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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-11-09 - Orange Coast Pilot• -· • -? Boonanaate~ 82~ Dies in Huntington--·--· f I . .. • ' ~ • , .. • Radio Dispat~her ' Blows Whistle On 4 Coast K; s -. . . -. I .. _,. \, . . NeWport Aides Propose Dead End ' For Coast Highway unman u • , FRIDAY. AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER .~11~ , WM.,1M.·llCL. Ill. 4 SICTIONS, • PAOIS • . . ' . I -Voi~e of ~oot ,esa ewe ·eIS-·-• I• Radio Solves Its Oiv1i Theft By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of Jlle OMIY !"lief St.tf A GRUFF VOICE that must have sounded like the wrath of God Himself to four juvenile wrongdoers solved a Bal~ Island theft -case Thursday night. . ' • Newport Beach Fire·Department·Capt. Ed Hanlon and several of his me~ Crom the island station reS'pof\ded to a medical aid call on Agate Avenue during tli€ diriner hour. · . . . 1'he pocket communications radio he carried was set aside while firemen administered oxygen to a young Marine who had reportedly iqibtbeCl too much fruit of the vine. · .. ·DUR'ING THE' PERIOD when ·capCHanloh wasn't watching bis ·. radio and noboqy was 111atching the household youngsters, the small - device disappeared. · ·. . , · . . . . ' \ All lour youngsters-innocently demell.knowledge of the IDlssmg • radio receiver, so the captain went out to his, fire truck, supposedly to · see if he'd left it there. · : Instead, he called Dispatcher Ed McPherson and asked him lo broadcast a routine_ station check call in a minute or two. INSPECTOR ART Morion said today Capt. Hanlon returned to· the bou.se and said he just couldn't figure out where be lost bis ra<!io -then watched the kids' faces. . Fear and dismay flashed across their faces as .the gruff voice .boomed out of a dresser drawer: "KMB 434 ... testing ••• L •. , .• 2 , .. 3 ... 4 ... '' The captain's lost radio was retrieved a~d the kids were given a stern warning. Huntington Death Man, I 04, Faces Possible Charge By HILARY KAYE Of tff ~ 'II" Slaff An 82-year-old man ~led in Huntington Beach Convalescent Hospital this week, possibly reSulting from a beating with a shoe by his UH-year-old roommate. Authorities in Kings County are await· ing ihe corooer's report from Orange County to determine whether Luciano Rivas, IOI, should he charged wilh lhe murder ol Wllter Rhode, C. The assault occurred four months ago in a convalescent home in Hanford, 30 miJes IOUth of Fresno. ' lllJUTY is," explained the spoltesman, "but our investigation showed that Rhode did not have any further injuries." A relative in Huntington Beach moved Rhode from the Hanford convalescent home to Pacifica Hospital in Huntington Beach and then to the HlDltington Beach Convalescent Hospital. "It may be several weeks before we get the full report on Rhode," said O'Rourke. "At that time, we'll decide whether to seek an indictment against Rivas. 'Ve understand he is presently in another coilvalescent hOme in Tu1are:"· · Latin Man Knew Lingo Of Trade A .sharply dressed Latin man who talked in jeweler's terms marcbecJ Into a Cota Me·sa gem ·shop Thursday __ wltb a .38 caliber revolver· in his attache case and robbed the owners of nearly Jl 1,000 worth of merchandise. Sven H. ·Schroder, 44, owner of Schroder's Jeweler's, 283 E. 17th St., and his wife Tove, 38, were alone in the store about 4:30 p.m., when the bandit entered. Schroder told· police he first noticed the man's appearance, which inC1u~ / a shiny-textured dark suit and a stinv brim hat, which is somewhat wpttal Southern California attire. r -- He then. noti~ a .38 reyo_l)er pulled from the man's briefca~, ... J'lit. as his wire emerged trom the_ back roo~-.... she had been .working,-:; Schroder tot"d ' J-~~~~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~-' WARNING -Commerce Sec· retary Frederick Dent says Americruts \Viii have to accept a more polluted environment in order to save jobs during the energy-crisis. Rivas was · originally charged with assault with a deadly weapon, but Kings County District Attorney John O'Rourke s8id he decided not · to prosecute at !hat time. Oregon; Bank Ho"ldup Suspect D. B. CoQ~r? I. , po ICC. • "Get back in t~re and he won 't get ho rt," the bandit snapped to Mrs. Schroder, w}!o then went and hid ha (~J!WEl.5, Pace Z) -$67 Million Neelkd far Newport Streets By L. PETER KRIEG payers, the stale, Orange County and Of·tM Dallr '1"' surt possibly other sources. Newport Beach needs $67 million in But, Voorhees ll8id 127 million of the alriet Improvements, lncllldlng a second cost will. !all on local ta~yers and c:rpaaing over Upper Newport Bay, to he oooceded !he city may have clllflculty help 90!ve the traffic overload c00ling' raising' that 1ind '.ol \Doney over the the city a consultant has recommended. next -to 25 ' The ~nsultant's report, which took "" years. nearly three years to prepare, was The plan does not include a reoopi. rt.leased today and also says that Pacific mendation for a bypass Of downtown Coa!I Highway • should he dead-ended COrona de! Mar as had been originally at both sides o{ !he Santa Apa River. proposed. f It says the highway should be rerouted Voorhees had initially recommended to the north as it crosses Newport constructing a six·lane expressway on Boulevard and should connect wllh ,lhe the old pacific coul!reeway r'""l-o!-way terminus of the Newport Freeway · m ..,, ca.ta Mesa then continue westercy Into between Harbor View fills and old Huntlng10n Beacb. ~ Corona de! Mai, 'nlo .eC<Jrtd bay ·crossing as ~ -'VoooWs-concedod the r.,o.t-was by the firm of Alan M. Voorhees and tailored toward public acceplance and Company of San Diego and endoned does not nectsSarily Include ·!he belt by • clti,.nS committee, should he kepi tedlnlCal solutioos to lhe cit)''s traffic just to the north of the aisling Cout m.. Highway bridge and !hon sbould SWll\g The report aays that the recommended north t• the Intersection ol Dover and plan "does not eliminate all transporta· Westcllff Drive near ,the Costa Meaa • tJon deflclencies, but it does 'prosent city limits. . solutions which are liittly to obtain public The consultant said the 167 milhon 1.'cceplance and support necesaar'y for cos. t ...wet be divided -cit,y lax-lm"*-otlon." , ]· • Secretary Fired Over Refusal To Make Coffee? LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A secretary bas fi!ed suit !or $50,000 ,In federal court, c18lming she was fired because she refused to ma'.ke coffee and wash coffee cups in the office. The suit claims Leonor Pendleton was forced to do the tasks because she is ·a \\'Oman. Sharon Giannctta, Mrs. Pendleton's at· tomey, alleged Thursday the firing by the East Los Angeles Community Union "Since the death of Rhode, however, we are reviewing the charges to see if we stM?uld charge ·Rivas with murder," O'RoUrke said. . "It's a very unusual situation to have a ·104-year-oJd man w® is able to commit a .crime of thii'kind," he edded. O'Rourkt; is ·waiting for a medical history for Rbode since he left Hanford to determine )Vhetber he might have sufferm. iubSequent ·tnjurieS' to" the head _which may have ca~ his death. ·A spokesman for the Orange County Coroner's Office, however, said Rhode's autopsy Indicated he died from a blood clot resulting from l\D old Injury, "We can't be certain bow old the ' . .. :-....... No Swimmin,g At This Pool SAN DIEGO (AP) -The FBI says it is investigating whether a man ar· rested here for an· Oregon bank holdup may actually be 0. B. Cooper, the fi.st successful paraChutin& skyjacker. Arvid Julius Kiperts, 41, of PorJiand, Ore., wai arrested Monday in &in _Qiego's Ocean Bea~ area and ordered jailed In lieu of $150,llllO bond. Cooper .... !he name.used-by a man who parachuteij over Ute state of Washington from a commercial jet which he hijacked on 'ntanksgivtng eve, 1971.- To bis cheat was. strapped $200,000 i~ ransom. No body was eyer found . Cooper wri s never arrested and none of the money, whose serial numbers'had beCn recorded, BELGRADf: (UPI) -Villagers -bas ever urned up. is olearcy a violation of the 1964 Civil Rights Act "since ii discriminates agams~alnllft·tn her terms and....,.. - ditlons ol employment ~use of her ~rd~j::. r~::i : i!i~ . The. FBI said Kiperls, charged wilh tnlng pool wllh !he ~-lus lrulll -Oct: 211 batdup at King City, Ore. Savings .,_,. &:. Loan Co., Is suspected ol 1S other of their bumper ~~ the <>r.,.. bank holdups since 1910. Julius Be!grado dail1-V~--1-•~m'"illiiilll, the FBL-special -;agent at reports: • PorUand, aaid a pqsm6le llnk with Cooper Some 230 wagons or new""'frine was dlscovered at one of those fS. sex:.,, But E!lcban Torres. executive director of the union, ~ld lttrs. Pendleton was ' (ired because of ber "incompetence, in- subord.tlon and ta.iiure to comply with Job instrucllon•, Including manning the switchboard and other g e n e r a 1 secretarial duties." • have been atorOd In the pool Mattson, In 1 telephone lnlcrvl~w covert<! by a layar of paraff111 'nluriida)', said !be Incident took t11a·ce oil to proted It frol\l exposure. in December 1971 while a Wilsonville, Tile wine ts lo' be preserved Ore. bank was being robbed. in !his way tut January, the '111.'The individual who rohbfd the bunk oewspaper said: w• busy at a waU des~. scribbling (S,. ll.B. COOPER, Page I) "J 'ii ' . ·-c;eut • Weather · Low clouds and local fog night and early morning hOurs, other· wlse sunny Saturday, according to the weather service. Little temperature chan·ge. ·· Highs a.t the beaCfles in the mld;oos rising to 74 inland. Overnight lows SSi-58. ' INSllUl 'l'ODi\ V Sot,thern CaU/ornia's fir a t di111ter playhouse is open and tltrivi11.g in ~afl CLenie·nte. 4-re· view of i ts first production, tht mu.sical "Oklahoma,•• will be fon11d-in today/· IV«lunder sectian • .. • '·' ·-•' ,, • I I ' . I I I 1 _2 _DAILV PILOT s 'Watergate Six' f'r11m Pflfle J D. B. COOPER .• Dealt Light Terms on a deposll slip," Mattson said. After he held up a teller and escaped. com.mjtted 8 "crime or patriotl.sm" "\\'e wenl Utrough the material on the becaUMI Ibey thought they were acting desk and we found a allp on which for the benefit of !be country. had l>ttn printed the name, 'DJ!. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Judge Jolm J. Sirica banded light sentences today 10 six origlnal Watergate defendants who aided investigators in breaking open lhe scope of the scandal. 111.ree of the jail men could be free by Christmas. The stiffest sentence was given to E. Howard Hunt, the former White Hou9e employe who admitted being a prime planner ol the break·in at Democratic national headquarters. Sirica sentenced hlm to 21A to eight years in prison and fined him $10,000. Four others got minimum sentences of ODO year each and the other IS months. The final sentences were far difterent from the li\ltial sentences given the sl.x and the nnal sentence given G. Gordon Llddy, the one original defendant wbo would not talk to Watergate in- vestigators. Slrica gave provisional sentences of up to •s years to tbe sl1 in January, Liddy is serving· a min.lmum term of six years, eight months. He also was lined $40,000. Sirica explained that he had no In- Israel Disagree11ie11t ~nags Develop In Peace Accord By United Press InternatJonal apparently took Prime Minister Golda Meir by surprise. tenUon ol giving the men the maximum esntenees be banded In Jonuary II they 0>0perated with authorities. Frank A. Sturgis, Virglllo R. Gonzalez and Eugenenio R. Martinez -three of the four ao-called "Soldiers" lo the break.fn -were given sentences of one to four years. Since the three bave been behind bars for nearly 11 months, they may be freed before the yea r is out. Bernard L. Barker, the fourth member of the Mlami ·area "Soldiers," received a sentence of 18 months to six years -sti[£er than the other three, apparcnlly be<au..e be recruited them for th• mwton. James W. McCord, along with Hunt a leader in the planning of the break-in and the defendant who first • broke is sllence to provide evidence to the court, was given a one-to five-year sentence. Unlike the Miami area men, ~tcCord has been free on bond since the trial. Si rlca said it was his intention th.at McCord spend at least a year in Jall. Lawy ers for the defendants asked for leniency, one pleading that the men Al though Secretary of State Henry A~ssinger-todaY-announced J.sraeli and Egyptian acceptance of a six·pQint truce plan that would lead to a formal peace conference, a last minute disagree· ment developed in Israel and the Cabinet met in emergency session to study the spags. . Jsraeli sources. said tlfe hitches in--- volved Israeli control or inspection rights An Israeli spokesman said the govern· ment would issue a communique later on Kissinger's compromise solution . But ln the -meantime there was no official comment on his .announcement Which Teen Reports • -Seeing UFO In California By United Press International Unidentiried flying objects have been sighted in' the California desert and in New York state. In Blythe , Calif.. Patrick Archer, 19, of Sagina\v, Mich. said he saw an object "".ilb a red light and a green light on either side tnd three amber colored lights in front, hovering over an orchard. In Johnstown, N.Y., Billy Pulis and dozens of classmates said th ey saw a silent, Apol1~like craft, ready to land next to Uteir school. Archer said he was driving west on Interstate IO. east of Bl)'thc, \\'hen he spotted a circular·shaped object with no markings in the sky moving up and down and from side to side. Archer said he decided it was not a helicopter or airplane because he could not hear a motor. to supplies reaching both the surrounded Egyptian 3rd Army and the city of Suez, and the lifting of the Egyptian blockade of the Bab El-mandeb Strait at lhe entrance to the Red Sea. The Kissinger communique contained no mention of the lifting of the blockade, something that government sOurces said Israel demanded, and received,. in negotiations on the settlement. It also provided for checking supplies for the 3rd Anny but not for the city of Suez. Even as the Israeli government was making its decision, t~e military com- mand reported ~ incidents OJ! lbe- ccase--fire lines: -A plane On a reconnai~nce mission along the Egyptian front was shot down by a SAM missile. The command would not say if it was in .Arab air space but said the two crewmen bailed out irto Egyptian territory and their names were given to the Red Cross. Egypt said two Israeli Phantoms were shot dO\'Vtl . -Elements of the Egyptian 3rd Army moved westward during lhe night from positions on the east bank of the Suez Canal. Israeli troops noted the movement at dawn and warned U.N. observers they could open fire unless the Egyptians withdrew. They did. _ Boy'le Recovering -Syrian troops on the northern front repeatedly opened fire at Israeli patrols with small arms and sporadic artillery fire during a three-hour span during the morning. Israel amwered with small arms fire and no casualties \\'ere reported. U.S. Ambassador John Scali delivered details of Kissinger's peace stabilization plan to U.N. Secretary General Kurt Vlaldheim in Ne v; York today, and called it "good news for-the Middle East." - Recovered from an overdose of barbituates, former United Mine Workers_President W. A. "Tony" Boyle is wheeled from a Washing- ton hospital by U.S. marshals to be taken to court for an extradition hearing in connection \Vith his murder-conspiracy charge in Pitts· burgh. Studen,ts Fi1id 'No Justic e' In, Texas Court ' l111peach111e11t Asked GARDEN CITY, N.Y. CAP) -News- day, the Long Island newspaper, urged editorially today that the House of Representatives move as scion as possible to impeach President Nixon. Alter bearing the pleas and passing Cooper,' but we don't know who wrote sentence, Sltlca aald, "It was the lowest it ., Afallson said. minimum that I thought wu justilled • ·under the circumstances." •i Al. a result of the unusual coincidence -The tnft appeared relt<Yed altar-the-of the deposit slJp, we wllJ al50 process 00.mlnute. session. . him (Kiperta) .., a su..pect In the hi· Before his aenteiielng, Marttnei told the judge: 11Jf t have misbehaved, 1 jack." want the country and you to forgive Arrangements nre being made to 1bow me. Whatever 1 get, t believe J deserve a photograph of Kiperts to the crew lt." of the hijacked plane. the FBI official Rebozo Bank ' ' Official Said To Have Qµit ' WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said today it is delaying formal removal of an officer in the Key Biscayne Bank and Trust Co. pend!Jlg confinnalion be re3lgned. The FDIC said, It re<eived word that Frank S. De Boer, vice president and trust Officer of the bank headed by President Nixon's close friend, Charles G. "Bebe" Rebozo, resigned last week effective at the close of bUsines-1 today. De Boer Is in charge of the ban.k's trust department. In a statement, FDIC Chairman Frank Wille said that the corporation, which insures deposits of banks, received recommendallons from. its stall that De Boer be removed as an officer of the bank Immediately. Wille said the corporation's board of directors requested written confirmation of De Boer's resignation and "hM voted to hol<J temporarily in abeyance; pending the prompt receipt of such confinnation, fonnal notice to De Boer of ill intention to suspend and remov ... him pursuant to law as an of fleer of the bank." According to Wllle, the lWl!ll- mendation to ~ and remove De Boer was based on activltieJ as an officer and director of National Home Products, Inc. and 8.! a partner of Baerwald and oe Boer' a broker-dealer whose licerue was revoked by the SEC in 1971. Subsequently, the SEC barred De Boer from employment by any aecurities broker or dealer. The Key Biscayne bank has been the subject of a number of investigations, including one by the Senate Watergate Committ~. Rebozo kept campaign contributiom totaling $100,000 from Howard Hughes in the bank before returning the money. Embassy Closed WASHINGTON CUP!) -The United States has closed Its embassy in Uganda -the country ruled by U.S. critic Gen. ldi Amin -but stopped short of breaking diplomatic relations, the State Depart· ment said Thursday. said. He said Kiperts rOughly matches tbe description given of the hijacker but that witnesses in times of dlU'eU eully make mlslakes about height and weight. In thut hijacking, which authorJttes say encouraged a rash of others, the man Who gave his name as D.B. Cooper boarded a Norlhwest Orient airlines jet in Portland. lie produced what he said was a bomb shortly after the plane left ror Seattle nnd took Dver the jet, demanding $200,000 in $20 bills and four parachutes. After the demands were met at Seattle, he allowed the flight's 36 passengers and two stewardesses to leave the plane. Then he commanded the pilot, two flight officers and two stewardesses to fly to ?i.1exico. Cooper later directed the pilot to fiy about 200 miles an hour at an a!Utude of 10,000 feet over a route which toot them over western Washington and Oregon. During the flight , the crew noilc- ed a slight lurch and discovered Cooper and the money missing when the plane Jandl'<! 3~ hours la ter at Reno, Nev. to refuel. The plane's rear exit ramp was found to be lo"·ered. Ground searchers hunted in southwtstem \Vestem W a s h I n g to n wilhOut finding a sign of Cooper, ' The bodies· of t',\'O murdered women were later found not far away. · In the year which followed, 21 extortion-hijackings of airliners took place in which more than $12 mllllon was demanded. Six sky pirates balled out of hijacked planes, but an were caught. Volunteers Help In Fire Crisis MILWAUKEE (UPI) -Ci vi Ii an. volunteer flre warden,, reministtnt of the \Vor\d \\'ar IJ blackout patroll ap- peared on A1ilwa ukee street,, tOOay to ease the state of emergency caused· by a "fed flu" lll'Ori: sJOWOOwn by city firemen. A1ayor Henry \\'. ~faitr declared a state of emergency Thursday after firemen rejected the city's final ofter in the contract dispute. Oftlcials said 122 f~emen called in sick today and 150 reported for duty. Aboul 300 national guardsmen also \\:ere on duty to aid in firefighting efforts. "That's when I started to get scared," Archer said. "I'm not ashamed to say I \\'as never so scared in my whole life. I was crying, shaking and \Yhite as a ghost." Deputies checked with Blythe Airport and learned that Pacific Southwest Airlines was conducting "practice missed landings" (flying low as if to land and lfil!n pulling up al the last minute) in the area with DC9s at ~about the time Arch er says he sighted the UFOs. Archer's UFO descri pUon, however did not fit that of an airplane. "There are no sna~ or hitches in the information I provided for the secretary general,'' Scali sa id. "The Sec urity Council will not have to meet . as far as I can tell. There is an im· portant role for the United Nations." But despite Scali's optimistic state- ment, UPI correspondent T h o m a s Cheath~m reported from Tel Aviv th at U.S. AmbaMador Kenneth Keating met for more than an hour with Golda ?i.Ieir at her request to try to straighten out some aspects of the Kissinger plan. HOUSTON (UPI) -A high schoo l civics class studying police administra· tioo and the miinicipal court system picked the court of District Judge Garth Bates at random to see justice ·in action. Henredon's Folio 11 Pulis. a sixth grade pupil at the War· ren Street Elementary School i n JohnstO\\'O, said he and his classmates were within 200 feel of a slowly descen· ding cr'aft when "it pulled the legs in and took off. "It was about 2:40. I \\'as going up to the high school. We all saw something 1haped tike a capsule, like Apollo, it was grayish whi te. "W~ were about 200 feet away and It was coming down. It had legs, like landing ;ads, you know, big discs, and -i.li...1ia~ coming dOY.'tl. Everybody was yelling and running tovrard it. Then a big puff of fire came and it took off. It looked like it was going to land if nobody had come out. OIAN•I COASt " DAILY PILOT Thi 0,.11111 Co11t OAlt.Y Pit.OT, will> ""'ll11 b ~Jr.Ill ttle H1-Ptft$. LI publlshtd by tlM Orantt ,CMtl Pllblltllln; Con\Pl'ny. StPot• rate MlllOM 1t1 pul1llll1..,, MoNlay lhr0U9h Frldey, tot C11ta Mnt, NIWPOl"I 11..U.. H\ll'llll'llllOI\ lltadlfF011111tl11 VeLley, 1..a9UM a.en, lrvitle/S.ocll.0.<k •rid 51111 Cle!M!\111 Sen J~11 (apl1lra110. A 11111111 tt01cftal Mlllloll It publl11'1td S1lunl•'f'I erid S\lrlCl1n. file ,,..!'Clpll '"1bll11!1!!9 pt111i It II IJO W11I a.y Jflwt, (1111 M111, Clllfonlll, nt.l6. R.ot.ort N. WoM ""'"""' •rid l"WlbMI" Ja<k II. C11rl1y \lkt l"r .. iftrlt 11111.0.-11 M ......... Tholft•I K11wll Editor Tho"' .. A. M11rphin1 M-1i111 l:dllOr" Ch1rf1t H, Looi Rich1~ ·p. Nill Aullll•"I MeMtlM Et111'efe °"" .... : ,. w..:.:r '""' ~IWllO't hHf\1 uu... eeui.w•"' t."911111 MMtl1 tn '•"' AWftllt ·H\ll'ltlfltM!l'hldl: 1"7S IM(fl '°"'"' ... "" Cllrntfll•1 a1 Nlf1ll a1 Cll'IJM n .. 1 Tiii ...... 17141 Ml-4111 Cf•itllM .w ........ '41·1671 .... c.-... ......... " u.--... 4fl-4411 ~ ... .,_,. e..tr Cl: a •• ...,, ... ~. 1ftJ,. Or .... C.-1 ~ ~ .... ....., t!WIH. """"' ...... .. ""111 --• of\ilrt"""*'"" i.'llirl _., .. •• 7 QI' Wllflollt .,..Ill ..,. "'"'*' -.....,... ..,..,, ..... dll9 ........ "II at ,C°"I Mftl. C.119r'M&. ~-... Ult.... • .. ......,, "'_., •• , .. ~, 11t11M .......... M--...,. • ·From Pagel JEWELS ... the small shop's restroom . Schroder told Patrolman John C. White that the gunman then motioned to display cases or men's and women's wedding rings and ordered hlm to hand them over. The victim said the olive-complexioned bandit swiftly picked out about 30 spe<"ific ring sets he "'·anted and referred to the .diamond as stones, a tenn the general public rarely uses. He also ordered Schroder to give him the most e1penslve watches and fled with four timepieces valued at $500, in addition to flOO in cash from the office till. Schroder said the bandit then ordered both he and his wife to remain in the back room and fled from the store escaping without a trace. ' Investigators' theorize he had a car wailing but the Schroders heard nothing due to busy afternoon rush hour traffic Outside on 17th Street. The victims said the gunman was complelely calm and • cool throughout the hol\lup. ' The case being heard Thursday, however, was the obscenity trial of theater own er Joseph Spiegel arrested while showing the movie "Deep Throat." The scheduled witnesses for the session were vice squad officers who planned to discuss in detail the storyline of the picture in question . No sooner had the teen-agers walked into the court than Judge Bates said: ''I do not wish anyone in the courtroom under 18 during this trial." He asked instructor Ray Corder to !ht bench and instructed him to please take his students to another courtroom. Prisoner Groups To Hold Events WASHINGTON CAP) -A national ' organization of familie! of American servicemen unaccounted for in Southeast Asia said today plans are complete for a symbolic "run for freedom" in cities across the nation next Week. Spotts and show business personalities are scheduled to participate in events designed .. to make the American people aware that the war might be over in most of Soutbeast Asia but it isn't over for those unaccounted for and their families." Unkindest Cut • Studen,ts Won't Get to See Nudes Students from Orange Coa1t and Golden West College ~ill not see one of lhe more lnteresting parts of a play ~~edulcd to run In Santa Ana Nov. Tho five""'°nd nude scene has been cul out. Santa Ana Colleg• President Jolm E. Johnson asked for the deletion of tbe nude scene in "Terminal" bec11usc Jt would not be In keeping with "colloge or comm unity standards, ''Terminal," a satire on the Inhumane lreatmellt of patients In hospitals is being ptt.Sented al Santa Ana College as part of a thret.~ay oxchange In- volving the three colleges. Orange coast and Golden West stud<nts will ,.. the ,play, presented by the New York-b&Ud Open Theater, f~. The same l'<lmpony will present "Mutation" at Golden 1 Welt ~ fiov . 26 and "Night Walk" at OCC Nov. It. There are no nude SCfQeS In the other two plays, 1ccordlng to 1 spokesman for tht coast Community CoUege district. The nude scene in .. Terminal,. lakes place when a nurse ordm a male patient to disrobe. It was eliminated witl1 Ille agroement of the th<atrleal tn>upe, Slilta Ana College off1"1' aald. · . - A 1p1rkling new coll•ction feetur in9 superb craftsmanship, qua lity end stylin g. Tn.1ly 1 H1n- redon trad• m1rk. View this exception1I collie;. tlon now 1t 1ny of Ted von Hem1rt'1 thrt• ' ,. fine stores. " " ' i. oL" • .,i Henredon i"'r'""" ' I .1 I ' " A s A Sund Got Pat D Your Oaif"H I ~Je1a. rr :enl1 8111111 DEAR ou r seven al"·ay~ p Stater Br these lur 10 know s!lll get ti ChulleQ Kunin1an urrange1n purchu!le II ln\•olv llrothers' order fo ~ou need the Slat warebous manager delivery request carried I you run Czt3) 68 Send DEAR ordered size 1~ box was in good -rubbed ~!~ "·ere cl pro V.TOl service shoes be a letter The c :':':OU an ._t lnce m "..'Jy fool : 4:1e. Jo ·-them, ..... service 11 U's d ta u will be Dinn DEAR Can ·Norther dinner bl are o n1outh. Wb•• restaur lost on restaur L.A. t Once N precess resort. up ge .. Brace ·twice Ahwab It bas ex et pt the Ah ltospit subtletl mery Peacoc of ·Beef -all 'l'l>e the Pn Univ er Drama and la res Iden Vqu m tloiJ at form a malled Cot1 DEAR I a a con my sl is abl she's about benefit pr~ia a suit Sine be ba <1ulre pbonin 8020 Term 8rh1t Infor1 nl ca and e grams P e D ls I who to ho '¢lone <( t Your • erv1ce· -A Sunday, Wed11e1day and Friday Feature Of the Dally Pilot Goe a problem? 2'1trn write Pat Dun11. Pat wil& cut red tap•, get th~ an.swer1 and action 11 o u need to 1olve lnequl· tie• fn aov- r:rnment and business. Mau 11 our quea· tions to Par Dunn / At l'nu r Service , Orange l'oasl Daiii1 Pilot, P.O. Bo:r 1560, Costa t.leta. c.:n., 92676. ltt cludt ~our rr ie11/1nne 'lumber 1111h1g Large Sl:e EAR PAT: \Ve have been raising r seven chi ldren on non-fat dry milk, •ays puchased in 25-pound bags from ter Brothers. No\v they no longer carry se Jar~e bags and we v.·ould like kno\v if there i~ some way vie can ·11 get !hem. The brand is Chn\lcnge. • Friday, November 9, 197.3 DAILY PILOT 3 I Belts ·,. Campaign Begins To Save Energy Afajor industries and public agencies on the Orange Coast today stood ready to back President Nixon's conservation program by puJling the plug on the waste of energy. Many of the key employers from Seal Beach to San Clemente were preparing policies calling for the reduction· in lighting, air conditioning and heating..,. S~nday Pilot To Take Look At UC Irvine IC you're goiflg to be looking for "SWl- day's ·Best" in the Daily PUot, chances are you'll be looking at these features : to stave vff what the President termed the ""'orsl energy shortage since Worid WMll." ~ Other firms, that had already initiated conservation programs before th e President's message \Vednesday, pledged lo intensify their efforts. "Thi s is not new to us. We're just going to do more and more of it," said \\!alt Cleveland, director of external relations fo r McDonnell D o u g I a s Astronautics Corp .• Huntington Beach. Cleveland added that his company had begun a corporation~wide OOnservation poli cy a year ago which resulted tn a "substanlial" reduction of energy used for lightin , and heating. At Costa Mesa City Hall, City Man- ager Fred Sorsabal said he would meet with utliity officials shortly to discuss methods by "1tich the consumptioo ol electricity can be reduced. .I. D., Costa 1\tesn Challeg:ge foods Com p&1y'1 L 11 a 1nzn1ann Is cootoctlng you to make range1nents for your c o n t I n u e d rcbase of the tJlzt vou want. What Involves, is your 1eu1ng lbe Stater others' m·annR:er lo plar.e a spe<:lal der ror the 2>pound bag whenever u need it. This sl1e is available at e Slater Brothen:," San Bernardino arehouse, but your Stater Brother• an 3ger must requt"Sl the Challenge ll\•ery man to pick It ap on a 1pe<:lal uest basis, since the size Is no longer rrled in quantity by the market. If u run Into ll snag, phone Kunzmaoo, 13) 68~810. LET THE,RE BE DARKNESS -The Wrigley Building, a blazing Chica~o landmark since 1924, was darkened Thursday ru ght for the duration of U~I T~lo the fuel crisis. In winter months, lighting consum· ed 218,000 watts nighUy. PROBLEMS ON CAMPUS - As UC! grapples with problems of growth, tight budgets and being the gigantic University He said the decorative fountains in front of the five-story city hall may be turned off and that there will definite- ly be no Christmas lights thls year. One energy saving measure already taken was the installation of additional switches on the fourth floor. ''Be.fore there wa s only one switch which meant that all the lights on the fourth floor were either all on or all off," Sorsabal 'e11d Sfu1Ps lla.-k said. 1 (Sunday's Best) • Ntrelear Plaiats DEAR PAT: A fev.• months ago 1 dered n pair o{ Etonic golf shoes. ze IO.A, through my golf shop. The x ~·3s labeled 10.A, so I wore them 1 good fa ith for tv.·o hol es. \\!hen they bbcd blisters on my heels . 1 tl>eQ '!_-t. ~il.e !nside the shoe . They ·ere clearly marked · ll·A. Our golf ro ~Tote to the firm and its customer rvice representative asked that the Edison Raps 'Licensing' of California's youngest campus, in- evitable planning problems arise. Staff Writer John Zaller analyzes them in the leado[f story of the YOU Section . NElW PITl'SBURGH -It c o s t Pennsylvania's "Smoky City" $ 1 7 6 million in anti-pollution expencli~ures to buy back so1ne...blue sky and -perhaps -a new public relations in1age. Staff Writer Jan Worth offers readers a clea r look at the new Pittsburgh in a Travel Page piece. In Irvine, Keith Lmnpkln, senior vice president at Allergan Pharmaceuticals, reported that his finn has come up . with several alternatives. He said Allergan executives have been studying ways of reducing the lighting and hooting and also -ilivestigated the possibility of establishing a. car_ pool program and buying a bus for employe use. The bus woold~ be boarded by Allergan workers at satellite stations which they would reach from their homes by riding bicycles. be returned. The next thing was Jetter from the flnn stating the shoes ·ere size 10.A, that nothing could be ooe and they were being returned to e. I wrote to the Charles Eaton COm- any more than a month ago. All I ave is a $32.95 pair of golf shoes 1at I can't \\'Car. , C. \\' .. ~c\\·port Beach The Charles Eaton Company ls sendlng ou an authArlzatlon to rttarn tbe tboes oce more. The size can be checked foot traces evident from your brief e. J•lt to make tare tbat U tM bees don't fit, ynu won't .hive to Wear em, IDclude tracings of )'Olr fed 1n1de Southern Cali(omia Edison Co. (SCE) likes President Nixon's call for speedier construction of nuclear power plants, but doesn 't want any temporary licenses issued ~·ithout public hearings. Carl Weldy, in SCE's San Diego head- quarters, said today that allowing the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) to grant temporary operating licenses up to_ 18 months without public hearing is "an ill-conceived idea." That suggestion is part or a package of energy conservation and produclion solutions suggested by President Ni~n in a nationwide speech \Vednesday night. '"We don't think anyone is going to build a half a billion dollar plant on an 18 month t·emporary licensing," Weldy said. "We think these things have got to go through the proper procedures," he added. An orderly method of proposing, a~ proving and building nucl~ generating plants is necessary, Weldy emphasized. A proposed addition of two nuclear reactors at SCE's San Onofre power plant three miles south. of San Clemente is currently awaiting state coastal com- mission action. The coastal commission is the last public agency considering the project. The AEC has already issued a permit. · Cutting the time for getting nuclear plants into~ operation from 10 to six years is a good idea, Weldy said. ·'We certainly lbink that this is very much in order. 'Ibe only quesUon that paper. The company's castomer ce representative assured me tbat I it's determlned the origtaal sboe slze uncomfonable for you, a new pair ill be mailed to you. * * * * * * Inner With T·rltnmlng• EAR PAT: Can you find out what resort in orthcrn Calitomia serves Christmas-· inner as in the Middle Ages, with Jare vf trumpets, apple in the pig's County Transit Buses lOUth , etc-:' !.. M .. Costa Mesa When Norm Slanley, the Piiot'• estaur ant editor, is on \'acatJon, I'm Jost on lnquiru~s such as yours -and e1taurant and resort assorlatlons from l~.A. to San Franclsro arr NO hf'lp. Once Norm returned, the tracking down prtcess was eased; It ~'SS the unique resort lo the Yosemlle area, booked up several years In advance. The ··eracebrldge Dinner•• 11 1er\1ed annually '"'ice on Christmas nl1ht at the Abwabnee resort lo the Yosemite Valle)'". Jt haj been held each yf'or since 19%7, l'Xcept for \\-'orld \\'ar fl yea rs when the Ahv.·ahrti!e set'l·ed as n U.S. Navy llospital. The dinner pageant contains subtJetles of costume , music and mum- mery In segments of the Fish, the Peacock Pie, the Boar's Head, Sirloin of"Beef, Wassail Bowl and Plum Pudding -all presented lo Squire Bracebrldtfe. The principals, the Squire, his Lady. the Panon, et nl, ore from the Stanford University Department of Speech aod Dnma. 'lbe chorus, vOlage.rs, w1lters and lackeys ·are drawn fnlm Yo1emlte rcsldeols. Tbfl tab ls UO per person. \·~u ma y be able to get 1 tlagle reserva· tlOh at this late date. 1be reservation form and detailed lnformatloa are being malled lo you. Running Low on Fuel Co11cnfesce11t Care OEAR PAT: I am in desperate need or locat ing a convalesCent hospita l or home for my sister. She is a cancer patient and is able to care for herself, but now she's afraid of being alone. She receives about $250 a month in Social Security benefits and pension funds and I'd a~ preci•t• knowing how to go about finding a suita61e place for her 1o-11..._ • •· ·• . . t: A .. Costa Mesa Since this decision must necessarily be based on a number of penoaal re- quirement•, begin yoar lnqulriet by pbottlng tbe Snnlllrlum Regbtry al !?t- 8020 and eallln1t-'br visiting the Long Term Care Referral Ser\•lce, 27t7 N. Tirlstol , santa Ana ,. phone : Ul-1662. Information on arta facllltlc1, standarc:ll of tare, nt0ntbly rales 11nd services , nnd eligibility for public assistance pro- grams will be made available to you. Permit Needed DE,tj\ PAT: Is It against tha law for a penon who owns a private camper or traller .to haul material for somebody else I« That crosst~·n bus ride to grandma 's house on Thanksgiving Day may be out of the question this year beca~ the Orange County Transit District is runn ing out of gas. Federal fuel allocation priorities have cut ~D's November supply of diesel fuel by one-third, making it likely that 1he wheels ~·ill stop rolling before Thanksgiving, district officials rEWealed Thursday. Supervisor Ralph Clark of Anaheim, chairman of the cm:::D board or direc· tors. said an appeal is being made to the U.S. Department of Interior !or an exemption that will keep the buses on the road. Clark said th e district has been 31located only 20,000 ga llons of fuel for Nove mber. The district's bus fleet needs at least 30,000 gallons a month to operate Reinecke's Wile In Newport St1it On Apartments LOS ANGELl!S (AP ) -Jean Reinecke, wife of Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke, has filed a $1.06 million suit against Newport Beach C o u n I r y Club Apartments and others, accusing the real esta~e syndicate of defrauding her. of a $60,000 investment which has pro- duced no dividends in five years. Mta. Jteinecke contended jn het-eh'i · suit filed in Superior COurt Thursday that she bought" a 2 percent investment Jn the syndicate on July ~ 1968. Sljo aid she learned ooly last January that nO permit had befn issued for the sale of the secu rity by the state real estate commissioner or the com- missioner ol corporatiom, as required byJ~:· N. Frolich, a~tornef for Airs. Reinecke. alleged lh<l syndicate members falsely told his client th ey would receive only shares of interest In the project when they actually were making a secret pront of ll0,000 on resale of the land. Mn. Rclnecke's suit seeks return of her lnv .. tment and fl mlllloo In punitive damages. l)'loncy? T. B., Fountain Valley Alao named In Mr" Reinecke'• suit : Absolutely. It's Illegal lo transport are Lawrence Berk, her former ac-- ~ampert or trnll crs ovt.r publlc blgllway1 countant and a syndh:ate partner, South for blre unle11 you secure a permit, Bay Club Aportments International, R&B according to Public UtlllUet COmmlls~ Development Co., Westside Management regulations. Unlicensed carriers could Co., Wilshire West Development Co .. •be l1at<l l50ll and be Imprisoned for Howard F. Ruby, Robert J . f'ranks • three months. and Edward R. Brol<Ja. • its current routes on an hourly basis. Dr. G. J. ··Pete" Fielding, OCTD general manager. said he thinks the transit district has a good chance of getting its priority exemption because or the high patronage It has received over the past year. "U we don't get the exemption, It will mean a possJble contingency plan that \\'ould change routes or hours. I would hate to do such a thing because we are already spread too thlii," he said. Fieldi ng predicted that un1ess the ad- ditional fuel can be obtained or a con· tingency program set up, the buses will be forced to stop running by Nov. 20. "Every user of diesel fue seems to rate a priority," Fielding noted, because of that, the government has decided all users will be cut back but that affects things like trucks, farm equip- ment and buses alike, not to mention the U.S. Navy." Clark argues that the district can best cooperate with President Nixon's energy conservation plans if given more Cuel because it would enable motorists t.o use buses instead of cars. Fielding noted that lhe dislrict faces the problem of a new fuel crunch when it accepts delivery of 63 new buses next spflng -dqubling the size of OCTD's fleet. He said the new buses will also double lhe district's fuel needs. "We may wind up keeping our pretty, new buses clean and unu.9ed," Fielding said. an Cfuh Dance. Se t for Capistrano The South Orange County Italian Club's fall dance will take place Nov. 17 from 9 p.m. to l a.m. al the El Adobe Restaurant in San Juan Capistrano. Partygoers will dance to the music of Pete Pontrelli 's band and door prizes will be awa rded. Cost of the evening Is $4 per person and reservations can be made by calling 492-83112. Quake in Mexico MEXICO CITY (UPI) -A moderalely strong earthquake lhOok this capital and southwestern Mexico Thursday, but there were no reports or damage or co11ualtics. The University of Mexico's geopbyalcal institute here said the quake, wh ich hit at 7:18 a.m., registered S.l on Richter scale. ·• remains Is \\'he ther Congress and various reguJatory agencies are going to be ready to move out and clear up the red tape necessary to permil such an action," be said. . On other aspects er the message, Weldy said the President "has put his hand on the important issoes at stake here. We think at this point it's a little premature to even guess as to . how the programs will be implemented. "We know as far as some of the measures he has suggested -extending dayli&bl savings time, eliminating 9r curtailinent ·or ornamental lighting, reducing commercial operating hours - would have some effect," Weldy said. "but we 1don't have anything ,that in- dicates how significant it would be." There are no studies on how much energy might be saved by such steps he explained. ' LAGUNA'S 'FRENCH' CIDNA - Floral patterns being reprodoced on Den- by dinnerware made in France were born at Laguna's Festival of Arts under the ta1ented fingers of flower painter Sandra Tommela Kasprz.cki . Staff Writer Jo Olson tells Sandy's story in words and pictures. BLUE KNIGHT -William Holden stars as Bumper Morgan, 20-year veteran of the Los Angeles Police Department and living the last four days of his pre-retirement career in a "mini~ries" based on Joseph Warn- burgh 's controversial novel, "The Biile Knight." It's previewed in TV WEEK. At the Reeves Rubber COmpany in San Clemente, William E. Stevenson, managing engineer for the firm which produces rubber pipe gaskets, said staff members are· giving the President's message a lot of thought. Conservation plans are reported\y under study by Orange County Airport, all ci ty administrations, and several sm aller industries as well. Laguna Beach city councklmen are expected to take up the COl'l3ervation question at their Nov. 21 meetlni and Larry Irwin, assistant opera t i n g manager of the Pottery Shac.t, me ~ Laguna's largest employers, said bis firm was doing everything it could to curtail non-essential use or energy. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii • ,• CALENDULAS IMPATIENS PANSIES ( Pony Pack ( SAVE NOW on STEER FERTILIZER Ideal for winter fertilizer Select from a variety of beautiful mums, pot- ted and foil wrapped. 3.98 Value $ 49 Foll WrappH ONION SETS PATl .O Now, J.ust Arrived • • • WROUGHT IRON PLANT STAND WROUGHT IRON BAKERS. RACK · . 1 899 1999 .- Plants FOR Tf/£ f/OLIOAYS e MUGHO PINE e RHODODENRONS e ALBERTA SP!!UCE e IRISH YEW e DWARF SKIMMIA e HINOKE CYPRESS e SMALL COLORADO SPRUCE Be sure to shop Grun H1ven for many bHuti· ful holiday Items which are coming in dilly. 2123 NEWPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA r;a Nursery 646-3925; Patio 642-4103 • , 1 • .J DAILY PILOT F'r1d1y, ~~, o, 197l AgDeff' Strong'!J Despite · Yut~1·e ' Police Story, Laguna Style ON TflE ROAD DEPT. -Just yester· day this space v•as filled ·with com- mentary on the ad nauseum about Anaheim's-cops \Vho have threatened lo run right out and give everybody traffic tickets if the city doesn't grant lhcm the pay hike they "'ant Today you are o!fered a different kind of _police story. On the same night that your evening paper was reporting on the Anaheim anl ics, 1 \vas in downlO\\'n Laguna Beach, picking up a loaf of bread. Thus it \\·;is I climbed back into my purple, metallic-flake dune buggy with the noisy mufflers and big tires and headed home. E;vcry middl e-aged old fossil you kri>w drives a purple dune buggy with loud mufflers, right? THIS ONE, I inherited from my k.id when he up and went off to the university. It has a fogged-up plastic rear 1vindow1 like you sec on all .con- vertibles. It has taillights that flicker on and off at their own "'ill. Mostly off. They defy repair. ,\ny\ray. I h.:id my loaf or bread and l1as too1Hng _homeward when I noticed I \\'asn '1 alone. f had company td -the rear. ,\ white Laguna Bcach--type pro'o\'I car. . · Oh. oh. This looks like trouble. I 11·onder how my taillights <lre doing? THEY WEREN'T DOING very \veil, obviously. The officer behiild me had just turned on a different kind of red Hghl s. I pulll!d over and turned off the buggy. I tried to climb out \Yilh ·great dign ity befilting my age. It is , incidentall y. impossible to alight from a du ne buggy \Vilh great dignity. "Good evening," the young, fresh-faced officer said cheerily. "~lay I see your driver's license, siF~ Please remove it from the plastic bolder." FUi\JBLE, Flli\·IBLE, fumble. IL is irnpossible to deftly remove your driver·~ license from the plastic ca~ When an officer is looking over your shoulder. All lhis time yOUoc are thinking ol. the Anaheim cops, who ha ve threatened to rip off everybody they can find with bad taillights. "Lord. I've never spent a night in jail." you say to yourself. _ ' "The reason I stopped you , Mr. ?l·lurphine, is three out of four of your taillights aren't \Yorking. That's very dangerous.". "'YES, YOU"RE RIGHT,'' l Y.'hined, pounding one fist over the three dark light s. That only caused the one good one to start flickering. I quit pounding. "That rear \Yindo\v is Sure clouded. Can you see out of it?" he asked. ' · "No I can't." I blurted. l\.laybe he 'll }ust take me to the municipal slammer ra!her than clear up to county jail. "l\.'l r. l\.1urphine, you really must get lhcse things fixed ·right a\vay. NO\Y , I'm not going to give you a citation. 1'm giving you a CilUrtcsy notice. You -t!.:in ·1 h.:ive to go lo court or anything and there isn't a fine. You don 't require rny certificates of repair. But do get •t all corrected, okay ?" the officer smil- ed . "Yes. officer. you bet." 1 sta mn1ered, ;:,oing into a state of near-shock. "llAVE A l'\ICE evening, now." he ca lled. as he eased the Laguna patrol car off into the night. r was so stunned I hardly knew "'here 1 \Y3S. But r sw·e kne'o\' \Yhere I wasn 't. I wasn't in Anaheim. w ASffiNGTON (AP) -former Vice President Spiro T. Agnew has spent the 1ast month sorting out the rerMa.Oll or his aborted political career. Friends have fotmd htm in good spirits but say they have. no Idea wbat.._ ... lf any~ plans he bM for his future . Saturday will mark one month since Agnew resigned his office and pleaded no contest to a charge of evading $13.SSI in fedifral lncori'ie ta"t"in l!Mi7. He was fined $10,000 and sentenced to three yea rs unsupervised probation. SINCE TJ IEN Agnew has worked al Slat·prise Visit settling the affairs cit his vice presidency and arranging his papers for the National Archives. Several staff members have stayed on to aid him. They work every day in a renovated PROBE U.S. AID TO AGNEW. SOLON ASKS -Story. P•g• I federa list-style lo"''nhouse across the street from the While-llouse. The office space was made available by the \Vhite House, and a \Vhile House spokesman said Agnew v.·ould need the quarters for· frOm four to six months. U~I TtletthOlo President Nixon is kissed by his 'vile, Pat, during dinner given by the Nevada State Society in honor of First Lady. Nixon made visit to \Vashington affair in a rare putil1c appearance. He told a cro\vd o! 7(1() thaLhis dyit,lg mother had said, '}l.1chard, don't you ever give up,' a sl'atament 'vhlch drew a standing.ovation.' · House Panel Eyes Ways, Means t~ Add to Treasury WASHINGTON !AP) -The House \\lays and ~!eans Committee is Jool<lng over odds and ends in a search for some type of relatively fast tax "reform" that could add about $2 billion to the federal treasury. lt could an1ount to a lax hike for some middle-income taxpayers who itemize such things as state gasoline tax among tt.?ir federal deductions. The committee spent several hours Thursday going over this and other opt1ons for abolishing deductions or exclusions. Before taking up its tax d.iscus.sion, the CQIMliltee approved by voice vote a bill that would raise Social Security benefits by 11 percent next year and Utah Stude1its Set Sex Week LOGAN. Ut.h (U P!) -Next \\'eek is sex wee};. at Utah State l.Jniversity -but it "'iii be all talk. Dean of \\lomen Helen Lundstrom announced Thursday that USU's third annual sex \Veek wouJd begin Monday. It has been set aside, she said, "lo explore areas of sex· uality and give students a chance to better understand their feel- ings." Speakers will i n c I u d e a psychiatrist, a psychologist and a police expert on self-defense. boost the payroll tax-v.·age base to pay for them. eBooster Repah· CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - \Vork cre\vs today continued the lengthy job or replacing eight' defective stabilizer fins on the Skylab 3 rocket. • Discovery of sn1all cracks around .bolts in the eight nns forced officials to postpone the shot from Saturday until next Thursday. e AFL-CIO ltlove WASffiNGTON (UP!) -The AFL-CIO. \Yhose nonsupport of Sen. George · f..1cGovern was considered an impartant factor in the 1972 presidential election, has begun a nationwide move to impeach President Nixon. 'The labor federation Thursday asked its 13.5 million members to urge the ir congressmen to impeach Nixon in1· mediately. e Booster Repair J ESSUP. Md. iUPll -A group or inmates held 12 teachers and two guards hostage at Patuxent Institute Thursday for three hours before state police flood- ed the building with tear gas and sub- dued the inmates in hand-to-hand fighting. F'ive persons were hurt when the 40 troopers, aided by a \Vorld War JI lank, stom1ed the red brick school building at the maximum security facili- ty. The inmates fought back with -clubs and make-shift knifes. First Snow • Ill Rockies . Wliite Stuff Accumul,ates iri Michigan, Ne·iv York ' " N ff fl ·" " ·" ·" ·" '3 1.31 ,. .lt !I ll ~l I.OS " .. ' ·" \lh wt1,1i.111C»Olu1 • m lAIM rt .• ~~1IHOW ..._ "" ~$HOWflJ , l(OW Te~•1 P1n1Mlldle. F:KI •lso rolttd over '"" Gull co.st •~ 11>owtrs •fld Thur>de-r11ornu rumbled lrli•nd. R1ln mllltd with -11u111ed lnlo W~11 Vlralnl1 ano r1ln Wis Kallered •IOl'ICI lh• All•nltc Co.tit. Tem11t1r•lures C.foru d11wn r•nci.ii trc.m .J •I WIUlsfon, N.O., lo 11 11 Corous CIWl11f, Tu. Coastal wtatlter i11forma· tio1i will bt found today 011 Page 24. DELIVERY SERVICE Oeloery ol !he Dai~ Pil-OI .... • is guaranteed ....,,...,, . ,. ...... ,.. ;.,. ~ ~-... ol .. ,.. "" .. •nta11traWs••*•~ UI"' ' ___ ....... .- , .. Ctn ., II .a ~. • I I.& 51M1r, ul .. I Clfl' wl M lnlPI It ,..C.ntMmllllu. l~ei;lr<lles .. I Intl•"""' ........ 142-4321 lllttMtsl lllill:I• ha . .. """"""' .. .. .. , .. 14D· I 220 s..-1.c.;w .. 1uc1. "' ... Cl!IS•• ... ""' S.• "'"'· 12fl'D le"' 1!1·4421 , Associates say Agnew 's mood is good. -··He bad hls whole staff out to his house last S.tun!ay nlgllt for a bulrel diMer and -~ was Jtm amazing/' one Crieod fa.id. "He looked fit. He was calm and st1'0!!I_ as ever." BUT AGNEW'S departure from oflice and the resolution or the Justice Department 's case against hint dld not erid. the troubles of the former vice presidcht, who has no job and no known income. -Jn Ataryland, the BaltJmore County .Bat Association is-stMdytng the posslbili- ' ty of disciplinary action. which could lead 10 disbarment, based on hi.s federal felony conviction. -Baltimore Clly, Baltimore County and Anne Arundel County prosecutors are deciding whether to begin their own lnvesU.gatlons. -Agnew f3ces moWttlng bills In the wake of his legal trouble. A defense fund set up under Chicago insurance magnate Clement Stone. probably won 't raise enough to pay Agnew's legal costs. -Less than t\V& years ago, Agnt\Y bcught a home in Kenwood, Md., a \\'ashington suburb. The-purchase price C'a11llJodia1ts Feared Lost was reported to be $190.000 with a dawn payment of $30,000, Agnew's mortgage still would be over $150,000. vnd it we..\ leumed Jhat he ha.I nol pul llJt..hoUec up for sale. -TllE INTERNAL Re\'enuc service is believed to be auditing Agnew's back tt1x returns with un eye to collec ting "'ha t could be tens of thousands ol dollars In back t11xcs. An ins spokesman declined comment on whether tJ1e agency was auditing the A1:new returns or whether ii plaMed to do so, Allied Families Vanish Ffom \Vire Services \1·iih government forces toda}• In the firth da y of infantry , armor and artillcrv batt les for control of the southe111 centrUI highlands. Saigon and Viet Cong spokesmen hav1! called the righting the stnrt of a Lhird Victniun war. PHNO!\t PENH -A gover1unenl task force set out today to find 2,000 families and more than 500 solWers feared lost in the rebel overthro\Y of a Cambodian city, but reported no sign of the missing pe"°"5. Field reports said t1ro rescue bat- talions totaling 700 soldiers today reach· ed Damdek, lour miles north of the oyerrun city or Srang. hoping the msssing had sought refuge there but there \Vas no sign or them. Heart Attack Detection Speeded Up With Test SRANG, 26 miles south1\•est or Phno1n ATLA.t\ITIC CITY. N.J . IAP l -A Penh. was evacuated Tuesday night du-s1virt ne \\' urine test. that can tell almost rng a rebel attack. l\1ore than 3.000 im mediately 1,1·hethcr a person has had families. including 1,000 soldiers, their a heart attack has been de\'clo1led, it dependents and other civilians, reported· l\'as reported today to the American ly tried to escape to the tO\Vn of Prey Heart Association . . Pachek. 10 mil~s by road fro1n Srang. Such a test 11·ould be of significant ani:I other government posts. \'aluc because patients ofte n do not ex· Officers at ·Kompong Tr am . 10 miles hibit the classic syn1ptoms of a heart north er Srang. told reporters today attack and doctors 111ay not immediately that of the escapin g refug ees, only I.000 kno11· hO\V 10 treat the ·patient. families and 428 soldiers have been f,resent blood tests do not detect a reported safe at various governmeiu -heart aUack for at least 12 hours after posts. . 1he onset. and traCl's of the attack ~leanwhile, Communist troops clashed 11'ash out of lhe blood in lV.'O or three -. . days. The ne\v lest cnn detect signs or a heart attack in a fe11· hours and the signs remain in the uri ne as long as fou r dars after the a ttack. doctorw said. This · 11·oufd be significant for a person 1,1·ho suffe rs a n1ild, or quiet attaek and d0t.•s not Sl'Ck immediate 1nedica l help. The ne\\' test 11·as reported by Ors. Stanlt')' 11. 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MON .• FRI. 10.7 T11be W•rntf e FtM Ooll"'y ••d S.t·U.-e SATURDAY 10·5:10 DAILY 10.7 e ._.Amerlcerd/M•tH Clt•r .. ~ We Semco CLOSEO SUNDAY SATURDAY 10·5:10 wht we Sell e ·wo li••w ellf' '1o11Ht h11IH .. d O'IN fHUllllDAY 'TIL ~ SUNDAY 12.5 Olft • No Ce1111111thMH S. ....... ~ur Warranty Is Not Pro-Rated! 962-5559 968-3329 • •• • i j ' • LOS tatlves~ asscmb d•Y being publish Willia COWlSeJ or beln yo u w 'Niese draft such le Visa Ron E do not hand I' "'flghl' can j snwll we lie .cover • DEL Ca liro and c robbe Vegag, 'o\'ere rob be ·-' Poli would tradlti Eugen Berna Morie • LOS Gord stand drunk , sit-in ·• • BA ·8 : for di : at.ion • ygen I an a i Dr. i head I A • .r1er Su en I er set t • ~· • s I :o l ! I • • Bo :t1 ! • •\ ews Media ~sksLaws - I For Notes LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Represen· tatives of the news media told an assembly judiciary subcommittee Thurs· day that more and more reportel'I are being ordered to tum over their un- published material to authoriUes. William Niese, assistant genera I counsel for lhe Los Angeles Times, told the subcommittee hearlng on newsmen's privilege that the Times is now handling "dozens" of subpoc~as ordering that unpublished notes be surrendered to authorities. "Lift from the med.la this .. , specter or being dragged inlo court every tlme you write about a controversial subject,'' ( NEWS BRIEFS J 'Niese said, urging the· legislators to draft a law protecting newsmen from such legal actions. Visalia Times·Dclta ~ianaging Editor Ron Einstoss said smaller newspape;rs do not have a legal staff capable of handling the various s u b p o e n a s . "Fighting these threats to a free press can jeopardize the economic health or z;mall newspapers," he said. "Should we 1ie down and play dead and not .cover the story?'' ' e 4 lleld in H1trder1 BELL GARDENS (UPI) -Four Caliromia men "'ere arrested Thursdav and cha rged with murder and armed robbery in connection with the Las Vegas . Nt>v. death~ of two men who ~ere fatally shot during an apparent robbery attempt. , Police said authoritieS from Nevada would arrive lo arrange for the ex-· tradition of David R. Bergeron, 2.1: Eugene E. Stobble!leld. 46; Robert W. Beman, 49, all ol Bell Gardens, and Morley !I. Oiristlan, 30, Bell e 'tfan•la•911ter l'rlal • ' LOS ANGLELES (U PI) -Carter B. Gordon. 34. was ordered Thursday to stand trial for manslaughter aod felony drunk driving lo connection with a motorcycle accident in volving actor James Stacy. Gonion. of Woodland Hllls. ii cha!Jed "1lh driving bis ' 1utomobile Into Stacy's ~~· ... Benedict CaaY.ml. Road . lat S<pl 28. Stacy's -P!IJ!lori, Clair Cox, :I, was killed In tllo acddenl and the actor lost a leg and an ann. : e President Appointed SAN DIEGO !AP) -Dr. Allen J. • Repasll)', dean ol instruction at San J06e City College, will bealme president • ol San Diego City College Jan. I. • Repuhy, 43, was chosen by community : ~lege trustees Thursday to fill the • job vacated by Dr. Rex Gortoo, who resigned Jnn. 26 to bead a new t'i\·o-year college. Gorton's last year at the downtown campus was marked by a • sit-in at his office. . e Death Trial Set • • BAKERSFIELD (APl -A : Balcsersfield physician has los t his bid : loc dismissal of an indictment of solicit- : ation to committ murder by ordering ox- : ygen s:Wt off to an infant who S\S'Vivcd ! an abortiwl. Dr. Xavier Ramirez, 59, a former i head of the county's Planned Parenlhood f Association , refused to enter a plea after the motion \YBS denied Thursday. · Superior Court Judge P. R. Borton : entered an innocent plea for him and : set trial for next !\larch 4. ; e Romose-al Rulln9 ' 1 SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -U~S: ; District Judge Alfonso J. Zlrpoll ""'° : Thursday the federal government cannot : fire a il:>mosexual solely because his • employment might ca~ "public con- i tempt." : Ztrpoli made the ruling in the case 1 of Dooald Hickerson, ,who was fired ~ from his job as a supply clerk with i the Department of Agriculture after it was ]earned he had been discharged : from the army because he was a : homosexual. ' ; Information • l On Assassins I Worth $50,000 I l OAKLAND (AP) -The reward for , information leading to the arrest or • persons \\1lo gunned doWn Sdlool Supt. • Marcus Foster ro9e to $50,000 as police 1 tried to determine the authenticity of ; letters claiming credit for the killing. ( Other school olficlals were under police ~ protection Thursday after a letter from • tto "Symbloocse Uberation Army" I claimed retponsibUlly lor the ambush 1 and tbrcalcned further killings. I The reward for Information on the , ossailant•lnltiated by a lt0,000 oiler ) by Gov. Ron•ld Reagan -wa• Increased by 125 ooo !rom lhe Ford Foundation, : ltO ooo 'from the Oakland City Council • 1 and $5,000 (roman anonymous citlztn. The mysterious communique, sent to a San Francisco newspaper and a Berkeley radio station, said 11ahoot-on- slgh1" ordot• arc In ellect against school , ornctals until i•poUUcal police" are i removed from tho schoOIJ. • ·I • f'rlday, November CJ, }q7J DAILY PILOT a Wrap-around sound ·buys UJllT .......... SUSPECT CAPTURED IN 'EXECUTION' MURDERS OF 9 IN LOQI Willie StHlman, 28, Handcuffed After Belnv Flushed From Hou•' -Extra Security Placed On Two Murder Suspect.s STOCKTON (UPI) -San Joaquin County SheMff's Deputies adopted extra security measures today for the ar- raignment or two suspects in the massacre or nine persons in the dream home of a country grocer. Willie L. Steelman, 28, an admitted hcrofn user, ex-mental patient and parolee, and Douglas E. Gretzler, 22, New York City, were to be escorted here under heavy guard from the coun'ty jail in ne8J1>Y French Camp to be charg· ed in Mun1cipal Court. They were captured Thursday in Sacramento, 30 miles north of this cen- tral valley fann conununlty, and booked into the jail on' nine counts of murder. Authortu .. said Steelman and Grettler might also be linked to a double slaying and the disappearance of two others in Arizona. Gretzler was arrested in a downtown ho\el by Sacramento police armed with shotguns. A short time later officers hurled tear gas into an apartment.. forc- ing Steelman from the room where be ·* ·*-* Disc Jockey • was holed up wil,h a girlfriend. Police said that w._,. wblch mlgbt have been used in the alayings in the S!l)lll town ol Victor near beJ'e ' Wed-nes~y were also found Jn the hotel. Aids Police hi Capture SACRAMENTO API -Disc jockey Robert Williams hanlly skipped a beat y,·hen he interrupted the rock music for a special news bulletin - a bulletin aimed at me person. '"Willie Steelman, you're tislening, <illbl!.'' Wtlllams Nid In a cool, nqiog ~iee typical of radlo1 .. tion KZAP-FM, which specJallJes .tq 1111"4 rock llllllic and' free.Conn i:oinluiD~ ·• • ' · His nlesaij~ Was from Sacramento police to 28-year-old Willi2 StAlelman, sought in lbe staying <Ji niJ\e per!IOl18 )n a tiny San Joaquin Valley hamlet 'l\Jetday night. He had holed up In a MJn<lown apartmeot boule Thursday with a girl and a gun, vowing not to be taken alive. * fl *· Probation Report Showed Steelman 'No\ Violent' ·"-:...l SA~ (AP) -The llnll pro- bltlon roport ... Willie Lather -· -years ago Aid: "No major prob. !ems DOied olld the pr....,.i. seemed to be good." Tburoilay mcming the 23-yeBN>ld fonner mental patient and dropout from Lodi HJih Schcol emerged from a shabby wblte frame house enctrcled by' swarms of anned police to face mass murder charges. "What is going ta happen, hopelully, is that the girl will come out first that you are with and you will follow her out with your hands up," Williatm said as a breezy roe~ lune played 1n lbe background. A few hours later Steelman and Douglas Gretzler, 22, of New York City, w.... booked for investigation o! II ·-r--= murders. '"And, uh , things will not be thrown at you and things ·like that," Williams added. Williams relerred to a cordon of police. anned 'i\'ith shotgoos and wearing flak jackets, an>Wld the run-down, twirstofy apartment house where ·Steelman bad sooght refuge. A jittery auxiliary of two dozen reporters and pho<ographers stood or crouched neit to police cars and the concrete pillars of a nearby freeway. "Willie steelman, the girl first , please? And then you come out with nothing in your hands and both of them up." In spite of these assurances, which Steelman had demanded be broadcast, it was five minutes and one tear gas shell later before Steelman emerged as irlBtructed, hands up. I Two victims were a Phoenix, Ariz., couple slain Oct. Z2 and nine persons in a San Joaquin County home Tuesday night. The tall, slender, 140-pound Steelman wearing a frizzy Afroolyle balrcut look· · Ing dazed and emollonleaa u officers In bullet-proof ..sts. threw him to the gnw and seorched him from bead to toe. Caltfomta had no prison reoonl oo Gmz!er, amsted at I dp;mtown Sacramento hotel 90 mlootes earlier. Steelman· s record showed t b r e e forgery convictions and reports of several alleged suicide attempts. "Nothing In our experience with him suggested any personal tendency toward violence, 11 Philip Guthrie, a Department of Corrections spokesman,' said o! Steelman. Kemper Given 'Life' On 8 Counts of Murder SANTA CRUZ (AP) -FAl!nund Emil Kemper m was 1enlenced to life im- prisonment today for 'the b11le:Hry of bis mother, her bes I friend and six coed bltcbblkera. SANTA CRUZ (UPI) - A Superior Court Jury Thursday found Edmund .E. Kemper 111, a hulking, 8-loot-9, 2IJO. pounder, guilty of el.si:ht munts of flrst- degree murder In the alayings o! eight women, including his mother. Kemper, who was to be sentenced today, bad turned himself In and pleaded insanity. He ts exempt from a dealh penalty law thal wlll nol go tnto elled unUI next year. Judge Harry E. Brauer told the jury, "If I seem a bit excited, I had aome fear you might possibly bave arrived at a different verdict.11 He said he agreed with the dedslon reached alter almost six hours ol. deliberation. Kemper confessed to kllllnc 111 bitch· hiking coecla, bis mother and btr friend . Kemper, who murdered his maternal grandparente at age 15 and was In· 1tltutlooallzed but later n!lwed as cured, t~t!lled that ho had a recurring fantuy o! killing women, eating their bod!,. and talking to their severed beads. 111 killed.1ameone/' he aakl, deacribing • his fantasies. •i1 cut them up and ate theln and kept the bead on a shelf and talked to tl I said some of those things I would have Nid li silo had been alive, in love with me and she bad been caring or me." Kemper'• attorney James Jack.ton called the verdict 11not unreuonable" biit said lhe legal dellnltioo of Insanity should be changed because "there ls no la"w written that will covu Kemper. u· Movie Tit.eater Ordered Sold • ESCONDIDO (UPI) -A theater which showed •-rated movies w .. ordered sold Thursday by Munldpal Judge Stuart Wilson .. a COlldlt!on ol three yean' probation. Walnut Pros>erUei, Inc ., Los Angeles, was ordered.to tell .the "Pussycat Ritz," lined !200 and ord<ttd to ceaee au operatlOlll In North San Diego County lor Ufte years. The sale mast be to a ftrm which lllowl movies for general audience consumptloo • BUENA PARK Beach at Orangethofpe O!llfl Otlly 1:30 to 1:30 p.m. lundty 10 to 7 SANTA ANA 3900 S<> Bristol • No. o( So. Coast Plaza Open to.t o.m. DoMy s.-y to 10 1 • ·ORANGE City Or. at Galden Grow Blvd. Optn to.I p.m. Diiiy Sundlys to 101 • ' ·-.:> ·- ., • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAI... PAGE Beach ·Park Threat People throwing up legal roadblock after legal road· blocli: in the palh of Laguna's Main Beach Park develop- ment need to come back to the real world, remove their blinden and look at the damage they an do by lnes- ponsible court action. li court batUes mater!aliu, they will delay devel- opmmt of the park at least a year from It• hoped-for opening in June 1974 if the council sticb to it. position of no sum.me~ cQ!JSlruction. Worse, delay aod ri•lng cost. could nuterially af- fect park design. a design reached in years of agoruzing b)I several broad·bared citizen committees, and by two city councils. The major threat Is a lawsuit by resident John GaJ>. riels. He is suing the city, the South Coast Zone Re$ional ConsenaUon CommisJion which granted a penmt for the park and the Slate Conservation Comm!Jsion which denied an appeal of the regional commW!on decision. Gabrielf maintains the commissions mw:t loot at f,roject environmental impact reports. Since they did not n the case Of the Main Beach Park, he is contA!sting the pennit issuance "on principle" although be says be;does not want to hurt or. delay development of the Main Beach Park. It appeara he will do both. While sincere, Gabrlels should reconsider biJ •f· forts. If it's principle, he could bave picked a more wor· thy target ' • A lengthy court test may kill the impetUJJ of the park. Most certainly it will mean higher construction cost. -cost. estimated at an additional 1 percent a month. On a low bid of $675,000, that mean. a nearly Impossible bit of trimming. Such cutting would likely kill tbe g:rant. which in part make cleftlopment for tbe city possible. The action, il ronlinued, wlllibring a flood of dis- appointment and bittA!nresa in uguna. It truly could kill a fine park and dangerously polarize tbe commllllity again. Gabriela should drop bis suit The <OsU ue too high, and the principle queruloUJJ. Dum p Access Hazard Southern Orange County faces a severe crisis in rubbish dis!>osal, and it appears the situation will woraen now that the county road department and city of San Juan Capistrano have chosen to do battle over a thorny access problem. Tb• fight !>egan when city oUicialJ ie3!'1led recently that their choice for access to a new regional du.mp in Prima Desecba Canyon was summarily iftored from the very start In a sense, the county road department kissed off city su&gestions for a new road. Instead, It told San Juan nothing and went on Its own private course of planning to use already dangeroUJJ stretches of Ortega Highway inJtead. There iJ only a year left before a new county dump must be opened to accept the area's rubbish. The fault obviously lies in the inability of the county staff to fully apprise residents of the city which iJ most affected by the access decision. And now there is scarcely enough time to work out a reasonable ·compromise. s , - 'Don't forget to turn out the lights. There 's an energy shortage, too, y'know! • • 'Fmninistic' Dear _Gloomy Gus Hopes for PtdlfJac·k Fro1n Arab La11ds . .....,, Q~lities A·re Needed _Shah_ .. Eyes : ·u.S~-lsrael Rel~tions ,. (smNEY J.HARRI~ One reason I am in favor of the Wcnen's Ub movement goes beyond the fact that simple justice demands full and equal rights for •-omen. It Is becat11e I believe that !be future of the human race may depend upon • wider and deep- er acceptance of "femlnlstlc" quali- .Liea in our civiliza- tion . To 1ay that men and women are, and should be treat· ed as, equal, is not to say that the two sexes are identical. There are profound differe~ between them , not only in terms of biology but in terms of the effective mode or living. ' NOT AIL characteristica are "culture- bound." Some, J beUeve, are 'inherent in the maleneas or femaleness ol every species. 1be woman's endocrine glands aeem to work differently from the man's; her central nervous system may Grganically respond in a diUerent way. Given this diUerence, what the "libera- tion" of women would mean ls not almply allowing her equal rights and opp«tunities with men, but also in· corporating more of the "feministic" trruts into the dominant fabric of our culture. In all male-dominated cultures of the past, the "masculine" qualities have \ Dqo1 you just Jove llli Majesty's llincerity about the energy crisis! Air Force One. helicopters, yachts, golf carts, trips to Csmp David, Key Biscayne and San Clemente~ complete with entourage ..• he'1 beautiful! A.J. S. been tile most prized aod IOllgbt-for-ag· gressiveness, acquisitiveness and in- ~ence. In prlmltiV<, pre-lndustrlaJ llOcieties, the!e were Indeed the traits most required to keep alive aod combat nature aod defend ...,,.If against eoe- . mies, personally and tribally. IN OUR MODERN tedmical, almost post-indultrlal aociety, these same traits are more dangerous than useful, unless tellll'Ored and modified by t h e "feminine" traits of sympathy and sensitivity and the need to nurture nther than to conquer. The goals of v;omen have always been more personalistic and humanistic than those ct men. Woman's added status in the coming wortd cou1d be a tremendo~ instrument for peace, for more humane treatment of one another, for the understanding that preservation ol life i! more im- portant than the pursuit of trophies. WOMAN must enter ·the mainstream of cu1ture not as a man muqae but as herself, with her own unique en-. dowment and the special contribUtion she bring1 to !be solution of our problems in living together. To become "equal" with men means not to do everything they do, but to become fully hersell and fully contributing to mankind's goals. TEllERAN Proof of U.S. ,.credibility" ln pressing Israel to withdraw from its Arab territories in Egypt and Syria captured in 1967 would modify aod possibly cancel a n t i · American production cu\backs by the oil-rich Arab states, the Shah of Iran suggested in an ex- clusive interview. Iran itself, the sec· ood-!Jrgest Middle East oil producer, did DOI join the pro- duction cutback. "3 the leader ol 32 millloo non-Arab Moolenu w I t h in- Umate ties to Washington and correct relations with Moscow, the Sbah ii by far the most important independent power on the edge of the uploe:ive Middle East. More to the point, Sbah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi ls determined to replace the British as guarantor of the most vital waterway ip the world today, the Persian Gulf. Without Penian Gull passage of uncountable oil tankers, the · entire economies of Japan and Western Europe would strangle for lack of oil. C ONSE QUENTLY, the Sbah, handsome at 54 with the sleek assurance of total authority and 32 yean in power, ls to be carefully listened to. "The United States has always su~ ported the principle of t h e in· admlssability of acquiring land by force," he told ~ in the gold-chased office of his Nlavaran Palace hlgh in the hills overlooking his ~ital. "Israel has no choice but to leave the Arab lands it captured in 1967." But what if that doesn't happen? The Shah, choosing his words carefully, said that Israel could never alone handle Increases In Welfare Expenditure Should Require 1,axpayer Approval To 11et on with so me needed reforms here at Babylon. The ones we were fooling around with in response to dear reader Art Hesbon's comment that I should do more than criticize; I should suggest. The first column in thi s now-and-then primer on better. government deall with taxes. Now that we have taken the dough from the folks, fair· Jy and openly, \'¥'hat about aome cost con· trols? Juai because we get the money to Saaamento doesn't mean we can throw it around like con· fetti. Right ? A major item 1D the state (and county) budget II public usistance : Wellare and health care .ervlces. About 31 percent oC the 1t1te'1 general fund goes for public ...i.t.nce -$%.I billion. In most coontles, aboUt 50 percent of the budget goe1 (or wetfare. AtMl>-all, ft'dcral, state and local expendlturn lor welfare in CaUfonila will total -16 billion in 1'73-74. TJIB STATE OtllllUtutiol says public educ1tloo llhall !lave flnl call on the -le'1 -· It -'I, not roolly. Welfare wap the q . -with tfoe rdorms of the ~ Mmlnlstratlon, ( RUSWALTON J there seems no end in sight to the rise of welfare costs. There ls, perhaps, a ~ way to control those costs: set a maximwn. Enact a two-part amendment to the State Constitution : "(Section One) It ls the stated policy of. the people of California that in any fiscal year not more than (25) percent of the total state general fund revenues shall be expended for public assistance programs and the State Legislature shall control such annual appropriations ao as not to exceed that amount for that purpose ." "(Section Two) No ,county shall In- crease taxation for the purpose or in- creased expenditures for p u b 11 c assistance programs wltbout such being first presented as an increase In !be tax rate and approved by a majority of the electorate In lh&t COW'lty." SCREAMS? Hell bath,no f\Jry lite the howls that amendment would cause! Some woWcl torm the amendment ,.,. constltullonaL l mean, whoever heard of the people having 1 voice In the amount of their money apent for ..U.. or MedlA:al! Tbat is beresyl Well. It msy be heresy bot li Is time the taxpayers had more of a 11y I about where their money goes. h it is now, public schools offer the taxpayer virtually the only opportunity to vote on taxes. And the result ls that citizens vote ''No" on schools because welfare keeps gnawing at their takehome pay. Another suggestion. G o v e r n m e n t bureaucracy should be put on a bu!ioess. like basis. With incentives for reducing costs rither than rewards for expanding budgets. Take a well·nm busineM, for example. A smart manager says to his workers: "U you can turn out more gldgeb for less money, whlle maintaining quality controls, I'll split the increased profib with you." The worke"'rs turn to arid tum themselves a boous. YOU CAN'T CQIDpule a cost·per-gldget In government, but you can con!pute the OOll for most departmeots for specific functloos and services. Why not say to the supervisors and employes In a department or dlv!Jloo : "Your ann~· lJutlcel iJ '4 million. The projected WOtt!Old ii X number of c11e1 (or X. mar>lloun). U you can handle the wortdood with fewer .-lloura (cir "" Oper.unC .colt) ~ .,Ut the .... inp wit!> JOU. Haf/ for till tup&Jen, an4balf for aW lucs HI far,...• Wt'd be 0-. .... the .. IA> .. .-.,.. would niUe _.. money. Al It Is """• the clvlsicn cbld tabs increaled alawi. , (tmd alary) m the number of Indian& ; In his"-· ( EVANS·NOVAK J. a situation in which the Arabs' ally, the Soviet Union, chose to -use its power. Only the U.S. coold do that. "But for what reason?" he asked rhetorically. "One cannot expect the United Slates to ri1t destruction ol itsell and the whole world becaUR Israel want.. to atay in Sinai." The Sh ab aJao came down bud against U.S.-8oviet participation in any United Natlom force e v e n t u a 11 y establilhed to guarantee Israel's security behind the old, e.re-11167 lines. The two grea t powers shOWOa·volCt personal in- volvement he told w:. "It might seem practical,'' he said, "but It i! not right for the great powen to take respomibility everywhere. That prevent.. other countries from doing what they •hould be doing. It creates a situa· tioo where" other countries simply choose up sides between the great powers and become .satellites. I• The Sbab declined to discuss actual U.S. policy in the 1ttidd1e East today: the times are too sensitive he said. But the general feeling was expressed forcibly to us by lesser government officials. Jt ls~th.at Washington 's Middle East policy is so muddled that it cannot !l'allY be defined. STARTING WITH the E~nhower ad· ministraUon'a inexplicable withdrawal of the o1r., to. sell arms to Egypt in 19S5 and c:ootinulng to the present, lmowledntble•lnnlans call that polidy se~-destructiye II incalculable cost lo' the U.S. Tbey bope the chaoge implicit in the ceasefire 'ls real and that Israel. with ironclad guarantees, will pull out ol Arab land . Yet, the Shah does not agree that all-out U.S. support of Israel and the coosequent Arab appeal for aid to Moscow explain the Soviet Union's grow- ing presence in the Eastern ~tediter· ranean and in Iraq, which has a long border with Iran. . TO THE CONTRARY, the Sbab noted ancient Russian aims for warm-water outlets and recalled that German Kaiser \\'ilhelm nurtured the dream of a railroad from Btrlin to Baghdad and Persian Gulf ports. But the Arab-Israeli struggle • has simply handed Moscow greater leverage. Given obvious and historic Iranian feat of a strong. Wlified Arab world, the Shah's call for U.S. muscle in dealing with Israel is significant. Iran hal close but informal relatiOl\.$ with Israel and most politicians here regard a healthy lsrael as a .vital counterweight to anU.- lranian hositility from such radical Arab states as Iraq . This Israeli connection. never publicly discussed, is Important to Iran. But that calls for a secure Israel on pre-1967 borders, not an Israel v.·hose presence on the Suez Canal enables the Arabs . to surmount their inteme rivalries; not an Israel. in short, that drives the Arabs close to the very unity which someday might prove dangerous to the Shah of Iran and hls country. What 'Proud' Tradition? To the Editor: This is a note to etpress my outrage at the caption under the picture of the iega ol the graduates of the Naval Officer Candidate School "A . Proud Tradition Falls" you wrote. Is the policy of dlacriniination prac- ticed in this nation agalmt all 'those who are not white mates a tradition we should be proud of, or one whose fall we should mourn? WHEN the Naval Officers Candidate School stopped ill discrimination against men of color, did the newspaper print a picture of black, brown, aod yellow male faces lnterSPl;_rsed among the white, then caption the picture "A Proud Tra· - dition Falls"? Of course not! Racism is a tradition whose fall we celebrate. But, when capable women from · all races break down banien, like the ones .. t up by the United States Navy, their legs are photographed, and their struggle ii disapproved. SHAME oa the Dally Pilot and may the discrimination against all groups in America who do not fit the white male standards of "nomµllcy" fall. MARILYN MUllPBY Anawer To the F.ditor: I have an answer to all our problems. Elect Eric Severeid President I don 't lhlnt he needs any belp, but li he • Wlcks MAILBOX LMllln fl'MR ......... lft wtlnlne. Mlm\1lly Wt'!Mn .,...., tlllVlt" flltlr rMUelln Ill JM _,, .,. leu. Tlll rt•t .. ~ ltttt'1 I• Jll -..c1 ., ..... 1....i. NM! I• ,.._.,., All 1e1ten !Niii i. ~ .......,.. ..... ,..... ...... ,..... IMll -· ""'' lie wt,,.... t11 ,....., H wtfklHI l'N-11 ..,..,..,. P'Mtl'Y wlH ... lie ,.,..llMlll. does, make Howard K. Smith Vice Presi- dent. BETWEEN them they know all the answers, not only to the present but to the future. But just in case even they need SQme help, I nominate the editor of the Daily Pilot to assist them. Even Qod doesn't know everything these men know. ARTHUR D. GASKIN Dlscetlertf To the Editor: After reading YO\U' editorial against Proposition I I have at long last discovered that you are Democratic paper. . That leaves you out of my life as my blood pressure CJDnot stand reading a dirty Democratic paper. I am a compara!ively new llUbscriber to your $beet but I can easily get along without it. , When the boy coll<Cls the n..i time I lvlll cancel my subacrlpllon. E. V. WILKIE Tit< Daily Pilot,· an independent publication tied to no ·potitiail' party, vi•wtd l'TopOsltfon l as a non-partison f.sJut. Longtimt readers are aware we have endorsed ntimero1&1 Republican ai!ldi<!atu -as "Well as DemocrOtk cand~•· Editor G...a OW D••• To the Editor» ' · ' ' l al"""'t mlsi<d It. After my bath, I just caught the ~ of the TV movie. It wu a unlversll)I (or a zoo or a · madhouH). AU ol the 1tudents acted liU blitllerlltl idlola. There WU thiJ -~ teaeher that acted :ust Ilia 1111 -ts. You coold tell he WM --. ... lie· -all about fiction writers and poets and those are the things th at count. JUST AS he was being tested by a bunch of eggheads for some kind of teachin g credentials. he blew his stack and started tearing up the papers and things and running around on a long table. About this time , the students started tearing up the school and break~ ing windows and burning books. The show ended with this hero-type teacher making violent love to a student on a little balcony while the students did in the school (or zoo or insane asylum ) below. NO'V THE redeeming quality of this is that a lot of us oldtimers were very thankful that we were toe dumb for higher educa tion. \\re just sowed our wild oats In our dumb, animalistic manner without paying tuition. We called !t raising hell ; we didn't try to pUL 1t off .as culture or a revolution for greater things. Of course, if we could have spouted a little poetry or something about Greek gods, or told about fiction writers or spoken a bit of Latin, it would still have been hell-raising and there's no redeeming quality for that. JIM BOLD!Nd OlANM COAST DAILY PILOT Robm N. \V<td, PubU.htr • Thoma.s Keetril, EdttOT' Btirbara Kreibi~h .Editorial Paoe Editor The edttorlal :Pill" o! the Dally P:ilot '&eeks to infonn and atlmuI&te. rnders by ]'>rnentlftl on this pq-e alverwfannmerrtuy'oa toipica or fu. tfftJt by l)'ndicated eoh1.mnlltt: and ct.rtoonlab. bl' ~inc &.forum k>r readtta' v~1 and by preamtlnr thil newspeper'1 Opinions and ideu cm cw:""' """"" The oc!lloN!· -of t);le ~Uy Pllo,l appear onl)< 1" u.e ~ltol"ial column at tho 10p • ot 1tte pace .. Opinions expft'!tStd by the l"OI· umnistJ e.nd cartoon1.ata and leutr ,writtn ere \Mir own and no~ .. m<111 ol thtlr -~ by 'be Dali1 J'l!o<"'-be -. Friday, November 9, 1973 , • } I • M•• Jo• "'· Mr. I ., .. Mr. I O"' Mr. I $llk1r Mr. • ,., Mr. • W1" "'· "" "'· "" Mr, I "' M« •• Mr.• '"~ M~ M•. .... M« • "'· . ....; "'· . • "'· D c. pres Fellcl1 "''11" ,, tn CllllQh ....... .... p ""''" S~ter . " "''" SM!ltr ·~· '"'"' St., c M-~="' ..... MU'll"" !'"'"' .... ,. !i:',l, (/lllptl, ·-Wftltlll DI- "'"' c ... M •• " ... ""~ Loun• ... 10:)0 F.mllv M ... ~· u '11 B "''' •• ,, ' • friday, NMrnber 9, 1973 DAILY PILOi Over Flrlng _Respmase to Nixo•• For the Record Coast Maga~ine .. Co·unty Energy Plan Eyed • Sued by Ad Man By JACK BROBACK degrees rather than the Of ,,.. D•Hr l"li.t 111tt customery 70 to 72 degrees. SANTA ANA -supervisor "I am sure we can make Births "But I think the Increased use is balanced by the reduc- tion in use of private cars." bu3 routes may have to be curlailcd and Sunday service , requested by many senior citizens ma y be delayed. SANTA ANA -An ad- vertising execuiive who claims the president of Orange Coun- ty Illustrated persoaded the Irvine Company to fire him hlle his ~tract •UIL had five years to run has sued the publi<•tkln and It& presi- dent for 14 mllll•1v WILLIAM H. MalTiott, !~ Ash Tree Lane, Irvine, ,uunes the publication and James C. Killingsworth as joint ·det~n- · Ralph ctark of Anaheim, ,in substantial energy savings in . danls in an Orange County the COll!llY operations with lit- Superior Court acUon . that ~ response to President ~ixon's tie Inconvenience and discom- Clark said some ma rginal .. seeks 12 million In loss of ORANGE COUNTY appeal to oonserve energy, tort," the supervisor said. commissions and $2 • niilllon said Thursday he will propose Clark chalrman of. the in damages. · ·• · a conservation program for Orange County T r a n s i t Brea Man Hasn't ' rMarciQtt clnllY).$ he was. Orange County government at District Board of directors, hired by the Irvine C.Ompany next Tuesday's meeting of the said the district may run Jato in late 1970 ·88 exclusive Board of Supervisors. some problems. advertising representative for County Sues Clark said his staff is work· "We are buying more buses Lost His Marbles New Worlds of IrVine, a com. Ing on -the proposal and he to bring needed transportation BREA Don't ever MPY magazine. He said the beijeves it will be possible to eVery Orange County area ·~.eement c••I·' for him to SANTA ANA -A Hun.-1 1 d f he "'·h .11 ul In f 1 challenge Don Falsken to a ,.o.. ~ ~ to nc_u e many o t ~-. Wam.: w1 res t ~ore ue ·draw 25 percenf of the net tington Beach oil company gesfions made by the Presi-consumption," he. ·asserted. game of marbles. 1t could p<>rcelain marbles used for plugging milk jars in 19th cen- tury England . 8dVertlatng" l"ev~ for not president has been sued for dent. take wee ks. 0 · Jess than eight .fear5. $55,000 in Orange County Srv>rific cons er vat ion R H I Falsken, a ~year-old real c Airport 'K 1 UJNGSwoRTa,. Mar-Superior Court act.ion that mersUres offered by Clark in· aDIOlla eat estate salesman, has a rol- rlott claims,• therf ' applied charges him with mis\eJiding elude reduced use of the ·coun-RAMONA (AP ) -Robert '!ection of cat's eyes and ag- A haunter of swap meets and antique shops, Falsken says he has picked up son1e rea l b.1rgains over the yea rs. .At 11 recent swap meet he boLlght a candy swirl worth S~5 for a nickel. . pressure on Irvine ComPany oflicials of a company that ty's non-emergency vehicles, N. Kenpedy, 43, has been nam-Fence G.,,,ant '.; off4lcrs-w~th the resul.t that took-over an oil and gas lease a· speed limit on county cars ed superintendent of the gies to rival any kid on the ,. · Jie ·Wa! (1re<f .by .Jrv"'~ .. in in the Placentia area. and reduced lighting ln COWlty Ramona Unified S ch o,o I bloCk -and then sotne. January 1973. Newport Be.Ji.ch • The Bay West Development buildings. District. Kennedy, now Jars throughout Falsken's Gets OJ.__ ' attorney Robert A. Sn}.ith Company, 10475 Slater Ave.,-superintendent of the Antioch home arc fi lled wi th 1norc lf,,U,Y states an earlier action by Fountain Valley, names John THE SUPERVISOR said he Unified School District near than 15,000 marbles . There are ,Jt1arriott against !.he ·I,rvlne. H. Alexander of the Alexander will propose, as the President Oakland, assumes his new job marbles used for games, fron1 SANTA ANA -A $10'l,375 .Company has been ·settled in Oil Company as principal did, seijln,g thermostats in in this rural San Diego County the common street var iety lO And one tu rn-of-the-eentury sulfide rnarble he owns is \11orth more 'than $100. F"alske11 says. Don 't lose your n1arbles, is his advice. They might be va lu able. Otlier . ' grant to install security fenc-his clieOt's favor, , defendant in the lawsuit. county offices at '65' to 68 community Nov. 5. peppcnnint s \Vi r l s, and Ing wtth 'gates ~ Orange illlllllllillllliiiiillllllllliiliiliiiiiiiliiliiiiiiiilliiiiiliiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilili ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- County Airport has been air proved by the Federal Avia· lion Administration. I ~ Deaths DETROIT (UPI) ·-Edgar C. Row, retired first vice preaident and member of the board " directors " Qrysler O>rp., died Wedneeday at the 'fe of Tl. Row was president o Chrysler C&nada from 11151 thnlugb 1951. Rep. Ali<lrew Hinshaw (R· Newport Beach) llllllO!!!lS"! the grant, which covers less than ball the 1225,000 cost ol feoclng as estimated by Orange County A v I a ti o n Dlrclor )!obert Bremahan. Brunaban last June asked 1 that the County be exempted from building__ the f e n c c F•t1c11 Pri.ll\l~::J1:a. ankftnt °' ~use boarding-areas~ for L"'1N BMCt11 d1i. of dNlll, Novemt11r .Y.t planes:,:Jre nng' ed by arm-1. 1,71, SUl'YI"*' bY hvtbll'ld, P1IJl 1 '"' o•UC1htwr, l uao B•n:t1v. Arl1on•i two ed m•ard . He said the fence . or~11-MlmW ol P.E.O. Sl1!er'-1 &"" •nd _ ,.l Btt• ~ SOnlrltv. ~1.1 was unnecessary. MrVlcn , Slh1rG1y. NO'fffl'lll« 10, 2 PM, S~fl•r Leq~h ~:::r,1. Interment. His request was turned . · :,,..'!~ Lwvni Bkch ~~,;~1 OI~~: down . The ienc g is part of ton. M•T • . the federal government's pro- 1rv1no Mey .... "'" ~ of 1Mt ar.·1191 · ·gram to prevent hijacking of St., c°'" ~. AnlCllnl of Co111 I S M... IOf' ID YNrl/ ~ of °"!-p ane . C~ty Mid Co.t• MISI Hl•!ork•l Soc •rv. Svrvh•.-cl tw wl .. , s-. of !tie h0me1 -. acoer1 "'11rtW. a111er1flt1ct1 dlvottltr, MIJl'llvn P•fk.,., VIiie P•rll; 1 I• !renck:lllldr"lll ; bf'olhtr, Vktor Ml.,..,, •nt1 •r.·~· 11en. fdfll avttlfll..id flDd Flor Ill h.,., botll of ~ WM. nr...rc11, 1y, 11 AH.. W•~• c111P1'1, wltn Walt.,. c_ Flvke l'fflcl1t • 1m...men1. Fal>'hl""° ~l•I P•r . W•lclltl Cl'MIOtl Mor11,11rv, ~. Ol1"9Ctor•. Wl:LDOM JoM C. Wtfdon. '24Vt AClde, COl'Ol'la clel M•r. Del• of clfflfl~ Howmotf' I , lti'l. Sv~lltd by wtte, kit" of flM tloml; brother~. ~lchlrd1 il1ttn, Hel"" SMICl1, Mll'Y iKOT1 4lnd a01em•t'Y L°""IO<wv' 111 of C•Mdt. Prlv1 .. cir•-1de Mn'k n Wiii tie Mid Stllll"dlY. 11):30 AM. Pacltlc Vltw MlmOl'lal P1rk. F1mlly WOOHIS tllOle wlll'lll'IOL plHM m1l11 ~Ill c0ttlrlbvllon1 "' HOall ~Jel "'-!till ConitW"'I Unit, Pacllk >JIN Mortvar"l'wer~~ f:dW•rd t.4-Wlll"'"I:.. ,,. .... ~ it.ci~&.1:'""'J ~!ti Nu ... ,.. '· 1t13. SUNIY9d bv wue. Gtfr"I'~· C•ftl'I' Dvf1'Y lllflnl C If K•rtl'I. of Chlj-' -~ ' Wttf Vl~l~•l ,......., I Clal'I.:::; ~ •. "lk"""..w.i.J~ lfld ' W111t- fonj. ell of Clll~j' -~lndlMullhttl". Servlcn. SltvrGIY, PM. afOldw•'l' C~. .tftl ...... COM SI/Joi' of- tkl1H1111. l"*"'-'ti;~wi.:.lt~--.~I Ct'fMI....... wnt A . .. ar09dw1v Mortvlry, lr.cton.. ARBUCKLE I< SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 4Z7 E. 17111 SI., Colla Mela 11141111 • BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar l'IUl$I Colla Meta 1111111 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY , lit Broedw1y1 Costa Meu LI Wal • DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUAit!ES 17111 Betldl Blvd. Raatblpoo Beocb IU-TTll ZU-Ave. Loag -b l!J-431.1145 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY ll'OI Lapa& CUyoa Rd. IM-1415 ·• PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemelery Mortaar)' Cbaoel SHt Pacific View Drive Newport Beacb, CalHornla MU7IO • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 711tl Bol .. Ave. Wettmbl-1131515 • SMml'S MORTUARY IZ'I Mala SI. Rutbl .... Beacll l3MS3t PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUI autlM•ll NAM• ITATIMIMT Tiii folloWll'll ,._ tfl '°'"" bull,,....,•: J•T~ATEl TltlJCK ltEM'TAl..J,lll r . CMPl'l'lln ,...,.., °''""'' ettrf. Jtn"l'I Sfollp 1'131 E. ClllPm•q,_AYI., Orqe, C11!f, TrtcT H. W•llKt, IDIO El~I SI,, Slnf• Ane, C•UI. ~704. Tiii• tH.11IMU I• conducled D'l' • geMr•I perll\lf'lhlp. TrKY H. W1ll1Ce TllJ1 llltlml'!ll Wll flll'd wifll tN County Cl«I of OrMtt Courlly Clfl Octotlef' 11. ttn. PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS aUSOillll MN!I• tTAT•MINT ,.,. tolloWlng perlOrl I• dolnt tiuslnn1 It' • • UllUGUAY TltAVIEL CLUI IN· TlltNATIONAL, "° I . ltlll SINl'f, COlll fo\111, C1Ufoml1 n.n JUln A. MIOl'IOM, ~ I!. lflfl It,, C0t11 ,..,..., c1111or1111, nta:7 Thll bus)llffl It COl'lducltd 11'1 Ill lndlYkl\111, Jven A. Ml9llOlll Thll tl•temtnl WH f11M with tlM CounlY' Cieri! of Or•l!OI CMl'l' "' Oc.tolW "· ltl'l • fl·tnll l"Ubll1hld Orllltl COii! Otll'l' ,-11ot, Noonmbtf 1. t, 1•. 2J, 1'7J 2'0f.13 Trio Named In District SILVERA[)() Mrs. Monica Engel, Robert L. Cochran and the Rev. Roscoe Burke have been named to the Silverado-Modj .. ta Park and Rttreatkln DiJtrlct board b)'tbe~ . 'lbe names wer'e submitted by Supervbac R«lald Caspers who said oniY Mrs. &Igel baa filed !or one ot the three va- cant seat! on the district board. He aald the other two were willing to serve and the board approved the appointments Tuesday. ·AMA Meets In.Anaheim ANAHEIM -1be American Medical As90dalion will hold Its 15th national conference on the medical aspect! of sports Dec. 1 at the Royal IM he<e. 1be sports symposium, which will cover various phaaes of beallh for athl•tes, b part ol the ~A Clinical Convention at the Anahiim Convention C en ·t er ·and Disneyland Hotel r u ri a I ii g throug)! Dec. $. Forest Chief PORTERVILLE (UPI) John A .• Leasure, 38, has been named supervisor of the 1.1· million acre Sequoia National Forest. He has been deputy supervisor of the Id a h o penhandle. MEN'S QUALITY SHIRTS .... $5.00 • , , and s•• our .J:JU:iting LADY M;A;~HA TT AN BLOUSES Collar • I n Cuff • 333 ' ... 17 .. 'st.' c..11-MNIJll WALL UNIT 01c.or1tiv1 gpld l11f 1J1pri9hfli, fovr Reg. • d11lve1i, id••I for boolc1 or 1cc•11ori1s , • , , , • , ,, ••• , , , ••••• , • , .$79.95 ATTRACTIVE BAR Ch,1tnvl wood trim with Soot r•lil. Ch11trivt vinyl front ind wh ite top ••••.. , •. , , •••• , , , •• , • ~.,. $179.95 BAR STOOLS Fout bl•clc wrought iron b1r 11Gol1 with bringt red vinyl 1••11 • , • , •• , • , , • , , • , , • , ••• , • , , •• , • , , • , , $35.00 SOFA & LOVE SEAT " 811ck·brown, white 1trip1d v1l¥1t, deep ,.. full 1001• cv1hion1, l•rg• roll•d Ir!" •• , , -.•••• , , • , •••••••• , • $600.00 SWIVEL ROCKER Grein ... rvet, very c.omfort1bl1 loo•• •••t c111hlon • , , •• .r •• , -. .-: , ••• , , , : , ••• , •••• , , , • , , ....... , , , $1 '40.00 MANSFIELD'S is consolid1ting Its oper11ion ~witft ifs. p1rent store in FULLERTON. Meri1S your chtnce• to se1e·c1 from one of the finest selections ot fint qu1lrty furniture in ORANGE COUNTY 1t tremendo'!.i' sl;ingL HURRY FOR BEST Slll(TION! a,l~G YOUR'TRU~K OR TRAlllR -OR Wl'tl 01,llVIR. All Hin finol. No t<· cfttnges or refunds. No lty1w1ys. SALE 2.rc. SECTIONAL Gold v1lv1t, h1e vy c•rved Sptnhh motif Ra9. incl~det corn1r fible, d1rlc wood ; , .•••• , , , , •• , •• , • , , •• , •.. $1100.00 3 PANEL DIVIDER $9995 D•rlc "".•lnvl, open 1pindl11, hinged lo fit •ny c.oraer ••••••• , , , •.•••••.•• , , , , , •••• , , • , , , , ••• -.•••• $110.00 .BOO~CASE DE$l '. J · Two drt11w1_r1 _pulf down" 1dj1Ht1bl~ _ 1h1lves, Medif1rr1n11n finith ••• , , , , • , • , , , , • , , , , •• , , •• , , . , .$1 SO.DO TUFTED IACK SOFA Sc1rlet rid, three 1001• cv1hion , li1•f1 with m•tching .. ol1t1r1 ,,, • .'\ •••••••• , •• ,., •• ,,, ••••• '.$S99.95 2 81rrel Ch1lr1 to c • m•ich ebov9 1ofe • , •• , •• , , • , •••••• , •• , , , •• , • , , • , • , • , , , , •• $120.00 CAMPAIGN CHEST Thr11 dr1w1rt, pec•n .;ood trlmm•d in br111, fine workm1n1hip I qu•lity ••••••••••••••·····-··••$246.95. LARGE SELECTloN OF * WAll *TABLE * flOOR *SWAG PRICED 10 SEtt 100AYI LAMPS A,!,~~~p;:~. E~Ds,500/0 • Occasional Tables •vings 0 6°FOOT PLANTERS ·FANTASTIC SELECTION ASSORTED STYLES CONTEMPORARY CHAIRS two btight yellow ch1lt1 on white m•t1I fr•ml. Perfect for p1tio or porch ••••••••• .,.,,,, •••••••••• $100.00 COffH "TAoltE • · ' Counffy Engli1.h, p•c.1n in color, c1nt1r _ dr1wer, r1cf•n9vf1r htlfmoon' 1h1p1 , • , ••• , , , , • , , , • , , , , ,•, , •• $150.00 52" STEREO " • C1r¥td front .... 1v1t trim, complete with certridge t1p1 , , , •• , , • , , , , , ••• , , • , , , , , , , , • , ••• , , , •• $120.00 8 FT. STEREO Hvtch top, fold ¥•lv1t front fri"'I, I0'1p11k1r1. SlidinQ front d1or1 , ,~__,,, •• , ••• , •• , , ••••••• , .$610.00 SPANISH ' LOVE SEAT ' ' ' D•rlc Grein vilv1t, wood .,tfn in °\ front & b1cl ••••••••••• ,, ••• ,, ••• , •• , •.•••••• , •••• , ,,, , .