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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-11-27 - Orange Coast Pilot• • • • • 7 , ----------·--------··------·~ Sirica Order~ .Test · for-Tanap@r-ing • ' •' San JUan Views ' . . Newport~ s Voters •Total .Freeze!) Get Population!) ' ' . On City l;rowtli Zoning (;o-ntrol?- • DAILY PILOT ra I * * * 10' * * * TU ESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMB~R, 2·7. 1973 VOL '6, NO. JJl, S SICTIOH$, Jl'rAMS< : f . ~ '. '(P ;.....-) I :.Til'°'j '. Watergate • ......, 1. .en ·S 0 --,. . • eace . . 1. Nixon :Airs . , -. . , ·rape Heard In Court Dual-€rises-- ... WASHINGTON (UPl) -One of Presi· dent Nilon's Watergate tapes -marred by whistles, hums and garbled vo~ -was played In public for the first Hme today in the court of federal Judge John J . Sirica. The tape contained portions of con- versations Nixon had with his Conner key aides, John D. Ehrllcbmen end Jf.R. Haldeman, on June 20, 1972. Silica ordered it played as part of an effort to try to find out whether the taped recordings had been altered in any way. 'Mlis tape was cho5en because Rose Mary.Woods, Nixon's personal.secretary, testified. Mood,ay she apparenUy ac- cldentaHy erued.an .l~ute 11e1J11<111 while ·treniorlb111J; It: Oct. I. She was on the witl:i+~.·BW\sf as:tbe"Jtape riw~ played. ' Miss Woods herself threaded the machine she used to transcribe the tape, punched the play button and as new:smen . and spectators leaned forward in their seats, the President's vqice 'tfls ,.bear'd ; in the courtroom. . ' Ul"IT ....... tHE•TAPES--President Nix .. on's counsel J. Fred Buzb3rdt · · arhves at U.S. District ·court· with ta~ recordings .of Ni:t· To Congress •· WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon today indicated to leaders of CUJgress that he does not expect any loosening or the Arab oil embargo until some progress takes.p!aoe•in Aralrfsnlell peace talks. Nixon and Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger reviewed the Middle East peace situation and the energy crisis with 21 senators and House members at a meeting in the White House Ca binet room that lasted nearly two hours. Sen. J . William Fulbright, chairman CAN THE ARAB FLU BE FAR BEHIND? Column, Page 7 300 MILES ABOUT MAXIMUM FOR FUL L TANK-Story, Pago 12 CALIFORNIANS STUDY CRISIS IMPLICAT IONS-Story,. Pogo 18 The quality of \he tape ,.... extttinely poor -marred by a low bum and ethoes in his Executive .. QJflce. BuiJd,tne office, where the conversaUOn took place. · On's ·:Watet:gate·. con\r.ersations. · . Ht> ·turned. them ·over to Chief U.S: .District Judge John J. o1 !he Senate Foreign Relations .eom. Sitjca. . , •. :_.1· : .. mit~; to!d, rePOrters afterwards that -"-""._ .. ._.'---.,__~-·-----the 'question ·ot th!! lifting of the embargo At first, only occasional words, In- cluding some profanity, could be beard u Nixon discussed news oonfereQCeS and other matters with Ehrficbman. Their words were obscured b y background noises Including such things u a jet plane and the toot ol a car horn. • Twenty minutes Into the tape,_the voices were replaced by a loud, persis· tent hum that sounded like an electric ruor·or an outboard motor at trolling speed. The hum dimlnished about four minutes.tater.to aJo.wer pitch. It changed slightly in pitch four minutes later,.atop- ped briefly alter another three minutes (See TAPES, Paae %) • HEIRs SEA RCHING ' . , . . . .. . SIZA BLE FORTUNE I SAN JOSE ()JP!). -A thrifty grandm<lther amiwed a conllderable fortune before she died but forgot • to teU her heln ·wheno U.-afety depcillt bo• was located, en helr said today. James Orum of Sunfand asked banks jn the San Jose area to check on wbetber . ~s. Ida McGovern held a safety deposit .. . .. Orum said Mrs. McQovem died ,,.,v. 14, leaving stocks, bonds. a aevblgs ~ "°"'" llld pnperlf. Moratorium On Growth In San Juan? By. JOHN ' VAL TERZA °' .............. .... A proposal by San Juan Capistrano • City Colmcilman Jam~Iborpe for a total moratorium · on anr new growth In the city bect~se of. ~ t!llergy ;crisis passejl Its first test befoi'ellls peers Monday. Councllmen agreed unanimously to scfieduiea run e11mlnation of '111orpe's , ~ !pr ~ total ~e on cily growth a't .tbe\r nes:t session, Monday. U the new moratorium were to take el!ect,' It would mark Ille oecond time that a· fUIH>lown ,shuldOwn of "°"" slrllction In the clty •bas•been lmpoo(d b~ the ~I. . . ., -. '"'°'Pe stressed •that hll latest aug- gesllons were extremely Important beca""' the city of late Is be"'« called upon to drasltcally Improve streets and Install street U~tlng. "'Ibb m~ans that 1n oilier to serve any new •P<otl .. who come · to the city we bave to rob pow« and sern&s (See GROWTB..-Pqo I) by the oil-producing states in the Arab world "depends on the progress of negotiations as the peace conference hopefully gels under Way.'' Arab and [sraeli representatives are expected to meet in Geneva Dec. 17-18 under· United Nati~ns auspices to start peace negotiations. Fulbright said that "the period of ·the ""'®'go" will d_,d on Uio prog- ress made in moving _toward im· • plemtntatlon of a U .. N. Sed.trity CounCil resolution· that eoded the 1967 war and provided for withdrawal by Israel from conquered Arab lands. It also established a recognition of the need for secure horders ,by Israel~ Fulbright said that in the loog term. the United' States has resources of its own whlcb It can develop to meet its energy needs. • Bui-be ..c!ded, "In · the, sbor!.·trem, · It's very difficult.'' ...- The Arkansas Democrat said the bleak outlook applied even more to Europe ond Japan whldl are much more (See ENERGY, Page I) • " Letter Bombs Found TEL AVIV (AP) -· Israeli postal authorittes today discovered three l~tter bombs malled from Switzerland, and Swiss authorities announced they In- tercepted. Ove others bound for Israel on ll!GodAy. All were discovered before they eirploded. 't R e lazing Gay Perkins of MiaITii relaxes at Miami Beach between takes of her movie, "The Great-Mas- querilde.'' Proj~t Blessed; Work Continues "' HONOLULU (AP) -Construdion risumed. on Honolu1u's partially com- pleled .,.._ llladium· •today• •afler,at· received a delayed tradilionaJ blessing to ward off a curse feared by workers . The blessing, .a rellgicw ceremony performed al'almost all new construction sites in the state, was administered by tile Rev.' Arbaham Akaka pastor of theJ{awalbou_Cburch , one of Hawaii's oldest Congregational _churc hes. Worken left their jobs • Friday com· plaining that the proj~t site was cursed and men were being "killed because the 53,000-seat stadium had neve r received the traditional blesslng. Two men have died at the jJl'O)ect • aJ the result of accidents. Airline Cutba~k United to Furlo ugh Over 1,000 WASIHNGTON (UPI) -United Airlines today announced it will furlough more than 1,000 employes, including 300 pilots, and cancel 100 daily flights because of .the fuel crisis. Edward E. Carlson, president of the nation's largest airline, said the cancelations had been scheduled even before President Nixon announced Sunday an additional 15 percent cut in jet fuel delivery for the airlines. Carlson indicated that. the new cutback. would result in still more layoffs. ~rlier; the airline industry trimmed more than·500 flights from its domestic schedule on grounds of jet fuel _shortages. Carlson Said the additional United flight cutbacks would . be ef- fective Jan. 7. But the airline will begin furloughing "immediately." Newport Residents Vote On Zoning, Population? ' ' 90,000 to 100,000. Councilman Paul Ryckoff has pro- posed a city referendum to give Ne.wport . 'Beaclf.-: i.woten~ ·-a t mace to express themselves on zoning and population limits. Introducing the matter Monday at an study sessioil or the 'council, Ryckoff said he wasn't sure that the people would actually support severe growth controls. Councilman Richard Croul ·didn't com- ment directly Of! Ryckoff's suggestion, but later in the meeting he said during a discussion of illegal rental units: "But L thlnk 0.we sbould find out If populalion limits are . possible· and ·if anyone. Wants them/' Ryckoff said. Ryckofl then uked City Attorney Den- nis O'Neil to investigate the forms suet. a referendum ml8ht take and to make a report at the couocll's study session Dec. 17 • .._ • . • . Other councilmen didn't Immediately comment on RyctOif•s propisaJ , but they did a~ to study the rrtter further. Ryckoff said be was making the pro- posal because he was worried that the city appeared to be "rushing through" . its. formulation 91. jbe .general plan. . "I'm concerned *8 might be doinR sometbihg we might regret," Rycko[f said. Rycltoff b&J generally supported past efforts to enforce tight zoning controls to limit popufatloo In the dty. He sup- ported efforts to dowNone the Balboa peninsula ,earlier this year. In proposing a refe~um on popula- tion and zoning. Ryckoff said he Wasn't sure phether voters should be asked to vote on a specific series of zoninll measures : or simply 8.!ked to make a general expression of how much growth ought to be allowed In the city. Currently the. city population ls about $7,000. Ulilmete projected population is "I think we'd be better to go after people Jiving illegally in the city than (See REFERENOOUM, Page I) Or ange · f:oast Weather Fair through .. Wednesday with • sunny days and slightly wanner afternoons is the way the weather service sees it. Highs at the bea~ es ·in the upper 60s rising to the low 70s inland. Ovemlghl lows in the upper 40s. INSIDE TODi\ Y Elizabeth Taylor, who by her own count.has had surgery 30 times and "flas been close death four times," will undergo abdominal turgerJI ot UCLA \Vedneaday.· Sto~, Paae 5. ..LM. ..,_, 1 """1" M C.alllonll• I. 11 MutMI. lllMl_ 11 _ ClanlltM t1-H ttan-1 Mtwl e. 11 Cll'llfa lS °"'"' C_., I <m•Wtlil w l\ltN ...,... 11 DNfll frfftQI I SNrll tt-11 f:d1*1al ·I'•" • Ii.cl Matttlf't 1•1t f:l\ttrl.._tt1I 16 TlllVIW.. 11 FIMM• 11·1t """"" l4 F9t 111t tltffnl I WM• 4 MY 0•,..,._ 1• w..,..11 .._ 1)14 Mtf1111r1 14 WWtll ,..... t.11 AM LaMln 1t • . • .-lue!tday, Nowmbtr 27, 197) ~sa La1vs·11it Victim • Crash Ill Doesn't Collect A mother wbo Jost a daughter and had her son transformed into a feeble shell or a boy with brain damage has Jost a · $2 million lawsuit against the city of Costa Mesa and a fireman \•:hose squad car collided with thei r 21~ years ago. A jury in Orange County Superior Court decided that then-battalion chie£ 1-~<m..!&!leman and the Costa Mesa Fire Oepartmerlt were not at faUlt in the tragedy. · Coleman, who e a r I i e r this year became San Clemente fire chief, su!· fcred shattered legs in the Feb. 26, 1971, accident on Estancia Drive. He was racing to a fatal fire in the city's 18-story Bethel Towers, when From PRfle 1 ,, GROWTH ... • ffom people who are already here," tie said. ' ·Jn a second suggestion, Thorpe asked for the formation of an emergency com- mittee to study the problem or local growth and its drain on energy resources. 'Ille Saddleback College instructor warned that as new houses are built in San Juan more and more · people will be lured into a life of commuting to work. 1--.. ....c.·nre-trend~in--SOuthern California these . ,days is to rearrange the population and "that is simply dangerous ," he added. Thorpe's suggestion brought no serious 4-eserVations from other coWlcilmen - :a11 or whom have faced moratoriums · before and. wbo .... hav~ e.Ildorsed them 1under different circumstances. The last freeze took place early in , , the year during a period when the • icity planning staff amounted to a~ skeleton "crew" or one man. "I don't take issue with your sug-· gestion, but I'm just noi ready, to _make a decision tonight," said Councilman James Weathers. During the coming wee k city staff will make initial studies_ on tbe .im· ·mediate growth prospects facing the city. Monday's discussion brought severe criticism from Mayor Roy Byrnes against firms which have been drafting . environmental impact reports related to · recent housing projects. : "I ftnd it extremely interesting that We're faced with a terrible energy crisis and the writers of the EIRs kept telling us that there would be µo problems band.ling all the growth," Dr. Byrnes Said . · "It's amazing how quick1y they all come home to roost," he added. . "It would be irresponsible to approve new growth that will demand new energy. I'm suggesting an absolute moratorium -no building permit ap- ~rovals at all in the whole city - until "We can get a handle on the true nature o'the prob1em ," Thorpe said. From Page 1 REFERENDUM. to start referendums to t a k e 'people's rights away." Croul said. Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis, in an inter- Yiew after the meeting, said he was Jnclined to oppose referendums except when they are really necessary. ''I think the people elect a city council to make decisions of this kind. That's "''hat the city council is for," he said. However Mcinnis sa id he wouldn't make up his mind on Ryckoff's proposed referend um Wltil he sees O'Neil 's report and hears comments from other coun- cilmen. Vice-Mayor Howard Rogers said after the meeting: "I'd like to see population limits set, but I'm not sure a referendum is the v.•ay to do it. "But I suppose a referendum could _ help. It took a referendum for us to finally beat the Pacifi c Coast Freeway," Rogers said. ' . OIANGI COAST DAILY PILOT ST a speeding car coming from the opposite direction went out or control and entered his lanes. Passengers Claire Arbuckle, 14. along with Edy,·ard Hernandez, 19. were killed, while Miss Arbuckle's brother Pa ul, 17, suffered disabling injuries. The n1other of two victims, Mrs. Cathefine Arbuckle. of 2002 Maple Ave., Costa Mesa, sought the $2 mU)ion in damages for the death. of her d~ughter and continuing care for her son. She also cha rged in a double-action suit naming both Coleman and the driver of the car in which her chi ldren rode that its operator, Paul R. Baldwin, 19, of li.1ira Loma, was also willfully reckless. Baldwin escaped the grinding crash that literally disintegrated both cars with 1 relatively minor injuries. Attorney Howard Harrison, of the San· ta Ana law firm of Rutan and Tucker defended the city in the eight-day Orange County Superior Court trial. A jury earlier this month deliberated for only about 1 and 1h hours before ruling in fa vor of Chief Coleman and the city's lack of liability in the tragedy. Testimony in the case included the fact thaj Ciyef Colelllll!l.J!li<! i:onswned a moderate -amount of . alcohol while off-duty before being summoned to re- spond to the fire . Factors that offset that fa ct and were admitted to evidence for the jury's consideration included the s~d _of _th e other car~ 90me estimates were up to 80 miles per hour -and the fact it hurtled out of con trol as •they ap- proached on the curve. ,,NG one could have avoid~ that ac· cident," the city's lawyer said in sum- ming up the jury's findings . He said he has heard nothing on a possible appeal by the firm of Hurwitz, Hurwitz and Remer, J\1rs. Arbuckle's lawyers. San Clemente's Chief Coleman declined to comment an the trial. _Sailor_Gamhles With Mesa Police, Loses A tattooed, teen-aged sailor from Arkansas gambled and lost twiCe in Costa hfesa Mondaf night, the seqond lime with a tale of being set upon, beaten and robbed of $70 by three burly black men. The 18-year~ld Arkansan contacted police about 11:30 p.m .. claiming the attack occurred in the 2100 block of Pomona Avenue. He was taken to the station and further questioned by Detective Ch an o Camarillo, who strongly suspected the sailor was telling a little white lie. . The chagrined swabbie finally con- fe~d he concocted the story because he Jost his pay in a poker game and didn't have funds to fly to Portland, Ore., to rejoin his ship. He was arrested on a charge of filing a false police report and turned over to the Shore Patrol, which was expected to make arrangements for h i s transportation. Detecti ve Camarillo recommended no prosecution and suggested the Navy would take care o( its own. 'Sinatra Heads Agnew Donation' WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Columnist Maxine Cheshire reported today in her copyrighted column for the \Vashington Post, Chicago Tribune and New York News Syndicate, Inc. that fonner Vice Presiden\ SPiro Agnew's legal fees are being raised throu gh solicitations from singer Frank Sinatra. Mrs. Cheshire said the original Agnew defense fund , created to deal with Agnew's problems stemming from a federal investigation of p o l i t i c a I kickbacks, was expected to raise "only a small percen tage of the money'' needed for Agnew's complete legal expenses. The Cheshire column cited "reports on the West Coast last week that Sinatra has sent letters to close friends asking them fo Clonate at least $3,000 each to help Agnew fight disbarment pro- ceedings against him in Maryland." Expl.osive 'Material? ~ANGELES (UPI) -E:<lw;ir4 Carroll, on e.n early morning jog through a-piallc area, saw a man stealthily place a silvery box in the area and disappear. Re alerted the sheriff's depart· ment. The bomb squad, backed by a fire depertment unit, worked ~ gingerly Monday at opening the mysterious parcel, a cardboard boa: bourid with silver tape. It took them 30 minutes. The box was filled wilh pornographic_ pictures. Light Show At Harbour Turned Off The Huntington Harbour "Cruise of Lights" wa s canceled Mooday, as sponsors Or the holiday light show decid- ed to comply with President Nixon's request to conserve energy. Sharon Butler, chaiiman of the guise, said public reaction to the decision was surprising. "! called up the groups who had aJ. ready made reservati<llls, and told them the show was cancel~_. They were all bitterly disappointed," Mrs. Butler re:- marked. ''People said they wanted somewhere they could go and still see Christmas lights," she said. "Everyone is very sad." ------ The Huntington Harbour Philhapnonic ConunJttee,1 sponsors of the ann~al ex- travaganza of lights, met for several hours Monday to determine how to call off their show. While the Cruise of Lights is definitely canceled, Mrs. Butler said the committee is still deciding whether to have a one- day parade through the harbor -lights or no lights . ''The committee is polling residents to find out if they still want the parade," Mrs. Butler explained. The Cruise of Llghts, which was to have continued nightly from Dec. 13 to 23, is a charity event for the philhannonic grOup. The committee hoped to raise $10,000. From Pagel ENERGY •.• dependerit on the. Middle East !or fuel suwlies. Jn other developments: -The President's top energy adviser, John A. Love, testified at a Senate hearing that higber prices -not mOre tax breaks -should be allowed to induce industry to find sources of energy the nation needs. -Interior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton, who previously i n d i ca t e d • gasoline rationing was arourid the comer, said he now believes "there is a good chance" it will oot be necessary. -The Baltimore SUn said among additional steps being considered to con- serve fuels of various types are a four- day school week, reducing weekday hours for gasoline sales, a surtax on consumption of electric power and clos- ing national parks to private cars. -The Washington Star-News said an additional 10 percent cutback in gasoline supplies may be imposed in the next few weeks, above tbe 15 percent reduc- tion announced by Nixon Sunday. -Budget Directer Roy L. Ash said the economic damage from the energy crisis "won't be as bad as some fear." He added that unemployment likely will rise "a bit, but not as drastically as predicted" by some. -Sen. Abraham A. Ribico!f (D-Conn.), introduced legislation today to set up an Energy Research and Development Administration to develop technologies for use of fossil, nuclear and advanced energy sources, and a nuclear energy commission to regu]ate all energy ac- tivity in the nuclear field. Shockley to Speak PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) -A Prine<· ton University student group said Mon- day it would not withdraw its invitation to William B. Shockley, the Nobel Prize winner from Stanford University who believes blacks to be genetically inferior to whites. Shockley was booed off enothe'r campus in Staten Island _Jl9t week, and mino'rify group members who are students and teachers at Princeton objected to his coming he~ Dec. 4. • . ' • Tht Ot•llO• Co11t OAILY PILOT, wflh Wllldl · II 'omlllned Ille New1.Prtu, ii pybllshtd bV It!• O•tl'lllt Coasl Publ;shl"9 CO<nPlftf. $.tpa· "" tO:tklns •re out1li1ht0, M~Y lh•o;igh Prl1hy, fOr C<>1t1 Mt11, N"'90lf lltldl. H1111tirio1on 8eatll/F011111'1" V1llwy, ~ 8Nth, lrvlf\t/S.lldltblcit tnd $a1' Clt#Nnltl sen J111n CeP!t!rano. A 1111911 r11111oftal 11:111'°'1 It JM,lblW\911 $al\l~IYI and $1.11'C11yt. TIM prlrH:l.i.,. put>lli.lllllO pl1"I !1 II bl Yttll ••r Slrtil, 'soltt Mtta. C.l!lo•ni., fa'H. Rob.rt N. w.94 Prflldtrtl 11'4 Pvbl!t~tr J•ck A. Curl1v D • · s· · ·ht 1vor~e . ®og __ _ Vitt l'rtildtnl l fllll C.tntr1I MtMOtt· Tho111•1 K11~a Ei:l!lor Tholl!tolf 'A. M"'P~in• "".!"'1119 Eonor Ch1rl11 H, loot Rith1rd ·p, Nill ~Hl1t1nl N11111tl"9 Edoton Valley's Former Polic~ Chief Files . Former FoUntaln VaUey police chief Charles William Michaelis, who ooe week ago asked the cUy to demote him, Monday sued for dJvorce in Orange County Superior Court. · . Michaelis cited "irTeCOncilable dif· ferences" in the action to end bis 19-year marriage. 'l11e C"X=tl1ief, W0011vel at-9695 Adam! aod laveyers' fees to Mn. Michaelis. 1 . The couple married Ocl 5, 11154, and separated lul April !4. The HunUngton 1 . Beach home and land in Yuc:ca Valley ls Included In the statement of assets. In an a.ppeatanco before tbe Fountain Valley City · Council Jut Tueeday, Michaelis was granted blJ nquest to be clomoted-rrom chiof to piilk!O captilil. UPI T""""I Airbor.ne W ACs Watergate Panel Ends -. For Year --- WASHINGToN (AP) -Voting lo cancel all !Urther public ltfarln~ this year the Senate Watergate committee dectdid Joday to broaden Ill invesllgatlon by seeking to subpoena a new list of presidential tape recordings. The committee also ordered six of- ficials of the · Hughes Tool Co. to. show cause why they should not be held -in conterriPC for' their refusal to appear before the commit.tee in executive session. Chainnan Sam J. Ervin Jr. (IJ.N.C.), said the committee staff says it needs more time to produce proof to support public hearings on two major con- troversies : a $100,000 payment by billionaire Howard Hughes lo a close personal friend of President Nixon and large contributions given to the Nixon 1972 campaign by the nation'• dairy Industry. The committee voted unanimously lO ~_tpone the hearingS but .Sen. Lowell ·· p;.weicker-Jr. (R-OJnn.), was reported to have voted against the staff recom- mendation that they be postponed in- d.efinitely, "subject to the call of the h ., " c arr. From PflfJe 1 The first women to enter Airborne jump school begin the course at an orientation session at the Army's Fort Benning, Ga . Privates Joyce Kutsiih {fronl.-fowr lelt)-and-Rita .Johnson (right) join in a laugh at their instructor's antics . TAPES .•. and eventually returned to its orig~ high level. When voices were beard again, 18Y• minutes later, Nixon was speaking with Haldeman end could be heard to say "Either way, either way." Battle of Bans Continues The President could abo be heonl at one point saying, "1 work better when even I go to a place. Uke that," aod at another i>oJn\ be uked·a White House stewar·d to bring him !OD'le con- somme. At Pussycat Movie House ·Miss Woods, who testified Nov. 11 that the quality of that particular tape was "very bad" and that it took ber some 30 hours Jo transeribe it, frequently shook her head as the .tape was playing .. Bu.ena Park's battle of the bans on showing of the X-rated sex movie "Deep Throat" continued at the Pussyca,t Theater today. Police, who had pledged to make.more raids on the movie house at 61TI Beach Blvd. following three film seizures Fri- day night and one Saturday, had taken off the heat. Pussycat '!'beater pers0nnel, who had pledged to put the alleged1y pornographic picture back on the screen. llltewise had failed to do so. Q'hey have been Jeft with no more "Copies of the film. Loan Pressures Gted by Prober WASHINGTON (UPI) -A con· gressionaJ investigator read memos b- day that he said showed White House pressure on the Small B u s i n e s s Administration to guarantee loans to a conmuction company owned by ·a co-diairman of the Athletes !or Nixon CommiUee. Curtis A. Prins, chief investigator for lhe Hoose Banking Committee, told the subcommittee on small business the loans concerned the Benny McRae <:'.oMtruction Co. of Portsmouth, Va., a company run by a former professional football player. · - Prins read · a memo from Thomas Reagan, director of the Rlciunond, ya. SBA office, to subordinates SO}'Ulg "Please get out papers on McRae. This is a White House case and the heat is on." Prins said the word "heat" \\'as underlined twice. So far, Buena Park police raiders have confiscated four-reels of· the movie starring Linda Lovelace. They raided the Pussycat on the basis of court orders signed by Judge John Smith or the Cenlral Orange Counly Judicial District Court. · Investigators also confiscated: the night's gross of about $5,000, paid by patrons who shelled ·out $S each to witness Miss Lovelace's sexy antics. District Attorney 's deputies Monday declined to Issue criminal complaints charging theater manager Ed Balley or the projectionist with any offense for showing the X·rated nick. "He can't help It," Buena Park Police Detective Sgt. Tom Hafdahl, of the vice detail commiserated ~1.onday. ~'They just send him a film and tell him to show il. He 's as tired of this as we are." "You see how difficult It is?" the said quietly to one Of the Watergate prosecutors who hovered over the machine attempting to hear. · Sirica listened with llUle expression from the bench, but grinn~ broadly when the President broke into a cheerful whistle at one point. Overall, the tape sounded much like a shor t-wave radio broadcast -scratchy and with voices fading 1n and out.· The voices were almost impossible to un- derstand. . At one poin t, Nixon could be beard making refere nce to his 1968 campaign against Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D- Minn.), but it was not clear what he was saying. Southern Orange County WEEKLY BOX SCORE FU.TURED FllMS 0' THE WE!K City ~nqement (orpor1tloll 1111 IMrffttlll lftllr """°"" cllltrlktllfl by lU... A ~ IMl'l'M'ln ni.lr !Inn tiff 1M 1 ,.,., h'crea• 111 IMlr tmployeo contrlbutlor.. 10~ "''' "11 1ru:r11.e In~ Unlttd Way olvl119 11 COlllllntt' Ct,.,, TM Clf'Pltlft lncr .. lt WM ll"llo lflll ltll ....,,...,.. ~. Xt,.x C1rp. ll•lf 1 ~ lncrwte I" fhllr nun •Ill MCI fhRlr t111ployM c1m~1tn It "'""Int •hlM tf lltf y11r. Aho l'VftfllPll ahlld tf t.11 yHr h lrwlNt Com(Jl'"y'' 1mployff c1m11tl1n. Their t1,,.,1t1 tlfl ''"'"'"' by ll'Jlo. COMMUN ITY Ortnge Ullf.111' • 8Ncil . South Coll1t Stnll An11·T~1t111 H1rtior °'"'· ltOt °"""" to spilctflc commu11itles ToNI rolwd to dote ~of c;..01 f llAISl!D TO OAT• s •0.212 '8,1?l ?3.750 97,45 ~.373 5773,197 52% 'l!llCl!NT 01' GOAL ... ,,_, ~' 24.9 •1.1 $316,714 PRUDENT BUYING Throughout our 77 years of carpet retailing, one fact becomes quite evident -that when money is leu plentiful people buy better quality. This is contrary to popular belief, but makes a good sense if you ·think about it. When you hav& to c~ncern yo~rself with value an~ performance, you are likely to buy betffrquallty. , At Alden's in the last three years, our per unit··sale has been more l!Xpensiva carpeting, reflecting this fact. Consceq.uently, we · have the largest selection of fi.her ·qualities you will see anywhere, all at competitive 'prices. The end result is customer satisfaction; ·pride and recommendations which provide our overwhelming source of new business. AbDEN'S CAltPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plac1ntla Ave. Ave., Huntington Beach, grants custody ol . his only child, Kelle Noel, 17, to Mrs. Eleanor Frances Michaelis and agrees· to pay an as yet unspecified amount of child ,support. He noor heads the patrol dlvlllon. I ·Michaeli• told the council thal h, wanted more lime for his law school e • sJodles.· Addlt!Onally, since be retires COSTA MESA 64M838 I But Iii! asks i court which must de(ennlne the division of the couple's property to not award, spousal support ~I .. In one year and 10 months, he wanted time to break ln a new chief. Fountain Valley's acUng police chief · l= now Marv Fortin, a fonner captain. HOUIS: M-Tin n.n,, t te l:JO -RL. t le t -SAT. t1JO to I -. ' I I -· -. -.- -: Chicken Joker Make s A Fuel for Himself By JOHN VALTERZA Of ... o.My "91 StMf AS RECENTLY AS a year a.go the mere menUon of using chicken manure to power a small family car was worth an hour's worth of·jokes at any social gathering. People .would listen agog at details of a technique mastered by a Dover, England, chicken farmer called Al Bates. But before the real message could get across, people would howl : ,, · "Hey, Fred, there's this nut in England who drives a real chicken ... car!" But all of a sudden, attitudes seem to be changing. AJ.Jlate&_aruLhiscmanure .digester doO:LseenLS<Lstupi<l any more. What the country farmer has done for the ~decade is to fill a small tank ·in his garage with a s 1 1 blend of animal manure - a mixture of chicken and ig with a little water' and fresh straw thrown in, ······-......................... -......• ·········· -··-··· .......................... . VAl..Tt:•ZA BEFORE YOU START to laugh, too, stop and listen a little longer. Once scaled into the small tank. the manure is heated under controlled conditions to en optimum temperature somewhere in (he BO-degree range. Then so_mcthing starts to happen in the sealed tank. Bacteria go to work in a process called anaerobic digestion. And as if by n1agic, a gas is produced and collected in the top of the tank. The gas is methane and it blO"-'S up beautifully. Ask any coal miner lucky enough to survive-a methane blast down in the mines_ _ _ _ _ _BATES COLLECTS THE gas, using a simple air compressor which con- denses the fuel into little tanks one would use in a camper. Now comes the good part. The tanks fi11ed wit h the gas are anchored In-the-trunk of Bates' old Hill· man auto ~·hich has been converted lo use regular gasoline or liquefied natural gas. . The car has been chugging along for years on its diet._ Every once in a while, Bates' digester has to be recharged, but it is said that by the lime the tank is opened, the odor is gone and the products-water and humus, go straight into the garden. Still chuckling? THINK THEN. for a moment, about the tons upon tons of animal manure prodll<!ed in this nation-every day (ever driven through Chino's dairy district at the end or a humid August thunderstonn?). There is enough ruel sitting on the ground to run millions or cars and feed just as many furnaces. Some natiorui termed "backward" by our standards already are into the bus1ness of digestion -India is going for it in a big way. Why not in the United States? . . College-level cngin-eernlready are turning out prototype digesters that could easily be installed in the backyard. ONE UNVEILED JN nIE EAST only recently appears to be reproduceable for about $3,000 and could produce enough natural gas to sui t a modest house. hold. . ; trs no "'ondcr that our nation seems reluctant to buy a process that \\-'Orks so simpfy. • . No one can stop laughing long enough to realize the poten~1al. Air Pollution Controls · For Projects Weighed Both the rooeral Environment a I Pgotection Agency and the California Air Resources Board are considering " proposals under which air pollution sources Yt'ould be required to obtain a permit prior to construction. \\iilliam Fitchen. Orange County air pollution control officer, said these sources include shopping centers, sports complexes, drive-in theaters, parking lots and garages, residential, commercial, industrial or institutional developments: amusement parks, recreational areas, highways and sewer, water, power and gas lines. "Obviously, U adopted , these new regulations woold cover just ~t everything that would create more veh1· c1e use and public gathering of any kind," Fitchen said. Under the plan being considerded by the state ARB, the air pollution control distrtct in each county would be requlred to deny a pennit for a complex (indirect) source if il would violate the state air pollution control strategy or if the sou rce would interfere with air quality standards. A supplemental program , in addition to the county APCD, will be required in the South Coast Air Basin which includes Orange, Los Angeles and parts of Ventura, Riverside and San Bernardino cowities. Fitchen said a limit as to the total tonnage of contaminants allowed into the air would be established for the air basin. A coordinating council of state and regional ... agencies, i n c l u d i n g representatives from cities, would then subdivide the basin and allot emission limits to each subdivision. The ARB plan for indirect sources will be considered for adoption at a public hearing in Los Angeles on Dec. 18. If the plan is adopted, the Orange County Board of Supervisors will be required to adopt local regulitions within six months. The federal EPA plan Is simllar but requires that builders of complex sollrtes obtain pennits from that agency. A public hearing on the EPA proposal will be held in San Franscisco on Dec. 7 and if adopted will become effectlV<! in six months. Fitchen said the EPA plan will be rescinded upon that agency's approval of the state plan. "The ARB and EPA proposals stem ·from a decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals earlier this year which ordered the EPA to require the states to develop plans to regulate indirect sources of pollution by Dec. IS, 1973," Fitchen ex· plained. • ---------\,/ 6 Tutsday, NMmber 27, 11173 s DAILY PILOT 3 6-ather llp Own Firewood , . Thern U.. home heating !Uet in the Orange COunty hUls -If you can find It and if YoU care to driveover "miles OL lortuous back country roads lo gel lo It. The U.S. Forest Service In Santa Ana annoiJn<ed today the $5 fee normally charged !or firewood gathering in Clevelll!ld Na\ionalrio...,,t his been tern· porar1ly dropped. "We have also set several areas aside on a 1nap that will be the best firewood areas we have,'' said Forest Service Resource Officer Bob Smart. "There stiD isn 't a whole lot out there. It would be like gathering wood on a beach." Smart warned that the mly wood legal to gather must be dead and lying October• Bad -Air-Pollation - Month for OC Laguna Niguel Shopping Site Hearing Slated on the ground. Chopping down a live tree can result In a $.SO fine and Smart said thC \Vood·gathering areas arc being closely pa\fOtled. The l\vo main areas y,•hich have been set aside for wood gathering can be reached only by driving .over mifes of \vinding. m_uddy r(){lds. "Anything other than a pickup truck or four·wheel-drive vehicle wouldn't be a good idea up there," he said. Both areas _ lie along the main divide or the Santa Ana Mountains separating Riverside and Orange Counties. One location is Just north of Santiago Peak and the other just to the sout'L of it along the crest o£ the hills. Smart said access to the two areas Is primarily up Silverado Canyon and from the mountain IOY.'n of El Carlso along Ortega ltighway. Theoretically, wood gatherers CM col· lect up to two cords or !ireYt'ood on one permit -that's about l\\'O pickup trucks full . But Smart said it would be _3 lucky br:tak 19 fin<J rnore th~n a rar trunk load . "1'he two areas we have mapped out are about the best there is in Cleveland National." Smart said. "We did some brush clearing \li'ork up there recently and left a lot of small pieces of wood. some burls and smaU live oak lying around." Although the collection is now free of charge, Smart said pennils are still Cool Car Pool l;aguna -t:om m-uter: I ts -Relaxing rcquireQ., They can be obtained from lhe Forest 5erVfce headquarters at 180 \Yater St. In Orange, where rangers will also pinpoint wood sites on a map. Smart said no wood gatherln& will ~ permitted oulside the designated areas unless a collector has fouud a specific cache of fsllen wood and can point-it-out on a. map. The firewood collecHon fee was titted on a nationwide basis by the U.S. Depart· ment of Agriculture because of the grow~ ing energy crisis ~nd shortages of home healing fu el. Smart said lhc order \j,'as generally designed for cool-climate areas but il was determined that such a ruling could help in other parts of the country a~ \\'C]J. Girls Desc rib e Devil Pries t's ' Rapes, Orgies fine casual leather from MAURICE HOLMAN CALIFORNIA CAIRITTA SIAIH LEATHER H•nd1om•ly •tvl•d In I shirt i•ck•t style. ld•1I for • Chri1tm•1 9ifl. N•fur•I •nd N • .,.y.loth Conlr•1t ilifch•d. $110 He said the EPA is required to enforce its own plan ln thoae states not having a plan by the six months deajltine. · Pli y sicia.11 Sued Over W oma11' s Im aginary Bab y • CHARLESTON. W. Va. (UPI) - A GOP Candidate? •Oregon Gov. Tom McCall says he's consid ering running for president In 1976 to give a voice to di sgruntled RepubU- . ca ns and Democrats as well as Independents. p . 'Devil Worship' Suspect Insane? KANAB. Uta h GPI -A :Mklay psychJatrlc examination was ordered for a Kane County. Utah man accused in the .. devil wo"hip" shooting death s last month of two hitchhiktts, including a Ca lifornia man. Sixth District COur\ Judge Don V. Tibbo Mood•Y tnatructed Kane County Atty. Tex Ollon to draw an order com- mitting Kenneth Lee Standrod, 2S1 of Navajo !Ake Estates to the stata mental Jmpltal in Provo for no more than 30 days. Standrod is accused In the deaths of Thomas Earl Morris, 20, of Torrance, and TertSa L. Beaty, 199, ol Boca Raton, Fla. Their bodieS wm found In a shallow grave near a cabin at Navajo I.alee Estates, a mountain development some 70 miles north of Kanab. I woman has Died a $110,000 negligence suit against-aiphysician1 .claiming. she . received pre-natal care for seven months only to find oul later-she was not · pregnant. The suit in U.S. District Court here ~1onday named Dr. Rose McClanahan or Charleston and was brought by Mrs. Harold D. Fields, alsd' of Charleston. Mrs. Fields said she . was advised by Or. McClanahan in February," 1972, that she was pregnant and received treat4 ment. Tiie doctor also sajd the baby'! heart heal bad bc<n d'e ~ and that the chtld would be a girl. tho suil conicnded. . , ¥rs. Fickls was placed in a hospital labor room for nearly four days, and when nothing happened. Dr. McClannhon told ~er the baby died , the suit said. The patient said she then consulted another physician Who advised her she "had never been pregnant In the first instan~." j • ., SPLIT COWHIDE lh• •u9g•d look of •ued•. Conh•1t tlttc~­ od. Burgundy on N • .,.,, Beige on l rown i nd a.;g• Oft Gr••"· $75. ..lfti CMtl '1.lt• &111 •• ,_.. .... Cot!•~ 1.. ..... 1.-trt 540-4611 411-4611 1 - \ • - 4 DAILY PILOT Tutld,7, NCMmbtr 27 1973 County's Own Keystone Kops ANAHm1 FOLLIES DEPT. -Lalest intelligence available here on our coastline indicates tha t Anaheim's cops are still at loggerheads with the city brass on what I.he last figure should be on their paycbeck5. , The salary dispute has been going on some weeks now. During this im· broglio, members ol the Anaheim Police Association have unveiled several tactics In their efforts lo put the squeeze on the municipal treasury box. First, in order to impreu the public with .. their impOverished condition, the Anaheim gendannes threatened to take to the streets in their patrol cars. giving every motorist they could find a ticket for even the most minor traUic or mechanical violations. COOLER HEADS, however, prevailed. Passengers Freed Arab Countries Snub Hijackers DUBAI (AP) -Snubbed by Ar&b regimes and disowned by Palestiru an guen'illa leaders, three young Arab gunmen zig-zagged across the ~fiddle East toda y in a hijacked Dutch jumbo jel. After releasing 244 passengers and eight stewardesses 1n Valletta. 1\talta, the hijackers forced the KL~f Boeing 747 to land at the liny J~crsian Gulf sheikdom or Dubai. THE Pl..A:'\t; spent more than tv.o hours on the ground in Du ba i. then took off aga in in the direction of Aden in South Yemen on the southwest tip of the Arabian peninsula. The Dubai airport control tower said the hijackers gave no destination. \Vhile the plane "·as on the ground ·in Dubai the hijackers talked by rad io to Prime ?o.1inister Sheik Maktum Bin Rashid , son of the ruler of Dubai, and Khalifa Nabooda, an assista nt to the defense ministe r of the United Afab Emirates . "We have our aims and everything i.9: bein.g done for us ,·• said one of the hijackers during the conversations. He added that they had asked Presi· dent Makarios of Cyprus to release seven of J~_ir-~des imprisoned in Nicosia "and he promised compliance." .. to embarrass their summit conference. The hi1ackers came to Dubai after Egypt, Lebanon, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrein and Syria all re!uscd to ".'let them I.and in apparent disapproval or sudl extremist terrorist tactic5. TllEY CO~l~IANDEERED the plane Sunday night over Iraq and since then have forced it lo ny around the eastern f\lediterrancan v.•ilh stops in Syria, Cyprus. Ubya , A1alta and Dubai. The hijackers apparently seized tt.e plane in retaliation for v.'hat they claimed was a pro-lsraeU policy of the Dutch governmen1. The Netherlands officially disclaimed \'arious forms of aid to Israe l. According to unconfirmed reports in Amsterdam, the hijackers had radioM. the Beirut flight tov.·er that their demands had been met. Aboard the plane .wit h the hi jackers v.•hcn they flew out of ~Ia lta 'A'as A.\V \\'itho lt . a viae president of KLM, and 9 or JI} crew members. Sources reached in [)Jbai said 1hc country·s ruler. Sheik Rashid Bin Said <il-~1aktum , firs t refused to give the plane permission to land. Egypt • U,I T.,._,,... HIJACKED KLM PLANE SITS AT REMOTE SECTION OF AIRPORT BEFORE DEPARTING FOR DUBAI Some of Freed C1ptive1 (Bottom Photo) Wive From Bus After Relute Tod1y 1t Luq1 Airport ·set for A~tion" Wicks Th·ey called ·off the ticket· blitz. It wu·· appareritly reasoned that such a cam· pa1tn might make for poor public' rela· tion.s. This demonstrated remarkable good judgment. THE HUACKERS have identified themselve$ as members of an obscure guerriJ1a gTOup. called the Arab-YOUlh Organization for the Liberation of Palestine. 'Ibeir seven comrades in Cyprus were arrested in a gun battle 'A'ith Ni cosia Police Jut April after they bombed the Israeli ambassador's residence there and tried to hijack an Israeli state airliner. Peace Talks Ma y Stem on Oct. 22 Cease-fire Lines Switching tactics quicker than a politi· cla n on the nm, the Anaheim cop union next decided to do just the oppo!ite. Instead ol 1Japping tickell on offenders. they would 11lmply give them courtesy warnings. The reasoning here was that it might make their cal.l!e a bit more popular with the populace (which is likely true) and at ule same .time woU1d flatten city income from fines , whi ch no doubt is also true. _ Thill is the tactic being rollowed by Anaheim's drivers of prowl cars as of the lat.est intelligence. 00 NOT COUNT on thi s, however, lf you are motoring through Anaheim. 'Ibe cops may switch back to Tactic Number One at the moment you run a traffic signa l at the Good Fairy Motel. just across the street from you-know - where. All of ihis must leave the poor Anaheim motorist in a c o n d i t i o n alternating between fear and dismay. First, the fear comes i( the lawmen switch to a Give 'Em All Tickets strategy. then you might get slapped with a citation alleging greasy windshield wipers. On the other hand, dismay could se t in if you are a God-fearing , law-a biding motorist and you know the cops aren"t slapping any paper on o(!end ers. 1bUll the irresponsible might figure they are free to blow stop signs, speed , and come at you from all directions with immwUty from prosecution. Either way, it figures Mr. Average Motorist ends up the loser in Anaheim. MEANWHILE, T II E pay-fighting Anaheim officers have embarked on one .more tacti c. in their battle, lor more cas h. They took a vote or "No Con- fid ence" in Police Chief David Michel. The tally was reported to be 273 v.'ho said No Confidence, 25 who had Confidence, and two others who wouldn't say either. Well, you have to have certain sym· pathy for Chief ~fiche!. What with the patrolmen th emsel ves deciding when they give tickets and wh en they don·1. you have to wood er v.·ho 's really running tha t cop ~ up in Anaheim, anyway? Too bad Chief Michel doesn't have a vote. Guerrilla leaders within the Palest ine Liberation Organization ""ltmbrella body in Beirut have denounced the hijacking as •'outmoded" and a "distortion ol. our struggle." Arab heads of state meetin~ in Algiers regarded it as an attempt Lotter11 Wh111er Lamberto B. Aledia, a pharma· cist's mate in the Navy, won $1 iµ.illion Monday in the f\1 assa- chusetts lottery. The 22-year- old bachelor sai d he had just re-enlisted fd\-six more yea rs to earn money in order to go back to schoo l. Aledia. of the Philippines, is attached to the Newport, R.I. Naval hospital. By United Press lntema!ional Egypt said today it is reviewing its decision to attend a proposed in- ternatlonal peace conference in the Mid· die East. and an Egyptian official warn - ed Israel that the Egyptian armed forces are fully prepared for action if Israel does not wlthdraw 10 the Oct. 22 cease-fire lines. Ahmed Anis, the officia l Egyptian spokesman, was asked at a Cairo nev.·s conference if Egypt might refuse to attend the December Geneva conference if the current negotiations with Israel on th e separation of their forces along the Suez Canal are not successful. "TIUS IS A question that is under close study at the moment," Anis sai d. He said Israel is ··playing for ti me·· at the military meeti ngs held at Kilometer IOI on the Cairo-S uei road and that "this can only reflect adversely its inten tions towards the peace con- ference itself .. , Asked about progress at the Kilo1netrr 101 talks which resume \\lednesday, An is said: "Th e Egyptian side has honored to the let ter the U.N. document on the cease-fire slabilization. ;,There is nothin g so far to indicate the Israelis are goi ng to do the same. The present Israeli stand -is not one conducive to the consolidation of efforts being made for peace in the area." TllE GOVERNrifE~'T"S spokesman ·s statement followed a "'arning by ano ther Pop Musician Electrocuted LOr-.'OON (AP ) -The body or ?OP musician John Rosti!J was {ound in his home recording studio ~onday night, and a friend said it was believed his electric guitar ;:lectrocuted him. Rostill, 32, returned recently from a tour of the United Sla tes 9nd Japan v.•ith singer Tom Jones, and they were to open at the London Pall adium next week. Rostill's wife fqund the body lying beside his guitar. "We've been told he was electrocuted," a friend said. It's Unseasonably Mild Tliunderstorms Sweep South,, Midwest Areas, Ho ·wever Ten1per11tures Hltll Ll'll' '" At~n-. .. u •• """'l\ol'-0. " >ri'"''' " ~ t.:'1~rtk " " " " l llff1lo " " •• ~=· " " ·" • •• . " "=•If 'l " \,)] . "' j, • ... &:::;:.. " " " ·" r.J'OI' " .. ... =" " ' .. " ·" IC111t"t Cll't' " " ~'Jll" " " . " M " "' .... n " ·" Ml•rnl " " Mllw.ilk" .. .. . .. MIT'' ., ~ •• ~""" , . .,,, " " ~ "" •• .. ·" ~~Cltv u l! ... • ''1'" w 1r.ii ll ~ . n '" ttdtlol't . fl=I' II • .. ll•tlun1.ll ~ :Ii 'fn!• . ort. u " It lll'l'IOl!d, Vt. I It l' L~t 111 1411• c11., " ·" k"" f..'tfl(""' ll " ., .. ~ ·" ~~-• .. .n S. C,flf•rnla , 5~ '* owr 'It."'~•'" ~ . = Wirf'\ •t ti .C: UV "°'di~~ =&~=~-·· , .. ~ • PM1 c:lNr "" .., .. .......... "" tflt AA' ~lvlltol C•trll Oltfrlc:t w..ic:ttd • tmlll•lr" !, • Egyptian o(licials that Egyplian armed forces are "'fully prepared" to resume the fighting if Israel continues its stalling tactics. / The key point o dispute "'as the securit y council resolution asking Israel to return to the Oct. ZZ cease-~tr lines, a move tha t would free the tian 3rd Army and ope n the road f m cairo to Suez. Israel insists il is impossible to return lo these lines because there were no cease-fire lines then. Tel A\'iv dispatches said the deadlock v.'as so great that the issue might have to be resolved at a peace conference to be held Dec. 18, presumably in Geneva. The innuential Cairo nev.'5paper Al Ahram said today a return to the Oct. 22 lines was the "minimum re· ... qui rement" be£ore the peace conference is held. Israel has called ror a mutual withdiawal by Israel and Egypt to their respective sides of the canal. Israeli press reports said the talks at Kilometer IOI on the Suez-Oliro road were snagged over Egypt's insistence that two Egyp- tian divisions and 400 tanks'· remain on th e Israeli side. THE ARAB nations 'A'ere in the second day of a summ it conference in AlgW.rs to align their stra!egy before the December conference. They have warned re peatedly they would resume the war if the Israeli-Egyptian talkJ a re not satisfactory. .. 'No Christmas cards to Arab countries, Miss Woods.' LondOn Audience Cheers Nixon Promises -.---- Tax Disclosures Return of Maria Callas To Public View LONDO'.'l i UPI ) -~1aria Callas returned to the London stage Monday night v.•ith surging crowds making ii clear they thought the fiery prima don· na's appea rance was a triumph. London 's top music critics agreed she still had he r old charisma, but they disagreed over the power oC her musical Reagan Defends Nixon in Aussie Press Meeting SYDNEY (UPI ) -California Gov. Ronald Reagan said today his faith in President Nixon has not been shaken by polit ical events in lhe United States. Reagan. on a three-nation trade tour for Nixon, said : "The President has subjected himself to free-wheeling press conferences. he has answered whatever they had to ask him ~ the case is before the courts. I beli eve him." Reagan spoke for 4 l minutes today to the Australian Institute of Directors without mentioning Watergate. Then newsmen hit him with 11 consecutive questions on the case. The only other question asked involved the trip itself, v.•hich also will take the Republican Governor to Singapore and Indonesia. A 'newsman asked Reagan ir be could jus~i(y the mission, in view of the world cnei"gy crisis. HiS K135 presidential jet was expected to use 65,000 gallons fo r lhc trip. "Bless you. bless you ," Reagan said, smiling at the newsman. He said he did not think the fu el expenditure by his plane was so bad. 0 You just can't let everything run down. some thin~s have to be done and I am, after all. representing President Nixon in a drive for increased trade and that is very important.'' DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Oelfvtry of tht Diiiy Pilot ts 9uarat1tetd· "'"''"'', ... ,.. • .,.., .. Mf ,,. .. '"" !YIN' fY J1» ,,lltu c.il IM I'"',.:" will ~ M ~I M ""' ~Ill I r. IMlll 1lllJ·"'· a.tWt'tl' Mii Sllllfl'll II ,_ .. Ml ntlh't ...., "" .,. ' '·"'· l •lllf'f11· ., • 1.1111. , ...... , .... ''" tnl • ,_,, wOI •• ltrwtM ff fM. "'lit Ir. 11* .. ""'M II •·"'· TtltphOMS Mtll 0fHtf <-tr Atttl •···. -· '4oOff llMrtll-1 M""9illtflll t11cll "" ...... ,... .. ........ , Mtotnt ' "" ,.._..., ,.,. .... _ .. ..... ... 'MR C..f'ltttlllt, 0'111 ,......, ...,. ............... ltlifM .......... perfo nnance. As Miss Callas ended her first London performance in eight years at the Royal Festi val Hall, most of the 3,IXXl members of the audience swept toward the stage like teen-agers at a rock concert. FLO\\'ERS RAINED dov.'n on her a.ad Sicilian tenor Giuseppe Di Stefano after the two-hour operatic recital. As the crowd moved forward, some tried to grab .her hand and others blew ki.Mes v;hile Di Stefano tried to shleld ''La Diva" from her admirers. Just six days_short of her SOth birth- day . Callas demonstrated she retained the magic that had made her the most famous dramatic soprano in the world for nearly 20 years. Even before she began to sing, she received a tumultuous . reception from the members of the audience, who had been either lucky in the ballot for seats, which attracted 60,000 applications, or rich enough to pay scalpers up to $250 for a $2$ ticket. · London's two best·known music reviewers diaaueed today on just how Powerful the CalW musical performance had been, although both said she <)lad obviously retai~ her charisma. THE mt~· William Mann said, "her words were as clear and impressive as ever, in every Item except, perhaps, the first duet (Wlth DI Stefano) from 'Don Carlos' in its first few minutes. Her intonation 15 still flawless, her phras-- lng skilled .the more because her breath control has been Inactive for so long." WASHINGTO;.J fAP) -President Nixa on has promised six senators to open some of his federal income tax returns: to public review this 'A'eck, says Sen. J. Bennett Johnston Jr. The Louisiana Democrat said Nixoo disclosed his intention at a meeting l\fonday night with four Democratic 11111 two Republican senators, includinl Johnston. A WllITE HOUSE spolcesman coo- firmed that Nixon mentioned the subject during the session. and said he ·wlll "have S(ltlething to say about ff; m the <oming days. No president has ever made such a disclosure and Johnston said Nixon expressed the hope his move would not set precedents. In a news conference with 1be Associated PreS! Managing . Editors Association on Nov. J7 the President acknowledged the truth of reports that he paid "nominal amounts" in federal taxes in 1970 and 1971 because he had claimed a $500,000 tax exemption on the: donalioo of his vice pnsidential papers to the govenunent. 0 [F ntAT isn,.t allowed· I will be glad to have the papers back1 and I will pay the Ulx because I think they are \\''Orth more than thnt," he said at the confenooce. Jolmton said the Presidml did not say -.!Jich year. would be oov.red by hia diJclomre or how or precisely when that disclosurt would be made. illr"'.:::olnf.:r.:UI01W•!1=1t ....... &Ob"e ;•!:3.,.,U••,.!IC:l!f!M•:.m .. It"s Cheaper Truswes Mull Skin1iy-dipping • -DULlJTH, Minn. (Al') -'1('s ·iiiiflmOilesty-fictor," says the supervisor o! physical education for Duluth's public schools. "Call it modesty if you wanl," answers school board member Leonard WIJeat, "but 1t's warped modesty." THE ISSUE IS skinny-dippin g in Duluth's junior high school swimming classes. The sclJ.ool board . will decide tonight whether to require some 2,500 boys in six schools to year swimming suits • The controversy apparently began when parents compl1Ined that the practice o! swimming nude was imm9'1est. U the board d .. cides to supply trunks for the boys, it would cost the system about tl2,000, said Richard Hill, the physical education supervlsdt". Said Wheat Monday nlght of the pro-suit fore .. : "It's 1 lot al hypocrisy. You have to shower every time you go swimming and you shower In the nude. ' · •· "IF IT'S IMMODEST to swim in the nude it'• immodest lo show- er in the nude." He sild a 1UM1ey taken by the board .found that a sizable rnt· Jot;lty of the bo71 don't care whether th1y !'ear suits. . ·' ,, . I I • .......................................... . . • I , . . r • Lowe ring Sought · For Drinking Age SACRAMENTO (AP) -An organization called The Full Rights InlllaUve C.Ommlttee says ... It is lau.ociling a statewide petition drive to tower California's legal drink· ing age from 21 to 18. Backer! of the initiative mus~ gather 520,000 algnatures from registered voters to quality It for Ute .N<iYember 1974 election. If _It qualifies for Ute ballot and Is approved by wters, Ute proposal would amend Ute ' Trucks Empty SAN JOSE (UPI) -Some 50 trucks were stranded Mon· day night at Davis' Arco Truck Terminal which ran out of diesel rue.I a week ago. Jim Davis, the ownec. said his next supply of the fuel isn't due until next Monday. state Constitution to lower the legal age for drinking alcobolic be•tll'laes. • Robert cfuuon, a prHa'tl' senior at the . UTI.lverslty cl san Francisco, is executive chairman of the organizaUon. backing the inlUaUve. · "The conunitte6 does not envision any problems in gathering algnaturea llince we will have tbe a.saistance-of over JOO ~ throughout the state," be said Jn a 1tate-ment. · · "Jn the past, the interests of young adults have fallen prey to our 'politically ex· peditious leglslalure. They have seen these youth issues as political footballs that are more times fumbled than passed," Closson added. The legislature has so far refused to approve proposa1s to lower the state's legal drinking age. Cetedld•te U'I T ........ Cathy O'Neill, 31 , a USC lecturer, an· nounced her candidacy today for Secretary of State at the slate Capitol. Mrs. O'Neill is a Democrat and a founding member of Californians for Cam· paign Reform. Liz Taylor to Undergo Surgery on W -ednesday HOLLYWOOD (UP!l - Eiizabeth Tayloi-Said' she Win undergo abdominal surgery at UCLA l.1edical C e n t e r W!dnesday ror what may be romplications o! m a n y previous operations she has had over the years. A spokesman for the 41-· year-old a c t re s s said "Elizabeth may have an br ternal hernia or adhesions from an appendectomy, a hysterectomy or a couple of Caesarian sections." operation in London for a dislocated ltnee. She was taken to Rome's Salvator ~1undi Hospital in February of 1962. suffering from a near fatal blood poisoning from eating oysters. Two months later she was back agaln for mysterious reasons. Some sald it was from an overdose of prescrilr ed medicines. She underwent a partial hysterectomy In 1964 at Lon- don's Fitzroy Newfield nursing home. Seven doctors ~ttended Miss Taylor in March, 1961 when her illness was diagnosed as influenua. She was given an emergency trac~eotomy -an incision in lhe lhroat to permit breathing. At the time, Dr. J. Middleton Price said she had no more than 15 minutes to Uve. "She was unconscious, blue, gasping for breath," he said. She was actually sufferll'lg from staphylocccus pneumonia of both lungs . Specia1 drugs and transfusions saved her life. MIS3 Taylor's friends said doctors were optimistic the exploratory surgery would not reveal any growths, benign or otherwise. A SPOKESWOMAN said there was no truth in a report published in London that Miss Taylor may have cancer. "The doctors do rd think It is a twnor and they do not sµspect cancer, 11 she said. Kidnaping Suspects' Sketches Circulated Twice an Oscar winner, fl.1W Taylor may hold some sort of record for a movie star undergoing the most operations. Not long ago she told an Interviewer ''I think I've had 30 operations." Almost two years ago, following an Opera· lion for r a sebaceous cyst below her right eye, she said. "I've been too close to death to fear it any more. I enjoy life far too much to want to die. I've been as close as you can get four times." So It i! with a certain degree of resignation that lhe actress, now in the throes of divorcing her fifth husband, Richard Burton, win be wheeled Into the operating room at UCLA Medical Center Wednesday. Even ns a child, the bru- nette beauty was prone to ac- cidents and illnesses. While starring in "Lassie Come Home," she-broke one foot. and was rushed to a hospital When a horse stepped on the other. During the making of "National Velvet," she took several falls from horses that led to lifelong back problems, ending in spinal fusion. ,After starring in "Raintree Coonty," she said, "they removed three of my spinal discs. 'Jbe doctors made sort ol a gotbic column from my waist to my tail." In 1968 and 1969 Miss Taylor made frequent trJps to various hospitals for traction treatments of her back. She has been hospitalized in Los Angeles. Rome, Paris, Lon- don1 New York and Boston. She was even hospitalized throughout a ship voyage to England , suffering a virus in~ fection . In 1963 she underwent an Yorty, Wife Subpoenaed In Inquiry . INTRODUCING-A DYNAMIC, /'!E\Y PHILOSOPHY OF UFI • • • r CONCEP.T-THERAPY A contlcstloll of universal, scltntific principlts •• •pplied to hum•n person· alify·and its _,,:::ilcllMltt in c11•cl...., ' Rell. Join us for • FREE lecture, ex .. plaining CONCIPT • THHAPY on Wednesday, Nov. 28th, 8:00 P.M:' 1161 Newman in HUNTINGTON BEACH Coll 714-147-7162 for further lnlormollon .,... " ..., 111 .. .........., ·_, .......-« .. .,..._ Mlf •r 11•1•1 e ttr Midi ,.. ...., '*" .... WWW d I tlo •• r _, • Conte111pt Chat;ged l · Oil 'Firms Cited SACRAMENTO IUP!l -Throe major oil companies - Mobile, Texaco and Exxon - have been a~ed in a lawsuit or thwarting_ a leg_ls~tive in- vestigation ·liriO charges ·the state is being .shortchanged $50 million a year in the sale of oil. TI1e Superior Court suit was ftled Mooday by the Crude Oil Pricing Subcommittee, w!Jjch later in the day in San l'ranclsco fol.Dld Union and Standard Oil of California In legislative cuitetnpt for refus. Ing to produce all subpoenaed reoords. A committee aide said tl)e la~suit would be ex· panded later this week to in- clude Union and Standard. 'lbe suit asked that the three f~, which earlier were found in contempt or the legislature, be ordered to hand over their records. If the com. panies fail to do so, the suit sought to jail Mobil and Exxon officia1s and fine Texaco $150,000 a day until they com· ply. A hearing on the suit was set for Dec. JO. According totes ti mony presented to the subcommittee earlier ffiis year, seven majOr oil companies, inclWing the three sued and the two found in contempt, are underpaying the state $150,000 a day for crude oil from state tidelands. The firms have denied tbe aJJegalions. AU but two of the seven refused to produce their reoorcls 00 the grounds they WE<e ooolldentlal and trade secret!. Assemblyman Keonttb Cory (l){]arden Grove), chainnan of the subcommittee, declared Mobil, Texaco and Exxon "have made a concerted effort to thwart the committee's in· vesttgaUon into whether or not the state is getting a fair price for its crude o i I resources .'' "A strong case has been made before our oonunittee that the major oil companies are short.changing the ,state to the tune o( some $50 million a year," Cory said in an- nouncing the lawsuit. He noted that t\vo other oil companies -Shell and Arco -have reached agreement with the s u bco mm it tee regarding compliance with the subpoenas issued Aug. 27. The controversy revolves around a 1965 contract under which the state agrees to sell its Long Beach tidelands oil at price fixed by a consor- tium of oil firms. .. ' . DAILY PILOT 5 INCOME FOR YOU front a Gift ••• •You can receivo a life income and immediate tax benefit.. by participating in one o( Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian'1 four diflerenl Life Income Gift P.Jans. Write or Clll toc111 for lnf011111tioa: Mr. ThomM K. Stedllnoer HOA6 MEMORIAL HOSPITAL PRESBYTERIAN 301 B Ntwport Baul•vt td N1wp11rt 1,,,h, CA 92660 T.._ (7141.~Ell. 11» ' -.;111 , , I . . ~ • • m1n1mum 71h% 6%% 61h%· ·1. Annual Yield 7.79% Term 4-10 Years Annuall Yield 6. 98% Term'2'Y.-4 Years Annuar Yield 6.72% Term 1-2 1;, Years f..i.r•ltr I"'",.. -i-, with~•••ol ••8ot1;u o• <o,.\liut1 l(C ... •h will ...... ,1.1....i wh•• Y" ..... JIUI '""""'· ~VCD SAVINGS. AND t.DAN -BDCIATICN us reduce our stock an sav.e money. while buying fine quality and , nationally advertised furniture. Featuring such famous names as 'Simmons, Sealy, California Furniture .. ·-Shops, Thomasv.ille, Rembrandt, ~1 Cavalier, Royal Coach, Heckfl;lan, · Brandt Cabinet, Hammary, Bigelow, La·Z-Boy, and a host of others equally .famous. 1865 HARBOR BLV.D. Down tow It Cotti MIN. *"'S131 'I'-Full Smrlce Fumlttn Stor1 ·• .• '""'' .,· OUr own 11....ivtnt °"'"" • I • ,. • • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • Long, Dark Tunnel With each successive announcement it becomes more apparent that the energy crisis is steering the United States into a quasi-wartime economy, with total public cooperation o!!ering the only hope of eventual sol ution. 1 There's not much point at this juncture in trying to fix the blame for the crisis. Suffice to say It's going to take a lot or qne percent and one-half percent sav· ings to make up the existing 17 percent energy defi· ciency. • This will mean some fairly drastic changes in living styles, especially in auto-oriented societies like ours in Southern California. Major pleasure travel probabl)' is more or less out for the duration-.bad news for ~as h<lavilY dependent on tourist revenue. Long-distance job commuting, in· creasingly frequent since the advent of the freeway system, will become much more of a headache. Jobs themselves will be harder to find in some areas. The plastics industry already is hurting, and petroleum by-products are essential in many other manufacturing fields, from shoes to patent medicines ..... Even such day-to-day cho!"'s as trips to the super· market may require less haphlzard planning than most of us are accustomed t.o in this era of "convenience" shopping. And retail outlets heavily dependent on week· end shoppers probably will have to cut back store &ours, judging from the President's remarks. -·So far public cooperation.seems to have been good -and relatively cheerful. Thermostats have been turned down and lights doused. But as the squeeze gets tighter there'll probably be more grumbling. We won't be out of the tunnel for quite a while, but the light at the end could be a very bright >ne - Ul timate Answer to The Crisis ( ART H OPPE J The nation's Energy Crisis was finally resolved by the simple expedien t of turning down the heat. But before that happy day, numerous desperate measures were tried and found wanting. One of the first was reducing the • national speed limit to 28.3 miles per . hour. While this conserved gasoline by · ~.he tankerful. it unfortunately resulted ~ in the country's men- tal hospitals quickly overflov;ing. As the crisis wor- sened, the Presi· . dent 's decision to ·tum off outdoor lighting \Vas lnevit· ably followed by the President's decision to turn off indoor lighting. But there "'·ere drawbacks lo a darkened nation. Not only did the crime rate increase, which people were used to, but the birth rate soared. Thi s was attributed not to the ab6ence of light, but to the absence of television , Without television, most American coopleo simpy couldn't think of anyihing else to do. uTRE TROUBLE with this country," grumbled the President,. "is that the people ~ve too damned much energy." Yet it was this second Energy 0-isis that led to the most ingeni~$, solution -the National Football & Pornography Network. "We have found," said the President happily, "that the number of people driving cars, reading under bright lights or otherwise wasting energy i s dramatically reduced during l\fonday night rootball telecasts. We are therefore going to bring Americans what th.ey have long dreamed of -football from 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. daily." .... As for the pornography, the President said he was regretfully throwing that Dear Gloomy Gus Where ls Pat NW>n? I wish she would speak on TV and tell us to clean up our backyards before we · try to cl""'1 her yard! GRANDMA 01_,. 0.. -tt .,. '"'''"'" "" ,......,. •IMI .. ..t ..CHMtllY f'llflkl ftll vt.w1 ., hie .....,.,.,.. ....,.. nw "' ""' "' ........., Gift, D9llY , ..... in "for those perverts who don't like football." INI'J1AJ.J..Y, THERE were problems. Because the federal network ofrered no commercials, several middle-aged men were found in front1 of. their sets starved to death. 1bis was solved by introcJucing Presidential appeals to save energy every hall hour. With no one on the streets~from 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. the Energy Crlsis ap- peared over. But after sir days, the most ardent pervert Jost bis zest for pornography. And In a month, the seem- ingly impossible happened: Interest in football waned. - "Don't you want to watch the 16th rerun of the Boston Beaven clobbering the Multnomah Moles 64--0, Harry?" a housewife would ask plaintively. "The heil with it," he'd reply. "J'ni" going sky diving." THE BEAT was now on the President to do something. "In the inuno<tal words of Harry Truman," said the President thoughtfully, "ii you can't stand the heat, tum down the thermostat. HEureka!" he suddenly cried. "That'r it! A plan that .will not only save some of our energy this winter, but ALL of our energy." So it was that the Presi4ept required ell American s to tum down their thermostats two degrees. The following week, he demanded another two degrees. The week after that. •.. Thus, by early December, !he Energy Qi.sis was at last resolved. Every American, beset by problems, happily went into hibernation. self·sufliciency for all energy needs in the U.S.-ln the !Diig run, this is the only rational solution. Fortunately, we live in a country where it can be more than just a plpedream. Lobbyist Law After two years of labor, the Orange Co)lnty Board of Supervisors bas brought forth an ordhwice reguist· ing lobbyists. It can best be described as probably bet· ter than no law. Under the ordinance, effective Jan. I, lobbyists will be required to file quarterly reports listing the name of their employer, salary received, and any expense of $25 or more a month spent on en!A!rtaimnent or gifts lor county officials or employes. Lobbying activities to be reported would Include approaches to the county concerning permits, fees, ap- plications, apj>eals, contracts, purchase orders and leases. This is fine as far as it goes. But, as some pointed out duriilg the hearings, it does not cover such items as lavish entertainment by principals in firms dealing with the county, who may or may not employ actual lobbyists. Nor does it shine any light on the opposite side of the coin-entertainment and gifts received by county supervisors, other county offic\als and employes. How· ever, a separate ordinance covering this aspect of the matter is in the works. Properly exempted are technical e~ w.h9. ap- pear before county boards to explain proposed projects and should not be regarded as lobbyists in the true sense of the term. '.!'he lobbyist law, long overdue, is a step in the right direction, if not ex~ctly a giant step. 'Waaa! It's all the sy;tem 's fault-making me stick my , hand in here! ' A ttack Couhf Test President's Powers North Viet Buildup Poses Threat WASHINGTON ..: Sooner than anyone woold like to lhink the President's emergency war powers, as newly q~ed by Congress, could be tested. Th.ere is no point in invoking oracular powers or indulging alarm, but it re- quires no special intelligence sources to perceive that the North Vietnamese have been engaged in a major buildup or their--torces in South Vietnam. N or t h Vietnam may atta<?t again. According· to one unofficial account 12 new IDrfielO.,, have been builtolla•k• ;md armored veblcles by the hundie<ls h4ve been IIlOftd tn, tens of tho ..... of fresh · troops have been infiltrale\f, and ap · oil pipeline aside a ·new highway aS!llreS a fuel lllpply for largge ~ military oiierations. ,, STAnNd· mAT North Vietnam may attack again is not saying much because It has long been surmised that this year's t•r u c e whic:h facilitated the American wilhdrawal was onJy a breathing spell anyway. There never was the slightest. doubt in the NiICll administration that the truce was perilodsly .~BY· Now let us look at the vaunted war powers bill passed over President Nix- on's veto. Would it prevent him from ordering 'Ainerican bombers back into action to break the back of a new North Vietnamese o!fenaive~ U he· were to· adhere strictly to the terms · ot ,the war powers bill, he could act without '.congressional authorization in "a natiOnal emergency created by an attack upon the Uh.ited States, its territories or possessions, or its anned forces." The legislative hisl"".Y· of this provision has something to do ·wlth how It would be interpreted, even if it were accepted as Constitutional, which is in doubt. Some members of Congress objected that any at!A!mpt to define t h e Prf:sident's emergency powers might, in fact, expand them. First, such . a provisim would give statutory sanction · to emergency powers which never bad (rucHARD WILSO~ • been clearly defmed. Second, a dtfmltlon would be subject to Presidential in- terpretation. To shore up these uncertainties, Congress added a final provisioo that nothing In the joint resolution sbould be """'1roed .. granting the President any new authmtty · :-.. 1 THE R~ULT is a Constitutional and statutory morus which one of its authors, Sen. 'lbomas Eagleton (Dem., Mo.), called a "tragedy" and "horrible mistake" legalizing more authority than Nixon ever dreamed he had. In his chagrin over the fate of his resolution , Senator Eagleton may have been exaggerating slightly, but thµe is no doubt that Nixon or any president cou1d interpret broadly the conditions under \vhicb a national emergency wouJd be created by enemy attack. Having done so, the President could carry on intensive mUitary operations for 30-90 days by merely advising Congress of what was already in the newspapers. .fRIOR to t he passage of .. tile war poWer5 bill, President Nixon delivered one stern warning to Hanoi on resumed military operations. Nobody knows, least ol all the authors of the war resolution, wh8t he would do if he decided that · an all-0ut attack by Hanoi endangered our forces in Thailand. The chances are he would "consult" Congress. That is, he would advi., l h e m what he and his military advisers bad decided must be done. President Nixon did not even consuJt Congress, although it had already passed the war powers resolution, before he ordered a workl·wide nuclear alert in the Middl e East crisis. SOMETIUNG is indicated by th e acerbity with which Secretary of State Kissinger staled the President bad 90 acted after all his national security ad· vise.rs agreed it was necessary. The alert was short of war, of course, but war could have been !he step following it had there been even so slight a clash as In the Gulf of Tooltin a decade earlier. A President Is in a position to take irrevocable steps which can create con· ditions Cong~ cannot repeal. Who Are Big Sacra1nento Spenders? Someone has to check up on these birds here at Babylon. To see jmt how they throw the taxpayers' money around. So, sweetwife and I did a bit of research. We took the 134 appropriations bills that cleared the AISembly Ways and Mean! Committee during the 1!1'13 session and tallied the votes on the floor of that house. One of the bills was the master (and massive) budget act for 1973-74. It came to 15.l billion. Add continuing ex· penditures and special I u n d ap- propriations and it totals llJ.1 billion. We set that one aside. The other spending bills called for an extra '213,011,886 -over. and above the llJ.4 t blllion. The way each Assemblyman voted oo those 130 bills gives a prelty good lndlcation or how he, or she, feels about spending and taxes. . So, we tallied votes · end ranked tile 80 Assemblymen In onler: the biggest s~ers at the top, Ute smallest spt.oders ar the bottom. Here are some hlgllllgbts and dark spots from that "List of the Big Spenders": ( RUS WA LTON J " TWO FEIJ.AS tied for b i g g e s t spenders of them all. Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti and Assemblyman Alister McAlister, D-San Mateo. Both men voted for every one of those extra ap- propriation bills; the whole damed $263 million. Tbey get the Gold-Plated Super Scoops. The silver-plated suction pump for sec- and placeh goes to Assemblyman Richanl Alatorre, O.L.A. He voted to spend an extra $262.74 million of your tax dough. Assemblyman Waddle Ded· deh, D-Olu1a Vista, was a cl~ third: $2fi2. 71 million. Biggest Republican spender w a s Assemblyman Ken Maddy, Fresno. His tab came to·$261 million. Se<ond highest Republican was Dick Hayden, Sunnyvale, with 258 million. ASSEMBLYMAN Bob Badbam, R· · Newport Beach, came In last -and last is best in my book. The expenditures he approved totalled $7i.8 million. Next up was Floyd Wakefield, R.SOU.tb Gate, at $97.2 million. In general, Democrats were more "li.beral" with your dough than were the Republicarui. That's no surprise. What is a surprise ls that some so- called conservative Republicans voted to spend more or that extra money than some of their liberal Democratic col· leagues. For example, of the 52 Assemblymen who voted to shell out anywhere from $263 to $200 million · in extra funds, 13 were Republicans. Nine Democrats were under the $200 million mark, along with 16 Republicarui. If you think that beca~ you have a Republican representing you in the As!embly you have a watchdog on the public purse, look again. These days it depends on the .man, not always the party. John MiUer, a black DemOcrat from Oakland, was the lowest of hla party's spenders in the Aaeembly: lt5' millloo. In lad, 20 of the 21 Republicans in the Assembly voted to """1d more o1 those extra lll!lds than Miller. ! Subscribers Pay for Bell Refusal to Update Equipm~nt ) WASHINGTON -Ma Bell is unbuml· doing it i> to pass on to the home !. Ung. 'Jb:at doesn 't mean she's taking her subecriber the costs incurred by the • clothes oil. It's you who's being stripped. company In competing with tunpanleo ~ ~ Unbundling is the lerm used 14 mean Iha\ are now Belling and leasJng -Bell ~ tbe proceSs "'hereby t e I e phone phones and switchboards to business. : subscribers are now being forced to In other words, AT&T can cut the prices ; ·pay for individual ser~ces which once it's charging for switchbo;mls and then l _.. Included" in the basic phone bill. try ·14 make up the difference by cha!i· : 1bul many caJifor-ina. you and me more. I Dilm are. fmding ~ ~ THE TELEPHONE lntercomectlon • tbal ·the phone com-Industry, u the llO!rBOii equipment t poD)' will no longer manulacturers and sales organlzatlons 1 l*1 Ille" postage If are called, is a very new Industry. · they /oriel ill put an Tbat it exists at all ii doe to a 1968 ~i_ ~ .. ;~lnp Clon~ declalon by the Federal Communications """'·-... Oommtsslon all6winc peOpie 14,put,.... ... ti poople wlli teltphooe -y OqWpment OD Bdl'J : ,_ ha-. Ill .,., for line. t callq ..,.,_.,.,, But why, wonk! anybody Wini to Clo or Di.