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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-11-08 - Orange Coast Pilot• \ • 1 ~ Judge ·Takes Court ~ --,. . . -'. . • To th·e Defendant ' • ·-At Doag .Hospital ' DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * THURSDAY AFTERNOON , NOVEMBER 8, 1973 VOL. U, MO, 112. 4 Sll!CTIONS, • P'AOIS ' ' .. Grie~i'ng ·Girl -•• • _,,_, us . - Coa~tal Chiefs Blast Anahei111 •super Cop~ Plan ' • •• ·t . . Partner Flees Hotel Kissiiiger ·-·. Judge Takes Courtroom . . To .: Qffend~t~A~ .UQag .. , " By ARTHllR R. VINSEL in smoke June 28, with a $100.000.plus 1 • 'of,,... ~ "'"' ,,.., bang blamed on a gasoline bomb blast Sorn~bo(!y ~ !1oWn the volume, the prosecullon • clajtn1. was arranacd on ~ TY aacl ·~lechthe c,ortaln l\i!f' by IUllim ·ancl'BOnglieq'',. < the tildridden 'defixi&nt'11 r half of . lie They are free' on ,1a;~ bond e8ct.i. hosl?-1~1 i:;oom .. and ~rt was called o A third defendan{ who 'Was arrested order i" .lhe ~ '!be P.eople a· 'day·, af1<orward "'1ien h<f..turned up Ray ~ ~~ ll in .a Sin Betriardino ·~pital with severe' Ooetime' Costa Mela nudle bar o~ horns abo faces J)r9SeCUtion in the case. Ray...1Robnr, 21,' ia' curreatly lmmobi · " ~ Bruce D. Lerner, 29,' 1who was burned In ibe-"°"8 Memorial · Ho 1 p It a · over 35' percent of bis body, bu not orthop!!dic1 wing with lnjutles auffettcq , yet been Connally charged and in a mOlorcycla ~cold . ' ' ·(See HO-'G llOOM, Pqe I) · Ke..' was wi4ble ~to· appear •. for .\ar: ~· · ·"· .~ rat8nmen~an Gharfi; ·!!non end con-· _ ' f} ' -.. «':i ' ~= ~' :ednesday"the°:.3 ' Fence 'Cutters, carDe ao him. • 1~arijuana. Held . . J~ J'me• ,F. Turner. Oankcd by O.~ Dist~ J.t"'°'y. G1_ o-r g e MeCltft, court 'repi>rllr Burg ... Titus and ~ Attoniey Myron Brown SAN YSIDRO '(AP) -An ,.Jectronlc marcbed Into Rohm'• room shortly 11arm wu ~ off near here when smugg- belore '"!PP"'· Tbe ']nCeedlnc lasted . lers cut the fence •"!"'rating the United abotit tbrOe mlnula. " ~tales and Mexlco.-Border patrolmen ROllln, • Stllrgeaol Drive. Costa Mesa, aelied 1,029 PoUnds or marijuana and ail! a .....,.....,,~ VJctDI'. L. BOngbeJ:I(. two Mexican men. • 31, ol Cbe Ame addrels, are aecu.M The fence was ait three. miles west of dollnlyq the ,Shangi'l-La bar irl late of the San Ysidro port of entry. June. . .I · A spoliesman for the U.S. Border '!be tavern operation .. 11272 Harbor Patrol said Edil>erto Villaneuva, Z2, and Blvd., Garden Gme catered to Jooe Jll!lellel, If; were arrested with -teo. PYI and l•tlll'td female tlie marijuana found concealed in two lmpmonaloil one)oge. II all went up ca,.., 1 ~ , • Suspect • Ill Nine Deaths Arrested BULLETIN SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Two were taken into custody today for quest ioning in the execution-style murder of nine people in a luxury rural home, in- vestigators reported. SACR~NTO (UPI ) -Police armed with sawed.off shotguns arrested a suspect in a do\vntown Sacramento hotel today in .t~ "execution" style murder~ of nine pe rsons in Californ ia's wine ~un­ try. Tbe suspect, identified as Douglas E. Gretzler. 22. \Vas led handcuffed by eight heavily anned officers from the hO.teLanP whisked ~ay in ~ pat rol car. A police spokesman said the hotel, which advertises "fa(llily rates," was MASS MURDERS $HOCK SMALL TOWN -Sto ry, Pogo 3 ' staW out earlier in tile day after two incn wanted for ques tioning in the case were reported seen t~e. A search or the men's room' dlsc,Josed clothing belie~ed used in the mass murders. weapons and money all egedly taken ' In a burglary preceding th e slayings. Another man Oed down a fire escape and was being""hunted in the area. 'I11e bodies o~ Walter Parkin, 33, his wife, their two·children and five friends -all bound-and gagged -were founCf Wednesday inside Parkln's new $65,000 ranch home in the sprawling vineyards In North-Central Cali[omia. All had been shot in the head at Close range with a revolver. ' Parkin owned the only grocery In the town of Victor, a community of 270 persons three ,miles east cit here. II sale at !lie store ·was opened normally and emptied or all cash, reportedly around $4,GOO. "It looks like the work of a madman," said ·the sheriff~All of them BP.pear to have been executed." He said the l'.i~s were tied and gagged and It appeared to be a "professional job." The men wantOO for queslioning were ideotified as Luther Stec.Iman, 28, Lodi, and Grett.let, New York state. Steelman was copvicted In San Joaq uin 1 Counly o1 forgery, ·escaping from the • • • ... county jail and possession of marijuana and glue sniffing. He served time ln a California Youth Authority camp. Authoritlee in Phoenix, Ariz. also were seeking Steelman and Gretzler for a $31 anned r6bbery, on charges of rape and ·tidnap ~):n a do~le murder near Mesa, Ariz. . · ' 1 The-nine· sl,yings 1bring tvr rT the number of victims ln ·Six mass:1mur<Jers in California within four years. Suspects were caught in alt· five earlier cases, In addition to Parkin , the victims found Inside the . master bedroom of his home included ibis wife J~, 31 ; their two childr.en. -Lisa.. 11, and (See SUSPECT, Page Z) '· J. Vl"I TtltPllolt . . :< ;SEIZED JN MURDERS . .. Willie L. ·StH Jman Coastal Police .Chiefs ' . . ' . . B ~r~.te.· 'Supet 'Cops' . ' . By WILIJAM SCHREIBER or "" Dallr l'ttll t ttti . Top Anaheim police ~nd city offictals today had no comment on a threat by dissenting policemen to take on the role or "super cops" by citing drivers for · even the most minor viol@.Uons, if the city fails to bargain with them over new cootracls. But several Orange C'.oast police chiefs contacted by the Daily Pilot bad plenty to say. · ''That kind ol conduct could set back Clerk Torched By Two l\fuggers CWCAGO (UPI ) -Two young mug- gers threw alcohol on a city clerk and set .,hlm afire when he tehlsed to give up ilis W•llet in-a washrOom in eh.icago's City Hall. . _ City worke rs heard Anthony Mele, 21 , screaming and rushed In to find hin1 on the floor, his clothes blazing. Alele was taken Wednesday to Henrotin l~ospital, where he wa; in serious con- dition wit h bums on the chest. face and legs. His assailants, described as black youths about 11 ~em ol d; escaped. proCesSional Ja,v enforcement a decade.·· said Ne\vport Beach Chief B. Ja ntcs .Glavas. foriner pres ide1it of I.h e California Peace Officers Association . '"Th.is ·would be a completely ir- reSponslblc action in my book and couldn't possibly act -to their benefit,.,~ Glavas added. Detective Chet Barry, pres ident or the Anaheim Police As.wciatipn (APA), said Wednesday his group is seriously considtting the last ditch altemntivc of public harrassment as a means to get the citY to come to terms. Among other things , lh(I APA is demand ing higher pay than the ci ty is offering. better fringe bencrits · a11d the right to act as sole bargaining ngcnl for \he1 otflcersln the deparh"Menl. ' Barry saitfhe hopes the Situation \von't come to the need for zealous ticketing of drivers. but he said the idea hosn't been rejected. either. Glavas said he does1.,.t see nn\· justification-fa 15uctnur-fl~ton. whr h he said can only hurt !ht' in1ngc or policemen in the eyes of the public. ·- "I Can think' of a lot cC altematl"c~ lo this kind of thing and the rnore I think about It, the more horrified J get." Glavas' thoug hts "'ere ec hoed by llun- ttngton · B<!ach . Police CJ1icl Earl<; (S.. 'SUPER COPS,' Page I) ' j ·: Ends Talks ~ ., ·:' With Sadat -~ -:: By The Associated Press - The Israeli state radio said todaY Israel accepted a five-point plan worked out through the United States for 8. settlement with Egypt. .. The radio quot.ed government souie&r in describing the plan, reached in t8llts between Secretary of ·state ·Henry A. Kissinger and his aides in sessions in Egy'pt and Israel. It said the points \Vere: -A prisoner of war exchange "~ soon ns possible." -A ~upply corridor for the encircled EgypLian 3rd Army that would be U.N:. supervised and run through Israeli lirps. But it ·Would include no weapons,. and in no way be controlled by Egypt. -Rcinoval or the Egyptian bJG(:k3de of the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait, lsral!l's vital outlet to the Indian Ocean. ~ -Negotiations between Israeli an; Egyptian military commanders to az:- range a more convenient cease-fire line for the two sides. · - -Direct peace negotiations betwe~ Israel and Egypt, once the first foul .. points are fulfilled. .• Kissinger flew to Jordan and Sat4: ,Arabia after spending a day in la~ with President Anwar Sadat in c3ii'o! • Kissinger's assistant in charge of M~ tSee l't1IDEAST, Page%) t:oast We ather some fog or low clouds night and morning hours but otherwise SUMy is the for ecast for Friday. Highs at the beaches in the 60s rising to 75 inland. pvernight lows in the 50s. ' •'[1'•1 • '""'ftt'""'I' 1'" A.• ~ ;.1 ......... _._\\~ • : Three members of a farnt ... /amilJh held J}ostage by two jail .! eshapees, waited ·until their cap. tors fell asleep and ran out tilt , house and escaped. Story, paQe 4. L-'M;...M ,lf-tt.. C•lllor1tl1 10 C1rMr Ctrllff It C1••.itle4 '2-CJ C11r1k 1 1t c,.,_, ,. Dt .. l'I "•llCtJ 11 IEdilorl•I l"•M "' 111ttt'11l11mtnl :M-JI l'lfl.rl(I *41 ,,, Ille l tcm It KOlffCtH ,. ... ..-. .. . • rM~1ts-•n .. M4.lt.i """'• .. N•llOYI "9WI 4 Or111M CMMIY 1""11 "' ltTA • Sl'lfb ,._. Slecll Mlrtttb ~I TMl'lfliM a ,_.., .... WMfllaf I "- W"""''I IMwt .. Wwt4 NIWI 4 • • -~ UAJL.Y PtlOI > Quality of Some Watergate Tapes 'Very Poor' WASHINGTO N (AP) -President Nixon's personal secretary told a federal court today that portl00.'1 of lhe sub- p:ienaed Watergate tapes were very poor in ~uaUtr, and that It 11 human!)' Im· posa1ble o hear every word on them. "I could not get every word."' Rose ?.1ory Woods said in describing the job of typing a rough trans'cript of seven conversations bet"·ecn the President and key Vitcrg ate figures. J.tiSs Woods, Nixon's secretary for more than 20 years. said the transcribing work took her nearly a month, working On Stri·ke on and off, sometimes on weekends and often far into th e night. The \Yatei'gate prosecution force wants a federal grand ju.ry lo hear the tapes. Miu Woods nJd ahe firal 1aw one of the controversial tapes Sept . 29, when. at Nixon's reques t, ahe began lhe lask of transcribing them at the Prelldent'a mountaintop retreat at Camp David, Md. "I went up there tG try to listen -I use that WGrd advisedly -to take down as much as possib le of the tapes that were subpoenaed," she Mrs. Gladys Rockie of Santa Ana pickets the Thrifty Drug Store' In Costa Mesa's Harbor Shopping Center where she has worked for the past 13 years. She said she has been wi th the :.'.Ompany ;ince 1943 and has never been on strike before. About •1800 retail clerks and pharmacists waulked off their jobs at Thrifty stores Wednesday, closing down 284 of the chain's stores in seven counties in a pay ms. pule. Winds Whip Coast SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -Brisk winds and intermittent rain will spread across Northern California tonight and Friday, the National Weather Service says. Coastal southerly gales. 30 to 48 .miles per hour, north of Cape h1endocino, will decrease tonight. the \veatherman says, but 15-ttr2.3-mph winds will y,·hip along the coast and inland on Frid~y. OU.NII COAST st DAILY PILOT TM Ot'•nee CH" DAILY l"I LOT, w!lll whltll II "'1'1111'11111 ftll N.-,r111, 1$ p,rllll~ by tM Ot•no• c..11 PllbHllllnt c-nv. h!M· rtll .clltloru t re P11DH111ed, Morid•y lllrOUQll Frlll•Y· IOr COi!• Mt .. , N1wpnrl ll'1cll, H11nll"9lon lleacll/Fovn1•ln V1Uey, L1g11<1& ... di, lrvlnslSAddlR.lek 1nd San Cll!Tlt!lte/ Saft Jllfft C1ph!r11,.. A 5Jno11 r19\oNI •1tlon h puDlllhed S•l11r.,•y5 I nd SuridtYI. TM prlnclPlll PVDlllhlno Plen! ,, •• JJO Wttl 81y .S!fftl, COlll Mn1, C"ilO•n!•. m ;•. Ro\1rf N. Wt1tl Pr•lftnl •!'Id Plllllllht• Jaelc R. C11rl1y Vkl Prftlffnl &fllll Gt-II M1n&91r 1liomt1 K11vil Ed!lor Tlioll'J., A. Mwrplllin1 M&1119"'9 Editor Chorfo1 H. Looi 1ticl>t rcl ·p, Ni ll ,..,1111nl M1~11no Edllvr• - From Pagel HOAG ROOM • • • presumably the prosecution will use him as a witness. Judge Turner led the judicial pro- cession into Rohm's room Wednesday in a-relatively informal Orange County Superior Court .session, which was re- quired to keep th e criminal complaint against Rohm in effect. The law specilies that a defendant fa cing trial in Superior Court be ar- raigned within 15 days after he is bound over following preliminary hearing at municipal court level. If this procedure Is not completed , the charges may be dropped. Tuesday was the 15th day and Rohm's chief defense attorney, S y l v a n u s Aronson, suggested what would be Judge Turne r's first bedside hospit al ar- raignment in a 4'Ai year career, when his client failed to appear. Rohm lay wilh his &haltered right hip and crushed toe elevated in a full leg cast and traction device. A red-lettered isign reading: BEW ARE OF VICIOUS ANIMAL bung from a metal bar over his bed. It was a get-well gift from friends. ,..,;;:,• :!::i ~ ~~ :::.~ lnlroductionis were made. ~=·=/ ,V:,f~"'=·~ "Yes .•. we've met before," said a-c1t1N111•1 .,. Nttffl 11 c-i.... .... , Rohm , when introduced to the jtxlge 1 .. 11nec1 at a hearing berore U.S. Dtstrtcl C<>Urt Judge John J. Slrica. Accordi ng to previoUJ tesU mony, it was Sept. 29 that the President expressed 1wareneu that record.inp of two ol lhe lots! of nlhe subpoenaed coa- versaUona couldn't be found. Sirica called tbe hearing to air the clrcum1tances twTOunding a White House clllm that the two tapes never existed. Miss Woods, we.ring a red knit dreu and a doble strint of pearls, said that transcribing the tapr.a bad been a "very Quick A ction Promised on Energy Bill . WASHINGTON (AP) -Congressional leaders today promised prompt action on mos t or all of the energy saving measures requested by President Nixon in his address to the naUon. Senate Interior Chairman Henry :r.t. Jackson said his committee wlll hold public hearings on emergency le1lllation today and rePort a bW out by Friday. Senate approval could be eipected next week, Jackson said. On the House 1lde1 DemoeraUc whip John J. McFall (D.cetu.), predicted ac.' STATE ENERGY SOLUTIONS NOT ENOUGH? S.. P•ge 10 FUEL FOR PLEASURE BOATS A QUESTION -Story, P•ge l S QUESTrONS, ANSWERS ON ENERGY PLAN TOLD, P•ge 40 lion on the President'• propoaal1 before the December recea. "If he wants a bill, we'll give him a bill, 11 said Rep. Torbert R Macdonald (D-Mass.), chairman of .the House 6Ul>. corhmittee on power. In his Wednesday night address, NiJ:on accused Congress of falling to act on any of the energy measures he sent to the Hill. The President said it was now "imperative" that Congress pau legj>latlm (!) -bllshlng yeer-round Daylight Saving Time, (2) authorizing relaxation of clean-air standards, (3) approving the tapping of naval petroleum r ... rves and (I) giving the government power to reduce speed limit. nationwide end restrict working houri. Macdonald 881d Nixon already bad the· authority to do m01t of what he asked and ae<med the President of playing "an ab.wlute shell game" 1D blaming Congress for Inaction. Sen. Merk 0. Hatfield (R-Ore.), a member of the Appropriations Com- mittee, said the Office of Management and Budget "is a:itting on over $20 million in energy funds " already ap- propriated by Congress. "The impounding of energy-related funding .ts lhe single greatest roadblock stopping Congress from meeting the country's energy needs," Hatfield said. Sen. Lloyd M. Bentsen (!).Tex.), 88id he and other oil-state senators oppose one presidenUal proposal that would allow lhe federal government lo "f!ulate the intrastate production and use of oil and gas. "The President won 't get that bill by Christthas with this provision in it," Bentsen said . Sen. Mike Gravel (D-Aluka), said Ute President's message "did not contain enough specifics in dollers or programs lo do lhe job. The flO billion menUoned by lhe Jlres ldent ts considerably less then we spent on Aplllo and probably only 10 percent of whet i.· actually needed," he added. Roy B. Martin Jr., of Norfolk, Va., president of the U.S. Conference of Mayon, predicted Nl1on would find sup- port among local offlciala: for his energy- sevlng proposals. In Arizona, Gov. Jack Williams onlered llete Cepllol lights dlmmed and thermostat.I lowered. He called a meeting to consider mandatory car pools and four-day work weeks for state employes. Krogh Seeking Nixon Subpoena LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Former White House aide Egil Krough, con lendlng President Nixon has "refused t o cooperate" with hla attorneys, has asked a C.lifomla court to subpoena the Presi4 dent for questioning concemlng con-, .. u..,. about Daniel E!lsberg. Krnglt, along with Jolm D. Ehrllcbmen and David Young, alto a1ked Wednesday for access to tll tape recording• or written reconls of White llouae meetings In which the Pmldtnt diacuaed Elllberg and the lealc of tbe Pentagon papers. ~· once head of the aecret White House "plumbers squad" assigned to plug leeks _pf secret government in- fo rmation, was the only defendant in the .!IC'.>bJled 0 Watergate Welt " case to seek the President'• personal ap- peanmce. ,~..,...•• 1714t '41"'111 and prosecuting Deputy District Attorney <h•nW •-"" ..... ,,, McClure. Booked in Shooting ,,_ ce.tto• ""'"' s.t1 ., LlflM ,_. Rohm has fought many rounds in -•tJMH court on obsctnity and lewd tn· SAN DIEGO (AP ) - A Florida man ,,. INlrflflW ... c:.itr·-eco"' •• •= ........ --t---n.m;,· l!n!n·tr-1'1!1ll111Rll!tltl,__ste~mli1l!ftll11tntfc-'-fiflvtm11r--.w11·a11e1tm Wec:tuaday tn ~"*• 1Hf.11tf operation or hlJ now-clo.1ed Firehouse wllh a fatal shooting outiide a market =:.· ::*'-,.:.~.r;::-.=.IC, tavern at 175 E. 17th Sl., C:OSta Mesa. ln San DJego'a Ocean Belcb area, poUee =~ ~ -::;;,ru::114"": Judge Turner explained agaln the aay. Officmi sak1 Georae G. Plyne, ""'"' ---· derendant 's conslituUonel rights berore 23, of San Diep 1to1Prec1 lnlo the .._. ci..s ,...... ,.w." c.t• MtM, he WllS allowed lO enter a plea. market and dled after the lhooUng Tues- c.H--. .-cr-.1111 ., urr*' nM Del'ensc attorney Brown pleaded h'· d ntn ---1 E M tne III .,.,...,1 _. """ .,.11 .....-1 ,..i1a.n: 11 1 i,;, ay evt . I· YMU" H • • erv , ......... aM .......... c mt nnocent to an cbarget, suatltlng '¥1, of Tampi, Fla .• WQ arrested netrby, e May ti71 trial date. police said . • difficult job," and that despite working unUI 3 a.m. SUnday morning, and again all day Sunday after arising at 6 a.m. she was wiable to complete a transcript of even one converutlon. "The quality Is ve ry bad on some," ahe said, "depending on the room. There are lots of funny things in them." Amon.a theee oddities, she said, "If the ,President puta bls feet on the de1k, it IOUndJ like a bomb. Boom." She said a similar sound ls created on the tape recordings if someone sets a coffee cup on a table. Miss WoodJ said . she returned to Washington with the President on Sun- day, Sept. 30 and continued worklng on the tapes lot almost a mon th. Once 1he 1&ld, on Oct. I, Ille ,.. questered herself at Key Biscayne, Fla .. and worked while Secret Service agent! I guarded the tapes, Which were ln a sa te, on a 24-hour-a-day basis. Miss Woods said she made a 11lngle {fpewritten copy of her transcripUons With no carbon s. Jler typewriter ribbons were burned to pevent anyone from reading words which might be left on them, she said . tier final product "was given directly, personally by me to the Prea:ident/' MJsa Woods testified. She 881d she flnilhed her tranacrlbllll work Oct. 23 or 24. Eleborellng nn the quality of tbe tapes, she said 0 aometlmes the President would whl1'tle," making It d110cult to hell' what aomeone else bad said. '4At other times, four people would be talking at once and I wouldn't set even one word," she said. ,. 1 \ From P qe 1 'SUPER COPS' •• Robitaille. He called the tactic • "San Diego technique," refening to a 1lmJlar me,..llcketing campaign by dissenttnc officers in that cily four year11 ago. "I think this is completely ill-advised a n d completely counter-productive," -Robltall le aiJd. "It does nothing for the department and certainly doesn't engender community respect." Robitaille said that whenever the PQllce in Huntington Beach have had similar problems, It ts uauelly un10llclted dlllen support that wins lhe day. Coste Mesa Police Chief Roger Nolh said he "strongly objects to any chance Jn practice from that which Is 1tandanl In Jhe department In onler lo put tbe pressure on during negotiations. ·; "I don't lhlnk this enhancel tbe lmll!e or police al all and cerllln!y ls not proleuional in my opinion,'' be said. "I sincerely hope ll\lcb a tblng "''" happens down here but I tbJDk our guys have a tot better sense/' Neth added. Aides for Anaheim Chief Dave Michael said he preferred to refrain from co~ menting on the veiled threat by his o1nws-because of the "fragile sttu.. tlon" in the city. •\! Gary McRae, Anallelm's penonnrl _ ,,dJrector and the men In cbafge of the city's side or the dispute, would Id comment specifically on lhe "super cop"" proposal. . "! am conlldenl lhe clttuns of Anaheim wtll continue lo receive the protection lhey have always recelved and I lhlnk tbe officers will Id with hone>ty and lntegrt ly," he 881d. UPI Tll.,,._,M McRae said he ii UNure ol the llelus of negotiations since the cootract talks were broken off three weeb aao. . Anaheim officers staged a protest HENRY KISSINGER TAKES TI ME OUT FOR TOUR ISM Vi sits Pyramids After U.S.·Egypt Accord R11ched mereh In fronl of City Hall Wedneldoy. Barry seld Wednesday thel U the protost did no good, the altemaUves -including the "super cop" idea -. will be next. l Search Abandoned ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (UPI) -State police Wedn~y called off the search for a Tes:as machinist sucked from the cabin of a National Airlines DCIO during a flight from Houston to Las Vegas. "As far ais we're concerned, we've done all we can do, '1 Police Chief Martin Vigil said. From Page l SUSPECT ... Robert, 9; Debbie Earl, 18, a babysitter; Richard A. and Wanda Earl, parents of th e babysitter: Ricky Earl, 15, Debbie's brother, and Mart· Lang, 20, the babysit· ter'a boyfriend. (Rel ated pictures, Page 10). Carol J enkins, 18, who lived In the Parkin house, apparently was spared because she returned home after the killings occurred. She returned from a date at 3 a.m. and went to bed without knowledge of the slayings. The bodies were discovered \Vednesday morning by two young men S"ent to the Ps,rkin home to search for Lang as requested by Lang's mother. From Pllf11! 1 MID EAST ..• die East aUalrs, Joseph J. Sisco, emerg- ed from 1alks with Premier Golda Meir In Jerusalem and told newsmen: "I feel optimistic." He had gone to Israel unexpectedly from the Cairo sessions Wednesday, ap- parently carrying with him details of the Kissinger-Sadat meetings. Egyptian government spokesman Ahm- ed Anis indicated to a news coriference in Cairo that Egypt climbed down from its previous insistence that Israeli forces withdraw immediately to lines reached Oct. 22 as demanded. in two U.N. Security Council resolutions. . "They must show signs that they will 1mple~ent the resoluUons," Anis said, · referring to the Israelis. "Once this is done the wheels will start rolling, and we may soon go to a peace con- ference, perhaps after a few days." In the background of th ese reported movements toward peace, howeve r, were charg~ Wed nesday from Israel that Egypt was preparing a new attack along the Suez Canal. .1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa-lllone 546-7788 ..:,;;.,J Officer Tackles -I· F'leeing Suspect On '50-yard Line' A Cosio Mesa policeman wbo 1pooked a fleet.footed youth he wu trying to am st on a routine tnffic wltl'lnt 1ave It the old college try today and quickly got his man. Petrnlman Robert Comub, :M o llllJ>cl. out college football player at c.'i State, Fr<sno, sprinted alier the youth, who was subsequently arreated and booked on several chargea. Fellow policemen ll1tenln& tn on the radios in their cars and at the ltaUon didn't exactly get a plsy-by-play ol the ex-grtdder'1 brief moment of glory In the 2100 block of Placentia Avenue, but they could envision It. "Officer in foot punult • , • " Patrol· men Cornuke ndloed, then the ban!· hitting tackler left the air briefly. "Sll.!pect In custody on lhe 50 yard line . . . " he radioed a few moments later. l c w allega tonne McM of Wi a U.S. In ment blem Laos order lo as Mus G\ldle mil prove resld Imp leern pool requi tions. The about whale surpl f2511. In In m Is A cond by the socl .. JUI! enJi> , Oementean Corruption Claims Hit From Wire Services WASHINGTON -In lhe wake of aUegations by a San Clemente ~. fonner ambassador to LB08 G • McMurtrle Godley has 'denied charges of widespread corruptioo. while he ran a U.S. Mission th.,.. from 1970 to li73. In testimony before the House govern- ment operaUom subcommittee, GodJey blamed a "lack of accountability" for the disappearance oC millions of dollars of eqwpment hia embwy had re- qulsltiooed. Godley also denied allegatlom by San Clemente's. Howard Mushett, IWmer Laos embassy seourtty chief, that be crdered bis swimming pool to be referred to as a "water storage tank." Mushett told federal investigators that G¢1ey and his top aides bartered surplus military equipment tn exchange for im- provements to the ambassador's personal residence. Improvements, investigators l a t e r learned, Included a $15,000 swimming pool and tennis courts, bullt without required Slate Department autb::rii.a- tions. The subcommittee members were shown a memo to a U.S. plumbing shop in VJentiane, Laos concei'ning repairs on the pool whlch said, ''Anything releniog to the amblllsador's pool Is to be referred to as a water storage tank and not al a swimming pool." Godley said he had no such policy of subterfuge. But lhe··former ambassador did admit under questioning that Mushett had com- plained. lo him of alleged . bartering theft and deterioration or nearly s2 million in requisifloned equipment from bases iri Thailand. He said that a t the time -about a year ago -he verbaUy asked an aide to look into the charges and received a verbal report that most of the charges were not true. Mushett claims that nearly $8 million in material -moslly non·weaponry gear such as vehicles, typewriters and office equiiment -had been stok!n or bartered. 1be govenunent has only been able to trace the $2 million in equipment received from "nlailand and cnly 22 percent of that has been accounted for. Godley said in a prepared statement "I categorically deoy that I engaged Ill • • • any illegal activity. I would webime 111 lnvosUgatlClll ol my -1 financial records, including Income lllC retunm." . Godley's testimony left It unclear whether Mlllbel.t bad ever told him formally about COmJpUOD In the property disposal sales. Jn his Statement Godley said lolusbett "declined .,. • lo pot apecifie charges 1in writing ." He djd not explain a memorandum tllen from embusy m.. that sbowed Mushett wrote to him on Sept. f, 1972, charging that senior officials were direc· ting the procurement of millions ol dollan of U.S. Government property and permitting tt lo be &Old, bartered, and traded away. Godley also said he bad no idea unti l about 10 days ago that no records whatever were kept on $1.I million of surplus requisition from Thailand and $25(),000 worth from Saigon. • Only Snakes For Company SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Fren· chie Renee, a North Beach dancer olad in tiger skins, is six Jeet unde.rgrounci" today, trying to set a world record with the benefit of seven snUet. • She-woi+bUrled Wednesd",l' with a seven-foot boa constrictor and six rattlesnakes, the latter in a· separate compartment. Her aim, she .says, Is 30 days in a specially designed crypt which meu.ires 4'h: feet by 7~, feet and is equipped so that she and the SllAkes can be led. - '· UP'I T"'""• CORONERS' ASSISTANTS REMOVE ONE OF NINE VICTIMS . In Victor, Mass Execution Stayings Horrify Community Mathis Rancl1 Building Delay Distresses Builder Orange County P 1 a n n i n g Com· missioners have postponed unW Dec. lo a decision on development of the 17~acre Mathis Ran ch in Laguna Hills despite strong criticism from the purchaser of the property. "The disturbing thing is that we never make any progress we can bw1d on," said Mike Zullo, president o f Shareholders capital Investments Co. Zullo told commissioners this week. "Two weeks ago we thought we had come to an agreement. You gave us seven points and we have complied with each one. I don 't understand this at all." . The commission agreed to the delay -as its staff recommended -until receiving public reaction. Public hea rin gs on the COWJty's general plan for the Partially Clad Victim Found SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The partially clothed body of a y0W1g woman with her hands tied behind her back was found in bushes behind the boatho~ at Stow Lake in Golden Gate Park. Coroner's deputies identifed her as Laura A. Odell, 21. San Francisco. Investigators said Miss Odell had been missing since Sunday. Police said she had bead injuries and might have been strangled. The coroner's office said the cause of death was not immediateJy known. Miss Odell was cloth~ only in a blouse. The rest of her clothing was scattered in the bushes. Two Shot to Death LAS VEGAS (UPI) -A Las Vegas man and his neighbor, who lived near the downtown area, were shot lo death Wednesday night by a man who opened fire when the victims walked into a house the killer was ransacking. The dead were identified as Leonard Remer.· an amputee, and bit neighbor, Keruieth Hall, both In their &O's. area are scheduled Nov. 20 and Nov. '1:1. The staff report stated that the plan- ning for the ranch was not consistent v.-ith the general plan, primarily because it placed 21 of the ranch's acres in commercial development and places another six acres for use for offices. The planning staff said there is already too much C1Jmmercia1 zoning along the San Diego Freeway in the Laguna Hill!I area. The report al~ criticized· density proposals for the residential area. Development plans caU for 995 dw elling Wlit on and about 2,788 residents. The staff recommends a maximum of 870 units. County planner Bob C u I be r t s o n retracted five paragraphs of what he said was "probably u nc alled-for editorializing" in his six page report. Part of this said. "The fa ct that a buyer has purchased a parcel, which · he later finds is not what he hoped it might be, cannot influence the recom- mendation of the department." . He said deletion of the paragraphs did not change the recommendation. Commissioner Bart Spendlove o r Mission Viejo said be was satisfied with changes made on the tract plans. "'Since my first involvement with plans for this tract two years ago when I ~as a homeowners' association presi- dent, I have seen the density cut in half and treatment of the Aliso Creek green belt greatly improved. He added that he felt the C1Jmmercia1 area projected for the development could complement the adjacent s h o p p i n g center. •·It could include movie thea ters needs not now providfd in the fl.fall ." ' Don't Drink Theil· Bootleg Concoction POCATELLO, Idaho (UPI) -Two women have been arrested on charges of selling bootleg liquor made from vodka , water and urine. Slate investigatq rs said Wedn esday that Edna M. Collins, 54, and Tiny Gibson Ward , 45, both of Poc8tello, sold the mixture as bourbon . Clemente Condominiunas Compromise Has Blessing A compromise approval of a 202-unlt coodomlnlwn project In San Clemente by the ltate coastal commission satisfied the C.pislrano Beach Community A&- sociatiOn. "We don't consider It a victory. We just ftel .We're gett ing frtmld s we. can el\)01 relallonships with," Frank Ramey, assoclatloD president said today. Wh<n originally approv'ed by the South Coosl Ro«lonal 1.ol1e ColllerValion Com· mission; Mira Costa VUlls wu planned as a walled community with 21.S un!IS. Bordered by C.mino Eattlla, camlno Mtra Cos~ 'and Cani1no Caplltr.ano, the project ovorloi>kl the beacb from hiah bluff1. The Santa Fe railrolld tracks and Plictftc Coast Hlghwl)' r1111 between the ocun and the proJ .. 1 owned by Robert II. Grant Corp. State Coutal Zone Conlotv1Uon Com· mialoners Wednesday In Burlingame unlUl!mr<L'1V approved the llkcre tract afler modifying ii. • 'Ille-walls and the. number of unlls came down. Tbe developer will be re-' quired to dedicate a 3.1 acre park to the clly of San Clemente and to Improve an outdated, Inadequate storm a raln and ~wer .• Rtpalring the 1920's sewer wu o[ Prime concern, Rainey said \OdAY. b<ca,.. damage to the bluffs from leakaie was feared. The community woclallon oppealed •the regional approval of the project Jut June,_not ~to ,atop develo mcnt, Rainey oaid now, but to plan It. Aaoctatioo members ihoujht the wall· ed Idea was a "mean, degrading thing," Rainey said, a¢ objected that Mira Cosla -use existing Pines Park without conlrj!>utlng a park of its own. The stale coaslal commbslon has ilenied eome pJOl)llled projects in the large, undeveloped areas of South Orange County to keep plaruiing options open for the future. But Wednesday, commission plaooen said the Mira Costa land, thoul!h a vacant area, was most suitable for residences. The appeal has been "expensive and time consuming but also rewarding," Rainey said, adding the experience has .. nea rly bankrupt" the association. 1 An attorney, Ron Steelman. was hired to represent tho community group. .Rainey · credited him, Paul Sayre of United South Orange Coast CommunlUea (USOCC) and Dale Secord of the Environmental Coalition of Orange Coun- ty with supporting the a~atlon at a Jong 1erles of meetings. Rainey added a "thanks" to the state coastal commi&1loncrs and plaMers, who, he said, worked many houn on the iuue. . • Thursday, Novrmbt!r 8, 1'17) s DAILY PILOT :J Slllall Town in Sh~k : Murders at Parkin Home Stir Residents ... VICTOR (AP) -Everyone In this small San Joaquin Valley fanning com- munity knew Walter ftarkln. He was the comer grocer wllb a ready smile and a friendly word. When Parkin was found shot to death Wednesday with his wire, two child"'n and five other persons, tiny Victor • reacted with shock and dismay. (Related picture, Page 10) Residenb talked about the slaying• over the telephone, at the one local tavern and on the streets. Over and over again they answered reporters' qu~tions with comments of "shocked," 1'dumb£ounded ,'1 and "dismayed.'' "He was a wonderful fellow," said Herb Preszler, owner . of V i c t o r Hardware, "the type of guy who didn't have an enemy, I don't think ." Parkin, 33, was found at hls ranch-style home along with his wife Joanne, 31; his daughter Lisa, 11, son Bob, 9; neighbors Richard and Wanda Earl, both in their 30s, the Earl's son and daughter, Debbie and Ricky, 18 and 15, and Deb- bie's boyfriend, Mark Lang, 20. Alt but the two Parkin children had . ~en bound and gagged. UPI Tel ...... lt ·' • • Sheriff's olficers believe the slayings were linked to a safe burglary Tuesday night at Parkin's United Market. RECENT PHOTOS OF ROBERT PARKIN, 9, SISTER LISA, 11 ) Children Among Nine Bound, Gagged, Shot Through Head Wednesday afternoon the store was empty. A makeshift sign on the door read: closed until further notice. "It's terrible/' said Barbey Berndt, a farmer and friend of the Parkins. "l can't believe it happened. I'm not afraid, just a litUe sad. I'd known Wally for 25 years." Friends told of Parkin's plans to turn his huge front yard into a practice field for Little League and softball teams, his morning-to-dark days at the market and his labor on his $60,000 home. Cat Lovers Hear Talk At Cwmente Clubhouse "He didn 't have a super-market," said neighbor Bill Peterson of the Parkin's market, the only one in the tiny com· munity ot 270 persons 20 miles north or Stockton. "But he had a store that was clean. And the kid h~tled.. It wasn 't a gold mine but they made a good life." "They were always afraid that something would happen to Wally," said Marla Tamez, a former employe at the store, who said Parkin once ca ught youths burglarizing his market. "He trusted everyone." The care of cats and other animals will be the subject of a special presen- tatlClll to be sponsored by South Orange Col.mty libraries Nov. 17 in San Clemente. C. Richard Calore, editor and publisher of "Voi.ce of the Voiceless," an in- deP.fndent humane magazine, will be featured speaker. The event is free. tl will be at 10 8.m. ·in the San Cleqtente Community-Clubhouse, Ole Hamon room .. <$lore's speech is enti~ed. "K is for Kit.~ and K is for Kindness to Animals." Sponsors are the San Clemente, Dana Point, and San Juan Capistrano CoWJty Libraries, and Capo Bay Area Friends Captu~ed! Mood .M.edit,ertanea~ and Pageantry. --si•.00 , ••. oo 11i;.oO , ..... as•.oo Your favorite interior designer will be h4PP11to0$.riat 11ou ..• ' of the Library. • Calore's appearance coincides witli' "pet month" in the: San Clemente.: Library's "read around the year'" pref. gram. Each month children are uked to read books on a certain subject. :i Tbis month; bright green flyers feahttt a frog in the middle and reprod.uctiolt of scenes from Beatrix Potter's "Pflte.r Rabbit" done; .!?l.. loca1 art teacher· Carel Jody adorn the·wa1Js·ot the library. · ~ The speech is a1sO timed In conjuncti"'I: with national Children's Book Week Nov 12 through 18. '• But San Clemente Children's librarlau Lois Wellman emphasized that all ages are welcome because the subject bM wide appeal. ' • • • • • • i 1: li~l\l\ElT f lll\~1..l--l-J..l.\-4-I PROFESSIONAL Opon Moo. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. INTERIOR DES IGNERS Thurs. & Fri. Evo1. COSTA MESA, CALIF. Bush League Police Work I POUCE BEAT DEPI'. -Anaheim mps have a beef w'ith their City Hall. They want more pay. They have flung up some picket Jines. They have made IOIT'le threats, too. The Anaheim law enforcers haven't simply threatened to strike or picket or quit. Through the auspices of their tm.lon, the Anaheim Police Association, they have threatened to take to the streets in their patrol cars wilh a vengeance. In other words, frustrated in their attempts to negotiate a pay hike at City Hall, they'll punish the motoring public. TIIEY WOULD CALL this a "super cop" operation. Drivers all across Anaheim would be pulled over for the most minor of infractions. Vehicles wouJd then be inspected to see if the Super Cop could tum up little violations of the safety code, like maybe bwJled.out license plate lights or d e re c t i v e windshield vlipers. In short, the Super Cops would take out their pay rebuff on the poor, unsuspecting public. They would write lots of tickets. And they call this being a Super Cop? OVER TIIE YEARS, I have had the pleasure of covering a number of police depart"!ents ·in , Orange Cowlty and particularly along our coastline. My Dad was a cop. My Mother was in law enforcement ror some time. Never in all the years of observing the Orange County police scene have I ever beard a suggestion of a more arrogant, overbearing and ruthless perversion of police power. · The president of Anaheim's cop usOciatioo, of course, said or the ticket spree proposal, ''This is something that b being held as a last resort. It's definitely an alternative we'd like to avoid but we aren't saying we won't use it if we have to." He also admitted any such "give 'em all tickets" campaign wou1d indeed amowtt to barrassment of the motoring public. ,,Well, I have news for the Anaheim Cop;. It doesn't really matter whether they really do it now or not. JUST THREATENING it was enough. Jt was enough to confirm the suspicion ol many who, for years, have felt traffic officers have ticket quotas and are "out to get us" every day. For years now, police agencies along our coast have pushed campaigns to improve their public image. Courtesy to the publi c has been the byword. 'lbe policemen is your friend . He is here O> help you, not hurt you. Support Your Local Police. THEY HAVE GONE to schools. preached safety, Inspected t.OOusands of bicycles. Helped in Little League, peewee footba11, Explorer Scouts, crime preven- tion campaigns and burglar-proofing homes. Our coastal police departments are filled with fine peace officers who serve in the name of Jaw and justice. They knew they weren't going to get rich pushing a patrol car. Nobody promised them a rose garden and most ol them accept it. NOW COMES ANAHEIM and in one overbearing annowicement, the cops of that city may have tom down all police public relations everywhere. Newport Beach Police Chief B. James Glavas, informed of what was_ happening in Anaheim , declared that be was hor- rified. He feared they had set police work back one decade. His fears may be conservative. Well. our coastal peace officers havP. only one consolation. lt didn't happen here. It happened in bush league Anaheim. • • •• ~ • ..-. • ....:1 .. , .... ' • • Gpn1nen Sleep;-Uostages Slip Away I He said he and hi.I wt/• awoke Ed. who was sleeping upstairs. r WADENA,~ Minn. (AP) -~ members of a fann family, held holtage for 33 hours by two jail escapees, wilted until their capton fell asleep today, then grabbed two of their guns and ran out ol the howte. The fugllives surrendered pe1Alel11!1y when lawmen woke them up by lhouting into tho house and ordering them O> come oot, the FBI said. Elm'< Wegscheld, hls wife Joye. and their son Ed, IS, fled from the house at 4: lS a.m. after their captors fell asleep. Three other Wegsheld children were allowed to leave the house Wed-_ nesday night. w~ oaid the f1lgitives, John P. Morgan, 37, and WOiiam Winans , ta, appeared O> eojoy lhe medla attention given them during their occupation ol the Wegsobeid hocne. 0 He (Morgan) was the 1hlr," said Wegsdleid. "He loved tt. The te~vlslon and stereo (radio) were alway• going." Mrs. Wegscheid said Winans also ap- peared to enjoy the sttualtoo, but Idolized Morgan. "Billy lost a Jot when Morgan started talking surrender," she said. "His hero was backing dovm." Mm-gan bad been jailed on murder charges in a double slaying. Winans had been charged with stealing beer and cigarettes. 'Ibey escaped from a Wadena jail Monday_ night after woWl- .; .. . . . .· ., . ·-~ . ' .. ... .. ... .. . .. 111 N N. lw;INA) A °"""' • • " v · ~\·. . . . . I". • • ·! • • • • '.;.·~WIS. MM111.,11·1._ti,,.,, ... •:. ,1 -.. ·: ... "':'&.l.:l :·~ ding a jailer with a gun. They holed up in the Wtpcheid home Tueoday nigh< and began bargalnlog with police !or a plane ta fiy them to freedom. Wepcheld said he noticed Morpn and Winam were asleep about 3 a.m., but he was not cmlldent BA .,..pe attempt would succeed. He said the fug!Um had two high- powered rifles aod a small caliber p~tol. '~The Poone kept ringing about 3 a.m. and my husband answered it, 11 Mrs. Wegscheld said. ''They (the fugitlves) didn't~1Ur." Wegscheld said neither he nor hls wife talked about making a break, but looked at one another and ea<h knew what Ibey had ., do. "When Eddje came down . • • 1 grabbed one .J0..30 and a pistol off the table," Wegscheld 1ald. The throe then went to the door . ''We gambled they wouldn't shoot us in the back once we got outside, 11 he added. Law enforcement officers Jet Morgan and Winans sleep for more · than an hour to prepare for a posslble con- frontation . J..,.ph Trimbach, spedal agenL In charge of the FBI in Minneapolis, uld the fugitives were ordered to come out of the house about 1 '6 hours after the Wegschelds escaped. 1, Mystery Grows Weird Object Sighted on River President's r War Power PASCAGOULA, Miss. (UPI) Another strange object has been sighted on the Pascagoula River where two fishermen reported being taken aboard a spacecraft by weird creatures several weeks ago. The Coast Guard called the latest sighting "an unidentified submerged U- lwninating object." Raymond RY"'!D, 42, said he saw the object while fishing oo the rive-Tuesday night. The Coast Guard conflnned the sighting. . Ryan said the underwater light follow· ed his boat and repeated efforts to beat the thing away with an oar ooly made the light get dimmer. Ryan said he summoned his twin, brother, Rayme, and the two of them went back to the braQt.lsh waters and poked at the light with oars again be- fore going to Coast Guard officials. "'At 9:40 p.m. the Coast Guard at Pascagoula dispatched a IS-foot boat to investigate the object," a spokesman said. .. "'The object was located in four to six feet of water, moving at+& knots," the Coast Guard report said. 'The officers named the object "an unidentified submerged illuminating object," and described it as "an amber beam, 4-6 inches in diameter, attached to a bright, metal object." Coast Guard officials said they tried to retrieve the object, but "it would appear to go out and move away and then reappear." The report said lhe object traveled on several different courses during the hour they had it under surveillance. Curtailed From Wire Services WASHINGTON -Collgress h a s enacted over President Nixon's veto a bill limiting the power of the president to wage wxleclared war. The action · Wednesday was the flI'St successful ovenide of a presidential veto in nine tries this year. " New Tail fjns Being. Put 'On Skylab Launch Rocket UP'I T...,.._I, Tuanbles Marlene' Dietrich 1ell off the stage Wednesday night at the Shady Grove Music Fair in Washington. Although unhurt, the 72-year-old actress order· ed the· audience out of the room before she left the or- chestra pit. Termed unconstitutional by President Nixon, the bill bars the President from commiting U.S. troops to combat for more that 90 days without specific ap- proval from Congress. Congress can terminate such an engagement sooner by majority vote in the House and Senate. e t'ord Critic Probell WASHINGTON -A former lobbyist who claimed be loaned $15,000 of his ow:n funds to vice presidential nom1nee Gerald R. Ford and was never repaid was under investigation today by the Senate Rules Committee as to bis credibility. FLORIDA BUILDER John J. Prie1te1 -Nixon,· Official De1iies Builder's Sliakedoiv1i Tak CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) Engineers today begin fitting new stabilizing tail fins onto the Skylab 3 launch rocket to replace a set corroded by salty sea air. The problem caused a five-day de1ay in getting the space station flight under way. Skylab 3 pilots Gerald P. Garr, who was reared in Santa Ana, Calif., Dr. Edward G. Gibson and William R. Pogue return to their training base at the Johnson Space Center in Houston this afternoon after only a day at the spaceport to be fitted for their spacesuits. Space agency officials Wednesday postponed liftoff or the last trio ol astronauts to man the orbiting station until 6:36 a.m. PST next Thursday. The crew, set to stay at least a record 60 days ~-Skylab, had planned to blast oft saturday morning. Kennedy Space Center Launch Director Walter J. Kapryan said in a briefmg that the "hairline" cracks in the framework « the »square-foot fins were discovered late Tuesday during a routine inspection of the big Saturn 18 booster rocket. Saigo1i R eports Tliat Third War Has Now Starred Sen. !Iowan! W. Cannon (0.Nev.), committee chairman, said after testimony behind closed doors Wed- ( IN SHORT ... ) nesday by Robert N. Winter-Berger that the panel will decide by early next week whether lo .. refer the lran5cript of the session to the Justice Department with a possible recommendation for per· jury action. SAIGON (UPI) -The Saigon govern-e Laqer•' Counts Cut WASHINGTON (AP) -A Ni100 re- election campaign official denied uoder oath today a Florida builder·s testimony that he promised to solve the builder·• legal problems in exchange for $100,000 cash contribution. Benjamin Fernandez, who headed the Hispanic Finance Committee to ~ the President, rejected the chMges made Wedne!day by John J. Priestu ol C«al Gables. Rumors Flying-Hughes May Reside in Miami ment said today the recent upsurge CHICAGO -A federal court judge in fi ghting across the country, with three Wednesday freed Chicago Seven lawyers bases falling to the Communists in Jess William M. Kunstler and Leonard I. than a week , marked the start of the Weinglass 9f seven of 14 contempt third Vietnam war. charges slapped on them by Judge Julius J . Hoffman during the riot conspiracy Bui Bao True, the g o v e r n m e n t trial of 1969-70. spo kesman, told a news conference an U.S. District C.OUrt Judge ·Edward estimated 400,000 North Vietnamese T. Gignou:x left standing for further soldiers in the south were responsible trial six contempt citatiom against In an opening statement before the Senate Watergate commi ttee, Fernandez said he was "appalled. shocked and disgusted with the t•11<>r ol his (Prieo!m') testimony ." Fernandez said a meeting he had with Priestes was arranged by tbe builder's associates, that "l never asked him for a dime," and that Priest.es "was never promised any favon - direc1ly or indirectly -in u:cbange for his donation" of $2510!» to Nixon't re-election effort. MIAMI (UPI\ -Business as90ciates say Howard Hughes may soon move into the Mlami borne he purchased from his millionaire friend George Davis - while closing a financial deal with Davis' development firm. Rumors Wednesday that H u g h e s himself was in Miami died down when clues dropped by Davis' staff pointed to a Davis-Hughes meeting, perhaps later today, at the International Monetary Bank on British Grand Clyman Island in the Caribbean. Davis has an interest tn the bank on the tax-sheltered island south f( Cuba, and "there would be aboolutely no prob- lem" in Hughes flying from his last- JWOrled retreat, London, dlrectly to Grand Cayman, according O> k M. Crampton. Crampton, a vice president in cha!ge of engineering and acquisition for the Davis Development Co. of Miami, said, "I think within five to ten daya there will be some sort ol public statement. This is a bus.iness cit.al, a n cl nothing persooaJ concerning Mr. !lugbe.,." But when pressed about the 1iland home Hughes purchased from Davis in Miami, Crampton said, "It's just a bit premature, I think personally, but it would not surprise me at all if be resided in that house in the near fUture ." Federal agents biendly with Hughes ever-present "advance men," said the billionaire recluse was not in Miami. They al.so said there are no legal im- pediments to his re-establishing U.S. resJdeoey. Vesco Under Guard for the latest battles. Kunstler and one count against Wcinglass. "The third war has indeed started in South Vietnam," True said. "From • Rello%o c ... ..,,..,. Ubel small attacks to which no.body pai"d MIAMI -Presidential confidant Charles G. "Bebe" Rebozo has filed attention, the Communists will launch a $10-million suit against the Washington bigger and bigger operations." Post Co., charging the newspaper libeled The first Vietnam war, with French him in a story about a stock transaction. participation, lasted from 1945 to 1954. Rebozo, in a suit filed in Miami The seeond conflict, invOlving the United Federal Court Wednesday, said the post States, took place from 1961 to 1973. libeled him Oct. 25 when it ran a front "If they launch a big offensive _ page article alleging he cashed $91,500 and small attacks throughout the country in stolen stocks in 1968 after being DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dt4i'ttf'Y of tht D.1it7 Pilot is 'iJL1at.1ntttd MHH'-f'.W..•1 If Mii .. Mt ""-,_ ........ ., J :JI """' c•H "" ,,_. c.., WM IN trMllll .. ...... C1I•• ,,. 1811• lllflllt ,,. ,,Ill. s.~.,. •Ml hMift II '/M .. Mt ~ ,,_, ct.., •l' f 1.m, S11..,n11r. « I 1.M. s.,.,.,,, <IH •M 1 <9"' "'411 M lnlflM ti , ... C.111 .... '""' ..-tll ,, 1,11'1. could also be considered a big offensive told they were stolen. -the negotiations can break up ," True e Gurttelf Ft11M1 Action Ttltpllonn NASSAU, Bahamas (UPI) -Police said. MIAMI -Larry L. Willia-·, 29, or '"" Mflt Or•,,.. c""'"'" Artt1 ....... ..,....., beefed up their vigilance or fugitive Government and C o m m u n i s t Orlando, will plead guilty to two felony N.rt11w•1t """''illt"" •••di financier Robert L. Vesco Wednesday, negotiators have accomplished little so charges in connection with illegal fWld •IHI Wflhlllll11« ···· •• ........ u• posting guards on his private plane in far at the Paris talks, which began raising on behalf of Sen. Edward J. i.~ c .. ""•ie. c•,!•"-••11. further moves to keep him from leaving last winter under terms of the Jan. Gurney (!).Fla.), the Miami Herald :!:111J"'~t::;.. O.:-.... ~: ......... the Bahamas. Vesco, wuler indictment \lr28-"".,ase-if~irerua~gree~~m~en~LiT--~~=r=epo=rted~=toda~~Y·~========~~~i:iii~=:====~iii~ with former Nism Cabinet members John N. Mitdlell-and Maurice H. Stans AQUA NET KOTEX on c:onspiracy and obstruction of justice WE charges, was arrested Tuesday oo a H'AIRSPRAY QUOTE U.S. extradition request and freed on Rog .• 98 _ 13 ox. PRESCRIPTtO Rog • .59 box of 12 ns.~ bail. :::;~ m 3.9¢ Arctic Air N umhs Plains ,39¢ "DERMICEL" Most of North Dakota, Montana Below Zero AIM Tape by Johnoon & JohnlOn Rog. .79 • '(' x 5 yd1. Ul1WIAINllf010CAST. • ' ~ .... , .. ti:.t~elsNOW ,,.,...,, ~ "' ~MtOWllS '"I llOW TOOTHPASTE --29~ TR·IAMINIC EXPECTORANT Rog . 2.23 4 CIL 99¢ ' RHONE'S GUNDERSON DRUG "716 E; BALBOA ,BLVD. -·- BALBOA THERAGRAN-M Vitamin by Squibb 3:99 DR IS TAN DECONGESTANT TABLETS R"9• 1.49 • 24 tablell 79¢ ' ' , ST RI-DEX MEDICATED PADS R• 1.49 • Jar of 75 ·I 99- •A•NEl-HIND' Wl:rTINO SOLUTION R ... 1.29 . 2 & , f ' • - ,• .. f • I • • . ' . . ' • • . • • ) i ' • .. ,• . ·• > ' ( ., • • • . . . • • . • • . . ' • • Pf,ctitre Not Too l Bright For Five-city Cable TV By TERRY S. COVILLE 11THE PlcnJRE {, not too "I can see a lot of benefits ot"" 0.111 '"• '''" encouraging right now •. The from it. but maybe we are ahead of our time. I'd recom-The dream of a five-city timing seems bad, the money mend wailing and backing off cable television network serv, market ts bad. We may want awhile." ing Huntington ;e e a c h , to just shelve the whole thing The system proposed pro- Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, for a year or so ana try vides for more thaD merely Fount a 1 n Valley and it later,'' be added. clear reception . As designed Westminster is fadiilg -ffl;S • One other· possibility is by Bateman, the five-city Directors of the five-<:ity backing the 1proposal with franchise would have to prQ- 1 Public Cable Te I e vi s 1 on public mooeyJif the five cities vide several public service Autboroty (PGTA)~bave decld.o want to build and own a cable channels, and a considerable ed to make one last, major network themselves, Rowlands amount of broadcasting equiJ>"" effort to find out why private said. , nlent, ineluding mobile units industry bas spumed what That Idea' seems somewhat to serve each city. PCI'A directors feel would be mote h b au s re , owever, e c e THE PCTA dir ector s -~ .__.,, one of the most sophisticated Costa Mesa has already e· Ul't ,,._..~ 1 ·~•lerrus ln the nation. ed ·u t It .... originally thought they co.uld WI A f press OP,post on ° · make s u c h requirements naer flG 11 i ~ FAR, 111E PCTA has "I ~ IT should be because they could olfer a For mer Congresswo-· 1 filled to attract any bidders privately owned, not public," five-community market to one man U>uise Day Hicks j fct constriiction oJ a cable says eo,;ta Mesa Councilman company with a cur rent has felurned to poll-sfstem which could serve 8U Alvin Pinkley. "I wonder how population of abo:ut 400,000. tics with vil:tory in Bos-~t 1five corrununities. successful It can be if nobody So far, however, none of ton City Council elec-: John Bateman, consultant to wants jto build a $15 million the private -companies has tion. tbe PCTA and designer of.p;•;y~st~errfi;;;; .. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';;;;h;;;;ow;;;;n;in;t;er;e-;st;;. :;;;;;;;;;--J tbe PCTA's set of speci.fica.11 • Uons, has been asked to invite BUSTERm FTC Drops ' High-C i Complaint WAi>HINGTON CAP)-The Federal Trade Corrlmisslon has dismissed char&es that commerclala\fot High-C fruit . drink unlairl; represented the nutritive'\value of the drink. By a 4-t "Oote, ,the com- mission Wednesday dismissed staff allegations t,hat High-C advertises itself as high in Vitamin C compared with other fruit juices, particularly p. spokesman from the Na-, 'tiona1 Cable T·e I e v i s l on j ~ Association to meet with the JI PCTA Tuesday morning, or .Q any other aceee\<'ble date. . cC "We'd like so.mebody from < the cable industry who can • telJ us why no one seems ' interested," Dave Rowlands, city administrator of Hun- tington Beach, said Wed- nesday. "It could be that our expectationa are so high, no. private company can see the benefits to building it. Marijuana Cutback otange -juice. , · THE STAFF, IN 3 com--Tren,d Told plaint issued in 1971, based allegatio.ns on High-C ad- vertisements lauding the pro- duct as "the sensible drink" and 11made with real fruit." Hiji!:h-C is made by the c.oca- Cola Co. The complaint argued that although a six-OYnce serving of .the beverage provided 110 percent of the remmmended daily diet ary allowance for children. High-C made only a marginally significant con- tribution to the calories need- ed by children. The complaint further noted that Higb-C did not contain unprocessed fruits. THE COMMISSION ma- jority. in upholding an earlier rulin g by an FTC trial judge, concluded: . "\Ye find. that the false and ml!deading representation al- leged to !have been made in Hi gh-C's advertising are not reasonably likely to have been conveyed to consumers." ln an opinion written by commiSSioner Da\•ld S. Den- niSOfl Jr .. the commission said consumers would understand .. r bat High-C advertisements 1neant by ''[resh fruit," and \Vould not expect an un- processed product. BERKELEY (UPI I -Mari- juana use drops significantly among high school sludents who "learn to understand themselves", a psychologist .s uggests. ' ' Th e overwhelming ma· jority of young people who try drugs are looking for something that often they can't name or identify," William Soskin, director of a UC Berkeley, youth project, SS.id Wednesday. "If you can sense what it iJ they're seeking and find an effective .way ol makin& it availabl~, then their recourse to drugs diminishes ve ry substantially," he com- mented. "The decline is the most marked among the heaviest \lsers," he said. "The most typical pattern-is a shift tram three to six times per week to fe\ver than one to three times per month." Soskin sa id the five-year-old "Project Communi ty" of the unive rsity has dra\vn 400 youth~ for an after·school pro- gram designed to • ' he l p (them) in understanding themselves and their rela- tionships to the adult world." IUE THIRK YOUR CHILD•s FEIT ARI SPICIAL. THEY HAYE TO LAST A LIFETllllE. It t1ke1 specie\ cue to give a perfect fit. Thats why we have iome _.O years of childrens sh oe fitting ex- perience, to properly serve you .•• and • super inventory. # 30 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH WHEN BEEFEATER ISN'T .YOUR PRIME CHOICE ' . ·' . l GO FORESTERING 1 \ Forester1ng is en1oy1ng our premiu m wh•sky for all the rig ht reasons. Taste. Drinking is one lh1ng . Forestering is something-else. ' .·$59' . . Fifth ; .. ----- • Thursd11, NO'tfmbtr 8, 1973 DAILY PILD' If ~MOVIE C*MERA •BONANZA CAMERA EX.CELLANCE AT A SAVINGS YOU CAN 'T AFFORD TO MISS EACH MODEL FEATURES: e F1•t 1/1~1 l•ns th1t Zooms lro!ft Wide ~ Anal• to T•l•pholo · · e El1ctro-F1dt Lits You F1ide Scenes In or Out e Automatic CdS El1ct1ic Ey• wllh M1inual Ov1uldt e Fast&. Slow Motion e Ball11y Rtchai11r Inc luded •·• '•••·l""o~ 'l 'u" ••~•• ••••• 1 .... •• ST 1002 224.95 MF&. LIST PRICE 349.50 HONEYWELL PENTAX SP500 WITH FZ.O LENS., e Su1H~1 Ta!u1n1ar 55n.n1 1'2.01.ens e Highly ac curate thro119h·th e-le11s Exposure Metering Systen1 e Classic Pen tax Styling and Pre cise Handling 179.95 llF6 . LIST PRICE 275.50 ~ Canon TLb cAMl•A , · . ' . WITH SOMM f1.S LENS · . I ' • Focal P lane Shut11r e Canon FD SOmm Fl .I S.C. Uni • Mic ropilsm Sc11en Ran11tlndtr uslnt Frtsn1 1 Lens • Shockltss Quick Return Minor System • Bayontl FD Mount • Shutler Speeds horn l/SOO to l Ste. plus n ·•Built· In Exposure Mtter 214i195 ,. ,. " OUR RE&. PRICE · 238 .40 ---lllliiiiiiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiiil--1~ .. ' /Gi1iiik: SR200 I '."SLR" CAMERA 8991 . WITH CASE • Buil t· In Eapos1tr1 Mtltr lor Film Spttds e ASA 6·~00 •• Focal P~al'll Shut111 • El1ctr1111ic .Flash Synch 111 1/30 Ste. ft lr:c1pt1 P1l1 m T111 •Acc111.i1y·S1101 OUR REG. PRICE 124.95 Full , wo Y1ar Gua1anl11 KEYSTON~ 4, ELECTRONIC STROBE ' • Guidi No. 40 • Neon R1ady Li&hl • Tisi Button 1 , • 3 Position all Mt:?I Shot • Quick Rtlt1enct 1lculalo1 • Hlddtn Synch C d • 2 Vt1r Gu1irant11 " I 24.95 MFG. LIST p{c; 31.95 MAXIE MITE I ELECTRONIC STROBE e W1irm Tone Flath Tub• e Easy lnslallallon • Powt1td by Two l .SV Ptnli&ht B11tt1 ies • R1c7clin1 Time 1·10 Ste. e On· OH .Swllcll 9.9& OUR RE&. PRICE114.95 WITH RECHARGEABLE NICAD BATTERIES HONEYWELL PENTAX TBLIPBOTO 'LINS 13SMM SMCT FlS • r. • '• f : Guide No. 40 .. NICAO R1char111b11 Batl1rits Rech1111ts In 2\1 His . Nton Rtady Li&hl 2 yr. Gu111nl1t Made in U.S.A • 39.95 • 11'11lli·Coattn1 Clfts S•fKI Rlllt clion • Ti1in11111ts up to 5°" Mo1t Ll1ht • Ullravlol1t ft1y1 .,.. R11t1ct1d • Supt1· Multl•Co1t1n1 Is a H111d1r, Tau1h11 Co1th~1 99.95 OUR IU. PRICE 129.95 so • .-coAsi-~PLAZA-COSTA MESA BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FRWY. -PHONE 979.3373 MON. ·TUES. • WED •• THURS. • FRI. 10.9 • I SAT. 10-6; SUN. 12 !Noonl to 5 · ~~~~~~~~·~~~ I , • '• .. DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL 1'XGE Needs Another Look The South Coast Regional CoasU!ne Commission WU well·advised to •et an Immediate new hearing on proposed expansion of camping facilities at Doheny Stale Beach following its unexpected vote against the project Monday night. With seven votes needed for approval, the 6 to 4 denial -two commissloners being absent -was an unfortunate setback. . The state's upgrading and expansion or the Do- heny installation over the past couple of years has been one of Its ·most creditable recreational efforts. With 234 additional overnight campsites already funded, the park soon could be able to accommodate many ca mpers now being turned away. This project appearM to be directly in line with the presunied goal of the coastline commission -to provide a few of the 19,000 campsites needed between now and 1980. Commissioner Art Holmes of San Clemente com· plained that area residents had been inadequately in· fanned of the parks departments original hearing on the project. He may have something of a point. So the "Piiblic should take advantage of another chance to speak up at the coastline cOmmission's new hearing Monday in Long Beach. Commission Overworked The coastal commission's apparent confusion over the Doheny project lends credence to Commissioner Ronald Caspers' contention that an excessive workload makes it difficult for commissioners to be adequately briefed on local issues. miJslons, it has processed $975 million hi permits In the past nine montha, roughly hall for Orange County projects. By comparison, the San Diego County Coastal Commission. handled on&thir<t that load. ' " Pennit applicalions continue at the rate of 100 a week and commission meetings run to 16 and 18 hours. Tiiis volume overburdens the commissioners and staff, A!ld virtually precludes attention to the primary goat or .an overall plan for coastal development. . C~mbining the two heavily populated counties was W·advised from the beginning. The results have been even worse than predicted. Caspers' proposal s)lould be given serious consideration. A Tragic Infraction A Los Angeles coroner's jury last week uncovered a tragic and. disturbing misuse of force by two Orange County sheriff's deputies while making an arrest in San Juan Capistrano last summer. Deputies said a 120-pound man they were arresting for blocking a . freeway off.ramp became violent and was restrained with a harness normally used on rowdy mental patients. The man became unconscious on the way to jail and never came out of a coma which may have been caused by the harness. The disturbing aspect of this tragedy is that the device, according to Sheriff James Musick was "un- authorized." ' .. Musick S?-id the men who used the straps were given a harsh talking to" and all patrol officers were warned not to use such devices. J Caspers has proposed the South Coast Regional Commission, which now covers both Los Angeles and Orange Counties, be split in two. By far the largest of the state*s six coastal com· The sheriff must be absolutely certain his men know how serious such infractions can be. He must also be absolutely sure no other squad cars carry im- plements that could cause injury or death in untrained hands. "THANK GO~ WE l>ON'T HAVE TO EXPLAIN TO ANYSOt>Y." Flowers, Sn1oky Fireplace Gazebo, on Taxpayer_Bill WASHINGTON -President Nixon's people tried to stick the taxpayers, ap-. parently, IOI" every possible peUy bill fil _his estates 1n San Clemente, calif., and Key Biscayne, Fla. We have gone through a stack of bills and memos, never intended to be read outside ·the· presidential circle. These show the taxpayers were charged !or everythiit from stamping his g o If tees with the presi- dential logo to furn- ishing his private San Clemente bath- room with his favor- ite soap. Tbe usual explana- tion out of the White House has been that the government pays for renovations in- volving the President's security. The doc· uments in our possession, however, show that the tupayers were soalted for doi- ens of improvements never requested by the Secret Service. TIDS HAS also be<n establ~bed by Rep. Jack Brooks, D-Tex., after a thorough investigation by his House Government Operations subconunittee. The President apparently C001plained, , for exa.mple, about the frreplace smoking I in bi• den. The problem was tunred I over to bis attorney, Herbert Kalmbach, who squawked to the contractor. I Wamm B. Sturtevant, the cmlractor, hustled over to the San Clemente retreat 1 and personally lit fll'es in the presi.deoUal i fireplace, he reported, "on January 4th, 1 1971, the day before the President ar-j rived and again on January 18lh, after 1 be had left. Bolh times the fireplace worked properly. '4[ ALSO understand that there were I mly two occasiON out of about 10 possi- ble times used where there was a smok- ing problem. My conclusioo is that on l the two occasions when the fireplace did smoke there must have been a different wind condition that· caused a down draft." He recommended installing an exhaust fan. The Secret Service at first resisted paying for the fan until Kalmbach's seaetary, Marilyn Parent, had a mean- ingful talk with the agent in charge. She reported afterward to Sturtevant: "Ken Iacovone informed me that $ would pay for the imtallation Of the fireplace fan after I informed him that it deftnitely was placed for security JlW1>0'0S and how would he like it LI ·you know who was asphyxiated because 1 there was a certain wind condition which I caused the draft to come downwards aid caused the smoke to come into the room. He fmally agreed with me." I cart to the tllpay"!>: !388J8. THE SECRET SERVICE was also I+ penuadeCI to restore Pat Nixon's favorite ptd>O. ottbough it bad bem rejected • Dear Gloomy Gus 'Ille people who ,.... outraged ot the Pr<sid«ll fir tapla( conversa- lims In the Wblte -now are. ouUlpd because . '"" eonveraa- doat """' DOI taped ••• H.W.L. -... ea m .,. •a;:::: 1t1 ................. ......... . ......... . _____ .... ..... ••• i • as a sec.iuity outpost. The First Lady's social secretary, Constance Stuart, ex· plained the problem in a February 15, 1971, memo to Mrs. Nixon. "I've looked into the matter of the restoration of the gazebo at San Clemente," Ms. Stuart reported. "The gazebo in question is the one closest to the ocean overlooking t~ point ·and it evidently is in sad need ofrepair. "'Ille Secret Service will not be taking this gazebo over as one of the ~· They would like to place some !!fnaJl electronic scaning devices in an already existing cabinet .• , ~ "THE GAZEBO would be res red to its origin<;t.1 condition . . • I ve been assured this work would be e in good taste and that the ultimate !'eSUlt would be as close to the original as possible." · The First Lady scratched an "OK" to this proposal and Ms. Stuart referred i t ¢0 the General Service Administration's speciaJ projects officer, John F. Galuardi. "Jack," she noted. 0 A8 yoo can see PN bas OK'd the work." An earlier June 30, 1969, report to the White Hoose Cll the San Clemente complex states: "Mr. Galuardi has already Informed you tl\11 he would have a carpenter, electrician, phmiber. and an air ronditioning-relrigeration mechanic m hand at all ·times with a total force of twenty various cra~en available on call. These people will wear the rejlU!ar GSA green wlifo!'ln. 0 HE HAS Ai.so made plans to have a jjay maid Jn a wbite unifcrni and a sufficient number of cleaners in grey uniform and black boW tie to fUrnish · cleaning-on a 24-hour basis. Linen towels, the preferred soap, and Scott toilet tissue will Ile provided in the Presi+-tt's restroom . • • ,\ "Arrangements have also been made for a florist to provide !reshly cut flowers daily in all offices of the Administration Building." Up to June 30, 1968, acrording to the financial statements, the tai· payers laid out $4,900 for cut flO'iVers and plants. Of this, $Mt wa s spent on flowers for the President's residence. AT KEY BISCAYNE, the taxpayers have paid for fixtures in the homes not only of the Prttiident but also his friend, Bebe Rebozo, next door. One' work sheet calls for a "bOOSter transformer" for "the existing kitchen •.. and for the e:tisting air conditioning and 8alDla Bath" at the Rebozo residence. Dozens of other miscellaneous items, including an ice machine that makes square ice because the President "does not like ice cubes with holes in them," were also billed to the taxpayers. A WHITE HOUSE spokesman com· plained that the documents were part of a "partisan, unethicaJ" campaign to embarrass the President. The spokesman said that the s.crtt Service had gooe ahead wllh plans I<> renovate the San Clemente gazebo be£ore Mrs. Nixon was COfllU]ted. -Quotes Jody Boyko, Sacramento -"Yoong poop!• U I<> IS are rommerciaUy labeled as actuka when seekJng entertainment at cerUln theaters and ·must pay the hlcbMt ratesi when we setk mature entertainment ••• we are still children I<> be cen!Ored at their whim." - Only Chance to P1·ove ltitegrity Nixon Must Submit ·_to ·Questioning \VASHINGTON £limitations of presidential broadc and the Ceverish atmosphere of televis press con- ferences have not served to clarify Presi- dent Nixon's position. The time has come to renew the suggestion herein before made that the President volunteer to appear before the Ervin committee of the Senate. It ap- pears that there is no othe r way to make the e:<plora· tion of his acts and motivation neces- sary for a more ba!· anced public judge- ment than exists in the present frenetic atmosphere. Disbelie! of this previous explanations. compounded by the missing tapes, is at such a high level that bis reservoir nf respect.has c!l'.aolii'l!!lY _dwindled. It is no longer ·merely a question or avoiding impeachment. The institution of the presidency as well as Nixon ·s personal honor are at stake. Before Nixon is brought to the brink of resigna- tion be should be heard in full . The huge majority which reelected him (rucHARD WILSO~ deserves no resS. THE CONDMONS of the presidential appearance before the Ervin committee are, of course. very difficult. Should he take an oath to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth? Should he answer questions without resort to executive privilege? What further documentation should he supply the com.mittee? How Jong should he be questioned and wider what rules? There are some answers to such ques- tions, bu t not to all of them. Certainly it is in the President's interest to testify under oath or not at all. BEYOND THAT, there must be ways to define the areas of discussion, the scope of the questioning, the length of his appearan~. These are matters v.•hich common judgment can determine, for it would serve no interest to give the impression of hara ss ment, unreasonable pressure or persecution. Nor would it serve the President's in- terest to so limit the questioning as ... to enhance the impression of con- cealment and evasion. It is probably too late to resort to the Wilson precedent as Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. suggested earlier this year. PresJdent Woodrow Wilson. a f t e r senatorial talk of subpeonaing him , in· vited the foreign relations committee to the White House for an informal session on the Versailles ~ce treaty. No oath was administered , but a transcript was made, and Wilson was unsuccessful in swaying the committee. MORE THAN A committee needs'. to be swayed today and this makes a, televised session or sessions With the Ervin committee both unavoidabfe and desirable from everyc;ine's point of view, How long should the President be ques- tioned? In the absence of an intem&tionat crisis, it is hard to imagine how ·better he could use his time than in lengthy expositions of his role in the Watergate affair, even over several days if necessary. Senator Baker wishes that the Presi- dent had decided to come before the committee last June, C i g u r a t i v e I y pushing a wheelbarrow laden with tapes and documents up Pennsylvania Avenue to the Capitol. The Senator haH-ex}fected the President to do so after it wu revealed that the tapes \•1erc in existence and contained. according to the Pre!i· dent, proof that he was telling the truth. THAT GOLDEN oppOrtunity has pass- ed. but Senator Baker. Senator Barry Goldwater and others think it isn't too late for the President to gain something from an appearance before the com- mittee. Jt's the only way out, aCt'Ording to Goldwater. In all likelihood. the committee would receive Nixon ~respectfully u n d e r virtually any ground rules, leaving it _entirely up to him what the general conditiorurbf his appearance would be. He could contend that his· presidential oath was solemn enough and no more wu needed. This would probably satisfy the committee, but the general public i.s already so suspicious that Nixon would be more convincing if he were held to the fire on possible perjury as have the highest officers of his administration. --- DEMEANING to the Presidency? Yes, in a sense. But inspirin~ also if the President were to appear before the public as any common citizen to prove • his integrity, and let blarrle fall where it must. Detente Key to Brez'hnev's Future MOSCOW -The fact that Moscow made no change in the flow of Jewish emigrants to Israel during or since the war of Yorn Kippur shaws how vital to the present Kremlin leadership the policy of detente wilh the US. has become. Said one Soviet of- ficial: "The Arabs bitterly complained that while America-- was sending anns to Israel, we were sending men to Is· rael." Soviet ofri- cials claim to th e Arabs that the emi- gration cannot be legally stopped, which ia ridiculous: 111e real reason it contin· ues is to avoid a public explosion ii. the U.S. ( EVANS·NOVAK J to his power and prestige. AS OF TODAY, tilere is literally no public dissent 10. Brezhnev's policy of detente. Moscow has paid Washington -$28 million-as the--firsWnstallment_on_ the $7 billion lend-lease debt. That was the Soviet side of the bargain under which President Nixon promised most- favored-nation trade equality and long. range credits. There will be no further lend-lease payments until the U.S. delivers -but no word or implied criticism of Brezhnev has been allowed. However, thoughtful Soviet proponent s of detente are getting plenty worried. 'Ibey claim that "everyone" is for detente, but then add elliptically that there are many skeptics oot yet satisfied detente is "possible." TRANSLATED, that means detente faces growing and important oppQsition inside the party or the army or both. And that in turn meam BrezMev may soon face internal political threats which would compel him rto veer 'Sway from detente. Thus , while o:mgressional actions may have on1y small economic effects, they could have decisive and explosive P.Qlitical effectS here. That explains Moscow's unprecedented wooing of American public and governmental opi- nion. But this courtship, at a time when Kbrushchevian political reforms are being turned off, does oot come close to meeting American demands !or an apen society agreeable' to political dissent." To the contrary, the courageous civil libertarian and nuclear physicist, ~rei Sakharov, is now being castigated in bigh party levels as mentally un- balanced. Alexander Solzhenitsyn, one of the world's truly great authors, is. Likewise, an extraordinary effort is being made to pretend that the re!usal of the U.S. Congress to · extend trading equality to the Soviet Union is really a minor matter, That m8y be true from a strictly economic standpoint, but privately Soviet officials admit that 1"'"1 a polltical and psycllological stand· polllt it has been a major setback. How To Be a Bureaucrat "l'llE STAGE ls now bei!i ci1refully "II you want to Ile a carpenter, · hs plumber, or meebanJc, there are dcnens set Io wit tand a probable second major or boob available to tell you how I<> blow from Congress: Legislation denying do It. U you want to Ile a lawyer, (THE BOO~) U.S. credits to belplinance the economic engineer, doctor. accountant; computer deals 1Moscow is trying to work out programmer, or admiral, there are / _ with no conspicuous · ....... despite schools you can go to that will instruct system, bierarchles, principles, maxims the headlines _ wi·th American ~~---·. you In the •Plll'Opriate arts and sciences and axioms, Its logic of no-think, Its _.._., ..• But ·for IOIDeone who upires to illuaioo of power, its 'l'Yth o1 piogress / Showing a stiff upper Up, Soviet Ieaiters be a bureaucrat, such resources are and its deificali<ll ot ritual and routine say the U.S. may block credits for simply not tufllclellt." , IN A COMPLETE departure from his new but pr OI' liter will elld such WITH THESE WOl'dl Pn>f. ThOmas academic role, Pro£. Martin -who ' disaiminab. _ L. Martin, Jr., Dean ot the Insti!Ute • has taught at RlllAStlaer, the University Iii fact, .... ever, dmlal ot U.S. oredits-ol Tec:bnology at Southern Methodist of New Mexico, the Unim ty of would .foroo.leed party leader Leoiild University, lnlroduces a bllarlous -put. Ari...,a, and wu formerly Dean of Brtzhnev a very bitltr pill. Although down of the retrograde Jn corpon1te Engirieerlng at both Arizona and Florida BNlZlloev carefully extraotA!d a blank life: Mollee In BIUD...._ (McGraw· Unlvoriity -makes a lreob,.engaging, check !or dolente from the Politburo Hill, $5.95). and exbllarating cmlribution to the last April (lnCludlng tbc sooret police A> Martin ..., it, whether in business, li!erature of excess In American . life. and tile milltal}', each ot whom now education; the executive ouito o r Mallce 11 B!aaderland lilould caplivalt have a aeat on tile 17-memller Polilburo) everyman•• state of mltld, bureaucracy cr1Ucs and commuters, .stablishmenls he ~ So on', forever felting slapped hi-eeds Its ~ t'ODceits, Its metaphors cllehards and anU-ettablllhment Turks. down by lhe U.S. 'without serious damage or fiction and foible, tts jargon. It• VIC'l'OR de KEYSERLING (· ~· ' ridiculed by these same offlcials as "not a real writer." NOR HAS the slightest sign been seen here of serious reduction in the alarming growth of strategic nuclear weatx>ns or of relaxatioo oC the rigorous Soviet coi> trol of the Eastern European bloc. To the contrary, the Soviet army ls widely believed to be sending hundreds of the new T~ tanks to _E)astem Europe. That may be part of the numbers game in preparation for a U.S . .SOviet agree- ment on mutual reductiO(l of armS in central Europe, or it Jhay not. No Westerner here presumes to know. I ' mus, while Brezhnev Is pushing ahead hard with many small 0 detente- isrm'* such as unjamming the Voice of America and keeping the migration pipeline going, he is not beginning to approach the harder issues that matter so much to the U.S. Congress. Unless he does, detente may lose its glow here as Brezhnev !ails to obtain the promised benefits. U so1 Brezhnev's own glow will also start to dim. ·otAMM COAST DAILY PILOT Rob•rl N. Weed, Pubwh<r Thom.., Keevt~ Editor BarOOra Kreibich .Editorial Page Editor The edltol"l;i 1~ ·of t~ Daily Pilot .Reks to ln1onn 1t1d. stimulate' readen . by Pl"ltjitil'.'C on this ..,_. divene t~mt~'en topics Of in.. ·tetrtt by s7ncl*jttd columnl11a and cartoontats, by/ptovkflng a forum tor readera' views and by prttentlna; ttits newspaper's opjnionl W ideu en cuntnt t ... CL 'f1i< tdl1orioJ oplftlono ol th< D<llY Pilot •-onJ, in th< tdltorl&I COl'41"9ft &t tht -'top of 1hf -· Opinions ..,..._ by the .,.. umnistl and ca~ letrtr . writers att their own and no rudorse- m'"t of ~ vi.... by Ute DoJ11 Pilot mid 11e 1n1.....i. Thursday, Noveml!er 8, t97s • ' • rea smo~ enjoji •heir Iran city Ian Ang spl opul in Sm par Lo• stud mor plea in only "' t to con ani o· wif me or that ter the dau hi ' • • ' T_h_"""~'~Y,_N_"""~-b•_•~B~._1•_1~3~~~~~~~-0~A~l~LY:._Pl~L~DT:._L7 ,. Out West, the View· Is Different ' ______ __.___,,: ' I gr=; ~he-~, ( ' J I came to 'lhe door. At her NON HOFFMAN / feet llve or 111 clop were ~ 1 '~ftnJ.d 1:~~!¥i:~ ::j j ..,., _________ .. so many things to do," she the s~y~ and neutering or demurred . "No. that'SJ ot so, said, lntl'Qducing the vlsitor I the CJty'/ dogs and cats. darting, that's why they go into -the Jiving room where Joining Jn this effort to out o1. the country make thole scenes." the ~tee was about to achieve j,ero pet population begin Its "'1•1\>ess. "My . two growth were maoy Hollywood Someone br<!Ullh up the proiects are Impeaching Ntson names: I Doris Day Lucllle blOQdy bor10'1 in that and saving the anlmah." Ball, ~ary Tyler' ,Moore, borrlllc bedroom acue in The house was way up in -eesar ttomero, Valerie Harper "The Godfather. It was the hills, l!lgb en®&h to be 1 and H,ope Lange. agreed that the horse was bl ff , real and but lnstanoe ol reasons lY una eeted by the "IT'S MOVIE STARS that smog so that the owners could t k the . ct " aid Mrs unrecognized on-goJng cruelty. "Like the rodeo," she aaid. "'11le next time they have a _rodeo we're going in force. You know they tie straps aro.und the horse's testicles. That's the only reason they buck. Cleveland AmDry knows all about that. The next time they have one, I'm golng to gather up Doris Day and all the other actors and march." Los Angeles is !till a land where credit dentists ad· vertise on television and cruelty to animals his become a major issue on the alr. 111e news of what's happening back · east filters in here to be added to. the !lat or life's anomalies. Not even in these pleasant mountains of con- tentment can Lhey be recon· cited so that sometifT!es those who inhabit theS& slopes turn away from the larger ques- ttOIUI with the knowledge that civilization 1s also built on a working atteotiQ,a to the lesser decencies. enjoy their Oower garden tna e unpa • s · ~heir swimming pool and th~ Baaehart., who would have tranquil-view of the immense! p,referred it to be otberwi!e. ctty that pceupied all the II we just had models, It Jandacape arid beyond It was wWJd be a fiop. It 's star·gaz. a movie staf's house;· but the 1ng • it~t sells tickets, I'm Richard Basebarts are settled afraid. • I W alflowing Woes Confound family peOple who don't cause She spoke about famllies sc andals and don 't Ii v e who 1 breed their pets just sq splashy. tbeir kids can see the birthing Washington Social Sc ene or «>Ur!e, here in Los and t~n allow ~ puppies Angeles you can f ~ r g i v e and kittens to be killed . She The pundlts here gloomily splashiness money and proud told how the animals a~ll· agree that the mood in opulence, w'here you might not ed. "They put ttlem in decom-Waahinglon thae ,days Is one in Philadelphia or Detroit. presalon chambers. w:tiat it of confuslon1 unease, ex- Smog or no.t, within the does ls to let the atr out cursloos and alarwm. And parameters of original sin slo.wly so that In 25 seconds they're absolutely right. ( __ AR_T_n_o_PP_E__..J Los Angeles is a aucc~~ t~ are supposed to be in "I've never seenJ t worse ," stud)'.. More people live better, ~ coma, but in some shel~rs confided harried Io o kin g more conveniently m o r e 1t takes 25 minutes and (hey re Washington hostess Pe a r I pleasanUy than any' plac~ else still not dead wh~n ,they're Noy¥er. "No one -absolutely in the world. New York !ihould h1auled into the fertilizer truck no one -knows what to only have lhls town's slums, and ~k~ off to be ground wallow in." so lt'11 not altogether ~ly up ahve. WaU Owing is, of course, the to l1ve splendidly here and , In Washington, they were most widely popular and concern one's self with the discussing the confirmation oldest of sports in the nation's animals. hearings on Jerry Ford while capital, dating back, as it Diana Basehart, the actor's here she had pictures of does, to the expense account wife, was chairing t h e wheelbarrows full of half.dead scandals of the s e co n d meeting, attended by seven puppies. "So there ts a crisis/' Washington Admlnlstratfon. In or eight wo.men and at least she continued. "There ls an fact, it's the only game in that many dogs. In in· emergency. Two hundred and town. termiltenl attendance were sixteen animals are thrown I But in the past, to preserve the Baseharts' four·year--0ld into the death·chambers every order, ,Washingtonians have daughter and the famous actor hQur seven days a week." generally agreed to wallO'!' in himself, who ,would be em-"And what the animals go only one topic at a time, such ceeing the luncbeoo.-fashion through wheri they 're used in es 'lbe aeavage cl. Doll y .show the conunittee w'as put· making a movie hire," Diana Madison, The Drinking Habits ting on to raise· money ror exclaimed, but R i c h a r d of Ulysses Grant or The Sex Life of Grover Cleveland. As a leading Washlngton hostess, Mrs. Noyster is ac- cepted as a leading arbiter of what orie should or should not wallow in. Jn the past week, she says, she's aged 1en years. "YOU SIIOULD have been at my dinner party last night, my dear,'' she said, her voice choking. "It was an un- mitigated disaster. ';The old fogey on my right who is terribly hard of hearing insisted on still wallowing in Watergate. Imagine! Now it's perfectly acceptable to wallow in The Watergate tapeso but Watergate itself! Really_! "Then the you ng man on my left was determined to silve1Woods wallow in Mr. Ni1:on's Federal Resort Renewal plan. You know, San Clemente and Key Biscayne. But personally, I think that wallow has been rather wallowed out, don't you? "At the other end of the table, one lady was wallowing in Bebe Rebozo and why he kept that $100,000 contribution from Howard Hughes in his safe depqsit box for three years. But the gentleman next to her wasn't listening because he was wallowing in Mr. Nix- on 's income taxes. "NOW lN the midd1e, one group wanted to wallow in Mr. Agnew's acceptinCgraft, which is at least au courant. But I don't think it's a wallow that will last, do you? The other group, however, wanted to wallow in Governor Mandel of Maryland and why he didn't accept enough graft to pay his hotel bill. Fascinating! ~ally, it was bedlam! So I tinkled my little bell for silence and said brightly, "Please. Jet's everyone agree on a single wallow to wallow in. Now, what about Jerry Ford? "Well. that started the most awful fi ght and everyone went home in a lruff. Re3lly, my dear, it was one of the most successful parties I've given in years !" " WHAT'S AGED Mrs . Noyster, of course, is that Mr. Nixon. in nominating Mr. Ford, caUed for making a "new beginning." Which is the 17th new beginning he's called for since his First Inaugural Addre!S. Magnavo.>e hol1oay specials Shown are but a few of our Magnavox Holida'( Special Values. There are many more in Color and Black & While TV. Slereo Consoles & Com- ponen1s, Radios and Tape Recorders. 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I , 3088 B R I s T 0 L s T STC:,l ... ~~~T~S: · ' 11AMto•PM • San Diego Freeway at Bristol , I SUM. 10AMto7PM • I Thursday, Novtmbtr 8, 1CJ73 ~U UAll..1 PI LOr Reading Tests State's Youngest Shadow of Watergate Spelled Defeai for State's Proposition 1 Pupils Improve SACRAMENTO (UPI) - 'lbe inevitable post mortems started today Into why Gov. Ronald Reagan could not con- vince Callfomians to vote for his tax cut plan. SACRAMENTO (AP) Celilomla's primary students are scoring higher and higher m reeding test., 1he state Board of Education was told Wednesday. The re s ult s place California's first, second and third graders above the na- tional norms set by test publishers, a board report said. THEY MARX a continuation of a slow upward trend es-- 1ablished when the s t a t e switched in 1969 from the Stanford Reading Test to Qr op&ative Primary Reading Test, said Alexander Law, head of the Office of Program Evaluation and Research in Court Nixes lesbian Bid SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The state Supreme Court has refused to return custody or two children lo their avowed lesbian mother. The court deni,ed the petition by Carol Parrott without com- ment Wednesday. Mrs. Parrott, 28, of E1 Verano, Sonoma County, con· tended her two children, 11 and 7 yea rs or age, were taken from her by a lower court judge because she had entered into a lesbian rela- tionship; Th.e. judge denied the charge. the stale Department of Edu· ca tion. "California pupils in grades one; two and three scored below the publisher's 'na- tional' norms when the Stan-3 Exectitim• Victi111s ford Reading Test was used . Nine persons were found shot to death Wednesday Each year, however, scores in a mass 'execution' apparently connected with improved modestly but con-the bur~Iary of a country store near Lodi. Three of sistently at all thre e grade the victims were Debbie Earl, (left) babysitter for levels," Law said in his the Watter Parkin family, Mark Lang, 20, Debbie's report. boyfriend, and Ricky Earl, 15 (right), brother of "When the change was __ D_e_b_b_ie_E_a_rl_. ______________ _ made to the Cooperative Primary Reading T e s t , California pupils scored very close to the publisher's norms and each year have continued lo make modest g a i n s . Achievement in all three grades at the present time is slightly above t h c publisher's norms, and the 1973 test results have con- tinued the upward trend," Law added. LAW's REPORT said the med ian scores for f i r s t graders were on percentile point above the publi.sher's norm, second graders were three points above and third grader~ \llere two points above. The switch was made because the Cooperative test more closely reflects material contained in California read· ing texts, said Dale Carlson an assistant to Law. He said the test was ehosen by a committee made up of testing directors from large California school districts who used surveys of teacher opi- nions of the tests. Police Arrested Dead Announcer LOS ANGELES (AP) -The apparent heB.rt attack that killed radio personality Marv Gray occurred after his arrest for investigation or driving un- der the innuence or drugs or alcohol, officials say. However, a breathalizer test revealed a "low reading" that was less than the .10 level usually considered by courts as an intoxicated minimum reading, officials s t a t e d Wednesday. J a t I infirmary personnel said they believed medication could have caused Gray's observable erratic condition. Gray, a strong booster of law enforcement jlDd -_oJ _ CQn· ,. servative political causes, was reported to have been visibly upset and to have told officers he had only had one drink, at a party, and suffered from a heart condition. Some jail officers said they thought Gray, 53, should have been checked by a doctor because of the low readinJ::. Officials said he was check· ed. by a nurse and that he took one or his medication pills after a high blood pressure reading was noted. There is no doctor on duty full-time becawie of a recent budget slash oppose4 by Police Chief Edward M. Davis. The most frequently men- ~ tkmed ex.planatiOns were-the complexity of the issue_, VQt,er cynicism fanned by ( PROP. 1 Watergate, the fear of higher local property taxes, a "you don't get something for nothing" belief, a fin a I weekend tel evision blitz and the potent strength of public employes. AT LEAST one Republicl{l, conservative, state Sen. H. L. Richardson or Arcadia, blam· ed "one of the most grossly mismanaged campaigns l hav e ever seen." "lt certainly d o e s n • t enhance h i s presidential chances, 11 Richardson said. "When you take a tax cut and can't get it through. it reflects rather dramatically on your )eadership capabilities. "The governor a s s i g n e d some of his top pygmies to the campaign. Their only good characteristics were mixing a drink. U the governor 'tries to use the same people to run for prfsident, he'll be lucky to find a plane ticket to where the convention is." The seffiilinal vote total sOOwed that Reagan's pro- posal, which would have IWited truces the ·state could collect, was rejected b y 3401@ -:Wtes. lt was beaten by 54.10 to iS.99 _pecrent. - or 2.3 million to 1.9 mil1i0r1 votes. State Cuts Enough? Viciorville Gang Held In Pot Haul Reagan's press spokesman, Clyde Walthall, was one or many who acknowledged the 4,000 word ballot initiative was too complicated. Reagan., Aides to Discuss E1iergy Crisis From Wire Services "l DON'T think there's any VICTORVILLE (AP) _ Of-question that the complexity fictrs in San Bernardino and of the initiative liurt from Riverside counties said they the beginning. People took a seittd more than a ton of look at it and just threw up marijuana and arrested five their hands," said the Reagan leaden 11ay ta1payen need not fear the defeat of Prop. 1 will release the wave of "big spending" pcedicted by Gov. Ronald Reagan in his campaign for the meuure. "The legialature ii not about to ta In re ... ' .. defeat was not a '1mandate pass any I C , said Assembly Speaker Bob to spend more." Moretti the chief opponent Their comments were gen- ol 1he htltlaUve. erally echoed by other GOP And Republican Assembly 'and Ocmocrntlc legislators leader Robert G. Beverly of during a series of telephone Mllll!&ttan Beach declare~d~the~_:l~nt:;:•rvc::::••WS=::W=:;;ed;;n~csda~y'-. __ OPl N I flA'I" I\ wr E K HOURS : 10 -b SOLIO ICEBERG LETTUCE 10~ Complete setection of HOLIDAY NUTS • For Cooking SWEET VALENCIA ORANGES 10~ Olltr GM un1M 1'•~. 1s y------------------1 C 0 U P 0 N ___ ;. -- fllilll DINNER SALAD ON US AT SAM BOS RESTAURANT 3001 SO. lllSTOL SANTA AHA 2016 NEWPORT BLVD-COSTA MESA PHONE 646-5718 There is no immediate pros- pect of a cut in California's speed llmlt to 50 miles an hour as suggested by Pres!· dent Nlxon. the Reagan ad- ministration says. that the 70-mile-an-hour limit ingent than those proposed. en 1,450 miles of California by Nixon Wednesday night. . freeway will be cut to 65 on Jn San Francisco, the con-servationist Sierra Club says Dec. 1 to save on gasoline. President NJXOns' proposals on Reinecke said he knew of the energy crisis are "likely no plans to call a special to fall short of what will be JegislatiYe session to consider required.'' aide. men in separate raids aimed.11;;;;;;~Re~~bl~lca~n~an~d~De~mocr~~a~Uc~~~~~~ at cracking down on an air smuggling operations from Mexico. To Restaurants But Gov. Ronald Reagan 's Cabinet and the State Energy Planning Cooncil planned a meeting today to discuss the President's energy-con· servalion proposals. CALIFORNIA already had adopted many or the sug- gestions. said Republican Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke, chairman or the energy panel. Reinecke announced Monday NJ.Jon proposals that would "The President's .statement need state. legislation. He also · did not go far enough in Jl'°'" said he thought the matter posing effective measures to could wait until January when reduce demands · for .energy the legislature resumes its and ~·ent too far in proposing regular session. relaxation of environmental REINECKE DID not men- tion that in at least two areas -speed limitJ and building heating -the steps the state has taken so far iare less-str- standards without p r o p e r safeguards to insure that the relaxation Is both temporary and necessary," Laurence I. Moss, Sierra Club president, said Wednesday. San Bernardino C o u n t y sheriff's deputies said they ar- rested two men in a pickup truck near Victorville Thurs- day and confiscated J,too pounds of marijuana in the vehicle. Three other men were ar- rested while unloading 1,000 pounds of the weed from a truck at a private residence in Woodcrest, north o f Riverside, deputies said. OUR VERY FINEST COLOR TV'S • ;tflf-l'H SO~Y: KV·l7D TltlNITllON (Cl COLOR TV SOLID STATE PORTABLE "THIE MAOEllA~ 11" Di1gon11 Cll,..ml<tlor II ~----, non Xl-100 THI MODIRNmE llCA1 1111111 lt·llKll dl1gon1t )ll·lot <t llll', ""'•1'11 111 Jlol141 tltlt Clf'CllltT'f', AWlll!'l'lll• He flM f\1111911, ICUll'Mllc '"°' -llff, ••Hr lll"ltlll m•tr4• ll'lttllrt tVllt In t h•llCI· ~ Mfl'HI WtllWI lfl l!IM CIMlltl. • lJ•lllCll ICr'Wn m. .. UAd tllqon1lly e New, IMnt-llM ll'lc!UA ..... • s,.c.....,1111 ''"-"' t'YHlll • Trinlll'M -IUft/IM ,.,,, 1yst1111 ftr 11'11r11, llortflll, llf•llkt coltr e '""' '"'"'" 1utorn1tlc flM t\1111"1, ctlor tlld • IUlf CMIAI • Mlllll ,,,,. rtlltl>lllty • 111111111 ll'ltfWA Ind _ ... "" JVC It-Inell DJ.llf\ll Clll M. In.I TttlleMed.i ' 1~ ... 14 S"" Clla ... 1 JVC't fllMtl Cltltr TIMVllltn Tiii• Hltttlllllffll "*'91 frtm JVC It ~tfflll ilt ptr· ffrmll!Ct Hiii •«Nfllffy. A ltlKt 1Mh1• ,icr.,. ,... ,,.. tllt fllMlt Ill .-1111 1taN cir-cuitry It vMllll In trla 1UI fer "'' clffrt1t, _, •l'tlll ,ic. ture -,..t. Suc:fl l1t1perf•t1! JVC IMf•rw •• ..,.,.,...tic ''"" T1111l111 Ct11"9'1, AVIW!NlllC Ctl•r c ... 1,..1. AvttMlllC l'tC· hlt'a Ctntnl tl'llll l111lt11t ,ic. tvl't .,.. MVl'llll ... ., .. • •lllHIY lllctltrt tnll' JVC ca. Hll•tr In caltr ....._ .. , .... JVC GOLDEN WARRANTY 2 YRS. FREE PARTS 2 YRS. FREE SERVICE QUALITY PRODUCTS-PROFESSIONAL SERVICE Why Buy From AA&D I • AA&D ELECTRONICS 275 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA 642-8882 . CALL FOR SERVICE Opon Dolly 9-6; Thurs. 9·9 ...... tlle Hetbef A'" Nee• 1956 I e OH yeer ,t.bor ''""""'" e o .. YHf pertl wonanty e ffn yHr ,1ct11r• tube worra11ty •. Dlscou11t prfcn e OH YMf' .... ., en ...... • 60 .... tu ... fft ...... --- • htet!dty, ,.,. ... , .me.-. -kNOW 011r 'redvcb a:id lteck tltam with SllYICI • . 11.\JtO JIAGS IY 5CXITT JOPLIN l~SHUA lllrJU/l'. ~ .. ,.. ~. NAllCHts IT 10Klf PMlLD' IOUIA c:notoe10V .U ll.UI oacm::snA 11\IOOIJ' UUAlltC ..... 80lfCI IT ftU'ffDt roeTD !Alt n.GAtTAlll, __,,_ l.CILIS.GUlHll.'--• "" 04l.1£11t IAIJIH. fllOIM' ....... _, • =~9~~==~ THE JnuSIC BJILL 61 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH 644-5610 OF ALL ALBUMS "Imagine my Toccata and Fudge in D minor for only $1.49," J. S. Bach "My symphony• No. 23, 29 & 30 on one superb recording, and all for $1.49." W. A. Mozart "All four of my seasons just $1.49. I can't ber.eve it.'' A. Vivaldi \ I I ONLY Only $149 Tift BPUNDOI llP 1'-W W"'h to., ANTONIO VIV AUX 'C:&OllO PHIUPP ftl..tlilAJIN Only $149 , , • ' I ' • I I t ' t ' I Thursday, November 8, 197)# DAILY PILOT JJ FASHt·ON ISLAND Sixty Fine Stores and Services "Exciti~ to Visit ·• • • Delightful to Shop"· O.Jlen Mondax and Friday Nights . NEWPO:aT CENTER PACIFIC COAST.HIGHWAY 11£1WEEN JAMBOREE A"O MAC ARTHUR ONE-•• !lllJE STAR SAPPllRES like the one above are indeed very rare. Of the four precious gemstones on earth, the corn· fl ower blue star sapphire is· probabl y one of the most beautiful. This magnificent 29.30 Ct. "Gem" is surrounded by 62 fine white diamonds weighing 5 CaraJs. The mount· ing is handcrafted in solid 18K Wot• Gold It is truly oro·of.,. -OF- -A"'- -KIND . STAftf SIAM "JUiep~ .kind! · $14,500. No. 17 Fashion Island • 644-5755 Set in the-great Scandinavian Woods ,..