$240.00 .TUFTED IACll RECLINE~ • Color b 1ttr1ctlv1 01blood, p11f1c.t • c1mfort for the min of th1 ho1u• ••••• , •••• •• •••••• ,, , , ., ••• $2'4t.9S , " I ! $7995 ·Ea. '99'5 '259'5 •49995 $14995 '15995 DECORATOR COMMODES 2 m1tchilt9 commocl11 in Chlnete Red. One w/3 dr•w~rli, one w/r1cord c1b ••••• , • , , ••••• , , , , • , , , • ,$229.95 DE CORA TOR CHAii Velvet hi9h•b1ck in or•n91 with ~-·""' -- gold t•111l1 on ,finie11 , .~ ,";,. ~ •• ,,,,,,,,.,, •• , ,, ., • -••• , , .$200.00 6..PC. IEliRdoM Top qu•liW, king 1i111 in pec•n. On• of th1 top n1m1s in fur~it\1r1 , • , •• , • , , •• , •••• , •• · •• , , , $1272 .00 5.pc, DINrTTI ' Formic• top, ~ry comfoti•bl1'\l1clt ¥inyl ch1!1t •• , ••• , , • -, , •• , , • , , , • , , , •• , , , , •• , , •• , • , , ••• , • S2'41 .00 GLASS COffff TAIU 41" rounl-1/J" 9l11t . 9olcl leef b•11 , • , ••••• 1 •••••••••••••••••••••••• , •••••••• $399.•s TAILE LAMPS 2 m1tchin9 l•mp1 tn h•1vy c.erved woo4 witll "ti119•" of rN l11~woocl •,••••••••••••••••••••••••••····Sl2•.•s \ $149':...- $11995 $899°0 $l69's $299" - $79':...- ' ' '• ' - • I' 1 ' -- ' ' ' • • ' • ' • ' • l ' ' • ' , l ' • • ) • • • ! • • • ! ' ' ' I I l I l 8 DAI LY PILOT F"rida/, Novtrnbtr 9, 197) L.Jtl. Boyd Three of Five 011 'Pill' Single Jt"s a proven sociolijfi91il fact that the \\'idower leads lnr lonelier a life than dOes the widow. At least, until such time ns either remarries. U tbe widower is to get marrJed again, hoy.•cver, he is apt to do so more than twice as speedily as is the widow. Specifically, he waits about three yt'ars, if average. She waits an average of seven years. A recognized medical journal reports three out of five QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi v.'omen on the Pill are single .•. Our Language man says no society in his- tory has talked without cuss words ... You can count on about 22 pounds of bacon. sir, in a 200-pound hog •.. Why whites are far more susceptible to pin· \li'Onns than are blacks 1 just don't know ... If you want a pounO of pop- \corn to lose a little of its weight, pop it ... \Vas none other than Buckmin- ister Fuller who insisted, "God is a "Boy, Yr'hat a day! He.'a doing imitations .of 'the-entire Watergate committee." · verb, not a noun." DRIVERS Q. ''l say the most common handicap among automo-- bile drivers is poor eyesight ... " A. That 's close. But the traffic safety boys say an even commoner handicap Js. the illusion among car operators that they're better than average drivers. Incidentally, that erroneous notion is saJd to be the most Widespread emm- eous noti on of all among men. More widespread even than the erroneous notion among women that they're better than average cooks. Deciswn Pending On Nixon .Office Q. "Where does the cocker spaniel rank on that list of most popular dogs?" A. It's No. 9. Rig~ after No. 8, the miniature 'schnau- average 12 years younger. 0. "\Vhat kind a piece of furniture is a setae, Louie, my lad?" A. Furniture, sir? Setae is another name for cat's whiskers. WORDS · \Vhat \\'ord3 are you most apt. to remember , those you hear or those you read? Those you bear, I'd say. Consider some familiar quotations. "How dear to my heart are the scenes of my childhood." That's commonly said. It's wrong. Was originally written: "How dear to this heart." Or take : "Alas, poor Yori ck, I knew him well, Horatio." That's wrong, too. "I knew him Horatio," that's how It was first written. And of course, "I could care less" is the spoken phrase now in wide usage. The authentic written original was "I cooldn't care Jess.'' It has been reported that men who marry in their 30s select brides five years younger on the average while men who marry in the ir 50s choo se women approximately eight years younger. Client asks the relative difference for brides of men who marry or remarry in their 70s. Those ladies aveage 12 years younger. -.Add,.ess mail to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, New. port Beach 92660 Copyright 1973 L M. Boyd PASADENA (AP) -A decision on whether to designate President Ni.ton's old law office as an historical landmark was delayed here, pending further testimony. The sev e n-member Ca lifornia Historical Landmarks Commission took up the proposal. '11\unday to include the President's -old storefront law offiCe ~t La IIabra amo·ng the s1.ate's 900 landmarks. NIXON LAW Office Preservation Inc., the group promoting the designaUon, told the commission the la,, office wwld he a good place to honor Nixon becau.se it was there that he developed plans to enter political life. The commis.5ion, headed by Katlµ'yn Kaiser. questioned whether the La Habra office is the best location t o recognize the President. The commission also ex- pressed doobt as to whether it should name a landmark after a living person and noted that oone of the other state landmarks commemorates liv- ing persom. MRS. KAISER saia the Safety -Silver is one Ot two really surviving forms of wealth in man's history. Growth -Industrial consumption has far exceeded world mine production for 15 years. Private investors· purchases in the past 2 years has funher in- crea sed this demand. Liquidity-Throughout history there has always been a market for precious metals. commission ne eded more time to read lhe .. preservation com- mittee's written presentation and Is interested In receiving additional testimony before arriving at a decision. · No date was set for further consid era tion of the proposal. Karl Wray, publisher of the La Habra Daily Star Progc:ess, directed the preservation com- rrµtt~ presentation. Burke Out At Douglas :IT. LO!nS (AP) - Walter F. Burke, who managed the Mercury and Ge mini space programs, has retired as president of McDonnell Do u g I a s Astronautics Co.1 officials ol the Mclloonell Douglas Corp. amcunced Tuesday. Burke, 65, was a member of the1 fum's board ol direct<in and served with McDonnell for Z8 years. But ... Your Source Of Supply Should Have: 1. Produci ng silve r mines, a smelter phone or in person and paid by per· and refi nery, a cenifi ed mint, an ap-sonal check.'Oelivery is weekly from proved assayer, silver bars of 10-25· National Mint, Inc. to our deposi tory 50·100 troy ounces,-with a registered ~ in the Centinel3 e-a-nk vault. Custom- hallmark , serial number, fineness ers may pick up their silver or store 999+,and weig ht imprinted on each it i'1 a personal safety deposit box at • bar. . the Centinela Bank for one year at 2. At National Silver Sales, silver is no charge. Market infOrmation, si lver so ld on daily quoted prices; a trans· news letters and other data is fur· action may be consummated by nished weekly to our customers. ,.-.:.:Don:t..b~ misled by bargain silver prices: there )If few when you have all the facts and figures. Your silver must be purchased from a reputable com pa ny to insure safety, growth and liquidity. (A MEMllEft OF TH£ BETJER IUSIN£SS llUAEAU) N•tlon.I Sllvtr s.i .. _, I I . N..,,. N•wr>ort M ~rt •"' n .. tpll••red rqul•rly In tl'I• Diiiy 'Hot, ft•1l1ter, !M n• wo,fd Or-.. c " •r· ... N•vn. Good Ntwt, l.•'fl:'• World N•wt, ,lftny-r, N•w Wortdt Of,,,,.,.,,, tloni':o~ ~ ~1,'"z"'v ' 0r.,,. Co..i ,,tv Ul\ltllliitc1, l"SA, Alr Ctllf0fnl1, .. V WlfldOW, R1tcUo It• -TV Cl\lnntl ~2. • Ca11lpaign Droops Wendy Nailed Witli, Top Still 011, th• pl1c:• lo 90 for FINE WAT.CHES By CUARL-OTrE EV ANS NEW YORK (UPI) -You'll excuse me if 1. say it was a bUst. Wendy Berlowltz. 25, did not bare her chest In front of the main branch of the New York Publlc Library '11\ursday at 12:Xl p.m. a.s scbeduled. But she got arrested anyway. soutti CM•I pl.all -CO.Ill Mftll cl•il\I 10-t. 111. 10.•, clo.td wn. -olive green polo shirt and - to an untrained eye -no bra. - "You can't stand warned a spectator. fal l off." ''I THINK she ju$t wants to ge l on a TV show," said a middle-aged woman in theli;;~iiiiiii there," crowd who declined to be iden- "You'll tlfled . "Why else would she Where Have "I know/' said Wendy perched ll the foot ol the urn. "I'm not going to." ·do it?. . .And her bust All The isn't that big." Beautiful uWhat's the big deal?" ask· D ed Oiaim Kane, 39, a cab a.lly ancers -driver from the Bronx who Gone? "COME ON," shouted a . happened to pick up a You'll Fh1cl The111 At ~._.. .. -,..,.,,_..__,,_.,_ .. .,_.,_.,,._.,_,,-,..,...,,.. passenger in front of the n.. library. "You ••en one chesl, LIVING ROOM one you seen 'em all. Wend y is the former teacher' from Norman, Ok1 a., who has been going around tile country demonstrating for the right of women to ap pea r barechested In public by doing so. On Saturday, she took her !:>louse off in the blue room of the White House. 'You seen ehest, you tllem aU.' j•But why arrest her? If 130 1. 17tfl STlllT EUzabeth Tay lor came here, COSTA MUA , .. ,.,,,, NEW YORK was the ninth stop on her nationwide tour. But she was arrested before she could bare anything and charged with disorderly coo- duct and causing a hazardous condition -a Jl\()b of eager busines.5men. you'd see a mob. And they 'd ~ take her clothes off for her . man. 0 1.unch hour's almost over." Just before 12:30, as Wendy headed for the very top of the library steps, a policeman radioed for help: "You'd bet- ter send a task force over here. There's a large group on the verge of being disorder- ly." She Y!'Ouldn't have to do it herself." AT POLJt'E headquarters Wendy gave her last na1ne as Dellea. 'Vlth her was her corrunon-law husband. Jim Berlowitz, who says he ap- proves of her campaign. "Over here, Wendy, over here!" shouted the crowd as Wendy struggled up the steps of the library toward a more visible position next to one of the huge cement urns near the doors. A minute later a wedge of New York's finest moved up the steps surroond<d Wendy and brought her through the hoots, boos, whbtles and cameras of the faithful to a squad ·car. A police lieutenant, who ask· ed not to be identified, sa id she would be served with a summon!I for a later court appearance, and cou1d be sentenced to 15 days in jall. 324 N-. NEWPORT BLVD. NEWPORT BEACH 642-3766 She wore wheat colored jeans, high desert boots, an: "But nobody gets 15 days," he said. "She'll walk in and she'll walk out." 23 Years 5mne Louitlon She hadn't removed a stitch. • SALES • SERVICE . ' ••••••••••• ··J .,_.,) TiJESDAY, NOVEMBER 13-8:00 P.M. NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM 1T'S A FILM FESTIVAL . Present.ed by the DAILY PILOT and Orange Coast College THREE FREE COLOR MOVIES THREE FREE COLOR 'MOVl!S "A Big Country -A Big Welcome'' "It Is Called Ntw Zt1l1nd'' i'South Pacific Adventure'' All thrn films will be Introduced to th• audience by John Holme• of the Auatr•· C lian Tourist Co"lml11lon, 1pp..rlng In person . ' at Australia/New ZHl•nd Ad .. nture. /.TTENTION: TRAVEL AGENCIES Since tickets for this show are llmltocl , wo h1v1 1 few 1v11J1bl1 for Yt»U to Pl'•• along to f•vortd customer~. If yoU de.We tickets, ple1M phone tho Dolly Piiot 11 (714) 642-4321, Ext. 27.i. Thia offer 11 mode only to bone fide V,~el .gencle1; lndlvldu1ls should pick up !/'•Ir 1dv1nce tickets from Dilly Piiot offices or 1t Or1nge Co1st Evening College. TICKIT SUPPLY IS LIMITED Get Free nckets Now From e Al:L DAILY PILOT OFFICES e ORANGE COAST ' IVENING COLLEGE OFFICE ·1 • ) '' I ' ' - , ' •• • • l • ..... /Fa • I • ' II .. ..• "Do w Pres co yo spok Th S<c cam rcpo ? w u 'al\' w. IUOl 100Ji box. plac and itcn1 E E IV t . c I c v e ' • . ....,., .......... Fa111U11 Clrcu• by Bii Keane ''Do you wont me 'o help hold Daddy down while you g ive him.his medicine?" ) •sheepisl1~ Nixon 'Takes Sta1id' WASHI NGTON (AP! - President Nixon is opposed to coyotes eating sheep, his chief spokesman says. The comment by Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler came Thursday after a rCporter asked for a \Vhite 2 LOO'IERS UNC LOAKE D House position on the subject. TllE REPORTER said that at a \Vhite Hot.LSe meeting on the energy crisis, one Eastern senator reported that the crisis could be a boon for the sweater industry, but a Western senator said there wouldn't be any wool for sweaters because the coyotes "'ere eating all the s~p. Ziegler said he had no firsthand information on the subject .but. "as for coyotes · ·eating sheep, obviously we are , SAN .. FRANCISCO . (U PLJ -· opposed to that:" , Sal\'at1on ·Army ~1aJ . George \V. Duplairi' reported. that : a AFTER THE laughter. in the -n~ot.her·son t!le~t r1qg i s _ne"'s_brieJing· room au~· \ooµng a clothing' donatfob the reporter persisted and box. asked how the White House The woman, Duplain said, "'ould help cope wi~ the pro- plac:es her boy in the box blem . and he passes the donated Ziegler responded "Siffiply Hcnls out to his mothCr. by not encouraging that to tak e place." NEW LOCATION- Same Great FREE Cooking School Every Thursday, Oct. 25 thru Nov .• 15 9:30-11 :30 A.M. EDWARDS NEWPORT CINEMA, Newport Center (Across from Fashion Island) •Prizes •Surprises •Gifts W ortli More Tlia1i $21000 • ~ l\'lore exciting and profitable than ever-'before, • ' ' • ' • ' ' the annual Cooking School returns to the Orange . Coast area for its 22nd great year-but in a new location, Ed\vards Ne\vport Cinema in Ne,vport Center (across from Fashion Island). You're in~ ' vited to attend free and to compete for prizes inc luding a Litton Electronic Oven , Amana Radar~ Range, Electro-Grill Tabletop Barbecue and more -national brand na1nes among prize items in· elude General Electric, Frigidaire, Oster and oth- ers. Plan now to attend the area's greatest cook· ing sc hool .. , I Co ·,Sponsored by • ' ' Richard's Markets, Lusk 1-jomes, Oavis·Brown Ap-• pliances, Edwards Cinema, Southern C.liforni•. l l Ediso~ Company, Orange Coast· Paily : Pilot, Coast Community .College District (Or.nge • Coast and Goldtri Wtst Colleges) • -- ------------ " Frld111. Novf1nber ~t 1973'-'-----~-D::IJ::'.:L::Y.:_P_::IL::O_:_T _!!1> SAVINGS TRIO FOR T HE FILM BUF F THR EE ITEMS TO OU TF IT THE CAM ER A MAN GAF XLllO MOVIE CAMERA 79.99 Reg. 99.99. Brand new design en- ables -thi s camera to work in low available light-no spotlights nece s- sary . Uses new Super B films . Pistol grip for easy and steady use . Fost I/I.I len s, $AF ZOO M LENS MOVIE PROJECTO R 59.99 Reg.'69:19. Dual 8 model shows both regular 8 and Super 8 films . Zoom lens. automatic threading and re- wind .. Proiectcir comes with empty ' 400 ft. reel, CENTURA PROJECTI ON TAB LE 12.99 ..... Reg. 15.99. A rugged table for pro- jecting movi es , showing slides. Non- glare legs. wood grain top. •• • -. • THE SOUNDS AND THE SHAPES OF MUSIC • ANAH EIM 444 N. lu•llO 11141 s15.1111 ' . • 10c'1Sc LLOYDS STEREO SET Reg. 299.95. Includes AM/FM stereo rece iver, built.in record changer, S- trock tape playe r, jumbo air-suspen- sion sp..,kers, ,dust cover, 199.99 PANASONIC CLOCK RADIO Reg, 22.95. A stylish AM clock rad io ' with sleep switch, solid-state design and full co~trols for snooz e alarm, oulo on/off. Woke up! 14.99 PANASONI C PO RT ABLE CASSETTE RECORDER Reg. 68.88. A go-anywhere ca ssette recorder wi"h bu ilt-in AM /FM radio. Unit operates on AC or batteries. Microphone is included, 49,99 ITC BATTERIES Activated with manganese dioxide for long life. They're steel encased . Reg . .30 , C, D cells, now only .10 Reg, .79c , 9 'olt cells, now only .IS NEWPORT HUNTINGTON BEACH ORANGE, MALL OF-ORANGE CERRITOS 4? F•1hio" l1l •11d 1714) •44-1 211 7777 Ecll11ger A .. 1. 171 4 1 192-11)1 1100 N. lu1ti11 Str111t 171 41 t•l·l)l I ~ SOO Loi C1rtlto1 M.111 111)) 160-041 • SHOP 9:10 A.M. TO t :lO P.M. MONDAY TH ROUGH SATURDAY. SUNDAY 11 A.M. 10 6. P.M. ' I ' ' ' • / JO DAILY PILOT Friday, November q, l!J7) State School Starvey Viole11ce Less Than Anticipated ' • SACRAMENTO (AP\ -Siu- dent \·iolence Is a problem in California high schools. but it's not as bad as researchers anticipated. a n1ajor stale.. Department of Education study said today. And v>hile fhe problem or \'iolence is most neut~ in the tota l of I.000 per s on s parllcip!lling. ;.TllE PUBLIC IS often Jed to believe that conflict and violence-are prevalent throughout the school districts of thc·.state. 'Student violenee is see n is rampant in the schools, exhibiting itselt in -11 Although most acute in the inner cil y, cam pus di sQrder and violence exist throughou t the state. -"Disrupt ions on campus stemming Jrom '1•<knLal:· tivism appear to hav\SUbsld- ed in recent years. inner citv high schooJs it ex-.._ ---......._ -----------------....,,., . ~~~te~~i%~,~~c:i~,~~d~~t.her ;;,;;,::~;;;,;.n:r;.;;,::;,,,. · pus disorder "'"' v lole11ce e.l'ist THE L 0 N G-All'AITED lhro119l1out tl1e Stfltc.' report "·as prepared by lhe -_ -______ ..-_ _ _ __ ____ ___ _ __ department's Task Force on --~~ the Resolution or Conflict for aC:ls o! crime from vandalism -"School conflict is not submi ssion toclav to the state Board ol Education. The "task force" was headed by Kenneth S. Washi ngton, a s s is tan t superintendent oJ public in- structi on. Researchers compiled in• formation throu ,i::h a 1nnil survey of 300 high schools: inore than 1.000 interviCl\'S \rith -students, t e a c h e r s , ,,arents and s c h o o I ad· 1ni nistralors al :ti hi g h schooJs; dissection or 300 reports, articles, books; more than 100 ne""·spaper articles and two \\'Orkshops with a • to murder," the report said. "In its examination of con- flict and violence in the high schools of the state, the Task Force on the Resolution of Confliet found many different lypes and forms ol disruptive behavior. Violence, the most cxtrc1ne form or connict. docs exist, b~t to a ,much lesser degree than anticipated," the study said. The report reached four general ,conclusions a b o u t disrupt.ions in Ca l i f ornia schools: assoclated with any single racial or ethnic group of students. -"Vandalism is the most widespread type of campus conn lct In terms of frequency and expense." THE REPORT said that ''andalism costs average mo.re than $4,000 per school per year among the high sc hool s responding to its mall survey. Theft, assaults on students and incidents involving illegal use or drugs or alcohol were the most frequent campus crimes reported in Jts mail survey along ~ith vandalism , the study said. - "On the other hand, the in- cidence-of-majo,r c r i m e (homicide, rape, and arson) was· reported to be generally low," the researchers added. "THE ~1AIL survey also in- dicattXI !hat the incidence of vandalisn1. fighting, and drug- alcobol offenses in schools \Vas directl y related to the size of the school," the study said. "In addition, the survey in-A Willtler dicated: that a relatlonslllp ex- "'' ''""'-'- ists between the frequency of French movie actress criminal incidents and the Daniele Gaubert has ~lQCCOOOmi~ s t a t u s or students: more crime occurs been wed recently to in schools located in· low skiing star Jean-C laude socioecOnomic areas. For ex· Killy in town near Ge- ample, the incidence of ex-neva. tortion was highest in large urban sc)lQOls with Io w ---------- achievement scores," t h e Kids report said. Like To Ask Andv students, parents _ a n d teachers viewed the causes Of high school disorders dif· ferently, the researchers said. • .... Aerosol Products 'Unsafe' WASHINGTON UPI) -A private research group says that aerosol products are dangerous to safety a n d health. It urged the govemmf!nt Thursday to clamp tight con~ trots on them and consumers not to buy them tor home use. TllE CENTJ<;Ji for Science in the Public interest said its year-long study or aerosol sprays shows they a r e dangerous because they can be misllscd or otherwise handled improperly and cause a new kind or air pollution in the home itself. "\Ve strongly recom mend that aerosol spray products not be used in the home. Furthermore we recommend that a public education pro- gram on the dangers or aerosol sprays used in the home should be launched by the Consumer Product Sarcty Conunissioo," the research center said in a petition to the commission . Save 98¢ Save 1.50 Save $1 Men's fabric shoe Cotton duck with cush ion insole. Sizes 7to 12. 2/$5 Reg. 2.99 ea. Save 311¢. Dazzle-yam 4 oz., 4-p1y worsted weight. Shimmery Creslan• acrylic/nylon blend. 99¢ Reg. 1.29 ; Christmas cards Box of 25 In festive designs 1.50 Reg.$3 Save 88¢ Polyester pillow 20 x 26" size. Queen size 2/$4. King size 2/$5. 2/$3 Reg.1.94 ea. Women's turtleneck 100% acrylic. Great colors. Si zes S, M, L. "'Save 5.96 Men's knit dress shiri Short sleeves. Polyester/nylon blend. Long sleeves 4/$12. Save 7.96. 'Staff of 8 ' Agnew Allegedly Using Services WASHINGTON (AP I -• • Rep. John E. Moss; (J).Calil. I says he is informed that Spiro T. Agnew has utiliu!d government-paid staff, surface and air transportation since he resigned as vice president. J\.foss a s k e d Con1ptroller Ge neral Elmer Staats Thurs- day to look into the reports. IN A LETI'fR to Staats, "'ho heads C ongr ess' in- vestigative a g e n c y , the Gener31 Acooun!ing Office, Afoss wrote: "From the letters I have received and my own in- quiries, it appears that Mr. Agnew has use or government facilities. a staff of eight head- ed by Brig. Gen. John M. Dunn , all ancillary services , government linlOusines and drivers., plus use of military alrcraft. 'Ibese have all been brought into use by him since his Oct. 10 resignation from office. Are these allegations true?" l\10SS SAID also he was informed by the S e c r e t Service that "I hey h a v e received direct presidential in· st ructions .Jo provide-2~-hour. a round-th~lock protection. to Mr. ·Agilf\v for a 11 111· determinate period .'' At lhe time of his resigna· tion, ii w;.is announced that Agnew "'ould keep his Secret Service detail Jin1ousine and cerln in other services for a11 indefinite period~ probabl y lasting for several ~onths. This has been customary for presidents and vice president s who leave office. Agnew \vas fined $10,000 and placed on probation aft.er pleading no et;intesl to an 111- come tax evasion charge. MINIA.TUAC.S Ol.D DOl.l.ft iiiiiiiiii CIVIL WA' 01.D GUNt • MANNING'S CoLLECTORS SHOP W:e ,2428 N jp;w.,.oAT Bl.VO, CO•'l'.it. 'Ml.-, CA.I.I "·· ' ' M"'• \l•S::to Our Low Price Marx Big Wheel Plasllc end steel pedal bike. F.or ages 4 to 9, · 9.97 Special Men's polyester pants Machine was·hable. Flare leg 1olid1. Men's sizes 29 to 38. 4.99 • BUENA PARK Bea ch at Orangethorpe Op t n Delly 9:30 to 9:30 p.m. Sundty 10 to 7 ORA~GE ,City Or. at Gard.en Grove Blvd. -< Open 10·9 Jl.m. baoly Sunday 10 to I SANTAANA 3900 So. Brltlol-No. ol So. CoeSI Plell Open 10·9 p.m. Dolly SU!'dly 10 to I · r I s NEW Amerlc cerned thal the more f tually d But ' . .. • • • -• _ Friday, N°"mber 9, 1973 DAILV PILOT J! Survey Reveals Miseoneeptions About Breast Caneer -NEW YORK (AP) - merican women are so con· emed about breast cancer hat they think lt ocmrs much out monthly self-examif!ation· their physicians. of thelr breasts within the birth control pills cause breast cancer, which specialists also say is a misconception. consisted or In-depth personal 50 out of 1.000. This is fhe intervi ews with 1,007 "'-omen correct figure. But 56 perecnt 18 years and older. estimated it was twice that yet a majority er v.·omcn believe they can lead normal lives if a breast has to be removed, said Dr. Irving Respl, Gallup executive vice· president. A majority or women ex· pressed the oplnion that moat breast lumps are cancers, · whereas biopsies find that between 65 and 80 percent are not. re frequently than It ac- ually does. But only 18 pm:ent earned last year in an effort to detect any cancers early at a most curable stage. And few women have their breasts examined regularly by . - TY.'0. TlllROS said t h e y thought a blow or injury to the breast can cause cancer. Specialists say this is not true. And 43 percent believe that These are major findings released Thursday in a Gallup study conducted for t h e American cancer Society. It ASKED TO estimate how high. many women develop breast Loss of a breast arouses cancer, 8 percent said about fears of being less a woman, THE TREASURY -SANTA ANA STORE ONLY! • LAST 2 DAYS · SATURDAY & SUNDAY • • -~, D-ISCOUNTS ON THOUSANDS OF RUGS'' . ' . -NOTICE: SANTA ANA STORE ONLY! THE TREASURY HAS MADE SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS TD HAVE PllDFFESIONAL CARPET EXPERTS ASSIST YOU IN MAKING YOUR PURCHASE DURING THIS GIANT 3 DAY CARPET REMNANT SALES EVENT . I • ' \ . . WEHONORJCPENNEYCHARGECARDl USE OUR TIME PAY PLAN FOR MAJOR CARPET PURCHASES. the Treasury ROOM SIZE if · & UP EA. 3900 8RISTOL JUST NORTH OF SO. COAST PLAZA · • '· • • ,f ' I , I ., J ' j ' , ' I ' • l I . ' I . ' . I '· I t I , i t . ' • -' f • • 12 DAIL V PILOT Dennis Weaver Elected P'(om <Wlrt Services Televlsjon cowboy De.nnil Weaver Won the presidency of the-Screen Actors Guild in a ·landslide over incumbent pruident ~n Gavla and a third candidate. ( PEOPLE J \Yeaver challenged a leadership which historically had been in control dating back to Rould Reagan's numerous terms before he be'.call}e gov er rto r of Califotnia. 'Phe vote tally gave \Veaver 6,785, 'Gavin 2.628 and Robert Kerr 224. . - Kathleen Nolan defeated .Ed Nelson in the balloting for first vice president. and Jot FlyM bested Robert Doqui in lhe race fo r second vice presi - dent .. Authoress Xavier llollander claimed in provincial court in Vancouver, B.C. she was col- lecting material for a book and was not shoplifting when she took three niglltgowns from Hud- son's Bay de- part m eut store June 8. The 29- , yea r old . author of the b e s t seller f ,.. ··The Hilpi}y Hoo k e r1' r pleaded in-' HOLLAND•• I ,.. norent to taking the three nightdresses valued at $48. Store security officer Elsie Yakowchik · testified she and another security officer stop- ped Pi-1.iss Hollander outside the store and found a yellow ni ghtie loose in the shopping bag, a mauve one stuffed up f the sleeve or her coat and a black and white one in her purse. • Evangelisl Billy Graham, observing his 55th birthday in St. Louis, received greetings from church leaders, followers and friends around the coon· try .. Grah_<tm's bir!}lday came in the middle of a lo.day crusade. • President Nixon and Roma· nian President N I c o I a e Ceausescu will meet i n \Vcishington Dec. 4 for talks ··on current international developments or mutual in· terest," the White House an· noun~. Ceausescu will be making v.'hat amounts to a return visit for one Nixon made to Romania in August 1969. The length of the meeting was not announced. * A San Diego police officer and fohner footba11 star has pleaded innocent to a charge of stealiqg $4.500 from th e Police Athletic Federation. n.omas R. \Vllllams, '1:1 , former starting quarterback for San Diego State, entered the plea before Superior Court Judge Franklin B. Orfield, who set a Jan. 9 trial date. Ford Backs Tight-rope Ad on TV WASIDNGTON (UPI) Ford Motor Co. has told the government its television com· mercial showing a tight·rope walker su~pended above a bouncing '73 Torino is valid because the rope walker is being jostled about as much as a passenger inside would be. The commercial. intended to show the shock absorbency or a Torlho as it is driven down a . trail of two-by.fours, was one of a list of advertising claims chanengcd by the government and responded to by 12 automobile makers in reports made public Thursday. The Federal Trade Com- mission will review the responses to determine if any claim hcls insuf£icient back· ing. The FTC could file false advertising charges against the firm involved if .such evidence is found. The FTC asked Fon! why its tight·rope walk1ng com· merctal was "relevant and 1naterlal" to what a passenger Inside would feel, Fon! n!plicd that the •''movement ex- perienced by the llght·rope ~·alker on lop or the wire affixed lo the car is very similar to 1hc ride motions a passenger ~· o u I d eJ· t ·r~t-nt't' " ) -. ••• • ' I ' .. • t. • • We' re ready for Christmas. Our stores have gingham .wtap/holly wreaths, festive displays. •.. and, of course, a ·.,world of holiday .gift-giving ideas ~_,.· to delight the·young and old. Toyland await!>. "S;anta's busy worksnop has turned out •9ike; and trikes· in ev~ry size and dimension. Baby dolls with smiles from ea r to ear . Learn-to-do games ' . that are a part of the enchant~d world of every girl and boy.Come see us and choose your favorite toys~ Whil~YCi>lll're"nere, :St~p in at the Trim-A-Tree Shop for ornaments, baubles, tinsel and wreaths to make this the merriest Christmas ever. • f ~ u . mi l'C co s Jill to of wa Wa Ni w _/ • - Mint By JO OLSON Of ,... Dtll't P'll.t Sl•ll ~fary T. Brooks, 28th director of the U.S. Bureau or the ~tint, added a last- minute Orange County stop to her cur- rent tour to pre.mote n bicentennial coin contest lhe 1'.tint Is sponsoring. She stepped In to lilt the · plac. of JUI Ruckclshaus, who lllid been Invited to address a First Ladies Luncheon . ~ted by the Rt!publican \Vomen of Orange County and t~ liuntlngton Harbour Republican Women's Club. Talk. of the defeat of Proposltion I was prevalent, and there were a few \Vatergate jokes in the crowd, but the mood was one or support for President Nixon and optiinism in spite of recent Washington events. ~trs. Brooks reflected the optimism and challenged the nearly 200 "·omen BEA ANDERSON, Editor ,,,..,, HOVI~ f, 1t1J f'•tt IJ • ' IDireetor -Brings spirit attending to brooden the scope of tho Repobllean party, run for o f f I " themselves and work within the system. SENATORIAL FA~ULV The daught!"r of a senator, the mother ~t a senator, ~ ''Ylfe of a late senator and at one time h senator herself, ·Mrs. Brooks · was named to bet position as direqor ol lbclillnt In 1069 by President" Nixon. .11!>0 Is the d~ughter of the late U.S. . Senator John Thomas or Idaho and 1erv- ed as his administrative assistant prior to hi5' death ih IMS. ' Her son la Jdaho State Senator John Thomas Peavey, and her late husband, U.S. Senator C. Wayland Brooks, represented Illinois. t..frs. Brooks \Vfls elected to the Idaho State Senate in 1961 arid re-elected in t!l66 and 1!168. ' . She is a graduate of the University cf Idaho and has worked ia the family ~nking_ chain_ and mo!:l recently developed-a large sheep and c~ttle ranch in Southefn Idaho, the Flat 'fup Livestock Co. in M1i1ldoon. PROMOTION TOUR • Mrs. Brooks was a.sk.ed by the National Federation of Republican W<lmen to add the Orange County stop to her promotion tour for the Mint's contest to design Centennial backs for the silver dollar, half-Oollar and quarter coins. "I ·feel >"like Paul Revere and the Spirit of '76," she said. She had ~alled her press conlerenct in Philadelphia to announce the contest the same day Elliot Rlc:hardsoo held his press conference, so no one came to hers. The onJy reeourse 'teft her was to take her staff members and go on a personal promotion tour throughOut the country. •11 woo_tedt to do soinething !or our country,••, Mrs. Brooks saidln explalning the con'tes~ which closei Dec. 14. "l wanted to make people study tho history of our country." NO ROOM She kidded about 'asking a member of the \\'ashingtoo. press corps to get a story about her centennial contest in the paper. '~1y God, v.•e can't even .get the war on lbe first page," n•as his answer. , , • ''This coln change will last 2,000 years, longer than anyone can remember Yl'bo was vice president in 1973," she retorted . After .~_ting lhe women gat~.;ed in the Alrporter Inn , she siiid, "'11le time has come for Our party to broaden {ts base to include all ~_gmenls cf our electorate. "Today, your service to the party is of utmost importance. We are living in a time of rapid-fire change ill the United States. There seems to be little opportunity to pause and consider the day's e'tienls in light Gf vthat has gone before. 'The result is a lack or perspective that 90metlmcs leads to over-f.motion, over.reaction. "Ours Is a government of rtaSon, a government of order. \Ve must ,never let ourselves come to tbe"PO.int where our great nation is run by emOtions, br charges, by innuendoes, by suspicions, or by allegaUohs." t..frs. Brook$ said sht had oflen wondered what klnd Of men safOOwn and wrote the Constitution. "I came up wlt one WOYd!\m.9elftsh;"' she-com= mented. "If they had thought only of themselves, the CmstJt.Ut.ion woilld have been created to last about 50 yeani. long enough to s~rve their rieeds. But they looked beyood. They designed the Constitution to protect you and me." She reaffirmed her support for Presi· dent Nixon by saying, "I've traveled over 50,000 miles in the last several monthli al)d I can tell you without, any hesitation that I am positive about America, I am positive abolit tne Republi~ Party· and I po.sitively believe ill President Nixon." 1 • Mrs. • Brooks thefl challenged the Wo1nen to Assume more responsibility in government. MORE CANDIDA TES "\Vhen there is work to be done, \\'ho gels it done ? The \\'omen, the Federated \\'omen. I v.1Juld W'ge all tSee ~UNT DIRECTOR, Page 11) '76 ' ' Loneliness, l Story Tears Tell ·Prison . ' • • !. ) • Women prisoners eir problems durin9 . rep session (above). At ri9ht is corridor linkin9 cells. Below left, one of prison's problems is illus- trated: homosexuality. . Below ri(Jht, women toil in one of prison's work .erees. • ,I • .... ...._ I, EDITOR'S NOTE ~ TtHI Cllllo!'nl• Oepfrtment of CMrec:ll-•llOW'l!d M11«l•t1<1 Prtu rtilOl"llr SUHn Sw1rd 10 1oerld lhr1e d1v1 et 115 C•lllornla Institution lo!' WotMn u 1>"1 of her r-rd! °"' WOll'.)Cfl In prison. !.he w•1 ptirmllled to -.p9nd -.-:Ng/It IOl:kl'll , In • ctU. Here 11 tlfr report. .BY SUSAN SWARD ~ •~ w • MMcll'IH H'Hf"Wl'lltr FRONTERA (..\P) -Six a.m. A series of bullet·like reports echo in the halls of the California Institution for Women. " It is the electric locks snapping open en the wooden cell doors where 693 \\'Omen have been locked in si~ 10 p.m. at California's only state prison for femal e felons. Outside it's st ill dark. A thick grey fog shrouds the single-story red brick buildings. A IS.foot high chain link fence surrollllds the 75-acre prison grounds 45 miles southeast o( Los Angeles. Breakfast will be at 7 and then at least four hours at a job -in the sewing factory, kitchen, garden or hospital. The women will tell you it's: a life full of loneliness and constant tension. "There W a lot of heartache here, a lot of loneliness,'' said Joyce, 41 ,' \\'ho like other prisoners didn't want her last name published. She has served 12 months for arpled robbery but did time in t1'e late' 1950s when inmates v.·ore prison garb and V•eren 't allowed to walk on the grass. "Some of these women don't have enough money for a package of cigaret· tes. Some are very lucky if they get a letter a rnmth. So they put m a big swearing tough act to hide the hur1 ." she 1aid. "But you hear them crying in their rooms. That's what gets me ." CASUAL CLOTIIES. - During the day, guided tours go through the prison. Inmates stroll past Ja\vns parched yellow in spots by a summer of sun and smog. The prisoners 'vear an assortment of halters, shorts. sweatshirts. jeans and dresses inst'ead of the blue denim garb of another era. There are card games, television sets in the rooms, sunbathers on the lawns. Visitors, often say they feel they have visited a oollege campus -.not a prison. But the inmates never feel like they're coeds. :P.1uch ol their talk, for example, centers on the Women's Board of Terms and Parole, whose five members are appointed by Gov. Ronald ReagllF'. . In the last year. the board has qwetly made it tougher to g~t out on ~le. 'Ibe inmates say they fear the bolird, calling the members a bunch or grandmothers without compassion. 1bey complain the board , members ask a prosti~4te sqch .qu~tions as "How mu~ did you charge ~r trick?" ..and ''Dki . you do it for ple~ure er money?" Rosebud, back behind bars at-age· 38 for violating parole on a 1957 anned robbery conviction, put the inmate feel· ing this way: TOUGH BOARD "What makes us out of control is the toard. It is so tough on us. How do you get out of this place? The · fear is a tem"ble thing. We go to bed \Vith it, wake up \Vith it." MORE MORE In the afternoon and evenings there are classes for inmates who want to finish high school, work toward a p~ fessional license in a field such as hair styling, or jt;t study something that interests them. · Two afternoons a week inmate boilsing groups hold rap sessions to air problems -drugs, Homosexuality, noise. They debate the merits of a controversial, newly established housing unit which uses the psychiatrist's tool of group therapy for new arrivals <!nd problem women. Some talk openly about the prison's homosexuality. Mostly they complain about the lack of men. Helen, 30, who has served 17 months for possession of narcolics with intent to sell, joked: "Honey, I have been in here so long even the trees are starting to look good." One homosexual inmate said the longer women stay in prison. the more likely they are to adopt an · attitude of "l __might as well try it." Prison superintendent Virginia Carlson · agrees . with ·a homosexual's estimate that maybe one-lhird of the inmates are "going together" and tw~thirds have had some. homosexual experience. UNSOLVED PROBLEM Miss Carlson; a dyPJamlc administrator respected by many inmates and staffers, said , "Our society hasn't solved the problem of homosexuality. \Vhy should it be hung on the prisons?" On the problem of inmate fighting. ~'liSS Carlson said the main cause is . overcrowding. The state Is renting some~ trailers lo set l!P a new housing unit to ease the squeeze. she said. "\Ve are dealing with people who assault each other. And now we've got this population pressure. We have population climbing the walls -double bunking in some cases. People get upset because women fight in her!. We're not de;iling with a group ot Sunday school gjrls who tiandle their emotiOn.s. '' She said her main goal is to get v.·omen ready to go back on the streets and keep them from returning to CIW. Two years after parole, about 31 to 38 P,ercent of inmates are 'back -95 percent of them on parole violations. That is a slightly higher return rate than the men's -which has hovered bet\\'een 27 and 35 percent in recent years. Paulette, 'IT, his been In CIW slx months on a forgery conviction. She sat in her room one night talking to a repor~ about her life bebir<t ban;. META!, BARS A World Series game \Vas being battled out on a television screen in lhe background. ln her sman room wis a bed, toilet, closet, chest of drawerl'. mirror and a window criss-crossed with metal bar•. "In the streets. you can jump in a car and take a ride," she explained. "You can go to Taco Bell. On the streets, you can't escape whatever your problem is, but you can get away from It . "In here I am starting to feel like. I am getting old. I've got tom9tr0w 10 look !orwaNI to that was jult • today." i • l I J -1 DAI LY PILOT . . Doorma·t ShouJd Get Up and Walk Out on Her DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 40, niy \vile Is U. We Cight constantly. Th~ t\\·o things we cannot agree on at'e sex and money. As ror sex, J an1 not getting any, and as ror money , 1 don"L.ha\•e any left after taking her oul to dinner four nights a wetk and paying her bills. -\Viii you dare take a stand for a much· Sept 30 so you go ah ead and rent maligned and popularly desplsed seg· the place to another family. On, Sept. because I believe you have 11 vaJkf euruplaint. But If I received w copy of this column In the mall from l\tV landlord I'd consider U an Insult. A•.t~ ment of sodety? I refer to the landlords. 26 when you call to find out what I am not going to waste any lime time lhe new tenants can move in, ' •• , .. -commenting on the people who move you are told, "Oh, our new pl•ce isn 't . out in the middJe of the night. Naturally ready yet. We won't be moving for CONFIDENTIAL TO ASHAMED OF ~IYSELF: You needn't be. It was an honest mistake. \Ye are a 11 Ig- norant-only on different subjects. they owe back-rent and have a lease. another four to six weeks." 1'he caliber of such tenants leaves Meanwhile the new tenln\s. have given • l'he...money problenLCOllld J>e easlll'_ :-olvOO if her 22·year-old Son would pay something for room and board. The smoke pot 1111U1 the smell oI the stuU is a trip by l!Jcll. r toJd my wile several tim$5 that l don't Jlke this set-up. She says I an Wive-any lime becal.We bet soo comes first and he always will. (ll'his house is hers.) l Jove my wife ibut lire Is one big hassle. What should I do, Ann? -DOORMAT IN L.A. bW., 11~g bu lreei.odlnl ,.. aod 1•ttla1 1etni-110aed ''°"' ... pet portlet. Your sltn1ture ral1e1 ·-\ question ill my mind . Wiiy ,..uld uyliody allow blmltl! It be lltOd as a dot"""I? !j Jff really dlda'I like tbS eet..up yoit woalde't Jmt He tllere, yeu'd 1et up and rnove out. nothing to the imaginaUoo. · noUce and made arrangem~ with their 'Jbe condition jn wblch they leave movers. a house or apartment ls not to be Yci'u keep saying, "Most people are A no-oonseme approach to bow to deal wJth llle's mosl difficult and most rewarding ar.raa1emerU.. Ann Landen'• booklet, "ftlarrlage -What to Elpect," wUI prepare )'OU for better or for wors~. Send your request io AM Loden m \\'. Bank Dr. Chica go, JU. 80654, enclosing 50 cents In coin and a long, stamped. self-addressed envelope. .. ---b1,1m't take-bome...pay-ls 30 perc:ent_lllQf' 1ban mine. but hi,s mother says be doesn't have to give us anything because he Is "her" child. believed. Everything that can be remov-decent." 1 y,•ish 1 cou1d believe tt. but e"d (with a screwdriver or an ax) goe;s -after 15 yeBJ'S of dirty tricks, I am with them. Since they usually live like· a Doubting Thomas. pigs they leave the Hsty" filthy dirty, U you print this letter I'll bet complete with rotten food in the cuir thousands of landlords will have it copied ln the ml'antime. she "·ails on him haod and foot as if he were eight rears old. He brings his goofy girlfriend over here almost every night and they DEAR L.A.: I can't see that you •re getting anything out of tbe marriage except the privilege of paying your wire's DEAR ANN LANDERS: You speak for the many and tbe few. The Upper Crust, the Middle Crust and lhe Crumbs. boards an<f'refrigerator. and sent to their tenants. Ple~se do The star tenants. however, are those it, Ann.-BITTER HERB who assure you they will be out by DEAR HERB: I'm printing your letter Cancer Volunteers Briefed ~ . ' I UPI Tel....,. I f Air Force flight nurse , Lorrai ne Shoen is tested Women Put Into Orbit? ' on centrifuge by NASA technici•n Ski Skrettingmd in space study. s pa,c e WASHI NGTON. I ,\Pl -NASA employes say the tint-Dr~' iGeorge J..oy,•, NASA's I Associated Press \\.ritcr oriented n1agaz1ne. misa;:ons. Tests . of 'Women s responses ing of the tests was unrelated deputy administrator, said in lo "·e1ghtlessness and re-entry to the article in "~1s." and !'I sl ress should not be . taken that, despite officia l hedging, an intervie'v before the testing . as a back-door comm1tn1cnt the odds are good that a annollllcemenl, "We're talking by the U.S. ~pace. prograni highly qualified American ·about an issue that doesn't l.o put \vo men 111 orbit. agency \voma.n scientist will be in exist anymore." sources say. space by the end of the He laid down only t\\."O "That's an awful assumption decade. criteria to be met by women that isit't supported by the If it occw·s, it will be 17 interested in space travel, , evidenct," one official in the years after· the Soviet Union criteria that would apply to · National Aeronautics a n d pl aced a woman balloonist on all candidates for the space Space Adn1inistralion said. a space crew, 12 years after shuttle : "reasooable heaJth" I The tcsls, which ended at N'ASA dropped its principal and "a reason for going into Ames Research Center in barrier to women as space." Califoruia, ,,·ere announced astronauts and 10 years after NASA said the five-week ! shortly after an article cri tical !\'AS . .\ official s began saying testing program \ras for j of !\'AS1\'s all-n1alc as1ronaut inforn1ally that !hey \vantcd "clinital research 011 female l physiology to develop selection 1 From Page 13 I Mint Director I of you to set your sitt'i high, because \Ve need c\·cn rnqrc Republican \\Omen in I posilions of leadcrsh:p. n1orc t\·01ncn run ning for officf'. criteria for y.·omen passengers in space shuttle missions." NASA spokesman Donald L. Zylstra. said the tests were ''lo see how wom<.11 \vould react to space flight" lie added that "passengers" \rns a word in the carefully screened ne\fs release that did uol reflect the fa rt that all persons aboard the craft "1Juld be crew members, that "oo one's going along for the ride." He denied that the tests mean NASA. has decided By ALUS<lN DEERR Of IM Dally ~UH Sl•ff Conquest of cancer was the Gptlmistic theme of a one-day seminar for vol un teers presented at UC! by the American Cancer Soc i c I y , Orange County Unit. Dr. Robert Combs. associate dean of the California College of r.ledicine, UCI, and member of the local ACS board, cited some statistics that indicated the outlook is better for many cancer vic- tiJns. In 1900, he noted. cancer ranked eighth among causes of death behind tuberculosis, heart disease. and several in- fectious diseases such as pnewnonia. Deceptively, lo- day, cancc.r ranks second only to heart disease. because many of these have been cured. . On the minus side, lung cancer ·among men has climb- ed dramaUcally ,since the 1930s and e.vefttually the rate_ among women could catch up. he said, because more "·omen a're smoking now. But on the plus side, the use of the Pap smear since the 40s has brought a drastic . . June Wedding drop in deaths from uterine cancer. The outk>ok for breast cancer victims is better since breast self-examination and frequent chec kups ha ve been initiated. RA TE DECLINES Stomach cancer incidence has been gre51tly reduced. Dr. Helen Gottschalk, assis- tant professor of dermatology at UCJ, noted that the death rate among skin cancer vic- tims is relatively small - 3.000 to 4.000 per 100,000 Vt'ho ge1 the disease. Leukemia treatment h::is succeeded dramatically, noted Dr. Steven A. Armentrout. assistant professor of medicine al UCI. In the I!MOs. he said, the mean survival trme for a child "-'ilh acute leukemia would'bc two mont tis By the 50s it was 14-16 month.s; the 60s, 30-36 months; and since then 40 months, for 40 or 50 i,rcent, some ·5 aud many 10 >~an. Dr. Combs noted that cer- tain forms of cancer are more prevalent in one part of the \\'Ofld than an other .The Japanese, he said, have a high incidence or stomach and liver Severson Troth Told :r.tr. and Mrs. Win st on Severson o[ Corona del Mar have announced the engage- ment of their daughter, Laura Elizabeth Severson to Steven McClure Tyrrell of Porterville. ·The couple plan a June 15 "l!dding in St Michael and All Angels Cliurch, Corona de! Alar. Miss Severson is a graduate of Corona de! Mar llisH School and is a senior ft lhe University of Sou ~her n Calif<rnia whl!te her fiance graduated. She affiliated with ·Kappa Alpha Theta. Her flance; son Qf the Donald Tyrrells of Porterville, is a member of Beta 'Theta Pi , and an All- American varsity swimmer. Winners LAURA SEVERSON Named lAtcy Leenerts, an eighth l.1. Roy,·e, Jr., county grade Costa l\1esa student, is librarian, during a kick-off grand prize winner in the ceremony for Children's Book Orange County Pub I i c \Veek at 4 p.m. :P.1onday, Nov. Library's recent bookmark 12 , in the library head- design contest. quarters . l\Uss Leenerts' design, first Bookmarks usillg the three selected ~Y the t.1esa Verde winners' designs will be branch library, was chosen . 'reproduced and available at from entries by children in all branches during the week. kindergarten thl'Ough ninth grades throughout the C(Xlllt)'. Debbinie Kasson , a ninth'liO•--------Oi grad« from Laguna Niguel, was selected for the southern reg ional award. Kev in \Voolley. a Brea fourth grader, was oorthem regional winner. Awards will be presented to the three winners by Harry THE EYE ANDI SEMI-PERMANENT EYELASHES ' ··r vc ah1•ays lltud. '\\'hat's \1·rong v.·Jth :i fe11-honest housc\1·ire!l in t;0\"1•rnmcnl?' In addition lo v:o rkirig for can· didates. n1any of .\·ou 011ght 10 think about bein£ randid;.tc<; )"ourselv<'s.·• that the Republican party mu~t reach out-"to women . B I a c ks. Spanish-speaking Americans, labor. ct h n i c groups. senior c i I i z ens, yout h-to give everyone a chnnce to \VOrk "'i lhin the Political syste1n . ";\nd voe must ,,·ork within the system because we're going to ha ve as bad a govern- ment as we're willing to stand for and as good a government as y,·e're \Villing lo \\"Ork for ." definitely lo put wo1nen ir. r =~-------­ • space. The Ames tests. he said, "wi ll prove or di sprove" their physical qualifications for space Clight , an aim not expressed by a project spokesrnan at Ames. RUFFELL'S , UPHOLSTERY 1 · W• Y•• w .. t t TH lint • 1922 "-"' l tff . Celt• w ... -14 .. 02St She notl'd That 1hr nunibcr Of "'Omen in gl)\ l'rnn1ln1 j,l\J3 (I.hose ll'ho cam S30 O!I() per year or 1norcl h<l~ incrra'i<'d to approx;malcly 11{). °,--~~:.:=:;--~-~iii:0-.-iiii;;~~~~~~~~~~~i;iii~~~~~~~~~~~ll IMAG INE SWIMM ING, Mrs. Grooks 1hc.1 a1'!Crledll • , SLlilPING, SHOWER· \ •A ~ ; ING 'OR EVI N CRYING --~--~ 111 e J 'ij ! WITH BEAUTI F UL l f 1 •. ..:..i !1-:1 111 S: j I I I LASH ES. THES li ARE -...... 0 ,..;:: ,. TH E SAME LASHES ~·J .. t • .: !"'u~ v·i IJ THATYOUWOULD • -· -""]' S PAY$1SORMOR E FOR .. _. < ~ ;: '} X ELSEWHE RE. SALE .-:1111: _ l ~ '11 j ~.ll e ! NOwS5 . u, cmon·s ' ..= m ~ l r: ~ ~. ti ~ I OM~. 1.11TH DAILY lfM ).\!,.~~;~u\~~~ ... ~ OZ !, i ! ~ I lf 0. ' ::::!::~:: Wdtclift' 'Plan, 171h and Jrvlne, .-S ..J ~ !t J 6'2·JIH t\\·porl &ac.tt,Calirornia9l660 z .. I a -I f AP'POINTMINT ONLY ... ' ' cancer, and a low rate or breast cancer. In the Hima1ayas, a certain group of people get cancer of the abdominal wall, due in part to carrying charcoal heaters next to their bodies to keep wann. CLUES FOUND An example of the disease being caused by a....job was illustrated. skills. Dr. Desai added. "1'he purpose of thlii conference is to spread the ,~·ord that \•1e can help the cancer victi111 and how. Volunteer-help Ji; essential for this. "Cancer treatment is a team e!!ort. We need the physician, the specialist, the voltmt~r lo offer SlJl)port as family or friend and the restarcher to work out the cure. \\'e also need the clergy and psychiatrist and famil y friends to lend support." Desai :.isserted that such a conference sliould be an an- nual or semi-annual event to encourage volwiteer support and kee p workers up to date on current treatments and research effort s toward the cur.quest o[ cancer. At the turn of the century a group who painted luminous;!;::===================~ ~~~~r.•l watches died of VELVET . FOG It was discovered thnt by lickinglllebrushto get~ H A IRS T YL IN G Point, they · absorbed the radioacli\'e material In the JS N 0 lJ' ! paint which caused-bone cancer. 8466 INDIA NAPO LIS AVE. "This Is why researchers HUNTINGT ON BEACH. 536-8829 are trying to correlate not:l~iiiiiiiiiii:i~iiii~iiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•iiiiiiii;ii only where someone lives (forll environmental influences) but what he does for-a living, to detennine causes tor disease." Belty Richards. an ACS volunteer -and Dr. Rajendra G. Desai, president of the Orange Coooly ACS unil, emphaSized the role or the volunteei. SUPPORT NEEDED "We are accountable," said r.trs. Richards, "lo t h e researchers, to the medical people, to the families or the cancer victim and to the vic- tim during treatment and after he has been cured. "We need volun\eers and leaders." She noted that there are volunteer jobs of all kinds at ACS from transporting pa- tients to programs, to office work, to educational pro- grams, to crusade "'i>rkcrs, to researth })elpers and use for volunteers with special -. ._,-- HAS THE GOODS Tu1. t~ Sun. 10 -s JUUm - llllAl"l'U Jllllllli'l'IVSll DHIQ111 tty Sl/HnMll Mllll•111(cl On• .of • klnd j•w•lry -handsome with shells, be1ds, seed1, & woods, plus other materi1/1 from n1ture. I. of A. E1tclusively ours - ~4 BIDTIQlJE Me'" ""•• J467 VIA LIDO, NIWPOllt1' IU.CH 67J-451 0 .. . • A TAILOR.ED TWOSOME. Hero'• the puftct •n•wtr for r.tl'• "Whet to wear" dU1mJn1. A youn1, ~phlstk:ated trO•~f jack eta, 1 ltlrt and pan ti that yw put topthe.r. The hand tome paly•ter and rayon ~Utrn ftatum 1 Cud jlcktt mated tot sporty pletted lkift and • ptplum jacket with •tridtht lined pa nu. Qf course you can mat them anyway ")lou want. Slz• S.13. 811K!/muld. CardJpaJ1ck1t, $40. Skirt, $l7. ShortJ•ckcl, $3S. Pant, 116.By ~ , • ,.,...,. '11 I~ NEWPORT BEACH Fuhkl; Jsland LA HABRA Jluhlon Squ1.tt Newport._,,. open b .. monday • trtday. IA Jfatlraopen late mon4t,y, thunday ~ rriday. • I f l . -~ - I [ I Your Horoscope Leo Presents • New Cor]cepts SATURDAY NOVEMBER 10 By S,YDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Money deciJion is featured. Full moon accents personal pos3Csslons, special -payments and collections. Purchnsc Qf luxury item is 1ndicated. Rome ls made more com· rortable, pleasant. F a m I I y member make s concession. TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20\: Be selective, speciEic. Take lead . Let vle\vs be knoYi'n. Don't accept second best - you have right to value in return for efforts. Be original, creative. Plsce1, VJ r go persons could play significant roles. Avoid self-deception. GEl\UNI (May 21-June 201: Face doubts, fears. Insist on knowing rather than evasion. Study Taaru1 message. You may be painting yourself in J emotional corner. Br e a k ~ through -~ accept -respon.tjbility. Relationship in- tensifies. Investment potential is promising. CANCER (June 21-July 22\: Full moon positk>n coincides with emphasis on what you want and will do to get it. First, get rid of obligation not really your own. Be rece~ live to one ~ confides in you. Don't cttW Urst stone. Ariel could figure prominent- ly. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22 ): H i g h 1 i g b I independence; originality. C.oo~rate Ji"ith Aquarlui. By presenting new cmcept, you cQuld m3ke a~ Vance . One in authority is win- ing to give you a chance. Speak up wi1bout appearing arrogant. You wlll understand. vmGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22\: Highlight willingness to in- vestigate and learn. Come aJive. Strive to realize poten- tial. Take long-range view. Refuse to be limited . Ask , probe -give full play to intellectual curiosity. Trust hunch. Aciuarlaa may be-in.. volved. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Obtain vaUd hint from Virgo message. Spread emotional v.ings. There ls no need to be restricted. You have right to ask and experiment. &aglt- larius, Gemini persons could f4,rure prominently. T a k e stock. Check budget. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. Zl): Accent ls on marriage , partnership, cooperative ef- fort. Go slow. Lel others ahow thei r hands .. · Don't reveal all withouJ. knowing what you get in return. Bring forth streak of practicality. It could save yoo . Act acconllngly. SAGITrARIUS ((Nov. 22- Dcc. 21 ): New ways of performing basic tasks are ac- cented. lnnovatioas should be featured. Gemini is Jn picture. One wtio perf°""' service l!a> more to offer .than is apparent on surface. Know it and insist on full value. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Good lunar aspect coin- cides now with change, varie- ty, relatlonllhlp that will in· ten5ify. Creative processes are stimulated. You fmd key to greater self-expression . ·vour voice and style become mean- ingful. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-fej>. 18): Property .matters dominate. Build. P .r e p a r e . Gather pertinent information. Check rules, regu1atioris: Don't run afoul ()f bureaucratic.. ted tape. You can make oppositioo \\'Ork for · )'.ou. DPo't hurl yourself agaimt briCk wall. . PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Emphasize ideu, conc:epts. Highlight development. Leave no loose ends. You will be rewarded for efforts. Know it and cany on with con- fidence . Older relative. offers sound ::idvice. Be receptive. Grab benefit of experience. C1ub Calendars I Reflect Activity HB Library Active women in Huntington Beach will be spotlighted at the Wednesday, Nov. 14, meeting of the Friends of lhe Huntlngloo Beach Library. Esther Funk, recently nam- ed outstanding citizen by the <XX board of trustees, will pment a slide-tape pr:ogra~. at the 10 a.m. meeting m the administrative annex. CARIH Pacesetter Chapter o £ CARIH (Children's Asthma Research Institute anct Hospital) will offer a Lillie Bit of O:iristmas Wednesday, Nov. 14, from a to 11 p.m. in the Sheraton Beach Inn, Huntington Beach. A collection or · i t e m s •uitable for gilt giving will be dlsplayed. Mini Gym An exercise program for children 14 montm to 3 years -of age will be added to the Mommy and Me exercise pro- grams this month. All .are held in University United ~fethodist Church, Irvine. The new series will offer cla!Se! for infants 6 weeks to 13 months beginning Tues- day, Nov. 13, or Thursday, Nov . 15, at 9 a.m.: 14 to 19 months, Tuesday, Nov. 13, 11:15 a.m.; 2 to 3 years1 Thursday, Nov. 15, 11: 15 a.m. Mommy 's Ni g h t Out speakers will be Dr. Edward O"ane, ear-nooe~hroat prob- lems, Nov. 13; , carol 8and1e. skin care, Nov. 20: N'ed Lamoureaux, drinklng water, Nov. 17 ; Carolyn Chapan, Montessori Schools. Dec. 4; Mrs. Louis Butler, church JftSCbools, Dec. 11 ; and Pat Laubach, Brately-metbod of childbirth, Dec. ·18. • Officers Wives Newport Beach F a s h I o n Guild will model cUrrent styles at the Wednesday, Nov. 14. luncheon of the Officers' Wives League at 11:30 a.m. in the Royal IM, Anaheim. Christian Women Coloratura · soprano Barbara Gibbs "'ill entertain members of the Newport Beach Chris- tian Women's Club Wed- nesday, Nov . 14, at 11:30 a.m. in the Airporter Inn. A museum doll collection will be ei:hibited by ~1adaline Selfridge . ORT , Newport . Beach Chapter, \\1omen's American· ORT will meet Wednesday. Nov. 14, at noon for a brown bag lunch and handicraft demonstration in the Oakwood Garden Apar.lmcnts, Newport Beach. Irvine Juniors Irvine Junior Woman·s Club will again . aid the Orange County Probation Dept. in Operation Santa Claus. New • toys are being rollected t!J be displayed for selection by foster parents in December. Mrs. John Yurkovich and M. James Ellis are chairmen. The group \viii attend taping of Let's Make a Deal \Ved- nesday, Nov. 14. Trojan League The ,;i:cience of futurology in lhe world of business will ~ the topic of a panel of speakers at the annual benefit luncheon oi the Trojan League of Los Angeles. Dr. Ted R. Brannen, dean of ~he school of business at use. wlll moderate a pa.net in Hancock Auditorium on the USC campus. A 10 a.m. brunch Y.1ill ·'fOllO\V in USC Town and Gown. Spastic League Shoppen will find bargains, old and new, at ·the. wea- nesday, Nov. 14, boutique of the Newport Harbor SpasUc League. Sale hours are 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Balboa home of 1'1rs. Robert Bameson. Proceeds will go toward the building fund of the Orange County Home · and Rehabilitation Center for vie- . tirns of cerebral palsy and Sorority similar dlsabllllles. • • A O>ri•tmas bouUque In the Mission Viejo home of Mts. Ronald Ellloll 11 scheduled for Wodnesday, Nov. 14, by the Orange County A I um n a e O>apter, Alpha Omicron Pl. · Proceeds wlll benefit tl1e IOrOril7 scholarship fllnd and the Nallonal Arihlrtl• Foun- dallon. SC Ort Snoopy Comes Home wlll be screened Wednesday, Nov. 14 at Edilards Cinema Viejo b7 the South eoas1 O>apter o Women 's American ORT. The showings, at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m., ire ICheduled for p a r e nt·teacher conference ~ay. . - .. 'I ' ·' • Friday, Novembff 9, 1973 DAILY PILOT 15 . • ome r~nning for extra savings under the squiggly roof! ' NOW! TREASURY1 S STOREWIDE SPECIAL! 600 PAIR ACRYLIC PLAID PANTS e FLARE BOTIOM e MANY PLAIDS 299 e BRIGHT COLORS •e CUFFED OR PLAIN PAIR CAM ER AS , 16 ONLY KODAK X-30 INST AMAT.IC NOW .ORIG.32.'1--=~x---' JO ONLY KEYSTONE .EVER FLASH J? ORIG.59.97 ·---··-=-.:·--·NOW UHBRANPED FILM-USA MADE 126-l'IEXPUc -·-126-NEXP . HOUSEWARES 19 ONLY \YINE MAKING KITS ORIG. 5.97-6.47 -·---··-----········--·-···•NOW I) ONLY WOOD SERVING TRAYS ORIG. 99 -·"···-·-·-·· .. ··-··•)·•·····•••••·NOW 30 ONLY HOSTESS SETS ORIG. l.'7 ... -...... ~--·-·--N•••N·--·-··-·······-·N0\11' 26.88 4'4.88 88' 2.88 . 3/1 00 1.88 61 ONLY NOVELTY PLASTIC WASTEBAS- KETS .50 9.88 ORIG.99--··--··-···-----NOW 26 ONLY DIGITAL ALARM CLOCKS ORIG.14 .• 7 ·-· NOW e SPECIAL BUY! HOOVl:R AND EUREKA UPRIGHT VACUUMS 1 ' e HOOVER ORIG. 54.95 e EUREKA ORIG . 64.95 e YOUR CHOICE-4991 12 ONLY COLEMAN 1-MANTEL LANTER,NS - ORIG. 12.47 ....... ·------.. --NOW 12-i ONLY REC/WHITE/BLUE FOOTBALLS ORIG:l.'7-··-----····----··--·-··-NOW lS ONLY RAWLINGS FOOTBALLS ORIG.7.97-••••••·----·------NOW 20 ONLY ALUM. HORSESHOE SETS ORIG.7.97 •••• -·--·-·-··-"•·__.-NOW 1-4 ONLY MENS TENNIS SHIRTS ORIG.5.97 ..................................................... NOW 16 ONLY REM .-MOHAWK 10-C 22 CAL. ORIG.U.97 ...................................... ~ ........... NOW 12 ONLY REO/WHT /BLU BASKETBALLS ORIG.5.,7 ..................................................... NOW ANTIQUE SATIN READY MADE 7.88 1.44 2.88 3.88 2.88 35.88 3.88 DRAPES 46x84 " ORIG. 4.49 NOW 1ss 92x84 Orig. 9.97 NOW 3as COLORS: WHITE, GOLD, NATURAL LINGERIE CLEAN-UP! 695 PIECES BRAS-SLIPS GIRDLES e CHOOSE FROM s 1 BIG SELECTION Orig. 1.99-3.99 NOW • WOMENS -GIRLS 42 ONLY WOMENS HANDBAGS ORIG l.99·4.99 ··-·--·· .... ···••••••····-····•••••··-NOW 110 ONLY WOMENS SLEEPWEAR ORIG. l .99-6.66 ···-.. ·······-·---·--·NOW . . 80 ONLY WOMENS ROBES·LOUNGEWEAR OR IG.l .99-11 .!9---· .. -·--....... NOW 380 ONLY WOMENS Bll()N_l SRIEFS ORIG .. 99----.NOW 110 ONLY ASST. WOMENS.SCARVES ORIG .. 50---·------NOW 1.00 .1.00 2.00 .so' .10 110 ONLY GIRLS DRESSES SIZE 3-U $10 SPECIA{BUY--.. ·--·--·----NOW 4 for 200 ONLY GIRLS PAN11ES ORIG .99 -...-· .. ·-····--·-·-· .. -..-·-· Nr:tN 150 ONLY GIRLS SLIPS 95 ONLY GIRLS HALTER TOPS ORIG. 2.SO-···---··--· .. ·····-···--·-·· NOW MORE THAN 5000 PIECES COSTUME JEWELRY e EARRINGS .50 .50 1.00 e PENDANTS ~ e BRACELETS ORIG. 1.99-3.00 NOW50C 22 ONLY MENS WRIST WATCHES ORIG. ll.9S.J9.9S ····-·····-· .. ···························NOW 10.88 SPORTSWEAR 150 ONLY L.S. BLOUSES SOLI D-PR INTS OR tG.4.S0.10.00.----"·-··--·· .. •••• NOW 300.800 100 ONLY POL VESTER SHORTS-TOPS ORIG.2.00-2.99----·-···-·-·····NOW ,25-50 ( 200 ONLY ASST. HALTER TOPS ORIG.3.99·4.99-.. ----··--·· .. NOW 60 ONLY LT. WEIGH"( JACKETS ORIG.3.91'·10.00--··-.. ·--··"·---.. -·.NOW 120 ONLY WOMENS CORDUROY BLAZER ORIG.16.00 ................................. , ....•............ NOW 480 WOMENS SHOES-SANDALS-SLIPPERS ORIG.1.99-J.OO ............................................. NOW 790 ONLY WOMENS TENNIS SHOES ORtG.2.99 .... 99 ...................................... _ ...... NOW 1.00 2.00 10.00 1.00 1.00 MANUFACTURER CLOSEOUT! BELTED TIRES 27 only Ray.on Belted F78x1 5 9 only.Premium Belt•D78x13 2lonly Premium.Belt F78x1 5 86 only Premium Belt J7Bx 14 56 only Premium Poly 078x 13 (J nbelled ,,,., • All prices plus fed. ••· ta1 4for•so 4for$60 4for$60 4for$70 4for•so 100 ONL V WOMEN'S DRESSES • AND PANT SUITS e JUNIORS e MISSES ORIGINAL NOW $8-$13 00 . HARDWARE-AUTOMOTIVE • 100 ONLY CHROME LICENSE FRAMES ORIG. 1.39 -................................ -J. .. -................ _ •.. NOW 5 ONLY ELECTRIC SANDERS Cit JG. lf ,99 ................. ,_.,._, •••.. -.. • .. ····-···-· ·····--"°"' 88c 13.88 ~ DISCQNTlNU.ED FAMOUS BRAND . ' . . SOCKET SETS • e 21-PIECE e o,;,·• DRIVE e SPECIAL BUY 14ss MENS-BOYS 270 PAIR BOYS POLY PANTS ORIGS.97{Sizes8-11J------··-···-.. -·.-NOW 180 ONLY BOYS SHIRTS ORIG2.91-·---·····-----NOW JOO ONLY BOYS WOOL C.P.O. JACKETS SPECIAL BUY •.. REG. ~.ft ........... -.......................... NOW 3.99 1.00 3.98 e MENS POLYESTER KNIT PANTS-JEANS CHOOSE FROM 2000 PAIR ALL ORIG/NALLY 8.97 TO 13.00 NOW SHARPLY REDUCED. NOW . 499 PAIR 321 ONLY MENS WOOL C.P.0. JACKETS UNLINEO SPECIAL BUV,_ .. :_w--·--···--NOW 26 ONLY MENS SPORT COATS-BLAZERS ORI G. 34.811.-.................. --...... ,_ ... _._ NOW 50 MENS POLYESTER KNIT SUITS SPECIAL BUY!-···--···-.. -·······--.. NOW 1000 MIEN'S NYLON SOCKS REG ••. 11 .•••.• -................................ _ ....... _.,, ... , ... __ ,Na.N HOME DECO R 22 ONLY 64-PC. STAINLESS FLATWARE OR/G, 19.a&(Gilt bOxed l-·--.. ·-·-.. ---· NOW ~O ONLY OIL PAINTINGS ORIG.29.91 ....................................... -.. , ....... NO'N 226 ONLY DECORATED COFFEE MUGS ORIG .. 81·.91· 1.17 ............................. -···--·····NOW 6.98 19.88 42;99 50c 9.99 10.00 .50 OVER 1300 MEN'S POL VESTER KNIT DRESS SHIRTS I SHORT SLEEVE ORIG. 3.99 NOW LONG SLEEVE ORIG. 4.99 NOW 2so . SANTA ANA .STORE ONLY! 3900 SOUTH BRISTOL-JUST ·NORTH OF .SOUTH COAST PLAZA STOllE HOURS: DAILY 10:00 to 9:00 SUNDAYS 10:00 to 6:00 • " . .. ,. • ·' , , " • / --. . -~-~----.......... ""'----.--~--4- • I ' . . • ~ .. . _..,_ --. J~f,__O_M_L_Y~P_t_LO_T~,~~~~~~~~Fr~ldq:::.:.,•~N~~•~m~~~'-•·~'~•c.;o7l . ' . •f . ·>-I . • ~ ' Laver Tops · 'Being · Champ 1~"ightfuare' Syd. ney Fop• ·· .. · · · · · · ,., • ' \ ••• J ;t ·Foreman .,, r 'l , . '"" NEW YORK. CAP) .., A youthful.dream Press by tclephone from the Houston a llr;t·round knockout over ·Joe Saciler, later ftled suit to have the "pact ol J)UShlng his way to ftnancial security · airport be(ore boarding a vlane to h1s Roman iO Tokyo Aug. Jl. • ~. A ~m-ber, 1m, teltleineot maJce 1 lot of money bul I ~ept busy and always had ....,gh lo Uve on.'' . W• has turned into a nightmare of lawsu.ils, home base J:n Ho)'ward, Calif. He was to reqeive ffM,OOO for the.· ••'ve'tbe. Phl,lalle .• lliphla _gri>up. 215, ""°"· t · · mon&.ary problems and difficulty in ob-Foreman, who gained natiOnat nt· -~ • 1 -...... 6"s m .. ' tainlng ••hts lor bea~1'ght c·ham· t I b ' ' defense but paymetit WU block .... by ol. ol1 tD<?tl'--• _...._.. ml '""-.. TbJ "6 ·~ ··~ ent on y waving a tiny ALnerican Oag ....,., ,..,,, ,,.,_ r- pioo Georfe Fomun. · In the ring alter wiMing t1-J964 Olym-a lawsuit Involving Martjr • Erllchman chag!illon. later sought to have th\s ...,. . Fo"""'n'I purse for tho fruW' ~t ..... '371,000 but he .aid "*' ---only • amall portion ol that -· "My confr~ with Sadler c:allod for him lo . get 13\0 pec"'81 off . !ho tllp. The Phlladelphl& peojJle rot » pereent · ol wllllt· I made f...n lbo~pi. apd I.I ..,.,..,I of -I made oulalde. · .., ''..l'm nol •larvt!>I but I don~ have pie championship In Melko City, was and David Miller, general i>fl'tnels In trael 11Ulll1ie4 but the PhuadelplM ll'OOP · IQY .-y. -I'm about broke," an linderdog·when he.Coughr Joe Frazier, George _Foreman ..A UllJ UP of lodged.-•-Clllllliml and · Ibo /lllPIJlo SYDNEY; Alllltalla ~ Ken Roaewall c...aa ail MIT ruldent 'Rod.i..ver. . to Ille oemlllnals 'fllllradaY ' he AUltrallu Indoor tennlJ c:haJn. ps. ForemlD aoid· Tbunday. "I can't get for the world title Jan 22. • Philadelphia. " la now ~ the ist Dls1:ld'. Qxu1 lllY nl ·the money. I've won .. I'm · trying With 30,l!llO rans screamlng,byslerically Er~chinan ,and the Phlladelphla 8NUP in San Franc!JcO. • . lo keep up three hornet~ I'm the cham· In Kingston, Jamaica'• National stadium, slgooil a 10-year coofrict lasi YOU: under In addltkin, Mrs . Lullene · GtJ\lam o1 Plot> but I csn't get any Jl&hls. the muscular Foreman smashed Frazier which the group would pay ISOll,000 for ffP.llolon ti IRllng Foreman, clalmlnc he ·•'( """1d come up with -•111,000. Bui lnim lhal I bad lo pay my. tralDiJIC all elimlnalod Sherwood Stewart, f.2 and La.., ••hipped Raul Ramiw. 11It'1 not anytbln,g like J thought It to the canvas six Umes and B\opped 50 percent of Foreman's future Ancillary s1jled. a ~ with ber. . would be." him in two rounds. · • e~ings. • · .' ·• ... " , '"Before l W¥ champion, ·r fought ·-· my travel and olher·dilqj, It -i lave me !NICll. And I've .oilll 11'>1' lo poy my lalS.'' co, 6-0, '1:S. . Funlm.ao spoke to The Associated ' , He has madt one defense Of his crown" Forenian ~d his manager~ Dlc'k. four times a tnohth," he sa1d:•11 didn't La•er has also announced he will be a member or Australia's Davis Cup ,,, -~ ......... a:~ ... i.\.Jll ..... a. ... ,.. .......... team. . ., Neale Froaer, the coach and nonpl•Y· Inc captain, announced tbaf lbe squad to play Czecbol1ovakla._ ln the semifinal will tie t.ver,, S5, 1Rolewau. as, John N._i,o; 28, and 'Mo! "--31. The Rnllrin'al ·of loot '9tngld and ooe doubles will he played at Melhoume's Kooyoog grass court Nov. 16-18. e,. LA, Efl9e• .Fl.er• , ~ -1\Vbitey • Wldlng colooi1ec1·· a· pos5 for Bob Berry Into the winning 1oal and propelled the Los Angeles Klnga lo a 3-2 victory over tl•lf'blladelpbia _Flyen Tbllrsday night in a National Hockey Ltque 1ame. .. 'lriumpl> moved 'the Kini• into -jlaile' In 'the NHL'• West Divisloo· \Vith U points, still six behind the Flyers.. 1lllidln;. coming in from the right wing, ..... -lh<il Into • -lllde of4lie' nel•aft<r Berry's mo .. had· ilrawn PIJllodelplil1 plBe Bernie 1'mtlt to Ille .. °"' lido of the clce· · 151': \ • . -. 9b· lvat-·V,..et l'roc:KHOLM -ujoni Borg, Sweden's tdliiie'~• star, sooreil ,the ~ . -1. i~. the 175,000 sti>ckbolm with a semalioolal 6-2, U, 7-5 ' 'lbon!djy night . over loj>teeded 1-:;ts~~ti, of YugOll"I~ ue · ~; "Pille, ~ , '; def~,te!I Ja!me Ft.D~I ot. Ollie, tbe otjier Swedish f1..,;1e, 2l·Ytlll' Leif Jilhlnsom WU knocked olil ~t ·by Tom Okker of · 1'1etbe(llnds; U, W, H . · will face •i%tb-seeded Artlmr AtQe . in the quarters. The Black AArba -Won by delllill <Ner West Gfnnon Kpl Meller. '!lliluH"Orlntes · e(ICed New 1.eiland'• ~ Panm in strafiht sell, 6-1, • ._., 3_1,:S:F lii'olhor .~td round mat· e '-•I'll £,hied IANA'POLIS -A ~P.,<esinaa for Indiamf·"ac:ers said today that coach' ~nl hu been fined 11.000 gJven • twi><!ay .U.penslon, hei!n· todoy, !Or bis lhlft technlcal fouls lrish ·Set :·To Play Tide fu Bowl Tilt ' J. • ,. . . ' . NEW ORLEANS CAP) -Second-rank· ed Ala~ma .will meet No. 5 Notre Dame in the Sugar Bowl while aeventb- ranbd Loufllana Stile witt take on No. 6 PeM State in the Orange Bowl, The Asiociated Press has learned. However, ·the plans wouJd be scuttled ti, Noire Dame !urns· down a ~allenge by coach Paul "Befr" Bryant to play bill crvn--Tlde in lbe Sugar Bowl. Notre Dame coach Ara Parse;ihian aaid Thursday: "Right now, our primary jo~ is to get ready for our game wtfu Pittsburgh ' Sa\untay." We're honored by tbe fact ·Alabama wants to play us and by the fact it consi(\ers us as solid competition." . Notre Dame f.nd Alabama have' never-,.,_ played each' otlier;' and it was reported unofficially that the Noti:e Dame players, who have never been in the Sugar Bowl, want lo play Alaliama. · Alabama's last appearance in the New Orleans bowl was in 1967 when it beat Nebraska .;u.7. Soon afti!r word of the virtually certain Sugar Bowl match, LSU voted 'Thursday to play "ao opponent which has at tb:iJ time a higher rating in the wire service poll." ~ only eligible opponen,t ranted higher than the n gers "at this time'" is Pem Stale. LSU coach Charles hfcClendon said he was "glad to gel Ibis decision by my squad members." ·Jn Miami,. Bl.II Wen!. chairman of ·Orange Bowl selection committee. said: Gilbert's Big Lead Not Safe PINEHURST. N.C. (AP) -Gibby Gilbert had bul one fond wilh aller his stunnini, record-eettlng, nine-unclef.. par u had gJveii htm th• fllll i'otmd liad in the . richest pll touniamenl Ibo world has ever seen. . "I just wish," Gibby muied Thuraday alter l•kit\8 a hure. ft~sln>ke lead In '111e chase for a $100,000 firll prize, "I just wl!b ii wu a bne-"J""d 'lollnla' ment." l!Ut II Isn't. This 1naucura1 World Qpen, olferlng a reconl one-haH mUUon dollan in total prizes to a 240-m~ fle;ld , 10f1 for. eight l'CJUIW, JU holes, and doem't end until Nov. 17. ..... "Nobody knows in something lib tJU.t;,'' Gilbert continued. "We've never pllyed an eight·f'QUDd tournament b e f ~ r e . Maybe after 72 holes a 11'1' could pt - oal 10 or 12 strot.s In f-and ju8 -coasL" ~ _.... Th• !2 -it included ellht blrdlot, llh eagle and only 24 ·pull! -brob by three strokes the record Ben llopn sel on the ·7,007·yanl. par-71 No. 2 - at lhe Plnehunt Coonley Club. II malcbed the best round oo the four this ye1r. 1<1 by. J. C, Snead and later tied by Jack Nickl.,,.. It was "far and away the belt ot my career," said Gilbert. And his leading margin was the biggest the American pro golf tour hu seeo this ytar. · .,It WU just one tJl thole days," lhrug- 1ed Ille 3%-year-old Gilbert, who played so badly early this year be almost pve up Ille tour in diqull · -g· a-bill rack at roferee Rush durihg an American Ba.skelblll Allociatlon game Wednesday. "Ad;uaDy, 'Oie're' in a Position of having everything to· galn and nothing to lose. P@nn State llbould ·'Wind up 11--0 with victories ovu North Carolina State. Ohio Unlverstly and Pittsburgh. Alabama could tumble against either LSU or Auburn." ~ · '~ · .' f , UPI T.._... •0 lt Wu a freak · l'OUOO, one you dream about. I just don't mate that m.lny putts. Never. That'• the belt I've tter had, I'll 'take 'em when I ean pl 'em." ·~fl~.: NEW BOSTON, Mich. -A Huroo llilh School se~ baaned fro111 playing vanity football two ..,.ks ago because be wean: an , 'arUfldal leg bas 1liOD a tut-minute reprieve to finish OOt his playing career tonlgh~ , . U.S.~ Dtslrld .Couft Jpdge · Lall>rence Gubow ru!M 'l'bUr.day that lion Suem- nick, 17, a tackle, bad overcome his ~ to booome. 1 • "line ewnple tiMlll~ handicapped people." . -8Jbll!W•.,.id. llfi1r bearing tesUmooy from Huron's team physician and an w . &:!>or <>tlbopedtc surgeon, that ~·a.plulic foot_and ankle present •M•ncer ~·bimaelf or other players. -., '.f~•-~ Ja .Do•e -·ORLEANS -Tulane's· football td1li .wm play ill lf75 llChedule In IJIS. Laulslaile • Superdome and wUI f~ the gilnt campus stadium It!! ~-~ave called home for a h~U 1l>e Tulane board of -~ adtflorized a committee of the i "IO' p forward with negotlatiiln!" 6fficialf ·o! the $162 miIHOn mam-' enclO!!d spcirts Palace now Ubder Ion in downtown Ntw OHeins.· · · liperoome, 'which will be able modate about 75,000 'for a toot• g e. Is scheduled to be completed ~ .IJI: end 'Of lt7t ., ·'Ne ,a. ... Sellout . . ... . . . ~ .A.os ANGELES -Th• Los Allgeles Jtilns 6id !5,311 unsold tickets Thursday, their National Football LeqUe UJlda¥ aaaliist New OrleaM will showti ~ on television. , out 72 hours prior to the ktctoff iW'!uired lo lift the I~ TV blackout. 4f f!fil~r'. •el~asefl PHOENIX -, Race driver Bobby Uoser ,...,..i lo his Albuquerque home Thun· to COl\llDue · reooyery from brokon auff~ In an auto race. Oler was Injured Salurday ~ bis ear collided with a ~ nu m the 41Jt lap ol the Aritalia f50 .i FuTnlck E llooal Speedwar,· •·as lilted •· rood COlldlllon· Samadtan. Hoepilal here follow· { the accident. Bru• Pleles Dtreles GENE, Ore .. :_ PhD Brua,' who ~ed fresbnWI football at the Unlvtnl· Bryani said the team seniors voted unanitbously Thursday to ·go to th e Sugar Bowl, and they de!ired to play Notre Qam~. NEW ORLEANS' BOB NEWLAND DOES A HAND STAND AGAINST DETROIT ••• "Since we don't play this week, '''e f~I~ it would be best to go ahead and face the matter of postseason play at _ this time rather than to· delay another week," Bryant said. Alabama and LSU had been scheduled to play, Saturday, but the game was postponed until Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 22, so it could be televised nationaTiy. Othet LSU games ahead are with MU!sLssippi State and Tulane. AJabama's other remaining games are with ~liami of Florida and Auhurn. Notre Dame's remaini ng games are with ' PllL!burgh. Air Force and Miami of Florida. A.SHER INp REASES MONEY · WINNINGS AKRON,, Ohio {AP) -Costa Mesa's Barry A.sher and Dick Ritger are breathing down the · neck of the Professional Bowlen Association mooey leader, Don ?1-fcQme. of MlDlster, Ind., and lbett are three toomeys to go. The PBA 'a mmey ranking announced Thurlday show McOme still on top with 111.100 cMsJiite the fact he failed ro cub In· on the past weekend's lourna· -' ln-Deq-qit. Asher Placed 18th there to boost Jtis winnings to 156,936 -a margin com· fortabl• ...Ugh for MCO!ne sl the mo- .-i but •'tilth uncomforling potentia l lo shrink. . . Ritger, from Hartfonl, Wis., would have to hit big Mmfings to .~hove his current 143,343 upward eoough 10 overoome Mc.Ome.. It'S a ReeQrd Payriff fo:t;" A;~ NEW yaftJ ;.:,.)f -'~n ;~ Tiie 16"i.player pu~ WU ~t,9ea,~·1.17 ~' i~ ~uly, ~ .;J, StrobmayJ, ·• Oakland A'• 'fOl1 the World Series In with receipts for World Series and league relief pllcher" ho made only 1972, th ey pocj<eled 1bout $31,000 apiece. w seven ap-for dolna. tbe -tbll)C lblJ y..,-, championship sertes re a c b I n ~ pearances and pllcbed 10 innings a!ler t4~Y eadl came awq ..ilii better than '5,117,281.15. The commlaslonef..-ofllce' COf1\lng 'to U1e Melo~ replace lie1;iili(a1t' 12l,ooll. • · • and bolh league orrtees 11114"' In lhc J!t1! Gosger. a _,:etetan .outlloltl<r who Filll Arena8 ~ . -. . . ~~J.dd · Help Energy ·Crisis ~ . . . ,, . By Ille Alooclaled J>... GoJtig IO ~ e~entS could help' con- serve energy and may be In the natioaal ill,leiest. . That's · the Contention Qf a nuiJlber of ~ o!Jic\als surveyed by The ~alod Press. ~So ev~ IJ!o1ieh )1;mdent .Nllcni, the na(ipn's Np.,I !P9lU fllJl dldni mention i( Iii his appeal 'l<(Ameticans to ooooerve ene.rrr. SOl<k>lit .~$ could bO!p. · ''. .. our only heating pnij,Iem ;, IOhen \\·e don't have full houses," 18YJ Arthur M..Wlrtz, owner'of the Chtcigo stadhnn . Allen Miller, jlllt ltsrling lli tblnl year on the toor and 1UU looklnl for his flnt victory, wu a dlltsnt aeeoad with a 67, [our uader par 111 the' .... yard No. 4 couile. ' ., · ' Both layouts are being uaed for Ille first four l'CJUIW of Ibis unique evenL At 11"' end o! Sunday's play, the baUiy field that has representattns from more than 20 countries will be cut to the low 70 scorers. The aecond week'• pliy all will he on the famed. No. 2 C10U11e generally considered •ll10llfl lblJ coun'.' try'a best.. Miller Barber had a II; Gay Bmnr, Ron Cerrudo, TOm Kite and loatl- Mike MeQillougb followed It • ID t11o coo~ cloudy weather that b111g .. ., the Carolina landbill counlry •.. .Most of the 1ame's creat stsra Md their problems. llWlen champ Tommy Aaron matched par with a n, but AnlOld · Palmer had to bring II bid: In 13 lo lie l~year-old Sam Saead and Soulh African Gary Player al 72. . "When we have 20,(l(K) customen . m-SI t'1e Stadium It raises the· i<!n~." u· m·p.mg' ', A_ \Vlrtz' arena is-the home of the Naticmal ---~--~ Hockey League's Chicago Black: HawD , and· Chicago Bulls of the National s So • Basketball Association. . uper m· ... " "So I'm going I~ ~k . hard to pl '-C ~t 'h<>u$es .so we can smt off the heal and l:ooperate wi\b Mr. Nlrm'• Oash Tomg· ht request to oomerVe. lueJ!" · ,_. spok..m.. 'for Detroll's Olympia, • hOme · of Ille NHL Red Wlnp, agieed' BEATl'LE (AP) -Tbe Loa· Anatles :i"t t~e best economy policy is a IWI Laken, With Injury Pt0blen11, li'y to ·~~ don't use. •lleat "bu ring a game k!<P _from loalng till lhfee l•met · ol ~-y, except in the entrance wa•,...,n · a · ~e trtp "'.hen they tab On -v .. , ,. the . Seattle .SuJ>erSoolcs lonlaJ>t In ·Ill: the spokesman said. "We don't need dotial BukelhaD Aasoctatlotl actlOn. ii Inside. The heat of 16,000 or ao bodies . is plenty." The LUen opened the 1Wtni With --Met~lltan ' S"""• Cent.er Iii aa M record and oa top of the NII.\ "~ ·~ ..--Pad/le lllvlaloo. Bloomington, home ol. the North S*8',~ But ,___ Cl • has bee<i-.aY!l!l ·~"" 1W'· _ _ • -at eveland and Mlhraiikae , "We don't 'keep • • 1o1 of he.t ..,. 01&rv relt .... -t anyway," said the manaaer of the aporta • COIJlpl~. "When you JI!!! ~.ooo ,bodies . .C.IM!llS • • • togeth!t tbeY generale jijin17 of •1." •' ij fai:\.'ln some .r.p.., 11>elpi.i,i.m ~tool: Los Allg•les oat ot. t11o lead 1fld 'Is no1.mulllclen1 •beaunc lilll too. much tbem to .. H mart. th. -lb cen~ Elmore fln!ltli '0Ut bec:a-·· warm · ot. a brohri cbeetbooe Clev · ,.,.. "The boilers are only nm when ~ . an Ille WIJ' ffilllldni ·u.< La~~ outside trli1111 ,11114 ,..... or• iel!'I Tuesday Dllhl. • • , .'· said Jpe , · 1"1 .. ~ Cl lbe Slrilth retunied Ille ["""-'"• ., .. MerDorial toiiiuii ;1n Bj'ij!alo )rblch MUwaukee but Jerry w';l·;: ;;r!. •lht . -ty ti ~-bu,_ ...... ., 3"111 l:;:;;~ ~•Jnllatioo for )'ou. receipts u well as the parlldjlotlng' spent a couple .,. ~u;" ths Baseball COllU11lalllDer Bowie Kuhn ~~In~-~~'!' ofand ~baln"r.1 th,~ ~,Ibo -~~. ""ttl!fJ .!!f ln ,!I; •mes. releue!l tbeWorld~.abamTb..,... di..._~ ~ -~-,~~ol.'4, 39: 1 handles tKe lllbM ot.· the N)IJ'j, the ltrllDed alomacb !nJilcleo "' BN .. of'lllO:'.NJIA Ind --of cU• bOal Ille J.abn lllNt and the~ 1"1\1a1o bullttball ...-. · · , ·, · 11 w•'r 1mown r wlli ....a.i· lit fooelloD lllle. ,.la I, lei)' Jlle ~~ -.illed at ,tane ...... ~IQ &...,.. this 2.i.ii~•· ~rr::.zo ?;:~"'~and a eompl,tion' =·-v--~I per cent. • -..... : 4 - • I· day with the A'• v;_, over New • .' · /l'hli ,Ifill' a!io,'vol.d ''Ot) at1. to, York worth a roconl hf,m .17 per man Tbe 'Mets voted 34 full shares; the stvera\ play~ •who.-.~ -.c!Jilf and tbe' loilna Mets c•llini" lli,lf0.18 largett Iota! of any of the llr te&tllll ' late Jn the .tUon. "liicluded 1 lh~t apiece. that' ,,....;ye World S.rlts IJ!Olley. il'O'lP w., "'°tie pitcher J!Qb 'Ap<idaea, The big,.! i-YOf( pool In World ~ties Oakland a"'nled 11 full shares. " · who pitched in .only one game; wolklng history relullod from reconl attendan<es Am06( iiie 'New Ygrk cuts wu a the only. two ballers he I.. ~ for the nv_e-pme National and American foll share, 'voted to !lie Shea. 'Sladiuln jQumeyman pllcher Bob Mill"f, a Mets . 1-plljolfl. ai wtll u the Serles. ground crew. lbe Mets also voted half original who was.pu/-ehued !rvl11 ~JI, The combined total attendance was shares of 17,475.08 apleco to Jim Fregosi and appeared In only one game, pitdli11C 643,&ll . aqd Phil Hennigan, who both left the just one Inning. . -I I 'file bJg ~ ft ~ ~ -&bJe to £.11..~l &plnol Ibo 8-, 14 teylnC,IO(~ .... -~1 "',_ The tlolealed ......... 11 the .. ..,. lloal i,wliiCh ~ .~,'!! 16 'tbelr ~earlier -;g;;. Ml, the .&udl!Mlun w,_ W. ha>& • • IWI a '9mllb IJ'll • nllounda ...., l:!'· llu every time !he Sabrm pl&)' ,.The Sllllca,. ~ ..,. ;,.... , ~ .. ,u o-,µmes, .;.. ilave boat lo II=·= ~-I:;~ lhll "":'""-sl.re. I 'irlili JVO i:-ld flDd .llOIM, w~. otJ, playlnc 11Mtt nett !aka a wtot lo get It lo 'oOnwi of lhe "''""" tlitll from tmlght at horn• a-•!.""the ·'-:.!!ft need II." lluiJI •~• ~"""" ----,~------,, • ' I ' an •)rt .,., to me ba TU ... '" '" ... ... "' ... ,,. "' ... ; ... "' "' m ,,. '" '"' "' "' 'l" . '-'----- • ·1mp1·0~ B . ... , . , . ·\ .. arons, Lions-Battle , Fountain V•Dey High'• -end • ~Huntington . 'l'il'o ol the Orange Coast area's ·moot ptoll!lc .ball carriers, Loren Mlcldin or Huntlngton 1!eath and Tony Accoman'!lq •(. \Yeatminlter lli&h ;q...., orr lonicht Jn • 11me or Sunaet League al ... rans. .¥comando n...ts just 167 yards to "act the 1,000.yerd mark lhls .._, and wilh two games remalnlng, appeers certsln to annex are• l'lllhlnc honors thlsyoar. · "Tony Is almply a super runner," Ays Westminster football coech Bill Boawel~ who bu ~ pl}nl)' of good runners at 'his school the past 15 years. J "He'll a threat every time he carries the ball. Hta qulclmeu ta his rualn attribute and M .,... good ball ....... In !ollowina his blockers." • Wllh 12 touchdowns, lour last week qalnst Santa Ana, Aeoomando is the major Westminster scorlna lhreal . Boswell lndlcetid · be wou~ : mt be all'ald to bave Mm Stewar! toss the ball since lhe past two weeks lhe !Jons have gone to the air successrully, · The same canmt be said of Hunlington Beach. . Mlcklin bas rushed for 676 yardl, third In tbe area, pnd has scored six timet. Rb 'coach calls bim lhe outstandlng junior ' namer In the leegue and few would argue, The IOu « quarterback G r·e I Nlµl<OW3ltl, however, bas hurt HUI>' - tfngtoo Bescb's balance. Last week the Olien completed a ~t ooe pass while having lour Intercepted. "Kellh Hemdoo will replace Greg and ht'a a good thrower, really," says Hun- tington Bosch's Roy Brummett. "Last week was a freak. He throws bard and the players have no trouble holding o·nto the baU 1D practice, so that's no qcuse. - ' w'e are much more ""'1'ltd about Westminster's Une size than Herndon'• p.1111.,. Westminster will outftiih us a\ every p()Stiloo and It coilld be I .big !actor.'' -.ii cli..agries. • '1Hect. we haven't pushed anyone .found all year/' he says. "I'd }qve to see il happen some night. Size doesn't mean anything if you don't move the ball." .......... aNdl '-'""" --11S ltobfftt TE OE Nlllton 170 ,. Olf'l'll t. T OT wall• 20I ltO Hokltn LG MG llloblttl lU llO l lH C OT E~ llO IN l,'.clelltl 1110 DE Tumtr IS.S l9I '#ltfllf lllT \.I Me.._,, 1lS 1• ~ s~ a.a Mch4tl 1as IU Mtrl'don QI 1.1 llbt 17' 171 Mldl:llll HI ce McAdal'l'll 17'0 110 McMclmf; HI Cl MldUll'I IJO 151 W..tt. ,L I 0......... IN ,. • • 'Wiit I 11 ~ i . ' i°""*' DlflMt ''° MeddocM sl!' o~ · o.•IMMf' tu tit lauw lllT OT 1(1.,,,... 22! lft PMv1 -RO DG VNIM 1:: J. lr.rneficl\ C OG Qv~ l 171 •1uer LG OT l.annlfll HS 1Jlt•Yl11• LT DE l llu ,•11S llO Smid: TE LI 0. c-io lit' 11" fli.wt>rt • QI Cl ' ROMtl 1.0 UO ~ndll Tl Cl 'l'odW 1'5 ltt T-Fl SS llllcMrn 17S I" RomelM FL Fl JlllWleoft '" Vik.es Tabbed To Turn Back · ' Saints T~night Only ooe vanity football team In lhe hWorY ol Marina !Dgb bas reoorded a wiM.lng aeuon. 'Wltll cool!-suralng, lhe Vlklnp ol flrs~yeer oooch Mike Heoipn con- tinue tbtt llrelch drive towerd~a R-n IMlght, lnlveHng lo' lhe Ano -I !or 1111 o'clock cmtett alnsl Slnta Ano !Dgb. / "We're healthy llld'We're ready," llYI Henlprt· ol lhe . &moet Le1gue pm• In whlcb· Marina ta ~vored by 'lli pointa: "The pleyers dtacovered. In lhe second ball against Western lhey could play almost perfect !ootball end Jbal'! Cl'!'. to buil4'confldence. -' . . ' • °For tJie first time au aeasorr we have everyone ready . to go. Gregg Foster, our quarterback,. stlli bas • SDreness In 1ill Ukle but II be' ~tiiluOs to pass like be did last week, be woo't ,have to won')'. about running." , Sanla Ano will have to .ll!ld • "IJ' to s1!>1> Fost~s short but deadly _.. Addlilooslly, the Salnta will hive to han- dle the .bard running ol Nelson Motsu- kawa U well H lhe oubide opeed ol lllclt Merlcold. Even lb. defense got In lhe act laot ~ as • blocked punt Ind an ln- tttceplloo ltd directly .to two ol lhe, lour touchdowns by the VlltlngS. . ·~ta. Anl, cooversely, comes into the ,._ crippled. • The Saints, s+l, hive loll eJc!il• players with .-1ed brolo!n bones and 11w lwO'wey starter Hector Gerdelllnl put out tot lhe -last ~k wllh the Sii'Xfnp ol,Coroae 'del"'"' clash tooi411\t In m:"lnt League football In what lllU!OI! to be lhe final ll'id confrootailoo betweea the two 1 after 11ven yean of rtva&y. Ktckiilf ta . at I 111 lflmtlngloo Beedl High and the Bsroos ol coach B111ce Pickford have been lnltalled u nJne. polnt ~vorttas to make ti Ove In • '9" and lhelr slxlh win In eight meeilnp wltb COn!oa. · , Fountain vp11ey· II ~2 overall tbta year and remslns In contentioo for lhe Irvin• League champloqslilp. r MDDef~nse . . . , ... • ~pa4s ·7..0 ,, "" ·i Tti.0.~~~'. '. } • ~11Jfiowllo~7y· : 'I ~ • ~ .,....... ,.._ ·. I i.ki;..,D.t .md. ·.: 1u p e J b d.-i.1 (oolball', .llni!H11f tht Plua X / w~ to ..,.11iMif~ a the.,.,.. be 'rbur.c!ey night In: a ,,.. Ancel• Leegue victorY bef.te • ~Ing crowci a! ~ta Ana Bowl. Tbe1-de!~~ •w-me lhrougboii! lhe pme. '1!p Warriors were never •bll lo move bttond-ttieli-.,;,j, 11-yaid line In ~ until mi orrsldei PioaJ\1 Oii a f 4~11111 punilng 11tua!kJn ,.,.. tl!fm l!le., An -addltioaal is;ylr( . dioa· WU · tacked onto the -to llWf• the !)ell to the ~ 41 - of • -. ... llli Jllll\I.\ .. ~ - A -pllJ Jlelled ~·,_m to the 30 liul .., Ibo -plq, !Dev• Nejen ....... ed ii ·flinllie fGr the ......... at tbe ·Meter Doi 15. '\ , Bpi, Macauley booted'• pant 45'yuds on Ille, next 1eries and theft lnter<>epted • -. ... the easui!ll . Rilll x play to lije lhe lloaarchs tbe lifelthey needed et lhe Wanton 45. l It· took II ~ to nt09t downfldd lncb>dlng a f<!urth down ~ for two yards by SteYe Mll'tlndlle. Tb e MCllllrchs ,,_ e/;uel .to iJie. occasion lhil •time and MartiDdale • In from ...... 'yuds out 1111 tile sUJ ot the loUrth qll!tiir. - "°"'"!'Cii.iwin ·kl "tbe ...... --illO ICor1lll ~Olinilllied for lhe n!gbl Motor Del knocked et lhe twice In the flnt ball, moving Id Ibo Plus X five wilh first and 1ne1 In tlie opeolng quartB. Four plays later, lhe ball wu ln~_lbort _oLlhe me! ZOO'\ end the Warriors took over. ID the second quartB, enother Mater Del drive WU stymied 11 lhe IJ. Plus bad one other bright spot1durlng lhe evening. Fleet.footed balfback1Jlocer Porker toot a Meter Del punt ~I his own 40 and returned It 57 y8l1!a to lhe -tlJree. )'enally merkers had been tbrowu . al the-beclnntal ol lhe run, however, and a cllpplng penalty nullifJed the dub. or ~::.f gua.rthe1'.?~-== 1alner. He WU lld with a leg Injury -Jn prectlce. ID addition to Maceuley . and Najen, olher Mooll'chs 1tandouss on deftnle included G«qe Ha D D I , , John ~. Greg Vlvteno, 'Tom i"'8 eriil Dirt Culver llllOlll otberl. . Viviano 11111 Pat Mc;Kiion filled In well for the injured Gll'llOa, llhutlllna pi.;. In e'!d alternailnl •t lhe tallbaci ll(IOI. Viviano bed an eerly nm ol 41 yards durinc lhe first three! end •wn•· ed 5.5 In It curies. MN ITATl1nc1 PX M' ~1~=== 1' ' l"lrst dow"' P9Mllltl · T~alflfst..... ] Yffdl ru..:r,: ft ~:~r.:,ne . . ' ,' Nft Y•nb .. IMll....,..~ 122 _ ,..,.. ""'""·~~ o......... ,,. . ..,..,, P'-111-/yardl P11Milllllf lt'U •IU l'Ul'ltltlsJtwnlltr9 '"' 2/1 Ill '"1111 x ... .., ':"T • ·-· Matw D1t I I t 7 -7 ~= re:· .... , ~"'""" . ...... ...... · 'I Ii ,. • '1it ; ! ......... ' ' • • " n . • •• •, I:! ... " " "?.; ll'': I H ., ,j H PWINe .... !" ·~ ':· ~ 11 _.., " .. .. ... ~ ... • • • ""' - Sea Kings It'• a m1tobup consllilng of off .... (Fountain V.Uey ) and delense (Corone del Mar) Ind tile nine-point spread ta based nn the asaumptlon Fountain --VaDey'' defense ta better lhan Corona de! ~:1 offense. · n;.plte. • diAppolnilng 2-5 overall llllll'k,, <:oech Dave Holland's Sea Kings m .-ldered the· best defensive club 1n 1rv1ne clrdes anc1 lhe CdM delenclen figu"' to give Fowttaln Valley's offensive arsenal a stur ,test. Fountain Valley motors In wilh a mu1u .. 1tack, paced by quarterback Dan Troup and bta aerials to Rick Hatfield. ID addition to lhat passing lhreat lhe Bazon1 pack a tolid nmnlng punch In Ben Dodson, Bill Ogden, Steve Thompson and t...:rve Mitch Chambers. Ogden bas scored six touchdowns, Dodson fOlJJ' and Chambers th ree willle Troop's pa.saing bas accounted for 1,034 yards and five touchdowns. Hatfleld bas been on the receiving Dall"t l'lllt M9ff ,,... MUll.11.Y Gll.AliAM (23), JIM GREEN PACE UNIVERSITY TON IGHT. Graham Sparks lJnl Troj~ns Seek: tO Spoil Hawks' Unbeat,en Mark When a league's No. 1 passer faces lhe No. I rusher, the football game figures to be a biglHcorlng affair •. !lowever, when ~ league's No. l club · against tbe "!I meets • team lhat bas allowed. Jmt • yll'ds • game paalng, II flgUrea to be • low«orlng lfWr. El Dorlldo ·Higb, the OnDie League's R~ B.aaken . . WiJ:t Baja Ti~es -.ADA, llleilc:o :_ ~ewport Beach'• BID lloab ·end Costa Mess's A. K. Bli•l<m were .class wlnneni Thurs- day la lhe Bajl 1,aoo oa ...... d rece. Rdsb, di1vlng. 1 Ford Bronco, ceptured lhe-iom-w11ee1 drive division wilh a tuDe ol II bean, 47 minutes end 51 .eCml& -llJllken woo lhe l25cc end over -ctcl<s -· ... be -with Mitdi ~es o1 Palll!cfile In 1 fflis. qvatne «JO. Their lbne Wu;. II llburs; · a mhi1tet and 51 llOOOds. • lb the ~ four-wbeel vehlcle dlvjsiOn, John SI... ol HIDltlngton Belch flnislled third driving • Volbwepn aedaa ... oiber -Included: ,..,~~~~l:=s~; 8rlJooi (IM "-J; --VW dulle bvaY,,111:41.41. . Prodi&lm i-w11ee1 -Clrs -Dick IM (Hemet) 'llid VW, 11::11.11. Mlnl'!Ji<kupe -Jim Porl<ftlll (Le Jolla) ud Cert Adema (Lemon Grove), Fdl'd Ooatler, M:U.G. Product!oo I-wheel drive o t 111 I y .emdes -Walker Ev1111 (Riverside) end Shelby MGOi-(Rlvenlde) Ford plchp, IB:IUO. I top team In the standings, passing yardage and delense against the run, tests University's TroJans: 2-2 in the league, boasting the No. I rusher end a stingy -defeme, tonight al a at Mission Viejo High. · · "El Dorado bas a defeme DO other clu~ In lhe league uses," says Unlvermty oooch Jerry Redman, "but we'll attack tt 1111YWay. They're tough against lhe run. Still, we've won two games on the slrenglh of the run ..a doo't plan ·to make any changes now." The pivotal figure In lhe MlBhlnl game for Uni ta tailback Murry Graham, who bas rushed for 40'1 yardl In !nur league games, Including 191 against Dana Hills. Uni bad ooe or lhe top passers In lhe-lea,U. last season Jn Mike O'Looghlln but because or the shift or emphasis to tile running game, his statistics are not slgnllicant · 'lliey really pale when compared to EI· Dorado's Bob Farro who In seven games bas 1911 yll'ds while compleilag 5l of 117 end tossing JO IOtlcbdowns. _..Eight o1 those ICOres have gone to """ c,alg Feola, whom El Dorado coach Glen ilaltlnp calls, "the finest receiver iD-the league." Redman says be t..ls University Is ripe to upoet if the defense can somebow handle lhe hlgb-icoring Bawks. "We're in a poslUon of having everythlni to gain and nolhlnl to 1060 " II.YI Redman. "El Dorado, or ~I •pp!llf• unRoppeble now, but you never know." H1alnp ..,. his dub won't be caught lloldng .-lo nm:t week or lhe CIF i>ll1olb· _r._1d_•1_._Nm~mbtr~-t_1_w_.3~~~~~~-DA!l~-v-P_Jl_D_T _l~f _l ,, end '!!_five TD pone• and llennta Tressler la an automatic oonve:rslon and a lh"'at from 30 yards out .. • field goal klcket. Too, Fountain Valley .bu .depth at quarterback w!lh sophomore Chris Dove avaJlab1e. • Corona del Mat counters with aome: tough nmnlng backs ol Its own, but the passing game la suspect with sophomore Gary GuJsnea missing from action due to a broken shoulder. Jon Terry Is slated to take .Gui.meas' place and he'll be trying to direct a ~und...-lented attack wllh Brent Ogd•n, Mite Fenaro 11111 Steve Behrens lhe 1 •J Los Al Big Favorite ~ •1! ;ol B .d .. <t_O! • llJ; .. I · S .. :t rr Costa Mesa j~ • ot.:4 To Upset GriffitJ( . W> C..ta Mesa !Dgb's Mustangs seek lhelr third otraight Irvine League football vic- tory toolgbt at Newport Harbor High against lhe Los Alamllol Griffms. Kickoff Is slated !or 8 o'clock and lhe Griffins ere !I-point favorites to end Mesa 's streak at tWo. Coach Frank llo,..til's Griffins march Into Newport after suffering lhelr first loss of the season last week to Santa Ana Valley following six slralgbt coo- questa. Pacini lhe Los Alamitos attack Is quarterback Mike Olivas and wide receiver Brian Ticehurst, the two who Eagles_ Seek First Victory Of '73 Season 11iere: are no league championships at stake tonight but the Estancia Eagles and Magnolia Sentinels wm meet in a football game at Newport Harbor~ !Dgh end pride will play an important role on both sides. Kickoff for the Irvine League encounter Is al I; Bolh teems will be seeltlng an escape from lhe c<uar and · this may be lhelr final opportunity to gain such an achlev.,. menl Estancia 1oea against lhe No. I rated team In Orange county nm week-Santa Ana VaDey. Magnolia will bring down ·lhe curtain against c.orona de:l Mar a weet hence. IDcooslstency bas been a big problem for lhe Sentinels and coach Jim Ho,.eil is hopeful his sqund can play an entire game this week. Jim Hemsley, his counterpart at' Eslancla, is fearful of a wide spilt on lhe offensiv e line.of Magnolla. "'Ibey move farther apart than aiiy team we have played this year and when they get down by lhe goal line, II Is even more pronounced. U you don't have quick·footed d e: f e: n s l v e players, lhey can sqneeze by you ·for good yardagfl:. II The Sentinels ere sparked by lhe nm- nlng of tallba'ck Mootr, Bullerdlck. Ht is one of the few Sentinels who hasn't been Injured .-1 ooe time or lllOl!ier this season... Larry Randel, lhe M a 1no11 a ' . quarterback, Is a doubtful starter. lie suHer"1 a sprslned lnlde last week and was replaced by Tom Tello. Estancia Is not wilhoul Injury, ellher. But Hemsley Is Usilng eeveral of his quesUonable players as pr o b a b1 e starters. Thls Includes quarterback S t e v e Morton's knee, Mike Hewell'• groin and Da~ Gibbs lnjlD')'. All three are on the ljuestlooable list but all three ere listed to starl ' Steve Adams sparks lhe Estancta run- ning game but also swik:bes to !lanker on occasion u a pass receiver. ·~ have combined to ....at havoc In ~ opponent's secondary. ;. at. Too, lhe Grills have a capable. nmnilll game, centered around' tailback· ·~ Or&. .• , \i~· Ortiz is • bard-running JiiOoP.CJll!l'W wbo can find bis holes in the enerw;4, defensive wall and be makes tM Dl!IAO, of his teammates' blocking. :Q:A Costa Mesa coach John SWeUJh hfustangs, crippled earlier by injuries to Paul Desmet· end Brian McCotlnlct9 have come on stroag behind tbt ~ of Dennis Delany .and. the Paulni :-.i. Steve Sharp. . · ,• , Too, lhe Mustangs have lhe versa~ ~n~f:ii~r~~~~ and,~ Fl11a11 ·bas lnteii:epted ~·!t puses In league play end Del8ny . . . Dirk Whitaker l!ave been '\h~ pla ~ counted on for most ot Mesa 'S Yardage rece:nily. . , ~ Bolh te-like to .. ·punish ~ position with . straight ahead drlv lhrough lhe middle and LO. .. 4fem1'4!r might haye an edge Jn lhe pau!\ijl- department. ~ A victc1r)' for Colla. Mesa could lhe turning point In acoomplisbing. winning season (5'4) for the first '. in the school's history. ~ · And a loss for Los Alamitos wo virtually end lhe Grilllns' title and . playoff dreams. ...,..;........ \ . '" .. ~ i t" ~~ flS W-"" Jt T ~~"! 1ff ~.~ .~ 1~ .. 