-Y Alllllancc, es they now that? ~1cept maybe to have 1 faddish :' eupllemlaticall plnse It. You get three Freoch cradle . phone or 10methlng o( ; -free ..U..1 -b, Md.then ti's 21lctnts the sort. ,JJn'L.Jldl ~ll)pment_ti]O ; Clll-J'llUI' lil·todl lime you uk lnlorm~-cheape.lt and best In the ,,.rid! That'• , : tloo for 1 rmn\W. what they uem to have been tellJni ~ One or Ille ru m for unbundlifW "' wttb their d<luge of ad~ertlslng from ( pbooe charpl ii 11111 AT&T can ...U the 111tion'1 iarseJt mcinopoly. : rate fn!:ro1111 ....,. without •A*rinc The IJ1Jftr to U-queotlons lo no. ' to -Ille bme -of phone service... Many ofliceo, fa<tories an<! hoi.Jr, that ,,,._ ·-·-a of a-.i rate ts, p1..,. that..., Iola of~ • .,. jpcre-.,.. torrlllle PR. , finding that non-Bell f<!Ulpmau ls both i-1Another _,...... that A'l'tT may be cheaper and can Qt more. Non-Btll ( J by crnosbet'-switchel -lnventod In the 1920'• . • . Fllty yeors of use and VO N HOFFMAN devdopl)lel1t have carried the eiec-' tromechanlcal croosbar and • r e I i y IWltcbes to the llmil o/ their capaliillty. I••-pho However, the almolt unJvenal adherence equipment offers options = neo you to these technologies that are iJO and. can answer without picldng up a 100 years old Is severely restrictinli reoeiver, or phones that can be in-capability and -••Uy Increasing the structed to reroute lncomlng calla to ~ borne, or a restaurant « a friend 's oost of telecommunlcation QJtem el· pansion." · e. If yo\l're not at your of!lce dell< Sbice, as Irwin pointl out, 45 percent they liave a phone now that not only or the cost of an aver••• local call emits the slandanl busY. lignli, but ~ automaUcally takes your number down, and 54 pen:mt of the COii ol on average and calls you back when Ille perlOll lonf.dlatanoe call it !be COii or IWitcblng, you 'ro calling ii off the Une ; u..n the QOOIUJDlnc l>Ublic Is lll.Ylnl "• hot· otber phones that do ailYlldol rifyUig prtm lor Ma 'BeU'I quaint YE!' ~ KIND OF technology was bom in Bell's own lab. That's 'Where ·the tranaist.or was · perfected. but not used. It tdOk the .Japanese 14 come slon( and •Y. "Ah, so, we build rittle JadJos with l;hem." Now they're buildl.ng big . swtlchboards and America la Jn the siWnelW position of having te lm(>Ort quality pbone syslems ftom abroad. And ·they tell us it's bee.a.use American workers are lazy that we haw an ~ favorable balance of trade. " • Bell's failure to do right by Its slockhoiders, Its custo-s and the coun- try Is directly traceable to being a fat, Inefficient monopoly only slightly smaller than the Federal Govemnet1L , It malits Its ov.n equipment and !hell sells tt to l\leif ~oo thllt It has no more inofnUve for cost effectiveness than the Pentagoo. Pau the l>igber prices on to the customer who must pay just as surely as be must pay his ·income lax. ·. 'II>< <dib>rlal .. Of'. ft1l, Daily : ordinary buttm in: CID dO llliJ = ~ 1£.'=.:!";!e~ iJludl mnre wtlhoul 11!1 buttons ~ .ii.:~ 'cotts ."""1d bl'" beeli" eat· In !his lleld, ~r= THE BAlllC REASON FOi\ lbil Ii lrwtn shows tbal· JBM, by UlrolOin& out DAILY PILOT PUot 1teb 1o ~ W ltimUlate ttaden .by. preetnlfnC on thl1. PICC ---~-.. '°""'" o/.111-. . terht by ~ncHcateal colum.ntltl and the Bell System is runnill( on 111 ablolete the old VICllllJll tube and lalroduclni tnd_V<17 i:ios!l)'_tedJDoiolY, lilanlef R. , modorn IOlld llale dr<:ulll:\'1 1111 been Irwin, a pn>fe....-al tliO WWttemote able In 20 yean 14 cut tDO cost ol School of .Business and Econilmlca, the 100,000 computer muJUpllcatloos from •• Uoivet'llty or New Hampoblre, bas $1.20 to one-tenth of one cent today. oapsuled the sltualion nleeiy: Or qaln and for the oame ......,. "Toda1 more tllan ilO -t of the the Cliot or u-Utlie band-beld central telephone offices In the Unltfld calculatorl boa d10ppOd -PllO to States employ s!A!p-by-step machlnel -880 )usl In tile last tbree years. Tbe lnven!ed In the 1880'1 -and 40 percent phone "'"W*'Y mlallt baV. done $• of tile United Sllltes' offices are ,......t same by ~t tt hasn't. JlcilNrl N. Wttd, Pubfi1htl' ' ' :!'"°""" Ktrvil, Eclltor • Bar!>ar• Krtiblch Editorial Pogc Edltor . Tuesday, November 27, 1973 • <artQ!!!lail, I» provkttnr • forum ... ,.......,. !~Ind by i-eolia& this F't""*Ptpet' I Op69i6bt and knJ (la l:urTtnt toplco. -tdltorill oPlnlolls of the D&iJy Pilot appetr onl)' tn the ~dlfonat column at a.e top ot the. -· Optntoni .,prwe<1 I» the ..i. umnllta and <.!artoonlm and Jttt~r wrltdt m-ttw:tr criwn ud no enb'tc· -ment ot 1httr vleWI by lhl DlilY ,.,.. l'tlo• -1d be tnlomd. ' ' ' "' -· " ,, ' •• " , QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandl ''Of course I'm depressed. My accountant knows mo~ 1 about me than I do." f,. M. Boyd Try Firecrarker ·---. --. - · ToQ_uit Smoking If your index ringer is shorter than your ring finger, odds are you're a male. If your index finger is longer than your rir;ig finger, odds arc you're a female. Not in ·every case, but mostly. Go on, check it out .... ith the citizens at the dinner table. Thinking: or giving up smoking? Might try Golden Gibson's technique: In Knoxville, Tenn., at age 43, he nopchalantly probed a pocket for a ctiarette, put a two-inch firecracker in -his -mouth, and lit up. Mr. Gibson quit smoking, just all oC a sudden, like that. Am s~tl trying to figure out what this social scientist had in mind ex- __1ctly when he said : ".Invariably, jeal- ousy weakens a man, but strengtheiis a Wonian." Can you get the handle on this remarkable contention ? PJease advise. SCOTLAND YARD · Q. "How come the detectil'e division of the Landon po- lice ia called Scotland Yard?" A. Centuries ago, the Loodon police set up their head· quarters in an ancient building that earlier bad been used to house visiting Scottish JciDp ·and ambassadors. Sort or_ like an embassy, It was. called. Scotland Yard. • Young lady, ask your English teacher the plural of sphinx. If said savant doesn't say sphlnges , you may gloat. That's correct. · Rapid reply: No, sir, just can't recall which New Jer- sey restaurant posted that sign, but do remember it read : •10ne of the two most overrated things in the world is home cooking." POEM • This little poem 15 supposed to ,..,..eaent a dialogue between a couple of fairly "'ell·tO<fo women. One com- plains about the. traffic. 'l1le other complains about the Jocatioo of her house. Both complain about their husbands, about the stupidity or their hoosemaids, about the high cost of the new fabrics. It winds up with. the two of them departing late to go to some sort or eelebraUoo, dis- tractedly issuing last.minute instructions. Yea~lot of the ladies changes but little. The poem is cal "Abon- iazusae." lt was written by '1beo Critus in the t · cen- tury B.C. A mouse, too, ls either righ't-p:iwed or left-pawed, de- pending. Another dl!!erence between the shark and the bar· racuda is the ~t bits again and again when attacking, but the barracuda just hlla onee. AnlibloUcs or not, pneumonia ls killing far more poo. pie hereabouts now than ever, must. sadly report. Address mail to 'L. M. Boyd,, P.O. Box 1875, New- port Be~h 92660. l TufSd1v, NMmbtr 27, 11173 DAlLY PILO! f . When It Reaehes 68, -W ateh-for-=--Arah~lu:_, By DICK WEST WASillNGTON (UPI) -At some polnt next month -the timing Is so certain you can Just about set your calendar by · lt -the Upl~ States , will · have a seyere outbreak • Of Arab Ou. The epidemic-will be caused by a .newly discovered virus that only Incubates a n d becomes virulent w.hen the room te mperature 1s 6 8 degrees. HOW DO I knOw thl1.? SiJnp-. ly because ; tel!!On , tells me' could not have been previous,Y-munthes to dmlop . .._ detecled This ~ not to say the Arab · nu epidemic will be all bad. IN THE PAST, we have Kept the room temperature BECAUSE OF h e a v Y 6c at 72 degrees, give or take a~(!nteeism in govemmcnt ol- _a few health nuts who insisted fices and Industry, I~ fuel ~----H--T---.-that gooseplmples we.re will be needed to heat the it is so. It 1has become clear, as the winten come and go, that lhere is a virus for every conceivable set of circurn.stancts. Therefore, there must \.> -t G_. . . b'Jt salubrious. buildings, lhal should make ~ • --C:. John Love ha_ppy . ·s I DE And maybe goosepimples do Speaking of Loxe. t h e ' fight germs.Nature must have President's energy adviser, a virus that is a~ivated by 68 degree room temperature. Arab fiu virus, so called because the cutoff of Arab oil imports forced us to dial down the thermostat to 66, created them for so tn e here's a step he might do purpose. well to consider during the But the best av a i 1 ab I e fuel shortage: setting up na· evidence indicates t h a t tional wanning centers. goosepimples will b e in· One public building in every etfective against the Arab flu community would be designed virus. It takes time for im· as a warming center where ··~-.· ' , Warning, The Suigeon General Has Determined That Cigantte Sm king Is Dangerous 10 Your Heall~. ' • people eould come In out of ihe col4 occassi<lnally. So much ·ror the people. • , .but what of the wine? EVERYONE KNOWS that certain wines are served at room temperaure. Over the years we have become ac- customed to drjnking these wines at 72 degrees or higher. Can we adjust to wines serv- ed at 68 degrees? Or will the shoclc to lhe palate be too great, sending us into nervous rigors? This could rank right up there wJth Arab flu as an .'.~. ..... .• ,_ . J. ~.. --·tr . .. ' - " untow11rd splnoff,o( the energy crisis. FUEL SHORTAGES or not, I would advise you to put the wine in the oven ror a few minutes" before. dinner .. 9t' else wrap it in an electric blanket until it is poured. Sw-cly Love can spare us enough energy to maintain a few amenities. If not, buy a pair of thermal underwear, cu t off the arms and legs and stuff them with wine bottles. In times of grave emergen- cy, one must improvise to survive. ' .. I ·1 ' ~J ' .... ~---------~i-='--~------l---~-----------Q--~--------1111------------tr----------...;,.----~~--''--~~ For the Reco1·d Dissoliitions Tut~day, Novtt11ber 27 , 1973 Ecology Awards Offered SANTA ANA -A coun· tywide program or awards for .Of ·Marriage e1emeruary ~.=ond•ty__a.nd. l'lltw.d "°"'· 1, community college stud ents L11p1111m. Ke11Mll'I No1m1n 111<1 Mtrtl'lo who develop outstanding en· Agn,, . , ORANGE COUNTY ,,_, Oorolh't' c , end John J1mn vironmental improvement pro-Robtrh, Delor11 IC . lh(f RoOlrl G1lr ..... _________ , JOM1toro, ~ Tnom1s •nd eve.lvn jccts is under way. M" Bth•lflOtf', Jucr1111 """' •!)IS J,ck Miiton Sponsoring th e merit awards Ara11jo, Patrl<ll Ann •llO EchWlfd is the orange County Environ-M . Irvine Land H1rr1_., Stn1n AM 1nd Harold Jame.s mental Education Council, Md:.w. Judith A. 1no 11:11\daH L. • h I [ Or Woodfl/\, C1'11rl~ A. 11\d M•rY Jo \'/ll COOperat 00 0 the 8n~e Miiie<". Jotlnny Wr1ltY •nd J9nette County Department of Educa--R . McClurt, Doriald K. 11\d Ottlml E. tion and local SChool distric ts. ezoning eenellel, P1rr1c1a L. •nd Ktnn"h ,._ Committees are set up in Rosi, Geor119 Olen 11111 ll:ulh M•~lne individual schools to evaluate A d 1Cel1tf, Buron J, •nd Ger•ldllll eu11, M1r11o s.-....i earry H. student environmental pro-pprove 9r-, Monte Gtnt ll'ld $/woron ROM •nA•-of hi h ')) th Sklb<I, Jinr1 M. and BU1 Rlclllrrd J~, some w c wt en .. 1- wenc1e1, L1ur1 P. •nd Henrr A111nony be submitted to the county_ SANTA ANA --Jrv'•e H111, JIMI Louh• and R•r 81Uey -lUC ... Grr19fl1y, T•m•r Rlcl'llrdlon •i'ld council . Company has been granted .. ~~~'.ct w'r.\11~:nm e. and Ltet1 s. An awards program will a rezone of several hundred 11:ocnt. J1ne1 Anne •nd Gtr1ld Hugh take place April 2 1974 at J01111, owotl'lv Jr•n •!Id Me1v1n the county Oepar'tment' of acres east of Irvine Lake in cf~:'jo11n w. 1nd Patricia o. Education. ~ alluvial plain of Santiago AMII, Thtlma P11r1 and Alv\n All>frt k f d J MOr.i1nc1, ROt1.1ld 1nd Gtor11 . Winning -OOUnty -projects wi ll Cree or a sand an grave H1,,, e1111 L. 1nc1 Jottn Akx•nd~r then be referred to the state operation. Gelcl'ltU, MIYbell and Ronald Grovtr, Barberi Ann 1na oouvtos·' ·~rlntendent O( SC h 001 S The rezone, approved by the Brvc• Committee on Conservation f Deaths Other . IQ.NS/IS CITY,~ .(UP -Charles Evans Whittaker, appointed to the U.S. Supteme Court by the late Presi\:lent .,. EisehllOWer;-·aied Monday of a ruptured abdominal aneurism. Whittaker, 72, served as an associate jusUce or the court from March, 1957 until April, 1962. Upon retirement, he became an arbiter for General Motors at the company's dealer relations plant here. SAN DIEGO (AP) Operatic soprano E d i t h MalOn, 80, best known for her performanc es as "Madame Butterfly" half a century ago, died Monday. She was a leading soprano with. Education. The committee will Orange County Board · 0 pick 10 finalists to be hooored Supervisors, is the first under at a ceremony April 8, 1974, a new county sand and gravel during Earth Week. . ordlnaDoe which requires ln 1972. Estancia High pl ans for rehabilitation and School in Costa Mesa received land · f baDdoned one of the 10 state awards:·-··~· sca~g o a __ . 1 hed gravel pJts. 111"1' program was ~unc . The Irvine Company also last year ~ the P~estdential agreed to build a private haul- and Stakwtde Me~it Awards ing road in th.e area so that or the ·feder.al-Env1ronmentaL-coUnty roadways would not Protection Agency (EPA). be overburdened with sand State Post SACRAMENTO (UPI) Ronald M. Kurtz , chief deputy director of the state Social Welfare Department, has been appointed executive officer of the state Personnel Board. Kurl~, .37 of Carmichael, will place Richard L. Camilli, who resigned to. take a job in private business in Sacramento. and gravel trucks . Company representatives said the operation would be of the shallow pit type in contrast to deep excavatloll! in some similar operations. Robert Vasquez, company representative said that the extraction would be done in four phases with each phase to be rehabilitated as the next ls started. He said some trees would be removed but would be replaced when the mining operation is completed. the Chicago. Opera in 1921-23 ,----------------------i • . ·~ - Political Notes Assemhlyman~ets UC Irvine Talk By o.c. HUSTINGS Briggs (R -Fullerlo n), f Miller of use. a reatured coonllnator for the American f.nlloch), a candidate or debater on Channel 28's "The Indian Movemtnl (AIM) and Gallfomla governor next Y~· Advocates" program. Of .. Diii~ ""-' lt1N chal f "· • ···-bl l\ssemblyman Wlllle L • rman ° -~" Y a key figure ln Ille recent h.., postponed a speakmg Brown ( o -s an Francisco), Agriculture Committee, will chainnan__fil Jl>!l. Assembly speak toolght at 6:30 In .the Ways and . .Meam_Ot_tn[lliltee, Quart<rde<k Room -of the will speak Wednesday at UC--Balboa Bay-Club. - llllndoff at Wounded Knee, engagement c>:lglnally set for s ,D., will speak toniibl'-at.. Friday Wore the Orange-g-~==~==- 7:30 at-Gal StateJ\'ulle< Co ~= UCi -1run1-· e urnmg Meians, an Oglala Sioux, ~ty uemucrl c ~ · .. Irvine on "California '74: . • Politico and Public Policy." Briggs will be addressing Brown who also serves on the members of the Canners committOOs dealing w i t h League or California and is higher education and Ille sitins expected to dls<llSS the future of teaching hospitals i s of agnculturt in the state. scheduled to talk al 3' p.m. Organizers of Ille dinner in the third floor lounge of ~ting say B~14ga may the Gateway c o m m o n s discuss his own pohUcal future helped organize AIM wttlt the Waldie, who • claims lhe Idea of Jn\Provlni the lot or honor of beinl lhe first Students trtbal Indians In America. HIS coogresoman to Introduce a talk will take place In tile Nixon !mpeachmenl rtSOlu- scbool gymnasium. It is -Uon WCl\'t be able to appear 0 • 00 Student Council al CSF. Lee-until Aprd. spoosored by the Inter-tribal • ' • rgamz bite tickets are 11.50 for non· Instead of Waldie, I he building. as well. * * * students. Rostrum will host Dr. Howard * * " * * * ASSEM BLYMAN John RUSSELL Means, a national REP. JEROME Waldie (0. UCI Youth Indians Plan Pow-wow At College on Saturday HfJ~ys For Board SANTA ANA -The • Hearing Set In Swindle ' Purse Thief STANTON -A native Dec. 22, an annual function Orange Cotlnty Board of SANTA ANA -A UC Irv ine American Indian pow-wow, of. the Indian Center. Supervisors wUl not meet student has been ordered to with crafts, foods end dances, Seven tribes will participate during Ciristmas week, it face arraignment Dec. 4 in will be held at Huntington In Ille ! . 1 . t th 0 bas hem announced. Orange County Superior Court Beach's Golden West College est1v ties a e co ege, o rd inarlly, meetings Including QI P -·"' have •·-held an· on charges stemming from his SatW'day. eo, awnee , ~ -. A Ouistmas benefit for In-Omaha, sac-Fox, Kiowa, Sioux Wednesday and ftursday, alleged plan to swindle a local di an children, the pow-wow and NavaJO· . Dec. 1.8-27' but the board firm out of $180,000. members. voted Jud J Turne · is___sponsored __ by_jhe college ~ Wearing authentic I®.ian them!elvM-a Oristmu ge ames r is -and the Orange County Indian _ dress, the Indians w i 11 recess for that period. scheduled to accept the plea Center in Stanton. perform ceremonial, inter-c 0 u n t y department of Robert J. Hodge, 29, of Proceeds from the pow-wo1R' tribal and war dances, display heads e.ncl members of the 1024 Verano Place, on charges will go to the children's crafts, and offer Indian food public wilh items for of grand then, masquerading Christmas-Party·scheduled for ·for.-sa1e.-··o ecember comideration· -There will also be an an. as a phySician 8nd assuming !" must submit them to the pearance by the Golden State clerk of the board by Dec. a degree or title he does not Gourd Dance Society, end a 11 it ____ ,, ___ , legally possess. dan 1..-, was a.ruNWK."l:'U. war ce coo""'». Otherwise the matters will The charges were filed Aug. The pow-wow climaxes a be held over unUI the Jan. 8 !le Hodg I I d I week-long drive at Golden a r e a e g e Y west College to collect canned 2-3 meetings. arranged to have officials of goods, beans, Tice Dour and~---------' Foundry Lea!ing Company, Fun or part-time students returning to wliversity studies after time spent doing other things are invited to join a new UC Irvine organization. Hope Lenchner of Verano Place, Irvine, is temporary Ch8irihan of the Association for \Vomen's-Men's Active Return to Education. Mrs. Lcnchner is a junior majoring in social econolgy. The group will deal with the special probleins of students who are over 21. Among services to b e coordinated by the organiza· tion are study sessions, rap groups, counseling. co- operative baby sitting, and pro- vision of a social lounge area. Ttle···assocra·tro·n ··win have · its first meeting at -. p.n1., Nov. 29 in the third floor f lowige, Gateway C:Ommons. .I J • j Traveler S F. , ues rrm ... _, l On Checks ~i To Serve Six Months cooking oil to distribute among 1752 Langley st., purchase Deedy urben Indians. Ca F . scientific research equipment SANTA ANA _ A Hun- SANTA ANA -A Hun-.:.;~.vi~ ~.:i.:.r.:i;: reer 8ll' ..... he needed for what he said tingipn Beach woman wbo tington Beach man who and '2 for the general public. was a National He a 1th claims the American Express snatched ~ purse containing Tickets may be purdwed al At UC lrvm' e Institute project. Company refused lo make $50 from a woman shopper .the door, or in advance at It is alleged that Hodge good $2 .000 worth of travele rs in Newport Center and then the college bookstore. directed the company to buy checks she Jost ln Reno, Nev., dropped it while being pursued A Career Fair focusing on has sued the firm for more the sophlsUcated equipment h mill' by the Newport Beach police the biologkal and health t an $1 ion. and 1934-42. TOLEDO, Ohio (UPl l - James Gertty Jr., 69, president of Gerity Broadcasting Co., died Monday. Gerity, active in Republican national politics, was a friend of President Nix· on's and attended numerous White House functions. H~ also was involved jn industry in Toledo and Miami , Fla. · helicopter has been sentenced 4 S • sciences will be held at UC from a Long Beach firm that Mrs. Sharon E. Robinson Delp Want_..d to six months in Orange Coun-W Ing Irvine In tile Mesa Court Gold later proved to be non-ex-claims in her Orange County ~ ty Jail. istent. Superior Court lawsuit that Judge James Turner In Concert Room from a p.m. to 10 p.m. Arresting officers s a id American Express repeatedly ordered the jail term for Ken-November 21. Hodge intended to pocket the re_fusedheto honor its guthaaranteehe S 'ta 'B d H rt'ng neth Lawrence Kenworthy, 30, 'Jbe fair, open to the public With t implication t s ani ry Oar U l o! 2214 Florida SL after Ille Four University of Redlands wUhout cliarge, is spon30red money and thal he used the herself had endorsed and defendant pleaded quilty to students from "Newtinct Beach title o( doctor and false papers cashed some of the lost S!LVERADO -Wanted: Two people to serve oil the har ! grand the! ~ by the Bloiogical Sciences Stu-fro the Nallonal H al h 'checks board Of directors of the Silverado Canyon Sanitarv Dis-c ges 0 _:, Iha will sing in ~:Mbool choir's dent Alfalrs Office, the m ~ · e t She . names the Security ·" Judge Turner also ru.ied t '8llDU8l pre;eftWkm of the Institute to further h i s trict. Must be over 18 years of age and registered voters. Kenworthy must serve three ·"Feast of Lights ... ' Biological Sciences Dean's scheme. Pacific National Bank or Hun· Apply to Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers. years probation on completion The Cluistmu progtam is Council and the Career Plan-tington Beach as subsidiary The 300 homeowners in the mountain district were of his jail term. expected to draw more than ning and Placement Center. The senior b i o Io g i cal defendant as the agency which Death Notices sUpposed to elect two board members Nov 6., but no one Kenworthy was arrested Oct. 6,000 students and membenl PerSllS attmliiig the fail' sciences major -is ·free on issued the checks last Sept. DoMld Bol11'1. ~ANl5. o1 ~1 17 w. filed for the jobs. f S . 19 shr.r&ly after he matched of the public . to four pre.sen-~iimaiiiiyiiiiuseiiiiPiiariiiiklngiiiiiiLol-iitii.iiiiiiiiiiii:O'iil5ii,000iiiiiibaiiiiilii, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii2iitOI. Si,..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Mt:.Fadden, sant• Ana. Dlr•e 01 ore!h, Under state law, the County Board O upervisors the pune from a woman shop-tations Dec. 6, 8', 9 and 10. N-mOtr 25, 1973. Survlwd b~ lather, could fjJI the vacancies, bUt caspers said bis &eareb for and ued lh h S" . . '"'-I~ ' choir OrvlUI OldentKlroh of Anllhem!; sleO· , per W88 purs f'OUg lngtng tn UIC o1<trVOlce tatner. s1mue1 eol1n, sa111a Ana; two interested candidates has met with failure. • d)e Fashion Island parking lot are Rick England, 518 Santa broniers. serv!ctt, Thur1<11v. Nov~mbtr ..1:.....: ld •· bol 29, 1973. I PM, Baltl·Ber11eron Coste He said if he had his way the UlitUlct wou ~a • by a man who witnessed the Ana AVe.; Sue Herman, 910 Mell Chaoel. Interment, He•bOr Rest babl · t of the Memorlo.1 Park. Ball~·B•roeron Furteral ished, but that WOUid pro Y reqwre a VO e · thefl Police moved llJ to Kinds Road ; Holly tnyate, HO<M, co.II M':t'.i.11t~~ec:tori. people in the district or state legislation. arrest him after the helicopter 1101 Somerset and Deborah Ro.• KaYf Herra. ,1.9 Calle C1dlz. pursuit. Winsor, 23'21 22nd St. Uguna Hl 1,_ 0111 of dea!ll, November l-----------1;::::=:=============~================~11 26. 1973. survl~ed, bv j(lh.t Earl ~arra ; CllU<lhler Hennell• i.. r o' l , 13 &randchdctren; 11 &re11.granc"hlldren. Senlcn. lodl't'I TlllSlll't'. l PM,. P~cltlc v iew Chapel, w th RaDDI Garson bOOClfYllln ollltl1!Jr19. lnterrnt11t, P.lltlllc View Memorl•I Park. P.lltlllt \llrw Mortuary, Olrtctor1. MOOR£ Pera' M. MOOf"•. A11e ff, of 1'63 W11U1ct s 1., CMla Mrsa. 01te or death, November 16. 1913. Survived bv wl'11, Neu c. Moore; two $Oru, 8111 Ind Ronald. of Citrus Hel9hts; two d<1ughler$, M•!i. Jimml<I Germain, ol M1nft11t11n Btach; Lols N. Mll$HY,-R,,.,nino-511rln<1s; 4 1111>-mothet", Rebeccl Moore, Monrovia; thrtt brotl'lers, Preston Moore, At11dm&; Olck MoDre, Ou1r1111 Flovd Moor•· Mlchl11111; thr« sisters. Eldora Cook, Cke11nslde; C!eo C1ntr1U1 Azusa: L?'Jlst Cow.iort, o\'\onrovi1; ntrte 11r11ndchoh:1ren: sev.n <1reat--11r1ndthlldren. Services, Thur5d1v, 11 AM, Bell BroedWIY Chapel, with Rev Frimtls M11c01asn olllclallno. lore•· mrn'r. Harl>Or Rrsl Memorial P1rk. ~II ero&dw•v Mor'S&'U:.iSi':'ors Get"llVdr Bird Sullivan. Rttldr n! of Co$11 Me$1; age 7~. Oare of Math, November 26, 19973. Survlv~ by daughter, M1xlM Bradford; fwl'I grandsons, Richard Lynn 11'1d Mlct11el 0t-11n Braolord. Rosary, lg. night. T~slay, 1 PM, Westcllll Chapel. Requltm Mau, Wrdnffday,...JO AM, SI Joacl\lms C1rtionc Church Wllti Fr. David olMclallng. Entombment, F1lrh11ven Mr:- morlat Park. FamUy SU\191$11 memorial contributions be mede to H~ Memorial HO$pilll. Wtttcllff Clllrpel Mortuary, Olreclor,_ ' . County Boy National 4-H Winner ANAHEIM - A u;.year-old Ailaheim youth has been nam- ed one of six national winners in the 4-H entomology pro- gram. Steve Manweiler w a s presented with a $ 7 O o scholarship by H e r c u l e s Incorporated, sponsor of the 4-H entomology program. Manweiler and the other winners received their educa· tional awards at the 52nd Na- tional 4-H Congress in Chicago Nov. 25-29. They were chosen by the Cooperative Extension Service, which supervises 4-H work. Manweiler, son o( Mr. and Mrs. Jack Maiiweiler, and a high school junior, plans a caree r in entomology. His collection of more than 600 insects has won the sweepstakes award for four consecutive years at the Orange County Fair. New Park Added to County Plan lntroduci~g the neweoastfOOeral . . . . ' savings plans. We'll pay you the highest interest in coast Federal's history with rates that range from SU% to 7Y,%. • Choose from five s.1vings plans, designed lo give you the best return for your savings. Highest guaranteed rates Annual Annlial Min. Min. rale yield balance term 7.SOo/o 7.79°/o $1 ,000 4year cert. 6.75 6.98 1,000 21/i year cert. 6.50 6.72 1,000 1 year - cert. 5.75 5.92 1,000 90-day. bon us account 5.25 5.39 no min . Passbook account Federal regulations require a substantial in te rest penalty on all cer1ificate account withdrawa ls prior to maturity. The Insiders dub Just open an account i'll Co.1st ror $1,000. and You c.an get speci_al lo\v "Insider" prices ·on con5umer goods and.sl?rvices. From au lomobiles. appliances, furniture to travel, entertai nment and home decorating. for a S 1,000 account, you get free travele r's checks, moneyorders, notary service, note collec tion~. Also free, for ,1 minimum $2,500 bi!lance, a personal checking account at a m.1jor b,lnk, and ;i safe deposit box. Saturday hours Coast offices are opCn Saturd ays, 9 a.m. to ~ 1 p.m. Weekdays, 9·a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays all offices exce~t down tow!" Lns Angeles are open 10 6 p.iTi. . l I ·ne 11.icQb fully-automatic Hi.Color 3S HOWi n. 1••••fw .... c••· ... Oii ................. . ....... .wt-a ..... . ... UNDER WATER - ' . DAVE'S UAMERA for gifts that "CUCK" EXUBANGE YO\J GET YOUR KICKS A FEW THOUSAND FEET ABOVE SEA LEVEL OR A HUNORED FE~ IELOW, GET YOUR HANDS ON THE • C'Om~ct Rlchoh Hl.CMor 35mm ca~ .--.. wlltl IUIOINlllC lltm ad'v11nct and merlnt c1ptul1. Wt m1c1t ti 11gh!WOfl9ht lfld llnlll ~ lo Ill In )'OUr POCkat, Wltll an 112.t wide 111111• Rik-ltr11 and 1~untr ..,....,. w to l/ll!li)tl'I 01 , ....... WI ldded I tot1lly llllomllk tX• Potur1 •'nlOrn, "'Y ll:lcu1 Ind • f&11tr lhan ll!llltnlng tVto(nellt Ulm ldv1rw:t. Wind \IP 1111 molor Ind dl'1! Oii lS .$110ls In 15 llCOllCl1. Wllh 1l'lllrp focu$ 1nd pll'lrct expo1ur .. Wltl'lovt m1111119 •nr of 1111 1e11on. T'*1 ,,,. Miii to Wort on ftle un· d-•Ter 1Nrl"4! CIPtUlt. And built °"'' Of 1ul)tr1ouot1 Mtl•C'l'v!lc ll:ealn wll/I 1111 op!lefll tllh POrl. 11'1 Wlltr· proo!, 1nowpno!, Mnd,,_I, thod· ll<'oOlt y01,1.n1""-"lt.,._. u.. 11 al dtP•ll• ., low •• 100 t11t, ll'l1 Ricoh HI-Color ts, • 11111• tr1m1 Umm com~ct Clmtf'f for un. O.r 115. Or ltlt tonipltlt -111 ca~ .,.II, CIPWI•, "'°'" view fln!Mr Incl uild-•ttr 111111.tor unoer 1111.00. Rog. $f34.00 s114oo .comploto Chrl-heodquorton for: • e CAMW SALB e CA.MIU •IPAllS e CAMIµ llNTALS e ~llMllCIAL PllOTOGIWHY -. ' • I • • ' "Scott wants to know if I "' wont o·ham ster.11 - 1'No, I don't wqnt a ham· 5,e·r ."- Top Stat e Teaeher Revealed ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -The ll'i! "C&llloml.-Teacher of the Year" la F.dward Helwick Jr., a lztb grade clvtcs teacher al Culver City High Scht\OI, Supt. of P u b II c lnalructlon Wllaon RUea bas announced. He 1 was picked from more lil3!U,t!IO_[JetlON~nomlnated by public, private a n d parochial scll>ola throughout !he state. • Other finalists were Margi~ Levy, a kindergarten teacher at the 37111 Slroel School In Loo Angeles: Eleanor Kipp, a teacher for educationally handicapped children at Fre- mont Unified School District, and Robert Cooley, a seventh grade aclence and reading teacbtr at Warren Eich School in Roseville. TutsdlY, NOYtmbtr 27, 1'173 DAILY PILOT 9 Auto Mak er Pollution Suits Denied •... LOS ANGELES (AP) -A lederll judp bu rolecl thal U.S. auto makert can't tie /Of'C<d under anlilnlll laws to provide "equi~ble reUef." for air pollulloo damages. U.S. Dilllict Qiurt .rudge Mapuel Real Monday diam! .. led M ol 31 cues qalnlt the nallon's ma)Dr auto manuf11c-- lurers. He Mid that allbouah smoghubecomeaaerious problem, aoUlnllt law1 do not give him the power lo fomr auto manufacturen IQ Ind a aolutlon for It. mE surrs w.re lnlcht by 27 slate$, Inclu d ing California, as well a s CAN'T THINK OF A. THING numerous cities and cOunUes. The plaintiffs asked lhat the ·auto companie1 be ordered to take several steps to eliminate smog, lncluding mak·lng large COflitribuUons toward t h e establishment of mass transit aystems. The suits asked that the firms be required to place proper smog devices ln cars sold without them and to ~ . attorney in Dearborn, Mich., said : "We have not yet receiv· ed a copy of the judge's opin· ion. However, if the repOrts we get are correct, we are obviously pleased with the results." Real did not address four separate suits which are pend- ing -three against Gcnerul Motors and one against the Au t Q.mObile t.-1anufacturers Association. Two ot the suits v.·ere brought by parties who claim they were precluded from pt'O- ducing and marketing anti· smog devices. One other suit ls a class action on behalf of all citizens alleging a nuisance a n d another is a class action an behalf ol American farmers under antitrust Ja ws. _ COLLEGE PHARMACY 44it .. ,1, Or. ., ... ,.... !~•OU trom F•lr'tltw $1tl• HotPlttll Ct1l1 MtM ~ • PllllSC•l"IONS • JICK•OOM l!NTALI • HOLLISTER OSTOMV e HUOSOH VITAMINS e JOIST STOCICINOS e CAMP I Ul'l"OllTS 0.ltVlf'Y ltn'lct • Mttltf' Clltrtt vide free emission tests. lfi;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ij HCERTAINLY, IN the battl~ against ,mog, the hour is late,'' he said, but added the r<qU<i!I! of the plainlifls "go beyond the power of this court to grant." He entered dismissals in 34 related cases brought against the Automobile Manufacturers Association, whose members include all the nation's major aut.o producers, and against General Motors and American Motors individually. Spiral Sliced Whole or Half HAM S "So Good ... It \Viii "llaunt" You 'til It's Gone" Do11't l o Dboppol11tflf OI DEl YOUI CHR ISTMAS & NE W YEAR HON EY BAKEO riAM, NOW! Wo ,.ockot• • S•lp Ftom Coost N c ... t e GIFT CllTI FICATE5 AVAIL.AILE e Indy to Seno wltfl Ho..,. '11 Spice Glaae e $plrel Sllcocl FraM Top to lottoM Nixon Lif esty-le Blasted by ~olon Helwick will r epresent California In tile Nalional Teacher of the Year com· _ petition ne~t month, Riles LONDON (AP) -Ac.tor Kenneth More, 58, marTled 10 actress Angela Douglu, 33, was asked in an interview what it was like to have a wife 25 yean younger than blmsell. "There . is no disadvanla~e I can thlnlt of," be replied. Tony Joseph , who reprfftnted the California at· tomey general's office in the case, said it hadn't been decii· ed whether Judge Real\ decision will be appealed. llENJ\y R. NOLTE, a Ford • We Pack ... •d 51rilp froM Coait to Coa1t e fllll Sorflco 0.llcatfflell a ln1ported Cltffw• 011d WIMI 3700 l. Coon Hlt hwoy, CoroM d-1 M•r -6n·t OOO I llKll W"I llf 5 C.-.Wlll ••1t1ur•11I • said !.looday. WASH INGTON (AP) ·-objection to the President's · buying real estate such as homes at San Clemente and Key Biscayne, but said be objected to !he publl~ paying for ii, citing some $10 mllilon for presidential e:itras. Rep. Jack Brooks (D-Tex.), says the. "ll~le of the cur· rent President has reached a level tolall)' alien to the IYefage AmefiCan Woi'~g­ man and woman." · Aft er urging· Americans this month "lo drive more slowly, to st.aynome on Sunday :tnd to sit in the dark ." Brooks said Monday, President Nixon '!boarded one or his elegant 707s, that we paid for. and new to hts private reLreat. that we paid a good bit for. in the Florida sun." MOST OF BROOKS' talk lo the Woman's National ·Democratic Club dealt with the tupayer11aid erpenses of the presidency, investigated by a House government ac- tivity subcommittee which he heads. • At camp ·David, Brooks said, the cost of a second, new swimming-pool put· in by Nixon was $150,000. President Johnson already had a pool there. Brooks said, adding: "it isn't very often you run into a backup swim- ming pool." HIS AIAIL, f r o m con- stituents as well as from across the oountry, is "5,000 to 1" against Nixon's personal costs, Brooks said. "l think the American public is pretty sick about these kinds of ex~nditures for the Presi· dent, ' Brooks said. 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M•mbtr F,0,1.C, ··················-..-··········-·······················································-- • • • - ' . .I ' • . ---- • JO DAI LY PILOT T11ttdc)y , Novtmbfr 27 , 1973 "Bo Fires New Volley Over Rose B,owl V·ote ANN ARBOI{, h1ich. tAP I -The Big Ten athletic directors snouldn't have Ille power to decide which conference team goes to the Rose Bowl. University ol A1ichigan football coach Bo Schem· bechl er said fl1onday. "The Tournament of Roses Committee should select the team that goes from the Big Ten," he -said. "No athletic director and no commissioner shouJd bave anything lo do with it." The Big Ten athletic di rectors \'otcd Sunday to send Ohio Stale to the Ne"' Year's Day bowl game after A1ichi ga n played a 10-10 tie with the Buckeyes Sllturday, giving each team a 7-0-1 con- ference record. "I'm tota lly disillusioned with their th.in king," he said. ''I think they ought to all stand up and say why they vowd like they did." SChembectller singled out Big Ten Conunis.sionncr \Vayne l'luke, who \\'as al the game. for blame in the directors' Hose Bowl decision. .. I v.•an1 the com1niss ioncr to come ll'lao's the Real Lose 1·? Michiga11 , Got Rook ed -And We 've Got Woody Those u·hose affections lie wit h the University of Alichigan football fortunes and those \vho watched Michigan tie Ohio State on T\1 Saturd ay, are rightfully outraged by· the ensu ing wte of Big Ten Conference athletic directors. That ballot, which incredibly puts Ohio State in the Rose Bowl on the first da y-of 1'74, reflects ignorance or woe ful prejudice by ttie six clucks v•ho voted to sel)d the Buckeyes to J>asadena to meet use. t And while it is an insult of the greatest magnitude to th at great Michigan tean1 . t.hlnk wha t it does to those of us who WHITE WASH CLENN WHIT& have lo endure another session u•ith Ohio State coach Woody Hayes. Getting along with Hayes is grand jf you are a repo rter from Columbus, Ohio. Or if you are aski ng questions from an armored ca r. Or iI you have fought in the Golden Gloves. Or if you have a thirst for combat. Or if you've tried hunting gri zzly bears wit h )'Our bare hands. \Voody has about the same kind of relationship with the press as Harry Truman had vtith Douglas MacArthur. Ho.,.,·ever, Hayes has a perfect record out here. He socked a reporter several years 1 ago and more recentl y had an altercation \\·ith a photographer. I prefer to in· terview him by mail. Or take an in- terpreter wi th me and pretend I don't speak English. Members of my staff who savor a Rose Bowl locker room assi grnncnt. come up with mysterious ailments. when they learn the}l'll be handling Oh io State. And what about the fans ? Ohio State's venture to the Rose Bo\\'I means another thrill-packed aflemoon of wat ching some guy built lik e a rhino running off tackle or off guard. Fo r variety, Tlayes runs ofl the right side of the line for J\Vhi\c. the n sy,·itch cs to the left. His idea of a \.\•ide open offense is \vaiting Iii fourth dO\\'n lo punt or going for a field goal outside the-30-yard line. After y,•atching Ohio State teams coached by Hayes, I woodcr where Paul \Va rfield lea rned lo catch a forward -pa~ And f y,·onder \~hat horrible thing -has . perpetrated this double damning of justice . . the vole which lea ves co- champion rvlichigan on the bench while co-champion Ohio State plays in the Rose Bowl. Propaganda peddlers say Michigan was voted out because the \Volverines losl their quarterback \Vilh a broken collar bone in the tie with Ohio Stale. However, a Monday phone call to Michigan spons information director Will Perry reveal s that none of the men casting balloLs contacted the Uofrvt regarding the nature of the lad's injury. Nor did anyone check doctors' reports to see ho\v Jong the QB \\.'iii be sidelined . "It shows me that Dennis Frankl in !the injured QBJ mu st be one helluva player,'' Perry sa ys, "if his presence or absence decides whether or not v•e ·go to th e Rose Bov;J . That should mean he's a shoo-in for the Heisman Trophy if he's that good.'' Agreed. Further, A-Uchiga n has three backup . quarterbacks v:ho have all started one time or another. Tom Slade was UoCM's starting QB as a sophomore for about half th e season and that same year Kevin.Casey saw heavy duty. Both are on the 1973 squad ... Senio r Larry Cipa di rected Mic!Tigan 00 a late game no.ya rd drive \\'hi ch resulted in a <touchdown and 10-7 victory over Ohio State two years ago and he's still on the team. Jn fact. he played the entire game this season in the 24-0 oonquest of Oregon. _ . At any rate, that skinnish goes in the books as a tie for Michigan. a loss for logic an d egg on the face for six bungling men. Now y,·e brace for \l'hat should transpire about a week before Christmas \\·hen a man with a build like Santa Claus and a personali ty like a Gestapo interrogation chie f co1nes back to Southern Call fo rn ia. Lord have mercy'. Michigan Players React To Rose Bowl Decisio1t ANN ARBOR . f\1 ich. (AP I -1\ngrr. rrustnition and gloom pervades the t;niversi1y of ~l ichigan because thf' und efeated \\1o\verine foo tball team \von ·1 be going to the Rose Boy,·I. "\Ve go t scre\vcd . It 's a damn shame.·· complained defensive tackle Dou g Trosza k in answer to the vol e \\'hicb gave Ohio State lho trip to the Ne\v \'ca r's Day classic. "Thl'y cheated us." g r u m b I e <l \ringback Larry Gustafson. referring 1o !he Big Ten athletic dirt'ClOrs \l'ho n1ade thr decision. The !op-ranked Buckeyes and No. 4 J\tichig an battled to a J().10 ti e Sat urda.v. ending the season ,,·ifh identica l 7-0·1 conference records and f6rcing a• vote by Big Ten athletic directors t'l delennine '\'ho would go to Pasadena. Most Michigan fans said t he \\iolverines should have been elected because OSU y,•ent last JanOary . "They 'A"ent last year. lt \tas our turn." claimed junior quarterback Den- nis Franklin. who Jeri 1he game \Vith a broken colla rbone !al e in the fourth quarter. of phon e calls from irate students and • alumni. including a Seattle alumnus who suggested the \Volverines drop out of the conference. The newspaper said one caller sug- gested a petition drive to allo\v A1ichiga n to play Oklahoma in the Outcast Bov.·1. The Sooners are under suspe nsion and banned from post-season boy,•I play by the National Collegiat e Athletic Associ a· lion for recruiting violations. An angry head football coach. Bo Sehembechler. suggested Sund<1y the possibility of J\1ichi gan pl aying in another lXl\\'I game. But athletic director Don Ca nha1n rul- ed out that suggest ion. saying the \\'olvc.rincs 't''Ould be ki cked out of the Big Ten . Despite the outrage expressed in some sectors of the spraw ling cam i)us, other students reacted lo the news \l'ith a yav•n. "\\1e a re interested. but v.·e are more in terested in other thi ngs."' said Robert \Visniewsk i. a frcshrnan fro nt Dearborn . J\1ich. to ... Ann Arbor, stand be~ore my team, :i.nd tell them they're not good enough to play in the Rose Bowl," he said. Schembechlcr charged that Duke prob- ubly manipulated the vote by tclUng the directors about the broken collarbone suffered by starting W o I v e r i n e quarterback DeMis Franklin dW'ing the game. "If a quarterback is so important. why is a t~~ the.re that ad· m1tlcdly doesn't have a passing attack," he said, referring to Ohio State's groond- orientcd game. "You wonder v•hY kids go 'A'rong ," he said. ·•t v.·ouldn't trust the older generation either. They're just out for themselves. ''I think the biggest iss ue was Franklin. but l don't th ink it was the only one," he added. "There were petty things and if not that. it was ignorance because they didn 't see the game." "I \\·ant to make on e thing perfectly clear." he said. "Nothing I say has to do with Ohio State. I think they're a trl'tnendous team. I don't think it's anylhing they· did. I think we outplayed them and eve ryone who \Vas at the game would agree .'' Duke conceded b1onday that "this particular situation has fomented so much concern there undoubtedly will be a discussion of our selec tion pro- cedure" at the con ference's winter meeting in Chi cago nex t week. In reply to Schembecbler's charges. Duke sa id: "That is totally absurd. I have been in contact with University of l\Iichigan authorities regarding the 1natter and u•Hl be in furt he r contact u·ith them regarding the overall situa· lion." The f\1i nneapolis Star reported r..'lon day tha t 1-llchig an , l\1innesota, Indiana and Iowa voted for the Wolverin es, \\.'hile Ohio State, Mic higan State, Purdue. Wisconsin. fllinois and· Northwestern favored Ohio State. Michigan State athletic director Burl Smith declined Monday to say if he voted for !\1ichi gan or Ohio State in Sunda y's poll to determine the Big Ten representati ve to the Rose Bowl. Smith said he did not see Saturday·s· Ohio State-A-Iichigan ganle, v.•hich ended in a J().10 tie. and admitted that the Buckeyes' performance against b-lichigan State earlier in 'the season "probably influenced my thinking." The Spartans su£fered a 35-0 defeat at the hands of Ohio State and lost to l\tichigan, 3t..o: "I'm one director out or to in the Big Ten," Smith said. "I didn 't see the game and that's part of the unfortunate thing." he said. "From the opinion we got from people who \\'atched the game. il \Vas Ohio State in the first hall and l\·tichigan the second." ~ .h ~ GARY MATTHEWS Matthe,vs Named NL's Top Rookie NEW YORK (APJ -Gary Matthews, \\'ho hit .300 as a regular outfielder for the San Francisoo Giants. was na med l\fond ay the National League's. Rookie or the Year for 1973. l\fatt hews received 11 votes from a 2~·man committee ·of the Baseball \Vr iters Association of America . He easi· ly bea t out Atontreal pitcher Steve Rogers, the runner-up with 31h votes. Catcher Bob Boone of Philadelphia, relief,pil cher Elias Sosa of San Francisco and lhird baseman Dan Driessen of Cincinnati drew two votes apiece. Los Angeles infielders Ron Cey and Dave Lopes and San Diego outfielder Johnny Gnibb each recei ved.one vote. Oulfielder Richie Zisk of the Pittsburgh Pirates rcceivl'<i the other one-half vote. SF'S CEDR IC HARDMAN CLOSES IN TO SACK JERRY TAGGE (17). MALCOM SNIDER 167l BLOCKS. Sports in Brief Rams Pick Up Sherman; SC .Confident of Win LONG BEACH -The Los Angeles Rams expcd. to have a new receiver but a familiar face in uniform SUnday against the Chicago Bears. The Rams announced 1'-1onday that they had-signed Irvine resident Rod Sherman. "former University or Southern California and Pasadena high school star. and placed Joe Sweet on the injured reserve list. Sweet haS' beeo ham pcrOO by a pulled hamstring muscra:"' e 8011il Ticke ls LOS ANGELES -The University of Southern California. must have been con- fident that the Trojans would beat UCLA a"'1 go to the Rose Bowl. Season ticket purchasers received in the mail ~londay options to buy Rose Bowl tickets. The applications. arriving onl y t\l'O days after Southern Cal's 23-13 vic- tory over UCLA. require their return by this Saturday. e T ille lo Evert · JOHANNESBURG. South A£rica - Chris Evert of Fort Lauderdale, Fla .. won the \Vomen 's singles title today at the South African Open Tennis Tournament by defeating E v o n n e Goolagong. the defending champion, 6-3. 6-3. About 1.500 fanS watched the 64-minute match which lvas worth $6.000 to the win ner and $3,000 to the Australian. e Lenks Do11btf11l AUSTIN, Tex. -Team doctors ex· amined Roose velt Leaks' injured lef t knee Monday and decided it was nol as bad as they had expected. but the Texas fullba ck is still doubtful for the Jan. 1 Cotton Bowl game against Nebraska. Leaks, a 213-pound junior, is the key to Texas· orrense, rushing for 1,415 yards in 10 games and setting up the Longhorns' other plays with his faking and blocking. . e Senilce s Slnt ed DONORA. Penn . -Funeral services v.·ill be held Wednesday for \Villiam Lee Towl er, whose son starred in football and now is presiden t of the Los Angeles County Board of Education. Towler, 79. a retired grocer. died Saturday. Eight of bis nine children survive, including Dr. Dan Towler, formerly with the Los Atlgeles Rams, tind now an ordained minister and educator. e ll11nble to Challfle, SAN DIEGO -Harland Svare says his critics were right in one. respect: he was miscast as a head football coach. .. , was unable to ·change myS(!}f for 47 peopl e,'' SVare sa id Monday,· three u•eeks after he quit as San Diego Chargers' head co ach to become general manager. "Coaching seems to require a quality I \3ck. It 's not a quality · I want. 'Tm not bolhered by the things that bother ot her people. I can't get excited about the way a man dresses or the length of hi s hair. I just u·ouldn't Crack do,vn on .every little thing the guys do." • C11clislo Killed BAKER. Calif. -1\\10 Californians competing in a Barstow·l~Las Vegas motorcycle race were killed in separate accidents near hear. the Highway Patrol reported Monday. Larry Allen Pfut7.enrueteer: 29, of Corona , was killed at midmorning Sun- day 'A'hen his motorcycle struck a rock in the track and went out of control. Larry Edaro Baird, 34. Lakewood. died Sunday afternoon about 30 miles north of Baker when his machine plunged down a 2(}.foot embankment . The annual 150-mile race is sponsored by the San Gabriel btotorcycle Club. e New Co.uh SYRAC USE - F'rank f\1 a Ione y , defens ive line coach of Michigan's un- defeated and once-tied Wolverines, was named head football coach at Syracuse University Monday, succeeding Ben Schwartzwalder who has retired. Maloney; '33, is one or the youngest head football coaches in the ma;or col- leges. e Cr0tllder Ponders BOULDER. Colo. -University of Colorado football coach Eddie Crowder said Monday that he would announce a decision within IO days about his status as head coach and athletic direc- tor at the university. Football Ratings .. TlM T°" Twemy, wllh tirsl•ltct vot.1 111 IMI'""' lhftn, '"'°" recorlb •lld lot•'!' POlnl5. Pornh 11!:1ul1lmd 1111 beiis ol 20-ll·l6-l~12·1t.»1+.S+ J..,.,: 1. Al1blm• ~~) 2. ()lll1homl UO) l . Ohio s1111 121 •· Mlc:lll1111 (H 5. Nolf1 D•mt UI 6. Pe.om 's1111 C?l 1. use I , LSU '' Ttx•• 11. UCLA 11, Arll-Sl1t1 12. TtXl f" TICll 11 N1Dr1i.k1 u. HOulh)fl IJ. Ml1ml. Ol'l'- ll. No. C•rOH1111 SI, ''· ICIMll II . .V..11'111'\d lt.T-- 211. MlllOUfl lo.o.t 1,116 M-1 1,ffj t.0.1 "' 10.0.1 ,,, ,.. m 11.0-0 m •·1·1 610 ,..,., .Qt •• 2.0 :JM ... 1.0 )12 10-1.0 "' 10,1'41 ,.. •1-1 20f ''''° ""'in , ...... .. ,... J1 »1 •1 f-).0 i l ·~ . '·'"' 1 -" Devine Sick After Penalties ~.: " Kill Packers .- •' '< SAN FRANCISCO (AP/ -The Sao • Francisco 49ers jumped on the Na.tionaf : Football League's latest band\\·agon l\'l onday night. stressing th~ nmning· a~.~ tack on orfense, but rel! orr briefly u•hen Steve Spurrier entered the game against Green Bay. "I only had to throw three or fourr pass~. The biJ p1ay that really turned, it arolind was · Vic Wa shinglon's run ... '· said Spurrier. who toSscd a ~yard touchdown pa~s to Ted Kwalick in the final period to clinch the 20-6 National Football League victory over tM Packers. , -' Mistakes. especiall y penalt ies. killed , the Packers' chances and kept them.- in their losing rut. "I don 't even want to talk a~ the penalties. I'm sick to my stomach.'\ said coach Dan Devine arter his Pack<!l'i lost for the fifth time in the la st seven.1, games. Spurrier. who started most of last • season when he totaled 18 toucbdo~ passe!I. didn't play ].1onday night untiJ rookie Joe Rel'd left the game wttlt~ a pulled groin muscle earl y in the firftltv period. ·.i The former Hcisman Trophy winner'-\.. who has played behind John Brodie nl08f or his seven-year pro career. completeai 1 four or live passes for 50 yards. m.~ first attempt produced the touchdown. ...;• Washington, who gained 94 yards ~· 21 rushing attempts. started the 67-yaro'; touchdown drive by running 25 yanl{· around .right end. ¥-· "There was some real good blocking;~· Guard Woody Peoples got in severat:: good blocks. Overall they executed af.t,.: just did the job," coach Dick NDt:°~ sakl of his orrensivc tine. which • taken much criJicism in the 4~ frustrating sea.son. - The 49ers had 174 net yards rushtJtf in their best ground performance or the year. Reed completed just five of If; passes ror 44 yards and all •iS ~ completions were inc;ide the SO.yard 1~:1 T11e Packers' nmning, powerful last year but sickly this sea.son. revld-1 somewhat ~1ondoy night with 131 yaM~I led by John Brockington·s 89. The 49ers broke a rour-game Joslh4. streak, and Kwallck yelled later, ·i•flr reel like we1ve just WOQ., the Super Bowl.·· PIKklrl 0 J O ~ ~ l( •ten ~ 1 ~ 0 10-;.i •' SF -V, WjjlM"'!llClll I run l~ .. 11 kl(k) r.a -FG Mtrcol JS Sii' -FG Goa~! 12 GI ....: FG M1l'col l.S 1 SF -l(w1llck '° Pllt fTom .$flv!Tlltl'" '""' l.'•T .; l I f"lii-" \ 118!1 ,..,,.;;;' SF -FG GolMll n ' IMOIVIOUAl llAOlllS ,,,.,,f')t RUSHING -Grten 91y, Bl'"Ortltiot~-~l:rtl~~is. S:~c :r~_'.. ~;.;--::~~IOI! ll rl Sonic obsl'rrcrs spcculaled 1ha1 the Big Ten directors wcnl 11 ith Ohio Slate because of Fra nklin·s injury. which would have kept hi m out or -ihc bowl game. But Franklin insisted. "I was going to play,'' and offensi ve guard !\l ike lloban added that reserve quarterback Larry Clpa 1'is a good passei:. maybe better than Dennie." Dodgers Shy ~From Massive Trade ' ,..,, $mllh 2~•. GIMI 2-n ; .... Fr~·· A.br•~ltl ).12, ICW1tlck ?.Jlis V, Wtsh1119 ..! 1-71. G. W11hlriotofl 1.\t, ' PA ING -, Blly, T-10-1•·'· 101 v•rClt, Ooll G1i10 4·. ' '°' ll"OdllM!on 0-1-0, O; sin Fr111ellco. , •·S-0. so, litffd i.1...0, ••· '1 IC * * * ·~ ..... SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -~.i ·· G,.... Bay Pacl<ers lost their llilitf.f -even beforo the big game MondWJ'Y "For some reason. nobody lik~ Michigan. I knew ,It as a freshman and il 'a continuing now." said senior ' light end Paul Seal. "They jusl don't want us 'lO go." "\Ve played a better game - rveeybody knows that.·· Cecilla Evan.'I. a 10phomore from Detroit. sajd in ex· plainlni the sludenl>' position. The Mlchlgan Daily, the campus .....,.per; r<porUd ...,.iving • flood , LOS ANG ~LES (AP) -The Loll Atigclcs l>odgcrs, 'A'hO ex pressed Int erest l~st sca8<ln In a ri ghl·handed power hitter or a right-handed reli ef pitcher, are trying to fill those needs from within or through a sniall trade rather than ·through a major deal. • . ~ "If we do trade it will be a specific lypc or th lnA:." said Al Campanis, vice presi denL for player personnel. ")'le migh1 make some · JIU le deals, but I don't feel \\'e're goi ng to be invorved ll)() dee ply." The Dodgers ei:presscd interest In Jirn· ' I my Wynn and Bob \Valson of Houston but were fold that Watson was una vailable and that the price for-Wynn we.s catcher Steve Yeager. "We said no," campa.nis sa1d. "Sup. pose Joe Ferguson breaks hir-thumb like he-dld last yea r. We won 11 of 14 ga mes with him out and Yeager playing. ''As far as the outfield goes, lf \ve ha\IC to give up an ann or a leg. we might be better off sticlting with Tom Paciorek and giv1ng hlm a rc•I \ shot '" carppanis Said. • Then he added that Charlie Hough, Doug Rau and Geoff Zahn, who were with the club last season. or Rich Rhoden, a bard-throwing minor le,guel; might fill lhe relief pltclllng need: So It looks like a quiet winter in stark contrast to last. )'Oar When the Dodg~rs shocked the baseball world with a seven-player deal with the Calilomin Angels. · · The Dodgers are shyiag away from wholesale chang,es for twa reasons, Cam· panis said. Fol one, the front ol'flce likes the current }earn. and sees no ,., rea50n ror a drastic racelift. "If you start wheeling and dealing," he said, 0 1t means you're not 11tisf1'! w,llh what you've bnloght up. And "" are. We won 95 games tut. year with a young team. We don't want to destroy whal we've acoomplisbecl." · ~ The other reason IJ ibat baseball talent oecms lo be coming at a high . price this off-season. Tho Red Sox eked for Don Sutton or Andy MeuerBmilh when right-handed slugger Reggie Smith went on the block rocently. "Thal stopped that," Campanls ukl. aighL _ -· Souvtnler hlDltm swiped ~, "trophies" while the Picken pre ' ~ for tbe "Game of the Week" 1.1 the San Francisco 49ers. "''\?~~ Locker nlOtn inonager Eddie -- said be Sl\f two young men rumln " from c.bd!ertick Park Sunday, paCkin the vlJIUng Packers' white Jcreeys wl green and gold stMpes. They were worU $126. he said. -'nit meo leaped Into a walling ~ and sped oU wi1h the lool ' -. \ • If 0 ,1a v D It or 11-0 A lo. ' I la ~ I ll ' ,. • r ' ... 1 Tuesday, NOYtrnbtr 27, 1'173 r;olf-"Fina.lists Mesa Verde Country Club's Stella Memam (rlght) show• off the trophy she won for capturing the President's Cu~. Rurinerup Doris Buckles helps hold the prize. Coaches Tab 5 Rustlers -All~ircuit Five Golden West College player1 hove beea named lo the All-Southern California Conference football flnt unit, annolinced by the clrollt coaches. RUMlng back Bob Ferraro and place- klcl<tt Brett While earned offeostve bonon and tackle Jim Potter, llnebac:ter Larry Grady and deep back Mike Purcell were named to the defenseve fll'St . team. AU-Southern Calllembl Conference Ol!eme Fln!Teom Pos. Player College WR-Campbell, Santa Monica WR-Heywood, Santa Monica WR-Mendez, Rio Hondo TE-Barschig, Rio Hoodo T-Ross, Rio Hondo T-Carlson, Cypress G--Campos, East LA G-Wilson. LA Harbor C-KJeln, East LA Qs-Holdennan, Rio f:(ondo RS-Evans, LACC RB Ferraro1 Goldea Welt RB-Dapper, Cypress K-Wblte, Goldel: West Wt. Yr. 18.\ Fr. 170 So. 160 Fr. 2115 So. ~5 So. 260 So. 220 So. 215 Fr. 215 So. 175 So. 195 Fr. 200 So. 185 So. ms.. Irvine League Co-champs Coach Cliff Hooper's Corona del Mar High water polo team tied for the Irvine League title with Estan- cia and is currently involved in CIF playoff action. Kneeling (from leflHimon Boughey, Jack Lorenz, Frank Browne, !\.1ichael Sayer,· Jeff Wherry, David Waddle. Standing-Mark Frost, Scott Marino, Kurk Del Valle, Michael Palmer, Mark Watson, Dan Pen- nington, Jay Stallman. CIF Polo Setup Shell~d Aft-er Runaway Matches If ever there was an indication that ome revamping In the CIF water polo 1layoff system is in order, surely Wednesday's fll'St round slaughters ought o be a tipoff. a banner fall. Cornna del Mar and Estancia tJed for the water polo cbampionaldp la the Irvine League and brttzed tbn>ogll fin~ round CIF opposition. Second Team WR-F1oyd, LACC WR-Brown, Goldea West WR-Amidon, Rio Hondo TE-Hirt, Golden West T-Adklm, Golden West T-Ray, LACC G-Eastman, Santa Monica G-Pepin, Rio Hondo C--&mdoval, LACC QB-Accomando, Golden West RB-ROO!mon, LA Harbor ~Ev&ru1, LA Harbor RB-Verstegen, Rio Hondo PK-WagllOI', LACC 180 So. 180 So. 18.\ So. llO So. ~Fr. 240 So. 220 So. 205 So. 205 So. 175 Fr. 190 So. Olson Sees Hard Road For 49ers Area's Leading Rusher Gets Kicks From Blocking 185 So. 175 Fr. By STEVE BRAND I.OS ANGELES (AP) _ Man ot "'' 0111y '"" s11H on the spot this week as the You'd think the only running nie 32-team eliminations ·forced the ollowing situations: It required a 60-mile venture in order or Newport Harbor to win its opener, <-0. N""'°rt's water polo -llD&<nl Is seeded No, % In Uoe pllyolh and appean beaded for al &eut a temlflDllJ bertll -perbapo aplul Corona dd Mar. Newport Harbor Blgll.11 football tum Is In Ille qaorterllllals qohul St. P1al Friday Di&IR 11 ~qe Coast Collefe af&er dbpecbo1 el preYloculy andeleoted Soudl Wib Frtdoy algllt. Dereme Finl Tum MG-a>arlton, Cypreoo DT-Potter, Goldeil West DT-Sarnaduraff, Rio Hondo DE-Archer, Rio Hondo DE-Emigh, Cypress · L-Oienevert, LACC LB-Walker, LA Southwest Ul-Grody, Golden Wffl DB-Parcell, Goldeu w .. 1 DB-Kapaun, LA Harbor DB-Randolph. LA Southwest DB-Eggen, Cypress 200 Fr. %%1 So. 225 So. 215 So. 240 So. 230 So. 210 So. ZOO Fr. 170 So. 1973-74 oollegiate basketball back in the Orange Coast area , season gets under way could to amass over 1,000 yards be Lute Olson, the new coach rushing th is football season at Cal State · {lMlg Beach) "'ould be conten t with his role. A sim1Jar trek resulted in San Semardino losing to SUMy Hills, 19-3. >o~y traveled to La Canada and , 1u.zhed its way to a 16-2 win. It was ROGER CARLSON • 1-0 at the half and Downey's best layer didn't even play. Tlae point is this : If there are not nougb qu.aUtY-..leams to fill a 32-tearn letup, why do it? What does a 24-0 out of Riverside North prove? Did Newport Harbor benefit from that :ame? And what did it do for Riverside lorth's program? . All4 Cello M-lllgb'1 cnn "!lnntry teom rolled lo Ill cmlomory In>lne Lel(ne cll1mplomblp. ·Me11'1 water polo teom mlslecl die pll,.ih !or Uoe llnl Ume la. ftve ye111, bll& ID. llpMt wiD oftr rival Corolia del Mir la lrvlDe Leape 1edon II IOme comalolloo. Orange County lootblll wu ...U repres<S)ted In the first round ol the playolfi with oeven teams wiDDlnl u <>Pl"-' lo lour loaes. The Garden Grove League'• Rancho Alamitos and SanUago conUnued !bit circuit's tradlUon of. early failure in the playoffs and the Santa Ana Valley upset kept It from being an wreal success story. And the fourth loss wu a tie-breaker !bit El Dorado found ltsell on the Wl'Ollll end of. Pr<dlctton: 1be -ol die SI. Poal- Newport Horbor looltloll qaorterlluls pme will be oae of tbe fluUlb. Seeoad Teom . 170 So. 185 So. 175 So. MG-Franldln, LA llari>or 220 So. D'l:-l!ryant, LA Southwest Z30 So. T-Misa, LA Harbor 210 So, DE-Blecboe, LA Horbor 2!s So. DE-Pared .. , Rio Hoodo 195 Fr. LB-Martin, LACC 210 So. LB-Ro...U, LA Harbor 200 Fr. ·LB-Peach, santa Monica 195 Fr. Dll-ShimaJu, Santa Monico 140 Fr. DB-Nilro;Rio Hoodo 170 Fr. DB-Badistaln, Rio Hoodo 150 So. Ds--Olavil, LACC 185 Fr. Player ot the year -Bob Dapper ( Cypreoo). and fonnerly the head coach Not Westminster's Tony Ac· at Marina High. coma ndo. He succeeds Jerry Tarka· The terror or the Sunset nian who switched to the League, voted that circuit's University of Nevada at Las player of. the year, Accomanda Vegas following a 26-3 season says he gets a greater thrill which gained national ranking blocking so sameone else can for the .f9ers. score. Also gooe from Loo.g Beach "Really, it's more satisfying is All-American Ed Ratleff to deliver a good block than and the schedule for the club to 8COre/' says the 17-year-old could be tougher this year school rushing record holder. than last. That's like Nolan Ryan "Anything I'd say now about saying he'd rather deliver a our team would be pure sacrifice bunt than pitch a speculation," Olson told the no-hit ter. Southern California Basketball "When you take on a poten· Writers Mooday. "But it ital 1 tackler and knock him would be very difficult for down," says Accomando. "it's us to match that record a bigger thrill tha n scoring. because or our road schedule. especially if your player "Last year's team didn't scores." play USF in Sao Francisco It also has drawbacks for and Marquette at Marquette." a 160-)>0under like Accomando. 019Cll'& team will have a "When I was a sophomore, 'Mte playoffs could easily have been tared to 16 good teams (a nd that in- IU<les Sunset League runnerup Marina ncl Jrvine League representative Costa !eoa). Distance Training brother act in letterman I remember deliverin g a great Roscoe Poindexter at 6-7 and block on Newoort 's Jim his 6-8 freshman brother, Clif. Swick." says ACcomando oJ ton, a duo from Fresno. U., fonner Tars linebacker "I'm not Jerry Tarltanian," who was one of the few said Olson, "but I'll be doi ..... U's ridiculous for th ese teams to be txcluded rrom playoff competition in leferenoe to other league champions . hat would have a hard time beating :osta Mesa 's junior varsity. Bear Day Unbearable · oue freshmen thi s year to play Ille best job I'm capable of · varsity football at UCLA. "I doing. I p-efer very fast paced actually knocked him down . games and at city college we "I guess he didn't like it always. had the top offensive· veey much. On the next play teams In. our,., ............ League champs or lesser circuits hould simply be reclassified in a secon- lary playoff -giving them a decent hot at winning a playoff game . For SoCal Performers -.-he broke throitgh the line and Grid Picks To Brogger batted me like a ping pong ball. I must have traveled IO yards in the air. When yau block. yo,u don't always get the reward of knocking down the other man. 11 Can you imagine the inequity of putting li of the ClF Southern Se<tloll football earns in one massive playoff system? That's what 's being done in water IOlo and It seems a lot of fine teams a-e. getting stepped on -including eague champions where they are trying I establish a better program and nm- 9r\ip learns In powerful leagues !hit lon't even .qualify. * * * ll(pwpo~M"I high schools have bad By HOW ARD L HANDY CM a. Dlllr ltlllll ti.ff Did you ever feel Uke you had a bear on your back while struggling to get something accomplished? Jim ctumpton, cross country and track ooacb at Southern Calllornla College of OooCB M-feels lhia Is !he only way to II'> In training distance nmners. "About every three weeks we have what we call bear day during our cross oountry workouts," he explains. CIF Football "llft>sl of the runners we have out !or the team can brteie Uuoogh a worliiMit on i rqulit ·basis without too Dl ff M much trouble after the season has pro-r .aayo enu gresoed lo the mid way polnl This ten<ls lo mate -a little cocky, All games Frldoy al a p.m. unl<os "We then throw them oomething they lherwlse noted. can't handle and call It bear day." , f-A To put the record straight, Crumpton ~. Paul vs. Newport Harbor at Orange scheduleJ bear doy on-\ regular -..is CO.St College and II la no llllprise to tile """""' :r.opj vs. Slnta Monlca al Santa Mmlca when It comos aloog. City Coil... What does a heir doy worlroul COlllill lervile vs. Leo Alblo at Mt. SAC ol! lnahOim vs. North 1'orronoe at El "Well, they run the usual live mllos ComJno -, In the eariy • lll!li:nlni boun, oomolhlng I-A they all do every day abolil I o'clock. lomMa vs. Momingside at Sel!tlnel "In the lflernoon, they talre a three- Flold, Inglewood ~ warm(•~·~ lbenof wemllerun) fiallve /Illa Park vs. Burroughs at Burroughs 1-~~-..~.en a , lt.'.\lofln Bosco vs. Kennedy at La Palma at race pace (about 3:30). They gel Stl.dlum, Anaheim four minutes ol. rest between each one. ri.mm Oaks vs. Crescenta Valley "Alter .iOulnl. another lap (440 yards) at Glendale High we II'> tO ii 33lia wilfl I UO.yard Jori !-A hi belwttn. ,,_ are cut down races ~pie City vs. Sonora at Buena Park dooe In oota, eldt two f.... futer liQ·Mesa al·Anlelope Valley Iba== two." low!Jod vs...Neff at La Mirads with two a~t .. ~~~~.!° c1o'~ lortb Riveraide at Indio ~ ~-•-.,. "" 1-A to 12 """"'11 !or die final two. n' . at Importal (Saturday, 7 p.m.) are 12 :11111 on a cut c!oWn-baiia l'ronl ~I Arlington Aller . another lop ol Joalntr, there Al at Puo Robleo SB -for tbt ffnt two then a wanndown on grass to f1nl.sh the workout. ·- Whal ls a regular. workout !or a Vanguards runner? "All 12 D\embers ol the team run five miles In the morning," he ,.ys. Afternoon -ls are on alternate light theit beavy basis, A light or euy workout by Crumpton's standards is a 45-minute rurl on grass. A heavy or hard workout is from eight to 15 miles depending '"' whether it is a straight distance run or at Intervals for shorter distances. Every Sonday morn!Ag, about 8 o'clock, die group heads out Bristol to MacArthll', lo Pacific O>ast Highway and bod< lo Newport BouleYard, then retum.o lo the college. This Is • dlstan<:e of about 15 mlles and the' men oover it In about an l\olJr and a ball. Once a week be takes tho team to tho beach 11 Corono de! Mar !or an eiibt to a.mile -llout, then a bit ol body .BUl'ftng. Bob Brogger or Newport Beach missed only four games and came within two points of hitting the tie-breaker on the nose to win the final Dailv Pilot Pigskin Pickeroo footbail prediction contest. Brogger, tied with two others for first, wins $50 from the sponsoring HarOOr Bl vd. Auto Dealers Assn. of Costa Mesa. Sue Cochrane of Irvine was second, while third place ts shared by Marge l!ow1!n of Dana Point, Stella Goodejon of Laguna Beach and Bill Scholes of Costa Mesa. Two ol tile third place fmishel'I had lo also he de- tennlned by tie-breaker after nine entrants had tied for the position with five mi~s (counting the Ml chigan-Obio Stale tie.) • · '"nils !Jr 1lOOd tberaP1 !or them and It ...... a !Dt of lime In the whirlpool wt..n we return to ICbooli ' Clumpioo adds. Does he get tile nmnen up !or a meet by letllng them compete against eac11other1n workoub1 El Toro Plays 11No, that's 90mething J don't allow -1 them lo do ," be says. "All ·of them Saturday Ni'"aht . have been tht number one 'runner at . That's the same problem op- posing derenses had with the classy Lions tailback this seaso n, knocking him down. "I'll have to credit the of. fensive lipe, really," says Ac- comand o .. "I can't remember many times I've gone into Jhe line and not f o u n d some place to run. This is the best oft~nsive team I've played on, so that makes it easy.11 Accomando fini shed with a flurry in his last three games and not so coincidentally, so di d Westminster. The elusive running back scored 10 ti.mes in the three wiM ta ftnish the season with 18 tauchdowns and 1!)80 yasds. It brought his three-year varsit)' mark to 2,633 yards total offense and 168 po,ints scored. "1'onv is the most complete back I've ever coached," says coach Bill Boswell. • 'He possesses ment al and physical to u g hn ess and gOod quickness ," .,.. Accom21ndo says he has to anolhec adlool at oome lime In their career and ~ are llerpe compeUlors. · El Toro Hlgh's second roiiii! rai1·1•0 ''U I -.lcf let them compete qalmt CIF footblll playoll game will __ _ each other In workouta, they wouldn1 be played , Saturday night paa(IJAr be any goOd on Saturday for our meets." against Imperial High ln El 8 ._ Have· ~ bad a Dtlt on YOID' back Centro. "'-• lately? U not, stop by Southern californla Kiclioll ls s.i for 7 o'clock. --- College and take part In one of their 'llte CIF commissioner's ol-$1'.00 regUfor cross country' workouts. You lice decided on the Sltu"1ay a lllOllth may not want the bear dsy compeUtioo dale at the request of El total cost reliaChapi at ~ quarter mile Joe' and • t"" mile .;;;;;i;;~~~-----..;i;;;;;;;;~~I !1"1DOM'T DISCARD THOill alter a regular -. . Toro. no dept...-'1,-t -on- .,.,"-""'""' 1 r;~.;:;r~Y~~ct:;;on~~H~;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;.;;;;;;;;i l l credit •ppro•al AMD SAYE AT START HARD? WE . .fl,!> I ~:: OLD RNNIS SAOESll ... ,..... ... ,....,,.. .. ""'"' ~ -,,... ..... ANTHONY'S SMOI SlltVICI , i WaJa..-. ~ e &,lliii e ,_.... ,.,_. e COltOflA ML MoUI ' , I GIVE POOR Ml\,EAOEt CAN HELP COSTA MESA DATSUN THE CARBURETOR SHOP 1141 HAUOI ILYD. C.M. IMO MIO I ----------[~----.......-~ • • •. OllA~Gf COUNTY lfAOIOTHLPHONE SERVICE I"'( i TONY ACCOMANDO be quick because of his size and speed. "I'm slow for a back.' 'he admits, "and so I have to hit the hole and make a decision quickly. coach says he doesn't remember me ever being hit solidly tiut I sure remember a few times when the other team bas . gotten a good shot at me. "I really don 't have time to think about which way I'm going to ga or how I'll fake another player. I simply do whatev~r it takes to get past them." Accomando says the deluge of offen from colleges hun't realty hit yet. He isn't sure it'll ever come . "At USC it seems they have a rule you have to be 200 pounds or better," says Ac- comando. He was reminded of Anthony Davis. "That guy has super speed." It might seem a.1'.uone conclusion he'll ~ his brother, O.n. at GQld~ West COllege, but Accomando says DQ. "I don't like~ cornporecl with my brother,' be says. "l might even avoid playing on the same team with him. Dan says he's considering transferring to a Pac-3 school and 1f he does it'll make my decision about a juhior college easier. "l haven't discounted any school yet. I don't want to get lost at 1a big school, sa . maybe a small oollege would be the answer. 1 just don't know yet." The colleges better start contacting Tony Accomando soon. As _Sunset League op- ponents for the last three years will tell you , he isn't easy to tackle. Pirates, Rustlers Battle In Basketball Tonight Orange Coast College and Golden West will be seeking win No. I of the fl edgling basketball season when the two collide tonight at 8 at GWC. OCC's Pirates were dealt a 6!1-56 setback by Trade Tech Saturday night in the season opener whil e the night before Golden West was thumped by Cerritos, Ill~. Bucs coach Herb Livsey will start an all veteran unit that includes guards Bruce Miller and Tom Crunk a n d frontllners Bob Manket, Jim Worthy and Rod Snook. Rustlers c o a c h Dick stricklin Is expected to go with a ~ unit comwsed of 111>phoinore Taras Young and freshman Theo Williams at the guards, sophomore Brian Sanders at center a n d rreshmen Keith Stowers and Kim Joiner at forward&. Williams scored 24 points and Sanden 14 in the loss to Cerritos. Orange Coast bold.< a 7·3 edge in the se.ries between the two Coast Community District rivals. The Pirates won last year's battle, 82-79. OCC has two other ~ames scheduled this week, hosting defending state c h a m p i o n Compton Coileg> Friday night and tangling with the UC Sin- 'ta Barbara JV team at 5:55 al UCSB. Golden West will compele In tile Moorpark tournament, lacing Piette 'lltursday iilght at 9 In the opening round. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC • LEASE! • VISIT OUR NEW ~EASE DEPARTMENT We T1ll0< Your LNM To Fit Your Bud11ot Abo~:kour MONEY~ lllAND G d p . S10960 rm ran r1x · 1 Mo. Firebird , ISPO)r SS/ 6~~. l ( ' -· • ' ........._ • \ . . luesday, Novtmbtr 27, 1CJ73 .;l UA\lV PILO f 371 Miles Weekend l\'l~illllllll Colu1n nisi R eiQi-ns Bli1ideil 17 Years Agtr by ·-M"Obst.ers From Wire Servlct1 He quipped to the Seafarers International U n I o n in Washington that com J n g home at night with the lighl! out "it might be dark and you could get in the wrong door. Thanks~ving Death Toll Kept ·Iffw · by-C.rackdown DETROIT fAPt -H you own a_ 1974 model car and want to go for a \Veekend drive whUe the £&S stations are closed. don't expect to travel more 1h:in about 300 miles. federal figures show. That's tht 3\·eragl.! 1nileage a new car vtou1d get if the owner filled the gas tank Saturday night. according to the Environmental Protection Agency. llere are some specific EPA estimates for new cars b~cd on normal urban driving con- ditions: -Ford Torino with a 250- inch, six-cylinder engine and 2&.5· -ga llon tank has a cruising range of 371 miles or about 14 miles per gallon. -America n ~1 o tors' Gremlin, a subcompact with a 21-gallon ta'nk and 232-inch, six-cylinder engine, has a 3.14- mile range or about 15.9 f!i iles per gallon. Chevrolet Nova with a slightly larger engine but the same-sized tank could go 330 miles. -Cadiltac DeVille with a 472-inch vs-engine and a 27 .~ gallon tank . has a top range of 245 miles or 8.9 miles to the gallon. Labor columnist V I ct or Rlesel, blinded 17 years ago when reputed mobsters threw sulfuric acid in his face, returned to his desk after the second in a series of eye operations and said there was a good possibility he woold regain some sight in bis left eye. Riesel said the operation y,•as ··extreme!~ successful.'' Riesel i'etumed to his desk ' "But who knows," be added, "there might be somebody in· teresting behind lhose doors." The gathering _ of t h e Seafarers laughed at his remarks. * Fonner Deputy U.S. At· ( .. )" tomey General W 11111 m PEOPLE Ruckeltkaus has been invited to become a '-------.-J I fellow al the at the Publishers-Hall Syn-Kennedy In- di cate in New York after spen-stitute of ding the weekend undergoing Politics at the second in a series of H a r v r d operations to restore his University. eyesight. "We'd like * to h ave President Nixon said not him," Or. having ornamental Jights at Ernest Mny, Christmas time "won't hurt institute di-•uCKEl.SKAIJS anybody" bul added "it's not rector, said. as pretty." Ruck.elshaus was ·removed from office when he refused Lincolns. Recalled By Ford to fire former specia l Water g at e prosecutor Archibald Cox. * L t. Col. Warren Robert Liiiy, who broke up with his wife just after his release from Hanoi after seven years as a war prisoner in Hanoi, will remarry. * John Darnes, 76, and l\1ary Bidwell, 80, ce1ebrated after their wedding in Lynn, Mass. by watching a play titled "lt's Never Too Late" star- ring Robert Cumming~. f110M Fashion Island Newport Beach · 103 FM STEREO SOUNDS OF THE MARBOR -Ford 's Pinto. a subcompC1ct with a tank less than half the size or the OeVille's - 13 gallons -has a 296-mile range because its r 0 u r - cylinder engine gets about 23 miles per gallon. DETROIT IUPI) -The Ford Motor Co. said it was,1------------------------'----------------------------'------~,----------- -The Chevrolet Vega, with a four-clinder engine, gets about 20 miles per gallon and • has a 314-mile range with a 16-ganon tank. -Ford's Mustang II, with a six-cylinder engine. has a 195-m ile range with a 13-gallon tank or about 15 miles per gallon. -Ford's Galax.ie, with a 22- gallon tank and a 4()1}inch, V8 engine, has ..a 220-mile range or about 10 miles per gallon. -Plymouth Fury has a ~~G­ mile range. with a 25-gallon tank and 360-inch, va engine, or about 10:4 miles per gaUon. -Chevrolet lmpala has a 286-mile range with a 2S-gallon tank and 350-inch VS engine, or about 11 miles per gallon. MAKERS have said the new models get about JO percent less fuel economy than cars made before 1969 because of increased weight and cm1ssion cont rol devices. recalling 17.744 current model Llncoln Continentals be<:aUS6 of a possi ble short circuit from an improperly routed starter cable . rt' was in about 75 percent of the 1974 model Continentals produced in ttiis model year, Ford said Monday. The com- pany also said it was recalling 360 current-model Cougars to find an estimated 25 in which it may not be possible to fully ~ngage the automatic transmission "park'' mechan- ism. ' The starter cable problem on the Continentals affects about 1.400 cars, a spokesman said . There have beeh no ac- cidents as a result of the condition, the company said. If improperly Positioned, the starter cable could rub against a suspension arm and rub off the cable's insulation, resulting in an electrical short circuit that could cause Joss of all engine and elec trical system power. 15th Season NEWPORT • HARBOR ' KIWANIS FOUNDATION PRESEN TS TRAVEL AN D ADVENTU RE S~RIES F riday, Novemb ::r 30, 1973 8:00 p.m. OP.A NGE COA ST COLLEG E AUDITORIUM 2701 FAIRVIEW ROAD, COSTA MESA ' Col.J ohn D. Craig "AF RICA CAMERA SAFARI" Dlr1fnl Alrlc1, Trloder Hom'1 Afrlcl, Modttll Afri(I, OVtt !tit .,. •• " ftll mythlry of thf unnplored h11 glvtn w.;iy 10 the fascln•lion of licl and -··~re11" alld u viU1.ttion encro1ch on ..,,lm1I 1ifr. Soon, only In H1llon1I Glme Pl rltl will YGll ~ 1blt lo Ht 1"-tnilftSl'f ol Ille Wild, AM Incited, rYMn'f of lhe11 1rt11 n1v1 Hen chHed To rourlsh In oiulbllrtll of new n111GMll1m. On this ulvtnture w1 v1111 South Alric1'1 Kri.ger Pirie, w1k h w1ter 11011 1cllvi1y, cnll the power and lll('td ol Uon1. Moclem Hllrtbl cont,..111 1h1rply wllh I~• view' from Pl rill Lodge wher1 WI cr11l1t tllt n19- 91d Nllt. On Ml. Ktnf 1 we vl~JI Biii Hotdtn'1 Slllilrl Club, letcl cr11ttd cr111n 1nd w•lcll Chuk1 or.nc1r1. There Is " ni9hl 11 Treerops1 Ntorongore Cr.1ter wllh 111 15,aoo 1nlm111. alld L~ke Man~~·• Wllert irons 1IMtt In ll'HI\ Ml. Kilt"W!nj.il..-lllglll'Sj In Atr!CO.--o!"Oltillh I ll!OW'f pNk Wllll th• ........ of MlrlftS!u I.tel'•· 01lrlchff •nd d1"1.in11 fire on th• V.+clll Mllrn. 5~11191 whKI hippos. pl~y. K111gunl Lodt• •!Id bird ~'II .,,.. I~ lfo9lv!y, ch•rm, •dlOft lnll •xcllemenl In this ctklr1111 p,ofr .. et SO.Ill I nd 1•11 Alric• II ii Is tod~y. " IEASOH TICKETS !Good tor 111'1 t !X td!l\lalom) lliOULT ·•••·•••• I l l.JI( ...... lllml"°"' 11 "°" 1, .. ,,,_., .•• l !J) I TUOI NT .,,, .••• , ..... f tM C ...... lldtnittl• 11 .. , ....... ,,, 11.•) . llAIOH TtCICn1 AVAIUllLE AT1 ........, Ht .... K ...... 'ctlfllt. ........ H,_,.,, IMCll, '*'> ""'HU • ~ ~" ...,,._.., DOI W. ~ 111'/d,, Kewpof1 hKt! .., errr 1T11111W' of lftl ~ H1rbor Khh11l1_ C:lub. \ • Add cash discounts to ~igh .interest at Western Fed Save money on merchandis , aVe money on movi.e theatce.tlckets, save money on concerts and legitimilte t heatre; programs, save money on car rentals and overnighL~~comrnodations around the U.S., save money on entertainment attractions like the Queen Mary and Japanese Deer Park ••• save money on a whole hdst of the things you do anyway. At the rate of 10% to ~0% and on up to 30%, it add'9 up! Just save $1000 or more at Western Fed and join the·Capital cttrrent annual pas~book rcue Club. Members enjoy all the free financial services you'd e1<pect, plus a long and growing list of discount opporturuties. We even send you COMPASS, a handsome and informative fouf.eolor magazine, every quarter to keep you up to date on all our activities. 