--- What a way to set your scene. Cradle<l in the great Scandinavian wood.sr , 1osew00cl stainfd. Lean and ' contemporary, yet with a d .. p down comfort·UJllOillCIY its own. Available ill Low Back FALCON • • • ER'S . -. •6 F111hion ltl11nd, Newport l1111c.h Mon. & Fri. tO. t :JO Tu••·• Wed., Thur1., Set. 10 • 5:)0 644-2110 AllO In P11.-dt111 11nd Loi Angel• a gift from any fine • • .. Fashion Island " store. layaway now . . • 0 ..... -... , ' I \ ' I 6-/ 2400 •.. where young fashion is 11 feeling, not an age. .-1 S f.tshion lsl~nd, N~wport BcilCh .•. µhont 644 ·4411 KAN I NE WINTER . . - FASHIONS sweaters. Flirffy Clnd t . c.ble 5tttch hits • Pl;oltb Rain Coats • I• TN W« Leek• Pl•l41 Terry Togs For After llcrtti & Clip Coats ·-,,._, IWMbl hits coiy Coats A•lesy0..lesy0ff MetlR WeftH c....,.u, Ski Coats & Sweater w ..... upt,....... A GREAT CHRISTMAS IDEA FROM . l THI WONDllfUL WORLD OF ,,..--·------ 12 hlttlff~ ........ Acrm -11 trim U+eclt'• • ll'5..0l11 • ' why you haven't. given her the truly magnificent watch of a life time·you know she's been wanting. We have three Omegas here, all set with splendid .diamonds, all in 14 karat y<1llow gold. One of them will stop the lady's wondering A.$925.B.$795.C.$695. Do Something Beautiful.0 SLA.VICK'S Jewelers Since 1917 18 Fashion Island e Newport Beach• 644-1310 _BUSTER BROWN: Care! It roes into every pair of Buster Brown shoes. And It's what we use in fitting them on your children -just u If they were ou r own. "Where Shopping ls A Real Pleasure" 30 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH .~angaroo leather on _a • cork wedge lift. Navy, Black, Tan, Burgundy, Brown or Hunter Green , 2300 .,.,,. ' C ~---_ f:~-{SH9E ~OU!l@D ••• ,.,,,.,. young fa1hion ii • fffling, J*Ot •n ags. •IS F11hion l1tarid, N1wPo•l ~..:h .. ptoont 644 .4411 ) . -• I • J 2 DAILY PIL1lT For the Recoi·d Format Sought Progress Report Accepted Zoning Proposal . Delayed Board Stalls on Planners, Derisity Reducti()1i Action Births ST • .IOSIP'H HOSl'ITAL .._ .. Dt. Ind Mrs. Edfltd A. A•tl\ttl'I, 1'10 P1rk NtwpOtt Dfi>'*, Mtwport irtKll. tlrl. Octoc.er n Mr. 111d Mr1. Wllll1m F. Broad~!, 17S» W1y11e "'""·• lrvlM, boV. OC"loMr 11 Mr. ft Mn . 0 1nltl J .1H111111111n, IJ6] IM!lo'f, HynllllQIOl'I Be.tell. bCl'f • ..,_M Mr. Wld ,,.,,.., TlmolhY Morrison, 11m Stln HlrllOr Lfnt, HUl'll11>9lon llHICh, girl, OclC>ber 22 Mr. ll'ld Mrt. TtrrY v. ·Nlwon, 481 l"l1g111r Clrclt , lrv1n,, tooy, Oc:fOtMr n Mr. Ind Mn . R1vmond F. Armour, "51 Olymplc Drive, HvnllM,11on Buell. 11lrl. Mr. Ind Mr1. ltobe•I O'N1ll, •!.Sl Pt99Y Clrcl1, Huntingr0t1 8H<n, gJrl. SANTA ANA -Orange Count y supervisors accepted the 1972 Progress Report !his week aod berore deciding whether to co.ntinu.e the pro- ject next year asked for a report in 60 days from the county administrative office. 1be CAO was directed to suggest a format for the 1973 report after Supervisor Ralph Diedrich questioned t h c Supervisors OK Holiday Before Yule on1ission of mention or the county Housing Authority nnd Hu1nan ltelations Commission in the '72 report. By JACK BROBACK Ot flll o.ir, 'llol 11111 the ¥.Jlowed uni~ from th e 11e was willing to drop this present 43 un.ltl per acres to approach when informed that 20. It would delay any action five JIM FUNK or the consultant CoSANTA AN~ -d0t1Mge Baker's argument against to six months. firn1 of Lampman an d unty superv sors e ayed the countywide application of Stuart Ballev, as s I at ant Associates of Santa Ana who action Wednesday on a Plan-the ••·Ing a-··•ment binged , · ~mm1s11on ed -· "-county planning dlreclor, aald prepa red the report for th e ORANGE COUNTY n 1 n g ""' .approv on the fact that onJy Dana the Dana Point area com· county said several agencjes proposal to amend 8 zoning Point factions and p-rtv plaints stemmed from a large \Vere not mentioned because 1 code which would reduce owners had been made. "'aw.are' b "Id" d ·1· II cd number of 4.000-sqtlare-foot they v.•ere not listed In in-ui mg ensi Jes now a ow _ ot the propc:l6ed change. lot s which under the current Ronald Caspers, u n d e r pressure" fron1 Dana Point residents, was anxJous lo get action on the cbang~ Wecl· nesday. He argued against Baker's 'original proposa1 to make a complete zone change liaUng that it would take monlhl to aCCQmplish. struclions received from the on thousands or county lots. - county. S • t Filed Supervisor David L. Baker "There are hundreds ol prop-~f:~~. could be buH\ to CASPERS did agree to the The 1972 report, which was lll of Garden Grove said the erty ownen in the west and t final Baker propo!al of return- h 0 d t b · I north partl ol lhe coun"' who lb Pl nn1ng covered in t e ctober 27 amen men w a s o v1o us y •J '"hlE NET result bas been ing the matter to e a issue of the Daily Pilot, said On Hospi'tal aimed at the Dana Point area hB.ve not been aware Of this that many apartment houses Commisston \vith a report population increased by 54 ,500 but would affect properties all propoled change," Baker have been bllilt m· the area , _.:.ba_c_k_w_i_w_·n..,...ro_u"r""w=ee::::k',..·--in 1972. over the county. stated. "Many have held prop-1• The addition brought the SANTA ANA -A woman erty for years as an in· with resUlting complaints PUBLIC NOTICE total estimated Orange County who clai nlS she learned after HE MOVED that the matter vestment and to suddenly from single family home p1CTtT1ous •usn1•11 be ed th. be f . rs ,, 8 11 Id "Y NAM£ sTATIMENT popula tion to 1,615,082 com-three unsuccessful operations returned to the Planning r uce num r o units owne , a ey sa . ou Tho 1ouow1119 1M1•S011 11 doing bu1l11U1 Other Deaths pared to 1,560,593 the year that her su rgeon had left his Commission with orders to they can build on their prop-find a mix of s~gle homes ••: EOUITV DEVELOPMENT co .. 1.ui SANTA ANA~range Coun-be!ore. instruments, gauge and spooge confme the proposed reduction erty i.s not fair." and apartmeots 1n the same MKArlhllr etvd .• No. 320, 1nr1,.., ''· ty employes will have a holi· inside her abdomen has sued in density to the Dana Point block in many cases." n~i'vi" NcwlNn E•slvfft, 7u HudlOn day on the Monday before TllE REPORT called 1972 him and the Stanton C.ommun· area. BAKER F£RST sugg~sled Bailey agreed with Baker sr., cosi' Mesi . cau1. nv• f . that rlther than· a d th th t · and . · Tiiis oullne11 Is cond"'1ed bY on Christmas, the Bord o f a good year rom an econorruc ily HospitaJ for $220,000. He called for action within men e a interest tn!ormabon lndlvldu•t. Supervisors d ec ided \Ved· s t a ndpoi nt. Unemployment Delores Harvey Han Ion !our weeks. His motion was R·2 zone, the county should on the p~posa1 had been Ttiri ~:::~, E :!~111911 with ttie nesda y. dropped to 4.6 percent by the names Dr. Jra L. Pomeroy approved, 5 to O. rezone the affected .properties largely confmed to the Dana coon1V c1erk er or•llOI '°""'Y 011 OCtoW 'Ille• extra day b e f o re end of the year which com-as princi pal defendant in her The commission proposal in Dana Point to an R·3 zone Point area even though it is. "13 ,.ntf, BOSTON (AP ) -Dr. Dun· cu Earl Reld, 67, president of the American Gynecological Society and a retired professor of obstetrics at Harvard Medical School, died Wed- nesday in Tucson, Ariz. December 25 affects some pared with an average fi gur e Orange CoWlty Superior Court would have amended the zon-and in that way accomplish would affect the entire county. ,ublllMd. Or1nge COl!t 011ty 'Uot. f 7 1 I · 1971 (" • R2 ~· l lb _, ' "f . . . Otlcbtr 11, 1), ind Novlmbtf 1, I, 10,000 employes. The Monday __ • __ · _pe:._r_c_cn __ '" ___ . _____ a_c_1_01~1-. ----------'-"~g:._o_n __ p~ro_:pe_ .. _•es:.__to:_c~u:_...:.~e...:.'=:::::"~c~ll~o~n~in...:.d~e~ns=l~IY~·----F~1:lh::._:D=t:•':':"::l_:S:u~pe:::r:v':'°::'~"~":_ _________ •='~"~"" before New Year's Day is not included in the special holiday ord er. SAN DIEGO CAP) -Tom F. Ham Jr., 54. San Diego restaurant owner and civic The vote was 3·2 with Supervisors Ronald Caspers and Robert Battin opposing. Caspers called the move ''a clear gift of public funds ." Caspers said it woold cost the county uncount e d thousands of dollars and lost working hours for the 10,000 employes. ! leader, .collapsed U'hile ea ti ng lunch at his Bali Ha i Restaurant Wednesday and died an hour later in a . hospital. The coroner 's office said be apparently suffered a heart att-11ck. Supervisors David Baker, Ralph Diedrich and Ralph ·Clark did not agree. Baker said there probably wou1d be li ttle work done on the Mon· day before Christmas anyway. ' -~~~~~~~~~~- Death Not.ice• !~~~~~~~~~~~~ I WHITFOll:D '!d-rd M. Wlllllord. AQto 46. of 20701 Cancellatii>n · Of Preserve Requested Anaheim 8 a request for cancellation of an agricultural preserve agreement on 21 acres of orange grove in cen- tral Orange County has been referred to the county Plan· ning Commission by county supervisors. Applying for the cancellation is James S. Gregg who told the board that orange growing was no longer profitable on the land because of vandalism·. I ·s. "K" 9Jvd.. $11. 26-1, Hu"lln11ron .,Hdt. O•t. of del th, NCIYftllbe<" 1, • "1l. $urvl-...d bv wrte. Gt'rrv; d1vcrhter, I <1r1n, ol' ChlCIOO; two $1-I UQhltors, He also pointed out that the property is bounded · on ttrree si des by industria l development and on the fourth by the future Orang e Freeway. I ~•tlw ovrrv, Tu1lln1 Cerol Cl•"'°"· We11 rlrql"l11 s!eDMn, Chris Cl'"'°"' \J .S.N.; !.nolhlr, J1nlt Whhlord; lhree brot,,.rs, .t1cl11rd, Urrv end II:°" Whllf«d, •II fl ChlelllO; -qr1ndd1ucihtrr. Sl~«s, ,..ninw.-, 2. PM. atoll 9roedwev Ch111tl. • ~tenTllftt, Slwt.111 V11tr1ns CirlT!t'lerv, I AllClt'IU. &ell 9rudw•v Morluerv, , redora. The land is part of the Dou glass-Sunk.ist Preserve near Anaheim Stadium. i~ ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY m E. 17th SI., C-Osta Mesa 646-4888 • BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corolla del lllBr 673-9150 Costa Mesa 6:16-UU • Bf;LL BROADWAY l-MORTUARY ~-~ 110 Bro•t·~uc;;st• Mesa -DILDAY BROl'llERS ~ l\IORTUAftiES~- 17Jll Belcb Blvd. ·Huntington Bw:b llC-7171 Ut Redondo Ave. f. Long Btacb Zll-431-1 1~5 ~ McCORMI~ LAGUNA ~ BEACH MORTUARY , 1706 Laguna Canyon Rd. I 494-11415 I • l PACWJC VIEW II; MEMORIAL PARK , , Cemetery !\Jortuary • ~ Chapel J; 3500 Pacific View Drive i'. Newport Beach. California ,. 644-2700 ,; . •' PEEK FA)llLY 1·. ' I COLONIAL FUl<ERAL HOME i&ol Bois a A \'e. Westminster 893~ZS ~ SMITH'S ~IORTUAR Y 1%7 Main SI. HuntJngton Beach ~>.19 PUBLIC NOTICE II -~~~~~~~~-~- 8 1N7 SUPEll:IOR COURT Of'" THIE STATE OF CALIFORNIA l"OR . THE COUNTY OF Oll:AN41E No. A·7MS1 NOTICE OF HEARING Of'" PliTIT ION FOR PROBATE 01" W1LL AND FOR LETil!ll:S Tl!ITAMl!!NTARY E111!e of MA9EL STOUT, Oece1sird. NOTICE IS HEfl:EBV GIVEN lh1t JACK STOUT h11 1111d hrrein I pelltlon for ProlMft of Wiii ond tor ln.u1nc1 of Lrtter1 Test1,.,.,. .. rv la the ~1111-r. rlfertnc:f lo which 11 m* fCH' hlf"lher partk:ul•~, ond 11\al !lie rime of Miring lh• ..,..... h11 Dote" w fCH' November 27, 191l, 11 9:00 1.m., In the courtroom ot OeP1rllT!t'nl No. 3 of said cour1, OI 1tlCI Civic Ctnl11" Drlv1 Wes!, In ""' City or s.mo Ana, c.n111m11. 011911 Novembl1" S, Irr.I WIUIAM 11!. 5T JOHN, Cwnl'I Cl«k l'DWAllDS, .l!DWARDI a ASHTOH iftt N •• ,..llCI •IVll. GIMUtt. c1111. t1:ao1 T .. , 11111 1C7·7JIO Alt~ for: P1llll011tr Publlsllld Or;ino. Co11t 01ily Pilot, Novrmblr 1. s, u , 191l 3'17-73 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS •us1NESS NAME STATEMENT The rollowing pirr11or1s ire dol"'ll busl· !IHI IS: OUR TOWN, 12!0 Ad1m1 Avt"ue, Casie Mew, C1Ufornl1 92626 Cor1tln1"11t tUlnol1 Propff11n, o C11!torril1 Reel E111r1 I""'''"'"'"' Trvst, 606 WIL1hlr1. Slnl• Monico ISulr1 SOOl C1lltoml1 90«16 Tt111 tMJilness 11 co11<hiclrd tlY 1 busln.u tr us! Contlrient11I lllfnols Pro»erlle1, A CelllO<"nl1 Rr11 Eslot1 l"veslrr>rnl Trutt ~~~1i:,,~n~re11ry Trustff TMI$ $l•lemtin1 Wll lllecl with 1he Cou"'" Clerk Ill 011ng1 County on Novtmblr S. 1913 FHJS4 Puoll111td Oranoe Ca.sl 0•11'1' Piiot Novemblr I. IS, 72. 29. 1971 J3V3.7l PUBUC NOTICE ,ICTITIOUS llUSIN!ll Hf.ME STATEMENT '=============! TM loUowi"'ll llttMln II dol119 M llli'lt • •. • IS. l •. PUBUC NOTICE 8LA(ICMORE ELECTRIC co., 1Ut I ·---~=.,------'-' ~~:;1e11110~ Terr1ct. Cosr1 Mn1, C1llf. • 'ICTITIOUS 9USIHE55 Thomai W1rd Btoctcm~, 112' NA.Ml ITATEMENT Git T • Tl'IO followf"" P'''°" I• dolfig bullntsl 916171¥1•1 ftfKI, COlll Mew, C.111. • .. ; Thlt bliioneu I' concl~ bY 1n • COll:ONA OEL MA it MEOICAL lnaovid~al , W1!1GHT CLINIC, 23-15 E. Cc.ti Hwy.. T~om~5 W 91ockrn«t I No. A, CorOllO clt l Mir, C1!ll. 92625 Th11 Jl•!tmenl. w11 llitd Wllh the Rktlord Eerl Zlnl:.Jn, M.0 ., 16411 C011n1~ Cler~ ol Or•11g1 COu<!ty on • Mllldofl Cln;le, Huntlr>glon 8eKh. C1llL OCl!)bfr n. \9'J ~ ..., 1"·2'1111 Thi• M lneu 11 ton:lucl..:r by •n Publ•shtd Or•flOI C111st o.lly PllOI, 1ndlvlduol. OCtOlltr 2~ al'ICI Nov9mblr 1 1 IS. lllc:hlrd E•rl Zlnkan 1t7l ' il1t-7J Tlllt tllltmOlll we~ llle<I w11h tht•I---,-------=::: '~.:... f,."l~n of Or1119e Counlv' °" , ___ P=U~B_L~IC::._:N~O~T=l~C~E:_ __ , fl·1't1SI '*'..._ Of'~ CN 5t OoUw Pllol, l"ICTITIOUS IUSUllSS 0$01t 21, eN Nov.mblr I, I, IS. f NA.ME-STATEMENT 1m 22•1·7J "-ftlllow1119 P1non1 Off ' dol119 blJlll'ltl1 01: PUBUC NOTICE ... ~~~~~:: ;;:m N. H1r11or 91vd,. s1n11 l 'f-,, .. A-hW"d, 2"31 fl.Olen .. • ... (1111. tMJO ,., .,..,. ..,, • N*lltlt• cent10C19d ,._,.ntrlllto SOUTH C08ST ViLLaGe WISHON · HARRELL STONEWARE •lru1.,.,,,,_ collrction al' h•t14U'1rown POlll•Y. lnl(tlmt~ 1r11' p!1nt:i. LET US OESIGN YOUR NEXT JEWELRY PIECE TIME LIFE BOOKS ARE AVAILABLE HERE. Single titlH or compllft Nrie~ -ithwt 1vlncription. Come in •nd browse MERCHANTILEBLOG. JJ7-J175 ~ TllE l'ILL-IGE A COLLECTION· OF QUAINT SHOPS NOW OPEN A complete -Pint Shap. Ovw 10,000 piirs to choose from. H.ing r .. ' Suri lint SMrts. ~ontalbo~ DESIGNERS-GOLDSMITHS WATCHMAKERS Ccompl• liM ol uniqul c;..,. «HI C°"""fr,I 556-7931 WHIM SEY TllE J'ILLIGE IS NINE RESTAURANTS • Stoneware by Pfalhgraff • Antique nostalgia replicas •Original Romertopf clay pots • Potpourri of gift items • 556-7911 •lso: c:ity pklm tr'M, "'- "/"llE J'/LUGE IS OPEN 12·5 SUNDAYS • • HDbLDW TllE l'ILUGE Unique Shops and Fun Pl1ce1 To Eat PLANT BOUTIQUE Specializing in: FRENCH 'RESTAURANT • House Plants •Fem • Ten-ariums •Ceramics • Macrame hungry tiger phone I s ~ s RESTAURANT •1110 11•,0DD OYDflD Ill 1J79-J J8J OPEN Tllf: VILLAGE HAS AMPLE PARKING Ptfllf 6 • • flOO[~ 0 s .... s 6 ..,._1..U.Ju.ul.U.A.t.t.t..u. The LUJu.u.u.o.u.u.u Belgian Waffle ln11 •WORLD FAMOUS ·BEl,.GIAN WAFFLES •OMELETTES •SOUP & SAfl!DWICHES We Are Looking Forward to Serving You OPENING SOON TllE l'/LUGE MOST STORES OPEN 7 DAYS Your Complete Women's Fashion Shoe Boutique ( 714 f 979-9252 the 1.olty lody lt1h1rn llloh .. n l•vtrlln In 1~r lrwl lllrt'tlv11...-1111111M1 IHK'f. S»-01M TllE VILUGE MOST STORES OPEN I 0-9 DAILY C 'Jie;J;'s °Jmle Swif1erlan~ Aln & CRAFTS Ir DEUCACIES IM,OUID FROM SWITZERLAND. EXPRESSLY FOR TOU, PHONE 557""°442 UNUSUAL GIFTS AND APPAREL FROM AROUND THE WOR.LD TllE Vl/,LfGE CLOSES 6 p.m. SATURDAYS ' WINE • CHEESE ETC. • TllE l'/LUGE EVENTUALLY OVER 60 lHOPS O~IGIN•L COtoCl,TI tN B'"JNU;. lll~U AND COPP(A '"°3'•p1 1;,,,.,..,n~ttod~l·(llll !h• <~nno"'~I" "~~ IM~ ~n!l\11 ., ·hi •t ~"'at~"' I . N 1wll••~ 1-~r •nv)•'"'"~l·~uc~"""' ••!•""v~ •~•••!"'"0' £1,. ~!11"'.ln •nd d0m~<1 •t r ~··~'·' G!A<<wA•~ hpff)~llncl'>ll•~~ •••on\ ~n~muthmot~ 557-2223 .Anliques and Plan ls ( ::g ~ =·::~"0:1v:~L111~, ,,~f~:.Glc~ e,;:d· 2"31 11:et1t•n '¥ ~ trtNr ft*I mnoll, .. or A"IDI!" 4. atz.r~ t .. u{tdtnftl.rl """ "°' bO ~Ible Tllh llvllneu 11 COtldilcltd rw • Oflll•AI :.1~f;.;:;n ~~~:.~~~~~#. ... _·~SOUTB .... ______ aoan_. ____ :._VILLlll ______ ·;_ __ o_,.;. ___ o..;.;_ __ o..;.. _____ ._L_O_C_A_T_E_D_._N~·_Er __ T __ T_D __ s...; .. o_u_T_H __ c_o_A_S_T __ P._L_A __ Z_A __ J r 1 • I • . --~ ' I p F c I I s 0 c v a t f ... c L " T '"'' • • • T .. c "' N IT • T " HE .. ... T ... '" •• • .. "· ' " .. w• HI ,, u .. " w. A .. '" .. •• ,, .. It .. .. T .. • .. c ' I S.17% Interest County .Borrows For 'Dry' Spell • ·,hursday, Novtrnb!r 81 1'973 DAILY PI LOT 13 Burgenet-Uri~ing Brallle Dollars By 0. C. llUSTINGS district includes a coastal Calli.) thinks Congress should secutor in a case or unusua l A PROPOSAL by Sen. John Of u-. 0.11~ 1t1111 s11/f Tun (D-C 1·r 1 > t Congressman Clalr w. strip of Orange County from study ways ,to set up a national dimensions." ney ti 1 orn a o Burgener ( R·Rancho Santa San Clemente to Newport permanent means o f in-* * * significantly reduce t h e llOUSTON F I o u r n o y , amount of dissolved salts in Fe) has introduced a law lhat Beach. dependently investigating and Colorado Ri'ver water was California state controller and would require paper money Burgener says the cost of prosecuting those in high posi· praised recently by Dennis to be embossed with the value pressing braille dots into tio.ns o! power who are ooe of the many candidates McLain, general manager of ol the bill in braille so blind paper money '\\"OUld b e suspected of breaking the for the R e Pub l l c 8 n the )1unicipal Water District SANTA ANA -Orang,, ~Invested in interest-bearing persons can determ1ne the minimal. The measure has public trust. gubernatorial nod next year, of Orange County. County wtll borrow M million bonds. denomination. been sent tq the House Com· Cramton's sugges tion, out· will appear at a cocktail "We've studied the bill from Union Bank to finance AudllOr-Controller Vic Helm "Blind people can t8t the m.lttee on Banking and Cur· lined recently on the Senate reception at the Holiday Inn closely and it seems to be county government through said no money WU invested ORANGE coum deonom!inatlon or coins trom rency, of which Burgener is floor, is that Congress create, in Anaheim Nov. 15 at 5 p.m. a very fair and effective means tile "dry" period before p~ In bonds which could be used their size but ·paper money a member. "a bipartisan, independent The event is being sponsored of reducing the amount o.f perty tax momes come ln dur-for county expenses durin g the ..._ ________ ..,,. only varies in color and * * * commissio.n empowered to ap-by the Flournoy for Governor salts in the Colorado River ing December. dry period. design," said Burgener, whose ~EN. ALAN Cranston (~ point an ad hoc special pro.-Committee. su pply," lltct.giln said.~ Uruoo lsimk was the Jowi~--'--=----'-·-----------------_.:_ ___ _,:__.:._ __ __: __________ .;,_ ____ __: _ __: ____ .:._ _______ ...:.:_..:.:.__c____:c__ ___ _ bkider of five offering a 5.17 percent Interest rate. lm!ER BIDDERS w h o wanted up to S.85 percent were Bank of America, • Security Pacific, Qocker and Wells Fargo. County Treasurer Robert Citron said Wednesday in· terest paid on the one-month loan will he 125,195. Bid solicltatlo'na to the banks was held up one week when · supervlson deadlocked 2·2 over borrowing the money. SUPERVISORS Ro n a I d ~ Caspers and Robert Battin = voted against the borrowing · _ while Supervisors Ralph Clark e .= and Ralph Diedrich supporled = the move. Supervisor David 3 L. Baker was absent from • the meeting attending a con-- ference. Caspen1 said he 4Jd not believe the county would have to borrow tbe money if it did not have 10 much money PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS SUSIN•U NAM• STATIMINT - TM fol low111111 Ptr-• 1r1 dol11111 bullnitt.s 11: • ROYAL PRINTING, 14341 1!11-.:h aoui.v1rd, Unit L. W111min1!1 r, C1lltornl1 n.u Gt"911CWY K11orrt1t1.. 11372 GooiltW'n L-. Huntington IHdl, C1lll«nl1 ..... C111'11tlne K11otnlr1.. 11372 Good'wln L1111, Hun.tllllfoil l!lucll. C1lll«nl1 .,.., -. Thl1 M ll'lfft II conctucted bY 11'1 tnrll'tld\llll. -GrlfOl'Y ic.lcwnlrl1 Tilll 1!1!9fnlrll Wll flied wllh the c-rv c1er11. fl/I °"..,.. counrv "" Nowmb91' s, 1m PUBLIC NOTICE ,IC"TITIOUS •u•n••n NAMI STATIMINT T~ ~1!0¥tlng pet10n1 If• tlwllltll 11: J. SUNOQUIST ASSOCIATES. lDt Suptrlor A_... A·S. Colli MHI, Cl. ,,u, J-'· Sundqui$1, llS1 MlrlrNr. l•lbol, C1. '2662: SIU I . W•bll•r, lr.11 E. lllbM Slvd., lllbol, c.. . .WI I Hollefl l!I. SundQul1l, 2151 Mlrlm1r, l!lllbol, C1. n"2 175/14 115114 175/13 1171/t4 155/1 5 -~ -"195114~ -----...,.,,,1-.-.-~ 205114 $ 185/14 195/14 $ 0•1111• 215114 MIJl/14 205/14 8.25/14 205/15 8.25/15 1 215/14 8.55/14 69'5 215/15 8.55/15 D&a TO ••n• ... '"MO .... ...,.,. fOI m .. a.ua.\ICI ON,.' .. SIHS T9:1S • Tl!il Wlh'll'U II cotldllctM by I OIMfll ,.,,,.,,hip. J1mn '· Sundqvht This 1111-t Wll flltd with ftlt County Cl.rtl of Or•!ID'I C-IY Cl!! Ot!GbW n. 1m WIDEST of W-l·D·E 50 SERIES ._I J:t i: t:t'.'! ! •! t .1111 3.:11 fl~ .... , .. Publl"*' Or....-: c ... 1 Dtlty Piiot, NOV'lmblr I, I, 1J, 1:1, ltT.I JJll)·T.I ·PUBLIC NOTICE ...... , Publlll'llcl Or•f'OI COii! 0.lly Piiot, Nov.mblt I. IS. t2, 2', Im 33f7·7' • PUBLIC NOTICE MOTIC•"O" TRUST•a'I SAL• T.t. ....... n Mlllt.-,1T·llm!M4 Of! No11emb9!' ,., 1973, II 10 :00 A.M., RELIAILE TITLE COMPANY 11 duly 1~,,11111 Tl"Vll" \ll"ldlr 1nd purlllbnt to Died of ,,,,,.. rlOWdld o.ternblr" "· 1m . II Inst. No. va, In bDDll 10494 Pitt Mt. of Offlcl1I RICOl'dl 1,, "" llfflc• of !I'll' County Rl'(Ol"dotr of Orl1'19t COVlll'Y. St1t1 of C1ll1Gml1 WILL SELL AT PUSLIC AUCTION TO MIGHl!ST 91001'.R FOR CASH IPIY•bll .t llmt of Ille 111 i.wfvl ""'""' of "" U!VMd $111nl 1t !ht Norttl frol\t ll'lll'"IMa \ to tl'll Orlngt COUl\ty C-'llDuH IDClltd 11100 Cl11lc C1nter Ori_.. Wnt !Formerly W. tTh SI.I In fN CllY of S111t1 Alll 111 rlgl'lll, tlltt Ind 1111..-.11 CDl'IYIYftl fi1 Ind l\DW lll'd by It '-"'Cler Nld Dlld of Tl"Vll ln tl'll prOf>trt\I 11!u.altd In Mid County 111d Stall deKTibld M: Loi I of TrKt No. Sl75, In 11'11 City of C111t1 MIN, Covnty Df Or11191, s1,11 "of C1Ufoml1, 11 Pl'· m1p rlCDl"Old 11'1 l ook '1 Pllll AS of MIK1ll1-~ In 1111 offlc1 Df !lie CovntY "-"' of 111d '-"'· Thi 1trtet lddr9ll Ind Dlhtf COl'l'lmotl clell9111ll011, II lllY• DI 1111 rul pr0p9rty dlscrlbld lboW 11 purpcirlftl to be: 2211 , A~m Avlftvs, Cosl1 MIM, C1ll1Wn11 f2'H Thi vndtrllOnlid Tl"Vllff dlt.cllll"l'll •llY lllblllt'( tor tflY hiCDrrKll'll'u DI the ......,.. ...._. Ind other common dll~. 11-.m-. ~ hlr1lt't. S.M 1111 Wiii bt mads, but "'llllDul e:ovtNl'll or Wll'l'lt'lty, •~Pl"... or lrn- 114i..t, r1191rdl119 111i., poun1l011, or ..,. clll'\brtnen. to JNY 11'11 rfm.111111111 prln- dNI MllT'I of 11'11' not. MCUrtd In' Mid DMd of Tnnl, wllll lni.t"nl tl'll'rlDtl, • ~ I• wld not.. ldY1ncn, 11 ,..,, vr*" thl ,_, of 11ld DMCf ef 'fMt, fell, , c;lllrg11 Mid IXMAMI ff thl lnlllM 11\d Df Ille lnll!J C1-tlld W Nld o..d of Tnnl. 'nit ""'9nc:llfy ....... 11ld Died If Tl"\llt lwtllofDll IXIC\llld lftd dellwrtd to thl ~ I W!"ltllfl Dlc:hrl!IDll 9f Dlfl\lll Ind Demll'ld kw Si ii, Md • wrltMll Notice DI 0.111111 Ind EIKllGtl to $.tit, TM unMn!gned CIUlld Wld NDfke of DellVll ll'ld EIKllOll lo Sill to • r9COfdld 1n !NI county w11«9 1111 rwl prDtWfy II ~ o.•: oi:lobtf ,,, 1m "£LI.AILI: TITLI C0M'ANY 11 '111d 1r11t!M, • .,Chrh= ~ulllll!I ~rnf*rtt llVMllMll ar..... Goist Dlflv ~IDI Oct. zs ..,.. ""· 1, 1. 1rn »lt-n PUBLIC NOTICE 'ICTITIOUS SUllNlll llAMa ITATIMINT RAISID WHITI LlnlR m~f!.~:'!/},~!";~... RAISID WHITI LlnlR M'"""""'""b'" & AUEYCAT TIGEI: PAW BELTED l/AISED LETTEll & TIGE// PAW GLASS-BELTED WH.ITEWALLS ""'" .... ...• .... .. ' .. ,.. ...... SIZI 1MN1 •« •nt Liiia SID 1Mk1 •111 •Ta LITTD Sill 7-1 C60/15 7.1 •..:,:•• A70/l 3 NON·RAJllAL ...._ ....... "''''' . ....... IWllllTID SIZI llAll•• '"' ..... G70/14 "''' , .. .. '60/15 1.0 37.95 D70/14 '"'. , .. H70/14 ""' , .. .. .. H60/IS 8.25 44.95 E70/14 29.95 G70/15 L60/14 1;-7 '""°'"' F70/14 -=~~~~~~~~ 30.95 H70/15 I ' J STEEL RADIALS OllG. fQUIPNON·IADIAl '74 CARS F18/14 Sflll u .1. a•d 38 95 3395 4:see 111111n11• '24?~ 1 .. i... ''" .. Jt.MIW lo. 1 ..... ~ l11/ll .. *.15'5 7.atlli . ~22'5 1.,11 .. 52,495 1•11. ~28'1 UlllU.~3495 l7511U.~39" t•IU'4495 1UlltU549'5 11-15 TIU-TRAC TYPE s49ts * * * * * * * ilr * * * HIADQUAllTIRS FOR DUPUX CAMPIR ' TIRIS & WHllLSI C71/13 C71/14 171/14 F71/14 G71/14 H71/14 G71/15 H71/15 -J71/15 DOUIU ACTION SHOCKS "='495 LOW eoclt •• • • 6 1111111.U UOll ., ...... Sl~~IS $Jiji!~ Sfl"IL IMHllJaO 195/14 2.01 rua1us1 • ..,..,,, 2.11 618/14 3995 14S 13 '·""' . 29.95 N.A. lOS/1 4 2.31 27.95 1 SS 13-S.60 13 36.95 4195 -2.50 6S/13·6.00/13 39.95 29.95 2.67 I SS/I S·S.60 /1 S 34.95 N.A. 20S/1S 4095 2.94 16S IS-6.00 /IS 39.95 29.95 H18/15 42" 2.73 17S/13·6.SO/l 3 ~9.95 29.95 21S/IS l.96 16S/14·6.4S/14 39.95 29.95 L18/15 49s5 22S/1S 8S/14· 7 .3S/14 -N.A.-N.A. • oNc!",e~aoR~~! ;,1,ft~:Eel . ~·~~ 2 I fl • u•ua All 4 llAlf lllMI 81 l llSC IDTORI . . . • , 0 00 e llml All' 4 WllEL CYUllEU 11 f WIPfRI ..... '2580 e If PlACf All lfTlll I 1111 llWN IPlllCI II MlllTING . Wllf: ............................... s 9eo e lfl'l.ACI llllT WIEEl RALi ....... .' ..• : ........ s400 e All D llAlf 11111 ••........•............• •200 ""'• cuu 1 m11 UClllC runs ................. •400 \r-'<~~;: e llPACI FIE DEL IDlllCI I HAI Tfll ......... •4 00 ~~:·,~.:,:•,~:,w~~~::~:.~ l'llWlfl lfPWTflY TftAl VAllf '83 .. ~::-:.;~ ~ ~'.·:.~·~~.r::~ GET EYERYJHINGs49aa "·" "'"· ""'" ' 11 "' 11 •· FOR ONLY •s $S.OO Pll WMIR AOO'L. • • 3495 3695 4395 1·1 MAGS SPECIAL COMPLITI CAPS & LUG NUTS AVAIL. 1tK IWl5l W SIZES llCl.11111 Ml llP THCIS AfULAll.£ 2f 4090 . ~ 7 1 J;·:.~~s:·. G78/J4 5.60/15 E1.1/15 G78/J5 011r cu1t•mer JOli'f It fl htt•r ttn• r••· I .,.. •••• • ""11ti•1t conc1r"i"f "-'•ctt •r 1.nlc•t r"'4ere4 t• '"' ''"'' c•ll 1vr Dirtttv ef < ..... ., Att.lrt, Mr. L "'"'-(213) 170-1737 or 3•1·1211. If ...... , .. tell •wt •f Y••r 'llt•, • Hf1i" (httk" will !ti i1tNt1 •ttWillf • lettr •Ii"" 1t tho ff•1rtl1tll1 ice. Tiit followtM P«IDl'I 11 DDll\ll bullnou 11;\--- 0t: - PIEPAIEDI '"''"''"''""'"a"" .. "'"._ ...... ............... alb: .... IL TORO MEOICAL WEIGHT CLINIC. t•I El TIN Jl:Old, No. --~o. Csllloml1 TWJ hrl Zfnlrtn. M.D., 1tm Mlldlll Cu·-clo, HW1tl11tllll IHdl. --TNt "'*""' It Cfll'ldvcttd bY 1n 11\dl>Muol. Rldltnl Elrl %111Mn <. Tlltt '''""*'' .... lllod With fhl CtollfltY C""-If °"""' COW!t'I' on ~ a. IWJI """4 ,.... Or ... c..-~ '""· OC;totw ...... No..mbtr '· .. lJ. 1m n.n ' •. . .... _,_ GARDEN GROVE 14040 Brool<hu"t lcerMf' W.ttmlnl;t9r COSTA MESA 3005 H:ARBOR BL VD. ... -.. (7141 530·3200 lcomor of 8'1ker and ~rborl (714) 557-8000 LA HABRA BUENA PARK • 2000 Whittier Blvd. 2962 Lincoln Blvd • (con.r ef Wh ittier (comor of Lincoln MCI It.chi tncl KMll) 674·3666 1714 ) 826·5550 • FULLERTON 1321 South Euclid 11 block North of RiV'tnicM F,.....•yl 17 t4l 870·0100 7 ORANGE 410 North Tustin Avenue 1714 ) 639·4371 • • • \ u .. 1L y PILO r f,L Thursday, NoV!mber 8, ·1973 Farmi119, Orange County-Style D.ily PllOI Sl•ff ltl!Ofo Agriculture isn't dead yet in Orange County as workers till cau li- flower fields in Huntington Beach. Land is leased by Bill Slater at southeast corner of Golden West Street and Warner Avenue·. Slater, from pioneer Huntington family, alternates crops1 keeping area a year-round greenbelt. Put Up a Few Squares -and WOW! Your Whole Room Gleams with New Light and Spaciousness! EXCITING NEW MIRROR DECOR $ SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY PRICE Outthh••• all other '"irrOt' tile .. lrllllcint 1old or sllvor 40111•• mln9Je with room r.ttectl-• ,_ a doullng .tfMt you hove to ._ to b•llova. Try thl1 "•• mirror tllo no'O¥. It in•talls easily In minute., mallo1 a bl9 lmpreuion fOf' a 1111011 'do-it-yovrMlf cott. 49 ~ • EA. JUMBO 12 x 12 INCH TILES Gives a L~etime of Wear! SOLID VINYL FLOOR TILE - Jumbo 12 x 12 IRch ..-a luJuu·iously sup- pl• and -•Y to Install 0 .,,0 , ony cl••"• dry surfetC•• Do It yovrMlf and •-•I 29~.n.~ rds Any Bathroom! SPACE SAVER VANITY '· l••Y .. cMo• 1.,iec• top ..... bowl,J ..., • ., whit• cobln•f with gold trim. 20 ll 20 Inch tla .. Withcwt folot(9t- CERAMIC TILE ~=~.·,': ,~·=·~:::: 3 9c brl9ht 9101• fl"l•hl Y•u co" ln1toll It Miiiy In on• otter- -n; end repcil"'' n l"t choro1 for a SQ. • llfetlmel 4 1/• • 411. Inch sl&o. Thrifty, Durable •.• VINYL ABESTOS FLOOR TILE Sturdy ombo1s•d tiles ro1ht greos., hor1h ollcoll and 1cwff metrk1. 119 ••loctlon of decorotor coa-1 11 12c Costa Mesa-2221 Harlior BIYd. ~45· II 26 MONDAY THRU fRIDAY 10 A.M •• 9 P.M. SATURDAY 10 A.M.·5:30 P.M. -SUNDAY 11 A.,,i •• 4 P.M. ALWAYS PL~NTY OF FREE PA~IUNG Anaheim. 2607 W. Lincoln Avonue !Corner M .. 11Dal -8274200 - -- ,_ Sinatra Can't Stay Away J'. HOLLYWOOD (UPI) front teeth ond a brulaed song appearance at 8 motion Frank Sinatra, who was told mouth. picture gala attended by he would be called for ques-Sinatra aMounced h i s Grace Kelly nnd a hundred Honing if he again showed retirement more than two other stars at the l.Ds Angeles his face in Las Vegas, says _:Y~•ar~s~ag~o~an~d~m:•::d•:._hi:::_• ::'w::•::n_:_M:::u:::•i_c_c_en_t_er_. -----he , will star in a hotel.- showroom next January in the desert playground. Sinatra has signed a con- tract to appear at Caesars Palace for ~ven days begin- ning Jan. 25. He will make a second week-long ap- pearance later in the year. IN 1970 HE was involved at the same hotel with a Caesars Palace executive who waved a gun at an irate Sinatra 'who Wa!: throwing gambling chips In the casino. At the time, District Attorney George Franklin, no longer in o£fice, aMounced Sinatra would be questioned on his return. Sherill Ralph Lamb said, following the scene, ' • I f Sinatra comes back to town he's coming downtown to get a work card and if he gives me any trouble he's going to jail." .. Includes: 2 Yul C1dll Dlnon . with mashed potatoes, · spiced 1ppl11 & soup or 111ad 111.,11 W111t1 lopllr SIZI Lemon Merinaue Pie l'IUI' served 1t your table for dessert OKM 1 o.r.n a WEEK sm1HC , , , then boxed to &0! lll[AKf~T, LUHCH, DINNER' The singer has had a record of d.iflicultles in Nevada. In 1963 the state Gaming Com· mission revoked h1s gambling license because he rolled out the red carpet for a top Chicago hoodlum at his Lake Tahoe casino. ,.,,__,G) .H~a6'Pi/j,-...1 .. ' NIWPOIT llACH. J110 NEWPOIT I LYD. HUNTINGTON llACH, 9791 ADAMS FOUNTAIN -YALLIY, 1ll55 HAllOR ILYD. 2640 Harbor Blvd. -COSTA MESA 546-5527 CAMELLIAS Enjoy the lovely blooms of CAMELIJAS winter and spring. From white to pink to reds. Single, double, rose forms. 1 GAL. 2.95 ' ' . ' . •" ... OPEN ·DAILY 9 • 5:30 SUNDAYS 9· 5 JAPONICAS and SASANQUAS Lovely variegated and slfaded forms. '!~~~· si~~~E~~~r~~~a~j~a centered with bri ght yellow stamens. 5 GAL IN BLOOM 6.95 Encourage 1-Ittnitning Birds .. B1rrett1 Humming Bird C1fet1rf1 will becken these tiny brigbl-<!olored birds to your garden or patio. 1.89 EACH BRIGHT COLOR IN THE SHADE PRIMULA 'MALECOIDES' Fast, low growing with very colorful flower(. ENGLISH PRIMROSE , Vigorous growth for colorful borders, under shrubs, rock gardens. .79 PONY PAK 'Meyer' Lemon Trees • • Very hardy stock that boar fruit n11rly year 'round. Dwarf growth .ROf. $2.95 , , . , ... , , ... Full growth1 1t1nd1rd size Citrus TrMI ................ . $1.98 $8.50 'Litdecado' Avocado Trees Dwarf In 9rowth but boaro full· $9 95 size summer fruit . . . . . . . . . . . . . • THANKSGIVING TABLE DECORATIONS A11twmn1 lo•ely color• In orlgin•I driod •rr•t1t•m1nt1 ,"1<0d 12.50 ,from ' Flower Shop , -. .. to m m of I M th . aUhN11 Cigarette Smoking Lessens Tt111rsoay, November 8, 1973 DAILY PILOT JG . Eltects Not lmme.llate Oil, Gas Cutback 'Pondered on Orange Coast By L. PETER KRIEG "We only use dteaet fuel tho new celling• eatabl11h bee•••• ol the low prtortty EDISON C 0 MP ANY of· Of""' 0•1b 'n" "'" for emergencies," said Hoag priority in the distribution of ot distribution to roadJlde pl'Qo-flclals say 'they are not The federal office ot oil and administrator Scott Parker, propane only. pene 1tatlonl and R·V dealers. panicky about the problem NEW YORK (APl gas has clamped ironclad "and we oUU ha ve enough t but ...._ __ _ Americans are s mo k In g quotas on the distribution of OJ1 hand to power ou r "We want to make aure SUPPLiES OF diesel fUel Ye • itl 5~· ..... • SDmewhat fewer cigarettes diesel fuel. propane and home generators for · nearly a mobile homes and' rural areas which power l1kllt of the tux· predicted that If the additional per person than 10 years ago, heating oils under a na-month:" ~ ury yachts alon& the . Orange supplies are not forthcoming, and inhaling a great deal Jess tionwide rationing program Other hospitals on the Orange 8 kirk Southern California will be f h h Am · ""ue• r•1•r-•1 ar... Coast are uncertain, us 1 tars rom t em, t e er1can that began Nov. 1, Coatt said the same i5 true .. " .., .., ..,.,... .., aced with requests tor volun- Cancer Society reports. Th e impact of the action for them. adequate to fut said. tary cu tbacks and forced into It said Wednesday the tar-is still unc.ertain but it likely A spokesman for th ti u tit.I I taezt IUIR• '~Right now, we have placed "rolling blackouts by the end reducing trend, through use II -~;.:ulh.orn Calllorn-· 1a·· Edlso" quQtaa· not "lo· exceed the of neli:t summer.'' wi cut off supplies to at ou ~· of filters and tobacco lc:i.st recreational uses such Company said fuel reserves n1er. amount's distributed a year Buskirk declined to "predict substitutes, is "clear evidence as pleasure boa ts and rccrea· are adequate to last un~ll next ~ ago1" he explained. adding the ruture'' end speeulate on that the tobacco-industry, tional vehicles. summer but conceded the that there arc no priorities wha t other controJs the fede ral despite public disclaimers, ac-utility doesn't know how or get flrsl call on those sup-established on diesel fuel uses governmerit may order beyond cepts the evidence on the OFFICIALS OF Ho a g ·When lt Will be able to get plies," he said, at this time. current rationing whi ch it health hazards of smoking." Memorial Hospital sai d more fuel tQ run generators. But he said owners of travel This has alarmed th e calls a "mandatory allocation \Vednesday that they can buy •·uthern Calllornla Hospital program." trailers and other recreation ~ THE SOCIETY issued its no more diesel fuel to fill R. W BUSKIRK, special AssQClatlon which ts protesting President Nixon mad e statfment, at Its an nu a I reserve tanks but stressed representative of the Interior vehicles can pro.bably forget and demanding that health various proposalB Wednesday m@ll\inl' 00 DfRjJ[@~ in thlil that thB effQpt wlll probably Department's OJI and Gas about using propane tanks care facilities be assured of night to try to e~,ie the ene,gy campajiJl against smoklng not even ·be felt . Division 'in San Francisco, said over the next few months future supplies. situation. since l,964, when the surii!;eon,,------------·---,--------------------__:..:__ __________ ~----~ general of the U.S. Public "" f : "Sorry, b~t we don't have ally 'What about the t111IK8Y )'OU owe rtie?' cards." J!imllh litlrv!~~ l•1"e4 hi• · I repart warning of )\ealth hazards from smoking. Dad Fails to . Oust His Iowa Mayor Son It estimated the per-capita consumption of cigarette tars today at 32 percent less than 10 years ago and 53 percent less than 20 years ago. Citing Agriculture D@part· rnent figures, the stat!rnent said there had been ft 5.G percent decline In nurpbers of cigarettes smoked iq the last dtcade. The per-p"rson number was 4,345 In 196~ and 4,04f in 1972, and estiruated to be 4,100 In 1973, QUASQUETON. Iowa (AP) -The fallt~r failed and the aon preval1od in the race for Quuqueton . mayor. Reuben 1tf. Hansen. 69, tried to oust tija IQD from the mayoral post Iri TUesdlljl'• municipal election. But Incumbent Ronald !If. l!aJllen. 33, l!R! r@llITT\'11 tn office In thl! Buchanan County town ol 400 by a vote of 107 to St . 'l'hird was Jerard Marxen wltfl 24 write -in votes. Mayor Htmsen said &Clore the election It was "a famil y squabble" rather than an Issue-oriented campaign. The mayor is a union steward at the Collins Radio Company plant in Cedar Rapids, Iow8, 18 miles rrotn h,r,. 11'1 'l'lllil WT· two years. there has occurred about a I per.cent Increase in number i>f ~J1arettes smoked per per50n, It continued. Ttie lather aCC\iled lils aon ot ·11too mucH OJU!·rnan rµle" llll!I •!!ld 10001 r • 1 Ld ' ill 1 wanted a mayor woo would be in town all the time. ----------1 "He runs tt his way snd Kids Like T (} nobody else_has anything to say." the rather comp1a1ne<1 _A.sli Anay . · of his son., - SAVE 51,,,se,,i510 THIS WBEK ON FAMOUS ARCM.l!R'TV ANTINNAI SAVE '1 ON VIJ.55 ANTENNA Reg. 9.95 8!!,. • ~ •••• ,, .. IO 51 Mltft •UHfi ., ..... to40Mlles •'Mi.:.:._._·: .. to 40 MHM • 10 .-nenis-31" Boom 29'' ARQHER SIGNAL BOOSTER/COUPLER EnioYjfnPtOYtd rtctptlort 90 VHF, UHF, and FM 'llh "C}iJ!?r liallfl" anttf,l\q, H•vy duty detlgn snwr• i •fli lflht 1/1•· ,, .. .,,,bled lor •l'f lntt11tllilltN': o.t iWH !ant MPlflflon on r:M. llNt pictures in color°' blacll-and·while. Hlgh-tenslle aluminum alloy with gold acrylic linlsh for corrosion resistence. VHF/UHF/FM sign1\ 1pliner lncll.lded-only one downlffd reQui1ec1. SAVE •sciN VU·85 ANTENNA Reg. 23.95 15!!. •VHF .•.•.... tol5Mn• •UHF •.•.••• tolOMlleri •FM .••.•.... totoMllel • 11 Efemtntt-11~ loom 42'9 ful~IVDlliitd. hlll'\t 1 1~11 :iet)• SAVE '100N VU· 120 ANTENNA Reg. 29.95 19!~, •VH,,,,,,.,,IO 120 Mii• • UHF , ••••••• to 75 Mllel • FM .......... to 75 Mllt1 • 24 Elementi-105" Boom for 111u ... r11up TV0t FM 11&1.o r1>1:to1lcn, "--lul bf•~• iir-1• ·-.11oor or lll'ill HM'IY'<luly, corros!Otl •-11111 eH•. !ttttl,,.. llJCo'"'11d 09.,1"0$. 1naiutor 11911111 on contrOI twl&. 1~1220 ARCHER ACCESSORIES FOR IMPROVED TV/FM PERFORMANCE ·~ .~~~ 'TV IHft .. ,ERENCE FILTER ' WALL PU.TE F-:::~ t ·FT. FOAM COAX CABLES 1Mll 1" OR FM FOR SET·TO-WAl,,L PLATE 1~1 Ull 1".... CONNECTION .WAT AH TIN NA CLIPS H9 COnl'ltcto11 Botti Efld1 ,...., ... llt~~Q"'°°' ...... • .. 1 .. IT COUl'Llll/ COMllNI" 11-1141 , .. ,,42 ~· tl-1200 111 <i-11r uHr1Yt1r1;111 AMl't.IPllK.OOur11ll X>OOl'ltl"li l!J.1130 24" P.69 l Motoro!t l'tva 11-til• 2" i'lllYATI TV lllTINlft 1&-&M ... IMART SAHTAS SHOP EARLY ••• STORES OPEN LATE NIGHTS ALL STORES OPEN SUNDAY I IOI lilfWP"" lhd. -C-M-11110 lroOl<hunt -FH1""11 Ylley (In Fountain V•ll9r Plua) • 2101 s . Malo St--Salta Aoa 1443W.17111Sl.-_SaottoAna- H41 ....... A .. , -H10liftttow ._ 6H1 w .. ., A .. .-H10tl"91 .. lhM!I IOJIZ ~wa Yaley Pkwy. - "9tu1M1Nl9uel (tn Honer Pl•••} 114 s. C:..loa IHI -s. c11111 .. 1• 13024 Now,..., llvd. -Tntln 1538' .._ .... , -WntmlMttr • • ' ' • • . . THE GREAT COAT WRAP-UP • -· 60.00-90.00! That's what they're made to sell for. All wool boucles, Plu shes, Double Knits. Fur Blends. Classic Wrap s. Button fronts. All colors, naturally. All . sizes , 6-18. What's the coat vou want? Name it! It's here! COATS AND SUITS DEPT. STARTS TOMORROW_~. NEWPORT ONLY SHOP ~U NUAY Nl)ON 1l 1 •, 00 • t .. • ~-\· ~-- • "~fi' ·;;: . "'"'' . .·. ···-~--. ~ . WHEN IT'S TIMr TO SAY ''THANkS" . · You'll be "thankful ycu chose-our M~llmark party accessories for your Tharrksgiving 9et- together ... because the clean-up after the feast is so fa st and easy -you just toss all the sturdy, colorfuJ accessories a.way. PAPER UNLIMITED 548-7921 SPECIAL CLEAN ONLY 10 LBS. '2.00 (Minimum) 25c EACH ADDITIONAL LB. CLEAN & STEAM 10 LBS. '3.00 (Minimum) 30c EACH ADDITIONAL LB. MONTGOMERY CLEANERS & LAUNDRY WESTCLIFF PLAZA . New Hours: Mon.·S•t. 1-10 p.m.-Sunday M B1nlcAmerlc1rd Master Ch.anie •11-lftl - Open 9 A.M.-10 P.M. 7 D1ys A Wtok • ' " • FIH Wool Plald Shirts. Great S.lectlonl •• hW!STCLIFF PlAZA Storekeeper 142-70l1 CHEESE OF THE WEEK BELLE FLEUR ·~· $2.1 t lb. SEMI-SOFT PART SKIM CHEESE. WE WILL CUT TO ANY SIZE. Fill Your Christmas Gift List With Food Gift Paks Now is the time to order gifts for Christmas. See them on display or phone. We'll mi1il, if you wish. · ffit""7 t4!~r. 642-0972 WESTCLIFF PLAZA . · Mai. • Fri. "Tll 9 Set. 'Til ' $111. "Tll S Custom Gas Water Heater Glass lined, l;ud9et priced, yetL family sizes. Anode rod resist" corrosion, assures longer li fe . Easy to install. Natural CJas. $5999 30 ,GALLON , ~· GRT-5 YEAR -. --W1rr1nty-on-T1nk- '' . RION HARDWARE Wl!STCLIFF PLAZA OPEN EVES. AND SUNDAY 'one-stbp' S'h:opping -a.t its finest! OPEN MONDAY & THURSDAY EVENINGS 'TIL 9 , Men's & WomeR's Alterations ·j westcliff ~ailors Cus ton1 Shirts Fine Custon1 T:iiloring Westcli!t Plaza e Nc\vi>ort Beach 10-6 Daily 6'15·1072 . THIS WEEKS SPECIALS HOT DELI. : BBQ .BEEF .Rl~S . -· . coo ... _ ..... :~_J'i.'b.- FROM CUit HOT _.OVIN-MINI _LOAP: SOUR FREICH BREAD ......... · .. .. ........ .. 25•.~ NEW CROP WALNUTS ....... •• .. r~• ·~·'~-.... 49• •. MARKET BASKET _Anthon'! ~ SHOE SERVICE DON'T DISCARD THOSE OLD TENNIS SHOES w. Rtptir & Re.Bottom AU Typ11 of Adid1s & Tr1torn Sho11 COMPLETE SHOE, LUGGAGE, & HANDIAG llPAIR WESTCLIFF PLAZA-17th & 1,..1 ... N•wpoft IMch e CORONA DEL MAR e 74 l'ASHIOH ISL.AND :>401 E, Coe1t Hwy. Newport B•atM e NEWPORT Bl!ACH e illl il'ASHtON SQUAJll ~ V1t Lido Santa Ana , NOW IN SOUTH COAST YILLAGl-SANTA AHA .· ... ~ ~· ··'6... _:~ KEEP~NG IN "'Kr. ~ THE RAIN NEW SHIPMENT -JUST ARRIVED IN RAIN WEAR FOR BOYS & GIRLS- TODDLER.S THRU 14 NUMP7Y DUHPrY ---CHILDREN'S s-wo-1s - 1058 IRVINE -WESTCLIFF PLAZA Our Staff Miss Charlene, Mgr.· Mr. Roy Alvarado - Mr. Rick • Miss Jerri :Miss Joyce -Miss Linda -~~Tu)uty -11.Att>~1n~· 17th & Irvine • Newport ,BHch e 548-0460 qpen Sunday For ottier fine service ' • • • • • • i l Senators •• Mak~ Vp A Gabble ' BY DICK WEST WASHINGTO N (UPI) -I r~cently ran across a little quiz on group ·nomenclature. See how well you can do on it. If a group of lions is called a pride and a group of geese is a gaggle, what are groups of hens, cats, toads, peacocks, leopards, pheasants, herons, bears ahd swans? ANSWER : BROOD of ru.iis, clowder ol cats, knOt of t~ds, muster of peacocks1 le'1> or leopards. nye of pheasants, siege of herons, sloth of bears, wedge of swans. These arc good things to know it your social . life is center.ea. around veterinarians. Otherwise. your chances of \\'orltlng them into everyday conversations are rather sllni.. How o~. ,for example, do yoq •have an opportul'illy -to say, :!Oki yo u happen to see a, lnu5ter of peacocks strutting in this direction?" ) · .. OR, "ISN'T that a leap of tea'pards over there by the carrlag< house ?" Not very often, I dare say. 10n 'the whole. you probably WobJcl be better off learnin g the names of groups that enter into ordinafY discussions, such as arguments over t b e Watergate case. Her4 ~e a fe\v group names that can be: used in good ad- vantage in Watergate debates: 1'How much Jongerare those blasted be&riogs~ going ta con. tinue?" "A long time . 'The oom- mittee still has a large garble of witnesse~ waiting t o. testily." "Why does it take them so long to interrogate a wit· Dell?" 1 ~ "Many witnesses spend a Jot of tlme',conferring with their attome·ys. Some of them have a whole cavil of lawyers advising them." "Are they afraid their testimony might b e in- qill\inaling?" "Yei. There is atready a ~·sized venal of defendants under indictment' as a result of' the W a t,el gate in- vestigation." ... "l11ere certainlr are. It will take a whole cudgel of jutlges \Qi lry all of those cases. What Political impac t do you think the Watergate scandals will hive?" i "With a gabble of senators Up for re:.election next year, the consequences could be far- r.eacbing. I expect that both parties will have a grapple of candidates seeking the presidential nomination." "Could be. The outcome of the qaUonal1 conventions prob· aJ>ly' will ·hinge on a dul>iety of uncommitted delegat.s .. The winning candidate wQI · l\ffil to hire a mud<lle of ca!J!Paign Workers and . a boijb , of s~writers ... But he'•can't do that unless he tines up a · le of <:ontributors." "Wgbt. II should be a close race 'wit1t ·a small q\lahp of voten mak1ng the dif(erence.'' ~udge Named •• 8Al'it.\MENro (AP) -' 1---·cov. R<loBtd Reagan has •P' JOlnted Jildg< Donald A. Pol· Jack ol Oxnanl to the Ventura County Superior Court bench. '°Iladt, a 65·ycar·old J!opubllcan fro111 Ncbrask~. replaces Judg~ ~>Xi• )le~cb. . 1ltlo wy ,eJ~~·~:m the ~ bulrtct·Court Iii N>P"•I. : 1, ' ., ' l • DAILY PILOI . , • J ' ' See hOw far yoitr.<linit\g room dollarS go at Gold -Key! (YOU CAN-ALWAYS BUY THE BEST FOR· LESS!) $698 . . . IF YOU HAVEN'T. DIS'cOVERED GOLD KEY WAREHOUSE SHOPPING ... YOU AIN'T SEEN NOTHING YET! 8 pc. "Broyhill'~ D.ining Room Including Chil.1a WHSE. '1PtHCE $648 · ~·rom famous ~·s un1n1it lfo·use'' bv llruvhill, a ··best selle r1' fron1 coa·st to coast: J..ook ! 'rhis inlricately carved .. Jl.Uj te iJ}(:ludes ,mas&iv e trestle ·base 64''x42'' table, 4 high back Side chairs, 2 arm chairs (all with upholstered seats). Elega nt' breakfront china features glass shelves and intc· rior dome lite! CHINA INCLUDED WHSE. PRICE El ' . •• c .l\n incredible value fron1 ··Bu rlington }louse." All 8 pieces in clucle n1assive rectangular double pedestal table (62"x42'' that ex tends to a full 98" \Y/l\\'O 18" fills) 4 higlt back si<lc chairs. 2 arnl chairs. all '"ilh upholslercd iseats plus 69" chii1 a \Vil lt t urio g:la ~s s ic(C"!'~ gla ss shel,·es and don~" lite! _!-\II finished in the fi nest se lecl hardY.·oocl "<'HCer:s! 1\ll 811ieces.on salc.t oclayj EE Table anll 4 Chair.s Or Chiri• • . .,,. l ..... ..... ~ l_ ;-,_)"./ • 8 Piece "Bassell" Modern Dining -Room . ' . Including China ,c 8 pi eces compl ete. Clean, contemporary B&Sset\ d.e~ign with large rectangul ar tabl e 40"x64,. with 1 • J.B!, fill. lighted China. 6 handsome 8pindle back chairs t2' arm·. , '4 ajdc); . ' . ""\.•,-·-J '.' ' 'OPEN ... \ .. ' . .-.. WHSE. PRICE , 6lPiece Dining Room Including China O.oose either 40"x60'' oval table (extends to 72") with 3 !Hie chaira and 1 irm or china with 3 glass !helves and lited itl~erior. 6 pc. com plete. Save more ••. Today! . • . ' WllSE. $ 5-9 8 PRICE Your Choice Thomasville 5 Pc. Dining Room or China Table \Dd 4 chairs or lighted China. Dine de hixt and .•n,·e! Choose the oclagon pede1tal 1able that rs.tends to 85'' wi1l1 2 • 18" fill s, plus 4 side chairs with \•civet .seals O R a large 4 door lighted China with gla&s !helves • In OranpCount)' __ ----------------i. HARBOR BLVD. AT 'I'HE SAN DIEGO FREEW~ . CootaMtsa REVOLVING CHARGE • •· I ' t • • • • ~ .. ' ' ' • ' '•. • • . .. . .. ;: . :'I DAILY PILOT ' • Thursday, Novembtr 8, 1973 ~ · t raduates, .Go A f ter THE BROADWAY ®OUOUQD~[S MOllDAY SALE < ,. .,. That Job By JOYCE L. KENNEDY Dear Joyce: Jf there is any one career message that J would like-to see you bring to college students, it is that something CAN be done about their chances for employment upon graduation. As a matter of fact, several things can and must be done long before spring of the senior" year to get the im- portant first job Vihich can serve as a launching pad for a relevant and personally rey,•arding career. For any (Career Corner J students in today's market - and especially !or t h e generalists -to sit back and wait for a job to find them is to court tragedy. What is required is personal effort, plus a close working rela· tionship u1ith the career plan- ning and placen1ent office. A WIDE DIVERSffY exists among co lleges an d Wl.iversities in the extent to which they attract recruiters, and there is an equally wide diversi ty in the interest which :.-the recruiters show in the PANASONIC 12" COLOR SET c . 288 .88 Solid state color, fu turistic styling, automatic color and tint control, "set and forget" fine tuning , fa st picture and sound .. Televisions, 72 ·,graduates of part i cul a rl••••••••••••••••• courses of study. A little in- . .. vestigation will e n a b 1 e students to find out well in advance of their graduation . what the odds are of being _ sought by employers. A very real ·fact of Ii!~ is that the generalists who make up the bulk or the average student body {and especially those with no immediately t employable skills) are the least likely to be attractive to recruiters. Some faculty members have a concern for the ultimate ·employability.of their .:-graduates while others take ·'1the position thal such concerns are not a proper obligation of higher learning. The career planning and placement office has an obli gation to have such concerns. ho\\1ever, and this office should be a first port, of call for students -the earlier in their college career, the better. rr IS RARE to find a col- lege or Wliversit y so in- sensilive to the employability of its graduates that it has no career planning and place- ment office. The degree to which such offices are given adequate support by the ad- minist ration of the institution does vary, however, and \\'here supix>rt is minimal, students must start all the sooner and work all the harder on their job quests. They may also choose to raise some questions on campus as to 1l1.he better implementation of IMPORTED QUALITY BINOCULARS 17 .99 Reg ... 21.99. Perfect for sporto spectators! Full 7-powe r magnification, cooted optics fo r color corre~ted images. 35 mm. Len s for bright picture. Case included. Cameras, Shavers. 13 ZENITH 19" COLOR TABLE MODEL Come in and check our low price! 90 °/o solid state chassis powers e fine Chromacolor® I 9·inch picture tube. Chromatic one·button tuning. Televisions, 72 SPINNERIN YARN .99 Reg. 1.49. 4-oz. skeins of "Spinloft" yarn mode in 4-ply Crosle n® acrylic. Assorted colors. Stock up now for your foll kn itting needs! 29 ··this increasingly important.1 .. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• service in student life. 11 rusuming there is a reasonable le vel of service, it is to the career planning and placement office that the student should tum lo locate summer and part-time jobs. and, where available. CG<-OP assignments. This is the place where career literature. in· dividual counseling and often testing are available to aid students. 111E GENERALIST who bas established a track record of gainful employment - especially if it has ap- :plicability to the chosen cafeer field -has a tremendous ad- vantage over . the senior. who gives a recnuter that ki ss-of death phrase, "l am willing to do anything." \Vhat this means is that ideally students should begin as early as the up pe r freshman year to look at op- tions. They should begin. !O choose areas -not specific jobs _ that appear to match their interests and capabilitie-s. T})ey should team what kinds of courses (taken even as electives in a liberal arts curriculum ) will 'n1ake them ultimat ely more marketable. And, again , they should back these v.•ith every possible experience relative to their goal. The student_s who are working \vith their i:1a£C· ment ofrices a year or n1~re in advance are really with it! _ Robert F. llerrick. Ex· ecutlve Dlrector, The College Placement <:ouncll. Inc. . HIS-IS GOOP AD".;ICE ftom an expert. Additklnally, 1 Ultf1tl booklet available free to readen ii 0 Makblg tbe Mtst of Your Job Iatervlf.w." ror 1 sbagle copy, send a WALKIE TALKIE FROM - INT ERNATIONAL TRANSI STOR l l .99 Re g. 14.99. Fun for oll ages. Set includes 2 wa lkie talkies with coll button , batteries. Range up lo 1/1 mile. Colling all kids ·to hours of enjoyment! Toys, 28 10-SPEED PANTHER RACING BIKE 77.77 Reg. 89.99. 27", Shimano dero illeur gears, center pull brakes, spake and gear protectors, podded saddle in lime. 24" rocer, some feotures, except side pull brakes. Deluxe bike in yellow. Bikes, Table Tenn is MEL WOOD ' RECIPE Fl ~E 3.99 Reg. $6. Let's get organized! Decoratively designed fi le is finished in simulated walnut. Drawer for notes. From Lerner. Stationary, 15 I I TYCO HY-BANK PRO ROAD RACE SET 19 .99 Reg. 25 .99. Professionally designed 4x8' layout with 40-degree banked curve, 6' straight-away for faslpaced fun. Track, pok, controls, cars. Toys, 28 , .. ii ' ,.,.. .... ,. • 1Y·t 1 ~-, .. ~ .. :-; i;(:[i "''i'I '"l"·c ff .. ,, 1; \..!)• ( .~ -~ .. · ·0 ...... . t..' r·'· <D ._,!• ~. ·;) '0 \:< 'ffi ~ ~·' " . :.~ EUREKA • UPRIGHT VACUUM 64.95 Save 13.95. A Broadway exclusive! All metal construction with handy tool attachments, tip.toe switch and diol-o-nop to adjust to any rug. Major Appliances,. 80 I J I. c e n t,.tamped, Hlf-ad- dreseed lo•&, wlltte en\!elope lo .i.1ce Lalo KePDt<ly •t tbb _per. ~111' 1eY e ral .. ........... ...,.. ANAHEIM '444No.£11tlid t71 41 Sl5.llll NEWl'OU HUNTIN<lTOH HACH ORAN&E, MALL OF ORAN~E lJOO H. T11\tlt1 Sh•t+ t 714) ttl·ll I I 47 F•1hio11 l1le1t4 11i4) 644·1212 1111 Eili11t•' AvellY• f714) lfJ.)))I ' . '' • . ' ' • ATLANTIC SPACEMATES ·.\'j ' . ·'~. SAVE 22 %-25% What o way to go! Luggage in inost durab le Skai vinyl , ovoilob!. in discontinued cork color. $35, spocemote, 25.99 . $18, clubmote, 13.99. Luggage, 35 ' BARBIE'S SEW MAGIC 9.88 •• ' .. Reg. 13.99. Mattel moles sewinq simple enoug h for o 5·yeor old! Sole, no needle or thread. Innovative sewing formula, patterns. material for outfits. Toys. 28 WESTINGHOUSE • AUTOMATIC WASHER •' : '· "• '•\ --189.95 Save $20. 2 speed unit with permanent pness cyclo, water ond temperolune controls. 18 lb. capacity for washing largo loads. Major Appliances, 80 CERRITOS 100 lo1 Cerrlfo1 Mell IJIJI 160·0411 .. • ' • I l " • \ ., • - Thursday, NO"tmbfr 8, iq73 DAILY PILOT J9 THE ·anOADWAY ~allUiJOD~[1 LAST 4 DAYS OLIDA SALE .t Right in St11le Holland Prime Minis· ter Joop Den Hyl tries out bicycle. Holland has ouUawed use of autos on weekends due to fuel crisis. FASHION HANDBAGS 9.99 A great selection of shoulder and swagger styles, assorted vinyl, leothars. Foll colors. Handbags, 37 OCC Begins ~~ ~ Special . Person. Plan Students £rom Orange Coast CoJlege will officially kick off their Special Persons program Nov. 17 during the tm OCC Homecoming game at LeBard Stadium. The Special Persons pnr gram allows participation o( older persons in campus ac- tivities through a free student body card. What does it take to qualify? All you have ·to be is a senior citizen over the age of 60. Apply by mall to the Associated Students Office, 2701 Fairview Road, or come to the homecoming game and sign up for the card. then at- tend the game free of charge. Persons applying by mail should include their name, ad- dress, telephone number and BROADWAY WOOL age. Cards will be malled wiUtin two weeks. PLAID SHIRTS Aviatiou. 8. 99 Safety T al,k Set at OCC A four-oart lecture series on aviation Safety Y•ill begin Mon- day in the Orange Coast Col- lege auditorium at 7 p.m. Tilled "A via lion Safety for Pilots." the se ries will feature talks by five aviation experts who will discuss all aspects of safet)· in the air. The opening session will be "Takeoffs. Landings and Air Traffic Control". 0 l her sessions will cover weather conditions. human r a c t o r s such as alcohol use aod flying and mechanicaJ problems. The special sessions are sponsored in part by the Federal Aviation Agebcy's Flight Standards District Of..: rice and will meet each Mon- day night for fou~ weeks . Viejo Student Wins Position ' A University o( Redlands coed from ~1ission Viejo has been elected secretary o( the college's freshman class. Shelley Norris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charle! Norris, 2-4341 Regina Ave., Is a music major and was elected during a student government retreat at Forest Home. LET'S BE FRIENll Y U you ha..-c nc\V neighbors or know of anyone moving to our area, 1>.lcaae tell us 10 that "'e may extend a friendly welcome and h~lp them to rb<!oome acqU.lntcd In their new 1urroundlnp. ' Reg. $15-$18. Foll favorites. Our own wool shirts in a gra et selection of ploids. Some solids, too. Up-to-dote two-poc· ket styli ng M-L-XL. Men 's Sportswoer, so "OAK LEAF" TV TRAY SET 29.99 Reg, 45.00 ensemble includes four rich antique walnut finish troys with roll· about storage rock. Great for extro holid?¥. !erving. Housewares, 95 ANAHEIM 4-44 No. E11cl14 171'41 IJl.1121 " ' MISS AMERICA OPEN TOE SLING 11 .99 Orig. $18. Puff, great-looking open toa sling on a super sole, high heel, block or brown suede. Junior Fashion Shoes, 75 MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS 3.99 -6.99 Reg. $7-$12. A handsome collection, oil with new collar styles. Choose from patterns, strips, great colors. Assorted sizes. Tie assortment, 1.99-3.99 . Men 's Shirts, Ties, 7 TIFFANY STYLE CANE LAMPS 19.99 each Reg. 25.00-30.00. Choose swags, table lamps desk"lomps or wall lamps in nos· tolgic styles. Walnut, white or yellow, By Wolfe Lamps. Lamps, 71 VASSARETIE LONG GOWN ,_ 6.99 Orig. 12.00. Lovely flow of non-cling Quintessence® Antron® Ill nylon tricot. Ass'td colors, 34 to 38. Fashion Sleep· wear, 24. ZENITH 19" BLACI(-& WHITE TV 129.88 ' Delivers a smooth, crisp picture. Wol- nut grain cabinet, 82-channel tuning system. I 9" diagonal screen. Televisions, 72 I CASHMERE LUXURY 69.99 Reg. $74. Just one of severAI classic styles in ric h, pure cashmere. Several fa shion shades in the group. Misses sizes. Misses Coots, 25 ('. ' ' • NEWp0RT • ,-... HUNTINGTON IEACH ORANGE, MALL Of. ORANGE '41 p;•ihloll hlol!O 17141 •44-1212 7777 l4l11t•' A,.,..,. 17141192·1111 2100 N. T111ti11 Str••t 17141 ttl.\ll l SHOP t :JO AM TO tcJO PM MONDAY THRU SATURDAY-SUNDAY 11 AM TO • PM . ' • BOYS' SHIRTS, PANTS 2.29 to 4.69 Orig. 3.00 to 4.00 Long wearing Knit and sports shirts , Orig. 5.50 to 7 .00, ponts in regular slim. All 4 to 7, many styles, colors. Little Boys' Wear, 74. SAVE 10.00 10-PC. COOKSET 19.99 ' 30.85 open stock value. Weorever Bounty p~rcelain on aluminum in gold or avocado. A complete cookset at one low price. Housewares, 39 , / PANTS AND SWEATERS 5 .99 to 12.99 Reg. $12-$18. Variety of pants includ- ing pull-ons, zip fronts, trousers, 8-18. Assorted sweaters, cardi gans, pull-ans. 36-40. Plaza Sportswear, 65, . Street f loor CERRITOS 500 lot C1nitot M•U 121 l I 1•0·0411 ' t ' • • • • DAILY PILOT llJ BOB THOMAS LOS ANGELES (AP) 'Vhere do the new female :stars come from!' Right out of the fashion magazines and lelevlsloo commercials, ac- cording to the current trend . The old movie story that starlets are plucked from chorus lines and malt shop stools is now just legend. Film !)roducers now pick high- fashion models. Examples: -Marisa Berenson, who air peared in "Death in Venice," "Cabaret" and is starring with Ryan O'Neal in a Stanley .Kubrick rum. -Cybill Shephenl, director Peter Bogdanovich's star on and off the screen. She air peared ln his "Last Picture Show," is making "Daisy ~tiller" for him and also played the cool heiress in "The Heartbreak Kid." ' ' Tbutsd>l.Jlownl><r 8, 1973 DIRECTOR'S STAR Cybill Shepherd tint year as a model, she almost lulfilled her acllng desires . Paramount picked her to star in a musical remake of "Roman Holiday," calling her a "present-day Audrey Hep- burn." But the project never got off the ground. and she we]lt back to modeling. Her view of the model's life gives a hint on why so many of them seek carttrs in films. ''I'd be a 1iar if I didn't say it was boring." she remarked . "I know people are indignant v.·hen I say so; they ask, 'How can anything that pays so well be boring?' Well, it is. pul on onalher olilrl~ etc. It pays buutUully, but you I eel like a piece of mt.at. "U I had boon willing to do bras and glrdles, I could have gotten $250 an hour. Or nurfes at ~ an hour. But I would never do them - never. I just dQfl't like the Jdea: be~ides, my family is Jn the garment business and they 'd kill me." Riverside Smog Mark RIVERSIDE (UPI) record 16 smog alerts were "THERE ARE so me uP1 T.._... ca'.lled during the smog season photographers, like Rlc!lanl 'GETAWAY' GIRL which officially ended Nov. A vcdon , who are fun to work I the RI de with. But with most of them A i MlcGr1w 1. verai County Air it is sheer boredom." Poll ution Control D ls t r i c t 44-100 Percent Dead,'' directed to take all kind s of modeling reported. b J h F k h . 1 During five years as a . y o n ran en c1mer or model . Ann Turkel made Jobs. Most of the alerts were in 20th Century-Fox. S00,000 lo $100,000 a year pos-Riverside, Corona and Ban-"TUE GIRLS who really HAVING GONE from cover ing for the fashion pages and ning, while the least were in an occasional television com· make the dough are those Indio, which had none. and girl to star in her first film , mercial. She could have made who do catalogues,'' she said. Hemet, with only P.IJBLIC FORUM CANCER AND CANCER QUACKERY November 14, 1973 7:30 • 10:00 P.M. Auditorium • S.C.C.H. No Adml11lon Chorgt Discussion Giid Slides by Specially Trained Physicians Questions and Answer Period Sponsored By SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL 13872 c .. 1t Hwy. -S. Laguna For Further lnform1tion, Call 499·1311 Ext. 233 -JeMller O'Neill, the beau- ty who brought love to teen- age Gary Grimes in "The Summer of '42"-lier other films: "Lady Ice," "The Carey Treatment." -Twiggy, who did a creditable job in '"l11e Boy Jo'riend" and recently filmed a thriller called "W." Turkel would se'em to offer more if she had been willing "You put on an outfit, pose, Springs had 11. a case history for the castingrf~:::::::::~::::::::::::::::::==========::::::::::::=::jiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiiij trend. She denie$ it. "I studied II • acting since I was 5," she said. "I was talting dramatic lessons from Sandy Mei sner at ,the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York and I was 14 and I began playing in summer stock at 16. -Ali MacGraw, the star of "Goodbye, Columbus" and "Love Story" who married the boss of Paramo40t, ;Robert Evans, then left him for her "Getaway" co-star, St eve l\lcQueen. Latest to join the ranks of mOOel·stan is Ann Turkel. whose slim brunette beauty has appeared on the cover of every fashion magazine in the United States and Europe. She is appearing opposite Richard _H~rris in "99. llnd. PUBIJC NOTICE ,ICTITIOUS •USIMISI HAMI!! STATIMINT "I went into modeling only because I thought it was bet- ter to be known as an employed model than' an unemployed actress ." Her tall \vl llo,vy frame a n d high-cheeked enlgmatic face made her an immediate favorite w it h fashion photographers .. and magazine editors. After her PUBLIC NOTICE SL,·ltJ FICTITIOUS IUSIN'l!SS •s: NAME STATEMENT HAll:VAll:D SUPPLY, 2101 Gr1MO, TM follaw'lt'll pel'$Ol'll er1 dol119 Tn1 follow!!IV 111•-l• tlOlllll bllllMU 81lbN, C•IU. 926'1 bulllnffl •1: Al1n De1ne 8r1ndl, 2101 GrMl~I. HOBIE NEWPORT COMPANY, 1100 81!1»1. C11lll. '1661 Wnt Call Hl9rtw1J', Newport 8.-ch, Tiiis butirtell 11 condl.ltled 1W at'I In· C..Uttrrll1 t2UO i:11v111u11. wm11m M-fllllf"· Jr,. 201s 111rlldlr1 Alan Otlnt 8r1ndl TKra<:t, NtwPOM ~II. C1llfornl1 Thll 11.lltlN'nl Wll 111911 with !ht (OU,,_ f.1'60 tv Clerk ot Orll!ll' County on Oclober l, M1rk ()bon, 11Ml5 1511'1 Slrfft. Nr.ttpor1 1971. l11ch. C1lllornl1 ~ PJIU4 FJ.etc"-1' Olson, lllOS lJth Str1et, Pubolllhed Or1nge Ca1f OlllY Piiot, Newport 'IHCll. C1llfonll1 t2'60 OclObtr II, 25, 11nd N-mb11r I, I, lt73 Thl1 blKIMll II condVcled bJ' I llm!19d JO,H-73 pertnet&hl11. ' ------------wnn1m ~tr. Jr. PUBUC NcrrJCE This 11.ienwnl w111 tiled with lF\41 ------------County Clork of Or1ng1 CounfY 1111 SLP·ltl October 29, lt7l PICTITIOUS IUSINISI l'·tfl .. NAME STATliMINT P1,1bll1hed Or111QI Co.sl Diiiy Piiot, TM 1o11ow1n11 pff"50n• 1,1 doing Hov1m11er \, •· 1s, n. un 3312·73 bu1lnHI II: VEA:S.l.ILLES NEWPOA:T COMP.I.NY, PUBIJC NOTICE rtiO C111n1't' La!W, N1wport ll11ch. Calllorn1• f2"60 HOTICI! TO ClllDITD•s l. CMt Stare. toO C1gMy L1n1, New· IU,llllOll COUltT D, THE pof'f B11cll, C1lll. STATI 0" CALl .. OllNIA "OR 7, Joan Sllrl, 900 C1gn1y LIM, NIW'· TMI COUHTY 011 OlllAHGE PO+"t B1•ch, C1llf. MO, A-17SJO Tiiis b111liws1 11 conducltd by G1n1r1I E1t1lt of C ... A:L J. WESTER:. Dec11sed. Parrntrshl~. NOTICE IS HEllEBY GIVEN to the Cher st~r• crldllors ol the above named decedtnl 11111 11111menl was llted wllll 11111 th11I 1111 ~r!llml n1vlng tl11!m1 1g1lnst Cwntv Clerk of or1nge COl.lnfY 00 the Mid de<:edent 1r1 required lo 1111 Octobtr 29, 1t1l. lhlfTt, with 1111 netu.wry Y01.1tller1. In Pftlf1 Ille offltl of lht cltrll cl Ille &bOYI Publl!.hed Orange Coast Dally Pllol. ~tllled court, or to present ttiem, wltll N!>Y9m~r 1, a, IS, n. 1973 3313-7J lht nec1ns1ry vouchers, to the un· def'slllned al tilt office ol n1r 111orne;os. SHEPHERD, SHEPHERD and DUNDAS, .1.ltorMYS at L1w, 4J.8 South Sprll'(I PUBIJC NOTICE ------------1 Sir"'· Suite 1100, Los .1.ngeltl, C1lilornla, SLP·lt2 wtilch Is tile place of business of 1n. J<ICTITIOUS IUSIHEll uMff1lgntd In all matters Pt'ffllnlng NAME STATEMEHT to the i>.sllte of :..11ld decedrrft. wllnln TIM tonowlng pt1r110t11 are doing four ,,_,1n1 •lier 1111 llrJI publlcat!on bus!ne11 11: o1 this nolice. NEWPORT PLACE 0 FF t c E D•ltd Oclober n. ltn ASSOC IATES, 1303 ... YOC•do AW., Sult• CECELIA WESTER: 115, Newport llrach, C1t11. '2660 Eucutrl11 of the Will • l . .a.t111on DrvelOP<T11nt Co., 2otl San of ll'le 11b0ve namf<! clecedrnl . Juouln Hiiis R-1, Ntwport Buch. SNIPMlllO, SHlf'HEllO Ctlll. '7660 aM OUHDAS · 2. The Prosi>et1-C1lilornl1 Company, AflorM'l'I •I Law One Tower Squar1, Harllord. Con-451 SMll l!llliltl SlrHI •MCllCUI o.1115 Swllt II .. 3. ll1y1nort Oevrlooment Comp1nv. LOI Altl.tts. Cllllornl• l!O] .l.YOCldO Avenue, Sullt 115, Ttl: (21J) 62i-f4fl l •2'·2154 NIWPOl't Buell, C•llf, '7660 Afl'"""5 for Suc:11trt11 Tiil• 1W1ln1u 11 conducttd bY a G1111ral Publl1htd Orang• C011sl 01Hv Piiot, P1rtntfl!\lp Oclober 25 and Nov.mber 1, I , 15, Al11on Dtvelopmtnl Co.. 1913 ]161·1] A C1lltorn!• Corp0r•llon Reed Baumen. Pre<1ld1nt This 1t11tement was llled will! lhr COl.lnlv Clerk ol Or1ng1 COi.iniy on OclDtltr Jt. ltll Publlsheci Orange Co.ti November 1, I, 15, ?2, 1913 F·2'2'21 Daily Pi!ol, 3J1'·13 ---- PUBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE NDTl'E TD CllEDITOllS SU PlilUOll CDUllT 0, TNE STATI 0" CAL''OllNt ... ,OR THI: COUNTY 0, OllANGE .Ho. A·nsn Estate of 11.1.ZILE J . LOUM ... GNE, DKHltd. NOTICE rs HEREBY GIVEN lo the NOTICI 0 .. TllUSTll'S SALi crtdltor1 of lhe 11bovt! n<1mtd dKedent LHll Ht. 7ll tl\al all PlrtOl'll havl1111 clllm1 aoalnsl T.S. H•. ""°'J ttll wkl dKedtnt arr required lo 1111 SOUTHERN CAL1FOA:NIA FlA:ST NA· then'!, with lhe nKffl&ry Vll!,IChers, In TIONAL BANIC 11 duly appolnttd Tr111ltl Ille office of lht tlerl< ol Ille llbOYi! unaer Ille tollowtng d1acrllltd de-Id ol lftlltltd COUTI. or to present thefTI. wlll'I' !rust WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION Ille neceilll<Y vouchers, re IM IHl- 10 THE HIGHEST lllOOEll: FOR CASH dtr1l91\td al lht offkt of htr tllorney, f!)llYll>lt at time ol Mlt In lawful LOUIS A.. AUDET, "'llorney II L•w, m011ey of tlll Unlltd St1l11) all light, "21 Wlllhlrt Blvd., LOI Allflt'le1, tlllt •nd lnlereil tOn YtYed to 1nd now Ctllfornla 90010, whkn 11 lhe pl1c1 h!ld by It U'l'lder 11ld Offd of Tr111t ol tM11lneu ot lhe undefllQlled In 111 in the preperty htrtlnll11r dtterllltd: m41t11r1 pe rtaining to tilt estalt of TRU5TOll:: IMVEST0115 MANAGE· Mid decedent, within twr months 11ter MENT comp1ny, a llmlltd p1rtntr'11l11 the firs! publleallon ot this notlct. llENEFIClAA:Y : DUMORO co.. I Otltd October n. 1Jn C1lll¥nl1 Corpor•llon LOUISE LOUM ... GNE RKordtd J1nuary 13. 1t11 111 Instr. E•oKUtrix of Ille W!ll of P~o. 5tol0 In book '"' p•ge 990 of the 1bave namtd dectdent Ofrlclal Reconlt In !ht olflct gf lhe LOUIS A. AUOET ~•co<der !It Of'lllflt' County; stld deed AllomtY 11 t.aw QI !ru1t 011crlbl1 tilt lollowll'Q proptrty: ml WU1lllr1 l lYd. TM Soutnwnlerty 60 teer ol trie LOI A"ttlt1, Catltornla f'OOlt N«lt)t•1ter1y 450 fnt o! Lat 116. Tel : IJUJ :IM-4144 ol TrKI No, 30CI, 11 lhOwn on 1 Alltrn1y lor Exnulrb mep recorot'd ln boolc 1'. p1ae1 11 Published Orangt Co;r11 D•l!Y Piiot, Ind 11 ol Ml1clll11110U1 M1111. reco•d1 Octol)er 1S 11nd Novembtr I, ~. lS, of 0<1nat CovnfY, Calltornla. EX· 191J 3llilf.13 CEPTING tilt SoulhH1t1rlY JJO t«1 thereof. PUBLIC NOTIC'E 246~ ~1nta Ant "vtnllt, Stnll .l.n1.1 ______ ------- C11lfornl1 SLP·l61 "Ill I Slrltl ld.dr111 OT commDfl IN THE SLIPElltOll: COUllT 01" TNll del!Qnttlon b shown •bOJI, no warr~nly STATE OF CALl,OllNIA IN ANO 11 given II ~ 111 camp4tt111111 et POil THE COUHTY 0, OllAHOE C'Ol'TKtnnl).'' Na, A'717J Tl'll benellcl1rr under Mid Oted al OlllDlll TO SHOW CAUSE Trwt. b'f reason Of I brlKfl Of c1tt1ult ApplLcaUon OI HEATHER Ly N N In lht oblf<11tlon1 w<:urtd lllerttrv, lllACl(M.l.N For Cl'll• al Ntmt Mrttoforl txec:utt'd ~nd dtllvved ~ WHEREAS. FllAHCES B. BLACicM.a.N, n.. ll!lder1lgMd I wtll!rn o.darallon II • I'll'~' of HEATHER. LVHN al Dtl•ull Ind C>lmlnd IOI' Salt, •nd 8LACICMAN, tlle tbOYe 1P01lc-1nt, Piil ,,,,.flten l'IOllc• af brt•th and ol tltct!on fllecl •" ippllcallon willl the Clerk of to c•u,. Ille ~ 10 Mii Mid t11r1 Court for 1n order cf11ngll'Q 1p. praptrty to WlkfV llid obUg11lons. Ind ptlcinl't l'll!l'lt from HE A THEA: LYNN ihtflllt« the 111\dtnltned ultllld Mid ILACltM.a.N lo HEATHER V.1.N&SSA notkt ot brf¥'11 tnd ol tle<:tlon to IL.ACKMAN • be ll:llCOnlN JI/IV u. lf1l II IMIT'. IT IS oRoEllEO llllil '" per$(1111 Ho. 11!:t2 Ill boolc 1otCIO HOt )17, lnltrltltd In the 100¥1 enlllltd malltr et Mid Offld•I ll:ec:enli. appe41r be!wt !hll Covrt on Novtmbtf S.ld sale wrn Ot madt. but without 27, tf13, 11 2:00 P.M .. In llM Covrtroom Ctvlfltnl or WtrrMrty, ••Pl'lll or l"'P!ltd. ol O•H""""' 3 of tllt lbOYI CMlllfed rtffH'flllf 11tle. OOIMltlon. or tn-c-i. JOG Civic Ctnler 0..1,... w11t, cUmtwanch, to ,.... lht rtm.lnl119 prln· Slnll Ana. Celltornla. and lhoW cau!f, clpal IJll"' o1 lt)I nol1!1) sacurtd bV It any, wllv lht appllclllon for cl'lll'(ll Wild DMd of Ttvll, wllft Int.rest 11 ot iwimt should not M 1r1nlld lfl Mid flO!t provldld. ld•1nc11, II IT IS FURTHER OROEA:(O tMI 1 IM~. undtt • tht "'""' al Wld Ottd copy ol ll'llt or<llr to •'-CIUM tit of TrUst, fffl, cl'llrvn: 11111 t•P1tn1n pvOllSl!td In TIMI Oilly•Pllot, 1 newspaper of l/lf TrUllH and o1 IM lr\1111 (rttltd of QeMr•I clrcul1Uon j)rlntld Jn the bv tald OHd of Trvst. C-ty al O<'•ngt, Stall ol Ctlllornl~, Jald salt WIN M lltkl on Mond1y, OMI a -k for IOUt' •uccei,Jve -k1 NO¥'Mlber It. I~ It 11:1t A.M. ti lll'lor l'O 1111 dltl Mf !or 11t1rtn1 t!lt t11t .rflCt If T, D. ..mc. ~fly, aciolk1llon. 111111 If America ,....,, Ont cu, "Oattd flllt lttl~ day of Oclllblr ltlJ lwtrHr'd W-. .Wit Ille. Oflfllt, Cl.AUDI M. OWENS ' ' Callfwfllt, JudOI of the SVPtrior Covrt Diii! Odtl9I' h. 1fn. jAMIS L. ll:VllL. Jll. SOUTfiElllfl CAl.1,0ltNIA AttwlMY al t.tw • NU ,,_... 1U1 'Ila ~ 1., T. 0. lll'Nt C... A9"'I .........., ~ C1, nut l l' ll:lltfl E. "-Tel1 C11•l~t1M1'1 o\Wlllllll l«rtfln' ""'""" "' PttllieMr acULON PLAID ~-sm ·SOFA llD L Modal •21to SJ-95 MOW ONLY ""• "o;;J~OOONLY $169.95 F. DBJYERY 'SET.UP R· GUARANTB! •PARKING E. SERVICE . 1• GIFTS '180e1 ;.ow ONLY $219.95 BE OPEN I (fiJ I - SUNDAY s;.,,. ... ' 14,.95 11 AM T R!v!en'1 axclualve c.blneC Bed 0 5 PM . ha1ttlfal Woh11t Fl1lsh ' SAYE $60. - o.nrms••r.~ .. ., .... alpr--W..A lllM;-. CGIW srouP that opwlt 10 l'W'lil --bodt «1111plel1wi&b1---. nu.. ""*' •adt. ... b .... tllpPClll. ...... _ .. h• illirt •*-...... Riviera's . TWIN and FULL SIZE Mattress or lo1t Sprint l wy both pltctJ an4 ttt He1dk11d and '°'''"' RECLINER.S J .POSITION KIN!; SIZE llf· C:L INER WllH FITTED STRAP PILLO'N ARMS IN LOO( OF LE .I.THEii "'" 513995 ~ OPEN SUNDAY 11 A.M. to 5 f.M • PARTIAL LISTING OP 'IHI. MANT snctAU Oii THI SHOWl-11.00I .,.., • rl,._....,CMIT ...................... .......... / • IW''•m • IWTA&m' • l~mm' ' ltMllA CONVatm.E CH.t.a-......... !""'•--NOW ONLT RJU, Siii ltMllA COlflAIW NOW _ ......... -ONLY 11995 15995 llUl1 1111 ltMllA COIMl19U ........ -. .. ............... ~~~ 17995 1'1111 SID ftl'IL C0Mfa1al .._ .. catz .,. ..... NOW .. ,., __ .,_ O'NLT IUYBA RJU. llZll SOfA m , .... -. ........ 111 NOW ,..,._ ONLT 19995 16995 PACTOIY DISCOM1111UED PAiiie" -••-••,..,NOW 18995 ....... 1 1 •llll•C. ONLY ............... ltMllA LOYI SIAT COllYllTllL! w.-.. .. ., ..... ........ ~~~ 17995 ltMllA q.-sm NOW ................ ONLY --,.._ .. _ ... -·-·-ltMllA ...... i.1o•-lil.,._ NOW •-ONLT 25995 11¥BA IAll.T ....CAii CO!'V!"TI•'• ==~1': NOW 28991 .,....,,.,.... ONLT BUENA PARK cotrA MESA J015-s. 1r11101 SANTA ANA 127 S. Mein 547-019 ORANGE 2393 N. Tustin'. -1351 Stinton Ave. 827-4400 ST,,_Mft lfvb!INM<I 0!''1'191 Coast Dally Pilot f'\111'1 .... Orlftfl COltl DaUw Piiot Octoi. u . " lfld Ho-tier l "11~ .... .;;;;m~;;. •• .;~-.~~r.;;.;~~ lfi1c:1• 1. L lL 1m 2;)D>.n 1m 1111•71 ' ~ • - , I I • de chi Tr 33 De w ba in an a m re ja' pol he de a Ja la the mi joi I off Be • I -; •. ( Burglar Def eats ' Office r for Job From Wire Services A convicted burglar defeated a suspended police chief in an elecUon for the post of constable in the Pbiladelpbia · s u b u r b o i Trainer. John J. Flannery piled up 331 votes to 124 for his Democratic opponent U&rry A. Wbl&unaa in Tuesday 's balloting. Jack Beniay at the TrOpicana Hotel. * No long~r a commuter to Washington., law Prof. Charles "Alan Wright )s happy to be home in Austin, Tex. · "It's deligfitft.il to be back here," President N i x o n ' s lawyer in the Watergate tapes dispute said. "I've been look· ing forward _for a long time to being back here seven days I f ) a week instead of three days." -PE 0 P LE While counseling the Pi'esl· · dent, Wright ta·ught his usual I tv.·o courses at the University t Flannery was found. guilty . 0£ Texas Law School and in 1971 of burglary, larceny coached the Legal Eagles m- and theft in connection with tramural football team to Its a $500 break·ln at a depart-second straight undefeated ment store. He is seeking a season. reversal of his 4 to 23-motith * jail sentence. Police in Turin said an Whiteman was suspended as opera singer from Moscow's police chief a year ago when Bolshoi theater applied for he was cited for in-political asylum in Italy. subordination .and violation of They said Renata Babak, department rules. 38, a mezzo.soprano, had been * scheduled to. perform in Milan Gov. Ronald R<agan end bis with a Bolshoi ~upe in the wife have scheduled a five-day Sergei Prokofiev opera "SI· tour of Australia's Victoria mean Kotko," and applied for state starting Nov. 21, Vic-asylum at the Turin police torian Premier Dick .Jlamer._ -hl!adq\iarten. disclosed. * Harner said the Reagans Rep. Geol'f• E. Danltlton woold al,. lend support to (D-Ollif) said be would aeek the state's annual Red cross re-election . to · COngress but appeal during their visit. does not yet know in which " * cif tWil proposed new districts H. Stuart Kolgbt was oamed be will run. $38,000 bead of the Secret The decision as to where -service, the he will run, the Los Angeles . agency r e--congressman said, will be sponsibl.e for made after the C&llfomia p r o t ecting Supreme Court rules on a t h e Presi-redistricting plan proposed by dent , the a three-judge panel. vice presi· d e nt and ~~~~~~~~~~~· other offi. cials. tcir.10HT Knight, 51., 1 a career· agent, succeeds James J. Rowley, who retired last month. Knight. assistant director of the Secret Service for ad- ministration since April 1971, joined the service in February 1950 after serving as a police officer in Detroit, Mich., and Berkeley. * Entertainer Pearl BaUey'1 doctor says she shows no evidence of a heart attack and attrlbUtes her collapse backstage in Las V~gas to exhaustion. The doctor said she should be released ln a few days. Meanwhile, singer Wayne Newton was subbing for her act, co-billed with comedian No Case Ori Judge SAN DIEGO (AP) -A $50 mllUon suit against Superior Court J u d g e Hugo Fisher ha s been dismissed in federal court (or lack of. jurisdiction. Fisher was accused by Hilda Nancy Miller of Chula Vista · of wrongly placing certain properly In the estate of her husband when be died. In the .same 1969 order, Mrs. Miller asserted . Fisher treated her "as if deceased also,'' violating her riS;ht to O'Wll property. Gt-rr '"·Keep A way. I, . " As his master went off lo try the spirit! at a Tomb- stone, Aris. saloon, Zukl, a fOUr·monlh old pupp7, wu left to J11•nl the motortycle. , • r 1. ' • Solidox® Colorful MUMS • Gorgeous. ".icltcl m•"'' reody \or toll "I""'· • loiily grown in pols, plonttrs, •''· • tloicly, 11lr.1s lull su!I. l l G. 29:. ''' 49' fER WELDING TORCH "The Revolutionary So/id Oxyrtn We/dinr Torch!" • l1111s, w1lcl•, cut51flll s1l4ot-1-..t.Wsi111"9 te .,.,., .. • hltel fff 11111r1p1i1,1119Chiilory r1,.ir, IM,,.,.ir, hoWiy Wlfk, wrMtld ir• w11k & ..i.I S(ul,t•r•. • IMhlffs ltrch, ,,.,..., p11ilfs, Mo11r~s,1loss1s~ l;pter. • A '9fltd Christrnos tilt ltr tltoie41-ywn1illfs • . ----REG. '39.9S - ' ' ! • • , .~ 5 26·88 Replacement PROPANE TANK • fits• 1-..n sttMs, i..111111 ... terdi•its. • Soft, c1 ....... 1ffid111t. • Yw'U.-1snlf1h RIG. 88C 'l.3t -, IO. • Thursday, No"m~er 8, s DAt.Y PILOr %1 ·GRAND OPENING OE OUR NEW TOY DEPARTMENT! MottelM HAIRY HURDLE SPEEDWAY ''Special Purchase -Fantastic Sa win91!" • Dortdt~il ra(illg on lht lig "I" RlG 'IS fC .5pttclwu1. .. • ' • Rip 'roullllonot1Jli•io11t.urst $ 8 88··· . "'." r1ist tho 11"'' & ltop or It'•· . · SMART SANT AS SHOP IARl YI 50 lb. Bog WATER SOF1EllER SAL1 • ltops ,1t111 ifaltl •Oh ... od• soh olttn. · . e fi1Sl ".,.\ily -,kf,1t~ ot ••"'" "7'"'"5'"''~ ... llG. '1.0t Package of 40 TRASH CAN LINERS "Fils Standard 3 3 Ga/Ion Trash Cans!" • o...t+tillo iliqMlltSOf lritWs 4f 11Hrs phrs twl1t tits. s119 "'•· --.. .--- • l~ ............ 4i.,.soM. & ... ,.,. _...,.. • Gr•t fir.,.,, dl ..... s, I"'"·~ ...... ~llG. '2:~.4~t Y~A~lUI • ' o)~ ·, ... I I • ' '• " • \ _,. ;. ., .,._ • ... • ~ "i . . '. ' '' ... ' • 1~ -.. ' ... " . .. " . ·. ' .... . -~ ., ' •• .. • • • • • • ' ,. v< -· ., . • • ' 22 DAILY PILOT Thursday, Novtm.btr 8, 1973 L./fl. B o y d Play It Safe, Don't Ap olo gize ' Gold en Wes t Studies · Au gust -Opening Plan UC I Lists Novembe1· ACCORDING TO Ennis , begin jn January and end Easter week, but a one-week Some advantages ol the By HILARY KA YE I I"'-b ad Of '"' P•llr ,..111 s1att 1,100 colleg a across the na.... around May 20. During the break beJore and after the three plans nc WW" a e tion have changed trndltlonal sununer, student! would have summer quarter. start on summer jobs or A new, early semester. d J 'er semester patterns In two a cholce of a run 12-week The second calls for a tw<>-travel, a lull aca em c quan which would have classes yeals. quarter, or concurrent elght· v.·eek Christmas vacation 1n during the summtt, no final starting in mid or late August, "The Senate contacted 100 week summer sessions. addilion to a. one-week Easter exams during Ch r Is t ma a The followirut list Is the re-Is being studied by the or these college and arter hollday, bot 119 break .helore 1 maindcr of UC ~nrfne exten-Academic Senate at Golden dist'USSing·the r:e a p 9 ll.JI es, and only one ~eek tner the holidays, and greater .ea~!' slon l).ctlvitles for November. decided the. early semester THE VARIATIONS of the summer quarter. 1ransletTing', according -to · Ev~-I 1. · · th West C.Ollege in lluntington I Id I I he ..,,..., or ear 1er m e plan is the most fflasible at p an wou nvo ve w n vaca-nis. , . month were published pre-Beach. this time,'' Ennis explained. tlons were s ch e d u I e d . THE TIURD oPtion wOWd . 11¥! dates coincide better vlously., Citizens In the communl~y •There are several options Presently, students and b~ve a t•week Chrlstn1as with Uie terms at Cal Stat~ Prograrri • . Did I ever tell you about old Henry Heidemann? As a boy, 1 cleaned trail with him one summer for the U.S. Foresty Service in \V ashington State. Heidemann claimed he never apologized for anyltiing. On the theory the apol· ogy sometimes turned out to be worse than the Insult. "You've heard about the king's jester in the court?" said he. ··one day he romped up behind the king, who was bending over, and booted his majesty in the royal posterior. That disturbed the king a Jillie, son. Then the jester made ,,116,:.:M~:itJ.«~"·,~' ,l.lbltc were asked to think a.bout available, but for the most facult y on the campus are vacation, oile week at Easter, Long Beacb and Fullert~. Edw:111an," Roberl FlllT'llnv. Ed.o., the schedule, and write views part, the semester would discussing the pros and cons but no break for' the :>wn.Jl'ler lfnlverslly of Califortil a's '' proluM)I" o1 lduca111111 •!Id c1111rm1n, and comments to Robert En-begin · during nu'd or lat... of three options. quarter. winter tenn, and high school o.p.rtrnat1l ol Mmlr.l11r1Hon alld "" nd S1tP1rvh1an, v1r11lr.I• commonw .. tth nis. Senate chairman at the August and list until Dec. The rrrst would off.er a two-AU options~eliminate 11d~d students graduating at the c t' un1v ..... 11y, lllch"'°"", Vlr9lr.l1. "•rl ll 2t Th econd t ould ··~" ~ .. r Chr' t or n--m•·-, he added. o1 1 1ecrur1 .. r1... "E<tuc•tton To co ege. , . e s semes er w • wee.k Christmas vacation, no weer.3 ...,. ore 1s mas . ~~ ~· MM! Tn1 Futur•.'' 1·10 p.m., llm.'.1--'--""---'---------------'-..:....:...:::.:.:::.:..:..::::0::.....:..::::::__=:=:::::::._.::::::::::::__:::__.;.:.::::::__.;...:_::_::..:_::::..:_ ________ __;_ _____ _ his second m.i3take. He said, 'Your pardon. sire. J thought you were the queen.' No, I never apologize." \Vr iles a Pennsylvania girl: "\Vhen told n1y husband that our marriage \11as in danger because he was burning the candle at both ends, he ju& shrugged and asked Y.'here he could get more v.•ax. I'm through !" That's not good. It's bad. "Defenselessnesses" is not the only English word that repeats the letter ''e" six times with no other vowel but can you think of any other such word ? 1 KARATE Q. "I-low many different belts are there in karate?" A. Six. Prom least to most skill: white, yellow, green, purple, brown and black. Q. ''\\!hat do the English mean when they refer to a 'cooker'?" A. That's an oven. 100. SOC:l1I klfflCI _Hilt, UC lrVIM ClmPllL SIPIG .. edmlQl.on, $5.50. MONDAY, "'"'· U "W ... l'I Ntw Ir. Sclenc1 Ind Hffllh C1re1<1 for Womtn,•• Panel of Phy$!· cl1ni 1nd HHllh C1r1 E<luc:1tor1. L11I IKIUl'I of 1111 UC ,,....,,.. Exlt1ulon lKlur1 111111, "T,,,. World of Wome" . . . -y-.Life afld H11lth." 7.10 p.m .. Rm. 11•, Comwttl" Scltn(I Bldg. Slnglt ldml11J1111. $6. "Fln1n;;lng: Comm1rc!1I 1nd 1nv11I· menl Pr°"rtv.'' Ro!Mrt L. Sptlk. 8.A .. VICI PrMld1nl Ind M1n1oer. Comm1rcl1I Loans, M•lor t.. o 1 n OtJNrtmtnl, Greil W1111rn S.1vln111 llld Loan A1socl1tlon. L••I IKIUTI In strl11, "Com,,,.,.cl1I ind lnYMlment PrCIP'l'lltt,'' 7.1,30 p.m., ltm. 101, Phv1lc1I Scl1nc11 IUdg. Single Id· mr1s11111, 16- TUaSOAY, Nev. 27 I . Q. "Ever do any gambling, Louie?" • A .. certainly. Lost $3.Sbillion, in fact , in a bet with the I · Ladyf.r1!!fld on the World Series. But . won it all back plus .. $1 .5 bdl1on on subsequent Monday night football. \Ve plWlge I .:some. ''Oetlgn lor th1 Future: Pol1nH1l1, Pl1ns 1nd Prospect1 al tlll LOCtt L1.,.I.'' !ktv Question: How C1n A Ml)rt Elftctlvt Milch Be1w11n Nee<:! And Plll>llc Polley Bt All1ln.cl In Tl!1 Aelnv Art1'), Paneu111: Loll Elll1, M.A., Ch1lrwom1n. Or1nge Coun. IY CO\lnell an AglngJ Ann Sous1, Viet C1!1l,,_1n, Or1ntt County CO\t!ICll on Aolnv 1nd Nur"' con11,1lt1n1, Community Mtlnt11 Ht11!h; Nll!CY COtt- rlOl'I. Olrec:tor of -Yfft pl1nnlng gr1nt an 1111119 In Or1ngt County; Ind Joanne Hog1.11. M.,. ..... R911lDNI Repr111n111lv1, C1tllornl1 Commission an Aging. Part ot 1 1Ktur1 .,,Jes. "Aging; Orlglnt. EtfKh •nd Cantrols.'' 1-•;JO p.m .. Rm. 1•1 , Hum1nlllts Hill, UC lrYlne c1~ Sln.oli: ldmlsslon, lS.50. Snllor cltl1tm, Jl.2JI. ftOM•SOAY, NOY. :II "0.lllng wltl! !ht Govtrnment,'• ~lch11I Chrl1tl1ni.on, LL.B .. practicing •"°"l'llr• Wl!ter, H1rpol1 1nd Chrif' ll1n&0n, HfWPGl'I 811Kh, I fom'llr h'lll llll)rllfY for 1111 R111IOt111 CDUns1t. ln1trn1I ll1vtn1.11 s .... v1c11 and Otnnls kl1rln, J.O., prldlcl"ll CPA "'Ill! Mon Ad1m1 ti. Comp1nv, S1nt1 An1, 1 fl)r!Mr lnt.,.n11 RtYlnl.ll 1oent 1nd 1n E111tt 1nd Gitt T1• 1x1mln1r. P1rt ot 1 UC Irvine Ext1n1lon lect1,1re ,.,.Its. "Stlectlng 1nd tlnplement!ng In ElflCllvt TIX Pl1n,'' 7·10 .,.m .. Am. 104, Pnv,1c1J Scl1nce1 tUdg. Single .. •. • • • • And now there are more TV sets, too, than bathtubs ·here.abouts. GROWING BALD? . Medical hisl~rianS saY the first known written prescrip- tion Wa"S" for a 'hair restorer. It called fot mas.;age v•ith . hippopotamus fat. Still, that's not the point. Point is that . men have been ~orried about growing bald for just about as 1nany centuries as they have been worried about any- thing. - It's a rare politician who executes a powerful han<l- .shake. But this signifies no lack of self-assurance. Politi· cians shak e hands so much Ibey choose to grip lightly. Another professional man who almost never bears do-.•:n : hard in the h11nd shake is the physician , rm told. The why : of that ren1ains unrxplained. Kind of like these Ozark sayings: "It ain't going to I:>: t !ill il's gone." "He'd tell the Devi l ho\v to run hell." , .. She kcers scr11tching "'here it don't itch." "Busier than a : bu1.1 !'J\v in a pine knot." "Dull as a widow woman's ax." · (;r;i ntetl. there's a lot of Festus Hagen in those, but why : not ·~ '1 1/clre~s n1ail to f,,. t.1. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, New- ; pc. '~',,:•':,".Coli/. 92660. TO MA KE •<!llliUl.on. u. -"Al1trn1th•1 Fut1,1rtt.'' Oon1ld Gtlnes, Ph,O., Ca-Dlrtctor incl Prof'llssor, Stuolos for Ed1,11:1!1onal Alt.rna!l~1, School 01 Educ1tlon., M1nk1to St1t1, Coll19e, Mlnnetola. 11111\or of "Cr .. tlng H1,1m1111 Schoo!1," Campus Publlll'llt's. 1rld "lmQ11manlln1 Ollfer1nt 11\d Btt- ltr Schoofs,'' C1mPt11 Publl1Mrs. P•rl ol 1 UC lrvlnt E•lenslan techrre MrlM, "Educ:1tan To Mtel Thi Fu,,,,,t,'' 1-10 p.m., Rm. 100, SOclal Sdtnc1 H1tl, !Ingle ld1nl1t.l«I, IS.50. THURS DAY, Ml'\!, 2' "Clln!c1I D1111nosl1 Iv llothemlcal AntlrsJs.'' C1rol 8111, M..0 .• Asll1t1n1 Prort1M11"" In Rnklenc1, Oeolrtment ol P1lholOll'f, Clilltort\11 Coileot o1 Mldlclnt, UC lrYlnl, L11! lecture In the UC ll'Ylnt Exl1n1l1111 lecture str!es, "Scltnllllc M.cllclne For The LA~m•n' Tl>e Scleric1 And Art 01 "\edkll Ot1ono&J1.'' 7-t,30 p.1n., ~r1 LKtur1 Hiii, Mfll!Cll SurRt! I Bl~o .. Slng11 ldml11lan, u. Kids Like To Ask And)· MONEY LA GUNA FEDERAL PAYS YOU NEW HIGHEST RATES ON$1,000~. 4 YEA R CERTIFICATES ~.1% 7 ?, 0 ls.I COMPOUNDED DAJLY YIELDS PER ANNUM l'lu~ con1parable high interest ratc:s on all other specified term certificate accounts rang ing from SI ,000 to $1 00,000 tlntcrci.l payable only at current Passbook ralc on early wilhdrawab, plus 90 day~' intcresl forf citurc.) LISTEN TO MIKI: ROY'S COOKING THING oo KNX-RADIO I 0: I 0-l l Af\·t for informal ion on Laguna Fedcral's exciting new Recipe Calendar giveaway. · Ask 'J.bouI new exciting benefits to SAVERS CLUB members! MATTRESS // ~ -0 0 0 ... NEVER A MIDDLEMAN Of the Big 3 Mattress Makers.. · · Ortho., Simmons & Sealy-on ly Ort ho sells Factory Directto You through its own nationwide chain. of over 50 Factory Showrooms. Everything comes to you factory • fresh in original facto ry wrappings. .. And Ortho delivers FREE in their own fleet of trucks. QUEEN 18 OATHO EASE This luxurious Kln0'$i:t• Mattress Se! can be yours et 1 super IOw Ortho price. II comes complete with Mattress, 2 Box Springs. Ortho-f'ak & Double Bonutl TWIN ORTHO EASE Oftho prnenlt the perfect 1iza bed for the ~room lhlt'• too tm•U tor 1 king. And you get the complete eet-M1ttrtn, Box Spring, Ortho-Pak & Double Bonus! OATHO EASE • • • The chcice ls yours-Twin size or Full. Either way you PllYOM low, low Ortho price for the complete 1111. Including Mattreu, Bo .. Spring & the famous Ortho Qoub1e Bonus! ON!58 rtho-Pak & Double Bonus With everyOrtho KinQlClr Queen you get the Ortho-Pak: Fieldcrest No-Iron Top Sheet, Fitted Bollom Sheel & 2 Pillow· cases · 2 Bolster PJ!lows ·Mattress Pad • Metal Frame on Eaey-Rofl Castera. FREE DELIVERY /.' CONVERTIBLE SOFA With EwryOrtho mettrts11etyou get the 001.Jble Bonu1: King or Queen - Pedded Vlny1 Headboard AND Quilted Bedapread. Twin or Full:-Headboard AND Metal Freme on Euy·Roll Casters. INSTANT CRED~IT CORNER Ortho Products ire m1nuf1ctured by Ortho 1r\d iOld only through Ortbo 1'1clory S .. ho-w'",,~ooi~m .. 1~ BENTON By de.y t aoft l Al nlgl'll I oomforttble bed I AllO Jn Super QuHn width (5"' wldtr lhan norm1I Queen Size Sletp.t) Ind with M•tohlng Chlir • • . ' BALI Complete 0-pr.ct • Ml with 2 MaltretMS,I .l 2 Mfltol'tinf Foundtltonf. 2 BOlaem, 2 Covertett & Walnut oniln finish comttT•*· ...,....-............ . --THE -NATION'S LARGEST CHAIN OE' MATJ'BE_SS ' ' ., I PECIALISTS -owW IO St.- ' 1:101\.f.E OFJ.'ICE: 260 Ocean Avenue, Lagun& Beach, California 92651 Telephone: 494-7541 •LAGUNA NIGUEL: J Monarch B&y Plaza,~ CU.MENTE: 601 North El Camino R<AI • LAGUNA HILLS< 24038 Calle , do la Plata• LAKE ELSINORE: 600 WC$t Grlham Avenue • • .\ ., .. • • ORANGE SANTA ANA ANAHEIM LAKEWOOD • 2445 N. Tust;n An. I•~•• 'from Or11191 ~·Il l Mione 617°0111 & Fountain Valley 161) I Horbor 11,vd. {corner of Edln1•rl N111t to Zoclv'• ,h6rit1 1)9A570 • 1811 West Lincoln. Ave. l1tw1111.Ju.tl' 111~' lreo•ltvnt' Av111u11 Ju1t t••t •f FM Mart 'ho11e1 776.2190 4fll C.•dlowood Avo. C111cll1wood Sf.op• lecro11 frofll W~e""'OPd Ce11 .. r rtid'll11 \)-4-26) I r • "' Stne v .. '"' LOS ANOl!W MOOl!STO IAN ,-llAff(IKO fllllStrtO SAN 01100 OAICL.).NO iAH JOSI 'HOINIX SAC .... INfO TUCSON t'r'ObtTON ' ATLAllTA _ aALr .LMI cnv • \ .. .. . ·. :; ·. -. ·: :: :. .. . . • •. ' .• . ., :: .. :· •. ~ ~' • ,I • • ' •• • • • • -· •' .• • • • ' • • • I I I I I I I I p L TODAY! ' Queen Candidates Saddleback College students will pick homecom- ing queen for football game Nov. 17. From left, Nancy Ronkainen, Mission Viejo; Ellen Brink, San Clemente; Lori l\1artin, San Clemente; Lois Balliet, San Clemente; Sue Sherry, Tustin; Sue Carroll, ~lis­ sion Viejo, and Tracy Wilkinson, San Clemente. Nol shown ar~ Sherri LQng, Mission V~ejo; Ginny Fesler, Tustin; Sheila Donohoo, Mission Viejo. State .I\.udos Go New Class Offered For Aides A four-week cou rse Ior elementary school aides or volunteers will begin at Golden \Vest College Nov. 13. The course is the third in a S'erles designed to leach the aides hoW' to work with elementary school ch.ildren in libraries. This course will deal with helping the children use reference books, and is worth one-half unit of college credit. The two previous courses, covering the use of card catalogs and book a n d magazine indexes, need not be taken to be eligible for the new course. AN Of PORTUNITY lo take the complete sequence of courses . will be offered again during the sf"ing term, begin· nlng Feb. 4. 'Ille class involves lwo hou rs of lecture-laboratory ea c.h week, and may be taken for credit, no credit. or for a grade. There will be two sections. One will meet in math.science, room 110, on Tuesdays from 10 a.m. to noon. 1be other \\i ll meet in math-science, room 115. on Wednesdays, Crom 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. New students may register by going to the college ad- missions office witil l\1onday, Nov. 12, or by going to either of the first class meetings, Nov. 13 or ,1~. Coordinator DAILY PILOT %3 Councilmeri Make Sure Peacemaker Has Clout By TERRY S. COVILLE nlE lttAN THEY are con- sidering fol' the peace-keeping role. architect Ernest EIY.'ood, Huntington Be a c h coun-agreed to the contract change cilmen intend 10 be sure the f\1onday night and so did Elwood's auomey had written. • was sh1Hvn councilmen ~1on· day ni ght, they immediately objected to the so ft -l ine \\'Ording. even t h o u g h llow lands supl)O rt ed it. "peacemaker" they !lire for the central t I b r a r y con- struction carries sufficient clout for his peace-keeping role. They inserted a clause in hls propo.sed contract this week which gives him the power to make decisions and resolve disputes, rather than merely offer ree<>m· mendelions. Callback Of Food Announ~ed library architect Dion Neutra. Elv.·ood, if he take.!l the job. "'ill step in -between Neutra and cily officials in an effort to speed construction of the $2.9 million central librarv which is a haJf.year behind schedule. ''This document is not at all reflective of \vhat the city council '''tint s." complained Councilman Al Coen. "Unless it makes it 1nore binding, · \\·e're just screwing around, \vasting time. I don't read this agreement as givi ng the coordinatDr the authority Y.'C ,,·ant him to have.'' Part of the \vo rk sloy.·do\\'TI has been blamed on poor com· mW1ication bet·ween Neutra and the city, '''ilh city officials clai ming he isn't doing the CITY ATIORNE \' Don Bon· work he 's supposed to, and fa agreed that the contract. f\ieutra counter-daiming the as \rritten. \\'Ould not pro\•idc city ts taking away his the coordinator \\'ith the force arch.iteetural cootrol. to accomplish what coun- ci11ncn desired. ~IT Y ADMINISTRATOR After councilm en re\\·orded Dave Rowlands struck on 1he the contract to give the idea of hiring an o the r peacemaker Cinal aut hority on architect, with· the title of disputes, and made it. clear are h ilectural construction that \\•as the only way Neutra coordinator, who will hnndlc n1ight retain hi s job. both on-site constructioo. proble1ns Neulra and Elwood agreed to WASHINGTON {AP) -The and Solve disputes bet\vcen the change. Food and Drug Administration Neutra and others. EIY.'ood is expected to sign has announced that Trev When the contract, \\·i1ich the contract soon. Packing Co. of Oneida, N. Y. * * * - is l'eoalling three type• * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * of frozen food! containing * MERCURY SAVINGS * u nderprocessed mushrooms * . . produced by another firm . * and IDan assoc1ahon Being recalled are Trey ~ .. ~~I"'• frozen beefsteak s with mushrooms, and Town fair frozen veal pannagiana and frozen salisbury steak, all in ty.·o-powid packages. The recall involves all Trey products distributed a f t e r * ~~':::c~~o~a'.'a:~!li'.~: "STATEMENT SAVIN&S"·PRESTl&E Card * Nevada. * IUEM PARK Mercury Savings Bldg., Valley VieW al Uncoln * T}le FDA said Wednesday ir HUITIMITOI IEACH Mereury Savings Bldg., Edinger at BucQ. 1i 1 FULLERTON ....;~Patricia V, Tref"\ised . mushrooms .. pro-* TUSTIM Mercury Savings Bl<lg:·ii)lna BIVd. at Newport Ave. · Ramirez of Pico Rivera has duced by Tusco Mushroom U MAllU..·FUW:ftlotl Mercury Savlntis Bldg., lmpet.~ Hwy. at Harbor * been named coordm· ator· o£ Products. Inc., of Bea.ch City, * ••••-M Sa . 81~ , 1 ~-!Sa DI F * Ohio, which were recalled Oct. * --ercury Ylngs "lll•• ~va on l>ITII· a n ego rwy. * Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order Fol' Younelf or • Friend· M1y be used on env1lop1s ~s return 1ddrets labels. Also very hendy fS identificetion labels for merkinq personal items such as l:.ooks, records, photos, etc.. Lebels stick on glass and may be used for marking home canned focd items. All libels •re printed wi!~ stylish Vogue type on fine quelity whit• tummed paper. minority services al cat State 9 because they were (ound * llDY kJIOU$ Mercury Savin is Bldf., Lont 811Ch BIYd. at C1rson St. * To Valley Teach er 1r-Full=";;1o.;;;. ==~:--=mito;;i;be;;un:;:d:;:erp;iiroc;;ii;iiessed~.=;;;;;;;;;i;;;*.::*;;*~*.::*;;*~*.::*.;*~*~*.;*~*~*.;*~*~*~*~*.;*~*~*· Prices were never lower! ..-----------------------, I Piil 111 IM• <•11P111, cnp 11\d ~II whll 11.u 11: I I Piiot l"rlnllne L11H:I oiv .. r.o. •~"IHI I · I Cts11 Ma~. c1u1. '1'24 I I 1 I I I I I I f I I L----~~L..Q.!_~~!~I!~~----J Shirley Ann Dill , 26, a special education teacher al h1oila SchOol in Fountain Valley. has been named sec- ond runner-up in the state- wide Outstanding Young Edu- cator competition sponsored by the California Jaycees. Miss Dill received a plaque and a check for $75 at the Jaycees meeting in Pomona last weekend. John Griner, 31, a teacher at 1Plavan School, was. a state Kids Like To Ask Andy finalist, too, and received a $25 check. Both Miss Dill and Griner v.·ere co-winners of the Young Educator competition in Foun- tain Valley which preceded the state competition. I.akewood Sets . . . 15th. Reunion 111e class of 1958 a t Lakewood High school has scheduled Its 15th rewlion Feb. 2 next year. Alumni leaden are looking for graduates of that year to attend. Graduates of Lake\\'ood can write Jo Collins, 14202 Ebony St., Wf.stminster for detalls. ~RACTICAL HOLIDAY GIFfS for the lvltole E\MltY ! _.,..::::::H::ARDWARE STORE I TOASTMASTl!'?R,_" ---.._,_ 3995 BAKES OR BRblLS TABLETOP OYEN BROILER Continuous deaning feature-safely cleans Itself as it bakes or roests or broils. Convenient pushbunon conlrOJs-seleet,. JUii. tet thermostat control. Easy to ~ for stainless bod\' keeps Its good loolc.s through '(tars of heavy use! Ifs priced right I 5242 ._...._ 2999 12" E.ECTRJC FIT.PAN . HJilt dome for l>llllnf roasts, foWf, •It. Stain\ess steel wilft alumlltlll!l-ciad bottom. 312SP E3> 19'5 3~ QT. CROCK POT Slow-cook In pnulnt stontWare lot Ml fll'lllr, lltltlr nutriti,., Clas cover.G~at for beansl3101 • 5499 ~ Broiler Rotisserie Air citalla!iotl sals in Juice1 for taste and nutrilio11. Aluminum ~ tgy, IO"xl5" b~inf $1Jtflce, 455C/50C llnli1tr • Rotlmlo _$4.99 llleiltr ·°"" -!.....34.99 COSCO 21~00 VALUE NEW! FOLDING CART Folds flat. opens to 26• tall. Walnut woodgrain she hies are i 5'h. x2s·. Gold brassctirome fr<rne. 3• casters. 12--1 30 HOURS: MON.-FRI. 9-9 SATURDAY 9·6 SUNDAY 10·4 • ' -MMtrfl4545 23" modem stYfed CONSOLE . ..,.... on casters 100% Solid.state Zentth Titan 300V Ot1ly chassis. 30,000 Volts of picture power (desi11t average). Exclusive s5599s Zenith Power Sentry System . Chromatic oh•button tuning. AFC. Solid-State Super Video Range Tuner. New Advanced Chromac:olor Picture Tube. °'"""' 100% Solid·State Zenith Titan 275V chassl•. Solid·State Super Video Range Tuner. Telescoping dipole antenna. New Advanced Chromacolor picture tube. A Great Entertainment Value-Ill 539888 19" TABLE MODEL DI-~ 100% Solid·State Zenith Tilan 300V chassis. Solid·State Super Video Range Tuner. 30,000 volts of picture power (design average). Exclusive Zenith Power Sentry System. Chromatic one·button tuning and AFC. New Advanced Chromacolor Picture Tube. · Stmttlionally Priced- ·t11~·-0 llrellft•rke UNITED -TV-·---& ----- APPLIANCE HARBOR CENTER CENTER Ph. 540-7191 STORES 2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa .._ ______________ ...., ______ __, ________ ;...;..;..;.;.,;;..;::.;;:..., ______ ...J, ' l 'L \ ·~ • • ' , ·~ I . ' ' .,,. ' . •. I ' •1 ['t 24 DAIL V PILOT Thursday, Novtmber S. 1973 ., • FACT: I 'OUESTIO.N: ANSWER: ' , . , • - Thrifty Drug and Discount Stores, in Southern __ California, have always paid a'!f!. are now paying · their sales personnel and pkarmaci'~ts · the . highest wages and benefits in · America in the discount, variety, department, s~cialty and drug store fields .•• • . . - substantially higher than virtually all of our competitors. ' ' ' Including both union and non-union stores! • The leaders of the Southern California Retail Clerks Unions h~e consistently recognized and acknowledged this indisputable fact! . WHY then are the Retail Clerks Unions in. Southern California striking Thrifty Drug and Discount Stores- That is what we, Thrifty Drug and Discount Stores, would like to know! their long-time friend; since 1939? We sincerely regret this inconvenience to our custo .. nl , • l I ' ( -.. ·1 ' I ' \ I .. • • • ' t ' rl!. . . • • • AACN President Cheryl Larson 'The nu ts e i~ t he ·,doctor'.s eyes and ears. He cfepends on her observations and ability to give quality care.' Che ryl La rson ... ·. ' - ' • , Nursing A- By AWSON DEERR Of *-o.llr 'Ull ll•lf "You're such a bright girl, why didn't you become a doctor instead of a nurse?" "The 'jtmior doctor' upstairs said ... " "Dr. Smith1 this is our head nurse, Mary." . These comments express attitudes held about ~ nurses as . step-s.isters to physi· clans. But the picture is changing and nurses themselves are the prime movers, said a group of nurses interviewed in Anaheim. Examples of the "new" nurse, the specialist: O!eryl Lmon, Linda Baldwin, Diane Adler and Grace Cookson. Cheryl ·Larson, president of the ~can AssoCiation ol Critical-Care Nurses, is a cardiovascular nurse spedaHst at MetropOlitan a.1 e d i c a l Center, Minneapolis. She noted that the 15,000 member AACN, begun with 200 members in Nashville in 1969, adds 40 to 50 new members every day. GOALS CITED Goals of the group are: better stan· dards of critical care, development of education specific to criti~ care nurs· ing, public education about critical care, . . -. rehabilitation of acutely 111 and com· municatloo among olher medical pn> ressionals. - And AACN members want recognition, respect and acCcptance as peers with other members or the medical com· munity. ''Critical care involves ll10n! than the cardiac patient," Ms. Larson sai~. "It involves the child near drowning at a poolside, the multiple traumas of an auto accident victim, the heart attack at a ba1lgame, the premature infant in the neonatal intensive care unit, the asthmatic and many others -anyone who is acutely ill." 