY 21*642·1771 Duplex & Triple:< units under shopping.
bedroo townhouse-great · PRIME construction. Frplc's, beam Red C•rpet Realtors
a• a ~od home or a Equal Housing Oppty. BEACH LOVERS Lido Opportunity WATERFRONT .,.;1. From 163,500. Bullder. 497-1761
rental $67,500. $ll,ZOO Loads of glass, woods and For small family, about to PIER & FLOAT 646-4414
166 Out of State Prop. Call 675-7225 heavy shake roof on this, be completed, all new 2 $19 500 Income Property 4 bednn Newport West. bdnn.. tam i I y rm.; BROKER ' '13• "780 ____ ...;.._..;... __ Colorado River Pa r k e r Az.'WATER frontage, Jt.J ,i;.
comm. sell or trade 968-1027.
178
TOTAL PRICE Braoo new ankle deep cut z..ton ... Character already ~ RED CARPET pile carpet th r u out. in. You choose your ownJ'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
MASS IVE c r a c k1ing decor. $79,500 FAST POSSESS.
fireplace with raised hearth. Harbor View Cannel model. "Country" Style garden kitchen. Assume low in-3 BR., 2 ba., family rm., lots of extras, Price retiuced Unbelievable? It's true! One terest VA loan with small to $68,950 including land NE\V INVESTMENT· Beauti·
Year old beauty w ,. l h down payment. Owner will ---------1 CORBl•'MARTIN ful 4-I d el · v BEST BUY t.IDO ..-ne\v p ex vacant an
EXCLUSIVES Ranches, Fa rms,
Groves 180 LOW DOWN
JUST LISTED! 2 blockl
to PRIVATE BEACHES!
Quiet tree lined
street. Quaint shutters &.
-roanJ.led craddlng-li.replace.
Sunny comfort kitchen. New
tile & floors. Spacious oak
paneted famly room.
Bookshelves galore & cozy
S\\·edlsh fireplace. Family
size bedrooms. Expandable
)'anl. Only $511,950! Unbeat·
able amongst $8().$100,000
properties. Call today.
SUPER BUY. 4 br, 2 ba,
-ea.Us~t.-$3J,!m-OPEf\
HSE Sun 1-5. 54U288. Bkr.
~~~I~ ~~ r ali~~= ~ ~l~s f~~an~~ch,a~~ 3 BA, 4 BR +. Bay Vimv. REAL TORS 644-7662 ~y ~~ \~atl~~o1\:r~
room and nice coo;:•e~red.:::_~962-~55~11~~~"':'.!~~-QJSS~· ~to~~bch~, ~42S~~Vi~1akj!.i~·~oo NEWPORT CREST CONDO choice rental area and ready patio!-Phone'-897"632 -US'MC STORY O"Olt o . 7:500:"'67s:741'4"Blfi"~ New-Plan-S,-4-bed.--fam--to appreciate. Price-cl lO sell
RANOI style home on BY Owner, $66,900. Save ~· 3 ba. Pool, tennis. at $78,000. --.-
INVESTORS fNT ERE ST
DOWN Orange f.D. ruggNI
canyon scenic, \\'ild life, yc1
only min. to Tustin. Ideal
ecology, church, prlv. W-
Shangrila estate. ~arce <ID. + acre-.parcels. $150M &
S250M. 838-4651, aft. 6 PM
67U550
CORONA DEL
.. MAR DUPLEX
Bluffs Beauty
$69~
-Or LeHo/Optlon
Exciting 3 bdrm., 2% bath
home, beautifully decorated. lmmediate occupancy avail.
Alao, may lease with option
to buy. Enjoy main-
tenance-free living In the
beaut. Blutls, with pools,
tennis & flowered green·
belts.
PLEASE CALL
673·3000
~ 11.\\ ,\ 111 :.\fll
rambling lot, even has a $6600 2 Br 1~, .ba Very Minutes to ocean. Under $52,950. Beach Tr 1 p I ex.
Walker & lee-big underground \VINE cle ·/sharp ' ~ market at $(0,000., terms. Lowest priced triplex In ~~~~~~~~~~! CELLAR, 3 sunny bedrm an · · ' Owner 642-7796 Newport Beach and ¥.. block
First,yeaf retum. First class '::;:::;::'::':;'~':'.:";:'::'="';:::::::~ suites, 2 vanity baths, coun· Miuion Viejo Nowport:Shoru to ~ach. Crea! .tor in· II• I location. Three-two bedroom _ try kitchen w/formal din· _ vestment. appreciation and n..cw
unlU. W/W carpets, built· CHEAPER THAN ing, cracl<Ilng used hrlck NT HO * SPECIALISTS * owner use too.
lnll, enclosed garages , RENT
5201
OO fir e p I a ce . Ca.a.'t be RETIREME . ME We specialize in finer New· $52,950. Fourplex. Only 2 left ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1
private patios. FantaaUc in-• duplicated! Assume \ow In-NEW Golf Course, new port Shores properties. Call of these 2 bdr. l ~· I ~.,.mhl~. potential -Priced TOTAL terest VA loan or terms $500,000 recreatiola center WI for homes in this great, fourple.xes. 10'7c Down. \Vill Business
.... to suit. NOT FAR FROM within walking distanc e beach oriented community. sell. contr'act or con· Opportunity
OLD FASHIONED $20100 is all )'ou pay. OCEAN. Bkr. 962-5511. ta:om this..2 bedroom, 2 bath, CAYWOOD REALTY vl600ent10perna1.monlhRents on way to
A large yard&: tall tree$ Kitchen with a view.liiiiiiiiiiiiii=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio air i;oncl., luxurious * 548-l290 * ·~·;,, Fo 1 ·2 bdr lba Bottle Water Route
is the 51tlting for this Fonnal dining. Brick * FR£E LIST carpetln&', electr1e kitchen -·"""· urp ex. · · If you IU'e.int~rested in OY1n-
charming 3 bedroom home. fireplace. Texas sized living with built-in bar·beq·u·e . S.nta AM-bai:l$8 on; golf course. 10% ing )'OUI' own business for
Freshly painted inside &: room. .Family s i z e d I Dining area plus breakfast Down. ~Viii sell contract or $2500. down
out. 'I'nle outdoor u~7 . ._... bedrooms. Red brick patio. Gi:w't repossessedls homes, nook. Covered patio with $21,000 ~co75n000ventiona1East. 'd 12 ·u It SILVER SPRINGS WATER John Catty, Rltn. .,.. -s.vu Huge lot $3)1.00 TCYrAL some have poo , l!ilOme no panoramJc view 24 hr ... ~ • · SI e n s. can pUt you on a route in
WCCTCUFF PAYMENT. Hurry. Call down pymt, various areas security guafd Ali Vacant, adult Condo. 2 BR, Attractive complex with Orange County's finest area ...,, _. oow. 963-6767. & pymts. No obligation. maintenance free in ihe new 11ii bath, ll68 sq. ft. Elec pool. Two owner apts. Walk-earning $1300. per mo. Po-
Almost $39,950. It'• near OlfNTIL I • ITT> RJH 70 BE HICEI Equal Housing Opportunities adult community of Costa ran&e & DW, new cpts, drps ing distance to shopping and tential unllmlted. We will
Costa Mesa
INVESTOR'S OREAM
200
CLOSE TO SHOPPlNG •
Darting-2+2 -cleverly giv-
ing ulmOllt privacy to both
units. Qmnni~ brick patio,
separate laundry room, &
many more amenities .
$85,000.
lP·--., tennis courts & HERBERT HA\VKINS d I Sol S42 -Lap and paint. Quiet area, well bus services · h rl h 964 N .,. .... ,, fi ll REALTORS * 963 5681 e . ,:11.V. az Real maintained, bulldl118s le $63 000 Eas' ide 4 house train t e g t man. .
Balboa .. :~:: ~~t!r.!;'~~ ~ ll~lilf$11 Huntington Hor~ur NE::Z:.~· ce~;; ~~~~·o~ ·~:i.~~~~a ~Ba;~·~~vla:fl.~r"~r:~:'.6oo~·~,~~~1-----
TREASURE" n "' w;thtn walking d 1 s la n c • 836-420;. $7,956. and rents way below ORANGE JUUUS
PETE BARRETI
-REALTOR-
642-5200
Hear the surf from this ~ ~'? rrS FUN rO 8E HICE/ HONEYMOON HARBOUR VIEW fi:om this 2 bedroom, 2 bath, market. Each house has Hot location in East Costa
secluded 4 bedroom, 3 bath I COT·TAGE \Vatch the boats from all' ~nd .. luxur~.ou i own game le yard. Mesa. Terrific opportt.m.ity ::;:~~::::~~~ IUlilij
2
•-e~p·$·~·1 ... ". · E:~1~~~'~1~~~~ ~~,?~~1~!'tt~~ I -...i-l!1vl Fw'de~!~~~~i!t~~ for
11000 -~·
right at $79,900. Asswne low ~~·=••-••!!!!!! ~ uo:wu1 '""~,,. ·-... nook.,~ patio with 979-2550 2529
1
Hartx>r Blvd.,
GAS SHORTAGE interesst 100.n. Ctill now! co-A ~ GI' • room w/flreplace. Lg e HUNTINGTON HARBOUR. panoranuc view. 24 hr. Mobil 1.1---Costa Mesa GRUBB&. ELLIS ..," · · gq family rm with bar a:oo security guard. Alt e..-.unnis ====·-~~--Lovely 4 BR, 2 BA in a 67,7~· ft., 3 br, -,be..tb -dining indirect lighting. Anthony JUAllY maintenance free in the new For S.le 125 24. UNITS cozy neighborhood. Bike's r room fatnily room ride lo South Coast Plaza. --~.,:,..:""".;:~--' • -. pool • dressing room -don't adult community of Costa 1001 RETURN l ~•-!!!i!••""'!!!~
I rd 1 3 3 900 llAY VIEW sunken living room. NO miss out! Call lrv'ine de! Sol $42,900. La Paz Real MOBILE HOME FOR SALE: ro ..... _ L 2•• Beautifu ya . • . DOWN $36 IXJO and in fine muney to oan ""'
CENTURY 21
5 BR, 21,i BA roomy, older · , 'i:£. The Real Est•t• Fair Estate 830--0700. Silvercrest mobile home 24 Bread &: butter apts. •
home in best location. oondlt.ion. B,.. · st6-0562. 536-2551 20' x 53', 2 bedroom, 2 Capitalized rate of return l
66-7221 . Eves' -$72,500. ASSUME FHA Loon. Total GET AWAY Newport Baach baths, carpeted, draped, "over 10%1 AMual gross 1st TD oans
The futest draw In the West. Pacific Properties payment $2CJ5, 4 Br, 2 * lfi ..... sn. 11-a1'n FROM IT ALL * BLUFFS * bu I I t-1 n s I refrigerator, inoome is over $41,000. 9c1o a lfl tJTh.6712 or 675-1632 ba, new crpt &: paint. by .R11'5 IW 114115 -\\'asher &: electric dryer, spendable! Call today · · .a Dally PUot ass ed ~-'-""',="-~---owner. 557-5080 . En~osed jtrei:,dt are~ goes BEST BUY! I wtred for 220, air con· 546-1600 UP TO 90%
811< % INTEREST llGono~iiiir~e~I ii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiG~e~no~r~a~I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 3 BR, 2 BA frpl bit' m:> Sq. Ft. Designed for the with this nn., bath Oiarming 3 bdrm. ditioned, kitchen c I o c k ' IN'~ DIVISION • c, ma:, active family. 4 Bedrrns, home. A great place to 2u Bath v · '' ,,._,_ shed land ped ·~'"~" tully crpted, 2~ car gar, IR...,... family room, home-relax or meditate. Note I.he n · !I. iew · · s ..... _,... ' sea ' O~ House Sat IS u n . ~ak"en kitchen. Se.If clean-cus"tom carpeting, the Ted *H~~ ~· f:~·new~ ~:::' inol~ I
$31,00J. 642-7742. Ing oven & walk in pantry. Wallpapers & the endosed BLUFFS TRI-LEVEL CON· adu1t park away from noisy flll.l:l!,:IJ Lowest rites Or1ng• Co
2nd TD Loans
Sells More Hornes
Than Anybody!
Two area offices serving you···
ZONEO R-4 $30,000
2 bedroom one bath on back of lot room for
three more, liitli a view.
NEWPORT CREST CONDO
2 bedroom, den, fire_elace, formal dining
·room and wet bar, w1).h 2 car enclosed ga-
rage $60,950. . .
ASSUME 7V2% VA LOAN
<Only $212,00 per month. Subject to exts't-.
Ing VA loan -Only $2il,500. 3 bedroom.2 ·
·bath. Pride ol ownership: --. · . '
' FRENCH QUARTER CONDO
3 bedroom. l'h bath; good area owner anx-
ious $25,750. 1
SPARKLING CLEAN
,3 bedroom-2 bath family sized home With
"ardwood floors. In model home coni!Jtlon.
$2,500. • -·-
TREE'LINEO STREET , ,lz large bedrooms 1 bath covered patio, and
''a storage shed. Located in Eastside Costa
Mesa '30,750.
,; EASTSIDE SPECIAL
,3 ~m 2 bath.home $31,250. .
' .NEWPORT HEIGHTS DUPLEX
1
'Good Income 2 bedroom l bath units '51,500.
I . E ASTSIDE CUL-DE-SAC .
1 bedroom 2 bath good area $39,900.
WESTSIDE SPECIAL "~ bedroom 2 bath with ·p0oJ, zoned C-1. :F',ooo. , . <
COSTA MESA NEWPORT BEACH
5411640 ~
I
'
HARBOR BL VD. '277 EAST 171h
Open E-lng1 Unlll 9:00
Cell and fOt tho
RID CARPET TREATMENT
• . '
3 BR., l~~ be.. Brick frlll, New shag carpets. $35,950. garden patio. Everything street. One-hall block from Jj£t1Jffi
642
_
2
s.
17
tt
1
1er Mtt. i~:·_11'
L&. L.lt; newly dee. $27,000 A Great Value! Call goes for the price of $41.9fi0. ~3~fi· .. !. bapool, ~~ clubhouse. $15,995. Ca 11 --·-· ·-~!!! --
Fortin Co. Rltn. 642-5000 The Re•I E1tate F•ir CALL 552 7500 .... '6"'• ' ........... '6 evenings 213-694-4690 • di"ance to "ht., churclies, Can be ...., at· <>-est t **TAX REFUGE** Se"""" Harbor area 2t yn.
COURT SALE 5:J6.255I VISION East Bild! Village & tennis Estalos 1051 ·Sit• D~ Little Jewel duplex. 2 Bed· OON'T BORROW
Drive by 2135 Thurln. YA-fHA club. $52•500· By ~wner. Alt Brea, Caiilomla. (Central room, ·1 bath each. Buill-ln 'TIL YOU CALL USI
Call Agent 5J8..2389 7pm, 6#-0987 Avenue across from Brea oven &: ~e, garbage dis· Borrow on )'Our home equity
Ee1t Bluff · ., • red h '1 I I Harbor Vu Somortot Community Hospital). Lot posal. 1 wut Jus. t painted -tor any ~ _.....__ •--·. R~-loiu: Latestl rioes. .~ Co t Ray and •-~~ ~• '"rv-"-""' 5 Br, 3 be., 2 frplcs, nu -m. n act , park new carpeting. Corner ing Los Angeles County tor
V2 ACRE-VIEW WM. ·McCAB REALTY REALTORS section. High up wlbig JIUUlaget, tor.,s.J:>owing. lot, fenced back )'d. $37,250. over Z> years and NOW iD
• n.4 ..... • -.._-1 nill Pl t REAL-TY-unrv. P&rk Center;-Irvine view. Comp. approx.Jan-1st. $6500 down and assume loan. Orange Co\mty' •0.,,-,;;.;~;t lo~ ~'ib. ~:',J 8740 WARNER AVE. $7",500 Finn! Ownr 49!"1101 ,'~GREENLEAF Drive by 751-753 SC.ft Place, SlGNAL MORTGAGE co.
Yan!. <hmer mo·"-· East. FOUNTA1N VALLEY YOU'LL LOVE IT I I l!VU HOMES/CAR.MEL 3 CM, then call 548-3036 for (tt4) 556-0106 ··~ * 842-4405 * . . . . . A private 5 •tar adull 'com· appolntmenttosee. DO NOT ·~Campus Drlve NB Reduced lo $(4,500. Sq Co Br, 2 Ba, Fam/Rm, Din, munity, 1750 Whittier Ave., DISTIJRB TENANTS.· By ~ • · ·
LAWSON REAL.TY \~~~ded.~R ~ns~.r:.~ Lg, Yd. Owner. $11,900. C.M. has available a 24x60 Owner. Principals only LOANS 'avallable, any type, * 67~ * fl. / (J /) f\.todel. Better than new, 6«-6480. Key ·West ln beaut. cond., please. anywhett, any size, $20,000
Huntl-ton Beech o/..inda JtJ{e quality carpets, sh ul!ers HARJlOR VIEW HOME-4 just-like llCW. 646-796.5 £AST ILUFF up. Mr. Jone> (702) 882-2132 .,. thruOut. Super 1 0 cat i 0 n, BR, one-story, upgraded & 9 am to 6 pm. Mort..,es,
Huntington h•ch's 4 Bedroom.!!, 4"2 Baths $32,500. 645-8400. ~~~'":~9?ccup.J•N!!!EW~"2~8!!!R","1""'B"A","1"1v1ng""' 6 UNrTS Trust Deeds
Most Popular pool room, pier & slip ~..l.m!!l>li.l!ll!..!!!l!!.!lnu,t, Adu1t k /prl t The Bluffs . Ne -wport Beach! • ·~ condo., o~-blel=,;,$200=,000.,.,.-*==673,,·_m<..,....,.. • l'\EVl1POP .. T Shores home, 3 rm. par w Ya e ~ ow111 i.n:i.ua V. E. Howird & C.O. Bo', 2 B'!.-$47,900. By owner. beach . $16,500. 51.0-3672. Fantastic VIE\V from very PUT YOUR MONEY
ground level Ooor plan, 1% SUBURBIA PARK s br: .,. r--.... 645-4599 or 642-25&3. CABANA 12x33, ma.hog. int. deluxe 6 unit apartment. Ex· TO WORK FOR YOUI years new, Freshly Painted 2% be, lg down stairS 1 $5000 ·u 11 tremely spacious. Earns with tut.etully paneled and master , faro & rumpus rm' =======::::::' .... ! TRADE Newport Be a ch cost ' \YI se $800. over $2000 per month. Once Earn 10% or more on wcll·
mirrored li:vir11 .roon1, plush 2 trpl~, next to sch!, park: t Prop. for Out~t-To>w'll Prop. U-move. 645-4530. In llfeUme value. Take ad· secured 2nd Trust Deeds on
wallpapettd dining !ltt~• tennill, bike & Bch trail. L1guna BHch Bkr. 714/673-~. 2 BR dbl wide. Lo dn. Assm vantage . call today. Orange County real estate.
shag carpets &. custom $55,000 a>56l La Von n e, CUSTOM I . DUPLEX nr ocean S62 500 pyments. Dlx l!'m. Prk. San · 546-1600 SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO.
drapes, oversized pantry 968-2078 owner d lOWltal' '°""'N I .. ~1• p ~tiles Larson Realtor Juan Capo. 491-7718 aft 6. TNVESTi\1ENT DIVISION • cn4> 55&-0l<Mi
ar -~•-walldng ence + ren , o. _ .... a 673 ~· I ~~~~~~~~~ I ~;-:::~C~am~~·~•~Dr:;;.::~;1---1 ~to ff~'t n i: t 0 n OPEN S~'!Y 2..-4, By owner, Bch -ocean vi.cw. \\'llik to ===""'-'·-,=--~ I, r.;:;;;;ifiiiii!'!'pjii!ji!iiiijiij!ii l ~ " •
Center Swimml.na: pool and new 58R, ~. crpts, drps, bch, \Yet bars · Ulc p11tio!! · DUPLEX -prime loc. Steps I AMI Eil• l ~ ~· ' . lf~~'!i'~I~ TO ak buY ~
many •park areas. Asking $42,500 Low i nt, 2 O 4 11 sun patio. 5\!00 sq. fl. 1 to ocean & bay. Owner anx-C.Wal l . / ; Trullnnyt. ~uneDeed.e, ph', ~~;~a15mounMa: .•
only $21,49S call todayl ~Bre~n~ts~to:gne~._:64~<-~1323~==~!~1;:29~.000~.=535-8~~1~38~/~495~·~101~<~5.=.Jl-'i:gou~•::,· ~A~gt~. ~67>-~2812~_;4S~J.~11~8l~l :iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~-l;iii: _ ---·-~·-· ~ 847-3095. :==.:-= jest.le Mortgage Co
Acroogo for ule I so 2 DUPLEXES -$750D0Wft _., I, d,~-0 ,ii-,..(~!)'{1'~Q.•. • l"V.l_EWncrc.l.lnl.~1pog. PRLCEREDU.CED Rtn .. I~ \:)\!a-J."IU ·~)...: 'b P</• V cnlr. Approx. 80 avocado, · ,..
4 BR, 2 BATHS I That 1.nfrigui•g Word Game' with a ChucHe 25 """'· pioes, pa1m, _ _.,, · ow.n~ .. "'Y' "11 11""' nd· 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!i" iiiilmiiil VA home, aharp u a pin , •t chain fence. Low down. Jouung :.! BR duplexes on I
Watkin& dist~ to bcli. lhlW ~a.AT • .. POUAN n9,9501 O\vner. ( 7 l 4'l h~e lots. Only HYiO Dmvn. Hou191 Furnish.cl 300
Formal Uv. nn., featuring 0 • ..,,.,0,,.. i.tt.n of 'ttie ...----......--... 726-7230 \Ttsta. No briers. Pl'1ce redueed to $34.950 ---------a modem kitchf'n w/dlsh· ench. General
' 'N'Shr + gas bltlns. 2 car 1aw':''fo:°f:~mpT~':: Cem etery CENTURY 21*642-ln} ~=---..._ __ _
·detached gar, •lluated on a Loll/Crypti 15' HUNTINGTON BEACH . •'A .""NT'" 'S
·nice site lot. $25.250 FULL I ~ ~ ..,. -Alf
.PRICE. $235 per mo. inclds .• :=~'{=E'=f1:.:R:1::P::::--: C~tETERY fl?l for 2, bet· 2 Triplexe11. Buy one or both •all. • · -J -9 ter part o .WestrninstQ" \vll l lok~ home or r:ondo
v fLLAGE • l 1· 11 I Mem: -Pa:rk; pct. $275 yt's ei<c"ha"ltjfl?. ~Nr Helt; park.
REAL ESTATE ---. · ago. Sac. $300. 642-1002. ~~-& shoppin~. agent
531-S!OO Operi"rdaya l-J'-D-UJ_X-1..E-E.l-..JI JI Commerci1l 7 SEPARATE housei< oo % TIBURON ONDO · ',. 1_.;.P.;..roc.:po;.;...rl'-'y----1:.,;5:.:8 aore, Anaheim. GroH -•!W'OIT•IAT,c,M.f4l·-* Apple J>le. Condltlon a. . I I I I' C·l Lot $17,500 $13,92fl. Asking $110,500. D. NEAT Baoh $115, \; blk bay, dean, 3 BR, 2 be.th. Findlay, lUtr, 4 9 6 -4 3 4:;. utll pd-avail . * ·Specn:culaT view 50' x 140' N~ar 19th .ft -246Z7 Del Prado, Dana Pt. Sll'{Gl..E OK 1 BR, $130 no,,., ~ tranquil pu'k· 1-,;.L;.;_;A~Y.;_,F~E;,_...jl ~ Overheard: 1 .:_. advertise Polnona Ave .. C.M. Priced (3) 4--PLEXES in HB. $49,950 good area util pd, Jlke aurroundlJwl. r I I
1
•
1
'"'1 low at $2.50 per Sq . F1. 1•ach. $6500 dn. I n c OVER 4.5-lBR. $135 avail, · * Lush 1bq, custom ahut.· ' , ,1h1t the mini-calculators can Wesley N, Ta'flor Co. $fi00/mo. 842'-3546, 496-8895. blk to f.lsh, wlk by sea.
tel'l I: uatd .. br1ak patk>. •-=~·=·=~-=~-=~ .. do enything with figureL I'm REALTORS SAN Juan Capo, rour plex SHORT term, 2BR, Hae. $100 ~--·~'"l•T%•1 v~-:.Loe...! rl II R y H 0 T I going to buy one for. •,,;::--. 2111· San Joaquin Hllhl Rd. lncome $7S(XI,, large lot, wk, Co3mpl fu3rn., ~~!npd· _,.. • ..., ,....,.,, ,...... ·-Newport Center 644-4910 a.dell units S79 (XX) 492o-8264 COZY BR, BA ...-. NB, "'j.~~';..•lty Inc.I NEWPORT BEACH 6 UNITS E. Side ~ta Me.;.. 1~ri"j "s~.'21 ~chli'J'r.i
'"' 4405 * (24 hrs) I 'I I I r e ~:::: ~he~~~ Prln1e bayfn>nt site fndividu$1 units. Prin. only. yrly. Balcony, "Pel ok, gar. • you ctn.lop from np No. 3· -· for boat rcpalr &: sales 548-a725 LACUNA 3 GR, pR, $.175 )'fly Equal HOUll1l( .Oppty. Bill Grulldy fUIT 67H16\ hlll F P All
t' '05' "'OMS • Pfl I' I' I' I' I' r I FOURPLEX. C.M. we 1-1 on ' Ree ocean, .. • \.:, -1t.:' J i NT NUMIElt'O lETfEtS IN .!.EASE (C·l) 50x250 ++ m$1nt. Bltns, D/\V , $56,000, nppli's &: glU'ttgt. · .~ Jnformf1li-ln and locaUOn •
1
_ THESE SQUARES. • 1883 Monrovia CM, pmt YEAGER REALTY ~lit ALA Rentals · '42.al3
or U;cse 111,.\ AV~ homtt, • f~!NAMll, ... ~ LETTERS 10 J I I I J J J TD/tn.de or ! 24 hr • "White Elephanr~·· -;;er-1 BR. Houae, $110 utll pd. l'O:'::icl, ":!.ff~ ..... ~11 • • • • • _ 557-3002. runnlna )'OUr bouse? Tum Kld.,/peta. Abo 1 BR. KASAllAN TWO atijolnlng lnalme pro-them Into "Cash" •.. ,.u mobilt CM. & S BR. l'am l ~R!!oa!!l_!l!!ot!! ... !!!._.!!Ml!:!M~4~41l_~S~C'.!R~A~M-~LETS~~~A~N~S~W~E~R~S~I N~C~LA~SS~IF~l~C~A~T!!l~O~N!!._800~~-L!~~rt1~"~::_:~~!"~~~%-~'·~~~1eC .. i .::~'=:::,=\:::1.!d:::.·,ru.::.•d"'t•_0_•11y--P1-tot -~-h._~~m-· r-~-·-~-·~8llll_· -
260
I I I .. I
• • •
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•
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•
. .
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NE\V 2 Br, 1% Ba, 1250
sq ft. Top area $all).
492-22&1
S•n Ju•n C•pi1tr1no
430
. -.-
. ..
.. .
-.
DESK space avatlable $50
mo. Will provide furniture
at $5 mo. Answering service
available. 17875 Beach Blvd.
Huntington Bf'ach. 642-4321
f• -
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'
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Mop av
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Ann. 5.')7
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Phone
P.O.
Found
FOUND
N<Wpo
968-7088
lngs.
fo'OUND,
Wearln silver 11
M,.. (
FOUND
months,
'"' " Mesa
FND' or Silky ...
HO!llff.
FOUND
••
Mond11, N"'mbor 26, 1973 DAILY PllDT 13
F=-==-...:44~5 ~ost • SSS Palnllna a
IE Factory" haa a lrg REW ARD. Mi•&lne since Pof!rhonfl"'
~onted, M & F 710
ACCOUf\'TING
Help Wonted;M & I' 111Help Wonted, M & F 710 Holp W.nt.cl, M & I' 710 '"H~e;':.lp;;W:;:•n;':t;;;Od;;,;"M-'7,i::l'-7'-;l~O I H ;:o:!lp:_W:;:o•:::t:ed::•.:M:.:.:&.:.P:.:7:.:l:OI . 1.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;.1 .. ' 1~S~E~~~ l~hlld t~: JANITOR • HANDYMAN for
P avaU. $185/mo. In U/9 "De.kola" M. Belatan PRO~lONAL polntti:r,
ccy Villqe ~ 30tb St. 'l'rebcrun Lo01u1 IJkt Sht s · Delivery-Sunday Only GENERAL OFFICE
HELPER
ldfft '4'0l'kl.,. cond, priv rm Cdt.t commerclal Weta: 2·9
&: Ba. Color TV. MUJt drtve fc:j• Mon-Fri.: E?l:_eer"· It &: be able to manage rcr1 req·d. ~ ptr
household, Mr. KJo tz mo.~1 P..?d.only.
·• &G-1960. , mb!: Bl k -•1 I ·1 p, l yrs. exp. neecll VW Van s f" • I · · ....... ar II ver or Bui. WW trade. rood r 1nanc1a uatrl•I Rentol 450 at1.ia. No questions liked clean paJntllll. Int. or ex1. • ~;;;;;;;::;:;;:;;=:1 ~493--0389~~491-8~1~6$\:;-=::;:: Relerencea. Must be good OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE· 640-8i!IO, oft 7 PM ~ll67 KEYPUNCH NOW LIASING COCKAPOO Terrier auorted runnina vw Year unlm· Analyst QUIRES THE USE OF A LARGE STATION 11""''· male, 111 yn. an1. portant. 645-4133 alt. 4:30. WAGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR. HARRY We wlll IToln, but Houaeke•••r. own
Huntl"""" Be..t. to "Powder". REWAllD! * QuaJJIY 1ow ooat * SEELEYT330 WEST BAY STREET, COSTA axperlence holJ::::I· tranaportation, live In or SWING SHIFT
NIW M-1 962-1909 vie. Yorl<town " Raldentlal palnlina ext. HHyY bockgrouncl MESA. ELEPHONE 642-4321 FOR AP· Good th lvd live ouJ. MG--0166 eves. 6 •1 • t k
9-IO Sq Ft It Bushard, llB lnt. all or-part call In b•l1nce 1Met POINTMENT. ma •p1 a. 6'7!t--4U). lY o • aetua "w txper.
amUton & Newt~ St. SHELTIE, belge 6' white, LYie 60-1569 1Ccountln9, c1sh Call Wayne 979·0541 HOUSEKEEPER. Part time1 d~~~~· keytape or key
, 9'0-1970 male Ans "Laddy". Med. PROF. wallcovertn& state f I ow forec11t1, $30 wee-k, xtra 4 occuk>naJ Apply in Pel'IOlmtl Dept
slie. Hu choke chatn.. Vic Uc. No. 219514. 1.nsur., all taxes, capital, a.. An Equal Opportunity Employer FAR WEST run days. Happy home in 9 Ar.1-12 Noon Mon-Fri· Vlc!Orl• St., C.M. ~Till ~ol paper. 714 : lrvtne. 552-1045 PACll'IC M
0
UTUAL COSTA MESA*
1~1400 sq, ft. Private
fictl. Plenty o! parklng.
. ady tor occupancy.
or 64" t"• p,.cletlon, • t c . r "U.1· • l!OUSEKEEPER wanted to 100 ewport Center Dr
LOST while male lick toy =p'-'AINTIN==c=-:-ln,..,..L"'&,....,,Ex,..,..l.~2.l Preporotlon of OC• Help Wonted, M & F 710 Htlp Wonted, M It F 710 SERVICES, INC.. live In with elderly lady _,/ Newporl .Beach ·
poodle. Must have in-yrs. exp. Beautiful work. quJ1Jtlon •nd rnerg--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;· ---------Laauna Beach 494-1337 /' F.qual Qppor, Emplo)'er
Jectlona. Rowan! $10 0 · Rouonable call N or m er 11vdlH w I II • COOKS 1672 R Id A HOUSEKEEPER P8£1'.'.'lme ROBERT NAlTRESS, RLT. a Mesa 919.-6571
I -t,O(X)' in complex w/'ZJJJ
ts A: 2 oUlces. l2c . per
. It. 5'15-3640. 1374F
646-0213 or -842'8237. --also be r~ulrt<I. ASSEMBtERS Train At Full Salary. eyno 1 vo. near Santa ll0bel..4i Elden. KEYPUNCH
SIAMESE Cat, fem, spayed. PAINTING. Pa-. Coll~• dog re e Benell .. , mil, 18-34. Santo Ano· 1 ,;iPiihoneiiiiii~iiji;&;i'{ltii;iSPi;Miii;. iill OPERATORS
front paws declawed, Glttr\ ""'·-ter ~··-··. Int-Ext. It I INTERVIEWS NO\V Villi FV ant n.ua. .................. , W •ccount ft9 Call Army Opportunities Equal Opper. Entpl0ytt Fee Paid. Beuutiful l'!e\V ofc "68-~. are. a, ~ I Localref.,Frffest.919--S294 major and mini.. Growing microwave cn4) ~1163 IN•PECTOR in Newpt Bch. Flrm CUSTOM paperhanglnr, 21 of ma nu f a c I u re r needs ==-"==:..==---ral .,. rclocallng from LA. G~a! LOSf amt BlJc Labrador, years In Harbor area. State mum 5 years ex-assemblers w/PC board le COOK exper eves, salaey Gene OH~ $400 mo Inspector • Preclsktn: tint benefits lnchxttng prolit
OP space avail. near white chest Ans to Smokey, Ile. 183281• 642_2356 perlence in th e soldering .._exper. G 0 0 d open Zublet. To start. No qucsUon about article and in process 111· sharlng. Start $57S, Also , Cocta Mesa.
1191
o,n San Juan Vic Fair Dr NB Blvd. Con· above areas r.. starting salary & niany co. M+-9884 mott money to capable 1pecdon for N.C. machine. Fee Jobs. Call Sally ltart,
........,. roundlngs hospital. Please call, pe-"n -w, ,~·e·c'"e nt -o!<c •hill t. Substantial overtime. Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd, P~~ from 1125 . ~ta~c~t~'411-~ml~~~~~~ EXT118.ERNJF !r~~· ~= quired. ' benefits. Pleasant sur-COOK, modern conv. !tcr:s°~. ~~ .. !ftlnar ma' filt•~ r.tlnlmum 5 yrs. exp. Night 54t'.Mi0&'5, Coufal PersonMI
spray. Call Roy, 9fi0-1407. Apply In Perion 642--0593 ba'"" A I benefibl. Apply at Of
1 l3'lOCM11'1·.!ft,786 NLeewton [ 1[5] STORE FRONTS, ROOMS • 3333 Horbor Blvd. lnd<;.:::,~or it,f~tions DELIVERY man for early ~.;.. AGENCY Newport Controls Corp, ~L-ab-C~l.-r-k ____ $4_7_6·' ay,,,~,,_..;..,r, ••"'°. . ase. ---Bt.DGS. EXP. LETI'ERING. C I M C Ill L.A Time Ho 901 W 16th St ~.-;JU _ OS I e1a, e • niom. • a me ,.315 3rd St. SUlte ~ ' ' Typl It FU' Good EXPERT WORK 645-&30 (714) 546-8030 ext. 153 (714) 494-9401 Delivery roule, mll!t have HiJntington Belch 51&-1439 714/642-9020 hene"l!i.. mg.
600 .,. ft. 1100/MO. INT/EXT PAINTING economical car. Over ,.,:is GENERAL Equal OpplY Employer WESTCLIFF
Randolph. CM. (Shop A I EST:,Jllallpaper 546-7887 TELONIC yrs. old, (d. •Uple~try p o. 9) Cal! 675-5116. :::;cco~u:::n::.:1'!11:.:r..____ Income. 3 bn. dally . MACHINIST ersonnel Aaency t1ls W1ntecl 460 . ACCOUNTING & Plaster, Pitch, R•p•lr INDUSTRIES Westminster, G.G., HB Diversified work l oad , INSURANCE casualty agen-(Mark III Center) area. 638-2924. manuf. elec tronl c In· cy girl. Office In Corona 542-&36
OR 3 BR home w/2 or TAX SERVICES * PATdl PLASTER.ING * Dental RecePtlonlst, strumentatlon. Modem ·,11ork del Mar. Exper pref. Good 1651 E. Edinger, S.A.
yr lease option Avail Reasonable. Ca 11 (TI4) All types. Free estimates DENTAL exper. req'd. Pref. shop. sa1ary. Part time. Houn LAUNDROMAT CLEAN UP
een Feb 15 &: March 675--f.676, aak foc Rick. Call 540-682S Equal Oppor. Employer mature yng. woman. 534-0109 ADVANCED KINETICS, INC. flexible. Send Reaume to PART TIME. Pret retlrtd
Balboa, Penin, area, aft Babysitting Equal OP,por. E1nployer m/f Garden· Grove 1231 Victoria St .. c;'~1 I .iBoxiiiiii'i;' Coroiiiiiniia.idiiei;I Miii"'ii";;;;;;;l-546-6691~~~att~6~pm~. ===--
pm, 525-4:n> ~==='-----Plumbl-BABYSI'ITER.-Mesa Verde "D::;E~N::;T:.oAL:...::"A=-t-.--Call 646-TI65 LA\Y ENFORCEh1ENT
Prof, wife, 3 yr old BABYSI1TING -Infant to i----··.:..•-----Elem. Sch area. Hrs. ssn , mos. An Equal Oppty Employer INSPECTORS -No Exper. Neceaaary
sires unfum hie w/pr. 5 yrs. Toya, fenced yd, n.c. L.R. OTIS PLUMBING ACCOUNTING 2:30-6:30, 5 dys a wk. Girls :~· &::~~~c:a"'i--~-'=-'-='-""'-Train At Full Salary,
,B. or E. C. M. 4~10 Mon thru Fri. Low rates. Remodels • Repejn. Water BUSINESS AUDIT ages 8 & ll 557-1548 DENTAL ASSISTANT GUYS GALS Benell11, ml!, J&.:<4
AR POOL SERVICE . .
IS IN BUSINESS
CALL 642-6589
AFTER 6 P.M.
raonol1 S30
CONGRATULATIONS
TO
Cris & Wayne Page
on the hoppy news
from Roja
!Mt--
ound (lrH eda) sso
Com. Mesa. 646-5836 heaters, disposals, furnaces, BABYSITTER. Houaekeeper, For Periodonlilt, f/tlme. VARIAN DATA ?.lACHINES, INTERVIEWS NO\V
dshwashn. fi42..6263 MIC & O~'n transportation, live Expanded duties, oppor. TRAVEL the bi. company in amall Call Armf OpportunitJH C1rpenter BIA, Complete Plwnbing INSPECTOR in or live out. 64!HJ166 eves, E H t. Bcb computen. has an im-cn4) 645-1163 Service. Uc. 212894. 6'15--46:11 ~ nee. un · mediate opening ·on 2nd Legal Sec'y Trainee
NEW, remodel, repair ,
frame & finish, Stores, of·
fices a: homes, etc. J.Jcensed
PLUMBING REPAIR BARMAI~ -Attractive $2.25 1 =~"""::,·.,..-,-.,.-.,--I shUt for in-p~ss 1n-Thia Is one ,Kn!at attorney No job too small Huntl-ton Beach hr N D EN TA L A• • la t a n t s~tors. 'l'A-'O years ex-who wUI train ....... u in the
**642-3128** ··• per . o exper. necessary. Olainide, Newport Beach CAREER penence _In the lnspect!;ln 1.-al field ll ~th.ave_........
H
. h S h I . • The Escapade. Apply: 1664 area or circuit ._ _ _. ..,.mb"-s •• ,_. •-19 c oo . D11tr1ct Newport Blvd., C.M. bet. ' •.•un .. n.• m:-• typing & ah skills Start ALL types carpentry. Fix Sewing/Alter.1tlon1 10-11 A lii 642-7998 cable, cWsts, etc. It you $500. Call Helen 'Muon.
just about anything around i ---"'------Is Accepting Applications tor. ___ . -·-----meet these qualifications 54()..6($5, Coastal Personnel
962-1961,
the.hot&Be etc. ~1648. ALTERATIONS. restyling business audit inspector BEAUTY operator \vanted DEPARTMENT Stt>RE and.are looldna....tor a poal-Agency 2790 Harbor Blvd,
C s.rv ladies wear, experienced Starting Salary $819 Mo . .;. · w/~me follov,.ing. Full or TAILOR National f1rm can now place Uon with a llOWine oranae CM ' arpet Ice reaaonable. 963....s806 xln't benefits. Application plume. 792 Center St, Costa 1 sharp guys & gals, tree ~ty company that of-MACHINE
JOHN'S Carpet & Upbolatery felevfalon Rep•lr deadline November m . Mesa. 642--0531 to travel US major cities &
Drl Shampoo free Scotch· Phone 536-9331, ext 211. BREAKFAST Cook, exper. For Mens Wear HawaJJ. No experience -* MODERN FACllJTIES OPERATOR
gard CSoll Retardants). COi.DR 'IV Repair, expert, Equal Opportunity Fast reliable. 5:30 AM· BROADWAY v•e train at our expense. *"COMPET ITI VE TRAINEES &
Dcifl!!tuera & all color re&!IOnable,, most In home. _E"!mp~lo~y~er~m~/~!·~~~~I 2 PM, 6 days. 673-7750. NEWPORT N~car transportation ts SALARIES EXPERllNCED
brtghteners &: 10 minute Frtt estimate, H.B. N.B. =:ACCOUNTING CLERK BUS BOY. Exp. bus boy Apply Pel'IOnnel Dept. llaxurned hedwo.rkToap._w~::!'re~ ~lEBDA!CALs IC MAJ 0 R MACHINISTS
bleach for white carpets. ·& C.M. Bert Gallemore, t·• f d hilt N Equal o E I u.....,..,..,,. ac; •• Save your money by saving .968::;:.;2783=::.· ------N.B. real estate firm . Pay· wan'''" or ay 1 eat ppor. mp oyer rapid promotion makes thls ' * 10% SHIFT DIFFEREN· Steady, non-defenae work.
me extra trips. Will clean file roll, payables, bank reooh-appearance. Apply Beach ideal position. For inter· TIAL Maey company benefttl, lite
living rm., dfni.rw rm., & ----------cllllatlons. Able to assist on _H_o_uoe~l~M~·~La=gun~•c,,..,--DISHWASHER, boun 12-8, view, see Ml'I. Spence, * U DAYS A YEAR PAID It.medical Insurance, 8 pald
hall $15. Any rm. $7.50, CERAMIC TILE NE\V le cash receipts. etc. $450 to BOOKKEEPER Weekends~ .'. Roadway Inn, 1400 S. Bril· VACATION hOUdays A: vacations. New
couch $10. OWr $5. l5 yrs. model Free st Sm jobs start. Sally, 646-0528. Great local co. needs aharp •;;;;;;;;m&iiii;;iiiio;;;;;;;;;;;;;,j tol, C.M. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. * ONE WEEK CHRISTMAS modem facllltles. H you are
exp. 11 what counts not re · e • 1..:=;;..:;='-"==--self disciplined I n d I v . _SlllITDOWN looking for a job with a
mettxxl. I do work nzyseU. welcome. 536-242.6. I•--------w/A/P &:/or college cost DRIVER Our appllcanbl muat be neat, real -ruttae, 1tt ul. APPiy Good ref. s:n-m.01. Top Soll ACE ASS(SI'ANTS a cc 0 unling background. alngle Ir: able to leave im· Please apply ln person or 9--3 PM daU,y. Moody Sprink·
Carpel CIHnlng _..__*_Q_U_AIJ_TY_*__ YOUNG MEN Xln't •tarting aalsry " co. Will drive <:<>. station wagon. mediately. contact: B. Kraltka lerJg. Pull St CM
Dutch Malnl. Serv. "37·l5<l! S!&-6930 A E YOU Jason Best ....,,..._, N.B. Jo Los Ange1ts twice GENERAL Olllce Aalatant, MAID WANTED Floor Care & Windows * MULCH &: rop &>IL * R benetlts. .._ ... _. Approx. 250 mi'• daily, trom v DM man .,
LOOKING FOR 1740J Brookhu:nt, F. Vly. dally. Should have Calif. Exp & maturity desirable, ' DOl1 Quixote Motel
DffiERNARDO " Sona -SUlte 213 96H715 drivers lie. & Ca1Jt com-Hours ftexlble. 9'l9-8600. 2100 Npt. Blvd.,C.M.
carpet &ales -installation merdal COus ll Uc.) Xln't e "'2-3670 e
an<) !fpalr._9§3,l639 • SECURITY dri Ing nl "'-IBLS GUYS MAlNTEN
e-OPPORTUNl'TV--1-CHRISTMAS v -reco · ----'"'-'" -VARIAN DATA ANCE ~
C-:;•:.:me=n:.:'•:.....;:C:::o:.:n<:::r;:el:.:•:....._ '°iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~I • ADVANCEMENT . . 'gPP,,%!;2i;.:,.,~~~t. TRAVEL, MACHINES =· ~ant=, :U~
* DRIVEWAYS * • • 'GOOD PAY OVER 18 zm Michebon Drive service. Call m-71'11
SIDEWALKS. PATIOS Job Wonted, Molo 700 DEPARTMENT STORE PACIFIC MUTUAL Irvine, CalllDmla MARRIED 21
JESS ANZALDUS, 979-9699 BUT, ALL YOU CAN ''SA s Free to travel Hawllii penon over YOUNG man desire1 Pftln-OFFER IS A HIGH NTA ft 700N=rt~Dr. MexicoOtyl:majorcities. An equal opportunity ~:~~ $125 ~pei::~Uo, sa:W~ ~· ~~· lawn work, ~~ ~~~D?A NEEDED NOW -~FJ!!'!!:FJ!.:!!!!r!!RO!'N!!!!!CS!!!"•!PJ !'~.be =!;,~le.A~~ employer m/t MASSAGE TICH.
remove. Frff est. 544-8998. Job Wanf9d, fem11le 702 -No Exper, Necessary transportation tum~ INSURANCE TRAINll Contractor We are a national marketing $567.50 month. We train It Train At Full Salary. w/2 week expen.e paid INSIDE SALES Young lady (lS..28) wanted
GERWlCK & SON
Bldg Contr. Addlt & Remod
State I.Jc. Bl-114321
ace student !lffks part-time & aerv. corp. who is look· provide costumes at no fee . Benefit If 18-34 traµtlng program. For awt. Financial institution seeking for lecltimate full ttme POil·
work hoURClcaning or b8.by ing for young men w/a de-Apply m Pine, Long Beach. INTER-NOW _ for personal tiitm.1ew. C8il outgoing salea oriented in· Uon. No exp. nee. we aend
sitting in occ _ Mesa _ alre to 1uecttd in the bus· (213) 432-0971 coll~t. Call Army Opportunities Miss sands, Cn4) 774-8097, div. w/llte sales exper, Llfe to school, earn wh11e learn. I
South Coast Plaza area. lneu world. No experience WESTERN GIRL tn4-, 64>-1163 lllAM·SPM Mon thru Fri. Ins. prel'd. Fantastic oppor. Apply In person any oft. or '
673-6041 5-G-2170 ~. la desirable" wt will <:<>m· ==~;;_::::,,:~--I !'attn" weloome at Jn. for lndiv. Interested in eve. 2930 w .. Cit. Hwy.
pletely train )'OU. SANTA DMSION ELEX:TRONIC TECH, Test terview. career open.ilw. Newport ..Beach. ' JACK Taulane, r e p a I r,
remod, add. Lie B·l 26tKJ72.
My \\'ay Co. 642--4'lo.1.
NEED help at home? We
have a.ides, nurses,
h o u a ekprs. companions.
Homemakers Upjohn
547~.
You must be neat in appear· ance, able to get along well
w/people, have a car, be
married &: be able to start
immediately.
An equal owty empioye.r equialign ..2!f %ramafl~~ GIRL Delivery Driver, 19-25 Jason Best Agency MEDICAL: E>cp"d front of:
--.. -..... ~ uuu., yn old. Oveneaa Motor 17400 Brookhunt, F. Vly. tice, recepHonlat. 2 doctors.