5%% four Y.ar. $!COO certificate And, of course, you earn the highest rate of intere1t available J111Y• where,·514% to 7K%. • . . • (a substanrial interest penalty is required for early uithdrau<ill -.Aaeta over $34,0 million • Hugh Evano, Jr., President 7% % • Fe®riil _Savings 1 • Main Office• Sixth & HiU , Downtown Los Anselet . . . CORONA DEL MAR 2744 E. cOaat 'Hwy., Jlm·Park, Manager, Telepb.one1 (714) 644·72JJ .. .. . . .... - • ' . . . • . :;;r----- ; -Gift lcleas Cr aftea '· • Pans Wor :.1 . Magic r. '" a. By ALIJSON DEERR Do publicize and promote. Of Ille Diiiy P'll.t Slatt o BEA ANDERSON, Editor Dorothea Britton thinks the word "bazaar" bas a magical quality. offers sample formats that have been successful, offers tips on rowlding up talent, and adds merchandising secrets and how to avoid pitfalls. Schedule the event when the com- munity is available ln greatest numbers. Key bazaar theme to se.asonal themes, public issues or local assets. ... ' i·r .:1' •• .. "' J' •' ], . ., T\tllnlll1, .... _... .,, 1m ''" '' ,\ •• Crafty ideas for gift giving or for fund-r~ising efforts are: I clockwi se, ' from top left) Driftwood and rock owls; mock stain~d glass sunburst ~nd chnCl 's tu rtle design; \ "It plays upon our imagination and brings into focus some of the more basic human Instincts: desire for ac- quisition, -expectation of something for nothing, enjoyment through group ac- tivity and an opportunity for personal creativity." I'll bet she's never been chairman of a fund-raising bazaar, one might think. To the contrary, the New York writer began as a volunteer worker, con- tributing articles to hospital gift shops, Girl Scout benefits and church baiaars. Later she formed her own bazaar crafts company, Tracydot Products and t markets her ideas nationwide. From her varied experience'" she bas authored "The Complete Book of Bazaars" (Coward, Mc Cann & Geo·gtiegan, Inc.), a complete guide for the bazaar chairman. ORGANIZATION Not just a crafts idea book, it also gives organizational plans as well .. Mrs. Britton details the whys of bazaars, Is She Ann Struck could weU be Mrs. Santa Claus in disguise. She-bas a cheerful tace. gentle disposi- tion, itiJetnatlonaJ Jove for children ana an unbeatable knack f0r turning out goodies for Christinas. After summering in Newport Beach, she beads for another pc:ipular pole, the Trunk in the Attic, her decorative arts shop in Tustin where she super- vises six part-timers who are as busy as elves. They turn ordinary yardsticks into whimsical shadow boxes, redwood scraps into candy houses, miniature flowers and figurines into personal keepsakes. For the group that doesn't want to make last year's in thing for this year's bazaar, she even describes how to scout out trends in gifts for this year and next . Patterns and directions are given for a variety of simple bazaar items, most geared to the beginner. The book is probably most vaJuable for the fledgling fimd-raiser, offering a step- by-step guide from appointment as chairman through counting the proceeds. Here are some of her suggestions for the novice : "When dividing manpower, apportion divisions to separate units with separate chairmen to achieve 1 a potpourri of flavors , representing the flair and im- agination of all the workers involved." Recruit someone outside r e g u l a r membership for art and posters, publici- ty, storage and decoration if special talents ar~ available to you. Price items in direct proportion to worth, wrap arxl display attractively and keep the aisles wide open and unclut- tered so you can accommodate the browsers. When possible demonstrate an item whose use may not be obvious. Use whatever resources you can for Jdeas -women's periodicals are a good source or ideas. "Take advantage ot available talent -green thwnbs, gourmets, carpenters, bookwonns, housewives (masters of making something out of nothing and frequently abounding in u n r ea l i z e d talents ). Obtaip all the good will, free labor, ingenuity of working women, husbands, relatives and friends. Contact suppliers. They may have someUting they want to give away. Whether for fund-raising events, gifl giving or for your own home, 'Us the season for arts and crafts. TIMELY TIPS A timely publication for ille seasor is Barbara Stephan's "Creating Wilt Tissue Paper" (Crown Publishers, Inc.) Her suggestions, fully illustrated ir black and white and color photograph~ and sketches, range from the simplest most inexpensive ideas to more elaborat designs. 'Chapters are devoted to tissue a·~ a surface deooraUon; used on metal. glass and wood; on eggs; paper cutting ; decorated papers; collage; pape r flowers ; Japanese paper folding or origami; two-shaded . paper design; ex periments ln light and shade an miscellaneous techniques such as ~ on candles. Especially helpful for the novice are a glossary ot tenns and an index of suppliers for necessary materials. Among items suggested in the volun:: are personalized stationery ind greetin , cards, gift bo.1.es and household con- tainers, children's blocks and playing cards. Paper flower ideas are hom>wed fro1n the world over-from American beauties to delicate Japanese designs. · Tissue paper Is combined with othc·· elements to make collages, mock stainc6 glass and even lamps. Seasonal decor· lions. 'lbe possibilities are endless. Mrs. Claus? exposure, all the time, throughout their lives," she said. "They absorb lessons in beauty automatically and don't even know they're learning." Mrs. Struck is still interested in Oilnese children and often teaches those born here how to speak Chlnese because their parents want them to retain the culture. For travelers and businessmen, she offers conversational Putungbwa (Man- darin dialect) through the Rancho Santiago Community College District Continuing EducatiOlL "This is the classical language spoken by educated Orinese people. It ts con- sidered the eY<ryday langliage of Pe- king," s~e explained. vegetables and three sauces, empti it on.to a sizzling griddle, chases around once wiill a Jong shuttle a1 J swishes it deftly back into the bowl Speed of preparation is similar t l the copier oxnmen::ial where the product ts fintshed after a quick Wl' · . aro1.11d the machine. The succulent concootion may be eate 1 with-chopsticks or scooped into a crus puffed roll that must be the Chine · version of tortillas. But back to her shop, recognized ; : a gold mine by home craftsmen a l clubwomen gearing up for boutiques. "We don't have a bit of bump cbenL : in the place," Mrs. Struck said. "f .~ ;ipecialize in a few crafts at a Um . We want the results to look· good ar, t expensive so thl!! p(!rson is proud her handiwork." ' broken·hearte~ stuffed dragon; and Having made the rounds · of pro- fessional home and gilt shows, Mrs. struck knows that illis year's theme is the natural, old-fashioned Christmas so her stock .roo,m is full of straw wreaths and bolts of plaid ribbon. The crafts expert learned Oriental cooking during the 15 years she spent in Otina white her father was a missionary and teaches these techniques, too. She also searches for authentic restaurants, even such remote places as a Mongolian barbeCbe tucked away in a Santa Ana shopping center. Fonner. staff members have starl their own shops in other communitl but it doesn't seem to bother M1 Struck. • handmade Japanese picnic box. She altributes her interest in art to her childhood spent in China w.bere gold leaf, cloisonne and intricate embroidery provide everyday enrichment. Ideas are from 'The Complete Bazaar Book' and 'Creating With Tissu e Paper.' "Over there the people have total . !_ Exam·ination· ·Finds The chef takes the customer's selected ~wlful of meat strips, sh re. d de d "Our greatest service is to help peoi · t fmd a little niche or happiness, 90IT1ethi : they enjoy dolng ahd can share ·w· 1 others.'' Close DEAR ANN LANDERS : Since you are llUCh a big mouthpiece for the medical profession, how would you like to comment on the findings of. a research team from UCLA Medical Scllool? They did a sW'Vey of ~ physicians and t•arned that seven per ct11t of the doclor1 engaged In oexual lnteroowwe wtth their patients. The physicl1111-who fitted out the q,ue1tl~nn1tres (anqnymously, of cour,.) ....,. '"'t o)lly cnecotopta, .but 1atern1s1s, cenera1 practlttonen and psycbtatiists. A -•te study Indicated that of the freshman medical stu<\.,US polled, about 25 P"rcent fell that sexual In· tercoune with a patfent might be ap- prop r I ate ·-the right dreurnltance5." 1'11 bet you won't be ruding lll)'lhlng about THIS In any I I . Doctors Average of the medical journals. How about It, of sexual ability due to medication f0< Tbere ls nothing wroag wltb geltl· 1 AnnabelJe?-PM A LAWYER high blood pressure. You suggested that a second opinion, nr a lhlrd. SJm , DEAR LAWYER: Don't bet Ute rent. a a doct~r ~ght recommend a change because your husband 's doctor bas ta1 Yoa.'d be ltoDMllH. Tile resaltl of that in mechcallon. a defeatist attitude does not mean ' it ·• Hr\'ef appewed • In the Octobtt baue ~ My husband has the same problem~houtd accept Ills word as fi nal ; 1 of the AmerieU Medkll News wbicb --o~ he is taking medication for epil-no her doctor. And don't lgnor~ '. 1 eaMI t -., -el m.toe. , epsy. b there •. cbanoe that a change sl Wty 'tbal counseling mlgbl be 1 Do I wlsb to-co.._t? YH, I do. studellll llallDI IMy b<ll<ve ,....1 In-damoglng to the physlcla11-pattent rela' m medication might help him alsn? great llelp -lo both Y" ...t yow b ' Do<lon "'·-· Wll<D yoa -temmae 111111 potlea11 m1g111 be •P'. ·tlonshlp. f--I ~tioned the problem of my baod. ' sider. wbli P.et 111..-malts in every _ pro p r l ate ''•ade-r t il e rt p 't , Dr. Franch Bra«land, dhtlnguhhtd . husbands Impotence to his physician nit ti llfe,1 •lie a., TV repilrmea, ,, pe~trlst of Ute hslltuf,e for Uvlng Ql)d he said, "You have to expect this Discover how tO be date bait withe ~1 ttr,mea, .,......_ tract ~' tUt l;>OES •ll'priae me. Ill Hartford, saggested that the survey sort of thing when_ a .man . is taking falling hook, Urie and sinker. I 1 drlwn. trlivellq: ........, adOrl, t. Not IM tf &be dodorl wn Wflom I may well have 1hown vastly different a drug to prevent epdepl!c seiiures. '"' Landers's booltlet, "Dating Oo's ri 1. "ranee adjmtln. prwet:Mf,, ... eorporate dlae111H4 tbe nrvey ClOlilld eeVlllon results bad tt bee.a taken In Vermont Can you shed a little light on this Don't!." will help you be more poir 1 exeettlvtt-ald yu, even &awyen, that •ader wUt clrcamstanca it woald be rather than C&Ufornla. To the comments subjecl? -'NEED HELP URGENTLY and sure of yourself on dates. Sc 1 sevo percent npn ror kuoodlln' wt.tb '1"rl&llt." . I of both gentlemea, l say, "Amen.". DEAR N.H.U.: I wish people wouJd 35 cents In coin along wllh a le 1 potlooll la'I oo lllaljllag. I oerloally Dr. Mlcbad De Baley, famoa1 _fleart . bear In mind tbat 50 tl"r ~nt of all Ille stami>ed, self·add,.....ed enveJ°"" 1 ' --Ille flpre lo .., lower It .._ aed prestdetl of 1M Baylor DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recently you ph)'slclana now practlclag medicine your request to Ann Landers, P.O. 1· · ao11f IM aloremeallooed lleldl. O.U.10 el Medicine It Hoa-. llld printed « letter from "Not Dead Yet" graduated In the bollom hall of their 3346. 222 W. Bank Dr., Chicago, 11 Ao for Ill perttiit el lilt ..-.1 -~ bebnlor -Id be Ull'emety complaining 'abont her husband 's toss class. ' -·· ,, ~ .. ., l.~ , • I ' • < • • Your Hor~scope Gemini Should Check Savings, Investments Coast Clubs i·n Holrday Mood WEDNESDAY N0VEMBER 28 By SYDNEY OMAl\R • ARIES (March 2l·April 19): Accent now Is on elevating your posillon. Strive to make room for .yoursetl at top. YOu gain plaudits: door of OJ>- portunity opens for possible advancement. Key is t o dl~omatlcaily weave and win. Don't force. Gentle persuasion will accompli!h purpose. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): PubllCJlion, distribution op- portunities increase. You are able to sharpen polnt or view. Travel could be high on agen- d•. Accent ianguage, educa- tion. Be selective. Highlight integrity. See situation as it really exlsb. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Empbasls ls on n\oney han- d}~ by others. O>eck savings. investment programs. Get on top of financial situation. Leave nothing to wishful thinking. You can deal from pos!Uoo of strength. Gain cooperation of partner, mate. CANCER (J.iine 21-.iuly 22): Obtain hint from Gemini mesuge. Do plenty of listen- ting, obserling. Permit mate, partner to take initiative. You lack sufficient "evidence." Legal affalrs may be spotlighted. Aries, L I b r a persons could figure in im- porlant ways. perlment. Ask que st Io ns . Answ!rs are obtainable.~. __ UBRA !Sept. 23-0cl. 22): Study Vlrgo message. Build on solid structure. Ooose course which Is familiar. Going too far afield now would be an error. Emphaslie security. Older individual does have your best interests at heart. Know it and respond accordingly. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21]: People seem deteremined to "!ell you stories." You receive numerous reports, manY' con· ceming nei ghbors and relatives. Maintain emotional ~uilibrium. Take time to ctleek details. Realize no one is giving up something for nothing. Assess costs. SAGmARIUs (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 l: Put ideas to work. Merely talking · is not enough. Key now is to test. Invest in your own abiUties. Pay and collect. -~alance budget and books. Gem.inJ, Virgo persons could figure prominently. Tlm· ing rerpaim sharp. CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jan. 19): Spoilight is on ~rsonali­ ty, personal appearanCe. Take lead. Insist on quality. You gain added recognition. Be confident and let others know you intend to go all the way. Vitality makes comeback. You receive compliments, recogni- tion ~ and cash. MRS. RICHEE MRS. FOLEY Wedding Rites Vows Repeated RICHEE-HANSON Debra Sue Hansen, daqghter of the J. R. Hansens of Costa Mesa, became the bride of Roger David Rlchee during ceremonies in the O>sta Mesa First United Methodist Church. Attendants were Lo r i Hansen, Amy Newman, Mary Jo Cripe, Maureen Woodard, Mrs . David Brooks, Peter Afaehren, Tyler Wood, Mark Bishop, Steve Skon and Paul Hansen. The bride is a graduate of Costa Mesa High School. Her husband is the son of the John A. Richees of In· d.ianapolls. FOLEY -SULLIVAN St. Catherine of S i e n a Church, Laguna Beach was the setting for the nuptial ceremony linking Patricia Ann Sullivan and 1"homas Gayle Foley Jr. They are the daughter and son of Mrs. Ann Sullivan of Laguna Beach and the late Mr. John H. Sullivan and tl'.e Thomas Gayle Foleys of San Clemente. Officiant was the Rev. James Diamond. Cheryl Wright served as maid of honor and bridesmaids were K a t h i e Ryan, Marie WOQd, Jane Foley and Mrs. Jeffrey Garvin. Attending as best man was Gary Foley,· and ushers were Jacques Allewaert, Robert Haggstrom, Robert Sutton and Douglas Holland . The bride, who earned a BS in biological sciences at UCI. is a graduate of Mater Dei High School and attended Marymount College. · Her husband is a graduate of St. Bernard's High School. Los Angeles and received a BA in political science at 1.-0yola University. Currently he is a law student at the University of Notre Dame. Secretaries Kathy Flanagan has lie.en installed as president of the- .newly formed Orange County O>apter of the Architectural Secretaries Association. Serving · on her board will be Alice Chamberlain and Karen Meligeni, vice presidents; Louise Hamen and Chere Geske, secretaries, and Janet Navta, treasurer. Moose Lodge A dime-a.dip d l n n er i! planned for Saturday, Dec. 1; at 6 p.m. by Costa Mesa Olap- ter, Women of the Moose, in the Costa Mesa 1'1oose Home. A business meeting is slated for Thursday, Dec. 2, et 8 p.m. and a children 's Christmas party for Sunday, Dee. 23. at 2 p.m. In the Moose Home. OC Singles Orange Coast Singles have circled Saturday, Dec. 1, from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. for a Christmas dance in the Costa Mesa Golf and ,Country Club. Music will be provided by the· Al Morello orchestra. · HB Juniors Two new pro jecls for the Juniorettes, a youth auxiliary sponsored by the Huntington Beach Junior Woman's Club will be Wld.er way in the next few weeks. The group will s t u f I Christmas stockings f o r residents at Fairview State Hospital and take patients from Hunt_i!t~ Valley Con- valescent Hospital on nature walks irt' the area. Sigma Kappa Orange County Alumnae of Sigma Kappa will offer an Old·fashioned Ch r i s t m a s Boutique Saturday, Dec. l, from 9:3D a.m. to 3 p.m. In the ..san.ta Ana Assistance Leap Clubhouse. Proceeds will benefit lhe bum-UJ\lt at Orange County Medical Center and cam- persbips for Camp Titan Jn the San Bernardino moun- tains. ' Democrat. Offloers will he elected for the Huntlnglon Beach-Foun- taln Valley Democratic Club at 1 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 1. in the Huntington Beach home o1 the sam l!aka!ns . Lyric Opera The Christmas Fair, a Renaissance style event to benefit the Lyric O p~ r a Association of Orange County will run SatW'days and Sun- days, Dec. l and 2, B aod '· Offered will be Items rang· ing from collectibles and an- tiques to Chrismas decor, arts and crafts and jewelry. Daughters A bake sale is scheduled -for 5aturday, Dec. 1, from 10 -a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Lucky Store, Westminster, f;ly Court of the Blessed Sacra- ment, Catholic Daughters of America. Job Seminar Who? Me? Go Back to School? is the theme of the college and career op- portunities seminar Saturday, Dec. l, in the OC'C Student Center. The seminar, sch e du 1 e d from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. will be conducted by in· structors and professionals from several college depart- ments. CHS Ayudantes Auxiliary ChUdrtn's ltome Society bas planned a Cbrutmas Boutique for Saturday, Dec. l, from 9 a.m. to S p.rh. In Shepherd of Ille Hiiis United Methodist Church, Mission Viejo. Ticket! will be available at the door and from auxiliary members. Philharmonic A silent auction of homemade crafts and baked goods will highlight the 5alur· day, Dee. 1, polluck dinner of the Huntington Beach Ph 11 harmonic Committee, Orange County Philharmonic Society. Members and guests will gather at 8 p.m. in the Hun- tington Beach home ol Mr. and Mrs. William Thomas. Mesa-Harbor· Club George Popa and h i s orthestra will provide music for the dimer dance planned for Saturday, Dee. !, by the Mesa-Harbor Club in the Holi· day Inn, Costa Mesa. The evening wl!I begin with cocktails at 7 with dinner at 8 followed by dancing unlil 1 a.m. Nursery Westminster Nursery School will benefit from a Christmas boutique scheduled from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Saturday, Dec. ·l. The sale will be hosted on the grounds of St. Edwards Eptscopal Church, Alumnae Faahlon Belles a holiday themed f-l,;ci-, Is sched.uled !pr Saturday, Dee . 1, al 11 a.m. by the Onlnge County Alumnae Club ol Alpha Gamma Delta Fratemlty. Proceeds from Ille event In tho Mllslance League ol Southe rn Callfoml1, Hollywood, will ao to camp Palvika, a camp for han- dicaJlllO<I children llJXl!lllOred by Ille Crippled Children's Society. AARP Mariners chonlI group from Marina High School will pro- vide entertainment for 1 the Huntifl8ton Beach Chapter. American Association o f Retired Persons Sunday, Dec. 2 from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Murdy ConunlUlity Center. The group will host a boutique baz.aar. Caucus Frances ''Sissy" Farenthold, chairwoman of the National Women's NiUcal Caucus and ftrsrwoman-to-be-nominated-- for vice pre!ldent of the United Stales, will speak Sun· day. Dee. 2, In Orange County. The 2 to 5 p.m. cocktail fwld.rai!lel' will aid the Orange O>unty Oiapter. NWPC. Hools for the event will be the Leon Lyom, Lido Isle. W~lmlnster. J;:=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::==; Punch and Judy Yu1etide Trading COmpany wilt theme the Saturday, Dec. t, Christmas gift boutique planned by the Punch and Judy Guild of Children's Hospital of Orange County. Mrs. Robert Thomas, Newport Beach, will host the noon to 4 p.m. sale in her YosYlrtW.. .. onh• 5'""a Clan Old LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Ac· cent Js on work, basic issues and general vitality. Nulrl· tional requirements should be given speclat attention. You could embark on project which is demandµtg. Give yourself every edge. l,M, Aquarius pen;ons lltJIY ~ In picture. .. VIRGO (Aug; 2}Sepl. 221: AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Period of solitude is in- dJcated. Remember that being alone is not n~s.!arily tbe same as being lonely. Build Spiritual resources. Heed inner .voice. Pisces, Virgo persons · could figure prominently. PISCES (Feb. !!I-March 20): Accent now is on friendship. hopes, desires. You get what you want -choose wisely. Relationships are intensified. Nothing happens halfway. It is all or nothing. Know It and don't play games with emotions. You cou1d be a big winner. Marital Appetite Wetted? t 0 home. Handmade items will be featured. Tickets are available from guild mem- ben. n =~"' ---·-· .. NEWPORT BLVD. ' You may bs dealing with children. Con.sid!rations of security are of paramount im· partance. Where and bow you live is spotlighted. Make changes. You need not feel there is only one way. E1- By ERMA DOMBECK .q,.,, FRANCIS- '\,,ORR J' FINE STATIONEHY /U .. tte'J"W.ti.• llwttatienl !(J"' .................. CHRISTMAS CARDS Dlsliric!lve Giiis. JIJJ (.[tlJT 111,IWlf •U-1111 CINU Ill IAl ·CllWlllll l IAlllll CURRENT FASHIONS AT DISCOUNT PRICES lMU 411111M et l"""'l111nt minu1n "'°"' C.OSt• M- •l'ld N"""""1 8Hcll Diiiy lM Frkler tll ' PM. 961-1111 Golden Needle's • s ;«l4t °' de "Jfled Great for Everything ! Reg. 2.~5.98 Now 1.97-4.77 yd. Gofden 'Tleedle FABR1cs SOUfM COAlT •lAZA • CAlllOUllfL .. lfVlL Ol'lll IVllM;l I S1MIM'1 for the womon who cores ... Do Something Different for the Holidays! fa .. • -at Jll far !twit nori<eabte dfff,,..Me. O.V.loi1 )'Glir-n lftdlvld .... !ltr ond 1..,,,,_ r-oppearorice eatilr & notvrollr In a ,.,,1que envlrG11-nt t+.a1 work1 for ya... fnior Ille holida)'l l'l>Ol"e lha11 ewert C.11 i.lloy fo1 • c-,i;....tory 1:1nalysl1 & holiday co11rl9 uh..,lo. A leouh!ul Wo,toGo , .. John Robert Pa.vers $(hool1 tor Wo"'•" ol All A9t1. . . OIANGI 3 Town & Country • !147·8228 GOVIG OV'C FOR DINNER? You'll tow ·ereperfe the only Ot1nge County restaurant serving a wide choice of crepe en trees ind I desserts for l!'nch, dinner and supper · TRY A SPINACH SOUFFLE CRf PE - Spinach wulfletd in creptJ. lighfly sprinlcJed with pirmes•n chtts~. (~rwd with cheese s•uct on requell). OPOtOM.Y' tL1lOAM Ttl. ~S6-122S Mllft.·lM'il.., lrllll;liCN fr l& s.t, 'I~ \Ul Sun.'d 9PM. lewltl CaM! Plau -CMI• 111"9 ...... ..... _.,._ ... ._..... ---·---l- Christmas .. ::. Pantsuits in .. alf Sizes 141/2 to 261/2 Ladi&1of all ages (and sizes) love pantsuits. Especially when they fit like Ella Nor's. May we help you <Mose the right one for her? DRESSES -ROBES SWEATERS GOWNS SLIPS . "BLOUSES GIFTCERTIFIC.4TESAl'AIUBLE ....r,....._,, .. ·' Ella . Nor'sHALF•SIZE SHOP • • 1 •' FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH "+: .2240..MfllflllrMIH 14HuntNtftonc..t.r •• LAGUNA Hl.LLS COSTA MESA &.,... HUia Maii 1115 tMwpwt lhid. Shop Sunday 12·5 (Ercept Costo Mesa) Bankt11!'&lrlcard e ~fa.!tercharae =-:-:< ·. . . : . ""' r ' and the word 'No.' If yau want a friend, buy a dog." \~ 3 Full Service YILLAWAY ~J Laugh at me. will they? Locations in Opon 11 • 5 T.,..._y, SllMIY ~ Huntington Beach ' PRESCRIPTIONS e c111..,.. •c-ts • 00t1Ywin Lein reflll .,..r prtMnl prncnptloM ~- GoodDeed BOUTIQUE DELUXE $9.88 Gouda, Smoky (smoked chene bar), Edam · Bar, two Cheese Spreads, Sweet.Hot Mustard, Belle Fleur Cheese, Muenster, Buller X.ae1e Cheese ond Import ed candies. APPETEASER DELUXE tu.II Butter X.acte Cheese, Mild Midi« Lo~ honi, Gouda, four Cheese Spl'Mdl. Shup Cheddar Spread, Belle Fleur Oieete, Old· Fa1hloned Cracken, Banana Chlp1, Smoky {smoked cb~se bar] and Imported candles. ~MoPSGift;Paks onDl&pIIQz Avaffable ht a large varioty;lhey..,.,. In an price ranges end are 1"" most 1?r9Cious of gUtl because they can be shar.ed With others. 1bey aho'!f lhoughtflllness, reflect good taste. flatter the recipient and •peak -iifghly onllO§JWr.'Tlley are right for all ages. • • ~~~~~~~~---··· .. ~~~~~~~~~ TAKE WITH YOU OR WE 'LL MAIL! ff (tkC1t1 lc&!!!f. . &outh "oast ?J•Q OPIRDAILT COSTA MEf'•& ,_,!'...,~ ""' -•All•'""'' 1U PM • M lth.totattfttSonOl.,of,.,,,., , ... ,......., , • I . J r AMILIR TUMBLEWEEDS MUTT AND JEFF FIGMENTS NANCY -I LOVE TO v 1srr PEPARTMENT STORES , ( • MV A&lll"! HE IEVER • ASKED Ml' IF"" TEETll \'ERE REAL. '1'00t< IT FOR 6AANTED, 16'.ESS! WHA'!'S PA !WSH? WI' l'\.AYEP l't.ACKJACK 11 /../.. 1\WA.M. ---- .. • by DoucJ Wildey TUE AOVERT15tl6 A'6€JICY Bl!SIN€SS IS ONE CONSTAN.1' STATE CE CRISIS, TANKER, c.c.n •O W'IU ~e- TME SfTl.M\TION.-.S/JMEJON! -by Tom K. Ryan HAS \005~ NIM'R HOIP Of PA Ol.D SAW:'OILY 1'1'etl OILY1'RIS.S1MAKESA CHAP Hl'AL"f'Y, W!Wr'Y, ~f m'AA'? d-21 by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmmer r--~~~~~--....;_~ TELL. ME WHAi 'l'OU'VE FOUND AND !LL TELL. YOU IF' % LOST ti PEANUTS LOST AND FOUND TDDAT'S CIDSSIDU PVIZLI 1 P191'11u99dln _..,,.. .,._ 10 Moner ,. .... .......... 15 -reel 1'1 Slntltit YO!ce 17 Split ...... d1ent:2 . ..... 10 Fld.. "' .,,.,... .. ,,.,,,,..., ..... 21 NeQ1U..,. ..... 22 MNnlol ........... 47~:51 .. <19 Frenc11 rlvw 60 &Mil boy 5 1 Mane.ion 63 Na!Tow ,.., 65 Aelatlve; Abbr • 66 Steal calU• 111 DIPIOl!'lecy 112 lntl'9dllnt of 1 Down: 2 wordl: M S~le 1!15 ott-..t Joke H Plttlele 67 Large~ eaH,. -lllil Playing Clf<!I ...... 23 01 ~ l lUI DOWN 25 TM Whole 1 Mou ··- MIOW!l 2 Gre11 Lake 20 Aflff't 3 a.comas .1om tnnallation 4 Fruit decar I al lkmklg -.cl 6 Bfftle 31 F"""9 -8 C1190 unH 34 lnctlridullTy 1 CUn.i1 IPJMlt. 3!J Uilmpo1"1g 2 WOf'dt 38 Encl: Pr1l11. I Kay• 'ae EJ:PC>aor 1 A"K"ot .,. .... a: 3 "'K. IC. I(,. wons. 10 Temitrtdtll "2 &.lore ,,.,.,.., 1'°3 ll'llldtol: 11 Mcarnn Pr1ft.11; M. I. T. to. 44 ·--code _ , sorn•: 2 worda 1 .. , ....... ...,.......;- 17 " -• MISS PEACH . ' I ' • ' " T11tSday, Novtmbtr TT. lq?') DAILY PILOT j[f DOOLEY'S WORLD &OOIC Ar HIM! 11"5 GmlH' ~. SUQON' HIS I · 'lllll ·-··"'-JUST 'lll<IM8 AMiii. .. CNf'r (DidlliOL Milo\• ITl>DiS611GM f SW'! lll'U f'MWll'/ . lllllN lllS lllW:rll 1 \ 1•11 v SALLY BANANAS . BeF'oRe I LeT You 11\)To GaLLIMaLJFR'Y' ' uave. To KNO(J 'Tbu~ OCCUl'anoN. GORDO MOON MULLINS by Charles M. Sdiulz ~-----~~ GO, SILVER FLAKES! • • . MOlll , GU!* v.l-I0'5 TMli KL.lltlON'S NEW ~INKC~ ~io:MU cwa~?· \I!'• ...... • • .J ... , .. . , . ' by Mell ·' ~· by R09lt' lraclfleld 1 <lllSf' ~~EA: WON'r.HuRr By Charles Banotti ;,. ,:..,)ONDeR IF THar'5 a TRaoe I COULO LeaRN S Y MSI<.°"? r---' by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson ~'COME JloCI(, lOllt> P.- I BET A PLUS~BOTTOM PIG4Y l!#lK 'No<.U> 'SELL UKE MOT~S ! by Roger Bolen THE GIRLS DENNIS THE MENACE • Yoo'flE *'1' ~lill1E MJ. H llllNGSWWEllTNQjGmy:· I • .~ Id Ll>'IL( P1L01 Ti!Mdit}', N0vtmbtr 27, 1973 Reddy or Not, Here She Comes By MARIL VN AND HY GARDNER Q: I htar that lbe popular recordlaf artbt, Heltn Reddy, Is go!Ag all out for womta.'1 Ub. Even won an award from ont of these groups. Which one? -Diana Smith, llempstead, Loni b land, N. Y. A: Ms. Reddy received the "Great Guts" award from NOW (National Or1aniz.a lion for \Vomen ) as woman of the year. But she couldn't accept in person. At that mom- ent she "'as in prison -but as a performer, not a pris-- oner. i Apart from singing the star chatted v.'ith inmates of the Terminal Island, Calif., Federal Correction Institute, ('Glad You Asked That') Women's Division. Aotany of v.·hom are members of the Alliance for \Vomen in Prison, y,·hich sponsored her ap- pearance. Llke Johnny Cash (who entertained in prisons so often readers continue to ask if he ever served time), the lovely Ubber had a double reason to entertain at the federal pen . She not only wished to have face-to-face confrontations with those less fortunate than herself, but to inspire other stars to appear gratis at similar institu- tions. There's no doubt that Helen is Reddy, \\'illing and able to do so .,1:henever caned u.,,.,n,,.~-------- Q: What is the real meaning: of the theatrical jar- gon "laid an egg"? And who introduced II to our lan- guage? -Rodney dell., Ohaba , Neb A: The expression goes back to early vaudeville monol- ogist James Thornton. Supposedly to blame the audience ~ ili04(IW' .. ij ~·· w1 hen a joke he told fell ~ 0 -lat. When only a ~£Tf:·· sprinkling of people ·' &~····; · :~·~· :~~ed st~; :?~sak~ WAU.·ST. LAYS AH EGG "Is that a laugh? 0r ~~---..,;••rm ·.--...... ~ are you laying an ~~~.~-.... ,,., ..... '-?'1 Probabl the =~--=-,3 --------... --egg Y ~7~~ ~~ :=--~":~ ~.~~ · most talked-about ..,use .. ~~· ~j i~~£!i .. .._v.,_ or Ute phrase occurred ·~~}j ·~f~*-~~.:.:.:. at ftie time of the 19'l9 ·.;:~{~·~~""~ ~~-;~~-stock ~arket c~ash c ;'.~~,~~-,~~~ ': ·:. . when Var1etr (the b1bl~ • ·:·4d'\ ..... -..r::i "-"'••, of show busmess) head .. ':'r.43~·-· .. : . .-~ · ·-. lined a front ~ page VARIETY & EGG article: "WALL ST. LAYS AN EGG ." Q: Settle an innocent di1aireement. I claim Rudolph ValentDo's leading lady In "The Sbelk" wa1 VUma Banky. f\ty graadmotber lnslstl It wasn't. Who's right? -G. J. L. ("a nOl&alclc movie buff"),, New Haven, Conn. A: Your grandroother. Vilma Banky starred opposite Val entino in the 1926 sequel, "Son of the Sheik." But the leading lady in the origina\ 1922 silent film ''The Sheik" was actress Agnes Ayres. Q: I beard that .the real reason Helen Rays won 't act again on stage ts because of some aUment she suffers. What is It?_. L. K. 8 ., Washington, D.C. A: An allergy to theater dust, accumulating for years on the five.story walls and scenery in most theaters. "1 have been hospitalized during every production I've been jn for the last 10 years because of it ," reveals the first lady of the theater. "Two years ago, when I was hospital- ized in the middl e of rehearsal of 'Long Day's Joorney' (for the benefit of a Mexican boys' orphanage), the doc- to said: 'You 're going to die if you don't stop thls.' So I stopped . And I've done only films and TV since." Q: When Bobby Riggs wa1 on the Dinah Shore 1bow and she predicted that Btllle Jean King would beat him, be said, uput your money where your mouth is!" Wb.Jcb 1he did. Now tbe 'question, did be pay of(? -1'-trs. T. Wrtgbtson, Utlle Rock, Ark. A: A hustler yes, but a welcher no -Bobby paid off the very ne11: day. POSTSCRIPTS . FROM MARILYN. To Mrs. D. Flan· nery, St. Louis. It's true. Anna rttaria Albergbetti once had a heavyweight boxer under contracl -because she was advised that her company should dive rsify. His name was Seeman Glass ... To ~1rs. Diam Matthews, Phoenix : Your daughter is correct, unfortunately. Lon Chaney, Jr. died not too long ago ... To Frank H., Des Moines: David Huddleston is not the son of Burl Ives,. even though you think they look and act alike. The only son Mr. and Mrs. Ives have ls 23-year old Alexander ... To Gene M.D., Saint Ann, MO.: The song "Red Sails in the Sun- set" was published in 1935. Sold in exceM of a million copies of sheet music. Mu sic was by WIU Grosz (using the pseudonym Hugh Williams); lyrics by Jimmy Kennedy (using the name Jimmy Kennedy !). Send you.r quest.ions to Hy Gardner, "Glad Yo1' Asked That," care of this 1iewspaper, P. 0. Bo:t 1560, Costa 1'1esa, 92626. ltfarilyn and Hy Gardner will answer as mony questions as they can in their column, but the volume of n1ail makes personal replies im- possible. DEL WEDNESDAY NIGHT* l~i ~ TACOS ~ ••• •From4 p.m. Mak• Wtdntsday night your night lo eat out. At Dtl Taco. WednetdtY night Is Taco Night. You get three tasty 0e1· TtOot for jult 99c. Thi& Wednesday, drive thru for· a famlly .a. nll«I yo1.1 won't lorg1LAt piicu ~ou'll find hard to bt•I: NIWl'OllT HACH SANTA ANA 1 -~-l-~·~·~·!'~'~·;·;··;·~··· 4tfi '""' -I· ., Ca r• Newport Fwy. TUSTIN lad Hiii ... , -AM""· \ HUNTINGTON iEACH -·--., ......... .. COSTA MESA 11H._ llf hlmt• Foaar Slaoavs Closing - • 'Campohell_o,' 'Garden' Opening A p.Pir or serious dramas mate their appearances on the Orange Coast community theater scene this week, while four other local shows ring down their curtaiM t h i s weekend. major roles. Reservations 1142-the Third Step 11>eater, 18" r.111. Newport Blvd., Costa M ... Intermission Tom Titus -"11>e Happy Time . • • ReaervaUOll& 646-13'!. ,ris, Dick Stewart J r., Wllb Rydbeck. Joe Trankla. Ray Oien, Sharrie Domey, t.tel Grau and Bob Peach. Murray. Reservations 494-074.1. -"A Thousand Clowns." Last stagings Friday and Saturday at 8:30 at the Costa f\1esa Civic Playhouse on the Orange County Fairgrounds. Closing performances a r e carded Thunday t h r o u g h Saturdav lo< this family com· edy at the San Clemente Com- munity Theater, 202 Avenid1 C a b r I 11 o·, San Clemen· te. Among director Richard Andersen 's cast are Tom Erickson, Richard Kosbab, June Mims and Gordon Smith. Reservations 492-0465. Pali Tambellini's cast includes CONTINUING itJ month- Bob Engman, Diana Spencer, long run at South Coast CALLBO'ARD -Th· Fountain Valley Commun!I· Theater will hold audition· Saturday at 7 p.m. f o r al' evening of one.act plays t be presented Jan. 25·27. Fou· dlrectQrs will be casting twC' comeCties and two dramas for adulla and teens or all ages at-the theater, 18280 Mt. Baldy Circle, Fountain Valley. fo~lrst on the scene, opening tonlaht and playinf through Saturday, is t h e Lido Isle Players' product i on of "Sunrise at Campobello," a play detailing t h e early life of Franklin 0 . Roosevelt. ~n. on Saturday, the Irvine Communijy 'Ibealer launc:hes the Edwljrd AJbee drama "Everything in the Garden" for a three-weekend run. \Vhile Saturday ~ opening night for Irvine, it'll be closing Herman Boodman is direc- ting the production, which will be staged at 8:30 for its five- nighl engagement at the Lido Isle Clubhouse. 7fll Via Lido 'Sound. Newport Beach. Reser- vations 67~. Repertory through Dec. 15 ls Adam Sinyk.in and Bernard tifoliere's comedy "The Would-BACKSTAGE -Or an g e Simon. Reservatiolls 556-5300. Be GenUeman,.. P 11 y 1 n g Coast College will host the -' ' Monique . ''Randy \Vednesdays through Sundays Opfn Theater of New York, Keene 's production of the at 8 o'clock. David Emmes an improvisational company, French suspense drama at the is directing the stylized pro-in a. p e r f o r m a n ce of Jluntington Beach Playhouse, duction. "Nigblwalk" 1'1ursday at 8 ZllO Main St., Huntington Don Tuche, Leslie Jones, p.m. in the OCC auditorium. Beach, winds up Friday and Darren Kelly, Afary Fleming, Admission to the unscripted Saturday at 8:30. Barbara Michael Hume and Sandra play -which changes every Crooker , Denis Thomas and Banks head the ~ cast at time it's perfonned -is free. Maureen Shrubshole take the _.'.'.~~~~'.'....'.::::!_.:::~::,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,,I McCORMICK P'ILIAJI night not only for the Lido Isle play but also for "Last of the Red Hot Lovers" at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse, "~1onique" at the Huntington !leach Play house. "A Thousand Clowns" at the Costa 'Mesa Civic Playhouse and "The Happy Time" al Lhe San Clemente Community Theater. '1EVERYTHING IN the Garden" makes its Orange County debut as the second proOuction in the Irvine Com· munity Theater's season of county premieres. 'Ille drama opens Saturday and plays Fridays and Sa turd ays through Dec. 15 at the Hum anities Hall Playhouse on the UC Irvine ~ampus. Ron and Carol Filian play the leading roles of a couple Jiving beyond their means and under social pressu re. John Loughman portrays thei r rich neighbor, Reg Park is their enlighted son and D. D. Calhoun is cast as the mysterious visitor who raises their standard of living. Others in the Irvine cast are Sylvia Lee, Robert Sax. Joyce Skidmore . Bob Pittsford. tifary Benton and Jack Ogborn . Curtain time is 8:30 at the UCI playhouse. Reservations 557-7297. THI OUTSTANDINCi fAMILY 5HOW Of THE HOLIDAY SU.SONI "BIG FOOT" • "NORTH COUNTRY" NOW THIU TUl5DAY --"BLUME IN LOVE '' + Rwa O'N"' "THE THIEF WHO CAME TO DINNER"' lot• I• Color Ill PLAYING THE central role of FDR in the Lido production will be Jay McCormick. Paula Ertz portrays his w i f e . Eleanor, with Nat ~Uchaud cast as his mother, Sara Delano Roosevelt . Other ma· jor assignments are taken by Patrick Brosnan as Louis 11owe and Gloria 'Soss as ~tissy LeHand. LOWERING THEIR cur· Fri.-Sat.-Sun . tains after final performance l!===F:ro~m~~l2~:~3~0==='~~~~~~~~~~~1 this weekend will be these I· four productions: Completing the Lido Isle cast a r e Don Soss, Graham Tingler, John Lay m a n , Claudia Grau, ti.1ark Harrison. Jackson Wilcox, George Har· -"Last of the Red Hot Lovers." This Neil Simon comedy resumes tonight and plays through Saturday at 8:30 in the Laguna ti.1ou lt Qn Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, La!]Una Beach. Jan Arvan is directing Walter Dudek in the title role, sup- ported by Patricia McQuade , Janice Hart and Genevieve _,. -•~'--'<.:• CINEDOME 20 ' .. -·~·.:. .'... .,,,~~:• .... -.. -·'""" CtlllODMl 21 :· "' ~·.:· ...... " ......... ~, 9111tr1 StTltiUln4 AoOlrt AHllord "THE WAY WE WEI!" IP'GI ''SOUND OF MUSIC" ICil ••• ,"ROMEO & JUILfT" (GPJ "JEIEMY" ••• "OKLA.HOMA CRUDE" CPGI sat., Sufi. 1--. & Hol. l :UP'llll Hotel 0Ytrl >r• W""I HJl!SUS CHRIST IUl"lltlTAk" "CONCERT ~ IANGLAOl!SH" ..Ill lft ColllHI CG I llliftO.... ..... S•IMrl .... "M'A•l'M" Dtfly At 11:--t:JI 5, ..... ,,,. t 1JI l'M l'lUI Cl rfMn t11Clltorl "IAnLE OF THE AMAZONS" ... a1ntr1 Stnl&and "UI' TKE SAKOBOX'' Bolh 111 ColorVa 1•1 • "M'.l."S'K" In Col1rl (1'0) "SHANGHAI KILLERS" lll "ASH WEDNESDAY" IR) ... "STRAW DOGS" Ill _,. ,. -·.·1 SIAD/UM •!~;;, "So!MflrMS A Gr.at Notlo•" IPGI ,. AND .. .a.!.l.U.!~.J'..:. "RAGE·• r.GI JACK Mc.ALISTER OSWALD J. SMITH BILLY GRAHAM 5 Hours llil Wotldll .Evangelism Special Tues. Nov.27 5pm to 10pm Channel 9 •. ,.T. TEDD SMITH AL KUHHLf. World Literature Crusade presents a unfque television docum•ntatton of system1tic evanaetism tc every home in nations wh•r• one third of th• wotld• people live. With 415 denominations coopera1in& World Literaturt Crusade conducb literature distribution in 210 oountries. NOW AT aoTH CINlMAS A s.ass.v Siamese cat le<1ds the F".8.1. on the wildest chnse Qf all! EAN JOfl!ES •HAYLEY MILLS • ED WY 1 ........ ENGAGIMfNT . SIMi!SUID == THE WAY WE .... --~ .. ~--..­··----~ HllD OYIR • lrl 1111 ' ........ . "NEWPOHT ( -.. ' , .. , lnKO LM • "ENTElt TKE CltAQOJIH "TRAIN ltOllElll" • • .,. 111 c ..... (It) "SUPER SURFING" "LIQUID SPACE'' ly Dole DcvJ& 7:10 &: f :JO I_. IY9tllllt ''WESTWORLD"' AND "SOLVENT GRUN'~ \ • ~!?! ,, "JEREMY" IPGI At 7 & 10:13 P.M. ..... ''THE STERILE CUCKOO" IPGI At 1:40 CALL THIAnl POI SUNDAY MATINll SCHIDULl MANN THEATRES WALT DISNEY'S hllarious comedy TllAT DARN C4'T w ... ~. Tws. e:ts. ,....,..._ "',. Sw~·l;4'-W:U .,,._1 "'DUMIO TtM Flying Elaph•nt" WliO. MOii. TU•S.·J & 11:• TMUIJ. Tlln1 IUJl,·lt1• a:U-7 6 It:• m=.~i.~u) ·~14t.ns1 ... ILIZA•ITM TAYLOR Hlll•Y •ONDA .. ASH WEDNESDAY" Ill + Jiiii ..,., .... "" tllol1 NOIMAN IOCKWILL WID. MCN.-'tUt:S.·l rlM1lJ THUltl ttw'I SUPll,·14:» J11J.J,1J.t :• Greg Signs HOU. VWOOD (UPI) i Greg Morr!J, ]OIJ8 a mombor ol the dtl\Jnct "MIJatoo: imposalble" aeries, will .play _ a Rueot rol< with MIU Con- nors oo 11Mannlx11 th.ls ...... -· LIDO "~""' ill A'.: II li.tlU .l.1<"! " LI(.( I ' , i , I\~ DCLUSIVll "THE BATTLE OF THE AMAZONS" ••• ''CATCH 2211 Both In Color (RI IYet. llf 7 PM. CNtl• .. n h••w fro• 2 PM lu1c.tn A.,.., ..... , "'rlAll 111-4070 --IKMUD Mlllll e IOO To\YlOI THI DIADlY TIACKIRS tPOI THI Ontll !POI '"" D<••• ....... ot ,,_ ....... ''-·' ••1·2•11 Plv1 e MA•lO ntOMAI JINNY JIG ...... 11 ••• s. . .tCl••-Go• .. ,, ...... Sl4·1111 ~ rwo •'"'' lllTil "'"""" AT DARN CAT IOI PU.IS 1 DUMIO !Gl """=== ._ .......... " . . . ...... , .•. . . . ...... -..... 111·1162 ... _.. ... MMlY Mll THAT DAIN CAT !GI nvs 1 DUMIO IOI ~--•... -·~ '''·721) ~­,, ...... ... -... .. 11. $4$-llll All C..... SJIHhll ,.,...roml "EL POCHO" I "IL HISC> N.ODl60" c..-.. lafWll11 ,.rkel ( l.sntN ILOWS Of THI Dl4G0N 12. DUii. Of ttON "''' ... (:I. ™'-~-~?'~'§";";;:'==:' Son Olo .. r..,, ' ' I Co.ni,.,.. 011~-· 11)•150$ ........... ._ "'41.TknUllMll M*A*s•H,. ~VH'9rl YIVt LKll Gvnfltfltlf Ask Andv ol Kids Like To • .. TONIGHTS-- TV IDGHLIGlffS ABC D 9:00 -Show Business Salutes Milton Berle. An hour·long special observing Uncle Milty 's 60th anniversary In show business hosted -and roasted -by the Friars Club. CBS D 9:30 -Cry Rape. This candid drama deals with the delicate problem of curbing one of the nation's least understood major crimes. NBC D 10:00 -Police Story. John Saxon plays an offiC!)r investigating a phony charge plate ring. Howard Dull, David Canary, Rory Calhoun and Tina Louise are featured. TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Evening NQvtMltft 27 ·:oom~~ -lflll'.Mll'•f-""" _ ... -""'' om SPM. A fi'lt-hour r1ll1lous telt· thOn wltll hoat Jack McAllslet. Con· iE,~lbM I , """ ·1o11 .. , ... (mus) 'S2-Bln1 Crosby, Jin• W1- m1n. em_,..,...., m-....... 1:30 00 ~ill -" ...... . ID-: ctOI "" Mr •-(dr•> '6J-Devid Hemminp. millions in c.sh In 11eh1np for their issu1tnce not to blow up 1 portion of Honolulu wifl'I 1n ltomic • bomb. 1=.Mflll-- 1:00 D 0 00 &I Tiit lblido• "l>dJ In 1 Trip" M1r;lcia11 Alltl'lony Bltkl "ruds~ 1 mtn's mind In ~ to local• a nrt book stoltn from • museum. Krtstl111 Holland (llt:Stt. rn n.ii...°"' D @ w m 11p1c1411h1• ......_ Sllltta N1ltlll ltN: A ont-hout IJ*l•I obsenln& Milton Btr1e's 60ttl 1nniY!rsery In show llvsinw. Tht fri1rs Club n>1st ii m11\td traditionalt,. bJ 1 fond ar11I tun·fltttci ribblnr of t11t ruest ot honor by fellow comtdiam and I""':.:=~"""" 'it.-..... ..... -Noclllt f1patia llJ 00 19ml-t:!OID llifJ (1)1 m 11!1Cffi!1 Cry iiitV lrtril'it silt '*I A cenclld dr11111 Milfl1 with Mtr lrtrMll CM tttlicltt problem of curbl111 OM W... ~ al the 111Uon'r lellt unclmlDod mt· lhl111 bsJ' jor ctlma. Tbt ptOductlon tumlna llMll tht lntrlnlsc rep:uJlllnct of this D1Mtt T1llltn '1Pt of felony from the vtrious Utile laclts poinb of vitw of trios• lrM:>lvtd; 7:00 I(]) D m..... tht rictlms; llll law tDf«tttMfll Bowli111 lor Dllllfl oftlctrs; society incl tht ICCUstd. Movie: (C) (1llr) "'latf1 ~ r1pht hlrns11f. Alldm M1rmric:O, (rum) 'SJ-l.1111 T11111tt, fticitdo Ltslle Wood1, P!ttt Coffield, Crq Mont1lb1n. MU11M1 1nd Jmph Siroll lter. s.t1rl ti AftMtlrt fE DOUT PerfannMCt ''Thi lhfJ· 11.M lJlrJ !Jnd Trio" A seven-prorr•m dassi· M4lll S4* ut music senu ffOm Maryllnd. (f) I Dt11M If..... tll LI Killl1 ~ Ql'Jfadwallilaitnl ~.~-IO:tlOllJ(i)&),_ SllrY "lltlllo "-1 on CndiF.lofln Soon pall• •11 ( Cl)> Kell M1w otflclr lnvt$tiptin1 • phony c:Mrp. e ,,... ._ pt•te rlnr who pous: u • *"""" UtW J II l'tlldl to be bniu1ht into tht OWP. How· - Pri•on Stabbing DeSalvo Murder Suspect ' Quizzed WALPOLE, Ma,.. (UPI! - An Inmate at WalP.Ole State Pr1S<>n Is Moect<:d 'ol ldlllng the "Boston Sirang1er," Albert H. DeSalvo, but oo motivo has been .. tablished, according to authorltiei. DeSalvo'a pajama..:bld body was found Monday morning in his room In the prison hospital, and authorities said he had been dead at that time "up to 10 boors." District Attorney George Burke said an inmate was suspected in the killing, but "there has been no arrest and (IN S!fORT ... ) we're not even close to it. But somebody is under suspi- cion. We're tracking-down a motive rlgbt now. We 've got several leads." e Red Shelling PHNOM PENH-(UPI) Communist forces laid down mortar barrages on both sides ~ Kompoog Speu today In an apparent attempt t o outflank governmen t troops who are trying to reopen Highway 4 to the deepwater port or Kompong Som, field reporters said. The road has been cut sioce Nov. 11 just southwest of Mohasaifl€, 36 mile.s southwest oC Pltnom Penh: But the sh<ll- lng al Kompo~ Speu today was U miles closer to Phnom Peril. The two barrages total- ing 20 rounds ~ Dnm mortar fire WOlBlded five civilians and two soldiers, military """""" said. e Billet's Back BARTOW, Fla. (UPI) - A 16-man -3Ctlba div in g ex - pedition detained for five days in Cuba flew h>me today after paying a $11,000 "repair bill" on Its chartered plane_. Robert Miller, 23, wore cllarg· ed with robbery .. d borglary and Miller w.., al80 charged with assault with a deadly weapon for allegedly shooting a security guard. Ball was set at $totl,OOO each. Chargts against a third ·suspect, Diane Davis, 18, were dropped by the District Attorney's ol!lce. e Pleas Filed LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Ail 22 defendants In t h e multimillion-Oollar insurance .fraud case involving EqUity Funding Corp. of America - descrjbed by investigators as llle biggest deception In llle insuran<:e industry's history - have pleaded innocent. U.S. District Court Judge Jesse W. CUrt.is heard the pleas Monday, then ordered defense attorneys to file pretrial motions by Jan. 7, with replies due from the U.S. · Attorney's office 30 dayS after that. e Studfl Slated SAN FRANCISCO (AP) A $330 million expansioo or San Francisco Internat!ooal airport has been delayed by San Francisco C o u n t y supervisors. Supervisors voted 8-1 Mon· day to postpooe approval of the project's environmental impact report !or 30 days until some questions about it are answered. The ooly opponent was Supervisor Diane Fein· stein who wanted to reject the study immediately. e Dour.re Death MADERA (UPI ) -Two teenaged boys were IOUDd shot to death on a dirt road just north of here Monday in an apparent double suicide. The victims were identified as Greg Lyon, !5, and Mark Metzger, 14, both students at Madera High &hool. Investigators said both boys had ta1Ud of suicide with friends over the past !ew days. '1llf5NY, Novembtr 27, 1971 D~LY fl LDT J 1 I MUTUAL FUNDS I "'. Vlfll -F•I· o•••rus •• , ••tel FM 11.1111.eo KUDOll ,.,..I lttd fll I• I lltl 11 0r't1 ,Cl M.ot 11,06 l'I~ '""° M) 6,U l11it 111'1 \4,"n: H.11 •1411 Intl mw #I• l9'~ ,.. ).JI l..D J II CwWI l.U 'Hi ~tM 14.1' l._1' CH Oii ~ DfYI Lv ll.., 1$,U .i.w pt i:ll' 4 •.w '·"' Floll'llllt n -.-14 Cl' S. lfl(fft •.C 1.11 JW.fl 1111 ,U J. 11 )l,h lt,JI tM fUW Inc. J•CI C.... t.6S M.JI Jk&fl Sit ,•1 1,t 1 $ AIO 011.,1 · E&IE 11\11 S.10 l.lO Jollftl.111 n .11 tlJl M Gw t.Oll •.ti .._.., £-cilt Of' ).01 1: .. 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I. !rt:°',"" •.tJ ..... ANC:NOlt • Trtnd ti.sense Alfl 1u1 1.11 t." a •.s. 1.11 GltOU•; PlfllAN(IAL Ind 1111 t ... 10 GMA J'UNOS: Glotll J,f1 •.u FltOGlllAMS! l utntrn t.n 10.U (f9 SM .... 1.06 Fnl lnw 1,oi 1.10 fin Oyn ,,ts l .t s LUINI In t .U 10, lnv t .tl 10.11 GtwUI 1.10 I.II Fin 11'11 1,01 1.01 MAU CO: Tr\! 7.lt P.tl lll(om 6.tP P.M Fin lni; S.W S.W "'""" 1.lol 1. Vtntur l.OI P.IS Vtnlur 1 ... 1.42 Vtftt J.61 J.61 lnlp F 1.11 .... StnHfl 8 t .21 t .1P W• N1U \1.03 U.09 hlFa VI 10.U 11.11 Mau F 10.as 11. $8 11.(,r 10.U 10.11 Alt1on l .W l.11 ,.IRST MASS-fftCL : '9 6tnF 11.6:111.11 AllOI• f I .It 7.12 INYISTORS1 MIT 10.1111.11 Swtl Inv 1.11 1.U AXIi 011.C Fd t.U S.OP MI G n .10 u 2 SW Inv G S.61 •. 12 HOUGflTOfll: Grin Fd I.to J.tl MIO 11.lllJ:t SOvr"ln IO.•lll .M FWWI A 4.lCI 4.61 lncorn IU 0 1 MFO 11.91 U.OP ~1•1 J.t l 1,11 Fllf'4 B •.n 7.lO $1otk F J,1t , .. MCO 12.M u. Si.P lnO l .U •. ,a !olo<k SJO 1,0\ ltl M11Ui I.IS e:u /o\1111 .... 1.12 1.n I TAT( INO Giii": Ail SCI •.CW t.39 Flm S.r 1.03 1.03 Mathrr t.}2 t . C-. Fa 4,U t .t4 BL..C C.tn 10.U 11.09 FOii.UM GROIJ,1 ~d Am t ,9' S, Oht,11 4.IS J.JO BlbSQn 10,U 10.SS 100 Fl'll t.•S t .U Mony Fa ~.ts 10.tl Pf"llQl'l •.SI 4.'l't Bayrot 1.21 l .M 101 FOCI 1.1t 1.1t MS8 Fd 1J.1S IJ.1 St Fr c;, -.i,1t I .... B11rt. tr 1.18 • . .Q Cotum 1,51 1.SI Mii BnC. • 1.9<1 t. SI Fr lllC" l .lol t.W. Btat;n Hlr 1.tl 1.t1 2S Funa S.12 S.G MIF fa P.11 7,12 Stilt Sir QM•l.t:I: B11con 9,8'1 9.89 FOii C.r •.21 t.~ M!I' C.ro l .91 ,,Jl STEAOMAH J'OS:-&rk!ll~ J,j) l.N "0UHOElll5 MuOm ~I 4.(6 4.IJ -An• IMI 2.90 1,llO • .II Bo111h lk •.ll 4.lt GROUP; MuOni tn 1.S. t.21 A~M> fd 1.!l l.ll Illy ,, '''" '".. Don Fon 1.90 'l.IJ c.r .. 1n .... S.4' M111 WI•• lS.Cl.l \1.03 Invest 1.12 1.22 MRS. COLLIARD SHOWS 'CHARM' CAT COLLAR Mall Order Item Has 4 Function•, S1y• Mell Wom1n lho .. 11 l.03 J.l l lll(OITT 10.1111.M Mull l r' ,, .. I.Ill OC11n 1.t1 •.• I 8•1111"1 9.•4 9.U F MllJ(il 1.1• 9.03 N•t IMI'-' 9.Jr 9,11 STllH fl0£ FOS; CALVIN FUNOS: F '>pecH IO.•S 11.M NAT SEC POS: i•l1nc ·Jt.M 19.M 81111 Fd 11.lol 12.'6 Fo11r!.Q F 1.13 l .U Ballln( l .U I.SI C.10111 •••••.•• COn Fd 21,U JJ.14 P•AHKLIN • Bond Sr •.11 ).16 Srock 14.031•.03 Olv '>flt 3.11 l.53 GROUP; Olvldn l .l4 l.11 SIS GllOU': NIIMI t.JO 10.19 ONTC '·"' 1.5oQ Prtl $tk '·" 6.SI Grw111 S.11 •.n NY Ven 10.1111.IS Gwlfl Sr •-9~ 1.U lntom 4.°" I.IP lncOfl\ 1.00 I .Pl cc; fUflll t .Mi 10.10 Fr 1nc:m 1.1t '·" S1«1. sr 1.11 1.1• Snvnll 1.21 t .OQ C111 lrl11 10.02 10.tS US Gv S t ,IS 10.1t Gr,.111 1.k 6.IO l l (l!nl S.t'J 1.tt C.nl Sii,. U.14 14.41 Ulllillt •.2• (.II NllW lNG 1,,-: $u1wy ,-t.16 10.12 CNANHIHG Rt~ C•P t.19 4.711 eq11lly IS.9' H.23 SyflC rQ G 5.11 6.l l ,UNOS: A\ Eqty ] ... t .2• c.twtn 10.IO 10.'9 T1mpl G. 1,SI 1.1' Cat~s Meoooow S.lnoo 10.01 10.9( Fkl l!EQ IO.ol6 II.oil S!OI U .>t lt.n Tran (IP J.t.J l.il This Collar's a Lifesaver 8nl Fd t,Oj t ... FO Mt OP t.11 1.11 NE.A Ml I.SI 1.14 Trawl Eq t.11 10.11 Com SI-1.2• l.~ FUNDS INCP GllP· Nt u Ctrll 1,)1 •,SJ Tlldor H 10.61 10.'1 Eqly Gt 7.11 1.01 Comm U6 t 14 Ntuwtn '·" '·"' 20tll CG 2.5oa 1.1' ECllY Pr 1.11> J.ll lmp.M; ,,, 1·!0 Newton 12.451'.l l 30tn Cl J,IJ '·°' Fnl A.11'1 P.Jtr 1.0. lndu~ Ir 11)1, 11·19 N-.. Pt" 13.IS l•,tt Unllltd Ill UI By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of Ill ~ty 'lltt Shin Build a better mouse trap and the world will beat a path to your door, goes the ~d axiom alxfut being in· dustrious and inventive . Lynette Colliard has In- vented a better cat collar to hang around your ow n penonal mouse trap's ·furry. feline neck, but her !root lawn does not yet resemble the SO. yard line o! a busy football stadium. SHE AND HER disabled husband Bill, of 3061 Gibraltar Ave., Costa Mesa, just this week placed the revolutionary new Colliard cat oollar oo the market. lblliard's collar -the Sav~ a.Ufe Cal Colla< It's called Grwtll 4.IS S.lt Ptlol ,·,, 1'11 ~ ... Wld 11.01 n .10 Unll\lfld .... I.JO lncom •.u 1 ll ltw! !.II •11 N1tlll•1 12 ... ll.lol UNION 5£RYICll -works in four different Spec• 1.11 1.11 Ge> P 11.w. .' .. Ntll hlr u .JG 1s.20 G•ou': • · Venlur 1.9• 1.)0 n 51<. !." s" Ome91 l.ll J ,)O Bid S Iv It) Il l ways and Its concept was born CHASE ROUP SEC: . 0 Hell Id "·" 11.71 Hall Inv Ill Il l IOSTON: AM• F , II I 1t One Will 1'.1t lt.lt Un CIPt Ill Ill some y.ears back ®e to a fl\CI 8ol 1.•• 1.40 a.1 Fno 1:1. ,·,. OPPENMM FO: Wllth1f 10 UJ lrag·1c dealh ,.· t•-fam"ily F"ron C11 •.60-1,03 COll"l 1111. 1a.11·11:oa o, .t.1n1 •.•1 10.is UNITED. ,.UND.S: lie · • SllTr 81 •,ID 1,'3 tn FAm •02 •l't Op Fl'd '·'° •.fl Act11n1 6.!I 1.20 "I lost my favorite Nil " ~· I.It '·" Ill lnl 11:,. ,,: .... 00 Tn• !.IS •• ,. Bnl Fd I.to I.Mo ~ r -• Cttom Fd 10.00 IO.t3 Giwrd 11 ltll lt OTC St< 10.07 \O t! Cont ~w t .10 9.tl explains Mrs. O>lliard add-CHA MNG FDS: HAMILTON GR Pi ••r•ml I.JI .: ... Con t fl( 9..)1 lD.2• • 1 l lCrlr 4.t S S.OI Fund J 16 1 12 Pa11I Riv a.413 1.tt ln(Om 11.(J IJ.'4 1ng that her part·Pcrslan Mtnnt J.s. J.M c.rwtn ,-11 ,·31 ~•1u~ F '·'' s.1J S<.11no: 1.t l 1.01 !.cllu1 F P.•I 1.14 ln<om •oJ •st Pfnn Ml J.i2 ... V1119C1 !.•2 •.1• black cat named Lucky finall y 5'11u Sp 1.01 1.1J H•ll .... I .:,. .: •• ""nn ~ •.!O l.S!) USAA C• t .11 9.11 • TMR A 1.t>l l .)t Hirl l v I 1• I I• Pllll• FO •. is .... us 6 ¥1$ 10.0. 10.1• belied his name after a COLONIAL HeOO.Q .:., 1:60 PILGRIM G,: VALUE Lll'IE ,.OS: ' ,fUNOS: keOQe S U Ctp11I J.1e J.41 VII LAI 4.91 S.ll Career o( trinirlng good (onytr t.Jl l0.11 Hoerllte 1:12 1jS ln~om 1.61 9.•I Vil lrl< 4.11 4.50 .""'' , E11111t1 l.00 J.21 Hor1ce 11 1311 !1 Pllt•m r.10 7.1' t.ev C.tll 5.JI li.•1 fortune to a family fnend. Fund •.12 10.13 lmprl Cp .:,, ,:1. Pint SI t .Sl '·" VII soc: J.'4 2.n Grwtn S.61 6.ll 1"'9 C.r t.60 I.JI Pin Trt 2.41 ••• YANCI! LlNOl,.S: ln(Olll .... 10.SI Inc tdAm \l.1113.]1 PLONEElll ,-o: lnwH •.U 1.11 THE GEN'n.EMAN , .. a s . \11nlur 1.12 1.•1 lnl f Ani l.•s l.21 Pion En I .II 1.n \IS Com ••• I P,4" " Col""1 G 1!.)0 11.)0 lntegon I JI I"' Pion Fil U .11 lf,1t 5'*1 '·" 1.ot very surv>rstitious but he COMMO,.WLTH 111 1~vt~t 10:12 11'.111r Plonr u t .24 10.ot Vnor1>11 •.01 •.3t r -TllUST: lnwtrn C. 1 9! 1 tj PINVICI t.00 "f.M \ttn1110 1.10 1.31 always hunted down Luc"" to A & a '·°" 1.u 1nv co A 12:20 13:13 PL• c.Ro 10." 1i.01 v111 f 11)91) '·°" .... "'J C I.la 1.41 rnw · GUid 6.11 • 12 PllllCl' ltatn:: V1rlfd I J.lt l. .. Stroke his coal-bJaCk fur for COl!lp Qi' •.u 1.11 lrw lf\Oit 2.lS : .. Gtwltl 12.0912.09 111-ng c;., t,,t 4.tl ood I k be! h din I[ Coll'lp Bd 7.IS 1,U l11w 8c1 I0..161111 Nw Er1 11.04 11.k W.USt or I.et 7.1.J g UC ore ea g 0 . Como Fa .... 1.11 INVEST . N ... Hlir l.lO I.JO W•l.FI "'"" 10.4111.•J to Hollywood Park L 0 s conud '·°' t.09 COUNSEL Pro Fd 1 •s 1.•s •Int ~ 10.01 10.01 • Con~ lnw 10.1S ID.IS C•PMTI I"' 7 13 Proo!dl J'.ll 4 1t WELLINGTON Alamltos to play the ponies. Cn\111 ,... ).OS s.s1 C•pil Iv 2:ss 1'.19 ProvCI C.I 1.IS .:» GROUP: ConN!I In l.1• 1.n C..p11 sn S 1S SM Prllll SI P t .31\0.2S E•PIOr ll.7Jll.S6 Lucky the black cat Conlry c 11.•S 12 . .0 IHllEST G•OuP:" ,UTHAM ·~)! 1.•1 •• ., h hi ' C11r111 0.11 S.t l •.20 IOS Gin 1 XI fUNOS: Mo rgon I0.1t 11.1' owever, got t by a car c .... oiw s.1• s.n 101 HO s:so 5:M eon... l0.1111.11 TtM 1v 1.11 ... dark ·ght and lo t Jj 0.111\ l.14 ... IOSPr ) 1t 4 1J EQUll~ J.76 I.ti Tr~t 10./J 11.13 One nl S 3 O.v1d~ Ul !U Mlll\111 •'.U ,:t'J ~o 14,11 U.IJ W.1\LV 11.'412.12 of~ nine lives at once. 81~ .. ~"E t~1 1:;~ :~:~ ~wlfl 1~:l; 1~: :!i!:. ::::t :1:12 "lie "-wasn't that "me," ()e(tl t ,11 .... V1r P1r P.t'J I." tnw I .to t,ll Winch<' •.61 1.n l"''n U Oelw F Ill.II t .U Inv Atl •.10 s.1• 'llll \I F 1.'9 t.t1 U Ind 1.16 l.Ol bis mistress remarked OIU1 T •.JI 4.1' I S I: °"W•t t.2110.14 WtllO &" P.ll 1M • ciev:r: Sl.U sr . .a Grwlll ,_ •• ,_,. R•-· F s.u ,,IS "-5.1• s.rJ Al Hichew, a retired Air Force colone l who was at the controls o! the plane when it made a forced landing 'lbanksgivlng day , aaid be was "misled'' over Cuba by the Havana cmtrol tower and Money's Worth "l invented it ---.. -e or Orte Cp •.11 •.5oa lrw;om t .00 t.ll Ain!M U.11 ... lttler t.1a lO.?t ~ DDOg(:t 14,.)114.)( Ttll tJI 3.44 .•. ~IC Eq 7.SI t .11 ._,.•<dlwldlnd that," Sly& Mn. Colliard Who Orl MI I t .20 9.10 lrU $11 \J,Pl ll .t i s.tiltat 2.1t J,19 Ml'lev.i~: --J" "'"· ....,, ... .,. Roy Clf. l :JD 1..-. M.t "llOUn Mid TI111 loubt tbo 1.a. ~-··...... , ... --!.""""""""' ~(ii~..., II.I. 1 ordered to land under threat o! two MIG flghtAn. Oil, Gas Investment Risky, But Worth.It belpo support ber dlsablod husband by working as a clerk at llarbor Judicial D!stricl Court. .,_:,r lll)'tn';f"Robtrt Hoou rvats ., lntkMll 11n tx·M111ne who 1dopta • Vletntn1· ti .. Trrtll ,-M orphan ol mlttd radtl Net· 1 MtU A Dul a:round and 1U1n1tts his ttrift 1114 lien s1111ll son by his obsuUon with t111 &:OOID~~=: W11t11 •B ,~'~iE looklnl torw•nl to etttndl111 • ban-L.s bnlD9I Sptnbb-ltnpl19 qutl hoftorin1 lhll'n u "llusbtlld wnlon of "tt1111Jllett. .. :..nc1 bt~~·" o:, '=:~: :ir ..= 10-.JO IT ... ~ntll lll1udt Mimi W1n11 Isl .. Cilbf ~1c1nr wflrt M'• PfUChlllJ. Nn '" Colflidt B A(l)a.. "Thi G1rb111 lhlicll~lf M1n"l!""'Sil MKCny 1911 to wort; P'rlbe .. llfd Cl• for I pfillfl te!TIO'lll lirm to dl&Jl:CI t!IDDfEm&JJIM up f'tldenc1 on UI• tluslw "Mr. (J) !1i EB@ (j) Iii.._ Bil" of thl rteklts. Piny MIM 11 M ... : la.) "1111 TllW -"" .......... (dr1) '64-Sttpbln Boyd. Dllfll Cl· Tt flfl t1M Ttvtfl lento, Jack H1wlli'ls. Cit Sll•tt o @rn mrnmm ... r1cr11 mn.- tter1t111 "Tiit ~ned Upside ( ([}) Trllh Wot Down" A d11m1Uc reenKt?Hnt ol history conttntr1lin1 °" 1He citdl ll:JO B <a {I)) (jJ CIS Litt """'= betwee'n General Georrt Washlnrton '1111 lfoJNrhood of th1 lell" (susp) 1nd his PNro-1dven1ry1 Gtn«•t '70 -Clenn ford, RMllllllJ for· Comw111is. 1l ttit O.ltlt ol Yorll-sytht, Dun Jager. town, in lhls SIOI)' of the America II. 0 9 @®) fD JIMnJ C.1111 Rnolutlollary War. N1rrattcl by CUI Jose Fe1icl1no 1uests. Robertson. 0 Mowlt: (C} "1ht C......- (1) Sh1pllfl1rs P•r Mel (dr1) '64 -Al1n Sitts, Oon1ld hosb. Plemnct. ai 11trcw 1 LI a..: "' I Oll mm Diel CMtt 81111 tM Mtrklp Mi'J"H~ rments 11'\et lht Mowit: "'Sleephtl C.tl Ti1nti' Ult lt6C °"" rays) '.t9-Albert LIMn, Jun Kint. LI Stlora )M11 U:OO I 0.. Step Blyotd MrM: tnr) "1'• '-"' ..... . ton. ll.lr1Qff Pmlllb ( 1) '61 -lobbr O.rin. Sttlll "'* "Ciut Sinllf" (dn) '4t s~~-•• ' ..... P1rt II. Qi=::.A:!ardntr. 1 0~:":::.-emi-1"°11!I WI~ llllf ..... I Wllltld DIM ... Nill * Tomom>w·ABC-4:30 pm l:JO l1- After Sthttoi Spocl1! 1:4S II M"": (t) ~ 111111" MY DAD LIVES IN 11•) '67 -Jomes ,,,.;, tiolB A DOWN TOWN HOTEL 1-· •·llilD 'IJ Hlull FtN-0 "A--C.n !:CltlDAJJ.NllM Sflow: "'C•••••r•• ~ • .,...... CitJ,'" "'Stetlt tf c:.wkt Liiie" 81111 A Bomb" Lew Ayres p1t1 u e nucle1r pil)'Slcl1I w/lo 11dt Mc· l :lO 8 Mewil: "Tiit set tr;" <«•) '49 t11ntt wlltn C1011SPlr1tors dem1nd -aootrt ftyln, A11elrey Tottet. Wednesday DAYTIME MOVIES l:GO IJ-71" 1 ... 1 '!O -Junn Stewtrt, Sht11ey Wlnten. J:OOti' -lo · .. -com) '65--MM ...,,._, (C) "Thi C1lol\ .-(drol • IJMJ Mills, Oebonill Ktrr. J:IOQIHIHCl "1111 -• -· i~T'64-8dtr1 Eden. 4:00 (C) "'SIM• a "'*" (•ra> 4'urt!ICI "'""· l:IOD@(})llJAIC-S,.. ill "My Did Lim In t Downton Hoter 8t1u trlQu. M1utt Btyt and Ile Eistnm1n111 Iler 11'1 1* dfltlM t.bout I lfn•JNr-olll .,,,,... ~ lllhen h• le1nw Mt ,.,.. , lft~!'lii.,." 1"'1 'q -H ... "'1ylopl\-- K9CE TELEVISION LOG - eRansomSet ROME (UPI) -The lather o! J. Paul Getty Ill offered $1 million Monday night for the return of the missing youth, but the teen-.ager's billionaire grandfather refused to pay a cent.. Mn. Gail Harris, mother ol the 17·year-old youth, an- """"""'1 !be ol!er and at- tacked oil bllliollalre J. Paul Getty for remaining "fixed in his loveless, old JJl8111S arid solitude." e Vegas Bla::e LAS VEGAS (UPI) -Occu· pants on five floors of the $15 million Regency Towers condominium c:omplet: were evacuated Monday when fire broke out in an equipment room on the ninth level. The 218 unit romplex Is ollly partially occupied. Occupants were evacua ted from the 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th and 12111 Doors when the blaze erupted at 4:11 p.m. Wilhln an hour the lt Clari: Qnmty fire units which responded' to the-blaze had It under control. e Ta: E1'aslon SAN DIEGO (AP) -A calexico city councilman was fined and ordered !'l resign his job Monday afle' pleading no contest to income tax evasion. Hector E. De La Vega, 43, was charged with I 11 1 n g fraudulent federal tax returns !rom 1965 through 1968. U.S. District Court Judge Leland C. Neilsm fined bim $10,000 and told him to resign from the council as a condition of two yean' probation. e 2 Arraipeol BEYERL Y lllLI.'! (UPI ) - Two men were arraigned Monday on chargts they stag- ed !be $22S,000 robbery last week at the WC3t Coast branch ol the lamed Tiffany's ewelers. Bryan A. Thomas, 23, and CRISIS ·STRIKES ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) -One cuualty of energy con· 1ervaUQJ1 e!lorts ma~ be the sight o! mlnbklrted legs Ieading-tour-gniups through lho """' Capitol. '!'be state decided to granl the youni women who.conduct' the toura permJssion to wear dark blue pa_nts Instead ,of the dark blue sldrts that had been part oftbelr unlforma. She · was once an associate NASO Listiiigs for Novemb.r 26, 1973 editor o! Mu!ual Broadcasting lorr----------------..1 ~ th d' •-f Thew quol•ll-oour G.n l•• 6\:. McO...w 11 11'-Aobrt Oh 16 10\io '-'Umpany, e II'eCwf 0 SllPll'lltd by tr. NI• OOna1ott 2S\1 1S~ Mtnur Ji~J 2• Aollln1 B Uh U"" California Animal Aid, a t1ona1 .,,10(1111on 01 oorc11 C.1 1•1 l!o Mtlkm t \:o 1~ 11ouw co 1\o ' Stcurltlotl 011llr1. Oow JOf'll ll 2)~. Mtdltrn SJ~1 $4\') Aowt Fnt I 11'< humane organization, and iS lrt llldt 1111 Olhr1 Ooyll OB I '·• 91,. Merd'lnl !lb llh RIKkr Pf\ 14 IS\1 11uat1d Dy ovtr·the· Ou<omn 11'1'< 11•., Mer~w JS 2• A111I Stov ••~·, n in affiliated .with other p et (OW!tfl' ••••1"11 to oun111n o 1.,. 2~1 ,...,,..r Fr H '"'•~Mil p~, 7\.o ass". •-nee g-•ps. •Kii otllfr •1 ot E111m1 21v. ll'11 Mldft• C l•lo'I lJ.., kfitrer 2t » By SYLVIA PORTER stake or lax·!ree cash/ One not Stll'pl'ising splnoff of the energy crisis is an UJ1$11le in the popularity ol oil and 83! lnveotmeot. -amoai the riskiest but Blso, if !bey pay oil, ._ !be most spectacular rewarding o! all speculatiOll.!I. The e<!:Ooomic reasons spur- ring the boomlet be- gan wtth 1our severe short· ages ol fu el, of course. Our appetite for oil and gas is in· cre&1ng and, POii.Ti il in truth is limitiess. But there are more reasons than this behind the spurt. on. AND GAS lnvestmenls are top-flight lax sheltera or special value lo taxpayers In high-income brackets. 0 And while the federal government is going to hil the so-called leverage deal under which an investor gets a two-to-one write-off,"· says Eli Warach, a dlvisional vice president and managing e d itor with Preotice-Hal~ "Congress has already indiooted It will not pass legislation under today's caidiUons which ,..uld ad· venely affect legitimate In· vestments ln oil es:ploratfon. That would be Wlb\!lievably aell-defeaUng and against the nation's interests. "individual !nvestol'! who dlOOl!e J>l'lllll)er oil and gas deals will not be undercut l>Y future tax reform legislation." 'MlE PAYOFF for finding new reserves ol oil and ea• has be<n big eoough IDltti now, but1 Waracb adds, "u we exhaust our.Cll.rttrtt f'e9etVel, it will become even more da.allng,., It's hardly a aecret that prices !or oil and gas at lho wellbead ~ skyrocketing. 1bls Ii a classic leller'a marliel. with cuatomer's IWld· Ing In line Waitin8 ro buy. Oil Is among the !ew speculatiorls that-oner in- veslon !mmcdlale lax abeller '"•ks -In blunt worils, mak· Ing . it possible !or you, II you're In a high Income bracket, to get Into oil wltll low-oost dollars and a chance to (el OUI wllti I IUbatanltal ; MIND YOU, THE risks irre at the heart of the tax breaks wt '""' cloM IE11ttrn Econ t.eb '°~' ,, MllLlr H$ 12 ll ~II tn 21v. 21"" tlm1.I The ClllOC•· EOS M11< U 1' Mllllcior 411\.o tt:i.:. $coll INI ~ 4\.. lllNll dO not 1roc1ull El P1i.o &11'11> ll!t Mpll 615 1th~ SoltUlL G J\o 4\.. HER NEW· CAT oollar ret.tlt mer11.up, "*r11. Et Nuut 10\1.o 1G11• Minn F•b '"-4\11 !.crlpp1 " '"" 1a1.<i llOWTI or <~fl'll1· energy C Sb t•.i MinNI C.1 lt\ol 1'"1 Sota Wrll t 'n \D \..o marketed through P.Q. Box llon; and <D not EQ1111r 01 11\oo 11\.o Ml1Rv Tr 14"'11 Hiio Sv Mer(lt 1\IJ t Y: you may get. Here's a list 1874, r-sta Mesa, reflects car r~ .ctU11 E1111 Sl.L 10h 11\\ MOeit .am 11io S\11 s..,,,...w 2•11o 21i.. ""' trtni.acll-. ' Et...,, A. H'Jo H \ .. Mobl ""' II~ 1l '°"'" Up l2'Po n of the four important ones: •lights several hundred feet INDUSTRIALS £U(ll In 1 2~ MOtlll "" 3S 2• Sllof1w • •Vt AHO UTILITIES E.tracp 21\.'o 12\.'o .wir •• In ), • SlmC*A l 'tl ,.,., (I) "Intangible d r i 11 i n g away, has an identification tab F•lr u. S\o s\t MOot• s. »'h J11-t s-To11 w,., ""' ... Alt F111or! El ttlro JCI"" MOr111 II' "'° 1'n !ooC..I Wl l l!o 12:io cost" deduction. You can elect and a permanent plush lining Acusmt u14 Hi.. F11m Br t 'N 10 MOrrlsn 14\o'i 1s~. so enr.c.1 JOY• s 1" lo deduct !be COSt 0 I which can be treated with Ad Mic"' 121 .. lJ~ F•ll L)9 .... p~. M19 AIK II/; , .... Sina PIP uo.. ""' Ad'ITll co ..... ,, .. Flngrlll 41Ji, s~. Mo1~ (.p ') "~' !ocltUr• ''"' 2S\'a ma•-nals and "··· othe flea poison over and over Al•• Al• 1t """ Fit Bo\1n u:w. Hh Motion 1n 1s t6'1i Slan.dt 1 1J.,. w IC • UJUCIC r ALI• a.1 12 11\1 IU Cf,pitl 3'~ JU;, Maler Cl l'\o Pit Std it.1111 U '-.. ,,. direct ancflndirect costs which again. All(o Lnl u 13t:. '" Mii.c :a.ira J1 M~ Smi1n f\1 •1-. s1 ... 1 lirn 11 20 AlleQ Bfv !lo lh l~t T1Fln 200.. 21 MSI 0.t. l\o 9'.o Stk N Alt 11\·• IS\" go .into drilling of a well - A fourth feature or the A!ltn Pf'lr \Sl, ll'lir F•KO Ill( ll'o 1 ~, Mufti"" 11 u Srl<N lrw 1h l l• . ed !be do Atllf(I Tel ts~. 1• Fl. Telep ,.~. u:i.. NII Ctlot!ot • ·~ Sl1M H s ·~· •h prov1d y not create Colliard cat collar is that on Am ~1 1u t i·. FoOa Tw u~. 11 w11 1.1111y ,.,. 4\o strt• TIC 1•~· 1s asitets having salvage value n~ .. rnal assr'gnatr·-· ,. n Am E• ... ~. *"' Fortll °' ll\'< n :1,.. N1 MOier ' • S1rw11 oo 21 » lN"'I "'"' Am Ek pf fr1mt H t t \.o Nt P•ttnl 1~1 1~1 s...ii.r El 1"-t \o remauun· ·g alter the well's search ol romant1'c ful!illment 1n u1 Fr•n11 E1 aP'"' 1~. "'""""" 1 1 Syrwr Cp 111°"9 1ou Am F!nc;L u i.. 13" Fu1n1t1 23.,. 2•'• New11 co •l<t 1• ... r1n1 C•p 1•,. 2rit completion. "ln other in. -or whatever-the kitty ..,,.. F1e111 21~ .• ,.,,, Fr11n1 •< , .... 11 NJ"'' c. 11"' 14Va T•mP1• 1s\, P• ... d ' ch Is J Am Furn ·~• '"° Fro1 FOE • 6'1) f'oll<Oltl in 1:i.. P\, Tar.lat W •2h ~t UStzieS1 SU COS WOU d can't get tangled Up in some Am Gree l/4~ 31~, F1111tr H P'l1 I\• N!tlHn .A 22~ lli;. Te e(m ·~• i ha t •-J••J' d d b •-j h th! kb he AMlr< Sy 21 21 ~1 F1111k Set I 1h Nrt lMn S al .. U~ T1M1nl » l9 ve o JA: cap wt Jze an o SwtC e sue as c us s . ..,,.. T•Ltv ,..., 10~, G1111ou'I 11 \'J 12~. Norditr Tenv en u 1• would be · recoverable only The collar fastens wi'th Am weia 1 ,,,. G•rt1"" 1l'• 1111 .. 11.,, 11~~ 11111nv ••:. i'I• Anllt!~ll" » »I• Ci1l1 LrJ t\, S NwJ NtG l \1 t h Time DC p•,. I\>,, '"-""' depreciation." ex· sti"ck-loge"er !abn'c that eas1•• AP9•co IJV) ,.,.. c.1t1w Tr 1 1\• No•n c. 11 JeVi t0W11 ""' ,~, ,1, w .. ""6"' "'1 APS lnco 1• 11 Gtlto C11 7~~ l'ff 0.kWd ~ I J\I) Trn OC.n 11'1-< n •,. plains_ the privately circulated Jy pulls apart when the cat Ar11n Mv1 1>t< 1 Gn Au1m :za•,. 1tv. ocean 0r .. ,,. 11~ 1rne11 F" 11t n. Pre ti Hall I tt E Arro,. Hr 14;., U'n Gn AutoP Oc1•n Ek t\oi 101i Tri(O fl'o ~ ce-, news e er,, X· throws its weight against the Arv!a. iv. ,~, •12 1J 0c"" Mt 21. 21,. Kl2 I' ti --Report ~ t .. ,Ml CCII• IHI. 16li.. Gerl &ind " lJ Olhh Lii 13 1lh Twin DK D l'. ecu Ve S JitA • J"•U ~aCJe On which Jt has Alt G1 LI u lltt G.n CnOCJe 3.1\..o :k\.'J OQHww M 16~• 111.lo Uni Cl¢ '"• ai, not SO in Oil!" ...__ · snared. .t.11 Slffl 21 2l Gnl Sl'lllt lOh 10 • 0011 CA.It 11 11 Union SOI IJ\t ll~t >rne ""'lo Trn u \J\'J G.otd !.Fa II ll'n Onnont 4 4'n unArt 111 '~' , ... (2) DepreclatiOO, Tile costs Baird Ato JI;. ,,,_ O..r.m Ml "' •~• O...r1 NA l ... J'° US SUQaJ 1((0'~ 41~, I !be I --bl Is Bairo wr' ui.. u w c.raon SC l l, SI• Ollil Cto '.'-11. us Trk L ~. t\. o sa vagea e asse .:::-"tF TRE CAT gets hung Balltt a.. 12 13 GrtrAw n. 11. P111,1 sr 13 !JYt univ Fdi 13 12•, Such a s derrick, t a n k s , up somewhere It won't get Bak., "' 211. 11w HI' c11 u 1• PK<lf 11 » VIQM "° 1 t'-11.ilil'fin l 6\.. 1\io ... hn EW t 10 Pl< GMPI 21 21t.1 V~t Sn •' t •~- h,,;i,i; .. ...,, aod the. li.ke -are •'-ttled," she 'expla'··. aan., Mtt JO\.. 3,.,. 1-1a11 Fn1c 1?\>t u"" ••< Lum -14"1 lS1~ v1n o.,~ 1(11., 11•. ~ UilV Ill;) a-Rll U u .... H .... lt Bl" 21\) 21'1) Pa n OCOI 11\>o 11 v ... $11(.~ !'• • s.ubject to deprecialion.dedu.c-The COlli'ards a-handlm' g a.~ttt1 F 20 21 ... " SciAI 1••1t ,,,,. P•lll Atw •lllo !411 v ktorJ st 1i,.. •'· t !be rod ti I f ''" .. ,,,.,, tt; 10V. Naf"pff R Sl"1 1\1 l"ylu CllS I~ U .... Yldto 5"' l )>,. 10JU1 over p UC ve 1 e all cat rollar sales by mail Blkln co •'·• 4"'° Ha1tr1 k 11 11~, P•t N sv 1111.i n:i. v • ....i Sc •h , ... I the ts Btnur La 1f 2' ~II Fl · ~. '"' P•<>'&. w voi Slloe ''' t h o asse · . order, but hope to market e.11 Pra IM 1, "''"' Ms ll Jh ••s" 11 w., Eti• t 11 10 (!) Coot. depletion. You ~et the deVJ·-naUonally 85 Its &111 u11 .11~ ~ Ht•t•I c 11 ... 12 "'' H&.H 11~. ,,i,.. w.,,. Ne. 1oa. 111o. .. ._ Bibb co l h t'\o HIP Co 111'.1 11"1 ... Ire LW 1l<o l'u Wt•mn I .,,, 1V, a deduction for the de.plet1on ......,.,1 .. ~ty grows, which an.. Bit Orm u:i. 12.,. Hines EL lll'n ...,,,., P1n11.111t 2o\'t 21"' \tr'Hofefl s" •"' ~· r Bio MIGS 31 41 • Hoo\'t'r 20~; 11 Pl-r W no l l;o Wei9I ...,I !" '" of your. oll reserves. With cost peared to•-the case Friday. Bird 1on1 n h t:M H11n1 M11 t ti.:. Pl-• 13 2t w.11nt M 10~. 11"' d I ti ut: BlkHI Pw Jl .)lh Hylll C. l\.o P\11 Pt"091ff lt IM W"<.\I Pt I ._. ep e oo, you recover a com· Ord for the .., •• I Un e1ouc °' •11 11"' HysLe• c ,,~. ,,'" PSN 'CM t •1 1~. ws Kye;., •1• 1•~ te part f your CO.ls erJ .... ,)ii e e Blw[ll S IV• t IMS ll'ltnl' 11 ~1 11\oo Pllln C..O I'• •lo W~LPuD 11 mensura o .......... 1 1 th 100 BMACP 11"" ''""' 1no. w.1 110;. 11\o OUl•r en 1J1. u~. •13\. ,.,,., for the reserves as the poten-~ .. ece were ess an Bob Evn' " """ •nos Nw<1 20\oJ 21 1oro au.enc. 1\o, ~ wtur Fd •I.II\• 11\. Thursday after four days on Boolll HO ll"'" 1•~• ln10r1x • 4"1 Aatnr C. 1~1 •ti. Willl"'I I 1• 111>1 tja} Oil production Of the Well Brll'l(O I Jl'n !4\lo IMlr Lib 1J~ 11"'4 A1yun, 2\1 , 221 Wll~ H J 10'• II\.; J's used up. When you have lll.e mark. et, ,bu! """· red to 350 8rln•l 1n 111 l \oo tntfl Crp 10 n Yr R1ymd i.vt 1111) wlnnJ srr 11\: u~, th Frida il d ll Brtcn 61 :U\t 14 Inter< En .Ill, 11"-RltM PK 1'\-ri llh Wtfll P-T t~i 10 recovered all your basis in W1 Y s . ma e very, arown ,., , 4\.o u11n11 c.s ,.,, o A•<ot Eq 1 •• ,.,1 'o'il!.( PLI 11~. u11o !be Well. COSt depl.uon S •-ps. says Mrs. ,.._!hard. . llu<•Ot 1\.o ,..,., •n.1 AIYm 4 '"" Atg Ell< u • .. u WOOd Liii u~. I~ w \Al 81t<k•• l \. 4,,_ 11'1 8kW A id\1 6 Rtij Univ P..o 10\.. WorMI 5w 10 1Mo H husband U I Burnp SI 1~ 20•,. lnten!I I~ II\ Rf• Pin •~' ~ltt Wtltlll w ' 4h (4) Percentage depletion. er , an op ca auu~r M it1<t 20,,, 1111ri1 CP •~• •~· 11,.~ t.R """ "~· 11om1 CP '" t 'tl This too allows You to recover annfneer until & tragic medical CllWI $\I 2H-. 21 II $0 UIU 11"• 21\4. RiwJI N!F 21'11 22~1 YtlJO Fri tf'I• 30'n ... 'e ~·m T:\'i 214. 21v1 l ~•Y I.Co ••• •1. ANd E• 21'' ,, Zlm~ Uth 1) 2•h YO\lJ\ cost of the well. But it misjudgment and . diagnosis ,:,, 1~~ 11~ jJ::•s~m :1 .. •t OTC JO Aln~I Aclii·e can do that and much more. forced an end to his career, cayman '" si.. o11n1 EF '" 10• r hel ut b • •'-[nMIQ RI \I>., ...... JollYf' M l S" U .,. 'W.i-IKA1k ... Clll. Jt allows you to deduct, and ps o Y answenng u1e ctn viPS 1~ 13,.. J...Wg 1v 1a~. 2J\, 111n-OrtMO 11t ,200 • •1•-~ '.Ve from •·-atlon, -percent phone Cln\fri o 11.,., 11i,.. l(ah•r st 114-lj'-"',! ""• 11 1~.000,.. '"" • -" --' IFS Cntl ''' IS l(.tlv•r C 311 t. '" •P Y1, .o•, ... 1 ..... t i. l from • , ,1 ,0•• la,,..n c u•, 111-. Ptnn Olt11'1 11 sco 111 ,,_ "' of your gross ncome The newty-mvented cat col· c..:'J, .-. lO!., ~~~ k11rn T-11, >,,. 0.11 Gtn n.:100 nA. »1,_ 2 the well, You cannot use in .Jar may•-!be rouple'a f'in" .... c~111 co ''·• '"' l(•llr St• •11~• u c.ntrl'IU °"1 7J,jol)O ""' 11l.-1ri. =' ut: -·-Cflllm Cp ,, ,,.,., llen Conn I llo. Ml'lllli Ekotc:ll It'°° » Jt•,,_ 1 one year both percentage cial security now 1 j n c e DI ~ 11 i>;eun Es' 13\. u\oi L•dcl Pt1 :W,aoo 11', u•~ 1oo dcpl · ' 100 IOI~ Kt y 0.11 S'• I+. Ptn~ Lll't ''·'°° 1 11 ...... . depletion and cost euon; COlllard caMOt expect to fonn ct1ri1 kc ' 1(1.,..\ Fa 11 11~. oo. Jant1 4'.tiOO 21 21 ....... . the lar !he t'cal 1 . r ."1~, 1,,~ 1(11 c1111 ''· 111; ---you use gerOQe:. op I engneenng con· CU1r11 UI 21 tt1.' ... .,.i Int 11 " HA SD 'Volume TH•r. •.W ,100 ul ' f' h bad p! ,..,...1 CUI U A IC;lrrl$ !rid S'o Sff AdV.,.CI\ ... ... , HM YOUR DEDUCl'ION, under this method ls limited Ito ooe- hall Ille taxable Income from the wcll. l(owever, percentage • dep[ellon goes on as long u Income from the well con· linues w. come In. So up lo Z2 per<ent ol your oll lnrome is exempt at all times, wllethu or not you have a remaintni basis In the well. You keep gotllng pe"""'tage dep[etlon-regardltls-ol your buls, $() you are almost alwJ13S better o!f electing to deduct Intangible coats lnstea<ll' of capltallz!ng them. lh th!> way, you make sure you (et a current deduction plus your deplellon. S ling ll'M""l. 8 21•K:\I Cl•:~ Mt :!1' i~ i>;nlOf '>'I 'IO 12 0.011111 before hll lllness c11wc1111 ,,.., ,1,1 11:n..ot. kU\o.o 1J Unt"""9fd • Cl1v Trlv ""' II"-"""r Pf n ,_, "'" TOlll CIO. ''£ 1\oo t l>;rutQIJ I \.. t~. Cobt u 25 ,, 11.1st1n 1:1 it• • Goi11e.r1 tr11tl Lo,er1 C01111rn H l•l.o U d fd St 2t J2 COc•C l • ll~r lltt l.Hll Ptt 1111 u•. COA1N•RS comm c1 11 n Lint•" '"' l \oo 1 wtute ~laid c 2t • \. 1,1p 11.e CIT\I Sii~ 1121\'1)1 LI~ tih 1•h t Bl•r lllllnt .II I • .. Ut ltO Cw MIGi 1' 20 llwSn Pr t 1 21\."; l lll1htnd Mllltt I + It UO 1(0 (fl'twlt p 21\r 2J'I>. U wttr C. ~· 1 JI • An1 ln(Ol'nll 11 • .,. '• Up t.I Cotr Auto I~ 110. LllY Boy lf\,o ,.~ s [II M!U'O\NW I ... 1, Up ,_, Cp\rvll IJ'·• \l\, ~.N~ 1,0,, "•c '1 '""'•NICI rooa 2 ... '• Ull S.6 <.:Onn Ftl 1)'° 11\lo _w,,. ~· • I " """' f!VI .l•b J'.. • \. UP 1.t (I'll l'tpr ~ 1t\oJ Lllltflr H ,~, , • P1ltnl1 lll.t..111 $•,. .... ti• s.• AMSTERDAM (AP) -A ~:l', ~ ~~ llt~ t:!m':';t ,\~ 1~t ,; ¥.i~~on~ :;"':. ~: ~: t: Dutch cavaJary officer sug· ~:!11'co ~~" ~~~ t:: ~ ~t: ~ .. :; ~~~;: ~I~;; ): ~:· '·' gested in a magazine that ""''" a· • ..., 1 L1K11tt-nt.. :U\1 '' o..,. ..... N 1.20.a '" • '• u11 tf "t••• arl •-Impro ved Cu•t NOii 11.u u Lo,.. Siar 10tt ion ,. Auto t rtin )k ,, , ,, u. u anu ... .JO" W are 1111 O!'rl111 011 i+. ,,,,. "'v fb 1.os1E•s with.lormaUOIL.of a motorcY· tNn• 1n11 21.,. » 1 ,.. 120 '''· , -.1sco 1nc .20 ,,_ \, Oft •·• o.tl+y-M I t.\r ~ iii"" ~\-"' l. 2-CNAI.•• 1.1.. ..i-.J.~ Oii ...JO,) cle baltllion. He sa id the t>ar1 oro sw • ,,,....'~-1l J M1owit1Dl•1 A >·-,,, on ~1 al 0.1• o.n :nYa'n _, • 1 "-""' £"" ,O.b t -1~1 Ort J&.O small vehicles low for a 0.11 109 12 ,,,, ... R•• ",11 11,:~ s O.•"'"' ..,.... , i~· °" ,,,, --· o/" I. 0.jlll Ml lO ,, .... , ' .••• '~1&'1 Foell ···-~. Olt 'lJ ) mdAlmum aggress \'entss, 0tt1l o. '""· "" 1rr1ti .,.1 •l'~' .t111 , D, .. , lf'ICMl•io J~.-, °'' ifi motilllty and disguise " and 0.klll AR . '1 ,, Mellnt c 11\. 241\o I Gi tt• l•Mi-• , •• -\\. Off 11:r • 0.1111 lnll 4\, 11.. /o\1111 F•I 1~ ,.i.,, t ~(09'.' 1: ... •r. 1 ,. "' OH JI.I 'l'VtlUld appeal lo the "concetl Ottu• c ,, J"" ~·k '• ""'' 11~, 10 0.11 imc11non 11.-'• OH u,J d In " f the O\l Qll m (/'\ '10\.o 11 ... Mlrt KV lt\o1 ttl\1 II 1111"" lntl(AI •to-\I, Otl 11 an temperance o t-D4lll'I "" '" •\. * c...11. 31 ,, • 11 H&n11y o.n"° ,1,.... 11,,, °" ..ti. b Uonal bar ,A o rw, Sot! i ' #<0.1 E •i. 101• 11 J..,,,f\OUFY .JO 1 -11. Olf 21.1 c na c acu.:r. 00~11••1 • 11~ '"' MCMlll!I • 11 12'.1 1• O.nM, Wo111k 1•.-J a Ott 11., "" VEHICLES FOR WAR? ' I ' • ' . . Tu,sda,y, Now,mber 27, l<.17) • -Oil· C-riS·is~ffec·ts Bank Vp 'Getting Gassed Using all the energy he can muster1 1nan struggles with six gasoline cans in New York as cutbacks in fuel loom. Fire Department has warned of dangers of storing gasoline. r Wester_ n Gamblers;-Teacliers Ey-e Ouwome----W rBJt%- CH1cAco (AP) -First By lbe Assoclaled Prff• From school teachers lt) resort owners, So u t h e r n C.!Kornlans and -'.tll e i r neighbors are taking a hard look at -how the energy crisis may affect lhem -and what lhey con do to help alleviate lhe malady. Sunday closings by _service slatlons could spice the odds against Ca1ifomians seeking a weekend tilt with Lady Luck In Nevada casinos. WITH THE GAMING Centers just out of reach of the average California motorist with a full tank of gas, President Ni.Ion's call for gas stations to close , from Saturday night to Monday morning bJ;Oughi w o r r i e d reactiO!l$ from Nevada of- ficials. "This couJd adversely affect toUrism, the lifeline o f Nevada's economy," said Gov. Mike O'Calla-ghan. In Sacramento, Santa Clara County Supervisor Sig Sanchez was named statewide chairman of an energy crisis task force formed by the County Supervisor.s As- sociation of California . ,. U'l'·LA pnsident B o b Unrube questioned lhe-wisdom ol requiring schools .to stay open for two days In the week when lhe Christmas hoUday will start. The Sunday gas station cloe- lng proposal also elicited anguished cries from ski lodge operators ln the state and others whose businesses are tourism-oriented.. "WE'RE SCARED," said a spokesman for the ski lift operators on Mammoth Motm- tain in Southern Cslllomia. "Ninety-nine percent of our skiers come from Los Angeles (about 300 miles away ) ... lt-'s goif!g to affect not only us but also every town on the way because that's how they lnake their living, with gas stations and restaurants. It won't destroy Mammoth, of · course, but it might destroy them;"-he said. Reaction from gas station operators themselves ranged from bitterness !l:o lukewarm agreement to comply with the presidential request. Bob McElreath, president of the Cslifornia G a s· o I i n e Retailers Association , said Sunday. closings could mean a cut of as much as 30 percent in gasoline sales. "SOME DEALERS m a y defy-----this-until 1t1s -man- a Sunday closing law for all reti il businesses. "If we're going to be restricted, other retail outlets should cooperate on t h e energy problem, too,'' he said. One _ isolated note o f National Bani< al Chicago. the nation's toth largest commercial bank has an· nOunced it is raising its prime lending rate from 911 to 911 percent. ef- fective today. The bank said i)!Ollday the move "merely reflects lhe recent and pn>bably short·llved uptrend,. in short-term lending rates. brightness was sounded by a spokesman for Walt Disney Productions. who felt lhat Americans UMerved by the growing energy crisis ma y look to Disney ll\OVies as a '------------' source of consolation. 1'WE FEEL THAT in time of national stress, people have always continued to demand recreation and leisure time, 0 he said . "Throughout the Depression and World War II, it was an extremely active and busy time for the motion pictUre industry." Meanwhile, Standard Oil Co. of California announced Mon- day that it will comply wilh the President's request and vohmtari1y close its 3 5 0 service stations in seven Western states on Sundays. A spokesman said company· owned stations in California, ArizOna, Nevad;:1, H a w a i i , Oregon, Washington a n d Alaska will remain closed but Standard's dealer -operated Chevron stations were free to make their own decisions on closing. State Cars Limited To 50-MPH SACRAMENTO (AP) -An executive order r e q u i r i n g 16,000 state vehicles to travel aJ. a maximum speed of 50. miles per hour has been sign- ed by Aeling 9<1v .. Ed Reinecke. The Republican lieutenant governor, acting while Gov. Ronald Reagan was out of the country, estimated Mon- day the move would cut state gasoline conswnption by 10 percent. Westgate's Tax -' - Lien to Remain SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A $U million tax lien against Westgate-Oilifomla has been allowed to stand. although federal judges were told it could break lhe !