'Critical care IS the future in so many senses." FUTURE VIEW She predicted a trend toward hospitals being ONLY for the critically lll, with other medi~l treatment given in clinic situations. In Chicago, she notecj, there are already hospitals set up as trauma centers, bum center's, cardiac centers, for that purpcioe only. "It saves staffmg and cost to patient and concentrates the best possible care in one center. Oar! is less fragmented." Linda Baldwin, head nurse of the cardiac care unit at Orange Cotmty Medical Center , ·president-elect of AACN, sees the time coming when a nurse ' i '*·-! .. 1 ·''1'"'"''.~; ,,. ' . . ~ ' ~ ·:' ' " ' Linde Baldw in, Grace Cook son end Diane Adl er (left to right). ere amo ng Ame ric a n nurses taking on ne.w roles, responsibilities an d status in medical fields . • s Dim ens1on and ph)'llclan will both direct activities in the unit. "It's only natural, and it's coming. After all, the nurse is al the bedside 24 hours a day. She Is tile--doctor's eyes and ears. IIe deperub on her observations and oo her ability to provide quality care." UNITS .OPEN The nunes' noted that when a-itical care units first opened, (the first ones were cardiac wlitJ ) interns \•tere assigned. They didn't like the work so the nursing stall got the job by default. "When there is a super critical care nursing staff, and a super critical care unit, the rest of the hospital has to upgrade care to meet these standards," ~1rs. Baldwin said. "'Ibc ideal situation," she said, "is for the .entire staff to rotate through the critical care wiits so they Will know. bow to· proJ)erly care for patients when they leave the unit." ·Diane Adter, an RN who iS editor of "Heart and Lung," the AACN magadne, feels nurses need to be en- couraged to write. "With physicians it is publish or perish. But the nW'Se also needs a: forum for her ideas, a place to share h~r ez· periences. Heart and Lllng offers the _opportunity to relate standards of care in each community, and to give nursing staffs a basis for comparison," she said. BEGINNING TO WRITE ::E ••• Some are 1»authoring with pbysicial!!_: to get started, but lhe magazine doei; have a stall for editing and eritlqume: inanuscrlpts. :;: •• Air Force Capt. Grace COOkson travel- ed from her current duty station in Spain to attend the Cardio-Respiratory Ca re Symposiwn co-sponsored by AACN and the Orange County Heart Associa- tion. She noted that the upgrading of the role of nurse has led to traininC Of lower level medical personnel to take over duti es once closely guarded for . nW"ses only. "The military is \'Cry education; oriented. There is plenty of opportunity . to get additional training ." She added that \Vhat the nurse can do now , and will do ln lhe iuture, is greatly changed from the _past. What are the upper limits of what a nune can do? "h1y campaign motto was 'A nurse cannot practice beyond the vision ot her horizons ,' she can do whatever sht! feels she is capable or doing," said. Ms. Larson. CSe.e NEW LOOK, Page ZS) BEA ANDERSON, Editor Ttlllnfty. ,,..,_..,. I, 1'7l p_,. H -. ,. -. • ••• •J . • ' ' ii!:· ' • •'i*:'.':.a: , A'Aiffial . -·Doctor ·9iagnosed -a-s 1-n-c-o mpete flt...._.;,.. DEAR ANN LANDERS< Please tell us what to do when a precious pet dies In a hospital and you don't believe yuu ,are getting the straight story from the veterinarian. OUr poodle was anttthetlzed so an X·ray oould be taken. He never woke up. We were shocked and heartsick. All the veterinarian said was, ••1 don't ... !mow w at fiappcniid ."- My husband took the dog 's body to another veterinarian for an autopsy. Tt!e report was: "No organic illneu present. The dog could have had an overdose of anesthetic, or a lethal reaction to the~." The lndlUeren<e of the lirst vet Is wblt burned ua up .. He didn 't seem to care that our dog had .died , nor was he particularly interesl<d to Ond out why, Wouldn't you think he'd want to know what mistake had been made in order to keep from making it again? I now suspect he already knew what be bad done wrong. What recourse does a pet owner have? -StD FAMILY JN VA. DEAR FAMILY: Here are two opUom open tipet owners Who are not 11tlltiell with the trutmt1:t bi u ulmol lleopllaL y.., .... contact Ille toc.l dlapler ti the Velerlnary Medical AP«lolloll or write to Dr. Donald Price, American Veterlnartoa Medical Allo<lalloa, "' Soath Ml<blJu Ave., (:blcaro, llL DEAR ANN LANDERS: A few days agci'Tald something I have iwver done I before. I went through my husband 's wallet. J was actually looking for money but r1ouna a 'Wlible lot more than the $10 I needed to pay a bill. Tucked away in a hidden oompartment wu a picture or a girl holding a baby. I reoogniJed her at once. She lives In the apartment above my husband 's lilter-ln·law. Now 1 know why be spent ao much time there when I was ~tall&ed IHI year for nerves. 1 can unden:taod a mao with a sick I wife having an affair, but alter finding that picture I'm' afraid it was more than just a fling, I-hate to tell yoo what I think abollt the baby. Sbollld I go see the girl and uk for the whole story? l will never get the truth out of my husband. He Is a terrible liar. Or, should I pretend I never saw the picture, pl•Y dumb arid go on dying inside! -MORE THAN I BARGAINED FOR DEAR MORE: One . plctKre II, - • them18d ' wordt: -especially words from • '"terrible Hlr.'' Tell ,.. ••-,.. load111e ptctve. Aalr llllm If be •.anti to go wltll yea for CCMIDHllag. ,, be ,RfUI~, talk to yMl' doctor. Sblce yau were bolpltalhed . lu& ye1r Iv "aervet, "' yoa 11nly lll1ve. -Take •II advlct lo "lard lo )'IV lutare pluo ud Sood lacli. •You aeed It. DEAR ANN LANDERS : Will you piea.o<> tell me why, when couplet 1et together for dinner or an evening, all the men seem to end up on one slde of the room and all the women on the other? I've seen this happen Ume and lime again and I think It's awful. I have tried to break up the oexist <'ODVersaUonal groups but it doesn't • • work. This goes OD all over, Ann. What's the re..,..? -CEMENTED PARTITION DEAJI 'C;P" 'lh --ue ..... to bate me but I btlitve It'• m11tlf ti..1r loall. Wbell they boP lo Ploi .. Allll 11tee JllllJor Said,,, or ''1 t1I Qlebli Uke n•, 11 er "'Ille Best Flew P.UU Is -" Ute ma. .... Ill.. CH1"11111me ~mT It's not always easy to recognize loft, esptcl.Uy the fint Ume an>und. M>- quainl youneH with the suidelinel. Read Ann Landen' booklet, "love er Sex and' How to Tell the Diflerence."I For a copy, mall 1$ .,..ts in coin lltd a long, atampcd, oe!Nddrmecl .... !Gi>t with your request to P.O. Box 1341, m w. Banlc llr., aucqo ru. -· ' • • ' I I • .. • ' 8 DAil Y PILOT Your Horoscope Building New Image Scorpio: Stay Out of Corner Four members ol Lady Carpenter Enterprises In New York get down to some serious work as they renovate an old counter restaurant Into a boutiq ue , uwhat's New." The job was the llrst that Included the all-female group doing carpentry, masonry, painting and cabinet work. The girls are (l•!t to right) Joyce Hartwell, Diano Mc- court, Karen Bermann and Lorna McNeur. : l ' ' FRIDAY NOVEMBER 9 By SIDNEY OMARR \Vhcn Leo smiles, the room lights uirthese natives can make or break a p3rty. The same is basically true or Capricorn, but in a different way. The style or Capricorn is more direct, to the point, slightly •·heavy.'' Capricorn can be dour. somev,;hat cynical in contrast to the Leo happy i:o-Jucky "'ay. ARIES (,.1arch 2l·April 19): You may "'ant too fll!Ch too soon and for a price that is out of line. Obviously, pa- tience and restraint become 1:win allies. Without them, you will spend and get nothing of value for plenty of effort and money. TAURUS (April 20.May 20): Cycle is high but one in authorit y refuses to let you ·have a "cakewalk ." 1t1eans : obstacle.!., challenges are ·thrown in your path. Yoo may -also have to deal with Aries ·On a rampage. Be specific, controlled and observant. GEMINI (May 21-June 20 ): 1'1ake changes bot d o n ' t discard pro,·ed m e t h o d s . values. Deal gingerly v.·i1h \1lrgo. One v•ho confides in you wants apprQval. Know it and don't make mi stake or : . offering anything else. You : \\'ill understand . : CANCER (June 21.July 22 ): !,.. Friend who ntay seem to oir -•. pose you is merely going • through cycle of temperament. · Know It an'd don't make a , big thing of it. Ride \vith emotional tide . Fa m 1 I Y , member pro,·cs staunch ally. · Throw aside false pride. LEO (July 23-Aug. 221: Op. . portunity is present but it is • necessary lo be realistic. i: Don't see through rose-colored ., haze. Pisces, Virgo persons .. tend to exaggerafe. Prestige is in picture but so is tendency tov1ard self-deceptior\. • VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpl . 22): \\'hat vou do now will ha\'e long-r<l'nge ·effect. Be ready to organize. (;ct fact s filed • and ready for use. Accept · ch a 11 en g e, responsibility. •. Capricorn, <.:ancer persons are ;. in picture. Communication VALERIE BREUER Breuers Tell Troth The engagement of LL (j.g.) Valerie Lynn Breuer an d James Russell \\'inkier has been announced by h e r parents. ti.1r. and li.1rs. William J. Breuer of Dana Point. :• l\f.iss Breuer. a graduate of .!UCLA and member or Della ~l Zeta sorority, is presently sta· • tioncd in \Vashington, U.C. !\fr. and Mrs. Russrtl E. Winkler of \Vash inglon, HI. are parents of her ·flance 1,1,·ho is • planned in Dana Point. MM. "'"' llt. 11 -,,,. CHllSTMAS WOllSHOI' DAILY IN• Cl'llrtsl • IMpert "'""" c....-.... ,.rt ctul1hMI l-t1 & -• 0.rO-..... n -4 ?.t-ln•' 47 .... """" ..... ,.... ...,...,.. (till"' "'""NleT'Olil l•ACM .... , ""'°"""'" " ........ . _,,,. • recci\'ed from one at 1 distance is highlighted. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): \1ou arc able to fln ish, to put final touches on project. Arlts aids. ~loney affecting cooperative effort is ques- tioned. Fresh creative energy comes to fore-you imprint your style. \'ou are due to emerge a "·inner. SCORPIO fOct. 23-Nov. 21 ): \\'hat you ov.n is apt to in- crease in value. Be patient. Don't jwnp at first offer. Open horil.ORS. Perceive potential. Refuse to be painted into Ct'.lf· ncr. You have more to offer than might be apparent on surface. Know it, act like you are aware of it. RUFFElt'S UPHOLSTERY Wllft Y•• w .. t ....... I 922 Hortt.f 11'¥4, Cotta 111 ... -541-0259 • ~BRASS' RINU w ....... ,,.,..., ... ., .. e N., ... Wl•tt • AIHll SHOIS Nehtf•ll..,.. c1 .... S..d•lt l121 E••• C11•1t Hwy. Coro"• dtl Mir 61l..47'40 '""' hollclay decorating ~ ,::.,";,. iffi~~M91@R~ g ;>o" 5HQWICl MIC.WE•'2' :x>1'.sir-t.•M CVH:llY•NNport llH<ll ,. HAS THE GOODS SAGITTARIUS !Nov. 22- Dec. 21 ): What appears to · be a weight, an impossible as.,PiraUon, will settle into con- sll\lctive groove. Cancer, Capricorn persons figure prom- inently. ~taintain balance, steady pace. Improve pro- perty. Remodel. Build on base that is solid. CAPRICOR.'i (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You spread out-your in· teresls multiply. Curiosity is stimulated Saglttarian could be in picture. Accent is on change and special rela· tionship. Ad vocale crealivity. Young person \.\"ants to ser\'e your inlPrests. Groups Choose Varied T epics AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 ·Feb. 18 J: Solid results are featured. Those who demanded result s arc now likely to express satisraction. Y.our a~ch is thorough and you detect flaws. Quality becomes your ally. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Movement, trave l and visits could be featured. Gemini, Virgo figure prominently. You are prO\'ided with valuable in· fonnation. Key is to use it ""'iseiy. Relative asks you to be discreet. Comply. You are on brink <i disa>Very. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you draw people "to you \\-ith their problems. ti.1any persons confide in you and accept your counsel. You deal manv times with Arirs. Libra ind.ividuals. Travel in- dicated for December. You arc ambitious, active and fond or fara1vay places. y 0 u perceive future trends and you are an accurate prog· nosticator. From Page 25 HB Library A booknu:irk contest and a 1nystery special are the l\\"O maj or C\"Cnts planned by ~lun· tington Beach Library in celebration or Children's Book Weck, Nov. 12-18. The contest for origin.al designs ls o~n ·to all children. oges 5 lo 12. Judging will be on Sunday. Nov. 18. A mJgic show. cartoons, games and costume judging \\'ill highlight the A If red Hitchcock Mystery Special from 4 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 15, in the city council chambers. Golden Key A business meeting and a tour of the new Children's Day Treatment Center. Faun· tain Valley is planned by (;olden Kry. a support group of the Orange County Child Guidance Center. The group will meet at tfl a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 13, in the center. Society ~lajor discussion of the l{un- Ungton Beach ~listorical Socie· ty will be the preservation of the SO.year.old Boy Scout House in L.:ike Park. The group \Vil! meet at 7:30 p.nt. Tuesday, Nov. 13. NB Friends Author Frances Russell Kay of Ney,•port Beach will discus.o; the China That Nfver Was ""'hen she guests at the NewJX>rl Beach Friends o( the Library coffee at 10 a.m. Tuesday, Nov. ll, in the Lido Isle home of Mrs. fl.1artin . Lockney. fl.frs. Kay, former society editor of the San Fernando ValleY News, will tell some of her experiences y,•hile in China during what \Vesterners called ''11le Golden Age." Allianc e Two events are planned next week byi the Alliance Fran· caise de la Riviera califor· nienne. On Tuesday. r\ov. 13. at 7:30 p.m. the fLlm , '"The Phan· lorn Baron."' \\•ii !-)c sho\1'n in 11arbor Vie1\' School as a scholarship fund-ra ise r. Color slides will add to an illusory pi 1 gr i 111 age to Versaille when Pa tr i ck Verhoeven lectures at 8 p.m. Frida,t, Nov. 16, also ?.t the school. HB Women Jo Ann Jacobs, \\'ho is associated with the San Gabriel Valley Llght Opera, will entertain members of the Huntington Beach Woman's Club. The group will meet Tues· day, No\'. 13, in the clubhouse. OC Panel Orange County Chapter of the Consumers Panel o f America will meet at 10 a.m. Tuesday. Nov. 13, in the American Family Ste a k House, Anaheim. Giving demonstrations will be Vera Way, hors de'oeurves, and Jackie Sum and Ellen \Vright, Christmas gifts. Lidoites Volunteer activities and fund-raisers \\'iii be discussed. Z~nta Club Ne1,1,·port 11arbor 7..ontians \\'ill host a dinner meeting for an Int ercity meeting of ·Area IV. The e\'Cnt will ~gin at 7 p.m. Saturd51y, N9V. lO,l~··•ii••••••• in the clubhouse. I, Twins' Mothers A \\"Orkshop for Christa1as decoralfons and gifts 11•il! be C."Onductcd bv crafls teacher Shirley Cathy for Orange Coast li.1others of T""•ins. The dinner ntecting i s scheduled for \Vcdnesday, Nov. 14 . at 8 p.n1. in the Fountain \1allcy lligh School dining room. Riviera Club Lyric soprano Teri 11;.i!ston 515 NOITH MAIN, SANTA AHA • 547.SISl ""'ill enterlain n1e1nbcrs of thc l:~~::;::~::::~~==:~::::::::::~~ Riviera Club al the \Vcd---- -_ ~ nesday, f\ov. 1'1, m<'eting in ~· ~ t~e Balboa Bay Club, begin· ~13. · ~ n1ng at 11:30 a.m. ,.: H Business Women New Look • Nursing Joan Coverdale, ecologist. poet and author, will be the speaker after a luncheon meeting or the Lido Isle \Vo man's Club. The art of laking good photographs 1\•ill be discussed by photographer ,Ch a r I e s Porter at the \Vednesday. NO\', 14. meeting of Ne\\'port lleach Chapter. Americnn Busines$ \Vomen's Associa11un, in ruChard·s coffee shop. The group is planning a Christ n1as bazaar an d bake sale on Richard·s patin Satur- day, Dec. I, from 10 a.m. tot p.m. TIWllt.. nllt.. ... .., uo-i.1111 &fMI I c•ll'l,1•N llM "A nurse can do as much as the hospital will legally allow her to do ," Linda Baldwin said. Gone are many or the arbitrary w a i t i n g periods (\\'hen a doctor might arrive) before beginning pa- tient care. Legislation on nurse practice is pending in many states, already tn effect in California and New York. "This is especially vital in critical care units," they said. to literally pull the plug on the machines that sustain the patient. • AACN also is active in pr~ grams of !he National Federa· tion of Specialty Groups to. keep the lines of com- municption open. HALO EFFECT Physicians are beginning to recognize the \'al ue of critical care nurses and. this has a "halo effect" on other nurses. And, even more signUicant Linda Baldwin summed up: "We are nurses because v.·e like nursing. We don't want to be doctors. We like patient contact. \Ye like caring for people one-to-<lne. "It's time that physicians began to think of us as col· leagues r ather than handmaidens." And, they might stop calling them girls. · l\1embers will meet in the clubhouse at 11 a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 13. After her talk, a tour of the Back Bay area will be taken . OC Auxiliary \Vomen's Auxiliary of the Arthritis Foundation, Orange County will meet at 10 a.m. fi..1onday, Nov. 12. in the Corona dcl Mar home of Mrs. \Yilliam Weaver. Yacht Club ., .,,., .. ,1 .. .. 11th DAILY l~l:M ( MON.•,. ••. 'TIL ':M 31 FASHION ISLAND '""0" ,,., 644-2353 .Af+ IANllAMlllCARD MASTIR CHA.RGI ,,,,,.~ Visions of Sugar Plums "'ill ~~".j=================:::--lheme the pre-holiday ladies C luncheon of !he Bahia Corinthian Y ~~ ch '· Club W'•~ Wed n e s d a y , Nov. 14. Christ1nas items for sale and den1onst rali'Jns of c r art teclu1iqucs \\·ill be featured. SliUfS On other fronts the AACN is : sponsoring a high level sympo.siwn in New Orlearu: where, for the first time, nurses will do the teaching while members of the other disciplines participate on panels. nurses are being given credit:l jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii by the patients themselves. II "Nurses will lead hospital grand rounds with physicians, emergency room s t a f f . radiologists and directors of the care units," Ms. Baldwin sa14. Diane Adler added that the New York Chapter of AACN will co-sponsor a symposium with a society of anethesiologists on the con- troversial topic of \Vhcn to Slop Treatment. They will lackle questions such as what to tell the family and \Vhen AACN also is developing a core of · instruction to train nurses in care for the acutely .. ii I. "\\'e're hearing more and more con11nents from patients as 'If it \veren't for you, I wouldn't be here. \Ve are the ones who arc lhere, all day, every day." "ft is a team approach: medicine has to be," Linda Baldwin added. .,It boils down to using ~ pie to the utmost of their abilities. to the maximum of their aptitude and interest. \Ve can't tell ,the nurse she can go th.is far and then stop," ~aid Diane Adler. VIRGINIA'S SNIP 'N STITCH SHOPPE 333'4 E•st Coest Hwy. e Coron• del ·M.r Phone 673 -8050 SEW A HOLIDAY DRESS! Be a dc-mw:c...doll or a sophisticated lady, as your llJOod commands in your cw.·n orbtinal Jl&rly gown for the ~la Christmas ball1. ChOOle from our fabu . Jous seleellon of velvet.A, velveteem, glittering bro- cades. :dinky ban-Jon knits. If you're the to iloN'd 1)'1)('. a simple long d1"e!11 acecntL'd with je\.\'t'l trin1. $c1v your own •nd be "You." Sec you auon. Virginia r.s. You'll &a\'C enough on the ball goy.'n over a ready· made, )'Ou con sr.leet a fun and exelilng print for R ho8:1il"I! outfit ror your holiday al·homo cntcrtaln-lng. e IANKAMUICARD e MASTU CHARGI I Ad Good 'tll TMS., NoY. 1 l I IS SELECTING A GIFT A PROBLEM? The Produce Mart has now on sale a beautiful selection of fruit ' gift packs. And best of all we will ship it for you 1nywhere in the U.S.A. with fast and dependable United P1rcel Service. Just pick out your choice and we do the rest. FRESH & CRISI' Iceberg Lettuce FRESH, LOCAL GROWN Tomatoes .......... ' ............................ . 10~ SCHOOL SIZE Red Delicious Apples 4 lb. bag/ 49~ &:ii c;;;;;;~GSSIZ~ ................................... 10~ 6 lbs. 75100 -sw1n-&-JUICY Tangerines COME AND CHECK OUR UNADVERTISED Sl'ECl.~LS DAILY WHOLESALE TO RESTAURANTS DAILY-FREE DELIVERY INGARDIA BROS •.. PRODUCE MART Yl('f'CMllA WI WILCOMf ~ N -==='= .. ="="='=M="=== 4, t OALASSO•I ITALIAH S llllAD-fllllSH DAIL.Y 2140 PLACENTIA AT VICTORIA COSTA MESA &45-1365 Soft1 _g"oet skin l•1th•r -so ••~y with pents or dresses-:-Cem•f" or black p•t•nt. $21 1012 IRYINE 541·H14 LS·l6• • MAOCUIA •l'Mf lllrtd!MC Sitt: 2 COi, I 9 Inell" (2S2 llM6) ' . Tr lea w surg rad and -A disc UCI can vol dise run cro ess re all Me cl in Cal UC , TU 1. I .. gro via sys co c v l 0 • • .• ,.ridll)', ~ove1nbtr b, 1973 DAILY PILOT 2i'. Cancer T+eatment Team Approa ch VELV ET FO G HAIRSTYLING IS Now :. 8466 INDIANAPOL1 5 AVE. By AU.ISON DEERR Of '!Ni O•!b 'llot Still Trealm cnt or cancer is a team e(fort. \Vorking in concert are the surgeon, pat hol og is t , radiologist, chemotherapist and igimunologist. .A panel of area physicians disc\Wed the role o[ each. .. cancer was defined at the UCl conference, Conquest or Cancer, for cancer society volunteers, as "a group of diseases caused by t h e runaway growth of cells that crowd out tissues needed for essential body functions." The.re are many forms of cancer. at least one for every kind of cell in the human bod,Y.. Each responds ~if· ferently to each form of therapy. Some have been sue· cessfully treated, while others respond poorly. "The surgeon·s role. is to remove rather than destroy all tumor cells ," explained Dr. Pt1elvin A. Shiffman. assistant clinical professor of surgery, California College of Medicine, UC!. regional lymph nodes which are the earliest mode for spreading the disease." He noted that a recent Supreme Court ruling requires that the surgeon tell .the pa· tient all modes of therapy available and then let the pa· tient deelde on his own course of therapy. Before, he said, the phflli· cian took all of these into consideration and chose the best approach. Now he rilust consider the patient's wishes as well. He used as an example breast cancer 1 and the con- troversy over r a d i c a I , modified radical and simple mastectomy and ' a lum· pectomy. Cancer or the breast i5 not a un ifocal disease, h e asse rted. Thus, removal of the lump alone, not the entire breast, will not be effective in more than 90 percent of the cases. Because, he said, there alreadf Is c a n c e r present in other parts of the breast and perhaps the other breast as well. INEFFECTIVE cosmetic purposes, .Is J>ecom· lng more ·and more common. He added that the aurgeon often works with , t h e radiologist, befwe to sllrink a tumQr and make a cure more likely, and afterwards to take care of what surgery can't. Chemotherapy, he 1ald, can take care or the tumor cells In the bloodstream. ''The surgeon must have the use of these people and the lrnaumologl!t irl e v e r y d a y care of the ca.ncer patient." Dr. Robert Orlando, 8'Sis· tant clinical professor of pathology, UCI, noted his most dramatic role as pathologist is during surgery, when a bl· opsy i3 made or tissue thought to be C81l<erOOS. It Is his job to defme the growth and pre- dict M behavior and sensitivi· ty to various modes of ther· apy. TEAMWORK , TUMOR REMOVED A simple mastectomy, tak· ing the breast alone, often is not effect:ive, because !he lymph nodes under the ann are already involved and can spread the cancer to other sites in the body. He noted that the aurgeon removes as much of the tumor as he can; the radiologist la used as an adjwtct before and after s urgery; the chemotherapy destroys more cancer celia, and the im· munologist takes over from there, hopefully to destroy the rest. 1. I "A twnor is a dynamic, growing organism which sends viable cells i n t o th e bloodstream and lymphatic system . The surgery en- compasses the tumor area and h·lore surgeons, he noted, are opting for a modified radical mastectomy, which preserves the major and minor pectoral mu s c I es ~ Breast augmentation later, for Dr. Ha Ivor Vennund, pro. lessor of radJological sciences and member of the local ACS board: "In the early stages of cancer, radiation is most ef· fective." and surgery is roore successruJ when used with ir· radiation before and after. He noted that in a Universi· Fo rget Women a·nd Children ". - Babies Come First PENELOPE POTTER December Rite Set Jn a home wedding ceremony Dec. 30, Penelope Valentine Potier will become the bride of Argyle Campbell. Mlss Potter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bailey Potltt 111 of Newport Beach, is a Kappa Kappa Gamma and graduate of the University of Southern California. She also is a graduate of Corona del Mar High School and Bradford Junior College, MasS&chusetls. Her fiance, son o( the William Pendleton Campbells of Corona del Mar, is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and use where he affiliated with Phi Delta Theta. By ERMA BOMBECK When a radio station caught fire recently, a disc jockey ran into the burning building and emerged happily with the ooe thing he considered worth . risking his neck for . . . a recording of Frank Slnetra singing; "Night and Day." When I asked myself what I would save if our home was in flames, .the answer was quick and unlaltering: the baby book of the children. I don't gel mellow too olten, but when I do I am positively sickening about It. January Rite Set A. Jan. TT wedding is being plaMed by Irene Rich and Jeffrey A. Sacks of Anaheim. News of the forthcoming event has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eric S. Rich or c.osta Mesa . ~fiss Rich is a graduate of Costa Mesa High School. Her fiance, son of Mr. ~ · P.1rs. Leonard Sacks o f . Anaheim, is a attended the UniversityolC a 11 f or n i a , Berkeley. 0 0 :l-01• YOU#" S hopping Convenience " I leaf through that baby book and can · almost aee the bald head and lhe-wTlnkled feet: smell the milk lir<ath and lalcumed bottom; feel the smooth skin and wet fists. 'That book.is Daddy with hair, a house the size of. a phone booth; me in J.. size 10. Jt can never be replaced. "Jf our house 1\"8S 00 ftre," I asked my family, "what would you save?" "Who aet it on fire?'' asked the youngest. "It doesn't matter who set the fire," I said. "I'm ooly asking what you woald save." '1hat's eaay,'1 he said. "my Easter candy In tile /rte<er." '"lbat's stupid," I &aid, "that can be replaced." "Yeah, but not 1D1Ul next Easter " be 12Dd. ''J'd 'save your hair dryer," said my daughter. "But what about all the fri<ndship pictures of yoor classmates you gathered?" "I see them at school/' she yawned. "I tblnk I would save my bowling ball," pondered my husband. • "You're kidding,'' I gasped. "'Thal llllng has been stored In the attic .so long, ti's fiat on the bottom. You never bowl anymore." AT WIT'S END "I know, but if a new house was being built and I didn't have an Utls yard work and Wide . repairs, I might have u~ to bowl a1ain." Aly other son hesitated. "I guess, first I'd grab Harry (our dog), <hen my box of snacks I keep 1111der lite bed, and then my can ol new tennis balls. U I still had some time, l'd check on you and Dad." "What would you save, · Mom ?" they asked. · I thought of the book with the pink faces that launched a thousand Christmas cards. The record ot imtnWlizations. The loving arms t h r o w n around Granddad's knees. The cardboard flowers stapled to a sucker, and said, "My list of babysitters." "That f~es, 0 t h e y grimace. J didn't want to blow my image. Besides, t keep the list ol baby-sitters In the back cf the baby book. Large Sizes • ·; SIZES 42 to 52 Sweater up, lady, and you're ready for a ll kinds of California · weather. We've got light·weight little shawl<ollar types, pebbly-wea ve long lengths -and lots of styles in between. from $21.00 Sunday Shop11tr? Fullerton Huntln9fon Beach Open 12 to s Ella · · Nor'sHALF·SIZE SHOP . ' . COS T A HUN T INGTON MESA BEACH 1IOS-..olT at.YD. M Hutm•TON CIHTIR ,,. __ .. ,., .. _, ,_,. __ """'·' NOW U outria HILLS MALL • LAeUNA HILLS 10.f<M II .... • -1w -•11 tM- ••11ltA .. em.rt1 • •••,.; Cftrrtr• ~ ~· I Some persons a r e im· munologlcally lncompctent she said, some are brought on by chemotherapy and some people are congenitally defi· clent in lymphatic or olher cells which fight disease. Some have a genetic disposi-uOO toward the disease, for example those \\•Ith Do\\11's Syndrome (Mongoll ism). In immWH>therapy, she said, the patient is treated with injections or serum from the b;lood of patient's cured of cancer, or injected with viable cancer cells and BCG, a living organism like TB th.al comes from cows . "It has been used with some HUNTINGTON BEACH, 536-8829 success in melanolllll. La...tP n ~=::=-:~:=:::=:;==:=:=::=:=::=::=:=:=::=:~;;;;;;;=:;;;;;;==;=;~-~i?Y~:1~m~d ~1':J:!~ HRU NOV. 10th SPEC IJ"l.JL THRU NOV. 10th "immunology therapy is very new nnd un .. tablished," Delicious O ven Hea d y she said. "but in the long run it is the best way to B I H If do what nature does best." one ess 0 All emphasized ho"·cver, that current cance r treatment is a tea1n effort. The c . h G me Hens modalities ol surgery. radia· orn1 s a . lion therapy, chemotherapy and imtnunology must be used together today to provide the best hope for the cancer pa- tient. stuffed with RlCE & \I UStIB.00\f::-i 8 OZ. Size-Reg. $1.29 99~ Packed 6 to a Box Each Fresh Ptanch 333 E. I 7TH ST., COST A MESA 64 2-4311 r:?. ,, ,, ~ fl · ifr~l?J ~""onre Undercounter Dishwashe r s1999s Combination of strong detergent and hot, hot water helps fight germs. Super-surge washing action, two wash cyc:les, du al detergent dispenser, J.b\ade pul verizer. Fits st an~ard 24" cabinet openings. ' Decorator colors. ~ STILL TIME TO INSTALL BEFORE . THANKSGIVING DAY! ·See it in actio n at th e Orange Coast Coll eg e Coo king Sc hoo l at Edwards Newport Cinem a • The Frl9ldaire Touch-M-Cook Range . . • . Tomorrow's cooking anC:ICleanin g-~o nveniencesilere-today':"". -""'".:· Easy cooking is right at your fingertips with this revolutionary newTouch·N·Cook Range from Frigidaire and General Motors. Just touch the control you want, the time or tern· perat ure settings you need. Instantly your cooking instructions are relayed to the range with precision. The Solid·State con· trol pan el is flat and smooth; wipes clean with a damp cloth. And no special cookware is required . T he oven? Just lock the oven door, and with the touch of a finger it begins clean· ing itself automatically . Oran91? Coast Colle9e 2'.!nd fl nnual Cooking School Last Cookin9 Session Nov. 1 !j ar Edwards t~ewport Cinema, Fashion lslond. Dont flt!iss Ir! WE MU ST MAKE ROOM FOR NEW '7 4 AR R/V ALS! PRICE REDUCED ON SYLVANI A COLOR TV WITH REM OTE CONTROL Save Over $80 ! ·. Sylvan ia Model CL2347f'R, big 25" diagonal 'picture with . beaut iful Medit_erranea n stylo caSineL C~1rom..ttri )l1 +Mf pi~· tur• tub·e Gibrattar 90ITA\l c:hass i1 Perma.L::1c.k(lMl the antt· . 9oof c.ol~r; tuning system. lnst.:int ColortrMi fo r a perfect•: picture in seconds. Remot e tuning contrc-1 inc h1ded. -Nrw ·TO~L-FREE-SERVIC:E PHONE -ZI NnM 7-3437- ~avls•brown w ........... _ ........... -..... __ ~··· ......... " ...... " ..... .. .... ~.- • • •• ' ' I ! , Alf DAILV PILOT • l • • Age Level, Not Drug lJse Going Down Bf LAURIE KASPER Of ... DIUr Pllet l,_lf Isn't drug we by yoWJg.stera less the,. days? "Absolutely and naUy no.i" answers Or. Herbert 0. Brayer, coordinator for Drug Abuse Education In the Oran1e County Department of Education. "II Is greater today than it has ever been In our history." He told ~~meo ali.ndlng his wotlcahop al Uh< Orange County District Pl'A's conveotiooette that there are a tremen- dous quantity of drugs available in the county. And many of th ... drugs, he IettUled, are going to the young teenager. At another meeting · with parent!, a couple told him that their children, aged 7, 9 and 11, bad all been offered drugs that week. A U:.year~ld bad come to their house in hopes of selling Uhem some "grass." AllhoUih only about a third of the hl1h .l!Cliools in tile <OOllly expels students for drug use, last year more than 400 students were expelled from school. While 4,320 are known to U!e drugs, Dr. Brayer said, the number is "no more than 10 percent of the number of youngsters involved in drugs at any time in this county. TIURD GRADE USERS "We've got third graders in 0ran5'1'.e County who are using drugs," he said continuing his testimony. Jn the next three grade levels he cited it as 1'a terribly serious matter:" '"Ibis L! not a fad. It's not going to dry up and blow away." n.Jl!erllO qe In_ Qi:anJe Co\lnty for a chlld lo be given the opportunity to use dnl&• Is ·betW\'<11 his ninth and eleventh birthdays ", , • and you •ren'l Coihi lo know a thing about It," he warned. And he uked the mothers, "'At that moment, on Whal basis la your child eoina to make a decision?" . Mucb of It, be asserted, will be baaed on the tralnlnl and experience the child rec.lve1 al -before he or ahe , reaches ochool age. Dr. Brayer Aid a aurvty of aeveial millkln youths showed that ruaons for drug use were: l'Uriosity, peer group pressure, Insecurity, boredom, lllluence and permluiveoess, escape, rebellion, failure, ab9ense of standards and ethics abd mental and physical problems. "1bese are not. the kind of reasons lhat you uoually deal wllh," said Uh< educator before pn>vlng that "telling them about It (harms of drug abuse) Isn't going to do any good." ASK FOR CIGAJIETl'E AU he bad to do was ask for a cigarette, which several women offered him. On ·Jan. I. 1965, the warning that cigarettes ''may.. be dangerous to your health" was required on all cigarette packag~. "Yet," said Dr. Brayer, "more people srmke today than have ever smoked in our history." Citing smoking's relaUonship to lung cancer and diseases of the cardiovascular system, he said death in women used to be 25 percent Of men. Now II la up lo 50 perttnl. "U you keep It up you will have women'• lib and equallly," be chided. ConUnulng his testimony, the educator said lhere ai:e 9 to II million ale<JllOlics in the c«Lntry and n1ore al~J ii being consumed per ca\>li. than ever before In the eountry's h!Jtory. Alcohol, be said, spills more !amjlles In dl\>orce than Infidelity. MIND DOESN'T CHANGE "The point ol It ia, givlog you facts doesn't change your mind. Facts don't change klda' minds and !hey don't cjlange adulta' minds. "Why do you expect your children. to be any different than you?0 be asked. Bui he waan'l offering the' PTA mothen a hopeless case. Instead he wu promoting the workshops bis staff often In numerous school districts for teachen and parents (which both husbands and wives·must attend). Testing in schools where the workshops have been held, he ·said, has shown a •positive change ln behavior in each achoo\, a significantly positive change in attitutes ln each school aDd a d.ecrease ln the number of children in elementary through hJgh schools using drug s or becoming Involved with drugs. For those who haven 't attended the work.shops. however, he offered £our steps for the parents to follow in working with their'children. His .first suggestion was to develop positive attitudes. Partnta shou1d, he said, talk with their children about things olher than why they lLSe drugs. TREAT CAUSES "Treat the causes and not the effects which ls what we do all the tlme," he charged. Mosl par'IJlls, he explained, &pank Uielr children for what they did rather than fluding out why and dealing with the cause of the child's action. "We have io discover attitudes • • . Every behavior bas its cause at¥1 every cause has Its attitude." From attitudes, Dr. Brayer said, children should learn alternatives. A child usually leama tbal When he doo something wrong , he la pwli.shed. But, ·the educator asked, why doesn't the child learn the alternatives to hit actions first? When they learn alternatives, chltdren must then be able to make a choice. Parents should begin to develop decision making skills in tbelr chlklren before they are a year old. Finally. skills or behavior should be developed in the cluld. "Every behavior you do everyday Ls to satisfy one or more need• in younelf," he said. One theory enumerates the eight basic need s of affection, respect , well being, power, skill, enlightenment, rectitude and wealth. People behaving normally seek satisfaction In the socially acceptable way but d'lildren need help in learning this. "We (the schools) can't substitute for you at all," Dr. Brayer said. "Unless you do it, they'll find a coping behavior and those coping behaViora are the ones. you aren 't going to like." Units Seeking Papers, Volunteers COLLEGEPK.PJ'A: Paper drive from 8 to 10 a.m. Satur· day, Nov. 17., EaCh clilld-will . receive a snowcone when.they deliver papers tQ the school. Claisroom collecting the most paper will receive a party and 1 tree to be planted on the ochool growxts . , . Book Fair Monday, Nov· It, through Friday, Nov. 16. Purchases may also be made at the general meeting T u e s d a y , Nov. 13, at 7:30 p.m. DAVIS PTA: Volunteers are needed for the Parent Corps. Interested persons may COO· tact Pat King, chairman for further infonnation . , • Party for all sixth grade students will take place from 3 to 5 p.m. l<UDOITOW. EADER PTA: ~trs. Ellen Ketcham of the Orange Coun· ty Repertory Theater will speak to board members Tuesday, Nov, 13. Her talk will deal with the theater's program for children and tbe possible lntnxluction ol Hve theater at the school level • __.__._ Unit's eartJ.cipat!on in Operatioil Merry Ouistmas Will begin with a clothing drive scheduled M o n d a y through Friday. Nov. 26 to. 30, followed by a drive to collect canned goods and toys. AU items collected will be donated to the Assistance Leegue ol Huntington Beach for di!tribution to needy famities at Christmas. EASTBLUFF PFO: Paper drive Thursday, Nov. 15. Class securing the most paper will be treated to an ectivity of. its choice. Protits will be used for additional teaming aids for the school .. , Deadline for tickets to the children's Benefit Booked • Orange Coast Chapter, Scripps College Alum· nae scholarship fund will benefit from addi· tlorual sales hours at B. D a Ito n, Bookseller, Fuhion !JI.and. T b e -llOl'e-wlll-remaln open tram 8:30 to 9:45 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 14, md pononnel will han- dle ales during the --pallllc event.-Making ielectlons are Mrs. Wil-lllm Jordan Oefl) and Jin. Dwlls Keith. ' . ' • winter movies series is Fri- day,· Nov. 9 ... Labels from sOup can!'" are stillneeded, · deadline iS \Vednesday, Dec . 5. FULTON Pl'O: J\.!embers will assist in conducting vi sion screening of students tomor- row and Tuesday, Nov. 13. Students from kindergarten, secorid, fourth and' seventh grades will be tested. Efforts will be coordinated by l\1rs. Fredctie Douglass. chainnan. and Mrs. Marianne England, co-chairman. MATER DEi PG: Parents of students are invited to at- tend open house at 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 11. in the gym~ nasium. FQl!owing the assembly. parents will follow their children's class schedules. Refreshments will be served during "lunch periods" a'nd at the end of the evening. MESA VIEW PTA: Dr. George Haddad of the Pace Institute will speak on Attitude -The Fourth Dimension in teaming at genera meeting Tuesday, NQv. 13, at 7:30 p.m ... Book Fair will be sponsored by the unit in school Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, Nov. 28-30. NEWLAND. Pl'O: Second aMual candy sale will be con· ducted from Monday through Friday, Nov. 12 to 16. Prizes will be awarded lo the children selling the largest amount of candy, and pr~ ceeds from the sale will be used ,to purchase schoo.l equip- ment. OKA PTO: Old·fashiooed bo:r supper for the fa~y is -·---:-·- scheduled at 7:30 p .m. Wednesday, Nov. 14 following general meeting. Box suppers will be auctioned. and schQol sweatshirts and identification tags will be sold. PAULARINO PTA' To help parents becon1e more aware of learning disability prob- lems, Mrs. Nina Bunyea who is with the Western Institute of Human ReSQUrces will discuss the subject. She also is a teacher at McNally School. l!Lrt. Bunyea wjll speak at the Paularino PT A meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wed- nesda y, Nov. 14 in the multipurpose room • • • Father..son spaghetti dinner fl'Qlll 6' 30 to 8 tonight. Mrs. Gloria Venerdi, chainnan an- nounces that there will be special surprise en- tertainment. Admission is 50 cents . . . Canned food drive for needy lamilies will take place Monday, Nov. 12, through Friday, Nov. 16. I-terns needed are puddings, macaro.ni, spaghetti products, instant mashed potatoes and any caMecl items. Mrs. Judy Cosentino, chainnan will pro- vide containers in e a c b classroom. ST. JOACHIM PG : Mrs. Mel Ventura, cultural arts chairman invites all interested parents to join grades five through eight tomorrow at 10,30 a.m. in the partsh hall to hear Larry Capune, long distance paddle< speak on Iris Wet Travels ... Newspaper drive will continue throughout the year on the first weekend of each month. Money derived from iliedrives will be used to furnish the learning center. Selected students lrom grades three through eight will vis.it various convalescent homes Thursday, Nov. 15, to visit with patients and decorate Uhelr l'O<¥llS for Thanksgiving . • • Providence Speecb and Hearing Center will screen students Wednesday, Nov. 14, in the parl.sh hall. ST JOHN AUX.: First of continuous monthly p a p e r drives under the direotion of Mrs. Gregory Finn, ways and -• means chainnan will take plac~l!:I!~ no.on TuesdaJ ... Noy . 13. Papers may be delivered to the parking kit ... Bicycli safety rodeo for students in th!rd, fourth and fifth grades will take place Wednesday, Nov. 14, starting at 9 a.m. Mrs. Freddie Lee, safety chairman is in charge. SERVITE PARE NTS GUILD: Hawatian Hol.l(iay is the theme of a fashion sbo.w to be presented at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 14, in the high school auditorium. Chairmen are Mrs. Gordon McCoy and Mrs. Frank Ryan, assisted· by the Mmes. Clive • Le Volr, Lynn Bednark and Wiiiiam Shoemaker. Vl&IO PTO: Drive to eel· 1ect 40,000 soup can labels is underway to earn a sound film strip projector. Mrs. Carol Wilder, president, Invites all friends ol the scbool to save_lhe:ir_JOUP'-"lOOJ"-"""'- brtng Uhem to school by Satur- day, Dec. 8. WARDLOW PTO: You're as Special as Can Be ii the theme of t b e mother-daughter fashion show, by t he Broadway at 7:30 p. m . Wednesday, Nov. 11, in the multipurpose room. Students and teachers will serve as models, and Girl Scout C'.adet· le Troop !Ot7 wUI provide decorations for the event. Refreshments will be ae<Ved and door prizes will be awanl- ed. Tickets, at fl for adults and 75 cents for children, may be purclwed at the door. I Bara IMl 1ra 111 right In clns of Mrs. Adi llllbray who runs l11t on•tffcher school in Flordia. Room for Improvement Instruction Isolated II)' DAVID L. LANGFORD DUETl'E, Fla. (UPI) -Tbe puplla al niette School call her ~•MJu Ada," the last d Florida's wilderness scl>oc>Jnwms, A matronly woman wllh •Uy oollfed balr, abe smiles '--.ml~ IOftly ol her tribulatlorll and small vic- tories. Barefoot llrlt·graden helped clean up the 111881--Milt Ada -her lull name ia Mrs. Ada BUbrey -opened Uh< screenless windows ol the aW<!lterlng schOOlhou!e for the flnl limo and the ~ swanned In. • The IChool board llUI hun'l ""'1• anything about i he cracted •and peeling paint on the old fnune , building, but Uh< nio1-.·1 teat anymore and lhl1 year new gas blo11tra bava replooed the old ke•ne beaten. "Out bare II can 1el pretty cold and Ult dllldftn llaed 10 )Ill Ill and lidftr anUI aboul 10 or II o•~r In Uh< morning," said ... MJss Ada, a with their gloomy hanging teacher Since World War II. JnOSI. If the lovebugs are a nuisan· It's the only building in sight ce and the weather a hardahip, at this dot-on-the-map ,.~ Miss Ada 'doesn't complain "•' loudly. She wants IQ keep ber for Ille Dry Prairie Baptist schoolhouse open. Chutth next door. 11 's Uh< last one-teacher II It closed the 21 children school in Florida, an educa· in grades .;.; through four Uonal oulposl for -22 -children-would have to ride a bu.I 35 tucked away in the nortliwest miles One-way to one fl. the corner or Manatee County. big scboolo In Palmelto or 'lbe area L! a sparsely someplace else. • populated-Oalland -of-cllnu-"J know I wouldn'.Lllke._a groves and phosphate mines , large school," sakl Mlsl Ada, tomatoes and watermelons, who charts her ~ course and booy brahmas grazing a! both principal and teacher. among spindly palmettoes. "Evtry now and then l see "Evtry year w~ th Ink some ot my old pupllo and they're go.Ing lo clole It lho;y aay Jbey would like to down, 0 aakl Mill Ada, who come back to Duette." bad been teaching here 16 Ml• Ada's pupils all while years. Every· Monday obe and predomlnanU, blonde, all pick• up oev.n gallons of milk eome fl'<Jlll the surrounding to aupply the lunchroom for lrll<k farma, catUe rllllCbes a week and she e&n"les the and citrus groves, so m e school's ree6rd player 1n the calchlni the bus " car)Y u ltun1t d. her car to keep II g,30 a.m. .Many c nm e '""" being stolen. barefoot, for comfort ir not Duotle School WU built du!' eoonomy , 'lnl, lhe .i.,....ion on II ..,.... "We donl requlrt ohctes. u an! la shaded by great oaks you can see," Mia Ada said· • a v f pl b c I ' ~ I New UCI Professor . Studying Densit.ies - By GEORGE LEWAL Of fM Deity f'Utt Stiff REFLECl'IONS by Reyn Sheffer .. ,.1, ............. hurt . th• ......... " .. °""99 Chapmll• '"'l Whether' Ute)' an '!alt \\'Ords, gentle word •, orr ""'ords v.1th a judicious touch of bla rney , it is unlikely that they \\1ill hurt the .tongue if they nre not Intended to hurt the per. son at whom they are direc- ted. Biting and cruel Words ... particularly lf ill-con- sidered ••• are sharp.corn- ered devices thal somltilhPS leave a. palntul memory with those who utter them:. Rarely, there may be a time and a place when words with unkind a nd ungentle implications can be justi- fied .. However, It i~ impor- tant that this ju1tlflcatlon Is fairly an4 reasonably con- slderOO before words are called u pon to state a thought.which we might lat- er Tegret. You can be sure of com- pletel,y appropTiate services refll.rdless of your faith or creed. Services can be con- dueted In any church, in any cemetery or· memorla.1 park. strictly accordiflg to' the preference of the family. a::H6FF61$. ,,._, moll'l'U.t.llY 97• SOUTH COAST tilGHWAY LA$UN~JEACH 4•4-ms • SAN CLEMENTE 1131 NORTH El CAMINO REAL 492-0100 'Pan-OEMania . . :lkz,HEAVY GLASS MUGS 0'41 n ... Wk'"' l Cllk• BREAD WARMER FINE COOKWARE - IMPORTED & DOMESTIC WE l'IATVlll1 NOlllTAICE DINNERWARE GLASSWARE by DURAND LE CRl!VSET COOICW.-.RE TAGUS COPPER OXFORO HALL FL.-.TWARE WILTON l'EWTER $A IATlliR CULTEl!:Y ·-· 7 pc. GLASS SALAD or FRUIT SET lrkl\IOlt boWI tnd 6 1n11ttf'I. •no 1tNl1111 G!thft,.,.. ==-·~ • • •' '• I• .s.i•s 2Va fl)t, STONEWARE BEAN POTS -&-4-CUP.S • SPECIAL ORGAN BUYS .. :· "YAMAHA• SPINET ORGAN lt11e9in• •11 1ut."i.1tic rflythM tt.1t pl•'r' .wifii•,0111 ••• yo1i1 .c•• pN..t a ••lfititde of ift•f11i1-11ts eftd pN d \t C e retli•tic iounds , , • with tauch mpo111e vib r I t o; chill'llt, 111d lfllll' ath•r Y IMllhl f.1ture1. .......... !995 ......... SJffl . .._..., , ON QSIEST TUMS The Lo~rey Salelllte AMtW-.laH_.l• l•I '•stlf .. ,H1r1'1 a two kiybo1rd, ·11 11ot• podal· bo1rd Sp!itet Mod•I Hom• Ql'fln It I price within tha r11ch of noryone's budgot. IM.S6!1 $]95 SA.LI NICI , • NewW..tllnr SPINET ORGAN 2·koybo1rd1, 1111tain1d plt"- c1111ion, slide control • for t;lawaii111 G11lt11r Rhythm ind ln1tnlm•nt Drvms, Cym· b1l1 ln1•h11 111d • ll'J111y offl•r 1wclie1hr1 f,, .. ,.s. IM.$1!H S695 SALi PWICI • Wurllmr u.ytioard ORGAN 1111 synttl11lter bybo1N .,.. c111 pr11et. ll111l1tlc ln•f,... 1111nt 1111..41 IHl1idl119 l 1nj1, Vlffl,' Plono, Chlr1111-. otc. • • , 1"h1 "fei1urr1•k•" wlttl .u.,.1t.4 1ffeots. • \ Mu1ic ••ker 11ctvally plaY1 r••I 1ounCl1 of pianos, btn· jos, 9uitan, d1111iu •nd doz· •n• of i111hull'J111t combi"• etion• wiU1 j1i11t • p1i1Ji of •· button. ~ SJ4t YALUI s195 SAU PllCE 11'1• Finelt h1•trUlfl•jlh of Tl'ltir Kind Mon•y C•n luy • , , fe•t11rin9 Tli• N•w•.•t Aco1utic i nd Clauictl Mod11 l1 ••• in YAMAHA. OIU.NDO, OlPHEUS. FRANCISCAN, ·TAU.MINI. ·•IHI ~' •th•r1 •• , S.lacjio111 tliat h•I'• th11 U11lqt1e C- lti111tin of Ct1f+Nn.li11lhl;;'e11d lt••1on1bl• Pric••I ~!!~ .:·$~.~5 ~ .. -.-.. _ ... SALE PRICES 19 .88 ~:~ :!R~P __ .......... -.... SALE !'RICI 529 088 We Have Many ~!!~ ~·~1~~ ................ SALE PRICE 53,.88 USED ORGANS l l'-'...;;,;.;,;~;,;.;..;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;.;.;;;..;.;;.~......,..--.....A . PllCID 1n5 flOM ...,7 lilr1 n•w •.• 1 f1vorif1 with prof111ion11 ls •• , a dtlight to th1 b19 i11ner . BE r I ER GUITARS 6 and ·12 Strin9s ••• lncludi11CJ Elec. Models . For l oo k•, For Sound, for Action, for l i9 la191M1 1'1rfo""11nc1 ••. All Famous Brandi ••• Now Goi119 At~T111~ Mo1t lito cr1dibl1 ·s avin91 During Our Gig1111tic GIA.ND OPININ• SAUi R09. $135.95 -------·-·sALE PRICE s59 088 Reg. $169.95 ...... --..... SALE PRICE s79 .88 .... SlH.n ... -._, .......... SALE PRICE s99 .00 w~::~ .... $495 1 .. ------------------... NOW ONLY PROFESSIONAL GUITARS ON 'EASIEST nRMS Lowrey "Lincoln. wood" IUsedl ORGAN 6 ind 12 5trl119•, lnc1udint El1ctric Mod11!1 , •• CN•tion• ~y MAITIM. FlNDEl, OVATION, •llSON, •UtLD, Slpalwe YAMAHA, and many oth1rt ••. All Goln9 At The Moat In· cr1dibl1 Savings During Olir •RAND ONNINCl SAUt . •119 R09. ~229.95 ........... -SALE PRICE $ 149 A ver11tile l111trum1nt with hunclracl1 of c0Mbination1. let-$349.9S> -···-·--SALE· PRICE luilt to 11111 for $1200 $189 WOITH16,1USlD $195 .... 5495.9$_ , ................. SALE PRIC::E _ OTH•S YA.LUU TO $610. GllATLY llDUCIO NOW ONLY l'-----~;.;.;,;;ii;; ................. ;io ........ _____ ""' Used Hammond M-100 Deluxe Spinet ORGAN • Dr1w b1n • P11rcie11io1 • -Pr1-11tt • R1 .. 1rb. Plv1 many oth1r 111elo1iv1 H1mmond F11h1t11. "' WORTH USID $695 $1295 NOW ONt.Y ....-FlnoUIM .THOMAS SPINET ORGAN lr.41911 combln1tioM: ••• Nno :q111llty for th• nto•t dl1crim· · S.1tir1~, fiftl1h1d l" ·Cor1tttn· !M'•'Y w 1ll)1i1t. WOITH USID -.:'~. ALL ACCESSORIES lncludi11g Strings, lr.4ut111, R1tcl1, Mikes, Pitch PipM, Oils, Poli.ft, Drum Sticks, Anlp. Acc111or101, Mi1c. Ptrh, Etc.. Etc., Etc. ¥2 PRICE · .. DURING -OUR GRAND 0:!~~· 11HohW' HARMONICAS ·M· .... -s29s ltt· SS.25 SW PllCE "ILUISHAIP" $325 IEG. SI.if • SAU PllCI~ ..__ NEW SPJNET l11t knowfl ltroncl fcoft 't ••"tio11 11111\1) Full II not• li•yboard, fin._,• co11c1rt hill ton• and 11111rtly 1tyled th1t Male" It • w1lcoM1 aGditlH to 1111ny dHor. · .... ,,.,, s395 SALi PllCI :-111 ~ •••••• s~ts H11•1•1ar.w.~S .._ .......... ... FULLERTON·~MUSIC • 'FOUNTAIN ·v ALLE 18191 .. "EUCLID . AVE, cq:~:aA:_ • """ ..... ," ,...., ......... °"' 0,..1 -· .... lot. 10.l•IO, M. 'Ill t , S.. 1·1 18120 IROOKHURST "'~[::.r.-r..':i; .. ~""' 111 .. ;.;oN&9;;~025-• ·' . --•• 1 -Thursday, Novrrnt>er 8, 1~73 $ DAILY PILOT JOSEPH K. CORTES~ D.Y.M. CAPISTRANO VETERINARY CLINIC - ll401 C•"'i"• C1phtt1110 S111 Ju•11 Capi1tr1110 Offi11 Ho11tt: Deily 9-l St hird1y 9.12 Da y or Night C1U 496·1111 Vi1it1 to tour f1cillti11 i11•it1J AITHUl J ... uzzmA, M.s.s. ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF HIS OFFICES FO• PEll.SONAL, FAM ILY, MAii.iTAL COUNSELIN& JOI It NIGUEL ROAD SUITE I LAGUNA Nl~UEl, CALIFORNIA 92677 OFFICE 49S-1"10 av A"l"OINlMENT 18191 EUCLID AVENUE COINn Of CONDOI AYI. JUST NOITH of SAN Dlll50 MY. .. -.. -~ ........ ..... ·14.11 o..+1t1"di119 pl1no th11t fir e11c11d1 th• 11101t rl9lcl 1pacific1tlon'-111 lu1urlon 'Fr.flch l'rori1ttl1I Ch•"'fo -.S1J45 s595 SAU PllCI "Yamaha" Console A trwly profe11lo1t1I favorite for looka, for tone, and for acti" u ........ S695 SAU PllCI ALLADVERTI D mMS SUIJECT TO PRIOR SAL! NEW PIANOS PRICED RlOM $395 AND UP "Rudolph · Wurllw' CONSOLE A11tM!l'ffc1lly 1 t y I • 4 lry 1w1rcl wl11nl119 cl11i9111r I(. Gunntr a.n1011, f11tvrl119 fflo Rudolph W'lrlin.11r Dur1ph1nic $01111dbo1rd. Ha• three work.; i11g p•d•I• ••• I 0 y••r WI .... ranty covtn ff11 e11tir1 pl1111 111d fi11ilhl U•.S1tl s495 SALi PllCI ''Taller'' I Used I GRAND wo~.·-s395 MOW ONLT N.,. BABY GRAND ... GUITARS. AMPS AMPS Fe11d1t, Ph11th, T ,,.,,.,., S-... Gib1011, Randall, Voi:, Al .... 1'11.,...,, PCI •ally ..... ,. ONlc>IO..; SJMI, ...... ,,... 7·- 0NI •IOUP $"8111 u• ... s1n.t1~7- 0111 .. 0 ... $t1:9J'W .. , ... ...... 1411 11 WE·R IT PIANOS ROCK ORGANS DRUM$. Mlm P.A. SYSllMS, New 4-Pc. Dn111 Outfits s ... ,., la-. MM..W T-. Aoor T ... ,._ .tt.b ..i "'"''" :!i~~ $175 USED PIANOS. raten NOM 169 USED SPINET LOOKS &OOD 'lAYS GOOD wo-:,~,us11 S1n5 NOWOMLY ~7- . • " l ' \ • 30 DAI LY PILOT PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Thursday, Novrmbtr 8, 2q73 PUBLIC NOO'ICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICflT'IOUI IUSIN•11 NAMI IT.t.TIMaNT l'ICTITtOUI llJllMllS ~':.. '::i1~ ptf'MN ltt_ tto!llG J• SALE! TV Cancellations 'Calucci's Dept.,' ' 'Roll Out' Axed By JAY SllARBIJ'M' protest with ABC oboot tho movie, he said-there wouldn't be any. • TONIGHT'S ' ' TV IDGHLIGIITS NIC D 8:00 -Ironside. Chlel Ironside (Ray· mond Burr) poses as a •kid row wtn·o In !his spe- cial two-hour segment with David Wayne and Kim Darby. CBS II 9:00 -"The Graduate." Th is ac- cl.aimed 1967 comedy comes to TV for U1e first time with DU$lin Hoffman , Anne Bancroft and ·Katharine Ross. l'ICTIT!CIUI SUllNflS NAMI n.tiT•M•HT TEltllA Gllt.l'Hl)I,, 1'10 I! 1 • t NAMI ITATIMaNY ,.,.. folt"""'9 Pfl'l.ot'll trt 4oint !dlllfl'• "'lie '1111, ltn!I Ari1, Cl. Tl'tl followl119 "'""' i. dolfllil ltutlntu tout111111 11: t'mlS •: DAL! Cl.OVTl!ll ASS0C1ATl.I, 2091 V'lc Jo.Jilt~. 1"' MIPh. NI. ti, • kALIO IA•TH SHOES OF a.lGVNA, l u1h'>•1• C'"l.,. Orlvt, Sul,. UO, ltvlnt, Codi MIM, CL '2611 HEARING AID BATTERIES NEW YORK (AP) -lt's only November, but tlle ax already l.t falllng on this season's new TV shows. The latest to get cancellation notices are "Calucci's Dept." and "Roll out." The notices from CBS brass bring to four the number of new programs canceled so far. ABC already bas 'axed "Bob & Carol &: Ted &: Alice," while CM last week said it was folding the "New Pe r r y fl.1ason" series and replacing It Feb. 10 wllh "Apple's Way." .. VERY FRANKLY.'' he said, "the thing we've decided to do is to keep quiet about it because it (a protest) only serves to heighten interest in P.l•••••D•••••1E.,.••• .. ::iu ..... '! the film." ABC D 10:00 -Streets o[ San Francisco. Po- ker players steal a shlpment of radioactive gold. Herb Edelman and Anthony Zerbe guest. THAT SERIES, created by P1CT1T1ou1 su11N•ss Earl Hamner, author of the 1'54 South Cotil H19hw1,, L1111M1 Ctllfornl1 ""4 Terry ~· L.Ct.lr, '55'1 SIOl1orn •ffch, C1tll. ftlSI 0•1• '"""''''• SlS71 l it Sur, 0.tM 111'11'11, !IT-Ctlll .... • MlfYlfl IOl'Mltlfl, lUIO 0<.tt" W1y, lll'olnl, Ctllfotfll• ttllf Thie Wlln .. II eorteluclld by I Otf\«ll l.•94ml l"ctl. C1Hf. flt51 TPll1 butl1111s II (OlldUCIMI b)' I Hmlt.d ptrt!MflPllp Tttl1 tou5lnn1 11 conducted by •~ p.trln1nhlp. Vic Alnll'ldlr l.ncllvldwal. 0111 Cklvllfl', Th.It llllll"llnl "'" fil ed wtlh ll'tl M1lv411 l om1ttln 0-•I 1'1rl"tr CounlY Cltrk of Or111t1 C-IY Oft ,Tllll . Sllltfl'llnl 'lo'll flied wfltt '"' Tlllt tllllnttfll Wl l Uled .... 1111 Ille NOVM!lttr s. 1•n Ctiul'it'f Cltrk or Of1nge C01Jnl'I' on COUfllY Cltrk of Ortng t Coun!Y Oii ,..!fMI NtvtmW 22, 1'7! oet-r 29, 1973 l'llbl llll'tlll or1nc11 CN•t O•llY 111'1lol 1'2"1t l'·lmt Movfl'llbfl' I, IS. tr. :rt, 1'7l :tll1·7' lll'lltill"*" OtlnDI: CiM:I Otlly Piiot, l'ubli$Plllf Or'll'IOt Ca.51 0111)' 1'1111. NO¥tn'lbfl' l, I. lS. 22. 19'3 3311.73 NovtmDlr I, •• IS. tt, un 11'4-73 PUBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE MAMt ITAT•MllJIT Cll'lll'KIAI. l'AOCllOtfllOI Cl' TNI IOi.'IO (Ill' !UP'llVllClllS 01' Tiit tollowll'lt ptf'ton 11 doing bullt'\111 top-rated 11 Waltons," is about CJt.t.JllGI COUNTY. C.t.Lllll'ClllMIA 11: a suc-ssful '.. An I S•fl .. AM, C.llfotMlll THI w11:1te1t1 GllOUlll', 130S 111'1rk .... U.lo> gees A reoul•r l'!ltttlno -' ltl• '°''' ol SuP«Vi.er• ., Or•no• c_,ly, c.11torn11, 11.0 Av• .. ••"°"' 1u.11c1. C1lltor1111 ""11 architect who gives up the 11nl!'IO " ""' GoYtrnl111 lotrd of ltit 011lrk11 oov•r_, • .,. n.. lot10 .t SllPll· P.O. lox oMU, 1rvl119, CL '2"4. good life there and returns v!sor1, Wll 11 .. d <Klvrltr lO. 1'1l, 11 t ::IO J..M. Th• fol1ow!119 Mmtd memlMr• Jol'l11 P'. Tur111r, 130S l'ttk J.ve., , tlelrio pr&1nt: 1tori1kl w. C•Utl"'•· c1111rme111 it. w. s1ttl11, o.v1c1 L. 11k1r, J1:1IP11 111!>09 1111!'lcl, Ct. nH1:. , with his family to live in A. Olldrlch, Jtt1pll e. Clerk 111d 1111 Cltrk. Thi• ~lneu 11 1191119 conducl'ICI h' h to f A I J.v111111DM1 E1t.tmfl'll 1, •cc.,tld. !••"'*'' to £d tson co. '°' H1r110r Ju1111c111 ,,, lndlv1111111. IS ome WD o pp eton, 011tr1<1 eomp1ex 11 Ql•ntlll. Tri. ,.rotNillon Deptortmtfll llwohlllf fu!'lcl ls ,,,. John Ill'. Turn•r Iowa. cr•sld. J.ppllc1tkln fOf' t M•llPOWfl" l'llllfllflll Ortnt ls 1pproved. A-'leellon fot Thi• 111t1mtnt tllltd wtlPI the County 1 or1nl, ltl• Rt0iollll CrlrnlMUlllU UOOl'•torf 1,...ov_t lll'rogr1m, 11 1p. Clerk ol Or1n111 County Oft: Ocl. 11, ABC is filling its "Bob & pr .... ld. H•rlno It ..i ror •nnn•ttoft to OrWID' CM!t"!' Strei! 1.1ttitlno ~1n1-~ 11n. Carol" time slot w1'th mov1'es Olttrlet No. 1. l'lilr(....._ for c~ty dftlllrlmtnb '" ._oveo. ltfl'ICICM'trY bDI'· P...ttt1t , .. 1no o1 monl•, F1i1t1erton School D11tr1ct. i. •PPI'°"*'. ,.,~ .... of ,.1.. lll'vbtldltd °''"'' Cotst 01uy lll'llcrt, •-1 Pacbie of until Nov. 28, when it starts cent11 UnllltO $thoot 0111r1ct 11onc11 I• 1pproved. CM.111>9 In llowt fof' l r•lldl Octobtr 11, lio 1rtd Nowm~r 1, 1, -3 rWlll;"" the fi'rst of fi've l.!Wtrl• lt 1pprovld. TM L-..1 Alll!ICY Formelllin COrl'lrn!Hlon lt iMll!IOl'lld 1m 11'1·73 ~"6 " '"'111111 ,.,.11ce1111ne9 tor .1.1111 ....... 1 "' • '°""'' ,_.,, ,.,. tor 1'111 com-l::C"-------'---.:: BATl'ERIES Wednesday night Dick Clark rftllftftv flf It•-· Tiit lt_,c, M1,,.._1 lll'rogram I• ·11191'0'Hd. T111 PUBLIC N-CE CWl'lt)' g1....., 11011c. of --1 o1 1rv1,,. ll•ndl Aork'llltvnil "'•'"' .. ll'rfl-o __ _,.c..c..,....ccv:s.c."..c___ minlspecials on the golden era ••rv ...,,-mg olf mon1 .. for flMnc:lno C-ty ..,,,'°""' 11 •Jllll'l'oved. Po11q 1· · of -k 'n ' roll. °" lll~lltan of 1urP1us prOpfl"ly 11 ldo¢ed. TIMI 10tM'"91'1t ""41t! .,.,, C1lllo!11I• lll'ICTITICIUI 1us1111•1• 1t Replar Pritt: . ·~ Hllilllw•Y l'•I™ .. 1151 h lll'i!tol r•nat: " ~. Otdlntnel No. 7110 'k Moltled. NAM• S~J.TIMENT ... G·· ... z·· Pk1. There's no word yet from 11111 \. ..... ef Cltt. le ,..._11c1 111o 1pjllOlnt ,.._....... 10 "'9 Otll'IO• C-1)' Thi folloWtftll PlftM 11 dolot bcn!1M11 ~ -,.,..., CJtlllN c-11. 1ttsl11Mt1on of ""' l'1111111no Olrec* " 1ec.pt111. 1t•'9M-••: .,_ CBS on what will replace "°" ef ~--O.vkl L. ltker. SCA.G aitti.itv. ~mltlll IMl'l'lttlr, •• IC• CAL..v.All:T. 1f10.E Hirtlot' l lvd.. "Calucci" and "RoD Out," or c•ltO lftlll Suptni-ll:•IPll A. Olldrlcll 11 '""""1911 to fill tf1e vtC•llC'I'· jll.,_.t Cos11 Mn1, C1Htornl1 '262• _...,.. .,. '"°""'" Tiit county '-" 1s l\lllwrlied '° hil•v-'" SUptrlor Hll'l'Y J.. Wltn1m1, 2211s Lt v1111 . when. '-' CMI NI. J9*i, Ind lo dltml'9 SU(lfl'ltr c-t c-No. ltml. Tiii r...,ot1 Ori-... MIHlOfl Vltlo. C11llornl1 '2'1S FOR * 111 lllt OEI' E•rltl4111k1 Slvdy .. tlCtlvM. Thi rlQVftf of CSAC for tundlfllt fOt Tllll bvtlrtttl 11 cond\lchd tri' 1n 1tt Olul'!fY Modlnli21tlon c1mm1u1011 " c111111d. ludolt TraMrer 11 9r1n1ec1. Wll· lndlvklu.l. AN INTERESTING note on hrt """"• .,., '•JlllH'OVld. lll'ri•tlt •"-' llNlfovtmll'lts In Olvhlklft.,1111 L•nd Ho. H.A. wuuinu. ONE "A' ' 1~1 ,,, atnPfttlll. T•x ~""' ,,. •llfll'llV.i. lll'ut111e11kln °' the s~ of !ti• Tt.11 .,,,_, w11 flltd w11t1 !ht 1rport, ' the blockbuster Mil'NI" '" ""°''"'' CN •I o.ttv Piiot 11 "',..,lrld. P11r1c11 A. H•fVl1 11 M iid Counly c11rk ot Or•no• Co11111v on 1970 movie ABCTV is airing I ...... " lbllflCI. T,..,...,., ol Employllf"I contrltoullon fO Jl:etlr-1 Fund Is Ocloblf %J, lt73 w11torlrllf. Tiit ""lstnr ., vot.,. i. 1111truct111 to •l•t>lltll not1tklt1ot1 pr~ur• P'·2"11 CENT Sunday night: The Airline This approach sharply con- trasts with one of nearly seven years ago, when ALPA blasted NBC for showing "Doomsday Flight," a m_ade-for-TV mov ie by Rod Serling that focused on -an extortion plot against an airline. NBC, which r3n the movie on Dec. 13, 1968, decided against ever repealing it after getting heavy protests from pilots and others. Serling subsequently said he regretted the film even was made. "DOOMSDAY" was shown well before the s t r i c t passenger checks now com· mon at U.S. airports went into effect. The APLA spokesman said the fact of these stiff security precautions -and t h a t "Airport" doesn.'t e.1clusively concern a bomb plot -were other reasons why ABC won't feel ALPA's wrath. . He said hls group still doesn't approve of the mpvie ABC intends to show, "but our measure of risk Is lowered tremendously, of course, by the search system." · tor 'Ptdt' dl1tr1ct tfecllonl. 0111111 c-t'f ~truetklft eontl'lctl '"' comolttlll. lll'11bll1hld Or1n11e Coa•t 01Uy Piiot, Pilots Association isn't raising A per'll'llt JI tt•l'l'-1 tt c;....,11 Tlltphonl COmlllll'f' of CtUl'oml1 for constructlan (l(lobtr 25, Ind Hov1mt11r 1. I, 15, ,, !ht ..,,,_.. lwdl ,.rt1.1111 ltdlll)'. lll'M 101.i.s.-...... """'1 .. for '°'" •• .,. , .. tt73 :lttl'·1S cain with ABC for sho\\1ing Dra111a Guest 19' ,,..ln1"'•!'ft'I tnd ttPtlr -1t1pnwlllf. Tiit CPllll eno'"""' If !tit Or'lll91 th th' -c11,1n1y •liiOd Ctntr.f 011111tt t. c11r1etld to lnveitlg•to memi.n111p 111 tti1 Ort!IG• -PUBLIC NO'R.CE e Ing. c~ty ~..,. MM••n••t Attncv." pvrdll•lfllll contrKt ltW 1111 M1111ee1 ''"' ... l------------I T ti e -f i 1 m 's various HOIJ..Y\Vboo· (UPl l 11 lncf•llif. L-frDr 1111ClllTT*lt.1!'lcl T111tln Lrtwlrl• trt """""'°·A tlud)' NOTte• TC CllOITOlt Su~Batte:rietFltAll h · •,on...,._,,.. r.::rvl"""" 111t1t Mt1111c11c.ntw1t 111tttor111111. A TrtMlw of,~ for ,.,.,, .. cou-0, TH• ·---~Allllodel c aracters include .a loonie Steve Forrest will "'"est star "" Otlfllit COi.iniy 1"#lc U'"1Y ... ~. Trld No. Ull .. •wrDYMI. Thi ... ... ...... . s ho boanl . 1· .&. • "" c-t'f c-t1 i. c11rte1t0 19 .,,."''' •n 1"*1dment to On1ln111<• No. :110!), Nolt• tTATI Ofl..CALIPOINIA "011: w s. an air tn1;:1·, 1n-with £had Everett on an c..1tr9!. ~ w11t1 CMOf1"1911 co1,_. tor.,_....°' "'' co1"91 wort sludv TH• COUNTY CP' oa41t•• tending to blow up the plane eJll'sode this fall ol "Medical "'*'m h 1pprovld. llt• ._,. 1dtour11ed. .... A·1116t I fl ' ·• Wit.LIAM e. ST JOHN l!tllll of HELEN IUltHS GAl"FNEY, RearinfAJdlAttAvallable n ight so his wife can collect Center." • Clfl'k of ..... ·~., Sllipll'VIJ'O" °:;=o;~ri 15 HEJl:EIY GIVEN to thl .at tbeFoUowtacSeanSlore•' insurance money. 1·-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;~J .. "' ••• • .,.. • crldltor• ., n.. •IM:rll• Mrntd dec:ldll'll The ALPA obi'ected to this o, -ltOC•• I 01' Tiii toAID DI' IU •RVllOl.I 0,. !Nil 111 Pfl'Mllll 111"4"11 cl1lm1 ... IMI ._,..,._ ,,..,.,..... '• HAff•COUNT'l".e.t.L1~0•1t1A 1111 11111 dtcedll'll •r1 ,1111111rld to 1111 c..... ._ when "Airport" was made, 1 '• SIMt ""'· CllfMtlt1 llllfl't with tM 111Ctutn VGNChen. 111 cn.,...l.$••-~·~· t··"-th t th k •a:-:~~ INlllnt tt 1tt1 ._,.,er s~ 11 onnt1 CCIUl'lt)', c.utomt•.r __ ~~ !ht ;.,11,, of 1111 d•k o1 ,,.. 111ov1 ,.._ con ICIJWl•g a e ma e-' 11 1t11 °""""""' s-111 of t111 Dl.trldl teVll'ntd lfY' 1111 llOlrd of --· ll'llltttO ~1. tW ,. ,.,._,, thltn. w1t11 =. ._.c.a,._ believe drama might prompt v -~ OC:....., JI. lt7lt It t:3' A.M. Tiit f'lllowllllll ,.,,. """*" bill'ICI lttl n«nlltY vO!.ICNn. to fllt· """ i.s-•• ~-d ed .-.it: ......, w. Ctll*a. °"'",.'" ~ L . ...,, lhtP'I A. Oiedrldi. 1t11p11 lllff'•!Gntd ,1 .,, E••' i1t1t stt'811 '°''' r.-.-.n *1 erang persons to try it •,..:t::i;t111 Ind .. Ci.tc.. Allllnt: fl. w ... t!lri. MtM. c1111orn1•. whlcPI 11 1tt1' pltc1i 1...;;;;;.,;;;;_ ______ _J in real life, an A L p A JM ..,... """" " SrMttlfl· Ill'•• .,,,, s_,......, tln::I• -dl•nfld fO Olk of tivlll'lllt of ""' Vl'ldlnl11111d In 111 G,.,,. Clrdt.' DltfttlfMftf ..._ n-1 fNrn"" '""'"'no I•"!' l'•rt lfld ll.u•tlln m1tt.n Plrl•lnl"ll to 1111 mitt °'l.~~~~~~~~~~~~ll~s~po~kes~m~an~Jsai;'d~.~!~~~1 0Wr1ct 11··eppnw11c1. Mra. ""''"'1 J. s1e1iow ,. •PC10111i.o mll'llblf " ""' H•'"' wld dlCldtnt Mlhlri tour ll'IO!ltht 111er Ho h ked 'f h" ~'"' c-ici1. SWlfVI'.., a.ttlft .m-,, "" "-'""'· ordl-• ,,..._ 2111 •!'Id .,.,. fll"lt P\lllll~ttlon °' lhl• notlc• wever, w en as l ts mJ ,,. .,...._.... Am1:ic111o111 to cert•'" llvhflflt dl11r1c11 1r1 •llfll'llVtO. u .. ~, °"'" ,,._119, " 1911 · group had lodged similar ;~;;,~~i!~:ii~ii h ...,...... wit!! clrtllln COl'flitoM. Thi lllglltlt Ind blS1 VM ., UltP« H....,.t II)'-'9 idltltmlntd. Tiii OI~ of H1rbon, s.clltt 1nd ,._rtll, k lllstruci'td lo HVGti CPllrlH G1f'IM"!' t.rw.ltplt 1111 ,_. frtn'I UPI"' Nl'WPOrt •• .,.. TlllW ..... ILL1·~1oumec1,T ,· ~z111:t::v':' r!n'!: !!'!!!.it ... 1';.:~1,i.1.:1~.JJU..911 ,..., E. OHH PAUL A. MANNA Cltrtl of tl'!t ... ,,. of llilpll"O'lJOr'S AMrM'r If .._ l'uWllP!td Or'lrt09 CN~I O.lly l'illf, fitlWM'lftlr t, lfJl. Slf\·73 '4~ LIW 19'Nltl PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC N0'11CE t:.:i:t~~c!:.'~u -----'-------,.,-------------1,...lff' . .a .. 1,1 I 7t474 Atttnw/ f« MmtMslf1t« · -•-aJ • ~.-.. Ad l'llbltlli'tld Or1t1111 C111t DlllT lll'llot Pursuant to the agreement between the Few:i-H1g ..... ...,. -""''"'blf 1, 11, 22. "· lt73 ~2l·n rnln!atration and the Natk>nel Wildlife Federation, the tollO\V-" --fi.r' ii a list' ot hlehWaY 1ectJons wtuch were aubjeet to the Federal PUBLIC NOTICE JttJhwa,y Admlnl.ttratlon'• National Environmental Polley Act SUlll'lll:IO• CCU•T o~ TN• reusei&ment to de~lne whether an environmental statement STAT• fil' CALtl'OllNIA l'Olt thould'be pttpal'@d and considered: TN• COUNTY.°" ORAN9• 1. In Humboldt CountY on State R~te 101 from nort.h of MOTtcl °"' :3A:i:::O 01' ,.ITITlON Rlcharchon Grove State Park to State Route 36 at AJton. Pott P•o·1An °" wti..L .uto Po• Two pro" ,.ecta are ft1'nf'V'tl>ed In thi! e@Ctlon. The first ls 1 LITTl'l.I TPTAM•MTA•Y CIOMD . r -.,..... . WJ.IV•DI miles ot 4-lane access-controlled highway from north of the £111te of 10A e. CL.ARK, o.c"'"· J.fendOclno County line to the South Fork' of ~ Eel River NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN th•! ' ' 2 mil ·• la £LIEllT U.1.VIN CL.AltK Ind WILfOlt.0 Bridge near Benbow. The second lll .4 es lA 4-M access-"· CL.AllK Mv. flltd 11.,11n , Pl'lllfon controlled hlghWI$ in the community ot Rio Dt.ll from ,_. Probei. of wn1 _, tot 1uu1n«o south ol. Dllvil Street to Bellview Avenue. f~-:'ie.!...,.~ 1e,:; COiltl:~ FAMILY TWIN CINEM A ' . ' ' - CINEMA I "CAMELOT'' (G) .. .. TOM S.t.WYll" Speci.I Cllll4Ntl'1 M .. _ S.~ Sa. 12 N ... "SANTA AND THE THlll 11.t.lS" IGI CINEMA II "U.ST TANGO IN PARIS" IXI Newnn1T-4oy MARLON lllAND6 "LAST TANGO IN PARIS" + I.Jin Fltllt'• "WHAT DO YOU SAY TO A NAKEO LADY?" 2. In 1.fonterey County on State Route 1 from ~ Fort Ord Wftk.PI 11 mtr:lt fer M1h., P1=•r1. ,. Military Reservation to St&te m>ute 156, including the Route 1rte1 11111 tPlt time •ncl P'K• o1 llHlll'l!I "' lotfl 11 Celor IXI t Bypeu ot the community of Castroville. 7.2 miles of 4-and ~ ~';:' ,r•:.m ~."rn.:':n ':-=c: "AYANTI" 111 2-lane hfa:hway with access control. · of Otp&rlrri.f'll Ho. s of "Id court.11===,;::;;;;,,,;;,,,==":J'.~~'!ll!'!ll!'!li!'!ll!'!ll!'!ll!'!ll!'!ll!~~I *1 In Santai Barbara County on State Route 101 &t Turnpike 1t 7ao cvlc c..w Drlv• """'· Jn : Roed ·Interchange and Overhead "'est ot Sant& Barbara, 1~~: :'oi::;.~,.~·1:i;11fornli. : recon1truct ~isling structures and approaches to provide WILLl.AM ·E. ''JOHN, ~d 4 ta:nes \vltli left-.turn median Janes to replace the existing' M. \.~:'l.'l"~~ • 2-lane facilities on Turnpike Road uw c_.... 1M1. • Iii Kern County on State Route 43 from !KMlth ot the City of L•.,......; C•ll~• - , • Shafter to the junction of State Route 46 Jn the City of i~> .!!':'~~-­ . Wuco. 8.9 mtles of 4-lane hlgh"A-'&y. lll'lltltl•llfd °'""'' Cot1t 0111v l'Hot. 5. In Kern County on State Route 58 In the City of Bakersfield " ........... 1• '· 15, 1m :un.?J trom State Route 99 to State Route 184. 7.1 miles·of 4-lane PUBlJC NOTICE freewiy. Easterly 4.0 miles are presently under construction.1-----~~-----·I 6. In the Citar of Los Angeles on State Route 11, construct st.P-its I "·· ed h !--~ •··-I tUl'.ll:IOI: COUJl:T M TNI ntercuaua:e at R ondo Beac Bou crv1Uu as rep.-.·'°:uaent or tTATI M CAl.ll"ottNl.t. l"otl ex:tetina: Alondra Street Intercb11J1ie to be deleted. TH• COUNTY M ClllANOI 1. In the City ot Los Angeles on Ste.le Route 101 trom Sumet HOTtCE or.: ~,::;:0 OF PET•· Bouleve.rd to State Route 101/134/170 Iriterchange, \\-i den TIOH FOii: lll'llOIATE °' WILL Jo.NO I 6-&ine trttv.·a.y to 8 Janes for a distance ot 2.1 miles and "°" LEnE11:s OF AOMIHI STltAT IOH •-~-" I j II WITH TH£ WILL J.NNEXED ............. ramp control or • distance 0 5.5 m es. Elf•I•· of GEOltGE w I LL ' AM 8. In tM City of Los Angeles ori State-RQute 1l8 between HOLTSCLAW, •Ito krio.11 ., GEORGE Balboa Avenue \1-'est or lnt.enta'W Route 400 and Intentate ~LTS~~~w·o. ;, :,~T~cu:. Route 405. 2.5 miles or 8-lane lree\i.-ay. •rtel •• G. HOlTSCLAW, OlcHMCI. St rn Oranre County on State Route 73 in the Cities of Newport J:.?J~;~ ~&T~~.,evhlsG~V.!iN ,....~~ Beach and Costa Mesa trom IK>llth ot. Bonita Ca,nyon Road at 1 Ptfi!IM tor l'Toblll• or win 111c1 the Univer1lty ol. Calltornla Jcvine campui, to intei-atate 400. ""' 111111.nct of Llftlfl of Adft'l/nl1tr1tlon '1 mil I 6-and 6-1 ;._,_., 1 .... 1 •• M-~ In · .___ wtl!I 1111 Wiil MMCld to fllt Pllll1orllr. "t. es o ane ••co;; ... ...,, .,............_. an tercnauge m.r-t to w111ct1 I• "'ldl 1or rurlhtr with .mstlng State Route ~ . 111rtlc1111rw, tnc1 llltt "" 11m1 •rtel pltct 10. In the City ot San Diego on State Route 75 boom ea.st cf :,_ ~~ 20, "'-1,n,""'!1 ~Oo '::. ~ lntentate Route 805 to Interstate Route 5. 1.7 miles of 1t11 courtroom of o~rtmlftl No. J -.. ~nlleomlaf._.yDI : I , I ed gh A t:r1v!''!.J~fn· ti!' er: .,c1;i:n11c':~!' , .. e ..... vis on Englnttr o the F eral HI way dn)ln-c111Fornl1. ' i~tratlon bu completed his assessment tor the hlghwa,y aecUons D•led Nov. 2. 1nl . lh1te4. WILLIAM~· $1 ~OHM. COllfll~ Clerk J. For the hla:hw&J eection In Humboldt County on. State v. DAVIO SJ•auM Route 101 he lull determined that .-oparation and oonshier 11TH l'LOOl. UNION IAMK TOW•ll: 1"".. • flt MIWP'Ol.T CINT•a DJI:, ation or an envlronmenta1 1tatement is not ttQulred. NaWl"OJtT ••Ac", CALN'".""' 1 Foe the highway 11ection In llonterey County on State Route :~41,_.~1TioNi1t 1 he bu determined that preparation and consldentlo11 of l'ublllhlcl °''""• COit! o.11Y ,.not an environmental statement ls not requlred. November' 1, a. lJ, n11 ,..._,l 3. At Tumpike Road In Santa Barbara County on State Route 101 he has detennlned that preparation and conslderatloni-,==P~U~B:,:LI=C=N~OT="l:.:CE:.::,.~~ ot e.n environmental statement is not required. tu,.•ioa COU•T 01' CALIPOIMIA 4. For the highway section ln Kem County on State Rou te 43 ,.'cr,'!'I ... C:. =~~1 • he has determined that prepe.raUon and cons-ideratlon ot an '*' --. c1n1. environmental statement Is not required. CASI tUIMI•• ~ S. For the hlghy.·ay section In Kern County on State Route 58 lll'l•lftHll: 1Eol=c~£ colt~ be hu determined that.preparation and oorislderatlon of an Tl~. environmental statement t. not ftQU~ -~~~E~m111~·~'Nvc~ - I. Foe-the hla:bv.:ay section ln the~ ot Los Angeles on State COMl'ANY. JOHN ir. MEll:ltlLI.. '~ •• easily the best movie so far this vear'' -51tPhll'I F1r~r , • N EW YORK TIMES ~1"°':.t ........... youin'&Z? ~~ • UCWSM' OIAHOI COUNTT PMOGIPQINT WllUATS • 71)0 • fiJO UT. lfJN. l:M •ii•• S1JO •'71M-flM ' .... , ... ,~fl EUIOTT WYNER ........ CUFF GORMAN JOSEPH BOLOGNA II .,,...,.,,, •l~tL 52S.JSH -SCMl·-DON'T LOOK IN THI IASIMINTlll LAST HOUK ON THf Lin 1111 L111c.i..ll .... ... "'' ·-· 111 ... oro T\,I,...,... ..... .... ---WISTWOILD !Ht ~ SOYLINT GlllN /Ml ••~ OIM• '·-·""· •--ckJ 962·2•11 --·--THI WAY WI Wiii iN) 1'11111 e MAl\O TMOMAs .,. ""-:::= JINNY£!==:.:; COPS AND IOllllS IN! Plus • THUi tulLm fOl A lONO OUN N 1 ... -1.1Mt ... ~ t • • 1 .. K~lh><f. • a.111 ............. :;,.:'~'~' -~· .. ,,,.. _, .......... ILICTIA GLIDI IN ILUI 111 "UI t .vtN M•lllfT <~110•-••-w THI CHllRllADllS (Xl ,..., ..... ,.. Ulll:lt* fl"Z THI CAT fJU ,...!•Ml ,,_.,,. l,111 Cotltft ssa.1022 TV DAILY ·LOG Thursday Evening NOVl:MIElt I ITMMwutn Loa NIIMI hllwocn Car1V111 M111lc1I Mtril: t:tllr) "Wllltlf MMtM(" (du.) '48-B•lle Davis, Jim O.wil. •:» m •• ,. ar1111~ 111tw '"°~~~1113:::: :;f~t'd fro"' 5PM. nova. Phlllttlphil Fll1rs. a!)NMlt . 1:00 8 Duslin Hoffman, Anno *·Bancroft, THE GRADUATE I C.-~-· ...... ThlLICfSllow TN FilblMI• · .. , ... 11.,11 ..... Maril -(C) (!>ti .,,... ,.. LM" (dn) '71-Joan Collins, Torn Bell. _ . fD ... _i..i .. m-- CBS THURSDAY MOVIE "" (I) tWl ciJ ....... -0 iiiioriii: (C) (10) "TH LWr ill tM Car wttll II.-l A C111" (mys) '71-samintha [Ulr, John Mcfnery. Oliwer Rited. fJ 9 (I) CU 1'""'1 M""': (?) ll1t1T "TM c,..i .. te" (com) '67-0usti11 Hoffm111, Ann• B1ncnift.. Klth1ri111 Ro.u. A roun1 min. 1 re- unt con.t:• 111d111t1. ii r11dy IDf life bu! Is filled with -n1111 mis· 1lvi n11 1boul his hrt1111. Hi1 detrt• of l~llOOl!nct b dlall1n11d lly M womr~ttrldfw, middlt ·•llll Mrs. Robln50n 1nd htr d1111ht1T E11!n.- 1s he ptunres he1d·owr·llffls int• ldulthOOlt. '~~-...,. lirittll .. ...,,_ ...... ......_ I ScMtl Dit· . .,,, .. ""' .. ,, -·· .......... 00 TM lekl 0..1 - IJ @(l) (D htl F• '1111 Spirit· H1lpe7' Caln• llnds hlmsllf in th1 1011 of· tll• m1sUr 11 bl 1tllmp!s to tetth th• llltlllty of rtvtnrt to an . IJ!di1n bar. whola motlltr h11 ktn kidnaped by Con'llndllro&. I Hlttlria1 .. l'l'9 f Mnla llhfl•M•Ml'tlal(R) v.w .... ,.,.. '"°~mnm-iiirfl:" It) (Dr) "'11la ..ii' l:JO La Hlt11 " (dr1) '66-Willi•m Holden, 1..,.., DI,., cu RGbtrtson. 10:00 a @ ma m"" , .111 •• llllltl'lflCI S.tmmy Divis Jr. Is host to Jon.Ill :-=:, Utd Allen, Enwst lof1nlr11 incl Muy .... ,.... Coil1. C""Juo"' ~·""&g!.,- ~~ lfl.:e-T• .. lsll Maka! -- D THE STREETS Of SAN * fRANC!SCO-BIG Hm a ~rn mstr••t• 111•• riiaCJiU •'fiit Tw•:11J·fout Kant P11q111" A IJOUP tf ~er ,aa11r1 7".30 B DnM w .... Cftll ..,.nts decide to p117 fOI katpa .tltn they •'for S•l~Sill11et" iltdunsil be· sl11I • 11\lpment of rtdiolcllM 1olll rth b11Ckm1U in the conl1mpor1 lrorn • unlwrslty 1ucl11r mtarth llnirnt •!lout I ui111l111I ""° $11 Ctnttr lrvck. Vic MCITTGW, H1ri Edtl· an IH1pl lortut11 ind llltft P•JI il min ind AnthonJ l•rbl 1utsl J•ck=~~ lO:JOiT ..... Tiit NN "1u ls lla't Twill~ lilt ... "'""-::.. .. -:· ~.J: It ....., "' ............ L.rtM*Ahal _. ....... •• m 1 ..... " a. CD Ta Tll 1111 Tn6 Gi) lmi/s,.rb ~.=!'"'" u:11 ,,_Rtlfiffi:i-CIJ••.,...... ~~ ==..-:-: ~ ... 1:00 Te T• ill Tnlltl 8 THE WALTDNS, WINNER * Of SIX·EMMY AWARDS! lltt"' [ii, ... "= IQ 9(I)1'I ·-"l1M Fm" 11:1511) ._ J4 En" Tildi a btby Oltr in t111 11od bri11p It hotM In tl'le hopes ll:Jt 8 9 (f) Cll a. ... (Q ttlat sti1 will ;. 1llowld to U., it "f• Ii". (rolil) '6'-lurt ltJ- Whtn thl Ian pulb tn tf Gr111d· nofds. a.mr1 locltn. _ . _; m•'• dttn clothes off th• llne and 19 ti>~ m Jl'llJ Arlm 11ts Gl'llldPl'S newty.sprollltd p111, iftil: ~ (1111) '63- lhe f1mily !Ills be.art·brob1 £.tin id!lllt Mor(M, MHdfprde fCtff. t11at tt11 dffr has iv eo. IJ ll7l (])EB WW."""'" I*· B 9 @di I:' lrt111ICe (Dir) br11Mttt "Tl'lls Child Is Mini" (R) 'i>oWnhlU A1r1111 Wt'(' Chief Iron· A 11111 courtroom drllftl mi. sidl turns in his badtt '"" posts wh1n tl'll altofllrtl pa11ntt of • ts • 1kldrow wino to c1lch !ht JOUllJ l»J ll1ht 1ttempll by l'lis llillef of 1 politiclsn's t1mp1i111 111tur1I rnotl'l11 to 1111111 cudody • m1n11er. David W*J'nt, tUm Darby lo11m1ry Prhu. ind Robin Stranet and lff ff. MonlpllJ IUlsl. ttlr. n -= «1 t2'<l "'""""" m..,. """""' ,.,_ 1....,-Cond. (dr1) '68 -HtnlJ GI Mnll: .,A lulllt hr Jw/' rolld•, Roblrt Ry111, Ofn1 Aad11W1. (dr•_) 'Ss-Gtor1• Ritt. Edw•rl Q. D MASTER Of DISGUISE .,.,,,.,, "'"' Tottor. *TOMA AS COP HATER ll:tlll~OMSllJ- LURES YOUNG SNIPER 1i5 :,>::'!'I "lat'"',_ BARRICADEO IN CITY (m"I •1i-Loo<lll4 1111, ~"' Ntt· 8 @CJ) EB 1... ''llockhotm son, Gloria O.H1ven. if"•a•dclWn~ OM "°"' .. I c.op. a ..... Hltck.ld: P'mlatl h11ln1 misfit and joins a )'011111 tnlptr barricaded 11op 1 bul\dlq i~ I eftlWdtd Mctlon of the di)', J1n·Mlchael YlllCllt 11M:Sts. Olli._ I """'' !'I t2ll<l 1:!080-.-... If tlM llvtt" (ldv) '52 -J1111&S Sttwtrt, Arthur lten11td'J, Julil 1:45 ~: (C) ._ rl NI" (~) Ada1=:.~= 2*~~=·..:1:1~ La ldtn .._ Ma11," "'Rll U1tnp" 1co -~np " PIHldll· 1:108-"Cf!o< Uf '""' 'It a rllt11. --Willleln lllldlx, Deftnll O'Kteft. Friday DAYTIME MOVIES (d11) '34-Claudttt1 ~ WH• ll1m Marahln 1t1r tri both. IZ:lO ID "Cllila Isl' (od¥) "35-Qsl\ CiMI, Jun Htrlow. , l:tO II "ft ,,... .. ,,... .. (COii!) '5Z =111111 Dunne. t:OOt\7)(5)"'11111 .. Mll•b..r' (ldv) );OO(f)(C) "IMNbnf" (lllUI) 'M- '54-X!hl'I McClllum. [!Vil Pnslay, B1rblr1 SllllWftl tJO e ~ ,_ lroo' (com) 'II-~!'I .... LM lot" (...,) '6' "' ~ ~. l =t>.in ltllotb. MM Fr111Clt. _ I --· ....,111 Jllll, _ _ _ . J:JO 9 Cl) (C) '119t ~· rntacc" Jl:Ot rn !'I ""' SOkil ...,. c ... 1. rcomr1t-t11c a......- Cft1) ·12....-11 Hlld:loll.-lwl ,._ 4:918 (C) "1'• latlllr le ~ ('*'I) • .,.. ._. <-l '34 ~· ""· -· ...... Route 11 the State of Calllom• requested It be 'llli thdrawn CHAltLIS •• OINNfY lftd DE,...IS from further coosideraUon in-~~01._ The S_tate b ~o:'~":~~L· .. ~~~Dll:EH'.NS~"v"...':,'.~ ~puina; an ~vironme:ntal impact 1t&tmlent that w""ID DOI! 1 l!ltMlfrt·OOI v .. 1ftdual..._~~l-indude th(a blghunov tection. Tl "'-~: A d'lll corri,t•"" Jiah ~r. '-'' IM. l:lO (I)-• IO!lll --IBl B ._-11 1:1Klll>f""(dn -(lt(l)"Llt"' .... _.,_..., '!I, .... ..,.. ,.,_, • .... Collcl. (dta) '60-ll#I .. • • th , ··~ 4 llM MM fllM W lftt •ll!tlfl 1911Mt 1 ... or . e h1ahvo'&Y aectioo ln the City ot Loa Anrtltt on State 'fOll. 11 vw wlll'I 1e Mlltld 1111• i.WM.111. Route 101 he bu determined that ,_,...,...tion and oonsldera 'f"llU '""" flle '"' tttt• court • wrl"M "·-ol .. ,..~,._... • pttldlnt In rllflOl'I•• 10 "'-c~~ll'lt uuu a.n environmental 1t.atement ls not requjred.. r~ .,rttt11 or oret plMdlno 11 , & For tbfl highway section In the City of Loe An&elet on Jvtllc• cour11 w1tti1r1 • d•&:i, ,,.,, ~~ .. -~te 118. he J;as determined that preparation and ~·:f':W1~ ::"':'..;';.";:·_,,,.,-:;:::, ~-ra on of I.ft en\11.rOrunental atatement is not required "' 1111 p111m111 •nd fhl court NY 9. For the hilhw&y section in Orange C.ounty on State Route ;.i fl'lttr • ludO"""' eo••"•' yov tor tM he hu detennh>ed that ~para.lion and oo~deratJon ot ~:1~1~11tr rt11tt ' rlClllll!ed ,,. ab aYironmental all.tement 11 not required. ' ".r:,,..,-+• • _. "" .,.. ....= 10. .nr ta. hlltnn1 MCUon 1n the Qty Ot San Diego on Sta.te :: • .,.,..:,. ":: ::."".,w'",,.....,. aoute 1$ he bM dtttrmtned that Jn'PU"&lton and conaklert. If ._, ""' M ftW • n-. don o1 u fttYl.ronmeatal statement 11 t Ired. -°"" """'''"' a. tm. · .A,tf1 pec..a lm17 request coplem ot detetmlna no requ . WfLL!,W •. IT JOHN, Cltttl ~tr D E. Uona by vniting to: llULI'" ''°' ltlr. o.,vty .... ._.,..,. DI,~,;,..~ f~~~~~=:•,:.11: Weekdays: 7 & 1:40 .._., ..... ...,,... ~= tderal Hl.rbwty Admlnlrtn.U ...-. c"'"' '*' Saf ... , . ..,. P.O.Boxl9!5 on ::::..::,•1,,."';:::,,. .&Sun.1145,3130, w;~""" -·• Sacramento, CA 96809 ,,,....... _....,. Clil:lf D1nr lll'tlot, 5 15. ,, & I 45' fOI A Loe. °'*" INTll THI DIAOOH" Pu11111bo41 1 <>r.an&t Cout Dally Pilot November&. 19'13 3327.73 ~ le. al •llf N~ i~t,.:;I •••"'!'•-'-•'•'---·.;.'. _..,:., ______ •· I ~l.,,__!=~IN~·'.,!'°:"~Oll~-~,,.~··~·~~ 1 •. _, KOCE TELEVISION LOG Listens to Landers i ' I ' ~ • M w he Jt .. ' El w I' • m r pl a th hi J ·Y D' c M y I .. ' DAILY PILOT 3 f • D11nti1•f1to1a D1•a111a Know the Name ;r . Of Liz' Horse?: i 'Monique! Moody Thrill~r.~~ By MARILYN AND HY GARDNER Q: What is Jack Lord's real name? And b It true the star of "Jlawall Five-0" has a painlhag banging in the Metropolitan Museum of Art? -Doug Scott, L)'D~'OOd, Waib. "f\itonique" is Ba r ba r a Crooker, which gives the Jlun- -·tington "lkacl'i Playho.use an enormous head start in. its... production of the mystery Jnelodrama or the same nan1e. - Llke most plays or its Intermission Tom Titus ' "!\·tonJque" on the boards, ~c Huntington Beach Playhoo4,, i~ preparing for it~ third pro· du.ction o( the sea.$Qn, the ;, . comedy ;'Mrs. Gibbons' Bc)y!~' Auditions for a cast of eig~ men and two women hall~ bt'en caUed for Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the playhotisc. A: Not one, but live! Painted at 18, "when painting," he says, "was all l lived for." Lord's real name is J. J. .Ryan. His wife of some 21 years (Marie) ca lls him "Mick." "Mick." ·'Glad You Ask,ci That' Q: Bet you can't tell me. the name or the horse in Elli.abetb Taylor's first big movie -"National Velvet." ' . -Eileen Wiikes, Laramie, Wyo. . , A; Bet we can. The'horse who made Lii a movie queen was named King! • Q: I'm't.btnklng of int1esllng in a Broadway show 1q1d I'm curious. Do you ha\•e ony idea of how much the back· ers of orlgbtal musical "Oklahoma" go t back for their money? -Marlon Thomas, lllrmingbam, Ala. UPI TtlePlloto $140,000 Nic·kel .genre, this ·Frtnch thriller . . (the stage version of the d1en~ 1nvolve~'ll;lnt. movie "Diabolique'') demands .Jt 1s !or this reason that Miss Crooker is such u valuable asset to lhc llun· tington Beach cast. Ht'r jn. terpretation of an en1 J.:oiltcrC'd ·woman doctot plotling \Vlth her lover to nnirder his wife is an1ong. the s tron gesl performances \vitncssed on a "MONIQUE" A drama ~Y Dorolh'f 'nd Ml~h••L • • 81Bflkl<>t!, lllr~Cled bV Rtl'l<IY l(ffM, ' procluctr jnd le<:lln!t1~ dlrecior &Ill MOt"t!Bod, &el detlon tW C1rl11 Trick, ortJented Frid•'>'• 1nd Sah1rdbYS Bl 8t30 1rirou11h Dtc. l 111 111' H<Hlll1>gl0<1 &tACh Playhouse, 2110 Mtln S!., HUii· llfllll on &t1cn. Restrvelloo1 M2·1ol2l THE CAST Fern•nd R11vinet ..•.. ~nnls Thom1t Dr. MonlQue .......... &.ub1r1 Crooker Ludtnn• Ravfotl .Maureen snrubshole L!11etle ... , .Sus1n Kello!IQ !osr>eetor Me<lin , . . .. P1iu1 SulUv111 Gou!IO~ '... . . . : John Phltlll)I Hen•lelle . . •.. , J0<111ne Wokoll Andre . .. . J. O. Relcheldtrfer Metil'nlilt• . . .. Gt0<1.I• Spelvin CROOKER Actor Victor Bueno, guesting in a "Hawaii Five-0" episode to be aired this season, holds a 1913 Liber· ty-head nickel that figures prominently in the sho'v (model in foreground). The rare coin is currently worth $140,000 and is one of only five in the world, an additional degree o r dramatic fidelity to sustain its heavily plotted premise. With very much less thlln perfection onstage, credibility would slip, and with it au· A: The memorable "Oklahoma," set a new American local stage this year. Kno\vn record for a musical. Running live for more than fit1e years, pri1narily as a first·rate coin· F •1 Th. k 0. n edy actress. she delves deep ptus road companies ••d • mm . it paid (by 19401 • 2.soo I Ill 40 ID D.,, in to •he psyche or • most percent return on··an investment of $80,000. But don't let ___ a complex personality a n d this rare example of $ucces$ influence your decision to be registers a r e s o u n d i n g a backer. Ninety-nine percent of the entries, e.s........,ially in dramatic triumph. __. By BOB THOMAS held down because all worked assassination: the officials thi'S era of inflated costs, end up in the red even of they're for minimu1n salaries except have· only handed out self· J\1ISS CROOKER is the hits or moderate bits. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Is Lewis, \Vho was 'µaid nothing. serving staten1ents." spearhead of a production rich it a thoughtful challenge to in ominous mood, enhanced POSTSCRIPTS FRO!'tt !'ttARJL YN. To J\1artha E. the Warren Report on Presi· LE\\-1S TOLD how h c THE PREJ\1JSE of "Ex· c ons id er a b I y by eerie Thompson, Newark, Ohio, and Randy E. Sjoquist, Seattle: dent Kennedy's assassination'.' became involved in the . ecutit1e Action" is that Lee background music. such as the The reason the papers didn't carry a report that "Peggy Or is it simply a make-money project: Harvey Oswa ld could not have theme from the 1novie "Spell- Cas1 was fowid dead in her apartment" is that Peg gimmick? "Donald Sutherland (the ac-pulled off the assassination bound." Director Randy Keen e That is the film world's alone, hence there was a con-has fashioned a most im· happily, is very much .allt1e ... To J!uck ~ .. Chicago: puzzlement over a new film, tor) originally developed the spiracy. But the film does pressive show. perhaps his Jack Elgea, who was on Chicago radio and TV for 20 "Executive Action'' which is property with Mark Lane -not attempt to document the finest to date. ·)'ears, 'is ·Dow doing hiS live celebrity broadcast f~.t.he ·billed .as "probably ~e most author of 'Rush to. Judgincnt' conspiracy; it offers a Uc-Whlle ~1is$ Crooker is th e rnPiomat in "HollYwood. Fla., via powerful WGBS ... To controvCrsial fitm of our -and .Donald Fteed over a · ti{)nal hypothesis on how it standout of the cast, the Claire SL Claire, 1'tiami: ·vou win your bet. As we've noted time." Audiences in the New gt~~y~a:ned~~n Sbuythe;~:~~ could have. happened. balance or .. : the Huntington , York and Los Angeles areas / "The pictll{e is really a Beach company' also performs to subm1ssh:e handled. is beautlfully Denis Thon1as holds center stage as 'the weakling husband duped into a deadly conspir· acy. \\'hile Thon1 as delivers ::i fine pcrfo1111ancc, his charac- ter is not totally suslaincd. particularly in his scenes of heavy emotional s t res s. Neverth rless. h<' is !Kl J)('rcent on target. ordinarily :1 good con1n1unily thcattr average. PAUL SULLIVAN gives a solid support.ing , po rtrayal of a curious retired po \.j c e i11s1>eetor, \vhile young Susan Kellogg is fresh an d dr:lmaticall y honest as the neighboring nymphet. Th c talt!nls of John Phillips as a tippling gardener and Joanne \Volcott as a light-fingered maid elevate a pair of utility cameo rules, bl.it J. D. Reichelderfer is far less im- pressive in his brief sequence. Carla Trick's home-garden J ames . E. Smith will b"C, directing the play. which wi.JJ oµc n Jan .. 11 . for a riVe.-. ·,veekcnd run. Age ranges. ~r the men arc fron1 early 2Vs to 70 years. for the \\.'Omen. 35 to 45 years. * * * Bt\CKSTAGE -Ron J<'ilian. and Carol Faulstick, who:n, play a married couple in t~e upcoming Irvine eommuni\.y Theater drama "Everything in the Gru·den ."' tied the knot.. for real last \vcckend they v.·crc n1a rriOO Friday in Las Vegas after a three-yea;; courtship . . . . . ·• Alan Dumas of Ncwp()c.' Beach \Vill appear 1:1'1' ··~·fother Courage and Hco Children." the first producllih\ in the University of Ne\v ~le);"' ico's ne\v theater. arts buikh ing opening Monday .... :·; Du1nas a1so is a staff aflol' iiouncer on th<' campus radiQ' statinn. setting is among the most --- attractive yet molU\ted at the Huntington Beach Playhouse, m MANN THEATRES ' "' ~" <' ., ~ .. -~ .. but its practicality is open to question. A huge door, sup· ported by thick w o o d e n beams, dominates ~enter stage; impairing some SO per· cent of audience sighttine on the horseshoe playing area. A jagged .wall and the sug- gestion of a door, while sacrificing.. realism, . m i g h t have been preferable. . '~ .. ~~~~~~~~~ ... ~' MANN'THEATRES . . .. ~!'!'!!!!~, .. . = .. .. .. .. -., ,, ·~ before, Julia Budd is NOT Barbara Streisand's sister, not will be able to judge for company in town, and I bought strange animal, a miXture of admirably, part i cu 1ar 1 y _ even a second cousin ...• To George Curtis, Flushing, themselves. The film opened it from him. fact and fiction that has never new c 0 me_ r Maure en N.Y.: Ed Wyn.a , who once managed the Stork Club and ran \Vednesday. -"1'.1y interest in the ..project been attempted before," said. Shrubshole iri the role of the Except tOr a slow·moving early second act, attributable more to authoMihip than pro- duction, "Monique" is a crisp and highly involving dramn. Performances continue for four more wceke1.1ds. Fridays and Saturdays; at t h e playhouse. 2110 Main SI.. Hun· ... . . his own popular Harwyn'1CJub. is still in the hosting busi· Although 'il Was made on had nothing to do \vith the the pr6docer. "The stozy we bitchy wife ,vhose incredible ness _restaurant manager of New York's Royal Box and a modest budget "Executive death of President Kennedy; ·tell is entirely ficlio na1, but frost' . . . tant on I am not 3.n assassination buff. many of the characters are iness inspires ms n · Le Jockey Club in the Americana Hotel ... To Doug Scott, Acti on" js no shoestring film. empathy. Miss Shrubshole, a Lynnwood, Wash.: Jobllny Carson's "Tonight" format usu-l't s1ars Burt Lanca ster. It seemed to me that this real·life figures shown in news Briton, projects h~r French ally block! in his famous guests afte~ midnight ~ause Robert Ryan and \Viii Geer, story offered a terrific chance rootage. which occupies 30 character · with . aplomb and he spends the first half·hour exchanging barbs Wtlh Ed and was created by three to put across the idea that percent of the picture. her transition" from shrewish 'lcMahon, ~ Severt'nson and his studio audience. to fl' 1 t fl lakers pro-we need to be reported to "The onl y real-life figures ,. _________ iiiiiiiiiiii~ " vuo.; P ig 1 1 m n -an official matters. I feel that \vho arc porlrayed by· actors,~ ducer Edward Lewis, director Send uour questions to fly Gardller. "Glad David ~liller and w r i 1 er we have not been told the are Lee Harvey Oswald and You Asked Tlint," care of this 11ewspaper. P. 0. Box Dalton Trumbo. The t.'OSt wasu;;;owiiihoiiiliiieiiitriiiuiiilh-aiiiboiiiuiiiliiiliiihe-K•enniiiOeiiidiiy-Jiiia;ock;o·;oR;ouiiibiiiy;o."---iiiiiiii;;;;;iill 1560 Costa 1'1esa, 92626. Marilt1n und fly Gardner 1 ·----------- will 'answer as nlany questio1ts as tMv cn11 in their column., but th.e volunu! of mail makes persona:! re· plies impossible. ~r'Y J'outh Coa::s l Reperlurj· A MASTERf'IECE OF TIMELESS SATIRE Moli•rt's "THE WOULD-IE GENTLEMAN" OPENS SATUAOAY -NOVEMBER IOtn AU Tne Eltmf'l!I$ Of A MuiiCll Comedy -B1roqut Sivie! 1127 NEWPORT, COSTA MESA FOR RESERVATIONS, CALL -646·13'i ltlES.t 1884 Newport Costa Mes 48-1551 "BIG FOOT" !Gl · "NORTH COUNTRY" tington Beach. * * CALLBOARD * With LIDO N~A~RT f.NTilANCE TO LIDO ISll 673-8350 "FRITZ THE 'CAT" (X) "CHEERLEADERS" (X) -" ' " _._(ll._ CtNEODMf 20 . ' ··-......!..... "-'" L...• -· -· "' CtffDOMf ?I . .. ~ -'"'''·''' .. ,.,. ''"'1111111 •""1 R•Clf"1'd "THI WAY WI Wiii" f,GI "SOUND OF MUSIC" .,.. "CHAILOM'S WEI'" I•) • HELLO DOLLY IGI U.A. CITY AND SOUTH COAST CINEMAS-TUESOAY SOc tLADIES AN O GOLDEN AGE ilt SJ-OPEN 'TIL 2:00 f'.M, '10U WANT TO HAVE A GOOD TIME AT THE MOVIES? CHECK INTO 4THE WAY WE WERE'.:: -"'". Sl40/UM0 I .'' ' .. '-"•l•..l..i.:..ul.: :r..:. _ ... -.. S 140/UM · 2 .": o. .. ,,.,,,,...rJ.ur.r • _ .... _ ..... S14DIU.+I ,4 ·.: t. ~'""'-' c•1\L"•' • "THI OPTIMIST" lf.•) .,.. "PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM"' IPGI "Toi.s n.t WltHll M•4MtS" II) ... ''TI!• '•IMS,11011 of J..i Det.ey,. II) "TH E GODFATHll" II) .,. "'DILLINQ.ll" fll "ELICTIA GLIDI IN ILUI" IPGI . .... "THE OUT$1DI MAN" A VERY SPECIAL CHILDREN'S c:fl n enchanting tole of three hibernating bears and how they first discovered the magic and wonder of Christmos ·;r· ,.: " ... . . ::· _,-.r SHOW! 0. qor.11 x..~J '·~d. ......... i:~ .. ~·J• · .. :.·· 0 .··:· .. • • .... ... .... "' : h Ullmann : Kdly "".. • lllill . Albert ! Barnes .<-lllllelttlllll IPGI 7 & 10:44 ,,M. Aloo ' GOLDll HAWN "IUnllFLIES All Fill" l,Gl 1:15 ,,M. Call Th .. t,. FOt" $1111day Matl ... hhH•le (PG) NEONESDA,V , • II--··\ JHUASO'IV P,~ lEO~G! S!G'.AL IN ''ILUMI IN LOVE" AN O Prod.;u, w-.... Dkected II TOMI BENEDICT "DAY Of THI JACKAL" 11-ltl\J ltllHltl ,rodlltl!-, Olttrl .. l'M Ir (llNft lftltrprl\•l COLOR !PJ ""'1' NOV 9 1rr1 ·TUol. 2•4 T•P Aftr• .... Al let~ GI ..,-.t-' 111•·1ll "MY SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN" ~~ SATU. RDA Y & ·SUNDAY .~£~; ·-· .. -·-.~.ILIA~ILl!!AI:=-~~~-11 . .:....\--IV, -. ALL llATS $1.H N•wAt .... C ...... . ... :.;:,;;."'""• ..... ---.. _. --..... ..... I!' ·~~~~~i::~::··Z·~~ .. m,~ UA ·~· Dally SOU!ll ; 11:.10 PM co.st Wtd & Tn11n: "80LSHO! aALLET" • Frl. S&t. Sun.: 'SWAN LAKE' Mon & Tuff: "Soviet Army Song & O;inct Ensemble,. No Sl f'ritt A Dtli9nl11I L1mpoon On Pornotr•l)llit Mov1•11 £_ "LE SEK Y SHOP" I J•tk Lemmon "AVANT I" Both In Color! "' . ........... ; .............. . I~~ --~I 1<T lllJl. tfl, COOi! •ll'f ' ull f!ICO "it• _l .. fTOlt llOCt '••1·••<11• . t•c>·<IQ, (II Mor.Fit: 6:00 8: 15 10:305.f&.Suri: l:lO 1;"5 &:00 8:11 10:30 HllD·OVll TWIN Ori WlSTMINSn•-ONr 8LOC~N~r,-{PG) °' ••0011:ttu•sf " S3~•o1 Sll\111' APE " CINlMA CINllll C0\1A Mf!>A • 1111[)1\Y NOV. 9 • "THE NAKED • (tNIMll. W(~l WIS IM•N51lll • (G) lRO WEEK TMf Qf.11,.V CllA~GE C<.IUNfT ENGAOEMfNT E"xcluslvely IPGl """ f'l.U5 . "RANI( SINATRA """'NCHUlttOH UNDIOATr' WOOOY Atl!N 11'1 ''PU.Y n AGAIN, SAM" 11' . . .• Thewarmest,moet human comedy in a long time ..• RICHAMJ DREYFUSS AONNV ~OWARD PAUL LE MAT Mon.-Fri. 7:»9:3(1 sat-Sun-l :J).J;30 , S:'.J6. :~9::p ; South Coasl Plaza (' ........ ' ... U;;;K-...... •I oon;;•···-~ • s.,4.7711 • ·i 1'T ti ~i ·ii ' ' I . ; • •• ~ DAIL V PILOT Thursday, Novtmbtr 8, 1<173 '"'Am I glad to sa yoa//.,,.. Yule Decorations '40 Miles' to Be Daylight Affair By TOM McCANN Of Jiit Otllr Pll.t Stiff Judging the Orange Coast area's holiday decorations by day instead of by night • the 1973 version of the tradi· ti onal "40 ~1iles of Christmas ,.Smiles" contest is the kind of idea the "Generalissimo," himself, might have come up with. "Generalissimo" is the af- fectionate title peers pinned on William H. "Bill" Gallien- ne, the colorful commander of a pack of promotions he had going up and down the Orange Coast at the time of his death in 1964. HE HAD BEEN the main sparkplug of the Huntington Beach Otambe.r of Commerce for 30 years when death pro- ved it was the only ¢mg· that could stop the Gallienne gallop -even at 70. The Stetson hat and string tie were his trademarks and many who knew him only slightly made the mistake of thinking of Gallienne as just a shallow showman. Showman, yes; s hall ow, never. Gallienne migrated to llun- tington Beach from 6,000 miles away. He was born on the island of Guernsey, in the English Channel. IN ·IDS EARLY years in the north Orange Coast area he drove a four·horse team hitched to a tank wa gon all ~ • Ht1tttingtoli Beaeft wit lbe the 1'1fami of the West son1e- d•11 soon.' over the area in connection with his job in the nursery at the Huntington Beach Com- pany. Later, be worked for Holly Sugar, John Eadcr's Baker.y and .W. L. McKinney 's grocery before landing in Standard Oil's sales department and, eventually, opening his own gas station. That was the move that put him in touch 'w'lith the town's business community and a more-or-less natural step into the local chamber of commerce. SUDDENLY THE lal<nl promoter in him began to bloom. He was to beconte the promoter, among other things, of one or the biggesf pai'ades in Southern California (outsid e. possibly. of the Pasadena Rose Parade), a giant annual gathering of twins from throughout the na- tion in the Twioorama and. of course, the 40-mile-long Christmas decorating event he helped the Orange. County Coast Association n u t u r e through the Depression. Somewhere along the line, he stopped long enough to look ahead at wildly multi plying popuJation and b u s i n e s s development. "Huntington Beach will be the 'Miami ot' the \\1est' some- day -soon," he predicted unblusbirtgly. Smile Must Go On He saw Huntington Beach and her sister cities of the Orange Coast area as focal points o_f a coastal area he liked to call "The American Riviera." IT TOOK WORLD War II and its restrictions on gasolibe consumption and w a r t i m e materials to turn out the lights of Gallierute's 40.mile·long "Riviera" just as it was beginning to blooin. The war years were the only time since the 1930s that the Orange O>ast did· not \\'Car a big, eleciric "smile" for the benefit of resident and tourist alike during the holiday seasOn. ltad it not been for gasoline rationing, "El Generalissimo" might y,·ell have decided dur- ing those 'var years merely to judge the contest in daylight rather than shut it down ; that is the decision of Gallienne's successors in 1973. TIIE "SMILE" will go on as usual, contest officials have decided, but judging of com· pet itive entries will be carried out during the day instead of at night. \Vhether individual areas, cities and entities entered in the traditional competition will limit the use of electricity is a matter of local option. The committee of Daily Pilot and Orange County COast Association officials in charge of the areawide con t est, however, made it plain that · holiday decorations designed to be viewed in daylight are the only ones the judges will be able to see -night-lighted displays will not be seen by this year's judges. IT'S THE KIND of decision Gallienne might have made in the 1940s if his judges cou1d have had the'gasoline to travel the blacked-out coast by day to see rooftop Santa Claus figures and frontyard Nativity scenes. He wouldn't have let a thing like an energy crisis stop the show. lt took a world war to make him ring down the curtaln. Trieil;-True Teen. Top Campaig1ier CHULA VISTA (AP) -Rick Wood , elected to the Sweet1'lter Union High School District's Board ~---411-1'!-Educatlon,campaigned•in the old tradition. He knocked on almost every door. · "U you spend enough lime working at the grass rooU level, yo u can win almost any elec- tion," la)'$ Rick, a 19'year-old political science stU· dent at Soulhftllern College. • Wr/Od.' rectllftd" 8.845 votes Tuesday, 382 more than his closest of four much-older riva ls, for a seat left vacant by the resignation ol Dr. E. Mor- ris Hayes. · -JJ - Toilet Tank Flush Lever • Mtfff 4uty 4nig11, wi"' lhreme-,loted hettdl• • Ideal rtplo<tlllfflf ••• 1cny ft i11st111l I • • ·, -.. Ke rm Rima Says ••• Stuff Your Pockets Full of -SQ.~ings! SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH NOV.14, 1973 Imperial Ill Dishmaster • S<ropes, w111hts 1n4 rinsts dbhts, pots ond p•s • Soft oMI s•itory ••• lils oll silik'S 33aa Gliddel1S-pred Satin Wall Pain~ • let•• ,.,. ... , l.1thtf IMHtr • lMYts1t1 ... M1rtlt • l1s1 te d"" ... ff st wt,.1 RIG. .4' s~A! 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RETlll 39c:L • . I ACR'JUC LJ\TEX. llitERIOR FIAT PAINT OPEN 7 DAYS I 5 NIGHTS. MONDAY THRU FRIOAY, ~ A.M, TO 9 f M ... SATURDAYS; I A.M. TO 6:30 P.!ol. ·SUNDAYS, 9 A.M. TO 5:31 P.14. · · •. Santa ·Ana · · • -Long Beach ·· 'Paint &~~ti"9 .. . Centers 52, ~~ti~ns ~n ~h· west -- 1 BLK. s~~Fs~A~~I~ IDELHil Hunt1n~ton Beach 2~01 LONG BEACH BLVD. TELEPHONE {7141546-4597 • · 1 Yi BLKS •. SO. OF WILLOW 6800WARNER AVE, EAfll GOt:.DEN WEST TELEPHONE 1213) 427.vM ·Anaheim CORNER OF LINCOLN & LINDSEY 1 Ilk. EAST OF BROOkHURST TELEPHONE l7141133·1I07 , fEL~'"~l 17.141,~~~ .. 