Gardening
LAWN SERVICE GENERAL Cltaning, Day
Experienced Gardeners, All work. H 0 u I eke e p ID K. area& Tree T r i m m ln g , Reliable. Transp. 543-7008,
?-fow, Edge, Oeanup New 541~ Lallm, Sprinklen far homes, =-"C-:"'"-:c-----:.,-ap.i &:: conunerdal. Depen-F.C. Bkkpr, Mature, capable, penonable. Heavy AIR, dable. Heu. rates. Prompt A/P P/R __ Free Elltlmates. • ~xp. u .. , .. ..-,
For Interview Coll
Mr. Edge
894-8852
8 AM to S PM, MON ONLY
CLERK mlST
ORDER CONTROL
DEPT.
Sales & marketing exper. re-
quired in saJes order pro-
ADVERTISING SALES cessing & Inv o I c Ing.
534-3144 or 534-7187 Jobs Wonted, M & P 704 Fo.stffi growing. publ.icatian Customer contact required.
EUROPEAN Gardener. ·1n Orange co. High comm. Pleasant penonality. Type
Maintenance_ I.anclaca.plna:. HOUSESITTING -Mature Call for appt. 645-J631. 65 w.p.m. elect i I c
Tree Removal . Ver Y couple. Impeccable. Refer-1.iiiiOiii;~ii;iii:iiiiiii;;;;;;;; I typewtiter.
reaaonable. 642-5.129 eves. ences. 23 yn. local resldenta 644-1582. ASSEMBLER Call For Appt. PROFESSIONAL ganlener, i ,,..,.-,.,,_....,....,...=,_..,= I lnd.,ttial Relations
tree work, prun ing , Hele Wanted, M&I' 710
aprlnklen, cleanup jobs,
landscaping. Gtor&e,
646-0893.
-""" a ..,.,. ' ....-.. ''
SM-3301. Parts, 1990 Harbor Blvd., Suite 213 96J.-6'Ti5 Heavy phone. hi board.
ENGINEERS CM. 5 Day Melt. 645-2113 ·.:::in Exl."iJl":1s::;:' GIRL Frida>. p/tlme. 4 Hrs. llSUIAllCf SALES METAL TRAINEE to 13.50 hr n---·~ ,.. ~.. ... day, hn flexible. Lite typing, Good bead -math. Just Q<:"1111:u ... , m ., ..u;i-.,ro. gen'l ofc "dutiH. Possible be INTERVIEWS NOW future !/time . .eA'I b1M ...... No exp nee et.m wb11e )'OU N mecbmUcaUy inclined. Call Army Opportunttiel vu-ill"...... .w•· learn pa-it time _ ._ o exper. necas.. Will learn
cn4) 64$-1163 appt. I tull • ....-•. a very hi.eh paylnc trade, ==~~~~_,--· ~GOOG'i5ifID)e;;;xp;;;'d•d;;pbone;;;;;;;;;;pr~need';;;i· ~ed time wl>en qua1lo Xln"t "!'· & beneJUa • pro-, EVENING Su per v l s or ed. Full Of' part time. C.U .u • ·• greutve raises ~
wanted fast food service. ~ 10-5 om Fannen lnlunnce Group EOIO JOB . AGENCY .I
exp. preferred. In q u l re ' pm. Ed Lull * S.1834 l1S Jrd sr., Suite 503
Swensons 217 Broadway HELP Wanted tor beautiful Hunttnetm Beach 536-lC.39 ~ Beach ofter 7:30 :uclu~ !°i ~.-::-:: ~~ '!!"~. MICRO.BIOLOGIST
• ........... oyster barman, .... ofter ICbool and Satur· Do you lJ1le ...-rdlt Glut .
EXP Sale&lady, Apply in dishwuher. Female ap. days ~ new subscrlp-entry level 1pOt to lfOW.
person, Jackies, Huntlpaton pllcant must be attracttw lions for the DAILY Pn.ot. Hospital back 1 round .
1 Center, Huntington Beach 1; natural looking, APDIY 'Ibis 11 not a Paper route w/blood chem. know"ledp.
FABRIC handworkera,_ no at Klamet Internat:IOria:f, and doff not include de-Call Elly Ellis, ~.
experience nee. Irvine area. 1100 W. Coast H~, N.B. llverln or collect1na. Open. Control Career Employment I
54(h1684 " Aak tor Eric. 645-• Inga In Coot& !ill-Follntaln -· 3400 1rv1no Blvd.,
UND young r ab b It BEAtrrIFY Your Home/
Newport West Tr a c t . Bwdnes11 for the Holidays.
968--1t*I f.1ominp & even· J ack's Gardening 548-1893
1.,... 1..:e;:.vc~•:,,· ~=----
;'()UNO, young male Collie. DEPENDABLE mow &
Wearing leather collar wlth edge. Col15clentious work.
silver 11tud.,. Vic. of ())!;ta Reas. Jo"'ree est. Rich:
Mesa (Peularino) 546-4253. 673--0T15
WOULD YOU
LIKE A
CHRISTMAS
HOLIDAY?
(714) 494-9401
TELONIC
INDUSTRIES
L119una Beach
FINANCE HOSTESS Valley and South Hunttngton N.B.
Typist Coshler to $500 Pleasant penona11iy. av... Beach. Apply now by e&lllng1'M"'T'°s"r1"sc==-~o~pe-ra-10_r_,_,.t~u II I
Great co. otters xln't oppor. 21. Stut1na: pay $l hr. 548-3013. time, e"Pft' only, Newport
tor sharp lndlv. w/avr typ. Perm. job, beolth beneti" Equal Oppor. Employer Type Sett1111 CM 64&-0164
Equal Oppor. Emplo_,. lng It Ute aper. Lots or &: KOOd meala f'Unl. Abo, aft 5·30 962-0175 I
,.. PR & ~ oo. benell... wllf train to -" late TIME FOR . . ............ N.8. Travel Agency need•
CLERK TYPIST Jason Boot Agency cocktalla far -money. DAILY PILOT pert time exper agent. Call !
-No Exper. Neceaaary 17400 Brookhurst, F . Vly. App\ moms or phone for tor appt. 675-1400, 9 AM
UNO Irlsh Setter, 8 General S.rvlcos
month.I, weuiJ'lg black flea ------~--
lag le choke chain. Costa
Mea area. &«>-8748.
"THINGS" by Moose. Gen'l
Carpenlry, Repaln. Pltun·
bing. E l e c • Re.modeling
DM'lE PERSONNEL VARIAN DATA Train At Fun s.1.,.,, suite ru 963-6Tl5 ·w~v~s WHARF CLASSIRED ADS to u PM. Moo-Fri.
MACHINES Benefits, m/I, 18-34. FOREMAN, en ergetic, -•• W . NEED extra Income, ~~ INTERVIEWS NOW mecbanlcally Inclined, to -• Newport Blvd 642 5678 pert time jobo
Accountant offtirs a Chrl1tm1s hot. Call Anny Opportunities run lhippln& I: production. Newport Bee.ch • ~:its. only tnchldtnc
ATCH fnd . HunUnif;on
Beach
• 11/20 Vic. Kings Road,
N.B. Lrg. mll1e golden w/
wht chest. ~.
FND man's wedding rtng.
Silver. Vl~ Bch area.
to $14K kl f 24 CTI4) 645-1163 ' No exp ntt. ln supervision. 615--0t74 weekends. Male It female c;.,,.Chemral/P!'.f~r 10 ~ oy rom Dec. to COMBINATION weldtr, arc Xlnt Mure. 979-8600. Htlp'Wonted, M & I' no Help Wanted, M It F 710 over 21. Must he depen-
•-u• ~ Jan. 1 to all omployHs. • he"·-1 dab! A I Paulo ~-1n cai,,entry, electrical, plumb-Sr. Olemist to $16K °' ~ .. exp·er ence. GAL FRl-BKKPR e. PPY ...,, • ._.. •
1111. fix.ft. F le B Home Teleprocesslng, 360/BAL If you loin us now, you Trainees for mast lhopi1. Exp'd ln all ore tkllll rvrl'ln.ur. UIUl~ERS Coat.a Mesa alter 1 p.m.
6411-561J.
Repair, &42-l403. Program.mer $UK are eligible for this out· Mechanical ablllty. Apply at 10 key by touch type 00• UAUlllw--llUllVUI
Exec. Secretary $750 standing benofltl Erickson YachtJ, 19 S1 lnventocy controi. Growth NEVER A FE£
Haull"'· Marketing Rep to $1:>0 Deere, Santa. Ana. oppty with growq co. can 1 IK. JSK. 7SK
ti.1arketlng Secretary 10 $700 Openings exist on our COOKS-counter Mt!n & Tues.. 835--1098
1
· LOCAL moving • hauling F /C Bookk..,per to 1100 2nd shift for olectro-women. Nu concept In Mex-GARMENT CUTTER SALAlllS • NMOTIAILE
by student. lAr'Je truck. ~'y/Dlctaphone to $650 mechanlc•I at1emblers lean faat foods, all shifts 1 Are You Unemp_loyecl Now-Art You Seeking: R6!,~17Barry. 534-1846 ~ Men Sec'y!Bankl.ng toS650 WI th 0 m'-lmum 6 avail. Full & part timl. Cook r~:ee-~tomtarr wni tra~ner".,ex50· A Ch1n9e -Worried About Your Age -
t.l'"\IQ'I • -Soc. Service Secy $600 onth ml • over 18, counter over 21. l"" •n.=> • ..,. Tired of Broken Proml1e1-Undeclded A1 To YARD, g11.ra.ge clean-ups, Typist lo $550 m I exper ence in Apply Bob Bum& Rest hr., 5 da.Y wk. Apply 8
remove dirt, ivy.,..driveway1, Back Ofc MedlcRI $425+ soldering, wirewra~ Fashion Island NB Center am to, 12 noon. 825 W. 18th A Proper Course of Action -
Slum.,. gradlna. 841·2666 Acctna Clrk Trne/Type !<00 ping, cobltlftl, or stuff· ~att~ll=AM=:,·....,~,---,--St, Ooota Mesa ARE YOU UNDER PAID?
sKIPLDADER • dwnp truck CALL TRISH HOPJ..'INS Ina. COMBINED Mt t Im e GENERAL LABORERS II YM C:. ~ n.·F•1w~c.t111rt.i wor" Concrete, _uphalt, JERRI WHmE'IORE Driver 'Ii: ~ tor I• ~-Alllo-lwe W u • k ... anlow snwii.r. bttaldni. 84&-7llO. " Othor benefit1 include elderly couple, App\Y .wJth •-•-'IWltli •y-.. .... . -.. ·~·
Secretaries
L119ol S.cretory
& Clerk
Dortnell Personnel
S.rvlce Agency
500 N'wport Conter Dr.
Newport Beoch 64M470
32 FT. FURNITURE Van '88 E. 17th SI. C•t Irvine> CM a 10"/o IOcond shlk pr.. rell, Clusllied Ad nl> 1168 IF YOUR ANSWDS All TIUTHl'UL
SHORT. Iona. white q. lor local furn haull A geri'l Su~ 224 642-1470 m lum, ,.._ 1n1urance, · ~~ D"i\i.:'~ O~x Skilled "!Jnskll~ . _ WI CAN ... m • YOU
"Tew WI apols, IOOJ hair, hauling. 54&-Ul62, 557-2136. "-stock purch•M a n d _.,;. ·• Tomporacy Employment ..,..,.
Lost $$5 NO EXPERIENCE
NECESsAltY.. •
.TRAINEI POSITION t..-.. tan. Sprtna<lale le ........ ,.. 9'.¥ W"" ••A er 1 ;;;•&•owii;;;;;;; ... ;;;;;iii;;;;;-Apply 8:30 Alt, Mon-Frl A. D• V•ti Ii•"• ttr.ftt 'l'Oc•tl•••I 11,1..,"1 ..,_..,. u --03 9 HAULING • A .. ., ...... , & c•sh profit sharing and 11 •• o. V•ll h ..... ,o ... 11•t1 .... '1.telllt•l'ICl7
Warner. ca 847 1 ~~~~ ~4'.1'-1 or ACCOUNTING CLERK tclucatkM\11 11sist•nce. Commer•i<il UlllDllW(R INC c . C>• v•u fMl t11fflc1.11tty ..... i ... •t1d to 1c:hi1 ... 11 ~~ •. : mo(lermoldan, .. ~l ..... I Uae 10..::.~r l'>,50 WPM, Coll or opply In person .... 1111111ru I . D. o. ,.. 1 ... th• ohllily •• Mok• , •• i.1 ... 1
ft!fUll.K' <> "' in Houset unlng 'i1Jlt cond., &: «1m-to · E. A,. you t1•4v to 11t a r1•li1ti1 ••r••r •"'1•ct1 .... 1
v1c. PaultJlbo Drlw . pany bene ta Great op:. • Teller F. If v•" _..,.. c111 ... 111ced •h•t h•'• ......... 1 •b'•· ... 1114
64)..0032 Dedicated C ... nlng pbrtunit,y to
0
learn ac-J . •'ullir ,,. 0 , you 1c:c:•ptltwllh1ut4tl•v'
LOllP Di&mond ring, 3 * WE DO EVERYTHING * COlllltinr, & Io r ad· (nil 833-2'00 YOU SHOULD llNOW
llODH, UUanY 1 et t In I· Refs. Free e!'lt. 646-2839 vt.neeme!l~' Nr 0 r I\ n I e 'Experienced • Thi ""'' i•lt• •r• not 14 .... rtl1ed
' ~· 4 9 2-~ 4 0 7 ot WILL clean your houle It = s=· ~~ ~i VDM It • Third p1rty profe11io111l l11fl.,111C1 11 ••m1tllt1••
""'4""WUI. windows spotleu clean. Btrc"' $(. N-n. ch c nsu Loan 11•c•111ry : REWARD! lk'tl lrlsh Setter. \\•/refs. Reas, ~. ·546.-neo . .. ... _.~ pi;I • • D mer 448 w. l!tth Strtet • ~tti119 th• tlt ht dt•t• opu, •t the tl9ht 1 ••• 1 , •.
: male,. 11 m91. old. white Costa Mt•• MJ.20Q quit•• t•ahnlti,11111
I stu 'Oft" chtst. vie. 19th St. :J;::a:::nl::.lo:::r~la::;I;_ _____ I VARIAN DATA f-Proce· ssor 723 N. Anaheim Slvd. • Ewecuti .... po1ltlo111 .,. ftll.d through •••cutlv1 in·
C!ill.64Hlll6 o••UGE Ca l J···-~-• Accounting Clerical MACHINES An hel 774-IOOll lmlowo
1 1 '""'"'" aiu1UC1CJJ lpeclallllng In' 2122 Mlchelton Drlve • m · () M111 reuun• 1111111119 , 11 111t 1 tot•I 1111-r
GRMT Dane I s .. =. .,.1.m. now •.• pa • d In & Office Pe-I ·-· Cali! rvr111mur SERVICES,. 111c. -C.7ll~-~ •• ~ bu 1i neu. Qua llt~ ·-·-u»n<, · UNITED GENERALoHlce,salea Dep. LIWIUlll' m Ave, , ncw~-u.,.... guaranteed ltt'Ylce at fa.It RUTH RYAN AGENCY -·ft' 1 t NK clerk typllt Iv Invokine LOl!r.male Pmlan Tabby, rate,,548-03llllor!reeblll. 1193'Plewport,CM 64&-ll!M An..,._ opportun y CALIFORNIA BA saleallterature.Mlacdlltles. May"-At Aawot hr YMI
bllt a Butt. Vic NB Pier. p • tt & lml Boac;ll. N.B. S4T-i811 'l!!!!!!l.!'!'em~ploy""'er~m~/~!!'""".r l141 E. CoOll Hwy. Industrial Electronlca s.,4 l"'m• 0. Coll To4ov
REWAllD llG-0714 ";:', n~honalna AOCOUNTll#l AVON MAKES Co....,. del Mor ='.""""" Co. In CM NO COIT nltmv. lllTllYllW
L011r mw aold -t ;;i: ;,, • No Ex per. N-.sry CHRISTMAS THE SEASON 67$-9140. DICUTIYI ShVICU INCOll'OIA TID ~°)'c.~'~/St'~k HI QUALITY, LOW$. ~~~~t~ Eam ~lr>BE~.';'k gifla F.qual Oppor. Employer Fat'Pn>ftt la attaln<d wh'" t .J H.llAINST.-H01110...ac1-SANTAANA
LOST ll&clc Lab, Fair A Lie, Ins, Rcls e M2N·1!°1 INTERVIEWS NOW u an AVON Representative )'0\1 ttll tbrou&b ftllllt-..et-!•cur17u1~:11~0~\IUlll11t
Fil....il.w, Thurs .,..., Ta&•, INT /EXT PAINTI v Call Amvt ()pportunltles In your gpare time .• Call: 111e 1utet111ra .. 1n the Wnt. Una Dally Pllot Oulttled PHONI 1714) 147·'621 ~thee. W-3718, Rewant f""' Est _ " Jim Sl8-8712 (1141 Mil'.-m:t l ~100. " O.!lr Pilot Claut!ted Adi. ..,._
I ..
NOW OPEN
GB Indultrlel or So. cam.
l\u lnunedlate openings for
trainees In display,
mark'Ung dlatrlbutton '
crtdit n1crchandLstnc. 8 new
klcatlona lo open ln tm-
medlato future. Many Pol"-
Uom now open tor full time
perm\UM!nt people.
• XLNT TIWN!NG PJ\O.
GRAM WORK ALSO AVAIL FOR
HIGH · S CHOOL 6
COLLEGE sruDENTS * COMPANY BENEFlTS
l'Olt: PIRSONAL
INTIRVllW CALL:
S.25'1
Mondoy Only ...
NURSES A Id t 1 , Con-
valeacent Hoop. ()ppor, tor
...,'00\tn over 31), 64).:05ll..
,,
I
' ' I
•
"
•
r
f tl DAILY PILOT Monday, Novtmber 26, 1~73
ant , M F u.o I :========i·=uc::t:::ion::::.·~TU~~A~uct~~on~ij~-:--!:llM=..1 Ml1<tll•naou1
wing Machlne1 .. 828 1tt, Power
Milp anted, & F 710 Help Wantoa,M & 10
OPEN I. NG I PURCHASING Clerk. Nat'I. ~nllboal n10..11ul. flnn, hiring
(or bead office. 6 ?o.1ot.
New in\lelltn1ent office ileedi> purcha11Ul& ex p er i e n c u
2 experienced, llC('fiied RciiJ necesa. 'l)'ping 40 WPM. Esta.le people. Your O\vn For inlormat:iou cp.U 642-
desk and phono. Private of· 0542
flee. Next to Real Estele Equal Ol>portunity Employer
ollico, cau ror interview. *Great Opportunity
Ne"' or (1Xperlenc:e<1 rcat
est/\te people. Your O\\'n
prlv3te d~k I: phon'1', good
1valk-ins. frt'C ndve11i1l11g,
LlKE NE\V Kenn1orc 1c.\1•lru; FOR S~LE ~Al' '!ew •hiah
hi I d~··'" .,.,,1. perf. 13 No\a 25 P«tect mat-nc. n >enui. .. ........ ., nc1 Suvc $2 500 see at 1
$150/best. 536-400'1 ~cwi>ort Paclhc B oa. t 1
SPortlnt GooO• 830 64;..3880 '
R1'C€P'~IONIS'l' I C.•hler ·I• ANTIQUE SALE 1_:;W,;:;;an~tid=----'l;;:;:20
Ute typlna & Filing. Moo SECURITY · ·ORIENTAL RUGS Ow Fri. Superior 0Jltlcal AT Witt pay 5 to 10% more than
Co. 641-1114 your h1aheist offer, Shah N
R1'Ct:PT, trrunce lordoctors 'a· OARD AUCTION SMh, 3130 S, Main, $,A, ofti<.'l!. Must be good typist 55T·Ul2, 545-5010.
shortl)fl.nd helpf\1.1 , 54$.=0076 10 00 Wad sci &. Th d Wanted: }IOUnl: newlyweds
RESPONS£8LE older or VAR.IAN, DATA MAOIJNES : a .m .. ne ay Urt ay, need neat OLD Nm. rugs
retired person n e e d e d has an bnanediate opening November 21th & 2tth pkwre1, drapes &. tbina:•
p/Un1e ln retail wioo cellar. for a SCc:u.rUy Guard to To be held et tor lat hoUle 645-8154
Exper. in the-use & 88.lcs \\IO!°k 35 to 40 houra per Dtl Mar Rae• Track & fairgrounds, Del Mer
of tine wines or adverttslng week. Prior """'tal ex-(T k v· d 1 V II ff f Int ta Mulkal 1n1truments 122 would be an """t. See •-a e 18 e a a e o -ramp o ers te
Ha-Id or-~uck, 495 E. pcandrience desired, but not 5, left on Jimmy Durante Way (at Denny's)
•u ....,, m atory. This poaltion re-to · t I B '!di #6 ( 'd
' 8o1t1, 5111
SK1S & bootil, men's. good
condition. Also ski equip. 24' F1'JEnOLASS J o l l y
CUll days, 979-3198. Jtoger, 4 sail•, 6 h.p.
TV, Radio, HIFI, Ou'ytder, •sleeps 4, head.
St 136 Only $2750. Owner. 49U!l9
el'ff 14' FLYING Junior, w/road
• RENT FOR -'LY .. ZENlTH, RCA & Sylvanlo TV trnller & 2 sets "!. Mila, "" ..,. &: stereos, priced less than $600. 675--1100. ~ ~ v es·
\V. E. Laehenmyer, J860
Newport Blvd .. (h;;ta l\tesa
646-3928 or Eve: 6734577.
OPENING for mature front
offlee appeo.rance girl, 2 yrs
office expe:r. heaV)' phone
& 60 . WPM typing skills.
Nr. Orange Co. Al.tport
same location 18 yrs. CalJ ,;;iii;iiiiiiOiiii•••••
for inlcrvltn.\'. Snles Se<-retfll")' to $650
17th St., c.~f. quires a reliable person to mam en ranee o Ul ng ns1 e
work independently and ground s-plenty of parking.)
OR BUY WITft NOO'lllNG the discounters. \Vilh 3 )'r. ;:642::::-'e::9llO::::.,...::·-,-..-..,,;-,;:~
DOWN. Drum. PA'.s. Mikes, picture tubes.· 1 yr paliS Boats, Speed & Ski1 911
Guitars, AmJ)!;, Roe-organs & service. All available
833-1718 646-3921or Ew. 67M577 Girl Fli 10rangeJ t_o $650
Ext.'C. Sec'y L.A., lo S700
~~~~ v=ty so~ fp~~n! The Entire Stock of EARLY AMERICAN &
as.si&nmenl1. .The ___no.nnal. EUROPEAN Furniture from a Santa Bar-
& PlanoJ. all brands. 1nodels In stock &: on 181 Unllrftlted Ski Boet
No age Jlniit, no parent need· di.splay. 'T3 models prict<l 331 Chevy Engine, two 4 Bar-
ed. OPEN NIGHTS TIU.. 9, to clear. Cash 90 plan or reh;, All Aircraft Flrih.-. RAINTERS, exper.; 1.1rork...)n. -
crew painting apt. illteri(lns
for lge. apl. management
ro1npany. Call ~78n.
PBX operator ansvrering
~er\'1ce. Experience pref.
Part time day, full time
eve11. 1:1.B. a.ma. 5.'l,6-8881.
Photo Touch Trainees
<4 People! $2 hr to start.
\\'ill be taught lo · oork
\V/1nicroscope. This is a sit·
ting job for !IOmeone who
enjoys interesting ~'ork &
raises. o( rourse.
·ECHO JOB AGEi'lCY
3ti 3t'd SL, Suite 203
Huntington Beach 536-1439
POUNDS of( PermRnentl,.v
The fa111ous Mike Turin pro-
gran1 needs help. Part or
full tinm. To form groups
& chapten. You can make
good & steady money v.·hile
you help ~urself & others.
Call Mike 'furln, 55&-1350
PORTERS WANTEO
For ne1v car gef refl.dy dept.
Expcr. pref'd. Apply in pet·
son, Chick Iverson, Inc. 445
Pacific Coast HWy .. N.B.
Lac hen my er
Realto1
REAL ESI'A1'.t> SALES
SUCCESS CAREER
~~eo.v or experienced. Join the
World's largest and taatest
growing resale organization
\Vlth a nefwork of over 500
offices and beconte a
n1ember of our Millionaire
Club. Mult~milli.on dollar
advertising program. Free
guaranteed li1..-enstng school.
Excellent sales training.
Please call 542-56M.
REAL ESTATE
SALESPEOPLE
Seeking uggressive, highly
motivated sa I c s men in·
terested in working in
HB/FV area & earning up
to
'85°/o in commission
CENTURY 21, RE
Ask for Mr. Smith, 962·8847
9608 Han1ilton Ave., ll.B.
*R.E. LICENSEE
E:,:ec. Secretary $700
Secretary, S. A~ $650
File Supervisor $500
Oaims Exan1iner to $650
Electrician $600
Secretary hiktng S600
Sec'y Legal Orangt" $600
Progran1 Mgr $2'lK
Electronic Components
Product Line Manager $20K
Data Communications
Purchas Supv (Boats) $13K
Receptionist $400
Call Jeannie Sisco
.it Sid Hottman
NEWPORT
Personnel Agency
833 Dover Dr., N.B.
642-3870
schedule wUJ be Saturday bare t\ntlque Importer and Dealer Ordered
and Sunday 10:30 P.M. to sold by Lien Holders to satisfy Creditor1.
6:30 A.M .. Wednesday and
Thursday 12 noon to 6 P.1't., To be Off1r1d at Auction to the Highe1t·
Friday 11 A.M. le 6 P .M. B'dd 'th t R with Monday and Tuesday I er WI ou eserve.
oft. Individual chosen may A Brief Summary of itebls to be sold are
be asked to \\'Ork vacations. as follows :
Etc., This_p<>shlon orrers: CLOCK LOTS (in the roug h) -BOX LOTS
*RESPONSIBILITY (m isc, i"'ms)-SECR ETARY.-BOOKCASE S
*JOB SATISFACTION -Dozen ROLL TOP DESKS -Over Three
*EXCELLENT Dozen CLOCKS (including Grandfa ther
BENEFITS Mantel and W all Regulators) -ORGANS _:
*COMPETITIVE Various Type CHAIRS (incl~ding Wind sor
PAY & Swivel) -Dining, Droe-Leaf and Lamp
*MODERN TABLES - CHINA CABINETS -HALL
FACIUTIES TREE S -BAR OMETERS -Marble Top
""""'~~~!!!!!~~!!!!!!' l( you meet these re·
SALESLADY. quiremcnts and are ln-
WASH STANDS -Severa l T ABLE LOTS o!
Bric-a-Brae -Misc. '1EWELRY -CUT
CRYSTAL & Colored GLASS -PORCE·
LAINS -BOWL & P ITCHE R SETS -OR-
1i;;NTAL SCREENS -Antique & Semi·An·
t1que PERSIAN CARPETS -C OAL BOXE S.
-F E RN 'ST ANDS -P AINTINGS; PRINTS
and MISC F RAMES -MIRRORS -PRIM·
lTIVES -Consisting o! o ver 3000 p ieces to
F ltin1e, Age 30-45 terested in joining a grow.
Apply In Person ing Orange County com·
THE SHOWOFF puter company, please ap.
?2 FashiOn Island, N.B. I ply in person or contact:
SALESMAN The Personnel Department
Lic·d Indu sttial Real Estate
mission onl y . Industrial be sold.
SAT. TIL 5:30, SUN. 12·5. terms to 36 ntos. ABC Color }la!craft quick c~ V Now TWO Convenient TV, 9021 Atlanta, or 19016 .Drive, Adjustable Tr i m
Locations to Serve You Bro o khurst, J{untlngton Plate, tri stacks. Tamdtm
FULLERYON MUSIC ~ch, 96&-3329 or 962-5559. A."lc Nleson Tl'l:lller, Speed
18191 Euclid, Fountain VaJley RCA Victor <.'Olor console, high 90's, stE IT TO BE·
1 Blk. N, San Diego Ft'\\fY. "'atnut, 21" color' TV, LIEVE l'r. ABSOLUTE LY
& ElK"lid. an1/bn ss radio turntbl. IM1'1ACULATE. (G\Y.8996)
• 557-4136 e Good ~net $200.' 675-7013 Ol°lglnal Cosl over $7000.00
122 N. Harlxlr Fullerton aft 5 & ~·knds. Sal~ Prh:ed at S369J.
• 171-1805 e MED!T. RCA Hi·B<>Y, color SE.A & SUN .R •. V.
RED pearlized Gretsch snare TV, AM/FM stereo/phono 17555 Beal~h Slvd .. Hunt. Sch.
drum. Almost UC\V, Bass combination. 551-2579 842-0675
ukelele. 675-0600. ZENITH CONSOLE 21" TV. 16' ·~IERCURY 112 hJ) ln·
Office Furniture/ BLACK & W H 1 TE. board, contpletely redone,
Equ"tp. 824 REASONABLE 642-5388 inclds trier .. many extraa.
$650. 536-1648. '
EXEC SIVVL CHRS SIS/25 ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~
Sec chrs SS/24 Desks $20/90 I[' ~ ~ 861 \V. 19,· CM F• toy~ ·I Tr.....,..ioll 11•1
SECR.ETARIAL de$k .. GoOd 3 Llnas 2 Timas $2,00 1 ~;;;;;;;;;;~:::::~1 condition with chair. 4 ' ' j I
. 5.57-5IOO · , Campers, Sala/Rtnl 920
Pianos/0,..1ns i26 SHAGGY Dog -a "chlld'sl,;__:_.,;.._.;,_ __ _
•·PIANOS
best friend. Found can't CAl\1PER "65 CHEVY Cha.Ql1
keep. Jr1ale. Call aft 5::10 mount, o~n road, Walk·
'"'..kdays anyt.in1e \l'kends. thru, slps. 6 \\'/extras.
5.5J.815L $3000. 963-'5ro.
Salesman ~·anted. Con1· VDM
Con1n1ercial Properties. ·
• 833-8~5
e ORGANS
Conducted by FULt.ERTON MUSIC SHEPliERD/Te1Til'r. -good APACHE tent tr811er,
PRESSER, EXPER
40 Hr. Wk. 642-3472, N.B.
PROOUCTION CLERK
10 n1anage 011 prentiscs s1na ll SALESMAN & JI.tanager,
unit 1..-'0mplex \Yith pool, and n1ale & fen1. $825 &: up
shov" 10 sell. Free apt. and n1onUtly g u a ran . it
pcrlorn1ance bonu~. Also qualified. No exper. necess.
Im.mediate o Pen in g in bonus if sold. 642.ml (ntsg. Mr. Lee f213) 770-8543
VARIAN OATA
MACHINES
2722 Michelson Drivf'
Irvine, Calif. 92664 m 4l 833-2400
CONTINENTAL Our Newest Location \\'Ith children. needs home 6 un1es .. ne1v cond. imn1ed. &16-2690. FIRM. 646--5277 of 282-7494 18191 Euclid , Fountain Valley San Diego 1 Blk. No. of $3.n Diego Free. V~RY aUcct. 7 n10 old, m~le Cycles, Bikes
PREVIEW of Merchandise w ill be shown at \\·ay at E~~ ~~~~i~t~~:'~~" train· Scooters
212-7494
~m anufacturing pro<lut.1ion 64&-96G6 I -Bkr. l ~~~~~~~~ii:: control where variety is the
rule. Position involve s REAL ESTATE SALES
\\'orking 1v/expoi{ paper \Veil established office, 1vith
1vork. accurate typing as experienced staff, hat open·
opposed to speNI, ordering I ing for tll'o salespeopl e.
.9 :00.a.m. day of each auction, IC CLES * Iv.th tW Ad • -Rentafs· from $5 SMALL-.male-mixed breed *-B Y . _ An equal oppor l un i ty .l s .vertiseme nt, n o Deposit puppies. 7 wks old. Ve1'Y CHRISTritAS LAYA\VAYS
of supplies therefore ability CONTACT
to develop a good telcphOne Paul J\1artin or Bud Corbin
rapport w/suppliers, 111ork· 644·7662
ing \\'/Various production Corhin·l\1artin Realtors
1~ports & ~ata invol~~ng of-RECEPTIONIST f1ce maclunes. Ab1h!y to
("Ommunicate "·ell on an in-
1e'r-departn1enta1 basis ex-
tren1cly importnnl.
Duncan Electronics
545-8261
Production Workers (4\
To $2 hr. Li te work. Perm.
job. Good conds. Co. needs
eager workers at once.
Great pl ace to start your
general office exper. Fan-
tastic potential for sharp
iodiv. \v/phon.Q _eyies. A~g
. typing & "'illingness to
learn 1vill do it.
Jason Best Agency
17400 Brookhursl, F. Vly
Suite 213 963-6775
ECHO JOB AGENCY Have something yuu want to
J15 3rd St .. Suite 503 sell? Classified· ads do it
Huntington Beach 536-1430 \ve11 -co.II NO\V 642-5678.
o:.iorg ....... .altUJ1llTlmJOJ:J'
A CONVENIENT SH()f>p(NG AND
SEWING GUIDE FOR THE
GAL ON THE GO.
· For 1n ad In Worr.an·s \IJorld
Call Mary Both 642·5678, ext. 330
Graceful Lines Hats Are Back!
SECRETARY employer m/f will be r equired for Bidde r Num be r . cute. Call 548-9439. $10. l·IOLDS ANY BIKE
l ... ,~~~~~~!!!!!~l!H~e~l~p~W~a~n~to~d~,~M~&~F~7~1~0~F~~u~rn~i~tu~r~•E====!8~IO • Pianos & Grands 2 CUTE male kittens. Need Ne-.v llalian· 10 sp ..... $.'.i&.95 Varian Data Ma~hines, the Security Guards __ ...c;c..;--~-~C: Ne\v spinets Jrom $495 loving l)ome. Orange stripe S~ntou_r Eq Coloi .••• $89.!li
big company is small com-Need full or p/tlme, 21 yrs \VEST'S Best fabric chain BIT'I'ERS\VEET dining set 5 styles and 1inishes & grey stripe. 645-0031. N1shlk1 10 sp •••• from $99.95
puters, has an opening for or older. Uni~fm.S & equip-has opening for sales ladies. oval • tbl, 44 x 64 3 fillers \Vurlil.zer G1'3nd Strauss 9 MONW f 1 Bl p . 1 Used bikes •••. , • AU Typn
a secretary in ils•Marketing ment furn. Li fe m.c; & hos· Must be able to SC\\I Oppor 4 Caneback chrs, sJ25 FIRM: Upright piano ••••• · ··•• $69 SI t'nl~f t:e & ~in Beach Bicycles 806 t;. Balboa
Department. You must have Hpita1
1
&izalion after$
2
h90 day11. for a d va n c em~ n t t~ 551-2519. PW1eaver ~pin~t ••.•• 1 •••• !ill in:~:;:..;~· ayfu · ov-18:::1':.:·d::·•:..:::Ba:::l:::boo:::.._' _..,..:6::75-:;T.:,:282::
a ood know! d f gene 1 o · \•ac pay. r. start· managenient Apply 20 ayer pianos •·•• rom ~"" CYCLE WORKS LTD g e ge 0 ra Ing pay. Anaheim & Costa Fashion Island, N.B. . * SOFi\ & LOVESEAT * e 20 Grands in stock. New. office proceedures, good Mesa area. Apply Costa Never used, e Very gd. qual. Used arid rebuilt. Priced Bicycles Sales & Service ~;:n!i~Ni~ ~~d t~kce:~ h'Iesa \VhitttFront, 3088 Bris· WHO D~WisA ~ORK? $149. t,rsually home. 963-7910. 1ron1 $395. Yamaha..., Knabe * RALEIGH
O\\'n initiative ~·ith ability to! Ave., C~ta .1'1e~. CHOOSE yo I . k Garage Sale 112 -hfason -HamJiJ.1 -\Vw·· * PEUGEOT
to make sound decisions. Equal Oppor. Employer for yourself~ be10';:~r \'::n litzer -Storey & Clark -* STEYR
Typing 60 wmp, Shorthand STOCKMAN full time • boss. JI.fen or \VOmen. Can MOVING to trailer, must stll Kawai -Slein\\'8.)' -Cable Chrii;.tmas Lay·A·Wayt;
80 wpm minimum. If you mature, ref &: pasf employ· be slightly handicapped, 4 rooms of furniture. Misc Nelson -Kincaid -Cable Pits, General 850 1822 NeY.'port Blvd.. Costa
meet lbese qualifications ment~record req. Mr. Hatch, Ne a t-Oean Appearance. automotive items, 359 A -Bajd\\.i n -Chickering -Alesa. 548-5783 or 675-17{1().
and are looking for a posi· 847-2561. , Vts, retired. Age :/!> to 70. Broadway, CJ\I, 64&-&171 Sohmer. ANIMALS .. R .. US ·71 NORTON 750, "ock.
tion with a growing Orange STUDENTS 14--17 yrs needed Sapplement your income. Until sold • Or9ans Free HanlSter w/purchase strong. $775. ·57 BSA &iQ
County company that of-for p/t y,·ork. $2.00 hr Driveacab6 hrs or morea Miscellaneous 111 .100 to choose lron1 of cage, free cage Rblt top e.ncl. New elec. ters: starting. 494-5420 day. Apply in person, N~1v. Used and Trade-Ins iv/purchase o( canary. Buby $600. Both near 50 mpft.
• EXCELLENT' BENEFITS T I t °r, 'Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th NO LIE Ophgan ••·•••••••••••••· $99 Keets, Cocka.tit'ls, Finches, 557-5100 e C0~1PETJTIVE PAY e e ype rator St., Costa Mesa. • • • • • • • ll~mmond 1.v/rhythm •• ~ puppies. Sm! T. Cup Poodles .. ;;c~~=·~~=,-,~-1
e MODERN FACILITIES $500. Fee Paid. yrs. exper. WO"'"' . ·" I BUY ti Kimball S\v.mger ......... J79i>. --5hcp.s.__D.ePol!lL \'iULtwk!,_ ~968 HUSKY 250 !\IX. Very 1vill gel this top job in LYLnn COfl\PIUllOll. want cu • • \Vurlitzer 3 keyboard . , "1.195 839-8520 , cin. exe<"l. -coM; ·$l:i0.
or Irvine w/time left for for conval~ retired wo-Good, late model furniture & Lolvrey Holiday $49:> 847-5759 or 893-6007 P par-Please apply in pel'son
contact: B. Kraftka creating life style. Also Fee man. fto?1n & b_nJ. small applienCes or sell for :you! ! cOnn Caprice •• : : : : : : : : S.~95 Dogs 854 ty. .
Po itio C ll An Christie saJary, hie rooking, Cd?.·l 1 Tho A 1 S . ( S1"9 =so~s •. Coantroln Career' Cal, I Mr. l\1eLaugh ljn , MASTERS AUCTION mas • pine:···· ' e PUPPY WORLD e TRtyi\tPl·I. 6&0 BonnevUle, VDM ....,.,...,.,., S73-n22 1 Hammond-Baldw1n-Conn . . re-bit engine, A-1 condition,
Employment Agency, 3400 ' eave inessage. · 12075;1 Newport. CM 646-86&> \l/urlilzer-t.owrey-Kimball Bull Dogs, Chihuahuas, Tiny low mile~ Otter 586--G)&
Irvine Blvd,. N.B. 839--0974 aft. 6 or Sunday Yamaha-Gulbransen Poodles. Labs, Great Dane, aft 6 &. wnd!. Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'!. FrH Organ Leisons Amer. Ellk, Pit Bulls. Bull S_,;U~P,;E;,R~:,:S;,Ae;CR,,,,lF::l"CE"'"'~ . .,-l970=1
VARIAN OATA ·
MACHINES
2722 Michelson Dri\•e
Irvine, Calif.,
TEMPO'S -· II~) S8 PROJ. & camera, $35. Phone557-4839 =:r·100~·p~~ Suzukl 250TS.Ready'torthe
. ~~gxG.S~~n~~'fa&J~!: FULLERTON MUSIC, Stud Service 1'tost Breed!: deiiert. $175. or best otr,
\voods SSO. 9 IN. TV $20. 1%! N. Harbor. Fullerton Open Eves: 531-5027 ·'9;;~~;;18;;.a~llc,;6:,_,. ___ ~ I
An equal opportunit y
employer mil
Secretary to Sa1es Mgr
lntel'est.ing sales secretarial
position for an elecll"Onics
manufacturer located near
the O.C. Airport. This . is
a very diversified & active
job that requires a good
deal of independent thinking
& decision n1aking. Re-
quire1nents are: X:ln'I phone
\'Oice, good typing & sh
ilesired, but · not necess.
Preferred age 2 5 · 3 5 .
Start.Ing salary in SGOO
range.
Function Modules, Inc
833-8314
SECRETARY
Dial-A-Job! AntiqU.• 800
TE~t.PO offer~ a truly uniq.ue SCRAM-LETS'
& time saving opportunity .
Joi· "'""
00
. KEYPUNCH ANSWERS
SECRETARIES .
\'·1 . • d. .,. d & Pe1m1t -Exude -Lealy -~o II ~nt Jgnl le . \Vo1ihy -1'1Y WIFE st11nulat1n~ long or shot1 Overheard: ';Tiiey adv _ tern1 assignments • fe~· . . . er days, couple weeks or feiv Ilse that the m1QJ-~alc1:1lators
months . you decide! No1v f·~ ~i~~~y w:~~ ~!~
you can . . . . . \VIFE .. _
APPLY BY PHONE j.iiii ..... ,...,...,...,.......,
Call 540.4450 & Let us kllOI\. ANTIQUES FOR
\1·hat your s~ills are. No CHRISTMAS need lo coine 1n personally . until l\'e have the "just right' Je1velry, silver, glass, furn-
spol for you! iture & primitives.
NEVER A !'EE AT TEMPO. BACKOOOR IMPORTS
Tempo Temporary Help 1896 Harbor Blvd., Ci\1
Pres. of bl'okerage firm 1 ~~-l!il~T.;~:;';~~~J .. ~~(P~ar;k~ln~1·;ear;:)~~ seeking a personal sec'y TRAINEE for lit!'! assembly,
11"/inialive & abili1y. ·Lite packaging &: sh.ipping, Costa EVERYTHING HAS
sh req'd. Fantastic OP· Mesa area. Xlnt future TO GO BY
portunity for individual potential, $1.85-$2.00 hr. CHRISTMAS! 11 11·/exec. sec'y cxper. to learn hrokera ge business. start. 979-8600. GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
Great starring salary. Quilts, oak & \valnut fum.,
Jason Best Agency TYPISTS jewelry, Cl°'*"1 Sat. & Mon.
17400 BrookhurSl, r. Vly. NEEDED NOW Antiquos for Interiors Suite 213 96.'H77~ 3545 E. Coast Hwy:, CdM
ust have good typing skills. ANTIQUE fire extinguisher SECRET ARY ;,o w.p.m., good figure work lamps. At whole"'11e -We
Alpha phones $35. RefraC't 171•1~ . LABRADOR Retriever pups HE7CHINS 10 ~Pee d , te~eSt'Ope $10. Surfboard SIS. . hrs: ??C." Ntghts 'tJI ~ YEU.O\V AKC x Jn 1 English-· l\fanufacture,-zr•.
U1 3.1rd St., Apt 3. side door Sat. til :.:30. Sun. 12·:> breeding. Ne"·port Br.a('h, Ne"' $450
N.B. llon1e all Sunday & 642--0444. 11.ff 5p1n, :;.:>2-n90
A1onday. PIANOS -ORGANS 0 0 B 1 E s, e :flA.b e I' a 11 t ·n HONDA r:i0. Io1v miles.
ASSORTED \\'all cabi~ts, New &: Used. Great selection. personalities. P..1/F', 4 & 6 xlnt l'Ond. $900.
super for gar. or office. Conipetitivl:' prices. Open mo., crop/shotS/Y.'Onned. 675-6317 . L · Eves. & Sundays. The best 1te Birch w/~liding drs, deals are always at: 646-7670 alt 5. SABRE cycle, street =
Desk & misc. office equiR' W II" h M • C SCHNAUZERS . Hold for or dirt. Good cond. . Lino, \\'orktOp 3' x 13. a IC S USIC ity Christmas. ShotR, tei·nis, or best oUer. ~8-1200 •
Thermofa..x copier. Chefio South ~st Plaza 54Q.2830 stud serv. 871,8182; 52'2-8366 ·n HONDA SL 350, in good ~~~~~s. 673-7700 or 673-3206 aft 5. condition. $550 979-474! or
FREE ORGAN LESSONS as PUPPIES, 8 wks old, ?ifostlyl_:::54"'>-=7.'12tl6=.'"7=,-:::--::--I
AUTOMATIC GAR A GE long as you like! Adult5 Ala&kan Husky, Cute \VANTED Utility Traller OOOR OPENER. Finest "'elcome to attend Tuesday ~7968 known brand. Reg. $200. night at 7:30 PM. We want 15" 1\·heel, 4x8 size
SPl;;cial $D'9.9S ins ta 11 ed everyone to learn to play SILKY Terrier Pupfly. 962·89-18 aft 5
\V/"J yr guar. 893-3517 or the· organ~ Tom Dieterich female. Sell/Lease. 832-94~ '66 Honda 30;} Scram~
530-1415 _ in charge 642-2851. C.oast or 644-6178. $225. 642-Ql31 after 5.
1~1PRINTING n1achine for Music, Newport Blvd. at BEAGI;E Puppies, 10 wks, Ask for Brian 4'I
Christmas Cards, letter ,Harbo'"",;:;:;';;,•..:CM~.~~~~-I Cbampion sired. AKC reg, '360' BULTACO 'El Balldito'
good<!. etc. 2 Sets -of letters. REHEARSAL PIANIST _11hots. SSl-5893 ~Xlnt cond. Must SelL,1$3oO
$2'l5. 642-0596 Let me· help you improve GREAT Dane puppits AKC. cash. 645-fi803 ••
OFFICE calculator, swivel your 11inging, dancing rou-outstanding le1nperamenl & 'TI BM\\'. Good condttion.
'chair, goll clubs,• .otc sup-tine9. For detaih, call 1t1t. breedillg. Very res. 838-9126 $400 Ir ·take over ~
plies, Movie camera, flood Rossi, &14-5377 aft. 6. Horses 156 Call 642-971.1 · .;\
lights, tripod. 673--8300 BUY a player piano for SELL 19:,.t T1iun1ph 65ol Ex·
SPANISH freighter model Cbristmas. Good selection FOR SALE 9 yr old buckskin eel cond much chfqme
boat. Hand made in Spain. from $ll00 to $UOO. David mare reg.4~76 $1100. Gai).~10 No. C,)S.C.'
Three feet long. Fragata T. Dupree Player ·Pianos, . • 2 l\1INI bikes. 4 hp~ $'la.
Espanola $100. 645-5143 29400 Grace,,Ln., 01 . GELDING. 11 yrs. old. Part &: $50. Call 557--9509.
DISCOUNTS on new Carpet, * CONN ORGANS * quarter. l>Jtl, Call aft 6 Mot H
Drapes, Floor coverings. • Immediate delivery pn1. 536-8238. or om•• t
556-1245 or 546-4478. e Lowest prtces Sal•/ Rent •1940
1 & sonic office experience supply exclus ive Fash. Isle \\ e are looking for a top • stores & decorators. No1v FOR sale small TV, sweeper
notch secretary to learn the Apply in Personnel Dept. \\'holesalc. to you. & po1iable fan , Call 492-TI96
GOULD MUSIC CO, • SALl:S •
20l5 N, Main, SA 541-0681 I ...,t""~ I~ • SERVICE. 1•
ad biz. If you t ake 9AM-12 Noon. Mon-Fri CLOSE OUT SALE after 4:30 pm.
shorthand, type fast.~ ac· PACIFIC MUTUAL Less than% retail price , Ml·-llonoous
curately & would like a 548-2153 f3 p to 10 J -· challenge. Reply Oassified 700 Newport Center Dr. m pm Wanted 820 Ad no. 964 c/o Daily Pilot, Newport Beach Appli1ncn ' .802 _;,;,;;;,;;,;;;:.. ___ ...;:.:;;
P.O. Box 1560, Costa 1'1esa, Equal Oppor. Employer WANTED solid Oak · desk, HAMMOND Chord Organ. 1m' Saber-Craft, like new,
Ca 92626. FREIGHT DAMAGE SALE 60 by 29, \V/lock. $1,00. 18-ft. hardtop, Qievy 4-cyl,
wri'.i,~% ~E. . ~ • e· RENTALS •
P,O. BOX 1685 .,
Sl'UDIO CITY, OALlF. Boats, Pawer I'"
9343
SIZES 8-16
~'!!!!~"!'!~!!!!!~ ... !!'!!!!!! li --..--------1 New Hotpoil\t refrig's., 644-60'.li Ca11 552-9139 JOO hp In k out. TAKE
Dramatit.e your Oulfits SECRETARY . Established u RGENTLY dishwashers & ranges• WANTED: Refrig. 1·2 )TS HAMMOND organ, model M· OVER. PAYMENTS. Call
I v.·ilJ! these flattering hats. inl£>rior designer requires \vasbers & dryt>rs, factory old Square type. 3 w/percussion. $495. ·aft. 5 \vkdy. 956-2764.