>uslness once headed by financier C. Arnholt Smith. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court _of A-I took the aotloo Moir day alter a I II-hour hearing, The three-judge panel stayed until further notice an in· junction granted against the Internal Revenue Service Nov. 20 by a federal judge in San Diego. 111AT INJUNCTION , granted by U.S. District Court Judge Leland Neilsen. ordered the IRS. to drop liens filed again.st Westgate properties to satisfy the tax claim. , -The appellate court .furlher ordered Westgate . lO show causeJn_wriUng why the San Diego order should not be vacated ~d the lower cowt action dismissed "for want of jwisdiction.'' The court set no deadline for the written request, and it gave the IRS 10 days to answer Westgate. Westgate holdings include the airline Air California, a tuna canning operation , Yellow C.b companies in San Francisco and Sin D10$0, casualty and Ille lnsUrance companies and real estate.-- BEFORE MONDA Y'S ~ Uon, Ralph Kessler, an at· tarney for Westgate, argued .UiaUtantlng the Stay "i>OUld put us out of business." He claimed the jeopardy tu assessment and the liens plac> ed againal propertiet I n Callfoniia and Oregon Oct. 19 would prevent Westgate from ob!alnlng financing and CTedit. They also would render; the Westgate insolvent and would force it into bankruptcy, he said. "If lhls happens. it would cause a Mlb..<itantial loss -to lhe shareholders. CTeditors and -federal g.o..v e.r nm en t itself," Kessler said. "WESTGATE JS really • Victim of circumstancea:," the attorney said. "We fe e I Westgate is being prejudiced against because ol the actiOM 1 of former hoard chainnan C. 1 Arnholt Smilh.,. ru.s. Moving To'Ward S.urplus in Trading monthly surplus in more than eight y'ears. "IT IS VITAL that counties organize inunediately to face the energy crisis and seek to develop approaches county government can take t o overcome it;" said Mono- C.ounty Supervisor Arch G. Mahan. president of t h e· statewide group. datory ," he warned. ''This is going to cut our profits tremendously." Phil Hudson, president of Complete .Mid .. day American Stock List WASHINGTON (AP) -The United States scored another big surplus tn forei gn trade in October, moving the coun- try closer to its first yearly surplus in three years, the Commerce Department reporJed today __ The Commerce Department said there was po single outstanding development in October trade, an indication that the improvement in trade y.'as 59li4Jy based._ The 15,000-member United Teachers-Los Angeles sug- gested conserving energy by closing the city's 60 schools on Dec. 14, a Friday, instead of the scheduled Tuesday, Dec. 18. the California Petrol e um .. ______________________________ ... ____________ ,.[ Retailers _Association,_ which covers some 200 Central California service · stations, said he would ask Fresno city and_ county officials to enact The department said there was a surplus of $527 million in October. based on exports of $6,431.6 million and imports of $5,904.5 million. Pop-out ~ Car Dents? I IT WAS TilE second biggest monthly surplus this year and put the country's foreign trade in surplus by $680 million for the fll'St IO months of 1973. Plast1c 4utos No Lo1iger Toys for Kids By comparison, U.S. trade was in deficit by $5.2 billion for the same period last year. The COWltry had a trade deficit of $6 billion for all of 1972 and a deficit of $2 'billion In 197 1. · The improvement In foreign trade is attributed directly to the two devaluatiom of the U.S. dollar which have made U.S. goods cheaper overseas and foreign goods more costly in this country. SECRETARY OF t h e Treasury George P. Shu1tz said Monday that the United States now feels the value of the dol1ar -which has been strengthening in recent weeks -is just about where it should be in relation to cUrrencies of the nation's ma- jor trading partners. The October surplus was down slightly from the surplus in September of $873 million , which was the biggest single HE DIDN'T NEED THAT EDMONTON. ALTA. (AP) -A thief stole a car, then' returned it to its original park- ing space when he discovered two small children in the bac k seat, police reported. Clll'lill111 serene• Monitor St"ict DETROIT -When will automakers come up with an answer to parking-lot dents and rusted fenders ? If all goes well, in about four years. By then, say industry spokesmen, Detroit should be ready to build cars with fe nders or even entire bodies of rubbery _plastic that pops back into shape if struck. PLASTIC JS getting plenty of attenUon since aut.omakers launched an all-out diet pro- gram for heavy cars. Extra weight means less f u e I economy, and rising fuel costs are making the problem more important each day. General Motors already has cars like the Chevrolet Laguna and Pontiac Grand Am with soft plastic noses. And the Oldsmobile 4-4-2 has an all- plastic hood. one of the few plastic-bodied cars on the market today is the Corvette. But as owners know, the carrs fiberglass body would rather c111ck than bend . Rusted fenders' are no problem, but cracked fiberglass -isn't any cheaper to repair than crumpled steel. WHAT DETROIT engineers hav e in mind ror future plastic cars is urethane, the plastic already being molded into auto interiors and plastic- coated bumpers. GM calls the ORDER ~. 1000 ~eautiful Stick-on <· YOURS '· \ LABELS v TODAY! Perso.na!illed • Siylish • Efficient- I I Order For Yourself or a Friend· May be used on envelopes as return addresl 11.bels. Also very handy es identification labels for merkin9 personel items such es books, records, photos, etc. Labels stick on gl•ss and may be used for markin9 home c·anntd · foe;d items. All ltbtls ere print•d with stylish Vogue type on fjne quality whit• 9u:mmed paper. · l_~!_L~~~!~J!~~----j -' material "soft face" plastic and predicts cars w i t. h "friendly fenders " of·the stufr. But if Detroit can make plastic bumpers now, why not rubbery plastic bodies? Why can't a Carmaker simply switch frOm steel to plastic? One problem is cost. For body-sized parts, plastic costs more than steel. And the plastics industry has yet to develop ways or keeping up with assembly-line production speeds .for body panels. ALMOST ALL plastic in cars now , about 16 pounds in a typical 1974 model, is molded. Plastic pellets a re melted into a peanut butter- like goo, then shpved into a mold. Tremendous presmrre i s needed to Jleep the halves or a mold together during the injection. And the bigger the part being made, the more pressure is needed. Frank Daley, director of mawtactuimg development at GM, estimates it would take presses exerting 12,000 ton s to form fender-sized "soft face" plastic this way. But the world's biggest injection molding machine can muster only 5,000 tons of pressure. EVf:N IF A super machine was tiuilt, it woqld still take several seconds at best to make a part. That is too slow for Detroit, which is used to stamping out metal body parts in an instant with punch presses. One solution is to squirt two watery chemicals into a mold and let them turn into plastic inside. This method is Called liquid reaction molding, and it requires mUch 1 e s s pressure. The process is fast · but still experimental. Until the bugs are worked out, carmakers will take the cautious road and stick with metal. f AND EVEN when equip- ment for soft plastic car bodies is ready, autos must be redesigned for the new material. This is because flex- ible plastic needs more si'J~ port than stiff steel. For that reason, a simple swap of plastic for steel in one of today's cars would not work well . So~ parts might sag of their own weight, while others wou1d prove too. floppy without added suppOrt:- Clouding the future for plastic is the same problem that made Detroit look to plastic as a weight.saver in the first place : petrolewn sOOrtages. Crude oil is used for plastics as well as for gasoline. PLASTIC, HOWEVER, can be made Iron other materials such as com stalks and wheat stubble, though the economics are not clear. Adds GM's Frank Daley, "if we didn't think there would be a supply to make plastic five years from now, we sure wouldn't be looking at it now." Airwest Sets Mark COMPLITI OIANGI c:,OUNT.Y C:O~H'-Gl SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - htclttcllttg: L091HHI t.och,. Hughes AttweSt reports that Sa• ci.,,..1tte. Ml11lo11 Vltfo, nearly 50,000 persoos ,flew with DH• Pel11t, .. -... 11 •• Lont the ifrline during th e .._ .. alHf most of LA."'" Thanksgiving holiday, shat- 2 MONTH TO MONTH tering records. ltENTAL IASIS 'J'raffic during tlle holldays l NO DlPOSIT IEQUlltD inCreased 13.3 percent com- . ON APPIOYED CllDIT pared to the, same period a 4 ONLY $17.00 PIR MONTH 'year ago, an airlin e TOTAL COST spokesman said Monday. lnllntfttd poget:l d 5 NIW COMPACT UNIT The tieaviest traveled ay s1z1 11 11. • 4 z 1111 was Sunday when the alrllnt! 6 'fOICI MUSAM PAMltl c arried nearly 14,000 ALSO ARE AVAILAILI • i l pa$sengers1 lhe highest single 7 PULL FRH MAINT111ANCl 1 1 __ da_,y~in~A!·rw-es;;t;hls;;to·ry·.~- -1•1i!'lf!lfml'Ji!Mlli.llfflMl!flf-llhl~la~--- •-··--tll 1.IMl'IWST DEQ 71_. ·13WSCI 'IOI SO, SAHT" .... UHTA AHA lre111 1.•!lwit ~ Ml•IM Vl•i•• °'n• Poln1. Jd C""*ttl, S111 '"''" C1Plllr1M, II T-o;. Clll tttl frM "'w21a ' ST,llOO To UI0.000 ~0oll:&rCr~ lllWOflT IOUfT't' MtDi Newport CMl•r l:ZO NtwPOrt Ctrii.r Ori .. ....,,ort O.•ch, C•flf, (71 4) 644824 ,, vo1. Net Li1~1 C1'19. ·-··-AAR(p .020 llO J0•1-'1 A&E. Pl<K!k 8 I'• ... Abet MI ·~ 7 7'.•-~' :~~':'in'e'i~~ . 1i 1:;:,_ • (; AOObe Corp 17 12 + 1 Adobe Oil~ 12 11'1 Ae•Ode• ll'IC l 1', •.• Aeronto11 tnc 11 1'' •.• Allol C&p Sii. 33 3'" •. Atl!IC6PWI l I •.. AIUIF'tll .Olb ~1 61•-'• Al( Ptito Sll -1 31.-'• Al•t n lnou~ I I 2'•-'• AlfOOrl'lt' f r II ,~,-.-'·• Alrp.-~EI Sk 2 6'• ... Ain••i<lt .16 18 lJ<.-•• :1:~ ~~ ; i~: :: :·; Al•~•a A•d a 61..,.,. • 1 Al~ WotlOll 9 i• ;-~. AICOla<; .0).b 6 6\1 , .• AneghCpwl 14 4'o-1, Allegn Airls 61 •'• t ~. A11e11A w1 n 1 7'• ... •unTire t.I< 6 9 + \, All~OArtht 2 3(o , .. Alla (Of'llfOI I 9',o-'• Alll!ller 1.71l 10 14 , . , Al p~ lndu• 1 11 o •.• Alt.lmil Cp 21 I Allt!t Corp 71l >; , , , Anec Cp pt 2 2;,_ "' Allee (pwt 11 11·16 .. h Alle•FOs .1"1 j 7'.--'·• Alum59t .41 1• 9'' ~ .. Amco ln<l•t l •·...--lo AmHes~ wts 6\ l !'.-~. An• A9ronm I 1 -'·• AmB<ltrl .ill lb a'•-'> AmFu l .nti a 26' ... ~, AmC:.•r _Q()I) 6 81,-'• Aml~•11 .l~tl JS s,.-~t AM/J11eA .33 11 5,,_ I,.. AMa llVS .3.l l S<o ••. AMotln .10d 10 /\,__ '·• A Petro 1.10 10 31'• •. AmPlan lDll I S'>.-'·• AmAlt 1.IJtl )l19 8'iJ + •lo Am Ally wt 8 1'11+ Vo Am AecGrp 11 3 + \1 Am !..Jte1 •k x2• 5t~ +. >o Am Tee .OSb J 31.-V1 Am TrainllQ 19 1 + 'lo AMICCp .Ool S 11 \t-V. Andrtl RIKI 1 11/1 •.. Anglo .10b S 1>,.,-~·1 Ari\hony Ind ll 4~> ••. A 0 Ind Inc 32 ~-'l• 'Applied Dal 2 l + Vo Aq11i\1ne .10 6 2• + ~, Argt;s Inc 18 ,,._ \'II Ar1CLO .08tl 18 11 -'l• Arl1C pt . .a l 8Vt-~ Arkl.<tG I.JO ~ 2S + '" Armac Ent 26 1:i.--\/, Armin Corp J 't" -•,:, Arrow Eled 11 SI>+ ~1 Awn~ra Cp 52 12~.-•to Ash!OOH.ta 11 12'i•-~. As.aa8"":".cog 2 6 , , , A~~fO .OSI'! 2 2 + Vo Astre• Inc • l ::fi~~':~ : ~,,._.ii. Al!CM 1.6Stl 131 22~1~o AUar.Cp WU 3 114-1/o Al.1~1 In .10 4l 22"'+ 'I-I At;\tral Oil 21 1Slt-'I• A11\om BIOQ 13 4 • •• Au1o Radio 8 1"' , .. At;IO Svc .ro 4 s,,,_ 'I• AlllO Sw .6S I 47 •·· All CCorp 29 1'4-"' Avtm<o . 1• 11 2~;... •,:. Avondl 1.15e 1 l3'"'+ ~. 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Equop Commooor Comm Psye Com PS 1.02 Cornpoln .Jl tompUOyn CompuQra Con(lll' .lltb Concrd Fatl Contll'c Cp Connelly en COf\roy Inc Con$011 Gas Coo~yne Cp cor11 Mater! Contlel wl§ Cook El .o!O Cook In .o!OtJ CookPaint 1 Cooper J .10 Coroon .1n11 Cor1Ltb ·~ Corr&S .91• Coll Co•p CouslnM wt Co• Obie Cr1iq Corp CramerE Jk C•eaOw Mo Creo1eP 2.l'6 Crest Fam Cror.s A .olJb " Crown C.P Si Crwnln .200 Cry~1•1 O•I 2 ''··-.,. 2 1}(1+ ,. 16 '"" •.. J 1 -lo 26 .,,_ \', 21 111-.,, 8 1J'o,. •,. 6 1•, ... ~ J" •.. ll 1 -~. 1 7·._. \, I, 8'' •.. M .. ,,, 11 1 -It ~ 1 .. '. 11 6'' .. \1 n 1• • .,. •, I ~'o-i, b ll~-+ •• 10 1 .... -'• ~ ]>,-\o SJ l'o-'• I 10'•-'' tS •:i..-~. n 2 -\. 11 7l•+ 'n I 7\,-.. Vo 1b 11~~ ~ v. lt 11 .. ~ I• ll ,, :-"' I ~''1 1 l iV;-~' 7 6' ... -~. 10 I V•+ ... 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Bitrtl'I SCI .11 21 2\t-"' Dell• Cor p U Hot .,1 Bartons Cod 3 2t•-•;1 Otlln Fa .so 1 a• .. .-.,.1 81rutn fosl 1 '"•-\o Onl tE.1 .OSb n 1111+ i1 B••WICk Ind 2 3h ··-Dero l nClt;~I 10 ~ ... 111 Basin Petri t S • Ots,Pn .19b 11 23 -"1 Sayroc .8'ltl , ,~~+ .,~ Design Jwl 1 S' • + ,,., &en1vlorl R S1 \•-~1 De\ec:IO Int 10 1\1-\" Sell Ind .OI 17 7 -Vo De velop CP I lO~t-~- " ,..-, ,. , ' De uApl .10.I 8 1•n •.• -u• ~ •·• OHJlnO .!Ob 23 6~0--\o e.n St 2.82b 8 20>.:. • . • Ol1mor>O M :IO 11 + "'" SenelSld~ 9 3\4 •·· OltbOIOVen 10 210+ •,, Stnr~ Cp 8 3'1-•+ v. Be ro Enl 3k • 10 3\o+ i 1 g=: ·~ 2~ 1:~:= ~: Bero Al .S7b II S~ "' Oise F1bric l 2'1J ••• 8ergRlly wt • 'fo ••• OlttrJey .!4 • 11 -\>1 So!rgtn Br w 1 4 -V.-01 1 ~ 11 IV.-V. Be ronpt I.IS 10 12 -~1 ..___• wn.._ P '' 3, _, •• Bern1omal 11 ( -,,. .,...,.. n:tro ~· &ert''" Corp 1 sv.-v. OrewNat Cp 11 1-l. •.• BervenC .10 11 • Orl11er ~rr S 1h ... &e1n111rn '" 1 , Ore fair .•~ 1 s•',. \• aeve•lr t nt 13 1" ::: oup!e•P .16 2 1• •... 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To~ ,21)b 71 1\'o--~. t oron C ."°'II t 11"1 • -. t olaL PttrOI 100 ~-lo To!tlPpl .IO 1 1R'>• '.. T-n&C .20 7 3\lo+ 11 Tr;KOf h'IC.p \S •11 + ', TrtnlLlt .JS 1 •~i-\1 lrnwlr .010 7 to ,,,...,...., 4k t • + \o tr1SMo.ota • s~• ... lubMi .tJb 20 2 -'• tult(O Cero 2 2~•+ \a turl;IOClyn9 6 6 , .• y,,.,.,., 1,20 ' 11«'•+ ·~ Twin l'°•I• 4 J\I+ '• T1co Ulborl SS •t•-\o -uv-UIPCp ,02!) U 1'!'1 •.• Urllorif(I 61< 11 61t-~ UnlnYo1st .fill •S •1-t+ \i lJt11MI 2.»b 11 161'1-\1 Un Mlg wh 1 21.o , .• UtlA!rPr .(Q • a.I•-\11 UAA~ .0111 1, 1\11-\~ unsr1no 1111 11 111o ••• Un(llflnl 2k 13 11111-'I U11 0011«51 • .Slio--\~ Ut1 fOOlb In 31 1"'-, , • uto Htuc, n Jh -\,'it Ull!Ntfll .10 6 10 ,,, USSnt t,Jlll 2 ~ '-' USFUter .20 20 t - \ .. USLRI 1.1111 Ii U ,.__ "-U~ 1.MA wt • 1 us Niti "'' 13 J •. -US Allllwn 1 3'~-•:1 us R90UC1t1 1 10\'t-\1 us •1111r .6(1 t 11~-\ .. Util1t• (.or~ ....... l• Urwty Bu 1 ll"''-llo Utllvlt1t 10 )\ol ,. , Ufllll S¥t • a &VI .. , lJrl,lllCI wtl t 13V) , .• lJR-S Sntmt lJ Jt't-1, U \I lfld wta It SVr •·• i \ f I -~, ' . ' f . • " Monday's Closing Prices • NEW YORK STQCK EXCHANGE I • , 1t1111a11ou , 1971 S ----" DAJLT '1LOI --YJiaUi High-Lows Appear Every Saturday Energy Crisis Batters Market J -. r ) zo UAtL., ~IL.U t TlltSdAy, Now1nbtr 21, 19/l JOIN -THE • 'SELLERS CIRCLE' WE'RE. SAVING -SPACE•- FOR ~ ~ ~ ~ If you sell e service end don't advertise in the ,,,, DA.IL Y PILOT Service ·Directory, you're doing business the hard way. The Service Directory ( cleuifications 600-699 'in the classified ed section daily) gives you an advantage you -·get through no other advertising medium. It reaches customers who ere ready to buy. Be there the when your prospects come into market looking for the services you have to sell . If your service isn't listed, we 'll start e --category just for you. Pick up the phone right now end reserve your space in the "Sellers Circle" . . Your Direct Line to Directory Results I 641-5678 CLASSIFIED AD · DEPARTMENT DAILY PILOT • ·.\ ) • 'OIICE + ~BIJC NOTICE PlllllJC NOl'ICE ,ICTtTtoUI IUllNISI •ICTITIOUI IUSIMISI llllW~J-MfSA lfMl•tao t(MOOt, , NOTICI O,_ MIJllHAL'I SAL.I • SUl'l.104t COUllT O' TMl .. ._. lfATlM•MT MAM• STAflMlMT OISTll.J~CT AIMii N. q, lanllt, tk.. l'ltlfltlff ITA't• Qfl CM.IPOl.MIA •CM l.~!"' follewkll ,.,.. .,. ... Tiit foll.wlfll J*'Wlfl b 6'11'111 IM.Jll-Netki 111111 as.M w. ll:oettl MOm&. llf Al, Dttllllltnl TM• COWTY OI' MA .. Ol ....,..t1tu ••1 tt: • NOTICt. I~ tlEUI .GIVEN WM! 1116. lj, '°' ' MO. ... ,_ DANA MIJtlNA INN, lOtl Cout ((NfUlll lON MUSIC CO., lllOJI lrvl1111 ll'lt totr• of Edvctlltlfl o1 IM H~· l.f<r \ffr!W. 61 •n -llllen "llWM 911 NOTICl fW MUllll ... OP PHITIOM HIOIWt•Y• Dtllt ll'offtt, C•lllMnlt t1'2t toY!f?tl'tl,_TllW.!O. Ct lU, .._ ~ UnlfltO k11oo1 Dltlrict oLOr•ntt Ot'-t U,. 1t7J ti\' tht fo\1111k1.-t ,_,, "" ll'lllO•ATl Of" WILL A#D llOA 'V.. J , Cartier. 1'111 CM" HlllhY4il" lll•l'llUll C•l'tMlll Woln, noo M•rl•n CM!<r. Ct Utorn111. wllf rtctl,,. 5Mltdl °'"'°' (MW "'"*' JIJOlc.Lfol Dbh'ld, L•JJWJtS TISTA.M•lfTAllY C•OKD ~ ll'alm, C1Uforflf•,,.,.. -Ln.. frilfWllOrt a..tfl. C..11. nw 1114• UI' I• ll;ot AM. "' ttll ltlfl "'"~' .,_,,.,..! Mtt~ u. ltn. ~ WAIVIOI -Ir... ll. Cllrtlw, ;MUI C..t Thi• M IMH i. COl'KIWIH b<r t l'I H r ot l>Kemller 1m •I the oil'~ ol Oitf!M. $1•1• ol1 C•lllorN•. """ Elltll ol EDWAAO A,. 'H 0 H v HlllllW•Y· 0.... Point. (•lllor11l1 ""' lncllvkWal. of wk! klMIDI Dlilrl~ l«•ltO II 1as1 I 1~t .,,,., .. "' llVOI" " Alri.tl WllTlUL, •k• liDWAllO A. WEITlVI,.. Tllf• OUMllHt I• cQl'ICll.lcttO .... •n ~P$1L •. ·-· , _ l'IKWlll• A~~~ c;~flf'llj., Jit •• ,"'9~ ... "'-"..,..,.____._ (){.. 0.-..1, -l 1 1 lncllvld1111. -Til!J"';t~ -w11rlfiff 1 t r W11r,11 ttm•-wTd • will be iiWUch ~I';' M 1\lti"""'''11rMY;-ti"lV6cjiftlllll . NOTICI!~ II' M!lllf:•Y GIVl!N ~1 --v. J•~Cltlltf ·-• - COUlll'f Cl....tc of Or1,.gt (Olll'lt'f Oii ~ ll'ICI r-.ct tor: • -crtdLIOI"• 11111 llllllltl fiobtr1 ~r{I MAltY ll. WllT?VL 11M 111111 , fltt•t11 11111 11tltmt11t W•I llltd \/ft11 lht NovtmMr I, 1973, l 1.IHllll Slll:YIC• ' tM llobwl .>. Morr! .. lkl ll, J, Mor•lt I ,_11tlon f$W f'fotltl1 of Wiii ll'ICI COi.iniy Cl•rlt of Oral'lft Cou11tr Oii . ,.tn14 Alt bldt 1111 lo ot In 1ctprdl11Ct t lld l•rMr• Morrh •k• .. rMrl e. 'or h~t ol Ltlllrt TttlllMltlltrY NovtMblr 16' lm • • 11'11bll.r.td 0rl11Dt Cotll 01Uy Piiot, Wllll CondlllOflll, lfltlrV(llOllt, I 11 cl Morris tlu Ml'I. lltobert Morrll •U to !ht jMlllle.rttf (bol\d Wl lVl(I), fl ft.-tl'ICC ,,..,., NovtMtlfr 6. 13. 20J 27, lt1J J'3S·7l 5pec:Jllc1ll11tlt, '#tll&ll 1r1 tlOW on tllt I . IE. Morrll 1h Mrt. llllllll'I• J. fo wlllldl 11 mtdt fot furtfltr ptrll<;\1111r1, l'Ul>llllll<I Or1111J• Cotti p11Jy 1'!101. , • In tht ollk t ot Jr. Pwdla.11111 ""nt Motrl• .ic1 ""'"· 111. '.I. Moul• -1"'9fMlll •rid n.t lfM II~ o.~ pi:.,, OI hHrlnl N11V1mblr 20. n, 11141 10tc.mritr •· PVBIJCNOTl(;E ' ' ti 1.,1d K l\001 Ol1trkt, llST Pltctntll clt~-1. 1ilowl,., •11'l IM .. nr;1ol11tf~ tht Mll'lt IMit • Mt "fot D11ttMbe( 11, 117J . • Ull-11 • • Avit11ut,C~r1.Mt1t.Cl\ifornll. • K~ll'I' dut Oii u ld llil09mltll 1111· 1.,.11~.1•1Jr1l ,:oo l :m.1 ln'lht courtroom --- FICTITIOUS IUSllllESI 1 e~ blOcltr 1t1111t wtil'nlt • bid ·~I Nit of !flt ltJU•nj• ,of wld •~«I"~ ot D11Mrtrn1111 Ko .• > of .,Id t:Mt, • PUBIJC NOT,ICE NAME STaTtMINT l'I lorm 01 I CtrllHl<I or '(Ullltn I Ni'8 ....... IJClllll Ill ... rltflt, 1111• •l l 700 Clvlc Clfl•tr; (WI ... wt.1. In , Tiie tol!°""l"11 Ot•J.Olll •r• dolt111 e...,.ckc °:" 1j~)bld 1 bond tc:tiMI to flvt alld lllttr•t Oil Mid• h1dffl\llfll deblOl't 1111 City, -~t.111• AN, .Cllllor1111• --~,.=c"T'-1To1c0-,------- w irr.esi It' :: tl'I 9 ,,,. IMOul'lt of lht 11'1 ,,,. proptrl';' In ttw '°""" of °'"""· . Olltd kovtr11blr 1), ltn . I ' I IUllMW J.P. SAi.t:s. 1t3' Fl1ml'1110 °'· CMI• I~ mtdt ~·•lile IO lht ordtr of Sltlt _,,, C1UfOr"nl .. dtlC'1btl ti loltow1: • WUl .. fl'I •• ,, JoM. ~ly Cltlk T"" I NAMI STATlMlNf Miw. Ctllfwl'lll '2t~t ' Ntwport ....... No Ullltltd kllool Ot,trlct Lot 14, Tr.ct 301S, MU Book 'ti, WILLIAM 10 . WAMlllb 1111(. ~I.._ ,Oillow4"" Pll'to'l.t ·tf'I .. Gt rtld L lq[jl'ld lt)I FltMI 0 A ll'trlorm111C11 •CINI m.y bl reQlllr.ci P.ttt 4), •lld mor1 commonl';' kl'IOWl'I ......... OllW.-llrttt, Sl!lit. 1(14 nttl 1111 Dr .. Cotll Mttl c.niorJ'lll "'26 1111 ., "" OlloCrtllon ot ,..... OJ1trk 1. 11'1 •t~ 2'221 AMl\tlm llr"'· CGtll MtMp LM ......... c ........... 14 111:.':.AHlilM OEll'OT, 11m .... l•ll T M I 'I l'ld '"' Fl I 1119 tvtnl of l•!l11r1 lo lfllW ll'llo •vcll Ct llforlll• T1h (1111 m -nn • A ....... rn. Ctlltor1!11 '*' Dr •'ti.it N,,1~' ~•llfo.lll• w,u1"' ftllO eonlrK I, 1119 IH"OCHdi ol lllt (lwcli MOTl(E IS HElllEIV OIVEN flllll An-tw 11'.tlllMtr' I .... lw t'.11111111. 1°'1 W, ttll Itel,, T11ii bl.tlll'ltSt II (OlldV(ltd I»' .. 0119rl l will IM forftli.d, or io CIW ,, • Oii FrldllY. Dl«!'l'lblr 1, un, I I 2100 1'111111.i.ct Ori/IOI COit! Diiiy l'Uot, ~Mlmt C.Utorrtl•, j)l.rlMrlPllP II llOf'ld, • 11>1 full wm. lhtreol Wiii be o'elotk P.M, 1t l•Olll of Courrllou ... NOY.,.,., 21, H, llftd Oectl'llber 4 1. ,Urry II'. C11tt1 I ... , 1057 W. 1111 TtrtY M lrtllNI • lorftllt>d to u hS S~-Olstrlct of Orlntt '201 ~J1mti0r" lllOH, Clt'f of Htwpott lt1J ,.1,_.,; Rd., An:ff!t!'llt Ct~fofllll -~ Thb •l•llme~t Wit flltd w!TJ'I lht County. Bttcll. County of Ot•nQI, Still of J. Alu G. Trout.11, '10" Wffl •111 COlffll~ Cltrk el Oti~ Count<r 1111 N11 Dl!kltr mt'f wlthdr1w ~It bid for C1llforllf1, I w!M 'Mii •I public 11vctl011 PUlllJO NOT.ICE ll!fd, All1ht1111, C~Uor .. 11 Nowmber u. lt n • pe•locl 01 lorlY-flVI fotll GI V$ llltt lo Ill• lllgt.ut lllddtt. for e1111 In T .. 1 1Mlsl1111•• 11 eonclllCltd lly I OtM••I ,._,,_ IM dllt .. , tor ltill OOtflll'lll tllerffl. 11wlul moMY of till Ul'lllld Sl1lt1, Pl•l111nlllp. p bll flld Ori c I Del I Tiit llolrd ., Edu<•lklfl of !ht Ntwl)Ofl· •JI "" ri.111. Till• Ind lnltrffl of •ICTITIOUS •us1111•1s """ (11111111 No~m~r 21 ,:e o.c::.1>1r )Y \lPI ~· ........ Vnltllld SCllOOI Ol1lrkt rtstnrtl wld llfde,,,..,_I dtbtort 11'1 1111 l l:JOVI MAMl SfATaMIHf C Tllb tlll11111nt W11 flit(! wfll! tl'lll Jt1l • Un n ,..... rlglll lo rolKI l ny or Ill bhh. OHcrlllH ~°""""'' ... 1111• mvth lhtrtl)I Thi lollowtno persoru ,,, doing OUftl';' Clerk of Of•no• County Oii Hoyt,.,.. ----::::::-:::c=-::ccccc=--"C.:.':.:1•NI no1 llftt tt1rll'f 1e,e9I .... lo#fft ,, tnio'f flt ntcnwrv 10 llHtf'I u ld bu1l111u n i tiff "· .1m PUBLIC NOTICE bid, tlld lo w•tv1 l ft'I' lntqrm1llly or i •ecllllon. w11h 1ee•P.ttd ll'lttrflt lllld C 0 MM U N I T V F I H A H C I A L IJW.OC lrr111ul1rl1Y ln 1ny bid rt'ttlvld. cost1, 5Etl:VICES. ll'IU Auel• Tr" ~. '"'4' ----;:c:=;c:;:::::c-:::::-::o:::c---1 D1ttd: NovtMfltr u, 1rn 011111. No..,.ml)tr 1, lt1l 1r111111, Ctlll. t2tM ll'llOllJMG OJ:~• Ca.11 c1111 ""°'· l'ICJITIOUS IUSINESS NEWPOll:T-MIE5A VNIFtEO Olv!Jlor1: HlrW O.vlCI 6hd Arlff>I Ttrrl1. 11162 NOVtrllbtr 2'0. J), tnd Dt<:tmfltr 4• NAMI STATEM!NT S~HOOL Ol~l RICT 011.~ll:O Q, WILl(lll$0N Auel1 Tr" Line. lrvltW, C.111, t2tU II. lt7J JSll:J totlowl1111 P<eflon 11 dOl!>ll buah'it•• of Df•ntll Coul'ltv. C11Lfornl1 M1r1Mb Otlflllof Co.;nl';' Tl'lll bl.llll'lf'U II eltndllCltd .,., Ill ------------==·~· II: llr Oorolhv Htrv<ey f o\lltr B'f Eunl M. Eldtr, O""'ty lndlVldll•I.• 1 SIMMONS ENTERPRISES. 2600 Cllf! P11r(h••lflll A11111t ll:OlllllT WlftCIU.•ll Arltl'lt Ttrrl1 PUB_LIC NOTICE '"' Orlv<e. Newpgrt Bff(fl, C1lllornl1 '26IO Ml·lllXI ll'tii.illff'I AltwM<r This sllltmtnl w11 lllld Wiii\ 1111 ----=;""',----_:.:=---CMrltt J. Slmmo111, 2000 CllU Or., P11bll111t<1 Or1119t Col!I 01lly i>llot,l.ot S. OOv.11, Sllltt nf County Ct1rk OI Or•1111• COUJ'll~ Oii P'ICTITIOUI IUllNllS NewPQrl Bt•(ll, C•lllornl• 92660 Nov1mbfr 17 •11<1 lk<.~mt>cr 4, 19731Ln Alilttlff, C•llfllrfllll tl014 N•v•mDlr I, 1'13. NAMl ITAJIM,Nf' in!~tdvoirislne$• f\ (imdl.l(;ltd l!Y e11 )621·13 N::::.~lJ,o;:.n;;, ii~ll O,ilY J,'l:'ii P\ll>ll$1\1d Orintt Cotti Olll'f 'l.r:. bu~l:...:':~~wl111 .-r•0111 •rt dolllCI TlllS<;,~;.~~~i ~:.~on1i1ed wl!h PUBLIC NOTICE ·---Nov. u. 20· 21 '""' D~._h. !!_73 ~'·1J -'LE1$U_lt!. •ll&LJCATIOHS 1JO-IE+ trie PUBLIC NOTICE · · · ·· 11'h 11., co.11 M•a •. c1111. t2'21 ' County C1trk of Or1 n9e County Of'I NO•ICI O• OAL• 0, •&llSOMAL _ PUBLIC N.OTJCE Ch1rltJ Oolforit JO"f,•4121 Brtllfatd Novtmtltr 26, 1913 • Hu11th1111o11 -•-·-.. , ''''' --' 1------Mln' __ ltlOfl_!.ltJ_YN.~.!.-!,~~~-·~~· P:ICJITIOUS IUSINlSS •ICTITIOUS IMISINIU T / .._..., '""' P11blisllld Or•1111~ C~ly "PilO'i: . •••• NaMtSTAT•M•MT .. ~.-..--M~l-"ITATIMl:N Pil~r=::;.".'411.! J.t .!!!!l_Clll(!lt ll<r .1 Hmlltd Navtmbtr ?7 and O.Ctmblr •. 11, 1a. Suptrlor Court ti lht s1111 of C1lltorJ'll• Tiii followl1111 perto!)I t r• cJolno , ~ht fo:jlOWll'lll perlO(_I Ii doing blltl11t11 "Cl)l•ll• b.' Jo<r ltl3 l60l-n tor trie County of 0!'•1111•· busll'lfts 11: ~· • lh11 1!1ttm1nl Wl l 1111'11 I ~ lht Mtlttr of Ille E.,11t ol CARE ENTEll:Pll15E5, SulM 102, Ql2 l'ANOA PLVMSINO, 1S1S W. Count';' Cl.,~ ,111 0,..., WUll IM PUBLIC NOTICE MnAGA.ll:ET MULLER. Oect1sld. Ntwmil'I "'"'""*· Hunlll\9f011 ltteh. Mllcl4.r1ttvr Bl'ld., 5uflt No. \6. Co.I• Novtmfltr I. r1,11 1 COlllll'I' on ---------------I Ncitlct 11 lltrtb<r 11lv1n lh•t tht ..,n. CA nw Mn1, c1111. t'U2t . dtr•lgntd will wll •t prl~11t s1l1, on Lat II:. lu19trltr, llOJ FMntlock, , Hqof•rd O. IClflM. 1(1212 Bowman l'Vbll htd '·"2U NOTICE TO COMT!lACTOllS or itltr tht lOlll dlY of Dtctn1ber, Ol1mottd ltr, CA • Avt., Solrlh 'Gi it, Coll!. '2Q10 ' Orllfllt Cotti 01lly •Hot, CALLING 1'011 •U>S Jt13. •I !ht otUc• of Ptul H. W•'fl•, 0.. R. ··~·!••· 1102 ....._u,111 Tiii• bl.lliMll " cGfldu<:ted b';' 'NI NOVtMbtr "' ll. XI, v. lt13 DU-IJ .Scl\ool Ofttrlcl: Hv11tlnglon ltlCll Union Al1orM'f• 4301 Ptclllc 80UllV•rd, lilll'I-51.N'nMll Or., Oltrnoflel 8..-, f;.A , /f'lll fvkhNI. I -------'--== H1gn School Olslrkt 1111911111 f'1rk. Counl\I of L0$ AnQ11ts. T.ci O. Nellon, SW APKlle Orlv1, • ltOWl(d D. KlllM PUBLIC NOTICE Bkl Dt1C1llM: 4:30 o'clock p.m. of s1111 of c11nornll, 10 lht n11111t1t tncl P1.tetn!11. CA 92610 T1111 111~1 wit tlltd with tht _Ille 1hl o;l.ty ol O.Cembtr. !911 bell tlldOer, i ncl 1vbltci to conllrm•tion Opll W. Koll, 2217' C11(.ltdt Dr •• .:wnty 1Cllrk of • OflJ'lllt COl.llll'f ':::11----,;;:;=::::::-':-C-c--=:._ __ PllCt ol Bid Rt'CtfPI : Hunll119lot1 Bt•(ll lir wld S1ip,1rlor Coutt, 11tt !ht rlghl, CtllYOll L•kt, CA N_,_, 1, lfl'l, ,ltT'ITIOUI IUSIHISS Union Hlolt Scllool Dlttrlct Olflc1, 1901 tllll •nd lnltrHI o1 wld dectt$1d 11 Tiii$ busl111111 1t colldvctltd by 1 11_,-11 ... tfUJ l t. 1o1.!iAMI! ITAllMlJllT Stvtnlttt1Tlt Sir.el, Huntlnrgton 811ch, tht tlrn1 ot Ot.1111 1.11d 111 111t •'9111, p&rlntnl'llP. PUOlllflld Or111... Cc1&1t Dally f'llOI, it; tlll Pl'flOll Ii dolno 11111111'81 C1. 92641. Corile<tnct Tr1Utr -Conr1r1nc1 1111• Incl 1n1.,n 1 tllolll 111.t 1111111 ot Je•n H1rl11 NOYtfl'lb«\ 1, 13, 20, 21, 1tn ROOll'I F Ill rur ol bvlldlflll. wld dtctlHd 1111 KCllllrCCI tw pper1tlon Tllll 1l1ltmtnl w11s tlltd wllll ti. --· J:Ul-1l lll:VINE AMIMAL HOSPITAi.. 1'°'6 Projtct I de 11 1 •I Ic1t11111 N1~1 o! 1tw or otnerwbt, othtr !Nin or CO!Jl'llY Cltrk ot °''"'' CQIHlf\I Oii , , Culvtr Drl..,., 1~11111, C.U1'111'11i• tJ6M Westminster High 5cllool EJ<P•nslO!I IBld In lddlllon to 111o111 of 11ld dtuiostd. Novtmbtr 16. 1m. PUBLIC NOTICE J•~• E. lllcfl. O.llM .. 11.ff Pwt No. 'tt12l 11 lht tlrnt of dHlll, on JJ'ld lo •ll "9641 =•19ft Cll"tlt , NtWWt l•ICll. C1lll. Plier Pl•n• •re on tll1: Allen-Mll l1r Oit etrt1!n ptr1on11 prQPerl'f 11tu1lt P11llllstitd Or•ntit CCII$! Dltll'f ll'Hot •. l---c=~-~~~~-----1 A•cl•lttcts. 1606 Bush, Sant• An1. In lllt CCIU!llY ot Or•flllt!· 51111 ol NOVl'M-20, 27, •nd Dtctrnblr •. SOll'llllOlll COU•f. 011' TM• 1n!r!rdVl~·Jt1tu . I• Colldl.ldlod . "" 11'1 C1Ulornl1 9'2101 C•Ulor11!1, P11fllcul1rty d1si::rlbld II II, 1m 3S2t· STAT• o• CALl•OllNIA 'Oil NOTICE 15 HE RE BY GIVEN 111•1 ro1io.i..i.. !&wit : .. THI COUNTY°" DllANGI J•ll'IH E. ll:f(h, DVM !fie •OOve-111mtd Ser.col Olllri(! ol Nott ll'I •mount of SUl,tl5.14 d•lt'd 1110. ,t,.n1tt Thl1 1111-1 w•t 11i.d 'w!111 lrit 0••119e County,. Calllorn11. 1ul119 bv o.c. )0, lf"9, mt•e by Ltl-.cl sltpi'ttm PUBLIC NOTICE MOTICI DI' NU!llHO •ttOIATa 0111 COIJJ'I,., Cltrk °' Or1no1 COlltll'o' Oii •nd lhrOUiJh 1h Govt rJ'llng Bo.rd, INI Merv E. Sttpllen,, p.tYlbll on WJLL AND "Oil L •TT I 111 I NOVi'nlfltr 16. 1'1.l. hl."relnalltr referrl<I to 11 "OtSTR ICl ", or belort 10 Ytlrl, wl'.lh lJ'lltrnl 1r T&ST,\MIMTAll:V OI: IN l H &. ll'n.wt •,.',H r~e!_vt0 ',~ to,,. bvl no0•,.latt0o:, 111,1111 7'7' ptr •llnum, · P<l.V•b\I morithly 111 ' ,INCTA'MITllO,UTSATllUM"IM!!I AMLITNEISITlllATIVI Llnlll:S OP' AO· N:.,~blml~..., Or•21nc11 Cotti O.lly Piiot, " ........ s I"" me. H~ b "' o: -6) 00 i.glnnll'IQ Fib. I \t70 Prntnl · "' llATION _, •Y, l hd 0l(lfl"lbtr 4, II. !flt .11w1rd of • con1r1c1 lor lht b,1.nct : $10.651.0l. Said 1111tf W<U<lll the lollbWlflll PtrllOrl .It dolJ'lll bilsl1111u ~tl•I• ot CHAii: LES ED WA ll D IJrJ .,:wJ-1J t bOve prote(I. by Oltcl QI Tru11 rKOrded Jtn. 2, •s: . TRUSTY, OteHMd BIOs s~ll be fl(elvtd IJ'I 11\t pt1c1 ltlO IJ'I BOOll n.,s, Piii' SSO, Otflcl•I 50VTHCOAST tNTEll:tOllS. 20S2 NOT ICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN 11111 PUBLIONOTICE ldenHll'1:1 •bovt , iod sn111 be OO<tllld Hl(orCls OI 5111 Bir,,.rd!l'lo Coun1y, i lld Gtrcll11 L11111, Coslt M1w, (;•Ul.•"421 MILCllEO El.llAttlETH TRUSTY ltlti ---;;;~;;:;:;;;-;;;::ccc~--- and publicly reld •loud 11 tl>I •bO'lt· lt'turll)9 pr®frtv d•si::rlbtd 111: Jostofl Gu1r111Ccl, 2mt Glrdtn u .,., Hiid lltrtll'I 1 petition for probll1 ot UileCI lime •nd place. Tl'lat porllon ' of r1!9 Eiit 3 i crri Cosll M•11, C1llf. '2621 · will llld lor L1t11r1 Ttsllm111lar'f or •1CTlflOUS IUSINISS Tllere will be 1 S1IXl.OO dep01il rtq11lred ol lht NorllitlJt 1Jo· Of 11» NorlhWfll Thl1 bus(11etl It (Of'ldvclld I»' 111 In the Alltmtllvt Ltller1 o I lilaMI lfaT•Nlli ltT klr tach ••' ol bi~ o..:umenh le ,,. ul tlW Soulht•tl ''• ot Stt;tiorl lndlvld11•1. Admlnhlrttloro, rtl•rfnc• IO whici'I 11 '.ht follow~no Pl•IOtl It CIOll'l!I butlrotu 11u1r1ntee Ille return •n gCIOd calldUlon ~o. TowMhlP 2 Norin, 11:111111 1 £1$1, JOH9fl G~rn.t(ci ll'lldt. 1or tlll'lhtr, 1Mrllcvl••i.. •hd 11111 ••· wl lhll'I stVtn dl 'l1 •f11r The bid oc:ienl l'lll S•n Bt rna,.Jlno Bill •nu Mtrldien, · Tllll ll•ltMHtl WI~ !!ltd wllfl lltt tllt llmt Ind plKt of ht•rl"9 1111 T IHSUlll.E.D 0 VA L-1 T Y MAIN· 11111. •"ccordlJ'lll 1o Govtrnm<enl Survt'\I Countv Cltrk of O!'lf!lll COUl'lly on l.tlM lllt !Mell u ) tor DlttMblr 11 11ENAN.,;i;;, ldJ Trldl WINll HI.II'!.· Eacn bid m11s1 ,onrorm 11'1d IM d•i,crlbltl •s· • ' Navrmber J, Im. 1•73. II ':00 .. m., In lht couriroon: llllloll l...::11, C1Hf. ' rt,ponslve to tl>e contr1c! documtf'lll. Bt11IMlJ'lll ·,, 1 potnl Jn tflt Horii! P-"1112 of Dlpirtme11t No. 'l •of w !d (Ollfl, Stt~• 11• P•M•"ft, ldl Tftdt Wlf'ICls, E1eb bid sh.IJt tit _Jl_ttC!'l\P~nl~ Dy llM of the. -~IMisl ..J.o _of • Yid P11t1ll$hld Or•not Cotll Otll'I' Pllof, •I 700 . Civic; Clfthlr Drive Wt1I, In HllflllJ'llltOll llttcll. C•lll. tl>e securltv rtlerred IO In tiw (ot1lr1ct StctlGfl, 1'4> feet wnt of lht Northt•tt NO~trnbe"f 6,-13; 10. :tr.1Y73 · + »O· Ille CHY or-5'J'ltt-"""• C•llfontl1. ~ 1lllJ OUlillftl 11 ~l.ci -.., 11n; ctoc:umtnl$ •NI by Ille llsl al pr~d corntr of tht Morll!'ll'fll •• ~I "" Ollld ~ It, 1'71 lldl'flilvll . 111txon1r1clors. SOUTllMll '• of w id Secllon; tllfJ'IC<e WIUIAM I!. ST JOHN, T SllYCI Ill. 1'11tr1M Tllo 01STR ICT reser~1 1111 1lgM lo Soutn 100 lttl; lhenc• w.;,, s.O lftt; P_V8LIC NOTICE COUl'lty-Cllfk Ith ltl!Mltnl W•• 111111 Wiii\ ttlt ttlecl 1nY or 111 bids or lo w1lv1 lllenu SOUlll 15' fffl' lhtnct WH I OOMALD A. Mc.CilJIM. ~tun!' Cl.,~ DI Dfl""' County .n Inv l•rftlu1aril1H or l11lorm1llli11 in Q IHI, rnort or le~ to 1 ooinl lflCTITIOUI •USIMllS 1• AUlftl ·-· ovtmbif" 2. lffl : •nY bids or In !tie blcldl1111. In 11>1 Weit M.,. of 111d E1st l NAMS. STAT•MIHf l""tt ~ 111, I' blltlitol ll'·!nttt Tht DISTRICT Ms deltrrnl11ed Ille tern; Tl'\tr>el Nor!lt 2SO ~ •lont Tiit foflowl ,_ I do! bl.l.i Cnlll M1M. Cltltwitli fi62' N 11 mbt Gr•ngt Cott! o.lty Piiot lltlll•ll . prevalllJ'lll r1tt of Pf' d!'!m lf'M! w1d Wtsl 11.,. lo !he NorthWfll II: 1111 pe 1 "II lllU Tll1 (114) Jtt.7111 °,,. r 6. ll. XI, '11, lt7J l:Jt4.1)\ wagn . 10 m1 locaUtv In whl(h lllls corMr ol t•IO E1sl ]• Acrn ; ll'lenct I Ell:VLWOOC) f>INANClAL COM· Attlnlly fW l"lftl....... \ wor~ •S to tit Pt•fonned lor tKh E11t 4t fffl rnor• or less lo lht Pllblllllld ·Gr C • I l PVBIJC NOTICE ~ cr•lt or type ot workmi o n«4td lo p0llll ol betllnfil1t11. · ' PANV, lit 5'n MIVU"!I Drlw , Suitt NOYtMbtr 21 'Zlj, 1,::.•t Ot ly P lol,Cl----;;;;;;;o;;:;:;--=:::"-==---- 1xecult !ht (ar>lr.tel. Tllttl r1tn •r• Ttrmi of 11lt e1s.h In l1wh.ll, l'l'MllltY 110, Newport ltKI\. C•ntor~I• t:U..O ' ' ' ,_7l 1 ll'ICflTIOUS aUSINlll on file 11 lht DISTRICT oUlee locttld ot llW Unllld 5111tt· Oii (ori!lrrniollon Btrvlwood Mlllll9f""'lll (:omc..11'1', MAMl ITATIMl"llT al 1902 sevente<en!ll Stre<el. Hunll"!flar> of 1111 Ten prreHtt' at irnount bid Gtnef'1I P1r1Nr, lit Sin MfflMI Orl'tl, Tiit feltowl Bea(h, C•lifarJ'll• '2Mt. Copit1 m•Y be ,0 bl diPOsl!td wllll bid S111tt 110. Newport a.tel\, (1llforril1 PUBLIC NOTICE ••· l'IO Ptl'IOll It dolno bl.I.in.. Dbl1lntid on roqvu t, A taov ol lhti,e Bldt Ot otfers to ~ 111 wf1t11111 ••. T:111 bull.,.ts II eonc!Uc:ttd bY I lt"'"ICI • COHSU'°"'llS' Ol'TICAL CO 12061 r11es shall be PQSll'lf ti the lot:I 11te. will tit rt't1lve<1 11 1he 1fore11ld o11;~,parl1111rsh!p. , SUl'l!lll• COUllT' W TMI V.tffi<r ·Vltw St .. Gi r4'..i G~·•'-Thr !orep~ng 1(hed11!e ol ne• dl""'••I •l'lw tlmt 111er flit , flrit ._...,lc1Uon R091r V. ll'ttffilln, ITATI D' (~LIJlot:llllA. ... _. E ·- 'I ' ...._ '"' "' n Idol\ Hl11tt ... ,,., .... j wl~I ls bised \IPGll I wor l'!I dllv .,1reo! •nd btlort dnte of li lt. . for Gt ntr1I .. 1r!l'llr COUJtTY OP' .°'AllO• .A I ~ al elghl (l l flovr•. llle raft tor holl'lay Oalta November It , ·1tn This .si.1tM•n' WM !Ul'd wit~ me · Nt. A·nlM "" f'tNdtll9, C1llf.·r1 111 , ~~ci cwertime work shall be I! lt•l l ELSIE PIPER BEllVEll CCllf'llY C1trk of Orlftlllt CDUl'll'f on · ',OITA'flON Tllli bl.ttlnftl 11 COllOllClod 111 I l!mlltd tlm1 and onf-hall. Adml11!1lr•lrlx of llM f.1l11Tt Novtmlltr t, 1t13, HOTIC• Of' N1"41111•G 0# Pll"l.,.r-:~ E. Hhlfl 11 ~11~11 t1t m1ftd11ory upgo the CON· of-1•/d Cltcldtnt •:rttU Al',LIGATIOM 1"0111 N'll'OINfMlNT Tiiis •llltintrtt woo '''" woo• , TRACTOR 10 wliam the (ontr~CI 11 PAI.IL H. WAVTE Publhhtd Of'•nol Co.11 0111'( l'llo!, 0, •UA!lDIAN C " lrit 1w1rdeC1. 1NI upon 11ny 1utxon!rat1or 4)11 l'lcill' •wl•v•r• NO\l.,.,ber U, 20, 27. •NI OKtmber lfnl...,.)' ourtl'f Clt<fk'. al Or1ftteo COllnl'f on under ~1..,. 10 pity not 1r11 thin ll>e H11nllf'lllolt l'•rk, c111t. ltUS 4, lt7J "61·7J 111 1111'' M1tttr 111'1. Gu1rdl1nslllp ol NOVfl!lbtr ~. 1'n s•ld i i>tCll!td r1te1 to 111 workmlft Alttf'MY fon AdtnlMllr•tth\ 1111personM1;ANOEA Wll<.WN, MlllOI, .Pllblt lttd Of ·~ 1mplove<1 by 1hem 11'1 the t•l(ullon 1714-0C . BLIC NOT a · TM .... ol tn. 5\ltll of C.Ulotllil No.,.,.,:... 13. T. CMll Diii';' l'ilo!. ol lht contr1e!. Pullllshld O!'IJ'llll COISI ' Cally Pilol, 'PU I ~ T• BAlllllARA JEAN CAIN 4. lt1J 21, tlld 0«tMtitr No bidder mev wlthdrltw 1111 bid for NovtrnOir 11, 11, •NI Otc•rnber ~. Pvnlllnt to 1111 ll w rou ••• lltrtby l450-7J 1 period of forty·ftve f'Jl d1y1 1l1tr 1t7l lSl1·7J PltnTIOUS SUSIMllS elltd tlld rtqlllrl<I to tppur befott ---::-,---------=::.:.~ l!lt dalr sat lor lhe CIPefllflll of bld1. • lllAMI STAJIMllllT !ht ludll• 01 lllh '°"'"· locllt.ci 11 PUBIJC NOO'ICE A paym<ent bOl'ld 1ftd • perlorm111Ct PUBLIC NOTICE Tiit lollowff'llll.P"Mll• •f11 dolllll ltu1h11A ~ ... 100 Clvk Ctttttr Ori,,. W•11 •. 1----..,.,,,---------- l)QNI wlll ~ required prlOI" 111 r~tcvt1on tJ: , , t11 Ult CllY tit '5.1111 AN, County of llllCTIJIOUS IUSINISS at ~ (011tr1ct. Tht pavmtnl bOtld SUl'l"iiO.-:COU•T-O' TH! ll'ATTEllNEO CONClllETE.' llOJ2 Ori~ Sllll pl C•lilcwnlt, 111 11w NAM• Sf~fllMllfT lhl11 tit In ""' latm srt lorth In ON ,01 Mt1rin1t Vllt1, Dlflt Pol11t tti2t Coun,.... of O.,.rtrnerrt Mo. J .., Tiit fo(lowl,. ,._ lo "" •-• Ille cantrKI doc"""""· STAT• 0, CALll' MIA WHll1m V. ~1111111 Corpor111ion, Dtctmblr 11, 1'13, •t f~ o'clock A.M , 11: ntJ -nn1_, D11ed: November 21. 197]. THI co~:rz.~otlANOI: • C.llfomfl corpore,lklfl, :D052 M¥l111 ll'lln •!Id """' to ~· ~. II •nY. SECVll:ITY VENDING co. 1'°7 N GoverJ'lll>O &a.rd NOJIC• o• HUlllltG. ~Ill PITITJOM V1st1, DllM 01'Qf11t f7'2' · ::.. ~ M¥TIN HAMMONTREE or M11i11 St., S11n11 /VII, C•. t210i · 11 BY Ji!Ck. s. R-r l'Oll PllOIAJS. OP' WILL AMO •011 TN• ~ Is , N lllll cDNllCtld .,,. -Mrll.iilll ptf-lllOuld J'IOI D. Frid Jlltlnton, 1ns Mal Y•rdt Sup<eriot..ndtlll I COl"POl'tl-' IM • i.d oo.nll•n of Ille --COii• MtM Ct t'.Mn ' 11'1iblhl'led Orincie Co.it 0.11¥ Pllol LITTE!lS TESTAMENTAlll'I' llOMO Wllll•m V M9Dl'llllld Corporill .. tNI fflilfl . f/11 Mid mlnr l((Dl'dlf'lll Thll 1MnJ ' • 1 JiovimfN!. i1. Dec1mt>tr 4 11, •nO Wa l\ll!OI . • v.:Jlll.,.n ..;. ,Moorlrttllod, ,.~r to Illa •vtflfS..( pellt!Wt on n1t, 111 ln:ll¥14ual. ""' 1 Condvclld by an II itn 36U·l3 EJt1l1 of CECIL E\IVA ~Rs,JN. Tiil t ....._, n1" WOii ll'lt --wlllci'I rtier«IC• \1 tnlOe IOI' Nrlhtr O F 1111 - CEC IL E L.AR5EN 01(t•std :llrk OI Clrll'OS c~ 'oft NO't. ·z. -°''"' H 2 ;m . . . Tiii• .... ,_. -n11<1 wltlt "" .~~·~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~I •'• oft. CEC'lt. i:vvA LARSl:N, •k.• • • •·~...... ....... .. , '*1kV!lrt. . . , • r TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD WE HONOR Master Charge and BankAmericanl THE DIRECT LINE 642-5678 NOTH.ii IS HEREBY Gl\1°EN '"'' ltn J {SEA.LI 0¥. ' • -COUl'lly Clttk of Or•no• County "' R WORDEN llSE lie fi · · · ,.,,.. ' Novemlltr ll, 1'71 LAU ITS ~ N l ted "1.lblllhtd Or•11t1t COIJI Diiiy Piii! WILLIAM E. ST JOHN • ' riert !n • petlllon tor Prol>Me ot Wtll Ho¥tMbtt, 1,_ 20.·1' lt7J· m s.n 'CllUlll<r Cltrk •nd c1m Pyblll/led °''"" l'tH4a 111<1 tor luu1nc• of Lt!ltrs TnllmtnlltY ' ' M tM s~rior court ot Novtr11btr )(I' 21, C011t Dllil<r l'llol, to !ht p111tlon1r fll~ WllvldJ rel<er1ncr lflt Sllft of C1llt4'11li , In •nd 11, lt7l Mid DtclmNr ~. to which I' mldt far lvrlh« piorllcul1rs. ·pUB' LIC ~-CE I-Qt. flit Cou11ty. ot Ortnt1-lnl-73 •nd lh;ot !ht tlmt •NI ll'IKt ol t,1;irl1>11 '~1• tt'r P. IC. GANDALt.. -· \ lht 1o1mt lllt """' .. 1 for Otc•mbtr Dtpvty • PVBLIC NOl'IC£ U, 1973, •I 9:00 1.m.; In lht courtroom STATlMIHT•D• AUMDONMIMT 0" Olott•I 1.. llOllllS ot Orp1r!Ment No. 3 of ••Id caurt. us•-o, P'l(TtTIOUS Att'""'''' ~.... • ,ICTn1ou1 IUllMllS •I 700 Civic Cef\tef Drive Wtsf, 11'1 aus11111ss MAM• 111n ••ell llv.11. NAMI SfAflMlMT ' tilt C11Y of S~llll An.11 C•tUorni1. . Tiit fotlowl!>ll ptrSOM htYt 11btll'IClonM Hllwhltflill iHCfl,, C1ilfeNill 9'2'47 Tiit Pollowlng litrlOrl 11 dolno 1111 I IJ Dt!ld Novembtr l l , 1973 !flt llH el .~ ftdJtlou• bcltlflas nlrnt Y...,.._1 tnt) 141_...I. 11. . ' 'llfl• 1 Wllll•m E. SI. 'Jollft, Cov11ty Clrrk P•fTERMED CONCll:E:TE ,I I 13GS2 PubHthtd Or11not CDlsl D1ll'f Piiot BEJtVLWOOO FEEO VAllO, )It It ' HIT1'. MU lllllAV AND ,A,.l'llAY M•rl11• VI••·· Olftlt, Point. N0¥11'11-.. 13. io. 21,·1m :nt4-7l MJGVll Drive. S4illt ll0, Ntwport a.Wt" • Allornt11 •I L•w · Tiit -llctltlou1 b\llhitu' l'lllmt rtltrrtd C•lllornl1 ftUO ', 44' W•tt Oai111 .,.,,,,, 511111 160' 10 n.rw. Wl!i flied ·In ·Or•llVI C-11Y PlJBUC NOTICE hrrlwood Fl1111nc!1I COIT!Plm. J6 .l• Lottt ... ch. Clllltml• tun OJ'I Mii';' JS, 197l. ' . S•n M19111I Drift, SI.lilt no. N~f Ttl: uni ~lJ-74" 1. W1111trn v. MoorhNd. 330.ll M.rlnt htdl. c.111orn11 ! AlltrfttY• tor: l'tllt..,.., Vist•; D•1111 l'olnl • ·1162 Tiii• 1t11slne11 11 eon111,1t1.ci wt" 1 nmltfd·J P11t>llslted Or11>111 .COlsl O.Hv 11'1Jot, 2. MM"( L Moorlll1d, Dl)52 M•rln• NOTICI O• PU•LIC SALi P11rlrierJ.lllp. Novemtl<er 27, 21, Ind 01(trt'ltM!r 4. Vis! .. 01111 .•otnt O• Plll.SONAI. l'ltOf'lll:JY R09tr V. l'ttttlOl\o 1tn ltll·1J m!i~:~"M•• ..-11 (ondWltcl bY •n 111 1111 ~:""of •:;:1 Properllts for ltrylwwd MlniogtrTltnt PUBUC NOTICE WUUllll v. Moorhtld Corpor•tlOfl, f'Ltkitlff vs. J1""1 Ltll11ct COll'lpln'f, O.W.11 11'11rt111r 1---,.~0Tlc• ,0 c1teotJ01ts ,.17111 "' 1111, Otltftcltttt. Cue No. 1S311, Murlld-Tiii• •l•l•ltltftf w11 . n11c1 wnh .._. " SUl'llllOll COUll:T 0' nlE 11'\lbllsllt<I Or11not C6'M O•ll'f Pllllt plf Colirt. Clftlrll Orltlllt COllllty-Jlldld•I ~=~'fk19,f Or111191 Covnt<r OAll STATE 01' CALijfQRHIA P'Otl No\'tm-'· U,)a. ti'. 1m JUJ.73 Olilrkl. C-ty of °''""· Sl•I• of • ' ., THi COUMJV 0111 OllAMliE C~=l~I htrtby gl"'tn INll Ploll'M.*11 l'uttll"'*I Orltllll Co.st Diiiy "=.l.· lfl. A·1"M PUBLIC NO'l1CE to 51cllort ·1174 ot ti. CM tf Clvl1 Nov. ll._al,·iJ lflli O.C. 4, 1•1J )4G.n:, E••··· of MARIE JEANNli f't:LOVS, Proc:ldl.>rl. Sl•lt of Clllll«lll.. "" I °:~;~E IS HEREBY GIVEN to !ht "~c.::~0::A:~~-:::' ~C:t1wWIW: !! ~~d :~ PUBLIC NOTICE i crtdilcw• c.I lht •bOllt n1mtd decldeol The tollovrint ""'"°"' 1rt ctolf\11 d Decllmblr, 1t,.J, 11 lO:Clt o'clock 11191 111 pt!'ton• t111Vlng cl•I~ 111•1MI buslMll ,,1 A.M. Oii iiie PrCll'lllMl'Wll'trt'lll4 prCIHfl<r •ICTlftoVS IUllM•ss 111 ,, .. 111d dtc:edel'll 1r• reqlllrld IO IU• CARMEN'$ DllAl'EllY SEll:VICE. Ills' *"'•tor• Mid wllldl .,. loc.t!.:I N.t.Ma SfAJ9Mlll(f ~ thtm, wltll tht ntc.t»af'I' voucllllrs, ·111 7tt w. 20!11 St., COlll MtN, C1lll, 11 10'.IA VII~ >lfty, • 01Y of 5'tll1 Tiit lollilwll'lt ' Plr...-.. 11r1 dol ' tht offlc1 of ~ cJtrk of tilt 180'f1 92627 ~ A111. C-1ty' of ' Ortnpt, Sl•lt o1 llull11t1s n : · tnlllled eourl, or to ·prntnl lhtll!. wtm Nestor 0. •rl•lo -Ctrl'J'ltn 0 . c .utorilit. IM Mtlnooiled .... Cl'llllll•. LIBlll! PllOOUCTIONS. 1•.o. ... !flt J'ltCt1S11r'f 'foudttr'-I• !ht un-Prieto~ :ion W•ll•ct . Coil• Mff1, Clllf. or ~ Pf')1911r1Y Ofterll)ld Nlow. ~l am Swordfltll Avonw. l"Wlltt ln e1e<'1l9ntc1 11 111e otllct ot her •1tornrv. '2'27 . UMcll, . Nrnlturt .. tl•Hw•r• , 11 d v111.,., Ctlltorril• no.11 ~ Louis A. A\ICltl-AtlorntY •I L1w , '921 Tllli bUSlntsl 11 I conduclld ll'f tn mltctl'--11111'11. • ll'illl M. Brvlfll, nll lrtfllonl, Lii Wllllllrt •l\ld., Los A.11Dtlf1, Ctlllornl• lndi\lldllll. D.ild , lfllt :t)rd• dl 'I'. of N~r, H.awt C.lllorllll "'31 1 fOOIO. wlll'll II !ht J)ltct of blltlneu C1rmeil Prieto lt13.•. L~ Ill, "1hl,.,.., 1927 S~ll ot. tilt llnclertlOJ'lld 111 1111 mlllltfl per-Tllb tliltmenl w11 fii.d' wltll tf'tl ~ Prof)«tltt Corport!IOfl AvffllM· F!Mirillhl V1tljy, C.111.)rl'll& 111lnlng lo the 111111 111 111d dKldr111, counlv ci.k of Or•J'IO• COUnlY oil .Plllflttff "'°' wTlnln le111r moi\lht Mltr .1n1 llrtl Pllbllca· <Nimtotr f , Un. If: A•rf' J ."°Fotfw"'· • Tlllt bl.ltlt11n It tOl'lduclPd lly ' lion of 11111 none•, """' '°"":"' ITAlllL.IY , • lll'lll'\CCll'90f'llllll h1GC:l1tl111 atl'ttr l/lln 1 Dlltd ,,.OVtmblr 26 •. Un 'llblllllld Orll'IO-Co.it ! Dl!l'o' Pllof; Atttnt1..... IMtrlMnhlp ' ll:OM Pelol.ll Howrnlllr 13: 20, 77, lt'ld Otcembtr' IN WMI ft $1., Sllllt 111 11'1111 llry1nt E•K11trl1e-ol lh• Wiii °'Ille .. 1m )Ul-l'J ....... -"It. "HI. ftftf -Tiiis .,.,.fl'llll, ... , llltd w!ltl 1bove naMtd dl(ldeftl A.....,..,., Pl*tlff .ounl<r Cl"k of OrMQt Covnty 111'1 Louis A. auo1T 'PUBLIC NOT. iCE · """'~ ont• co.11 0,11., 'i'°' Novtmbtr '· 1t11 f Attwney II L•• N~ ti': Tm • • 3604.n I ' ..,,. Jt'll WUlllfrt l lYf. ' • •• Hl90A't CUMNIM ... AM ~ LM A11ttl••· C-'lftnlll .... ......,,. •, ... ,~......... p•mH~ NOTICE Atty, ' r T.m~ f1U) *'41'4 ""'' , vua.u..! . "' ~' Mft• ....... Alttrtllft ,., l!ucetrt• • Of< •uut 'TllNIS,I• • 1 , ·--'-" l lfltl at · l'ublJ.Mcl Or•~ co.HI O•H'f l'!lo1, 11.U. Utl • •1t1 u .c .C:I • . ''""'TIOUI IVttlflS1 \Alt~ ....... c .............. Mo\'tmbtr 11. •rid OtCt Mbl• 4, 11. Nollet I• llerotlY tlvtft. to ~ Crl<llltc• tfAM5 lfATIMlln' · ll'Uflll"":' Or...,. C11111t Otll'I' 'll•I• I l .. lt73 '601-73 of W1\1'1' -w.lbrock ll'ld H1rtld Spit;, Tiie, ~kr#llll ptllOll I• llolJ'lll bvllrw•t ,..ovtlllbtl' ·1s. 20, 11. Mlil I "'-':::.-,,,,"''"''""'""°"''°"""'..::::.:::01·Tr1Mftror1. whm• """""'. lddrt11 11 ••: • , • : '· 1m a..s, PUBUC NOTICE noo ~lrlllw """· cost• M1111. ~v · s.1~ · &~EAll'll:L&Es. 1m: w.[.::.--'"---~--'-----==~ •.. ,,,,= CO"IT --,.. ot O\:•llllt· Sl•lt of C1U!On'lll, lhtt WI ..... Unll 8, C91f• M ... (•"'°'"'' ' P, UBIJ. c NOTICE v VIII ,. _. I llulk tr1K111'tr 11 •boll! 10 be fl'llld• t1'27 1 STATI OP' CAL~OllHIA •o• to HIWtll Ill. (11etitrl-011 11111 C1rol'fl'I Mwtl'I L" l •rtOl\o 10Jt w. WlllM,1--~---'---------" TH• COUNTY 0' OllAHGS. w. Cl!flttrlol'I. Tr11ni11r.... w II.... • VIiii .. (Ollt Melt, C1Hfoml1 '2127 suP•lltOI. COUlf o .. TH• .... A ·JIM4 blltll!MI tddra• I• 15f'n Hllfl'llTlltt9llrd TNt WlinNI It ~ '" Ml IT An Ofl CALl•CMUllA "°" NOTICl-W-Nl.tJthto-----Ofl-ll'ITITIOM t1i:ia.-Hun"r+tltw1 a~-----cMtl'f of 1t1c1MOtitt f -'Otl'COllWTY OP' o.API Jl!Ollt 1'11.0IAT• Ofl WILi. ANO LSf• Qr_,.., II ... of Cotllorfll.. Sltvt!'t L ..-.ort "°· &-1Wtt Tiii Of' ADMIMllTllATIOM WITH• Ttlll jM'llplrly " flt tr111...,.,.ci 11 11111 1t1~ wit filed wllll tltt MOT"Jt::I Oil MIAll:Uto ~" l'HIT101' t TH•WILL AHH.ll.10 ll!cmd •I 24111 Nf'Wll'Orl ..... ~ H-'-' ~ Cltf" of Of.. Cluflt<r _. l'Oll ....... n Ofl Wtu. AfllD 'CMt.' Eslllll ol WILLIAM c. MUk"AY, kKlt, <Cllllftt't "".Of ........ .-r..; HO'HMOlr u.~,,n L.eTTl•I JWlfA#ll•TMtY llOtlD l O.Cffltd . C•lllotl'll1.. ·, , ll'..n7H • WAIVIDJ NOTICf: • IS MlllEI:'(' C)IVIEN rtlfl .Did' .,,..m I• dacrf""9-11'1 ...,_,,, , ~I-~Or ... c:.ttt J)all l'I.., l!lrilt• ot ,CAlfLI!! ClllAIN, OtneMd - e11r1M111 w. M11rr1y li91 Hied 111t•l11 M: Ml •lotk lfl lrtdt, II•~ 11111!PIMM Nowinw 27 •nd OlcllfltlW ... v 11 ,.; N_CUl~f. IS--'tfllllll'I' 01va11 flllt I II pt!Oton ftr l'rtbll• ol Wiii l lld tN1 fOOd '111111 ot lfllt ••r\ltrt.,. lllltll'llll If» .1 -.,, ~Al.lE ' ICA~llAN lltt !IMO ...,..J'I for l1wt11Ct of Ltttll'• 01 Adrnllll~ llftO'IWI" H H•l'I l•rtltr ~ tN1 llC,,_ ' p9!11 °" Jer Pf'oMtt OI ~I 8MI wtlll-llll·W\11 ·-·· lo tht pelltlerief', .i 211:a ........,... lllilf.,t ,,...,,., I Hdlt ' • Pus'·c N'-CE lor' ,.,.MICll OI L.•,tt••' ftll-it rdrtf'Ct to wfllcll II rn.ot tor twflltl' COlll'ltY of Or.,,.., St ... tf (11~11. , bl,.. Vll , JO l"llllloMr llCftd We!\1111), rtfo ..... !I ~rtlc.ut1,., •J'ld thtt lh1 !!Ml •nd ptlt:• Tflt llf.llk frl,.ftf win tit ccinwnwn•ltd -~ _ ' _ 1o•wllldl 11 ~ !!" lurtlttr 1111rtlc1Mr1., ol llHrlno 11111 M1'1f hit .,..,, Mt Oii .fi'' •fM ,.,. '"' dlV ol ~.I • Jlt1'1TIOUS !fUSlftlSS .... tMt lM """ •nd plxt_tr lttlrll'll •or otctMtte• 11. 1tn. 11 •~* •. m .. 1m ., 10:00 AM. ., 0 111twf.Jt uca:ow I ' ~AMI •t•:r:•••"' , tn. •• ,,... ~·· '*11 ... tor ~, 111 the c-tr--OOfft of ~rtl'T*lt Ho. COllll'QtlAT!ON, !117 i.r Llnc•l 11,,, Titt lafloWIN Pl(IOll.J1 .dolt111 ,M l11111 l1, 1'71, ti liot I."!-• In IM~ i °' t1ld t:Ollrt. •I '100 CIYI' '""' A.nll'ltltn, (Ollrlt'I' of Or•~ St•t9 of .-; .._..AO ct Otptfltm1nl No. J °' Mid CMI. OrfYi Wft'I, 1"11 l!W"'-ctff ·ot $tlllt --.V.; C\!11'rflfit; r ~L 1 ,;A~..-Ulll-""wlOn Dt •• at 100 .CIYl(.J:llfl'9C_ .Qlfva_w.t, M C•llfoml•. , • So fir 11 ltlWWll 10 1M ,,..-., .. , •II I ·~lf!JM !'.f• C:.M~t nu:! 1111 CllV of Stftll M •• C'illlornl1. Dlltd Novarnllll',.. lm llutlMM nimM IM Md'"'" 11MCI IW ,Er!MI • ,K.-PP• 2\l:n M•WIOll Dr.. 0 ..... NO'n!'t'llllf" ''1·ltrJ WllUI"' I . it. JIM, Covnfy Ci.rt Tr•n1~0tl ,for ml .trit" yHrt 1191 ~ ~~" (•~f0rll!1 JtUl WILLIAM R. I J OHN/ JONIS AMD l l ONAlt ANO ,..,. 11rt: ""'"' • .Tll[1' ~.1 ..... If\ cOl)dllCted b'( Ill Ctunf'f (ltrk ' AlllTHU• o . euY. Jiii. Ot,ftd: HOYtmbV 1J, ''" lricll'lfdUll •••NI 11141 l(AIA•l~N • "'1 W"ltl Tlllrii $'"'9 ' • N ....... ft, C~ T,..,.._. .,,.., •• ~' , 1 ........ ......._ .... L• ........ C•l""11•,..,. • C.of'tlt w. ('tttlltflall, Tr•l'llf.,.tf: 1M• ......... WU fifed w1111 "" s• ....... . fth UUI t)t.llfl, ·~ I~~ CCMllW Ctlrk of Ortnt1 COWll'I' Oii ut ~ ~llflff!M1M17 A""""" f0t1 ll'tllt6tNf 1n7 lilt,.., .... A\9• W1'11t11t U, tt7J ~ • T~ 1'1111 ... ·--!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! 'll.nf ~lfl. C ....... f-' -... ' ·' ,._,.,. Antrlltn M==' v°:":. ~=·' =.;11?:: •:=.,: =.: C••t o.iw l'ltot. ho~ t7°'1:'~°'2" ,,;":: l'Vl!lltMiil .~.,.~"!! o.11y ,., • -''n a.10.n N@ytl'llW n. 1tn ltOS-n 1,,, J.M.n ....,,..,...,. 1 • a. • "'• iw1·n •I ' • . \ 1 Utsday, November 27, 1973 DAILY PILOT 2 J The-Biggest Marketplace on tile. Orange Coast_ · -·--Announ<emenl• • , , , . • 500 • $24 MObilt Horne. ,_...,,. • • • m . ,., ....................... 9S0·990 loots & Morine fqvlpmeot 900 • 914 'n1'Jiool111t111' • • • • • • • • 700 • m fi,.andoil • • • • • . • • • 200 . m DAILY -PILOT CLASSlFrED ADS '-'IOl'!Oh. . , . . . . . . • S2S • .s49 Ptt• ond ~iM . . .. . • . 8SO • 199 .RtGI Ello., ~ol. . . . • '00 • '99 ...... 0/ • . • • • : • • • . . 300 • "'9 k~~ ond lmtruoion . . . S7S · m $er"Kel ond ltepoir' . . , , bOO • t/l<t Tromf)Ortolion.. • • • • . • • 91.S -949 I tto&.¥et: for Sole • • • • • • IOO • 124 t.Osr & Foi.iid • :-: •••. m -·:·s1c ................... •.· .• IQO .... -. You ~~--Sell It ;Fi.nd It, Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678) One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval ............................ ________________________________ ~,__--~~---'·· General ,. '6-neral General Ge~!._. -~!General General . General [ HcluttlfcwSlle. ]~[ ERRORS, AdvwrllHrs should chock their ads dally & report errors lmmodlatoly. Tho DAILY PILOT a11umt1 liability for tho first incorrect in1e rtkm-Olfly.- General General Congenial Growing Office LOOKING For Aggressive, experienced salespeople. IN WESTCLIFF -Condominium secluded yet.convenie11t to shopping: Air conditioned, 2 bedrooms, 21'.t baths, beautiful pool and clubhouse. Amazing Newport 'Beach value · at $39, 750 . A listing· cif Marge Ell more. UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 64S-6500 1649 Westcliff Drive, Newport Be1ch OFFERIN~ l Al;u;-advantages usu~lly found on! y in -th_e_ -~G~," .. "r"a'!'1 """"""""""""G"on""e"r ."1""""""""""~1 larger ollices·. Plus ' 1iuperior commis.sioh schedule -more frequent personalized ad· vertising supPQrt -active office location - full time receptionist and secretary -NA· TION WIDE EXPOSURE of your listing. INTERESTED??? Want to EARN MORE and LEARN MORE? Then take this important slep toward in- suring your future -call John Allard, Man- ager, for your confidential appointment. AUSTIN SMITH GORMAN & ASSOCIATES 2821 E. Coast Highway, ~Or"f'• do l Mar 644-7270 General MESA VERDE BEST BUY JUST LISTED -3 bedrm .. 2 bath, fami ly room. Large patio and all the usual Mesa Verde extras. Nice C]Uiet1'1ree lined street. Vacant and ready for your move. Priced at only$,36.~0-0. Clt.LL 540-1151. NEWPORT BEACH PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOME'S WALK-TO NEW GOLF COURSE J'iet4tbe SHtid, ~ -NEW $500,000 RECREATION CENTER • S Enjoy the new life style and live carefre e m this 2 bedroom 2 bath (large master suite) air conditioning, luxurious carpeting, drapes, electric kitchen with built-in barbeque. Din- ·ing ar~a plus a breakfast nook . Covered patio \vith pazioramic vi'ew, 24'hour Security Guard. All maintenance' free in the new adult com- Il)Unity of Costa del Sol in beautiful Mission Viejo. $42 ,900 Full Price L!! Paz Real Estate General General MESA VERDE BARGAIN 830-0700. PRICED RIGHT and equipped with gold shag carpets, spacious living rm., with marble . faced fireplace, 3 neat bedrooms, family room is extended by enclosed patio· with room for pool table. Step saver kitchen has plenty of cabinets & electric builtins. Great . floo,r plan & Mesa Verde location . CALL 546-5880. • AHD ASSOCIATES REALTOR DELUXE TRIPLEX -VIEW Real pride of ownership. One block to the beach. ln high ren tal area. See super owner's apartment. A listing of Ed Nelson. $132,500. _ CALL 644·7270 . WE CAN HELP YOU BUY, SELL, OR TRAOE ·A H"OME . ANYPLACE IN THE.NATION Ganer i i * Balboa Bay Properties * . LIDO ISLE Super clean! Extra lge., 2 Br., 11/z ba., frpl., patlo. Fast es- crow O.K. Try $71,500 675-7060 LEASE OR LEASE OPTION NEWPORT HEIGHTS Reduced! Spanish 3 BR., 2 ha. split-level. Extra lge. lot. Owner ext remely anxious! Call & submit 642-7491. INCOME T"'O 2 Bdrm. Units Near Harbor Blvd. $39,500 $3,500 Down 556-8800 Bluffs Beauty $69,500 NEW HOME Sp11rkling OC\v Yiew home high i111he Laguna 1111111 wllh u su1·1>rild11g ,·l1h\' from both th .. • lront and back. At· lrnclive h\'Q bedroom a nd den floor plnn, large pracll· cal kitchen and <'IC!an au electric heRt. $46,500. NEW LISTING Spacious 5 ~roon1 Herbor \rJew home \\>ith the ~I of features. Close to ischool. pool nnd greenbelt for the active large family. ~aull· Cul floor plan. nice land· scaplng. $81,500 -includes the land. BAYFRONT PeJ'haps Newport's best bay· front buy. Sparkling new three bedroon\ townhouse with--Jow -malntenance, fee-- land abd private llllp. Good central Newport k>caBon • lease for $450 or steal for 177.000. Call 67S..n25 EASTSIDE HOME.+ TRIPLEX COUNTRY SmlNG situated on a large. 130i<150 lot with towering shade trees, a eomfortable 3 BR 2 BA home with den and front porch for your rocker ' Plus 9epEU'8,ted away from the house a triplex with ipcome potential or $440/mo. on~v $69.950 for all CAL 7211 IT'S GOT EVERYTHING-4 Bedroom, fam- ily room, formal dining room, 20' x 40' pool wlth w<>l sweep & jacuzzi. Large corner lot with boat door and oversized double garage. Just lis.ted •at $84,500. Hurry, CALL 540-1151 . -Or Lease/Option Exciting 3 bdrm., 2~~ ba1h home, beautifully decorated. lmmedlate 'occupancy avail. ~Also, may lease with option to buy. Enjoy main· tennnre-rree living in the beaut. Bluffs, "rith pools, tennis & flowered green· belts. EXECUTIVE MANSION HUGE FIESTA ·-~ -· ERITAGf . REALTORS Daily Pilot Classified Ads General General SPYGLASS HILL Lovely 6 bedroom traditional home. Cozy family room with fireplace and wet bar. Bonus roon1. Swimming pool, gazebo , view. $225,000. HARBOR VIEW HOMES Somerset model, 5 bedrooms,'3 baths. Large family room, 3 car garage. 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 owner will consider trade. $200,000 , VERSATILE BONUS ROOM Popular "Oxford " townhoUse in University Park. 3. bedrooms and dining room, 21'.t baths plus big bonus room . Very sharp with great location. $60.900. ADDED ATTRACTION , Smash hit. Custom built Baycrest 3 bed· room. 20' x 14' freestanding playroom in .. J>09l size back yard. Quiet prestigious "U" street. $75,000. DOVER SHORES WATERFRONT Very large home Y{it h· 6 bedrooms plus den · pJus billiard room. Large living room, for· mal dining room. Pier and slip, water view from mainy rooms. An · lmus.ual property. $190,000. BROADMOOR BIG CANYON Exceptional value at only $119,lioo: Fully landscaped, draped, and· decorated , Ideally suited · !or family living: 4 bedrooms, 3· baths, family room . · OOV!'R MODEL BIG CANYON Sparkling new 2 bedroom Dover condomin· lum in Big canyon-ready for fast OCCU· pancy-:-ll0figh!lul end loc.ation in new sec· lion. Family room. •$89,500. , - • •• CAME.0 SHORES V Ocean vie;<t; ·v~y large living , room· ahd master bt\lroom • wi\h beauti!ul parquet floors, beamed ceilings.4 Qedrooms, 3 bat6s. $115,000. .. ' • .......... 644· l766u~idWll Banker .. ; .......... 2161 S.n Jooquin· HHJ1 11.J.1 N.I . Haibor View HOme 0.anninl? 2 bdrm .• den, 2 baths: bl!-ln elt'C. kilch., newly deco!". & ready to n1ove into~ Corner lot on quiet cul rle sac.• $66.!lOO. Call: 673-3663 642-22.13 Eves associated 4-YEAR A VERY 'SMALL JCa.. co:Ts ACT FAST! NEW DUPLEX VILLAGE ~WALLACE WON'T LAST! Live m one unit and eajoy All by itself on this cul-de. REALTORS 2 on ·a lot!!! 3 BR, 2 BA + income from the other. on:c sac slrect with privacy 2fiOO . -5"-4141- 2 BR rental!!! ?\fake $$S la.rge 3 be<:froonl 2 bath ~nit square feet of spacious (Open Evenings ) $28,JOQ Call ~400. wroo•thm 'andf1rephiug•ce.s, coudln,:1!" . home with . 4 bedrooms., I.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .,.T family room dining room.I' FM I OPfNTll. 9. kitchen., plus a I bedroom 2~ YEARS NEW. Only onC STI \' E. "°" rd & apt. \\'ll~ fireplace. Close in lh is rear Costa Mesa NEW LI NG • a 'Co. to s~pprng, school.s, park area available and for only 'CORONA DEL · PLEASE CALL 673-3000 ROOM. Almost 3,00Y Of 1psclous liv· Ing .. Triple car ,earage. SP8JU8h arched e n t r y . Format llvtng 8.Jld dJnJng. Giant fiesta room. CUllured ground11. Best a r 11 a . A s s o c tation maintained p oo l a ., .This has EVERYT»ING! Call to see today! 847-601-0. BROKlRS-~EALTORS 102~ W Balbae b7J lbtJ '===""'='-==-=~="'=· =~I and library. Just hsted at $55 500, For a real treat ' _ s.52,SIXJ. Cull COL\VELL cali · ' MAR . 6'&-0555 640-7171. \Vhite Elephant Oime.-A-Line I Genorol OUR FINEST 5 BEDROOMS OPEN TIL 9 • ITS FUN 1'0 BE NICE! P,."igc Mesa Verde. This :~] Home has 3 baths, Family ~~ THE REllL ESTllTERS Priced in the Slrs. Locaf'cd in an· .area of n1uch higher priC<!d hon1es. llere ls a great 3 bedroom plus ran1· ily roon1 house just \\'aiting for your inspection. Ca.II 00\V • 673-8551). m 11.ll ,\ llL\fll 2 STORY CUSTOM l'OOL •ONLY $39,950! [i.iiifi\f I ·\ Sells ·More Hoines Than Anybody! Two area offices serving you · · · ZONED R-4 $30,000 2 bedroom one bath on back of lot room for three more, with a view. NEWPORT C 0 REST CONDO 2 bedroom, den. fireplace, ,fprmal dining room and wet bar, with 2 car enclosed ga· rage $60,950. ASSUME 7'h'h VA LOAN Only $212.00 per mQDth. Subject to exist· ing VA loan -Only $29,500. S bedroom 2 bath. Pride of ownership. . ' FRENCH QUARTER CO:NDO .3 bedroom , 11'.t bath, good area owner anx· ious $25,7,50. SPARKLING CLEAN 3 bedroom 2 bath family sized borne, with hardwood floors . In model home condition. $32,500. . . . ' TREE LINED STREET 2 large bedrooms l bath.cOve<ed patio, and a storage shed. Located in· Eastside Costa Mesa $30,750. EASTSIDE SPECIAL 3 bedroom 2 bath home $31,250. NEWPORT HEIGHTS DUPLEX Good• income 2 bedroom I bath units $51,500. EASTSIDE CUL-DE-SAC ~ 3 bedroom 2 bath g<iod area $$9,.900.' . W"ESTSIDE SPECIAL . 4 bedroom 2 bath with pool. Zoned C·l. $36,000. . .. . • cosi A MElA.. . NEWf_=EAC.H_ 546 1640 \. 2629.HAll.BOR BLVD. 271 EAST 17th Oiion Evonlns• Untll 9:00 Coll incl get tho RED CARPET TREATMENT I room, Dining r o o In . "'-'--'-~=!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ OCEAN Fireplace. Ne\.\•ly painted ln,.lde and oul. $57,950. CaJI COLWELL 64&-0555 OPEN TIL g. ffS FUN TO BE NICEf Hard to believe - 2 story neighborhOOd. Huge livini . "Brand Ne.w" tj· . ·. b8,...1n. Tamendou • WALK 1 room. Ranch style kitchen. . LAK:E FOREST VACANT. MOVE IN • s E p AR ATE STUDY. $19,680 Be t. · · Lak t .1 -3 lnrge bedrooms. 2 full '-"' GiP.niic bi!llU!l room. King S VJew tn e ores • baths 111.rge family kitchen size bedrooms. Entertainers ' · · . . Balcony overl-O?ks the lake. huge !""1x135 lof, b o a I : LET'S TALK Cabana with s p a rk l i n g Cottage by the sea. Wl11te ~c;-v landscaping, . country ·camper gal<' easy terms. cuslo(11 pool . Yours· for a pickett fence. ~ing a bvuig near shopping and $32.950. 546-1754 TURKEY lifcllme er valul? _ only bedroom .. CfJzy, living room. schools. Offered for $65,000. it ""U're looking for a NcV.'· .. ro,95(). Take advantage. Large kitchen. "'alk to Will · lease at $525.00 mo. J" I ~0 bea h Cati ""0303 pcn1 Beal'h duplex only 6 Call today c · I , V'l;r • Call COLWELL 64&-055l doors to the beach \\1\th an I 842-2535 Walker & lee cxcelll'nt summer/winter •••l 11,.,1 rcn!ul record in tiic $84.500 OP£Nnt e •IT'S F~ 70 BE Hal mngc 1vith n n1in. of only WILL TRADE lO'iV down and supt'r tern1s . ~""'-' CALL US * <t1NU naval, model grove 1vc're ready to talk , I • for Income property. 644-7211 * '56 T-Bui:I + casb Ct t·ar _E;·:;;;;:;~:;;~~-.1ot. garage, orrices SGv for em -beadt property. $1800 •.OOWN • Buys TIC\V l BKR 675-6712 or 548-8796 \ ' • beautiful 3 br l yr cld · . f 4\ lO\vnhouse in Sandpointc -EXPER .. Gen. Co~lr. seeking burnt orange shags -Va· new projects. Jo1nt-Venlul'l'. BUY A BARGAIN' Oceanfront Duplex cant , too! Hurry! B k r 543-fil48 eves. • 54&-0022 1 Generat Liquidation forces sale of 3 $79 500 BR, 2 IM. NC"'JlOrt Hghts I · 1 J == .. home, gas BI. fireplace. . ram rm 15x30 H&F Pool Large comer, 40 lot 11•lth 8~2% nn nvall . Price re: 1 ? story .. FIXER UPPER'" duet>d $4 500 . No1v only mt.'Ornc property. A real $15.00J. Ca n Realtor for sound "SLEEPER"' at Sun· MACNAB ·IRVINE _______ ... ______ _ HOLIDAY SPEC]AL~B,900 A real ho.nus for ~our family . Spacious 3BR, 2000 sq. ft. home . Formal DR. large FR. community pool privileges. Joyce Ed- lund 642-8235. (V451 BLUFF 'S BEAUTY Original Trina Model-3BR's 2\!z battis- prolessionally decorated-asking $69.Soo. .or. rent for $475/mo. unfurn. Will consider lease/option. Bob Owens 642-8235. (V46) MAGNIFICENT 'MONTEGD--$75,500 Harbor View Homes neatly new 4BR ranch style home. Lovely decorating & shutters. 'Ready tor move in. Joyce Edlund 642-8235. (V47) . "' .[Jrvlne I '--b·~ni ~11, C<Mftptny r tOI Dl¥tr0flve ... 2-1235 l ... llacA-W.•UOO ~n ... ch, Cllltornla 12tt3 info. 64S.6&16. set Beach. \\'ho's first? I • <I Bedroon1s, 41 1 Baths pool room. pier A_ slip 12:ill.OOll • 673·7'18'1 IOln\J L llJ\11\ ' 2299 Harbor Blvd. Zl!RO DOLLARS TOTAL MOVE IN COST!! Absolutely correct. Use Your VA eligibility now and enjoy the gourmet k itc hen . 'Separate den. King sbie bedrooms. Twin patio&. Ex- tra wide boat and camper gate. Conveniently loci.led. Once in a . lltetirne chance -only $29,s:Al! HURRY! ' 142-2535 . I • I ~2f"2':.,,.-:'-:rll:_Y_P_IL_o_r ___ -..:.,:::.,.::,::•:rT_Utsd_•.:.Y';,,.N_.,.,_m_btr_27,;'eo.,.1:::97'-:•:."lar=••~----:-1Hunllngton BHch Newport Baadl • lncoma p,...riy Iii Mo,,....., HouMI Uilfllm. 1;...,:~;~:;:-ME;;:_:;:_;;A_:;:_N;;_D::;_(:;;_;,.,l -B-RA_N_D-·N_EW __ INVESTOR'S DREAM SUBURBIA PARK I br, GRAND OPINING For Sala ' l2S OWNER + Trusto..do 260 . .$onor~•'-I ___ _ 305'' ttQI >'!rst year""'"" First clau 2\1 be, I& down italrl Nawport Bay_ Towa" NEW 1974 U' Lazy Daze 8 UNITS PUT YOUR MONEY S ME DUPJ.lX locatlon. Th<tt-two bedroom master, faro & ru:, rm' 1 ! 2 BEDROOM Mobile llome, D od I' ALA UNT~ OR INCO CORONA DEL Ul\lta. w1w '""'-""· bull• 2 trplu; next to • part<, CONOOMINillM HOMES cbuall, 1!!192 Qllall a... 10 •6010 RETURN TO WORK 'OR YOUI .,J""'I.,~"""" ~~ER ~10i\''~Ll5c~ :;;..~~°:!. }:.'t!fi: ~ = ~ ta 't'~ n ~~; ~~.~~~-.. :W ~· :~BA, u,1ng awn.rs "°""' Cci •laht ~~.:r.; i:,,~~1 f Ii~ - \,lpper floor ha• a view ot Crtat 3 1-!!!~-owner's come polentlal • Priced 1"'968--"""2071!-,-,;.-""'"'..,.--...,r,..,..=-= ::'ull securtty Hl&hrlie nn. Adult park _w/J)f'lvate =~bl J.. it ·1::; ~~~L ~A>Td:.~Eeg~r I l .vn. I the ocean & 3 Bedroom!:!, and rlght! . OP~ Sunday 2-4. By owner. Stetl It concrete construcUon bee.ch • S16,500. ~!672. dded lnoo more u1t ~lied (Ilf.) 556-0l06 0 DUPt.t. 1 lower ha• 3 8edroorn5 & unit plus a 2 bedroom & OLD FASHIONED new 5BR. :st&, C11Jtl, drps, 'rlvate Balconlff CABANA UX3S. _ • .._ Int a me, CQ.P " NII den. You own lhe lal\d here, 2 bath unit. ExCf.llent loca-A large yvd Ir: tall trets $42,500 Low int, 2 o 411 21arqe spaces ptr unit. cost ~ wUl"-;n-·$8()(1· re.te fttum ii 10.6%. &1Uer 4500 Camput or., N.B. JllWPOI' tlA\',C.M. '42· , + IOO! Co.ll for more details. tlon. Tfte llried llrfft. Near 1a the eettlng f.Ot thlt Brent•tont, 644-U23 noo~ 1undedc U-mcw~. · ~. ~ 0 n I ~ "'"' ~ STUOEN'r:.B&dl. ~_LSU51 avt PETE BARREn <hCI Deac:h. J ust stepo to charming 3 bedroom heme. Huntington Harbour Un Opportunity to Pur-$128,000. Take advanla(r. TO iiiiJti;, ]jiiji or oen-r utll pd, walk by, the sea.-: the park. lnYest .r:r monoy Frtlhly painted llwkte le chase IH.Ytront Proptr'.,y ln • Call aow.i: .. "l600 'l'hllt ~. ~ m~Mt, CLEAN 1 Br tum apt $140. 1' -RE ALTO~-In • ~ " property. out True out-living. HARBOUR VIEW Newport l!eaelt I I f'A1 ~ anytime, ,,. .. ~w •· for la.,, m CID KOOi! lll'IL , "'. Ca U nnw ~. John Carey, IU!n. 557-2022 JUI l'ernando 0 Rd., N.B. ":\~'::"' ~ INVES'l'MENT DlVJSION jatlc: -Co p~ 2 st ~pix $180. ~Ol'fNTIL •• !T'S FUN m. NICI/~ COSTA MESA CI! 2000 sq \~~ j~eu~nt~m"H:.~v~~ 675-ISSJ Nu paint, CID, fncd w/pr. 3 ':~~~:Ms ~ 1 • '. ::~n~';1~~~~~~N~ ~~:~:i:.·ooow1th10% o~;~ ~°ci'eo:/..~NAc._"" .. ,. 150~llfHllllfl ( -11..al ~~~~t~r~: ~~~~· ~ '. DOWN $36,COO and in fine ut n.rrn.ll'""T1"'\lro.tHARBC:XJR l% VIEW l I ah-~ -·-•••··~· F.P .. bltnl, klds/peta, ~· · ~LL TERMS condition! Bia. 546-0562. nv"'""''~' Comple<ety redecorated 3 aCft. m · •·•· u •• .--f f-L-• 300 NU Paint 3 BR J'M 1291 REALlY bedroom Ind 2 bed:oom cntr. Appro~. 80 avocado: EAST BLUFF "'"""" um """" worl<llbop, trplc A ' car. Call us 11bout thl.!I SOOOPER * S9'x290' LOT * ASSUME Fl-IA Loan. Total u.nlls. One block to sandy 25 citrus, pines, palml. 5 BAClC Ba)' 5 BR 2~ Ba $475 buy. A 3 bl' Freedom Home· C-1 ZONE ~ •• ~nwt crp$205t ·, 4pnlBntr,. by2 I;';;;"';;;;;;;";;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I beach. Hurry, won't last! chain fence. Low down. 6 UNITS Oener•I pool &. matnt, all extrul on a sharp tree-lined atrctt $32 500 E z TERMS u. ,_ « Onl~ $76,500. ~.850. OWner'. ( 714) LARGE Ir. SMALL • WE ...,;th laf'R"e yard and rru!t • . owner. 557-flm C.E J URY ll*"-'•·'"I m.-72.30 Vista. No brkrt. 'nle Bhills ·Newport Beach! 1 BR. HoUle, $110 utU Dd, H VE -•EM ALL"< Call ui k64477l1 -HOl;fDA-Y FUN -· 1'3.£.J.U_ I ~tic VIEW from vecy Kids/pets. Also l bn. A in. ·· trffs. q c . . ~11!1!cda~m+ ~:;:"1 ':'oour:i 3tu~~· ~t~' 2~'~ar bi~~: can he yoon in the large * SPECIALISTS * Co;m•r::; 151 uxe 6 unifipartffient:--E;x:' mobue-or.-&-,-sR:.~Ji'Rm Al.A-Rent1l1~ 14n NIGll. · DAll[Y & A5,lJ[IAl ES + den, 3 baths, many ex:-Open House sa t /Su n . family room and formal din· \Ve specl.al.lze 1n finer New-rope treme~ spacious. Earm nn, until pd, $1(1), Hntg. 11.ANDLORDS! trns. Qu iet street. $58,700 S3\.CXXI. 642-TI42. tng area. Spacioul tile entry, part Shotff properties. Call C 1 Lot $17 500 over . pel' month. Once Bch. Aif, Fee. m.a430 3 B"., 111. bll.. Brlck frpl, large deck off muter 5uite. us tor homes ln um great, • ' in Wetime value. Take Dd· $90 1 BR Houle. Alao llntg. We Specialize 1n NewPort n ,. A gnat end wilt twnh~ with bfach orltnted community, so· x 140' Near 19th & vantage -call today. Bach $150 singles. 3 BR, Beach • Corona del Mar • J..&. L.R.; newly dee. s27.ooo 3 bdrms., 21,i baths and a CAYWOOD REALTY PQmona Ave .. C.M. Priced JNVEST~IENTl600DMSION fam rm. $185. Walle to & Laguna. Our Rental Ser· i--~=~~=~-i* C-2 Zone . Harbor .Blvd. HERE 'TIS 100 x 350. '""' to adjoin· 6 Mo. NEW. 3 BR, 2~ BA, Spanish style home at 31J.22nd St Only $54,500 Shown By App't Only ~39HorEvo.~543 lachenn1yer Re.1llt>r ing strett, srrs.ooo, * C·:? LOT 50 x 150 Ne\\rport B!vd. 138,500. Fortin Co. Rltrs. 642-5000 greenbelt location. $46,500. 90 1 t $2 so ~ Sq Ft ~· ach vi.a. t vice ls FREE to You! Tl')' COURT SALE CALL 552-7500 * 541-!2 * w°:'sfoy 0 N, Toyior Co. ~- 11 ~'."""/pe<o. Agt. ee. Nu-View! Fo::;~~::~n. VISION ~~~:FF~~~ N==~~o ~ ll~llJ\ll B=Al•:::.o JEWEL =l~=~ENT!LJ48 "";;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;I • d h'll $89,500, NEWPORT BEACH · Charmin< a BR, 2 1rocy,l ;;,_-------1 * 6 UNITS • Eaststde, Costa • re I BROKER 833-0780 Prime beylro,. lite nicely lurn. 6 4 2 -2 22 2 , LITTLE ISLAND GEM Mesa 112,500. ln<ome 1160. • FREE LIST !or boat repair A ao1.. 2 DUPLEXES 540--0995 or 644-1295. Spacious 3 BR, 2 BA. New Roy McCordli-RHltor -'\T~lJark ccnt'!;:Ai~:s FAST POSSESS. -Bill Gl'IUldy R!!r §15.fil~ PRIGE -REDUGED -Balboa Panlnoulo ~:~ ~~tio.lah:~: Gov't reposse.!l'Sed homes, I·larbor View Carmel model. LEASE (C-1) 50x250 + + trpl La ,_ .... ~,. of brick J.lilO New~7729Blvd., C.?lt. I J BR 2 ba family rm J8S3 M---•-~• pmt Ownel' ,.,.v. sell these ad· BAYFRONT 5 BDRMS., '4 be c. knov~,•hJ -,_A ..., .... 1_• "'downmi? hpayvem<,poov~~:..~~~ 00aa YOU-'LL LOVE IT 1, 1, U11lvv1C:1 "--• --..-ams, Y PJ.Ut> r-•Y .... ~ ....... Iota of'extras:·Price reduced TD/trade or ? 24 hr • ~ 2 BR du~xes on BATHS. Plirt.. float. Wlnter lng, & bltn cabinets. Coun-l-~.,;;;B,..A=Y"C=R"'E"S"r=•-"'"!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!~-· & pyn1ts, No obliptio11. \\'alnut Square Condo, 1uper to $68 95() including land 557-3062. htJ.? ota. Only l 0 Down .. _or_yearly.L.; -!Q.19. ;ry kitchfn Garqe-W/elcc. HILLTOP HAVEN Equal Housing Opportunities upgraded, 2 BR & den "A" coRBtN..MARTIN 'IWO adjoining income pro-!:~ !'educed to $34,9&1 BAY Vu 5 bt, 3 ba, 2 story door. 3 doai-t trom So. Bay. Charming 4 bedroom: hor> MESA VERDE HERBERT HAWKINS Model. Benec <han new. REALTORS 644-7662 perties, center Coota Mesa. CEN.TURY 21*u2.Jnl ,""'1·068F>plc, dshwsr, yrly. $500. Yeart, only. Move in quet dlntng room -f1,1·0 ' REALTORS • 839-1600 quality carJK'tS. 1hutten -~T'BE'ffiffi5Ni5~-\~0:"wnet~!:;-~645-~:IJ20~/~-~~-\ -~ today. Courtet)' to brokers. \Yann flrepl:ices. l a r g e Sloping tn>c lined slrttt on """"""""""""'""""'""""""i thruout.Supel'lo c at ion . * 5 BEDROOMS* Condominiums 6UNITS E.SldeColltaMesa. Coron• del Mir 115 Abalone, 675--1837 ol' quality home -gourmet the meRa. Entertainer's Huntington Btach $32,500. 6'6-8400. Oen, dining are..t., 3 Ba, I I l60 Individual unlts. Prin. only. (213) 836-4740. kitchen. Poflslble to assunlc deli2hL 1n executive Mesa c_Jea n, spacious l ·story , or H • 548-6725 2 BR house Jn old Corona LOE S. Bay!ront tri·level, la.n -~171 Vertie location. Double door $750. Clillhaven. $89,500. DUIT NOW FOURPLEX, C.?11. we 11 de! ~lar, c om p I c t c I y 4 BR. ll,2 BA, lease Dec 2 story entry. Fol'mal living --GEM maint. Blbls. D/\V. $56,IXX>. furnished, including grand thru June $150. Pier It boat O#'ENTILt• rrs FUN 10lJE MCEI room. 2 cracking fireplaces. ~-1 DON'T WAIT FOR YEAGER REALTY 556-filTI pillno. sep. tub &: sho\ver, alip available. 615--8512 or ~ ~ Jo~onnal dining. Comfort Total Down u.1rF Tust n Ave., N.B. t't'IC. m Marg u er It e II-• • kHchcn. Breakfa.t 0 re 3 REAL1"RS 642-4623 PRICES TO RISE lndu•trlol Property 168 6i5'.as16 ' _,61°'>-85:,.:::;!9=;,.,.,~-.,.-,,.-,.-l !Uljlfll!I 1'fainmoth family roonl. \Vet Cozy 4 bcdrm startel' home Laguna Beach $Zt,OOO for these spe.ciom BAYFRONT, nu 3 ~. lam nm j:J ba r. 4 bedrooms -Giant just a sklJl to the ocean! -"-TW--O--N-EW___ HARBOR VIEW/ 2 BR, l~' BA ad~t,.condos. * M-1 * 6 MO. ~n~ ru: or unturn. rm, 2 story, yearly, inquire . --·-••••-l\laster suite. Extra Countcy style kitchen wit h CARMEL ChoiceotlocationsstDlavall. ~-~r11.,1de -"-. 2a~t~~ 400 s. Baytront No. 5. Sell vin dishwasher and all the bi A I nM do ac: 1u vmw -u:v111 storage. er mo g -Jatel!t fix ture s. 1 2 Vanity This brand ncv•. cui;lon1 buiH . 3 BR, 2 BA, Fam/Rm, Din a e. s .ow as ~ wn 73 X 300 FEET 242 Po 67)-7769 Btlboa Peninsula RED HOT! ! ! priced lo sell rn.,t ! Take 2 bdrrn. + guest apt. hon1e, Xlnt cond, Beaut. yd, up-to move in, with $220 mo. ocean. ppy, , LIKE NE\V! ! 3 BR, 2 BA. S:.'i3~c -call today. ~~~~t~~ ~~ ::!~ ;i~~ is \vilhin y,·alking dli;tflnce graded, ownel', $69,900. ~ all. 836-4200 Aaent. NEWPORT BEACH :::C:::o;;•t:::•..;Me;;.;:-" .. '-----2 br &: tam rm 2 car gar, dem den, huge FR, owner · yan:l! This ls a Gov't re-to parks, beaches t.: shop-644-6480. 1721 Port Ashley Pl. NEWPORT RNlERA RIVIERA REALTY 2 BR house In old Corona on the Point. ~y lse. $335. I ! ___ , II 11 ..,. 990 OP£NTIL 9 • "S f'UH 10 BE NICE! · d 'II I 1 pin<> area. Really "slick as NEWPORT CREST CONDO Gracious 3 Bl' 2~ Ba fpl 149 B--->\\•ay C.M I nw. 675-4003. r ans ca·1..:u. ·WT)' •• ..-;,, . 1 ~ possession an y,·1 not as -.. • • • 4........, • • de\ Mar, c 0 m p 1 e t e lt' 1 Tit g , Bkr 962-5511. l,A! rm 3 ba ' Pool fennls Poss. S32·000· Financing R ncfi F pl~no. scp. tub & shower, Call 645-8400. II _1o_n_g=a1~125~,250==fo~ll=p-rice_. a ivhistle." $7S,950. Ne\v P lan 5 4 bed !am !am rm, 2 car gar. Immed. 642:·7007 645-5609 Evts. furnished Including grand B1y1hore1 S vro. l~.H M~utes to. oceM. Under avail. To inspect call 1 ft, arms, $325. 721 Mar gueri te, LARGE,lroomy 4 br, 3 b& • V. E. u.-nl & Co. FREE RENTAL ~k-1 q market at 165,000., tenno. 642-00ll'J. Gro¥01 TIO 6~76 home dooc to pvt beacl>. w --.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiii; • REAL ESTATE Owner 642-~ CORNER Condo. 2 Bedroom. INVESl'ORS 1.-H T E RE s T 1=BD,::RM::::..-mo-blle~-h<>me--wt~th 1 52 51 m 0 · thru Aug. BIG CANYON $220 $325 MO 1190 Glenneyre St. * BLUFFS*"" New:-tiodra""j, DW, DOWN O"""'' Co. rugaed 8x46 additional room . .,;64-=6--"!461=·-c2"'13,-'12,,!4.JG40~-·--1 DOLL HOUSE \Ve have only tv.'O Jots aw l!--' 49+9473 5'19-0.116 BEST BUYI I firep •pa 'pocu. Adults canyon .scenic, \\'ild life, yet 646-4323. .. Corona del Mir over 15, $23,COO. 548-7898 B4 al -1 T ,; Id al able -an excepUonal neigh-M ' h B T Charmlng 3 ·bdrm. Santa '·"bel CM o Y mm. o us .. !1. e ~1inl fl<x. 1 Br. c:1 .... Jes/ 2 bo'"-""· You will lo·-fO 1°'l' this great 2 bedroom. onarc ay err. ua. • lo h"-h ar ~~ ....... 2 BR den dln rm l,i BA Oiarming 2 bedroom home. E!aatalde, CostA Mesa. Love- ly _g_al'den and play house. Great -,Larter or-feflttment home ·• 01ly $26,400. Call 545-8424 Soll.lhCo Realtors. BIG CANYON CONDO 2 'Bedttloml • den • tamlly nn. -or 3rd bdnn. End model wUh a great open feeling. Fee land. $91,875. C. F. Colesworthy Realtors 640-0020 CLASSIFllD HOURS Advel'tisers may place thelr ads by telephone 8:00 a.m. to ~:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday 8 to noon Saturday COSTA MESA ·oma: 330 w. Bly 00-6618 NEWPORT BEACH 3333 Newport• Blvd. W-6618 llUN'nNG'ION BEACH 17875 Beach Blvd l540-1220 LAGUNA BEACH .. • · 223 Fore1t Ave. 494·9466 SAN CLEMENTE 305 N. El Camino Real . ~92.f420 NORTH COUNTY dial tree M0-1220 CLASSIFIED DIADLINES De&dllne for copy 6: kills ls D:30 p.m. the day be- fore pu:blicatlon, except tor Sunday A: Monday Editions when deadline 11 Saturday, 12 noon. CLASSIFIED REGULATIONS ERROj\S: Advertisers should check theil' ads d&Uy A: report elTOn Immediately. THE DAll..Y PILOT u swnes liability for the tint in· correct inlertlon only. CANCEILATIONS: When kllllng an. ad be sure to make a reconi of the KILL NUMBER pven you by your ad taker au: receipt of your cancellatlpn. Thi• kill number must be pl'e• aented by the advertUer 1n cue of a dispute. CANCELLATION 0 R CORREC110N or NEW AD BEFORE RUNNING: Every etrort la made to kill or correct a new ad that hu been ol'del'ed, but we cannot guaran- ~ to do so until the ad bu appeared. Jn the p&pel'. Dl)U:.A·lJNE ADS: These . ads al'e 1tl'lctly cuh In advance by mall or at &ti)' one of our o(- ficet, NO phone orden. Jln41bto: 3 p.m. Friday, Cotta Mesa office 12 noon -all branch of. fj- TllE DAILY PILOT * serves tM rtcht to w. slb' ·edit, M\&Or or rt· tu.,! &J:!X advertliement. and tn iihanp lti 1'81ts & recul1tk>nl without J)i'lor m>UCo. CL..USl"ID MAILING ADDRISS p, o. lloi l!lfO. Costa M ... ta:IS •LUlN ~.. • 2n Baths. View !I eco SY .. c ..... · pnv. a·P9· Family. All util pd. ' ' · ·1800. ' ii·v .. In this fi-"-a. So will \Vllh pool. Park like grounds An attr., nearly new con-Duplexes/Units c:i.. ......... ila e'tate Scarce 40 laun FP patios W. • ·--· rl PJ . h 4 bd 3 Ted Hubert & Assoc. ---'6· . Homtflnd•r• 547-9641 1 yr'. old.' 1375. ;M Colden-your chlldttn & they'll find -settne p vacy. u., many temp, Vilt rn1s.. * 67!>-8500 * salt 162 + acre parcels. $1SO~t I: -.a the "..!~Lkind" oL play· x-trns. Phone 897-0321._ huths, lonnal dlnlrlg nn. $250M 838-4651 aft s PM Huntlng!on Beach rod 675-6900 nl8tes~~u · & fwnify rm.; s\vimmlng BLUFFS TRI·LEVEL €ON· ** TAX-R!FOGE ** -' ' · · -_ . :NEAR~ new 3 BR., 3-be.th.I. pool, ja cuzzi; senerous out· DO. 3 br, 2 ba, cathed_l'al LltUe Je\\'el duplex. 2 Bed-FOR l't'nt or lease 3 bdr, frplc., patio; b It.ins, COM .. ANY REALTORS SINCE 19-14 673-4400 PRrCE SLASHED! NEAR NEW HOME Q\vner says SELL IT FAST! P r Ic e reduced $1,000! Sweeping curved drive to y,•ide cet'Bmic tile entry. Garden kitchen. Ove.nized l i v i n g l'oom v iews marUcured grounds. FOUR tamll)' alu bedrooms. Quiet cul-de-sac locatton. Side yard fur motor home. Pric- ed to ,;ell at $40,500, Take advantage -call now! 847-6010 OP£N TIL 11 • "'S FUN 70 SE NICE/ ~ 61$;11\ll Newport Heights Area S . -GAS SHORTAGE Lovely 4 BR, 2 BA In a cozy ncigbborliood. Bike's ride to South Coast Plaza. Beautiful yard. S 3 3 . 9 0 0 . CENTURY 21 64.S-72'll Eves: 548-8.594 OCEAN WALK . $19,500. Cottage By 'Ille Sea. 2 Bedrooms. Cozy 11 v i n g room. Large kitchen. Walk to beach. Agt . 645--030.l Balbo• Peninsula 1toor living with patios & ~am ceilings, pool, walking room 1 bath each Built-in I I~ 2 bath, 2 story, near beach. di&hwahr. fi06 Orchid Scenic decks &: a lull ocean view. distance to schls, churche~. oven'& range garbage dis-~ fireplace, fenced yard, new Propertlet 675-5726 $149,500. East Bluff Village & tennis ...,.. .. , 1 . · . ~ .. 1 .. ed palnt 1: carp!t dbl. garage, TURNER ASSOC. club. $52,500. By owner. Aft 7· urut Jtlngwit ~ "·aahft'..dryer,' no pets . LOVELY, 3 bl', 2 ba, tam Walker&lee .,.~ ... ,.,. 110• N Coast H ' ·-··· !pm 644--0987 a new ca.rpe . l' o•., ~a nn, Lusk HV Hills. Many H ti ton B .ch'• a · wy., ._, ... _ ' lot, fenced back yard. Bust'non O"ll7"Wi> • extru Avail now. 64+-2883 un ng e 494-1177 HARBOR VIEW HOME-4 $37,250. $6500 down and as· Walk to Beach $150. 1 Br .:::=;,,·==-='-'c""'= Most Popular ~P=A=N"O"RAM""'=1c"""v"1"E"W~ BR, one-story, upgraded & swne Joan. Drive by 751·753 Opportunity 200 Coach Houte. Vacant. * 2 BR, 1 ba, fireplace, 2 Bdnn condo., desirable spotless. Inuned. Occup. &'Ott Place O.f then call Botti W R Homeflnders 547-9641 huge yard·trees. $285/mo. ground leVt'l tklol' plan, 1% Exquisite 3 bdnn home with Poss. Owner 644-6249. 548-3036 !or I appointment to • ater out. incl wtr·i&l'denel'. 833-8974 years new, Freshly Patnted panol'amic o ce an & NEWPORT Shores home, J 1ee. oo NOT DISTURB L! )'OU are intetftted in own--Lido Isle l BR, 2 BA. sar. $350 mo. with tastefu lly paneled and downtown Lai\Wl view! Bl', 2 Ba. $47,900. By owner. TENANTS. By owner. Prin· ~yov.r ownn buatneM tor INTER ,_ ~ut So &a; N.,.._ mi?Tored living room, plush Pool sized yard, beautifully !pal onl 1 _..,J, dow W 1eue, ....-. . . 67).-8'Tl'5 or 60-6290 wallpapel'ed dlnina; area, landscaped,Dlni~ nn, built 645-4599 or 642-2563. c s y, p ease. SILvER SPRINGS WATER bayfront home: 4 BR., 5 shag carpets & custom Ins, dishwasher. Family rm, TRADE Newport Be a ch · GREENTREE can put you on a route in ba., beau~ tum. Sandy bch. SHARP 2 br & den, So of drapes, oversized pantry fireplace. Patio. Move in Prop. fol' Out-of-Town Prop. Duplex &. Triplex unit• under Orange County's finest area Pier &: float $1650 Mo. Bill Hwy. fOI' 1-. $350. Call agnt. area. near schools, wa1king condition! Owner will con-Bkr. TI4/67?r2058. construction. Frplc's, beam earning $1300. per mo . Pi> Grundy Rltr 675-G161 I _::644-:.:..::85Q9=,'-------I distance to Hunting t 0 n •Ider leasing. S 5 7, 0 0 0 • DUPLEX nr ocean $62,500 cell. From $63,5()0. Bullder. tential unlimited. We will Newport Be•ch Center, Swimming pool and 494-&Xl3. Miles Lanon Realtor 64&4414 train the riaht man. 964 N. Costa Mtu many perk areas. Aaking TARBELL, RHltors m.8563 Income PrODOrty 166 Batavia, ~- only $24,495 call. today 192ll S. Coo.st Hwy, L. B. DUP-LEX . I St .;.r...:. (TI4l 532-6501 .,, --pnme oc. e., RED CARPET O't • ....,.,... MAGNIFICENT to ocean&: bay. Owner amt· DRAPERY WOI'kroon1 for Tl BURON CONDO VIEW LOTS ious. Ag<. 