11 ··-. lti K.ntl J~ ~ • 1fls 5w:rr.r.. • · . .,..,. • . . · , 112 o.tanr, Tl CM19'\Y US Ttrea 1 SB J ,kloatt .. San Clemente . ' Slight· .Pick . OverTige~ •<Oe. • it ·~ ,,..,. M 1'81 ''"" ~I j~ l1io, • A flrot.cfivlsioo · spot in the OranfP: League football race Is at stake· toilill!!flt when Sen Clemente "lligll'1 Trttons iit- vade Valencia. . • id Klckell ta · at I and eoacll· Allie Sdiew. Trttcni are 3\0-!>0inl l8vdiltet t:o' ludll th& Tigers tbelr fouttb llialght - In clrcuJI play. -. I .. a The Trtf<ins ' ere msi.' fnlm"• - pasting of· Dana Hills ~lhal,offi!aslJt outburst wu triggered by the bard nllJ>; n1ng or Steve Oloon ud lhe sharp pa"i'Wl: of 1-4, 225-pound Daa Dodd. . , .,; Olann and Dodd combined 4q run fll.i 331 yards between lhem In lhe ..,;.;, of Dana H1l1s. ,' :i ·ID addliloo lhe Trttons preseot.a ~· defelll(<, led by middle guard T\11,j, Murphy, ·d~ve tacldes.MW! ·~ an4 Randy Groff . and .• d,e!1¥'aive 4 Greg Young and BIO,}l;riqiJist , 'lbe delense bas liiiilted five ,opoooeoilt-' to one, toucbdo'IJI Qr ., leal, .w1tj, ~ Mlasloo Viejo end S!>aora oolvlng tAi Trttons' Artansaa olant la<tlcs. . Valencia's ··game rivolves arouil"" quarterbaol<1Paul 1.allolde,jDd 41» 1 !lint ol, !1<>b Maaoa end Greg nr1n_,, ~'ii~ for tllt ~~ 'T.s.~· bas six ·~·-~' to his ci:tdlt fncl . c:onnedec!, op scoring,~ .~"tf~, in .,f ~~lt~ ' at Brea. . .. . Schaff 'and Valeucla -· De'fi' Pinckney ll!ve.bqlll; vJ'k(ed ~ ~ ~ Uc! lhey agree !lit team ~ mikes the fewest sliou1d win. ' ' · 'l san Clement•' ._... to ~ .... nm or lta-i>roblem.:Jn that ~ In ripping Datll Hllta end LaiODi ,_,. recently. · · . ,. dislocated lboulder, , "U you toot Foster end . Marina's top . delenslve player out, you'd have a tituaUon tlmlllt to the ODO here/' ,.ya Tom Baldwin, Santa Ana'1 coi<h. •''Marini, ol CGUl'I!, II 100 percent Improved over a yoar qo. It appem to be • teun oo lhe move up and we jUll hope wo can alcnr them. down a'blt. MV, RivaJ Match Groun·d . Attacks . '-"' ,,. [ ' I ., 'Wt beoen1 yet ployed-I IClllllldir 1 goon g.-4nd we're .iu,. It~. tab •llW'IY perfect ef!<lrt to l>nllil"fllL" -Ill i="' .• ~ i1~ ...... ~~Ir ~ -· Mlalon Vltjo )lopes lo ..... 'Ill 111'11 wlMinC seuoo ln lhe 1Cboo1'1._.yur hiltory when It ,_ II -ln • Creltvtow Lequo ,lootball ..... toelght et i et El Modlna. , -Bob lllYMr'• Mlillllll Viejo ...,. bas nolcliod tour Ylctorl.. In ..... pines lhlll -. 11111 llOedl one vlctOrJ In Ila llnel twe pmt1 to be lhe ftnt teem footblll In the school'• blstory to l1nllb •bove .500. El ~. "*IWlll!e, la flihilng for • possible llhot at the leolUI Uile. The Valll!W'ds are 11-l·t lh league play Iller wlnninl U-plllel In • row, and have looi>ltadlng Vllle Pert u tbelr l1nal ...... -fl'oln lolllgbl. 'Ille pme II I m.itchup of two grotlld- poundlng of!--Mllalaa Vltjo'1 I· loriutiiii moclel end &I Modena'1 wlsbbone-T cype. El Mod ... la a two- polnl ,favorite. Rmmlns bacb Rlcbltd Klnpland ol El Modene and Ken Robbins or Mtaslon Viejo will likely be the p Iv o ta l pertonneri In the pme. Klnpland, the !ullblct and leadln& ball carrier for El Modena bu picked up 539 yards_ this season and two touchdowns. H• av..._ 5.S yards per carry and ta tou&h to bring down at 1-1, 190. Robbins, Mission Viejo'a dlmlnuilv• tailback has rambled !or 779 yards In 139 cerries this season end bas soored eight touchdowns. Tailbacks Dirk Stewart and Bill Stokes team wilh Kingsland In the El Modena bactOeld, wblle hllled GllY Reeves bal aided Robbins w!lh his blocking and ptl\ered 317 yards rushing himself. Quarterblck Jim Christopher, a better nainer lhsn • passer, guides lhe El Modena oil .... , wblle Greg LaBoote does the bonort !or Mlsaioo Viejo. Bolh ere rated adequete pO-., though neither team ta lncllned to put lhe ball In the ,1r with lily!~. , l J ~ League Gets Nmµ~ ,·1 The new CIF "B" lea~ 1n ·w Hunilngton .Belrll High 1'\ll -In be8hmlJil 1974. will be Qued' &mplre Leli"O· TeotaUve 'lppmal the neme was given 'lbunday~ Other teams In Ille loop will Katelle, Kennedy, Oypresa, Anaheim. Oranae ..er 1'lolhi1L · w: ' .. I - I • • '• 18 O~ILV PILOT B1·ea, Dolphin s Collide An elasticity test Is In store for Dana Hills "l!lgh's foolball team when the Dolphins travel .. to nYea for ~an Orange Tuague foot ball game tonight at 8, The Dolphins wlll be looking to bounce back from a big defeat, something the y 'v e done once before this season. lvhen they tangle with Brea's \Vildcats, losers of just one league game this season. Dana Hills bounCl'd back from a 41-14 pasting by University three weeks ago to smite V,a.1encia, then was walloped by San Clemente 48-6 last week. lf Dana Hills is to recover \\'ilh another win this week, It'll have to stop a relentless {Srea ground game which has led to five victor- ies~and a tie in seven games. The Brea atla ck is led by returning all-league running back Steve Seeba, a 6-0. 100- pound fullback and tailback Carl Bostick. Carl Seale quarterbacks the Wildcats who pass sparingly and generally on short pat· terns. Seale replaced Bostick at quarterback two games ago, and the Wildcats have won twice. F~idl)', Nowmbtr 9, lq73 1 S.A V Picked to Beat Edi·s·on By ROG ER CARLSON 01 11\t DMIW ,lltl Sl11!1 Santa Ana Valley lllgh's Falcons have been installed as ll·point favorites to make Edison High's Chargers their eighth straight victtm of the 1973 football season by members oC the Daily Pilot staff. And coaches ot four com· moq. opponents that have fac- ed these two Irvine League elevens which collide Saturday night at \Vestminster High School concur, although three Lagunans Test Tough Raiders Laguna Beach JDgh may have a tiger by the tail as lt battles Sonora in an Orange League football game tonight at 8 at Laguna Beach, Coach Hal Akins' Laguna Beach Artists, in the throes of a six-game losing streak, face a Sonora team which bad its season spoiled. by EI Dorado last week and may be itching to make amends. Sonora, the pre-league favorite, had cruised past six teams before losing 21·14 last give Edi""' ·a good shot al upselllng Orange county 's No. 1 learn. Fountain Valley coach Bruce Pickford gives the Chargers lllUe hope ol the upset. But Magnolla coach Jim l~ov"ell, Corona del l\1ar coach Dave Hollaod and. Costa Mesa chief John Sweazy say Edison has the type of personnel ca prible or scrambltng the lrvine League rrice. Santa Ana Valley leads the pack by one game 'vi.th Lo& Alamllos and Edison sharing oecood place. Founlaln Valley Is two games off the paco. Combined, the coacheS say Santa Ana Valley will prevail, 28-l9. Each picked Sanla Ana Valley to score.28 points. Here's what each has to say about Saturday's clash: • P!CKFO,RD -"I'd have to go with Santa Ana Valley. 11iey've got too much clfense for Edlson. Edison's ruMlng go.me and defense has been hurting and I'd uy the llnal score will be 28-11. "F.dlsoo can,throw the ball and score. but, It'll never stop Sanla Ana Valley. II a team puts together an excollenl defensive effort along with a ball control type offense it can beal Santa Ana Valley. You 14tve lo keep the ball 15 plays and· score .•• -.then do It again. You ca111t trade touchdowns with 5anla" Ana Valley. "!I'll take a real super defensive effort. Maybe St. I Cliecki1i g W o 1nen' s Golf Crown to Dougherty Nancy Dougherty Is the ~sident's cup champlon at !I Niguel Cotmlry C I u b following her victory over Jean LeBon thls week in the finals. · Fran Hanson defeated Ann Wright for the vice president's crown while Peg Cunningham won over Lorraine Impey for the secretary's title, Gene Carrick defeated J a c k i e \Vatson in the treasurer's night and Ellie Scbmidt lop. pied Doris Johnson In the director's nlghl. dJcap, Barbara Leonard was Lackner next at 75, Lillian the A flight winner with 30. DeShazo third at 77 and Lou Hazel \Vebster and Fran \Vtlley fourth at 78. Lewis were next \vi th 31 \; In an even boles event. Zola each. Bartholomew wa s again the In B flight it was GIMY A light )Vinner With 33~~ with Stasko the winner with 29 Phyllls Stafford next at 35. followed by Betty Brown ~1arlon Keeler won B flight (29'h) and a five-way tie at with 32 with Lila Slmdorn 331h between Del Gustkey. at 34, Lu On' at 34~ and Cleta DeLong, Carol Ross, ~1axine Strickland it 35. Belly Walthall and Eleanor In C night it was Charlene Green. Col~ the winner at 351,2 with SMdy McFarland won C Belly Blakeniore second at night with 2911 with Sall,y 36. Rout second at 30'n and Elise Faye Farwell won D flight Stipes third al 35. wilh 3511 with Est e II e Ro.binsoo next at 36. Poul will get them -but nobody is going to trade touc~wns with them." Santa Ana VaUcy defealfd Founlaln Valley, 56-27. EdiJon lost, 23-21. I SWEAZY -")t should be a very good football game. Edison matches Santa Ana Valley In speed and quickness somewhat. Edison has an ad· vantage of 'qulclencss .ln ~e interior line. It's much quicker there, but when you get into the other phases -set..'Ondary, linebackers and ends - l 'd say Sant.11. Ana Valley hns the edge. "Edi:30n's big weakness 1! lhe lack of d.,,ih al tailback. Dut if you defend too much against the pass Edison can run. "I'll lake Sanla Ana Valley, 28-24. on raw talent. "You just have to keep scor- ing to beat Sana Ana Valley, you can't shut them out. I think B<tlson is capable of doing It and Edison hns an outstanding passing attack." Santa Ana Valley beat Costa Mesa, 40-14. Edison v.·on , 38-14, llOWELL -"I've though t all along that Los Alamitos and Edison had the best chanao of beating Santa Ana \'alley because of their team quickness. The only way you can stay v.·ith Santa Ana Valley ls to be comparable In quickness nnd I think Edison ls. Evan Orrell and George Meadow are the m o s t darlgerous receivers. ·Dana Hills colllltCr! \vith an offense that has rP.sembled the girl with th e curl on her forehead it's be e n som e tinfes good .and sometimes horrid. -i week. The Raiders of coach Frank Hicks have a talented offense and a de£~nse which appeared unsolvaUt'e until last week. consolation winners included Ann Teel( the club champion, In the president's flight; Pat Francis, v ice president's'; Dorothy Hester. secretary's; Eileen Bradwell, treasurer's; and Charlene Cramer in the_ director's, Mission V~jo . .. Members of tbe Mission Vie-·,..esa Verde jo Goll Club wo.men's group_ They are down to the played a November blrthday quarterfinals in the v.·omen's townament using net scores club president's cup com· less five strokes for scoring. peUtion at ~:tesa Verde Coun- "Plus you have to play a real disciplined defense with no mistlkes. "Edison is capable but "'ilhout Blll Rutherford at tailback (the Chargers ace ha s been hampered with injurlesl they'll have a tough time or -The· Dolphins have given Up· the ball 17 times on fumbles and 'interception! in thelr last ORANG!' COAST COLLEGE'S GRANT GELKER. fwo gaiiifs. However, ~ .... · : • - have big play .potential from Now Top Line111an quarterback Bill Springman, ---~---.l-'-------­ hal£back.s ?t.fark Foster and Darryl Howe and flanker Mark Eljenholm. • Springman ha§ rushed for 193 yards scored f i v e touchdowns and passed for another this season, while Foster leads the ground attack with 536 yards and two touchdowns. Gelker Though.t He Was Through Reserve quarterback A I Benavidez is also available to the Dolphins. He has thrown four touchdown passes this season. By CRAIG SHEFF 01 I'll• D•Ur Piiat Sl•lf Orange c.oast Colle&e defen- sivt! tackle Grant Gelker today i.s rated a major college football prospect. But a little over a year' Dana Hills enters the game with a M. record on the season, 1-4 in league play. ago Gelker himself figured his 1ao football career was a thing "' DH9 Hllll OlltnMI SE-John S~IMM~ L T-Ml ke Vlgg!lntfll LG-'Ne1 Collier C-Mlk• Tanner RG-N'ick Yocct RT -Mir<.. Rldntl' TE-Seo!! Brl.ICt OB-BUI Sprlngm•I" HB-Darn<I Howl FB--M.lrl< Fo$1tr Fl..-M1rk El(tnnolm c1n. NU11...-. DE-Otvt Budt . OT-Frark Knauer DG-llltl J'11Jen OG-AndV Av1wnr OT-lloxer Totr11 OE-M11rk 811lhkt L8-lllcw. S•o"n L8-llo0 Splen CB-M11rk Ell~nhOlm CB-8111 Sorln11m11n S-SllVt MlkiOI 1110 of the past. 115 The 6-0, 230-pound All-CIF "" 210 lineman injured his back in l:J a practice session just prior 1.s tQ the 1971 North-South Shrine ~= game ln Los Angeles. But despite the pain or the ~= inju[) he played in the game 110 and then left for the Universi- ~~: ty of Colorado. \\'hich had 11s awarded him a full l:g scholarship. 160 Despite the injury, Gelker, "' 160 a Ne\\·port HarbQr High grad, Big LA Harbor Outfjt W or1·ies Shackle£ ord Los Angeles Harboi College team's leading scorer, Jim has had an up-and-down foot-Evans, bnll season to date and !his What abOOt his ov.TI Ru stlers fact worries Golden \Ve~t af!er thei1 loss to RiO l-londo Co 11 e g e coach Ray last week? Are they physically Sh ackleford. and mentally prepared for the Golden \\'est plays host to Harbor outing? Harbor Saturday night on the "I'm sure we'll be ready Orange Coast College stadium to play ball Saturday night. field in a Southern California "'e won't be doing anything Conference onting. different this \veck. "They are hard to figure," "\Ve had to abandon our Shackleford admits. · "They game plan because we fell played a tremendous pre-con-behind early and were forced ference schedule and Jost to pass more than we v.·ould !Orne tough ball games. hav~ liked. to. "Against Santa Monica they 11We had possession of the didn 't look as aggressive as ball less than in any gan1e 1hey normally do but it may I can remember. i think \Ve have been because of the nu," had it for less than so plays." the.Rustlers coach says. It \vas 54 to 89 for Rio Hondo. "Basically, they come and "But that was one of those knock you do1111. They are games a team will have every a 1·ery physiC'al team and one flOW nnd then where you don't lhat is normally a hard-hit-perform as well as you ting. aggressive group." should." Shackleford feels tailback Shackleford doesn 't plan any Dave Robinson is a super back " linellp changes for this week's and a helter ru nner than the outing. played for the Colorado freshman team that season of '71 , Then , while working out in the winter, he severely aggravated the in jury. 11e was to.Id by a Denver specialist that he needed an operation and that he would not play football again. Two local specialists agreed lvith thl Denver doctor and Gelker reluctantly decided to go through with the operation. But a friend told him of a Jo,ver back exercise he had learned from UCLA trainer Ducky Drake and Gelker put off the operation and began doing isomelric exercises dai· ly. The pain subsided and he decided to give fo otball another try-enrolling a t Orange Coast in September. The back has gi\·e n Gelker no trouble at all thi s season-and it 's evident. Op- posing coaches ha ve raved about hi1n and he's constantly 1nentio.ned as a JC All- Alnerican. OCC coach Dick Tucker says that Gelker is as good as anrone he's ever had. •·He's right with the best line.men wc'\·e had and that me ans guvs like Bill Redding. Dave Gleason and Pat S\\-eelland. If he has an edge it's because he's a couple of years older. Gclker's stre ng1 h and quick ness are l\\'O reasons why he's regarded as one of the best linemen in JC football, :savs Tucker. "And he 's got the same super attitude that Redding, Gleason and $\\•eetland had . He's a major CQl!cj?e pro.spect. there's no questi on about tha t." Gelker says if he had to do lt again, he \\'Ould have gone to Orange Coast in the fi rst place, but ndds that playing for Colorado was a val ua ble experience. · "If I was counseling a See Gelktr Pnge 19 · H u N FRI. & SAT. FRI. & SAT. SUNDAY Noon 'TII 6 p.m. 35c ' I N. G T 0 N ·L A N E s lrACN IL. NOR TN Of ADAMS t6Mll7 Midnight 'til 3 a.m. 7 a.m. 'ti l Noon WEEKEND BOWLING BLUE ClllP SQUADS SATURDAY 6::10. 9:15 and MIDNIGllT J\!OONLJCHT (Win lll11e Chip Stamps Wi1h Your Bowling Skills l BALL & BAG COMBINATION 1 • WAS "'"'- W.lh n..r ..... I NOW $1988 1 Terry Hart, a quarterback- turned-ha1£back leads t he Sonora o(fense. He ranks se- cond in rUshlng in the league with 301 yards in five games. Sophomore Mi)<e Porter (5- 8, 140) quarterbacks t be Raiders and another sophomore, !.1ark Kenlon, ls starting tailback. Fortunately for Laguna Beach, It may be the last time it will face the pair, since the two schools are being leagued apart next season. Laguna Beach's ranks have been decimated by injuries throughout the season, and the latest Artist io be sidelined. is starting senior running back Mark ~1azzarella. Akins is ex- pected .to ..replace _MauareUa 'by moving either Jotm McCall or Kelly Akins to fullback. McCall has been playing in the line and Akins has been the Artists' starting quarterback most of the season. If Akins docs start at fullback, John Willette will take over at QB.· In a two. better ball of ·foursome competition t hi s weelt, nr.i· pla"' went to Kay Horn, Nancy Dougherty, Fran· Hanson ,an~d "Edith Ray with an oulslanding IS3 score. Two teams tied for second at 141 including Charlene Cramer, Pat Francis, Lee Ginder and Doris Handschuch on one team. On the other \Vere Ann Teel. Jackie \Vatson, Jane Robertson and Elsa Wise. Another tie resulted for the next spot at 142 with Nel Townsend, Ruth Keil, Alma Ralston and Corrine Franklin on one. The other had Doeothy Hester, A1ar1Qn Cook, Nancy Thompso11 and a blind dJ'OlrW' (Charlene cramer). - At 143 "·ere three teams including Lorraine I m p e y • Bettina Hall . Peg Cun- ningham , and Sue Foley; l\1 a r gar et Broz, Alice Mccredie, J\!arga~ct Sibbert _and Gloria Weidner; also Jane ?t.iehaffey, Eileen Bradwell, J\fartha Urquhart and Shirley Perry. Costa Jtlesa In A flight jt was Cece try Club of Costa Mesa. Col,lry the winner with 73 -Pairings for the action in- .followed by Eleanor Swinehart elude Mary Ratekiil against at 74 and .Jean' Metcalf at Stella Merriam; June Suddert 82:. with Ma ry Wananiakcr, 'In B flight tt wail £1earior .Phyllis Smith' vs. Bernice · Wheeler the winner with 78 Johnston; and Marge Hayes followed by Jnn Schudel at playing Doris Buckles. 71. A tie resulted at 78 Quarterfinal match~ are betw .. n Ruth Jenkins pnd scheduled this week wilh Helen ~fannaud. semis TUesday and finals on In C flight it was Irene Friday next week. it. They need a ba.ck like _. that. Edison's Dave \Vhite to me can ju.!t kill .YO\l because or his great passing abiiity. "And if Santa Ana Valley is vulnerable It's in the seron- dary. But T'll take Santa Ana Valley, 28-17." Santa Ana Valley beat 1'-fagnolia 3~·21). Edison won, 20-14. Kennedy the winner v.•itb 77 In a ringer tournament •. followed by Jean Grubaugh ?t.tary Ann Dyer won A flight ffOLL.\Jl.1> -"Yeah, I think at 00. gross bono.rS with 75 followed F.dison has a good chance or by AJice Watll at 78. In the winning. Edison v.•ill make less Bancho SI A net compeUlion. Lorraine mislakes than Sanla Ana Members of the women's IAwrt wa the winner with Valley and It has a passer group at RanchQ San Joaquin 59 followed by Eleanor Altman in Dave \\'hlte. With a passer Golf Course played two and Doi ~1assa (60); and o( his stature It kind of acts tournaments this week. Virgtnla Vlstica and Betty as a neutralizer. Jn ·a low net event, 7.ola Hamre at gL "But l'll say Santa Ana Bartholomew, Ma r g ar e t · In B flight it was Arlene Valley, 28-21. Edlson can win DeBach, kay May and Fem Verfurth the gross v.iMer with but its defense \\ill have to Spro.ul tied for first 1n A night 75 with Kelly Adams second bend and not break. 'They with 75. at 81. Edie Gow won net can't give up the long gainers. In B flight it was Lita Sim· honors with 55 followed by 1hey have to make Santa Ana dorn the winner at Tl followed June Studdert (561, ~Jichl Valley work for each score by Peg Roberts (75), Marlon Uematsu (58), Lucille ~fanley and if they do that they'll Keeler (76), Lu Orr 77 and (59) and Kay Farley (60). have a good chance because Afarjoric Thatcher (78). In C flight 1t was l\fary I think Edison can score in In c· flight it was Trudy Fothergill the gross "'·inner a hurry against Valley. Bone the winner with 79 with with 81 with Erma Bendtt "I think Santa Ana Valley Charlene Collins and Millie second at 84. In net action, can be thrown oo." Stevens tied at at. Claire Collins was the winner Sant a Ana Valley defeated Laguna's offense will be running up against a Sonora defe~e which held six o~ ponents to a touchdown or less "before surrendering three TDs last week. In a better ball of threesome Anna Lee Shetler won D with 55. Sylvia Pranauski (59J, Corona dcl l\lar, 23--0. Ed ison Defensive end Bob Rook (S. 4, 210) leads the Raiders defensive unit compe tition for members of __ ru_:· g::..h_t_w_ith ___ 73...:.__wi_lh __ P_a_t ·_::S..:..::...W...:....•m:.:•:.:•:..'•:..G:.:•:.:1.:.1 .:__P::•g~e:..1:.:t_....:.:w:.:on::·:.:22-:..:11::.. ------ the women's club at Costa LE-01Ye l(n1PO LT-8rl!CI Erner-.. LG-John MtCall C-A\11rt. Jot!~~ RG-Chrl1 Whltt RT-Oa~e M11rlin TE-Scon wesr1111•rd Qft--John Wllttlte FL-'Aike Serr1no LH-Pllt COll•m RH-Kellr Akin• !.Iesa Golf and Country Club, the v.·inning team of Eleanor iss Green, Jean Da1pee and Diana io0 Saenz fired a 64. ~~ Jn second place were Fay iss Netten, Dee Ascher and ~~ Barbara Leonard along with l !s Elise Stipes, llazel Webster l~ and Sybil Foster at 65. 11s Ano.lher tie resulted . for LilflUM• 8e1'h Dtr.nM OE-8r11d Emery fourth with ~1nrion Voss, Nma i.o Danielson and carnelle Ken-'" 0T-01Vlt M11rUn MG-Mark Jol'ln$on OT-Onn11 Adams OE-John McCall LB-Jett Johni.on L~hrls Whitt S-Jlm Sims S--Mlllt S1!1'rano Hll-DaYt KnilPP Hll-Rot>trl W(l(ld 160 nedy on one team at 66. On l~ the other \\-·ere Gerry Watson, ics Enna Haven and Joma Van ~:~ Auke r. ,'° In another tQnrnament scor-"' 145 Ing (our pars with half ban- ,YOU'LL FIND JUST ABOUT EVERYONE AT THE ORA NGE COUNTY •-NEWPORTER ·INN• (JAMBOREE ROAD -NEWPORT BEACH) I • • • • ONE DAY ONLY• • • • • NOVEMBER II, 10 A.M. to 10 P .M. o· LA'rEST SRI EQUIPMENT · 0 LATEST SKI FASHIONS 0 CONTINUOUS SKI MOVIES 0 TWO FASHION Sl!OWS I 0 DOOR PRIZES 0 LIVE MIJSIC . . 0 RESORT-TOUR DISPLAYS I 1 ) SPORTS Since 1924 :&m~ SKIERS ~~\{ SPECIAL I it'-.., 0 tlOS SKI TUNE UP ~itt. ',s'" o"· "' .. HOT WAX · FLAT FILE I rt • ... Make Your Skis Work For You. Makes Skiing Twice as Easy. Eliminates ·Edge Grab-Skis Carve Turns and Hold on Ice. • HOT WAX Professional Release Check REG, $2.00 SPECIAL "' $1 00 On Our "Beconta" Machine RiG. $4.00 $200 SPECIAL FLAT FILE REG. ~.00 $200 SPECIAL 24 HOUR SNOW REPORT 547-2545 • I ONE WEEK ONLY Any of 9ur Four Stores Nov. Ith to Nov. 15th I . --.. ' I all Of C moved rods a lower rut-ru ' ~ou New M storm as two out of s season. Ne South• t1r sh Sp b1191 w Fli9ht1 over cl and •r s. w•t• life Re Sunday •lint hunttir gun m v. d•t1, northw peel • Callfor Ing In w pheas usual Califo lation, bility tumin trav l range , . say it G can for lhe toug colle .. for Ora pl• roac WO coll busi casl ,, What's Doing Outdoors JIM NIEMIEC • • For Ci>ast Area School,s Girls ·seek Prep Cros~ Country v~neyhaJI CIF Title v ..... -- Friday, Novtm bf:' 9, iq73 DAILY PILOT 19 NeCSummaries l For Area Girls r a1t•Ml• 111) UJ TV1tl11. ... ... , .. . 1!119111 JOYCI GllclH'hl.JtM'I' Miiier lH) WM This weekend marks the end of the deer season for of California. Heavy snow tn parll( of California bas oved trophy bucks out of the high country, gtV!ng ntm- s a better chance at bagging a late ·season deer. In wer elevatlona hunters can expect to see buc~ tn full t running with herds of doe. . c"'' ......... Yitil• c•t c•J 11 MMOllO 1, COOk IMI f :47 («w•• r.cont)1 :J, Slt•lld IEMI f :Qi ). Herrh (Ml f:Slll 4. "-' IMI 10:001 J. Rtn•t1~ CEMI IO:CIJ1 6. Gonlm (EM) 10:0:51 1. Hattln {t:M) \0:461 L *"''I CEM) 10:121 f, Wom.ck (Ml 10:\JJ 10, MOrtllNll lllMJ l0;111 1\, V...,._11- IMI IO:X11 12. S•mPtOn IEMJ 10!111 13, l'ont.,11 lMI 10:%51 14. Menino• (M) 10!:11. t\1:r'°n. 1~ve~\~lw1°' 1f:Ji 1~ r~~VfV?n1 1~1 ;..,.J,i1rei' ltu. moton 'l'11111or V• 'I' HIWMl't H1r11W 111 14') WltfOfll 1. 1"1bl•n (N) fl: I 2,lrtz IN) Novick IT> det. Hvm•n (I!) W. MM (El 4ft. F1rstl~ IT ) M. M1ed1 (E) Olf, T•vlor (Tl 1·2, t4itnson llJ d1I. F1qr1H IT) lo.2. • H&Wlln !Tl cllf, QultJ" 11!1 W. R.• IE) d.tf, ,l111ttm/tlt (Tl 1.0. Wtlllt"( CE) dot. Motrf~ IT) M. DtUIVI ct!) dlf. Htrdln !Tl •• ,, Am&rYI IE) dtl. Htl!n Il l Ml. ~H· 1·5. ~ Dtt1D11 lltnd1r•JGY i cl(lr (HI wwi .... t-7 •• Ottnt1 Cu11 1111 ltl ,_,,.. Out Of state bunters in Utah, Nevada, Colorado and ew Melico have been doing only fair, but the' latest torm that· bit this part-of the country dropped as much a two feet of snow. Hunters can expect continued good ut of state trbphy buck bunting through the end of the eason. -· Duck Hu11tl,.. fmproees New fll9hts of northern_ birds heve worked Into thtrn Cellfornle end sc.tter1unner1 ere finding btt· er shooting at most privet• end public shooting are4s. Sprl9, wld9-•nd tul ere found In most 9•m .. et• with • sharp lncr1• .. In mallards •lso evident. lights of !Ort• diving birds hove bMn crooslng the skin ver clubs, but liev1 not Httltd down to work decoys nd •r1 u1u•lly ending up on large bodies of water. Solton S.• octlon nm•lns slow due to • lick of 1terfowl but on th1 other bond the Kem N1tlonol Wlld- ile Refute reports· good shooting on Wednesday ond undey shooting dey1. Hunters et Kern have been av1r- 9lng bttter thon thrM birds per 9un while ot Wister unt9rs have worked. hafd to bruk the one bird ptr un mark, especially Sundays, Very few fMlt hove orrlwd In th1 Southfond to ate, prlmarlly due to the mild weather In Ceneda and northwestern perts of America. Duck hunters can tX• I 1 continued build up of woterfowl. In Southern ollfornlo the slCOnd h•lf of the woterfowl IHIOft oper>- lng In Dec:embtr should produce fontostlc shooting. Plleuant Outlook Good With the help of the Department of Fish and Game, heasant hun!A!rs will get lo a fair shoot this year at the suaJ stocking areas. Hun!A!rs traveling to Northern California will have to fight a lower bird (native) popu- lation, tnc~ased hunting pressure and the strong possi- bility of poor weather. Many Southland hun!A!rs are turntn~ to club shooting to achieve the same purpose as traveling hundreds ot miles. , . ·Hunters Baek F..-folio K•lth N.wmon of Newport. Bloch p~I t°"lhtr .. hunting trip to th• i.rtlle volleys ol l.W.O this post WMk ond oil mambora of the hunting group batted limits of phtaHnt end mallards. Accompanying Newman were Hower~ ond Morge Ashby, Dr. Gerry Winkler ind th• Bob Wllsons all of the horbor eru. According to Dr. Winkler, hunting WH handlcop-JM<f by strong winds •nd below frHzing temperatures, but •If membtn m•n•tod to get their shtro of birds. Dr. Winkler st1tod !hot there were thousonds of ,_ In the Y11leys, but they wtro flying wey out of shotgun r1ng1 •• they moved from feeding to resting areas. s-1111s11 SeuOll E11u l'.·-· - It appears the swordfish season Is coming to an end &Ld this one will no doubt go down in the record book, lbla past year Is one of the few tn many years where records at tho Balboa Angling Club show more broadbill weighed lo than marlto. · Whitey at Anglers Center in Newport Boach re- ported the la!A!st catch made by Mel Marsh aboard the sportfisber Atun, operating out of Newport Harbor. Marsh's fish weighed·in at more than 200 pounds and perhaps will bo tile last bll!flsb of the season. Whiter added that fishing at the Cape ts just short ol fanlllstic. Reports from resorts indicate excellent blue and black marlin ftshlng, with boats averaging bet- U!r than one 300 to 400 pound marlin per boat per day. Wahoo ftshing t.. just plain great, lo fact, ve!A!rans say it i! the best It's ever been. GELKER ••• -.luMw Venlty • --WI ..... \lt) l:nJ -Mlwl• Viti• 1. Mll\ll (M 101~1 2, N«titY CIEM) 10:Ui a. Orllnatr CEMJ IO:Mi "-Cox (Ml lO:ilt J. lllW llMJ 111001 " Trltctwro (EM) 11 :011 7. Wlht CM) 11 <031 I. Wlrd (EMI 1l;OS1 ' f, Coonl't (M) 11:151 10. ~'' (M) 11116. ·-.... 11 MMIM (M) tJll Mll-'Oll Vlllt 1 Hout'/: IEMJ 101.191 2. Klm (IEMl lO:Q ; J. Alldlrlon IMI 10:J11 4. #MM (Ml 11:00 J, Norwood tl!Ml l l:IS1 6. 0.~IOll (Ml 11 :111 7. Bernl•k !EM) 11:221 I. Cox (Ml !1!231 f. NlcllollOll (EM) 11:211 10. Ft1rnly ().\) 11:)$. V1'11ty c..ie MtM CJJI (41) Lf1 1.11mu .. 1. PrlH I (Cl 10:06 (COWM record); 2. J . l(ollr ICl lO:TI/ '· Smlrn IC) 10:171 4. l llltr IC) 11>1!01 S. EUI• tCJ 10!UI •· Wlllllr (l ) 10J'l01 7. G1H1911tr {Cl 10:411 I. Gr1Lner tC) IO:At1 f . Lunctberv Ill 11 :00: 10. lUCll'O (l) 11 :01 ; 11, Myl (L) 11:lSJ 12. Pllltlln tLJ' 11 :7\J ll. 1t1ltu• ill 10:2.4; 14. Wttltrllnjl (Ll 11 :JO. J"'lor V1rt1ty CMll MIMI llJ) (IJ) LM Alalnltn I. Slult<flln (() I013t1 2. Gotl'I' (Cl lO;•l 1 3. WrlQl'll lCI M:SA1 L H1rrl1 IC) 0 :071 5. ,Mail (C) ll:D11 ,, la'f ICJ 11:091 7. $111'rltt (Cl' 11 :15; •· C1v1n1111'1 (C) l1 :l"ll1 f. SltrU11g IL) 11 :421 10. S1nc11t1 (L) 11 :». ·--C•ll MIMI 1211 1411 l• AllmllM 1. {tit) HIWklnson !CJ, EHloll IC) 10:"51 J, s11lnblck \LI 11 :251 '· l'J&ellff (L) 11 :•1 1 J, Zllgl1r (C) 11:n1 .. 6Mnv 1~1 :n1 7. C1v1n11111, R. (C) l.2:DS1 I. ltrM>ll (Cl 12:DI; f , Mllltl {C) 12: f; 10. MUlll' (Ll 12:21. V1'11ty Mat1M (Ill 141} S'"'I AM 1. l h1m1 IMI f:27.9 (c:ourn rtcordll 2. P1l111 (M) 1D:D41 3, Oodc:t ISJ 10:131 4. M1ll1l1 (M) 10:211 S. Jhol1r IM) 10:221 6. Well• (Ml ID:31 1 7. Mor1111 ISi lO:'MJ I. Null (Ml 10:)71 t . Sttufle-r !SI 1D:Q 1 10. L11al1w (SJ 10:411 11, Eddy ISi 10:501 12; Arlow CMI 10:5'; 11 01\111 IS) 11:06; 14. Eo•n IS) ll:Of. JIHllw Y•nlt't Mlrl111 (16) (4ll S1nt1 AM 1. Ctdrl (Ml 10:]11 2. Plelt (M) 10 :)9; l. Alltn !Ml 10:4'1 '· Pllchtr !Ml lO:M1 s. Mytr1 ($1 10:561 6. vinc:1111 !Ml 11 :001 t. wnn1m1 CMI ll:OS; I . Morlhttd (M) 11 :12; t . G1rcl1 (M) 11 :16; 10. Bridge• ISi 11 :20. ·--..... AM Wl (n) fMrtnl '· Hopkins {Sl lO;AQ; i.-T1rr ($) lO:G 1 l,~0.JIUP CMI lO:ff i "-Htrldrkk tM> 11 :031 S. lll&bY IS} ll:OS1 •· k.Ud'I (Ml 11:14; 1. Hiley tSl 11:11; .. ~ 1~~•1:2$J •. to.II (M) 11:211 10 Elldlcof't {Ml 11:2'. Vlnl" H__. H1rlllr 1211 12') ..... ,,. I. Kozlef IW) I ;2'1 2. kott (NJ lD:••· ]. Klria ·(N l 10:'31 '· Hunltr CWI 10<'91 5. llenco (W) 10:~91· 6. Hllllltl" INI lO:SO; ],. Mlnltr (N lO:SIJ I. Blenkl!' 1...-1 10:521 f, Jl;J_l l 3. fl'erton. 0. (NI 11 1171 4. OM-(WI 11!111 l· t.llltlfttfl (NI .fl111.i1 ,tl, ~2':~'1 ~~1/J~ ol1"f2~1 . O'Wl n (NI 12:1 J 10. Tl~ ot (N 1::1. • ._. ... .:...-.i:r'1"' -1. Conk· IN) 12:111i • ~--{•NI 12:141 J, R;'t;;fP. 1211 I "-·?J' "' "'j/ • fi'. "1 1 ""I , il'l1r N) 2: ' Lum tn N l"'" I. _,. IHI l·r1 9. ""°'' NI lt:a; 10, J~::m;fW 2141, •• , .... (11) (41) Mlttl!Ofla 1. M1ft 11f (El 10:15,51 2. ~onnet {El 10:211 a. l(l"yon (EJ 10: ... 1 '· Mltc1lt, o. !El 10:4'1 s. lflln IEI IO:Jll '· Murtlto CM) 10;.U/ 7. Mlllllm1 tMI 1o:u 1 •· Alllu IMJ 11:._1 '· Ll!Mfl (Ml ll ilt1 10, BOlln (El 11 :201 11, MlloOl'I {M) 11 :201 12. RlmMy (!) l1 :1't1 11 P11Mr1ll•' (M) 11:•; 14. lltekl>Urn (M) 11: ... Ju11lor V1r1lty 1t:1t111e11 n•I 14JI ~ltOll1 1, Wtrd IE) 11:10.li :t. Z1111l111 {El 11 :3'1 13. Pt 111rcttl1 {Ml U:•l; GMr (&I 11 :3': '· Knoll CM) 11:.u1 .. SllYO IE) U :s.51 7. Dtntlll\ (Ml 11:»1 I. Gr•tltm (l!l 12:01 1 f. R•tl tMI 12:0l; 10. Cl1rc (Ml 12:11, V1rllty Cor.111 •I Mir 1111 IMJ ,01111l1l11 V•lll'I' 1. Huniek•r <CJ t :•J.1 {coun1 "''"''' l. Mff,.,.r ICI "'~' 3. PlfKI (ii') 10:11; 4.. DIV (CJ 10:231 5. Wl'llt1 CCI IO:Jll .. O.vl1 ICI IO::M; 7. a.rlow IC 10;371 I . Cum.o mlno1 (Fl ID :31 J f , W11t IC') 10:'1l ID. Cichowski lFl 10~.'9 11. Funk, T. (0 10:52; 1 , Bite (F) 10:5'1 ll. Strlckltnd Fl 10; 1 IL Bov1r IF! ll:09. .111n11r v1nnl Clrtnt wt Mir 1111 J7J l'eunt1l11 V111rt l. H191n IC) 1D:3', 2. Dtftgl!' (Cl 1D:ll1 1 R1mon (C) IO:Ll1 4. Rhodll ICI 10:47; t . S1rm11n10 (fl) 10:561 6. Mcle'flhlln IF") 1~; 7. Funk, G. ~~1Nolt~12{F1 1'11:~; cr=o~ ~11!1 '1~l 11 :06. '~" Ctr'Olll wt Mir (IJ) (ll) ~tiht V1111, I. Dolin (CJ 1D:«li 2. Holllnd (CJ ID:"/; 3. Mlchiout (C) 11 :231 ... O•Y c J\1:%5; s. C•roelrt IC 11 :2'1 •. KHn () 11:21; 7. Biii IF) 11:30; •. Ountll' (C l 11 :32: 9. Roo \Fl ll:)a; 10. Stndre (Fl 11 :'3. Sf -C:UI C:rtJ S•nt1 AM V1llly 1. Mct;;onn11t !El 10:00 1-CC111rw rl(ordJ, 2. Aoulfer ($) IO:OOJ l. Buen· dl1 ISJ 10:3'1 4. Hurittlria El 10:37, t. WtJ'J•k IE) 10:l71 '· -(El '!i'°' . Smtih (SI 10;42, '-Korr I I 10:"71 t. T~nblUQf\ ($) 10:511; 0. Arthul.i1 (El Hl:Jt ; 11. llkM.lnt IE) 11 :07; 12. H0111n (El 11 :12; I· ~·"" (Jl 11 :1J1 14. Lftnlck 1 1 1 :24' J11nl~ v1rlltv 1:•-nu u1 s11rt1 ""' v11111 l. Gullerr11 ( I ll:OIJ /· Jtnn 1t111 CEJ 11:171 3.11111111 IE 11 :191 4. Jtoll1 CSI 11 :19; 5. Alblrs ISi 11:211 ·! 6. GIHrtt ISl ll:)DJ 7. #M reeren !El 11 ::>0, I. P111 !E l 11 :J9; 9. mvlhl (E) 11:45; 10. Blll'nt (Sl 11 :52. • .._ CUJ ~~Alla v....., IE1i. TfN:l'= !EJ.e!I;~~ i.,~,c~i1:'a~ "· Crl•~I 1£1 11:30 J, Rlroer <s1 n:'3i. ..,_ LoMt 1il. n::w; 1. #MHO'I' h:) 11 :311 I . klr• (El }~f1fl :~Vol .. (El ll :4'; 10. Tl'lotrlh l/1nl1Y W•tfftl111tw C•I C•) HlllltlllftOft lt1ch 1. Anotl IH I •:jj·2 lcour•1 recordl .2. Prince (WJ ID: 1 2. Alverez (Wl WOMEN'S GOLF ••• Continued From Page II Joyce Crowell (60), Bette Gonya (81) and Doris Bucltles (62) were next In line. S•ata An• In a ohrl><zvM tournament for members of the women's club at santa Ana Country Club, Merilee Duggan wai the A flight victo< with 31 ll. Tied at 32 were June Drury, Edith Roblnsm and liobble Sylvester. - ID B Oigbt it was Gloria Fleming the winner with 30 foDowed ey ' A 11 c e Nisson (3111), Maxine Dungan (32) and a tie 'It S3 between Dodie WoodJ and Gladys Bemis. Pro Results J NlllOOll lelkltlNlll AUICll!ltll BOiton 94, New York 14 011i'Glt 17' Alllnfl !" ChiCICKI n i. GolOlll letl 111 A-'CH •1*-""11 a-llftlll Utlh 12.4, NIW Yortt !Of In C night lt was Idele Fason M11i-1 H9dcw u..- tbe winner at 281h followed ~,:.i"";'.'" ~,,':\1~p111, 2 by Mary Dickinson 1291, Rooelp;;;=======il I Delaney (30) and Wibna Shiv.. IUY A NIW 7J DATSUN Contlno<d From Pote II player coming right out of high school I'd encourage blm to play al a junior collega first: If 1"" 10 to a JC _you can play 10 games a year for two seaSOJ1s and acquire the mental an d physical toughnesa needed at a major college. ly (31). AND SAYE AT with coaches, they -rally ID D fllgbl Ann Ward wa• "This bas been a super year for me. The atmosphere at Orange COast Is fantastic, the players are great and the CQB.ching staff ha1 be e n "'onderCut I've never had a more enjoyable season. "Playlnji football at a major college-ls different. It's bu.slness, While y O: u oo- caslonallv develop friendships I• Slf(tM·NAllMfl• •U.llHO CU.JI • M.r.lllMl ... , SNOW' • IW,lf!CM. fl'OYll TWl'Aftl •KAflON11tCOHD LAIGISI ----· ~Yt.Jl010.IOL'M .......... tJ NOON fO IMO L'M _ .... 11~T07PM aren't Interested In you the wiMer with 27 followed COSTA MESA DATSUN personally. To them you are by SUale Stew&Q (28), Mary . lMI HAllOI ILYD. C.M, a valuable piece of meat nnd Crooaon (30) ~md Vi1'glnie 540•6410-- you've got to produce ,.. ·Low~'.'_e ~(32~)'..:.. _ _:.I ___ _.!""!"'""!"'""!"'""!"'""!"'""!"'""!"'""!"'~! you're ouL 'nlere's really a - lot of preutae involved." But Gelker Is a very mature individual for his aga and quite capoble of bandJlni the pressure. His future Is bright with UCLA, ·use oru1 ea1 currenlly aeeJdng his services. But Gelker is in no hurry 14 make a decision. "Llfe ii apeculative, yoti never know what's going to happen. For the moment I'm jusl going to enjoy what's hap- pening right now." , \ MIDll Dwbl" 1. A1rldondo, Mtlfhtwt (0) clef. VlllJIN~, WHYl r (F) ._.. 7..S. 2. SltpMns. Redmond (0) dll. Hetty, H1<111r (Fl .. l. M. 3. llltlr1, Plowdftl (01 Ot t. Hllll11'd,. MIPltr 11"1 .. ,, 6-1. ·•. Cu1tor,-f'orbll (OJ Ott, '"kllll. Wy111 tFI .. ,, .. I. J. ltOQOll, Mv1r1 IOI dlf, Kotkl, K1n1gv IFJ .. ,, 6-1. '· o•s111119lln111v. Wiison cl• r, Y11nc:ll, K1rl C Fl 1·S,. ..... Brty, C•1fll (Fl '"3. '"· 1. P11lm, Flll1lmmont (0) dlf. 1. o.mott Robin• (0) cl 1 r , Bl1ckWtldtr, Fl1lrH (l"J ......... t. Wilker, AmHI (OJ Oii. GooHn1, Lope1 ll"l 9.1, ..0, 10. OtY'IO', GU!lll'I' t0) lltollnd, klll(k (Fl '-1, ..0. Or1ng1 Cust "I (4) ll C1mlM1 Ml11d Oeultln \, Arredondo, M1tlh1w1 (01 cltl, BtneO'lcl, Brown IECI '-2. 6-.C. 2. CODOle, Aroufo (EC} cit!. CUlfl!', Fortin 101 O'lflUll. l. O'SlllUQhnt51'1'. WlllOll (OJ def, Mount, Flemtng jECl '-2, 6-I. • 4. Y1tkm1n, CllltnJ tECJ def, P'1lm, Fltu lmons (OJ 6·7, 6-l. s. Wlll1rd, Butt1rwortll (ECJ d1t. Dtmorl, lhi6ln5 {O) &:1/7.s; •· Shlmtzr1. Sumottr (EC) def, Kehtv. Alss (OJ ...,., '"'· 1. W1tke1", Amffl IOl det, JHOl\o Sc~ul!er IECI 6-1 , 6-l. f, O•vld. 04i!111y (0) dtf. O\tflet, Kirst (EC) 6-2, '°'· -9. E1rsm1n, Port1r COi dtl. McGeulley, Lift {EC) '"3. •·:t. ID. Dixon, X1ntll•kl1 (0) dtf. Banuelo~. Chilr !EC) 6·2, a.o. Net Scores Tu11!n Hllll], l1k1 ForHI 1, S1>nny Milli 4, Ptnln1ul1 0. c lllbN Bl'( 2, N"""1 BtKl'I I. Cor-dll Mir ], Mel.I Verde 1. •, Emer11d 8•'1' 3, Lido 1111 1, •• •• ' ' .. •• ... ... • ... " Huntll\lllDn H1rbour 3. L11111n1 Nlgu1\ .J. Grid Standings· Newport Herbor RKkll 4, Tltrrt Ttnnl1 0. Tu111n Hlll5 3. Old R•nch 1. Sunny HUl5 3. P111lnwi. PoOnl l, Ml11Jn v 11.10 :i. B~ ~•".'YOA 1. • Tu1lln Hllf1 .c, Old It.Inch O~ Hunlll\lllOl'I H1rbour 4, L'l!Ufll Niguel Oeubln 0. Lindi H•lllh-Shll'H H1uth IHI won 5unt1'1'-HIH1 '· P111ln1ur1 Point 1. 6'2, '-1. . Lido 1$lt 4. Em«l kl B•Y 0. Ellen Cl1rk-U.Urltt1 Glbrlll IHJ 'f!IOn Tl1rr1 Tttlnl• "-Hirt.or GrMM 6'1. '".. o. Shiny Flnn-0111 O'Conner (H) Wi111 Bllbol BIV 3, N"""'VOrl BHcll 1, ANGILUS Ll!AOUE 6-2. 9·2. MIUI V«de 2, Llkl Forttt 2. .,, L T ,., ""1;iiii'i"ii' iici~ ..... < ... iii.miiiMii•i1~iiii1iHii1iiWjMiiiiiiHii"ii"i"ii"'iii""" .. iii1ii11iii .. ii1 ii0i0 ·--· ,,...,.,ut. )ooo<U:..tlooo ,,.Dloo l ...... .... 39' -........ ~ FAST I Btshocl Arnet St. P1ul Melll' Oii 5enll!I $! . .t.nlhonY Plus x llJ-POWER FAST FLUSll c1...,_,i. ,. ..... ., r.,.' t .. , 29' -·-·~ . ...... , ... ·-··""' -···· 30 01912 ~~&ll 5~ ~~lft~ 0302'50 29 1 HI· POWER HAND SOAP FRAii! OIL FILTER CHECKER !!~w.,. LIFETIME BATTERY CARBURETOR AIR CLEANER ··-c.-•• 1oc... ~ ....... -· 199 GRAND PRIX OIL FILTER '""•'--"' 99, OU Pil•• • ... -I • l : : i l JENSEN CONSOLE i P't !TJC'"6tL· · -~1:-.."""".i...ii, l•...., ~ PO R CA.P "'-H.14•'·• •, .._.,..,c1-'1 ..... .,_.., ,,. n. Lolw!looo orv-• ... -.... -:1. 19~! • SET OF EIGHT ~~1~kLiLUGS .... •• ~ 99: .. SA. VE 30% • 50% AUTO PARTS Tb IE •·urs MOSTCOYIPLIETE 94~1T • \'OllRS•:t.t' Alo,.OCE.ttEa 111. POW•:R AN.l'I RUST ,,._ .. , __ ..... « .. ~ c .. 1 •• 1 s, ..... , .. PltlCR IHICTIYI THRU- TUUDA Y, NOYEMIEI 13 BAROAIJL lOAl'tlP BATTF.RY CUARGER 90° SWEEP 2" TA.CH 30.000 ~llLE DRAKE StlOES ::."'.'~:!.~~000 399 a..-... 11 '' r1v.~ ._ ... HER CULES HEAVY DUTY LIFETli\IE GUARANTEE SHOCK ABSORBERS ._.... '"Tllo 1.110!1• orr-''""" .... ~.1. Dool"'°'~ .. Gooo·•-·T• Ll~C•t, f, .. ~ .. Y .. ll"" E-... w .... , t°'..'ia!:°.':'t:w 11o.-n,.,, .. 1 s.1 •• , 5~.~. CAR RAMPS 899 .. ,. "·" ::~~ r" •if>......... ...,,, BENDIX DISC JJRAKE PADS 6t5 ... 19' :.;~~~~· 1~ -... ,. .. '*''""f' 12 FOOT BOO STl'.:R CABLES (-,., ... Oil_,.,.. ... 299 1399 A!ROSEAL GREASE FLAT GUN FIX • Phone MS·82M nE,u:Y oun · MUFFLERS 0...1 •• or ~1,,1;t.~:'"::::'-' Molflooo I l .. , ... ~.o.. 111 ... 11 .. - rot'I CllOICI 111 EAST 19th STREET,,COSTA MESA , J UST 0 ,, NEWPORT IL.VO. -hlllrtO Mew Tl'lffltr- ·~ ~ WATER l'UMPS r .. -, ,._,,,. ... -d .. ·-~ I NEW FUEL PUMPS 4~ . ., --oo;::.~~ .... .. • " • • • , ' -. ' ' Is Coast Cle111·, Rocliy? ?jow that sum1ner is over and all those nutty tour- ists have gone, squirrel§ once more reign supreme i ·'' ~ .. '. •• ' .. .. ,. Ilia. ;ff,k. • Y' ... ' .1 l .... • ,1,. •'• • , ... I ' . ., . .... ' • . ' .. • I • .. >._ -• " :· • , ' t ·'. ;;. ' ~' . ~-: ' • • • • • .. ' ... ' Calua Before tlae Sto1•11a? Officials reportedly 'are selling !raps and plan to remove (Urry little critters to new homes in hopes • • •• • DIUY Piiot J!holn llY Pit O'Don11tll -at Heisler Park In haguna· Beach , .. .for awhile. But things are getting squirrelly .. sidewalks and stairways with their burrowing, much to displeasure. of humans. ~ •• or keeping the park from cavin g'_ln. I,.!le's not Ill that's it cracked up w be. •• Held Hostage• PlllLIC. N011CE PIJBIJC NOTlqi None• °' ,... TlMI ..... .uc• ,ICTITlOUt 1•ut••a T. 'Calm, Cool' Bank OP MIMI .. 0# ftl t.OC.,_ Aellll• lllAMI fT•TIMINto C'f' POAMATtC* COMMllflON OP Ol· Tiii folloWlnt penon I• cMint IMIMM ...... COUllTV• CAU•OllNtA. WMllll 11• PllOP'OllD ••t•IJ'ne* OP COU... 'llL.'MCOM -111....-1 C~ TY 111m1 AllA HO. 11 °' o•· C~'*-,.,.. Oolcllll (Miii ,,,...., Alt91 COUMT'f' AND oa.tlCTtoNI 01 lf'llhM• c:.ltrornl1 fl1tl, ,.,ct IOll .QN. PllOT'ftfl 'fMllffO. WtU. II ,... lrVIM, C'I· nUI .... ,.....:._ 01111 flWYID ,.. MIAAI.. Jtct 11\oll ,_,.,, I _....., NOTl<;I If MlllJIY OfYl!N tflel llrwt, lrvlnt. C1lllornll '21'05 ... lfl _.c_.... W ...., NM ._.. tr'9 lhl• 111W1M1t 11 allld1i1t ltor M uni ,,_ ,....... ~'°"' ... lnflvtMJll RobberCuJ Down ... c;~ ti;tOf'M(ll, 11 ... .i CtltfOl'nla. JIU lllorl CttP«' r ·••••"Ill' ....... ~ ~ Tiii• 111Mfnt!it ..... flltd' 'Wl'91 ~ JM ..,__... ~ fl C-t'I' SitrvlOI c-ty Clll'll of Ot11111t c-11 M ..,, ...... n ., °""""' c~. Cettfltrn••· 0cto0er ,.. 1m ,,... :TM __.. •ICl!t!ftf•• .9fll' fllteWllll ctLa~'"--said the ennm•n """•lfv clllef .. .,_-wllkl'I It m«• ,.1111Ulhld Ol'•1"' Cattt O~llY .. "'::' ALTANTA, Ga. (AP) -'A allm gunman !tilled Iii a bar- WICll-D , e-:·-.. nfc~ ~i. W I ...... V.Crl ... ()ctobtr It. and NowmDlf' .. ' 11talked I. w -aftd falrJy JIM on fl~ ·wttl'I t11t c~, tm »Ml h._ T hid .,.. t. " dlMOlwcf (tMl1ft • rage <1f police gunfire u hd .• lntelligen"J' and calmly. He :'~~::!.iT"...:? l*.J:!': PUBIJC NOTICE watkea-out <1f"'a'""'bant with-asked b'-a. portable ndk> ,,..., Ol41~rpor1tM ~ '"_._ -, •• ,.,., '---·-'--.S11\t1 AN H1!9'1tl •r"i ut1i-por1ttd PICTITIOUI v• two \VOmen 1KH1tages was so he co.uJd hear ........ & wu ..,,,,or., bllWMll 'tfll dt\' 11rn111 o1 NAM• sTAT•MINT A..l...WlNwl as "c81m _ 1 Jot , t.&1 .... --id .~ .. 1 ~·-on' AL : eo.t• ......, •M Nt~ &!Kii w.ill'I ni. to11oW1N ,.,""' •rt. ~ ...........,....,.,. " ~ ~ .uvu ~w11 \1111: ~ Nttf4t OrlW, tflt !lflt~tted bU1i11• t1r -• fl'cihmer thawbon I \fat~.';jY .t~ alf. Wegothhnone."" .,_. ·~,.,:::..~9flt9~t'i ~Ir~ H~~·.,:..•~,,'!!~~!.':W,., po ceman nego ta Wl The FBI broadcut an •"'-"°'n....1 c°'1' M9M -· Jldt L.. o••*"• J1s1 1 Cof•I Aw .• him for several hours. . r NOTICE IS ll!UllTHl!ll Gr/IN tflll Cott• !MM. ca. ""' . ,. L. C ~-tbam talked peal on the radio, offering 11111 cllM'llulorJ tie• tr~ w~v N•ncv A. oav•r. Jl:J1 I C«•I Av ... J £Mi, • \Aid af in f!t fOI" ttlt 21th 4'1Y f/f ...,...,,,...,, 1'71. 11 (Oita Mitt• Ca. '2624 - . nea""' f ur hours with the s e pusaee um . ""' hDr.N' "' aiGO .. ~ " .. 1c1 M«•• ""' Hat\MA. •11 ttlll'lt '-""'· .• •.u 0 -the bostagea but the gunman d1Y or •• *" ... Ml• '"""• c .. mu well:.citessed gunman, trying refused 1 m•tttr t•n tot ,...,.. 1n Room • TN• IMlf.u la C(illCIUtttd n • ..... r .. to pe~··de him to tel"'""'" ' In !he ~1... CMllY """"Mmlr1"1111 pertl'llf'VllP· ,,. .,~ ~ An FBI t ·-'d 1u11c11111. il.f North .$'f(Almortl Slt'W, M«ff A. Hiil-four "-'Omen bank employes agen IMU. • ,...,, AM. cllltf«llli.. .. tt11 """ •"' Tiii• •'•'"'*" ••• r111c1 w1t11 ""' he held pti Tbursda · decision was made to shoot p111a .., ..,. 11Mrt111 "' .... P"lflOlll c-"' c1«11 of Of•rio-COllntY "' ca ve Y lfl the gunman if he insisted on ~ ~ '" ,::'';! ~ 4:1~~ ot1o111t 29' itn P4'1l4 abrsmachll room! th ofFthetdoNwnU~ooalwn taking the woman from the wNm time .,.. pl-•It ,.,._. 1n-,.ub11N'IM °''!IOI co..t o1ny .,,","!.: an o e irs a . ,..,..i.t .....i11 MtY IPPffl' IN tw NllY'lmlfl' i. '· '" :J. '"~ .,,. Bank: of Atlanta. scene. ~id: ~bl!'" 1, lt11 PUBUC NOTICE l .'Y ORDER•OF THIE LOCAL AOEHCV pUBIJC NOTICE . THE GtrmtAN took the -----------l"°"MATION c()'.IM1SS10N o, ~~1--.....::.:....::,:,=,.=----sLP·ia COUNTV. CALIFO.NIA SU' .. women hostage lnunediately l'tOTICI TO c••DtTCMll lllchlN:I T. Tumtt IUPllllOl COUllT 0, CALll'OUIA when he was told the branch IUl'lll:IOll COUll:T 01' TH• ExKull .... Offlctr COUNTY Ofl' OU.N91 ITATI Ofl' CALll'OltNl.I flOll -Loctil AllllCY . N• A"""l office had ooly about $50,000 THI COUNTY Ofl OllANll fl!nMtlOl'i commlulOl'i NOTICI D" IA&.• Ofl' RIAL , ... cash on hand -one quarter ' N .. A.m&I l'Ubllal'ild Orintl CIMJf °"'' Piiot, Plll:TY AT •PlllVAT• JAi.i the t be demanded . ~stat• pt °$ALVATORe II:. MON~CO. NOY1tn0frt),N;'l6.lm 1174-13 Gu•rdl•nlhlP Etllfrl If JAMet Ch ' hlJJJlOUD. 'd . 1 M.O .• 1bo k110W11 11 S, ll. MONACO, • · · ll~CJ1,.~~~ G1~AYHt1t~~r:· OIYB.lf th.II, ,~t am ~I ' ~~E 1.S HEAEIV GIVEN to th• •PtJtlUf,': NOTICE' MilllKI '° ('Oftffr1t1ttlot1 b'f tli9 tllcH_. Everytime I went back to creditor• of ,,,. abovt n•nwd dl«dent 1111.cl .S\IPfflor court. on or 11ttr fM talk to him he cocked his that Ill PlrtOllS N Vlllll cl•lm1 au-IMI MOTICI OP' MAllllW.ll tAL• lttli <llY of No¥1mlllr, ~mff. "t I~ ' · j '! Cha'tha 'd "! tllt' 11ld d«edtnt trl l"l<IUlrtd lo tU• ,Oll:ANT a, ICDTT OAANGli COUNTY der1lgfl9d, 11 9111rdl1n I• 1 p!Slo 1 m •lijll , ' lhtm, wllli lht ll9Clutry 'f'OUthlrL Im tlit CllVl.S ION, • ,.(alftfl;, vt. l,.VNN ., J, of J1mtt AlelMrd Gr1y, I ml1111r, '#1~ never saw his face. He made ot11c1 of 1111 clerk of tt1t above en11K1ct rA1e.sn.v. o.t-1ant. No. _.,,. ••" " prt.=:,• 11•• ~ ~~lo':t · . h . . h court, or lo prntnt thin\, With 1111 Judglmtllt Diii' ...,.nt s, 1'71 •nd b91t tr 1111 .... _,1 -me Sit 10 a c air wit my n«USlrY vouchH" to tM Ul\dtnltftfd • vlrtve 'ot .j, o:ltllllon II.Miid on condition• htl•1111t1ar mll'lt .. • back to him. He threatened In c•r• of JAME$ L. AUBEL. JA .• Oc~ '· tm. bY thl MunldPll court, ":111. tt!"" I l~~t of ,;w,n:: ::: · al . , , AtlomtY •I L1w, ~ Via ()florto. flf Sout11 Or•lll:,I COU!1fr JUdklll Olllrle1, I r II • ~--~ ... sever times to kill his N"""'POff •••ch. c.111om11. niut. w111c11 '°""'"' t11 e>rw:"'"' 11111 ot c1111om11, ""' ••t•i. of uld 1'1'11l'IOI'" ...;!.. ._....ottit hostages and 58•1d at one · 1 11 th• P4K• o1 11uM1M.11 of tt11 ulldtrllpr\9d Wot\ , ~~ • .....,., 111 , • ...,. ot w '"''""' et 11w • "° ' poID In 111 nwt1ar1 ptrttlnl09 to TM ,1st1lt GRANT & '$COTT ORANGE COIJKT~ lh9n 0# In ldcllllon lo 11'1111 j! llkl that be did not want to live." of 11lcl ~I. within flMw maftllil OIYISIOM -j [...;.,_, cnirtor and rn•-· In 'tM ,,.... ..,........, ....... FB' agen•· and police p--lltlt thl flnl Pllbllc1tloll of"" notl(I. lfthlfl LYNN J. l"lllESTL.V •• IVdOl'i'ltftl In lttl Coun!Y, ... ~ "' .. ·~ . Stilt al • ~ ~ ........ Dtltd Octobl'r 2'. 1913. • dlblot, .......... "" Ni.net of ~" C1ntornt•. Nlc.r •• -· y1ded a car and $20,000 in (5) #MAie E. MONACO lct\11111'( '"' Ofi Mid '"""""" Ol'i !tie _..,, \,Wldl~ ~:..=' lnl•-:ndl.:: --~ from •··" head"''""..,_ Ellec:lltrhl ot !hi Wln of d•ll of 1111 1-..enc:. t11 11kl tncutlOl'i, !,?J111 1 • .... tld \,;CQU uwa 't.._. ..... ., . IN •!love 111"'9C1 dtudent I hive ~ upoll 111 1111 rfellt, nit. AWU•I .. -II .... ..... . to meet the demands of the ·JAMn L-11u11a.. JR-11'\d 1,.,..,,.1 of uld ludO"*" dlbtor •t 20'S2 S•"'" Sii• L1111, ttunt11111•0l'I · · Alt9nlily It Uw In !I'll P'OPlrfY In !I'll CDl#lt\' tll Ortll09 ht<ll, C1tltoml1, mort p1rtlct.111rlY gunman, identified as George >tn Yl• o.wt. s••tt °' Clllfomt•. dllcTftlld •• follows:' "1er1'*' •• t°'I°""": Linton Whitfield 31 of New N..,.,. 1t1e)I, c.1 ma Lot -. of tract "" n ,.... M•P Tr.ct ~. Lot 1,, 11 "" ,,.... 1 1 T...,,._: 17141 •n-41n , lilKorded hi 8ook 20f, peon f.11 rK~ Ill I d jUI, ,... Q4, Carrollton, Md. · A"-Y • Eutvtrls ltocllnlvt °' Mbc.n.MOUt Mapi. 1t 1" "" offlc• ot ""' COUl'ltv RICOfdtr But as he led tl\'O ,.., the PubffslMd Or•• C11o11t O.lty 'ltllot 11 C'Ql'NT\Ol\IY fltWNll ··= ..,,. C.11• of Or.not C011,11ty, c!,nklml, .~· "t Nov•mt>tr l. t, 1•, 23. lt13 3332·7:1 Dtllc.O., $M1 CJtl'l'lll\11, Catlfotnl1. Tt11 Pl'OJlf't\I I sold u • · hostages towards the car a NOTICE IS H£1lE9V GIVEN fllll II•• or offitn ,._, bl Ill wrltlflf police Sharpshooter f'•ed one' e PUBLIC NOTICE .. Fr14••·· No+.nlblr :ZS. ,,,,, ,, 10:00 flld wi...,.11 Ill !~!!.¥td..,DY' :•mt•H '',"'•-'" .... • o'clocil A.M. If Courthouolt. M1rW l'1 Gm. _.....,, ..... 111. \Ill front a rooftop, .knocJQng him 0tttc1, 11110 Cl'O"#fl Ylll9'f P•rflwlly, hlc:h, Calllotnl•. •t 1ny llmt itltr to th t · ttl•I City ol U1una NtoUll, CoUr\ty ot or1~, flr1t pUbllc•llon flf tlll• l'ltlltl •rid btf«• ) ..,e pavemen . '"''•IOl COUll:T 0' C.l&.lllORNIA, Stitt of Calllorril• I wttt Mii at put,11( d•I• of 111•. ' "'COUNr, :.11 " .... os,,::.... Lii auction .. "-" hlti:wt ........... for <tM Tlmll .,., tOl'ldltl-·.-~: ,c, ~ .. As '" In ltwf\11 "'°""' of ..,. Unflld $tttll. In i.wful . monn: ol tflol ..... -• " ~ !J!WO hostages div-LOI,,....._ CM.._.. . .ii.. the -f10t)t, tttll Vd 1,.....,1 9' I/If pert cull Ml INllanct lvldtlltM ed to the ,.._,,..A the CAS• NUMll.11 C 111\l Mid• ~ """" '"' ttlt ..,_. bY 1 naa.· MCVred b'f> • 1°r'l!l'I DIM 6............ gunman SUMMONS -"*" ..... pnptrly • mvcl'I tllar9oi' 1111 · 11'11 ,,.,..., io told. Tiii ~c"'t sctt:amed·ind fired-once with ltltlmlfta:· Titl flllESTON! Tut• .. ··-,,..,-w: ~,, ""'"' Nici (W.01 ol 1111 •-' Wd 111, lctOfl'IPllW I I. 'd ..... __ llU88ER COM~Afrr(Y dlNI THE DAYT~ ~ Wflh ICctiile li'dwnt lfld 1M offolt W cwtllltd Of CMl!lw'I d!Kk a revo ver, po Jee sa1 • .l.Wt:ll TIAE .. ftUllEll: COM,.ANV ('4111. 11111 thl Mlll'ICt to .... paid on cliflo police -who bad surrounded Olf9nd6ntt.: N. G. BEAL.OW. INC.. D•tld Octclbll"" w. tm. llnt'lllOl'i of ttlt .... 11'1 1111 Supwlsr he NATHANlll. 0. llltLOW ll'ld DOES I DlvltlOfl• S01t1tt Orltilll c-itv ewrt. t one-story branch-opened ttorQUgh x oii..L.AJto 0. WlllUttsott Thi """' 11 ,_...... to r.IKI ""' up with-a deafening fusillade To the 0ttenc11nt1: A d'lll tompl1lnt Marwt, OrWICll COW!fY ind 111 lllft. , his been flied by ltot plelnt!ffs 111ln1t IY M9llNI ll Hlllfl' DeflVt1 Oltld: OcMl1' JO. 1'71. of r1ne and small arms fire. Y°"· If vou wts11 to dtftfld 1t1r1 i.wsult, WllllMR ,......,. • • JAMES FAEDlllCK GllAV The hostages were wtin-YOU m1111 flit In lh!1 cOIJl"I 1 wr111.,, ., s. •I c..-. 11..i u ~tin o1 the u"''t" plN<l1"9 In rtlf!OllM lo thl tomp11lnt ,_ c...._... call,.. 19'1 •'--med minor jured. A policeman identified for 1 wrlt11n °' or111 ptud!no. If 1 PMllfillff'• .l"'"""1 • ~ .... ,,,_ (.IW, as J B Ada-· suffered 8 JIJ'ltlc.e C-11 wtlllfn :10 d•n •rt.r l"Wlllhlocl Or11191 cont Dlfll' Piiot, 1m 11111111 ,,....._" • • ... ..,, this summons II M!'Yld on you. NOYlt'nblf' i. , 1'-1m sm-n s-i. AM. c.atltlnl• tl7tl stomach wound possibly from Othtf'w4$e, v-det1u11 wn•· fll 111terld • ~.., 9--.. . he . • li 1. .. n °" 1ppUc.et1ori by thl p1a1n11ft1 ind P'~"C NOTICE l"uWllflld °''"" C•st Deltv l"llol, a r1coc ting po ce UWJet, a tM court may .,,,.,. • llidflllMllt "''1 .... 1 umq..oa N.-iw 2, :a. •· "" Stil).n police spo!'esman said .. He was ~,'!.i '~""' =.1:, ot11tr re11etJ-----:;-:::::------J~::::::::_::_::_::...:_:~-_ ____ ::_: reported m good condition at If .,.. -4111 i. ..-"" .i¥1c:it "' NOTtCI ~'fi:teDn"ORt PUBl.JC NOTICE a hospital ... ......_ "' llif• --· ... ..... IUl"••toa coutrr 01" Tiii " :-.::. ::.u:t!·~i: ."'::r .......... ITATI OI" CALl!lOINIA ,0. ILi"* Detld" Jull' z. 1m. THI COUNTY Ofl' O&Ulel SUl"l•IOll COURT 01' TMI C .... A-11Uf ITAT• 011 CAUl'OttlOA '0.. lAAENCE £, CAlliU.. Estate ot 01tAL. IMMElT NORMAN, TM• COUNTY Of' OftNll• Clfftl 0-Md. NI. A·711U 9Y 11.ot.t T....... -HOTICI tt •Mill•lt't ~-,._ ~ ,.,_ NOT~ 011 .HEAAING . O~_P.lllttoff fSEAll 09pl/ty credllort ol tht MCrve n1nwd dltlOllll FOil l'ltOIAT£ Ofl WILL ANO.' f"Ol .Southland • HA•VEY M, ~·ossMAlf tt;al ... ,..._.. lllYlnt d1lma •f111t LETTIRS TESTAMl!!NTAA'f ,_WI,.,.,,. ... iw...-:n;tm 1111 Nld Ollc:ldttit sr1 nqulrld to fOe W1t1 of EllHA J<>tlANNA ICLllN, ,z_ tl!tm.' wllli tfll. '*"MfY ~ M O.CMllll1 L9I Atl9t-ClllfWftl• t11e· offlt1 ot t111 dlrll of Iii• ""'" HOTICB· IS HEllEIY GIV£N W..t Bartender Toti ftll) "1.enl ll!lllW court, er to •pr-I 1'1trn. '#llli £\IEL VM ' kLUMll hit llled htrlllt I A"-"9Y fw '°"'"'"' Publl1flld 0r.,.. co..1 o.n ,.11ot "11 -rv Wil.ldltr1. to n.. vn-Mtttio.. w 1troD1i. of wi• •l'id tor Good Mixer Newmbtr , '" 2i. >II im Y M»n .........,. " "" llW o~ of IClndlt l..V.11Ct vi L11tH1 Tnl1mtnt•1Y 19 ' ' . & Alld«Mlfl; a. Jn, Stnll Alla, ffll ""'"°'*"• rofeAMI lo '#hldl 11 PUBUC NOTICE---C.11foml• tl7'Cl:I Wflltll It thl lnllM tor lvrlhtr p.1rtlclll•r1. 1rid tll•t ~ ~ "' ""' ~ il'i all tl'll llMI •rod pll<t of llMrillll fM J--===,.-,===~~-·l;n.ti.n ' Plf:lallill'll to !tie •l•I• of llmt Mt *n Mt kit Haw. 20, 1912. LOS ANGELES (UPI) SU,Qlf>t. COURT 01" TM• uld ~. wltN'n flovr nw11i. lflw 11 t:l:l 1.m.. In ""9 courtroom of B rt d I the ,. : 3TATa 0,. CA"1l'Ol.NIA •o• , ... flrfl puMlc.tlr.wl " ""' not!t.. °""'r'""'"' No. I of ulcl court. •t a en en rom .I.Ni) ntl couirrv OP OltMllH • lllltM Cc...-11, nA. 10I Cl'lic ct1111r 0r1ve w~ 111 "" Angeles area and Nonoay "°· •1-1 N.arlot .. £. Nomlll'I c1tv ., S1n11 A111. c1n1orn1a. · , • NDTICE Oft N•AlhM OP PRflTIOtil AIMllfl!.....,,. of Ill Estltt · DetM Mov.Tlblr 1, 1tn. were Judged the best ui the ll<Ht l'llOUTI °' WILL MD l'oa " "" Hovi "-"*' OKtdl!lt WJH1am e . $1 Jolvl l\'Orld in what was dubbed LITTlllS TISTAMllCTAIY (IOtfD tCIMHL ......... ION • C-t\I Clerk WAIY•D> / 1G .... ...,_.V M••ll• IAYU ASKll•N the Olympics of bartending. Esl•te of IOA E.,, ClAlllC,. ~. .. .. . IUll ~ , .... W. · ti · NOTICE IS Hl!ltlllY GIVEM thll ...... W. Cllll..,_ "7tl .... ' inners ID c:mnpe tion at ElBEll:T CALV~ CL.AAI( 9IMll •WILllORO T•h (nQ ~ ........ C.llf-.... the 22nd InternatimaJ Cocktail A. CU.llK """' 'tl11c1 MN!n , pttlllon AttwMp • u t"'1tn"11 Tll1 tn4J .. 1111 d Lo ~-" 'val 1or itl'abl.. or "'111 .,,.; fOf 1-nct """'lllld ·~ eo-.t DatlY itnot, ANn11y1 .., .........., an ng ui uaa. Festi were of ut11rs T..tlO'llllt•rv • .,,. ~-°"*' "· .-. '"" Mavembef t. '· 1tvt111lhld ar.,,.. C09lt Diiiy ,....._ Bob BatugO\of Valencia and t1-. llond Wttvldl. ~ 1o 1tn 11t1-1:1~a.4t.1m »11-n B. ~--Shoo. which 11 mldt fOf h.lr'INr Plfilahn, Jame 11-._-.,cu k of •rod 111a1 1t11 11 .... n ,itc1 ., r-n.._ PVBUC NOTICE . flJ'1JC NOTICE Norw'i:l'. . ~ 111e """' Mt """ "' 1or ~ .. ~,~-~~1-~.....::.:=i::.::·.:::.:=:.... ___ _:._:.:::::::.::::::=--- s . pt-' the -·u·•j t7, im. •I f :qt a.m., I" n. ~ . -"' ,.. 08 Ul'.:u UA;.t.MU of °""'rtn'llftt No. I ol Mid oour1, • ti1rot1T OP COffDrTMHI ' competit;ion with what he call· " no ctYlc c.ntw Dr1w Wtat, In °' ...,. .. n1••t 'f'911.~.,.,.,...._....., ''....,.,....., Clltln11 ed "the -.., tru " the . _ the COY ol S,.flfl A111, C1llfenll.. ff.fl ...... ii ............ 111111 Mr .. OdlMr, ltn ~ e8 8, )Jl'lme 0.lld Novembar 7, Im .......... II ec~ .... I Clll """' 'f llM S.,111111& •111t 11 ..... ingrim\ents of which are WILLIAM E. SI JOH~. • ASQTS • COUllT ""'WATI C:OUnty Clll"fl . I . . Tllusn T•UITI COMllNID Smlrtl&ff vodka, grand M. L•WIS LINMAN cm ..... cru.•mwn... ........................ IS.IQ 1$,1"5 rnamfe'r 'ind ciniano bitters. ,_ -c-, .. •"" .... · , -u.s. , .... 111...,. llali'ITi. .......................... 10>.000 _.,.. 200#4 -.. ,. pr~ f\lrnllul'"t fnd t\lll\lr• .. l'id elllll' Batugo's winning entry .jn Toti tntt 9'1AD _. ·~·'"' .. ,.. prern1 ........... . the loner drink mixers · """'-''""'·~.....,. · OtllW _._ .. : ................................... . • .., com· Puotllhld er.,.,. COlll Ollt'( l"flot, TOTAL ASSETS ............................ ~ ~tion was "The I cc NO'f1mW •· '· is. 1m. ,..,, cAPrTM. .ucouHTs • • • • Conwnon 11ock-lotll ptr YllUI ( I n t e r n a t tonal Cocktail PlJBIJC NOTICE CN= .,.., .. •l/lllOt'tM so.coo) Competition) of '7!," -l'ICTrTIOUS 1us111n1 ~1.11 cN ......... ~~ .. ~~1.~~~ .. ~1 ... ::·.::·100.o» car:\oca rum. ......._,th gin '"t• ITAT._,I.,. LlndlYldsd ,.,.,.,. .,, ..... ,.,, .. , ..... , .• , .. , .... , . ppl . . ';:?~~ dille, TM 1. pwlOl'i It d611111 1111111~ TOTAL CAPIT~ .l.CC:OUNTS ltt ... ,.,•I'd JIJ 100.C00 pmea e JWce -grena ; b : . . . TOTA( Lwi.1~f'f,l.S. AHO CAPCTAL. ACCOUNT.$ ~ : "AClf' AVIATION COttSULTAN~ "<1ttm1 & • .2'Ji ri 11 aow1 ................ ioo.- ' 3U'I K l'#drth, lOI Al•IT)llot f07'20 ..... of Gall'-'!11, County" or.,., u. Mlctll ){oflli Mtflllll. 12•1 CHAllLll A. BILLMAN, IPrlllclir!I) ..... 41.llt ,. ..... ...... -.. ,. ,.....,, . ... tlAlf - -Cha lW Klnlr-rtll. Loa Allmllol, CA tClnO ' lll:ICHAllDA. DUMKE, (Slc:rwl•rrl nee r Tftft llinf,.._ 11 tondUdld bl' u of IHTlllN.ATioMA&:i(TIU!ST COltfOltATION, bllnt duly ._,., Mcfl for 111,,..ett lndl'MUel M't'1 ltl 'I* ,,,,_, ~ of tfll mtl19"1 tot1!1lllfd In flit fort901nt --..! Mlcfllll K. Mlllllll of oondll\lft ¥0 .,,..,_ pWl•lr!lng ~ tlld flit! tvel')' t lllOfllon, 111i.:.;;t' Tl!lt ~ "-' fllld •Ith ttll 111!11W Md 1"'lngl ""'* Cllf'lhlhllld II trw IO !hi belt of hi• kllOWlllO!ll: Ind bllltl• A • t.ed · County Clerk " Ofa11119 COlli'lft' on CHAllLES ll. 11Ll#MN ~ • II ''"'' RICHAAO A. DUMKE Ppo •n 0cto111r ,.. 1m {Pr•1011111 l"Utlflll'lld 01'91101 COISt o.!ly l"llot, (5tcttt•rrl Oclobtr 2', Ind Ho¥9mbll"' l. t, II. Jolm C. Hoy, vice cbancellor 1m 2221,n '9bfltMll OfMOI CoMt o.11y ,.not, NoY9flltllr '· 1t11 for student affain at UC 1 _ _.10Pi<UBLliffi15iiCfN:i10TICE~iiJ'-~J--..'.PUBIJC..:::.:::·;:.NOTIC~;;E~,===~P:::UB;'.U:C'.'..:NOTI~· CE~--. Irvine, bas been appointed to I PICTrT'IOUS SUllN••• the board of educators of the MA.Ml JTATIMIWT MOflCI Oii' ftcMIAT Of' UNCLAIMIO MGNIT Tht foltq,wll!f pwaon. •re clol1111 j TO TMI COWTY·Df' O""NOI Center for the Study of. the M l•• a1: NOTICI IS H R!lY GIVIN tl'lll J, lloblrt L Citron. T11 Colltclor·T,_., Presidency IT!:OUAltT JEWllLftY. 111'-A Hlr· Of IM CAIUr!IY Of°"""'' $!~~"~1 -'''' ,,.., .,,. fDllowlno 11111'11 hlld • bor. loultvll'd. Coll• ~. Cafll. t2W. In = ~=-~""=':iii =:-" the Nnd!/Mr' .. 1111111" lndlCll!ld .... Hoy was named to the board W1111r E. At.111, " Lind• 1111 Or., r;: Mll'i csay ., Ole.,,.. ltn. , 41"' ~-~ ...... ""• CCIUflry of or1"" on during the nt , I NfWllOl'f BHd\. C•Hf. '2IWO • 1 n -•Y· 1 .... 14.!J c11n nor mor• . ce er s annua na-. ~11, T •""~ .. Lind• 111, Dr thin ll!ll'( llMIJ ..... an.r • •rt1 l'UDf c•tlon o1 11111 Notic., vn11u , YWllllll ~ tional leadership symposium NtwPOrt eitet;, c111t. nuo ' " i;'.:'l .Mlkillf "' ,..., any of ·111 Of "" P1rtlcu11r i u1n1 '""""'"'!Id lltnln II• 'held recently in Tennessee. 1~r~111t;;ln11t 11 tone!uctlld bl' 1an If 1111 ~1nt°t: ;'~~1== .::.~°!':tr.:' r:t~':;~~~c:! The symposlmn was one' ol . Marl• '· "'"'' ~G;~W c·~=--~~ ~·w ::o"J."" .. ,, dt11t11111d l'ltrtln: a ffries higpligbtlng c:::V t~::n:'or::. ~wi~ =r., ........ ~r~... A.....i roundtable discussions and 2o&. 1tn. • i.a.u Holl ._ ._. t»t.u lectures teattlrinj pretent anti ~llhld 0r....,. co.it D•lly ~ 1+11 • ~~·1~ MIW' Mtuw ~• former top 1 over nm en t ott •. 24 .,.. Nov. a.'· 1" tm ne-n •1N1 ~-r...-CJ.oM = leaders. PUBUC NOTICE stt1R1,,...~~U1T PVNilN!' ~ ~ .. . _._, .... ,.,.. ::::·~:t:i-_.... • ..... llOflCI TO ClllDt'TCHll ~ -.._~ IUP•ll:I~ COUllT Of' T~I WMt H.,...,. Ill. ....,. ITATl~ftOlllllA ,_ • a.J4l "*"' .... ' "'* _.. ... I JOlt9lt JMIDft n• ,... .::.,ou•• 1.u1 • Nlrl ·1H1111i;1 """"' 1~: £sf1lo or MIL.DltliD CHASE cooir;s, .. J·a41 llOlll 0 .. ~ lt.t$ OtcNlld • If •1•1 ....... G. CtNMtll 11.IO Gets Kudos • NOTlti: ll HIRf.•Y OIYEN lo tlll ·~~I "=r's.~m .,2:·_.." CT9dltort of ll'lt *°" l'lltnld dtcldtnt r 1WA1 J .... A. .-.- .. Illa! all ptrlOl'il tlrlfnCI tWilml .,.iMt te· = Mrltw(n ElHolt i!I:J1S0 !he Nici dK'ldlflt 11"11 '*!Ulf'ld 19 ftlt II* ~ ,.. ltlMI, wlltl t111 ......,., Y'Ol.lttllr.. In .. t""-~t' . 2'Jt Usa S. Halverson of CClronl "" offk• of 1t1t tllrk o1 '"' *1Y'f .... .....,... J Jol.a del Mar bu been named t0 ll"tlttlld cOlll'I. "" lo "..,' "*""· wttti TAX~ a..-o Jll o·MO. u n.,s · tM MC...ary wutNrt, .. !hi .. ~ • A1pha Lambda Delta, the na-c11r1111MO ,, ""' 9"k9 or ht• ,,..,.,.., · ~ . · •:-- tlonat--.ehotutic honor aoclety ftoo.t.N AHO llAOOING, A.....,..·" AllOITM .. :y """' ... -..... • LIW, 301 lnl 011'111 I""""*-C91.,_.. el' • y . 11 A for Women for her outstu-•um w11Jc11 11 1111 ,i.e. Of MMtta ... Pvt. -..-Cltwtill 1~,. I • CdMCoed ~ ~' B k 11 of IM ""°'"""" In all f!'llltlttl ,,.,.. 7..., ~. lt""'9 . d W01a .at u c n e 1a1nt111 1o t11t "''" flf uld dlcllllllt. ~ ~ ~' :: u vent()' in pennsy1van11. -~::. '::.: -"" .... !Int ~ MAUlllL .... ,..,,.... .~-TRUST ,UllD MO. Ill• 'Ibe 1972. graduate of La O.'-' octot11t 11, 1m · •· ..,. " ,~;; un.~ c.. 1'1 .. -.1 .. UI .... Scboo1 needed AllMANO MARCOTT• ltl~ ...... Mllflf'M .. MWM Moloi'1 mt..OO ;l,fCl(l-' ........... Executor "' ttlt Wiii I lM1 • • ...,. ~ I~ 00 grades (If 3.5 or· better on or thl *"' ,..,,.. -.Cdftt ;:;; "'"" ftflMll, Jr. l$'oo a ~8C8Je of • 0 to be elected llOOAN .IND UDOIM t"1 ,l,.'°"' ...... 2':7I • AMrMn et U. , ..... ...,,.._ ~ IUI to the soclet~ Min Halvenon ., '"' 011W tNNt w-"~ '111 '· the dan• ter. ol. .,_ Lor ._..., c""'""' "'" Dlted 11111flt\urff • .,.., ... ,;1m., L · .1.1 -P".&1•· ... ,..,_,.Wt I'*""' lll:OM:ft , CITllON ra, •• Hal'··-~ Dahlla Pvblllilld Or•l'llll cant oe11r ~1o1. 0AAM11 COUNTY Tf.tl: cou.maoa.Ta..,u I St u~ Y'iilo....,.., T1J1u OtlobM' 1,, "' •l'ld Nowmbtl' ,, ,, l"Ubll"*('Orlf"li to.it Dll'IY "''°" Jll•~ t, 11.1'71 • =n . 1m ,,...n _. I ) ' " ~ -]> ' ... > . u • • D •• •• .... ". .> "' ". --Ughll ··-· lie ' ..... • '1iWURl , ' . "Wi • jUlt • •• II , ... ,, ., !Inn, ... • .. neii .. ,, I ~.-. T • • " •• •• " • " .. .. • i .. .. • •• ,. ' 4 • • • " ' ,_ ' •• " )Jo • -• . . •• • • ... - c '"· Pacific '·LigbJ~g : Delayed ·. 7 KENAI, Aliulta (AP) ::1: ?'.....-. botw'etn PldllC Ll«hllnl Co. and Cool< ~rDiet JU jiraducm have c1e1ayec1 ljevolopmonl DI a -mlillon cu• Uqulflcotlon p;.ject ·thal '""'1il lnclltile a planl,ln Kenai,' ... "We Oft negotlallh( with' • juat .ab!>"I ~loody, that ~. au," ten l'dCIA8ll ~ Raclfit • F•ld'I, -bl< 9, tm DAILY PILOT !J ·OVER THE COUNTER ,..... ......... ~ Gtfl 6¥1 .... "'""'" -~ .," llloltti!I • •" ~ ~.... !ft )Q•4 30-., ""'''""' UYt 1i" = ,c. ..... 'i'~ I _, di Gt •1' ..... ,.,., :M\li !I'll, fl .:: '4 1 ,. ... :. II~ tf.,.. ff~ :ru.. ~{ t;tJ 11 1tv1KJ' Stoot T' ~ 'u d W ' =-:.:1:'.-'Tl"o •:,. •:• :i::r; • ." ll:::::: .... ---n er raps --...... ., ~~ . 1' ... G-. .. l\16 .... 1111 • ii ' ~ c• llnlllnl <9'1 \.all .. .. .... 1i111M: F• Mio !I... , IM • ... ft ... . · S' Tfll ..... °' ~ ,, ,, Mll!Nt Gt ...... 11 .. • 1 •• • ' 49 • IM:h• I "-• 11 'I" Ml•llw 1'r 141'. 1 Yt ''°'"' M 1J'4 t • ' Wr1;119. -111 H!KM ;Iii \Ii ,.,... AM SW!. '" . Wl'W 01* 111 • ._ _. ,_,.. ~C • t'\\ M9111 Mf'lfl 1n1ii 111\ MtM 'tn 1_11 .. ......... *" Cl~ .......... c. ..... ~ '" v-----.& wo,11:.· _.,i~ .. Of ••·.r,:~ateak ,....._. &(tlilal "" L II"" 11\li llllM& .. *¥1 ~ .,.. U, "'•--. ' ., g a.-•.aA ~ _... ' ~"llll:ll !.&IV W• llCfllw, £!fllfl A a3\ii Mlli MMI'• :lot '° !II e; '' .&ace .6.1-1et, tbt l*bce .. tochaded ill znUlt ~· LI l•c11 l:ll 2t't )'4 l!Atf.,. .. 1tlli II "T ... ~ ;}¥; °' bacor1 ~t..,. ._ IVPled lilt an tbe .ac:tual ..,...... n•• ':tMG. ,\I& ,:~ ~r .. , it: f• "' la-14\i\ • .:.,... .._.._.... ID -~ Jf4•L-~ ........ --...&... I~• "7J ''""' II ~ ,,. Cl " ~ » Id UB -...,-.. ~,.· Wa'f W8-...,._ ~ .... -.t.tll '""" _, 11 n~ ...... la-M a ~.... .._- that )'OU cao. lee a full, b: ml•lq ( ............ ~ ~) =•a. ~ l~ ,... ut n: ' MMW~ :; 1i" Wa I u\11 t:• .~tali~ ~ ~ ... u ,... _ ... ....,.,....i to =--~ = ll r:i !!. ii: !.:" .l" = e::: 11= = ~ the ~ "•" m6ilt eleuij .... tbla flct. . ' ., 1t= 1~~ r'..!11-W:: 2~ 11-. Nt tw"1 :l't 1~ " s 9 9¥1 NA$O Uotinp ,... Thurtday, No...,.llor I, 1'73 • M~at No Longer llji.)lellophane .._ -·no! add tllll ........ 111a-1aw Ni........ ·i~ -gr ... =-'i.'l"' ~ ::! ::::. ': ~~ '-'-1• ....._ J ~ ~.r ' "" n• "' ,. .. "" "" '" .,_ " "" ~ ~ !!.. Jl:l Ull:ll 'IN9_. Vil 1-1111111 ~. tit lnil 11 ,_. ,.,. It 2IMo ....... 14 t• .... II _.... ta nu 11 • new u s. Dept. o1 -~ ICJllDl1tZD to 6 .,,.. ,,.,... o 11~ ,.,. ~ c. ,,. • <111 ;:= 10, ~ture ~lion ao(_lt ..... tftlld la ., la U = .... l1 SJ'h ~~:. I~~~~ :i7.tGf u~ ii• Tll4Y 0. ~:: • 'Alub, • 1Yhlldl11cy 'of. the'' 1 ftrot. said w-..1. "No . • ' coolnlctJ have been llgned, ' ' · . 1 ·11Q1 ~ ·11r1na are rudr·. }'fnal F.IOor Doivn toll... ' ' .·· ' "· Dalt1, ....... " ...... McLean said the delay-In · Kci.ll Cellter's .$1. 7~0,000 office bulfdlng, under construction at the aoutheut the ....,.llUctloll ochedule is corner of Van Kannen ¥1d Birch Streets in Newport Beach, is scheduled for com· directly r.latod lo tho lack t~on ·in late February. Architects for the 61,000 square foot buildlng ... cl lbm contnoctr and added gdon and Wiison of Newport Beach. The office buildlng will feature M>lar DQ new timetable has been bronzed wlndows ind brQnzed anodized Jascia panels. · ·~:. . . Ci&Jm1M·te1 .. ~Wally ,..,. ~ -J'DA ncalalkm NifUlrtuc lood -= "~u~': ~:3·., n n~ :::e '.: G ;:~ T~E· '1,., ~ Psnm, .m tilalnC betWeen lll*f1htliaer1to1111U..term:: ,,_ •M "'m: rJ:;H~ ~i~ HtfW'r-•~== _. Mt'-sm federal lftd atite ftC11)11tOn ""lmtlab .. IDod If the iood .... OfM "' ~ llWM S. 1'°' ,,,_ H•1 NIG Pi No yf.t"Y Ot ,_ ~ ooa•r~r ~.~ II ............ ,. another ::'1.~ ~ ~ =.'r.: ~; .... al,t ::ii-.::. r: ~ ·1 ... ;W:Y~ :: :"" r r~--:-~-:..::.:-... ......;-..,;___ ........_. -.a.a..a.. 11 ni 1 m ............. a.. w... '"' 10in Gttt 1.1J '" ~ ()(Ml'! 0r JAi; 11-. ..... ,.,. '---.Vlr llUIN-~·•••-_,... ...,.._ :»\II 31\11 Gt\t• Tr llll t ~!!':!IE• 12 12\11 l"' OU!! 14 iDabn.:" ' 1t It ii nutritkmally lnftri« ="i!c. !114 ;r' 2:.1'1~ ~~ };VJ Oft;r ._: ,~ 1fa T~ t,". Jt •= II m"• y to tbe HreaJ tbiq. fl #fa ,...,. 1... tri. Gfl ......... lf .. 11\11 o.ll'ft k JO 11 r~ ..-!? ··-"• lv"1W H; 1''Ao 11 GIA 91NI :W li (ljlJ CMt ~ 1S ..,... ...._. .. -,.,.1• -As ol New Year's Day, ,,,,.... '"' ~ ~. c"• ,.,.., •Vi DrlMftt ;,.., ~t: = t im_,:~ ane to -· 117'9 the followinc new rulea :tr'o.t..tt tit l~~ G;ic1~~ :~~ ~~v. t'~' t: sv. 6 usu,._, . ~ ~"" n•• ~'l:r.' ,_ ~ .a..-All \Itel M tJ Gtlltn W 12.,., 1l'lo ... Ml .. 2•111 t•V. Tri L. ,.. .. but It 1Q. WW llU Y.ll01 ..,...,..: .... l'l'll 11'4 111' GrNll 5< ''°' 1 ... Ct" Jt .t0 ~ ~ 11'" ~ , Padllc ?JchUng, a .. major JU · aupplier In Jbe Los An(ele1 ref)on, had hoi!ed to begin oonstnlcllon tL tlie 1Celial 'llqulllcaU.O plant b)I nest Apr!~ McLean aald. · . day'• pries u . " hot dOa'• may COil· e = .,,~ 1~~ 2:1 "t: ,;~ 2r" ~ t::: :~ H"" Vwe. $n ,."'. ,,,.. B , (; N h k ~ tam beef _,.. Hot dop ·made ., 11 ,. "'"" ~w 1i 16 ,.,. ()(OI 1111\ 11111 V• O'tll 1•'4 11 . • ? T f 0 r blCon .......,.. ,,.. l'llo .u ioun "'* t>"" u"' ,.._ 1111v 11\lo 1J\ll v_. SN:ll '"' • lg a.. 0 an S _ _,,, b of otba' ulmalt J'DUlt be IO 1 L tY1i 'If H•ll .. Ulla )lo;, hfM C.. tlllo lt ll'k.WI $1 ~.,,, IM ' ..... "'".,. t t labeled. Mft = u111 "'" Soll"' ,,.,,, lllh t!! H S• u 1•V:1 = 5C ~ ,;:: . .• poctettllok ro'·od1 1:..L..1-~ u--~ "':. 1111121~=~: 1~:t1~~ '9t'.t,: lt~~~..,..w -... -,,,.',,''-' .. . . '·. HIT•• ' 1 ........ I . ~ u.ua.• "" 1111 Mlwffl Pl 1141 '"" P'lttr9 l•. Mii '"' w .. ..... ~-0 -It 1"-l-.t, " d 1J1 C.. '°"' '" M9111t Mt llh 1 '°''*"" 2t1Jo 1011o W•\tl NG 11" 114. 'T . ..L. ' 'A' s· ·z z f B D Uar this one tbitt •lice ~ your ' ....._.._., • an y u 21 ... n .......... c 11 11¥. Iii-w "ll'o '"::::: I :"' :.. . .pp· . ine · . ,utOs · e or ottom o . "right to tnow" stand out -:ble'f!i'~i'ft1ieC.V::ie~ a= -i :m!i~ $,•c-e ~ iE as:~ f:: U= ::~-~ ,;.. 1;: ri ~ • • clearly. of ~r> u lo' 15 t 111 0r... 1'"" ,,,. """" 1ri11tt n.,, 1111a """' c.. , 1>-1• 1 WMt7 '"' ,,,. '"' UICt: • p percen ... llNdS .. •l Hy•11 c .,.. '" Oll.•llr Cll 111'1 ltYI WI l(yGi '""' ,,,,,. c..,.... ~ Miiii*' ~ A5 cooSumer ~erences late model, full-sir.e can. · 11 t water 11n1 ~ '' ,. "~'"' c ,,..., l • eiu.e11 ca ,,., 10111 wsi.-w n 11"" 1• ···TM Shows ., -. NEW YORK -If you want ~shift toward small cars, A Che. vrolet Jmpala, ac-lU.IUl.•RIT'I, 0 • Y s .-1tvwn and_ ....... ·-ta °I 1•w. 1•~ 1-. w.1 20 20V1 .. r<'" • * WIH•fllll 1 11"' 21"" -"-=-,~. . t.__ bacon n. .. h .. e 1-., _ _. lo ... ,,.. ... --. , .... 10 llldl H\ICI :tt'lo )0 _..,,..,,. to 21 WllM H J 1' l•'lii that ..W.y • 1174 car to nave • ...a_.. "' ler fiind •t h ~· to McCull .... "' -~ 1--~ are allowed too. Any btnden 21~ u 141 lftfor•• .,_. s'll 11111M ~ ,..,. 11-. 'Nl1111t s... ,..,. 1sw. ~ re.sale al ti<~' . 1 u~ar "ea s 1 muc \.vlvlng · -&.. cur-Hat all curing aaents used. -·~"' _ ... 1. _.-1 dry _ tt n"" .,111, ub uv. 11.,. ,_.(.._ lq •111 •v. w1111. l'll:T u:i. 1•,.. 111"""me,·be't•..; .":•"-~~'" a-ll., ".' lou·•·r lo sell late-mod.el, renUy ?s d...,.ectating 50 per-'nus, 11 -· are 1 nutri"onal --.;u u ... ~. UUlll& · "• 1• 11:w. ,.,, .. crp 11\11 " 11:" ~"' ,,.,.. ""' 1" Plt """ 1fl4i llCI ul.IWlll. 51"' -r ~-u -n" -IO)' _..,.., tnUSt be • 1 1' 2•\llo 1nk't Ett nv. 11v. "90 Univ 11 1t\o'I Wood llll l•:W. I "" • . 36%~. .. . . e ... h • ' IN ·~~· I d t p 0 u r y mu • ' IHI ,.. 1SYI J1 lllU IP\W 15 UV. R.1nr c. rin • '#ttlr P:llll ""' '°""' · • I 00 .. .....1 • u.:... ·r t I st than In n.-t ... • or if """'' .1-..1 .. ~ -.,..,_... 1..u ,,. 11w. ,1 1111mt Gi u,.. 1s:w. "'-• ..ia ,.,., • WDrld S'f nYt 1•,,. I ' Jn That'sthe'advtce'autofleet-sa .,. ... --size cars. avtn i cen a er an -Y'M""• ,, .......... ..,.y are clearly listed cm the labtll "GI ts,. •111 A1um .-. sin "'"" att •sl'ltt::~~ 1:11111:? t D' . C, Ome ~ ezperta . pie· ~Ying they are in good cond.IUon, t er mediate-sized (l)evrolet alo~~ .. ~ wtio want -for· instance, ••fruab, non-kM,,,, ,ti. -,t,,.. :::~; ... 1~ 1~-= :: :t" '5VI = m. m: ;;"' r; Uiilled. Sta'l .... ··.-....-..1! . Uoos. large uSed cars are moving Monte Car!Q with comparable . ~ , ..... "'1 .. t YW are f t .._ milt added." The ..., 4" w.. 111tr11 c. 11~ 1w. 111111rt Olli 1211o ,, ,,. 'M:ll! ..... _. uH--al •·111 -"ll 1 .... ,. st 1J'41nYI 1•" Utll 112•"'11~ OTClOMoitActiN .. , LOS ANGELES <V) _ The which. ~~IY. will IC'l\Jlre off the lots more slowly than equipment. ..;;;'' ....,.. ~ J-JD1slmum for blDden 1s 3.5 = : ;;~ ft~ ~c. t= ;r *" v..... .... ,.,.... ~ more tba .. 'blilf,a nU111-new: in previous '""'"N," accordina ·• --t. , .. ,..,. u-JaM '"' 1014 11.,. Oil _.. c,. 411,1111 • ,,._ ·~ ''I"bnea. ~ Co,. resq1i 8 ~rs for .buslneSl ·\ISe~g to Blessing. t.Jtb ~king a~ A tm IMPALA. the top A110, in recent mantha, the .r-'--Ml 11: 1:~ = •,: :J11&:: = e':' ;tt;;: ;: ;::t :: 31 percmt incw Jn net -in· the ·current model year~ The JO days longer to sell these . of the ''Chevy" line, sells for .• ~cut lqiMa,tpre pwed NON-IDLITAL meat , 1!~ c!r Klllff ~ t= r_: 1.:"ti:..,.,. ;ri;; ·'l"" ':: 1= .. -... '--~i..... •U-..1 .......... r lime ~vice ,miirht well be cars than a year ago," he $250 Jess than a similar 1971 a un:a .. ~~blll requiring ~ s=-.......... Internal 1"6 1st1o 1talv•r c ""' s-. lblll OrwiAO tSAO 11,.. tl1Ai• " ' .......... IW lUlllll .. &U,,,, "I........ ~ &' II t _. ,___ _.,.,,. ~--11'4 lt ic.-( IS 11\lo La4lit ..... "·* 11" uv. ...... ,; ·d. tt73"·;...._ .... -A to"tbe aame ~ to eoasurnera;· who says. And, "resale prices are model sold for a year ago. a .: fPt!S "'-• and 1ctMen orsana be lncluded. if , CM1 '•" 11V:1 ic.'"' Tk ~ '"" 11~1c c, •·• 1m 17"• Y.o ;~ 'iwrtod·~·y;,~ . . · off8n tend -to • igm>re the much softer." -Late--model luxury cart, in· Il)tltl , to bl. pectaged in tbe tmn 11with variety meat&" g::• ~ ll-~:t :=::-;-w l;'" l:: ::J•t.w ~:= 3.,. ~~·2~ .. Ftr the 12 weeks ended OCt •. ~ ·_{adqr wb en cludlng Gadillacs and Lin-~t.':Mteriall Pennit-or .. with byproductl" appears gn t ~ ~ t:'.nC:: 3 l~ ""~o .....,11., ... T•~. ,,,.,,. r • · , . ,~a new ear. . McCMJ..AGH Leasing owns coins, are not catching the ~.~ ~ abopper, to Re m the libel. ., 1r 121111 lM'h ~~:-:: 1i~ 1;:: =:::;• ~~~ ~ "!.net lni:c*M'wa& 115.1 mllllo~ ' ·. · '· · ' ' . '8.000·cara, and the .company buyers ' fancy tho way Ibey """""" .i · leul IO percent By December 1174 meals "'" "' •• Cw• '" ,. ""'-'"' ~ or 4 ceotJ a ibare ·~ -AllE ,_,;.,;,, _:...._._. turns 'Over atmosr half that used to, either. "For Uie first of. ·the .toP ot the P1i:kl1e and other foods to' which • 1n'41mM11 .. ~ '"' isw. i. Tottt • -. -JNs .... re of 11174. .... 111:-· -,.. • ., --~ ..._..,...-.....: and. ... --..... t least 70 ,_,,.c.,1 •• u_:...1..:. --~· -i---Js ~'u": I;.,., I::! ~'Cf 1~ 1111& (;oi11er1 a11d Lo1er1 ~· ~~tho •U~.~.q ... ~· ~.-""'"' ~--"• ~~ ~~4el,int.e[mediti~ _ number On the US e d-C 8 _!' _time 11_1 memorr," _.re~ __ ,.-::lhe""6'1 I per-I.-.-.. \'l~Wllt ADU~· Ml 21 2t Kfl"*' 1J'4 14 OAtHa•S ~~ &ftq-. "'111" ..... _ ~ .... .A.II _.,.nAH cars-where\'et . market each year.' Br--c... .. , ••..-"--'¥ ~ -r-~ \ll bottom.-(Tbe other have been addeil ~wttlch ·11Y1 11~ ltatlt' ~ 1• 20 1 Gtn "111'1 s.,., w. .. 1-up "'·' • .....-... · Sil I '"' ~-·or-• ~'& -~ ,.,.. "WV ~-10 t I the ,,_ 1-___.:.__. • ,..., """ 1t ttr~ tt\o ~ I S.ikllm OtlU _ S'h+ 1 U.. n.2 ~ ,_,..bet 1J-ac ~ • practical," uys ..IOhn Bless-: ~fost, of the f,inn's vehicles old Cadlllac1 on our uled ear per~ a ....,. .. 1-v-are claimed to have -..1a1 en. ,.,. 10 Kllttffl El ,.,. '* 1 wt111ftty "111•• • + 1 UP 20•0 mlUlon ... ... '"-~ ed. for the •·~I ) ~... !..-' 21 ,. I.KIM St si: ,, 4 "°"'"' Mlcroo 1t1'1+ 1..... Up 1•.s , .. , -« -ctn ... a luill-.::: Ing .. preiidtnt of . f.{cCullagh are lea'.sed to businesSmef! on lot after June I. . lcui:: • • iilti'ttkliU1 -11mrtdfed .. prop-0 u u:w. ..... "' 1111t-u" s TrMWt '"°" "-+ 1"' up 1•.o oo revmues OI. '153 mllt\Qn. · Leuiog, Inc., one of. the na: a "cl~ end" lei'SE! •. which Prices of compacts and m. 1be C".ormedlcot legislation tl'tiel must cmy labels tell· ~ ~ t~ ~:~ t::.:u li~ ~~ ; ~g,~~~ J\t! 1~ ~: l::; Dr. Franklin D: Murphy, Uch'1 three ·tara.st au t O means the lessee pays a fiie<r termediates on the other hand, has aromed naUomride in-tna their cUorie content • ~ I; H~ t::!'r ~ ~~:: i 1~"=''~11(~ . ~v.! tw. ~ ~~:: chtannan, Slid Wednesday the leMOn. B1-m.ur r 0 r e..s e e s mcmthly ....... --e pnd after z are holding up well · in the terest and could sf&na1 an Im-armunta or -.t•tns and ll!WTl .. 14:W. 1~ Ury lov n 24 \0 An\ MIC!'9' Syi :tt~+ • Up lJ.J •\.-..-.,, ._. .... & port •-~ in th l"'"'K; ptr A\110 IS"" 1•v. le¥tt' Nil 10 11 11 1111!'1 Carportn llY.+11¥> Up \S.1 lnc:reue was \QIC:'resuK-oC·fOn• "definite Sign.! of ... weakening" or 3 years turns the car back resale market. A two-year old ant lUl[wa.rv move lnl amounts d. key vitamins and c,t,.,,, 1•'h 11V:1 L~"'' ..i 14\t 1s•1112 A•Oll l• c .. ·'° s + ,.. up u .] ...... , ~ ..... In _, I -'-~ r I "-"·llagh r I F k hlch In ~""·glng Ill (OtlJI Ftl 161'1 ,,\t Ubuty " 2\\ 2'-13 G4n HOObl•• ' ....... Up lt.3 wu.111U s ... ~ ~.,.. .nt ln .the resa e 1u.o..--..et or ux-to "11.:\,u or resa e. ord Maveric , w gets r-"'1"" • minerals. 'lbe nutrients w °" ,...,. '°"" 11 1..n en""' ,.,., , u 1n11:ra.1a 1ncp n + 1,.. _uo u .1 •"" -_..... operations ury --"' ·flln' .. lz.e' aulos, as long Ble.<iaing says tbe company is m ....... than 16 mlles to a gall"" be e-'"' In "RDA's" ~wt """ "'" 1..1fftlc1 str ,,,,. """ u C•m arw ""' 2""' + 14 uo ,3·3 ~ t"I~~ llllU ..,..,. ""'' · . ......'ll:"<N'll:"\I ..,-91t C, Ml '2 Unc llcl't Sl"ll 6,. I• NnllFrn .OSb WI+ "< IJo 11.0 • 1 .. i ..... 19' w1Ui _.t.. ...... ..ronnance as the -.. ab or la g e losi ng money on. mani· of these of gas, is worth about $200 A LOT 18 new in the sphere or -••res of the US tt~ 2iY1 1..1on as. 2,. iv. 11 u s . 1ure1(11 sv.+ "' !JP 11·9 ...... ,. .,.,u. ~.. ... ...... OJ -• t 1 be''"• and .-.~ · ' ca t"'-211'1 1..or:tU• ~ .,,. L.CK~n _ from the newspaper publish-persists and gasoline eosts leases because or the sharp more than a comparable 1971 0& mea a ... ,. -even Department ol Agricul~'a 11 tt '"" a 1..-St..-1o:i. 1111a 1 .t.CMAT c.oro • -l °" 1•.3 l.oi eroup.. continue to shoot upward. • decline in the .book value of model was a year ago. more 11 In the olllna: -of new 1y1tem of "recommended a:'-~\ 'I"' 1t t= t':13::, 'll.,., 1 ~!1\~ ~ !r;: ~ ~ ~::! "' •• ·' " • ~ •• • . . ~ ., " •• •• • ' • " •\ ·' n • • .. • ' .. , ' •• ..../. ' ' I • •• • ·, ' • ..• " ' ' '• • ·, I '' . ... . N-1 ONLY at Canyon Sands, Palm Springs . . . . NO SHARED WALLS IN . t.IVINCi.'.AREAS .Enjoy s/11f1/e-f1mily privacy.~. o.ver 10<! fllml/les dot EnJoY 8 tlinnls·collrtS, ~eafa<i.iiwimmlng·and Jacuz:frpools, saunas, puttihg green, cabana. No initiation fee, no dues. Park environment, , • 4. • .:., • '. freedom from exterior mainteOa_nce. . ~ ~ -•-:; ...... . , ' ' --. 2-clf oar-with electric auiOmatic door opener. floor-to-ceiling wood-bUmlng fifepllce, 11 It vaulllld eelllng. See 4 dulling m!)delS. newly Jumlslled by W, &J, ~ .. ... . . , , ........ 1..,z ... -.,l,21/i-•2 b1*9oin1,2ktti. · -ii ncllJot '"-..... e $36,500 up. · . ' BUY NOW· .. ,IMMEDIATE·POISl:SSION ... ENJOY THE FULL SEASON. • _ • l I \ ' PALM ·SPRINGS -•· I I Elegant.1 .. tort~deeigns with colorlill tile roofs. Wide distances~ llvfn~ar-. Private, •Uedpattce. ' ' . ' e . '' Amr..:----. ...4....t-L.-. hOml ~il.c-~ ~' . _...;. ' ' . · . $750 mltllo•Amflc. toe. (N'IS!), 'Cmyo' · .n· ·. s,·, .. ~*· s ...,_;, . .,.· ..... ~--.... -~--------~--------....1-,~~--~-t ~ : CANYON SANDI,. -,,. , I ~,-,. ·' ·~nM~~~,\.{0 ; 1 .:;':-:;::;~~~.~~ ............ 1'1.1 •• ~ •. ,. : •• • ' • ' • • -.1nlcleawholet1mei.,come J · "'"" 1 ... ..._ __ .... ______ ..._"""..._"' __ '*" __ A_~_~_~~--:'·---:--..~~----'1-'-::_-_-._.:_ .. :_::~ ..... :~:::::::::-,.. 4300 L Pltni ~Dr,, ~ln>Spi!np (714) 321-2185 ~ . .• . , •• ,. • Glllrt ...... . , . ' . . ... •• • ' I , - vital concem to YOu. tfie meat Dietary Alkrwances," for one t:JY ·~ •i~ ~· -=-~~~-m:-;:v. ~ ~=i:~: ~~ 1: 3:. 1i:l buyer. Sped6cllly, here is average adult, for ooe day °'" Ort ,.,,, 6tia :;11(11:11y · "" •"-•TIME oc .111 1V:i-riri °" •.1 -J ,~ch ~• .~.u be ' 0.11 Olfl G1'I Oh -I • ff 1 Fl• CYortUlll 1,.._ Vil Olf l .l -v ... W WUI ~-OUU\UU oata -~ W!llo IM"'-C 2t 111 I MatUllM'tY C, • -IMl I O.• aware: 1 11"8 Qutl'E possible lhat 1:: : ':: 1:: =~ f:: W' P 11 :~~ ~~ t.;: ! ::t -''" · 4b:men . must now . aome of the food manurac-= 1-: ~"'If\/& =~~ · :"' ~14 :~ 2!!:,_c;rrc:: ~~ ': ~:! ccntain at "ltut tJrM foodl turera and packagers will beat g:: c 11:w. ''"" Mto.1 1. 11 11 n Otd!llofl"Dlt• ,,..,_. • '·' one of J tbim a iubltantlai the December '14 nutritional · <:.: ::: 1:~ =~~ ;~"" l:.,., :;.~?~ ~~ m:= ~-2! ?:~ . DI . . ---11-. ,._ .. 111 .. -_ ..... Iha Ol..n '$cl J-:W. '"" --lO JO'h 16 $11ylll'lt OiK• 13\11-" OH •. { IOlll'Cle . pro(elil, l\;U,l&WUg informl-. dea\.l.UU'C -.i"-' l 0.C:ultl ll:i. 1J .... Mttkm 13V. I• U Dal• TK1WoOltY 2 -~ Of1' )., ~:yt~~i:! =.~~~~~~I 'MUTUAL FUNDS ·., I covering the c:ontenis, and meat pocken abudy are • ________________ ._ _ _._ therefore the quality, of thiJ labelln& tome ~ucts \viUI ._-.: 1-:-: iitt~ ltft..Gr• ,,. u1 ·~-.:~ .. ,..., f::11 :t.:l ~:! type of fonea meal. 'lbe nutritional information and at .._ .,.. ..-. ,.,. .. MUD: 1111 a ".11t11.,. HA•D 011:'": labels must a c c u r at e l y leut one major food chain Ef.i ~"':i = ': il~ li:n 111: t .. t.ff ll' :: ~ t: ;:~ cie9crlbe each ot. the t11ree is nutnUmally labeling other .. "'· ~'Ti .. t:: t: ::: ~ d'l:1tB ~ t: t:: tn foods in desctnd!Qg order of pl;ctapd foodl ,......, $kl! H ll.lll 14.• ~I 52 11.U 12.tt lllt Ht J.91 LSI the 'weight ol each. The The drive for nutritiooal "'_.., ~1'l'• I~, AT ff:fffi:l: ~:: ~ ti:~:: 3tu't."n ~~:'·10 amoun'• J -·' load, • .._,.,.. 1-t....11--.11 all Jm-M""' food AHW •.• 4,11 lffllrl Trt lLU ... AMiii •.If S.JI EQlllty J.'6 •.OI .. \ll c:aUI .......,..,, lilLlll: ..... \ll .-.-Mtrw Fcl •.• J t.441 IE'""t 3.11 4.U Polll'J J.11 4.23 ln-..11 6.Jt 7.3' need not be lilted. products is lalnln&: strength. :::".,,.'" :J:I: l~I: J:r~ 'i::1 1i:= ::t'r11~11 t:I: ::~ s~1(Vcfao'fm~cw -JleainntDg Jan. 1 ac.. For the first time since the AGt H s.1s s.21 ''" •-t.n t.s1 ~ 1.1• 1.• ""' Stir ut 1.21 oording to another F DA Truth in Packaging Ac t = .. H ll:I: l!:: =-'L,,._, t.os ••· !-r.. ~51'!' s.1o11 ~ ~ n;: l~~ gul ·~-main ..1:.1.--... .-.. i.....-1 full Ame", s.n s.10 CNIOU': C."''l.Mr tu.11..u SeflltMI 11.1011.11 re l1oaMJt ~·•-r-~me awa BtVenyean ...,,. •• ,,.. t.11:10,n &,!*' 1.•1 '·'° 0rwt11 &.• 1.1os.111,., I'" 11.at•• u "chJcken cuaerole" ot ·-there ls evidence of .. ai "'" DWI t .lO 1(1,1' n.u 11.'9 Rlll'dl' 13.tt '"" IN•••HLO OJl:P. : .,.-, Am Eth' 4.tJ 1.41 Ir• 10.:U ••• Ulily N S.JO $.II (.omit J..11 •.OS "pepper steak" which have ~ea on both food J•t...11 ... Allllll ••'••ss c., llK 1.• ... Utt 1111v 1.4 t..11 &trpr 1.0I 6.M 1-"-·1-i-..a • .1 .. ., that th' food _. _ __. _ _.._ _..._.. l'UNDS: Dnt 7.lt •... ~ 1 ..... 1J F!tt Ff •..ll •.M uw.:aa .......,.,,... e 111.&UUal\a. Cff>t.11 1.u .. " e,.. ,... ... HarlM' r.•1 '-"' l11Ctrn I.ft t.n ,....,. ta.It u.tt : . t.1111 L 6,11 r.u , l11'fllfll i:°' t14 ,._ . 't.i&..11A C:. 1tM u... "-ti H 1.1' t.o:t S.Ct ·" 11 l'llfllR ,JI lUl iE 1•.H l._tJ SMllAltSON ~: Sho . c E Sl.c:~ ·'' tlt Sllltfll , ... 4:tt AH: lt#lf'( lt.U 21.:n • Am Gr1'I l.11 35 T'9ftcl at.JJ•.ta '91 6.lt 7,45 lft(Om 17.SO tt.U P. pers an xpect ... ·~w •n ....... "°... ·~ .......... ·-'·""·" .... -t.E .• 'ltOeltAMI! IMM 'l0.1211,06$110...11.M11.M • I Ml MYI 9,11 Piii DYft 6,AS 6,AS Wtfllnl 10.11 II.I) $IOI H 1.ll f.IJ I : . ~ • "' •• '"' .,, ..,, ,_" ,..,,..nM°"• ••-' ' ·L. · ·· l' E. · p • l ( , ::i1 1"'· tft t.ft t=.'rco: 192 •.» f:: Slit 1~=1~:~ ...... t.11 e.u Pl•ST • 1-I'" 1.)J t .JI 'ftl!Nr 1.•1 t .'1 eve · g· g rices ..... ..., .... .. "·" .... ·-... .... ''" '·" ··~ -t', .. ., ·w•sTOM= _ ff-~ 11 ... ILi' Smith .• 11.11 'It.I) I,._ .11 J,7' H S.• J.11 ~: S9 l&Gr U.IJ 11.lS -.wit: Fil 1.n '-" Mt 11.n 11.• so Gt11I" 11.1t 1J.50 W. M1t1 ft.II 1MM1 I.JI t.M MtG lUI M.J1 Swit lllV J . .O l.:D SAN DIEGO (AP) -En prime remedy." ....... . ..... .• s.c .. ,. 1.w 1.n lllllllo 11• 1•.• 1w '"" G ,.,, .... P &.11 ... 1M ll'Uitl US I.IS MPO 11.M l•.ti !?. In 11.U lt.tt pr1ct1J have ·lev.e)ed ott and An -1 J·-· w Bell ""' .., 10M 1JM MCO 1S.tS 16.'1 ,,. 4.tc S.•1 -•-.U·• ... _. hi•"-I ... ,............. • .,,_ . • I llOllUM ... ,: MlllH I• 2.IO 2.)0 " 1110 7.tt l.t'l IN~ t QIUW any ....... or execuUve vice prealdent d. the 4.11 UI ,. ,,.. "·°' 11.ot ,... .. I'" 11.U II.IS STATI IND oa .. : .U-.-'"-11•--•-..... 8 JM J ... ltt P:NI U0 I.Ml Ml4I 11111 i.M J ... Cll'l'I N S.00 ) ... IOmt! wue, aay1 a \AIUJ.unua Cmmen i..,. of Clllfomla, ~ a.• .... Cat_. "" 1.tc MMt• H u .1s ILtt °'""'lit s.». s.• ernr 1...i.,..._. -entatlve s·u .~ bill -·" ~~cany "'' 4.J't IS ruN LQ •.n MSI H l•.1'0 ,.,,. '"""" s.2t s.11 00 IH\M .. IW1' a"I"'-' ..ni Will:' l'JUUMU U&-W t1•tt,tl = -t.J! 4,M MU lnG t..1110.n $1 Fr Gr S ... J.OI Sboppen for I dozen "" reshape the bultnea te'la-'l'ii' • ,..., .... 1.n •.• SI Fr In( t.11 t ,11 -· ........ I 1ta·"'"--'-DI 1 ,, I MIP: °" 4.4J 4.11 St4it• Sit ., .. 41.H o.; ... --........ ~ . !Jll'C~-ilCllJ.Shlp between proctMOn :• .. ... ,,,... I.JI ,,. """°""II •.fl SJt IT9ADMlN ...... bet-• 7t and 75 cents In and ·-'·-by ~-••·.thing· · .,. · -. .. UM.tt.lO -..~-''"· •.n -'" •n 1u .... ..,.....,._. -.,q . .... r ...... t.• f.'111 Mrlill »WI MAJ M;01 Ant .._ 1 19 1 1' the ·atorts," J. P'rank.Bemtett, .. UI I' Slitc" 11.ttlLtJ Mull Tl'1 '"" 1.tl lll¥HI 1:_,. 1:. rnaupr of lhe Qallfcn1a"" ~ n I ~ti! tl} .;:n :m\[.,. t.M t.M :tt'T l;fc Af -~ :re: .J·r.J:" Program, saia'tnan 1Dtetvlew between them." ,tjf.;:;; 'ttr'l1 1.1• 1.tt ~-=" ti 'i::I ~"" 11.u11:n W~ ..... ,. u-_,_. -. '1N l'UNDI: ·C'lltll Sr 7 ... 1.0 DI'°'*' 1•1 .ts $10<~· :r:; tt·~ ~n:INll n1;:" .._ .,...... H alUS ,... rr IMm 1.tt t.01 llfff stk "-" 6.9f. SIS ORCMI,: • ductl " ~bavtn--'ft. N U$0•S t .1110,12 I-4.1• S.11 Grwttl i.JJ Jll ~ .vrr-df.3'14.• UlillUt ._. ·S.1' MM:ll Sr Ll'I 7.53 IM0011 l.)l t':a Ing I • CdM B h Ot,.w 1.u t.ti .. tea, s.o. s..s2 ~ '·" l .3t Stntnll ,11111 • .., 0 ( ' ' • ' ran· c MMtlllli t .ID 10.'JJ fh lll'IY •.35 4.11 NIW IMO llll Ttcflnl .: .. 1•311 -ldl!NNli"l'I' • ·-• ..1.1· NY \1111 "·" 11," Piii LI!.• •n ... 12.11 IECll!lly U.)4 11,IJ $1.irwy .. 10. .. 11"41 ~.,. .... • _., ...,..1.£.A ~ & ~-10 ... 11.)t H =dlfl t ... '·* Grwtll 10.'111,'2 S'fll(ra G t..tO J.SI Wftt ta~ le '\I Trlll 11 .. It.ti PVMD INC' $Im 1' ... 11.11 TMll: ,,_ UI .... ~ I wi ... 111 Of $111 1).9f. IS.2' MIOU I HU Mt t.J6 •. ,. T..,.,.i G' .. ,, t '.n eoawntttee meeH..• N rt ,..,.. ca.-'·°' '·" """ c..c s..tJ 1•41 r-c· 10 11> ._ e'Ulrpo OI: I'"'*' 1.1' t ,05 Nt_.11 ,.U t.U Tr"' C.. '-" t U knaftth.old . _,, n illtd to.,. 11.54 lfllllll tr 11.20 U..14 NtwM M.JI 1S.t6 Tri'll IE• 11 11 lL:M ' --H t .11111.11 111111 I .Ill •.a Hw ~ 1 •. ,, IS.,, T'llOOr K u:a II &'J Pl'Oll'9Jlli 11to & $tll 1.)1 1.• Gew.irl. •.tt 1.• Nlw Wlf 12,U 11.SJ JOlh CG 311 i•J • ' "1 -· • 111: .. t-B nk. Ok'd .., Gr 1.10 1.u GE s-;: n ... s .•• N1cfl1• ~ 1•.G: '°"' ci in i&.1 1;i. .. ,_• _._,,,":! ~-a . ., t: t: r,: :.\vp .t·:12 "" t.="" 1i:g 'l:lf unlli.d 1:11 .: .. ..... ~...,, atable lltua--OnHll S..tl ) ...... ' 111 "L . IM 13.t11S.tl UlllfllncJ 7.S1 J.Jl ..t... "--• ....... _., " ....... ""' r.M ... ,... II II °"' WIH 17.11 U.14 .·• .. •ON s••wtca • ~ -~v llllilU<m1 • • tillcl 1 .... 1.1 E;'"~ 4.U 4. Df'PI_,. 'lh U'°: l*'Glrlm .,. ~ Bank ti. N~ president v...wr t.12 10.t.t hid Ul, 111 ~ "'"' io. .. nM ~1s ,,, 11•111.20 'lfi fUmera te trOf -Jtonald 1... Rodien announced i!!J&.: -LJo.~i" ::: :::: tl~ llll1J;l t.n:J: ;;;:~ · _ _... ~~"-•'-1bat ,._......_, ',__. ..___ ~-.... t ,'9 rlMf 4.rt 4.•I OTC 59c 10..SCI 11.•1 •""•t't""IO ..... _ ..... --..v.-u. Wlll1I" ~ ~· .u.ur =if S.M "" Orw9'I .... '·?! ,_,..,.. 7.IS .,,,, PU : .. · _ , .. . . · , anoe a.p.euou lllPl°'al .bu c, i:n tJ ::::1 .J:~ ~n =.:~ t~ H: ::.~. ~:: t: t C O'm m .f t1 t I I Q11 recti".*f ~ b; DIW Qwoaa ~N M..• 11.lf !Wrt lW f,Jlo t ,JI PWnn Mt 2.6' . • • g::: C 1:'1;. U;M ''tt.t-~--..1 I ' del Martftke. IM. ::;:· ,tll ':~! ~r. ~ ~:~ ;:: lnttflln( w.1 .. IJ ~"' auu .•.• t 8·f --II ~-•·-··' ... J .141U' Mt .. 1 ~ I.tr "lOlttM .... klellt 7.11 1.1t r· ·IOUrc~• a1lo bed lUV .,.,..,,. """""'' IN\.la\l """' ,,. ,,,5 ltffM• 11:12:1a.n C.ptal 3.io •.05 u~"Z"c.a ,:::: 1 • .U ~==,;•· ~propDlal by by Waltf,r W. Smith, regiOnaJ tfi'l~ t::r~c, J:~'I:~ = ::;; lC:us Gvt$ 1t.a::;1 . . *'-=". •-.·s:;a-director of u.e San Franctaco """"' ·"rt lflC ... I'll 11'114,)S ,.,. St 10 ... 1 .... \IALU• u ....... , ..,._ ..,, . ~,,. s. ,,.. ram , .. , ,. .. ~n T,. 2.tt •.. vat u. i. 1 . .i 1j,1o fJltablllh. ...,..,. region, extend 1 FDIC ,., 1 a 1...,.. ~" t.n ''°"••• ro: r_:1 ~nc .,u 4 .... • ~tklll fol>-l:MJI COVt!raee tQ 'the banJt'S Office I '". :!:~"': 1;::1::~ aa.rllll 1~:nli1tr: V•r s;. ~~·~:;: ' ",r.,_ .. LI be .. _. 19 loc-•-..11 -I..... w:-.. _. Coal! It • t .. \J 1.21 "'"' ~ tl.Jt l•M II ~ 11.'1 YAM( .... n..,, -,_... ~ ""' ... ,. -• c '"'' J·" '"' G ':" '·" ,.._. t; 10.u IAN : -• •• "--_u• In 1-. lfllhwaY near M 1 c Art bur I: '·" .Jt tri• • 1.•1 ... ltlt GR~t ... 1l.11 :;,-..L 1.ts 1,., 1111 UUI _,, n~l---' In..,_ n.... t.·» '·'' .,.., n .1'11.IJ "''' I --· ., ... " I.It UUVn::"'f-.ni .,,...,.,_. ~l. A 1.1) I 1' Grwtfl tJ 1 ll,U • .. '2 ;UMBRS' GROUPS " 1(1..1s10.1s L =: ,, •. n.n11.1s VHrelt • . .M •• -. I~· . __ ... lb• ~lu~.1~ Ntbee~wportt = 11':ft1::~ I" ~:" t~ etC ::J ::U~=' ... ~ .... ~u .. • ,':~ .. ---·~--, ~.~-·~ ... .... ... •.• ... "" ..... w • •• lniendld '° """ Harbor __ _.____ DI c ILM 11.fll l~T --,: _.Gt I.St t.Jt \llkJl9 Gr 111 4ll .. ~·-i5 1.n I a.ti ... !'::! SI, '"'11 ... WaHSIUi ... Ll1 powen more mn.oc.. merce bulWinc at ua Eat °"' "'' 1 o a.10 ...., u.. · w1111""" n it" ~ .. .......__ --'-""'--~ ~ •-' '• In ... t •·· I .... •.n 4AO '*M~ ii 1 • 11 ... -lllWUC -....,. ..,,.._. • ....,..., 1 -.. DOW " I.If f.,. t1..1t c--11 ... 11.11 ermm Qnboa, ~-thie u.· -ocea -·'-rmov. •• SM• nJi 11.a 1.,.it, '·!! t.tl ': 91 .,.._ -..._ r _... ·-t .::!:_ ........_ I f,IJ f0.11 ~:CJ., t: ii:~ 8::111 ~~Ji :;:tt 1:.':r f!.!!!-~ Nprellllllllft kl' the lllte Wlllll UI -.... ---·· ·-.. , '· ~ ., ... , S.IJ s.u Int .. ., •• a Mort!" ,;:; \ta pup, &old the !eCJtlem: =....,.,, of tbe Jenk of " T t.ti I . 11 IJl'f t ... 11.tt Tt!Wli'f I... 'ii ... ---11 lndt~~··· 1~ • ~ .. ~.·~ I ... 1 • °"""' •.2' .... Vk" , t0.17 11~ JFVM 11 ... ll. """ MlloMlo "_. •n-'""~ ~w-'9tf 9 •· WW.Ml J." •.JI ...,..,.. It.II: 11 'llfth.ly 1~ 11,tJ lradl~•lly l\u t.......-,.._ ............. u --... ..Mt _.,I M. 11.. l''* Ul J.... . ........... , •.st '· ._,1111 11.IO ·-llla'CU U1llJ ·-....Y· -•U8 VII.nee WU r,• • 1tft10.2' '""" IJ·"l4.'1 •1111r1· 11..3 . ' .,,_ 11,o;! weakest link in the fQDd pro.. ~-t'Oll\P&ete b.~~~t n I ftj'§'• "j'''·H ::i,:: ,;~ 1:~ "15ttt™"~ i:g th:~~"' tt!f, t.~ ducUan and muketinC chain. &M;Wuat .baclud1nt-111n11: new t. 4. J ' 0.... tA lOJI H l ,.ot ._.. Gr . , .. Tba crtnce beUevee thlt the drive--tn ~and a fully ,: t" 't.,. = ,':, ,,.~ 1l1l ~'f. ~~1 .... J,;: ,.;~ itJt ••-a'•'•• ~~.lion 11 a ............ 1--•"':.1-..-.... t .._ CIMlt 9t 11.tS '"'" Sil l.41 t.lS lfltr 111¥ 1 .. 0111.t? ....... ......... .,_, ~ ._,... .... IW U•Ya u..,-.MOKU • 1,1 ,M;,, 1'f J.!'t JOl'IMlll 1j,Oil )$,(W fl-41nt 111' 11.1' l•llN¥41~. • • • . I • ' •• I ' ·. • ' .. . . • • Many States, Cities Getting Behind :Energy Measures·! Jl)l DAILY PILOT Frldty, No.embtr 9, 1973 United Press lnternnllonal ?i.lany stale and municlp:1l covernments already have put into opt'ration il variety of nlcasures designed 10 im· pll'ment PrcsidCnt l\iion's proposals IO conser,\'e eu.c.rgy. In Lansing. (iov. \Villiam G. li1111lkcn ordcrt.od state of· flee thcnnostal.s set at 67 degrees and autboriz~ the vurchase of compact cars to rt'place larger mod.els. He .11.so ordered electric lights and power. even for e 1 ec tr I c typewriters, turned off In e1np1y offices. BUT JJE om· not order speed Hn1its slo\ved to 50 m.p.h. but Instead aaked the UPI Ttt .. lo SAVING ENERGY -President Nixon Thursday ordered the lights ol sev· eral . buddings and monu1nents in the nation's capital dimmed or turned off durm_g the energy crisis. (Top) The North Portico o! the White Hou se and \.\la shmgton 1\lonument {upper left) re main lit earlier in the evening. (Bot· tom) The North Portico is d arkened except for entrance light. )\'a shingt-On Monument ;s cQmpl etely dark. t. Highway Salety omce lo assess the impact or any auch ac:Uon. In O.troU. Mayor Roman S. Cribbs imposed a seven· point fuel saving program that includes a. 50 m.p.h. limit on city cars and ' reauctlon of tem peratures to 60 degrees in empty offices. San Francisco's famed Fer. , ry BuUding was dark Thurs- da1 night for the first time since tile blaCkouts o/ W0rld War 11. The lights henceforth will be turned out at night for the duration of the energ)I' crisis although t h e ii· Jumlnation surrounding lbe tower's four clocks will re- main tit for the time being. New York State may have wba\ one merchant caned aJ .a 0 BlaClf Chrlstrpaa" as several cities announced plans to curtail tradlUonal yuletide lighting dbplaya In downtown areas to save energy. NEW YORK City°• lamed Rockefeller Center Christmas tree will be a llltle less bright this year, with trimmings slated to be cut by 25 pereent. The citJea of Aubum; Corn· Ing and Elmira have decided not 14 tum on their yule llghb thiJ year. Sehools Feel Pineh Arthur Linsner, a member of the Elmira Mercllants As s o cia tion , said "23 (merchnnts) are having a 'Black Christmas' so there wlll be more pct\\•er here for people of the city," Erie County exec utiv e Edward Regan ordered a one- third reduction in electric Jighting used to heat county offices, and told the county public ¥.'orks commissioner to drift "Immediate and long range plans" for reducing energy consumption and un- necessary travel by the county government. Riles Says Fuel Crisis Prompts Problems SACRAMENTO (AP) Schools in 36 California coun· ties expect !uel ,shQrtages this winter, both for school buses and heating, state Supt. or Public Instruction \V 111 o n Riles reports. In a report Thursday to the State Board ol Education, Riles said ·a survey of 41 oC California's S8 county school superintendents came up with these reults: • -Five counUcs have bus fuel problems, and 36 others anticipate p r o b I e m s by January. -Four coonties anticipate shortages of fuel for heating schools. -Several counties are con· sidering steps such as curtail· California Minimum Wage Proposal Aired SAN FRANCISCO (AP\ - Public hearings will be held late this month on a proposal expected to raise the wage for aClifomia adult workers by 35 cents to $2 on ?I-larch 4. The proposal. formulated after five da ys of public hear· ings on recommendations from industry wage ·boards, is scheduled for approval Dec. 4 by the $tile IDdUstr1a1- Welfare · Cammissio11t said Theodore J. Todd, commission chainnan. lower rate "enhances youlh e m p I oyment opportunities because or disadvantages and risks associated with hiring young people." Some 90.000 st udents are employed in '-''Ork-expertence programs. he added . · H OUSEHOLD WORKERS are covered-by the minimUm wage lciw-for the first time, Todd said. . · A few exceptions tO the law include student nurses, outside salesmen, baby-sitters, pnr fessional actors or actresses and apprentices regularly in· dentured under the state Division of Apprenli ceshij>"" Standards. Also exempted are employers of fewer than five persons in farming OC· cupations. ing travel by athletic teams, eliminating driver training, elimJnating o r shortening regular school bus routes. UE SAID mE counties reporting problems getting enough ()lei !or school buses are Fresno, Monterey, San Diego, _ ~o. . Joaq\).in a n d Sacramento. Counties anticipating shortages in fuel for heatiol schools are El Dorado, Mere· ed, Mono and Stanislaus. ''Although the past im· mediate concern has been prima rily over diesel fuel for school buses, many counties expressed concern a b o u t heating fuel, particularly those dlstrtcts which use propane," Riles said. "THE DEPENDENCE of California's schools on fuel is awesome. Each day, the 13,293 registered school b u s ·e s transport more than a million students. These buses -1og -. more than 171.2 million miles an nually," Riles said. "Also, about-one.third d. TurnpJkes in New Jersey posted lo,ver speed limits of 50 miles an hour. Experts believe such a limit could cut California's vast area is sub- ject to extreme variations in climatic cortditions. With the " severe cold of winter, it is OPENS HEARINGS- nc;>t possible for children . to Sen, Henry Jack.son. function in the schools without (0-\Vash.) opened a heating fuels," he said. hea r ing Thursday of rules said he has written his Sena te Interior to Gov. Ronald Reagan and Com1nittee on Presi- President Nixon .to give dent Nixon's proposals -schools priority in allocation for combatting the en· of fuels. ergy crisis. eonsumpllon of gasoline by Ill • percent. • ... fo,arnum Alston, energy ad· · · viscr to \Vlsconsin G o v • • Patrick J. Lucey, said the governor might have authority to lower mail.mum speed lim~ Its oo Wlseonsin hlgl!Ways 14 -; 50 miles-an hour.' Lucey's stat( .. ; Is studying the matter, AJs1on : said. .. • .. ... A SPOKESMAN !or New York Gov. Nelson A.:, Rocke!eller sakl he might ... have to declare an emergency · ~ to lower speeds, but the stet( • is studying the possibility. · :f Gov, Wendell Anderson of :: · f\1innesota will ask the ·· I .. legislature in January to ~ . · ~e a 50 m.p.h. limit. Ht ;· has ordered state vehic1es to : · lower their speeds. ;\ Utah Gov. Calvin L,. : .. Rampton hes decreed that : vehicles on state business be 1• limited to 60 m.p.h. and has ;:. urged resldens to cut their :: speeds voJunlaril~ .. Gov. Dan Evans o t -:· Washington says "lb State. _ Highways Commission will "!.. n1eet today to ronsider his'. i. request to lower speed liml \ to 50 m.p.h. throughout the ~ state. Evans says it may be' .. possible lo\ lower the limit" ~ Saturday as he wants, bu\' -: William Bulley. deputy direc-• · -tor of the State Highwa)'I :-: Department. said it would take two or three weeks to ' change speed limit.s signs. Gov. LlnWood Holloo of · . Virg inia ordered s ta t e' ~ e1nployes to slow down to 50 ~ 1niles an hour and lower heat ! to 68 degrees. • ~1ontana <;;ov. Thom as : -Judge,~v.·ho-,earliei: this y_ear ... set speeds at 60 m.p.h., rese /: it at 50 miles for stak . . vehicles. :,:: • •1' • OHIO GOV. John J. Gillipa:: ordered a 60 m.p.h. limit ~ state cal'!. Tbe Ohio Highway Patrol bas set a 50 m.p.h. speed for its cars except in'· emergencies . The governors of Indiana. .• Penns y l·v a n i a. Arli.ona. Kansas. Pilissouri have also • imposed restrictions on .state-· used cars. ... ------,,~--~~I GM Seeking P1ice Hike On '7 4 Ca1"8 Complete Mid .. day Ameriean .StQck List ' • ' 1 PlllATE TIBST FUIDS AllllABlE FOR REAL ESTATE LOAMI 1.i &. 211d TRUST OEEO$ $1.600 To J25Q,OOO UP TO IO% LOANS OH TAllST DEED COLLATERAL HWOfn' .EQUITY ..... -""""· C!O NewPort Ceni.r Ott.. N.wport BMcil, C.ltl'. f:"14) M&-ll:M FIRST ANNIVERSARY SERVICE SPECIALS LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES * HIGH QUALITY SERVICE * FREE FREE FREE WASH WITH ALL SF.RYICE COURTESY BUS ON • THF.. HOUR COOLING SYSTEM SP.fCIAL r.tdlfto' e"CI f\fll!e•· l\01.n, lh11d le~ t l'ICI 51Jirng1~. IG< IKlti. FORD OWNERS TAKE NOTICE ROTATE 4 TIRES WHEEL ALIGNMENT SPECIAL (!Wiit U\tfof, C&l'lbc::t •nd fOf! '"· tOo'<IC.I I• ttQll!rtd Cllf• or11,. BttAKE INSPECTION SPECIAL cc .... '"'° l""Ptc' """' •!Id rNlt b•llltU. ln$Pt!;I lllllM'QS ~nd llffflot ~•If, Cl'ltd! lor WI>'"' cylll'llltt IN~I, m1U11' CVllF'der lluhl t1vel, .self·.clll/1Ul'lf met1>11111m, pow9I'" bOOtltr. Ad!11$1 frQ<>t whffl be•r· 1"0, P1u..n11•r c1ri IH'lf,• ~OltO, llH(~N, & MlllCUllY PltOOUCTS ONLY All l"AltTJ E•TltA U• HllOEO JPl!!CIAL "lllCU IN aFl'liCT THltU HOV, JI, 111' 16900 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH •PH.9•2 -884~ • Did Revere Drive VW For Only 2c a Mile? WASHI NGTON (UPI\ - Someone really did get 88,000 miles out of a 1966 Volkswagen at a cost of about two cci\ts a rn ilc, according to the con1- pany. His name was Pau l Revere. _ L'nlike his namesake. this Revere racked up hi.s mileage com muting to work from his home in Toms River, N.J. Volkswagen gave the govern· mcnt that account Thursday in submitting proof lo back up a television .;commercial based on Revere 's ex- periences. THE VOLKSWAGEN af· fldavit said Revere commuted to work "some distncc from his home" but ~id not give loca tion or distance of his workplace. The Volkswagen commercial was ooo of a long list or advertisements for which the Feder a 1 Trade Commission demanded proof from 12 automobile companies, fore ign and domestic. The replies \\'Crt made public Thursday nod the FTC is reviewing 1hem In a search for ca~s of false ndver\islng. (Rclaled .,_ . story, Page 12) Volkswagen said it learned of Revere through a n "fmsoliclled Jetter." Jt sul). mitted a copy of the letter along with Revere's copious records sbowjng be spent about two cents a mile on gas and maintenance, to keep his Beetle on the road. the cost did not include insurance, registration or other 1imilar lees, the eompeliy added. CHEVROLET REPLIED, when askedJV~Y it was billing the '73 Moote C..lo 8 u "the best handUng American car you've ever driven,'.' t!Uit the statemefX was "merely en in- vitation from Chevrolet to the public to teat drive the 11173 tiionte Carlo 8 ... " Several firms admitted their !uel """10my ligures were peak pouibllltles Wider Ideal driving conditions. Renault said Its claim ol tip to so milts per galloo oo thr.. models "cannot reasonably be Interpreted u belllg a guarantee o f performane6 on all their models or on any one of them under all possible oondltloos ... I ' I • WOW YO prltn on I 1rct~ I ' • Thursday's Closing Prices • ' NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE ·. ' . \ l_ November 197) ! __ ___; DAILY PI LOT Year's High-Lows Appear Every Saturday I • I r I • I ' I ' -1 • • • . . 