, assistance with oftice skill s warTanty. I '"7 17'" &t$-"'7M: .._. RENT r,\dd dash, smart fashion BEACH CITY APPLIANCE "" • ..._., 1 "'" 23' SLICKCMr',-~ 23.1i A MOTOR"'H -
•-· 1lft..taiMt 1ff~ '10 outfits with -h6ldly ~~a~c~::i~~~te~i:~t5j,!! NEEDED 3623 W warner SA S45.-0780 1Don't give up the ahtp! HAMMOND Organ. Home 19'n. 72 hrs, VHF, trailer, ?tf.INr • HOME OR VAN ""1 . .... J I brimmed fedora and so fr. responsible interested and Xl6Z N. Tustin ' Orange "List" it in classified, Ship model BCV w/020 tone MU!lt sell. Save $1000's, CONVERSION. LO\V AS S9
. . drapeablc hat plus St.'a rf. ' ~ _to=S~ho=re~Resu~·~1~ts~!_;tl4H678~~:;·:;o,J~ca~b~tne~t.=Xl:;nt~c.'O~nd;:,;:963-:;;~25~ro=-!,.,;494-06;,::::1=5=. ======,I per Da·y & 6c per "1tle.
Gently n.01\·1ng hnes sug· :°'Singlt' crochet in rug yarn. 'f'Uicient. Excellent salary (25) Trainee --RESERVE YOUR.S .TQl>AY
gcst a tu hp shape -even 1 Pattern 7143: fits all si?.es. plus enc en t iov e . Call G.E. W ash e r , F'rigidaire ' ~3341. to the lo\·~ly cwvcs ol the Barbara. Jean Neal, washer, Norge e I e ctr i c --C;*""~°"'R'"R~ENT=;-,?>;;,.,, •~
SE\'El'-rY·l'"l\'g CENTS 53S-235;l. . A. ble ~ <V ... poi'kel s. No \\"aist seams -ssem rs dryer. Your choice, $45. sm Ill. 'R. G ... ,..E~"1C-k. 1973 El. DORADO ....... ...i ~~~! lt or not as you "''ish. ~~Jafuhr i;.~rr~alt::!d f~ *Sec'ys, Bookkeepers =li~:itsfi5nteed. · .L .&-.. .rs.JU ~ ·..,: • home. 18-ft., tape ~.V.,
P1inled Patt cm 9 3 4 3 : Air Mail' 11.nd Soecitl -Hand!· .Liz Reinders Agen<..-y . !'"~!!.!~.;_---:BtCLAY J., POWN uiaA s~lf·condatntd. •leeps fl Call
htisse
5
' Sizes 8 10 12 14 ing; olher.,·lse 111~3 4020 Bll°thJStreet • ·VO~T ~. ~ . l>JIL ,.._i:angc •. oven brgVcr • ~ Y•dallr~r;.u. Jf wr.u m, aft. 5 •. 006-27'4.
16. Size 12 (bun' 34';'req~i~ delivery will take thret! Su!te 104., NB 833·8100 Instant Personnel ropulthl ""'out.ew'/o!.~·on4 bom::;:emr, Acconll•f,. flit .s-.. ocf. :n:~ \Vll:L trade Newpi)rt>
l 7/8 yards 60-inch fabric. .,.,·eeks or ' more. Send to Dial A Job · -83:J.0855 Tempcrary Service ..... .,. C:Wtelopmnsagefor TUndoy, 1-6.51.SS • Property for Motor ,
SEVENTl·t 1\'r. Ct~NTS Alice Brooks, the DAILY No Charge To You ?MS Campus Dr .• Suite 100 storage under. S 10 0 • l"IOd'ttltlldso:w1ttp)ll'!ilngtoJUnbers 1-67-70 673-2008 Agt, Eves, 67"407.
for each pattern _ add 25 PILOT, 105, Needlecraft Established 1965 · Nc.,.,'J)Ol't Beach 546-474111..;6,;;<..M:..·=75~·.,....,--=--f:::~e.-.: 41~~ KORM 20'-25' MO'fOR H oile i ,
cents Jor each pattern for ~Jo·n~;:1· ~~~k~~ SERVlCE Station . atte~dant. Equal Oppor. Employer Rent Washers/Dryers · 2 hnpuhht 32.Tokln Q......_,, • Superior, Lifetime &('C)oen
Air Mall and Special Handt· lOOU. Print Name Address Neat, reliable, work island $2. Wk. Full maint. 3 Good 331Ufbie '3And Roa:d . Ken \Velsh, 639-IMJ..
Pnm. 442, Pattern Dept., z~, Pal"'m ·N•m'.._ • & lube ....... Fair Exxon, WAITRESS, experienced on· ___ .::*.:.·639-=.::12'12:::::..:*=---54 J:;;, .. ,.;, ~~!! 6465 "'"'"" eo·• , M In~, otherwise thir' d-lass "'· """. ~ I All h.I A I _......,......,. ~ ~!:i!)!~l') oue I otor Home -EE D L ECRA~ 'l'l'. Fairview &. Fair, Cost• Y· II I tj open. PP Y 61r-·-360f 6d Be '73 "°26' M H • M de ·very will take threeo r i be SAM 11 AM B I M • 1 806 ...... 7 Jv. ..,.. • ' • •·eekl or more. Send to Cn>chet, knit, etc. Free jiiMiieii .. .._, ..,..,..,..,..,..,... t. Cout-. J~OO's ul dln1 at.r11 s ~:=':;' ~~ :,Good ~AIM~ Free miles 9 tll 9, ~
l\Iarian Martin, the DAILY dlrtttiolis, ~'ll)c. ,C:io;;o;::;-;,:;;;;:::..H=wy,_,,_00=::1''---I·---------9 hrd 39 ""'4 6'Looll. .11~.JZ FREE lVEEJCENiY+ 1
232 West 18th St., New BasilM.t0an' '..ncy~la~!!., "?:',"-,. STOCK CLERK \VAITRESS &: Hostess exper. e Surplus. Bulldlnt lOGood 40 Th0t to~jyt OfC. zf Rcerealional Vehlele w.u:.. •. 1 Y ~ NY 10011 ~I "' l\Jiu us ,.... Apply lh "PC'hOn He~IMA""'"'RIAL ·lOOO't oINE\V llS.. "'Caplfohl 71At .U-0: B ,_,,. o .. ,... . • . i·J'1n ten stoo R .,._ ·•~ l?You 42~ n • ureau. (714) 8•1122 NAME. ADDRESS with II. • • .. ~taurant. """" s. . lt'E)iSl Doors, lumber, pty. l:l.Jcurm.y . .QAll 73S«Ut'il'f ~---..
ZIP, SIZE and STYLE lftltut Croc!htt Book -Read bills of material. 1·1u Bn11to1 S.A. wood. alum sbeeliri1. mold· 1"" .ue. 74Affatll9 __.. Auto Servlce,·P•"'!l!' '.
NUMB£&.. . Learn by plctU!"f'I!! Pat-l"b bo \VAITRESS .over 21, ~egs tna. windOWI. etc. 1$.Moy 4S0n 7S (),lt OfC.1Z 4\ SEE MORE Q uick terns.fl.OO. JV xe!I, record entrys, l8d & ...... Z ••· B ERS SURPLUS t65hoiN '4WiM 76 ...,.. iNi".1' REPLACEMENT 8r ,f.11!(·' F'uhioN and choose ont: COmpk~ Jitstant Gift Book restocking. Exper. helpful. ay eve ""uw. uwi.:s, UILD ~;~,, ~~ . ~r=.... i.1~ illary gas ttmka, Pie~,
ttern tree trom our • more than 100 gttts • can For Afpt. 644-11884, 2«16 So. Main st.15.A. 19,_.. ,.._ ,,_ -. 'whl drives, Vans ft"!'"" -~·mm-r -talog. All f!.00. ,..,1 -iai n •• 1• Warehouseman $2.75 br. Mon thru Sat 0·5 :zoa.·· · • 50-.,... . ~· bonlfs. 89J..8314 . t1ttii~~ -Complete AfJ:hln Book. .u.._.Ulu"l"' nclluvM To Start. Raises w!U come n4: 546-1037 2lTok.t S-IV-' 11 ~ _..._. iilllll J.N~•..-SEWING BOOK ll.00. (714) 4u •••t fe11t. Lite exper. ok. Very C & ~._... .52c.M • l'lWI"'" -~-
•• ~.. H 11117 Rae -• 50e, ' ,..._ nne "'" well organlud, -~'-""':"'* 0 ""' ,.. " $1" -,., -tomorrow. Book ol u Prbe M&U.L TELONIC ~ YoU can aloo ad-Equl,....nl IOI z" .. ~ .. 1"'_&. lk!O ":;=:'~ .. ~. • ~ ..
INSTANT F A S 11 1 ON 50e, vanoe. Ne31 appc......,. will --'-----'-----_._
BOOK _ Jfundredl 0 f Qllllt Boot 1 -16 pattema. INDUSTRIES count. OLYMPUS OM·L fl .8 lens 21 ~ A · 11 PllCll
tashlooftdll.$1-!Oc. ECHO JOB AGENCY calT)'lnJl;cMew/strap,4mo. ~P-, .,=:, :=. "':"
Mute11m QlllU 8ook' I • 315 3rd St., Suite 503 old. $275. 675-f5.10, ~Wltft fOWh to.CM
Dally Pilot Want Ad& hav. !Oc. Laguna Buch flunllngton Beach 53!H439 Any d•• ;, the BEST DAY lo IO.~-• IS\,~ ().:11171.
barplna..-.. QuUt, ror TOO•.>'"t 1J\'lnJ • 1 H ..,. \2:1-\81~ l{4lal:rtl 1••••••••111!"1!1•••••••••~ F.qual Oppor. Emplnycr ave eomcthitts: You wattt to run an ad! OOl'l't del{l.y, , • Hll? Cla.~ified ad~ tto It ~an today 64~. ------,-----,-..:...----------r-----·.:::::.:::=:. _______ I
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' Monday, November 26, 1973
J Recroo1rona1 970 Autos, lmpc>rt.cl 970 utot, MP;! ~a· Vlhlcle1 956 ....-.~=----:.;;.. PORSCHE VOLKSWAGEN FORD • . ,..
"
CO~PACT
TRAILERS '72 YW 11 p e t d tranarnlJston, f'X• 7 PASS. BUS <:<llen1 conc1111on. cmDIM>
'71 PJN't'O Radio, heater, 4
Eully Towod By ""' Car • Jrrom a VW lo a C&d.J.Uac. '.'-l > FALL CLOSl!OUT AT PEUGEOT sri!i\'i. Low Mlle-a<, <532· 11396 THEOOORE .
$3099 ROBINS FORD . ; '
·,
r• $99 NEW PEUGEO'(. O>llla 2J:.':arbor B1~10
DEALER 71 PINTO 1000cc
••• 1 OVER
.,, DEALER COST Complete Sales and ~-Auto. trans. Low mllease,
, • Invoice$ avalh1ble for
1PCCUon.
50 compacts on display. custom lnt. RM. OtJC PACIFIC MOTOR brake" Oean & in A-1
--------I cond. No reuonable otftt IMPORTS retuse.i. 546-4145. By f7t-··-
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BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
'70 CAPRICE COUPE
(P183)
$2399
'71 FORD ¥• TON
PICKUP ·
(22102Kl
$3199
'69 CORVETTE
(C51AUKl
$3999
'73 NOVA COUPE
(200HCU)
$2999
•n MALIBU COUPE
(P58)
$3099
'68 VW CAMPER
(XYG877J
$1999
GROTH
'73 CHEV VAN
BUBBLE TOP
V-8,. unheard-01 value CQBZ·
093).
$3989
GUSTAFSON
Llncoln·MeTCUry
16800 Beach at 'Varner
lfuntinKf.on Beach
842-8844 • (213) 592.5544
"HomC' or the Viking"
'71 DODGE c ontempo
camper yan, raised root,
full equip!, sac for ba.1 due,
$2890. Ph: 645--0856
~h\trh Jhnp1111!i ' t:.r .~ ~· ... ,_,,
·~,.,,.,,[lo,~ "4'1'>40t> -· . ~ . --
'69 FORD l ton, many ex-645-6400 or "6'6-6406
lras. 34,00'.l mitl.'S. \Viii ac-·n SPIDER. Nu paint,
cept trade. 6 4 4 - 6 4 5 7 ; overtiauJed $3800. or best
644-4839. offer. Leaving country .
494-3661.
VOLVO Owner. PEUGEOT /SUBARU PRIVATE Party, Mu at
1557 W. Lincoln Ave., ,74 VOLVO'S Sacrillc" ·n 9 ...,....,
Anaheim 53J-8D) Ford C.ountry Squire Wa&m. HERE. NOW lo mll .. ge , White walls, air, SAAB
* *SAAB MAZDA Best d.eal always, Complete
selection now. Buy or lease
from
Jim Parkinson'•
Immediate Delivery
On All Models
SA VE I ON REMAINING
'13's I: DEMOS 9>eoaJr
1966 Harbor. C.1\1:. 646-9303
luggage rack, loaded $2495.
675--2871 or 640-1250.
'73 FORD LTD
AU xtras, perfect cond. prlv
ply aft 5 P~f or wkend&
546-5877.
'11 LTD Brougham, extra
clean, 4 dr, pwr, air, v .top,
new steel belted tires Sl400.
492-7400
64.S-6406 ;.;.Au;;;.10
.;;;
1''-U';;sod;;;;;;--990-1 . .!IN~.T!!!ER~N~A~T~IO~N:!'!A~L I
_645-6400_" __ ·_. _or____ BUICK GREAT BARGAIN
TOYOTA --------1967 Postal lntematlonal --------BUICK Slcylark '69. Lo mi, Scout. 22.000 miles. xlnt ,72 TOYOTA Nu lleel belt radials, mechanic&! co n d it Io n , l owner. 5.S7-4U4., $500/offer. 842-6829
CELICA
Green \\•ith Black Vinyl Top,
4 Spd, Factory Air Cond,
C861ESGI.
$3199
'69 SKYLARK cpe delux. air. MERCURY pi s. p/b, good cond. $1350
or best offer. 846-3166 1--------1
CADILLAC '69 COUGAR XR7
CADILLACS
DATSUN Aulomatio, air conditioning. SEDAN Orange County's --------1 A~1/F~1 radio, po\\•er SICCl'· '71 DATSUN 1200 ing. powc1· disc brakes. full Largest Selection
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
\11, automatic, A?il/FM
11tereo, air conditioning,
power steerl.ng and d ls c
brakes. Stunning ebony
black exterior \11 /matching
interior and vinyl root. ?i.tust
see. CYNL687). leather interior. lnulitiC· Air Cond Auto Trans Po1vrr 1 All Models & Colors
ulale. (487EYZJ. Steering, Faun Extcrlo,, JU$T ARRIVED EL OORAOO, COUPE SAYE $$$ wHh Brown Leather lnterio,. ,74 TOYOTAS CPE. DE VIU.ES A FINE EXM!PLE OF A FLEET\VOOD BROUGHA?ltS
l WELL KEPT MOTOR CAR New Models . New C.Olors COUPES -SEDANS --IDuit tmi4 (95!)\:FF). SAVE $ ON RE.'1AIN!NG CONVERTS
• ,1 '
$1777
'SI Chevy Van w/'68 Camaro '71 AUDI 100 LS *BUENA eng. Looks great. Must see.
Best oUer. 54$.-2531 or 4 Dr Low ~fileage (21JCFU} Si>7 $116 •
Wl,;-OOW • Bl .. 6 Chevy. $3495
Choice of interiors
~t». lfADU '
W VOLVO
-
TOYOTA $5795 73's & DEMOS Wide selectlon of colors
*BUENA 1\ l {Tapeslry .~full leather}
1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-93113 MUil euliA Faotory a;r conditioning 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 J!':c-;71!f:~t~~i~om;h:/i, *PAR' K -TOYOTA ~l:~~W!1ho:::f: ·~~e~eM!:~'!°~
!: •... ::;:: ~ .. bu~'. *BUENA *PARK 49'2-1610.
AM/FM , $3100. 646-1996. Truck opener more ~646--34~~'1~· ==~==• • JENSEN 1966 Harbor, c.~r. 646-9303 All in imntRculate cond ition '64 MERCURY XLNT ·)
LEASE '71 TOYar A I"!" Nabers Cadillac 548-4326 eves.
m.1les per gallon . • . Only liOO HARBOR .BJ..
'" }:HEVROLET
'65 DODGE VAN. Runs good.
$lkX> 01• best oUer. Call
Roman, 645-6927 *MAIDA Corolla sedan • · • Got 30 AUTI!ORIZED DEALER MUSTANG
$58.34 mo. 36 mos. ope;; COSTA MESA ·•
end lease. S40-9lOO Open SUnday '68 Ford Mustang
BILL" MAXEY -
TOYOTA
6 cylinder stick SR
'73 Cad Sedan DeVille. 645---0636
Full po~·er. Excellent cond. FOR aale '66 Mustang, conv. ' I.
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LOW BLUE .BOOK SALEt
•
SALE PRICES GOOD THRU NOV. 30, 1973
We Have an Outstanding Selection of Extra Clean
Used Cars That We Are Offering The Last Days of
November at Low Kelley Blue B~ok (no additjons or de·
ductions for mileage). We Are Overstocked and Must
Reduce Our Inventory Immediately. Listed Are Some
of These Outstanding Bargains!
'69 MARK Ill
I061HDC·J ,
LO:,~~UE $3225
'69 LINCOLN 4 DOOR
IXSSl671
'69 MAR(j)UIS COUPE
tZKV707)
LOW BLUE
BOOK
'69 COLONY PARK
Wt9on. IZVRl 941
LOW BLUE
BOOK $1950 LO:,~~UE $1475
'68 THUNDERBIRD
Co11pe. IXOJ.4221
LOW BLUE $975 BOOK .
'69 PONTIAC BONNEVIUE
Secltn. ( 5402A)
LOW .BLUE $1050 BOOK .
·MISCELLANEOUS USED CARS
'68 FORD WAGON '72 DODGE WAGON '70 FORD GALAXIE 500
Country Squir•. IXEU7571 2 Door H.rcllop. (I tllQH J
'LOW ILUE lboll-. _$715:. ~1415 . LOW BLUE
· '· BOOK
.
•0toit11t Count~·· ramlll! of Fine C4rl"
'
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' 2626 Harbor Blvd. of Cars
Costa Mesa 540-5630
. . 1 • '
Sh3']l New Car
Trade-ins,
Coming In Every Doy
Ask About-Our-Unique
Used Mercedes L1a11
Plans
House of lmpotts
6862 Afanchester, Buena Parle
tJn the Santa Ana FrwJ
523-7250
NOW OPEN
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
,. ' I L ' -' > >
•'I '.1,·,,,., '.I; \11{
$6400. 49-1-5430. nu top, tires, runs xlnt, $650 ~ :
842-4887 Wed-Sun 8-4.
Mission Viejo Imports
fe.'.l.turing --1~~1U~M~P~H--'67 CAMARO. Radio, beater, · MERCEOES BENZ R automaUc, an-cond., power '72 RUNABOUT. 4 ,.ct, air, steering, sharp, {UNB406) disc brks, cust lnter/exter.
& SALE or Tra~. CJassic '58 .. $1295 · <c·• lo mi's· $2'.KIO. or bst ofr.
FIAT TRJA Rdstr, gd. eng, trans, THEOOORE Pvt Party. 551-2006
Complete Sates & Service tires. Over<lri .. ·e, 30 mpg. ROBINS FORD '72 RUNABOUT, auto, air,
Visit Us Soon At · $325/trade for VVf bug or 2000 Harbor Blvd,, deluxe Int & ext, 9900 ml,
28701 Marguerite Parl<:way van. 64$-3716 anytime. C.osta Mesa 642-0010 $2450, or best otr. 545-0148 .
MiMio o Viejo 495-1700 '70 TRIUlllPH. GT 6, Wood CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH !USE AVERY P\VY. EXIT) dash, lo mileage, new tires,
MB '72 -00 '5 15 000 lmmac corxl. 673·7284 eves. · · ~ .... ' '70 "'--1 N York mi. Full pwr. Maroon. Im· VOLKSWAGEN --,-er ew er, '70 PLYMOUTii FURY Ill mac. Loaded. Pr f pt y Xlnt cond. All extras. ~· for sale very good cond CWaerl646-2673 aft5P~1 --------552--059l/562-9l09 $1400. ~. 4823%
MG '71 YW POPTDP
CAMPER
CONTINENTAL ""ru.,,""',.,,·=NB"'. -=c---==-I
--------70 DUSI'ER, 318 eng, P/S, 'TI J.IARK m $4!ll0. Fully P/B, Jae. air, mags, One
eqUip. Qk blue/white top. owner. 893-2000 aft. 5. $1250 '68 MGB for sale or trade,
xlnt coll{(, best ofter.
67>4334
M.GB
'67 1t[GB. Xlnt cond. Nu
trans, much more. $1300.
or best offer. 49'1-76'13
OPEL
'68 OPEL Kad!'tte Wagon.
Luggilge n ck. Good interior
& tires. Call 66-7506
PORSCHE
'70 PORSCHE 911 T
5 Spd. Low ltfilcage, Sharp.
(607JSN) ·' $5875
*BUENA
*PARK
*MAZDA
7015, 'JQIJO'I"T, BUENA PARK
Coll Mr. Way .. 522-1750
'68 912 LO\V LOW miles,
lmmt1.c.. 28 mpg. Sell or
take economy car ~
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
CALL 642-5678
\
Prt. Pty. 675-7085 aft 6 or best offer. ~===~---· CORYEI fE '70 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill With tent, Extra clean.
(699-Cll).
$2875
*BUENA
--------I far sale, very good cond, $1400. 645-4868, 4823~ Riv-
er, NB '69 CORVETTE '70 FURY Ill 4. dr, vinyl,
Conv, Air Cond, Stereo Tape, power, air, dlx radio, xtras.
10,000 miles on new engine Cl'eam puff. $1675. 496-3784.
and trans, Extra Sharp PONTIAC *PARK (8'1ESZI S3695 .
*MAZDA *BUENA
'68 6 CYLINDER Pontiac
LeMans, 2 door, yellow o
wfblk tnt. xlnt cond. Leav· ;
tng town saoo. days <n4)
832-9363 eves. (714) ~
7015 KNO'IT. BUENA PARK *PARK Coll Mr. Woy .. 522-1750 .
PONTIAC LeMan9 . Ex·
cellent condition. $950. 347
?!Jont~ Vista Ave., CM.
~161 '63 BLUE VW BUI. '70 ~~~P. :::· 1:!& d;.ti~ *MA~DA ·~?ni~,~~.~~~:;i system~ Xlnt cdhd, must' ~ Belts, stereo. Bronz, x1nt
seU. $1400. 6'5-1015 cond, l2850•4M·2978 , . 7015 KNO'IT, BUENA PARK '68 PONTIAC oo. V\V Ghia <.'OupJe, rebuilt Call Mr Wavne522..a7SO LEMANS eng. Good cond, thruout. __ '"'·=-=''==---,._
1675. 64(;.1355 DODGE Phone 831-0Q57
'63 VW c.mper, 72 eng, nu '66 PONTIAC Station Wan.
tires & pAint. Custom bit '72 DODGE Co3t ata. Mg. Top cond. ~. ~
int. runs xlnt. 6#-4148 Xlnt cond., auto. rib, 1o mi. 552-7618
'69 FASTBACK, rad19. while cptd "" S-. SS!-8944. T ·BIRD
walls, 28 MPG, 58,IXXJ n1Uet, '73 DART Sport, Pa.y off
$8501inn. 644-6009 $.~ & _clean pick up for1"·i_o_T--B-l-RD-.-,-d-r _La_nda_u.
'69 VOLKS. eqwty, 557...Q7 new paint, rill pwr, air, tape
autD-rad io, Sl200 FORD dk. xln 't <.'Ond. Sacrlfice
675-5768 llft 4 pm SI~. \\'ort 541-5221, Home
LIKE ne~· '72 VW Bug. '69 Galaxy 500, 4 dr, HT. 552-1588, Jim Stanley.
18,000 miles. $1 9 6 S . 111. p11, pb, air xlnt cond. T·SIR.D 'fi8. 350 Auto. V.
714/586-1753 Orig owner. 979-6748 Top. RadM>, tapt, dcc1c, 'PIS.
'67 V\Y , Splint lO sailboat, '66 FOR!)..-Fairlane GT, Good Alr. xlnt. l owner, prt pty,
$.i50. each. S48-<17ll bl!he cond, Had recen1 valve job, ~ aft 4
Sptn mo. call alt 6. s.i8-83n T·BlRD '62. Mint cortd, ln-
"66 V.\Y. VAN, Great 1hape, FORD '70 LTD Brougham, side-out, $100 d~ Aslume
nr new Urea, Orig owntr 2 dr, fac air, radkJ/lape, $29 mo pyml., ca.u alt 8 pm.
19$-1145 gd llrel, 11300. 83l-:r796 _5'1_8-_561_7_. _____ ,
'67 VW. Xlnt cond, ?ltu."l see '66 FORD Ranch \Vq. gd 1967 T-BIRD. aood cond, I
10 Rppret'lnte. cond, $450. or b!ll oflr $725.
536-3410 5-l8-814t • call A.fl 6 pm, 640-1759 ·I
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Monday, NoV!mber 26", 1973
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Look Ma, No Keel
Al Cassel's revolutionary sloop has been launched Saturday at Boatswain's
Locker in Newport Beach. It has no outside ballast but features twin "bilge
boards"· which can be lowered when sailing to weather and raised when sail·
ing downwina. Lead ballast is poured under the cabfn sole. The Doat~cl1ristened
Terrorist, ·was built of aluminum at Cassel's Sparcraft Corp. in Costa Mesa.
Sailors Win Tie
At Newport High
Newport Harbor High School
sailors wound up in a tie with
Houston, Tex., interscholastic
skippers in the competition
for the November Cup at
Monterey Bay Sunday.
The match race series, pat·
terned after Long Beach
Yacht · Club 's Congressional
Cup, attracted four high
schools, two from Texas, sail-
ing in Shields Class sloops.
Each team sailed against the
other twice.
Newport Harbor H i g h
School's team of Bruce and
Don Ayres , Phil Ramming and
Tony Wattson, scored fow-vic-
tories fo tie the Houston , Tex.
team skippered by Buddy
Brown, the 1973 Sears Cup
winner.
Also tied were Monterey
High School, skippered by
David Sparkbul, and Fort
Worth, Tex., High School,
skippered by Tom · Garden,
with two victories each.
The series was organized
and sponsored by Harvey
Kilpatrick and Robert 11.
Allan Jr ...
Malahini Scores
ln ~1 idget Races
F.d Zimmerman's Malahini Zarky, P!HYC; (2) Grunge
was the winner in the Midget Madren, Charles P r o ct o r ,
Ocean Racing Fleet D division Pewaukee, YC ; (3) Torch 11, of Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club's
Thanksgiving Regatta Sunday. Jim Grubbs, CYC.
In the two Olympic , classes TORNADO - ( 1) Screamirig
Mik z k • Yellow Zonker, Tim Taylor, competing, e a r Y 8 CBYC,· (2) Resurrection, Steve Shantih was the winner in · y II Harvey, CBYC: (3) Sundance, the 470s and ScreaRUng e ow Rick Cram, MYC·, (4 ) Blood Zonker, skippered · by Tim
Taylor, was the winner in the Vessel, Robert Harvey, CBYC.
Tornado catamaran class. THISTLE -Ferrari, John
Final results: Brown, CBYC; (2) Charisma,
CAL-40 _ (I) Flambuoyant, Hank Birner, CBYC.
Barney Flam, LBYC ; (2 ) DAY SAI1ER -(I) No
Cheetah, Dick Pennington, Name, Ralph M i d d 1 e t on ,
KHYC. SFVSC ; (2) Tramp, Roger
MORF -(I) Malahini, Ed Murphy, SFVSC.
Zimmerman, CBYC; (2) El CORONA'IX>·2S -Es Que
Tigre, Russ Hart, CBYC; (3) Si, Syd Corp, CBYC.
Adventure, Roger Rosscamp GEARY-18 -(1) Furious
CBYC. II. Bill Johnson , CBYC; (2)
PHRF·A -(I ) Happy Time, Misty, Chris Hamilton, SBYC;
Ev Cunnings, CBYC; (21 . (3) Something Else, Bill
Interlude, Don Steiner, St Roberts1 CBYC.
BYC; (3) Diune, Chris Selby, MERCURY -Tilt; George
NHYC. Patterson, CBYC.
PHRF-B -II) Dilferent MULTIHULL -(I) Beowulf
DJummer, Ed Jones, St BYC. V, Steve Dashew, cBYC; · (2)
CAL-20 -11) Tension II, 9quarius, AJex Kozloff, CBYC;"
Bill Carmichael, CBYC; (2) (31 Taku, Lee Griswotd;CBYC.
Colleen, Ed Fox, BCYC; (3) SMALL BOAT ARB -(I)
Lo-CaJ.Ri, Dick Spear, CBYC; Home Brew, R. A: Haskjns,
,(4) i\1ai Junge, 'Bob Coswell, CBYC; (2·) Loony Tunes, Ran~
CBYC. dy Smyth and Jay Glasser,
470 - (1) Shantih, Mike f;BYC.
Greene
Triumphs
In Laser ·
Phil Greene Jr. of Newport
Harbor Yacht Club won the
Laser Class in Huntington
HarbOuf Yacht Club's Cold
Turkey Regatta Sunday. It
was the first time the in-
creasingly popular Lasers had
been sailing in Huntington
Harbour.
Another first was t h e
Wildfire class with 8 entries
won by Mark Gaudio of
NHYC.
The regatta drew 60 entries
in five c13sses. Results:
IJIXJ.14A (15) -(I) Kelly
Snow, HHYC; (2) Bruce
Or'sbom, BYC; (3) G iv
Marshall, ABYC; (4) Stu
Robertson, ABYC.
IJ00.14B (13) -(1) Gaston
Ortiz, BYC ; (2) Emanuel
Coster, St BYC; (3) Don Kilt,
PVSA; (4) Glen Selvin. HHYC.
LA,SER (121 -(!) Phil
Greene Jr., NHYC; (2) Rick
Kern, WYC; (3) Steve
Washburn LBYC.
WILDFIM (8) -Ct ) Mark
Gaudio, HHYC; (2) Ron
Holder, BYC; (3) Keith
Kilpatrick, BYC.
SABOT (13 ) -( 1) Steve
Salmond, HHYC; (2) Brad
Wheeler, UiC; (3) Mark
Golison, I.SC; (4) Steve
Youngman, SI BYC.
Calms Halt
Dana Race
Flat calms a1ong the coast
between Oceanside and Dana
Point Sunday abo<ted !he sec-
ood leg of Dana Point Yacht
CJub's Oceanside Argosy.
In the race from Dana Poiilt
"to Oceanside Saturday, Rich
Ritchesen's Jeremiah from
Oiannel Islands Yacht Club
was the Class A winner· and
Monte Yearly's A b"·b y,
Oteanside Yacht Club, was the
Class B•winner. ·.
Dana POin.t to Oceanside:
CLASS A -(I) Jeremiah,
Rich . Ritchesen, CIYC;. (2)
Neureliny, j!ill.Stone, DPYC ;
(3) Good Grier, ·Joe Konars
DPYC; (4) Qomlnator, Kelly
Miller, VYC .
t • 4 • •
Andiamo Takes Angehnan Title ·
Bob S o d a r o ' s Ericson-35
"'Andlamo from Balboa Yacht
Club was announced as the
winner of Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club's Angelman.Series
at th~ club's annual t~by
presentation dinner.
(2) Niki II, John Kinkel, VYC:
(3) Bail Lt<Vie(Don·Du llo<e,
VYC. .
Six you~see.
J\T MERCEDES·BENZ, the quest for
,C1 perfection is ceaseless. Now
the Mercedes·Benz,engineers have
made seven subtle modifications to
the 280 Sedan ... refinements so un·
derstated that six can be recognized
only·with a careful walk·around in-
spection. The sevendt only when
you take a test drive.
No. l ..;wid# 8ZJlt,compltmnUary air scoop NO.z;.lnc..tas bumperpniiiC~On: --
The 280 of today is proof that at
Mercedes-Benz, change is inspired not
by the whims of fashion, but by the
lhrust of engineering progress.
Start at the.front. The familiar Mer-
cedes-Benz grille is still there. But it's
lower and wider now and is corilple-
mentcd by a· louvered air intake below iL
Why the changes? Simply to take advan·
tage of the aerodynamic body engineer·
ing lessons taught by the 450 Series
sedans-and to provide extra cooling
€apability to deal with the extra heat
generated by today's anti-pollution en·
gines. New bumpers ·wrap around the
front end to offer greater protection than
ev'er before.
Swept by the wind
If y_ou've walked past the front doors,
three of the changes have escaped you.
That oversized outside rear mirror is
one~ Minutely adjustable from inside
flc'&'h~~jif'>1;W",__,Y.,,.......,. ,.,,~~ '. ''"-""""~-""f<!'ll W --
IM'"" . -.· ,,.. ""'' ' !" ". •
f; '•t ~ ... ' I .
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No. J-new i111emJJllyadj'u.stabU mi"or
'No. 4-,nort vi5ibility than ewr
No. 5-ae rodynamicwindOfJI molding.
0the car, i(s rubber edged and has polar·
ized glass to combat glare.
The front vent windows have been
eliminated. Unobstructed vision is
greater than ever and thieves no longer
have a convenient niche for their pry bars.
AroUnd the perimeter. of the side
windows there is a new molding. It may
look like decoration, but it's actually a
safety device. ·
Try a 280 in the rain. You' II be
amazed at how clear the glass area re-
mains. The rubber-edged molding
catches water and grime as they come
off the windshield-before they have a
chance to foul the side glass. The mold-
ing_ also puts the airstre~ to WQrk,
guiding it across the windows t~ fwther
sweep them clean. The rear window is
cleared bY the same principles. ·
Aerodynamic taillights
.A joy to maneuver
The 280 weighs well over one thousand'.
pounds less than the domestic-sedans_
-No. 6-stlf-clttu1ing l'ear lights.
that try to compete with it. Combine this
reasonable weight with its sensible size
and lively performance and you get a
The sixth change is in the taillights. sedan that is as enjoyable to drive as i.t
The curious ribbed design uses airflow is to look at. It maneuvers almost like a
to keep the lights free of.·debris-and-sports.car.-
TlitMtrccdts-Btnz 280: a Jtd@ with almost 'i.t10rts t'<1r lwnJling.
grime. The next time you'rC driving in
foul weather think how important visi·
bility of your rear lights is to the driver
behind you'.
Nwnber7-1be one you can feel
The seventh change is the transmission.
And wlllle it still has four speeds 'for-
ward, and can be-srurceamanuallYif you
choose, a torque convener has 'replaced
the lluid'coupting. .
How can you tell? The dr:ivability of
this 280 has been improved. Torque is
multiplied when needed to make this
Mercedes-Benz feel smoother and more
enjoyable 'than ever.
That's the lot. Not a faddish.or"an·
nualmodcl year' gimmick insight.And
the things we l?l~dn't improve on ar.c
still there in force. ·
{s th.e 280 for you?
Buy a new iso and.you cle<irly fly in me·
face «Sf tlle uends set-by-domestic "tux.-·
ury" ~la$s cars. The judgment is yours.
But if you are intcrestcd,call us to arrange
a test drive. It could be the best invCst-
mentyou !}ave made in quite some time.
r7":.s.::;;;1.;-;:-i:~----:-i I 1301 9"11 Strwt P.O. lox 2640 I
1 "".,... -·· c.111. "'" I I Please scn<t me your full-rolorlxochwc I I of 1he M~rccdcs-Denz motor cars. I
I N• I I :'H' I
I s.... Zip I
~~eaes-Bem@
.
28701 Marguerite Parkway, Mission Viejo, Calif. 92675 Phone: 714·495·170CI Mission Viejo Imports
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FRGM Fash Ion I s l~nd
Newpo1-t Beach S:rE .REO~SOUN0S OF THE HARBOR
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San. Clemente •
Today's Final
C,api~tr.~no EDITI ON N.Y. Stocks
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VOL. 66, NO. 330, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE cpUNT'(', CAUFORNl_A .MON DAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1973 TEN CENTS
.
-Coast-Stations -Fumhig-ffyer ·Sunday Gas Ba~
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
· Cf ttie Diiiy rlltt Stiff
Service station operators along the ·
Orange Coast today reacted unfavorably
to President Nixon's Sunday gasoline
sales ban because th~y _believe it will
hurt busineM. ·
The sale ban, to take effect after
oongression81 approval, would stop
service stations from dispensing gasoline
between 9 p.m. Saturday and 12:01 a.m.
Monday to discourage loog-distance driv.
Move Made
To Exclude
Two Tapes
BULLETIN
-WASHINGTON .l~!'L::-The White
House !Ued with U.S. District Jiiifge
Jolm J, Slrlca today a li-pag1> aaafysls
and tndei: for the subpoenaed Watergate
tape recordings and otber m1terlal1 and
claimed that two of .the taPes should
be. withheld from the Watergate grand
jury ta entirety.
WASHINGTON (AP)~..P.residenLNix·
on's personal secretary, Rose Mary
Woods, testified today that she listened
only to one part of a Watergate-related
tape recording -that the White House
says ls missing an 18-m'inute segment.
Duriilg Miss Woods' testimony, U.S.
District Judge John J. Sirica said that
~naed White House tape recordings
were to 6e tumea-overto--him · later
in the-day. He gave no details of the
transfer of the controversial tapes, long
80UJlht by federal prosecutors.
l\llss . Woods testified that sh"
traoacribed lbe taped portioQ of l Jµne
20, 1172 convetiall0n that· -the Pusidait
had with ..Ude John D. Ehrlichman in
bis old Eiecutive Office Building office. .
· The red-haired secretary said she then
also took down a port.ion when H. R.
Haldeman first entered the office and
all three men were speaking. She said
she listened to the tape only long eoougb
to be certain Ehrlichman left the room .
The Whlte House says 18 minutes
of Nixon's .June 20 conversation with
former chief of stall Haldeman-is
obliterated by an audible tone and no
convenation' can be heard.
There were published reports over the
weekend that Miss Woods woljld testify
chat she ~ccidentally erased the 18
minutes but questioning bad not pro-
gressed to that point in a one-hour
11¥>ming session.
Miss Woods testified that last week
abe twice listened to a duplicate of
the June '1t tape and said "we. listened
to what bas been called a lot of other
names -a mistake."
She offered to explain but was in-
·terrupted by Watergate prosecution folce
Jawyeo Jill Volner, who was attempting
to establish what portions of the tape
Miss Woods heard. Miss Woods, President Nix 01n ' s
(See TAPf:S, Page IJ .
ing. It is estimated that the-· measure
YJill save 50,000 barrels of gasoline per day.--... -------~-·"-
"As fai' as I'm concembi this is
tha 'l))oet childish and Idiotic thing I
ever heard of,,, fumed l\Ob Smith, of
Smilti'.s ARCO, corner Bristol and Baker
Street, Costa Mesa.
"All this is going to do is insure
that the stores will be sold out of
three and four gallon gas cans this
weekend. It wOn't stop· any driVing on
~ \ .....
Sundays. The peo'ple will . just carry
their cans wi~therbi" 1
'Smith, -wno aJtrat'ted nationwide at•
tentioii recently when be "captured"
a gas delivery truck in protest over
wholesale Price lncri!ases, says be plans
to remain open th1J SUnday.
"Why? Because I've got .gas to sell.
I've already got the government telling
me how much I can sell it for and
the oil companies telling· ni"e · how much
I'm going to get. l'rh not going to
give a.way fO to 5b bucks out of my
pocket." . •
Smitb;iruisll Ilia! the gaSOline shortage.
was manufactured and that with the
ootbreak of lbe l\lideast War the oil
companies now find that they have to
maintain-the posture .. of In even~greater
shortige. '.!They can•t say that we can
meet ~ oil requirements of the country
now af.ter all." Smith said. "They've
created a monster."
For that reason Smith will not volq.n·
tarUy stop seJling gasoline. "And as
soon as I'm forced to under the new
law,~I'm going to send President Nixon
a formal bill for each Sunday that
I haven't been able to sell my gas,"
he said. Phil Evans, chairman of the Q)sta
Mesa Service Station and Garage Owners
Committee and operator of a Phillips
66 station across the street, disagrees
with Smith. He believes the shortage
is real
"I've been closing Sundays anyho\V
ever since 1 couldn't get as much gus
as I wanted," he explained. '-'l"'rtrgeared
to a seven day week bul I've had
to scale things down. The Sunday sales
ban won't affect me that much, but
it will hurt a lot of other service stations.
"Personally I believe they should ra-
tion gasoline. That's the ultimate solu·
tion. It's the only fair way to spread
(See OPPOSE, Page Z)
Power .Plant Foe Found
"
Dead; Victim of Suicide
ur1 T ... ,...,.
-KNIFE!f IN PRISON
Albe rt H. DeS.lvo
'Strangler'
Pound-S-Jain
$20,000 Theft
Burglars Strike
Caspers' Home
By AR'111UJ\ I\. VINSEL Of ... .,..., , .... ...,,
-~-·----. ----
. In ·Prison · ) --A series ot •l"l<i'l' lilooe •calll Ill
" the ,B.amqpa· (ancli ol Oiange County . . ... . .
Board el S~iaoro Chairman Ronald r.. CapRn::.\oGay'Wis ~a clue
to 1~ .. ~ 1'hailigtvtng hQllday ~·ol.hil~-~--.. olili •Of ~ ~plained Wis lnvolVecl
someone a~ miinlcklnc a small
child who· Aid~ 111 wuv jow1•
"
W ALPoLE. Mass. (AP) -Albert
Desalvo, who confessed to being the
"Boston Strangler" of . the 1960s, was
found stabbed to death · in his prison
cell today, correCtloos officials reported.
Although DeSalvo confessed to killing
13 women in the Boston area between
1962 and 1964, be later retracted the
confession and was never convicted of
any of the 13 deaths.
The former .handyman was serving
a life lenn at the maximum security
prison for assau1ts on four other women.
A priao~esman· sakl. DeSaJvo's body w d about 7 a.m. in a
cell in the p · 's· hospit~ section where
DeSalvo worked as an orderly. .
DeSalvo, 42, died of multiple stab
wounds in the chest. No. weapon was
found and there were no suspects, the
s~ke_sman said.
During DeSalvo's assault trial In
Jaouary 1967, Jiis lawyer, F. Lee Bailey,
attempted to get the confession to the
stranglings entered into evidence. He
'vas able only to present such testimony
from psychiatrists· whom DeSalvo told
he was the strangler., _
DeSalvo was convicted of burglary,
armed robbery and sexual molestation.
State authorities have long maintained
they did not have evidence to proS«Ule
anyone for the stranglings.
The case of the "Boston ~strangler "
caused a worldwide sensation ... The vie--
Police' Chiefs
Home Burgle£l
Westminster Police Chief Walter
T. Scott should have read Dick
Tracy's CrimestQppers Textbook
item in the , SU.clay fmmy papers
before Jaaylng his C-Osta Mesa
~.
A burglar entered his . Melia
Verde residence through an unlock·
ed bedroom win<i9w and made off
wtth 1100 ili loot, Jll()S(ly cash and
coins, plus a daughter's Estancia
High School student body Caril.
He also stole the master key
to all door locks in the Westminster
Police Station.
San Clementean
Douses Blaze
In Home .Kitche.n
The caapers taniuy murnecl lo their
home at 119 Via -Florence m Lido Iale
aboUt ~:II p.m. SWlday &rid immediately
s~.something was wrong When they
fbuqd a side door ajar.
Invest1gat0rs Said tOdiy T team Of
highly professional thieves -was probably
involyed in looting the residence of
dozens of·items.
"They did a real .job," .said Newport~
Beach Police Detective Pa t r i ck
O'SUUivan, as he continued with his
investigation today.
Stolen iteins -mostly fairly small
and easily carried :._ incloded ·all the
.couple's personal jewelr)', chin a ,
silverware and antique Items, such as
table lamps.
The burg1ats who pried open a sliding
glUs dOor· Opening onto·-tbe -patio after
seating a ga'W faclng the-street appeared
to select the loot with taste and consid-
eration of value.
Detective O'Sullivan said the pro-
fessional nature of the job indicates
the strange calls to the· Caspers ranch
in San Diego County, where the family
spent the holidays, were probably con-
nected.
Invcstigators ... Uteorize the calls were
placed to ilSSure that the family, in·
(See BURGLARY, Page!)
Indian Store
Loses $11,567
Burglars who entered the store
via the skylight took nearly $12,000
worth of rare American Indian
jewelry , during the weekend from
a San Juan Capistrano store,
Orange County Sheriff's officers
said.
Deputies called to Hiatt Indian
Crafts, .31808 camtno .capistrano,
by a silent alarm said intruders
-rorced"open-sbowcases ih the store
and fled with jewelry valued at
111,567. .
' .
8ecurity Guard
Accidentally Shot
By-Own Weapon
A 49-year~ld security guard for a
San· Clemente apartment complex ac·
cidentally shot himself in the stoniach
over the weeekend when-a pistol fell
from his hands and fired. ·
Police received a call from the man,
Samuel Elton Urban of 2701 Del
Comercio, late Saturday.
Urban reportedly told ' police to send
an ambulance "because I'm bleeding
to death."
Firemen and ~ce responding to the
call from Urban lying on the ground,
ble~ng from an abdominal wound.
The guard said. he had dropped a
.22-caliber magTI:um derringer and the
weapon went oil. ·
The guard wc:.s taken to San Clemente
General Hospital where the slug , was
removed. _ _
Nurses there said Urban was "doing
very well" ·today.
Sharpe, 42~
Battled
For GUARD
Bruce Sharpe, the 42-year-old lawyer
who led the battles .. against plans to
build two new~San---Onofre-nuclear-mc-'
tors was found dead in his car today,
the victim of suicide .
Sharpe, a prominent lawyer in the
Santa Barbara and Lompoc areas, wu:
found slnmped over the steering wbe<f
of his car parted along IDghway 166
near Santa Maria. He had been missing
since last Thursday, authorities said.
Sharpe officially represented Groups
United Against Radiation D a n g e r s
(GUARD) based in San Clemente and·
served as legal counsel for that group
and others deemed fonnal intervenors
in the drawn~t · batt-ifs against the
plant proposals.
Officers in charge of the case in
Centra1 California said that they have
learned the lanky, soft-spoken lawyer
had been despondent over recent prob-
lems in his work arid had had a history
of thwarted suicide attempts.
Officers said death came as a result
of carbon monoxide poisoning. Sharpe
had attacl!_ed one . end of ~ gard~_ hose_
to the exhaust pipe 31).d stuck the other
t,brough a window of the car. No nQte-
was found.
His work for GUARD and· the
California Ocean Shoreline Preservation
Conference in the nuclear reactor
disputes lasted for years and involved
months of research and ptesentations
before review boards assembled by the
U.S. Atomic Energy Commission.
As it turned out, the lawyer's efforts
and those of the groups he represented
were in vain.
Edith · Roberts ,,
:succumbs at 82
• uins ranged in age from 19 to 75. Most
had been associated with-· health care,
either a~ nurses, hospital volunteers,
workers in physicians• offices, or friends
of nurses and doctors.· All lived witpin
A . San Clemente ma'O. succeeded in
putting ~t a potentially dangerous fire
in his ~hen over.1_ the weekend -
a blaze caused when his toaster ac--
cidentally was turned on.