675-21112 49;.llSI &ale or machines .....,.t., * Apple Pie Condition & 2 adj lots. La Mirada, Next 5 Cl t ly. F.dlngtt/Grand area, Studentl & Slnglea $llS Bach~lor Pad. Top area. SINGLES apt $120 for lllg) H ~i-•-547 ~1 good landlord, clooe in. om .. ._rs ·~ PRIVATE 2 Br hie $1S5 HoUMI Unfurn. 305 stv/rtfr, fncd w/gar. Pet ok. clean, 3 BR, 2 bath, to Prop City Park. Plans an emen 1 EXCLUSIVES 1,,.:4ilM::,,c=.343::::,.-=~-~--* Spec t a c ula r view comp IOI' two R-1 attached OCEAN VIEW RESTAURANT, lncl. pro~--------- overlooking tranquil park· 1500 & sf each. Decks, ocean Rambling Tri-level. Beaut 4 NEW INVESTMENT. Beauti· erty, 1 blk to bay, Newport EASTSIDE 2 br d,plx 1185 now ntce CID, nu paint, am pet. like surrowxlings. view. Approved CUP. Comp BR w/panoramic ocean ful new 4-plex vacant and Beach. A&t. ~. * Lush shag, custom shut· , pkg ready to go $27,500. Ol' v1 Lge u 1 re dy fDr that ftnt owner "---to L 2•• lllNTALI BRAND New 2 Br, 2 Ba $225 bltns, CID, nice patio a: gar. NICE? 4 Br, 2 Ba $29'.> av!. trplc, bltns, patio, 2 car FREEZER 4 Br, 2 Ba l3:!0 frpl c, all appl's, a ttal ten & used brick patio. will bulld to suit. Owner ew. v nn, ·mass ve a · mitiil'fl'9y oan ~ * Low 1% VA Loan, "'l.n4S. stone !pie:, huge tam rm, This unit ill located in a Hlu111 * Apta. * 141•0111 * O't luxury master bedrm with choice rental area and ready 1 t TD L assumable at $255. pet' CUSTOM townhouse resl· priv view balcony. Only to appreciate. Priced to aell S oa ns month. Call: I i dence + renta1, No. Laguna $62,500. Broker 492-9700. at $78,000 . • larwln re1 ty nc. Bch _ ocean view, walk to San Juan Capistrano ~.!.~ ~~.1 Tr t p _I: xln. UP TO 9Q% 968 4405 * (24 hrs) bch, w•t """' · tile patios • N~.::::.. Be~·~~ -~~block 8'1' % INTEREST 43S W.11lh COITAMll4 home fol' the holidays? ALA Rontal1 642-1313 $95. 1 Br furn cottage, pat fur single guy or gal. Equal HoUllng Oppty. sun patio. 5400 "I· fl HORSE PROPERTY to"/;;cl,, 'G,.';;;';;.. ... 2nd TD Loans -~-::$"3"1"",9°'5~0;;----'~--1 $129,000. 530-8138/49.5-1075. 2 Bl' house on 1 hillside acre, vestment, ap~latlon and Laguna Nigutl fenced fol' horses . $38,500. owner UM too L 'o Co $130. 1 Br, part furn apt, util pd. Eutside. SPARKUNG EXEC HOME 4 BR, gold shq, drpo, fam nn w/aolarlwn, frplc, ae11 clean oven, D/W, patio, shake roof, fncd yard. Walk _tQ___SQ, CoNLPl."8~137:i. 642-fi618 Ol' 548-661L No DOWN 2590 dwn, HB, (TI4) 968-3563. $52,950. F~. Only 2 left owe1t r1te1 r1ng1 • $58,300. Sea Terr ace Santa An• ot these . 2 bdr. 1 ba. S.ttler Mt9. Co. Townhouse for sale, rent tourplexe1. 10% Down. WW '42·2171 545-0611 $165. 2 Br wifurn View spt. 1 child ok. gar yn:I. E. aide CM ~ _ $3Xl. lovely 2 Bl', mdwn apt child, pet, gar, yrd, view, NB. The owner bu spenl..otnuch time on this elegant home. 3 br, 1~ baths. great area -phone 897-0311. Walker &lee •IAI. lll.t.TI DOLL HOUSE Vacant, $26.500. Beaut cor- ner lot. 4 ~e bedrms, only $1.350. down. Pymts less than rent. ., 1llage Real Estate HZ.4471 ( r~:.) 546·1!01 or lease option. Most popular RAMBLINCS RUSTIC 8cll t'Ontract or con· Servlna Harbor area 24 yn. model, 3 BR, 2 story, ocean 3 BEDROOM, 2'iii bath Townboule. Family room, ftreplace, pool. $325/!itO. 645-6610. vi ( ___ .. ~ ....... "" WITH POOL. 4 Spa_ clous ventlonal. ReaU on way to DON'T BOR_R_OW_ - ew. ""'=· ---~~· bedmut, Inell!& tudeaway $600. per.-,, 'TIL YOU CALL US! $225. hol1le 3 Bl' unfum, kid1, ~tll. ll'g ynl, Ir: gar, Get tn before the price goes master ""1th cathedral cell· $59,850. Fourplex. 2 bdr.1 ba. up. 493-0450. inp. ~ family nn, backs on ~ coune. 10% Borrow on your home equll)' lido Isle homemakers kitchen with Down. WW sell contract or far MY good purpose. Setv- todays bltnl. RESORT LIV· conventional. Jng Los Angeles County tor JNG FOR THE WHOLE $175,000. Eastslde 12 Unltt. over J> years and NOW in $lllO hse 3 bl', untum, frplc, dbl pr, Irr yrd. Fresh Palnt Sll'.l. 2 Br Fncd. Kidl. Garage. PRIME Lido Opportunlly For small family , about to be completed, all new 2 bdrm., f am i ly rm.; Z-alol'ies. Charac~r already in. You choose your own decol'. $79,500 LIDO REALTY 11 • • I'" I ,,(., ' I! *673·7JOO * FAMILY! Only $34.~. Call Attractive complex w:lth Orange County! 3BR 28 "= Tht Real Estate "fair f:I. Two owner apts. Walk· SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. • 605AN:r~~ mo, $375 • HM. 4 Bl', 3 Ba, trplc, bring kids, hone & olhel' pet11. LANDLORDS FREE Homoflndoro 547-9'41 839-6133 ng distance to lhopptnir and Cn4i> ~ 3 BR. Fam 0 -, walk to 673-3775 or 642-.5200 ---::=o-==::---I bus services. 4500 Campu11 Drive, N.B. n.111 $21,000 163.000. Eastside. 4 houoes LOANS available, any type, beaelt, $180 utll Pd · TNHSE upgrd 3 br, 2 ba, on a large lot 10% down, anywhere any size S20CKXI Kida/pell. Alto 2 BR, dbl gar, patio, nr. So. Coast Vacant, adult Coodo. 2 BR, 10% 2nd, *1% first commlt· up. Mr. J~nea (702)° 882-2132 starting $130. Vacant. ~. Plua. $265. $7133, 1% bath, 1168 sq. ft. Elec ment received. Income =-""""""~""'"-"""'""'"° Fee. 979-80> BRAND NU 3 bl', 2 ba, pluah range & DW, new cpts, drps $7,956. and renta way below ~ Wanted 250 2 BR, Qmdo, Jdda OK·S225. exec home. Lge flim nn and paint. Quiet area, well market Each house haa ' mo. brk. Call Marilyn ~. Welli, 979-1533/997-1450 maintained, bulldings Ir: own gai-age & yard. WKND. Money, 9 prden Copley 832-5440 or Tom Fat Protll ii attained whe gro~. $1050. Down. S186 Fol' detailed in!onnatk>n on ro:ute yardl. f7 each. w/or Nehrbas, 83l.Hi060. . """'' •II ~ --"t t Tax impounds. No other these and other units C8.ll without equip. C.M. Ir. Nwp. .1w._ a'C11Ult~l• BEST BUY -LIDO !!!!"'!'!~~"!'!'~~!!!!!! 3 BA, 4 BR +. Bay V'teW. --------HONEYMOON ss· to bch, 425 Via Udo "HIDDEN COTTAGE Nord. 1137,500. 61>·1414 Bkr. costa or charges. Aat. Red Cal'J)et, Re a 1 1 0 r si.Bc:;h;;,· ~213-443".1839=:=:;::::;· ===-=;CLASS:;~SELLS~==-=642=·='611!==-· !..:tl::ing"=Dall='='=' ::;P:l:==::;O:,:uall!ed:===:j 836-4200. "!i!!!!~I 979-2550 2629 Harbor Blvd., I' =: Costa Mesa. TREASURE'' PLUS POOLI BY 0\1'fler, $66,900. Save --I~ 24 UNITS 10°/o RETURN Hear the SUI'f from this 2 Generous stze bedl'ms. Lge $6600. 2 Br, l'iii ba, Very secluded 4 bedl'OOm, 3 bath fanlily room y,•/bar and in-elC'a n/sharp. 642-a299, r~y home. 2 mas s I ~ e direc1 lighting. Anthony pool Mission Viejo fireplaces, enormou1s family & pool sld.e dressing rm. room. open beams. Priced $26,500. Don"t miss out, call -, MobilaHomos 24 Bread & butter apts. -capitalized rate of return rlghl at $79,900. Aallwne low today. in<eresst loan. CaU nowl Th R I E t ~ F I GRUBB & ELLIS 1 H 1 ••• a r 67S.7080 SJ6.2SS1 BAY VIEW . 5 BR. 2\,i BA roomy, older home In best location. $12,500. P acific ProperllH 675-6712 or 67>1632 LGE. 4 BR, tam. rm., lge. kltch. Now $87,500 MarahaU Realty 875--4600 Coron• dtl Mar 1 "CORONA COTIAGE" Bnt S. Hv.y locaUon. 2 BR • on huge R·2 lot. Add a unit!,·! $62,900. Call &t>84-00 YA-fHA Repossessions. Latest prices. WM. McCABE REALTY 8740 WARNER AVE. f'OUNTt\IN VALLEY * 842-4405 * REPOSSESSIONS O" lnlormnUon and location n1' u·rsc Jol i/I .t VA bome1. ·ct • • Kl\SA CIAN R,.f. E1lat1 '62"644 12600 i5i1. 4 Br, 2 Ba~l328 total pymenta. 7% GI Ln. Prine. only. &trlUK or 5'16-9754 eveL For Sale 125 Is over 10%! Annual grou lneome ill over $41,000. 9% NEW Golt Coune, new lw10BILE H<?ME FOR SALE: spendable! Call today $500,000 recreation center Silvercrest mobile ho me 546-1609 • within walkin&; 0dl0s't iliiC'e 20' x 53', 2 bedroom, 2 INVESTMENT DIVISION from this 2 bedroom. 2 bath, baths, carpeted, draped, air cond .. lux ul'lous bullt -ln1. rerrtgeru.tor, ~ I RETIREMENT HOME fu~:Etir~~~~ ~~·~~;:r~~'. ~ lfiliifN P.nora-tc le 24 1 pnUo. Throe ycan old - 1ccurt1f' evu :rd. ~i like nf!W. Loca ted In ·new **TAX REFUGI ** malntf!nnnce tree In the new adult"pl\l'k away from noisy LltUe Jewel duplex. 2 Bed· adult community of C.0.la street One-half block from room, 1 bath each. Built·in del Sol $42,900. La Plz Real cfuhhoule. 111.9911. C a 11 °"'" • range, prba&<t di,. Ea<ote mcioo owntUs ~ poul. 1 unit juot painted · Can be seen lt: Oatmont and new C:8111'1tina· Corner NEW Co1£ Coone, new Esta.ta, 1051 Site Ortw lot, fenced beck yd. $37,250. $500,000 rt"Crtatlon center Brea, Califomll. (CentnJ $6500 down and uaume IOAn, 'Nilhin walklng d I• tan c e Avenue acrosa ftom BM Drive by 751·753 Scott Place, from this 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Community Ho.pital). Lot CM, then· call 548-3038 for air ~cOnd., I u x u r Io a• #46. Contact Ray, park appoJntmeot to see. DO NOT ca.rpetlnr,. electric k1tchen managert for 1~. O)STURB TENANTS. By with built·tn b a r b e q u ~, 2 BR dbl wide Lo ctn Allm Own• r. P,rlDdptlll only Dining area plus breakfaat • • Jeut. nobk Covered patlo with pymml.I. Dix fam . Pric. San1,•::.:;;;;::=....,....,..,.,,.,,,=-I ponnr.m1c vtew. 24 1tr. Juan Capo. 49Fl7U alt e. HOUSE -!:· 6 UNITS gecurlty au a rd . All BE5I' ~ Udo · Ya dJ t New unill at 2637 Elden, maintenance tree 1n the new Harbor, double wide, pe.do, CM. lit uatr w/'llJ% write adult t'Ommunhy of Coll& pool, p rage. $7950. 675-m) oft. Call Butlder &4M414. del Sol $42,900. La Pu RetJ It's a brel!ie. . • eeO 1.0'11' 8AN Juan Capo, four plex S©\\oUµ-L£t,~s· Thal Intriguing Wore/ Game with a Chucl/1 ------.t "7 CIAY I ...... •-.. ... ""'"of""' """ ---i... low fO form '°"' 11....,i. worda. I TOLINO I 1 11r11 I PYMET I; . I I r I . I 'L.-OSET 1 ~ I• I I I _ 1 X.ro!Od movlft or• off ollk., . . _ . . Tho only thi~ !hoy loov. tO ' ~------~the lm1gln1tion -tht -. ·1 H I B p 0 s I •. ., . 11,.....,. ......,,,......,,-T,--r-...r""" o f;"fu:r.i; :-.... "':!ii...-;:~ ._....__._..._...__. _ _.. Y"" dtwlop from ,..,No, 3 btlow. I PRINT NI.MERED lETT£R$ IN TH!SE SQUARES 1 ' .. UNSCRAMllf l!TlHS TO I V <jET ANSW!R r1'r1·rr1 I r4'I I I-" I I • HARBOR Vle;-Hlll s, 4 Br, l Bii. tam rm, Fee! Land. 131,500. OWll<r G4f-154~. 1 ~ BLKS. from ocean. Ve.ry llvRhle 3 BR oJdel' home. Under $30,COO. Own/lli;ct. Call Pc;gy 61'-TQI 6'l5-39til Tho futOl1 draw tn the \Vest • • .. Dolly Piiot Clullfled Eatata Dr0700. ttema with -... o01i, lnci>me ll!OO. i..... lot. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 CLASS SEW -&12·51118 Piiot Oaalfled. 'gc..em, !etldl~unl~la!.,119!!!!,iloo,~!-!!:!:!!!:.~ .f _....=,::,::::...:::.:.:...=.:..::.:....:..:.:..::.:....:..::....:..::....:..: ____________ " ,, I I . , • H~e"!~,,t~n . Belch_'{ .. NfCE 1 br turn apt $140. utll paid, 2 blkl to beach. KIDS & pet 2 br $149. Bllns, CID, play lltetl & CIP. J,.ARGE lot 3 br 1225 3 bliclJ beach, • new dtt.tt. ALA Rontols 642-1313 We pre'llently have a good selection of rentals from $235 a month · up. May we be of service lo you in solving your housing needs? "I 1 I I 1 . 111 I l'ilil. -· --I l.\'llli111' "SINCE 1946" Jst Weatern Bank Bldg. Univeraity Park, Irvine Doy.1-S52.lOOILNl9h ~ BR. 3 BA. w/pool, lease yearly, MOO. per rno., phOne ~llll .rt 6,30 pm. Newport llffch . VERY attractive 4 bedroom, two story Palermo In Harbor View -exceptional ' yard. near school and pool. 1525 Agt. 615-1225 . • INDIAN JEWELRY FRI, NOY. 30TH 7 P.M. JAKE'S AUCTION 24 OAIL\'FtLOr-·!U!SdlJ'....-Nove:mber 21, 1~9i.7' .. ~..,...,. _____________ iili•••••••••••••••• Schools and Instructions _This '\'.arkty of .£ine _~hoo)s could introduce you to a Dllfl' tomorrow. For further information regarding placement of advertising in tlle Daily Pilot Schools and -·---lnstruction..Directory __ ,. -· * CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325 Newport Air Associates Flight School & F~ing Club LEARN TO FLY $550 FAA APPROVED Course Includes: * 35 Hours fli9ht t ime ii Cessna ISO's with 20 hours dual inst ruction. Club membership. 3 Month's free dues. Individual instruction, tailored to YOUR ability. IS AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE AT LOWEST R.&TES IN ORANGE COUNTY Learn to fiy now - -1nd have fun I Interested In A Real Estate .. Career? IN SIX WEEKS PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM LICENSING PREPARATION FOR • Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers • Employml!llt Ass-istance For -' Graduates With Leading Brokers.-·· -ti - • Day And Evening Classes • Broker Exam Testing • $1 t Ofull Course / for Information-Brochure Free Guest Lecture Newport, 325 No. (Old) Newport Blvd. 548-1192 EDMOND F. JACKSON ..Beal.Estate Education Since 1964 ACADEMY REAL ESTAT.E , CONTRACTING & INSURANCE SCHOOLS GI-Master Charge & B of A Firehouse Gallery ' SCHOOL OF ARTS & CRAFTS DAY & EVENING CLASSES CHILDREN & ADlfL TS Tole & Decorative Painting, 3-D Decoupage, Pottery & Ceramic Classes, Lost Wax, Oil Painting For Children & Adults, Corn Husk Dolls, Apple People, Figure Draping, Print . Transfer, Sculpey, Reverse Glass Painting, Mac'rarile. New Craft of The Month, Each Month 17211 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach 4 MEN & WOMEN OF ALL AGES ....... •./!'" MEOICAL ELECTRONICS INHALATION THERAP't SURGICAL TECHNICIAN MEDICAL & DENTAL ASSISTANTS ' MEDICAL OFFICE MANAGEMENT CLASSES STARTING SOON, DAY OR EVENING ••• Deferred .. Peyment• PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE BLAIR COLLEGE 1801 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CALL 645-2922 Anna•s DAY SCHOOL Kindergarten thru 3rd Grade REGISTER NOW Ages 2 thru 3rd Grade • Full Learning Program • Phonics Stressed • Arts & Crafts • Music e Reading Specialty e Sports Activities --· ..dA~ Y·OU , ••c Want just a job or ' I,,, ' An Exciting CerHrl '-. ,,,,,,,.. Call PACIFIC TRAVEL SCHOOL -. ACCOUNTING Fino )OCl\I firm needs sharp indlv. for .20$1Jlon \v/11. ru. tw·e:. ' NEVER A FEE today to see if you qualify for Dertnell Personnel a position in the Service Agency AIR TRAVEL INDUSTRY.· SOO Newport Center Dr. Newport Beech 64M47D ay or e ening c asiiseesscc:lafl'nl--ll~A~C!'!C~OU~N~T'!'!IN'!'!G~C!"LE~RK~I prepare you for o posit ion as N.B. re•I ''""'' 11rm. Pay. roll, payables. bank recon· • Reservations Agent cilliations. Able lo assist 011 • Ticket Agent CMh rec~lpts. elc. 14:;o to start. Sally, 646·0028. • Air Freight Agent Aovi:RT1s1NG SALES e Fasle~t growing publication Travel Agent In Orange co. High comm. • Tour Escort ca11 '°' •t>Pt. 645-3631. Tuition financi ng also available. I Pacific Travel School 610 East 17th Street, Santa Ana 543-6655 ._Approved-foc...Veter.ans'...Ir:ainin.g-._ TOM NEWMAN VOICE & PIANO INSTRUCTION BEGINNER OR ADVANCED ' All Styles More Than 20 Yrs. Experience With Or Wi~t College Credit ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTSMAN needed by a nation wide de· veloper, J.ul_ern1edt' te or Senior \\•ith type 5 struc· lion e.'l:p. good nefl111. Please en ll l714) 837-2020 ext 2119. Autc. USED CAR · MECHANIC-·--- Experil'nced only. Chevrolet -DEoaJer.-Phone --Bob Ma~ . 546-1200. AVON MAKES CJ-IRISTA1AS THE SEASON TO BE JOU. Y Earn extra money lor girts as an A \'ON Representative in your spo.rc time. Call: 540-70-ll. ASSEMBLERS Gro1\·ing micro,vave n11:1nuf1:1cturer ~s assemblers v.·/PC board &: so ldering expt'r. G o o d s1ar1 i n~ s:thiry & n1a11y co. bl'nefits. PI ca s ant sur· rou11tlings Call For Appl. IndlL'>lrial Relations 1714) 494-9401 TELONIC INDUSTRIES Laguna Beech Equal Oppor. Employer * Fly Mexico & Canada 1,,.----·ll---.IHSpecial-RatH-for-Gommercial-or--· (Between Warner & Slater 2110 Thvrin Ave., Costa Mesa Ph: 646-1444 847-5588 AUDITIONS FREE BY APPOINTMENT ALL-933:2320 8:~BYSl'J1'ER-~tesa Verdc Elem. 1ic.·h area. H". . ~:'3(1,-5--dys--a wlr.Clrls - agE"S 8 & ll 5J7-7"»48 .. Instrument Students. For Complete Details Call NOW 979-1155 -PRIVATE SCHOOL Late Registration Being Taken KINDERGARTEN THRU FIFTH GRADE 9 A.M. TO 3 P.M. • Phonetic Reading • Arithmetic • Afile-rican-J.Jistdry e Castilian Spanish & French e Bible History e Large Grounds & Pool s From $4.00 a Day Plus Extended Day Care Phone 646-1170 261 MONTE VISTA COSTA MESA EBRDNIX TUTORING CLINIC READING-MATH SPELLING DIAGNOSTIC TESTING (No Charge) Your Child Will Receive Guaranteed 1-to-1 Instruction At EBRONIX-Where Reading Is Enjoyable 27SO Harbor Suite 78 C.M. 979-1626 The MTI faculty draws up· on over I 00 yrs of accumu· lated business and teaching experience to make each class more than just another text-book course in the fields of: _Accounting-Bookkffping Data Processing Secret aria l·C ler ica I Business Administration Day 11t1d EHtif'"I Classu Fl11at1Cl1t1J aftd Praumellt AlllllallC• ApproWitd for Yetent111 MTJ Business College 2100 NORTH MAIN STREET SANTA ANA, CALIFOl!NIA 92706 Phone 541-2673 UTILE RED ' SCHOOL HOUSE 1525 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa 645-43l11 or SJ6.2227 Ages 2Yi -6 Full & half day programs. Open 7AM to 6PM Individual Attention Experienced Teachers Planned Program -Including Math & Reading Readiness, Arts & Crafts, Music, Science, Story Time, Social Studies & er .. ative Play. BABYSIIT!--:R ·Housekeeper, 0\\'11 1r:uispo1tatlo11, Ii v e in or live out. 640-0166 eves, 67;).....16?,0, BABYSIITER alt 2, Turtle Rock area, 833-2037 aft S. BARBER The Ba1boa Bay dub is seeking a Barber &/or hair stylist \\'ho is interested In srlling up a !!hop in the club. Musi be of high caliber & have xln't cha.racier. ft'fs. r or pal'liculars stt person- nel nianflger, Balboa Bay Club 1221 \\'. Coast 1-lv.·y., N.B. BEAUTY operator v.•anted \\'/some follo\\'ing. Full or p ltime. 792 Center SI, Costa J\feAA. 642-ffill I BOAT As§emblcrs, exper. only. Apply Ca I i f o m ta Boals, 1665 S. Claudina \\'ay, Anahf'im. 956-9250 BOOKKEEPER Great local co. needs sharp self discipli ned ind iv. V.'/A/P &/or college cost a cc o untlng hack.ground. Xln't starting salary & co. benefits. Jason Best Agency li4CXI Brookhurst, F. Vly. Suite 213 963--iiTIS BOOKKEEPERS Assistant P/time. 10 Key adder nettsi\, A/R helpful. Hn flexible. Phone for appt. .... 3280. Lost 555 Babysitting_ Contractor General Services Housecleaning ~'--------------~ Painting & Paperhanging I B 0 OKKEEPER, P/time, retail store men:handising. ll-15 tu·s per wk. ~latutt, refs. Bugg11 lmemational;- Help Wanted, M & F 710 20431vestcliff Or. NB LOST T11il('ss J\·lanx i\1ale BABYSITTING -Infant lo GERWICK & SON Clean-Paint-Repair HOME CLEAN- Cat, Siamese i\larkings. 5 yrs. Toys, fenced yd, TLC. Bldg Contr. Addlt & Remod APT & If0l\1E-REAS RATES REAS RATES long hair. \7ic: I!cil & i\fon thru Fri. Ul\v rates. State Llc. Bl-114321 968·6487 or 963-70'19 963-7029 evenings Ed\vards, 847-72~3 Cosla Mesa. 64&-5836 673-fi04l 549-217° Carpentry. electricaJ, plumb-Dedicated Cleaning' DJ..;: Calit'-.1 Cat wf\\'hite JACK Taulane, r c pa 1 r. ing, fix -it. F & B Home * WE DO EVERYTHING * stomach & rll'a collar. Carpenter remod, add. Lie B-1 269072. Repair, 642-1403. Rcfl'!. Free est. 646-2839 ·Narcissus Cdl\'I "r\mi"". Bef. ~=------My \Vay Co. 642-4703. G. &J0-3510 aft 6. 673-1607. Nr::\V, remodel, re Pair. ='-'""-=..:..;;;..:.:.;;:;...._ Hauling WIU. clean your house & frame & finish. ~tores. of-Gardening ..;.;.c...c...><..-----n·indows spotless, clean. LOsr n1ale Persian Tahby, fices & homes. elc. Licensed '------=-----LOCAL moving & hauling w/refs. Reas. 836-4672. hlk .& Buff. Vic NB Piel'. 962-1961. • LAWN SERVICE d La t k REWARD 962-0774 ""''--"'"'------=-11 by stu ent. rge rue · Maintenence ALL types rarpentry. }'ix Experienced Gardeners, A Reas. BruTy. 534-1846 or ·..;c===.:;_ __ _ PAINTER-Highly qualified , jliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~:.iiiii: efficient would like rour[I business. Reas. 642-3158 Job Wanted Male 700 INT/EXT PAINTING ' Free Est Jim 5118-8712 R.E. Broker wants office Pl Emp. M thN F. J\1ature aster, Patch, Repair responsible 552-9344 Eve. * PATC'H PLASTERING * PROFESSIONAL bartender. All types. Free estimates Exp. Ref. For your prlvnte · Call 540-6825 parties. 613-5629, 6T.J...Gi57. • Jnstroetion just aboul anything around areas. Tree Trimm in g, 673-0647. KrwI Handy Man Service. 1 !1•) lhe llOuse etc. 53&-1648. Mow, Edge, Cleanup New YARD, garage clean-ups, Building Maintenance at Plumbing Lawns, Sprinklers for homes, remove dirt. ivy, driveways, reasonable rates. Fite est. ---"------IOCC student seeks part-time l ~jiiiiijii!ijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ Carpet Service apts & coinmercial, Depen-stumps, grading. 847-~ 673--0526, 673-0039. L.R. OTIS PLUMBING work housecleaning or baby Job Wentocl, F*"ele 702 IJ r--dnble. Reas. tates. Prompt .::::====:..:::.:...::::z..., Rt'models & Repa~. Water sitting jn 0CC -Mesa -Schools"f JOHN'S Carpet & Uphol<;tery f'ree Estin1atqtt. SKlPLOADER & dump truck p • I heaters, digpogals, furnaces, South Coast Plai.a area. instruCtions 575 D1·i Shampoo free Scotch: 534-3144 or '534-7187 )\'Or~. ~nckr~te, .,A1!~~01t, apint nghA • dshwashrs. 642--6263 M/C & 545-4240. . 1--------gard £Soil Retardants). l·EUR--0-P_EAN __ G_a_r_d_e_n_e_r_. p:iw1ng, rea ing. n"llT" • aper an91n9' BIA, Complete Plumbing NEED help at home? \Ve STATE Degreasers & all color Maintenance-Landscaping. 32 IT. FURN ITURE Van PROF all er1ng Service, Lie.~· have aides, nurses , CONTRACTORS brighteners & 10 minute Tree Removal. Very for local furn hau1s & gen'l • w eov · state PLUMBING REPAIR ho us ekprs, 'Companions. LICENSE hleach for white carpets. reasOnable. 642-5329 eves. hauling. 54&-l-862, 557-2736. ~sNo,0f95;!Pcr~i'1f~ No job too small Hon1emakers Upjohn I t. u i · 1 Save your money by saving PROFESSIONAL g·~ener. Housecleant·ng 842-4386. 1 ~ **642-3128** 547-6681. n ;i~ 11 e as 6 H'i, me exlra trips. Will clean ...,..,_. Roof' All Trades hi;alvi1ngsr'," .,Adining rms.1'50& g,~nkle~~k, cl:a~U~n i~~: ~ ~~~~: ~!~J!w~:. ing Fp;;,!~~l~.M~~~capi~'. 835-2727 . ny rm. . • I d . Geo p I' d ROOn·--•~rt •·'-& A/P P/R ~ ·~ 0\'l't a OC'cadc or Exper. couch $10. Chair $5. 15 )'l'!I. n n s ca p 1 n g' rge, ersOftQ IU Reasonable cal.I NO rm re-~fi~g~ F re..-a . • exp. vo...-.-.u. Calif. Contractors exp. is what counts not 646-589'.J. Apartme t 842:-8731· sultation/estlm;;:s~ ~ Jobs Wanted, M & F 704 Ll.<ense Servo'ce m<'lhod. J do \1.rork myself. BEAUTIFY Your Home/ ft PAINTING Pa~rhang,·ng Root· S • ~• . · r~ · mg """'ialists. 6411"'11"'-'1 HOUSES-ING -Mat"-C'.ood ref 531-0101 Business for the llol)d9ys. H I • Master Craftsman Int Ext r-~ 11 • -...... l.oc·ntion lhru·olll So. Cali f. Car,;.;t Clea~ing J ack's Gardening 548-1893 ome ~ eGftlftCJ Loco.I ref. Free est'. 9~294 Sewlng/Altera'fi0n1 couple. Impeccable. Relcr- RIDING lessons i\\'estcrn) Floo r Care • Windows cVt's. . .•. services for the dis· CUSTOM h 1 21 ences. 23 yrs. local rcsidenlll Lesley NP!son T ta in\ n g • DEPENDABLE mow 8i. ceming Newport Beach/ paper ang Ilg, ALTERATIONS, resty~\ 644-1582. . St.bl ... 001-~~. Dutch t.1ainL Serv. 537-1508 Co-na del Mar -!dent years in Harbor area. State lado·-we•• e-·· .. "".,,..~.) DIBERNARDO & Soru$ -edge. Conscientious work. w~ active life is·~ fuU J~c. -183281, 642-2356 re~ble.<'A~ Help Wanted, M&F 710 (. Reas. Free est. Rich: t 00 bered Ith the EXTER $220 &: Roo S1r*tf lftd...... --~--"--=--COMPLETE lawn !\ef"Vior. tcrnpx_oe. tpray. Call R9f, 960-1407. COLOR TV ReNI;,. ex..,.ft Use 10 key, type 45-50 WP~. ACCOUNTlNG Sr. Financial Analyst Heavy background in balance thfft accountingr cash f I ow forec•st1, taXes, capital, de- preciation, • t c . Pl'ep8.fatlon of IC• qulsltton and mere· er studies w I I I also be required. College d • 9 r • • w I I h occounll"ll mafol' and mini· mum of 5 years ex- perience in t h • above areas re- quired, Apply In Person 3333 Harbor Blvd. Costa M~se, Calif. (714) 546-8030 ext. 153 Boys wn.nted, 14 to 17, for µ:111 tin1e \vork flfler school. Easy voork & good moneyi Cflil Josh Bradbury, 645--0770 BUS Boyi; & Vi'aitresses AM Shiftf6:30. 1'1ust be l'.!Xp. Con tar\, J. \Vl'stbrook Mon lhru Fri only 4.<M--6574 CLERK TYPIST ORDER CONlROL DEPT. • Sllle~ & ryiarketing expt'r. re. ql.l,lred in sales order pro- cessing &: Invoicing., Custo!J)fr contact required. Pleasant personality. Type 65 w.p.m. electric t)'I)C\\'l'iter. ··-~-=- Call For Appt. Indu.'ltrial Relations (714) 494-9401 TELONIC INDUSTRIES Letun1 Beach i · Equal Oppor. Employer J CLERK SERVING KITCHEN I~ carpel sales -in.~talltt ion Gi.l-0775 I o e,ncum al how I ~· N. t .. ~P. Alrlms TefevlsJon Repair ACCOUNTING CLERK r :ind repa'ir. 963-26.19 c~ o nonn me ma. n-....... ea ""''""'· ess _ . C C Olean-ups and ha u 1 i n g CASA bl ...,... ! r-• xlnt working cond., & com· ement, oncrete 536-5!39 PRO~ pa.inter,. honest.work, rcatona ~· most 1n home. pany benefits. Great op-Ocean-View · PATIOS, ,~·tdk5, drivl'~. con-. =. t'le~ ~~~te. rec~·~· ~-?i· N.B. portunlty to tear n ac-• School District 1 : Accounting AGGOUN T-l!'IG & TAX SERVICES RH9Xlablf'. Ca 11 (714l SiY.l6'76. uk for flJ(,'k, ' General Services LIMPIA ' · · ~ a emore, counting. &: Io r ad· ~~!s_~~l4Lic. no. S'OORE FRONTS, ROOMS -968-2'183. vancemcnt, Nr 0 ran Ce Equal Oppor. Employer m/f S.lary $2.32 per hr " .. CHR!STJllAS SPECIAL.. BLDGS. EXP. bE'l'l'ERING. Tllo • ·<Joun\y-Alrport,.-"Appl1 ·Nl• --~-c CEMENT: 1 Patio, <!rives, Rei i n i tt h k It. c It b . Fully Licensed EXPERT WORK 645-8830 Uotl&J S,Y1tem.J On-p. 4361 SubsUtute needed • p/Ume. walk$-nepalrs. saw & 111oodgrainlng, anfiquing. al l & Insured HI QUALITY LOW $ CERArtflC TILE ~ & Birch SL, Newport Beach, Accounting Clerk . Caletcrl11, or sale11 clerk ~· ~move. fN'<' cs1. 5lt.-89M. tones & colors. Repairs incl. FREE ESTIMATES U 1 Rcl •' 5421701 remodel. Free e11t. Sm jobs 546-7360 · LOcal NcwJ)Ort Be&ch firm, ptt, J)rtfd. AJ)llly per10nntl . Child Care in prict. Call for lret est. c, 111• s · welcome. ~2426. Cireti.t oppor. for indlv. w/ commlstilon office, nm Boby11ttlnt LTCEN~ED Chlld C1u't":-Blrth BABYSJTI1NG in n1y homt. th1·u G ... i ty hOmr -Nr. Cos•• M~sa airra . So. Coo~t Plata. 557--8656 Rc!l~f!n<f'• 6U-<L'l84. Rer. a\'811. 646-4219. Please Call 67>-8735 PAPERHANGER, profeSslon· Top SOii ''Whit!! Elcpuants'' ovet<-good math aptltudl! & &CCur-WllJ11el', Hunt. Bef!.Ch, EQl.lll "11-llNGS'' by 1.Joosc. Gcn'l ~ al all types. Lowest cost. -running your hOUM!T Turn ale typlng. Cll.11 Ml.kt· White, Oppor. Employer. .. Carpen~. Repairs, Plum· LIVE a little nlOl'e with 8 968-5129 aft S pm. , · * QUALITY * \Mm fnto "CUh" ••• aell 540-6005, COU:ULI Pent0nne&l!!~~'!"!!"'!!!!'!"'~ll hing. !'j e c. Remodeling 11,,..tn maid. $45/up. G.G. The "Y•Low Paga" of * MIJLCll & TOP SOIL * lhem lhru e Dally Pllot Ag<ru:y, mo Harbor Blvd1, Dolly. l'tlot Want Ada ba1,i li42'5613. !jmployment 1-995"*1t. cl•Ailled •••• -. · 586-4930 clwlfted lldl CM. · · bupl8! &al<n. · ·· ·I '\' .. • I ' .... c . • I I ' ! I • • - \ -•• -• _,. ... -l 11Hd~. NOYtmbtr 271 lq.73 OAILV PJLOT 25 I, , Htlp WantOd, Ml F 110Help Wantod, MI. F 710 Htie Wontiif, Mi F 7J! !:!!IP Wontod, M i F 710 • Help Wanti<f. Ml F 710 Htlp Wanloct, M l F 710 Auction -auction 1<ttlantous Won!M l20 -CLERICAL COUN'l'ER Help, l!Wo. "' PORTERS WANTED SECRETARY ANTIQUE SALE &1 WAIAYS Female, P<rtnanOnl port GENERAL OfFJCE KEYPUNCH For new·= .. , re&ey t!<ot Preo. ol brolt<nl&• firm ORIENTAL RUGS "'~"· Ume,.,..,.. 4 nl;bts, Jluri<!r SWING SHIFT Ex...-. p ... rd. Apply in per--inc • penonal sec'y Win pay 5 to tl)';l, moro tlw> 1 Q00/0 FREE King, 3)15 llubol', O.ta HELPER son Chic~ h~noon, Inc. 445 wllni>U"' a ablllil'c Litt • AT ""'r hlttbest ol!<r, ~ N S CASH i\1fla. 6 Mo'a actulll y,'Orl( e:xper. Pa.~l Hwy.,.N.B. sh ~'d. Fa.ntut op-AUCTION Shah, Xl30 S. ?.lain, S.A. $ COUN1:rn Help . dry on k<yp\llldi,ktytapeorkey PRESSER EXPER J)On unlty tor lndlvldunl !!.IHl'lZ. 545-5070. elf.a~. Qver 20. Hrs 2-7 disc device. ' --w/exec. uc'y e.11.pe.r. to Warited: young newlywed& P•r-1 Atl•ncy pnr, 6 d.,... 54H485 Wo·wlll train, but Apply l1t-Personnel Dept.-40 IJr, IYI<. 642o$4fl. N.B. team brokora•• -bu•h-, -10100 o.m. Wodnoaday I. Thurad.ly, n..,d neat OUY fam. "'~ 833•9770 0 ••-rltnco holpfvl. 9 AM-12 Noon. 1'1on-Ji'rl PRODUCTION Trai nee , Grtul stu tt u& Wary. Nonmber 21th & 29th plct .. -, d-pe• , t.:;;;:-, ENTAL lle«ptlQnlst, """ ~ PACIFIC-MUTUAL Learn--Vlnyt molding &-.Ir Jaoon Bolf •--n~ To •-htld ti "'00 •• • "·~ ALL BEAUTIFUL CO'S only . At least I yr oxper-, GOOtj m11h -""'ltudO Cali ..,,.. -tor lit houle 645-.!l&I ORANGE, NWPT BCH Some Sau. Fr!nce benent" ..,.. • 700 Newport Ceo..,. Dr. ~-twappt 17.xJ Jlrookhun•. F . Vy. Dtl Mor Roco Trock I. F1l'11round1 Dtl M or Bo» StlnanY bl e y ol •. I. FASHION ISLAND H.B. Rrea . .846-3540 t1nytlme. Coll Woyno mG541 Newpon B<ub 6 Suite 213 ~ (Take Vta de la Valle off-ramp ol l~terstate Chlldnm ••·iog "t Det1ta1 l!eC<!ptlonlst, FAR lllrt'T Equal Oppor. Employer RfuL~AcfiJ:'.tfS STOCK CLERK 5, left oo Jimmy Durante Way (at Denny's) 64ti-lm ALL FEES PAID DENTAi.. exptr. req 'd. Prer. RW KIRBY SalHmM wanted. ".few or oxperlenced Jo\n the to main entrance to Building #6 Jnslde \VANTEl>: W1Nt akls wl lh BY EMPLOYERS '(;":;."' yng. WOltWl. 534--0109 Sl2Slwtei< per w r l tt en 'World'• 14rgest a~d l.alteat grounds-plenty of parking.) blml""' 1tlM65 C.M. under • .L ~ en Grove . t'tDVIC£S 11i1r. ~-Call 831.--0300 gro\vfnl resale orpn3ation n~d bllls t t J1al Fill . $75. Cal l Llnd!l $16-4478 -Stctttti.r..v z~ AL Assnt_fi------mos.. _ _tl[Jlf,I ,_m 9~30-to-'-!""' -with .. netwerlf-.of~ "Jb~o ~ehtrys -l'he-Entlr•..Stock..oLEARL y_ AMERICAN-.&-Mu1H:•l-tMtrument1-m Xln't tldlla. Insur. exp, Corp. exper, XRa.,y licensed. Call ~ LABORERS offices and ~me a l'Cltocidng Exper helpful I EUROPEAN Furniture from • s.m. Bar· ole. All beoetJ... btw 8 & U am, 846-«l73. 1672 Rtynolds Avo. lmmed. Asslgtun<nts. Top member of our ~Ir. · · -· bare Anllqut ·lmpof'fer ot)d Dulor Ordorod RENT FOR ONLY $S R-pllonl1t $500 0 E N TA L A 11 I st a n t Sln!I Ano $;$. '-or abort term Club-Multl-mlllJoo dollar Call For Appt. sold by Lltn Holders to 11tllfy Crodlfon. OR BUY WITH NOTHING Excttln& world of dralgn! Chalrside, Newport Beach Call 5'0-4450 advtrtisln& PftliJ'.Ml· Free lnduatrial Rtlalions 00\VN. Orunt PA's. Mlk6, Hurry! area, Equal ~. Employer NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO. guaranteed lloorwng school. To be Offered at Auction to th1 Highest GuitaN, Aini;l.rc, Roe-organs Personnel $500+ 642-1998 TEMPO Temporary Help Excellent Mies tralninr. (714) 494-9401 Blddir without Riserve. & P ia111'tS, an h1·andit. Aulst busy personnel dlrector GENERAL LAUNDROMAT CLEAN UP Please cull 542-5689. TELONIC A Brief Summary of items to be soJd are No ai,:c Jhn!l, no 11<.1.rcnt need· oC expandln& rorp. Fun & DEPARTMENT STORE MACHINIST PART TIME, Prel retired REAL ESTATE as follows: , "."·.OPEN_ ~l<:i!TS Tl':L 9, var!•IY? TAILOR Diversified work load' ~alt 6pm. SALESPEOPLE INDUST1UES SAf. Tit ,,30, >UN. t~-o. Bur ........ 1 1500 $500+ manut. ele.c tront c 1n-L-al SOc'y Tral-Seeking aggressive, hlghly CLOCK LOTS (in the rough) -BOX LOTS ' Now .TWO Convtnton! Expcr. Burroughs gal In Al F strum.entatlon. Modem work Loe. -f' ......_,.,_, .11 tral motivat@d sa I e s men in· L-uni S.ich (misc. items)-SECRETARY·BOOKCASES Locatt0n1 to Serve You Pay .· Al /Rec · for large or Mens Wi1r AhtiyPANCEo KINETICS. INC. tnd~v. !i;;i" skt'fi1 1 or 111~ terested tn "'O~ in -::11 -Dozen ROLL TOP DESKS -Over Three FULLERTC?N ":\USIC G~~;:i ~ frtnges . UM BROADWAY 1231 Victoria St ., CM legal. F'amily type atanos· HB/FV area & canung up Equal Oppor. Employer Dozen CLOCKS (incl uding Grandfather, 18191 Eu~·lkt: F ou~ttun Vallry ruv NEWPORT Call 64G-TI65 phere. Salary to $5."IO. C:11! to • • A1antel and Wall ReW;ators)-ORGANS -l B\k. N, ~n Die-1:° Fn~1'· Type 40, lots of vartety & Apply Personnel Dept. An E 1 O E I Helen Milson, 540·6055 , 85°/o In comm1ss1on Security Guards Various Type C'IA (lnclud'"g Windsor & r.:uclld . people. Fash. Isl. All co Equal Opper.:. Employer qua ppty mpoyer Coastal Pen;onncl Agency, CENTURY 21, RE Need full or p/tlme, 21 yrs .-.... • 557-4836 • benefits. Future! 2700 Harbor Blvd., CM . Ask for Mr. S1nith. 962-8847 or older. Uni!onna & cqul.~ & Swivel) -Dining, Drop-Leaf and Lamp 12'2 N. Jlarbor 1-·nt1er1on Claima Exomlner $100 DltAPERY experienced aew· GUYS GALS Ham H 8 ment turn. Life 1ru; & ho<-TABLES -CHINA CABINETS -HALL e 171 1905 e Accident&: health, gooc1 e.'<-' ing machine operator, LEGAL TRAINEE 9608 llton Ave.. . . pltalization alter so days. TREES -BAROMETERS -Marble Top i="'·~~-·~-~- per. Some IUe helplul. Solid eu•tom only. Small '1>op, 1 ~IR/tV~ A Cheecy •mile & _lo" !o' RE LICENSEE Ho! & vae pay. $2 hr. •tart-WASH STANDS_ Several TABLE LOTS of Offtco Furnlfurt/ opportunity! Now! Newport Beach. Co It people. qood typrng. For * . . , ing pay. Anaheim & Costa Bric--a-Brac _ Misc. JEWELRY ·-CU T Equip. 824 MANT MORE -~~~!:."!~y -boow------~. m~ ruin~~:.-t·~·;--anag··~ on premis~ small ·~~::-~~tt:-Fr!~ 3088 ~ •. ~CRYST'.(t-&-co1orea ~cuss:· .. =-p·o·n:cE. -.. PVT ..... m . has personal ex- CARE ER. "·'...-"'"" pre£Ser, ..... ~. s.~ Control Career Em· · · 1 to! Ave. Costa M~sa. LAINS -BOWL & PITCHER SETS -OR-ecutiv_e office-r urn it u re -OPPORTUN.ITIES folding, eto.-<bit Drapecy--ci.REER . -jjloymeri?Agency,3-100-Uvlne f-wut.complex \\'Ith poo I and ' _,____ JENTAL SCREENS ·--1 & Ex 11 t quality Clef!l)ers. 1702 Newport Blvd NB ' shO\V to sell . F'l'Ce apt. and Equal ·oppoT.EmPloyer -, · -· ·--rll1t que Semi-An-~=· · ce en Blvd, c. M. 642-0'llO " · · performance bon.,. Al"' Statistical Typist tique PERSIAN CARPETS -COAL BOXES Ltl Our 20 Yo.,1 Of LORENZO'S boou• I! •old. 642-mt (m•g. l'ee Paid. Natlooa!Jy known -FERN STANDS_ PAINTINGS, PRINTS EXEC SWVL CHRS 115125 Prolt11lontl Exportlso Edin.,.r At The 646-"'66l Bkr. blue chip lirin. G"'at bene-and MISC FRAMES -MIRRORS -PRIM· See ehn S8/Z4 Desks $20/90 Placo' You Wilt. Tho DRIVER Nattoitat llrm can now pltce Newport Freeway REAL ESTATE SALES lits lnd udlng profit &baring. ITIVES -Consisting of over 3000 pieces to r.li'.MOs 867 w. 19• CM Right Corporation( 7 sharp guys &: gals, tree 2101 E. Edinger, SA Well established office, with Start $575. Also Fee Jobs. be SC>ld. \Viii drive co. station \VaJtOn. to travel US major cities &: Apply in pen;on \experienced staff, has open-Call Sally Hart, 540-6055. SECRWJ'ARJAL desk. Good Approx. 250 mi's daily, from Hawall. No experience _ Fri. 3 PM-5 PM ing for lwo sal1$people. Coastal PetsoMcl Agency, Conducted by ~;!I~? with chair. 4 N.B. ID Los Anoe"'• twice we train at our .. ..,,... WAITRESSES & CONT~CT 2790 Harbor Blvd., CM . CONTINENTAL ~ ~ dally, Should have Calif. New car transportation is Paul Martin or Bud Corbin STORE MANAGER 282•74•• of 282•74IUI 1 Pi•no1/0rg11n1 drivers lie. & Callt. com· fumlshed To Re-UASTES•~ 614 (662 7"t " m('rcial (Class n Lie.) Xln't . p wages. :r1'V ~ Corbin·A1~in Realtors Femnle. r-.1~ ·Ladles re-San Dl-o • P"'IANOS laxed work atmosphere & tail swimwear. F/time. Ap---. COMBINATION welder, arc driving record. rapid promotion makes this OMAPECRAHITNOER RECEPTIONIST ply in person, Thurs, Fri, PREVIEW of Merchandise will be shown at &: hellarc expert enc e. Apply In Penonnel DepL ideal position. For inter-Great place to start your Sat. Bea Dyke S\vimwear, 9:00 a.m. day of each auction.' • CRGANS Tralnecs tor mast shops. 9 AM·12 noon, Mon-Fri view, see ' Mrs. Spence, TRAINEES & general office expcr. Fan· 390 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. With this Advertisement. no Deposit FULLl!RTON MUSIC Mechanical ability. Apply at Roadway Inn, 1400 S. Brls-EXPERIENCED tastic potential for sharp SOFT v.:ater ,dealer needs -will be required .for Bidder Number. Our Neweat Location Erickson Yachts, 19 3 1 PACIFIC MUTUAL tol, C.M. 10 a .m. to 4 p.m. MACHINISTS indiv. \\'/phone exper. Avg I licl This ulA::ii:::::~;:_;;_..:...:_=::_:;~::,.;o::=~::,;:::::::::'..:_=,\ Dee Santa A 700 Newport Ctr or. 1yping & willingness to ~e eit~adyne ~~ -· Antiques 800 Garage Sale 112 18191 Euclid, Fow1taln Valley re, na. Newport Beach Our a pplicants must be neat, Steady, non-defense \\'Ork. learn will do it. lion S ,,,.. ... sJ. J;"' 1 Blk. No. or San Diego Frff. COMBJNED Part time smingedial·'te&?y•.ble to leavt! im· Manyoompanybenetits,llfe Jason Best Agency + ~~ ~born:. EVERYTHING HAS GARAGE sale moving TV \\'ayat Euclid. :~ ~~k=r ~~ Electronic Assemblers & medical insurance, 8 paid 17400 Brookhurst, F. Vly Call ~9-0fl98. Mr. LQgan TO GO BY dr)'cr dishes n1 any other 557-4136 refs Cl-~~> Ad no ...,. Day shift. Apply, Pal Elec· holidays & vacations. New Suite 213 963-6775 u no answer, Call 645--0297 CHRISTMAS I 11 misc Tties. Wed IG4. 53> Rentals from $5 I '0a11y~PU·~ t p 0 Bo~ tronlcs. 6391 w .. tmlnoter GIRLS GUYS modem ladllties. II""' are Le & pho GOING 0 Victoria St., C.M. 4019 Wet1terly Place Suite m Newport Beach (MacArthur &: Birch) 826 Plea.Se Call For DirectioM co o . . . x A W tm' t -· 330L -looking for a job with a RECEPTIONIST ave name ne num· UT OF BUSINESS G 1650, Coata Mesa, Calif., ve., es Ul'J er. 0""' TRAVEL al future 1 Legal Fl Fmt or ber. Quilts, oak & walnut furn., AR. Sa.le-comp a.pt full of e Pianos & Gr1nd1 \ 92626 Employm1nt 1 ~3 PMdaU;,.~·s~ Lite~lng c TRAVEL TO EUROPE jewelry. Closed Sat. & Mon. ~~ ~~irtv New spinef5 trom $495 Counnllor OYER 11 ler D>-WESTCLIFF or learn the •kill ol your Antique& for lnltrlors · 5 ""''"and !lnish<a Commercial Do you have a bui.incll...Qf Free to !tllIJ Hawaii 3020 Pullman St., CM Personnel Agency choice. Invest only 2 years 3545 E. Coast Hwy., C<U.f Ml1cell11110U1 111 Wurlitzer Grand Stra1m your O\\'n? Terrific oppor. to Mexi co City & major cities. MACHINIST {Mark m Center) and Today's Anny will ANTIQUE fire extinguisher NO U Upright piano • · ••• ••••• $69 Tener Experltncod -"' -Consumer Loan Processor UNITED ' CALIFORNIA BANK 3141 E. Cooal Hwy. Corona ckl Mar ''73-9240 ui;e sales personality to grow Must be neat &: s~le. No 542-8836 guarantee you Europe or the lamps. At wholesale -We E • • •• • • • Weaver Spinl't ••• · •••• · $145 into job placement career. t"Xptt. ~sary. A 11 Turret Lathe Mach. Also, 1651 E . Edinger, S.A. best training around. supply exclusive Fash. Isle I BUYll Player pianos ···• from $999 iln;, flexible. Call Elly Ellis, tr a nsportatton fum~hed Machine Shop Trainee Lok-RECEPT. trainee for doctors stores & decorators. Now •• • 20 Grands in stock, New· ~156-RS05. ConlroJ Cat'e('r Em· "'12 \lfef!'k expense paid Fast, Inc. 864 \¥. 16th St., office. Must be good typblt CALL COLLECT wholesale to you . Good, late model furniture & Used and rebuilt. Priced · plorment Agency, 3400 training program. For appt. N.B. shorthand helpful. 54S-0076 <714J 558-2665 O.OSE OUT SALE ap'piiances or sell tor you!! from $395. Yamaha.-J!nabe ' Irvine Blvd .. N.B. for per90naJ intervll'1v. CaU MAOnNIST Gcncral ror Less than % retail price MASTERS AUCTION -l\fuon -Hamlin -\Vur- "EVENING s u P e-r v tTif? ~MW-Sands, (714l '174-8097, l\fill. Ask-ror l\.lr. Han~n. RES~NSIBI.f,; older d odr fYPlm _S!S--_2153_(3-pm_toJO_pml x.. --.llt2er -Storey &: C1ark -lOAM SPM M thru Frt retln:u penon nee c .a I .:u75~~ Newport-;-O f 64&-8686 Kfwal -SrcinwaY -c&lile wanted last lood 5'rVlee. -on . · HANS 0 N lNDUSTIUAL p/Ume In retail wtoe cellar. NEEDED NOW ~PP ltncH 802 83" -exp. preferred. Inquire Pa~ts welcome at m· PRODUCfS, 17845 Skypark the & 1 "'""''114 aft. 6 or Sw\day Nelson -Kincaid -Cable S\vensons 217 Broadway tt'rv1ew. Or-, Irvine. Call 557-8373. ExJ>er, In use sa es • FREIGHT DAMAGE SALE Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'1. -Baldwin -Oli.ckeriD& - 7 G of line wines Ol' advertising J\!ust have --' -.;,.... aldllll . New Hotpolnt re~~, • SPEED boy' r.o_L.._ .. __ ~r Laguna Beach after ::II IRL FRIDAY MAlD WANTED would be an asset. Sec 50 6~"~ work ....... , " s ""-'11wum e 0 • pm. We need a young but mature Don Quixote Motel Harold or Chuck, 495 E. & w.p.m.,lli r! dithwasbers & ra n & es, sting ray excellent con-r9an1 ~ / . 7 C M aome o ce expe ence. washers &: dryers, factory dltlon. Royal typewriter 100 to choo!'le ·from EXP Saleslady, Apply In person, ,.......... \V figures, 2100 Npt. Blvd.,C.M. 1 th St., . . t manual. Carrying case in: New. Used and Trade-Ins person, Jackies, llunlington likes detail, variety, hard e 642·2670 e ~ Apply 1n Penonne) Dept. n~CH YCITY-APPLIANCE -•-•ed N F 1 ~-- Center, Huntington Beach work & types accurately. MAftRIED penon over 21 RETIREE-SOC. SEC. 9AM-12 Noon, Mo~Frl iii W Warner 84 56-07ll> d~e· set ew& sk r ~ H~on~i',~i'rl;··::· s695 , FABRIC handworlten. no jo\V~ ~~~~tan!uturelnteress~!3..g Car & pb>ne neceu. $125 To act as security~. PACIFIC MUTUAL JJ62 N: Tustin.' Of'allp 549-00.57. Be1mt 10:30 Cl' Kimball S\\•lnger ........ $195 ' experience DeC.' Irvine ~a. · ,.,,..,., wk. to start. -89HOOO. p/tlme for back entranCe '100 Newpol't Center Dr. 98&-5656 after 3 Wurtitzer-3 keyboard •• ~119$ ~ 54()...3684 •-540-ll~ WANTED MASSAGE TECH. ~utles. Good health essen· Equa1Newport()ppor ·~h1--G.E. W a 1h er, Frlck!alre ASSORTED wall cabinets ~ Ho~day •• · •· •' • $49S 1 -""" •sf4 • ·•• sr Have fUn and &et paid fer TRAINEE Ual. See Personnel Manager, ~I washer, Norge elect r I c super for gar. or oUlce: Conn CapMce ·•·•• ••••• $395 Equal Oppor. Employer FEE p•iD it! We ue now taking ap-Young lady (l!J.28) wanted BalbN ~y Club ~I dryer. Your choice, $45. Lile Birch w/slldlng drs. Thomas A-l Spinet:·••• '179 /:1~::11~ Accountant "' to $14K plicationl tor our escorting for legitimate full tfme posl· ~ URG'ENTLY =u;i7~ranteed. ~!, ~n;i~bp of~l.ce xe<f~~: :=~d-r!~1n~ 1 COOK Sr. Cllemist to S16K service. Gfrl1 must be neat lion. No exp. nee. \¥e send Thermol"" -pier. ............. Yan1aha-Gulbranscn --• n-otable J-'-._ lo school, earn while learn. ron Sale New ~-171 ..,. .. v .._11"''"' F 0 L r::c:i~~g, 360/BAL Sl2K ;&gt;;;n. ~ ;d c:;;_ Apply in person any aft or Sales Secretary to $650 NEEDED ci~ $2f:JJ. or i:;t .. ouet. prices. 673--7100 or 673-3206 !'" rgan e1son1 Exec. Secre1n~ .....,,, venUons row avail. Call for eve, 2930 W. Cst. Hwy., Girl Frl (Orange) to S650 Spanilh tables $25 ea. Call eves. FULLPEhoR,,.T05.lN7-483jMUSIC B~~:t~~ ~r ~Mfarar~:~gg ~t .. ~ 1t0 0 J:rnooo ca:~· = Driver, 19-Zl :;,;:~.~:cb~sekeeplng ~~: ~A. to !;J (25) Trinee ~RIZE. New Tappan ~Y~ ~~~Q'ii 12'.! N. llarbor. f'ullerton, : ~~· _, t o c ~1 ~-ct Secretary, s. Ana -Cucades M,75, Shon °falb 171-llOS • 1 I p Mgn: Sec'y/Banking to yrs old. OWneas Motar a · · "-UI ege. .....,ntra. File Supervisor $500 bit-In dishwasher, retaill "" App Y n erson Soc. Service ~·y $600 Parts,' 1990 Harbor Blvd., position w/frlnge benefits. Cla.ln1s Examiner to $6.50 Assemblers $250, sacrifice $15 o. $2.50. Elura Wigs, $8, hrs: Open Nights 'til 9 Typist to $.550 CM. Exptr, req'd. Contact Coal;t Electr:iclan $650 962-1464. · ' Wiglets $5, Dynel \Vlgs $1 Sat. 'tll 5r30. Sun. 12.5 C-,J Acctng Clrk Trne/fype $100 GIRL. 1/ttme, Sales &: Gift Community College District, Secretary Mktng $OOJ Rent Washer1/Dryer1 & $3, Display Heads &: fix. Jhe Also F .. Pos1'tlo·• Wrap. App'" 48 F-!370 Adams, CM Sec'y ,-• Orange S600 VOLT ••. WJc_ Full m·'·t t11res for sale, 846-mt> PIANOS -ORGANS ·~ 'J Medical ASlisWlt Fro & .....,6.., ..., ...,, SKI rack tire chains marble New Ir: U!led. G~:it selection. Island, Newport Center. n--•-. nt Program l\!gr $22K Instant Porsonntl * 6J9.u:>2 * cottee ~ble, matchlng0 dub Cbmpetitive prices. Onon CALL TRISH HOPKINS H k DtU!IL otflce. Exper onlv. Electronic Components • Eves. ,... • JERRI \VHITTEMORE ouae ~Pj.r, 1n own F.V. area. 919-0313 Product Line rt.tanager $20K Temporary Service FREE Pick up. Rebig appl chain:, sofa; tMk chair, &: Sundays. The bes! igg~r ~~~ 64o-cn~ ev:. MEDICAL off. in Hunt. Bch. Data Communications 3848 Campus Dr., Suite 100 & 1Cl'8.P metal. 675--5Z8. call host &: hostess chain. Hun-deals are always at: 16 F1shlon Island Nowport lltach Beh\'n 9 &: 11 am or 3 & 5 pm Equal Oppor, Employer 67>-46311 Back olllee girl. Apply C/O l!eC<!ptiontst, $400 N•wpon Beach 546-4741 anytime. ._ Harbour. Call : Wollichs Music City • Dall Pilot Cl Bo N Call Jeannie Sisco F.qual Oppor, Employer BuUdi.,,. Mlterl1l1 806 A8411-UT014MAOll.TIC GA n AGE •-·•• ~--st Pl·--••• ~· HOUSEKEEPER, Part time, y ' an. x o. & Sid Hollman ··• n """'w ....,.. ....,. ~- $30 week, xtra 4 oceasional 30· Daily Pilot, P.O. Box • NEWPORT 1v·~~·· e S I B lldl full days. Happy home 1n 159), Costa Mesa. .......,~ urp UI. U ng DOOR OPENER. Finest FREE ORGAN LESSONS ar 488 E. 17th St. (at Irvine) Cl\f ._ .. __ 0 a:'\ ......, MOTEL desk clerk. Detail Ptrsonnel ~ Exp. for Coclctails. MATERIAL • IOOO's of NEW known brand. Reg. S20Q. I like• ...... , S II 224 ·-1470 ·~~ -·~ 133 Dov D N Call for appt., 642--8361 ITEMS! Doors, lumber, pl.y. Special $139.95 ln s ta 11 ed ong as you · ._ ... ta 1 u • -"" HOUSEKEEPER wanted to _oriented. some typlng. Will tr r., • • wood alwn -"ee"'-old w/$ yr ,,, ..... 893-3571 «' ~'eleome to attend Tuetday COOKS-counter ~fen le live 1n with elderly lady train. Off SUn &: Mon. 642·3870 \\'AITRES.S, experienced on· · ...... u.ug, m • ~1415 •-night,>t 7:30 PM, We want ~ waA bfCIA w 494-8521 ly. All 1ihittl open. Apply ing, windows, etc. everyone to learn to play \\"Omen. Nu concept in t.tex-1 ===~-~---Laguna Bench 494-1337 SALESMAN bet. 9AM-11 AM. Jlmbo's BUILDERS 'SURPLUS $CASH $ the organ! Tom Dieterich , ~~~ll. ~l i~ t~. s~~k FEJ\fALE warehouse girl, HOUSEKEk, Vi F?AER, 2 d&y1 a ~::'~~~:~!Ne~ Uc'd Industrial Real Estate 3(JOO Coast Hwy, CdM. 2406 So. Main St., S.A. ror furniture & appliances. 1 -In ch.o.rge 642-28j1. Coast 1 over 18, counter over 21. ~rmane~~ st~nts~~ wee c.~., NB, Type Setting CM 646--0164 Salesman wanted. Com· \VAITRESS over 21, hostess Mon thrn Sat 1().5 piece or home!ul, Day or Music, Newport Blvd. a.t Apply Bob Burns Rest smoken, 5 daya, G:llam-HOUSEKEEP~ -~ U att 5:30 962-0175. miuion only . Industrial ~~~&eve shifts. Zubies, C nt:,.546-l037 night, 548-7147. '-llarbor==o=·,cCo,Mo,·~~==-I Fashion Jsland NB Center 3:3Upm, $1. 75 an hr to start. .:.n. Pw.1 me NEED extra Inc 0 me , Commercial Properties. · lmlrll !AtPRINTING machine for ftEHEARSAL PIANIST aft 11 AM. Inter. 3-5 pm, \Vlndo w near Santa Isobel & Elden. permanent part tifne jobs 83l-8265 WANTED, full & part/time Equipment 808 Christmas Cards, letter Let me help you impmw: ' , COOK exper eves, salary Designs, 3737 Birch St., P hone 6'&-8304 art GPM. avail. Nights, only lncluding SALESMAN & Manager, employees for retail sales goods, etc. 2 Sets of letters. your singing, dancing rou. Newport Beach weekends. Male & female male & fem. $825 & up apply in pef'!On Mu.slc Land, FOR Sale 8 mm movie $2'15. 6:42-0596 tines, For detail<:. caU Mr. open Zubies. GARMENT CU'M'ER INSPECTOR over 21. Must be depen-monthly g u a ran. II Lagwm HUla, Mall. c:amera w/power zoom .& WOOD slab like cocktail Rossi, 644-5377 ntt. 6. 1·~~-"""~'-"-~--1 COOK, modem co n v . , hospital. Please call, for wetsuit mfgr. Prefer ex-l----4-'t'reclsl f dn.ble. Apply Paulo Drive-In, qualified. No exper. necess. WHO WANTS TIJ WORK? light meter, Oood lights, aeU tables, new, approx 2>'' x BUY a player piaf!ljl tor pertenced or will train. $2.50 ~]icl~or~ 1n ~s.." 1~~ Costa Mesa alter 7 p.m. Mr. Lee (213) 770-8543 DRIVE A CAB! ~~~zoo~~=-: ~'. .. ~, oak -SO% Oise. Christmas. Good, selection hr., 5 dny wk. Apply 8 spectlon for N.C. machine. NURSES Aides, T-3 full or SALES: Mature, exper in CHOOSE yOur hours, work cdllor splicer spare reels ~ from $1100 to $J:JOO. David am to 12 noon. 825 W. 18th lt11nlmum 5 yrs, exp. Night part-time. Exp er or r e ta l I g 1 t t st or-e. tor yoursel1, be your own & ~ & ~ manuals. OFFICE cilcu1ator, liYlivel T. Dupree Player Pianol, ·' - St, Costa Mesa. shift. Suhlltantlal overtime. tral~. Intervws Mon-Fri, Eves/wknds. Must have boss. Men or \\"Omen. Can Sacrifice H~•\ 6'lS--38TJ after chair, goU clubs, ore sup-2940D Grace Ln., CM , AU •-·• 8 -4 M v ~ refs B"-International be ~H-htly handicapped. •-1· 'f · "ood I Help Wanted, M & F 710 U1;11~ut1J. Apply llt am pm, esa eroe , .._.,.. ' Ne a't-Oean Appearance. 7:3'.:I p.m. ~ ies, ~· ~e camera, u * CONN ORGANS * ' I CLASS SELl.'l -00-5678 :1~H;•;lp;W;•;n;tod;;;·;M;l.;:;F;7;1;0;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Newport Controls Corp, Conv. Hosp. 661 Center St., 204.1 Westcliff Dr., NB Vts retired. Age 25 to 70. MAMIYAJSEKOR -1<m lig hts, tnpod. 673-8300 9 'Immediate delivery l 901 \V. 16th St. C.M. 5f8.5585. Secretary to Salts Mgr SUpPlement your Income. DTL, 35mm SLR, Ftl.8 ClVlL \Var Items wanted for e lg.vest' pnces 714/642-9020 NlJRSES Aide•, Con· Interesting sales secretarial Drive a cab 6 hn or more a lens. lJke new. s mo. 7 private collection. Gurui, GOULD MUSIC CO. 1 Equal Oppty Employer valescent Hosp. Oppor. for position ror an eleclronll'S day. Apply ln person, rolls film. $90. $95. After swords, pictures, e I c. J.045 N. Maln, SA S-17.(1681 women over 30, ~. manufacturer located Tlear Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th 5 pm 2831 Bristol, apt 23, 546-4047. PIANO WANTED. 1 SK. 251(. 751( 1 1 1~~~~~~ 0 FF ICE CLE AN ING the 0 .C. Airport. This is St., Costa Mesa. C.M. (2 biles So. Baker). SADDLE Stubben Siegfried, Wll.L GO ANYWHERE. ii• i EXECUT!YESr-MANAGERS • ' ' ' t I 1 I I I! SALARIES· NIGOTIAILE INSUDlllC£ SALES P /time. N~ • Costa ~ ~~=. lr:a a= \VIRE Operator, Exp'd. Im-OLYMPUS OM·l, n.s tens Eng Int" complete w/fit-P.O. BOX 1685 Are You Unemploy1d Now-Ar• You S1ekln9 Mn Mesa Areas. Expcr. Couple deal of independent thinking mediate. Salary open, Mer. can)'ing cue w/atrap, 4 mo. tings & fuzzy pe.ds. S3lS SIUDIO CITY, CALIF. A Chang• -Worri1d About Your Ag• -~·~~~.:.Tuk. Top &: decision making. Re-rill Lynch, 540-3121 old. $275, 67r6530. Aft. 6• MS-7'9741548-9790. YAMAHA Baby G r and Tirid of Broken , Prom ises-Und1cid1d As To ~~~ :Crt :~)'O:' 'P~A~!NTEl<S'==~.-.. -,..--r-.:-wor~k~ln ~I-m 0 e~ ~: ... 'f!!'t ~.hon1~ \~~vafesmPftlll~~n~ Furniture 110 1:. iiO; d~ tat.e ":t~ ::::::·a·f· .. ~t ~-= 1 A Prop1r Cours• of Aetion -,_... ...11 t!m -~ -··"-... -. pt Int---"" .... •"""" """"'& • " clni: '"-i ••• dra t b · · W1uiul, •Wl e wuen ......... crew ynu, ... ,g a · ., •. iu,,. desired, but not necess. man. Room & brd, small lrERCULON & vcl'°'t aofa9 Cnu. rs . .--, pcry a n c s, 6'4-1211. , ARE YOU UNDER PAI07 fted, !rnpanylge .• a& ~7'it.ment J>referTed age 2 5. 3 s . salary, lite cooking. Cdt.f & loYeseall, 3 pc coffee t pr or sheer drps. 968-6145. HAMMOND Chord Otpn. 1 If T• ec. Aalwer Th Followhtt CottP• Fann.en Insurance Group Startin&' lalary ia $600 Call Mr. l\.!c Lau g l.l l n , tbl set. hide-a-beds, din. SPANISH Freighter model $100. I II n. Affttmtlwe, We'd Lite M 11tnew Ed Lani * 5fJ.1!34 PmC Opera.for am:Wt?rlng range. 673-m'l, leave messAgc. sets, lamps, chllds eofa etc. boat. Hand made In Spain. Call SSJ-9139 Wlttl Y• 1ervi~. Experience pf't'f. Function Modules, Inc: r. Used for dlapiay only. 3 ft. long Fragata Espanola PLAYER Piam Baldwin tNSURANCE cuu&lty a.gm-Part time day, full time ' l3U3l4 [§] Pncific Construc t l on, $100. 645-5743. elec., auto, Gu~ Pri ' IF YOUR ANS\11115 A'I TIUTHFUL cy girt .otllee In. Olrona """·H.B. attn. ~-.;-8881. \;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiO;;; • .._In 5.18-9883 SPANlSH !rtlghter model Ply. -- -WI· Cj,N HILi' YOU d•I Mar. Expei-. proL Good PERM part tlm" 7-tt Food S y · KING SIZE Bedroom 9'I bo t Hand d l Spa! ~~--"----- A., Do .,011 hav• 1tro119 _.>c•tlo11ai ci,1 ..... 7 r· =e ~~~~OU: Store, 2150 P1aeentta. Ave., ECRETAR · 5 pcs., ailed walr!ut, $200'. Th~e feet "i:n:. 'heaara Sporting Goods 830 1. Do you h ..... 9oocl , _,..five lnt•lllgonc11 ~ CM. Middle.age p e r !I on We are l90klnJ for a fQP Antiques IOO Span style l&mp, ceram.lc E:apanola. SlOO. 645--5143 C, Do you f••l :ufflc•."tly fl'lollvated to echleva7 · prtlerred, Apply ln person. hOtch &ecretnry to learn the -lamp &. gold 'IWa& lamp FIREWOOD, Oak &: Pine WANT to buy g \lied lkil D. Do you,,,.,., tha •billtv to mata dechlons1 JUNIOR SALE~N: Photo Touch 'l'rnl~s ad biz. If you lake SCRAM LETS SU ea. 548-.s7S4. stacked & del. Trees cut, With blndU., lQ).165 C.•1. f. Ara .you i;1idv to ••t • r1oli1tlc career obiecbtl1Ye1 Id F.am S3J.U() per ~ WCC'k-(4 People) S2 hr to i.tart. ~t .. i .. 'e. typewoulfasld likAeaC-8 • , FRO~! a B. Hills home, 8 mnrked by US Fot'e$1 under $15. Cali L ln da F. If you w1f1 convinc.d th•t halp ..,,, •"eila '• wo11 Jng after IChool and S.tur-Wiil be tauatit to worlc "-"' '"Y • pc cboke Fr J>ro,.o dinln&: ~rvltt': (M..1866 M6-+C'18 you accapt 11 ~ithout d1l 1y7 d~ selling new subscrlp-w/mlCl'OtCOpc. This \s a s\I· 5!1dlll!:,~964 ~~ly~~~ ANSWERS ~ G.E. dllh~. TWO R09e Hills ·lots. Otoicel'G°'UN""'-close0--,t"'-s.eurt~~ty-p"'lece-. YC.d SHOULD KNOW ~ t.,or :~ o.~~;~e Ung ~.E::._~m~~ who P.O. Box ~. Costa Mesa, area $$00.00. Fnr loto call 43" IV x SI" H x 23" • Tha \ett1r f,...u 1r1 not adv1rt111d a.rl does not ~ude d.-"'enjoys oluu:_;::_ng, .. v, .. & ca.S'JQi. Lollon _Empty _ Stole _ BITI'ERSWEET <n.ntng 1et ~29Sf. · Diep antique blue finish . • lliird P"fv. -'rofaulo11•l lflfl111nce l1 tomatlm•• ral9tl, ............. !!!~!!!J!!!!!!! .. '""!!!!!""'= IS ••PLOT --• tbl 4f x 64 3 •-B1•1n ........... -.. ·~ 0-~1 ,. llvtrl6 or collecttna::. Open. ECH.0 JOB AGENCY Blt1hop -l1n: "".. 1 ' .__., FOR aale small TV·,'S\W!fper \:'. -·-_ ...... .,._.,,..,.. 11•ce•••tV th 1 , 1 1 1-tn ,.,__._ ~ ..... ·~-taln M• ~ St. Suite -SEX::REI'ARY • Established X·ratod movlel arc fttl 4 canebaclt chrs, $325 l'IRM. .&: portable tan. Call 49Z--n96 SKI sale. Child &: women., e GfeHl"t jhe right doon open, at •.J '"' ••• r.· ':"e:.'" '""'3..., m 1>vuu .>w ..x-u , ~ .lnte-'-_._, •-__ , th! 1 ~, 551 Z19 C!'-4 V&lley a.nd South Runttnaton ·Hunt~ Beech -536-l'39 'a.a.: u.:Nlf'i('.r requu~ 1tllkc. The vc .. y ng .. ...., • • after .(:l:J J)nl. equip & clothing. ..-.1, • ::~:!;~:chpn!~l~~~"' ar• fil led throygh aiocuti ... • 111. ,Bet.ch. Appl,y now by calllna POUNDS ~ "'-·~Uy assistance with office skills leavt to the imaglnaUOn IS * OOFA It LOVESEAT it 5 PC t>ll'iette $21J. Wn>ught boots, parku. pants, etc. $C8.3Gll, The 1amou9"Mtkr;rr'.ruri~"~ for new headquarters in SM the PLOT. Never nsed, e Ve'Y·&d. qu&I, Tron Boottue tro. OwdJer _,64i.rn;:,,::,:;:7;,. =~~~.,..,-I 19 ~::~•:1.11ne mailing, It not .. tot1l an1w;r F.qqal Oppor. Etnpl0yer cram needs help. p 8r((w Juan Caifii:ttnno, mt11t be $149. Us!Jlllly borne. 963-79}{). $50. 67).'635 MAZPOWER Coll clut., EXECUTIVE SERVICES INC Ktypunch Oporolof Ml time. To twm groups ==~-·~~~~~t~~ ANTIQUES FOR SOFA 10' $125 L?C CONTR. h di •tee! shalt. Bag A ...,_ ' J • • E:ee Pakt. Bc!ti.uttful new Otes & ~n,pters. You rnn mnkc plus e.n cent t v e , Call ~HRISTMAS !>36-0942 on ' Carpet, Dr~~ •• 11~: All for. only $150. 556-1237 May HCIYt All A1t1w1r For . Tout in Newport Beach. Great~ go6d & stea.dy money while BllrJ>a,ra. Jean N ta 1 , Round Mission ook !bl., MAPLE br set, xlnt cond Tile. 556-1245 or 546-4478.· SKI BARGAIN S•11d Ralufl'I• Or Cafl Tod•V ~ &: outlt3nd~ bene-YoU h('lp )'Odl"lelf & othttt. ~. 5 d u'&. Queen Anne tbl., dbl bd dreseer nlte tbl cb!t Irvine Cout Country Oub Used ln5tructor f'quipmtnt -Fo·-tits. StlU't '575. J\Jso Fee Call l\flke Turin, 5-ll'K) *Stc'y1, BOOkk~ptra BADrop!Kc•Dl,OOWaRlnultMroPmOmR°fS drws mlrT_, $ZiO 551-«MO fam~I mtn1benhip. Call aft • 637-l'i~ '* HO COST IXICUTIVI INTIUllW ~.;..,Call~~., ~-~·, TIME FOR c I·•-·-~. • 7733 • -· EXICUTIVE SElYlCIS IN~""OrtATID ~ ~· c~-·~ u, !teln<ters Agency -1896 Harbor Blvd .. CM MED!T. 1··• ""•w•• ....-•· · SKIS & ""°"' m"''· •- •·· I :·1• ·•·• •• ~ HOMI OFfltf -S.'. ,)"J\ ANA Agency, m Harbor' Blvd., DAILY PILOT 4(00 Birch Strl'tt • (Park In 'l'Cl'r) lb!!I, O('C. chr A l&mp, xlnt c OMP'roN'S C.llC)"elopcdta condition. Al,o !Id equig. ... CM Suite lo-I, NB 811-~lOO rond. $195. 846-00S. '68 llChl edit., 24 .book set Call da,yi, 9'19-3l;o. Securl~\ll~:"~o~\lildi 't · ; CLASSIFIED ADS Dial A Job 133.-0ISS It's a breeze, lcll your ltem1 Don't give up the lhlp! Pvt. PtY. Lido hle, 6'7H109 ?\E'\1 Nordic• 11okl boots PHONf: 17141 547·1625 A aood want a4ta11..,..i 1>-• No Cha.,. To You with eue. u• Dally Pilot "LI"" It In c1 .. 111ed, Sblp t;idic. ,1,. ~ ~ ~'l't•l!!!!~..,...,,,..!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..,!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!~!,..!'"'!!!?!iettt.!!!:.,_ ____ .,...!. __ 64:::~Z.~5~6~7~B:'......~..!.....-!Est~ab~1~~h<d~~1960~-Claoallled.~ =~~Sbore:::::.:~Rnll:::::~lt1~t~MY.£18.::.:::::.::._•N:~eed:::::..:•~·~·Poc1=-"~'~Pt>;c.~·::::..:an::.:.:lld~!.!-~~•~"4S-::::..;'ISS;.::;_7~•-- ' ' . . . • .. I j • ' ' \ ' f • -. -' '. -.• -. • -----• ------- - I • ' . • . . ' ,. -" I ·-luMday, Novtmbtr 27, 1~73 l'jis~i~.r~:O:dff.o>.,ifi1~Ff,1,~136~~[!!~~~~~j[~~~Jf!·ao~-~·~h~,!Pow.~~r==:::~~~~JljE.:j~~-:::ii~A5u~tot~r±~~P!'~~~tt1~=::t~70~Au~tot!!;:r}lm~!l""~~~tt1~;:::::~~A~u~m~•~·~lm~~...,~~~td~!::::~!!'j-Au~lb" ,."""' ~ ro, .....;:;:;:::..:.:.;;:.:;..__m __ 940 :.::... ALFA ROMEO MERCEDES BENZ TOYOTA i SPECIAL* .__....;C...:::O..;..;RV_E....;11_E_1 • • ZENlp!,RCA&SylvanloTV Loaded,Jl!~ST~~F25. all MUST Sell due to ·~ ------...,..-·l-------.;..:.;:;;1.--.;..::...;_..:_;.;..; __ JI{ ,- & st~. priced Jess than SI new MW MolOl' Home, ·-ALPHA n --~ •• Dueto JIM SLE AS 7 TO 200 STB CK ~ ~ the d~counoen. With 3 yr. allt,.. eepo 4 wlth full Dodi: Ttog H ,. =•= MONS LE E • •I . YO'fA 1 Of h w k '67 FA A • r, p,., P il.Cfure tubes. 1 yr ... ,,, .P•ts, Gener1J-ISO p Uey, stand UJ> bead, teak th! • Im a, ._a51 CVCI")" Vdoce . 20Xl/cc, 10,000 Corolla sedan .•• Cet 30 * t e ee ~1soo'FM. 64· .. ~!dr SC b~. & 1 .1.11 .. ir" decks, raUs, locker•. ng, mac ~" super original mUes Xlnt cond. IMPORTS milea Pt'r J!:&Jlon .•. Only ,,. -·-, moc1':" ";;; ;rt;.,k av:r~~~~ . ANIMAL;". "R" us. etzy.ot-hp, sounder, ::::~.~r. G({~lt ~~n. fro~ Like New,m: 81\H.7$1 · MERCEDES BENZ-• $S8.3l mo. 36 "'"'· OJ>tn '71 FORD COUGA" . _"" display ... 73 ~et!! priced ~ l'E'(! Ha ml!tc wrpwx:base comp&A, 12 ch 25 watt 9.5, 673-0370 aft G:30. Any-'n SPIDER. Nu paint, AlJTHORIZED chd leue. "---- to clear. Cash 90 plan or of cltge, tree c I\ & e VllF', bait tank, outrl~, ·time on wktndt~ . overil.auled $3800. or btlt SALE.S SE CE ~ T ON PlCl(UP ' . '11 COUGAR XR.7; xlnt cond. fac air, v~l top, tilt wheel 21),000 mu._. call 546-4156 days, 5$1'"'5'55 eves & wee~nds, $2,950 lerm_• to 36 mos. ABC Color \1'/purchase ot.cana~. &by & much more. Th l 1 oUer. Leaving c 0 u n try. & RVt · Camper Spcc.lal TV, 9021 Atlanta. °" 19046 l<e:e-~. CQCkatiels, • inchea, beautiful boat cost $17,000. !9"' .•El.FODOR ~ *Mo·--4%3661. Jim Sltmons (221021') B roo khurtt, Huntington puppies. Sml T: Cup Poodles, in April. Must Sncrlflet:, I~ ,___, ...,.~ I $3199 -61!.l:" MAXE Y ... TOYOTA Beach, 968-3.329 or 962-555S. ~~S5""' Deposit wut OOld.. owner ttansftntd. Make of· tw>me, lUt., tape deck, T.V .. ----A-U~D-1---·1 mDOl'h ~ UJ fer. ~51, after 4 pm. seU-condained, lleepe 4. Call · (We're top \,uytr for an;y 1----TV, brand new, sllvcrton or Mite 4034 Emerald St. an. S. 956-2764. wsed Mercedes Benz.) l50rt.ablc;-19'•;--tmr;-mmnt -'J'OO-nmfny....pcl£~ \\IJlnMt goodh. No; S23t Tomlnce ·~. Auto S.rvlce, Pam 949 1912 AUDI, beige, 20,000 1301 Quall gt.art glare cover must ho1ne or young yna Private party. mlles, auto, xlnt condition N.-.virt Beach '69 TOYCYr A Land Cruiser 4x4 (967>\f'W) $19 9 5. Tlieodorc Robinll Fonl., 2000 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. 71 TOYOTA CllLICIA Cil02.DSM) '68 COUGAR, 289 enaine. Economical. Auto, fact alr, wbt vin tp, metallic ;m body. Gd cond. 11300. &1>41611 sell,• $160. value,' only ~irdd~N';~Jl ~~ge in-MINT CONDITION REPLACEMENT & aux· $3950, ~ days, "'"833.9300 $90/Be&t Offer, Real c u · v-... 1959 18' O\rla Craft Util ~ llia.ry ·gas tanks, pick-ups, 494-8884 aft 6 PM. ENTER FROM MacARTHUR bargain, 556-0846 Dogs 854 Boat. Comp. restored. 1 of 4 whl drives. vans & motor "12. AUDI, •• Excel nond., low 50 USED REVERS unit for Hammond the last dbl p 1 an k e d homes. 8924314 mt, $3.~. Call e v e 11 , o'l!an complete amplil\or e PUPPY WORLD • mahogany boat bit. See In DATlmN repQ!r 4 yrs exp 894-8247. MERCEDES •peaker cost $188. Seti $50. B"ll Dog" c;itihuahUM, Tiny th• water. Vista dot Lido, all late modola w 0 r k AUSTIN HEALEY ON DISPLA'Y 494-8£&. Poodles, Labs, Great Da.ne, 611 Lido Park ur. Or Ph; guaranteed good prices. PANASONIC am·tm tuner, Amer. Esk, P,it Bulls, Bull 673-U44. $3500. Will take 963-6821'· S•··-N Car BSR m.inichanger, 2 6Pkt'st Turier, C.OCkapoo, Irish trust deeds. '67 AUSTIN Healey 3000. .._:.t' ew $75. 645-1410 eves. Seller. 100 MIXED PUPS!! 35' Owens Sedan, immac. •BUYING A CAR? • White, wlre wheels, Prl. Trade-ins Stud Service 1.lost Breeds. live aboard. Galley, salon, Check it before you buy Pty. $1500. 9fl3..6ll5 Comlnv In Every Day Ope E,_ 53l~ Call 49'J-1932 alter 6 PM bo n ·••" -~·· head w/shower. •lpo 6, lots BMW Ask A ut Our Unique 1 11 LABRADOR Retriever puP' ol mahog.:J>r will consider * Atn'OS REPAIRED * Ustd Mtrctdt1 Lust YELLOW AKC, X Int trade on Jig. motor home. All Work Guarant".!ed ORANGE COUNTY'S Plens I'-------' breeding. Newp:irt Beach, 846--8173 ,_ Call 49'Z-1932 after 6PM OLDEST 3 Llnff, 2 T lmH, $2.00 642M44. FOR SALE Near new high 0 House of Imports '-Ii•••••••• DOBIES, exu'berant perf. '73 Nova 25' perfect I ll(AJ I 6862Manchester,BuenaPark 1• personalities. M/F, 4 & 6 cond. Save $2,500 See at AuleltorSlle on the Santa Ana FN.•y FREE to good home. YB mo.. crop/shots/wormed. Newport Pacific Boat s , 523-7250 Weimaraner. 6 wks old. ALI 646-7670 aft 5. ~38tJ> 951 lof.B. '72 280SE 4·5 15,000 frw to You 842-0010. '73 TOYOTA CeUca Landau' . top,· mag wbeels1 4 spd, i=. 1.000 m1. ,n~2617 TRIUMPH SALE or Traat:. CluSlc '58 TR3A Rdstr, ~· en&. trans, tires. Overdrive, 30 mpg. $325/trade for V\V bug or van. 646-3716 anythne. ·ro Triumph GT 6. 4 spd, $1850. Call - $2499 '68 CHEV. 9 PASS. WAGON (YUN11!8) $1699 '73 NOVA •COUPE (209HCUJ $2999 '70 T!UUMPH, GT 6, Wood '72 MALIBU COUPE dash, lo mlleage, new tires, (P159) '1" COUGAR, 3 pod trans. FM stereo & tape, New ' ( tires, >.1nt cond. thru-out, ' ( $1750 or otter 5t5-GW or 11 963-5643 ="""'D""'o..,.o"""G'""E,.---1 · ' I '63 DODGE StaUon wagon, new tires le part&. Sell h- parts or could run, Best otter. 566--0846 • ' • '73 DART Sport, Pay off 1 $3200 & clean pick up for ' equity, 557-4087 t FORD Immac cond. 673-7284 eves. $3099 ·oo TRS, coov w/spoke whls, 71 PINTO 2000cc Cordon Setter & 1.4 SCHNAUZERS -Hold fOr FiSJi;'"Skl' 15" Glii.Stttiff Tr:i· Antiques/Classics J Excellent selection of pre· ml. Full pwr. Maroon. lm-1----l--~~~~~t.:;~~ Christn1as. Shots, terms, hull. '70 Johnson 60 hp full MORGAN !964, Xlnt cond. price re-evaluation models. (;~U)·~d~ J; J'i!J t Y stud.ser.v • ...87L-8182;_522:;:.8366. to 191£er many xtras ilea-AM/FM stereo_ DEMO $ALE &15-7500 or 645-1850. aft 5. . $1 . $2800. Days, 835-l055, Eves. SA[ES:SERVICE:tEA:SlNC 'fit MER~BES 220. €lean, burgundy & blk, gd oond, Auto. trans. Low mileage, $1900 or bit ottr. 673-«n& '73 NOVA <..'UStom int. R/H. DlsC ~ brakes. Oean & in A-1 VGlXSWAGEN---·1---•COU=--..J . ..cood.->I• "'"'°"•bl< otrer • -refused. 546-4145. By o • ' SHAGGY Dog -a child's GOLDEN Retriever pups, 525-7326 · OVERSEAS DELIVERY air. 20 mi. to gal. Days: best friend. Found can't 5 wks old, Champ blood Boats, Sall 909 Trucks. 962 ROY CARVER, Inc. 832·8660 Nights: &14-1771. '60 VW Ghia couple, rebuilt Owner. keep. Male. Call aft 5:30 lines AKC, $150. 836-8139. e Good cond thruo t wkdays anytime \'•kends. FLIPPER, Good condition. 234 E. 17th St. MG ng. 646-355 ' u · 5.57-8151. G 0 L DE N RETRIEVERS, •Fully equipped. $250. Phone '57 FORD Panel Truck. Costa Mesa 546-4444 ___ ..;.;.:;..____ .~1675~;,,· =.eel=:.--~~ PRIVATE Party, Mus t Sacrifice, 'TI 9 passenger Ford Countty,Squire Wagon, ro riiileage, White walls, air, luggage rack, loaded $2495. 6'f5.28TI or 640-1250. AOORABLE calico kittens & mother cat. Box trained. ~ 963.-3731. Please save from pound. FREE to good home, 6 wk old puppies, Lrg mixed bred. 567--0704 COW.RED Garcltm Rocks & broken concrete, YOu -hauf, call aft 4:00, 675--4595 SHEPHERDfTcrrier, good with children, needs home immed. 641t2690. SMAlJ.. male mixed breed puppies. 7 wks old. Veey cute. Call 548-9439. 2 CUTE male kittens. Need loving home. Orange stripe & grey stripe. 645-fi031. ~;_;~:.'d'p;S:~\00'.· sbots, G~~9 family boat. 13• ~~': .... ~.~Fi CREVIER BMW ·~.:,~ ='. ~~es c~ ·~e~·tC;~' i\l;.~ ~: GREAT Dane puppies AKC, fibergl ass (Kitel 1i1int cond. PM. Sales .e Service • Leasing tains aft 5:30 call 673-0ot02 ~2338 outstanding temperament & Pvt. pty Lido Isle 67~09 '65 OIEV. % Ton. Excel. 208 W. 1st., S.A. 835-3~TI MGB. '69 VOLKS breed;ng. Very res. 836-91'6 con<!. 6 ply tires. A/A, .USED BMW'S Auto-Radio $1200 6'5-5768 aft H VR MAVERICK Grabber 'Tl 6 HorM1 856 Bo1ts, Speed & Ski 911 ~." 84~~~ for camper '73 3.0 CSA DEMO 1·.67--M-G_B..;.;D.;.r . ..;...:kreen::__.-good-=''o"p'=m"'"'=,.-,,==== ( E . OLET ~t :~~u~. lo~.ile~ OUTSTANDING r eg. TB 18' Unlo'mi•-• Ski Boat '73 3.0 SA DEMO mech. tires & mileage. orig .'12 .. VW BUS, AM/FM stereo, .. off::,;e:;,r.'-63&--0640"'=;:;:=,...,,.-,"°"d 63 7 XI lMI •n FORD F-100. 10.5 x 16.5 A owner. Need some body · sunioof, Z.bed. Xln t :::: mare. 1 . H, yrs. nt 331 Chevy Engine, two 4 Bar-tires. 4 speed, radio, low '71 BAVARI work. $1250. Aft 5 646-860'7. cond. $2850. 642.6517. 11211 BEACH BLVD FORD LTD 1966 Small V-8 trail, show, breed. Must rels, All Aircraft Fittings, miles, like new. Phone "70 2800 CS 147 •-•-•331 good mileage. Radial tires. -sac:---. 997-4262 · or · " .. "3367 '67 MGB. Xlnt cond. Nu '63 VW Cam.per, 72 eng. nu _, .,..__, I ul dl ~,,.,., J·lalcraft quick change V =~=.:~~=--.,.,-c-·"10--2002~-----Cus bl mmac ate con t l o n 838-2646 Drive, Adjustable Trim •66 F.D. P·up. w/shell. ,69 2002 -tra:ni. muCh more. $1300:-!itts & xl~t:,,~ .. "l~m 1 .. H::U:.:N:.T~l:.:N:.:G:.T:.9:::.:N~B~E:.A:.:E:.:H:l ,'o;!!!'-·;;1858::;:::·--=--:-;::-c= MUST MOVE Sacrifice 20 Plate, tri stacks, Tamdem A/T · RJH P/B Xlnt or best offer. 494-7673 int. runs n · O'rr"I -'69 Galax 500 4 dr HT ' " · •·t N' ~ il Speed • a<r, • • '68 2002 '67 VW Xlnt d M st CADILLAC Y ' • · mo. old. reg 111 Arabian ,..... e 1eson ~·a er. cond. 18 Mpg. $1195. 968-2908 ..:.::..::;=-------OPEL · con · u sec -s/t, ps, pb, air xlnt cond. colt. $300. 96S-2137 h;gh 90's, SEE IT TO BE· . coR· TINA ___ __:. _ _::.___ to appreciate. ---------1 Orig ••mer 9-~.a LJEVE IT.· ABSOLUTELY '60 Ford % ton PU w/ 536-3410 CADIUACS . •~• IMMACULATE. (G\V8996l camper. $650. ---------1'68 OPEL Spt Dix, air, 1 ',~n-vw~_;::Co::.n.::.v::.. ::..A_u_t_o-_m~.ck~.-1 '66 FORD Ranch Wag. gd Original Cost over $700J.OO Call 53&-0546 1968 FORD CORTINA. Ex· new tires & int. good look· cond, $450. or bst ottr Sal p 'ced t •""95 ceptionally Cle an' un-ing, good ru:nning & gas radials, 33,000 mi, like new, 0 C ' 548-8149 e n a """' . Vans 963 believable gas economy, saver, $825, 979-2217 eves $16:95. 494-7880 aft S range OUft" S ·n LTD 4 dr, V-8, auto, SEA & SUN R. v .i .:.:::.::...-73-CHEV--VAN _ _:..::: ~9362. '68 OPEL Kadette Wagon. VOLVO Largest Selection power, air, leather int, like 17555 Bea8'4~Z6'l's Hunt. Sch. BUBBLE TOP DATSUN Luggage raok. Good Interior 1---'--'----All Modelo & Colon new LDw price, 543-3$1 V-8, unhoard-of value (QBZ-& tire•. Call 645-7S06 '72 VOLVO 2 DOOR EL DORADO, INTERNATIONAL 093). $39&9 1973 DATSUNS OPEL ·ro GT, one owner, CPE. DE VILLES . 0 Ls Excel eond, Must see lo 4 speed transml-"ion. (786-FLEETWOOD BROUGHAMS GREAT BARGAIN GUSTAFSON ALL M DE apprec, 641>-1'60 ELT). COUPES-SEDANS -1967 Po•t•l International l~=~hM:f\~er IN STOCK PORSCHE $2977 Wide sel~~~~ors Scout. 22.000 mlles. xlnl Huntington Beach I M OR S mechanical co n d l t i o n , r I B'k 842-11844 * !213! 592-5544 ~~~V;!.~K,... _ 1r •• ~~!_ *1972 PORSCHE 914* l • ~::~ ~'%\':'l'eath<r) . $500/oflor. 84U829 ~Ysc=.-ta~"' --925 *"IH9o7"'11.-.FOr-Rm.-vD VtklAnNg•*• ~.;, C;.'pj,,;;;;N -!»pd,-radio,Radlals -1\8a11-A111it--"acto.,.._atr_no•djU9!!i0< _LJNCOLN 493-33'15 or 831•1375 Blue and like new lUWA l(Alf.. Full ~r-choice of: , _ _.,;.:;:::;.:::::;;;~~==! * BICYCLES* Short whoelba>e, heavy duty, -WILL BUY YOUR $4,095 * 837-6722 aft 5 vo•vo Cruloe Control MUST SELL! '62 Ltnnotn mall 18 v 8 • pd '68 912 LOW LOW ile l.t Stereo AMIFM radio Continental, Immaculate! CHRISTMAS LAYAWAYS s mpg . ' .rs . DATSUN, TOYOTA m s, 1'nl k $10. HOLDS ANY BIKE Mags, carpeted. immac., 28 mpg. Sell or 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 AU in =~~:condition Good tran&portation $400. New Italian 10 sp •••.• $59.95 Perfect Inside and Out OR VOLKSWAGEN take economy car 962-8&tO 645-4767. Suntour Eq co1oi .... 189.95 12.495 * 837-6722 a1t 5 PAID FOR oR Nar. wrLL ·73 PORSCHE 2 litn, black. '74 VOLVO'S Nabers Cadillac MERCURY Nlshiki 10 sp •••• from $913.95 '66 FORD Econo Line, xtra PAY TOP DOLLAR. CALL 2tXlO miles loaded Assume HERE NOW At.rrn:ORIZED DEALER 1--------- Used bikes .••••• All Types long bed, 4 mag whls, KENT ALLEN, 540-0442. lease or p~,. 646-0783 2600 HARBOR BL., '68 COLONY Park Wagon Beach BicycleS, 806 E:-Balboa G8.b1eral Hi Jackers, nu '7{1 DATSUN Roa.dster.~~ POR. 911 4-4, '70, AP. GP. ImmOnediAlalteMDeod~ EA11 9100COSTA MESAOpe Sund J0oded, Better mileage & GROTH For an ad Jn Wom1n~1 World Blvd .. Balboa 675-7282 cpts, need• little work ...,"" good and 25 .....,,.,... 11.~i,;..,. AM/FM K · •'lCi:n 11:i:s ;.>'t\r'" n ay rf then 531~ • ·-·~. 567-1'356 -·· ~% mags, = .._ ..... -· BUY or LEVE "=-=:-:==7'S=""= pe onnance 0 •" CYCLE WORKS LTD -~,.. -· ~ CAMARO modob. ~ Bicycles Selos & Servke •n GMC Vandura, 350 Vl!, JAGUAR PEUGEOT <ft I •. ~. --------·1'1" Mercury Montego Wa""ri. * RALEIGH. :i~·~U:~·=~ -fOllYO~O ·10 CAMARO. Air, pis, pt b, SISOOortakeoverpaymcnts. * P.EUGEOT $2600. Terry, 54!-228.5 or •n J"" XJ6, white w/nalural NEW PEUGEOT ~' am/fm, Nu paint. $2200 • .o.~:::...::.=21".==-~~-I * STEYR fi42.-0785. Int. loaded~tirtn. DEALER or best offer. 494-3661 MUSTANG - 822Christmas Lay-A-Ways •n DODGE con te m Po °'1966::.:.:llar=bo~r.c:C:::.M;:·c_.::646-=.=93<l3;:: CHEVROLET 1 Newport Blvd., Costa cam railed f J AG '67 Roadster:.~ mi. body Complete Sales and Service. Autos, Uttd 990 ---------· FOR sale '66 Mustang. conv. Mesa. 548-5783 or 67~1700. full ~p~U for bal ~: mech xlnt wtre wheels, 50 compacts on display '70 MONTE CARLO, auto nu top. tires, runs xlnt, $650 'Tl TRIUMPH Doytona. Show $2890. Pb' 645--0856 AM/FM, $3100. 646-"19!1!i. PACIFIC MOTOR BUICK trans, A/C, p/s, p/b, bok1 842-1887 Woo -Sun 8-4. Room cond. Low, low ml. •n_ GMC llally Spx Window JENSEN IMl!ORJS seats, vinyl top, mag whls, '68 Mustang VI8, auto, A/C, $650. 645-1030 ·or aft 6:-vah, v.s, auto, p/b, posi DESPERATE 1upertmmac, $2450. 675-6886. Pis & disc brks, vinyl top, 55t>-0263. ·tract 30,000 mi, &ood cond, JENSEN PEUGEOT /SUBARU MUST SELL BY SUNDAY Tl TOWNS. Station war.;; . xlnt eond $975.64&-8535 1968 HUSKY i250 MX. Very $2200. 556-7565 INTERCEPTOR 1557 W. Lincoln Ave., 1969 Buick Electra Ltd, new spotltui k> mileage, ull •65 MUSfANG, P/B, PIS, cln. excel. cond. $300. '64 Chevy Van wf'68 Camaro LARGE SELECTION Anaheim 533-8220 cu!tom paint, vinyl top & pwr + a/c, A/Shocks, prl 'auto trans, new engine, $595. 847-5759 or 893-6007 p. par· eng. Looks great. Must see. OF COLORS int. Fantastic cond. $8.50. pty, &1+731l. 846-5630 \!o!fS Ti.'~s;"u"'MP=H'".-650=-Bo~"--vill-,,.,,..-e, Best oiler. 545-2531 or IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ___ S:_A;_A_;;B ___ .1 =83~~;:;97:;_7:.,I o:'.!r_:645-":'.:84~15!:.·---IFOR sale ·~ E1 Camino, '68 Mustang, Calif. Special. "" •u"" 557-9116 FULL SERVICE BUICK Skylark '69. Lo mi, p/s, p/b, air rond., auto Call 64a.7122 from 9-5, 'ii' re-bit engine, A-1condition,1-""--',6=3"'-=F~O~R~D~V~A~N~-DEPARTMENT * SAAB Nu steel belt radials. V-8, nu tires mag whla, 642-5900 aft 6 pm. .. low mileage, Oller 586-4206 $1000 646-3358 aft 6 & wnds. 3 spd, 6 cyl, Mags. S400 firm. Best deal always. Complete 1 owner. 557-4114. WILL. · '65 MUsrANG 2+2, 4 spd. * 544-3417 * selection now. Buy or lease '69 SKYLARK custom delux. take 1 carat, 2 carat, Rebuilt 302 engine . $600 2 MINI bikes. 4 hp. from · / lb 3 carat diamond ln on trade * 646-9020 * 1 75 & $50 WILLYS US mail truck van. air, P s, P •· good cond, for new ......___ ....... · · Call ~ &6-712'l from 9-5, Jim Parkln..-i'1 $1350 or best Offer. 846-3166. car. CW*""'l"m· '68 MUSl'ANG Call 557-9509 64Z-5aOO alt 6 pm. CADILLAC SHARP looking '55 Chevy. 6 cyt. STICK •n HONDA TJO, low miles, Great running cohd $400 $850 * 645--0636 xlnt nond. $900. '65 DODGE VAN. Runs good. 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. • or best offer. i;is..ssu· . OLDSMOBILE 675-6317 i:,.;:· sZ:m offer. Call 642•9405 ·'69 COUPE DE VILLE ro CHEV Impala, 4 dr. h.t., 1 _____ _;_.1 SABRE cyde, street legal LAMBORGHINI power, air. Orig ownr. •·• • or dirt. Good cond. $100. '72 DODGE 31B auto, air, --645=6400 -.... or .... 645-&406 $1495. !>fG.1151 .;JOJf!I • SP~ce or best oUer. 548-1206 full p:iwer, mags, crpts, SUNBEAM Full power plus factory air ,64 CHEVY. 3 ,~ good en· OLDSMOBILE pipes Sac $3395 548-4424 '68 LAMBORGINJ GT 400, conditioning, new white side .,,... GMC TRUCKS '71 HONDA SL350. Xlnt cond. A ' W . eel ' 961 47,0Xl orig. mi. Xlnt cond.1 ---..;.;--;_ __ ;_ __ I wall til'es. Immaculate gtne, needs tires, good trans· HoNDA CARS Never ridden in dirt. $525. utos ant Must Sell! 213: 8464761. *'63 Sunbeam A1pine• 46,{XM) miles. (759AJV), portatlon. $150. 536-0687. 540-43t5 Aft. 5 PM ToP DOLLAR PAID MASERATI Now tires * $250 $1977 ' '67 OIEVY Impala wag. 396 UNIVERSITY OLDS '68 HONDA * 644-8074 * eng. a/c, · bst .ofr over $,'iOI). 2850 Harbor Blvd. 305 &rambler, Porfect cond. IMMEDIATELY TOYOTA 673-2635. Costa Mosa ~M- $295 S48-0875 FOR AU. FOREIGN CARS '68 MASERATI very clean, n l • ~-. Call or come in to see us. good cond. Must sell CalH---~..;.;.::..::;.::__ -1A111• lllli& '72 CAPRICE, l~ mileage, um OLDS 98 Full power. '66 Honda 305 Scramblor ....,;sgs ,74 TOYOTAS WI'< _.., lully equipped. Xlnt cond. 7900 miles, >lnt cond. Below $225. 64M!31 after 5. TOYOTA Call Eves. 644-fbll blue book $42tltl. 55Z-70ll9 Ask for Brian MAZDA Now Models · Now Colon •ro STA wgn 9 pass xlnt PINTO 350 SL. 69 \I Honda. --===:.....--1 LEAS_E_or BUY cond. prl ply lo aded1 __ ..:,...;;_~---I New eng. Ex. cond. '73 ROT ARY at 1961Ularbot'., C.M.. 64&-93<l3 w/xtras $1950 ~ Coll Mory Beth 642·5678, ext. 330 Slim Sensation! Everybody's Pet! 9349 SIZES IQY,.20Y, $400.? • 64&-1719 ENGINE MAZDA '73 Cad Eldorado, lully load--===c"'H"'=RY"'s"=LE'=RC---1''72 RUNABOUT;--auto. air. NISHIKI Co lo d 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. · · ed· black on black Must deluxe int & ext, 9900 mi, Tots 10 toens to 'adults. ~·~;~as~;J~n:~~~'. T0~2-~SH No Money Down ~tM-l.flDU ~t. =· "".'r. ~ ;:;,ro;:-:ChrYl;;:::l;:er~N:;:ew::::--;:y;::ork::;::er:.1 ~$2450~-!:P~L!:,,~~~~o~"~.Jy~545-0l~H~48.!:.I ::~~~i:~~;?F."£th1~ 'l"J1251J:~i.;1l' 1;'°.:!: '.~/~ckl~te model can 36 m:~~l.~iA.C. 1966 -H-~ ·CmMDYOT~ .. ~~" F~73 ~~=~ill~. ~~~~~·~;~:.~· ~~_!1N~_f'1,:NT::::;;:'A;::$2400;::L:.j' "'•1"'n=c-R_l_C_K_ET_;;.4:.DO:..:..O-R mg • or stuff him for a Howard Chevrolet *BUENA ~~.. · · =0~ .CAD ·~ CdV ·•·-has Sta rt \.Vilh a sleek and toy! Crochet of rug yard •n BMW. Good condiUon, ---r ""1lf,..j..., 1lf .... -r ... 1972 MARK ,JV, Immac Joc:al 4 speed tnmsmlsaion, ,radio car , all equipment; M\ilt a:nd htater.---ndlal littl, simple shape, then add a . add fringe after. Pattern $400 & tak,e over payments. MaeAr:tt'lur and Jamboree . _ "Make Room For Daddy" · iverytbing. New tir:es etc. wide collar and you have 7106: directions for cat 30" -Call 642-9711--Newport Bea'Ch •• , clean out the garage "$115-0. Ph 552'-9344 Eve. sell Make Offer 557"'9349 33,00J miles. (205CXV). fa.Shion's favorite shirt look! high. SELL 1954 Triumph 650, Ex· 833-0555 ·*PA-:;RK ... tum that Junk Into cash "Make Room For Daddy" Have it in one or two colors. SEVF.1'."TY·n\'£ CENTS Cel cond, much chrome, ' WE PAY TOP DOLLAR With a~ Pilot Claaified • • • clean out the a:araae Printed Pattern 9349: Half for each pattern -add 25 $1100. Gary~lO No. c, s.c. FOR TOP USED CARS ad. Call -5678. ••• tum that Junk into ea11h Sizes 10~, l 21h. 141,), 161h, cents tor each pattem for ,69 <M<iiLIA 125 $225 If your car ls extra clean, 181h, 21H~. Sice 1'1',~ (bust Air Mail and Soecial Hand.I-'"'""°'" see us first, 371 ta)tes 3\4 yards 35-inch. ing; otherwise thatkl!an .,.,...:•o:•:c•;.,:6c:7:l-c:275::o::7.:•:c•::=•;__ BAUER ButCK *MA-ZDA Tots to teens to aduJ,ts -df!live ry will tfke three Motor Homes 2925 Harbor Blvd. this cat is everybody's pet! "-eeks or more. Send to Sale/Rent 940 Costa Mesa 9'79·2500 Attract all ~yes with ihis Alice Brooks, the DAILY 1-.c.;;=..;.;;=---~ engaging pussycat wall hang-'PILOT, )05, Needlecraft e •• S e WE BUY ing -or stuff him for a Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsea °""LI! IMPORTED' AU1'0S toy! Crochet ol '"• yard StatiOn .. New York, N.Y. • SERVICE • BEST PRICES PAIDI _.add fringe aner. Pattern 10011. Print Na,n"'-Addnlst, DrllTALS Deen Lewis Imports ~:. directilons for cat 3<>" ZlrfE ~~ E=· "72! • ""'I, • 1966 Harbot", C.M. 646-9302 SEVE?n'l·IJ'WJ!l CENTS Crochet, knit, etc. Free JUNK WANTED. Autos, for each pattern _ add 25 direct.Jons, SOc. trucks. Jnatant' cas'h, bodie!,. cents for each pattern for ln~t Ma.crame a8ot. scrap iron hauled away >Jr Mall and Special Handl· Basic, fancy knots, pal· free, Ed Stone 536-4876 pt(l)T, 442, Pattern De{)t., terns. $1.00. . -CASH FOR ... ; otberw1.ae third-class lnl'tant Orocliet Boot .. YOUR CAR deltftl'1 will take • three Learn by pictures! Pat· 546-7070 -or more. Send to tenui. IUIO. RENT A 'MOTOR HOME -970 7015~Knott; Buena Park C1ll Mr. Woyne 522-8750 * M1lfdt '73 Rotary * $'6 MONTH 36 MONTHS OPEN LEASE Will accept trade·lns .,cALL 11411. FRY 84U666 Hunt. Beach MAZDA 1o1iJ1aa 11artin, the DAILY Oom--•tOlttBoo\ MINI HOME OR VAN Autoo, lmpo~ :1!S !Veot 1Bth St, N.. -more than 100 alfl5 • CONVERSION, LOW AS $9 Yori<. N.Y. lOOIL Print 11.00. per Day & 6c per mtle. ALFA ROMEO 173.11 Beach Bl. MUell !IAMS. ADDRESS wlttr °"""'""' Afchu --RESERVE YOURS TODAY * ALFA ._OMEO MERCEDES BE. NZ --and 1!1TJJ!l 11.00. =-~=·.,-~-~~-" ~ 11 llfty Rae Rook• • 50c. WILL trade Newport Beach NOW OPEN S1!Z' llOllE Q u f·c k Book of U ...,. Al&hs... ~ for Motor Home 8clt deal alw~S! Bm'llnnJ ~ ::: er.: = ~f -1 •16 patt.,,,., AJ!t. Eves, 675-S487. ~~ ll!l. (Ser. •0288!. Ml11lon •I• Import• _... Catalog. All SOc., 20'--25' MO'I'OR Home 1, ' & 1· Complete &C-re:uurl n_g Ontr llllc. M_,,, Qotltt llook 1 • Superior, Ufetime I< Open :;:on . now. Bu,y or 1•"0 · 'MERCEDES BENZ D'IS!'AllT llEWING BOOK !IOc. Road. Keo Wel•h, 639-2981. J{J' p kl , & .. ~I weer tomoltow. Quirt• for Tflday'• lJvln(' e oale'sMOlorHomftRentais1 m ., nsonl FIAT SL Fat Profit I• atta11'1l'd when '73 23-26' M.ll. & Minlli Complt>tc Sales & Service INSTAl(I' FA S R l 0 N you ,.ll through tt'1Jlt ... c Free mile• Jl til'9. 