24 Olll. Y PllOT Weekend ~alendar ,· ... ~ r . , 1 .,,, .. ,,, • • •• British Ready Mysterious Takes Leml CAPE,~~~ yess~lf~r Ame~i~an ~up Frenchma1i Top Skipper-sin World To Compete: in Newport starte to:;t!IOw &!l/J7 bciets ~~i11Scft here 'ffdn~y •· l.;()NOO~; · AP) . A bids to wrest the much sought \Yere , involved in the last on the t · ~leg of tll,e toondi surprise new fall~er toy art er trophy rrom -tM United Btitish challenge for the ~~· ld ' ~ ~J.Pc~~lto the. cOve ea7 mertca's Cup st~tea. But a11 hope. or mouh· Amtrfca's Cup in 1964, are By ALMON LOCKABEY YACHT CLUB -Cal·25 Fleet VOYAGERS-YACHT CLUB 'Syaney, Auslrallii . h . . · ,_, ting a British challenge had behind lhe uew boat. ... 11111 lclltw Championship, Saturday, Sun· -111assey 111idget Series No. Frenchman Eric Tabarly's yac t racmg serLeS 1! eipeci.w Some or the top racing ski!>' I, Saturday. Pen Duick Vl made use or to be announced this week. dis."lppeared -untn 00"':· BOYDEN AND Livingston pers in the world \vill mix day. DANA POJt\'T YA C 1-1 T BOATING the wind and used a spinnaker The development or a crnck ''\Ile don't have much of · id lhin publicly on it Up Saturday at Newport SOUTH C 0 AST COft. CLUB -PHRF Series No. to carry--hhn to the front 12·1neter British_chaljenger :i cl.Ye about what Ls ha!>' have sa no g · Harbor ''acht Club in com" INTHIAN YAC•IT CLUB -1. Sunday. _ '---------~ or the neet. has been so sec ret that even pening," confesseO a-the hvt~~~~?r:t:aelyl~~r~ petition for the Jean Schenck Intraclub Regatta, Sunday. LIDO ISLE YACHT CLUB ; Behind Tabarly \vere . four the st3te1y Royal Thames spokesman for the RTYC, one yac .. -o ~femorial Trophy. PALOS VERDES YACHT -William Morris Change or British entries, Great Britain Yacht Club isn't sW't ex8cUy" or 'the top clubs in Britain was designed behind dosed The event is the annual CLUB -Champagne Series Watch Invitational. OR, Sunday; Hot Rum Series, IJ, Second Life , Burton Cutter \Yhat is going on. which counts kings and doors at S-o u th am Pt 0 n challenge team race in No. !, Sunday. 5.5 meter, 6-meter, PC. Sun-and Adventure, the yacht The club is th e official body princes in its membership. University on England's .south Lehman-12 dinghies. Six yacht SAN DIEGO day. which. \VOn the first leg on that would challenge the "But provided certain con-coast. and will be built in clubs will be Involved in the NE\\'PORT·BALBOA SILVERGATE y Ac HT points of the race from United States. The An1erica's' dltions are met, we hope to al uminWn aUoy. . competition with four-man CORONADO YACHT CLUB CLUB _ Hot Rum· Serles, Portsmouth, England, to Cape Cup series is scheduled ·to go ahead with UIC chall enge Few other details are teams. NE \VP ORT 11ARBOR -Indian Summer Regatta, Town. Behind were British be sailed off Newport, R.l., this week" the spokesman available because as one ex- Heading the list for the YACHT CLUB -Jane PHRF, Sabot, Saturday, Sun· SDHF, Sunday. Soldier. Two Italian entries next September. said. ' pert said: ''Obviously Boyden defenQing Ne\\'port Harbor Schenck T r o p h y . interclub da y. SOUTHWESTERN YACHT CS E . RB and Tauranga, 33 Anthony BQyden and John and Uvingston don 't want the Yacht Club will be Bill Ficker, chajlengc, Lehman-Us, Satur-SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB CLUB -Keg 0' Rum Race, Exports France, Sayula JI AUSTRALIA AND FRANCE Livingston, two experienced America~. to know \vhat they the 1970 America'~ Cup day. -Sinnholfer Hot Rum Series, MORF, Sunday. Mexico and Ktiter France. already have announced their members of the, RTYC who are.up to. defender and fol'mer world -·---------------------...:....---'----~--------------:.__:_ __ :_ ________ :_ _____ ~-------- Star champion. Others on the NHYC team are H e n r y Sprague, national and in· temal.ional Finn Class cham- pioo; George Twist, a crewman on Ficker 's winning America's Cup team·; and Bill Symes a top intercollegiate sailing skipper. Chris Colby is the a1lemate. ED BENNE'IT, U.S. Olym- piC representative in the Finn .Class in 1972 will head a St. Francis Yacht Club team. •Oithera i n c lud e Tom Blackaller, world-famous Star sailor; Chris Boome and·H:ank Jotz, both top Bay Area small boat sailors. l!Jlboa Yacht Club's tea111· · wiil consist of Dave Ullman, U.S. Snipe and 470 champion; Argyle Campbell; lop U.S. Te'rnpest Skipper Conner win- ner of the Congressional CUp, and £Ortner All-American in- tercOllegiate sailor; J a c k J akosky, a ci:ewman for both Ullman ahd~eamphell, and JJm Tyler, cl!;lmpion Lido-H ;)dPI"'· . . . DENNIS CONNER, former world Star. champion will he the key man on San Diego Yacht Club's team of Carl Eichenlaub, John Driscoll, and Mark Reynolds. Chic Rollins is listed as alternate. Bahia Corint hian Yacht Club and California Yacht Club are the other challengers, but their teams were not listed. Firs.t race will start at 11 , &.J!L ovet· and inside the bay course, with the second race to-start immedia~ly after. ·~)IDJio"A YACHT CLUB will bod. @.unique event Saturday iJ) conjunction with Lido-14 Freet 1 when top skippers take lhe helms of LI00.14 sloops I wi1h blind ctewmen from the ofange COunly chapter of tbe Braille lnstitute. ~r local action will in- clude Voyagers Yacht Club's Huntington Pier 'Vest Race, the 7th feature of the Massey lfidget Series for bo3ts· rated under the Midget Ocean Rac- ing Fleel (MORFI oo Satur· day, ~and Lido Isle Yacht Club's William Morris Change or ·Watch race Saturday. PRIMARY JNTER"EST on the big boat front will center on the start of l.AJng Beach Yacht Club's 1,000-mile La p.az race which will send 28 boats southward, including fi ve · local entries. Entries (ri)m Newport Harbor are Bob Grant's 61-(oot sloop Robon JU, NHYC; John H a 11 '~ Columbia-43 Ragdoll, Tribute, a Columbia-52, Mae Donald, Blatterman, Lawhorn a n d Holleran: NH y c ; Bob ~ e a u champ's O:ilwnbia-57 'Dorolhy 0, NHYC; T.M. 1'Y,,edor's 47·foot sloop Andale and Dennis Coate 's 36-foot sloop Chasquie. So uther n Californi a YaChting Association calen· dar: LOS ANGELES ·LO NG BEACH LONG BEACH Y A C II T CLUB -Start oC Long Beach to La Paz race. Saturday noon. SEAL BEACH V A C II T CLUB -Sunday Sailors Series No. 2. Sunda~'· CABRILLO BEACH Y A€HT CLUB -Fall Series I\'o. 3, all classes, Sunday. SANTA MONICA BAY PACIFIC MA'RINERS CoaC.I Wealfaer sunny tod•V· llqht Y•rl•lll• winos night .rtd ,_.,.Ing tiovr1 t.corn!.-;i -1.,fy 10 to 16 knoll in 11temooni ~ 1rld lttUrd41V. HlOh loday, m!d .0.. CMll.tl temptr.rvm rtngt from U to "' lnl•rld len'!Plflt~ret •Inge frwn 50 to 7.a, Wiler lemptr1!ure 60. · S••• n-n, J'ldes ,.IDAV ~ Niii ............ l t411P.m,. 1.3 Sotcond low ............ 2:24 p.11'1. '°·' SATU•DAV FW'lt ...... , ........ ~. 1100 1.m. 6.7 .. i,.., tow ............ 1:'4 p.m 1.7 s-Mt iWtll ............ f :27p.m. 1.2 ~ .............. J.01 P.tn. -1.1 fU..oAY '"'"' hlfll ............ 1:2' 1.m. .,,, fl'l"1 '" ............. 2:Jf1.m. ·1.+ .................... ll!tl 11.m. 1.0 l4aolW 1oW ........ J;SI p.m ·1.1 M...... •1• l.ftt·.... •:U ~11'1. ...,....,_ •:11 "'"''.... S:ll 1.rn. . I .. •. ' "CAMELOT" BATH BDDWABE 111 keep talking about how rich it looks you won't remember that.our ptjce ia ao dam low for the q'uality. Antique brass · and Pewter. Etched Towel Bars 60"x30" . .. . . .. . . .. . . . 1.59 60"x36" .................... 1.99 9"x52" VALANCE .. .. . .. . .. • 99c Have you seen these lovely cafe11. The interwoven colors sort of give it class and a soJter effect. (Chee, I sound like a real decorator guy). In orange, avocado, white. wilh contrasting accents. WHITE TOllET SEAT 197 A regular everyday item ancW:ome guya gel up lo 4.99 lor this. Oh well, to continue. Nylon non-corroding fittings. And with a little of Toilet Trims you can make it look like something else. (A Buick?) -· m•sle1 c.t'la1g" ... ' .JACK ARMSTRONG "WO·ULD'VE LIKED THIS • >' '-..__,/ PE.EL A~D PR.ES5 'PBEWAY FREE STANDING FIREPLACE. full base compiele with curved screen no rnortanng needed1 A winner 10 satin black and colon. Self·adheaive 12xt2 tiles. deep thick shag, many colors. We'll show vou how to do floor or ceiling with no seams showing. SHAGGY VAC TOOL And to keep the nap on that stuff right up there. the gadget that tita'all atandar' •aea. For long or medium shag. 267 ·- AMA'Z.J K<;; . Hew Do THE~ Do ~.t-~ TAAT 7 \ CLOIE SPAllSB CBmEJJEI 4400 WGING BAUi LAMP 1 never have Jikitd this light. but we've sold hundreds. They always make me feel the thunder and lighting ia coming with th• rain. Gold 6.niah. 9900 BWISTIC"' BllCI WAil COVElllC 597 Loob to real the guy with the mortar ii alwaya trying to find out where the aeam 1tart1. Gi•• it tome thought. 1 ARMSTRONG PLACE ''N PRESS VINYL TILE Beautilul lloor tile and no m•BI of glue, mastic, spreadeni, clean-up, etc. (and on and on). Just peel the protectiff paper and lay the tile . .-.,,d such beauliful patterns. 12xl2 tiles. ·-· ·-.~ ~ ..... O'""'•I " A deal. U you lik• a lire in the fireplace. We deliYer them and you can 90 the wbol. winier, no matter wbal the gCII supply ia.. '", I .J f J I : f. .. .. _ -· - EACH PALLET OF FllECl.OW ucs- 59so 660 LOGS 8 FOOT REDWOOD LOGS 497 Abe would hare liked th81e. They are lat d••ill, and you can 1pllt them. maybe aome day be pr..tdent {I don't know if ., tbat'a-1uch-a lucky-brecdc-nowadcrp.) ROUGHT '-llON BAILllG 77c .'fli· Add oome aa!otr and a lot ol ;ood looko to your porch. Or ~lllld a HHJ. cavo-lor that 'lriM-aloclt Bwnlingor kid next door. . ~ . artis lioast Bu ibvol and the recei Be Sept Fl arms then her He lhelr lore In with lhe " -insld lhe "Y se go • rt'llSS withl mu1• , _...__ ------c-------• ' .. • ~­' • Daily Pil ot Photos by Richa rd Koeh ler Dancers-• 1-n-Residence .. .. Grant Puts· Gloria Newman Co m p.any on OCC Campus Stories By CANDACE PEARSON introductory concert, a masters class in modern -------ot ttii ~HY 'liii ''-" --d~an-ce;-a hUmanitiesTe<:tuie and music sesSion.- "Jt enriches the dance program. lt increases Campus artists had a chance Wednesday to the students dance vocabulary and motivates combine the painter's palette with the fluidity them. It's fun.'.' of a dancer's movements. · Dorothy Duddridge iJ .,talking about the Gloria Newman Darice Company Hin residency" at mE TREAT.RE department will have .it's day Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa for six Thursday with a mod_ern dance Jecture-demonstra- weeks.. tion that will feature the unfolding or a stciry. Duddridge and fellow teacher Suzanne Joseph, The closing event will be a dance concert are the danee department at the community at 8:~ p.tn. Nov. 1A. Tickets are $3 general Q>llege but they n:ia:ke up for their small numbers· admission and $1.50. students.· by brfnging in outside experts. OCC is sharing the 13--member company With seven other community coUe·ges, includidg Santa "WE'VE BEEN IN the forefront of getting Ana , in . the ini~ial year of the . "community artists from New York and1the world," Duddridge arts proJect'' s_upported t)y the federal National boasts. · Endowment for the Arts. It will introduce ·other artists and an additional -·-dance coiiii)any, pfobably-Of anothertype-:- "There are so rn3ny different kinds of modem dance,'' Duddridge said, ''like ice cream.''. She describes the s t y I e or the Newman Company,. which is based in Orange, as "very flowing ,and technically skilled.'' A career in dancing is difficult and not always financially rewarding. "It's an artistic endeavor they (dancers) ha¥"e to enjoy doing," Duddridge said. · She has known Newman Jor 12 years, since the Gloria-Newman Dance Theater was formed. NEWMAN, who serves as artistic director and chief choreographer, has studied With Martha Graham, Merce CUnningbam, Louis Horst and Doris.Humphrey. . . - • Arts I Dining _ Out Entertainment • DAILY PILOT 25 Friday, Novemer 9, '1973 - But this is the first ·time "we've tried to ._. ~ . ihvolve ·the other-arta. Before.;.we've been-selfism---'.lHE-F..EDER.AL_grant is matched . by com- and just. bad masters· classes lind concerts/' munity. and college sources, whicll eaCh pay A native of New York, she has been on dance-faculties-ai-:-t:Jeim--;-usC---and-car-sta•;;;.-------------------------~---'--;------- the blonde teacher said. "It's ~n very well $1,000 for five sessions. received by the OUicr d.eparbnents." ' ''It's inexpensive <,'ORSidering what wt get ,'; , Beginning with • _!_.P.hot9grapher's session· in· Dud~ridg!_ s~id. ad<!!ng she's alreat;!Y: J:!Ut in September, the company proceded tO ~ \!~ee occ s name fortliesecond year or the· project. Long Beach and taught at Eugene Loring's American School of Dance. She bas a masters degree from New York University and has been IS.. DANCERS, Page 311 -~· .,. ' DJl~Ce Is 'Singjng a So11g ~ith Your _ .Body' Floating, softly gliding, weigbUess, her , "The moment where you should enjoy arms find their destination in mid-air, the movement is where YQLstarLJO then pose ror flight.. panic • . . -- Though clothed ln sweater and slaclts, Glbrla Newnlan. Before a master's her body's Lautness·I• not di!i1Ji9ed. . . . tjasa.at Orange Coast College. ' Her movemt;1.1~1 ddelleceptive ... ~. , The-Veteran danCer and choreographer 11beir aPPllfOl1) sunpliclty. . cate ' --~ the hour .. ncl-a·hAll session with forcelul-te$1fy. to her co~~l· , .llttle:fanfate, with no allusions Jo lier 'In .a \•oJce ,fu'1t (inn U1efl warm;.~ career, ·spanning almbst three decades.· with charm and klnd11fc18, Ibo au!.... \be studen!S aco:ePt · her es tl}eir the others: • ,, '""'"" • teochel' and she obviously reli.shes the "Think \!\ tcnns .. ,.._,. ?""" ~ role. · · '°"' ljben o/Oll staJ:I' to move • • • Feel 'Ibey sland sllgh y askew . in lines inside. You're• miklnc the bod)( ®:· ~11 fidnC the mirrored wall in the dance tbe action fOt your . • • · ' 1 ofud!O. AU shapes and sizes, !he leotards "Yoo'(e putting your foot down for though , mostly black • differ· on each securll~ instead of lO!ting your lic!/'Y dancer. Llke pcifka dois, bore an~ there go where . ii h~• !<I. M••Y 'tlma .l"!fre about Ille room, a )ouch of green, red . mlssin(•the rea!,'lujl of; ~· ~ or~ goes~ the moti0ns. 'l'ilhln yourself bclore you stllrt to "Your head has to work too in dance." mo''e . . : Newman advises tllem as she v.1alks • among lhe dancers. ''Not . baq," she Three members o( the Gloria Ne\\'lnan · "(Try to \ combine that isolation of ni>d~-at-one-·point,.--!.~~\-not--quile-secure-. ·Dance-Theatre-lead dancer ca r o I -\'nrious par..ts \,vith a sense of space. Some of you are terrified ." 1 • • • The studeq,l's faces are intense. And w.amer,_ ~nda .Lee .Evans and Barba1a Rush 'back-you're CO\vards .... although their abilities often markedlY/ Gilbert-serve as DlQdels for t he "Almost ... the hip p~hes you past varied, their enthusiasm doesn't. It is sl~dents. . the Je~t it. So it sends you. Right. high. / t . :Some parrot the leaders' movements. \Ve give :a gold star wben 'you fnU One woman tries to-leave: early to .while others experiment with.-tlii?ir own • •. . · -.... catch a ride home three times. but-t lu\i' 1 kill styles "One. 't¥i'O, {boom) four, rive, rush ...,, .. "•• -""'"'"" really tangible -• ec ca ' 5 or • back and (bo6 · N d 'I ··-• ~w-.. "! I I f b' . d I • a one, m .. . o, on keeps drawing her back. She finally \ see a 0 0 •g eyes an no watch the floor . . . tba\ started olit gives In to It alid stays-unttl il\e 'encl. many bodies moving ·behind them," nJqe; It sbOold get bigger ... one·(snap) Newmah, keeping lime by·' snapping Newman says. "See If you can distribute ... move back and hold. Better." her Qngers ·or beating on a shallow drum it (a movement) lh terms or your She pushes them and her determination tOp, puts the studen!S throut h their enerJ!l'," she adds, polnling lo her head becomes theirs. ' paces •ith a ~es of exercises and as she says "energy." As her voice takes on a softer, more dance movements. "They all move, really they do," she confidential tone, !!he tells them that Stretching. bending, trying to SO'lr ~ J laughs. referring to the hips, ribs and sometimes they will be fighting for twisting, finding new muscles, -plie-ing shoulder in one exercise. • . breath, but can't show it . · abOut the room. a mass of legs" and She urges students to ' 1 t r u s t ' ' The students go througti an exercise arms not quite in consort. themselves with verbal enCOW"agcnlcnt. that asks them to make their spines \ .. .. : ! seenl t.o float inside. ''So1ue of theje :1r(' rcn11y beautiful." she tells them. The class ends ,,·ith the three company dancers teaching: the steps to a jaZZ)t modern dance routine. , • For some ot the students. this sessis \\i ll be "the only contact ~ ,~·ith 1 the p fessionat world of dance they'll eo.1 have. For others,· it' is one in a lCllQ line of dance lessons which may of may not ·lead somewhere • ~ to another leSson. ' 1 But nil of them could Lake awa~ a little more confidence in lis\enJ.!'4 to themselves. a htlle piece of tiM Newrrian philo${)phy: ~ "The inner kind or concentratiOn . that's where your awareness is. lf }'Otl can find tha1. it w\11 really open a lot oC doors for you.'' ' • .. ' ~-, .. , '" .. .,, "' iLll • • DAILY PILOT Friday, Novtmber l'J, 191) • . . Dinner Playhouse Serves Zesty , Styl.~h ''OklahOmn' French p1lnter Jnn·Yves Tei• feels his work com· blnes the 8y11ntine end lmpr•1tioni1t experiences •• he strives to ... present the f•ce 1nd to portray • A rousingt robust, scaled- down and spruced-up revival of one of America's favorite musicals, "Oklahoma," has the new Sebastian's West Din- ner Play-off and lllll!ling · in splendid style In san Intermission Tom Titus the contNdictlon of the elegance, sophistication ind the rtiligious spirit in man . Dellt Piiot Slflf l"Mtt Conflict Painter Relaxes on Coast By TERRY COVILLE Of Ille 0.llY PUii St•tf H nothlng else, he has the name to become aoolher great French painter: Jean-Yves Teu. But this yOWlg artist who left the Coast o! Normandy to relax on the Orange Coast d Cllllorula has mor. than Just an Okkoontrj surname lo his credll : r , I Ula brush . strokes fOllOW ·I some oL,_~~~!!-of the ~~Cocteau • He sbives, he says, "to represent the face, the human person, man or woman. The principal contradiction i s between elegance and sophistication and a deep religious feeing ." Teze feels the Byzantine ex- perieire best meldecj all three sen.tjbilities -el e g a n c e , sophistication and a religious spirit -and he considers himself "the ultimate representative of that tradi- tion, an almost lost tradition." HE IS NOT just a talker. • and -·Mati,.., His facial portraits are-r.inlnlscent o! the Spaniard Picasso. Teze recently arrived in Hun- tington Beach-tor a brief stay . BUT ,. TEZE SHUNS com· with a . friend after pJatju.g parilons, · explaining, wilh a second place in the "24.th heavy accent, '1Style is not ~ ..Grand Prix of International for me to always make the Painting'' at De au v 11 l ·e , same thlng, but it Is an at-France. He earned the honor titude of my spirit and in cqmpetition with more than sensibility. In the tradition of 400 international artists. painting I lhink I've found Teze. who will soon exhlblt my own style." in Paris and Rome , is 31 , His style, as he describes but has been painting serious- It, involves a combination of Iv for only two years. even the more fonnal, religious though he first learned in high tones of the Byzantine period, school. with the looser fonnat of the impressionists. HE DID WORK "'ith his lather, owner of a shipping business, but left that two years ago to spend each day painting in an effort to express himself. Teze comes to Orange Coun- ty for the "quiet and calm." "I've found here tranquility and serenity," he says. "I may stay past the end of November if things go well." H~ says the message he may be trying to deliver in- volves a resolution of the con- flict between paganism and Christianity. "My conflict is a reflection of. the conflict of society, and of peoplei,. and between previous 1onns of civiliza- tion." "When. I paint, I must Live Theater have an attitude of modesty. It is not always my feeling or emotion, but something I share with many people. "I do not want to com- municate because l am. an individual person, but because I share many things with other per90m. To paint is a resolution and aCfinnii.tion of myself." ~oliere C~medy Presented · "1be Would-be Gentleman" - Opening Saturday for a six- week run is South Coast Repertory's production of this ?iloliere comedy, p I a yin g \Yednesdays through Sundays at 8 o'clock in the Third Step Theate,r, 1827 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Reservations 646- 1363. "Last· Of '1'11.e Red Hot Lovers" Neil Simon's comedy opens Tuesday for a Lhree-week. run 8f1lie Laguna MoultOii l'lay- house, 606 Laguna Canyon Road. Laguna Beach. OJrtain at 8:30 Tuesdays through Saturdays. Reservations 4.94- 0743. "You're A Good Man, CharUe Brown" Now on stage at the Foun- tain Valley Commu nit y Theater, 18280 Mt. Baldy Circle, Fountain Valley, is this Peanuts musical, p 1 a yin g lonigbt and Nov. 15, 16 and 17 at 8 o'clock : Saturday and Nov. ·11 and 18 at 2 p.m. Reservations 968-28.)2. "The Happy Time" The :;an Clemente Com- munity Theater will open this family comedy next Thursday for three weekends, 'lbursdays through Saturdays at 8:30 in the Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 Ave. Cabrillo, San Qemente. Reservatipns 492-0465. County Fairgrounds with an 8:30 curt.ai.D. Reservatioos 556- 5300. "T!Je Filth Victim" And 11Dames At Sea" These two Orange Coast College productions close this weekend y,·ith "Barnes" on stage tonight and "ViCtim" on Safurday at 8 o'clock. Admission is free. ''Oklahoma'' Rodgers and Hammerstein's musical Is on stage -Wed· nesdays through Sundays at Sebastian's West Din n er Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, Sao Clemente. Dinner at 6:30; cur- tain 8:30. Reservatiom 492-9950. r-~~~-,~·<;;:pz:~~:;·M·~::~::·~--1 [~~~~;~:y:fff ~ • ~ e ~ Friday. playing Fridays and "ltlonlque" A suspense drama is being presented F r i d a y s and Saturdays at 8:30 through Dec. l at the Huntington Beach Playhouse, 2110 Main St., Huntington B e a c b • Reservations 842-54.21. i :; JJ2 FOREST .... I MALLI Playthings• '!!.' i Saturdays for three weekends ~ LAGUNA HACH 497.:mo B in the Community Center " ii auditorium on the Orange ~ ,.,...., and other o ! ~~~z.=r.·~. ·ifb~i::.. ro~!r~~iFTs i 7 Groups .Featured; ~ "~~T:,::r~ Whole Family ! · ! ~-:.~~: ... ~~= :::-= USE ou• LA YAW•• •LA• I In Concert at OCC I! ,....., IA• ""' OIDEI EAIL Y FOR SURE DELIVERY ~ Orange Coast C 0 I I e g e ' ' perform Symphony ID< Brass Ill · ! Music Department v..· i 11 Choir, Third Movement by « FO• COLLICTORS: A.tlte•tfc R.pllcas NOW o,.•N 'SU~OAYS 11... 1! Victor Ewald and r I u t e ii ' Old ......... T."I ·present its -fall concert Sun-• • ~ · Quartet Number 1 will present U-.~1a.•si~~---~~~~•••~••••~•••••-.:d day, Nov. 18, featuring seven Kuhlau's Grand Quartet in E of OCC's instrumental music minor, First · Movement. The We 're moving Thanksgiving Day to our new "FARMER'S MARKET'' in Costa Mesa at I oth and Newport Blvd. (near Hoag Hosp ital). We'd rather move to this fabulous farmer's market than "Eat Turkey." We are dedicated to our custom- ers who have made this $200,000 venture possible! Thanks to all of you 200,000 times! Sincerely Ernest and Sally Camp WE STARTED THESE COUPONS AND THEY group.s. Clarinet Choir will offer Sam-l) The concert will be !itaged my Nestico's Study in Con- ! at 2 p.m. in the coUege trasts. auditorium. Admission is $1. Sarabande by Claude The groups are under the Debussy will be performed by . directrution ot 1 1 occ professo 0 r o! FJ 1 heutep Quartet NEwnbembr 12 andwlll ms men a mLLS1c, r . ercuss1on nse e Charles Rutherford and stu-execute Frank Ward's OCtette W dent assistant Dan 1.eilinger. for Percussion. ri The program features ap-OCC's Symphonic W in d t pearances by the O C C Ensemble will present three-~ Symphonic Wind Ensemble, works Overture for Band by l Jazz Ensemble, Br a! s Felix ·Mendelssohn, Military ~ Ensemble, Clarinet C ho I r , Symphony in F by Francois t~ Percussion Ensemble and two Joseph Gossec and Ballet " flute quartets. · Music from "Prince Igor" by ~~ ·The Brass Ensemble will Alexander Borodin. Clemente. B-"".,L In as a "non-pro-"'"6" JN 11IE PWll role of Ado fessklnal" replacemeot for the Annie, the gal who can't say orl&inallY scheduled Equity no, Marla Small turns in the production ol "Man o! La I Mandla,-'' this '~Oklahoma" latest io a growing s~es o has ...,.,.,; .... amateurish about s u p e rlative performances. ~..... th 1 Miss Small's comic transitions it. The show moves wt sty e are excellenl, as is her timing and zest, ils musical numbers in her scenes with' Will Parker take wing beblnd a mere three-piece on:bestra, and its -played to high Aiiarity by choN!ollrapby glltten m a Dao Rodgers, wboSe comedy stage seemingly too small to acting out!lrips his sipging acconunodate such 1 a v i s h ability· staging. A standoUt, even among a It is a colorful production high caliber cast, is Lyon mounled with a hlgll degree Rnl>erts ., the villainous Jud or skill and polioh by ·a Fey. Roberts' huge, lee ring c h a r i s m a t i c cast well presence is menacing enough, coordinated by direclor David but he turns in a complete Parrish into a smoothly func-characteri.tation with a strong tioning ensemble. An excess singing voice and a skillful ol "TV blocl:lng" -playing interpretation of his outcast downstage so that each character. Coddington. Miss Ne t z e n b!OS8Clll1S with a marvelous. gutsy portrayal, IWUe Cod· dlngloo's shotgun-shy peddler I! a splendid piece of comic relief. • MUSICAL STAGING and choreography are both first rate, with Diane Lovello' hlg~rgy dance n · cular • The exhausting rmer and the Cowman'' sequence revels in stage excitement a n d precision, the more Impressive because of -the limited dimensions ol the stage . "Oklahoma" will play this weekenc.l a n d Wednesdays " through Sundays for two more as the featw-e event at the neW Sebastian's West Dinner PlayhoUse -which dfera a meal equal in quality to the show. Reservatiom are a must -at 492-9950. performer is ladng the au· Completing an exceplionally dience .L mars the overall well balanced corps of prin· artistic quality on occask!n, clpals are Alice Neu.en as but the cast Is nearly always Aunt Eller and (]Jrlslopher s\l'Ollgly enough motivated tor;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;-overcome such artificiality. TIUS IS, IN the final analysis, t h .-commanding slrength o! the Sebastian's West production -a cast fine- ly tuned to Its mission and firmly ingrained in character. Most are also well ac- complished musically, i n particular the predominant roles of OJ.rley, Laurey, Ado Annie and Jud Fry. ATTENTION -ALL ART LOVERS! now open OLD WORLD ART Specializing in Inves tment Paintings. Restorations, Authentications and Insurance Evaluatlcns by EXpert Craftsmen -Fully Guaranteed in the heart of Design Center -F aslrio11 Island 230 Newport Center Drive, Suile 302 · (SthlnCI C..,.<iell & Ch•lflt1J HEN RY VORGANG, Curator _ Gallery: 640-1349 Dv-">001111..,..111 Reside nce : 673-7699 I f l$i ,_- Michael Stone ia very nearly Perfect u the"amiabl e cowpoke • Olrtey, exhibiting men variations of chatacter than any Qirley In r<Ctflt memory. Tall, · lanky and blessed with an excellentl-------'-----'----'-""~--volce, Stone adds an extra fl<' _________________ ""'f dimension of. guts to wbat all too often is only a surface portrayal. l!findy Corsentlno's Laurey is blonde and beauteous .. most Laureys are. bul abe too reflects an impressive degree of depth, moot nolable in her "Out cl. My Dreams" nwnber and her duet with Stone, "People Will Say We're Love."· New Review Joins Mae AtGWC PARKING LOT Art Show November I 0 • 11 I 0 a.m. 'til dusk 17211 BROOKHURST Fo11ntti11 V•llty 968-9330 MADE US FAMOUS ···.~.:~·.'..':!~'" m r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~11Q I ••••• 8 •••II ••• a.•. a ............. . • Your 8 MUMS THI; WORD • L•1t Of The Good On11 • • Int .... h v,.11.bl1 Buy • GORGEOUS • VALENCIA • • LARGE • POMPOM MUMS. ORANGES • • CAULIFLOWER • $ft# • 00 • • 25" Each • 7'"'1unch • 12 Lbs. I • • Limit 2 lunch• • Limit 3 • ALL COLORS • Limit 12 Lk • • With This Coupon • With :Jll1 (~ • With Thft S,_,., • ................... " .. , ......... . •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , • y.., Alw•y• Sav• 20c • OUR FAMOUS • We'r. famous Ftr Olf'\I • ICEaoERG • CALIF. VALENCIA • ZUCCHINI • : LETTUCE : 0~.:!'.~!.t~1cr:: 59UASH : .: .~· : 59' 91. : IOC .... • • ~ Ea. limit Y, G.llon Only • Llmrt J Lh. II • UM1t 4 • With This Couptn With This Coupon 8 ~ ........••........•.......... COUPONS EXPIRE NOYIMlll 14, H73 .----•.,Orange Couniy·s Most Popular Prod;ilct and FWwer Hout:•.'-' __ _ NEWPORT PRODUCE FlOWERS l'I' DDIA 0,.0 7 Days a Wttlc I 11.111. to I p.m. 2616 Now""!' loulnard .. Ille P- • ' . IONOEO F'-UIT $1.11,PElt FOR 35 YEARS ,_ 67W71J .,..., .. 175-42'1 Doubles Anyone? Tennis and Sun ••• at Soulhern Calirornia's most unique tennis resort! • 10 Championship Courts With night plly • The dNtl's l•rtest pHI • 80 modtrn suitn · m1nv with full kitche1ttt1e1 ind colllr TV • 20 tCf,J.:sttti"19 in the ifurt of Palm Otsert's Winter play;rouM • Frte Tlftnis Club pfivtft1n loi 1u11t1 • Room ra1es lr:im $35.00, doubl1 otcup1ncy, in season. While here, sharpen your ;amt lhisstnonl Enroll in the Vic 811~ T enWs Colltge • 111 e~clusive wilh Shado1v Mountain Resort ind Racquet Club. Ptrsonaliled inslruclion horn the "Headmaster ol Tennis" himself! 2,3, and 5 day 11te1 upon request. Take a~antage of our special 9f0tlp flllS. Try Saturda~'s ·News 'Quiz B ~. OR NOT 2 B ,,,.,ly dr"ltcl II I t'IYtfw .. ....,..1 pr9ftrtinea. ""· If ...,.., , .... Sl'llll:..,.,. to t«:OQnlM ... , lllCC'lfffllf 17*1 In !Min• 4or ttflh'a " tM Mtl11 ,,. •Plffl'r ..,,,.., by ...,,._ •TMrt -.. we tit "· l.~·:s· ~--- ) • • T Ch Guild Broth o! .. scree day i man T i • - ' ' <· Youth Con~ert UCI Orcliestra Begins Series .. Coast Frldar. Novtml>er <>, l<J73 'OAILV PILOT • Get·s Magic a spedal pan and heated quickly. ~r. Peter Odegard wiU conduct his UC Irvine student orches- tra Saturday at. 10:30 a.m. for the Cinit pC four hour-long youth c.on.certs In which his group Is collaborating with Learning Un· limited of Irvine. The University Orchestra also will be ~laying portions of the @Ogram to .be d.el\vered at.a p.m._Frlday and..Saturdaf to regular con~erl ~udi~nces l~ tl1e Fine Arts Village. Theater. Too many people tend to rocllld tbe pancake as a rather simple and ordinary foodstuff. They rarely thillk or it as · anything other than .aQ ~em suitable for a fi lling and lne~si breakfast. This limited view ove ' ooks 'one o( tho contradictions ·of -re8t cuisine, namely that !50me of th~~t 1Jelectable dishes are ofteri"'rnatle mr1 .th,e~stmplest Sweetened crepes are ~rved for dessert, w1th fruit or a , aauce or sometimes just sugar. ~V;eetened crepes ars stulfed with meat, V~' etables, fish·, or cheese, rolle(j or o , and sauced to be served as a ma· · sh. . .. j 1 ·SUBSTANTIA'nNG ttw-lmark-o Out 'n Abowt Norman Stanley MuS1c will be from the orchestra's regular repertoire, tailored to co~s1der the nee~s of younger, less experienced concert goers. .The first concert will offer the rousing Bacchanale of Saint-Saens and the. weste rn themes in. Aaron Copland's Rodeo. . Umvers1ty Orchestra mtends to demonstrate the different 1nstrumen~. show~n~ exactly what comprises -the· orchestra. . ~arnmg Unhm1ted board president Annette Bork said sub- scnphons to the youth concerts at $~ for children and $4 for adults -that fee covers all four concerts -can be obtained fr qm Leaming Unlimited, P.O. Box 4499, Irvine, Calif .. 92664. Other concerts have been scheduled for March 9, May 4 and June 8. Mrs. Bork said. Odegard and hi s group will be on hand: for all four concerts. Two W ay1te Films at Cliapma1i Chapman College's Creal Fi 1 ms Guild's tribute to "Fi£ty Yeats or Warner Brothers" brings Louis L'Amour, author of "Hondo" <and many other · noted screenplays, on campus at-8 p.m. Satur- day in Memorial Hall Auditoriwn. Ch3p- man College, 333 N. Glassel! St., Orange. L'Amour. whose works i nc I u de "Shalako," "Catlow" and "l\1an Called Noon" is noted for his achievements, having receive4 the \Vestem Writ ers of America Golden Spur Award, the im Teddy Rooscvtlt Rough Rider Award for excellence, and a Doctor of letters from Jamestown College. "Hondo1' (1954), written by L'Amour and directed by John Farrow, stars John Wayne in the title role and co-stars Geraldine Page. "The Searchers" (1956) is the co-feature which also stars Wayne and co-stars Natalie Wood, J effrey flunt~r. Ward Bond and Vera l\1iles. Admission is free to Guild members, $1 to adults and 50 cents to students. Further information regarding the re- maining shows to be featured in the series ana-memberslllp in the Guild may be obtained through the Cultural Affairs Office, (714) 633-3821, ext. 309. jngredlents. , · Throughout the world -tlbe...f>asic pan- cake is varied ht man~ waY.s . to yield a substantial number ~ g~! treats. To cite but a few amples, Jewish blintzes, the Russian linchiki, Chinese egg rolls and nalian c~llOni·aJl.st'em f rbm a common panciJke ancestor. 1 l ADD TO THESE inthrnational ve~ons yet another wherein the pancake all but achleves status as an art \form -the French CIWC· Do so beatuSe proof of such artistry can't be disputed at one ol the latest restaurants to open in Orange County. Th.is addition to the local dining scene is the Magic Pan - a "creperle" located in South COast. Plaza, Costa A1esa. Here yo1,1'U find French crepes, together with the Hungarian genre known a s "palacsintas," t ,h e exclusive house specialty. 111ere are other reasons, certainly, but the menu alone calls for a visit as soon as po~sible to thi& exciting establishment. Lest anyone be wary, however, of rushing io-a place where· the unknown makes up the entire bill of fare, a world of explanation might be in. order regarding the general nature a top.notch· product, all c at lhe Magle Pan turn "out a as thin as lace. Indlvldually. or co'mbinatlon -depending on"tbe hour, , ur capacity, and whether you opt = the entree or dessert type -they 1the perfect lunch, dinner, late eve • supper or anytime snack. The '-1agle Pan prepares all crepes openJy in the dining room,,with a ntimber of pans revolving simultaneously over the names upside down. 'flle fillings and/or toppings are added tn the kitchen to complete the final concoction brought to your table. Served with various kinds or salad (like eggs a la Russe, mixed greens, h1andarin orange, lettuce and avocado), luncheon offerings range from a spinach souffle crepe, $2.40, to a curried chicken or country beef crepe, $2.75. Others include ham and cheese 1palacsinta, $2.50; shrimp gourmet crepe, $3'.50; cr.epe can- nelloni, $2.60. Dinner selections (with tu·o crepes) include crispy ham palacsintas, $2.20; A1pine cheese sizzle. $2.20; chicken elegante, $3.70; curried chicken, $3.95; mushroom supreme. $3.20. Or the diner can order any enlree crepes in oon1- binaUon. of the crepelpalacsinta. It is a very thin, delicate pancake ~IENU LIS11NGS along this line in- made trom a batter of eggs, milk and elude a three-crepe combination: crispy nv:ir. with or Without navofing, sweeten-ham, Alpine cheese sizzle and spinach ed. or wisweetened. In the cooking pro-soufnc, $3.45. Others noted include $3.10 ; Crispy ham and mushroon1 supreme, $2..70; CQuntty beef and chicken elegante. $3.85. The first of our l\\'O highly-recom- mended entrees was the country beef. $3'.95, ""hich netted crepes fille<I u'ith juicy nnd tender cubes of beef and mushrooms, cooked in a 1angy mixture of spices, and topped \\'Hh bubbling ched- dar cheese. Next up was the equally prais~vorthy crepes St, Jacques, $3.95. Providing a taste surprise both savory and un· com1non, they contained scallops. shrimp and sliced fresh tnushrooms in a bcchamel sauce with gruyere cheese. Unless you have a tremendous capaci- ty, don't repeat y.•hat turned out to be our only mistake Of the evening. \Vhich "'as follo,ving the entree crepes urith two_ full orders for different dessert crepes. rr you can't set aside the temptation, however, which is a likely event con- sideimg all the seducth·e posslbllitic~ don't say you y.•eren't \vamed. It's just that in our case splitting either the chanlilly or cherries jubilee crepe v.·ould have been quite sufficient.' • • cess the batter is poured sparingly into chicken elegante and spina~ souffle, ::--'-~-r·1,1;iii=:=:=i;;; .. = .. =·=·=·=·"= .. ~·=ll="========.:=:::;;;;:=::=:;;;;, Real Cantonese Food DINNER SPECIALS NIGHTLY ""'" ms Jason Chase Show 4-1 .... WIDLT ""',_ lltlllTllMMOO . ,. TUES.-SAT. CHARLEY D. A MILO .e1t here ar take hGme ~---- ltEtftfii®E 673-<633 .,...lcf.1t L~• Dl-Codllllls EntertalMMnt • "SUN. A.MON. ·• lllllRT . Mooday Mite FootUll DENVER-··MINING Co. FINE FOOD AND SPIRITS 71• W .lfttl It. ,CHM MeM ,C•. 1714, 645°214] _ .. , ............. .. THE CllANl'JLLY, $1.60. consisted of fresh banana slices steeped in a specu1I bro\\'Jl sugar sauce. topped with a vast quantity of y.•hipped crt>am and toostcd aln1ond sli\•e1-s. Cherries jubilee, $1.6.l, brought forth vanilla ice cream wrappest in a crepe "'ilh raspberry preserves. and covered "'ith hot brandied cherry sauce. Others in· the dessert department range from crepe a la mode, vanilla ice cream, \vrappcd in a hot crepe. sn10thcred with biltersv.·cet chocolate shavings melted on top. \Vith a touch of pecan creme. $1.65: to crepes beignets. crepes delicate- ly crispc.'<i and served in a basket, with hot brandied apricot sauce or hot bran- died cl)ocolate sauce, $2.95. Jn addition, there are four a la carte. salads abbcd at 95 cents to $1 .10 - mixed green, avocado, San Francisco shrimp. l\.1andarin orange -and from the soup keUle there's potage St. Ger- main. 95 cents_~ Cl!P, $1.50 per bo\vl . This is a famous Parisian blend of French rounlry pea soup. chicken and vegetables (served with sherry or sour (See OUT 'N' ABOUT, P:age %3) SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 P,.M. .to 1 P.M. " IAN9UIT FACILITIES l•KhffM - 11 ·5 ·~ .ii I-EARLY BIRD I CHAIPAGllE SUIDAY BRUllCH NOW FEATURING 317 PACIFIC COAST HWY. I DINNER I • . 4 · 7 P.M. -Man. ind Thurs. ~ " I 2 MEXICAN DINNERS Witll .TMI C..,.. I L "°" TM• PIUC• ~ ONI I ~o~IX~N~- 0... c..,.. ... hr l•Jlre ,....., At T•lllt TOPS IN MEXICAN FOODS & STEAKS LUNCH AND DINNER . 7 Day1 A Wook -11 A.M. to 2 A.M. INTllTAINMINT Nt•HTlY WITH THI LATIN IHliTHMS OP CAILOS 2530 W. Coast Hlghwoy HENRY'S N=hrt 548-1177 10 A.M. • 3 P.M. DINNER IS SERVED FROM 5 P.M. Phone llJ.2770 ' c.,AirJJO,rter Cfnn - · ~'FftliR ·11 .$TflIQ LUNCH r-f:'~"/.,~JUrt;, OINNERS from IOC' (IQ.._,-. from $1 .10 Mon .. frl. 11:30 AM lllf'f lllf'flCOMf CllltOlflf Evenings nt 1~00 PM CANOfUGHT OINNf•S . TOP SIRLOIN' STEAK' OINN·E·R 195 "•("~II •,t ll .. IALA0{HQ•C I 0 ' D•ll \1 .. C. c:.•t«C tll•D C"O•(I O• ••C l"'•" 0 1 fll,.C " •1111 ,;'! Ron Shy Hits the Spot · ' •il<f gets it together in the lounge. Lunth • Dinn 1r e D•ncing e Entert1inm•n+ for ,_, .. ,, '42-82'3 cl""1 SuMO'fl op•~ 'til 2 •.m. .. THE BACHELORS .. HUNTINC.TON IEACH E6clt. Dar• &. Gary GaNln Tvn. thr• Sirt. 536-1555 .. • " 496°5773 499·2626 GIOU .. 0 IOU .. 0 ITIAI •••••..••••.••.•• _I.II 10' llllOI .. STIAI ••••.••.•..•.....•••• ,1.11 MfW TOii ITIAll •.•.•..•..•••.•••..•••• 1.11 Blvd. at 17th St. in.Costa Mesa • . ' ' FACILITIES FOR PRIVATE PARTIES 1N THE NEW ' GARDEN COURT llANDll HANDON DUO, TM.~ • ................ HGINCY LOUNGE LOCAL Lonn• DINNlt 32102 COAST HWY. t•I C,_ Ytlty ''rtlwe'tl LAGUNA NUtUIL LUNCHEON SERVED DAILY From 11 :00 A.M. ' • DINN.E~ SERVED UNTIL 8:00 P.M Monday and Friday #1 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER 644-2.200 CAttllMIN SllAll .•........•...•..••••• 2.tl ITIAI ANO lOllTll •..•.•....•...••..•• l.•S , .... •ooo COMl lNATtON ••.•...••.•••... 2.,J SllAI It" ''''Ill .•......••.....•.•..... 1.tl HllT·IAtOll WIA''IO .•.....•.•..••..•.. 2.)J_ ••• ,,, ................................. 2.•• '11l01N ITIAll IANOWICM .. •· •..•••....•• 1.tl OIMNlll !NtlUOI: GlllN IAlAO, tMOl(f OF OlllSING. OAIU( lllAO. CHOltl OF llCI PlltF• 01 P01At0 OUR SPECIALTY CHATEAUBRIAND I .. , SERVES TWO s323 ' • '._! IDIMGll ilf UllNGOAll 1" If•• MAllNil VlllAGI IHO,,tNG (lNTll HUNTINGTON lfACH 146 .. 101 3901 E. Co11tjtipway/Colao1 clol llar Phone• 675'-0900 NOW OPEN MONDAY . \, ' ' ' '2502 S. "BriSIOI, Santa 1\na 1"1n !IQl,°111 UI' W~R. ... 1 1 1 cruu 551-11911 TRULY TASTY ITA.Ll.4N FOOD . at n1oder-ate-prices--- Our Sauces, Meat Balls, Cannelloni, Mani· Cotti and Baked-Lasagna ·crre all maae on the premises from authentic Italian recipes, using the finest ingredients available. We even make our own Spumoni. •e•••············· BIG SPECIAL f 7 COURSE 1 WAGNA DINNER I ·11~~~ 2 for _$ s~s 1 INClUDfS: APtMfi1er, aoup, solad, Varflc bread, : tpagh•Hi wilh fMQt 1auc•, baked lasagna, gla1• 1 of wine, dt1aer9 end coffff. DO NOT IRING CERTIFICATE-BRING FRIENDS ·•••••e•••••••••••••••e••••••••••••••ee•• DINNER DAILY • . Sunday thru Thursdoy-S lo t p.m. Fridoy ond Soturdey-5 to 10 p.m. Ollat oplrft Dt<. 31, 1973 * • Reuben's 1555 ADAMS AVENUE • ... ' • . " • • t . ... --------------------,, ~2'-!llL:...D•.::•:...l y:..."':..••.::L::.OT'--'''--,---.::-=---.::"c.'~::.'::.':.· ·:_•:_":_(:;_.:_..-:_":_' '-r"--'fn Hanky~Panky Catering Serving The Oran91 County Area CREATIVE CATER ING FOR ALL OCCASIONS OUT 'N ' ABOUT ... Benmt.'<l e:elllngs. polished hardwood floors alternatinµ: with olhers of smooth.surfaced tile, hanging potted ferns, a ' _small vase or fresh nowers on each table, wai tresses at- tractively clad in old-country, peasant style dresses with long da rk·colorcd stock.inJ;t$, aprons · a n d ruffled-collar blouses: these are but a few of the appealing feab.1 res - added to the unusual bill of fare -that make! dining at the Magic Pan one of your pest new bets in Orange CoUJ). ty. Festival Goes Down Under Choke of Many In tri guing Sel ectioni In Food and B•v11reg11s PERSONALIZED ESTIMATES IY APl'OINTMENT TAK• LIF~ A LITIU !ASIER For .. lnforrnation .. Call .. 17 14 I .. 979-6809 TEMPLE GARDE NS ~ Q-HNS:S::S Resta11rcn1t RICKS HA Luncheon & Dinner Da ily ' COCKTAIL 1500 ADAMS lot Hotborl COffA MESA LOUNGE . ~\'3 •''1.•J{Ji ·~ 540-1937 540-1923 Featuring Exotic 1'roplcal Drinks And, 111 Gorden Groft 12201 llOOXHURST IAt ChapM011) 631•7020 • t .- ' ·~ --· THE FIASCO'S-INVITING YOU TO AN EVENING OF EXCITING MUSIC AND TUESDAYS THAU SUNDAYS IN THE LOUNGE t SUPER ENTERTAINMENT nmmJJ1185mlWI m~ Lmm NEWPORT BEACH • ' . t p ' -1 l~ NOW APPEARING at The Ground Round COLLINS, ~~STLEMAN WEBB r,•,,nc.a~· !ilru Saturday Relax and enjoy great e11tertainment plus gr~al ,,·ir~inp, and diI1in g. Including gianl drinks. l:ie~r t.y th? pitcher or nlug. \\.ine. .AJl at reasonable prices. Cock•oils by r!M 9lau or pitcher N., cC)•1cr, no ml~!mnm. When yoo're hugry for good food , ud thirsty for ii good lille 2750 H"l>or Blvd. Mesa, Calif. (Fronl Pnge 27) # cre11n1 on request L Any -0{ y-0ur f a v o r i I c cocktails are available from the bar. Three house wines -Burgundy, chablls or rose -are offered at 90 cents per glass, S2.25 hair ca rafe, $3!95. full carnfe. TllE RESTAURANT itself provides a very gracious and continental setting in \Vhich to enjoy your food. Two in· divldual dining arc as , separa~cd by a spacious en· tryway and the e-0cktai1 bar. "'give the options or dining in a distinctly garden-li ke or country inn atmosphere. CHAMPAGNE lltUNCH IUFFET SUN DAY, NOV. 11, 10:31 TO l P.M. RESTAURANT 2141 WEST COAST HIGHWAY NEWPORT IEACH 646·SG57 Further, a special accolade ,must be extended for the courtesy and efficiency of the pfrt waitresses. The service they offer 'sets an example- that many longer established restaurants would do welt to study and emulate. Th e Costa ,.fesa Magic Pan is the latest establishm ent in a chain that got under way \l'jth its first spot in San Fran· cisco in 1965. Additional Joca · tions at present in Southern California are \Voodland Hills and Beverly Hills. while others are current1y operating na· ti onally in Denver, Asj>en, Philadelphia, Atlanta, Chicago and New York. You'll find the South Coast ............ •. OPEN SESAME · • Plaza edition -3333 Bristol Ave. -at the north end of • NATURAL FOOD RESTAURANT• the JlC\V mall, near Bullock's. low Choles.torol M•n11 , • The ~lagic Pan opens seven • -HHrt Sa'+'er -days a week at 11 a.m. Service • UNLIMITED SALAD AND • is continuous until midnight, • TEA WITH DINNER • •·1 d h 1w1111 1h" cou panJ :v on ay throug Thursday, ' • ·V.i:GET.4RIAN DINNERS FilOM 52.25 • • until I a.m., Friday and Satur· day, and until 9 p.m. on Sun· days. • OPEN DAILY • 5:00 to 11 :00 P.M. 2440 W. CoaSt Hwy. e • N~wport koch 446·7071 • ........... ' JJoideaux . French C11isi11e Lunch -Di1111er C.'losed Suit & Mon. 758 St. Clair, Costa Mftc& (714) 540·3641 BRUNCH ON THE BIKE TRAIL e NORTH BEACH EGGS A Spicy San Frenci1co Dhh e CHIL! .t.N D EGGS Jl/A!NEZ .. Spicy Ho11111 Chili & Chea1a e E'1f~S TONY H~m. Moi:arella 6nd M .. rina1a s~u ce 0 SUNOAY SCRAMBLE Torn atoe1. 011ion1 e nd Sh•ro Ch•ddar Cheese e HAM AND EGGS To Ord•r lntl11dts Fre1h Fr11it C11p CONTINENTAL BREAY.FAST JUIC E-GLA.1£0 lllAN CAl<E-COl'FEE 85c MIACKERAL fD.ATS !CO MAIN ST. !CORNEil OF 8ALllOA PIER I.NO BIKE TRAIL) BALBOA PENINSULA See the brighter side of life along the Orange Coast in Orange Coast RounCfup One of the features that make Sunday rllaDAr HOWARD'S GOES MEXICAN HOWARD~S HACIENDA Serving Newport's ' Finest l ~ r -· MEXICAN..; FOOD ·e -.-Sfl\f'OOD CHARBROILED STEAKS Opel 7 Doys For BREAKFAST e LUNCH e DINNER & A.M. -Midnltht, Sundoy th111 Th11rsdoy 1 4 ~.M. -1 :00 A.M., Friday ond Sot11tdoy FOOD TO GO-WINE MARGARITAS I 4001 W. COAST HWY. NEWPORT &EA CH t.73-7750 Open 7 Duys Wffk Doy1: 11 :l1,A.M. to 12 f".M. Fri. 011d Sot. ll :3~ A.M. to 12:30 S11ndays: 4:00·12 MIDNIGHT COCKTAILS 9093 E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACCi 962·7911 MEA~OWLARK COUNTRY CLUB ORANGE COUNTY'S TOP .ENTERTAINMENT JOE LIGGINS The Or iginal "Hon~ydrippers" BACK AT THE ' LARK ROOM with WILLIE JACKSON Wednesday thru Sunday B•nquet 'f•cilitie• 1.p to -450 People 14712 ,.RAH.\,M AVl:NUI I At W~tMtl HUNJINGTON llACH 17141 14& .. 118i !21ll 1592·1914 DAILY PILOT • f_. _in_::_ - 1 PIZZA HOME D'.ftIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A JLOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS Now Me 'n Ed's mobile ovens speed delicious piplnc·hDt pizza to your door in minutes. If~~ For prompta1rY1<• pl10no 646·7136 (Nowport Boch/COS!• Mesa-17th 1hdTostin) or 847-1214 (Hunlin1!on Beoch-S.ach ond Hiel). ~ FRENCH ACCENT -This isn'lthe coas t of Nor· 1nandy, but it looks like it could be. The scene is typical of those to be seen in fillns to be presented in ''Australia!Nriw Zealan d Adventure.'' :\ctually , the fi she11nen are working on their nets .in Aka roa, a New Ze.ala.t1d.villa~e with a definite French ac('ent. 1'he latest In the series ot "film festival'' travel shows presented to area audiences jointly by the Dally Piiot and Orange Coasl College I s scheduled for Tuesday even-- _.ing-this one .taking Its au·. dience to Australia and N~ Zealand. The Do"" Under program. en t 1t1 e d "Aust.-1\al New Zealand Adventure," will get Wlder way at 8 p.m. in the audltorium of Newport Harbor High School, 16th Street and Irvine A v en u e, Newport Beach. It -0ffers free admission to the public to view three films-"' A Big Country-A Big Welcome" ''It Is Called New Zealand " ~nd "South Pacific Adventure." Jn addition to the films and a packet for each show goer fill ed with brochures and travel information, the show also offers Dally PUot readers the opportunity to win a free trip for two to Australia and · New Zealand with trnnsporta· lion and expenses paid for three weeks. . The trip will be given a\vay at the end of the week-after the "Adventure" show has played several other "Cities in the Southern Californla area . No purchase Is necessary to win the trip, or course. "Australi&/New 7.ealand Adventure" is a presentation simil3r to "Go Orient" and .. the t\110 shoY.'S on British Columbia whlch the Dally Pilot and Orange Co as l College have co-sponsored ln the past. . -----·-. --1r -I T -==chin;-e Ci1~~ I Frt'<' tickets are &l'atlable at all Dally Pilot offices and the Orange Coast C:Ollege Evening tollege office. A lin1lted number of tickets Is expected to be available at the door Tuesday night on a first-<.'d'me, flrst.-served basis. I /~ O"N OA•CY " "'. " "' • CCO"D MONOAV :1 I I BAMBOO "FOR MEALS I TEUACE PREPARED \VITI{ 11f 'rt . o:~:::c~:.:~::.. : ,, , mJ -i\''"·::;_:::·1 ~~ I !J!Ul ltk l'llONE •.•• 645·5550 I ii_::. ~'_!~~s2:._!1~ .~c~:!ES.!_.I I I SAM'S SPECIALS Served Monday , Tuesda y, Wednesday, Thursday dinners include salad, garlic cheese toast. choice of baked potato or rice Hawaiian RED SNAPPER .................. 1.95 MAHI MAHI ... , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.25 GRILLED SEA BASS . . . . • • . . . . . . . 2.55 TOPSi°RLOIN ..........•....•... 2.75 NEW YORK STEAK .............. 3.25 LOBSTER TAIL . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.45 STEAK AND LOBSTER . . . . . . . . . . . 5.25 ~.~ 16278 Pacific Coast H19l'lw-v, H1.1nt1n9ton Be1teh (213) 692·1321 luncheon • dinner • banquets itlexica1i Restaurant PROUDLY PRoSENTS THE CHAPTER II For Your Dining And Dancing Pleasure ~ Playing Nightly \V ed. thru Sun. "F'ii1est J\ilexican Food in Orange County" OP EN 7 DAYS e COCKTAILS 547 W. 19th STREET c q sTA MESA T!lf.D:Tln.N:\1 • I I ·'' ; ' ' . ' !!" ......... !'S •.. /'\ .... ,r.r. • '·'·' ~J .. ,t .. 'i:.• •oott yo11nt tDM t111key • Primo rlb1 of bttof • -i .;,..,Lo 'j .i ... 1. Dt. ... ,.l'J C ,.,,:1111.1 .,,, , , I ,;,., .~iu1:1.t ... ·::• :;(,..,t•I , 1.1 I p.~'. r.:)::;:. ':'JC! r; S'..iC • :·. J 17 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT C£NTti ........ •lfffV• " .,..... --.. ·-•••• 2111. . . Cal State Preserits Ne 'W Group One of the ne"·est musical groups at Cal State. Fullerton will present its second concert of the season Sunday ln the university's Recital Hall. ; The New Music Company, which specializes_., In con- temporary musica l" f-0rms and compositions. will C e a t u r e several university f a c u I t y artists in solo works durlng1 the 8 p.m. concert. Tickets for the perfonnance "''ill be available at the theater1. box offict or by telephoning 1714 1 870..3371 one and one-l\alf hours before the performance. Tickets also will be available' at the door . Among the artist3 perform- ing will be cellist Terry B. King, playing "Seance at a Lat e Hour," a 1973 com- position written especially for him by Paul Rea1e; orga nist John Jensen playing "The Ho- ly Ghost Vacuum ," a 1964 e-0mposition by Ge roge1 Cacioppo and featuring an electric organ; and tromboni st I William Nicholls in "Sequence V" by Lucemo Berio. Also featured will be 110\JQ. Concerlato," a 1973 com· position for viola and violin written by Dr. Donal R i hfichalsky . professor of music al Cal State. Pamela· Goldsmith and K e n n e t h'. Goldsmith will be featured ini this four-movement work. . Closing out the program will'. be vocalist Su 0. Harmon;, performing John C a g e ' s "Arla" and accompanied by the other faculty artists. Conttnontol Cul""° 't.cktollt Scmllll Luncheon and [)jnner Mondav thr01'flh Sohll'lfav. Closed Sundays · V./o are locatfd next to !ha May Co. in South C ... .1~~ Pl.111 )IJI S ....... I~~ Pt:ltlE>AY [ · in tht l1M'ilijl!o!j . .. ·-- • ·. \ T 1;00 ~ M i~M l :IOIJ H ( J:JI u 1:00 DTH *ST AN 1:00-11 l:IO OF *Br DO * Fo 10:00 11:00 11:15 ll:IO -w t lo I 12:00 IZ:!O 1:00 0 t * 1:45 t:IO J:" "C "" 4:N "" . I' t r TV DAILY LOG Friday Evening NOVEMl£R9 ' 7:00 Saturday Morning NOV£MIER 10 ft~~=~ ~ ...... r .... =~l1'1F1t1Mr· WJ.Cf?~:n_, ... FPnbttM• Dlilbll Fttt1r1: (C) ..... Uce" ltlt Trtli r1) '56-Au: RM50tt Rory Cal· Sl•lllt .. lltt M1rlll lloun, (C) "1'1111wt J Lott Call· Movie: (C) (2hr) "'Moritourr 1011" (•clV) '52-Wnlitm Powell. ~ ~:.:.. ~~: 8f1ndo, YW 7~ I &L*.:.~lt\ PriVltl 1111111 Stoel&•• F! ~ (J) Ntf1111'1 Kt1ot1 Mtf•N TU.n11de Cholf lili'N: (C) (tO) "f 11 M • FI t • Ulb'1 Miii (com) '67--Georat C. Scott. ~(])Yoda 11111 IBOOiltlll""" """''"°"'' ~ Vq o,t;e Dt••lliry Hm Mtrw lriftlll Sltow Ctwl!!J MQle Aldy lrlftttlt 1:00 · til (!) m Add1ms F1ml1J Hl1ttry ti Alt JOlin WtJH Tlllltr1 • UwtnrlPJ Mlwle Nmt• lff.l,.rn Super FrltM• Dttert TIMltrl 'ilil iillll Uttlt bseal1 Movlt:. (C) "A,tdle Ttrrltclry" :00 (}) 0 m Nm (Wtl) 'SS-Rory Clllloun, 1tMl111 ltr Dllllrs I¥*' 1f rn,. 6 Movie: (Zhr) "Hl1• Sl1rr1" S.umt Sbe1t r1) '.tl-Humphre)' Bo11rt. · irbcope '73 Alll111I WorW 1:30 {i) AJ Lib L11111C•l111 Wll1f1 MJ LIM Ci) l1i tt) fllltflll!CY + ' 11.0ii Lucy M~e: 1i1Hloll D11ll<1r Jtl1n9lu11t" Mod Squid (mys) '57-Rlch11d Oenninr. m I Dre11R of Jtlnnlt I All p,, Bre1kf1st Show h111t111dai l:OO ~Cf) 1!J: f1vorit. M1rtlan1 (I) Dnratl Q: @(IQ) iD l utcll Cluldy IJll la t11t Abru e: "Al You111 •s Yow fffl" Am1ric1 (com) '51-Monty Woolt11. m1r A11or ~Cf) Llu/1'1 lftC111 RH1tn fWfttos Lltinn tlrtoon Caminl $flld lbcer Mlsttr Ro19n' fttllhbottlood ;JI Dtl:I~ 1lr.U "Two ol • Kind" t:JO 9 (t) Jeunll e, ~ti'::" s.ium 6 '~a m Stir l1tt BlpU•l ltr l'ifl (}) Q) Chott ChaMn c.cttttr.U. Mtric: "The K•PPr Tl111t" (rvm) ltwltlkd llarlts B<l)'er, M111h1 Hunl Yiin StrHI Wffk 10:00 at. (IJ SPMd Bum. U.t&Md World NC¥ foothll m To Tell IM Truth I Stume Street ""'"" "rn@J m• .... • -Tiii QiMI Cut -I @ (}) lrldy IQrds 1:00 19 Ci) talvcd's Dept. · Mlllt: "'Sil 1·ridp1 tt Cnss" 9 (J)dQI m S1Rltri I Sell ('drl) '5~Tonr ·Curt1$, Jullt Ad1111i; en n . Sealtl• SuptMnics. KIR i... ctirtat 9 Lat.In llUI~ LA. lat· ___ 1.- O ~CIJ G)T~1 ·11al7 lu•cll . ·1o111rC••11. . D El'llSlS ''WILD lt.JD ISOOllliC.1111b *IN THE COUNTRY" O lilCIJllOJ · ''" •-. B Mltlitll $ Metil: (C) "Wli. Ill 11 ~: "ft hr lll&flt" tliii C.UJttr(' (rnus) '61 -Ehis (tomib)JZ~ll, R1rt. M11 Wl1L 1'""~1~~.~~" 11~ : ~"i=~ a.. M11str1 Mtldu CO. J1pantst Ltnau111 PTo1r1111 En(]) MC Sirpentar "'°"- 1·JD iJ Special "SUNSHINE. A ~W..~fDt....., * love Story that Wiii m Seu•• strtet tuc at your heart i1:so e ~(fl Cl!imCI $ •• I 911 t • II Kans.as City-Omaha vs . G it; 00 ti.QI m Tiit &lrl Wltll * Mitwaukee. The Best in D 'TH[ ~bb1ouPLE NBA BASKETBALL. *STARS TONY RANDALL I'!.'~ .. ~:..-· .. ,.. AND JACK KLUGMAN ~"'-' t 1UJ 1IJ 11) T>o"" --: (Cl """' w.,. foo Mt" lirfffittl Sllft ...._.. (WU) '60--Al.ldlt Mur· CltJwatdltn ~. Barr)' Sul!iw1n. Nov1l1 mt U• . t:OO Q}(i)·~m Nttl111 ••• ~: "M~ I Pa lltUe at s -(?il 5'-M11jorie Mllft, "" '"' °"' a> m 111 m '°' ~@ m R. 0. z z z m til•pltftPlp Wrtstllq Tll:S Wtt' In Pr. Ftotbll Aft C[ne Cornt en Clftt · ernoon . M1J!erpltc1 TM11tt (R) U:OO ft;"""""' . l1 Crildt lltR Crild1 Movll: "Tiii llut Dttlll" (mys) bpantM l.111••1' Pr11t1• • 111 Ladd, Y1ranlc1 Like. •:JO 'IHlill""""• ........ . OFUNNIER THAN EVER! iiftfi: (CJ "''",._ (ml * Brian Keith-Laugh Now -Vin Heflin, Yvonne 0.C.rto. D f.\,f,?Jf~'r'-il::.O""l'J.i~.:,C • .,,,,,~,, * preHnts D.C. lnt1m1tioM1," Far Richer or Poorer I {i) """""' '' w"' -ei ~ ... ' m• ...,,,,..,..11s1,...""" \W \;U -• 1 TrMI .. LI H .. . IZ:JO . Sptrb ~ Los Anrelts ln- 10:00 ' ~~~ ! Dtt Mtrll• vtttloNI Swlmmin1 Championships. • 'H ~ Wll u:i • D ~ (}) ftCAA r11t1t1n T11ms to f. IDc!""" be •,:ouricld. ~J"~ m 'l... ,.,...,, """ ~ lll e!." "'"'""" Vf'r11t1wU. . SIN1m1 Stmf riltl , U.S. fth'J lO:JO Tahi Itek 1:00 6 Morie: "th .. lier' (drt) 6 Twll!iht ZDnt • -S.tn C<inn11y, Skip Hom1ltr. · Cofts1111111 PTolll• tt T ikn A Tllltf 1111 Co~ ~ T11i1 = Vildu LIMI If t111 llt1tl 11:00 ~~~Ill~'"' ~:~:. .. fQl f~ ll&llt Zon• • ~ W..b111 PlllJ Mallin l:JO .... : tel ., ..... ,it (WIS) Slltrltdl-H1h1111 Tllt•lrl 11 MutphJ, Susan C1boL ToT ..... TN• 1(1)-Chkl>om ... Soo•rt -....... """""""' ill T>o M"k . """'""" USA . , LI kwlstl N Mtrtlll Z:OO Ml {j) filt Altllft Alfftd Hltdad: Prt•llb °" ca..,.. I (1J Trills W•d Mwil: ....., ..,.. (WIS) ~ 11:15 , CkM(l)l:s l•I• 1i1me· (C} 111m1 Wa~lly. Jl~ "Wiit~ W111-Yt11 Wll11 tf! i.Jpb ;== =ilt Witt olft?"~m) '66--l>Olil 011· Ctmblt I 0 Ci) CE ~nny C.ISOll ClllllllJ ClauiCI! Re pelt of Elf ..... I ·30AM movit m GD II Ctllttrt Thi •n· 9 (I) ... ' (C) "Qd 8'1b- -;mln11l1 sboW ls . d~oted lllil.::(dra~bert Finney, Lisa to th• moslc of Cit Stevens. -Minnim:--- ii Tiii Pt,.lllden tD SHIM SIJMt ..... -'!ht ~I U•· m Mtwita: "••hlrl If bU Slide" Mo'rit: , "":•'P ind "Cllh•" ...... (hor) '56-Boin Don levy.,. ?:lO 8 Qt) fl) tis ctllldnn's fi1111 Fts• U:OD (J) M0¥11: "forelp Corflsplfldenh tml "ir.ck Mot111t1ln,'' (dr•) ••§-Jotl McC1u, l•f1i~ O.r &ptmleli: bat/W"t 1 m Mll'lif: (C) "Thi M1npl1 (1d¥) 19orts Spedal et tfll Wttk '&2-Jack P1l1nce, Anlu Ekblfl-NFL Cl1111C ef die W1U l 11:30 (ill Sv~nst TM•frl Flltbol-Sotclf 0 "'"''"' M"" l:IO -"' 9 The Pritelltl st.rite• Htl•• Thtlttl 1:00 B _, (Cl "4D Cu11 " """ O JERRY U:E LEWIS-8 • (""I '67 -"'" •u~ft. *KING+ IKE & TINA! 9lclfl,_ • ~~OJ m M•of1M spt<l•I II -"'-' h"I '40 + fl"@ "m Mt~:t'• Norma Sh1art1. Mftit: "Mo•l Hip~ It I po Gr111•1" (dfl) '67-Erk M Mllttt ..... Nli&tl"'*' f -· combl. . 1 l:IO hltJ"• ,,..... ... · II :.:~Rtble Mollsttr" (hor) hall "Loi A111tles frtt·CHnk" ~torit N1d1r, ClllKll• Barrett. ..,_.""""' 1:45 ti ""'" IC!:i'°' " .,. Tht ~·-,.... (WU) ' tit RobWOfl, (t) flllll ~ 1:JO m Ml·Mnt --= "Cl1111t ff nm :1Wt•M11 r. 1111P"'1•1 ""'"""'~Mo 111 IM -({)1111,U.stlksw / ' KOCE TELEVISION LOG llrtln<I ol' ,..,.. j ,,. IMMI (CJ Chlklrtn .,.,. "' • "'" crNIM 1.-cl•ll'/' I 0 f Cl'llldf1:n, Jill Cllflll.&.-W1r (C} ,1JI A 'rMllM IMrH fC) lf*lll I:• Tiii AdWO(lt.a IC) "Would We •• 'll1!1r Off wnn L"" Stfte Tl•ft Ind LMI Gowfl'lfl'ltrll hr'Ylct1?" •• "" cwetf!Oll lltt'lllnld f!lll Wlllr:. f 1• ... 1'71 IC! A llOll•lfltc low Into fM r«lflt fMll of !Olk rn¥tlC • ... klflnt ...... -Mown.Jrtltl"J.160 mlft). - ' Frldar, Novembtr 9, 1q73 OAILV PILOr :: Gary Owens Adds Lines to 'Phone Book' KMPC's Gary Owen11 haG a new book out..-''The (What lo Do While You're Holdlng the I Phone Book." Turning on The 119 pages consist or a collection of telephone anec· dotes. and games to play, dur- ing the silences which ensue when you1rc left holding the phone, following that phrase, "One moment, please.' Scott Manchester for $100 each time you answer of our nodJ of approval, one donallons of such articles as the -phone that way, and inuat 80 KIIS way ror Ila re·~ cloth -new or used -for Talkradio opening up a whole cent ••exclusive Interview" the preparation of baMer1. new vista ot future rromotlons with Charles Hickson and Call Barbara Spark at (213) based on Its curren "My Dog catvin Parker · the . t w 0 877-2711, Ir you want to help Listens to KABC'' promotion. ~iississlpplans ~ho say they In one "'ay or anoth~r. Pay off there ls a case or were cetptured and examined Next Monday . ~ght on Recipe dog food seven tlme5 by the crew or a UFO. Titled KNAC.'s Eyenlng With show.- a day. "30 Minutes Aboard a-Flying program dire<:(Or Ron McCoy _ _u_y_ou've been lOQ.king for Saucer,'' the special feature llas prom:lstd four houl'j of Chuck cecil and his "Swingin' found Hickson and Parker Jethro Tull, form ... 8 p.m ... to Years," he can be found on describin{ every detail ol the ~ldnlght: with no co!11merc1al KGJL on Saturdays from 7 three robot-like creatures who 1~terrupuons. And this Sunday to 10 p.m,, and Sundays from captured them on the evening night .at 9 p.m., KCS_N (88.5) To reissue an old cUche, Owens' book obviously Hits a necessary void .... The book is being distributed b y Hawthorn Book.s. I tion, Including having both Gov. Reagan llJld former governor Pat Browfl in studio on the KFWB Newsline. Hank Allison researched the special report series, and is to be congratulated for his efforts in separ<Jting fact from fiction . Pacific Palisades won _KABC's "Football Cruise" to ,~1exi00 on that station 's "Sportstalk" sho'if, while Mrs. Julia Bonan- do of Alhambra was a '5.000 winner by vin1te of saying "KHJ Plays All the Hits," recently when Captain John called her home. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. That same of Oct. 11. Is dehverln~ the music of the station brings you t h~e Andrew Sisters. -1 , 1 A number or stations covered · the pros and cons of Proposition l, with KFWB broadcasting a se ries vf reports lo explore the many sides or that piece of legisla· Hollywood Radio Th e ate r IT TAKES a lot of doing Devotees of . the Mormon drama series Monday through to get a 1.1erry Christmas T~bemacle Choir, please ooti. Friday at 7 p.m. So does Faire and CoWltry Crafts It s now aired on KBIG Sun- KAPX (108 FM), the San Cle-~1arket pulled together at days from 9:.30 ~ 10 a .. m. mente station. KPFK. !J'hey're looking for_ A.nd th~t station IS covenng CONGRATULATIONS of a different nAture are In order for a couple or big contest winners. Jerry Myers of Contests of one kind or another are much on the air these days, with KIQQ still asking you to "Pass it On" While we're in the· midst some assi.!tance, including the !he . BaJa. 1000 Offro~d Race again this year, With Cirl KOCE Focuses on Jewis'h Community· Salzburg Talk Slated The Jewish community in Orange County, its . organiza· lions, religious activities and growth. will be the subject of KOCE·TV's "Focus Oranl!e County" program to be broad- cast over Channel 50, ti1onday at 6:30 p.m. • The program will b e munities of Orange County. repeated Thursday at 8 p.m. But how many Jewish people and Nov. 18 at 9:30 p.m. are there in th e country? The There are accurate fi gures best guesses place the number available on the number of between 40,000 and 50,000. people in the Black, the Mex-Visiting with host Ji m ican·American, and th c Cooper are four Orange CoWl- J -a-p a n esC=American_ CODk__tians-of Jewish heritage in0 ~ii~~~t::=~~:i:t;~~:::~=i:;;:-----1 volved in Jewish commwiit.y J activities: Leonard Sh an e, sides in Orange County. The program visits several A scholar in the Salzburr· J e w i s h organizations bl· history of theater will lecturf eluding: '111e Jewish Federa-on "The Salzburg W or Id tion Council of Orange County, Theater" Monday at Cal State the umbrella organization for Fullerton. 60 ~e_wlsh g~ups in the county Professor Walter Weiss of which coordinates _alt othe~ the..University_of__Salzhw:g will groups ~fJew~otiifitaUon, appear in room 303 of th€ the Jewish Family ~rvice or a d m i n is t r a t ion·business o.range Coun_ty, which P:O-building under the auspices v1des counse~1ng and a w1d_e of the department of foreign r~ge of services for the fam1-languages and literatures. The !Y' ~d the Israeli Acade~y lecture ls open to the public 1~ lrvme, where ~el 50 s free of charge. president of the J e w i s h Federation Council or Orange County; Mitchell Goldberg, president of the Jewish Fami- ly Service of Orange ~unty; Penny Stone, president of the \\tomen's Division of the United Jewish Welfare~ Fund ; and Ygan Sonenshine, an Is- raeli citizen who moved to the USA 10 years ago an~ now re- fjlm c r e w captured the vigor of Jewish religious a~ tivity in the celebration of the Simchat Torah, t h e c:.ulminating festivity of the Jewish Holy Season. Weiss, who will lecture in German, is currently on a speaking tour ol the United States under the sponsorship of the Austrian government. QRIAT fAll9LV l)fTJRTAINllElffi_ M •'"*'9.,,.....,,. ~ Alatlla'• .,:«11; Ht .......... •• Atlv1rHMllll 011 TV MISS THESI .ACTION·PACl(ED ADVENTURE HITS TOGtTHll TO INTElTAIN THI FAMILY! Pl'9ltll<I ot Am ... Jtln N1!11111I Enl1r•rf1t11 l11t VILLA-Ori"" ot.OOU SU1l,-Huntl11ttleft IN"' 5l'-,Jl6 MESA.....CO$l1 MHI Ml-IU2 ·• MlllAMAlt-hn ClllMllll 4'2-405' CINEMA WIST 11-W.Slrnlnllff NOW SHOWING! ONE WEEK ONLY SHOWTIMls-Mon.-ftrt •::JO.J.,:11 PM/$it!. & $un. 11·2 :1M :J0·1·t :15 SPECIAL LIMITED •NGAGEMINT-NO PASSES ACCE,TED a unique California experience llram •itb !Jour llinntr Presenting liV9 theater and a "served" buf· let. Wedneedays, Thursdays, Sundays- S9,95 ;__Fdd._ays-$10.95.i, Saturdays-111.95. Coc~lalls e•lri. No foQ.i:l or bevera"""Qe NIGHTLY served during the performancl!. DINNER AT 6:30 Attendance by CURTAIN 8:30 RESERVATION ONLY F'8e Pa.king Phone (714) 492-9950 140 Avenida Pico at the Ocean, San Clemente I SHQWING NOW! Call Theatre For Policy ' ----- Stereo cassette deck with automatic shut-off, tape select switch and walnut base. NOW IN STOCK AT ONLY • $11495 (~_ l;PI Consumer best rated EP I Speakers. Fantastic sound in a super small enclosure. Compare them to speakers 1wice the size. MODEL EPI 50 ONLY $55 lrfll,,fhi kardO!\) ! JRL Cl~ SOTOKSllllCMLAI MFG'S LIST $438.45 NOW ONLY $329 Designl'd in the Cit,1tion tr.1di1ion t H.irrnan /K.irdon's 50+-f.lut1ichilnncl 50 WJtt Ai\1/Fi\1 Stl'rcu Rl'ccivcr hJs qu.1d cJp,1bility Jn<l loJdcd with Harrnon/KJrdon qua!ity features . \Vc'rt· 1c1uning it \Vith a GJrrard -IOB auto1natic Turntable with base and Pickering car1 ri<lgc and folft" Sf<L 42 8" 11Yo-way speakers ., ~PICKERING ~·:1111 The PICKERING VIS SE Cartridge unequ.1led for precis ion ih its cl<1ss and sin1pte 111ounti11g. MFG'S LIST $49.95 NOW ONLY $1450 D 25 FOOT CURLED 0 HEADPHONE EXTEtl!SION MFG'S LIST $~.95 NOW ONLY $19S WEST LOS AHCEL£Stl378 So. Ottrland, 839-2216 PASAO ENA:. l.2J So.RosemeiJd. 4-4t2~JJ NO HOll YW000:4858Yineland, lat tan~ersl'l1ml. TORRANC£: f7007 Hawll'IOlllt Btvd 1370-8~79 ' 769.3473 LONG B£ACH:272S PK1licC~st H111ay.4J4.IJ981 $HlRMANOAKS·4626J~ VanNuys 81wd., 981·1731 COSlA MESA:2490~ Newport 8lVIJ , 11~)6C2·lJ~3 l - WCSTW0001 I09S6V1 Weyburn Avt .. 413·6S36 1P11;J YIUd t l!Oft will! M1111mul'l'I 'ufC/11\ll ..... ..cMI IJPCN MON. IHRU FRI. 1. •SAT. and SUtt '· 1 ltlO AM t• l rlO ,.. 10:00 AM te l!lO ,M ·NIVERSI Y STERE .i...._ , Bailey leading the broadcast team as it brings you five. minute reports on the hour. starling at 7:05 a.m. throug - 4:30 ,l.m .. on Friday. Sat~r· day, they'll bring the action to you from 2 to 2:15 p.m. • -• .,..,.,jr_ ---Wf1TWOILD lllOJ . SOYLINT GlllN fl'Ol ~~Dr•• DlllY•·IN SUPER SWAP IEm MAJtlOlll.LVD,lktft·M '-'·' '4111 .......... ,. Olll&H& DrlM•la t Al ............... " ...... ·-~ ...................... '•Miff 'uril ll'Mfttal_ ............... I Lincoln A••· •••• or 11n .. 1 111 ... 010 YUL ... , ...... • WllU UOl.IK .......- WlSTWOILD tl'Gl SOYLEN1' GREEN !PG! lOR O\olO ,, .. _ ... ••-lovnl \S..\ 962-2411 -----·---THE WA'rm. Wl'I '"I COPS ANO IOIBlRS !NI Plu1 • 1"Rll IULLns FOR A LONG GUN '° .... t l U.nl Ul!OCll ••nz THI CAT fXI S...!Olin• ,_.yand s1.1.co• ... SSl-7022 ""~'­. ' I t•.iu••no °''---" .. ,.4,4S -·-,_,.. .. JfSUS CHRIST SUPl•STA• "-LIS 1 IOOT Hill IP<tl -Fo1· Weekcnde1· • Acl,·erti in" Phone 642-4321 -- - ' - • • . --- A Tale of Two German Operas ' v ..• Richard Strauss and ~lugo von I-lofmannsthal po o I e d resources lo create I w o operas. "Der Rosenkava lier'' antl "Ariadne." Strauss crea ting the ·1nusic and von Hofmannsthnl writing th c lyrics. Bolh 11/ork s '.l'il\ appear in the l'orthcon1ing opera season brou,!!hl to Southern Cnli fornla by the New Yori< City Opera, under the auspices of the Music Cenl<'r Opera Associa- tion. Tht• 7th <1nn11al visit begin" \\1cd11t>sdav and con- tinues throu)!h Dec. 9 with 15 operas in the Pavilion. "Der Rosenkavalicr" will perforrn Nov. 19 i>nd Dec. 3 nt 8 p.1n: and ;i new pro- duction dcviscrl and directed f,..r NYCO by Sarah Ca lcl"•ell of ··Ariadne auf Naxos" 11·ill re performi.>d Thursday at 3 p.1n., and Nov. 25 at 2 p.m. As opcr<'l:i. "Roscnka-t:ilicr'' nnd "~rifldnc" tend to cliff1!r greatly. \V ti cn Slrauss ;ip- proachcd th e composing of "lloscnkavalicr,'' he wanted to create another "Marriage of Fi r.aro." F'ortunatclv. there C' o u Id neve r be a11other realization of the Fiag~·o st ory as suc- cessful as Mozo rt \\•ork. St rauss knew this and tric<l not · for the same story. but rather for the san1c fr:eling. Crrlainly he achieved thi!'=. pe rhaps in a more re fined 1nanner. Stylist i ca I l y. •·Jlosenkavalicr" cnn1p::re in their literary va1ui:s. SJX "\\''EEKS o f t r r th e t)ren1ie re nf ··11 er Resenkavalie r.'' librettist 11of· n1annsth;i l \VfO!t" Str;iuss: "I an1 cxt rcml•lv curiotts ."?;out th:i! !iltlc ~1o1 i c r c thing.·· -GERMAN LYRICS Johanna ~teier as the Marschallin and Sylvia Anderson as Octavia perform in the New York City Opera production of "Der Rosenkar- alier" in German Nov. 19. Th L' "liti le ~tolic rc thin""' \:> 1\·hic h Hofn1annsthnl ref;t'· red 1vas the play. "],e B. our gcois c;cl1!ilho1n111c .. " Hofn1<1nnsthal suggC':;tc.<l that I•' and Strauss grc.'1!\y com· 1·rcss lile play. for 11.'hich Strauss should \\1rite inc:ide111al Tram Open Seven Da vs • The Palm Springs1 Aerial Tramw.a y is now open seven days a week. MARLON BRANDO "LAST TANGO IN PARIS" + Alle11 F11nt'1 Tramway genera! manager O.L. McKenney announced that the altraclion. no'"' in its 10th ye a r of operation , began its seven-dAy-a-\~ieek winter schedule on Thursday. Tramcars to !he 8.515-foot mountain station leave at least every half hour. with the final car up to the mountain statio.n departing al 7:30 p.n1 .. and the lasl car relurnint; at 9 p.m. "WHAT DO YOU , SAY TO A NAKED LADY?" coast oo"a'l:'a U:JO p.m. 1:IO p.lft, C1ll'e. Sv!i. lo Hit.I Sl.00 ; Both In Color IX I \I.A. CITY ANO SOUTH COAST CINEMAS-TUESOAV sic !LA.OIES AHO GOlO~N AQERSl-OPl!N 'TIL 2'00 P.M. "JES US CHRUT SUPEll:STAR .. "HAROLD ANO MAUOE" lloth In Colcri LIUrerH:I 011\lllr "IL•UTH" "HEAltTllR'l!AK KID" A aoth tnC•lorl !PG) V Hor,..rl MDON'T LOOK IN THI! BASEMENT" "TALES WITNl!iS MAO- HESS" lolh In Color! till. I Pe!~• ~e!ler1 "THE OPTIMISTS" "Pl AY rr AGAIN, SAM" lolh In Calorl !PGJ Try Saturday's Ne 1cs Quiz • • • FROM F as h ion Island N ewport Beach . .. • '! .. eas11y-tltebest movie so far this Year'' -s1.,phe11F11rl)e1 • NEW YORK TIMES • ....--~ (;\~ ... Wherewereyoun'6Z? J'~, ur·· • •• '-' . IACLU5'YI Of.ANGE COUNTY lNGAGfMENT WUKCiilTS -7:30 -9:30 SAT. SUN. 1:30 • 3:30 -5:30 -7:30 . 9:30 ELLIOTT l\ASTNER presents CLIFF GORMAN JOSEPH BOLOGNA in Weekdays: 7 & 8:40 Sat. & Sun. 1 :45,3:30, S:15,7&8:45 . SHOW STAITS: 6:45 ,.M. lnd feotvre, ort-.111 Only "THREE BULLETS, FOR A LONG GUN" , music 'and create a short, one- act opera ("Ariadne aur Nax- os") to go along with it. 1'hc play. U(Xln m a j o r revisions, eventually became an operatic prOlogue about a grouo of actors. a stage direc- tor. composer, wigmaker, and dancing mas;cr engaged In ~ex­ ecuting some outrageous in- structions from an .18th een-. turv patron \Vho had hired thern to present an "en- tertainment" (the opera to lol\ow) for his guests. THE CO~WLICATIONS are up1:oarious. The roles or Zerbinetta and Ari<idne created the difficully of £inding y.·01nen who could perform them. The famous divas Frieda Hempel and Luisa Tetra i..z in i \vere available but were considered ~ ' un~uilab\e aetors. "' NYCO's choice of artists arc :,,• ·~:=;.:lt. Carol Neblett in the title role .... :::: and Patricia \Vise as Zerbinet-~/· ta. '/ ' # 'fhe premiere of "A riadne" t ./~ t took place in Stuttgart on Oct. • ~ .. , "P"" .. ~ 25. 1912. Although the director ~ fy l~ .. -' • ' ~~· ~ , • ,. ._ • l I of the Stuttgart was most reluctant. the fir st performance was given at the Court Opera. The part of Ariadne w;is l{ivcn lo a young opcreua singer named ll-1i1.zi Jeritza. \VhP.n she made the transition front operetta to opera . Mizzi became known as i\1aria Jeritza. The Zerbinetta was ~1a rgarethe Siems, who also tiad sung the l\farschallill in •·Der Rosenkavalier." Thr premiere w11s far from STRAUSS MUSIC -Carol Neblett in the title role and John Alexander as BJe- chus perfor1n in ":\riadne auf Naxos'' at the ),.os An geles ~Jusic Center's Pav· ilion. •years \:lier. a ne\V \'ersion \\"<?S comp.lctcd. Late Lehmann as the Ccni · poser. l ~at ii should be. loaded 1vilh Olll!":!!lCUll~ ~ ll r pr i SC s. in- elu<ling 1ht• 1nl t•rn1i1tcnt use or b::>th J'·•i.:lt .. h and Gcnnan throu;1hc:u:. This premiere took place at the VicnnJ Roy;i\ Opera !·louse on Oct. 4, 1!116. The c:ist in- cludt>d 1'.1aria Jcrilza as A.riad- ne and the then little known The premiere of f\1 i s s Cald\vell's NYCO production recently r.ecei\'f'd rave!' in New York Citv. She was citcd• 1 ,_ _________ ., for creating the "fun O;lCra" -. LIDO N=tll at"is rul. Not ;iccepting failure. 1nannslhal and Strauss took ··Ariadne" bnck to the drrt\\'- ing boards. \Vith exl en~i\·e revision. arid three and a 'half (;(l\illl.<ll ~l!\HM.O. CU11?01Hl f10N a FOUNTAIN \/AllfY ,,."..:'~) .,,,,.,,9; Q;;;.~;, -;;110..0GIR "WESJWOllLD" lP'Gl • SOYLENT GREEN " .IP'G) m "THE WAY WE \YtnE" !l'GI "SOUND 0.f MUSIC" -"" .. CH4RLOTJE'S WEB" "THE OPTIMIST" IP'GI "PLJ.Y IT AGAIN, SA M" !PGI "LITTLE FAUSS & llG HALSY" "Tale• That Witltft1 Madllfts" Ill} O 'OUNT.11.IN VAlllY ...... ~~n ....,.,;oO~i1 Aii'D~<>1• ~~~~~~~~ '" "The PosMt1ia1111fJoel Dellll'ley" !RI "IHE GODFAJH ER" Ill CABARET ll'G-1 & HELLO DOLLY IGI ... .. DILLINGER" I l l "i L£CTRA GLID E IN B1.UE" !PG) '" "THE OUTSIDE MAH .. '.'A cinch to score as the llliggest, glossiest, romantic lilocklluster· of the 11taning movie year!'' --lJRUCE WILUAMSON, Playboy • l!llll li5"ft~~,~~<C...-:3P-'~~·· .~ t!' .4 • ' • Ql-' l'CIAS•Wllll llUl.CIOL!I -... S!Hlll · IQOl If~· Ill W 1flll 'lfllt IM' S!llllt-lllll1 ll(IW()-·-llll.JOlltum:· IMGLm'GIS · IOUU. ..... 1111.1111 ... 111ionu.,_UISOIJJ .,...,___.._",,._lJIUIO!t•-"•---DWl'IQJ.O ""on·f'rl: 1 :301115 10:30 Sat-Sun: 1:30 3:45 5:00 1115 0130 • • • M•.-TH.-Tllur.·l"rl.; OPttl •:4S h t·S11111 OPttl 12:45 W 1y1 O"" 2:00 , I fPGl-~~-=~1 INTI.INCi TO LIDO ISll 673-IJSO "FR:Tz THE CAT" !XI "~H EERLEADERS" IX) !- "BIG FOOT" (GI ' "NORTH COUNTRY" r I m MANN THEATRES MANN THEATRES BREAT 1 BELLY I LAUGHS I\ CUF~ i GORMAN \ JOSEPH BOLOGNA M0'1.·Frl. 7:(11). 1:«1, 10:1J $i1 Siii\. l;.ai. l :lD, S:lS, 7:00, 1.«I • .. The warmest, most human comedy in a long lime ... RICHARD DREYFUSS RONNY HOWARD PAUL LE MAT Mon.,fri. 7::»-f:JO Slll·Sun-1 :J0.3:30 ~;l).f:)(l .. • :: • • •• ·: .. ~~ .. .. :: :: ·~ .. .. • ·' • ·. be A ... " .., ~~ ; II ... • • 0 .. .- • . . -. ------------"""---...... ---- ·~Cabaret' l~li Decad.ence Reigns on·cs.F_Campus :-;· ' :;~1 J~UELINE C. LAND :-:· Of .. DdJ 'll•t llllf . -;:::welcome to the Kit Kat ::faub. Tiie bawdy, raucous ·~telub where pa tr on s ! ;itcaped the groWing menace :~JI~ power flourishes Ol\cc, ~ on the C.Ufomla State ::~venity at Fullerton cam- :jlpl. :::!"Cabaret," ln a delightfully :;tecadent induction, continues ::DI rUn at the university's Lit- !;tle Theater through Sunday. ;!'!t has been virtually sold out ~;iw all el.ght performances. :!Qu the box office at 870-3371 ~·ooe and one-half hours before the sbowUme fOl' lnfonnltion~ •• : • .. This university production of ·.the famed musical deserves -,a' full i-.e. The staging is • ~ and swift paced. The :.cast Is well matched. All .,. • Voice Solo In Laguna Concert ... A solo voice concert will begin the Community Concert •• J.ssoclation of Laguna Beach's ,· &ew seaS011 Nov. 11. • < t :.. 'mon Estes, a New York ! ~baritone. will perfonn at ~ ~.m. in the Laguna Beach HJih School auditorium. : .. Ested began his · singing : ... s;areer at age 8 in his church ... sJwir. Jn 1966 he received a ' p-lze in Moscow's FI r s t : pitematlonal Tschalkovsky V<>- ; ;QIJ compeUtim. · • ::: M e-m befmalp· information : rilay .·be ~received by calling Hoyt Poot at 4!16-t701. ' ..... . have good, atroog voices Bradahaw It is barely credible ceremonies, who also guides -an advantage seldom found that lhe would rorego ·bii.ving the audience through the In nonprofessional productions. his child and sharlrig the good show, is played by Whitney The k0oky cbaract~r of Sally !!~~~· hlm to pursue her Rydbcek. Rydbeck uses the white face and gloves with Bowles, who is mostly a love C1lfford Bradsl1aw, t b e all the flai r and deplorable interest in the stage version, yOWlJ American writer, is decadence that the role re- wa, developed li!. the film t9 portrayed by Andrew Boettner quires. His number with Jean assure star stptu~ for Liza who has a fine, full voice. Henderson and Judy R.lchonne , Mbllelll. ~ltner's tall, slim frame. . "Two Ladies" was fun and Fnr Utose whose only e>r· carries the character of th~ one of the best numbers in perience 'wtth the famed musi-)'OW18r starving artist well. the production. cal is the fllm, Liza Cll!ford Bradshaw's struggle The ltt.C. and his Kit Kat Minnelli ls Sally Bowles. So to write had taken him to cOOrus gave the audier.cc a Pamela Hall, who portrayed London, Paris and Venice rousing "Welcommen" and the nightclub singer in the before af"!'iving in ~rlin. He set the tone for the . o~hcr CSF production, fared well in was seeking an ~nv1ronment chorus numbers : great bmmg, a difficult role. Difficult if so that would stimulate the great oo.5tumes, g r e a t only for the audience's precon-. "The Grea,t American Novel." choreogr-aphY. There wa s ceptlons. He finall y learns that it is always so much to watch Miss Hall's Sally is not as not th~ environment but how when the chof':1s was on t~at kooky and is less poignant. one mixes and relates to it it was frus~ating. Those b!g, She mellows so much during that counts. buxom ladies . and . ~he I tn· her Jove affair with Clifford ·The Klub's 1naster of tillating fraulcms giving the Tickets Available For Chorale Concert and dJrec.tor_ or music at Im- manuel Presbyterian Church in Uls Angeles. Tickets are now on sale. "Come on'' to all in black ; lace stockings and garters. Fra ul ein Schnelder and ~!err Schullz. pl ayed by Deborah Bi'ucher nnd Gary Bolen, made n perfect c o up l e . Fraulein $chnelder was thr maiden \andladv struggling to survive in the changing times. Gary Bolen1s Herr Schultz waf a sweet, simple man . Like so many, he was soon to be betrayed by his optimism. Their duel, "lt Couldn't • Please Me li-1ore" and "~1ar-. ricd" were p I e a s ant in- terludes . "Tomorrow Belongs to Me" hailing the future of Nazi Germany is ominous and ; fearful and the first act closes . \\'ith a chilling reprise. The costumes, by Dwi~ht Richard Odle are unassuming and pleasant mod ifications of the early '30s scene. Sally Bo\\'les' wardrobe was a little disappointing . . . perhaps more flair or a better fil Th i s sta g e ve rsi on stimulates th e ima~inatlon. The finale 's . .stop action and frozen figurt's give o n e another chance to grasp \vhat is being stateci . It really drives home Clifford's words: "If you're not against it, (Nazism) then you are for it ." The Irvine M!!_sle_r Chorale anticipates another sold-out concert for its Dec. 8 prese!l" talion of "Christmas With The Master Chorale." The 106- voice chorale, conducted by John Alexander , will appear at Newport Harbor High School Auditorium in Newport Btach, 600 Irvine, at 8:30 p.m. Adult prices ar $5, $4, $3 and lp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;mtl BASS-BARITONE· Simon Esm· The program will include '"Ibe Magnl·flcat ?' by Pergolesi, "Motet Vt" by Bach, traditional and con- temporary carol settings, and w i J 1 o:wtclude with "A Ce remony of Carols" by Ben- jamlzJ, 1!rltten~ students are $1.50. They may be purchased from Coast Music Store in Costa Mesa ; by writing to-P:O. Box 4174, Irvine,. 92664 ; or by calling (714) 548-0049 or 54~145. Group rates are a l s o, available. \ "Last year, nearly 200 peo- ple were turned away at the door," said Jan Un v er t business tnanager. Immediate ticket r.eservations are ad- -vlBed. ----.. ar\'I• '73~·~., ~~.!~~~~~~· 40 Cara-ts Ut : Gelt Ullmann : Kelly fftd ·: Jlllile Albert : Barnes ·f..,OJ.lNlAft1\JlS !PG! Young Albert 7 • 10,-44 •.M. DANCERS AT OCC • • • '!'he cborOJe -1s a>mprised of people of !DanY occupations and represent 22 communities tn Orange County. The groilp is dedicated to singing the great masterworks in choral literatwe. Alexander ts coordinator of choral activities at California State ·University, NorthrMige, HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) c>oLot."°H•WN Edward Albert, son or Eddie "IUnER'FLIES Albert who starred in "But-ARE FREE" (llG) (l'nlm Page !5) on the West Coast si nce 1954 .. Carole Warner is assistant director and lead dancer. .' A MEMBER of the company :since 1961. she has performed ln Uie BrQadway and tour1ng ~:companies of "Oestry,'' and : the Los Angeles and Las .; Vegas companies of "Guys ;: and Dolls." :: , Artistic ad~isor . ls Betty :~ Walberg, who wrote the dlU'ICC ·:music for Broadway pr<>.- : : ductions or "Anyone Can :; WhisUe." "Fiddler on the :: Roof.'' and "On a Clear Day ::•You Can Sec Forever." :: Walberg's other impressive :: credits include doing the : .. dance mus ic and vocal ar· :: rangements for the films : ''F\mny Girl" and "On a Clear Day" and the for lhe film Story." dance music ''West Side NEW~lAN. wbo retti,·ed a choreographer's grant ~om the National Endowment for the Arts. ho.s been credited by critics with "grace and imaginati.Qn ,'' lyrical Hslow motico style," con- trasted in other pieces with "humerous spoofs." ~ H;er major works include "Ol Winds and Time," "Trom· perie," "Mulli,:an Stew," .and ''Orbits." The co.mpany performs choreographers also t~ give a different feeling of move- ment. "But even t h o u g h they're different," Duddridge said. "they're all G 1 or i a Newman." ;, , Ji.Juth Coast Repertory ......... '"1'HI WOULD-II e1N1UMAlrf' OP•Ml SATU llDAY -NOY•Mlllt 1tll\ •, • An nt 1'9IMlll Of A Mlrlk•I Co!Mfy -.. ~ Styl•I .-1W M•W'°ltT, COSTA MIU f'Olt llllllllYATIOMI, CALL-Ml-llU .. ' ' ' A VERY SPECIAL CHILDREN'S c.:ffn enchonting tole of three hibernating bears ond how they fint discovered the magic ond - wonder of Chriitmo1 ~--.r: .... : .· .. :... . .. ' • ......... ·'t" . . .,,, . . · .. . . . . SHOW! 0 ·, '• .. ... . . ··: ' terflies are Free," signed to . isod I 8:55 P.M. appear m an ep e o 11 ---~-~----"0rson We l I es, Great Call T11eatre 'Far S111day FAMILY TWIN CINEMA . . . 1n11 •IOOKMUIST AT SLATllt Ol"IN '•4S WlllCDAYS UT/IUN -COfilTINUOUS 12 NOON 'CINeMA I 5th BIG WEEK ! Winner of 3 ,,WiiLor'' (G) • "TO"M SAWYll" (G) SPICIAL KIDS Mysteries." I And now the movie ... •• .perhaps the.-. nmarbble film to erneriesmo. CedlB.DeMi!le -Hollywood:' Mariltff Schd11le MATINll SAT/SUN -12 NOON "SANTA AND THE THREE llEARS" (G) ".JFSlS CHRIST SUPERSJ'AR". CINEMA II HELD OVER I MARLON IRANDO STARTING FRIDAY - • ''AYANTI" lR1 BOY, HA~ WE GOT A VACATION FOR lOU ... .,.Where n0ttmg can possibly go worn 9 2lid At A11 3 c._. Chllllon -Ill . SCM.ENT \ __ .. ,._ ·,_,. y,,,., .... uoo .- , F'rtday, November 9, 11)73 DAI LY PILOT :J * EDWARDS THEAT RES r * I . -........ Everything seemed eo important th.h ... wen love! "IMMENSELY ENTERTAINING" ALAN R. HOWARD HOLL YWOOO REPORTER "WCllEDML Y !fAUM.I." aox OFFICE MAGAZINE "AN ACADEMY AWARD CONTENDER!· Holl Bartlett has folhioned ·a bold new concept In fllmmaking which imporves on the book!" / I . Vefnon Scoll U.11.1. " 'The Way We We e' is irresisti!>le! A cinch tq score as the biggest, glossies! romantic blockbu sler of the waning mov ie year." BRUCE WILLIAMSON, Pl.tyboy I HE 3 PERIOD WHICH FOLLOWED THE MURDER OF PRESIDENT KENNEDY & LEE HARVEY OSWALD, 18 MATERIAL WIT-,,., NESSES Dll!n • 6 BY GUNFIRE, 3 IN MOTOR • ACCIDENTS, 2 BY SUICIDE, ONE FROM A CUTTHR(ljl,T, ONE FROM A KARATE CHOP ·=····· I Diii• U.IEE• T 0 TH E NECK , 3 - FROMHEART ATTACKS , AND2FROM _ .... ~ ....... ,,1J.: •• ,/':' !>. .. , NATURAL , :0 , ,..~ ..., . · · '-CAUSES. /, .;_:-. ~ · (, •\ AN ACTUARY, f."". ~ l ,~~' ENGAGED BY • ¥ 1:: ) '~'"""\ THELONOON · ~· , ;1',$r<lj SUNOAYT!MES '. ~ .. , t ·c; ! CONCLUDED ·· . ·t . j THATONNOV. , ,~'\.j 22, 1963,THE . II" •• J.., 0 D D ·S ~ .•. :: / A G A I N S T ..,.._, T HE SE WIT NE SSES BEING DEAD BY FEB., 1967 WERE ONE HUNDRED THOUSAN D TRILLION TO ONE. . , ~fEET SAM. THE WONDER ~I A>'I. HE'S GOT MADNESS 1N HIS CLOSET. EVERYBODY IN TR OUBLE, THE POLICE IN CIRCLES -, . AND THE WORLD IN HIS '' PETER POCKET C'Cl I roo. SHOWING NOW • vu.im,~ : , ·j~ ~IM~ -c - In Caklr-Patlavi$ion• A Parlll!Ollld Re6eue 2nd TOP COMEDY WOO DY ALLEN in PLUS • FRiii SllURI, LJURUCE HIRYET, lllGEU LJISBURI IN HARIOll SHO NG CENTER ·e:oWARDS HARBOR.,:,':, "THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE" (PG) NOW PLAYING YUl 1•Y<1•• ' RIC~A•O ll/UMllOI l RO WEl!'IC Tf'I[ ONl Y ~·­(OIJ"lri E<iGA.GUird r,rus:a ION UllM&N IN .... 'llSIEE ... ....... AllEW! NOW P~AYING • ., , • '70 FORD TORINO Hardtop. VI, •ulom.tlic. rtd;o, h111ltr, power steer· "inq & brt~e1, WSW, a ir con- • diti oning. !2278Qll • Ao •, I • • ' ' EVERY 1973 CHRYSLER AND PLYMOUTH WAGON .,BEING SOLD WHILE 'THEY l,.AST AT ACTUAL FACTORY INVOICE* ••• HURRY FOR THE SAVINGS OF THE CENTURY!!!!! You'll never save rn the purchase'. of ore rnoney on • · a new c _on_111, loolc at the ar. Corne invoice* •.• That's actual facto,,.y . that sirnple N h yo.,r price! It's do . ' o olcus p le uble tallc. The r' o us ••• No price You pa p C1ce We pay is the Chrysler and :,· hoose frorn 20 -. · Yrnoufh wagons. NEW 1973 PLYMOUTH SATELITE SEP~!~.<::..~~~ " Absol1tely loaded ... Jtti Ml1ae eq .. 1,.,...r htcl111~ •Ir S•r. No. RP23-M3G·245465 S1 ZOO DISCOUNT Offl OF fEDllAL WINDOW STICIC.ll rt I Cl. '68 TOYOTA '69 PLYMOUTH '69 ENGLISH '70 MAVERICK CORONA 2Door hardtop. 4 spaad, r•· d io and heetar, white side wall tires. (X OB098 1 WACiON Suburban. VI , automatic, ra- dio, he.ilar, while w.ill1, roof rack. t YHE2441 • FORD ' Stand•rd lran1mi11ion, radio, h•1ter, vinyl top. IZSHISSI AMlllCAN- S•d•n. Economical 6 cylind•r •ngin•, 1t•nd•rd tran1mi1- 1ion , radio and 'haatar. tWWR8141 ,, .. 6 cylindar, 1tand•rd tr•n1· mi1sion, r•dio, h••l•r .. vinyl top, chrom• window ir•m•1. (729BHJI s1 lr95--~~695 -~----1 s995 '68 C.HEVROLET '70 PLYMOUTH '67 MUSTANG '68 DODGE '69 v.w .. SEDAN 2DOOR HARDTOP' DUSTER V8, aulomati,c transmi11ion, raJio, heater, vinyl top. I 188AQFI COIONET 440 fASTIACIC 4 speed h••Umi11ion, t•dio, VI, 1ulom.itic, radio, haater, healer, bucket 1eah, con-air co11ditionin9. (007HFR I 1ole. !9l4BQICI ... • sg95 6 cylinder angina, 1tandard lr•nsmin ion, tidio, heal111t, whita 1ida w1tl tires. 9b7BEJ I ' • ... ' ' ' . VI , •utomalic, r1dio, he•lar, power 1taarin9, WSW, air cond., vinyl lop. IXIYl&S ) sags Stand.rd lr11101mi11ion, he1t- ar. 1715HEWJ s995 I BRAND NEW '73 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT . DiSCOUNT A ~,Q,JJ~Jth now h•s facilitiM for 1ervice ·on ALL MOTOR HOMES ,... 91rdle11 of size, by exper~ . •need motor hom. meet... •nicsl WARRANTY work on lntern1tionai1 · and 0 o d g • truck chassis. BRAND NEW 1973 TRAVELALL 'I America's ~ding Recrea· tional Y·• h i.c I es from the Uecfing"lntirncitionai t ruck • • ' I Dealer •.. Atlas! I :· . ' • .l ' .. . • . t • ;~ • • • ! • • • • I " l ~f ·~ . l . ' ' l • • . • s • . • • ! . . • l I 1 I I ' lO . . :c ; .. ~ . ' • • . . ORDIR TODAY FUtl · . . .. PRICE .. . !OVER STOCKED WlTH NEW . . ' '-. . • • BRAND ' NEW: "714 . B.~100 VAN Fully Factory Equipped"· !Bl 1A i4X028l96J IMMEDIATE DELIVE·RY ·$83 oo wN s33 MON TH $1J. i.~ tot•I dn. pymt. $1 l i1 tOt•I mo. pymt. inti. tall, lie.; l .•II carrying ch arges o" •P.pr. cr•dit f1>r '42"m"os. D•fjjrr•d pymt'. prie• $3569 incl:-te•-l tie. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE . RATE ·l,l.65 ~ _ '· , • · !CAR TRADE-INS .••. cALL ••• . ' ' " Rt'dio, heater, fully fa~ory eq11ipped. ___ __.ZR LLXI09.t62l __ . ., ~12 , DODGE, WAGON VS, automatic., air cond., power st8;rin9, AM.FM radi~, cruise confrol •. l 134EK6 J • . ··.$ " . $46 is total dn. pymt. $46 is total mo. pymt. incl. tax, Ue., A· all carrying charges on appr. credit for 36 m.Qs. DefeITed .pymt.~ price $1702 incl. tax &: 1lc. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE • 17.21•/. .. • ,. . ' 70 FORi> GALAXIE Automatic, factory a ir, power steer- l~g. '866 -;~ . . . • FULt PllCI , '69 DODGE POLARA . Automatic, factory •ir, p,ower sfeer- ~--76~ .· FULL PRICE ··70 FORD MAVERICK Auto. trans., radio, heater. (458GJTI ·•766 . · FULL PRICE . ..!69 PONTIAC 1FIREBIRD •·At.to. trans., air tcJnd.1 pOw'.er steer- ~in9, v.s. IYVM9~7) · . ' ' '96;6 'I FULL PRICE _ •~.-$~,ER'' :'72'·~-. '65 GRAND Pl,llX Full power, air .cOnditioning, :vinyl ~ ':~· SAJ'U '66';.;:., FUL( PRICE '69 C.HEVY IMPALA CPE. V-8, power steering. IY.CL447 1 ·s·T66/._ FUU PRICE ,, FULL PRICE '67 CHEV:, ·¢AMARO s.s.: ' . ' va, landau ·r•of, radio, heilter.- IYOY771 f $666 FULL PRICE ECIAL·•! ·!. ! · • ·$ ' va, pow:•{ sfHri.nC)', •ir c nd ition- inq, bucket.reefs, 'Vinyl p. (627-µ>.~PL -·~-7"""'..L.-.,.~~.l_~ .. • • • CHARGER '. ~276 6 IWL2 /G4GI 02407 J ~. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY s35· DOWN s35 ·MONTH . . ' . $85 i1.f'.oitl dn, pymt. $8S ii1 total mo. pymt. incl. tai, lie., & •11 carrying ch1rge1 on' appr. credit for '42 mo1, D1ferr1d PY"''· price $]655 i11el. h1x & lie. ANNUAL PER· ~ CENJAGE RATE ll.1io/o,, , a ' SPORTSMAN YAN VI, aulonratic, P.S., tint w1hld, H.D. 1prin91, retr , slit. /, • IMMEDl:ATE ' '$396lr1--• "$1~1''6 DOWN" ·:111 & MONTH~,_ j $1 16 il tot&I dn. pymt. $116 i1 total mo. F>vmt.'inel. f~x. lie .: & all c•rryjng efiarcfes ·on ! appi. credit ~r 42· mos. -Dtfarred pymt. price. $4918 incl. ta• &."\ie. ANNUAL PE,~ ,. CENTAGE R~t·E 10.26 % · .. · . ' FRE E CREDIT CHECK : If you «• new in California • If you owo on y.Ur cae.e . If yDtl are HW on your job e J I '""-hav! _little or '!" c.odlt e Drive homo tOdiry In !lie car iif yoilr clici.lo•· Ex· amr,les of our lftCIRY ways to fl•ance: t.;rOcker· Bank • Un on Bank e Sicurlty Paolflo e hntl . OI /\m'!fica e Uoltld Calffwnla ~k e Crysler Credit e FIFfl14o Thrift 'A·KE vo:uR. CliOICE~ ~~ '71 VEGA · Fully factory equipped. l246CTHI '71 PINTO ........ Automatic, bucket seats, radio, heater, ll97DIM I Automatic:, radio, heater. I 290FWC ) $ ' . S30 is total do\vn pymt. $30 is' total n1onthly oil ,W · tcreqit fOr 36 mos. DCCerred pymt. price pymt. incl,. ta.'(, ~nse, and, ~11 can·ying charges is $1110 incl. T&L. ANNUA:L'.'P.EltCENT• ' "GE RATE 13.63% · r ' • 1 . ~ ' 0 ')j~i"< I l \ ,,J • •• • 1 ' . • • ' • • 34 OAJLV PILOT AMBLER TUMBLEWEEDS vou Al\EN'T valV l'NfHLISEP Al'O!lf11-US AMl'USH MUTI AND JEFF FIGMENTS f j ' i I L "" NANCY F1!daJ, Novcn1fr CJ, 1117) NO l'CSS~ LEAIKINEO. RCA.LEO At.D T'MSTED CONTA!KE:RS,NQM?Rf 0¥'ER-5Ql'E€ZEO DA.6S OF MSTE" NO lt\ORE LOST CP<PS, .... ... A ClEAll Pl.ASTIC CYLINOER W~tCH DtSP&NSES Ex.ACTl..Y TME Rl61-1T AMOUNT Of PASTE ONTO THE &RUSH .. ~ TELESCoP!NGo AS IT'S USEOI v'i-~ I AIN'f IN SHAP!: YEH, LAST WEEK! BOY. AM I GL.AD I fOUNOOUT IN TIME ABOUTl-IERJ I'M NO OOPf)bu KNOW! ' .. WITH A F'LAP- ~ ~ NOZZLE ! NO MORE LOST CAPS! THE OUT POLICE ARE GIYIN(;: OUR TREE JUST GOT ·ONE SUMMC!NSES F'OR L.ITTERINC7 THE SIPEWAL.KS ,TD DAY'S CIDSSWDBD PUZZLE ACROSS 44 From ····· to Yesterday's Punle Solved: riches 1 F11h 45 Oo a 5 -dixit polishing Job 9 Curtain fabric 46 Zebra le11turo 14 Monstrous 49 Wost 15 Communic11· C11nadi11n tk>n city 16 Bird 53 Went badly 17 lightweig:h! 54 Ice hockey metal: Abbf. su rface . ' 18 TV part 55 Part of a s 19 Selkirks or city Cascades 56 Boring tool 20 Folding cloth 57 S harpnus 22 Tangled in a 58 Cry of r6'\lelry D mass 59 Sug1r source I s 0 S L E R R E S T 23 In good 60 Go wlthout order food 21 Golf COUtH 4-0 Numericll 24 Plav fo1 a 81 L1it• areas prefix sucker DOWN 22 Childhood 42 Three-legged 25 Set up sickness stand 28 Rich l ittle, 1 Man or boy 24 Edifices 43 Din for one 2 City In 25 Women's 45 Emulates 32 Zodiac i;ign Cu11bec quarters . Anne 33 f ootwear 3 Sickness 26 Appear Murray 34 Sign of a hit 4 Ordered back 27 Wash lightly 46 l ow person: 35 Marmalade S Cree or Sioux 28 Heals Informal ingredienl 6 Direct 29 Moslem 47 Correct 36 Dams 7 Kind of party religion 48 Violent angtr 37 Nairow 8 Fish 30 Go1 up 49 Pitcher ~--- opening 9 Rubs with 31 Eminent Blue 38 Len er preasure 33 Sudden pain 50 Utter 39 Europeans 10 Put in a box spasms trenii1dly PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH by Doug Wildey by Tom K. Ryan AM~USH l'/.OOW SURE!WOULON'T YOU AFTE'R SMC RAN OFF ANO MARRIED ,I.NOTH$: GUV? 11-9 --by. Dale 'Hal! by Ernie Bushmiller HOW COME '(OU'VE NEVE~ A5KED ME WAAf I[~ UKE 10 ilE 1Jlf CllTE.ST Of THE Cl/TE? ,;:::=,-_ "° Facet 11 Reve '41 Get-12 "Bus S1op" togethers author 43 Enlarged a 13 Merited gift ; hole Archaic- 36 Animal 51 Golf club disease 52 Cooling 37 Followed drinks secretly 54 Hockey 39 Kiddy clolhet --0ff"'1al MA~C IA 1 THAT1S GE.O~GIE., WHO . WOUl-1' L.ll<E TO W~ITE. A COL.UMN WHAT DO YOU. !VANT TO IVlnTE Al'OIAT, G i0Jt611o 1' I 1 ' • s ' 7 .. " 17 ~ " "' " ~ ~" .,, 1, " '1 ,,, " .. '' " " " .. .. .. .. .. .. . ST -I"' ' I ' !W A' 10 1'1'A:'I " " j 21 " !'>! '. " .. . : .. .. .. " SI " II ~ " " - ct· ,. 11 " . .. JO JI 1!'111 ' DICK TRACY rGFC THI> PAPE.JI: .... ON VOUR Fl!fT, PIKE • '>OU'RE GOING BVE·BVE . ® ~-.. l!NOUGM STALLING! ON. YoUll FEET! DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS OUT o F THe '°'laY; GU?lie, /1M c;ReaTeST DeTecr,ve IN a'~ oF Ga,(/M/lUFRY <lfllD GORDO l'M /.ioT Olll nie TRa 1L. • I • HoLD wf1,fg4 r' 'b 71/1 • 16 *:. AWFIJLf ~ • MOON MULLINS · • ANIMAL CRACKERS by Charles M. Schulz AREN'T \OJ CURIOUS? AREN'T IOU ~IOJS AS TO WMAT M~ LIFE MVS! 8e LIKf ? BUT WHY AN\ I UNDER ARAIST? WHAT Alli! Tiii! CHAAG!S :::.<[ (.-;-" t~ .. by Harold Le Douz by Mell ,S01f,Y1 WS ,4~1f6APY MAV5 A ~lf"''"li: IN A"'AHilM -· LET Mf TURN OFF MY WATER FOUNTAIN·" • by Roger Bradfield ' @> . 0 0 ,- ••. , 93'~ By Charles Banotti by Gus Arriola • F/INIJV/ 0 111#fl:'if'AT • ~}/ 'TOO/ I by Ferd Johnson /llJ<TIS BETTf'J<' ..• <;o ON ·-t>oNIT PRESS )'OUR LUCK. ' \ by Roger Bollen '1That certainly sums up tbe clolhlag budget llalTy's pat me on." DENNIS .THE MENACE Jlllliill -~ 0 II •• • • • -< . • ' J '" " >I ·~ 1 ,, .. ~I 11! '1 " '. ' ' • • , • " 'I , I 'I • • .. ' '. ) .. ' ; I .. I: , • . ) . ' , • . I , I . . l . .. ' ' ' . ' ' .. . ' ' • ' ' t ' l ' • ' ' ) . I ' I t i. : I ' '' ' ' ' " ' ' . ' . ' ' ' ' ,1 ;j . ri t ' f . '- I r "1 ' ~ I . l ' ' ' I I 111001 Kl<OOI. 110 o• PL.ACI PLACt NOTICI c-. ...... ...... ...... lldy r Tiier• w ... ~, .... EK' ... 'J Tht 15 l•tllltt Tiit ~$ :::!:! CllAPT, ., . CA•PI HMlltl P-IOl'll \ltc.lllOl'I •w-. co._ Sllll'IOI"' Mlllwr~ s.w 11'1 T•ble Pn""""" ClM•N Al~ll H .. llh Per\tlon: y~, ....... ..... ' ..... ·-·-...... '"""' "'"'" _,~ ._ ... y~, Fw ,,,,_ .. .. • ,,,,_ Ori,,.,. Orlvw •• 0 "L CALI , .. • .,< THE ., c I'"" SEC ... , .. ...... z~. '" " ., "' -. PUBIJC NOTICE l"l.ACI "I.I.HS AAI OH "ILE1 11,lcta.ywr I Slorle M91on HMttll t. W•re ..... VK.111011 lrlod• Pnlmllflor'! Appo'ttlllttllhlO l•ICKTl .. 0111 (l.atlM"tnJ T-o HMllll & Wllf.,. . ._ .. VKllllOll CAllf'IT, LINOLIUM 6 IOPT nLI L.AYll II PUBLIC NOnCB II Sllt1:1 .... ... 1.1. ... • Nearly Everyone List.em w Landers '· ~ ! ' •.• ~ it-~:-i----:--....-1.. g I .., 'l.t • j ·~ ===j :::;:::-~;::::;1i~~~··;;:::::::=;·~.-·~-~~ • 111r;j,-.. ,!: ie.o-- (!! Ml ML I Itta-a ~ Ml --I ..,.." . I '/!"- , u.... ~ ll•·CI' --- ., -----" -- I PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS IUllMISJ MAMI STATIMINT The lflllowlnl lllfWIS .,. '81111 WWMt• Ill P:A.MU.Y IAILIOATS COM"AHY, 1040 IOINI CNc• !<¥•nut. Suitt H. Wt1tmln1!tr, till!, t2 .. J ~IV snaw -l'•rtnlr, 1~1 • .,...... ~. H\ltllll'llttfil ... ,., C111t. """ lt~lt ~ -l"trtrMlr, llOSl loOewtltr Un., Huntlntlol'I IMdlo Ctlff, '2'4f TI111 l:lulil*I It 1ondl.ltlld ll'f' t tfl'4rtl ,.rtMnlllp Klll'f' SMW TNt "1l1rM11t 11111 nltd wlltl tN C9lnltt Cltrt of Or•ll9' COVl'ity on 0<10btt I&. I 71 ~ i-v.IWll!d OtMOt Co.11 DtllY l'llot, °'""*" H. Ind NOYMIOtl' a. f, 1,, "" _,, ' . PUBLIC NOTICE FrldlY, Nowmbcr 9, 1973 D"1LY PILOT 3$.;. PVBIJC N011CE Pll1IUC NOTICE TRACT llCP • \ -------------- • • • , .--· I < : ' f///11/J ;;/;, ., • ' I ' ' ' I - - ' • , c . I I !lfl DAU. V ~ILOT PUBUC NOTICE ·-Pvbllshtd Ol'•nlll CM•I 0.ll't P'llol, OCtob« u., tna Nowm&tt t. f , '" l,,,_ 32l5.1) PUBUC N011CE Pl(TITIOVS SllllM•s1 N.ud ST•T•M•NT TM followl"'ll H rlOM Ill• ..,... bvllMll .,: COAST-'t. MA.1NTENANC£ CO., 1S20l VI• 0. MU, t.1911na Nltu.I• Call!. ""' J1mes H. C.llMly, "101 Via Of" ""-la, lJQllM NltUft, Caltt. tilUJ llkftml T. Ck.car.Ill, 7"' Sl'lldY Sptl119 Dr., l t.ll"baftk. Cal. ti~ Thll bullNU II conclUCt.d bY a 9MW!'ll ,.r1nan11lo JarnH H, Cal,.,.Y Thll .iat-1 Wll tllad Wi"" ttM '"""'' ClwlC of Or•!lllil (D&Hlf'f an NO'(Mlbet° S. 1t11 ,.nw 'vblllhed Or•.,.. Cot•1 O.llw '\lot Ho....mM<" t, 16. n. :io. 1r13 un-11 PUBLIC NOTICE l"ICTITIOUS a usutsss -JrtAMI STATl.MIJrtT Tl>e tollowllllll ptrlGll ll doing bu1ln•..1 ... . DEVOi!: CO. PUaLIS HEAS, 40I \'I. ~t•nfront, Ntwport S111Ch, C1lll. t2'6l Wllll•m o. Vog<1I, 606 \V. Oa1nlront, "-'"'PO<I 8t1cll. C1lll. \ll6tl "ll!L• bu11nt111 Is condu"~d by •n lnOh1l.n.tl 'Nlnl•m o. voo&1 'This •'•""*'1 ••• flied "";"' llW Counf'f Owl< ol Orlf'OI C"""IY Ofl Novamber J, lt7l """ ,vblli.l'ltd Ortn;1e Co.1st D1ity 'Itel Novtmbtr t, 16. 