·Firemen said their mopup serv\ces
were needed nonetheless at the home
of.earl 4)mb of IS3Avenida Co ta shortly
after noon. Setu'118y,,
Stabbing Suspect Suffers . Burgl~, llit-roo Try
The AEC overruled an objections to
the reactor proposal and granted liCenses
to two utility firms earlier this fall
to allow construction of the new reactors.
-"~--.1· •
Double Suicide?
Miss Edith Blandie Roberts, a 33-year
resident of San Clemente, died .Sunday
at a capistrano Beach co.nvalescent
ltospital. She was 82. ·
Miss Roberts , who lived at 230 Avenida
Miramar, leaves two nephews, James
Ross of Minneapolis and Kenneth Ross
of St. Petersburg, Fla:; five ni~ces,
Phvllis .Gardner. Marjorie Judkins,
Vaicrie Roberts ·and M8tion Skornica,
all of the Great Lakes area, and s~~ley
Lostrom of St. Peter!burg. ·
Visitation is sCllifdllled >tor .Tue.tta:y
evening at Lesneski Mortuary with
services at 11:30 a.m. Wednesday i;n
Lesneski Chapel., I Private burial will follow at Melrose
Abbey Mausoleum in Anaheim.
'Your Wish
' -Our -Com man d' ,
.
~ta MesaJ,lOlice ·were surprised
at the candor of a San Clemente
man who they stopped for driving
the wrong way in a one-w y a~y
SUnday..-
"I'm .dnmk,'1 the mot o I' is t
declared.• "You caught me. Take
me away.••
Police took him away,
a 2&-mile radius of BOSton. .
The bigftSt-.maqbunt in Massachusetts'!
history wU ·touched off Feb. 24, 1967
when DeSalV9 'and two inmates escaped
from Bridgewater State Hospital a month
(See 'STRANGLER, Page !I
They said 11,500 in damage was done
to the kitchen of the .$60,000 house when
someooe placed a • bagful of groceries
on Ji drainboNd and accidentally
deplessed.the ~switch. ·
Firemen said Lamb reported a oound
San Juan Eater')' of igniUop coming from the kitchen and _ ran in to find the sink ar.ea ablaze.
• He u$ed 'Water from the tap to extinguish
L B the flames. · ose~ ooty ·Dainage amounted to 11,000 worth of _ · · .. " tdl<;heil contents and l500 to tho .struc-
T T -' G _, ~ ·-~. firemen said. ·-. o .LUUC unn1an . ~ . . . .
A gunmall who apparently was
familiar with the establishment's bank· 'Plant Pilferer'-
ing habits held up the manager of -a •
The defendant in a court action •
brought about by a stabbing at a San
Clemente party several weeks ago hfls
been burglarized and rwt down by
unknown assailants in recent days.
San Clemente police today are in·
vestigating both incidents in \\'hich Jerry
Dewayne Ra<fdock was the victim.
In the latest case llad®ck, ~ .... wa~
PRICE OF SEED_
' SELL~ BIR'/), CAGE ~f:htJ~~be~~u~th~U:,~ Strikes-Again .
with the day's receipts, Orange County ·A bul'-ru' . the "-•• j• •• .. An ad Joiorth lea than: a pack of Sherill'•' officers said. ., .. e 10 v•~· .. Cilim., bird eeed Is . all• lj took to sell two • Depuljes said, t.,iay they ·have not Sberllf's-omce became a Uttle '\hi<ker blrdi.a¢ •.bi~ge. l!ere'• the ad:
'
yet as<!l'lalned-' tl!'> 11111 totaI of, cub. f'd~ the .... ke1'hyltb a theftrOportecl .
and checks coritainecl in ihe canvas bag iii~ San Juatl-Capistrano .area. • · • TAI,L gold btn!cage. (2)
taken from employe James Edward Hen· The lile is labeled "Jl!ltled plao! ~0 par(P=-r:re, all . ~erson, 319 Santa Barbafa .. Ave.., San plllerer.11 And ,the foliage footpad CMJ or ...-· · •
Clemente. • . ttaues to baiile lawmen bf, seizing a •. The advertiser told her Daily Pilot
OOJcers aid !Thnderson was on ·his numbj!r of !plants from· !lit patio of Ad-visor sha· sold every bird "the nrst
way from the C<iktay leitcben restaurant, ·a·hoi!l• at Jiii! Woodlai«I Court, San daY the ad ll!fl<"red." Action doesn't
3t791 . C.mlno Caplslra!IO to • nearby J~. • • ,, have to have .an expensive price ·tag.
bank about II p.m. when he was halted 'llls meGlod wu the "'"!. .u ll90f!, spend aoine '!blhl oe'ed" -If. nett
at guµpomt and 'oi:<ecl .to hand over COl\ll'l)ented an lnv.,clptor. 1" "alked • time you have soiiiething to tell. Dial
the bag. -• through. an unlocltecl pit, picked up the direct llne to results Phone the
lfenderson has provided lnvliltlplors an Ille pllnta he could Jay his hands Dt.iiy Pilot A~ MUm '
with a 11escrlptlon of the masked bandtt. 0. lid lalt. '' '
• \ ' .
nm down by a ]jjt·run driver near his
home at 129 San Fernando Sunday af·
ternoon and suffered a compound frac·
ture of a leg as well as cuts and
bruises. t
The former Marine late last week
alsc> was vcitimized by bttrglars who
broke into the residence and made off
with about• in-stereo·equipment.-
In &_lnday's incident ~lice were given
a description of a gray and black c8r
-driven by· a·man known only as "Steve".
Haddock was taken to San Clemente
General Hospital for treatment of the
injuries suffered in the 12:30 p.m. in·
cident.
'The hlt'nm Victim bas been ordered
to stand . trial in SOuth •Orange County
Municipal Court on charges of assault
stemmin8: from'1he stabbing at a party
Jn his residence Qct. 10.
Haddock was airefted by police after
someone 'calfed1 to report the altercation.
camp Pendleton Marine Thomas Cooper,
118, wl.1 stabbed-twtce-wlth a ~six·inch ·
ltnile and rtqulred boopllalization. 1 Cooper later recovtred. Haddock w11s
booked initially on felony assault
charges. Later they were redueed to.-
misdemeanor a~ult.
He bu been free on bail since the incident.. .
• ,,
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The bodies
of a 57-year-okl ex-oonvict and his 22·
year-old girlfriend were found Sunday
in a Mission Distlict hotel, and police
said it was a double suicide.
Oraage Coast
Weather _ _,,,> ~
It'll be sunny and cool Tuesday,
accordiDg to the weather service,
with beach temperatures in the
upper 50s rising to the mid 60s
inland. Overnight lows in the 40s. . -·--
INSIDE TODAY
Homose$'uals Ji ave com·
plained about tlieir portraual
in movies and on television Mtd
it appeart. likei11 that, gays wiU Pe depicted differe~itly i11 the
future. See story Page 7 •
•
• •
• • •
' •
•
-_, ,
News Leak
City Cops Vote
'No Confidence'
Attributed
'
To Jaworski
Dissident Anaheim policemen have
unveiled their latest tactic designed to
force the city to negotiate for hig her
pay -a \'Ole of "no confidence" in
their chief.
Stephen Solomon, attorney ror the
Anaheim Police Association, said 111
• of the organitation's 278 members voted
at a rally Nov. 6 against Chief David
Michel.
Solomon said 25 of those at the rally
in Pearson Park supported the chief
and two abstained from voting.
'Ibe poll results were released by the
, APA as part of a continuing campaign
' by officers In Anaheim to make the
city reconsider its pay and contract
offers.
One tactic -a slowdown on ticket
•· wiiting for moving violations -was
in operation .through last-week but an
. APA spokesman aaid today it has been
•,canceled because some manber officers
• did not want to participate. ·
A aecond tactic -termed the "super
. cop" approach -was planned but never
put into operation. lt caned for an
, , increase in driver citations for even
.. the m01t minor violations.
Officers also picketed city hall for
a .week in an effort-to bring their
-grievances w tho Jlllblic eye.
' ~Donahl NiX(Jn
;:May T~stify
" ~On Wiretaps
; : BEVERLY HILLS (AP) -F. Donald
Nixon or Newport Beach, brother of
-the President, may be called w testily
1 lo federal court about "8ecret Service " . ,1 wrretaps.
,; An attorney for a Conner aide to
" billionaire Howard Hughes disclosed Sun-
i day that he may call the President's
. brother in the Las Vegas case.
Testimony apparently would cen ter on
:.:-the fact that President Nixon had his
-. brOtber's Newport Beach· home tapped
·. with his brother's knowledge.
·' Donald Nixon was not immediately
available for comment today.
The Las Vegas case Involves John
. Meler, the fonner• Hughes aide, who
. it under ihdlctment on federal inp>me
: 'tu. evasion charges. Meler, who lives
• 'Jn Britl."1 Columbia, ~ded innocent
:•to tho .charges and ts ·~heduled w go
on trial Jan. 7, his attorneys said.
HWe haven't formulated our strategy
'yet, but it's possible we might · call
Donald Nixon to testify in Las Vegas.
'primarily on the question o f
Sll"Yeillance," attorney Robert Wyshak
said in a telephone interview. "I couldnt'
Aid ma telephone interview. "I couldn't
Meier bas contended the tax charges
are politically motivated and based on
. evidence illegally obtained during taps _
.... ot telephone conversations he had with
the President'• younger brother.
.. 'Jbe President r.ecently acknowledged
that h1a: brother's Newport Beach phone .. wU tapped by the Secret Servjce for
; . uaecurity reU01JS" and that-Donald Nix-
on wu aware of the measure and a~
: proved of It.
'"Die auneillance ln~olved not what
be was doing," ?resident Nixon said.
' -"~ surveillance involved what others
·who were frying to get to him, perhaps
to use improper influence and so forth,
mlghi be doing and particularly anybody
who might be In a foreign cowitry.''
It was reported over the weekend
that Meier was questioned recently by
Senate Wat~te investigators a~t his
relationship 'with Donald Nixon and cash
~ cootribulions made on Hughes' behalf
to the President's emissaries.
'." • Meier was fired by the Hughes
} organization in 1969. It was reported
' that the action was taken because he
"
disregarded a White Hoose command
that he disassociate himself from Donald
Nixon.
DAILY PILOT
TIM°''"" c .. 11 DAILY l"ILOT, wllll Wll!(ll
Js_mrnbh'l.cl lllt Nt¥n•Pr .. 1, II po,ibll"*I by
,-" ft'lt' Ort"llt Cot1! Pullll~t119 Cornptny, ~
ntl edllfofl1 t fl PU1>li111«1, Mondty lhl'OUQll
l'r .. y, IOI' Coltt Mt'11, NIWPOf'I &ffcfl,
Hwtttnri'Orl 8t~llJFo..nr.in Vtlll'y, 1..-vunt ~ lrvlne/SMl!ltto.<k 1nd "" C~!tJ
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edltlall '1 111\1111"'-' Sih1rd1y1 11'111 "'""YI.
Tiit citlltc ... I Mlftl'llnt pllnt 11 ti UD Wet!
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•ob1tt H. Wt.d
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Ch1rlt1 H. t.." •ldi1rtl '· Nill
Alll1Ht11I ~ t•lfen
... Cle 1111 0.....
JOS Ntrth ll C11111IN .,,1, tJ:672 --C..lt .... I J:a V:,:.'J' SlttM
.....,.,i ~: -9wltwt• HIN"""" htdl: 11'n •ltd! hulri1N
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, ........ 1n4t ·'42.(J21 ca..Hki• .... ..., , ... 2.1111
S. C......_ Al D1,a1111•11 , • ..,.... .. tJ-4421
~llM. ltn, ~ C.11 ~"""" c-.-,, ,.. .... ....... """"' ...... · edi19rltl --911 Mw9lftltMwri11 ,_.
""' .. ... t • wltW ....... --"""'"" ·~--· l«W ............. II Ctttt Mttf, c......... ...... "" ... Clrritr ... __., ...... U.IJ "*""""• ......,. • t1w 1'$ llM rlltf!llWr.
Solomon said the APA decided to
disclose its "no confidence" vote when
It learned that Chief Mich el had askt.>d
for City Council permission to fire four
APA members.
Michel has assailed the tactics ~ed
by the APA, claiming they have hurt
the image of the police department In
the eyes of the public.
Councilmen voted last week that pay
negotiations had proceeded in good faith
for three monttu and the city's ftnal
offer is fair and equitable.
The city's offer calls for some Im-
provements in fringe benefits, a 6.75
percent pay faise the first year and
a six percent raise the second year
on a two-year contract.
Police negotiators want e v e n
more benefit Improvements than the city
has offered, a onetyear contract and
seven percent raises each of the next
two years. . Steppitag Out
WASHINGTON (AP) -The White
House today accused the ofrice of special
Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski of
responsibility for what It termed l1No
recent new .1eak1, one labeled as s!Jlg-
gering.
It was lhe first open criticis m by
the White House of Jaworsk.i 's operation
since he took over the office from which
Archibald Cox was fired Oct 20.
-One-of tho published items cited by
\Vhite House Deputy Press Secretary
Gerald L. Warren was a report in this
week's issue of Time magazine that
Jaworski's office Is investigating a
$100 000 contribution to the l!r72 Nixon
cam'paign by the Seaferers lnternatiooal
Union. Nixon addressed the union's cont
vention today. (story Page J)
City officials· cl'aim that to reopen
pay negotiations with th e olficers would
be unfair to other city employe groups
which have already come to terms.
Solomon said efforts by mediator Tom
McCarthy of the State Conciliation
Service have failed to get any results
so far. r..1cCarthy was called into the
dispute last week in an effort to bring
the two sides to some kind of agreement.
Explorer Scouts march to graduation following
completion of law enforcement training academy
conducted during the long Thanksgiving weekend
at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. About 150 Ex-
plorer ·Scouts from 22 law enforcement Explorer
po sts throughout the county participated in the
academy. Many of the parti~ipants were girls.
The second item cited by Warren
was a column, appearing in many
newspapers today, in which Rowland
Evans and Robert Novak reported that
White ,H~e lawyers pleaded in vain
last week with Jaworski to agree to
a delay in disclosing that an IS-minute
-segment of a taped presidential con-
versation apparently had b e e n
Solomon says ~1cCartl\y met with city
personnel officials but failed to S\V<\Y
the city1s stand against continued
negotiations.
The APA says its "no confidence vote"
is not the last card up its sleeve.
Solomon said the next step is to wage
a campaign that will inform the public
of the dispute through newspaper ads
and door-to-door explanations of the
issues. ·
He said the APA will not take a
strike vote unless .tfle city takes retalia-
tory action against members of the
group.
Camp· Pendleton
CO P.oggemeyer
Gives Up Reins
Maj. Gen. Herman Po~ll!"emeyer Jr.,
whose career as commander of Camp
Pendleton w~s hh~hliehted by his
i?reeungs tG the ftrst of the retumlng
Vietnam prisoners of war. turned his
command over lo a new man today.
The former head of the nation's largest
military base will take on new duties
as commander ol the Marin e f0rces
in the Pac ific, leaving control of the
40,000·man base to Brig. Gen. Robert
L. Nichols.
Announcetnent of the change was made
several weeks ago. but t o d a y ' s
ceremonies at the base made the transi-
tion official .
On his departure Gen. Poggemeyer
was hailed by civic groups in cities
surrounding the base as "a deeply in-
volved officer" and by spokesmen for
the base as a man who likened hia
duties to that of a. mayor of a large
city.
The base's official nemipaper praised
Gen. Poggemeyer for his efforts in drug-
abuse education and easing racial
tensions.
•Not That Bad!}
Amputee, B;Tells Kennedy Boy
PARADISE (AP) -An 8-year-old boy with an artificial leg has
written to Edward Kennedy Jr., who recently lost most of his right
leg, telling him having an artificial leg isrft that bad. . .
Shannon Hanley, a resident of this small Northern California
town, told Kennedy, who had to have the operation one week ago
because of bone cancer, that he had his operation for the same rea~
son Nov. I , 1972.
"When.J first got my artificial leg last February, I didn't think
I would be able to do many things. But I found out I can do just
about anything I want to do," Hanley wrote the 12·year-old son of
Sen. Edward Kennedy, (D-Mass.). .
Hanley said that since his operation he has learned to ·swim and
dive. He added he can ride a minibike and he also plays touch foot-
ball.
The boy asked Kennedy to write him once he feels better •
Energy Proposal
Highlights 'fold
By President
WASIDNGTON (AP) -Here at a
glance, are the Mghllghts of actions
announced or proposed SUDday by Presi-
dent Nixon to cOpe with the nation's
energy crisis.
HOME HEATING OlL -Home
heating oil will be rationed beginning
Jan. 1. Deliveries to .residences wlll
be cut 15 percent, to commercial
establishments 25 percent and to hr
dustries 10 percent.
FromPqel
OPPOSE ...
the shortage around." ·· ·· ·
Evans said Costa Mesa service station
dealers are schech*d to -meet -Thtl?Sday
evening to discuss whether to follow
President Nixon's suggestion . to volun·
tarily begin the Sunday sl'lutdown this
weekend.
But a third service staton leader is
opoosed to the idea of rationing.
'1The black marketeer! "'are ready to
set up their (coupon) presses," insisted
NIXON DRUMS UP SUPPORT
FOR PROGRAM-Story, Ptge 3
PRESIDENT OUTLINES
FUEL SAVING PLAN. Ptgt 10
NIXON'S ENERGY PLAN DRAWS
MIXED REACTIONS. Ptge 5
William H. Bay, operator of Mission
Viejo Mobil Service and a director of
thHntemaUonal Service Stat!_on Dealers
Association.
"I think the only way to handle this
Is through mandatory federal allocations
to each service station. They should
allocate it equitably, possibly on th e
amount of gas sold last year," he said.
From Pagel'.
"' STRANGLER. • •
after DeSalvo's assault trial. c .
DeSalvo, who had been at the hospll81
awaiting an appeal, wu captured 1 ~i
days later in a Lynn, Mass., clothing
store, where he asked to use the
telephone. DeSalvo was at tho hospital before
the trial, undergoing observation for an
alleged sexual moleslaUon offense, when
his eel Ima le, Geoll!e Ka tar, persuaded
Bailey to represent DeSalvo.
Balley: at first resisted but agi:eed
to do tt' ooly a day before detectives
arrived at the ., hospital to question
DeSalvo about the stranglings.
Bailey tape-recorded DeSalvo's ·story
under an 8greement with the state at-
torney general's office that it could not
be used agaimt him. Detectives were
said to have found that most of what
he said tallied with the evidence or
the_ crimel...
DeSalvo also claimed lo be-Uie "Green
lfian" known ,to New England law en-
fon:9tent officials as the man respo~i
blt 1• an estlmated !Oil to 1,000 rapes
and other aemal oUenaes over several
• years. ' ' No one waa ever proseaned as· the
"Green Man." who wu called .. that
beca\Jle ol the repairman's outfit the
victims said he wore in gaining entiance
to their homes tmder the ruse of being
sent to fix something.
Before DeSalvo repudiated his con-
fession In 1968, he maintained he
desperately wanted psychiatric treat-
ment.
After DeSalvo's conviction, Bailey
commented. "Massachusetts has just
burned another witch."
Ted Kennedy Ahead
PRINCETON, N.J. (AP ) -,. The Gallup
Poll says its latest survey of Democrats
puts Sen. Edward ~i. Kennedy or
Massachuse tts far ahead of other possi-
ble contenders for the party's 1976
presidential nomination. The poll indi-
cated that Alabama Gov. George C.
Wallace and Sen. Edmund S. Muskie
of Maine were the next leading choices,
though far behind Kennedy.
obliterated.
Warren, reminded that the White
House accused Cox of a breach of ethics
after he acknowledged he inadvertently
was the source of a published report
linking P r e s i d e n I Nixon with
AdministraUon handling of an antitrust
case agiliist m , was -askl'd of Jaworski
was guilty of violat ing ethical standards.
\Varren said he would not make such
a claim because. he said. the White
House has no evidence Jaworski was
personally responsible for lhe alleged
leaks to Time and Evans and Novak.
Warren, declaring he spoke in part
from long y~ars of experience as a
newsman and editor before he joined
Ute White House staff, said he found
an obvious coincidence in the fact that
Time reported an investigation of the
Seafarers contribution at the time the
union was holding its convention here
and was being addressed by the Presi-
dent.
"I'm just pointing Out a coincidence
that I find very obvious and staggering,"
said Warren.
Ho~·ever, the White House did not an-
nounce that Nixon would ~ak to the
Seafarers until Sunday night.
A member of the magazine's news ·
staff In Washingtoo said the section that
carried the story on the Seafarers'
union was closed oot Saturday night, be-
fore ~ _,_~~ lloose '!JlDOOllctllletS of
Nixon'i ~· ' • Any suggestion that the story was
timed to coincide with tho speech ts
"simply untrue," he saJd.
From Pagel
TAPES . • •
personal secretary for 23 years, was
warned of her constitutional rights to
remain silent and to consult with her
lawyer as the questioning began. It was
only the second lime ln the federal
court tapes hearings -which resumed
today after a tw~week recess -that
a witness was so warned. The other
witneM was Haldeman.
Miss Woods said that she was under
the impreMion that the, Haldeman por·
tion of the June 20 conversation wa~.
not included in the prosecutor's subpoena
for nine Watergate tapes. The White
Howe has said that two of the nine
tapes do not exist, a disclosure that
led to the hearing in Sirica 's courtroom.
"He has fought encroachment and
spearheaded ongoing base renovation.
Among the n1any guests he has greeted
at the base was South Vietnamese Presi·
dent Nguyen Van Thieu," the official
publication pointed out.
.SERVICE STATIONS -Beginning
Dec. 1, the President asked service sta·
tions to stop aetling gasoline between
9 p.m. Saturdays and 12:01 a.m. Mon-
days. He said this will be made man·
datory when he is given authority by
Congress. Gasoline deliveries t o
wholesale and retail dealers will be
cut by 15 percenL
JET FUELS -Jet fuel allocations
to airlines wijl be cut five percerit to
domestic lines on Dec. 1, while int
ternational lines will be held to 1972
levels; on Jan. 7 fuel allocations to
all airlines will be cut 15 percent below
1972 levels. Fuel for private aviation
will also be cut when Congress gives
him authority.
Nobody ·$ells Amana for less than 1>uA(Ct,f>
Where do YQU want the freezer -
The general assumed control of the
base two years ago after his predecessor
left the Corps to assume the top spot
,in a Texas military academy.
Gen. Poggemeyer's successor comes
to Pendleton after a stint as com.er
of the Atlantic Fleet Marine Force,
headquartered at Camp LeJeune, N.C.
Front Pnf!e 1
BURGLARY. • •
cludin_g children Kirk, 20, Rick, 17, Greg
and Xristen , both 15, and Blair, f2,
were still away from their Lido Isle
residence. , ~spers and liis wife told Officer Tom
Stewart, who was f i r s t dispatched to
the crime Scene, that the calls occurred
SPEED LIMITS -Nixon said that
when he rs giVen authority by Congress
he will Impose nattonwide speed limits
of 50 miles ' per hour for automobiles
and .55 for trucks and buses .
ORNAMENTAL LIGHTING -Nixon
Said he will ban residential omemental
lighting and unnecessary commercial
lighting, with congressional approval.
Thursday , Friday and Saturday. _ G.Jider Plunges·, . The call in which someone apparently
talked like a small cblld wu menUooed , · ·
plus two In which the phoae rang but P'! 1 Jn• ed was followed by 1llence whel answered .11Qt JUf
by ao~ member of the family. .. t ,
C&speni, ti, who heads Keystone Sav-A San Diego bang glider pilot sulfmd
ings and Loan Assoclatloo, told In· a broken· wrist wbell lill ldle'lllle crafl · vtsttgators many people . and organiza-tions knew of hta p~ holiday piumni<t~ fnw Holy Jim · Cuyon In
absence. ., the hills abov ... Mltslon Viejo Sunday
He wu to confer again today with afternoon.
police and provide • detailed list of Tony llll8flea, fl, laUDCj!ed his gilder
them. In adillUon to a rosier ol.past from Cow dt caia m<l\.at about 3 p.m. servants~ .9!1>er hired help. -' Loss to the lanilfy was es1fmatea-and-la~" In-the rugged 48n)'On 1 ...
only at 110,000 to lllJ,000 pendlnJ a than a _mmu~ later, a IJlllk .. man .for
complete lnvenwry of the missing Items , the Oralii• County Fire Department IOid
wfllch th? financier ai\d con-erslal tod~.
county leader alJo pllMed w •UP91Y A unit of the Trabu<o Volunteer Fire
today. Ileplrtment Mcue squad went w the
He said all hollldlold Hema werw In-..,.,,. but Hug11el rtluled "'ambulance vent.-ied and apprailed for euct value .
. .
'
WE
TAKE
TRADE
IHS
_in your new tlmono. refrigerator ...
LOW
PRICES
ARE
BORN
HERE
RAISE !>f
ELSEWHERE
-on the side? on tbi boftoti,? • onthe!2P.1
Am···~~ a choice
-90 DAYS (:ASH
WITH AP,.tOVED CRIDlT
1115 llWPOIT Bl VD~ .
Dow11tilwn crsta Mesa .:... Pliiine 541-naa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' . . only two weeks ago by his lnlurance attention and left With frleodl, olllc!&ll
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Closing Prices
• . . ,,_ .. ~ ....... -· l
• .Aond.,, ti-2b, 1913 __ ..::.~c. ____ DAtLV PILOT JJ
•
NEW YORK STQCK EXCHANGE Year's High-Lows
Appear Every Saturday
I
fll•K = HlQft I.Ow 1.111 c':. _.. .......... -~ .... ----------&;;&;.;;.J
Energy Crisis
Batters Market
NEW YORK (UPI)-Stock prices Monday took
one of the wQTst drl!bbings in New York Stock Ex-
change blstory, reflecting a growing feellng Presi-
dent Nixon's emergency energy measures will fail
to prevent a recession.
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 29.05
points to 824.95, the widely·!ollowed indlcator's
lowest level since Nov. 26, 1971-exactly two years
ag<>-when Jt closed at 816.59 .
The drop In the Dow was exceeded on only
four occasions. During the great crash of 1929, the
index skidded SS.33 -the record -on Oct. 28,
and 30.57 on Oc.t. 29. On Sept. 26, 1955.
<
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SAVf .40c
DOG FOOD
°cOMPAll 1·0· ' !I AT ' I
14c ea. for
• Vet's dog food is load<!d with
meat and vitamins to give your
pet the rich nutrition he-needs.
Stock up at sa'lings.
'
Da.ysEase
rreshener .....
ate 59c
Choice of lemon or f~ral scents.
It's as pretty to look at·as it is functi~nal. Buy one for e'lery
room tn your llOuse at this low
discount price.
•
• • •
LOG '
CABIN
SYRUP
24 oz. e7c
SUPD
SAV1111$
SALE
SALTED
Sunflower
SEEDS
• aec
fJmOUS !Ytull with David & SGns setds
fret serti111 pitcher. saltetl i~ sht!I. 16 01. . . ~· --~~~---------~---------~-------/ • MILANI SALAD
DRESSING·& 02.
Original frellCh, ltilliaft
or 1000 Island salad
llressin1. Brr semal
at Ulis low pnc:e! sec
I
I I I I I
I
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FISHER SAL TED IN
THE SHELL PEANUTS
1~ o;, 1101.1.,;1r "''· 3 I c aae ol sal!ed i8' lhe sllell
pealllts. £vtr1one lom: 'tm....... -
lll.47c
SAVE $9·.
Panasonic Dryer ~
COfrlp AT . $14 •
, ..
Play-Doh Super Zoo
Fully Quilted :;,~;:~t A fl~raf~ l':oof!oc~nf Preads in
-Won't Want toon~y saving oeu',POrary
Stt hils 6 anir111I molds. 6 311 bases. 18x24" 11111. 2 cages, •,, .....
lhree 6 OL cans ol Play-Ooh.
Aurora Olympic • ,
SKITILE BOWL ' "'" .
~:\l.•· 5ss
Giant 7" pil!S, 4~" Skit-
tle ball, 2 sectiOll steel
pole, built-in pi• setters..
SAVE 32%
EASY OFF .... a·ac 1.29 -
The oVen cleaner that makes
quick thorough work of an other-
wise tedious tast Just spray on
and wipe off. 16 oz. lemon or
regular.
-·~IQUID •
-WOOLITE . ...
77• 59c
The famous cold water soap for
·all fine washables, Mad<! to order
for cleaning wools and all of to-
day's new fabr~s. 8 01. bottle.
Don't· miss this sale!,.
. ---miss. r you --------
Butter-Up
POPPER
Now
0.1, _711
~he Princess by Regal 4 qt. po~
corn popper. Dispenses butter
as it pops corn. Teflon II popper
plate. Lid caifbe used as seNer.
67178
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META(9 ~'
PIE PAN
·~5,.~·
, Oor •tt· Price 4 for •1
Heavy duty metil for yearn of
serv<e. No. only a necessity
for IJ!king ~ies, btlt handy for .
_ wann1ngJood._ •
HOLIDAY STORE HOURSr MONDAY thru SATURDAY lOAM to. IOPM •SUNDAY lOAM to 7PM
• COSTA MESA 3088 BRISTOL ST . . . . ~
Sa n Dieqo -Fr eeway at. Bristol
•
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Just in time for the holiday
wrapp ing. Big 1500 It. spool
of Vi' wide tape. Roll oft
tapeeasili .;, •
•
• ~GLU~
STICK ·
~-~~·:·-3--s1 -,., .
A neat glue for neat people.
Just draw it on and press
pieces together: it won't
ooze, leak or sp[ll.__
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burl
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L~g~n& Be&~h
EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks ·' ..
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. VOL. 66, NO. 330, 2 ·SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C"UFORNIA MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1973 TEN CENTS
Coast StatiOns Fuming Over Sunday _Gas Ban
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
01 Ille Diiiy Piiot flllf
Service station operators along the
Orange Const today reacted unfavorably
to Pt:esident Nixon's Sunday gasoline
sales ban because they believe it will
hurt business.
The sale ban, to take erfect after
congressional approval , would stop
service statk>ns from dispensing gasoline
between .9 p,m. saturday and 12:01 a.m.
Monday to discourage long-distance driv·
-ing. It ls; estimated that the measure
will save 50,000 barrels. of gaSQUne per
day. .
"As far as I'm concerned this is
the most childish and iji.iotic thing I
ever heard of,'' fumed Bob Smith, of
Smith's ARCO, corner Bristol and Baker
Street, C.Osta Mesa.
"AU this is going to do Is insure
that the stores will be sold out of
three and four gallon gas cans this
weekend. It won't stop any driving on
Sundays. The people will just carry
their cans with them."
Smith, who attracled nationwide at-
tentioo recently when he "captured"
a gas delivery truck in protest over
wholesale price increases , says he plans
to remain open this Sunday.
"Why? Because I've got ga.s to sell.
I've already got the government telling
me how much I can sell it for and
the oil companies telllng me how much
I'm going to gel. I'm not going to
give away 4-0 to 50 bucks out oC my
pocke't."
Smith insists that the gasoline shortage
was manufactured and that with the
outbreak of the Mideast War the oil
companies now find that they have to
1}18intain the posture ol an even greater
shortage. "They can't say that we can
meet the oil reqµirements of the country
now after all," Smith said. "They've
created a monster."
For that reason Smith will not volun·
tarily stop selling gasoline. "And as
soon as I'm forced to under the ne\v
law, I'1n going to send President Nixon
a formal bill for each Sunday that
1 haven't been able to sell my gas/'
he said.
Phil Evans, chairman of the Costa
Mesa Service Station and Garage Owners
Committee and operator of a Phillips
66 station across the street, disagrees
with Smith. lie believes the shortage
is real .
"I've been closing Sundays anyho\v
ever since I couldn't get as much gas
as J· \Vantcd," he explained. "I'm gea red
to a seven day v.1eek but J 've had
to scale things down. The Sunday sales
ban won't affect me that much, but
it will hurt a lot of other service stations.
''Personally I believe they should ra·
tion gasoli ne. That's the ultimate solu-
tion. It's the only fair way to spread
~See OPPOSE, Page !)
• • • es~~tt~m~-. ~-1 ~e~~o 1r1ca
$20,000 Theft
Burglars Strike
c .aspers' ~ome
By ARTIJUR R. VINSEL
Of 1119 Diiiy Pilot $11ff
A series of mystery phone calls to
the Ramona ranch of Orange County
Board of Supervisors Chairman Ronald
L. C8spers today was considered a clue
'
Police Chief~s
Home BJLrglecl
Westminster Police Chief Walter
T. Scott should have read Dick
Tracy's Crimestoppers Textbook
item in the Sunday funny pilpers
before leaving his Costa Mesa
home.
to the $20,000 Thanksgiving holiday
burglary of his Newport Beach home.
One of the unexplained calls involved
someone apparently mimicking a ~mall
child who said: "I wuv you.'' .
The Caspers family returned to their
home at 119 Via Florence oo Lido Isle
about S:J> p.m. $unday aod immediately
sensed something was wrong when they
found a side door ajar.
Investigators said today a team of
highly professional thieves was probably
ln•olD! In looting the residence of
dozelir.of lteins.
''They did a real job," said Newport
Beach Police Detective P a t r i ck
O'Sullivan, as he continued with bis
investigation today.
Stolen items -mostly fairly small
and easily carried -included all the
couple's personal jewelry, chin a ,
silverware and antique items, such as
table lamps. • ~Hr Pllol Sl•tf PMle'
Stepping Out
A burglar entered his Mesa
Verde residence through an unJock-
ed bedroom window and made of£
wilh $100 in loot, mostly ca.sh and
coins, plus a daughter's Estancia
High School student body card.
He also stole the master key
to all door locks in the Westminster
Police Stallon.
The burglars who pried open a sliding
glass door opening onto the patio alter
scaling a gate facing the street appeared
to select the toot with taste and consid-
eration of value.
Detectlve O'SuJlivan said the pro-
fessional nature of the job indicates
the strange calls to the Ca~rs ranch
in San Diego County, where the family
spent the holidays, were probably COIW
nei:ted.
Explorer Scouts march -to graduation following
completion of law enlorcemeat training academy
conducted during the long Thanksgiving weekend
at El Toro MarinJ: Corps Air Station. About 150 Ex-
plorer Scouts from 22 law enforcement Explorer
posts throughout the county participated in the
academy. Many of the participants were , girls.
Moulton Ranch
Plans Due Study
In Joint Session
PRICE OF 'SEED
SELLS BIRD, CAGE "
An ad worth Jess tha~ a pack of
bird seed Is all It took to sell two
birds and a birdcage. Here's the ad :
Investigators theorize the calls were
(See BURGLARY, Page II
Kohoutek Seen
In Calitornia
SAN FRANCISCO • (UPI)
comet Kohoutek bas finally made
an appearance in the Northern
California sky.
Leon Salanave, executive
secretary of the Astronimical
Society of the Pacific, said he
spotted the comet in the early
morning sky today with the aid .
of binoculars. He said it appeared
as a "fuzzy star" ind was four
to five times fainter than earlier
predicted.
The comet is e1pected to become
progressively brighter...belween n'" ..
and JamJal')'.
I
One Man· Dies, Two Hurt_
On Laguna Canyon Road . . . .
One man died' and two were injured "Big Bend" area of Laguna Canyon
· Saturday night when the pickup truck Road near the Telonics manulacturing
they were riding in went out of control plant. ·
on Laguna Canyon Road and crashed The survivors were listed as Anthony
pinning the meh inside. J. Changala, 20, of 18361 Beach
Laguna Beach firemen worked ex-Boulevard, Huntington Beach a n d
tensively prying the men out of the Manuel S. Garcia, 27, of 24172 .Lar\wood
shattered vehicle. It had apparently hit Lane, El Toro. Changala was said to
. a rock on the road edge, flipped be in satisfactory condi.lion today at
sideways, passed betwec·n a utilitY pole · Orange County Medical ~ter. Garcia
and guy wire lben landed upside down. -was given'emergcncy care and released.
One man who1 o~erved the accident Orange County Coroner's office declin-
aftermath said, "The men were stacked ed to release or confirm the name
in there like pancakes." or any identif)'ing information about the
He 'said the dtad . h d . dead man. . . man . a massive Coroner'S deputies .said they had not ~d mJuries, and was pinned on the been able to reach next of kin tor
bottom. The accident occurred in the death notification.
_Building . Tops s_9· iI·Iion
C(J_!tstr!'Ct}ori irt Laguna Surpasses Pace of 1972 .
Residential and commercial building In the residential area, permits have const~ctlon permits have brought in
activity ln Laguna Beach has topped been issued for 134 single family homes $108,945 this year, up '381000 ·from last
$9 million so far this year, up about with a total value of $5.1 million, or ye5ar .. 1 -.. f ch ., mi11J th rtod -· -pecia penru~ or woe anges, ""' on over e . aame P,e: 1r Just over $38,000~ per borne ·on1-the-variaoces. alMl env~tal ·impact
TALL gold birdcace. (2)
g...., Pl\'llkeels male, all
Cor $10. (Phone No.).
1972. . . average. ,, reports have genefa\eil $\S,llOll,..tl)i.j year.
• · And-the-city planning department;. . Laat ""lfi:~its tolalbiil! 13.5 ._.-,N~ 'ncord .,was.-~ept for · th e's e
which last year ~ •1t1J4t ·c~1flnf ·, ~-borne, wete ISsueCI. categories In 1m. _
the first 10 montlis, 'i!n'ady 'baa ~'en -..., hilllary ,.,_,, , • Even the. sale of docu'nients by the
in $2$2,911 thls'year. • • All total!-.11 •11'91111 perii!I~. In-plannJnir depart,,..nt ls up, So. far this -'llio ldvtrtlser told her -.DailJ---Ellot
Ad-vllor aho sold every bird "\lie first
.day the ad •ppeared." Action doesn't
have to have an expensive price tag.
• Spend some 11blrd aeed" yourself, next
tlm< you have 10methi9g to sell. Dial
• the direct llne to results. !'.bone the
• D<.I~ Ptlot at iC-5171.
., .,
Simply, the flctires Indicate fom. eluding lllUllHI •• llinds it $6.9 ,.ar. $1175 worth of publi.shed ·material
atructlon Is boomJnc lil ~ lle)l<h. ri>IJllon, up from .~!*it year. hi!' ~ sold, compared to $252 last
The biggest dollar lncroale In. """ In the ~v...,. idlP'rtm•. new in· Jle&r. , •
i>ermits has come ln the commercial come "' bu been ~due to sewer ., The 'fiaure:S, on building activity and
sector. A total of ~ permils worth conneotlOO and .. w,r..rnoe'fees, whlcb j>l~ dePartment revenueo are .con.
$2 mlllloq have boon Issued this year, t"lether bave ~ fnt;llOll co' 1 jOln.td,ln lhO·flnt Issue of "Memo Paa"
compared to M permla worth a scant INlllY·$tlll!l las~yoor 'iaibllalied°byjho_dcpar1men_t~ i>\anning,
$425,000 In the first 10 mon\ha of 1972. F .. for building permita and other and development. •
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DeS alvo, 'Bo.ston,
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Strap,gler,' Fou~
Slain in, Cell
WALPOLE, Mass. (AP) -Albert
DeSalvo, who confessed ~to being the
"Boston Strangler" of the 1960s, was
found stabbed to death in his prison
cell today, co1Tections officials reported.
Although Desalvo confessed lo killing
13 wom'en in the Boston-area between
1962 and 1964, he later retracted the
confession and was never convicted of
any of the 13 deaths.
The former bandyman was serving
a ur~ term at the maximum security
prison !or a~ults on four other women .
A prison spokesman said DeSalvo's
body was folmd about 7 a.m. in a
cell in the prison's hospital section v.·here
DeSalvO: worked as an orderly. .
DeSalvo, 42, died or multiple stab
v.-ounds in the chest. No weapon was
. found ~d there were no suspects, the ·
spokesman said.
During DeSalvo's• assault trial in
Japuary 1967, hji\lawyer, F. Lee Bailey,
attempted to get t~ confession to the
stranglings entered intO evidence. He
was able only to present such testimony
from psychiatrists whom Desalvo told
he was the srrangJer.
DeSalvo was convicted of burglary,
. (See STl\ANGLER, Page l)
Burglars Get Cash
_In Lagun~ Gift Shop
Lightfooted burglars . WOO' t I p,t o e d
across the roof of a corrunercial building
then rowered themselves1nside throligh~
the skylight have stolen $70 cash from
two Laguna Beach gift shops .
The Sand Dollar and The Gre.nery,
both located in the same complex at
1276 S. Coast Highway, reported the
theft to Laguna Beach.)lolice Saturday .
The Sand Dollar lbSt $S5 nnd !lie
Grccn~ry losr $IS:-
• ' '
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Watergate
Recordings .
Turned In
. WASlllNGTON (UP IJ Tap e
recordings of President Nixon's con."
ve rsations with aides about \Vatcrgate
were turned over today to Chief U.S.
District Judge John J . Sirica.
Nixon's counsel, J. Fred Buzhardt.
delivered the tapes in a gra}t, metal
container resembling a tool box to Sirica -
in his chambers in the f e d e r a 1
courthouse.
Another White House lawyer, Leonard
Garment, said the box contained the
tapes of Nixon's Watergate-related coo-
versations, recorded at the White House
and in the adjacent Executive , Office
Building.
Sirica placed the tapes· in the custody
of federal marshals who be said would
guard them around the clock. The White
House turned. over the tapes without
a legal fight after Silica requested them
Wednesday.
Sirica said he would not listen to
the tapes immediately, but wouJd hear
them later to determine if they contained.
any evidence that should be turned over
to the Watergate grand jury.
He asked for custody of the tapes
following disclosure that one of them
- a conversation between Nixon and
H. R. Haldeman -contained an· 18-
minute blank section.
An Administration source said this
was caused by-an inadvertent erasure
by Nixon's secretary, Rose Mary Woods,
while ·she-w8Sifa~rib1ng The-tape.··-
The White House released a 22-page
analysis and index of the tapes, and
included the first official explanation
of how that 18-minute section was erased.
The analysis says obliteration of the
conversation was caused by "the
depression · or a recOrd ·button · during
the process or reviewing the tape.
possibly while the recorder was in the
proximity of an electric typewriter and
a high inleflsity-lamp."
The legal papers said that the accident
was believed to have been "in-
consequential' at first because it was
not thought that the Haldeman con-
versation was among the subpoenaed
material.
'The delay in discovering that tho
incident affected a portion of the tape
containing a subpoenaed conversation
was due to the a.J}lbiguit)'. of the language
of the subpoena," the White House legal
document said.
The. White House said it had been
believed that oqly an earlier meeting
the same day -3une 20, l!m -between
(See TAPES, Page !)
•
Oraage , Ceast
Weather
It'll be sunny and cool Tuesday;
according to the wenther service,
with beach temperatures in the
upper 50s rising to the mid 60s
Inland. Overnight lows in Ule 40s.
INSIDE TODAY
HomoseXWJls ha v e con1·
plah1ed abo1't tlieir portra yaL
ilt movies and on televi.sion and
il appears LiktLy that aa11.s wiU
be depicted diffe-rently in the
future. See story~ Pa pe 1.
' ~. . .... I -... 11111 •
L.M. loJll I CIM""111 f, 1t
Cltu!llM •u c-ic, u
Cl'Ml-111 11
0..111 Motkft; 1t
••li.ritt ,... •
•nten.i-1 it "I...... 1•11 ..... ''"' llffl'lll 1t Mtt'OKOH 14
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UAtL~ PILOT LB Monday, Novennier 2b, 1973
Laguna Plan
' For Schools
Under Way
A four-month project to define educa-
ticmal goals now is under \\'ay by lhe
Laguna Beach Unified School District.
'The "Laguna Plan" as the project
is c.alled, will include community con-
ferences , a mail questionnaire and board
of education review.
1be plan is designed to draw out
-·responses on what local schools should ·
·be doing from a representative cross-sec-
" tion of parents and taxpayers in the
'..,.,.,., district .
Goals are intended to be on the books by March 19.
Between now and January, committees
,.will be formed and trained on how
• to nm community conferences at each
.ot Laguna's five schools.
. . Elementary school conferences are _
scheduled for Jan. 12: Thurston
' Intennediate School conference, Jan. 19;
and Laguna Beach High School con·
·~ference. Jan. 26.
At the conferences, all interested
•,persons will be invited to come and
tell what they like and don 't like about
· the school system.
-Remarks will be processed and review-
' ed in a secood set of community con-
.. terencies.
The purpose of the second round of
conferences will be to assign priorities
to goals listed in the first round.
1 In an attempt to make sure the goals
, are representative of what the com-
munity thinks, questionnaires will be
111mailed every 10th registered voter in
the district for response.
, A Cinalf eport Will then be prepared
"·and submitted to the school board for
.' approval.
~ The Laguna plan was drafted by a
citizens committee and adopted by the
.. board ol education last week.
_,: Board members praised the com-
;· mittees' work and stressed the need
i_,·,lor the goals to represent a true cross
section of the community.
The goals, once adopted, will serve
as a guide for future decisions by the
; OOard on budget · and educational pre>-
r grams.
From Page 1
,-BURGb\RY-;·~-. -
:"placed to assure that the family , in-
.: eluding children Kirk, 20, Rick, 17, Greg
• and Kristen, both 15, and Blair, 12,
were still away from their Lido Isle
· residence.
Caspers and bis wife told Officer 'I'.om
•1stewart, who was first dispa{ched to
the crime scene, that the cafls OccWTed
· 'l'bursday, Friday and Saturday.
1be call in which someone apparently
. -talked like a small child was mentloned,
.. plus two in which the phone rang but
•. was followed by silence when 'answered
:· by so~e member or the family. . . . caspers, 42, who heads Keystone Sav-
ings and Loan Association, told in·
;, vestigators many people and organiza-
tions knew of his planned holiday
~ absence.
·.. He was to confer again today with
: ~police and provide a detailed list of
_:" them, In addition to a roster of past
servants and other hired help.
'. Loss to the family was estimated
only at $10,000 to .120,000 pending a
complete inventory of the missing Items,
which the finaricier and controversial
county leader also planned to supply
today.
He said all household items were in-
., ventoried and appraised for exact value
only two weeks ago by his insurance
carrier.
P eron Recovering
BUENOS AffiES (UPI) -President
Juan D. Peron, 78, recuperating from
:~ an illness officially described as a
bronchial infection, spent the fifth con-
secutive day confined to his home Sun·
day. The president was reported·handling
official business at his private residence
t in a Buenos ·Afres suburb.
' i ,
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DAILY PILOT
The Of~ CHI! D"ll Y JttLDT, wltti wllk:l'I
" C'Otnblnld "'-N-t·Prtu, It PUbllslltd by
Wit Or•"" Co.ttt P\lbllV\lnt Comptny, 5,,...
,..,. idUIOtls 1r1 ""61bll«I, Morlcliy mrOUgti
Prlcl.lr, klr COlll Met•, NIWPO•I Bfftl'I,
_H_,11,..,ton: 61K~IF0<;n!1ln Vllley, LlllUN
IMc:tl. lrvlne/lecldleb.Jtk •r.cl S.n Cl9""""1
SM Mrt C'•l'l1l•1no. " 11nv11 regiO!l•I
•1tllln h llUl!lllollld S11urd1n •lld SY11111vt .
Tiie jN'ii'l("lpaJ P\lbllshlno Pit~! It 11 JJO Wbl•
a.y Sll'ftl, CO.II MtM, C•liforni., ~-
leb.tt N. Wetd
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UPI Ttlt,rltll
KNIF ED IN PRISO N
Albot-t H. O.Salvo
From PflfJe J
ST RANGLE R • • •
armed robbery and sexual molestation.
State author1\ies have long maintained
they did not have evidence to prosecute
anyone for the stranglings.
The case of the "'·Boston Strangler"
caused a worldwide sensation. The vic-
tiJns ranged ifl" age from 19 to 75. Most
bad been associated \\'ilh health care,
either as nurses, hospital vohmteers,
workers in physicians' offices, or friends
of nurses and doctors. Al.I livt!d within
a 26-mile radius of Boston.
The biggest manhunt in Massachusetts'
history was touched off Feb. 24. 1967
when DcSalvo and two in1nates escaped
from Bridgewater .State Hospital..a month
after DeSalvo's assault tri al.
Desalvo, woo had been at the hospital
awaiting an appeal, was captured 1'-h
days later in a Lynn, Mass., clothing
store, where he asked to use the
telephone.