838--0800 Villi U1 S-At BOOK --o I tln& Daily Piiot C...llled FREE WEEKEND 28701 Marguerite Parkw~ Juldlll fadl. SL ' Ads. 60-M Recreational Vehicle Rent.al Ml1!ion Viejo 495-1700 .-----------------Bureau. (7J4) 842--9922 645-6400 or -CUSE AVERY PWY. 1' ' The 'fastest draw.In llH! Weot. $1277 •.. a Daily Pilot 0.a.ll!SiOed . ~fOll ltmia -TOYOTA -' -' Today's Final I San Cle1nen1e Capistrano EDITION * VOL 66, NO. 331, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1973 TEN CENTS San Juan ,Growth Freeze Passes First Test By JOHN VALTERZA Of IM o.111 Plllf Sl•tf A proposal by San JWIJl C.plstrano City Councilman James Thorpe for a total moratorium on any new growth in the tcity because' of the energy crisis psssed Its first test before his peers Monday. Councilmen agreed unanimously to schedule a full e1aminat.lon of Thorpe's suggestion _ for a total freeze on city growth at their next session, Monday. -· * Business Ffrst tf the new moratorifun were to take effect, It would mari the second time that a full-blown shuldown of con· struction ln the city bas been imPoSe<t by the council. Thorpe stressed that ~is latest sug- gestions were extremelf important because the city of late is being called upon to drastically improve streets and Install street lighting. "This means that in order to serve any new people who CQme to the city we have to !Oh power and services 'Priority Issued On Marine Fuel W ASHIN.GTON (AP) -The Office distillate fuels to pleasure vessels - from people who are already here," he said. In a second suggestion, Thorpe asked for the fo rmation of an emergency com- mittee' to study the problem of local growth and its drain on energy resources. The Saddleback College instructor warned that as new houses are built in San Juan more and more people will be lured into a life of convnuting to work. "The trend ln Southern California these • I days ls to rearrange the populaUon and that Is simply dangerous, 11 he added. 'nlorpe's suggestion brought no serious reservations from other councilmen - 1:1.11 of whom have faced moratoriwns before and who have endorsed them Wlder different circur.utances. The last freeze took place early in the year during a period when the city planning staff amounted to a skeleton "crew" ol one man. .. I don't take issue with your sug- gestion, but I'm just not ready to make -• • a declslon lonlght," said Councilman James Weathers. During the coming week clly staff will make initial studies on the Im- mediate growth prospect s facing the city. Monday 's discussion brought severe criticism from Mayar Roy Byrnes against firms which have been drafting environmental impact reports related to recent housing projects. "I find it extremely interesting that we 're faced with a terrible energy crisis r1 Ill A f R l C A 16" U. S.S.R. & 01 H f R IUDDLf EAST s 3" and the writers of the El.Rs kept telling us that there would be no proble.vis handling all the growth," Dr. Byrnes said. "It's amazing how quic:ldy they all come home to roost," he added. "Jt ,cu'd b:! irresponsi ble to approve new growth that will demand new energy. I'm suggesting an absol ute moratorium -no building permit ap- provals at all · in the whole city - until we can get a handle on the true nature of the problem," Thorpe said. State Panel Asks Lift On Halt ot....Petroleum--.A.ll~tion ord_er.ed s.al.ei _ including those ~rated commercia11y__ Monday of marine distillate fuels on -only if adequate supplies remain . •:·· .. ... i _ SACRAME~TO (APl -ta e ex reconmended today that California lift il!l 5-year-old .moratorium oo offsMre oil drilling. 1 priority basis to boats-and shore after meeting the needs of commercial fishing boats and seafood pro<eSSers. installations harvesting and processing The marine oils and other "middle · fish and seafood. distiJlate" oil!: have been uoder a· federal The order pennits the sale o[ marine atlocatiOn program coritrolling their * * *-Nixon Sees No Loosening Of Arab Oil WASffiN.GTON (UP!) -P...,ident NlJ:on today indicated to leaders of f.ongress that he does no t expect any loosening of the Arab oil embargo until 10me progress takes place in Arab-Israeli peace talks. Nixon and secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger reviewed the Middle East peace situation and the energy crisis with 21 senators and House members at a meeting in the \Vhite House Cabinet room that lasted nearly two hours. Sen. J . William Fulbright, chairman CAN THE ARAB FLU BE FAR BE!11ND? Column, P•ge 7 300 MILES ABOUT MAXIMUM FOR FULL TANK-Story, P•ge 12 . ' CALIFORNIANS STUDY· CRISIS l'MPLICATIONS-Story, P•ue 18 wholesale·distributii~an~,--- Bot the Prosru!! ~ly utrip<d no prei.n!lces llll<illlr the !Ina! con- illllllel'I of morine oil The regulitloG, -flllll1"8ately, orden priority aupplJ to "commercial fishing vessel> of American ownership, regi!try, or operation engaged in the harvesting and. transportation of marine (See PRIORITY, P•&e I) * * * Count y Airline· Firms Reveal C1isis Effects • By WILLIAM S'WIF.IBER Of .. Dlt'1 ,...., ,,.,, The national energy a.is.is will have a significant effect on one of the two airlines serving Orange County Airport but the other expects little or no change in current ope.rations. John Tucker, director of operations and chief pilot for Air California, said today Air Ca1 has ,1ready cut back some flights and plans to lay off pilots, ground crewmen and other personnel as of Dec. 1. "There have been significant cuts in of the Senate Foreign Relations Com-our operations but It's impossible to nµttee, told reporters afterwards that go into specifics -because we are Sun the questltln of the lifting of the embargo unsure what the fuel allotments will by the oil-producing states in the Arab .be," Tucker said. 1'0rld "depends on the progress of Tucker said the flight cutbaclts have negotiations as the_ peace_c:oofer_en<:e__mostly been_ the_sllo!:! ~which 'will hopefully gets under way." be co!L90lidated into other routes, Arab and Israeli repmsentatives are . "We have to cut back on our OYlng ei:pected to meet In Geneva Dec. 17-18 houn to meet the fuel supply that will under United Nations auspices to sta+t be '8.vailable,'' Tucker ·Ald. · peace negotiations. Tucker !aid the cut~ by. the rim Fulbright sald that "the"-pericil" of of, 'December could be · somewhere the embargo" will depelld Oil lhc -· ~ 10 and 15 percent. . ress made in moWig toward im. "We don't really know at this point plemenlation of a U.N, Sec1/11tY council H even motereducUO/is will be needed reeolution that ended the 1967 war and but we are certainly studying the pmo!ded for withdrawal by Israel from possibility " he sald. conquered Arab lands. It also established Presldenl "Nixon announoed 'Sunday a recognition of the need for leCUl'e that be will calJ for an additional 15 borders by Israel. percent reduction in airline fuels on Fulbright sald thar In the loog term, top of a 10 percent cut already in (See ENERGY, Pqe I) (See AIRLINES, Pqe I) . ' ,Airline Cotbaek Uni~ to Furlough Ove r 1,000 W ASHJNGTON (UP!l -United Airlines today announced It wl11 turli>vgh more titan i ,000 employes, lncludlng 300 pilots, and cancel 100 daily flights-because of tile fuel crilla. ' • Edward E, Carlson, president of the nation's largest airline, aald the cancelations had ,been ~eduled even !>efore--President Nlxoa ' announced Sunda}' an additional 15 percent cut In jet !uel dellvery for the airlines, -. Carlson Indicated that the new cutback · would result In aUIJ __ mm:JiYQUs , >=;T;fl-;;;;i.;:;;i:.=~=;;;r;=""':=e""'=· Earlier, t e a I ne ndu t me more than g from Its domestic schedule on ~rounds o! jet fuel shortages. Clrlson said the addttlonal :United flight cutbacks would be ef· fectlve Jan, 7, But the airline wl11 beglri furloughing "Immediately." • ' I OTHER LATIN AMERICAN REGION S -.-:--.... _ .. --. -. ... --'l'fie-statetands-eommissionl!ill-vote- on 'the recommendation following a ~ ing De<. 11, said State Controller Houstoo 3" • ... 1 ., . . '~ . . ---··-. -... . · .. : .. ,, KN'OWN Oil RESERVES .. : ' u,,....._ Black Power Map shows location of world oil reserves with the _ Middle East holding 53 percent o! the precious supply. Neighboring Africa has the second highest portion, more than Russia and all other Communist countries.· -------------------~ Mesan Loses $2 Million Music lnstmctor Hurt in Crash In San Oemente Lawsuit Over Accident .. A mother who lost a daughter and bad her son transfonned into a feeble shell of a boy with brain dama ge bas lost a $2 million lawsuit against the city of Costa Mesa and a fireman whose squad car collided with their 21n years ago. A jury in Orange County Superior Court decided that then-battalion chief Ron Coleman and the Costa Mesa Fire Department were not at fault in the tragedy. 'Coleman, who e a r l i e r this year became San Clemente fire ~ chief, suf: fetea -sha,ltered legs in the Feb. 26, 1111, accident on Estancia Drive. Re· was racing to a fatal fire in the city 's 18-story Bethel Towers, when a speeding car coming from the opposite direction went out of control and entered his lanes. Passengers Claire Arbuckle, 14, along with Edward Hernandez, 19, were killed, while Miss Arbuckle's brother Paul, 17, ouffered disabling lnjurle;. 'lbe--mother of two victims, Mrs. Citberine Arbuckle, of 2002 Maple Ave.1 Clemente Se ts , Police Auctio n . - Camping gear, blcycl.,. soortio~ g'&ds and other uoclalmeCI items taken In 09ldence wJU go on · the suction block Saturday U{ a special auction sponsored by the Sao Clemente Pou,. Depjtrtment. Tbe.-10 a.m. sale wn.1 be held in the garage area of th'e Fire Department headquar.ter-1-at-~\ti center-a ' Items can be seen ahead of tlme at the sales area . The auctlon Is held twice yearly to clear. out storage areas ot unclaimed ar\lcles, -"" Costa Mesa, sought the $2 million in damages for the death of her daughter and continuing care for her son. She also charged in a double-action suit naming both Coleman and the driver of the car In which her cltlldren rode that its Qperato_J,_~~~ R. B~dwln, 19, of Mlra Loma, .,., also wilHully reckless. , Baldwin escaped the grinding crash that literally disintegrated both cars with (See LAWSVIT, Pqe I) 3 New -B-reak-ins In Capo Areas Bein'g Probed San Clemente !Dgh Scltool music In· structor Arlon Enmeier suffered a major bead cut and other injuries thiS morning in an auto coDision which occurred as he was driving to wort. The 30-year~ld Instructor was at the wheel of his small English sportscar when ltJ became invol1led Jn a collision with a larger auto at the intersection of El Camino Real and Camino San Clemente. 'lbe driver of the other car was unhurt and not immediately ldeatllled, Firemen adminlstered rtrst aid to the Injured teacher and then took him by a1l'!b941Pce to San CJemente General Hospital. Sutures were required to close a large cut, but the injuries were not believed serious. The mishap occurred only a few bloclts from ~meler's address at 721 Via Ban- dita, 0raoge eo1mty Sherllrs .mcers are Dana Citize. ns today investigating three hr.at-Ins In - -the San -Juan · Capi!trano ...., u the burglary rate in the mission city continues to mount. Slate Session Paint spray equipment valued at $1,300 was stolen during the weekend from , a '11le Dana Point Citizens for Action hame under construction at 263929 Via have set a special "members-only" Alona by thieves wito broke into the meeting for · Wednesday at 8 . p,m, so garage. · ·that a , vote .can be · taken to ftlnforce llepuUea-lald cash and jewolry with the group's \'Pinions on a major prop...1 a tolltl vlllue of $356 wu taken by to change densities in R·2 ziJnlng ar.as, • thieves who. forced open a window at The session win be held In the Dana the home of Beatrice L, Leon, ii!, of Hills illgit School auditorium • and 266G Paaeo Tecate. memberships will be c:oofirmed at the Mn. IA!on told officers the money door. said 1pokesmen. and jewelry was •t;akcn from 1her master The organizat1on for the past several bedroom durlng·the weekend. months has battled for changes in the . Je~clry; cash, a radio and binoculars county Janel-use designation SQ. that in Were-:.taken_lronLthe-ho'"" oLJllmes-cortain...wes--1\-% Jand would be-able Raymond Wells, 12, of 31645 Via Madon-to contain only hall as many units as na by burglan who forced open a the law currently provides. bedroom 'window: Final hearlnp . on the matter are Officers listed the total lo'1I at the scheduled be!or. Ille COunty Board of Wells home at $11IO, supervisors Ile<, 5, - ' l . ' I. Floomoy, the colllllWsJOll chairman, The rec:ommendatim came from the State Lands Division alter extenshe beariq1 _ ln\o cumnl eavin:umenlal ' safegui>rds against !be p1<11P..,'t of major oil l!illl• such as t1te· one In the Santa -Cltanel that led to !be bin In January 1111. The spill OCCUJTed In a well being drilled on a federal leue otitstde !be state-<ontrolled three-mile llmJt. · Flournoy said the state experts recom- mended a resumption of drilling only oo existln~ state leases and only from existing offshore drilling platforms. · That would provide a polentlal of 50 to 60 -new wells which could be In full prOOaction within nine mOntbs, Flournoy said. f.. • He said th ... wells could tap est1ated reserves of 200 mllllon to 300 million barrels of badl,v needed crude oil. Flournoy sald he Is convinced that the tough nri-diiDing itaodardS pro. posed by the divjsion will provide an adequate safeguard against any potential disaster. "The ...U. can be drilled safely with maximum ptotection for th e en. vironment," be said. He emphasized that the decision to consider a resumptioo of. drilling now was not hastened by the increasing energy crisis. "Ir e«nes at -a-ttrne- when tHe oil is needed, primarily by coincidence," he said. · 11le other two members of the com- mission are U. Gov. Ed Reinecke chairman of the state's Energy Policf Council, and finance director Verne Orr. Reinecke has said he is prepared to vote for a resumption of drllllng on state leases when be is convttieed it can be done_with maximum safety. Floumoy declined Joday to say how he would vote on the proposal. But be said the staff "has made a strong case for the resumption of drilling." Re sal'd there is no question that the oil Industry bas sophisticated new equipment that was not available at (See DlllLLING, Pqe %) or .. ge Coast ,Weather Fair through Wedae9day with Slll1PY days and \UgbUy warmer afternoons is the way the weather oervice aees it. !Dghs at the bead> - es in the upper 60s rising to the low 70s inland. Overnight low. in the upper 40s. --INSIDE TODAY Elizabeth Taylor, who bu her own count 1ia.s had surgeTtl 30 times and "has been elote death jou1 limes," wiU undergo abdominal 111'!1•'11 1ll UCLA Wednesday. StcrJJ, Page 5. 'l -' Watergare Tape Heard In Court WASHINGTON CUPlJ -One or Presi- 'dent Nixon's \Vatt>rgare tapes -marred by whistles , hums and garbled voice! -was played in publlc for lhe first lime todav in the court of federal Judge .. John J. slrica . The tape contained portions of con- \'ersalions Nixon had with. his former key aides, John D. Ehrlichman and H.R. Haldeman1 on June 20, 1972. Sirica ordered it played as part of an effort to try to find out whether the taped recordings had been altered in any way. This tape was chosen because Rose Mary Woods, Nixon 's personal secretary, testified Monday she apparently ac- cidentally erased an 18-minute segment while transcribing it Oct. t She was on the witness stand as the tape was played. Miss Woods herself threaded the machine she used to transcribe the tape, pWlChed the play button and as newsmen and spectators leaned forward in their 1--'-<· eats, the President's voice was hear. -in the courtroom. The quality of the tape \Vas extremely poor -marred by a low hum and echoes in his Executive Office Building office, where the conversation took place. At first, only occasional words, irr ·eluding some profanity, could be heard as Ni.Ion discussed news conferences and other matters wilh. Ehrlichman. -Their words were obscured b y 'background noises including such things as a jet plane and the toot of a car horn. ~ Twenty minutes into the tape, the -> voices were replaced by a loud, penis· ~ te nt hum that sounded like an electric , razor or an outboard motor at trolling t speed. : -The hum diminished about four it minutes later to a lower pitch. It changed ,__.,.J>_ slightly in·pilch (our-minutes ·latel'", stop-- ped briefly after another three minutes UPI T.itplltle Airbonte ll' ACs The first women to enter Airborne jump school begin the course at an orientation session at the Army's Fort Benning, Ga. Privates Joyce Kutsch (front row. left) and Rita Johnson (right) join in a laugh al their instructor's antics. and. eventually returned to its original F c f c .hi~v~~ices were heard again, 18 \\ or ontenipt 0 ourt minutes later, Nixon was speaking with 1--,.---fu ldeman-and-eoold-be-heard-t.o.....£ay•------- "Either way, either way." A Newport Beach attorney who spent The President could also be heard the weekend in Orange County Jail \Viii at one point saying, "I work better have to go back there Jan. 7 if he when even I go to a place like that," does not produce evidence on a $52,900 •---and-at anothel"" point-be -asked-a -Whit~nsaction-repeatedly demanded by _House steward to bring him some con· Superior Court Judge Claude "'I. Owens. • somme. The angry judge sent Roland Stewart Miss Woods, who testified Nov. 18 Barcume 36 of 550 Newport Center that the quality of that particular tape Drive to' the 1jail on a contempt citation rwas "very bad" and that it took. her after ' Barcume failed 10 provide some 30 hours k» transcribe it, frequ~tly documents related to the will of a San shook her bead as the tape was playmg. Clemente resident who died in Capistrano : '.'You see .how difficult it is?" she Beach nearly four years ago. .said qul etly to one of the Watergate Widower Wilson Eugene Luther, 85, p~utors Will;> hc)vered over the J38 \V. EscaJones. named Barcume to ·~ ~~pting. to h~r.. administer his will shortly before he Smca listened with lit~le expression died June 25, 1970. in a Capistrano ·from the l>er!ch, but gr~nned broadly Beach convalescent hospital. wb~ the Preside~t broke mto a cheerful Luther, an active Christian Scientist, whistle at one point. -named the First Church of Christ Scien· Overall, the tape sounded much like . . ' .a short-wave radio broadcast _scratchy tis~, .1n Boston._ _M~ss.,. as .one of t~e .and with voices fading in and out. The pnnc1pal benehc1ar1.es 1n his 1.ast Wlll .voices were almost im?>ssible to un· and testa_ment ~h1ch was filed by ·derstand. Barcume m Superior Court. At one ?>int, Nixon could be heard Deputy County Counsel ~olm ~·l. Pat- maklng reference to )Jjs 1968 campaign agaillSl Sen. Hubert R. Humphrey (D- Minb.), but it was not clear what he was saying. 1be White House says that Nixon and Ehrlichman discussed nothing about Watergate during the June 20 meeting. Although Nixon and Haldeman, who met a few minutes later, did discuss .:watergate that day, apparently it is . that segment that was obliterated by the persistent hum. From Pagel DRILLING ... the time of the 1969 oil spill . He '1ld other state officials have con- tended state regulations at the time were stronger than those imposed by ,. the federal goyemment and that the Santa Barbara spill would not have OC· curred bad the well been drilled w>det" 1 the state's 19699 controls. . ' ' • ' ' ' ' • ~ , :: • • ' . ) • • The new require ments proposed today are even tougher, Flournoy said. DAILY PILOT 'TI1t1 °""" CMlt °"ll Y l"llOT, wltft Wlllc!I II qmblntd '"" H-Pren. " Plltllllhed "" the Ort• CO.II Pllblf1'11119 CQmlMlnr. S-. r.1'9 eiltlrlns tre pWllJl'led, MOlld1y 11\rougll f'rlfler. for eo.11 M111, Hl'flJIOrl llttt'fl. H1.1111111111011 ll11ell/l"auntt1n v.1._..,, lfllllfll 8Mdl, lrvin.1s..11111n.~k 11111 S11n Clt.....,te/ Sin JIUln ClpJ1tr111D. A 1lng11 flljlioN! tdllloll 11 pybl!J/led iltunl•r-end SilnO•Y1· Tiit prlnclpo1J Plfbllfllflll llllftl II 11 U) W"I ••r 5tl'HI, tot•• "'"'· C11t1orni., n1». Robert N. W1M Pl'ftidfftt 11111 l"\ID!lallll' J1ck It Cu,l1y Vlu Pr•ld..,I Ind o.n.t11 ~l'lllW Tho1n11 Ke•vil ...... Tlioflltt ;.., Murpltine M-.lnt IE'dlllf' Ch1rl11 H. loot 11Uttrd r. Ni ll Alllfltnr Mtnttlllf Eflllln s. a. ..... OMc. 105 N•rth El Ct1nh10 A1tl. t2•72 o..... ....... Cott• MeHr m *"'' ••• ,.,,.... '"""'°"' httli DU N-pen llY•lfll .... lrittefi a.ch: '"" •eKfl 9l\lll'v«tl U9lllll a.di: m t'-' ,._ , ........ 1714l '4Jo4JJ1 Cfw'11t4 Allwet11 .... '42·15,71 s.c-••..,.-• T•tr,eur 1 4fJo4420 C#r!"llM. Itta. Or1,.,. c:ornt ~11111119 ~-Ht -11ar1n, hlllttr•llllN. tflflN'flf _,,., .. ld'f'fl"!htmmts '*""' ., .. • ~ Wllflllll ..... , ,.,.. ... .. ., ~ ..... -..... .... dlll ...... ,. .. 11 Cotll ~ c.t1"'11i.. ~1111 '"" <Alrrltr UM IMl'lffl'r1 flt' '-",il IJ ~: mlllhry ...... 1111• llM •llllY. !._ _________ __. • I I Firm An,nounces Users A1isiveri11.g Cutback Pleas Spokesmen for San Diego Gas and Electric Company r~ported today that their initial appeals to customers for the reduction in power usage already appear to be \VOrking. In an announcement issued Mol).day , the fildes said operations reports show a decline in electrical usage despite the weather throughout the utility which serves San Diego Ciounty and the South Orange Coast. Energy use normally hits a peak late in the yea r as colder weather hits and darkness comes earlier. B~t reports from the utility say the increase is tapering off noHceably. Yet, the utility 's campaign to induce the usage of less power has scarce1y begun. When utility bills go out on Wednesday they' will be accompanied by an appeal from SDG and E executi ves for customers to curtail exce~ive use of energy. Besides appeals to the domestic customer of electricit y, the utility has plans to launch an all -out effort to show industrialists and -businessme n how to cut down on the use of power. A team of two-dozen co mp any representatives are in the field each day calling on n1ajor consunters in an effort to find areas wh ere electricity can be saved.-An estimated 830 major users are targeted in th e effort . Several v.•eeks ago Cal ifornia's utilities were ordered by the California Public Utilities Commission to cut back by 10 percent in power production. The utility has said it enjoys a better· than-average supply or fuel oil, but that cutbacks still are necessary because as the crisis worsens, it may have to share some of its fuel with less-fortunate utilities. The firm was dealt a setback recently, however, when the San Onofre Nuc1ear Generating Station wa s shut down because of problems with turbines. Because of that unforeseen problem, the plant will remaln Inoperative (or the next several months and fuel oil will have to take the place of nuclear power for that period. SDG and E holds a 24-percenl Interest In the plant. Southern Callfornia Edison Company retainJ the rest . J terson said Monday that the church became anxious after waiting several years for distribution of its p:irtion of the estate and called on lhe public administrator's office to look into the situation. . "At the heart of jllis Issue ls an alleged $52,900 claim on the estate which has been paid by Mr. Barcume," Pat· terson said. "But our problem is that he can't produce this creditor and he can't show us the canceled checks or receipts to support these transactions." Patterson said the $52,9CKI would have gone to the church if the claim that the court insists on investigating had not been paid by Barcume. '·Judge Owens has asked him several times to produce this evidence," Pat- terson said. "Barcume has told ~ that the evidence has been committed tG microfilm but we haven't setn that microfilm yet." ' • "Judge Owens made it very clear in our last court session that he ·was far from satisfied wilh Mr. Barcume's failure to comply with a court order," Patterson said. "He sent him to jail for the weekend and brought him back !\1onday to release him on his promise to appear Jan. Ii and produce the needed evidence at th at time." .,,. Court records indicate that the $52,900 questioned by Judge Owens involves a claim made on the Luther estate by a "Harris Robinson;" "But I don't thin k Judge Owens is going to be satisfied illltil he sees this creditor or sees documents substan· Hating that claim," Patterson said. "He has repeatedly pointed out to Mr. Barcume that this business has gone on for nearly four years now." Barcume could not be reached for comment on the Luther will. ·From Page I ENERGY ... · the United States has resources or its . own \\'hich it can develop lo meet its energy needs. But he added, "In the short trem , it's very difficult." The Arkansas Denlocrat said the bleak outlook applied even more-to Europe and Japan which are much more dependent on the Middle Ehst for fuel supplies. In other developmenls: -The President's top energy adviser, John A. Love, testified at a Senate hearing that higher prices -not more tax breaks -should be allowed to induce industry to find sources of energy the nation needs. -Interior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton, who previously i h d I c a t e d gasoline rationing was around the comer, said he now believes "there is a good chance" it will not be necessary. · -'The Baltimore Sue said among oddiUonal steps being considered to con· serve fuels of various types are a four· day school· week, reducing~weekday hours for gasoline saJes, a surtax on consumptlr>n of electRc powfr and clOJ.o lng national parks to private cara. -The Washington Star-News said an additional 10 percent cutback in gasoline supplies may .be Imposed In the nat . few weeks, above the 15 percent reduc- tioll announced by Nixon Sunday. -Budget Director Roy L. Ash said the economic damage from the energy crisis "won 't be as bad as some fear." Ile added that unemployment likely will rise "a bit, -but not as drastically as predicted" by some. r • l',....P .. el 'No Dealings' e!Cecl. . 1\Jcl<er Ald "f.-· than 10 piloll and -plane crewmen" will be "furlouglled" becoule ol llle.ftlll!l.l'ed®-_ ------ llom. But be aloo ml~.,. l!tlDI • Bl Ch ....... 1n-_....i...... , asts arges "Aa of-Dec. I, ..._wULbe_lurlouahlng_ -, some DeGDle, l!)Oltly the new employes . wtth row· lellktrity numbers," 1\Jcket AIRLINES. • • Donald Nixon said. '!be layoffs mean the «DJ119l"!!I will not be paid but will be at the By JOHN ZALLER on-ctwges of lll<OlllO tax evasion pencl- top of the priority ll!t for rehirlnt( If °' .. ,.,. ., .. ••• in.. ~ Meler the fuel sltuatlon eases. F. Donald Nixon, brothe.c. of lhe Presl---y,Th1s Is a nlatter Cor the court!, A public relations officer at the San dent, Monday branded as "absolute and 1 really don't think I should &aY Francisco headquarters of H u g b e s stupidity" charges that a former ac. anything," Nixon said. Ail"W<!St, the ~ jet lirlll1e "'""1g qualntance was being persecuted by the -Nixon did acknowledge however 1 that Orange County, said no cutbackl at Whitt Houae for re/using to break off be has known Meier "Cor yean • but all are anticlpaled until alter the first an aJ!ned business relatioosllip. tie declinecl lo state the nature of tl>clr of the year. Nl1lli, a Newport Beach resident , was relationship, except to say they never "We are not cutting back at all," responding to comment.s by the former had any ~lness dealings. said Larry Litchfield, Airwest pubUctty acquaintance Jon Meier who is being Nixoo also acknowledged thnt the olficer. 'jWe are operating our schedule charged with income tu evasion by Secret Service bas made v.·ire ta~ oo as IMOW1Ced fur fall and have no n,..t the U.S. J"'llce Department. his phone. to alter It through the holiday season. NlJ:on naUy denied lhat he had ever It WB.!t reported over the weekend We are already heavily booked!' had any business dealing! with Meler that Meier, who now lives in Brltlsh Lilcllfield said Alrwest bas suf!lc:lent who was an aide to bllllonalre Howard Columbia, was questioned rec<!IUy by fuel under the national allocation pro-Hughes W1lil 1969. Senate Watergate investlgaton who are gram to see It through until mid-January "l have known the man Cor '°me Interested In his relallOMhip with Dooald without adjustments. time" Nl:roo u.td ln a telephone In-Nixon and cash CQntributions made on "We are studying oome adjustment. tervleW, "but I have never had any Hughes' behalf throogh Presidential that would be made after that but to bus\ness dealings with him whatsoever!' aides. say now what they an: would be Meier, through his attorneys, had said Meler was fired by the Hughel premature," he said. he may call Donald Nlx<lll lo testify organizatioo In 1969. Alr Cal's Tucker said his airline Is Jn his trial. It has since been reported that the also taking steps to cut back co fuel Meler contends that the tax evasion action was taken because Me I er conswnptlon in~rugbt and on-the ground charges are a retribution from the White----Wsregarded--:White House -orders ~ to lzy choosing better routes and taxiing House for his refusal to break off his disassociate bimse!C fr001 Donald Nixon. les.! on the runway. relationship with the President's brother. "We are not going to sacrifice Jn addition to the charge of political passenger safety for sake cl. conserving motivation, Meler claimed that in.- fuel , however," Tucker said. formation that resulted in his indictment Tucker added that "Air Cal will "J?OSl originated from phone taps made by Frot11Pflflel likely" be able to handle the holiday the Secrel Service M F. Dooald Nixon. crowds but be said some passenger;s "People with federal charges against LAWSUIT. • • will have to, "gi"" a litlie J!!1 t~ them will try aoylblng," Nixon _ said. specific flight schedules to vanou.s "But this kind of defense is the most relatively minor injuries. points." stupid thing he (Meier) could do." Nixon declined to comment further Attorney Howard Harrison, of the San- ta Ana law firm of Rutan and Tucker defended the city In the eight-day Orengo County Superior Court trial. Anaheim Trucker Hurt in Crash From Page I A joey earlier Ibis month deliberated for only about I "1<f \!. lloUrs before ruling in favor of Chlef Coleman and PRIORITY • • • the city's lack of liability In the tragedy. Testimony In the caae Included the Of 3-Big-Rigs--food product. to shore lnstanations In fact that Chiel Coleman had C"onsurned -the -United-sta\ea -or--ita temtoriea-and--a-moderate· amount -of -alcob:>I whil~ in tt:ie operation of onboard equipment off-duty before being summoned to r-e- and gear." . spond to the fire. An Anaheim truck driver suffered a leg fracture and possible internal injuries this morning in tbe collision of three rigs traveling north OD tb~ San Diego Freeway through San Clemente. Arthur G. Spahr, 18, was at the wheel of one o{ the trucks when the collision occurred shortly before 7 a . m • , authorities said. The injured driver was taken by city ambulance tG San Clemente General Hospital, where be was admitted (or treatment. Specific details of the morning cram were not immediately available from the California Highway Patrol. Tue mishap occurred In the northbound Janes near the El Cimino Real overcrossing. A heavy-duty wrecker was required to remove some of the damaged macllinery, reports said. CUSD Concert Begins Thursday Tue opening performance In a concert series sponsored by the Capistrano Unified SCbool District will feature a 50-piece wind Oll!efDble from Cal State Long Beach Thursday evening at Dana Hills High SCbool. Three other free concerts will be of. fered during the current series as a community service. Each will begin at e p.m. In the school's little theater. Conductor of the initial concert will be Larry G. Curtis, director of bands from the university. Among the selections on ~ ~rograrn will be compositions by RosSIIU, Holst, Schuman and Copland. Priority also goes to "the operation Factors that oCfset that fact and of shoreside ·seafood processing in-were admi tted to evidence for the jury'a stallations in the United States and its consideration included the speed of the territories." other car -some estimates were up Those two priorities are to last SO to 80 miles per hour -and the fact days from Monday. except for com· it hurtled out of control as they a~ merciaJ fishing vessels ~esting yellow· proached on the curve. · fm tuna, which will Ill' placed in' the "No ooe cou1d have avoided that ac- priority system -next-Jan. 1 for ~ eident:'-' the-city's lawyer said in sum- duration of the harvesting ·season. ming up the jury's finding>. '!be regulaUoo bars allocation of He said be bas heard nothing on marine distillate fuel, lmless the seafood a possible appeal by the firm of Hurwitz, industry supply ii assured, too: Hurwitr and Remer, Mrs. Arbuckle's "Ships and any other marine craft lawyers. wl1ooe primary use is, or will be, of San Clemente's Cl!lel Coleman declined a recreational or pleasure nature. in· to comment on the trial. eluding bcttb private and commercial yacllu, cruise ships, sport fishing boat. and other pleasure craft, whether owner operated or cha.rtered. "Supplien o! marine fuels should furniah such fuels lo sucll end usen only where sucll furnishing will not com- promise the supply of the pre(erred end users," the regulation said. Sea Search Continues POINT MUGU (UPI) -Navy and Coast Guard aircraft and ships searched the Pacific today for a missing crewman after a Navy bellcopter crashed 20 miles southeast of here. Four crewmen were Southern Orange County WEEKLY BOX SCORE COMMUN ITY """" Lacr!,11\a 911<1'1 Sol.Ith Coa11 S1nt1 AM-tvtlln H1rbor Othet, Mt oultM te tflKHIC COMNHlt* Tot.I rohff to dcrte P'erc.911t of Goal S ltAllEO TO DATI I 4 212 ' 21,n1 2l,7,g 11 • .cu 2o..37J $77J,1t7 52% PlltCllNT 0, GOAL •U ff.• ••• ,.,, •1.1 Sll,,714 PRUDENT BUYING /) Throughout our 77 years of carpet retailing, one fact becomes-quite evident -'-that when money is less plentiful people buy better quality; Thi, is contrary to popular belief, but makes 11 good sense if you think about it. When you have to concern yourself with value and performance, you are likely to buy bitter-quality. At Alden's in the last three years, our per unit sale has been more expensive carpeting, reflecting this fact. Consequently, we have the l41rgest selection of finer qualities-.you will see anywhere, all et competitive prices. The end. result is customer satisfa-etion, pride and recommendations which provide our overwhelming source of new business • HOUIS: M& 1ln n.n., t le ~:JO ALOE.N'S CARPns • DRAPES '1663 PlacHtla An. COSTA MISA 646-4838• -Pit.:. 9 t9 9 -SAT. 9:JO le S ' ' ' ' • I I Tuesday's -CI o sing Prices ~ NEW YORK STQCK EXCHANGE I I ( t, • SC DAILY PILOT J_ff Year's High-Lows Appear Every Saturday Do'v Index Drops Anothe1· 7 Points NEW YORK (UPI) -Investors tu rned back two rally attempts Tuesday, leaving prices on the New York Stock Exchange lower in active trad1ng. The Dow Jones industrial avera~e seesawed during the session, and closed 7 .22 1>01nts lower at 817.73. Bargain hunting among blue chips ~amed the widely followed Index more than lour points ahead In the first hour. Those gains disappeared by nud-day, however, and at one point the Dow was more than 10 points lower . The market made a second rally Jater with buying encouraged by news the Cost of Living Council was stheduled to announce the decontrol of an industry to be named later in the day. \ American JO Most Active • 2fJ IJAIL. Y t'tLO I lutWay, Novtmbtr 27, l.'11) I, ------------ JOIN THE 'SELLERS C/flCLE' WE'RE .SAVING SPACE FOR ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ' If you sell a service and don't advertise in the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing business the hard way. The Service Directory (classifications 600-699 in the classified ad section daily J gives )'ou an advantage you get through no other adve rtisi ng medium . It re aches custome rs who are ready to buy. Be there when your prospects come into the market look ing for th e services you have to sell. If you r service isn't li steq, we'll start a category just for you. Pick up the phone right now and reserve your space in the "Sellers Circle" ..• Your Direct Line to Directory Results . .,. ' 642-5678 Cl!ASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT DAILY PILOT I • PUJILIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE TIMf FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD WE HONOR Master Charge and BankAmericanl THE DIRECT LINE 642-5678 ~UBIJC NOTICE l'llBUO NOTICE • • • PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE -· ' .. u. '' • ' l . I r • • ---. ... _____ -- --~- Laguna BeBeh Tr-~~ 's Final VOL. i>6, NO. 331, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1973 TEN CENTS Laguna ~chools Tell 10 Gasoline Cut Goal A plan to cut daily fuel consumption for student transpartation by 10 percent will be outlined Thursday lo principals of Laguna Beach schools. The proposal calls for modification o: bus routes to trim 115 miles off the l,000 miles covered daily by the l2·bus nect. . In some instances, ·students would have to walk farther to bus stops. The greatest fuel saver suggested in the proposal is discontinuing the practice. of turning buses around at the Laguna Lakes, one mile beyond the intersection of Laguna Canyon and El Toro roads. The turn around point· has been used by buses delivering students to stops in Laguna Canyon beyond the bus terminal at 2003 Laguna Can)ron Road. The proposal was prepared ,by Ray ore Lawson, director of maintenance, opera- tions and transportation for the school district and Richard Jones, transporta- tion foreman. Other suggestions include cuts of bus service for fi eld trips and athletic func- . tions. The fuel saving proposal comes in direct reponse to restrictive diesel fuel and gasoline allocations established by It~s Lights Out Priorities Laguna to be Decorat.ed Anyway For Boat 0t11Y 'not '''" ,..,... LAGUNA DECORATED lance Ishmael W ASIIlNGTON (AP) -The O!fice of Petrolewn Allocation ordered sales Monda)'. of marine distillate fuels on a-priOMty basis to boats s re installations harvesting and processing fish and seafood. The order pennits the sale of marine distillate fuels to pleasure vessels - incl~g lhose operated commercially -only if adequate supplies remain after meeting the needs of commercial fiabipg-l>Oai. ~ P""""'""-""' The marine oils and other "middJe disUDate" oUS bove been under a federal . allocation program controlling th.et wholesale distribution. But lhe program previously assigned no pfeferenc'3 among the final con- sumers Of tnarine oll. The regu]alion, effective immediately, orders priority supply to "commercial fishing vessels of American ownership, . registry, or operation engaged in the harvesting and transpartalion of marine • (See PRIORITY, Page I) Lag~a Outreach Drug Program Site Criticized 4 ' the federal government. This month's allocation for fuel in- cludes 2,400 gallons of gasoline and 1,240 gallons of diesel oil. The 3,640 gallons of fue1 allocated for November falls about 400 gallons short of what the district expects to use. The ditference will be made up with fuel stockpiled during summer vacation . • . " r1 Hardest hit ln the fu el crisis ls the district's allocation of diesel fuel which th is month is down 600 gallons from a year ago. The gap has been closed by sending gasoline powered buses on athletics- related trips and field trips, since gasoline is in greater supply than diesel fuel. "Actually, we're not hw1ing too bad Dmllr Pll1t Slltf l'tlotl An Unplanned Stop Bicyclist Bruce B. Morton lies on the ground after suffering,a broken finger when he rode down the steep 3rd Street hill in Laguna Beach and smacked into the rear of a car stopped at·the bottom of the Ifill. Morton, 14, resides at 717 Summit Drive. The driver of the car, Ber- nard R. Worsnop. 46, of 980 Catalina St., was waiting for a pedestrian when the accident occurred. Sauna Ordeal Sparked Promiscuity--Lawyer parents Y.'ho observed every tenet of the faith. "She went lo her husband as a virgin at the .age of 21 ," Lewis said. "And on every date she ever had before she married Bud Parson, she had an escort who invariably frowned U she touched a boy's hand." Lewis said Mrs. Parson took. refuge in sexual fant.asles that were enhanced by the fact that she often heard the lovemaking of her parents-11canied on behind a paper thin wall." He . said Mrs. Parson, one of eight children born to a couple who fled 1 from Mexico at the height of Pancho (See PARSON, Page !) , yet," said Lawson. He predicted the situation will worsen by Feb1'1Jar y, however. One plus factor for the district. he said, is that ~nly six buses run on diesel, while another six buses. a minibus and 21 other tnicks. cars and tractors are pa\vered by gasoline. "You take a district where all the buses are running on diesel and you'll find they're really hurling," Lawson said. State Panel Asks Stop On Halt SACRAMENTO (AP) -Stale experts recmunended today thai California lift its S-year-old moratorium on offshore oil drilling. The.State Lands Commission~will vote on the recommendation following a hear~. ing Dec. 11, said State Controller Houston I. Flournoy, the commission chainnan. The recommendation came from the Stale Lands .DiVision after extensive hearings into current environmental safeguards against the prospect of major oil spills such as the one in the Santa Bart>ara Channel that led 10 the ban in J anbary 19119. The spill O<CWTed In a well being drilled on a federal lease outside the state-controlled-three-mile limit. Flournoy said the stale experts recom· mended a resumption of drilling only oo. existing state leases and only from existing offshore drilling platfonns. That would provide a potential of 50 to 60 new wells which could be in full production within nine months, Flournoy said. -- ·He said those wells could tap estimated reserves of 200 million to 300 million barrebs of badJr needed crude oil. Flournoy said he is convinced that the tough-new drilling standards-pnr ... posed by the division will provide an adequate safeguard against any potential disaster. "The wells can be drilled safely with maximum protection for t b· e en--.. virooment," he said. He emphasized that the decision to consider a resumption of drilling now was not hastened by the increasing energ1 crisis. "It comes at a time when the oil is needed, primarily by coincidence," he said. The other two members of the com- mission are LI. Gov. Ed Reinecke, chainnan of the state's Ener.gy Policy Council, and finance director Verne Orr. Reinecke bas said he is prepai'ed to vote for a resumption o! drilling on state leases when he is convinced it can be done with maximum safety. Flournoy declined today to say how he would vote on the proposal. But he said the staff "has made a strong case !or the resumption of drilling." He said there is no question that the oil industry has sophisticated new equipment that was not available at the time of the 1969 oil spill. He and other state officials have con· ~See DRILLING, Page !) Orange Coast Weathe r Fair through Wednesday with sWUly days and slightly wanner afternoons is the way the weather service sees it. Highs at the beach- es in the upper 60s rising to the low 1'0s inland. Overnight lows in lhe upper40s . MIYl•s ,. N Mlil!Jal ~lllllb 17 N)tf~I ,._. 4, ll Or•~-C9"tY I SY1Yi• ,..,,... 11 S,.ortt 1•11 Sloc:ll M•rt;"-\ .. It Ttll'VhlOll lJ Tl!t•!wt It w .. l'Mr 4 w~ N.-. f>1 4 w.,.i. ...,.. 4.1f ' -------........ ,. T11tsd1Y, NOVtmbtr 27, 1973 'No Dealings' Donald N·ixon · Blasts Charges By JOHN ZAl,LER 01 "'-Dilllr l"llOI S!ttf F. Donald Nixon, brother of the Presi- dent , r-.1onday branded as "absolute stupidity" charges that a former ac- quaintance was being persecuted by the White House for refusing to break off an alleged business relationship. Nixon, a Newport Beach resident, was responding to cornm~nls by the former acquaintance Jon Meier who is being charged with income tax evasion by the U.S. Justice Department. Nixon flatly denied that he had ever bad any business dealings with Meier General Plan who was an aide to billionaire Howard Hughes untll 1969. "I have known the man for some time" Nixon said In a telephone in- terview, "but I have never had any business dealings with him what.soever.'' Meier, through hls attorneys, had said he may call Donald Nixon to testify In his trial. Meier contends that the tax evasion charges are a retribution from the White House for bis refusal to break off his relationship with the President's brother. In addition to the charge of political motivalion, Meler claimed that in- formation that resulted in his indictment originated from phone taps made by the Secret Service on F. Donald Nixon. ~eople with _federal ~barges against them will try anything," Nixon said. "But this kind of defense is the most est Gets stupid thing be (Meier) c:ould do." Nixon declined to comment further !------'"-----------«Lcha!:g~eJouyasion..J!!!Jl!· Re Week's Dela-y in~.~~mr, ~eie~auer ror the courts. and I really don't think I should say anything," Nixon said. A request to erpand. the Laguna Beach Nixon did acknowledge however, Uiat I he has known Meier "for years" but General Plan to cover social needs o -he -declined to state the nature of their the community was put off for one relationship, except to say they never week Monday night by a split vote bad any business dealings. of the planning commission. Nixon also acknowledged that the The social needs element 'which would Secret Service has made wire taps on deal with ways of imp~ving health, his phone. welfare and other community problems, It w~ .reported ove~ the . wee~e_nd was requested by the Laguna Beach that 1i1~1er, who ~ lives m Bnhsh 'Ruman Needs Advisory Board. Colwnb1a, was question.ed recently by Commissioner Sally Bellevue cast the ~te Wa_te~ate in~estlgator~ who are only vote against a motion to place m~erested m hl.S relatt~p with Donald . the entire matter at next Monday's N1.1on ~d cash contrtbutlon.s ~de on : stury session. She urgoo the commlssloo Hughes behali through Prestdenllal to move ahead and appoint a committee a.1des. .. to begin work on the element. Mei~r . w~ rtred by the Hughes • Jack McDowell, commission vice orgaruzatlon m 1969. chairman, requested the study session I~ bu since been reported that the to allow for a complete presentation a~~ was ta~en because M e 1 e r from the Human Needs Advisory Board ~sreg~ed. White House oroei:s to On what the element would cover. disassociate himself frcm Dona1d Nixon. McDowell said he was "not sure" whether the element should be in- corporated into the general plan, which .has dealt strictly with land use in the past. McDowell noted that a social needs element was not required under state Jaws governing general plans and that it might be delayed until other required elements are finished. _ Leslie Bell, a member ol the Human 'Needs Advisory Boazd, said the group would be more than willing to present a full presentation to commissioners. Frowt Page I ,OUTREACH. • • Drive, said the 24-hour hotline and some follow up counseling might be tolerable. "The question-is how much follow up oounseling," he said. ' Jones particularly objected to future 1plans by Outreach to _establish a radio- dispatchcd vehicle to bring aid to crisis Victims. "A two-way radio van racing up and down the slreet is highly objectionable,'' Jones said. Dorothy Joyce, founder of the rtligious -coun9eling program, admitted pest ac- tivities have caused problems. "There are no longer church meetings and no longer. a parking. problem. J!ut . we feel it is necessary to continue counseling. There will be no traffic jams · and no disturbances." "It seems God wants us to stay there. : And I'm not going to argue with him," said Mrs. Joyce. Commlssloner Sally Bellerue said sbe . was "sympathetic" with the Outreach • program, but that "the cmter in a residential wne is just too intense." "We have to listen to the neighborhood and the property owners," she concluded. Following brief d f s c u s s i o n, com- missioners unanimously actepted a mo- tion by MJchael May to deny the use. Commissioner Larry Campbell sug- gested Outreach officials attempt to relocate their center in a commercial area of the city. OIAN•I COAST .. DAILY PILOT TM Or .... C:O..t DAILY "ILOT, W11t1 wfllch I•~ fl'lt ,.__,.,...., Is Mllllled !rt' tilt' Ore""" CO.sf P~lltlllnt Cllfl'llllfflY, ._.. ,.M: 91111'-" ,,. JIUblll'*I, Molw:lt't lllrouth 'rider. fllr eo.11 M.,., N9WllOl1 IMdl, Hunlll'll'IOrl " Btacl'l/,-°'l"ltln Vtllty, l...-.. lludl, lrvl111/!.edd1Mc1r. lllld S.n Cr.m.ntf/ S.11 Ju.n C"tpl•lr.,._ A 1lfllft "'lloMI ..inion 11 1111~11~ ,.,.,.....,. ...., hnffl~ rhtl pr1rKip.1 Mlltlllne f'IMI .. •t ~ W'ttt Bty $1rMI, C..tt M-, C.~, f'H.M. lob.rt N. W•ff Prtsi..tl •1111 l"ubl"""' J•1k II., Cv,1,., Vic. l",_llttM ..... G.Mrtt M-.... Tho"'•• 1e ..... 11 EllllOI' lliOl'l•I A. Mur,Jii111 MMatlnt l"tv Clt•rl11 H. Loot ltkhtrd P. Nill Aatltlt nt MtMflrll Edllon L...-..... Oflfko 222 · Fo r•tf "'"'•nv1 11t•lli111 All!,,,, .. r.o .... "'· tZ6sz ...... _ School District Weighs Moulton Plans Tonight Trustees or the C.pistrano Unilioo School District bave calloo a special meeting tonight for a complete eva1ua· lion ol the lnltial master plan ol develop- ment !or the Mou!tOn Ranch. 'Jbe 7:30 sessiou at school dlstrlct headquarters will deal with the ultimate development plans for the 14,000 acres of the ranch. About half that acreage lies within the 158-square--mile di.slrlct. The session ls being held in conjunction with a session of the. district's new Growth Plan Advisory-O>mmittee which recently was empaneled to study the effects of major increases in residentlal and commercial development in the city. Besides the CUSD, other district. al- fectoo by the Moulton Ranch develor>- ment are the Laguna and Saddleback Unified School Districts. The approximate boundaries of the massive acreage are El Toro Road, Laguna Canyon Road and Crown Valley Parkway. From Pagel PARSON ••• Villa's revolution, had seven children herself after an almost disastrous start to her own marriage. "She and Mr. Parson had their prob- lems and on one occasion she flied divorce because of his sexual relation-- ships with other women," Lewis asserted. "But they worked things out after those early years and went on to raise their family and enjoy a happy se1Ual relationship Until the tragedy that oc- curred in the sauna room." Rummage Sale At Dana School Dana Hills High School's P Teacher-Student Association will hold rummage sale to raise cash for student related ·ieaming materials Friday an Silturday. Donations still are needed. Spokesmen for the event said anyon" with articles suitable for the sale muld call 493--4.268 or 496-2984 to arrange for pickups. '!be sale will be held from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Friday and from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday. The event will be in the Laguna Niguel O>mmunity Center. . Hospiudity Day in Laguna CMY ~l »I W.11 lrflir.tt .......,. 9-fl1 am,...........,._,....,.. ,...,,.,""""' hecll; 1117J ... di IOulrHflll IM-tltfMni.1 AS Nomi tEI C.mlroo t •I ........ (7141 '42-tJ11 .. M MW ........... 6424•71 L..-. .._. Al D1,a1 1*1 Hospitality .Day will be held by Laguna Beach merchants in the Forest Avenue _ Mall from I to 4 p.m. Sunday at the shopping, complex. Businessmen from the ts shops at the mall locatoo at 132 Forest A.....,., Le- guna Beach will proeent a holiday &!ft preview show. ,,.., •••• 4ff.t466 '-""'""'· ,,,.. Or•• C:0.11 .._.llMllt ~-W. -110ri..,, Fll\lltrtl!Mt, ........ 1 _,.., ., 411h'"1"-b IMrMI .,.., .. ••:••* wl"*1I ........... .......... tf '*""""" -· ~ dH9 ........... Ill Clllt MIM, ""--~-.,. ~ .... '"""""'f llJr -JI S;) IJ -'lllri MllfWY ........... WM fNl'llM~. Relresllmenll will be 1ervoo by members ol the mall wociatlon and Laguna designer Romeo Reyna will display the special decor1tlonl be baa turtled out !or the quaint mall. OTHER LATIN AMERICAN REGIONS 3" . ---~ -----·-- AFRICA ''" . , .... .. MIDDLE EAST s 3" ... 1_ .. ·:·· .. · ... . . . . " . -" .. i ., .. . ....... • ---- • f'relll' P.,,e I ENERGY •• ,,.. made in movtna toward in>- plemtntatlon ol a U.N. Security Council r,..lutlon lllat 'llded the I~ war and provldod !or withdrawal by Israel from c:onquerod Arab llnila. lt lllo establlJhed A recognition ol the need for · .....-. borders by Israel. Fulbright said that In the long term, the Unitod States has resources ol II! own whlch lt can develop Jo meet tts energy needs. . But he addoo, "In the short trem, it's very dirflcult." The Arkansas Democrat aald the bleet outlook applied even more to Europe and Japan which.. are much ··man dependent on the Mlddie E..,t !or fuel supplies. In other developments: • KNOWN OIL RESERVES ·:: .. ;.: ... -The President's top energy adviser, John A. Love, testified at a Senate hearing that higher prices -not mere tax breaks -should be allowed to induce industry to find sources of energy the nation needs. -Interior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton, who previously ind I cat e d gasoline raUoning was around the corner, said he now believe! "there is a good chance" it will not be necessary . . -. . -: .. . . . .... . .· .· . . . Black Power -The Baltimore Sun said among additional steps being considered to con- serve fuels of various types are a four. day school week, reducing weekday hours for gasoline sales, a surtax on Corisumption of electric power and clOl-- ing national parks to private cars. Map shows location of world oil reserves with the Middle East holding 53 percent of the precious supply. Neighboring Africa has the second highest more than Russia and all other Communist countries. -The Washington Star-News said an additional 10 percent cutback in gasoline supplle!i may be im~ in the next few weeks, above the IS percent redut· ti on announced by Nixon Sunday. From Page I San Juan Moratorium PRIORITY -Budget Director Roy L. Ash said the economic damage from the energy eris.is "won't be as bad as some fear." He added that unemployment likely will rise "a bit, but not as drastically as predicted" by some~ • • • On Growth Cwars Test food products to shore install~tions in the United States or Its territories and in the operation of onboard equipment and gear." -Sen. Abraham A. Ribicoff (0-Conn . J, introduced legislation today to set up an Energy Research and Development Administration to develop technologies for use of fossil, nuclear and advanced energy sources, and a nuclear energy commission to regulate all energy ac- tivity in the nuclear field. By JOHN VALTERZA Of n. IM!t'I' Pllef ltatf A proposal by San Juan Capistraco City ColDlcilman James Thorpe for a total moratoriwn on any new growth in the city because of the energy crisis passed ill first test before his peers Monday. Councilmen agr.00 unanimously to schedule a full examination of 'Iborpe's suggestion for a total freeze on city growth at their next session, Monday. If the new moratorium were to take effect, It would mark the second time that a full-blown llhuldown ol con- struction In the city bu been imposed by the c:ouncil 'lbo<pe stressed that his larest SUS· gestions were extremely Important because the city of late Is being calloo upon .to drutieally improve 1treell and wtall street lighting. "This means that In order tO serve any new peOple who come to the city we have to rob power and -services from peopte whO are iliei<lf bert," he said. In a second suggestion, 'lbo<pe askoo for the fonnation of an emergency COQl· mittee to study the problem ol local growth and its drain on energy resources. '!be Saddlebl<ck College Instructor warned that as new bow:es are built In San Juan more and more people will be lured into a life of commuting to work. "'!be trend In Southern California these days is to rearrange the populatlon and that is simply dangerous," be added. CUSD Concert - Begins Thursday The openJng performance In a concert series sponsored by the Capistrano Unified School District will feature a SO-piece wind ensemble from Cal State Long Beach Thursday evening at Dana Hill! High School. Three other free concerts will be of· feted during the current series as a community service. Each will begin al 8 p.m. in the scllooi'1 little theater. Conductor of the initial concert will be Larry G. Curtis, director of bands from the university. ' Among the selections on the program will be compositions by Rossini, Holst, Schuman and Copland. • Laguna Teacher Joins Committee Betty Davis, business lmtructor at Laguna Beach High School, h,. been appointed to a committee on ac· cred.itation for San Marino High SChool. Mrs. Davis will be visiting the San Gabriel Valley school for three days ln March. The accreditaUon oommlttee will aplore strengths and weaknesses or the school. A Laguna Beach High School teacher ls selected for the accreditation com· mittee each year. Others who have serv- oo In the past include Dr. Donald Haught, 'lborpe'a suggestion brought no serious reservations from Other councllmen - an of whom have faced moratoriums before and who have endbrsed them under dlfferent circur.1stances. 'Ibo laat freeze took place early In the year during a period when the city planning staff amounted to a skeleton "crew" of one man. "I don't take issue with your sug· gestion, but I'm j1.nt not ready to make a decision tonight," sakl Councilman James Weathers. During the coming week city staff will make Initial studi<s OD the im- mediate growth proopeda lacin& the city. Board Merphers To Be Elected In Laguna Beach. Members of the Laguna Men's Club will select five board members during the annual meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Bridge Hall at Glermeyre street and St. AM'• Drive, Laguna Beach. Entertainment for the meeting includes the talk "Fitness for Busy People" by Ralph Sl)ow, football coach and athlete. Snow explains the aging process, and demonstrates a fitness program which may be done in 10 minutes a da y. Further entertainment l n c I u d es "Musical Souvenirs" an offering of Broadway hits and novelty nwnbera by the trio of Herta Fitter, 10prano; Albert M. Devroye, violin; and Robbie Joe Schellenbach, piano. Retiring dtrr<:to"' of the men's club are Beb Hastfilg, Irving Johnson, Merle Loder, Joe Primevera and Fred ~oan. Final plans for the Christmas party at the Alrporter Inn Dec. 11 will be aMounced by Dr. M. E. Jacot>,,on. ~ Priority a1'o goes to "the operation of shoreside seafood proCessing i!J· stallations in the United States and its territories." Those two priorities are to last 60 days from Monday, except for com- mercial fishing vessels harvesting yel!Qw- !in tWla, which will be placed in the priority system next Jan. I for the duration of the harvesting season. The regulation bars allocation of marine d1'tillate fuel, unless the seafood indu.my supply is assured, too: "Sblps 8Dd any olher marine craft ..-primary use Is, or will be, of a recreational or pleasure nature, in- clllling both private and commercial yacht!, cruise llbipo, sport fishing boat! and other plea.sure craft, whether owner operated or chartered. "Supptim of marine fuels should furn!.lh such lue)11 to SUC!L eod use.rs only where such furnishing will not com· promise the supply of the preferred end usen," the regulation said. ~aguna City Hall · Offices Switclied There have been some changes made in Laguna Beach City Hall. The offices of City Clerk Dorothy Muslelt and the City Council Aide Jacklo Washburn have been switched to give the clerk more working room. The city recreation department and the Laguna police oerectives have moved . inlo a leased bulldlng at 5111 Glenneyre St. which formerly housed the city's main post office. LUeguard5 have de!*riod the ocean- front old Beys' Club lacillly, and movoo into the Main Beach tower. Ch.let Lifeguard Skip Conner also has an office at the Glenneyre Stree t "City Hall, South." Southern Orange County WEEKLY BOX SCORE COMMUNJTY O•-Ltg-8Mtll South Coils! leflll AM·T11t11n H•rbor Otfl;er, ............ ""tftc COIHmllf4" TeNI rol .... to den Pore• ef •oa1 -t •AISID TO DATI ' 40.212 "·"' 23.150 11,ru "'·'" $77J,lt7 12 y. Pl•CINT OP OOAL .... .... ~.• 2•.t 41.7 $316,714 PRUDENT BUYING Throughout our 77 years of carpet retailing, one fact becomes quite evident -that when money is less plentiful people buy better quality. This is contrary to popular belief, but ma~es a good sense if you think about it. When you ha~.e to concern yoursel.f with value and performance, ydu are likely to buy bitter qaallty. . At Alden's in the last three years, our per unit sale has been more e"pensive carpeting, reflecting this fact . Consequently, we have the largest selecti~~ of ~ner qualities you will see anywhere, all at comP.et1t1ve prices. '• ihe end result is custO'mer satisfaction, pride and recommendations which provide our overwhelming source of new business. ' • Don Mllltt, Richard Holllster, Charles Roiclr,Olarles SchllilelerMJartdtd-ffliaah\ltln3'-+tl------:c---~=----------J. LDEN' J'rom P .. e J ·' DRILLING ••• ' tend<d 1tate regulations at th• time wer• stronger than those lmposoo by the federal government and tbat the Santa Barbal'll spill woold not have oc- curred hacf the weH been drllloo under the state's 11199 controls. • The .... requirements Npr-~-IXlday are eve> loulber, Flournoy uld. . . - CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentlo Ave. COSTA M!SA • 64'"4838 • HOUU: M& 1ft ,..._ t le l :M -PIL. t le t -SAT. t :JO le I --------.. --. Saddlehae.k ' \_Joday's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 331, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORA~GE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1973 TEN CENTS -She Lo.,es Her Kitties,;.·-All 30\ol Then1 By JAN WORTH Of tftt Dal"' Plllt lllrt ' "I love these kitties. Anyone can see that I'm giving them a home." Mn. Sandra Huffman of El Toro said sbe would starve. to feed her ,.cats. She deCllnes to say how many cats she has. Neighbors estimate 30, and In one two-week period, they trapped 21 felines. Mrs. Huffman , 36, of 24172 Ankerton Drive, goes to court Thursday because Don Nixon Denies Hughes Deal By JOHN ZALLE R Of ""' OlllY ~, ... lllff F. Donald Nixon, brolher of the Presi- dent , Monday branded as "absolute stupidity" charges that a fonner ac- quaintance was being persecuted by the WhHe House for refusing to break off an alleged business relationship. Nixon, a Newport Beach r~sident, was responding to comments by the fonner acquaintance Jon Meier who is being charged with income tax evasion by the U.S. Justice Department. Nixon flatly denied that he had ever had any business dealings with Meier who was an aide to billionaire Howard Hughes until 1969. "I have known the man for some time" Nil:on said in a telephone in- terview, 0 but I have never bad any bu.!ines.! dealings with him whatsoever." Meier, through his attorneys, had said he may call Dona1d Nixon to testify In his trial Meier oontends that the tax evasion cbargea a.re a retributloo from the While House for hiJ refusal to break off hiJ relaUonshlp with the ·""91dent's brother. In addition to the charge of poliUcai motivation, Meier claimed that in- ·rormation that resulted in his indictmellt originated from phone· taps maae by the Secret Service on F. Donald Nixon . "People with federal charges against them wlll try anything," Nixon said. "But this 'kind of defense ls the most (See DON NIXON, Page Z) . Irvine Reveals $37,350 Spent On Ranch Park The city of Irvine has spfnt 137.350 to date to correct deficiencies in the Ranch Park. Community Services Direc- tor Paul Brady said today . The improvements correct conditions in the park which resulted from county park devel-ent standards. When the par kwas fin! designed and developed , the Ranch tract w:as under the oontrol of county supervisors and planners. . Since incorporation, city government has attempted to improve problems ranging from dangerous lighting systems to poor drainage in grass areas. Brady said since October of 197'2, the city has replaeed 31,000 square feet of sod turf, installed .a bulletin and rules sign board, replaced buried faulty wiring and authorized' replacement of the entire walkway lighting system. ;Completion of the lighting replacement In the seven .. cre perk, Brady said, '1rest.s with ·, the public w o r k s !See RANCH, Pa1e I) Oruge on Halloween nJght, Orange County Sherlfrs deputies broke Into her home after being called by neighbors who complained of the alleged odor around the Huffman houre. · Mrs. Huffman was scheduled to be arral~ed ~n !1 oomJ?laint alleging that the cats were creaUng a public" nwsanee. The district attorney alleges that the nuisance consists of "an extremely nauseous odor." Deputies broke in asser ted.ly because they feared someone was dead Jn the house. Since the break-in, Mrs. Huf'finan has posted a sign reading, "Anyone intruding upon my borne either outside or inside will be subject to a lawsuit or punished severely." Q>unty ordinance permits the keeping of · three· ·adult ·cats lrr a home. However, any number of kittens may be kept. Neighbors complain about the smell, and the noise and destruction done by the felines. .. Ready tor Competition . . Flutist Paula Hill, 14, of Mission Viejo High School, is shown at re- cent Santa Ana Winds competition for 34 community and school bands in Santa Ana. Mission Viejo's band took a third place in its division. There were about 3,500 persons competing . ~~~~-~-- Sauna Ordeal Sparked Pro mis.cuity--Lawye_r By TOM BARLEY jection known as "Betty." · 01 1tM oa11Y , ... , s11H Lewis said Mrs. Parson's adoption of Maria Parson'4 lawyer today alleged multiple personalities led Maria to em· before an Orange C.Ounty Superior. Court bark on a series of sexual adventures jury that bis clieut's ordeal in the sauna that often led her to seek mates in room of an Orange health spa unleashed local bars. a promiscuity that bad its origin in He told the jury that Betty bitterly childhood sexual fantasies. · regretted Maria's actions but neither San Francisco Attorney Marvin Lewis personality, nor the third personality Sr. told the jury of nine wofuen and which was Mrs. Parson's true sell, could three men in Judge William MUJ.'.T~Y'S take full control. courtroom that Mrs. Parson, 49, was Lewis said those sexual longings and a "sexually exciting" woman who ~d fantasies were built up as the direct to repress all such thoughts before ber ·result of Mrs. Parson's st rict Roman · e Catholic upbringing in the home of marr1ag . , . Lewis asserted hi s re<f.haired client parents who observed every tenet of was on "the brink of a precipice" in the· faith. psychiatric terms four years ago when "She went to her husband as a virgin she] f'!lllld " herieif )IJlabie, to .open,,the al the .age of 21," Le,wis said. "And door 'of the ' Sf1Ul18 r6om and · unable\ on everx date she ever had before to immediately att'ract · the attemioD •Of ' she married Bud Parson, she had an the start. ·' escort. who invariably frowned if abe '!be resulting trauma, he told the touched a boy's hand." jury In his opening statement, brought Lewis aatd Mrs. Parson took refuge' into the open the loving character known in sexual fantasies that were enhanced as "Maria'' and -the remorseful p~ by the fact that she often hea rd the · lovemaking of bet parents 0 carried on , behihd a paper thin wall." W•ath•r lrvm' e Resumes He said Mrs. Parson , one of eight ""' ""' cbildren born to a couple who fled Fair . through Wedneaday with from Mexioo at the height of P8"cbo sunny days and slightly wanner R ff • Villa's revolution, had seven children aftenwons ls the way the -ther ezon_ e ea. nne: he~! alter an almost disastrous start I t m.i.. t th bea"h.. v to her'own marriage. aerv co sees t • ....-a 'l.J -"<"-· 'A", .''Siie llMI Mr. Parson had their prob-" -.. in the upper 60s ~Ing 1o the On T1irtle .nock 1em:s and .. one occasion she med low 7111 inland. Overnight lows in , , divorce because of his sexual reiaUon- the upper 408. Irvine city councilmen tonight will ships with other women,'' Lewis ._...rted. resume public bearing on the J,400-acre "But they worked things out after INSmE TODA•Y Turtle Rock Village rezoning. those early years and went on to raise Elltabtth Tau16r, who bu lior COuncllnien meet at 7::l0 in Univenity their family and enjoy a happy sexual Olllll count lia.t hod •VTQ•111 30 HJ1h Scbool, 4771 Campu; Drive, Turtle relationship untli the tragedy tbat oc--tl,.., a!ld-!!hol-W•~•"'-f--lloCIC .. --------~--curred..in.tbu&una..l'.OOm.:__ denth our «mts,''"wiU undergo The heoring is a continuation ol the · Lewls Js seelting II million in damages abdominal '1urQ•TV al UCLA Irvine Compolly 's appeei of a planning !0< MrS-P-MSOn. He said he will put W ed .. sday. Storv, PO{le $. commilSlon denial of the zooe plan. his client and most ol her seven children • . ' Commiasionen deadlocked 3 to I ov~r ages 26 through 10 on the stand in the resonlng last month. what is expected to he a lour-week At Issue art concerns about dO!llity trial. ,- open •poce, traffic circulation ;;d He told ihe jury sworn in tnday that pr ... rvatton of hllisid<S. · Ma ria Paraon before ber entrapment The mone plan submiited by the in the sauna was .... devout Catholic Irvine Company increases the •tu ol mother who gave most of hlr time the vll11,.,,adj!I up to 4,llOO more people to the Boy Scout and Catholic Youth and canaervea 321 aett1 ol natural movements and PTA and who ralaed open ill>oof. ~ lamtly in'a strict Catholic manner." • , • • When they run free , t.he cats get Huffman express similar irritation. into tra!h bins , climb on roofs and "On hot days, the smell of cat urine weren't bothered so much by the odor as by the intrusion of cats onto their property. affect lhose with allergies, said William Is one of the worst smells Imaginable," "The cats ruined my grandson's sandbox, said Mrs. Waldo Peters. Hicks, whose kitchen window faces Mrs. said Ray Bloxom, the neighbor. Huffman's garage. Mrs. Hicks is allergic "We couldn't leave our car doors or Since the deputi es broke in on Hallo- ween night, Mrs. Huffman has attempted to kefp the cats inside and has eliminated much o( lhe odor. to cats. . windows open because the cats would !1icks said he and his family have get inside . When they're in beat, they to ·eat 1heir · meals on the far ·· side · .fight ·all night," he said. of the house because they can't stand "What really slarted it all was when "Nobody's alter her," Bloxom said. Mrs. Huffman on the other hand claims her neighbors are out to get her and brutalize her cats . the smell coming through the kitchen the animals crushed our petunias,'' Blox- window. om added. Neighbors M the other side of Mrs. Across the street, neighbors said they 'Medical Horrors' Pill-popping Surgeon Guilt y SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A surgeon who admitted perfonnlng at least 36 winecessary back operatioM and a OOspital were ordered today to pay a fonner patient dying of cancer $3.7 million damages in a case the judge described as a "grand Guignol of medical horrors." The decision was returned against Dr. John G. Nork, who has 25 additional ma1practice cases pending against him, and Mercy Hospital. Nork testified during his trial that from 1963 to 1970 be was addicted to "uppers and downers." The court decision said that Nark admitted "tbat the drugs rendered him incompetent, and that they caused him lo treat patients improperly." Nork, under investigation by the State Board of Medical Examlhe.rs, and the hospital were ordered to pay Albert Gonzales, 32, compensatory dama ges of $1.7 million and punitive damages of f2 million. Gonzales, a groCery clerk, charged that surgery perfonned by Nork in 1961 was wmecessary and that the emo- tional reaction and pain caused triggered the terminal cancer. His attorneys said he had but three years to live. In issuing his 196-page decision, Superior C.ou.rt. Jud ge B. Abbott Goldberg said, "This case was a five-month horror. This court was a grand Guignol of. medical horrors." Eighty-five persons testified during the trial, many of them for. ~r patients (See SURGEON, Page 2) • Drilling Ban Lift Asked Experts Urge Ending Moratorium 01i Offshore Oil SACRAMENTO (AP) -State ezperts -====*" tocla that "·"'-'· lift -'~· y ~ ......... _ its_ S-year-old moratorium on offshore oil 1rilllll&. _ The State Lands Comrilisolon will wte · on the recommendation following a hear- ing Dec .• II, said State Controller Houston I. Flournoy, the commission chairman. '!be l'<COIIllDendattm came from the State Lands Division afler extensive bearings into current environmental safeguards against the prospect of major oil ~pills auch as the one in the Santa Barbara Channel that led to the ban in January 1969. '!be spill occurred in a well being drilled on a federal lease outside the stale-controlled three-mile limit. Floumoy said the state experts recom• mended a resumption· of drilling only m existing state Jeases and only from existing offshore drilling platforms. · That would provide a potential of 50 to 60 new 9iella which could be in full production within nine months, Flournoy said. He said those wells could tap estimated reserves ol. 200 million to 300 million barrels of badly needed crude oil. Flournoy said he is convinced that the tough new drilling standards prcr posed by the division will provide an adequate safeguard against any potential disaster. "1be wells can be drilled safely with maximum protection for t h e en- vironment," he said. He emphasized that the decision to consider a resumption of drilling now was not hastened by the .increasing energy crisis. "It comes at a time when the ·oil is needed, primarily by coincidence," he said. The other two members of the com· * * * President Sees ' No_ Relaxation ' - Of Oil Embargo WASHINGTON (UPI) -President NlJ:on today indicated to leaders of Congress that he does not expect any looeenlng Qf the Arab oil embargo until some progress takes place in Arab-Israey peace talks. Nixon and Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger reviewed the Middle East peac:e situatlon and the energy crisis CAN THE ARAB FLU BE FAR BI HIND? Column, Pago 7 300 MIL I S ABOUT MAXIMUM- FOR ,ULL TANK-Stoty, Pa,., 12 CALIFORNIANS STUDY CRISIS IMPLICATIONS-Story, Pave 11 . with 21 senators and House members at a meeting in the White House Cabinet room that iaated ntarly two hours. Sen. J. WllUam l'lllbrlgh~ cbalrman ol the Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee, told roportero afterwards that the question of the lilting of the embargo (See ENERGY, Pace .I) - mission are Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke, chalrrJ>an of the Ila~'• -IY Polley Council, and finance d&ector .Veme Orr. Reinecke has aald hF is Jftpaall to vote .for e1 resumptiaa of dPUling on state lealle! when be ls con\rinced it can be done with maximum safety. the oil industry has sophisticated new equipment that was not available at the time of the 1969 oll spill. Flournoy declined today to say how he wouJd vote on the proposal. But he said the staff "has made a strong case for the resumption of drilling." He an<F-other sta:te officials have con- tended state regulations at the time were stronger than those impo,Sed by the federal governmen t and that the Santa Barbara spill would not have oc- curred had the well been drilled under the state's 19699 controls . He said there ls no question that The new requirements proPosed today are even tougher, Flournoy said. Bnriness Priorities . Petraleum ... Office Orders Fuel Sales to Fishermen WASHINGTON (AP) -The Office of Petroleum Allocation ordered sales Monday of marine distillate fuels on a priority basis to boats and shore installations harvesting and processing fish and seafood. The order permits the sale of marine distillate fuels to pleuure vessels - including those operated commercially -only if adequate supplies remain after meeting the needs of commercial fishing boats and seafood processers. Th e marine oils and other Hmiddle distillate" oils have been under a federal allocation program controlling their wholesale distribution. But the program previously assigned no preferences among the final con- sumers of marine oil. The regulation, ellective Immediately. orders priority supply to "commercial fishing vessels of American ownership, reglStry, or operation engaged in the harvesting and transportation of marine food products to shore installations in the United States or its territories and ia...!!Je operation of. ooboard eqOipment and gear." ,.. Priority also goes to "the operation of shoreSide seafood processing in- stallations in the United States and its territories.'' Those two priorities are to last 60 days from Monday, except for com- mercial fishing vessels harvesting yellow- fin tuna, which will be pla.ced in the priority system next Jan. 1 for the duration ~f the harvesting season. The regulation bars allocation of marine distillate fuel, unless the seafood industry auppJy is a~ured, too: "Ships and any other marine craft whose primary use is, or will be, of a recreational or pleasure nature, in- clucllng-both private and commercial yachts, cruise ships, sport fishing boats aod other pleasure craft, whether owner operated or chartered. "Suppliers of marine fuels shduld furnish -such fuels to such end users only where such fumishi,ng will .not com- promise the supply of the preferred end users." the reguJation said. Airline Cutha~k ·' Unit.ed to Furlou gh· Over 1,000 WASIUNGTON (UPI) -United .Airlines today announced lt wi!Llurlnugb-ID.are_ than 1,000-emplllfes,Jncluding_3oo pilots, and cancel 100 dally fllghts because of the·fuel crisis. -Edward E. Carlson. president of the nation'o largest airline, said the cancelations had been scheduled even before ·President Nixon announced Sunday an additional 15 percent cut ln jet fuel delivery for the airlines . Carlson indicated that the new cutback would result in still more layoffs. · Earlier, the alrline Industry trimmed more than 500 flights from its dome~tic schedule on grounds of jet fuel short'ies. Carlson said the additional United fllght cutbacks would be el· fective Jan. 7. But the airline will~ furlougbinc "lmlntdiately." ' . _,;.: ..r -._~• PU.()I J.5 -~ TUfSd.li, Novtmbfr _27. 