21, :SO, lt13 3"1·11 PUBLIC NOTICE ,ICTITIOUI aUSINIESS NA.Ml STATEMl!NT TM talloWlng l*"lllnl ll"t doing ~··•: CHA MON -ANTIQUES a. RECOl..LECTIONS, In Alall Av.., Bl1bol llland, C1!ll. t'l6'2 Cl'llr1H Gordon l ucllln Jr. '•rtMr, m o10111 St., S.n 'tdrc. C1UI. '°"31 MOftlca Marv Bu.wtLI B " ( II • fl • P1rlftlf", 426 AOlh St., San Pedro. C1ll!. tOolJl Thi• 1111s1 .... 1 Is tondllcted Dy a limlled p;irtnal'INP. /Mnlt1 f.A. 8. Buc1!1n Thi• 1t1t111tMnt w11 111..:I wltll Ille Countw Clerk of Orl"lll Counly an Nov.mt.er ~. 1tT.I P2"M Putllltllad 0<'1119t CotSI O~llY ,llot Nowmbw t, 16, n. :JO. 1t1l 3JU-7l PUBLIC .NOTICE -- ,ICTITIOUI IUSIN.11 NAMI! STATIMINT TM lollow'l119 potrlOll Ii dol119 llu11MM 11$: THI!: al)OIOI!:, 3333 Brlslot st., Coal• Me11, '21126 Jucllth R. Gr1w, 2271 Hlghl1nd Vl1l1 Dr., Arc1dl1, C1IU. tlOI» This bus!-I• conduct~ bV I ll inct1v1du•I Jlldltt. R. GrlY Tl>is lllltlll*nl ...... !!led with "'' County CltrlC of Orang• Counf'f on Novlmbef J, lt7l ·-PUbll1hed OrlrlQI Cots! Dl!IY '1101 Nov1mller t, u. U. lO, lt73 3:Jll.1J PUBLIC N011CE SLP..Jll SU Pl!ltlO• COUAT O' CAt.ll'OAJrtlA COUNTY 0 1' OllAN8a .... .....,.,,, NOTtCI! Of' S•La 01' ••AL ,p.~ l'l!ltTY AT P•IVATa SA.La Gu1rdl1nlhlp E1t1l1 ol TERESA ANN GRAY, A Minor. NOTICE IS HEREBY" GIVEN that, 1ublecl to conllrm1tlon DY the •bO'l...it-tlllltd Superior Court, .P.j\ or 11t•r the 1tlh dlY of Nove[l'lber, 1t'11, tlla Ul\- der1lgned, •~ g1.1ahlltn• of 11>1 E1t111 ol T•••il Ann Gray, a 'mlnor, w\11 sell 11 pflv1!1 11le to lM hlg~I •nd 1>o111 nef btdd&r on l1'lt ,.,...., and condl!lon1 htrelnafltr mentioned Ian. right, llUe. aod lnltrt1! or ••Id minor ind all the right, 11111 aod lntarql tllal thl! 111111 of 11kl minor 1!1s *"quired b't' 0per1tlon ol ltw or olhlf"WIM, olhtr lhafl or ln addlllon fo fl'lal o1' $1ld m,lnor. 111 the re1I proe>ertv loc1ted ln tM c..oun1r ol Orange, Sl•I• o1 C1lllorni1. deterlbed I S tollOWI' An undivi ded one-hall lnl1rort 111 li!1sehOld Hi.It for • term 1ndl11i1 Augutl '· m<:I. In rtll Pf'Olll'l"IY loclltd 11 :io.52 Sevtn S.•s Lint. HU'llllnt11!on lleKh. Callloml1. morl partttularty Clfterlbild at lollow1; Tr1ct '6At, Loi 15, as W m10 rec:oroecl In aook 5M1; l'llift 634. In tlMI office 01 ti. County Reeordw ot Or1n;t County, Calltornl1. 'The proplrty Is lold "al It." 8 id1 or 11tt.r1 mutt bl In wrlllf'O and .,.,111 bt rac:t lv9d by• Jame• FredrlclC Gr1y. 20~52 Sf'ven Se11 Lint. Hvnllngten flt•ch, C•tllo"rnl•. el 1nv time 1Htr nrst puDUc1lion of this nollc1 Ind bafore \ dale of gale. Term1 •no conditions ol ••le: C•!h In tewlul monev of Ille United St11es or p•rt t1sn eno blttnce evidenced DY 1 r.011 "'cured b'f • Trull O&td oo 1111 p!"eperly •o r;old. Ten P.,-tenl (10<~) of the 1mount bld lo accomp1nv tht ofltr b'f certlfled or t-1Jhler'1 check tnd lh1 1;e11nc11 to DI paid on ron· llrmatloii ol 1he s•I• DY ll"!t Superior Court. The rlgM Is r1~erved to relKI 1ny 1nc1 111 bids. Oa!!'d: O<:tooer :ia. 197l. JA MES FR£0RICK GAAY" 11 Gu1rdt1n of 11\1 111111 of tM 1boyt.Nmed mlrtor KIMI! & A!Mflnon ('W) 1'20 N"111 al"OIOllway s111l1 •n1, C1Uftf"lll1 tt70J An-JI tor G1arcll111. Putlllshtd °'"'"'' ca.11 oanY ,1101, N~mbll" 2, J, t . 1'73 :s:wt-13 PUBLIC NOTICE MOTICS OP' TllUJr•E'S IA.LIE Ha. lll1·1'1 I On Otambl!r' 7, 19n. at 11 :OD A.M., CFS SERVICE CORPORATION, I C1Ulornl1 corociration. 11 duly 1pp0inll!'d Tru1tff undll" 1nd pur1utnl to Deed of 'Tru1t recordad August 11, 1'71. u lnlfr. No . '327, In bool!; t75'\, 01g1 tlJ, o1 Otticl_. lttcon:ls In ll!t otnc1 of tti. Coun1v Rtc:ordtr of Orange COi.iniy, St1ta ot C1Uf0rnia, WILL SELL AT PUILIC AUCTION 'TO HIGHEST BID· OER FOR CASH (p1yablt 1t 11111* of silt ln l•wf\JI monl'I' ot lilt Unlltd S!al••) 11 Iha South front tntr1nc1 10 lf'lt' Or&"O" County old Courthol.lse. ClfY ol Slnl• Ana. s11te of Calllorni1. •II right, '"'' Ind lnltr"lll CGn'll.IY,ed to and flO'I• tltld by lt under ~aid Deed of Trull In Ille prcoerlY 1ltv1tltd In 11ld Counf'f ~ tla lt dncrll>tll ••: Lot J1 of Tract No. n:n, at per rneo, rKotdtd In 5oolr ll'l. pagas IJ.26 of MlxtllantOIJI Maps, In ""' office or !ht County lletOl"dtr of ..+d COVl!ly. ' Tiit strtet a<klresa and otlltr c(H"l"lmon dfflgnal1on, II '""• of IM rHI property CliUtrlbld t bovt hi P!Kf'O'ltd to OI: l41SS Groveview Unt, s.,11a A.I'll, C1lilaml1 • The und•rlltned 'Trurtte dlsct1lms •"Y ll•toliflf f(lr .,,., lflCOf'TICIMll of tnt """' _.,, 1nd ot....,. common ••loM!lan, II ,,,.,., lhown l'Mn!fn. S.ld a.ta wfll bl made. blll wJthOUI co...en<llflt • WlrTantf. t.Kll'HI or lmpHRCI. reo-n11no t!l\a, 00t1111klrl. or ~­ (llll'lbrlfK-. 10 P<llY the r1mafnl119 prln· dplll ~ ol ,,.. ~I) lllC\H"ed by Nici Ottd of '""'· to-wit: 12S.111.61, "4tJt Inter.ti tMreon, a1 l>f'OY1oed tfl Nlill noMt11. tdvtnce.. If 1ny, undar 1fllit Jwrf!• 11'1 Mid OHd of ,Tru1t, fee" t:M'911 and t lll*\HI ol rlle Tn.111et .,id of tllf ttwl• crt1tlll llf Miid Ot«I of trv11. , n. belll«d~ llllCllr w• OWlf ., frwt ller"ltoforl: aKtc:Ufad lf'ld difllWll"ld to ,._ WMSertlfMd 1 Wl'"ltltn DlclalaHon ot Ottftllll 1fld ~•!'Id for Seit, and • writttn N.,kll ef Daf1111t •nd Elecllon fo s.11. TM .... •rll9Md <IVMd llld Hoftct of o.tlllft tnll £1tc:tlon lo '9n to tit r«:ordtd 1i. lllt' COU!lf'f whart rM ttll ,.,....,.,. ' I loctf«I, o.tei N<Mlftllltf' 1, 1tn. Cf:S SUVl,1 tOR,.O•ATIOH .. ~,,,,.,_ • .,w • ...,. ........ blc;utlWI 'Act Pr111dtm lOll#ll Mo • .a-1,111'4 .. I DVLAN ,,,_ - t>vllll.... °'""* CNtl Dt UY l"llof, No•l<'l lMf t , l6. ts. tt1J ~n I \ .. • Frld11, Novtmber 9, 1973 i:ii". DARYL PILOT w ANT ~OS 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s ·I F I E D 6 4 2 - 1 .. 5 6 7 8 1ntr•I G.ner1I .___-_ .. _ .... _..·]~[ Hol.IJet tor Slit I~ ** ** ** ~~ Herita. ge Collection ..!1 dolly & r.ojoort orroro immedlotoly, The DAIL·Y PILOT 011umo1 lleblllty for the flrot - incerr•ct 1 .... rt1on only. NEWPORT HEIGHTS ---------JUST ~ISTED -FANTASTIC.BARGAIN -G.n.r.1 General Large 3 Bedroom, family rooi:n, prime Heights location. Owner transferred -Must sell! His loss -Your gain. $52,500. * * * * * * CALL 540.115'1 *TAYLOR Co *IT'S BIG 0 IN TURTLE ROCK-Private yard, spacious cul·de-sac home. 4 Bedrooms, 21h baths, for· SPECTACULAR OCEAN VIEW-'-$ll9 500 ma! dining and famil¥ room. Massive lire · 1• · place, kitchen 1s a culinary's delight. Estate llrand new home on Sp~ass Hill wd;;,';~w si .. S car garage. Offered at $61,250. Vacant of ocean & lights. 4 Lg~ rms. sep. g and ready for your inspection. CALL 546-5880 rm & 212 baths. Pool-size yard. 3-Car gar. 15 POINT SUR OPEN DAILY 1·5:00 NEWPORT BEACH • 110ur 28th Year" IT'S GOT EVERYTHING -4 Bedroom, lam· ily room, formal dining room, 20' x 40' pool with pool sweep & jacuzzi. Large corner lot with boat door and oversized double garage. J ust listed at $84,500. Hurry, CALL 540.1151 . -WE51£Y N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors : ' ' 2111 Sin Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 A BIT OF SPAIN ASSUME 6°/o LOAN Truly a magnificent mansion at old time prices. Supi:rior locatlon. Enter into private courtyard. Double door en- try with Spanish tile floor. .step do"'n Jiving room . Forntal dining room. Large patio + pnntry I1npressi\"e fiesta roon1 \\'i.th massive fireplace. Separate nutn's den with heavy bookshelves and a crackling llreplnce. Kingsize bedrooms + drei;s- lng room. Easy care yard. Call no1v for an a1l- pointment. S.12-2535. OPEN TIL 0 • IT'S FUN TO BE NICE/ THE REl\L ESTl\TERS OCEAN VIEW Spacious vie\\' hon1e in cxcluidve J·larbot· View I-liUs . General ~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil MAKE OFFER MUST BE SOLD THIS WEEKEND-Already the best value in ?.lesa Verde, but owner still invites offers on this 1800 sq. ft. 4 Bed· room home. Beautiful decor, wood paneling, wallpaper, and good carpets. Elegant setting on spacious lol Room for boat or trailer. CALL 546-5880. 4 BR-2 BA $27,950? YES! L.irgr comer lot on quiet EASY LIVING cul·dc-sac . nc\\" cpts • new . ~•int · ~1c1v eeran1ic. b:ith NICE 3 BEDROOM-all bltns, dble. gar., 11\(' • ~1111n1".'ss st('('! kitchen clubhouse & pool Condominium excellent lo- . h•u·bage disposal· etc. cation. Vacant . move in quick. O\vner will Newport help with financing, Askiµg $24,800. CALL at 540-1151 , FairvieW 646-1111 _(anytime) EASTSIDE. HOME+ TRIPLEX COUNTRY sm1NG CHARMING TOWNHOUSE 2 STORY SECLUDED UNIT.-featuring 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, oversized patio & beauti· ful carpets .& pai11t..-Spacious _grounds· with beautiful pool & landscaping. Lots of trees, ocean breeze in quie t adult only community. Perfect location near Newport Back Bay. Priced only $36,500. CALL 546-5880. BACK BAY BEAUTY PLENTY OF ROOM-for growing family. 4 Bedroom, 2 bath , lge. kitchen, den & swim· ming pool. This upgraded home has all hard· \Vood floors and lots of trees. ldeal for large or expanding family. CALL 540.1151 . G1n1r111 HIGH ON THE HILL MESA VERDE REPUBLIC ASSUME 7°/o VA LOAN EASTSIDE UNIT A 3 Bedroom hon1e \\1th a 1 bMroon1 apartn1cnt on a cul- dr-sac street. Qut\lily built unit, hard\,·ood 'flool'l!, roon1y bec\J'OU111i;. Titc $180 apart· n1enL rental ,,·ill h~lJl pay. !he S:i70 totul 1>ayn1cnt. Beat ln- rtnt'ion! ! Subrnlt ~u orrcrs. Anyone c:nn qual ify. Seller will h"clp li.J1!UK"e. $68,000. . co:Ts WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- (0ptn Evenings) ROOM FOR LETTUCE, Generol BLUFFS~ CONDO $69,500 OR LEASE /OPTION Exciting 3 bedrooru, 21# bath home, vecy ru1 (ully de<.'Ot'- ate<J. Quick occupllncy avail- . able. Also. 1113y lease \\'Ith option to buy. PLEASE CALL 675-3000 m 11.n · ,\ 111 :.H'll JUST LISTED IRVINE TERRACE A l'l'll~Y ... ditfcrent WKI run house in n1ost ltcsirnble location. j l>edroon1s and dt>n or 4 bedroon1s, l~e ll'l'l.'-Shadrd patio off the spacious living 1'00111, ovel'· sized pool 1vi.lh sunny patio ant.I a vie''' ol our lovely l>ay to · boot? Pt·icet.I at SS'J.500. 673-8550. OPf.N r1t 9 • IT"S FUN TO BE NICE! llil ~: • THE REl\L ESTl\TERS G~e•n1eJr~aot-.al ..... _.lll:<j NEW LISTING IN THE &O'S CORONA DEL MAR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Located In private commun- ily, nea.1· tile beach. I..ovel.Y 4 RR, 2 BA home, new C&?· l)('t.-i &. drp!I . low nlalnten. auce. c.'Ol'°";dc1· rentina'. $4'!,500. • 400£.17° C.M • BLUFFS ONE OF A KIND ANGELITA Just listed, 2 bedroom . one IE'\"CI, on p11..1u1-esque green. belt. Open bcan1 ceiliri&•. n~wly ptUnt e<I & papered. rus1on1 carpclcd & draped. $67,500. C. F. Coles= Realtor COUNTRY SETTING IN TOWN TOMATOES, OKRA o1w ol 1hc ft>1v est1tte !U.zed AND YOU * 59'x290' LOT * pt'Upcrtit-s in Costa Mesa. So buy your family-this C-1 ZONE Jl.4 acres + 2200 &q ft gorgrous 4 bdr1n b\gyie on S32.:i00 E-Z TEfi:\lS cuslon1 homl' + !ldjtatate a co11lCr lol \\'ilh'opcn roun-N'creation hnu..;.c + separate 'ti:y S[Mlccs. Also "lncludr's 2 * •I lh'<IJwni hon.ll' {h\lgC gnrt1.t:l' & sho_p + 46 ttte11 llL,-urious batlL~. All this in nuistcr an l + {a1nily roon1 + n1uch n1ort'. Reller niay Costa i\tcsa \\"hel'C JivinI: + den, :.i baUi'i, nuu1y ex-help (iunn<.~. $125,000. is free and easy. FHA and ti·ns. Quiel sU-eet. $::,S,'iOO David ~rke Rltr \'A lcrn1s available also 5~il -5444950 dbivn -1>rogran1-:-\Von't Ins t • C·2 ZonC' . JI arbor Bh·d I ~-~------­ Ion!: f~r S27,-000. j 100 x l,50, aect•ss to ... adJOlll· RAP..~ . OPPORT. · One ot ;ng su·ccl, su:i.ooo. . Tustin s n1ost beaut. &. I _ tlesi.rahle astult condol'I. 3 MA IRCENT M C di R I Bit. 2 1 ~ RI\, dining, trplc, Roy c ar • ea tor a/c, pool, club. lovely l!HO N~wport Blvd., C.i\I. grounds, sec. gate. Owne.r 548-7729 leaving area. Priced for LET'S TALK quirk salt>. $32,SOO Firm. s.1IXXI dsi. TUSfIN VIUA. SPANISH HOME I TURKEY · l~ C Red Hill. Open Sat & Sun. 1()-<I or call for appt. 544-:;n).I\. BUY A BARGAIN! 3 'Be<lroom.<1, 2~': baths, for1nal dining ru~a. paneled fmn ily roon1 . Pool. Room lo add-On Qo.\'nCr transfcn·ecl. Call no1v! $95.500 HARBOR C:OMP'ANY REALTOR.'i Sl1\CE J!»~ 673-4400 situated on a large 130x150 lol \\'ilh to\\·ering shade 1.ree11, a con1forlable 3 BR 2 BA hon1e \\"ith den and rront porch ror your l'O(!ker COMFY cozy Plus separatNI &\\·ay fron1 lhe HOME COMES EQUIPPED \\'ith gold shag house _a triplex ,,·ith inron1e carpels, spacious living room with marble potential or s:i4otn10· faced fireplace 3 neat bedrms. Family rm . onlv $69,950 for all • . . CALL 644-nll is extended by enclosed patio with room for Just stt>ps from beach v.•ith iJ yoo·re looking for a i'\e\\·· a. fabulous ocean vie1v. S po1t Beach dupll·x only 6 bedroorm, den. formnl din-doon; 10 thl' braeh \\'ilh an Ing roon1 , HUGE fan1ily i.'Xl.'l'llenf sun1n1l'r \\illll'r roon1. l-le.1'l''s a home v"ith l"t.'ntal m'011\ in the $8-1 ,500 great individual charm, in rangl' \1•i1h a n1in. of only 11. great Joc11.t\on. If in-1~(. do"·n and super lernlli terestrd p I e a s l' call CALL U:' 673-8550. \\"e're l"l!ady 10 talk oP'fNTll9 •ITT FUN TO BE NICE! 644-7211 Li<1uidation fo1't.-e5 sale ot 3 RR, 2 BA, Ne,,·port Hghb honw, J::R!' Bl, firepbu:e,' tam rm, l5x30 ll&F Pool, 8\~.lk Jin avnil. All otters ,,·ill be coruildtted. Call Realtor for Info. 64~ .. /Jn NIGEL E!AILEY & ASSOCIATES PRIME OCEAN VIEW I OCEAN VIEW tl'ROPERTIES 1 Duple.x. 2 Bdrms. each. FOR SALE Leased land. 4 Car parking. pool table. Step saver kitchen has plenty of cabinets & elec. bltns. Great floor plan. & Mesa Verde location. CALL 546-5880. · ERITAGE (-lt~~l!1tl Im COME SEE ! ! . 'ALPHA BETA e N'ewly pMnt·ed 3 BR home. • numpus t'OOln, covered BY STATE 01'" Ci\LJF. j Xlnt rennl..I history. $7"9,9'50. Ask fol' i\1r. \\'elil Calt: 673·?.Ci63 673-66&1 eves.:I~==:;:======~==:;=======! (21:!) 620-:::1o::; 11· General General associated pal Kt e Bont rtoor. large lot • J~t ~l.500. V,\ 1'~1 1.\ or CONV ten11s 2a-W \\"L•snninster. Cl\1 646-39"U 01· Eve. 6t:>2986 Alpha Beta is the rhnln tenant in this established .shopping center. The four storei; ~t to Alpha Beta nre for sale fol' $99,500. Gross is over $12,000 and O\VC at 8%. Call 675-1'll5 COXOO, Carpenleria. $4j()() equity. \Viii take V\\I square. back as pa.11 paymt. Cap1i Realty 644-TalS General " BR OKERS-RE AL TOQS 101~ W 8olboc 1171 llitl General I I I HARBOR VIEW HOMES Super cl ea n Carmel model on corner lot. 3 bedroo1ns, family roo1n , formal dit1ing area, 2 baths. Large private patio. Land included at $69,900. COZY 2 BEDROOM HOME + UNIT Located on lovely tree-lined Corona del ~lar street. Red brick1 fireplace, all newly painted back unit in rear. Only $69,500. LUSK HARBOR VIEW HILLS Lush landscaping surrounds this charming 4 bedroom hoine, providing gracious indoor I outdoor living. Separate play yard featured. $93,900 fee TAX PROBLEM Here comes shelter ; ne'v four plex \Vith one 3 bedroom unit and three 2 bedroom units. Lots of parking, closed garages, good loca· tion close to shopping, 5 1ninutes to beach . $115,000. - BORDEAUX MODEL BIG CANYON J,Jelightful 3 bedroom, 3 bath end unit with .i6cean vie'v lavisWy decorated with out· 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. Newport Beach. One example, 3 bedroom for $68,500. 'EMERALD BAY Magnificent white \veter view. Situated on ocean side on large lot in the bay. J ust steps to the beach. 3 Bedroom. den, dining room, pool. $295,500. PRIVATE GATED COMA,IUN ITY Bay, beacbes and boatll\g facilities avail· able for your use. Lovely home-move-in condition. Sunny patio and custom gardens.· $72,500. ....-- 644-1766 ColcbrAll,Blnker • ...... 2161 Sen Joequin Hills Rd ., N.B. 4 BDRM. • $26 ,500 Can't beat this combination \\'ilh large bedrooms, 2 baths, buUt-ln kitchen, dou- ble car garage. w Iv.• carpets &: drapes. Bettel', check thi~ one out TODAY -646-Till, Open eves. Walker &Lee lllAl llTATl Treer-Trees Live ln a forest on this East· side 72' x 30-j' R-2 Jot. A grape covered arbor leading to Tiki I·lut. 2 Bedroom home. Live In & hold for future development. \VIII take 7 w1lts. Needs lots or TLC &: weeding 10 uncovel' 110me of the lovely unusual planting. Qo.\11\er "ill carry 1st TD with only S5.600 dQwo. Full price $32,500. Call 545-8''24, SouthCo ""'ealtor,1. Gen.rat ** BA YFRONT LOT Best 001 k>cation. 50' x JOO'. Owner transferred. Anxious for quick sale. Loan can be subo!Uinuted. Submit any oUer. $129,500. Call GU-8400. ""'"" v. E. u... .. n1 & Co. .............. 4 BDRM-LUCKY GI NO DOWN TERJ\1S or low down to all others on Ulis inunaculate 4 bdrm., 3 baths. Dining rm, built-ins, cllsh"·asher. PV s t o n e tireplact!. Covered patio, rushing 'vaterfall. Sprinklers front & rear $31,750. 540-1720 TARBELL, Rooltors -4 Bedrooms. 4% Baths pool room, pier &: 8lip $250,000 .. 6~ 7784 General (f reelin<J6 Lachenmyer · Re,11tor A-FRAME BY-THE·SEA Want a combinnlion of moun- tain i;eclusk>n plus seashore living? You n1u st sec this }3 bedroom, '.! bath hirlt!a1\1ny. l'ltin1a1c in privacy -rxclush·C" com- muni ty. Only $4 7 ,950. 64&-7711 -Open eves. Walker &Lee lll•L l t T•Tt OCEAN FRONT Balboa PeninsuJn. Beautiful S BR., 3~~ be.. home. Family rm .. dining rm., 1% Yn. young. Sho"·n by app't. $19:),000 · 1'1~ See! Jo&ephine \\lebb, Realtor Bolboo Rool Estate Co. 700 E . Balboa Blvd., Balboa 6'73-4140 Eve!!. 613!-3596 HORSE RANCHES living on ~!i aere estates in Yorba Linda. 1 & 2 1tory, 35 bedrooms. HandlOme exterior, spac.iowi f Io o r plans, 3-ear garages, fireplaces, full lns uladon & self-cleaning ovens. Fron1 $44,900. l\1odels on \'orba Llndfl Blvd., \Vest of Imperial. 714: 993-5330. PRESTIGE REPUBLIC OPEN SAT & SUN 3200 S. RENE DR, S.A. 4 + F.R. 149,500 CANT REIL 1133-2224 GeMr•I ' ' ** CHRISTMAS IS CQMING ••••••••• TAX TIME IS GOING • • • • • • • • • • • 1407 NO. BAYFRONT, BALBOA ISLAND HUGE HOME • PIER • 1 V. LOTS. CHA~ + + + 718 J~$MINE, CORONA DEL MAR NEW, DUPLEX • FIRST OWNER USE ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN SEE FOREVER BOTH PROPERTIES OPEN FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY 8·AM TO a· PM SALISBURY: REAL TY 673-6900 315 MARINE AVE., BALBOA ISLAND ---------- ALMOST NEWPORT litEIGHTS 3 bcclroon1s. large patio and boat storage. Sl7,9jl) first tin1e on market. F'ast possession. Call q u i c k 646-nn. 112 ACRE· RANCH W /POOL Exccutivt? Estate. nlOVing and tnu.st reasonable offer. bo1ne for large \\'/citrus orchard. Ou'11(>r aC"C'f'pl Lo\"ely lan1ily Walker &Lee .. :-.,=-"""''-''-'''-''.!."'-'''-''-...-/ ~J. ,... "1!!;!, -OCEAN VIEW flard 101 bclil'vc but only $30.900 run priec. Sir on yoor deck, • .,.,.atch lhe boat~ & cu. Joy the good life. MG-1384 • tlJNllNGlCN HARBOUR. llfAl.lY NEWPOR;r CREsr ~cwporl Bclich l,V.XUI')' Lofted Jiy mt ceiJ,__frplc, &-wtt b&r, pool, jacuzzi &. tennis courts. 4 BR 2~i ba, 172,!jro Tustin Relax & er\joy the peacclul nl&lnt tree condo, 2 BR. I\, ba. only 121.500. Russell & A.uociatt'.!s 223ll Brookhurst. HB tno-=-ns1 OCEAN VIEW • $25,950. Clrcular atrett of fine , homes. 3 Bc<1.roOn1s In. cludln&: guest fadllly. Party room. tntel'tai!U'l'I patio. BrtQ1htakln&: view. J\.&'1.. 643-0,'«).";. I SPANISH 4 BR. fant. din. nn .. a ba. pool. J..oncli<ai>ed, $6j,000. Call ...-tor lPPI. e 549--0622 eves. The DAILY · PILOT ' ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace Genera l Salesman oftlllnmll1 lolt Puct..11 ~~n#"!lfOllf!Me,O,. ~.,.,. Olr.c• Bob faacn11i h•• b M tt n•m•d S•l•1man of Ill a Mo111t\ al our Hunlln9tott S.1Ch-Spil11gd1le oftic., Oob~tormtrly hJ lh111 retl e1111e loin bu1f11t11, h•• earned 1 e ,er1111I l •l•a 1 ward1 In Ill• 2Y. ytar1 whh Walk tr ind lt1, H• his r~slOod In Ille HunlinQ· Ion 81111ch 1r111• for 10 y1ar1 1 whtl Ill• wlla •nd tour tons, Out1landlng a1le1m•t1 Ilk• Bob Pa&Chall m11r.a Wal-•r a le• art ou1at1ncllng com· pany. Call him. 1.. 60-t2 Iola A'l't. Hwflt!11tion Btl(ll. CA 1841, Walkar&Lea lllfll:ll • I I I '\ ' .. ' ' '. I ' r ' !. ' '. ! • • i I " ' . • I , '' ·. I .. ·. ' ' .. ' . " I',, I . ..... .. .. I ' ' . ' I ': • • frld~y, NOWt!Ilbtr 9, 1973 * DAILY PILOT 3 ener1 Genera Gener ii Gener i i J:oato Mua unt ngton Beach • .,,...,.......~ Pete /Ja;relt Jeedfti; pr~enk ' LARGE COUNTRY HOME · , NOW AVAILABLE THRU OUR OFFICE I ~ated on a bluff overlooking the Bact Bay, ; 111s centered among other 2 to 6 acre ~tales, .1 Drive down a co1111try lane !lo thi• Iuxlnious I . Hacienda. Enter the quiet serenltr of Uie arid , brick work, wide overhangs shading the pan- 1 orlimfc ~view ·of bay, mowitS:in, -and ·water I' [ fowl sanctuary. Hand h.ewn paneling, .beam- ed ceilings, carved doors'- beautiful \letail- ' Ing tbruout. This 5000 sq. ft. home ii built ; : around' a central coortyard with foµnt ain, : swimming pool and cabana for large scale entertaining. Stables and corrals complete this 2 acre country complex. Be the f9rtunate family to possess an elegant way of livin g. Make an appointment to see thi s today. ' i. ' 1· ' !. • 6fflco Open S1lurd1y1 & Sundoys • PETE BARRETT REAl TY 1605 W11tcliff Dr., N.B. 642-5200 J I • READ THIS LA CUESTA VILLAS from $30,'90 A ntw concopt In Home Ownorahlp by Ayres Construction Company You Own Tho Land ond !ht Homo Not • Condomlnlnum ~o Monthly Mainten1nce FM -4 Booutllol Extorlora IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY: J BR, 1 BA & HUGE FAMILY ROOM+ SEPARATI; 2 car gar. Buy for Thank19ivhig Move In By Chri1tm11 No P1yment1 Until January Model I plock W. of Beach Blvd. Off Adams in Huntington Beech AYRES SINCE 1905 \ 53'-1445 ~nJa Jt>fe PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT Lindo 1110 Wotorfront Custom 4-bdrm., 4V. bath home on lagoon. Fully equipped islllnd kitchen, waleriront lamlly·room, bllllaid'room •....... $200,000 Lind• Isle W1terfront Lovely 4 bdrm., 4'>'• ba. home with swim- ming> pool, pier & slip, panoramic view ol main channel. Lge. family. rm: w/space for billiards & family din ing. Waterfront lormal dinlng & living rm. $290,000. For Compl11e lnformetlon On All Hom11 & Lob, PloHo Coll: BILL GRUNDY;:REALTOR 341 Boyaido Dr., Sulto 1, N.B. 675-6161 Ge('leral General * BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * OCEANFRONT Duplex .... $155,000! Duplex .... $175,000! Triplex .... $225,000 ! 675-7060 NEWPORT HEIGHTS Reduced! Spanish 3 BR., 2 ba. split-level. Extra lge. lot. Owner extremely anximis! OPEN SAT (SUN. 1· KICK THE 217 MARGUERITE HABIT O T J .. t l~led: two 2-bdrm • F REN RUSTIC STOl\lC B 0 0 K du,plex: clOMJ to ocean., Have a hDfne,..not a tnndlord! JWolCll ST\~ JIOME ON Large lot. $98,500 Splendid \rnlue ln this 3 an RM.1BUNG LOT. UUCt OPEN SUN. 1... .. In convenient locaUon to HlDD£N UNDERGROUND hoot Id. ho . Jt 'WINE CEl..LAR I ! I Cout1o 3449 QUIET COVE ' SC 1 ltJ 'oppmg. ~ try' ~·"n•t kltcbe•l wl!h "'w. ... _. park·llk1t ,grounds. ?.ltul)' •v-• · Super large lot. 1 DUCml., fl'uit trees. Covered park>. tormal·dinhig. CracklJ.na .,..., 2 fa.mtly mll., view. Lota CUstom cabinets & pane.Ill~ ed~ brJck tplc. Hu,ae patio ot parking. Just rtduced, of birch. Fireplace nestkld aurr;>Unded by manipured now $l44,500. 1nlo clrcu'Iar brick ""811 grouJlds & Ka.rde:nii. Can't boa51 \ng, ~us tom .eun. be dupllcaled! Al9Ume low cabinet. · New hot wate11 lnt. VA IMU or termJI to ............ _.. heater. ASSU1'1ABLE VA llUit.~ NOT FAR }~ROM . LOAN at 6 %. Qlll 546-2.113. OCEAN! Bkr. 962-5611 •. l)01f '\' • tJu.)CKJ.l)( OPEN TIL i • °tt'S FUN TO Bf NICEI • ~~~ , [l 1. 'IE$'11il 2· :~-!~~~:~. BUY NOW new, il<shly Pa>nted wnh ta.stefully paneled And roll·· EXPAND LATER ' NOT;. EMPTY, rored living room, plush Consider this 2 BR home JUS1'•VACANT waUpa"""'1 d;ning area. In an ideal c oJ.o n a shag carpel, & custom •---~. l J l • Ua·a pes, overslied pantry Highlands walk to ofvate ...... ..,..use una· O\•e Y )QffiC s . beach JoCation with yard just been fi nished. It's all area, near schools. walking space' and Door plan that new & sparltling: New gl'l'Cn dlstani..-e to H u. n I I n K t o n make It a natural for an shag carpeling in all roon111 Center, Swimming pool and addition .• , . • 3 huge , bl'<lroorns w.ilh many park areas. Asking Or n1atchinr:,baths. \\'hile bnek only $24,495 call today Enjoy this &unny, well kept UrcplaCf.i: Large back yu1'Cf. _8~r_i·3095~-· ----- little doll house as Is. ; Anyone cah nssun1e this VA ·-----!"'"'--'. Only $56 500 loan V.'iU1 total payn1l'nt of . . CALL '44-7211 1230 per/mo. Seller wlll I TRl 0 L£VEL /Jn NIGEL UAIL[Y I>. ASSOCIATES help rin,anre. Priced. at i\pproximately 3500 ~· ft . $28,500. call 1vith a 35' fenced pool and Call & submit 642-7491 . ..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;iiiiiiiiii SCJX'lrate_stea~n1 . 4 Bed· 1001ns, 3 Batfis & 3-car gar- uge. 1\ regal mansion (ol' thl' executive. General liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili~~~~~~~~~~~~~;:1 UNUSUAL FIND Gener1I General Luxurious du p 1 ex. Owner's unit 5 BR. + 3 BR rental. Secluded Newport Island. Call IMMED. POSSESS. 3 BR., 2 ba. Comp. redec. New carpets. Frplc. Shady yard. $36, 750 -'-10% down 556·8800 "BEACH 'n COUNTRY" Walker & Le., lllll\. ll lATI Perfect Combo! The warm Cal! 54~. counlry decbr of thls rustic ='-"'"-'-=----~ 3 bedroom. 2 bath split-level A HONEY FOR THE accentuates a spectarnlar ll 1llage Real Estate '62·4471 < r.::: r MM10J 1' " : . • .. ' . '. ' . You Can Buy A Beautiful Deane Home '" Prestigious Big Canyon 3 Bedroom 3 Bath From $79,95.0 to $89 ,500 .C.11 644-6056 I 0 AM -5 PM ·------- General . . General A. UNlfJl)l: tl()Ml: for further informa· lion. 673-7420. * BALBOA BAY PROPERnES * 4 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU ' view of Newport Harbor! MONEY FANTASTIC \Veathered open bea1ns; lf value is important -a fa.1m style dining room, lol of townhouse for little l Bedrooms, add on ram rn1, cm.y family roo1n , with its -compare! \\le challenge pool & boat or cMll)CI' stor- own fireplace and paUo _ any other good buy in town. age. ·A(iprox 1/3' acre tot in Th. 2 Bn I BA l •· ·g Jl ,B. "'-llei: n1ust sell this scciuded master bedroom is (\j, , ge reu.·1 , i7C: suite , , • a "NO-NON· crpts drps shelves + v.1eek: Offered · at $37,500 SENSE" value at $83,500. bench all 10r S 2 1, 5 0 D. 'Subnitt )'OUT tcnns. Call G I loYI down OK! Don't miss Assumable FHA Joan. 1 Rid\, Richmond. 842-93n or General enera this! -. CJS RS AL ESTATE' 962·~ aft 6 IPM. R. E. by ~MEsA VERDE EXPLOSION OF GRUBB & ELLIS CO •. 83>-05SI or 546-llGS Mc Vay,-, __ _ . cul . h rd I VALUE' 2 STORY• 67$-7080 OPEN HOUSE REPOSSE.~SIONS IN WESTCLIF~ -Condominium secluded 1~:0.iov!'i~ ~ee oV:Fla:i~ • • '2183\RALEIGl-I, Cf\;I :·or Information arid loCation yet convenient to shopping. Ai r condition· ingo Drive. 5 bedroom•. 3 $33,000 LARGE LOTS SUNDAi" NOV. 11TH, 14·PJ\1 ·•I· th"" F'!IA " VA homes. ed.d 2 1beab·rooms, A2Jf.! ~athsN, beautifu.Bl pooch! baths, family room and. din· True! just $33,IXXl total price 45 x 118 IS rnE SIZE of t!Jis BRING ~YOIDUSRllPIARENTS L'on\f!.Kct A· -,SA. BIA. N an cu house. mazing . ewport ea ·ing room all newly pa,mted for this immense z._ stm-y valuabl.e _dose to everythmg value at $39,750. A listing of Marge Ellmore. and ~l~pered, plus a 400 home. Setting on a beautiful lot. Sohd .2 bdrm. cottage + So they too can enjoy thi.s Real Estate 962-4644 sq. ft. finished garage-bonus tree lined .street. Offers a guest unit, V3.l.'Wlt OO\Y. 3 BR, 2 BA hon1e w!beaut. -------- UNIQUE HOMES Re1ltor1, 645-6500 room. B ea utiful ly large separate family room * * * * * * * grnd~. Special features.incl. SECLUDED ... POOL • 164. 9 Wt_lt~liff .o,., ~ewpo. r_t Beech landscaped._Offered for just and se p a r ate guest 60 x 1~ IT. LOT sun:ounds 2 pa~ &, bltn B-B-Q. Close l -"""""""'""""""""""1""""~""'""""'""!!!!!1 457,!}j(). Call COLWEU. .quarters~ Huge, yard for that this like neW Corona. High. to sci~ fi lbeaL'hes. $30,250 3 SR & 2 BA G9ne,.al General ~ 'relaxed country like living. lands home. 3 Spac~ TRADE Qltiet mea ~ice home 1"-'-""-'--------------1 ... 2 · o·N 1 eai1 us rlght now1'842-:1S3S. bdrm• .. 2. baths. 1axgc ,."" . . . sn,9so · · &: yard area. Popular 3 BR;, z-BA home 'Cai for details til 9 Pl\1' T\\"O, 2 bedroom homes iOPfNJJL P • ~ FUN 70 BE NICEI~ YO~R CH!JICER$69i,500 with all bltns, coly flagstone RED CARPET. REALTORS separated by: a sparltling -· 1 • • 1 Un1ver11ty e• ty fplc, fam rm and tai:ge 536.8836 .• pool. Excellent condition, 1 3001 E. Cst. Hwy. 673-GalO .Yard. . WW trade for duplex, ~lODEL HOf\;1E RESALE Eastside C.M. \Valk to shop-, ' ' SOUTHSIDE tnp\ex or fourplex, local 3 BR. 2 BA 1 ping. Ottered for $59,500. ' area. Call 5-la-8·l:l4, Sou{l1Co . ' anl. mt., co~. Call COLI'""'' I 1'Al! n""'"'. SWEmE Realtors patio, shag ll~O\ll_. frplc. ""1.o1.. O'IV"\hNo1 • bl tns. D/\V, 1,2 m 1. f.ron1 ANO ASSOCIU£S ~ "YeltoW Paces" ol The ra.1e11 dra\v tn the \V<!sl. ,:; j;;d; ... ;llled.;;;;;· ;· ;·&12;· ;-:!618;;·;;;;;;·;·;·;a;;Da;;lly;;;P;;~:·~·':.";;:;~i;;~:;;~;;I \;. REALTORS REDUCED $4000 .. Balbo• Penlnsut1 Charm-packed 2 BR hide·f ;;;;•u;";;';•i;~;·V;;•;l;;;l•;Y;;;;;;;;;;I Wi~1~1.eJ.1s_6f~9. :noo avray IJ\ best Old Cd~I Jo. Potential P lus. This is a LGE. 4 Br, fam rm., lge cation. "1alk to surf. Huge A'ITRAC Sol-Vista ftome for must to see, for there is kitch. 2-Sty. $89,500. R-2 lot • add a unit later. SPACIOUS LIVING sale by owner, 4 BR. Beaul, no voay to describe this pro-Marshall Realty 6'54tiOO llurry! ;62,900. Call 645-3400. $-12.500 -fin avail; &42-313.J COZY CUL-DE-SAC COTTAGE " .. '" WALK-TO NEW GOLF COURSE I',, I . Eastside Costa Mesa address. A safe yard for the kiddies to play in and large bedrms to sleep. 2 Cozy fireplaces & private covered patio. NEW LISTING. It won't la.st at $48,500. ~~ B~r 1~':>pot{·a!'-; Corona del Mar W.ill!!llili:!ll!IJ~~"!h'.!..9 Enter Jns ~ sq. ft. palatial ll-4 pm-. or ·673-0019 Area, Presently there are , V. ·E. Howard· a ·eo. palace of spaciousness a nd for duplexes 3 structures on the property. EXTRA NICE ui. llnd prestige living ' at· it& ' .a.ilc):triRl~:s!.!, OUered fur $50.<XXl. Call Duplex -spaci:ius 3 BR.. wr...~·q finest~ liv nn, Lam rm ~all ·Scott Really 536-la33 ""' ~EW $500,000 RECREATION CENTER , I . CALL 644·7270 COLWELL ~ 2 __.ba. with wood burning CORONA DEL MAR-\\'/bitn bil·, 2 frplcs, sliding CLOSE fo,tbt Beacti1 1a,.BR. ...._.,. · dinincr m FA glass doot·s to covered patio, OUered ·By Otmer, Ina..~. .. Enjoy the new life style and live.carefree in this 2 bedroom 2 bath (large, master suite) air conditioning, luxurious carpeting, drapes, electric kitchen with built-in barbeque. Din- ing area plus a breakfast nook. Covered patio with panotamicview, 24 hour Security Guard. All maintenance free in the ne'v adult com- munity of Costa del Sol in beautiful Mission Viejo. WE CAN HELP YOU BUY, . SELL, OR TRAD£· A HOMI ANYPLACE IN THE NATION b'"'!:T"' . .._& ... .:!'.···!' ~ Pl. ' 1 Block to bch, 2 stol')' Beaut kit ""'ith elec bltns, 963-6739 · · 1 • ---I · ~; carp. Wl!lpe!. us .. ____ . R I _ ttand ~·.deluxe 2 bdrm. Cna.n.1n;i-. ocean VJeW • , ro~inaJ. dining rm w/anlique Irvine - unit; really sharp. Xlnt ·$70,0CXI. Call 6'&2936 owner. nlllTOn, separate bonus 1';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;:;;;/ location &. owner anxious .Also C.d.J11. R·2, 2 Br, 2 a,a, 1oom + J tge hedrms and .a I' , . . . to sell! move in cOnditloo. Nev; kfi. very ass1mable 5'~% VA · GREEN TRUMBER MORGAN REAL TY chen. 6i5-2936, LOAN . ownJ this . one. He's 2828 E. Coast H.ighw•y, Coron1 del Mar 673-4642 67~9 Cost• Me111 HERBERT HA\VKINS landscaped it with.any eye General Gener11I REALTORS • 963-5681 for bMuty aM a desire MID PENINSULA R.oon1y cottage \Vilh con1mer. cial wr1ing just 60' fron1 beach. Prcscnlly a hon1(', ;;..;...______ ·OCEAN VIEW SHOULD A HUSBAND ,!or rnlhiruat care. 3 bl!nns .• EVER STOLEN BEST BUY IN • ,41 HAZEL .CDM TELL HIS WIFE •1:'.fR[E LIST . 2 · baths, upgi·ad.,., patio A DUPLEX " . THE SCHOOL BE).~S -.,. • and a great Io ca ti on . Try this: hvo 2 bedroom NEWPORT. By owner, charm~l--BR, 2 are-just a block a way fron1 $43,950. units. double garage in-BEA.CH "-;BA.i Qulet.stTeet.2)i-fin .from this· super sharp 4 bdr111 Gov't repossessed homics,' CALL 552~7500 $42,900 Full Price Lo Poz Rool Estoto , can be shop, office or ? 1 ? r 830-0700 'Gorn:e + pwidng, fenced. L'Onic of $3i50 per year. :· Lit~e Corona .~.-~R· home '\\i th lots ot room for sonie ~~pools, some no · VISION AskinJ: $35,950. Try your Back Bay, convenient to ·RY. S:AVE RE ~IOn! the kids. Huge pool and down uvmt, various areas own price 0\\-TJCr says freev.•ays & airport -large Will list ~t ~·· Open game room also. Nice & pffe~ No obligation .. SEr.L! Call Red Carpet, living room, formal dining Sunday l·::i, 6Q..3.546. caJ1)C1s & drapes thruout. Equal" Housfug Opportunities SS7,500. Realtors, 645-1k8)., are~, large kitchen 'lvith * OPEN HOUSES * Dble garage d e ta c h e d . HERBERT HA\VKINS --~ familv room new carpe:ts S t & Su I r: Great kitchen area MOM! REAUl'ORS e 0~" 1600 Any day ls tlie ac.~4 DAY to -~ . • · • • n •. · v 0-»" REA1..,T¥ R. EALTORS nm an ad! Don't delay • il palnL 4 bedrooms plus -.. 400 IRIS Priced to sell in Co&la Mesa I•-"":"··----- . ' rumpus roo 1 m. Ej'~:d Duplex ............ ,,Sl05,<m ~:~-.._ all terms. Call THIS-~taln Valley holhe l-:fniv'. ~P~rk Ce!'1~er. ,Iryine :.. , BKR 61:>-6712 O!' 67}1632 ,J 1'o.n.~""r"o!"I """"""""""'!Ge!!!!!!no"r"a'='1 """'!". !"\ ...,...,,. • .,.-~h~ ~=s~~rp~o~n b~~~fi:i e red bill 1t I: I . ; I ' -. MACNAB .IRVINE BREATHTAKING BIG CANYON Qlstom built, one r ear old 3BR, large den, 4 baths. Paddle terirusl Mountain stlfeam ! Fair- way View ! $255,000. OPEN &AT .. & SUN. 1-5 p.m. •23 HERMITAGE LANE . (ti!) PANORAMIC UPPER BAY VIEW Highly upgraded 'Early Bluffs" home. Extra lg. LR w/lg. custom firepl ace-walk-in bar. 2 BR's, panelled den w/fireplace, 3 ·baths. $89,500. Jack Custer, 642-8235. (112) NEW OFFERING Sharp 4BR, 2 bath -extra mirrors, lovely landscaping, 1 yr. old Harbor• View Home . f/5,500. Joyce 'Edlund 642-8235. (113) ---~ •. ·LUXURIOUS-EXCLUSIVE Lido's Best Buy! Large lot -3 BR 's each w/batll. $89,000. OPEN SUN. 1:5 p.m. 216 VIA LORCA. (114) MIGHLY PRIZED Portofino M<idel in Harbor View ea. 8BRs, ' FR, 31> b3thl + finished bonus room. $82,000 fee. Bill Burt 64H200. (115) "OCEANFRONT BALBOA" Parflally furnished.-immed. oecypancy. BR's 4 baths-all rlew opt., drps. & decora- Uon. 0$169,750. Gloden Fay 642~235. (116) BRAND NEW W/A VIE\,'/ . 3 BR 2 bath• Carmel Ml>del in New Harbor View' llomes: Choice ol colors, carpeting & decor. VIEW of Newport Center & Hills. '69,950. Jeanne Newman 642~. (117). "ORIGINAL .t!LUFFS-TRINA MODEL" 3BR's 21> baths -on greenbelt. Prof. dee-1 ·orated. '69,500. Will Jease or Iease/opUon: Bob Owens 642-8235. (t18 ) 'I' [lrvlne 1-·-~·~c..,.., I Ill Dl¥et Drift 141·1211 IM4MocAIUlurM4-UOO ............... ,cl1ftomla IHN ..., ""' .....,. ..... , .... ,.. ........ -. Y" 90 ............ AH t11it lee...._ lbfN W.W .. descrlMcl I• ,,..,_ 4ef'tlll ltf ....... , .... whtr• h1 hfdoy'1 Dally Pflot WANT ADS. p..,._ 1howl111 e,.. llffles fw IGI• .« te ,.. .,. •,..cl te lht 11te• l•for...rlo• I• .. ,. col•• Md! friHy, ..,., 11rd.., & S1111dof. HOUSES FOR SALE · • 2 BR. FAMILY RM-OR DEN 426 Vista Suerte (North Bluffs) NB . 644-1766 $55,9!7 (Sun 1-5) 659 Bolsana (l'ortaflno) Laguna Bch. 644-1766 (Sat 1·5) , 3 BEDROOMS 2183 .Raleigh, Costa Mesa • $30,250 (Sun 1-4) 17632 Redwood Tree Lane, Irvine 644·1766 $60,900 (Sat & Sun 12·5) 2030 Holiday (Baycrest) NB 6441766 $89,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 4 BEDRooMs . •835 Amigos Way (Easlbluff) NB 644-2991 $52,500 (Daily 1·5)- ••755 Via Lido Soud, Newport Beoch 6441766 $295,000 . (Sun 1·5) 4 BR. & FAMILY RM. OR DEN 3619 Surlview (HVuHllls) ~dl\l 64417&6 $120,000 " ' {Sat & Sun 1·5) •19 Point Loma (Spyglass Hill ) NB . 644-1766 · $189,SQO (Sun 1-5) 2019 E. Ocean Blvd. (Bal. Penln) Nil 675-4600 $89,500 (Sat & Sun 1-4) 425 Via Lido Nord, Newport Beacl1 675-7414 $137,500 (Sat & Su~ 1-5) DUPLEXES 'FqR .SALE 2 BR. EACH \JNIT • 135 45th. Sl, Newport Ji!eat;ll 493-1181 . .(Sat & Sun 1·5) • 3 BR. 706 Narci ssus, Coronadel Mar ~- 5849346 ·1 (Sat&Suul.S) * 'Peol J * * Woterfrott * * * W•terfrOllt & PMI 1. • I yard, room o_r poo • 313 HELIOTROPE is built for entertaining, The -~ J&C XS:-· to sell 11.! $57,500. to~ Duple• . .. •. . . .. . $1Z1,900 formal dining rm. is blg' Comfy Cozy Condo I I motivated & .wants . l!CU. • HAL PINCHIN enough I.or the largest dirh O..\nl:r transIUrcd, m u st FOf a rare opportunity call REALTOR 6/:>-4392 Walker "lBe ing ~.The huge living see!! 2 Br, 2 ·8.i\,,plus den, 646-nn. u rm haf a cuslom bit !rplc secluded patio, best' loca· OPfNTIL9 · "'SFUNT'JBEN/CE! BUY FROM BUILDER •1•L '''"'' & the family rm. has a tion~! Just listed, & Hot! ~ .•'' I ·~~~·v'll;:~I Bh~: ~ ~~'!'t ;pt~700 Open eves. ~a~~ ~el s~Y ~~is o~tC: $32,500. CALL~ . Nar~uc. open-sat-Sun. 1\tESA VERDE FI N E-S T· IK11i1e', fdr only $43,950. Call TU 1-5. Lois Vogel Realtor. AREA. Lovely 4 BR, bon:ie today, ,962-1687, Y:cekdays ·V. E. ff<murd &Co. 548-9346 with prof. landscp, lo maint aft 1:30. HNI .,__ IWa.p * BEST BUYS * REDUCED $10,000 yrd. Truly a lovely lamily 511. OL Leg Bch Lot $8500 THIS \VEEKEND ONL:Y° ~ ~~ ~ ~=: ' 74 70 ONL y 341900 Canyon Lake Lot , DUPLEX comer, ch~l.l'Jrllng, ious. Call Hal Meade Agent, 4 Bedrood. plus bonus room, for a 4' BR. fam rm home, $11,500 by owner. 500 PoinsetUa, ~l'ra> or 557-8057 located on.a quiet cul-de-sac Open 1-5 dally. 8~S% Int. ' 2-story. Only $35,900. near green belt jea~ing to 2 BR Duplex $36,500 i LOVELY new S p yg l ass WESTCLIFF WM. McCABE park. DecOrator drapes & Beach Home $59,500 -hon1e, for sale or lease op-BY OWNER , !REAL TY cpls, wallpaper. Paneled 7 Inc Units $59,500 lion by owner, 2 BR, den, $36,500. Lge 2 BR, 2 BA, 874~..it_ARNER AVE. . gar. with ·work bench. Booch Duplox $76,500 many xtras. Prof. lndscped, cu.t blL 480 Shady Dr. FOurn AIN VAILE'l . 'BOB. OLSON REAL TY Call now for details. Tennis & club &:. pool. 64:>-5028, * 842-4405 * ~ 546-~J18 wk.ad s 642--l m 644-2696 eves. . , SUPER Sharp Ha I e ~ r'e s t Owner Transfesrred 'BY Ov.T1er. Ranch, 3 BR. 1797 Orange Ave., C.M. LOVE~Y home & income! J-!ome. 4 BR, 1~ BA. 4 BR, ~.BA with CO'ly fire-' 2 BA, own greeR belt & on 49 R-2 lot. So. of H'~'Y· $34,250. 10o/n down. Open place. ·C:rcen Valley Condo, cul-de.~c. ·cathedral~beam- M • $89.500. By Owner. Prine House. By Owner. Call for VA or 1'rIA tern!§; or as-ed ceUing. F,rplc, brick 21 only 673-4169 appt. 541H1542 sunle a 7l''o GI Joan. .patio & ..,..,alks. Underground $59,900 3 BR, 1% ba. Brick (rpl, OCOTJ'":h.{EALTY 536-7533 Spt1nk1~. + +.~PIT!, '~ , nev.• 2 BR, 2 BA condo. lg. L.R.: newly dee. $21,000 H tin.rL..-Buch assume 8~% G~. at S39.~. ~ I I 2 blks. Oii11a Cove. 673-7769 Fortin Co., Rltra. 64z.500J un ~T' ~ • 5211 Chablis Cir.,· 551-5189, $©\\~lA-l££2rS" That Intriguing Word ·Game with a Chuckle -U... j,y a.AT I. POUAN l ~.t i·li° El I i I B M I p L I ! ClASSIFIED AD: Wanted- ! I' ·I I Se<ond-hand typewriler by ~ ; young lady student with wido '"l•_._V_A_G_L_E_,R,..;......,1 · 0 ~·~ ~. ch··"• ~~-' • 1...IL' ...Jl1-' ...11-.l.I '_._I _. by fl1».:; :" tt.. ,:;.,,. ; ~• · · · · · · l'"" d..olop -... Noc3 bolow. r r 1· r r· I' 1· 1 t) UNSCRAMBLE Leneas I FOR ANSWER . I I I I I I I I ' SCRAM·Lm 1'NSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION, 800 -\ 832.(,614. VACANT '. UNIVERSITX .PARK Rambling 4 Bdrm. JU!t blks diamUng new how;e \\ith to beact_I. Assu~e 71;'11 VJ\ 3 BR. 2 BA, den, family loan ...,,th fl~ble , down. room. ·ideally located nr. $306 mo. pays 1t all. Prof. recreation center, schools, decora~ with brand nc\V .... .4' •= 500 6"" 3177 ankle-cut pile carpets ~·· ~. · ·~ · lhruollfl,~runtet~ just left! WALNUT SQ. CONDO Huge fsolated master .suite. air coocl., 2 Br & den, below Ext:E\lse CJ( glass, mas. market, a steal! 644-4887. sive fireplace,' goor· TURTLE Rocle 3 BR. fam met k . Sllm1.IT YOUR m1 atrium, view, pools & OOWN PAYMENT!!! Bkr· tennis. Pri pcy. 833-1486. owner f 5511. · ~ Laguna Beach ~ A-FHA VERV·5PECIAL Repossessions. Latest ftl"iL'el!. WM. McCABE ·>REALTY . 8740 \VAR.NEil ;\VE, FOlJNT1\IN VALLEY * 142-4405 * .4 + 2 4 Bedrodnu + 2 Bedrooms, 1 \~ ~th back unit. 94' x 155' ldt. Zone R·2. Roon1 lot Quality bit. 2 BR.. 2 ba. home. Just yards lO beach. Qu\ct cul cte 11ac, minimum upl.~p. Ask., S59,500. duple>\, . ==:c-,--,-,-=-...::..;;::_;1 WM. McC ABE OWNER. leov!rc area. mtl$t 'REALTY ""11 or i.... new 11ou ... 8740 W'Ah.'l£R 1\VE. Prof. decor A tndscp(I. t'O~TAlN VAlil~Y "pq:rv.00<1. Sac. Ci UA rd• * ••• ""S JlOOI!.. tennls. _ -·-* OPEN SAT & SUN FOR ~ By O\\'OCr. Nice ~1 Tasml\n Bay <Sea Tcr· 2 BR HOuse, w/40 ft. grt'(>n· \ race Gardens, Ju!ll ~· or houlc. $2'l,900. Pll: 962.f».~1. ~tooarcb B9~) 499-lSU I ,, ., ..... _._ .... ~ .. . . • • • • • . , • • - t\ C:Ja DAILY PILOT Friday, NO'ltm<r 9, 1973~D~~==:r~~!!!!!!~~!!!]~~!:]§~~=~j'E~i!!:!!~!ili!!:2~~~!!::~§~=~fi1~~~~~~== ou-"'UnfUrn. 305. 1 ·'-"'""=,:._;,;.=c,-,;;;_;_---,-::-:=::-nn:-.=h:--'-.:.:.._""-"'i:::= h t 1 Houtel Furnished 300 Houtet • ';!o~u~MI:!~:!!!.:::.::::.......;::::: 1:.:;.:;::.::~"'-"=c....--'-l~j,Sl:;@;U;n;• ;;B;•;•;<~;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;L;•;@;un;•;;,;"";;'•;;;;;;;;;:;;. Nowport e.ac roper Y 1-, I ti -$--~--ril G1-r1I Cotto M<•a , ~ldo lalo * HANDYMAN SPECIAL * Save dollars on Utis ocean view 4 bdrm., 2 bath home with family rm. & dining area. Needs a little elbow grease to mak~ a. real a SllO\Vplace. Has fenced yard & nice patio area. If you are a handyman, you could save many dollars on this family home at $49,500 RIVIERA REAL TY 494·5678 499·2800 BEACH HOUSE .. ,,., ... ,, DUPLEX .,,_ -·-·-, l·Brock ~o lleae:h: l IXlriTI.1., liiiiiiiGi0'1ioniiil G¢en Apartri1t11t1 (1) 2BR tU pd ~ba.cb tull 2 ea, $ll0 2 BR C..M $140 $800 t.eue, ~'t'Uiy, c:bolt-e ) ba. 2 Pallo•. Main· . 1 &th (I) l Bl! . 1 lll5 u . Balbo 2 ~ T lhou,.' 1155. It B. LEASl-OR OPTION location M Lido hie, 3 JlR, rd ft I 0 ·th privule ""llot e1r '°' klk.'b, 1 blk bca • a. e N. B'. * N···· n~" ' BR Green· dcri din urea. btrns, 2 SA, tenantoe--h~e ya . ·Pc., Acreogo for 11te 150 ""' · ..., · ..., · "·~· r ..... &: tee Ba.ch fUll 2 Bft walk to v"ater ~ .... ' ' · bettnled ceil's., ~ag; dbl. ied ¥arares. bulltL~:uS~let •ktt & g~~ t .;....... • $175 1togles,~ fam.llle!I.' J\al. brook (or 3 BR + ~ 2 fplc~~#lua:• ~~~~.ipatiO. r' ear. ""/"ork.shop. 10 t,.t MORRO BAY sttceL ExceUent co ..... uun. $Zl5 1 BR ~--tt. Fee 9TIFM30 nn top wuu., 1l¥"'~ 1>ov.·n wiU buy. S4S,~ l vi of bn.v fro · • pool • let> reedMun · · · * Huie t&mily room 1;;6'4-5050;:::::";=...,.,,--,---- 0PEN SAT /SUN 1·5 \!,::J~io~. 29% oo.~ 1il"J:v1EWR'li:.TALS S.lboa Island * l'enced Y'f' M inion Vloio 4831 Bruce Cnitc•nt at 71,11% lnterest. $30,00'.I. 613-4030 or 494-3248 $$502 ,.~~UbALL\ilhoY:.~,~iewb1,: .: ~~=~= BEAUTlfUL quie t Lido S•nds • * * * • * * ...,.J ......... w.. ,.. i.. F Lht 75 x 125. View ot bi,y. & INVESTMENTS Balboa ls1antl family ~ 4 , 2 SA, den. * Cozy tirePlact cul-de-aac 3 Br, 2 w. .R. 9 U~ITS 29" ~ .. t T"~ ·---~ (714) l'llM500 11-•c led lhrU •Out • stepo .. So. ca PW•. can Cary daya, 87il-0500 ,, io vuwn a •i. -,o llu'-"=-~ 9C6 E. EUCLID CHARMJ.NC 3 BR, 2 Ba. tn'clude':1' wuhc.r dcyer . & CoJl for deta.lb l3kr. or eves !l8&--4068 11rak~:i,~2~··~nt11 _J:::JO::::llXl:::KER:::. "-----=646-=l'l"'-14 ""'""FUILEiiiiiiiiiiRii:roiiiiiN.,..,.. home, lrpl., lovely bpauo. reb'lg., blUn ranie A oVen, l•rWin r~.lty Inc. Newport Buch )ONES REALTY INC ESt816 (714) 673-6:Zt0 2001w.a..lbol11w1. Htwpotl &Mth·c.lilomla 11261110 _ • Furn., yrl,Y. $530 lllOlll 75 yrds to bay. 110 Collins equal -oj)J)ty. -'=-----·I Apartments NEW TRIPLEXES Wllllant Wmton , Contact Sa1bb&ry Realti. 9'14405 (2.4 hra)' 4 BEDROOM, 2 BATll. For Solo 152 AND DUPLEXES Ilea! Estate &T"..a331 6?:1-69()1). FamllY rm, fonnal dinlng WAL.f< TO BEACH $55,llXI 1<1.$67,!j)O BALBOB" 2A,!!!_.and,~-3 2 BR. 2 BA, 1 blocli trom F uni•"' Voll-""'1 priilvate ""!'i.!.,~'."'°1thl Wiison 11 Pl1ctritlil Ave '" -,. ~-., ·-.. beach bltn kit. din em. o i;.; -• pr v eges. ..,,.,_. · • \Ve have 2 luxury triplexes, $j.10 per mo. lncludhli awn-do • $450 .,..1y 'Util 1nck1' . 644--{1686 even l n gs & only l!A yrg. old. Buy one or COSTA MESA mer, 1974, 642-2222, 540..()995 rr~7 ' ~· · • 3. BR. 2 BA, l car gar., "'""edtends; 642--5735 days. both. Tenanta will n1ake the PHONE 547-6791 AGT. or 644-1295~ • I all bltnl, swim pool, kid• LUXURY ocean vu home pa.ynlents for you. Chi! any. f'ANTASI'IC 3 BR, 2 SA. Balbot Pen1ntu • 01<, like new, Orib' $249 mo. Brand new 3 BR, 2\l BA; ~ REALTY 536-753.'\ lndu1trl1I Property 168 WI bltns, waterfront, on Ut· 2 BR, cottage, nr Bay No fee, Agent 84M42'l torm. din, trplc, wet ~. Laguna Beach :N;;•;;;w;.<po=rt:...;;S.=•.;.<h;;.... ___ 1 ~ tle Island. Avail to July. adults, 00 pct&. srvtRJ!t' 4 BR. 1% ba.. ~ fam rm. everything • Pool, tennlS, :.:;,,;;;;;;:.=="----I DUPLEX' *JUST OPBNJ:~D * Cemetery ~~· 0"f"/ 1:D~1~1g!!J $300. mo. Call eves, G~ll5 nu crpt, $18S mo. yrty: "Cla.saic Homes' $320/mo. sauna. Winter 'JOOI), yrly VICTORIA HLDS. VILLA GRANADA Lots/Crypts 156 w. Side of CM loc. ofllce. Balboa Peninsula 6?:1-1178. 96H829 or 968-ll:l6 $600~. :'968-4254~'.:'.-'-,"'"'~=-~I A large fl:LJtlball>:._!'°nte o!rt4 ~:u~~~;. ~~~~:~;: g0nr; IN EASTBLUFF l'\\'O cemeteiy lots in cpted & drped $78,500 BAYFRON'l' 5 BDRMS., 4 Huntfnjton Jffch PRIVATE beach. 2 BR + bdnn-s., 3 u ... , conv · ba & FABULOUS 4 BR \VITI-I 21' wkd .. .,. 642-8601 wkenda Capistrano Be1ch • 1 guest 1'00m: l~* bn., carp., den, lge. famil y rm. "·"'''·et steps bet\\'et>n the Y · 1 Park. Reasonable $ 5 0 0. ""'7_1~.,~ BATAS. P\er, float. \Vinter RENT WITH OPTION drps, ... .,11er/•1 ... ,er. 2 car , U """"II BATI-I. FIREPLACF..S, WET "-.,.,,2976 ~ -I 6~2039 " ~' bar & lovely ocean v1ev:s. OPEN' SAT/SUN. l·S BARS & POOL FAClLITY. ;~=='-'·~-----Lots for Sale o1· ye9..1· y. i.:r • NE\V deluxe lower duplex, Fwn.lcy townhou$e8. J.. 2, 3 & gar. Chlldren O.K. Yearly, Owner will carry Jge. 2nd $S2 S00-$54 SOO Comm1rcl1I ::.:;;.:...=..c::.=---'1.;.:70 Costa M... p11v. 2 BR, 2 BA, 2 patios, 4 BR. $175 4: ~·-$'11.5 nionth. ' 1'.DN.OS~44T,H500 LAGUNA 135 45th StrHI and ONE DELUXE 5 BR, Property 151 SUNSET Beach chanool lot Jrp!c, $2'25., 34592 A Via WHY RllNT? GERRIE CO. ~70 Ocean ShQre Properties DEN \\ri.th dock space. Broker Singles OK. '125. 2 BR. Catalina 496-19'24. $1500 ®'vn blzys th.is 2 BR, CHOICE BIG CANYON 3edBd, :1sh··~! .. ~~~;:s's~ i;.n::a~~ * 493-1181 * \VITH 3..BA AT $66,500 NE\!/ lnduslntrlal bl$dl6g.1AF 213-592-S521 CMalo~.~,e ~Ho1:i RU~~.~~d. Coll-• Park 1~ Ba. !fnm. townhouse. Unusual opportunity to lease .............. LEASE WliH OPTION tenant. rome ' 'tV a u .... w.i -• Total~ J?Cf mo. luxurious new 3 BR hotne ceilings & ''' decks. 835 A~1IGOS WAY year, triple net. Price Homefi •rs 547-I SLATI!: REALTY 963-4M3 w/ mognUlccnt view. Uon. $84,500. $2000. do\v11 $500. month. 1r10DEL OPEN dwn. for commercial bldg. ;;;..;•;.;.n.;;a_;..0_1_n_____ dswbr, fncd yrd, newly u et coupe, 1 • cot age. $915/l\li.I. :JI . l . OKiice North end view loca-Lovely 4 Br, & Family rn1, 1 blk to Cdlii High School $160,000. Al!!lO have $30,0XI '~ D p . t 3 Br, 2 ba, tam rm, frp\, Q 1 · 1 Bt t :H !H . .:?t~:. B~a~lyT~~R~n-JONES CAl.;L~~oo;sYTIME Sulllvan/Bkl', 540-4429. . DELUXE Trailer with ~red~ee'!:·:..1!!280~ . .,,s,,l6--02Sl""'"'---~.:~e:tc~~·Agcy =~thv~;~~~o~~ :~ i h 4 bd s .. NEARLY new Womans Al> cabana. 1440 sq. ft., 4 BR. Coron• dol Mir Homefindtrs ~547_·9641 _, n•sl to new AndcrliOll temp. wt rm " " REALTY INC ~-.... -~-~,...-~-~-~~-~-"';-~;!-;';-~~-~-!!'I parel Shop for sale, The Business 3 BA. Xlnt kitche1L 60' from -, ... ~1 .... w baths, formal dining rn1. ESCl'M6 = GRAND O~ENING T"·o-Timer, 435 West 19th 0 1% mile beach on beautilul 3 BR. family nn, fJ.vlc, 1~ school & &reenbclt. _,.,, """. &: family rm. Swimming . St., Costa 11-lesa, 645-6866 pportunlty 200 cove. Private club w/heated LR~ Bakitdl !135ba,lhutiNt ~; New bLhlldrecrplB& & drps, b~. ;6~7f>.:;'<;;:t~"°·-,,==c; pool, jacuzzi; gene~ out· (714)673·6210 Newport Bay Towers or 548-l83G. pool,~ courts. Dana cp ... , "' · ..... c n pets ok. """"''BLUFFS CONL>O 3 br, 2 door living with pat1os & 2001 w Be!b<N n...... 1 & 2 BEDROOM * Gift Shop * Point. Rental Nov. 15 to NrCE 1 br duplex $)50, furn, ~7036_ ..... 2 "ar ••a r. l'vol. f .P., , decks & a 1ull ocean vie\\'. · ....... CONDOMINIUi\1 1-IOMES · NEWPORT BEACH Owner rebrmg $3""" .,.,,..,, __ _.... Good '1oc. Won't last. 2 uv ,_ <>0 • i-· L $149 500 ~~!lt~h·Cah/otnlllllt&O Bay(ront H.omes Prime bayfront site * F Food T Ou r..tay 15-,uuu or~ """'w-SfUDIO 2 bl' 2 bra pw. trplc, \VALK TO BE;A.OI, BR l.illJ\!i. .,..,;-is iJ.>, l> c OCEANFRONT HEIGHTS AREA Boat Slips Fo• boat repair• & sales Ht lkt 1 ly. Jnq. 213-925-Zl45. Ext26L leally gooa livin'. Condo oitly $165 per 0"';..>33 SLJJ/mo:__.~~---~luded ocea1.1tront ~sta!e Large eustom buUt hoine on Full Security Hlghrise Bill Grundy Rltr STa-6161 ~I S~o01ru~ .. ~lngrd Lid Isle VIEW 2 br $300, gar apt. ter-SCOTI R.Et\LTY 536-8,\Y -Vic\V hvn1 3 st~..1nckw ~~ the very tip of histonc t'a:tallna Dr. 4 BR. & den, Steel & concrete eonstructlon en Y _.... -0 race for BSQ, lnry 4: gan1e 3 br, 3 ba huge SWlllec • Dana Point. 3 Bdrm . huge family nn. \\ith Private Baleonics Condominiums * Coffee Shop Sol rm child & pct ok. Irvine intercom, \\ctuar, bltns, 3 I l . . See.ts 'Z1 WINTER lease, beaut. SUPER Nu 3 br z ba H~. dbl/gal'. "'"'"Into. S.l6-27Zi • Spanish home on ~ s, billiard table, 2 Ba., frplc., 2 garage spaces per un1t. for sale 160 RIVIERA REALTY baylront home; 4 BR, 5 ........, 'r"'"' directly over the crashmg bit-ins, & n1any extras. Roof top su.ndcck 149 8 .......,,....,,,..., CM ba., beaut. furn. Sandy AADLAll>PllR 's lrpl le. i:;t21~.,il0~ 3 BR. + bonus, 2~ b&. $425 URG~ / lnunac 3 B1r, !ant ~ surf. $2'75,(((l $68,500. Unusual Opportunity to Pur· DUIT NOW ~._.. .. ...,, · · beach. Pier & float $1650 •nta s --3 BR. 2 baths •••••••••• $450 rm Harbor View 1on1e. I• CALL '9'-'''·lCJC chase Bayfront Property in 642-700! 645--5609 Eves.-fltO.--$205 2 br frptc teak pan 2 BR:, l~i baths ,,,,,, $235 $4..il>/mo . .Ph: G-H-6::163 or \:I"~ Ne\vport Beach. DON'T WAIT FOR Bottle Water Route Bill Grundy Ritt'. 675-fil61 euni all ,-edec greai 2 BR. + den, 2 ba. •••• $430 044-751::5,_. --~~~~! ......... 310 Fernando Rd., N.B. PRICES TO RISE 0,vn Your own bottle water RUSTIC CHARMER en~! ' 2 BR., 2 ba.~ .......... $~ s1-1ARP-Vacunt 3 br, 2~:i ba. REALTY 675-esSI $21,000 tor these spacious l'oute, will train u qualified. Darling 2 br 2 ba beam $325 _ trg 3 l:t', yard, patio, 3 Br., 2 ba., incl. gdnr .. $335 Pool & yard n1aint. Lease Nt•r Newporl p011 Offfte HARBOR Vu Home Montego 2 BR, 1% BA adult eondos. Best Orange Co. area avail. cl nu shag & drp rPt \\'ntr lots ot light A air. ~1 n10. bJJ-86.ia. 1 level, 4 bt·, nice view, Choice of locations: still avail-Will adjust route size to $35o 673-2227 213;7g3-0tzl, $425 • _New 3 * fam rm, CLEAN 4BR + N·,-~M~a110e~·-r, S\vim pool/tennis privl'gs, able. As lo\V as $390 dow·n fit your needs. Earn $1500 · ' ~ceptiooa.Uy mce llarbor vacl:lnt $·150 7.9l'/o In. nu unit to move in, wilh $220 mo. per mo. Potential unlimited CONTEMPO 4 Br, 3 Ba, V1e-.v Homes. Call t..'Ollcct, 337-$11 NE\V ENGL.A.:.'JD >..1nt buy in Harbor ·View *Git Simpstn 562-ioOO * pays all. 836-4206 Agent. .Silver Springs Water 964 frpl, bltns. $485 /mo. NU·VIEW RENTALS NR. 0 .. acb 4 Bi·, fani rm. . La ~ '·----..1 Homes -only $69,9ii0; 3 BR., -NEIVPORT Cre t 3 B 21, N. Batavia, Orange. ' Winter. Ph. 714/Sra--4923, 6'1'' ..,...,,.. An.t ""18 ~ -• • tn guna. e., uo:aun::u dining & family rooms lood-11 r, 2 _ (TI4) "'° •=1 624-7109. ~ or "U"t"J.<o' • 3 &, frple, l"Ondo. ·root, CARMEL MODEL cetl-liv. nn. \\'/ rick fiool'. ed w/exlf"as. _Adult ocCupled Newport Shor•s Ba, plan 3, nu & vacant. ~ BEAUTIFUU.Y' remodeled "~l!E.11.116" tennis, $500 n10. 645-16.">8 . .;: l.€e. ~~~ ~!~."; :: . & .~tter than-new! pall BEACH DEAC H ~~~r fi=~· g ~~~er~ • 4iuor Lic.00 Sale . Newport Be•ch _bome. New thmout, So. o' . ht. We~an Bank Blc;la-CONDO," 2· BR. 2~~ ba, foi•nil , be used 00'!\ • _ II! , 6T.>-8126:· , _ _ _ ,. _ • LlqUOl' Store $300K Yr. Hwy. 3 Br, 2 Ba + huge University Park, lrv1J1e Hv lm lrplc & \vet bnr · • d~n. can 700 u-CORBIN-MARTIN Vacant -Owner out of state· -----. -e Aii'port UpbOlstei'Y BuS. 32LA.lnethyst, Balboa 1s1aod. _400laW'ldl')'J--~,',?-&. &am$400e ~·. _D•ys 55~7000 Nights great 1C:C, $400, 644-5173 ' ·;,fonna~~ron~· -RE~LTORS 644--7662 Super Shores A-Frame, 3 Income Property 166 • cw:pets, Drapes $140K Yr 3 bed. 2 ba. Owner's lovely 673-1658~ ....... ·---. i7F7ii?, .5 .j )n R,.2 qot; interesting 2 I.,.,,; ...................... I BR, 2 BA, fanl. rn1 w/1rplc. EXCLUSIVES -• Fabric Store $79K Yr ti~1fs4so ":~'Noy :a~~:. ENCLOSED rt i 0 sur-2 BR., 1 bf.th .......... $315 San Clement• '~-& den OOme with 2 Immediate occupancy. Sub-HOLLAND BUSINESS 213 "1llll. A~ • 2 BR 2 ba d a/ $215 $15000 BIG CANYON ~~',~. oUor. $18,500. Call RED CARPET ~70 SALES 540-0608 I·~· rowtded by BR, 2 BA, . • .• ' on, c.. 2 BR, 2 BA home on ,l! PRrvATE °sErnNG ~ 2 BR, completely turn. Avail. den, dbl frplc, Nr. Bia: 3 BR:, 21i2 ba. ··-· $385;400 Shorecllfts. Frplc, beautiful -:n thts charming 2 bdrm., 2 7 r 1 NTIL 9 $33,950. Two 2 bdr. 1 ba: ANTIQUE STORE, app ~'lf'lu Nov. 15, 126 33rd St .. Open Corona. $350 mo. yrly. ! :-· ~ l:::S ··· ... "·· !~ cpts & drps, gardner. Adults ba'th home "rith planked nr. $89 500 <Jn a lot. 10% Down. Incotne retaiJ. inv _ 10 yr""';; Sat afterno6n, 714-811-Qli!9. A.gt/owner, 673-:Kl58, eves. " 1 s · ......... ~ only, no pets. Avail Dec. in den, ocean vieo.v, 2-story ' -'~ E. ~'llnl & Co. $3,750. Yearly now and available. inquire 213 B. Houses Unfurn. 305 67;)-.4()20-~ :.:··J~a ~~st ·Jkh $450~1$ lst. $3:15., 49'l-382l tL!t.er 6 dining area with bookshelves Beautiful Deane "l\IIonaco", iii! ti.al~~ l'ents need raising. Great Ocean, Laguna Be a ch, BRAND new 3 Br, 21hi ba · ' p · '' Pttl to 'the ceiling. 2 Frplcs. Red-3 BR, 3 BA, over 2.800 sq, tt. low $ first tiine investor 497-2355. General writ w/frplc & bit-ins.. tG;iO CALL 552·7500 l·s"'·a"n'°;a-A_n_a ____ _ ~wood decks & garden patio. 6 Rue Cannes. Shown by BLOCK TO OCEAN starter units. sq. ft. of cha.rm & a super VISION --=cm appt only.~. l.O A~t-2St 3 BR 2 ~lh N 1 $52.950. Beach Triplex. lnv111-t ALA .RENTALS neignbol.'flOod to boot. $Jd5-Sp11:'11.d out! .I. Br, $215. Gur, ·' 'f'N• • DS 5 PM -· " """ s. ew Y Lo\\·est priced triplex in ..... , b"il-2925 1 K'd / '" •· "· 1' 'SHIEL ' de<.'Or. in & out, incl. new Newport Beach and ~ block Opportunity 220 wt 5"CWJZI w RllYICI · iu:ll )11 • 1 s ~''" ~J;iS · ..• REAL ESTATE ''LEASE'' carpets &$4~ra900~' to beaeh. Great for in-TAX SHELTER ~M;o:: ~~tip~ e red hill . ~:iu·ll Ll~!t Rentnl A~ ----1 _..,. ___ _. RE) CAYWOOD REALTY 22 _ _._, • ......,_., tennis · comer separate en-. om• 1 rs • New Newport Crest Condo -· vestment, appreciation and f fiit -•o .,.... H f' 547 1 1-<FVI 11..:•-•Y E,~~w,... . . Po""'"r "Plan 4 ... 3 bdrm owner use too. new apta. 1st own'-"~P· I l , ~'!?·,. tranc $22S/ REALTY REALTORS --:I , 18 Thalia 49l-8093 If""'" ·* 548-1290 * $52,950. Fourplex. Only 2 left $365,oo:>. Orange. _ _....~ e -garage mo. Univ. Park Center, Irvine Tuttln y + study, has all of lhe of these 2 bdr. 1 be. Comm'l/lnduatrl lot. 7~ c644-"'-'12ll=ccA&t=·'-----..:;.;~;;;;;~;;~;;:;;;.1 ~;;:::=;,;:;;;;;-;;;;;3Bii.I EMERALD BA bltn goodies. Located close San Juan Capi'strino 1.v ...... lexes. 10% Down. Will acres llOO' tronl•= ''"' .N.EWPOIT •IAY.c.M. "'2·nU. NR.. ................... B•-• 3 br ~ -· •'1'71: BRAND new 3 BR -.;; BR home, custom design, to tennis rourt & pool areas. ,,,,,,..Y ' ..... ¥ .... ¥ u...:u-u.o .. _ ' 2 BR Condo ••••• $225 Mo/lse ~, ... ,a· A 1-uso. Bltns, ct"'ts', ~ 1 i ho sell on contract or oon-exposure. La Mirada. $2.15 -den, crptldrp, frplc, 1ra: lot. 2 BR Condo $245 Ato/lse -• (i8 mos ne\\'. Ac ass c me HORSE PROPERTY ventionat Rents on way to sq. ft. CHOICE $851$110/$115 &. 2 car gar. Avl now. 424 ••••• cirJ>b, gardener inc.'!, no pets. 'of 4,000 sq ft with w1-David Bourke Rltr 2 Br house on 1 acre, fenced. $BOO. per month. Mobile home park. $1,100,000. :n_....... ..--..,,_ ..... -4~ Orchid, Open l-5. 675-4275. 3 BR Home ••••• $29.S mo/lse 544-80!2 ""6eatable coastal view. 546-9950 159 0,. F 1 Zb 1162 08 64 28 45 31 .,.. UGlal.wu~,uu11, w_..,. 3BRHomo ••••• $3(Xltn0/lse --·7'·~-----I 260 000 zoned for horses $-:15,000 25% •°'"· ourp ex. rm. • 1 • • • • • ~1 • a.DSE 1 br $165, furn. w/ NEAR Beach, View 3 BR, 3 BR Home .•••. $325 mo/Lse W•stmlnster I sp'ACIOUS 3 BR + MUsr sell, front row, ~fillion dwn, Call HB, ( 714) b!', bdaeks on\V •11°If lleourse. 40 & 22 units in Orange uti.1 pd. -quiet It nice. 2~ii ba, owur'a unit, cUJt 4 BR Home ••••• $300 mo/lsc•l.:;.:;.::c;;;;;:;:c=----1 ,, DEN dollar View, brand ne\V, 4 ~968~·!3563!!!·~~~~~~ hr1o O\\'Tl, i se con-& ~1.:-~ County. $150,oo:>. GALS ok 2 br $1Toi, now. duplex, beam clng, patios, f BR Home ••••. $425 moflae l BR 2 BA, BUILT INS BR, 2',J ba, Newport Crest~ tract or conventional. Goto,,~150,000. in c--. nice yard for pet-patJo. tplc, nr sbopti, $31.J. 67~. RANOI REALTY 551-200) call 89'.i-5;.(l{) alt 4:30 1,ome. Clarn1ing Spanish lot 3ffi plan 5 $88 500 or $175,000. Eastslde 12 Units. u Courses ~ Calif, E/SIDE 2 br, dp1x $16S. bring I ·style kitchen \\·-frplc. Lge JSR rondo, w1i.6· &at ~lip, I Attractive complex \\tlth $1,850,00)1$7,700,00). child & pet, gantgt'. NEAR new 3 BR, 3 b!1ths, AVAll. Now -4 BR, 3 BA, HoUHS Furn. or yd, good view. $85,&oo $82,500 or home in llobUe Hornn poL Two 0\\'11Cr apts. Walk-A food plant. 4% return MOVE in 3 Br 2 ba. $Z5 fryl., patio, ' b J t . 1D II ' park, pooL Yr Lae. ht & Unfurn, 310 REDECORATED Riverside, $51,500. A1ake of. ing distance to shopping and on investment. $1,'iS0,000. & l\fake a home' for kids & dish\\'ihr. Xlnt. $450 Month. last, $~ 65 /mo• ~ •. 1 -~.;.:.;=-----1 :1ru out. Hon1e on lge lot, fer. Owner, 714-682-7424 bus services. othei investments pets. Scenic Properties 615-5726 ,;;897~-!305~j~· :J.}J~~~li;G;•;n;•;ra;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I ' ocean & canyon vie\\'s. Two * BEACH HOUSE * Mobile Homes For detailed information on International Investments POOL!Frplc 3 br $340. Nice l 'Ai m.KS. to beach; 2 BR ~EW 3 Br, 2 Ba, bltns, "nice bdrms. $42,500. For Sale 125 these and other units Call Cor Vanderbout 539-0ll2 home & area _ avail. 2 Ba. Child welcome! Patio traah compactor, crpts , "'.INGO REAL ESTATE $4~.500 ·Buys cute 2 bdrm., -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Don Berman, Broker and * Silv•r Bullion* VACM'7 4 bl', 2 ba $375. Blk & yard.~ Mo/yrly. drps, comm park/pool. Nr 2 BR., 1 ba., un!. New carp, ~ 499-1.39"7 sharp, rustic decor. \Valk • unit specialist, Red Carpet, ID ocean, sngls ok. BOYD Realtors 615-69,, lll:I. SJ3..8447. drapes, decor. Yrly. $250. L:'.OLONIAL BEAUTY! to beach. Valuable R-2 lot! Mobile Home 1972 Realtors 645-81118 Z17 E.17th 999 + FlNE BARS Sla-!000 SEE ti? appreciate 5 br $3i0. SPYGL.As.S Hill, 2 BR. den, 3 BR. 2 BA, crpts drps 3 BR., 2 be., unf. new carp, • --GEM1---12x54 St., Costa Mesa. Mon•y to Loan 240 close ro schools, shops, now. lease or sale Avail mid Nov. bltns, 2 car attach~d gar'. 3c1raBpesR ' •2coo00r, r0r1Y,,·-~·, ~ 4 bdrm in one of .. ....,F T · A NB 16 UNITS -POOL, studio ALA R•ntals "2 •••3 T ...... ;., -prlvl., ~ mo. •-/MO. 837-9ll5 ., . · a.uuun · • Larn•na•s~ finest sections. .._."'" us.:m ve., · · IN HIGHLAND, CALIF. 2 BR 2 BA &~ 3 BR 3 1 TD L -..,_ ......... ...,.,. _.,., .._.. Furn · WlDlel' $32S •-· REAL TORS 6424623 • • st • oa ns 644-2696 eves NEW ---•-F ed llo " . Pool-sized lot is pi-o-· SAN BERNARDINO BA. Name your terms -· ~wu.1uio::. enc: pa , 2 BR., 2 be, furn, winter • l e ssi onally landsqaped, Harbor Vu Somerset COUNTY. LOVELY 10 \Vill carrypapcr-Nopoints 3 Br, 2 Ba, trplc, bU:ns. ~_l. recreation. No pets. $300. 'Features 3 balhs, fan1ily 5 br, 3 ba. 2 h-plcs, nu sec· or cx~ve interest, etc. UP TO 90% Rl!NTALI fenced yard; So of Hwy. $26.}. m-2036 associated rm, massive firepla ce. tion. High up w/big viev.·. x20 COVERED PORCH Submit trade !or down. 8'12% INTEREST $2915. Call ~nt 1·5 pm, TuR11...E Rock, 4 BR. ~A Dining 1m. Oversized patio Con1p. approx Dec. 7th. Full WITH OUTDOOR RUG. $275,00). Agt/Own. 642-2221 2 d JD L .ftoulff * Aptl. GT0>6900 Ba, 3 ear gar. $450. lmmed. with BBQ. 159,950. 4""'1003 Price $81,500. Owner ALSO COVERED CAR· tmsg. --) ft OlftS * 141•0111 * J.RG. 2 BR. w/2 yrda, 1295, possession. 5j;.0030. TARBELL, Realto.s m.1101. PORT NICELY LAND ~·mo LB • • 8 UNITS ~ 67; .... , ~ 9403 Laguna S.ach D R OKE A S -Rf A LTO~S 11'1~ W Balbcc b7l l~t l 19ll So. Coast H\\}'., · · SCAPED MODERN 6 MO. Neo.v. AU 2 BR, kitchen lowest r1te1 Or1nge Co. GSW.11thCOITAMllA .Jo+•vw vi.r -Newport Bt•c"-5 BDRMS WAl'E&RFRONT MOBILE PARK. blt·ins, <,,,,, t1rps, patios. Sittlor Mtg, Co. MS • & Up. Furn_Be.ch'•c 3 BR 2 Ba, ~pacio.!11, ATTENTION 1 , , PIER FLOAT Laundry rm, encl garages. 642·2171 545-G611 =.;,/cooking, Ideal tor :oo~ $420mo. year!)' RElilTERS .Till> fanta>tic ocean view at $94,500 546-0135 aft, 6 pm Gross inc $18.900. 1175,llXI. Serving Harbor area U yn See Us First !or All Yoor *PRIME RENTALS* ' '.ess than a 3 bchm. price. BROKER 833--0780 O\.tTJM"/Bkr. 545-5800. · $lfiO -Cozy 1 Br. Unf. Apt. LOVELY' 2 Br, 1 Ba., frplc, Housing Needs. We Have * \Vaterfront home 4 BR. ,.,,~. ~.,..,..,..,..,..,..,.,.,. 11 U .15 1 3 LOANS TO $Z,(J)) Util. Gar & Yard. 1 child ok. beam ceili"""" patio "'""" Homes-Apts Ol" Condo'& tn 3 nA., pi'er & slip' Lcue' .1-~ uvv ~ BY OWNER, nice, upgraded ni • room or more. 2ND & ISi' trust deed loans $195 -Brand. Nu 2 bl' Apt. .-. mo /·-~~y (;~;.....:-• °" ' ~ NE\VPORT Crest Con fl o thru-out, 1972 f.-Iobile Home. 1 & 2 BR. Gross $1875/mo. $5 oco Secured by Uni G & a.rd Oilld A ._,., · ..J"-"• 1v1" Lag Bcb-Min Viejo-Lag $1400 (fUrn,) &~ '01.a.~ deluxe ne\v 3 Br, din rn1, Prine only. See 187 E. 21st ovt>J' ' ' 8 ' Ill' Y · QUAINT 2'BR l BA, Niguel-Dana pt &. San* Waterfront home, 5 BR .. Central heat & air, all adult E/ 'd C ll eombination of real estate. sml pet ok, ..__ ____ ......._•dry ~;: Oemente 3 ba i & u Win'-3 ba. dbl gar. Belo\v park, move in 1 0 day ! st, s1 e J'\1., or ca & personal property. $230 • Hse 3 BR, 2 ba, unt. u=" w~, er. ....... • ·• Per ' P· ~ REAL ESTA'fE market. $72.500. Owner. i\ssun1e bal. of loan, ap-O\vner, 642-196/J NO poinlo;, no prepa·y Gar & yard~~'". l'Olll. 615-M98. OPEN 7 DAYS $1,000 (furn.) IM 642-5583. M _._ BEACON RENTALS • 3 BR.. 2 Ba., pnUo. Will 1190 Glenneyt·e St. ;:;;:..::=------1 prox. $11.200 thru bank. \Vill EASTSIDE, thirteen 1 Br penalties to $10,<MXI. pet. SHARP 3 BR, tam.) nn, {In Plcadllly Circus) take children & pets. (turn). )4..9.l.7J $4:::J-03lG PRICED to sell, Lrg 2 BR. make ,sact·ifice in equity. units, inc_ $1960 per mo. FAST SERVICE $250 • HSI!? 3 & Den, bi.tns, view, nice :yard; ease. J854 s. Cat. Hwy. No. 6 * Bayfront upt., 3 + den, frpl<', dbl gar, fertL"t>d yrd, l\"lust sell! Cpts, drps, stoves, refrigs, Deal Direct With Lender crpts, drps, nr. Hi sch.I. 673-2222 Lag'Ulla Beach 494-9491 ocean view. LelUIC $1300 • .aguna Niguel $3S,500. 510 Santa Ana, Ph. 5.18-2743 or 646-9742 pool. $176,000. By O\lmer. CITY F1NANCE Otlld ok. C t Mt · (Furn) • 548-3763 or 642-7!E6 l\fOBILE i-lon1e-Bud.""er Ex-548-9695 Orange County Cn4) 547-6633 We A1so Have Furnished os • •• srut>JO $~ util pd. * Co~do -3 BR., 2 ba. :y 0\\'lK'r, Niguel Shores -~---~~--Ba~ 1 2 3 br AJ{'i Color tv & bl Jdngl s. llom •. Beach Side, first time 3 BR-, 2 BA Harbor pando in park nr beach. COSTA :f.-IE&\ 4 plex. ~.500. DON'T BORROW LAN. L"'°'DS F E' E Famlb' Needed, 3 Br l~ ca e - e Pool. Lease. $355 <Unfurn.) Highlands Home By Owner. Newpt Bch. 646-2748 , $625 Income pays pnn int 'TIL YOU CALL US UK ba. $3)0. Gar, 1ned yrd. ~·po&rc!llA:.i~t br duplex. $190 * Fabulously tum. 2 BR. l)(fered. 5 BR's + den Principals Only. $69,500. =642-°"''°31'°28"'.~~~~~= tax, ins & util. 1090 d~, n0 Bo .ho equllty fm . 2 BR, 1 Ba, brand Kids/pell. G•~ARA~GE-· pertl ~ .~ On 2 ba., Udo beach. Lease oeautifully Indscpd. \ValJt to 646-5302 BY the Sea. 10 x 50 ABC p ts 675-1669 or 1·7'28-Zl'49 rrow on your me new nr banks & sbop'g Calil's Lrgelt Rental Agcy aPt "" ,.....,.,,, WATERFRONT APJ"S. <Unf.) .~ &S:~~alp~~1j~ co"u"'·p=LE=x-.,-°"-.-.n-$62-,500-,vfexpando room, oovered 6 UNITS, CORONA ~EL = 'i: ~efe'!"b:;~~ cntr' ' Homtflnder1 547·9641 v~T:~r, pet ;,.k·All * 2 BR. -2 ba. Lido beach. -·~ i t ~'l\1iles Larso;· Realtor patio, 2 sheds, carport. MA R FOR SALE OR 20 d NO in $250 • :t BR. 2 BA. 1 yr l •-~-ri· W/D uW ' Leaae. $425 ja1.o-uu." tenn s co u r s -M'>-_8:.i:., """" A'"l over years an ~1d -bell / . Im 3 BR p U a .... ., lcuu rm, a. 1, , pet ok. * 2 BR. • 1 ha. Leaae Guarded l'Of\Amunity. Fee v1.J .,.... $3995. 960-1420 or on.,....~ TRADE, O\VNER 833-3894. Orange County! ... , green w VJew. • new crpts, drps, frtlhly Bl yard 3 br 2 ba $(25. $350 land. Phone 4 9 6 -812 2, NEWPORT Shores home, 3 NE\V 2 BR, 1 BA, living SAN Juan Capo, four plex, SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. ::c· clilldren & aml pet painted lnside nnd out, 1rl frptc, bring kids 4 Pe'l Em· * 2 BR. • 1 ba. Leuc $82,500. Br, 2 Ba. $47,900. By owner. rn1. Adult park w/private inoome $7800.. large lot, (714} 556.QlOO S28G 3 BR, 2% ba, frpl fncd yard. Family, no pets. erald Bay area. Avail. $275 '.ido 111, r;-&15-45.99 or 642-2563. beach -$16,500. 5-ro-3672. addl units $79,500, 492-8264 4500 Campus Drive, N.B. pool-&: area. Brand ne;; $265. 547-6791. ALA Rent•'• 642..UU A FAMILY HOME BR., fa mily rn1., 3 ba. \Vilh !gc. patio. Via Lido Soud. !J22,500 PIER & SLIP J BR., 3 Lia. $270,COO. \Vill lease with firm option. LIDO LOTS TRADE Ne\vporl Be a ch BARGAIN I..ido \\lllt'rfronl The tastest draw In the West. Mortg&g•I, -Has ~ EASTSIDE large 3 BR, 1 '16.\ -1 BR near beach, big Prop. for ou1-of-To,vn Prop. park. Dbl \vide, covered ... a Daily Pilot Claasified Trust OHds 260 $315 -3 Br, 2 BA, dshwbr, ~ huge ta~ rm., frJ)lc, fenced yard, child/pet wel· LIDO REALT Y I I' 0 , I ' IL *673-7300 * Bkr. 714/673-~ garage, pool. $800. 6T.'-r8~ Ad. 642--5678. tncd & lnd&cpd w/ Lovely u.5. :yard., MOO Santa 1Mbe1 romt! PUT YOUR MONEY View! has aU: child ok. e5 per mo. 546-7945 or $210 • 2 Br ocean view apt,1 'ro~R-LE_OAS __ E_: _Brand ___ N_.w_ $375 -3 BR, 2 BA Brand -2639 11'11 deck, sml P« ok. BfG CANYON OJuntry Club TO WORK FOR YOUI Kew. Dshwhr. Child & pet 3BR home needs carpenter $310 • 3 Br, 2\1 ba, new "'11'S, Beauty 4 Bedroom 3 Bath Earn 10% or more on well· ok. Includes gardener. & painter + 'It..C!, Make drpr, deck. Beaut. ocean Fam.lly' Room, F 0 r ma i secured 2nd Trust Deeds on Open 7 Daya A Week offet on rent, Open Sat A view! Dining room 3 car IV8lt Orange County real estate. BEACON RENTALS SUn, lO:oo-6:00. 1880 MANY OTHERS AVAIL! oo cw..i .. ,.C Overlookhtg Only. interior lots avail. ~,7 Ft. for ~ldence, w/po01- pat1o $14,000. 35 Ft. nord corner (4.0 lt.. buildable site) $05,llXI. SIGNAL MORTGAGE co. (In Plcadlf1Y Ctrcual FuUerton Ave. NU·VIE\11( RENTALS the 8tb Tee .. Yearly Leuo CTI4l 556-0106 1B&4 s . C.c Hwy.'No.-6 FRESH Paint 2 Br. 4-Plex 673-4000 or -llllXI. mo. unfurnlshcd, or i .,,;;4500;;;.,;;Cam;;;pu;;;;;• ;;;Dr,;;·;,· ;;N.,.B ... .., I -JLagunarai~"iBeiiaici.ibi'i'i:ri-~ffii $110. Yro toi kids" pell. PRESl'JGE NORTII END $1500. mo. lurnlahed. AU. ;t FREE RENTAL llOOK Call1's Lrl<tl Rental Agcy 4 BR.> den. lamily rm.; 3\1 Bl\AND NEW EXPENSIVE DROP IN I i BROWSE Homtflndtrs 547·9'41 ba., 2 wet ban, tabulou• F\lRN1'l'l1RE. can Aller 6 TO make, buy or sell a Tnisl De<d, 8llY amoon~ anytime, ph: 638-5015 Ma- jestlc Mortpoe Co een 1l:ed 3 bdrm home, 4 BR, nt. Back Bay. untum vle'IVI; $624.month. 1,P,_M::.;-;.:.:.::;::;;....---- 'i LIDO REALTY ,,-I ,, I, I .. 'II *673·7a00* lfEST BUY LI DO ~ BA, 4-BR +. Bay View. 88' 10 heh. 42'5 Via Lido Nord. $137.500. 615-7~14 Bkr. 1Mi11lon Vi•jo !JIG VIEW LOT • FOR •.SALE by Owner. 3 BR. , 12 BA, <:entral air, 1 yr ' old. On cul-de-Mc. Cu1it1. cirps It Cfp(tt-Auume 71~ or . .23201 \(la Rtl.na.. t11.v. .,;-;;;;:;:::f:· ====::-: l'ODvFANTASflC VIEW! ~ 3 BR, "SevUle" 1•19,l>OO Bltr. 96H739 . t /. ' WILL Buy bt and Znd 1'0'1 up to $100,000. Call belwn 5 &9PMor1to9AM 644-6511 - ~ bath, d~l• ,.,. .. , hule or JllrttaliY !Um, $3'15 or .~~!\EAL=~ Condominiums fenced-yar,J>ullt.,!ns. $235.0l) -~i..... 2458 None Avt-'I ron l/I _2_8 R. 2 _ _,.U~n~.f-ur-'n.,~ ___ ....;.320;;.; per/mo-New carpetl. New 833-~. :n. ren eue. -!!f.lnL 3 BR. ll! Ba crpt, ~ ba IJ den. Panoiutlc OCOM fountain V1lloy Wall<cr ao Leo 111 ltnced yd' w/patlo r;r vtew. Washe\l tlrytr, bll.W. REAL ESTATE s C Plaza. $300 in 0 $400/ruo. -· l'I\) Fountain Ptll'k 2 ·hr, 1~ :190 •!!arbor Blvd., 1t Adams. ~ , . . i BR. 2 BA. cpl, drpc, bit· b.• f"'dt'· tli>lc, ~ c,..cf, LANDLORDS! 4 BR,., BA, bltln s10vt, ~~$..1il0,. mo. l:t'o1c.11:f:~. A~(r! We Speclallze In Newport .,.. d/w, fl1tlc, ~il" cC L . N"' I lit. Edina<r .t Euclld. Pb. Beach ' Corona de! Mar e crptl, drpa, nr SOtlu• !tuna ,,..,. , IJ3$.6802, • Larw\a. On< RmW "Se<· Plaat, $335, 5f>=l843. J1P iliiluxe-pn!en bQ1ne "H;.oun""t'i'l_"-~l~o-oc~h--I Houna Furnished 300 vice f• FREE ft> You! Try MESA Verde 3 BR. ~ 3 BR. 2 bt. CtlJfOm d-· := Nu.View! ~ incld'd, yearlt gold Wa carpet yelloW bu: LOVELY It u n ti" at on General fllO UTIL Pd 1121 Mobile, CM,. $125 San Clemente, 1 BR ocean view. Laguna Belt. 3 BR N'obJle Sl~5. CM. !\1any Bachelor units, $90 ulll pd. i\ill-Fee. m.K>O. Tho fut.ell draw tn the West. • , .a Dally Pilot Clusllled NU.VIEW RINTALS feue, $715 pet mo • .Pb. IM. •lwnpetono' wall !rplc ,Townboule ~ 2 Ira bn, 87.Hfl30 or 491-3218 -7918. w•gu.Joo. 4 patlol, enclo• 2 bo, blt!ni, enclld patio, "'UICK C "SH 3 BEDROOM, 2\1 ball> cd, Idell Jor 1m. dog or ~!!~'!.""mo= ,.. " Townho\lse. Family room. cat. Walk to beach, ~m ""'=~·~-=~~~~== THROUGH A f!replae<, poOI. $325/lllO. in olymplo sbte pltljl You don't , need a run to 645-61110.' tenni1 or go ; all "Draw Fast'' when )'Oii DAILY PILOT LRG. llv rm. frill~ din rm, in the fr"' _~ie ~ an ad In, the Dall!'. SSIFIED AD 4 BR; WQO<lland l< lla!'f>OI' """' cit I. $IMIO. t Want Adi. Call it6W CLA . HS. 3Z :Etlttttt, 6IJ.Oli2ll. mo 493-l 1 • MY.>87& - • " I N N 3 2 s l 1 • Unfurn. Apt., !!urn. Candomlntum• 32G Irvin• C:otlt /Mu Huntington Buch NU, never been lived Jn "2 br, 2 ha, W/lg deck, 2'ar, private lndry rm, ocean vle\v. $250. mo. 493-9676 NE\V deluxe 2 br, 2 ha. _frpl, 2 patios. $22.5/mo. 34592 Via Catalina. 400-1924. 2 BR, 2 Ba, crpts, drps, bltlns, disbwusher, in the Palisades. $200. ~ ll55. Corona dtl M•r -- SPLIT lewl 3 Br, 2 ha. rSb~y 2 Car gar. Pool. Bltnl, cpts, " or~• drp1., retrlg. Adult couple 2 BR. mobU&-home. $140. only. $300. rutr. 64.2-5333 incld until. No children, no TOWNHOUSE Slinta An1 peta. 646-l809 2 Br, fireplace, pc)ot, private 1----------1NICE 1 br dplx. Quiet. Sep paUo$, -continental break· DELUXE Tov.nhse 3 br, 1 'h by garages. Employed adult fast. Spacious grounds near ha, cpt/drps, bltns, lrg prl ovel' 30, no pets. 548-1021 shopp~ ~ fine beach'. Fur· patio, dbl gar, nr So. Coast COJ\1PLETELY' tum t Bit. nishcd or unturnlsh~. {rum Plaza. 644-7819 or 557-15.11 $130. 131 FIO\\·~: ~~0.1. $250. Corona del Mar, Duplex•• Furn. '45 Adults, no pets. ~ ~ I ~644-~26~1~1~. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! -Sl'l5 2 ¥R1 1\i 1~bJI, Pf.do, DELUXE townhae, 3 hr, B1lbo1 P1nlnsul1 g~. ctpis,' 2~~ ba. l•'rplc, dshwahr, w/w . call 833· 731 crpt·, 1 ~~ bl ks to bch. Yr 2 BR $195. Nev.• crpts. Kids/ Pets OK. l\t9ve Today! Callfs l..igest Rental Aa;cy Homoflndors 547-ff41 N<owparl BHch ~ACIOUS 2 BR furn, lncld&: util., Bal Pe., steps from beach w/simdeck overlook- lng water. ·Lease or rent mo. $32.J, No brokers. By appt phone 67J..&176. Duplexes Unfurn. 350 Bilbo. l1l1nd llUSTIC CHARAt! 3 BR. Steps to boy. S%JO/Af0. Yearly. call 644-8856 Coron• del Mir S BR or 2 BR I: den, 2% Ba, kitchen, tam nn., patio, 1 blk to bch, nr park, walk· tna: distances to 1torM, avail now. 615-1273. Cl-IAR~11NG front house, 2 BR. den dlntna. trplc, farm kitch, 2 biles to bch. $275, ~2. BRA."'lD ne\11 upper unit, 1600 IQ. ft. 3 br, 2 ba, frplc, huge balcony, bltns, dshwhr. & gar. $!75/mo. Yearly. Unf. 673-2058. eves 6'1'5-5487. NEWLY d...,..led 3 BR. 2 BA, upper, wflae IWldeek. walk to beaah. $325 yrt,y. 64&-:ns.;. Duplexes, Pum. or Unfum. 115 , Newport llNch ATTENTION RENTERS $854115. Rooms ideal for students. O>mm, k I t . , ~ w/trple. Ocean Vu. $115416$ Studios incl nil. 0c..-. Students ok. SJ.45-0X>. 1 Br's. Some w/ views, lKe nnt, frplct 8t 11un- d<!d<s. Cok>r TV' •• Open 7 "°"" A W ... BEACON RENTALS '(In Picadllly Circus) 11154 S. C•I. Hwy. No. 6 LIC\S'ta Beach M9t91 B1lbo1 l1l1nd ADULT Lrg 2 BR, pool , , ,:l•::;as;::•c:·..:673-;:;c'lm~::.· -~~,­quiet, super clean, bltnl, 1: Jl&j). Ni> Dll'.tl. Call ~4. 2 BR., bltwlns, pool, Ad.ults., ~ ne pets. $225 -Lease. 01ria Point. LIVE in the all' new Dana Point Harbor · at the SEMPLE R.E. 67>2101 NE\V &. bt&utiful 2-Br, 1 Ba. Huge master Br, beam clngs. tree top view. $300. mo. 673-1658 beautitul MARINA INN SEPARATED private room 1\totel. 34902 Del Oblipo St. w/bath. Prime location. 1496-2353). Kl t ch en , Ef-1 ,c.l:::lllS~mo=•o:lll::. . .::.673-:.::.:al64=:..· __ flclencle1 &: Apartments. 2 BR I II led I ,,__ d;al , BA, crpta, drpa, ea poo, :uu-u.;, frp\c. Pool. $225 /l\tO . phones, televisk>n, sauna 675--0562 ho.th, I a u n d r y facilities, · mttUng room, clote to San Cost• u--- Oemente A Laguna Beach. ";;;;;;;;;;~;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Come play ln o u r • 1port!lahln&'.. mopping & restaurant&. $60 Wffk & Up. Bring ttm ad & receive ~ otf on Ont week's rent. -------- CHARMING 1 Br. on ocean. $lOO Incl. ul!L Opp AlbertlOll's. 'Tl9 Gaviota. 491-1719. I ' • Friday, Novr1nbtr 91 1973 DAILY PILOi • Gutst-or Gate House • Secluded e C1n bo •ll•chod to lh• re1ldenc•, but must h8v1 char•cter * 675-4737 * Re_nt1l1 to Shere 430 Industrial Rental 450 I NOW LEASING l5x~ ENCL. storage gar. Near Nev.•porl Freev.·ay in Costa Mesa. 64:.-STI4 Reht1fs Wanted 460 ==:....:.==-_;c;. TEA.CllJNG .studio l\VO UJ.'.\d pianos large. Corona Oel Mar. J.B. ~fiddl eton. 673-4520, ext 7. UNFURN. 2 Br, frplc, Ne-.vport nrea. quiet non· smoker, around S 2 O O. wkdays_ 54()-()(fil Mary. ·I~ ..... _ ....... _.--0.J •. I.~ Legal Notices 510 NOTICE &x:uril"y Pacific National Bank Bran<·h applicatio11ii ' Iii('{\ Noven11x>1· 2. 1973, v\. <·initv of Rid~ Route J)r. & ;\1oulton Parkv.•ay. i..aguna liills, Orange County, Cali· : lornia. Lost and F«lld • I I l . . • l l ' • ' t. ... , ..- • OAJLY PILOT f)ld>y, Noitmer -9, 1973 ,-, & 1117' .nt-•. M&F 710Ht p anrwa, M 10 I nif lfrM ldl) SSO Child Ca,. --J'~T.;;ll;:.e ______ 1 ..:.H:;:e;?lp:_W;:::e:;:nl:::ad:!,~M::&:.:,..;,.::10::.:,::e:;i:.i>:;W~a::;nl:;:ad::;,~.::.:'-!.:~I Ip Want.d,. M&F 7101 Help Wanted, M & F 710 ~~~;;;-;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 mD: Adult cat Bil< & Brown ~!LO CU>~. mY homo, d">•· CE!W.ffC TILE NEW & Clerk Typist $500 ESTABUSIIED Local 01. I U1ped. Cleor piulle <Ollar nlghtt. Infants okay. !loo rem<Xiel. Froo eot. Sm Joi>tl DELIVER Fee 1'11ld. Sparlcllng ptr!JJO· ha& opening for Delivery • MOTOR R0 111'E 1115. Crown Valley MttU lunch Oak Vie'v Sc b . wc>lcome. 536-24~. o.llty. >Qn't typinf. Worldna & Stock Work. Mu11t ha~ .,.,. f 1 ~ ~t"•1 Rd. i..s. Nlgucl &l:i.-062> n renda. Top Soll TELEPHONE DIRECTORIES wl execs " ardllt<-cts. Xln't gooc1 driving record & 1mow f d ' t ......,.... Contractor 1>t-netit1. AlllO Fee Po.iitiona. Oronae Co. area . 40 hr. The Daily Pilot has an opening tor a r81ver 0 • IJND: Gr<¥ male cal, • QUALITY * 'I 8 I h ••tt Call Ann Oui.<tiu. 556-850S, week. Company bO!lefltt. deliver papers to carriers in Laguna eacb-long leg&. '110rt balr; ~ CUSTOM BUILDE!l * MULCH & TOP SOIL * " en or women l or over w t cars, Sw on 0>ntro1 caret~l:mpkwment Write ClaWtied Ad NO. 999, South La§una Monday through Frlday after-dl~t. lovable . Vic. tt~cJing, paUos, or wbatl~!!!!!!~~586--09~~30~~~~ 'vagons, br light trucks. Pleasant outdoor Ageocy, 3400 lrvine Blvd., Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. noons an Sundayrhorning.Salaryplusauto ,__ -= ~-allowance. Phone Harry See ey, ,,.. , • r · Pautarino & Brtato!, c.~f. have ........ Jay GUht.'11. worlc, [;our available dayllgbt hours. Cali· N.B. · ~~~~M~, Ca. ~. or I 64" 'S21 'o , 919-8587 licensed & imrured. Lie: I lilJ lornia icense plates required. Apply for job ~LERK TYPIST -""'""=E;;X::E::C·"'u =T"'IV"''":-;S,:--~o • Black cat. pleue Bl-2818S2. 6l6-ll5.'I 111 description and trailling 8:30, 10:30-A1.r-or Crttt startingliliiji 1ar --""' -apPQlntment. entlfy Vic. H.B. area, GERWICK A SON t 1 :30 PM at the location nearest you-, dally. •hlr1> 11\dlv. w/a~ typing $15,000. to $75,000 An equal on.nortunity employer tlanta & Bus ha d, Bldg Contr. Addll & Remod A Ute·e"xper. Xlnt oppor Sehd re5U.me0f call TODAYj,~!!!O!!l!!!!!O~!"."~'~<~·":"'~':!'l~~"t~'i''i\iJ , -3182. State Li~ Bl-114321 • BEGINNING NOVEMBER 7th !or advancenient. .• for · conlldentlai NO COST ~UNO black male b. 673--600 -M9.2110·1:J::o::b_W:::.;:•:::•:.:tad:::!.'.:Ma:::;l:::e~7:.:00::: -iJ • J•son Be1t Agency exetuttve b\tervlew. ,:;Ip Wanted, M-U-ni bo\lt 1 yr. Vic of 600 JACK .-Tauhme, r...e..~a.lr.. STUDENT • Fult-or rt 1~ N. Gl•111ll Ave., Orange 17400 Brookbunt, F. Vlv.' EXECUTIVE SERyt~. reeway & ca Ts n ~ remod, add.• Llc_ B-1 '269072. UmC OUIC\' exp. xrn t 1134 Gilbert' Av ., An•h•im -Suite 213 9$l-6n5· -------lNC. ""'=-~JUNIOR ~kkteper McDONALD,.:;S~-1 OOS..WO. ) MY Way Co. 835-3i'U5, reference6. 3328 W1 1st Strt1t, Santa An• 888 N. Main, Santa na Secretary, AIR & A!P. NOW1flRIN'G . . o -2 female Wldp ts, Gardening * ;1;.2499 * . 88 Fair D rive, Bldf 16, Costa MHa CLERK TYPIST· . Cll4 l 547-9 625 Exp req. Lite Secretariat APPLY IVED-i'IU.'kS. Vic. Laguna Nir.:I, v.·tar. • DRlVER·~om~•lon, cauc· (Orange County Fa'1rgrounds enter from EXECUTJV~ 1'0uaekeeper dutie• but good Seci'ttarlal SAT AU. DAY 11 ti ·-" U GARDENER ....... , ,,.... · 1 for at0CKER BANK, 'rt-\ist for outstanctin" fa m i l Y . skl11s -.t Pl-•,.nt Irvin•• 650 A VJ!DNDA PICO .1\ft co ars .... ..._ ea co ars. . of 22 yrs, ex-46, former ex--. 5'11" ~ .. ~ N'ewport Blvd) De l • ..... .,.,,.... · " NTE 493-0848 per. who i.s knowledgeable lbs. sngl. bo~able. FJP · pt., Newport Center. At-~~us cook & serve meals, toe., Penh jiosltion. Xlnt SAN CLEME D blac.k and white eat & proud of his work see~ time. 640--0332 Equal Opportunity Employer :~:; ~d~ Ex. CallceU~ornt drlve, •upervise ~~hold. benefits, 5*'8100 -MECHANIC with Class A wtwhite paws I: pink nose I 4 or 5 add maint jobs. · 1 a-~. , ; '' ~r o'A"P'/!." mo. Call 846-0011 LADIES, are you looking for license. Apply Ca D.'I Pu• Vie. Dover ~ \Vest George Hampton, Job Wa"ted, Fem1le 702 H W M & """' ~ r just need Shell, Fairview 6 Baktt. Cliff NB ~6 , * ~~rol5 * NEED help at home" We 1lp anted, F 710HelP. Wanted, M & F 710 ~ FABRIC CU'ITER, no exp. ai: J:°ney T Apply in ~Cos~ta~M;;e~sa~==-:--· J ound female German short PROFESSIONAL gardener, have aides nurSes CLERKTyplstsexper. heavy nee. Irvine area. Ask for person ,' Gold (:oast MEO/DENTAL \ hair hunting dog wearing t~ \VOrk, ~run I!'! g' house kprs,.' companions'. typing, &Orne-general oUice Patricia, 540-3684 Industries, 1500 SOUtn Grand RECEPT collar vicirilty 18th St., spr1nklCl"S.. cleanup JObS, H 0 m e makers Upjohn Delivery-Sunda. y Only ~B~~. Mr. U1*tman Field Serv. Rep. Santa Ana. & leanr bow In lflint. Bch. Mature, 4 Costa ~fesa, '527-7658. I a n ds ca p in g , Goorge,, ;;54;;1,;-'68=1=. =~----$3:25 lir +car+ exp to earn $150 per week or ; k ·~ I» I 646-5893 1;.......... COOK for ltJJllan Deli, Exp WESTCLIFF more. Full &. Part time. days w • _.,..., resume. :, -OUNl> 1nedium size white1 · ouvKKEEPER; exp COhstr .over ti. ·18514 Beach Blvd. n 1 Ag Assist company l'{!presen· 18'100 Main St., Suite •~. brown & be,lge shaggy dog E~PEAN Garden ~ r · fld heavy payroll & gen OF . DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE-Huntington Beacll. r-ertonne ency tative tn showing revolu· HB. 9'264!t g l Orange Coe.st College area. Mruntenance -Landscaping. lectgs thru trial bal, my QUIRES THE USE OF A LARGE STATION 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. 1· rod t Inl . M "'D!CAL St<>tvlO'T'A"'-er 557-3058 call 1 before 2 p.m. Tree RemovaJ. Very office or yours Day or nite. COOK, 1/lline, will train. (litark Ill Center) -iouary P uc · erviews t; ~·ve--v>• • OUND white kitten, 1 blue, reasonable. 60-5329 eves. Call Joan 900-1228 WAGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR. HARRY ~=~cent hosp i t a 1, ' 542-8&36 10 a.m. Monday -Saturday. Bkkpr. Radiology ottlce-. 1 green eye vicinity 18th COliiPLETE LAWN . \VANT a job at hoine-ad-SMEEELE"f' E330LEWPESOTNBEAY ~~R32EIET, CROSTA FREE OFFICE .sPACE, LAVUNrdDRCoESS JH/=tim~,· .. Me661sa ~fu. tor int er v lew & Pomona, Costa Mesa, SERV ICE dressing envelopes. Please SA. T H 64-. FO AP-* COUNTER GIRL for dry C.B. In exchange for e e nv. ospi • ~. MOW AND EDGE phone, 962-7017. POINTl\tlENT. cleaning plant, assembling, answering Attomey's phone. Center St., CM MEDICAL insuranc:e ~ UNO large black male CLEAN·UPS 536-5139. BOOKEEPER part time 8 bagging & checking ex-~ LOT man. Full Ume, Allen e.xp'd. Newport Beach area. lab vicinity Driftwood & ANY AND AJ..L Garden1ng, Yl' exp, iJ)dv. or small buss. An Equal Opportunity Employer ~~~i P~~~P~~Y wi~ FULL TIME LADY Oldsmoblle Cadillac. Ask =URE nuLC..b 1n i al Beach Blvd,. H.B. Mobil ~as~ H(;~lmg.~240mplete ..:C:::•.::ll..:64.::>--fc.:..:78:::2c,...____ person. -, , to assist Service Department LIVEfor Mlnr. HSt~vens. k 4 9&-0SOO u-ainee wanted. Min-3 yn HomePark,!00--~. ssr'bri en or JobsWanted;M& F704 . ..,-~~-,--,-~~~=-,...-,-='--:,.-,....,...-==I F1VEPOINTCLEANERS in greeting and taking ouse eeper, exper. on small equipment FND. Be au t , long·haired H •;..•.;,lp;;.W.;.;.;•.;..•.;..lecl=,.:..M:.:..;:&;..:..F_;7..:..:10 Help Wented, M & F 710 1864.1 Main St., HB customers home. Must be MMaturehafor e~rlycaDwomlroan. Must be able to read blue Siamese cat Vie. Bolsa EXP. Japanese Gardener. COUPLE Domestic Ex--* 847-2466 *-good driver and have ust ve ear, m print & mikes. ~· ctrica & Edinger, H.B. Comp. Yard maint. Shrub-CC'llent 'local references ACCOUNTING CLERK AUTO PARTS t----"--'=-"---pleasant personality, See [ :12~.,;:·:496-;:~1097:;:;;::::::::. 846-3410. ~ry.w ~. r· re e est. sum. Far East Agency; Assist credit manager in Exper. or will train. Young, CREDIT Charles \Voodard, Service\ i MODEL :oo~~ DEL S' ~D Blk BurHmeBse cat. Vic. ~MOaltW 3&. <'DGE Hf2131 l W387-5196. vtypee1i.fyt1"et ',relit applicatiodens, ~iortioue'v'esfast5311earnpsoer. Call ASSISTANT Man;!n';.1soN & SON * * * WOMEN, ~EN uuwntown . . a re a . "" • p anted. M & F 710 " n, prepare · u...,, · · · 2626 Harbor Blvd,, \\'anted for Jall and winter 960-1290. · .CL~~""~!PSe posits, maintain 'xerox ma-AVON MAKES Major household-appliance Uncoln-Mercury fashions. Call for appt! FND Bike Vic : Hamilton & J~ chine, etc. ~tany flm:! com· CHRl::>t1~Ut..::i ·ru.c. ..,r..ASQN manufacturer. with new fa-2626 Harbor Blvd., 675--8442 Bushard, H.B. Exper. Amer. Gardener A" FUN PLACE ~Y bene111s. ~a~I ~rs. 't'U l:S~ JULLY cilities in Orange Co. has =~=-"Co=•oota::...::M:::eaa=..._-__ MACHINISTS AMERICAN BEAtmES 96'J..5046 Mo Main!., Tree trin1, TO WORK eennlan or m eryiew. Eam exf,ra money tor giftB opening for an individual GENERAL nursery wwker, A1odels Academy FOUND Sma ll oran-male Landscape 552-8101 · 642-43?1 or apply at 1 ,h e as an AVON H.epresentaUve wi1;b experience in W'bole8ele tandscano or 11u rs 'e r y 3700 Newport Blvd N.B. · .,~ DAILY PILOT 330 \\est · , · credit & DCC'Ount reconeilia· r- stomach, call (1) 496-7890. J"N ll'U.. v "'" S2.50 hr & up, Laguna Hilla Studio Apt ava. .Adults only tiger cat has sfitchei on Geiieral SirVice1 :JJ~ -~ t -Bay Street, Co~ta Mesa. ~, .. ~1;,~ spare tune. Call: boo. Fam.iliari• .. v.rith fi--background, 21 yrs & over, & MOTEL Maid to live-in "THINGS" by ~loose. Ge·"i e . ~u ~ MffiITIOUS young adults BABYSITTER Housekee plan financing & construe-Nursery El Toro 831>-5653 • 492-ll74 El Rancho Motel, Lost S55 Car~n!Ty, """"'~., Plum· c; c;n for sales positions. Must use ow hon"""" ~ . h pc~, t'ion 1ndust:ly laws would be s c t-~ '"'.....-" own cars in \vork. Call n . ';' ... "'l"'rtaoon, ve ..Jn he'\pful, although not ab-GET INTO SHOW BUSINESS · ' LOST Oct. list. Male Tabby :~~f~ec. Rem ode I in g fl {J !!62-458.l before 11 ant. 06~ ine oui. 00-0166 eves, sohrtely necessary. Candy girls • usherettes MACHINE MOTEL Desk Clerk. Detail cat, neutered. V\c. ·Bch & C-. eJ.ee A N S \VE R 1 N G 8 ervite 5-4&30. Please torward resume~ in· needed. Must be we 11 oriented. Some typlna;. Will Heil, striped legs,, white CARPENTRY, elecu·ical. telephone opr. Full time, BABYSITI'ER-Daytime & eluding salary requirements groomed & attractive ~ train. OU Sunday & Mon-, chin, neck, stomach & feet~ plumbing, fix·H. F & B day shift & \\'eek-ends, 228 Eves. RespollSlble lady. to: CLASSIFIED AD '#545, over 18. Apply in person. OPERATORS day. -*-8521 · Pink nose ,&-~n eyes. home Repair, 66--1403 Now Hiring F t Lagun References pref. 644-5937 Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, South Coast Pina Theater MOTEL MAID WANTED Please call 847..{621 aft '5:30. H•uling Bu· s y ores • a. BABYSrM'EJ4 mature for Costa 111esa, Calil. 92626., No. 1, 3410 s. BristOI., Costa will train, apply Ip person, CAT, white Persian' wtth , BO ~ APT". Mgr. Exp'd. for 15 , toddler, my home. ~::ll, Equal Opix:>rtunit:y Eniployer "'Mii'ii'iia;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, Costa Mesa ·Inn, grey tipping, Rep u'b 1 i c LOCAL moving & hauling unit~ Costa Mesa. I FV 968-3475 f 30 DELIVERY • homes area, 2763 Tern Cir. -.by student. Large truck. CallC.C. Doyle. 548,1168. area, a15: . on1-~ ~-for early GIRL FRIDAY . Ex·pen"enced MOTOR ROUTE. CM 962-7464 n . rd ·n. ao-• 534-1846 NIGHTS BABYSIITER needed part m b ig-LoM. tunes Hon1e Needed ,lmmedla.tely ~ l\fake \\'.e have aJ!,OJ,>enin&: for. a · · • ""'wa · ""'88' ..._.,J~ or AUTO DETAIL MAN time some eves·& wk/en(js. Of!liverr Route, Must have motor routtfcairier lft South WST Jadii!ii:-gold warch -rn m=-0647.---· · · · E . . . • . -, ,, BalbOa area. 675--0433. econo~1~~ e.ar, ~ yrs old your own decisions. l\iore 1 ........ 1 ........... Niguel or near Snug Harbor NB GET RID bF UNSIGIITLY xper. pn;f d. Primai.ily ne\v · No solic1hng, ·no collecting, than just a job for gal w/ ' Immediate .r;:;~-Jst" ... Piease call 1116173. Re\\1U"d. 558...rim TRASH & DEBRIS, $l2 Apply :;.:; ddi ly car ~etaiL Steady Job. Co. BEER TENDER -Female 21;!! hrs dajly, Westminster good typing &: pleasing per· days. L 0 AD . c 0 t LEGE bene~ts. Good hrs. Pl~ant No exJ?'rience needed. GG, HB, area, Good sup-sonality. Good hrs. Top pay. ·on.nfngs Harry Seely, 642--021 for in· STUDEN'l', 548-G4 28 151 E. Coast Hwy. working conds. Apply ~n per-496--9023, Dave plementary Income, 638-2.924 Xtra long term assignment. r-formation and appointment. GERMAN Shorthair Pointer Newport Beach son only, See Mr. Nielsen, BARMAIJ>, top salary. Open . • Irvine 540-4450 For Experie .. ced Equal Upportunity Employ. ''ic. O.C. Airport. CaD SKIPWADER & dun1p truck Terry Buick day nites & wknd shifts DELIVERY & Stock Work 17802 Sky Park er. 64H266 aft. 6 PM . I work. Concrete, ·asphalt, Equal Oppor. Eniployer 5th & Walnut, Hunt Bch eall betwn !lam '&: 6pm. F/time, Must be neat & NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO MACHINISTS & NEED 6 couples. Earn REWARD! 1 58\\'ing, breaking. 816-TI10 M .,,., ' know the area See Harold Tempo Tempo~~ H I .,~ "'~ 2nd •-Don't give up the ship! on-Fri, ......r9935. . · , , ·-J e P ~ ........ mo ns ..,. NECKLACE \\'atch, round, 32 FT. FURNITURE Van \Vhite ElephRnt Dime-A-Line "Lisi" >t ,·0 closso'fi'ed Ship BAR Hi-Time, 495 E. 17th St come. Annt. ~11 am. all • TENDER, ·p/time. No ,....·! ., GIRL FRIDAY one girl of· " see through, . crystal back for local fw·n hauls & gen'! e todRy 642-5618. to Shore Results! M2-5678. exper. necess. '-"' fi ' MACHINE OPERATORS 546-5 789 · with green trim. 64tH287 hauUng. ;.JS-1862, 557-2736. #".... ----------Call &14-txr.tl DELIVERY I ce. Must be sharp & , Newspaper Delivary after 2 pm. LIGHT-~fOV!NG. · VER~ _... dQJ! ........ L<U> ~ , Delivery-Driver -part-time personable. CM are a · Early morn, 1.fust have car. WST 1 yr old Sbeltie (?tfin. 1 REASONABLE. STUDENT 13: , BOAT REPAIRMAN over 21, Jn Huntlngtori _06'.c:i..s4<JO:c:,:::c,=~~-~-2nd ShKt 3P~11PM Over 21. Pa,y approx. $200 Collie) Reward, Vic: Sand ' \vrnl VAN. 646-1.MG AJJJ , ~~ Waterfront boat yard exper. Beach area. 16532 Beach HARDWARE Sales Clerk 3rd Shift 11P~7AM mo. Hunt. Beh 1u:ea. 847·2300 Point Homes, Santa Ana. .. /(/~illh~. Pfef'd. No college people Blvd. Huntington Beach. Apply in person only, H.\V, bet. 10 am. 545-2443. wrn,u.n.cy P ease. Penn. job. Blad<ie's DENTAL OFC MGR W>ight Co, 126 Rochester T 0 NITE ROOM CLERK LOST greyhoµnd, female 5 A CONVENIENT SHOPPING AND Boat Yard, Newport Bea~h. Dental specialist' needs I St. Costa Mesa. O ~· \V/exper. Apply in person, yrs old. ,Nev.•port t1l£S, SEWltoH; GU1ot: FOR THE BOOKKEEPER w/typmg someone ""'ho enjoys work-1-IElP wanted lot• a beauh-M1'll1 ,, Chucker Del W{!!bbs Newporter Inn, Nanie "Deserla". HB/FV GALON THE GO. ability Jor ~u Newport o~ce ing w/public to handle busy ful sup11er club. \Ve n~ area. Contact 847-9192 ot expanding CPA fll'l!1, ok. S'hrthnd & typing nee. cocktail waitresses, \\'&It· Engine L•th• llfJ 7 Jamboree Rd., N.B. Lost gray, tan & white tabby Good opportunity, s e '! d Hunt. Bch. Sal. open resses, oyster man, dish· -~ Turret Lathe eat. Lg. green eyes, Harbor For an ad In Wo1T1anrs ~orld reswne & salary req. Wnte 714· 962-6671. • \va.5he1'. Female applicants N/C Drills Grinders Vu Homes area. $ 2 5 • Cl.assified Ad No. 955 Daily . . must be attractive & natur· Sun•n Hone reward. 6 T:>-5923 or 640-U29 C~ll .Mary Beth 642-5678, ext. 330 Pilot P.O. Box 1516 Costa CON'l'RODENTAL ASST/ al looking. Appl;: at Kismet Mesa, Calif., 92626 . , L NURSi:: Inter. 1100 W. Coast H\\y, Seamed-To-Slim! BOOKKEEPER / secretary ~appy mtelligent, motivated N.B. Ask ror Eric. 6"5-ai79 1---1~ r>rof. care for home nr ofc. Carpets, upholstery & floors, 546-5715.' Accounting 2 LADIES e.xp. want housecleaning. Clean !>'OUT ACCOUNTING & home for $2'2. 979-4314, TAX Sl!RYICES 83&-0751. [lLLJ.l Reasonable. Ca 11 C7lti I COMPLETE CLEANING 67l).fi676, ask for Rick. \Vindows, 1-loors. Rugs, Babysitting Paint. Free est. 645-3716. BABYSIT my home day-Ironing nights-weekend. By hour day I ---"------or ""'eekly play room-fenced IRONINGS done in my home. yard. Near Eader School ExceUcnt work and reason. 968-BOE able. You furnish han~rs. BABY S I TTING. Warm Phone 642-~l. lunch. Exp .. references. Masonry 536-2676 fo · individual wanted for pn>-Ar pl consr: ~mfuvj" gresslve office. Hours 7-3, HOSTESS. ~ays. Apply aft SP. Y 1~~ Tu . " salary open 979-6510 Spm, Pehte A u b e r g e u1te , slin. DENT~recept Ort~tic Resta(J,r&n!,_ ~~ S .. Pla.U!. BUSBOYS, days. Apply at ffi FV . · .. I Dr., S.A. !So. CoasfV1llage) Petite Auberge Restaurant ~n ce, smok~a'. s~1:i~ n~ HOUSEKEEPER -daily 3WO S. Plata Dr., S.~ (So. familiar w/back office pro-p/time, Must have car. 3 Coast Village) 55&-0556 eedures cn4> 979-l400 older children. Cali M-F, Buyer/Exp, . ~DENTAL Receptionist, S-SPM 644-9242 Small ma·t"I nandhng equip Laguna Hills El Toro area HOUSEKEEPER "'anted lor WESTCLIFF exp'd, all p~s mastered'. father & 11 yr, old son. Personnel Agency Salary open, replies. con-Modest . salary but easy. tMarK Ill CenterJ fidential. 831>-ll30. Must drive-. ·Phone 963-5765, • ~ DES~ Clerk, nite sbµt 8 HOUSEKEEPER I Compan- 1 ;;;;' 1;66:;l;E;·;-~·iii·i;;;r,;S;.A;.;;;;; I pm. Ask for ,. J1l c k I e ion, Jh-e in/out. Must drive, J • Westbrook. SUrf & Sand no smoking. 962-5224, HB • CHECKER AUTO STORES hotel. Cali Mon thru Fri HOUSEKEEPER, f / tlme. 1iioniiliiiyii494-05 ... ii7ii4;;;;;iilii;;iii~I Mesa Vex;de Conv. Hoseital, 1• 661 Center St,, CM 54S-5.585. Di1hwelh1r1 .Needed ANCIENT·b\ARINER Day & Night ' 2607 W: C6ast. Hwy. Ne'WJ>Ort Beach ,.,.r '·fi46.:0201 Apply 3 pm-S~prn. Mon-Fri . ~. ' DISHWASHER need..!.' ·Ex· perleneed Good pay a gOod hours.· jteferences wanted. CarrM?i·s~ Dinlng & Pie Sho1>: 628 N. Coast Hwy., L.B. • INSURANCE SALES No exp nee .. earn while you learn, pa1t timer· eves & wknds, fuD time w,hen quali- fied . . Farmers Insurance Group Ed Le.ni * 540-1834 TOOLMAKER (1st Shift) Long 1'e1m Em,ployment lib'" IAY°ifs In Our Manufacturing Area Excellent Workint <;onclition1 Company Paid Benaflt1 SATURDAY INTERVIEWS ' . N.ovemlier 10th From IAM 'tll Noon BERT EA CORPORATION 18001 Von Karman lrYlne, Calif.! 833-1424, ext 294 or 833-1425 ' Equal Opp. Employ•; NOTEI Reel E1tete S•l11men I! you have a license or want one, see Peg Bolinger for CQIW_dential interview. Red c~. 497-1161. --'---~----NURS~-Aides & Orderlies, all shifts, Exper or trai.neeli. Interview Mon· Fri 8am-4pin Mesa Verde Conv:. Hosp, 661 Center St., CM 548-5585. PAINTER 18-40, exper. references. Steady work: Bondable. 675-8388 or 6#-2199 PART TIME AsBlsla.nl Mechanic: General vehicle servicing, minor tune up etc. Apply Capistrano . Unified School Di! tr i ct, 2612,6 Victoria B I v cl • Ca~Beach. .P/TIME SAL;ES Work 1 eve/~'ic. Party tales exper. helpful. Should eam $35/party. 64.5-3700, Mr. Big· alow.' ,. Program Mg< $22K Electronic ComJ!oM'ntS Prdd\lct Line Manager $2()K Data Communications Des~ Engr (mech) I» $141< ~ Acent Manuf to $121< Geoeral OUice , $450 Girl Fri, Buena Pk to $750 F IC Bkkpr, F. Vly $100 Se<:retary to $650 Call Jeannie Sisco & Sid Hottman NEWPORT Par_l,.......y w 0over o.. .. Ii.a. ' MWl70 ' I ·I t, 1' •• 3~ • -3 ,., t ••• _. -'. ~ . ~· - ' \l •I VI ) P. ' I •' ' • ~ ~ .,., ::..l .. -~ • ... I Cal~ I• j ~ No ' '. I • • • -· -. • • • .J' -:. .... :-_. ,,.., . ' . ' -,,,_....,,. ,_ ---.-- Hili;!oni!d, M ~ P '!~ Holp -on19d, -a P .• Help Wonted, M .. F 710 Csnwo1 a Ml1collo_. 1iml-11o-• -~II Mlscollonooui r;~·;,;::;~;.:;;n 111 Plinoi/.:;~: PILOT ~l,, Rul litol9 Llc.nll"I SECRET.ARY }'OUNG woman to work l qu'-'1t IOI . · ~ !..et "' J)O.)' half of your II-AttTacttve poottlon In c....... culiltr t. pboae. 2-3 ~ SllPER 8 Technicolor pro-* BIG PUBLIC AUCT ION * • PIAlilOS :.:Ot1:' !co. With""._ de! Mllr for"'*"" lndlvid· per wk. Good appear, jector • ......, Ke)'llone CARPET * TO NIGHT 7:30 P.M. • • ORGANS / P $75.00 wUl Pll.)' for UAt .., Secretlrt A Clrl Frf. dependabWty &: xlnl rtll mov\e camera w/lJahtt 1 ,r.:..,~b <o u r h da,. wm handlo ~ -,..q'd. No l!Udent> pleue. Xlnt c:ol'd. Will ..u all .; NEW-NEAR NEW & PRE-OWNED PULLlltTDN MUSIC t -and Esa1e & ...., -..,,,...,,..,. Mn. Mkml, 6"-'1[1111. CdM, '""" IJ.lll, ~ or BROKERS FURNITURE & APPLIANCES Our Newoat Loco-' llr-...f' '°" Uomatd dence. MUii ho"' ttood com-9:31M;. 642-63M 18191 Euclld, FOW11aln Valley • ·-. ReeJ =-bus-munlcatlve • trJ11ni lldlls. YNG man req tor llbl-. WON oo TV..UU· 1n box DON'T MISS OUT! I Blk. No. of San Dt"° ""'• C "'DEO TRA · Sllhdplul,butf;,-.i. wanttoustnr & forklift SowJdmovtecamen&pro-. INC way at Euclid. • •, J.'. INING M\llt be a1>1o wortc flex, 'operation. Xlnt comJ)lllJI Jector, Super a. Relall $460 • Partial List: 557-4136 I I~ ,; r.?4!.~ _,. for lbte ""1edWe be IM to •1>enenu, Jl'Yine 1.oc. <n4> .. u 1200 Firm 616-l'm' Rentals f $5 " lf~-~~.-YoU can avail traVd H -· Pl..,. 506-8100 . s-' ' 4 CHAIR BARBER SHOP roll! t r of our conttnWUt tend msume-a-ta!ary---.Us. Lot f mall r Til added -.., tra!ntrc and John Lum. 1ory ID P. o. Box',118. c..-YOUNG man or woman Over 200 different qualltr carpets. Mfg o s app iance&-· e top.p bar. • -..11 _ ,. Gronds -'-/ tu Edward 1 dol Mar, ea. 9'16'l5.' w/outJtandl~g penonallty. Furniture 110. on the looms of the worlds finest carpet -Barwick be<lroom set -Bassett mirror -r ·-· ' nl"l! OOW'les Thia 's• ~E><per pref d for ••~hillve mills. Over 2,000 color selections & styles Kroehler sofas -BeautyRes! mattresses ....! ~ew11;y"i .. 1n~t~.~-~. 1 ll!'rl> bod""' 1.,. ••• ~ bt .,,.,,CRET.CRY Jlt(tna >bop. 644--0820. S.lo Prl/S.t/.SU.. -Bunk beds U • ~m ~·~~ , 4vallable to any 1~;;;,; de Qua..,. control dept. oed<• I '\iiiiiiiiiii , SJ'OC~TO THE G at prices & carpet you can live with. -DUSUal double contour lounge Wurlltier ·Grand StrauA , C i .~· tt) JQW our ~~ exper. secretary to petfooll W/BETTER NITURE! No leaders, just fine IuXurious carpet. -Relax.o-Lounger -Sofas -Love Seats -, Upright piano •••••••••• $69 • 1 !-qrpru.atlon. OU.., OW' ex-f''41-ott1<>o-~: I .-ot,..,.,, 11,....J Ult'a . .I'. dolohtalJ, _ All.first tiu.alil)' gQ!ld.!. Al~ pad & in· '· Bedroom Sets -Golden coffee & end tables w1eavei'p1anosv1net '"";:.:.:.: ill;1 _.,., we t1ave Of!Cnlnp mi:. ':I· ..,..,.,....,...,., • v ~ eenter autded, dustproo!, ~tallalion by highly experienced carpet --=Recliners -=Glass Bookcasn --Shelving-"' •Y<r • ····----: _.....,._ 1'11'~~t Orange Olullty · ""=:r. reconls. · · '"· Annolre chest $99. Sofaa mstallers. · -Dming room set-Dinettes-Ilide-a-Beds-• al Cmnda In -k'14:ew / iO"nll Proportla , Inc.' =r.~m.::ridl~ Antl.n . 800 :.!.YJ:i-~iJ29·u'41: . Occ. chairs-Bar Stools-Coffee tables -~::,~~::!~--~ · ·' <aervlne an o1 otte" xln't -ts. , =:i... Sofa" Love Seat $139. Kin& Lam,ps -Stereos -TV 's -Comer Group -Maso• -Hi.mtln -Wur> • .. °"""'•County! OaJJ o..-•lie bdrm. oet $139. Dtnetto 9776 Garden GrOYI 91u.1 . w/stereo -Washers -Dryers -Refrlg's -lltzer ·-S,....y & Clari< -~ CAIL 1133-193l 17141 548-llM RED TAG SALE table I< 4 cttaJrs $39. Sola, IJU. Mattresses -lland tools & LOTS MORE ! l ! Kawai .