Desalvo was at the hoopital before
the trial, undergoing observation for an
alleged sexual molestation offense, when
his rellmate, George Katar, persuaded
Bailey to represent DeSalvo.
Bailey at first re.sisted but agreed
to do it only a day before detectives
arrived at the hospital to question~
DeSalvo about the stranglings. .
Bailey tape-recorded DeSalvo's story
under an agreement with the state at-
10mey_g~~.ral's~~ .. ~tj_t__~µ14 .-~..Q!
be used against nim. Detectives were
said to have found that most of what
he said tallied with the evidence of
the crimes.
DeSalvo also claimed to be the "Green
Man," known to New England law ,ef!"
forcement off~ls as the man responsi-
ble for an estimated 600 to 1,000 rapes
and other sexual offenses over several
years. '
No one was ever· prosecuted as the
"Green Man," who was called that
because of lhe repairman's outfit t1)e
victims said he wore in gaining entrance
to their homes under the ruse of being
sent to fix something.
Before DeSalvo repudiated his con-
fession in 1968, he maintained he.
desperately wanted psychiatric treat-
ment.
After DeSalvo 's conviction, Bailey
commented, "Massachusetts has just
burned another witch."
La g una's J11nior
Tennis Tourney
•'
Sign ups Slated
Entry forms are now available for
the Laguna Beach Junior Tennis Tourna-
ment for boys and girls in grades four
through 12. The tournament will be
played Dec. 8 and 9 on the Laguna
Beach High Sch~l courts.
Laguna area schools and the Laguna
Beach Recreation Department have the
forms . Ffes are $1 for singles and
$:? for doubles.
Tournament play will consist of boys'
and girls' singles and doubles, in the
high school division. intermediate school
division and elementary school division .
ContestanlS must provide one new can
of approved tennis balls which will be
returned after the tournament. Trophies
will be awarded to winners and run-.
nersup in each division.
!Further information is available by
c3llil'ig the recreation department, 494-
1124, e~t. 238.
' ' • . .,
Hos~ital ~ee~~
. '
C.ounty Support
Officials of Saddlebnck Community
Hospital In. ),agll!la , JJllls. ~ve ask!"f .
Orange County government to en®rse
a $12.5 million bond lssue to help aave
financing costs and provide money to
open their ISO.bed faclllty.
The request comeS betore the Orange
County Board·of Supervisors Tuesday.
Bernard Ingram, president of the
hospital's 20-member board, Said the
refinancing program bas been arranged
with United C8lifomia Bank aOO Miller-
Schroeder, Inc., St. Louis bond brokers.
tn return for the county's endorsement,
it would get title to the facility in
30 to 35 years.
County approval would mean the bond
sales would be tax exempt. Ingram
said the money saved throug~ tax ex-
empt status could be passed along to
patients in lower costs:.
Ingram said the re-fmancing would
complete, equip, staff, and operate the
$15 million facility scheduled for opening
Feb. l.
"UCB has asSW'ed us we will hnve
all the interim financing we need. to
get the hospital &pen and carry us
through the first six months," Ingram
said.
After the bonds are sold, UCB will
be completely re.imbuned, he said.
Refinancing for the non-profit hospital
was necessitated after the Lutheran
Hospital Society of Southern California
canceled its management contract with
the hospital last September.
Jn a letter to the Board of Supervisors.
County COun.sel Adrian Kuyper warned
. that "lf'tt clioae tololii with Sa~dleback '
the county should seek assurances that
It would be adequately financed and
·~ed."
Ingram said he and other hospital
officials would be meeting with County
Adrninlslrat* Officer Robert Thomas
Tuesday morning to review details of
the proposal.
"We are hopeful this will be approved,
but if it Isn't we are still in good
shape," Ingram said. "hillier-Schroeder
will proceed with steps toward corporate
bond sales."
Conditions of the bond sale would
include that :
-The hospital agree to dedicate title
at the end of the 30 to ~year financing
period to the county.
-The county be assured of no liability
in case of default of the bonds.
-The county could pay off the bonds
at any time and accept full title.
-The hospftal provide a~uate pro-
tection against malpractice liability.
~unty supervisors would have the
right each year to disapprove the election
or re-election of any hospital director.
Construction of Saddleback Community
Hospital began in 1971 and has been
beset with delays from strikes and ad·
ministrative stall turnover . Original
opening date for the fa cil ity was las1
?.1ay.
•Not That Bad!'
Amputee, 8, Tells Kennedy Boy
PARADISE (AP) -: An 8-year-old boy with an artifi~al leg has
written to Edward Ke nnedy J r., who recently lost most of his right
leg, telling him having an artificial leg isn't that bad.
Shannon Hanley, a resident of this sm all Northern California
town, told Kennedy, who had to have the operation one week ago
because of bone cancer, that he bad his operation for the· same rea-
son Nov. !, 1972. ,
"When I first got my artificial leg last February, I didn't lhink
r·would be able to·domany·things.-But-~ found-out 1 can do just
about an~g I want to do;• Hanley wrole the 12-year-old son of Se¥. Edward Kennedy, (D-Mass.).
Hanley said that since his operation be has learned to •wim and
dive, He added he can ride a minibike and he also plays touch foot·
ball '
The boy asked Kennedy to write him once be feels belier.
'
TESTIFIES. ON TAPES
Nixon Secr1tar..v Woods
Fro11a P a ge 1
TAPES ..•
.Cops :Eose
'Confidence'
·In Anah eim
Dissident Anaheim policemen hnve
unveiled their lll.Jt'st tactic designed to I
force the city to neg_otiate f(>r higher
pay· ~ a wte of ·"no ·confidence" in :
· their cblcf.
Stephen SOiomon~ atiomey for the J
Anaheim Police Association, Saia t 1t.
Or the organization's 278 members voted 1
at a rally Nov. 6 against Chief David
Michel. ·
1 Solomon said 25 of those at the rally :
in Pearson . Park supported the chief
and two abstained from voting,
The poll results were released by the
APA as part of .. & cpolinuing 'campaign
by officers in Anaheim to make the
city reconsider Jts pay nod contract
offers. 1
One tactic -a slowdown on ti(;ket
\Vrili ng for 1noving Yi!>lations -was
in operation \hrough last week but an
APA spokesman said. today it has been
canceled because some member officers
did· not want to participate. ~
A second tactic -termea ,nie "super
Nixon and John D. Ehrfichman had cop"-RpprOlf~h ~as-planned but never put into operation. · It called for <in
been subpoenaed. increase in .dr!Yer citations for even
The analysis did not say it was Miss. the m~t minor violations.
Woods who was reviewjng the tape_ when .Of_ficers also picketed city hall for
it was erased, but an Administration a week in an effort to bring their
source said this was the case. grievances to. the public eye.
Disclosure. that the IS.minute portion -Solomon said the APA decided to
of the conversati on between Nixon and disclose· its "no confidence" vOte when
Haldeman, then his chief of staff, had it learned that Chief Michel · had asked
been erased. came \Vedne_sday, one d@y for City Couucil_permission to fire four
after Nixon assured Republic a~ APA members.
governors that there would be no further ~Iichel has assailed the tactics used
startling_ disclosures about \Vater_.B.ate. __ by_lhe APA, claiminL lh.ey have hurt
At ttie \Vhite House this afternoon, the image or the police department in
Gerald L. Warren, deputy . press the eyes of the public .
secretary, sadi the President was aware Coancilmen voted last week that pay
Ylhen he gave the assurance to the negotiations had proceeded1 in good faith
governors that there was "some dif-for three months and the city 's final
ficulty" with one of the tapes. offer ill fair and equlllble.
But like the legal ~emo, he ~aid The city's offer calls for some im-
there was some confusion at the time provements in fringe benefits, a 6. 75
whether the damaged tape was among percent pay raise the first year and
those subpoenaed. . a six percent raise the second year
He. said Nlxon . int~nded in no 1way on a two-year conlract.
to.~lead th~ Repu?hcan governors. . Police negotiators want ev en
The President tiad a .doubt 1i1 his tnOrebenent improvements than the city
mind not only if it \Vere subpoenaed has offered a one-year contract and
but what the circumstances (of the seven perce'nt raises each of the next
da~ge to the tapes) were," Warren two years.
said. . City officials claim that to reopen
Me xican Child
Getting Better
pay-negotiations Wlth the oUicers would
be unfair to other clly employe groups
which have already come to terms.
Solomon said efforts by mediator Tom
McCarthy of the State Conciliation
Service have failed to get any results
so far. McCarthy 'A'aS called into the
dispute las t week in an effort to bi'ing
the two $.Id.es to some kind of agreement.
Soloino'n' says McCarthy me' with city
personnel officials but failed to sway
the qitx,.'t • stand against · continued
..
'
0
to
,S
h
I
_j
Opponent of Reactors
Found Dead in His Car
Carlos Varela, the 2-year-old Mexican
child given p tree operation l!'rid&y a
Mission C.Ornmunity Hospital to correct
a cleft palate, Is out ol bed ind p1iiy;ng·
today. " ,
''It lookS -like-the operation· fs · going'
to be a tremendous success," ·said
~lission spokesman Paul ldeker .
The six-hour operation in Mission Viejo
was performed Fr iday'1 by Dr. Joseph
Ferreira of San Clemente.
' ' ' ~~~~~iays ifS 'noafntiaencevore .. --7-1
is not the last card up its sleeve .
SolomOn said the next step is to wage
a campaign that will inform the public
of the dispute through newspaper ads
and door-to-door explanations of the 1
Bruce Sharpe. the 42-year-old lawyer through a window of the car. No note
\Vho led the battles against plans to was found.
build two new San Onofre nuclear reac-His work for GUARD and the
tors ~a.s found .. d.ead in his car today, /California Ocean Shoreline Preservation
the victim of swcade. / Conference in the nuclear reactor
Sharpe, a prominent lawyer in the.
Santa B_arbara and Lompoc areas, was
futmd slumped over tfJe steering wheel ot his car parked along Highway 166
near Santa Maria. He had been missing
since last 11tursday, authorities said.
disputes lasted for years and involved
months of researc). and presentations
before review boards assembled by the
U.S. Atomic Energy Commiss ion.
As it turned out, the lawyer's efforts
and those of the groups he represented
were In vain.
The AEC overruled all objections to
the reactor proposal and granted licenses
to two utility firms earlier this fall
to allow construction of the new reactors.
Yowtg Carlos and his parents, the
David Varelas of Ensenada, were
brought to Mission Hospital through a
cooperative effort of the hospital and
"Operation Involvement," a non-profit
group whibh tries to help provide good
medical care in the U.S. for Mexican
children.
Double Suicide?
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The bodies
or a 57-year--old ex-convict and his 22-
year-old girlfriend were found Sunday
in a Mission District hotel, and police
said it was a double suicide.
issues.
He said the APA will not take a
strike vote unless the city takes retalia-
tory action against members of the
group,
3 Firen1en Killed
MEXICALI, Mexico (AP) -Th,...
El Monte, Calif. firemen died in the
crash of a pickup camper on the highway
connecting thls city with 5an Felipe,
police said today. .
Authorities identified the victims as
Griffith R. Morrison Jr., 24, the driver,
and John Wilkes and Vince Kempe.
Sharpe officially represented Groupe
United Against Radiation D a n g e r s
(GUARD) based in San Clemente and
served as legal counsel for that group
and others deemed fonnal intenrenors
in the draWlM>ut batUes against the
plant proposals.
Officers In charge of the case in
Central California said that they have
learned the lanky' sort~spoken lawyer
had been despond~t over recent prob-
lems in his work and had had a history
of thwarted suicide attempts.
Nobody Sells Amana for less than ~
. Where, do YQU want the freezer
in your new ifm•n•. refrigerator ... Officers said death came as a result
of carbon monoxide poisoning. Sharpe
had attached one end of a garden hose
to the exhaust pipe and stuck the other
From Poge 1
OPPOSE •.•
the shortage around."
Evans said Costa Mesa service station
dealers are scheduled to meet Thursday
evening to dlscus.s whether to follow
J?resldent Nixon's suggestion to volun·
WE
TAKE
~.
LOW
PRIC ES
ARE
~
f
l l
j
Laguna Soccer Play
• 1 tarily begin the Sunday shutdown this
• weekend.
But a third service stator( leader Is
opposed to the Ide. of rstioning.
BORN
TRADE HERE
Regis tration Frid ay · . .. ':"' . -'
Deadline-for-reglstration for the .
Laguna Beach Recreation Department's
soccer play ls Friday.
· Forms are available at the department
office, 570 GleMeyre St., for the two
soccer leagues, one for boys and girls
aged 7 to 9 years and · the other for
b(1ys and girls 10 to 12 years of age.
Registration fee of ~ Includes unll6rm
and trophy costs.
Ted Kennedy_Ahcad
PRINGETON, N.J. (APl -The Gailup
Poll says its latest survey of Democrats ·
puts Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of
Massachusetls far ahead of other possi·
ble contenders f~r the party'& · t978
presidential nom1n8tion. The poll ..,indj.
cated that Alabama · Gov. George C .
Wallactr l!ld-Son:-Edmund-S:-Muskle
or MaJne were the next leadlng choices,
' ""Ii f:ir h ... t,:nd K,,nn"<iv.
•
"The black .marketeers are ready to
.set, up their .(coupon) ~· • lnsls~
NIXON DRUMS UP SUPPORT
FOR PROG~toty, Page 3
PRESIDENT OUTLINES
FUE L SAVING PLAN, Page 10
NIXON'S ENERGY PLAN DRAWS ·
MIX~D llEACTIQNS, P ... 5 _,
William , H. Bay, operator of ·Mlsllon
Viejo ,Mobil ServlC. and a, director of
the lniematlonal Service Station Dealers
AasodilUon.
"I' think the only way to haftdle Ibis
.ls. through l)lamaiory federil alloatlons
to each service slltlon. 'tliey should
allocate It eqUlllbly, pooilbly on the
amount of gu sold Jail year," be saJd.
"Then they should figure out bow
much . tl\ey neOO to cut · tonsumption t-
and rocluce the amoW>t allocated to
the. dealer by l!te neomary pen:onllge.
1 -.Id-allow the dealtr to-ltffp-
th• hours of operatloll wlllcb hll ·
..,articular location demaft!51."
l
•
-IMS _
r,
RAISED
ELSEWHER E
-' ,.
on.Jbe side? «1 the.bottom? on the Bel_
ht1n11. gives you a choice ---== -
''
90 bA VS-CASH
•
WITH APP!lOV I O CllEDtT
1815 NEil"'llRT Pl.VP.,
~ ..
Duw:!i:at:ll i; .• sia : • .a~ -Pllane 548-7788
•
. ' I
I '
..
• • • -'I •• "
'
Saddlehaeli Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
EDITION
VOL 66, NO. 330, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1973 TEN CENTS
Coast Stations Fuming Over Sunday Gas Ban
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of lfM O.lly l"Ji.1 Sllft,
Service station operators along the
Orange Coast today reacted unfavorabl y
to President NixOn's Sonday gasoline
sales ban because they believ e it will
hurt business.
The sale-ban, to take effect after
congressional approval, would stop
service stations from dispensing gasoline
between 9 p:m. Saturday and 12:01 a.m.
Monday to discourage long-distance dri v-·
Stepping OHt ·
iog. It is estimated that the measure
will save 50,000 barrels or gasoline per
day.
"As far as J'm concerned this is
the most childish and idiotic thing I
ever heard of,'' fumed Bob Smith, of
Smith's ARCO, comer Bristol and Baker
Street, Costa Mesa.
"A11 this is going to do is insure
that the stores will be sold out or
three and four gallon gaS cans this
weekend. It won't stop any driving on
•
Sundays. The people will jwt carry
their cans with them."
Smith , who attracted nationwide at-
tention recently when be "captured"
a gas delivery truck in protest over
wholesale price increases, says he plans
to remain open this Sunday.
"Why? Because I've got gas to sell.
I've already got the government telling
me how much · I can sell it for and
lhe oil companies telling me how much
I'm going to get. I'm not going to
I
~way 40 to 50 bucks out of my
pocket."
Smllh Insists lhat the gasoline shortage
was manufactured and that with the
outbreak. of the Mideast War the oil
companJe, now find that they have to
~intain the posture of an even greater
shortage. "They can't say that we can
meet the oil requirements of the country
now after all,'" Smith said. "They've
created a monster."
For that reason Smith will not volun-
tarily stop selling gasoline. "And as
soon as I'm forced to under the new.
law , I'm going to send President Nixon
a formal bill for ea ch Sunday that
I haven't been able to sell my gas,"
he said.
Phil Evans. chairman of the Costa
Mesa Service Station and Garage Owners
Committee and operator or a Phillips
66 station across the street , disagrees
with Smith. He believes the shortage
is real.
"I've been closing Sundays anyho~v
ever since l couldn't get as much gas
as I wanted," he explaineJ'"I'm geared
to a seven day week but I've had
to scale things down. The Sunday sales
ban wOf\!: affect me that muCh, ·but
it will hurt a lot of other service stations .
"Personally I believe they should ra-
tion gasoline. That's the ultimate solu-
tion . It's the only fair way to spread
lSee OPPOSE, Page 2)
Judge Gets Tapes
Federal j}farshals Guard Recordings
WASHINGTON (UPI) Tape
recordings of President Nixon 's con·
versations with aides about Watergate
were turned over today to Chief U.S.
District Judge John J. Sirica.
Nixon's counsel, J. Fred· Buzhardt,
delivered the tapes in a gray, metal
container resembling a tool box to Sirica
in his chambers in the f e d e r a I
courthouse.
Another White House lawyer, Leonard
Garment, said the box contained the
tapes of Nixon's Watergate-related con-
,versations, recorded al the White House
and in tbe adjacent Executive Office
Building.
Sirica placed the tapes in the custody
Survey Shmvs
of federal marshals who he said would
guard them around the clock. The White
House turned over the tapes without
a legal fight after Sirica requested them
Wednesday.
Sirica said he would not listen to
the tapes Immediately, but would hear
them later to detennine if they contained
any evidence that should be turned over
to the Watergate grand jury.
He asked for custody of the tapes
following disclosure that one of them -a conversation between Nixon and
H. R. Haldeman -contained an 18-
minute blank section.
An Administration source said this
was caused by an inadvertent erasure
by Nixon's secretary, Rose ~fary·Woods,
while she was transcribing the tape.
The White House released a 22-page
analys is and index of the tapes, and
included the first official explanation
of how that 18-minute section was erase~-
The analysis says obliteration of t'ft'e
conversation was caused by "the
d~pression or a record button during
the process of _reviewing the tape,
possibly while the recorder was in the
proximity of an electric !:pewriter and
a high intensity lamp." ·
The legal papers said that the accident
was believed to have been "in·
consequential" at firs t because it was
!See TAPES, Page ZJ
~ousing Nixed in Irvine
. Explorer Scouts march to graduation followin g
completion of law enforcement training academy
-conducted-during the Jon g Thanksgiving weekend
at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station . About 150 Ex·
plorer Scouts from 22 Jaw enforce1¥nt Explorer
posts throughout the county participaled in the
academy. Many of the participants were girls.
Flfty·five percent of ln-ine · residents
surveyed say there abould be no housing
built for families earning from $8,000
19 115,000 a year.
J planners may assume present residents
believe families should earn at least
$16,000 in order to live in Irvine.
to develop its own transit alternative
to the automQ.bile. Another 33. ~
took the opposite view with 27 percent
undecided.
Stocks Plunge Sharply;
•
Energy Crisis Blamed
NEW YORK (AP ) -The stock market
fell sharply today 1in \\'hat analysts
described as a renewed wave of investor
anxiety over the potential effects of
the energy crisis on the economy.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial
stocks, which has sustained one of its
steepest drops in recent history the
past four weeks, fell another 29.05 points
lo 824.95. '
Declining issues outnumbered those ad-
vancing by a 11 to I margin in relatively
active trading on tbe New York Stock
Exchange.
Brokers said President Nixon's energy
message on national television Sunday
night apparently sparked further concern
among investol"3 about lhe energy
outlook.
Analysts say the concern focus~s not
only on the direct impact of energy
shortages on such Industries a s
DeSalvo Stabbed
automobiles. fast food restaurants and
travel. but also on the broader capacity
of industrv to function at full pace
on limite01uel supplies. ·
"Tecli'nically speaking, the market is
certainly ripe for a rebound," said
Manown Kisor, analyst at Paine Webber,
Jackson & Curtis. "But we appear to
be In a· phase where irrationality bas
all but taken over."
Today's selling was "primarily in
response to Nixon's energy speech" ac-
rording to analyst Robert 'Amster of
Rosenkranlz, Ehrenkrantz, Lyon & Ross.
After hearing the Administration's
plans to restrict various uses · of fuel
bv consumers and indu stry, Amster said,
"The American people now realize we've
..got real prob l e ms. and the
Administration can't bail us out of
them.··
As a result. he said, ·'confidence is
destrey~n the buy side.''.
The 'Boston .Str.q1igler' . . '
Found Slain in Cell . . . ~ .
WALPOLE. Mass. (~P) -Albert
OeSalvo, who confessed to being lhe
"Boston Strangler" or tfte • 1960s, 'vas
found stabbtd to death in his prison
cell today, corrections officials reported.
_Although ~Salvo confc~!ed .to killlng.
13 women In the Boston area between
1962 and 1964 , he later retracted the
cont'esston and was never convicted of J, any of the 13 deaths.
,'The former Jlandyman was serving
a life term at the maximum security'
prlson for assaults on rour other women .
A prison spokesman said DeSalvo's
body was found about 1 a.m. In a
""II In tbe prl1011's h<iopltal...olioa where
DeSalvo worked u 1n orderly.
DeSalvo, 42, died ol mult(ple stab
wounds In the chest. No weapon was
IOW>d and there wore no suspects, the
spokesman soid.
' . '
•
. ' During OeSalvo's a'ssault trial in
January 1967, his la~er, F. Lee Bailey,
attempted to get the confession to the
strcfhglings ente red into evidence. He
"'as able only to present such testimon y
from psychiatrists whom OcSalvo told
he "''as ~e str.angler.
DeSalvo was convicted of burglary,
anned robbery and sexual molestatipn .
State authoritlf:s have long maintainea
tney ~id not have evidence u; proseculo
anyone for the strangllngs.
The case of the "Boston Strangler"
caused a worldwide sensation. The vic--
llms ranged In age lrom It lo 'IS. Most
bad be<o •8"<iated with health caro,
either as nurses, ~tal volunteers,
workers ln physicians• offices, or lrJcnds
or nurses and docton. All lived within
a 26-mUe radlus o[ Bmton.
:The ~t manhunt in Massachusetts'
hisfory was louched oll Feb. 24 , 1967
when OeSalvo aod two inmates ese1ped
(See STRANGLER, Pase I)
•
Police Chief's
Home Burgled
Westminster Police Cbief Walter
T. Scott should have read Dick
Tracy's • Crimestoppers , Textbook
item in the Sunday funny papers
before leaving his Costa Mesa
home. •
A burglar eiltered his Mesa
_Ve:rde._r:eside_nce through an unlock·
ed bedroom ·window and made off
with $100 in loot, mostly cash and
coins, plus a daughter 's Estancia
High School sfudeilt 1l00y card. -
He also stole the master key
lo all door locks in the Westminster
Police Station.
A random survey of 10 percent of
the households in Irvioe recently pro-
duced 263 responses, Larry Morrison
said today. He is project manager for
Wilsey and Ham of South Pasadena
the finn selected to prepare the city's
general plan.
JC the data from the survey is correct,
Caspers' House
Hit by Tliieves;
Loss of $20,000
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 tti. Dally f"llot Slaff
A series or mystery phone calls to
the Ramona ranch of Orange County
Board of Supervisors Chairman Ronald
H lid Li. ·htin. • L. Caspers today was considered a clue 0 a y g g to the $20,000 Thanksgiving holiday
burglary of his Newport Beach home. Contest Junked One or tlie unexplained calls involved
meone apParently mimicking a small
I A Hill ild who said : "l wuv you." n eg ean The Caspers family returned lo their
me at 119 Via Florence on Lido Isle
The Aegean Hills Ho me o w n er s about 5:30 p.m. 'Sunday and immediafely
Association in El Toro has joined the scnSed so_mething ~as wrong when they
voices calli.ng for a dark Christmas. fowxi a .side door aJar. . . . Investigators said today a tehl. of For ih~ f~rst tim,e tn several ye_ars , highly professional thieves was probably
the assoc1ahon. wont sponsor a holiday involved in looting the residence ()f
home lighting contest dozens of Items.
, Instead, by a unanimous vote at a "1bey did a real job," sai4 Ne}Vp()rt
recent meeting, the board of directors Beach Police Detective P a t r i ck
adopted a policy <!discouraging member O'Sullivan. as be continued with hia
•, hom~wners from any · e x t e r lo r investigation today.
decorative lighting 'this holid,ay season" Slolen Items -mostly fairly small
to conserve energy. and ea.Uy carried -included all_ the
Past exterior decoration con~ts couple's personal jewelry, chin a,
JJ)cbored by the 8S90Clation have been silverware and ·antique items, such as
popular. v1ca president ·Aubrey .:Miller • table lamps. · ~ .
said Friday, but the decision wasn't The burglars who pried open a sliding
made reluctantly. glass door opening onto the patio after
"It was . well received," he said of •scaling a gate facing the street appeared'
tlte Idea ol e>ncellation. "l think people to select the loot with taste and con~d·
rea lize just how serious the energy crisis erallon of value.
is." · Detective O'Sullivan said the pnr
Various cities and business inlettsts fesslonal na'lU':e of the job indicates
have promised lo cut bfck ·or elidllnate the st~~· calls lo the caspers ranch
outdoor lighting this year in anticipaUon in Sill • • ·C\Jtlnty, whete 1he lamily
ol lu~I shortages. • \pent the · lldays .,.,. probably con-
·'l!'e Aegelit : Hilts : association, which m•<:ted. ' ,
ha• 111111 membert, bas .called on other • Jnvestlgatoj's lheori!t the c&lls were
homeowners groups fo adopt similar placed to ...,.. thal the lamily, in·
J)Olldes and all S"1dleback Valley · luding chllH.Klrk 20 !lki 17 Greg residents to cooPente tn th effort. c , 1 ' • • ! ,, and Kflsten, both Is, and Blalr, 12,
J' 'were &till away lrom ihetr Ll!lo Isle
' ' Double Suici®'? '~ residenq,. •
, ~-• · Ir• ' · C.spcrs and bis wile lold·Olli<er Tom
SAN f'RANCIScO <UPn ..:. ~bodies · Stewart, who was 11 r • t dispatched to
or a S7-year-old ex-convict end his ~-the crime scene, that the cans occurred .
yelN>ld glrllrtend •....,. found Sunday Thursday, Friday and Saturdl)r.
In a Mission District hotel, and potlce The call In which oomeooe.apparenOy
said it wu a double suicide. !See BURGLARY, Pap I)
Other findings of the survey suggest:
-seventy.two percent of I r v i n e
residents feel there should be no govern-.
ment subsidization of moderate in"°me
families seeking housing in Irvine.
-Sixty~ght perecnt said that property
taxes are not the way to finance public
transit.
--Only 38 percent said the city ought
-Eighty percent said there should
be only one central city hall.
-Sixty-two percent thought the city
should extend its boundaries southward
to include ·the coastal sec tor of the
Irvine Ranch, but only 45 percent thought
the city should grow northward into
' IScc HOUSING , Page Zt
* * * * * * 'Attitudes Will Change'
Says Irvine Councilw~mm1
While 55 percent Of present city of
Irvine residents oppose provision of
homes for new families earning from
$8,000 to $15,000 a year, attitudes will
change, CoWlcilwoman. Gabrielle Rz:yor
suggested today. .
"As.!urning our survey is valid , I think
this attitude will change when , people
come to realize their sons and daughters,
the wklowed or elderly, can't live in
this city Wlless their . incomes exceed
$15,000," Mrs. PryOI' said.
Councilman Henry Quigley said the
survey results are "intriguing" but do
not to him prove cooclusively how Irvine ·
citizenry feel about specific issues.
Others on the council were not
available for comment today.
"America stands for something more
than shutting lhe door ·on people who
earn less than •ts,ooo a year," Mrs.
Pryor said.
CoWlcilman Jlenry Quigley said be
isn't sare that's' what the 55 percent
opposition to moderate cos,t housing means.
"I think the data says more clearly
that people are , opposed to subsidies
either by the 'city or the federal govern-
ment 1bat says to me people who
PRICE OF'. SEJiiJ
SELLS BIRD, CAGE
An ad worth less than a pack of
bird seed Is all it took to sell two
birds and a birdcage. Here's the ad :
TALL gold birdcage_ (2)
green parakeet& male, all
!or 110. (Phone No.).
•
'lbe advertiser told her Daily Pilot
Ad·vlsor sb .. sold every bin! "the !lrSt
day Jhe J d appeared." Action doesn'I
have to have en expensive price tag.-
Spend some "bird seecl1' yourself, next
time you have something to sell. Dial
the direct line lo results. Phone the
IY..ily Pilot II S0.!678.
. ,.
have worked hard getting where they
are are reluctant to see sorrre other
guy move in across the street with
the help of the government," Vice Mayor
Quigley said. •
Quigly did not criticize the results
but observed that the questions were
"highly generalized."
"One could do an in.depth attitudinal
survey solely on the housing issue,"
Quigley said.
Of the other responses on the survey,
Quigley said he was surprised lo learn
more residents favored annexation of
the coastal· se.ctor than appear lo favor
annexation of the "golden'1riangle and
areas around El Toro Marine Corps
Air Station.
The survey did not Identify these areas
in its question tegard ifig aMexatiofi to
\See ATl'ITUDES, Page %)
Coast
•
Weather
It'll be s°uMy and cool Tuesday,
according to the weather service,
"''il h beach temperatures in the
upper 50s rising to the mid 60s
inland. Overnight lows in tlie 40s.
INSIDE TODAY
Homosexuals Ii a v t 1 com-
plained about their portrayal
in movies and on television a'nd
it apPears like lu tltat gays wlli
bt depicted differentl11 in the
future. See 1tor11 Page 7.
'
)
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Boley Cause
\The Lake Forest Hon1eowners Association is circu-
, Jating petitions to preserve twin tunnels on Ridge
Route Drive under railroad tracks in Lake Forest.
Designed as an arterial highway since 1963, Rid ge
Route is to be widened with the tunnels replaced
by a bridge over Ridge Route. ·
' '
Moulton Ranch
Plans Due Study
In Joint Session
A review of the Chapman plan for
" developing some segments of the
Moulton Ranch near Laguna Beach will
fl be studied during a joint session of
~., the City Council and other city bodies
1. at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at city hall.
Designer John Chapman is scheduled
J to preM:nt his proposal for deve1opment • of the 10,000-acre area.
Population estimates place 57 ,000
persons in the area bounded by Laguna
:-Beach, South Laguna, Laguna Niguel,
Irvine Ranch and Saddleback Valley.
In the Laguna Beach area , Chapman's
plan has called for cons truction of 162
resid ences along the Top or the World
and Arch Beach Heights area and ex·
, · twion of Alta Laguna Boulevard. to
Coast Highway and inland to a proposed
routing of Oso Parkway.
Housing construction and extension of
the road ,have been .criticized by Laguna
area community @:rou~. and residents
" have complained that 9tJapman sought
• .... no community input during design of
the are~ adjacent to their homes.
From Page 1
OPPOSE .••
the .shortage around."
Evans said Costa 1\1esa service station
·. dealers are schedul ed to meet 'l'hurs;lay
,_ evening to discuss whether to foll cw
President Nixon's suggestion to volun·
·# tarily begin the Sunday shutdown this
w:::n:-thlrd~rv e staton leader is
opposed to th l 11 f rationing.
"The black mar leers are ready to
set up their (coupon ) presses ," insisted
NIXON DRUMS UP SUPPORT
FOR PROGRAM-Story, Page 3
NIXON'S ENERGY PLAN DRAWS
MIXED REACTIONS, Page S
PRESIDENT OUTLINES
FUEL SAVING PLAN, Pago 10
William H. Bay, operator of 1\1 ission
' Viejo Mobil Ser vice and a director of
the Jntematlonal Service Station Dealers
... Msociation. •
· .. I think the only way to handle this ! 11 through mand atory federal alloca tions
\ to each service station. They should i allocate it equitably, possibl y on the
amount of gas .sold last year," he said.
•'• •
' ·'· • ' :
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•
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(
UP'I T1l1photo
TESTIFIES ON TAPES
Nixon Secretary Wood_s
Fro1n Page 1
TAPES ...
not thought that the Haldemnn C'On·
versation was among the subpoenaed
material.
'The delay in discoverin;: that the
Incident affected a po rtion of th e tape
containing a subpoen aed conversation
was due to the ambiguity of the language
of the subpoena ," the White House legal
docun1ent said.
The \Yhi te House said it had been
believed that only an earlier meeting
the same day -June 2£1, 1972 -between
Nixon and John D. Ehrlichman had
been subpoenaed.
The analysis did not say it was Miss
Woods who wa s reviewing the tape when
it was erased, but an Administration
source said th.is was the case.
Disclosure thnt the 13-minute portion
of the conversation betw een Nixon and
Haldeman, then his chief of staff, had
been erased came Wednesday, one day
after Nixon assured R e p u b 11 c a n
governors that there would be no further
sta rtling disclosures about Watergate.
At lhe White ~louse this afternoon,
Gerald L. Warren, de pu ty p re ss
secreta ry, sad! the President was aware
when he gav e the assurance to the
governors that there was "some dif·
ficu lty" with one of the tapes.
But like the legal memo, he said
there was so1ne co nfusion at the tin1c
whether the damaged tape was among
those subpoenaed.
He said Nixon Intended in no way
Jo mislead the Republican governors.
···The President had a doubt in his
m!nq_ not onl y if "it were subpoenaed
but \Vhat the circumst ances ·(of the
dan mge to th e tapes ) were," \Varren
said. •
f'ro111 Page 1
BURGLARY. ••
talked like a small chi ld was mentioned ,
plus tWo In which the phone rang but
was followed by silence when answerl'd
by some member of the famlfy.
Caspers, 42, who hea ds Keystone Sav-
ings and Loan Association , tol d In-
vestigators many people and organlz.a·
tions knew of his planned holiday
absence. ·•
He was to confer again .today with-
police .Jlnd providt; a detailed list of
them, ln addition to a roster of past
servants and other hired help. ·•
Loss to the fam ily was esti mated
only al $10,000 to $20,000 pending a
complete inventory of the missing Jtem11 which the financier and controve.r1lal
cotmly leader also planned lo •upply
toda y. ·
He 'said all household ·Ile.ms were In-
ventor!~ and appraised for exact value
only two weeks ago by his insurance
rarri@r·.
' . I
Viejo Residents'
Preferences Set
At Tuesday Meet
Results of a survey of A-fission Viejo
residents on what type of local govern-
ment they want will be presented at
a public meeting of the Mission VJejo
Homeowners Associatipn at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at La Paz Jntennedlate School.
The ll·item query was mailed to all
residents '"'O weeks ago. It was written
by a study committee from the
homeowners' group and asked for
residents' opinions on a 1>1unlcipal
A~visory Council (MAC).
A MAC, an advisory body to the
Orange County Board of Supervisor.a,
has been proposed for Mission Viejo.
It would provide direct input to the
county on locaf issues such as traffic
and pa rking,_recreation, streets and law
enforcement.
Also on the agenda of the meeting
is election of officers and a report
on mass transportation developments af.
feeling Mission Viejo.
Mexican Cliild
Getting Better
Carlos Varela, the 2-year-old Mex.ican
child given a free operation Friday a
Mission Community Hospital tO correct
a cleft palate, is out of bed and playing
today.
"it looks like the operation i.s going
to be a tremendous success ," said
J\lission spokesman Paul Ideker.
The six-hour operation in Ml.salon Vlfjo
v1as performed Friday by Dr. Joseph
Ferreira of San Clemente.
Young Carlos and his parents, the
David Varelas of Ensenada , were
brought to Mi.sslon l;lospital through a
cooperative effort or the hospital and
"Operation Involvement,'' a non-profit
group which tries to help provide good
medical care in the U.S. for Mexican
children.
Glider Plunges;
Pilot Injured
A San Diego hang glider pilot suffered
a broken wrist ""herf hls kite-like aaft
plummeted into Holy Jim Canyon In
the hills above Mission Viejo Sunday
afternoon.
Tony Hughes, 'lT, launched his glider
from Coto de Caza ranch at about 3 p.m.
and landed in lhe rugged canyon less
than a minute later, a spokeSJTllU1 for
the Orange County.Fire Department said
today.
A qnit of the Trabuco Volunteer Fire
Department rescue squad went to u.e
scene but Hughes refused ambulance
attention and left wilh friends, offlclals
said.
J'
Grove Educator
Dies After Crash
Donald R. Wash, superintm!cnt ol
the Oarden Orove Unified School
Oi!trlct, died Sunday followlns five
weeks in a coma multlng from a
mot orcycle accident.
W~sh, 12, had beoD superintendent
of the .district slnCiO February, 1971.
He had been with the district for II
years.
When Wash's motorcycle, coUldtd with
a 1 dune buggy Oct. 21, he was taken
to Shorp l\1emorlal Hospital In San Diego,
where he died early-Sunday momlng.
The·admlrtistrator leaves his wife Pat,
his daughter Klm, and two oona, Ken
and K.C. • ·
• Graveside 1ervtces for WHh w\11 he
held Wednetdly al 2 p.m. al For..t
L.i wn In Cypress.
f
..... . .
Cops Lose
'Confidence'
In Anaheim
Dleldent Anaheim policemen have
unveUed lheir latest tactic designed io
force the city to negotiate for hlfher
pay -a wte oI "no confidence' in
their chief. ' ·
Stephen Solomon, attorney for the
Anahelm Police Association, said Ill
of the organlzaUon's 278 members voted
at a rally Nov, 6 again.st Chief David
~fiche!. '
SOiomon said 25 of those at the rally
in Pearson Park supported the chief
and two ab.stained from voting. • The poll result& were released by the
APA as part of a continuing campaign
by officers in Anaheim to make the
city reconsider its pay and contract
offers.
One tactic -a slowdown on ticket
writing for moving violations -was
in operation through last. week bl.it an
APA spokesman said today It has been
canceled because some member officers
did not want to participate.
A second tactic -termed the "super
cop" approach· -was planned btit never
· put Into operation. It called for 1:1n
increase in driver citations for even
the most minor violations.
Officers also picketed city hall for
a week in an effort to bring their
grievances to the public eye.
Solct.mon said the APA decided to
di.sclose its "no confidence" vote when
It learned that Chief Michel had asked
for City Council permission to fire four
APA memben.
Michel has assailed the tactics used
by the APA, claiming they have hurt
the lmage of the police department in
the eyes of the public.
Councilmen voted last week that pay
negoUaUons had proceeded In good faith
for three months and the clty'a final
offer 11 fair and equitable.
The city's offer calls for eome lm·
provementa: In fringe benefits, a 8.75
percent pay raise tbe first year and
a six perctnt raise the second year
on a two-year contract.
Police negotlaton want e v e n
mono benefit lmpnwementa than the city
has offered, a one-year contract and
seven percent raiaes each ot the next
two yean.
City officials claim that to reopen
pay negotiations with the officers would
be un1alr to other city employe groups
which have already come to terms.
Solomon said efforts by mediator Tom
McCarthy of the State Conclllation
Service have failed to get any results
so far. McCarthy was called into the
dispute last week in an effort to bring
the two sides to some kind of agreement.
From Pflfle 1
HOUSING •..
the Santiago Hill!.
-Assuming expansion of the city
mi gill increase · taus, only 38 perCMt
favored elp8DlioD, 37 percent were
unsure and 24 percent opposed an in-
crease in the size ol Irvine. ·
-Forty.five-percent favored city
purchae ol wlldllfe preservea ae<:esible
only by hlld111 trslls, while another 38
perce11t favonod preserves which could
be reached by bike and car.
-Fifty-ooe percent thought the city
should save farm land by expenditures
of city !undo.
-Only four percent were willing to
support a ".substantial increase" In city
taxes to pay to preserve open space,
while 34 percent favored a moderate
tax Increase and 38 percent would su~
port a minimal Increase.
• •
Bond Issue
Hospital Seeks
County · Support
I
Offlcla1s of Saddlebact Community -The county could pay ofl the bonds I
Hospital In Laguna 'llUls have asked at any time and accept full title.
Orange County government tO endorse -The hospital provide adequate pro·
• $12.5, million boad lsaue to..help save _ teclion against malpractice liablllty., I
financing costs and provide money to -County sµpervisors would have the
open their l!O-bed laclUty. right each year to disapprove the election
The request conles before Ute Orange or re-election of any hQSPILal dJrector.
Co unty Board of Sllpervl80rt 'l'Uesday. Construction of Saddleback Community
Bernard lngram_J presldenl oL lbe _Hospital beg_an in J971 and has been
hospital's 20-member board. said the beset with delays from strikes and ad·
refinancing program bu beeo1 arrange<I minlstratJve staff turnover. Original
with United CIUfom!a Bank 1hd Miller-opening date for the facility was last
Schroeder, Inc .. St. Louis bond brokers. .May.
In return for the county's etldorselmnt, -'-----------
it woold get UtJe to the faclllty in
30 to 35 years.
County approval would mean the bond
sales would be tax exempt. Ingram
said the money saved through tax ex-
empt statu.'I could be passed along to ·•
patients In lower costs.
lngram said the re-!inancing would
complete, equip, staff, and operate the
$15 million facility scheduled for opening
Feb. I. .
"UCB has wured us we will have
all the interim financing we need to
get the hospital open and carry us
through the first six months," Ingram
said.
After the bondt are sold, UCB will
he completely re-lmbuned, he said.
Refinancing for the non-profit ho6pltal
was necessitated after the Lutheran
Hospital Society of Southern caJllornla
canceled Its management <ontracl with
the hospital lul September. . "
In a letter to the Board of SUpervlsors,
County Counsel Adrian ICuyper warned
that "If It chose ta join with Saddleback
the county 1hould seek 1S1Urancea that
It ...Wd he adequately financed and
-admln11tered. ••
UPIT ....... 11
KNIFED ·1N PRISON
Albert H. O.Salvo
'·
Jniram said he and other h<icpllal
offlclall would he meetlnc with County
Adminlltntive Officer Robert Tbomu
Tuelday morn!J>& to rovlew details of
the proposal. '
"We are hope!UI \blS will be approved,
but If II l.sn'I we ate 1Wl In good
lhape," Ingram said. 0 Miller-Schroeder
will proceed with steps toward corporate
bond Wes. 11
Cood!Uons of the bond sale would
include that:
-The bospllal agree to dedicate title
at the end of the 30 to 35-year financing
period to the county.
-The cotmty he usured of no liability
tn case of default of the bonds.
ATIITUDES. • •
the "SaDtlago Hll1s," Quigley oboerved.
He noted allo that people 1eem la-
terestecl In a transit system but oppose
tax Increases to pay for It.
"To me, that seems to say the users
should be charged for a transit system
and with the energy crilll it appears
there will be more 'usen' of public
transportation S)'ltems," Quigley said.
Mrs. Pryor concluded that the city
may face 1uits if it bans outrigbf the
construction of moderate income bous·
ing.
I
Grocery Owner Shot
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The owner
of a small grocery was found shot
and k!Ued Sunday In the hack room
of his store. Police said the body of
Saletm Hasu.n Erakat, 53, was found
In his store by a customer. His hands
were tied and he was shot ln the head ,
they said.
From Pqe J
STRANGLER • • •
from Bridgewater Stale Hospital a month
after DeSalvo's assault trial.
OeSalvo, who had been at the hot!pita1
awaiting an appeal , was captured 1 \~
days later in a Lynn, Mau., clothing
store, where he asked to use the
telephone. .
DeSalvo was al the hospllal before
the trial, Wldergolng observation for an
alleged aexual molestation offense, when
his oe~ate, George Ka~, persuaded
Bailey lo represent DeSalvo.
Bailey at fi rst resisted but agreed
to do , it onlf., a day before detect,ives
arrived latl '*" hospital to queatlon
DeSalvo about the stranglings.
Bailey tape-rt!corded DeSalvo's story
under an agreement with the slate at·
tomey generai's o£flce that Ct could no!
!>e used agalmt him . Detectives were
said to have found !hat most of "What
he said tallied with the evidence of
the cMmes.
DeSaJvo also claimed to be the "Green
Man," known to New England law en-
forcement officials as the man respoMi-
ble for an estimated 600 to 1,000 rapes
and other sexual offenses over several
years.
No one was ever pro9eCUted as the
"Green 1t1an," v.•ho wu called that
because of the repairman's outfit the
victinl3 sa id he v.·ore in gaining entrance
to their homes under the ru.se of being
sent to fix 50l11ething.
Before DeSalvo repudiated his con-
fession In 1968, he maintained he
desperately wanted psychiatric treat·
ment.
After DeSalvo's convtcUon, Bailey
commented. "Massachusetts bas just
burned another witch."
Nobody Sells Amana for less thcin 1>tJldaP
Where do ~ v.-ant the freezer
in your new 1f.m11n11. -retrigefator ...
on the side? on the boltom? on, the g,..z
>h••• gives y0u a·Cholce
•
90DAYSCASH
Wl'l'll APPROVED CllEDtT·•
1115 lllWPORT Bl VD.,
Downtown c~sta Mesa -Phone 548-7788
f.
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I
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Huntington Bea~h
FounJain ·Valley
•
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Today's Fl11al
N.Y .. Stoeks
voi:. 66, NO. 330, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, .CALIFORNIA MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1973 TEN CENTS
Coast Stations Fuming Over Sunda jr Gas Ban
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of t11e 0.lty '1i.t SM"
Service station operators along the
Orange Coast today reacted unfavorably
to President Nixon'• Sunday gasoline
sales ban because they believe it will
hurt business.
The sale ban, to take effect after
congressional approval, would stop
service stations from dispensing ga90llne
between 9, p.m. Saturday and 12:01 a.m.
Monday to discourage long-distance driv·
Expansion
Of Edison
Hearing Set
The question of ~ther Huntington
Beach had the authority to approve
Southern California· Edison's power plant
expansion may be settled Dec. 21 in
Orange County Superior Court.
·Judge Walter Charamza, a Huntington
Beach resident, h~ set that date for
a abow cause hearing for the city to
dt!end its expansion approval granted
Dct. 15, or mclnd the approval. ~ /
The Envtronm..tal Coollt191 ol ~e
County, .repr e1 !nted ... by attorney /Ver Lyn
Jensen, film au!! Nov. IS 19 'ball the
approval process started b)"'l!llntlngtoo
Beach. • .
Jensen's sult, whicb,..names both the
city and F.dison as reSpondents, contends
that Huntington .-Beach does not have
the authority to iwume the role or
lead agency Y the primary agency for
deeeloping" an environmental impact
report (E!Rl -in Edison's lengthy
permit process.
Jensen also contends that Huntington
Beach did not do a thorough job in
obtaining advice and Input from other
agencies for the Edison. EIR, thereby
invalidating ita approval for the $310
million expansion project.
City Attorney Don Botifa views It
otherwise.
"In the language of the state guidelines
(under the environmental quality act)
it appears the city has .. much mo~e
merit as the lead agency, Bonfa said
today. · -
The city's role had been challenged
by the Public Utilities Commission
(PUC ), but Bonfa Said the state Jaw
indicates the closest "genct:al" govern·
IS.. EDISON, Page Z)
Grove Educator
Dies After Crash
Donald R. Wash, superintendent ol
the Garden Grove Uljlfied School
IJislricl, diod Sunday following five
weeks in a coma resulting. from a
motorcycle accident.
Wash, 42. had been sdperintendent1 of the district since February, 1972.
He had been with the district for 16
years.
When Wash's motorcycle collided with
a dune buggy Oct. 21, he was taken
to Sharp Memol'ial Hospital in San·Diego,
where he died e,rly Sunday morning.
The ad"1tnlstrator leaves his wife Pat ,
his daughter Kim, and two sons, Ken
and K.C.;
Graveside services for \Yash '!'ill be
held · Wednesday al 2 p.m. at Forest.
LaWll in Cypress. • •
ing. It is estimated that the measure
will save 50;000 barrels of gasoline per
day. I
"As rar as I'm concerned this is
the most cbildiJh and idiotic thing I
ever heard of,'' fumed Bob Smith, of
Smith's ARCO, <COl'Der Bristol and Baker
Street, Costa Mesa.