8635 E, FLOR0EN ~AVE. y !eR !H~!~!9 . ·AT LAKEWOOD BLVD. · 2 ILKS. E. OF BEACH 0HACIENOA •· TE~EPHONE 12111 ~1-11 TELEPHONE 12131611.filOI , .. ' t • • • I '• I • • • I . . I I ·;, . ' l • • I 34 DAILY PILOT Thurs.day, N~mbtr 8, 1973 DICK GORDON Laver Easy Net Victor; Smith Rolls SYDNEY, Australia -Corona de! h-tar resident Rod Laver ousted Paul Gerken in straight sets today in second round action of the Australian indoor tennis championships here. Laver disposed of Gerken &-2, 7-5. John Newcombe, meanw hile ousted Charlie Panrell M , 3-6 . 6-3, Ross Ca!e defeated Mike Estep 5-7, ~3. 7·5. and Sherwood Stewart tripped Jim McManu.s, 64, 2-6, 7·5. In other !Ingles matches, Mexico's Raul Ramirez defeated New Zealander Jeff Simp!on, Ken Rosewall topped Ian Fletcher and Geoff Masters ousted Ju Singh of India. -• e Sn1ilh Advances STOCKHOLf\.t -Defending champion Stan Smith overpowered Ray Moore of South Africa lh1, 6-1 Wednesday and moved into the quarter-finals of the $75,000 Stockholm Open tennis tourna· ment against his Davis Cup teammate Can't Buck City Hall-or Rariis LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Loi Angeles Rimi have cut loose wide receiver Dick Gordon for arguing with an assistant coach In a move the former AIJ·Pro says is unjUBtlfled. "We felt It best for all parties con· cemed to give him hi! release and an ..OPPortunity to catch on with another club, 0 says Rams general manager Don Klosterman. Alter 1.-08 Angeles put Gordon on waiven, he was claimed by the Green .Jl.iy Packers. 'lbe Raml refused to d!Jclooe delalll Absence O! the dlugroement, but It Wit rtPorled !hit the S:year-old Gonion had v1uod with opeclal teams coac:h Dick Ver111111 ~onday at the team'• Lolli Be1i!l1 trainlllC tile. • "It wa11 1trlcUy a verbal altercaUon, .. and the whole thing is unjusllfltd/' said Gordon. "I don't have anything more to say. but I'll make a statement through my agent, John Mackey." There was no comment from Mackey, former head of the NFL Players ~la· tlon, or-VtrmeU. Cordon, a ntn&year veteran, played put his 9pllon In 1971 at Chicago, where he ltd Ule leat1Je •¥b 71 -plkills abd 11 toy<lldowno In Ibo 1971 ....... llie RamJ Md' 10 give Ill• Be"' their ilr.1 ,Ound 1111 drtlf eholce In cem- peruiatlon. Gordon was hampered by injuries In his two seaaons.wlth the Rams as muscle pulls and broken ribs kept him out of action moat or 1972. lie injured his shoulder a month ago and was activated only last Filday and saw limited action Sunday againll Allaota. After opening th1I year as a starter, Gordon wu Ulod prtmartly as a klckoll rttumer playing backup to Harold Jackson at wide receiver. Gordon cauaht no passel for. the Rams this season and had only three receptions in 1972. Meanwhlle Wednesday, Ule Rams said quarterback John Had! left praCUce with a back spurn. Althouah the extent of the problem was not known.1 Hadl, who has never mbsod a game wllh an Injury, waa expecled to play this Swiday againlll Now Orletw. of West Was Too Great And Showdown Becomes a Rout MILWAUKEE (AP) -With Jerry \Vest in street clothe3, Elmore Smfth hurling and In foul trouble ·and Gail Goodrich far off form, the National Basketball Associa tion's moat publicized early season showdown was no contnt. Kareem Abdul.Jabbar totaled II polnts and 21 rebounds while Lucius Allen held Goodrich to four poJnts, 23.2 below his averaiie, \V ednesday night as the Milwaukee Bucks rolled to their 10th IUOCMliVe victory and 11th in 18 1amts, 109-92 over Loi Anaeles. The Llkera, struggling throucliout the early 1e110n while trying to blend In talented newcomers Smith and Connlt Hawkins with their holdover cast of 1tws, had little chance after West, the brilliant veteran guard, aggravated pull· ed abdominal muoolot In pr'llmt watinups. Wllh Abdlll·Jabbar pourlna In 11 polnta In the flrtt quarter, lhe BUCkt stormed ' lo leads of 31f.24 alter one period and !Ml at the hall. Happy Hairston. and reserve Mel Counts led a ntild rally that cut a 22 point Mllwaultee lead lo 'IHI, bilt the Bucks responded with a 11-1 11ploalon en route to an 85--62 IHd an.to three periods. 'nle 8-!oot-10 Smith, leading the league with 102 blocked shots and No. 2 in rebounds with a 15.& everage going In, played only 22 minutes, reconling only BeVen rebounds and one block. Laltars COlch Bill Sharman said Smlth, who hid fractured a cheekbooe in a colll1kln with Hairston a few days ago, aggravated the Injury when be caua:ht an elbow from Abdul.Jabbar on the second half Upolf. Smith wu charged with his fourth foul on the play and picked up his !11th 3\i minutes later. "He's had terrible headaches since he aot hurt and the headaches .came back afttr that Upoff," Sharman said. "That'a why I didn't put him back ln.11 But Sharman and Bucks coach Larry OootA!llo agreed West's absmce, and 115 rewltant effect on Gllodrtch, was a much bluer key to Milwaukee's victory. • DICK VERMEIL ' Visions Go But McNeill .I Plugs Away l LOS ANGELES (AP) -Fluhback lo 1971 when Rod McNelll wu the Southem caJ ifomla Trojans' candidate for all-everythlna:: He can't misl, they said. McNetll believed It, too. "I bad glortou1 vlJICXlS," McNeil! recalls. "But they all might be out ol. reiach tor me now. When I w<is a lreslunan f thought I'd alep In and take over where 0 . J . and Mike left off." 0. J . Simpson and Mike Gamlt were I Heisman Trophy·Wtnning Tr of ans' J tall backs. I "Even the coaching stall In my . sophomore year was talking . along the:. same lines. l felt then if they ha'(e confidence in me, I'll do my belt. "It never crossed my mind that I'd get hurt. Now I know the daa..,-of 1ettin( hurt and getUng IOI! In the shuffle." ~ Tom Gorman. "'nte big factor was the de(enstve Job Lucius dld on Goodrich," Ccotello Hid. "That wu the key, plus they mlaed West becauoe he .. ts up a lol of plays. But Lucius conCentrated, was alert and took things away frotn Goodrich. In the second hall Goodrich even seemed to be rorcing some shots." McNelll sullered a b«>ken hlp during a spring practlct'I sa'lmmage ln 1971. It has taken hJm until this seuon to return lo lbe form of 1 frellman in 1970. .. ·Gorman the No. 8 seed, beat Marty Riessen, &-3. 7-3, winning an 8-6 tie- breaker in the second set. Arthur Ashe. the No. 6 seed and wiMer of the Stockholm Open in 1971, trim med Frew McMillan ot South Africa, 6-3 , 6-4. Top-seeded nie Nastase of Romania, winner over Smith last week in the final of the French Indoor Open Tourna- ment. trounced Olle Palmer of Sweden &-2. t-2, and Tom Okker, the No. 3 seed from The Nelher:lands, routed 2Q-- year-old Corrado Barazzutti of Italy 6-l, 6-l. e l\'e10 Detroit Coach DETR.Orr -Alez: Delvecchio, 41-year· old captain of the Detroit Red Wing!. ,vas named new coach of the National Hockey League team Wednesday night, replacing Ted Garvin. e McAllster Baek LOS ANGELES -Injured fullback James McA1ister may play this Saturday against Oregon, his first action in three ,veeks, says UCLA coach Pepper Rodgers. AM Wedn.sday's workouts. Rodgers said McAllster had been "improving steadily'' in drills coming back from the knee Injury that has kept him from plaving in the last three UCLA games . Rodgers said McAlister would not start, but he haped he "might play." Charlie Schuhmann will start at fullback. e Kings Rotded PllJLADELPH!A -SllRhtly shell· shocked, the Los Angeles Kings try to halt a skid ln which they have lost their last two games when they meet the PhiladelRJi ia Flyers In National Hockey League action tonight. The Kings opened with a 1-0 teed over the Minnesota North Stars at Bloonrlngton Wednesday night. But the North Stars erupted for four goals in .. four minutes and clobbered Los Angeles 5-2. e Sims Doubtful LOS ANGELES -Coaoh John McKay says although his Southern California Trojans are stil l unbeaten in the Pacific-3 Conference ·race, ooe loss can mean the difference between the Rose Bowl and being a league also·ran . "That 's why this Saturday's game \\tith Stanford Is so important," McKay said Wednesday. The Trojans arc 4--0 In the Pac-8. Stanford I! 3-1 with a loss to UCLA. "Stanford is still a contender, they~ only have one loss, they can still win the Pac-41, '1 McKay said. UPI Ttltfllofft THE LAKERS' ELMORE SMITH DRIBBLES AROUND EX.CAL STATE (LBI STAR CHUCK TERRY. SANTA ANA'S T. N. SMITH (CAR 91) BEGINS BAJA 1,000 OFF·ROAD RACE WEDNESDJ,(Y. Fe~ro Nabs Baja l,000 Off-road Ra~e. ENSENADA, Mex. (AP ) -Bobby Fer· ro of Sherman Oaks zipped flnt across the finish line early today In the Baja 1,000 off-road race, completing the rug· .ged, 87~mile course in his Sandmaster VW dune buggy in 16 hours and 15 minutes. PreUmlnctry lndlcaU0111 were that the :ZS.,_...,d Cal~omlan al30 won the eiaplMI tJme race, but this would be coriflnDed only after race officials finish· ed ~ the Urning• or !he other co . In last-m.lnute swil chtS that caught 1 • reporters by surprise, Swedish driver Rol r Tibblln wM replaeed (n the starUng- order by A. C. Bakken of Cost.a J\.1.csa, who '"'as among the (!ar!y leaden. At Villa Conslitucion, the 10th and final checkpoint 130 miles from the finish line in l..a Paz and 745 miles from the otartlng point here, Ferro wit 17 minutes abeaa of moto rcycle rider Mitch Mays or Palmdale, c.ur., riding a HUJ- qvama 400. Ferro also flashed pas! the checkpoint 42 nilnutts ahead or hit cl...,t rour- wheeled rival, Walker Evans or Rivenide driving a Ford pickup !ruck. In elapsed time. Fem> was one hour and 12 mlnutes ahead of Evans at Villa Constltuclon. Ferro crossed the finish line at 2:21 a.m. today with an avera ge speed of 51.98. miles per hour, a drop from the M mph average he had been maintaining wlth 200 miles to go ln tha annual race. This was Fc.rro's first win In the Baja 1,000. Previously, he !rad finished second in the race and twice won the Baja 500. Defending Champion Parnell! Jones -... was forced out of the race when his Ford Big Oly Bronco developed trouble .shortly after the race started here. Jones, an Indianapolis 500 winner who has twice won the Baja l ,000, wu,kmck· · eel out of the race even be!orl ~nf the !lrsl checkpoint. Much of the dTGma In the race, which bejan here Wednesday morning, faded out with the .exit of Jones and hiJ arch·rJval, Mlckey Thompson, who lalled to ~ily hi• vehicle, IY motorcyclea and 1JO foltl'-wbtel vehicles started the race. "l really can't take any ·credit because l played him the same"'Way I always do," Allen said. "But with West oot, Goodrich probably !ell more pressure and it might have affected his shots." u. Mttht crn • p T ) .. , . ' 1·• lf =·~ ~ 1 2-1 .. 7 •.• l' 4 4-7 It 0 ••• 2 .... ' ,... 11 I .. 2 Mii•••• 11"> e p T Dndrloe ' 2·2 14 l"trrv ' 04 10 Jalltllr ti M %2 Al1WI 5 1).1 11 "oo.rt• 5 1-t 11 Dllvl1 I M ! Dr111eol/ t 1-1 s Lw 10-0' McGlkn S 1-1 11 Twry I M 4 Warn~ I 2·1 I WHllamt 4 0-0 • lo!1l1 » 21-Jt t2 Tot1l1 SI 1·10 lot LOI........... 2( 11 20 ~ti Mllvt•llll" JO 29 2• 2+-109 Tol•I halls -Loi Angt/M 17, Ml/'#11111 .. )). A-1 ..... 'Bama vs Irish? NEW ORLEANS -The Sugar-Bowl wUI vote today lo invite Alabama lo play In the Dec. 31 bowl game with hopes that Notre Dame can be lJntd up u the opponent for the second-ranked Crimson Tide. Engman to Quit 'Jbe .&;.foot-3, 215-pounder, W b 0 I e brother Fred is a defensive end at UCLA, bu ohurfied himleli back toward the top of the deck, now altemaUng with Anthony D1v1J . He carried 24 Umes for a career hlgb 164 yardJ last Sllurday tn Southern Cal's 5(H4 victory over Calll<rn!a. Coach John McKay says he'll alterv_atA! hfs tailbacks "mere and more because basically Rod Is rumlng more and more Jike we always thought be ahould have ... and Rod't a good put receiver. too," I "I knew it was a milter of time but I dldn't lhin1< II would take as · long u It hu" McNelll 11)'1. 11At the beginning of hie ......, I fell a lot better than lut year bul whal I really needed wu a lot ol playing time, J've worked harder ln practice, getting in ' belte< lhipe each Week. I've felt pretty good the Jut three weeks." How does he like McKay's aystem of altemaUng tailbacb! I "It's better than not playjng, IO I'm totally tn favor 11 thlJ Point," ht ll)'I. Chilled Screwdrivers Aid Laguna Grid Fans Life goe1 oo In Laguna Beach, despite the high school foot ball team's ablence from the victory column Binet it apanked Cypreu RVen g1mea 1go. And while some disgruntled fans are suigestlng it's time for new coaching blood, others relieve the pain. in other ways. ,_ That is, two people slipped a case of chilled 1ttewdrlvers into 1ut week's debacle with nt11hboring Unlverslly lllgh WHITE WASH Ol.INN wtirn and proceeded tit dispcee of tllelr cargo In the U!U11 manner, occasionally 1harlilg a· can wtth -oeated naarl>Y. While the Laguna Beach team's record is hardly anythlnl you'd commit to memory or ha YI ttprinted. on yoijr Chrlotmu cants, It does ,.... tit have lnlplnd new mctaliJlng In Ule atando. * fl * Quick ahota ln 1porta: C11111111r llalu-. plteMr JI m P-..., IM Aallll' Nolaa Ryan ror ia. ins Ame11eaa u.,.. ey v-r i.lward lo ·-u lollcal as giving tho NIIMI -prlle tit Aawar Sltlat, or catUtts Yost Berra'• aalVJ:, or beUIY· tas tlte two llp11 are miJllN, er rtvlna your motber 1havlll11 cre1m. ,.II Nola• Ryu eoo1d wlll 11 11mea pllmlat ...... Alpll, Ila -..... WOii Sl wltll a teem like Baltimore. \ Palmer woa only 22 ind be DID pitch for divisional champkm Baltimore. ! Soch la PoUUct. I so oay they'll play UC 1rvlne on I ~ng or the Angels , reliable April (a Mmday) at 3 o'clock and die e will be llaiod at UC!. I Some mlgbl concfude thet wtll be the only time all ...... that the llaloo 1 will be playing In their own leap. Dwtfbl V1 .... , a Moo! bukelball player, ts 1pla1hed all ever l1lt cover · of Oral Roberts Utdvenlly'o [Intl 1n- form1tloa. brocllare, Waled 11 1a "All·:"' American c1ndld.lte. ! ' But l'm 1fr1ld he'll never make AA t -be wu dropped from Ille aqlld ealy ' 1 few day1 qo. I And ble!I Harland Svare for his I greatett dect1l111 u a coach. 1 refer 1 to the one he made eArller thlJ week when he merdlully re1lgned u San Diego Chargers eo1ch. I 1'wt .... • I NW Ot aot, titere! Is no way the Rams wtll -their· dlvl11oa1t title W. tlmo ll'Hlld. Up Wuhlngton ltlta way tltey'W come .,. with • new ltlnd or highway robb«)'., A deer hunter WU takltll lits kill alOOt!< the road when a car 'Jlllllod up, ol<illlled' ouddenly and t.,. men jlllllped oul They! tool!: away hll deer -al ""1POJlll. 8arprlot of lho d•I .. -1drllDc n -' ehtslw!y 11111 lorl Dgmoa wtll retire as S.nll An1 Jtlgb trick coaal at Ge end or tlte 1974 Hnson to b1Ddle new d-11 , .... , vt .. prtnclpol. ,...,. ............ -.,,..,.._ wttb 1uccee1 for more than 1 decade. ' Ooe ot bl1 prote1e1 11 l.Ue Curds, ~ now 1 member of lhe Denver BronCOI pro rootboll team. -' ' ' t I ' . I r Thursday, N0vtmbtr 6, 1q73 -DAILY PILOT 3~ t, Workman Undaunted by Injuries Tars Seek ~re lo&t for the ...... and Mike Bennett and Steve Hines. chances for .. upset over The Santa Ana Vllley lhr .. t? T 0 Imp ro ve Lions Hope To Contain Micklin Injuries have cut deeply Into the armor of · Edlaon lllgh'1 Charin aa they gird for lhelr Irvine Le.11110 foot ba 11 showdown with undefea!M Santa Ana Valley SatUrday night at Westminster lllgh. Saturday i8 vtrJ doubtf\d Valley can double team OD Falcons II Ille ability to pro-slow down Myron White, Gary R u t he r lord's avlllablllty "I don't tlllnt Santa Ana Orange County's No. I ranked "We're just going to try to Rushing (Achllles tendon), any of our receivers ...,. tact White .., paaalng altua-Templeton and .Abel Fausto," Mills sprained an ankle s1stent1y," SllYS Workman, tlom . aayi Workman. against Corona del Mar and ·~they can try, but we have 'fhose duties fall on the 11We haven't seen anyone Is loot !or the Santa Ana lour good ....... ahoulden of Jack Clark, Tom close to stopping them and "One of the best passing offwes in the CIF, one of the least productive rushing gff.enses." Westminster lllgh foot1>1r coach Bill Boswell Is ·~ again and the reason Is tha his team ls on a one-ganx.. )YiMing streak. Gone are starting guards Al DISlena and John Duggan. Gone b defensive end Dftve Miiis. And gone Is tho No. I tailback, BIU Rutherford. Valley game. Estancia double covered Flannelly, Kevin Ford and realiatlcally we're just going Still, optimism is evident on Tros:ell and White went to Scott Campbell. to try to sJow them down the Edlson campus due to Batch five times. Corona del "If Santa Ana Valley is sue· some. the tremendous striking power ~far tried to cover TrOn:ll ceuful an the pass rush we'll "You can't over p 1 a y of quarterback Dave White with single coverage and wu have to draw and screen some anything defensively, they just and his quartet of receivers burned badly. to slow them down," surmises. have too many ways to hurt That's the scouting report on Newport Harbor's football team and coach Don Lent says it's about time that turned around. DiSlena (knee ligaments} and Dug gan (torn ligaments} -Joe Troxell, Jim Balch -Perhaps the key to Edllon's Wortanan. you." 0 The win last week Wlf great but it was the way we finally jelled as a unit lhl Says Pickford ·corona Defense Toughest in Loop Fountain Valley High loot-standouls will be missing Fri- ball coach Bruce Pickford day night. says his team has some pro-Tight end Rick . Tessler-Is blems facing it Friday night out with a shoulder injury when the Barons seek their and Dave Mackley is still hob- sixth win in eig~t starts at bled by injury, Huntington Beach a g a in s t Mike Lear takes over at ~ Corona del Mar. Ugbt end and Jerry Grundy "Corona del Mar is the and Scott Napp take over toughest defensive team In the Mackley's v a c a n c y at Irvine L e a g u e , ' ' says linebacker and guard. Piclt(ord, "we know it. They But Fountain Valley still has always are the tough cs t the major portion of ils poten t defensive team. offense intact with "And I don't want to be quarterback Dan Troup around if Dave Holland's luck leading the way. ever changes. Corona del Mi.r "'That's the one thing that was dominating its game with has really helped us th1s Edison until it lost 1 ts year," says Pickford. "We quarterback. have a kid that can throw "I suppose against us the the ball and a good group breaks will change." or receivers. Pickford also vciices concern "We have a lot or people JOHN SWEAZY Mesa Eyes Winning Campaign "'ilh the Corona de! Mar of· that can hurt you ... we're not fcnse, although Jtolland's Sea . a one-back offense. Costa !'fesa High's Mustangs Kings must attack with a '11" feel that Troup is ai--are eyemg ,a winning season backu? quarterback a f t e r good a passer as any in after seven weeks of the 1973 sophomore Gary Guisness was Orange County and it bas football campaign and that's lost for the seaJOn. really added a new dimension saying a mouthful considering "Knowing ow-·def en 1 e to our game. Mesa's schedule. they'll probably cram the ball "And the improved play of 'nl.i.s week's Orange C:OUOty down our throat," says our fUllback, Steve Thompson, Top 10 lists six of Mesa's Pickford. 11Especially against has made us happy. He's roes among the top 11 teams. our defense." learned to block and he's Coach John S w. e a_i y' s Two of Fowitain Valley's_... doing a good job." Mustangs are 34 fOr the sea90D with Los Alamitos (Friday night al OCC) and Fountain Valley remaining. H•nghtg It (Jp Impressed me most," say· "We had boped to move Boswell, who will be tryil¥' the ball on the ground this Earl Engman will be to stretch the streak agaJns· giving up his Santa 1·d season and we have what ap-Ana High track coach-Huntington Beach Fr a : At SA Bowl pears to be the ingredients ing po$ at the end oC night at Westminster. to do it," says Lent asi he the 1971'-season to as-With just two games to play prepares his Sailors !or Satur-sume vice principal's Westminster's-.Llons must wb day night's home ga me duties at the school. both games to avoid the won Monarchs Tangle E , Sa' ts h .record ever in the 15-yea._ . against Western. ngman 5 in ave history of the sch o o I ,. "In Brian Theriot we have been perennial powers \Vestminster is now i-s. a constant breakaway threa t. in Orange County cir- Tom SaCtig and Pete Brown cles. Boswell feels the club ha. With Warriors A matcbup ol two of the Angelus League's top rwmlllg backs takes place tonight when Mater Del's Jim Gardea faces Pius X lltgh's Reggie Kellough in actton at Santa Ana Bowl. Kickoff for the Mater Del homecoming con- test Is a o'clock. rlarde> bas sparked the Mater Dei ollenae most of the ...... although Greg Vi- viano moved Into the spotlight a week ago to share rushing honors at the tailback position. Kellough, a 6-foot, 170- pounder, la the leading rusher for the Warrion and also plays on defenae where be has inlercepted tlm!e """'"' this season. The difference between the two teams may come in the freshness of the Monarchs at- tack Ill the fourth quarter. Pius X has eight players Pivotal Tilt Awaiting El Toro going bolh ways and physical condition could be ·a major factor in its success in the late· stages. Mater Del has only two starters going both ways. The Monarchs rely so much on the rwming game that quarterback Steve Martindale threw but one pasa last week that was · <.'Ompleted for 15 yards. In the game the Monarebs burled only two aerials and both were com- plete, the other by backup slgnal-caller Jim Wigmore. Pius X has a first-year quarterback in junior Rick Ponce. He wa:s sidelined with a shoulder injury as a freshman and last season played mainly on defense. Pius co&9h Warren Simmons feels Mater Dei has a .strong defensive unil · are big, hard-running backs. ----------shown signs of being able t· Between the three we should do just that. have a good rushing attack. '"We changed our defen!o· "The only thing I can say v •ki la st week to add a dom is there must be a tack of . I ngs lineman... expta1ns Boswell concentration somewhere. Il "Other teams were runnin; seems when the line does the H on us too success fully. Las job, we fumble. When we get ungry week we stopped the insid the ball to the backs, they run but Santa Ana was sti! get nailed. able to gain around the ends. "You need a long run or For the first time all season "We've been working a · two to keep the other team ~farina High has its entire tho~e end sweeps becaus honest. We haven't bad that team healthy and that's nQt we'll have to stop Lcr'el - all }'ear." all that's finally together. Micklin, whom I con.sider tb" Lent also replied to the feel-"We're playing right now best junior nmning back b ing amoog many followers this league." like I had hoped we would that the Newport team on all season," says firsl;year Westminster, or course, ha the field in the last rew games coach Mike Henigan who has the best rwming back in th seems to have lost a lot of turned one of the Orange Coast league, period. Tony Ac its drive, poise and confidence. areas', most disastrous pro-comando rushed for anothe "All of that bolls down to grams intn iespedability. 196 yards against Santa Am just one thing," says Lent. and picked up a new nicltna.rnl". "We've lost concentration. "We're healthy and we're in the process. ' We're not complacent but playing as a unit. I couldn't oTony is a superstar de we're not consistent, either. find fault with a single player luxe," says Boswell. "He use There are a lot of indicators in the second half or last his blockers, is always unde1 to show the · lack of con-week's game against \Vestern. contTol and has yet to bl ~ centratioo. We can't brei;i.k a It's just. the second lime in stopped on · a clean tackle • long run on offense and we five years at Marina the was tie's • jmt too quick to ge..., . Mal.,. Dll °''"'"' drop aucial interceptions on an assistant from 1967-1971) a good shot at him. . TE-Ml~• ...w.\H"rt • ,.,1t11 defense. I've seen a team go out and "We'll run Tony as ofter. LT-K9Yl'I P•l'I dominat ~---.--LG-&ob .t.1v1r11 1111 "It's something that the e OJ.IUUI-. as we can because he's tbrr ""~ -i:::;:.rmur ~~~ team will just have to work Marina is currenUy 2-Z in guy you've got to go witb J1.T-er1c •ffll iao out. Western is the defending the Sunset League and 3-4 to win." ~~i:! 0,:9rfl~••• l: Sunset League champ and overall with Santa Ana's Boswell says he'd Hke tt Ta-Jl111 Gardff l~ plays with a Jot of pride. Saints the next-t&tast game go back and replay :some oJ r::J:: :.':::1ero . 160 We can't afford to let down Friday night at the Santa Ana the Sunset League gamu Matw 09' D\f-1 against any team now." Bowl. because he feels the outcome LE-Gtor'9f H1nn1 ill Lent will have the services "Gregg Foster was really would be different now. , LT-Kevin Ptvln """' hi MG-Tom Lyt• 162 of Brown at rullback again. "tting the receivers last week "Huntington Beach will be :~~,..L~:""r ~= He missed lasf week's win ~nd while he isn't going to a good test to see if we really La-aoo M1c.u11y 115 over Loara with a hip pointer gain any yards r u s h i n g have improved/' says BoswcJ1 Hem sley Philosophical About Battle for Cellar Mesa's on a two-game win streak and highly lnstrwnental in that succes3 are Rod Fig- gatt, Joaquin OWnberlaln, Steve Teregis and the interior offemlve line of M a r k Mcllonnan, Jerry Schepens, Paul Farris, Kim Josepboon ~t::!~:"S: lrs but will alternate with S&fUg, because of hi! sore ankle, he's "They're a good running teaiij' El Toro m '""''• varsity foot-cB-Jotw1 Olldeli: us 'Ille balance of the squad is certainly throwing well," says and will probably try to keep' •"&" s--Gr911 Vlvleno 1,n,. heaJ•h... See vn .... Dto-37 the ball 00 ttie ground." ' Estancia'• Eagles will )!ave their last chance to e!JC8pe the cellar in the tough Irvine League football wan Friday night when they entertain l\tagnolla High's Sentinels on the Newport Harbor lllgh field. 'lbe Eagles and Sentinels are both winless in Irvine League play this season and Friday's loser will move lo the bottom or the pack alone with one game to play. There will be no way to escape at least a tie for the bottom spot for the loser. Jim Hetmley, experiencing problems of major proportion in bis first year as head coach at Estancia, is philosophical about the game. uMagnolla doesn't do a lot of things dillerent than the Tri tons ball team goes after lts, __ ,....::....:°'.:.~.c.c•.::".:..M•'------'----"-'--Y-----------·---'-"'•__:-.;.__' _______ _ seve!lth stralgbl without a loea Saturday D1gbt at Mission Vie- jo lllgh and coach Mac Moore calls it, '11be pivotal game of our season." -teems we have played exoept !or splitting their down linemen wider when they get "We've,really been pleased close to the goal line. with the entire Interior line, 11 and Jim Davis. "Instead of the usual 111· says Sweazy. "Teregts has yard sp11t, they often split played some good football for two yarda apart. us and O.amberlain bas prob- "If y.U don'i have quick-ably he.n "'"' steadiest player. footed derenslve linemen, lhey "People have not turned his can squeeze through there corner and lately aren't even rapidly and score. This is a going his way." major concern to us." Los Alamitos Hlgh's Grlffuu What about the Sentinels loom Friday night and s ..... y defense? says they pose a problem ms aenlorless eleven col- lide• with nrst-year Arlington of Riverside and a victory would appear to clinch a CIF 1-A playoff berth · as an at- large power. And Moore admlls those lof- ty goals did enter his mind prior to the aea.90l'l.. "It is sim.Har to others we similar to Edison and Santa "Yes," saya Moore, "it was have faced, a five--two with Ana Valley. in the back ot my mind. Now a monster man. It's mostly '"niey're basically a slot-I it boils OOwn to Saturday night a matter of hitting and offense and they pass and· whether wen going to make reading the type: of defense run effectively out of it. They it or not." they will be in. probably trap a little more Moore says it won't be an "We hope to rip the man than F.dison and they use a easy task and cites the Arl- in rront of us and try to lot of screens and draws . ington passing game as the go to the man with the ball. "Los Al's quarterback Mike best of any his team ha.s faced It will be a matter of whether Olivas and wide receiver this year. •e can physically pop them Brian Tlcehurst present a real "I've seen Arlington five or not." problem for U!. Ticehunt is time!," says Moore. '"It has ..- What about the injury qilo-certainly among the top two two good running backs and Uent at Estancia? or three receivers in the an e1cellent passing game. 4-cyl. 1 BOO cc. Bike-bar option eecures bikes and other cargo. Rear step bumper option gives easy access. Deluxe box cover option shown has crank-open jalousie windows. Courie r offers Not Making ,Mistakes Dave Gibbs is hurt and is league. "They don't try to confuse a doubUul p a, r ti c i p a n t "There are four or five good people with anything flashy. although Hemsley was reluc-recelven in this league and They play hard nosed football tant to take him out of the he's certainly one or them." and come right at you. probable lineups -be goea There are no changes Ill "Wef :g to try to both ways as an end. the c.o,,ta Mesa tineup with p1ay a and do it well. Quarterback Steve Morton the Mustangs bllled to take I thin. ~ going to depend overhead cam engine has aluminum alloy · head, 5 main bearings for rigldlly and st~~ngth, 4 different stripe kits In 4 color choices. Snap-down bed liner option , Nick Vlelsldes Is sllll sidelin· ed with a knee Injury at San Clem"1te lllgh but It doesn't seem to matter these days. is playing wU.h a bad knee the field u they did Jut week. on w! ·r we're ready for but is working out dally Flggatt, Incidentally, bas Ill· them. we are we'll will although not at full strength. tercepted seven times this the game. But il we go Ill Mike Hewell, a starting yeor from his spot Ill the expecting another j u n I o r guard, Is likewise bothered secondary and 11lx of them varsity opponent we may find San Clemente football coach with a groin pull, but is also have come in Irvine League ourselves on the wrong end Allie Seba!! found Steve Olson expocted to start. play. of the sUck." to replace ~•lstdOI and the -·------------------------------' l9G--pounder scored th!' e e touchdowns Ill his 181-yard el-r------fort aesinst Dana Hills Jast CUP THIS COUPON ------., ::e~h:n~v~;~ r:rd~al~~~\~ •1 C!-••~ $5-gg Friday night. ~-~ "Olson was our fullback earller,"saydScba!f,"wejust I Al .• AS Ml I l:RY moved him back. He doesn't I have a whole lot of experience , ~~ul~~ .. he has pretty I BAR' GAIN COUPON Schatt says his te•m can I will again II It performs as IL did agala..t Dana Hills in I \/ · a 4M rout. Use this coupon and aavt on tho purch-of,.M\.Allaa oc C"-on Bottory at "We've always moved the I .,.St1ndard Stallont and most Chevron Dealera. Prnent It and receive: bill, u says Schaff, 1'bi.it In Iha past three games we I $5.00 olf tM 1t1tion price of an Atlas "~" lltttry S?.00 off IM s&ltiOfl ,ric.t of"' Atlas "A" hltttY haven't had the fumbles and SS.00 off the station price of 1 Chtwon "CP30" llatttry Sl.00 olf tht stltlolt ,,a of• Allas "K" lltllfJ mistakes that can kilt you. I $100 off the 1)11ion pr let of"' All11 "PA" BatttrJ Otherwise we're going about Offer ll{ld station price1 may vary at parliclpeling Chevron Dealers. Purchases may lhe sa.Tie as always ." I be made by using your Chevron Natlonal Travel card. Budget terms available. Jn that span Schaff'• Tritons . ~ . . toppled Laguna Beach and I Tflll COl.lflon good only I« purch"'~ m10. Chirino tht period from oc1'ot1er t, 1tn through Dana llills. They lost to NoYtml>tr SO. 1973. Only on1 coupon m•r M uMd '°'••ch bttttrJ JMirchlMd. Thi• coupcn ti void Sonora. I Where proPllblled, 1111td or 0111trwl1t n1trlcttd. ~ """ t120e.,'or ftdtmpt~~~N ~pon...,• ~o Sch fr I I V lel\C'B as ll"'61rd OH Com9~y ot C.IHornl1, Wtltt~ """"•'°"" Inc., ,0, loa H. ..........,.d, _. .., a eva ua cs 8 I I Trldtm1rk "All••" A1g. U.S. P1t. Ott. All•• fklHly Compen,. OltcOt.1nt1 lhetrn •bcM do flot as.•~ a big, physical team capable On ail id/u11men1 ot.., All•• or Chtwon blll•'l'· I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ,r beallllg San Clemente with a minimum of mistakes. I ,._, !ijii I , uwe've iot to •top them Standard ~tati·ons Chevron Dealers rlgbt down the line. We'll have I '1 • .,_ I to play a good , solid ball gome - and make no errors," says L-••••••••••••••••••.I Scharf. • ,\ Strong 7-crossmemberframe, box-section rails. Cour1ercurb wolght, 2,515 lb. Dual cylinder . brakes ... each wheel has not 1, but 2 brake cylinders for sure stops. • Blg coll springs up front. Long 104.3-ln. wheelbase helps smooth the ride. Long 6-leaf rear springs cushion load up to big 1,400 lb. • Roomy cal1 has style, vlsl blUty, insulated qu iet. Foam seat. OpUonll air conditioning and automatic transmission. 1, for box gives carpeted ,.,,,,_,...""""' comfon. Durable indoor-outdoor material. Well OOvers, side and end panels avaHable. .r . .. ..... ~ . . . . . t ~ f ' All-welded 74.5-ln. box and a wide 62.2 lnchss. ' . FORD I COURIER FORD DIVISION .... I ' 1 J • , • ' • • IU "' ........ ,., .. ..,, ~una 1 'Inj uries , ., Mountina I ~ ' Laguna Beach mgh football I+ coach Hal Akins has had to · shuffle his lineup so much this season he must feel like a Las Vegas dealer. And he's at it again this week. ' Halfback: Mark Mazzarella 1 will be sidelined for Friday's ' game with Sonora at Laguna due to a hip pointer incurred Jn last week's game. And Akins, who lost starting halfback John Carlson for the season two weeks ago, is now : looking for a combination to ~ go with the one ·remaining I f healthy Artists back, Pete Cottam. "It's ridiculous the injuries • we've bad," Alt.ins says. "A • big problem for us has been we haven't been able to work • with the same kids two weeks in a row all season." Among the stoi>-gap mea- sures Akins is considering is moving quarterback Kelly Akins to the fullback spot, inserting John Willette at quarterback and shifting to the I-formation. Another possibility is to 1 move Jineman John McCall J , to fullback, where he saw a f 1 little action early in the sea- l !On. Akins ls testing out bolh 1 possibnities, but either way be feels his team will need a superior effort against Sonora. "After getting beat last week, you know they'll be f spoiling to get at us ," Akins , says. "They have some ex- ~ cellent players in the skilled f · positions and two or three • big kids. j ·' .l!Their halfbOck, '!'eny Hart, ,. .. is a r~al lfipl~. threat .• He l · was a quilrterback earlier, but : they'.ve actu~lly moved the t ball better since they-put him f at halfback and let a f ·sop h omore do th e quartel1>acldng. "Defensively they use all ~ kinds of different formatipns , ' ....._and they are quick. El Dorado used an I-form ation and had good success with a power btast off tackle against them." • :1 MV's Goal: i:.Winning • Grid ¥ear • ' ' His 1973 football team has · already notched more vie- ~ tories than any predecessor . ~ at Mission Viejo., and coach • Bob Hivner is confident his ! 1 Diablos can extend that record • against El Modena this week ~ and in the finale against Tustin a week hence. • f 0 1f we win these next two games, we'll fmish 6-3 , whi ch ·isn't too bad," Hivner says. ' "Our kids are still en- ' thuSiastic, and I'm optimistic, • t®. t "If we play well, we can i beat El Modena this wee k. I It's surely not going to be a walkaway, but I'd say we 1 have a very good chance." I If that chance do6 indeed pan out, it would be Mission _ Viejo's fifth win in eight • games, thus assuring the first 1 winning season in the school's history. Hivner isn't taking E 1 ~·fodena Jightly. mind you . He points out several strong points, including a good run- ning attack. "They've really been able to move the ball with their wi shbone offense ," H i v n er says. "Their fullback, Richard Kingsland, is a powerful run- ner and he carries it most of the time. "They have a pretty good line and with the wishbone they have an extra back in there tQ block, so it makes things tough for the de£ense. "They don't pass much at all, but when they do it usually }\urts you. Their quarterback (Jim Christopher) is a better ruhner than he is a passer, : • but he can throw well enough • ' when he has to." !' Mission Viejo. ha s become : a run-oriented team itself in ~ the past few weeks since an 1 injury sidelined s t a r t i ng ~~quarterback Dave Schmidt •in! mwer lsn' planning any • 'llii>leoale changes. P ro Results I . I ···-···~, ...... ,, ........... •••.J · Tlli1 1mount 11Prl••nl1 1h• mon111ty p1ym1nt (lnde• 11'11 J.C. Penney Time Payment Plan 1or Ille pu1clla~e or 1111$ i!em. No FINANCE CHARGE will la incu1r1d 11 tl\e "N1w 81!1nc1 .. or 11\e account In 1111 Intl b1lllng tl~tement Including lhl pu1ch111 11 Pl od in lull be!o•" lhe ne~I billin; dale Jhown In 1h1l 1ta1cment, When .ncu1rnd, 11 monthly FINANCE -CllARGE woU be delett•Hnlld b, 1nnl~ong monlhly pe.,odtc rates ol 1 2~0 . (ANNUi'IL PE RCENTA<.E RATE 1~ ·~·)on lhe lot5I s~~o And,~. (ANNUAL ;, j PERCENTAGE RAlE 12"o) on 11111 po111on o;·e• S500, to Ille "Pre .. ous V""" {lfflance" wothout dcduchn!l· p1ymenl1 ~nd cred•ll. . . . • BUEN~PAR~ Beach at Orangethorpe Open Delly 9:30 to 9:30 p.m. Sundey 10 to 7 • I .. AS LI STED BELOW .,.. • FOR NO DOWN PAYMENT, 5.50 A MONTH ReliAride®Deluxe Steel Belted tire has: Qf 2-ply polyester cord body Ill' 2 tough steel cord belts · F•d Save I p,Jces shown are for tubeless Siz• Aeg. E1. Tix Sale Price per Ml ol 4 w'1111wa!ls ptu1 Fed. E•. T11. No E78id 4-735114 31.97 ea. 2 50 4 for $100 257.88 g:rue;~" s~::?B~11~~'1:~~~~:~· F78•14-775114 33.97 e1. 2.68 4 for $100 3 .88 n1me 11nddoe1rio1reflect any G781t1 4-825114 33 97 ea. 2 85 4 for Sl 00 35.88 nllionwide standard ol qu11+1y, H78x14-8-45/855•14 JS 97 ea. 2.98 4 for SIOO 43.88 With 1he purchase of RetiAride~ tires you get: G78x15-82Sx15 JJ.97 ea. 2.87 4 for SIOO 35.88 1. FREE installation 2. FREE lire ro tation H78x15-~5/855x 15 35.97ea. 3.01 4 for SIOO t13.88 every 5000 J78x15-885x15 · 37.97 e1. 3.19 4 for $100 51.88 Sale p rices through Sunday, Nov.11. Charge it on your JCPenney charge card 'ORANGE SANTAANA Clly Dr. at Garden Grove Blvd. 3900 So. Brlllol -No. of So, Cout Pl.ta Open 10·9 p.m. Delly lundey 10 to 8 Open 10-9 p.m. Dilly Sund1y1 10 to I • : }... l ' ' •• !: , •, • . ~, ~ • ., '~ ·l • ·= • •• ;. ~; " .. ' •. :- , • , ·~ ~ , ~ • , ' . • ~ • ~ • ' ' ' ~ 1 I • I I • ' • t • • . • • • ; r s • 1 • ' ' l: • !· .. ~· ~ • • • ,. :: .: • ,. .. • .. •• •• .. .. :· ; ~ .. ~· • ~ J • .. ~ ' • ' ' • : l i i l ' ! • I i • • Prep Defensive Stars KIM NILSSON Coron1 del Mar MIKE BENNETT Edison KEVIN SERENO Fountain Valley ANDRE LOPEZ Mlrina BILL MOCKETT Newport Harbor JOAQUIN CHAMBERLAIN Costa Mtw JEFF GREEN El Toro DAVID McBETH Hunti ngton Beach JOHN DCJDEK Mater Oei STEVE GOODRICH University BILL SPRINGMAN D1n1 Hills TIM SWEET J:1t1ncl1 JIM SIMS Laguna S..ch TONY RICHARDSON Mission Viejo RICK VAUGHT Westminster Da11a Hills Haunted _8y Funible Problems VIKES ... ConUaaed From Page :lS Henigan of his quarterback who. conlpleted nine o{ 11 In -the first ha If' . U Dana Hills' team is 11s resilient as its conch, it won't .show any ill effects of a 48-6 shellacking last week from San Clemente when it takes on host Brea Friday nlgl1L 11Tbe period of mourning was over by the second quarter Friday as far as l was concerned,'' says Dana Hills roach Tooy Leon. "It was one of those games where th•Y couldn't do anything wrong and "'C couldn't do much right," Leon says. "We turned the ball over seven Umcs, and \hat makes 17 in our last two games. We're lucky to be l·I In those gan1c s with that n1 a n y turnovers." Like any coach In a similar situation, J..eon can'l pinpoint reasons (or the Oolphlns' IUY A NIW '71 DATSUN AND SAYE. AT COSTA MH A DAnUN • 1141 MAllOI ILYD. C.M. 540-6410 rumbling problems. and doesn't think it's totally the result of the Houston veer offense they're running. 'It's a high risk offense all right," Leon s a y s . 1ir~ouston fumbles about twlce a week wiUt it arid they in· vented the dim thing . Fumbles are allnost exj>ected, but Mt lo the extent we 're gelling them. "Our 'problem hasn't been with the exchanges so much. We're fumbling •when being hit.'' ln ·Brea., Leon sees !!Orne problems similar to those of San Clemente. ·~They have a good running game and a fine fllllback 11n Steve Seeba who runs w th good authority," Leon says. "We'll continue to pass as long as we're that successf\ll. Earlier I tried to have the offense cram the ball down the other team's throats on the ground but I learned o.ur line just isn't big enough to do that. Mafk one up for experience." Marina was al90 able to run behind Nel>on Malluk""'• whr11as pul No. 1 !allback Rick Merigold ht a ruerve position. . ''Nelson will start but RJck will play a Utile more this week," says Henigan . uniey're different types and the -ety should help us move the ball." . He says Santa Ana is a hlgh·•corln( 1tam that la dangerous on elmost every play. DON't DISCARD THOSE OLD TENNIS SHOUll Wt ,.,..,. ..... "'"""""' lfl ,..,_ ff MlllM -Tf'tfWI SMM. ANTHONY'S SHOI SOVlCI e WllTCl.lttfl l'lA1A e LIDO • PASMIOM llLAtlD e COttOfU IHI'-MAft • 1 -... J DAILY PILOT 37. New Impetus for Gauchos Boes Get Defensive Test Again Apparently there ha. been game of the season a week least a co-championship must nothing wrong with the Sad· later against Inv ad I n g have somethJng to-do with dleback College football team Paloma1 . It, and I think they CM do that a visible shot at the San Diego City has one con· the job." defense. We've played good defense all year, but haven't been consistent with the of- fense." Orange Coast College's foot· ball team has lived and died with its defense most of the season and things don't figure to cha nge as the Pirates near the end of tbe 1973 campaign. Mission Conference co-cham· ference game left. It can San B e r n a r d i no and plonsbip couldn't cure. clinch at least a tie for the Palomar are the best offensive Hartman feels the Oauchoo will have to stop one of the conference's best backs in Tim Cunningham of San Bernardino. C®ch George Hartman's title with a win over Chaffey teams in the -conference. ac-- Saddleback team was given Saturday . A loss would glve cord ing to Hartman. He reels a chance to gain that co-cbam-Saddleback a chance to win th e Gauchos defense will have pionship when circuit-leading things outright. to play superbly in both san Diego City College was "From what I've seen our ganles. defeated by Grossmont last team is really starting to "San Bernardino has sort week. To gain at least a tie, come around," says Hart1nan . o( a reverse problem to ours," "He's probably the be.st back we'll fa ce all yeJtr, but he's not the only good runner they have ." says Hartman. "Their fullb ack is also a good one. and both t h e l r quarterbacks can run or throw." Coach Dick Tucker's Pirates and Santa Ana battled to a. scoreless tie last week and the OCC head man expect.s another close defensive strug· gle with host Cerritos Satur· day night. "Yes, I think it'll be anot her defensive game. Our defense has been super all season long and Cerritos has a fine defense, too," says Tucker. Saddleback has to win its "Our kids have been con· Hartman says. ''1'hey have game with San ~rnard.ino centrating much better in moved the ball y,•ell of- saturday night at San practices this week than in fensi ve ly. but ha ven't been Bernardino, and the final past weeks. The idea of at able to stop anyone on ....-----=-=-=-=-=~----------=-=-=i "Our goal right now is to win our last two games. That would give us seven wins wh ich is as many as we had when we went to the state playoffs in 1970. "We should be 7·1 right now instead of 5-2-1. We should have won the Golden West and Santa Ana game!. There's no question that we have a good football team. We've beaten good teams and our defense has really b e e n super." In the past OC'C has had trouble with cemtos, winnin!{ jus t three of eight games. And Saturday's battle figures lo be another tough one. "Cerritos has a fine team, there's no question about th at. Every game they've lost they could have won. And th ey should have beaten Fullerton (17-14 Joss ). 'They have a lot of balance, good runners and a good defense. It's hard .to find weaknesses. 'L ~ . Tucker finds. il hard to co1n- pare Cerritos with other clubs the Bucs have met. · "They run-that full house a lot of the time, but this year they 're · also running more out of a spread with twin slots. Their offense looks more like Fullerton's than anyone else we've played." Despite Orange Coast's t-1·1 South Coast record, Tucker isn't ready to concede the con- ference crown yet. "We've got a shot at it if Fullerton loses it.s last two games. It's not beyond the reahn of possibility." Uni Seeks To Soothe Wounds University High hasn't had v.·hat would be called a good -rootball season but coach Jer· ry Redma n says the Trojans CQU!d go a long way toward soothing some. or the wounds v.'ith a win this week. The opponent is El Dorado Friday night at Mission Viejo High. Th e Golden HaWks are 5--0 in Orange League play. "I think we're mentally ready and rea lly have nothing to lose," says Redman or his Uni club which is on a one· gBme winning strea k after stopping Laguna Beach last week. "An upset over El Dorado "'ouldn't make our season but it would give th e kids a real Injuries Ha~per Seahawks WILMINGTON -Injuries and a bout with the nu have momentarily weakened the Los Angeles Harbor Seahawks football team . But coach Floyd "Scrappy'' Rhea is confident the Hawks will be ready for Saturday night's Southern California Conference confronfation with Golden West at Orange Coast. "This is a mighty tough ball game, especially in our present predicament," says Rhea. "\Ve are hurting wit h a number of injuries and a Jot of people weakeqed by the flu .' Several or our key defensive people missed the game with Santa Monica and the particular type of flu they have takes about two wee ks of recovery." How does he assess the Golden West team on offense? "They are sound and well· balanced. That r r e s h m a n quarterback, Dan Accomando, is an excellent passer and a fine athlete. He has the ability to run the ball as well as pass." \Vhat about the Rustlers defense? "It has been improving each week. \Ve saw them play Orange Coast and give up 27 points in the first half. 'Then we watched them against LA Southwes t and t h e y in- tercepted fiv e passes. You have to be sound to do that." Harbor is geared around the running of tailback James Evans who has scored nine touchdowns this season. The passing game hasn't plE!ased Rhea to date and he is making a switch a t quarterback as a res ult for the Golden West confrontation. Kevin Keenan. a freshman, will take over the signal-call- ing duties from the more ex· perienced. Dave Garasic. 'This will be Keenan 's first start of the campaign and the move is being made t<? improve the passing attack according to Rhea. Harbor has completed about 47 percent of its passes this season. Women's ·Volleyball • UC Rlv1r1l0t dl'f. UC lrvl11e, 15·13, ll·\S, ls.t . boost and take some or the v1rs1tt Unlver1lly def VIII• P11rk, Is.$, 1>'. ' scars 1away from i.he previous J11111or v1r111y · Vlllt P1rk di! Unlverslh, IS.11, losses. 1s.t. "Let's face it, this is a sen~.;s~~l\\!:!.,1.!.~~.\~~ :::.•ic~rall(.111 real challenge... 2·9 ..... 1$·1 . S&n!or 1 -E1!111(.l11 ~1. Wnlmlnlltr Th TroO h J...AA 11-t , .. ,, 1•13. e Jans ave U\."t:n a Jvnlor 1 -w11tmln1ter def. e11anc11 dominant factor on the ground Hju~i~ 1/·!: E•l•ll(.I• cit!. we11m1ns11r . thls year. 'Their passing attack 11jt,.J~3~·e11111(.1, 0ti. W••tm~11,, hasn't frightened anyone and 11M. 1"'· 11.t. JIJll or • -Wfflmlnll•r dtf. E1tlll(.i• Redman says it's a little late t?..J. ,.,, 1s.1. to try to go to the air. 7.l11~r-1Ss.9. e1raoc11 ••'· w1srm1n,11r "We1l pass some, but just Junior• -e111nc111 d•'~ W15tmln•ter lS-3. ?·12, lM. to keep their defense alert," SOD11omDrt 1 -wntmlnst•r 11111. "'"'fS'' ',_,' lS.t, 11.3. says Redman. "We've been soo more 2 -wn1m1n11tr ere!. E1t1nc a 12-3, t·U, l•·S. success ful running with Murry SOOl!omor• 3 -wn1m1n1tlf' d•'· Graha1n and see no reason e~!:t3' JS.~ 11.-.. 1m1.,111r d•'· ,~Tii'•~ 1s... 11 ... to change now.•• 5ollhomor• s -W•1tm1nu1r ct•t. El Do d · £ th E1111ncl11 4.7, 11.f, HM. ra o 1s one o e soo11omor1 ' ~ We11m111111r der. top defensive teams in the e~~~10·713:!.1• ~~~m11111,r league agalllS· t the run. The E•••nc:I• n..1. s.1. 11 ... Frolhmiln I -ESlll'ICll Haw.ks are also the league's W!'ttmlnt19r 1D ... '·lD. 10.3, fred\m1f1 2 -Ei11nd1 top passion team behind Bob W1t1tri1lnster ,.,, 1.10, 13-1. e Fl"fll'!n\1111 J -Wtsltnlmter Farra. ~1111nc•• llM, 1&.12.,... ll Frt1llm1n • -Esl111(.li1 "We' have to get to Farra wesim1111'9r lj·'· t-11. 1s.1. bef h " ' Fr11hm1n .-We1tmlMIOf ore e can set up. says e1111nc11 1-10. 1w. 1M. Redman. " \" e • v e •··n Frffflm•n 6 -E111nc11 'l U\.'l: Wnlmt1ISIOI" lW, J.t, 12·1. aomewhat successfUI this year ---------- because we've been aggressive on clefense. We'll have to play thal way Friday night lo win." ·POOL TABLES s39500 --...::. and up [:)OWLlllG CHUCK'S D IWAlH , ... , .... '""--....... COSTA MESA DATSUN Presents FOOTBALL FORECAST GIO. ZIMMllMAN ......... he-of tho lotton and qU01tlo11 about "" Callfonda oro l• a cot111t-don to ""1r owr l'ffttlod of n:itl.. football teo1n1, wo Patlflc El9ltt flnolo, ollO 011 Nove•Mr 24tti. wo11lcl INio to .. 1i. time to oxpkll• that o Tho 4tfl•ranli:ff Ind"' wlll cllll o,.. .. ttth toam'1 n:itl119 11 NIM on ltt power q1ot1 ... t, WHli ... cl S~nforcl Ts a 16.pol11t _.., 11ot Oii , • .,... wo11 alld Iott. In otltor w0tcl1, to Sou':lt9'11 Ci:ll, raNd #I. It's tl•ply tlto OYft... of ltt past per· for-o .,.i.t all oppo1ttloo. lodt of tlto Tho two 119 TH powon .. •I• 1itMYJ football teafltl tflot wo follow recoi-011 foYOrltos. 2ofl.rotecf Olllo St.te b p~ IJf oclf111ted rotf .. eaclt ....-, whkh oxploln 27 pollltS •"' MkJil ... SMMi, u4 MlcW.. why L.S.U., for exoinple, tan be 10tti 0 ,._ 9an, #5, •Ill bfft llllttol1 lilf ·21 . At .... pol11t 11 the sect1011, we w .. 1c1 pklr 'O'lo weft, 14 .. the Hit, ftc ...• olriio19h a State and U.C.L.A. to -' 111 ttie a ... toam wh11 oltd1focrtecl, Ill power qvotie11t f111ct11gtn frotn wffk to wHk. lowl o• Ja11wary 11f, bvt tltot's ,..uy J••P· 5..-lt'• Int ovr way of morllomotlcolly 1119 the t"'11• 1peculatl"' 011 ttte rflatlve pGWft of col.... AAd OKe bla.,.• Miucuni , .............. footbGU '"""-We C• bo •• wro119 .. a11y• htto ..,.,.oed Oklollo-I• a llf Et•t o•' laltd wo .,......25-I• of tfle tlMOI , b11t c .. torwo sllow-4ow11. U..1 IJke tt11 ....... wo fMI lt'1 • rellable a 1ystem 01 a11y 111 Mluow May-loM .......... tllh ._ .,,. 16 .....,,... • ., wf1119r1 -alld losen. points to t11o• patfft s....n. ""°· N.,... Mlctlitotl elld Olllo Stote are1t't tH 011ly Da-, #6, wlll tlow Pltflbwt• dow11 , • • two '"-ckts.1119 111 o• a co11fereMo ch1m• tH lrftll .. ould wl11 by 20. A11d h•• SNN, plollllllp coofrootatlo11. U.C.L.A. olld 5olltll• #7, wi ll whip Nortll Corotloo State by 12. __ ._. l!fttdt11rth., •••• , •• , , .20 ~S,od •••••••••••• 13 Mtnc11y 11tt.'1 s"'t"' ~;.,-w1111 S1ilf11 w111 mlli;t tlill • taliililt for-.prlf.,..•11dtn 1mC1erHt1 by Hv•n. k l 0111:111111 ll9mo croWcl C0'11d ~Ill 111111 mk• lra11blt IOf" Sl•l1r1. ----~...;...:--•• Watlll119too •••••• , .• , •• 17 So11 k0ttckco., •••••••••• 16 Two WMlll '"• Mith IMm11 r111 inl1 111111..aws. Sllin1 11me11 tllll'Od by s1lnl1 W .,.,. crNIMll by flalc...,. lttclr.111111 lflOullll lil VO -111111 to Cllll S.fl. by 111u11 one. • , Atlo11to .••.••..• , •• 2t Phllctfflpltoo .• , , ••.• , •.. 17 llDD LH 1111 lftlll• tt1ln 1rt 01 Ill• fl1lc1111-4Dutlltrt, 11111 1tom1n G1brlll 1111 i:llNlt ....,..,., Well 11""1111 1'1111 Elill" elll ,... .. ., Hy. Ptlco111, l!Clwtv1r, will '°"'"' llDwn E .. ln . MloMMto .•• ; .•.••••• 17 Detfolt .•.••••••••• 10 Tllll rlvalry fAlfll~lly .... '"°" ·~ ... Vllln lilVI _,,_..., II II .ir11tllt .., ... LJon11 Dttroll ...... 1w1y tint ""4tl119, U.,, alld 1r1 llllOtf'Ootl• .,1111. Lot A ........... ." ••.••• 31 · New Or1o0111 ..••••••••.• 10 W1n1h19 to 1(11'1'11; iftett lrt Hll'lf S1lnfl 111•1 ltl'Hf ltldllllilts 2 wllk1 1fO •• , ,...,..,. -tf ... I HilCll ilM L.A. SltffM by Vllllftll illlCI l"ilklllll 111 11111 two MtilllL Mk1111I .••••••••••• 31 lalthnoro .••••••••••• 6 . SlllCI" "' ltn •.. DllJlhl111 11111 1ren'I Ml"I •'°""911 In ltltlr 11vn1 ·1or AFC tltto .... -""" .,,..rllKO In Sulllr BOWi. Alld (1111 nol INl•lrKk 11111191! to 1fojl lllt Plff"HL CIMl11•atl .. , ..••••... Z6 l11ffolo , ..•••• , , • , , 17 tit! g~m• el" HilllNI clmlng u11. 11nc1· Ben91l1 tr1lli119 Sletler1 In AFC Ctnlrll. 51111 !lll'lt, flout In thll -. lllfY c•IC h Billl In •1111111.counlry. A111n11 Ill• Julc1, c•n be tot.1!1111 Dollas ...•••••.••• 27 Now York Gio11h .••..•.. , ••. 17 Cowoon wtro "E•gltd" lw• w-1 •• bvt bMt Ctt1111l1 i.11 Sullday. Gl11n11 n ulcl 1111 II~ Dilllil• IA Y1lil IOwt, bvt If no t -•nd lff"•blllly not -Ill• .... , wltl .. , """•rl N•w Yorlt Jots ..••..•••••• 24 Now E119toad ••••• ,, ,., •• 20 Jtll, P11triot1, Ind C91h "'"'""' It ""' ,..,. Ml"""' illllflllf .. HwmMl..fllWlflllf" In All"C ••• ,, 111011 ,...... ... ..n1 will 1•t llilllnctlot1. Jtfl 1cr1mDlt t.r wf• 11.,._ Saturday, Nov. 10th -Major Collefes San Diego " Lone Bueti 7 ,, South Carolin• " Af::l•chlan " Air force " R11t~l'I 21 Southern COlll ifornir ,. S fl."Orcl 12 Ari zone " Brir •m Younc 20 Southern Illinois 20 ...... ' Arizon1 St11te " w -ll SY111c11se ,. Holy G"'51 ,. ~om1n1 ,..... • Tampa 31 Wutl · !II • Ark1n1111 21 " JO Ark111s11s Stile 21 Arlinston ' Temple " RhodC! lsl11nd " Auburn " Missi111prn state ' Te1111 " Baylor " .. ·Boston College " Wtsl Vir~nl• JO Te111s A&M 21 S.M.U. 20 Bowrin1 Gretn " E11ter11 lchl111n 20 Tex11s Tech 31 T.C.U. JO C.t lfornl1 ,. S111 Joie Slit• " Toledo ,. M1r1h1lt " Cincinn1tt 21 onio u ll Tu1ilnt 21 ""' " COl0111do " K1ns11 " 8.C.L.A. " Ore eon ll Cornell " Brown ' "" " New Mt•lco • 01rtmo11ll'I JO Col11mbi1 , Ul11h Stille " New Me•ico Sl1 te JO Duke " Wake FGresl ' Vlll1nov1 " Wtsl Ch1sltr Stilt " E11sl Carolina " Richmond " W11shington " Idaho " FIOridl Sta te 20 V.l".I. " WHhi11gton State " Ore~on 51111 21 fu rm11n " Ttte CilOllGeJ , Western Michlg1n " 8111 Stitt " Ctor1i1 " Florid• ' WiJ1i1m & Mii)" " Coif•!• JJ Ge-orgi1 Te ch ll V.M.I. 0 Wisconsin " ·-· JJ. H11rv1rd " Princeto11 7 Other Games -Far West Houston JI Colortdo State 0 lnd i11n1 " Nor111-ster n " Kent Slate " Mi1mi (OhioJ • 20 C•! Poly (f'om:)f •. " NorthridC " Ke11tucky 2l Vand•rtli!I ' Ca l Poly (S.L.C,..; " Cal Lui rtn 0 Louisllllll Tech " L1m11r ' Central w1shir .3>f\ " Western Wtsh lnrion , Lo1,1isviU1 2l Dayto11 " Chico State 20 H11yw1rd " M11ryl1nd " Vif&i11i1 ' Colorado Colleee 21 st. M•rrs " Memphis Sl•le " SGutntrn Mississippi • Conco rdi1, Mi1111. 27 P1cilic ulheran " Mi11mi, Fla. " ·~· ' E•stern New Me•ico 21 Pitt1b11r1 " Mlchlill"I " Illinois ' Eastern Oreion 20 Southlrl"I Oreaon " Nebr1sk1 JO low• St11e " F11ller1on 21 S1cr•m11"1lo • No<th Carolina " Clemlof1 " H11w11U JO Santa Ciani " North TtllilS " Wichitl " Lewis 11"1d Clark " Wh!tmilf1 7 Northern Illinois " X11vier • Unlitld ll Pacific JJ Notre Oame " Pittsburch ' Nev1d1 (LIS V1e1s) 21 Norther" Arizona 20 Ohio Stilt " Michl111n Sllta , NIVldl (Reno) 27 Divis • Okt1hom1 " Mil$0Uri JO Northern Coloracto ,. SOl.lthern COiorado • Okl•homa St1te " 1<1ns1s Stato ' f>Qrtlend State 20 Easttrn MontlM 10 P11cllic " Fresno Stitt JJ Puget Sound " Simon Fra11r ll Ptl"ln$[lv1ni1 " Ytlt " lfiversid• " Los An&elt1 u Pen n Ille 21 North Carolin• Stitt " Sin Francisco Stete " Humbo1<1t 10 Purdut " Minnesota " Whittler " Occidental " BUY A NEW '73 DATSUN 610 AND S A V~ ON CUR EXCEt~.Etff saE~Tl"N GF Ri:. ~AJ;11r 1973 M~~El.S! READY FOR DELIVERY TODAY I• I . .. r • , ... u.~JL V PILOT Frldiy, Novemtt 9, 1973 I Offensive PI11:yers of the Week Collegiate Football For Colleges ; Preps Water Polo Results ' I. • GARY GUISNESS Corona del Mir JOE CARTA El Toro MARK HOLDEN Huntington Beach GREG VIVIANO Mater Dei ·i'J VINNIE MULROY Newport Harbor KURT SCHUL TEN University DENNIS DELANY Cost• Mesi ROY BUTTELING Est1nci1 BRAD EMERY Lagun1 Be1ch JEFF EVANS Mission Viejo STEVE OLSON San Clement• DAN SMICK We1trnfn1ter I I ' Area Spol'ts Calendar T-111 ! Foolblll -Plu• J( YI Miler Otl 11 SA l!lewl ti), Girt• 'IOl!erblll -c.i Sl1te ILO!lf l ttell) 11 UC ln'IM I''·"'·'· ,,,..,.. ,,..,., ,, 'Footbtll -Cor"Olll dtl Mllr VI S::,_.1,111 Vtllt'I' ti H11t11lt'lfl"' ltKll. ,.. Hl911 1t ....... IEI Oorldo Y5 ~l'I' 11 Minion Vltfo, Hunllnoton •acn ,, W151mlMltr. S.11 Clerntnll 4 Vtltndt , COlll M.,.. YI LDI l tllflflOI 11 0rfl'ltf '°'"' Sotlort 11 LIO-IHCf\. M.trlna ti Stnt1 -.njl, Ml11IOl'I Vlefe ti El M«ltftt, MtsMlll .-. Elf..,,.11 ti HfWOOrl HltOC!f" {tit 11 I I I C•OSI countrp -M1ttr ~ v• Pl115 X 11 Irvine P1r~ U:ISJ, SCHJ!lltrn C.tlfom11 JC ft'lftf""lf Plfl'tt, Weter polo -5-Y HUii 11 N.woort H1rbor, FDUl!ltln VI 11 t 'I' 11 W1ttmln11tr, I.I •Wiiton II Coront Ott Mllr, Et11nct1 ti LOii Amltol. L.ll\lnl lttcfl ti MFHIOl'I Vlt jo, Costa "'"' ,, Oowntr. El Tora ,, El Milden•, (1111 "' 3: 1$), M1rln1 VI J.1N11, 11 GolOtn w .. 1 r.1, °''"" (Gell .. S1nt1 Ana ll;JO), IUo HOndO ,, Gotdtfl Wt$1 (l), SUO!eotck et $111 ltrntf'llllll v}llry Coll.,e C1J, UC lr- Ylllt ti Wfll Cota! tolll"ntr 11 ltl'llt l1r0tr1. ' . MARK FOSTER D1n1 Hill1 DAN TROUP Fountain Valley WALT SATLER Marina MV Hosts Qualifying Tourney Mission Viejo Golf Club was the scene of a qualifying round for four major PGA golf tournaments Monday ~·ith six players and an alternate selected to participate in two of the fou r events. Mesa Verde's ilead pro- fessional, Max Bayha, is the first alternate after posting a 75-76 -151 but will be selected for tournament action only if the other six do not fill the available spots. Each of the top six finishers will be eligible to play in two of the four events in· eluding the Los Angeles Open, the Haw.aiian Open, the Andy Wil1iams Open in San Diego and the Bob Hope Desert Classic in Palm Springs. Ulw score ol the day was posted by John Ruedi o( Coronado Country Club. He finished with a 69-71 -140 for the 36-hole competition. Others qualifying ·included : Denny Meyer or Quail Lake at 79·71 -141; Norm Bernard of Redlands CC, 73.75 -146; Bill Hartley of C a m p Pendleton. 74-74 -148: Jim·. my Powell 0£ Via Verde CC, 74-76 -150; Paut J\.fcGuire of San Gabriel CC, 77-74. 151; and Terry Ferraro of Western Hills, 78-73 -151. More than 40 Southern California club professionals all' member s ol "th~ Proressional Golf Association, participated in the tourney. Santa Ana Ernie Ainslie and· Paul Renius wi ll face Jack Wilder and Merle Boyle Saturday in the fmals ot· the Santa Ana CcJuiitry Club high·low tourna· ment. ,..Ainslie and Renius defeated Bill Hutchens and M 11 o TedJtrom to gain the llnab while Wilder and Boyle top- pleil Bud Talmage· and Mike Stewart.. . <:osta Mesa Results 0 r quarterfinal matches in the men's club championship at Costa Mesa Goll and Country Club have Qe<n ]IOlled. Jack Feller de!eated Mike Edelstein. and Mark I.a won over Art Dtbbs In the upper bracllet. Bob Darnell deleated Vic Conrad and Scott Weaver toppled Jacll Va l .. ek In the lower haU of the draw. , SemlfinalJ wUI be played !ti.is wee.a with the final round set !or Sunday, Nov. 18. JOE TROXELL Edison Area Girls Basketball LA Mtrtlw 1411 (H) or•nt• CNll ........ ' • ' ' """'Wch ' ' ' ' 6trker • • ' • '"' ' • • ' M tllwtfl ' ' ' " -' • ' • P1rlcln1 • • ' • Poirier ' • • ' Tor.ls " • " n Scwe llr Qu1rler:s LA Htrbor " • • ,,_., Or•n11e Ca.isl ' ' " ,..._,, o"'*• W••' u" i111 s1n11 ""' ,, • " .. ,_ ' ' ' ' H~r11 ' ' • ' Hon1nc:1 ' ' ' " "~-' ' • " Merrlllf' ' ' ' ' Nichols ' ' ' ' Pll,,,... • ' ' ' A11ulrr1 • • ' • H1rm1nsan • • ' • Tol•I• n " " " Scort "" ~rttrs Goldtfl WHI " ' " n-s1 S.nt1 An• " " .. ,...,, Schedule Htrt b !llt mtlor tolll!lf tOOllMlll Klltdult lor St!Ufdl'I': w .. sT Sttnford 11 5oull'ltm Ca tlfornlt UCLA at Oreoon w-.11111otan St1i. tt ~ $11!• Frl$l'I0'"$1111 II Ptclllc Ctl Sltl9 (Long lttcll) 1t S6n Oleoo S!ttt ldtllo ti WMlllllOIOl'I S111 J-STiit it C1Hlorfll1 llAIT -Mltml IFlt.) ti Army Dlrtl'llOlllll 1t CO/llMtllt 8r0Wfl 11 Corntl Princeton at H1rv1r<1 S'lflCUlf ti Holy Cross • Nortll C1roltn. S!alt ti Ptnn Stitt Nolt Dlrnt 11 PIH Rllodl l1ltnd ti TtrnOlfl Wril Clle1t ... Sl1l1 ti Vlll1110~1 8oslon Coll..:ie 11 Wtlf Vlr9lnl1 Pflnn II Yale IOUTH MlulHlppl Slllt 11 AUblH'll Furm111 tt Tiii Clledtl Rlctnnond 11 E1st C11rolln1 Gtortlt vs. Florkla 11 Jtcksonvlllt, Fla. YM\ 11 GtorQlt Tech L11t1 s11n1 Tech 11 L1m1r, night 0.'llOl'I 111 L11t1l1vllle Toledo 11 Mlrshlll Vlrolnl1 II Mt"lllnd Southern Ml1sllslPlll 11 Mtmplll1 SI.it, night • Clf!m$Clrl 1t North C1rolln1 Appal1dll1n Stitt ,, South C1rotln1, nloht · Jl1vy 11 Tut1ne, night Kent11ek! 11 Vendtrblll Ftorld1 1111 11 Vlr11lnl1 Tech Duk• 11 W1k1 ForHI Col11111 ti W11111m & Mtrv MIDWEST E1tt1r11 Mlclll111n at BIWilllnQ Green Nortl!wflltm 11 Indiana Colorldo 11 Ktilsts Miami, Ohio 11 Ktnl Stitt unno11 11 Mlcr.11111 Purdue 11 Mlnnnot1 OkllhOmt ti Ml1111t1rl Iowa Slllll 11 N1br11k1 Mleftl111n Slttw II Ditto St•t~ Clnet11nall 11 Ohio UntvwrstlV K1ns11 611!1 lit Okl1homt State Or1k1 11 SOU!htrn llllnol1 1111 Slate II WHffm Mk111111n IOWll II WlKansrn ,. Northtrn llllnolt 1t X1vltr SOUTMW .. ST Wldlllt Stilt 11 Norttl TtXll Stall AriWlnstl t i Rici eavlor 11 Texas Sautn.rn Mettlodl1I 11 TtXll Al.M Tex111 Tech 11 Tex11 Chrlsl!tn T1m1N1 11 West Texas St1i. night llOCKl._S lll/19'0 at Air Foret wvomlno •I Arl1ona St111 Arl1on1 11 8rlgn1m Y11t1n11 HOL1$lan 11 Colorado Stilt Ullh ti Ntw Mn:lc.o Utah Sl1!1 1! N.w Mtxlco 6t1te, nl11h1 These Popular Sizes: 878-14, C78-14, E78-l 4, F78-14, G78-l 4, F78-15, G78-15 pl us Fed . Ex. tax of $2 .00 to $2.73 per tire and trade. BLACKWALLS $1 less.$ Only $8 more for large car sizes: H78 -14 ' · H78-15, J78-15, L78-15 plus Fed. Ex . tax of $2.94 to $3.31 pe r ti re and trade. BLACKWALLS $1 less. '"" • ., OllM'ltn \)( ll'\llM ) 1 :J l-f Cl\111198tac:ll Ill~ UC rvlnt KOtlflll: KruM -'• IOUQller 1, llabl 1, 11:-t ltrfllrd 1. s~ rt Qlllrtln ~Harw Oj O 1-t Otf'I Wnt 3 S 2-13 4fn Wtst KOl'(llll -Wtsttrlekl J, l rowr'll t H11llkln 2, McAcl1ms 1, Rolllrlson 1. Yirlll'I' SCW91W~ MtrlN 5 2 2 I -10 S1nl1 Ant D • l 2-9 Mtrlna Korlng: Ftbltn 2, F1rr111 2, Rock I, CuHl111n1 1, Edw11111 1, 0 . W111g1r I, HUI I, Hormtll. Jllltlor V1nil'1' Mlrln1 won by lorNll, ,.rtM-S., .. Score 11'1' Q.uirttn M1rln1 1 2 2 0-5 S1nt1 Ana 0 O O 2 -2 M1rl111 Korlng: Slortv 1, Glonkt 2, I UKt!t I. V.U:SIT'f sc-» Chl1rt1r1 University • • 2 • ....._lt El OorlCIO 0 1 3 2-6 U11lvtnlly Korlng: 01vl1 '' G1u1ter 3. MtCormlck 2, L~on1 1, Thom1~ I, Co.growl. JWlllll' Vtn.lty SC0111 •v Quarttn Et Oor11ki • • 1 l 1-7 unlvtnl!Y o 2 o 2-<1 Unlvtr•ll'I' scoring: McC1Ulllty J, Slt'ttM !, Hallmtn J. ,.,..tt-Sopll Score by Qu1rten e1 Oorldo 1 2 o ,_. UnlYWlllV I O l 0-2 Unlwrslf'I' Kori119 : CamP111U 1, An· OtrlOn 1. ' Vlrllti> sc-i.,. Qu1rten N.wPOrf-3 3 4 l-13 Wtlffrn o O 1 ~1 NtwPOrt SC::orlng : Horm111 ), Olcktv 2, OODron l, AndtrlOn f, Newllnd 2, Kaurlan 1, Harris 1, Wfllff l. • Ft"Oltl-Stptl Scort by Qlllrten Nawport S -' 0 ~· Welltrfl I l 1 1-5 Ntwport Korlno: OobroH, J. ), Gr1y, M. '• Holsl~ 1. VAllSITT Sc-av Qvlrtln LtllUllf l!lttCll 3 2 4 l-11 sonor1 1 o o 2-' L11u111 lllCll scoring: NIWIOll 1, P111n11 3, Motloll l, Jolln$Dn J, Sim- mons 1, eenson. JUlllN' V1rtlty Sc-n ONrtft'l L~ IHCll 2 5 ' J-13 SOrlort J 0 1 14 Lt!W(ll l t•tll tcorlne; V111Mourlc 2, W1lltct J, Morretle 7, O'H•rt • • ·--Seer. • ., QU1rt1n L11u111 Inell o l 2 ,__. sonor1 :s o 2 1-' Laguna 1~11 Korlna: O'Hara I, EVll"ll 3, Ctlrll!lll\ltf'I 1, lunl1119 J. Val"lll'I' kore 11'1 CNlrltn. "Wntmln1ler I • o o-s Hunllnglon leldl o o 1 ,_. We1tmlntltr tc0rl111: MIHH¥ 2. ,.,.. row• 2. H\,11\llngton ~Inf: Dodd I, J, Wtlr t, cvs11m1n. JINiler Vtrtlt't .... .,,~ w .. 1mrn11... s ' ' t-lt" Hftln ltKll 0 0 t 0-0 w .. 1ml111ltf' tcorr111: Lf'lrllt s. Smt111 4 H1rrrne1on -'• Hwbln 4 Stlll 2, , ..... ... ,,_.,, ... ,..,. WH!ml111ltr l 0 0 2-f HIOll IHCll 0 l 0 0-l Wtlllt\ln1ttr JoCOtf!'fl; H 1 r r I 1, Wotlllll", Glltmaf!, Wldtlllm. H1111tlngton KOrll'lt: K""' Kuc .... Football Summaries JV FMINll SC-llJ Ckl.lrttrs F-llln VtlllY ! 6 6 1-15 M1C1nol11 0 0 C.-0 • Fountain V1t11v TOS: lurke, MO$•, Ho......111, Rou. P•I: Morrhon. JlllljM" Val"lll'I' Scort .., Clvarltl'tl Wutmln&ler .. 1• I ' 1-3• S1nt1 Ant D • I l._21 Wn1mln1ler '(JOI: DIMt11 ttJ, C1n-tr1U, Gr1sblug1'1, SklonWt'I', llamlM (2 c1tcrit1). SODllao!loA ,.lfrNll sc-,, Q.uirt .... Maonoll1 O 0 8 7-lS Four1i11n v1ue, 1 o o 0-1 Founllln V!lltv TO: L1vm1n. P11: WUYlf (OIU . SOP"'"'*"-FoalNl1 M1rln1 1• t 1 1-31 )X.~l~n TOS· Ill.NII!.!~ 013f. 0p;:u1 Ill, Cl'll.lbik: PAT1: Rlnkln t2 kick, 1 run), Pleu! (Pllll. --sc-11'1 a.trten 511111 An• 0 • • 1'"""":12 Wtllml11tter 3 o o &-11 Huntll'!gton lHCll TO: Tr1vls. Convtr1lon, fltkl toal: Tr1vl1 (rvnl. """"' ,_,NII ,,_ .., Qlllrtltl Edison 19Clldl I I 12 14--3-1 Mission Vltlco {JV Fl"OMI • 0 0 ........ Edison TOS; Or-r 3, 81nk1 I, ltrburV 1, Convtnlon1: Orn.....-!rvn), E111 ... (run). Ml11lon Vloelo TO : Rttd. ,.,.....,. ..... " Scwe .., OM"'" North Torr1nc1 0 0 I Coron• del Mir 0 O O CorOlll d•I Mir TO: Els.on. Ellen (run). Boosters Set Meeting A ca II has been sounded for active and a ss oci at e members for the recently organized Corona del M"ar High School tennis boosters club to further the tennlJ pro- gram. 'The next meeting ot the group will be held Dec. 2 but no time or place has been designated for the meeting at the present lime. Mrs. Emily Baldridge is chairman of the poUuck dinrier meeting. Save on the tire that's been selected for so many of this year's new cars. s·FG's Silvertown Belted features two tough belts of fiberglass cord strengthened fo r stability It's polyester cord bcxJy construction gives you a smooth ride. _,,""' TRUCK -CAMPER LUBE & Oil CHANGE a.RAKE RELINEf All CAIS I MOTOR HOME SHOCKS SAVE lQ.00 to 30.00 A TIRE \1565 Jj~ "" ..... ·~pl! s1:r1 II• SIL.ICflON Of SIZIS Pl!CI Slia - -,.ICI ,,..,. .•..• Jl.,J 111·16.I •. Jf,fJ 7H·11 .••. J I .ti 175·16.I , • 47.16 701°16 •••• Jf.fS t l .. 16.1 • • ·u .11 750-16 ••.• J6.71 11-16.J •• 4t.IJ 12-16.1 •• It.II ,,l .T. 2.14 TQ 6.• W•'t.L L•UICAtl ... 'tOt.lll Cd MO CMAJtGI llf•IJll OIL, l"lll(I INCLUCMll VP TO I OUAllTS Of'. CHIALITY OIL. '""' ........ "'. 1 ··9 WHEEL BALANCE l"LVS WllOMTI ~~.s·~! 1:a.n CARI 9'~. 40,000 MILE GUARlNBE INITALUD UNINli AND LAIOlt • -DELCO& ........... 2495 HI JACKlll • -........... Al -. _ ... SllOCIS ..... _ Il a. OllC11 .......... 1110 ...... Tiit ..-in, ltfff:t· ""'"' IMt•tlM "' ,.., car ...,.",... fir ••• 17~ mllft "'*" VM11 Ill lltltG~ll ... :::i:., Ur Ml"Wlct. S...... Ille 11111111 'fill tr -r "" """' lhl• IJllf'ftd wlh e. rtt11actt1 • a ........... llnls ....... "" .. -....... ,.,.ty. lll'llit.ll ............... ....................... .,...,... .....nc.. WE HONOR ALL MAJOR CREDJT CARDS 2049 HARBOR BLVD. ..... . ··"" "' ...... lat ..,, COSTA MESA ' \ MONDAY ltlno flll:IOAY IATVllNV ..... " ....... ( ---- ' . I • { i ' i r A T 111 \ T 1 • 10 ,. ,. ,. 17 ,, ,. 21 23 25 20 3-0 34 35 3 • 1 OAJLV PILOT ' Thursdlt, Novtmbrr a_. 1973 AMBLER . TUMBLEWEEDS ~ by Do119 Wiidey DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS '"""~IC•! 1h eor ™'" """" ~RtU.ED !J THliT 's a .Po•s1 ace Poss18H.ITYI ••.•.. ~~ . ..J~jf.:il . ··~ ; ' i r MUTT AND JEFF RGMENTS NANCY WELL. ......... He's STRONt; AHO l'M ROMANTIC! l'M 50RRY- I CAN'T :po ,THAT l .... PEANUTS by Dale Hale by Emie Bushmiller WELL, AT LEAST RETURN MV AMUSEME"IT TAX M~ FOOT 15 ASLEEP1 __ 8V'r M~ TOE5 ARf A\IAN: ! GORDO MOON MULLINS i::::::====:::=::::::---'il® -Cit IF')bU INsN ANIMAL CRACKERS Ml?.DoDO, ~TC.00 1"1~1WJ° ~N~IS BU)FOI? QIJe'e .eat!" ?; Ha.PU> MM-..,_Of!, PAAT• t;::::;,. b\f Charles M. Schub r-r-~-~-...... ....., WHEl1E CAN iHEV 60 WITHOLIT THE FOOT 11 TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PVIZLB WH!\T 6000 DOES IT DO fOR THE 10ES 10 5TA~ AWAKE? ACROSS 1 P11nWiln1 WOY 6 Th• unlverM 10 Put down 14 Domicile 15 He1p ol ttone1 16 F1bled giant 17 Generou1 19 USSR cil'f 20 P1intul to the touch 21 Oefen1i11a b1rrier 23 W1rg0d 25 God of lov. U 1n1 --or 1p1u1kfng 30 Pllnt parts 34 Enu1n c11 35 Br11k 37 Purloined 38 C1nln1 31 T1lk1 1imlessly ~Jackie's hu1bend 43 Surtece m11aurem.ht 46 Run• ' 46 Organic compound 41 OlspoMtof rnerChandlae &0 H11dgew lttm: 2 word1 52 "·-•m•n with MYtn wfvH" I 2 I I 4 • 64 The very bett 65 S. American clty:2 Words 59 View• 83 Poetic cr11tion1 64 Ottawa or W11hlngt0ft worktr:2 words 66 Be overly SOllcitOUI 67 Annoy ~ N1rr1tiv1 l poem 69 French i.l1nds 70 Noted Canadian phyticlan 71 Mu1lc1I 1ymbol DOWN 1 Quick drink 2 Run ... nv 3 "You•ld It!" 4 Hinging •mp 15 Boogeyman 6 Miner'• utenlll 7 Helps 8 Medltemn· e1n i1llnd 9 P1rty to Cllhing I check 10 Obl1rvt11:2 WOl'dl 1::-+-+-i-II .. .. .. ~ Ynt1rday'1 Puult SoNed: 11 E11t lndien .W Acceptt: carpet 2 words 12 Angered 41 ESP meeting 13 Proofr..,-1 44 F11H nemq word 47 H6uHhOld 18 Unorthodox Implement doc1riM 49 Sover.tgn: 22 Light Abbf, bedtteed 151 Llttofntmff 24 ·····vote 53 IC.l1m1rtltl1 26 A1 -···a 5S California hener community 27 Rt11ert: 1 56 Symbol of 1 28 Actor ·····' deity Brue• 67 D111 out 29 ·ThrH Rom•n 68 Slnglti godd11 .. 1 60 Jt•ck of ti'. 31 Dilincllntd nick 32 Former Aaltn 11 Shilld n1tlon 62 Rtllgl..,ut 33 G1rment group 35 W11hington 115 lbttn hOll... C~W 12 11 JUDGE PARKER I'M oP HERE IN CHICAGO, GOT LONESOME AHO D!CJDED TO CALI. YOU, Ml!S A&&EY! DO "'tOU MIND 1 .MISS PEACH Wf,J.J..1 Wf. ~llM TO HA"' FINAW:.V ftfiSOl.VED ~ OF YOIA~ PftOllJ.liMS1 l"A --Oii: IS Tlif."li S OMl!TMIN" 11..41: r i f ! • DICK TRACY Y0'4'11:'1i W°"ll:'lltD A!IOtAT \' P1K!,YOU ANO 1 ARll GOOIG TO MQ MINUS YOUR ATIORNEY • by Harold Le Doux DOJ''T YO\I SAY A Tl<l~G ... EXCEJ'T P'-OM16E THAT WHEN I GET eACK JN TOWM YOU 'LL LET 11\E.. TAK! "fOU TO OINHER I yes, Fill.I.IN• OFF TMIS C01ACH1~ by Mell c c by Chester Gould OF C:OUl1SE NOTI ~:::::,.. WAS U' Tll'R' • 1l> ""'" n<• um' 'fVKt'S A 1'ALK ON SAJ'ETY? by Roger Bradfield "'WAS 1\lER' LOOKING R>R ™' emu TVICJ.."'S ~MU66iOl<IMIN rn' Pi.J.YGIOXJNO By Charles larsottl ANP IF' IT 11JRNS OUT TH8T I 8M, l'LL Se 8LReae>v DResseo roA Tl-le PilRT .,___, -• l:ly Gus Anlola • . • 11 l1 ii by Ferd JohnlOll • • WI/Ar's 71/Ar r--, ,<OURGL!NG> ~p P.?? &~--r ~" ·- ~ - by Roger BoDen I.COPf!~P! THE GIRLS 11Now, Fred, I bope thll robe Isn't TOO larse -when tM saleslady aald, 'It bet be'• tbt tall, masclllar atlaletle type,' I Ja•& coakln't IA)' DO." DENNIS THE MENACE I • . , ' "' , I I: OTC JO Alo.t·Ac1i1·t> ..... Oil Sl'lele Cp Pt1111 Liii Am E•prrsi RIM 00n AO Ptnn Oltih Sl~llc Cp C11111t1I Cp An!W"' &u1.cll NII Md Cart UOd Ptl MUTUAL FUNDS .1 Nf,.. York -Fol· IOWlft9 h 1 list of old .1nc1 •~kt1:1 pri· en • 011 Mu!ual Ful'ICI\ IS ql'Oled by tM NASO Int. EillOll Cit' 1.61 I.JS .klllllilll 1'.11114.M lllltn<. 16.1116.11 EATON & Kl!YSTOHE: Com 10.U 1D.6S HOWARD: Cu~I 81 11 ... 19.11 SOK.. 29,)9 tt.3' 81+n Fd t.n 10.1>& '""' BJ lt."9 ti.SI SU•o .... : Gwtll F 13.t l U.11> Cus1 IM l .4S t .26 Ad G"' 4.21 4.6t lnttnt •.16 6.73 Cusl IC1 1.11 1.80 M lf't l .St l.n Sptcll F '·"' 1.6.1 C11S1 KJ 6.01 •.st Ad 1111 l.'IO '·" w ...... , sic• Fd 12.'M u.u ClllOI SI 12.011•.lt ""Cap '·" S.11 NCWllmbtr I, ltll EOIE Sp 21.Ml 21.2fl Cui! SJ 11.0i lJ.12 Int FdB S ... 6,Sl 1111 ...... EG••I Gt n .Sl 1l.M Cll\t SJ '·°' I.II SbCI Lev 4.51 4.t s Advfst• 4.31 4.71 El!un Tri 16,:M ... Cuit S.. ,,Jli •.II St:CUIUTY l"DS: A~!~ fd I.loll •.JI> EmtrQ l .69 •.03 APOiio '.16 S.?2 Eqoull/ J.)t J.tl Min& In IT.Sl 1•.19 En''jJ 11.111J.1S Poleri 3.11 •.It lnfts 4.11 I.JS Alulurt 1D.11 10.11 Farrt 1.8:1 •.M 1Ct1ltkr t.20 •.79 Ultra F 7.11 1.90 .AGE fd S.OS S.H Fm 8ure • . .u ,,.., Kt1-r Giii 1.61 l.:M SELECTED FDS : All~\ate .13.10 1•.09 F.O RRs 1.•1 Lndmrk 7.IXI 1.M Am Siii' 1.17 1.17 Alp!\& Fd U.1113.96 FIDELITY Len• Fd S.ll S.11 0CD ~ 1D.ll 10.71 Al'IWP F, S.16 s.,t GllOU": LEX GROU": ~f Sllrs ll.11 \l,1' Am 81rtl'I t .11110.A 8 nd deb l.'6 t.lt Cp Lear n .11 11.11 S.nllnel 10.90 11 .ts Am Ovr' t .11 10.07~ Capt.it 11.!iC IJ.SI 'Grwlll t.'1 1.01 Se1>try F ll.loll U .1• ""' Eqty •.BS S.32 Cont•• 10.10 RtVtll ll.IO n .oe SH.l.ltl HLD Git .. ' AM ,f.JC ,.ltESS Cv !.Sit 1.•1 . Llbty Fd S.11 S.6S ComSl l.t6 •.DO FUNDS: Dest 6.~ . Lire l1>lv l.:M t.11 f1>\rpr S.99 6.!ool C..ptal 7.•t 1.19 Ent• •.loll .. Llt1t CIP l.J.I 1.02 flt! fd t.20 •.St l1>com . '·'' •.11 Ev1rst o." 1J.lO LOOMIS H&rbr 1.11 1 . .-~~m ~:U ::~ &!: F 1!:t! ::Jf s~~~t :~::~ :!::: s~Ji1.t"~N:~1sf:~ ~ ·~s'~ ~:: t:~ ... ~~·Af.c1Al'·02 l6.tS L2~;r.,A•·~.IO 1.3' = ~~:~ ~~:~~ Am ''""'I S.1" i .l9 '°ltOGltAMS: Am Bus l .02 l 21 lt1wtl t ,76 10.67 ~N'i'~r t~= ~~ ~l~ ~r: ::n ::r, L~::.::11 ltJ~ ll'.~ fi'oe c::n 1J:: 1 }:~ AMCHOlt Fin lf'IC S.91 S.tl Lulhn tn •.1' I0.1J SIGMA ,.UHDS: GltOU .. : V11>I •.17 •.11 ,,...ltl'lltl 3.8' ,,1$ Cap Sht 1.60 I.JI C.Ot•I '-toll S 11 1\!Fd 111 11.61 ll.11 MASS CO: l"v 10.SJ 11.Sl ~Jinw • ::~ ::~ i~e~1roRS: i~;'F ::~ ::~ ~~~\ur ~:!? ::!~ ~~t':r ::~~ ~:~~ g~~ ~~ ~:~ ::~ M"::l /Ncr;62 1l.7J t'11 r&c! lt~ l~:~ We, Natl lf.09 1J.2S lncom 1.32 t .11 MIT 11 .61 11.61 So GtflF 11.8' 13.t 7 -~~-·~~•• m•~--••••• Au~• F I.OS 8.80 ll! Multi 1.79 8.'l'I MIO IJ.lO 1t.S4 Sw !!IV G 6.79 6.11'.1 AXI Flm EM• 10.3' 10.3' MFD 13.41 14.n Sovr In 11 .70 11.11 HOUGHTON : FORUM GROUP: MCO l•.IS 16.13 Sl)t(tt• 4,&l S.1' Fulld A •.11 S 19 100 Fnd 1090 10.90 ,,...t.I Iv 11' 1.1' S&P l!>O 1.ot l.ot Fund B 1.03 ,·.. 101 Fnd 1"s1 a 51 ..,., ... , 11:01 11.01 STATI •ND GJt .. : Sloe-S.t& 6~ Col..m t :M 1:8' Mid Am S.2t S.71 C0m Fa •.92 S.ll An SCI 'n s 70 15 Fund t .ll 6.ll MD•Y Fd ID.ti 11.9" Olwsif S.ll S.&l BLC Gth !l.6S 11-13 fdn Gr . •.50 •.92 MSB Fd 1•.SJ U.SJ PrOOJtl 5.10 S ... Babson 11Sl11 S3 l'OUNDEAS Mil 8nG t.'9 10.Ja SI Fr Gr t.'6 t .tt 8•yr<K 7"03 1'9 GAOUP: MLF Fd 1.11 l.ll St Fr Ille t.ot t.ot 81yrk or . 6.?2 6:80 Gr.,111 S.33 S.&l MIF Gro •.ll t.13 Stale Sir '6.ID,1.20 &ea'" HI I 81 1.81 l11eom 11,)S U.44 MuOl'n !II •.l!'I S.12 STEADMAN l'DS: Be&~on 1019!0 ~ F ,..,U&I 1.9' 9.17 MuOm ffl 1.9" t.17 Am Ind l .11 J.11 Berbhr J:'" • lll F S~t•I !!.Oii 12.0t Mut Sllr1 U.t11S.t7 Auo Fd 1.1' 1.lt &ancht~ I 1' S !I Four\q F t 11 t.11 Mull Trs 1.• f.90 lnws! l.J7 1.JI 6o1t F°" 9.11 10 111 FRA NKLI N ""'I lndu 10.(J 10.tl Oct&!\ l.1S 1.1.S Bro.... l 31 3 U GROUP NAT SIC FDS: STllN ltOIE l"DS: 8rnPI"' 10 t(l 10.t(I ONTC I 00 1.11 Bal&nc 1.66 t.'6 B•lltl( n .ll 21.JI CAL'\llN FuNos:. 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I ' I • • • v • • 40 Dt.TLY PILOT T~ursdA)', NDYttmber 8, lq73 , -o-. ----- Energy ,Plan Qu~stions Answered r WASHINGTON tAP) J.ltrc we qutstlons a n d answers on the scope 3nd Jm· pact of the "energy tmergeo· cy" program a-n noun c e d Wedneoday night by Pre.<ident Nixon: Q. \ViU ho"1e1 'ond of· fices be ·CIOllltr tl1i8 wi11ter because. ol tlle ener'l~ s1wrtages1 A. The Presideflt asks that home thermostats be reduced by lllx de&r<eS to the aru1ge daytime temperature will be 68 degreei .. Operators .of r0r- !~~ fa~tO:~ ~~:to~~~~ needs by 10 percent through .:lowering thennostats or adop- ting shorter working hours. Q. Will there be ratiou-ni.u of gJsoltne a11d hon1e heating oil'! A. The federal government is developi~g a gasoline ra· tlonlng plan that will be put Into use lf nttded, and a pro- posed plan to ration <heatJng oil will be arux>unced In about rour weeks. q. Will there be restnc- tions on 1he use of auton:i~ bUet'! A. The President has ..,,. gested that States lower m'ax- lmum speed limits to 50 nilles per hour and asked Congress for emergency authority to cut Etaergy Pf.ata speed limits tlUilugh federal action. He also suggtsted parking taxes be raised, vehicles with bu.t a single oc· ·ropant be barred f r o m designated 'sections of eech city and pre!~rential parking be· provided r..-partlcipants In car pdols. All fed~ally own- ed vehlcle.s will Observe a 50 mlle an hour speed Umit. Q. IJ thought being given to adopttng 11eor-rou11d Da11- Daylight Savings Cliristmas Fete 'Off' Nixon P1·oposals • Beneficial WASHINGTON (UPI) SAN DIEGO (AP I - The San Diego Junior Cha.mber of Co1nmerce says its annual Christ nias lighting contest has been cancelled this year "as a move to save energy." In Capsule Form President Nimn's proposal W~sday night to ~dop,t WASHINGTON • (AP ) year-round daylight savings'-----------' Here at-a-glance are President Nixon's legislative _proposals to conserve energy. time could have benefits other than just saving eletjricity in the late afternoon and even- ing. TRANSPORTATION 0 A 11 o w transportation ran2e agencies to adjust carrier SUPPORTERS of the con-u 1• schedules and service points troversial "fast clock" ·first after sununary hearings. proposed 200 years ego by c l -Lower speed lintits on Benjamin Franklin say that . 0 Ufi y .;s the nation's highways to 50 .. miles an hour. an extra hour of evening light ~ would cut down on crime, B • POWER . particularly d u rt o g the t~,i USJness -Open the Elk Hills Naval Christmas shopping season, Petroleum R e·s er v e in and could cut traffic fatalities, many or which rulppen during l'i1ay RusSell, nlanager of California to increased oil pro-- dark evening rush hours and community association liaison duction. porary operating I i c e n s e s lastin'g up to 18 months for atomic power plants. TIME -Extend Daylight Savings Ttme throughout the year. POLLUTION Alfow tfle Eiivironmental Protection Agency to exempt for ooe year power plants ond factories from air and water quality laws on a care.by-case basis. .. light Sa11ing Time1 A. 0 Nbon ~ed Congress to authorlie adoption ol Daylight Savings Time tbn>Ughout the yeru:,, ••Yin( it <ould reduce electilcily and· h e a t i n g demand• by as inueh as thred pe.rctnt. Q. \Vill tlttrt bt curb1 01~ 11se of e11ergy for llgl1t- ing? · A. Nixon seeks con- gressional authority to ordei: a curtailment of outdoor eJec- trical adver·tislng ari.d ornamental lighting, including gas lamps to be found in front of many homes. He also wants power to limit store hours, "'·hich would save on both heat and light. None of his proposals would affect use of lighting in the home. Q. Will any of tl1e ad· niinistration's proposals re- sult i1• liiglier taxes? A. 'Nixon said the govern- ment is considering imposing "control fees" or surcharges ·to discourage excessive use of natural gas and electricity and asked Congress f o r authority to levy them. OUTLINES ANSWIRS Nixon After Talk· • Art Threatened Too Cool for Nude Models involve drW)k arid fatigued for the Ir-Inipose "energy con- drivers. vine Com· servation fees or taxes," BOSl'ON (UPI ) -Turning he "'as concerned wheth.er the Britaip t r i e ~ year-round _paoy, h as the· heat down a rew degrees school might be gtanted an -Exempt such federal ac- t ion from the National Environmental Policy Act, 'which requires prior prepara· tion. and review o f en- vironment a 1 impact statements. daylight time frOm 1968 to been named perhaps on the consumption BUSINESS in New England School of Art exemption from the 10 degree 1971, and officials said traffic president of of natural gas of too: excessive -Curtail outdoor electrical classrooms y,•ould pose a heat reduction Pres.ident Nix· deaths.drQJ>p¢ 31 percent. the bdard of use of electricity. advertisifltt and . ornamental . serious p r ·ob I e m , ad-on caUcd....10< ,in co~al The Adnynistr{ltion ~d op-_trustees of -Authorjre the Federal lighting. ministrative assistant WlJliam buildings. posed year-rowld. savings tlhl'e-the"' commu-Power Commission to suspend -Red~e co m m e r c i a 1 Davis said Wednesday. He said, when it cobies to but a Transportation Depart-nity Associa-price regulation on new operati~ hours. "When we go to hire nude hiring nude models. room ment source . ~ recently lions Insti-natural gas. RATIONING . mOdels~ 00e of the things they temperatures are "a real~ "the energy ctjsis has "Chang-lute,· head-11:ussiLL Authorize the Atomic Develop standby plans always ask is, Ho"' wann is blem for us. even when-you. ed things." Thus, Presjdent quartered in Washington D.C. Energy Commission to grant to ration gasoline and home the room?" can heat the place. What do Nixon proposed reinstatement Miss Russell is ·responsible without public hearings tern· heating oil i( necessary. Davis said Wednesday night you do ... close the school?"· of the system \Vednesday for liaison activities with ·461r•••----------..:o-.-.iiii--------------------------"'* night. · homeowner associations in THE LOGIC behind tile idea is that more ·daylight would cut the use.· Of electrical energy need~ for lighting or. rice buildings and born~. residential areas deyeloped by the Irvine Company. . She resides in Ne\\-port Beach. Complete -Mid~day American Stock List The Transportation Depart- ment, which enforces the Uniform Time· Act, as recently as last m·onth ~!aimed that year-round daylight t ·i m .e "would reduce nationwide de· mand for electricity by not more than t to 2 perCent, .. varying by region. Passenger Record Set At Air Cal ' Air California carried a record 10.537 passengers in its satellite markets during October and flew a total of 38.727,608 revenue passenger miles. The se preliminary figures result in increases of 15.4 percent and· 16.l percent, respectively, over a year ago according to Fred R. Davis, * Richard Af. A rt an i an • Balboa Island has been named a member or the President's Clu~ for the Penn Mutual -life 1.Qsurance Com~ny. * The Orange County ChafT)ber of ·Commerce board of direc~ors has elect.eel Robert \V. Clifford , presidenL of Air '.:'alifornla, as chainnan of the board for 1974 .. Vice chairmen elected were Gordon H. Olson, partner in an Orange law firm and Richard J. Smith. vice presi· dent of Hunt-Wesson Foods, lnc .. Fulle1ion. * Harry C. Afoore recently returned rt-om Washington, O.C. \Yhere· he attended the Advanced Training Institute for business counselors con- ducted by General Business Services, Inc. Moort:;, who ·is the CBS regional director for Southern California, resides in Ne\vport Beach. vice president of market * development for the airline. Newport Beach re s ident Traffic results for the first Bayne A. Sparks ·ha s bee ten months of 1973 show a pp o inted l ,062, 183 passengers carried vice presi- compare.d to 897 ,704 for an dent of cor- 18.3 percent increase over the porate com· comparable · 1972 p e riod . munJca- Revenue passenger mile~ were tions f o r 376,175.200 versu.s 318,980,100 Santa Anlla for a 17.9 percent increase. c o nsolidat· DO YOUlSILf A FAVOR 11t>U DESEIYE ITI ed, Jae. He w i 11 be respon· sible for all corporate and financial communicatiQns ac· tivities for 'Santa Anita and its subsidiary companies. He is the former publisher· of American Builder. • .Glenn E. !\tiller has been named district agent i .n Newport Beach for t h e Northw~stern Mutual L I f e "' ~I Vol N(I Vol "let LIU Cl'IQ LISI (.1>9, LA ii C1Mj -A ,._ CarPwUol s do MV•--' F&lr NII .»:r • l>.o-Ill MACp .O'lb • I•'~ t ~. Carrier<'. ..t t f k • •to F•ICon ~ 101 U\t , tt AAV Co .20 l 41'1 + "' C•rrols °'" J J:i. F•lftlonF Sil t2 ''•• " A&EPl•st~ l 1V. 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CrVfl'!I CP SI n """+ 11/t GIS<.otl s,.. l ·~· .. \Ii -I a--Crysl1I 011 llM 11"-+ ~ Gre.rwnro Sic ) 6¥1• V. BldQfr . .xi. I I Vo Clolbk Cit .to t ~ ··· GREIT 1.2CI J 10loo • Vo Blld'St .1/ib l S~--\o C\!lk'rA .!111 102 OVt+ \Ii GR I Cp.116 lS JS"'°+ 1\li Bncrtt 1.4Sb t IS"· .. ,, C<1Utr8 .m 1 ,_, .. Gt•w c ,3111 " t \lo-\t ler>l~lft' u Ill 2S"" .. ,,, cw Tr-.pl , .... GrlMOI Indus n 1V.• '\ Baft.tut1I .to 1l \( -lo -O 0--G T I Qrp t l ''I .. \" Baflfttt' t .OJ 6 11-.... Dll!l'IOI\ .2Clh S ' · · • GutrdMI ..; ' S'loo-It Bernt$ fft9 • • . .. 0&1>1e11" .1• 1 11 .... GullM 1.l'tb u· 17.\t• ~ Bt>rftWlll '" 10 th~ \lo O&t• Doc '" J 1•~ +-v, G+lllMttl lll'h l 1\J+ \Ii BwryW!' .:n l ~ t V. D.111 Prock,! IS •V. ·•· Gvlt RepFd 1J • 6Vo-V. B•rk'll Mid 1 IV. , .• O&~Mrl .lad f 1\lo ' ••• GutfSa 1.15b U 17'MI •.• 811111 S>P .11 1 ,..,._ V. DlyU11 wts t 2'4+ ~. GUlhlrm l.11 :w 1111i-1 B•rtom (ti(! I ,,,. . . . OCL 1-r 1 ..... •• • -" H- B&rutll Fas! 1 IV.• ~--0.•rbnS.2 •I 11 "* Heller.rt H 1 21/o._ 14 Baslft ~rt S1 616 _. \Ii OeJur AtM ·1 '"" + \lo Hafl!Mol .411 U I V>-"4 8'/,'" .191:1 2 10111 •. , O.lle COrp llJI+ " H&lnll1i D !Ir; 1 5* + v. 81 I Ind .OI 1 ,'.~ .... ~ !?!',~,.Fe.:.~ I J:i.-'Ai H&M• Pl., 120 11\lo-'1o Blft SI 1.0$11 t ,. " "" I.·""" S 2l + V. H&nShot .SS I 10,,_ V. &e ... 1s«1""" I •::WO-'Ill Oe$1"Pll ,1tb SI ~Yt+l\'t "''I'"° .n 1 , .... v. Bitl'HV\ Cp • 3 ''-• \lo °'11Ql!I JWI 2 ,.,._\lo H&rtlld ldl 11 l •. , Bl••'\ ISrw 1 3U+ i"' O.tecto IM 1 21')+ V. H&rtr Mt Cp 1• ~ VJ by TEltRY GRANT, R.ith Everyone agrees , that 1£ you have your health you arc a \ery lucky pc(&On. But, how niany of yOu are planning so 1hat you better your chances . of 11taying healthy ~ The most impor~ tant sin~le factor to coniider is having a physical check· Ull on an annual baSls. &er1>10+'NI 1 s lo\. O.velap CO n 1s "''\;''' H&"'t!yGrP 1 1Vt• '"' k~nc .10 ~} ~""~ \Ii DevAOl .O:Mi 31 ·~ .. H11bra Ind I ....... ,,,, Insurance Co. e1c ,.."' .n > 111,1o + v. DHJ1r1C1 .IOb •• 1011o.. ..,,u119 .~ , ••1. lloBffr l OI l ?2 -YI !?\!~~ lt ~+ fO H•y!,1>S .0Sfl o ,i,, The best ,..,ay to avoid tu- ture problcm!t JS to catch them befo re. they are so a~ ' pnrent tha.t they are alreacw troubJesoinc. It you want•to do yoor1'clf the ' one nmt:l Jrnnortt\n\ tnvo\-You en ever do, •mAkC yoUTllClf fl 1,romW tod:i.y to hn.ve lln nnnual check-up very soon. YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you 'l.ted ll dPllvery .• Wc \viii dt· lh'<'r l)te'lmptly-without e.xtl'fl ,.h .. r'P(', A ~At m&ny oeoole "'f'l" o.., •1~ l ror . their heA.IUt .. ,."<t~ '''t' ,,,.lcome roqut.st4 • ... rl!•"ve"' •ervice 3nd ""'"~"f: A"'cl'lti nt~. l'Al!K Lt DO PHARMACY UI t-t•,at1I keMI' ,,.... Dlfl"'Y New,.rt IMCh M2·1Sll lie joined the firm in 1968 er1 11 ~ 1 sv.-1.. ... ... _... • ..,., · s ti\ .. ~t~~c-e 1" 1 1 and has been associate direc-l!~~~S .n ,~ lt~ ~~ 81:::: 1: 1~ 1t\~': ~ ::,1~\~J ~ :~"". ;,,; tor of marketing in the agency :~s~r:~ ~ 1;:~ 1! ~~r: ;: ~:;-:: ~: ~'!0?, ; 1~~· "" department of the Milwaukee g~J,d ·~ ~ 1~. ·~ ~'T::w :tt ; 2ii!: t! ~l:t'.:iicSk :. ! ·~ home oJ:Cice since 1971. Boc1t11A.11 • .o so Hv.+ i.;. oown~1~ J 1ir: v. Ho11111n 111C1 > 2i. He resides in Newport tr.a~~ : :::t :? ~~'ff ~ i": t: ::~A'lf ~i J~ .. i~ Beach WI.th _,_ W''-, " .. '!.!~,",-2 t '6:V.+ V. OW.ioy C.. 1 • ••• HOnNIC ,11 1 I' -t-II UUI u.. _,,_ ·~ '" JN;+ "' OvnTI .na l I~-Vo Hoi.lllM .1!111 's I~+ II eo-C ,20 2 ' -.,. DYIW!edr C .If '"'" Vo Ho~t1 wt 1 1-... Brlll ltlOMI I-' ~+ l4o -· 11'--HeusA1> .Ila • ~ Bl"aci c.mot • 1 21.-.+ 111 E Syst11t .ID • ,.. ... 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NMttll ,1111 l "'• .... vOylflCI tt1 1 •Vt-w NtwlOf• 11 •·" I MDt .01b 11•"' Nw MrtN SI I nv.+ Vo kottn I .CIS • ,, ,,.. ~ tt '2 l 'h ... klll'ry ttllrl 14 tl"' I "i Nlw Pf.-tt lQYI+ 111 SN C'"taln • u~ .. , MVTlml' .to 1t 1• ._ ~ SbclAMll~:iti t .__... , .. Nlt0FrS .:rt S JI\ •.• S.•porl C11 1 .\l .•. NJI l"f,),_ I 2016+ Y. Sed>I\ Aft 2 6V. "t.. l'\loel !NI Int I 41/»+ \lo SK.MQ 1.ttb 10 f lit ••. NOtl!iO<IAY I 21\'ft Iii $tc.11fMIW1 10 Clt 14 -Ml~ • )~ 1"" SK Plei.llU 6 J"t VO No Nn IS 1•'4 + '9 SI~ MIOC: I I ., • Ml:rC.OI It 1\li ••. ttll>I. t2 Hl\f."' NNG#MI; M • 1'JO+ \t C. ,:lflb 11 • ._.. \\ """ COr11 1 •"-Yt ,... 1;.0!'p • • • VO Hlltll•r Ott • 6~+-v. •11'1!1 ,40 1.i 11'1'1-• l'WINt OIKI "' fO ... \'I nrRl ·°' 10 ·~· ,,., OttilYori'C! ~S1\.lo + " ~Oii f: :: ;:"': ~ 0Prlo8'1i• 1 I 11\'16 Ii wd Mtd I t 1'tif 16 Ot!S..ly ,t• JO Hlt+ \ti 1.M 11 I~+ l4o 01(((11 .IO>& I M '" llool AO I 11'1\ fl.' ONtlCtt JOI> J )"-\ ... P .n S U\tt"' 0 Olll<I: 1,M 11111 II\~" lilo ICfl (p I Ul'i'I ... Ootn "°"' ID J~..._. VI rid .21 I 1~ Oflflfllll I tlllo ·•• f kin In JO 1 t -"' Oriol• "°"' I 11 -*' mlfli , Jjlb I J ., , Or!M!lll ll'NI 4 1\.41 ••• 1'1'1111•1'1 -Ml lJ ~ ••• 05\lllwlft .50 I ·-... MD 1"'9 SI 1 11>1 ••• 1 • • • ' • ,. • ,. • , " • • . ·r Wednesday's Closing Prices . .. NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE I • • OAJLY PILOT Year's High-Lows Appear Every Saturday • ) • • I ' ,., , ~ .. ' ( . . ' . . , • DAILY PILOT TOOrsday, NO¥tmbtr 8, 1973 Announcement• , • • • • • 500 • S2A Autornobi~ ' • • • • • • . 950 • 990 ·-The-Biggest-Marketplace on-thl""Oranp-Coast-· •• Mobil Horim for Sall • ~ • ns -W9 BooN & Morine(~ 900 • 914 (~ ..•••••. 700 ·7W finoncicit • • • • • • • • • 200 • 299 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFl ·ED ADS ""'°""'· ........ ,57S -5'9 fl9" and 5uppllM + , 0 , I , l50 • 899 Rta1 Ellot9 Genttof, •• , • ISO .. 199 • tbM1 foi· Sole ' ' • • • • 100 • 124 l°'t ' Found • • • • • • • sso • 574 Menhancfisc •••••. • •• eoo. 849 You Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678] One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval ~ .••••••••• ,300 -499 Sc"°411 and lmtwction • • • S7'S • $99 ~-.!. -.I D~!.. \ j 6()0 • 699 --"-...,......···'.' frGnlipOl!ollon. • • • • • • • 915 -949 Gen.i ral General Genii-al ...,... .... -~~~~Gene ral ERRORS. AdvtrtlHrs 1hoUld chtck their lliiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ads dally & report error1 Immediately. The 11 , DAIL Y Pl LOT u1um11 ll1bllity for tho first incorrect insertion only. ~·~~ Gt Mral Gonaral * BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * NEWPORT ISLAND Pier & slip. Dix. du- plex. 3 BR, 2 ba., 2 BR, 2 ba. 3 Car park· ing . $125,000. 67!>-7060 NEWPORT HEIGHTS Reduced! Sparush 3 BR., 2 ba. split-level. Extra lge. lot. Owner extremely anxious! Call & submit 6424491. UNUSUAL FIND Luxurious du p 1 ex. IMMED. POSSESS. Owner's unit 5 BR. + 3 BR., 2 ba. Comp. 3 BR rental. Secluded fedec . New carpets. Newport Island. Call Frplc. Shady yard. for further inlorma-$36,750 -10% down lion. 673-7420. 556-8800 * BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * 4 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU READ THIS LA CUESTA VILLAS from $30, 990 A new concept In Home Ownership by Ayres Construction Company You Own Tho Land i nd tho Home Not a Condom ininum No M~hly Maintenance Fee 4 Beautiful ExteriOrs IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY: 3 BR, 2 BA & HUGE FAMILY ROOM+ SEPARATE 2 car ga r. 4. U/1111 (.)UI: tlVMI: IN HARBOR VIEW HILLS -Under con- struction and under comparable prices. 3 Bedrm, Carmel model , quiet street, near tennis court and shoppin~ facilities. 168 Ft. deep lot. Amazing low price of only $62,750. A ilsting of Lyleen Ewing. UNIQUE HOMES RHltors, 675-6000 2443 E. Coast Hyw., C~rona del Mar General General ****** Gene ra l Gene r al ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;I ASSUME 71/2 °/o VIEW CANYON & OCEAN CORONA DEL MAR $16,500 Beautiful 2 bedroom, 2 beth home Y.1th dintn& room, la.i:gc \O\vcr level fan1Uy room & patio. R·2 Land per- mits change to duplex. PLEASE CALL 675-3000 m llAl ,\ llL\fll VA LOAN Top location ~ Top condition. East111de Costa Mesa. 3 Bed.. 2 baths, Family Room , Fireplace, Shake Roof, New Qua! lty Ca.-peting, Children may walk to school, OUered for $39,000. Call COLWELL 6'6--0555. TAX ADVANTAGE TRIPLEX Best financing available. Q\vner may carry 1st. T.O. belO\V current rates, may accept p r e p a i d interest. lBR., 2BR.. 3 BR., All furnished, excellent con. dition. Call C-0 L \V E LL 646--0555. IDLE DOLLARS GATHER NO INCOME G1ner11 ;;..;;==..,...----:-. 1st TIME OFFERED MESA' DEL MA' ASSU,ME 61/z 0/o.11 lmmaeulate .! 1.M!drOOmm! story ~ with pre mn ..-ade ""1"''""' and coverinp, giµden p&'tjl), lhake root,1 sPrlnkters front & back. Walk to all 9Chool1, lda>ppi,_ and transp>rtat.ion. A Ill.PK J llharp home. Priced at . $36,:m. .._ super tenm. Better hurry, CaU 546-23131 OPEN TIL e • IT'S FUN 10 BE NICE/ CUI-de-sac 11Cl'Cet prov! General OCEAN VIEW Spacious vieo.v home in exclusive Harbor View Hills. General LIKE NEW HOME VALUE PRICED- Buy '°' Thanksgiving Move In By Christmas No Payments Until January Model I Block W. of Beach Blvd. Off Ad ams in Huntington Beach * TAYLOR co.* 4 BR-2 BA $27,950? 12 Apartments • Very low Vl'.cancy . Owner will carry 2nd T.O .. Ov.'neT will Trade ctov"n for smaller unit11 or land . Offered for $172.800. For details call COL\VEU.. 640-005. quiet atmi>sphere _ f q:r private livl~ ~n JJ'lls almO!t new home . with 1 a r ~-' recl'eatlon roorn and low ~. ·) terest GI loan that CM ~ assumed by •nyone. Bettfr see this tqday. 646-ml Open eves. - ' ) 3 Bedrooms, 2i;ii ba:hs, formal cHnlng area, • paneled family room. Pool. Room to add-on Owner transferred. $41,500 S1veepln:: cwved dri\11!: leads to \\id~ ccranUc tHe entry. Gardea kitchen. Oversized AYRES SINCE 1905 5J6.l445 LINDA ISLE-$195,000 YES' Bay!ront luxury! 4 BR home w/study, ige , play rm, DR & 4'h baths. Unusual plan. High ceilings, book cases, plus. Pier/slip. TRIPLEX can nmv! $95,500 HARBOR COMPANY REALTORS ...,SINCE 1941 67~ OCEAN VIEW Duplex. 2 Bdrms. each. Lea9ed land, 4 Car pa.i·king. >Ont f'fi>ntal hi!tory. $79,950. Can: 673.3663 613-6688 eves. associated BROK~RS-RE ALTQq!; 101~ W 8albcc !>71 11.1,l HARBOR HIGHLANDS Conveniently lcx:at«l to 1\tar. tners Park, school & \j. brary • excellent famtly neighborhood. 4 BR., 21,li ba., hobby nn. Large covered ,patio., v•arn1 har<!F !loors. $59.500. . C. F. Cole1sw0ff'hy Realtors . . 640-0020 living room views man!-"Our 28th Year" ~~,.:~:;,,~';!,':;: l!i!!!!!!!!!!!1!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!.n!!e!l!r•!l!1 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!II WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realton cle-sa..: Jcr-ation. Room for Gener• ue • .J blg_motor home. Call now • 2111 Sen Joaquin Hills Ro.u to ,,,, _ &t7·SO!O. ~ • ~ NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. Ol'ENnL••fT'S FUNro BE N1CE1 ei4tt1e .;;;1i .. _ ;J,,._,, ·IMAM. ~;n.;;1 General rll1$1;1111 . r-·~r 644-4910 ~ J "REAlJORS clJncla _9,,fe LET'S TAU<' AND ASSOCIATES PRESTIGE w ATERFRONi HOMES TURKEY H ~cu'rc looking for a New- port Beach duplex only 6 doon to the beach \v\th an excellent su.mmer/1vlnter rental record in the $84,500 range with a min. of only 10% down and super terms CAU.. US y,·e're ready to talk 644-7211 /JD.Nl[,[l ~MLEY &, ASSIJCIATES ATTENTION VA or FHA Terms EASTSIOE 3 BR, llf.i ba home. Lgc lot with b>at gate .. , q uiet s!reet. Qf. ferro at $31 .5tY.l • e CALL ANYTIME e 646-3928 or Eve. 645-2986 644-7270 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Close to the beach. Ne w upper unit with large master suite. Owner's unit -re- modeled. All new with cozy frpls. OWNER WANTS OFFER! $119,500. WE CAN HELP YOU BUY, SELL, OR TRAOE ·A HOME ANYPLACE IN THE NATION Linda Isle Wa terfront Lovely 4 bdrm., 4'h ba. home with swim· ming pool, pier & sl ip , panoramic view of main cb·anilel. Lge . family rm. w /space fo r billiards & family dining. Waterfront formal dining & Jiving rm. $290,000. For Complete Information On All Homes & Lot s, Pl11H Coll : BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 B1ysid1 Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 2828 E. Coast Highway, Corona dtl Mar General 1~-"'~~~~~-=---="--.~~~~~ General General General 5 BEDROOMS, 3 BATHS ASSUME 6°/o LOAN MILLION $$$ VIEW ~ TRIPLEX- NEWPORT HEIGHTS AREA BEAlIT'TFULLY :l\1 A I N. Largt! comer lot on quiet cul·de·sac . ne1v cpts . new paint . ne1v ceramic bath tile . stainless steel kitchen . garbage disposal . etc. Newport . 11 Fairview _446-1811 (1nytim1) EASTSIDE HOME .+ TRIPLEX COUNTRY SETTING situated on a large l.30x150 Jot Y.'ith tOY.'erlng shade trees, a comfortable 3 BR 2 RA home .. ~:ith den and front porch for your rocker Plus separated away from the house a triplex with income potential or $440/mo. only $69,950 for all CALL 644-7211 FOR TRADE a>Noo. c"""""'"'· Do you own up to 20 units equity. \VIU take VW aquar,. and wish to trade do\Yn? back as pru1 paymt. This may be your answer: Capri Realty 644-7525 Top Eastside Costa J\.1esa Area, Large apartments, ,B::.•:cl.::;l>o.:;•::...;P_;•c..nl;;,:nc.;1~u.c.;t1'-­one 3 bedroom and tv:o 2 1 • bedrooms, 3--years ne\\', great condition. Excellent Rents. Call CO LWELL ·6'f>-055S. Walker &Lee Corona del Mar BUY NOW EXPAND LATER:: Consider this 2 BR horftl!! In en ideal Co ro '' Highland!, \\'alk 10 p1iva e beach, location with yard spa~ and floor plan that 'make it a rui.t'ural tor ~ addition ..... Or - Enjoy this suMy, \\'eH ktDt '. Utile doll hou.~ as ts. ,, Only $56,500 , ,: CALL 644-7211 .. PRIME OCEAN VIEW >'ROPERTIES FOR SALE Lachenmyeri 8l'St vi("\v in 1-larbor View Jlills. This lowly honle is hui;, on a lot 111it;1 a forever 1so· Ocean viC\1·. SllARP 4. bedroom ramlly room, 3 batlis. Three cnr garage. BcauU!ui pool.. Indoor and outdoor living at its best. lo'or niore info. call • 673-8550 TAl.'l/ED . CUSTOM BUILT --------- ll l AL llll l l BY ~ATE OF CALIF. Ask for l\fr. \rest !2131 620-3708 Genera l Realtor HARB~ VIEW HOMES It Super clean Carmel model on come~ ~ot. 3 bedrooms, family room, fo1mal d1nmg area, 2 baths. Large private patio. Land included at $69,900. COZY 2 BEDROOM HOME + UNIT Loca ted on lovely tree-lined Corona de! l\ilar street. Red brick, fireplace, all 1,1e\vly painted back un it in rear. Only $69,500. LUSK HA RBOR VIEW HILLS Lush la ndscaping surround s this charming 4 bedroo111 hon1c, providing gracious indoor outdoor living. Separate play yard featured. S93,900 fee TAX PROBLEM JI ere comes shelter: ne'v four plex \Vith one 3 bedroo111 unit and three 2 bedroom units. Lots of parkin g, closed garages, good loca~ tion close to :;hopping, 5 1Tiinutes to beach. $115,000. BORDEAU X MODEL BIG CANYON Delightful 3 bedroon1, 3 bath end unit \Vith ocean vie'v lav ishl v deco rated V.'it h out· ~landing carpels, drupes and 'vallpaper. Large lot. Private n1a&ter bedroom terrace. $145,000 . NEW AWARD WIN NING CONDOS Choice of morlels, location. decor. Near ten- nis courts. pool. Excellent terms. ·trade, lea~e 'opt ion. Ne,vport Beach. One example, 3 bedroom for '$68.500. BA LBOA ISL E RES IDENCE OR DUPLEX Little island water!r~nt pier & slip. 4 bed- rooms. 41h baths, dmmg room . family room. This Spanish 2 story with tile entry and 'vrought iron trim is a real charmer. You'll love the chert room. $239.500. PRIVATi GATED COMMUN ITY Bay, .beaches and boating facilities avail· able for your use. Lovely home-move-in condition. Sunny patio and custom gardens. $72,500. . •• --644-1766 ColdweR,Banker t:~:i1Jd 21'1 Son jo•quln Hiii s Rd .. N.B. *BEST BUYS* Log Bch Lot $8500 Ca nyon La ke Lot $18,500 2 BR Duplex $36,500 BH ch Homo $S9,500 1 Inc Units $59,500 Beoch Duplex $76,500 Call no\v for details. GU-Im 1797 Orange Ave., C.M. ~ '1!!J, -OCEAN VIEW }tard to believe hut only $30,900 full price. Si! on your deck, l\'tllch the boa1s ,i:,, cn· joy the good life. Ii !6-1J34. HIJNllNGTON HARBOUR llfAllY IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Lol"atcrl In p11vate rommun. lty, nC'8.r the bee.ch. Lovl•ly 4 BR. 2 BA home, nt'\\' car- pels &: dr)>\ lO\V mninten· con5lder renting. NEWPORT CRES!- Ncwport Besch Luxury Lotted llv rm cell, frplc, &: wet bar, pool, jacuzzi & tenn11 courta. 4 BR 2~ ba, 172,995 TUI tin , Relax It enJoy the peat'(lf\.il ma1nt free condo, 2 BR, l it ba, only $21,lOO. Ruuell l Allocla1es 223U Brookhuntt, JIB <n•>~T'l87 ) ..,,,.s.'-HERITAGE • • REALTORS General Salesman of till month I Arnold Broyles ha1 b11n 01rned s11e1ma11 of 11'1• Monll'I 1t our Cost• Mesa oniee. Since joinl11g Wilker I L•• 111 11170. Arnold fl•• earned several dl11incflv1 1ward1, lncludlng 111lesm1n ol 1111 year !or hit ollice, and • member ol 1h1 Top Twenty 111 tl'll comp1oy. H11 and 1'111 larnlly Uv• In Co1t1 Meta. • l11dlvldualt Ilk• Arootd Broyle111e 1l'le rta•on -Nl'ly Welker a L11 1ells 1.000 tiom1sed1y.c111111m. (714) 5'1441S 1tto Mart161 ltvd. Co .. 