-Steinway -Cable t. f·RIAL ESTATE F.qua!Oppor. Em~m/I 1 DAY~&NSALE1 !t:·~~2=1 '"; Gardell' ,._8 Items subject to prior sale. Ne~".w.nKn~ke~~ J 1 I ~SAWMEN SECR-"•y lolany, maey hard to llnd tables,2lampe,$199.Speclal OIUf MAS E $ohmer · Earn ' '"'""" Items. Prlceaulowaa: savingsonhouorfllls!!! Cub T RS AUCTION e Organs - I . up to We are ~ for a top ~ boil~ $19.50, Ola.in "Financing. BolA available. .CU-6650 ' (formerly Windy 1 s) 100 to c.h<ole from t' . 85% notch oecretar;; toJearn the r.;;;,. Occ. ta&lea $12.SO, P1c-REPOSSESSION CENTER "'1V ' COME BROWSE AROUND New Used and Trode·lns , i ' ~ I;;.":.. ~· k • 1u.r.o. Hall ...., 619 E. 4th St .. Santa""" 207512 Ne~rt Blvd., Costa Mesa Op<lgan " ..... " ........ 199 : ·, 1 curatel,y '& would like~ $44.50, Oocka $ 3 9 . 5 O, Df.iJ..y 10 to 7 * Sunday u,.s 1 Hammond w/rbythm •• ;6915 1 challe"" Reply citeui!led Drttoerl $49, Buflela $09. MOVING from big houor CHrogo Salo 112 G ... _ Solo 112 (Behind 9ny's Bldg. Mat' ls.) Kimball Swln&er . v .... l1l!5 ,. Work For Lout Ad no. 9i4 c/o Dally Pilot, P,LUSUNL;_·D·PLINGUS : •LPLUE S New avocado velvet ..,.;· Costa Mesa * * 646-8686 Wurlitzer 3 keyboard • · $ll96 • ( , F or The Bot P.O.Boxll60eo.taM... ._ -I< chair, &<>Id & wbiteSACRIFICEeoo<IOtrbttmaa GARAGE· SALE • t.DiYreyHotiday , ....... $495 ·> OURSELF! • ea 93;26, ' ' A mmple<e now llblpment Italian tablea, New dUllng gilt Items, all new. Ex-TURTLEROCK Sat Nov. Go rago Solo 112 MllCOllonoous Ill ""1n Caprice .......... ~ · l ~!l'!'!!"!~~~liJL!!'!!'-m unwiual item1 flom the room.table, cbina, 6 chain, ~ve metal detectors, 10th, S..Spm. 18921 AnUOch 'nloi'naa A-1 Spinet ••••• $11 1 J I C.•11 Ed KAs•blen SECRETARY-EXEC. 88 Eaattt .. ~1~ ... ~1~ ~e!.7& misc item 1 • marine radio, CB radio, div· Dr,' Irvine. Delux walnut ANTIQUES! Roseville; col-2 SEMI antique roo~ me., Hamnwnd-Baldwin-Conn J ! . '6" ""_._. Shrt.hnd , ..,,.... ... ~ ~"'" .,...... _....,""' ing 'equip., depth recorder, &: wrought iron bar w/2 ored glass; sheet mmlc: Oriental rugs 5400 ea Wurl.ltzer-~y--Klmbe.11 ., .1 ; .._.. yrs ' ..,.,.ng 'Ir: , ""'handleral truck It trailers. Prices on ANTIQUE Oak McKaskey utronOmical telescope, elec stools. 2 maple end tbls, Post cards. Hou s e h 0 Id She to und' 1 ble · ' Yamaha...l.Gulbransen exp nee to e ... ___ ti will be ar1ne head ~. k ~ t d ra ·" ~ a ' Cll'Ca, FULLERTON MUSIC - .;i R,ul Ett•te .S1le1 th~ chanei!Pni ~tlon for 1Z"~t anlowques amaz.. Register, Oriental table, ~ • uuc or ~'"'p cus om rps, orange & items; circa 1920 Spanish 1890, 5 dia., extends to 9' ' I 1.. Otti ___._ ..._. th ~-1a1 . TIU Lam U 'dating winch, AC/DC port. combo.· avocad'o for plan 4 tam. chandelier. Sat. 11-4;30; $350. Avon rubber boat, """"'t m N. rla'rbor. Fullerton " 11' ce '"-~ ....,.~ter 1an """' specialist, Oental otc . Sblrts Sat 10 AM any p, qw TV radio, fm. & other misc rm. & kit. toys & loads Sun. 1.().2. 4342 Brookside, $600, used lx sell 1200, 17J .. JI05 ;_ . ytirqe saJea people want-exper/not nee. but must en-FIRSI' COME,. FI R 's T all llems • remodeling. sporting ~. Eves & .of goodies. Irvine·, l blk. below Walnut, 1 , !W better than average com-joy working w/pubUc. Sal. SERVEi ~2501 wknd 962-4283 G Evinrude motor for same, hrs: Open Nights 'tll 9 • Tom Miler, SUA811 open, Hwit Bch. n4: 962-667! •ROOMS FULL OF beautiful TAPPAN Retrig side by side s, · . ·OVER 59 antique clocks reentree tract. co:rt $100, sell $50. Other Sat. 'til 5:30, Sun. 12..S P tlonl1t/Typl1t SECRETARY./ . Chrlltmu gift ldeu. dn, our kitch too sml, 1100. GARAGE Sale Sat I< Sun. ~--watches from IID-$600, Jawolry 115 ~· Item~" 831-1453, 33:!"12 FACTORY Anti of th W Id Dani&h Mod 2 t Washer, gas & e:lec. dryers, ruul table, Garrard tum Dosmia, Niguel Shores. CLEARANCE tor a young Onu'lfl RECEPT que1 • or · sea bnch gas stove, radiaJ arm saw ta.ble, F~ ~r .. Llve bait DIAMONDS, Opals, Gold · ~Flin,_, ?.fult have at Fast irowing,Nj(•i 18.ilboat * 22 Rooms of AnUques ~~~~:it> ~~drwr w/lathe, sofa&: Jove seat, Ulnk, Girls 20 bike, Honda watches, Cocktail r ings & AUCTION •ARTISAN 2-man church. ;i:oui~ °lltsyr exp. Xlnt hours, manuf. hiring fi¥' bead ot-I!: * From 22 Countries , • p0rt dshwahr, clotMi infant 175. ·91m Bobbie Cir. HB other fine jewelry. Pri pty, 838 E. 1st: St., SA. Pawn Shop ·model. W&s, $9500. No\.f, 'f'I & an opportwUty for flee. Good front oU a~ !!ti1 Newport Ave. 8 alUOJ, mod. bU-in end to adult. Misc. 2829 ·Santa •962-6351 must sacrifice, 838-55!l;. & E'urnl.ture Store Llquida· $5750. -. ~nt. Cont&L't the pearance mM Exf¥:. typ-Costa Mesa MS-9033 table, wb. oau,g. Quaint Ana Ave, CM 6C-4290. GARAGE SALE, Furniture Miscellaneous 111 tion. Frl.<hcy, Nov. 9, e ARTISAN 2-man theater : = ro:1~~~ FIX· !!!·.d.60 2 n0Yrswp. m.exp~ --~d·. SCRAM.;'LETS palntop :.i79~ desk,. K1aJs HARVARD classlcs complete (some Wrought iron) & Ap-7:30 ~f. Sat., Nov. 10, model with band box ard ·~'t ·~-t near new $75. MaPle spin-pliances. 106 Coral Ave, 10 AM. belts. Was $7500. Now, ~ E PJ'IONlSl'ITYPISI'-For info call 6f2.-0542 LRG oak tbl, 3 pc sofa, n1ng wheel lamp $100. Balboa lsland HUGE EVERYTlflNG GOES!! $4750. 1 time U to 5. Uniwnal Equal Opportunity Employer • burled walnut lamp tbl Maple loye seal, rocker FURN. Old 'I'hings, Head • AUSTIN Pipe organ, 2- arlne, 1599 SUperlor Ave, SE C. w/or'ganizational ANSWERS lampa, maple br se't'. $115.0ld&l$55mbc.items. skis, Collector re cord s Tom'aF•ctorySale man. ll ranks. playirw 4 Costa Mesa 642-3235 recordkeeplng & statistica'l 675--0922 8846 El ?mrldente, F.V. Households, misc. Sal 10-3'. Designer Holiday Dresses in Vista.. $3750, RJ E c E p TI 0 NISl'-typlst. typing ability for Anaheim Com! -st.. -Blimp -OAK wood table. 2 buflets. 847-'656. 504 Tustin, NB. ALL DA y SALE ·& asson.d fabticit. • NEl>"\)RT"\'lpe organ, II-. ~~IBeco~traUlctor. Hun-~~r:rt::it CPs!nd nrn::.!'<t 'Gravel -CAiqUAGE :m7 ~~:c«;,·· C~M. SAT & Sun, 10 arn-4 pm, Hide-GARAGE Sale: Twin <;)ver SO pallets of storage Sat, Nov 10 -9 am-4 pm ~~~· ~y lD yn:. ~_...,.. a w interview Y· re ..... ,~ . -CLASSIF1ED A1>: Wanted .a.w.l * a·bed, chairs, cushions, 10 ~teads, 2 ice cream COrnbined from 3 Comparu'es m W. 16th St., C.M. e Empty cora>fes. --, . 'fib ca,u 842-2526 ~a~ r~ ~~0~~ -Second-hand ~ b)o 12' orange sectional. $100 cycle 3 spd Ward \Vasher, chairs, 1rg ottoman, cabinet 1. BALBOA TRANSFER Bldg. 703 pedals, chhlldl A: kft';_q" I -, _ • Box Ji6 Coita M 0 Calif .youngCA·RRIAl¥lY student with wkle game table & chairs $100. like new, Lamps, dishes, for storage. 646-fi523 & STORAGE NEWPORT ORG~ r 1 ,... 9262.6 • • . GE. Avon bottles. 551-4n6. -tlothes, etc. 512 Catalina GARAGE SALE_ Sat. Nov 2. LAGUNA BEACH VAN Atrl'OMATIC GARAGE FOR APP'l'. 6'>'1500 .;, L!H!fe SECRE."TARY pert 11 J OooS •N ENDS · excess SOFA 9' Contp; matchl(lg Dr, NB rear alley. 642-6432 10th, from 9-4. Barstools, & STORAGE ~~ b~E~ Fi~t . f ffi m-: n pieces of golden oak Jurn., ·~i' k>vaeat'xlnt cond . GARAGE Sale-World's Blg· bike, original gilt items. 3. HARBOR MOVING&. SI'G. Spe~\a.1 sm.95 ins ta I led Pl"Al'\fOS -ORGANS ~. hopro 021~~ ~~ ·~exible, incldg chairs, tab I e 1, ·~·* geat! Everything 10· people Misc 603 Main St., HB AU(TION w/5 yr guar. •~-3577 or New & u-... G-at --•ectlon. me, ~· ' cabinets. Also o mat e ever needed ·or o\lined In o;,,r OR:U ~"' 11o:.1 , HAR.80llt SERVICE Station Help cbHtnut bed 1s t ead &8U~.M.edJt.:coffee tbl, theirentirelivestrombirlh ~~ases:-,P:d;, d~40s2t,' . · . 530-t415 . ~. ~~ige prices._ Open ,' • REALTY wanted d&,)'L .Good waps. dreuer. Unique Home a com cs~ lampa A 50~ to old age. 18767 San }"eUpe, , UNCLA .. .e FOR Sale, 2 lb. down mum· s, Wldays. The best &. ,' Apply {n pefllDn, 300!E. 17th Real Estate, 2441 E. est ed. Xlot. 644-6621 . Ftn V1y 5t()..498f . books, etc .• 4804 ~yer .. NB llft~D my sleeping bag. EXcellent deals are always ~t: • · '"*""els Off-Shore Sl, C:O.ta """'· Hwi:, CdM.· Prlo«J to .,.u 7' BLUE Green Couch, iai. BABY crib., h tghc ho 1 r, 64:>-42Sl * STORAGE-* c:ol'dttton. IJO, Lind a, --Wallichs Mu5tc City 11~ male onccs opening SERVICE StatK>n hlechanic (were In the re"1, estate 195 Anaheim Ave.,.C.M. childrens clothes, &: ma.n,y FURN, Refrigs. clothes, 546-4478. South~ Plaza 540-28.10 , ~1! Ground noor opportun. exper. Class A Uc. f'/time'. bu$1ness not furnitureJI Olli ~736 other nice I things,. &t & Mi&c, Sat/Sun 8-5, 1888 NEXT SAT., NOV. 10 Miscellaneous ·r; kit ambitious sales ~ Top Pay. Arco, 19th & -LACE * OOFA1& LOVESEAT * SUn. 158 W. Martpoa, San :;,~ew Circle, CM 10 AM-ALL DAY Wanted 820 FREE ORGAN LESSONS as t , 1mmediate Uoor time Newport, CM. BeauWul band made Vene-Never uled $149. Clemente. 235 E. Paularino St. loog as you likel Adults \.~~· Immedia te earn-SERVICE Sta Emplo)« t!4n lace table cloth, com-Record ple.ytt S:Z. 968-1'910 GARAGE Sale: S&t-sun. 9-5. GARAGE sale, clothes, pool * COSTA MESA * WANTED: Grey bathroom ~come W altend Tuesday . us· possible. We have sol.kl Mwrt do ~r work &. plete with 12 napkins. $850. SOFA 9' velvet, matching Stove, oottee table, clotbel, :~· !!,~2 P~~-mHuchB E .. of Newport Freeway aink,. pref. 18" x ·2()'' Am. night at 1::l1 PM. We want ;. ... .a:•-'-·trom 1 new home drive tow truck. 11!'.X> w. canpo;•tm~nine:A,, !~°...:' ap-5' kweseat. Xlnt oond. 75 lb. Camper tee box. RoU. Nov 's.llcome ...... s:'' · · TERMS_ CASH OR Standard "Dreslin""548-8598 everyone to leam to pl.ay ~o;.k>nsi o the Ouistl· Coast H\I.')'., N;B. ' ' · 64.f}:.l459en.. .,...,.......,,,, 0 r 673-<rl15 of heavy canvas, etc. 303 BAYfiliORES Cloth CASHIER'S CHECK ONLY evea the organ! Tom Dieterich ~ siu: oo~tsl'OCK SERVICE Sta. Full time ANTIQUE clocks in "as is" DINNETI'E ' fief. and bel". Princeton Qr. CM 54f;..(1;29. pans quilt-l!ICl'Qps es,~, liouRbQid furn./{):rlllml ef. NEED ·lkilng equipment for M~~2S5iiYd.C:00: < 14)1'1&13841:12ll1592.-2&G dl9thays ... Jl,Nfust bert.~~· Arco condltion· one and two ~~551 ~ery ANndbl QUES ... ~~~~te .. llOi., atereo, Sat lM; 2652 ~ ... -F!JAppliance,, Q;tfice ~~dren, ages 4 to 14. ,H;;;arlto"=='r=,'OCMO::...=~~--I s ewpo ~·1c weight • Frmch G 11 ri uu.i -bed "~. oce chr, Crestview NB 648-2692 lVl"11. e cabinets. Office ' -SfORY.cLARK COnaole SHIPPING CLERK Ge~ wall cioc.! e~ DUNCAN PbYfe bu fl et, shop hair dryer, Chr1lbnu HUGE G . --' . Machines. Antiques. Cb1or & WANTED . good violin for n--ut!lul ~·,·~ _............... excel1 t tree, tv, tent. 215 Joa.'nn · ~ IMUf,! furn, B&W TV's. ·Slere()8. $ew1ne child. Reasonable. Ca JI .IX6 ~ l-.. Receiving, Inventory1 Expel. more. Private Party . ..._.... ... ..,.. en con-Pl, NB, Udo Sanda S.t/~ dishes, ~. misc, 'Sat Jl,lactrines. Golf Set. Yamaha 963-6.120~ s . • i;.t;.95i9 • only. Steady. 642-3472, NB. 963-6351. dttlon. $50. Call ~1&17-. le Sun S-6 Nov 10 & 11th 350 , Cyck,. Bar & Stools ~ . ' • ---=.=,:.::::::..c::_ __ Spray Gun.()porotor ANTIQU& lO' nautical bar. T OOFA $115, dlair $1>. Very PATIO Sale . Sun Only. Tab!• 328 Flower CM . !OO' · -m· Barrel · Box · WANTED; Used Waterbeil Spodil'tl Good, 130 Now Hin• g For P tlru -•-Ne<d •-r-a~ room eood cood CaD anytime "-Chan, pin& .poog ~ QU" -··-'dis'-··•-Tru• '·--'·. es, with fralne. UDcla ..,. ·c.n1•,;;o=·='--'=;;;;...-.;.:,;i n art e mom & ~~moor1' · ••· -· ·~· · ' • ' & aoces.. l!e<hpnls, lamp -':::"'2 • ·~"~'"nn""" .... ' ~~ Braoo, ~""';,.,.~Bric-U-. 54&-4C1I. •c·ci!''l:: <>> 1~: Yamaha --"hrls shiltJ, exper w/spraytng Ideal tor comm er c la I 963-47SI ' shades ~ misc. 1830 Poit ... _.., ~ tw•f 1 ~ a-c, ....cwa, ~ Mis-~ ,_ y,./G K·-• , .... • tl'ftCls lacquer or r@sln w/~nuner-display. Only taKI. 673-3177. CUSTOM-Made Furniture Manleigb Pl, N:.~. · . misc. Open an 1 week.-8-5, cellaneous, ett. PLUS MUCH Muslcal_l ~~ . ~ ...,_ !150, Robinson'' Fashion hland clal equipt. Sal~ com· BLACK MAflOGANY i' High quality.' your dealgn· 457 Tustin Ave., N.B. MORE! ,., . ~.. ' spear gun '50: ' Alf AfeaS m•nsurate w/rx..,.. 540-ISll Highboy w 1ma tc h1 n r or mine: m.Q:IS, GARAGE Sale: 2 ttchciol G!\RAGE Salr. Fri-Sat-Sun. E. C "EO" JENKINS RENT F'*·,a 1' ~~ .;;;;:;;::~·t~--~-, Irvine. , dresser MAll«Xi, dropleaf table le deaks, desk, ~ks, clothes, 2994 Mllbro off Baker Furn ~ ·--' ,• • OR BUY Wil1t :p_\1 ~ts .men's. i'OOd SfATl~ICAL TYPISr ~ s.J6.«152. 6 chl1n, $135. ~,! c · l tie~~ 1Jt0 9 i Bikes, MLsc. • ' Auctioneer,~. ph. 540-3880. OOWN. Drumj P.f.~.~ff. .• '~Uion."' AIM> ski equip. .. -'-Security Reoeptlonlot, CLAWFOOT Oak tbl, oak • 64H027 Sat ~ GIGANTIC -.ale Fri STEiU1N . Cioitara, A01ps, ~ .call d.,.., 97!h11Jlll., • , .,, 1:1~ , 2 Yl'I exp or equivalent. Mult planter, curved r;1u. china 1.' GOLD Tuxedo aofa 6' · Sat & Sun. 626 Center st: G SUVl!I', Wallace, 1'~ .. aU brands. · NEW & used ~ equJJ> • ~ In pcnon lD-5 ha.Ve prior training In typing cabinet, 435 Coltorl NB Lawmn iota. ' SUZUIQ motorcycle, ln'ing c M 642-2161 or 548-6842 Antique pattern, 8 eettings No age limit, no· J>ttttnt need· ment·' ''SAtlUFICE• Call ~2 Faahioll Isl., NB ~:i:~. ::.T~em.!1.'br::! Applloncoa I02 *548-Sl&O* ::.i,-:u,.~,,:. ~ uOO I.lie Gar. Sale: Sport, ~ .. ~~. ~ ~a1! S'i:T0~ii'.'s~%'~.11'.ff: 9 ' ._.... A'wknds ~ . ' E Oppor. Employtt County Alrpon . .,..;;, 10vel1, ~GIIT DA"IAGE SALE Gor ... S.lo 112 Sun. 423 Esther St, CM. ...tique, ~ capip. Orip stamp -. $2 ea, New TWO Convenient store, Roalf~r.l'"t'" ,... I.! IRL Temporary, 40 oU.lces, good fringi'benefl~ New Hotpolnt ref r lg• a M8-2l55 · art objeds. ~~ SoOO. · 673-4812 LOc.tions to Serve You B•r '32 , per \\'fflc, une nights & Salary commensurate with dishwuhen & ran I ea' GARAGE Sale • Nov. ll>ll HSH/GDS & tum. Mod. off GARAqE ~e. Fr l • S",D n' BRAND new paD~e~. ,..._FULLERTON MUSIC "JQ;L9ENA1UR cominerclil PEP',. •'eekenda, Startl~ ability. 833-0051 wasben .l dryers, ta.ctorY . ~. &or tiles, bar· furn, etc. 336 E. 20th CM Antiques,.D'll.SC & baby ttmis. amps, turntable, deck• 18191 Euclid Fountain Valley freezer: ., • e If servfOe.!!11?" . "24, Fun ahop, SUPER aervtce'•atatlcn at--warranty. stools, famous brand ·~~.A. & Tuatin Sts. 423 Poppy Ave., CdM. ~ers. Sl:70· Beautltul l Bllc. N. San Diego Frwy. loadine' 33" hfgti.. bY .a· 4 Santa An a , tendant needed. 'Neat tn ap-BEAClf CrrY APPLIANCE clothine obu.p, mlsc. 5672 n good want &d ti a good U. ~· turquoJ.Se necklaces. & Euclid. wide by 'll" deep $100. pear. Wqes •n for right 3623 W. Warner, SA 545-0780 Mlddlecoff, H.B. Need a ''Pad"'? Pu.l-e an ad! vestment. , 1811 aft 5. e 557..tl36 e 675--0960. N, """"' In man. Apply lloguna Oiev-al62 N: Tu~ era..., Antiquff '°° Aritlquoa IOO Al,ttlquoa IOO BOOKS, twru,,::i:;; palntl~, 122 N. Haroor r'ullerton TV ~""-'"-R"i~d-io_H_IF_I___ • &Utltore.Daya,~ ~~Cout ,Hwy , .. . ' =· uch ' ladie'a • 171·1805. St ' . , . IM iMust hove-. TAKE my pt.lne calls on •;~~~~&e::··························· .. 1 ~ Suiim10-0,"l::'~ ACTION SALE oroo . ~~~· llll3 )'OW' pt.lne when I'm out• fqr bit in. $75 Imported la"' •• FOLLOW THE SPOTLIGHT ' ' Newport Beach. Sat only. F...i.rs, Gibooo" ZTVEN'!"', t RCA & ~~· - L. pharmacy, 11,111 Realtor • P.O. Box 2448 bridal gwn ti: tm etc, $35. · · • LARGE steel closets excel etc. Drums. bonw. factoey "' 5 e~, P ess ,_,. H.B. 92647 az 1~12 548-5633 • . • cond.,... brass p u J I e y ~· guitars $15J1j: Dealers than .~·discounters, With 3 1 ~'-~ .. , chazideliEr cafe d 0 0 rs invited. 140 Cabrillo, (off yr. Pl$.fe tubes. l yr part;s , AT, quality assur· T~~k~p.=.e!rior! ·NEWIMagicOiefMJcrowaw •.t. ' .• btaidi!c!ck..:Wmlsc. chrome gar'. ~~~Next tu I?thJ, ~~~~~ ~~a~~~' 1back und in Balboa division. lfAiS Bab-oVen. Lists for' $400. Sell · ment ra • · 962-1944. · · display. '73 models priced '1,;=;a:kwiol~ilreaa: cock, CM . .., bclo/t' wholesale $Zl0. • , , •. HERCULONorvctvetS>f.a& s~i: B~y AI11to75Sax, to ·Cleat\.-Cash 90 plan or taehlrlg, aaUlng, conegl!, • • * 892-1&12 * • ... · / t •. loveseat.s, cott tbl lll'll, · · · 0 over · <U' terms to 36 mos. ABC Color , telcoat. Xlnt entry level lamps, used for dlsplay only tra,de for .Kd g u 1 t a r s • TV, . 9021 Atlanta, or 19046 • O&ltlto ~ .• xl! s1,artet. URGENTL¥,l , iA_fl'AG wuhitt & eteCtriC • • Pacific Construction Co. 5 r.t-307 4 or 675-7766. , Bro o kJwrst, Huntington ~~ I ; ,,di)'er $175.. Kenmore elec • • 538-9833 1 YR ,Old Ludwig drum.se\., Beach, 96Pr3329 or ~. •-A ClAUS'' dcyer $50. Kenmoft wuher • GAS Oryet-'$50 5 drums & 2 •• syinbolk STEREO, Pana son t c , NEEDED Mo. Guar. t: delivered.·. DOuble Bed $1S Rogef! teat. Xlnt. cond. AM/FM radio, ' apd ·1 I'· ~ 847.m!i . SPECIAL NOTICE • Walnut Table $75 ~ turntabl... headset, 2 mo: "'' We train. Provide REC;INA Elect. broom like • 3 D &·y GRAND OPENING • il1lcc SU%Uki 2SO SELL or trad• Drum oet 1115. 675-1064. , ~!a1nofee.At1areas. (25) Tra1·nee "'" $12.SO. Sh tla•d e " • · 644-4488 175or~.~1~uI'fl' zENITII eo ... 1. TV,·wor1cs 1~1wo1torn Glrl 'l".llli\tt & waxer U... -·. AUCTION OAK.' -... 1125. Oak ~ " 0 Jdnt. Lovely cabinet, $6S. ·: ,,.__ A.,. Looi Beodl $1!1. Phoae: 846-1111 ... e flmve,..tand, 145. N!te otand, Offico l[urnlhlrO/ 64i--53ll8 , ' 7 .... r 43iOm Assemblers ' ~HOUSE -• TH IS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS ·• ~~mMlsc •ml Items. . Equ,lp: 124 . " \ F-4"'1 0ppor. Employer range w/dou\tle,._,,, u111 • NOVEMBER 9th & 10th AT 7 PM SHARP • 'IJiESKS. ., • ' ti . • ECRETARY -•doors below. ~.B KDttx . SUNDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 11th AT I PM SHARP' REFRICH'n:<zer ·"' tro.t, ~ 4f· ~ ~ d~s . -.. ~' ~1-. · kt VOLT Pl, C.M. £,., • Gen. Elect. Ill "'· 11. " "f,l!""l"ter -t -.. a.. "';;~~irm ~ • .' lnatont Poncinnol Roni Wolhera/O.yltra • Just arrived from New York 4 40' containers of American & Eur<\-e avocado ""t $400, Sell f!.'15 .. JP'':';Sun. IJ3!Hil9S.wktlys, ._,,------l "'jood t;yplng 'akills • a"' Temporary S.M<e 12. Wk. Full matot. e pean Antiques to be sol~ at Public Auction to the highest bidder e 64M584. '~ pm. · · · , 3 LI ' 2 Ti ,.; M · 1 lfi."',..G rel t Mvancernent 1848 Campus O!'., Suite 11); * 619-lD * • without limit or r9serve. SKIS for sale, ~ A 170" EXii: SWVL omst,l]siz M•, .,.-, .., ~~!. Start $5111. call Newport Beadl ·54&-4741; KENMORE elect drier, xlnt • • (2) Stlngny bikes. 61<15 Sec chn ~ Ilelka·$a!/90 ·FllEE lol ~ hJme aml · iof.Hart, -· C...tal F.qua\ Oppor. EmJlll»or "°""• recond JOOtor call aft . SOME TREASURES· TO BE FOUND • Seashore Dr, Newport Pierce 867 W. 19, CM ·mixed Tertiei :...i. hou.e: ,• :N'.It'"""' Agoncy, 2 7 9 O s 536-1231 e Gold leafed Love Seat & Matching N~e Point Chair, Louie ~ Beach 66-3408 · b r o.k, ' ' · ' &ittor Blvd, CM WalJ!::l; :;'C"""' · AIR Conti. Sean u ,tm BTU • 14th Period; 12 piece Spanish Dining Room Set, he.avily carved; • OLD wood vanlt;y w,<h'g mir-P!onoa/Ot!oni ' " 825 ·~~10fs. a tie c • .. ~·· "'°". · s, Girl FrldAy1 · ... ~ Se Deb ldlfler -Immaculate 3 piece Oak Bedroom· Set all refinis· bed 10 p'ece Bel e ror, lampg, baby atrolh>r & · · TO ~ ho mal ""' -, .. ,.,_._,k e BLUE DOLPHIN •' •·~ ara uin ~. • • ; t •• back pack, misc: .... *CONN QRGANS *· ... ~--·· ~· p/eSlam..,~ · · ilOOk ..,.,., 3355 · Vi6 Udo. N.B. ~' • pl $70. Phone 9&8-~ gium Dining Room Set, ~nd painted raised enamel faced, very 673-3353 Sat anytime. e rmmediate delivery .. whl ' & j;e........ k 1 ese, •.t.:1~ T y WANTED \ 2 Refrig: 1-l.Yr old Sean • unusual; outstanding 411 post brass bed1 l of,a tind ;·2 piece Marble e OAK wood table 2 buffets • Lowest prices •.54.,871 m m • r . .na: s, • 1·--"'".... 0 OU ~ I --·-ID· ,,_, Coldspot. Second older, both • Top Walnut· Bedroom Set, mint cond.', Real d•-'y Walnut Picture • 2027 . . . GOULD MUSUJ(Xl •• i-",o;·~"''c:;::''-' ~-~--1v"'*1 Relndera Agency -m "'"""""' r . w&1.er ·pro. must go 66-40'l5/979-3789 ~ Oran* !!.1.153Ave., .. c .M. 204.5 N. Main, SA 547.00st WALL lo wall carpe. " t & pad, 1,,.,,4020 Birch strert ceu1rc -el. Pofiohers, • e Back Love.Seat, xhit.; llellvily caPV~d ()rieota1.,St~l-Silver & Linen e ~ y 18 012 " dte 1fM NB ll33-8191l · etchers ..,.... ~ors LG. 2 dr Westinghouse troat-e Chest ; 10 tune.Nickelodeon, crank tm, ~ade· m,;>pain, in working * UPRJG!IT PIAN\) .. 0 u· '• m 0 Ye · · J ,, blllh<d 19SS ~ -. w·~~\l'~. ~ rdrlg. Xlnt con!. 165. • cond ; 10 pi.ece Oall:·Dinlng Room Set,11111lt cdnd ;' lrg. Oak Confer-•• ~ ~la ::1 I~ ='."' 12SO"".'"'~ed w'i:t. ~~ lrvme. 11 · 2 s.m. l · C!UiTAflY · • I ence Tabfe, cla)V.feet. · . -~ 96U13J alt 6 PM OLDER Sliver G poodle ~ I ,-. 09'ftinr ·In manuf. Futalgn>W~ . nii· . Bulkltne Mjilerlol1 I06 • • WHlRLPOOL bath, tilJ bi ' . ' -. . . in. mature home. ray tor a mature; well teri s co. . , InC. ~-• • tub. New w/wuranty, tte. LOWREY Coronat10,n 642-5.188 ~ :T'.i.~~ ~~s.lU'x\Yd., Newpirt M~~ir:~~I~ • H,l!'!~v!r~ c~'C1h~~~t sr-is:~::-1:= ;J;rl~~ • ~: Sat, $150. 551-7l61 , ~~~ Re~1reQ.1= ADORABLE blonde, male, I t. . . >;quu Oppir. Em· ~~male~ f:5~~':;.'7';.!\~ e Cubics, E .. loa, Zou1 ·Men, otc. Too fontHli< to doatrlbo. • ii:..:.~~ ~ =t.Ji. bst o~. ~ .5: ~~old, iov.. i 1~•1t ASS>ll' MANAGEJIS foy In., wtndowl etc. . • . Mu1tbo-toi.,opprocloted. '·• * 963-7317 * WURLITZER Conn Tllomu GRAY Poodle to t?d home ' ~ . Cit '" " ~\:RIC:~861 tDUS SUltP'tUS , • BESl' oU.r for custom bit tow.at overtead, lowest 4 mo, c•ll AnlmOI Q>fttroi , ., I work. wried KEN lltorett In So, °""'C' 2406 So Main St 8.A PARTIAL LISTING:; I · Walnut ...,.. cabinet. R<!d prices, .. .,. uleanoa com. .=2511 or si1..-, •' · • County CoUt locatl>no. COJl · -0thru Sat'!~ . • Large assortment.of Bow Front China & Round oak Tables (some • area.tu&. 3 x 6' €!3-3219 11 49l>J6Sl * FREE l<M!able 2 yr old male I '~vi:~o:nc· ~-~ 711: 5f8.ID31 • with claw feet) Oak Hall Trees,~retaries, Gov. Winthrop Style • DELUXE ldqj-a!Je wat .. r PIANO W~ 'Cbahuahua w/pa...,. IDs 1 • 616-71111 ' · w~ -Ho .....,. e Desks Unusual Bedroom. Dining Room & Parlor Sets in a variety e betl6~.h."~rator: new. OWIJc Wll.L GO ANYWHERE. good borne. :>;T-'llU3 aft. 5 Oppor Em ..__ -dcltlllp In...,.,.,,. Auth-tum al the of .. , .. ....... TO~ b'-p 1 h er ........... P.O. BOX l&Si CUTE nu•~ pupp'-. N~ • ,...,,.. HS .,.._ ""'''for Sta..; century, ~ ~ e .,y1es .. w ...... ; ..... rary Ta -·Several ar or C airs, Square e O'N<ll wet ,..it lllto new. !mlDKl c;rrY. CALIF. lovllta ho7ii'e. Ooll~ ' I I 1 ·I ' . -' < E ) ,. " ' I . -' •) • r H - " (\. ... 1 . ,. ' .... l ' ~. r ' I 1: •• II ll " I " \ I 1 1 ' ' , I 11 t ·ll ~· lo - ' ... ~· ..J• ., '" -~ i ' • • _, •I I ·~ ~ .. ' . • I ' i ~ ' " I t. " ' . ?i ~ ~er.!:· lie. Cllil -lor •PP!· ' IARN BOARDS • Oak Tables, Sets o(. Cbalrs, Marble Top watn,ut Dresser,. LalDp & • Pacllle &uf.bOard, call Tom P1Dii>:WANTID ' .alt 3 pm. • !:"'-o1 WHO WANTS ro WORK' ltm' quantltlei e Occasion.al Tables, Rockers, Ice Boxes, & Lob Morel Also several • ·a1fl0.1J12 .. metre otter. m.41 -ADORABLE Poodl .. ,....,... • , ktlel for aml rrowth Co. CHOO~nr;:.:·::sun.' ,....,, John flC.3927 . good pieces o! Art, Cut, Prused & Collectable' Glau; ClolSOll.ne, • WHEELCHAIR ·-adJ, toot HAMMOND ORGAN puppiea Free to sood ', , ~c~~ltt! poo111on tor 11 -· Clocks, Cbandellers, bric a brae, etc. ' & ter ,...... Ell<ftll " J..,. • -or 548_111311 . liOm•s. Call 586-006. , 1 . it&rt<r. ' to.itact Mr. for ,...... ' be Y'>'ll' .... ComorOI .. • ' . : nlap. ~l;Jlo!o!,,. D ¢UTE, health,f k 11 t .... . ' 114'1-122'1 l:"-.~t~1ot =J!.n EqulDIMnf IOI : INSPECTION FRIDAY NOVEMBER 9th"-10 AM.SALE TIM]i:. CARP&TING lbr uvtrii!<iin. ~ 2-Jan ti<! u bl• moih41f SlamelO. rat her · -t1 , ARY pet-IF~. l!eit-Otlft ~· = LOCATION: SMIITY'S ANTIQUES • !nl-ldtchen-hall. Grape, tow Y • -· • •handtomeat,.....r.1?.H13111 I >II dlctatton. ,,.,., On. Via ' t'ltired Act :1$ wro: OLYMPUS OM·!, fl.8 ..... • • 1G30 North State Coll•~· Blvd. • shag. 6n-1191111r.o. 5.l 7--U08 POODLE mix male l ~ ,;... , r -sic.~ 213 Octon A.,.., sup'ptemtnt ' """ lncom• New &m. per!e<.'t condlllon. , (?.blocks North of Interstate 91, M;abelm, California) BUNK bedJ $40. Coooole HI· KANABE. Conaole. beau• yn, .. ..,. l<iendly. to &<'°'1 1 ; • ... ch, 4111.1115. llil>eaeal>tbr.or.-a 1215. 675«JJO. , e 1 e JI 11o:c1r1·1 blkel!O. Mlle. c:ol'd.1913. $i00. 1t0tno.1'H-t%i6 .rt6. ~I~ tradlt Our Tndtr'• dly. ~ 1 rn ,.,_, KODAK Cato111el ~ilde p. FOJ lntonnaUo; dlrectlons, or reserved seats call (714) ~1190 e 632 w. Ilth 548-3850 m.mi FREE 10 gOO<J -. -· \ J I !~": ~r!-~!:Cl ~~ 4; 111 E. 1ltlt .1;'"61:1-~lent eont111"'1· 1ii ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• H~ll\ .,~~><:d. wa: ~ ':! H:r~ ~~ ~"1"-. .u.~ mci .w.,, \ , --. . ~ .. I ,;. I . I . • • • I ,. , -.. . . . , .. . ,,, .. . . . .. ~-••• . ' ~! DAILY PILOT Frldl1, Novtmtr 9, 1973 ats 15 eot• I 4 1t 1, Power 906 Cyc ••, .. I RUR.'1ESE trnTENS e PUPPY WORLD• ~--iiiiii"°'iii'"iiiiii""'iiiiii.:;Jl~·~:itrj DAHNAAR8P00RINT L ~-]j•j Scoottrs 1 ,_bandS&lppllitl CFA ltEG lSTEllEO. S50 UP En&llsh Bull DogK , ~ _ 1',.--- • 2 Auto ervlct_, P1rts 9 ! I Trucks 925 REPLAc£MENT & aw.. • • • •• • l"!'iri ~ .. ~/~'~:.; '70 ·cHEVY PICKUP I •537-4.744 • ChlhuahUl\B, Tiny Poodles, R , V . St ii n t s Yacht ••••••••••I D 854 Anier. Eak (Sp It z) , Brokl':t'llgl':. New Un!Oitet, RANGE COUNTY P•t•t Gtwel 850 ogs OobC'rman, Pit llullJ, Rull Boats, Gentr11 900 0erewri A Rangl't'$. ~au C1mRer'6.S.le/Rent .920 Q IONA'S PET SHOP OLD EngllMl Sheep, AKC Terr~r. Cocka~. lrlsh or t..a.rre; Powl'r or Su.II. \V11 CA/.1PER $bell, icebox & ~ho~me~•~· ~892-83~~1~4 ~~~~I V-8. Auto Traill Exctlltrll C<>nolitto" 1159'lli'1. ) r;:;1 ,SALE 'PRICE $1115 .,. pupp!t-$, call &:!lier. 100 MlX]:;D PUPS!! '69 40HP Evlnrude, Big Have TI1c1n All. For In· SUZUKl-BULTACO PETS SUPPLIE S * 96(rl6&ii * Stud Scn rlcc f\1ost Brt"eC.ls. Tv.1n, Elect sta11, l'f!(..-ent forniarlon or to make an Ill.bl<:, llctps 3, $39). 0.11 Autos lot 5al4I _ l!!) MIKE McCARTHY BUICK BEACH BLVD. & SAN DJECO !'RIVY· :.31·2450 IUOini!JG alt bl"Cl'd.¥ 1"1"'-"'<-'i31 Open Eves: 531-5027 niajor overhaul, xlnl t.'Ond, appt. to 8('E! boat.ii ln the alt 6 Mon thrU ThW'1 .. uruiJ 1NOv. alth bu,Y 11 c.11.gc t:t;ft~l~\N Shepherd pu11p1rs, \VANT info regarding female &-12-2833 t"VCrting, 711 1.193.~101. ~me, t t l ·Sat· Sun, Gd Lha.matci· 1 h 'C. \Val.nUl 6 '''k!oi old. -\\'eaued, need Gttnt Dane "Brindle". \YANTED: used 12'-Cbl.laps· 3-1' OIRIS Sea Skiff, twin l . .!'.:=:o"'jj)j""-, ------\'h~ Shopp!~ t~rurr. fenced yal'il 546=2"64 Placed w/Lai,runa Beach able rubber. l·JS JIP OUt· V8'•, holding tank head, TRADE equity in 1972 18' {Johns Racing Cyclel) Jtvtne. C.llh'fl' \\'alnul I f\'OR\\tEG lAN E 1 k h Ou n d Hwnunc Society Approx boa..1'd. 675-8608. . 00+...i--ers, radio, depth 11eJt <»ntained tn.iler tor 651-<HU Gd -·~• 1 cab over cam}>e:r. Call · pups. AKC, champ line. 9-%)..13. 529-1oou CAMPBE!..L 24· Crul!fe-1', slps 1'CCOtder, trim tabs, 8"' m 557-3470 Blwn 6 It B pm. hunily dog!ll, 96S...s59l LABRADOR, black, 3 yr. 4 Ut ofter over sscm prl step. $13,500. or take ski QUICK CASH T·CUP Tiny Toy Puppie!, AKC, !em. cxc. retriever, pty, 5.'Ul-2253 boat in trade. 837..0013 Cycles, 8ike1 O.C. Nowoll Suzuki dealer THR.OUGH A >\KC. l!oodi• OL.Xorl<J<>.. watch..dol< & !rlen<I. Shot>. B 1 M· I t I 11&->'f. ''13 FG Lyman. Scoottn-Stud serv1ce, 5.14·52-IS. papen, etc. $100 841Hi819 oa s, • n • Loaded. Will trade for niy 925 •46 Ford Pleld up, xlnt \.'Ond, ---1~1tored . to .brig. l!!_USt sell thtiWKena~"M2t . DAIL y PILOT BEAGLE pUppi~. ARC reg. OLD E ngli sh Sheep do& service 902 equity or cash & take over WANT AD Om.n1 pion sired, 9 y,•k old. pops. Champion med, AKC.., JS your bottom dirty! }full ~"""""'"m:::IL::..:::6'6-0344==---$5 LAYAWAY $5 RocrHtional Centurion Le Mans S1le1. Service. Perts 1 _.;V::•~h::;lc::l:::":....--.....;9.':"56 Recreat ional Vehicl es y,·/shots 551-5893 Parents OF"A, Shots. Quality cleaning fQ!' 30c per water 909 Recreatlona1 !>Ups. (n.4) 962--i860. line ft. 645-ta3) :Bo~•':.:':..' ,;;Sc;•;;.ll ____ c... 956 Vehicles 956 PUllE bi~ German Short BOAT Owners, tired of hi llalr }>{)1nter J)Ups, :"Clnt maint. <.'OSI? Rl'.!finl!.hlni;: & SUPER Sabot, double hulled, Chnmpion.'ihip Shock racing snoot y,•iH1 s.11ls "3" ror every wind coud. Dolly, boat COVC't' & <..'On1pl racing gear + fbgls niast & boon1. $•150. 640-l~ Sun Tour Gear Sy!lltem '73 clt•rance on '60 OiEV school bus. f\1ake Alloy ocitterle5s crank your own motorhome. Hi&h pressure tires Su1uk l's A Bultaco1. 541).-33.IO 1$£131 MOTOR HOMES OVER 20 GMC MOTOR HOMH '" Stock fo, ''"'"edlote Dellvery Choice of Color• & lqulpme"t AlJO • MOf OIHOMrs • MINI MOTOI HOMIS VAN CONVllSIOHS • PICK·UP (AMPllS BUY OR IEASE . ''A TOTAL SERVICE FACILITY'' Service • Ports • Soles • Complele Camper & RV Supply Store • Supplies • Propane Gas • Dumping Station • Vehicle Storoge TH£ FINEST SALES AND SERVICE FACILITIES IN . ORANGE COUNTY. FACTORY TRAINED PRO· FESSIONALS USIN G THE LATEST AND BEST HEAVY·DUTY EQUIPMENT ~ --· W1lL "SERVICE" YOUR hrf'('dlng, no papers, $25. n)()nlhly l4£'r\'il·e. 645-1320. ·5.17-91J7 ~KC English .Bull. Fe1nale. Boats/Marintt :1 yrs old. Champ. bloodline. Equo'p 904 FtnYl"I & white. Best oUer. -'==·-----'-"-' Call 842-9584. Vlll, radio, CB radio, depth REGISTEllED Ger n1a11 recorder, elec. head, new Short hair puppy. 5 n1011.r & u3ed diving equip., jet good marking, s 111 a r l , powered sleigh for divers 968-2433.. or for fun Eves/wknds SCHNAUZERS • Hold !or Christn1as. . Shots, tenns, stud scrv. 871-8182,-522--8366 aJl5 PEi\1BROKE \Velsh Corei. 11 l\'kS. AKC. . Call 546-4928 SILKY. terriet"li • 2 females. No re1u1onable offer refused. Call 832-9422 or &IH178. Horses 8S6 96Z-4283 BRAND new s~·an Fi\1/VHF Marine \\·tan·1. & mt. $42'5. pri ply. 538-2'153 CORONADO 25. fu\ I Cr N\\"J>I. Channel n100ring. Sabot 113 int. lo QuaJ. par. ty. $1995 Firm, M9-2815 ·-· !!OBIE 16 \Y/traller, loaded \V/xtras. Full race. Xlnt cond. 968-8627. Ccn1er pull brakes -LIFETIME GUARANTEE Cot'Ona de! Alar Bike Shop '74 Suzuki's here. Truck1 962 = ~~J=~·Y ~2428 °' so;.ir.;; *SP~CIAL * * BICYCLES * 2215 Horbor Blvd. C.M. Of ti. w k CllRisrMAS LAYAWAYS * .ne ee SlD. llOLDS ANY BIKE (Harbor at Wilson) New Italian 10 sp, •.•. $59.9:5 '71 DATSUN s'"''""' Eq Coloi .. .,. S89.95i ~"'l!'~!"!!'~~!"'!'~~I PICKUP & CAMPER NishildlO sp ...• from $99.95 1973 SPORTSTER $1700 (443BSX1 Used bikes .•• , ,, All Types ll OCll miles Stock 9 Beach Bicycles, 806 E. Balboa ' 'Price furn ' $219 Blvd., Balboa 675-7282 * 543--3691 1t + BICYCLES + ·66 HONDA CB 450 xlnt rond. '72 'D0DGE naieigft Records ... $99.00 New tires engine overhaul· Vi TON PICKUP While Supplies Last ed cr.11.sh guaa'ds very clean (77:WLJ Other models from $64.95. 89.i-J66ll $-150. ' 53299 Peugeot ill all sizes & colors . M 0 T 0 R c y c LE trailer Ch gc~~la J,J~a i ;~ Y 8 custom 3 rail $135. 11 1882 Newport Blvd, Costa . Bullaco Lobito J75cc $250. '73 MALIBU to.1esa. 548-5i83 842-8305. COUPE ' n a• ~· MX Husky 900 miles. Runs like new x ras. · ''* """' ' 10" extended forks $350 I l[?f!T _, f R. V. UNIT REGARDLESS ~-j~i:.... i>F SIZE OR MAKE. '~...____ ~ 24 HR. EMERGENCY , ~ -,. · ~ TELEPHONE NO. CORRAL for renl: 25' " 100' fenced Jot orr Goidl'n"'est in H.B. S50 per mo. Call 54(). lij2 or 540-9460. '73 YA.J.~AHA TX 500 \\1th CUSTOMIZED Honda 17'5. (Ssu•· 210874 I n 125cc Amer. Eagle aft 96l-63.5l · 6 pm. 548-2676. . . . •71 FORD 'I• TON '72 HARLEY Dav id s on N!SHOO Safari. omy n~n CAMPER SPECIAL ' . ' 2" _lfrl' AVAILABLE ~ BIL£ BARRY ••'•-C.MC R .d ·~--•1010-cle few blocks, comp, eqwp. epi 0 u;.K.'\; • " • ~J • • Tor towin& $50 Wlder list. (2210'1KJ ~ ~~t Jll'es 787 mi, 3llO Nev.'port, No. 102.. CM $3599 ALl\IOST ney,· boys 10 speed 'TI HONDA, SL-350 Kl 1~ - 21" bicycle. $80. ml. Super cof!C!., $69a. 960-144.1 673-8876 aft 6 dunng \VC!ek. AUN! BIKE • Zebra • Xlnl condition! $75. 64().-1824 •n CHEV. 'h TON PICKUP (73002LJ $2999 '68 VW CAMPER tXYG8771 $1999 -- GROTH CHEVROLET Only 12,@ .,.,.1u1 miles, VS, • • • • • • engine, custom cab, 3 speed tra.nsmisslon, radio, heater, heavy . duty tire!!, step BRAND NEW -..... maey xtru & can:• GMC TRUCKS be told from the day ll sold new! C'rai31.LJ AND THE BEST SAVER OF ALL -THREE GREAT MODELS- $2888 Over BO Fine Used can to Select From Nabers Cadillac At.m:IORIZED DEALER 2600 HARBOR BLVD. AL:.\10Sf Aµ.. SIZES UPTO $1200 SAVINGS MIKE McCARTHY BUICK BEACH BLVD. & S..\N DIEGO FR\V'f. all·l-450 , 1·210 HATCHIACK I Check All Of Our New Car Trades l · '70 JEEP y.1, 4 WHEEL DRIVE 1#1 7611 HU I RYI THE ALL NEW 1974 B-210 THE VERY SPORTY 1·210 2 DR. HATCHBACK 4-Speed, Bucket Seats & White Sidewall 1s ... #0092s 1 Tires. THE GAS SAVING 1·210 2 DR. SEDAN 4·Speed, Bucket Seats & Wh ite Sidewall I Se•. •OJOJ 11 Tire5. THE 30 M.P.G. FAMILY CAR 1•210 4 DR. SEDAN 4.Speed, Bucket Seats & White Sidewall Ti re,. ISer. #043391 COSTA MESA 546-9100 Open Sunday e SALl.S e · •••••• • SERVICE • e RENTALS e EXPLORER , lllJNJING!Oli HlACH • .. • 1 " ·.· ., ·. ":. " OL' ''COUNTRY'' '68 CHEV. % ton Fleetslde w/camper. Very dean. Origll>a1 own<r 545--0384 '68 CHEV % Ton pick up auto tra.ns, lo ml, nu tire!, xlnt cond, 546--4054 "13 DATSUN Tnick with Unlity bod)', $3'.IXI or best offer. 831-2822 or 496-3279 •••••• WASHBURNE has the new GMC Motor '73 GMC SUPER Home at &nice Oldsmobile CUSTOM ~ TON I" Lorog Besch. Wed·&>•i. PICKUP 1Q.6. Bus. Ph. (213) 5.11·2440, liO V-8, Auto Trans, power Hme (n4) 9'19-fA)39. steertrc, radio, duaJ bat· •Exclusive to Vegas• teries Lot! of other extru, ''Chauf fer e d'' 3 day C457'i:N). weekeoo. New 26' Luxury SALE PRICE $3795 Motor Home . wet bar + "Complete .. 6 Peroon MIKE McCARTHY Pad<age 161 eacto. BUICK OaJe's Motor Home Rentals BEACH BLVD. & 838--0900 SAN DIEGO FR.WY. "73 LANDAU. Brand new 25' 531·2450 Mo to rhome. Beautifully • •' •••• equipped. Close out ..i.. Reduced over $«XO. M\Jlt _;;,...;~;=.-,::=-..::;,,....:::; tell. See at Johnlon A: Son 1989 "" Ton Chevy Panel. Llnooln Mercury. 2826 $150. Call 507-3410 btwn 6 Harbor Blvd., O>ata Mesa. I-B pm ' 540-5630. '40 Ford Pick up, i.lnt eond. e l>f.lei1 Motor Home Rentall l'l'l'tored to orig, must aell •••••• '73 GMC · % T. Ciunpcr Spt.'Olal, 19,~ nli JOQclod w)ex.U'.ag, ~iii! •ttl tank, t1·11ns. l.'OOIC1·, x I'll foam seat 1llutdlng 11hcll 11.l!IO avull) l\:lwiL··&ell \.lllli \\'Cfk! 61-1944 dll)'!i OI' 494.5803 att 6. . '69 EL CAMINO 350 cio. V8, air, pill, auto trun:;:, 1950 Call 1<33-8216. Vans '73 CllEV VAN l\UliBLE TOP V.:i unhcw'd-Of vul\IC !QBZ· OJ;ll. $3989 GUSTAFSON Lincoln· Ml•l'CUl'Y lW Beach nt Wanie1· IJW1tingto11 Beach 842·8S44 * (213) 592.:;v.1.1 ··1101ne or the Viking" 1966 ECONOLlNE SUper ~1111 240 CI, 6, 3 spd, cunipcr e<Juip. Ne"' pa.Int, ~ tir~. xln1 mcch. cond. $1000. 5-1&-7162 ask tor Curt, da,}ls .. ~i DODGE ~portBn11u1 Vnn :ns cu in. nuto r /h tp/dk cpled; 2 tone body, ~I ton xlnt cond asking $2900. 894-®0 ·n DODGE c ont e mp o camper van, railed roof. full equlpt, sac for bal ~. $2890. Ph: 64,;.-0856 '13 OIEVY Van, 5,500 nU, V-8 auto, p/brks, p/.!1, a/c, 11teel radial• & nl.8.g!. ~. ~722 '63 1''0RD V~ 1.tags & l.'hrorne \\'heels. S.IOO. e Pt.ice lirn1 • 5C-J691 • Lm DODGE !ii Ton V11n. :{18 enKine. \Vlndowl~. llUli: "'lll'l'll $3800. 5ll}-Ot3-I 0 1" W--03<16 'li6 t'ORD Slij>crVan · 2-10 cu. in. 6. ll/1-1. Auto. Alr ronrl .. Campey equip. Xlnt cond $975. :>49-3875 'T.l DODGE V-8 cualo1n pnt + button tuck int, ml\&•• stereo. xtrss! MS-42-16 *'61 COR VAIR vnn, ?-.ll'chanlcally xlnl, N ~ .,.,. Urc11. SiOO Ken, 644-84~1 '65 DODGE VAN. Runs i;OIXI. $800 or best oUer. Dall H.onmn, 6·l5-69'17 '71 FORD Super Van • id l'Ond, C\ISI int. mags, 6 C)'I, slick S2l!'IO 642-31'3 evta. 1973 OODGE van y,•/air & many fXtl'U. Oean. $600. Ir t.o.p. 3355 Nevada, C.M. 1966 WINDO\Y Ou!vy, $900. big 6. ~nl rebll. Xuo. bucket seat. 714-492-1610 '65 0-IEVY Van, xlnt rnC<'h. $650 * 496-2192 * '72 DODGE Vnn 318 V-tl At!lo. Low 111lle11ge.•'Xlnl cond. Call 997-0363. '69 F'ORD I ton, many CX· trns. J.1,000 miles. \\'JU ac-cept lradt. ~7 r· Autos Wanted t6I ---·-· --- ll\1PORT5 W M'TED Orange Counly's TOP I BUYER SIU. MAXEY 'J'OYOTA 18881 &each Blv ~. H. lkich Ph. 8'7~ \VEHUY ·' IMPORTED AUTOS BEST PRICES PAID! Dun Lowis lmflWl1 1966 -· C.M. 616-l:JOC TOP CASH for clean late model can and trucks! , Ho-rd Chevr9let ?-.1acArthur and Jamboree Newport Beach t 833-0555 ' \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CAnS 11 your car Is u~a ~lean, Re US llnt. BAUER BUICK · • 292ii llarbor Blvd. ; Costa Meaa · 97fl500 ' Autos, I 111ported , 970 1 / ' * ALFA ROMEO 1 Best deal nlways! B~llnas { l1'0n1 $371J5 (Ser .. ·~SJ. 'T.1'1 &: '73'11. Ccimple~ 1e- lecl:ion now. Buy or loase · from ,I t Jim Porkln...,•; ' '73 23-26' M.H. A Mlnll th1I wkend 9E'J8..9Gi_ Frie miles 9 tit 9, 83l-0900 '71 EL CAMINO. Oean I 24, STARCllAIT, 10 ,000 tbruooL MUsr SELL/ -or -I 52604 FOR New & u...i Ctr llolts -1.-1 .. .,.,,, ...... some• r.t' SALES HOURS Mon.-Sat. ' a.m. to 9 p.m. s~., ..... to6p.m. • SERVICE HOURS Moo.-Fri. 7 :JO o.m. to 5 p.tL Scmordoy 7:JO to N ... CALL 493-3375 _01 '831-1315 • ·mies. Sacrilice due to Ill-$1B25. 9'l9-4.W7 SSIC '67 AIJn Romeo j """'· 646-2385. • • • • • • · Ductta Spy<i" ronvmtble. FREE WEEKEND Ttte I ona , s trpk Reoreat!oMI Vehicle Ranta! 'ff FORD =j~1'1dR model . Coot! Bureau (n4) 842-9922. ' Cll'eltably, 1\lUJJI · Dual Wheels, V-8 Engine, sell, 111 t c4n'I support two * 21' 23' &: Zi' MOTOR Good Coridit1on. (39133C). Cll'I. $500, and take bver HOMES tor rent by private 1 T~ FLATBED Pl3fnent1 of S78 per month., pm,, 63!rlm. ' SALE PRICE· $18'5 Balanoe ow..i : 1)192. c.11 Trallen, Trawl 945 fDr weekend appointment, MIKE McCARTHY •92-4744, San Clemente. 119' Scamper by AMF . BUICK lDTI ALFA, -PBlnt lob bltern Tralltt, hvY duty • BEACH BLVD. a: overhauled. '13.500. , " ' tnaulatlon, compl .. u conL SAN DIEGO FRWY. '94-3661 I >.11 pouibl• xtru, !80tJO ... w $31·* AUSTIN HEAtEY ~ old, S1crlllco $4,995. 30J6. · 16'-18' • • • • • • 167 AUSTIN Heal'/' :iooo ~El~~~rl,. CUJ1. Need a··'Pad"t-Plac:t an ad! Whlte1 wh'!' wh~llrj. Ptt'. Private Party, -· ;,Ca::D::.;:64H611::.:=·----"Pty=._,ll500=e.· !!96Ulu~~-.~­• • I ' . · utos, ORAN ., ; .. • . . • II Friday, No"tembtt 9, 1973 OAILY Pit.OT ,..., .... tot, Imported 970Auto1, New 9IO utos, mportttd 70 utos, I mporttd 970Autos, mported 70Auto1, Import 970Auto1, mporte 970Aulos, Imported 970Autos, tmportod 970 1, * --GIGANTIC USED EAR SAlE * NOW IN PROGRESS HERE ARE SOME EXAMPLES OF THE TREMEND_OUS SELECTION. · '73 MAZDA '73 DATSUN Wiid 111111 economy c•r wUll c.utrom "rlPft ov1r 1 llNulllul l:lul'!ll or111111 •-19rlor. 1!411lpped wltll 4 cyl e119ln1, 4 Sffl(I, rldlo •nd m•t Wfl"lt. Thi• ont 1111 Only 4'U mUH Ind II rlrln' lo 90, IUllJUll) '73 OUSTER Low mn .. 11 Ind It • iovtlr 111111 mkl5l11 ar ttu1t II lo•dld Wiii! 1q11IPrnt11I lnc:lucllnt tic. •Ir co11d .. power 11111., '"IOmtlle tr1111 ind vlnyl top. Wl'YI really priced this 0111 to Hu tulck. 11•1Go11 '73 SCAMP '72 PINTO RUNABOUT •MllY cute. A bNullfwt Arl11111 00141 wllll m1khint l111trl0f' lllCI 14uippld wltll 4 •Plld lrana. 2000 cc ~my I cyl en11l111. R•dl" llC. llr ctlld., •1111 e111tom tl<ltrlor trim. Prlctd tor quick ,.It 11111 WMlcllld. !1'0£JLl '72 VENTURA 1'111• llte .. I r1dl111.t su11lll1 Y•llOW With "°"" 'l'lnyl top llld Mklt ... ti. 1i'.t1UIPJ"4I Wiit! COllMle, •m.11 11111!11, 1utorn1flc trll)J., rJC!lo, ,..._, •f'rt., llld fie;. fir. Prlct lu•t rtduc:ld -tor . CIUldf Ult. l•)S£0HI '72 PINTO WAGON o,...t 111111 tconomy w.,Ofl 11111 11 ,..u., cult. Equipped •ltll rodl11 llr11, 1ulom1tlc tr1111., r•dlo, 2900 cc ...,1,.., tlr c1nd. 11111 custom ut1rlor. Orn! opportunity wllllt II lints. l•tSFLW) '72 VAN Mot111r 1111'11 to find inolltl. Thlt l'Onl Vin ls equip. Pld •1111 cu1tom paint, cu1tom lnfll1or, mati whctb, wldl IYll llNI, tide plpet, OYtrtle•d Vint, 1111111 VI Ind I Ulll"lllllc tr1n1. A IMloull111J V•n llMI Wt'YI lust Nductd lh• price tor lmmldi.t1 1110. (570531() '71 DATSUN '70 GRANO PRIX A greet cll111c tlld 0111 11YUsll, A truly lovtly tux· 11ry sp0r11 cir. Tiii• on1 Is • bNullful bflflll in color with mtkfllng vi11y1 top •nd lnllrior. Eq1,1l(ISlld wltll 111tom11ic lr1111., AM·FM 1111'• rldio, poWtr strv .• pOw« winClows, tit .11r encl r1t1y1 wll•ls. tZYOOlll '69 DODGE DART A trMt 1C0110my cir prietf to n ll •nd ...._ mlrtllt Yllut. A beiUllHUI ncll111t or11111 with 11 ltbony top 11111 Interior. H•s lht t111t1111c 111111 the ""llrMI with 1111om1tle tr•n1; Tiiis"" won't lllt loflt W llUrT\I. (ZLKJ50) '69 LEMANS WAGON Nol .. IV to flftcl Wt .. 'YI flf ... A tl'MI mid 1111 WljjOll 11111 1111 lvtl "*'911 ,....,. Ind 11 HIY lo p&rtl;. W1 lhrtw 1111 KllllY llff llllc IWIY on lhb ,Onl 10 comt on In lllCI rnRI In lfftir. { .. 7HOOI '69 PONTIAC VENTURA Hln:llllp COUPI Ind only 1111 at.lll mll" lfl It llMI WI gOI II ""' • llllt• •kl man who ....... II new. It's one In 1 mlltlol'I •ltd ""lpped wltll power door locks. p0wer w11111ows, 1ulom1Hc tr1111., vlnyl top Ind tic. llr. Hurry. (XNJ7"1 '67 CAD H1r1 11 1 low mu .... IUPI!' et'" llllllll'Y e•r 11111 II lo•ded Wilb •II 1111 lloodies inc:ludllll .f.M.FM 11tr10, pc1w1r 1e111, p0wer wlndlwi. tic. A trMI opportunity to own 1 rully plulh cir tor Ylry Hfll• money. W1'v1 priclld 1111• -Oft 1111tl•l tlli1 .,...... lllCl i nly so llurry. (VGPUf) '67 LEMANS Nard to, uupo. Only 1111 S4.771 111 " •of It • btl•ullful dtcp twrt~lldy wltll Ivory lnttrlor. &ci11l11- pect wllh power 1!1'9., 1ulom.•tl~ tr1nt. •ncl IK. 1lr cond. A mull to .... (YC U511) '66 Pl YMOUTH Only 1111 •5.ttO mlln 11111 Wiii mlkt llmtllll I trMt 111111 tr111sp0rllllon cir. Hll smtll VI, 1utom11k tr1111., r•dlo, powtr 1trt •• 111d w111 l•e. 11r cOlld. Priced tor 01l_!k__ Pit. ~ mu1f !_O IH. ISVCtSfl YEAR END Cl.EARANCE SALE . . •9530 PR MON!ff NEW ROTARY MAZDA RX3 SIDAN ONLY 5195 DOWN A•t••stlc 1 spffd traa11dule11, AM rod.lo, S gol. tn, 1peclol wear & polldl, s '"' 50,000 mlle fff'Vlce policy. PoWM' fro11t dl1e brok•, elec. clod, '"' ·wllldow .i.e., ff.fot .. r, r:ff&ol tlr... full wliffl co•ott, tcM:ll•· .... tar, tripod__,., NClllllllt froftt btlcltet seots. tl11ted tlon, full 11ylo• carp-"1119, cltoretN lltfl..,, tool kit,......, HtN•- er, flow lflhl ¥Htilotfo11, tock· l1t4J f•I fll* door, 111b nto 1tt111th19 cle•lco. C5124All61tlJ IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 12.11. Dlttrred PllY!'Mflf prlc1 t4289 . .!0 Tncludlng ell t1ic, llctnse end f!111nce charges ort epProved crtldt. futl price Jnd. leic & lie. "386. $195 10111 down piiymenl 11\d SU.JO per mo. for 4 mo. Annu1I perc&nllllll r111 OR NO MONEY DOWN! LEASE ME FOR ONLY $66 PR. MONTH SAW DEPT. OPEN 9 a.m. • 10 p.m. DAILY SERVICE DIPT. 7:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. MONDAY 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. TUES. thru FRI. 36 Mo. O.E.L We PERFORM AU MAZDA WARRANTY WORK re<jardless of where you originally. pardicned J_O)I! _Ear. • 2001 E. First St.,· Santa Ana (Santa Ana Fwy. at First St.) (714) · -558-7871 ' utos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported f.-'---'--"-----970 Autos, Imported 970 BMW ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST .. & D.a_TSUN '72 DATSUN PICKUP \.Vith camper. Fully Equipped, Loaded, Weekend O n I y ! (224EnV). $2895 . . . JAVELIN '72 JAVELIN CPE. Less U1an ro,000 miles. Au1o-matic trans, power steering, pmvcr brilkcs, factory air, 214IBY. _A_ut_o_s._lm~eo_rt_ed ___ 9_70 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Auto1, Imported 970 J Autos, Imported -970 MAZDA-MG '73 MAZDA R.X2, 2 door, 10,000 ml, auto. under war· renty, will take ·~·67 ?ifustang part t rad e • 673-9266. '66 MIDGET, l'WIS good but needs mioor adjustments Body good, $450, 5411-3765 1951 MGTD, very good cond. Only 56,000 orig miles, best oHer, 839-9818 MGB SIMCA '70 SIMCA, 1204, 4 dr, yellow, radials, good transp car, $615. 494-6129. TOYOTA 10YOTA '69 TOYOTA COROLLA 1200 4Spd, (2JSF2'ZI) $1099 TOYOTA ·~ TOYOTA. Good running coOO. New battery, recent tuneup $190. Call 64&-0416. '69 TOYOTA Land Cruiser 4x4 (967AFW) $ I 9 9 5 . · Theod6re Robins Ford., 2060 Harbor Blvd., Calta Mesa. 642-00)0. TOYOTA TOYOTA CELICA 1971 w/4 soeed. (OOOEAF') $2675 WE BUY USED qRS! ent selection of pre- ice re-evaluation tnodels. DEMO $ALE ES· SER VICE.LEASING COT CATSUN -· < ·-~ .. ,.. ..., • ....,' • .,. .... '"'"' <J4<' "''"' ,...., $2995 Jim Slemons Imports 1301 Quail Nei.vport Beach 83.1·9300 MUST sell nu job, '73 Ma7.da RX·3 v.•ag, air cond. 4 speed silver w/vinyl top, rall y wheels, lug rack, bst ofr 548-5056 aft 6. MERCEDES BENZ JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS MERCEDES BENZ '70 TOYOTA e CORONA e 1968 MGB Metallic green with black fn. good cond, $900. 842-3932 or terior, 4 ·speed, Ml/FM 979-9873 radio & white sidewall tires. Bill MAXEY TOYOTA ' '• ', J '·' '1', j,l \l I• 'n COROLLA ' Wagon, xlnt condition. 8 track tape. • $1500 Cash. 5411-7612. Like tO trade? Our Traticr'i; Paradise column is for YoU! 5 lines. 5 days for 5 bucks. · VERSEAS DEUVERY Y CARVER; Inc. Zl4 E. 17'1.h St. Mesa 546-4444 ·CREVIER BMW s..tes e Service e Leasing W. 1st., S.A. 835-3!n .., USED BMW'S '71 BAVARIA ' ,'70 2800 CS COUPE 169 2002 "' 1600 ... 2002 ·~ 2000 CA COUPE ·'GG BM\V 1600 2 dr, eng just overhauled. Rt d i a I .\i(es. Exceptionally clean. .W95· '68 BMW, 2002, ·stereo, Radial tires, clean, 1973 DATSUNS ALL MODELS ·-IN STOCK BARWICK IMPORTS 33375 camino Capistrano San Juan Capistran:> 493.3375 or 831·1315 ·Tioatsun PU, nlr, R & II, dlx. PV Camper s~; w/full rear opening. New brks., Nr, new tires. Stal). dard shift. $1795. 961f.9393 FIAT '71. FIAT 850 Sport Co.lpe. Sharp! $1295. · Pvt party. 002-4881 FORD ENTER F1lOrd ~1'acARTHUR ·JENSEN JENSEN INTERCEPTOR LARGE~ON OF COLOP.S lltU.fEDIATE DElJVERY FULL SERVICE DEPARTMENT NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coo.ft H,vy., N.B. 642°9405 MASERATI AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE Jim Slemons Imports (We're 1op buyer for any used Mercedes Benz.) 1301 Quail Neo.\'PQrt Beach 833-9300 ENTER FROM MacARTHUR 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY Sharp New Car (969DMJ). $1195 OPEL '68 OPEL Kadette L sta. :;~·ra~~~'.ak~ ~~ •• ~ •. ·~··1• vahre job. new Dame red ·--====:..., __ .·~i-t .. ~;£ acrylic laquer paint job, . ~·~ Must sell! $850 or ben ofier. -. · Call Taylor a~ 96'2-1715. 28602 MarguerilP. Parkway '67 OPEL Good cheap tran-MisEon Viejt) portation. $450. 831·2040 e 495-4949 Call 963-3730 USE AVERY PWY. EXIT PORSCHE '73 PORSCHE 911T TARGA. Gold with black in· terior. Stereo. 5 spd. Mags. Like new. NEWPORT IMPORTS '69 TOYOTA CORONA 4 Dr, 4 Spd, CYRVll51l $1199 Bill MAXEY TOYOTA ' ~11:595~· 552,.~. oc1455=,,,.--:-=,.:; 1968 FORD CORTINA. Ex-BMW '72 Bavaria, 4 speed ceptlonally c I e a n , un-tltr cond, AM/nf, green believable gas economy, SUPER Leggera, 3500 G.T. w/tan 24,000 nil, $6500 Lar· 540-9362 Lo mileage, fuel. injection, '~.·, 546.5240 eves 642·2106. .::::==· -~-~--•.• JAGUAR -$4000, Don. or.-1041. Trade-ins Coming In Every Dey 3100 \V. Coast Hwy., N.B. Ask About Our Unique =--o=,,_64_2_-940_,.5 --,--'69 TOYOTA · Used Mercedes Lease '65 356C me c h perfect e Station Wagon e CAPRI .. 13· CAPRI, 2100 eng. 4-spd. red w/blk luxury decor -p, Reclining tront seats, /FM stereo, air cond., $n}y used 3 n10nths. Asking . 557~1 aft 5 pm. ~RI. 2,000, nt cond. ~!lSlde & out, am/fin stereo ~dio, radlal Ures, $2,175. 'Call 646.-2424 '72 CAPRI m A/C, aUck, >1:lnt cond. afn/tm, lo miles, • 645-5595, m--0855 ,...... " CORTINA !Dlli CORTINA disc brakes, '.a: new tires, auto trans, new paint, lo mileage, $450, 549-1842 -• '69 Jag. 2+2 $28B8 Black with tan intefior. Auto-mn.tlc, chrome v.•ire wh~. 37,S'lti miles. · NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 IV. CoaSt Hwy., N:B. 642-9405 JAGUAR XKE 1971 Y eUow Coupe Loaded! $4850 (262CQT) . WE BUY USED CARS! lll.11 q111" 11\ulin'• '"""' ' . ' ,, .. MAZDA Pl 20,000 since overhaul needs 4 ...........1 -..K.... .__..,_ ans paint $2500 Firm · 644-.6955 °11"''"·· i-awu, '"'''"~· '73 MAZDA RX·2 . ROTARY House of Imports eves c$sl09S 6862 Manchester, Buena Park PORSCHE 56 Coupe 356A .::in the Santa Ana Fi;wy Clean-rcblt 59 trans. New ~iiijj:l[lili)li:i(;~ Vinyl top. • speed 1ransm;,. Ml tt_0 ;,· 7250 1orENrt c1u1eh ;~~~~~ :::=: .. ~ . ~.~. ~on. 4,234 miles. Rad;nl 11 n • 0 mpo 1 NEW PEUGEOl ~~- g\m;{ad;o and heater. <s1~ MERdE~~s" BENZ DEALER . $2977 Fl~T Complete $Illes & Service 1\a• 11 I .•. ..!. Visit Us Soon At - WA LfW 28701 Marguerite Parkway TOYOTA . Mission Viejo 495-1700 -(USE AVERY PWY. EXIT) -'63 MERCEDES Benz 190C, loc.G 1-larbor. C.M. G46·!l30.1 4 cyl, gas & auto, $6.iO. * Mazcle '73 Rotary * aft 6 on Fri bef 4 PPl $66 MONTH ~Sa~'~· ~64<1--54~2S=--- 36 MONTHS O?EN LEASE~ 1971 230 C MB, air, power \VIU accept trade-1111 windows, auto trans. gra.y, 2840'l Marguerite Parl<way Mission Viejo Complete Sales and Service. 831·~ • 4954M9 50 compacts on display. USE AVERY PWY. EXIT PACIFIC MOTOR '70 TOYOTA Slatton wagon IMPORTS. Corona Mark 11, al r , radio/beater $13'15. prl ply. . PEUGEOT /SYBARU :H6-s'!st • 1557 IV.~ Ave., '67 TOYOl'A Anaheim 533~ ~ii!i--"1&1 1961 PEUGEOT stat lo n c ... RO""' DELUXE wagon. Runs. $50 or otter Au ~om at I c transnussion, 83l--On2 1 radio, beater le air condi· tlonintr. ~065JDL). SAAB $699 CAU. MR. FRY 842.6500 -62M miles, Reg Siemens I . '67 JAGUAR XKE Type 4.2 Hunt. Beach aen>lced. $7300 673-M12 '1MLl.'--B-UY--Y-O_UR_O~A-TSUN--I coupe blk, 24,000 m I , '73 280 SEDAN, Sunroof, lo PAID ·ron. OR NOT WILL AM/FM, radial{, chrome mi, assume lse. Prv. ply DATSUN *SAAB Best deal Jtways. Complete selection now. BUy or leut from ""'~ ~ {. ',. ~ .. IA.~ . .._' . ' , ., ,PAY TOP DOILAR CALL wires, t c at her' lnt. MAZDA -* 586-4201 * • , , '!:''-' "A" l\AA't metlculodl matt, concourse '61 MERCEDES Benz, needs i:KENT ~·· ~· nd ~ ... , co • tu~. traru. Make oller •.tM M•--'t p-~~->IOZ '71, nu tire~ A/C, FM * 49Jl.9'lS * -· -•~" e -··-. stereo, 494-«136 ,alt 5 or '69 JAG. XKE. 4.2, 2+2, 1-·31 B I "",.~I =~~~·~~~~~ Mi.akm Viejo nuto, radio, wire whls, air •.lo · ea.ct'! B · '""~.., FOR Sale '72 220 Diesel .MB, "1·-• 495-4949 wkends. • • • .. ....i.... t 'l.tM 72 •• •""" ~,_,._-=~~ ~ ~ DATSUN Pick Op. Cam· cond., new c''6"""• "'""" or ' '"""'DA RX-3_ see to apprec. USE AVERY PWY. E.XIT I 18(XX) I Xlnt T.0,P,. 494--6129. \Vti.&on. luggage rack, factory ** 8.11>-8095 ** ~ ,,.,,,, "Make ftoom For paddy" l\llpe~$bo. Can ~.i-22&9. XKE 2+1 Coupe, 1966, alr, radio, 4 speed, $2995. 67 1\1.B axio, 34 mpg,I auto, 645-6400 or 64;MJ'IW ••• clean out the aaraae lt'I a breeze •• , 1t1ell your Only_j2.100 }?on 675-1047 _673-~19'16~. -·~=-=~-~~H. cxlra clean. $2595. It's a breeze. , , sell yoUr • , , tum that ju.nk tnto w h ltc"" with eafll!, use Dally $ lines, 5 <l"Y' for $5. Q\11 '72 MAZDA RX .. 3 638-2254.. , Items wtth t!&.Se, use Daily With a, D~ PUot Clusttled ·Piiot Ctas11lfted. 642-5678. toda.y •.• 642-0078 xlnt ccnd $2iJOO 67s..2G78 Need a "Pad"? l'laoo an ad! Pilot Clusllled. 642-5618: ad. ® 64 · 5678, Jim Parklnoon't , -· . .., . ' t # "' • ~ ... t ......... ,.. . • . I • ., ' Autos, fllew 980 Autos, New 9IO PROBABLY NEVER AGAIN WILL YOU RND BRANI-NEW BUICKS PRICED LIKE THESE TERRY'S WINDOW CLOSEOUT STICKER PRICE Brend Now 1973 ilulck Limited Sedan (Ser. #H530995J s7193ao $5493 --------------Brand Now 1973 Buick Riviera (Sor. •H556949) . $705705 s5337 Brand New "1973 Buick LtS.bro-~538005 --$4123-Sedan (Ser. •C123622) • ---·-------------------Brond New 1973 Buick Rogal Sport Coup• (Sor. •Z153896) $486345 '3972 ---------------Brand Now 1973 Buick Apollo (Sor. # 110507) $389830 $3343 --_________ ..:.....__.___ 1973 Riviera Custom Executive Car, Never Registered, Full Power, Air tond. !Ser. •H406969J $4793 ---------------1973 Reg•I Sport Coupe Exec- utive. Cir, Never ReglsterW, PS, PB, Air Canel., Vlnyf Roof. (S... illZ13- 2429l $3797 .-1972-Bulck--Skyl-ark..HJ-.~-C-aupe-,_~ - -$2-3,r. Avtt». Tr1n1., PS, PB, Al)i.,Cond, ~ Vinyl Roof (758FVYl --OVER lo rrs TO CHOOSE FROM SEE AND DRIVE THE 74'S AT BOB TERRYS DISCOUNT CENTER T·ERRY BUICK 5th & Walnut, Huntington Beach. 536-6~8 • ' I " I I f.( .r ' b " • ,, '!.1 •'I ' I ~;­ "t I " " -< ' . f I ; 1 I ' ' ·1 I' "· r ' I : ~i .,, ' I " l \ 1: '. >. :;I '' 1 J , ,\ I I I I I I ' I .. • • • • I. ' ' • . • ' I • •• ' .. DAILY PILOT F·~··· N"''"'' 9, 1973_'"""_,....,,...._,,=-..,,_=...,.===-~m;::;::-:--;:::::::;:;:;--;;,;;-A::;;;:;-;r;;;:;;;;;:;;:;;;--.:mii ""A----."'im_po_rt"'oc1'""'-"'9"'1"o"'A"u"'10:'.s~. ""u;:: .... :.---•90GiiliAA:iiulcto;;s,:'"UUi<Mdid--~990~ ~A~u"tos'-,-,~m-po_rt_ocl~-~97"'0""'A"'u""to"'s,..,""lm=po-cr::t-cod:;--;9"7"'0--.A=utos, lmportocl 970 ' Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmponod 9 Autos, lmPortod BUICK TOYOTA TOYOTA TRIUMl'H VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLVO '71 VOLVO 144 BUICK , ICK 1971 BUICK 225 • '69 La'ndcruiser HELP!'liloney ... nootwhlle '69 YW BUG -'66 .vw BUG '74 VOLVO'S Automatlctransmtulon, 70 .BU ELECTRA CUSTOM " JUST ARRIVED "''""'iW'67 Triumph 8Ptt· Sum( onu>11• wHh black in-HERE NOW AM/Fiii n1<11o. 1M1ov1. ESTATE WAGON , -hardtop. B"11J8111lm '74 TOYOTAS REMOVABLE H.T. lire, 4 new radlal lire< w/ lo h Slw terk>" iun roof, 4 ipeed, $2777 l'ull power & fact~ ~r. Ex· Interior, dual oon\!Ortalr,.ab, e 4 \\'heel Dtive \\ire wh.ls, reblt eng, trans 4 spd, r&d · eater, ·p radio & heater. ISYB268). Immediate ~livety cell :ooditJoo. (l}lBUt; tull po\\'Cr, factory ooet-Nuw Models. N~· Colors e ~dio &: rear end. Need.1 body Cai·! (YGR11 7J. SUPER SHARP On Alt l\1odets ent c . • d!Uot1h111, till wheel, door SAVE J .• o~ ~~l~~NING e Heater work. $6ii<l or ofter. 6T>-2398 $1295 5795 . SAVE I ON REMAINING f\a.-I.-!. $2395 JockS, P.B. radio, w b It e LIW TOYOTA 1966 l!.,,bor, C.M. 646-g303 '72 CELICA 4 Spd, ...Fa.cto1y,. AU· Cond, (&ilE.'lG) $2999 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA . . ... 1974 • T~YOTA'S ¥.,!, HERE AT \\IE f'1; tJSED CARS! 111.tn pll!• lllt>ILn', 11"1!.: I •'-"' ~ • ~rt.>.t ., ' - •1Setsof$n,...95 TR 4 -Cu s tomlz e d! 73~·,&f.OllOEMlotJNs • 91UQAVOLUl/ll6YO Jim Slemons sv1e~-a101~w'•'•~~ ~~~~ 21 Beautltul! ! Xlnt n1 e c h. ·~ (ZNU)7) cond. Mu.t ScU! Bell Oller! ~=:: I a ' ~~ dltlon. $3333 l~:c , 1~4-A ms, b 11.. I~ -VOLVO 1001 Harbor. C.M. 646-9303 Newport Bcacl1 ' Over 80 Fine Uoed Cars lD ....... c~wP·a~e5 u~-:: e:~: A~t~~ ':: !!sb~!!;~ln~ ~ 1966 Hat'bor, C.M. &16-9303 Autos UMCI 990 EN~~·=~R~iUR Na'"~rslect CadFrom11•-- ---• ....._ 491-6748. I buy & COJ)d. B c I 0 Vt' 28402 l\·largueri te Purn'tll' '71 vor.vo l<M. FaC. air. ~-·-------1 ="=~=?-"~+.-,,--= ..... - ' v.•holesale. Pvt pty. 673-8666 l\tlssion Vic)O· xlnt cond in &: out. Gets BUICK ''": ELECTRA • · Fact. AUTHORIZED DEALER Zi4D.2~~ue1i!a.P..Nkv.'a,y ~fissimi Viejo 831·ml • 49o-49<9 USE AVERY PWY. EXIT TRIUMPH '72 TRIUMPH TROPHY 650 VOLKSWAGEN ' . . • ·~Fl.I 831-~ • 4!Q...4949 great mileage. 547-7191 • a.tr. Jutt P11'r, vu1yt lop, 2600 11AfU3URHLVO. TI . V}V But;. ,\ti . USE AVER'\' P\\'Y E.'Crr days, 9794>78 eves , k 1970 BUICK 'RIVIERA tilt1}yhl,' power ~ k>L"K, . Cosla Mesa '70 V\V Squareback, orange, 1ugg. rack, radials, xlnt eond. $1550/ofr. 962-7875 '58 BUS XLNT COND $350 997 ·5559 or 613-4462 Radials. X1nt cond. $1500. · ,vkends amnrn stereo, 1 n1 n1n e: 9100 Open Sund.11 Call Sue, 644-24:30 dnys. WANTED: V\V Bug or . Factory air conditioning, full cond. 42.~ mi, $3J:j3, Call S.11r • --~~ 831-002 "'e•. Squareback, not running. '71 vw 411 SEDAN -~" vinyl top. m•tchlng $16-llM cl>•. 61:h54~1 n;gl1ts '72 Buick Skylark '69 vw Pop wp Camper, 1-Ia\'e cash. 5 48-1819, tapestry interb-, WBW, tilt &"-•:eekends. IIT Cpc, Ait' Cond, Po\\"ci' nu eng, clutch & tires xlnt ~18-5380 A u I o m a t l c 11-amtuisslon, wheel, AM/FM I t e re o • '7U BUICK La Sabre 4 dr Slf:ol•ritlg and Brakes, Auto $2150 or oUr, 59'1-3ll4 or ra<ho and heater. (91.20Uf) (592EXC) l:IT, perfect cond.!' \Villi Tfi.UIS. Vil1)'1 Roo~ •. Lots. of 592-2169. VOLVO $1887 $2333 auto, air cond., I"· pO'IC<!d oU~r Ex~._ """ll•vell' "'!· 1m V\V. Xlnt cond. Radio, '64 vw Sedan, engine good --------Over so Fine Used ears to lo sell at oruy $18fi0. mn<.'tliate. l i;).iBfi'VYUICK$Zl95. mag whl" wood daih, """ cond. Needs paint , $4j(). '72 'VOLVO 2DOOR Select From. 6*-1826 TERRY ""''"· 586-5443. 5.'!(;.;{162 eves or 6+1-1500 ~ lW!U Naberi Cadillac CADILLAC o<h • w~unl. Sch. '12_.,V\V$1400SQBK, auto, x!nt -day~•·--.68=-8~u~s---4 speed transmission. radio, . YOJA AUTI:IORIZEO DEALER --------1 ... " RtVlEffi,\, .........,.. cond. . ' t Must '"""" .... , and h 1"66ELT1 u•nnh VD 197·• CADILLAC ~ ·-Gorgeous. l!llIDacu a e. 6~ XLNT COND Sl,250 eater. ' <" 2600 ~a BL . oa ~ New radiu.ls & slX>cks. $14%1. See lo Appreciate. Well ao-,.= ~ '762 $3277 cosrA MESA FLEE'"'"OOD P11·. ""'·7712. "'Pl yO<ir trade-in on!> ** '12 SUPE!t BEE:n.E ** 997""° or ••~ !i»-9100 Ope Sunday In "-'.CC.::~:..:.:=.----1 ·~ th ~-d' 1.. reblt eng x!nl cond $2000 1972 chn~ 81·, -nd Stereo 1966 Harbor, C.l\1. 646-93Q3 · n ELEGANCE. Full pv.•r., UE4139l'." w/en on~. ·-. -~·u...._ -12400.Mokc '71 VOLVO i42 S, •• 000 ml. '72,' l'ulck Limited Cpe ,..,kill)& finish, padded CADILLAC . '65 vw BUG offer. 673-1153 or 586-1067. ·;o l • · -fonnerty cr.vned by local <k>c· vloY! t<iP, tuatcbllW t8')ellUY1---------1 Stereo. $600. 645-1619 '66 V\\' VAN, ne\\·Jy reblt UIA W"IO 494-8637 Power , Air Cond, 0040 sea1s, cootlort seats; <Wt & a e I COT DATSUN __ , ................ , .. . - .... ...... Excel cond.' Orig owner call tor. lJl,000 aotual milca, Full & leather interior, dwtl '64 c d D v·u. '70 BUG 41,000 nil, Orig eng., $850 or be!t offer. YOLYO '69 VOLV0.124, X1nt copd. (306ft.JLT). $3595. I telescopic wbccl, stereo, ONE o'\1/NEll White Ylitl1 '!Oo'-a~ily-"=P~llo..,t"'"°''•-•"'•"'A"ds,-..,.ha""'"" ,,....,...-=,....,,,,...,,,....--,.,,, O\vner, Very clean. Xlnt-673-7SiO 50,000 mi. aft 5 call 979--2269 TERRY BU CK door Jocks.· H!lB . every 1vhite inte1ior. New tires. I blil'l:alns ralore. Nt'erl a "Pad''? Pl:.ce an ad! cond. $1400. 536-1598 \Vant ad l'C:?tUlls ... 642·567!1 1968 l·latbor. C.l\r. 646.9303 asking $1800. 51h It Walnut, Hunt. Bch. deluxe xl.l'a i.lnUKinablc & Tilt 1\·heel At.'l/F'M electric ... ' ,~.. ' '"'· '"" f N 9IO • .. ~. N -• A to N 980 A I N 980 A to N 980 Aul0$, New 980 """" ""00 vel')' low mUei1. ( S er · \\'i11(1o\\'!S '& scaL 'Loaded. ·l.A~u.;o;s·~·;;•w;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;-;·;;;•;w;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i'-;,;;;;";;;s;· ;;;•;w;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;";o;•;·;;;•;;w;;::;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;u;;;;;;;'·;;;;•;w:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;!-;;;;;;;;;~I ~1 $6555 °'''Y u,$i'o95 1949 SEDAN' DEVILLE ! I • t· I· . r ' ~ { t I < • • I '' ,, I I. I ~ .. ' I DICK JOHNSON VICE-PRESIDENT ''Now-· ••• ·· -· --• WERE READY To LEASE NOT ~JUST NEW UNCOLNS & MERCURYS ••• BUT ALL MAKES ••• ALL MODELS .... _£VEN .. ---. USED I'' • ....... _____ -. WE'VE TRIPLED OUR STAFF ... ·, ALL EXPERTS-... -AIL READY TO LEASE ANYTHING YOU WANT . ; . TODAY! • ~----1974 } , • I • • Pantera ~Y. ~II ! Tomas •.................... $244.00* -Continental Mark IV ...... : ............. · ... _Sl'l5..00* ~arquis ; Brougham . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . $139 .00* Cougar XR7 ............................. $101.00* Capri I the · Sexy European I ................ $ 95.00* VJ6 Melttb 0..-11 lei' Leme 011 Ap,,•Md Cre41t .. .. • !'HONE FOR LEASE BROCHURE • 540-5630 GET THE FACTS ON THE FAMOUS FULL MAINTENANCE LEASE Malcolm Reid ·Charlie Thomas Hal Sanders PREVIOUSLY DRIVEN SPECIALS '71 CONTINENTAL Coupe. Full pi>wer plus factory air· condition- ing. (024CQT) $319.36 dn . 24 }"o.'O.E.L. O.A.C. LEASE $15065 PER FOR MONTH '69-MAR.l' Iii Factory air, power winaows, 6 wafpower seat, AM/FM stereo, landau ropf. (0611JDC) $3275 '77-l\'.IONTE CARLO Sport CouP;d. v8, automatic, radio, .heater, PO'\'er steering & brakes, power windows , factory air, beautiful 1 owner -.r. (431ETI) $297.~ .. • '70 MAVERICK 2 Door. Super clean. 3 speed, radio, extra de- luxe lrim. (148HDC) $1675 '69MERCURY ~farquis coupe. Automatic, factory air, power steering·brakes-windows, radio, heater, vinyl top. (XKV707i . • $1695 , '70 CONTINENTAL 4 Door. Full power, factory air. conditioning, landau roof. (288ASH) $2975 '71 CADIILAC Coupe de Ville. Full power, auto. temp. con- trol air, power 6 \Vay seat, AM/FM stereo, tilt-tele., landau roof. (610CXV) $319.36 tin., 24 mo. 0.E.L. 0.A.C. LEASE $15065 PH FOR MONTH '72 DODGE WAGON Coronet. Small, ve, stick, radio, heater, power steering, roof rack. Real wagon for economy. (951FBB) $2175 '69 CAPRICE Sport Coupe.-ffcfory air, power windows, only ' 38,000 miles. (OOOAGB) SALE PRICED -oranv-Countr'• Fantlly •JJ'I•• Ca"" • Home Of 'l'lte New car • , • "Q ..... re.~· • Home Of TIM! N•• Oar , • • 410.U-re.d" . , • ' 2626 HARBOR BL VD. OF-ORS Coot• Mne • 540-5630 • .l''act01:y air condiUonllig, tull pl>\.\'er, vinyl top, f u 11 JeaU:ier interior, tilt & NEWPORT IMPORTS telescopic steering, AM/1'~M radio, door •locks, ct'U.i.!ie contl'OI, many c x t r a fl&. 3100 \V. Coost fJwy,, N.B. tYNF.OllBJ. 642-9405 $1999 '73 MARK !V. Silver miSI 19'9 CADILLAC lV/cranber:rY velour inter: I EL DOR.ADO Fully equip, top cond. Pri Pty. $10 400 new, asking breathtaking firenllst finish, $7!XXI.' m..1ll3. vinyl top, lealher interior, . tilt & tcleiwpic v.·neei, E?'-'TRA Clean, U:lw nille&b<e stereo, door Jocks, new 6S ,Olupc O:V. ?i.Ia~ ex- \\'liW \SAV :.,M) tras. One 0"11er. Smooth ' 52555 ~~I~ .. 0.11.Y $1950. I 1970 t ·AiJILLAC '67 C:OUPE De. VIiie. Good EL D<JRADO 1nech. 1..'0nd. l\lany extrua '.('urgooitie white Vinyl tut-64,00) n11lcs. ~lake oiler. quOisc cioth & lea.th~ }ll-1"1u.~ sell 968-886ij, - terior, "fulJ power, lnct.ocy EL Do>:ado Conv. ·n. loaded, air c6nditioning, .•tilt "-lt: ~great shupe. Private. pty . telescopic wheel, stereo, $300 under vo'l)l)]eaale bocik. door Jock&, 11entinel, etc. 644-2336. · tlQ2ACNJ ··-=73~CA"o=""so=v.-1~11 .. -.-.-. 7.4500~ $3222 ml, fully "!•iPll"PvL ply 1970 CAUILLAC $6250/or ofr. ~73ll eve. COUPE UEVILLE _sn.-:=IOl='~=-l_,-5,_. ,,.-,,-,-,-,--I utcme, brown vinyl Lop, '70 S.D. f'ully loaded. Cordovan leather,~ l u JI Jo.11~1 ~nd. 76,000 nli. t>O\''er, faciOI}' air COfJd..., $2295 .... 497-Ul2 tilt & telcsoopM: wbt.'el, door '71 EL D 0 R A 0 0 C.00. k>cks, stereo, light sentinel, vcrtiblc, xlnt cood, priv etc. Xlnt cond. t831HBBJ party bst oUt 644-2336. $3~2 00 C:OUPE de YUie, lull 1972 COUPE DEVILLE power & au exln11. SlW I bJ #;_,_. ""' • .i .... 1 64-H780 or 642-3639 ce ue .... QUI.II,, ... Ull! ~ .. v CADil.LA" ·= 67 000 . top blue leather full pl>\\W ... w , • OL1g tac:Ory au-' conaUionw,, we mllet Bea'!Uful cood.. $1.0ll & telescopic wheel, stereo, or oiler 645--Q.84 door locl<s, ... -. elc. CAMARO Shfil1>. !WlEAFJ $49:99 19W CAMARO, PIS, PtD, 1971 COUPE 'DEVILLE air, aul<>,: new p<int. $2liO. F'actory air conditioning, tu11 1 ,4c-9l-~:l66c-I=-. --=-.,-__l-+ power, vinyl lop, tapeslry CAl\IAllO -'70, air: pJ.s, & leather interior dual 11/11·nn..,, R&H, Michelin ~=1c s~.-~1~ tiresC~-;itOLET ! stereo, dOof loda,. many ex----------1-tras. (388DLM 1. l OO $3888 I I 1973 CADILLAC Ga I:: :=::EE : COUPE DEVILLE '69 Impala Custi Burnt sienna, brown vinyl top saddle leather full 2 door 1:rr. V-8, automa c po,:.-er, factory air 'oond., transmission, air condi · . tilt & telescopk wheel ing, PQ\\·er $teerlni:, I stereo, door locks, etc. xinl roof, clean &: low mil ! I cood. (629HOE1 (Ol2H0A). :::t $5888 Only $1195 1970 CADILLAC ~. -.11' ~ CONVERTIBLE ~ -· Leather interior, full J>d";'er, FORD lacwry air condittoolng, tilt & telescopic wheel, AM/FM • Y•Alll ICllVIMO SAN Cl.IM•9'• stereo multiplex, w s w SJS NOITH IL CA..a ·~L Urea, etc. (816BSR) SAN CL.bmnl 492-1137 1'969 c~l~~VILLE '72 CHEVY VEGA ~1 Cordovan ' acrylic lacquer ''HJ hba k C , w/matching vinyl top and •1C c_ oupe leather upOOlstery 1u11 Radio, !{eater, stick, nfce power, factory air con-car.; ROO with black ditlonina:, tilt &: telescopic lor. (OOSEPCJ. wheel, AM/FM ster,o $1595 multiplex, twllight 80ntlnel, (1111~1!1 loW tnDes. &iper cle&n . !YWK5061 $2777 ' 1971 SEDAN DEVILLE ,,;;;69;;CJo;;clEV;;;.~i."'1P°"AJ.,,..,.1""cu=:k Sliver blue, white -vmyl top, 2 Door Hardtop 350 blu~ tapestry & leather In-a u t omatlc trinsn1 n'. tenor, fW.l ·power, factocy power steering, tinted g1 air • conditlonhl&, tilt &. complete. Strato b u. c k,e t teleaooplc. wheel, I t e r ,e o seats, vinyl top. Factory llir AM/F.M, ~r lo cks , cond . Will sell for • y automatic trilnk opener, etc. blue book who I e 1 a1 ver; itw P!ues~·W&CUcl 644-4687 • $3999 ' '65 MPALA 327. 4 , w 1970 SEl>.4\N DEVILLI ,battery & starter. , Adriatic . tw-quolse, blaCk 'body, tlret1, paint. ! vinyl top, black leather, lull . ~r1s: l'/Be>lf!!n.:;.,, w~, c. power" ·factor)' air oan-· . ~""'. or o f r dltlonfug dual oomlort front or . lrade. 642-1353 ,..,,, iut A 111-1c SELLI . I , wheel, tte'reo, doot, 'tock:a, 1969 NOVA 2 dr coupe, C, crube control, etc. C12m3') auto trans, p/1, 307 $3222 = Pl'<lmor. - 1972 CADILL~~ * ·n arev MONTE EL DORADG air bucket""" v1ny1 ""'-tee blue flrerblat, blue vinyl tilt wheel 38 rxxj ml, $2.895. top,' matching" interior, ful' 673-1901. ' ' 1 JXMW factory air con-· '12 I -dU.ioning tilt A: telescoplc MPALA, «0. 4 dt, pa. wheel ~ereo door locb. pb, air, air ll!t shocks, etc. Like new: (872EIA) ' =·~tires, $2a». or $5999 '63 Im pala, aood transpoita. Jm CADILLAC lion car. $loo or best olf<r SEDAN D'IVILLE . OOS-7341 t Fac:tory air conditioning, Ml ,;:i;12;';Cl;;t;.;EV;,.,,Y.,lm-pe"'la""2"'11r"'·+-= flT, pawer, Yin.YI ~~_;!!•ther Red , a/c, orla' owner. MUil and tapestry fn....,.., lfl( ..U $1m. -I I< ~wheel, stereo, '15-lMPALA Cl ' auto, door ioc ~t HgtJt 1enthiel, all p/s, pJb, a/c, 3ZT ere IOCXI I the ex<m;, (159l;LUl ,,.. .. ""' l6IJO &<S:iii6s $4699 WILL talc~ 1 ~rot, 2 ~!I" Over 80 Ftne U.ed Can: lo 3 cat"at dllmdnd in OQ ~e Select From · for riew car. 892-4444 1 Nabers Cadilac ·ncnEVELLr. s·~Port~CO\IPe..;- AlT'''Hon1:r.-.:-o DtA1.F.R auto, p/1, bkt .eat.a, -21110 HARBOR BLVD. sole, $19116, S:U.7~ I a>sTA MESA A~1 .Qiy It llW'l.i!m DAY to ---·~ ___________________________ ..;,.., ______________ :", _.;.._.;.._~ .... -:-~.-~--·1Sf>..9100 ()pt:n Sunday nuJ an ad! Don't d@lay •• • ' ' I ' ., I J 1 ·' Fact ..... l inte air • s l I < I I-°Se~ .~,I 'N : ·J A ' . I' f I, ' ' I ' ' 'f-a!I ,' ' I - ' ' ' I 2 ' .. I ,- 111. 1" I,: ; . 1 'fC. ~') R " I .oc . .. ,.,. '" ... ·- I ' ' --. !I) utol 990 -:::::_:·:::~::-:::-:-:-~~l~A~ut~o~1,:_;U~Mcl!!!!!...__..:.._!!!!IA;o•:.to.::•.::••c..U:.soo='---.:.:.:: IA=utc;•.;;;••c.U;;.•;;.;od;;;._ ___ 990-' AutOJr-Us~· · 990 Autos, Us.cs 990 Autoi, liHd Frldar, Nottn1btr 9, 1973 990 iuto1, UMd DAIL V PILOT 4:; -:::-::C:::H:::'.m:::::--:O:::-LET~-1---.::FO~R~D:'......... ___ . ..;.r..;.INT.:.....;;..o __ PLYMOUTH PONTIAC PONTIAC • RAMBLER .T·BIRD - 990 Autos, UMd 990 ;1!..,e.\~~u~? ~ ~~ X~~ 100 *~l97dl PINTO, locally driven, • 100 ·n PONTIAC GraJwJ Sal•ri GRAND Prix 1969, vll)yl lop. '62 RAMBLER \971, T·BIRD LANDAU .•ll~iaje, Man,y xtra1, Lml · 'Gal&ena Gas 'Ree "'" wir, orlx owner. Mint Gallcw,,s Gas FREE 6 _paSll \.\.'agon, auto, air, nuui whla, moderate olile11. TRANSPORTATION CAR 4 doOr hitrdf6p1 facioly t1lr jOb, n l tell $1600 be cond, lo nilleagc, n1any I A~/FM 11lereo, llll \1:hJ, Xlnt cond. Muat sell. $1650 &Wi-1198 after 7 pm cond., Nil . po\ve'r, vthyl In. I 1 '1 WI ' or st . 'II.1th purchw lltrrui, p1i pty. 552-9~12 \V th p;n"Ch:UJC P/\V, P/S, disc brks. wood or ofter 6'15-2696. 1 ------~-~-I ,orr. 347-.1026 . '69 GALAXIE 500 '70 FURY Ill trim, Railey Wheels, 13,000 ~";: '~1 "'.t.:1.!~r'::•:!:'. ' . T·BIRD , f 100 Gollon1 Got FREE with purchoaie '69 T·llRD '~· CHRYSLER 2 -HT v.a automauc PLYMOUTH · 2 -· v.3 •utomallc U'llns. ml. 642-3103. RAMBLER ___ T_·_B_IR_D ___ 1 1340El<Vl j.i tranan~. ah-c.-pndition-!.--ml.sskl n. air oondilionlni. '73 LE l\tANS Coupe. V-8.1 -------,--1 '72 T BIRD ~2999 .,,'65 IMPERIAL 4 dr. H.T. Ing, JAW.·e:r steering,-etc. 1970 PLY,.IOu111 Dwiter, J>V11·er !$ICCl'htg, vlnyl roc;ir &: auto, p/s, p/disc brks, 9,000 '&9 RAMBLER 2000" R • -1' I A/C. 6 way aeaC.. All pwr, Clean Ii: rwli $1. IZJFSZI) xlnt st\11.pe. ~1400. \Y!ll a C'lea:n ca1• with low tiules. nU wider 1var., Jinntac, ,., FuUy IUXW'Y equipped. Full O\'c.r 80 Floe Used_ Cara to AM/FM Aulb, pilot Runs · O·'· 1495. ~oded '1,~~ 56-3566 3'W <•~"1 . l'«JOO. 84H874. power & lactory •"· 074>'ND ScNleci From. C d'llo V·S. automatic lrll\Jlniuion, tun ~·er, air ronclllloning & vinyl roof. (985CPYl . A gh'l\l buy! 'like new 11000. MS-6.\75 ... , eva •. . . Only $1595 19T3 G RAND Pr ix 3 speed trari"1i-n, eco-$3495 aben a I c Only $1695 .,JI before lOAM. Owner. ".o..-A-~. '68 PLYMOU1'H GTX $1000. repme8lllon, full p:n\'er, nomical ,6 C)4inder @ngine, AUTil0RIZED1'£ALER "68 CIJRY.SLER Ne1vport, lib ¥· """''=:"--r' ·440 cu. in. Uniroyal Tl.ger !'A TX ~-A-A. all'. A1.f/FM Stereo, Int· radio and heater. (YRA976J Jim Slemons ~ HARBOlt BLVD. ~2-dr, Hrr. air. pwr, FORD Paw•. 54H823, 361 E. 22nd 1-Viw -":!"'~tr m•c. Be•l oflor. 673-3700 $777 Imports . CQSTA MESA fUl,4t4f#P ·.FO•D .auto U'&ns. AM/Fi\f, lo ml St; FORD ,64 CllAND PRIX, Xlnt 5-10-9100 • Opeo Sunday I I: book, 642-4ts s;s"::;:.IMW.Lt.N Clllll•!f"• 1964 PLYM66rii rury-P/S, cone!. Extrat1. $400 ~78Ga poi Quail CHRYSLER '67 4 dr. Hard SAN a CAMNo 11.U P/B, Radio, lteater, sax> •vi.us 11•v• u. CllM•NT• bet...S, 644--0312 eves.. l N~'J)Ort Beach i"' ~·~owner, p/1, pib~ CLBllNTI 491 ' 11 J7 OJ' best offer. ~46-0753 ~ =:. c~ ~~ '67 Gran.sf Prix Conv -· ~Wt fJDil ENTER 'f'R8t:M~acARTJIUR I -M0-1.00S '1 id. oond. $6.5(1, 1972 FORD L TO ·~ ~'RAJUbDAnd, V-8, auto • Full power, new I-Op, air, , VOLVO Fat Profit J,; attah\ed when QUICK CAS!i THROUGH A DAILY PILOT 'WANT AD • '+'IA•S MIVI,_ SAN (llMINTI SJI NOl1t( B. CA.-.0 UM. SAN C~ 191·11 Jl I . BROUGHAM s. o ' ra. nu Urea. '69 ROADRUNNER, Nee cl s Michelins. $5$. 642-3354. ,t >-Ou sell 01·~· ... " reault-oe!-. • CONTINENTAL 2 Xlrl> clean. llWO. 645-0369. """-' • door ha~-vi I t body work. $400 979-'lli05 bef. Ung Dally Pilot ClusWed •i.iwp, l\Y op, " 'II !Ind I• C 11~ '"' I""" 1-1 .... bol· CM ; '• tapestry Interior, tlual CQl\l· ~ou • 1r1 lass1 c" 5, 61'f-Wl2 e\•P.s. ClaMlfied Au.. •.. 642·5671' ""° .... • ·1 · Ads. 642-5678 I , 1969 CONTINENTAL fort seats. factory air t."00· Autos, New ·. 980 980 Autos, New .i SEDAN dl tlonlng, automaUc , Factoey air coodltlonlng full transmill~lon, power steer- . p;M-er vinyl top l~ther hJi, po1o,er brakes, white interiOr tllt whl • F 1 sidewalls, run equipped. ! . .. ac ory (ll846'2) air condlllohing, lull power, $3222 · stereo , door locks. t (XSW"';,41) -----Ol•er -80~1ne Used ~Cars--,-. ! $1]77. Select From. I Over so Fine tJse<! cars 10 Naben CadRloc -Select Front . AUTHORIZED DEALER ~ 'Nabers CadlRac :mo HARBOR BLVD. : '/ AUTRORIZEO DEALER 54(}.9lOO COSTA ~f~ SUnday • 2SOO HARBOR BLVD, ' • 1 cosrA MESA '71 FORD 1 j S»-9100 Open Swlday ! :;;e,rA:;., rn~. ~~;, COUNTRY SQUIRE .f wkndl 6#-4746 ..• CONTINENT AL Marier III Statbl 11•agoo. 9 passenger, ~c. steNO,·tthr, dnt cond. radio, healer, power -neer. p ;;, 675-8883 ing, air conditioning. roof m -CONTL. Town Sed full rack, Ja;857 mil~. C.iSSi). 'P>°. eq"lp; + C•~l•ec~~trol, $2477 19,000 ml. $4-1.'iO * 837-4448 1 71 1.tARK III $-l9:i0. Fully equip. Dk blue/white top. -1\··-L110:1 I • (072EAD) Pr/ply 6T.,..71m. llnllt UlllO I I CORVETTE TOYOTA I '6•1 COlt\TITE 3Z7 1966 llat'tlor, C.'.i\-1. 616-9303 I ·: \I ErtY NICE '70 FORIJ Cbw1try Squil't!' '~all 6-G-11143 all 5 P i\! \\'agon. Beige. XJnt cond. COUGAR 1"gguge rack, !wl P"'·· low · t mile. $2100. 675-8821. '~ '72 O>ugar XR--7, V...S, auto, '69 Jo~RD LTD Sedan, slr 1 ,, p/s, p/b, alr. stereo, wrt'd cond. &. full J)Oftr, landau 1 tadla1a 17 700 mi t 'tflm top. Xlnl cond. l\lust sell. 1-J . ' •· • ,...,.... &12.,2238;'-• .673-0685 ·-.~~"----=~ ·, '?Q. (.'OUGAR-p/s, p/b, ~k-. '69 GALAXY ~· 4 dr., HT. I -beaqt contJ .{nu lire~ Chfor Alt, pe, pb, air,~ xlnt cord. I · Red, ~7. Orla: 01•1ncr $1200. ~48 '68 COUGi\R. '70 LTD Ford, 2 dr, w/vlnyl "'"'~ a No. 1. top, p/.s, Wh, air, 1o mis, ' ·~-... • 846-0460 • ~ l'· _..::5.>,:;_;-11lll=:::°':..."'=1·"7872::.:..._ 1 __ _::,.:==_.::_ __ DODGE JEEf' 1tl DODGE 1ttonaco st.a. '73 JE~P CJS Renagade. WEJt. All xtru. New radial.I Under v.'UTIUlty. Headen, I. brks. $2300 Firm. Eve. full roll cage, Cibie' llghtl, 1" 493-731B etc. htust sell Best Ol!er, 11 '72 DOOOE Polara Custom.1..::6'.l::.1·..::127:::.2::.·-~--- alr, · Pi•. p/b. st••••>. etc. MAVERICK •'31 ,000 n1I, xlnt cond .. , ______ _ ' 641>-1932 " '. '70 l\lA VERJCK excellent con. • · 1970 DODGE Otallen,aer. dltk>n auto air cond $1300 ;-1 Tran!t-An1 model . Mmt sen m-1ci&s .. · ' · ; $1350 or bst ofr. 536-3402. .10 2 dr bl! 1 1 1 • . re , a:reen. c can, , '63 DODGE> Polan, 383 A-air L'OfKI, tape deck $1000 i . one owner, $500. Cuh 494-1719 ·• · ' -FIREBIR.Q MER~URY ; -\VAGON '68 Colon,y Park. . FIREBIRD '13 Esprit. Load· Top cond. 9 pus, air cond., ' ro. Air, suto, etc. Lo mi. nil pv.T. stereo, $1395. Pr!. ply. $3795. 494-7755. 5J6..6975. • '71 FlREUIRD. $2650. P'S. MUSTANG p/b. al•. mag whl" "" ---------tires. 673-5441/&12-371i6. FORD 1o0 1967 MU$I'ANG, low mUeqe 390 Cobra. Jet enelne, ex· cellent•mechanicaJ condition ~L New ' brakes, map, tires, alr abocb A I· Ga11ont Gas FREE paint' Must see 1o • , 1 with purchase preclale. ~!>-2083 after S:30. 1.' '69 FORD LTD '68 MtJsrANG, G cyl •llck. 2 ff T V ., ol New tires, p/1, 40,000 door ... ., -<::1, &utomauc mlles t 11QI!;. 644-1980 or tranan.sJOn, JIO"'eT steer· • ~ I Ing, air conditioning, vinyl '"&15-~!;=380'=~=~=--=-· ropf,,.A nice car! \ZN)'Sil). '70 MAOl I, 351 2 bbl, -µ ' · Only $1395 "'""· iw~. p/d•1 a~•0• • .,1r. 1 49,000 mUes, $185().ott , i . 847-471B • j • , tflJff, 4'~ 'oo REJBLT eno I< ....... . 1 • FORD 35.ooo m1. p/•. ,,., cond, ~I! $600 finn 5t6-1024 aft 3 ' ,;.•::;,r;,."'°c:.=": · OLDSM.OllLE LUI CIWI -4t'J.11JJ '73 OLDS · , '72 FORD Full pow.,. & factory air. I ' RANCHERO ~. tactoey """"""'· Automatic tl'aDI. '""""''"" $3995 I .... -inltH. T7'31K. . ~ $2595, Jim Sle-. 1 , ""' $l•lllQllJ lmpans -Imports N2!'..~ .. !l'.-1301 Quall ~ .. ~9300 j .~ Ne-.vport 8ead1 ENTER FROM MacARTilUR 1~; 1NrER •1l~'f:ncARTHUR &!Ds~E '. '72 PINTO GMC TRUCKS .. u Blue with blue i!Rerior. Auto-HONDA CARS · = ........... con. M>pef UNI~ OLDS -ml H-_ Blvd. O>lta MeA . Mlollillo '85 OLDS 88, p/s, ~/b, auto trans, radio, heater, ale, good cood. IYG-1971 >ft I NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W, O>alt Hwy., N.B. ,pm=..------- 642-'405 '10 OLDS ~· Su.I'""'"'· ~~. RED ·n FORD LTD Wqon stereo tape, deck, ale, fulJ .IX low pilleq., Super cond. power, lo JnJ. X1nt cond. $2150. 67H876 alt 6 during $212S..64Hl86. week. '69 OLDS !Ill; 2 dr tit, loaded, <; •n FORD 'LTD, 2 dr, >Int w/8 ""<M, .... ;Jt:a-000 ft· '. cond, alr; am/tm, all ml. 53S-Banft, ·'' power. k> mlie, S»-900l. Hnf&.o·..:lloh~·~=~=--..,.. -·n FORD Otuntty Sedan 10 ·n 98 wx. SON. FP, Ill', .. :i:q pa.11 NII ~&._air oond. v. np:. -tlt whl. ft.~ dlec ~· Xlnt'cOnd. $18'15:-&C-8153.--bl'kl, $Hi0. lf, .. 0523, '66 Ford. l'Ood cond. p/a, ~-=•:::::;:.,.· ~=-=-~--.,. 11 air, radto. new' ttrea. S450 168 Oiiii~~ C)'., «!& ~,or otter. 80-2t17 owner, •••• , or 111!1 FORD Ud .ala. wiog. 4Uer. ~"· -39,000 ml'•· 11!115. tan lJ6I oil)S 4clr, air, p/1, • -· A p/b, cleln, call all 7 pm. IA! •-__ _,, 'TO LTD SqQlr< .w-· Ile, -· -· =: run .m .. AMJTlll ~ PINTO ·"' 10 -pm 8».41117 • ~ ~~~~~=:.--1-~~.;......;.;.;...;......~~ ·n GALAX1E, q , °"""'• '73 PVfl'O w-. Am-Fm t 3'7M ~ e'W· SlJeO, l'ull ate~ MlchtUn tim A ~ • ~VT. 8*-3291. More!! $2150/olfer . '68 FORD Galui<. Xlnt 646-2839. t; oond. !61o0-·it ;;;;. Pmto~~-,_..,-.,.,..,,200=-cc-, I ' • ~7--0ZiS * '-'pd· a/c, lo mllct, lilnt. 'ii!l FORD $1'AT10I< WAGON cond. f?llO 830417 '"' RUNS GOOD .· CllEAl'll "Tl J!lNTO RIJNABOUT, lo • t45-am • ntl, $UOO. fM..2231 o r "-want"'"'°"" .:: .. -::1133':::'1:.:.ts!ic.:. ____ _ . , . YO~ FACTORY AUTHORIZED CHE VROLET DEALER SERVING THE ENTIRE H ARBOR AREA FOR OVER 13 YEARS • .. •• Try Our Newest at Connell Chevrolet Lease · the "CONNELLEASE" Way See Jerry Perkins, Le•sing Mln191r We've cleared out most.all of our 1973 inventory so •••.•• we're receiving extra loads o.f-'74'.s from the ·factory. No -. . . . need to order at -CoHnell , NO NEED TO ORDER IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • • o<-. ~I ---. II ' ' • 1 . "' ' ALL COLORS & iou.tPMENT AJAILABLE ' ' • • ·. flNAL 1973 DEMONSTRA.TOR SALE!' . , ·~ B~~~D '73 STATION WAGON Autom atic, rad io, heater, power steering , power disc brakes, power ta il gate window, air conditionin~. 11278 ) 120 5409 I ' $ 94 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY CAPRICE Loaded (249) (114358) . 1.MPALA (~~~(~i5977) ; IMPALA 2 DooR Loaded (J.2 1) (104511) • -. , s429s~ I $351S8!> . s377~55c ~69·~~~lf!~WJ:.e~'"·"··''· 51799 '72 MONTE CARLO . 5·3499 ..,., itoto., raqkl. 111r concr.. 2'.llOCI, m.H':" ii) Raror Sllo1p. (eltEIFI • -auto, VI (Zlk6Ul iJ:4'PRJCE 4 DR. $425856 Sls. Mgr. 'scar. Loaded (106) <(102300) .. IMPA.LA ·cusTOM .s359()00 lr1~1"&osas11 I;: , ·$42.0.6~ CAPRICE 4 DR. Loaded {771)'. (164262) . I i ; 52299 ,.0 .CAMARO COUPE , 499 '..' #~ Vt! •ufOINll.c, 'P.S., rlldlO. SNtp orar'19e _,,, IH.5CEPI I '73. VEGA HATCHIACK 52499 f,19S mli.. R«llo. 111iom.11c, Ilk• br•nd -· (lllGXP) • '72 ~!!A,~!~~~"' "''· ""'° mllu. 51899 (Onf"NI) '72' IMPALA CUSTOM 51899 HOW AEAO THISI C~. l/t, llulo., rMllo, P,$,, P,8, Ill coloi'. Ml llet'I car. -UllELT '71 '71 '71 '72 CAMARO 5309·9 Yellow, bl•clt rual, black lnl..,., $Nrp. P.S •• P.B., auto., rMlo, air, 37,000 mUes. !1'2COW) NOVA COUPE 51899 Sm.II VI, 1lkk 1hlft, radio. sliw CIHn. (312CT9! '72 VEGA WAGON 52199 Rldlo, ~ 19"(1 trantml11"'1, 29.0.0 mll11.. (lllGNIJ • '70 CHEVY I) NOVA ~099 ' -· sm:-1 VI, automat~, P.S ... r&dio. !2'9Ak.H) ., ~ • 299 '72 ~ 1p.N, elr condltlonl11C1 • .iiariil•. (270ETD) 599 · '70 CHEvY 1 TON C..599 Lp)o plckin>. H.O. c•mP1r tQUfp.,.cl, • ~ · J""l~S. ~ 1pttd, lO,llt mHft. llMJlo.. , • ,,1,7f :'.'· .,. '69 EL CAMINO '69 EL CAMINO '72 EL CAMINO •. '73 EL CAMINO· Aut om1tic:, power niea. \1 65DDEI • ·WILL TRADE Small V8, air, P.S., automatic, vinyl roof. Va, a utomatic, power liteerin9 & br1 kes; l42 647E l oir. (5l1 92 KI WILL TRADE WILL TRADE • • Smell VS, iflck onifl, rodio. fl45HDCI • ' WILL TRADE f • • ' • t [ ' •' • • ' I, • • • • ' • I • "I .. ' ' I ' ' • • . ' • ' • ~ ' I I • • • ' ; I l t ' • ., ' \ . • s:"rJday, Novemtr 9, 1973 _48 DAIL'( PILOT , F:INAL ~73 CLEARANC,E SALE! ~36-ooo-M1t1-WA•1tAftT~AVAIL-ABiE~ -II-, . ALL NEW 1974 ,OM,EGA JuLL Y EQUIPPED $ . W! THANK YOU ••• FOR MAKING US • • • N 0 1 IN ORANGE COUNTY HONDA CAR SALES FOR THE PAST 6 MONTHS . , . AND NOW ••• • NO. 1 HONDA DEALER IN AMERICA! !Sept. 1974 Sale, Figures ) GIVEN WITH PURC &~ASE . OF ANY CUSTOM VAN THIS WEEK! . r TAKE 1969 · 1969 1969 $ $ 11 ~ 1 / • in tol•I d1t. pmt. IJf.77 tet11 mo. pmt, l~cl, t•x. lie., & 111 c1rTYl111 cllt&. CH 0 ICE Electra. Tilt wheel, vi ny l roof, air cond., l .S. Tilt whl., vinyl roof stereo, full Coupe. Cruise control, vinyl roof, Load-.,. '*· credit tor,. ll'I05. Otttrrllf pymt. pl'ic• •1•.n lm:r, 1111 & He. I( -full power. IYPK520 1 power, air, Loaded. (ZMU77 1) ' 9d, full power, air. !219EQD I ANNUAL f'ERCENTA~E RATE tl.U'/lo. inn c•"' price Phis I & I, SEE OUR HUGE SELECTION I 6 7 ~~~~o.,~~. pow". IVCJbOOI $ 4 7 7 '68 ~o~.R~~.R~8.V:"~~~'~foll $577 power, tape. 1558209) ._ '69 ~~~: .. '~~Ac~., pow". $677 IZAD8951 '68 f.'IAT SPYDER $67 F,lly eq ui pped. IZWY624 1 '69 . ~.~~;,~, ~~~!~~·E•i• cond., $877 rad io. 1109 6381 OF CUSTOM VANS; TODAY! '70 ~s~R:~IR~p. •adio, hoator. $977 '7 4'' STAGECOACH'' VAN 100981 31 ....,__141_....0AGC I __ _ s39771MMEDIATE DELIVERY · '69 ~S~~~.~~i~~ond ., radio, vinyl $977 ' top. l770ADZI t REPLACE WORN SHOCKS! BUY 3 and Get ~h One FREE 4 DELCO PLEASURIZERS FOR THE P'!,IC# OF .3 1¥STALLED. Any Model Oldsmobil• SERYICI A PARTS DIPT. OPIN MON.·SAT. 7:30·5 :30 For Compllto lody A MOiai i.,....rSonlC-Col 5411-fHS . I ' . { l . . . •· ,.... . . . . ' BRAND . NEW ~iiiiiimiiiji 197 4 · ' "''"""" VENTURA ~ . ' BRAND NEW $ ---~~~ 14_ . . $78 66 DOWN $78 66 MONTH . $7S.S6 is total dn. pymt. $78.86 i1 total mo. pymt. incl. tax, lie., all carryin9 charga' on •ppr. cre~t for 48 mo1. Oeferred.pymt. p•;ce $l86l.4b·l nd. tu & J;cense . ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 14.35 ~ •. ORDER IN YOUR CHOICE OF COLORS TQDAJI RAND .. PRIX $ .30 FULL PRICE ORDER IN YOUR· CHOICE OF COLORS TODAY . f'rlda,y, Novemhtr 9, 1973 . 40 ·- BUY -OR- • • t • ··LEASE ', • J' ORDER IN YOUR CHOICE OF .COLORS TODAY! ' VISIT OUR NEW LEASE DEPARTMENT-NOW OPEN!! ! ! .Brand New 1974 Grand Prix ASK ABOUT OUR NlONEY BACK LEASE PLAN Brancl New 1974 Fireltlrd Esprit 510960 ' . MONTH . 5 7629 ~o~;H ~,· . . .. , 36 Mo. OIL. OAC. . ; 36 Mo. OIL. OAC. _______ _, '71 BM W 2002 lS,000 miles. Stunning white eJCterior. Excellent cond ition. ! 020EAF l .52985 '70 CADILLAC Coupe DeVille. Full power, air, vinyl top, loaded. 42 ,000 mile•. 1508EVAI . · 53345 ' . '69 CAMARO . Hardtop. Racing oran9e, vinyl top, automatic, power steerin9, power brake1. IYWMb041 51235 '72 DATSUN 240Z '69 DODGE CHARGER ''67 MUSTANG . 4 speed, AM/FM radio, low mileage. Must see. Hardtop. Factory air, vinyl top, console, viny l VS, automatic transmissi on , radio and heater. Must f KJY 155 ) bucket seats. l l67BKC I see to appreciate, ( UKM 140 I ' -. '3995 .. '950 SA E , ' . • '67 CAM ARO 4 speed, radio and heat er, power steering. (UQC- 9901 51195 ' . '69 FIREBIR D • ' " ' Convertible. VS , automatic, air, power 1teering· brakes-windows , tilt wheel. IZLX356 1 I f ' _.._ ' . ' • • • ' • ' ' • ' . • . ' I ' r ' . ~ f, J ,, . ' ' • . ' ' • . ' r • ' • . . • ' l . ' ! " I ! • ' ' t • • I l • : • • • ~ I I . ' • • . • ' • • I . - • • ' ., • • • • L Down! .;. llt • lncTudingr Cruisa00-motic tr0flsmflsion1 Power front 'disc brok-. - power stetring, vinyl·inse rt bodyside mld g1., tocker panel MOid.. •' Jngs,--.tectrie clock,-steel-IM!ted rodtal tires. 400 v.a_en;Wi,..Cali~ AND .S'-95..""' to .. .; lie. is. total 011. ~'· s102.t1 :. Mt.I ... fornio emission equipment, H78:tl5 belted wsw tirei, rear bumper 1110 ... ,y1111. i11cl, kn, li<er11• & oh <ortyliii(tiin't•1 eri- guords, selectaire air conditioner, dual rear 1eot speakers, 'radio, appr (1itdi1 for "' 11101. 01fe1r1d llY"''· $.5371.l I lfl<I. ON Ly lax ~ Ii<. ANNUAL ,EKENTAGl IATI 10.97"fo. T1lal tinted glass, lefthond remote conl(ol mirror, light grouP.~ wheel •. • • ,0 ,11,,,1c. $4"1"-"' • covers, 'linyl roof. Ser. #.CJ62Sl0991 8. (Stk. #99) · • j • • • t NEW '74 F-100 PICK-UP \ NEW '74 GRAN TORINO --··--) ONLY ~195°0 DO)YNI + T&r s911s -~--,.r Mo •... $195 plut kll a!Hi lie. It totrol dPoll pyMt, $91.IS k tolal MO. pyml. ind. ku1, lk. &. aff carrring dtar!jl•• Oil oppt. cr•dil lat ''"'°'· D.l ... •d,py1111. pric• $411?.32 Ind. to• &. lie. ANNVAl PERCENTAGE IATE 10.97'/.. Tolol cotll pric• $3951.91 OUR FINANCE EXPERTS ARE HERE TO HELP YOU! ~69 FORD LTD · 4 Door. VI, 1utomatic:1 r1cllo1 ~e1ter, pow- er 1teerin9, • br1k911 ·•ir conditioning, Yinyl rofif. I XXZ169 I 13 Ptr Mooth S1M k t.tlf ... ,,.,. 541.11 11 ht•I *• ,,..., i1d. tt .. tlct.H & •" ""'"' ,..,,.. • •w. cmlit fir 24 ..., hfwfM n-J. Plkt lllU.11 IMI.· t11,,' lic.M. Altll\IAL Hl<UfflGl IAfl M.06%. J1t1I c.U fric• $1047.7S. i . , HARDTOP lndudes: 351 V-8, California Emissions Equ ipm ent, soli d slate ignition, select- shift, cruise-o-matic, H78x14 belted wsw, power steering, pOWer front 'disc .. bra kes, fro.nt . bl4!nper.·guarch,-•ea r . bumper guards, air·condition_er. select- aire, dual rear seat spea kers, radio, tinted glass, lefthand remote control mirror. wheel cover1. Ser, #4H30H1266- 46. (Stk. #2191 llNA' 1 73 · C'EA RANCI Our supply of new 1973 ''Leftover Cars'' is dw indlinO fa st. But, while they l9st, ypu. can ''Steal'' o modern new car at a real old ·foshion.d price. GRAB ONE NOW & $AVEI > l,fu!1mhu!1I THEODORE_ ROBINS LEAS IN.G CO. Complete lease program. All makes. Daily rentals: $6 per day 6c per mile ~ llNNETH CUff, ...... "-642 0010 Ja. MlllMp. i..-.. SpKlolht • -. --· ..:, " .. $l 95 _plus tax & lie. is totol-dn .. pymt: .$80.54 i;• tdtal mo. pymt • inCI. tax, lie. & all carrying c~aro8s on op pr •. credit for 4~ mos. De- ferred pymt. price $4240.57 incl. tax & lie. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 10.97'/,, Total cash price $1494.21 includes: V-8, G78xl 5 ~r.tt, auto.···· trans., tool ~tow box, solid state ignition. Str. "F10YRS84884 !Stk. ~2011 .. , NO EASIER TERMS NEW CAR SALES HAVE OVERSTOCKED OUR USED CAR DEPT.! SAVE NOW ON OUR 2 1/2 ACRES OF FINE TRADE INS! ,,71 PINTO ' 1pt1d tr1n1mi11ion, r1dlo eni J.11t1r, (I B5HDCJ 90 '" Moot• 1111 It , .. ,, •. """· $4t.f0 It ''"' ... ,,., ... ,. ,, •• lie. & 111 u111Jl•1 cllAfln .. •lflflf· cr'4il fff U -· h t.TW ... flric• 11"21.40. loMI. 111 I lie. ANNllAI. rt:K ltf'IA&I 'aATI 14.n%. T1l1I c• irk• S1 S72.7J. '71 CHEVROLET '72 MUST A G: M1lib11 2 Or. H.T Autom4tic:, r1clio, hMf· er, power steerin9, eir ~or1clitionin9. I 59J. OTAJ 58 '" Mooth S4H 11 ,_,I •· ,,.t. $11.M It "1111 ... ,,_. hie!. t1r., lit•M & 1n ''"""' cw,.. • '""· uWit fir J6 ..., Dd tm4 ,.,.., $2tTUI lefl. t1a & lie. AltMIAl PltaNTAll u rr 14.n%. r1111 ue11 ,nc, $1432.n. . '11.20 h t.111 -· n.t. IDd. h •, 1lc., & 111 wrrfat tMrt .. ......... ""'' ,... .. -. hM .. .,... ~· p.117.lt,illd, 111 & lie. AllNVAL n lClllTAll U.ll 11M~. f'11\ uMi ,.1c, SU22.1S. -, ANYWHERE • ' . . ; ~ "''i't• '7 ~~ ..-' Custom, City car. Automa tic P..,er sffft'in;;·1 power brokes.1150859) . 1 NO MONEY DOWN ' ··, 70 • ~ .._ ittJt ii htDI -pr11t, lllcL tlll, ML. a •II u nyi.,. CW,. • '"'' _.,. fw • -. .....,,. n.r ,.1c, 12049 ... i..1. U. & k AllMIAI. nKllffMI un 11.M%. , .... '"',.. STl12.7t. 'Tl . PINTO MANY MORE $1395 '67 FORD Xl $695 '72 VEGA COUPE . Co11p1. A11!0 ., r1dio, h11ier. CHOO!~FROM , Sport co11pe, R&H , 1ir, 111!0., R1dio, h•etor, '4 1p11d. I 18SHOC J P.S., P.B., P·window1. (6'42AVll I 50'4EIVI '70 TOYOTA $1595 ~11 PLYMOUTH Cricket $1195 '71 · FORD F· l'i>O Coron1 2 dr. H.T~, redio, h•1te1, A11tometic, hetltr, low mile19•. 1/t ton, VI, 111tornatic, radio, '4 1p1Dd. (92l BQE l 188lETWI h11l•r. l82227JI ~ • . '68 CHEV. CAMARO $1595 '7 0 TOYOTA WAGON $1395 '68 MUSTANG . . XI , 111lom1tic, r1dio, h•eler, '4 1p•td, r1d io •nd h•1l1r. RlcH. •ulo,, 6 cy1 ., 91111w•r. power 1l1•ring. !WXE697 ) !lltCEL I IWFS366 ) ·AVE ~11 VW BUG $1695 . '69 MUSTANG $1495 '72 FORD COU~UER R1dio & "••ltr, '4 1p11d. V-1. 1ulorn1tic, pwr. sir. fvll f1ct. •quip!. 1601FFHI (96 10U Q) IWZGt6tl . . $229 5 '71 TRIUMPH Spitfire $1695 '70 VW CAMPER ··-:'7.2 liORD CHA nAU ' , . Rotdtltr, R&H, '4 1p••d, W11tph1li1 conw1r1ion, '4 •p11d, r1dio, I p111. club w190n, VI, 1utorn1tic, 1t•y or1ng1. ( 36'4HOAI / he•l•r. (I SQ747) Dir c.011d., ifower 1l••rin9. 1•66ELTI . • \@j. ______ ,, .... --- • • • ) VO John ding run with of 11 T as acci M E. em pla nal hi an > of m fro up LI I s h I ' . • y • • ~San Cle111enie Today's F ina l Capistrano ,. .. EDITION N.Y. Steeks * VOL 66. NO. l I l, 4 SECTIONS. 48 PAGES . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1973 TEN CENTS , Fighting Marine·s SalUted-on _l98th-BirthClay By WILIAM SCHREIBER or ""' Dally ''let Sl•tt A booming, 13-gun salute -which Marine Corps uniforms down through frightened some young children to tears history with narration of the Corps' -greeted the flags of each squadron as they paraded in front of t}le crowd. famous battles. Among honorees during the celebration Uniforms included the green and red Aircraft Wing, which makes up El Toro's Marine contingent. those brave ~1arines \Vho so richly en· dowed our corps \\'ilh laurels and tradi· lion as a reminder that \VC are the guardi an ol all that they have foll8ht and died for.'' - ching as far back as the First World Corps in peace as well as war. • Gallant U.S. Marines through 198 years oI Corps history were honored in a splash of colors and patriotism Frid<iy at El Toro a.1arine Corps Air Statton. ~Fu1l -dress unlfonns, flashing ~bres, John Philip Sousa marches and a stan· ding-room-only crowd on the base ru.n~y heralded the Marine birthd.ay with a pageant believed to be the ·nrst of Its kind at El Toro. were the oldest and the youngest Marines outfit Of American Revo!Ution fttarines. at the base. the--i>himed -hat-imiform ol-tlle Indian Highlighting the pageant was a real life reepactmcnt of the raising of the flag atop a rugged peak on lv,.o Jima during World War II. ' Hlll said that "for the first time . in .many years our country ls not in· volved in armed connict. It is a time not only to enjoy the warm comradeShip of our fello\v alarine. but to refle<:t briefly on \\'here \\'e are going.'' The role of U.S. ~farines in the Viet- nam conflict was played up during the celebration with prominent mention of each sqadron's battle field activities and history during that war. _'._L --+ Atop each squadron flag, fluttered bat· '• Col. ·Walter Redmond , 55, and Pvt. and Mexican wars and the plain blue Harold Kirkman, 17, marched in review or the American Civil War. shQIJl.de:I:_ to shoulder to ·a march played . • The t98th birthday celebration included by the Third Marine Aircraft band. festivities marking the 31st anniversary The pageant included a display of of the founding of the Third Marine , .. . During the ceremonies comments were offered by base commanding generals H.F. Hill and W.R. Quinn. Hill, a major general, said the an· niversary "is celebrated in memory or Hill said professionalism and loyally tie ribbons and unit citations e~Lher~ through Years of combat, some stret· ching as far back as the first World \Var. Capistrano Motorist HOTP A.NTS EYED I N ENERGY PINCH MILWAUKEE (AP) -"All female employes will wear hqlpanlS, which should generate a substantial amount of heat in the office." ~ Huntington Man l(illed Loses Life Three persons died Thursday and tod:i.y as lhe result or Orange County traffic accidents, the coroner 's officer reported. Margaret O'Afalley, 64, or 26511 Calle ~ Juan Capistrano, was dead an · ·{ljl•al ·at Mlssloo Community Iii ) "II 1:<11 .p.m. Thursday. She --~ In a ·5:20 p.11[ aCCldent In ..... the car she was driving went ouJ ii. control Dnd slammed beadon into a concrete· wall. The mishap occurred at Camino C8pistrano aud La Zanja Street in San Juan Capistrano. She was alone in the car. Janet Florence, IS, of 174 Villa Rita La Habra, died today in Habra eom: muoity Hospital of injwies received Saturday when the caf' in which she was a passenger ran lnto the rear of another vehicle, the coroner's office reported. Dd>orah Ann Caaabian, 11, of tG4 Olive St.. Orange, died TIJunilloy at the Orange County Mediall Ceater as the mull of htjurlea teceived Oct. :io in ·a lllr~ oocw.nt '"1 .Ille Gorden .Crove Freeway just W8ll: -V.,Jft!lilil;pe Street ID Garden Grove> FiJ."St 6 Bugging 1---Hef endants Get Light Sentences WASHINGTON (UPI) -Judge John J. Slrica handed light sentences today to six original Watergate defendant,, who aided Investigators \n breaking open the scope of the scandal. Three of the jail men could be free by Christmas. The stiffest sentence was glVen to E. Howard Hunt, ·the former White HOU9e employe who admitted being a prime planner of the break·ln at Democratic natio"nal headquarters. Sirica sentenced him to 21/1 to eight years in prisOn and fined him $10;000. .. ·Four others got minimum sentences of one year each and the other 18 months. The final sentences \Vere far different from the initial sentences given the ~":1 and the final sentence given G. Gordon Liddy, the one original defendant who would not talk to Watergate in- vestigators. Sirica gave provisional sentences of up lo 4; years lo the six in January. Liddy is serving a minimum term of six years, eight months. He also wu (See WATERGATE. Page I ) That was one of the "rules" facetiously posted '11tursday in the office of Clerk of Courts Francis X. McCormack follow- ing President Nixon's speech on the need to cooserve energy. "~latch periods, rather than coffee breaks, will be held," another rule stated. "EYery half hour, employes will stand up and light a match to keep everyone warm." 'Dnrk-¥ ule' Plea Issued In Clemente "I'm dreaming of a dark Christmas, with every ornament not lit ... " San Clement. city councilmen may be singing this parody of Irvin Berlin'• "White Cbriltmal" today, '\er their call tO tlie d-.ot San Clemente to--doalDC 1111 bolldoy-• (Related,8lAJrteo and plclure. Page 3). ~ -'l'llunday lo have '!!!!J:--npted outdoor -.-dur· -·-~ -i uw. 10 foot pine tree to be P!anted In special oeremoniea at the community clubllouse and lit only from dull< lo ' p.m. "'We hope," Councilman A rt h u r Holmes -said. that residents wUI "use that as their one Illuminated Christmas decoration and refrain as much as poai· ble -electrically decorating their houses ... The dlJcussioo Oil Cu!stmas -cutbacks was sdieduled by the council long . before the energy speech Wed- nesday by the city's most famous resi· dent, President Nixon. ln response to the President's desire for energy conservation, the council agreed to draft a resolutim supporting Nixon's stiggesUons. And councllmen asRd Cily Manager Kenneth Carr lo "IW! all possible siepl to conserve all ene1JY and all Dllural resources" in public facilities and with city equlpment. .. - San Clemente reSidents are itso being asked by the council lo cut down energy consumption in the face of a possible . crisis. Nixon's suggestions include year-round daylight savings time, t u r n i n g thermostat~ down to 68 degrees, driving 50 miles per hour and eliminating un· . ne<eSS8l)' lights. 1be council passed a resolution sup- porting year.round daylighl savings time last June. Support for restriclog city cars to 50 miles per hour to tel an eumple for other drivers came 1bursday from Councilman Paul Presley. llartelius Defense Lawyer Takes Stand.,,Rips W omaii By TOM BARLEY Kuiillcb's characterization of the Of ... .... .... .... shapely 31·ytll'<lld prosecution Inch- LOS ANGELES -Defense attorney an off the stand demonotratlon of the Matthew Kurili~h took the .w:imess stand way in which Mrs. Vaughn stood legs himself today m a surprise maneuver , . . • aimed 11t -aiding his client, Dr. Ebbe , apart and arms akimbo, outside the Hartcll"' of El Toro. COW>ty courthouse at the time Kurillch Kurillch was attempting to convince was driving Harttllus to the 'building. the state Board of Medical Eumlnen "He· made me atop the car and he tblt charges filed against Dr. HarteUus ran, toward! her like a aqulrrel," Kurillcfl were manufactured by the phyaician'a said. . 1tonner mistree, Reba Vaughn. "I told blrn lime after time to ~lay "R .. the best ,.ay I ~ of getting away fnnn that -.ian but he 1uat the trve 1tory acro.u," the trial 1awyer wouldn't llaten." 11kt. Kurilicb11 efforts at mimicry1 Including "I came lo know Reba Vaughn better bll lmpel'IOIUllion of Mr•. Vau&bn'• pro- tllln moat men and I want this com· noun<ed Tenn<sssee accent, bnlught mUtee to see the real character -of ,1trenuou1 ob}ectioal fnim the prosecu· this mentally unstable woman." iUon. - Kurllicb told the thren physicians who,,.-Kurllich told the committee that Mrs. must rule on Hartellus' guilt or lnnoceriCe Vaughn admitted lo him In his office that his effort.> lo help Hartellus, 50. that she had worked with the district In his first of three Orange County. attorney's office lo CO!'vlct Hartellua Supetlor Court trials were constantly with the promise that she would be hampered by the physician's Infatuation' relta9ed from the 1tai. Nori:o facility for his blonde lover. (See ffA!!TEUUS; ...,, I) . , • Ex-roommate, 104? Hospital. .Case Eyed By Offici~s By HILARY KA VE ot 111t1 Dl&IT Pllet S'-\" ( An 82·year~ld man died jn HlDltington Beach Convales~t Hos'11tal this week, J>OSSibly resulting from 1 a beating with a shoe by his 104--year-old. roommate. · Authorities ID Kin&lf'County -aw.U.. ing ·~ _,,_., ~ from or..,. -_, ~lo dete""'1e wbelher Luciano • ... Dall)' "lot SJaff _P!Wtl -lliVU.-,lOf;-'ihould .be charged with_th_e PART OF SAN ·CLEMENTE'S PAST -CONSTIUCTf!J BY .O~E HANSON -WltL -U lPRE.SEIVED i murder of Walter Rhode. II. • ·aw ef SID.000 Wai Topo. Dud'!O lht~to.:S.lo'. In ProbOto. Court Thi• Wook The asasult .occurred fiSur months ago • Tustin Resident Will Air Gripes Before Trustees Shepard Kanarek, leader of a move to get TUstin out of the Saddleback Community College district, will present bis gripes lo Saddleback trustees Monday night. Kanarek was invited to address the board at the request of Missioo. Viejo Trustee Donna Berry. His presentation will open the regular board meeting at 8 p.m. in the administration building. About 6,500 signatures have been col· lected' so far by "The College C.Ommittee or Tustin, urging de-annexation from the district, according to Kanarek . By state law, 8.000 -signatures are needed to bring the matter up before the Orange COunty Board of Education for consideration. One compliant involves the ~mile drive to the Mission Viejo campus from Tustin. Santa Ana College in the Rancho Santiago district is only four miles away. Kanarek said Saddleback offers fewer courses lhan Santa Ana College and has less adequate facilities. Saddleback has one permanent building, a library. 'At prDSellt most classes take place in porta.ble units on the 200-acre campus. Saddleback recently began night ex.· tension classes in a Tustin High School. Trustees Hans Vogel of Tustin also has organized a new committee to try to reaolve some or the c:omplaints and pi:ev...i the pullout. " . Two Burglaries In San Clem ente A television Set and a co~ee jar full of peMies and a $140 wrist •atch were llOlen In two separate burglaries Thu,.. day night, San .Clemente police reported. Douglas Miller of 2381> Rosa, San Clemente, told police a 21-lnch black • and wblt. TY .. t valued at $75 and fl.IO ~worlll of -les were taken from • the home. ' Intrude.rs ransacked drawers in three rooms at Margaret Washington's house at 3U Cane Oondo, Police said , after entering through an unlocked bedroom window. The only item stolen was Ute watch. \ • •Baeienda~· Bid Newport Ma1-i Outdraws D~ve~oper Art old Spanish ·home considered by of land overlooking the ocean .. !IOme to be an important part or San Then realtor Dwayne Berger beard Clemente's past was saved from the that a Los Angeles developer was in· - chopping block this week by a high terested in putting four houses on the b!d. Jot and tearing down the "hacienda." '111e white adobe bouse "&t 320 Avenida He alerted the San ~lemente Historical Gaviota was being aold by the estate Society, which, led by Marion Moon. al.Corrine D. Meyer in -Orange County \'made 1 the trip to Santa Ana for the Superior Court, probate dlvisiQO. . ~ hearing, TucMay. ' The on!f bid, at $120,000, for the Harris' bid was opened and read and home b.iift around 19' by San.Clemente ·then topped by the Los Angeles building pioneer Ole Hanson for one of his firm offering $126.500. daughters, was from Newport Beach Harris offered $128,000 and the bidding resident 'erry tlarris. stopped. Harris and his wife, Estel, wanted to The home has a large living 1'.