"All this iJ , going to do ts insure
that the stores will be sold out of
three and four gallon gas cans this
weekend . It won't stop any driving on
Police Chief's
'
Home Burgled
Westminster Police Chief Walter
T. Scott should have read Dick
Tracy's Crimestoppen Teltbook
item in the SU.day funny papers
before leaving his Costa Mesa
home.
A burglar ·entered his Mesa
Verde residence through an unlock·
ed bedroom window and made off
with $100 in loot, moslly cash and
coins, plus a daughter's &tancia
High School stude!\t body card.
He alsO stole the master key
to all door locks in the Westminster
Police Station.
Beach, Valley
Will Send .12
To · Puerto Rico
HWllington Beach will send eight
representatives and Fountain Valley four
to the National League of Cities con-
ference in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Dec.
2 to 6.
The 'Huntington Beach contingent in-
cludes sir cooneilmen (Don Shipley Is
the kine councilman DOI going), City
Administrator Dave Rowlands and Fire
Qtief Ray Picard.
Four Fountain Valley Councllmen CAI
ffollinden will miss the trip) are
representing their city.
All individuals from both cities are
making the trip at city expense.
Memben .of the HunUngton Beach
group have been advanced $550 per
person for air fare, room, board and
other expense1. 'Ibe same $560 expense
will be advanced to the four Fountain
Valley councilmen.
If lh05e representing Huntington Beach
spend more than the $550 advance, they
can be reimbursed by the city of it
was .a reasonable expense, according
to Finance Director Frank "Ben"
Arguello.
The same flexibility does not apply
to fountai'n Valley delegates, who must
li!_e1·within the bul;lget ·or pay for the
excess out-o( their own pOcketa.
Fire Chief Picard was added to the
Huntington •Beach grooq> beca111e he Is
a member of the League of cities na·
tional public safety steering committee
which will make a series of public
safety recommendations at the five-day
conference. ·
Any money not spent , by individuals
from either city is expected to be return·
ed. to the city treasuries, according to
both finance directors.
Sports Ni ght Set
F~r Edison Higli
Sundays. The people will just carry
their cans witb them ."
Smith, who attracted nationwide ·at-
tentioo recently when he "captured"
a gas delivery truck ln protest over
wholesale price increases, says he plans
to remain open this Sunday.
"Why? Because I've got gas to ~II.
I've already got the government telling
me how much I can sell it for and
the oil companies telling me how much
I'm going to get. I'm not going to
The 'Boston
Strangler'
Found Dead
WALPOLE, Mass. (AP) -Atbert
DeSalvo, wbo confe~ to being the
"Boston Strangler" or the 1960s, was
found stabbed to death in his prison
cell today, corrections officials reported.
A1thQugh DeSalvo confessed to killing ·
13 women in the Boston area between
1962 and 19", . be later retracted the
confeuiM and w.u never ODDYicted of
any ol the IJ deallll.~
The fatmor baDdyman WU serving
a life term at tbe maximum security
prison for assaults on four other women.
A prison spokesman said De.salvo's
body was found about 7 a.m. in a
cell in the prison's hospital section where
DeSalvo worked as an orderly.
DeSalvo, 42, was stabbed 16 times -
s.ix tinles in the heart. No weapon was
found and there were no suspects, the
spokesman said.
Dt¢ng DeSalvo's assault trial in
January 1967, bis lawyer, F. Lee Bailey,
attemJ)ted to get the confession to the
stranglings entered Into evidence. He
wa.s able onJy to present such testimony
frvm psycliiatrisbl wbo;n DeSalvo told
be was the strangler.
DeSalvo was · convicted or burglary ,
armed robbef'Y and senial molestation.
State au.tho"rities have Jong maintained
they did not have evidence to prosecute
anyone for the stranglings.
The case of the HBoston Strangler•·
caused a worldwide sensation. The vic·
lims ranged in age from 19 to 75. Most
had been associated with health care,
either as nurses, hospital volunteers,
workers in physicians' offices, or friends
of nurses and c;loctors. All lived within
a ~mile radius o( Boston.
The biggest manhunt in Massachusetts'
bl.story waS touched off Feb. 24, 1967
when DeSfllvo and two inmates escaped
(See STRANGLER, Page Z)
Valley Council
E yes Candida tes
, Alembers of the Fountain Valley City
Council will hold a special meeting
+ tonight to screen Candidates for the
newly created job ' of 3.ssistant cit y
manager. ;,
The closed-door session will be held
at 8 o'clock at city hall.
City Manager Jim Neal said today
Out.standing· atodent athletes will be honored 'lb\lnday during the Edisoo •
High School PT8A Sparta Night. •
that the four candidates to be in·
terviewed by the. council were screened
Otlt of. the more ' than too applicants
lot the post.
'The ~. which was funded in the
lt'IJ.74 bud@!, curies an annual salary
ol up lo $21;i0o.
-. give away 40 to SO bucks out of my
pocket."
Smith insists that the 'gasoline shortage
was manufactured and that with the
outbreak of the Mideast War tbe oil
companies now firid that they have to
maintain the posture of an even greater
shortage. "They can't· say that we can
meet the oil requirements of the country
now after all," Smith said. '1They've
created a monster."
For that reason Smith will not volun-
Inspection
tarily stop sell ing ·gasoline. "And' as
soon as I'm forced to under the new
Jaw. I'm going to send President Nixon
a fonnal bill for each Sllllday that
I haven't been able to sell my gas,"
he said.
Phil Evans, chairman of the Costa
Mesa Service Station and Garage Owners
C.Ommittee and operator or a Phillips
66 station across the street, disagrees
with Smith. He believes the shortage
is real.
Dlllf P'llol Sl1ff ......
"I've been closing Sundays anyhow -
ever since I couldn't get as much gas
as I wanted," he explained. ·'t'm geared
to a seven day week but l 've had
to scale things down. The Sunday sales
ban won't affect me that much, but
it will hurt a lot of other service stations.
"Personally I believe they should ra-
tion gasoline. That's the ultimate solu·
tion. It's the only fair way to spread
(See OPPOSE, Page 2)
'Investor
Anxiety'
Gets Blame
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock m~rkel
fell sharply today in what analysts
described as a renewed wave of investor
anxiety over the potential effects o'f
the energy crisis on the economy.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial
stocks, which has sustained-one of its
steepest drops in recent history the
past foor weeks, fell another 29.05 points
to BZl.95.
Declining is!lues outnumbered those ad-
vancing by a ll to 1 margin in relatlvety
active trading on the New York Stock
Exchange.
Brokers said President Nixon's energy
message on national television Swtday
night apparently sparked further concern
among investors about the energy
outlook.
Analysts say the concern focuses !!Ol
only on the direct impact of energy
shortages on such industries a s
automobiles, fast food restaurants and
travel, but also on the broader capacity
of industry to function at full pace
on limited fuel supplies.
Lynn Hacker, a Huntington· Beach police reservist, inspects Explorer.
Scout during closing events Su'nday of law enforcement academy
conducted durin g Than:ksgivi.ng weekend for scouts from 22 Explorer·
posts throughout Orange County. About 150 sco uts, many of them
girls, attended the three-day academy at El Toro Marine Corps Air
Station .
"Technically speaking, the market is
certainly ripe for a rebound," said
Manown Kisor, analyst at Paine Webber.
Jackson & Curtis. "But we appear to
be in a phase where irrationality has
all but taken over."
Today's selling was "primarily in
response lo Nixon's ene rgy speech" ac·
cording to analfst Robert Amster of
Rosenkrantz, Ehrenkrantz, Lyori & Ross.
.After hearing the Administration's
plans to restrict various uses of fuel
by consumers and industry, An1ster said,
"The American people now realize we've
got rea l probl ems. and the
Administration can't bail us out of Will Nixon's Plea Cancel them.·' "'
As a result, he said. "confidence is
destroyed on the buy side.''
Harbour Cruise of Lights? Quo~ Lacking;
•
By HILARY KAYE
Of IN Diiiy P'lllt Stiff
The plug may he pulled on the Hun·
tington Harbour Christmas "Cruise of
Lights"· as a result of President Nixon's
plea Sunday for Americans to eschew
on1Amental lighting in order to save
ene rgy. .
Directors ot the Huntington Harbour
Philhannonic Committee, sPonsor of the
annual charity event, huddled this mom·
ing to decide whether or not they would
call a· halt to thC lighi:··show and. if
so, how. '
~ week, the lad ies steadfa stly main·
tained they would p~ with the col·
orful holiday event -energy ~crisis or
no -because plans, including WO !or
invitations and 2,500 reservallons, were·
Loo far along to stop it.
But there were lndlcatloos today that
President Nb:on's appeal to Ameri.~ans Mee ting Canceled
to ·helP s~e energy. has put the he~t•-Because of lack of a quorum, Hun-
on the Cbnstm~ cnu.se sponsors. tington Beach Union High School District
The board. is still discuWng what trustees have canceled their meeting
to do about the cruise, and ~ible y,•hich was scheduled Tuesday night.
alte rnatives , Shalon Buller, a member .A . spok~man for the high s~I
of the philharmonic committee, said this d1stnct s~1d trustees wi ll not _meet again
morning. . until . their next regularly scheduled
Mrs. Jane Zimmerman, chairman or meeting Dec. IL
the event, sajd that $800 has been spent ~------------
on invitations, and that 2.500 reservations
already have been aqcepted . •
The group hopes to raise $10.000 for
charity, according to Mrs. Jane Dod,
founder of the crui11e.
Plans for the holiday light show were
begun last January -long he!orc talk
of an energy crisis ~an -explained
Mn. Zimmerman. The cruise Is schodu~
ed to take place nighlly, between Dec.
13 and 23.
Oruge Coast
Weather
It'll be sunny"'and cool Tue9day,
according lo the weather servh .. ~.
With beacn temperatures in the
upper 50s rising to the mid 60s
inland. Overnight lows in the 40s.
PRICE OF SEED
SELLS 8Iff;D, CAGE
An ad worth less than a pack ol
bird aeed Is ill IL Look to sell two
birds and a birdcage. Here11•the ad :
1be event. ICbedaled for 7:30 p.m.
will be held in the campus gym and
will include dernonatraUOll!I o1 the
variW. !pOrta 11111-the boDored athl<tes
participate in.
Ac:oorcllos Iii a PT8A opokesman, the
·gporll Dllht will be the lint of four
events <luring the 1ehool year designed
to acquaint the community with pro-
grams at the ICbool.
Edi~op Girls Returning I INSW E TODAY .'
HomoseJ:Ual.t hove com-
plai'ned about their portrayal
i1l movies and O?l television and
it appear.t likely that gays wil l
b• depicttd dl/f<r<ntlu in tht
f11t1tre. See story Page 1.
TALI, gold birdcage. (2)
green ·parakeets male, all
for flO. (Phone No.) . Police Find Bodies •
The advertller told her Daily Pilot CO CORD JUPll -l'l>lice llliy
Ad·vllor 1heo sold every bird "the flrst emiliid ,fuii6McJ shof his wl/O ll> death
<Illy the aq 1ppeartd.;' Action doesn "l and . tlien killed hi-ii ~. Mrs.
have to ~ an expensive pri'ce .tag. K~hl..,,. Andel'OOll, It, -found 6y
Spend some "b!N aeed" yourself. next J>C!hce on the ,couch ID ~ ll,Jni room
tlme you have iorilething to aell. Dial with a bulJ.t m he< dlllt. Ollloen ,.Id
Jhe direct line to results. Pholle the the body GI her buaband, o1o1m Anderacn, D~ily Pilot at SQ-1178. • , --SI, ot Manion, ... In I dlalr a few ~"-'-~~~~~~~~--feet1way. • •,
~.
-
' .
Drill -T-eam 'fakes Whirlwind .Tour of Sovie t UniQ1i
' .. Tbt IS-moml!er Edison High School
DrlU Te.Im was ldleduled to return
to · HllJ!t~ Beach • toalght from a
seven<la!j_~hoind tour a( Ruula.
The lifis llD<I their di~ were
aet ll> mi,.; al Lii1 An1ele1 lntemoUonal
• All'plrt u.r were !hell lo oe buo<ll
to r.lllaa -111811 School, ""'-'" they p!in.
nod lo meet their fatnlll~ and friend!.
~ ollldals .. umatcd their arrival
-
r
in Huntington Beach to be between 6: 30
and 7 p.m.
They-added that there_ would he no
formal "welcome home" ceremony since
charter flights are so uncertaln1 and
the gltls were bound to be tired from
lhet tiip home. · •
ntere are no immediate plans for
the! girls to share their experiences with
the rest al.the student body. However,
~· '
. .
a spokesma n for the school's activities
o(fice explained-that within the near
futu re, the drill teJm membe~ will
have an opportunity to relate the events
cf the Russtan trip .
Tho 56 girls from Edison High, and
the driU t,.m from Ansheirn High
School, were inYlted to tour Russia,
and ·perform thhlr driO team routints
before Russian dignltarlcs.
•
ffflillt " A.JM L•IMllr• 11 l .M. hWd I Mtwl1• 11 Clllftl'llll S, lt Nltliifll Nlwt "' Cl1nUIH tt.U Or1n11 Ctvnl\' t CllftlC• 1J lrlYll Pentt It
'"'" , .. 17 llK• M1rlllh ltoll
Cre1,_cl JS
0.11t1 trtttlcn It Ecllllrill ..... • 1IN-llHM • ,.
l:~ttrtlM!lflltnl 11 l"Mllltr• II
l'lllhal 1•11 w-• II"# IN lltcW9 It ._. ....... ,,.,~
""'''"'' , . .. ,,.. .... ...
\'
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' •
1,
•
" Monday, Novtmbtr 26, 1'#1l
Seven Reels
Tapes Given Up
By Wliite House
Kohouwk Seen .
In Caufornia
-SAN ,IWICISCO (UPI) -
Comet Kolloutek bu ftoaUy made
ID ._,...,._ ill the ~
Cllllomll~. --
Ian $alanaYe, execatlTe
-.ry Of the Aatronlmlcal
Society of the Pacific, said he
spotted the comer In the oarty
BULLETIN -ecu tot; ·has·namtd a panctof six -expert! --mo~Jng sky today·-wit.lt the aid
WASHINGTON (UPI) _ Rost ~tary to verify that the tapes have not been or binoculars. He said It tppeared
Woods, President Nixon's personal •«· tampered with. lie said also that ·he as a "fuuy star" and wu four
retary, testified this 1rttrnoon she acct-\\'00.ld hear arguments on all claim! to five times fainter than earlier
de'at.ally erased a portion of oae tf bis of executive privilege befo~ ruling ~·hat predicted.
secret W1tugate tapes oearly two portions can go be[ore the grand jury. The comet is expected to become
moatbt ago and lhat tbe President u.ld Even before the tapes were dcllv&ed pro_gresslv~ly brigbter between DOW
I& "was no problem." by White House counsel J. Fred Buzhard t and January.
' ---,..,-.,,... in gray metal canisters, extraordinary
' ' WASHINGTON fAP) -The White securit y measures 'ft·ere placed around
Houle today turned over to a federal Sirica's chambers.
.. judge seven reels of subpoenaed White A U.S. marshal required a signature
, House Watergate tapes, but asked all and clearance before allowing anyone
or pert! of three of them be withheld into the judge's offices, and even Sirica's
from a federal grand jury. personal secretary was made to wear
~ The Whlte House also gave the court an identifi ca tion badge.
• three other tape recordinaa to back The \Vhite House analysis claimed in .,... the case of the tapes It wants withheld :.tts contmtioo that conversati<:m of June that the conversations are "sub}ect to "~· 1972 and April 15 this year went executive privilege tn order to protect
Nuclear Reactor
Foe Bruce Sharpe ·
Suicide Victim
.,.unrecorded. -· the confidentiality of advice given to Those three tape reels cootain Wh1te the President.,, Bruce Sharpe, the 42-year-old lawyer
, House telephone conversations of June One of them is or a conversation who led the battles against plans to
"1120 and the recordings made in the old between the President and John D. build two new San Onofre nuclear reac-"'E u· Off. B ·rd · April 15 tors was found dead In his car todai·. xecu ve ice u1 1ng on Ehrlichman on June 20, 1972 -the
"11be(ore, ·as the White House oontends, fi rst part of a taped conversation that the victim of suicide.
a recording device ran out of tape. the White House says is marred later Sharpe, a prominent la\V)'cr in the • · d J •-J s· · Santa Barbara aild Lompoc areas, v:as · U.S. District Ju ge 01111 • 1r1ca by the 18-minute hum . found slwnped over the steering wheel ·~aid the court will listen to only enough The hwn occurs three minutes and of his car parked along Highway 166
<''.of the three recordings "to determine 40 seconds from the start of a con-near santa M,aria. ·He had been mis!:ing
'the absence of the subpoenaed con-versation between Nixon and H.R. sin""" last Thursday, authorities said .
versalion." Haldeman, who was then White House ...... --SM~ officiajly ~sented Groups The April JS conevrsalion the White chief of staff, according to the White ~ United Against Radiation Danger s
"i'House says went unrecorded was with House infonnation supplied to Sirica. (GUARD ) based in San Clemente and
::·then-White House counsel John Vf· Dean The 'Vhite House said that it is beli.ev-served as legal counsel for that group
• :'ti~ and the June 20 conversatio!l was eel the bum "was caused by t.he 1m-and others deemed formal intervenors
. with former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell. pression of a record button duru1g the in the drawn-out battles against the
!'•· 'I.be White House g3ve Slrica a~g~ _____ J2toc..e.ss_o!.....rebe.aJ::ing the.~~. possibjx__ plant-pr.opo.s.als _
analysis of !he ~a~ and other mater1alS y,·bile the rteanier was ln the proximity Officers in charge of the case in
"·1 t was placing 1n 1<.s custody and asked of an electric typewriter and a hlgh-in-Central California said that they have ,.~~that he withhold all Or parts of three tensity lamp." learned the lanky IOft .. poken lawyer
;.::C?f the tapes from t.pe Watergate grand Ttie White House said In lts filing, had been d~ over recent prob-
., Jllr)'. . as lt did In court, that the delay In lt•na Jn his wort and had.)1ad a history ~. Thus ~~ a fight that began ~ug. discovering the missing portion was "due of thwarted suicide attempts. ·
••1 29 when S1r1ca ordered that he be g1.ven to the ambiguity of the language of Officers said death came as a result
"•the tapes to determine what portions the subpoena." of carbon monoxide poisoning. Sharpe
)q the grand jury should hear. had attached one end of a garden hose
Jo: Since then, White House has disclosed to the exhaust-pipe and stuck the other
, ~t (1 ) the two conve:sali?ris w~t ~· From Page I . through a window of the car. No note !'fecorded, (2) a presidential d1cta!Jon was found ·
·belt could not be found and (3) an 11> EDISON Hb ,..;rk for GUARD and the
i; 'minute segment is Is obliterated by a • • • california Ocean Shoreline Preservatkn
" ~ .on yet another ta.pe. . n-. Conference in the nuclear re.actor ·~ Si.nca, on consulta~on with the White ment should be the lead agency. disputes lasted for years and involved
•. House and the special Watergate pros-"We are the closest general govern· montm of research and praentatioDI
-Employes Back ,,
. :.At Thrifty Drug
.. 111
·-Mter Walkout ' ·
• ~.). 1 , , I I• • '! 1~-y, An estimated 500 'thrifty Drug ator~
· ·employes were back on their jobs today
' after a 19-day slrike which shut down
more than 50 Orange County stores.
A new contract was ratified by vote
p Sunday and a union representative said
:'.'.,j~. IJlll'gin of approval w~s overwhel.m·
·i. ~e two-year-contract is retroacl.lve
I to July 1 and wtll raise the base pay
of clerks hired before October of 1969
•· to $4.05 an hour by Jan. 1, 1975. Clerks hired after that date v.'ill have pay
·~ raises bringing their hourly wage to
~ $3.66 as of Jan. 1, 1975. The increases
: ,are 53 cents and 42 cents respeatively.
• · Hourly wages for pharmacists v.·ill
climb to $11.25 by Jan. 1, 1975, a SO-cent-
:· an-hour pay hike.
· C.ost-of-living raises and improved
benefits are also included in the new
· .. contract, which was approved by 90
percent of the union me'mbers.
.. 'Ibrifty terminated the previous con-
-tract Oct. 17, saying it could not afford
·' to compete with non-un ion drug stores.
The strike closed 285 slores fro m San > Luis Obispo to the Mexican border.' John
.. C. Sperry, executive officer of Retail
Clerks Local 324, which covers Long
· Beach and Orange County, said his
-district has 800 union members and
·. 5S stores.
"I estimate that about 500 retail clerks
--were on strike in Orange County and
: that would be at around 35 stores,"
I he said.
l
Contnict talks, Sperry conlirmed, are
still in progress with Sav-On drug stores
but no se ttlement has been reached.
OIAN•I COAST "'
DAILY PILOT
111• Orl nti• Coal! OAIL'I' P ILOT wllll Wllltll
II c-llle(I Ille N IWl·~••H. 11 PU~lllhta bY
tlll Or•nge (OA•! Pu1>l11lling Comp1nr. StP'I·
rtl• "'l!ion1 ••t Pul!01n"· Moncley 111•9111111
Frklty, lor Co11t ~~I". NewPOrl 1111<11,
Hunll"!l!On lltAt ~ount~in V.ilt y, l e9Ulll
tMcfl, trvln•IS• dlel!.-t~ 1tld 5•n Cllment1/
Sin Ju.11 CH> """' • 1lngl1 r19iol>tl
"'lflo!I II putHillltd St!wrd•Y• tnd SuncH ys.
TN prlnclswl puelltl'>if'O pl•"' ,, .,, JJO west
lty StrMI, Cotti Ml'u , C•lllornit , t1tit.
Robtrf N. w,,d
"'""'"' 11'111 f'vo111n1r J,,. •· Curit'!' \lk:t ltn>llMrrl flld 0-•I MIMttl'
n-.!t:-11: ... 11 Edi*
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Mll•f91n1 l:.111r
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littlltrii ~"'''" l".0 .... 790, ttt41 --· L.llillM htdl: tH ,.,.., ~~
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ment because the PUC is a quite specific before review boards usembled by the
agency," Bonfa noted. "And It was U.S. Atomic Energy Commillicm.
rathe< anticlimactic for ttie PUC to make Aa it turned out, the lawytr'1 efforts
its assertion after the city bad already and those of the groups be repreeented
prepared its EtR." were in vain.
Bonfa said there may be a queJtion The AEC overruled all objections to
as to whether HWltington Beach did the reactor proposal and granted licenses
all it ,could \o gather. other ,aa:ency to two utility flrma earlier thiJ .fall
inpui for the EIR, but he feels the Input to allow -of the new ructon.
v.'8s sufficient. . • .
"I suppose we could 1have gotten more
input, but our per:mlt does not prohibit
-other agencies from developing more
information. The PUC can use our. EtR
as a starting point and supplement It
if It wants .
"I'm forced to conclude t he
Enviroomental Coalltion's lawsuJt Isn't
going to accomplish anything o f
substance. I can't really understand why
they want. to attack our permit which
is only one of 13."
Paul RJchardson, district manager for
Edison, said b1s company's basic con-
tention ls that It complied with all
of the ndeJ and regulations established
by the city.
Richardson said the suit will have
no real effect on Edison '.:; progress until
an actual court decision is rendered.
F..dison. is expected to go before the
South Coast Regional Zone Conservation
Commission sometime ln Febniary ·as
another step in its lengthy process of
obtaining sta te and federal pcnnits to
expand the tluntington Beach generating
plant.
Richardson said he hopes the court
issue is settled before the February
coastal bearings. If it is settled in
Edison's favor, the suit should ha ve
no delaying effect on expansion, he ad·
ded. ·
Lawyers Protest
Co11rtroom Curbs
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Attorneys
for two persons charged with murder
in the prison escape of Inmate Ron ald
\Vayne Beaty say they will object to
rourt.room security measures they tenn
"ilor'rendous" and prejudlcla~.
Jean Hobson. 45. and Robert Seabock,
22. o.f Palo Alto were Scheduled lo go
on trial today in Superior C.ourt on
a change of venue from san Bernardino
County.
The courtroom in the downtown
crimi11al court.s building has been divided
Ooor·to-ceiling by a partition of thick
glass tqpped wttb 1teel S<reOO!ng. Ele<·
tronlcally contn>qed door look• have been
installed.
Truck Wrecked
Ip Huntington
A lluntlngton Beach city dwnp truck
carrying a load of sand and gravel
rnade ,an unexpected stop Sunday, leav-
. tng Ila load beside the ""'d on OOthard
Street.
PoUce said the tnick, driven by Jack
Ellll, :r, of Tm Newmaii Ave., Htm-
tington Beach, was heeded ncrth on
Goihard wheo the milhap occurred.
EIHll told offlcen 11\' wu 1otnr Utrouall
the airves near EJll6..Avenue when tiie
load shilled and the '!nick ran off the
road and overturned. EUIJ reported oo
in juries in the accident.
Boy, 8, Blamed .
For Huntingwn
$14,000 Bl.aze
Huntington Beach firemen said today
that a '14,000 home fire over the
weekend was started by an 8-~
boy playing wltb matches.
'!be fire, w!Jicll erupted at about 9,25
a.m. at the home of Barbara
McLanahan, 9301 Hudson D r J v e,
destroyed a quarter of the residence,
according to Fire capt. Roger Hosmer.
The Saturday blaze was the second
in a row to be started by a child
playing with matches. A week earlier
a three-year-old boy was pulled from
his blazing home by his father and
a neighbor. .
The Nov. 17 fire gutted the wooden
home at 17662 Van Buren St.
Hosmer said the Hudson Drlve fire
was started by the child who was playtng
with matches in one of lbe upstairs
bedrooms.
By Uie time fire trucks arrived, he
sa id the entJre upper story was ablaze.
Heat b'om the flames broke out the
windows and firemen moved quickly to
prevent the aprtad of the fire to
neighboring homes.
said there were no Injuries
or to the home's threeo
occ pa ported from the fire.
He said the upper floor wu gutted
by the fire and that heal and smoke
damage was spread throughout the
houle.
Pageant Sla!ed
In Cosmetology
Demonstrations of hair design and
fashion wUI be presented to the public
Tuesday between.. 11 •.m. •and I p,m.
when the coametolol)' ~ ol
Golden West oouese holdl Ill IDl1Ull
open bluae. '
Viaiton wllr be able to tour Ille coo-
, mei<>lol)' ladliU .. , and __.. . ._
demonatrat!ons atudtnta 1ia .. prepared.
The department alto will ollw It.
seventh annual "Chrlltmu ~
Fantasy" nezt month.
'!be pageant will bellD ot TJ p.m.
Dec. S .. It la open to the PJblic w!lltout
charge. Elg)lty studelll $1)'lllta will
display decorative halt lt1lel and coo-
tumes.
Grocery Owner Shot
, . SAN Fll,'.NCISOO (l(PI) -The owner
of a small 1rocery wu found allot
and kUltd SUndaJ In the back .....
of -his 1toro. Police said Ille bodJ ~
Saleem 8--~, U, WU fOunll.
In hit ... by • ...-. Illa -
weni Utd and ht -llhot ill the held,
they said.
'
..
. .
•
264Ahoard
• '
Hijacked
-Higltlights
Of Nixo11's
• •
Jetlilier
BEIRUT 1.UPJl -Negotiations to free _ _,..
264 penons aboarda hiJOckea Oll!Cli
Jumbo jet lallod today and Arab guer·
rlllas who selud the 747 plane Sunday
took J)fJ_ J,QIJay rrom Libya'• Tripoli
Airport and flew (o Mifa, ·1be lives
of the hostages atill ln Jeopardy.
A ipkesman for the Royal Dutch
AlrUne (KLM) said the plane left Tripoli
at 7:30 a.m. EST for an unknown del5·
tlnatlon. He aid the 217 pasoengen and
17 cmvmen remained aboard the tight-
ly closed aircraft at Tripoli during many
houn of negotiations.
The plane landed at Valletta on Malta
at 10:20 a.m. PST.
Arab news services said the key 111'"
r!JU demands were a Olltcll plecfce to
close tnnslt camps in the Netherlands
for· Jewish ernlgranta bound for Israel
and an end to all emigration of Soviet
Jews to Israel by way of Holland.
Holland replied that n() such facilities
existed, and the situation remained
deadlocked.
The guerrillas command e!'ed the KLM
plane Sunday shortly after it had taken
off from Beirut Airport en route 'to
Japan and forced it to fly first to ..
Damascus where Syrian authorities
refUsed to refuel it, and then to Ni cosia.
Cyprus, where authorities provided fuel
but refused to release seven Palestinia ns
jailed In a previous hijacliliig_ ana the
plane flew to Libya. ·
Finl reports said there were sevm
guerrillas aboard the KLM 717, but the
airline saki later there were three.
KLM said the_hljadters-lried -earlier.
in the day to leave Tripoli but that
Libyan authorities refused. Lat.er, the
plane took off anyway for the brief
hop across the Mediterranean. .
44% Feel Nixon
Violated Laws
WASffiNGTIJN (UPI) - A Harr~ Poll
released today said 44 percent of
Americans beUeve that when the
Watergate investigation is completed,
Pnoident Nlion wUI be found to have
violated the law.
1be poll alJo lllid 46 percent of 1,159
per""'5 queslioned Nov. 12-15 did not
believe Nixon was a man of high in-
tegrity,
'!be polling organization headed by
Louis Harris said the figures showed
a sharp decl1ue in PJhllc., nopect for
the President. II !aid that II months
ago when a cn>sa-~lon of_ ,\Q!erlcaru
was asked if they believed Nixon was
"a man of high integrity," 75 percent
said he was while only 13 percent .said
he was not.
More Rain, Snow .
Seen for North
' "'',........,. KNIFID IN PRISON
Albor! H. DtSalvo
PromPqel
STRANGLER • • •
from Bridgewater State Hospltal a monlh
after DeSalvo 's as.sail.It trial.
DeSalvo, \vho had betn at the hospital
a\Yaitlng an appeal. was captured 1 ~~
days later in a LyM, Mass., clothing
store, where he asked to use the
telephone.
DeSalvo v.•as at the hospital before
the trial, undergoing observntion for an
alleged sexual molestation offense, when
hll cellmate, George Ka tar, persuaded
BaUey to represent DeSalvo.
Bailey at first resisted but agreed
to do it only a day before detectives
arrived at the hospital to question
DeSalvo about the stranglinp.
Balley tape-recorded DeSalvo's atory
under an qreement with the llate at·
torney generara office that II could not
be Wiecf agliiln!t him. Detectives were
said to have found thal DlOlt of what
he said tallied with the evidence of
the crimes.
DeSalvo alto claimed to be the "Green
Man," known to New England law ·~
forcement officlala u the man resp>nat·
ble for an esUmated MIO to 1,000 rapes
and other sexual offenses over several
yean.
No one was ever prosecuted as the
"Green Man," who wu called that
beca.Ule of the repalrman'a outfit the
victims said he wore in gaining entrance
to their homes under the l'U3e of being
sent to lb: '°'""thing.
Before Desalvo repudiated his con-
fession in 1968, he maintained he
desperately wanted psychiatric treat·
ment. After DeSalvo's convictioo, Bailey
conunented. "Massachusetts has just
burned another witch."
Final Enrollment •
For Valley 4-H &rt,
Final enrollments for the Fq~n
Valley Clovenlaia ~H·Club wUI be held
tonight at a p,m. at Faith Luth!1fan
Cburch, 8200 E!Us Ave., Huntil)&ton
Beach.
Enrollment in classroom 10 at . the
church ii open to all Fountain. VaUey-
Huntlnlton Beach chlklnn betwe"1 tbe
.... al nine and It. More lnf\)nllltion
i. available al -17.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -More nln K ed Ah d and ..... will spread over Northern Ted enn y ea
California tonight and Tumay morning ,
as another stonn front moves down PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) -The Gallup
from the Gulf of Alaska. Poll says its latest survey of Democrats
The National Weather Service forecast puts Sen. F.dward M. Kennedy of
calls for "increasing cloudiness from Massachusetts. far ahead of other possi-
Energy Tall{
WASHINGTON (AP ! -Here Ol a
gli nce. arc-the lilghliglits of action.s
announced or proposed Su nday by I)rcsi·
dent Nixon to cope \vilh the nation's
energy crisis. I ' HOME • HEATING OIL -Home
healing oil wlll be rationed beginning
Jan. I. Deliveries to residences will
be-cut 15 percent. ...1P ~cial
establishments 25 percent and to in·
dustries 10 percent. ' I
SERVICE STATlONS -BegiMing
Dec. 1. the President asked service sta·
lions to stop selling gasoline betwe!'.n
9 p.m. Saturtlays and 12:01 a.m. Mon-
days. He said this will be made man-
datory when he ls given authority by
Congress. Gasoline deliveries t o
wholesal e and retail dealers will be
cut by 15 percent. !
JET FUELS -Jct fuel allocations
to airlin es will be cut five percent to
domestic lines on Dec. J, while In-
ternational lines will be held to 1972
levels; on Jan. 7 fuel allocat~ to
all airlines wilf be cu t 15. percent below
1972 levels. Fuel for private aviation
will also be cut when Congress gives
him authority. ~
SPEED LIMlTS -Nixon said that
when he is glven authority by Congress
be v.·ill impose nationwide speed limits
of 50 mileJ per hour for automobiles
and 55 for truck.s and buses.
ORNAMENTAL LIGIIT!NG -Nllon
said he win ban residential ornamental
lighting and UMeccssary commercial
ligbting1 with congressional approval.
* * * Fr~m Pqel
OPPOSE .•.
the shortage around."
Evans said Costa htesa service staOon
dealers are scheduled to meet Tburtday
evening to discuss whether to follow
Prtsident Nixon's suggestion to volun-
tarily begin the Sunday shutdown thta
w~kend.
But a third service staton te.der ls
opposed to the Idea of rationing .
"The black marketeers are ready to
set up their (coupon) presses," lnai.sted
NIXON ·QRUMS UP SUPPORT
FOl('PROGRAM-Story, P111 3 . -, ..
NIXON'S ENERGY PLAN DRAWS
MIX~D -REACTIONS, Page 5
PRESIDENT OUTLINES
FUEL SAVING PLAN, Poft 10
Willfaffi H. Bay, operator of Mission
Viejo Mobil Service and a director of
the Intematlooal Service Statioo Dealers
Association .
"I think the only way to handle tlUI
ia Utrough mandatory federal allocations
to Nch strvlce station. They abould
allocate it equitably, -ibly on the
aT.flDlt of gas sold last year t'' be llld.
lhe northwest tonig\lt with rain likely hie contenders for the party's 1976
to Point Arena and Red Bluff northward presidential nomination. The poll Ind!·
and a chance of rain spreading to Santa cated that Alabama Gov. George C.
•then Uiey should figure out how
much they need to cut conswnpUon
and reduce the amount allocated to
the dealer by the necessary percentage.
This would allow the dealer to keep
the houn of operation which bis
particular location demands."
Cruz and Stockton late tonight.·• Wallace and Sen. Edmund S. Muskie
Forecasters said the showers are ex-of Maine were the next leading choices,
peeled to taper off Tuesday afiernoon. though far behind KeMedy.
Bay added that he was Wlcertain what
stand, if any. his association would take
on the Sunday sales ban.
-=-~~_.:..~~~-_.:..~~~~~~-...................... ...... " ... ".' .......... " .............................. ' ............. '".' .. " .... .
Nobody Sells Amana for less than 1>uA(cU>
Where do WlJ Y-iatlf the freezer
in your ne\Y if,n•n•. refrigerator ...
TAKE
TRADE
INS •
LOW
: .:-= .-.. -.. -,r.i......;,;l ;it\
:I ~. "" . '"",,.. "1 , -I
-. :J
~(. PRICES
ARE
RAISE,D
ELSEWHERE
on the side? oi'I the bot19rn? on the !9.P.1
A;n•n11. gives you a chOlce
( •
90DAYSCASH
Wl1" APPllOYRD C~RDIT
1115 llEWPlllT iL Yf~
llaWntlrm Costa Mesa -Phn 541-.7718
f. •
•
\
·L-• • •
_M_,_,_-'-'·-'-·~-·~-·-·---~·-----'H ____ ._ .• _.,_._,._L_01-'J
Nixon ~-Seeks Fuel Crisis
..
N . .
-= ominat1on---· -Firetl, Empwye
'Confidence'-Carrkd Gripe . ---D L t S t
HATFIELD, Enland (UPI)' -eua e e
·:m·.Anaheim
Margaret Elrnl, the munlclpal
N!gistrar or births, marriages and
deaths, rtc0rded the oame on the
death certificate: "Mr. Serious
Mltconcluct of Mill Lane, W•lwyn,
aged 71.". She -~ It without
·on Ford
-batUng ~.-------~-• Oisalde11t Anaheim pollcemen have With the deoth of Mr.,Milcon· W~GTON (UPI) -The Senate
unveiled their latest tacUc dl!llined to duct, there died the stain on the Rules , Committee N!ported today II
force the city to negotllte for higher character of fonner rallwaymau. "found no bar or impediment" to dis.-
pay -a vote of "n0 confidence" In Malcolm MacTaggart that he car· qualify Rep, Gerald R. Ford (R·Mich.), ried for 31 years. thelr:chlef. Mac'l'iiPrt baita raw 1'1th his from becoming vice pr<Sldenl
Stephen Solomon, attorney for the emplo)'ll'I, the London MJdland and ·,A ·member-of the -COiDmlttee, Sen.
Anaheim Police AAoclatlon, aald 111 Scotti.sh Railway Company, in 1139 James B. Allen (0-Ala.), chided coJ.
of the organization's 178 memben voted because he took two weeks vacation leagues for making a lukewarm assess·
at a rally Nov. 6 against Chief Davfd when they said he was entiUed ment or Foret He called the House to only ooe week. He was fired · ,
Mjd)e\. for "seriooa m1sconduct.'" Republican leader "a man of honor
Solomon said ~ of those at the rally Mac'fagg8rt never forgave them and high principle, a man of ablJity
in Pearson Park supported the ~ef ·and adop~ the sJµr as his name. and dedication; a man of noble purpose
and lwo abstained from voting. He used lt on all hls official and·unimpeachable integrity."
. The poll results were released by .the docutnentS, including his Social Debate on the nomination was to open
APA _as part of a continuing campaign Security payments book. and when later in the day. Senate confirmation
•
by officers in Anaheim to make the he died last week. his widow by an overwhelming vote was expected
city reconsider its pay and contract registered hls death In that name. Tuesday.
orters. Ford, 60, a member of the House
• One tactic -a ·slowdown on ticket for 25 years, testified today before the
writing for moving violatlom -was House Judiciary Committee, which also
in operation through last .... k but an Ike~s· --D;v· 0. · r· c·· e· .. is· e~pected--to tflllorse the nominali9<1· APA spokesman said toc1ay It bas been ., by a one-sided vote. -
canceled beca111e oome member officers Ford mtist be approved by bo<h the
did not want to p8ruclpate. • Houae and Senate before b~ can succeed
A lleCOlld tactic _ termed the "super Plans Dur•ng Spiro T. Agnew .. v1ce president cop" approach -was planned but never 11 1be Senate Rules O>mmittee, 1n its
put Jnto-<>peratlon._!t.....i!ed for an 110-page N!port on Fon!, aald:
increase in driver citations for even-w =---R=-----=Je,..--d=--'"'N'ot-everTmember-ot'ihe-c:ommittee
the moot minor violations. ar evea found himaeU in agl'<!emenl with Mr.
Offlct'l'S abo picketed city hall for · Ford's voting record, his general
1 week lo an effort to bring their philosophy of government, his penonal
l'inaDcel 1o the public eye. .-'WASHINGTON (UPl) -A letter from and political yiews and his public actions
-111d the APA decided to Gen. Dwight o. Eisenhower to Gen. through his f5 yeara of service in the
dilt:lole tta "m confidence" vote when House of Representatives. II atar.d that Chief Michel had asked GeorgetC. Marshlitl stating Eisenhower's · "But the committee looked at the
.. OtJ CGuncll pcnnissioll to fire four plans to divorce his wife to marry total record and found no bar or im-
APA rmmbtn. .. . another woman proobably slill exisls, pediment which would disqualify him
Mktld bu uuiled the tactics used the Wubington Star-Nc!ws bas reported. for the office for which he had been
'"' ·~ •PA. claiming ,...,, have hurt ed · non\inated ." •7 -n "'"'"":: The newspaper quoted relit MaJ. drie ...._ of the police department in Gen. Harry Vaughan, milJt ....... aide to In the ·House, Rep. Jerome Waldie Utie .,_ ol lbe public. ......:: (D-Calif.), wanted to question Ford on
c-ctlmen voted last weet that pay President . Harry S Truman, as saying his unsuccessful 1970 effort to ·impeach
_.ia-bad J)l'.OCeeded Jn good faith -;the letter is probsbly at the Marshall U.S. Supreme Court Justice William 0.
for three months and the city's final Library at Virginia 'Military Institute. Douglas. Waldie charged Fon! may have
Iller la lair ud equitable. Merle Miller, In . a ·new book about been aided by President Nixon and
The clty•1 offer calls for some lm-Truman published last week, said Conner Attorney General John N.
provements in fringe benefits, a I. 75 Mitchell. percent pay raise the first year and Eiambower's predecessor tn the White Waldie says bis rese:arth established
a . six pertent raise the lecood year House told him in an interview he that Ford was acting as t b e
on 8 t~year contract. destroyed the letter. Miller said that "handmaiden" of Nixon and Mitchell
Police negotiAton wut even Elsenbower, then supreme commander in Che impeechlumt effort ·arid that the
lllOR bellefit Jmpnwetne\113 ,Ulan the dty ol Allied for""' In ~:. 'lfl'Ole .that Justice Deparlment fed Fon! information
bas offered, a oo&-y~ ~tract and he wanted to divorce wife MamJe and on Douglai in \'Jolatiorf of its rules.
seven percebt nilses each or the next ~ ~~ Sumn)e;s~. his driver in "ll he 'ln 'faot was a i\artlcipalit In
two years. ~ a Collcerted · political ellort by Nixon
City officials claim that: to reopen Tb.t. Star-News quoted Vaughan as and Mitchell to impeach Douglas, then
pay negotiations with the officers would ""'1Cying Eisenhower wrote such a letter it's my view that his ·Wlderstanding
be unfair to other city 'empfoye groups to Gen. C-ge C. Marihall, Army chief or using the Department of Justice only
which have already come 'ti terms. of staff during World War IL Vaughan for other than politic:al purposes is Jack·
Solomon said efforts by mediator Tom ·1ak1 Tnunan did not_deslrOy the letter, ing," Waldie said.
MCCartby of the State Conciliation but sent It to Marshall, ·the Star-News Fon! told the committee Wednesday
Service ' have failed to get any ....Wta r"l!Orted. he ·a&ked Milcbell for guidance In the
so far. MCCartby will called into the 'lbe newspaper quoted Vall8han as impeachment move pnd that Milcbell
dispute last week In an effort to bring recalllng: "Eisenhower was' commander sent his deputy, Will Wilson, who gave.
the two sides to some kind of agreement. ct our' forces in Europe, and be wrote him a list of "certain areas I should
· · Gen. Marshall seeking advice. He wanted pursue." He ·said the list was written
Mexican Child
Getting Better
Carlos Varela , the 2-year.a(d Mexlc:an
cnild given a .free. operation Friday a
Mission Community Hospital to correct
a cleft pelate, Is out of bed and playing
today ...
"ft looks like de operation la going
to be a tremendous success," said
Mission spokesman Paul Ideker.
The slx:.bour operation ln Mission Viejo
was performed Friday by Dr. J.,.pb
Ferreira or San <Clemente.
Young Carlos and his parents, the1 David Varelas of Ensenada, . were
brought to Mission Hospital through a
cooperative effort of the hospital and
"Operation Involvement," a .QOD-profit .
group which tries to help provide good
medical care in the U.S. for Mexican
children. . ,
to llnow Wbat getting a divorce would on plain paper without a Justice Depart·
do to · his cat<e!'. ManhaJI wrote bsck ment letterhead.
that that wu ' 'the most stllpid thing
you coukl think of doing'."
'lhe Miller boi>k, "Plain Speaking,"
quoted Tnnnan u aaylng Marshall
"wrote him ba<t a. letter the like of
which you never did see. He said ...
U Elaenbower even came close to doing
auch a tlilng, he'd not ooJy bust him
out of the Army, be'd see to ii that
never for the ml ol bis life would
he be able to draw •peaceful breath."
Santa Ana Man Dies
OCEANSIDE (UPi) -Donald 'Bo!ao,
35, or Santa Ana, .... killed. Subday
when the lllQloreycle be wu riding went
out of control on Montezuma Grade
and overturned.
The Califomla ll!llhny Patrol uld Bolan, sos Kl>na vr., wail drivllig too
fut down the steep grade, which Is
located in a canyiln_ near here.
Glider Plunges; ,
Pilot Injured
A San Diego hang glider pilot suffel'<!d
a broken wrist when his kite-like craft
plummeted into Holy Jim Canyon in
the hills above Miasion VJejo Sunday
afternoon.
Tony Hughes, 27, launched bis glider
from Coto de Caza ranch at about 3 p.m.
aiid landed in the • nigged canyon less
than a minute later, a spokesman for
tjie Orange (:oonty Fire Department said
!Oday.
A unit of the Trabuco Vohmteer Fire
Deportzileat rescue squad went to tho
' 8Cell<! but· Hughes refused amblilance
attention and left With friends, olftclals
aald .
White House Cites • Leaks
'
Watergate Prosecutor" Leon JawQrs/ei .. tJriticized
''-' '"• I
c • ' •• • ,. I WASHINGTON (AP) -The White ~I .of a.:ial>"'! presidential .con-said Warren.'. '
House today accused the oll)l!e of ipeclal , ""18tlnn·•. a~' h8d b·een l{oweTer, the White House did not an-
Watergate-prose .... r Leon Jaworski of • oJillterai~/· j,' 1; · .• , , ,f llOWICe ll)a.t ~lxon would speak to the
responsibility for wbal u ~ l"'1 . , Wmoii;' 1 ~ lllRt the witl. 61""J.~~U ~ i;:f.'g~'•· ..,..
N!Cent new leaks one label«! as stac· · ' l{ouae HiCaood l=O• of a breach of eth!CJ 11811' in W~ said the section that ' • after he' lldmoilledged be inadvertently ,_, ... _, I 'the . , gering. -was the oource of a publlobed• report· ... on the 8eafaren
It was the first open criticism by linking Pr• 1 Iden t Nixon with lore &s~ ~Saturday nigh!, t ~
the 'White House of Jawontl'• opention Mmlnlstrat!on bandlinC of ao. anHtrusl N'1J<11'a speech., announcemm
since he took over the office &om which ..... oiilna l'IT, was asked of Jaworatl Any auggestli>n that the story was
A"Chibald Cox was Dred Oct. 20. r wu guilty iJt vlf/latlbg Otbical ~andanls. timed 'to <olnclde with the speech is
· bl'-•·• 1 d•·• b Warren ,.id be wW!d not nlaluo such "simply untrue " he said , "·:e of the JIU ~·~ terns ~ Y a claim because, he aald, the White Warren aald 0Nlson 1..;1s that U thm
White House Deputy Press Secretary Houae bas no evidence Jaworski wu are lnvest!ptioos, they should be band!·
• -. Gerald L. Warren was a report In Ibis • pe~ '"!P'!'lllble lor the ,1~ ed ~l"l'&blY and professionally and
> we<k's Issue of Time , magazine that leaks t6 '11me an<! Evans an<! Novak. "developed in th e proper forum."
.J Jaworski's office ls invesUgaUng a Warren, declaring he spoke iD part The White House spokesman said anew.
'100,000 contribution to the 1972 Nlmn from long ye.an of experience; as a that Nixon's lawyers are cooperating
' campaign by the Seafertrs International newsman and editor helm be joined fully with ~a'l'onkl's office apd that
':' Union. Nixon addres:!ed the IDllon'a con· tjie White House staff, uld' be found tb,e President has "• great desire" that
"V!lltioo tadly, (Story Pa1e 3) an obvloul coincidence In 111~\fact lhal all Watergate-iefated Information "be
• The oecond Item cited by Wamn Time ~ ao lnvootfa.uoo of the developed fully and become know11."