1 ,,. .... CA tMM Walker&lee ffMUtll l. ..,,~ .... HERITAGE . • REALTORS BUY A BARGAIN! Liquidation forces sale of 3 BR, 2 BA, Newport lights home, gas BI, fireplace, fam r n1, 15x30 H&F Pool, g1 ~r;, fin avail. All offers \1·i\l be considered. Call Realtor for info. 6'1s-a;.16 .. ~enera l . . Ne\v paint, carpets, drapes. 3 BC'droom owner lllrlt ele- gaotly furnished. All built· in kitchens. 6 closed gar. ages. 642-4353. PETE BARRETI -REALTOR- 642-5200 Roomy cottage with commcr. cial :ronln~ just 60' fron1 beach. PrcsenUy a home, can be shop, office or ? ? ? Garage + parking, fenc«l. $67,500, BKR 675-6TI2 o!' 675-1632 Gene ra l MACNAB IRVINE ----~--... ·------- FABULOUS VIEW-POUNDING SURF Privacy o! China Cove-Multi-level w/ele- vator-JBR's, .2 baths. Shower-& dressing room for beach. New cpts., cir,\>'· & newly painted & paneled. $143,000. ' B. Morphy 642-8235." ( s34) TURTLEROCK COND0-$52,400 Plan #2: 3BR/LR around atrium. Prime location on park I Martha Macnab 642-8235. (s33) BLUFF'S FINEST Single level JBR unit w/ope n view. Warm- ly decorated for total livability. $68,500. "Helen Wood 644-6200." (s20) [Irvine 1--·lm111 t1oot1,eom, • ., I IOI OovtrDtlv. Ml •12SI 114ot MeoAn hur 144•f200 Newport .. ch, c:anromla t21ta !!!!!!!!!!!!!!! * S9'x290' LOT * C-1 ZONE $:2,500 l:.:·Z TERMS * 4 Bedroon1 home (huge miu:ter BR) + family room + den, 3 baths, many ex· tras. Quiet stI'\'et. $5S. 700 * C-2 Property . Nf'lvport Blvd. \111lh 30· x 30' building. $36.000. Roy McCa rdl1 Realtor 1810 NcY.'f')(lr. Blvd., C.J\'l. 548-7729 Call 54:>-9-191.0pen eves. TOTAL PRIVACY POOL-ASSUME Private chi\-c fo Deane Gar- dens 1'.10DEL 1-£0'.\lE! Regal t'~u-s!ory entry. Vaulicd cf'ilings. t'ormal dining. King size nias<cr. Roman bath. Brh~hl ganlm kitt:h('fl. Mammouih fiMta room.,· px>lsidc! Custon1 Ron1an- style pool. 3 hUR<" patios. Park·lik<" grounds. Seller lic1uidating . lake advantage. Transfer loan. Call now to Vie\\', 8.\i-8010, Ol>f.N nl e • JT s FUN ro Bf N/Cff HARBOR VI VP.l'satllc noc,vian from ex. <.'t'ptionally nlt-c \irw horn~ .... 'I 2. 3. ~. or 5 bedrooms.I 1 11.t'1..'0lllmodn1c any size f~, ily. Lovely pool size ya ' Asking $86,000. Call~ , CHARMING 1 ~ EASTSIDE .~l Sharp 3 UNiroorn home \Yith ·~ 2 Baths. As!lun1c 5-%<;"f, Gt I iiiiiOiiiiiiii loon. Boat gale or can1 per I ~ aeet·ss . co: Ts . WALLACE REALTORS -~54646-44111- (0ptn Evtnin91) z ·-· - NEWPORT · BEACH ft's got everything • 4 bt.>d· room, fan1ily room, fonnal dining 1'001n, 20' x 40' pool with pool sweep & jacuzzi. Large cor.ier lot with boat door & oversized doable V.!U'· age. J ust listed nt $84,500. l-fw·ry! CJ\LL 510-1151 Open Evc11. "".s-» HERITAGE . • REALTORS BA YFRONT LOT Best CdM location. 50' x 100'. Ov.·ner translem"d. Anxknl1 tor quk·k sale. t.oe.n can be subordinalcd. Submit any oUer. $12'J,500. Call 645-81'00. z OfflcEs mm row n m. ' I v.~~u.J 4 BDRM-LUCKY GI NO 00\VN TERMS or low ! down to all others on this Immaculate 4 bt1m1., 3 ~ths. Dining rm, built-ins, diahwashor. PV stone fireplace. Covered p&.tlo, rus hin g waterfall. Sprinklers tront .t: roM' $31,75!1. 540-1720 TARBELL , R11ltor1 oflnJa .-96/e • BOOrooma, '""-Blthl poOI room, pll!'r A 11\p $250,000 * 613-7184 ""hi> HERITAGE . . REALTORS Walker &lee lll A ~ l l f A11 DUPl:.EX HIDEAWAY• >, EVER STOLEN One a!·, kind, In -~ A DUPLEX 1etUng. Welk' to btttb. Try this: two 2 bedroom Owner m~ belp ""'" . double garage In-$105.HOOOA.L PINCHlm.411N i com~ ol S3T:i0 per year. Asking $35,950. Try )'OW' REAL'l'OR ! own price owner say11 CORONA DiL MARiJt SEU..! Call Red Carpet, l n1--i. -bch 2 nealtors. ~8080. ch~ ~n 'vn $ MESA DEL MAR 110,000. Coll 615-2931 owM<. Lovely 4 hdrm. home In Alto C.d.~, 2 Br, 2 p beauttlul Mee-a del Mar, 00 mov6 In . New quiet, tl't'e lined street. Bit· !';cl""1'i?'ii. ;;,· "'6~;:'-i::::''7'.:-::-:-;-~;itJ IM, carp.\ drapes, conCrete LOVELY itew '5p;y1 t a drive, dou >le garage. N1cely home, Joriaale•or lu.ee l4nd!Ct\pcd, Priced to IC!ll: Uon by ()1fnf!fl 2 BR, I MORGAN REAL TY many·~· Prot. Indscpid, 67~2 • 675-4419 TeMI• A club A Piii· . rM~o*•· OCEAN \llF.:W -• 125.950 .. , ·1 ·~ Vi,. ,_ I M Clreular atteet ot tine i • .i:.. '' '!"me w ~"" homl!'I 3 Bedrooms In· ' ':..'0-:'lc on, mu. on OctQ cludlni cue•t tacUlty. Party .~Sl~!9~,l00~-,£~~­ room, entrttalntn pa.tio. DUPLEX ~· charm Bruthteldng view. A&t· by ...,,.,, lOO Po1-tlll, 645-0303. Open 1., d&lty. J% Int. ,._ I : . 1 Th11r~dAy, Novenibtt 8, 197j, DAILY PILOT L . ==-==:::---'" , 111,;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-•:;;u;n•:;Ba;;;adi;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, j L 0 l:;do;.:..I:; ... :;;_ _____ Mobile Homos lncom~ Prope'!f 166 MC;r1gagu, H ... ;s Onlum, 3Q5 Hou'" Un u r.n, nfurn. J115 -For Salt 125 ----~-'---Trust~-,, 260 1 ";~".°:'.'====-=1-;:::~7."'-:~===l~":;.;"-;';;:-.;..;::::::::::::=.1 A FAMILY HOME 1 ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; RED CARPET ..,.... . rGtntrtl Costa MoH 4uR .. fa~ rm., 3 ba. with 1' Mobll H 1 EXCLUSIVES !.;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;. HANDYMAN SPECIAL * ! tf ave dollars on this ocean view 4 bdrm '!Z bath home with family rm. & dining area' 1 Needs a liltle elbow grease to make It a ·reai - 1 showplace .• Has fenced yard & nice patio 11area. U you • are a handyman, you could I save many dollars on this family home at I ~9,500 ' l(IVIERA REALTY 494-5678 499-2800 f,.._NOT EMnY, l)UST VACANT J;ausc this lovely home's ~t been llnlshed. lt'1 all oew &: sparkling. New green tlulg carpctlng in oll rooma l huge bedrooms with Matching bet~. while brick iltfplace. Large bnck yard. ti' one cnn as11ume this VA n wllh total paymenl of per/mo. Selle.r will •elp Uuance. Prlood al r,soo. ea_'_..' - Huntington Buch RUSTIC STORY B 0 0 K RANCH STYLE HOME ON RAMBLING LOT. HUGE HlDDEN UNDERGROUND \VINE CEU./\R ! ! ! Coun- try gourmet kitchen with fo1·mat dining. Crackling us- ed brick fplc. I-luge patio !iWTOOl1ded by nranicured ground! & gardens. Can't be duplicated! Assume low int. VA loan or terms to suit NOT FAR FROM OCEAN! Bkr. 962·5511. ~.~tlo. Via Udo Soud. '12x~· 971 :ou~J~~~R~~. ~~~~ ~~T:~~~: LEASE-OR OPTION ·~~!';:! ~~ !.=~ P P $33,950. TY:o 2 bdr. 1 bfl, * Ne < BR G ard I t IER & SLI on a ltlf;. 11)% Down. Jncon1c Ellro 10% or ruorc 011 \Veil-Queen 1Ucd 3 bdrm llonKl ar new reen-Y -1iex o ne W 4 BR., 3 ba, $270,000. WUJ IN HIGHLAND, CALIF. $3.i:>O. Yearly now and ~-cured 2nd Trust Orceds on ~ bftth, dble sc1u·11ro. kuaC btookl tor 3 BR + d.lnlna-Andel'901n • ~~ o o I kand lease l\ith firm option SAN BERNARDINO rtntti need rel11ing, Great Onmge Counly re~ e.lo.tc. fcnCt'<I yar, bullt-1111. UM.00 nn grecnlJt-1. ..,.,.,, 8 r • LIDO LOTS · 1 COUNTY. LOVELY 10 low S !Jnt time Investor SlCNAL .\l01tT<'.iAC£ CO. per/n10. New co.rpetJ. New• 1!USCt fiuntly l'OOin ~673-~7225=------·• Only interior w uvail. x20 COVERED PORCH gtartcr units. 11141 556-0106 11aint * frticedyard 4 BEOROOli.t, % BAm! 57 f't. for P.sldenct, w/pool-WITH OUTDOOR RUG $52,!rJO. Beach Tr Ip I ex. 4.:.oo Campui D1·., N.B. . \\'alker & l...ec : ~tfl :::i1;1~~ven Fanlity rm, fonnal dLn1na patio $74,000, 35 Fl. nord • Lowc11 priced triplex In I"'""''""""""'""'""''"""""' REAL ESTATE , 1 _ u;s m1, private ten.nit le pooi corner (40 h. bulldabJe .slto) ALSO COVERED CAR. Newport Beach and 1,~ block \VIL.L Bnv 1st and ~ .. TD's 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Ad11n11. * Co.:y {ll'{'plu.cc pr iv Uca;eli. $545/montb. PORT. NrCEL Y LANO: to beach. Creal for In· -'"u =.;.::.::.::;:,:,,:=;:;·c:::..::::=:.:::::1 • Stcp.J to So. Cst Plaia &14-5686 even Jn c 9 4 $6S,OOO. SCAPEO MODERN vcslment, appreelatlo11 and up to $lOO,OOO. Call betwn 5' LANDLORDS! Cuti for dt.'fai.l.s 1\lflekcnch; S.12-6735 day1. ' ~OBILE PARK. owner use too. ~~~M or 7 to l:I Af.1 \Ve Specialize In Newport larwln re~lty inc. LUXURY ocean vu home. LIDO REALTY \, I " I *67J ·7JOO * * $1ft,500 * 4 8Dilli-fS. Plus rnald'11. 4 B:i. EI e g an c e perAOnifi«I! Brand new. Call todoy! --GE:1111M-- 120-F Tustin Ave., N.B. REALTORS 612-4623 BEST BUY LIDO 3 BA, 4 BR +. Bay Vic1v, 88' to bch. 425 Via Udo Nord. $137,500. 675-7414 Bkr. Newport Be•ch 546-0135 aft. 6 pm 1.tOBlLE Hon1~Eudger Ex· pando _i.n pnrk nr ~nth. Newpt Bch. 646-f748, 64>-3128. dv the Sea. 10 x so ABC y.•/expanclo room, cove1'ed patio, 2 sheds, cal'pQl't. $39\Q. 960-1420 or Sts-4241 I~ $52,950. li'ourplcx. Only 2 Jell Bench e Ctirona de! l\Iar e ' t'QUill hownng OJJJl~y. Brand new l BR, 2~i BA, o! thesl! 2 bdr. 1 Ua . $5,200 2nd TO for s31c $'1100, &. Lug11nu. Our Rcnto.1 ser. 968-4405 (24 hrs) fonn. din, ftplc. wet bar, fourplexcs. 10~ Oo11·11. \\IUI 1~~ int., 3 yrs due. vice It J<~RF:E to \'.ou! T1y • '-""'tH')'\h\ng • J>ool termbi sell on contract ot con· 833'·1129; 5't6-9r;>t eves. Nu·Vic\VI $150 · 2 Br 1-lse. f'enced snu.na. Winter $500, yr1y vrnt!Qn1a.l. ltl.'llls 011 \\'MY to NU-VIEW RENTALS ~a.I'd rol' kids* Pl'l:t. Gar. $600. 968-425-1 $600. ptr month. •• _. 673 .. JO:lt> or -194.3248 C11.lif'3 Lt-gei;t Rc111u1 Ai;cy PRIVAT'Ebc~a-ch--2-8-R--+I SW.850. Fourplex. 2 bnn. 1 Homeflnders 547 9641 · bn . backs on i:olf L"<lW'tie. Balboa Island • guc11t roo1n ; 1 1.~ ba., carp.,' !{)!di dov.'ll. \VIJI ticll con· 3 BH. PI u Ii ill: fam 1in, drps, "'asher/dryer. 2 car tract or conventionu.I. $350 ANNUALLY. Bay View, new Cti>lS, dl'p$, fre&hly gar. Chihtren 0.K. Yearb. $175,<m. Eutsldc 12 Un\ls. HouHs Furnished 300 2 story, big house for big painted U\8ide and out, lrg $415 month. Atu·aclive complex wllh f11mity · 4 Bil, 2 BA, den, fncd yard. Fanilly, no pets. GERftlB CO. 644-8070 pot T\vo 0,vner apt8. \Valk. General f11>lc, crpled th r u ·o ut . f..!65. 547-6791. llAHBOR View 4 BR paJ. ing distance to shopping and 1 Includes washer, dryer, .~ 'lh '~ 1 acd bua services. I $1~5 U1il pd. Lrg bach, full rcfrig., blUn rnni::e & ovt>n: Fount~ln Valley eaino 11·1 ex~.,."''"' y For detailed inforn1ation on k1lc h, l blk beach. Balboa. 75 yl'ds 10 00.y, 110 Collins, -fK'Xt to ne1v A!!<lenon lhese and other units Cnll $1~ · L11.: & ni ce Bach, fuU Conta<:l Salisberry Itcalty, 3 BR, :! B.'\, 2 c;ir ;,:ar .. 6~ .... ~~& greenbelt~. bkr Don Bcm\n.n, Brokl'r and ~1~ & s:u·a~c-. Lai;una. . 673-6900, nll bllns, s\\'iln pool. kid!i · 1 · unit speeialist, Red Carpt>t, $:!3j ~ I lih, .~P rear unit, 2 BR, 2 BA, 1 block fronl Ol\, like nc11•. only $249 n1o. BLUFFS CONDO l hr, 2 "BAYCREST'' Acreage fo.r_•:.;•;.;l:.•_...;c15:.;0 Realtors 645-8088 217 E. 17lh frvlt, 1.100!, ~a1age, Cd;\·l. beach, bltn kit., din rnl., No fLoe, ,\geot s.12-4421 ba, 2 car gar. Pool. F.P .• -St, Costa Meu. ....,.~l!,_:~IEW RENTALS patio, $4.50. yl'ly. Utll lncltl. <I BR, 13i ba. Lrg fan1 nu. ~~s/. S33-86:1S. Lsel ' -WALK TO MORRO BAY 9 UNITS ••~ O<' 4!) .. 3248 GT.>-2877. "Classic Homes·· $321)/mo. -~-~_m•:._· ~-~-- BACK BAY--1t>!c:~~~1~;,;~Y~~~/Jc,ro;~ 16 " RETU $110 UTIL Pd. $125 Mobile, Capistrano Beach !l&l-Grl9or 968-l.!j6 BAY Vic1v from 3 s~ Charmi 4 bedroom bo ul l ~:'J~ interest. S30,000. Oro RN C~'I. $12a Srur'Clemente. 1 l ~ br, 3 ba huge 1 , quct r::m . tlvo wW UI'~: * * • * * * * Sharp detached home In Iron!. BR ocean vi~\V, ~na NE~\I deluxe \o\1·c1· dupl.~x. Huntington Beach ~~?rcorn,~jetbar64&.~' places, large quality honic . Lot 75 x 125. View of bay. 1\1·0 4 unil buildings behind Sch. 3 BR Mobile $l<la, CM. priv. 2 ·BR, 2 BA. 2 patLO~. __ lgar.~=-=m"o,_. -'-'~7'- ass: um e loan . $?5 OOO. $7.000. vacancic11• Over 16°ih return util pd. Agt. Eee. 979-80}. -Cainhna 496-1921. F am1ly lo\\•nhouS<"s. 1, 2, 3 & P~I & yard o.:n:!'lnt. Lease gour1net kitchen. Possible. lo 29<.:h oo,vn at 7\ti% interest. Rootn tfor 3 nlorc untt§, N~ I M~y Bache!or units •• $90 fl'plc" $:l~ .. 34592 A Via ~E".'T WITH OPTION SHARP·Vacant 3 br, 2V~ ba. &16·71TI. ' BROKER 646-2414 on do1vn. Se.Ucr \Yill help Balboa Island 1 ·I Bli. ~175 .t up. $.'iJO Jn(). 333 . .,u.,... '.walker &lee Huntington Beach's OPENTIL~· IT'SFIJH10BENICEI Apartments finance. Take advantage. Coron• del Mar WHY RENT? Newport Heights l I ~= ~ Call 1101v. · CHARMING 3 BR, 2 Ba. • . , $1500 do11·n Uuys lhis 2 BR, _:;.:£;.:..:;.:..:;:.;,,:.;;;;_ __ ~··~ ,,,.,, Most Popu ar [' For Sale 152 54•1600 home, frpl., lo11ely palio. I LRG Bu_ch $135, utll 1xl. Nr\V 11~ Ua. lan1. t0\\1lhousc. RUSTIC & cozy 2 hr, I be. cltl1, 515-0465. 2 Bdl·n1 L'<lndo. 1¥.i: years WALK TO BEACH lNVEsn1ENT DIVISION furn., yrly. $530 month cp!s. ktl & bath. N~11·. Tola! $11)7 Pt!r nio. beaut yd, gar, ci·p~. drps '.STAR OFF OF nC\\',f • 1 ·N?shly Painted y.•ith S n r h \Vllllam. Winton NGoolCEd 11 b.-Wdup~c1x1 $150, fw·n. SLATE REALTY 963-0J:l $275 11• uril. Ca.l'y Johnson, tasTe u ly paneled and mir· -! ... e ave 2 lu.'1.Ury n·iplexes. , Real Estate 61:>-3331 1 oc. on nsl. sm LI 1 B. c 6--G..{)6''5 or nisg 673-1Zl5 Gtacious contemporary hon1e shag carpeL<i & custonl Newport B.y Towers .....v•" lb , .1v ......., '7 ;i:if:\i~ 'J: BR, 2 story. Ni~ly furn, VIE\\I 2 br $300 g~r apl i ~r Cttl1f's Ll'g'est Hental Agcy j NEWPORT ~~Z~~g dr:~· ~: GRAND OPENING ~ti"mvm'h, .. 1e;,'n~;·,~.i~0~011"'. ~~l:,"'an·u!~.· 1 1~~·J:Qj0.i\f:11JI BAL30A Island Charming 3 ~~~:~~rtfv~· S'l40. lrplc, pli'~· l~ts. d1 1 ·fn;, 1"~..i. Ap· New~rt Isl•~ . 011 large corner lot • near di·apei, oversir.ed pantry 1 & ~ BEDROO~ ~ per mo. Including sum: I race lf?r BBQ,' ld.ry & g0~1~ Homefinders 547 .. 9641 3 BJ\, 2 Ba. Not crptd. Fe~ , ijbrnry, tennis courts I: area, near schools, 1valking CONDOMINIUM HOMES &!OTT REALTY 536-7533 16 UNITS _ POOL, stud'" nlei, 1974~ 642-Z222, 54Q.099a rn1·chiJd & pct ok. 3 BR laniily rm lrplc JS' ed yd. 3 car prkng. $~ Y,'estctifi shopping:, 2 bed· distance to 11 u n ting t 0 n Bayfront I-tomes or 644-1295. SUPER Nu 3 br 2 ba $365. ba. 0 crpts & d~s bi~· ~· lsl & last + $250 , l'OOnlS, large paneled den. Center, S1vhnming pool and Boat Slips Commercla1 2 BR, 2 BA & 3 BR. 3 FANTAsrlC 3 BR, 2 BA, 1\ll appli's frplc, pct child. children & pets ok. sm: scc/cln dep 6ii>-8l 40 Bright kitchen, laundry many park areas. Asking Full Security Highrisc Properly -lS8 BA. Name your terms -all bltns, waterfront, on Lit· ALA Rentals 642-8383 536-7036 San Clemente tloon\. Boat gate. A genm:>U9 only $24,495 call today Steel &. concrete constructkln ---'--'C...----Will carry paper -No pointa tie Island. Avail to July. l>ul' for $39,950. Call 646-n?L 847_3095_ PriVllte--Satconlcs or excessive interest, etc. $350. mo. can eves, 673--0ll5 $:l~ · 2 br, frplc, teak pan. NU PAINT TH RU· 0 UT. 2 BR 2 BA home 011 • 2 NEW lndustriaJ bldg. good Submit trade for down. t:hng, all redcc, gl'eat ~ 4 br, 1% ba .. gas Shor~liUs. Frplc beautiful) dP!Nm.•. JT'S ™" 10BE HICE/ FANTASTIC garage spaces pt>r unit. tenant. Income $16,140 a $275,000. A.gt/Own. 642-2221 Balboa Peninsul• ch!irn1! . bltms, 2 car gar, fenced cpls & d~, gard~. Adults I Root top sundeck year, triple net. Price ( $32j [I :\ b d · vd $270 E 962-5319 ·r" ' II. ·~~~·11·1 4 ~ms. add on fam rm, Unusual Opportunity to Pur· $16,lm also have $30,000 msg. 646-9666) CLEAN, SMALL 1 Br. rear · t;: · r, >'.ar • pallo, '7 • ·mo ves. only, no pets. Avail Dec. ~ 1 1-f!-ll!i·l!-111!!.'•~-l!l'!lii--pool & boat or camper sto~.. chase Bayfront Property iii d1vn. for commerciaJ bldg. 8 UNITS house Nr shops & bay S~~~ of ~1ght f atr. \VALK TO BEAOI, 2 BR 1st, $325., 492-3821 alter 6 • '' 1 age. Approx l/3 acre lot in Neo.vport Beach Su!Uvan/Brkr, 540-4429. 6 MO. New. Ad 2 BR, kitchen 4161' · E ·Bay or ~ a · · civ ~ fain rm, Condo only $165 per n\o. Pli-1. I!~~~!~~~~·~ H.B. Sl'llcr must sell 1his 310 1''crnando ·1,d., N.B· . l'1 · • •· I C·~ceptionally nzL'C llt1rbor SCOTI REALTY 5J6-i333 1-'-=--------1 eek Oll d $37 500 " NEARLY new Womans Ap. Ult·ins, cpts, drps, patios. 2131672/3036 View Homei; . . 1 ,, TRAD' E &.b.n~t ~ te~nls. 'call 675-8551 pnrcl Shop lor sale, The Laundry rm, encl garages. 4 BR. 2 B;\, beachfront. 1812 NU.VIEW RENTALS Irvine Tustin Rich Richmond. 342.9371 ilr Two-Timer, 435 Wesr 19th Gross 'inc Sl8,900. Sl75,000. W. Oceanfront. $300 per mo 673-4030 or 49'1.:!2481';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,j ' Fipular 3 BR, 2· B.A hoO)C-962.7652 a.II 6 PM. R. E. by HEIGHTS AREA St., Costa Mesa, 645-68fi6 Chvner/Skr. 545-5800. ti! June lS!Jl. 1-77&-47?5. "OLD Corona" charnler _I • , 1 ~ ~75BA 8~~ ~i~s. l crp~'. { f.lth all bltm, cozy Oagstone cM=•~V""""'-· ------Large cuslom built home on c'::r~54~8-c:1836:::;·:,,..,~=~~ 11 Units, room for 3 more. BAYFRONT a BDRMS:, 4 excellent location south oI ~R. ; bonus, 2,fi ba. $4~ drp,.,, gardener incl, 00 pets. ~ le, ·lam, rm and large REPOSS SSIO S Catar Dr 4 BR d NEWPORT BEACH 1 & 2 BR. Gro"' $1lll5/mo. 5'\.Tl!S. ficr, fioa\.-Winter highway _ lhree bedroom ~R ._. '~th' .......... I:"" 54+1JOL2. ai'd. Will tratl.i> for duplex, E N ..... mafamo'J• rm .. & .. ~ •• • I'. b f I ., Prine 9nly, See 187 E. 21.<;t ·or uearly 673--. 3 bath nd f I h d 2 BR., 1,, baU1s ...... $23a w··C.--"'",-1-,.-----4," .:;i..., l ..., J ... • a·1me ay ron si .e . St E/slde CM or U J • "IN"· I . a . um s e . or 2 BR + den 2 ba $430 estm niter "1 flPlex or f..,...v-C'X, loca For lnlorm11.tion and location billiard table, 2 Ba., frplc., For boal repairs & sales ' · · ·• ca C d I M unfw·n1shed. $400. Bk r. · '. · •·•• -'I-""'-'===-----' area. Call 5f.5.8t2.l, SouthCo o[ thes! l1L.\. &: Vlt. homes, bit-Ins. & many extras. Bill Grundy Rltr 675--6161 O\vner, 642-l960 orona e ar 675-7225 2 8~·· 2 bath~ .......... $~~ 3 BR 2 BA BUILT INS ~altars. t'Olllact . $68,500. Condominiums EASTSIDE. lhlrtecn 1 Br SMALL 2 BR house for rent. BEAUTIFULLY remodeled 3 81., 2 ba., incl. gdnr .• $33.1 call 1392-5D) aft 4:30 , I WESTCLIFF KASABIAN CALL '-"• ,,,.;,,, for sale 160 units, inc. $1960 J'l('r mo. $225. mo. Call mornings, hOme. Ne1v thruout, So. ot !· BY OWNER Re•I E1t•te '62'""44 ,;w ,I -Cpt~, drps,ooostoves, refrigs, 673-6177. Hwy. 3 Br, 2 Ba + hUge $36,500, Lge 2 BR, 2 BA....... ~~176• · By Owne(. Costa Mes• laundry room & game room. <i..t bit. 480 Shady Dr. MODEL HOME RESALE al AL TY DUIT NOW 400 Ja.minc. $<00 mo. tt:>-5028. 3 BR. 2 BA, lam. rm., cov. N11r N• .. •~t Pest orrlet DON'T WAIT FOR OOSTA MESA 4 plex. $62,500 Hurry! $125 l BR ?i.Iobile 673-1658. "ll:1l1'l 'i·lld, -- -'I L1•11llu r Houses Furn. or Unfurn. Gener•I 310 Sf.PER Sharp H I r t patio, shag thruout. frplc, PRICES TO RISE Income pays !Jrin int tax, Home. Kids & Pets. oE:CNC,CLOSo=;:::E~D~-,.-t-i-o-.-- BR a ~1~ ~ blllls, 0 /\\1, ~~ mi. !rom CARMEL MODEL $21 ,000 for these spacious ins & util. 10% dn, no pts. Calif's Ll:gest Rental Agcy rounded by 2 BR 2 ~· . "SINCE 1946" 2 BR '"ba f N ome. 4 :,_ '' 0 · bch. 1 blk. el. schl. 2100 2 BR t , BA d 1 ndos 6T:>-1669 or 1·128·2'14!1 Homefinders 547.9641 den. dbl frpk, N' r. Bo·g' lsl.'Vl'stern Bank Bk.lg. ·• 1 " un · ew CU'll, $3·1,250. 10'/fi uv•\'ll. pt>n Miritm.ir Ln. 536-7119, Xlnt buy in 1-larbor Vie1v , '·l a u t co . U p "· l draJ>Cli, decor. Yrly. $250. 111: sc B Owner Call for Choice of locations still avail· ••DUPLEX, 2-2 BR's. Lrg Sin Jes OK 11~ 2 BR Corona. $350 mo. yrly. nive.r,.ity a.... rv!nc J BR., 2 ba. unf. new ......... ,.ou • Y · AITRAC Sol-Vista Home tor Homes 4 onty $69,950: 3 BR., able. As !ow a.s $390 .i... •• ,n yards. Assume FHA loan. g .w. · ·I Agt/ovrner, 673-2058, eves. Day1 552-7000 N1nhts d d ' 1 .;:;;-• !PP'· st()-9542 ' snle by owner, 4 BR. Beaut, dining&. family rooms, load· to niove in, 1~·ith S220 ....,~. Owner/Agent, 545-8625 ~~~.1: LrgH~:t ~1~t~Agd .. Y ' b'75-4020. • 3 r~, 2 eco~ .. ~~t. 3: t"" ba. Brick lrpl, $ol2,500 fin avail, 842_3135 ed w/extras, Adult occupied 11 "~"-4206 A L.R.; newly dee. $27,IXKI ll-4 pm, or 673-9!11 9 & better than new! Co.U pays a · .....,.. gent. 6 ~ITS. CORONA DEL . Homefinders 547-9641 EASTSIDE large 3 BR, 2 2 BR l bath $3l5 F'ul'n.; \vinter $325. . C.o., Rlaltnl. 642-0001 , ..::._:,_,""'c:::_:::.:,;c=--""". :;_ORBI" u •RTIN 'P---------. =~"R'oA~Do-E=·:._'-g=-='~.o.NcoEc.~':CC8":::E..::: ·~:.:O,~R I Dan.a Point BA, huge family rm., frplc, 2 BH." 2 l.m d~. -.;,j~ ... $215 2 BR., 2 ba. furn, winrer , , V For duplexes ._ n-mlll II .w-.x>'71 lrg. yard., ~ Sanla Isabel 3 BR, 21· 'bu ' si8at 400 $300. FPVf'te1n ey • ' and trlplexel!! REALTORS 644-7662 CLASSIFIED SAN Juan Capo, ·four plex, DELUXE Trailer .\vi th ~~~r mo. 546-7945 o1· 3 BH'.'.' 2 ~l'fti; '..'.'.': .•... $400 associated I ,f' Sil,% Call Scott Realty 5l>-T:>33 HOURS income $7800., large lot, cabana. l440 sq. !t., 4 BR, --· 4 Bit, 3 balhs .......... Jtlii "/Ii Irvine add! units $79,500, 492-8264 3 BA. Xlnt kilchen. 50· from B~D new 3 Br, 2',2 ba 4 BR., 2~~ baths .•.• $4501415 I;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;:;;;:;;;; Advertisers may place I ~~ beach on beautiful cove. unit w/frplc & bit-ins. 1650 5 BR, 3 ba, N' pt Bch .•. ~75 BR OKERS -R Fii L TO ~<; ~()1~ W (i olb"'" ~11 111 l 4iBedroon\ plus bonus room, BIG CANYON their ads by telephone Mountain, O...rt I Private club w/heated pool. sq: ft. of charm & a super CALL 552·7500 2.srory. Only $35C.AOOOB.E Hernando'• Hicle•w•y S:OO a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Resort 174 TReennis courts1._oana Po~!· n6:1·3~:~,1~1.·hood 10 boo1. ~385. VISION . WM. Mc An en1icing addltioo. to this i\'londay thru Friday ntal Nov. a to May ....,, &. MJ Coridom1nium1 ' 320 ' 81..0 \VARJ''lE.'R AVE. Mme is the private patio close to pool & tennis courts. 213-625-2345, Ext 261. wut acro86 froin park and d h" I I REALTY upgraded 3 bdrm., 2 bath $891500 g to noon Saturday CONDO, 2 BR, 2 Ba, palio, $3000 or $550 monthly. lnq. R~MY one bedrooni duplex Unfurn: garden in the front and the Beautiful Deane "i\fonaco", COSTA ?dESA OFFICE Day \vkiy, 644·9178. "d I I . • e I -FOUNTAJN VALLEY enclosed area in lhe ttar. 3 BR, 3 BA, over 2800 sq, ft. 330 W. Bay L1 o Is e cnrus -L'Orner sepan1te e11· r I Cost• Mes• * 142-4405 * rt· ii lncl .... A .. • .-....4 · 6 Rue Cannes. Sho\\'n by •• 2 1<"'"70 Out of State Prop. 178 trance · garage $2'"i5/1no. ----------t · -8 a """"-.,.. 111 u..: pnce appt only. &14--6056, 10 Al\f. .,.. """'-0 --~---~---RUSTIC CMARMER _!i44-72_ll _A.gt. R&\LTY REALTORS MESA Verde North 2 Br, 9wner Tr•nsferred 01 SC::f.L. 552•7500 5 Pl\I. NEWPORT BEACH \\'ANTED, house & cabins Darltng 2 br 2 ba, bca1n NR. lx.il-hops. Bright 3 br Univ. J>ark Centcl',· Irvine bltns, garage, patio&: pool, 4l8R. 1"" BA "ith cozy fire-REDUCED 3333 Newport Blvd. by water in Washingtcn ap-cl. nl! sha; & drp, fpl. Wntr den, crpt/drp, trplc, lrg lot'. adutis only. $225. n10. 1635 l p!ace. Green Valley C.Ondo, VISION 642-5678 ~g53.1~ ac. nr. store. $350. 673·Zl'l7, 21 3/i93-0-127. 2 car gar. Av! now. 424 2 BR Condo ••••• $225 Mo/lse A Iowa St., 545-BTII aft !~ or F11A tmns ,«' lS· WESTCLIFF UNT!NGTON BEACH Lido Isle Orchid, Open 1-5. 675-4275. 2 BR Condo .•••• $245 Mo/lsc ~5_ . ....,.~~~----I mr~~!r1'~1533 3 br, 2 be, xln't cond. H 17875 Beach Blvd. ~~~~~~~~~~' jNEAR Beach Viel\' 3 BR 3 BR Home ..... $295 mo/lse Fountain Valley ~ e red hill $62.500. Open Sun 1-5 540-1220 , ~ \VINTER lease. beaut. So. 2~1 ba, own'.r·s unit, cusf 3 BR Home ..... $~ mo/lse --.--.--'"----! .. H::u::;n::;ll;;."l:E:ton~~·:;•;;;•:;<;oh;._ __ 1 1600 Cornwall 11 •l Bayfront home: 4 BR, 5 duplex, beam clng, patios, 3 BR Home .•••• $325 mo/l.se NU fountain Parit 2 br, 1% -R£,U.TY REALTORS A. Sand & &:-a Realty L.AGUNA BEACH ba., beaut. furn. Sandy fplc nr shops $3i5 67f>..6000 4 BR Home ..... $300 mo/lse ha <.'Ondo, frpl.c, shag crpts, I VACANT u · Parlt c l · 67~8800 222 Forest Ave, beach. Pier & Ooat. $1,650 ' ' ' · 4 BR Home ..... $425 mo/lse pool, dbl gar_ adults. l in· ntv. enter, ivme li.1onth Bill Grundy Rltr 4 BED, 3 Ba, ad~lts, no RANCH REALTY 5r51-3XKI fant ok. $260 mo. Avail Dec J?i•l'il'bling 4 Bdnn. just blks Harbor Vu Somerset 494-9466 67 •• 1,... pclS. Lease. $3;i0. 42'1 1 1 Edi & E 1.d ~ "tirbe-acii. A.ssuinc 7•,~ V,\ Comfy Cozy Condo I I 5 br, 3 ha. 2 frplcs, nu sec· S AN CLE~tENTE Business ~ oi Poinsettia. 675-6218 or AVAIL Now -4 BR, 3 BA, s · nger uc 1 • .---... 111th fll'xlbll." .do1\•n. Q\\11er transferred, n1 us t lioo. High up 1\'/big view. Opportunity :ZOO Newport Beach 558-9683 park, pool. Yr Lsc. 1st & .c8.J9.680",-= 2 c.· -------1 It 111 p f " 2 B 2 B \ pl d Coinp. approx Dec. 7tli. I"ull 305 N. El Camino Real . last, S 3 6 5 I mo, 828-4495, Irvine mo. pa~ a . ro . llC?C.. I', ~' us en, 492-4420 321 A Balboa 1 ..... NEAR "''' 3 BR, 3 baths, 891-1""" ---------1' ck!corated \\'ith brand nl"w secluded patio, l:M.!st loca· Price SSl.500. 0 11• n e r * Gift Shop * mt:lhyst, slahu. " .JV.> dnkle-dt.--ep L"\lt pile carpt.>ts lion!! Just listed & Hot! 499·1101. NORTH COUNTY Owner l't'tirini 3 bed. 2 ba. O\\'ner's lovely frpl., patio, b 11 . Ins ' NEW 3 Br 2 Ba bhns 2 BR, 2 BA WALNUT t1 rh t. Paint\'N just 11."lt! $32,500. CALL 64~ dial free S40-l220 F ood home. \Vinlcr/ year I y dlsl~wshr. Xln~! S450 ~onth. trash comp~ctor, rl r pt s '. SQUARE. $225/MO. Avail l ' ,_, led 1 ., WATERFRONT * ast F Ta e Out $410/$450 1no. No groups. Scenic Properties 67;,-5726 drps, comni park/pool. Nr Nov. 25th. Call 551-1008 .j , r.iv.ia mas ct su1 e. IOl'ENTIL9 I * S bo d 213/799-4856. Jt:,~ve use of glrutfl, 111a.s· PIER & FLOAT CLASSIF ED morgas r 1~; BIJ<s, to beach; 2 BR UCL 833-844.7. Newport Be•ch ·~ brick fircpl.ace., gour· V. E. l'°"'an:I & Co. $94,500 DEADLINES Plenty of parking H ·;;o;.:u;.:'.:"::....U.:;;;n;:.fu:.r;.:n:c'-.....:3:.;05 2 Ba. Child welcon1e! Patio 3 BR 2 Ba. frplc, cpts drps, --------1 rhe\ kitc:hen. SUBMIT YC>UR "'-' '-.....,.,.., BROKER 83~0780 Dl'adlinc for copy & ki!ls * Coffee Shop ... & yard. $J'25 Mo/yrly. fcnt'C?d yrd $295 mo. BLUFFS-VIEW ipc>WN PAYMENT!'~ Bkr· 1 is 5:30 p.m. the day be· Seats 27 General BOYD Rea ltors 675-5930 837-9115 ' Nl"C'd to lease Spnrkllng New owner 962~1L r BY Ownel'. Ranch, 3 BR, fore publ.ication, except RIVIERA REAL TY SPYGLASS Hill, 2 BR, den, 3 BR, 3 BA. din 1n1, Jrg ,.,. ~~ Editions v.1hen deadline 642-7007 645--5609 Eves. Wl ....... , '" •• __... 'J'ennis, pool pl'lvl., S500 mo. k i t c h e n . S u b m i t . I ' -* FREE LIST 2 BA, own '"""'0 belt & Nd~~i:?~w er~~. ~~ nr~0, for Sunday & l\tonday 149 Broadway. C.l\f. ALA RENTALS lease or sale A11ail 1nid Nov. L•guna Be•ch fam rm, cheerful elec. cul..(le-sac, cathedral beam-3 ba, dbl gar. Below · s 1 rd 12 ~ -··'""' ~ ed ceiling, Frplc, brick ark t $'12 500 Ov. JS a u ay, noon. 644-2696 eves. SIDDIQ $115/$150 util pd. 21 .,/700-7191 coll. aft 7 PM. !~ patio&. walks. Underground 00..~. ' · •ner. CLASSIFIED • Liquor Lie. on Sa1e f b NOUS PERSONALITY Plus Harbol' Color tv. & cable • si~les. BRANO new 3 BR, 2~!. Ba, ' ~~t hr;:s~s:,<' :m~e~ ~~~~cc81';~1 cr1~ ~ s.J.~:3 ,=Bo'R='."'-,~~B~A-~H~a-r~b-o-r REGULATIONS : ~i~~ s~;0f:l~ ~~~.. , jjij :i:~S~s ~. ~~~·c:RinJ~~~ 1foc<t ~1~!i:! ~,~uf~~~ SI!Ml ~~~~ ~: N ~::ifs 0 r ~ pymt, various al'eas 5211 Chablis Cir., 551_5789, Highlands Home By Owner. ERitORS: Advertis:ers e CarpetS, Drapes $140K Yr 3 GARAGE apt 1 b.-$:195. On oourtyard .setting 4 singles ~ts. No obligation. S32-66Iol. Principa]s Only. $89,500. should check their ads e Fabric Store $'79K Yr NEWllOIT&UY",C.M. ,,, • .,.,_ BR, 2 BA, lrplc, bltns, hill, St'<' forever, pct ok. or family isoolmo unf ;· ousing Opportunllies ~ daily &. report errors HOLLAND BUSINESS fenced .Yartt. So. of Hwy. VIEW 2 01· $300 util pd. All $600/mo rum 644-mi. A t. HERBERT HAWh'lNS UNIVERSITY PARK DUPLEX $62 immediately. THE • ~l 67H900 appli's, \V/D, pe1 ok. • ' g. REALTORS * 963-56.il Charming oov house with nr Ol.~an ·500 DAILY PILOT assumes 6:15-4170 SALES 540-0608 CllOICE . $8S/$llO/~a . & COZY private frplc bltns BIG yard 3 b1· 2 ba $t25. Westminster ., de r ·1y Miles Larso.."""' Realtor JI b'l't f th 1. t I ANTIQUE SI'ORE $30'! Bach. umts, furn, util paid. . ' • • • r . k. & , 3 BR, :. BA, n, amt 673-8563 a 11 y or e U'S n4 , app " CLOSE 1 br SlG.5 furn w/ refrig, crpts, drps. $170. nio. fl)lr, bring ·ids ~t En1· NEW 2 BR 21, bA 2 YA-fllA IRl'I'>.,...;' ions. Latest _prices. -WM. McCABE REALTY room. Ideally located nr. NEWPORT S""-s home, 3 correct insertion only. retail inv, 10 yr lse util pd .• quiet &'nice.· ~ erald Buy area. Avail. gar, pool'~' av~ N-Ov. c;: recreatton center, ~s. '"''" available. Inquire 213 B. GALS ok 2 br 117,-. "°''· LRG. 2 BR, w/2 • ......i,, $'95. ALA Rentals 642-1383 1-noo. ~"U3 •·-•', 1 park $59 500 673-3l77 Br, 2 Ba. $47,900, By owner. CANCEILATION.$: Ocean. Laguna Be a ch , ,.... ")J N1.l-'t .... · • · · 645-4599 or 612-2563. When killing an. ad be 497_2355_ n·tce yard lor pet-patio. per mo. Sl65 • 1 BR near bt'ach, big 5'10-4121 ex. 361 days. I L•gun• Be•ch NewDOrt Shores sure to make a record ON·Sale Genel'a1 Liq u 0 r El~IDE 2 br, dplx $165. bring OTJ..7245. 673·S.I03 fe nced )"arcl, child/pet "'el· Townhouse Unfvm 3U ' Mo ot the KILL NUMBER child &.. pet, gai'l:lge. 3 BR 2 Ba, clean, spacious, con1e! . ' GIEAT • • • E E fEI given.::')'OU by your ad License. Translerrable, By MOVE in 3 Bl', 2 ba. $225. patio, gar, $425 mo. yearly $210 . 2 Br ocean v1C'iv apt, Newport le•Ct!. •I I • 8740 WARNER AVE. •J>UNTA!N VALLEY °"'::.. ·142~ * ... JI{ 4+2 .D SP RA .!! taker as receipt of your Nov. 1, 1973. By owner. fi·lake a hon1c for kids & Jse ~11 Jrg deck, sml pet ok. · I dRo~~~ :1:~'. =~ Vacant. Owner ouLQt state • cancellation. This kill Ph. 968-5077. pets. . LOVELY 2 8 1 B f.rpl $310 · 3 Br, 2~:1 ba, nc1v crpts, SPLIT level 3 81', z ba. even ·the bullt~n· ppliances Super Shores A·Frame, 3 num"ber must-l>e ~ POOL/Fl'plc....3 br..~ . ..Nice.-oeam-.. 111~i-p"&.fki·-c'. ___!!':~deck. Beaut. ocean _t_Ciu:_gar .. P.ool..Bltns cpts ----!I BR, 2 BA, fam. rm w/frplc. sented by the advertiser Investment home & a1"C?a ·avail. • re • .,. • gar, view. d~ relrig Adult .... 1' ~-are new! ('!Of;e ·to schools & Immcdia:le. occu]lMC)', SUb-in ease of a' ·dispute. Opportunity 220 VACANT 4 br, 2 ba. $375. Blk $29S ino./yearly 673-7079 !\JANY OTl!ERS AVAIL!. only."$300. Ritr. &42-533.~p e 4 ' ' + 2 Bedrooms, BaU1 bo.ck unl1. M' x \'lot. ~ R·2. Roonl for "ptex. •-WM. McCABE • • REAL:rY 8740 WARNm AVE. h,fQUNTA!N VALLEY '* IG.1• * some oceo.n view. Don't nlit any of!'Cr. $48,500. Call to ocean, sngls ok. Cost.a Mes• NU-VIEW RENTALS 1nlss "thls one! $59.500. fi.15.8.lOO. ' CANCEu.ATION OR· * SiJver Bullion* SEE 10 apptccial'c 5 br $250. . 613-40:.0 01· <194·32.i8l ·S_a_n_l_•_A_n_•------l ~I .H.. r X%1WE~~~s~N~~ 9!19 + FINE BARS 835-11300 c\oA.• Ill sclt00ls. shops, llO\V. Going fast. $?10 2 Br. ~sc. ATTENTION DELUXE To1vnh~ 3 br, l~ .,,,/TOltkMCI Every effort is made to ALA Rentals 642-8383 g~.;d~;~dft:n::i15ASl'~· RENTERSll ba1,locpt/drps, bltM, ltg pti IEAJ. ES~. :fE kill Ol' correct a new ad Money to LOan Homefinder1 · 547-9641 ~ce<I a hon1e! Apurtment? o.r pa · dbl gar, nr ~· Cout that has been ordered, '°"'~-~~~--~-I Roonim&te".' \\'e have tht'm Plaza. 644-7819 or 557-153.1 1l90 Gle!meyre St. but We cannot guaran· 1st TD Loans 4 BR, n~. Back Bay, Uf!_fum aU! OPE>~ 7 DAYS. Duplexes Fum. 345 494,S473 5<9-0316 BLOCK TO OCEAN tee to do so untll the ad or partrally turn, 137, or BEACON RENTALS EmerAld Bay Lot 2·St~. 3 BR., 2 beth1. Newly .haapapcr~Pr>eared Jn th e UP TO 90% Hou'"*Aptl. 1:26392458 Norse Ave ., (In Pica.dilly Circus) Bal* Penlnsul1 One o( the largest, riearly ~-m. &dout, incl. new 8 '2 INT RE * BR ,· b!U l&>i S. Cst. Hwy. •6 2 BR I t _. level building pads in -~~ ··~."900P"· DJME.A·UNE ADS: ~ 'ii> E ST ' l 4S•01!1 * 4 • BA, n llove, Laguna Bcado f.14.>191 l!l5. N""' crp<L l<lds/ PAIK PLACE Etnorald Bay. Over 12,000 CAYWOOD•w REALTY These . ads .... strictly 2nd TD Loans "'W.w.ttt•COITAllUA oven d/w, !rplc, fool yrd, ;:~.i::. OK. ~10\"' Tod.,,! HOMES equare fed:. Ownenblp pro-eash ln advance by mail $45 • &: Up. Furn Ba.ch's, crpts, drps, nr South Coast Lido Isle \,.OJ s Lrgest Rental Agcy 1 MODEL vktes acttsa to -v. beach, * 541-12'0 * ~ at any one of our of· L 0 C Some \\•/eooki ..... , •.i~n • ror ..Plaza, $335, 545--7645. Homefil'\Cler1 SC7-"4t j t-~· owe1t r•t•• renge o. ... OU\.'(ll $800 Le ...... ..a •• -2 )eft! With a.ti thr! teMiJ cts., pools le perks. S.n Juan Capistrano ccs. NO phone orders. S 1 M studt.'lll!I. ME.SA Verde 3 BR, lflllc, a.~. ¥"-""'V• choice Newport Be•ch I ~· Very clole 'to the $38.500. Deacp~ne: 3 p.m. Friday, •tt er ts!· Co. $lfi0 . Cozy 1 Br. Unf. Apt. ganlerK!l' incld'd, ycorly location on Lido Isle, 3 BR.1 --~------I . '1"he9e t.re a mu.I TURNER ASSOC. HORSE PROPERTY Costa Mesa office 12 642·2 171 545-0611 Utll. Gar&: Yard. t ch!Jd ok. I~. $275 per mo. Pb. den, din IU'C<l, blln~ 2 BA. SPACIOUS 2 SR turn. lnclda · ! J1C6 N. Cout Hwy., t.aauna 2 Br hou~ on 1 acre, fenced, noon -ill branch of· Scrvlna lfarbor area 24 )'rs. $193 • Brand Nu 2 bt.· Apt. $<G-.7988. ~ tplcs, ~tge = patJo, util., Bal Pe., at•pa: from ifpdiQm COLONIAL BE.AUTYI d968wn.:..., c. ail HB, < 110 THE DA11.V Plt.Ol' re·, 'TIL YOU CALL USI sml pct ok. TownboUse.· f'am1ly room, &W-0050 Ing water. Lease or rent .I'. Ill 494-1177 zoned tor horses $45.000 25% rJces. DON'T BORROW Urlf. Co.r & ynrd. Cbtld le 3 BEOROOflf, 2\S bl.th op. co " 4 or be11.r.h W/AUndeck OVttlook· J•----.t t ._, serves the right lo clas.. S730 • J.lsc 3 BR, 2 ha, un!. fireplace. pool. $325/MO. Mission Vieje ino. $.12.5. No brokers. 8)' ( =1 101 ~;. ~llll :ion~. tify, ·edit, censor or re-1:";,~o~~~:~~ g:. I: yard ~ chUd, C."<ll\6. 6.f5.0010. . 8 EAU TI FU L q u I ~t D•Poll phoneU6lnfihlil6. •- Sale By Qwlttr. Nice 8R looul!i... w /<0. fl. gttet> . $12,,..,. I'll. -· Pool--&lud lot la PlO" 1[••1 lute any adv<rtiJem<n~ Ing Loo Angeles County for l2!IO • lbc l & Deo, blln•, LRG llv rm, lrelt, din rm, cul-dc-sac 3 Br 2 ba FR ~P txH um. - f t ·11 tonally landtcaped. and to chan~ its rates ovvr 20 l:ri and NO\V in Cil)fll d l!I hi 4Blti Woodland I:: HARBOR Clll Gary da1a, sio-65o0 1'~tature:A 3 baths. taml\y • f'Cll'Ulationa without 0 Oillu' ok.l1J&, nr., . sc · HS 325 Esther, 6i.Hl626 Bier·, ot '"'' t.~.tMo S.lboa Island I f l 1 prlOt nouce. J'!lllge ntyl W , -rm, mus ve re p ·ace • SJCNAL MORTGAGE CO. e Abo Have F'iimlsht'd 3 BR. 2 BA llouee on Newmrt-BMch RUSTIC Cl1ARi\t? 3 ll1l Dlnl111 rm. Overtlztd J>&tlo CLASSIFIED mtJ IS&-01116 Baoh. 1,.2, 3 br ...... Tustin Aw. $225/mo. No...... ,_ St"t>' to boy. $2SO/MQ. with BBQ. 159.950. -125 MAILING AODRE$5 45(JO Campu• on.,., N.B. LANDLuRDS FREE 548-l23S or 542-3319 NR. Beach 4 Bf. ram rm, Yearly. ca~ 6#-8856. TARllLL, RNllon CARP'l'S dr w1y 3 Ba r I ndo Pool 1·~ So ~--JI L.B N~" • BR ' BA JI I P. 0. Box 1560, You don't need a aun to 2 8R. SUO. 2 BR, C.M. lMO. ' .... ,_pr, ne ' rp c, co • , Coron• dtl Mar ~w • ~~ ·WY" • '""""" • • J • v na: Coat.a Mesa "Draw Fa•t" when you 2 BR T~khc>Wle $155 lf.a deoorated, $1a5 mo. 2 tennis, $500 mo. ~1658. -,..,_, _____ _ The!' lutest draw to I.hf: West. rm. Adult park w/prlvate 002626 pince an ad 1n the Oall.y 2 BR walk to water. NB children, no Pf:tl &16-6223 CONDO. 2 BR, 211 ha, IOnnl SPAC ne"-er l br, 2 bl, , .a Dt.tl)' PUot CIUllfted beach • $16,~. 540-3612. .f' Pilot \Vant Ail•! Call no1v $175 slnale•. families. Agt. Need a ''PAd":" Ptae'.4 an ad? l\v nn, &pie & \\·et bet, ~rv. Pof'Ch, Walk shop. Aa. 64H67L • N<&i a "Pld"'! l'IM.'< an adt f ~=======.! -&t~. Fee. Sl!l-M30. eau 64M6'111. att•L Joe. '400, ~173 Im. 1325/mo. Lte. 614 &LI I • ) ' I • , I '-Coron1 dtl Mar I , 3BR<>r2BR&den,2~ Ba, kitchen, fam rm., patio, 1 bUc to bch, nr p.-Jrk, walk· trig d.lsl811~ to stortis, avu.U •~ OOW, (i'f$;.1Z13. . • Costa Me11 l BR It Oc:n. Ft-pie, beam cfllings, llC'W shag erpt. Prfv. covered paUo. Util incl $1!)5/n10. Call 968-1950 Newport llffcn 13 : BR.ANO new upper unit. 1600 11q, ft. 3 br, 2 ba, frplc, ., huge balcony, bltns, dshwhr, & ~· $375/mo, Yearly. Uni. G73-.20C>8, e"es 675-5487. NEWLY derorated 3 BR, 2 1 • BA., upper, w/Jge sundeek, walk to beach. S.325 yrly. 646-215.5. NEAR new 3 BR, 2 BA, clos- • , ed garagt'. Yearly. 642--3188 • or 642-7914 • •.. Duplexes, Furn. or Unfurn. Newport e.ach ATTENTION RENTERS 355 5$-$115. Rooms ideal ror . students. Comm. k i t . , . Lounge w/frplc. Ocean Vu. · ~ $115-$1Q) Studios incl all. Oceaatront. Students ok. $145-$3JCI, 1 Br's. Some V>'/ views, lg"e nns, frplcs & sun· decks. Cc»or TV's. Open 7 Days A Wet>k , BEACON RENTALS (In Picadt\ly Cireusl 1854 S. Cst. Hwy. No. 6 Laguna Beach 494-9491 -Balboa Island ' ' NEW 2 BR, 2BA, 2 houM.'li from Bay, yrly or winter. 213:3TI-7688 675--2651 .· ,, YEARLY 1 BR. tum apt for ONE ADULT. No pets. SlSO mo. ind util. 675-:m75. ' ' ~ . ~ BalbOI Peninsula--, .. ': . $35 WEEK ·& UP BEACON Bay, l BR, frplc, beamed ceil, bltin country kitchen, breakfast cor, ne1v shag crpt, 4 doors to bay & pri beach, Tennis, $275 furn/unfurn. 675-1748 or 642-1129. SPACIOUS 2 BR furn, jncldg util., Bal Pen., steps from beach wfsundeek overlook· ing wttter. Lease or rent mo. $32.1. No brokers. By appt Phone 673-8876. $35 per wk & up. 1 BR, 2 Br & bach's. Color TV, maid serv, pool. THE 1'1ESA. 115 N. Newport Blvd. NB. '646-9681 O(:EANFRONT .... : ' e Sleeping Rooms DELUXE 3 Br, 2. Ba, bltns, fp\(' •. $325. 675--2893 675-2949 8.~-1491 ' Ji ~-1 , • : ~~':'~i~:s ~ms : BALBOA INN ~ lm Main Street ' -6"15-8740 BAYFRONT 1 Br apt, priv heh & pier, util pd. !: .. ~, $300/mo. yrly. $195 mo .. wntr. 673-6790. ' BAYFRONT 2 or 3 BR. ~ -~nfu: 6=· Furn or '·. ·-~---=----BACH. apt. $125 Mo., yrly. incl. util. Nr. beach. '• ' 1-farshall Realty 675-4600 •, ~ Costa Mesa Casa de Oro ... 3 BR. 2 ba. Frpl, 1-Blk. to beach. Yr!y. $300. A~k for Mike JONES REALTY 673-6210 MALE needed to shr lge 2 br, 2 ba hse w/same. Yrly. 1 blk heh & bay. Responsible. $175. 673-8666. WINTER RENTAL OCEAN· FRONT 3 br, $2<Xl/mo. Call !113) 596-1709. 1 BEDROOM, pool , blk to beach. Yearly $155. Single adult. Call 646-2696 • • • •. " I( ,.:,1 b Io, S Ii 11;' u ., c .,. ·' \ .. ' \ ' D .. 11 ·" .c 1• ,,, 0 .'ll . ,(fl c r~ , . ·!"' l\ I ,, Bl ,, .. 6 p '! i ' I • a I E I - !'.'" I" I'• ' . I I I· I i ! ,, I . I :~ I 1-: ' . 1 1111 c ••' ,.,, ! ,,-. 1? u! S b ,,, -~ ,,., . . Oi " " . .,r ·'' ,, ' '" tlli ~J .-.J I •• • .tl I ~' ' I ~ "'' ' • . , ' ' ,,. I .. ----. • .-_ I I - ' · .----Th1,1~at. NOVtlf\btr_8._1973 uAlLY PILOT J' He!'!.. Wa1Jtecl~M.&E.:t10 Holp·Wantod, M·&-1'"710: '."iiir:wan;;;f.'M&I' i10H1lp·Wani'9il, M-ft?iO~ilp Wo1nir,M·i'J'i10· Hiijf?'Wintod;"M&F-7lo'.°Htlp·Went..i,,M·&-F-110-Help-W..,lffr M°"-ii'.7r.·1tr--- ' ' , , 8 •by1llllng l< BABYSIT my home doY· p .. ntghta-wttkerid. By ho1rr day 11 'l·'or weekly plll.)' ~m·fonced ~~· "'y~. Ni!ar Eader School ,,. ~5 mBABYSITTINC, Warm Junch. Exp .. references. r 1 s:Jt;-2676 .1 C1rp11nter Ill NEW, remodel, repair, frame O! & finiSh, S!ores, oWces & .... b0me1, etc, Li c ensed . nw 962--1961. 1t1 ~STOM WOODWORK ·1i9l cabl.llets. l)Mellng, pattos. CISCO'S MEXICAN RESTAURANT South Coast Village IW. S.Rower & S.. c-. Phna Dr.I Santo Ana Appllc1tlon1 Now Being Taken For: C~ktall Waitro1111 Hostessts And Kitchin Help B1rtenders Walters Bu•bays A,,lw llLPenH MHdey tlr• hkloy 1 O ... , '"' DELIVER TELEPHONE DIREC'l'ORIES Men Or woJnen 18 or over with cars, station wagons, or lighl trucks. Pleasant outdoor work, your available daylight hours. Call· forniaJicJmae plates requlr.ed. Apply 1or job desc ription and training 8:30, 10:30 AM or 1:30 PM at tho location nearest you, dally. -BEGINNING NOVEMBER 71'1 • 1940 N. Glauell Ave., Or1n9e 1134 Gilbert Ave., Anaheim 3na W. 1st Street, Sant• Ana 88 Fair Drive, Bldg 16, Cotta Mes• (Orange County Fairgrounds, enter from Newport Blvd.) • HOSTESS, days. Apply aft Sp m, Pellle Aub erge Restaurant, ~ S. .P~ 01'., $.A, ($o, Co:\i.I Villagl') HOUSEKEEPER -dally p/tlme, Must have car. 3 older children. Call M·F, &-!PM 644-9242 ' l MOTOR ROUTE The Daily Pilot ha s an opening !or a driver to deliver papers to carriers in Laguna Beach- SouCh Laguna Monda y through ~'rlday after· noons and Sunday morning. Salary plus auto allowance. Phone Harry Seeley, 642-4321, for appointment. An equal opportunity employer Receptlonl1t/Typi1t wruil NI lor u. y<>ung 01"1\llf'l CoJ111y Jo'lrm. M u~t have at lens: I yr t>Xp. Xlnt hO\IJ'S, bellt'rils & an opp.irluntty for advanc~nlent. Contl.lct the \\1000 LJ~lrtING FIX• 'l'UKE CO., 545-2901. llOUSEKEEPER wanted lor ftther &-11 yr, old son. Modest salary but easy. MU$f drive. Phont> 963-5765. HOUSEKEEPER I Compan· ion, liv-0 tn/out. l.fust drive,1,,. ... .-.,..,..-..,,...,..,..,..,..,..,..,.,.._,_,.. .. HUN11NG10NHAR.Bcu. no smoklng.,,962-5224. liB HeiPw;nted, MI F 710 Help_WanMcf, M & F 710 ·REALlY HOUSE~ElPER; t7 titne. Mesa Verde Conv. Hospital. lwtA.CHINISf, General & Expands Off.Shore 661 <;enter St., CM 548-5585. bead man, for working °" * Pr1' nt st' H Ind · I 1\\0 l't-s;)\e on(,'es opening HOUSEKEEPER part time, ~a ui,gs, ~o ustria nQ\v! Croun<l floor opporfun. 2-3 hrs twice a week. -eatl a roducts, >.$ for .M!· s Ii; lty for ambitious sale1 peo. 1 ·~ Duke Dadu;rka 646--7598 JaCk Bergman 846-9495 · Equal Opportunity Employer / *ALL TYPES* 1 -~~!\I!!!!!!!!!!~\![!!!~!!\!!!! I ""'.,.-,-~~~~~==~=--~-­Dig .& Small I ~ Help Wanted, Ml. F 710 Help Wanted, Ml. F710Help Wonted, Ml. f7·10 · 11"1 Oppitn1111lty lmploy.r •/f -613--138L c1~2t°~i~7,8g'l!~'Jarl<.C1t-110p-pie. Immediate lloor lime avallablc. lnunediate earn. INSURANCE SALES MACHINISTS, exper. needed c d • · " lid •or .man manut. itrm. Xln't oor IR·ator* '""' """"'"· t.e h•v•., · refc11·als [rom new home , .. t .,. working conds & ' co· sub-Oivisions o! the Christi· 536-1648 1---,1~ / * BUILD·ALL * ACCOUNTING CLERK I ,_ * CARPENTRY * Assist credit 1nanager in D I' $ d O' I "'' ' * 548-1831 * vorilyrng credit applications, e 1vet.y-un ay n_ y " II! No e:q> nee .• eam while you benefits. Apply Tawnatic, c · J Co 1001 K It . St GIVE US YOUR '!''" ompame.. earn, part time, eves &: rp, °"" e erwg ~ • CALL BILL C0~1STOCK wknds, full lime When quail-ll'Vine, 979-6080. ,.,,, O<O 1384 & (211) s~ -<O tied. M ale Hairstylist BEST AND · WE'LL ' ·~· . ,.._ Farmers fosurance Group w/followu,. to jorn qua>Jty GIVE YOU OURS! Robinson's Fashion Island .1'1'.' Carpet Serv1<.• type letters,. prepare de· . P1Jntln9 & posits, maintain Xerox ma. Ed Lant * 540-1834 shop in OraJtge Co, airpol't OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE-JANITORh\L Help wanted, ~~~C~ai~~~~inii3.~2f· VARIAN DATA MACHINES JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery __ P;..•;::P"oo;,r;.:h•:;n:;ia~i;.:"9!-___ 1 chine, etc. Many fine com· •1 •1:• Dri ShamDOO !ree Scotch· x pany benefits, Call 'Mrs. •· ~·· gard (Soll R.eta.rdants). PROF. wallcovering state Greenman for interview. " Degreasers & all color lie. No. 279514, lnsur., all '642-4321 or apply at th e brighteners & 10 mlnute types of paper. 714: DAILY PILOT, 330 \lio'est ,,.,1 bleach for white car;iels. 842-4386. Bay Sh-ee.t, Costa Mesa. , .1 Save your money by S'lVini.;: ?: , me extra trips. Will clcqf1 liYing nn., dining rm .. & ' !'; ! hall $15. Ahy rm. $7 .50, ;~ couch SlO. Chair $5. 15 yrs. " exp. is what counis, not method. t do '°"ork 1nysclt. Good l"('!f. 531-0JOt. • .~ C1rpel Cleaning , Floor Care & Windowt Dutch Main!. ~rv. 537·1508 1.,. UPHOLSTERY & carpet , • clean. Prompt, personal !r• service. Free est. 536--0487. PROF, Wallrovering. SI. lie, no 279514, ins, all types ol paper. 714/842-4386. A FUN PLACE TO WORK PRO~ ... palnl~r. honest v..-ork, reas, Int/ext. free estimate. Ref« 548·2759 642-39!3 I C']/ //} I HI QUALIT Y, LOW $ .Jhe f'-euben L1<.·, Ins, Refs e 542·1701 EXTER. PAINTING fl '· fl Free Est Jim 545.sn2 C. aJ..ee *Wallpaper Hongor* - Carl Rebko 646-2449 Now Hiring Platter, Patch, Repair -----~- QUIRES THE USE OF A LARGE STATION Men, women or Couples, the big company in small -WAGON OR VAN CONTACT MR HARRY for p/time eves. Apply 8-4, !\IAN .needed to I e.a r n computers has an im· Now Hiring For SEELEY" 330WES"TBA•V STREET, COSTA Mon-Fri, 249 B East s l at tone r y busu~ess. mediate opening in our in-. , iii:. , I Emerson Orange Pleasant \\'Ork. F/t1n1c. -house print shop for a Christmas MESA. TELEPHONE,. 64M321 FOR AP--JANITOR, /ti ' Beach stationers, l 8 o 7 coordinator. Responsibilities POINTMENT. P me. M es a Newport Blvd, CM 1 include coordinating a 11 An Equel 91'porlunlty Employer I H•lp Wonted, M&F 710 Helo Wonted, MI. F 710 Verde Conv. Hosp~ta1. 661 . ph f pn· 1·n • Center St., CM 548-5585 MARINE M~1nt Co. seeks ases o n l g an,, full & part time employees, reproduction. You will be JOBS, great for students. must have some painting responsible for ordering and P/time eves & Sat. Sal + & Boating exper, apply in maintaining materials re- bonus. Call 892-2258 person Mo~Fri at 8:30 AM quired to produce copies of JUNIOR SALESMAN: Sea Lancers 201 E coast final printed publications. H NB . Determine type of plates CHURCH 'fusfodian approx DOMESTIC Help Ge 0 r g e Earn $20-$40 per week \VOrk--~-1-equired for each printed All Areas + Security Apply in person 11>-5 No. 2 Fashion Isl., NB Equal Oppor. Employer 30 hrs per week, call Allen Byland Agency, 106-B ing alter school and Satur-MARRIED person over 21 job etc. You will also direct 646-9742 or 545-6384 after E 16lh St s A "7..()395 days selling new subscrip-Car & phone necess. $125 and supervise collation and Sal·•' ,6 Pm. . . ., . ' .,.. . lions !or the DAILY PILOT. I wk. to start. sn1-8000. " " DRAFTSMAN ,,. -~--assembly of publicalions. A PART TIME SALES I Clerk ,Typist $500 This is not a ~per rOute MASSAGE T ECH. HlO!'ough. kno1vl~dgc of \\'ork 1 eve~ per _w-k..._ _ , !o prepare Atlas records & and does not 1nclud(! de-TRAINEE ?ffset pnn~ng, plate . mak· Party sale-s exp. helpl"":-ul. Fee J#lid. Spat'kling person-misc. plans applicable to liveries or collecting. Open-, 1 t J tcd b d "' alitY. Xln't typing. \Vorldng v.·at(!r & SC\ver facilities. ings in Costa '!es", Founla,·n Yowig .la.dy {1.S-281. \Vanl ed. ing: anr ~a in ei~ \Von1an should be a cigarette I •-h. " • 1 l 1 ll operations necessary. : If _you sn>okcr 10 be success!ul \')! execs,,,:; arc 1tects. Xln't Samples of 'vork . .......,,;red. N'alley and South H•1o11·,,g101, ?r egitimate u Ume posi· l th alili uo .. ~ Cement, Concrete ' * PATCH PLA5rERING * All types. Free estimates Call 5'1K825 BUSBOY NIGHTS •--lit Al F p · · ··•-t N \V d mee ese qu ca ns Sl>oul<l ea•-up to $35. lor """'ne s. so ce os1t10ns. Phone 837-7050. Mr. You"""'· Beach. Apply 00, .. by c.all•·,10 ion. o exp. nee .. e seo d l kl f " .~ fl An Ch . . ·-...~ y D hool hil l an are oo ng or a com· r,,,. J·-,,·ork. No ·ln"estme·"nt , 'LU n rislie, 556-8505, DRAPERY manu!ac•·-r 548-'".!3. . • to sc . , earn 1v e e.arn. h ff •• " Co trot C E I •w.~ ~ A "1 pany t at o ers: req. Call 645-3700, Ml'. Blga n areer .mp oyment needs e xperienced or Equal Oppor. Employer p~y in per::;on any alt. or 101\'. ,,, BEAT THE RAIN! Patios, walks, drives, Lie -·no. 255915 e Don, 642-8514 I ,~. CEP.fENT & Block Work. ., Walls, patios, sidewalks, I . etc. By hr. or job. 646-6915 r CEMENT: Patio, drives, ·.1 , walks·Repairs, saw & '! . ~ remove. Free est. 544-8998 1_ DIUVE\VAYS ~ SIDE\VALKS "11 Pa!ios:-' Jess· An z a I d lf&, • lo<• 979-9699. ~ ... • Child Ca,.. ~0_!!1~9"--~~~~- L. R. OTIS PLUMBING Remodels & Repain. Water heaters. disposals, furnaces, <Jshwashrs. ~ MIC & B/A. Complete Plumbing Service. Lie. 272894. PLUMBING REPAIR No job too small • •642-3128• * Remod81 & Repiir Apply 3-5 daily 151 E. Coast Hwy. Newport Jeach Equal Op~i. Employer AMBITIOUS young adults ·for .sales positions.· Must use PWn . earl!! In work. Call .. 962=-4581 before 11 am. APT. Mgr. Exp'd. tor 15 , 1 • · HOME REPAIR-REMODEL Units, Costa Mesa. 1 .11, OIILD Care In niy home CARPENTRY, CONCRETE Call C.C. Do)lle, 548-1168. f' ,( near Pleasant View School •646-6030• / --~~~~-=~-' ' or part-time babysitting job ASSEMBLERS, f/time days. 847-5681. · Roofing / Apply, Arrow Manulactur· •11 • 1' ing, 1245 C Logan Ave., CM. ;u1 C .. ntractor ~FING; repairsµ:roof-AUTO DETAIL MAN , tng experts. Free •··-I'd P . .1 I. JACK Taulane, repair, cs1 / eonsul!alion. BA y LAper. P~ · nmru;yn~1v -re.mod, add. Uc...B:-L2.fm72. ROOFING SP,£"CLUJSTS.-1--car ~e.rul: Steady JOb. Co. • ''. ?i.1y \Vay Co. 547-0036. 646-0219. Fin. ,Avail. benef.1ts:-liood·hrs:-Pl~nt , • . • • _ • working conds. Apply in per. ! !. GERWICK ~ SON Telev1s1on Repair 90n only, See Mr. Nielsen, Bldg Contr. Addi! & Remod '1'erry Buick · I _ State Lie. Bl-114321 1 COLOR TV Repair, expert, 5th & w·ainut Hunt Sch ''" 673-6041 549-2170 reasonable, most in home. AUTO PARTS '' Gardeni-Free estimate, H.B. N.B. Agency, 340a Irvin<! Blvd., trainees tabling & machine JUN 0 eve. 2930 \V, Cst. H1vy., * '.\lotk>rn f''acilities l -~--------N.B. I R Bookkeeper & Newport Beach. * E:sc:t>llent Benefits SALES operators. Good pa Y , Secretary, A/R & A/P, ~~~-CLERK TYPIST holidays & vacations. Beach Exp req. Lite Secretarial McDO~ALDS * Con1pctitlvc pay \\'ater Sottener Salesman, Great starting salary 10, Drapery · Service, 900 w. duties but good eo--A•--'-' NO\V IURING I Vac. sales, ,fusurance etc ~~~ ll;ll Please apply in person or In ho loses NEW DEAL sharp indiv. w/avg typing 17th St. CM. skills req. Pleasant Irvine ~PLY WBD·FRI. 1-:i contact IN Hig:r~: Pl~nty of le.9.di & 1 litde exper. Xl 1 n't oppor DRIVER<ompanlon, cauc. Loche ., Pel'J]l position. Xlnt ,,...,,, SAA'Vf!AE~'LDADAPYl',....... B. J{,rafka. + $150 per deal. Check' us or a vancemen · 46, former exec. 5'll" 155 nefits. 556-8100 u.JU .~ '-v on1 Jason Best Agency l_bs. sngl. bondabl~~ti!!! LADIES, are you looking for &\N CLE~iENTL VDM · f~t~P~:S ii~n am>&; S 174~~rookhurst, F. Vl y. time. ~ a career or just need MECHANIC with Class A 7 pn1. 1508 S. Grand, S.A. uite 4'w 963-6775 DRUGSTORE .Clerk, must Christmas money? Apply in license. ~p~ly Co. n1 Pu s SALESGIRL Temporary,. «I , C~OIL ' be exJ)'d. good hours, good person, Gold Coist Shell, Fauv1ew & Baker. hr.~ per week, ~nle nights & ·· ra.v Bushard's P1'1armacy: ~l.'lduslries..J508 South Grand'l-'Co=st=a~M:;."""~·:;,,==~--'VARIAN QA.TA sonte \\'eeke.ni:ls, ~'.Starting WIN, D. ER 244 Fore.St, Laguna, 494--0145 'Fta ~~So & learn how MED/DENTAL MACH.INES NOv. ~De<: 24, Fun shop, -ENGINEER o -earn-per week or RECEPT 2722 Michelson .Drive Serendipit)', Santa Ana, more. Full & Part time. ,,. . , 55 2702 . · So. Calif. co. has need for Assist company represen-In Hl_lllt. och. Mature, 4 1 Irvine, Calif., 92664 l,'°'7'.::-~'===-----,. Immed. opening on 1st shift. asst. engineer for materials tative in showing revolu· days11vk .. Send r~me t~: J (714) 833-2400 SALESPERSON, .exper in \Vilt train· to set-up & oper-research & development. tionary p~uct. Interviews 18'100 JI.Jam .:..'t., Suite #20:!, I An equal opportunity retail gift store. Days, eve$ ate a non linear coil wind-Kno\vlcdge of thicl: film ma-10 a.m. Monday_ Saturday.l-HB-".-'9'l04~8~.------employer mff & wkends. Must have refs. ing lathe if you have lived lerials & processing pre-. MEDICAL Stenographer . ,.,..,..,. ...... .,..,.,.....,1 Buggs International, ~3 in Orange Co. for a min. of fetTed. Salary commensu-LAUNDRESS f/tlme . .Mesa Bkkpr. Radiology office. Westclut Dr., N.B. • l ""·, have local i-"us. work rate \vith e:--n-ience & aca-Verde Conv. Hospital, 661 p~-to · 1 · J• uu ··.-~·· Ce t St CMr:Ao "~"" uvue r in erview history & are interested in demic backgrotmd. W r I t e n er ·• ~ 644-1775. -establishing a-long term fe-Classified Ad #544. Daily LOT man. Full time. Allen·1M-E=CAL=--,_-_._---.- lationship. Pilot, P. 0 . Box 1:;60, Costa Oldsmobile Cadillac. Ask ~di N uowBeanceh girl, Duncan Electronics Mesa, Calif. 92625. for Mr. Stevens. 495-0800 ~~39o3 ewpor:t ac area. Call 54S-8261 ESTABLISHED Local Co. J..VN -Challenging position MINIATURE mac h in·i s 1 FoT Interview Appl. has opening for Delivery for fuJI or .Pltime employ· trainee v.•atned. Min 3 yrs Equal Oppor, Employer m/f & Stock Work. l.fust have ment. O~rung on ll PM-7 exper. on small equipnient. good driving rerord & know AM shift. Top sal & ?-.lust be able to read blue P ,1 • $22K SALESGIRL, pharmacy, ,tull . r:ogram .. gr . time 1 l:.le:.:U'Onic Con1ponents · 675--0640 Product Line Managel' $20K . Data Comn1unicaUons SAILBOAT, quality asi~- Design Engr (mechl to $14K anL'e man \V/bac~uncJ m Cost Accnl l\tanuf lo $l2K some ?f the fo~l?Wing ar883: General 01fic:e $450 Teaching, sailmg, coll~. Girl Fri, Buena Pk to $150 gelcoat. Xlnt entry l~I I ;,i ··• & C.M. Bert Gallemore Exper. or will u:_a.ln. Young, PROFESSIONAL gardener, 968-2783. ' ambitious, fast learner. Cati COOK, I/time, will train. ' 1 J ,tree work, i; run Ing, Tile Day or eves. 53l-7180. Convalescent ho S p i ta l. Orange CO. area. 40 hr. benefits. Plea~ ca 11 print & mikes. 548-5219. . week. Company benefits. 642-2410, for appcnntment. Write Classified Ad NO. 999, LIVE In H 0 use keeper , M 0 D ~ l.Jcin~~ DEL S, F/C Bkkpr, F. Vly $700 position for sell star;er. Secretary to $650 Judy, 642-1:644. , Cf ~~"f.~~s:o "SANTA CLAUS", : • sprinklers, cleanu~ t jobs, • ,,:;: AVON MAK.ES 642-0593. _ I a n d s c a p i n g . 'George, CERAMIC TILE NEW & CHRlS'I'MAS THE SEASON :;iCOO~K;;;ef;:;oc.r "'r'"ta1°"i~an-.,llc~ll~. "'Ex~p Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Mature for elderly woman, WOMEN MEN ~:~l,Mt1~'. Ca. 92626, or r.1ust have car, call from \Vanted for rail and winter NEWPORT ' Personnel Agency ~c!tu':~ ~~ 'f:.'Air= 1~,.,· 646-5893. remodel. Free est. Sm jobs TO BE JOLLY over 18. 18514 Beach Blvd. v.·elcome. 536-2426. Earn extra money for gilts Huntington Beach ' EUROPE,\N Gardent'r . I _ M'Aintenance -L.ands,capfng. Tree Removal F V e r y Top Soil ~.an AVON Re~sentative 1 DELIVERY man for early EXECUTIVES ~l ~ur spare nme. Call: mo~ning LA Times Home $15,000 to $75,000 ; I reasonable. 642-5;}29 eves. * QUALITY * . CQJ\;fPLE1'¢/ LA \\iN * ?-.1ULCll & TOP SOIL * a-40-•041. Delivery Route, Must have Send resume or call TODAY I"'' SERVICE 1 !~~!586--6930~~~~ BANKING eronomical car, 23 yrs old, ror confidential NO COST No soliciting, no collecting, executive. interview. UNION BANK 2M. hrs daily, \Vestminster EXECUTIVE SERVICES, ,; ?-tow AND EDGE <' CLEA!i>llPS 53&-5139 I l(ll] 1, ·, ANY AND ALL Gardening, rn.toymeot ti Has a unique opportunity :For A ',, Trash/ Hauling. Complete I ~ · 1 Serylce. Glen 530-3240 or t__.. Personnel Secrttary I " 89¥•>12 Job Wonted, Mlle 700 ! "' EXP. Japanese Gardener. I She. must . have ~ sh & I /Comp. Yard maint. Shrul> YNG man req for shipping, ~pmg skills & e~JOY meet- --;' bery, trees. Free est. warehousing & fork ti f 11 mg people. Bankmg exper. j ' 546--0527 aft 3. operaUon. Xlnt company desirable. I MOW &: 1.L>GE ~nefits, Irvine Loe. (TI41 Please Apply In Penon. ;, 0..EAN UPS fJ56...8100 Lynn Smith i' • li5f..,0;57 • SI'UDEN'F • Full or part 610 Newport Center Dr. GG, HB, area, Good sup. INC. plementary income. ~2924 888 N. Main, Santa Ana DELIVERY & Stock Work ==~(71'04~l~54~7~-96'l5='--= F/time. Must be neat & F /C Bkkpr $750 know the area. See Harold, Thru p & L, Fee Paid Hi-Time, 495 E. 17th St., A~·so F'ee Positions CM WESTCLIFF DELIVERY Personne1 Agency Delivery-Driver -part-time, 1651 E ~~ · SA ........ nger, .. over 21. In Huntington (Mark llI Center) Beach area. 16532 Beach 542-8836 Blvd. Huntington Beach. 12-6, 496-Hl97 fashions. Call for appt! · 675-8442 AMERICAN BEAUTIES * Models Acadeffiy 3700 Newi)ort Blvd N.B. MOTEL Maid to live-in Studio Apt ava. Adults only ** MACHINISTS & MACHINE OPERATORS 492-1174 El Rancho Motel, s.c. MOTEL Desk Clerk. Detail oriented. Some typing. ·will train. OU Sunday & Mon· day. 494-BSZl. MOTEL MAID WANTED will train, apply in person, Costa Mesa Inn. MOTOR ROUTE 833 Dover Dr., N.B. Western Girl ' 642-3870 2C3 Pine Ave., Long Beai::h 432-0971 • PURCHASING CLERK EQ>tal Oppor. Employer Purchasing dept. seeks clerk SECRETARY ' w/min. 2 yrs exper. in pur-Marketing ~cretary cha.5iJW & invmlory control For our sales & .marketing to per~ var~ duties. dept. Min of 3 yrs 8eCT'eiai- Dynamtc manuf. div. otters ial exper to support western xln't benefits, regional sales manager. -Call Denese Duties include customer {714) S'IS-1144 liaison, sales bookings, in- / terface w/eastern corp. ofc, Equal Oppor Employer m/f con-espondence, etc. Position Real Estate Licensing requires good typing &· sh Let us pay hall of your Ji. skills, pl~ phone per- censing fee. With our spon-sonality w/a desire to grow sorship $75.00 will pay tor in a ·small computer oriented your schooling t h r 0 u g h finn. . r Exper. Amer. Gardener time Offii:e exp. XI n t Newport Beach 1 references. Equal Oppor. Employer ; 1~ ~:;nt., Tree ~.8101 * 675-2499 * BABYSITTER-Daytime & I Job W1nted, Female 702 Eves. Responsible ·. lady. DENTAL OFC. MGR. Dental specialist n e e d s someone who enjoys work- ing w/public to handle busy ofc. Shrlhnd & typing nee. Hunt. ·Bch. Sal. open. 714: 962-fi671. FREE OFFICE SPACE, C.B. in exchange f o r :t..9R"" Attorney'• phone-_ Experie-nced GAL FRIDAY We have an opening for a motor route earlier in South Lagwia ·• Laguna Niguel, November 15t. Please call Harry Seely, 642-4321 for in- fonnation and appointment. F,qual Opportunity Employ- Lumbleau Real Estate Good M ........ hen fit & .&ice Sdt001 and get you licens"ed ...... '6" e s in America's greatest bus· working conds. iness · Real Estate. Send resume or apply· · VIDEO TRAINING • Gener1l ·S.rvlcff Retere~ pref. 644-5937 '",,',: "THINGS" i.... Moose. Ge"'l NEED help at home? We BABYSIITER, mature, for •• 113 have aides, nu rs e s , oddl I carpentry, Repairs, Plum-house kprs, ~ companions. t er, my home. 8-5:30, ' fr<· bing, Elec. Rem ode I in g H 0 m e maker 8 Upjohn FV area, 968-3475 alt 5:30. C~~Af: ~s;f£E • 642-5613 I 547-f&l. BEER TENDER -Female Happy intelligent, motivated ' CA RP.ENTRY, electrical, BOOKKEEPER, exp constr No experience needed. individual '"anted for pro- .. r plumbing, fix-it:. F & B fJd heavy payroll & gen 496-9023, Dave gressive office. Hours 7-3, · r' home Repair, 64:i-1403 led.gs thru trial bal, my BARMAID, top salary. Open salary open 979-6510. H1ullng office or yours Day or nlte. day, nites & wknd shifts.D ,=E""'N"T"'°'A"'L'--'"=R"ece=p0~·0-n~ist, "~' LOCAL moving & hauling . i' by student. Large truck. Call Joan 960-1228 Call betwn llam & 6pm, Laguna Hills, El Toro area, Mon-Fri, 646-9935. exp'd, all pttases•mastered. BARTENDER, p/time. No Salary open, replies con-.Rear. -·Barry. 534-1846 or I'.; 673--0647. a..EANUP-Hau1ing. Garage, _ yard trash, trees -What f 1, have you? Prompt,~ free : .. estimates. 847-8125 1r11 SKIFlLOADER & dump truck i , .Ork. Concrete, asphalt, .~t· sawing, breaking. ~7110 ' ,!'I 32 Fl'. FURNITURE Van • I!" . for local furn hauls & gen'I .or hauling. 548-1862, 557-2736. 1 .11· FREE Pick-up. Appliances, ·V scrap metal. Call anytime. ~!1 675-5258 iµ lJGHT MOVING. VERY , REASONABLE. STUDENT 1 WITH VANt 646-1346 : I ~~ HoUMClunlng i:olf t ' tlJJ "' I .~..i llf HOUSEWORK by the hour . Week days. Call after 6:00 6T.H053. BOOKEEPER part time 8 yr exp, indv. or small buss. Call 645-4782 WANT a job at home ad· dressing envelopes. Pease phone, 962-7017. MATURE lady wants to care for handicap or elderly res. of HB. NB area, 96$-6906 . Jobs Wonted, MI. F 704 COUPLE, Domestic, Ex· cellent local references. llOCIO. Far East Agency, 2Jll 387-5196. Help Wonted, M I. F 110 .,. .. Accoi.mtant/O.lst to $12K Sales Reps (So. State)$16l<+ Sr. Chemiat to $161< Main t. Engl' ME EE· $1.SK Marketing Secretaf:Y to S700 Acetng Clerk Trainee $400 F/C Bookkeeper to $700 exper. necess. fidential, !01)-1130. Call 644-0050 DENTAL rec. Orthodontic BUSBOYS, days. Apply at office, FV area, exper nee. Petite Auberge Restaurant non smoker, should be 3lllO S. Plaza Dr., $.A. (So. familiar w/back office pro. Coast Village) 556-0056 cedures cn4) 979-1400 Buyer/Exp. $800 DESK Clerk, nite shilt 8 Small mat' I handling equip pm. Ask for Jack 1 e WESTCLIFF Westbrook. Surf & San<! Personnel Agency .... hotel. Call Mon thru Fri 1001 E. Edinger, S.A. only 494-6574 lMark lII C<!nter) 542"836 CHECKER AUTO · STORES Is offering excep· t iona l opportuni· ty to persons .in· terested in retail 1 11 Exec. Secretarv to $750 I • .a Sec'y/Dictaphofte to $625 ' .. .,. 1 Jr. Sccre1ary to $625 coreers. We have openings for cosh- iers, counter soles Dishwasher wanted Weekends OU Calf 6G-0593- l 1 ' HOUSa OF CLEAN Jr. Landscaper to$6CXI TIME FOR I, .71 Prof. care fol' home or ore. Out $ales art/design $800 ' ", Carpets, uphObtery & floors. Secretary /l'urciwlttg to $EOO '!I 546-57~, JC Typltt to $550 1 "' lronl-Machlolst• $5.SOhr QUICK CASH , _ ··• Office Bo)""Man $2.25 hr. .11 IRONINGS done in mY home. Dental/Girl .F'riday to·$433.33 pid advancement, ' ,,. Excdlen< work and reaSOll· CAL!. TRISH HOPKINS xlntbenefits. Inter· THROUGH -A t' able. You furnish hangers. JERRl WHITI'£MORE Phone 642-85111. IRYlNE msoNNEl viewing Fri. I pm- '. M•eanry 'iERYICES•AGENCY 5 pm ct 111 t. DAILY PILOT ·-ALL cypt• of brick block 4588 IEI. ll!!'., St. (atl~ll4C70M 19th' St., Cost• , tl alumpgtone work. Frt>e U e ~ _.,. • ttL ~1855-l~·~~~e.~·~·~· ~'l Meso. WANT ' AD .... . ...... . -"Mille Room FtJr D•dcly" An Equal Opp!y. Employer •"' .... , clean out the garage Like to Trade? Vur Th.der'a t tum thM Junk Into cub Paradiee column is for you! 642 5678 ;.,ttb .._l)&ily PUot .Clalail~ 5 linca, 5 d1Y1 .for $5. call Have IOmethlng you want to • , 111. c.11-today •.• -.. u1 ouatfled ads do u 1 ____ _..-__ _ ' clerks & manoge· ment troinees. Ro· • -·' I · I ·' ----------' -- GIRL FRIDAY, one girl of· fie<'. l\olust be sharp & J>Cl'$OOOble. CM are a , 642-MOO HARDWARE SaJes Clerk Apply in pel'IOn anly, H.W. Wright Co, 126 Rochester St. Costa Mesa. .. HEL.P wanted lot' " bcuuti· fut supper club. We need cocktaif \Vnltres.,.es, wait· t'Ct$C&, oysr~ man, dish· wa1111er. Female applicuntt must be a ttractive & n1Llur· al fOolilitt<, Apply kt !<!•mot lhttt. UOO \Y, Coast Hv.iy, N.B, Mk tor Eric. 645-2679 Immediate Openings Far Expe;ienced MACHINISTS & "· NEED · 6 couples. Earn $100-$1,000 mo as 2nd in- come. Appl. 9-11 am, 54H789. Newspaper Delivery Ear-ly morn. Must have car. Over 21. Pay approx. $200 While you are studying for Standard Memories, Inc your license you can avail (Subsidiary of Yourself of our continuous Applied Magnetics Corp.) field training and John Lum. 2'lZ1 S. Anne St. blcau-Douglas Edward s 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;S;;ant;;;;a;;A;;na;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;i Video Tralning courses. This 11 superb bodern training is available to any licensee de-SECRETARY ' MACHINE OPERATORS mo. Hunt Bch Ill~•. 347·2300 bef. 10 am. siring to join our growing We are looking for a top organization. Due to our ex-notch secretary to learn ;the pansion we have openings ad biz. If you t a 'k e throughout Orange County. shorthand, type fast & ac· Colwell Properties, Inc. curately & would like a 2nd Shift 3rd Shift NITE ROOM CLERK 3PM-11PM W/exper, Apply in person, 11PM-7AM Del Webbs Newport.er Inn, 1107 Jamboree Rd., N.B. (serving all of challenge. Reply O.assifled Orange County) Ad no. 9M c/o Daily-PilOt. CALL 833-1931 P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca 9'l626. To Operate NOTEI Mills Chuck1r Real E1t1I• Sal11m1n REsb1:c~Acfu~s SECRETARY-EXEC. Engine Lathe If you have a license or want r;ew or experienced. Join the Shrthnd, typing & sevei'al Turret Lathe one,. see. Peg Bo~nger for World's targeat and faatest yrs. e."<P· f\CC· to handle NJC D ill G • d confidential lnteiview. Red growing resale organl.zation this challengtng position tor s:n.,:n Ho~" ers ,.,,c,.ar!!pe!!t!!,!!4!!97,.·1,.76,.1,.·.,..,..,. .. 1 \vith a network of over 5CXI dental specialist. Dental otc. 1 ~ offices and become a exper/not nee. but must to• NURSES Aide, 7-3 & 11-7 n1cmbcr of our Millionaire joy working w/public. Sal shifts. We will train ne\V Club. Mulli-million dollar open. Hunt Bch. TI4: 962-6671 personnel. Xlnt benefits f\dvcrlising progr:am. Free SECRETARY/ which Include in come guaranteed licensing school. RECEP TOOLMAKER llst Shilt) l'eplacement &. 2 wks vaca-t;,,;ccltent sales training. T. Long Tenn Employment tion after 1 yr. Apply at Please call 542-5689-Fast groWing Nat'I sailboat Wilh History Of 1445 Superior Ave .. Newport mlinuf. hiring for head of• No LAYOFFS Beach, orcall 642-2410 REAL ESTATE fice. Good front oU ap- NURSFS Aides & Orderlies. SALESMEN pearance, IBM Exec. typ-. all shifts. E."<per 0 r ing, 60/70 wpm, no .ah. In Dur Manufaclunng Area trainees. Interview Mon-\Vhy not wurk In the hottest req'd. 2 Yf!.L. exp req'd. Frl area · Huntington Beach • For info call b'[j!'..()542 E xcellent Working Sam-4pm ltfesa Verde Fountain Valley. Let us Equal Opportunity Employer Condltion1 -~~d~f~. 661 Center St.. train you. Call Phil Mc-SECR"TARY C Pila 8-t ..rw-_........ Nan1ee, VI.LL.AGE REAL ' . -~ oinpany a ' ene Its PAINTER 18-40, exp er. ESTATE. 963-4567. Rapl<Jlj growing firm seeks SATURDAY ~=· ~~ \\1'~k~ .=.::R:.:e.::1:.:loE,::::11:..•=t:::ec:.S~,~,-,-,-I ; t~~;1~'k1111s ~~~ 644-2199 New olllce needs better than sh, G re a t advancement INTERVIEWS average sales people want-potential. Start $550. Call TIME FOR ing better than avt:rage com-Sally fhU't, 54()..6055, Cohtal mission. Tom Miller, 642-4811 Personn~I Agency, 2 7'9 0 November 10th From IAl;t\ 'Ill Naon BERT EA CORPORATION • 18001' Von K1rmon Irvine, Calif. 83).1424, "" 294 or &J3.1425 Equal Opp. Employer RECEPTIONIST Harbor Blvd. CM Qu ICK CASH Beautiful ofc ol local co. S.C'y1, Girl Frid..,. IOOklnl: for sl18.I'p indivtdurrl Bookkffper1 , w/avg typing k we 11 • .. groon1ed appearance. Xln't No Charge To You THROUGH A start;"" Sf\l k Ad Vl1llc<'mcn: Uz li.tod•n A,..ncy , potootial. -021 Westerly P1Ace ' . JHon Beil Agency Suite ll5, NB - DAILY PILOT moo Brool<hw'St. f , VJy. EstabliWd 1965 ' Sultc 2!3 lltll.<;170 SECRETARY ' RECEPTIONSf I bookkeep.. lnuned. opening In ma.out. WANT AD er. Also ~sist dentist. Call tac:iUty fo1· a JlllLtute well 963-4283. -groon'cd e~r. lndlv. Abbve You don't need ll. gun to a\'g typing k di. Rosan 1,nc. "Draw fast'' \\'heO yo~ Mi-53.1.1. Equnl Oppor. Jtm. 64' 2 5678 placo 'an ad in the Daily ployer. • • PilOt \Vant Ada! Call now \\'ldte Elephant Di~ ________ h -64.'l-5Gl~ coll loday 612-!im. ~ ' I I t . " ~ ' '' I ' ....., • - • - t ' ' '1 ' I I I • • I • , ! • • TtiurMlay, Novtm.btr ~ 1973 1lp W1ntod, M F 7 D Help Wantod, MloF 710 Ant Ull SECRETARY A·-rtCtlve pollUo.n in Corona (ii Mar !or mature lndivkt- imt u Sc!ocn?tQJ'Y &. Girt f'ri· $y. Will hand.It> pt'nONll ~ 'aome buMtas ~· dtf1oe. !\lun hive Rood rom- ro;un\cativt & typing v.ua . 9:1 help1ul, bot nol l"S!l'Cntial, Must be able to \\"Urk Ocx- t~le schedule & ht-fn-e 10 travel ii needed. Pll'nse sfnd l'l'SlLmt' & M!.llll'Y h!a- ttl'Y t(J P. 0 . Box 278, Corona <ftl ""'· Ca, ml:;, · SECRETARY Qiiality COl:l!J'OI <k.•p!. seck1 f!kpcr. ~ary to perform ~ o!floo procedures: TY p 1 n Ill'. , correspondl'nce, ruaint. of personnel N!C01'(1s~ $ng. Pretcr.so1ne-atlitical per. Dynamic nranul, div. ers xln'I benefits. Call Dl'nesl:.' 171•1) $.18-1141 Equal Oppor. EmplO')'t'f" m/f SEC. needed lrnmed. S/H, 1)1).ing y,•/gcnenU O[fice ex· r>er to handle variety of tl1til'S roc sml scrowtti Co. Challenging position for ~!es starter. Conlact Mr. Morgan 5'17-92'17 St:CREI'ARY, personal , F.C. Bkkpr, dk"l.a lion & type. One ~tirl ore .. 213 Oc<>aa" Ave .. Laguna lkach, 494-7815. S£CRF.TARY pal'l time in Prof orfiet', hours flexible, ryome. 213-596--455.t Sf;rtVICE Slatlon sall'sman .t. lubcman, Top pay & fringe benefits. Experienced man preferred full or part time. Shell, 17th &. Irvine, ~rt Beach. SERVICE Station ~lcchanll', fxper. Class A liC, F/tlme. Top -Pay. Arco, 19th & ~e\\'J)Ort, Q.f. SERVICE Sta. Employee. Mu.~t do repa.ir Y.'Orlc & 4rive tow truck. 2800 \V. ¢oast Hwy .. N.B. s;VICE Sta. Full time b,Ys.1 l\fust be exper. Arco ..\ Newport. CM SECURITY .GUARD VAR.lk"i DATA MACl-tlNES ha11 an lmmetUate opel)ina for a Security Guard to y,'Ofk --'5 to 40-houri per \\ e<>k. Prlrlr postal ex- perlerlC"t' ck>l§ircd, but not ruandnlory. Thls position re- quir~ a reliable pcrliOn to Y.'Otk htdept'n{lently 11.1'111 handle a variety or plant protection · and s a f et y a.'1lllgn1nents. The norn1al i;:ch1.>dule wW be Saturday and Sul\Clay 10:30 P.M. to 6:30 A.l\f., Wednesday and Th1U"S<11:1.y 12 nOOn lo 6 P.rir., Friday ll A.M. to 6 P.M. y,·IU1 l\.tonday a.nd Tuesday off . Individual chosen may 1K' a.11kcd to y,·ork otht>r schedules to COVt'r vac;a. tions. Etc., Thia position of· fers: *RESPONSIBILITY *JOB SATISFACTION *EXCELLENT BENEFITS *COMPETITIVE PAY *MODERN. FACILITIES Jf you meet these re- quirements and are in· terested in joining a grow· ing Orange County com- puter company, please ap- ply in person OJ' contact: The Personnel Department VDM VARIAN DATA MACHINES 2722 Michelson Drive ltvine, Calif. 92664 (n4> 833-2400 an equal opportunity employer m/I ING P.tachine operators, I !!~~~~~~~~!!!' xpcr. Top pay. Apply 890 SfATlSTICAL TYPIST • 18th St. CM Receptionist, SHIPPING CLERK 2 yrs exp or equivalent. Must h.:ing, Inventory. Exper. have prior training ill typing nly. Steady. &12-3472, NB. financial statements, good IC'lephone voice nee. Orange IPPING Clerk w/lyplng County Airport area. lovely ).'PEJrience. offices, good fringe benefits. -Phone 892--8351 Salary commensurate with Spray Gun Operator abil~ty. 83J...005l Bi.rt tin1e morn & arternoon SUPER Sl'rv1ce station at- . [ '°ifts, · exper w/spraying tendant needed. Neat in air ~ lat'.quer or resin w/commer-pear. Wage!! open for right ~al eqUip!. Salary com-man. Apply Laguna Chev- ensurate w/exptt. 540-48ll ron, 6M So. Coast Hw y , . n i n<>. Laguna Beach. Want ad result.a. ..... 642--5678 For 1n 1d In Worri.an·s 't'llorld Call M•ry Both 642·5678, ext. 330 i-Pure Flattery! Needlepoint Book! ' *STOCK CLERKS* VAJUAN DATA MAOlll'lES tM big company In 1mall con1puttt1 has ~ 1m· mediate opt'.'ninp tor in· divlduall with prklr ex- perience with an electronics firm or will train. You n1ust have a sint't'rt dc11:lro to learn Mnd be willing to WOJ"k overtln1e. If you meet thete qualUictt.llonll and are look· b1g for a poslt\on with a growing Ora11a:e C o u n I y <."Ompany that o!fers: * 12 da)I& per year paid v1;1ct1.tlon * 6 day11 per year paid ¥1ck' time * Holiday &hutdown at Chrlat.rnas * :r.tajQr and BMIC l\fed\cal * l\todern facUlties • Competitive pay Plev.se a pply in per!On or contact B. Kratka VDM VARIAN DATA MACHINES 272'2 Michel son Drive. I1vlne, Calif., 9~ {714) 833-2400 An equal oppoftunity employer m/f TAKE my phone calls on your phone when I'm out. Realtor • P.O. Box UIS 1-1.B. 9aW7 TIME LIFE BOOKS llas openings for 3 repre- sentatives ID ~'Ork in our rtf!wly decor. ore in Irvine. Penn. p/time & lltime. (9-1, 1·5, f>.9 l. Earn at an xln't base sa.l. $2.25 per hr v.· /lx>nuses &: commissions. No ac.1ual selling involved. Fantastic atmosphere. l'~or intl'IVW call 833-8095. Irvinl'. TRAINEES to $3 hr Needed at once. No exper. necess. to be printers helper, drill press oprs, pWlCh press oprs, utility \\'Orket'S, t i r e mounters, carpet cll'a.ncrs & delivery drivers .... And m11ny n1any more. Immed. hire. ECHO JOB AGENCY 315 3rd St., Suit.e 503 Huntington Beach 536-1439 URGENTLY NEEDED (25) Trainee Assemblers VOLT Instant Personnel Temporary Service 38--18 Campus Dr., Suite 106 Nev<port Beach 546·4741 Equal Oppor. Employer \Vaitress, Experienced. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Beckon -B1aon -llarpy - Coward -HE WORKS A do-nothlna: "He's wril known as a miracle worker. It's a miracle when JIE \\10RKS." ODDS 'N ENDS • excess pieces of golden oak furn., incldg chain, ta b I c a , c11bioots. Also, o rna t t• che5tnut bed s l ead & dresser. Unique Hom es Real Estate, 2443 E. Cst Hwy, CdA1. l>riced to RU (we're in the real estale bu.'iine55 not 1uruiture) ! FISHER & FISHER 1SI' ANNIVERSARY SALE! Snll.ll Tables, Oak Dressers, Cupboe.rds, Desks. Lamps. llat Racks, Cedar Chest, Shelf Chx.'ks, Jewelry, Plant. en . Jamestown Village, Tustin 832.5101 BLACK l\1AHOGANY ;• Highboy lv/matching ""'"'' 84&0152 Appli1nce1 802 FREIGHT DAMAGE SALE New Hotpolnt refrig's, dishwashers & ran g e s , washers. & dryers, 1aetory wurranty. BEACH CITY APPLlANCE 3G23 W. Warner, SA 545--0780 2062 N. Tustln, Orange 998-5656 MAYTAG washer & electric dryer $175. Kenmore elec dryer $50. Kenmore washer '40. Guar. & delivered. 54&-8672 847-81J5 G.E. Americana white doub. oven range self-cleaning 1B months old. Must sell , OOZ.1.244. REGINA Elec.'f. broom like nc1v $12.50. Shet l and polisher & waxer Uke new $15. Phone: 846-1886 Rent Washers/Dryers S2. Wk. Full maint. * 63S-1202 * SEAR'S Kenmore soil heat ell'C dryer, 3 yrs old, xlnt cond, $75. Ph: 962-2747. KENMORE elect dryer, xlnt cond, rccond motor call aft . 5 536-1231 AIR cond:.Sears· 1:1,000 BTU $70. Sears Dehwnid!Uer 20 pl $70. Plio1ie 968-1$29 2 Door \Vhi rl poo l Refrigerators, $65. Good running cond. Call 546-2568. Building Materials 806 • Surplus . Bulldlng lt1ATERIAL -lOOO's Of NEW ITEt.ts! Doors, lumber. ply- wood, alum sheeting, mold· ing, windows, etc. I B~~E~!,.sg~~tus Mon thru Sat 10.S TI4: f>46.1031 Authentic, turn of rhe century, New England BARN BOARDS 1000' quantities John ~ _ 642-3927 C1mera1 & E9uipment 808 " •• fOOAntlQ-idO P"l:::•~::t.:!./;:O::;r@e:;•;;••..__.;;.n;;6,l"'.:~=:'.':"'.'':'.".;:::":-:-'71 -m , •••••••••••••••••••• e PIANOS , • PUPPY WORLD e.1~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;\f - 3 DAY GRAND OPENING · • ORGANS E~~.!i.°u'!,.8~11 :?.:.ft:.:1• AUCTION FULLERTON MUSIC Am.,., Ellt "fs PI ti l , THIS FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHTS NOVEMBER 9th & 10th AT 1 PM SltldlP Ion Doberman, Pit Bulls, Bui/ Our Newe1t Loc1t Terrier, Cockapoo, Irish 18191 Euelld, t'ountaln Vllley Setter. 100 AUXEO PUPS!! 1 Blk. No, ol San Dleao Free-Stud Strvlce Most Breeda. way at Euclid. Open Evet: Sll-&:127 557-4136 Rentals from $5 WANr info regarding female Great Dan e "Brindle". Placed w7t.aruna Beach e Piano• & Gr1nd1 ~~':9 ~ty Approx ORANGE COUNTY SUZUKl-IULTACO (Johm Racing Cyclfl) •I ' I SUN. AFTERNOON, NOV, II AT I PM SHARP JUST ARRIVED FROM NEW YORK 4 40' CONTAINERS OF AMERICAN & EURO. PEAN ANTIQUES TO Bllf SOLD AT PUS. LIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER, WITHOUT LIMIT OR RESERVE. INSPECTION FRIDAY NOVEMBER 9th, 10 AM -SALE TIME. LOCATION: SM ITTY'S ANTIQUES 1630 NORTH STATE COLLilGE BLVD. (2 BLOCKS NORTH OF INTERSTATE 91, .1 Ne\V 1ptnet1' rrom $495 ,......,...H O.C. Newest Suzuki 5 1tylea and tlr1ishes IV' u . AN pups. A K C • \Vurlltur Gni.nd Strauu plaunun1, bl•ck ll\Mked. 1 $60 wkl old. 892-7996 wkda,yi; Upright piano • ••·• .... • aft 6 pm Weaver Spinet ••.•••••• $145/,,;-:---0""' ,,..,.--,=c--,-Playcr piano• .... trom $999 OLD Engllsh Sh<l<p dog ANAHEIM, CALlf'ORNIA) e 20 Grands in stock, New· pups, Champion sired. AKC, 51111. S1rvlc1. Patti Uled and rtbult\, Priced Parents OFA, Shots. Quttllty lrom $395. Yamaha-Knabe pups, (734) 9tiHSl30, '73 cle.1r1nct on Suzuki'• &. 8ult1co1. FOR INFORMATION, DIRECTIONS; OR RESERVED SEATS CALL (714) 992-1190 (REFER TO LRG. DETAILED AD IN THIS -flfuon -Hamlln -Wur-ST. Bernud AKC, 7 mos. llt:zer -· Storey A Clari< -oJd, male, Sanctuary \Vood Kawai -scelnway -Cable line, xlnt markings. Pvt. ,74 Suzuki's hero. FRIDAY'S CLASSIFIED.) · Nelaon -Kincaid -cable ,:,PIY:;,:,· :;6U-4tll8"-':;::c~--~-i -Baldwin -OUckering -PURE bred German Short •••••••••••••••••••• Sohmer. Hair Pointer pups, xlnt Garage Sale 112 Mi•c•ll•noous Ill e Orgena breeding, no papen, szs. G ARAGE SALE TURTLEROCK Sat Nov. IOU\, 9-5pm, 18921 Antioch Dr, Irvine, Delux walnut &: wrought Iron bar w/2 stools. 2 maple end this, custonl drps, orange & uwcado for plan 4 fnm. rm. & kit. toy11 & loads of goodies. COL.OS.SAL 5 Family Garage &Ile. fi'urnuce, dshwh1·, toy, baby needs, clothes, housewares, l'lc. Come h4!lp save our n1arrlagea • 'rhurs-Sun. 10-1 am--6 pm. 3722 S. Ross St., SA 556-0076. GARAGE Sale: 2 school desks, desk, books, clothes, misc . Items. 1009l Stonrybrook, H.B. Fri & Sat. lG-5 SUZUKI motorcycle, sewing machil\C, drum & stand, many other items. Sat & Sun. 423 Esthl'r St., CM. 54&-2355 GARAGE Sale -Nov. 10-ll · paintings, lkx>r tiles, bar- stools, falTlOU! b r and clothing cheap, millc. 5672 r.1iddleeoff, H.B. GARAGE Sale, camper shell. TR b I e , Accordion, music stand, surfboards. patterns, fabrics, wrought i1-on, t.-lisc. iten1s. 897-6005 Jewelry 815 Honchell-Browne Bkrs Basket Ring 8 dia. 200 Black Pearl Cfll' 40 Point 74 Solltare Uawless '620 Loose Blue dia.s 20 A~a:lia Gem opal 2 diil 240 1912 Court. NB, 673-2976 1 block from the pier DIAI\10 NOS, Opals, Gold wR.tCh!'s, Coc!Ctail rings & otht'r fine je1velry. Prl ply, must sacrifiCt'. 838--5595. Miscell•neou• 118 HUGE :ALL DAY SALE Over 50 pallets of !Jtorage Con1bined from 3 Companies 1. BALBOA TRANSFER & STORAGE 2. LAGUNA BEACJ-1 V'AN & STORAGE 3. JIARBOR MOVING & SJ'G. AUCTION ~ E. 1st SI., SA. Pawn Shop &: F umilure SI.Ore Llquida- tiOn. Friday, Nov. 9, 7;30 P~t. Sat., Nov. 10, 10 AM. FJVERYTHING GOES!! Tom's Factory Sale Designer Holiday Dresses & assorted fabrics. Sa,t, Nov 10 • 9 am-4 JJlU 729 W. 16Lh St., C.~L "1dg. 700 At.rroMATIC G A R A GE DOOR OPENER. Finest known brand. Reg. $200. Special $139.95 in s ta 11 ed w/5 yr guar. 893-3577 or 53G-1415 N~oou::i:e ~IM 557-9U7 ms Harbor Blvd. C.M. Optia:Qn .••••.• , • • ....... $99 AKS C Engllshld ChamBu!J. b!Food•moll'_! Hammond w/ritythnl •• $695 yrs o . . p. u..,, (fl11;rbor at Wilson) KlmbaJI Sv.•lnger •.• ,,,, S'l"JS Fawn &. white. Best otter. WurUtter 3 keyboar11 •• $1195 ~C~all~tl4H584';;'~· -,--,--,--!~~~'!'!"~~'!'!"~!I Lowrey llo\lday ........ $495 GERMAN Sh<pherd puppl••· $5 LAYAWAY $5 Conn Ca.price .• , , ••••• , $395 6 y,•ks old, weaned, need "-nturion Le Mans Thomas A-1 Spinet ••••• $179 fenced yard 546-2464 \,.C fiammond-Baldwln-Conn F' h Sun Tour Gear System Wurlitzer-Lowrey-Kimball 11 855 Alloy cotterless crank Y -G High prcuure tires amaha ulbransen 71 GA:L aquarium complete ,.._ t 11 •-•e FULLERTON MUSIC, c~st table, s 1'1: Oscars, LIF~~t~p~uA~E 12'.! N. Harbor, Fullerton t lrg Oa.ntnoid. S 3 0 0. Corona dcl Mnr Bike Shop 871~1805 548-6789. 30.ll E. Coast Highway hrs: Open Nights 'til 9 640--0911 Sat. 'tll 5:30, Sun, 12·5 HorHI 856 LAMBERT TOO! * CONN ORGANS * CORRAL tor "'"'' "5' x 100• * BICYCLES * 8 Immediate delivery fenced lot ott Goldenv.•est in CliRISfMAS LAYAWAYS 8 Lowest prlt'Cs H.B. $50 per mo. Call 54(1. $10. HOLDS ANY BIK~ 1 GOULD MUSIC CO. _ -l5t2 or 546-9-Mj(I. New l!alJ8:!!_ 10_ s~ .•••• $59.9.S 2l45 N. Main, SA 5'17~1 SUn{Ollr Tlj Ciiloi •••• $89.95 · LA~MOWER, ol~ wood * UPRlGl-IT PIANO STABLES -S30 mo. We feed, Nlshlki 10 sp , .,. rrom $99.95 vanity w/lrg m 1 r r or, Restyled, overhauled and you buy. l'Xerclse area. Used bikes .•.••• All 'l)ptt lamps, ~by stroller & ba~k i t • cd S%iO Mr \Vard 556-7199. a:l301 S.\V. Birch, Beach Bicycles, 800 E. Balboa pack, nusc. eves 673-3353 ~962'!"~" .,~~· .!~~·~· .!.""~· -="'!ss,.A~.lH~g1rn•i:i.iliPoi'iY>i'ARF. Blvd., Bnlt>Dll. GJS.7282 Sat anytiine ..,.,..i · · . S rtln Goods 830 8 YR. OLO PONY ".fARF.. * BICYCLES * BRANO new pa.nasonJc quad, po SI LARGE, GENTLE $150. OR Raleigh Records. .. $99.9!5 amps,· turntable, deck , SKI'S & boots, m<.>n'I, -...A OFFER 833--0112 While &ippliel Last speakers. $170. BeautifUI '"""" misc. turquoise necklaces. <.'Onditlon. Al!IO 11ki equip. Other models from $64.95. 673-18ll aft 5. Call days., 979-3198. I -.,. ll-C) Peugeot in all sizes & colon. Store, Rt1t1urant, ...._flfipmeiit ChCYr 1.c'LE1 maw'o''RKS>' ·• ·LwaTOy' BOOKS, furniture, paintings, . . cameras, radios, lad i e 1 Bir 132 1882 Newport Blvd, Colla ~~i~~n ml~. m;oo. = J.:ELVE.'NATOR commercial ~lcsa. 548-5783 Newport Beach. freezer s e 11 service.to 80fltl, Generil 900 '66 HONDA CB 450 xlnt cond. loading 33" high by 43P. •69 40HP Evinrude Big New liret engine overhaul· Mitcellaneous v.<ide by 31" deep · SlOO. Tuin, Elect start, 'recent ed, crash guards, WI)', clean :wanted 820 67"'.r-0960. major overhaul, xlnt cond, 8M--3fi68 S4SO. ._ -.;.;.;==-..;,..--..;..;;" TV, Radio, HiFi, 642-i833 r.1orron.c\'CLE lrallcr \\/ANTED: Grey' battuoom St · 136 \VAN'I"EO: usied12' Coll <'ustoni 3 rail $135. _n i sink, pref. 18" x 20" Am. treo ' · aps· Bullaro Loblto 175cc $250. Standard "Dreslin" 548--8598 able :rubber. 1-35 HP out· M2-&0S eves NEED skiing equipment for six children, ages 4·1D 14. 545-2!W2 I \\I ANTED good violin tor j child. Reasonable. Ca 11 963--6120 before 5. ZENITH, RCA & Sylvania. boftrrl. ~. . TV &: stereos, prteed. less B u -I f TRIUMPH 650 , Bonnevllle than the discounters With 3 °•ts, m-nt. '69, Sharp. Under 10,(Q) ml. )T. picture tubes. 1 Yr parts Service 902 $850. tmns, 6T:;H421, & st'T'Vice. AJJ available IS )'QUr bottom dirty' Hull 'TI HONDA, Sl.,,.350 Kl 1600 t models in stock & on ' ml. Super cond., $695. display. 'Tl modl'l! priced cleaning for 30c per water ~6 afl 6 during \\Wk. to clear. Cash 90 plan or ;.1in;;:•~f<e,· ;.64o:"-c:l320""''-.,.,~-~,f-0m;Oim<<.>.J:;;;--:--tenm to 36 mos. ABC O:ilor BOAT Ownen1, tired of hi flff,Nl Bl~: 7~ra · TV. 0021 Atlanta, or 19046 rnaint. oos1? Refinishing & Xlnt condition. SIJ. Mus ical Instruments 122 Bro o khurst. Huntington nionth\y service. ~1320. f>1(}-l82-I RENT FOR ONLY $3 OR BUY \VITH NOTHING DOWN. Drum, PA's, l\tikes, Guitars, Amps, Roc.(lrganS & Pianos, all brands. Beach, 968-3329 or 962--5559. Boats, Power 906 VF.SPA n10tc;ir st'OOter 180.1 STEREO Pana 11onic CCS lo m1. F'way ll'&al AMtFM' radkl, 3 s pd DANA POINT szis. 846-1646 aft 5:30 p.m. turntable, he~t. 2 mo. HARBOR 1973 DUNE cycle; cherry $175. 67S-1004 R . v . S t a a 1 s y 8 c h t rondltion $325. P ho n c ?-.fAGNAVOX radio &: Brokerage. New Uniflite&, =-"'-'=7.·,..,--="""'-o,.--=ol phonograph comb. Will play DeFevers & ~. Small "1U HONDA TraU 70; 19G HIFI as Y.'Cll. Walnut, In or Large; PowfT or Sa.ii. We miles $195. also lhp min good cond. 836-4741 Have Them All. For in-bike. Call 557-3.581. TV 24" Blond console $35. formation or to make an VESPA Ciao Moped auto Radio phono console blond appt. to see boats in the m. nu, W>eC1 6 Wk;. Real $12. AM/Fl\1 car radio new. evening, 71·1 493-5101. buy 160MPG 96.l-6094 646--6930. 34' OIRIS Sea Skiff, twin '70 Suzuki 251)..d!rt Savap I Lunch & Dinner e BLUE DOLPHIN e 3355 Via Lido, N .B. FlSHEYE Lens. Super AUCTION Takun1a1· 17nun F4 w/s=w in mount. Built;n No age "limit, no parent need· ed. OPEN NIGHTS TIU. 9, SAT. TIL 5:30, SUN. 12-5. Now TWO ConY1nl1nt Locations to Serve You FULLERTON MUSIC 18191 Euclid, Fountain Valley l B!k. N. San Diego Fry,}'. & Eu('li d. • 557-4836 • 122 N. Harbor i''uller!on STF.REO, Pruui 11 on'. I c , VS's, holding tank head, S27S aee to apprc. ' Ai\1/F?-1 radio 3 s pd outriggers, radio, depth 96'2·7'M9 turntable, headie1. 2 1no. recorder, trim tabs, swim '70 HONDA a. 175 set up $175. 675-1064. step. $13,500. ,or take ski for dirt g~ condition $250 WANTED J.19 (UV), 006 (02l. Y48 UNCLAIMED • 871·1805 • ZENIDI Console TV, \\'Orks boat ln trade. 837~13 586-4918 · Semi l'OndUCIOr \Valer pro- cessing personnel. Polishers, etchers. gagers, in.specton. All shifts avail. Expe1". nol necess, but reliability essl'n. Fast g1m\'i11g elcctronlc ma. terials co. Silcoa, Inc. 4100 l\IacAl1hur Blvd., Newport Beach. 833-3803. !Y21, tiltecs. Jncl0 leather * STORAGE * carrying case. $215. or best SELMER Bundy Alto Sa~. V.G. bst olfr over $175. or trade for gd guitars, 673-3074 or ~77fi6. xlnt. Lovely cabinel, S65 Z'> FT. '73 FG Lyman. '73 HONDA I I tr ti ~ 642-5388 · Loaded. Will trade ror my m n a ~. ~~~~~~~::~! ~uity or cash & take over Gold color, xlnt cond $225. r paymts. 646-6344 ~84&-88'1--•~------i ~r~::;it2~330 ext 256 or NEXT SAT., NOV. TO F-u-rn-i-tu-r-1----8-1-0 1 10 AM-ALL DAY 235 E. Paularino St. 1 YR Old Ludwig drum se1. 5 drums & 2 symbols Rogers seat. Xlnt cond. 548-W!l I [' 21 ~2' custom boat. 150 h.p .. Motor Homes htOVING from big house. Ne\Y avocado velvet sofa & chair, gold & white Italian tables~ New dining \V ANTED male or female room table, china, 6 chaln, fifANAGER TP.AINEES/ lamps & misc it cm s . ASSNT MANAGERS for 968-7317 KE:'-ITUCKY FRIED CHIC-'i°='"=~~~~~~ KEN stores i(l So. Orange ANT~QUE O~~ McKaskey County Coast locations. Call R~g1ster..._ Oi1cnt~l . t~~!e, for appointment 675-8960 Tiffa~y Lamp, L1qu1da~1ng =-cc"o'=O'""'='--'-""=-[ a ll items • remoclcl111g. WANTED, Pcnon to serve 494-2501 apprcntlcesh1p in Mortuary. 0~E~CO~RA~TO~R-.-8-1-1a-u-.-,,-,-1y~le HS graduate req. ror State desk; \Vh.ite console table lie. call 646-2424 for appt. w/4 yellow velvet stools; Warehouse Fortman i n1 ported chandeliers. Fee Pald. Rapidly growing &16-1231 Costa Mesa firm seek! ex-LRG oak tbl. 3 pc sofa, burled walnut lamp tbt, lan1ps, maple br s e t . 675-0922 9459 SIZES 34-48 L.1lf..,.;..., 11fr...1"- Crea.It' as you learn! Charts for 11 beautiful needlepoint designs are righ,l lnsirll' our EASY ART OF per . \\"at'Chouseman W/!!IOmc supervision expcr. SaJary 10 SWO. Call Ed Wolf. 540-6055, C0&.stal Personnel Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd., CM. WHO WANTS 'J'\) \VORK7 DRIVE A CAB! OIOOSE Your hours, work for yourseU, be your own boss. Men or women. Can be slightly handicapped. N e a t-Oean Appearance. Vts, retired. Age 25 to 70. Supplement your Income. Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a day. Apply in penon, Yell.:>w Cab Co., 1B6 E. 16th FINE quality lrg Oak dining room set, cortce table, con1· mods, 8' couch. gold velvet chair, all xlnt. 673-2483. OAK wood table, 2 buUets. 2027 Orange Ave., C.~t. * 642.Jm * 12' orange sectional . $100 game table & <'hairs SHIO. Avon bottles. 551-4736. SOFA 9' Contp, r:natchlng 4~s· loveseat xlnt cond lf NEEDLEPOINT Book! No ! Kli s, no expensive painted \Vhcn you \\'ant to 'know ' canvasc1> to buy. Clear pie· St .. Costa Mesa. CK hi k -Bl.A & \v te chec cd YOUNG \\"Oman to 'vork sofa, 7' needs uphostering cashier & phone. 2-3 daya $60. Call 644-oo"".J.5. *53thl:'>S9* look your \'Cl)' bc'st,• hires teach you aU the sc this! It hnll gliding stitches! cess l ine~ H:at flny,' ln!o s •\'•~l\"TY·f'lVf; CENTS !s plus !indc-1nte1'l'st neck 101~ ea~h pattern _ add 25 per wk. Good appear, ed' U tbl dependability & xlnt refs BEAUT. M 1t. co · ee , <ttail. . eenls for each pattern for tPrlnt~ _Pa.Ul'nl !l 4 5 ~ • ,\l_r J\Iall and Special llandl- on1l!n s Slzes 34, 36, 3.~.. ing· otticl'\\'ise lhlrd-class • 42, 44, 46, 48. Sb:l' 36 delivery \Vil\ take three OJust 401 takes 211 yards \\'eeks or 1nore. Send to OO.)nch. Alice Brooks the DAILY ; SE\rENTl ·tivl': CE!\~ PILOT, 105.' Needlecraft req'd, No sludents plell5C. <.-ommodes, la.mp! &. sofab- CaJI Mrs. Adams, 644-7575. I ,,:cdc:;,. ;cXcotn00t.'=644-$=-";2'°1~~~ 7' BLUE GM'en Couch, $20. 195 Anaheim Ave., C./1.1. YOUNG ma n or woman w/outstanding pel'80na1Jty. Exper pre!'d for exclusive mens shop. 6#-0820. jar each paltern -add 25 Depl Rox 163 Old Chelsea [ I[~] (:Hits for each pattern for Stah~·n, New ' York, N.Y. •ehw c ·r • Mail and Special Handl· lOOU. Print Nanie, Addres&. '_ ILOT, «2. Pattern Dept.. Zip. Pattern Number. 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiii : otherwise third-class N E' E 0 L ECRAFT '72! • )'e very wUI take three' Crochet knit etc Ftte A,nc,;l.;;iq:,;u;.;11~----IOO-twefkl!I or more. Send to • • • - Jitatia.n Martin, the DANILY, d::~~t"5• ~ Book. Ll\CE Q32 Wetrt 18th St., e1~ Basic fancy knots pat-Beautiful hnnd made Vene- )'ork. N.Y. 10011. Prlnl ' ' Han lace !Able cloth. com· ;N~IWE. A.DORF.SS 1\·lth tt>n is, Sl.OO. plete with 12 napkinl. $850. :QJ' 81ZE and ST\'LE 1.nshant crothftt Book -Olli PVf!nings Io r 81>' wu.:..•v Learn~ plctuttt! Prit· . I ,., ,.~ ,., ~ t ~r.uu po1n menl. -•11 or , 'SEE ?ifORE Q u I c lt ~;pteie i~nt Gift 9oo1c _,64!)-=,:.1159::·"--~---- J:aahk>nl ~ c~ one -more than 100 aUta ANTIQUE JO' nautJcal bar. &!!!::' u..,,. uviro our Sl.00. Need lrg. recreation room. ~j"='::, Catalog. All Omiplete Alsbu Boot Jdeal for co m m e r c la I 'INSfANT SEWING llOOK 11.00. d~p/ay, Only $l00. 673-3117, • today weu tomorrow. 1• IUl1 Rui Books· SOc. ANTTQU~ -icebox, ;.-' ~-ol 1J PrlJe Alpaa.. hoosier, hall trees.J.355 TeJ'. =A.f!I' FAS H I 0 N Qulll Book 1 _ lS J)lltttns. race Way. Lilauna Beach -ffundndo o I !'olk-..:49!'-'·..:l;c!ll::.I ----,---km flcb, SL M~"""'11 q.ut ttoot t .. "Weed It .t H.t:1p'' fP tb&l lttm undtr $50, It) SOc. From treaa:uttl to traab ~ Pilml)' PiacMI'. ChlHt lor Tod..,..r. U. • Tud':u..lhf.:.il~~:Sb· ' ' CRll 548--3736 * S01' .... A &. LOVESEAT 'I\: Never used $1~9. Record player $25. 96.S-7910 Garage Salo 812 GARACE sale, clothes, pool table, dE"C.'0-pillows much n10rc. 8532 Lamar, H.B. Nov. 3-lJ (l(lme see HUCE Ga rage sale furn, dishes, clothing. misc. Sat le Sun M Nov lD & llth 328 F1ower O.l YARD Sa.le Nov. 9 & 10 1'"Um., clothes, tools, etc. :t008 Anaheim St. CM &16-2159 QUALITY tunf .• dbhes, elec. train, 2 dln. nn sets & misc. Open all week. 8-5, 457 Tu11t_tn Ave., N.B. GARAGE Slle. Fri•Sat..Sun. 2!)94 Mllbro o(t Bak~r. Fum, Blk<t, Mlsc. GIGANTIC g&r.1111 sail' Fri, Sat & Sun. 626 O!nter 51, C.M. 642-2161 or l4M842 *COSTA MESA* E. of Newport F'reeY.>ay TERMS -CASH OR CASHIER'S CHE'CK ONLY Household turn., Pt'rsonal ef- fects. Appliances. Office furn. File cabinets. Oflice J\olaehincs. Antiques. Color & BSrW TV's. Stl"rros. Sev.':lng l\1achines. Golf Set. Yamaha 350 Cycle. Bar & Stools. lOO's of Barrels. lloxC'S, 11-unks, Luggage "'Ith Bric· a-Brae, China, Glass, l\1is. cellanrous, etc. PLUS MUCH l\IORE! E. -C. "ED " JENKINS Allctionecr, \Vh.~. ph. 540-3880 HERCULON or velvet !!Ola & loveseats, coff tbl sets, lamps, used for display only Pacific Construction Co. 5.JS-9833 GAS Dryer S50 Double Bed SIS \Vnlnut Table fiS OOcc Sutukl 2SO -BA YSHORES Clothes, pots, p.nns, quUt-scraps, boob, stereo, Sat 10-4, 2 6 5 :J Crestview NB 543-2692. REFRIG-Freeier • no frost, Gen. Elect. 18 cu. ti . avocado cost $400, Sell $175. 644--4584. LOS Angeles Jines only S54 GILD Sta.rfire ?dark 4, lilre nu, \V/case $275 or bst oltr 673-fil36 ,,... to You m fresh. ·t1rater cooled eng, Sile/Rent MO ~------' head, bait tank, s/s radio, • SA S e compass & C'XlIU. 963-2551. L~ 3 Lines, 2 Tlmosr $2.DO r;;· CHRIS ;,board, receot • SERVICE • SEIL or trade .Drum $75 or Electric Guitar 839-1178 ... rhaul. new trailer, bait • RENTALS • FR.EE to ~ home, sml pump, sac. 646-2365. set ~l~'<!t ;~er& mal~ t~i: 28' LUllRS 'fi8, Flybridge. 540-499J/515-1015. ~. co~1~~ny extras. Off' F II I TO good home, male & fem1 ~.-=~=-----ce urn ure cats allered p/Slnmese 14 WHALER type boa!, -_E_q,_u;._i,_P;..• _____ l o._24 ivht' &: brn ~ 8 r k 1 n is'. fr~lgs, Polyethelenl' fUled. 545-18TI. $250. 673-1851, 536--2001. EXPLORER , HUNTINGTON BEACH l~fl!\lf,Cl!i•I l1•'' H 1<11r,, "J°' 1·.1r,• '' ADDRESS-o--graph class 900 •--S I 909 perfect conditlon. S1200 new, OLDER Sliver Gray poodle -ts, 11 OL' ''COUNTRY';- scll $395 Includes over 100'.I in mature home. SUPER. Sabot, double hulled, WASHBURNE reu!luable plates w/cabinct. 642--5388 Oiampionshlp Shock racing ha!l the Ile\\' GtttC Mol'Or ~ 9 to 4. ADORABLE blonde, male, sabot wtlh sa.ils "3'' for Jlome at &-rVlce Oldsmobile EXEC SWVL OIRS 115/25 Malke Poo, ll mo oi.d, kNes every wind cond. Dolly, in Long Beach. Wed·SU Sec chrs $8/24 Desk! $20/!Kl everyone 968-5335 boat cover &: comp! racing l!HI. Bus. Pfi. IZ13) 5.ll-iuD, Pierce 867 W. 19, 0.1 GRAY Poodle to gd home, g!'11r + fbgl1 mwst & boom. llnlC iil41 979-ro39. 642--3408 4 .mo. call Anlm11l Control. $450. 640-1826 •Exclusive to Vegu• Pi1no1/0tg1ns 826 536-2511 or 847-3020 LIDO 14. • ' C h nu f f e re d · • J day ;.;;;.;;.;;~.;...:=--..;,..----I rnEE loveable 2 yr old male Tra.iler + dolly. Xlnt cond. "'eekend. New 26' Luxury I Free Onran Lessons Chahuahua w/papers to a 673-5371 ~1otor Home -Y.'l!t bar + '6 good home. 557-1813 alt. 5 HOBIE 16 w/traller, l0<ded "Complete" 6 P•ro o n A , •-y Llkol CUTE nutty puppies. Need w/xtras. Full race. X1nt 0P .. •1..'!<~1 1611 cHach. n-~-· t .. ongi ~ OU lovin ~me Call 642-5838 cond. ~. e ' •• 0 or ome n.o:in.wr Non-players le pl~en wel-a.ft 3g · 838--0900 come to attend Tuesday ~ Boats, Slips/Docks 910 '73 LANDAU Brand 25' night at 7:30 PM. We want I ADO~LE Poodle-TfirirJ NEWPORT slips for rent for Mot o rho~e. Bea~fuily ~eryone to 1~ to P.lay f:Pp1es ear~ goo clean boa~ listed with us equipped. Oose out aale. the organ! Ali materials nles, · for sale, priced to sell. Bier Reduced over $40)). Must fq.rnlshed. ClllliUAHUA female adult. 54S-2S92 M!ll. See at John90n It Son Torn Dieterich • ln charge. 1-·ree to (t'OOd home. Lincoln Mercury. 2 6 21 Phone 642·2151 545-2100 * SLIP nr City Hall for Harbor Blvd.. Costa Mna, COAST MUSIC ~~~!!!°!~~~~I "'"t. wm take up to 28',_~,,,_-,-,-·=,-_,,,.--.,,-...-,-1 ;. boat. $40. mo. 673-814.5 eves., •• 0 1 , ,1 u R Newport Blvd. at Harbor [ I[~) B S • Ski fl I a es n otor nome entail Costa Mesa PN nl..... ~ oat1, peed • '73 23-26' M.J I. & ltfil:lls month. Come In f or PIA"NtfS-:.... ORGANS demonstration: 3000 Redhill, New A: Used. Great R lecUon. =V=l·O'IO'cl,~C","M"'. "97!>-"-7!2'034"'."-= • Competitive prices, Open SKIS {or sale, :a'.15 le 110. Eves. A SUndays, The best (2) Stingray bikes. 67()j deal1 are alwaya at: ,.[16' SKIBOAT, g:la111 over~ miles 9 ti! 9• 838-0!0> • v.'OOd, many' extras. See lo ZJ gt"ARCRAFT, 1 0 ,00 Pets, O.ner1I 850 apprrc. No nlOtor, $295. inUes. Sacrlll<;e due to ru. 1 ---548--7200 llf!~. 646-~. LONA'S PET SHOP · . FREE WEEKEND 1 Sl'a!'lhore Dr, Newport WaUichs Music City Beach PETS SUPPLIES n.treat!oMI Vehicle Renl>J : Gi:oomlng all 'breed,, special I ~-""' I{•] Bureau. <n4> 80-9922. uni\! Nov. 3)lh, buy a cage . . For rent, 27' Paeearrow L-Shaped marble coHee table SOUth Coll.It Plaia 540-2830 get 1 hamster tree. Walnut . Loaded with xtru $25. Very unusuRl Ki~h cust/made king bed1pread. 979-5337. OAK wood !Rble. 2 bullets. 2011 Orange Ave., C.l\f. * 642-1353 * MECHANICS tool1 $400. Air Compressor one HP 1110 call 548--8541 WHmLPOOt bath, fits In tub. New w/warranty, reg. $300; Sac. $1!>1. 557-7261 ROBERTS turn-tllble perfect condition $25. After 6 p.m. coll 58&-7004. $.1(0) Worth of Mint tta.ins Rlpldo, will aacri.fice • 9G8-73l7 * BEST' otter ror custom bll Walnut sl~reo cabinet. Red area rug, 3 x 6' 673-.U19 DELUXE klng-slte w a t e r bed v.•lth heater: ~. Own· er 673-6$. LOWREY Coro n a t I o n ViHage Stioppirwi: Center, 540-7796 54i-4on Con!Ole Orpn w/speclal Irvine. Oliver Ir Walnul Campen, Sale/Rent 920 * 21 ' 23' It> 25' MOTOR mo-~,R<~U ~:.o· t;,~ ;;u. 154 CAMPER llh<ll, Icebox & HO~t"'3S78.""' by private 64"-ll97 I·=-''--------table, sleep.41 3, $.350. C..11/:party"""~-.;--.--.=/ • REGISTERED German att 6 Ji.fon lhru Thurs., Tr1llen, Tr1vel 945 ~~d~ ~~ Short hair puppy. 5. rtlOll., anytime, Fr 1 ·Sat· Sun, 29, SCamptr by AMF ri __ , good marklni, 1 mart. 642-+tlll. ~-·tern Tn.llfr hvy dU"~ P aes. :'"~":"com. gsg..2433, • TRADE equity in 1972 18' b;'wntlon. comP1 self con'f. PIANO WANTED. PEP.ffiROKE Welsh Corgi. ll seU contained traUer for All poulble xtnu!, $8000 new 1 \Vll...L CO ANYW1lERE. \Vks. ARC, cab over camper. Call 1 yr, old, &lcrtflce $4,995. , Call 546-<t\128 557~19 Btwn 6 & 8 pm. 5.1T-J018 P.O. BOX 1685 C k ;=-"';;---;---,=:-..=I Sl'VDIO CITY , CALIF. COCKAPOO puppies 8 wl<I y<lllr Bl n Auln Service, Ports 949 PIANO W~ANTED old. Black (2) tomate• 13 Scootws 925 1·..;.:;;.:;_='--'---""I each. 557-7417 -ru::PLACEMENT & aux, m4> AKC ChlllllPlon lln!d Black '73 ~IVASAKI. J;ndUJo. Ilk< lll•t'Y g&1 tonic., pick I HAMMOND ORGAN Standard Poodle PupplH -· Low mlle .... 138(). Incl 4 whl drlve1, """' t. .._ i 615-ti866 or 548·1836 Male., 646--7565 helmet. 49+-2859. homes. 892"83.\4 1 LOWERY Cron do~u b I e SILKY terrlen • 2 females. 1971 YAMAHA 3IK> M.X OH· 1961 FOllD van body, no keyboard, $350. No rea1111nable offer "'fused. ~dJ?!ke. 1lke new. $650. eng or1 1tranA...:., $1~~~~ ... ~· ~ 517~ Call 832-9122 ot i4Hl78. . 1.~. ' . =·· ·~ ·-·-~ -· KAN--AB-E-cOnoo·i-e,-b<-au-L DU> EnJl!th Sheep, AKC '1Q SUZ)IKI 250 Endun> like ~=-"""~=-,..,~=I cond. 1943. $100~ J'Nf)lriea. CAJI nu, xlnl oond M50 Oa.Uy Pilot Want. Ads haw • 832-72]1 * !1(1(>-l!ll * ' •8!7-1741• barp!M plort. I • -- --, p 3io I I ( ' · PEU~EOT--r--TOYOTA • Tti1,1~ay. NOWt!Jlbtr a, 1CJ7' 970Autat, u...i VOLKSWAGEN-CHEVROl:ET DAILY P)LOT , ,1 990 Auto•, Used ~ roR A!itlq /Cl 1 '7D CHEVY PICKUP 1m ALFA. new paint !ob, SUPER '-"• 3IOO c .T. NEW PEUGEOT '69 Landc:rulser '69 YW BUG ·09 CHEV IM PALA CUSTOM RE:D ·n FORD ~TD Wagon ' __ I U ct 953 V;t:.f1u1~~ Tront<~F· )Exce. 11..,t """"'""'"!o..~;\'O· ~.iJDonoq,e,_tu:'I~-. , D"•'"" RIMOVA BLE H.T. 2 Qoor ll••~to1" 300 vs. tow milelll'!. Super cond .. 'ST PORSOIE 'Pffdlter '"'"'""1 ""' ,....,.., .,.,...,){JU., ~ ",,.,..,.., 51"\~ • , "~-~ D-' au t on1atic tra n!lmission, S2750. 673--8876 att 6 dur1tJG ttjtow rm c:ortd, l5!00 will SALE PRIC I tins AUSTIN HEALEY MAZDA Complt!to .., .. IOd 9'rvl<'<. • Rad~~· nve 4 ""'· rndlo. hrntcr, Sharp """'" '"'"""'· tlntc<I "'"" ·""wee,:.:::k;,.,. ~=~,-..,.-~f ~nskler pe.thal t l' ad e Ml K 5(1 ttiin~"lt on t.fS1; • Jleater Carl (YG RIJ7). complete. trato b II c k et '71 FORO LTD, 2 dt, x1nt ' mUJt'" 53H39t1 1 McCARTHY '61 AUSTIN Healey ml. */Mid• 'n Rotary * PACIFIC OR • 2 S.1• of Th"' $1295 ::;'::t'.' \~~r/ 'Zit '~i0'ketl~ =~r, i:1;;.ue,~l all RocrHll0111I llN!!._U !~~~ WhU•.1..~ whoell, Prt. ... MONTH 1~m $2195 blue boo~ w h 0 I c" I•' FO Co """ 10 ' i VohlclH 9l6 °"'~'1 ~·~ t pty, '"""· 993-6115 136 MONTHS O?E:N LEASE "'rv 64-1-46"7 '7! RD unlry ~an ..lo -EV ·-· bu" M SAN D~rnwv. • BMW w111 t.C<:CPt trade-Int .. P~nuo1 w•~ .. ~UIAA ltU -~-. '72 CHEVY VEGA ~·.,\:'~~~ri§.~9fil~d; T·;.,..,uck~ °"", ~11oO:e. 9•6•2e e e ·7·3 "•Mc e e ORANi~D~~~NT)"S Hurrt~ B~;h . ~w~n:~~. ~a.;~, ... ~l~ 1rga::.1 '"s.,~.~~k. V:,, ~nU:: "H atchw~k Covpe" JEEP t "" _v.. nw ... -WK":l' ---llave ca.sh. 5 4 8-181 9, Radio, Jlcatcr, rtlck, n1ce '73 JEEP CJ5 Renagade. ~ T. -Camper Speclal, 19,000 & MAZDA 548-S380 c•IU'. fu1t.I \\rith bhu.:k inter· Under warranty. Headers, *SPECIAL* ml loaded w/extru 30 SAAi -, '71 VW FASTBACK '°1'. (OOiE)PCJ. full roll cage, Cible lightiio rOJ tank, tran1. cooler,' xtra • a&ltYJ MMl.,,....,"lon 'Vte,.0Partrnjo '"I $1595 ek. Must sell Best oiler roam Hat, (Hauling lhell Auto, air, new brake,., xlnt 637•1.m. ' *• Otth w k al., avallt Must 1tll this -11331 lleach·BI. 84UISCI O'ranae County'• Nlwllt 83~:i040 • •~919 ~'Jrofo••*1,, py"°"tdp.ty.8,,!1!): MAVERICK · e ee week! 497-1944 days or Excellent .. toctlon ol I"'--USE AVE:RY PWY. EXIT ••~ 494.5803 alt 6 price re·evaluaUon mndcll. '73 MAZDA RX2, I door, JUST ARRIVED •n VW Rug. AM/FM. '1 DATSUN ' DIMO $ALI 10.000 mt, aum, under....,... Radlal1. xtnt cond. $lll00. '70MAVERICKex<cllent- I • • • • • • SALES.SERVICE·LEASING renty, w111 take '65-'61 '74 TOYOTAS Cdll Sue, 644-24.10 days. dl!lon, auto, air c'Olld, 11300. PICKUP & CAMPER OVERSEAS DELIVE:RY M"'tang part trade . Dealer 831-tl422 ev,., * •n CHEV MONTE CAP.1.0 830-71l$. C4>43BSX) BRAND NIW ROY CARVER, Inc:, 673-iti66 CLEARANCE SALE New Modolt . New Col"" '69 VW Pop I Cam air, buckct scal5, vinyl roof.1-"''-"'M"""E~R-C~U~R-Y--1 •' $2199 GMC TRUCKS 234 E. 17th St. Mi&:f :~.":/'!~~.~= '73 SAABS~RTING AT SAVEJ.~~ ~::~~N~c~ ~ngOr cl~:fr~ t~4~; ~~:f:1• ~.ooo "'1• SZ.B~.t-------~ '72 DODGE Y.i TON PICKUP C77333LI $3299 '73 MALIBU COUPE 18SMf41 '71 FORD % TON CAMPBR SPECIAL C22102K) $3599 '72 CHEV. Y.i TON PICKUP (73032!:) $2999 '68 VW CAMPER IXYG8771 $1999 GROTH CHEVROLET lftll BEACH BLVD ; 147"*7 . . 549-3331 HUNTINGTOl!f BEACH •••••• ALMOsr ALL SIZES Costa Mc,. -ollver w/vlnyl top, rally .. ,.. lm-7169 CHRYSLER WAGON '68 Colony Park. UP ro wheet., lug rack, bit ofr up to 24 miles per p.Uon l · · Top cond. 9 pass, a.tr oond.1 • $1200 SAVINGS CREVIER BMW 548-&J56 alt 6. Dick Miiier ~loro 1 1.:1 '64 VW Sedan, engine good all pwr. stereo, $1.395: S&Jes e Service e Leutns ,72 MAZDA RX·3 120 W. Warner. 5.A. UUUI cond. Need• paint, '450, '65 IMPERIAL 4 dr. H.T. 536-6975. · :IOll W. ltt., S.A. SJS.l!n •Int cond •o.M ~ -78 557·2132 TOYOTA s:Mh1'762 eveo or -~ A/C. 6 way oeatt. All pwr. MUSTANG MIKE McCARTHY USED BMW'S • . ~ "'~'" * SAAi days. AM/FM Autooo\'.llot. Runs BUICK '71 BAVARIA MERCEDES BENZ l9Cltl Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 '68 BUS like new Ii :;t~75 11·96-7-'-IU_ST_AN_G_l __ l_t·· BEACH !ILVD. • B st d al al Complete XLNT mND Sl.250 before lOAM. Owner. u , ow ml cage • e ' -·· '72 CELICA ~1 =~v '"0 CHRYSLER N 300 Cobra Jet engine, ex· SAN D53IE19.