197) ~~~~~~~~~~~--''-r Nixon's -Tape;S -Played "". i ·First Time • Ill WASHINGTON WP!) -One of Presi· dent Nixon's Watergate tapes -marred by whistles, hums and garbled voices -was played In public for the first time today in the court or federal Judge John J. Sirica. The tape contained portions ot con- versations Nlxon had with his formet. key aides, John D. Ehrllchmao and H.R. Haldeman, ~n June 20, 1972. Sirica ordered it played as part of an effort to try to find out whether the taped re(Ordlngs had been altered in any way. '!'his tape was chosen because Rose Mary Woods , Nixon's personal secretary, testified ~1onday she apparently ac- cidenta lly erased an IS.minute segment while transcribing it Oct. I. She was San :Tu.an Moratorium On Growth Clears Test • By JOHN VALTERZA pas!ed Its first test before his peers or ... o.11, ,., ... ,,.., Monday. A proposal by San Juan Capistrano Councilmen agreed unanimously to . Cit Councilman James 11lorpe for a schedule a full examination of Thorpe's i~~~'"to:;.<ta! moratOrium on any new growt!i -suggestlonlbl'-a total -treeze-on-cicy • in the city because ol lhe energy crisis growth at their next session, l\.1onday. Parleys Slated For Saddlehack District's Needs Conferences to discuss educationa1 n~ of the Saddleback Valley Unified Sdiool District will be held at 7:30 . Thursday night at au 19 or the district's ·~.schools. Ten percent of the district 's .households, high school student bodies, teaching and classified staff, and residents of Laguna Hills' Leisure World were sent invitations. ' "But everyone else is invited as well,n said John Cooper, the district 's . coordinator of research and develop- .ment. "The prime purpose or these com· munity conferences is to assess the needs of our district," Cooper said. To do that, everyone will be asked to fill out a questiormaire rating a list of possible district needs. Coordinator of the program is Dr. Robert Jenkins, former San Francisco .superintendent of schools. He worked with a task forc e of parent -volunteers on four committees. They drew up tbe statements of need and organized plans for the community con- ferences. Sharing the podium at each conference will be the school's principal and presi- dent of the parent-teacher group. Following the meetings, results of the questionnaire will be tabulated and the data analyzed by the task forces. That · infonnation will be used to develop 'recommendations for lhe d Is tr i ct' s master plan. "This is the first time in the nation this method of assessing a district to plan for the future has ever been tried on such a massive scale," Cooper said. "We've had a hint from lhe state department of education that they're impressed enough to adopt our program as a state model for master planning," he said. "This has been one of the most in· 1 tensive non-directed efforts in citizen participation I've ever seen," be added . ··''We are really building toward som~ 2 enthusiasm." From PGfle l SURGEON ... of Nork. who is practicing medicine . at the Veterans Hospital in Martinez. . ' . -• Nork, 45, testified he lied in two previous malpractice trials and blamed his insurance carrier and their attorneys for forcing him to do it. In the two previous trials, he lost suits of $495,000 and $595,000. ' OIAN•I COAST " DAILY PILOT Tiit Or•l'lff CHll DAILY PILOT, wltll whldl 11 CllrM1"fd It.-Ht'WS-Pr.sii, It "'1blltlltld trr It.-0r.,,.. eo.11 l'Villl9hll'l9 COmcltn'I'. ~ r•te •ttioM ••• PVbl..,_, MO!lda, llVllollllll Frid•'/'. fell' Colli M..a, N-.iort aead'I, Hlllltlnt* l tl'!;tl/l'Olll'lllln V1U1y, LfOllN ... ell, lrvlntl!olddll'l>Kk Ind !o1n Cltnwt1l1/ '-" Juan C.pltlf•nt. A 11no11 reglol!.ll t•UUo" Is putolliMd lltvrdll'I •I'd lunchn. '"" prW.Ci"I pi1bll9hln9 pl1"I II 11 DI W..I l•f II'"!, Colli MtM, Cfll~t.. fflN, lto~erl N. W11d J1c.-R. Curley Vk t Ptt110tttl •rid ~r1I MtM<;itr Tlio11111 K•1•i1 !fllO• TlioMll• A. M1i1r111kino ~lllt'Etll., Ch•rftt H. Looi Ri<h•r1I '· Nill AMl1l1"1 M ..... '"' Elfll0!"1 Oda Mew: ,. Wtt.1 ... , ''"" Ntwfl(lrt &ucfii: :U~ffl'WPll•I hultlo.,C L-0-!19'dl; TU ""'""' A-N11t1111'191or> IMdl: 1711J ._. ~ ~cit-••: ., """" I I C1mlftt •111 , .. .,.... rn•• M1 ... 111 Cl I"" A•sa1Wq MU6n ... Qsu Tu Al .... I IW "''''''' 41tJ-44it C..'l'rllht, itn. o...,. C...1 "9iJ""611S ,.,,..,,,. ... -.... """"""' lfllWi.t _,.., ., ......,, .. _,,, ...... _, ..... ~ ...... ..,... _ ........ 9' .,.,. ._, '-'C dMf ......... M ( ... Mfft, c.11... ~-... Cfft'llll' p If """""'! ... #11111 ..,,,, "*""'" flllll••,., ............ , .. .,,....., t • ' If the new moratorium were to take effect, It would mark the second time that a full-blown shutdown of con· structlon in the city has been Imposed by the council Thorpe stressed that his latest sug- gestions were extremely important because the city of late, is being called upon to drastically improve streets and install street lighting. "This means that in order to serve any new people who come to the city we have to rob power and services from people who are already here, 11 he ,said. In a secood suggestion, Thorpe uked for the formation of an emergency com· mittee to study the problem of local growth and its drain on energy resources. The Saddleback College instructor warned that as new houses are built in San Juan more and more people will be lured into a life of commuting to work. "The trend iltSdutbem C31ifornia these days is to rearrange the population and that is simply dangerous,'' he added. Thorpe's suggestion brought no serious reservations from other councilmen - iilJ of whom have faced moratoriums before and who have endorsed them under different circUL1stances. The last freeze took place early in the year during a period when the city planning staff amounted to a skeleton "crew" of one man. "I don't take issue with your sug- ge:stion, but I'm just not ready to make a decision tonight," said Councilman James Weathers. During the corning week city staff will make initial studies on tbe Im- mediate growth prospects facing the city. School District Weighs Moulton • Plans Toni ght Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District have called a special meeting tonight for a complete evalua- tion of the initial master plan of develop- ment for the Moulton Ranch. The 7:30 session at school district headquarters will deal with the ultimate development plans for lhe 14,000 acres of the ranch. About half lhat acreage lies within the 158-square-mtte dlstrict. The session is being held In conjunction with a session of the district's new Growth Plan Advisory Committee which recently was empaneled to study the effects of major increases in residential and commercial development in the city. Besides the CUSD, other districts af· fected by the Moultnn Ranch develop- ment are the Laguna and Saddleback Unified School Districts. The approximate boundaries of the massive acreage are El Toro Road , Laguna Canyon Road and Crown Valley Parkway. Christmas Decor " Contest Planned · In Mission Viejo Entry blanks for the Mission Viejo Beautiful Christmas hom e decorating contest .will be mailed to all homes early next week. The competition is open to all Mission Viejo residents end will t n c!'I u d • categories for lndlvklual residences and neighborhood decoration schemes. . Jeanne: Gegnebin. thairwoman of the contest. said aU j14ing will be done durinl dayltgbt ....,n to holp ...,..rve electrldty. Prtttmlnary JudfiDC wW ba..Dec...l.I wttb flnlf Judging Dec. II. Winnen will "be lllllOUllCed Dec. 19 1t the candlellghl pa"'cle •t Elcfor•do Park. categories will include a Grond Prize for the home displaying the best overall dttoraUve 1effort on any subject ; best Santa theme; most creative: and rtliglous. Another car.gory will be "0..t Neighborhood Theme" for entries of three or more contiguous b o m e s decorated on a common theme. Moro lnformaUon .,.., be oblalncd by caillng Mn. Gagnebln at S86-022Z. Public on the witness stand as the tape was played. Miss Woods herself tllreaded the machine she used to transcribe the tape, punched the play button and as newsmen and spectators leaned forward in thelr seats, the President's voice was heard in the courtroom. The quality of the tape was extremely poor -marred by a low hum and echoes in his Executive Of!ice Building office, where lhe conversation took place. At first , only occasional words, in· eluding some profanity, could be heard as Nixon discussed news conferences and other matters with Ehrlichman. Their words were obscurtd b y background noises including such things as a jet plane and the toot of a car born. Twenty minutes into the tape, the voices were replaceg by a loud, persig. tent hum fuaf soun ed. li)(e an e1ear1c ra1.0r or an outboard motor at trolling speed. The hum diminished about four minutes later to a lower pitch. It changed slightly in pitch four minutes later, stop- ped briefly after another three minutes and eventually returned to its original hjgh level. When voices were heard again, 181(.a minutes later, Nlxon was speaking witti Haldeman and could be heard to say "Either way, either way." The President could also be heard at one point saying, "l work better when even I go to a place like that," and at another point be asked a White House steward to bring him so'me CO& somme. El Toro Fair Will Benefit Hospital Ward A "country fair" of homemade han- dicrafta to benefit the pediatrics ward of the Saddleback Community Hospital will take place from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. 1 in El Toro. The Lake Forest Women's Hospital Auxiliary is sponsoring the event, which will ~ in front of the Lake Forest fountain off Bridgier Road. Fair booths will feature stuffed dolls, patchwork pillows, bread dough plaque.s, and bowls, decorated pots and other gift items. 1bere will also be a plant boutique run by t.he Lak~ Forest Garden Club, refreshments sold by tbe men's auxiliary and an original painting for .. sale by the Lake Forest Art Association. Area residents are also being asked to donate items for a rummage sale at the fair. Call ~9353 for information. Gwen White is coordinating the fair. Plywood Siding Taken in Irvine One more in a continuing series of building material thefts in bustling Irvine was reported to police Monday, involving nearly $400 worth of plywood siding. Officer Harry Ehrlich said S and S Framing Co., of Westminster, lost 60 large sheets heisted from a location on Pine Street west of Athel Avenue. Company officials said a truck must have been used, but heavy weekend rainfall had destroyed any trace of clues such u footprints or tire tracks. From Page I RANCH ... department" which is preparing plans and specifications. other projects approved Nov. 13 which are to be completed soon, Brady said, are: . -Removal of citrus trees throughout the park. Some are dying or dead. -Installa.tion of three retaining walls around circular planting areas presently traversed by bicyclists. -Install ation of a retaining wall around the tot lot. Total city expenditures ·in the Ranch Park will amount to $66,915. not Including maintenance costs for replacing refuse containers. In a memorandum to commtmity services commissioners, Brady said posts placed in the center of bike trails near city streets are "to prevent veblcle:s from entering lhe park." 0 Area residents, as well a the coun- ty ," Brady said, "rtported considerable vandalism due to vehicles traversing park lands." · OTHEI LATIN AMERICAN REGIONS 3" AFRICA 16" . , .... . . MIDDLE EAST s 3" ... 1_ . . . . ·:· .. -·· . -. -... . . . ·., A ,, ~ ..... . . . .. . -•. : .. . . : KNOWN OIL RESERVES Black Power . .. . · .... : ... -·.:-.·.·., . .. .. . . . . . ~ .· -.. -. .. . ...... supply. Neighboring Africa has the second highest more than Russia and all other Communist countries. Map shows location of world oil reserves wllh the Middle East holding 53 percent of the precious ~~..:....~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- From Page I ENERGY .•• by tbe oil-producing states In tbe Arab world "depemh on tbe progiess of negotiations as the peace conference hopefully gets under way." Arab and Israeli representatlves are expected to meet In Geneva Dec. 17-18 under United N8tions auspices to start peace negotiatioos. ·Fulbright said that "the period of the embarJlo" will depend on th• prog. ress made in moving toward im: · "plementaUon of a U.N. Security CoWlcil · resolution that ended the 1967 war and provided ·lor withdrawal by 1'rael from conquered Arab lands. It a1'o established a recognition of the need for secure borders by Israel. Fulbright said that In the loog term, the United Slates ha> resources of Its own which it can develop to meet its energy needs. But he added, "In the sh:>rt trem, it's ~ery difficult." '!be Arkansu Democrat said the bleak outlook •PJllled even moie to Europe and Japan which .,,, much more dependent oit· tbe Middle E..t for fuel supplies. In other developments: J -The President's top energy .adviser, John A. Love, testified at a Senate hearing that higher prices -not more tax breaks -should be allowed to induce industry to find sources of energy the nation needs. -Interior Secretary Rogers C. B . ·Morton, who previously i n d i c a t e d gasoline rationing was around the comer, said he now believes "there ia a gaod chance" it will not be necessary. -The Baltimore Sun said among additional steps being considered to con- serve fuels of various types are a four· day school week, ' reducing --weekday hours for gasoline sales, a surtax on consumption of electric power and clos- ing national parks to private cars. -'!be Washington Star-News said an additional 10 percent cutback in gasoline supplies may be imposed in lhe nert few weeks, above the I5·percent reduc- tion announced by Nixon SUnday. County Lai;id Use Hearing Tonig4t In Viejo School '!be second Fifth District public hear· Ing oo tbe Orange County 1983 Land u .. Element Is scheduled for 7:30 toolght In mulU-purpole niom B. County planners predicted today that agents of developers and property owners who have been saving their Ot:r posttloo to the plan will bring It out tonight. '!be fint local hearing ended after Jess than an hour of review. Though 150 attended tbe meeting, only three addrtsoed the county planners. All live county planning colIUllissiooers are expected to attmd the meeting. Followinc a brief overview of tbe land use proposala, whld! call !or a population lncreue of 500,000 In the next 10 years and density reductions In many area, developen will have an opportunity to present alternate proposals. Sea Search Continues POINT MUGU . ttil>n -Navy and • Cout Guard atrcrall and ablpo searched the Paclflc today for a ml.s!lng crewman after a Navy helicopter crashed 20 miles soutljeut of bere. From Page I DON NIXON. •• stupid thing he (Meier) could do." Nixon declined to comment further on c:hafges of income ta1 evasion pencJ.. ing agaWt Meler. "Th.is is a matter for the courts, and I really don't think I should say anything," Nixon said. Nixon did acknowledge however, that he hf!.s known Meler "for years" but he declined to state tbe nature of tbetr relationship, except to say they never had any business dealings. Nixon also acknowledged that the Secret Service has made wire taps on hi• phone. It v.·as reported over the weekend that Meier, who now lives in British Columbia, was questioned N!<e!IUy by Senate Watergate. investigators who are interested in his relattonsl!ip with Donald Nixon and cash contributioris made on Hughes' behaU through Pres!delitial aides. Meier was fired by the Hughes orgljlllfalion In 1~. - It bas •ince beeo reported lhat the action waa taken because M e I e r disregarded White House orden to disassociate himself bun Donald Nl%on. •• Southern Orange County WEEKLY BOX SCORE COMMUNITY -CK•• l..19\11'19 '"'" 5ovlh Ca••I S.nl• An.·Tutlln Harbor OIMr, "' ..... ,. .,_tffc .c ...... nltiet Total r11lletll to .,_ ,~ •• •oa1' • l IAISID TO DAT& • .o.212 21,12J 23,7JO 17,.QS :io.,J73 $71J,1t7 12% f'lllCINT °' eGAL .... •••• ~ .. ~··· A1.7 SJt6,714 • PRUDENT BUYING ' Throughout our 77 years of carpet retailing, one fact becomes quite evident-that.when money is leu plentiful people buy better quality. This is contrary to popular belief, but makes e good sense if you think ebout it. When . ypu have to concern yourself with value and performance, ·you ere llkel.y to buy better qual"rty. • At Alden's in the lest three years, our per unit ·ale has been more expensive carpeting, reflecting thi1 ~act. Consequently, we hove tne largest selection of finer qualities you will see anywhere, ell . et competitive prices. ,. The tnd result .is eustorAer • s11tisf11etion, pride and recommendations · which provide our overwhelming source of new business. . -· Brlldy's memo responded to Dally Pilot publication of a photograph showin~ dead orange trees, muddy sidewalks, a bat· """1.J(uLcm and a_.P.Olt blocking tccess to the Touralnewayenfrihc'Oe +11--- to the park. ~A-hB ·' Brady did not comment on the posslbltlty . that cu rb cuts might ease bicycltats' .... or the park which roatUN!s a through trail from Jeffrey Road to Yale Avenue. I communlly Services C o m m I s s I o !1 Chairman Sally Miller said some com· mi.sSioners were concerned shout the pho~gr•ph suggesting It did not fairly represent the efforts of the city and Its stall to correct problems in the park. • ) t" . CARPETS e DRAPES . . 1663 Placetitla Aff. COSTA MESA 646-4838 llOU~: M-Tn n.n.. t te lrJO -Pit.. t le t -SAT. t1JO le I . • • •• ' • ·' ~-... --·-- • • --.. Today's Finni N.Y. Stocks r VOL 66, NO. 331, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAX, NOVEMBER 27, 1973 TEN CENTS Huntington tO Vie for $10 Million Art Center By TERRY COVILLE Of "" Diiiy Plllt ltaft The city's Allied Arts Commission will make a bid Wednesday night .[o have the propooed $10 million Orange County Cullin'al .Aris c.nter built in Huntington Beach. A ts-acre site next to the city's new $2.1 D!illlOD central library will be offered u ,Ute boom to attract interest ln Hun· · as.a.culluralcenler So far, the only city ·to extend an offictal otter to attract the center has beeii ~ge, whJcb proposed six acres . ' Ul'IT ......... and the poalbllity ol underground park· iDg. Homtlngton Beach will reveal its offer to the site evalualio1r committee of the Orange Coonty Cultural Arts Center, WedDeoday In Santa Ana.· The 13 acres Huntington Beach wants to offer is part of the · ZSO..cre central park oow under dev<!lopment. The sug· g..ted site sill acrou 'l'albort A venue, aouth of the central library, which is H built there, the Cillfui81 arts center would abo be near the bluffs above Huolingtoo and Talbert lakea, a feature . . ore * * * Boat Fuel Priorities Ordered BY L. PETER KRIEG Of .... DlllJ I'll" Slaff The federal government today ordered restrictions on the sale of marine fuel, declaring that it must be saved for fishennen who use their boats to make a living and gather ·seafoods. The order • U. the ()l!Jqt, o1 Petroleum Allocation sild lli3l -.u-i Iii!!! will ba mlll on a l!lilllllJ _ buis. Spori lilblt>a ~ and ..... -... not 'ln -~ prb'ity ---Fuel doCks In N""1'Qrt llarllor bad bot receiVed word of the late.at -but not unezpecled -federal !llOYes to con- serve energy. "Hell, we're just selling to the boats that come in and ask for ~ it," said Jack Nelson, operllor ol the Shell dock_ on Balboa Island. "We haven't beeo told ~ 80 v.·e won't stop Wllil we nm out, ' he said. • the Allled Arts ~ion comldets 20,000 cars. an extra bonus. Other proposed 'features involve an 0 It would be a beautiful place for elhlbit ball, conf'"'erence rooms and the .center tylag it in with the central further accorr.modations for the visual pait;, the library. and the bluffs," says and performing arts. . city Librarian Walter Johnson. "We thinlt Mrs. Kathleen Quick, one of the ill a logical lite ·too, be<ause of its citizens working on the project, said ~~~ .. ~~ tband.e ~!!.'°'>°Dfellgo,tan." centers of a central location, with good freeway u. ....,.i::&e;7 ~ access, is one or the ingredients As Jll')llOled, the COUDty Cultural Arts nece!881')1 for an accepllble site. Center would be built on the size pro-Johnson saya Uie library location can . rtlon 9!.,!he !.<I Angeles Music Center. be easll connected to the San Diego I iO\ilil' liiCJiiile a -,ooo:ieit conffiil~ay Urie ililleo northunGoJaen theater, two smaller theaters, three West Street and the proposed Route restauranll and' i>arklng for 15,000 to 39 (Huntington Beach) Freeway. • rI A restaurant, proposed on the bluff want to raise the money for lt privately over Huntington Lake, is another at-and avoid governmental involvement. traction included in the city's package. But they have said lhe offer of a The city has not developed any more free site is desirable, though not an specific propc>Als to offer the county absolute necessity. Mrs. Quick said committee, but JohMon Indicated some several county cities bave .discussed the agreement could probably be worked possible locatlon of the center, though out on parking. Talbert Avenue may Orange has made the only form al offer. be realigned, or eliminated, which would Once a site is &.elected -possibly also pen up more land between the before the end of the year -committee library and the cultural arts center. members expect to raise most of the No gove rnmentlt---en:tJty-1s-ftnanclaUy-money--and-start-constructlon-on-at-le:ast"-' supporting the Cultural Arts Center. the major theater sectiol) in three to Committee ·members have said the y five years. State Panel Asks Stop On Halt SACRAMENTO (APl -State expert• recommended today that California lift its 5-year~ld moratorium on offshore oil drilling. The State Lands Commission will vote on the reoommE!ndatlOn following a hear- ing Dec. 11, sald State Controller Houston I. Flournoy, the commission chairman. n.. ~endatton came from the State Lands Division after extensive hearinp Into current envii'onmental safeguards,against tbe prospect of-major oil spills such es the one in the Santa Barbara Channel that led to the bsn In January 1969. The spill occurred in a well belng drilled on a federal lease outside the state-mntrolled three-mile limit. Flournoy said the state experts recom- mended a resuwption of drilling only on existing state leases and only from existing offshore drilling platforms. THE TAPES -President Nix· on's counsel J. Fred Buzhardt ·arrives at U.S. District Court with tape ~rdings of Nix· on's Wa tergate converaalions. He turned them over to Chief U.S. Diltrlct Judp Jolin J. Silica, Bob Bisby, -Union Oil dock is riaJ>t next door, said he's alroadY slopped. He ran out two weeb ago. • Dalti-,., .............. 'EDISON HIGH DRILL TEAM· MEMBERS GET WARM WELCOME' UPON -RETURN That would provide a potential of 50 to 60 ne'if wells which could be in full production within nine months, Flournoy said . First of Ni.son'• -' Watergate Tape • Played in PubUc ,W~GTON (tlPn -Dae of Pnll- dml Nlml'• Walerple tapes -marred by wblltles, bums and garbled voices -wss played In public for the lint time today In the court of federal Judge Jclln J. Sirica. __ ]be_Jape contained portions ·o1, am· vet'IBUons Nllon had with his fonner key aides, Jolin D. Ebrllchman and H.R. Haldeman, on June 20, 1972. Sirica ordered ii played as part of sn effort to try to IInd oot. whether the -taped _recordinp.had been attered In anjr·wsy. 1bis tape WU "'-1t !Je<ause Rose Mary Woods, Nixon's personal secretary, leslllied Monday she apparenUy ae- cldentally eraaed an ta.minute segment whJle transcribing ii Oct. t. She .... on the witness stand as the tape was played. . Misa, Woods herself uiresded-the llUIChlne she used to transcribe the tape, pllnched the play bulto1l'and u newsmen _ and spectators leaned forward In their seats, the President's voice wu heard in the courtroom. ~ The quality of the tape was extremely poor -mamd by a low hum and .-In bla Executive Office Building olllco,wbero the cuweraaUon toot•place. I -; y~iOfdii,fli' .1 ..... -prafllllty,. oaald. bo-hW'd • Nlzoa dlram!d nen OCIGferencee and olber matters with Ehrlicbman. Tbelr -'•!VO obocured by ba~ noises including such lhJngs as• a jet plane and !lie tool ol a car born. T1'enty 'l'inuteo Into the tape, the voices • wera replaced by a loud, persis- tent liWn that IOlmded Uka .. tleclrtc . ruor or an outboard motor al trolling speed. 'Ille bum dln\lnllhed about lour ,. (Ila TAl'llfl, ~ I) Phil Toiier, owner of Davey's Locker sportWhing fleet, says htl ljJCirtfishing bl"",.... bas already beeen affected. . In Ruul•, No Hamburgers, French Fries, or Cokes for Hungry Tr1vel1r1 He. said those wells could tap estimated reserves of 200 million to 300' million barrel• ol b8dly needed crude oil. "We .are ol!!lody leelintt the t>lncb " . Toafer said. "We ran out o1 luerMoliilty -wh ' DQ1llng and our suwlier said be wm't e·r ·e s be ptting any more in unW Dec. 1. . · "So we're already in trouble," Tozier • · . Slid. the .. Hamliu r gers?-FIDornoy said he is copvince<L!hat the "IOOift new dnfling standards pro- po8ed by the division will provide an a<!Oquate safeguard against any potential disaster. "The wells can be drilled safely with maximum protection for t h e en- vironment," he said. '"lbere's fuel available· at certain sta· (See MARINE, Page Z) Edison .Drill Team Girls Return Fro m Russian Trip He emphasized that the decision to comider a resumption of drilling now was not hastened. by "'the increasing energy crisis. "It comes at a time when the oil is needed, primarily by CQincidence," he said. Sauna 'Victiin' Experiences Told in Court By. TOM BARLEY OI NII DlllY Pllll.I .... Maria Parsoo's lawier today allegod bet&e an Orange Cotmty SUperlor COur1 jury that bla cliel)t's ordeal In the sauna room of sn Orange health spa unleubed .l proll)l'!!:Y)ty that had its origin \n childhood sexual fantasies. - San Francisco Attorney Marvin Lewis Sr. lold the jUry of run. women and three men in Judge Willlam Murray's courtroom that Mrs. Pinon, 49, waa a "sexually ezciting11 iWOman • who · bad lo repress all such· thoughts' before her marrtsge. By HILARY KAYE Of .... Dlltr l'Mtt Si.ff After Russian food, American ham· burgers, trench fries and ·cow· seemed llke a gounnet treat to the S6 drill teafu llitis -from Edi.son High School · In HW.tlngton Beacb. They came back Monday night from a sevelM!ay whirlwind tour of the Soviet UniOn with the drill team from Anahelm'1 .. Westem High School. MOre than 100 relaUves arid friends greO!ed ·them with cheers, laughter, hug· Binf, ~Ing and flowers. 'Dli' welcome scene at Edison High began. When a group of mo!hers sigh led the-Jlnl lillS~ carrying the girls to Edison High from !.<I Angeles JnteroaUonal Airport. Jumping up and down, laughing nervously, the mothers Cried, "'lbere's a bul! There are om daughters." '1frs'. Linda P,ltterson admitted, "I've neftr missed anyone so much in my whole life! What am I going to do when Laurie goes away to college?" Mrs. Mary Boone sat nervously waiting, carrying a bouquet of Dowers for her daughter, Robin. Alter hugging their families and friends, and unloading souvenirs - .-Iy dolls -the glrls·began chatting . about the trip. "We were on TV there," Laurie Pat· terson told her famlly ·Juippily. The girls perfonned their routines at' a TV station, and the. performance will be broadcast twice thioughoul the Iron Curtain coun- tries. 'lbe te8m also performed at a school in Moscow, and in return, were treated to a singing COl!C"rt by the students al that school. When asked first impressions about the trip, many llitls began talking about Russian food -and it was obvious that none were part!Cillarly enthralled with Russian cuisine. Lewis asaerted bi4 ·-!'lienl was on 11tbe mink of a predpJce" in paycblalrfc terms fDll' years ago when she found hersell unable to open the door of the sauna rodm and unable to immediately allract the atlellllon ol the stall. .Divor~e' S@oghi 'Die resulting trauma, be. lold the jury in his opening statement, brouglit Into the op:.. the loving character kmwn 81 ''Marla.11 and the remoneful pro- Valle y s Former Police Chief Files jection m.m as "Belly," Fonner Fountain Valley police cblel Lri1i safd-vra. Paraall'i idOjtlOii OI ~Cllaeilr,WhO'*lnJ,;tk mulllple pono0allliea led Marla lo em-qo uked the city . to demote blp>, bark en • ...ieo of aexuaI ad•-.llolldaY 'SU<d !or dtYorce In Orange ' tbal often led ber to !Mk mates ·'In °tty S.perlor · Court. local bin. ' -.ell• dtad "tmconcllable dif· _.lie lold the jury that Betty blt1trly, h!i"'"""" In tbe actfoll to end htl If.year regntlad Maria'• . ...,_ b\11 neither marriqo. pononalitf.'Diir u;e • 'tltliU'Iiil'oonaUlf Tiie et'Clllel, who 1rv<s at 91195 Adiina which wu Mrs. Ptfloa's1.'tnle .U, could Aft.,'ffunttngton Beach, granta cus~y take lull control. • of his only child, Kelle Noel, 17, 19 t..wts said those 1e1Ual Jqlngs and Mra. Eleanor Frances Mi baelis and fantasies '""" built ur. as the dlrecl -to pay •• u yet Wl8J>OCllled result of Mra. Panon 1 strict Roman amount ol cblld support. . • C8lllollc , llllbrinllnl JA the. home of •Btll he asU a court Which mu! par<nll who olioeMd ...,,. tmet ol _.,., the dlvtsion of the CllOl'!!i'a, !lot PAll90N, .... I) property to not awsrd lllJOUs8l. supPi!rf , and lawyers' lees to Mrs. Michaelis. 1be"lll>llJ>le1n:inie't!"1lel:-a;--1954;--anc1 sepanted laal A_pril,11. T!ie H1!11Uogtoo_ Beltl'h -liome and land in Yucca Valley is included In the sta1emenl of assets. ln an appearance. before the Fountain Valley City Council lut Tuesday, Michaelis was grante4 his request to demoted &om chief to police clptain. He now heads the patrol division. Michaelis told the coun~ll that . he wanted more. time for his law .moot studies. Addltionally, since ~ ·retires In one year and 10. months, he wanted ume to break in a new cbief. Fountain Valley'~ acting police chief i!: now Marv ForUn, a former captain •. -. . ·' "We ate a 10t of bread and water," recalled Sberry Hyder, wrinkling ber nose at the mem-ory. ''The milk . was sour, so we didn't drink that And the food was pretty bad, too." . Miss Patterson added .that they were served beer the first day, wben they did . nol like the milk, but said that their directo:r, Mrs. Oieryl Rankin, put a stop. to !bat.. "After that, we just' stuck to water," she explained. When the pandamon.ium settled, a group of girls beaded for the nearest Bob's Big Boy. • "BOy, this -never tasted so -go00,11 clalmed Debbie Jollie, one of..· team's captains. The girls were abo rather unbiipressed with the Russian. -le they met. "II wasn't at all what I exj>ected," Miss Jfyder remarked. "The people were kind of pushy, not really friendly." _, "'nley really didn't smile much over there," commented Kay Melvin. "They seem~ rather stem." Most of the girls enjoyed the trip to Iatngrad, bul few· we(e impressed with Moscow. 0 1.enlngrad was more western," said Miss Pattenoo. "I'd like to go back some day and see more of that city. Moocow I'm really not Interested in seeing again." Red Chief-C{;onfers O n ~ ~ • ·With India's Leader The other two members of the com· . mission are Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke, chairman of the state's Energy Policy Council, and finance director Verne Orr. Reinecke has said he is prepared to vote for a resumption of drilling on state leases when he ls convinced. it can be done with maximum safety. Flournoy declined today to say how he would vote oo lhe proposal. But be said the staff "bas made a strong case for the re~on ot drilling." He said there is no question that (See DRILLING, Page Z) Oraage «:oast Weather Fair , throogb Wednesda y witb sunny days and slightly wanner afternoom is the way the weather service sees it. Highs at the beach- es in the upper 608 rising to the low 70s inJand. Overnight lows in the upper 40s. INSIDE, TODAY --Ellzabtth Taylor,toho·brh...-- own counc has 1'ad nrgt111 30 times and "ha! been close death four tlm:es. .. will Mn<fe!rgo abdominal sil?ae'lJ at UCLA Wednesday. Stofl/, Page S. NEW DEIJ!J (UPll -Sovtel party lei!lor Leoilld Breelmev and Prime ' Minister lndlra Gandhi exchanged warm and lavlsb praise today after meeting privately · to further strengthen . lildo- &viet relations. At a gigantic public ...ceptlon .on the grounds-of the htllorlc Red Fort Breshnev promised during a 70-minute speech that "we will always be with you, In all dilflCillties and Joys." L.M. -' Clllftl-llt ~ . ,, ClhMn.I ""' Cll'lllt1 .. c-.. DAiii fhltnt I l.fltwlal ~'" I llltwttlnmtnt .. fllMMI 11·\t "" .... ltldnl I JtyO ..... .. ........ .. ........ .. .,., .. ;, MlitMI ~Wftft ,, N1l1Motl M"" 4.1' Or1n11 C1t111f'f I l'tlvi.t P'tnw " -· , ... n Sttck M_,.eh: 1 .. lt TlllYltltlll ,, l lltll"" .. WM ... • w__... ""' 1•1t W•lt .._.. 411 ... • • • . . ,, • • • . 2 DAILY PILOT " San Diego Air Crasli Kills 3 SAN DIEGO (AP) -At least three -died today u lhe mult or a colllslon llMllvlng two small planes over Interstate 5 north of the city, authorities said. One plane, a slnglH nglne Piper. crashed west of La Jolla , killing one occupant, police said. The other plane, a tvo'ln-engine Cessna, made a forced landing at l\1iramar Naval Air Station and slammed into a parlwd Navy jet, killing at least two perSOns, authorities added. Son's Arrest . Follows That ·or Parents T~sday, NO'ltfT!btt' 27, 197l Harbour's Light Show Postponed The Huntington llorbour "Crul,. of Lights" was canceled Monday, as 1ponsors ol the holiday light show decid- ed to comply with President Nixon's request .to conserve energy . Sharon Buller, chairman of the cruise, aaid public reaction to lbe decision was SlllJ)l'ising, "! called up the groupo who had al- ready made reservations, and told them the show was canceled. 'nley were all bitterly disappointed," Mn. BuUer re- marked. "People said they wanted somewhere IH•Y-CirutcFgo-·and sUII see Christmas lights," she said. "Everyone ls very sad." The Huntington Harbour Pbllharmonic --.. Don Nixon Denies Hughes Deal By JOHN Z~LLER CM IM o.llY PQll 1 .. H F. Donald Nixon, brother of the Prest· dent, Monday branded as "ab9olute stupidlty" charges that a fonner ac- quaintance was being persecuted by the While Houae for refusing lo break orr an alleged business rel"Uonshlp. NiJ:on, a Newport Beach resident, was -responding to romments by the former acquaintance Jon Meier -who is being charged ·with income lax evasion by lhe u.p. Justice Department. Nixon flatly denied that he had ever had any business dealings with Meier who was an aide to billlonalre Howard Hughes until 1969. l----"-Eountain..Yalley {l!!!li!i ,..hich_ had Committee, sponsora_of lhe anoua! ex-_ a brush with the Jaw earlier this mon~ travaganza of lights, met for several "I have known the man for !Orne time" Nixon sald ln a telephone in- terview, •'bufl-tiave neverbad-any busineu dealings with him whabjoever." • . when the parents were arrested on suspi-hours Monday to determine how to call cion of fencing stolen goods, had another off their show. go-round with po1ice this weekend. This time, Founlain Valley officers While the Cruise of Lights ls definitely arrested the 17-year-old son on suspicion canceled, Mrs. Butler said the committee of burglary. is still deciding whether to have a one- The youth was allegedly eaughl wilb day parade through the harbor -llghis another 7-year-old boy burglarizing the or 00 !Jghts. · coin boxes of the pinball games at HThe. committee Is polling residents the Fountain Valley Miniature Golf to find out if they still .want the parade/' course. Airs. Butler explained. Police say they believe the ~wo boys Tbe Cruise of Lights, which was to -,;.-St.Ole the-· keys to the .madunt!S -and---liave·· continued ·nightly ·from Dec. JS - copied them before returning them. to 23, is a charity event for the Sunday the two were assertedly philharmonic group. The committee discovered by the course manager as hoped to raise $10,000. they used the bootleg keys to open the game table coin boxes. ~ The youth's parents Thomas and Grace .. Newhard were arrested Nov. 6 at their home at 17315 Santa Maria Ave., by detectives who claim they found more , lhan $3,000 worth of stolen goods in- cluding $500 worth of meat and more than 100 bottles of liquor. The teenager wM present at the time ' of his parents' arrest, police . said. ~e · couple are currently free on bail awaiting preliminary hearing in the West Orange County Judicial District Court. The youth was released to bis parents' custody following his arrest. From Pagel MARINE .•. • tims, at a higher price," he noted. • But Tozier said he'll probably be forced to cul back mid-week tripe with both the sportfishing boat and his harbor cruise ship, the Pavilion Queen. . His ·Catalina lx>at doesn't run dunng the winter. "We may even curtail the Pavilion Queen on the weekends. It · will depend oo how tight it gets," Tozier said. The effect on availability to private . pleasure boats probably won't be known for several days until the level of supply .~ has been determined. · Nelson figures there's plenty to go around, if everybody wouldn't rush to buy it all up. "There's oo problem if these guys ~ dm't get nervous," he said. "But when you guys print all this about a shortage, they all come here and we run out." . - : Woman's Theft , ' : On Bus Probed SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Municipal Railway is investigating a report of a driver who sat in his bus , and watched a ~year-old woman get ' knocked down and robbed by three • youths. · Robert Rockwell', a spokesman for the ' railway, conceded, "If the facts as , reported are valid. certainly the operator . was derelict in his duty in not going : to the woman 's assistance." Lena Gaadagni told police her purse . was snatched by the youths Sunday at 6 p.m. as she was boarding a bus at 16th and Potrero streets. OIAN•I COAST •• DAILY PILOT ,,,. or1111t CHll DAILY 'llOT wlffl whldl 11 eemblnlcl·MMI N""•'rtu, la pUltlllhell bY 1t1t or•nee Cotll 'llbll11\1rt9 ~'· S.... rtle '91110111 l rf 11\1111111\ecJ, Mondt' tllrwoll J:rWIY, for Co1lt Mt ... , NIWl'Of1 IMCll. Hurltlllflon lttcfll'°""Hln Ytll.,, ...,_ 9Mdl, lrvlM/StddltbK~ Ind kll Cltment1/ s.... J1111n Ct11lltr1rio. A 1l11Qlt r .. lonll ..iJtloll 11 ~II ...... S..IWffl'I' 1nd Sundt,._ Tl>e pl'lrlclpll ,...lblllnl p!Aflt II t i llf Wtll .. , $Ir"', Cotti Mnt, Ctllfornlt, '2'». llol>11t N. W11d Prt11dtftl Ind '""'l"""r Jttk It. C11rl1y Vl(t Prnldtflt t,... GtMrll Mt,,..., 1ltotri11 IC11 .. il EfilOr T1'o""'' A. M-rphiRt Mt111tln; l:d•IOr 0.trlM H. Looi ltichtrtl P. N•ll A11l1lt11I Mtntglrit Edl"'1 T 1rry CeYill1 W.I Of'tl'lll c-tw E4l• " ........... ~ 17175 htch .... ,..,.,.. M•lli~ A'''•1i1 P.O: lo• 7t0, t2MI --LllUM ••ctru m ,..,., •-c. .. ,._! ,. ... , .. , ,..,... Patient Awarded $3. 7 Million In Damage Suit SACilAMENTo (UP!) - A Sllrgeoll wbo admitted performing at least 36 unnecessary back operations and a hospital were ordered today to pay a former patient d)ring of cancer $3.7 millioa damages in a case the judge desaibed .. a "grand Guigool of medical bon'Ol's.'' The dedsioa wu returned against Dr. John G. Nork, wbo has 25 additional malpractice cues pel1ding against him, and Mercy Hoapital. Nork testified during bla trial that from 1983 lo 1970 be was addicted to 11upPers and downers:" The court decision said that Nork admitted "that the drugs rendered him incompetent, and that they caused him lo treat patients Improperly." Nork, under investigation by the State Board of Medical Euminers, and lhe hospital were ordered lo pay Albert Gonzales, 32, compensatory damagea of $!CT rnUllon and punitive damages or fZ million. GollzaleJ, a grocery cleric, charged that surgery performed by Nork in 1967 was unnecessary and that the emo- tional reaction and pain caused triggered the terminal cancer. His attorneys said be had but three years to live. In issuing his 196-page decision, Superior Court Judge B. Abbott Goldberg said, ''This case was-a"five-monlh horror.- This court was a grand GuiSJ>OI of·· medical horrors.'' Eighly·five per>Olll testified during the trial, many of them for. ·or patients of Nork, who Is practicing medicine at the Veterans Hospital in Martinez. Nori<, 45, testified he tied In two previous malpractice trials and blamed his insurance carrier and their attorneys ror forcing him to do it. In the two previous trials, be lost suiis or $495,000 and $595,000 • "The drama played out here was not a fantasy contrived to satisfy a casual fancy for morbid amusement; it was real, permanent and tragic," said the judge. "Here have come the poor, the maim- ed and tbe halt to testify agalMt their once beloved physician for the wrongs that he committed against tbem with evil purpose," Goldberg said. "The defendant, Dr. Nork, for nine years made a practice of performing unnecessary surgery, and perfonnlng ii badly, simply to line hi! pockets," Goldberg added. Nork admitted he performed wt· necessary and negligent sW'gery on Gonzales and also testified to 36 slmi!ar operations on other patients during his nine years of surgery. On including the hospital in the decision, Goldberg said, "! have reached the conclusion that the hospital is liable wtth great reluctance, because I am sure that the Sisters of Mercy have dooe evecytblng within their JlO'I'<!' lo run a proper institution. But they, like every hospital governing board, are ror- porately reSpons.ible for the c:ooduct o[ !heir medical staff." f'1'0lft P .. e J DRILLING ••. N....,.. teo<fli .SW H-..rt ............ '-" ~1 .. Nori" !.I Ct1t1irio RMI Tll ;tsnl f714l 642-4120 ., Cl_... ....... , f '41·1671 th< oil-industry baa llOphiailcaled new · • equipment that was not available at lhe tbne of tho 1969 oU spill. • ,,... ...,. ...... c:--tY c. • ..,..... _, .. ~. 1'12. °"""' C-1 "'*'""'"" c~. ,.. """"' ........ 1111111n1MN, ... SIHtl --" ...,_.,....,.,.. ........ _, • ,......... ....... N«ltt .... """""' " ...... 11111 ..... . ...... °"" ,.., ... ,.,. tt C.te Mtw. Collflmla. ~-.... ~ a.ti ,_,.., ....... ,, , .. ,.. .. u ,,.wr.,y .... -. • He and other stale officiali have con- tended stile regulations at the · time were atronger than tho,. imposed by the federal government and that !he Santa Barbara ipill would not have oc- curt'ed had the well been drilled under the 110le'1 19191 conll1Jls. '!be new requlitments ~ today are even tougher, Flournoy aald. . O.llY l'lltl llttl f'Mle " Meier through his attorneys , had said he maf call Donald Nixon to testify in his trial. Meier contends that the tax evasion charges are a retribution from the White House for b1J refusal to break off hia relaliooship with lhe President's brother. IS OLD LAKE PARK LOG SCOUT HOUSE DESTINED TO BECOME A CALIFORNIA 'MONUMENT? YO\fngtters of PreHnt Pedal by What Was Meeting Place for Townsfolk for SO Ye1r1 P11t In addition lo the charge or pollttcal motivation, Meier claimed that in- formation that resulted in his indictment originated from Phone taps made by the Secret Service on F. Donald Nixon. From Page J PARSON ... the faith. "She wool lo her husband .. a virgin at the age of 21 ," Lewis said. "And on every date she ever had before she married Bud Parson, she had an escort who invariably frowned il she touched a boy's hand." Lewis said Mrs. ParSOn took refuge in se1t1al fantasies that were enhanced by lhe fact that she often heard the lovemaking cf ber parents "canied on behind a paper thin wall." , He said ?ifrs. Parson, one of eight children born to a couple who fled from Mexico at the height of Pancho Villa's revolutkla, had seven children herself after an almool disastrou.'I start to her own marriage. "She and Mr. Parron had their prob- lems and on one occasion she filed divorce because of his sexual relation- ships with other ·women," Lewis asserted. "But they worked things out · a~r those early years and went on to raise their family and enjoy a happy sexual relationship until the tragedy that oc- curred in the sauna room." Lewis is seeking fl million In damages for Mrs. Parson. He said he will put his client and most of her seven children ages 26 through 10 on the stand in what ls expected to be a four-week trial. He told the jary sworn in today that Maria Parson before her entrapment in the sauna was "a devout Catholic mother who gave most of her time to the Boy Scout and Catholic Youth movements and PTA and who raised her family in a strict Catholic manner." '"'Illey were always at mass," Lewis told. the jury; "And it ·can be imagined what effect her later behavior had on a family raised in this manner.'' Fountain Valley Police Recover Office Material More than $8,000 worth of office equip- ment storen from a Newport Beach orfice building over the long Thanksgiv- ing weekend, bas been reCovered by Fountain Valley police. Detectives Bob McClain and Marty Engquist claim they found t h e typewriters, calculators and camera equipment in a Garden Grove motel room occupied by David Alley, 23, and Calvin Andrews, 25. The two men were arrested Saturday by McClain and Engquist who said they received information about the whereabouts of th e pair. Andrews, accordin~ to pOlice, was recently atTeSled on suspicion or com· mitting two burglaries in t h e Westminster area. Court action is pend· ing on those two cases . Meanwhile, both men rema in in custody today in Orange County Jail . The detectives said they believe they r~vered abou.t 1¥) ~t of the Items stolen fiom , the Newport Professional Building, 369 San Miguel Drive. 1be detectives said the burglary of the offices in the Newport Center building bad not been discovered · when Ibey arremd Alley and Andrews. "We found the name and phone number of one of the owners on a calculator, ao we called him Saturday," aa!d MCCiain. "His flrst remark was "Is this some kind of a joke?' '' Three Still Missing . SAN DIEGO (AP) -An aerial search continued In !he Gull or California today ror a 23-foot boat missing with three C.IUomiana aboard, the Coast Guan! said. A spokesman said lhe boat was operated by Bill Byler, !l, or Covina. His passeng!.n were identified 11 Miki! CUe, 3$, of We11 Covina/ and Carl Crandall, 40, of Azusa. ~ Group Requests 'Scout House' As Landmark From Page J ... TAPES ... minutes later to a lower pitch. lt changed slightly in pitch four minutes later, stop- ped briefly after another three minutes and eventually returned to its original The Huntington Beach Historical Socle-hi gh level. ty wants the city council to declare When voices were heard again, 181/• the · old Lake Park Scout House a minutes later, Nixon was speaking with historical landmark. Haldeman· 'and could be heard to say Next April , the log cabin will be "Either way, either way ." 50 years old. Boy Scout Troop 1 has The President could also be heard been ot:ieadquartered in the cabin since at one point saying, "I work better it was built in 1924. when even 1 go to a place like that," The scouts are currently working on and at another point be asked a White p1am to refurbish the cabin for a 50-year House steward to bring him· some con- re-dedication ceremony set for April 2. somme. Once finished , the spruced-up cabin Miss Woods, who testified Nov, 18 will have a new roof, new windows, that the quality of lhat particular tape a healing system ·and other-minor was "very bad" and that it took her repairs. some 30 boon to lrlnlcribe it, frequently It will be rebuilt the same way it shook her head as the lape was playing. was originally built -wilh vohmteet "You 1ee bow difficult it is?" )he labor and donated material. said quieUy to one of the Vi(atergate The scout house was erected In l924 prosecutors who hovered o~er the Cl b machine attempting to hear. with the help of the local Llons u • Sirica listened with little expression the carpenters union, Southern GaJifomia from the bench , but grirmed broadly Edison and the telephone company which when the President broke into a cheerful supplied the poles for logs. whistle at one pOint. City historian Delbert "Bud" ffiggin• Overall, the tape sounded much like describes the building of the cabin as a short-wave radio broadcast -SCT!'tcby follows : "All turned out that day, the and with voices l'.ading in and out. The scouts furnished the lunch, the Lions voices were almost impossible to wt· rolled the poles, the carpenters sawed, derstand. notched and placed the logs and in At one point, Nixon rould be beard one day the cabin was one-third com-making reference to his 1968 campaign plete." against Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D- ·"·People ·with federal -charges against them will try anything," Nixon said. "But this kind of defense is the moat stupid thing he (Meier) could do." Nixon declined to comment further oa charges of income lax evastoo pend- ing against Meier . 0 1bls Is a matter for the courts, and I really doa'I think I should say anything," Nixon Bild. Nixon dld acknowledge however, that he has known Meler "for years" but he declined lo stale the natur. ol their relationship, except to say they never had any businw dealings. Nixon also acknowledged that tho SeCre t service has made wire IOlll oo hi• phooe. It was reported over the weekend that Meier, who now lives 1n British Columbia, w.. questioned rec<111ly by Senate Watergate investlg1tor1 who are interested In his tt!atiooablp with Donald Nixon and cash contrlbutiom made on l{ughes' ,,bebfq lhmigh Preljdential aides. Meier was fir<jl by lbe Hughes organization in 1969. It has since beeo reported that the action was taken because M e i e r disregarded White House orders lo disassociate himlell h'om Donald Nixon. Valley Bicyclist Injured in Crash Edlson tater supplied the remainder Minn.), but it was not clear what he of the poles needed to complete the was saying. -A 17-year-old Fountain Valley youth cabin. The White House says that Nixon is in stable condition today at Hunlington For years, the cabin was shared by and EhrUchman discussed ,nothing ~bout lntercommunlty Hospital after his bicy· as many as three· .Boy Scout troops Watergate during the June 20 meeting. .. <:le collide4' with, a car_ Monday n,lght. . and other scouting organizations. Now Although Nixon and Haldeman, who met Roy Torr, of 16557 Sequoia St., was Troop 1, with 80 members, ls the only a few minutes later, did discuss injured when his bike ran into a car user. but troop members hope a Watergate that day, apparently it is driven by Vickie Mierau, 23, of 1242 refurbished scout house will attract more that segment that was obliterated by Warner Ave., Huntington Beach. interest. the persistent hwn. 'lbe accident occurred at the in- Troop I also plans to develop a small The tape played in court today was tersection of Slater Avenue and Cameron scouting museum with uniforms and a copy of a portion of the original. Street, Huntington Beach at 5:30 p.m. other scouting items dating back to The original, along with originals of Police said the mishap resulted when the 1920s. The mini-museum will be nine othe r of Nixon's Watergate tapes, the youth, who was riding \\'ilhout a opened to the public on special oc-is locked in a safe. in Sirica's chambers headlight -apparenlly made a le<t casions , according to a troop spokesma_n_. _u_nd_e_r_24_-ho_ur_a_nn_ed_:g_um __ · _____ Jli_m_lnto the oncoming C8r. , . PRUDENT BUYING Throughout our 77 years of carpet retailing, one feet -becomes quite evident -thet'when money is less plentiful people buy better quality. This is contrary 'to popular ~elief, but makes e good sense if you think about it. When you have to concem yourself with value end performance, you ere UkeJy to buy better quality. ,. At Alden's in the lest three years, our per unit sale hes been more expensive carpeting, reflecting this feet. Consequently, we have the largest selection of finer qualities you will see anywhere, ell et competitive prices. _... . .... -. The end result is customer setisfeotion, pride end recommendations which provide our overwhelming source of new busineu. ALDEN'S . . • HOUlS: Ihm. Tin n.n., t 19 l:JO - " CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plac1ntla Ave. ,COSTA MISA 646-4838 ' RL. t 19 t -SAT.; t :JO 19 I ' Nixon ,Sees No Relief -for 6il Crisis Hits Air Cal .. Operations By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of '9le D10y f'llM ltaff The national energy crlsii will have a significant effect on one of the two airlhtes serving Orange Cowity Airport 1 but the other c:1pects little or no change in current operations. John Tucker, director of operations and chief pilot h' Air California, said today >Jr Cal has already cut back some nights and plans to lay off pilots, Chicken Joker Makes A Fuel for Himself By JOHN VALTERZA Of Wit °"" 11'1 .. t Stiff AS RECEN'n... Y AS a year ago the mere mention of using chicken manure to power a small family car was worth an hour's worth of jokes at any social gathering. · People would listen agog at details of a technique maslf!fed by a Dover, England, chicken farmer called Al Bates. ' But before the real message could get across, people wouJd howl : r ground-crcwmen and otbeLper.sonne_.__.,_, as of Dec. J. "Hey, Fred, there's this nut in England who drives a real c_hicken ... car!" But all or a sudden, attitudes seem 10be cli8nging:- Al Bates and his manure digester don't seem so stupid any more: ''1bere hlivebeen-Sighificant cuts in our operations but it's impossible to go into specifics because we are still unsure what the fuel allotments will be,'' Tucker said. Tucker said the night cutbacks ·have mootly been the short bops which will be consolidated into other routes. "We have to cut back on our flying hours to meet the fuel supply that will be available," Tucker said. Tucker said the cutbacks by the first 1 0£ December could be somewhere ·-·i>et;;-een to &nd ts percent. · "We don 't really know al this point if even more reductions will be needed but we are certainly studying . the possibillty,' .. he said. President Nixon announced Sunday 1 that he will call for an additional 15 percent reduction in airline fuels on top of a 10 percent cut already in effect. Tucker said "fewer than 10 pilots and plane crewmen" will be "lurioughed" because ol the flight reduc· tions. But he also said layoffs are being considered in other personnel areas. "As of Dec. 1, -.·e will be furloughing some people, mostly the new employes with low seniority numbers," Tucker said. The layoffs mean the employes will not be paid but '11ill be at the top of the priority list for rehiring if the fuel situation eases. A public relations officer at the San Franc.i.900 headquarters of H u g h e s Airwest, tbe . other jet airline aerving Orange County, said no cutbacks at all are anticipated until after the first of the year. 11We are not cutting ' beck at all," VALtl•lA a little longer. What the country farmer has done for the past decade is to fill a small tank in his garage with a special blen·d of animal manure -a mixture of chJci:en and pig with a little water and fresh straw thrown in. BEFORE YOU ST ART lo laugh, loo, slop and listen Once scaled into the small tank, the manure is heated under controlled conditions to an optimum temperature somewhere in the 8Q..degree range. Then something starts to happen in the sealed tank. Bacteria .. go . to . "-'Ork -in a process. called.._anaerobic .. digestion. Ancl.a.s . if __ by magi c, a gas is produced and collected in the top of the tank. The gas Is methane and it blows up beautifully. Ask any coal miner lucky enough to survive a methane blast down in the mines. BATES COLLECTS THE gas, using a simple air compressor which con- denses the fuel into little tanks one would use in a camper. Now comes the good part. The tanks filled with the gas are anchbred in the trunk of Bates' old Hill- man auto which has been converted to use regular gasoline or liquefied natural gas. The car has been chugging along for years on its diet. Every once in a while, Bates' digester has to be recharged, but it is said that by the time the tank is opened, the odor is gone and the products-water and humus, go straight into the garden. Still chuckling? ... THINK THEN, for a moment , about the tons upon tons of animal manure produced in this nation every day (ever driven through Chino's dairy district at the end of a humid August thunderstorm?). . There is enough fuel sitting on the ground to run millions of cars and feed just as many furnaces. Some nations termed "backward" by our standards already are into the business of digestion -India is going fot it in a big way. Why not in the United States ? College-level engineers already are turning out prototype. digesters that could ...Uy be inllalled In the backyard. · ONE UNVEILED IN THE EAST only recently appea!Ji lo be reproduceable said Lan-y Litchfield, ~irwest publicity for about $3 000 and could produc;e enough natural gas to suit a modest house-. officer. "We ~ operat1ng our schedule hold. 1 as 8-~ced for fall and_ha!_~ no need_ It's no wonder that our nation seems reluctant to buy a process that works to alter it through ~liOtlcla~. season. so simply. · - \Ve are .already hea_vdy booked. . . No one can stop laughing Jong enough to realize the potential. Utchf1eld said A1rwest has suff1c1ent fuel under the national allocation pro- gram to see jt through until mid.January without adjustments. •:\Ve are studying some adjustments that >rould be made alter thal bul 14 say t)O'\V what they are would be premature.'' he said. Air Cal's Tucker said his airline is al.lo taking steps to cut back on fuel ronsumption in flight and on the grOund by choosing helter routes and taxiing le:!S on the runway. "\Ye ,are not going t o sacrifice pa_..-safety for sake ol OONerving fuel, however," Tucker aaid. - Tucker added that Air Cal will "most likely" be able to handJe the holiday crowds but he said some passengers will have to, "give a little on their specific flight schedules to various points." County Appeals Board Orders Tax Returned Anaheim got an early Christmas present Monday from · an Orange Comrty Assessment Appeals Board. The board ruled that about $840,000 in possessory interest taxes paid on Anaheim stadium will be rttu•to the city. The dec!sioo ends a dispute !bat began ln 1968 when tlie cily protested tues based oo t(le use of the stadium by the Angels basebol! club. Fonner county assessor Andrew J . Hin.Vlaw, now a congressman, ruled that Ille Angels had control of the stadium for six mooths of the year, but a deciSion by Superior Court Judge J.E.T. Rutter last February ruled lhat the posse.sory interest assessment should be on the basis of not more than 90 days a year. -Possessory interest was defined by Hinshaw and Jatcr _by his successor, Jack Vallerga, as the right of a private penon or l'Ol"pOl'ation to exclmive use ol government own"', ta1 exempt pro~ erty. Anaheim lw paid St.2 million In siJch laxes OWi' a six year period. 1be aa- dilion ol interest on the impoundtd 11WDS ups the figure 14 'l.31 million. . Thia year, following tbe oourt order, Ibo city paid only SH~;e11 in poasessory intemt taxes on the aladlwn , tbe Jowesl llguro In 1lr yeart. 'Ole contract between the city and the baaeball club states that .the city must pay any t.axes based on the club's me ol the stadium. • In the successful court arcuments the city and the Angels argued that the ball club did not have a laable c::-r lnlertat because it did not ve ucluslve control ot the 43,400-seat sladtwn. ' Air Pollution Controls For Projects Weighed Both the federal En v iron m e ntal Pgotection Agency and the California Air Resources Board are considering proposals under wh.ich air Pollution sources would be required to obtain a permit prior to construction. William Fitchen, Orange County air pollutiOn . control officer, said these sources lnch.ide shopping centers, sports complexes, drive-in theaters, parking lots and garages, residential, commercial, industrial or inStitutlonal developme0ts : amusement parks, recreational areas, highways 3nd 3E!Wer, water, power and gas lines. "Obviously .. if adopted, these new regulations would cover just about everything that would create more vehi- cle use and public gathering of any ~kind," Fitdlen said. Under the plan being considerded by the state ARB, the air pollution control district in each county would be required to deny a permit for a complex (indirect} source-if it would violate the state air pollution control strategy or if the source would interfere with air quality sumclards. A supplemental program, in addition 14 the county APCD, wlll be required in the South Coast Air Basin which includes Orange, Los Angeles and parts of Ventura, Riverskle and San Bernardino counties. Fite.hen said a limit as to lhe total tonnage or contaminants allowed into the •Lr would be •established for the air basin. A coordinating council of state · and regional agencies, Inc I u ding representatives from cities, ·would then subdivide the bastn and allot emission llmlll to each aubdlvl.slon. The ARB plan for Indirect sources will be -red for adoption at a public lleorillf! in Loa A~les ,on Dec. 18. II the plan is adof>Ced, the Onmge O>unty Board ol Supervisori wlll be required to adoPt local regulations within ~ sl1 months. The federal EPA pion Is similar but requires that bulldel'I ol come! .. .oureci oblaln permlls from that ageocy. A public hearing on the -EPA proposal will be hekf In San Franscisco on Dec. 7 Ind II adopted will become effective in stx mobtho. Fllchen said the EPA plan win be rescinded upon ttrat agency's approval of the state plan. "The ARS-and EPA prop:isals stem from a decision ot the U.S. Court of Appeals earlier this year which ordered the EPA to require the states to develop plans to regulate indirect sources of pollution by Dec. 15, 1973," Fitchen ex- plained. He said the EPA is required to enforce its own plan in those states not having a plan by the six months deadline. Watergate Panel • Ends Hearings, Broadens Probe WASHINGTON (APl -Voting to cancel all further public hearings thia year, the Senate Watergate committee decided today to broaden its investigation by seeking .to subpoena a new list of presidential tape recordings. The committee also ordered six of· ficials o.f the Hughes Tool Co. to show cause why they should not be held in contempt for their rerusal to appear be'lore the committee in executive session. Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr. (D-N .C.l , said the committee staff says it needs more time to produce proof to support public hearings on two major con- troversies: a $100,000 payment by billionaire Howard Jtughes to a close personal friend of President Nixon and large contributions given to the Niton 19'72 campaign by lhe nation 's dairy induslry. The comntittea •voted UDanimously to postpone the hearings but Sen. Lowell P. Welcker Jr. (R-O>nn.), wu reported to have voted against the staf£ recom- mendation ihlr they be IX>'tponed ln· definitely, .. subject to the call of the chp,lr." ·vice> Chai rman Howard H. Baker Jr. (!\-Tenn.), saM he doct not believe the postponcme~eaiu the commlltee1s in- vestlgaUon ia finling out. "It's my view that !t would nz2le .out LI we kept Lt In -ion wllboul good hard proof," Baker said. . . Election He0:ring Scheduled Orange County's method ol counting election returns will be the subject ol a public hearing Wednesday. Mechanical vote counting has .been debated vigorous- ly l:jefore the county Board or supervisors counUess times since 1964. Sparking the latest public hearing is a request by Registrar of. Voters David Hilchcock to spend $973,250 on lhe Gyrex system, formerly caUed the Coleman System, to expand its capacity by so percent so that it can satisFactorily han- dle the 8501000 voters H i t c h c o c k estimates will be registered . fol" th e Novembel--1974 general election . ..,.... _ _ Hitchcock added that he e:cpects 900,000 voters to be on the rolls by the 1976 presidential election. By comparison , t~re we.re 711,299 registered voters' for the Nov. 6 special election and almost 8tXl,OOO voters for the general election in 1972. • • Ul>I Ttli'pl'lor. Discussion on the upgrading of the vote counting system surfaced Oct. 30. At that time county supervisors decided that a public hearing shouJd be held 10 explore the subject in depth. Wednes· Bum Rap? day's hearing starts at 10:30 a.m. . ____ t£i.!_ch_~k1 iµ . ~ l~_t_tl!~ _ ~9 s~~ry~s. points out that the addition o( tfie f8-2l year old voters to the electorate and the Supreme Court decision of 1972 which extended the close of rfgistration from the 54th to the 30th day prior to an election, plus continued p op u I a t t o n growth have added to the total of Mrs. Reva \Villiams claims she· was only .t1doing my patriotic~· duty when ticketed today in Houston on U.S. Highway 90· A. She was driving"too slowly -50 in a 65-mile zone. registered voters. . Unlil 1964, voles were handcounted 'Deep Throat' 1n Orange County. The Gyrex, or Coleman system, was approved by the - county Board of Supervisors and in· Batt} R • stalled in lime for lhe November 1964 e aging <Jectiori. To date the Gyrex system has cost I B p k the county about $1.8 million and has n uena ar proved ·to be accurate to a rate of 99.9 percent, according to county ol-ficials. _ "It is interesting 10 note that in 196.f Orange County became the first county in California to acquire a centralized electroo.ic vote tally system." HitChoock stated. "Today over 95 percent of all votes cast in Califomia are counted electrooJc.aJ!y or mecbanically and oVer 80 percent are contrally tallied." During the Oct. 30 discus.sion, several persoo.s criticized electronic vote count- ing and urged the county to return to the old handcount system . Hitchcock, in his report to the supervisor's, offered a synopsis of all other voting systems including voting machines, punchcard sys~ and other ballot scanners similar to the Gyrex. "We found that there have not been anx significant changes in voting technology or the costs of such since the last study in 1971," the registrar said. He said the 1973-74 oounty budget contains $260,400 for vote tally equJpment and that the Gyrex Corporation had agreed to a lease-purchase agreement on the new equipment. He said this \VOUld allow spreading the oost over four years. ,, Buena Park's battle or the bans on showing" of the X-rated sex movie "Deep Tbroat'' continul'd at the Pussycat Theater today. · Police, who had pledged to make more raids on the movie house at 6177 Beach Blvd. following three film seizures Fri· day night and one saturday, had taken oil the beat. Pussycat '"1eater personnel, who had P!eclged to put the allegedly pornographic picture, back on the screen, likewise had failed to do so. They have been left with no more copies of the film. So far, Buena Park police raiders have confiscated four reels of the movie starring Linda Lovelace. They raided the Pussycat on the basis of court orders signed by Judge John Smitl> of lhe Cenlral Orange County Judlcial District Court. Investigators also confiscated the night's gross ol about $5,000, paid by patrons who shelled out $5 each to witness Miss L<>velace's sexy antics. District Attorney's deputies Monday declined to issue criminal complaints charging theater manager Ed Bailey or the projectionist with any offense for showing the X·rated-flick . • ' DAILY Pllcrr-:J Crisis Congress Briefed On Situation \VASHINGTON (UPI) -President ' Nixon today indicated to leaders or Congress that he does not expect any looseniri g of the Arab oil embargo unlit some progress takes place in Ara b.Israeli peace talks. Ni:<on and Secretary or State Henry A. Kissinger reviewed the Middle Eas~ peace situation and the energy crisis CAN THE ARAB FLU BE FAR BEHIND? Column, Pago 7 300 MILES ABOUT MAXIMUM ' FOR-FULLIAN -Stofy;-Polf•l2 CALIFORNIANS STUDY CRISIS . IMPLICATIONS-Story, Pago 18 · \vith 21 S(!nators and House member~ at a meeting in the White House Cabinet room that las ted nearly two hours. Sen. J. \Yilliam Fulbright, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee, told reporters afterwards thal the question of the lirting of the embargo , by the oil-producing states in the Arab · "'orld "depends on the progress of : negotiations as the peace conference ' ho pefully gets under way.'' Arab and IsraeJi representatives are expected to meet in Geneva Dec. 17·11 ~ under United Nations auspices to start peace negotiations . Fulbright said that "the period ol the embargo" will depend on lhe prog- ress made in moving toward im- plementation of a U.N. Security C:Ounci( resolution that ended the 1967 war and provided for withdrawal by 15rael from conquered Arab lands. Jt also established a recognition of the need for secure borders by Israel. Fulbright said that in the long term , the United States has resources of its own which it can develop to meet it! energy needs. But he added, "In the short trem, it's very di[ficult." , The Arkansas Democrat said the bleal: outlook applied .even more to Europe and Japan which are nwch more · dependent on the MiddJe Eut (or fuel •supplies. HEIRS SEARCHING ' SiZA.BLE FORTUNE . SAN JOSE !UPll -A lhrilty grandmother amaSled a considerable . fortwie before she died but forgot to ' tell ber helH where the •alety depooit box was located, an heir said today. i James Orum of Sunland asked banks in the San Jose area to cbeck on whether Mrs. Ida McOtvern held a safely deposit : ·box. ; Orum said Mrs. McGovern died Nov. 14. leaving stock!, bonds. a saving! ..,.I count and property. ~ • " .• fine ' ' casual '• "• ' " leather I from MAURICE HOLMAN CALIFOlllNllt. CAllmA GUIN .,_ UATHll , .. H11uhall'lt ly 1ty1ecl i11 • 1hi1t i•ck•t 1tvl•. Id.al f~r • Ch1i1t111a1 gilt. N1tural a11d N1¥y-laH1 Ca11tra1t 1tltchtd. ; $110 srLIT COWHIDI The ru99td look ef tutdt. Co11t1att ititch- ad. lurt11ndv 011 N .... ,. I ' .. ai9t 011 l row11 011d lti91 011 Grot11 . $75 ft!.nasirfs ' S4M611 421-4611 • 4 OAILV PILOT County's Ow11 Keystone Kop s ANAHEllll FOLLIES DEPT. -Latesl Passengers Freed -Arab Countries Snub Hijackers DUBAI (AP) -Snubbed by Arab regimes and disowned by Palestinian guerrilla leaders, tllret yoong Arab gunmen z!g.zagged a"'°"' the Middle East today in a hijacked Dulch jumbo jet. After releasing 244 passengers and eight stewardesses in Valletta, Malta. the hijaclcen for<:ed the KLM Boeing 74J to land al the tiny Persian Gulf sheikdom or Dubai , .. to embarrass their summit oonference. The hijackers came to Dubai after Egypt, Lebanon, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bohrein and0 ' Syria oil refused 1<> let them land in apparent disapproval of sucli extremist terrorist tactics. THEY COMMANDEERED !he plane Sunday night over Iraq and since then have forced it to fly around the ea.stem intelligence available here on our Medi! ·lh t · S · THE PLANE spent more than tv.·o erranean wt sops m yna, coastline indicates that Anaheim's cops hours on the ground in Dubai, then CypfUS, Libya, Malta and Dubai. • are still at loggerheads with the city took off again in the direction of Aden 'I'tie hijackers apparently seized the brass on what the last figure should in South Yemen on the southwest tip of plane in retaliation for what they claimed be on their paychecks. the Arabi.an peninsula. The Dubai alrport was a pro-Israeli policy of the Dutch .......-1 tower said the hiJ·ackers gave government. The Netherlands officially The salary dispute has been going ·~··· d. I · ecf · f f ·d to •-ae! no destination. 1sc aim vaflOUS onns o a1 i;,a • on some weeks now. During this im-While the plane v.·as on the ground According to unoonfinned reports in broglio, members of the Anaheim Police in Dubai the hijackers talked by rad io Amsterdam, the hijackers had radioM Association have unveiled several tactics to Prime Minister Sheik Maktum Bin the Beirut night tower that their l n t cir cffOr" f015ilt~thes-q-u~ie on~Rashid, son of-the-ruler of Dubai,-.-and _demands had been~; . . ~ · . Khalifa Nabooda an assistant to the ~d lhe praile with the hiJackers t~.mun1~1pal treas~ box. . defense minister' of the United Arab v.•hen they f1ew out .of Malta was A.W First, 1n order to impress the public Emirates. \Vitholt, a viae president of KLM, and with their impoverished condition, the "We have our aims and everything 9 or 10 crew membe~. . . Anaheim gendarmes threatened to take is being done · for us," said one of Sourci;s reached ~ Dubai ~1d t~e · 1 · . the hijackers during the cmversations. country s ruler. Sheik Rashid Bm Sa.id to the streets m their patro cars, givtng H dded !hat the h d ked Pr · al·Maktum fU'St refused to inve the .... ea ya as es1-• e· every motorist they ~d find a ~1cket dent Makarios of Cyprus to rel ease seven plane permission to land. ror even the most mlllOr traffic or of their romrades imprisoned in Nicosia ' ., U .. ITtl ........ HIJACKED KLM PLANE SITS AT REMOTE SECTION OF AIRPORT BEFORE DEPARTING FOR DUBAI Somo of Frtod.C1plives IBoltom Photo) W1vo From Bus Allor RolH• Tod1y 11 Luqo Airport meclianical violations. "and he promised compliance." COOLER HEADS, however, prevailed. They called off the ticket blitz. It was apparently reasoned that such a cam· paign might make for poor public rela- tions. THE lDJACKERS have identified themselves as members of an obscure guerrilla group called the Arab Youth Organization for the Liberation of PaJestine. Egypt •set for A~tion~ Wicks Their seven comrades in Cyprus were arrested in a gun battle y:ith Nicosia police last April after they bombed the Israeli ambassador's.residence there and tried to hijack an Israeli state airliner. Peace Talks May Stem 01i Oct. 22 Cease-fire Lines This demonstrated remarkable good judgment. Switching tactics quicker than a politi· cian on the run, the Anaheim cop union next decided to l:lo just the opposite. Instead of slapping tickets on offenders , they woold simply give them courtesy warnings. 'Ille reasoning here was that it might make their cause a bit more popular with the populace (which is likely true) and at the same time would flatten city income from fines, which no doubt ls also true. This is the tactic be.ing followed by Anaheim's dri vers of prowl cars a! of the latest intelligence. DO NOT COUNT on this, however, if you are motoring through Anaheim. The cops may switch back to Tactic Number One at the moment you run a traffic signal at the Good Fairy Motel, just across the street from you-know- where. All of this must leave the poor Anaheim motoMst in a c o n d i t i o n alternating between fear and dismay. First, the fear comes if the lawmen switch to a Give 'Em All Tickets strategy, then you might get slapped with a citation alleging greasy windshield wipers. On the other hand, dismay could set in if you are a God-fearing, law-abiding motorist and you know the cops aren't slapping any paper oo offenders. Thus the irresponsible might figure they are free to blow stop signs, speed, and come at you from all dire;ctions with immllllity from prosecution. Either v.•ay, it figures Mr. Average Motorist ends up the loser in Anaheim. Guerrilla leaders within the Palestine Liberation Organization umbrella body in Beirot have denciunced the hijacking as "outmoded" and a "distortion of our struggle." Arab heads of state meeting in Algiers regarded it as an altempt MEANWHILE, TH E pay-fighting Anaheim officers have embarked on one ,.. more tactic in their battle for more cash. They took a vote of "No Con~ fidence" in Police Chief David Michel. Lotter11 Winner The tally was reported to be 278 v.•ho said No Confidence. 23 who had Confidence, and two others who wouldn 't say either. _ Well, you have to have certain sym· pathy. for Chief Aliahel. \Vh~t with lhe patrolmen themselves deciding when they give tickets and when they don 't, you have to wonder who's really nmning that cop shop up in Anaheim, anyway? Too bad Chief 1'1ichel doesn 't have a-. Lamberto B. Aledia, a pharma- cist's mate in the Navy, won $1 million Monday in-the Massa- chusetts lottery. '!'he 22-year- old bachelor said he had just re-enlisted for six more years to earn money in order to go back to school. Aledia. of the Philippines, is attached to the Newport, R.I. Naval hospltal. By United Press lnteniatlonal Egypt said today it is reviewing its decision to attend a proposed in- tem3tional peace conference in the Mid· die East, and an Egyptian official warn- ed Israel that the Egyptian anned forces are fully prepared for action if Israel does not withdraw to the Oct. 22 cease-fire lines. Atlmed Anis, the official Egyptian spokesman, was asked at a Cairo news conference if Egypt might refuse to attend the December Geneva conference if the current negotiations with Israel on the separation of their forces along the Suez Canal are not successful. "TIUS IS A question that is under close study at the moment,·· Anis said. He said Israel is "playing for lime" at the military meetings held at Kilometer 101 on the Cairo-Suez road and that "this can only reflect adversely its intentions towards the peace con· fe rence itself." Asked about progress at the Kilometer 101 talks which resume Wednesday, Anis said: "The Egyptian side bas honored to the letter the U.N. document on the cease-fire stabilization. "There is nothing so far tQ indicate the Israelis are going to do the same. The present Israeli stand is not one conducive to the consolidation of efforts being made for peace in the area." THE GOVERmlENT'S spokesman's statement followed a warning by another Pop Musicia1i _,_..Electrocuted LONDON (AP) -The body of pop mll.!ician John Rostill was found in his home re<»rding studio Monday night, and a friend said it was believed his electric guitar •lectrocuted him. Rostill, 32, returned recently from a tour of the United States and Japan wiµt singer Tom Jones, and they were to open at the London Palladium next week. Rostill's wife found !he body lying beside his guitar. 11We've been told he was electrocuted," a friend said. It's Unseasonably Mild Tliunderstorms S·weep Sout1i, Midwest Areas, However Temperat11res Hl1h Low '" Albe"V .. ~ ·" ,l,llC~Of"OOI " Atl•"ll ,. ~ ·" Ritrnorc~ " " ''"'" " " Blll'f•to " ~ ·" c::rir101t• .. " . " ~l\COOO • .. . " n!clflf'l•ll " " 1.ll ltWl•n<I " .. ·" D•HH " " ""'~' ~ " ·" 011,.,it " .. ... f•lrtio"kl " -·· .. " ·" ,C•fltal CllY u " L•• vri:s u " Loul1 llt ~ " '" Mtn'IPhls " " ... =.1r.:u." • " " u ·" Ml,_.POlll " ~ ... Nnt ~19"1 u • ... ""' .. .. •• Etr'' Cl!Y " .. .... .. n m SDl'lllOS " " Pl!lllftlplll• " " ·" P=lll l! • P~IJurol'I ll ... P l•MI,~. .. ·" R id>mO!ld, •· " " ·" I'·~ Ii 1\ ·" •ti 1 Cl"' ~'\::•fl(IK9 ll " n ·" ~.::-.. ,.., .. U'1Wl4T"'l1010<.A.'1. S. Cfdllor"I• Si't:Jr. _... ..,.,, .,,_.,I ~' r II C• I = = ·~II tM cilltlY 1"11 &j• ~ ---~ -~· .. rM "V?..