' wu a ~· appearing In many / Seafaren C011trl_, at the 6me the Ask<li il Ibis meont tM White Hoose
newspepera :J1/t In which Rowland IDlloo was boldln1 Its caomnUorr ~ provided Jaworski with documents be
, Evans and Novak N!POrted lhfl and wu beJni addna!ed by ,Ibo !'ml· aoughl lw• or mol'<! .weets .co. Warren
; White HOllM Jawyera pleaded ·In •aJil denl ?.!Id conversations Det-treei1 White HoUa.
lasl w.i< with Ja.....-i ID -ID "I'm Jiii! poillllllc out I ..,_ '1LlllCJI and the ._,ton ,.....
a delay In dlaelosing that an lf.mlallle that I llDd Wr obflotll ud 1taaelin(," pmUepd aod be ~ not dl.oc:uss them.
\ ~ .·
• . •
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I l
-
Teen Queen
,' ';.;
~ . ~' . '
.~···
• ,-1 ..,_.,., & ~-~ .... >. • . ~ '. ;. ~i :
-UPIT .........
Lori Loi Mat-aukawa (center} from Aica , Hawaii; has been crowned
winner of the Miss Teenage America pageant in Ft. Worth ... Tex. Top
runnerup was Janet Louise Daince, Logan, Utah Oeft), 1973 honoree,
Melissa Galbraith, is at right.
Change of-Com1nand
Made at Camp Pendleton
Maj. Gen. Hennan Poigemeyer Jr.,
whose career as commander of Camp
Pendleton was h!ghligblid by bis
greotings to the first of the returning
Vietnam priloners of war, turned bis
command over to a new man loday.
The former~ of the nation's largest
military base will take on new Cluties
as commander of ~ the Marlhe forces
in the Pacific, leaving control of the
40,QOO.mail base to Brig. Gen. Robert
L. Nichols.
Announcement of the change was made
several weeks &JO, but to d a· y ' s
ceremonies at the base made the transl·
tion official.
On bis departure Gen. Poggemeyer
was bailed by civic groups in cities
surrounding the base as "a deeply in·
volved officer" and by spokesmen for
the base .. a man wbo likened his
duties to that of a mayor of a large
city.
•Not That Bad!>
Amputee, 8, Tells Kennedy Boy
PARADISE (AP) -An 8-yeaN>ld boy with an artificial leg has
written to Edward Kennedy }r., who recently lost most of bis right
leg, telling bjm havi,ng an artificial leg isn't that bad.
Shannon Hanley, a resident of this small Northern California
town, told Kennedy, who bad to have the operation nne week ago
because ·of bone cancer, that be bad bis operation for the same rea·
son Nov. 1, 1972.
"When I first got my artificial leg last February, I didn't think
I would be able to 'do many things. But I found out I can do just
about anything I want to do," Hanley wrote the 12-year-old son of
Sen. Edward Kennedy, (!>-Mass.).
Hanley said that since bis operation he has learned to swim and
dive. He added be can ride a minibike and be also plays touch loot·
ball.
The boy asked Kennedy to Write him once be feels better.
,•
Sufficiency
In Energy
---·
To Be Goal
------;~ I
WASHINGTON (AP) -.President Nls·
on moved today to drum up public
support for bi.sJOlutlon to the energy ..-
crisis, and declal'<!d that his long-range
goal 11 to put this country "in a position
whtre nobody can cut our lifeline ...
Speaking to a convention of the
Sea18"'rs International Union, AFLC!O,
the President reiterated his goal of mak·-
ing the nation self.sufficient in energy
by 198(! and linked ii with errorts to
build a strong merchant marine.
The United States will "never be
dependent on another part of the world
when there is a crisis," if his proposals
succeed, Nixoo said.
The speech was Nixon 's first public
appearance since his national radio-
t~evision &ddress Sunday night in which
he unvelled his plans to deal with the
energy crisis.
The President also repeated bis in·
tention to remain llLtbe Whi\e HOUM·~
referring to Jlimself .._ lhe.caplaln...ol
a ship w~ job it is to. bring that
vessel safely home.
"I'm going to stay at thal helm until
we bring It Into port," he declared.
Nixoq was given a warm welcome
by lM delegates and praised ,by
Seafarers' President Paul Hall for past
efforts to revitalize the maritime . in-
dllstry.
Hall, who headed an Industry SUI>'
porting Nlion's rHJection, said the
industry "found on the basis,-of
perfonnance we can believe Richard Nixon." • ·
The union leader avoided any direct
reference to Nixon's Watergate troubles .
But in introducing the President, Hall
describedJlim u the courageous captain
of the sh.ip of state now "going through
troubled seu. ... And, Hall said , "We
are not fair-weather sailors and don't
believe the American people are fair-
weatber sallon." •
Hall was the only member of 'u.e
SS.man AFLCIO Executive Council who
voted agllnst a resolution at the labor
federatJoo'1 recent convention wfUch
called for Nixon's mlgnation or Im-
peachment.
Time Mlll(llxlne reported Sunda,y that
lpOcial Water1ate prooec111Gr 1-
Jaworslll .... lool$g lnlO a 'ICIO,oOO
girt from the Seaf&N!n Union to 1he
Committee for the Re-<Jection of !he
President. '
Sometime after the union made its
contribution, repartedly borrowed trOm ·
a New York bank, indlctmenls charging '
Hall with violations of the Cornipt Piiic-
Uces Act were dismissed by a federal
court on grounds that the Justice Deplri.
ment has not pu.9hed the prosecution. 1
The JIJIUce Department. did not appeal
the court's decision. •
N!sou aald his steps for combstlng
the energy cri>ls W!IJ mean Americins-•
will have to live in cooler rooms and
drive a little slower but "perhaps live
a little better."
This doesn't mean !his country will
go hick to the days when it didn't
have enough, he said.
"OUr goal is · not to go back, our
goal is to go forward," N!son declared.
He merred to the enerv crisis as
a temporary problem that would not
Jast much longer depending on in-
ternational developments.
But by 1980, be vowed, the Unlled
States no longer wnuld be dependent
on foreign sources of petroleum.
He called his "Project Independence"
a great program but said Its success
would depend on the support of the
American people.
'
ca1ual a~er1>001> at
the H11ftti1>9fo1> Harbo11r
Yacht Club,
6 i1>a a1>cf Capric• luccola
haYa r.hol•1>
are 1f\rd•1>l1 •t
Harbour Viaw
El1ll'lanterv School.
Tit1y .,. th. d•lf9ht1r1 0,
Mr. I Mr1. Victor l11ccol•,
H111>ti1>1Jf01> Harbo11r,
Tha ir cloth•• •r• ~.
a<1eilabl• i" 111•• 4 • 14 at
The A•d laUoo" L.td.,
11> Ne•pori 8elach,
11ntl1>1Jfo1> Harbo11r
and Oran9a. -
.. AIMtofll ISLAMD ..........................
T"" & C:.VMT•V or.,... 111•> MWf'S
MUtn'lfittinM MA•llOUR 1n•1 ... MN
l
•
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• ,
f' IMILY PILOI Mon~y, Novtmber 26, 1973
Greek Coup Ends _'74 Election Plans '
,COOL YULES DEPI'. -So we've all
i----.neatd..P,wlden~.liill1<Lill):JO himself,
SQ we know It bas to be true. The
r4el foulup is upon us. We are playing
brinksmanship wilh 1be fuse boxes. We
h~ve overloa(k!d our cin.i.llts. The gas
lines are about to blow nothing but
cold air.
Despite all this, you have to retain
the belle! that the CMslmas season
will come wr way regardles,,,
I Oh, there'll be some changes, all righl. !iW likely won't see the Christmas
dlsplays of llghU!d boals In Newport
H~ that in past years treve
delighted young and old. Or the nighUy
~rama in the hills of Laguna Beach.
Or' the floodlighted Christmas scenes
that abounded at homes in Huntington
Beach or Costa Mesa .
'YEARS PAST, OUR coastline has been
flimed for its Yuletide electrical displays
in the "Forty l\1iles of Christmas
Smiles" from Seal Beach lo San
Clemente. Not this year.
'nlis time, the Forty Miles does
its' smlJlng in daytime only. And it's
__ J2._l.!1H to. be judged as a daytime show
·m the aays of Dec,. 15, 16, ana· ·11.
You cooJd have $40,000 worth •f lighls
On that Yule display and it won't buy
you the sweepstakes this year.
AU this is just as well. You recall
that the Forty Atiles of Christmas Smiles
was started as a coastwide exhibit
ta1culated to bring a lot of tourists
down to our region to view all the
lights. The notion was that stores could
stay open an~ the good visitors might
drop a couple bf nickels our way.
-ATHENS (UPI) -Souroff close to PAPADOPOULOS h Im s el I was
Ulb n~w regime in Greece gaid today reported hekt under house arrest by !hey launched a bloodless coup to topple
President George Papadopoulos because the Army.
the military-government could never Allhouih Pa~ was an avowed
win electiOllll promlsed by Papadopouloo opponent or Hiled King constanUne.
for 1974. there was no indication that the latest
The sources sakt the 59-year-<>ld leader coup, the aecond in all and a half
of the coup, -Brig. Gen. Dimitrios' Joan. __ yean, would _lead to Constantine's
nides, commander o{_jhe military police, return.
was opposed to the pOlitlcal liberalization The new government has announced
policy pursue<f by Papadopoulos slnCe no new plans tor elecUom. SOurres said
Greece was declared a republic tut It wu l!llilkely _any would be held by
May. IVIC as Papadop>ulous had promised.
SP A IN
~ , Madrid
Autos Banned
SOVIEt UNION
Six European nations banned a total of nearly SO million motor ve-
hicles from the roads Sunday in efforts to save enough fuel to •ee
them through the winter. LitUe grumbling was reported among the
94 million inhabitants of West Gennany, ·Switzerland, Belgium, Den-
mark, The Netherlands and Luxembourg.
"loannldes, havinl his own Intelligence
service operating through ESA (the
mllltary police ), felt the pulse of the
people aod !mew !hat lne and lair
elections promised by P1podopouloo by
1974 could riot have been won by the
regime," the sources said.
TIIE lllILITARY leader>hip l!ISlalled
Lt. Gen. Pbaedon Gyzlkls, once a loyal
supporter of Papadopoulos, as pres.ldent
of the· new regime.
Greek newspapers, published today
without prior Ctn.orship, balled the eoup
I with banner headlines r e a d i n g , ·
"Papad0poulos Thrown Out" and
"Papadopoulos Regime Overthrown."
r-The sources said loaMldes, oom-
mander of the ESA ror the la.st si1
years, pushed aakte his own loyalty
to Papadopoukls to bring the president
down Jn the faee of bis pledge 10-bold
free parliamentary elections in 1974.
"U elections were ro be unfalr or
not free, why hold them at all," Joan·
nid .. was quoted by his colleagues.
Disease Claims
Laurence Harvey
LONDON (AP) -British movie •tar
Laurence Harvey died of cancer at bis
Londoo home Sunday night, friends
reported today. He was 45.
The actor with the soft, suave manner
had been Ill for the past 18 months.
Friends called on him repeatedly In
recent weeks.
HARVEY WAS rnarriei\ IOI' the third
time at the end of last year. His bride
was fashion model Paulene Stone,
motliei'' of his 3-year-old daughter
Domino.
The mamage was at Beverly Hills.
Harvey's previous wives w e re
American milllonairess Joan Cohn and
British actres.. Margaret Leighlon. Both
marriages ended in divorce.
~
to live like a jet set star with stylish
clothes, a 'big-spending manner and a
fund ol 5howhlz anecdotes.
ON 11IE SCREEN be was more ef-.
fective ·in roles that gave him the chance
lo exude quiet, well·bred menace.
Harvey spent most of his childhood
with his parents in Johannesburg. After
serving three years in the South African
anny he made up his mind to be a
star . and. came to Britain at 19 _on
an army grant ol $16 a week.
He studied at the Royal Academy
of Dramatic Art for about three month!
and then joined the Manchester Ubrary
Thealro in llM6.
His first Lrindon stage appeai mtte was
in "Hassan" in 1951. A year later he
appeared in Shakespeare's "Cbriolanus"
at Stratford on Avon.
Ioannides, Greece"s new 11behlnd1the-
1et:nes" strongman, planned the takeover
which a communique said waJ carried
out .because Papadopoulos was "trying
lo fool lhe ll""k people" wilh pllUlS
for free elections.
THE TOPPLED strongman, who
-erusbed a 1tudent-worker--uprlsing the
week before, fell victim to the same
type or bloodless coup he used to seize
power as an army colonel 6~ years
ago.
UPI T .......
SUCCUMBS AT 45
Laurence H1rvey
The Forty Miles contest got started
during the Depression. They figured
times were bad then. But at least in
the 1930s, they could afford to tum
orrthe lights. Egyptian, .Israel Talks
In Stall as Arabs Meet
'Harvey never attained the highest
ranks of international -but his performanw in such movies u "Room
at the Top," "The Manchurian Can-
didate" and "Darling" eslablisbed him
in the United States as well as this
country.
His bride of less than a year tended
the Uthuanlan-bom actor during months
of illn~ at his elegant London home.
11 Perish as 'Twisters
•
00 NOT DESPAIR. Figure that your
personal circumstances could be worse .
You might be the manager of an all-elec-
tric band. Or a used car dealer who
specializes in slightly worn 16 cylinder
limousines.
What about the merchant who just
!oond a bargain and stocked in 400
cases of Christmas tree light bulbs?
t -Or tbe gasoline station operat.or whose
main business was selling to skiers head-
ed home from the mowttaiM on Sun-
days?
Cl.EARLY, YOU could be in wone
shape. Some folks are really going to
get pinched In the energy 11queeze. On
the other hand, do not discount American
1 ability to turn advenity into a dollar
profit.
Somewhere, yoo can bet some en-
terprising chap has just gone Into pro-
duction on a 30-day windup alarm cloclc.
Somebody ts probably planning to revive
Ken Murray's "Blackouts of 1974."
Another perceptive fellow j~t bought
16 railroad cars filled with firewood
-at $30 a carload.
And maybe you retain your stock
in lhe West Covina Buggy Whip Factory.
See? Things could be worse.
All you have to do it wail for the
President's next speech.
'
By United Press lnternaLional
While Arab leaders gathered in Algiers
today for their first summit conference
in four years to align strategy against
Israel, Israel , and Egypt ba·rgained
unsucoessfully for 90 minutes today over
the withdrawal of their armies on the
Suez front.
THE ISRAELI national radio qooted
U.N., olfi<ials as saying tlte crucia) talks
went well and that the next session
between Maj. Gen. Aharon Yariv of
Lsrael and Egyplian Maj. Gen. Moham-
1 med Gamassy would he held Wednesday.
But UPI Correspandent Raymond
Wilkinson reported from Kilometer 101
on the Cairo-Suez road that today's talks
ended with no sign of a break.
The Israeli military command reported
an exchange of artillery and !mall arms
fire south .of Ismailia on the Egyptian
front Sunday, the most serious in<:ident
of the month-old cease-frre. 1be national
•
. . ' )~ •<'.' • • "' J .... ~ "-···~ ..-:-. 1,; .... () tf.'. ')/ ·'1(< ~ ·;· ' f r J. , .. Q, ... 1 I "'"'·~.:'. '\ C l( 1J \ ··;)·
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..... 1• ----...i----·~~---~ww&.Y I ~ ()t~l3f.I) 1st \ '--~~----~ .
I
-HARVEY, BORN Lorushka Mischa
Skilme, underwent surgery .. d cobalt
· ray treatment iz.i Los Angeles last May.
Ravage Southwest U.S.
radio said one Israeli soldier was killed
in the !ighling.
Officials in Jerusalem said Israeli
troops had been placed on alert on
both the Syrian and Egyptian lronls
"because ol the tension that· has esisted
for the past few days." Egyptian officials
have called the cease-fire talks near
collapse and warned that Egypt may
renew the war unless Israel withdraws
IQ lhe Ocl 22 cease-lire lines.
ISRAELI PRESS reports said the troop
withdrawal deadlock resulted from
Egypt's insistence · on keeping a force
of 400 tanks on the east bank of the
SUez C&naJ iiislead of the mnall policing
force demanded by Israel.
The newspaper Ha'Aretz said the
Egyptians also demanded an initial
Israeli withdrawal to .six miles east
of the canal and a 'later pullback to
the strategic Milla and Gidi passes in
the Sinai desert
During the last -at borne Harvey wwked on a script for a fihn
he wanted to start shooting early next
year. Among the re<:ent stream of caJlers
were Elizabeth Taylor, Rex Hamson
end one of his closest friends, playwright
Wolf Mankowitz.
Friends said Harvey will he cremated
at a private ceremony in Golden Green.
London on Wednesday.
Harvey, a chain smoker, always tried
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dtllvtry of tht Daily Plfot
Is gUatM!tffd
,,........,.,rtillh'T II YW • ""' ..... ,,_
,._,_, .., J;M ._nt., t •ll Ml '"'" Cl!I\' wlll M '""'9llt ta ,.... C•lll .,, NII• -.IM ,,.'·""" S...,,...r Mlf ._,,, H rw .... riah'e
V"f ~ ..,. t ..... s.t.rfay, .,. I 1,111.
S..M•Y, c•ll Intl 1 c.,.., will M .,...,. ta,
.,..._ C1t11 .,. .... .,. ""'" 11 1.111.
Ttltphonts
M11t 0r1,.. c-tr ... , .. , ....... Ml.utl
Nlrffl .. tl HW11tltlftell ltldl
'"• W11tmln\ltr .. .. •• • ••• ,.1QI
kR Clt ...... lt, Cl,ill••M lt•tll,
J1r1 J•IR C••lttrl N, 01Rt ~111!1, ~Ill L.11u111, Lttllllll HJtwl •. ·• 4'1-4GI
CLARKTON, Mo. (UPJl -Violent
weather ravaged much of t li'e
southwestern United States during the
weekend, killing at least 11 persons.
Five person,, died in tornadoes in
Mmouri and· a tornado killed one person
in Arkansas.. Five persons died because
of the weather in Oklahoma.
"TWISl'ERS AND v i o l e n t lhun-d~rstorms caused property damage in
Missouri, Arkansas, 0 k I ah o m a .
Louisiana and Texas Friday, Saturday
and Saturday night. Fait weather
prevailed over most of the southwest
Sunday afternoon.
· Three persons died Friday night in
a twister near Eminence, Mo. Leu than
21 hours laU.r, Robert Mlller, 6:1. iod
his ~year-old wife Ruth, were killed
in a tornado that struck Clarttoo.
Dunklin County deputy Sheriff Bob
Mcllonald said the Clarkton tornado
touched down "ev.ery mile and a half"
as it loped across the Ml!sourl Bootheel.
It hit the Miller home first, then
destroyed four trailers. a brick home
and damaged a cotton gin.
A tom'ado touched down near Rosebud.
Ark., Sailuday killing Ruby Clayton,
C()MMHl()l?4TINt3 Tlil: t3l?4NU
IAUNClil~(3 ()t= Tlil: 13~1\ o= Nl:WV()l?T
C()l?()~4 Ul:l M4l? ()t=HCI:
FEATURING WORLD CLASS 77,000 CUBIC FOOT .Hor AIR llALLOONS
... -BANK OF NEWPORT HOT AIR BALLOON ~ SPECIA1. ANGHOR 'ACCOUNTS FOR THE
RACE <WEATHER PERMITTING> FIRST 1,000 NEW CHECKIN.Q"ACCOUNTS .. :-
PICK THE WINNER AND WIN A PRIZE FREE LIFETIME PERSONAL CHECKING ...
1ST PRIZE -FOLDING ADULT BICYCLE NO MINIMUM BALANCE.
2ND PRIZE-ELECTRONIC CALCULATOR ... ATTENDANCE .PRIZE DRAWING
. 250. 3RD PRIZES-BANK OF NEWPORT 1ST PRIZE-HOBIE CAT 14 FOOT SAILBOAT
COLORING BOOKS . 2ND PRIZE-TEN-SPEED SCHWINN BICYCLE ' ,,_ '
~ INVITATIONAL SAND CASTLE COMPETITIONS 3RD THRU STH PRIZE-"i'Wo RO!JND TRIP "
WITH PRIZES FOR THE WINNERS. · TICKETS TO ANY AIR CAUl'.ORNIA DESTINATION ~ BICYCLE DEa>RATING COMPETITION FOR ·~ MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT.
KIDS OF ALL AGES. ALL ENTRIES RECEIVE -~ WE'VE PLANNED I>, GREAT DAY OF FUN AND ...
. A PRIZE. IT'S ALL F'REE ...
~ FREE HOT DOGS AND PEPSI. ' WE LOO!< FORWARD TO'SEEING YOU
· SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1ST . .-
COAST HIGHWAY NEAR MACARTHUR
FE~IVITIES FROM 10:00 AM to. 2:00 PM
Of Newport
I (
80, and injuring several other residents.
Llgbtning started a fire at Bixby, -
Okla.. that destroyed e '40,000 lm1e
and its $50,000 in furnishings. Oil Com-
pany executiv~ Don C. Smith, 62, and
his wife, Ann, 60, suffocated in.side.
WEATHER
Sun, Moon, Tides
Flrsl Hltll
Flrll lC7>ll'
SKOnd Hltll ·-...
• • ·•
j
MOHOAV
TU!SDAY
... '
ll:os p.m. a' 4:2S p.rn. 44
t~Jl L"'-S.I
3: 10 1.rn. Z.•
ll:JI P.f'rl. Z.S
S:ID "·"'--0.1
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•
•
:VO~. 66, NO. 330, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNI A MONDAY. NOVEMBER 26, 1973 N
I
Toda~'s Final
N.Y. Stocks
TEN CENTS
Coast Stations Fuming Over Sunday Gas Ban
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Ot fti:e Dtlb' '11•1 $lift
Service station operators along the
Orange Coast today rel\cted unfavorably
to President Nixon's Slllldhy gasoline
sales ban because they believe it will
hurt business.
The sale' ban, to take effect after
congressiOJ\31 approval, wouJd stop
service stations from dispensing gasoline
between 9 p.m. Saturday and 12 :01 a.m.
Monday to discourage long-distance driv-
ing. It is estimated that the measure
will save 50,000 barrels ol gasoline per
day.
"As far as I'm concerned this is
the lll05I childish and Idiotic thing I
ever beard of," fumed Bob Smith, of
Smith's ARCO, corner Bristol and Baker
Street, Costa Mesa.
"All this is going to do is insure
that the stores will be sold out or
three and four gallon gas cans this
weekend. It won 't stop any driving on
Thieves Hit
SWldays. The people will just cerry
their cans with them.".
Smith, who attracted nationwide at·
tentioo recently when he "captured"
a gas delivery truck. in protest over
wholesale price increases, says he plans
to remain open this SunCay.
"Why? Becau~ I've got gas to sell.
I've already got the government telling
me how much I can sell it for and
the oil companies telling me bow much
I'm going to get. I'm not going to
Clue Probed • in B.urglary of $20,000
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of 11M O.llr ,Utl SltH
A series of mystery phone calls to
the Ramona ranch of Orange County
Board or Supervisors Chairman Ronald
L. Caspers today was con~t'dered a clue
to the $20,000 Thanksgiving holiday
burglary or his Newport Beach borne.
One-of the unexplained calls involved
someone apparently mimicking a small
child who said: "I wuf you:•
The Caspers rami!y· returned to their
home at 119 Via Florence on Lido Isle
about 5:30 p.m. Sunday and immediately
sensed something was wrong when th ey
found a side door ajar.
Investigators said today a team of
highly professional thieves was probably
involved in looting the residence of
dozens or items.
"They did a real job," said Newport
Beach Police Detective P a t r i c k
O'Sullivan, as he continued with his
investigation today.
Newport Council Studies
Valuable Zone . Changes
Newpart Beach councilmen will be/
asked tonight to approve ioning changes
for several of the biggest, most valuable
properties still undeveloped in the city.
Those properties. including virtually·
all on the open land around Upper
Newport Bay, will be changed from
the "unclassified district" to the "plan-
ned commwiity district" if the council aces along with the recommendations
of the city staff and planning com-
Jllissioo,
1be changes, which are in some
respects considered minor housekeeping
operations, are expected to be routinely
approved by the council tonight.
In the past, however, large numbers
of concerned . residents have attended
public hearings on these rezonings anti
officials believe they may have crowds
again tDnight. ·
The proposed rezonings will be taken
up near the top or the agenda at the
meeting whlCh. begins at 7:30 p.m. in
city council chambers.
Among pl'Qperties to be considered
for rezoning are :
'-The so-<:alled Castaways Hill prop.
erty, bounded by Westdilf Drive, !lover
Drive, Upper NeWport Bay, and ~acific
Coast Highway.
-The land along Irvine Avenue near
23rd Street and the Harbor Area YMCA
building. -Two 18rge parcels near Pacific Coast
Highway, oni; at Jamboree Road and
the highway 'find the other at MacArthur
Boulevard and the highway.
-Land around the Phllec>Ford Acro-
in the city c ommunity development
department.
"So if people are worried about this
rezoning. they should r<alize that adop-
tion of final d~veJopmerit plans is still
a Jong way off and the city .will be
CX>Dducting extensive reviews betore any
final plans are adopted," Foley said.
FOiey explained that a new state law
requires the city to abolish a 11
unclassified zoning areas by Jan. 1.
The best classification with which to
replace the old zoning, Foley said, is
the planned community district.
"Under unclassified zoni'ng, a property.
owner could ask for virtually aily kind
or development he wanted," Foley said.
Police Chief's
Home Burgle£l
Westminstes. Police Chief Walter
T. Sootl should have read Dick
Tracy's Crimestoppers Textbook
item in the Sunday funny papers
before leaving hi! Costa Mesa
home.
A burglar entered his Mesa
Verde residence through an unlock·
ed bedroom window. and made off
with $100 in loot, mostly cash and
coins, plus a daughter 's Esta ncia
11igh School student body card.
Stolen items -mostly fairly small
and easily carried -included all the
couple's personal jewelry, chin a,
silverware and antique items, such as
table lamps.
The burglars who pried open a sliding
gla ss door opening onto the patio after
scaling a gate facing the street appeared
to select the loot with taste and consid·
eraiion of value. _
Detective O'Sullivan said the pro-
(See BURGLARY, Page Z)
Talks Collapse,
•
Hij~c~ed Plane
Flies to Malta -·
BULLETl!ll
SAN FRANCISCO (API -Standard
Oil of CaUfornJa announced this afternoon
it will go along with President Nilon'1 en·
ergy cutback request and close 358 gas
stations ta seven Western states on Sun·
days.
· BEIRUT (UPI) -Negotiations to free
2fi4 persons aboard a hijacked Dutch
jumbo jet failed · today and Arab guer-
rillas who seized lhe 747 plane Sunday
took off today from Llbya 's Tripoli
Airport and new to Mata, the lives
of the hostages still in jeopardy.
A spokesman for the Royal Dutch
Airline (KLM) said the plane left Tripoli
al 7:30 a.m. EST for an unknown des·
tination. He said the 247 passengers and
17 crewme~ remained. aboard the tight·
Jy closed aircraft at Tripoli during many
hours of negotiations.
The plane landed at V8lletta on Malta
at 10:20 a.m. PST.
Arab news services said the key guer·
rill.: dem&l'\dS were a Dutch pledge lo
close transit camps in the Netherlands
for Jewish · emigrants bound for Israel
and an end to all emigration of· Soviet
Jews to Israel by way of Holland.
Holland replied that no such facilities
existed, and the situation remained
deadlocked. ·
The guerrillas cornmandered the KLM
plane Sunday shortly after it had taken
off from Beirut Airport en route to
Japa n and forced it to fly first to
,,
give · away 40 to 50 bucks out of ll1Y
pocket." ~
Smith ill!ists that tbe gasoline sOOrtage
was manufactured and that with the
outbreak of the Mideast War the oil
companies oow find that they have· to
mahttain the posture of an even greater
shortage. "They can't say that we can
meet the oil requirements of the COWltry
now after all," Smith said. "They've
created a monster."
For that reason Smith l\'ill not volun·
'
tarily stop selling gasoline. "And as
soon as I'm forced to under the new
law, I'm going to send President Nixon
a formal bill for each Sunday that
I haven't been able to sell my gas,"
he said.
Phil Evans, chairman of the Costa
~tesa Service Station and Garage Owners
Committee and operator or a Phillips
66 station ecross the street , disagrees
with Smith. 11e believes the shortage
is real .
Look Sharp, Be Sharp . . .
Officer Stan Bressler of Newport Beach Police Department advises
young Explorer Scout on the virtues of sharp dress dUring inspection
Sunday at law enforcemenf academy· conducted for Explorers from
22 posts throughout Orange County. The three·day academy .drew
about 150 scouts who are eXJ?loring careers in law. enfor~ement. It
was conducted at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. ·
Boston Strangler Stabbed . '
To Death in Prison ·cell
WALPOLE, Mass. (AP) -Albert
DeSalvo, who confessed to being the
"Boston Strangler" of the 1960s, was
found stabbed to death in bis prison
cell today, coriections officials reported.
Although lleSalvo confessed to killing
13 Vr'Omen in the ·Boston area betWeen
1962 and 1964, he later retract'ed the
confession and was never convicted of
any of the 13 deaths.
cell in the prison 's hospital section where
DeSalvo worked as an orderly.
. DeSalvo, 42, was stabbed 16 times -
six times in the heart. No weapon was
found and there were no suspects, the
spokesman said.
"I've been closing Sundays anyhow
ever since I couldn't get as much gas
as I wanted ," he explained. "I'm geared
to a seven day v:cek but r\'e had
to scale things dO\vn. The Sunday sales ·
ban won't aUect roe that much , but.
it will hurt a lot of other service stations .
"Personally I believe they should ra·
lion gasoline. That's the ullin1ate solu·
lion. It's the only fair way to spread
(See OPPOSE, PQge 2)
'Investor
Anxiety'
Gets Blame
NEW YORK (AP ) -The stock market
fell sharply today in wh at analysts
described as a renewed wave of investor
anxiety over the potential effects of
lhe energy crisis 9n the economy.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial
stocks, which has. sustained one of its
steepest drops in recent history the
past four weeks, felt.another 29.05 points
to 824.95.
Declining issues outnumbered those ad-
vancing by a 11 to l margin in relatively
active trading on the New York Stock
Exchange.
Brokers said fresident Nixon's energy
message on natlOnal television Sunday
night apparently sparked further concern
among investors about the energy
outlook.
Analysts say the concern focuses not
only on . the direct impact of energy
shortages on such industries · a s
automobiles , fast food restaurants and
travel, but also on' the broader capacity
of industry to function at full pace
on limited fuel supplies.
"Technically speaking, the market is
certainly ripe for a rebound," said
Manown Kisor, analyst at Paine Webber,
Jackson & CUrtis. "But we appear to
be in a phase where irrationality has
all but taken over."
Today's selling was "primarily in
response to Nixon's energy speech" ac--
cording to analyst Robert Amster ot
Rosenkrantz, Ehrenkrantz, Lyon & Ross.
After hearing the Administration's
plans to restrict various uses of fuel
by consumers and industry. Amster said ,
''The Ameriean people .now realize we've
got real proble ms. and lhe
Administration can't bail us out of
them."
As a result, he said, "confid ence is
destroyed on the buy side."
Ben-Gurion Serious
TEL AVIV (UPI ) -Doctors attending
• fonner Prime Minister David Ben·
Gurion, partially paralyzed by a stroke
Nov. 18, said he remained in serious
condition today. "No significant change
has occurred" since a weekend report
that Ben·Gurion was experiencing ".fog·
ging of consciousness,'' a drop in blood
pressure and pulse. doctors at Sheba
Medical Center said.
nutronics plpnt. ........___
-The Newporter apartments site, on
Jarllboree Rond above the Newport~r
Inn ..
_ He also ~ole the masler key
to all door locks in fhe Weslminslcr
Police Station.
,.Damascus where Syrian authorities
refused to refuel it, and then to Nicosia.
CJP.:rus_. wher_e aut~.!!i~,, provide~ ~I
tiut refuseO. to release sevefil>filest1nians
Ja iled in a ·J?revious hijacking and the
plane flew to Libya.
The former nandyma'n was serving
a life t~_rm at the maximum security
prison for assaults on our ol er womelr
A prison spokesman said OeSalvo's
body was found about 7 a.m. in a
During DeSalvo's assault trial in
January 1967, his'1awyer,'F. Lee Bailey,
attempted to get the t'l)llfession to · the
stranglings entered into evidence. He
was able only to preseDt such testimony
from . psychiatrists whom DeSalvo told
he--was the strangler. __
"The thing I would emphasize abol\i
the new zoning is that it would stijl
be possible (or development to take
place wi~ut further public hearings,"
said ·William Foley, a stnior planner
. I •
A<Jults
''ti .
.
Return
•
to
DeSalvo was convicted of burglary,
armed robbery and· sexual molestation.
State authorities have long maintained
· . they did not have evidence to prosecute
S h · l{')-T-~ -anyooe for the strangliqgs.
C 00 f' The case or the uBoslon Strangler"
.-• ca~ a worldwide senai:tion. The vic-
tims ranged ill age from· 19 to 75. Moot
had been aaooclalecl willr health care. · , PRICE OF SEED
SELLS BIRD, CA.GE Newport-Mesa Program to Bring Students Back either as nunes, hospital vohmteers,
workers in physicians' offices, or friends
of nurses and doclon" All lived within
a 26-m.lle radiUJ of Bolton.
An 1d worth less than a pack of
bird seed is all il took to sell two
!filds and a birdcage. }Jere's the ad:
a. JOHN ULLllR
6t ... ~ Plitt •• '"
School oUicla1s are working out a
program to aUow stllients to return
for addltiooal high school voeaUonal TALL gold blrdct1ge. (1) class ft the ha ud ted f ~reen parakeets male, all es 1 er Y ve gra a rom the Newport-Mesa Unified Schoo I ., or $10. (Phone No.). 1, District. ,
The advertiser told her Dally Pilot The erfort is a response to a survey
Adovlsor, she sold every 6ird 11the first of past graduates or Newpor~ lMch
d'Y the id •PJ>C!l,!•d." Action doesn't and Costa Mesa pubttc schools m ilh1ch
hav.e to ·bave an expensive price tag. the young adults indicated dissatisfaction
Spend some "bird sefd'• yourself, next with the way in which thtir tchooling
time you have. oometh!ng to sell. Dial Jirepared them-for I productlv~ life
'the direct line to resull!. Phone the In the ou!llde worl<f. .? ..D<Jly Pilot 11 142-5671. · "We took their criUclom ·very ,.rlou!-___________ -1y," ~Don Hout, '811stant SUperir>
l •
teodent for instruction. "This is just
one of several ideas we're considering
to ..make 01.A' education-more relevant
.to what OWJSludents say they w~nt.''
The 'urvey results indicated that 39
percent of district graduates were work·
Ing ralhel' than gotng to school , although
many of t.ho9e working said they planned
to return to school.
9ncl of this 39 percent, only seven
J>C(Cent said U.ey fell they had received .
Important help h'om their education In
preparing for the workdiday world.
"The· survey ihowed 11t tha l \here
are a Jar111e. number ol our students
who wtlt not .want any more academic-
•
type lnatructloo after high achoo!.'' Houl
says.
Th.is mean1,._Hout says, that graduates
may be relnctant to enroll ln vocational
education pf'9£rams of the c.out Com·
munity College Distrlct.,wi\ere lhey might
be required to ta~e general studies in
subjects like ·English, blitory, and math.
But at the same lhne, Hout Says,
"their rtSJX)nSeS indictate they £eel .. a
need for more vocational education to
give them skll1s that will g•t them
jobs.
"'This fs the kind of instructton we're
thlnkin8 &bout 11trtlng as a kind •f
. acl\lll edu~tion f)mlr~" l!Qut said.
!See STl!DINT!l,. 1!ap 11 ·-
The biaest mon11unt In Massachusetts'
history was touched off Feb. 24, 1967
when DeSalvo and two inmates escaped
from Bridcewater State Hospital a month
after DeSalvo's assault trial.
DeSalvo. who had been at the hospital
awaiting an appeal, was capturtd 1 \1
days later in a Lynn, Mass., clothing
store, where he asked to use. the
telephone.. •
Desalvo was at the ho8pital befor<l
the 'trial. undergoing o~atlon Jor an
alleged sexual moleotatlon,olfen,., when
his colhhote, George Kalnr', persuaded
Bailey to repmenl DcSalvo.
-Balley al .first res\Sled but agreed
(Set STl\ANGLBR, P ... l)
....... ~· • ~· 4 ~ .. _, ~ ... ._ ' f" .. f • ' ··~
Orange Coast
•
Weather
It'll be sunny and cool Tuesday,
acrording to the weather service,
with beach temperatures in the
upper 50s rising .to-the mid 60s
·inland. Overnight lows in the 40s.
INSIDE TODi\ Y
Homost:ntals h iz v t com·
plained about their portrayal
in movies a'W mL tetevisimL at«i
it appears likely t11at goys 1oill
be depicted differently ill tilt
f uti,re. See stonJ Page 7.
•Htillt H
\.,M, toyd I
C•llftffl• S. 1t
Cla•\lfltd tt.tl
Cait1lc1 U
Cl'lll-4 11
DHfll Ntlk O• lt af1Mi.1 ,... 6
(11""11Wllf'M!ll It
'IMMt lt.11 f'w flll .__... l t ... _... 14
..
A"ll l_'IMOtfl 14
M0¥1H II
Mllitfllt Newt W
Or'"" cw"tr t
S¥1W'll ''"'' 11 '""" 1"'' . Stot11 "°"r1t1t1 . 1 .. 11 r
T ... ¥1•\tll II
TM-til.,.1 11
Wtltlltt' 4 w-·· "'"" ,,_,, Wwld ,._ ... -·
l:
1---.ile---...___ r._..,,, _._
,
Bend lsnie
·Hospital S~eks
. -. .
County -SuppQ~t
...
County GOPs
Support. Nixa.n
A vote of confldmce wu given
to President NllOD tocky by the
Or&ll(e County JlePublican Central
Committee, wblch 1eSOW!dln&IY
-llq>pOl'ttd bll conllnualion In om~.
•
Seven Reels
" . T~pes Given Up
.
By White House The resolution by the county's
GOP leadership both urged that
he not resign and that no lm-
OlficiaJS of Saddleback Comlnunity County7pprovat WOuld mean the bond peacbment-action -be taken to-BtJl..LETIN \rith former Atty, G~n. JC!_hn N. Mitchell.
llospltal in LaglUla Hills have asked sales would be tu exempt. Ingram remove him from the White House. \\'ASHJNGTON (UPJI _ Rose ritary The White House gnvc Sirica a 22-page
Orange County government to endorse said the money 1saved ~gh .. ~ ... ex· The Republican group also cited Woods, Prteldtnt NI.ion'• person"! sec-analysis of the tapes and other materials a $12.S million bond issue lo help save empt at.at us cou d be pa~ ·---a to his leaderahlp in both domestic
financing costs and provide money to patienta tn lower oosta. and foreign attain and pledged rttary, tetUfied thlt aftentooa •he 1ceJ.. .. it was placing in his custody and asked
open their 150-bcd facJUty. Ingram saJd the re-flnandftC would continued support in Orange Coun-dentally erased • portion of one of bis thot he "'ithbold all or parts or three
The request comes before the Orange complete equip staff and ,_,..te the tecre& Watercate laptt D~arly t•·o or the tapes from the Watergate grand • • • -r-.. ty. months ago and 1bat the President said ~--Col!!.tr. Board of Supervisors Tuesday. SIS millio.n facility scheduled for o~ 'lbe document drafted said it It " bl " jury. ~mTr'trlng'l'fi , re:stdetrt th &-Feb:--1.--··---·-'7.:,-,.~-1-,~i.......1.1 i..~ wi'thdr•um 'l.D!i'.. Jf jn was no pro em. Thus ended a fight that began Aug.
Ul'I Tt+fpflttt
KNIFED IN PRISON
Albert H. O.Salvo
hospital's :G-member board, said the "UCB bu assured us we will have ;;t;;;;e'rtrbi'e evide'lite tsTa6USli::r,.;). -!---~--·-~ -2a,.w~dc~ed that he be given
refinancing program has been arranged all the interim financing we need to that he ls guilty of violating the WASHINGTON (AP) -The Whitt!: the tapes to delenlii~ons-
with United California Bank and Miller· get the hospital open and carry us trust of the highest office In ~ouse today turned over to a federal the grand jury should hea r.
' •
From Pagel
,STRANGLER • • •
" to do it only a day before detectives
arrived at th e hos pital to question
Desalvo about the stranglings.
Bailey tape-recordl'd OeSatvo's story
under an agreeroent with the state at-
torney general's office that it could not
be used against him. Detectives were
said to have found that most of what
he said tallied with the evidence of
the crimes.
DeSalvo also claimed to be the "Green
,1 Man," known to New England law en-
forcement officials as the man responsi-
ble for an estimated 600 to 1,000 rapes
and either sexual offenses over several
years.
No one was ever prosecuted as the
"Green Man," who was called that
because of the repairman's outfit the
victims said he wore In gaining entrance
to their homes under the ruse of being
sent to fix something.
Before DeSalvo repudiated his con-
fession in 1968, he maintained he
desperately wanted psychiatric treat-
, ment.
'· After DeSalvo's conviction, Bailey
commented, "Massachusetts has just
··:; burned another witch."
'
Employes Back
.. At Thrifty Drug
Mter Walkout
Schroeder, Inc., St. Louis bond brokers. through the fint a1z mcmthll/' Ingram America. Judge seven reels of &ubpoenaed White Since then, White tJouse has disclo6ed
In return for the county's endorsement, said. House Watergate tapes, but asked all that (1) the two conversations went un -
it would get title to the facility in Af~ the bonds are aold, UCB will or parts of three of theni be \\ithheld recorded, l21 a presidential dictation
30 to 35 years . be completely ie-lmburoed, be wd. from a federal grand jury. belt !'04/ld not be found and (3) an· IS-
Energy Proposal
Highligl1ts Told
By President
WASHINGTON fi\P) -Here at a
glance, are the highlights of actions
announced or proposed Sunday by Presi-
dent Nixon to cope with the nation's
energy crisis.
HOME HEATING OIL -Home
heating oil will be rationed beginning
Jan. 1. Deliveries to residences will
be cut 15 percent, to commercial
establishments 2S percent _ and to in-
dustries 10 percent.
SERVICE STATIONS -Beginning
Dec. 1, the President asked service sla·
lions to stop selling gasoline between
9 p.m. Safirdayland 12:01 a.m. Mon-;
days. He said this will be inade man·
datory when he is given authority by
Congress. Gasoline deliveries t o
wholesale and retail dealers will be
cul by 15 percenL
JET FUEU -Jet fuel allocations
to airlines will be cut five percent to
domesUc lines on Dec. 1, while in·
ternallonaJ lin1!3 will be held to 1972
levels; on Jan. 7 fuel allocations to
an airlines will be cut 15 percent below
1972 levels. Fuel for private aviation
will also be cut when Congress gives
him authority .
SPEED LIMITS -Nixon said that
RefinanciJ)g for the nODiH'Oflt hospital The White HoUJe also wgave the court minute segment is is obliterated by a
was neces,giated after the Lut¥ran 1 Top Cr;tl•C three other tape recordings to back bu~-~ yet another ta.pe. . . Hospital SOclety of Southern California II its contention that conversaUons of June Sir1ca, on consultation with the While
canceled Its ·management contract with 2~. 1972 and April 15 this year \Vent House and the special W~t~ate pros-
the ho.!pital last September. Of p f unreco rded. ecutor, has named a panel of six experts
ln'a letter to the Board of SUpervt'••rs, no re Th to verily that the tapes have not t>een .,.... ose three tape reels contain White d · h H ·d I h h County Counsel Adrl·an Kuyper warned fl 1 ho tam pere 11•1t . e sa1 a so i at e ouse le ep ne conversations o! June I h II I · lhat "If lt chose to JO. in with Saddleba'k 20 d h wou d car arguments on a c aims .,_ an I e recordings made in the old I t · ·1 bef Ii h t the County should seek assurances that Plans Dead Executive Office Building on April 15 o e~ecut ve pr1vbe1 elge h ore rud ~g w a it would be adequately financed and before , as the \Vhite House contends. portions can go ore I e gran Jury. administered." d Even before the tapes were delivered a recor ing device ran out of tape . by White House counsel J . Fred Buzhardt
Ingram said he and other hospital Bruce Sharpe, the 42.year-old lawyer U.S. District Judge John J , Sirica jn gray metal canisters, extraordinary
officials would be meeting with County said the court will listen to only enough security measures were placed around
Administrative Officer· Robert Thomas who Jed the battles against plans to of ,the three recordings "to determine Sirica's chambers.
Tuesday ·morning to review details of bulld two new san Ono~ nuclear reac· the absence of the subpoenaed COO· A U.S. marshal required a signature
the proposal. tors wa s found dead in his car toda y. versation." and clearance before • allowing anyone
"We are hopeful this will be approved, · t1le victim of suicide. -The· April 15 -conevrsaHon-the-White -into the judge's oUices, 'i1nd ~ven Sirica's
but if ii isn't we are stiJJ in good Sharpe, a prominent lawyer in the House says went unrecorded was with perml81 secretary wa1 made lo V.,~ar
shape," Ingram said. "Miller.SCbroeder Sar).ta Barbara and Lompoc areas, was then-White House counsel John W. Dean an tdenUficalion badg&.
will proceed with steps toward co'rporate f III and the June 1J) conversalioo was The White House analysis claimed In
bond sales." ound slumped over the steering wheel the case of the tapes it wants withheld
Conditions of the bond sale would of his car parked along Highway 166 that the conversations are ".wbJect to
include that: near Santa lttaria. He bad been missing ,.....,. P .. e J executive privilege in order Jo prol\?Ct
-The hospital agree to dedi~le title since last Thursday, authorities said. the confidentiality of advice given to
at the enclof the 30 to 35--year financing Sharpe officially represented Groups OPPOSE lheo!~~de~~~ is or a conversation period to the county. · ,.pnited Against Radiation Dangers •-• •
-The county be assured of 00 liability (GUARD) based in San Clemente and between lhe President and John 0 .
in case of default of the hoods. -served 83 legal couu:iel:--{QT. .~t group the shortage around." Ehrlichman on June 20, 1972 -the
-The county couJd pay off the bonds and others deemed fonnal inlerveOors Evans saJd Costa -Mesa-9N'Vice.ata.li0n _ first par.\_of .!l ta~ conversation that
at any time and accept full title. in the draWl"H)llt batUes against the dealers are scheduled to meet Thursday the White House s8Ys -is marred-later
-The hospital provide adequate pro-plant proposals. evening lo discuss whether to follow by the 18-minute hum.
teclion again.st malpractice liability. Officers in charge of the case in President Nixon's suggestion to volun· The hum occurs three minutes and
-County supervisors would have the Central California said that they have taiily begin lhe ,Sunday shutdown this 40 seconds from the start of a con·
right each year to disapprove the election learned the lanky, soft-spoken lawyer weekend. .... versation between Nixon and H.R.
or re-election of any hospital director. had been despondent over recent prob-But 8 third service staton leader is Haldeman, who was then White House
Construction of S&ddleback Community !ems in his work and had had a history· opposed to the idea of rationing. chief of staif, according to the White
Hospital began in 1971 and has been of thwarted suicide attempts. "The black marketeers are ready to House infonD.ation supplied to Slrlca.
beset with delays from strik1!3 and ad· Officers saJd death came as a result set up their (coupon) presses," Jn.si.sted The White House said that it is believ·
minlst t. talf t ""'"'••• of carbon monoxfde .poisoning. Sharpe ed the hum "was caused by the im-ra ive s umover. ..... ..... __. had attlched one encl of a garden hose NIXON DRUMS UP SUPPORT presslon of a record button during the
opeoing date lot the fadllty waa last to the exhaust pipe and stuck the other FOR PROGRAM-Story, P•ll" 3 process of rehearing the !lpe, po53lbly
May. through a window of the car. No note NIXON'S ENERGY PLAN DRAWS' while the reconler was in the proxlmity
was found . MIXED REACTIONS , p 5 of a.n electric typewnter and a high-ID-His work for GUARD and the ' age tensity lamp."