°= rnwv. 7609 22800002 CS COUPE JIM SLEMONS '1roelecmtloo now. Buy or 1.... ,, ·~,or G'l:l-4762 ~ ewpon. cellent mechanical condltton ln.J\I 41JXl....J.v...Facb:lry Air Cond 'TI VW SQUA REBACK. cust. ~ dr, lft'r, .air. pwr! throughout. New brakeS,' •••••• '69 1600 IMPORTS Jim P•rklnson'1 (tltl.u:.;:)U). ' Radio Healer. Xln t cond. au to u ans. Al\.1 i l-:'lt, 10 mr nlal,.'S, tires, air shock& & . · · ' '68 2002 MERCEDES BENZ $2999 $1550. 49+-7020 Most Sell. & book. G4i.4009 pa;n1. Must ..e ID _, · V1n1 963 '67 2000 CA COUPE AUTHORIZED 197'l SQBCK, air '°"d. Stereo CONTINENTAL preclate. M;-2083 after 5,!lJ,'. SALES le SERVICE tape, new tires. $2400..Make '68 MUSTANG, 6 cyl stick, '73 CHEV VAN ·BMW '72 Bavnrtn, 4 speed Jim Slemo·ns offer. 673-115Jor 586-1067. New tires, pis, 40,000 BUBBLE TOP air cond, AM/FM, peen 645-6400 ,66 .vw VAN, newly reblt 1969 CONTINENTAL miles. $1195. 644-1980 or • , V·8, unheard.of value <QBZ-w/~1 24.000 mi, $6500 Lar-Im,-_.. or &f5.&to8 enc., S850 or best offer. SEDAN 6'5-1380 093), l'Y. t14b-S240 ell~ 642-Zl06. ' VI•• SIMCA 673-7570 Factory alr conditlonlni;:, full ·=10-M~A=CH-J-3,;~l-2-b~bl-13"' $3989 CAPRI (We're top uyer for any po've1·, vinyl top. leather mpg p/s Ptdb auto 'air GUSTAFSON J used M~'Q'u:lfnz.) '10 SlMCA, 1204, 4 dr, yellow, '70 TOY OT A VOLVO l"lerlor, tilt wheel. stereo, 49.000 n\u.,., '11S©Oa.r: Lincoln·Mcrcury 'Tl CAPRI, 2000 eng. 4-lpd. N~oortJ3£acb rad'!!•• ~good transp car, e -CORONA • door locks. (XS\V541l 8474718 .16800..Beach-at-Wumer--red-W7bll<luxury-a....-833-9300 $8'15. ~ M<talli 'tll bl ck I '74 VOLVO'S $l777-"''56~R"°EB=L:::T_e_ng_&:-trans='"'.' ~---11 342.~un~gt~n(f1~f~9z.5544 group. Reclining front see.ts, ENTER FROM MacARnruR SUBARU c green wi -a n. Over 80 Fine Used Cars to 35,000 mt, p/s, xlnt oond.. "I-tom~ of the Viking" AM/FM stereo, a1r cond., =·& !tilir:'ckiY..·~tl~ HERE NOW Sel~ct Fron1. $600 firm 546-7024 aft 3 only used 3 montha. Aaklng 50 USED Drl c-DMJ! N L-C dill 1966 ECONOLINE Super Van $3500. 557'"3151 aft 5 pm. ve A """ · Immedial~ Delivery auwrs G GC 240 CI 6 3 pd MERCEDES SUBARU $1195 On All Modol• o I E equip ' N~w 1paJirt camgoodper 1971 CAPRI, 2,000, Xlntwnd. SAVE S ON REMAINI NG AUTH R z D DEALER rtres, 'xlnt meeh. cond. $1000. lnalde & out, am/fm •teren ON DISPLAY 73'• & DEMOS 2600 cg~,~o>~E~KVD. 1971 OLDS TORONADO , MS-7762 uk for Curt, days. ~~io&l"'J~ tires, $2,lTS. Sharp New Car Dick Mni!r Motor• 1ma:CJCIDC.d<. I .... I .... ..!. 540-9100 Open Sunday Factory air conditioning, full '7~ DODGE ~porllman Van ,72 CAPRI '2000 AJC ltlck Trade--ins r,ales & Service • _ -eoA. L.alM 'n MARK Ill,· fully equip. ~we.r, v~l ~~ tapettey ., ~8 cu in. auto r/h tp/dk ' • C I I E D V I U •---A YOI VO ped. $5350. 642-0590. eves n erKlt', t w • stereo, cpted; 2 lont! body % ton xlnt cond. am/fm,.lo miles, om ng n Vll'Y., ay 1 t 1 .-vf1 t l.t &: wknda 644-4746 dual front seat, loaded; 1 xlnt cond aaking' $2900. $2600, 64~95. 971).!0855 Ask Abo"' Our Onlque 120 \V, Warner, S.A, , · AM/FM 1tert0 multiplex. · 89l--08:IO "ATSUN U1ed Morcedo1 LHM 5.57-2132 28402 Marguorl1' Parkway 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 '69 CONTINE:NTAL Mark Ill C325CXD) . • ·n DODGE con tempo ., Plona SUNBEAM 331.2040"""''°9 .Vtejo 495-4919 •n VOLVO 142 s, 24,000 ml. ~lis:t3~hr,illnt cond. $2999 camper van raloed roof JSUN PICKUP H f I rts USE AVERY PIVY. lOOT Excel cond. Orig owner call OV<r SO Fine Used Cars to full equtpt, •ac for bal due: '72 DA ouse 0 mpo '69 SUNBEAM Alpine coupe ._7 CORVmE Select Ft!>m. · l ·~~~ ~UJtom pot with camper Fu11y Eqrn.l'!'\')l ~ r.:,.8;1'~~l!72SO':..~~e~ar• . ~~)6~~00 $750. TOY1907T4A'S ·i.:>~Y.~s ~n~~ . Naben Cadl~' +'button tuck Int,-···· l.oad~ .. w ..... kona Only-t ' -. naklngll800 • !64CQIWETTE 327 AUTHORIZED DEALER ·-rn ARE H"RE AT ~ V:tl'lY NJCE 2600 HAfWOR BLVD'. · oteren, xlru! .646-4246 t22'E )$. · ' NOW .OPEN TOYOTA · I: Autos, UMd 990 Call 645-184.'I all 5.J'M COSTA MESA "61 CORVA IR van, 2895 MIHIOft Vlofo lmporti \Vf;BUYUSEDCARSt COUGAR 54tl-9100 Open Sunday OLDSMOBILE Mcchankally x!nt, Ne W f"mrlng TOYOTA CELICA BUICK Sales & 9':vlce '1' GMC SUPER ""''· S700 Ken, 644-8494 MERCEDES BENZ l9n w/4 sJ'<'ed. (OOOEAF) '10 ex>UCAR pis, p/b, air, OLDSMOBILE CUSTOM o/• TON '65 DODGE VAN. Run• good. & $2675 1970 BUICK RIVIERA beaut con<!._4 nu !ires. Colo< GMC TRUCKS PICKUP ft8!n~.r 64~6s~ oHer, Gall FIAT WE BUY USED CARS! Factory air conditioning, full Red, 644-44.17. HONDA CARS 3IO V-8, Auto Tran•. powrr --~----1973 DATSUNS Comololc Sal" • Service '69 TOYOTA power, vinyl top, matching DODGE UNIVERSITY OL ttttrlng. ra<lio, 41ual bat. 'TI FORD Super Van • gd Visit U1 Soon At CORONA tapertry interior, WrNI, tilt terlet, Lots of oU1l't' txrras. cond, c2~~~ t64n~ !1'14ag13 ' 6 cyl, ALL MODELS 1.8701 M11 ...... •erlte Parkway wheel,' AM/FM rl ere o .1, .7_0_DO_DG_E~M~~~ .. ~-I -21150wffarbof'-Blvd.-.--(4S~ stick ' .LON ....., evet. -... M 4 Dr, 4 Spd, (YRV85l) (529EXC) onaco • . Coo••~ta~M~e~sa~=o--~~~ lLlt. 1973 DODGE van w/alr & IN STOCK Mission Viejo 495-1700 ' $ $2333 wgn. All xtra1. New radials •n 98 LUX. SON. FP ltf SA E PRICE $3795 many extras. Clean. $600. BARWICK IMPORTS !USE AVERY PWY. F.XIT> 67 T0Y9TA 1199 & brks. fmo Ftrm. Eve. v. ,..1, m whl, tr.' MIKE McCARTHY &t.o.p.3355Nevada,C.M. :13375CamlnoC.pl1trano 1971 250 c MB, air, pow<r CORONA DELUXE °$:,'\' so~e Uoed Cars to 493-73111 brka, 124!10. 894·0523\' BtJICK 1966 WINDOW Chevy, '900. San J uanCapl1trano windows, auto trans, gray, Automattctransm.iaion ect m 646-5386 I BEACH BLVD. & .,. 6, recent rebll. Xtra 483-3375 or 83"1375 ~~e,~~~~mnna ~~.:...•ec~t).alr coodl: Nabenz Codlllac: FIREBIRD '"·ss""'o'"w~s~ss;~ .. ~6-cy~l,-orig-"' ' SAN DIEGO FR\\-Y, bucket sea.I. TI4-49'J-1610 'Tl GREEN Datsun 1600 Pick 73 280 AN uv• ... <& $699 AUTHOR! ED DEALER FIREBUU> '73 El . Load-owner, good cond, 19(1() or 1 5.Jl.MJO '62 CORVAIR VAN 4 speed wid tim: ' SEO • sunroof, Jo 2600 HARBOR; BLVD pnt. oiler 968-1574 ... .._ RUNS GOOD S28S. :~ wtice.;..1.. T 0 ! n ea~ ml, assume lae. Prv. pty COSTA ·:&IBSA · ed. Air, auto, etc. Lo mt • · -• • • • • • 646-7032 • !'m * 586-4201 * ~9100 Open Sunday Prl. pty. $3795. 494-775.5. 19M OWS 4d.r, air, p/s, "' :una~';lf, bum;~ 1 i:g ·~~-rncE. ~ak~e Eo91!f.Ber *"'· need• 1=::,VfuN I TRIUMPH ·10 BUICK La Sabre • t1r ·n nMBIRD. $2600. pf•, ~/b4l!J.1ii'i:· call an 1 pm. t 4utos Wanted mirron, call CTI4) 53fr7913 uiu• 'l:>IJ"' u ~ HT perfect cond 1' Wlth p/b, air, mag whls, nu • · ' Top WllL BUY YOUR DATSUN '72 TRIUMPH aubi, •Ir cont!., pi,' priced tires. 673-6W/642-37'6. PINTO i /1'72 CHEV. V. TON I PICKUP Only 12,000 Cartful Miles. \r-8 enginf!, CUll!.Ohl cab, 3 'tpeed trnniimisslon, radio, PAID FOR OR NOT wru. FOR Sale '72 220 Diesel MB, to sell at only Sl.850. FORD DOLLAR PAY TOP DOU-AR CAU. "' t';.~';\,"ioos ** 28402 Marguerite P-TROPHY 650 64().l.826 ~ ~1;';;c'.,g1~,~~~ •' ~ater, hca\•y duly tires, step bumper, n1any xlt1ll '6 can't be told from the :; ~ it BOid new! (nsJlLJ. P AID KENT ALLEN, 54Q.-Ol42, MlsS>on Viejo -RIVIERA, good cond. 100 nd I mll " 240Z •n Ure AJC FM '67 MB 200D, 34 mpg, auto, 831·~ e 495-.ftfM9 New radials \fr flhockl. $142!S. co • 0 eqe:, ma.n;y IMMEDIATELY 1tereo, '~··alt 5 or RAH. extra clean. $2595. USE AVERY PWY. EXIT Gol;t<!ous, hnmaculate. Mu.t Ph: ~7712. 01llon1 OH FRl!E xtras,prl pty. 552-002 , I $2888 wkendt. 638-2254. · '69 TOYOTA Seo to Appreciate. Wiii ac-•n BUICK Skylark pis air with pllrchase PLYMOUTH FOR ALL 1972 DATSUN Pick Up. Cam· MG = = =-:::. ~ vinyl top, iliOO'. '69 GALAXIE 500 100 Qver 80 Fine U11cd cars to FOREIGN per Shell lB,000 ml. Xlnt COROLLA 1200 (!E4139). fr 2 door HT, v.s. automallc 1hape. 12350. Call 644-2259. 4 Spd, <2'!r.!21> transmtuion, aJr condition· Oellon1 GH FREE . .. iN:i:'°,;· Cadlllac: CARS FORD '&fl MIDCE"l', """ good but $1099 CADILLAC Ing, powor sleerl"", eto. with~-• WI! ARE IN needs minor adJumnentt Clean & """good tZJF822I '70 fURY Ill : · AUTHORIZF.D DEALER \ aoo HARBOR. BLVD. DESPERATE NIED 1968 FORD CORTINA. Ex· Body good, $450, M8-376S EXTRA Clean, Low mileage Only $1495 OF GOOD CLEAN ceptlonally c 1e 11 n, un-1951 MGTD, very good oond. '68 CQupe D.V. Many ex- .• I COSTA MESA *°'"9100 Open Sunday ' believable gas economy, Only ~.ooo orta: miles, best TR 4-Cu s tom I zed! tras! One owner. smooth fl,....-..a 'a.Wfl FOREIGN CARS "~" ,., .. ,2. otter, 839--9818 Beautiful!! Xlnt me c h. running. Only $19 5 o. ~ "'°"1 ,.. TOP ·DOLLAR-PAID ~~JAGUAR ~~ust Sell! Best Oiler! 644-1455. FORD , ••••• FOR OR NOTI OPEL '73 CAD snv. like nu, 4500 Call or come In to "' UL '69 TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN ml, fully equip. Pvt. pty • ,..., ,..,,,.,,... M MIN1I I '64 CHEVY l EL CAMINO JAGUAR XKE $6250/or otr. 644-73l1 eve. "' NCITH n CAMINO HAL '67 OPEL Good cheap tran· SAN CUMt:NT! 4H 1117 portatlon. $4!10. • St•tlon w.,on • '66 vw BUG 67:\.1010, 1·5. • V-8, Auto T,.,.., Radio, Good Oondltlon, tN898061. NEWPORT IMPORTS l!ln Yellow Coupe Lo&clt•rl! Call 003.3730 4 speed, radio, heater '70 S.D. Fully loaded. 1971 T BIR•· LANDAU (579ABEl Burnt orange with black ln->..1 nt cond. 76,000 ml. w ..., SALE PRICE $695 $41.50 12b'2CQ'l't PORSCHE \VE BUY USED CARS! MIKI! McCARTHY 3Wt' IV. Coast Hwy., N.B. ·ig 356C me c h perteo1 BUICK 642-9405 20,000 ~nee overhaul need• BEACll BLVD.&: IMPORTS \VAI\'TEO paint $2500 Firm 644-6955 SAN DI8GO Flt\VY. Orange County's _•_ve_•-----~~ !' 531·2450 TOP S BUYER .67 JAGUAR XK£ Type 4.2 PORSCHE 56 Coupe 3'56A • • • • • BILL MA.'CF.Y ·ro YOTA coupe blk 24 000 mt Clean-reblt 59 trans. New 18881 Beach Bl•.:. AM/FM, .:..i1a1i, chrome clutch 11175. OOC.7431. 1S Green Datsun 16 O O H. BtStch Pb. 847-8500 wiret, J eat her , int. Piclrup, 4 speed, wide tires \VE HUY metlculout malt, conooune ~lotted wheels. Tonn <! au I~IPORTED AUTOS . cond. 6734468. l"""r AM/FM r adio, BEST PRICES PAIDI '69 JAG. XKE, 4.2, 1+2, carpeting, 110 bun1per.i.J!:2'. Dean Lewis Imports auto. radio, wire whls, air ptbTors, call (TI4) 536-111.u 1006 llarbor, C.hf. 646·930: eond., new engine, $3400 or ·ro SCOUT, 4 wheel drive, -TOP CASH T.O.P. 4~129. iV..&. auto. power brakes, ELEGANCE • ECONOMY \;;u bat, huhs, many extras. for clean late model cart •n Jaguar Sedan, low miles. iGood condllion. $2300. or and trucks! Pvt pty <n4) 79&-8031. ~~~· 00893-WODOE TRUCK Howard Chevrolet ·n JAGUAR XJ 6, '#bite t_YN MacArthur and Janiboree w/beige lnterlor._Xlnt cond. 'elf ~. New brakee, New Newport Beach Mi.llt sell, 842-$50. -A Jacl!n18n rims( good 833-0555 XKE 2+2 Coupe, 1966, ru ' $650 -• WE PAY TOP DOLLAR . Only $2150 Don 676-1047 • 1 GMC, 11 TON V·8. Shor! FOR TOP usED CAns J. ENSEN , IOOd cond. $550 or of· Ir your cM' 11 exlrn. clean, ' !I". 5i!J...260.1, see us first. '6' .FORD Wheelt, v.s Engine, Condltion, (391~1Ct. 1 TON l'LATBED IALI PRICI! $1895 MIKE McCARTHY BUICK Bl':At'H 81,VD, & SAl< DIEGO >'RIVY. !131·24!10 atEV. \I ton rteettlae camper. Very clean. owner · ·~ U.AUER BU1CK .2!125 liarbor Blvd. Co.!ll ll ~fesa 979.2500 Auto1, lm~rted 970 ALFA ROMEO *ALFA ROMEO Be1t deal alwA}'ii! Bcrluias rrom 131!!!1 CS<r. #1)188). '72'• It '73'11, Compl1Ut If+ lcctJon now. JJuy or len1e tntm Jim Porkln1011'1 . CHEV II Ton pick up to tran• lo ml, nu Ure1, 645-6400 or 64M406 1)1 cont!, ~ CLASSIC 'trr Alla Romeo DATSUN Truck wtth Duetta Spyder convertible. tUlty body, S~ or ~ ~-to--J:~ i ftiodef le~ ff, 131-:ln:I ar ~ eondlUon. ~ubiy, -must 'II TOn Cl10iy Pone!. HU, u I can't 111pport ftlO YOUlt NEWLY APPOINT I D JENSEN HEALEY DEALIR . IN NIWPORT BEACH Fent~ the full line ot JENIEN HEALEY JINSEN INTERCEPTOR L•rt• S.lec:llon of Colors .lmrnecllale Dollver( FULL SI RVICB DEPARTMI NT NEWPORT I IMPORTS • Call 11117""410 btwn e • .,.. lllOO, and tAk• over !"I pm paymonto•of 178 per month, 1100 w. Conti !fwy., N.B. • EL CAMINO :110 CID, Bal..co owed: 111112. Call M2·9405 V8, air p/bl. ~uto trant, for weekend •PPolntmtnt, Ukli to tradef Our 'l"radtt''• Cit\ 833-82411. 49)..4744, SM Clemtnlt. Paradise column l!I tor you! TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 $1095 terior, sun roof. 4 speed, $2295. * 497-1132 4 door hardtop. Factory air radio & heater. (SYB~). conditioning, full power, •'l'Ulltl lll'AMllM CUMI ' SUPER SHARP '72 CDV, all pwr &: extras! vinyl interior, tilt wheel, Ill NOITM a C...-0 l~pall.EWEQ:.1 $795 25·962 mil,., $4435. -stcrro, door tock" all d~ IAM C-4H-tU1 . -·~""'Ei. D 0 RAD 0 Con. tux" extsrai 999E>.'V) 1970 PLYMOUTH D....; l~==I ~ertlble xlnt cond prlv . xlnt shape. $1450. .. party b~t our 644-2336. Over 80 F'lne Used Cars to tra~e. hank ~3566 • . Select From. Nevada, C.M. , 2840'l "it~~~;e~arkway ~ CAMARO Nabers Codlllac: PONTIAC , 831·2040 e 495-4949 ·-~· AUT!10RIZED DEALER ' USE AVERY P\VY. EXIT 28402 Ma.rgYcrlte Park\\'l\Y 1970 CAMARO, P/S, P/B, 2600 HARBOR BLVD. '72 PONTIAC Grand Safati ,68 TOYOTA Good running ri.ns.,ion Viejo air, auto, new paint. $2350. COSTA ?i1ESA 6 pas~ wagon, auto, air. N ' 831·2040 e 49:>-4949 494-3661. 540-9100 Open Sunday AM/FM stereo, tilt wh~ cond. ew battery, recent USE AVERY P\VY EXIT CAMARO -'70, air, p/R, l 00 P/\V, P/S, disc brks. WOOll tuneup S790. Ca11 646-0416. ' a/trans, R&H, Michelin trim, Railey Wheela, ~000 '69 TOYOTA Land Cruller '10 BUG '1,000 ml, Orig ti 5.57 9494 G 11 0 FREE m· 642 3103 4x4 (967AFW) $1995. owner, Very clean. XInt l'C!:R. -• a ont at ='-=~-~-·=~~-·• Theodore ltoblnt Ford., 2060 cond. $1400. 536-1598 CHEVROLET will> pu<eh= GRAND Prix 1969, vinyl tQp, H bO Bl.~ ~-M ·-vw -· ba k '69 FORD LTD mag whl1, moderate miles. ar r vu., u.n1ta esa. •u ~ .. are c , orange, Xlnt cond. Must sell. $1630 642-«11.0. lua. rack, radlall, xlnt 100 2 door I1.T., V-8. automatic or offer 675-2G96. • •n COROLLA. Wagon, xlnt cond. $1550/ofr. 962-7875 Gallons Gas FRE! transmission, prnver stccr·b,73iic-"='"""~"'=--=I condition. 8 track tape. '58 BUS with purchase ing. air <:onditioning, vinyl LE .~s. Coupe, V-3, $1500 Cash. 5@-7612; ~~NJ?~~ '69 Impala Custom roof.OA nilcc cs"'1' 3tZ9N5VS'11J. ~~to, u':~~rP/~ .. br11~: Fat Profjt Li atta!Md wMa 2 door lIT, V-8, automatic ft Y UXXI. ~74. you sell through re!'lult~t· 1971 VW. Xlnt cond. Radio, tra1t1tnission. air condition-"•.-..aiJI~ 1973 GRAND P ri x Ung Dally Pllot eta.awed mRg whl1, v.'OOd dash, COCO ittg, po\ver steering, vinyl ~ ~ repossession, full pov.W, Ads. 642-5678 mntt11. 58&-M43. roof, clean & low miles! FORD air, AM/rM 1terro, int· (0.l21 10A). n1ac. Best offer. 673-3700 ' Only $1195 • TlAltS Sl!llVINO SAN C\.IMl"'ll 1!.l7l , .PONT. cat a I i n a IJI MOITH IL CAMINO I U L Btooghan1 ST;iOO. C I e a n • to• A lltf&W"'-SAN CUMlNTI 492·11~7 •:adial tin:s, 4 dr. hard top. ~' ~ .,., call art. 6.30 p.m., 536-&166.- Fo.D 19n Ford LTD Cpe. RAMBLER 1' .. uU cqulpt. Good cond. $2190 . , : MYUltl tlltvtMf •tllMINTI If interei;tNI IK'l' pcl'90nnel SJS MOITH IL CAJ •o llAL manngcr, Balboa Bay Oub, TRAN's6io~MBATLER!ON CAI\' IAM CUMINTI 4tl-11J7 1221 \V. Coast J·hvy .. N.B. ~Ll9S after 7 pm '65 IMPALA 327. 4 dr. New '70 FORD Country S<tul,.1----,T=.-=a"'l"'R"D:-'---battery le ttarter. Good wagon. Belao. X1n1 cond. body, .'tires, paint. Trana. Luggage ruck, full pwr., low1-------- needs engine work. A/C. mile. $2100, 615-6821. 1 00 PIS. P/B. S250 or of t er '69 FORD LTD &-d:in, ni r Gallons G•s FREE or trade. 642-1353 MUST cond. &. full power, land1tu SELL! 1011. Xlnt cood. ~lust S<"IL '''ith J)l1tt.ilasc. 1969 CllEV King""'°" 9 642-2238. • 69 T ·BIRD passenger wagQn. loaded, 'Ei6 FORD Country Squire v .s a11ton1nllC' 1rnn'1'1\i~ n~s paint By owner, St11.t1on Wl\g()n, 9 Pf\SS, tully ruit po1vcr, air tondiUon 493-7799. equlpped1 pert cond, Sl,100 ,(,: ''h\fl toof1 (985CPY). '70 MONTE Carlo Mlchc!lirui or best offer, 551-2962 gt-cat buy! bro"'• w/blk vinyl to~ ~le '69 GALAXY 500, < dr .. !IT. Only $1695 pf\\' lo nu. neat $2550. N I. ps, pb, air, i<lnt cond. • 644-7357. Ori• owner $1200. ~748 11. _ .11 #A -,,/fj . • '7'2 CHEVY Impala 2 dr HT. '70 LTD Ford, 2 dr, w/vinyl ~ 4"ol .. z,.,. : Red, a/c, orig O\vncr. M11st lOp, p, s, p/b, a.ir, lo mis, FORD ' ' Hll Sl97S. •99-3686 • 846-MOO * . ; ---~~~~--I 1t YUiil 1111Yl,.0, 1#1 C1,.•Ml9'TI. • '65 l~lPALA Clean, AUIO, * ·s~ FAl.L'ON • ~JS NORTH IL c•MNO p 's, p/h, al e-, 327 eng good * $100 * SAN CUMEHTI 4tZ·1\) lrnns car, $600, ~. Call""'aft. 6 5..'.6--06!'_t~~~=----·• 'VIU. take 1 carat, 2 carat, '59 f'ORO STi\TION \\'1\<ION '73. T·BIRD. grocn/whl~ ny di)' II the \tltST DAY to A ltOOd w11.nt ad 11 a llOOd I.a· I llnet, 5 day1 for 15, Clll NU 1n ad! Oon't d•laf· • Yllltment. today ••• 80-6871 3 carn.t diamond In on trade RUNS COOD . {'llt'.:AP~ lo~. loaded. Pvt. J>ty. M __ _..;!;' :_:=:::::.=.:..:_..::._ _______________ _! for new car. 89>4444 • f;4.")..fi002 • .11tll, tx>k>\\' brir«. 644.(1()11t 1 I • • • • -··~r,~"' -• DAILY P:ILOT Th11rsda,, NOYtmber 8, l j: : Two Disney Brothers Lived To See 'Dream Come True' By BOB THOMAS BURBA NK (AP) -In 1923, two brothers started a movie cartoon business in a Lo_s :.Angeles garage with capital of $200 borrowed from an :uncle. Fifty years later , the Disney ;empire reaches every-cowltfy of the world with its family ·entertainment, d o i n g a business volume in 1972 of $329 million wit h $40 mill ion profit. The 1973 figure will be bigger. WALT DISNEY died in 1966, and tris brother Roy guided the company until his death in 1971. They established the guidelines for their successors {o follow: employ creative im- agination : keep faith with the public: offer entertainment for the entire family. The rest of the fi\n1 world has always scratched its head over the Disney operation. The Burbank factory that Mickey f\1ouse bu ilt has seemed in- credibl y square and naive. Yet Disney over the past decade : has proved the most 'sue- "Almost e1Jery oth· ~r day me get pro• posals to build a11 81111rseme11t p ark abroad.' ' cessful film cOmpany and has extended its scope far beyond movie theaters. They must be doing something right. "Things have never been . better," announces E. Cardon Walker, . j:ireside~t . of ~Walt Disney PrOOuctions. "We've had a record high m-films, and we've set new highs at Walt Disney World and Disneyland·. Every division in the company is up." THE COMPANY'S pros- perity would have pleased the 'brothers Disney, who spent Al" l"llolo BUILT EMPIRE Walt Disney the completion of his other great dream. the $4-0 million Walt Dis ney World in Florida, which was opened in 1971. Card Walker, the ta 11 1 athl e tic looking UCLA raduate who ro se thro!,!gh the ranks to head bf the Disney empire, said the firm will con. tin ue to assess its goals. . Under serious consideration is a venture into a recreation resort. • Cartoonland'' series. In the coming year, Disney will release '2Z mllllon worth of new films , beginning a t Christmas with the f'i r st cartoon feature in three years, 'iRobin Hood." Other featlW's Include : "Superdad;"-with . Bob:-:Cra:ne· - and Barbara Rush; "Herbie Rides Again," sequel-tO"The Love Bug" with Helen Hayes and Ken Berry; "'!'he Bears and I," an outdoor adventure with Pa.t Wayne ; "The Island at the Top of the World," .an adventure spectacle with the highest budget ln the studio's history. . Scheduled for re-release afe I the cartoon "Alice in Won. derland" and "Lt. Robin Crusoe, U.S.N." . THE RE-RELEASES are a large part of the Disney sUc-, cees. Walt !ashiooed most of the features so they wou1dn't age, hence they can be brought back to each new generation of movie goers. "It's amazing," W a Iker remarked deliglltlully. "When- ever our classics go out in-release--again,-they-always do better than before. 'Fan- tasia' did $30,000 in one week in Los Angeles -unheard of! It did $12,000 on Saturday night, $8,000 ·after 8 o'clock. That shows that young people DURING WALT'S lifetime, ~~~vering it, not just . the company planned a moun· When Walt Disney died, ·tain resort at Mineral King there was concern in the mm in central California, but the trade that his coiripany would project has long been stalled not have the creative impetus br lawsuits_ brought by en-, that he had provided for 43 v1ronm:ntahsts. Years. Walker remarked that Despite-repeated offers , Walt's successors could never Walker believes · ·there will. solve the absenc~ of Walt neve"r be another Disneyland ·but he added: -' or Walt Disney World ih"'the United States.' But he did not " W E H A V E rule out foreign c0W1tries. fortunate to have in the b -----rn,,t-of-their-ear.eers_in..hQck "Almost every other day we organization those who worked get proposals in build an closely with Walt over the amusement park abroad,'' years. OUr problem is adding said the executive. 0 We've to those with new talent, and had offers of money and land I think we're making g o o d from almost every big coun-strides in that direction. For try, thougll n RuSSiaor-instantif;we-latn1chect-a~pnr Yugoslavia. lt's something we gram of developing new might consider in the future, animators three years ago, but we~e too busy to un-and now we have 20 young dertake it now." people who show remarkable ' to the Bank of America. Theirs was a pioneering business, with W a I t pushing new creative challenges while Roy scurried to borrow money for his younger brother's dreams. talent." Not until they o p e n e d· ~sneyland in Orange County in 1954 did the brothers finally achieve smooth financial sail- ing. Walt didn't live to see THE BASE OF the Disney operation has always been movies, from the very begin- ning when Walt himself was drawing his new "Alive in The Disney plarui for the next 50 years? "More of the same. things we've been doing 811 along," he said. • > FACTg FINDER FOR 19731N REVIEW States, Cities Civil Rights Crime Fiscal Affairs Geography Weather ~ .. ·" ,,,,~ THE OFFICIAL ' .-· t~;. . . ,~, ASSOCIATED PRESS ·~~ --~·,!!_.,, ALMANAC . ,~:~ Finances Space ~--~·. 'tO ,· ~ .. ,~ ·-t~,-· .... w_.'1 .~..-.~' Foreign Relations History Awards. Industry Earth ~~(l ,. ' Disasters 'Jc~<e Educetioa ';it,~ T ransportllion World Nations Communications Sports Labor Religion Leisure Homes Heatth Arts Science • Whatever you want to know about any of the above subjacts- and many others-can be found in this valuab/il reference book. There are more than 1000 pages of instant information combined under the direction of the world's largest news organization, plus a map section of the United States and Canada, a color section of flags and a complete .chronology of the Watergate scandal. It's a big bargain at only $1.75, plus 25 cents for handling. Send for your copy now/ FILL OUT AND MAIL THIS HANDY COUPON TODAY! ,-------------------·--------, I APALMANAC 1 Orange Coost·Daily f!ilot I P.O. Box G22 Teonecl!, New Jersey 07666 Enclosed is$. ____ . Send me ___ copies of AP Almanac. Nam•----------'----~~ Addro11 ~-------------­ CltJ sia1a Zip __ S 2 prr book i11t/11rir1 po.tlat~ am/ ha11dli111. L /.lak~ c:hrc:ks pn)"'1blr 10 Thf A1wcl1J1t"J Pr~Js I\' ~--------------------------~ c. • f ' • • I ' . " ss~. $11'9 01:.JART. HALF ·GAll.ON· • ~· .1' •I'· • . .. \ •\ • ' , • \_ San Clemente Today's Final ~-isirano EDITION N.Y. Stoeks I VOL 66, NO. 312, 4 S6CTIONS, 48'PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER $, 1973 TEN CENTS . Threat _by Anaheim Police ASsailed on Coast By WIWAM SCHREIBER "Of Ille Dlltr ~ Staff Top Anaheim police and city officials today hid no comment on a threat by d!Jlentlng policemen to take on the role of "super cops" by cltlng drivers for . even the most minor violations, if the city faUs to bargain with them over new contracts. But 1everal Orange Coast police chiefs contacted by lhe Dally Pilot had plenty to say. · -s~a "That kind of conduct could set back professional law enforcement a 'decade," said Newport Beach Chief B. Jomes Glavas, fonner president of t h e California Peace Officers Association. "This would be a completely ir- respo11t1ible action in my boot and couldn't possibly act to their benefit," Glavas added. Detecti~e Chet Barry, president of the Anl!heim Police Asaoclatlon (APA), said Wednesday his ·group is seriously Reactor Foes considering the last ditch alternative of public barrassment as a means to get the city to come to tenns. Among other things, the APA is demanding higher pay than the city Is offering, better fringe benefits and the right to act as sole bargaining agent for the officers in the department. Barry said he· hopes the situation won't come to the need for zealous ticketing o~ drivers, but he said the idea hasn't been ·rejected, either. ~ Angr.y Glavas sa id he doesn 't see anv justification for such an actlon , \Vhich he said can only hurt the image ur policemen in the eyes of the public. "I can think of a lot of alternative~ to this kind of thing and the more t think about it, , the 'more horrified 1 get." Glavas' thoughts were echoed by Hun- tington Beach Police ·Chief Earle Robitallle. He called the tactic a "San Diego· techniqUe," referring to a similar e ·IYi~on Construction Plan ~Shortsighted' ' Pruident Nixon's /call for quick coo- str\JcUoq ol atomic reactors ls "short llgb~." two opponents of the expansion of the San Onofre nuclear generating plant hovt aold. ._ And the Prestdent's suggested solutions for the energy crisis are too tittle, too late, qreed Lyn Harris Hicks of - Groupe United Agalnsf Radiation Danger (GUARD) and Dale Seconl of the En- vi-.ieotal Coalition ol o..n,e County. While the environmentalists were . - speaking out after the President's speech Wednesday nigbt, Southern eauromla EdiJOll (SCE) olficla!J today were quleUy preParing a lull reaction. SCE representative Carl Weldy said today the utility company wants to re1- pond -to all of the President's lileas for energy cOn!ltrVation, not ju.!t to the power pl1nt question. In his speech, Mr.. NiJ:on said he would ask the Atomic Energy Com- mission ( AEC) toJJspeed up the licen>ing ·-:Ex-fubl~her llurges Friday Mass St;heduled A funeral mus will take placio Friday In Son Cl<mente for Harold Burges, former publisher of the Daily Sun-Post newspaper. He died 'l'lleaday In Arizona. He was 11. Mr. Burges resided with his wile, Eotber, at 411 Via Montqo, Son Clemente.· . Mr. Burgea ,.,.ed u publiaber of the Sao Clemente Sun-Post, which is owned bY Howanl Publicatlons. from 1967 1mUI May of this year when he resign<d heca,.. of UI health. of Commerce, the San Clemente Dons and the Elks Lodge in Glasgow, Mon- tana. He worked as an adviser to the Sun-- Post 1mUI bis death from a heart attack while visiting his ... ther, Glenn, in Pboenls. Visilatioo Is tonlR)lt at Lelneokl Mortuary Chapel, 640 S. El Camino Real , San Clemente.. and construction of nuclear power plants" so more nuclear power than oil is used. The time lag of approval and con· struction of such plants "must be reduc- ed," President N'u:on said, "from 10 . years to six years." The Pres!dent repeatedly said that new sources of energy must be found and added at one point, "We have the most adanced nuclear technology ;f"known (See REACTOR, Page Z) . * #, * Ene:tgy: Mea8ures --:-. , , Promised Prompt C~ess Action WASHINGTON (AP) -Congressional leaders today promised prompt action on most or all of the energy saving measures requested by President Nixon in h1I address to the natioo. Senate 'Interior Chairman Henry M. Jacbon said bis committee will hold pliblic bearings on emergency legislation today and report a bill out by Friday. Senate approval could· be expected next week, Jackson said. On the House side, Democratic whip John J. McFall (D-Otlil.), prodlcted ac- mass-ticketing campaign by dissenting officers in that ci ty four years ago. "I think this is c<impletcly ill-advised a n d romplctely c.'Ounter-productivc." Robitaille said. "It does nothing for the department and certainly doesn't engender community respect." Robi taille said that whenever the police in J1unti ngton Beach ha~·e had similar problems, it is usually unsolicited citizen support that \l'ins the day. Costa ~1csa Police Chief Roger Neth ;: UPIT ......... A veteran of aeven d ifferent newspapers from Oregon to Pennoylvanla tin'!' 1915, Mr. Burgea began his career on hia father's newspaper In Clara City, Minn. At the age or 11, he wao numlng a llnotype machine. Mass will be said at JO 1.m. Friday at Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Oiurch, 105 Las Esperanza. Rev. Father Joseph Karp will olflclote. Burial will follow at Asceaaion Cemetery in El Toro. Io addition to his wife, Mr. Burges is survived by a lot!, Robert Burges of San Clemente; a daughter, Margaret Cardwell of Athens, Georlla; brothers, Ted Burges of Clear Lake, &..th Dakota; Glenn Burges of Pboenls; Nell Burges of La Mirada; slit.era, Clara Anderson of St. Poul, Mhin.; Elaine Lee of Garden Gro,. and Mildred Gf8nac ol Lansdale, Penn. ; and I granddaughter, Sarah Canlwe!L STATE ENERGY SOLUTIONS NOT ENOUGH? See Pogo 10 FUEL FOR PLEASURE BOATS CAROL JENKINS, 18, GRIEYES AS NINE BODIES REMOVED She Worked at Victims' Store and ·Lived With the Family A QUESTION -Story, Page 15 --------..., He later ran a print shop with his lather alter laking journalism claases at the Unlvenity of Minnesota. QUESTIONS, ANSWERS ON ENERGY PLAN TOLD, Pogo 40 tion on the President's proposals before the December recess. Su;spect in Ni .. ~··,Murders A staff oergeant in the U.S. Army in World War n, Mr. Burges WU a member of the Son Clemente Chamber "ll be wants a bill; we'll give him a bill," sakl Rep. Torbert H. Macdonald (D-Mass.), cliainnan of the House sub- committee «lit power. Arr~sted in Sati-amento Barbor Estates Area ID bis Wedneaday night address, Nixon accuaed Cuatg• j~~f ailing to act on any of the pieasures he sent BULLETIN SACRAMENTO (AP) -Two were taken into custody today for qnestionfng in tlie ·execution-style marder of Dine people in a luxury rural !tome, In- vestigators reported. Developers Must Limit to the IIlll The 'dent said It was now "imperative" that Congress pass legislation (I) establishing year-round Daylight Saving Time, (2) authorizing relaxation of clean-air standards, (3) approving the tapping of naval petroleum reserveo and (O giving the .government power to reduce speed limits nationwide Unit,s for Annexation and restrict working hours. · SACRAMENTO ruPn -Police armed with sawed~ff shotguns arrested a suspect in a dO\Vntown Sacramento hotel today in the "execution" style murders of nine persons in California's wine coun- try. By CANDACE PEARSON OI' 1M hllY Pltlt Steff Bowing to extensive public pressure, the San Clemente City Council Wed- nesday told two developen they'll hove to put a lot leu oo their property if they want 'to be anne1ed. Residents of 'the existing IWl>or Eslatu In -1lern San Clemente pocked the council -cbamben Wedneoda)I night unUI . about 311 pet'IOOS stood outslae listenlnf. The pub114; bearing, which laoted more than two houri, WU on JllOpooed prHOO- ln( of. two potteil of land acljocent to Halt>or Eltalel but now In Son J.,n calJfltrano.' Deveiopetl Fronk Horpell and Tom I'·-wllllled tbe pm.onlng of JI. I (..-u.I), to determine whit they could put .., tbe land II It cornea Into the city. Horpell w~ted to put up to IO units, at U unlto per "°" more denolty on his pioperty, Landolf, WU planning J.16 unlll per ...,. mon oo bil ldjacent 17.111 acrea, The resldeots, II Umea .,,..,. and hoatlie,'dldn't Wllll anY1hini of the kind. They objected to what Ooosiderod is I I ' "high density" and to the new tracts using their narrow streets for circulation. "We don't want to be the Jut group that gets shafted before ·somebody finally comes to their senses," Kent Saunders told the council. Saunden, wbooe oummary of the laaues raised by the asooctation ran about ID hour, said the elfects of cumulaUve growth on city oervtcea and Macdonald said Nixon already had the authority to do most of what· he asked and accusec! the President of playing "an absolute shell game" in blaming Congress for inaction. Sen. Mark 0. Hatfield (R-Ore.), a (See ENERGY, Pa1e %) San Juan Slates The suspect, identified as Douglas E. Gretzler, 22, was led Jbandcuffed by eight heavily armed officers .from the hotel and whisked away in a patrol car. A police spokesman said the hotel, which advertises .. family rates," was MASS MURDERS SHOCK SMALL TOWN -Story, Page 3 scboob haven 't been adequately II p measured. , F arewe ariy staked out earlier in tbe day alter He allo contended that the clUlter two men wanted . for questioning in the housing atyJe waa wone than govern-A · 1 I u will be · d 1 case were reported seen there. meat alWn ....... ,..... usi .... ,the oan-speoa arewe sa i 0 A search or the men's room disclosed ,_,. ... Marfaret O®'I, former manager of the dol!1fnimn developments around the Back San Juan capistraM Chamber of Com-clothing believed used in the mass Bay 'in ~ Beach u an example· t 5.M N l6 t the murders, weapous and money allegedly of .,.. ~-• ~-•·• '"·in be meree, a .~ p.m. . ov. a in bu I ---•· th ._, •-~,.-.um -g El A~~ n •• ta t taken .a rg ary P•=~111g e •• u "It' ·•ct. It' Ii •" ' ~ = uran . I I DaJU,,. • .... • c.... 'lbe social mixer, a no-host cocktail say ngs. SaUDdert and other 1peaken con~ wlth refresliments at n per person, Another man fled down a fire scape th,at the city's planned open 1poce ing, 15 being sponsored by the chlmebr. and was being ,htmfeil In the are~, . which would allow denoltlea of on! 1.5 The evening's program will com· The bodies of Wal\er-Parkin, !3. hJS units a grou 0-ab-e., lhouJd apply_to,._memorate Mrs .. Olsen's tenure and se.rre _ \Yi~e..~t~wo children and fi~e, friends the hllly, canym-Ute •rea. u official welcome to Valerie Po'wers, -: all bound and gagged -were found Councilmen unanbnoualy alfffd. the new chamber manager. Wednesday Inside Parkin's ne,W-1 $65,000 Al tbe Id.vice of city attoroey F. All South Orange county chamber or ranch home in the sprawling vllleyards _ Mackemle Brown, the council referred oommeree members and Jhe public are • • In Norib-Central CaHrornla. All'liad been the -1Jll blclt to tlle planning com-Invited. The El Adobe Restallrant Is sltqt In the bead at clooe rage wtth mission for a report on the modification. at !18111 El Camlno Caplsh'ono, San a revolv.t\ , (Bee PAllCELB, .... I) Juan Capistrano. Parkin owned the only grocery In f ' • - : .~. UPI TIMllflottt SEIZED IN MURDERS W~l_lo L, Steolmah the town of Victor,' a community-of 270 persons three miles east or here. A safe at the store was opened normnlly and empUed of all cash, reportedly around 14.000. "It looks llke lhe work of a madman." said the sherllf. "All of them appear to have been executed.'' \ r said he ';strongly objects to any change in practice from that which is standard in the department ln order to put the pressure on during negotiations. "I don't think this enhances the image or police at all and certainly is no~ proressional in my opinion," he said. ' "l sincerely hope such a thing never happens down here but I think OW: guys have a lot better sense," Netf!1 (See 'SUPER COPS,' Page Z) ··; -an . l(i'ssinger E11ds Talk • lnEgWt_ • . • . . . - By Tbe Associated Press ·'\ ~ "hte Israeli state radio said today Israel accepted a five-point plan worked out through the United Sbl.tes for a settlement with Egypt. J The radio quoted government sources escribing the plan in t een Secretary State · ger and his ai in sess id. Egy and Israel. It said the pointa ; l prisoner of war ex~ge uJi soon as ~ble." . I -A -supply-corridor for the epcircled 'Egyptian 3rd Army tbat would be 11.N • supervised 1nd run through Israeli lines. ; Bui Jt would include no weapbos, aiid in no way be controlled by Egypt. " •i -Removal of the Egyptian blocka~ of the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait, Israel's-vital outlet to the Indian Ocean. 1: -Negotiations between Israeli and: Egyptian military commanders to ar~ . range a more convenient cease-fire Urie-' J for the two aides. · ~ -Direct peace negotiations between · Israel and Egypt, once the first four 1 points are fulfilled. I I Kissipger flew to Jordan and Saudi Arabia !ifter spending a day in tal~s , with President Anwar Sadat in Cairo. . Kissinget's assistant in charge of Mid-! dle East affairs, Josepb J. Sisco, emerj~ ed from talks wjth Premier iolda Meir t in Jerusa1em and told newsmen:, "l 1 feel optimistic." ~ He had gone to Israel unexpectedly from the Cairo sessioM Wednesday, ap-· parently carrying with him details ot the Kissinger-Sadat meetings. . i Egyptian government spokesman Ahm~ ~ ed Anis indicated to a news conference ' in Cairo that Egypt climbed dow11 from : its previous Insistence that Israeli forces withdraw immediately to lines reachea Oct. 22 as demanded in two U.N. Security i Council resolutions. : "They must show signs that they will 1 implement the resolutions," Anis said, referring to the Israelis. "Once this is done the wheels will start rolling, , and we may soon go to a . peace con- ference, perhaps after a few days." • • In the background of these reported. n1ovements toward peace, however, were charges WedneJday from Israel that Egypt was preparing a new attack along the Suez Canal. Oraal(e «:east -. Weather Some fog or low clouds night and morning hours but otherwise sunny is the forecast for Friday. Highs at the beaches in the 60s rising to 75 inland. Overnight lows in the 50s. L'\SIDI> 'l'tHJA l' Three members of a farnt /amib;, held hostage by two ;ail escapf!es, waited until their cap- tors feU a.sleep and ran out the howe and escaped. Storv. page ~ . L. M. krC U ClllfwlMI II Clrttr CWMr ti CIMlllM 4M, c-1u " c,...__.. • Dtlft'I Mtfktt It ~4ltort.I p"' .. , St'-"MMMlll ..a1 ,1 .. -.... I'll' llMI ._.. It -.. AM._....,. ti MtMI .. ,, .,.., ,._. . ,......... ...... ·' Ol'lllM C...W ll·IJ PTA • ·-,..,. 119'11 MMMt1 4MI T-. -.... ·-. .................. --. " • I • , ;t UAIL t PIL-Ol Thursday, NMmbtr 8, 197.) • • 5th Graders on 'Foes , .... ,..,.1 REACTOR • • • -.. to nm.." f'\ Palisades School Hazard. Under Fire He -00 Ille Kanbattan Project, which orodu<ed the atomic bomb In World War JI, u en example of nuclear ty and -•tenD1nat1oo. remllb·lllw·~ local Of • A hazardous tralllc sltuatiori around Palisades School in Capistrano Beach i! going to be attacked by a special "Safety Patrol." The problem Is already being con-- fronted with varying solutions by F~th Diltriet Supervisor Ronald Ca1per11 SoOth Orange County Office, th e calitomla Highway Patrol, the Parent· Teaclte.r AS$0CiaUon, Orange C.ounty Sbe.-iff'a Department and the auto club. But the Safety Patrol, fdth grade studenta to be commissioned by Asal1tant Prlttcipal Gary Taylor, may be the final key, principal Thomas Blum said Wednesday. Pallaades School, at 26462 Sacramento, lits oo a steep hill. The risea In the 'r08d that obstruct views only aggravate the safety problem. Disregard. for safety rules or mistakes by both chlld bicyclists and adult motori!lt.s put them, and pedestrians, in potential danger, Blum said. Each year the CHP gives a "Stop on a Dime" safety assembly at the school but tbe "rules baven't seemed to do any good In our immediate area," he said. After the last assembly, Blum said, he watched the children leave school and they "kind of forgot w h a t Ibey heard." The CHP will repeat, the aaf.ty discussion Nov. 27 and for the first time a CHP car has stationed itself at the school mom.lngs and afternoons. Its pre9ellce reminds -adults to drive safely, Blum said. Bob Nelson, Casper's South Orange Coun.ty representative, is conducting a Fro•Pagel PARCELS ... Once the planning commiJsion, which had recOmmended the higher dens:ity, r.eports bac~, the OOWJcil can take final action. The solution ·obviously didn't please the developers, especially Horpell, who 8.fgued the city couJdn 't apply a prezon· ing that doesn't yet _exist. The city council ·Is scheduled to vote on the open space zoning measure in two weeks . The action, if ~Mexation follows through, would anow Horpell to put 'IT Wtits on his 18 acre.s and Landolf to put 2.8 units on his. "What can we do with 'l1 tlnits?" Horpell , demanded. "Sell them for a half million dollars each?" Horpell's associate, Robert Thatcher 1 bad already testified the adult com· munity units would sell for $'15,000. There was some doubt over whether -the re.sldents and council even want to annex the property. City Manager Ken C.rr said although the councU has declared its intention ·to begin annexation p~lngs with the Local Agency Formation C.oqunlsslon (LAFCO), no papers bave been flled yet. Councilman Art Holmes, also a member of the South Coast Regional 1.one Conservation Commission, raised the issue of the adequacy of sanitary servie<S. The tracts might bave to' be served by the city, he said, and the coastal commission is wary of granting continuous expansion of sewers. The council's action was popular with the audience, which cheered at the vote. San Juan Company Picked to Do Joh Christiansen .and Assoclates of San Juan capistrano were selected by the Board of Supervisors to do engineering work oo the Capistrano Beach storm drain. 1be selection Tuesday clears the way for work to begin on the design of the drain which will run from Doheny Park Road to Camino Capistrano in the Ca~trano 8each.san Juan Capistrano area. The project will be supervised by the Orange County Flood Control District. OUM•• co.or IC DAILY PILOT TIM 0r'"'9 C..11 DAILY PILOT, wt111 WlllC:fl 11 ~ trte N .... ,.r..._ It ............ 1W ,,.. 0r-. c-11 Puti11t111ti1 c.........,.,_ 1ep9. , ..... " ...................... ""'""' ........... l'ri,s.y, Nr Cotl• M ... , NtwPI01 INCfl, H1111......._. 8t«ll/l"ovnt1l11 V•t11.,, .......... 81ed!, '"'""''$1iddlftlie11 Ind S.n °""""91 S... J-C•Plllr-. I\ ll"'lt' rtiOklMI flOlllDll ll M l""" 1ttvrd1y1 Wiii Sl.JnOi'fL TM lll'llKIMI ,..,......... llllllnt It •I Ml W1$1 •• , J"-1, c.... M-.; C..lil9rlllt, fli». ~oMrt N. Wt.d ............ 111111 "11114isntl" Jtc.k l. Cwrlty Vkof .-r.llfMI W 0-11 M-..r T$.•111•t IC••"I l•U•• Tt!OMlt A. Mwrphl110 MMe9Jftl f.""' Ch 1rle1 H. t... l i&fte" P. Nell l\ullfMt MtNtflll !fl ..... .. =··· ,, 0,.... JOl Nerill El CoMl110 lt•I, 92672 --(,,,11 ~I UI .... ky Jfntt --·---.... --.... : 1191 ................ L.....-9-cll• • p.,.. """""' TJI•••••• cn41 ••Ma11 "' ~ M••Tf • a MWn .. n ••Al'"*' rw ,,. :t111 ........ ~. lfP. er... c..t ......... °"""""'· '" -..,..., '""'""-......... """" ., . ......,.._. ..... _, .................... .... ...... st..,,...-.. ................. .:.... ..... ~ ..._.._.... IW COITl9r .... ~ ... -i1 '-'·'' """"'"' ~ -.... .... ..........,. • swvey ol the )IOlllblt need lot an ldult croalni Jiuan1 II the IChool. Nelson, C11P and ShtrtJ!1 re- latives recently met with Blum, Taylor and PT A olficlals to devise saltly ltepo. • The PT A iJ making yellow « red sashes, to be llenelled with the wordl "Safety Patrol," to be worn across the chests of the group's membera. Blum said the plan is to have students in an afternoon activity clats lllttoned outside at 3:15 and 3:45 when d!lldreii leave school to l'<mlnd them 10 walk carefully. They will "reinforce llfety habits ... not be policemen," he added. . ,..,.. ....... lo pal ... ldoa llllo elfecl In 1111 -two ..... Iller he gttl _,, aalety lnlormatlon -the autl)moblle club. "We want other children to PIY at- tention 10 them (the patrol)," Blum said, adding he will try 10 make the patrol "Important 10 them." Another wembly iJ planoed to explain the ef. forts to the K-5 students. Blum said the ad>ool oUJc:Ws are "afraid" an accident wW take place on 'the ru.et. He Aid be'• .... too many drl vtr1 slam on their car brakes to avoid a bicycling d!lld. I --ol Ille limbo status of the PftlPllllltd ~of two nuclear reacton 1t. Sin , three mlles oouth ol san ci.tnen e. The two, 1,J4G-megawatt generators above the San Onofre Slate Beach ha ve been -approved by eVery necessary agen. cy except the State Coastal 1.one Conservation Cornmi!s.ion. A1lMuih the state commtSs:ion has bad a hearing on <he project planned by SCE and San Diego Gu and Electric Company, a decision lm't expected tmtil Nov. 21..at the earUest. Citi.:en .Opposition Nixon's comments will put extra pressure on the commission, whlch was eatabllabed by the 1972 coa!tal zone act, Seoord said, "It puts a little mo... of a monkey on their back." DanaPointOwner Denied Because of the dangers from radiation and the long term environmental hazards, nuclear plants aren't the answer, Secord contended. He aceused Nixon of 0 shorts.idedness and tunnel- vision" for hla desire to relaE en· vironmental standards and for sug· gestlng lhort~tenn measures. Permit to Build Triplex Using more power of whatever kind isn't the solution, he said, drastically changing lifestyles is. · A Dana Point property owner WSJ denied the right to build triplex apartments on her lot by Orange County supervisors Wednesday through an ait_ peal by the Dana Point Cit1%ens for Action Association. Mrs. Esther M. Wallace bad applled for a variance permit to allow en- croachment into the front Part of her irregularly shaped lot and into the rear section to allow the triplex b\liding. County ZonJng Admlni..trator Ray Reed had approved the variance, noting that under tbe law Mrs. Wallace could build five apartments on the lot as Jt is -zoned. The property In quesUon i! on the east llkle ol the Street of tbe Amber Lantem, north ol La CMta Drive. Amber Lantern makes a wkie curve In front ol the lot, thus .Uectlng the conformaUoo ol any bull&lng· on, -the property, Reed pointed out that the requested variance would allow encroachment !nto· tbe !root Jot 1etback 10 11 feet from the street ntber than the required :ri. But be added that on the other side ol the lot the building would be 71 feet back from tbe street The rear encroachment ol 15 feet from tbe property Une rather than the required 25 was also approved by Reed because of tbe odd shape of the Jot. Oppoolng tbe Variance permit WU Har-m Angel, presJclenl o1 the Dana Point Cit.izem For AcUon Association. He argued that developmeot bad become too deme for the narrow, winding streets In tbe community and that u a ....Wt Frot11P .. el 'SUPER COPS' • • added. Aides f« Anaheim Chief Dave Michael said he preferred to refrain from com- menting oo the veiled threat. by hi> olllcers becauae ol the "fragile llitua· Uon" in the city. Gary McRae, Anaheim's penonnel dlre<tor and the man In charge ol tbe city's side of the dispute, would not comment llJ>'Cifically on the "super cop" proposal. "I am confident the cltizenl .of Anaheim wUl continue to receive the protection they have always J"lftlved and .Lthlnk the officen wlll act with hone.sty··and Integrity," he said. McRae said he is UMUre of the status of negotiations sJnce tbe contract talb were broken off three weeks ago. Anaheim officers staged a protest march in front of City Hall Wednesday. Barry said Wednesday that U the protest did no good, tbe altemaUves -including the "super cop" Jdea - will be next. cars were pa{k:ed on the streets In Mrs. Hicks or San Clemente agreed . front ol apartments and adjoining single "I would welcome the President'• call family homes. He said the association for restrictions of our nation's power prefe~ that a duplex, rather than consumption, but It is long .overdue and a trtples be IMillt on the Jot. -~pa~tbeUcaJJylli3llequate in scope:"- Supervts« Ronald Caspers supported Nuclear power plants still represent tbe association's contention saying a a threat to health and safety, she said , duplex was all that should be allowed adding she wished his comments had on the property. His motion to deny refen-ed to solar and other sources of the variance carried 5-0. clean, safe power. Lawmen Find Fullerwn Man With Dead Girl A murder eomjllalnt ·wm be sought today qalnsl a Fullerton man wbo was found sleeping In a car lloogslde the body ol a bal£uude woman In the Garden Grove.,..Wednelday. R!>bert Dale Knoell, 211, Fullerton, is being held In connectloa with the aneged murder of Donna Marie L'Homme of Placentia. The Orange County Coroner's office said Mrs. L'Homme bad been strangled with a belt which . was wrapped around her throat The bizarre acene waa stumbled upon by petrolling deputy -wbo bad stopped to detmnlne why the car owned ,by Mn. L'llomme WU partlolly blocking a street In eomity territory near Garden Grove. The depUtJet rouoed Knoell !nm biJ 11.., and ...,.. the belt around Mn. L'lbnme't iliniot. Siie was dfld at the scene, the corone1"1 office reported. Investlga10n aald 10day that Knoch is an acquaintance of the victim's hus- band and wu known to ber. They aald they bave been imable to determine a motive for the slaying. Knoell bU -10 talk. San Juan School Sets Book Fair '"Jbe aJ!d'1 Garden of Boob" is tbe theme ol a book fair Nov. 15 and 11 -ed by the P""'1t·Teacber League (P'l'L) ol Siio Juan Elementary Sc:bool. · New and used books wUJ be available far sale to book Joven and early holiday shoppers, a Pn. offidal said. The fair will be In tbe school auditorium at 31642 El camino Real, san Juan Capistrano, during parent· 1d:Jool CO?lference llmel. In addition, it will be opeit from 7 10 9 p.m. Nov. 15. "Mr. Nixon's capitulation to pressures to proliferate atomi c power "to play to the nation's .rexcess consumption of power" is "short-sighted," Mrs. Hicks 'also said. Nixon's comments, she said, are con- trary to a ~d Corp. report which said nuclear plants should be a last alternative, and in aU cases, should be far from population ~nters. From Pnge I ENERGY • • • member of the Appropriations Com- mittee, said · the Office of Management and Budget "is sitting on over $20 mllliOn in energy funds" already ap- propriated by Congress. "The impounding of ener8)'-related funding is the single greatest roadblock stopping Congress from meeting the country's energy needs," Hatfield said. Sen. Lloyd M. Bentsen ([).Tex.), said le and other oil·state senators oppose · one presidential proposal that would allow the federal government to regulate tbe Intrastate producUQI) and use of oil and gas. ,., Uganda Chief Lauds Nixon KAMPALA , Uganda (UPI) President ld.i Amin today sent a telegram to President Nixon con· gratulatlng him on not re!lgning. He said a weaker man might have committed suicide. In a telegram on Nixon's address to the nation Wednesday night, Amin -a longtime U.S. critic -said, "1 wish to congratulate you aod compliment you most sincerely for this courageous stand. "I am sure any other weak leader would have resigned or com- mitted !Weide after being sub- jected to so much harassment because of the Watergate affair," Amin oald. Watergate Tapes 'Poor Quality,' Says Secretary WASHINGTON (AP) -Pmidellt Nixon's personal secretary told a federal coort 10day that portions of the sub- poenaed Watergate tapeo w.,. very poor In quality aJMI that It Is humanly Jm. possible to hear every word on them. "I could not get every word," Role Mary Woods said In· describing the job of typing a rough transcript ol 1even conversations between the President and key Watergate figures. Miss Wood!, Nlxon'a secretary for more than lll yeara, said the tramcrtblng work took her nearly a month, wortlng, on and oil, sometimes OD weekends and often far Into the night The Watergate prosecution force want! a federal grand jury 1o hear the tapes. Miss Woods 1aid she lint saw one of the controveraial tapes Sept 29, when, at Nixon'• request, 1he 'began the task of transcribing thtm at the President's mountaintop retreat at Camp Da•id, Md. circumstances surrounding a White House clalm that the two tapes never ex11ted. . Miss Woods, wearlnlj "' rad knit dress and a doble string of pearls, said that transcribing the lapel bad been a "very difficult job," and that de1pUe working unW I a.m. Sunday morning, and again all day Scmday after arillng at I 1.m. she was tmable to complete a transcript of even one convertation. - "The quality la very bed on 10me," •be said, "deJ>llldlnl on the room. There .,. Iott of funny thine• In them." Amoog these oddities, she said, "if the President puts his feet on the desk, It......, like a bomb. Boom." Slit said a limllar 10U11d Is created on the tape recordings If aomeone 1ets a collee cup on a table. Miss Woods said Ille returned . to Waahlngton with the Pmldent oo Sun- day, Sept, !O and .continued working on the tapes for al1D01t a month. I /DRY SR 139.95 On Str.f'ke Mrs. Gladys Roc kie of Santa Ana pickets the Thrifty Drug Store in Costa A1esa 's Harbor Shopping Center Where .!ihe has worked for the past 13 years. She said she has been with the c:ompany iince 1943 and has neve r been on strike before. About 4,Boo· retail clerks and pharmacists walked off their jobs at Thrifty stores \Vednesday, closing down 284 of the chain's stores in seven counties in a pay dis- pute. 5 Me11, 66 Rifles Seized . In Gun-running Episode SAN DIEGO (AP) -The possibility of a gun·running operation lo revolu· tionaries was under investigation today after the arrest of five n1en and seizure of 66 rifles headed into ~Texico, or Central America. Jn a dramatic last·minute climax to months of surveillance, a southbound camper truck loaded with the ·.3<k:aliber rifles and several thousand rounds or ammunition was stopped 100 feet short of the border at San Ysidro. The driver, identified as Oscar Gonz.ales·Rodriguez of San Salvador, was arraigned in U.S. District C.ourt on felony charges of failure to register implements of war, aiding and abetting in the failure to register guns and trans ferrin g rifles to a person other than a licensed im· porter or collector. Gonza les, in the United States on a tourist visa, was ordered jailed, in lieu of $25,000 bond. · In Los Angeles, U.S. ~toms officials said four other men were taken into custody for iiivestigation of violating the neutrality Act covering illegal export of arms and of the 1968 gun ~ntrol act forbidding transfer of guns to nonresidents. The four were identified as Juan Emlgeio Bonilla, 45, of Hawthorne; Herty Rodriguez Lewites. 32, of Redondo Beach ; Rene Amador, 32, also of ROOon- do Beach, and Bonito Alberto Hernandez, 45. of U:is Angeles. E/DRYER 179.95 1"1 went up there to try to listen I use that word advlJedly -to tske down as much aa poooible of the tapes that we~ aubpoenlfd," she tesUlied at a hearing before U.S. District Court Judge John J. Sirico. According to previous testimony, It was Sept 29 that tbe President upr- 1wareness that recording• of two al the total of nine 1ubpoe!loed con· venaUons couldn't be found. Once Iha llld, on Ott. 4, Ille ... questorad -at key BlscQM, Fla., and warUd Whlle Sectet Service. agents ....-the laJ*, wtllch ...... In a Nie, on a~-· Mia Woods aid Iha made a ll!n;le typewritten ""VY Ill lier -Pllont with no cart>ona. Her typewriter rtlilions ware burned 10 pnmt ..,.,... from them, ... lllcl. 90 DAY. CASH · A'•""'"!D CllDIT 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa-Phone 546-7788 ' Sirica called tbe boarlnc Jo air tho • , ., • • • I I I I I ,t.~"L AC I/WI """' ,._ ~t"' •• ,.i~ll Addr J ..... " .Ad1111111 .. \'.\: :r:-"'J'! .. AlrlCll AJ ' 41i.•Ol\t ... .. ~ =~· ·~ ". '"" r.'o:l' ' ' ., AU ., fil~~ AIOl'll ""' """"' .... ~ ~mer ~')\., . ..,., ~· •• • Amin "'"" .ArtlC:• ·~~ ,... ,.,,, ,,., A iC'i: ff ' ~~ t'*' t,; •g..s A " ~"5 •• .., 0 ... •'111911'1 ~~ ~~· ,,,,,,_ ~:~ Am S ~~ s A"'SI Aln51 "11,mT Aml AT f ~i:;.: A Wit .,,_ ·-· -AM• •m• =-~IT " Am• =! """ .... """" --~ :~iii "'' "" ~: "" "'' ., Ar A Mm "' •• ·,.rvl ••• ';A~I A ., .. ... A "" AtlC " .,. AU• <A.Ill. ATO " " A ·~ A" A •• , • •• ' ... l~ •• .. •• .. • ·• ,, 'lat ,!fr {" " . .. • .. .. ~ ,, ' • • ' " •' •• ' ' • • . I • " • • J r Thursday's Closing Prices I I • I • ' - Thursdi\Y November 8 1973 SC DAil Y PILOT 4 1 NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE • \ 4 • , ( Year's Bigh-LQ-w s Appear Every Saturday Mai·ket Rebot111ds " •• • ·~· •• On Deve_lopn1ents • • .. •• " ... ' ,. . ~l ~ ,. •: Speclal lo tbt OallJ Pilot 1, VAN NUYS -Hungry Tigeizj Inc operntor of nine seafood j specialty restaurants reportedij Monday that for the r .. cal~ year ended Aug 31 sales \Yett~ '8 211967 compared to' ..,$1 890 595 lo fiscal 1972 !-l Nel income for fiscal l~l totaled $1961958 compared t ~ l2IO 297 for th< like pe : of 1972 .. Earning> per share rot' '""'' 197! amounted to % cents per Mate compared 33 cents pe.r share m rLSClfQ 1972 on fewer shares OUt.3tan! ding ' ' I I DAILY PILOT Th<Wld,Y, NOY...., 8. 1973 ,j"; I Annount:emerit• • , • • • • SOO • S2.4 ~~ ...••• ' .9S0 ·990 Boots & Martt Equipment 900 . 914 The Biggest Marketplace on the· Orange Coast ~-··. ·--·--lolo-.. 1·•. •. '"-··149.. I (r~t •••••••. 700·799 F"'1o!1<iol • • . • • • • • • 200 • 199 1-kMes for Sale , , • , , • 100 • 124 ~ & found • • •• • • •• sso • 574 Mer<hondlse. • • • • • • • IOO • &t9 DAILY PtLOT CLASSIFIED ADS ,.,fOnOh;. , , • , , , 1 , , SlS • 549 PWtl and SIJppl'• • • • I • • ISO • t99 Reol E•tote General. • • , • 1SO • l99 You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad ( 64,2-5678 J One Cal I Service Fast Credit ApP,.oval . . ................ : •. 300·~ S<hoo't. ond INtruttlon • , • SlS • S99 Sw•im vnd Rtipain , ! . ', 600 • 699 l!GNpOftrotion. ••••••• 91S • 949 ...,.~-~--...-~ ... ~-~~ .. ~-~-~-~G~e~n~e~ra~l ............ ~G~1~n:•~ra~l ............ ~G~en~e:r~all .......... -:G~e:n:e~r:a1i' .. • ........ ~G~e:n:e~r:e1i' .... .,.,.,':':!G~e~n:e~re~I.,~ '\,.,., .. G .. ene .. r·e~I .......... , ERRORS. Advertisers should check their ASSUME 71; 2 0 10 ::.l ~lt:::Tl=M-E-0-~----..,ED ads dally & report errors Immediately. The 11 rrU\ DAILYPILOTa11um11llabllltylorthoflrst READ THIS VA LOAN MESA DEL MAR" Incorrect insortion only. -Top location . Top condition. ASSUME 61f20/0 ' ~ ~·~~ .. -------'"-•"'-'"-~-~ ... -----•I Eastsldc Costa Mesa. 3 General General * BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * NEWPORT ISLAND Pier -&slip. Dix. du· plex . 3 BR, 2 ba., 2 BR, 2 ba. 3 Car park· ing. Sl25.000. 675-7060 UNUSUAL FINO NEWPORT HEIGHTS Reduced! Spanis h 3 BR., 2 ba. split-level. Extra lge. lot. Owner extremely anxious! Call & submit 642-7491. Luxurious du p I ex. IMMEO. POSSESS. Owner's unit 5 BR. + 3 BR., 2 ba: Comp. 3 BR rental. Secluded redec. New carpets. Newport Island. Call Frplc. Shady yard. for further infonna· $36, 750 -10% down tion. 673-7420. 556-8600 * BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * -4 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU General General LA CUESTA VILLAS from $30,990 A new concept in Home Ownership by Ayres Construction Company You Own The land and the Home Not a' CorRlomininum No Monthly Maintt nance Fee 4 Beautiful Exteriors IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY : 3 BR, 2'BA & HUGE FAMILY ROOM+ SEPARATE 2 car gar. Buy for Thanksgiving Mova In By ·Christmas No Payments Until January A U,._l()Uf tlVMf IN HARBOR V1EW HILLS -Under con· struction and under comparable prices. 3 Bedrm, Carmel model , quiet street, near tenriis court and shoppin$ facilities. 168 Ft. deep lot. Amazing low pr1ce of only $62, 750. A listing of Lyleen Ewing. UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 67$.6000 2443 E. Coast Hyw., Corona del Mer General General ------------ ****** VIEW CANYON & OCEAN CORONA DEL MAR $86,500 Ikalitlful 2 bedroom, 2 bath home with dln\ng room, large lo1ver level family room&. patio. R-2 Lnnd per- mits change to dupJex. PLEASE CALL 675-3000 m Iii\\' ,\ llL\fll Bed., 2 baths. Family Immaculate !I bedrootn ~ ) Room, Fireplace, Shake stgry borne with premlwn Roof, New Q u a 11 t y grade earpeTin&' and wall Ca.-petlng, Children may coverlngs, larden patio, \Valk to school, Ottered for stio.ke root, sprinklers troqt $39,900. Call COLWEU. I< back. ' ' ~. \Vandalk to all scbootlol8 ·; shopA ping \o ~ transporta n. super •1 TAX ADVANTAGE ~. '&"' ... ,!';'"i!nn~; TRIPLEX 11ctter hlln')', Call 546-2.113 ... OPEN r1L e . n'S FUN 10 Bf_ NICfJ ' J; Best financing available. j ~~: ~7~~~;~~~ ~ Rim'lllll 'i Iumillhed, ·exet>Uent con-dition. Cell COLWELL ONLY $2,000 ··I 646--0555. I DOWN . IDLE DOLLARS eu1..i .... , ,.,.../ . prov1d,. '. quiet a""°'ph<:re I o'r j' GATHER NO private living In this almost INCOME new home wlth I argt ., recreation room an<t low in~'~.; 12 Apartnlerits • -vt!f'Y 1011.. terest GI loan that ~ e I VP.cancy • Chvner \viii C'lllTY assumed by anyone. Better , I I·_, e B ... !h d l' p t ,C OCEAN VIEW Model I Block W. of Beach Blvd. Off Adams in Huntington Beach * TAYLOR CO.-* i_f2~9~~A 2nd T.D .• OwnCT will Tracie see this todayJ 61&--ml I clrr.\•11 for smaller unit's ot'+·~O..,pe::n:..:e:.:":::'::· =;::::---l:'"'~-f-f---'] --ram-:-orrerearorsm:soo. .. : Spacious vil'\Y home in exclusive l larbor Vie1v }fills. 3 Bedrooms. 21..!i baths, formal dining Al't'a, pane-led family roo1n. Pool. Room to add-on Olvner transferred. Call 00\Y! ~95.500 REALTORS SINCE 194-1 673-4400 . OCEAN VIEW Duplex. 2 Bdrms. each. Leased land. 4 Car parki~. Xlnt rental history. $79,950. Call: 673-3663 673-6688 eves. associated BROK ER:S-REAL TORS 1015 W Bcilboe 67J·l6tl HARBOR t:JD.NIGEL · nAILEY & ASSOCIATES AYRES SINCE 1905 536-1445 644-7270 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Close to the beach. New upper unit with large master suite. Owner's unit -re- modeled. All new with cozy frpls. OWNER WANTS OFFER! $119,500. WE CAN HELP YOU BUY, SELL, OR TRADE · A HOME . ANYPLACE IN THE NATION HIGHLANDS Conveniently located to 1.tar- iners Park, schoo\ & li- brary....._. exCf'llent family -=======::::::..-2828 E. ~01st Highway, Corona del M•r LINDA ISLE-4195,000 YES' Bayfront luxury! 4 BR home w/study, lge , play rm, DR & 4'h baths. Unusual plan. High ceilings, book cases, plus. Pier/slip. . Linda Isle Waterfront LOvely 4 bdrm., 4\0 ba. home with swim· ming pool , pier & slip, panoramic view of main .channel. Lge. famil y rm. w /space for billiards & family dining. Waterfront formal dining & Jiving rm. $2!!0,000. For Complete Information On All Homes & Lots, Please C•ll: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boyside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-4161 General General Large corner lot on quiet cul-de·sac . new cpls -11c>1v paint • OE.'\\' ceramic bath tile • stainless stet-I kitctien • gar~e disposal . etc. Newport I ol Fairview 646-8811 (onyllm•l EASTSIDE HOME+ TRIPLEX COUNTRY sm1NG situated on a large 130x150 lot \\'ilh · IO\Yering sh11.de treei;, a comfortable 3 BR 2 BA home vi'ith den and front porch for your rocker Plus For delails call COL\VELL ... 6 .o;,;. TRIPLEX Walker & Lee : : ::. I "'"\ ,,,,.,. 11 I FOR TRADE CONOO, Cao·,,..,,t0<la. s45<Xl :: 1' Do YoU O\\'n up to 20 uniti'i equity. \Vil! lake V\V squ&re: 0 and wish to trade riown? back as part paymt. -J This may be your ans"'cr: Capri Rt'alty GM-1525 Top Eastsidc Costa __ Mc>sa J Aren. Uu1:"c apartmc>nt!I, Balboa Pen1n1Ufa J one 3 bedroom and h\'O 2 -----~----'-bedrooms, 3-years new, LGE. 4 Br, f~m· rm., lee._ great condition. Excellent kltch. 2-Sty. $89,500. Renls. Call C 0 L \VE LL Marshall Realty • 675-4600 646--0'"..iSS. Corona del tMr .~ ' ASSUME VA 8°/o INTEREST "'ith a loan· balance of $'12,500. 1'he payment of SU'.1 per/mo. includes a 11 . Sparkling 3 bdrm middle · BUYNOW ··I . _iXPAND LATER '.' 1 Consider thts 2 BR home ~ j In an ideal Corona H~h1ands, walk to private 1 beach, location with ~ ., , I space and floor plan th.ilt ;· 1 make it a natural for an· ' 1 addition. . . . . ' : . I Or '· J ... Enjoy this sunny, well kept ' little doll house as is. ' i Only $56.500 -' ! CALL 644-7211 ' of the blocker with big back , , ~NIGEi · ll11ILEY & A55lll1Al [<; yard and lots o( privacy. ' ; I Hdv.·d Ooors "'ith new sha.5t nelghlJoi'hood. 4 BR., 21! ba., A mNTION General General ~ rm. ~gc covef'ed VA or FHA Tarmt J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! '.. '• 1i:" 'l..--EASTS!DE 3 BR, 11! ba 5 BEDROOMS, B!G DEAL! MIWON $$$ VIEW ~ TRIPLEX- separated a1vay from the house a triplex with income potential or $440/mo. only $69,950 for all CALL 644-7211 carpeting, Hugt" kitclten -=I , with built-ins. Submit what .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'-iiiiiiiiiiOj -' cash you have for _Jlown payment let seller carry the balance. EvcTyonc qualities. "BEACH 'n COUNTRY" Perfect Combo! The warm I country decor of this rust1p 1 I 3 bedroom, 2 bath splll-leVtl , floors. $59, · rth horne. l{:e lot vtith 'boat S 3 Bd. & 2 DENS . c. F.Coleswo y ••. , ... qu'et s.reet. Of. 3 BATH HUGE 100;.; J4i)' LOT Best vi{!'\Y in Harbor View HUis. Thi!! lovf'ly home is bui lt on a lot \\"Uh a foreV<"r 180" Ocean vic-.t•. SHARP <l bedroom family room, 3 baths. ·"'fhree car garage. Beautiful pool. Indoor and outdoor liY'lng at its best. For more info. call • ~8'550 NEWPORT HEIGHTS r.ct·cntuntes A spectaculai -I Re1ltors ~0020 f('l'l"\ :i.. pi,sro. ASSUME Nearly lt3 ac1-e !or. e CALL ANYTIME • Boat/trailer access useful AREA vie"' of Nc"·poirt Hl:ll'bor'. \'/C'athcrrd open beams; Jann st;yll' dining roorn, cozy family roon1, v.•ith Its PRIME OCEAN VIEW 646-3928 or Eve. 645-2986 6°/o LOAN for storo ge of t'" ck'. r»ROPERTIES That's right! An old fashioned campers, boats, etc. Plus BEAlITCF'ULLY 1\1: A I N· Walker &Lee ~IAl tilt.ff FOR SALE 6% V.A. Loan and a house fenced rambling custom galore. Go~s 2 story, home featuring 2250 sq. ft. B Y STATE 01'' CALrF. 2-KIO sq. It. of luxury living. of living spa~. 3 large TAINED -CTJSTO~J BUILT ---------• NC\v pa.int, carpets, drapes. * 59'x290' LOT * 3 Bedroom o\vner unit ele-C-1 ZONE Call 545-9-191 Open C\'es. ov.·n firepla.ce and patio· - Cy se<'luded master bedroo~ -• TOT AL PRIVA su;te . . . a "NO-NO ' . Ask for ~Ir. \Ve~t Wann family room. Lovrly bedrooms, 2 baths,· 1 .. ,....,"m,..>,,6.,~,,',,'os,..,..,..c ~""''""""";O<J=M""'-·_ .. _ .. _642-56'18~~ 1 ~~~ing.!~~-~~t ~~~o.!~~lf Sf~~g ~OPEN nL o. "s FUN ro BE. N1CE1~ ganUy furnished. All built· $32,500 £.Z TEru.1S in kitchens. 6 closed gar. ages. 6424353. POOL-ASSUME SENSE" value at $83, : • 1;G:.;•:.;n;;;ec.ra;:.l;._ _____ ...;:G.;.•;;.••:.;•.;ac.l ______ I landscaping . a once in a room, heavy shake roof, lifet'ime bargain • call no\v, covered patio. And best of PETE BARRETI -REALTOR- * 4 Bedroom home (huge master BR! + family room + den, 3 bath!!, many ex- tras. Quiet street. $58, 700 Low _,, OK! Don't ml• ' Private drive 10 Deane Gar-this! ·---, ' I d.,,Mooc-LHoME' ""a1 GRUBB & ELLIS co.~ 1 two·slory entry. Vaulte<I 67'7080 · 1"9 ...... !11' ... "J 844-2535. all, a lo\v 7% assumable r loan. $42,500 full price & . . VETERANS YOU ;\lAY $3600 takes? 1 ....................... .... 642·5200 * C·2 Property -Newport Blvd. 1Vith :JO' x 30' building. $36,000. ceilings. Formal dining. •!!!!!!!!!""'~'""'"'!~~~:!:'H J King r;h:e master. Roman QUALIFY 4'0R A NEW larwin realty inc. CHARMING liltilljtlill(liijllilltffl;olJ LOAN. CALL '42·2535. equal hoU>ing opply. TOWNHOUSE I I OPENTILO •n'SFUNTOBENJCEI 9684405 (24 hrs) "WHAT A BONUS" Roy Mccardle Realtor 1810 Ne\vpor, Hlvd., C.t.l. ~!!~~~t ~~~n :~en: Ve~~~~2!d y~l'i ··! poolside>! Custom Roman-Cl'i;tionally nice vie-.v home "-.i' style pool. 3 huge palios. 2, 3, 4, or 5 be<lrooms to .J Park·like grounds. Seller aN.-ommodate any stze tarn,-, , liquidating . take -advantage. ily. Lovely pool sizl' yard, · 0 Transfer loe.n. cau now to Asking l86.IXX>. Cati ~~,. , view, 847-8010. HARBOR VIEW HOMES Super clean Carmel mod el on corner lot . 3 bedrooms, family room, formal dining area, 2 baths. Large private patio. Land included at $69,900 . COZY 2 BEDROOM HOME + IJNIT Located on lovely tree·lined Corona del Mar street. Red bri ck, firepl ace. all ne\vly painted back unit in rear. Onl y $69,500. LUSK HARBOR VIEW HILLS Lush landscaping surrounds th is charming 4 bedroom home, providing gracious indoor outdoor living. Separate play yard featured . $93,900 fee TAX PROBLEM Here comes shelter; ne\Y four plex with one 3 bedroom unit and three 2 bedroom units. Lots or parkin g, closed garages, good loca· tion close to shopping , 5 1Ti inu tes to beac h. $115,000. BORDEAUX MODEL BIG CANYON DelighUu! 3 bedroom, 3 bath end unit with ocean view lavishl y decorated with ou t· standing carpets, drapes and _ wallpape r. Large lot. Private master bedroom terrace. $145,000. NEW AWARD WINNING CONDOS Choice of models, location, decor. Near ten· nis courts, pool. Excellent terms, trade, lease/option . Nev,,port Beach. One example, 3 bedroom for $68,500. BALBOA ISLE RESIDENCE OR DUPLEX Llltle island water!ront pier & slip. 4 bed· rooms. 4\0 baths, dining room , family room. This Spanish 2 story with tile entry and wrought iron trim is a real charmer. You'll Jove the chart room. $239,500. PRIVATE GATED COMMUNITY Bay, beaches and boating facllities avail· able for your use. Lovely home-move.in condition. Sunny patio and custom gardens. $72,500. • 644-1766 ~ ColdweR,Bankar i!b."EAlTOAS 1 •--•I 'I 16!;! 2161 Sen Joequin Hi111 Rd ., N.B. • ' ~ 2 Story secluded unit . fea- twing 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, N H • hts oversized patio St. beautiful ewport e1g carpets &_ paint. ~pacious -========::::: J ust listed _ fantastic bar· grounds \\1th beautiful pool 625 Sq. ft. Bonus Rm \\'ith ]llun1bing !for bar or batl1! Room for 2 pool tables. 4 bedroon1, 2 bani. tine shag 548-n29 0Pf.NTIL8 . 1rs fVN TOBEN/Cf_I -, fl ~~ ~t1';, ';; CHARMING ~ -gain • Jarge 3 bedroom, & landscaping._ Lots.of trees, family room, prime Heights ocean breeze.in quiet adult location. ()y:ner transferred onlr community. Perfe~t 10- -ntust sell! His loss _ your cation near Ne..\'J)Orl Back THE REAL ESTATE RS ~~...:..·0111 *BEST BUYS* Lag Bch Lot $8500 Canyon lake Lot $18,500 2 BR Duplex $36,500 Beach Home $59,500 7 Inc Units $59,500 Beach Duplex $76,SOO Call 00\Y for details. &1z..1m 1797 Orange Ave .. C.M. ~ ~ -OCEAN VIEW' !lard to believe but only $30,900 Juli price. Slt on your deck, watch t:1c boats & en-joy the good life. 846-1384. HUNTINGTON HARBOUR. l!fAUY IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Located in privale commun· lty, near the beach. L<l~ly 4 BR, 2 BA home, new car- pets &: drps. low mainfel")o Mee. cooslder renting. $48.500. 400L17° I C.I. NEWPORT Cl!EST Newport Beach Luxury Loffl'd !Iv nn cell, frplc. Ii: wt!t bar, pool, j11.cuzzl & tt nnis courta. 4 BR. 2 ~~ ba, 1?2.995 Tustin Relax &: enjoy the pcaeerul malnt fret condo, 2 BR, lloi ba, only $21,500. Russell & AMOC:ta1e1 22311 Brookhurst, HB (714)~7'187 • . barbeque. Convenience lo-EASTSIDE cation for schools, shopping, 1 · gain S52 500 Bay. Priced only $30,500. CALL ~115i Open Eves. 546-5880 Open Eves. & access. $40,950. Call Sharp 3 Bedroom home with "ii;iiii~~~~~~ 54&-2313. 2 Baths. 1\ssun1e 5%% GI Ii ~.-.HERITAGE . • REALTORS General Arnold Sroyre1 his b1en n1med Salesman ol th• Month at 01.1r C0511 Mesi olltce. Since IOinlng Walker & Lee In 1970, Arnold has earned 1ever1t d11tinc:t1ve ewards, Including s1111m1n ol 1he year lor his othce,' and • member ol tlle Top Twenty In th• company. He 1nd his !amity IPl8 '!' Cost" Mesa. l ndivldval& like Arnold Broyles ire the r~•son why Walker & Lee 1ells 1,000 home1 •day. C11!1 him, (714} 5'1·t•t3 Walker &Laa llliml~ I ~ -f,.. HERITAGE OP<"1"" """'\10::; "11 ::c:,,Boat gale ''. camper MAKE OFFER l{il(IJ\ll Jca.. co:rs '&::~.~5, E~=~fij . . REALTORS -·~ WALLACE Invites offers on this 1800 MID PENINSULA REAL TORS "I· fl. 4 Btdroom • home. -546-4141-Bcautilul decor, v.·ood pan· BUY A BARGAIN! Liquidalion forces sale of 3 BR, 2 BA, Newport Hghts home, gas Bl, fireplace, Jam rm, 15x30 H&F Pool, 8~% fin avail. All oilers \\'ill be considered. Call Realtor for info. 645-6646 .. Roomy cottage \vith commer. eling, \\'allpaper and good cial zoning just 60' from (Opt:n Evenings} carpet!!. El.cgant setting on beach. Presently a home, spacious lo:. Room for boat can be shop, office or ? ? 1 J ~========! J or trailer. ~~'. + parldng, fenced . NEWPORT 546-5880 Open EvH. General BKR 6<>-6712 0, 675-1632 BEACH Gener•I Il's got evezythlng . 4 bed-....6'> HERITAGE MACNAB IRVINE -~-----""'----~-- FABULOUS VIEW-POUNDING SURF Privacy of China Cove-MuJ,ti·level w/ele· vator-3BR's, 2 baths. Shower & dress ing room for beach. New cpts., drps. & newly pai nted & paneled. $143,!)()0. "B. Morphy 642·8235." (s34) - TURTLEROCK CON00-$52,400 Plan #2: 3BR/LR around atrium. Prime · location on park! Martha Macn@ 642-8235. (s33) BLUFF'S FINEST room, raniily room, fonnal . • REALTORS dining room, 20' x 40' paol ... !!!'!!!~!!!!!!!!!!~~~~ wHh pool •weep & jacuzzi. VIEW _ $45,000 Large corner lot wlth boat door & oversized double r.ar-You can Stt the ocean from age. Just listed at 184,500. this spacious I am i l y Hul"T)'! re!ride~ on larae lot in CALL 540-llSl Open Eves. quiet cul-de-sa.c sti'fft. Ex· ~~HERITAGE . • REALTORS tra bonus is the assuntblc 5%% loan!!! 646-7711 - Open eves. BAYFRONT LOT Walker &Lee Best Cd~I location. 50' x 100'. :::::;;~';;";:'::;':;;';;";;':;'~:::'.. 0\\11er transrc.rred. Anxk>Us _ for quick !Rile. U>an can be EVER STOLEN subordinated. Submit any A DUPLEX otter. $129,500. Call 645-8.fOO. Try th•: two 2 bedroom z QfflCESSlR)'INQ 't'O!JI 2'JN Tit.I_ units .:. double garage In- [ [ come of $3750 per yenr. V. t:, ~ Co~ Aod<lng 135.950. Try YD"' . --~·...-_ own price owner says SELL! Call Red Carpel, 4 BDR-LUCKY GI Realtor•. &JS..so,~soc.·--- NO DOWN TERMS or low MESA DEL MAR ' LARGE LOTS 45 x ll8 IS TI-IE SIZE of this valuable close 10 eve~ ~ lo.. So!id .2 !xlrm. coUage ~ " guest unit, vacant now. * * * * * * ~1 (·1 SO x 100 FT'. LOT sutTOlUli• this like new Corona Hlld.H lands home. 3 Spac bdrms., 2 bath\, lar'£e pa & yard area. YOUR CHOICE $69,500 llnivertity Realty ·-t ;i ."lOOl E. Cst. Hl:V)'1 6'13-6510 SOUTHSIDE SWEETIE 01arm·packed 2 BR hide- away in best Old CdM cation. Walle to 1urf. Huge R·2 lot . add a unit later. Hurry! $62,9Xl. Call 645-8400: I I I Tll ':~f v. E. no...nt & Coi • I ,.,,,..,....~. " • Single level 3BR unit w/open view Warm· ly decorated for total livability.· $68,500. "Helen Wood 64+6200." (s20 ) [Irvine I do\vn to all othen on Oils Lovely 4 b(trm, bo1ne In ln1maculate 4. bdrm.. 3 IJc.aqU!ul MNa dcl Mar, oil baths. Olntr\g rm, built-Ins, qu!l'\, tree llned !ftrec1. Bit· dlshw:uhcr. PV iJ to l'I c inl, carp;;--drape1, wocretc LOVELY new spy g I a fireplace. Covered r.Oo, drtvc, doubl~ gurRJie· Nicely home>, lot' sale -or Jeue a,i. J-u I h Ing JN R le r a I I, landscnpl'd, f>rtct"(I ID M!ll'. lion by owner, 2 BR, den, S~rlnlder. l!onl I< rear MORGAN REAL TY man.v xtru. Prof. Ind~ ·'ill~B~L';°Re~tors 673-6642 _675.6459 i ;~;,"~:.,.tub " poo; tOI Dover Drive 142·1235 1144 M•cArthur IU• 1200 Newport ... ch, Cllltornl1 1211:1 • OCEAN VIEW -$2.'1,950. J. j ~ ClrcullU' 1treet ot tine 1 • · ·.. homftt 3 Bedroom• ln-tn a " e duding ...,,, fadllty. Plll'IY -4 S..'drooms, 4\i' Baths room, entertainer& poUo. pool t00m, ~ A lllp B~athtaklng vlew.. Aaf.. $!!;10,000 .. 673-l'IM 6U-0303. ":I , Vic .11 home w/gre~ R , X ':.~· :i ~¥· on Ocean lllv.:. ~l!:l,500. 615-4048. . 1 btJPU:X con\er, cMrmini' by owner. SOO Polnaettle... 1 Open 1-5 daily. '16 tnt. ~ I I I I I ( • b 0 • t 0 ., -. . -, /' Lagu~a Be~eh · EDITION Today's Final N.Y.·Stoeks I VOL. 116, NO. 3·12, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1973 TEN CENTS 1 ~ain Be~ch ·Plan Returning to Coastal Board After se veral' closed s e s s i o n s evalua ting legal threats aga inst ttte Main Beach Park, the Laguna Beach City Council Wednesday deferred action on the park for a week. Tbe ,council· was faced with bids for the park construction, the lowest of which wu $50,000 above estimates, with threats cl .a CQt1rt actiQO if it undertakes demo}ltioo GI. buildings and parking areas }Yhile la~t is delayed, and the primary of a law 8Ult against · the c.optcll . . lervation permit enabling , consti:uction. Belilnd this ' multitude ol woes, the • council is receiving increasing criUcism by citizens oo deslcn points ol tbe park, primarily the belgbt ol the dirt mounds planned to 1eparate tbe park lrom tbe noise and burly-burly ol CoaJt lligbway. lt wu learned today that the city Is proce«llng with what could be termed a "faikafe" plan to counter the law Ml\I bnluR]it by resident John Gabriels. ,Under the plan, the city would 1eek I ~ permit lrom the South Coast Zone Regional Conservation Commission which this time would consider the city's envln>runental Impact report !or the proj- etc. Gabrlels' lawsuit contends that the coastal commission is required to review the EIR, that it didn't, and iherefore acted illegally. . A se~d pennit would cut off that legal argument, but still could delay start of the park for four months during a second round of waiting for appeals to the state commission and possible new litigation. Time clearly is the enemy of the city now. If the fall-safe plan is undertaken . Fifth District County Supervisor Ronald Caspers would be the man to initiate it at the region~! coastal commission. A commission member, Caspers has been a stout supporter of the 1.1ain Beach Park plans. As bis aides pointed out, Caspers previously supported the plan before the commission and arranged for county revenue sharing grants for the pioject. "Ron just wants to do what would expidite' the ability or the City to develop the park," Tom Fuen tes, executive assis- tant said. Caspers himsel f was in Washington D.C. and not available for comment however. Fuentes said he was certain that the supervisor had decided to bring up the matter at the Monday meeeting of the regional cOrnmission in Long Beach. He · said the only concern is over whether or not the commission's recmslderation of the park would in fact help out. City Attorney Tully Seymour indicated that the delays built into !he procedure could make any aid by the fail-safe plarl questonable. However, Seymour said that since L.-"c~~~~~~~~--• • ......... OU· Il Cl IVI on Talks End~d ·Israelis . Acc·ept I u~s. Peace Plan By Tbe A.-lated Preas The Israeli state radio said today Israel accepted a five-point plan worked o•I throo&b the United States !or a settlement witll' Egypt. • . Tbe radio qootad loreigD .,,.,._,"" mts in Tel Aviv, who in tum quoted government suorteS. Other well-j>lact'd IOYermaerrt ~ aak("~? ... e ... , the report WU •;a1oee to the tnrtb." Tbe <GITOopoodeala, not -..i. ...,. -to ... ·-the inl°""'lli>n tn a brieltna by a llOl'em- ment. IOUfte. ' Tbe radio Nid the plan was reacl!ed In , talkl behreen Secr<laey ol State Henry A. KW!nger and his aidea tn talks in Cliro and Te1-Aviv. ~ loreign ~ts. the broadcut said the dauses were: -A prisoner of war exchange "as soon · a.s possible." -I\ !Upply corridor !or tbe encircled Egyptian 3rd Anny that would be U.N.- supervised and run through Israeli lines. But Jt ·would include no weapons, and In no way be cootrolled by Egypt. -Removal ol the Egyptian ,blockade ol the Ba~l-Mandeb Strait, lsi:ael's vital outlet to the Indian Ocean. -NegoUations between Iaraeli and Egyptian military commanders to ar- ran8:e a inore convenient ceue-firt line for ·the two aides. -Direct peace negotiations between Israel and Egypt, once the first four points are fulfWed. Kl9slnger flew to Jordan and Saudi Arabia alter opendlng a day tn· talks with President Anwar Sadat tn Cain>. Kilslnger's usislant tn char&• ol Mid- Suspeets Seized In 'Execution' Murders of Nine • ll!JlLETIN SACRAMENTO (AP) -Two men -. taW lato cm1od7 -Y for ... ..-.., la !be UOC11tlorHlyle aumler of able people tn a -ry raral home, bt- vtlllpton reported. SACIWIENTO (UPI) -Police amred with sawOckff abotguna arrested a suspect tn a downtown Sacramento boiel today in the "execution'' style murders' of nine persons tn calllornll '1 wine coun- try. . '!be luapecl, tden!ifled as Doualas-E~ Gretller, :a, w11 led bandcul!ed by eijllll beavlly .anned officers lrom the hcitel and whisked away tn a polio! car .• I\ police spokeaman aid Iha bole!, wbicb ad~ "family ntea, 11 1'8S MAIS MIJltDl llS SHOCK SMALL TOWN -Story, P ... 3 1take<I out earller Jn !be day Iller ·t ....... -led !or ~~,In tbe CUI 'INl'I ._.ied "I"' !bore. ' . A -ol !be men'I rowr disdooad clollllas beUeved uaed tn lbe lllUI murd!n, .....,. and ._ lllestdl1 -1n • .......,. pnoedltts Ille 1l1yqs. -m1n lied down 1 Ore escape (See StJSPICf, Pqe I) . r die East alfairs, Joleph J. Sisco, emerg- , ed from ,talks with Premier Golda Meir in Jerusalem and told newsnen: "[ feel opti~k:." Sewage ~ees Will Go Up In Laguna Sewage fees in Laguna Beach are &oing up with tremendous increase& due to heavy commercial and Industrial water users. The Laguna Beach City Council I i>' proved a new concept billing system Wednesday which equates sewage feeS to water usage, the theory being that what goes in, come1 out and goes to the city sewage plant. An exemplloo system will be available to certain· businesses such u plant nut'Serier whlcb-may-use a large amount of water but do not produce much sewage. • Tbe council's action wai met angrily by Legion Laundromat owner Jack Overholt. • • .· ·: . DllY _;,.;,~:·,,.;... LAGUNA · eEAcH ·FiREMEN ·CLEAR 6E.BR·1s ·wHi:ii·E· cAR· PLow Eo .1NT0 GARAGE TH1s MORNING Overholt said he paid "$1,100 a year for water and now "fl,300 a year to DriVer Dorothy Ann AUbuStine Unhurt After Dust Cleared ·~" l:llg h Drlve ;,Afi,r :Srft1s~up · get rid of it." · . 'lbe sewage rate for homes will be at a fised rate ao no matter how much water an individual home uses now, its rate will remaln constant. The fiml ntes are based on a stattstical atudy which arrived at an average .home water usage. Residential lees, too, will .be going up. Car Rams Lagun:a Garage Drive r U1iliurt A fter Slw ttering Accident The reason for the increased fees is a city requirement invest $160,000 this year in the All90 Water Management Project. That bill alone would amount to a zr percent -lo lees for all users il spread acroaa the board. ' Pq.nel Approves Social Security Benefit Hike ' I •· A car plummeted of.£ High Drive into a closed garage in Laguna Beach at 9:15 a.m. today, ripping through a waU . The driver escaped injury. Driver Dorothy Ann Augustine, 39, of 425 Hill St.. bad only a small scratch when the car landed. Officer Carmen Pollastro said li.ls. Augustine caught her clog-style shoe between the gas pedal and the floor of the car when making a tul'n north onto High Drive from Allview Terrace. She looked down to see what had hap- pened. " . ' "By the ti me she looked~up she' was on her way through the garage," Pollastro said. . The car . hit the. garage of Michael and P.1aureen Haag,! 410 atawtl)ome St. Their house lrorita . Ori· .Hawthorne .but .the garage is on High, ~e-· 1; ·-:-, Mrs. Haag was the 'only one home when she heard the crash. "I thought the house had exploded,'' she said. Police said major structural dam~ge resulted to the garage, as well as damage to stored equipment inside. "But as ·for 'the car, if the windshield hadn 't broken she could have driven it away," .pOJlastro said. "There wasn't even a flat 'tire. I couldn't believe il." "It sotmded like a bomb had gone off," said Anne Grapdy of 462 Hawthorne SL . ~l· ~t-it bad -bit. my 1 house, it was so cloae." Agnes Durbin of 568 High Drive was in her car ready _to pull into the stre_et whea.. the Augustine car went by and disappeared over the bank. . "She just missed w:," Miss Durbin said. ' WASlllNGTON •(AP) -Divided ·llouse · and Ways and Means Committee stamped final approvlal today 11J voice !'Ole a blD lo bite Soclol Socwlly benelitJ 11 percent next year and to tncr.11e the poyroll-tax wap baae !or them. Under · the plan, expected to be ready lor U-actloo oat -t. lhn. would • Earl y Meet i1igs Mea 1i 'Deli Dinners' for Council be a i-.. -la lodal 9e<urlty The Laguna Beach City Council has benellb Dell Y-.,. 7 per<enl cominl started meeting at 4:30 p.m. now Instead la April'• drocka ml amthar 4 ........,1 ol the usual 7:30 p.m '"'•rt and that IL.Jiii)''• cbecb. -· ''!!lo iDcreaal -Id be financed by brings up a problem. What do they hiking U. payroll tu wap baae _ ··do ahciut dinner?. the level ol ..._ against whkti Social Mayor Roy Holm has stressed Secwity tua IN paid -to •1S.t00 nnly a hall hour be tak<n !or evening elfectlve Jon. I .. Thi eun-mt ''1'81!f · 'meal, 80 !or the Wednesday moeltng -Is IOI to Co to flt;• Jail: I tbe council .....00 Jots' of ~ity Illa!! under, existing law. There would be no memben sent out !or sandwiches. cbarri,e In the current I.Iii ~ Soctal Where they sent out to II Sto)\le~en, Securilj tu rate -'/Ut. a dell lamous !or having a j\lll911 '!be Nlmr lldmtnlllratlon lavon rai. aandwlc:bes each oomed after a lamous lnl Soctat8ecurtty beoellta by 10 pertent penonality, real or llcUonal. \ effective with next July'• checks. • Well, wtio got what? /' ' . . \ Ci\y Finance Director Tom Meade got Jaclde Wasllbllfn, counoll aide, got · a "Bonnie and Clyde.n a "Jobn L: Sullivan." City Clerk Dorothy Musfelt got a · City Attorney Tully Seymour played "Mickey Mouse." It comenalive and simply got a corned Mayor Roy .llolm"ordiestrator oJ the ~Ji.slain,.;;.?.?..'\" oni':; "'f· Bo d bo deW JTleeting tfme, IOl a "J,Sl Bacb/' ~ltm:ith :' ~~rru7 1u~ch Coonctl•membera' Phyllis s""""1 and slct wldi Cllie littie drawings on It. Carl · J?.'""°" _eaclr got ..'.'_Boilnie and ~ LMttt City Ml!nager Al Thea! got Cl)'des. ,.,. 1 "Honry Aldrich" named alter the Vice mayor Pete Ostrander got · a ratllo prOjp"am.' "John W~" No one 80t a "Richard Nllon" (for Weguaril Chief Skip Cooner_ ,got. a wllldl Stoltlemyers declines to l~t uJoe Paloota." · ' ' aandWlch ingredients, simply saytng: City Tl'ea!urer Peg Morreale got a "You .... r know what you're going "Shakespeare Oil rye." to get with this one." \ Gabriel's case is built on the £allure of the com mission to co~ider the park EIR, a reconsiderati on of the project \Yith an evaluation of the EIR would be "a way of curing any alleged prob- lems." Gabri els has filed suit against the city. !he regional coastal conservation commission and the . State Coaatal Conservation Commission. Seymour said It did not appear likely the city could file a counter suit to protect itself from damages caused by delays due to court fights . Glenneyre Structure Under Fire Laguna Beach City Council support for the Glenneyre Street parking struc- ture had seemed solid as the Rocl;: of Gibraltar. lt wavered Wei!nes<lay. Councilwoman Phyllis Sweeney called the proposed structure a ' ' w h I t e elephant" and councilman Cart E. Jobnlon said that at tbe proposed park:: ing meter rates, the tupayen of tbe city would be subsidizing parking benefiting ooly the downtown merel)anta. · fl str~w voie taken at the imistance ol Councilman Charlton Boyd iliOwed the fate ol lbe structure hung Oil a 2-2 vote with Mayor Roy Holm tn tbe middle. Holm said he had been in favor of the structure at the parking meter ratea reached by compromise with leaders . of -the successful .meterJee referen- dum, but, he conceded that Sweeney and JohnsOn's viewpoints had swayed him. The cotmcil djd initiate repeal of the 1 referendum-hit 7»-Cent-an-hour meter in- crease, establishing the parking fees at 16-cents ·an hour for city meters and 25 cents an hour for meters in the Festival ol Arts-Sawdust Festival area. The council agreed to increase meter · fees to 15 cents an hour on Feb. l , , 1975. The money will be placed in a · special lund lrom wbiCb $30,000-annually would be diverted to the city general lund. Those steps · were the ones agr~ to by the parking referendum committee •. But prominent in those recom- mendations was the construction of the Glenneyre parking structure on the site of the present parking lot between Legion , ,and Cleo Sh-eels. · Councilman Johnson was the first to • raise objection to construction of the structure at the rates proposed. He said the structure itself would lose $42,000 annually although parking in the city as a whOle would generate an estimated $100,000 annually !or parking lot develoi>' ment plus tbe $30,000 paid to the general lund. "It seems to me we're stepping off on the wrong foot,'' Johnson said. Johnson Nid that with a money Joser like the Gleoneyre structure, it would be impossible to proVide addiUonal park-. ' (Sot STRUC'l'IJRE, Page %) ' ; ~-----....... , 0r-g·J ,_...,..., ~_. I .. Weatlter Some log or low clouds nlgbt and mornin&.bours but Otherwise sunn1 is the fo1ecast for Friday. Higlls at tbe beacbes In the 60s rising to 75 Inland. Overnight lows tn. the 50s. , I lNSUt•; 'l'f»UA." I • Three YJNmbns of a /ornr fa mUy, h<.ld hostage by two i<ri\ escapees, waited ttntil their OOJ>" tors fe ll asleep and nm out ihe house and ttcaped. StOTJI, page• 1 4. • • 1.. M. llWlll H C11i"'1Kll le C1rMr Clrlllt' 1t ci..u11i. .... , (Oll'llct If, --.. °'"" NOiiet• 'U e•iw1a1 "'" .,, •111t1lzl Wililll )NI FINM:e *41 ,.,. .... It .... '' lllfolu.. 116 Altft .. ....,.. JI =-'": Natt.Ml '"-a °'"'"~ ... ,, ~ u SIMtt ..,._. .... T-. --.... -. ........ ,... ... --. .. • • Threat by Anaheim Police Assailed on Coast By WIWAM SCllRE18ER Of !tie 0.11., l'lllt S1111 • Thp Anaheim police and city offlclall ~Y had no tomment on a thrtat by dissenting policemen to take on the role of "super cops" by ci ting drivers for even the most minor violatloos, If the city falls to bargain with them over new contracts. 1 But several Orange Q)ast police chiefs contacted by the Dally Pilot had plenty to say. 11Tbat kind of conduct could set back ~e:S!ional law enforcement a decade/' sal<l Newport Beach Chief B. James Glavas, former president of t h e Irvine Faces Another Lag In VC Growth CUrrent projections have turned up another 10-year lag to the time when UC Irvine reaches the halfway mark in Jts growth to 271500 students, it was revealed today. Two years ago, university officials predicted UCI would enroll from 12,000 1--WJ.S.OOl_s.tudents in 19&:1. + ~ -- • At a btt1ddast meeting with the pres.s today, Chancellor Daniel G. Alrich Jr. said current estimates indicate that stu- dent population won't be reached until 1990. 'Jbat is despite a record enrollment this quarter in which 1,100 new students showed up instead or the 250 expected. "We will continue to plan in the e1- pectation lhat this campus will someday reach an enrollment of 25,000 to 30,000," Aldrich said. "But at thi! point we do not expect ·to reach ftiat ~axlmum ~lment as quickly as we had earlier pl{l.nned to reach it,'' he said. Current enrollment is 8,500. Aldrich said that additional con- struction on campus and new faculty appointments would be curtailed in keep- ing with the slower rate of growth. The chaocellor explained !hat the revised growth projections we r e ~ecessary because of changes In the estimated enrollment of the University of califomia system a.s a whole. At the lime the Irvine campus was planned in the early 1960.s, the University of California system expected. to reach an u1tlmate enrollment of 250,000 by the end of the century. That meant Irvine and seven other campuses a11 would have enrollments in the 30,000 1tudent range. But the birth rate and growth rate tn Ca1tfomia have not kept up with these projections, which were based on 1960 census data. Aldrich said the newest projecti003 for 1990 set Irvine and San Diego cam- puses with 10,000 to 12,000 students, Santa Barbara and Davis with 15,IXM>, Riverside with 8,500, and Santa Cruz with 7 ,500. The Berkeley and Los Angeles campuses would remain at their present sizes. Laguna to Have Italian Supper An Italian supper prepared by the Laguna Beach High School PTA will be served at 6 p.m. Friday in the high school cafeteMa prior to the Artists homecoming football game. Menu will include spaghetti, salad, bread, punch and coffee. The pMce is $1.50 for adults and $1 for students. Proceeds from the before-game supper will go toward PI'A projects at the high school. The Artists gridiron squad will meet Sonora High School at Guyer Field at 8 p.m. OIANH COAST LI DAILY PILOT TM~ c.t DAU.'f l'ILO'f, With ""ldl /1 _,,.,.._, ... ...,...~ " Pllbl .... .,. the°'""" C..tl l'lltll~ """""'· a.,.. nl9 9dltilw1' •r• pUblllNf, ,..,.., """"""' Frleir, ftlr C..11 MtH, H-.rt le9Cll. H11ntlngt011 ' 81K11/F"D1111t1M V1lll'y, Ug- '-dl, lrvlMl'-Odll'b9d: Mii S.n Cltmtmt1 fltft Juan <"•Dl1I••~. A 1lngl• AflloMI Miiion II P110ll1hlld S.1un1.,. Mf ..._,.YI The Pl'lnti"!.1 Pllblll#lint lllll'lt II It 2JO Wn; ••r Slttel, C.0.11 Mew, C.lllornll, no.. Rob•rt N. W.N ,,.,.Ide!!! Mii ~illltr J1c• R. C11rl.., Via l't .. idtnt ind Gtniw1l M.frwttl' Tho111•1 K11Yil '""' Th_,, A. M11tpf!in1 MIMtllll 1:.11 ... Clierln H. L.ot Ri11h1r4 r. Nill ....... ~IEdl!in ---222 • F.,.,t A••1111, fi'•llilf ~ttlll ,,0, ... 666, 926$2 ...... _ .Cl&ft M-1 D Wttt .. ,.,~ ~'-di: »11 H...,.., llovlntfd ,.. ... tMdl: 1"11 "'9dl ""'-'"•" 111111 °"""""! al NM111 II ta,,,.. .... fll .. b r 171•1 MMUf Cl lftelll Mtwrl I I '41.UJI a...-.... Al .... , ••• , 'fitllJ'I 1 ,....,,... • ~. Mn, Or..... C.... ._.llfllnt ~. ,.. -'"'"'-ln.trtlltflt, ..... _...,. "' ~ ......... ""'"' .,.,. .. ~ ...,...,, ~ ...,. ---·~--· .... dlM -· ~· ... Cllilte """'· ~ ----w °"""' .... _..,, ., ... ..,. ,.....,, fl!Ullwr ......... ,...,..,,. Colilomla Pe1ce Olflcen -•Uoo. "This would be • 1 complelab' lr• reot>OIWble 1ctlon In my hook and couldn't poulbl)' IC! to their bepefil," Glav11 ac14ed. Detocttve Cllel Bitty, -'dent of tbe Anabelm PaUce AaodlUon (APA), nid Wedneaday hl.s CJOOP LI seriously coosiderlna: the last ditch alternative of public 11.arraasment Al a meana to get the city to come to terms. Among other things, the APA Is demanding higher pay than lbe city is offering, better fringe benefit.I and the right to act as sole bargaining agent for the officers In the department. Barry llld he bopo1 tbe litultioo w..,1 come to the -for lellous Ucketlnn of drtvm, tiut ht said the ldu hun t btm rejected, either. Glavu Mid be doeall't 10e llftl' JuaUllcllloD for IUdl ID ICl!qa, wbldl be llld ... Glib' hurt tbe ...... IJI policemen In the eyes of the public. • "l can think of a lot of alternatives lo this kind of thing and the mor< I think about It, lhe more horrified I get." · Glavas' lhougbts were echoed by Hun- tingl<ln Beacb Police Chief Earle Robitaille. He catied the tactic a "San Diego technique, 1' referring to a aimllar Murder Claims Superintendent 'Assassinated' OAKLAND (AP) -The "Symblonese Liberation Army" bas claimed responsibility for the assassination of Oakland school chief Marcus Foster, and a telephone caller· says the chief of police will be the 11next" target, authorities said today. Police guards have been assigned to other city and school oCCi· cials In the wake of the hail of gunfire that killed Foster Tuesday and seriously wounded Deputy Supt. Robert Blackbum as they left the Oakland school admimstratlon building. · A spokesman for the Alameda County Coroner's office said it received a threatening call Wednesday night, naming Police Cheif Charles Gain as the "next" victim. Gain accepted a job as chief of police in St. Petersburg, Fla.,· but has not departed. · The message to a radio station fiaid Foster had been_ fo_und_ guilty of crimes against children and had been sentenced to death. Dist. Atty. Lowell Jensen called .the shooting an "assassination." Watergate Tapes 'Poor ' "Quality,' Says Secretnry W ASIDNGTON · (AP) -Pruident Nixo1.1's .personal secretary told a federal court today that portions of the sub- p:ienaed Watergate tapes. were very poor m quality and that it is humanly lm· possible to beer every word on them. "I cou1d not get every word," Rose Mary Woods said In describing the job of typing a rough lranscript of seven conversations between the Prealdent and key Watergate figures. Miss Woods, Ni.Ion's secretary for more than 20 years, said the transcribing wort took her nearly a month, working on and off, sometimes on weekends and often far lnto·lhe Dighl 1be Watergate pmecuUon force wants Village Bazaar Shopping Center Hearing Delayed Hearing dates on the Balboa Fun ?.one condominium project and Laguna Village Bazaar shopping center befort the state coastal commission have been extended.. for another 80 days. Both projects, which were denied permits by lhe Soulh Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission and then appealed, were set for discussion Wednesday In Burlingame. They were pulled off lhe agenda prior to the meeting to allow more study by commission planners and developers. Jon Konwiser is proposing to build 33 condominiums Jn place of the Fun· Zone amusement park on the bayfront in Newport Beach. The 75--000-square·foot bazaar a t Pacific Coast Highway and Bluebird Qm. yon Road ts planned by Mark Gumblner and Assoc. The next state coastal commission meeting is Nov. 28 in Santa Monica Civic Auditorium, at ~hicb time a vote may be scheduled on the proposed ad- dition of two nuclear reactors to the San Onofre power plant three mites south of San Clemente. Commiss ion planners are still working with Southern California Edison, San Diego Gas and Electric officials and with opponents of the project on possible solutions. A hearing was conducted a few weeks ago in San Diego. Laguna Urging School Election November Date Lag1D13 Beach school trustees have voted support for legislation to eliminate the "lame duck" period betwem the school board elections and the swearing in of new trustees. Under existing law, school board eloo- tions are held in April of odd-numbered years. Winners tn the elections, however 1 are not officially se~ted until July 1 following the elections. Board members agreed that the school board elections should be held In November of odd-numbered years so that they correspond wtlh g-al elec- tions. '"This would save money for the tchool di.strict," said Trustee Jane Boyd. Truatees allo agr<ed thl! winners In the election he 1t•ted Immediately on the bolrd. ' The board directed supt. Donald W oodlngton lo ..00 I letter ID the C.llfomla School Boardl Alloclation outlining the action In -1 of a change In election polldel. I fedml grand Jur.y to he>r !he tapes. Miss Woods said she first saw one or the controversial tapes Sept. .29, wben, at Nixon'.s ~equest, she began the task of transcribing them at the President's mountaintop retreat at Camp David, Md. "I went up there to try to listen - I U!e that word advisedly -to take down. as much as possible of the tapes that were subpoenaed.," she testified at a hearing before U.S. DistMct Court Judge John J. Sirlca. According to previous testimony, it WU Sept. 29 lhat the President expressed awareneS!I that recordings of two of the total of nine subpoenaed. con- venatlona couldn't he found. Slrtca catied lhe hearing to air the circumstances SWTOwuling a White House claim !hat the two tapes never existed. Miss Wood!, wearing a red knit dress 1114 I abfe Blring of pearls, aaid lhlit tranacribing the tape.I had been a "very djfricult job," and that despite working until 3 a.m. Sunday morning, and again all day Sunday after arising at I a.m. she was unable to complete a transcript of even one con,versaUon. Eight Girls Vie In Homecoming Queen Contest "A Moondanoe Masquerade" is the theme of traditional homecoming ac- tlvtUea this week at Laguna Beach High School. Eight comely high sobool glrla are vying for the title of 1973 homeooming queen. They are Diane Diaz:, Lorilee Goodall, Maria Stinett, Karen Clark, Donna Greenough, Susi Young, Teri Huston and Anne Rothing. Students will vote Friday on whkh of the princesses shall become queen . The queen and her court will be presented during half time ceremonies Friday night during lhe Laguna-Sonora gridiron fight at Guyer Field. On Friday afternoon, the annual homecoming parade, featuring t he princeSses, floats, football players, band, song and cheerleaders and Dag girls, will leave lhe high school at 1:40 p.m. 1be parade will continue down Short Street, down Legion Street, across Glen- neyre Street, and up Park Avenue. A pep rally will follow at Gufer Field . The homecoming dance will be held · from 8 p.m.