~~ ~-ftle •fr flf Mllvt.,_.. W rtll Air l"dfut'-" (91\lrol Ol•lrkt 11redlclfd • ..,..,.. • • • .,, Egyptian officials that Egyptian armed forces are "fully prepared" to resume the fighting if Israel continues its stalling tactics. The key point or dispute was the security council resolution asking Israel to return to the Oct. 22 cease-fire lines, a move that would free the Egyptian 3rd Army and open the road from Cairo to Suez. Israel insists it is impossible to return to these lines because there were no cease-fire lines then. Tel Aviv dispatches said the deadlock was so great that the issue might have to be resolved. at a peace conference to be held Dec. 18. presumably in Geneva. The influential Gairo newspaper Al Ahram said today a return to the Oct. 22 lines was the "minimum re· ... quiremenl" before the peace conrerence is held. Israel has called for a mutual withdrawal by Israel and Egypt to their respective sides of the canal. Israeli press reports said the talks at Kilometer 101 on the Suez.Cairo road were snagged over Egypt's insistence that two Egyp- tian divisions aod 400 tanks remain on the Israeli side. THE ARAB nations were in the second day or a summit conl'erence in Algiers to align their strategy before the December conference. They have warned repeated1y they would resume the \far if the Israeli-Egyptian talks · are not satisfactory. i· 'No Christmas cards to Arab ') countries, Miss Woods.' ' ~·-., London Audience Cheers Nixon Promises ··~ · ••• Tax Disclosures .'~ ... Return of Maria Callas To Public View LONDON )UPI) -Maria Callas returned to the London stage 1t1onday night with surging crowds making it clear they tbought the fiery prima don· na's appearance was a triump~ London 's top music critics agreed she still had her old charisma, but they disagreed over the power of her musical Reagan Def ends Nixon in Aussie Press Meeting SYDNEY (UPI) -California Gov. Ronald Reagan said today his faith in President Nixon has not been shaken by pol itical events in the United States. Reagan. on a three-nation trade tour for Nixon. said: "The President ha s subjected himseU to free-wheeling press conferences, he bas answered whatever they bad to ask him aod the case is trfore the courts. I believe him." Reagan spoke for 41 minutes today to the Australian Institute of Directors without mentioning Watergate. Then newsmen hit him with tt COMCCutive questions on the case. The only other question asked involved the trip itseli, which ,also will take the Republican Governor to Singapore and Indonesia. A newsman asked Reagan if· he ·could Justify the mission, in view of the world energy crisis. His K1S5 presidential jet was expected to use 65,000 gallons for the trip. .. "Bless you, bless yo.u.'' Reagan said, smiling at the newsman. He said he dld not think the fuel expenditure by his plane was so bad. "You just can't let everything run down. Some thinas have to be done and I 'am. after alt. representing President Nixon in a drtve for increased trade and that ls very import8l)t." · DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE OtllvtrJ' of tht Cally Piiot Is iuarantttd Tt1tplW>nts MoJt O•lflte <-'Y Attn •" " • · Mt>Gln N11't11-.tl .. lf"llflltM letdl •M Wlll ... lilltlt'f •••• •• "" .... ,. loll at!Mfltt. ('"'''-... dt, lt11 J•111 C•,i1tr-. o-~ '"" ut"'9. '-"llM lflfWt .......... performance. As Miss Callas ended her first London performance in eight years at the Roya1 Festival Hall, most or the 3,000 members or the audience swept toward the stage like teen·agers at a rock concert. FLOWERS RAINE D down on her and Sicilian tenor Giuseppe Di Stefano after the two-hour operatic recital. & t.be crowd moved forward . some tried to grab her hand and others blew kisses while Di Stefano tried to shield ''La Diva" from her admirers. Just six days short of her 50th birth- day, Callas demonstrated she retained the magic that had made her the most ramous dramatic soprano in the world for nearly 20 years. Even before she began to sing, she received a tumultuous reception from the members of the audience, who had been either lucky in the ballot for seats, which attracted 601000 appUcations, or rich enough to pay scalpers up 1<> $250 for a $25 ticket. London's two best·known music reviewers disagreed today on just how powerful the Callas m1.13ical performance had heen, allhough both said sbe had obviously retained her chari!ma. THE ~' William Mann said, "her words were as clear ·and impressive as ever, in every item except, perhaps, the first duet (with Di Stefano) Crom 1DOn catlos' In it! first few minutes. Her Intonation is sWl flawless , her phras- ing skilled the more because her brealh control has been 1.nacnve for so long." ~ WASIDNGTON (AP) -President Nix· on has promised · six senators to open some or his federal income tax returns to public review this week, says Sen. J. Bennett Johnston Jr. The Louisiana Democrat said Nizon disclosed his intention at a meet.in& Monday night with £our Democratic IDll tv.·o Republican senators, includi.nc Johnston. A \\'JUTE HOUSE spokesman con- finned !hat Nimt m<J1lioned !he :oibjed during the session, and said ht Win "have something to say about ii In the <Oming days. No president has ever made SJch a disclosure and Johnston said Nixon e1pressed the hope his move "'®Id mt set precedents. In a news conference with The Associated Press f\.1anaging Edit.ors Association on Nov. 17 the President ackno~1edged the trulh of repom that he paid "nominal amounts1' in federal taxes in 1970 and 197l because be bad claimed a $500.000 tax exemption on the donalim of ·his vice presidential papers to the government. · "IF 111AT isn't allowed I will be glad Iii have the papers back and I will pay the tax beca"'° I lhink they are v;orth more than th.at ," he said at the conference. 1 Johnston said !he Pre•ldent did not say which year> woold be oovered by bis disclosure or how or precisely when that dloclooure would · be mado. I ........ -=-----111'.!!1- ' It's Cheaper Trustees Mull Skin1iy-dipping DULUTH, Minn. (AP) -"It's just a modesty factor," says tht super<isor of physical education for Duluth'.s public schopls. "Call it modesty if you want," answers school board IJlember Leanard \Vheat, "but it's warped modesty." THE ISSUE IS skinny-dipplng in Duluth's junior high school swimmin g clltsse.!. The school board will decide tonight wbether to require some 2,500 bo)'S in six schools. to year swimming suits . The controversy appai:ently began when parents complai ned thi.t th• practice of 6Wlmmlng bode was Immodest. If the board de- cides Id stlpdly trunks for the boys, it would cost the system about fl2,000, sal• Richan! Hill, the physical education supervisor, • • ' 1 l I I ! I I 11 Said Wbea! Monday night of the pro-suit forces: "IVs alot lit hypocrisy. You have to-shower every time yoiL go swimming !11~- you &bower In the nude. I "IP IT'S IMMODEST to swim in the nude it's Immodest to show· l er in the nu.de." · ' ) He sai d a survey taken by I.he board found that a sizable ma· I jority of the bo1S d®!t care whether Ibey wear suits. _t-......... _. .... --. .... ..ii..---~,.,, I 1 ' ' l I - ' -. - • Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 66, NO. 331, 3 SECtlONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE ~OUNTY, CAUFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 19B N TEN CENTS Doctor Convicted ol •Medical Horrors~ SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A Sllll!eoll who ·admitted performing at least 36 unnecessary back operatiom and a hospital were ordered today to pay a fonner patient dying ol cancer $3.7 million damages in a case the judge descrlbed as a "graod Guignol or me<lical horrors.'' ' Tbe 4eclslon was returned against Dr. John G. Nork, whO has 25 additional malpractice cases pending against him, and Mercy Hospital. Nork testified ·during his trial that Uftl T.._..hl .THE'TAPEs ·-President Nix· · dn's counsel J. Fred BUihardt .an'ives at U.S. District Court . with tape recordings of Nix· on's Watergate conversations. He turned them over to Chief U.S. District Judge John J. Sirlca. First of Ni xon's -- Water gate Tapes P:layed ·in Public WASIDNGTON (UPI) -One.or Presl- dent Nixon's Watergate tapes -marred by whistles, tiums and garbled voices -was piaYed in ·publlC for the .first time today In the court of federal Judge Jolm J. Slrlca. 'I1le tape contained portions of con- versations Nllon had with his ronner key aides, Jglm D. Ebrlichman and H.R. Haldeman, on June 20, 1m, Slrlca order<d lt played as part of an · eUort to try to find oul· whether the .taped recordlnp bad been altered in any way. This tape was chosen because Rose Mary Woods, Nixon•., personal secretary, testllled .Monday she apparenUy ao- cldentall)r ep1sed an 11-minute segment while lranacribing . lt Oct. I. She was on the witness stand as the tape was played. Mias Woods herself threal:led the machine she used to l.ranscribe the tape, punched the play button.and as newsmen 'and •spectators leaned forward in their seats, the President's voice was heard (See TAPES, Poge Z) from 1963 to 1970 be was addicted to "uppers and downers." The court decision said that Nork admitted "that 'the drugs rendered him incompetent, and that they ca.used him to treat patients improperly." Nork, under investigation by the State Board of Medical Examiners, and the hospital were ordered to pay Albert Gonzales, 32, compensatory damages of $1. 7 million and punitive damages or 12 million. Gonzales, a grocery clerk, charged that surgery perlonned by Nork in 1967 was unneces,,ary and that the emo- tiooal reaction and pain caused triggered the terminal cancer. His attorneys said he bad but three years .to live. In issuing his 19&-page decision, Superior Court Judge B. Abbott Goldberg said, "This case was a five-month horror. This court was a ·grand Guignol of medical horrors." Eighty-five persons testified during the tr,ial, many of them for. · ~r patients of Nork, who is practicing medicine • at the Velerans Hospital in Martinez. Nork, 45, teStified be . lied in two previous malpractice trials and blamed his insurance carrier and their attorneys ' for f9rcing him to do it. In the two previous trials, he lost suits of $495,000 and $595,000. "The drama played out here was not a fantasy contrived to satisfy a casual fancy for morbid amusement ; it was real, permanent and tragic," said the judge. "Here have come the poor, the maim- • • ed aod the halt to testify against their ooce beloved physlciao for the W!'Ollg! that he committed against them with evil purpose," Goldberg said. "The defendant, Dr. Nork, for nine yean made a practice of performing wmecessary surgery, and performing it badly, simply to line bis pockets," Goldberg added. Nor k admJtted be performed tm· necessary and negligent surgery on Gonzales and also testified to 36 similar ore l r1 Ill Marine Fuel Ordered Saved for Fishermen BY L. PETER KRIEG Of Ille n.llJ "'"' I t.ff nie federal government today ordered restrictions oo the sale of marine fuel, declaring that it must be saved for fishennen who use their boats to make a living and gather seafoods. 1be order from the Office or Petroleum Allocation said that diesel fuel will be !Old on a priority basis. Sport fishing boot and cruise ahips are oot in U>p priority classllicatl00>. Fuel docks In Newport Harbor had not received word of the latest -but not unezpect.ed -rederat moves to con- serve energy. "HeU, we're just selling to the boats that come in and ask fof._it," said Jack Nelson, operator of the Shell dock on Balboa Island. · · "We haven't been told -anything so . we won't stop .until we nm out," he -'"!lid. Bob Bi>'by, whose Unioo Oil dock is right next door, said he's already stopped. He ran out two weeks ago. Phil Tozier, owner of Davey's Locker sportfisbing fleet, sa)'3 his sportfisbing business bas already beeen affected. "We are already feeling the pinch," Tozier said. "We ran out or fuel Monday morning and our supplier 8:31d be won't I < .• be getting any more· In until Dec. 1. "So we're.already in trouble," Toiier said. "There's fuel available at certain sta- tion!, at a higher price," be noted. But Tozier said he'll probably be forced to cut back mid-week trips with both the sporilishing boat and his barilo!' cruise ship, the Pavilioo Queen. His Catalina boat doesn't nm during the winter. "We may even curtail the Pavilioo Queen on the weekends. It will depend on how tight it gets," Tozier said. · The effect on availability to private (See MAJ\INE, Poge Z) .-"" . ; • ) f '" NiXon's Brother Denies Charges 0£ Acquaintance Senate OKs Nominatinn ' Newpori f.ouncil Of Ford by 92-3 Vote By JOHN ZALLER °'"' DlllY "'"' 11ett WASHINGTON (UPI) -'I'1le Senate F. Donald Nixon, brother of the Presi-approved overwheltftingly today the dent, Monday branded as "absolute nomination of Rep. Gerald R. Ford as stupidity" charges that a former ac-new vice president. The vote was 92-3. quaintance was being perseruted by the 1be House is expected next week to White House for refusing to break off complete the historic first for Congress an alleged busineso relationship. in filling the nation's second highest Nil:on, a Newport Beach resident, was offiFceor'd 60 H-··· R bli I ade , , ........., epu can e r, responding to comments by the former was picked by President Nil:oo Oct. acquaintance Jan Meier who is being 12 to succeed Spirtl T. Agnew who resigir charged with income tax evasion by ed Oct. 10 and was fined for tax evasi'on. the U S J U Depart t It marks U\e first time that the 25th .. usce men . Nixon flatly denied that he had ever Amendment to the Constitution, passed by Congress in 1965 aod ratified in had any business dealings with Meier 1967, was put to use. It provides for who was an aide to billionaire Howard a simple majority vote of the HoU9e Hughes until 1969. and Senate to confirm a nominee of "I have known the man for some the ltresident to fill a vacancy in the time" NiJon said in a telephone in-vice presidency. 'Ibe House Judiciary Committee com- terview, "but I have never had any pleted hearings on Ford Monday and business dealings with hlm whatsoever." is expected to vote approval Thursday. Meier through bis attorneys, had said 'l'1le full' House will get the nomination be may call Donald Nixon to testify next week, and final confirmation is In his trlal. predicted a week !rom Thursday. Meier contends that the tu evasion 'Ibe Senate Rules co m m 1 t t e e charges are a retributiOn from the White unanimously approved Ford Nov. 21 House for bis refu.ul to break off his following four days of hearings. relationship with the President's brother. Ford spoke briefly this morning at In addition to the charge of political tlJe national convention of the Interna- motivalion, Meier claimed that in-tional Seafarers Union, whose president, formatioo that resulted In his lndil:)mellt Paul Hall, predicted: "You are going originated from phone · taps made by ~ to have a smooth and successful voyage the Secret Service on F. Donald Nixon. througb Congress." 11People with federal charges against Ford told the delegates: "Despite them will try anything," Nixon said. choppy weather and rough seas, you "But this kind of defense Is the most and 110 million Americans can be proud stupld thing he (Meier) could do." of what can Le done throul!h our Nixon . declined ·to comment · furth~ government. Our Government t6e past .on charges of income tu evasion pend-.. 200 years has weathered one stonn after .~.~~ "!_ei~aUer for the courts, another. We have a very good skipper (See DON NIXON, Page Z) to see us througb this one." Uftl T ......... OVERWHELMING APPROVAL .VP.o..lgnote Ferd House Approves DST; Senate Still Must Act . . . votes to cancel Li gh~ Festival Newport ll<ach cnuncllmen voted unanimously Monday to urge cancellaUon of this year's Feslivli of Ligbta Boat Parade as a measure in ketpihg with the national effort-to conserve ·dwindling fuel supplies. Since the city does not officially sponsor the boat parade, its .recom- meodation will be fon!arded In the d(rec- tors of the Newport Harbor Cwnber of Commerce, who will meet Wednesday to decide the fate of the Festival of Lights. Councllmeo were at first reludant to urge outright cancellaUon of the lridl· tional event, which dates . back to the World War II era. However, councilmen took the position that gOvermflent should set an, example to private citizens by taking the sternest measures to deal ·with the , energy shortage. In making their decision, councilmen Indicated they were most ooncemed about the amount of diesel fuel that would be consumed by participants in the parade and the amount of gasoline used by people to drive to Newpott Beach from across Sourern California. Chamber officials this ming pointed out they don't spomor parade, either, but they indicated the ecutive com- mittee will vote to do everything the chamber can to discourage lt this year. "I'm not"'Stire what we'll do, but I think the majority of the board feels we should go along with the economy measures," said GeorP,e Woodford, skip- per of the chamber's Commodores Club. Councilmen also enacted a series of other energy conservation rr.easures, but they putOfl' comlderaUon of the most sweeping ones unUI they can be given more study. Airline Cntbaek Judge Reaffir1ns Shield a~ Trial WASIDNGTON (UPI) = The House voted this afternoon to place the country · on Dayligbt Saving Time year-round tmtil lhe end o( April, 1975.to conserve energy. Councilmen quickly agreed to eliminate ligbting for the city's flagpole and aonual Christmas dl4play, to set tbermO!ltats in all public buildlnga no higher than S degrees, aod to reduce as mucl> as possible the ligbting in public buildings dt!ring dayligbt hours. ' • · United to Furlough Over 1,000 WASHINGTON {PP!) -United Airlines today announced it ·will furloqh more tJi"I' 1,000 emplo~. including 300 pilots, and cancel 100 dally !lights beeause of lhe.tuel crisis. · Edward E" Carlaoa, president of !he naUon's largest alrlihe, said the cancelatton! bad been 'tlClleduled even before President Nixon announced Sun~y an ad~ilt_onal 15 percent cut in jet !uel'dellvery for the airlines: · Cartson-indlcated that'the"new-cutback-.,..,uld result In sWJ more layolfs. ' ', • Earlier, the airline Industry trimmed more than 500 fllghts from Its domestic schedule on grou~ds ,of jet fuel shortages. ' Carbon ll!lld Ille, aqdiUonal ·United fllghl cutbackJJ would be el· fecUve Jan. 7. But Ille airline will bj>gln furloueblng "bnmedlately." • 1 LOS ANGELES (AP) -Participants In the murder trial of two persons charged in the slaying of a pruon guard will be separated from spectatol'1 by a bWletproof shield despite objections from defense _ajtomeys. Jean Ho1-l, 45, aod Robert Seabock, 22, or Palo Alto are the second pair to be tried in the October 1m killing ol a priaon . guanl. The· guard was shot -to death, and another guard was WOWld· ed in the escape of · pruoner Ronald Wayne ll<aty. A Superior Court judge Monday denied a defense moUon uklng that the trial be moved to another courtroom. Jury oelectioo began alter denial ol the mo- tion • Ir the bill is passed by the Senate 8nd signed into law by President Nlxon, almost eNeryone in the country would have t~ tum their clocks ahead ooe hour beginning at 2 a.m. on the first SundayJ that falls 15· days . after the law is 'tll&cted:'l11o, vote was 311 ... Sta~ wouid no longer have ·the option, either iwtnter or summer, of exempting themsetvis from the tldvaiiced time, as tbey are pennltted to do und er Jaw. However, states that lie within two dlf- f~t tin\• zones would be able to .,_,,pt one portion of the state so, thlt there would be a unlfornl time tor the entire lllate. ;, .,1 However, they allo asked further studies on propooals to reduce the irr tensity of street lights and to cut back night ....,.atlon programs that ~ outdoor lighting. The council also shied away from a proposal to reschedule Its meetings for dayligbt hours In order to -e eleclrlclty. 111 really don't think that's a 'Jabte option." said Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis, referring to • the P-1 to reschedule council and CiSmmiSsion meetings. Mcliinls indicated a willingness to s~p­ port the other measures . but he ~Id he wanted to consult with police about the ef!ects of reduolng street lights aild with tho parks department on the night (Seo FESTIVAL, Page Z) operations on other patients during his nine years or surgery . On including the hospital in the decision, Goldberg said, "I ha.ve reached the conclusion that the hospital is Hable with great reluctance, because I am sure that the Sisters of ~1ercy have done everything within their power to run a proper institution. But they. like every hospital governing board, are cor· porately responsible ror the conduct of their medical staff." State Panel Asks Stop On Halt SACRAMENTO (APl -State esperts recunmended today that california lift its five-year-old moratorium oo offshore oil drilling. The State Lands Commission will vote on the recommendation following a hear~ ing Dec. 11, said Stste Controller Houston I. Flournoy, the commission chairman. The recommendatioo came from the State Lands Divisiop after extensive bearings into current environmental safeguards against the p._t of majcr oil spills such as the one In the Santa Barbara Channel that led to the ban in January 1959. The spill occurred in a well belng drilled on a federal lease outside the state-controll~ ttiree-mile limit. Flournoy said the state experts recom- mended a resumption of drilling only on exisUng state leases and only from exisihig offshore drilling platforms. That would. provide a pot_ential of 50 to 60 new wells which could be in full production within nine months, Flournoy aaid. He aaid thoae welis could tap estimated reserves ol 200 million to 300 million barrels of badly needed crude oil. Flournoy said he is convinced that the tough new drilling standards pro- posed by the division wUI provide an adequate safeguard against aoy potential disaster. "The wells can be drilled safely with maximum protection for t b e m. vironment," be said . He empl\aslzed that the decision to conaider a resµmption of drilling now was not bastlned by the increasing energy crisis. "It comes at a time when the oil is needed, primarily by coincidence," be said. The other two members of the com- mission are Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke, chairman Of the state's Energy Policy Council, and finance director Verne Orr. Reinecke bas said he is prepared to vote for a resumption or drilling on state leases when be is convinced it can be done with maximum safety. • Flournoy declined today to say bow he would vote on the proposal. But be said the staff Hhas made a strong case for the resumption of drilling." He said there is no question that the oil industry has sophisticated new equipment· that was not available at (See DRILLING, Page Z) Orange «:out Weather Falr through Wednesday with sunny days and sligb1Jy warmer afternoons ls t.he way t.he weather service sees it. Highs at the beach- es in the upper ·&Os rising to the low 71b inland. Overnjght lows in the upper 40s. INSIDE TODAY Elizabeth Taylor. who bu htt own count ha3 hod surgery 30 times and "ha.s been clo.se death four times," will undergo abdominal surgery at -UCLA Wednesdov. St0rv. Page s. L.M. lerll ' _,_ " c.i1""9I• . " Mvtumt """" " Clt•tlllM 1'·U N•llONI Ntw1 4, 11 Coml~~ " or"" c..,.tr 1 ·-" lylwl• ,,_., " '*'"' .... ,. ' ...... , .. " acll1otl•I "" • llotll Mlr11fl1 1 .. 1, •11twt11-1 " T .. tvl!WOft • " ·-17·19 """"' .. ,.,. ,.. . ..,.. ' .... -• ..,_ .. w-·• ...... '"*4 ,...._ " --.,, ... ._.... 11 " " • • I lutsda~. Nowmbtr 27 1 l'f•~ . . .. Growth Beferend-0111 '· Oouacibnan Pabl Rycl<oft bas p~ posed a city rererendum to g1ve Newport Beach voten a chnace to express tbomMIV<ll oa ZOlllni and poplllaUoo llmlll. Introducing the matter Mooday at an study ,...Ion or th• council, Ryckoff a.aid he wasn't sure that the people * * * Total Freeze .:On 'Growth' ·Io San Juan? By JOHN VALTERZA Of rht DallY Plltt 11.tf A proposal by San Juan Capistrano City Cotmcilman 'James Thorpe for a -. ,total moratorium on any new growth '.1n the city because of the energy crisis ' passed itl first test before his peers Monday. Councilmen agreed unanimously to ' would actually -support severe "'1"th contro!J. "llUt I think we abould !Ind out if population llmll5 are possible and il anyooe. ...... them," Rycltoff uld. RyckoU then uked City Attorney Den- nis O'Neil to lnvelllgato the forlllJ such a referendum mlgllt take and to make . ' Explosive Material? LOS ANGELES fUPl) -Edward Carroll, on an early momlng jog through a picnic area1 saw a 111an stealthily place a silvery box ln the area and disappear. He alerted the sherllra depart· ment. The bomb squad, backed by a rtre department wlit, worked gingerly Monday at opening the mysterious parcel, a cardboard box bound with silver tape. It took them 30 minutes. The box W1'S filled With pornographic pictures. a report at tile couocil'a study 5eJSloo Dec. 17. Otber <IOUDCllmen didn't Immediately comment on Rycko!f's proposal, but they did agree to otudy tile tnattu further. Ryckol! llki hf Wll maJdfta: the p~ pofll be<auao be' was worrtecl tha), the city appeared to be "rushing through" Sauna Trial: Lawyer Tells Of Fantasies • By TOM BARLEY Of 1M DMIY 'I"" llefll Maria Parson's lawyer today alleged before an Orange County Superior Court jury that his client's ordeal In the sauna room of an Orange heaJth spa wtleashed a promiscuity that bad its origin in childhood sexuaJ fantasies. schedule a foll examination of Thorpe's suggestion for a tDtal freeze on city growth-at their next session,-Monday•~. ---- San Francisco Attorney Marvin Lewis Sr. told the jury of nine women and three men iii Judge-wtlllam Mmay's courtroom that Mrs. Parson, 49, wal!I a "sexually exciting" woman who had to repress all such thought! before her marriage. . " If the new moratorium were to take ·effect) it would mark the second time that a lull-blown shutdown of con· .struction in the city has been imposed by the c:ouncil. . · 'lborpe stressed that bis latest sug- gestions were extremely important becau..e the city of late 15 being called .upon to drastically improve streets and inslall streel lighting. "This means that in order to serve , any new people who come to the city , ·we have to rob power and services from people who are already here," ~he said. ; , In a second suggestion, Thorpe asked : ·for the formation of an emergency com- mittee to study the problem of local :growth and its drain on energy :. :resources. . The Saddleback College Instructor warned that as new houses are built • in San Juan more and more people will be lured into a lile of commuting to work. "The trend in Southern California these 'days is to rearrange the population and ,.:that ls simply dangerous,'' he added. ' Thorpe's suggestion brought no serious 'reservation.a from other coWJcllmen - ~all of whom have faced moratoriums ,,.iore and who have endorsed them under different circumstances. . 'lbe last freeze took place early in the year during a period when the I city planning staff amoWlted to a ·skeleton "crew" of one man. "l don 't take issue with your sug- gesliM, but I'm just not ready to make "'a decision tonight," said Co\lllcilman ~James Weathers. I Fl'Otll Page I TAPES ••• in the courtroom. The quality of the tape was extremely poor -marred by a tow hum and echoes in his Executive Office Building office, where the conversation took place. At first, onJy occasional words, in- cluding some profanity, could be beard . as Nixon discussed news conferences and otber matters with Ehrlicbman. Their words were obscured b y backgrollnd noises including such things as a jet plane and the toot of a car born. Twenty minutes into the tape, the voices were replaced by a loud, persis- tent bwn that sounded like an electric -.-~ razor or an outboard motor at trolling speed. The hum diminished about four minutes later to a lower pltch. It changed slightly in pitch four mlnutes later, stop- ; I I : . ' i . • ' . • • • ped briefly after another three minutes f and eventually returned to its original high level. When voices were heard again, 181/, minutes later, Nixon was speaking with Haldeman and could be beard to say "Either way, either way." The President could also be heard at one point saying, "I work better when even I go to a place like that," and at another point he asked a White • Hotise steward to bring him some con- somme. OUNQI COAST N DAILY PILOT tn1 .0r1"°' CM.It DAILY PILOT, wllh Wllkl'I 11 comlllMld lh• Hrw1.Pr•·u, II Pll(l!i$/!H b'( "'-Ori~ CD111 P11bl1'.llin11 (O'"P9nY. ~ ,.. .. .in;o..1 ••• P11b!l1nec1, Mor1111y tlln1V$~ Frk11y, tQr Cos11 Mt••· HtwpOrl llffdl, Hunllf\8!1111 llttehlFOUt11t!n V•!~y. Ut11t1• lludl, lrvlne/Sldd._c~ tl!d Son CJem.nlt/ Jan J111n C.plf!rt rio A ••n;lt reQlonll ' ..fl11on It Pttlll/\M<I Salt,1nl1 y1 tl'ld s..,.nc11,s. Th1 ptlncloll pultli'shJne Plt nt II •t lJD Wf'1 111r S1rHf, Cost1 Mftl, c1tilor1'1.-, t?nt. Rob11t N. Wt.J Pr•iounl 11'1d P11Dl .. hilr J1ck R. C11rl1y Viet ~rnldtnl ef'lll Gt111r11 M1nag1f Tho1111f 1(11vil Ed1fo.r Tltot'tltt A. Murp~it11 M_1ft1111flll fd!IO!' L r1t1r K,;,, N...,..., klCfl City EdllW N..,.., ...... OMe. llJl Newport 101111•1~ M1U/119 AJJr1111 r.O. lo• 1171, fl66J ........ "'"'- CO.It Mttt: Ull Wnt lty $tr"1 ~ lttdl: m Fw•1 •-H~lll'lotWI ... ldl: 11"S •IKfl IOo.llfvt ... ,S.11 cNtntin1t: JDS HOtlfl Iii ClfftlM llMI Tll.,.._ (714) '42-4JJ:I Cl•Nfe4 A....W., '424671 ~lfM. "'I. Dr•"" Cetsl '"'*1"111"f ~nr. Ht ,,.W\ 11>01111, m~11i.... .,,..,..., !Niter ti' <Mtvt•·t11""'"ll PltNll• 11111)' "' '9'Nlfvcll!ll Wl"""11 W*ltJ Pl'!'> ....... " cwyrlgt)t ._. ....... ~ ....... Mid II CMlt Mtu, ,..,..,,.. ~"'!on .., , • .,.. n,u ...,,.,, W -II U.lf A'IWlllll.,-1 lftllllelT ....... ,.._ MM fMflltlll • • From Pagel MARINE .•• pleastii'e bo8l$ probably won't be known for several days until the level of supply has been detennlned. Nelson figures there's plenty to go around 1 If everybody wouldn't rush to buy it all up. "There1s no problem il these guys. don't get nervous,'' he said. "But when you guys print all this abQut a shortage, they all come here an·d we nm out." Anthony Pisano, manager of the 4G- boat Fisherman's Cooperative Associa· tion , ·said his 4G-boat fl eet will likely benefit from the order. Fuel had been in short supply around his cooperative's San Pedro headquarters, he said, but the federal order should change that, be said. "Things really haven't been critical here but our allocations have been cut about 15 percent," Pisano said. "But this news will be helpful because the fishing season starts up at .the first of the year." A'bout 400 men are members of the cooperative, he said. From Page :i ·DON -NIXON. • • and I really doo'l think I should say anything," Nixon said. Nixon did ackoowledge however1 that be has known Meier "for years" but be declined to stall the nature ol their relationship, except to say they never had any business dealings. Nixon also acknowledged that the Secret Service has made wire taps on his phooe. · It was reported over the weekend that Meier, who now lives in British Columbia, was questioned recently by Senate Watergate investigators who are interested in bis relation.ship with Donald Nixon and cash contributions made on Hughes' bebaU through Presidential aides. Meier was fLred by the Hughes organization in 1969. It has since been reported that the action _ was taken because Me 1 er disregarded White House orders to disassociate himself from Donald Nixon. From ·Pagel FESTIVAL ..• recreation program before any decisions were triade. The energy-saving proposals were developed by Jacob Myndefse, city genera] services director. In outlining the conservation measures to the t'Ouoctl, Mynderse disclosed that the energy shortage has already made itse~ fell in Newport Beach. M)1lderse explained that the dty is able to secure delivery on onJy about one-third or ita normal diesel fuel sup- plies, and that 1f the situation worsens, the city may have to reduce trash pick- up to once a week. And in the meantime, Mynderse said be bas already grounded all city trucks powered by diesel fuel except those used for trash collection. "Anybody who thinks the energy crisis Isn't for real · onJy needs to listen to , stories like this one to Know that It's no joke/' Mcinnis commented. LewiS asserted his red-haired client was on "tbe brink of a precipice" in psychiatric terms !our years ago when she found herself unable to open the Door of the sauna room and unable to immediately attract the attention of the staff. The resulting trauma, be told the jury in bl! opening statement, brought into the open the loving character known as "Maria" and the remorseful p~ jection known as "Betty." Lewis said Mrs. Parson's adoption of multiple personalities led Maria to em- bark on a series of sexual adventures that often led her to seek mates in local bars. He told the jury that Betty bitterly regretted Maria's actions but neither personality, nor the third personality which was Mrs. Parson's true seU, could take full control. Lewis said those sexual longings and fantasies were built up as the direct result or Mrs. Parson's strict Roman Catholic upbringing in the borne of parents who observed every tenet of the faith. "She went to ber husband as a virgin at the age of 21," Lewis said. "And on every date she ever had before she married Bud Parson, she had an escort wb:> invariably frowned if she touched a boy's hand." Lewis said Mrs. Parson took refuge in sexual fantasies that were enhanced by the fact that she often heard the lovemaking of her parents "carried on behind a paper thin wall." He said Mrs . Parson, one of eight children born to a couple who fled from Mei.ico at the height of Pancho Villa's revolution, bad seven children heneU after an almost disastrous start to her own marriage. "She and Mr. Parsoll bad their prob- lems and on one occasioo she filed divorce because of his sexual relation- ships with other women," Lewis asserted. "But they worked things out after those early years and went on to raise their family and enjoy a happy sexual relationship until the tragedy that OC· curred in 1he----sauna room ." Lewis is seeking $1 million in damages for Mrs. Parson. He said he will put his client and,m06t of ber §even chJldren ages 26 through 10 on the stand in what ls expected to be a !our-week trial. He told the jury sworn in today that Maria Parson before her entrapment in the sauna was "a devout catholic mother who gave most of her time to the Boy Scout and Catholic Youth movements and PTA and who raised her family in a strict Ca tho Uc mann er." "They were always at mass," Lewis told the jury. "And it can be imag~ed what effect her later behavior had on a family raised in this manner." Fro•PageJ DRILLING ... the time of the 1969 oil spill . He and other state officials have con- tended state regulations at the time were stronger than those imposed by the · federal governmeot and that the Santa Barbara spill would not have oc- curred had the well been drllled under the 'state;s 19699 controls. The new requirements proposed tod ay are even tougher, Flournoy said. • Sou1ltem Orange County WEEKLY BOX SCORE ~,IHtt .......... te """'c C•t•H•Untltt. Tffel reh-4 te ._.. Pwcw ., ..., f ltAlllD TO DATI . ""'" •·"" ,,,,so ,1,ns """' Sl7J,lt7 11% 'llCIHT 0111 OOAL .... ., .. ... , 2, .• 11.1 SJ-U,714 , • 115 formulation ol e geoeral plan. "I'm concerned we might be doing something we might regret," Ryckolf aald. Ryckoff bas generally supported past elforts to enforco tight zoning t'Onlrols to Umtl poplllaUoo In the city. Ho sup- ported efforts to downione the Balboa peninsula earlier this year. In proposing a referendum on popula· tion and zoning, Ryckoff said he wasn't sure whether voters should be asked to vole on a specific series of zoning measures; or simply asked to make a general expression of how much growth ought to be allowed in tbt city. Currently the city population Ls about 57 ,000. Ultimate projected population is 90.000 to 100,000. Councilman Richard Croul didn't com· ment directly on Ryckof!'s suggestion, but later in the meeting be said during a discussion of illegal rental units : · "I think we'd be better to go after people Jiving illegally in the city than to start referendums to t a k e people's rights away,'' Crou1 said. h-tayor Donald A. Mcinnis, in an inter- view after the meeting, said he was inclined to oppose referendums except when they are reaJly necessary. "1 think the people elect a city council to make decisions of this kind. That's Whirthe city cotmci!-is-for;1'-he-said. .. However Mcinnis said he wouldn't make up his mind on Ryckoff's proposed referendum until he sees O'Nell's report and bears comments from other co101· cilmen. Vice-Mayor Howard Rogers said after the meeting : "I'd like to see population limits set, but I'm not sure a referendum is the way to do it. "But I suppose a referendum could help. It took a referendum for us to finally beat the Pacific Coast Freel!'ay1" Rogers said. Newport Office Building Looted Of $8,000 Gear ll1ore than $8,000 Y.'Orth ot office equip- ment, stolen from a Nev•port Beach office ~lding over the long Thanksgiv- ing weekend, has been recovered by Fountain Valley police. Detectives Bob f<.1cClain and Marty Engquist claim they found t b e typewriters, calculators and camera equ.ipment in a 9arden Grove motel room occupied by David Alley, 23, and Calvin AndreYls, 25. The two men were arrested Saturday by McClain and Engquist who said they received infonnalion abou t I he whereabouts of the pair. Andrews, according to police, was recently arrested on suspicion of com· milting two burglaries in t h e Westminster area. Court ac.ik>n is pend- ing on those two cases. iieanwhile, both men remain in custody today in Orange County Jail. The detectives said they believe they recovered about 90 percent oC the items stolen from the Newpo rt PrOfessional Building, 369 San ~tiguel Drive. The det ectives said the burglary of the offices in the Newport Center building had not been discovered when they arrested Alley and Andrews. "We found the name and phone · number of one of the owners on a calculator, so we called him Saturday," said McClain. "His first remark was "Is this some kind of a joke?' " Boycott Called Off OROS! (UPf) -A stu<tent boyc<>U of classes in the Cutler-Orosi School District was called off Monday night at a meeting or about 200 parents. The boycott began Wednesday after the district board of trustees voted to cancel a controversial bilingual teaching pro- gram at the end of the school year. Ne~rt Co~cil Action Here In brtef are the INJor actlOlll taken Moadiy by Newport Beach city t'OWlcllmen: POPULATION: Acreed to itudy • .....,...i by Cowtctlmatt Paul Rycko!I for a city referendum oo zoning and population curbs. ENERGY: Enactod a sweeping .. rtes of conservaUon measures, tncludinr a nlCOmmendatton to the Newport Harbor Chamber ol Commen:e that the annual Christmas boat parade be canceled. ' ' SlllOG: Orde~ Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis to write to the federal Environ- mental Protectloo Agency to ·~oppose strongly" the proposed surcharge on parking. . . LIDO BEACHES: Set a public bearing Dec. 17 to t'Onstder reoewal. or the city Ieue of 115,beaches to the Udo !ale Community AuociaUon. GENERAL PLAN: Delayed all major action becau..e only a bare quorum Wa.!J present. Will Dl~pute Coast Atulrney Jailed For Contempt of Court A Newport Beach attomey who spent the weekend in Orange County Jail will have to go back there Jan. 7 if he does not produce evidence on a n2,900 transaction repeated.I)' demanded by Superior Court Judge Claude M. Owen!. The angry judge sent Roland Stewart Barcume, 36, of 550 Newport Center Drive, to lhe jail on a contempt citation after Bamnne failed to prov Id~ documents related to the will of a San Clemente re1ident who died in Capistrano Beach nearly four years ago. Widower Wilson Eugene Luther, 8$1 138 W. EscaJones, named Barcume to administer his will shortly before he Nevada Gas Ban Reviewed WASIUNGTON (A) -John Love, White House energy adviser, agreed to take a secood look at the effect ol Sunday gas statioo closings on Nevada, Rep. David Towell said today. "! don't ltmw of another state on the same Wis that Nevada il!I," Love told Towell in a meeting Monday, adding he hadn't realized the impact of station closings on Nevada. Towell said he pointed oot to Love the loog dista.oces between gas stations for visit,on, driving to Nevada from L4s An&efes and san Francisco. Project Blessed; Work Continues HONOWLU (AP) -Construction resumed on Honolulu's partially com- pleted sports stadilllll today after it received a delayed tradtUonal bJ,...;ng to ward off a curse feared by worken. The blessing, a religious ceremooy performed at almost all new construction sitel!I in the state, was administered by the Rev. Art>abam Akalra, pastor of the Kawaibou Church, one or Hawaii's oldest Congregational churches. - Workers left their jobs Friday com- plaining Uiat the project site was cursed and men were beiug kiUed because the 50,000-seat stadium had never received the traditional blessing. Two men have cited at the .,roJed as the result of accidents. diei! June 25, 1970, in a Capistrano Beach t'Oovaleocent b<>spJtal. Y.Ib<r. an active Christian Scientist, named the First Olurch of Olrlsl, Scien- tist, in Boston, Mal!IS., as one of the principal beneficiaries in his lal!lt will and tesllment which was filed by Barcume in Superior Court. Deputy County Counsel John M. Pat· terson said Monday that the church became anxioua after waiting several yean for. dlstrtbutloo of 115 portion ol the estate and called on the public administrator'• office to look into the si tuation. "AI the heart of thla Issue 15 an alleged 152,900 cfalm on the estall wblch bas been paid by Mr. Barcume," Pat· tenon said. "But our problem is that he can1t produce this creditor and he can't show ua the canceled c:hecks or receipts to support these tranaactklnl." Patterson said the $52,900 would have gone to the church U the claim that the court Insists on invesUgatlng bad not been paid by Barcume. "Judge owe .. bas asked blm aeveral limea: 10 produce thl! evidence," Pat- terson said. "Barcume bu told us that the evidence bas been committed to microfilm but we haven't aeen that microfilm yet." "Judge Owens made it very clear in OW' last court session that be was far from satisfied with Mr. Barcume'a faihll'e to c:oniply with a court order 1" Patterson said. "He sent h)m to jail for the weekend and brought him back Monday to ttlease him on his promise to appear Jan. 7 and produce the needed evidence at that time." Court records indicale that tile 162,llOO questioned by Judge Owens involves a claim made on the Luther estate by a ''Harris Robinson." "But I don't think Judge Owens is going to be aattslied unUI he seea this creditor or sees documents substan- tiating that claim," Patterson said. "He has repeatedly pointed out to Mr. Barcume that this business has gone on for nearly four years now." 1 Barcume oould not be reached for comment on the Luther will •• Three Still Missing SAN DIEGO (AP) -An aerial search continued in the Gulf of California today !or a %3-foot boat missing wlth three Californians aboard, the Coast Guard said. A spokesman said the boat was operated by Bill Byler, 84 , of Covina. His passengers were identified as Mike Case, 35, of West Covina, and Carl Crandall, 4C, of Azusa. PRUDENT BUYING · - Throughout our 77 years of carpet retailing, one fact becomes quite evident-.-that when money is less plentiful people buy better quality. ~-,#~· ' ... ~··"- This is contrary to popular belief, but makes a good sense if you think about it. When you have to concem yourself with value and performance, you are likely to buy better quality. At Alden's in the las\ three years, our per unit sale has been more expensive carpeting, reflecting this fact. Consequently, we have the largest ,election of finer qualities you will see anywhere, all at competitive prices. The end "result i~ customer s~tisfaction, pride and recommendations which provide our overwhelming source of new business. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DUPES 1663 Placentia AYe. COSTA MISA 64M838 • HOURS: Moe. Tin n.n., t M l:JO -RI., t M t -SAT., t :JO M I \' • ' ··- • .. '. • .. , . . - • • Today's· Final N.Y. Stocks VOL 66, NO. 331, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1973 c TEN CENTS Doctor· Convicted al •Medical Horrors~ ~ ' . . - SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A llUqjton who admitted pertwmmg at least 38 lllU1eOellll'Y back aperatlono and a hospital were ordered today •to pay a former -patient dying ol cancer 13, 7 mllliflO daniages In a caaa the judge deo<rl\led as a "grand Gulgnol of medical horrors.'' ' The decision· was returned agailist Dr. JOOn G. Nork, who h11 ~ additional J1l0l~ce cases pending aaalnst him, and Mercy Hospital. , ·Nork ' taUfied durln& hla trial that llvm '1113 to 1970 be was addicted to ''uppen and dowuorl." - 'i'6e oourt clecWm said that Nork admitted "that the drur/:s reodered him lnconq>eient, and that ihey caused him to treat patients improperly." Nork, Wider inveailgailon by the State ,Board of Medical Examiners, and tbe bolpllal were ordered to pay Albert Gonzales, 32, oompematory damag .. of $1.7 milllon and punitive damages of $2 million. Gonzalea, a grocery clerk, chaJ'll'd that surgery perfonned by Nork in 1961 was unneteasary and that the emo- tional reaction and pain caused triggered the terminal cancer. His attorneys said be had but three years to live. Ill issuing his 196-page dedsion, Superior Court Judge B. Abbott Goldberg said, "Th.ls cue was a five-month horror. • This court was a grand Gulgnol of medical h::irrors." Eighty·five persoos testified during the trial, many of therii folo_ ·or patleota of Nork, who ls practicing medicine D.llfY PUtt Stiff """ GREENBROOK RESIDENTS BLOCK CONSTRUCTION OP -STREET THROUGH TRACT Truek Driver (center) Teke1 Time Out To ltHCI P-rs of Plcke!Mrs ' ' , , I at the Veterans Hospital in Martine?l. -Nork, 4.1, testified be lied in two previous malpractice trials and blamed his Insurance carrier and their attorneys for forcing him to do it. In the two previous trials, be lost sulta of $4§,000 and 1595,000. "'111e drama played out here was not a fantasy contrived to satisfy a casual fancy for morbid amusement; it was real, pennanent and tragic," said the jlllge. ."Here have come the poor. the maim· , ed and the hall to tesllly against their once beloved phy51~an for the wn>11g3 that be committed against them with evil purpose," Goldberg said. "The defendant, Dr. Nork, for nine years made a practice of performing unnecessary surgery, and performing it badly, simply to line hi! pockets," Goldberg added. Nork admitted be performed un· necessary and negligent surgery on Gonzales and also testified to 36 similar operations On other patients during his nine years of surgery. On inCluding the hospital in the decision, Goldberg said, "I have reached the conclusion that the hospital ls liable with great reluctance , because I am sure that the Sisters or Mercy hav&. done everything within their power to nm a proper institution. But they, like ~very hospital governing board, are cor- porately responsible for the conduct of lhelr medical staff." Uprising in Mesa Road B-Iockaded By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of .... DtllY Pllfl Sl1H A group of .angered homeownen today blockaded construction of a road through the new Greenbrook tract in north Costa Mesa ln protest over a 11 e g e d misrepresentation of traffic conditions by the developer. The Dahlia Avenue residents say they bought their $40,000 to $60,000 bomes with the understanding that their road would end in a cul~e-sac. Now, Utey say the Larwin Corporation is trying to take the cul-de-sac away by building a road that nms straight to the South Coast Plaza parking lot P.icket signs alung'over their shoulders and bah!.. in their arms, eight pro- testers, mostly women, were successful in torcing a truck to leave the construc- tion site. · public relations man Bob Perlberg, ex- pressed surprise that the homeowners took such a bard line today. He said a meeting had been arranged with them to discuSs the complicated background of South Coast Drive and the access road and to apprise them of Larwin's continuing efforts to negotiate another connection. The meeting is scheduled for 3 p.m. near Ute Larwin sales office. One of the protest leaden, Mrs. Harry West, 945 Dahlia, said . the residents were angry because Larwin salesmen told them the street .would remain a cul~e-sac. Opening the road, she maintains, would encourage Greenbrook residents to use Dahlia to get to South Coast Plaza and South Coast Plaza shoppen to cruise through their street to avoid using Sunflower Avenue. Mrs. Pat Barry, 920 Dahlia, said she chose her house at the end of the cul~e-sac because she has four children and wanted them to be safe. Senate OKs Nomination Of Ford by 92-3 Vote . ; . ' . As added insurance tlley strung a wJre, ten<;e;, lc;r<>li!I' ~ !'!!d.,~ked W.AS~~TON IUPI) :-Tiie ~te '' ~ ... · on!s Brother- , Denies Charges Of Acquaintance 2 Kllletl .... " """lrt.aiil ln lnlat Of'Qie 'CU>Ge-oac, approved overwlJelmliiily llidii1.,,-'lhe ~ DDt ~ .-erlbem IDIW they D01111n!o'"'" of Hop. ~Iii ir.,.l' u bd"-"" llaperior a.in NOtiaJnlng ..W Ylce pruldeilt. 'Ille' ftli ftl n::i. order. Voting against tbe nomination were Attorneys Richard and Gregory Sens. Thoma! F. Eagleton, (D-Mo.); Politiski, rep,resentatives of the 12 Gaylord Nelson, (~Wis.), and Willian1 homeowners on Dahlia Avenue, said they D H th (D-Malne) would seek the order Wednesday.. · a away, · Lawyer Richard Politiski said the only The Houi:e Is expected next week to L • 0 A We reason Larwin wan ta to build the access complete the historic flrst for · Congress awsuit _ --ver_ -cc , ntm ... r.~~Ef~~~-m~i~~.,geo~Ji=:pu:: ::'. Mesan Loses $2 Million By JOHN ZAU.ER Of .. Dl!lfy ,.., ..... ~ F. Donald N!Xon, brother of the Presi- dent, Monday branded as "absolute stlipldltf" charges that a former ac- qaalntance WU being persecuied by the Wlilte House for refusiDg to break off an alleged buslneoa relatlonSblp. · Nll:on, a Newport Beach resident, was responding to cofttmentS by the 'former acquaintance Jon Meier who ls being charged With in!Xlme tu evasion by tbe U.S. JUlllce Department. N!Xon flaUy denied that be had ever bad any business dealings with Meier who w:as an aide to billionaire Howard Hugbes unW 1969. 0 1 'have known the man for some. time" Ni.Joo said ln a telephone in- terview, "but I ha.Ve never bad any busiDesa dt.a11ngs with b1rn whatsoever." Meler, through his attorneys, had said,. be .may call' Donald Nixon to tesllly in his trial. Meler •contends 'that the tu . evasioo charges ire 1 retribution from the White House for bis refusal to break off his relattooship With the President's brother. Ill addition to the charge of political motlvauoo, Meler cJallqed that 111> formation that resulted in bts Indictment OliiJnlited from ~e taps made by ' (See DON NIXON, Pap Z)· --' Co.ast Weatiter Fair tbiough W"'-!ayhlth SUMY daya and sllihllY warmer afternoons is~the-way, l ie· weather oervlce iees It. IDgba at the ~cl> es in the upper IOa rising to the low 7lll inland. Ovemigbt lows in the upper 408. INSIDE TODAY 11-Tavlo1', 1o11a bv lltr ot.n· count p h'a4 1Uf'!ll'1/ SO ii?MI and "ha.I been close clnth jovr limcs, • !Dill undtrgo a-itlCI! 111rg<111 al UCLA Wedn<adav. Storti , Page 5. .. t.M. ..,. ., , ... ..,... ..,, ,......... ,,.,. c-.m 11 ,.......,. 11 --. ......... , ... '· •-tall#l•f 1C ,_ 1Mt ...... .... . ...,...... ,, MM111111 l4 ... u..n ,, -" ............ ,., .............. ,, --. IYh'M ,...,., ' 17 .,.... 1•n ............. ,, T~ .. 17 -" -. ._... ..... ,,.1. ---4.17 A mother who Jost a daughter and had her 900 transformed into a feeb le abell of a boy with brain dtmage bas Jost a $2 millloo lawsuit against the city of Costa Mesa and a fireman whose squad car collided with their Zll years ago. A jury in Orange -Cotmty Superior Court decided that then-battalioo cbief Ron Coleman and the Costa M ... Fire Department were not at fault in the tragedy. Coleman, who e a r 1 i e r this year became San Clemente fire chief, suf- fered shattered legs in the Feb. 26, 1971, accident on Estancia Drive. He was · racing to a fatal fU'e ln the city's lktory Bethel Towers, when a speeding car coming from the opposite direcUOD went out of control and entered bis lanes. Passengers Claire Arbuckle, 14, along with F..dward Hernandez, 19, were tilled, while Mis:s Arbucile's .brother Paul, 17, saffered disabling lltjurl.,.; The mother of two victims, Mrs. StQr~ge Facility . ' Conversion Hit · catherine, Arbuckle, of 2002 Maple Ave., Costa Mesa; IOUght the $2 million in damages for 'the death of ber daugbter and cooUnulng care for ber son. She aiio charged In -a doubl""'ction suit naming both Coleman and the•drtver of the car in whlcb ber cbildren rode that its operator, Paul R. Baldwin, 19, of Mlra Loma, was also willlully reckless. Baldwin escaped the grinding crash that literally disintegrated both cars with relaUvely minor injuries. Attorney Howard Harrison, of the San· ta Ana Jaw firm of Rutan and Tucker defeoded the city in the eight-day Orange County Superior Court trial. A jury earlier this month deliberated for ooly about I and II hours before ruling in favor of Chief Coleman and the dty's lack ol 'liability in the tragedy. Testimony la the case included the fact that Chief Coleman bad consumed a moderate amount of alcohol · while ofl-dl!tr before being summoned to re- spond to the fire, Facton that offset that fact and were adrilitted to evidence for the jury's coosiderition' lnduded the speed of the . oQier . car -some estimates were up ' to ao 'tnUes per hour -and the fact .. It' ,Jnirtled out pf. control as they ap- it waa originally planned. was Picked by Pr<Sldent Nixon . Oct. A Larwln Company spolo!sman deoled 12 to succeed Spiro T. Agnew who r<S)l!O- this, as well as the charge of ed Oct. 10 and was fined. for tax evas!Oq. niisrepreseotatlon. It marks the first time that the 25th It wu esplalned ~ two •ccess roads Amendment to_ the Cooatltutlon, puoed were ;p.ctfled for the Greenbroot pro~ by Congress m 11185 and ratilled m ect by the city but that city officials 1967, was put to use. It provides for were unable to secure a better easement a simple majority vote of the House from adjacent landowner G e n j i and Senate to confirm a no~ee <>f Kawamura. '111e favored alignment would the President to fill a vacancy m the have connected with the tract at another vice presidency. ' point to preserve the cuJ..dAac. 'I11e House Judiciary Committee com- 'lbe disputed acceSs road, the Larwin pleted hearings on F<>rd Monday and official pointed out, would be only tern-is expected to vote approval Thursday. porary and would be removed upon The full House will get the nomi!'a~n compleUon of South Coast Drive, restor-next week, and final confirmation 1s ing the cuJ~e-sac. predicted a week from Thursday. One official of the Larwin Company 'lbe Senate Rules Co m m 1 t t e e ' unanimously approved Ford Nov. 21 following four days of .bearings. Ford spoke briefly this morning at the national convenUoo of tire lpterna- tional Seafarers Union, whose president, Paul Hall, predicted: "You are going to have a smooth and successful voyage through Congress." 'Sister City' Hunt Endorsed The Costa Mesa Chamber of Com· merce has given its ,.endorsement to the search for a sister city for Costa Mesa. Finding one will be the job of Cotm· cilman Robert M. Wilson, a member ol the · slate< dty committee of the Natiooal League of Cities. Ford told the delegates: "Despite choppy weather and rough seas, you and 210 million Americans can be proud of what can Le done through our government. Our govemmet the past 200 years has weathered one storm· after another. We have a very good skipper to see us through this one." -' --: ' ·'I • • By Mesa, Sta.le ~~~OD the-curve. ""No. one ·cowd have avoidOO that ac-- . cldent, ". the city's lawyer said in ~ • nllng up the jury's finding._ Wilson will Dy to San Juah, Puerto Rico Dec. 2 to discuss the possibilities at the League's Annual Congress of Cities. Oil Talks Held He said be bas beard oothlng oo . -Costa •Mesa has' joined 'the otafe la -a ,polaible appeal -by the firm of Hurwitz,· a moye to force occupant.S ot a 19th Hurwitz and Remer, Mrs. Arbuckte's Street home to comply with the city's lawyers. Chamber directors backed the sister city concept unanimously at Utelr Nov. 17 meeting. '111ey said it could bring many benellts to t!Je clly of Costa Mesa, PARIS (UPI) -West German Chancellor· Willy Brandt and French President Georges Pompidoa conferred for the third time in 48 hours today on ~e oil crisis and European security. bealth butlding aod 18fety codes. San Clemeote's Chief Coleman declined Na~ u defendJuits in the Orange to cormnent on the trial. CotmtY '8uperior -Court adion aeeking a court order to that effect are Larry aod Gladys Barria and Manball B. and ")ane Doe" Gretmore'. It .Is alleged ibat HarriJ, a palnUng aintractor, has been allowed by Gret· moro to coovert the lf8l'lge at aao W. 19th SI. into a storage facility. The dty claima that otber violations Include construction of a wood storage shed and the'""' of osy-acetylene equip-ment at all boun. ·Colonel Collptured SAIGON (AP) -The Khmer Rouge inaurgeata in Cambodia claim that a U.S. colonel w• amont 74 "ene9.)'0 officers they killed or captirid between Oct. 15 and Nov. 15, the Viet Ooog radio reported today' The hn>ldcut, quotlllg the KbiDer Roup -ac-r' did DOI ldeDUlY the .-I or say whether buru killed or caplllred. .. Sex, Fantasies · Described Lawye r" Says Sauna Ordeal Un'leashed Promis cuity . ~ . . By TOM BARLEY · ' Lewis ISlerted his red·halred client ,that orten Jed her lo seek mates in °' .. DlltY ,._. '"" was on "the brin'k of a precipice'' in·-local bars. • Mlrla Panoo'I lawyer . today alleged psychiatric terma four years· ago wben He told the jury that Betty bitterly beftn an Orangt County Superior Court she found heneH unable to open the ttgretted Maria's actions but neither jury that his client's ordeal in the sauna door of the sauna. room and unable personality, nor the third personality room of an Orange health spa unleasbed to Immediately altract the atteotlon of whicb was Mrs. Paraon's true sell, could a inmisculty that had Ila origin in the staff. take full control. ctlldbood sexual fantasies. The resulting trauma , he told the Lewis said those sexpal longings and San Francleco Attorney Marvin ~s jury ln hi! opening statement, brought fantasies were buUt u~ as the direct Sr. 'told the' jury of· nine womeo and into1the open the loving character known result of Mrs. Parson's strict Roman three men in Judge William Murray's u "Maria". and the ~ remorseful pro-Catholic upbringing ln tbe. home or coartroom that Mn. Paraon / 49, .was ject1on k\>DWD u "Betly." parents who obwved every fenet of a "...ually ucitina" 'Womln who had Lew1a iald Mn. Parson's adoptloa o1 the faith. . to ..,,.... 1ll oucb thoughts before bet • multiple penooallUes led Marla to em-"She -i to bet husband as a virgin rnanlaae. • bark oo a aer1 .. of sexual advmturel (See PARSON, Paga t) -- • \ ' UPIT ....... OVERWHELMING APPROVAL VP-0..ignate Ford House App roves DST; Senate Still Must Act WASll(NGTON (UPI) -The House voted this afternoon to place the country on Daylight Savlng Time year-round unUl the end or April, 1975 to ronserve energy. ff the bill Is passed by the Senate and signed into law by President Nixon, almost everyone In the country would have to tum their clo~ks ahead one hour beginning at 2 a.m. on the first Sunday that falls 15 Pays after tha law is enacted. The vote was 311-88: States would no longer have the option, either w·inter or summer, Ot exempting themselves from the advanced time, as they are pennltted to do Wlder law. However, states that lie within two dlf .. ferent time zones would be able tQ exempt one portion of the state Id that there would be a Wliform ' time for the ·entire state. • Hawaii was exempted from the blQ by an amendment by Rtp. Sparlj ~Jalsunaga (D-Hawail ), who poinled OOI that the Islands are so close to fbt equator that they wiU have little varj tion in the length or lhe day. The bill pfSsed despi te argwnenta th• the sun would not rise until after t a.m. on the western edges_ of the ti~ zones during wlnter. 'n\e law woW. last through two winters. · • • \ \. TutSOay, Novtmbtr 27. 1~1) ) May.o:r Blasts EPA Parking Hammett Brands Surcharge as Outrag~ous, Destr~tive }Jy RUDI NIEDZIEJ..5KI Of .... o.11'1' ,lltt '''" Costa ~1esa ?.1ayor Jack Hammett to- day branded the Environmental Protec- tion Agency's parking surcharge plan as outrageous, ridiculous and dC6tructive not onJ y lo his city but the entire American economic syste1n . "I'm so hot under the collar [ can hardly ta1k," said Hammett , who review. ,~ State Experts Ask Offshore Oil Drill OK SACRAMENTO (APl -State experts recommended today that California lift its five-year-old moratorium on offshore oil drilling. The State Lands Commission will vote ori the recommendation following a hear· ing Dec. 11, said State C.ontroUer Houston I. Flournoy, the commission chainnan. The recommendation came from the State Lands Division after extensive hearings into current environmental safeguards against the prospect of m8jor oU spills such as the one ln the Santa Barbara Channel that led to the ban in January 1969. The spill occurred in a well being drilled on a federal lease outside the '.state-controlled three-mile limit. Flournoy said the state experts recom- mended a resumption of drilling only m existing state leases and only from -elisting offshore drilling plaUorms. 'lbat would provide a potential of 50 to 60 new wells which could be in full production within nine months, Flournoy said. He said those wells could tap estimated resenres of 200 million to 300 million barrels of badly needed crude oil. Flournoy said he is convinced that the tough new drilling standards pro- posed by the division will provide an adequate safeguard against any Potential di&aster. "'111e wells can be drilled safely with maximum protection for t h e en. vironment," he said . He emphasized that the decision to consider a resumptioo of drilling now was not hastened by the increasing energy crisis. "It comes at a time when the oil is needed, primarily by coincidence," he said. ed the EPA regulations wtlh fellow mem- ben " the city council in 1!\ldy .... 1on Monday night. The regulation!, to take effect in June 1974, would place a fee on each com· merclal or mUnl.cipal parking space. The amual fee would range bcty,•een $145 to $450 per space, depending on the type of use. '"l'hil l& planned .self-destruction/' fltmed Hammett. He uld OJ1ll would go up, ~ would avoid IOinc to stores, businesses would go broke, and people wou1d Jose their jobs. With the plan, the EPA hopes to discourage private use of the automobile, thereby lowering air pallulion levels. Drivers who come to work alone would be charged additionally. •11r my calculations are correct this Business Priority Restrictions Imposed On Marine Fuel Saks BY L. PETER KRIEG 01 t11t c.llY PllOt ll•ff The federal government today ordered restrictions on the sale of marine fuel , eclaring that1 il must tie -s-aved for fishermen who use their boats to make a living and gather seafoods. The order from the Office of Petroleum Allocation said that diesel fuel will be sold on a priority basis. Fro•Pagel PARSON ... at the age of 21," Lewis said. "And on. every date she ever had before she . married Bud Parso~ she bad an escort who invariably Irowned if she touched a boy's hand." Lewis said Mr.I. Parson took refuge in sexual fantasies that were enhanced by the fact that she often heard the lovemaking of her parents "carried on behind a paper thin wall." He said Mrs. Parson, one of eight ' children born to a couple who fled from Melico at the height of Pancho Villa's rev<Xution, had seven children herSelf after° an almost disastrous start to her own marriage. "Sile and Mr. Parson had their pf"Ob.. lems and on one occasion she filed divorce because of his sexuaJ relation- ships with other women," Lewis asserted. "But they worked things out after those early years and went on to raise their family and enjoy a happy sexual relationship until the tragedy that OC· curred in the sauna room." Spart fishing boat and cruise ships are not in top priority clas.1ifications. Fuel docks in Newport Harbor had not received word of the latest -but nOt unexptctl!d -federal move:s to con· serve energy. "Hell. we're just selling to the boats that come in and asK for it," said Jack Nelson, operator of the Shell dock on Baiboa Island. "We haven't been told anythin~ so we won't stop until we run out, ' he said. Bob Bisby, whose Union Oil dock is right next door, said he's already stopped. He ran out t\\'O weeks ago. Phil Tozier, owner of Davey 's Locker sportfishing fleet, says his sportfishing - business has already beeen affected. "We are already feeling the pinch," Tozier said. "We ran out of fuel Monday moming and our supplier saJd he woo't be getting any more in unW Dec. 1. "So we're already in trouble," Tozier said. "'lbere's fuel available at certain sta· lions, at a higher price," he noted. But Tozier said he'll probably be forced to cut back mid-week trips with both the sportfisbing boat and his harbor cruise ship, the Pavilion Queen .. His Catalina boat doesn't run during the winter. "We may even curtail the Pavilion Queen on the weekends. It will depend on how tight It gets," Tozier said. The effect oo availability to private pleasure boats probably won't be known for several days until the level of supply has been determined. Nelson figures there's plenty to go around, if everybody wouldn't rush to buy It all up, _,. that South Cout Plaza with 8,300 l'Ol'llinc opacos would be paying this agency between 11.2 and $4 millloo in taxes each year. "What I want to know ls who will do the enforcing of this ridiculous plan. Who will do the accounting and policing? This bureaucracy already has 8,000 peo- ple. Where's all the money going to go? What percel'llage will rapid transit get alter the bureaucracy geta: lts cut!" Hamm<Jt said the EPA method o! purifying the air remind.! him of a boy trying to kill an ant with a 25-pound sledge hammer. "He kills lhe ant - but he breaks all the cement on the sidewalk. This is overkill.'' 1 The 'mayor called for an all-out effort by the city of Costa Mesa, the Chamber of Commerce, and the press to stop implementation of the plan. He will personally begin the attack by testifying Dec. 7 before EPA panelists in San Francisco. "That's a good day for me to start fighting. That's the day I started fighting the Japanese," he said. Councilmen Alvin Pinkley, Rof>ert Wilson and Vice Mayor Willard Jordan say they-w!ll-carry-the-eampalgn-against , the EPA to the League of CiUes Con- ference in San Juan, Puerto Rico early in December. "This will affect all cities and all businesses and the effect will be hor- rible," Pinkley commented. Sailor Gambles With Mesa Police, Loses _ A tattooed, teetraged sallor from Arkansas gambled ancC lost twice It! Coota Mesa Monday night, the aec:ond Ume with a tale ol being set upon, beaten and robbed of $70 by three burly black men. 'l1le I&-ye11N>ld Arkansan contscted police about 11 :30 p.m., claiming the attack occurred in the 2100 block of Pomona Avenue. He was taken to the station and further questioned ·by Detective C h a n o Camarillo, who strongly suspected the sallor was telling a little white lie. The chagrined swabble finally con- fessed he concocted the story because he Jost his pay in a poker game and didn't have funds to fly to Pot11and, Ore., to rejoin his ship. He was aJTeSted on a charge of filing a false police report and turned over to the Shore Patrol, which was expected to make arrangcmenu: for h 1 s A Christmas Star Pine Costa Mesans Mr. and Mrs. Ray Jensen are moving to new spot in Tradewintls Trailer Park,,•o their 12-foot Monkeypod Star Pine 'I'rce planted eight years ago is being uprooted, too. Wilm L. Frerichs. maintenance man for Newport Harbor Lutheran Church, carefully dug it up today. The Jensens will share it with other c.hurchgoers as a decorated sanctuary Christmas tree. It will be replanted alter holidays. Nixon Tape in Watergate Probe Played in Public WASlllNGTON (UPlJ -One ol Presi- dent Nixon's Watergate tapes -marred ' by whistles, hums and garbled voices -was played in public for the first time today in the court of federal Judge John J. Sirlca. voices were replaced by a loud, persis- tent hum that sounded like an electric razor or an outboard motor at troping speed. 'l1le other two memben of the com- mission are LL Gov. Ed Reinecke, chairman of the state's Energy Policy Council, and finance director Verne Orr. Lewis ls seeking fl million In damages for Mrs. Parson. He &aid be will put his client and most of her seven children ages 26 through 10 on the stand in what is expected to be a four·week trial. "11lere's no problem if these guys dm't get nerv~,'' he said. "But when you guys print •. au this about a lhortage, they an come here and we nm out." . transportation. The tape contained portions or con- versations Nixon had with his former key aides, John Q . Ehrlichman and H.R. Haldeman, on !June 20, 1972. Sides ordered it played as part of an effort to try to find out whether the taped recordings had been altered in any way. The hum diminished about four minutes later to a lower pitch . lt changed slightly In pitch four minutes later, stop. pcd briefly after another three minutes and eve0ntual\y retW'11ed to its original hi gh level . Reinecke has said he is prepared to vote for a resumption of drilling on state leases when he is convinced it can ·be done with maximum safety. Flournoy declined today to say bow be would vote on the proposal. But he said the staff "bas made a strong case for the resumption of drilling." He said there is oo que:sUon that the oil industry bas sophisticated new equipment that wa:s not available at the time of the 1969 oil spill. TONIGHT UCI LECTURE -Series on "Aging, Origin!, Effects and Control, Room 161 Humanities Hall, 7·9 p.m. Adm.ission $5.50. WEDNESOA Y, NO\'. %8 UCI LECTURE -''Ca liforni a Polities." Assemblyman Willie L. Brown Jr .• Third Floor Lounge, Gateway Com· moos. 3 p.m. COAST COMM UNITY COLLEGE BOARD -Regular meeting , 1370 Adams, 8 p.m. OUNfiE COAST CM DAILY PILOT TM OrMH C..ll DAILY ,.ILOf, wlll'I ... lcll 11 ~ tile ....,._Pren, 11 "'*'lll'IM .., ""' O.-.• C.O..t Pr.iblltl'llnQI Cempeny, 5e1N- r•l1 9dlllon• 1r1 publl1tiec1, Monday rll~ Jlr!Uy, fOr Col!f Mett, N""'pOrt •..cf!, Hunllnoton 81kf'l/Foun1tln V11!11Y, lMl- 8...:h, lrvln./Stddlt~Cll "Ill Sin (~It/ "" JIHln C.pl1!r1no. A 1111911 rt11t-1 llllHIDn II Pllblilhed Sttu"111y1 -~yi. Tiie pra,,.c/p,1! put!llllllln9 Pll"! ft 11 U0 Wttl lt'I' St""1, (Olli Mt,,., C.Nfwnle, tH». llob1rt N. W11d Prni!Stnt Ind Pllbll..,..r _ J1c .. 11:.'Curlty Viti Prllkl9'11 lf'lll ~Mrtl Mllllf« Thotn11 K11¥il Edi!Or lho1111• A. M.,rphi111 M.IMglno Edi!Ot Ou1rl11 H. loo1 llith1rd P. Nill AsJl1l1rtt Manllllnf ElfllOrl lJO Weit l•v Street M1~H111 Mdr.u:·,.o . lo.-1160, f2621 --H.....,t '-dli am Newport lo!.llt..-N u.-aMC11: m ....... , •-Hvl'ltlnttlft INcfl: ,,.,, .tkft IOV'-"1i'tl .. 11 Cl-'t; llOS HOt'll'I El Cl"'ll'O llMI I , ........ (71 41 642.-4111 Cl•rNW AtlMill ..... 141·1•71 CllPVFfOnl, 1'71. Or"1J'lft" Co.t.i ~ubl!Ullnf Otm•V· NO -1_,IM, llklllf"ll...._ lfl""111 fNl1• W ICIVfffl.-tl ..,.,, IN't' .... f~ ...._,, N*fll ,,.,. He told the jury sworn in today that Maria Parson before lier entrapment in the sauna was "a devout Catholic mother who gave most of her time to the Boy Scout and Catholic Youth movements and PI'A and who rabed her family ln a strict Catholic manner." "They were always at mass,'' Lewis told the jury. "And it can be imagined what effect her later behavior had on a family raised in this manner." Nevada Gas • -Ban Reviewed WASHfNGTON (Al -John Love't. White House energy adviser, agreea to take a second look at the effect ol Sunday gas station closings on Nevada, Rep. David Towell said today. "I don't know of another state on the same basis that Nevada is," Love told Towell in a meeting Monday, adding he hadn't realized the impact of station closings on Nevada. ,,,,.. Towell said he pointed out to Love the long distances between gas stations for visitorS driving to Nevada from Los Angeles and San Francisco. Three Still Missing SAN DIEGO (AP) -An aerial search coatinued in the Gulf of California today for a 23-foot boat missing with three Californians aboard , the Coast Guard said. A spokesman said the boat was operated by Bill Byler, 34. of Covina. His p'asseogers were identified as Mike Case, 35, of West Covina, and Carl Crandall, 40, of Azusa. Anthony Pisano, manager of the 4Q. boat Fisherman's Cooperative Associa~ tion , said his .fG.boat fleet will likely benefit from the order. Fuel had been in short supply around bis cooperaUve's San Pedro headquarters, he said, but the federal order should change that, he said. "Things really haven't been critical here but our allocations have been cut about 15 percent," Pisano said. "But thJs news will be helpful became the fishing season starts up at the first of the year." About 400 men are members of the cooperative, he said. From Page 1 DON NIXON • •• the Secret Sertice on F. Donald Nixon. "People with federal charges against them will try anything," Nixon said. "But this kind of defense Is the most otupld thing he (Meler) could do." Nixon declined to comment further on charges of income tax evasion pend- ing against Meier. "This is a matter for the courts, and I really don 't think I shoul d say anything," Nixon said. Nixon did acknowledge however, that he has known Meier "for yeais" but he declined to state the nature of their relationship, except to say they never had any business dealings. Nixon also acknowledged that the Secret Service has made wire taps on his phone. It wu reported over the weekend that Meier, who now lives ~ British C.Olumbia, was questioned recently by Senate Watergate investigaton who are interested in bis relationship with Donald Nixon and cash contributions made on Hughes' behaU through Presidential aides. A1eier was fired by the ·Hughes organization in 1969. I~ has since been reported that the action was taken because M e i e r disregarded White House orders to di!assocl.ate himself from Donald· Nilon. Southern Orange County WEEKLY BOX SCORE I IUlllD TO DATl • 40,212 '"·'" ,,,,~ '"'" "'~n ,lllCINT 0, GOAL .... :::1 · '"' 41.1 ~ .. niPYritM ._., j on-............. .. ....,., di• ....... Miii t i C•ll ~. ....lfk ·--~,_.II.. ~..,. .., """"" a ... UH,71 4 _.,.,,,, l¥ NH II.If Pl'!Mfll1'1'1 mlllflt'r fetwf 'teiM4 te ... tnJ,lt1 .__'"_""'~"""~-a-.M~ ...... ~-·~~~~__,· '-~~~-........ ~~-·-·-.... ~~~~~~~~IJ%~~~~~~~~~~..0 • • \ • Detective Camarillo recommended no prosecution and suggested the Navy would take care of Its own. Project , Blessed; Work Continues HONOLULU (AP) -Construction resumed on Honolulu's partially com· pleted sport. stadiwn today ' after It received a delayed traditional ble!lling to ward off a curse feared by worken. The blesslnc, a religious a!remony perfonned at almost all new construction sites in the state, was admin.Lstered by the Rev. Arbaham Akab, pastor of the Kawaihou Church, one of Hawaii 's oldest C.Ongrega1ional churches. Workers left their jobs Friday com· plaining that the project site was cursed and men were being killed because the 50,000-seat stadium had never received the traditional blessing. Two men have · died at tbe vroJect as the result of accidents. 11tls tape was chosen because Rose Mary Woods, Nixon's personal secretary, testified Monday she apparently ac- cideatally erased an IS-minute segment while transcribing it Oct. 1. She was on the witnes.!1 stand as the tape was played. Miss Woods herself threaded the machine she used to transcribe the tape, punched the play button and as newsmen and spectators leaned forward in their seats, the President's voice was heard in the courtroom. The quality of the tape was extremely poor -marred by a low hum and echoes in his Executive Office Building office, where the conversaUon took place. At first, only occasional words, in- cluding some profanity, could be heard as Nixon discussed news conferences and other matters with Ehrlicbman. Their words were obscured b y backgrowid noises including such things as a jet plane and the toot ol a car horn. Twenty minutes into the tape, the \Vhen voices were heard again, 18V4 minutes later. Nixon was speaking with Haldeman and could be hea rd to say '"Either way, either way." The President could also be heard at one point saying, ''l work better when even I go to a pl:ice like that," and al another point be asked a Yi'hite House steward to bring him some con. somme. Miss Woods, who testified ~ov. 18 that the quality of that particular tape was "very bad" and that it took her some 30 hours to transcribe it, frequently shook her head as the tape was playing. "You see how difficult it is?" she said quietly to one of the \'1atergate prosecutors who hovered over the machine attempting to hear. Sirica listened with Utile expression from the bench, but grinned broadly when the Presiden t broke into a cheerful whistle at one point. Overall. the tape sounded much like a short-wave radio broadcast -scratchy and with voices fading in and out. Tho voices were almost impossible to un. derstand. PRUDENT BUYING Throughout our 77 years of carpet retailing, one fact becomes quite evident -that when money is less plentiful people buy better quality. This is contrary to popular belief, but makes a good sense 'if you think about it. When you have to concern yourself with value and performance, you are likely to buy bette~ quality. At Alden's in the last three years, our per unit sal e has been more expensive carpeting, reflecting this fact. Consequently, we have the largest selection of -finer qualities you will see anywhere, all at competitive prices. The end result is customer satisfaction, pridp and recommendations which provide our overwhelming source of new busineu. ALDEN'S CARPETS e _DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: ,._ Tin non., t lo S:JO -Fll., t lo t -SAT., t :IO lo S I • ,1 I I •