California Ocean Shoreline Preservation PRESIDENT OUTLINES The While House said in its filing,
Conference in the nuclear reador FUEL SAVING PLAN, P•g• 10 as it did in court, that the delay in
disputes lasted for years aod involved discovering the missing portion was "due
moiltbs of ,..,arch · and preoen!ltloM Willlam H. Bey, operator of Mission to the ambtgully of the languaJe of
when he is glven authority by Congress BURGLARY he wm Impose nationwide sp,eed limits • • • •
of SO miles per hour for alltomobiles '
An estimated 500 Thrifty Drug Store. and 55 for truck.s and buses. fes.siowµ natW'e of ~ job ,: ~tes before review boards assembled by the Viejo Mobil Service and a dlrector of the subpoena."
U.S. Atomic Energy Com.mission:: the lntemationaJ Senice Station Dealers employes were back on their jobs today •' 1 1' • •1 ' 1 • the atrana:e calls to' t!Je, ~··"ranch Association.
~ ' ' . !,~~ ~~9:b~~~~ec:'t~~ s~~!s.down s~::iNT~·~1~!1J!1Go~am~~~#'·1n Sali t~~r<bunty, where the f~
,, A new contract was ratified by vote lighting and unneceuary commercial spent· the holidays, were probably con· ·
Sunday and a union representative said lighting, with congressional approval. nected. Kohoui£k Seen
lit California
"I think the only way to handle th!!
is through mandatory federal allOcatioos
to each service station. 'Ibey should
allocate it equitably, possibly on the
amount of gas sokl last year," he said.
Grove Educator
Dies After Crash the margin of approval was overwhelm-Investigators theorize the calls were
ing. F p placed to usure that the family, Jn. The two-year-contract Is retroerlive ront qe l ' ~ ~u1 :~~ ~fo~1'0c~be:"':f :~ h, ~-~i;:enbo~kj5~· !ict1i:l ~~
to $4.~ an hour by Jan. l, 1975. Clerks STUD EN a S • • • were still. away from thelr Udo Isle
hired after that date will have pay residence.
raises bringing their hourly wage to Hout said that perhaps 10 percent Caspers and his wile told Officer Tom
$3.65 aa of Jan. 1, 1975. The increases to IS percent of all district graduates
are ~ cents and 42 cents respectively. might be willing lo enroll in high school Stewart, who was firs t dispatched to
Hourly wages for pharmacists will level classes alter receiving their the crime scene, that the calls OCCWTed
climb to $9.25 by Jan. 1, 1975, a 00--Cent· diplomas . Thursday, Frlday and Saturday.
an-hour pay hike. · But he pointed out that the district The call in which someone apparently Cost~f-living raises and improved is still only developing the outline of benefits are also included in the new such a program, and that approval from talked like a sma11 child was mentioned,
cmtrilct, which was approved by 90 district trustees will be ·needed before plus two in which the phone rang but
percent of the union members . it can be implemented. was followed by silence when answered
'Ibrifty terminated the previous con· Hout said Deputy Superintendent by some member of the family.
tract Oct. 17, saying it could not arford Nonnan Loats has also ordered a Caspers, 42. who heads Keystone Sav· to compete with non-un ion drug stores. districtwide review of all vocational
The strike closed 285 slores from San education program to,.give students more ings and loa!l. Association, told in-
Luis Obispo to the Mexican border. John career education w}IJe they are still vestigators many people and organlza.
C. Sperry, executive officer of Retail in school. · tiona knew of bis planned holiday
Clerks Local 324, which covers Long "Each high school will be making absence.
Beach and Orange County, said his its own decisions," said Hout, "but we He was to confer again today with
district has 800 union members and do anticipate there will be a re-allocation police and provide a detailed list of
SS stores. or resources to attempt to meet the them. in addition to t f past "I est;-·te that about 500 rela1'l clerks a ros er o ... _ expressed needs of student!." servanta and other hired help.
were on strike In Orange County and Another effort beginning as a result Loss to the family was estimated
that would be at around 35 stores," of the survey is a study to begin a only at $10,000 to $20,000 pending a
he said. career education program for students complete inventory of the missing items,
Contract talks, Sperry confirmed, are starting at the elementary school level. which Lbe financier and controvenlal
still in progress with Sav-On drug stores "The Idea would be to give students county leader alao plaMed to supply
but no settlement hJls been reached. the chance to explore careers at a today.
OUNGI COAST -•
DAILY PILOT
Thr Or•ngt Cotll DAILY PILOT, wilt! wl!lc!I
ll (°'11b1ned •nt Nt..,.1·Prt 11, 11 Pt1bll11>td by
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Vkt l"rwlOlnl end Genetti Mtl>fttr
Thom11 K•1¥il
Editor
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•
very early .age, and as lime wint on, He said an how:ehotd items were in-
to permit them to get actual work ventorled and appraised for exact value
experience in areas they found in· only two weeks ago by his insurance
leresting." carrier.
Old Orange Coast Trooper
Given Military Funeral
A bugler will finally blow !lpes Tues-
day for Pvt. Jamea C. Keeler (U.S.
Anny-Ret.) a Spanish-American War
veteran who died more than two weeU
ago In the Harbor Area.
The Army was fmally able to locate
service reconls of the ~YW<>ld troOper
In Ila Washington military.archives, thtl.!
qualifying him for a ·miU!lry fljlleral.
OM of the old mao'a laallltg wlshet
wu for such a trad!Uonal ceremony,
with the Oagodr>ped .,..ket, the crack
of rifle fire and the bugle salute at
sundown.
Only about 2,500 vetel'llli atUI IUl'Vive
from that war of lhe late 19th Century
and all the& service reconls are kept
centrally In the nation 's capital.
A long.,.go-reUred rallroadman •nd
San Francl3co cable car concluctor, Mr.
Keeler died on Nov. • ti~ be celebrated for yean u Annis« . Day.
Dulh name In a Harbor nunillg
home, which be entered Jasl one year
ago, after coming to Costa Mesa for
Thankq!Vlng dlmler and aayillg be would
like to atay.
He had been. ah!~ around to.
Southland V e t e • • n a ' Administration.
hospitail . !Or oome yean-and !"anted
to be near h!J fa..rtte relation, ·granc1.
nephew Roy Staley Jr., of Costa Keaa.
Rites for thO old·Umei' who lerved
with Companr M of the ~ u.s.
Veteruta Brtgil,de In 1'18·in lbe Philip.
pine lalancls, wlU be at S p.m. Tuesday
In Bell-Broachray Mortutry.
The aged trooper who r:al' away !tom
a ~ fann to Join tho'bone cavalry
and ..erv. wilh two ol bll older btothen
will ihen Ilk• h!I final ride.
He will be drlV<n to Sowt.llt National
Cemetery In Wellwood , wilel'1I the sym-
-..J ...,... of wlllta .,_ marl<
the '"ting pla<e ol thollsanda of bll
fellow ooldlen.
Illa primary lllrvivor ·ii Staley, of
2235 Rutem Drive, Cooja MeA, In itd-
dltioo to nieces and nc!ph<WI whole
residence ii no lon&er known .
'
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
Comet KohoulU hio flnaJly .made
an appearance In the Noi-them
California sky. .
Leon Sa.Janave, executive
aecrelary ol the Astronlmlcal
Society of the Pacific, said he
spotted the comet in the early
morning al<y today with the aid
of binoculars. He said it appeared
as a "fuzzy star" and was foW'
to five times fainter than earfter
predicted.
The comet is expected to become
progressively brighter between now
and January.
"Then they should figure out how
much they need to cut CODIWnption
and rtduce ·the amount allocated to
the deaJer by the necessary percentage.
1bia would allow the dealer to keep
the hours of operation which his
particular location demandl.''
Bay added that be was uncertaJo what
sland, if any, bll wodatlon would like
on the Sunday &ales ban.
However. he said be would stop selling
gasoline on Sundays . to comply With
the request, but that he would also
v.·rite a Jetter to President Nixon urging
adoption of bis allocation plan.
The current allocatioo plan, Bay main-
tains, is not fair because the quantity
of gasoline alloted to each dealer is
determined by the oil companies, not
the government.
Donald R. Wash, auperintendeot of
the Garden Grove Unified School
District, died Sunday following five
weeks in a coma resulting from a
motorcycle accident.
Wash, 42, had been superintendent
of the district since February, tm.
He had been with the district for 18
years.
When Wash's motorcycl~ oolllded with
a dune buggy Oct. 21, he was taken
to Sharp MemoMal Hospital in San Diego,
where he died early Sunday morning.
The administrator leaves his wife Pat,
his daughter J(jm, and two 90ns, Ken
and K.C.
Graveside services for Wash will be
held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Forest
Lawn in Cypress.
Nobody Sells Amana for less than 1:>dldcU>
Where do YQU want the freezer
In your ne\Y "ifm•n• refrigerator ...
WE ·
TAKE
TRADE
llS
<I
• .:·':1: "~~· LOW · .. ~ -· '
PRICE5 .i
<
ARE · '1 . ..~.
BORN 'ff, · ' .. HERE ~
RAISED f'
ELSEWHERE
on the alde1 on the bqftom? on the .t2P.1
•
Am11n"-gives you a choiCe
•
90DAYSCASH
WITll A~"IOVID Clll.DIT
1115.llWPOIT Bl YD~
Duwnlnn Costa Mesa -Pboae 548-7781
•
I I
J
M
s
f
• -.---------· --.... .._ -·--------. •
' f '
• • Totlay's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VOL 66, N0.~30, 2 SECTIONS,-26 PAGES ---ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, ~OVEMBER 26~L973 c TEN .CENTS
Coast Station
1
s Fuming Over Sunday Gas Ban
• By RUDI NIEDZIEUllU
Of flM DtllY' Pli.t Staff
Service station operators along the
Orange Coast today reacted unfavorably
to President Mxon'a Sunday guollne
tales ban because they believe it will
burl business. _
The sale ban, to take effect. after
congtesslonll approval; would -stop
service statklns from dispensing ga!Oline
between 9 p.m. Saturday and 12:01 a.m.
Monday to discourage long.distance driv-
$20,000 Tlaeft
ing. II is estimated ·that the measurt
will save 50,000 barrels at gaaollne per
day.
"As far as I'm concerned this is
the moll chlldlsh and i<!lollc thing I
ever beard of," t.µned Bob Smilh, of
Smith~s ARCO, corner Bristol and Baker
Street, C..ta Mesa.
"All. this la:-going to do is insure
that the slol'! wilt be sold out or
three and four gallon gas cans this
weekend. It won't stop any driving on
JJurg-l~fs _St:r_i~~
.
Caspers' Home
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of .... Delly "" s ...
A series of mystery pbooe calls to
the Romona ranch or Orange County
Boaiil oi Supervisors Chairman Ronald
L. CUpm today was <OOS!dered a clue
to the $20,000 Thanksgiving hollllay
burglary of his Newport Beach home.
Cloe ol the unexplained calh involved
somlOJl< apperertly mlmlcl<lnC a small child ""1 said: .. I wuv you.••
The. CUpen fa)lllly ..wmed to lair
home at 111 Via Floreace Gil, lido lote
about 5:30 p.m. Swiday and lmmedlately
sensed something wu wrong wheD they
found a side door ajar.
Museum Pla11.s
For Costa Mesa
To Be ,Unveikd
Plans for Costa Mesa's own musemn
will be unveiled by the Coma Mesa
lflstorical Society at tonight's study
sessloo of the Costa Mesa City Council.
The informal meeting is scboduled
for 7:30 p.m. in the first floor conference
room at Costa Mesa City Hall, 77 Fair
Drive.
City Manager Fred Sorsabal said the
historical society is asking councilmen
for a $15,000 contribution toward the
museum which is to be constructed
at Estancia Park on Adams Avenue.
The bujlding would house historical
artifacts and is to be located adjacent
lo the Estancia· Adobe.
Anolher study session item is the C.Osta
Mesa Zoning Ordinance and its rela-·
tlonsblp lo the Costa Mesa General Plan.
Council members are expected to 1ron
out several inconsistencies between the
two documents. State law requires
municipal master plans and actual zoo..
ing lo be Identical as of Jaouary 1974.
Members of the city COUDCil will ·ilso
1 take under consideratioii l'tquests by
the federal Environmental Protection
Agency to reduce automObile \lie through
tflc imposilion or tax ~irges for
city parking lots, Councilmen earlier ~~~~~:S~selves in opposition tcf ,!.he
lnvestigators said today a team or
highly professional thieves was probably
involved in looting the residence of
dozens ol items. _
"They did a real job," !aid Newport
Beach Police Detective P a t r i c k
O'Sullivan, as he continued with his
investigation today.
Slollll, lteml --ui lllrly small
and easily carried .,.. lnd1111'4 al! the
•couple's penoiiol. f•elry, c b In a ,
sUvmme and ahUqlie Itemi, such u
t.11111 latll111. 1'bO wrglar1 who pried open a •liding
glass door opening onto the patio after
sca~g a gate lacing the street appeared
to select the locit With taste aod coQ.Sid·
eration of value. •
Detective O'Sullivan said the pro-
fessional nature of the job indicates
the -ng'e calls lo the Caspers raoch
in San Diego County. where the family
spent the holidays, were probably con-
nected.
Investigators theorize the calls were
placed lo ..,.... that the family, in-
cluding chlldnn Kirt, II, Rick, 17, Gt<g
and Kristen, both 15, and Blair, 12,
were. still away from their Lido Isle
residence.
CasP.efs and ·bis wife told Officer Tom
Stewart, who was f i r_s, t dispatched to
the crime scene, that the calls occurred
Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
The call in which someone apparently
talked like a small child was mentioned,
(See BURGLARY, Page %)
J. Paul Getty
To Pay Ransom -
LONDON (AP) -The father of J.
Paul ~ty Ill said this alteinoon he
agreed to pay an WJdiscklsed ransom in
aavanoe for the bw'• return, according
to a statement issued on the father's
behalf.
The 17-year<lld grandson of the Amer-
ican oil billionaire has been missing in
Rome since last summer.
The statement said the kidnapcrs re-
fused to. hand over the boy 'at the same
time the ranso~tn was_ paid. so it was
agreeO payment would be r;nade before
the release "as is customary in other
recent kidnaping cases in Italy."
•
Sw>days. The people will just carry
tbelr cans with them."
Smith, who attricted naUoowide at-
tention reCentJy when he . "captured"
a gas delivery truck in protest over
wholesale price tncrea!es, ,says he plans
lo l<l!Jl!in -Jhi,t Sunday.
"Why? Because I've got gas to sell.
I've alreiidy got the government telling
me how much I can sell it for and
the oil companies telling me how mUCh
I'm going to get. I'm not going to
Police Chiefs
Home Burgkd
Westminster Police Chief Walter
T. Scott should have read Dick
Tracy1s €rime!toppers--Textbook-
itcm in the Sunday funny papers
before leaving his Costa Mesa
home. •
A burglar entered his Mesa
Verde residence through an unlock·
ed bedroom window and made off
with $100 in loot, mostly cash and
cs>ins, plus a daughter's Estancia
High School student body card.
He also stole the master key
lo all door locks in the Westminster
Police Station.
Ta)ltS .Collapse,
ffijacked Plane
' .
Flie$ to Malta
BUUETIN
VALLETTA, Malta (UPI) -Arab hl-
jacken of a Beyal O.tch Alr11De1 (KLM)
jambo jet agreed to fl'ff %47 paasea.a:en:
in uchaqe for two bo1tage1 and safe
conduct from Malta, airport •. ICKll"cea
said this afternoon.
BE;IRUT (UPI) -Negotiations lo free
164 penons aboard a hijacked Dutch '
jumbo jet !ailed today and Arab guer·
rillas who seiied the 717 plaoe Sunday
took off today from Libya's Tripoli
Airport and flew to Malta, the lives
of the hostages still in jeopardy.
A spokesman for the· Royal Dutch
Airline (KLM) said the plane left Tripoli
at 'l:30 a.m. PST for an unknown des·
tination. He said the ~47 p&ssengers and
17 crewmen remained aboard the tight·
Jy closed aircraft at Tripoli during many
hours of negotiations. '
The plane landed at Valletta on Malta
· at 10:20 a.m. PST.
Arab news services said the key guer·
rill.. demands were a Dutch pledge to
close transit camps in the Netherlands
for Jewish emigrants bound for Israel
and an end lo all emigration of Soviet
Jews to lsrael by way of Holland.
Holland ~plied that no such facilities
-existed, and the situation remaine<f
deadlocked. . .r
The guerrilfas: commandered the' KLM
Plane Sunday .Jhortly after it had taken
o(f from BCirut Airport en route io
Japan and forced it to fly first to
Damascus Where Syrian authorities
refused to refuel it, and then to Nicosia.
Cyprus, where authoMtics provided fuel
but refu sed to release seven Palestinians
ja!Jed in a prCvious hijacking and the
pline flew to Libya . ,
give away 40 to SO bucks out or my
pocket."
Smith insists that the gasoline shortage
was manuractured and that with the
ou tbreak. of the Mideast War the oll
companies now find that they have to
maintain the ~lure of an even greater
shortage. ''They can't say that we can
meet the oil requlrements of the country
now after all,'' Smith said. "They've
created a monster."
For that reason Smith will not vohm·
es
President's
_Secret~
Erased Tape
, BULLETIN ..
WASmNGTON,-(UPI) -Rete Mary
Woods, President Nixon's personal sec-
retary, testified this aftel'DOOll tbe acci-
dentally erised a portion of one of· his
tecret Watergate tapes aearly two
moaUn ago and tbt Ille Pnsldeat said
it "was no prohlem."
WASlllllGTON· IAP> -'fhe Wbile
"-today Iii-over to a federal judge se.veq rejO!t ol subpoen'aed While
House Watergate tapes, but ,Wed all
or partJf of three or them be -withheld
from a federal grand jury.
The White House al90 gaVe the court
three otber tape rfl"Jf'dings lo back
ils cootentic:u-.tbat converq~s of June
20, 1972 and April 15 this year ·went
unrecorded. .......
Those three tape reels contain While
House telephone conversati<ms of June
20 and the recordings made in the old
Executive Office Building on April 15
before, as the White House oontends,
a recording device ran out of ta_pe..
U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica
said the coun will listen to only enough
of the thtee recordings "to determine
the absence of the subpoenaed a>o-
versation."
The April 15 conevrsation the White
J{ouse says went unrecorded was with
tfl'en-White House counsel John W. Dean
III and the June 20 conversation was
\l:ith £orQ'ler Alty. Gen. John N. Mitchell.
The White House gave Sirica a 22-page
analysis of ~he tapes and other materials
it \l:as placing in his custody and asked
that be withhold all or parts of three
or the tapes from the Watergate grand
jury.
Thus ended a figb\ that began Aug.
(See SECRETARY, Page %)
'Your Wish
Our Command'
Costa Mesa police were surprised
at the candor of a San Clemente
man who they stopped for driving
the wrong way in a one-way alley
Sunday.
"I'm drunk .'' the motorist
declared. "You caught me. Take
me a\vay."
.Police took hDn away.
The final item on the study Session
calendar is a request • JiY"Mesa -Tow
to share in police-requested auto
towaways. Police tow calls are currenUy
answered on a rotating Oasis by Coast.
Towing and Harbor Towin;.
1be council will take no !orma11 action
tonlght '<in any or the study .. -..
Items. i Adults Return to School?-
PRICE OF SEEh
SELLS BIRD, CAGE_ Newport-Mesa Program to Bring Students Back
·An ad worth less than a pack or
bird seed Is all it took lo sell two
birds and a btrdcage. Here's tb~ ad:
By JORN ZALLER
Of *' .. .., ;,.., 119"
School offlclaia are working out a
progral)l lo allow student• to return
for ll!ldiilonsl blgh · acbool vocational . .
TALL gold birdcage. (l) classes after they have grauclated from
green parakeets male, all _the Newport-Mesa UniOed Schoo I
!or .110. (Phone No.). District.
The advertiser told her Dally· Pilot The erfort 11 a response to a eurvey
Ad-tJ90r she told every bird uthe first of past gr_aduates of Newport Beach ~· and C..ta1olesa publlc schoolt in which day the ad appeared ." Action ~· 1 the young adults Indicated dlSAtislactlon
have to hav. aa eapenslv• price tag. with the way In wlddl . their tldloQHng
Spend some ••blrd teed" younelf, ~ .. :....... l'f
time '""' ha"" something lo aell. Olil pee..,._ them !or a • pnductlve 1 e ,_ u.i In Ille oullide-1d. the · direct II"' lo "'ults. P_. · "We took their criticism wry ,.rloUI·
Dt._ll;;..'i_P_110_1_a1_eo.611 __ 71_· ------Iy," said Don Hout, assistant auperin· •
•
t
tendent for Instruction. 0 Thls is jiJst type' instruction after high ldiooJ," Hout
one of several ideas we're considering says. '
to make our £"ClucaUon more relev8nt This means, Hout says, that graduates
to what our students say they want!-'' may be relucta"nt to enroll in vocational educatloll p<Ogralll! or the Coast Com-
The survey results Indicated that 19 mw11ty College Dlstilct, rt! they mlgh
percent or district graduates were work• bd required tb take ~ studles !n
ing rather than going lo school. although subjects like English , hi ry, and mith.
many of those wQrlclng said 'bey'planned But ,at tlie same time;-Hout says ,
to return to school. ''their •responses indicate they feel a
9nd ol thit 39 percent, anlJ seven need ror more vocational education to
percent said they fell they bid received give them skills that will get them
Important lltlp from their edqcalion In jObo. ·; •
preparlDf for the workdaday -ld. ''This. 15 the kind ~ instruction.,..,,.
"The sumy $ltow1Cf us Iha\ lherJ_' lhinttinc: about ·~ as t.klnd _or
are a tarte. number or our sludenti ad\AJ edocation ....,...., .. llont llld.
who will not waot any more academic-(See STIJDEN'I!, Pap I)
•
I~
•
tarily stop selling gasoline. "And as
soon as I'm forced to under the new
Jaw, I'm going to send President Nixon
a forrr@l bill for ~ch Sunday that
1 haven 't been able to sell my gas,''
he said. 1
Phil Evans, chairman of the Costa
li-Iesa service Station and Garage Owners
Committee and operator of a Phillips
66 station across the street, disagrees
with Smith. He believes the shortage
is real.
;.
I
UPI TlllllNI•
KNIFED IN PRISON
Albert H. DoSalvo
DeSalvo, 'Boston,
Strangkr,' Found
Slai1i in Cell
"I've been closing Sundays any w
ever s.ince 1 couldn't get as much gas
as I wanted," he explained. "I'm geared
to a seven day week but I've had
to scale things down. The Sunday sales
ban won't affect me that much. but
it will hurt a lot of other service stations.
"Personally 1 believe they should ra·
lion gasolil'IC. That's the ultimate solu·
lion. It 's the only fair way to spread
(See OPPOSE, Page 2i
_,, ______ _
'Investor
Anxiety'
Gets Blame
From Wire Services
NE\V YORK -The stock market
fell sharply today in what analysts
described as-a-renewed wave of investor
anxiety over the potential e£fects or
the ene;·gy crisis on the economy:.
The Dow Jones average or 30 industrial
stocks, which has sustained one of its
steepest drops in recent hislory the
past four weeks, fell another 29.05 points
lo 824.95.
It was the worst Joss the average suf-
fered since It dropped 34.15 points on May
28, 1962. during President Kennedy's con-
frontation with· the steel industry. over
prices, and the fifth. worst in history.
Its closing was the lowest since Nov.
· 26, 1971 at 816.59, exactly two years ago.
Issues declining in price dominated
those advancing by 1,518 to 149, the larg-
est number of declines in NYSE history_
Trading was fairly active.
Turnover amounted to 19,S:W.OOO shares,
compared with 11 ,470,000 exchanged. on
Friday, the day after the Thanksgiving ..
holiday.
Virtually e.very group, vl'ith the excep... \VALPOLE. M8ss. (AP) -Albert tion of gold mining issues, took a pound-
DeSalvo, who confessed to being the ing. Higher-priced stocks in the oils,
"Boston Strangler" of the 1960s, was diemicals, electronics and cnmputers,
found stabbed to death in his prison and glamors all dropped.
cell today , corrections officials reportea Brokers said President Nixon's energy message on national television Sunday
Although DeSalvo confessed. lo killing night apparently sparked rurther cnncem
13 women in the Boston area between among investors about the energy
1962 ·and 1964, he later retracted the outlook.
confession and was never convicted. of Analysts say the concern focuses not
any of the 13 deaths. only on the direct impact of energy
The former handyman \vas serving shortages on such industries a s
a life term at the maximum security automobiles, fast food restaurants and
prison for assaults on four other women . travel. but also on the broader capacity A prison spokesman said DcSttlvo's { . d body was found about 7 a.m. in a o in ustry to function at full pace
cell in the prison's hospital section where on limited fuel supplies.
DeSalvo worked as an orderly. "Technic~Jly .speaking, the market is
certainly ripe for a rebound,'' said
DeSaJvo, 42, was stabbed 16 times -Manown Kisor, analyst at Paine Webber.
six times in the heart. No weapon was Jackson & CUrtis. "But we appear to
found and there were no suspects, the be in a phase where irrationality has
spokesman said. all but taken over."
Dui'ing DeSalvo's assault trial in Today's selling was "primarily in
January 1967, his lawyer, F. Lee Bailey, response to Nixon 's energy speech" ac-
attempted to get the cnnfiSsion to the cording to analyst Robert Amster of
stranglings entered into evidence. He Rosenkrantz, Ebrenkrantz. Lyon & Ross.
Was able only to. present such testimony After hearing the Administration's
from psychiatrists whom DeSalvo told plans tel restrict various uses of fuel
he was Jhe strangler. -/ by consumers and industry, Amster said,
' · ,DeSalvo waa convicted .of burglary, "The American people now realize we've
armed robbery· and sexual molestation. got real p r o b I e m s , and the
State"'authorities ha:Ve tong maintained. • Administration can't bail us out o[
lt1ey did not have evidence to prosecute them."
anyone for the stranglings. As a result. he said. "confidence is
The case of the "Boston SI rangier" destroyed. on the buy side."
caused a worldwide sensation. The vie· -
tims ranged in age from 19 to 75. Most ~-----------~
had been associated with health care.
either as nurses, hospil~l Volunteers.
workers in ph}'slcians' offices, or friends
of nurses anti doctors. AH lived within
a 26-mile radius of Boston.
The'biggest manhunt in Massachusetts'
history was touched off Feb. 24, 1967
when DeSalvo and two inmates escaped
froln 'Bridgewater Sta.te Hospital a month
after DeSalvo's assaun trial.
lleSalvo, Who bad been al the 00.pital
awaiting in appeal, was captured 1 ~
days later in a Lynn, Ma.a., clothing
st9re1• where he asked to use the
telephon"C.
DcSe.Jvo was at the hospital before
the trial, undelgoing observallon for an
alleged sexual molestation offense, when
his cellmate, George Ka tar, persuaded
Bail~y to repre~ent OeSalvo.
'·
Balley at first resisted but agreed
to do it pnly a day before detectives
arrivicl at the hospital to question
OeSalvo about the stranglings.
Bailey tape-recorded OeSalvo's story
under an agrecmeQt with the state at-
torney general's office that it could not
be U$ed agairwt him. Detectiv~s we.re
said to have lound that most ol what
he safd talllcil with ,the evidence or
tM crimes.
I
•
)
Orange Coast
•
Weather
Ir!\ be sunny ~d .;;.I Tuesday,
according to the weather service,
with beach temperatures 'In 'the
upper 50s rising to lhe mid 60s
inland. Overnight lows in the COS. ,,
INSIDE TdDAY
flomose:tUals have com·
plai'lled about their 1>ortrayal
in n1ovies and dn television a11d
It cippears liktly that gays will
be depicted difftrtritly in the
fut11re. See st ory Pagt 7.
hati•t . !6 A'"' L ...... 1 U L.""'-aefllll I MoflK 11
C1"1tr11lt .I. It N1tlt111I fft'fl'I +..l Cllulllellll 2'-U Or111tt C19111f t
Ctl'lllU II Sfl'lle l'or1w' 11
C"f'-1111 IS
DNlll Nlllc:ff It
1-.rtt , .. ,,
, ... MM1!0h lt.11
••tllrill ,... ' T"""llM • lt
l'llWtllllllllftt 11 ,.,..,.,.. ,,
l'l .. llCt 1 .. 11 WHfMr 4 , .. !flt l"9nl It WIMlll'I ...... ll-14
--14 --..
. '
\ . •
••
Bond Issue -
Requested
By -Hospital
'
C0;unty GOPs.
S'!_pport Nixon
A vote Qf confidence waa given
!<> Prosident Nixon today by the
Orll18e·CoW1ty Republican Central
Committee, which l'f.IOWldingly
supported hll contfnuatton fn oUlce..
'nt6 re90lutlon by1 the countY'1
GOP leadership boih urged that
Olliclals of Saddlehacl< Community he. nol r.,ieu . and that. no flf\"
Hospital in Laguna Hills have asked peachment action be taken to
Orange County government to endorse rem9ve him from the White llouse.
• ,. ·11 ~-• lss h I Th e Republican group also cited a .,1~.s mi ion UUllU ue to e P save bis leadership in both domestic
flnancing costs and provide money to and foreign affairs and pledged
-their !SO.bed lacillly. The request ~mes before the Orange continued supPort in Orange Coun·
Of Nixon's
Energy Talk
BULLETIN
SAN FRANCISCO (AP\ -· Standard
OiJ of CaUfomla announced this afternoon
it wUJ go along wttlt Presidebt Nlsoe11 u..
ergy cutback request aod c10M 3St p1
llllloal hi .. _ w..-·-.. Sao· days.
County Board ol SUperviso'.' Tuesday. ty Th• document drafted said It w ASHINGTON (AP)
t---~iOBerninl ard Ingram, president of the -~s:ho_u_ld.._b.e___'!.i!hQra\\11 onlv ,;;il;,,;;in-;,-J--gl!lianance,, are. the hld>!lgbta 0 tarno:tnem~~a-tbC -----controverttble evi<lence estaliusnes aMOWlced or proposed Sund by Presi·
•I •
relloancing program has been arranged that he Is guilty ol violating the d t NI •-th !lo • with United catifomia Bank and Miller· trust of lhe highest office in en xon w cope with e na n s energy crisis. Schroeder, Inc., st. Louis bond brokers. America. 1 In return for the county's endorsement,
ii would get title to the facility In
30 to !5 yun.
. County approval would mean the bond
-.--salts -woutd be · tax exempt. Ingram
• said the lllODeY saved through tax ex-
empt status could be passed along to
· · patienta In lower cos.ts.
Ingram said the re-financing would
.. complete, equip, stall, and operate the
,'. $15 million facility scheduled for opening
Feb. 1.
"UCB has assured us we will have
all the interim financing we need to
Top Crittc
. '
Of Onofre
Plans Dead
'..get the hospital open and carry us Bruce Sharpe .• the 42·year~ld lawyer . throuih the first six months," Ingram
Id who led the battles against plans to " ...
HOME HEATING OIL -Home
heating oil will be rationed beg!Mfng
Jan. 1. Deliveries to residences will
be cut 15 percent. to commercla1
establishments 25 percent and t<> In·
dustrles 10 percent.
SERYICE STATIONS -Beginning
Dec. 1, the President asked service sta-
tions to stop seUing gasoline between
9 p.m. Saturdays and 12:01 a.in. 1.ton·
days. He said this will be n1adc man·
datory wh en he is .given authority by
Congress. Gasoline deliveries t o
wholesale and retail dealers will be
cut by 15 percent.
After the bonds are 90ld, UCB will build two new San Ooofre ;1uclear reac-
be completely re-imbursed, he said. tors was found dead in. his car today, JET FUELS -Jet fuel allocations
Refi · f th pr·'1't ~ital to airhnes will be cut five percent to ~;as ~ta:i -af:~u: ~~ran ~ victim of suicide·. . ---<IOihestic 1meson~:--,:--wnne· in·
'< Hospital SOciety of Southern California Sharpe, a prominent lawyer in the temational lines will be held to 1972
•, canceled its management contract with Santa Barbara and Lompoc areas, was levels; on Jan. 7 fuel allocation.s to
the bospit.al last September. found slumped over the steering wh eel an airlines "'ill be cut 15 percent below
.f.. In a letter to the Board of Supervisors, cl. his car parked along Highway 166 1972 levels. Fuel for private aviation
Co t Co ••! Adrian Kuyper warned wilt alsO be cut when Congress gives un Y un<K' near Santa Maria. He had been missing • .. that "If it chose to join with Saddleback him authority. ·
the county should seek assurances that since last '1'1ruraday, authorities said.
it ~ould be adequately fin anced and Sharpe officially represented Groups
administered." United Against Radiation D an g e r s
Ingram said he and other hospital (GUARD) baaed in San Clemente and
. officials would be meeting with County served as legal counsel for that group and others deemed formal intervenors Administrative Officer Robert Thomas in the drawn-<>ut battles against the
Tueeday morning to m:_iew details_ of plant propo,sals.
the proposal. Officers ln charge of the case in
"W• are hopeful this will be approved, Central C&lllomla said that they have
but if it isn't we are still in good teamed the lanky soft-spoken lawyer
shape," Ingram ~~'!di~~roe<ler had be<l!.A~dent over l'.!'<•nt !>._"'"'
wt1I proceed with steps toward corporat.---iems fn hi& work andliidfiad arustoiY
bond Illes.'! of thwarted suicide attempts.
COndJtions of the bond sale would Officers said death came. as a result
Include that: . o! carbon monoiide poisoning. Sharpe
-The holp!tal agree !<> dedicate title had attached one end ol a garden hose
at the end of the 30 to 35-year financtng to the exhaust pipe and stuck the other.
period to the county. through a window of the car. No note
,,. -The county be assured of no liablllty was found. ,
. · ln cue of default of the bonds. His work for GUARD and the
·;·, -The cOunty could pay or£ lbe bonds C&Ufonlla Oc~an Shoreline Preservation
, , 1 at any time and accept full tille . Conference in the nuclear . reactor
-The boepltal provide adequate ·pro-dispute.! l~ted ,for ~ears ,and mvol.vcd
tection against malpractlce Uatilllty. months of. research and preJentat1ons
-County aupen.:'5ar~ would hav~, the before .re~ew boards asse~~ed by the 1~/. right 'each year to disapprove the eleetion U.S. Atomic Energy Comm1ss1on.
or rH!tctlon of any boopltal director.
t
TONIGHT
OOS'l'A MESA PLANNING COM·
MISSION -Regular meeting, City Hall
6:30 p.m. ·
"AVIATION SAFETY FOR PILOTS"
-OCC lecture in cooperation with FAA,
Auditorium, 7-9 p.m.
UC! LECTURES -"Commer<ial and
Investment Properties" series, Room 101
Physical Sciences Bid&.. 7-9:30 p.m.
Admission $6. "World or \\1omen" series.
Room 174 Computer Science Building,
7-10 p.m. Admission $6.
TUESDAY, NOV. fl
OCC MUSIC CONCERT AT NOON
-Clarinet Choir, Flute Cho Ir ,
Ptrcllllion Ir Bran Gn>up, Music Studio
No. 1. P'reo.
COSTA MESA SENIOR CITIZENS -
C<>mmun!ty Recreation Cent<r; I 1
a.m. • 3 p.m. UC! LECTURE -Serles on "Aging,
Origins, Effects and Control, Room 161
Humanlti•• Hall , 7-9 p.m. Adm!Jtion
15.50.
DAILY PILOT
1'11• Or•"" CM" OAIL V "ILOT, wllll ""4!kti
II comtolMd n.. -. ..... Pru t, It 11'*11"'911 "'
ltlf Orlflft "°'" Pj»Utfl!lll ~¥-......
nt• edl!ic>n5 ••• pUb!IJ"-d, Mono1y ltw"Mllh
~rlll17, tar C05!t M.,•,_H9WPOr1 lttdl.,
Hlll'lt~'-" llMCl'l/FOU"lll" Vllley, lftUM
IMdl, lrvlnl/5Mdlll:llC~ 1"4 S1t1 CIMMfllt:I
SM Jilt" C•11!1tr11'11, A ti"llt '901DMI
91flllon II pillllll.,_. i.ltwd•YI 11'111 511fld9yi.
Tiit prlMlpll .,wt!tl'I"" llll"t II 11 Jlll W..1
.. y '""'• ClllJ INN, (fllftnllt, 9K:lt. ••rt N. Weed ..,....,.. •lllf "'*lllflw
Jeck l. Cwley
Vlcf '"'w.nt llM Ot'ltr•l.MIMW
Tit•111•1 tcee.tll
lllllllW
11iellii•1 A. MurJ>hl11• MeMtlllf .. , ....
ClierlN H. l.e•• l;lc .. t t4 '· Nill Alll*llt,..,.... h i"" ---JJO Weit lty Stt-11t
"'•llfflt ....,,,. •• l',.0 , ... ,, .. , •2•1• --..,...,. ....... ~ ...... " ~ --1. ,._, "'*"' ............. 1Mtf11 ,,.,. htdl ......,...
... C""*"': :IOI """II <:efl'llllll Ill•!
flllfO 111 C71CI MJ ... Jl1
as 1fM ~'""al: u MNfi71 -· ----................................. :":.. =-•, ~'"":111"': ...... ., ..................
' t ..
Employes Back
•
A-t Thrifty Drug
After Walkout
An estlmated 500 Thrifty Drug store
employe.s were back on their jobs today
a(ter a 19-0.ay strike which shut down
more than 50 Ort11nge County stores.
A new contract was rt11tl!ied by vote
Sunday end a union representative satd
the margin of approval v.·as overwhelm· ing. .
The two-yeaNXKltract is retroactive
to July 1 and will raise the base pay
of clerks hired before October of 1969
to 14.~ an hour by Jan. 1. 1975. Clerks
hired after that date will have pay
raises bringing their hourly wage to
$3.65 as of Jan. I, 1975. The increaaes
are 53 cents and f2 cents respectively.
Hourly wages for pharmacists wlll
climb to $9.15 by Jan. 1, 1975, a 60-cent·
an-hour pay hike.
c.ost-of·llving rais:C3 and improved
benefits are also Included in the new
contract, which was approved by 90
percent of the union members ..
Thrifty terminated the previous con-
tract Oct. 17, saying It could not afford to compete with non-union drug stores.
The strike closed 285 stores from San
Wis Obispo to the Mexican border, John
C. Sperry, executivf' officer of Retail
Clerks Local 324. which covers Long
·Beach and Orange. Count)i;-s&la-rus
district has 800 union members and
55 stores.
"l estimate that about 500 retail clerks
were on . strike in Orange County and
that would be at around 3; atores,"
he said.
Contract talks, Sperry confirmed , are
still in progres1 with Sav-On drug stores
but no &etUement has been reached.
From f.age }-,
BURGLARY •••
. plus two fn whlCh the p'lione 1'1!18 but
,. .. followed by silence when -md
by aome member of the lam!!)<. ~ ·
Caspers, .u. who heads Keys~ Sav·
Inga Ind Loan A-iation, !<>Id· In·
vesttg1tors many people and oraanJia·
tlone lmew ol his plll!l!Jed h6Uday ab!lence. • ...
He "" !<> conlcr again today with
.police and provJde a detailed lilt ol
them, In addition t<> a rosier ol past
servanta and olhor hired belp. t
Looi to the family Wftl .. Umaltd
ooly at 110,000 to $20,000 pendJn& a
complete Inventory ol th• milllnc liems,
wh!cb tho llnal>cler and controversial co~ leader allO pl1Med to supply today.
He said all household liema were lb-
,vent«ied alld •Ppta!Sed !or eucl value
only two weeks ago hy hi• 1Nur111ce
carrier.
SPEED LIMITS -Nixon said that
when he is given authority by Cong res.!
he will impose nationwide speed limits
of so mile! pt!! hour for automobiles and 55 for truCkS·-aoo buses. --·-· · ·
ORNAMENTAL LIGHTING -liixon
said he wil1 ban residential ornamental
lighting and wmectSSal')' ~mmerclal
lighting, with corigressional approval.
FremPqel ..
OPPOSE •••
fbe shortage around."
Evans said Costa Mesa service elation
dealers are scheduled to meet Thursday
evening to discuss whether to follow
President Nixon's suggestion .to vQlun·
tarily begin the SWlday shutdown this
weekend.
1 Buti •a third service staUon ltader is
oppooed t<> the idea ol rationfng.
"The· black· marketeers are ready to
set up their (coupon) presses," insisted
NIXON DRUMS UP SUPPORT
FOR PROGRAM-Story, P1 .. 3
NIXON'S ENERGY PLAN DRAWS
MIXED REACTIONS, P ... 5
PRESIDENT OUTLINES
FUEi. SAV(J'j(i Pl.Aloi, P1 .. 10
William H. Bay, operator of Mission
Viejo Mobil Service and a directer of
the Intematlonal Service Statton Dealers
Association.
"I think the only way to handle thi.s
is through mandatory federal allocations
to each service station. They should
allocate It equitably, possibly on the
amotttlt of gas sold last year," be said.
"Then they should figure out how
much they need to cut consumption
and reduce the amount allocated to
the dea.ler by the necessary percentage.
This would ·allow the dealer to keep
the hours of operation which bis
parUcular location demands."
Bay added that he was uncertain what
stand, If any, his association would take
on the Sunday sales ban.
However, he said he would It.op aelling
gasoline on Sundays to comply with
the request, but ttlat he would also
write a letter to President Nixon urging
adoption of bis allocation plan.
From Pflfle l
SECRETARY •••
29 when Siricl' ordered that he be given
the tapes to determine what portions
the grand jury should hear .
Since then , Whil e House has disclosed
that (1 ) the two conversations went un·
recorded. (2) a presidential dictation
belt could not he found and (31 an 18-
minu te segment i:: ls obliterated by a
hum on yet M12f:her tape, · -
Slrica, on consultation with the White
House and the special Watergate pros.
ecutor, has named a panel of six experts
to verily tbat the ta~ ba,.. DOI be<n
tampered with. He Illa allO that be
would hear orrumenll on all clai..,
ol exeeuUve pr!Vllege belor. ruling what
portions can go before the grand jury .
Even before the tapes were delivered
by White House counsel J, Fred BuWnlt
in gray mai.I can!stan, utrlOl'dlnary
security measures were placod oround
Slrtco'i chambtn. -··
A U.S. marshal required a signature ·
and · clearance before •Uowlllc -
Int<> the Judg•'• omces, aod even lilrlca's
penonal , 8'Cnl«lry Wll mode !<> wear
an i<Wlt!ficatlon bldil .
1bt Whit. Jlouse analys!J clalmed In
tile .... of the tapea)t wanta wlthbeld
that the COOV'!flaliooa &rl ,"IUbjeel to
executive privQe1• In ordlr to pn>tect
the. OXl!ldtntlallty of advloe ctv• to &be Prwident. II
One of lhtm Is ol 1 coove111tlon
between the Presldeot and John D.
£htlldlnlan on JUlll lO, Im -the
ilrit Port ol a taped converutklo !bat
the 'Whit. llouae llYI 11 marred later
hy the 11-mfnute hum.
'
•• L
'
Steppi1ag Out
•
'
Ot!IJ ltllel Sl11f ~I• \~
'~1'~· . '
Explorer Scouts march to graduation followin g
completion of law enforcement training academy
plorer Scouts fro m 22 law enforcement Explorer 1
posts throughout the county participated in the
academy. Many of the participants were girls. conducted during the long Thanksgiving weekend ·.I
at El Toro Marine Corps Afr Station. About 150 Ex--~~~~~-'-~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
01a-oraiig ___ e Coast Troop·e. r -··--From-Pqe·l ·-STUDENTS •••
Given Military Funeral Hout said that perhaps 10 perceol
to 15 percent of all district graduates
might be willing to enroll In high school
level claws arter receiving th eir
diplomas.
A bugler wilt finally blow tapes Tues· of rifle fite and the bugle salute at But be pointed out that U\e district
day for Pvt. James C. Keeler (U.S. sundown. is stiU only developing the outline of
Army·Ret.) a· Spanish-American War · ThllY RDoul -2,500 veterans still silrvive ·such a--program, and that approval from
veteran who died more than two weeks from that war of the late lith Century district trustees will be needed before
ago in the Harbor Area. 4nd all their service records are kept it can be implemented.
The Army was finally able to locate centrall)' in the nation 's capital Hout said Deputy Superintendent
service records of the 95-year-<>ld trooper . Nonnan Loats has also orde?:eli a
in its Washington military archives, thus A long.ago-retired rallroadman · and dlstrictwide review of all vocational
qualifying him for a military funeral. San Francisco cable car cooductor, ?<.1r. education program to give students more
OiieO f the old man•,-laStIDrWiSheS-Keeler died 00 Nov.-1-l.---which he· career ·education-·whiie· '1hey···are ·still
was. for such & traditional ceremony, celebrated for years as Armistice Day. in school.
with the flag-draped casket, the crack Death came in a Harbor Area nurslng "Each high school will be making
home, which he entered juat one year its own decisiona," said Hout, HOOt we ------------ago~.-co~g-to-Co&ta-Mesa-for-ao anllClj)itettiere wi11De a f"C:il!OCatlon Longtime Mesan Thanksg1vmg dinner and aayfng b• would or resources t<> attempt to meet th•
like to stay· . expressed needs of students." -
He bad been ahipped •round to Another effort beginning as a result Ricllal'd Krebs Southlsnd Vet e ,. an a ' Adl\'fnlltratlon of the aurvey Is a study to begin a
hospttals for . some rean and wanted career education program for students
SerVice Tuesday
Funef.at servic~s are 'Sch ed:iied 'rues·
day for longtime Costa Mesa resident
Richard ,Krebs Jr., who retired to the
Orange Coast after a long career in
Southland public ~rvice. He w;lS 88.
An Anaheim·bom native Galifornian ,
he had be<n-·ma:yor-of-Attail!a dilrlng
the mid-19305 while serving as a tax
collector !or Los Angeles County.
Rites for Mr. Krebs, wbo aJao served
as a tax collector for San Bernardino
Cowity while living· ·fn Blytlle; will ·be
at 10 a.m. In Bell Broadway Mortuary.
He leaves hJs wife Emma, of the
home at 234 E. 15th St., where the
couple lived 22 years, plus nephews
Albert Krebo o! New York and Jack
Krebs ol Long Beach .
Rites will be conducted by Dr. Earl
W, Isbell, of the First United Methodist
Church, with Interment In San Gabriel
Cemetery.
He was not active in local affairs
following retirement. because, as Mrs .
Krebs said, when they were married
22 years ago and moved to Costa Mesa ,
they decided to give up public life.
to be near. bis favonte re~Uon. lfand· starting at the elementary school level. nephew Roy Staley Jr.; o! CG!ta'Mesa. •
Rites for the old·Umer who Med ,
w\th Company .,M of the 40lh U.S.
Veterans Brigade fn IJ98 In. th~,Jlhllii>'
pine Islands, will be at 3 p.Jil. .-i'lladay
fn Beil-Broadway Morlulry.
Powerless Yule.
Displays Vrged
Reaidenllr of the Collea• Park district
in Costa Mesa have been urged to uae
their ingenuity . in displaying holiday
decorations which do not conawne power.
'!be College Park Homeowners
Aaaoclatlon Board ol Dlrector1 has
notified its membership that the energy
·crisis demands that they let their
Christmas spirit shine "through our ac·
tions instead of our electric bulbs."
'nle board allo satd that College Park
residents interested in organizing a car
pool from College Park to any specific
1ocation should-write to the College Park
Homeowners AssoclaUon, P.O. Box 1562.
Costa Mesa.
' .
Grove Educator
Dies . After Crash
Donald _ R Wash. S~Jleri!llendeot of
the . Girden Grove Unified School
District, ·died Sunday following five
weeks in a coma reslltttng from a
motorcycle accident.
Wash, U, had been superintendent
of the diltricl since February, 1972.
He had be<n with the dbtrtct for · 11
years. " When Wash's motoi-~cl• collided with
a dune hu!llY Oct. 21, he waa taken
to Sharp Memorial Hospital fn Sin Diego,
where be died early Sunday morning.
'Ibe administrator leaves his wife Pat,
his daughter .Kim, and two sons, Ken
and K.C.
Graveside services ror Wash will be
held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Forest
Lawn fn Cypresa.
Nobody Sells Amana for less tha·n
Where do ~-want~ freezer
in your new 'ifm•n•. re~ ...
..
on the side? on. riw mztton'i? on the mP.1 --Am11n• gives y0u a choice
90 DAYS CAS,H-
wflll APPllOYID
C"I DIT
1815 •n JlVD~
Dantawll Costa Mesa -PhDll 548-7718
•
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't-· •