-.to midnight Saturday at Top of the World Elementary School. The group "Prodigy" will provide music. Bids for the dance may be purchased at $3 per couple at the activities office. Laguna Schools' Insurance Up Tho Laguna Beach Board of Education ligurel It knows a good bargain wba1 it iees one . Monday • night, on recommendation from Business Manager Clyde Lovelady, the hoard purchased an allditlonal 12 million In llahllily Insurance for a scant !900. The action brinp the IDtal amount of UabllltY inlurllla! for the scl>ool district to '5 mJ!lloo, at a total cost of fl3,000. The board earlier had budgeted 115,000 for inlurance Ibis ytar. Lov.lady told board manhers Iha! the di.strict ahonld hive • goal of even- tually buJiD1 110 mlliloo In liability -· nld be "otronaly objects to any ch>ngc In practlc. from that which Is standard In ·the department tn 1>rder to ""~ !he )l'llllD't cm durlDc ..,.Uattons. .. r dan't tblnk tbil eahancea the image of polloe at all llld certainly Is not ....,_, tn tDY op!Dion, '' he said. "I alncer.Iy hope such a thing never haPlltfll down here but I think our guys baYe a JOt better .sense," Neth added. • Aides for Anaheim Chjef Dave Michael ma•Ucketing campaign by dissenting officers In lh8t city four years •go. "I tb4*. Utls Is completely ill~advised 1 n d completely counter-productive,'' ' Quick Action \ Pro1nised on Energy Bill ··· WASlllNGTON (AP) -Congressional leaders today promised prompt action on most or all of the energy saving measures req1,1ested by President Nixon in his address to the nation. Senate Interior Chairman Henry M. Jackson said his committee Will hold public hearings on emergency legislation today and report a bill out by Friday. Senate approval COl!ld be _ei pected ne1t week, Jackson said. On the House side, Democratic whip John J . McFall (l).CalU.), predicted ac- STATE ENERGY SOLUTIONS NOT ENOUGH? See Page 10 FUEL FOR PLEASURE BOATS Robitallle said. "II does nolhln1 for the department and certainly doesn't engender community retptct," - Robitaille Said that whenever the police In Huntington Beach have had slmllar • problems. it Is usually un90lidted ciUzen support that wins the day. CO&ta t.lesa Police Chief Roger Neth said he prefer red to refra.iil from 1COD)- mentlng on the veiled threat by his officers because ol the '1fraglle situa- tion" in the cily. Gary Mc!Ule, Anaheim's personnel director and the man in charge Of the city's side or the dispute, would not A QUESTION -Story, Page 15 - QUESTIONS, ANSWERS ON ENERGY PL.:IN TOLD, Page 40 lion on the President's propo.Sais before the December recess. "U he wants a bill, we'll give him a bill,"· said Rep. Torbert H. Macdonald UPI TlllPP!tt• SEIZED IN MURDERS Willie L. StnTmin From Pagel (!).Mass.), chairman of th!! House sub-SUSPECT comnuttee on power. . • · • • • · In'1tis Wednesday night address, Nixon atcused Congress of failing to act on any of the energy measures he sent to the Hill. The President said it was now "imperative" that Congress pass legislation (1) establishing' year-round Daylight Saving Time, (2) authorizing rela1ation of clean-air standards, (3) approving the tapping of naval petroleum reserves and ( 4) giving the government power to reduce speed limits nationwide and restrict working hours. Macdonald said Ni.loo already bad the authority to do most of what he asked and accusec: the President of playing "an absolute shell game" in blaming Congress for inaction. Sen. Mark 0. HaUield (R-Ore.), a member of the Appropriations Com- mittee, said the Office of Management and Budget "is sitting on over $20 million in energy funds" already ap- propriated by Congress. and '''as being hunted in the area. , The bodies of \Valier Parkin, 33, his v.·ife. their two children and five friends -all bound and gagged -were found Wednesday ins ide Parkin's new $6.5,00Q ran ch home in the "Sprawling vineyards in North-Central California, All had been shot in the head at close range with a revolver. Parkin owned the only grocery in the town of Victor, a community of 270 persons th ree miles east of here. A sal'e at the store \vas opened normally and emptied of all cash, .reportedly around $4,000. "It looks like the work or a madman,'' said the sheriff. "All of them appear to have been executed." He said the victims were tied and gagged and it appeared to be a "professional job." Jaworski: Has Assurance WASlllNGTON (AP) -Newly ap- pointed Watergate special prosecutor Leon Jaworski said today be had been given assurances by the White House that he bad the right to "sue the Pres i- dent," if necessary, in conducting his investigation. Jaworski told a House judiciary sub- committee the assurances were given by Alexander Haig, President Nixon 's chief of staff, before he agreed to accept the assignment to replace Archibald Cox as special prosecutor. "I wanted assurances beyond those that had been received by Cox," Jaworski said. He said Haig used the words "sue E/DRYER 139.95 the President" as an example of the complete independence Jaworski wou1d have. "Haig discussed the matter with the Presid ent and th en told me I bad that absolute assurance," Jaworski said. Jaworski was questioned about his belief that he had absolute independence to carry out the investigation in vlew of Nixon's press conterence statement Oct. 26 that he would not provide presidential documents to a special pros- ecutor. "Has the President's position changed?'' asked Rep. Robert W. Kartenmeier ([).Wis.). "Yes,'' replied Jaworski. E/DRYER 169.95 90 DAY CASH ........ "'""' CllDll 1815 NEWPORT BL VO. Downtown Costa MesHIDI 546-7711- commenL speclflcelly on the "super ClOP" proposal. "I 1111 confid"1t ,tbe clU.... of Anaheim will coriUnue IO' receive the protection they have always received and I think !he offloen will act wllh boneslY and Integrity," he said. McRae ,.Id he Is unsure of the status of negoUatlons since the contract talks were brokon off lhree ~ks aao. Anaheim officers staged. a prolesl march In front bf City Hall Wednesday. Ba!T)' said Wednesday that if the protesl did no good, the alternaU,.. -Including the "super cop" Idea - will be next. From Pagel STRUCTURE • • • Ing In other parts of lhe town. "This represenlJ a very louay business deal. These parking atruclures abould be self liquidating," he said. HI Just don't aee bow It makes business sense and I don't see how buslnessineo can propose It to us," Jobmon said. Richard Willetts, leader of the referen- dum which overturned the council's pr. posed 21'.k:ent-an-hour meter rate, asked Johnson what the solution was then. "I hate to say this because you've shown us the public doesn 't want it but the way to do it Is to raise it to 20 cents and 15 in the structure," ·1 by role for . the ove ~ B I coo ~ to r Johnson sald-sharpl"-.~--------1,--- Councllwoman Sweene¥ said s b e be~eved the structure was primarily· needed . for summer only and that It may go ~used a good part of the year. "We have to face the very real possibility of having a big white elephant on our hands," she said. During the straw vote, she said abe felt the 142.000 projected annual deficit of the structure would ''saddle the com- munity" while the council "did nothing for other parts of town." "How can we sit here and plan a deficit when there are· other ways of handling parkJn&?'' slleasked. . Cotmcllman Boyd strongly ·supported . construction of the faCili(¥ .. "These are here and now problems. Putting them off until tomorrow does eventually catch up with us." be said. Boyd .said the city was strangling in itl own traffic and be noted that Lagwia has a bad reputation for can-Ying out fine plans. He said that among others Filth District C.OUOty SUpervlsor R o o a I d caspers, member of the South Coast Zooe Regional Conservation Commlssloo, had noted "Laguna tends to make great promises but tends not to come through with very much." Vice Mayor Peter Ostrander refrained from comment on the .structure, but said be ~as in favor of it. Ma)'Q!' . Holm said be bad 1ided wilh the parking committee which unanimous- ly agreed to the structure's comtructioo but said Johnson had raised points he hadn 't comidered. "The logical coocluaJon leads to disasler. You're taking can off the streets (from meten which make a profit) and pulling them In 1tructur .. · that don't support themlelv ... " Holm said noting that that was "paying with taxpayers dollars to support the parking structure." No final action was taken on whether the structure should be built or not. Potted Plant Thief Strikes in Laguna Four polled plaots valued at 1311 hive been stolen from Richard P. Nall, 425 Arroyo Chico, Liguna Beach. The !heft Tuesday is lhe second heist of plants from Nall's porch aod fronlyard area. Taken were potted Ivy, a creeping Charlie, and a ChriStmas cactus. • ·- 7 • I I ~ • t • I . I . ·I ' I g I, I Saddlebaek . T oday's Fin a l ---N.Y. Stoeks • tr~""" .... ,. . . ' .VOL:. 66, NO. 312, 4 SECTIONS, 48-PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNI A THURSDAY, NOVEM BER 8, 1973 TEN CENTS . I -... -.-.. ----------------------------------------------------------~----------------~----_;J '-T '1reat by Analieim Police Assailed on Coast' ' . \ . . , "'. 'ii By WILIJAM SCHREIBER }','' l Of .. DelW ~1111 ll•ff ~ Top Anaheim police and city o(fictals rtoday had no comrQent on a threat by dissenting policemen to take on the role of "super cops" by citing drivers for . even. the most minor violations, if the city falls to bargain With them over new contracts. ~ But several Orange Coast police chiefs 1 cootacted by the Dally Pilot bad plenty I to say. I "That kind of conduct could set back professional law enforcement a decade," said Newport Beach Chief B. James Glavas, -former president of t h e California Peace Officers Association. "This wouJd be a completely ir- responslble. action in my book and couldn't po1sibly act to their benefit," Glavas added.,-, Detective ' Chet-Barry, president of the Anaheim Police Association (APA), said Wednesday his gn;>up is seriously •. considering the last ditch alternative or public harrassment as a means to get the city to come to terms. Among other things, the APA is demanding higher pay than the city is offering, better fringe-bepefits and the right to act as sole bargaining agent ror the officers in the department. Barry sald he hopf:s the situation won't come to the need for zealous ticketing of drivers, but. he said the idea hasn't been rejected, either. Glavas said he ·doesn't· see any justification for such an action, which he said can only hurt the image bf policemen in the eyes of the public. "I can think of a lot of alternatives to this kind of thing and the more 1 think about it, the more horrified I get." . Glavas' thoughts were echoed by Hun· tington Beach Police Chief Earle Robitaille. He called the tactic a "San Diego technique," referring to a similar \ sa id be "strongly objects to any $hange in practice from that which is standa rd in the department in order to put the pressure on during negotiations. / "I don't think this enhances the unage of police at all and certainly is not professional in my opinion," he said. "I sincerely hope such a thing never happens down here but I think our guys have a lot better sense," Neth added. Aides !or Anaheim Chief Dave Micha el • " ma ss-ticketing campai~ by dissenting officers in that city four years ago. "f think this is completely ill-advised an d completely counter-productive,"! Robit aille said. "It docs nothing for the department and certainly doesn 't engender C;'(lmmunity respect." Robitallle._~a id that whenever the police in f{untingtdn Beach ha ve had simil;:ir problems, it is usually unsolicited citizen (S.. 'SUPER COPS.' Page Z) • ¥Ille ~lan Ilasa...,L.. ' • ' Citizens Charge Input lgn~red • By GEORGE LEIDAL Of .. o.llJ" ...... St•ft' A majority of the citizens serVing on Irvine general plan study committees, complained to the city COWlcil today · that their contributions to the plan baYe beeJl ignored. Tuesday night, members of several study committees will carry a petition to the city council, former Irvine plan- ning commissioner Wesley Marr. said today. • Ir vine Faces Another Lag · In UC GroU7th .. l~ne S•••ll•P -:--•' . ' culrenl projectlooi[bave t~ up another .IQ.year log ~ the time wbm UC Irvine reaches tlie halfway mark in its growth to 27,$0l students, it was revealed today. Byatanden look over demolished cars iollowing 1 , broldlide collision Wednesday evening ob Univer· ' slty Drive near Culver Road. Donald J. Qbayle1 18, of Santa Ana, escaped injury. Quayle'lr passenger, Tpdd Travis, 17, of Tustin, was treated at Tustin Gomm unity Hospital for face and· ·arm lacerations plus second motorist. Norman B. Proctor, 20, both and released.· · Israelis Accept Plan Two years ago, university officials predicted ucr would enroll from 12,000 to 15,000 students in 1980. At a breakfast meeting with the press today, CllanceUor Daniel G. Alrich Jr. said current estimatea' indicate that stu- dent population won't.;. be reached until . 1990. . Kissi1iger Sess io ns Witli Two Fact ions Successful That ls despite a record enrollment this quarter in which 1,100 new students showed up instead of lhe 250 expected. Br '1'lle "-l•l<d Pross The Israeli state radio said today Israel accepted a five-point plan worked out · through the United States for a settlement witb Egypt. 1be radio quoted foreign correspond- ents in Tel Aviv, who in tum quoted government suorces. Other well-placed govemment sources said, '.10111'ever, the report WIS "close to the truth." The oorrespondeots, not identified , . were understood to have received the I • lnformatioo in a briefing by a govemf men! llOUret!. . _ .L> The radio said the plan was .reacneu In talb betweeo S..retary of Slate I Dr. Hartelius" . ' Former Lover Branded as Liar • By TOM BARLEY · 01 1111 ~ Pl* St•ff • LOS ANGELES-Prosecution witness Reba Vaug{m's character and testimony wer"' repeatedly attacked again 'here today as l)r. Ebbe Hartelius' ·taW,ers put on more de~me witnesse.! ill tbe ltCOl1d day of the eighlh three-da,..11tate hearing. .· ( HarteU.us, 50, of El Toro, is cberged with mOtaI turpitude and unprore•\onal "'nduct.' II .II _lllepd lhat his res:ted drugging of Mn. Vaughn, 31,, In her commitn'H!ilt 11 a narcoUcs, ad ·ct i. in 1• alter lhe pair bad lived at I I0\111'1 at her Costa Mesa hifme. • Tb8 Danllh-bom doctor's former paramour bu been repeatedly branded as a liar and a thiet by a 1etles of w1-whose Ieslimolly is designed to counter the effect of the atlractive blOnde'• earlier statement from the wi-stand. Bui lhe derense waa warned lnday by lllale belrll>C bfllcor John A. Wllld that be will nol lllow -• lhan 10 character wl-to Iett!fl' fnr Dr. Horte11111. -Illa dedlkn followed the cllarge by state laW)'tl"I lhat llOll ol tllt defense 111111Qoo1 "la lhe ri>oat blatant form of.....,,., Henry A. Kissinger and bis aides in talks in Cairo and Tel Aviv. Quoting foreign correspondents, the broadcast said the clauses were: -A prisoner of war exchange "as .. soon as possible." -A supply corridor for the encircled Egyptian 3rd Army tbat .would be U.N .. supervised and run through Israeli lines. But it would include no weapons, and in no way be controlled by Egypt. -Removal of the Egyptian blocka~e of the Bal:H!I-Mandeb Strait, Israel's vital outlet to lhe Indian Ocean. -Negotiations between Israeli and Egyptian military commanders to ar· range a more convenient cease-fire line for the two sides. -Direct peace negotiations between Israel and Egypt, once the first four points are ·fulfllled • Kissinger flew to Jordan and Saudi Arabia after spending a day. in· t~lks . with President Anwar·Sadat .in C~ro .. Kissinger's assistant. in charge of Mi.d· die East affairs, Joseph J. Sisco, emerg- ed from talks with Premier Golda Meir in Jerusalem and told newsmen: "I feel optimiStic." "We -will continue to 'plan in the ex- pectation that this campua will someday reach an enrollment of 1.5,000 to 30,000,'' Aldrich said. "But .at this point we do not expect to -reach that mpximum enrollment as quickly as we had earlier planned to reach It," he said. Current enrollment is 8,500. Aldrich said that additional con· struction on campus and new faculty appointments would be curtailed in keep- ing with the slower rate of growth. Kemper Declared Sa-,W., • The chancellor explained that the revised growth projections w e r e necessary because of changes in the es timated enrollment of the University of California system as a whole. At the time the Irvine campus was planned in the early 1960s, tbe University of California system expected to reach (See GROWTB, Page Z) Guilty in Grisly Case Glider Pilot Dies LOS ANGELES (AP) -A hang glider pilot plunged to his death Wednesday after jumping with a giant kite off a bluff on coastal Palos · Verdes Peninsuala, officials say. The victim was Charles Kocsis, 26, North Hollywood, identified. as treasurer of the Southern California Hang Glider Association and a film editor for NBC television locally. SANTA CRUZ (API -A jury lo?nd hulking Ed/Rund Emil Keml\"r ill guilty and sane tOOay in the butchery of eight \\'o rn..en lncludirig his mother. It-waa '"Kemper's second conviction ror murder in 10 years - a total of 10 killings. Tiie panel of ·Six. men and six women deliberated five houn before retum1ng a verdict against the 2.5-ye,ar-old defen· dant, who was .. convi'cted at age 15 of killing hit-·paternal grandparents, for which he served five lyears in' a state mental hospital. • 111 agree with your verdict entirely," said Santa cruz County Superior Court Judge Harry Brauer,· Who announced the verdict. Kemper was IOlllld guilty o eight count> or first-dqree murder and 1d· Judled sane by the jury. • The judge set sentenciJUI for 8:30 a.m. Friday. After the venlict was read, Kemper, a huge figure of 6-foot-9 and lllO pounds clad in an orange J'il Kllifonn , whispered quieUy tO his lawyer. He was impassive tiU'OUihoul. • - Kemper pleaded Innocent by reaaon of insanity to the killings. told how · and ·why, ~ killed six hitch- hiking coeds, his motlier and ber friend . He beheaded seven victims and ate the flesh of several. Last wEiek, be admitted the 1 murders on the witness~1:30d and said he should be tortured for \Vbat he' did. . . I. Murder Claims Superinrendent Assassinat,ed' OAKLAND (AP) -The "Sym bionese Ubention Army" has claimed responsibility fo< the assassination of Oakland school chief Marcus Fosler, and a telephone caller says the chief of police will be the ''next" target, authorities said today. Police guards have been as~gned to other city and school offl· clals in the wake of the hall of-gunfire that killed Foster Tuesday and seriously wounded Deputy Supt. Robert-Blackbum as they left the Oakland sch~ administration building. , A spokesman for the Alameda County Coroner's office satd It received a threatening can Wednesday night, naming Police Cheif Charles Gain as the "next" victim. Gain accepted a j<lb as chief of police In St. Petersburg, Fla., but has not departed. The message to a radio station said Foster had been found guilty of crilllts against children and had been sentenced to death. Dist. Atty. Lowell Jensen called the shooting an "assassination." Lasl year, when the city hired Wilsey and Ham to prepare the city plan, councilrilen said Irvine citizens would provlde the "genius" or '"vision" to make the city plan unique. qounctlmen turned away urban plan· ners ·of the stature of William Pereira ~ tbey wanted to "democr8tize" the geDellll plan process. _ · On the basis of the $200,000 preliminary plan unveiled last Thurday, members of f~ of the six general plan citizens UPIT..._.. · SEIZ!D IN MURDERS Willie L. 5tffYman •' ·~.~~ Su8p~.ts .seized In 'Exec11tion' Miirders of Nine BUU.ETIN SACRAMENTO (AP) -Two men were taken Into custody today for questioning in the ei:eeutlon-style mu rder of nine people in a luury rural home, in- vestlgaton reported. SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Police armed with sawed-off shotguns arrested a suspect in a downtown Sacramento hotel today in the "execution" style murders of ltlne persons in California 's wine coun· try. The suspect, identified as Douglas E. Gretzler, 22, was led handcuffed by eight heavily anned oUicers from the hotel and whisked -away in a patrol car. A police spokesman said the hotel, which advertises "family rates." "'as MASS MURDERS SHOC K SMALL TOWN -Story, Pago 3 staked out earlier in the day after two men wanted for questioning in the case ·were reported seen there. A search of the men's room disclosed clothing believed used in the mass qiurders, weapons and money allegedly taken In a burglary preceding the slayings. Another man Oed down a fire cape and was being hlD1tcd in the area. The bodies of Walter Parkin, 33, his , wife, their two children and five friends -all bound and gagged -"·ere found \Yednesday inaide Perkin 's ne\v $65.000 ranch home In the spi'awling vineyards In North-Central 'California. All hnd bc<:n shot in the head at close range with a revolver. De!enoe attorney M•lthew Kurillch continues to atgue that !O cbaract..- wll-ohauld be allowed 1r1&r earlier (lloe HARTEUUS, Pap~) He ·was arrested in Pueblo, C.Olo. last April and his tape-recorded confessions gave the ......,.. to a llOfles ol unoolvod murderl plaguing Santa cruz olliclala. Jn the tapes played in court, Kempu Parkin owned the only grocery In the town of Victor, :i. communi1y of '---------------------·r ·(See susPECr, Page 1> •· . 1 t . - • • 1 ' committees say their recommendations A have been left out of the plan. $ Marx said a majority of the members 1 of the environmental, population and . economics, housing and public facilities ;: . planning committees have signed a peti· ·: tion calling for renewed consideratUm , ·of Citizen sUggestions. · -..,it Additionally, Marx said, the bicycle .1 trails colllJllittee memben bave signed the doCument urging a restudy of the : (See CITIZENS, Page 2) , \1 ·' :1 Congress Vows·:! ! Quick Energy ;: ug!sl~!P.n .J WASHINGTON (AP) -Congressional ' leaders today promised prompt action on most or all of the energy sa~ measures requested by President Nixop in his address to the nation. / Senate Interior Chairman Henry M. : Jackson said his committee will hold · public bearings on emergency legislation today and report a bill out by Friday. l Senate approval could be expected next week, Jackson said. ·~ On the House slile, Democratic whip ' John J . McFall (D-Ollif.), predicted ac- STATE ENERGY SOLUTIONS NOT ENOUGH? Seo Page 10 ' FUEL FOR PLEASURE BOATS l A QUESTION -Story, P199 1s 1 QUESTIONS, ANSWERS DN 'I ENERGY PLAN TOLD, Pav-40 .I -,---,,--=-._,.,~,--~~~~~· lion on the President's propcsals before the December recess. .I '1lf he wants a bill , we'll give him · a bill," said Rep. Torbert H. Macdonald (D-Mass. ), chairman of the House sub- committee on power. In his Wednesday night address, Nixon accused Congress of failing to act on any of the energy measures he sent to the Rill. The President said it was now "imperative" tbat Congress pass legislation (1) establishing year.round Daylight Saving Time, (2) authorizing relaxation of clean-air standards, (3) approving the tapping of naval petrotewn reserves and (4} giving the governm-ent power to reduce. speed limits nationwide and restrict working hours. Macdonald said Nixon already bad ' lbe authority to do most of what be asked and accusec; tbe President of playing "an absolute shell game" in • blaming Congress for inaction. Oraage ..., Weathe r . Some fog or loW clot.ids night and morning hours but otherwise sunny is the forecast for Friday. Highs at tbe beaches in the 60s rising to 75 inland. Overnight lows in the 50s. li\SllJll 'l'OUA \' Three members of a farm family, held hostage by two jail . escapees, waited ut1til their cap- tors fell asleep a11d ran out the house afld escaped. Story, page . 4. L. M. '"4 tt C•llttnllm 1t C•retr Cwntr lt ci..11111" tt-41 c""rc' >t crwu-.. JJ °""' Mofk.. 11 , .. 11..-1 .. ,,.,. .. , 1111..-tM!llMM ~I l'ht41nc• *41 "" .... RICIN 11 -M Allll L"'°'" lS I ' ' • i::t i hunday, Novtmbtf 8, 1971 Diiiy l"Hol Sllff l"ltoll Edison linemen Bob Williams of Irvine (bottom) and John Willis of Huntington Beach install new power hookup at Jamboree Boulevard and Campus Drive in Newport Beach. New 121000-volt line will serve buildings in Koll Center. FromPnge 1 CITIZENS ... citizen viewpoints. The petitioners feel their work has had "little impact" on the general plan. "As the thrust of the citizen committee inputs became clear it was obvious we wanted very much to pursue and insure a very special type of civic development . "Several dominant th emes began to assert themselves. A desire for open space, community facilities, meaningfu1 growth controls and a reduced level of population from those previously sug- gested for this area," the petition says. Petitioners also note an 81 percent favorable citizen response to a survey question asking if the city shou ld take special measures to preserve agriculture as a land use. Citizens also expressed concerns about the population projections for the city. "The planning program presented at the Town Forum on Nov. 1 did not deal in significant depth wi th the above citizen directions or demonstrate a substantial awareness of the above themes," the petition suggesls. The signers, including Marx and former planning commissioners Ellen Freund and Robert \'lest suggest that a city of 550,000 people '·intensifies the very problems such citizen directions would avert". Among the problems listed are: -Loss of food produc:jo n lands in a tim e of growing food sci1rt·ity. -Rapid industrializat ion \.\'it hout the means to meet all hoJs.ii". n:eds. ,OUNGI COAST IS . DAILY PILOT The Otln\lt Coa11 DAILY PILOT, wll'tl whidl 11 COl'lbl~ lt'le N"""•Pt.sa,. 11 pybllll>ed tlY' lt'le 0••1>9e Coen Put>llshlfl9 (Om1141ny, s.ep.. r•I• tdilfonl 1r1 Pllbll1'*1, MondJ'( rtlrQUOh F•kl•v. for cos11 Meu, Nt"'1l0rl 8e•ch, HUf'lllng!On !l!MlllFOtmtlln V•llfy, LIJIUM ... cto, 1rvlntJS-lelNlc-..... San ci. ...... 111 ~" Juan CIP01lr1no. A 1lnQI• r19lorlll • ICl!llon is P'1111111'* S1lvrd1y1 ind SUndtn. Tl'HI prlflCiPI! ~i~!"ll P!ll\f Is 11 JJO Wflf 81y .S!tHI, CDl!t Mew. C~ll!ornll, rnH. Rob•rl N. w,,d P ru!Oln1 t<ld PU01•ll>tr J1c~ R. Cwrl1y \lk:t 'Prnlclftll Ind Gt~•ll M•n-ttr Tho11111 K11•il . ""'°'" Tito"''' A. Murphln1 Ml~lflll Ed1ror Ch11f11 H. Looi Rit~1 •d P. Nill A•lll1nl Me~lng Ea110" Offkot C..11 Mn.: lJO WtM hy Sl"'et Nl'WPll"f ... di: lW Nirwptrl 8o!.1 .... 1rd L"O-8NC~: 21:1 FMl'\I ,l-H\ll'lflr'IONifl tffCfl: ITllJ INdl '°"levt•f ... ,, Chl'"""'P1 llOJ H11rltl El C1111l11C1 lte•I , ........ l7141 '4J-4J21 C._.... Alftrtf.S., "42·1671 S.. C ....... Al e.,.,.•••i , •••• ~ ••• 4tl .... 2t c_,.rlfllt, 1111. o..,,.. Cottt P\11111,~lrlo ~...... HI "''" •tor..... llt111tr1I'°""', •llOrlll ~tttr .. ·-'""'"*" htt•in INJ 1111 ...... \ICH Wlll'IW! 001Ci.I ...... lll+ulwl If IC'f'r,..,,, -· StCMd deM .. I ... lllf II CMlt ~. C1~191',ill. ~'°" lw wrrlH U.U """""'' 11w fl'lllf• u .11 '""""'''' tnlll!1tY fntlntt1111f •st.6S rr-INr. Dog Show Slat,ed In Lake Forest This Saturday They're putting -~ the dog in Lake Forest with the neighborhood assocla· tion's dog show to be held at 10 a.m. Saturday at the clubhouse parking lot, 24752 Toledo Way. Prizes will be awarded in 15 categories including best groomed, most unusual, most unusual costume, shortest hair, longest tail , best fetcher and best heeler. ln addition, a discussion of obedience training will be given. Concluding the something for everyone show is a category called "least tricks," said spokesman George Medrano. "And, that's going to be a tough one to judge,'.' he added. Further infonnation is available by calling hfedrano at 586-0860. From Pagel SUSPECT ..• 270 persons three miles east of here. A safe at the store was opened normally :1~d emptied or all cash, reportedly arou nd ~~.OGO. ··J t looks like the \'tork of a madman," said the sheriff. ''All of them appear to ha re lleen executed." J{c said the victims were tied and goggcd and It appeared to be a ··professional job.'' 'fhc 1ne11 wanted for questioning were identified ns Luther Steelman, 28, Lodi, and li-rctzler, New York state. Steeln1an was convicted in San Joaquin Counly of forgery, escaping from the tounty jail and possession of marijuana and glue sniffing. He served time In a California Youth Authority camp. Authorities in Phoenix, Ariz. also were seeking Steelman and Gretzler for a $31 armed robbery, on charges of rape and kidnap and in a double murder near Mesa , Ariz. The nine slayings bring to 67 the number af victims in six mass murders in California within four years. Suspecb _ were caught in all live earlier cases. In addition to Parkin, the victims round inside the master bedroom of his home included his wife Joanne, 31 ; their two children -Lisa, · 11, and Robert, 9; Debbie Earl, 18, a babysitter: Richard A. and Wanda Earl, pa""ts of the babysitter; Ricky Earl, J5, Otbbie'1 brother, and Mark Lang, 20, tjte bab)'llt· ter's boylriend. (Related pictuns, Page 10). carol Jenkins, ta, who lived in the Parkin house, apparently 'was spared because she returned home after the killings occurred. She returned from a date at 3 a.m. and went to bed without knowledge of the slayings. The bodies were discovered Wednetday morning by two young men sent to the Parkin home to sean:h for Lang as requested by Lang 's molbtr. , - Moulton's Eco-impact Report In A lg,s...page environmental impact report for the proposed t ,887·acra Moulton Ranch development ln south~ central Orange County waa aubmttted to the county planning department thts week. 1be Em is the fmt step toward pub1ic hearings on the mammoth project, which calls for a papulatlon of 57,000 persons on the scenic rancbland within the next 15 years. Initial plans for the project show 18,600 dwelling units on a total of 44 perceiit of the land. The remaining 55 percent of the property will be left in a COD· servation area and open space. This does not include open space and parks within the developed. communities. Net densities of variom · communities in the project range from one to 20 units per acre. The overall net density is predicted to be 4.04 units per acre. Planning for the six property owners comprising-the Moulton Ranch has been done by Chapman, Phillips, Brandt and Reddick Associates of Irvine. ---Steve-Ma1efyt. proj.ct-.nonager, said lf all the homes in the project were built today, they would fall in the $30,000 to $40,000 price range on an average. The environmental impact statement was done by Environmental Data Research, Inc., of Costa Mesa. ETR director Ray Lamb said "The county Is forcing development here. It's impossible to put low-cOst housing on this property because of the taxing situa- tion which makes the land so valuable. "Not to develop thl.5 land is a waste of the land, in my opinion," Lamb said. "It no ,Jooger functions well for agriculture." Chapman Msoclates plannen stressed that the develo~ent will not be a· new town, but rather "a viable hillside community" with an employment base, adequate transportation, and necessary community facilities. "It is not a city -and that's just the problem," Lamb said. "If we could start developing the south end of the county over again, Chapman could design it and build a very good city." FroMP .. eJ-- 'SUPER COPS' •• support that wins the day. Costa Mesa Police Chief Roger Neth said he P.referred to refrain frotP com- menting co the veiled threat by bis officers because tof the "fragile situa· Uon" in the city. Gary McRae, Anaheim's penonnel director and the man in charge of the city's side of the dispute, would not comment specifically on the "super cop" proposal. "I am confident the citizens of Anaheim will continue to receive the protection they have always received and I think the officers will act with boMl!ty and Integrity," be said. McRae said he ls un.sure of the status o! negotiations since the contract talks were broken off three weeks ago. Anaheim ofrlcers staged a protest march In front o! City Hall Wednesday. Barry said Wednesday that if th• protest did no good, the alternatives -including the "super cop" idea - will be next More Patrolling Asked in Forest Property owners In the Lake Foresi area ol El Toro want additional patrol- ing by the Sheriff's Department In their area. A puublic hearing within four weeks was approved by the Board o f Supervl!ors Tuesday to determine the necessity and method of defraying the cost of the additional patrols which were requeated by 142 property owners who live north of the Santa Fe Railway tracks and west of Ridge Route. Supervtsor Ronald Caspers s a I d residenta ~d indicated they were willing to pay for the additional protection. Uganda Chief Lauds Nixon KAMPALA, Uganda (UPI) Prosident ldl Amin today sent a telogram to President Nixon con- sratulatlng him Ct1 not ... ignlng. He said a wea~er man might have committed lulcide. In a telegram on Nixon's address to the nation Wednesday night, Amin -a longtime U.S. critic -said, "I wish to consratulate you and compliment you most •lncerely for thts counigeo111 stand. • HI am sure any other weak leader would have resigned or com· mltted suicide alter beinfl 1111>-tected to ao mU<::h baruament because of the Watergate affair," Amin Nici. • • . . ., Queen Carolp Dilly 1'1 .. t lttff l'IMM Fro•P.,el HARTELIUS . . . ' usuring the committee that he could put 500 pel'90lll on the stalfd. It has also been testified that Harte-Hus enjoyed a sexual relationship with the late Wanda Mel~,.29. ot COiia Mesa and drugged the-nurses' atde to the Point that she apent -o[ the time in bed and neglected her young family. Two attorneys trying the case for the state Board of Medlcal Examiners have finnly rejected a deal proposed by· the defense, They are seeklng the revocation of Dr. Hartelius' license to practice medicine. Five-out ol six defense witnesses called thus far in the current hearing have ststed t!>at HBrtelius is a hlgbly regm!ed physician in the Harbor Area and that he has been the victim of a series of false accu..aUons. He was described as "thoroughly p~ fessional and ethical" by his office nurse, Mrs. Mary King, and even more slro!'BIY defended by her husband. retired Vice Admiral E. L. King of the U.S. Navy. "I don't think a man could have a better reputation," the former Naval officer told the committee of three doc- tors. And he assured the panel that If he had ever had any doubts aboot Hartelius's innocence he would have in- sisted. on hls wife ending her 12-year service in the doctor's office at 2345 E. Coast llighway, C.Orona del Mar. "If he had done anything wrong, she would have walked oot anyway,'' com· meoted the peppery seafarer, reminding the commtttee that Hartelius had been cleared of arson, fraud and bribery -Carolyn Johnson is 'feigning-University High School bomecoming.._-charges.Jn..tbree.Orange-€ounty.5uperior•--- queen, crowned in halftime ceremonies recently in a gam~ against Court trials. • Dana Hills High. The new queen is a 17-year-old senior and varsity King and bis wife repeat~y con- head cheerleader at the Irvine high school. University won its home--demned Mrs. Vaughn as a har and cotriing contest by a 41-14 score. • a thief and three witnesses have ns:rw testified that they have been threatened over the teJepbone on various occasions Jaworski Says Ni.Xon Assured Him Free Rein WASHINGTON (APl. -Newly ap- pointed Watergate special prosecutor Leon Jaworski said today he had been given wurances by the White House that he had the right to "sue the Presi- dent," if necessary, in conducting his )nvestigatioo. Jaworski told a House judiciary sub- committee the assurances were given by Alexander Haig, President Nixon's chief of staff, before he agreed to accept the assignment to replace Archibald Cox as special prosecutor. "I wanted assurances beyond those that had been received by C.Ox," Jaworski said. He said Haig used the words "sue the President" as an example of the complete independence Jaworski would have. · "Haig discussed the matier with the President and then told me I had that absolute assurance," Jaworski said. Jaworski was questioned about his belief that he had absolute independence to carry out the investigation in view of Nixon 's press conference statement Oct. 26 that be would not provide presidential documents to a special pros- ecutor. "Has the President's po s i ti on changed?" asked Rep. Robert W. Kartenmeier (0-Wis.). "Yes,'' replied Jaworski. Jaworski said when he was approached to take over Cox's job he told Haig, who telephoned him in Houston, that he did not think he could accept because of the lack: of independence he perceived in the assignment. Haworski said he agreed "with con- siderable reluctance" to come to Washington for furth er discussions with Haig which, he said, led to the assurance he sought. · "I would not have accepted the ap- pointment had I not received what I considered the most solumn and substan- E/DRYER 139.95 . . tial assurances or· my independence;" Jaworski said. • He appeared before the subcommittee to urge it to lay aside legislation for the creation of a special prosecutor outside the executive branch. Jaworski sa.id appointment of a special prosecutor in the judicial branch would be a controversial time-oJOSuming proc- ess that woold delay and <U>fuse the Watergate investigation. FromPqeJ GROWTH ..• an ultimate enrollment of 250,000 by the end of the century, Thal meant Irvine and seven other campuses an would have enr,ollments in the 30,000 student range. But the birth rate anCI growth rate in California have not kept up with these projection,,, wh ich \\'ere based on 1960 census data. Aldrich said the newest projections for 1900 set Irvine and San Diego cam· puses with 10,000 to 12,000 students, Santa Barbara aod Davis with 15,000, Riverside with 8,500, and Santa Cruz \\'i th 7 ,500. The Berkeley and Los Angeles campuses would remain at their present sizes. Photos Threatened PASADENA (AP) -Jet Propulsion Laboratory scientists ~re looking today for a solution to camera hea'ter problems that have threatened Mariner lO's ability to transmit pictures of the planets Venll! and Mercury. The scienlists expressed cautious optimism Wednesday that a slight warmup migbt be sufficient to insure transmission of clear pictures of the two planets. I 90 DA-Y CASH A,."0¥1D · CllDIJ by Mrs. Vaughn _and her mother. Mrs. Jane Jack, a convalescent hospital administrator employed by the company that a:mtrols Bayview Manor In O>sla Mesa, testilied that Mrs. v 81lihn telephooed her and used foul language while she threatened to llill the witness for "seeing Dr. Harteliua." And Newport Beach attorney W. -Gerald. Brown testilied that Mn. Vauglm's molbtr called bis office and told hlm lhat -"lhe-W..ld ..e me and Dr. Hartelius in jail for this." Brown represented Mrs. Vauehn at the time she was committed to a atate hospital as a narcotics addict. He was also involved t in legal action that led to lbt filing by Dr. Har1eli113 of 1 dllllllli· ty claim on an insurance policy held by Mrs. Vaughn.· . Mrs. Vauglm has oot atiended lbt hearing since she offered three days or testimooy foe lbt state against Dr. Hartelill3. . 4i ·~ . ..., TV S~n Sued; .. Bans Movie Ads c -. NEW YORK (UPI) -· A film diJtributor bas fded a $1.5 millim suit against the National Broadcastln~Co.'1 local televisioo. station for refu.. to show comme:rcials for a fictiona lzed film about President J:<ennedy's death. National General Pictures Corp. called WNIJC.TV's decision Wednesday not to carry conunercials for the movie, "EX· ecutive Action,'' "arbitrary" and un- comtitutional. Mission Viejo Gets New S~ed Limits • Speed limits for two sections o! Alicia Partway In Mission Vi•Jo have been approved by the Boord ol SUpervtson. A 50-mile-per-bour limit wtll be eD· forced on the parkway between Trabuco Road and J eronirito Road and a 45-- mph speed on the ·stretch between Jeronimo Road and Muirlands Boulevard. The speed limits were reconr mended by the Orange COUnty Traffic Committee. 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Dmtown Costa Mesa-¥holle 546-7788 ' • • ..... ___ .. • • -,, . 7 .. 7 • . ' \ I • J T o day's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL .. 66, NO. ·312, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8,' 1973 TEN CENTS Threat by Anaheim Police Assailed on Coast: I , 1 · . • By WILLIAM SCHREIBER ! ' Of .. Deltr fltllt IWf "That kind of conduct could ,.t back professional law enforcement a decade," said Newport Beach Chief B. James Glava.s, fonner president of t b e California Peace Officers AssociaUon. :.'I'® ,Anaheim police and city officials 1 today \Jad no cqmment on a threat ' by· dillenting. policemen to take on the 1 role ,..of ''super cops" ,by citing driv~rs for even the most minor violations, if lh• ply falls to bargain with them 11This would be a completely Ir· .responsible action in my book and couldq't •possibly act to their benefit," Glavu added. .. over new contracts. , ~ :BU:t several Orange Coaat police chiefs contacted by the Daily Pilot had plenty to say. . , Detective Chet Barry, president of the Anaheim Police Association (APA), said Wednesday bis group is seriously . ··'· ' , ~at'Werk • ' , .. ' , F.dilon linemen Bol!; Williams of Irvine (bottom) and John :WIJlis,of Huptlngton Beach llistall ,..,.,po;.er hookup at Jamboree Boulevard • and Campus Drive In Newpo;( Beach. New 12,000.volt line will serve .bUUclings In Ko!l CeDter. Edison Plant Officials ' .,.1 ' \ , • " r j. , •, "" U;t!~Ure of Nixo ifMessage .. .... Prtildtnt ' NllOll'a 10lutions for the said, HYou can UIUme we wouJd uk "'*'l!''crilla will nqt -ar.~au~ for a variance on pollution requlrementa > 1be lluDllDlton• Belch JICIJIOl' Plnt.>@Dd, becsuse ol the fuel llhortqe. ~ Qdilotnll Edllon ofllctsls ~ "But "1lllld Ir)' to ham •th• hlch not.~ wba,t hil me911ge might nf~ '-IUI""'•• fuel i.; "'-ts ouillde the IOUth to Mle jlllllt'1 lonf ranp future. '-!":-,...., Hmm iokf Wednelday ht 'wanls all ma\ Air Buln. If the !01'..Wphur'luol ....... lo ll&h'-their antl-polluttim lhortsge got eritloll, then we mlcht ttqlllreft191!1 '10 'idlol' power plants to -~ liirniiii the other at planll wttbln bilm ~ ':IJid • ._ f9ol. • . the--co.yt.,Buln... • Paul llliiiudoii; -lllcbonlson .... F.dllOl1 still ltn't ..... .,_ llld -the coal ~ el "how much authority rests belilnd NII· If W lot_..,. lot BunUbg!Gn Beldl C111'1 "°""·" aad II C..,.•, 1be ltates bn1• tire laciJ po!Nr pllntl can\ 11111 the local govemmllltl would 10 bQ1D Ollll llJJWl1. llong with ~ requeota. It --)!ii' IUlphar fuel -•-He Indicated lildison Is hopeful that lt,Olll bornlliR -.. catil4 lwltda t!le a~te &1enci• !W tau llCllDG· to blclHUlphur .' to npport Ibo Proaldmt'1 "'ll*tl .. 11111 '!I mlly 't know If ... •WOUid said mort ol Nboa'I propotala bod - ctuoap to hiaJHulphur fuel," Rlchanbon suggested previously by FAil<lll. I " considering the last dilcb. alternative of public harrassment as a means to get the city t.o come to terms. · An>ol1g other things, the APA is demanding higher pay than the city is offering, better fringe benefits and the right to aCt as sole bargaining agent for the offlcen In the department. Barry said be hopes the situation won't come to the need for zealous ticketing of drivers, but he said the idea hasn't been rejected, either. Glavi! said he doesn't see any justification for such an action, which he s'aid can only hurt the Image bf policemen in the eyes of lhe public. .•11 can think ot a lot of-alternatives to th is kind . of thing and the more I think about it, the more horrified I ·get. '1 • Glavas' thoughts were echoed by Hun· tington Beach Police Chief Earle Robitaille. He called ·the tactic a "San Diego tethnique," reJerring t~ a similar said he "strongly objects to any change in practice Crom that \\'hich is stan~ard in the department In order to put the pressure on during nego tiations. "I don't think this enhances the image or police at all and r.crtainly is not pro(essional in my opinion," he said. "t sincerely hope such <1 thing never happens do\\'n here but I think our guys' have a lot better sense," Neth added. Aides for Anaheim Chier Dave Michael mass-ticketing campaign by dissenting officers in that city four years ago. "I think this is completely ill-advised and completely counter-productive,", Robilaille said. "It does nothing fOr · the department and 'Cert.ainly doesn't engender community respect." Robitaille said that whenever lbe police in Huntington Beach have had similar problems, it is usually unsolicited citizfp (See 'SUPER COPS,' Page ZJ • e1ze Police.man Suspended . --In Slaying _ ,, A Huntington BeaCb police· officer whose girlfriend was killed a month ago· in an accidental shoOtlng has been ' placed on ~ days' suspension from the poli~ d,epartmeot. Pplice Chief Earle Robitaille said today the ~· Of Officer' Ri:iD Palmer, JI~ -....... -a ~·of the ahootlng lnddent which resulted In the > -el l!oey ~· 211. • -~ .. lbe ~ .:=;-:,.';'"::;-0::'.":. while the ~ and the DlstriCt Altorney'I OIOee <Otlductecl ID ln- vesilgatlon to decide whether to press criminal charges ln1the cue. Robitaille aaid that once the shooting was ruled accidental be reviewed the evidence and found Palmer to be in violation of two departmental rules. One deals with the handling of a firearm in a manner which endangers othen and the other covers conduct w)llch. could bring disrepute on the ofllcer or the department. · Robltallle said the suspension began Mooc!By. Once back on the job, Palmer will be reduced one pay gra4e for a year. Palmer l! a veteran oC eight years of poDce· work 1n· Costa Mesa and Hun- tington Beach. Doctor Arrested On Rape Charge In Huntington A Huntington Beach P.J!ysiclan is scl;tedoled t6 appear in West Orange '" County Municipal Court Nov. 18 on charges that he raped his • part·time receptioaist while sbe was tmd.er the lnfiuence ol drugs. Dr. Edwin Hersh, 39, wu booked on suspicion of rape Tuesday aftemoon after Hunllnlton Beach detectives picked him up at hil office at 20932 BrookbW"St St. • Blijl .far · the ...,.,.1 praclioaer WIS • orlg1nally ·aet at llG,000 by JUdge Ken Smith of the West Orange COUnty Court. It was .....iuc:.d to 12,000 by Judge James Smith ol the wne court. Police said Hmh. pald the. bail through his attorney Tumay· nllbL Detectives Identified the alleged victim as an 18-yeaN>ld girl who worked as his part·time recepttonist. Uganda Chief Lauds Nixon' KAMPALA, Uganda (UPI) Piesldent Id! Amin today sent I telegram to President Nlzan can- cratulltlnl him on not mlgnlog. He said a ftlker man might have committed suicide. In a ~on Nlson'a address ... , to the nation W-y night, Amln -a loogllme U.S. critic -oald, "I wish to coogratulate you and complimenf you moot sincerely for this courageous stand. .. I am sure any other weak leader would haye resigned or com· milted 1ulclde afler being '""' lected to so much harasmntnl 'i.c-·o1"tbe Wa~ •itaJr," Anl!n uld. ' ,. • -( _ .-.. .-1" '"J.~.; 1-~ :-:' >tX j r. . ,u''... . CAROL· JENKIN S, 18,·GRliVES~ AS NfliiE' IOOlES REMOYIO,": · Shi .\Ydrkod at Vi~llml' Slo~·anil:-t:.IV9_d'Wlt~ the• Fimiif.·.': > Booty Recov ered. Two Couples Cha r:ged In Sim .illlr Theft Cases A FoWltain \1alley couple are in custody today after a raid on what local police claim to be one of . the area's largest maiket ·places for stolen goods. • Thomas Howard Newham, 41, and his wile, .Grace Martha , 39, were taken into custody late Tuesday night at their home at 17315 Santa Mariil Ave, by a ·team or detectives Crom Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach. Th!>Y are .charged wi\h ·receiving stolen property and · possession Of dangerous drugs. Jn.side the hoUse, • police allege they found more than $3,000 worth of stolen goods Including npprozlmately $500. worth of meat and more than 100 bottles of. liquor. · Shortly alter the Fountain Valley ar- rests, oUicers picked up another couple in Costa Mesa on .similar charges. custody of a neighbor, !he detective said. . En9.uls~ ,ueg~d !hat both coup!"! \Jave • -"buying stolen goods from shop filters and ' thieftS for about t\VO' years. He said that in addition to the meat and Uqui>r ... recovered from t h e NeW!lan1s; ottfcers reportediy foond a motorcycle stolen one year ago from Costa Meu a.i-,d several pieces of stolen office ·equipm!tlll. Detectives ·said they hauled seven pickup truck loads of stolen meat, televisions, guns and tools from the Cavanaugh house. ' Planners Okay Iron Fences Dudley Cavanaugh, 53, and his wife, JeaMie, 44, were ~rrested on possession property cJiarges. In their home at 1119 Planning commlsslonerso.ln Huntington Sul'IOower St. detectives claim they found Beach have agteed to allow wrought nearly !211,000 worth of stolen propelty lnin fences In CtJ!-de'sacs rather than .Jn-that home-_ .. , • the heavy block walls now common ·Dot. Marty' EnquiSI of the Founlaln : m housing tracts., - Valley police sa id.. lovesllgaUon of the '!be decision came ~ay.after com- case is continuing. • missioners heard a staff rtport which He asserted that the Newhards also indtclled noise' levels at cul-de--aacs with had a small quantity or marijuana, block walls, no walls and wrought iron hashish, bashjsh oil and dangerous drugs fences are almilar. in the home that they share with two In a f to I voee, commisEoncr1 de<lided teenage aoiJs. to amend atandanl Plan 70t to allow Only -son• WU· present with the sil<.foot .Wl'Oll&bt iron -wttll com- arrests ...,. made and .at his isa-11 • peUble landlcaplng, with "° •m.ore than request as turned over to the lour inches between bars of the rtnce. • t ' Qu~stioning · Of Duo Set In 9 Deaths ;, . I • BULLETIN SACRAMENTO (AP) -Two men were taken blto castody today for questlonlag ID tbe execatllHtyle murder o( Dine people . in a luxury rural home, lit.<; vestlgaton reported. : ~ •·• i SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Police arm<d with sawed~fl ahol&W\li • arrested ·a . suspect In a downtown saCramento hole! today in the "execution" style mur~ ; oi nine persona in~California's wine coutl·; !a ' ' l 'Ibe suspect, identified as Douglas E. GreUler, 22:, was led bandcufled by eight heavily armed o!Bcer• ln>m !)le hotel and whisked nay in a patrol car. A police spokesman said the hoiel, which advertises "lamily rates," was MASS MURDERS SHOCK SMALL TOWN -Slory, Pogo 3 staked out earlier in !be day after two men wanted for questioning in the case were reported seen there. ' A search of the men's room disclosed clothing believed used In the mass· murders, weapons and money allegedly taken In a burglary precedln1 the'. slayings, , . 1 Another man fled down a fire escape and was being hunted in the area. The bodies· of Walter Parkin, 33, ldl • Wife, their two children and five friendi~ -a11 ·oouud and gagged -were f'oeidl Wednesday inside Parkin's new $15~' ranch home in the sprawling vineyap:il 1 in North-Central California. All had bem shot in the head at close range W'lib a revolver. ·- Parkin owned the only grocery ~ i n the town of Victor, a community .of 270 persons three miles east of here. A safe at the store was opened normally and emptied of all cash, reporteQ]y around $4,000. "It lookS like the work of a madmail," said the sheriff. "All of them appear to have been executed." He said the victims were tied and gagged and it a.Ppeared to be . ;I' ;'prOfessional job." The men Wanted for questioning wei:e idebUfied as Luther Steehn.an, 28, Lodi·, and Gretzler, New York state. Steelman was convicted in San Joaquin County of forgery, escaping from • tho. • (See SUSPECT, Page I) " ..• ' Oraage Weadter Some fog or Jow clouds night and~t. morning hours 'but otherwise sunny . is !he Corecasi Cor friday. Highs at the beaches In the !Os rising to 15 inland. Overnight lows In the 50s. INSUlfoi 'l'ODI\ \' Three members of a farm family, held hostoge by two jail escapees, waited until their cap-1 tors JeU asleep and ran out the house and escaped. Story, page 4. • ~ ' p ,,1.,1· t<IL01 H Thursday, NMtnbtr 8, 1973 I Israel Okays 5-p0i11t eeace Plan General Law City: Mayor Suggests Status 'Change' By TERRY COVIU.E pointive rather than elective. ot ..,. De1tw f'ti.t ,..., "The people just won't ev er . look at lo the wake or Tuesday 's election, charter changes," ~mplalned Matn ey. Mayor Jerry Matney suggested today "Maybe lt'a time to do away with an that Huntington Beach might want to antiquated charter." abandon its status as a charter city. "l'd like to have a staff study on His proposal for a comparative study it to see what we might lose if we of the two fonns of local government wmt lrom a charter to a general law would apP&N!"UY receive the full .sup-port ol his oounclJ mates. dty/' said the mayor. "I'm t1nid of JIOOfil!i around wllh lb~ damn charter." "I think such a study Would at 1..,t 'l'uesday, voters soundly rejected a benefit th~ council," said Councilwoman proposed change In the city charter Norma Gibbs. · ~ Wtlcb would have made the offices of "I'd be behind the study 100 percent," cit)' attorney clerk and treasurer ap-( added Councilman Ted Bartlett. "But ).. ' · we've been a charter city a long time, • and I think a vote on it would go J F • ds the same way as Tuesday's election." ury tn -Councilmen Jack Green, At Coen and ' Henry Duke also agreed Ibey would ' 1upport a ataff study of the charter Kemper Sane ~,;,:.".:tSllipley could Ml be reached Huntington Beach Was incorporated in I l 1909, but didn't become. a charter city And Gu ; ty until 1937, by a vote of the people. -" The cjty charter is a 41-page• document which outlines all the Jaws and pro- 1 SANTA CRUZ (AP) -A jury found cedurea by which the ctty functions. llulklnc Edmuod Emil Kemper 111 'guilty A charter city can· do some things llld .,. today In the butchery ol eliJll -such u levy special taxes -which -lndadinc Illa mother. a general law city ClllllOl It wa Kemper'• 1ecaacf coavktJon General law ci.Ues operate under pro- lor inunler In 10 yoan -1 total ol cedurea established by the state which io t.illinp. are uniform for all general Jaw dties. . 'Ille pone! or 1\1 • lJ\d:llx women Only ,.ven of Orange County's 2S .. -.. deltben!ted five hours before, returning ciUel have •.scharter, the. rest · are a ftrdlet qainst the IS-yeaMld defen-general law •. ,,,. otlier charter cities dant, who was convicted at age 15 are Ana.helm, Santa Ana, Newport ol kllllnl his paternal grandparent.s, for Beach, Seal Beach, Los Alamitos and wbicb be served five years in a state Placentia. mental hospital. Groen pointed out some dlllerences "I agree with yo1U' verdict enUrely,'~ between the two forms which could said Santa Qin County Superior Court lmmedlately affecl Huntingtoo Beach. Judge Harry Brauer, who announced They Involve city council salaries and the verdict. the city's five percent utility tax. Kempel' was found guilty of eight The Huntington Beach charter set.s .. Kissinger '· J Meets .With ·1 2 Factions By The Associated Press The Lsraell state radio said ioday Israel accepted a five-poin t plan worked out through tbe United Sllltes for a seltlement with Egypt. The radlo quoled foreign comspood- ents in Tel Aviv, who in tum quoted government suorces. Other well-placed government a>Urces said, ~10Y•ever, the report was 11close to the truth." The correspondent.s, "°t Jden!Wed, were understood to have received the infonn ation in a briefing by a govern- ment source. The radio said the plan was reached in talks between Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger and his aides in talks in Cairo and Tel Aviv. Quoting foreign corresponden.ts, the . Westminster High School ha s nearly enough varsity cheerleaders for two full squads, but desipte the number, they synchronize well for some spirited formations. Shown in one stunt are: Janet Whitten- ---------broadcast saiame clauses "'·ere·:-berg (front), 17; row two from the left, Kathie Gold· en, 17; Kathy Shepherd, 17; and Kathy Jones, 16; row three, Gall Wiley, 16; Jan English, 17; Barbara Woesner. 17; and Debi Lipetz, 16. -A prisoner of war exchange "as soon as possible." -A supply cotT~dor for the encircled Egyptlan 3rd Army that would he U.N.- Lawmen Find Fullerton Man With Dead Giri • A murder complaint will be sought today against a Fullerton man who was. found sleeping in a car a1ongside the body of a half-nude woman in the Garden Grove area Wednesday.~ Robert Dale Knocli, 26, Fullerton, is being held in connection with the alleged murder o( Donna Marie L'Homme of Placentia. supervised and run through Israeli lines. But it would include no weapons, aud C P • S Fast in no way be controlled by Egypt. ongress romise -Removal of tbe Egyptian blockade . Of tho Ba~~Mandeb Strait, !STael's vttal outlet 1o the Indian Ocean. -Negotiations between Israeli and A t .• E ' La Egyptian military commaoders to ar· c wn on nergy . ws ;~atw~de":'venient cease-fire line WASHINGTON (AP) -Congre.<>ional leaders tod ay promised prompt action on most or all of the energy sa ving measures requested by President Nlxon in his addras to the nation. Senate Interior Chairman Henry M. Jackson said his committee will hold STATE-ENERGY SOLUTIONS NOT ENOUGH? S.. Pege 10 ~--__._,,. -Direct peace negotlatlona between. lieve....in_thia emergency legislation we . Israel aod Egypt, once the first four can start deAllng with" the problem ol point.s .are fulfilled . gas , inciuding deregulation. He indicated he would be willing to con.sider it in subseqCient legislattoo. On the House side, Democratic whip John. J. McFall (f).{;a!if.), predicted ac- tion on the President's proposala before the December reCess. ' > Klsfinger flew to Jordan and Saudi Arabia after spending a dsy In talks with President Anwar Sadat In cain>. Kissinger's assistant ip charge of .Mid· die Eat affairs, Joseph J. SilCO, e111U1· ed from talks ·wilh Premier Golds Meir in Jerusalem and told newsnen: "J feel optimistic.,, COWlts o( first-degree murder and ad-council salaries at $175 per month. In judied sane by the jury. April, 1970, councilmen uked for a • 1be judge set sentencing for 8:30 a.m. charter change which would allow them The Orange County Coroner's office said Mrs. L'Homme had heen strangled with a belt which was wrapped around her throat. FUEL FOR PLEASURE BOATS A QUESTION -Story, Page 15 "If he wants a bill, we'll gi.Ve him a bill," said Rep. Torbert H. Macdonald (IH!JW.), chalnnan or the House iuJ>. committee on powei. · •. He had gooe to Israel unexpectedly from the Cairo· sessions Wednesday, ap- parently carrying with him de~ of the Klsslnger-Sadst meetbJ&s. Friday. to Ht thtlr own aalaries. Voters aaid . After the verdict was read, Kemper, no. ' ·a huge figure of &-foot·9 and 2ll powuls Under general law, council salaries clad In an orange jail uniform, whispered are set by the state legislature and 1qldetly to bis lawyer. He was impassive bued on a city's population. With a throughout. population of 150,000, H!m\ingtoo Beach Kempel' pleaded innocenl by reason ouncllmen would be pala$300 per mootll. ol insanity to the killings. The five pel'OO!t utility tax was Im· He was arreoted In Pueblo, Colo., last posed In the fall or 1970, according April and his tape-recorded confessions to City Finance Director Frank Arguello. gave the answers to a series of unsolved He saya Jt Ls the only special tax levied inurders plaguing Santa Cruz officials. by the city at present which could not be levied by a general law city. FrontPqe I 'SUPER COPS' • • support that wins the day. Colta Mesa Police Chief Roger Neth said be preferred to refrain from com- menting on the veiled fhreat by his officers because or the "fragile altua· llon" In the city. Gary McRae, Anahei!Jl's personnel dlredor and the man in charge o£ the city'a side of the dispute, would not comment specifically on the "super cop" proposal. Arguello said the utility tax earned the city $1.6 million in 1972-73, and will bring in an estimated $1.8 million In 19'13-7f. In 1969, the city also Imposed a cigarette tax, but the state set Its own cigarette tax a few months later, eliminating the city lariff. "Going general t.sw could put a terrible crimp in our budget and I'm not sure how we would handle that," Green said. "But I think there are some well-taken concerns about the charter, and It bas been a question in many dlarter dttes." "With more and more state in- tervention, the charter may be diluted anyway," said Coen. "I'd go aloog with a study as long as it is done in-ho~ by the city attoi:ney's office." The bizarre scene was stumbled upon by patrolling deputy shertfls who had stopped to determine why the car owned by Mrs. L'Homme was partially bloctiiig a street In county territory near Gard.to Grove. ,. · t Th• depati~ ~."l"" )lnoch from his sleep and saw tie belt around Mrs. L'Homme's throat. She was dead · at the scene, the coroner's office reported. Investigators said today that Knoch is an acquaintance of the victim's hus- band and was known to her. They said they have been unable to determine a motive for the slaying. )lnoch bas refused to talk. ( Nixon to Resign? KENSE'IT, Ark. (AP) -Rep. Wilbur D. Mills predicied Wednesday that pressure from news media, Congress and the public will force President ~ixon to resign "witbln a sbor\ ~period of time." Mills, Arkansas Democrat who is chairmatt of the House Ways and Means Committee, said in an interview that he beUeves events will "force the President to step down," po5slbly within three months: "I am confident the cltlzem of Anaheim will continue to receive the protection they have always received and I think the officers will act with honesty and integ(ity," he said. McRae said he la unsure of the status of negotiations since the contract talks were broken off three weeks ago. Anaheim officers staged a protest march in front of City Hall Wednesday. Barry said Wednesday that If the prote!t did no good, the alternatives -including the "super oop" idea - will be next. Watergate Tapes 'Poor Quality,' Says Secretary OIANel COAST 1R DAILY PILOT Tiit Or-. Cini DA1lY "ILOT •1111 wllkll II ~.fM N-. .. ,_. .... Mii"*! W "'-Or-'111'9 CNlt l'\lbllll'llftt CM9t"'· s.,._ ,.i. .. 11-. ., •• ltNd. Monlley tht0\1111 ,rlc&ey, !Or (Diii M ... , Newport 811eh, HwitlflgtM BtlC:h/,_11111 v,11t1w. 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"""" llt' .,.,. llM ,....,j ... -it U.11 ....... , ......, -· flM ........ . W ASIIlNGTON (AP) -Presider I Nixon's personal secretary told a federal court today that portions ol the sub- poenaed Watergate tapes were very poor in quality and that it is humanly im- possible to hear every word Oil them. "I could not get every word," Rose Mary Woods said In describing the job of typing a rough transcript of 1even conversations between the President and key Watergate figures. (Related story Page 3.) Miss Woods, Nixon's secretary for more than 20 yean, said the transcribing work took her nearly a month, working on and oU, sometimes on weekends and often far into the nighL The WStergate prosecution force wants a federal grand jury to bear the t.spes. The White House said today it never said anything aboUt whetber secret pres1dential tapes were audible because it ll!d been -king on the assumption they never would be heard publicly. "I reccgnlze completely there is a question of ettcllbility," press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said. But he said he was sure the matter would be elesred up in court to the ssli>- faction ol the public. Nixon, resJ)Ollding Wednesday night to mountinJ, cafls for !ifs resignation, vowed he has 'no intention whatever of walk- ing away from the job I was elected to do." Ni>on voiced his detennlnatlon to hold onto his office ID "a penmal note" at the end ol a televtsloo-radlo addttss to the DIUon on energy problems. Mill Woods said she first aaw one or the controv....111 tapes Sept. 29, wben, 11 Ni>on'1 request, she began the task \ • .. of transcribing them at the President's mountaintop retreat at Camp David, Md. "I went up there to try to listen -I use that wurd advisedly -to take down as mueh as possible of the tapes that w~re subpoenaed," she testified at a hearing before U.S. Distri ct Court Judge John J. Sirlca. According to prevtous testimony, il was Sept. 29 that the Prealdent expressed awareness that recordings of two of the total of nine subpoenaed con· versaUons couldn't be found. Sir1ca called the hearing to air the circumstances .surrounding a White House claWn that the two .tapes never ~ existed. MW Woods, wearing a red knit dress and a double string of pearls, said Urat transcribing the tapes bad been a "very difficult job," and Uiat despite working until S a.m. SUnday momlng, and again all day~ Sunday after arising at 6 a.m. she was unable to complete a transcript of even one conversaUon. "The quality Is very bad on some," she said, ''depehding on the room. There are lot.s of fwmy things in tbem.'' Among these oddltles, she said, "If the President puls his feet on the desk, It IOUnds like a bomb. Boom.'' She said a slmllar IOUDd is created on the tApe recordings if 10meone Stll a 1'>ffee cup on a table. Miss Woods said ·~ returned to W1Shin&lon wllh the Prealdent on &to· day, Sept. 30 and continued working on tbe tapes IOI' almott a monlh. QUESTIONS, ANSWERS ON ENERGY PLAN TOLD, Page 40. public hearings on emergency legislation today and report a bill out by Friday. Senate approval could be ezpected nut wee k, Jackson said. · But today Jackson said "l don't ~ FrontPqel SUSPECT ... county jail and possession of marijuana and glue sniffing. He served time in a California Youth Authority camp. Authorities in Phoenix, Ariz. also were seeking Steelman and Gretzler for a $31 armed robbery, on charges of rape and kidnap and in a double murder near Mesa, Ariz. The nine slayings bring to 67 the number of victims in six mass murders in California within.. four years. Suspects were caught in all five earlier cases .. In addition to Parkin, the victims found inside the master -bedroom of his home included his wife Joanne, 31; their two children -Lisa, 11, and Robert, 9; Debbie Earl, 18, a babysitter; Richard A. and Wanda Earl, parents of the babysitter; Ricky Earl, 15, Debbie's brother, and Mark Lang, 20, the babyslt· ter's boyfriend. (Related pictures, Page 10). E/DRYER 139.95 In bi1 Wednesday night adclms, Nixon accuaed ecmg...,. of falllnC to IOI oo any of the energy measures be ...,1 to the Hill The Pmldent aid It was now "imperative" that Coa&reu pass legislation (I) ..ikblishtnl year-round Daylight Saying 'nme, (2) authorizing rela.ution l of clean-air standards, (3) approving the tapping of naval petroleum reserves and ( f) giving lhe govlmrnent power to reduce speed liplits naUonwide and restrict working hours. Macdonald said Nixon already had the authority to do most of what be asked and. accusec:. the President of playing "an absolute shell game." in blaming C.OOgress for inaction. The White House said today Nlxoo is asking governors, mayon and eotmty ollk:ials to cmsider shortening school hours during the winter and. extend the tenn into the summer mootb:s to help cope with the energy crisis. The requeM is being made in a tele- gram being sent today to the olflclals. In addition, press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said energy cw' John Love would meet this afternoon in the Executive Of- fice Building wllh energy advisers to governors from around the nation. In addition, he said, meetings are be- ing held today by federal regional COl..ln- cils in 10 cities -Booton, New Yori<, Philadelphia, Atlanlll, Chicago, Dallas, Kansas City, Denver, San ·Fnmdsco and Seattle -to seek cooperation of other government olficial3. 90 DAY CASH .,.."..., catDlf 1815 NEWPORT BLYD. llowntDwa Costa Mesa-1110111 548-nsa • Egyptian government spokesman Ahm- ed Anis indicated to a news confmnco in Cairo that Egypt climbed down lnNn !is previous Insistence that Israeli lor<et withdraw Immediately to lines reached Oct. 22 as demanded in two U.N. Securtty _ CouncU resolutions. . "They must siJow signs that Ibey will implement the resolutions," AlliJ ~Id, referring to the Israelis. "Ollce tbil t.s done the wbeell will at.srt rolllq, and ·we may IOOft go to a peace con- f ererice, perhaps after a few days." In the background or these reported movements toward peace, however, were charges Wednesday lrom Isriel that Egypt waa preparing a new attack along the Suez canaI. The Egyptians said the situation on the ca.Dal front was "teme and ei- plosive" and that their army wu in position to crush the Iaraella. Kissinger's peace-seeking tour ·con- tinued with a quick visit to King Haaeln or Jordan In Amman and then • trip to Saudi Arabia, the big oil producer in the Mlddle Eat, for conferences wilh King Faisal in Riyadh. , Sisco met in Israel not · ooly •with Mrt. Meir but also with Deputy Premier Ylgal Allbn and Deltnse Minister Moshe Dayan. An Israeli communique said the discussions took place "In a gocid and constructive atmosphere." · • • ' ' / I ) l I I I \ \ l ' I I Thursday, NOYtmbfr 8, 1973 H OAILY Pit.Of .J aworski Given Power ·. Watergate Prosecutor 'Can Sue President' WASHINGTON (AP) -Newly •Po poiDted lhtergate 1peclll prosecutor Leon /-"1 said today he hod been ilJven -by tliO White llouae that he bad the right to "itue the Presi· dent," 11 nece511ry, in conducting hLs lnv~UgatloQ, JaW'Orlki to_ld a House judiciary sub- committee the assurances were given by >Jel>hder Illig, President Nimn:s chief of staff, before he agreed to accept the uoignment to replace Archibald Cox Irvine Faces ~ A 1J,other Lag In UC Growth . . . . · \, CORONERS' ASSISTANTS REMOVE ONE OF NINE VICTIMS .t ~~,,. In Victor, M111 Execution Sfayin91 · Horrify Community - ·-\_ ..... f~ ~.:ti····,.,..., ""' -"" iWJt.i..u ' ' RECENT PHOTOS OF ROllERT PARKIN, 9, SISTER LISA, 11 Children Among Nin• Bound, G199"1, Shot Through HHd Small Village in Siwek . Over Execution Killings VICTOR (AP) -Everyone in this small San Joaquin Valley fanning com- munity knew Walter Parkin. He wl!_s the corner grocer with a ~ready smile and a friendly word. , When Parkin was found shot to death Wednesday with his wire, two children and five other persons, tlny Victor reacted with shock and dismay. (Related pictures, Page 10.) Residents talked about the slayings over the telephone, at the one local tavern and on the streets. Over and over again they answered reporters' questions with comments of "shocked," "dumbfowided," and "dismayed ... '\He was a wonderful fello~ .. t'' said Herb Preszler, owner of v1 I et or Hardware, "the type ol guy who didn't have an enemy, I don't think." Parkin, 33, wu found at hl1 ranch-style home along with his wile JoaMe, 31; bis daughter Lisa, 11, son Bob, 9; nelghboro Richard and Wanda Earl, both in thelr IOI, the Earl'i son andjlaughte<, Debbie and Ricky, 18 and 15, ond lleJ>. hle's ·hoyfrtend, Mart Lang, 20. All' but the two Porkln children had been bound and gagged. Sheriff's officers believe \he slayings were Jinked to a safe burgl6ry Tuesday a farmer and friend of the Parkins. "I can't belJeve it happened ... I'm not afraid, Just a UtUe sad. I'd known Wally for 25 years." Friends told of Parkin's plans to tum his huge front yard into a practice field for Lillie League and softball teams, his momlng·to-dark days at the lnarket and his labor on bis $60,000 home. "He didn 't have a super-market," said neighbor Bill Peterson of the Parkin'a market, the onJy one in the tiny com- mwlity of 270 persons 20 miles north of Stockton. "But he had a store that was clean. And the kid hustled. It wasn 't a gold mine but they made a good Iii ,, e. "They were always afraid that something would happen to Wally," said MariJ Tamez, a former employe at the store, who said Parkin once caught youths burglarizirig h1I market. "He trusted everyone." Partially Clad Victim Found night at Parkln's United Market.' SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) _ The Wednesday afternoon ~ store was empty. A makeshift sign on the door partially clothed body of a young woman read: closed until further notice. with her hand5 tied behind her back "It's terrible " said ""'beY Berndt, was found In bushes behind the boathouse. ! ·;-, t at Sto'! Lake In Golden Gate Pork. r----------"'""-"-., Con>ner'• del)uUeo identlfed her as Laura A. Odell, -211 San Francisco. ~ ·~ators-.aJd Mios Odell bad been i mllolq llince Sunday. . SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Fren· cble a.nee, a North Beacb'dancer clad In tiger skllll, II six leet undtrll'l)Ulld today, teylng to ,.t a world reeord with tile benefit of aevt:n snakes. / She was buried Wedne>day with a seven·loot boa constrictor and six ratllesnucs, the latter in a ~Ar ate compartment.. • Her' alm she uys, b SO days In a specioily designed crypt whtch -•11 reet br 1111ee1 and 11 equipped ao U., lhe and the lnUet CID be led. ii Plillce said lhe bad head ln)urteo and ~have been strangled. Tb~ coroner'• olfiiii llld tho cause d death wu DOI Immediately known. .MjM Odell WU clothed only In 8 . blouse. '!be rest -o1 her clothlnl wu scotllred In the busiles. T wo Shot to Death ' . ' LAS VEdAS (UPI) -A Lu Vegas man and hLs neighbor, who Jived near 'he downtown area, were ahot to death Wedneoday night by a man who opened ftre when the victims walked Into a ..... tbe k111er "" ransac:ldnl. '!be dead were ldeatilied as lbJDll"d Remer, an am-. and his neighbor, ~ Hall , both In their !O's. . -· CUrreot projections have turned up another JO-year lag to the ·time when UC Irvine reaches tbe baUway mark in Its growth to 27 "°° 1tudents, It was revealed today. Two yem agO, -university officials predicted UCI would enroll from 12,000 to 15,000 lludents in !Ill!. At a breakfut meeting with the press --y;-Qancellor-Danlel G. Airtel! Jr.- said current estimates indicate that stu· dent population won't be reached until 1990, That is despite a record enrollment this .qu¢er In which 1,100 new students showed up insteod ol the 250 expected, "We Wiil continue to plan In the n· pectatlon that thll camJllll will aomeday reach an enrollment of 25,000 to 30,0001" Aldrich said. "But at this point we do not expect to reach that mulmum enrollment as quickly as we had earlier planned to reach it," be said. Current enrollment U 8,500. Aldrich said that additional con· structiOn on campus and new faculty ·appointments would be cuftalled In kee]>o ing with !lie sklwer rate of growth. The chancellor eiplained that the revised growth t>rojections w e r e necessary because of changes in the estimated enrollment of the University of California system as a whole. ··At the time the Irvine campus was planned in the early 1960s, the University of California system expected to reach an ultimate enrollment of 250,000 by the end of the century. That meant Irvine and seven other campuses an would have enrollments in the 30,000 student range. But the birth rate and growth rate in , Ci.lilomla have not kept up witb these projectioru:, which were · based on 1960 census data. Aldrich said . the newest projections for 1990 set Irvine and San Diego cam- puses with 10,000 to 12,000 students, Santa Barbara and Davi.!i wlth 15,000, Riverside with 8,500, and Santa Cruz with 7,500. The Berkeley and Loa Angeles campuses would remain at their present sizes. Driver Unhurt As Car Hurtles Through Garage A car plummeted oil High Drive Into · a close<! -garoge In Laguna Beach at 9:15 a.m. today, ripping through a wall. The driver escaped injury. Driver Dorothy Ann Augus tine, 39. of 425 Hill St., had onJy a small scratch when the car landed. Officer Carmen Pollalltro 21aid Ms. Augustine caught her clog-style shoe between the gas pedal and the floor of the car when mating a tum north onto High Drive from Allview Terrace. Sbe looked down to see what bad h•Po pen ed. "By the time she looked up ohe was on her way through the garage," Pollastro said. The car hit the garage of Michael and Maureen Haag, ~70 Hawthorne St. Their house fronts on Hawthorne but the garage is on High Drive. Mn. Haag wu the only one home when she beard the crash. "I tliOtigbt the house had exploded,'' she said. Police saJd rnljor structural damage resulted to the garage, as well as damage to stored equipment inlllde: "But as for the car, If the windshield hadn't broken she could have driven it away," Pollastro aald. ~·There wasn 't even a Oat tire. I couldn't believe it." "It sounded lite a bo!nb had gone oft," said Anoe Grandy of 482 Hawthorne St. "! thought tt bad hit my house, it was so dolt.'' Agnes Durbin of 563 lll&h Drive was in lier cor ready to pull Into the atreet when the Augustine car went by and disappeared over the bank. "Sile ·just missed us," Miis Durbin oald. n't IJrink Their Bootleg Concoction POCATELLO, Idaho (UPI) -Two women have been arrested on charges o1 .. 111ng bootl•g liquor made from vodka, watu and urine. S!Ate Investigators said Wednesday hi Edna M. Collins, 54, ond Tiny Gtbocrl Word, "5, both of Pocotello, aold tho ml'1llre u -· as speclal prooecutor. u 1 wanted .. urances beyond thole that bacl been received by Cox," Jaworlkl said. .,. , •• Ila aard Haig used the words ''sue the Pres.ldent" as an example of the complete independence Jaworski would have. "Haig dbcullsed the matter with the President and then told me I hod tbot absolute asaurance," Jaworski said. Jaworski . was questioned about his RQid in Newport belle! that he had absolute Independence to carry out the investigatioo in view of Nixon's press conference statemtn•· Oct. 26 lhat he would not provide presidential documents to a !pedal pros- eculor. "Has the President's position changed?" asked Rep. Robert W. Karteruneier CD-Wis.). · "Yes," replied Jaworski. Jaworski said when he wu approached to take over Cox's Job be to1d Haig, 'Focus' Editor-publisher Jailed on Drug Charges The editor-publisher of "Focus," the a small quantity or loose leafy material avowed tabloid periodical of Orange resembling marijuana and two hand-roll· County's l»mosexual community, re-ed cigarettes containing the same com.-pounsf. mained in jail today on a charge or Detectives said today that in addition sale of dangerous druP. following a to his leadership in publlsh,ing the gay Wedoe9day night raid on his home. commwlity magazine thal Warren claim- who telephoned him. In -· tba~) he did not thlnl: he could occspt became -<. or the llck of Independence be per<elved in ~ assignment. " Haworski aald be agreed "with con--, slderable reluetaftce" to cOme to Washington for further discusslorui with Haig which, be said.Jed to the aasurance_ he sought. , 111 would not have accepted the ap- pointment had l not received --wt.at r . considered the most solumn and substan- tial assurances of my independence," Jaworski said. Jie appeared before the subcommittee to urge It to lay aside legislation for · the creation of a special prosecutor , outside the executive branch. 1 Jaw6rski said appointment of a special Id .. prosecutor in the judicial branch wou be :f troverslal, Ume-<ooSwnlng proc. ' ess at would delay and coofuse the :. \Vat ate investlgatton. ;: •• .. ,• ,; I-'-4 Panel Approves .. , Social Securit y ~: ··~ ,. Benefit Hike The team of ~ewport Beach d_etec:t.ives ed to be secretary of the American rmved on ~commercial artist and Civil Liberties Union's Orange County \VASHINGTON (AP) -Divided House ·· printer's west side apartment about 5:30 chapter. and \Vays and Meanll CommUteeJ: p.m., after an alleged drug purchase. A spokesman for the ACLU in Laguna stamped final approval today by •!-i Detective Capt. Rich Hamilton said Beach acknowledged that \Varren has vote a bill to hike Social Security beoefttl: 4 several mates fled the premises, some been active with the group but could 1 l percent next year and to increase · scrambling through windows, apparently the payrolJ.tax wage base for them. f unaware of the specific reason police not confinn whether he is an official. Under the plan, .expected to be Rady ~ were there. "'Ibose jobs just sort of get passed for House action next week, there would Warren, 33, of 2234 Pacific Ave., in around," explained Patricia Henog, an be a two-stage boost in Social Security county territory just outside Costa Mesa attorney who has long been active with benefits next year - 7 percent a nnlnc1' I city limits, wa.s formally booked on the constitutional right! organization . in April's check.i and anotber 4 ptrceot .!1• a charge cf sale or LSD, reportedly During the booking process, WarTen in Ju1y's checks. · ~" a quantity of three tablets allegedly listed. his occupation as commercial The increases wou1d be financed by :~r. obtained for $6, police said. artist and police said his residen~e con-hiking the payroll tax wage hue -~ 1 No ball bad yet befli set today and tained a variety of printing equipment. the level of wages· against which Sodd ·}' authorities were studying th~ possibility He has been a!fillated with the publica-Security taxes are paid -tO $13,200 . t of additional chars:es being filed by the tlon "Focus" since its inception in either effective ·Jan. 1. The current "$10,ll>O'·-:,-t Orange County District Attorney's Office. edito.rial or publishing capacities and base is set ·to go ·fo $12,600 JaQi• 1 ~':' ; Detective Dan Di Santo claimed in-proyided his busine~ card as its under existing law. There would ~-·~· .. : vestlgation at the scene also yielded. . representative to officers. change in the current 5.85 percent ~ •. ,five bottles containing about three ounces The magazine is generally circulated Security tax rate riext 'year. ~ '.' each alleged of amyl nitrate, another in the Orange County area and carries The Nixon administration favors rals-~· ' restricted drug. advertisements of bars, restaurants and ing Social Security benefits by 10 percent :,(-:- Investigators claimed they also found a church tailored for homosexuals. effective with next July's checks. ___ 1~ .. ' • • T.P~========~==========~ ·' ~ ·' ·-<: Captured! d Mediterranean Moo . and Pageantty ! 51,.oo ,,,,oo 11 s.oo 399,00 159,00 Your favorite interior designer wiU be Mm to assist 11ou , .. H.J.GARRElT fURNllURE PROFESSIONAL Opon Mon. 2216 HAR BOR ILVD. INTERIOR DESIGNERS Thurs. & Fri. Evos. COSTA MESA, CALIF. • ' • • ' ' ,, ,"~~ -.. ·~ .1; "';.' ' .. , .. · -t·t~, '"t':: .L.!.11 ·-'· ' . l ·~ . .. .. ~; ··. . ' ' ~ .,. ·-· ' -r, • • I • • r ; .• l "'i j I •i: ' '.~I -,~ • . r, ,. ·-~. ' : t' ' . ' I ' ~· ;· ' ' 1· • • ' ' !' I " I• ' ! •,' ! ! I i ' " I: I l •• .. " I' , / " • . . .. • .. ' .. ' I !. ' • • •• ' ' . I ' ' It ' •• . ' • .. ·4 ' ·,~ .. • Bush League r Police Work • t POLICE BEAT DEPT. -Anaheim ,c:ops have a beef with their City Hall . "1hey want more pay. They have flung p some pil'ket lines. They have ma9e o90me threats, too. 4 The Anaheim law en!orcers haven't 1,imply threatened to strike or picket ';,pr quit. Through the auspices or their union, the Anaheim Police As.sociation, lhey have threatened to take to the •,streets ln their patrol cars with a '1engeance. ·• In other words , frustrated in their -!~~Pt.s l.Q Jlegotiate .B pay h!!te at \City Hall, they'll punish the motoring .-public. ·~ THEY 'VOULD CALL this a "super .~p" operation. Drivers all across 'Anaheim would be pulled over for the )nost minor of infractions. Vehicles --.would then be inspected to see if the "•Super Cop could turn up little violations ·-or the safety code, like maybe burned.out ~license plate lights or d e f e c t i v e ,,.windshield wipers. • • In short, the Super Cops would take • (JUt their pay rebuff on the poor, "msuspecting public. They would write • 1ots of tickets. • • And they call this being a Super . -Cop? > OVER TIIE YEARS, I have had the :.pleasure of covering a n!ffiber of police .;. .departments in Orange County @d .. "partiC1.1larly along our coastline. My Dad ""as a · cop. My Mother. was in law • forcement for some time. ;· Never in all the years of observing ; the Orange County police scene have · 1 ever heard a suggestion of a more :--·arrogant. overbearing and ruthless ~ 1perversion of police power. ·~ The pres ident of Anaheim's cop :.'BSsOciatioo, of course, said of the ticket ;:sJ>ree proposal , "Thi s is something that >bi being held as a last resort. It 's ~<definitely an alternative we'd like to ~Javoid but we aren't saying we won't •·use it if we have to." , ·; He also admitted any such "give 'em ~ .:111 tickets" campaign would indeed : •arnoWlt to harrassment or the motoring : '.Public. ·r-Well, I have news for the Anaheim : 1COps. It doesn 't really matter whether .. <they really do it now or not. -· ._ ... JUST THREATENING it was enough . • :It was enough to confirm the suspicion · iJf many who, for years, have felt traffic • officers have ticket quotas and are "out -' . to get us" every day. . For years now, police agencies along ·'our coast have pushed campaigns to • improve their public image. Courtesy , .. to the public has been the byword. , :The policemen is your friend. lie is <here to help you, not hurt you. Support · Your Local Police. : • THEY HA VE GONE to schools. , 'preached safety. inspected thousands of : ~icycles. Helped in Little League, peewee . .lfootball, Explorer Scoul.s, crime preven- ; •tion campaigns and burglar-proofing ·'homes. ; Our coastal police departments are : "filled with fine peace officers who serve ' Jn the name of Jaw and justice. They • lmew they weren't going to get rich pushing a patrol car. Nobody promised them a rose garden and most of them ·'accept ii. NOW COMES ANAHEll\t and in one overbearing announcement, the cops of ·.that city may have torn down aII police . public relations everywhere. '. ·Newport Beach Police Chief B. James Glavas. informed of what was happening • in Anaheim . declared th.at he was hor· , rified. He feared they had set police -work back one decade. His fears may :-. be conservative. • Well. our coastal peace officers havP -only one consolation. It didn't happeii • here. lt happened in bush league Anaheim. . ............ - ' Gun.1nen Sleep; Dostage8 Slip Away ' WADENA, Minn. (AP) -Three memi>Crs of a farm family, held hostllfe for 3.1 hours by t'l\'O jail escapeest waited until their captors fell asleep today, !hen grabbed two of their glll>s and ran out of the house. The fugitives surrendered peacefUlly when lawmen woke them up by shouting into the , house and ordering them to come out, the FBI said. Elmer Wegscheid, his wife Joyce and their son Ed, 15, fled from the house at 4: 15 a.m. after their captors fell asleep. Three other Wegsheld children were allowed to leave the house Wed· nesday night. Wegscbeld said the f\Jgltiv'8, John P. MOllan. 37, and William Winana, ti, appemd lo enjoy the media attention given them during their occupation ol the Wogsclleid hon>e. "He (MorgM) wu lbe star," said Wogscheld. "He loved ti. 'nie televisipn a® stereo (radio) were always going." Mrs. Wegscheid said Winans also ap. peared lo enjoy the sUuation, bot Idolized Morgan. "Billy lost a tot wherl M9rgan started talking surrender," she said. "His hero was backtng down." Morgan had been jailed on murder charges ln a double slay~g. Winans had been charged with stealing beer and cigarettes. 1'1ey escaped from a Wadena jail Monday night after woun- Mystery Grows Weird Object Sighred on Rive r PASCAGOULA, Miss. (UPI) Another strange object has been sighted on the Pascagoula River ·where two fishermen reported being taken abo8.rd a spacecraft by weird creatures several •• weeks ago. The Coast Guard called the latest sighting "an unidentified submerge<! il- lwninating object:' Raymond Ryan, 42, said he saw the object while fishing on the river Tuesday night. The Coast Guard confirmed the sighting. Ryan said the underwater light follow- ed his boat and repeated efforts to beat ·the thing away with an oar only made the light get dinuner. Ryan sa id he summoned bis twin, brother, Rayme, and the two of them went back to the brackish waters and poked at the light with ,oars •gain be- fore going to Coast Guard officials. "At 9:40 p.m, the Coast Guard at Pascagoula dispatched a 16-foot boat to investigate the object," a spokesman said . "The object was located in four to six feet of water, moving at 4-i knots," the Coast Guard report said. The officers name<i-lfle Object "an unidentified submerged illuminating object," and described it as "an amber beam, 4-6 inches in diameter, attached to a bright, metal object." Coast Guard officials said they tried to retrieve the object, but "it would appear to go out and move away and then reappear." 'nie report said tlle object traveled · on several different courses during the hour they had it under surveillance. New Tail Fi11s Being Put On Skylab Launch Rocket CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) Engineers today begin fitting new stabilizing tail fins onto the Skylab 3 launch rocket to replace a set corroded by salty sea air. The problem caused a fiv~ay delay in getting the space station flight under way. Skylab 3 pilots Gerald P. Carr, who was reared in Santa Ana, Calif., Dr. Edward G. Gibson and William R. Pogue return to their training base at the Johnson Space Center in HOlLSton this afternoon after only a day at the spaceport to be fitted for their spacesuits . ' Space agency officials Wednesday postpooed liftoff of the last trio of astronauts to man the orbiting station until 6:36 a.m. PST next Thursday. The crew, set to stay at least a record 60 da)'ll aboard Skylab, had planned to blast off Saturday morning. Kennedy Space Center Launch 0irect9r Walter J. Kapryan said in a briefing that the "hairline" cracks in the framework of the 30-square-foot fins were d.isoovered late Tuesday during a routine inspection of the big Saturn 1~ booster rocket. Rumors Flying-Hughes May Reside in Miami l\1IAMI (UPI ) -Business associates say Ho'N3rd Hughes may soon move into the l\.liarni home he purchased from his millionaire friend George Davis - while closing a financial deal with Davis' development finn. Rumors Wednesday that H u g h e s himself was in Miami died down when clues dropped by Davis' staff pointed to a Davis-Hughes meeting, perhaps later today, at the International Monetary Bank on British Grand Cayman Island in the Caribbean. home Hughes purchased from 'oavis in 1'1iarni, CXcunpton said, "It's just a bit premature, 1 think personally,. but il would not surprise me at all if he resided in that house iri the near tuture." Federal agents ·friendly with Hughes ever-present "advance men," said the billionaire recluse was not in Miami. 'Ibey also said there are no legal im- pediments lo his THOtablishlng U.S. residency. Vesco Under Guard ' .. : · .. ~ ... . . · .. ... ~ .. · .. ... ... .. .. .. .MINN. '1'11mbles UPI T.ifllMtt Marlene Dietrich fell off the stage Wednesday night at the Shady Grove Music Fair in Washington. Although unhurt, the 72-year-old actress order- ed the audience out of the room before she left the or· chestra' pit. ·---~-- Saigo11 Reports That Third War Has Now Starred diJli I jailer with I II""· 'J11ey holed up In the Wepdleld llome ,.,_, night and began barphlinc ·with pollct for a plane lo fly them lo freedom, ' Wegscbeld aa!d be noUced Morgan and Winans were uleop about ! a.m., bot ho was DOI cmlldent .an~ eS<ap< attempt would 1ucceed. • He said the fll&1U... had two htgho powered rlfl .. and a omalJ caUbe. pistol. "The phone kepi rqing about ! ,a.m. and my h111band answered It," Mrs. Wegsd>eld said. '"Ibey (Ille fllgllives) didn't aur.•1 _ Wegocbeld said neither ho nor bis wife talked about making a breel!. bot looked at me another and each knew wbat Ibey had lo do . President's.· War Power Curtailed nesday by Robert N. Winter·Berger that the panel will decide by early next week whether to r.efer the transcript of the session to the Justice Department with a possible recommendaUon for per· jury action. SAIG,ON CUPI) -The Saigon govern· e l.aWflet'•' Counts Cut ment said today the recent upsurge CHICAGO - A federal court judge in lighting across the country, with three Wednesday freed Chicago Seven lawyers bases falling to the Communists in less William M. Kunstler and Leonard I. than a week. marked the start of the Weinglass Of seven of 14 contempt third Vietnam war. charges stapPed on them by Judge Julius J. Hoffman during the riot conspiracy Bui Bao True, the g o v e r n m e n l trial of 1969-70. spokesman, told a news conference an U.S. District Court Judge F.dward estimated 400,000 North Vietnamese T. Gignou:i: left stand.Ing for further soldiers in the south were responsible trial six contempt citations against for the latest battles. Kunstler end one count against Weinglass. "The third war has indeed started in South Vielnam," True said. "From • Rebo:o Clulrges Libel ti MIAMI -Presidential c o n I id a n t sma attacks to which nobody "paid Charles G. "Bebe" Rebozo has filed attentioR, the -Communists will launch a $10-milliod suit against the Washington bigger and bigger operations." Post C:O., charging the newspape r libeled The first Vietnam war, with French him in a story ~bout a stock k.__aiwtc:llon. participation, lasted from 1945 to 1954. Rebozo, -in a suit filed In Miami The second conflict. involving the uruted Federal Court Wednesday, said the post States, took place from 1961 to 1973. libeled him Oct. 25 when it ran a front "lf they launch a big offensive -page article alleging he cashed $91,500 and small attacks throughout the country in stolen stocks in 1968 alter being could also be considered a big offensive told they were stolen. Davi=as an interest in the bank on the sheltered island south of Cuba, and '1heni be absolutely no prob- lem" in Hughes flying from his last- reported retreat, London, directly to Grand cayman, according to L. M. Crampton. -the negotiations can break up," True e GurnelJ f'uad At!tion NASSAU, Bahamas (UPI) -Police said. MIAMI -Larry L. Williams. 29, of beefed up their vigilance of fugitive Government and Communist Orlando, will plead guilty to two felony financier Robert L. Vesco Wednesday, negotiators have accomplished little so charges in connection with Illegal fund posting guards on bis private plane in far at the Paris talks, which began raising on behalf of Sen. Edward J. Jast winter under terms of lbe Jan. Gurney (nFla ) the Miami· Her td He Aki ho and his wilo awoke Ed, """ -....... iq>lllln. "Wbm Eddie came down • • • I grabbed one .JI0..30 and I pist<JI olf the . ta!>W.'' Wtpclleld aald. 'Ille three then -lo the. door. "We pmbled they """""'t lhool Us In the bock once wt Sot outside/' he added. Law enlu'cernent officen let Morpn • lllld -sleep for ...... than .. hour to · preptre for a poealble coo- lrontatJi>ri. J""1' Trimbach, apedaI agent ID charge ol the FBI In Mtooeopollll, llld the iUCiti ... were m!tnd lo come out of the llouae about 11> bocl'I after the Wegschelds escaped. l UPI,_........ FLORIDA BUILDER John J. · Pri11t11 Ni~on Official Denies Builder's / Shakedown Tak .. , WASHINGTON (AP) -A NI.mo tt- electlon campaign olficial deoitd Wider oath today a Fl0<lda builder's lestlmony that be ptUnlsed lo solve the builder'• legal problems in exchange ·for '100,000 cash contribution. Benjamin Fernandez, who headed tho Hispanic Finaoce Committee to RMlect the Pr<sident, rejected the cbarges made Wednesday by Jobn J, Prlestes·ol Coral . Gables. In an opening statement before the Senate Watergate committee, Fernandez said he was "appalled, slDckfd ..:l disgusted wllb the tenor ol bis (Prieoles') · testimony." Fernandez said a meeting he bad with Priestes was arranged by the builder's a.ssoclates, that "I never uked him for a dime," and that Priatea "was never prom.bed any favon - directly or indirectly -in eichange for his donation" of $25,000 to NiJ:on'1 re~lection effort. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dttiwry of lht Dally Pitot is 9uuanlttd """"9.,_,l'IHy, II ,_ ..... ""9 ""' .....,.. 'Y J1• •·""• Ctll ..... ,_ C..., will .............. ,.... , ..... ,. .......... ,,. ,. .... h..,..Y """ s ...... ,, II .,.. .. ll9t ,..... ,.., qfy w • '·"'· •• ,.,...., ..... l ,lft. S..Uy, Cllt 11111 I un wll IM ......... • ,..., C-... 1111 IM• ..iu It t .IR. Teltphonn Mnt Or .... ,_,, .,,_ ....... .a-un MWWlwetf ........... ltklil a.Ml .... lllllfltt., ,. •• •• , ••• Mt-IDI S.11 ,._,., ,,,..,.._ htcl. S111 J•H Ct""'9M, D-. ~. s..fll ......... U.-0 H'-"91 •· ........ Crampton, a vice president in charge of engineering and acquisition for the Davis Development CO. of Miami, said, "I think within five to ten days there will be so~e sort ol public statement. This is a business deal, and nothing personal concerning Mr. IJlughes." further moves to keep him from leaving !,.r • • a the Bahamas. Vesco, wider indictment \lr28~ce~a~sie-~fi~re~a~gree~~m~en~t.~r;;;;;i~==~r~epo~rt~ed~t~od~a~y~. ~~~~~~~~~~1~~;~;=~=;;~ with former Nixon Cabinet members Jolm N. Mitcllell and Maurice H. Stans AQUA NET KOTEX on conspiracy and obstruction of justice WE But when pressed about the island charges, was arrested Tuesday on a HAIRSPRAY QUOTE R .... .59 box of 12 U.S. extradiUon request and freed on Rog •• 98 _ 13 oL PRESCRIPTION • .. PS,~ bail. :::~ m 3.9¢ Arctic Air Numbs Plains ·39¢ ~·~ "DE•11cEL" ,. • Most of Nortli Dakota, Montana Below Zero •• AIM Tope by Johnson & Johnson R •• 79·1'\x 5yd1 • .. Tempcr«t11res Hklll L~ Pel. ~ " SS }2 ,01 " ~ ~ " " M Sl l1 ~ ,. ~ " .. ~ ... " M " " " .. 17 '' . ~ 1J 10 .. ,. " . JO M " ,. .. "•• ~ 62 •01 I tt ~ n " " .. " " " £ g !l l! ll ~ l! ·" " ·-~ ,, " " " " I, . U" WIA11tt 1()10C J41 C. . . • St1n, "'""'"· Tld<'ir TNUalDAY StcOl'ld 111o11 ............ 11n "'"" u SKCll'ld tow •. • l:~p.m.. ... i ,.IOAY Fl'lt !Ifft\ .......... 111' a.m. .. . Fl"I low ............. 1:111.m 1.J s.eor. "'"" ............. 1.,.m. <&.J lkwlll low ••• •. ••••• !:M p.m. .0.1 """"-•:lf ··"".... •:J4 ia.m. MOOll thn >:• ,.m. ~ 1111'1.m. TOOTHPASTE ~~29¢ TR1AMINIC EXPECTORANT Rog. 2.23 4 ft. ·99¢ RHONE'S GUNDERSON DRUG 716 E. BALBOA BLVD. BALBOA rltlw....,,.,.. 11 111 THERAGRAN-M -~,-- MEDICATED PADS R ... 1.49 • Jor of 75 BARNES-HIND WETTING SOLUTION .... 1.29 • 2 OL - 7 • • - ' --- Today's Final N.Y. Stooks * ~ V,OL 61>, NO. 312, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES .ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY:, NOVEMBE:R 8, 1973 N TEN CENTS :·Chiel Glavas Flags-Anahei111 ·Super Cops I - By WIWAM SCHREIBER Of .. Dclib' P'iltt Stitt ' "1bat kind or conduct coutd set back considering the last ditch ,alternative Glavas said he doesn't see any • said he "strongly objects to any change mass-ti cketing campaign by dissenting professional law enforcement a decade," of public harrwment as a means to justification for such an action, which in practice fron1 that which is standard off icers in that city four years ago. • Top Anaheim police .and city officials today had no comment on a threat by dissenting policemen to take on the role· of "super cops" by· citing drJvers for even the tnoat minor violations, lf lb~ !:)ty fails to bargain with them said Newport Beach Chief B. James get the city to come to terms. he said can only hurt the Image of in the department in order to put the "l think this ts completely ill-advised t Glavu, fonner president of t be Among other tl:tings, the APA is policemen in the eyes of the public. . pressure on during_ negotiations. . an d completely counter-productive " l California P,eace Officers Association. c;\emanding higher pay than the city "I can think of a lot or alternatives ';I don't thin k 1h1s enhances the 1n1age . . . .. . ' 1 "Thia . would be a CQJDplete1y ir4 is' offering, better fringe benefits and to this kind of thing and the more or police at all and certainly is not Robita1lle said. It does nothing for t responsible action. in JPY b.ook and the right tg a~t as sole bargaining agent t think about )~ the ID9fe horri fied professionaJ in my opinion," he .s~id. the department ~d certain,l,Y doesn't ! couldn't possibly act to their benefit " for the officers in the department. I get." .. "l sirtcerely hope such a th ing never engend er community respect. . Glavas added. 1 Barry said he hopes the situation won 't Glavas' though ts were echO'ed, by Hun4 happens do\vn here but I think our Robitaille said that whenever the .po!1ce over new contracts. · · ...., But several Orange Coast police chiefs contacted by the Daily Pilot had plenty In say. Detective Chet Barry, president of oome to the need for zealous ticketin g tington Beach Police Chief Earle guys haye a lot better sense," Neth in Huntington Beach have .~d Sl!fl:1lar the Anaheim Police Association (APA ) of drivers. but he said the idea hasn't Robitaille. He called the tactic a "8an added . problems, it is us ually unsohcited c111zen I said Wednesday his group is seriouslf been rejec'ted, ejther. Diego technique," referring to a similar Aides tor Anaheim Chief Dave Michael {See 'SUPER COPS,' Page.!) Secretart . . Do g Kennels Raise Ho wls a Union Seeks Says Tape s- • Bad Quality R<sidents ol Santa Ana Heights :1.re really raising a howl OYel' some proposed dog kennels. This puzzles one Wning administrator because 'the ones .screaming the loudest are area horse owners. who s!ioul<l be compatible with the dog lovers. For years the-two groupc-have - been the best ol neigbbon. See this and other Ha!tlor Area related stor- ies and pictures on Page 29 today. To Impeach ·:er-esident WASmNGTON (AP) -. Pr<Sident Nixon's pertonal secretary told a federal court today tlrat portions of the sub- poenaed Watergate tapes were very poor in quality and . that it is humanly im- possible to bear every word· en them. . "I could not get· eveey word," . Jlo.$e Mary Woods said In desttibing the Job of typing ·a rough tranacripf of 'l'ven conversaU~os between the Presklent and key Watergate figum. (Related story Bcilboa Fun Zone Hearing Date . ' Gets Exrension' Page 3.) • .. u ....... ~~ ~ ea1~ Fun •~ Miss WOQds, Nlml's _..,, tar .< ~-~"" ---~ more than:» years, Ald the b-.ibing ' cmdomlnlmn project ..i Lquna Village work tool: ber nearly a ..U., WWting BazUr lhoppln& center beloro the state on and off, aometlmel--on.-weQenda coastal commission have been enended and often far Into the nlaht. for IDOlher eo daJS The Watergate prosecution force wants . · a federal grond jury to bear the tapes. Both proJecls, wblch were denied The White lloule said -Y it never permlta by the South Coast Regional said anything .about wbetber eecret. Zone Conservation Commission and then presidential tapes were audible because appealed were set for discuasion it bad been -king .., the U1U111ptlon ., ' . they never would be beinl publicly. Wedne.day ID Burlingame. "I recoanlze tompletely there ls a They were pulled off the agenda prior question ol credibility," press oeeretary to the meeting to allow more study Ronald L. Ziegler said. b --•--•-•------~ d el But he said he was sure the matter Y COnui~ PUIW.lalt ..-.a ev opers. woold be cleared up In court to the utis-Jon Konwuer ls proposing In build faction of lhe public. 33 condominiums In place· of the Fun Nixon, responding Wednesday night ·to Zone amusement park on the baylront i:nount~ calls for his resignatioo, vowed In Newport Beach be bas 'oo intenllon whatever o1 walk-· • ing away from the job I was elected In 'Ille ™'llCMquare-foot bazaar a I do." Pacific CoaJI lllghay and Bluebinl Cm>- Nixoo_ voiced his d<lem!lnatlon to yon Road 'ts planned by Marl< Gumbiner bold onto his o«ice in "a persmat note" and Assoc. at the end. of a televisiOl14radio address The next state coastal commission to ~ nation on ~ Pi:®lems. meeting is Nov. 28 in Santa Monica Mw Woods said she first saw one . Civic Auditorium, at which time a vote of th~ controversial tapes Sept. 29, when, may be scheduled on the proposed ad· at NlXon's request, she began the task dition of two nuclear reactors to the of transcribing them at the President's San' Onofre power plant lhree miles mouotaiatop-retreaL at camp David, south of San Clemente. Md. WASHINGTON (AP) -The AFL-CIO began a nationwide lobbying campaign today for the immediate impeachment of President Nixon, saying the President "has given clear evidence he does not intend to resign." 'The 13.S-millioll4member labor federa- tion is the first national organization with political muscle to push actively for NlXOrt's impeachment. A sharply 'l\'Orded statement accusing the President Of, among dtber thtngS, having "consistently lied to the American people," was prepared by the leadership for distribution at factory gates, union meetings and for mailing to rank-and-file workers. It urges all union members to write their congressmen and Chairman Peter Rodino of .Jhe House Judiciary Com4 mittee to ~ake them "aware of the need for urgency in voting the im4 peachment of the President." With congressional mail running heavi- ly in favor of impeachment, Rodino's committee has begun studying possible grounds for such action. 1be AFUIO is credited with having one of the most effective lobbying organizations on capitol Hill when it cc:mes to bread..a.Jld..butter issues af. fecting workers' pocketbooks. Its suc4 cesses on philosophical issues, however, have been limited. At its convention last month in Miami Beach. the labor federation unanimously adopted a resolution urging Nixon to reslgn "in the interest of restoring a fully functioning government." The resolution called for impeachment if he refused. Nixon declared Wednesday in a na- tionally televised address that he ha s no intention of stepping down as long as be is physically able to carry on. l 0 1 went up there to try to listeq I - I use Uiat wurd advisedly -to ' take doW. u much u possible of the , tapes that were subpoenaed," she lellilled al a bearing before U.S. District Court Judge Jobn J; SJrtca. Harbor Area Public Pool .Reinecke Wife . Access Limits Rejected Plans (or limltln1pacceu to the Harbor -Suing Over =·ix:~1~~t=:-c1raS:: boards Wedn..iay after local swim Ne wport Units groups objected to them. Scene of the dispute was a meeting LOS ANGELES (UPI) _ Jean of the Newport-Mesa Unilied School c. Reinecke, wife Of the lieutenant . Board, which owns and operates the governor, llled 1 U miDion damage . pool located on the campus of Newport suit today, clatmli fraud In con· Harbor High SChool. nection with her lllltl parchue. of 'When the dust cleared after the Beach meetlni, there oeemed to be three an Interest In the Newport , poutbll_iUes for raolving the iJsue:, Country Club Apaitments. -&llber aome --would .bave to a~ss to the pool because there were so many outside groups that some of the district's high school swim programs were being squeezed out. · Io one case, trustees were told, the Costa Mesa High School swim team had been forced to use a pool in Mission Viejo because UC Irvine was using the · district pool. Trustees also heard a complaint from Jack Fullerton of the Costa Mesa Aquatic Club, a swimming club sponsored by \the Costa Mesa Recreation Department. The 11111 cbarpd !hat lhe men • -'-··· r-~ -. -ttd-tir-p1-1Ltntent ~cl...... al~tber, which trusteeJ . partnenblp did _mt have Jl!Mt'4~ps were aoing lo have FulJerton said that while the Newport Beach Recreation Department was given up In 13 hours a day In use tlie pool In the summer, "we were told that wt bad to practice before 6 a.m. or after 10 p.m. if we wanted to use the pool." necellll)' _lepl,psnnitl to sen her · to woo. ii1lt In tbe pool at the same tbe bm -l ~ In. the Ume, wblch lrmteel aeemed In favor, .apartment complex. ~ -would have lo bWld , Mrs. Relnetlle, 1!ho IOUihl relum a new Olymplc-slle pool. • of her ll0,000 lnNUnenl plus •.,,,.;.,; are .i,ey m1ny Peot>le who puntUve damages of $! mlllJon, Wlllt In 111e the pool ond only ao many cbaraed the def-COllCOlled mn Jn ·I •-, 10 11'1 cleor lhal --.._ I 11aecret --'It" of neat-~ ~ -r-· ~ II llllnll to have to give," lY llOO,IOO lhroucJilml relala. said Doolld Hout, as1lstanl district ' Namod • del-were --.t llliwart F. tluby, llobert J. Fnmlao, ai.~ff·i-·-my 0W1derttanding that the -anl II. Broida ud M, • -111111 111 In ...,,. up with a lAwnmce jlerk u well u lour -m.tbocl. of ICbedullnl fol' the pool • ...,,panlel. ACOllldtac lo Iha IAllt, lbat wtD te,p everybodJ wllh a chance Berti '!&I (ormerly lln. llelllocllo'1 to U1e It. ... -public ......,taat and... ''Tllat will mean that more than one the -wbo apprucbod her to ...., llll1 have lo use h at oace," brvtll to Ille ·~ .... aid. • School ollkial1 bad wanted to limit -. • .-l " • -• /, • ' • ' • •• ' • • F\dlerton-indicated that the new rules dldn1 seem to resolve that Inequity. Another complainlna group was the Balboa-Corona Aquailai Club which -.Id have been squeezed out of the poo\ entirely under the proposed new set of regulations. Spokesmen presented petitions which they .said contained 1,000 signatures pro- testing the ellmlnaUon of lhe Balboa· Corona club. "l'rUatees agreed the. provision llmiUng Newport Beach ' to the sponsorship of lllfl Gile team -the .Newport-trvine- -Aquatics Club -sbould1 be struck (See POOL, Page l) -.. ' • ___,,eace Poliee · Seize~Tivo Men • In Execution Murders SACRAMENTO .(AE)"-Two men were arrested today for questioning·1 in ·~t? executiOHt)'Je ·murder of, nine penoos in a luxury nu:aI home, · inves'tigatOrs reported. , ' A · man police-ldenWied as . V,:illie Luther St~lm8'a, 28, of Lqdi,. came ,out o! an apartmeijt, l!ullding wl)h his hands raised after ,police · surrounded. the building and fired -• . tear gas canlslell inside. Earlier, police arrested a man iden4 tified as Douglas Gretzler, 2Z, of New York City, in a hotel four blocks from the state capitol where the two were re'gistered under their own names. Police said Steelman appeared after MASS "MURDERS SHOCK. SMALt TOWN-,Story, Page 3 . ' they honored his request io broadcast over a rock ·radio station a m~ge saying be would DOI be ~urt il he ·surrendered. He was preceded by a woman who was not lmmediatety lden~fied. She said she threw a • pistol on the lawn as she came out No shots were .beard wben Gretzler was apprehended lb a roonr~room search of the Clunie Hotel on th• downtown Sacrameato mall. Wearing borMlnunecl alwes and a leatl!er coat, Gl'iiler wu ,surr<IUll<l!ld by a dozen policemen who liu.u.d him through a crow~ of news reporters in the loJ!l>Y aad Into a w1itlng car. SllOlglin-armed police 9\lrrounded the hotel and e111cuated the third flqor before the lelrdl bqan. lnvestlpton believe Steelman w11. ac- companied by a woman, .bad no i~ fonnation on ·whether ·she was a friend or· hostage. San Joaquin County Sh&ilf's Lt. ·Dooald Morrow . sa\d · Grelzler and Steelman were ,also ·~ing sought on a tWC>COUnd·m~r warrant by Phoenix, .Ariz. aµthortties . Morrow said · the Mesa and Victor .crimes are sl.inilar and that StOOJman live\I ab<\Ul l)irie. miles from wh.ere the ~ ~les were ,discOvered Wednesday niilc11iri& .In the home of the )Valter Parkin family . The victims were identified as Parkin, 33, who owned a f09d market two miles away'; his wife JoaMe, 31 ; their children, Lisa, 11, and Bobby, 9: Richard A. Earl, a neighbor and accountant ; Earl 's (See CAUGIIT, P11e ZI ·Hearings S1ated • 1_ •. On General P lan . . - Newport Beach p 1 a n n l n g com· missioners tollight will ~Id public hear- ings on four major portions of the city 's general Rian. The nieettng will be held al 7: 30 tn Qty Oxncil chambers of Newport Beach aty Ball. Helrlngl are scheduled. for the recrea- tion aod open space element, ,the master plan o[ blWeways. the housing elemen t. .and the conservation or natural resources element. ' Rod Gunn, director of advanced plan· nlng, said he would recommend that the commtsaion DOI adopt any elements tonight but he said he hoped for broad citizen comment on all of them. .an l\.i ssinger Ends Talk In Egypt •. By Tbe Aueclated -!'~. • • The Israeli staie radio said today Israel accepted a five-point plan worked out through the United States 1or a settlement with Egypt. ~ The radio quoted foreign correspond4 , ents ln Tel Aviv, who in turn quoted : government suorces. Other weJl-placed /' government sources said, '.lO~·ever, the ·: report was "close to the truth." • The correspondents, not identified , i were understood to have received the , information in· a briefing by a govern-' ment source. ~ The radio laid the plan was reached t In talks between Secretary of State ) Henry A. Kissinger and his aides in talU 1 in Cairo and Tel Aviv. 1 Quoting foreign correspoodents, lhe • ·broadcast sai4 the clauses were: I ' -A prisoner of war exchange "al \ soon as possible." 1 -A supply corridor for the encircled Egyptian 3rd Army that would be U.N.· supervised and run through Israeli lines. But it wouJd include no weapons, and in no way be controlled by EpPt. -Removal of the Egyptian blockade of the Bab-el4 Mandeb strait, Israel's vital outlet to the Indian Ocean. 1 -Negotiations between Israeli and Egyptian military commanders to ar4 range a more convenient ceue-fire line for the two sides. I -Direct peace negotiations between 1 Israel and Egypt, once the first four I points are fulfilled. .4 Kissinger flew to Jordan and Saudi~ Arabia after spending a day in talks t with President Anwar Sadat in Cairo. \ Kissinger's assistant in charge of Mid4 : die East affairs, Joseph J. Sisco, emerg-1 ed from talks with Premier Golda Mell: in Jerusalem and told newsmen: "I feel optimistic." He had gone to Israel unexpectedly from the Calro sessions Wednesday, ap- parently carrying with him detail! of the Kissinger..SSdat meetings. Egyptian government spokesman Abm4 ; ed Anis indicated to a news conference 1 in Cairo that Egypt climbed down from its previous insistence that Israeli forcts withdraw immediately to lines rea'checl Oct. 22 as demanded In two U.N. Security Council resolutions. "They must show signs that they will Implement the resolutions," Anis said, 1 referring · lo the Israelis: "Once this is done the whffls w1ll start rolling, and we may soon go to a peace con4 ; ference, perhaps after a few days." 111: J1 • C:Out Weatller SomeJog or low clouds night and morning hours but otherwise sunny is the forecast fur Friday. Highs at the beaches in the ms rising to 75" inland. Overnight lows in the 50.s. INSIOll 'l'ODA Y Three members of a farm family, held hostage by two jail escapees, waited until their cbp. tors /ell a1ltep and rll'n out the house and esooped. Stor11, poge· 4. l . M,-..,. ta Cati~ tt c,,..,. c-r 1t c-..ir1t11 a.., c-1<• • CrM1'""11 lt 0..... Mlle.. IJ Eflterlat l'ttl 6-P 1111Wtel-'ftl •s1 ,._. .. , ,., JM ._.. It lkrt1ceH M Allt ~ ll • • I 2' DAIL.Y PIL.Ot Thursd,v, NovemOtt 8, l97l M11rde r Claims Superi1itende1it 'Assassi1iated, OAKLAND . (AP) -'fbe "Symbtonese Liberation Army" has claimed respons1b1lity for the assassination o! Oaklllld school chief Marcus Foster, and a telephone caller says the chief of police will be the '.'next" target, authorities said today. · . . Police guards have been assigned to other city and school o!li· c1als 1n . the wake of the hail of gunfire that killed Foster Tuesday and senously wounded Deputy Supt. Hobert Blackburn as they left the Oakland school adrninistrat.io11 building. . A . spokesman for the Alameda County Coroner's office said it received .a threatening call \Vednesday night, naming Police Cheif Charles Gain as the "next" victim. Gain accepted a job as chief of police in St. l.'etersburg, Fla., but has not departed. The message to a radio station said Foster had been found g~ilty of crimes against children and had been sentenced to death. Dist. Atty. Lowe}.I Jensen ~ailed the shooting an "ass3ssination." ~mergeney Legislat ion Congress Promises Fast . Action on Energy Laws !ASHJNGTON (AP) -Congressional leailers today promised prompt action on l most or all of the energy saving measures requested by President Nii:on in ftis address to the nation. Senate Interior Chairman Henry M. Jackson said his committee will hold STATE ENERGY SOLUTIONS NOT ENOUGH ? S.. Poge 10 FUEL FOR PLEASURE BOATS A QUESTION -Story, Page 15 QUESTIONS, ANSWERS ON ENERGY PLAN TOLD, P1ge 40 public hea rings on emergency legislation today and report a bill out by Friday. Senate approval could be expected .next week, Jackson said. But today Jackson said "I don't be- lieve in this emergency legisl.a.J.ion .... we.. can start dealing with " the problem of gas, including deregu]ation. He indicated he would be willing to consider it in subsequent legislation. On the House side, Democratic whip John J. McFall ([).Calif.), predicted ac- tion on the President's proposals before the December recess. "U be wants a bill, we'll give him From Pagel 'SUPER COPS' • • support that wins the da.y. COEita Mesa Police Chief Roger Neth said he preferred to refrain from com· menting on the veiled threat by his cificers ·because of the "fragile silu3· tlon'I in the city. Gafy McRae, Anaheim's personnel director and the man in charge of the city's side of the dispute, would not comment specifically on the "super cop" proposal . "I am confident the citizens of Anaheim will continue to receive the protection they have always received and I think the officers will act with honesty and integrity," be said. McRae said he ls unsure of the status of negotiations since the contract talks were broken off three week! ago. Anaheim officers staged a protest march in front or City Hall Wednesday. a bill," said Rep. Torbert H. Macdonald (D-Mass.), chairman of the House sub- committee on power. In his Wednesday night address, Nixon accused Congress of failing to act on any of the energy measures he sent tG the Hill. The President said it was now "imperative" that Congress pass legis lation (I) establishing year-round Daylight Saving Time, (2) authorizing relaxation of clean-air standards, (3) approving the lapping of naval petroleum reserves and ( 4) giving the government power to reduce speed limits nationwide and restrict working hours. Macdonald said Nixoo already bad the authority to do most of what he asked and accusel the President of playing "an absolute shell game" in blaming C.Ongress for· inaction. 1be White House said today Nixon is . asking govemOrs, mayors · and county officials to consider shortening · school hours during the winter and extend the tenn into the summer months to help cope with the energy crisis. The request is being made in a tele- gram being sent today to the officials. ln addition, press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said energy czar John Love would meet this afternoon in the Exeaitive Of. lice Building with energy advisers to governors from around the nation. In addition, he said, meetings are be- ing held today by federal regional coun- cils in 10 cities -Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Kansas City, DenVer, San .Francisco and Seattle -to seek cooperation d other government officials. zreSter was asked whether Nixon would curtain his own travel because of the energy crunch, He responded that the President would continue to travel where and when necessary but this his aircraft "will proceed at an aporopriate reduced speed" to save fuel. Business and oil industry spokesmen generally backed NlJ:on's call for the national effort to coo.serve energy al- though some were worried about the' side side effects of reducing oil consumption, such as the possible loss of some jobs, Mike Wright, board c!ninnan and chlef executiYe of Exxon Corp., gave the President strong support today, "We support the President's call for a sharp curtailment in energy use as soon as possible," he sald. ~IY PIJtt ~~a~ i<•1tt J RefkctiO...s on Wi•iter .November sun com bine s with ocean for this dazzling li ght show at en-taken earlier in the afternoon. View is from cliff overlooking Corona ~-•~ trance to Newport Harbor. Though it looks like a sunset, photo was del Mar State Beach and harbor jetties. Ke1nper Fou1id Sane, Guil ty In 10 Deaths SANTA CRUZ (AP) -A jury found hulking Edmtmd Emil Kemper III guilty and sane today in the butchery of eight women including his mother. · It wu Kemper's secpnd conviction for murder in 10 years - a total of 10 klllings . The panel of six men and six women deliberated five hoiifi before returning a · verdict against the 2.5-year-old *fen~ ~t. who was convicted at · age 15 of killinf bls paternal grandparents, for which he served live years in a slate mental hospital. ~·I .agree with your verdict entirely," said Santa Cruz County Superio. Court Judge Harry Brauer, wOO announced the verdict. Kemper was found guilty of eight counts of first-degree murder and ad- judged '81le by the jury. · From Pagel CAUGHT ••• wife, Wanda ; their son, Ricky._ 1~; their daug~ter, ~bbie, 18: and Mark Lang, Offtcers SaJd an WldetenniDed IUDOl1'lt· of cith i.S ~slrg from a floor safe in a food marlt:et owned by Parkin, and that there may be a connection between the slayings and the theft. Carol Jenkins, 18, a roomer in the Parkin home, discovered the slaytngs. Canlis said she told deputies that she came home after a date at about 3 a.m. Wednesday and went directly to bed, suspecting noUting. But be said abe was awakened at S a.m. by-. two friends of Lang, who were knocking on the door because he had not come home the night before· and his car waa parked in front of the Parkin house. -'-~~~~~~~~ Dr. Hartelius' Former Lover Assailed in Court Bv TOM BARLEY Ct tlM o.JIY ''* 's19" LOS ANGELES -Prosecution witness Reba Vaughn's character and testimony were repeated1y attacked again here today as Dr. Ebbe Hartellus' lawyers put on more deferuie witnesses in the secood day of the eighth three-day state hearing. Hartelius, 50, of El Toro, is charged with moi:al turpitude and unprofessional conduct. ·it is alleged -ti:iii~ repeated drugging or Mrs. Vaughn, 31 , led lo her commitment as a narcotics addict in 1969 after the pair had lived as lovers at her C:OSta Mesa home. 1be Danish-born doctor'• former ptl"amour has been repe;ltedly branded as a liar and ·a thief by a aeries of witnesses whose iestirnony b desjgned to CQunter the effect of the attractive blonde's earlier statement from the witness stand. But the defense was warned today · by state hearing officer John A. Willd that be will not allow more than IO character witnesses to testily f« Dr. Harielius. His decision followed the charge by state lawyers that moat of the defenae testimony "is the most blatant form of hearsay." Defense attorney Matthew Kurillch continues to argue that 30 cbarader witnesses should be allowed after earlier assuring the committee that be could put 500 persons on the stand. It has also been testified that Hartellus enjoyed a serual relationship with the late Wanda Melendrez, 29, of Costa Mesa and drugged the nurses• aide to the point that she spent most of the time In bed and neglected her young family. Two attorneys trying the case for the state Board of Medical Examiners have fLmlly rejected a deal proposed by the defense. They are seeking the revocation of Or. Hartelius' license to practice medicine. Five out of six defense witnesses called thus far in the current bearing have stated that Hartelius is a highly regarded physician in ·the Harbor Area and that he bas been the v1ctim of a series of false accusations. He was described as "thoroughly pro- ftssional and ethical" by· his of(ice-nurse, Mrs. Mary King, and even more strongly defended by· her hW:bal'llf. retired Vice Admiral E. L. King of the U.S. Navy. "I don't think a man could have a better repu tation ," the former Naval officer told tfle committee of three doc· tors. And he assured the panel that if he had ever had any doubts about Hartellus's innocence he would have in- sisted. on bis wife ending her 12-year service in the doctor's office at 2345 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. "If be had done anything wrong, she would have walked out anyway," com· mented the ,Peppery seafarer, renllndlng the commlttee that Hartellus had been cleared of arson, fraud and bribery charges In three Orange Cotmty SuperiOr Court trials. ... King 11111' bis wife .. peatedly COil· demned Mn. Vaughn as a liar . and a thief and three witnesses have now testified that they have been threatened over the telephone on various occasions by Mrs. Vaughn and her mother. Mrs. Jane Jack, a cmvalescent hospital administrator employed by the company that controls Bayview Manor in Costa Mesa, testified that Mn. Vaughn telephoned her and used foul language while she threatened to kill the witness for "seeing Dr. Hartelius." Mtd Newport Beach attorney W. Gerald Brown testified that Mrs. Vaugt.i's mother called his office and tOld him that "she would see me and Dr. Hartelius in jail for this." ' Co sta Mesa Hi g lr: J Re1iovation Gets Trustees' P1isli By JOHN ZAU.ER • I • tlM DllllY pt)lt Stiff • f- Stung by skyrocketing cosls of con- struction, the Newport-Mesa Unified School Board decided Wednesday to push forward Immediately with a $2.2 million renova~on project at Costa Mesa mgb Sclrool. The original plans, drafted in AP.ril 1972,. called for construction to begin in December and continue for a period or about three years. However Superint endent John Nicoll ~ told trustees that the delay since last ~ year already has cost the district nearly ~ $300,000 and that to continue as originally ; - planned would cost at least 121111,000~ : more. ... , "Inflation in construction coats ii ht- creasing at the rate of about two percent per month," Nicoll said. '1 "If we want to get -the mulmum effect from our building fund. we llhould proceed on the whole project lm-l mediately," be said. The project wlll include C0111tructioo 1 of a large Jibra ry and media center on the open mall near the entrance to the school, and additions of smaller buildings !or health care, counseling, a television studio, girb gymnastics, and a new scienee area. A separate phase of the program cails for lnstatlation of a comprehensive drainage system to handle the flooding • that occurs on the campus in rainy weather. Barry said \Vednesday that if the protest did no good, the alternatives -including the ''super cop'' idea - will be next. From Pagel POOL ... Judge Takes Courtroom To Defe11dant-At Hoag Tr ain Vi ctim Dies VENTURA (AP) -The Conductor or a railroad engine whose akin was frozen by propane in a collillion with a i'unaway freight train died Wednesday, authorities: said. Joe Mason, 60, of Ox- nard, was injured Tuesday when his engine collided with three runaway tank cars containing liquid propane gas near State Highway 11 northeast of here. Brown represented Mrs. Vaughn at the time abe was committed to a atate hospital as a narcotics addict. He was also involved in legal action that led to the !lllng by Dr. llariellus of a dlsablll· ty claim on an insurance policy held by Mrs. Vaughn. Mrs. Vaughn has not attended the hearing since she offered three days of testimony for the state against Dr. Hartelius. Under directions of the trustees, the first phase of the project, which includes : the new library, will be opened up for bidding in the nei:t few days. Construction then is expected to begin in December. . Work on the remaining portions or , the project could be under way by , May, trustees were told. . The whole project cou1d be finillhed . in 14 months, less than half the period originally planned, by doing work on the three phases of the project COD· currently, school officials said . out so that the Balboa-Corona learn could be included. "But that doesn't mean Newport Beach will get twice as much time in the pool," Hout explained after the meeting. ''It means that the l\\"O swim groups may have to share their lime in the p:x1l with each other." OIANSI COAST " DAILY PILOT The Or1ng1 COil! OA/LY l"ILOT, wl1'11 wt>lcfl 11 combined 1h1 Ntws·Pr.u. 11 P'Jblllht!d cy w.t Or1119e (01•! P11bllal'll119 C-"'· St-~· ri ll llil•l~i 1r1 Pli!Jlll~, Mor.di' lh~ "rkl1v, ror Co5l1 MtW, N"llfrl te.ch. Hunlint1on 811ch/r:ov~1a1n V•ll•'· L1gun1 .... tll. lr\lln1JS1<kll11W1c~ al'd Sin CltmMltl Sin J111n C1piu""° A $lng11 rr;lonll lfdllion 11 (11,jbJ"~l'd ~11ura~v• tnd sunc11v•. TN prlnclpaJ 11ubll1~!119 Pl•M ;, 11 lJO weal 81y Jlrfft, Cou1 Mt11, c11,101n11, t2'2'. 1 Robert N. W11d r PrKINnl 11'111 l"UO!lohtr J1ck It. C url1v \Ike l"rK lcltlll Ind G-r11 Mllllttf Tko11111 K11 .. il E11tot TI.011111 A. Murphi"' MliNg1r!9 1£dl!or l. '•*•• Kri19 NtwPOrt ••Kii Cl!y Editor N..,.,, IM&li Offk• l)JJ N1wport l oul1 .. 1rd M.ill11t AJ4rn•: P'.O, lo• 1175, 9166) , °"'"'"""" Cttll Mft1: UO Wttt 81V llrtt1 LltllM l .. c!li m f'«•I _.._ Hunllllflllrl lltlCPI: !1t1J llNcll 80\l!r.1r1t lal'I Clefnlllt1: JOl t+orth Et Cerni..., 111:111 T• ...... 17141 641~)21 c:l•NW A~ "42.U11 CGC>Yrlgltl, 1f7). Oflfllll Coiiltf l'vbtl•l'U<1t ~. Ht -1torln. lllw.trllltnl, .. """'4 INlltf w Hvtrf.._n lltrt!n INY M ,..,,.....ed wl"-! IMlf(lll Pt!" "' ........ .,~'-· $~ tNll llMI ... Hill .i C..11 i'Mw:. <•lllotrllt. ...,i.llell """ ''"'"' u.u ~I W INH U.11 ,_1111111 mlfltirY ..U.!19M llM lftllltfll'I'. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of 1111 Dill' ,.not Strif Somebody turned down the volume on the TV and .Pulled the curtain on the bedridden defendant's half of the hospital room and court was called to order in the case or The People vs. Ray Rohm . Onetime C.Osta ri.1esa nudie bar owner Ray Rohm, 29, is currently immobilized in the Hoag h.1emorial H o s p i t a I orthopedic wing with injuries suffered in a motorcycle accident. He was unable to appear for ar- raignment on charges of arson and con· spiracy Tuesday in Orange C.Ounty Superior Court, so \Vednesday the court 'tame to him. Judge James F, Turner. flanked by Dtputy District AtlOrney George ?.fcClure, court reporter Burgess Titus and Defense Attorney Myron Brown marched into Rohm1s room shortly before supper. The proceeding lasted about three minute~. Rohm. 526 Sturgeon Drive, C.Osta Mesa, and a codelendant, Vic!lor L. Bongberg, 31, of the same address. are accused of destroying the Shangri·La bar in late June. ~ The tavern operation at 12272 Harbor Blvd ., Garden Grove catered to transvestites, gays and featured female impersonators onstage. It all went up in smoke June 28, with a $100,000-plur bang blamed on a gasoline bomb blast the prosecution claims was arranged by Rohm and Bongberg. They are free on $10,000 bond each. /"' A third dcrendant who was arrested a day afterward when he turned up In a San Bernardino hospital with severe bums also faces prosecution in the case. Bruce D. Le.mer, ·29, who was burned over 35 percent or bl• body, has not yet been fonnally charged a n d presumably the prosecution will use him ~· as a witness. Judge Twner led the judicial pro- cessioo into Rohm's room Wednesday tn a relatively informal Orange C.Ounty Superior Court session, which was re- quired to kee p the criminal complaint agam,,t Rohm in effect. The law specifies that a defendant facing trial in Superior Court be ar- raigned within 15 days after he iJ bound over following preliminary hearing at municipal court level. I! this procedure is not completed, the charges may be dropped. - Tuesday was the 15th day and Robm's chjef defense attorney, Sy 1 v 8 nus Aronson, suggested what would be Judge Turner's first bedside hospital ar- raignment in a 4'1.i: year career, when his client failed to appear . Rohm Jay with his shattered right hip· and crushed toe elevated in a full leg CIJSt and traction device. A red-lettered sign reading: BEWARE OF VICIOUS ANIMAL hung from a metal ba~ over his bed. It was a get-well gift from friends. ltitroductlons were made. "Yes . . . we've met before,'' said Rohm , when Introduced to the judge and prosecuting Deputy District Attorney McClure. Rohm has fought many rounds In court on oblcenlty and lewd en- tertainment counts stemming from operation or bis now-clOled Firehouse tavern at 175 E. 17th St, Costa Mesa. , Judge Turner ,explained again the de!endant's constllutional rights before he was allowed to enter a plea. De!ense attorney Bn>wn pleaded his client tMocent to all charges, suggesllng a May tf/4 trial date, • He said later the compound hip frac- ture Rohm suller<d recently Will keep him In the holpltsl at lesst another four to " six weeks aod perhaps more , l>elore be can be reJeued to convaleoce at home. E/DRYER 139.95 90 DAY CASH Al'PltOYIO CllDIT 1815. NEWPORT BLYb. Downtnn Costa Mesa:--ftn 546.nl . . . ....... ' • ' ' " 1· I I • I ' I I 11 • I • N DAILY PILOr B~~idents Hotvliqg Over Dog Ke~nels • . By L PETER KRIEG But now they're slartlng to tum 0t ,.. Delt1 1'1111 ll•ff qainst eaicb other, aay county officials, A little spat over a pl'OpOIOd dog who predict the rill could be cllustroul. boat! ,Jn' Santa Ana Hel&hts may be The lasue at hand b an application triggering a major upheaval among the br_ William . Majer ol. El Toro to buy midents Of that unique l t t t 1 e aDd operate a Commercial dog kennel !lllillllothood __nestled below Orange _ ~t 20'/t. Ordlanl Drive, where a ketmel County Airport. · 1 bas oper4ted for years. -, Beacuse of Its agriculture zonlJ\g, the Zoning adminlslrator Raymond Reed tiny county Island bas become a.Julven_@~roved lbe JIWllCllllon, ~ out for dog kennels and horse stables. there are th~ other kennels abd two FOR YEARS, the two grQups ha.fe been the friendliest of neigbboni. large stablee on the aame atreet and be figured lbe u .. wu compaUble. But aome nelgbbort decided Ibey don't CdM Apa.rtments ' ' -. Get Zone 9kays Four Corona del Mar g a rage Comm~k>ner Rosener alsO contended apartments have recelved approval from the 'Corona del Mar area la already the same South Coast Regional Zone almost Completed converted from lingle- ConservaUon Commission that h a s family to multi-family living. Other com~ denied duplexes in West Newport. misskiners apparently agreed Approved The actions came Utls week at a meet-were : ing in I.Ong Beach. -A two bedroom apartment above , Commt!sioner Judy Rosener o f a four-ear garage behind an existing Newport Beach, who voted for the . single-family milt at 515 Narcissus Ave. Corona del Mar projects and agaimt by Edgewater Development Corp. Com- seveq Weat Newport duplexes last week, missioners Robert Rooney and Rona.Id said 'the developments are similar only -Caspers voted no. to a Point. -A two bedroom aparbnent oVer a 1be Corona del Mar lots are larger, two-car garage behind an existing two- at about 3,500 gquare feet, than the bedroom unit at 713 Larkspur Ave. by average l15'IO square foot West Newport Donald E. A r ch e r . ConmUssklners lots, .she said. Rooney, caspen and Rimmon C. Fay 'Ibe difference made the average voted no. density of 20 units. per II'OS!I _atf'e_ in -A two bedroom apartment Over a the 'Corona de! Mar JWQjects less than two-car garage behind a two bedroom the 28 units an acre density in the unit .&t 720 Larkspur Ave .• "also by D,na Smith project turned down last Areber. Rooney, Fay and Caspers voted W~ ' · no. • , " -. ,..= 1 -A · l\VQobedroom apartment above i . four-car garage behind an e1lsting twO- · s· he' . 'L bedtooJ!!.,bouse at ' 102 Nartlssus Ave. ' s. in ove by Eva B. Weber. The same 'throe COrnmiislOners voted no. W • h J ' b A All four projects got lbe necessary .. · 'It O •• S seven or eight voles for approval 11 One proposed two-bedroom apartment · lnstall,er Speda1 to lbe Dally PUot PALM SPRINGS -Bronda Berger. an attnctive 25.year-old Rancho ~1irage woman, is "on top cl the world" at General Telephoae Co. ol California. She .!$; liDe o( l,130 ~ners. and l:'epalrllien. eiiipJoyed bY the utility, but ' the onfy ·woman, at the momen~. clim· . bing telephone poles. BRENDA INSTAI.J..8, removes, rear- ranges and tests telephone in the Palm Springs area. She's also responsible for maintaining certain outside phone equip- over a garage at 317 Iris Ave. by Frances Reymer was deoled by lbe commission Mmwlay. Mrs. Reymer said she couldn't meet the commtulcm's requlroment for four parting -· The otbu builders Aid they could provlde !oar _.., allhoiJgb a few planned on uomc ,the tandem melhod ol partin& (one car behind another). want another kennel and appe~J,ed-hi.t , deelllon to lbe Orange Counl)QJanlll])('' Commlask>n. THEY SUBMl1TED a petition signed by 133 persons demanding an en· vii:onmental frn_pact report on the dog kennel. - In the petition they claim Santa Ana Heights ill rgpstly "single family r~idel)­ tlal and equestrian estates." But Reed, wbo expressed surprise When the planning commission went along with the demand for the EIR; said that both county planners and even But Reed expressed the most surprise the ~rt Land Use CommWlon ha.Ye. th.at horse ~owners would want to go pointedly declared that commercial uses to battle against the dog owners: are best there 1*cause or the notse •11n the past people with dqgs sup- trom jetl flying overhead. ported people with horses and vice "I lhink the impact that barking ~ogs versa," Reed said, 0 because of this make is already MIDm.:.'...Jleed_illcl, __1!~11 . ._._I!robably have dis~gr~en~ .. and the Airport 1Land Use Commission between the two groups in the future. has even RSJSed a resolution saying ''I can't understand it," he said, '1they they don't want residential U!es hez:.e." should stand together." BOO'll NEWPORT Beach and Costa Mesa planners have also endorsed the commercial uses. Reed acknowledged that if the battle turned' into all-out war, there would be enough zoning complaints flying arowld the entire area to keep a dozen D•ilY l'llot SI'" ftholo THESE ARE TJiE CANINE KENNELS THAT ARE RAISING SUCH. A ~USS IN NE IGHBORHOOD S.nta Ana Heights Residents Squa re Off for Battle 0vtr EcOJ-impact Statement Coast Co1n111eree Outlined. Developers Discuss Futzire a£ UC Irv ine Se ssio n A murmur of excitement rippled throu&h the Newport Harbor Junior League audience Tu~ay night. Word that two new major department stores Wlll be ·~~ to.1Ute ,array of mercantile dellibll already at Newport's Fuhlon Island sparked lbe respome. A sprinkling of husbands in the UC Irvine lecture hall punctuated the ladies' joy with audible groans. . . 'I ment -some of It located atop telephone I poles. Eddie's Stilt {;ettiltl! (;ifts For F airvie1v One week after F.ddie Conover went on bls aoe-mm mission to make life a little better for JOmeODe else on Halloween Night, the mponae cootlnues to come in, bis mother says. LATER JN THE evening, part or a series offerred by the Junior League and UC! Program in Social Ecology, the' Harbor Area audience of 100 ade peareci unanimous on one point ma e by·lbe apeakers: She and her colleagues have completed rigorous training for the jobs they p¢orm, including . a week.Jong session .of pole climbing with a dllJlcult eum. ·.Now holding the UUi of "imtaDer," Brenda says al~ work boun she prefers to "be treated as a woman" but between I a.m. and 4:!0 p.m. as "JUI! anolber telephone lnstaliaiton mu." Brenda waa a private settfllary in Palm sprtnp !qr almolt a year before taking her new job. Prior to that sbe worked. u a customer representative (or. General Telephone In Santa Mooica. '"JOHN ·COURTNEY, Brenlia's 1~n18br, aaid. "since she's been on the job, ahe has proved to evtryone sl)e ts as capable of doing th& work ~ well as any new employe." . . Adding, Brenda to the crew also brought about a suddeo change In lbe appearance Of 90mf! of her co-workers. •;Grooming of Mne bas lmproVeil alrDost lOQ percent," Courtney said. i·1 wonder . Whu t1 . "V'V ••• Road Wear!f F.cldie, IS, ol 2l5S Oruge Ave., Apt. C, Costa Mesa, went from door-to-door co!ledlng small contr!butionl to give the PaUent Benefit Fund at Fairview State lloepital. He collected '40.67 Iha~ night to belp underwrite lbe coot of spedal rocroa- tlooal materlab or tramportalton to shows and sports event.a 10< the .,.,..lly rell:fded youngsters there. Persons who read ol the small gesture he decided to do for Helloween have added to it. . A Los• Angelea policeman sent a cbeel: and so did an elderly Laguna Beacb woman who sent $10, althou(h she might easily have spent It on her II grandchildren . and five · g r e a t • graodcbildren. Mother grandl!Kllber called and aug- gested that l!cldle stop by to pick up ber coolrlbutloo, Mrs. Cooover aaJ4 . Newport ,Beach's consideration of 1 roadblocks: to keep beach visitors out of the . area on weekends would be desirable. Possibly lbe best dressed audience ever to fill a UCI classroom heard Al Auer, vice president of the Irvine <'Ampany c o m m e r c i a I development operations, and .John B. "Jim" Kilroy, preskfent and chalrman of the board of Kilroy Industries. Auer discussed the philosophy of the Irvine Company in its various com- mercial developments ranging from Westcliff Plaza in Newport Beach to Fashion Island and even Lion Country Safari. BOTH SPEAKERS observed that Envlronmenlal Protection Agency limita- tions on parking at diopping ol Industrial centers will be important concerns possibly affecting fllture development. Weary bike tranlor sleep• on picnic table at Martn· ers Park Ill NMrpOrt Beach. He shall remaln anony. _ mous because p~olograpber who happened by 1:"es- clay aftenioon didn't ban the hell't to wake him and ask his name. 1 ' 'V... . . . .. -.. •• ·~ ~· # -• " . I Dlll' P/ltt SI'" l'llol01 SEES HIGHER INTEREST Developer Kilroy However, Auer pointed out that unlike other areas of the nation commercial development in Orange County has been held back due to conservative caution on the part of developers. _ Auer noted that a single high rise office building built by the Irvine Com- paey In Newport Center adds ltl,500 a year in taxes ,to the city of Newport Beach and another $200,000 a year in taxes to the Newport·Mesa Unified School District. Another $600,000 is generate:d by the city's one percent sates tax Share. AUER OBSERVED lbe tax benefits of &bopping centen: are not generally understood by those who oppose highrise. A! for the EPA definition o( shopping AIRS SHOPPING FUTURE Irvine Company's Auer centers as a "complex source" of air pollution due to increased numbers of cars, Auer says properly constructed cars, Auer says properly constructed shopping center reduces auto trips. He predicts increasing land values will force higher, more "vertical" shopping centers. Kilroy, a native or Alaska and graduate of Santa Barbara State College owns and operates a firm managing more than four million square feet of office and lnduatrial space. HE DISCUSSED the technical side of office development predicting interest rates for money which supports such construction will remain high along with rentals. Stnnford Appears Ready To Hike Tuition Rates ' Speclal to !be Dolly PUo! STANFORD -Trustees of Stanford Tuesday will consider ttcommendati-Ons for lncreulni bulc tuiUooi &om $3,iis to $3,ns, atarting lt 1174-75. • Unlvenlly olflclols confirmed lniHal rej>orts by <llmpua rad io station KZSU · of the J>l'Opooecl $2111 Increase. • SHORTLY AFl'ER the K ZS U di1closute, the student s e n a t e unanlmoutly adopted a resoll!tion urging a t pen:ent Umlt on the tulllon lncie11e, roulll!lr '2tJ2. Tll)l Moyer, a atud<nt aenator Who allo serves on 'the trustees' commltlee on finance. expressed con .. m that the -would llqU-out mkidJe-lncOme 1tudents1 but indicated lbe boon! )irobably ·would approve the $240 recommendallon. No dlanc• Is planned In t h e Unlvenlly'a pollq Iha\ U.4emonslrated . ' , • r financial need of all undergraduates will be met throulfl a combination of gilt aid, term-Ume jobs and loans. More than 40 percent of Stanford's undergraduates now receive scbolanbip, aid totaling 18.7 million annually. At the graduate level, 70 percenl ol Stanford students receive support total- ing $14.5 million from the University a~d ex.te"lal sources. ) .. ANNU,\L SURVEYS of freshmen ad- mitted to Stanford who enroll elsewhchi have shown lhree-fourths attend other private universities ''Ith comparable cosia. Only I In 10 students In this group cited coetl as a major factor In their ~on. Moro tJliD ball tllose admllted lo Stan- ford -., to attend public lnsUluUons cited costs at a strongly Influential !actor in their decision, howevtr. inspect~rs going tun time. HORSE STABLES, In the truest sense. are reaiJy1 not permitted in the A·l (agriculture) zone, but riding clubs are. The difference I! that riding clubs are supposed to keep only horses of members Wfiij live wlthiii a certain dl!tahCe. And that Isn't always carefully obeyed, or so charges one dog breeder who admits she's a little bitter. Nlrs. Jo Ann Van Arsdale had her application for a commercial kennel for her Persian Gazellehounds turned down . by Orange County Supervbors not lo~g J ago. • A neighbor named Jack 1'1ullan had . appealed Reed"s decision and Supervisors ov erruled the approval in what Piotr!. 1 Van Arsdalc insists was an arbitrary 1 decision. ~ She's even obtained an EIR and Reed said there were no legal grounds for him to deny her application. But supervisors did, so Mrs. Van Arsdale said she turned around and 1 1 ' appli.ed for a non-commercial license, ' something that doesn't require a use permit. "That blew their minds," she said, l can have just as many dogs, but I just can't sell them ." 4 REED SAID Mrs . Van Arsdale so dismayed supervisors that they passed • an emergency ordinance requiring use : permits for all non-commercial kennels in the future. ·"But in the-meantime,'' Mrs. Van Arsdale said, "they took my living away · .. from me. I had a chance to make it on my own. 1 really ought to go on welfare, that'd teach them." Mrs. Van Arsdale said she'd sort of , given up her battle, but upon learning of Majer's ·plight -and his plans to hire a lawyer to take on the county -she says her interest ls renewed. "I'd figurt!d that It was polltical in- fluence that had ·overwhelmeci·me1" ·she charged, " bUt maybe if everythlng's ,t brought into the open, 1hey'll have to '' ·consider each case on its merits." ·'il . ' ·.1 A COSTA f\-fESA realtor wh o .~ represents 1'1ajcrs, agrees. "I can't believe that the noise or :;j a few more dogs ls really going to ;'i make a significant difference in the ·.1 neighborhood ," the realtor said. -~1 She pointed out that sanitary reguia~ (1 lions require the concrete dog run& to 1,--; have drains into the-aewer system IO "'i the smell can't be an issue. ,·'f "They don't make . the sten.ch that a pile of horse manure makes," ahe : said. ~CJ And it's remarks like that, and things .:i f like Mrs. Van Arsdale saying she !hould .i-J cite any number of setbaCk vlol.atklns. =1t that are the makings for total civil '"'1 war. "if But that's not .what either of them ·i want. r 111E REALTOR ni~ !bat Majer bas>1 hired a lawyef jlist to carry . on his ' battle and to see to it "that there are no more ar;bitary declalons ,;nade ·., like In the case of Mrs. Van Aradaft." Reed said no final decision on Majer's : application can be made until his .EIR,... is in. He said he'll have to conduct ' another hearing at that time. / He said he'll be curious to aee if · the rift is for real Ind ne.ighbon in / Santa Ana Heights break Into a full ' fledged feud . '.; Blind Sailors . .' -· Set Competition In Lido Regatta ·1 ;lj Newport Harbor will be the scene : i for what may be the world's IQOSf. -~ unusual boat race Saturday when 15 ' blind and partlally .. igbted teenagers from throughout Orange county serve as crewman in a three-heat Lido 14 ; reJ1:atta. Skippers of each of lbe 15 entries wlll be sighted, but the blind youngsters will be their sole crew. 'Ibe regatta ill co.sponsored by the Braille Institute of Orange County and the Balboa Yacht Club. It will take place on the yacht club's racing course. 1 The first race will begin at noon• j with the third heat set to start a 1 3:45 p.llJ. I None of the teenagers has ever raced , before, according lo J\raille IMUtule I rel)resentative Jeanne Crawford. l I They will all meet with their' skippers Saturday morning to go through a prac-\ tlce run. · ij She said the instltute's you t hi : coordinator, Steven Hudson, thought up ~. the Idea for the race and said Balboa·• I Yacht. Club olficlols are entll11Siattlc I\ about it. i • All skippers will be BYC members, I she said. Actor Buddy Ebsen, a Newport Bt!loch l'Kklent, wlll addms the )'Ollllplel'I' prior to the first rac"" A tropby - tattoo to the winning """" wlJJ lake , place immedlataly alter lbe llnal race. '' ... f " UpJ!.Cr Newport Bay • Tours Set Saturday The second of the winter .. ries of guided tours of Upper Newport Bay will take place Saturday beg!nnlng at 9 a.m. '1'be tours are sponsored by the Friendl of 'Upper Newport Bay and are free. Tours will leave the starllng point, the lntenectlon of Easlblull and Back Bay Drives, every few minutes throuch 10:31 a.m. , • • l J • ' • • i. 30 DAILY PILOT lhursdu, NOYembtr 8, 1971 PUBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE PICTITIOUS IVSINISS HAM• tTATIMINT The-'-li.w!M-.... -t• Ool'"l&I PICTITIOUI IUSINl!SI butlMU •1: PICTITIOUS IUllN•ss HAM• ITATl!M•NT Tl!ltAA GRA,.HIX , ,,'° E. •I MAMI STATIMIMT 1ht tollowln.g .,.,IOlll er1 folrt0 fdl,..,, Sullt trl1, S.nl• AM. Ct. Tiit f900Wlng per-II OOlllCI bullntU M fnt'll 11: 91105 ": DALE Cl.OU11Eflt ASSOCIATES. 10ll Vic Alex1ndlr, ''" ~ole, HO. n. KALSO l.AltTH SHOES 01' LAGUNA, &u1lnnt Ctfllll' Orlvt. Suitt 160, Irvine, Cott• M• ... C•. tu21 115, South COIU H~llWIY. L•~· C•lil::wnl• ttUol TlfTY c .• L.Cl•lr, US.I 6lOSllOll'I luc.11. C•llf. '2Ul D•'-CloUllw, SlSll •lo $111', OaM l"•rk, El Toro. C•lif. t2UD /Ml"'" aorn1leln.. UJD Octln W•Y· l"olnt. C•Ulorn l1 tu2t Thll bWIMSI 11 conducltcl by. ttntr•t L.;llM kldt, C1llf. '2UI Thl1 bvtlntu 11 conduct.cl by I llll'llllcl Nrl"'"hlp Thll butll'llU 11 conducitd by In pUtnw'lhlP. Vk Allx•ndlr lndlvl~I. 0•1• Cloulltr• Thll 11-1-1 WH "ltd w11!'1 rht MllYln lor111l1h1 GMl'l'll Ptrlnl'I' Coun!Y C"'1l of Or..,ge Coun!Y et1 Tnl1 tl•l-1 wts "ltd wlltl IN Thl1 111 .. ment W.l Ill.cl with Ille NOY911'1btr $. ltn C-'Y Cll'l'k or Oreng• countv et1 Count'I' Clerk °' 0<•"'11• c-iv et1 •·2f'Mll · Nov.mbff tt, ltl1 Ocloblr 2'. 1m P'uM\11Md Or~ Cotll 0.llY l"llol •11111 fl"·W.111 Novtmlltr I, IS, 22, 2'. lfl1 l"'llbll11Md Or1noe coett D•11Y l"Hot, l"ubllshed Or•f'IOI Cont O.lly p11ot.ICC:CC:::.C..::_.c.:...::_:;c:._;:__ Nov.mbll' I, I, IS. n. ltn 2311·73 N-bitr 1, I, 15, 22. lt73 JJtol-73 PUBIJC NQTICE PUBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE J• SALE! HEARING AID BATTERIES Bay 1 P1ckl1e of BA'M'ERIES 1t Replar Price . ud Get Ille bd Pkg. FOR ONE CENT • TV ·cancellations. TONIGHT'S 1 'Calucci's Dept.,' 'Roll Out' Axed By JAY SHARBUTI' prolesl with ~about thO NEW YORK (AP) ..:: It's " movie. he said there wouldn't only November, but the ax be aey. already is ltllln.g on tlU$ "VERY FRANKLY," he season's new TV !hows. The said, "the thing we've decided latest to get Cancellation to d0 i.s to keep quiet about . TV HIGHIJGHTS NBC CJ .a:OO -Ironside. Chief lrOnslde (Ray- mond Burr) poses u a skid row wino In this spe- cial two-ho~ segment with David Wayne and Kim Darby . ;-cas 8-.:00-=-"The-Gnduate." T h I·• .... cl81med-19&7 corned)' cornea to TV for the first time with Dustin Hollman, Anne Bancroft and Katharine Ross. ABC D IOtOO -Streets of San Fnnclsco. Po- ker players steal a shipment of radioactive gold. Herb °Edelman and Anthony Zerbe guest. notices are "Calucci's Dept." · bee and '"Roll Out." tt ause it (a protest) only serves to heighten interest in ll•••••mi•••-•••••••••,.! The nolices from CB.S brass the film.'' bring to four the number or This approach sharply con· new programs canceled IO far. trasts with one of nearly seven ABC already has axed "Bob years ago. when ALPA blasted & Carol & Ted & Alice." while NBC for showing "Doomsday CBS last week said it was Fllght," a made-for-TV movie folding the HNew P e r r y by Rod Serling that focused Mason" series and replacing on oan extortion plot against TV DAILY LOG it Feb. 10 with "Apple's Way.u an airline. THAT SERIF.8, created by NBC, which ran the movie Efarl Hamner, author of the on Dec. 13, 1966, decided Thursday top-rated "Waltons," is about against ever repeating It artei- a successful I.os A,nge!es getting heavy protests from architect who gives up the pilots and others. Serling good life there and returns subsequenUy said he regretted with his family to live in the film even was made. Evening his home town of Appleton, uoooMSDAY" was shown .NOYEMIER I Io~C. fir .... "Bob & well betore the striCt--1:00.ll~mlBa>N•n • , 1~ 1 ing 1 ~ . passenger checks now com-· 11])9(]) Nin Car:ot hme slot wtth. movies mon at U.S. airports went . 1p Coftt'cl trom 5PM until . Nov. 28, when it starts into effect. Kln11 vs. Phlltdtlphi1 Flit rs. \Vednesday night Dick Clark Tirl LlltJ' SMiW , ' Loef111Wt1P'lltw.. ln.- CtfMMM.i.t -:(2la)--( •) '48--lttlt D1vi1, Jl111 D1wll. l :JO ID MtlY Crifflfl Shlw II!)-. '"° II Du1tin Hoffman, Annt * B.,.croft, THE GRADUATE . CBS THURSDAY MOVIE running the first---ot five-The APLA spokesman ~ai·d lc...w.i, tf Eddll'• fttlltr- the fact of these stiff security ne ni.tstoMt O mfirnispeck 'ni~ls loin the golden era precautions -and th a t Stlflrft 119 (I) cu ""*' llMr: oc ro · "'Airport" doesn't exclusively .,,.._. M1riri ffi 1211ff "TM ........ (OOll'I) There's no word yet from concern a bomb plot _ were Mnil: (C) (8') "'Quell ftr '67-Dustin HoffN1, AnM IHCtOlt. CBS on what will replace ..... lM .. (dr•) '11-Joln Colli111, Tom Kltharint Rou. A JOUnl mall,• ,.. other reasons why ABC won't e IL 1 "'" -·• "Calucei" and "Roll Out," or • ctn It lfadutl1. ii •-7 for feel ALP,.\'s wrath. @I ........ It~ 1111 but Is filltd wflll Yllff llllis-• when. He said his group still a,,·nn. ...... ~ 1Mn11 tboul llis f11tur1. Kil ..... * doesn't approve of .the movie &;•Ci) 111 CJ) Hlpt'i ...,_ vf lnnocenct Is dllllt~ ., tw AN INTERESTING note on ABC intends to show, "but D iiliwii: (C) <• ..,,. LMJ 11 wvme~•ttractivt, rnid41t-t ... Mrs. "Airport,'' the blockbuster our measure of risk is lowered Ult Cir WMi .,_ & A•••" ~~~';~u~:~.!:':; 1970 movie ABC-TV is airing nd 1 (11171). '71-Slminthl Euar, Jolin id1ilt .......... S nd . h treme ous y, of <:oune, by McE~'"~tJ;~ .. ""~RCll"'!!-· ,_ u ay n1g t: The Airline the search system." (i)Tllil..WOIM Pilots Association isn't raising D t1! CJl OJ 1tq: '' "'Tit• Splrit· cain with ABC for showing Drama Guest ...,.,........ ~~~;r:1r:.=•,:1:-:~ the thing. f """ lrlfflllt -~ ltKfl tilt futililJ. of fMlll' &t The film's various fIOLLYVIOOD (UPI) -. ..._....._., .... ,.,. •rt~lndld bOJ'·~llOllr1tn ·. i ) l ) l ) NOTICI: 'TO Cltl!l>ITOlllS SUf'llllOlt COUllT Of" THI STATS <W CALl .. OltNl.CPOlt THI COUNTY 01'" OllANlit: characters includ e a · loonie Steve Forrest will guest star I.Mir blr Mitt kldnt,ecl by CIM...._ who boards ·an airliner, in-\C'ith Chad Everett on an NMfl I"...,..,.,.,.,..._ ,...,,._..., t di (0 bl th ·--lllMMIM .......... (Rf!"."._""""'' in flight so his wife can <:ollcct Center." 111 111 l!!!I en ng ow up e plane episode this fall of "Medical J:OI ~=· m-V-Y«P' h'I --· NL A·trNI WILLIAM e. ST JOHN c!~:iof HELEN llURNS GAFFNEY, Hearing Aidt Are Available .at the Follo'tl'l.q; Sean Stores · Cl"k of lhti &ard ol $11ptrvlton NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to tht tl"itdl!OA of Ille ebovt n1med de<edefll Oll'l'ICtAL ,..OCllOINOS 0, TMI IOAllD 01' SUf"lltVllOllS 0" tllel i ll pen.on• hivl"9 cillms 'fllln11 S-.Pu\ OllANOI COUNTY, CALll'Otr.NIA-. C-hflt9 Af11j ClttfwllOI Ille W ld decedftlt lrt rtqlllred to fllt ,,..___,~ , ' • them, with the MC:KHrl' llOIKl'lera. ht ~..,·~ A ,..utlr '""''"' of the 8C111rd ef SUS*viton of Orange County, C.llfomll.1 .i.o tlM Dlflce ol' HM ctttt of 01t 1bo_.. ~ .i1t1no H IM Gowml119 Board of !ti• Dltlrkh ~ bY the Bo.rd ol ~VP9'-tn!llted court, or to prnenl tti.nl. w!lh ~ ¥1Hrl Wiii llftd (lctoibtr 31, ltll. 11 f :)) A.IA. Tht fOlkMlnq iwmed m&mb«I bel!lll the MCftMl'Y YDl!dltn. to the un-t..c-ll!Dt ptHMI: It-Id W. C..UM!' .. Cl'lflrrn.n; O.vlc:I l , Balcer, ltllph A. Diedrich, R1lph def'ilgned 11 419 E•U 171'h Sir"'· Cosl1 1-19"dl' •· om •nd the Cl«ll. ~nt: R. W. 8•1Hn. M11u C•Hfofn!a. wtlldl 11 the Pi.t•l"--'---------J TM str'-' 11•~• or lr•tf•in Plam •nd s"°"rlr111l!'fl Clrde •r• dl•rioed fo 0.k of ~lll'lltU of ..,. vndfnl11ned In all Grow Clrcle. Det•~t No. 1'2·1 trom lllt C.pl•tr•NI &1y Park 9fld Rec:rNllon methn ptrft;llllng to the nit!• of Dltlrid Is ~. Mrs. Pflyl1b J. $1elnw ls eppolnttd membH 9' 1t1t H"llti said dKfd&nl wllhln four fMnfhs 11t1r'.l-------------' ,.,_.,.,. c-11. Sllfl't'VI!.« &•tfln .mvn 11 "" rnNttng. Ordlntnc• NOi. 2711 ind ..,.. ""' publt~ellon o1 thl& l!Ollc• 1712 •rt • ..,.... ... Annoex1tlons to ct'l'ltln 11.gt>tlnt di1trkh •r• ~· Ul"..J.01 Oaltd N-rnblr • ''73. · 19 l'PI" ..... wlrh <•rttln condltlom. The hli!hftl Ind best UM of U9Pl'f' N..,,orl Hugti Cl'lerl.; Gt~ l•Y 11 d.termlnecl. Tl'le Director of H•rtlort, 8.c:Ma •nd PWU. Is lnslrvcttd to Admlnlttralor of th9 Esl•I• h!Ynllli"I• 1ltt f'M'IOyal lrom Uppef' Ntwport ,.,.. Tl'lt tlolrd ldlollfMll. of the •bcJW "'""" d ed&nl Wit.LIAM E. ST JOHN PAUL A. HANNA cc Cl..it of rht BolNI of Svptnl_.. l"'ubllthtd Or.no• Coe1t O.lty l"llol, Novamllef' t , 1'73. 33t1·1l Q:.':"~ La.':.1dl11t PUBUC NOTICE 41' 1111 11111 StrMf C-.tt M_,, Calff. n•JJ ------------o-:cc:::-:-------------1-1,., . .u .. ,,, I 7M74 A'"""" fw Adtnlftl1tr11or PUBIJC NOTICE l"llbllshtd Df'•n11t Co-II DlllY Piiot Pursuant to the agreement between 'the Federal Highway Ad· Novtmbet' 1, 15, n. "· 1912 3'21-13 ministration and the National \Vlld1ife Federation, the follow· ---- Ing is a list of hJghway sections which OA.tere subject to the Federal PUBLIC NOTICE Highway Administration's N&tional Environmental Policy Act sul"eRIOrt couaT oio THE reusessment to determine 'vhether an environmental 1ta.tement STAT• o,. CALIPOltNIA ,.oft should be prepared and considered: THI. COUNTY OP oaANO• L In Humboldt County on State Route 101 from north of NOTIC• °" ::.t.~o,, PfTSTIOH Richardson Grove St!'lte Park to State Route 36 a t Alton. ,.oR l"ROIATI. o,. WILL ANO l'Olt Two projects are _.o......,ed in this section. The first is 1 7 L•TTERS Tl.STAMENTAll:Y ltoHO .,. """" . WAIVl!O) FAMl l Y TWIN CINEMA ... ~· . ~ CINEMA I "CAMELOT" !G) ... .. TOM SAWYEl" S,.c.i•I Cllll4rH'1 .... _ Sot -Sv1. 12 Noort ---.'S:lNTA"'"""AND THE THRIE HA.RS" IGJ insurance money. 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;~I : ( (Zllr) -rill Dtrlr• t:JOl!)LI NltM The ALPA objected to this I '" (cir•) '68-Willl•m Kolcl1-. ll> Wtf ""7 v.1hen ''.Airport" was made, cir RoOtfbon. l~C!lt11 ma m• ftlll•• <:ontend.ing that the make-1~ . SamrnJ O.Yis Jr. ii tiose to lcMll• believe drama might prompt ~·:, tiM1 Allen, Etntst lo!1ni111 tfl!I Miry d ed ... -"""-erang persons to try it ,...., ....... ,.... om_ ..... in real life, an AL p A ~ @ Jlra-Wlrt spokesman said. Ci) ...... Hoy.·ever. when asked i£ his Era & n... u THE sTRms OF SAN * FRANCISCO-BIG Hm group had lodged a similar mum. 1::.::..... G IHI CJ) EB Str1e11 ti I•• frlMJict ' ''f!M TwtlllJ·ftllt Kmt ..... llCllf P1111ut" A llOUP of poMr "8Jtrs i:Jt 11 Or111 ....., Ital ~ dtdclt to play tor Ulfll ...._ tlMf ''rot Sllt-Siltnct" Bltcknull bl· •let! • shlPIMllt ef rtdlotctM roll rats blatkrtl•il 11 lht cont1mf011ry ffom • 1nh1rsitJ lllldw f'llllfdt dr1m1 1boUt ' «lmlntl who ... ks etnhr lrvck. 'fie Morrow, Hirt ldtl- 111 lt1t11I lortunt 11\d thtn 11)1 ll 1111n incl Antllol'tf Z•"• avest. Now Ttir• THMkry w•LoN IUNDO "LAST TANGO n. .... Price 11 lipt lwli&M z... .. Jttt =-~:.:. 11t:JI i 11• llCl IWpftJIWPMr '*ic-y ,: IN PARIS" + Allft F11t'1 T\ll ...,,... • Jllllllll llOLlil .. __ , .. ~ftflt ~-.. c: ....... ,, . C....b•lltl ·-·1 ,_ Ltt'1MM1Ahll ... , ... -111:.:-,_ ...... Cf) Tt T• t1M1 Trttll ID (jJ Tiie Tltrilbltlltn ll:Ot -- • • (I) __ _ I l l mUes of (-IMe access-controlled highway from north of the E•l•t. of 10A E. CLAltK, OecHMd. l\fendoclno County line to the South Fork of the Eel River NOTICE IS HER1!8V GIVEN th•I · of ELBERT CALVI N CLARK •nd WILFORD Bridge near Benbow. The second is 2.4 mdes 4-lane access-A. CU.ltlt Mv• flied l'ltreln • P"l"on controllfd highway tn the community of Rio Dell from for Prao.M of w111 end tor l5auanc• CINEMA II south of Davis Street to Bellview Avenue. ~~iai!:"::;:r, ~, :~~ "UST TA.NGO "WHAT DO YOU SAY TO A NAKED LADY?" WIS1WOllD ll'll SOYLENT GIHN tN1 "'" o;u. , ..... ~ .. l:tt --T>ollatl ... B THE WAL TONS, WINNER * Of SIX EMMY AWARDS! ' I I 2. In Montere)t County on State Route 1 from the Fort Ord Yotlld'I 11 """'-tor turt'r-e P'l1kv41rs. IN PARIS" Ill Military R"ervation to State Route 156. including the Route ind "''' the time •nd P4itet of ht•tl1111 8__. lotfi 111 Color fXI l Bype.s!I ot the conununity of Castroville. 7.2 miles of 4-and~ 1~,t''t~m~m~n ~ =~ "AYANTI" IRI 2-lane bi~way with access control. of O-rtm.nt No. J of uld court. ll===~,;:;:;;,~;;~==:=".~~!'!'!'!'!'!'!'!'~~ ' 3. In Santa Barbara County on State Route 101 at Turnpike 1t 700 c1vrc cent.,. Dr1v• Wnt, in Roe.d lhterchange a.nd Overhead '~rest of Santa Barbara. ~.'i: :~':., ~'igllfornl•. reconstruct existing ·structures and approaches to prov>de WILLIAM E. sr JOHN, 4 lanes with left-tum median lanes to replace the existing M. Ll~lc;"'L'iH~~ 2-lane facilltlCll on 'l\trnplke Road utr cnMMw •IW. 4. ln Kem County on State Route 43 from south of the City of L• A......_ C•llfontl• tOOOI Shafter to the junction of State Route 46 in the City ot !~' :4"~~"-" Wasco. 8.9 miles of 4-lane highway. Pvbl11hed Or•noe coast Cally l"tklt. 5. In Kern County on State Route 58 in the CitY of Bakersfield Novembor '' t, 15, 197' :S..23-73 from State Route 99 to State Route 184. 7.1 miles of 4-lane PUBLIC NOTICE freeu•ay. Easterly 4.0 miles are presently under construction.1------------ 6. ln t he.CJty of Los Angeles on State Route 11, construct sLl"-20S . Red h B __ , J SUl"l!lt lOlt COURT 0,.. THE interchange at ondo Beac oulev.uu as rep acement for STATE o,. CALIPOltMIA fl"Olt existing Alondra Street lnlerchani:;;e to be deleted. THE COUNTY 01' ORANGE 7. In'thc City of Los Angeles on State Route 101 from Sunset NOTICE oHFo. ~~c;. OF l"ET!· Boulevard to State· Route 101/134/170 Interchange, "·idcn TtON FOR PROt!IATE OF WILL ANO 6-hUle freeway to 8 Janel for a distance of 2.1 miles and "°" LEnEAS OF AOM1NtSTRATION I II l . . WITH THE WILL ANNEXED nsta ramp contro for a distance of 5r5 mlles. E111te of GEORGE w 1 LL I AM 8. In the City of Los Angeles on State Route 118 bern>een HOLTSCLAW, e1so krloWn •s GEORGE Balboa A · t f Int ta•-fl t '05 d int t t W. HOLTSCLAW, ts GE 0 R GE ~venue ~es 0 en; u: 00 e.,. an ers a e HOLTSCLAW, •• G. w. HOLTSCLAW, Route 400. 2.5 miles of 8-lane freev.:ay. Ind •• G. HOLTSCLAW, O.Cta.-d. SI. ln Orange County on State Route 73 in tM Cities of Newport NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN ""' . JENNETT HOLTSCLAW 1111 fll~ htr'eln Beach and Costa l\1esa from 90Uth of Boruta Canyon Road at 1 pttltlon tor Prob.II• of Wiii _, the University of California, Irvine campus to Interstate 405. tor luu•nc• Ill L1tter1 ol' Admlnl11t1tlon 4 1 ·1 f 6 d 8 l f incl din' __ ,_, wl"' tht Wiii ennexlcl to ftie ptlilloMr', . m1 Cl o • an • ane reeway, U g an lntc:.< .. :.uange rwftrtne• to W1'11d1 Is m.cl• tor further ~:Ith exi5tlng State Route 55. P1rtkvl•t•, •1'111 ttllt tilt 11m1 •nd pt«• 10. In the City of San Diego on St.ate Route 75 from east of °' ""'11111 ..,. sanw ~s been ~, I t t R ~ In . tor Nov. 20, 1'7l. •t t .00 '·"'·• '" n en ate oute "'""' to terstate Route 5. 1. 7 miles of the courtroom ol' ~""""' No. 3 4-lane freeway. or uld court, •t 700 Civic center :rt'e California Division Engineer o[ the Federal Highway Admin-~~W1~.~:;1· 1" tht ' 1"' of 5•n1• An•. ustrat.ion has completed his assessment for the highway sections Deted NOY. 2. 1'13 listed WILLIAM E. SI JOHN, ~ Counly Clerk 1. For the high'vay section in Humboldt County on State v. DAv10 IJRll:UM Route 101 he has determined that pren• .. '"lion and consider llTN PLOOlt, UNION •ANK TOWl!ll: , .,..... -910 NEWl"ORT Cl!lfTElt OR. atlon of an ~v1ronmental titatement is not required. Nl.WPOltT IEACN, CALIF. tlut 2. For the hl gh"•ay section in t.1onterey County on State Route T•h ln41 '44-00Jl 1. he ha.'{ determined that preparation and consideration or A~':~r:h!r' ri.~~!10c"~~ 0,11,. Pilot an environmental statement is not required. Nov.mber 1, •· 13, 1913 l~•·73 3. At Turnpike Roe.d in Santa Barbara County on State Route 101 he has detennlned that preparation and consideration PUBLIC NOTICE of an environmental statement ls not required. SUl"••uo• COURT Ofl" CALIPOltNIA 4. For the higll\vay 11ection in Kern County on State Routt" 4:3 1 .. c~r:c"'f111~:, g~~N:_i:.1, he ~u determined that preparation and consideration or an 11R11 Ant, c1111. envll'Onmental statement is not required. cas• NUMll!ll !MUI 5. For the~hlghv.1ly section ln Kern County on State Roule-58 ~•)Trt111: secJ~1~0;~RE co1t~RA· he has actermlned that preparation and consideration of an TION. environmental statement i,, not required. oer~n••: THOMAS N. SMITH, SYLVIA • th . I". I SMITH. 'SURETY INSUll:ANCE fj. For e highway tectlon 1n the City of Log Angeles on Stat(! COMPANY, JO~ .... MERA/LL. Route 11 the State of Calltornia requested lt be withdrawn CHARLES •. DENNEY •nd OENHll --further nsld ti . th I. Mf.ll:AILL. WILSHIRE INSURANCE ,...... co . era on m e reassessment TilC State is COMl"AN'I', a1cHARO H. SAVAGE. Jreparin& an env1rorunenta.1 lmpact statement that will DOE I lhn11191'1 DO£ v, lncillllv" tncf\lde thls highway 1ectlon To the Otf"'nh: A clvll compl1lnt 1. J'or the h1gbwa.y aection in lh«l City of Los An(:l?les on State =· t"' Y011ni::111 iwto '=,!!:1~1~ ='. Route 101 be has determined that preparation and consldera-~ ""''' 111e In 11111 court ·• wrttt'" tJon ,:or an environmental atatement ls not reQulred. 1or .a~rt0 ~~.~"':""or;1° ~~~1"~ 8. F'or 't.M highway tecUon in the City ot Los Angeles on Jv1llct C_,I w!tl'lln • d•~tr State Route 118 he hu determined th&t preparation and ~r~~~ ~.:civ;·,i»Licttl: Mnsideratlon of an environmental st.atement is not required. ..,. ""' p111n11ft end tM cDll!'t m•v 9. For the·hla:hwa,y 11ed.lon in Oraiige County on State Route 73 tf'lllf • 111119nwn1 •1•lntt vou tor "" M hall detcnnlned that preparation and consideration of ~%1n1~•11tr re1r11 requalld In an environment.al 1t&tement Is not required " YM •1•11 tt Mill t111 .nlce If 10.. For the hl.atrMiY aectlon in Ute Oty of Sa'.n Diego on State :: :!'~~' '':.' 1':1!ttt'ffwl':.:= Route '1S be hu determined that prcpt.ration and considera-II '""' ''"" .. ,..., "' t11N. tk>n ot II\ environmental statement is not required DttM .. "'""llff "-ttn. . '! •. easily the best movie so far this Year'' ·-Steohen F1rt1Er • NEW YORK TIMES ,.---~ wt.. \Ullrt you i'l'62? ~"?' • U:QUSM' OUHGI COUHTT INUOIMINI' WID:MYS -7130 • tllO MT. SUH. 11at -:l:JO • SiM • 71JO . f:M EWOTT KASTNER presents CLIFF GOR~AN ~g~fi~~A Aey penon may requl"st copicc of detcrmJnatlom by wriltne: to• :~L~~ lt~· ... s~N, Clerk Mr D E. Trull . fSIALI W kd DI ' • . l•tOIL. Cll:AIL ~ Slalta .. ays• 7 & 8•40 vl1hln 1'.'Tlg1necr uu "'"'cltft Dr .. s.,11 * • • iw::J# ST~ .... P.M. P F<deral 0 H'i&tni.'8.y AdmJnistra.tlon ~:1'1"::4~,...c..it. m.e Sat. & Sun. 1_:45,3:30, • • Box 1915 ... ,..,_, tw .....,.. Sacramento. CA 95809 ~'*'Wd Ol'fl'ltt COll'11 o.n,. PllOI, 5 15 7 & 8 45 w,....... ....... o.., "TlllUllULUTS POI ALONG_., Publiobtd ~O>ut Dally Pilot November 8 1973 ·--73 "'-" " ''" •-• '· •· 1 ' 1 . • ....,,,., 1'11 11tt-nl •••••••••••••••,,;••••••••• ' ' .... .. --•lfkl t62-2'•1 -~·---THE WAY WI WIRI !NI .......... ELEmA GLIDI IN IWI,.. ""'. ·• 1•011• u... ......... -·-Jn .ml JIQ "° ............ w THI CHIHUADlll Jll """ t I Mnl UllOOlf FRITZ THI C~T Ill INTD Jl:' o'tA-e IWfit ..... WIN TIAIN ROllOI .• , '• • 9 Cl) ne ••llM "Th• Fm" 11:11 Ea... M • :; Err1 finds • bltJ ... r 11 tilt woods • eftd brinp It lloftlt in tht boptsll~llft(f)Cll IMI ..... 40 . ttt1t &hi wlll 1M 1llowH lo .... It ilf"9 11'1' (11111) .............. ..,. W11t11 tht ltwR pctlb Ill ti Gr•n4· nold1, t.rttm Lodn. . .... du• -off t11t llnt... 89(1)llil llllloll•-~: t1b Gr•nd!Nl'S ntWtJ.rprouttd ,..., W : ~·rl'" (4rl) 'U-· tlM ftmllJ ttlh l'll•rt·brokan £nn Mlct11n1 ~~n. HKOlpfclt Mlfl. · r: ;1:crrkihmt.~ •••• (tM) !!.t~=~~~;J'.~ •"I>oWnhm Ailtltt Wir'' Chilf Im· A tllll C1GUrtroo• d11m1 wotws sid1 tums in his bfftt ind posts wtltft tM 1doptht Plftflb ol • / •s 1 skldrow winG to utch lllt )'Ollnl boy fllht 1ttempts, bJ hit { •ill•r ol • politlci1n's camp1l1n n1h1r1I mothlf to rtPln eustoc!J. f m1n111r. DIYicl WayM. Kim D1rb1 Ro1tm1ry Pflnz i nd Robin Strtssw 1nd LM H. Mon!JfJ!"tfY 1utt1. \\\ .... _. --IJ Mllril: (C), (2'tJ ... ltlll If tM hlll" toncl. (dr•) '66 -H•n ......-: .. A 111A1t ftf Jllr" Fondi. Robli't Rpn. Q1nt AfldrtWJ. (dra) 'SS--GIOIP Rtlt. Eftlf4 '· U MASTER OF DISGUISE Robl•"'-Aud"' Tottll. * TOMA AS COP HATER lz:tO l,f,I °""" - LURES YOUNG SNIPER I II= CCl ...... "'"_,;. BARRICADED IN CITY (m"l '43-:f.••"" lo~ )!" Mil-·, D tlIJ(})nlltM· ·~ ' son,Glorl1DiKavtrt. ·? Brnkclown" liM poJll al I (:OJ-\ aJ .... Mltdlcld: ,,..... J ; ..... -... lolia ·..=.: l:tt '>12'11 i ga ~ -! ::'':' .=t' ...::.'.: ... c11r 11r.;u:;:: i .ltll·Mlchltl Yllctlll ..... r l 1!1-$ -cq ~ 1:•88- -.. , .. -, ... , 'S2 -1:45 ~CCl -.. M" (Mf) ! ~,~;!:;· ~~~;;:::,; loo -~op,. ~H ... l· S:lt•·--.,. ·(.,., '41 ' nifls, ~11111111 hnd~ 0.11111 O'Kttft. . ~ :~ Friday Listens to Landers . ' ,. ' . • • t ) I . ' • , ' . ..,, ' Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks --· VOL. 116, NO. 312, 4 SECTIONS, 48 .PAGES-ORANGE COUNTY;--C;t.l:IFORNIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, l97T c TEN CENTS Mesa's-Neth Flays Anaheim Cops as 'Non-Pro' By WIWAM SCHREIBER Glavas, Conner president of t h e ot .. "* ,..., ''-" California Peace Officers Association. Top Anaheim police and city officials "Thjo would be a completely ir- today bad no comment on a threat responsible action in my book and by c:lislentlng policemen to take on the couldri't possibly act to their benefit," role ot "super cops" by citing drivers Glavas added. I.or even the inost minor~ Violations, if Detective Chet Barry, president of the city falls to bargain with them the Anaheim Police Association (APA). over new conlracts. said Wednesday his group ls seriously But aeveraHlrqe-Cout police-chlels-considering the -last.. ditch alternative contacted by the Dally Piiot bad plenty of public barrassment as a means to to uy. · get the city to come to t~rms. , ''Tbll liind of cooduct could set back Among · other thi11&•. the APA is profeaiooal llw enforcement a decade," demanding higher pay than the city 11ld Newport Beach Chfef B. James Is offering, better fringe benefits and ' Mesa .Bank the right to act as sole bargaining agent for the officers in the department. Barry said he hopes the situation won't come to the need fOf' zealous ticketing of drivers , but he said the idea hasn't . been rejected , either. Glavas said he doesn't see any justification for su ch an action, which he said can only hurt the image of policemen in the eyes of the public. "I can think of a lot Of alternatives to this kind of thing and the more I think about it , the more horrified I ge~." Glavas' thoughts were echoed by Hun- tington Beach Polict Chief Earle RQbitaiUe. He called the tactic a "8an Dieeo technique,'' referring to a similar mass-tickd,ing campaign by dissenting officers in that city four years ago . "I think. thls is completely ill-advised a n d completely counter-productive," Robitaille said. "It does nothing for the department and certainly doesn't engender community-respect ,'' Robitaille said that whenever the police in Huntington Beach have had similar problems, it Is usually WlSOliclted citizen support th~t wins the day. U .S • Costa Mesa Police. Chief Roger Neth said he "strongly objects to any change in practice from that which Is standard in the department in order to put the pressure on during negotiations. "I don 't think this enhances the image of' police at all and certainly is not professional in my opinion,'' he said. "I sincerely hope such a thing never happens down here but I think our guys have a lot better sense,'' Neth added . Aides for Anaheim Chief Dave Michae l said he preferred to rerrain from com- menting on the veiled threat by -.hls olficers because of the "fragile situa- tion" in the city. Gary ~1cRae, Anaheim's personnel directo r and the man in charge of the city's side of the dispute, would not comment specifically on the :'super cop" proposal. "l am confident the citizens of Anahei m will continue to receive the protection they have always received and I think the officers will act with honesty and integrity," he said. McRae said he is unsure of the status of negotiations since the contract talks were broken orf three weeks ago. · • e1ze -·-.·,··~S·tickJJn 7 r 1?: Mesa High's Facelift . . -. Questioning Of Duo Set In 9 Deaths • • , >, ' . ... -~·' •• •• • ' . .. ·" J f :. " • • ( f I I ' • • l ~ • . . I I ' :; C"leared? ~ Movies made of two bandits durin~ the robbery of a Buena Park branch of .$ecurlty Pacific Bank have apparently cleated a similar Costa Mesa stickup. One man involved in the Oct. 19 B4ena Pafk robbery is dead. A Second is still at. large. And ~ third ·suspect is in San Bernar~· O>unty j~il on another. charge.• I Costa Mesa pollc:e said today that wltoelaes to .-the Aug~, JI -r...: the GleUI< Federll • IDll om.;., .. -Bl-.d., -· bave -UV<ly llilked lft of the 1uspecta to that~cue. A c.unposite drawing ol one of two men who held up the Staler Brolhers Market, 2180 Newport Bl-.d.,. Oil Oct. 11 aJoo matches I photo ol the dead man. "These guys both loot good on our market job," Ncirm Kutch, Coeta Mesa dete<!tive, aaid today. • Limb wu eXP,!Cled to be arraiined before a U.S. mqistrale in Los Angeles today. Detectives said, the Glendale Federal Savlnp and 1-camera llW'Yeiltance system was malfunctioning and got no •bc>tl of the bandits, although It bas alnce . been replaced. "Otherwise, ire )llight bave beeo able to dear this up aoooer," he said . A stolen car taken from the San (See MOVIES, l'ip l) Dog Kennels Raise Howls Raldents of Santa Ana llelchts ore ""'lly ralllnl'. a bowl over llOllle pn>pooed doc aimels. This puzzles ..,. zoning -8tntor because the ..,.. llCl'elll1lllg !lie loudest are ..... hone owners, who obould be cmipotlble wl1h the do! Iowa. For years the two groups have been the best of neilhbon. See tlils and other Harbor Area related stor- ies and pictures on Page 29 ~ay. SOUGHT IN CRIMES Mlchool 0. Brllnl!I• 'f eamst,ers Honor Growers' Pac i WASHINGTON (UPI) -The jurisdic· tional dispute , between two l a b o r organlz.atiom which seek to represent California farm workers was rekindled _when the Teamsten Union said it would honor its pacts with growers. Teamster President Frink E. Fitzsim- mons' announcement W e d n e s d a y destroyed a tentative agreement to setUe the dispute between his independent wtion and Cesar Chavez' AFL-CIO United Farm Workers. The , tentative .agr!!<_,1 !lad )leen -'<eel' out' ,Jn ~ hY' An.-CIO Presidotnt Geotgt!)oleany. and ·called for the Teamst•rs ·to ab"l\®n.their struggle with the UFW .arid lo repudiate existing labor contracts with 8?9Wen. Court Rej ects Plea SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Convict Rucbell Magee'• eifort to plead double jeopardy to an aggravated kidnaping cl!arge growing oot of 1 lll'IQ quadruple slaying in Marin County was, rejected Wednesday by the California Supn!me Court. The court denied,• without com- ment, bis pe®\X1 for a hearing On his appell from 1 Sept. ti 'state Court of Appeal declsloo. Gets Push By JOHN ZALLER Of Ille o.lly l"llol Slaff Stung by skyrocketing costs of con- struction, the Newport-Mesa Unified School Boan! decided Wednesday to push forward immediately with a $2.2 million renovation project at Costa Mesa High School. The original plans, drafted in April trn, called 1or COllllructlon to begin 1n 'J)ecember and t'Ollttiiue for a period of about three yean. However Superintendent John Nicoll told trustees that the delay since last year already has cost the. district nearly $300,000 and 'that to continue as originally planned would -at least $200,000 more. "InDation ir\.i construction costs is in· creasing at the rate· of about two percent per month," Nicoll said. "If we want to get the maximum effect from our building fwxt, we should proceed on the whole project im- mediately," he said. The project will include construction of a large library and media center on the open mall near · the entrance to the school, and additions of smaller buildings for health care, counseling, a television studio, girls gymnastics, and a new science area. A separate phase of the program calls for installation of a comprehensive drainage system to handle the flooding that occurs on the campus in rainy weather. Under directions of the trustees, the first phase of the project, which includes the new library, will be opened up for bidding in the next few 1days. Construction then is expected to begin I in December . Work on the remaining portions of the project could be under way by May, trustees were told. The whole project cou1d be finished in 14. months, less than ball th& period originally planned, by doing work on the three phases of the project con- currenUy. school officials said. Dr. Bartellu Bearing Witnesses -Blast Ex-lover By toll BARLEY .. .. D.ity ,..., ..... v LOS "-NGELES -.Prosecution wllness Reba Vauglln's.c:bat'acterand testimony were repeatedly at~ again here today aa or: Ellbe HarteJiUI' lawyera put on more delenae wltneaeo in the IOCOlld clay of the eighth llltte-day state llearlJll. I Rortelllls, 60, cl El Toro, I. charpd With morll turpitude and unprofmlonai conduct. II la allepd the! bis reiieated dnJUlnl of Mra. Vqlln, JI, led to ber commltmenl *' •I lllmllkl eddlct ill lllllt eller the polr bad llnd .. lmnllher~--- Tbe DonJsb.llarn -·· IGrmer -bu beta repoated!y brlnded • I ltar and I thief by I aerleo Of "'--leltlmony " dell,...i .. -Ille --ol the .-.. lolonde'• .... llltemea\ -the 'llllMD lland. But the dolonae wsa worned today \ • by State hearing officer John~ A. Willd practice medicine. that he will not allow more than JO Five out of six defense witnesses called character witnesses to testify for Or. thus far in the current hearing have Hartelhis. -; stated that Hartelius is a highly regarded His decision followed the charge by physician In the Harbor Area and that state Jawyen that most of the defense he has been the victlm of a series testimony "!J the lllOllt blatant fon\1 of false accusaUons. of~." He was described as "thoroughly pro- Delenoe attorney Maltbew Kurillcb feulonal and ethical" by his office nurse, conttnues1 to aigUt that 30 character Mrs. Mary King, and even more strongly wllneaes lh>uld be allowed after earlier defended by ber huaband, retired Vice llBW'liia the CCllllllllttoe tllit be could Admlral E. L. King of the U.S. Navy, put IOO perwoos oa tbe atand. 111 don't think a man could have II baa II.lo been testified thlt Hartelius a bel1er reputation," the former Naval enjoyed 1· oexual relaUonshlp with the officer told the commlltee of three doc- lale W• Melendres, .211, of,,C..Sta Mesa tors. and cbl!Ued the nursea' a~ to the AM be assured the panel that if potnt that she opent l1lOll of the lime be had ever ha4 any doubts about In bed and nqlected bet,...,. famfly. Hartelius's innoc:ellce he would have Jn. Two attorneyl ltYinll the cue for aisled on his wife ending her 12-year the 111ta Boord of Medical Enmlnen -ael'Yice in the doctor's offlc:e al 2345 · bate llrmly rejocted a dell pr_.i E. Coui lllghny, eor.na del Mar. by the c1e1..... 'nlly are aeeldna the "ll be bad done anything wrong, she """"lion ol Or. Rortelius' llcenae to (Seo llARTBUUS, Pqe I) ' ,. . : '• . ·'· . --•tiff,,...... • , I I , , , I. v . 'I'""'" 1 ,. FRANK AND MONA'BURNS <~obic·OVEit'PAl'ERS ~OuNll'.jN RAVINE Per..tvance of M ..... touple"Retlifiil--Colliji)l)ipliiiiia'"J.!Val .. ble-::c liftlis .• •. "l'; ';j.:_1 .; • ~ "'t· .•. Me sans· Get Scroll in ·Ravine They didn't knQw who he was but they were conyinced Bhufor.d L. Holman wouldn't have thrown his college diploma away. And that's why Mona and Frank Bunf, two schoolteachers from Costa Mesa, picked up the scroll which was aimlessly drifting through a ravine at the Santa Ana River bluffs. They picked up a 1ot of ·other things too. Llke canceled ch.ec~. some wedding pictures, an old U-haul bill, phOtos of Persons posing in front of their homes, and a newspaper clipping. 'Ibe mystery .surrounding the fihd became unbearable for the Burrui' who thought that the papers were valuable enough to be returned to Bbuford -L. Holman, wherever he was. ' The police department proved to be no help and neither did the telephone book. '11lere was no trace of Bhuford L. Holman. So the Bums' called the Daily Piiot and the mystery was solved. And because the Bums' wete in- terested enough in tryingJo return what they thought to be important papers, Bbuford L. Holman is in possession of at least a few of the personal memen- tos burgled from his apartment garage about two weeks ago. The the[t was never reported. 111 1rled to find out who MI:. Holman was but I was afraicJ to interfere with his privacy," said Mrs. Bums, 3216 New York Ave. ·"But I thought nobody would throw a college diploma away and then it occurred to me that maybe JOmeone had stolen a locklior ~m his house and thrown the papers away." That I.! exactly what happened , ac· cording to Holman, whom tho Burns' were unable to track down though he lived Just a few mnes away at 413 Falr Drive. "I was very con<erned ·1bout·ll because it.had all my alimony checks and child support payments in It. But mostly it was. just a bwich of mementos, nothing of any value to anybody bUt me," he said. Holman was traced by the Daily Pilot through a name 1'bich appeared on one of the canceled cliecks: A man with the same illiUaJs was discovered in Laguna Beach and 'It was revfaied that his ex·wlfe now was married to Holman. . A few 'rltore ·felepttone calls-got Holman himself. The Holmans were appreciative of the Burns' willingness to-n!turn the belongi~gs. "There were a few antiques in the box. There was an old snuff box in µiere that belonged to my husband's grandfather," said Mrs. Shirley Holman. "W~ didn't report the burglary to the police because we figured there was no chance to get any of It back." Now the Holmans say . they wilt tak e a hike through the ravine themselves with the hope of recovering some of ·the other contents of the box. Sign Panel'ists Back Or.di1iance The Mayor's . Sign Ordinance Com- mittee Wedneaday night voted in favor of the cootrovenlal Costa Mesa Sign Ordinance. City councilmen will receive tb.e com- mittee's recomntt!ndaUon In one week.· The orillnal)Ce pro-lo establish stri,ct. iikn , regUlaUons In all areas or Coste Mesa and to phue out elclsting signs n0t conforming to the new Sia•· danls. The c:eunclJ •l'!l"inted the committee ...uer this year to study the onlinance and to lfve Its ..-.meftdalion, ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -Two men were - arn!sted toda)loo for questioning in the ' execution-style murder of nine persOns · in a luxury rural borne, invesUgatori • reported. A man police identified as Willie Luther Steelman, 28, o~ Lodi, ,kme oUt ~ of an ·apartment building with his ~ ;. raiied alter police surrounded ille i(" bulldlilg and fired a tear Pl coniltOr r· inside. ... l Earlier, police amsted a man fd"': 'I tlfied 81 J)>nglas Gretzler, 22, of New .( York City, in a hotel four bJocks from · the state CapJioJ where the ·two were regi:Jtered under their own names. Police said. SteeJman appeared after ---' MASS MURDERS· SHOCK SMALL TOWN -Story, Poge 3 they honored bis request to broadcast . over a rock radio station a message · saying he WoWd not be hurt if he :· surrendered. . He was preceded by a woman whq , was not immediately identified. She said she lhrew a pistol on the lawn as " she came out. ~ . ' .. ~o shots were beard when Gretzlerr :~ was appretf"'-ended Jn rroom~to:-roatn "'---'~ search of the Clunie Hotel on th"l '·: downtown Sacramento mall. t Wearing horn-rimmed glasses and a 1 leather coat, Gretzler was surrounded .! by a dozen policemen who hustled him ; ' ,. through a cro-wd of news reporters m · the lobby and into a waiting car. ·-. Shotgun-armed police surrowided the ' hotel and evacuated the third floor before : the search began. Investigators believe Steelman was ac- companied ,by a woman, had no in- formatioo on whether she was a frieod or hostage. San Joaquin County Sheriff's Lt. Donald Morrow said Gretzler 800 Steelman were alSo being sought on a two-cound murder warrant by Phoenix, Ariz . autOOrities. Morrow said the Mesa and Victor crimes are similar and that Steelman lived about nine ~miles from ·where the nine bodies were discovered Wednesday morning in the home of the Walter Parkin family . f·· Oraage ~ .. t Weather Some fog or low cloud.1 night and morhing hours but otherwise swmy is the forecast for Friday. Highs at the beaches in the 60s rising to 75 inland. Ov'ernight lows in the 50s. INSUUl 'l 'ODi\ \' Three members of o farm famuy, held hostage by two jail escape.es, woited u·11til their cap- tor& fell a.sleep and ran ou& tht house and e1caped. Storu, page 4. -.... --. --. °'"'" c..... ,... l'TA • """ -................. T-» --·-' """"""' ...... &Iii --' , 2 PAll y PILOT c ---- Pool Limit Pinn Gets R ejection . Plans for limiting aceess to the llarbor Area's only public Olympic-size swim- ming pool were sent back to the drawing boards \Vednesday after local swiln group.o objected to them. Scene or the dispu te was a meeting of the Newport-Mesa Unified School Board. which owns and operates the pool located on the campus of NeWport Harbor. High School. Wheh the dust cleared after the meeting, there seemed to be ttu:ee possibilities for resolving the issue: -Either some groups would have to be e.zcluded altogelher, wtuch trustees seemed to oppose. . -Or some eroups were going to have to work out in the pool at the same 1 time, which trustees seemed to fa vor. -Or someone "'Ould have to build a_new Olym_pic-sj~ pool. "There are. ·very many· pei>ple woo want to use the pool and only so many hOurs in a day, so it's clea r that sqmelhing is going to have to give," said Donald Hou t, assistant district superintendent. "Ifs my understanding that the trustees want us to come up with a niw method of scheduling for the pool tSat will keep everybody with a chance to use it. "That will mean that more than one group may have to use it at once," Hout said. , ( • School o£ficials had wanted to limit access to the pool because there were so many outside groups :hat so me of ·the district's high school swim programs 'vere being squeezed out. J UDGE TU RNER (RIGHTJ, PROSECUTOR McC LURE AT HOAG For Inj ured Defendant, a Court With 'a Bedside Manner In one case, trusteea were told, the Co.sta Mesa High School swim team. had been forced to use a pool in Tl.fission Viejo becauSe UC lrvil)e was usi ng the Judge Takes Cour t1·oom . . ~ district pciol. · Trustee• also heard a complaint from Jack Fullerton of lhe Costa "Mesa Aqua tic Cfl:lb, a ·swimming club sponsored by the Costa Mesa ~w.rti.ation BeparlmE',nt. To Def e~dan,t-At Hoag Fullerton said that while the Newport Beach Recreation Department was given up to 13 hours a day lo use the pool in the summ er, "we were told that 've had to practice before ·s a.m. or after 10 p.m. if we y,•anted to use the popl." Fullerton indicated that lhe new rules didn't seem to resolve that inequ:ity. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ... 01111 "''°' ll•ff Somebody turned down the volume on the TV and pulled the curtain on the hedridden defendant'~ half of the hospital room and coun was called to order in the case o( The People vs. .., .Another complaining group was the Balboa.COrona Aquatics Club which would have been squeezed out of the pc)ot entire!)! under the proposed new set of regulations. 1 Spokesmen presented petitions which 1 they said contained 1,000 signatures pro- testing the elimination of the Balboa· Corona club. Trustees agreed the provision limiting Newport Beach to the sponsorship 'Of just one team -the Newport·lrvine· Mesa Aquatlcs Club -should be struck out so that the Balboa·Corona team could be included . Officer Tackles F'-eeing S~spect On, '50-y ard Line' A Costa Mesa policeman who spooked a neet-fboled youth he was trying to arrest on a routine trarfic warrant gave it the old college try today and quickly got his man. Patrolman Robert Comuke, 24, a stand· out college football player at Cal State. Fresno, sprinted after the youth, who was subsequently arrested and ...booked on several charges. Fellow policemen liste ning in on the raruos in their cars and at the station didn't exactly get a play·by·play of the ex·gridder'11 brier moment of glory in the 2100 block of Placentia Avenue, but they could envision it. "Officer in foot pursuit . . . " Patrol· man Cornuke radioed, then the hard· hitting tackler left the air briefly. "Suspect in custody on the 50 yard line . " he radioed a few moments later. DAILY PILOT T ... Or.,.. C..•I DAIL V l'ILOT, wllfl ..... tdl 11 f;Omb!IMlf ffle '"-"nu, 11 Plll!lllMll w !tit 0r1,.. CNat P\lbllt111Pll c.tnpln'I'. S•IN- nN tdltllnt 1r. llUDl(fMll, MeM.i'I' lll""'Oft l"rld1y. Nr Col!1 Mtt•, N..,_rl ll•ldl, ltunll"'IOI! 1111<1!/1"-.11111 Villl\t, L~­ tMdl, ltvlM/Sllld!tblcll. 1116 1111 Ci.Pl'llfll9/ $111 J1N11 C.p!tl•-. A 1111911 •'9kHlll tdllloll la Jlllb!laMll 5'11unll l'I 11111 S11ndl'fl. ,,.. prlnclN I llllblltfllllf 1'it11t It 11 QI WHI ••r Srrwt, C•I• M•w. C.llfwnll, '2•2'. ltol.ert N. W1H "r•lllefit ,..,.. ,.Ul>lltMr J1dr It. cllf1 • ., Viet ,.rnldlrll ..W G.111t'l l.Mtfll9W Tllorn•1 K11•il l:CH!9t l hom11 A. M11rphl111 ~.Jttt 1:11/ftlr cii1rl11 H: l101 ,.ic~,,J r. Nill AU11l111I Ml lllfillt l!llltit1 Ctott. M ... Office JJO W1t1 l1y Str11I M1lli111 A44r111:',.0 , lo• 1560, '2616 --H~ 9-11: 1W ,._,..,. 9111..._,,. ~~:'tlll"tml .......... ...,.........,. klcfl: 11111 •..ct. tou1 .... 1r• 6'tl 0-: JDS Nlrtll El Ctl!lltlt Jlltt , .. ,,, .. f114J 642...UJI CL MM """" b t Ml•lln =Ii 1t7J. Onllff Coottl l"Ullttlf!IPll • Ht fttWI tltrltt. Uk11tr11-., l'llllttr .,. ........ ''""""'" ,,,,.i .. ,,.,, .... ,..., ...... -'lfll¥t "'*'-• "" .......,..,~.....,. ....... cit; ............. II C•lt MtN, ~-. ~IM ll'r Uf'Tltt tt.61 _.,_..,, tlf ,.,,r1.i1 P ,11 -iillt'i t11ll!twr ....... ~ .. ~. Ray Rohm. .. Onetime Costa Mesa nudie' bar owner Ray Rohm, 29, is cllrrently immobltized in the Hoag Memorial H o 11 p i t a I From Pagel HARTE LIUS . • • would have walked out anyway," com- mented the peppery seafarer, reminding the commlltec that Harteli us had been cleared of arson, £raud and bribery charges in three Orange County Superior C.Ourt trials. King and his wife repeatedly con· demned Mrs. Vaughn as a liar 'and a thie£ and three witnesses have now testified that they have been threatened over the telephone on various occasions by Mrs. Vaughn and her mother. ~trs. Jane Jack, a convalescent hospital administrator ~mployed by the company that controls Bayview Manor in Costa Mesa, testified that Mrs. Vaughn telephoned her and used foul language whlle' she threatened to kill the witness for "seeing Dr. HarteUus." And Newport Beach attorney W. C.erald Brown testified that ~1rs. Vaughn's mother called his office and told him that "she would see me and Dr. Hartelius in jail for this." TONIGHT COSTA MESA WATER DISTRICT - Regular meeting, n Fair Dr. 7:30 p.m. "THE FIFTH VICTIM " -OCC Drama Dept. Auditorium, 8 p.m. Also Nov. 10. LIBRARY FILMS -Films for all ages : "Good Earth" "Patent Leather Kid" and "How to Take a Vacation," 7:30 p.rn. Free. "COMMUNITY '73" -Series of sym· posiums sponsored by Junior League of Newport Harbor, Room 174 Computer Science Bldg. 7:30-9:30 p.m. OCC LECTURE -"Family Estate Planning" Paul ~fan: lecturer, Eastbluff Elementary School, 7:31).9:30 p.m. FRIDA V, NOV. 9 FOOTBALL -Costa Mesa vs. Los Alamitos. OCC Lebard Field . 8 p.m. Estancia vs. ~Iagnolia , David50\ Field, 8 p.m. THANKSGIVING DANCE -Dept. of Leisure Services hosts dance for ex· ceptional young adults. Community RecreatJon Center, 7.9 p.m. OCC LECTURES -"The Restless Land" (Geology ol Orange County), Science Lecture 1, 7·9 p.m. "Skilns. a Winter Way of Life," Science Hall, 7:31).9 :30 p.m. UCI ART EXHIBIT -Works ol four Chicano artists, Fine Arts Village Art Gallery, Nov. 10.Dec. 9. Preview tonight, 7:30 p,m. UCI · CONCERT -UCI University OrchC!tra, Fine Arla Village Theatre, Nov. 9 and JO, 8 p.m. Atl!nWloo $!. ofthopedic wing with injliries suffered in a motorcycle accident. He was unable to appear for ar· raignment on charges of arson and con· spiracy Tuesday in Orange County Superior Court, so Wednesday the court came to him. Judge James F. Turner, flanked by Dc.puty District Attorney G e o r g e McCJure, court reporter Burgess Titus and Defense Attorney Myron Brown marched into Robm's room shortly before supper. The proceeding lasted about three minuteii.. · Rohm , 526 Sturgeon Drive, C:OSta Mesa, and a codefendant, Victor L. BQngberg, 31 , of the same tddress, are aCCURd ol destroying the ~angri-La bar In late June. ~- The tavern operation at 12272~Harbor Blvd., Garden Grove catered to transvestites, gays and featufed fem ale impe1"S9nators onstage. It all went up in smoke June 28, with a '$100,000..plUJ bang blamed on a gasoline bomD blast the prosecution claims was arranged by Rohm and Boogborg. . They are free otl .$10,000 bond each. A third defendant who -wis arrested ~ day afterward when he turned up m a San Bernardino hospital wilh severe burns also faces prosecution in the case. Bruce D. Lerner. 29. who was burned over 35 ·percent of his body, has not yet been • £ormally charged a n d presumably the prosecution will use him as a witness. Judge Turner led the judicial pro-- cession into Rohm 's room Wednesday in a relatively inforrnaJ Orange County Superior Court session, which was re- quired to keep the criminal complaint against Rohm in effect. The law specifies that a defendant facing trial in Superior Court be ar· raigned within 15 days after he is bound over following preliminary hearing at municipal court level. ' If this procedure is not completed , the charges may be dropped. Tuesday was the 15th day and Rohm 's chief defense attorney, Sy Iv a nus Aronson, suggested what would be Judge Turner's first bedside hospital ar· raignment in a 4!h year career, when his client failed to appear. . Rohm Jay with his shattered right hip and crushed toe elevated in a full leg cast and traction device. A red·le!tered sign reading: BEWARE OF VICJOUS ANIMAL hung from a metal bar over his bed. It was a gcl-weU gift from friends. Introductions were made. "Yes ... we've met before," said Rohm. when introduced to the judge and prosecuting Deputy District Attorney McClure. Rohm has £ought many round! in court on obscenity and Iewd en- tertain~ent ~lUltS stemming . !rom operation of his now.closed ,.Fitebouse .· tavern at 175 E. 17th SL, Co11ta Mesa. Judge Turner explained again the defendant's constitutional rights before he was allowed to enter a plea. Defense attorney Brown pleaded his client innocent to all charges, suggesting a May 1974 trial date. He sa id later the compound hip frac- ture Rohm suffered recently will keep him in the hospital at least another· ' four to six weeks and perhaps more, before he can be released to convalesce at home~ Rohm 's room·mate aecmed CurioUI Wednesday about the proceeding• bclllnd the yellow plastic curtain, until his nune came to administer a muscle relaxant . Judge Tumer and the defense couMel finally agreed on a Jan. z jury trial date. with a prior Dec. 14 hearing on a motion to completely dismi.Ss the anon and conspiracy charges, ag~t Rahm. Israel OKs Five-point Peace ·Plan By The AHoclated Prell The Israeli state radio said today t11rael tccepted a fiver.point plan worked out through the United States for a settl ement with Egypt. The radio quoted foreign cottespond- ents in Tel Aviv, who in tum quoted government suorces. Other well-placed government sources said, :t0Y'ever, the report was "close to the truth." The correspondents, not identified, were understood to have received the 1nfonnation in a briefing by a govern- ment source. The radio said the pJan was reached in talks between Secretary ol State Henry A. Kissinger and bis aides Jn talks in Cairo and Tel Aviv. Quoting foreign oomspondents, the .broadcasl said the clauses were: -A prisoner o( war exchange •jas soon as possible;" -A supply corridor for the encircled Egyptian 3rd Anny that would be U.N.· supervised and run through Israeli lines. ~ut it would include no Weapons, and m no way be contro!Jed by Egypt. -Removal of the Egyptian blockade of the Bab-el-~1andeb Strait, Israel's vilal outlet to the Indian Ocean. -Negotiations between Israeli and Egyptian milltary commanders -to ar- range a more convenient cease-fire line for the two sides. -Direct peace negotiations between Isra el and Egypt , once the first four points are (ulfilled. Kissinger flew to Jordan and Saudi Arabia after spending a day in talks y,•ith President Anwar Sadat in Cairo. From Pagel I MOVIES •.. Bernardino area, where Bannister, Lamb' .. and Brunelle were known' lo associate, was discovered abandoned in an adjacent apartment complex after the Aug. 29 .robbery. Comparison of the methods of QPE!ra- !ion -including sawed-off automatic weapons, tough talk and one b3ndit vaulting over the counter for the money -all checked out closely in each rob- bery, police said. The style y,·as di(!crent in the markel job in which the bandits marched brazen- ly in and out, but the physical d<ocriJ> tiOllll fit extremely closely to Bannister and Bnmelle, Investigator Kutch said. He· said that Lamb, the FBI 's on1y suspect In custody, was already in Sen Bernardino County Jail at that lime. The dose resemblance involves a photo o{ Leslie A. Bannister, :11. He was slain in a high speed cha~ when hit in the head by police builets Oct. 19 in Buena Park. His . accomplice in the Buena Park holdup -in which Bannister's female companion was captured -is believed to be Michael 0. Bnmelle, 29. Two vehicles were used in the Buena Park job. Brunelle is accused also o( connection with the murder of Pamela S. Hodgman, 21 , whose nude body was foond Oct. 19 dumped off the west city limit bluffs in Huntington Beach. T11ey were known a5!10ciates and evidence o( violence allegedly turned up in Brunelle's C'Cllfiscated car. Detective Kutch said-today that photos pr~vlded by the FBL following the Buena Park bank holdup led tellers at the Qlendale Federal Savings and Loan firm to identify Joseph C. Lamb as the second bandit in their robbery nine weeks ago. A federal hold order was immediately issued for Lamb, 28, also known as Roger D. Carlton. He i. ,.rving time in San Bernardino County Jail for being under the influence of narcotics. E/DRYEll 139.95 90 DAY CASH On Stri·ke ) Mrs. Gladys Rockie ,of Santa Ana pickeis the Thrifty Drug Store in • Costa M~sa·s Harbor ~hopping Center where she has worked for the ; past 13 years. She said she bas been with the company •ince 1943 and bas .never been on strike before. Aoout 4,800 retail clerks and pbai:mactsls walked off their jobs at Thrifty stores Wednesday, closing down 284 of the chain's stores in seven counties in a pa y dis- p ute . Watergate Tapes 'Poor Quality,' Says Secretary WASHINGTON (APJ -President Nixon's personal secretary told ~ federal caurt today that portions of the sub-poenaed Watergate tapes were very pxir m quality and that It is humanly lm- poalble to hear every word on them. "I could not get every word," Rose Mary Woods said in describing the Job of typing a rougb transcript of seven conversations between the Presi dent and key Watergate figures. (Related story Page 3.J , Miss Woods, Nixon's secretary for more than 20 year3, Sa.id the transcribing work took her nearly a month , working on and off, sometimes on weekends and often far into tbe night. The Watergate Pr:2:1jution force wants l /DllYElt 169.95 -~· I federal grand Jury to hear the tapes. The White House said today it never said anything about whether 5ea"f:t president ial tapes were audible because · it bad been working on the assumptioQ they never would be heard publicly. "I recognize completely there is a question of credibility," press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said. But he said he was sure the matter would be cleared up in court to the satis-. faction of tlte public. · Nix~, responding Wednesday night to rnountm" calls for his resignation vowed he has 'no intention whatever ~f walk· ing away from the job I was elected to do." 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. lllllton Com Mm-l'lla11 546-7788 . . • • • ,I