®m, restore! he honle, which, will> a Mtacbe<l lormal dining room, den, two bedroom guest lloule, sits on abou t one acre (See HOUSE, Page I) - in ~ a convaJeacent home in Hanford, 30 miles south of Fresno.· Rivas wu ortginally charged with assault with a deadly weapoo, but Kinga County District .ll,ttorney John O'Rourke said be deddJd not to prosecute at that time. · "Since the1death of Rhode, however, we are rE}Viewing the charge.s to see if we should charge Rivas with murder," O'Rourke sakl. "It's a very unusuaJ situation to have a 104-year~ld man who is able to commit a critne of this kihd," he added. Q1Rourke is waiting for a medical history for Rhode since he left Hanford to determine whether ht might have suffered subsequent injuries to the bead which may have camed his death. A spokesman for the orange Q)unty Coroner's Office, however, s1ki Rhode's auto.J!.Y indicated he died from a blood clot resulting from an oJd injury . "We can't be certain how old the injury is," explained the spokesman, "but our investigation showed that Rhode did not have any further injuries.'' A relative in H4f1.tington Beach moved. Rhode from the Hanford convalescent home to Pacifica Hospital in Huntington Beach and then to the Hlllllington Beach Convalescent Hospital. "It may be several weeks before we get the full report on Rhode," said O'Rourke. Orpge • Weadter Low clouds and local-fog night and early morning houra, other- wise sunny Saturday, according lo the weather BerVlce. Little temperature ollange. lllgba at the beaches in the mid-60a riain& lo 74 inland. Overnight Iowa 56-58. INS m •: 'roDJ\"' Southern California's fir 1 t dimter · playhouse is open and thriving in San Clemetate. A ,,. view of its first production, the musical .. Okloh~," will M found in toda11·s Weekendn section. • • ..... ft • , .,.. -,.,, .. .... • , .. ,. ...: ' ' ' ' • \ -, • • • . . ' • :· --.. . , •• • • • :: ·: .. ·. :· ;. . " ·. ·. ·. :: .· 2 DAILY-PIL OT ; Newport St11dy Coast Highway .Dead End Sought By L. Pl'TER KRIEG --"°''-''~' Dlll1' PPM $fllf Ne wport Beach needs $67 1nillion ln mendation £or a bypass or downtown CQrona de! Mar as ha.d be<n. ori~ly_ proposed. _ street improvements, Including a second cro!!lng-over Upper Nf\\·polt----Say, to ' belp solve the traffic overload choking the city, a consultant bas recommended. Voorhees had Initially 1'!<0mmended construct.lng a alx·lane--:-tJPf.es:JW•Y' on the old pacUic coast freeway right-of-way between Harbor View Hills and old Corona del Mar. · The consultant's report, which took .. nearly three years to prepare, \Vas relea5ed today and also says that Pacific • Coast Higbway should be dead-ended . at both sides of the Santa Ana River. lt says the highway should be rerouted to the north as it crosses Newport Boulevard and should connect with the ...._terminus -of-the Newport-Freeway-in Costa Mesa then continue wesLerly into Huntington Beach. The second bay crossing as proposed by the firm of A1an 1\1. Voorhees and · Company or San Diego and endorsed by a citizens committee, should be kept just to '1he north or the existing Coast Highway bridge and then shoJ.tld swing north to the interseclion o( DOver and Westcliff Drive near the Costa Mesa city limits. The consultant said the $67 million oost would be divided between clty tax- payers, the state, Orange County and possibly other sources. But, Voorl1ees said $27 million of the cost will fall on local taxpayers and he conceded the city may have difficulty raising that kind of money over the next 20 to 25 years. The plan does not include a rea>m· . History Group Seeks Signups . The week beginning Monday, Nov. 12 .tras been set aside by the San Clemente Historica1 Society Is ~ last Chance for charter members to sign the scroll of membership before it goes to the illuminator. The signing can be done by presenting a membership card at the San Clemente Public I.:ibr.ary. The special signing week will be closed out by a \\'ine-tasting party starting at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bucklin 11-foon, l2D9 Buena Vista and hosted by the Junior Womens' Club. 'nckets can be obtained at the door or by calling '92·2972. Norwegia11 Chr1 v Offered Sunday A taste of Viking heritafe will be served up by the women o Telemark Lodge, Sons of Norway in San Clemente Sunday at an authentic Norv.•egian ~ ner. The typical Norwegian feed will lncJude lute fi sk, meat balls and Iefse with all the trimmings, according to lodge spokesman Lewis A. Tbolnas. The mef:!I will be managed and served by native Norwegian·bom women of the lodge, including Rangheld Lee, Petra Groos, J\fartha Ok.land, Ragna Thomas and Anna Llse Moss. Besides the dinner, which will take place from 2 to 6 p.m. at the San Clemente Comunity Clubhouse, there will be a bazaar of Norwegian handicrafts. Reservations can be made by calling 492"6481, 492-3164 or ~-3965. Bomb · Destroyed DENVER (UPI ) -A deadly nerve gas bomb -one or thousands ordered destroyed by the Army -exploded in an empty, Birtighl room at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal Thursday as techni- cians mechanically disarmed the device. 'Ibere were no injuries and the gas was contained within the room and detoxifi ed immediately using instruments operated from the outside. OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT 'Thi or~ DA.IL'( PILOT' wltlt -..ildl !1 mmltlrl4id 1he N...,_Pr1n, 11 Pllt!llVIM 11y lfll or..,.. Coell Plltllklo"* c.omp.ny, $tJ11. r11t 9llltlorl$ •rt PlllOllll'Mld, MDNl•r thnM.11111 Fri;rr. fOf' CO.tr MIMI, HtwPOrl a .. c11, Hun!lng'°" Be1e~/f'""'"l11ft V11i.y, i..tiWM a..eh, lntlrw/SM:lcll~ 11111 Safi C"-111 Siii Julll C1pl11r1no. A s.lngltl "9iol'lll tdlllon Is Jlllbll..,.., """"",.. Ml ~.,... '"-pr1nc:i.er pUOllthlf'tl pllnt I• II uo Wnl &.y $1r1Nt, COiii Mtt1, Crllfemlt, nlM. Rollotrt N. W1M Pfftld .. I 11111 P110Ui.lltf- J11• It CYrltv Vlc:e Pr•ldenl ff4 Gt!laf1I IMl\fMt Thom11 Kt1l'il ..... Tlto1n11 A. MYrphh10 MaMelnl Ellltll' Chtr/11 H. Looi i1Uditt4 P. Nill ANl\t1nl Ml"'fillf lltlltof\ ... c ...... oMu JOI Ntrlh El C1ml110 R•1I, 92,72 --C.111 M ... 1 )Ill Wfll &.'f $1....i N""'°" lffdl1 DD NN'POf'I 8-lf¥4t1 Hllr>IJnolOll IMdl! 11'11 9Ndl ltu~l'd l.ltlll'll IMdl: m ,_, A- 111 ...... 1714, '42-4U1 ct1 1lttoe4 Mw .. 1111 1 Ml-1671 S. Cl1 111• All 01p .. •11t11 f;1'11•••• 4f2-4ilt ~'· '"" or.,.. c..,, "W!1t111111 ~· ,_ -ttofJM, 11Mtrll51nl,. "'*'... _.... .. .. .... ....,., .....in ""'' ... ~· wlltlMf Nliklfl ,... ,,....~,-. ...... dill ..... ,..~c.t· MtN. c........ h'hnl9tlltn ..,, b""-r s:a ... INllttfll'rJ -11'1111 II.II ,.,, mlll""' ...... , ..... U-'S "'Ofllfl~. ' • Voorhees ~needed the report was tailored toward public accep tance and does not necessarily include the best technical solutions to the city 's traffic ills. The report says that the recommended plan "does not eliminate all transporta- tion deficiencies, but it does present solutions which are likely to obtain puJlic acceptance and support nece5.$1lf)' for implementation." From Page I HARTELIUS. • • If she cooperated. Mrs. Vaughn was · committed ther e in 1969 as a narcotics addict. She has testi(ied that repeated injections by Hartellus durinJ their long association was responsible for that condition. She has also testified in the current hea ring and in Superior Court -that Hartelius beat and kicked her, performed abortions on her and that he sold narcotics to a relon on the run from criminal charges flied in another state. It has also been testified that Hartelill.! similarily drugged the late Wanda l\Ielendrez, 29, or Costa Mesa to the poin t that she stayed in bed all day and neglected her young family. Kuri1ich labeled Hartelius as "a jackass" and said his client's continued infatuation for his mistreM torpedoed many of his efforts to prove Harteltus' innocence. Kurilich told the committee that while Mrs. Vaughn was · cornfortina Harteli~ and assuring the silver-haired physician that she loved him, she was calling Kurilich at the lawyer's office and describing Hartl!lius as a 11whlning, spineless, sniveling cur". Hartellus said Mrs. Vauglm hid police investigators in a bedroom closet at her C.Osta Mesa home and that they taped Hartelius' ronversations with her in a bid to "hang something on him." Kurilich said Orange County Deputy Distzict Attorney Al Novick took Dowers to Mrs. Vaughn while she was hospitaliz- ed and made a pass at her in her hospital room. "She threw the tel""'°"e at him " Kurillch told the astonished conunlttee.' Kurilich was reprimanded for making references to Daily Pilot accounts of a Hartelius trial in apparent support of his attack on J\frs. Vaughn's integrity. His references to lhe newspaper and a reporter who wai present in the hear- ing room were slruck from the record on the instructions or state hearing of- ficer John A. Wllld. ''It isn't just Hartellus who is afraid of Mn. Vaughn," Kurilich said at one point. "I think we're all afraid of her. She is a vengeful, vindictive woman who is capable of doing anything to get her way." Doheny Campsite Hearing Slated By Coast Panel , \Vith the new 1hearing by the regional coastal commission on the addition of 234 campsite at Doheny State Beach only days away, there are rwnblings or growing opposition. South Coast Regional Zone Conserva- tion cd"mmisioners last Monday denied by 64, with seven votes required for approval, the ' state park's department plan to put more recreational vehicle camping at the Capistrano Beach park. The commission agreed to. reconsider the project, after pressure from parks officials, at next MondaY's meeting. The session will begin at 9 a.m. in Loog Beach Harbor Department head· quarters, 925 Harbor Plaza Drive. Commissioner Robert Rooney repeated this week that he stlll objects to putting exclusive parking lots on the beach: Rooney of Huntington Beach would like to see Doheny kept as a day·use facility . .,. A rew other commissioners, including Art hur Holmes of San CJwrente, objecL.- to the waY parks o£ficials develop plans in a vacuum. The only public hearing on the plans for JX?heny took place in. Los Angeles. Although a state law restricts such hear- ings to four major cities, critics have pointed out Jhat the department could have had an informational meeting for residents. Frank Rainey, president Capist rano Beach Community tion, also frowned upon the public input. of the AMocla· lack of The Cap~!rano Beach Chamber of Commerce Wednesday voted to ask the commission fo again delay the hearing to allow local bearings. .Rodney and one or two other com· missioners feel recreational vehicle parks clO<e olf two many sectors to the public. The comml.uioo last Monday also didn't like the fact thet'e Is only one enlrance to the beach between Shorecliffs and Doheny, lea\>lni a lcmg stretch of public beach with no easy public acctss, UPIT ........ WARNING -ColtlJQ.erce Sec- retary Frederick Bent says Americans will have to accept a more polluted environment in order to save jobs during the energy crisis. ,., Teen Reports Seeing UFO In CalifQrni(l By Uniled Preu International Unidentified Dying objects have betn ~ighted in the California desert and in New York state. In Blythe, Calif., .Patrick Archer, 19, of Saginaw, Mich. said be saw an object . with a red light and a green light on either side -nd three amber· colored · lights: in front, hovering over ab orchaid. In Johnstown, N. Y., ~iUy Pull& and doz.ens of cla5smates said tbeY saw a silen~ Apollo-like craft, ready' to· land next ID their school. Archer said he was driving west on Intentate 10, east of Blythe, when_ be spotted a circular-shaped object with nD markings in the sky moving up and down and from side to side. Archer said he decided it was not a helicopter or airplane because: he could not hear a motor. "That's when I started to get scared," Archer said. "I'm not aahamed to say I was never so scared in my whole lile. I was crying, shaking and white as a ghost." _ Deputies checked with Blyihe Airport and learned that Pacific Southwest Airlines was conducting "practice mis.sed landings " (Dying low as if to land and then puJling up at the last minute} in the area \Vilh DC9s at about the time Archer says he sighted the UFOs. A'rcher's UFO description, however did- not fit that of an airplane. Pulls, a •i>lh grade pupil at the War- ren Street Elementary School i n Johnstown, said he and bis classmates were within 700 feet of a slowly descen- ding craft when "it pulled the legs in and took off. "lt was about 2:40. I was going up to the high school. We all saw something shaped like a caps~e, like Apollo, it was grayish white. "We were about 200 feet away and it was coming down. lt bad legs, like ]anding pads, you know, big discs, and it was coming down. Everybody was yelling and running toward "it. Then a big pull of fire came and it took of£. It looked like it was going to land if nobody had copie out. "It bad its legs out, then when everybody came out, it pulled the legs in and took off. It didn't make any noise ; no engine noise. "It was wide at the bottom, going off to · a point, and then cut o£f at the top. It Wall about as big aa a car, a station wagon probably," he said. "There was a beam of light right around it ; a light circling it all the time; like a ray. When it was going up, it had like a halo around it all the time." A teacher, who asked that her name not be used, said, "l've convinced mysell it was a helicopter." Fl'Olll Page I HOUSE • • • and guest house. The Spanish style is feahJred in the red tiled roof and colorlul • tile decorations on the walls. As the yard slopes tawara the ocean bluffs, there Is a patio with chairs and table. In tbe yard closer to the street sit an abandoned birdbath and three cement dwarf sculptures guarding a rose garden. Mrs. Moon said the hiJtoric.al society members were ready Jo speak JIP in court 11 necelsary, but didn't have to. "It WU saved." Man Dies After Snowball Attack SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) ~ A 56-year- old crippled man collapsed and died unct.r a snowball barrqe by oeveral youths. police said • Police said Manuel Rell, who baa • history of heart trouble, was atanding ow.Ide a supermarket ThundaJ night wben the attack began. . - ' Suspect D.B. Cooper? F~l Probes Identity of Man in Holdup • SAN DIEGO (AP) -The FBI ·says ll 111 lnvesUgatlng whether a man ar- rested here for an Oregon bank holdup may actually be D. B. Cooper. the n.st aucccsaful parachutin&: skyjacker. Arvld Julius Klpert.!, 41, of Portland , Ore-;.--wu arreilecl Monday in Sin Diego's Ocean Beach area and ordered jailed In lieu.of-SJSO,OQOJ>ood. Cooper wu the name uaed by a man who parachuted over the state of Washington from a COl!lUlerclal jct which From Page I WATERGATE ... lined $4C,OOO. _ Slrlca ezplalned thal he had no Jn. tention of giving the men the maximum sentences he handed in January if they cooperated with authorities. Frank A. Sturgis, Virgilio R. Gonzalez and Eugenenlo R. Martinez -three of the four so-called "Soldiers" In the brea k-in -were given .sentences of one to four years. Since the three have been behind bars for nearly 11 months, they may be freed tiefore the year is out. Bernard L. Barker, the fourth member of the Miami·arta "Soldiers," received _ a sentence of 18 months to six years -stiffer than the other three, apparently because be recruited them for the mission. James W. l\fcCord , along with Hunt a leader in the planning of the break·ih and the defendant who first broke his silence to provide evidence-to the court, was given a on~to five-year sentence. Unlike the ~1.iami area men, McCord has been free on bond since the trial. Sirica said it was his intention that l\tcCo(ti -~pend at least a year in jail. Lawyers for the defendants asked for leniency, one pleading that the men The four '.'Soldiers" and Hunt pleaded guilty In January to dJatxes of coo· splracy. burglary , bugging and wiretap- ping. McCord and Liddy, lilo> Hunt. a foimer White House employe, were con- victed. · l.Jdd_y was given an additional sentence of 8 to 18 months £or refusing to testify before· a federal grand jury. He also fa<es oootempt of Cmgres& charges. Hunt's lawyer, Sydner Sachs, told Slrica that Hunt's beaJth is deteriorating and that forcing him to spend any more time in jail might "do further harm to him." Hostage Still Held BUENOS Aij1ES (UPI) -The Argen· · tine submdiarf of a U.S. oil company paid a $1 million ransom two weeks ago for the release of a lddnaped American executive, but the hostage was not freed, business sources said Thursday. The so~ identified the kidnap victim as David B. Wilkie Jr., 48, president of Amoco Argentina Oil Co. he hijacked on Tbanksglvtns eve, 1971. make mistakes about be1ght and weigh!. TD his chest was strapped $200,000 in In that hljacklng, which authoritie! ransom. aay encouraged a rash of others, the No body wa.s ever found , CoO~r was man who gave bis name as D.B. C:OOper never arrested and none of the money, boarded a Northwest Orient tllrlines jet whose serial numbers bad been recorded, In Portland. lie produced what he said has ever tumoo up. wasa-OOmb sOortly arter lhe plane Tbe FBI said Klpe~ charged with left for SeatUe and took over the Jet. Ol;L ~up at l\llli,Clly,..Qte~ demanding $200,000. ln $20 bills and four " Liian Co.. .. SilipiCted of-13 6ther paraChutes. -Oregon bank hoidups since 1970. Jullus. Alter the demands were met at Seattle. MattSDn, the FBI specl81 agent at he allowed tbe filght's 36 passengers Portland, said a possible link with Cooper and two stewardesses to leave the ptane . was discovered at one of those 15. Then be commanded the pilot, two Hight Mattson, in a telephone interview officers and two stewardtsses to fly Thursday, said the incident took place to l\1ex!co. tn December 1971 while a Wilsonville, Cooper later directed the pilot to fly Ore. bank was being robbed. about 200 miles an hour at an altitude "The individual who robbed lhe bank of 10,000 feet over a route which took \Vas busy at a wall delt. it:rlitbling _them over western Vt'ashington ~ on a de~it slip," Mattson said. Oregon. Duflng the fight, the crew not1c- After he held up a teller and escaped, ed a slight lurch and discovered Cooper 11We went through the material on the and the money missing when the plane desk and we found a slip on which landed 31h: hours later at Reno, Nev. had been printed the name, 'D.B. to refuel. Cooper,' but we don't know who wrote The plane's rear e1it ramp was found It." J\tattson said. to be lowered. "As a result of the unusual coincidence Ground searchers h u n t e d In of Ole deposit slip, we will also process soothwestern Western \V as h in gt on him (Kiperts) as a suspect In the !Ii-without finding a sign or Cooper. jack." Tbe bodies of two mun::lered women Arrangements are being made to show were later found not far away. a photograph of Kiperts to the crew In the year which followed, 21 of the hijacked plane, the FBI official extortion-hijackings or airliners took said. , place in which more than $12 million He said Klperts roughly matches the was demanded. Six sky pirates bailed description given of the hijacker but out of hijacked planes:, but an were that witnesses ' in times of duress easily caught. Anaheim Cops Ready For Mass Ticketing Anaheim police prom~ today to tum from pie,keting to Ucketing if their pay package isn't sweetened by !I City Coun- cil whicl) views its orrer as "final." , Police, their wives and children con- tinued picketing city ball ln protest of the city's 6.75 percent pay raises ac- cepted by other city personnel. Attorney Steven Solomon, representing the police, said lf the picketing fails to get results, officers will initiate a campaign or strict law enforcement giv- ing tickets to persons in traffic situations which in Jess inflationary times might result in a mere warning. Councilmen meanwhile akipped a scheduled 'I'1lursday negotiating session with police aOO may next Tuesday vote to Jgnore requests for reopened talks on the police pay package. Mayor Jack Dutton and Councilmen Calvin Pebley and Mark Stephenson have made it clear they feel a fair final offer has been made to the police. The 278-member Anaheim Police Association has not yet threatened to slrike. However, a strike vote would be taken i£ leaders were disciplined because of lheir ' part in the pay Jlassle, an · APJ. spokesman said. Solomon is said to favor the 11saper cop" Stepup of citizen citations over any walkout by police. However, Detective Chet Barry, APA president, suggested the "supei:. cop" lactic was not being considered. Thursday's picketing was peaceful. At issue in the dispute is a pay · package which would cost the city of Anaheim an additional $260,000 a year, city personnel chief (;ary McRae said. The highest pald Anaheim policeman would be paid $1.176 a month mxler the city's Dlfer. Present top saJary Is $1,119 a month. Embassy Closed WASlflNGTON (UPI) -The United States bas closed its embassy in Uganda -the country ruled by U.S. criUc Gen. ldi Amin -bot stopped abort of breaking diplomatic relations, the Slate Depart- ment said Thursday. Henredon's Folio . 11 ; ' . A 1p1rklin9 n•w collection f11turin9 1up1rb craftsmenship, qu1lity end 1tylln9. Truly a Hen - redon tr1d1 merk. Vi1w thi1 axcaptionel col/1c- tion now et any of Ted von H1m1ri'1 thrae fine stor1s. • Henredon jic~ DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARAS\AN NEWPORl BEACH e , 1a1-" 1727 WESTCllFf Dlt.. '42·2010 IOpefl S1111!111y 12·11101 I LAGUNA BEACH e !45 NOltTH COAST HWY, • INTERI O'R S WllllDAYS & SATURDAYS t:OO to l:JO l'llDAY !TIL t:tO . ' IOpe11 S11M1y 12;.l ilO) 494·•111 TORRANCE e UMt HAWIHOINI ILYD. Jll·IUt • t '\ I .1 1 ' \ \ 'NiiW V Pf:ICM on t i ch:i.t. -.. ~ .. " " ' ' .. .. I • " .. " . " . " ' ,. 51 ll ' ' ll ,,. n· ·t It~ "" I I I Today's Closing Prices • • • ·-• t . . . Frlday, NMmbtr 9, 1973 SC DA!I, Y 1'1l171' ;:J NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Year's High-Lows Appear Every Saturday l • Stocks Plqm"!llet; Dow Off 24 Points NEW YORK (APJ -Fears or a serious Impact on the economy because of an energy crws drove stock prices drastically lower today, brokers said The Dow Jones average o! SO stock• was oil more than 24 points They aL-;o said the heavy 1nst1tut1onal domina- tion o! the market tended to make the recent drastic r1Ses and falls rusproporl!onately large, compared_ with the past "There's a g r e a t deal or concern over the energy crisis, and ~e1 1ous concern still lingers about President Nixon's vulnerab1Uty," said New· ton Zmder o! E F Hutton & Co. • - J .iJ! DAILY Pit.O T SC Frldiilly, Nowmbtr 9, l97l ~~~~~~~--''--""--=-.:.:..:c.:..: · Newport Study Coast Highway • Dead End Sought By L. PETER KRI EG OI tflt Dlll'I l'li.t ''"It Newport Beach needs $67 1nillion In street improvemeuts, includjng a second crossing over Upper Newpart Bay, to belp solve the traffic overload choking Uie clly, a consultant has recommended. The consultant's report, which took · nearly three years to prepare. was released today and also says that Pacific . Coast Highway should be dead-ended • at both sides of the Santa Ana River. Jt says the highway should be rerouted to lhe north as it crosses Newport Boulevard and should connect with the termlny_s of th.e Newport Freew~y in Costa ~fesa then continue westerly into Huntington Beach. The second bay crossing as proposed by the firm or Alan M. Voorhees and · C.Ompany of San Diego and endorsed ~y a citizens committee, should be kept Just to the north of the existing Coast Highway bridge and then should swing north to the intersection of Dover and Westcllff Drive near the Costa Mesa cit y limits. The consultant said the $67 million cost would be divided between city tax- payers, the state, Orange Coun ty and possibly other sources. But, Voorl1ees said $27 million of the rost will fall on local taxpayers and he conceded the city may have difficulty raising that kind of money over the next 20 to 25 years. The plan does not include a reaim- History Group Seeks Signups The we~k· beginning Monday, Nov. 12 has been set aside by the San Clemente Historical Society as the last chiiice fQr charter memberS' to sign Qte scroll , of membership before lt goes to the illuminator. · The signing can ·be done by presenting a membership card at the San Clemente Public Library. The special signing week will be closed out by a wine-tasting ·party starting • at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Buck.Jin Moon, 1209 Buena Vista and hosted by the Junior Womens' Club. 'nckets can be obtained al the door or by calling 492+2972 . ·. :; -·• • " . • -·: :: ·• ·. ·: .. ·• :· ·. ·. . :: .. :· .· :: :· . : :· .. =~ .. :: :: .. :: .. '= j~ ·= :: .• =~ •• £~ .•. .. .. • •• .• •• • :· •• .· Norwegian Chrv Offered Suiiday A taste of Viking heritage will be served up by the women of Telemark Lodge, Sons of Norway in San Clemente Sunday at an authentic Norwegian din- ner. The typical Norwegian feed will include lute fisk, meat balls and lefse with all the trimmings, according to lodge spokesman Lewis A. 1bo'181· 'lbe meal will be managed and served by native Norwegian-OOrn women of the lodge, including Rangheld Lee, Petra Groos, Martha Ok.land, Ragna Thomas and Anna Lise Moss. Besides the dinner, which will take place from 2 to 6 p.m. at the San Clemente Comun.ity Clubhouse, there will be a bazaar of Norwegian handicrafts. Reservations can be made by calling 492-6481, 492-3164 or 492·3965. Bomb Destroyed DENVER (UP I) - A deadly nerve gas OOmb -one of thousands ordered destroyed by the Army -exploded in an empty, airtight room at the Rocky Atountain Arsenal Thursday as techni· cians mechani cally disarmed the device. The.re were no inju ries and the gas was contained within the ·room and detoxified immediately usi ng instruments operated from the outside. OUN•I COAST DAILY PILOT Tiit Oranot C.0..1 DAIL y PILOT. wlm ...... ~ It c.om&lned 1"'-NfWl.Prnt, It Pllllllthed bY me Or•noe c....i PWlltlllr>t C-ny. 51'J19- r•t. 1111111ont "''' Woll5hllll, Mon111r lllrouvl'o Fr~•r, IOI'" C0tt1 MCH, N-porl 811cll, HIJl'lllnDlon 111..:;l\/FOll!lt•ln \11U1y l.19111M llHCll, lrv.,,,lkcldlfbKll Mid S.n i::i..n...111 11111 JUllll (lp(llr•nco. A 1l"'le "'91ontl 1111/tlorl It P\1111111\4111 ial!Jnl.fl'I Md Svncl•n. y,,,. Pf"ll'lclfll pUl)llfMno plant I• '' DI w .. 1 air. $tl'Mt, C0tl1 Mttt, C.llfomla, '1111'6. ltob1rt N. W19' l'rOtlDmll 1no1 l'IODllln.r J•ck R. C11tl•y Vice l'rt11dml ,,.,. GIMr11 MIMOtr" Thom•• K11¥il .. ,,.. Tlto"''' A. M11rphh11 MMetlrlf Editor __ .. __ ·: Ch1rf11 H. t • .,, llcli1N P':" Nill .. :: •• i~ ·l • •' .· .. j ~ Aulll•nl MtNtlnl Ellfwl ... Cl••••• OMc. 105 N•rth El C1111l111 ltt•I, t2412 o-. ........ C..l.t Mn11 Ull W•I .. y ,,,..,. Hftpttf l..cll; DD N~ ._...,.,,_ HwillrlcllWI IM<ll: 11'7J ~ ~"'""' ~ IMCto: m ,.,..., A- T&f ...... 1714) '41-4JJ1 = .,,.. A"-'thflit MM• 71 .. C ....... All Da,&tl UIW&l f:1llf•1a1 ·4tM410 ~. 1~ Or....,. CM.i ~lllllfnt ~ .. ' .. •''· Ni -1tofltt, lllwstr•llon! -· I MM1w '°' edYtrf~ 11tr11" Mar llit ~ ~ twtltiwt N*lll "" ...... ~,-. ...... daM "''... ,.af •I Cll;,1 Mall. C.tlllilnlk '*tTlelllrl .-carrttr t:us _.,.,.,, IW f'NU U.IJ •fMllflllYI MHlfan' .......... U.11 rncM!ltll~. mendation for a bypass of downtown Coron a del Aiar as had 'been originally .... proposed. Voorhees had lnitiolly recommended constructing a six-lane expresawal on the old pacific coast freeway rigbt-o -way between Harbor View Hills and old Coron a del Mar. • Voorhees ... 'Onceded the report was tailored to ward public acceptance and does not necessarily include the best technJcal solutions to the city's traffic · ills. The report says that the recommended plan "does not" eliminate all transports· tion deficieneies, but it does present solutions which are likely to obtain pu~lic acceptance and support necessary tor implementation." From Page 1 HARTELIUS. • • if she cooperated. Mrs. Vaughn was · committed there in 1969 as a narrolics addict. She has testified that repeated injections by Hartelius during their long association was responsible for that condition. Sbe has also testified in the current hearing and in Superior-Court that HarteHus beat and kicked her. performed abortions on her and that be sold narcoti<:!I to a felon on the run from criminal charges filed in another state. It has also been testified that.Hartelius similarily drugged the late Wanda J\·telendrez, 29, of Costa Mesa to the point that she stayed in-bed all day and neglected her young family. Kurilich labeled Hartelius as "a jackass" and said his client's continued infatuation for his mistress torpedoed :nany. of ~~efforts to-prove Hartelius' innocence. Kurffich told ihe committee that while Mrs. Vaughn w., romlorting Hartelius and assuring the silver-haired physician that she loved him, she was calling Kurilich at the lawyer's office and describing Harti!lius as a "whtning, spineless, sniveling cur". Hartelius said Mrs. Vaughn hid police investigators in a bedroom closet at her Costa rt1esa h«ne and that they taped Hartelius' conversations with her in a bid to "bang SQJDething on him." Kwilich said Orange County Deputy District Attorney Al Novick tool: Dowers to Mrs. Vaughn while she was hospitaliz.. ed and made a pass at her in her hospital room. "She threw the tele!>hone at him " Kurilich told the astonished committee.' Kurilicb was reprimanded for making references to Daily Pilot accounts of a Hartelius trial in apparent support of his attack on ?\.frs. Vaughn's integrity. His references to the newSpaper and a reporter who wai present in the hear· ing room were struck from the rerord on the instructions of state hearing Of.· ficer Jolm A. Willd. "It i.Sn't just Hartelius who Is afraid of Mrs. Vaughn," Kurilich said at one point. "J think we're all afraid of her . She is a vengeful, vindictive woman who Is capable of doing · anything to get her way." Doheny Campsite Hearing Slated By Coast Panel \Vith the new )l~aring by the regional coastal rommission on the addition of 234 campsite at Doheny State Beach only days away, there are rumblings of growing opposition. South Coast Regional' Zone Conserva- tion Commisioners last Monday denied by 6-4, with seven votes required for approval, the state park's department plan to put more recreational vehicle camping at the Capistrano Beach park. The commission agreed to. reconsider the project, after pressure from parks officials, at next Monday's meeting. The session will begin at 9 a.m. in Long Beach Harbor Departmenl head· quarters, 925 Harbor Plaza Drive. Commissioner Robert Rooney repeated this week that he still objects to putting exclusive parking lots on the beach. Rooney of Huntington Beach would like to see Doheny kept as a day-use facility. A few other commissioners, including rthur Holmes of San Clemente, object .... to the way parks officials develop plans tn a vacuum. . The only public hearin g on the plans for ~heny took place in Los Angeles. Although a slate law restricts such hear- ings to four major cities, critics have pointed out thal the department could have bad arr--infonnatlonal meeting for residents. Frank Rainey, president of the Capistrano Beach Comm1D1ily AS50Cia- tion, also frowned upon the lack of public input. The Capistrano Beach Chamber or Commerce Wednesday voted to ask the commission· to again delay the hearing to allow local hearings. Rodney and one or two other com- missioners feel recreational vehicle parks ciooe off two many aectors to th• publtc. The commission last Monday also didn't lik• the fact there l! only one entrance to the beach between Shoreclilfs and Doheny, leavinl a long .iretch of public beach with no easy public access. · • L • U,IT .......... WARNING-Commerce Sec- retary Frederick Dent says Americans will have to accept a more polluted environment in order to save jobs during the energy crisis. Teen Reports Seeing UFO In California By United Press lalematlooal Unidentified Dying objects hav e been sighted in the California desert and in New York state. In Blythe, Calif., Patrick Archer, 19, of Saginaw, Mich. said he saw ari object with a red light and a green light on either side ..nd three amber colored lights in ·front, hovering ov.fr an orcbaid. In. Johnstown, N.Y., Billy .Pulls and dozens of classmates sallL.lhey saw a silent, Apoll<>-like craft, ready fu land next to their school. Archer said be was driving west on Interstate 10, east ·of Blythe when he spotted a circular-shaped object with no markings iD. the sky moving up and down and from side to side. Archer said be decided it was not a helicopter or airplane becaUSt! he could not bear a motor. "That's when I stllrted to get scared " Archer said. "I'm not a.shamed to ~y I. was never so scared in my whole bfe. I was crying, shaking and white as a ghost" Deputies checked with Blythe Airport and learned that Pacific Southwest Airlines was conducting "practice missed landings" (flying low u U to land and then pulling up at the last minute) ~ the area \Vith DC9s at about the bme Archer says he sighted the UFOs. Archer's UFO deScription however did not fit that of an airplane.' Pulis, a llixlh grade pupil at the .War· ren Street Elementary School i n Johnstown, said he and his classmates were within 200 feet of a slowly descen- ding craft when "it pulled the legs in and took off. "It w~ aOOut 2:40. I was going up to the hi~ school. We all saw something shaped like a capsule, like Apollo it was grayish white. ' "We were aOOut 200 feet away and it w.as coming down. It bad legs, like landing pads1 you know, big discs, and 1t was coming down. Everybody was yelling and running toward it. Then a big puff of fire came and it took off. It looked like it was going to land if nobody had come out. "It had its ~ out, then when ~verybody came out, It pulled the legs m. and took . off. It didn't make any noise; no engine noise. "It was wide at the bottom going off to a point, and then cut ' off at the top. It was about as big as a car, a station wagon probably," he said. "There was a beam of light right a.round . it; a light circling It all the tune; like a ray. When it was going up, it had like a halo around It all the time." A teacher, who asked that her name not be used , said, "I've coovioced myseU it was a helicopter." Front Page 1 HOUSE ••• and guest house. The Spanish style Is featured in the red tiled roof and colorful tile decorations on the walls . As the yard slopes toward the ocean bluffs, lhere is a patio with chairs and lable. In the yfrd closer to the street sit an abandoned birdbath end three cement dwarf scu1ptures guarding a rose garden. Mrs . Moon said the hillorlcal ooclety members were ready to speak up in court if necessary, but didn't have to. "Jt was saved." Man Dies After Snowball Attack SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) - A 5&-yelll'- old crippled man collapoed a"1I 'died under a snowball barrige by ,.veral youths, police said. Police said Maouel R<ll, who had a history of heart !rouble, was 1tandlnc outside a supermarket ThundaJ nlihl When the allaclt began. 1 . Suspect D ~B. Coo_per? F~l Probes Identity of Man in Holdup . SAN DIEGO (AP) -The FBI oays II Is lnvestlgatlng whether a man .,.. -rested here for an Oregon bank holdup may actually be D. B. Cooper, the IJ;st 1ucoessful parachutln' skyjacker. Arvld Julius Ktperts, 41, of PorUand, Ore., was arrested Monday in san Diego11 Ocean Beach area and ordered jailecl'ln lieu of $UO,OOO bond. Cooper iru the-name Used tiy a man who parachuted over the atate of Washington from a commercial jet which Fro• Page 1 WATERGATE •.. fined $40,000. Strtca e>plalned that he had no In· tenUon of giving the men the maximwn irentences. he handed in January ii they oooperated with authorities. Frank A. Sturgi!, Virgilio R. Gonzalez and Eugenenio R. Marttoez -three of the four so-called "Soldiers" in the break-in ..._ were given sentences of one to four years. Since the three have been behind bars for nea'rly 11 months, they may be freed before the year is out. Bernard L. ·Barker, the fourth member of Ui;e Miami-area '1Soldiers," received a sentence of 18 months to six years -stiffer than the other thr~, apparently because he recruited 'tlbem for the mission. he hijacked on Thankscivlng eve, 1971. To his chest was strapped $200,000 in ransom. No body was ever found , eoOw \tas never arrested and none of the mooey, whose serial n\Jmbera had been recorded has ever turned up. ' The FBI said Klperts. charged with Oct. 211 holdup al Kiiie City, Ore. savings I< loan Co., Is suspected of lS oth"' Oregon bank holdups since 1970. Jullus Mattson, the FBI special agent at Portland, said a possi ble link with Cooper was discovered at one of those 15 . Mattson, in a telephone interview Thursday, said the Incident took place in December 1971 while a Wilsonville, Ore. bank was being robbed. "The individual who robbed the bank was busy at a wall desk, scribbling on a deposit slip,'' Mattson said. " After he held up a teller and escaped, We went through the material on the desk and we loWld a slip on which had been ptinted. th e name, 'D.B. Cooper,' bul we don't know who wrote it," Mattson said. 0 As a result of the unusual colncldence of the deposit slip, we will a1so process him (Kipert.s) as a smpect in the :1i- jack." Arrangements are being.made lo show a photograph of Kiperts to the c_r_ew of the hijacked plane, the FBJ official said. ' 4 He said Kl perts roughly matches t1>e description given of the hijacker but that witnesses · in times of duress easily make mistakes about height and welght . In that hijacking, which authorities say encouraged a rash of others , the m~ who gave his name as 0.9. Cooper boarded • Northwest Orient airllnes jet In Portland. He produced what he said was a bomb shortly after the plane Iert for Seattle 'ind took over the jet , demandlog $200,000..tn $20 bills and four parachutes. After the demands were met at Seattle. he allowed the fllgbt'1 36 passengers and two stewardesses to le&ve the p1anP.. Then he commanded the pilot, two flight officers and two stewardesses to fly to MexJco. Cooper later directed the pilot to fi y about 200 miles an hour at ao altitude of 10,000 feet over a route which took them over western Vi'a!hlngton and Or~gon. During the night, lhe crew Jl!ltic· ed. a slight lurch and dlsrovered Cooper and the money missing when the plane landed 3~ hours later at Reno, Nev. to refuel. 'l11e plane's rear exit ramp was found to be Jowered. Ground searchers h u n t e d ln southwestern . Western \V a s h I n g t o n without finding a sign of Cooper. The bodies of two murdered women were later fou.rld not far away . In the year which followed, 21 extortion·hijackings of airliners took place in which more than $12 million was demanded. Six sky pirates balled out of hijacked planes, but an were caught. James W. blcCord, along with Hunt a leader in the planning of the break-in and the defendant who first broke his silence 'to provide evidence to the court, was given a one-to five-year sentence. Unlike the Miami area men, l\fcCord has been free on bond since the trial. Sirica said it was his intention that J\fcCord spend at least a yeai in jail. Anaheim Cops Ready Lawyers for tie defendants asked for leniency, one pleading that the men F oi: Mass Ticketing The four "Soldiers" and Hunt pleaded guilty In January to ~ of oon· Anaheim police promised today tO.llllP •piracy, burglary;buggmg anll wiretap-· -from picketing to ticketing ii their pay ping. McCord and Liddy, like .Hunt, a ~ package Isn't sweetened by a City Coun- fonner White "Hotise employe,'were con-cil which views its offer·~ "final," vlcted. Police, their wives and children con- Liddy was given an additional sentence tinued picketing city hall In protest of of 8 to 18 months for refusing to testifY the city's 6.75 percent pay raises ac- before a federal grand jury. He also cepted by other city personnel. faces cootempl of Coqress charges. A Hunt's lawyer, Sydner Sachs, told ttomey Steven Solomon. representing s· · Iha H heal the police, said If the picketing fails irica t unt's th is deteriorating to get results, officers will initiate a and that forcing him to spend any more campaign of strict law enforcement giv-e,u1~~· Jail might "do further harm ing tickets to persons in traffic situations which in less inflationary times might result in a mere warning. Hostage Still Held BUENOS AijlES (UPI) -The Argen- tine ltlbsidiarf of a U.S. oil company paid a $1 ~Ilion ransom two weeks ago tor the release of a kldnaped American executive, but the hostage was not freed, business sources said Thursday. The sources identified the kidnap victim as David B. Wilkie Jr., ~8. president of Amoco Argentina Oil Co. Councilmen meanwhile skipped a scheduled Thursday negotiating session with police and may next Tuesday vote to ignore requests for reopened talks on the police pay package. Mayor Jack Dutton and Councilmen Calvin Pebley and Mark Stephenson have made It clefr they feel a fair final offer has been made to the police. The 278-member Anaheim Police Association has not yet threatened to strike. However, a strike vote would be taken if I~"~ ..wer~,...disciplined becau.¥ of their part -in the -pay ..Jwsle, an APA spokesman said. . Solomon it said to favor the !'super cop" stepup . of citizen citations over any walkout by police. However, Detective Chet Barry, APA president, suggested the "super cop" tactic was not being considered . Thursday's picketing was peaceful. ·At issue in the dispute is a pay package whi ch would cost the city of An.3;h.eim an additional $260.000 a year, city personnel chief '9:ary Mc.Rae said. The highest paid Anaheim policeman would be paid $1,176 a month under the city's offer. Present top salary is 11,149 a month. Embassy Closed WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United States has closed its embassy in Uganda -the country ruled by U.S. critic Gen. Jdl Amin -but stopped short of breaking diplomatic relations, the State Depart- ment said Thursday. Henredon's Folio 11 • • A sp•rkling n1w coll1ction f11turing 1up1rb cr•ftsm•nship, qutlity •nd ,tyll n9. Truly 1 Htn· · 'redon tradt mark. View this ••ception1I collec. tion now •t any of T 1d von H1m1rt'1 thr11 fin• stort1. • --Henredon ftf"1il. DREXEL....:HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARA51AN NEWPORl BEACH e .,_. _J .. 11!111111 ·" INTERIO"RS WllllDAYS & SATURDAYS t :OO 19 1:30 PllDAT !Tll. t.00 • .. · . 1717 WESTCLIFf OA.. 142-2010 tOpe" Suntl•y 12·1il01 , ~ LAGUNA l~CH e 145 NOITH COAST HWY. .. IOp•11 SulMllay 12.111ar. 494.1111 TORRANCE e UMt ljAWTHOlN! ILVO, i11.12n ' . '"£ '"' ,, ( .. I • • w ' ' ' • ' • ' I • " " . " ' " . !' .1 . " " .. . " " n . }i • ' ' ' I ! I I I I -...Loday's Closing Prices • • ( Frld1y, N~embtr 9, 197l SC DAILY l'!l.llT J!:J .. NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE-Yea.r's High-Lows Appear Every Saturday . . . -' -• Stocks PltJ1nmet; Dow Off 24 Points NEW YORK (Af J -Fears or a serious impact on the economy biCause 0£ an energy crisis drove stock prices drastically lower today, brokers said. The Dow Jones avetaRe o! SO stocks was o!! n1ore than 24-points- They also said the heavy 1nst1tutional domina- hon of the market tended to make the recent drastic rises and falls d1sproport1onately large, compared with th e past ''There's a g re at deal or concern over the energy crisis, and serious concern still lingers about President Nixon's vulnerab1l1ty," said New- ton Zmder of E. F. Hutton & Co. • • JI • • • • .. • I • . ' 24 DAILY PILOT f"rld.iii)', NMmbtr 9, 1973-. L . ' Weekend Calenda.- 'fop -Skippers in World To Compete in Newport Frenchman Takes Leacl _British Rea<!y_ l\!y~erious "~\'~1 ... Ct\l!E TOWN, South fJrica .,., 1AP'J~ -A sotittleast--1 wihd iJarl~ to blow ,as '11 boals ¥essel· for Amerfi!all. Cup :,,Wt tol ~e~.~re Wednesday LONDON-{AP) A Oids to Wrest the muCI\ so"ght on the second leg of the round surprise new challenger for aft er trophy from the United the world yacht race to the coveted America's Cup States. But all hope o( moun- By AL~tON LOCKABEV YACJ IT CLUB -Cal-25 FieCt VOYAGERS YACHT CLUB Sydney, Australia. yacht racing ser-ies is expected ting a British challenge bad last the \\'ert: Involved in the British chaUenge for America's Cup in 1964, are behind lbe oew boat. •••II"' Ec111or Championship, Saturday, Sun--Massey Midget Series No. Frenchm::in Eric Tflbarly's to be announced this week. disappeared -until now. Some of the top racing skip-d 1, Saturday. BOATING Pen Duick VI .made use of BOYDEN AND Uvingston pers ih the "'orld will mix ay. DANA POINT YACHT the wind and used a spinnaker The development of a crack ''\V e don't have much of cnUTH c OAS T COft. 1• t B I !sh ••• 11 have said nothing publicly on It up Saturday at Newport ~ CLUB -PHRF Series No. to carry him· to the front ~me er rt l;U.il enger a clue about what is hat>" Harbor Yacht Club in co~-JNTHIAN YACHT SCLUB -7, Sunday. of the fleet. . l has been so secret that even pening/' co n:f e 1~1 e-d a the ven~ UBut well~th or= petition for the Jean Schenck Intraclub Regatta, unday. LIOO ISLE YACHT CLUB Behind Tabarly wer~ four the stately Royal· Thames spokesman for the RTYC, one yachting· uu s say e J\1cmorlal Trophy. PALOS VERDES YACflT -William Morris Change of British entries, Great Britain Yacht Club isQ_'t S!p"e exactly of Ule top c1utis in Britain was designed behind closed The event is the annual CLUB -Champagne Series Watch Invitational. OR, Sunday; lfot Rum Series, JI, second Life, Burton Cutter what is going on. which counts kings and doors at· Sou t h,a m Pt 0 n challenge team race in No. I, Sunday. 5.5 n1eter, 6-meter, PC, Sun-and Adventure, the yffcht The club is the official body princes in its membership, University OD England 's south ---behman-t2-dinghieS":-Si-x-yaeht ----~.AN-DIEGO -day. __ which won the first leg 1on that would challenge the "But provided certain con-roast and Will be built in clubs 'viii be involved in. the NE\VPORT-BALBOA SILVERGATE y Ac HT pcants olthe-Yac'e-----from -t:J nlted--States:-The-An1erica's -ditions are met, we-hope-lo a!LUJUru!m_alloy. • .. -~ n •I ul .. '!! ·"' ..... 'It • " ' I competition ,,·ith fo ur-mnn COllONA DO YACIIT CLUB CLUB _ Hot Ruin Series, Portsmouth, England, to Cape Cue series is scheduled to ~o ahead with the challenge Few -other details ar e · teams. N E \VP 0 RT tlARBOH -Indian Su mn1er Regatta, Town. Behind were British be sailed off Ne\vport, R.l., this week." the spokesmM available bccuusc as one ex- lifading the list for the YACHT CLUB -Jane PHRF. Sabot. Saturday, Sun-SDHF, Sunday. Soldier, ,T\\'O Italian en(ries next September. said. pert said:· "Obviously Boyden defending Ne "•port Harbor Schenck Tr o ph y . interclub_ day. SOUTHWESTERN YACH1' CS E RB and Tauranga, -33 Anthony Boyden and J ohn and Livingston don't want the Yacht Club wHI be Bill Ficker, challenge, Lehr'n®-12s, Srt°lur-SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB CLUB -Keg O' Rum Race, Exports France, Sayula. ,II AUSTRALIA AND FRANCE-L.lvin~ston.-tv;0--experienced A1nerkaM lo kno\\' \Vhat llieY the 1970 Ameri ca 's Cup day. -Sinnhofler Hot Rum Series. ~10RF, Sunday. l\fexico and Krlter France. already have announced their members of the RTYC who are up to." defender and former world --------------------------'-------------------'---------------------'-------- Star champion. Others on the NHVC team are H e n r y Sprague, national and In- ternational Finn Class chan1- pion ; George Twist, a crewman on Ficker's winning America's Cup team; and Bill Symes a top intercollegiate sailing skipper. Chris Colby js'the alternate. ED-BENNE'IT, U.S. Olym. pie representative in the Finn Glass in 1972 will head a St. Francis Yacht Club team. Others include Tom Blackaller, world.famous Star sailor; Chris Boome and Hank Jotz, both top Bay Area small . boat sailors. Balboa Yacht Club's team will co~ist of Dave Ullman, U.S. Snipe and 470 champion ; Argyle Campbell o top U.S. Tempest sldpper former win· ner of the Congres,,ional Cup~ and former All·American in· tercollegiate sailor; Jack Jakosky, a crewman ror both Ullman. and ·Campbell, and Jim Tyler, chainpion Lido-14 skipper. DENNIS CONNER, former world Star champion will be the key man on San Diego Yacht Club's team of Carl Eictienlaub, John Driscoll. and Mark Reynolds. Chic Rollins is listed as alternate. Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club and California Yacht Club are the other challengers, but their teams were not listed. First race will start at 11 a.m. over and inside the bay course. with the second race to start immediately aft~. BALBOA YACHT CLUB will host a unique event Saturday in conjimction with Lido-14 Fleet 1 when top skippers take the he1ms of Lido-14 s1oops With blind cre"men from the Orange O:lunty chapter of the Braille Institute. Other 1ocal action will in- clude Voyagers Yacht Club's Huntington Pier West Race, the 7th feature of the Massey Midget Series for boats rated under the Midget Ocean Ra~ ing Fleet (MORF) on Satur- day, and Lido Isle Yacht Club's William J\1orris Change of Watch race Saturday. PRIMARY INTEREST on the big boat front will center on the start of Long Beach Yacht Club's 1,000-mile La Paz race which will send 28 boats southward, including five local entries. ~tries from Newport Harbor are Bob Grant's 61-foot sloop Robon !fl. NHYC; John Ha 11' s O:llumbia-43 Ragdoll, Tribute. a Columbia-52, Mac Donald. Blatterinan, Lawhorn a n d Holleran: N H V C ; Bob Be a u champ's Colwnbia-57 Dorothy 0. NHYC ; T.~1. Vedor's 47-foot sloop And ale and Dennis foate's 36-foot sloop Chasquie. Southern Ca lifon1ia )'achting Association calen· dar: LOS ASGELES -LONG BEACll LONG BEACll YACHT CLUB -Start of l....ong Beach to La Paz rill.'C'. Saturday n<ion. SEAL BEACll Y A CH T CLUB -Sunday Sailors Series No. 2, Sunday. CABRILLO BEACH YACHT CLUB -Fnll Series No. J, all classes, Sunday. SANT A M01'1CA BAY PAC!t'IC MAR I N E R S "CAMELOT'' BATH HARDWARE II 1 keep talking abou&,how rich it looka you won't rememb6r that ow price is _ 10 _dam low for !he ciyality. Antique brass and Pewter. .cEtched Towel Bars 18" _ .6.97 24" .. 7.97 Chain Towel Bars 18" .. 5.97 24". 6.97 ROB• Towel Bar, 18", ................ 6.97 Etched Towel Ring ...• , . _, ....•.... 4.97 Crystal Soap Dish.,.. . . . ... _ .... ,. 5.47 Crystal Toothbrush and Tumbler Holder .... , ........ , ... , ... , . , , .. 6.97 Etched Crystal Paper Holder ...... _ .. 5.47 Robe Hook ......... , ..... , ........ 2.97 ~·.;' ', WOVEN CAFE CURTAINS • 48 "x24" 99c 60" x30'' .... , . . . . .. . . . 1.59 60 "x36'" ................. , •. 1.99 9"x52'' VALANCE . . . . . . . . . . . 99c ' Have you seen these lovely cales. The interwoven color• sort of give It class and a softer effect (Chee. I sound like a real decorator guy). In orange. avocado, white, with contrasting accents. • WHITE TOILET SEAT 197 -. JACK ARMSTROl-G WOU-lD'V-E-L-IKED · THIS · PE.EL • >. "---" . PBEWAY , Fm STANDING FIWLACE F'ull base complete with curved screen no rnortanng needed. A winnet m satin black and colon. 30· 99sa 38' 12988 OZITE SHAG CABPET TILE 39c Sell-adhesive 12x12 ti.181, deep thick shag, many colorL We'll show vou how to do floor or ceiling with no seams showing. SHAGGY VAC TOOL ..... " AMAZJ 1'1<;; How DD 1c....,~ THE~ Oo THAT 7 ,'1 I,. /jt\\. lf I' 1 t ~. 1 ,w~ GLOBE SPAKISB CBmEUEI 4400 The picture tells no lies {the ad writer. I don't know about). Okay, here's some truth. This aame liqht goes for over SlOO in the liqht stores. • BANGING BAIN LAMP I never have liked this light. but we've sold hundreds. They always make me feel the thunder and lighting ia coming with the rain. Gold fini$,h. 9900 ARMSTRONG PLACE 1 N PRESS VINYL TILE Beautiful iloor tile and no mess of glue, mastic, spreaders, clean-up. etc. (and on and pn). Just peel the protective paper and lay the tile. And such beautiful·j,attema. l'Jx12 tiles.., ONE FA\ QUARTER A deal. if you like a fire in the fireplace. We deliver them and you can go the whole winter, no matter what the qaa supply ia. EACH • PALLET OF FllEGl.OW LOGS 59so 660 LOGS FREE LOCAL DELIVERY • 8 FOOT • ' ' REDWOOD .. .... LOGS -·· \ ! 1 ......... ' 497 Abe would have liked lhHe. They are fat derill, and you can split them. maybe some dcry b• preaident (I don't know if that's such a lucky break nowadays.) • ·WROUGHT 1101 BAllJIG And lo keep the nap on !hat atuU right A regular everyday item and aome guys up there. the gadget that Hts all standard 77c W,· get up lo 4.99 for lhis. Oh well, to vaca. For Jong Or medium shag. ~~~-----~-1--continue;-Nylo"n""n·on-:-Cbrr"Odtrrl['Uttinq·c---•I-----. ' LookJ •o real the guy with the morta:' la always trying to find ·out where th• seam starts. GiYe it some thought. ----- Add 1om• safety ci'nd a lot ol good )ooks lo your porch. Or build a little cage for that wiH-clock Bumlingor lcid noxl door. COasfal Wealher 5vnny lodllY. Lion! Yfrltble winch nl9h1 •nd mornh\i ho11r1 bttomlng wn1.ny 10 to 16 knoli ln 11!11rnoon1 tod•Y Ind sa111rd•y. Hlgn loday, mid .OS. Coe111r l1mP•.r1111rt~ r1rtge from U to 61. tnl.m temper1t11rtt. r1119t frOfl'I lO to 1._ Wlllf' t1mper11\1re 60. S••• JfJooJt. Tides l'lllOAY $kond PilDh ...... t :'°P·"'· 4.l koncl ~ J:24 p.rn. 4,1 SATUaOAY !"Int 111f11 •.. 1:00 •.rn. '·' Finl low •. l:.U p,rn 1,1 $eceN Pilllf'I • . ... f ::V p.m. 4.1 k<tnd 1oW •. J,V p.11'1. ·I.I IUfllOAY ' •· fin.I l'llOt( ., .......... t ::l6 •,rn, •.t "''" tow ............ l :lt 1.rn. 1•t ~ l'lltol'I ·•·-··· .... lt:tl P·"'· 1,0 ,__ 1ew , ,,, J:53 p.m •I.I S...,,... •:,. 1.m. kt1 •:~ p.rn, "-rr-4;1G P..11'1. .. U. S:2l •.m. malr:e ii look lilce something elle. And with a lit~le of Toilet Trima you can 2 67 CA Buick?) .. rn1s1~1 cl'la1q~ ., . I \ ,- ' t I I l v be wit vi Goa mis Su fir a Be Ri m in 30 a sa th w ir D' a a hi to ' w a cl in " g ., ' .. • . ~Lag-1111a ,.Be-~eh Today's Final N.Y. Stoclis VOL. 66, NO. 313, 4 SECJIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1973 TEN CENTS ! C3.spers Will Seek cRehearing on Main Beach ----' Laguna Beach's Main Beach Park will be presented for a rehearing, this time with review of the project's en- vironmental impact report, at the South Coast Zone Regional Conscrvalion Com· mission. The office of Filth District County Supervisor Ronald \V. Caspers, con· firmed Thursday that the supervisor, a member of the coastal CODUllWion, Coast Man Killed By OMster? By HILARY KA YE Of be Dllll' Pli.r Stiff An 82-year-old man died in Huntington Beach Convalescent Hospital th~ week, possibly resulting from a beating with a shoe by his 104--year-old roommate. Authorities in Kings County are await· lng Ute · ~roner's report from Orange County tn detennine whether Luciano Riva s, 104, should be charged with the murder of Walter Rhode , 82. The assault occurred rour months ago in a convalescent home in Hanlord, · 30 miles south of Fresno. Rivas was originally charged with assault with a deadly weapon, but Kings County District Attorney John O'Rourke .saKI he decided not to prosecute at that time. "Since the death of Rhode, however, we are reviewing the charges to see if we ahould charge.Rivas with murder," O'Rourk1 said. "Jt'a~a very unusual 1itu:atlon to have a 104-year-old man who ls able to comntit a crime of this lllnd." he a,ddecl. O'Jlourke ... Ja__waitlng f<lr a llledlcal history for Rhode aince be kift"'l!iiifOnl to determine whether he might have suffered sublequent Injuries to the bead which may have caused his death. A spokesman for the Orange County Coroner's Ofrice, however, 1aki Rhode's autopsy indicated he died from a blood clot -resulting from .an old injury. "We can't be certain how old the injury is," explained the spokesman, "but our Investigation showed that Rhode did not have any further injuries." A relative in Huntington Beach moved Rhode from the Hanford convalescent home to Pacifica Hospital in HuriUngton Beach and then to the HunUngton Beach Convalescent Hospital. • "It may be several weeks before we get the full report on Rhode," said O'Jlourke. HOTPANTS EYED 'IN ENERGY PINCH MILWAUKEE CAP! -"All female employes will wear hotpants, which should generate a substantial amount of heat in the office." That was one of the "rules" facetiously l'(ISted Thursday in the office of Clerk of Courts Francis X. McCormack follow- ing President Nixon's speech on lhe need to conserve energy. "Match periods, rather than coffee breaks, will be held," another rule stated. "Every half hour, employes -will stand up and light a match to keep everyone warm." Oruge C.ut Weather Low clouds and local log night and early morning hour~, other- wise sunny Saturday, acco~ng lo the weather service. Llttle temperature change. Hlghs at the beaches Jn the mid-60s riling to 74 inland. Overnight lows 56-58. will seek a. rehearing during Monday's comrnisslon meeting. Aides reported it waa likely that if the commissioo agreed, ~e rehearing would be sched uled for Dec. 3 Sf the earliest. The city's Main Beach Park project has been attacked in a Jaw suit filed against the city, the regional coastal commission and the .state conservation commission. LA Officials' Homes A'blaze LOS ANGELES (UPI) Sepa'rate fires were set early today al the homes of a Municipal Court judge and two po I i c e com- missioners in fonner Mayor Sam Yorty's administration, fire of. ficials reported. 'Ibe ftrst oi three fires which occurred between the hours of 4 and s itm. was at the el:clusive Wilshire District borne ot fonner Police Commissioner Emmett C. McGaugbey. The second was at • the Silverlak~ home of-Municipal · Judge George C. Campbell and the third · at· the home of former Police c.ommiuionet Marguerite Juattce; who lives in the soutbwesj area of the city. 6 Watergate Defendants Get Off Emy WASllINGTON (UPI) -Judge Jolm That suit alleges that the regional commission issued permits for the $675.000 park development without first studying the project's environmental im-pact reporr.- The reh earing could remove the legal basis for the suit. Caspers acknoweldged in a formal statement that "the plaintiff raised a signiflcent legal question." But, he said "the city bas spent $3 million on acquisition and has federal and .county grants totalling $592,000 which may be lost if the project does not proceed-this year." "This park will provide everything the coastal commission is trying to achieve," caspers stated. He said the facility as planned would be one of the finest parks in the county and "it would be a great loss if these £ederal and county funds were now lost and the project delayed." Caspers help may not clear the way for construction or the ~ach project because another Lag\tnan, Richard \Villett.s has threatenj!d to file a lawsuit to prevent demolition of the old service stations and restaurant and parking lot in the beach project. However, Willetts said he did not think the demolition oi the structures should ~:I take place If the project is to be delayed a year. If Caspers ' efforts result in a new approval _.ID' coastal commission in~ eluding the EIR, Winetts may have Jost his moliviation for the lawsuit. \Villetts, a city council candidate, recently !ought the council over lhe increase in parking meter rates and won a compromise. * *-* * * * * * * * * * Lowest Mairi. Beach Bid $48,000 Over Estimates Officials . Set Study Wednesday Bids for development of Laguna Beach's Main Beach Park have been opened by the city with the lowest bidder giving a construction coat o( 1615,000. J, Slrica Uncled lighl -today .. to als ortctnaJ W-gate defendanta 'Ibo The ~ty'I estjmat4 _for the wart 1fU $626,'/811. Bids by lour -!Irma ranc<id from the low submitted by Goocl- rnan and Peloquin, lnc., _ttl La Habra to a high of $1.1 million. ' --._...... la lnoklar -the IOOpe of the ocaodal. 'lbree of the JaD men oould be flft by_Cbrlstmu. The stiffest am~ wu given to E. Howml Hunt, the former White HOU9e employe who admitted being a prime planner of the break-in at Democratic national headquarters. Sirica sentenced him to 21> to eight years in prison and fined him fl0,000. Four otberl got minimum sentences or one year e&cb and the other 18 months. 'l1te final sentences were far different from the initial sentences given the six and the final sentence given G. Gordon Llddy, the one original defendant wbo would not talk to Watergate in- vestigators. Sirica gave provisional sentences of up to 45 years to the six in January. Liddy is serving a minimum term of six years, ei"ght months. He also waa lined $40,000. Sirlca explained that he had no In· tention of giving the men the muimum sentences he handed in January Jf they cooperated with authorities. Frank A. Sturgis, Virgilio R Gonzalez and Eugenenio R. Martinez -three of the lour so-called "Soldiers" in the break-in -were given sentences of one to four years. Since the three have been behind bars for neai ly 11 months, they may be freed before the year is out. Bernard L. Barker, the fourth member of tbe Miami· area 11Sold.lers," received a sentence of 18 months to. six years -stiller than the other three, apparently because be recruited them for the mission. JameiJ W. McCord, along with Huot a leader in the planning of the break-in and the delendollt who fll'Si broke his silence to provide evidence to the court, (See WATERGATE, Page I) Laguna · Beach Collections Sets Cleanup SIGN SAYS VICTORY BUT COACH AKINS (CENTER) LOOKS .GRIM Laguna GrJdders E1t Up for Homecoming at ·cottas-Rntaurant ~~~~~~~~~~~ Tustin Resident Will Air Gripes Before Trustees Shepard Kanarek, leader of a movt' to get Tustin out of the Saddleback Community College district, will present bis gripes to Saddleback trustees Monday night. Kanarek was invited to address the board at the request of Missioo Viejo Trustee Donna Berry. His pr"esentation will open the regular board meeting at 8 p.m. in the administration building. About 6,500 signatures have been col- lected so far. by "The College Committee of Tustin, urging . de-annexation from the district, according to Kanarek. •By state law. 8,IXNl signatures are (See GRIPES, Page I) Vietory Feast~ F ootbal'lers Go.bble Free Goodies Sixty happy mouths gleefully chomped away on a "couple hundred" pancakes, 15 dozen link sausages, and five dcrzen eggs (scrambled) washed down with six gallons of orange juice and prodigious quantities of milk. The occasion was tbe Seventh Annual Pancake Demolition Breakfast today hosted by the Cottage Restaurant for the Laguna Beach Varsity Football Team, song and cheerleaders and the school coaching staU on Homecoming Day. 1be breakfast is provided free by Cottage owner Harry Mooo. ?\1oon said he made six gallons ot pancake batter to cope with the hwigry young alhJetes and hungfy .coaches and ·hungry song leaders. "You know, after this thing, mothers have come up to me and asked 'how do you ever feed au those boys,' " Moon said. Inside the restaurant, the varsity sq uad members were ha~ily taking sec- ond and Utird helpings. Moon said the breakfast, now a Laguna Beach tradition got started when lhe pep leaders at the school ' wanted to do something to boost team spirit.,. Presiding over the munchlng ag· gregation was Head Football Cooch Hal Akins seated in front of a large banner proclaiming "Victory." Demolition Plan Stirs Row ~1ta Federal Savings' Project Dra'tvs Criticism Increasing public criticism has bit Lagwia Federal Savings and Loan Asloclltion plans to demo1lsb an old apartment, a gallery and other structures had always planned on developing the property as a parking lot and showed it as a parking area on the plans or the building comtructed in 1961. Critical discussion at the board m~vng attempted to tie demolition to the total project which is subject to design review and could require an EIR. Cit=)~~~~ other ,,;~!ten conlrOntJng the rt1f81ri Beach Part at f :JO p.m. W~ City Manager A 'JbeaJ said a major factor In the bidding ls the avallabtlity of wood pilings for the sea waJJ. 1be city revised specifications and aUowed bidden to propose alternate pll-. ings. The low bidder based his alternate' bid on the use of aluminum. other bidders used a revised wood pllin&' system of concrete. This is the second round ot bidding for tbe park, the first last year was unsuccessful when the lowest bid came in $300,000 over city estimates. The City then scaled down aome feature of the park, and requested bids again. 'lbe bids presented are only good for 611 days and should delay start of COO' struction, higher cost.! were forecul by city officials. * * * EIR Decision Could Affect Beach Lawsuit The coastal romrllissions don't have to require environmental impact· rePort9 (Em) from pe~t applicants, the State Attorney General's office has ruled. At the heart of the lawsuit ffied hi' John Gabriels blocking the cmstruction of Laguna Beach's Main l!each Parle is whether the coastal commiJsions are legaUy required to consl!ler all Em. Under the California· Envtrorunelital Quality Act (CEQA), public agelld<s, must, lD'lless exempted, require Eta. from developen .• CEQA gives a specilic exempt.ion to state and regioilal water quality control boards because they are already focusing on environmental matters. The state resources agency, em- po..,;rcred to de'lelop guidelines for the implementation of CEQA, ' has gooe • step further . INSWE TODA V Laguna Beoch's oeml-annual cleanup Broad to k ay f a parking -errorr--ls rollln&----round-and-Mondar-· _or.:•.--__ w_•Y'--_m_a_e_w_ or " thn!ugb •Frtclay, a special cleanup col· lectlon is available In residential areas. "I don't know wbat e\se it could be developed as," Miss Mills said. Lagwia Federal plans to raze the structures at 269, 275 and '111 Broiidway, officials said. The U90Ciation seeks ap- provals for an enJarged land.scape park· ing lot and drive up teller facility. !ts guidelines doo't speciftcaDy mentiol1 the coastal. commission by Mme, but exempt state agencies de.aling with, U,. environment. __ . , Southern California'• J i r s t dinntr pl4uhous• u open and thrivin g ·fn San Clemente. A re:- ol•w of Its first producdon, th• muricol "Oklahoma," will l"if found tn tadalt• W•ekmder rection. Al Ywr knlo J ~LI.... 14 -.. .. L, M, Mt'4I I c.llttnil• I 'CltUlfl.. ..... (IMln ,. -.. --, == , ... tl.J Pw ... ..... ' ..... t#e 1J ,..._ . := ...... N.t""'4 ..... °'"'" ,....,, ··---... '=-------... , ... ...... • • , • ,, .• .... 1•1t " JN\ • , .. ,. • - '!'rub coUectors wtll pick up articles such aa old water heaters, nJp, stoves, reltlgerators, "furniture and bundled, tree trtmmtnp. Collectlon will be made on the normal trash pick up date. Dlscards lhould be Jl(aced where refuse is normally pick· ·edoip. - It II hil-'11ie foe the speolal refo."' collecllon to tnclude IUd1 thlnp 11 old a.-Illlel or clebcU from building demolition. 'lbe special service II offered twiqi a year to aalJt ...tdenta In cltartng home and pnperty of abondoned material tbal Is unalgbtly male and unnnted. • ' The conflict bn>ke into the open 'lburs- day night at the Board of Adjustment when several citizens protested demoli· lion, and the board continued the bearing to next 'lbunday In allow further study or the matter. . At 1'aue before the board Is whether an envlrOtimental Impact report can be required !QI' demoUllOn as part of the laraer !ll'l>Ject developing the parking_ lot. Loma. Milli, president and manager or Lag'"1A Federal said today obe was not aware of wba_t happened at the Board ol MJQotmenl /lleeUng and declin- ed to commeat. She pofntd out lliat the associaUon • Asked if the 'association would consider r\ainlng the old ,...klences which had housed low Income and elderly peroons until they were evicted recently, Miss Mill• 181d: "Right now I doo't know. I'm not-going to say. We're going to have to have a meeting on the thing." City planning 1taff had Indicated the demolition of the old 1tructures did not ' require an f:IR for city consideraUon. The. matter mu1t go also to the South Coast ZOne Regional Conservation Com· mission foe a demolition permtt, That permit can either be iaued by the coutal cornmisSlon staff without a publtc hearing, oe ti a major con· troveny devtlopo It could requite ·a direct -action. I q Miss Mills said she did not have the l'IM.' for the parking lot at hand and said she did not know bow many spaces would be added. 'lb' delay WlD allow members of the Hwnan Needs Advisory Boan! an •op- portwiity to discuss !he po s 1Ib1 e pre&ervation of the old structures as - low coot bollslng. _ The board '"'! split on the issue 'with Boal'Ji. mem.bers Lu rtlurph inc, Michael Schley and Arnold llano voting for the delay and Boar<! Chairman Chris Abet and Member Peter Weisbrod op- posing It 'lbe presumption by the attnmej general is that lhe commission establisbl ed by PropostUoo 20 Is included 11 that exemption. Dale Secord of the Environmentlf Coalition or Orange County bas cballelW cd that Idea before the South Cooil Regt1X1al Zone Cooservallon Commlssloq where he suuestect EiRs would smooft the permit gnmtillg P""""'· Although Secord strongly :J EIRs aren't duplicaUon and should required, be said he can•t · Gabriel's cause. "lie picked the right Idea and Ult wrong project ," Setud said. Agreeing with Setud's ---(See RBPOR~ ~ I)_ ' I • • -• 2 DAIL V •P.c.ll'-'O'-l---l-B_. ____ F_rld_•-'Y~· N_o_,._m_l>o_•_9_, _1'_7_J 1 --- Newport Studfl. Coast Highway Dead End Sought By L. PETER KIUEG DI Ille Dalrr .. 11.1 Si.It Ne,vport Beach needs $67 mlllio11 in .street improvements, including a second croulng over Upper Newport Bay, to help oolve the trafrlc overload choking the city, a consultact has recommended. 'I'he consultant's report , whicti took nearly. three years to prepare, was released today and also says that PacUic Coast Highway should be dead-ended • at both side!! of the Santa Ana River. It says the highway should be rerouted to the north as jt crosses Ne.wport Boulevard and should connect with the ' terminus of the Newport Freeway in Costa Mesa then continue westerly into Huntington Beach. The second bay crossing as proposed by the firm of Alan ~1. Voorhees and Teen Reports Seeing UFO In California By United Press International Unidentified flying objects bave been sighted in the California desert and in New York state. In Blythe, Calir., Patrick Archer, 19, pf Saginaw. Mich. said he saw an object with a red light and a green light on either side ...nt.! three amber colored lights in front, hovering over an orchard. Jn Johnstown, N.Y., Billy Pulis and · dozens of classmates said they sa1v · "" a si lent, Apollo-like craft, ready to land next to 'thei r school. Archer said he was driving west on Interstate 10. ea!t of Blythe, when he · spc.tted a circular-shaped Object with no markin gs in the sky moving up an<! down and from side to side. Archer said be decided it was not a helicopter , or airplane because he could not hear a motor. "Wat's when I started to get scared ," Archer said. "I'm not ashamed to say l was never so scared in my whol e life. I was crying, shaking and white as a ghost." Deputies checked with Blythe Airport and learned that Pacific Southwest -. Airlines was conducting "practice missed 1andings" (flying low as if to land and • then pulling up at the last minute) · in the area with DC9s at about the time Archer says be sighted the UFOs. Archer's UFO description, hOwever did not fit that of an airplane. • Pulis, a si.J:th grade pupil at the War- :: ren Street Elementary School in : : Johnstown, said he and his classmates :! were within 200 feet of a slowly descen· ·: ding craft when "it pulled the legs :.; In and took off. :: "It was about 2:40. I was going up : : to the high school. We all saw something :! shaped like a capsule, like Apollo, it ·: was grayish white. :: "We were about 200 feet away and :.; it was coming down. It had legs, like :-: landing pads, you know, big discs, and ·: it was coming down. Everybody was :~ yelling and running toward it. Then : : a big puff or fire came and it took :· off. It looked like it was going to land :: if oobody had come out. :; "Tl had its legs out, then when :: everybody ,ca me out. it pulled the legs : in and took off. It didn 't make any :· noise; no engine noise. :: "It was wide lit the bottom , going :! off to a point, and then cut off at :· the top. lt was about as big as a :: car, a station \vagon probably," he said. ;~ 1 "There was a bea m of light right :; arouod it; a light circling it all the :· time; like a ray. \Vhen it was going :~ up , it bad like a halo around it all ;~ the time." ~ A teacher, who asked that her name :· mt be used, said, "I've convinced myse lf :: it was a helicopter." :: •. f: ~ ~ ., • " • . • . • • .. • :· ' • • • • . . • • • • OIAHGI COAST DAILY PILOT Tl'lf Ot~ Coell DAIL'( PILOT >¥1ttvMi"ltJI' r1 comb!ntd Ill• N1wi-,.r-.1. 11 Mff1111c1 by fl'lf Otl"lll Co.tit Plll>ll1h1rt9 (OITIP9nf, Sfl>I· r11e tdlllont •r• PVttlli..._, Matic1..,. lllro"9~ Frkilf, tor Clli!I Me,1, N1•110rt IHd't, Hunt111111111• lnc:h/F1111nttln Valley, Lio""' BN<l'I, trvltll/kadltl»dl lr"lll S.n <:i.....1,,111 $1" J1;1n C't11fi1•1no. A 1l1111t '"'lllllNI lid!llol\ 11 Pllb!IU'ltd s.1111'111.,. Mid SvncWvs. r"' prlrtcipel PllbllsM1111 plltll II ., "° Wnl &.t llrltl, C0tt1 Mtu, C.l!forni., mM.' llobert N. W1M Pr11161ftt '"" Pvbl""- Jec.• II. C11d1y Vlol Pta.Jd"'I 11'111 "-1'1t M1f11W Tiiorn•1 IC11vU . Company ot San Diego .and endorsed by a citizens commi ttee, should be kept juSflO the. north of-tfie existing Coast Highw ay bridge and then should swing north to the intersection of Dover and Westcliff Drive near the Costa Mesa city limits. The consultant said the $67 million cost 1~'ould be divided between city tax- payers, the state, Orange county and possibly other sources. But, Voorhees said $27 million of the cost will f3ll on local taxpayers and he conceded the city may have difficulty raising that kind or money over the next 20 to 25 years. The plan does not include a recom- mendation for a bypass of downtown Corona de! ?I-far as had been originally proposed. Voorhees h:id initially recommended conslrucling a she-lane expressway on the old pacific coast freeway right-of.way between Harbor View Hllls and old Corona del Mar. Voorhees .:<>needed the report was tailored toward public acceptance and does not necessarily include the best technical solutions to the city's traffic ills. The report says that the recommended plan "does not eliminate all transporta- ..tion deficiencies, but it does present solutions which are likely to obtain puJlic acceptance and support necessary for implementation." ~ Laguna Views Energy Saving For. City Hall Laguna Beach City Manager Al 1beal said today that city hall too would initiate steps to conserve energy as its answer to President Nixon's call for electrical and fuel savings. Theal said be would ~ meeting soon with department beads to outline steps the city can take to cut down fuel and electrical usage. First steps could include automatic closing devices on city ball doors which do not now have them, Jocb on the city hall thermostats and a lowered temperature througlloul Theal said the 'city would be also looking at ways of conserving gasoline by reducing auto trip.'5 and be said a cut back in municipal busline routing was possible U propane for Ille "dean air" fleet became acarce. Already the liquid gas bas increased considerably in price during the past yea r, Theal said. Three Firemen Win Promotions In Laguna Beach Three men have been promoted to ne\v positions with the Laguna Beach Fire Department. Forest Johnson, a 19-year member of th e force, has been promoted from captain to battalion chief and will serve as one of two men assigned as operations officers. Bing Boka has been promoted from engineer to captain. Boka is an 8-year veteran with the Laguna Beach depart· ment. Dale Lucus has been promoted irom firema n to engineer. The 32-man Laguna Beach Fire Department is assigned in three Jire stations. In addition to day-to-day operations duties, Battalion Chief Johnson will serve as department training officer . Johnson, 43, is active at the fire science school at a Santa Ana college as well as the fireman's academy also at Santa Ana College. Auditions Set By Lyrie Opera 1 Entry !onus ar.c now available for the upComing Lyric Opera auditions with a\\'a rds totaling $1,000. Deadline for entry is Nov. 19. Auditions will be held Dec. 1, 2, 8 and 9 at the Festival of Arts Forutn Theater in Laguna Beach, 690 Laguna Canyon Road . • .... --rll~ Mvtjfil"t MtNillno E•ltot -Entrants must be prepared t 0 participate in the January Repertory _Seasoos_Jealuring_'.'llon Pasql!«l~ an<! • • • • • • • • . • . • • • • • • • • ' ! • • • • • ' • • • • • • • • • • • Ch1rl11 H. Lff• Rich•,,f P. N•ll AultleM ~Ntlrtt E.itou ---222 · hrelf Avt"UI M1lli119 Adtlre111 l'.O. I•• 666, •2652 ..__ c..11 M .. ; DI Wul a1y Slrlt9t HIWJ!Orf tMdl: IJ» flllWPl!f1 lov"'111'11 tl1111!1"elorl 8Mdl: 1111S hltfl llOl.lltY11'11 "" 0..-fti as fllorlfl !'t C.mlno tM! , .. .,.._ 1714) '4f-4l11 c:s..tfte.111 A4NftW9t MZ·M71 ...... IMcll Al D1pa1: .-.: 1...,· ... 4M-t4" ~""'· ,,,... bf-.,.. Cttu l"vbtleti"" c.-.i.v. fllo MWI uor-., 1n11t1,.1~ ....... -ltw " .. ....,.,'--" lltttlil ,..,. .. !......... ""'*" .... 111 ..,. ~ " '*"''""" -· .......... ,..., ..... " c.t• Mt:N • ~ Mlta-i;l1'rl W ct"'-r AM ,,,....,,, ., ""11 a .11 -1t11r1 r11111r.n ...... , .... .,.., INldM'/', • "La Boheme." Further information about forms and the auditions is available by calling Lyric Opera at 494-0709 . Lagwia PT A to Hold . Tour of High School 'l11c Laguna Beach High School Pl'A will conduct a lour of the high school campus at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday, begin- ning in the lobby of lbe administration bulldlng, 625 Park Ave . The purpose of the lour Is lo eoqualnt local r"idenls, particularly 11-who have recenlly moved inlo the school district, •ilh the facility, slid Kathy Dahlquest Pl'A presidcnl· -' Funeral Shoek Widow Finds Stranger iii Casket MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Leonard Zilbert, president of a century. old chain of funeral parlors, apologhed to a wldo" for the appear- ance of a stranger in the casket reserved for her husband. "We are human, we made a mistake. I wish we could undo It," Zllbert said Thursday, and scheduled "full military honors" tonight for a second service for John Greenia, .a World War I veteran who died Sunda~Jllght al a hospital. On Tuesday, Greerlia's widow, Minnie, and 75 members.-and friends of Post 3559, of the Veterans of Foreign Wars where the 77· ye11Mld veteran served as quartennuter, were shocked when they found another man dressed in Greenia's clothes In the caskel Chaos erupted as the widow was led to three other viewing rooms in seartb of her husband's body. An investigation by the funeral home the next day resulted in the discovery that the forn1er stockbroler's body bad beOJ11>1aced in another man's grave. The body was exhumed and returned to the chapel. Zilbert said he hoped the second service would recapture the 14dignity'' of the dead serviceman. Hartelius Defense Lawyer • Takes Stand, Rips-Woman By TOM BARLEY Of tb:.t ~tr PO!f Sii" LOS ANGELES -Defense atlomey ~tatthew Kurilich took the wttness stand himself today in a surprise maneuver aimed at aiding his client, Dr. Eb be Hartelius of El Toro. Kurilicb was attempting ~ convince the state Board of ?i.1edica1 Examiners that charges filed against Dr. Hartellus were manufactured by the physician's former mistress, Reba Vaughn. "It's the best_w_.a.y I know of getting the true story across," the trial lawyer said. "I came to know Reba Vaughn better than most meil and I want this · cOm- mittee to see the real character of this mentally unstable woman." ' Kurilicb told the· three physicians who mu.5t rule on HartellUS' guilt ol innocence that bis efforts to help Hartelius, 50, in his first of three Orange County Superior Court trials were constanUy hampered by the physician's infatuation for bis blonde lover. Kurilich's characterization or the shapely 31-yeaMld prosecutioo witness included an off the stand demonstration ol Ille way in pbich Mn. Vaughn stood, legs apart and anns akimbo, outside Ille oounty courtbou8e at the time Kurillcb was driving Hartelius to the building. "He made me stop the car and he ran towards her like a squirrel," Kurilicb said. "I told hlm time after time to stay away from that woman but be just wouldn't listen." Kurilich's efforls atmlmlcry, including bis lmperso6ation of Mrs. Vaughn'• pro- nounced Tennesssee accent, brought strenuous objections from the prosecu· tion. Kurilicb lold the commillee that Mn. on the instructions of stale bearing of· ficer John A. Wllld. "It isn't just Hartelius who is afraid of Mrs. Vaughn." Kurilich said ~t one point. "I think y,·e're all afraid of her. She is a vengeful, vindictive woman who is capable (If doing anything to get ber-way." Willd will later today set a date for what will be Ille ninth t!Jree.<lay heariru! into charges of ~al turpitude aM unprofessional conduct against Hartelius who practices medicine at 2345 E. Coast ·Highway, Corona de! h1ar. The two state lawyers assigned to the hearing are insisting that Hartelius' licensed be revoked. They have rejected all · possibility of a deal ., invotv1ng a lesser 1J0118ltY. Hartelius .has been cleared in three Oringe County trials of ~rges of arson, fraud and bribery. The state hearing is oow in its third year. \ Forwil on Cancer Set at Hospital A public fonnn on cancer, and cancer quackery, will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the auditorium of South Coast community Hoopilal, 31872 Coast !Ilghway, South Laguna. The cancer discuuion will attempt · to amwer questions presented by the public, and will expose" u net bi ca I treatments. The discussion is one of several forums being presented by the medical staff of the hospital. There is no charge. The programs are prepared by medical apecialist.s in the subject u n de r discussion. The next forum, scheduled for Dec. 12, will deal with depress:ion. REPORTS ••. Carlyle Hoff of the eenier fl)( Law ln lhe Public Inlerest In Los Angelts, which has flied suit egalnlt CEQA, partielly because cl-the EIR Issue. Hoff lndlcaled the cenler can'l tupport Gebrtels' 1ul1. "It's a bad !&sue lo bring it up on." But Jiorf said the Center, along with , U.S. Marines ---. 198-Hailed .011 Birthday lhe League of Women Voters, Is opposed By W!LIAM SCHREIBER to categorical exemptions by the state ~ Of '"' D•Ut "'°' '''" resources agency. Gallant U.S. tl1arines through 198 years "The only reason lh<y (thC coasU.1-or-colj>s -1s1ory -were honored In • commlss lom) have gotten away with doing EIRs u long as they have is that everybody likes th e coastal com- mission. "They 're as likely to disapprove something as anybody is," he added. The commissions have b e e n overburdened with paperwork a n d already receive many El.Rs from developers who had to write them for local governments, Hoff conceded. Carl Boronkay, deputy state attorney general advising the state coastal com- mission, ruled months ago that the com- isslons didn't have lo ask for El&. But a ruling isn't final . A court decision is. FronaPage I GRIPES .•. needed to bririg the matter up before the Orange County Board of Education for consideration. One complaint involves the 20-mile drive to the Mission Viejo campus from Tustin. Santa Ana College in ·the Rancho Santiago district is ohly four miles away. Kanarek said Saddleback offers fe~·er courses than Santa Ana College and has Jess adequate facilities. Saddleback has one permanent building, a library. At present most classes take place in {Klrtahle units on the 200-acre campus .• Saddleback recenlly began nlghl ex· tension cla sses in a Tustin High School. Trustee Hans Vogel of Tustin also has .organized a new committee to try to resolve some of the complaints and prcven( thC pullQUt. FronaPage I WATERGATE ... splash of colors and patriotism Friday at El Toro Manne Corps Air Sletion. Full drcM unlfo"rms, fla shing sabres. John Philip Sousa marches and a stan- ding-room-only crowd on the base runway heralded the ~1arine birthday ~·ith a pageant believed to be the first or its kind at EI Toro. A bool!Ung, 13-gun salute -which frightened some young children to tears 1 -greeted the flags or each squadron as they paraded in front or the crowd. i I Among .honorees during the celebritlon , \Vere f.Nt oldest and the youngest Marines j at the base. _f I Col. Walter Redmond, 55, and Pvt. H HaroJd Kirkman , 17, marched in review shoulder to shoulder lo a march played by the Third Marine Aircraft band. i The pageant included a display of Marine Corps uniforms do.,..11 through history with narration of the Corps' famous battles. Uniforms included the green and red outfit of American Revolution ~tarines, the plumed hat unifonn o( the Indian and A.1exican wars and the plain blue of the American Civil War. The l98th birthday celebration included festivities marking the 31st annl\•ersary of the founding of the Third ~farine Aircraft Wing, which makes up El Toro 's Marine contingent. Hiihllghting the pageant was a real life reenactment of the raising ol the flag atop a rugged peak on Iv.·o Jima during World War 11. During the ceremonies cotnments were .offered by base commanding generals H. F. !Ill! and W. R. Quinn. I r;liill. a major general, said the an- ni,•ersary "is celebrated in memory of thooe brave Marines \llhO 30 richly en- dowed our corps with laurels and trad.i· lion as a reminder thal we are the v.·as given a one-to five-year sentence. guardian of all that they have rought Unli ke the Miami area men, McCord and died for ." has been free on bond since the trial. Sirica said it was his intention that Hill said that i'for the first time in many years our country is not in· McCord spend at least a year In jail. volved in anned conflict. It is a time Lav.·yers for the defendants asked for not only to enjoy the warm comradeship leniency. one pleading that the men of our fellow ·Marine , but to reflect The four "Soldiers" and Hunt pleaded briefly on where v.-e are going."· guilty In January to charges of con-spiracy, burglary, bugging and wiretap-Hill said professionalism and loyalty ping. McCord and Liddy, like Htmt, a ching as far back as the Flr.t World fonner White House employe, were con-Corps In peace a! well a& war. victed. I 1be role or U.S. Marines ln the Viet- Liddy was given an addl,tlonal sentence nam conflict was played up during the of 8 to 18 months for refusing to testify celebration v.·ith prominent mention of before a federal grand jury. He also each sqadron's battle field activities faces contempt of <:ongress charges. and history during that war. Hunt's lawye r, Sydner Sachs, told Atop each squadron Oag, fiuttered bat· Sirica that Hunt's health is deteriorating tie ribbons and unit citatlonl gathered and that forclnj; him to spend &!!}' more throo~ years of combat, sOme stret- time in jail might "do further ba=rm~-"c6ing ~as faf back <iS thT firSt World to him." \Var. Vaughn admitted lo him in his office that she bad worked with the district attorney's office to convict Hartelius wilh the promise that she would be released trom the state Norco facility if she cooperated. Mrs. Vaughn was committed there in 19&9 as a narcotics addict. She has testified that repeated injectiom by Hartelius during their long association \\'as respomible for that cooditiall. Henredon's Folio 11 She has also te!tified in the current hearing and in Superior Court that Harte1ius beat and kicked her, perfonned abortions on her and that he sold narcotics to a felon on the run from criminal charges flied in another state. It bas also been testified that Hartelius similarity drugged the late Wanda Melendrez, 29, of Costa ?i.1esa to the point that she stayed in bed all day and neglected her young family. Kurilich labeled Hartelius as "a jackass" and said his client's continued infatuatioil for his mi.stress torpedoed many of his efforts to prove Harteliu.1' innocence. Kurilich told the committee that while A.1rs. Vaughn was comforting Hartellus and assuring the silver-haired physician that she loved him, she was calling Kurilicb at the fawyer's office and describing Hartelius as a "whinln& spineless, sniveling cur". · Hartellu.o said Mn. Vaughn hid police Investigators in a bedroom closet at her Costa ~1esa home and that they taped Hartelius' conversations with her in a bid to "hang 90mething on him." Kurllich said Orange COurlly Depuly District Attorney Al Novick took Oowers to ?i.1rs. Vaughn while she was hospitaliz· ed and made a pass at her in her hospital room. "She threw the telephone at him," Kurilich told the a!tonished committee . Kurillch was reprimanded for making references to Daily Pilot accounts of a Hartelius trial in apparent support of his attack on Mrs. Vaughn's integrity. His references to the newspaper and a reporter who was present in the hear- . in(_ room wore struck from the reoord Christmas Fair Booths Offered Booth space for the Lyric Opera Christmas fair swap meet and nea market ls now avalJable for reservation for the early Oecember-evenl. The Chrlstnw fair will run from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Dec. I ahd 1, I and 9 m the Laguna !load! Feallvel of Arts grounds, ll90 Lquna Conym Road. ' • . Bootbl rent for ~ and C7.IO. Space Is limited. · F\rrthet Information and .....,,,.uons ere evailablo by calling 494-0'I09. . ' A 1p1r~ling now coll1ction f11furinq suptrb craft1m1nship1 quality and styling. Truly • H1n- r1don tr•de m1rk. View thi1 exc1ption1l collie. tion now 1t any of Ted von Hem1rt's thrte fine stores. Henredon ~~ OREXEL-HERITAGE-HENRE,DON-WOODMARK-KARAS)AN . . 7ed11111- INlERIORS WIUDA YS a SA TU•DA TS 9:00 le l:JO NIDAY 'TIL 9:00 • NEWPORl BEACH e 1127 WiSTCLIF~ Dlt.. 642·2010 ro,.. s .... , • ., 12.s,101 ~ LAGUNA BEACH ' J4S NOftTH COAST HWY. (Opt• S11M1y 12.11101 4,4.a.111 TORRANCE e 2164' HAWIHOIU<! I LVD • lfl·lllt v F Gall of CO splasb" at EI T Full John P ding· runway with a of Its' A ' Si • , s WAS J. Siri to six o elded-.. men co The E.How unploy T w· Be . . • -• . I • . \ ·' . Saddlehaek· Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks ~VOL'. 66, NO. 313, 4 SECTIONS,-48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CA~IEORNIA_0_ _ERIOA'(,_li_OVEMBER 9, 1973 TEN CENTS --~ Fighting "Marines Saluted on 198th Birthday-~ By Wil.fAM SCHREIBER Of tM D.ity Plttf Sllff Ga11ant U.S. P..farincs through 198 years or Corps history were honored in a splash· of colors and patriotism Friday at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. Full dress unlfornu, flashing sabers John Pbillp Sousa marches and a atan~ ding·room-only crowd on the base runway heralded the Marine birthday with a pageant believed to be the first ol lts'klnd at El Toro. A :lxloming, 13-gun salute -'which Watergate Six Get Sente nced WASHINGTON (UPI) -Judge John J .. Sirica handed light sentencea today to six original Watergate defendants who a~ lnvesUgators in breaking .open the KOpe of ate scandal.. Three .of the J8.il - men could be free by Christmas. The stiffest sentence was given. to E. Howard Hunt, the former White ff009e ill'ploye who admitted being a prime ~ ol the break-in at DemocraUc national headquarters. Sirica sentenced him IO %1> to eight years in prlaon and lined him $10,000. Four othen got minimum sentences of one year each and the other 18 months. 'I1le final sentences were far different ~m the initial sentences given the 11.t and the fmal sentence given G. GOnlon Liddy, the one original defendant who would not talk: to Watera;ate in- -testlgator1. , , -Siiiei gave provisional senteocea--,,1 'rrightened i!Ome young children to tears -greeted the nags of each squadron as they pa.faded in front of the crowd. Amoog honorees during the celebration were the oldest and the youngest Marines at the base. Col. Walter Redmond, 561 and Pvt. Harold Kirkman, 17, marched in review shoulder to shoulder te a march played by the Third Marine Aircraft band. The pageant inchllled a display ol ~larine Corps uniforms down through -istory with narration of the Corps' famous . battles. Uniforms inclUded the green and red outfit of American Revolutioo Marines, the plumed hat uniform of the Indian and Mexican wars and the plain blue of the Amerlcan Civil War. The 198tb birthday 41elebration included festivities marking the 31st arullversary of the founding of the Third Marine Aircraft Wing, which makes up El Toro 'a hfarine contingent. Highlighting the pageant was a real life re-enactment of the raising of the flag atop a rugged peak on Iwo Jima during World Wat fl. During the ceremonies comnienll were offered by base commanding generals H. F. Hill and W. R. Quinn. HW, a major general, said the an· niversary "is celebrated in memory or those brave !rfarines who ao richly en- dowed our corps with laurels and ~adi­ tion as a reminder that we are the guardlan ol all that they have fought and died for." Hill said that '1for the first time in many ·years ow: co\Dltry is not in- volved in armed confilct. Jt is a time not only to enjoy the warm comradeship ol our fellow hiarines, but lo reflect briefly on where we are going ." J:fill said professionalism and loyalty will still be the bywords of the Marine Corps in peace as well as war. The role of U.S. Marines in the Viet- nam conf1ict was played up durin g the celebration with prominent mention of each sqadron's battle !ield activities and hi.story during that war. Atop each squadron fl ag, fluttered bat- tle ribbons and unit citations gathered Lawyer on through years of combat, some strct- ctting as rar back as the First \Vorld War. The crowd was reminded in several ol the talks, of the-men who are stil missing in action after the Southeast Asia war and or those who served long terms as prisoners of war. The ceremonies were ended with the cutting of a huge, two-tiered birthday cake by the commanding generals. The oldest and youngeSt Marines got the first two slices. Stand Blasts Reba at Hartelius Hearing . By TOM BARLEY Of ... DlllY Pl ... Staff LOS ANGELE.S. -Defense attorney Ma tthew Kurilich IOok Jhe Witness stand him.self today in a surprise maneuver aimed at aiding his client, Dr. Ebbe .Harteliu&-of El 1J'oro, _ • . Kurilich waa attempttng to convince the state Board of Medical Examiners that charges flied against Dr. Hartelius were manufactured by the physician's former ml.stress, Reba Vaughn. "It's the best way l know or getting the true stof)I across," the trial lawyer said. · "I came.to knQlY Reba V_aughn better than most men and I warit this · com-. mittee"·to see the real character ·of this mentally unstable woman." Kjlrilich told tht three pliySiCians ·who must rule on Hartelius' guilt or innocence that his efforts to help Hartelius, 50, in his first of three Orange County Superior Court trials were constanUy hampered by the physician's infatuation for his blonde lover. Kurilich's characterization of the shapely 31-year-old prosecution witness i~luded an off the stand demonstration of the way in which Mri. , aughn stood, l~gs apart and a~s akimbo, outside the coun'ty Courthouse 8t the time Kurillch was driving Hartelius to the building. "He made me stop the car and he ran towards her like a squirrel," Kurilicti (See HARTEUUS, Page 21 Coast Highway Dead End? .Rec~mmendation Made by Newport Co11 sultant ~ayt::~.PPIWl!llCRlllll-KK=~-"""ii'>"-:. --:-"'·'~-"'v'"~,;·~,@!i!•1s"~· "41!!".i ini~~-technlcal-solutions-to~the-ct.ty'1---Lraffic • .. Mr"'*' constructlng a six-lane expressway on ills. . NelrJl,Pl1 Beoch needl '87 milliqq in tbe old padfic Coast freeway right-of-way Tbe report says that the recomm'°ded up.to 4$ years to the iii: in January. Liddy ii 11erving a minimum term ol Iii< years, e11bl mootbl: Ho alooo •• llaed $40,000. lirica e~ tbll he bad "" In- """""' ol Jiving !ho men the rnuimum IOlllences 6e banded in Jaouary If they i:QoPerated with authoritiet. ~ street haptotwa•tC1,.JnclucUna a llCOlld between Hatbor Vlew' Hllll and old plan "does not eliminate all transporta- -~1 .,.. Uppjl-Newport liq, fD . Co1w1a del llllf· tJoo deficienclel, but it does present ,_,._ _._ ·-.._ __ 0l _ __,,__!.I r............. Vaimtaeu coDceded .ti» report was aoJuUoos which are likely to obtain public ....,. .,..--w~ ..,._ - -- -toiJarocf ...,.ard pablJc aceeptaoce and occeptan(:e and 1Upport necema.ry for --.-rank A~~gtll<r"R:-Gonml and Eugenenio R. Martinez -three ol the four ao-called "Soldiers" in tbe brea.k·in -were given sentences of (See WATERGATE, Pase I) U,.IT ........ Tustin R esident Will Air Gripes Before Trustees DOING HER DUTY -Ms. Maggi Kaplan does bit in energy crisis by riding bike to office in San Francisco, a trip ol nearly 3 miles. She gets added exercise lugging vehicle up stairs to office. Shepard Kanarek, lea der or a move to get Tustin out of the Saddleback Community College district, will present Petitioners' Spokesmen To Address Councilmen his gripes to Saddleback trustees Monday • nliht. I · Kanarek was Invited to address the Sp:ikesrnen for signers o a petition board at the request of Mission Viejo expressing concern over the city of Trustee Donna Berry. His presentation Irvine general plan will address Irvine will open the regular board meeting councilmen Tuesday night. at 8 p.m. in the administration building. Wesley Min, former city planning About 6,500 signatures have been cql-commissioner and environmental author, lected ao far by ''The College Committee said today increasing numbera o1 of · Tustin, urging dHmexation from members ol aome of the geheral plan tbe district, according IO Kanarek. cilizm comiDitleel ara signing the peti· 11y state law, !,000 signatures are lion. needed to bring the matter up before Fonner planning commlssioo chalnnan the · Orange County Board of Education Wayne Clark has added his name to fOr c;oosideratioo. the growing list of lodividuals ur1ing One complaint involvee the ZO.mile restudy ol aeveral Issues related to the drive to the Mission Viejo campus from • plan for a dty al Sl0,000 people presented Tustin. Santa Ana College In tile Rancho last week by Wilaey and Ham, general Santiago district is only four miles away. plan caosultantl. , Kanarek said Saddleback offers fewer 1bose concerns include: courses than Santa Ana College and -Increued demands for housing. bas les.5 adequate facilities. SaddJeback -Increased energy demands in a bas ooe permanent bull ding, a library. time ol energy obortaae. Al present most classes take place in -Cooversloa of bllllides intoZ housing P91table Wlit.11 on the 200-acre campus. tracts. · 'saddleback recently began night ex· -Increued air pollutlao In· a region tension classes In a Tustin High School. the Environmental Protecllaa Agency 'l'l:utee Hans Vogel ol Tustin aJao baa clusillel u a critical alnbed. Orianized a new committee to try 10 -SplraUJnc public aervlce coots. reaol.. aome of the complaints and -1-al lood producllon tands al prevent the pullool a time ol sn>wing food ocardty. -llap)d lndullriallzallon without the -HfJ!l'l!-AN!.fS-El'.ED,__~~~-Boy P118he(! 1Jffllike; IN ENERGY PINCH · Father Sues Family MILWAUKEE (AP) -"All female omployeo will wear hotpants, which An I!!! ,...,, ""1!r1narian who clalma lhOUld generate a substantial amount his aon ,..., aettously Injured when ol heat In tbe office." \ another boy allegedly _pushed him off 'Mlat was one of the "rules" faceUoualy hi> bicycle has sued the boy and bia poited Thursday in the ol1lce of Clerk r· family for JU,OllO in Orange County of Courll Francls X. McCormack lollow· Sui>erior ·COili!. . Ing< Pnioldent Nlron'• speech oo tbe K••L Wriatl~ SIOl5 Piii: Hill Roacl1 need to conserve energy. . namee ams Heskett, .. Jobn I»e' "Matoh periods, rather than coffee Heskett ud "Jane Doe" llelkett as breaks, will be held,:' another rule defendants In the actloa !lied oo behaH 11ated. "Every hall holir •. emplo)'ea will ol his IOI!, J~, 11. Wright llates stand Op and Ugbt a match to keep his aon was pushed oil hi1 bicycle last e~ warm." ~ Nov. 5 and received mbltantlol injuries to the -In tho laU. • ' means to meet all housing needs. "Rampant organization smacks of growth for growth's sake which is the ideology of the cancer cell," Marx said. "ln all fairness this citizen concept should be put forth as a well-considered alternative. and not summarily rejected by Wilsey and Ham's processional staff," the petitioners contend. :ti Irvine Planning Chief Supports General Plan Irvine Planning Commissioner -Gary Dabell today charged that lormer plan· ning commissioners are taking a "nasty swipe" at the city's general plan con- IU!tanta W"ilaey and !lam. " "11 lsn't W"~sey and Ham's !ault there has not been enobih citizen inpl&t to the general plan," Dalzell said. 0'lbereL~ entirely too much lip service paid to the eont'ept of 'citlzen Input' by the staff and certain members ol the City Council," Dalzell charged. "I'm !rankly disappointed at oome ol the planning methodology Uled by Wilsey and Ham, but I don't think this is the time . to ~e potsbota at their prodllOt. "I think we should· meve ahead-to ailopt the plan in \be short tlma we · hove. left 'WIU!<>Ut crlttclzlng whit Is at _,t Just a rellonunendaUon. "',!'hen when wt ~ .. met the gentral plan deadline we'll 'have aomething to crttldze, attack and change I I necessary.'' "I doo't think now Is the um. lo ""'te cootroven7 over the ...,era1 plan," Dalzell aiocluded. ' the clly, a _.tant" baa.reoimmended 1 doa not necemrtly include the beBI hnplemeotaUon." · . The COl!Wltant's report, which tool: nearly · three yean ·to prepare, wu released today and aJao aays tblt Padllc Coast Highway sbould be dead-ended at both sidea of the Santa Ana River. Police Study Murder Rap It says the big)lway should be rerouted to the north u it .,,,.... Newport Boulevard and should connect with the tenn.inus of the Newport Freeway in C.OSta Mt!\'& then continue westerly into Huntington Beach. On 104-year-old Man Tbe second bay crossing as proposed by the !inn ol Alan M. Voorhees and Company ol San Diego and endoraed by a dUzens committee, should be kept just to the north ol the existing Coaal Highway bridge and then abould swing north IO the Intersection ol Dover and Westcliff Drive near the Costa Mesa city limits. The consultant said tbe $67 million cost would be divided between city tax- payers, the state, Orange County and possibly other aourcea. But, Voorhees said $27 mllllon of the cost wW fall on local tupayers and he conceded the dty may have dilfleulty raising that kind c#. money over the nert 20 to 25 yean. The t>lan does not include a recom- mendation for a bypass of downtown Corona del Mar u bOcl been originally proposed. l rvine Wrestlers To Open Season The city-sponsored Patriot wrestling club will 18.unch its second teason Nov. Z1 at Univerilty High School. City recreation 0>0rdinator Froome Gayle said the club is open to all Irvine youth. ' PracUces are held from g to 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays and, Thursdays al Uni High. Wednesday -will be held from 5:45 to 7 p.m. A $10 fee 11 charged 1... the enlire season. InformaUon about the program Is ovall•ble from Kent Bently at 551-146& Irvine Ski Club To Meet Wednesday By HILARY KA YE Of * DeMY Hit I r.ff, An 82-year-old man died in Huntington Beach Convalescent Hospital this week , possibly resulting from a beating with a shoe by •his 104-year-old roommate. Authorities in Kings County are await- ing the coroner's report from Orange County to determine whether Luciano Rivas, 104, should be charged with the murder of Walter Rhode, 82. The assault occurred four months ago in a convalescent home in Hanford, 30 miles south of Fresno. Rivas was originally charged with assault with a deadly weap:in, but Kings Cowity District Attorney John O'Rourke said be decided not to prosecute at that time. 11Since the death of Rhode, however, we are reviewing the charges to see if we should charge Rivas with murder," O'Rourke said. 0 It's a very unusual situation to have a 104-year-old man who 11 able to comm.it a crime of this kind," he added. O'Rourke Is waiting for a medical history for Rhode since be 1ert Hanford to determine whether he might have sliffered subsequent injuries to the head which may have caused hi! death. No More Pot For Prisoners FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) - Cell life ls ncdon11er high life for prlson--- m in the Bnrward County Jail, says Sheriff Edward Stack. ~pidon led to a stakeout the other night and a deputy obwved a sock being lowered oo a •Iring from a cell window.' Minutu later, he moved in and ar- Jrvtne Ski Club plans an organizatioQaf ed th meetliicl l -1:30 11.m. Wedneaday in rest two teen-age girls "" _ey wore R cbo JA'&mtC tntennediat School about to put a packet of matljuana 4M W:.~l';~ · __!_ -' Into the sock for retrieval by a prisoner. ~ interested In ·~ -ln>m Stack aald the girls we,.. turned over begtnnen to 0.1>¢1 -is wo1come to th juvenile autboritlea pending IUl;Jher ~in,1ed!!i.. ,._lion coordinator Froome -lnvesUgaOoo. . ~ 'Jn!Onnatlon about the club "'!be lngenulty of 1heoe people is la avallAble from Joan Coot at 1113-0!M. rather remarkable," said Stack. • A spokesman for the Orange County Coroner's Office, however , said Rbode's autopsy indicated he died from a blood clot resulting from an old injury. "We can't be certain how old the injury is," explained the spokesman. "but our investigation showed that &bode did not have any further injuries." A relative in HWltington Beacl\ moved Rhode from the Hanford convalescent home to Pacifica Hospital in Huntington Beach and then to the Huntington Beach Convalescent Hospital. "It may be several weeks before we get the full rep:irt on Rhode," said O'Rourke. "At that time, we'll decide whether to seek an indictment against Rivas. We understand he is presently in another convalescent home in Tulare." • Wea ther Low clouds and local fog night and early morning hours, other- wise sunny Saturday, accord.Ing to the weather service. Little temperature change .. Highs at the beaches in the mid-60s rising to 74 inland. Ove~nigbt lows 56-58. . INSIDE 'rODA Y ~s~o~ut"°ie"°m Ca1ffoT1aia's f 1r1 l di1rner playhouse is open end thriving in Saii Clemente. A tt--1 view of it.I first production, the musical "Oklahoma," toil I be found i n today's \Veikender ' fCCtiO'll. Af YIMlr S.tvkl I Aftfl Llllfln 14 Ultillll M L, M, IOrf I C11\l8"'10 I C~lflM lf.41 c..... ~ Cm1..... J& Ddtll NtttCM ' lfdllwM!I PtM • ,lfllll(• 11 ·JJ '" tllt llltotlfd 1 Mtrttc.... 11 Ml!la.x • , • .. ' , ! I I • 1 I I -- j, •• ... . :.• .. . . • 2 DAILY PILOT IS F~y,_Nowmbo_r q, 1973 I ~~--~~~~;.;c f'ron1 ·1•nge l HARTELIUS. • • said. "I told him time after Ume to stay away from that woman but he just wouldn't Usten." Kurillch'1 efforts at mlm!cry, including hi.s impcr10natlon of Mrs. Vaughn's pro- nounced Tennesssce accent, brought strenuous objections from the prosecu- tion. Kurllich told the committee that MNi. Vaughn atfmifted to him in hfs office · that she had worked with the district attomey·s office to convict Hartelius with the promise that she would be r e.leased from the state Norco facility Jf she cooperated. Mrs. Vaughn wa5 committed there in J969 u a narcotics add.let. She has testified that repeated Injections by Hartellus during their long association was responsible for that condition. She bas also testified in the current hearing and in Superior Court that HarteUus beat and kicked her, performed abortions on her and th at he sold narcotics to a felon on the run from criminal charges filed in another state. It bas also been testified that Hartelius simllarily drugged the late Wanda Melendrez, 29, of Costa Mesa to the point that she stayed in bed all day and neglected her young famil y. Kurilich labeled Hartelius as "a jackass" and said his client's continued infatuation for his mistress torpedoed many of his efforts to prove Hartelius' innocence. Kurilich told tile com1nittee that while 1ifrs. Vaughn was comforting Hartelius and assuring the silver-haired physician that she loved him, she was calling Kurilich at the lawyer's office and describing Hartelius as a "whining, spineless, sniveling cur." Hartelius said ~1rs. Vaughn hid police investigators in a bedroom closet at her Costa A1esa hom e and that they taped Hartelius' conversations with her in a bid to "hang something on him." Kurilich ~id Orange County Deputy District Attorn ey Al Novick took nowers to ~1rs. V1trghn v.·hile she \vas hospitaliz- ed and made a pass at her in her hoopital room. . "She threw the telephone at him.'' Kurillch told the astonisheds<>nynitt~. Kurilich was reprimanded for making references to Daily Pilot accounts of a Hartelius· trial in .appareut support ol his attack on Mrs. Vaughn's integrily, His references to the newspaper and a reporter who was present in the hear· ing room were struck from the record on the instructions of state hearing of· ficer John A. Willd. "It isn't just Hartelius who is afraid of Mrs. Vaughn/' Kurilich said at one point. "I think we're ~II afraid of her. She is a vengeful, vindictive woman \\"ho is capable of doing anything to get her way ." Willd will later today set a date for what will be the ninth three-day hearing into charges of moral turpitude and unprofessional conduct against Hartelius who practices medicine. at 234.S E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. The two state lawyers assigned to the hearing are insisting that Hartellus' licensed be revoked. 'They have rejected all possibility of a deal involving a lesser penalty. Hartelius has been cleared in three Orange Counly trials of charges of arson, fraua anlf bribery. The state hearing is now in its third year. Kurilich today said Mrs. Vaughn told him that 1i1rs. 1t1elendrez took drugs long be£ore she· knew Hartelius and admitted to him that she had never seen Hartelius give the attractive nurse's aide an injection. ~lrs. Melendrez' mother bas testified that Hartelius constantly visited her daughter and gave her narcotic in- jections. Hospital Figure Incorrectl y Nan1ed ?tfrs. Jane Jack identified as a "con· valescent hospital administrator" in a Thursday article dealing with the Dr. Ebbe Hart elius trial was incorrectly related to a Costa ~1esa hospital. Spokesman for Comprehensive Care Corporation of Newport Beach said today Atrs. Jack has not been employed by the firm for more than a yea r, and never \Vas employed at the Costa Mesa care facility referred to in the Thursday story. • The Daily Pilot regrets the error. OIANGI COAST " DAILY PILOT Tiit or ....... CO.ii OA.ILY PILOT, -..1111 ....,ldl h combined !ht Ntw1-PrtH, h 1111bll"'ed b¥ ""' Or•»dt C""'•' Publllh"'9 Com111"v. $~. ••!t edl!ion1 ••t P11111!1hld, M-•V tll•OllO!I F•kh J, tor Cotti Mfll, Newpor1 Beit h, kvntlrHJ!Gn 81Klll F°""t1ln valley, L•oun1 . t.Kri. 1rwlM/5Hcll1bllck tnd Si n Clltnon!t / Sin J-Ctpl1!r1no, A 1l1HJlt rtOlo!lll ldl!loll 11 Plllllllhld S"urd•y1 •I'd SuN11rs. TM 1M"lnclP1l putotll/llrlf •l•n• \1 1• :uo Weil Sty t.lrMI, Cot1t M"-t, C11lf9mll, tti"6.. Rob1rt N. w,,11 PrtllOlftl tl'd Pl/Ollll'ltr J1tk R. C11rlt 't' Vk t P'l'fllO.,.,, tnl Gentrtl M1n191r Tliom11 IC11wil ...... Tholfttt Ji,. Mwr,hin1 M~lng E•ll« Chtif11 H, l10t Rlchtrd P. Nell AM\t11M M-.lnf Efllfrt """• C.,11 Mt11~ 1'I Wnt llJ S!,1t1 Hewporl ll1ll(fl! USl H....,...t l1111llv111i L~UM.f'l1t/I: 'ft FIM"tl! A- Hlll'llflltlOll l tKtl: 17115 IHch IOu1""tr• S.11 Cl-If: JOS Ncrtl'I Et C1"'ll'IO 111 .. t , .. .,.... 17141 '42-4Jl1 C._HW Afttffll11111 '41·1671 S. C ....... All ..,..,.. ... 1 , ... , •••• 4tl-Mlt CwJ,lfht, 1'7l, OrMlll 0.H "llMtthlno ~,. Ne ,...,. oori.. llll.llttt•...., "1"'111 -flf'I' Of' IMIY•I~ l'ltr-tl!! lfttY II , ... ..._... wlll'IWt \f*;lll "1'> 111-.. .. CWYrltnl ·-· S.C:.... OIU _. ... Mid 1t C..tt Mfw, c.tll~. MIW\11111111 .., urrltf 1Ut """""""' .., -n ..,,,, IMlltlllr1 r111•1""' arttfMllMI . u ... ""'""'· • ,- No Swimmi1ig At Tliis Pool BELGRADE (UPI) -Vlllagcr1 at Bajmok near the Hungarian border have filled the local swim· ming pool with the surplus fruits of their bumper wine harvest, the Belgrade dally Vecemje NovooU rePorts. Sorne-230 wagons of· new wine have been stored In the pool covered by a layer or paraffin oil tq protect it fmm eltposure. The wine is to be preserved In this way till January, the newspaper said. Schools Set Opinion Poll In Saddleback . By JAN WORTH 01 I'll• Otllr Piiot St11f \Vhat kind J of education should the Sa9dleback V.illey Unified School District offer? For answers, dist rict o[ficials are ~oing to the community in a public involvement program dCsigned to find Out what. weaknesses .People feel the schools have and wh at values should take priority. A focal point of the program will be at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 29, '.''hen community conferences will be held concurrently at each of the district's three high schools, two intermediate schools and 13 elementary schools. ' Dr. Robert Jenkins, retired San Fran· cisco superintendent of schools and a Capistrano Beach r e s l d e n t is coordinating the program. ' Ten percent of tbe district's residents, whether they have children or not will be invited at random to attend the ineetings. Of the 18,000 households in the district excluding Leisure World, a total of 1 sOO· invitations will be i~ued. About · '100 more itiVltations will be given to Leisure World residents. Jenkins said he believes input from· the senior citizens' com- munity can be extremely valuable for the district. Alli residents of the district are welcome at the conferences., whether or not they receive an invitation, district spokesmen stressed. Jenkins has been 'Working with four task forces of parents and school ad- ministrators for a year. They have compiled a list o[ 60 needs to be presented at the conferences and will ask the community to rate 'each n~ . as either high priority, desirable p_!tonty, low priority_i or no priority. 'Th.e list includes sucllilema as : -Major emphasis on basic skills· -Emphasis on student aware~s of I.he importance of moral and spiritual values; -Inclusion of career education pro- grams beginning in the elementary grades; -Development or attitudes such as self-respect, respollsibility, good judg· ment and cooperation; -Providing firm, consistent, and fair discipline. "Usually, involvement from the com- m.unity in public issues comes in spurts with extreme points of view on a particular controversy. What "'e are trying to aVoid in this community con- ference approach ls getting views from extremes on both sides of an issue with no response from the board mid· dle ." Citizens \\'ill be asked to rate their priorities on a written que stionnaire which also "'ill provide space for open. ended criticisms and comments. The results of the conferences will be tabula ted, probably by late January and \Vill form the t'Ore or a master plan of education for the Saddleback Valley. From Pagel WATERGATE ... one to four years. Since the three have been behind bars ror nearly 11 months, they may be freed before the year is out. Bernard L. Barker, the fourth member of the Miami-area "Soldiers," received a sentence of 18 months to six years -stiffer than the other three, apparently because he recruited them for the mission. James W. McCord, along with Hunt a leader in the planning of the break·in and the defendant who first broke ilis silence to provide evidence to the court, was given a one-to flve-yea:r sentence . Unlike the Miami area men, McCord has been free on bond since the trial. Sirica said it was his intention that McCord spend at lea.st a year in jail. Lawyers for the defendants asked for leniency, one pleading that the men The four "SOidiers" and HWlt pleaded guilty in January to charges of con- spiracy .... burglary, buUing _and l{ireta1t: ping. McCord and Liddy, like Hunt: a former White House employe, were con· victed . Liddy was given an additional sentence of 8 to 18 months for refusing to tesUTy belore a federal grand jury. lie also faces contempt of Congrus charges. Hunt's lawyer , Sydner Sachs, told Sirica tha t liunt's health ls deterjoratlng and that forcing him lo spend any more time in jail might "do further harm to llim." lmpeachn1ent Asked GARDEN Cl'l'Y, N.Y. (,(P) -News- da,y, the U>ng Island newspaper, ~ied editorially today that the House or Represenu.uves inoVe a; soon as JlO'!Slble ~o lmpeacb President Nixon. •""·-. .. ~ . . SCAG .Nixes · • Chino Hills AD;port Plan By JACK BRORACK Of th• oaftr Plltl tl•lt Although citing ..serious deficiencies in Orange ~ty·air transport capabilities, the executive committee of the Southern California Association of Government Thursday threw cold water on Chino Hills as a probable airport slte. The SCAG committee approved the final draft of its Southern CaJifomia Re~ional Airport System Plan, a $700,000 proJect prepared by a consultant. The adopted rePort said the proposed Chino Hills airport would be in conflict with proposed plans for a wildlife preserve in the 25,000 acre area. SCAG has previously approved plans for the preserve. Use of the Chino Hills area as an open space preserve is also an adopted policy of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. The SCAG rePort said presen t major airports, principally Los Angeles Intema· tional and Ontario JntemaUonal could be used to meet increased travel demands to 1't least 1980. But it added, "in the decade to 1990 ~~-d~mand may exceed capacity of existing airports by up to 32 million annual passengers requiring new facilities at locations to be selected later.· "The most serious: deficiencies are anticpated in Orange, Ventura and western Riverside County areas," the report added. The Chino Hills airport, proposed by a corporation headed by Reg Wood of Santa Ana hes been endorsed by the city of Anaheim which is presently con· si dering a joint Powers agreement to fi;1ance the venture. All nothern Orange County cities oppose the airport plan. Leaving the . way open ... for solylng future air transport problems locally, the SCAG..-report.s~ted that the decision for any future airports anywhere in the region should be made at "the local level. · --- Orange County Airport which Is cur· rentl y serving about 1.2 m 111 1 on passengers a year should be able to handle two million by 1980, the report stated. J:Iowever, no future expansion o( the arrport was recommended with the traffic leveling off at the two million figure. S1veet Adeli11e · Group to Make Singing Debut The MissWn. Viejo chapter of Sweet Adelines, a nationwide women's singing organization, Will present Its first annual show, at 8: 15 p.m. Saturday ln Loa Alisos Intermediate School auditorium , El Toro. - "Memories Are Made Of This" is the theme of the program, which will feature the "Strawberry Jamboree," a women 's quartet from the North Orange County and Rio Hondo Sweet Adeline& chapters. Also set to appear is "The Harmony Express," a men's barbenbop quartet which won the championship of the western states division of the Society to Prevent the Extinction of Barber Shop Quartets in America. . ' .. ~-.. LA Officials' Homes Ablaze LOS ANGELES (UPI) . - Separate fires were IOI early today at the homes ol a Municipal Court judge and two po 11 c e c:Om· mlsllonorl In lonner Mayor Sam Yorty's adminl1trallon, flre of· flclals reported. _ The flrsL of lbree.Jli · -..... -• occurred between the hours of 4 and 5 a.m. was at the exclU.!lve Wilshire. District-home-of · tonner Police Commls!toner Emmett C. McGaughey. The second waL at the Silverlilke home of Municipal Judge George C. Campbell and the third at the home of rormer Police Commissioner Marguerite Justice, who lives in the southwest area of the city. Zone Denials Top Irvine Yes Votes The lrvine zoning approvals score is 759 acres denied, to 408 acres approved with 4,986 acres of zoni.gg requests pen· ding. Since cityhood in December 1971, cowr cilmen or plannihg comm1Ssione!'3 have turned down five zone change requests totaling 759 acres. The denials include the 72-acre Rinker residential rezoning near El Toro Marine Corps Air Station; the 34-acre central Irvine townhome proposal by Larwin Company; a 30-acre bomes devetopment by Frank Ayres Incorporated; 193 acres of the Village of Valley View, and the 430-acre Turtle Rock addition which con· tinues to face .final 1'Ction by the city council Projects approved since citybood in· clqde: -Three commercial . proper.ties, ln· eluding the 35-acre Bruce Nott parCel at CUlver Drive and Walnut Avenue and the 30-acre Traveland recreation· vehicle sales area at Sand Qmyoo A vr:- nue, the San Diego Freeway, and the !!Nlcre Zee Street shopping -er. -One major addition to the Irvie • Industrial Complex of 121 acres. -One major residential rezoning allowing a mix of homes on 212 acres of the original Valley View prope>W. Approved area is to be known as De<rfield Village. The pending matters, acrording to a tist prepared by the city planning staff, amo.unt to a tolal of nearly 5,000 acres of city land. Tney are: -A 240-acre. proposal by Pollderoo1a Homes Inc. · -A 53--acre proposal by Presley Development Company. -The '30-acre Turtle Rock addltlon being appealed to the city council. -A ~acre Smoketree V i 11 a g e townbome project by W a r m i n g Io n Development Corp. - I Reserve .Jt1d9111e11t Irvine City Plan Hangup Viewed " The city of Irvine mightavOta some general plan headaches by setting aside for Inter planning, areas that-are in- agrlcultural preserves: councilnlen and plannin8' commissioners were told Thurs· day night. Donald C.meron, representing the lrvtne Company planning staff asked: "Why should the city get hung up plan- rUng lands which are in agricultural preserves when the land cannot be developed until 10 years attar notice of withdrawal from tu shelter status?" Cameroo urged city o£flcials during a session dealing with the city's general plan to "concentrate on what can mutually be accompUshed In the next five to 10 years" and reserve for future judgment the uses of. land now taed for agriculture. 11You are just beginning the process.'' Cameron said, observing the city's general plan is only "step one of a long chain or plans which will shape the city's future." Cameron, who served on the William Pereira team which dld the original southern Irvine Ranch plan including the UC Irvlne campus and adjiicent acreage, detailed the history ol the Irvine Company general plan. That document 1'ilich has been worked on for 13 years by many lndiv:lduals In the company and with consulting finns, "represents their be9t ideas at-- many points in time. "No one expects the city as lt is finally developed will look euctly like · it ls represented on the current plan," Cameron said. "Planning is a constant ·process. What we should be coostdering now is how do we draw a plan whfcb ls capable of acoommodatlag change?" · Ca~eron observed that the city's general pJan consultants have con· _ •istently 119ed the city of Philaddeh!a In m8king papulaUoo comporWinll: - On the same amount of land Irvine ·may someday occupy, there are 2.2 million people In Philadelphia. . "The most people proposed lo date for Irvine is ooly one quarter ol that figure," Cameron said. The final population will depmd on resolution of yet to be ~ved policies. One is the future of agriculture In the city. . "Given our present knowledge of the future it appears to us that farm~ will not always be a feasible land use,' Official Slain SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An urban renewal offlclaJ was fatally shot and his sister wounded by an angry spectator during a public meetln( here Thursday night police said. Officers identified the deed man as Rory Haltbe. 22, a director of a citizens redevelopment advbory group. Camer60 ald today. Jto"·ever, he emphaaized, "it a cily study cha11goo the plctwe and steps can be taken to make lt feasible to continue to farm some land, we're open to discussing that optloo," he sald. ~ Cameron explained that the Irvine Company land use plan was based on the understanding that sometime In the 2.lst century fanning operations would have been phased out and devek>pment would occupy land now used for farming. Police Study Drug Charge '~ On Newsman ; A criminal complaint charging the editor and publisher of Orange County's tab loid showcase or what's happenina: on the homosexual .scene waa being studied today by authorltieJ. Sam Warren, 33, of 2234 Pacific Ave., was released on $1,000 bail Thursday, following his arrest the night befort at his apartment jll!t outside Costa h1esa city limits. A raid team of Newport Beach detec- tives arrested and booked the bachelor artist and prlnter on suspicion of aale of LSD, with additional charges pending. Investigators claim they arranged an LSD purchase and also five vials con· talning another contraband compound. amyl nitrate, plus: a small amount of • alleged marijuana. , Warren has been afflllated with the gay magazine "Focus" iilnce Its inCeption ' as a mouthpiece ror Orange County's 'maiea and females who prefer Intimacies among their own gender. Police who conducted the raid said several men present In Warren's apart· ment Oed through open windows and escaped, apparently not knowing the reason the investigators came knocking. No criminal complaint bad been 131ueil yet today. Irvine Retirees To Meet Thursday Members of the lrvlne Chapter of. the American AssodaUon of •Retired Persons will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. In Unlveraity United Methodist Cllurch, 18422 Culver Orlve. Organists Norman and Phyllis Plum· mer will provide a musical procram following a short rqular meeting, Prell· dent I.sadore Schnelder aald. Artyooe seeklng lnfonnatlon about the club may call SChnelder at SS2-9182.. Henredon's Folio 11 -' Part of the proceeds of the concert will go to the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. A reception at the Cesa del Sol Recrea· tion Center in Mission Viejo will follow, ~ • with all guests invited. Tickets are available by calling 831). 16.10 or ~72. While they last Uckcts will also be on sale at the door. ;_ A 1p1rklln9 n1w coll•ction ft1turln9 sup•rb cr1ft1m1nshlp, quality and stylin9 . Truly 1 H•n- redon tradt mark. Vi1w this 1xc1ptional collec. tion now 1t any of T1d von H•mart's thrt• fin• 1tor•1. Orange Trees To Be Replaced By 175 Others Phased removal of 175 orange trees from the city of lrvine's Ranch Park has been recommended for co~cil a~ proval Tuesday as part of an . im· provement program totaling $10,127. Over an eight-month period the orange grove remnant will be replaced wilh 175 trees. When a~,!!.d_tQ existing trees the park will have a total of 487 trees ranging from eucalyptus to pine and liquidambar. '· Community Services Commisslonen Wednesday reviewed the park im· provement project and recommend coun· cil approval. Along with the tree replacement pro- gram , retaining walls and planlen are to be built. ~1iiglrlirge"C11"!1.!tm.. tree" ts to be permanently planted and Is to be available for decoratloo by the Ranch llomeowners Association, according to Paul Brady, community services direc- ter. Ilostage Still Held BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -The Arsen· tine oubsldiary of a U.S. oll company paid a $1 mllllon ransOllr two weeks ago for the release of a lddn>ped American executive, but the holtqe was not freed, business sources sAld Thursday. The sources ldentllled the kidnap victim as David B. Wllkle Jr .. 48, president •Of Alnoco AtgCJltlna Oil Co . Henredon jot~ -DREXEL-HER IT AGE-HENREDON-WOOpMARK-KARASl AN • INTERIORS WWDA TS & SA TURDATS t :OO to l:JO FRIDAT 'Tl~ 9:00 NEWPORl BEACH e 17l7 WlSTCl!Ff Dk.. "41·1050 10,.. '"""'' 12-l•IOI ~ LAGUNA IEACH e J4S NORTH COAST HWt'. IOp.111 SuMay 11·1110) 494·6111 TORRANCE e lll<t HAWIHOINI ILVD. S71·f27t t ,, -J " ol you we co • Ca an ro ·v . • . ' ' ' ro w t E • ' ' '\ ewsMedia rA-sks Laws For Notes LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Represen- tailvOI -DeWI media told. ....,.bly Judiciary subcommlltee Thurs· day that more and more reporters are being ordettdto tum over their ~ published material to autboriUes. William Niese, asslstant g e o e r a 1 cowiael for the Los Angeles Times, told the subcommittee hearing on newsmen's privilege that the Times Is now handling "dozens" or sub~s ordering . that unpubllahed. notes be surrendered to authortUes. :'Llft from the media this ... specter ot being dragged into court every' time you write about a controversial subject," ( NEWS BRIEFS ) Niese said, urging the' ieglslators to draft a Ja:w protecting newsmen from such legal actions. Visalia Times-Delta Managing Editor Ron Elnstoss said smaller newspape~ do not have a legal staff capable of handling the various s u b po e n a s . "Fighting these threats to a free press can jeopardize the economic health of smaJt newspapers," he said. "Should we lie down and play dead and not cover the story?" e 4 Reid in .Jtlurders BELL GARDENS (UPI ) -Four California men were arrested Thursday and charged with murder and armed robbery in connection with the Las "Vegas, Nev. deaths of two men who were fatally shot during an apparent robbery attempt. . ·-~·- Police said authorities from· Nevada would arrive to arrange for the ex- UPIT......_ SUSPECT CAPTURED IN 'EXECUTION' MURDERS OF 9 IN LODI Y(lllio StHlmon, 28, Handcuffed After llein9 Flu1hod From Hou11 Extra Security Placed On Two Murder Suspects STOCKTON (UPI) -San Joaquin County Sheriff's Deputies adopted extra security n1easures today for the ar- ralgnment of two suspects in the · massacre of nine persons in the dream home of a country grocer. Willie L. Steelman, 28, an admitted heroin use r, ex-mental patient and parolee, and Douglas E. Gretzler, 22, New York City, were to be escorted here under ~avy guard from the COWJty * *·* jail In nearby French camp to be charg· ed in Municipal Court. They were captured Thursday in Sacramento, 30 miles north of this cen· trai valley farm community, and booked into the jail on · nine counts of murder. Authorities said Steelman and Gretzler mlght also be linked to a double slaying and the disappearance of two others in Arizona. ... tradition of David. _R. Bergecon.._ 23: Disc Jockey · -~-- G retzler was arrested in a downtown hotel by Sacramento pollce-armed with shotguns. A short ·time later of!lcen hurled tear gas jr\to an aparnn..t~ forc- ing Steelman from the room where he was J)oled .up with a girlfriend. Eugene E. Stubblefield , 46; Robert W. Beman, 49 , all of Bell Gardens, and Morley R. Christian, 30, Bell. e ManslaNqhter l'rial LOS ANGLELES (UP!l -carter B. Gordon, 341 was ordered 111ursday to stand trial for manslaughter and felony drunk driving In connection with a motorcycle accident involving actor Jameo Stacy. Gonion, of Woodland !Dils, ta charged with driving hta automobile Into Stacy's motorcycle on Benedict caoyon Road last Sept. 21. Stacy's <Ompan!OD, Clair Coz, rt, wu t1llei! ln the accident, and the actor lost a leg and an arm. e Preritlent Appointed ' "8Al'I DIEGO (AP) -Dr. Allen J. ~. cleon ol lnllnlction at San : j,. Oty College, will become presicieot ol San Di"I'> City College Jan. !. Repasby, 43, wrui chosen by community ooll<l!e truslees 'lbunday to fill the job vacated by Dr. Rex Gorton, who resigned Jan. 26 to head a new t\\·o-year college. Gorton 's last year at the downtown campus was marked by a sit-in at his office. ' ' e Death Trial Set BAKERSFIELD (API -A Baksersfield physic ian has lost his bid for dloml.W ol an Indictment ol solicit· atim to committ murder by ordering OJt:· ygea stilt oU to an infant who sw-vived an abortion. Dr. Xavier Ramirez, 59, a former head of the toonly's Planned Pan!llthood As9oclation, re~ to enter a ptea after tbe motion was denied Thw'sday. Superior Court Judge P. R. Borton entered an innocent plea for him and set trial for next March 4. e Bomose:rual RuHnq SAN FRANCISCO (UP!l -U.S. ----Aids Police In Capture SACRAMENTO APl -Dix jockey Rbbert W'tlliams hardly skipped a beat when he Interrupted the rock music for a special news bulletin - a bulletih a.lmed at ooe .penon. "Willie Steelman, you're listening, right?" Willi.ams said in a cool, swinging voict! typical ol radio station KZAP-FM, which speclalli.H In hanl rock 111t11lc aod h'e6-fonn comme11t. lliJ message was from Sacramento poiloe to ~d Wlllle steelman, l<llflhl In tlle •tlYinc . ol nine -In 'a Uni Son J~ VaDey hamlet Toeoday lllgllt. He had boied up 10 a N><lown apm hnent bou>e Tlxlnday with a girl and a gun, vowing not to be taken alive. "What is going to happen, hopefully, is that the girl will come out first that you are ·with and you will follow her out with your hands up," Williams said as a breezy rock tune played in the background. "And, uh, things will not be thrown at you and things like that," Williams added. Williams referred to a ccrdon of police, anned with shotguns and wearing flak jackets, around the run..<fown, two-story apartment house where Steelman had sought reluge. A jittery auxiliary of two dozen replirters and photQgrapbers stood or crouched next to police cars and the coocrete pillars of a: neartiy freeway. "Wlllie Steelman, tbe girl first, pleaae! AIXl then you come out with nothing in your hands and both of them up." In spite of these assurances, which Steelman had demanded be broadcast, it was fi ve minutes and 011e tear gas shell later before Steelman emerged as instructed, hands up. Polli:e ·said lliat weapoiis-Wblcb Ditglit have been used In the siayinga In the small town of Viet« near here Wed· nesday were also found In the hotel. * * * Probation Report Showed Steelman 'Not Vi°ilent' SACRAMENTO (AP) -'lbe llnal pro- bation repo<t on Willle Lother steelman three years ago aald; "No major prcib. 1 .... --one! the p...,u.tl seemed to be .,Gd." ~ .-nlng the 11-,..,.old former mental pati<nt and dropout from Lodi IDgb School ....,...i from • shalJl>y wilite frame lnlSe endttied by swarms of anned police to face mass murder charges. A few hours later Steelman and Douglas Gretzler, 22, of New York City, were booked for investigation of 11 murders. - Two victims were a Phoenix, Ariz., couple slain Oct. 22 and nine persons In a San Joaquin County home Tuesday night. The tall, slender, 140-pound Steelman wearing a !rizzy Afrostyie haircut look· Ing dazed and emottonlesa aa officers In bullet-proof vests threw him to the grass and searched him from bead to toe. calilornia had no prtaon re0ord on GreWer, aJTeSled at a downlDwn Sacramento hotel 90 minutes eariler. Steelman's record showed t b re e forgery convictioos and reports of several alleged suicide attempts. "Nothing In our e.tperience with him suggested any personal tendency toward violence," Ptlllip Guthrie, a Department of CorrectiOllll spokesman, said of Steelman. . ' • Dbtrict Judge Alfonso J. Zirpoli ruled 111ursday the federal govenunent ,can0?1 fire a homosexual solely because his emp1oymeni might. cause "public con- tempt." Z1rpoll mode the ruling In the case ol Dmald Hicker3on, wbo was fired from hi• job as a supply clerk with the Department of Agriculture after It was teamed be had been discharged from the army because he was a bomooexUal . l\.emper Given 'Life' On 8 Counts of Murder ' .. Information On Assassins ' Worth $50,000" SANTA CRUZ (AP) -Edmund Emil Kemper 111 was sentenced to Ille lm· prlsonmeut today for the butchery of his mother, her best friend and tlx coed bitcbhlkers. SANTA CRUZ (UPI) -A Superior Court Jury Thursday found Edmund E. Kemper Ill, a hulking, fl-foot·9, 280-0AKLAND (AP) -'!be reward for pounder, guilty of eight oounls of first· infonnation leadini to tbe arrest of degree murder In the alayinga of eight -• who gunned down Sdlool Supt. · Including h' the ;:rw;: Foster rose to $50,000 as police women, 1s mo r. tried to determine the authenticity of Kemper, who was to be sentenced lett.....-clalmlng·ettdit--lor-the-itil!lng. today, had turned himself In and pleaded Other --~-• olflcJ•'· -,. _ '-r pollce lnlanlty. He Is. exempt from a death ..,_ ~ "' uooe penalty law that w!O not go Into effett protection 'lllursday alter a letter from until next year. the "Sym-LlboraUon Anny" Judge Harry E. Brauer told the Jury, claimed reaponslb!Oty for the ambush "U I IOOllt a bit excited, I had some and threatoned IUrther ldlUnga. fear you might possibly have arrived 'Ille reward for Information on the at a different verdict." He said he assallanta-initlated by a lt0,000 offer agreed with the decision reached alter by Gov. Ronald Reagan -was lncrea..ed almost six hours ol dellberallon. by 125,000 !run the FonLFotmdation, _ ·Kemper confessed to killing six hltch- $10,000 from the Oakland City Coundl hiking coeds, bis mOllier and her !fie!id. and $5,000 from an anonymous cltiun. empei:, who nturdered his maternal '!be mysteriOll! oonununlque, 1e11t to grandparenl9 at ~ge 15 and was In· a San Francisco newspaper and a sUtutionalized but later releaaed as Berl<eley radio station, said "shoot.on-' cured, testified that he had a recurring sight" orders are In elfed against school fantaay of kililnc women, eating their officials until "poUUcal police" are bod!., and lalk!ni to thelr'levtred heads. removed from the schools. "I kWed I0"1eone," he sai\i, describing • • ' I hi.s fantasies. "I cut them up and ate them and kept the bead on a shelf and talked to it I said some of those things I would have said ll abe had been alive, in love with me and she bad been caring of me." Kemper's attorney Jamea Jackson called the verdict "not unreasonable" but said the legal deflnltloo ol insanity should be changed because "there Is no law written that will cover Kemper." Movie Tlieater Ordered Sol.d ESCONDIDO (UPI) -A theater which showed 1.rated movies was ordered sold niu .. day by Mlllllctpai Judge Stuart Wilson as a condition ol three years' probaUO!l- Walntlt """*11 .. , Inc., Los Angeleo, Wll$ ordered to 1ell the "Pussycat Rilz," lined $200 and ordered to cease all operations In North San Diego County for three yun, '!be sale must be to a !inn wl>1cb abows movies for general audience c:onsumplim • ' Friday, Novtmbfr 9, 1973 DAILV PILOT S I • - . Wrap-around_ sound buys • .BUENA PA-RK Bloch II Orongotho<po Open Dolly'''° t6 '''° P.'!' luncfly 10 to 7 SANTA ANA 3900 So. 8rillt0f -No. of SO. Cout Plaza °""' 10-1 p.rn. Dolly ""*r 10., t • ·ORANGE .. . City Dr. ot Garden G,_ Blvd. °""' 10-1 p.m. Dally Sundlyo 10 to • • I .- l • • • -·---.. ,,. . ~ OAU,y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Hard but meaningful lessons have come from Tues· ·day's water district election. Only time will tell how deleterious the ne~ative publicity related to the Irvine Ranch Water D1Strict landowner-voter election will be. Recognition of chang· Ing times by IRWD and Irvine Company officialdom Jltighl have.averted the ill will and bitter taste the elec- tion has caused. ~- In 1961, about the time the Irvine Company began lta urbanization plans, the IRWD formed under tailor- made laws which gave landowners complete control of water districts. ' ln 1969, election law changes required these agen· c;les to end the nepotistic appointment procedure in favor of an election system. Voter apathy, unpublicized election dates and a musical chairs routine of resignation and reappointment combined to make that 1969 law a farce. In 1973, the IRWD set its first "public" election. Because the livine Company held 50 million of the total 138 million possible votes -one for each dollar of assessed valuation of land -the land development firm virtually bandpieked the winning directors and treasurer. : The men selected are qualified, and a cursory study of the balloting sbows many attracted votes from citi- zenry. · What is unfortunate about the election is that the process appears to ignore the Palos Verdes decision of the state Supreme Court in which public agencies·with t.u.!.tlg powers are subject to the one-man one-vote pro- visions of both the state and U.S .. constitutions. By preserving the u1andowner vote" method of selecting those who will govern the IRWD and similar districts throughout the Saddlchack Valley, the outdated Jaw created a number of obvious problems. Among them: -Alienation of women voters and veterans who purchased homes through Cal·vet Joans. Less.on -Alienation or newly enfranchised (for other elec- tions at least) over-18 voter~ who live at UC Irvine or rent apartments. -Alienation of apartment dwellers generally. -Creation of a costly -$20.000 -special elec- tion process which caused dual polling plac~s for many Irvine voters and confused many others who refused to figtit their way through tangles -of proxies, missing' polling places and other red tape. In short, the public has a right to be riled. Water districts ought to act quickly to regain public trust by seekin~ election Jaw reform which truly enfranchises all registered voters. Changes In Order? Boundary disputes, complaints from restive stu- dents who must commute many miles to reach the Sad· d.leback Comm.unity College campus 1 and disquieting concern over limited academic offerings and personal freedoms suggest it may be time for Serious reconsidera~ tion of the makeup of the tw1ryear college district. Last week, 6,000 Tustin .petitioners urged removal of their new unified district territory from the Saddle- back Community College District. It is no secret that many Irvine youths move to apartments in the neighboring Coast Community College district in order to avoid the lengthy comm ute to Mission Viejo and obtain the freedom and choice of classes they desire. _ It is possible that the ultimate answer may Iie in a boundary adjustment ·that would put Tustin in the Rancho Santiago Community College District , Irvine in the Coast district and use Saddleback facilities for the burgeoning number of students coming from the Mission Viejo-and-south area. SB ., 'Don't forget to turn out the lights .. There's an energy shortage, too, y'know!' 'F eniinistic' • • Dear .Gloomy Gus Hopes for Pullbac·k From Arab Latads • Qualities Are Needed ......... ·. ,Shah Eyes U.S.-lsrael :Relations .. One reason I am in favor of the Women's Lib movement goes beyond the fact thai simple justice demands full and equal rights for women. It is bec{l.use t belieVe that the future cf the human race • .... · may depend upon a w\der · and deep- er acceptance of "femini.stlc" qua1i· ties in our civiliza· tion. To say that men and \\-"Omen are, and should be treat· ed as, equal, is ~ to say that the two sexes are identical. There are profound differences bet\\-·een them, not only in terms of biology but in tenns of the effective mode of living. Nert ALL characteristics are "cu1ture- bound." Some, 1 believe, are inherent in the maleness or femaleness of every species. The woman's endocrine glands seem to v.·ork differently from the man's; her central nervous system may organically respond in a different way. Given this difference, what the "libera· tion" of y,·omen Y.'OUld mean is not simply allowing her equal rights and opportunities with men .• but also in· corporating more of the "feministic " traits into the dom inant fabric of our culture. In all lllale-dominated cu1tures of the past, the '1masculine" qualities ha\·e Don't you just Jove His Majesty's sincerity about the energy crisis? Air Force One, helicopters, yachts, goll carts, trips to Camp David, Key Biscayne and San CJemente. complete with entourage ... he's beautiful! A.J.S. GIMmY Gut c"""""" In sftmlttM W ,........ 11141 .. Mt _ .. rtly reflect "" ¥1twS .t thtl _ ... r. S.-Yllllr "' "'""' h GlelftlY 0111 .. D1il'r Pllt. been the most prized and sought·for-ag· gressiveness, acquJsitiveness and m.. depe<>dence. In primitive, pre-Industrial societies, these were indeed the traits most required to keep alive and combat natwe and defend one.U against ene- mies, personally and tribally. IN OUR MODERN teclmical, almost post·industrlal society, these same traits are more dangerous than useful, un1ess tempered and modified by t h e "feminine" traits of sympathy and sensitivity and the need to nurture rather than to conquer. 'l'1>e goals of women . have always been more penonalistic and humanistic than those of men. Woman's added status in the corning v.·orld could be a tremendous instrument for peace, for more humane treatment of one another, for the ~landing that preservation of life is more lJn.. portanl than the pursuit of trophies . WOMAN must enter the mainstream of culture not as a man manque but as herself, with her own unique en· dowment and the special contribution she brings to the solution of our problems in living together. To become "equal" y,i.th men means not to do everything they do. but to become fully hersell and fully contributing to mankind's goals. ' TEHERAN Proof of u .s. "credibility" in pressing Israel to withdraw. from its Arab territories in " Egypt and Syria captured in 1967 would modify and ~ibly cancel a n t i · American production cutbacks by the oll·rich Arab states, the Shah of Iran suggested in ·an ex· elusive interview. Iran Itself, the sec· ond·largest Middle East oil producer, did not join the pro- duction cutback. As the leader of 32 million non-Arab Moslems w i t h in- timate ties to Washington and correct relations with Moscow, the Shah is by far tbe most important independent power on tbe edge of the explosive Middle East. More to the point, Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi is determined to replace the British as guarantor of the most vital waterway in the world today, the Persian Gulf. Without · Persian Gulf passage of uncountable oil tankers, the entire economies of Japan and Western Europe would strangle for Jack of oil. CONSEQUENT~Y, the Shah, handsome at 54 wlth the sleek assurance of total authority and 32 years in power, is to be carefully listened to. "The United States has always sup- ported the principle of t b e in· admissability of acquiring land by force," be told us in the gold-chased office of bis Niavaran Palace high in the hills overlooking his capital. "Israel has no choice but to leave the Arab lands it captured in 1967." But what if that doesn't happen? The Shah, choosing his words carefully, said that Israel couJd never alone handle Increases In WT elf are Expenditure Should Require Taxpayer Approval To get on with some needed reforms here at Babylon. The ones \\'e v.·ere fooling around with in response to dear reader An Hesbon's comment that I i;hould do more than criticize; I should suggest. The first column in this now-and-then primer on b etter government dealt with taxes. Now tha.t we have taken the dough fnKD the folks, fair· ly 1 and openly, whal a~ut some cost con· 1rfls? Just because wffet th~ money to -- 5ap'aniento doesn't f1¥1n we can throw it 'around like con- !cW. Right? ~major Item in the slate (and county) ~el is public a.ulstance : Welfare and boilltb care servicea. About 31 percent of I the state's 1eoeral fund goes for 14>uc uststance -fZ.I billion. In most ~Ues; about 50 percent or the budget ~ fer welfare. A1l-lo-all, federal, slate iuld local upeodltures for :"•!fare .An qJl!omta will total about " blllk!a ln ''r-71· .. . hm STA ft comtltution . says public ....,_tkll lillJI 11a... lint call on the ~·· -· u dc!lm't. .not really. W611are iap>tbe dos-EYeo wltb the relonns of the lltagan administration, ( RUS WALTON ) about where their money goes. M it is now, public schools offer the taxpayer virtually the only opportunity to vote on taxes. And the result is that citizens vote "No" on schools because welfare keeps gnawing at their takebome pay. there seems no end ln sight to the Another suggestion. G 0 v e r n m e n t rise of welfare costs,' bureaucracy should be put on a busines,s. There is, perhaps, a way to control like basis. With incentives for reducing those costs: set a muimum. Enact costc rather than rewards for expanding p two-part amendment to the State bud t ConstilutiOn: ge s. · Take a well-run business, for example. "(Section One) lt Js the stated policy A smart manager says to his workers: of the people of califomta that in any · d r fiscal year not more than (2S) percent "ll you can turn out more g1 gets or less inoney, while maintaining quality of the total state general fUnd revenues controls, I'll split the increased prolits shall be expended for public a.ssl9tance with yOU." The ~rkers turn to and programs and the State Leg!slature abalt control sucliannUillpproPftiUOOS~ 80-.wr1utbftnae1M'!IDletlves..a bonus. as not to exceed that amount for that YOU CAN'T rompule a cost-per-gidgel purpose." ln"government, but you can tompute "(Section Two) No county aball In-Ille COit for most departments for crease taxaUon for the JIUl'POll'! of Jn. spectflc functions and services. creased expenditures for p u b 11 c Why not say to the supervl$ors and assistance programs without llllCb being employes In a department or dlvlslon : firs\ presented as an locreue lo the "Your annual budget ts 14 million. The tax rate and approved by • majority projected woridoad ts x number of cases of the electorate in that county." (or x man-hours). If you ,can handle SCREAMS? llell hath no 11!fY Uke Ille the workload with fewer Jll'l>hours (or howls lhat -amenament would cause! less operating C05t), wt'U eplit tho ssv· Some · would term the amendment un-lngs with you. Half for the taxpayers, constitutional I mean, whoever heard and half !or a pay increase for you." of the people having 1 volco lo Ille We'd be ahead, and the state employ .. amount of their money spent for welf..-e would make more money. As it is now, ·or 'Medi-Cal! That is bere'J'I . the division chiel lakes Increased stature "\Veil. it may be berisyl>ut It I• (and salary) on the·numbcr of Indians lime the taxpayers had more of a say in his teepee. ( EVANS·NOVAK J a situation in which the Arabs ' ally, the Soviet Union, chose to use its power. Only the U.S. could do that. "But for what reason?" he asked rhetorically. "One cannot expect the United States to risk destruction of itself and the whole world because Israel wan ls to stay in Sinai." The S h a h also came down hard against U.S . ..SOviet participation in· any United Nations force e v e n t u a l l y established to guarantee Israel's security behind lhe old, pre-1967 lines. The two great powers shouJd avoid persooal in· volvement be told us. "It mJght seem practicaJ," he said, "but it is not right (or the great powers to take respP11Sibility everywhere. That prevents other oounlries from doing what they should be doing. It creates a situa· tion where other countries simply choose up sides beiween the great powers and TO THE CONTRARY, the Shah noted become satellites." ancienl Russian aims for warm-water The Shah declined to discuss actual outlets and recalled that Gennan Kaiser U.S. policy in the Middle East today:' Wilhelm nUrtured the dream of a,. the times are too sensitive he said. But the general feeling was expressed railroad from Berlin to Baghdad and . forcibly to , us by lesser government Persian Gulf ports. But the Arab-Israeli officials. It is that Washington's Middle struggle has simply handed Moscow E li . uddled th 11 t greater le,verage. ast po cy 15 50 m at canno Given obvious and historic Iranian fear really be defined . of a strong, unified Arab world, the STARTING WITH the Eisenhower ad· Shah's call for. U.S. muscle in dealing ministration 's inexplicable withdrawal of with Israel is significant. Iran ha! close the offer to sell arms to Egypt in but informal relations with Israel and 1955 and continuing to the present, most ·politicians here regard a healthy knowledgeable Iranians call that policy Israel as a vit;a.1 counterweight to anti· /self-destructive at incalculable cost to Iranian hositillty.from such radical Arab 1 the U.S. 'l'hty hope the cba.Dge implicit states as Iraq. · in the ceasefire is real and that Israel. This Is.raeli connection,· never publicly with ironclad guaraqtees, will pull out. , di~., is inn>ortant to Iran. But] of Arab land. . -that callB for a aecure Israel on pre-1987 Yet, the Shah does not agree that borders, not an Isniel whole preaenc:e all~t U.S. support of Israel and the on 'the Suez CaoaJ enables the Arabs consequent Arab appeal" for aki to to surmc>unt 'their Intense rivalrles; not Moscow explain lhe Soviet Union's grow· an Israel , in short, that drives the ing presence Jn the Eaatern Mediter· Arabs close to the very unity which . ranean and ' in Iraq, which has a long someday might prove dangerous to the I ·border with Iran. Shah of Iran and his ooWltry. What 'Proud' Tradition? To the Editor: This is a note to express my outrage at the caption under the picture of the legs of lhe graduates of the Naval Officer Candidate School. "A Proud Tradition Falls" you wrote. Is the policy of discrimination pra~ ticed in this nation against 811 those who are not' white males a tradition we should be proud of, or one whose fall we should mourn? WHEN the Naval Officers CaDdidate School stopped its discrimination again.st men of color, did the newspaper print a picture of black, brown, and yellow male faces interspersed among the white, then caption the picture "A Proud Tra· dition Falls"? Of course not! Racism is a tradition whose fall we celebrate. But, when capable women from all races break down barriers, like the ones set uP by the United States Navy, their legs are photographed, and their struggle is disapproved. SHAME on the Dally Pilot and ·may the discrimination against all groups in America who do not fit the white male standards of "normalcy" fall. MARILYN MURPHY Answer To the Edlk>r: I have an answer to all our problems. Elect Eric Severeld President. I don't think he needs any help, bul U he Wicks MAILBOX . l.etf9n '""' ,....,.. 11"1 "*-· Mlrmlll'I' wrttlrt 91111,11.i COllYft' ftlefr _... .. Ill * worff or leu. Titt rhlll • eeM-.. lett.n ,. tlf -W l'lllNHll hit It ~. AU Mftw'I _, 111- Chlilll .......... IN IMll ..... ,_ ........ "'" ... wtttllMM .. '""'"' " lllffki.t ,_ •• 1i.eren1. PMtrr wlll !Mt M "*'"'"· does, make Howard K. Smith Vice Presi· dent. BETWEEN them they knpw all the answers, not only to the present but to the future. 1 BUt .just in case even they need some help, I ooininate the editor of the Daily :Pilot to assist them. Even God doesn't know eveiything these men know. ' ARTHUR D. GASKIN Dlscoeery -· ' To the Editor: After reading your editorial against Proposition I I have at long last discovered that you are Democratic paper. That leaves you out of my life as my blood pressure cannot s~ reading a dirty Democratic paper. I am a comparatively new subscriber to your sht!et but I can easily get along without 11. • When the boy <Ollects Ille nezt time I will cancel my>suboi:riptlon. · . • E. V.Wll.KlE TllC Dailu Pilo~ on lndeptndent pllblfcoUon dtd to no politico! party, vltwed PropOritton 1 as a non...part'8an issue. Longt(PM 11aders are aware. we have endorttd numtrow ,Republtcan condldolU -.. wdl .. 'Democratic candkiatc~. , Editor .Goed Old D•ll• To Abe Editor: '· ._ I almoit mllleil It. Alter my bath, 1 juat caught Ille end ·or the TV movte. It wa1 a unlvenilty (or a ZOo or a modboule)" All of !be studtnls acted . Uke blltherlnl ldloll. 'lbere wu thll ·one flenl-li>Pe toachet that act<d ;us1 'like tho students. You ooukl tell . be wu .~H bec!aflse be tnew-an abou) fiction writers and poets and those are'. the things that count.• JUST AS he "·as being tested by a bWlcb of egghead,s for some kind of teaching ci'edentials, he blew his , stack and started tearing up the papers and things and running around on a1 long table. ,\bout Utls time, the students, started tearing up the school and break·1 Ing windows and burning books. I The show end~ with this he~type 1 teacher making Violent Jove to a student! on a little balcony while the students1 did in the school (or zoo or lnsane1 asylum) below. .-I NOW THE redeeming quality of this Is that a Jot of us oldtimers were! very thankful that we were too dumbl for higher education: We just sowed! our wild oats in our dumb , animalistic manner without paying tuition. We called; It raising hell; we didn't try to put 1 it oU as cultUre or a fevolution for greater things. . 1 Of coune, if we could have spouted( a little poetry or something about Greek , gods, or told about fiction writers or· spoken a bit of Latin, It would still have betn ·hell-railing and there's no \>edeemlng quality for that. ' JIM BOLQING OUNM COAST • DAILY PILOT fi>bm N. W<<d, PubU.hfr Thcmoi Kem!, Eilttor Barbara Kreibich ' .Eaitoriol Pag, Editor The edltori&.l tPRee of 1"" 0..111 J>ilot .;eeq to inlonn and stimulai.' f'll!ldtrs by prnenu._ on this Ne dlvt.rwfcommentary' on topics ot tn- tenlt by tiyndlcated ~umnllt1 and Clflooni11t, by provl<f\111 a forom tor l'efdittl' vifl'WI and by prttentitw thll "-Ptt'•·-Mdldeuon Cllt'ftnt t-T,l>e edltarlal opln ... Of i)je Dolly Plkit •1'1l<01'1>niY Ill <111 edkorlal• column' ·at the iop'-ol the Jiiiie. Opbtions tll:Pit•d b)orthe Ollf. umnisbl and cartoord1t. and letter wrttera are thtt.r own. ud r.o .!fldcn~· mcnt Of ~Ir -.. by Ille Dolly Pilot -"' -• Friday, November 9,•!~78 ' ' ' sir er hel th ne rel by ju Hi D w cit co pa po co he ra ne m ta d I ill pl Ii • I Huntington Beaeh Fountain ·Valley ·* • . ' - Today's Final • N.Y. Stocks VOL 66, NO. 313, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1973 TEN CENTS Huntington Man l(illed Ex-roommate, 104? B@ekwell Plan Firm Already Savi1.ig 011 Eiiergy When you·r/ hot , you're hot. except at the Seal Beach Space Division of Rock"·ell Int ernation al Corporation. Turn on a hot water lap and it runs Coast Route 'Dead E11d' Proposed :. ,. -·- By L. PETER KRIE .. Ot ftle Dlll't Pllet Slaff Newport Beach needs $67 million in street' improvements, including a second crossing over Upper Newport Bay, to help solve the traffic overload choking the city. a consultant has recommended. The consu1tant's report, which took nearly three years to prepare, wa!I released today and also says that Pacific coast Highway should he dead-tnded at both sides or the Santa Ana IUver. . 11 NY11 the blgbway should he rerooted to tbt -.. It -Newport Boulevard aod ahould ·connect with the terminus of the Newport Freeway In Costa Mesa then c:onlimle •-ly Into Huntington Beach. • The second bay cromng as propooed by the firm of Alan M. Voorhees and . Company of San Diego and endoned by ":1 citizens committee, should be kept just to the norih of the existing O>ast Highway bridge and then should swing north to tbe intersection ol Dover and \Vestcli{f Drive near the Costa Mesa city 1imits. The consultant said the $67 million cost ~·otJ!d be divided between city tax- payers, the state, Orange County and possibly other sources. But, Voorhees said $27 million of the cost will fall on local taxpayers and he conceded the city may have diliiculty raising that kind of money over the next 20 to 25 years. 1be plan does not include a recom- mendation for a bypass of downtown Corona del Mar as had been originally pro(K)Sed. Voorhees had initially recommended constructing a six-lane expressway on the old pacific coast freeway right-of-way between Harbor View fills and old Corona del Mar. Voorhees conceded the report was tailored toward public acceptance and does not necessarily include the best technical solutions to the city's traffic ills. The report says that the recommended plan "does not eliminat~ all transporta- tion deficiencies, but 1t does present solutions which are likely to oblaln public ecctptance and support necessary for implementation." ' Orange Coast Weather Low c1ouds and local fog night and early morning bours1 other .. wise sunny Saturday, according to the weather service. LitUe temperature change. Highs at the beaches In the mld-60s rising to 74 . Inland . Qvernlght lows 56-58. INSIDE TODA\' Southern Cali/Q._rnia's f i ra I dinntr playhome I! open and thriving in San Clemente. A re· view of tu firSi produccion, the musical "Oklahmna," will be found tn toda11's Weekender l tctfan. At Ytur Strtlc• I M• Laflflf• t4 -.. " "'· M. ··~ • Cll1"'"91• S Cl•HfflM ,,. .. CIMk• I' Cr.I.... )II DMlll Ntfkft 1 lftttrttl ,... • ''"-n.n '" ... •--"' 1 ~ .. #Ml.... • ~ cool. Take a sip rrom the drinking fountain and it is warm. ~faking the hot water just a little bit rolder and the cold water just '3 little bit hotter is the space brain's answer to the fuel shortage. lt's not enough to make a significant difference in the way hot water feels when washing or the way fountain water tastes, but the readjustment or tem- peratures is expected to save some energy, according to ·Rockwell spokesman Tony Longo. How much is not yet kno\\TI because the plant's conservation plan is just a month old. ·· "We started it as soon as we knew there would be a r.eal energy problem. It was going for more than a month before President Nixon made his big pitch," Longo explained. The conservation policy is in effect both at the 2,000 empk>ye Seal :Beach plant and Rockv.•ell's larger facility in Anaheim. In addition to the water readjustment. employes have been instructed tO turn lights out whenever possible at the end or the day and when leaving office.s ror a lengthy period of tim~. The lighting in parking areas ~ heen reduced and the firm's display lights ore -tumed oft ·a· Longo said. In oome c:asis, u bu been said. In 10me. cases, light g bas been cut down by • mud! as 50 pen:erit slmplJ tiy iwllddtii oa only every other fixture In a Jone hallway. · Sedlrlty ana employe safety regu1a- tlons however prevent too many lights from being turned ore and, i n departments where there are night shifts, it is impossible. "PeopJe in Seal Beach are always asking us why we don't turn off our lights at night and the reason is that we have a three shift operation in some areas," Longo said. He added that employe committees are meeting on the energy problem and that new ideas are being put into practice as soon as they are generated. Company safety slogans Connerly found on pooten have heen toppled from their prominent positions by the energy savings pitch. College Students W 01i't Be Seei1ig Nude Play Scene Students from Orange Coast and Golden West COiiege will not see one of the more interesting parts of a play scheduled to run in Santa Ana Nov. 27. The five-seoond nude sctne has been cut out. Santa Ana COllege President John E. Johnson asked for the deletion of the nude scene in "Terminal" because it would not he In keeping with college or community standanls. .. Tennina1," a satire on the inhumane treatment of patients in hospitals is being presented at Santa Ana college as part or a three-play exchange in- v01ving the three coUeges. Orange coast and Golden West stu4ents wiU see the play, presented by the New York.Jlased Open Theater, Cree. The same company will present "Mutation" at Golden West Nov. 26 and 0 NJ.ght Walk" at OCC Nov. 29. Then! are no nude -. in the other two ploys, according to a opokesman for the ·coast Community College dlstricl. The node ICeDe in ••TeQnloaI" takes place When I 11111'9e orders a male patient to disrobe. It wu elbnlnated with the agreement of the theatrical troupe, Santa Alla College otnclals said. Huntington Exchange Club Wins 'Big E' The EKbanae Club of HunUncto"- Beadl llaa -lhe National Exchange €1ub'• 1971-Blg U£0 award for U· ~. . The award wos present.cf' to the club for meeting requlrem<nls In etndency, ex;panslon and education. The Exchange Club Is a national oervlco club for buslnm anc1 proletaional men . . . u,1 T.......,. WARNING -Commerce Sec· retary Frederick Dent says Americans will have to accept a more polluted environment in order to save jobs during the energy crisis. Anaheim. Police Question Final Wage Offers Anaheim police promised today to turn from picketing to ticketing if their pay package isn't sweetened by a City COwt· Cil which views its offer as "fmal." Police. their wives and children con- tinued picketing city hall in protest of the city 's 6.75 percent pay raises ac- cepted by other city persoMel. Attorney Steven Solomon, representing the police., said if the picketing fails to get results, officers will initiate a campaign or strict law enforcement giv- ing tickets to persorlS in traffic situations which in less inflationary times might resu1t in a mere warning. Cowlcilrnen meanwhile skipped a sched.u1ed Thursday negotiating session with police and may next Tuesday vote to ignore requests for reopened talks on the po1ice pay package. Mayor Jack .. Dutton and Councilmen catvin Pebley and Mark Stephenson have made it clear they feel a fair final offer b'as been made to the police. The 273-member Anaheim Police Association has not yet threatened to strike. However, a strike vote would be taken if leaders were disciplined because of their part in the pay hassle, an APA spokesman said. ' Solomon is said to favor the "super cop'" stepup of citizen citations over any walkout by police. However, Detective Chet Barry, APA president, suggested the "super cop" tactic was not being considered . Th.ursday's picketing was peaceful. At issue in the · dispute is a pay package which would cost the city of Anaheim an additional $260,000 a year, city personnel chief Gary McRae said. The highest paid Anaheim policeman Would be pajd $1,176 a month under the city's offer. Present top salary is $1,149 a month . Huntington OKs Taxi Rate Boost A 20 percent increase in taxt cab fares has heen granted by the Huntington Beach City Council. It will now cost riders $1.20 to travel on.: mile by taxi, and fl.SO tor 10 miles. The old Jate was $1 !or a mile and $6.40 for JO mUes. Hospital Case Eyed . By Officials By HILARY KA YE Of ftll DM1Y 'ilol Sl9ff An 82-year-old man died in Huntington Beach Convalescent Hospital this week, possibly resulting from a beating with a shoe by his 104-year-old roommate. Authorities in Kings County are await- ing the coroner's report from Orange fumty, to detemtlne Whether Luciano Rivas, ICM, should be charged with the murder of Walter Rhode, 82. The assault occurred four months ago in a convalescent home in Hanford, 30 miles south or Fresno. Rivas was originally charged with assault with a deadly weapon, but Kings County District Attorney John. O'Rourke said he decided not to p~ at that time. · "Since the death of Rhode, however, we are 'reviewing the charges to see if we should charge Rivas with murder ," O'Rourke said. "It's a very unusual situation to have a l(K..y~ld man wbo is able to commit a Crillie ol !Ilia Iliad/' he odded. . ' O'Raurb Is waiting for a medical hlslory for llbode since he left Hanford to determine whether he might have llllltered ouboequent injuries ·to the heed wbldl mq luiYf .. -llll deatll. A 1poMPman for the Ora.qe QUity Coroner'• Qf.Ooe, however, said Rbode'1 autopoy lndJcated he died from a blood clot resulting from an old injury. "We can't be certain how old the injury is," explained the spokesman, "but our investigation"sbowed-tbat-Rbode did not have any further injuries." A relative in Huntington Beach moved Rhode from the Hanford convalescent home to Pacifica Hospital in HlDltington Beach and then to the Huntington Beach O>nvalescent Hospital. "It may be several week! before we get the full report on Rhode," said O'Rourke. "At that time, we11 decide whether to seek an indictment against Rivas. We understand he is presently in another convalescent borne in Tulare." ..._/ Huntington Girl Escapes After Kidnap and Rape From Wire Services BAKERSFIELD - A Huntington Beach girl who was being held in a motel near here escaped from her ab- ductor when the man fell asleep after reportedly raping her, Kern COunly Sheriff's Deputies said today. Deputies said they were called to Zula's Hideaway Motel early Thursday morning by the 18-year-old girl who showed them where to find her sleeping assaJlant. Randollo Antonio CBbezos, 321 of Los Angeles, is being held today on charges of kidnap, rape and sex perversion. A. spokesman for the Sherifrs office said Richard Wblttingtoo, 18, of Alameda reported he was hitchhiking with the girl !rom Loo Angeles to San Francisco when Cabezos picked them up al about 2 a.m. Whittington told lawmen that the man stopped his car a few miles north or Bakersfield and fired a shot in the air -..Ith a rifle, tellin& Wbittington to leave the vehicle./ Whittington lmmtdiately reported the Incident to deputies, but it was not until I a.m. that the girl made her escape and called officers. The city is served by Hennan Tate's Yellow Cab of Newport and Costa Mesa, tnc., which also serves Westmlnster1 Tate told councilmen Monday night tlle · rate increUC-has also been apprcvod She told them lhe had heen taken to lhe motel where Ille wu raped· and forced to commit acts of perversion. Aliens Arrested MAN\IATI'AN BEACH (UPI) Authorlll" arrested 92 Illegal Mexican aliens Jn a raid J)li ~ Metlox Pottery Corp. here Thursday. Police aaid the raid caifie allor a PottetiY Workers Union local complalnod to authorities. by lhe three other cities. 1 1• Councilman al.so suggested that Tnte grant senior citizens a 10 percent dis· count coupon, rather tban the five per· cent 4i.scount he now allows, but no action wu lfken on that proposal. I MAJ. GEN. HOMER S. HILL OBSERVES CORPS' BIRTHDAY Histori_cally Attired Troops Add Color to El Toro Affair • • • M~es 'P....ass -in-Review' ' . ' To Honor l98thBjrthda~ By WniAM SCHREIBER Of ftM o.11r '"" '"" The 198th birthday 'c;elebration included festivities marking the 31st anniversary ot the founding of the Third Marine Aircraft Wing, which makes up El Taro's ,_.larine contingent. • ' ' . . Gallant U.S. Marines through 198 years of corps ·history were honored in a splash _of colors and patrJotism Friday at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. Full dress uniforms, flashing sabers, John Philip Sousa marches and a stan- ding-room-only crowd on · the base runway heralded the Marine birthday with a pageant believed to be the first of its kind at El Toro. Highlighting-the-pageant-was-a-real- lif e re-f:nactment of the raising of the A boomillg, 13-gun salute -which frightened some young children to tears -greeted the flags of each squadron as they paraded in front of the crowd. Among honorees during the celebration were the oldest and the youngest Marines at the base. Col. Walter Redmond, 55, and Pvt. Harold Kirkman, 17, marched in review shoulder to shoulder to a march played by the Third Marine Aircraft band. The pageant included a display of Marine Corps uniforms down through history with narration of the Corps' famous batUes. Unifonns included tbe green and red outfit of American Revolution ~tarines, the plumed hat unifonn of the Indian and Mexican wars and the plain blue of the American Civil War. flag atop a rugged peak on lwo Jima during World War II. During the ceremonies comment! were offered by base commanding generals H. F. Hill and W. R. Quinn. Hill, a major general, said the an4 niversary "is celebrated in memory of those brave Marines who so richly en- dowed our .corps with laurels and tradi· tion as a reminder that we are the guardian or all that they have fought and died for.'' Hill said that "for the first time in many years our country is not in- volved in armed confl ict. It is a time not only to enjoy the warm comradeship of our fellow l\1arines, but to reflect briefly on \\'here we are going." ' HiU said professionalism and loyalty will still be the bywords or the Marine Corps in peace as weil as wa r. The role of U.S. 1'1arines in the Viet- nam conflict was played up during the (See MARINES, Page ZI Voiee of Loot Radio ·Solves Its dw1i Theft By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 tlll D•ltr l"llot $1•11 A GRUFF VOICE that must have sounded like the wrath of God Him~elf to (our juvenile wrongcloers solved a .Balboa Island theft case Thursday night. NewROrt Beach Fire Department Capt. Ed Hanlon and several of his men from the island station responded to a medical aid call on Agate Avenue during the dinner hour. The pocket com1nunications radio he ca rried 'vas set aside While firemen administered oxygen to a young Marine "'ho had reportedly imbibed too much fruit of the vine. DURING THE PERIOD when Capt. Hanl on wasn't watching his radio and nobody.was watching the household youngsters, the small device disappeared. . , All four youngslers innocently denied knowledge of the missing radio receiver, so tbe captain went out to his fire truck, supposedly lo see II he'd leftlt there. .,. Instead, he called Dispatcikr Ed McPherson and asked him lo broadcast a routine station check call in a minute or two. INSPECTOR ARr Morton said today Capt.' Hanlon rolurned to the house and said be just couldn't figure out where he lost his radio -then watched the kids' faces, . Fear and dismay flashed across their faces as .the gru£! voice boomed out of a dresser drawer: "KMB 434 ... testing .• · l ,._ . 2 ••. 3 ••• 4 ... " The captain's lost radio was retrieved and the kids were given a stem warning. ' ' I 1· Parac hute Hi.jaeJ~er Has FBI Nabbed ~D. B. Cooper?' SAN DIEGO (AP) -The FBI soys it is Investigating whether a nn1n nr· rested here ror an Oregon bank holdup may actuatly .be D. B. Cooper, the ri;st successful parachutlnr; skyjacker. Arvld Julius KJperts, 41 , ol Portland, 6 W ate rgate Def endants Get Off Eas y WASHINGTON (UP!) -Judge John J. Sirica handed light sentences today to six orlglnal Watergate defendants who aided investigators In breaking open the scope of the scandal. Three of the jail men could be free by Christmas. The stiffest sentence was given to E. Howard Hunt, the former White House employe who admitted being a prime planner of the break-in at Democratic national headquarters. Slrlca sentenced him to 2'ii: to eight years in prison and fined him $10,000. Four others got minimum sentences of one year each and the other 18 months. The final sentences were far different from the initial sentences given the six and the final sentence given G. Gordon Liddy, the one original defendant 1vho would not talk to Watergate in- vestigators. Sirica gave provisional sentences of up to 45 years to the six in January. Liddy is serving a minimum term of six years, eight months. He also was lined $4-0,000. Sirica . explained that he had no in- tention of giving the men-ti,e maximum sentences he handed in January if they cooperated with authorities. Fr.ank A. Sturgis, Virgilio R. Gonzalez and Eugenenio R. Martinez -three of the four so-called "Soldiers" in the break-in -were given sentences of one to four years . Since the three have been behind bars for nearly 11 mon ths, they may be freed before the year is out. Bernard L."Barker, the four th member of the ~1iami-area "Soldiers," received a sentence of 18 months to six years -stiffer than the other three, apparentl y because be recruited. them for the mission. James VI. McCord, along with Hunt a leader ln the planning of the break-in and the defendant who first broke his silepce to provide evidence to the court, was given a one-to five~year sentence. Unlike the Miami area men, McCord has been free on bond since the trial. Sirlca, said it was his intention that l\.1cCord spend at least a year in jail. : Special Session Called Monda y In Huntington A special session of the Huntington Beach City Council has been called for 5:30 p.m., Monday, to consider action : on four business items : • -Signing a contract with a special : architectural consultant to expedite con· • struction of the $2.9 million central • .. library. • -Determine ·what the next step will ' be toward redevelopment of the old downtown. -Meet in executive session to discu ss a personnel matter with the planning conunission regarding the planning departm ent . -COnsider reviving a proposal to prezone an old World War II Army Bunker in the Bolsa Chica area sO a specialty restaurant can be built in it. OIAN&I COAST Kl . DAILY PILOT Tlo1 Or•nt• CN1t DAILY PILOT wlth wil!cri 11 cornblnt'd ~ Jltw1.Pr1n, Is 1111bllsl!..._t'd b'f lttt O••ni;lt CCI.H I Publif/!1119 Com111ny, n~. ••ti r•hlior>I trt Pllbl!IMll, Mondi\' fhtOll!lh Frkt1r, !or Cc1r. MUI, NtwlXl't ll••ch, Huntl119IO!l B••<h'Fo1m11ln Vallt'f, L•g~nt llHCh. lr.lnt1S1dd1e111c-ind Sin ci. .... n•t/ Str'I Ju&n C1plttr1roo. A 1!ng" f8Glon1I edition 11 Plltlll1h"" S.hll'llt'fl •nd Suncltrt- The prlf!CllMI PliDll1hirtg pl1"! II " 3XI Weil hr 51rtei, C01t1 M•.,, c.111orn11, mM. Ore., was arrested l\.tonday in San Diego's Ocean Beach area and ordered jailed in Ueu o~ $150,000 bond. Cooper was the name used by a man who pa rachuted over the state of Wash ington from a commercial jet which he hijacked on Thanksgiving eve, 1971. To his chest wu strapped $200,000 in ransom. No bod y was ever found, C.OOper was never arrested and none of the money, whose serial numbers had been recorded , has ever turned up. The FBI said Kiperts, charged with Ocl. 29 holdup al King City, Ore. Saviqgs &... Loan Co., ls suspected of ts other Oregon bank holdups since 1970. Julius Mattson, the FBI special agent at Portland, said a possible link with Cooper was discovered at one of those 15. Mattson, in a telephone interview Thursday, said the incident took place in December 1~71 while a Wilsonville, o~. bank was being robbed. "The individual who robbed the bank was busy at a wall desk, scribbling on a deposit slip," Mattson said . After he held up a teller and escaped, "\'t'e went through the material on the desk and we found a slip on which had been printed the name, 'D.S. Cooper,' but we don't know who wrote it," ~1attson said. "As a result or the unusual coincidenc.e of the deposit slip, we will also process him (Kiperts) as a suspect in the :ii- jack." Arrangements are being made to show a photograph of Kiperts to the crew of the hijacked plane, the FBI official said. He said Kiperts roughly matches the description given of the hijacker but that witnesses in times of duress easily say encouraged a rash of others, the man who. gave his name as Q.B. Cooper boarded a Northwest Orient airlines jet in Portland. He produced what he said was a .bomb· shortly ·after . the plane left for Seattle and took over the jet, demanding $200,000 in $20 bills and four parachutes. After the demands were met at Seattle, he allowed the flight 's 36 passengers and two stewardesses to leave the pla.ne. Then he commanded the pilot, two fli ght officers and two stewardisses to fly to 1'.1exico. Cooper later directed the pilot to fl y about 200 miles an hour at an altitud e of 10,000 feet over a..route which took them ever western Washington and Oregon. During the flight, the crew notic- ed a slight lurch and discovered C.ooper and the money missing when the plane landed 3~1: hours later at Reno, Nev. to refuel. The plane's rear exit ramp was found to be lowered. Ground searchers h u n t e d in southwestern Western Wash in gt on without finding a sign of Cooper. The bodies of two murdered women were later found not far away. In the year which followed, 21 extortion-hijackings of airliners took' place in which more than $12 million was demanded. Six sky pirates bailed out of hijacked planes, but an were caught. make mistakes about height and weight. Jn that hijacking, which authorities From Pagel MARI NES .•. celebration with prominent mention of each sqadron's battle field activities and history during that war . Atop each squadron flag , fluttered bat- tle ribbons and unit citations gathered tttrough years of combat, some stret- clling as far back as the First World War. The crowd wa3 reminded in several of the talks, of th e men who are stil missing in action after the Southeast Asia 'Var and of those who served Jong terms 'as prisoners of war. The ceremonies were ended with the cutting of a huge, two-tiered birthday cake by the commanding generals. The oldest and youngest Marines got the first two slices. Growth Controls Slated for Sti1d y Huntington . Beach planners h a v e developed a 2.58-page document which covers the history of growth in the city. and outlines possible future controls Robert N. Wted Prn oOt"I '"" PWll1Mr J1c~ R. C111ley ' -for growth. . ' ' .. • \/k t Prt1lt11U INI G-•ll Ml"lttr Tho11111 K11.,..il Et ;IOI' Tho11111 A. Mvrphin1 Mt ... glna 'Etltor CfiitrfH H. Looi Rich1rtl I'. N•tl Allllltnl ~Mtlnt Efltorl T1rry Co.,..1111 Wt1I Or11191 C:-1r Edllor HINltl .... IMctl OH1ce 17171 l11ch 101111¥11'4 Mtlllnt A4clr111: l'.0 . lo• 7tO, t1:6'41 o .... .,.,,_ U.VN l ttth: 22J l"lll'nl Alltllue C:01t1 MtM: no Wtsl l •Y 5trt<ti H•-' SNCl'H un H"""'" '"""'''' '-n C,..,,,,,lt: .)llS Hortll l!I C:tl'Ollne Rttl , ....... f714 ) "4J-4ll1 Cl-'fltcll .44""'9hlf t.4i4•7t '"'"' Nfffll Ot'I,.._ C"""r Clm-IKa 140·1210 Cottyri,tit. 1fTI, Ort"" C..st ~llOl!trl ... ~r. Ht -1Wle1, Ul1111ttll0nl, Ml!Otlel l'!lt1191" ., ""trfl1Mlelltt ~ ""'' tt r9PlllllwN wltlltllt M1Kltil 1111'' nwtlltlt • Qjjfl'Tflll -• klit!ill cllll ,_,... Miii 1t Ctlllt MfM, C1Ufenl1t. ~l~len llr wrttt G.U -ltllt'i llr -· U.IJ IMllM l 1'1'111""'1 atl/M lllftl U.llol f!Wltillf , It's titled the "Growth Policy Study" and will be the first item reviewed at the 7 p.m., Tuesday, study session of the planning commi!Slon. Copies of the planning department 's growth sludy are available at city hall and the public library for pub1ic review. PlaMers are encouraging p u b I i c r~ponse to the study and lndlviduals arc invited lo comment on It at Tuesday's commission meeting. .Qf _fic ial Slain SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An urban renewal official wa s fAlally shot and his sister wounded by an angry spectator· during a public meeting here Thursday _ JtigbL police sai d. 0((Jcen ldenlUied the i""'"dead m•n as Rory Hallhe 22 a dl""'1or of a citizens redevelop~n't advliory group. No Sw imming -At Th is Pool BELGRADE (UP!l · -Vllla1ers at Bajmok near the Hungarian bonier have llDed the local inrlm· ming poor wilh Ille IUl'pi111 lrul11 of their bumper wine harvut, the S.lgrade dally VecernJe Novootl reports. Some 230 wagons of new wine have been stored 1n lhc pool covered by a l11Yer of paraffin oil to protect Jt from exposure. The wine ls to be preserved in this way tUI January, the newspaper said. Police Study Drug· Charge On Newsman A criminal .complaint charging the editor and publi!her of Orange County's tabloid showcase of. what's happening on the homosexual scene was being studied today by authorities. Sam Warren; 33, of 2234 Pacific Ave., was released on $1,000 bail Thursday, following his arrest the night before at his apartment just outside Costa Mesa city limits. A raid team of Newport Beach detec-- tives arrested and booked the bachelor artist and printer on suspicion of sale of LSD, with additional charges pending. Investigators ·claim they arranged an LSD purchase and also five vials con- taining another ~contraband compow>d, amyl nitrate, plus a small amount of alleged marijuana. Warren has been affiliated with the gay magazine "Focus" since Its inception as a mouthpiece fo r Orange County's males and fema les who prefer intimacies among their own gender. • Police who ccnducted the raid . said several men present in Warren's apart- ment fled through open windows and escaped, apparently not knowing the reason the investigators came knocking. No criminal complaint had been issued yet today. Youths Will Vie In. Huntington Derby Contests Orange crates will roll Satur~ JJ!Om· ing 1n the eigW! annual Olan&• Crate Derby apoasored by Ille HunLlngton Beach Jaycees. Boys and girls from 8 to 15 are eligible to join the downhill run at Slater Avenue and Gothard Street in HunUngton Beach. Beginning at 10 a.m., there will be four classes - 8 to 10-year-olds, 11 to 13-year-olds, 14 to 15-year-olds, and a separate soap box class. Entries in the soap box class must conform to the rules of the National Soap Box Derby, which include exact specificatons as to how the cars must be built. Entries in the other three classes must ccnform to local specifications which are less stringent. Cars must be no more than seven feet long, must have .brakes, must be steerable, and may weight no more than 250 pounds including the driver. Winners will receive trophies from the Jaycees, and all participants will be awarded certificates. Mark Hammerquist, chainnan of the event, said be expects between 80 and 100 participants. Entry blanks and further information is available from Hanunerquiest at 536- 0435. Soi1tl1 Am erican Pupils to Need Homes on Coast Host families for Soulh American students arriving in January are neeaed in the HunLlngton Beach and Fountain Valley areas. Students will be arriving In West Orange County from Brazil, Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia, Argentina and maybe Chile. They are part of Lhe Youth for Understanding program, one of four stu· dent exchange programs sponsored by the U.S. S1'1le Departmenl. Students, who will atlend local high schools, will stay six months. Families are preferred who have high school age children, but !hi! Is not necessary. Person.s who desire more Information may call Pat Krone at her oUice, 548- 46.!0, or at holrie, 64UJ31. 'Cru cib'le' Play At Marina Hi,gli Arthur Miller's pl~y j'11te Crucible" is being •!aged this weekend by the Marina High SchQol Drajlla De~rtmenl. The play, which deals wiillthe Silem wilch trials of the 1600'• ., allegories for tbe C<lmmunlst bun ta ol the early · fifties, will be staged 1n the llCheol cafeletla tonight and Satunlay 1t :Ji.~ Ttckell for $!.25 will be a e al the door. Snag Hits Mideast Peace Plan By Ualled Press Inlernalloul f.llhough Secrelary ol Stale Henry A. Kissinger today annou~ed Jsr~eli. and Egyptian acceptance of a six·polnt truce plan that woold, lead to a fonnal peace conference, a last minute disagree- mc:nt developed in l!irael and the Cabinet met in emergency session to study the snags. An Israeli spakesman said the govern- ment would issue a communique laler oo Ki ssinger's compromise solution. But in the meantime there was no official comment on his 8nnoUDcement which apparently took Prime Minister Golda Meir by surprise. She canceled a sched- uJed television appearance. Israeli sources said the hitches hr valved Jsraeli conµ-ol or inspeclion rights to supplies reaching both the surrounded EgypUan 3rd Army and the cily of Suez, and the lifting of the Egyptian blockade of the Bab El-mandeb Strait at the entrance to the Red Sea. The Kissinger communique contained no mention of the lifting of the blockade, something that government sources said Israel demanded, and received, in n'egotiat.ions on the settlement. Jt also provided for checking supplies for the 3rd Army but not for the city of Suez. Even as the Israeli government was making its decision, the military com- mand reported three incidents on Qie cease-fife lines: -A plane on a reconnaissance mission along the Egypiian front was shot down by a SAM missile. The command would not say if it was in Arab air space but said the two crewmen bailed out into Egyptian territory and their names were given to the Red Cross. Egypt said tw,0 Istnti Phantoms· were shot ·down. - -Elements of the Egyptian 3rd Army moved westward during the n1ght from positions on the east bank of the Suez Canal. Israeli troops noted the movement at dawn and warned U.N. observers they could open fire unless the Egyptians ·.vilh..drew. They did. -Syrian troops on the northern front repeatedly opened fire at Israeli patrols with small arms and sporadic artillery fire during a three-hour span during the morning. Israel answered with small arms fire and no casualties were reported. 1teanwhlle, there were other Mideast developments: -5audi Arabia, leader of the Arab oil boycott, refused to lift is pe!roleum em- bargo despite the Middle Ea.st p6ace accord and the peroonal intercession of Kissinger. U.S. officials accompany- ing Kissinger on his 14-bour trip to Riyadh said Saudi Ambia, America's major arab oil supplier, declined to re~e normal oil shipments WJtil Israel returns all occupied Arab ter-- ritories. . ' ' • • • ' Helping Hands ·~~:r Ul'I Tll ..... lt ;l , • ')'Ir The gloves Gerald Carr vlill we ar into space sit on a table \Vhile the ~ ... 1 aslronaut relaxes during a break in spacesuit fitting. Carr and two -i other Skylab astronauts, Edward Gibson and \Villia1n Pogue, came 'J to Cape Canaveral for the s.uit tests even though their launch was ,. delayed when cracks \Vere discovered in the tail fin s of their rocket Carr is from Santa Ana. · State ·Rufu1g May Affect . Laguna Main Beacl1 Plait The coastal commissions don't have to require environmental impact report s (Effi ) from perm it applicants. the State Attorney General 's office has ruled. At the he<irt of the Ja\\'SUit filed . by John Gabrlels blocking the coostrUction of Laguna Beach's !\lain Beach Park is whether the coastal commissions are legally required to .i:onsider an EIR. Under the Cslifornia Environmental Quality Act (CEQAI, public agencies, must; unltsS · exempted, require EIRs from developers. CEQA gives a specific exemption to state and regional water quality control boards because they are already focusing on environmental matters. · The state resources agency, em- powered to develop guidelines for the implementation of CEQA, has gone a step further. Its guidelines don't specifically mention the coastal commission by name, but exempt state agencies dealing with the environment. The presumption by the attorney general is that the commission establbh- ed by Proposition 20 is included in that exemption. Crime Prevention • Meeting Scheduled The Fountain Valley Police Depart- ment will ho ld a crime prevention meeting for all city residents Wednesday in the Community Center. , Officer Pat Coleman will present a program of anti-crime measures that residents can follow to make their hOmes burglar resistant. The program will run from 7 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. ,, " . .I~ I Henredon's Folio 11 0 A sparklin9 new coll t efion fttturin9 superb craftsm1n1hi p, quality a nd styling. Truly • Htn· redon trade mark, View this exceptional eollec- t ion no w t t any of Ttd von Htmerl's three fine stor••· Henredon f<i'"1t#t DREXEL-HER IT AG~H ENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASl AN • NEWPORT BEACH e 1et1-~ . INTER,IORS WDIDA YS I SA TUIDA TS 9:00 te l :JO I'll DAY 'TIL t :OO I I 1721 WESTCLl~f DR:. 642·2010 t Op111 S~11d1y 12·51101 --~ LAGUNA BEACH e l45 NO R1'H COAST HWY. tOperi Sw111f1y 12.11JOI 494 ·6511 TORRANCE e UMtHAWTHOANE ILVD. J71·121f I I I • News Media Asks Laws ' I For Notes I ' LOS ANGELES (UP[) -Represen· tallve1 of the news media told an .....,bly Judiciary subcommittee Thurs- day that more and more ~ are being onlered to t11111 over thelr Ill· published material to authorities. William Niese, wU.tant g e rre r a I COUlll<I for the Los Aogelea Times, told the subcommittee hearing on newsmen'• priY!lep that tile Times la now handling "dozens" of subpoenas ordering that uopubliJbed notea be aurrendered to authorities. "IJft from the media this ... specter ol being drail!ed Into court every time you write about a conlroveralal subject," UPI T.i-.i. ( J . SUSPECT CAPTURED IN 'EXECUTION' MURDERS OF 9 IN LODI -NEWS BRIEFS . wnn. SIHlman, 21, Handcuffed Alt.r &.Ing Fluahod From H.u .. :'":-t .-U::-~-:-!:t-!"-.. -,~-~men-1ato-~_,'°: Extra Security Placed aucb legal actlona. Vllalla Tlm ... Deli. Managing Editor .Ron Elrlstcm said smaller newspapers do not have a legal staff capable of haodllng lhe various subpoenas . "Fighting these threall to a free press can jeopardize the . economic health of small newspapers," he said. '1Shou\d we lie down and play dead and not On Two Murder Suspect.s cover the story?" e .S Held In ltfurcler • BELL GARDENS (UP[) -Four C81ifornia men \'.'ere arrested Thursday and charged with murder and anned robbery in connection with the Las Vegas, Nev. deaths or two men who were fatally shoe during an apparent robbery attenipl . Police sald authorities from Nevada would arrlve to arrange-for the ex- tradition of David R. :Qergeron, 23; Eugene E. Stubblefield,. 46; Robert ·W. Beman, 49, all of Bell Gardens, and Morley R. OtriaUan, 30, BeD. • ltf•n•la11fltter rrlal LOS ANGLELES (UPI) -Carter B. Gonion, 34, waa onlered Thursday to ll1lnd trial for manslaugbter and reJony clrmlt driving in connection with a malorC)'Cle acddell Involving actor J .... Stoey. . .Cb'dlll. oC 97 ..... nl llllla, ls dta11ed e.e:c.:.;:r:r~~~ lul lle!>I. ............ ~ CS.. 21, was · tfTfil tn lbe~ .cdl!ut, IJlll 'lbe actor lost a leg and'·an arm. e PresWeat ,,tppolntecl SAN DIEGO (AP) -Dr. Allen J. Npuhy1 .._ of lna1ruction II San .lolo Qty Qi!ege, wlll t>Ocome -!dent oC San Dleto City College Jan. 1. n.po..hy, 43, waa choaen by comm1mity colloge lrultee8 'lbll1'9day to fill the job vacated by Dr. lies · Gorton, wtio resigned Jan. 28 to head 1 new t~year college. Gorton's last year at lbe downtown campus was marked by a sit-in at bis orn~. e De.tit Trial Set B AKERSFIELD (AP) -A Bakaerofield physician baa lost his bid for <lbrnlsal of an 1ndlctment of oolldt- otlon "' commltt mun1er br ordering ox-ygen amt oU to an in!~t who survived anabortlm. Dr. Xavier Ramires, 59, a former head ol the C01D1ty'1 Planned Paraithood AnociaUon, refuled to enter a plea afte< the motion was denied Thursday. Superior Court Judge P. R. Borton entered an innocent plea for him and oet lrial for next March 4. e Bomose-al Rtdlnq SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -U.S. Diallict Judge Alfonso J. Zirpoli ruled 'lbursday the !ederal government cannot fire a bomooexUal aolely because his employmenl might cauae "public con- STOCKTON (UPI) -San Joaquin County Sheriff's Deputies adopted extra security measures today for the ar- raignment of two suspects in the massacre of nine persons in the dream home of a country grocer r Willie L. Steelman, 28, an admitted heroi n user, ex-mental patient and paro~. and Dooglal· E. Grelzler, 22, New York City, were to be escorted here tmder heavy guard from the C0W1ty * * * Disc Jockey Aids Police In Capture SACRAMENTO AP) -Disc jockey Robert Wllliaw hardly skipped a beat when he tntemipted the rock music for a lpeClal news bulletin -a bulletin aimed at ..,. -. j "Wlllie steetman, J"OU're ,...,,,..., npt?'"~.iald In a cool , swinging wieo ~ 111/UO at,tlao KZAP·FM, ~ch . , In 1latjl rvct mllllc Bnd·tree-tona ~uuuaJt. llli tneasap .... lh>m Sacramento police to 28-jea!'Old Willie Sleelman, sought In the slaying or nloe ...,...... in a tiny Sail J9'1quin Valley bamlet Tuesday . nigh~ He had holed up In a n&<lown apartment bcwe 'lliursday with a girl and a guo, vowing not to be taken alive. "What is going to happen. hopelully, iS that the girl will come out first that you are with and you will follow her out with yoor bands up," Wtlllams said u a breezy rock time played in the bockgroond. . "And, uh, things will not be thrown at you and things like that," Williams added. W'illlams rererred to • cm!on ol police, armed with shotguns and wearing Oak jackets, around tbe nm-down, two-story apartment house where Si<elman bed sought refuge. A jittery auxiliary of two dozen reporters and photographers stood or crouched next to police cars and the concrete pillars Of a nearby freeway. "Willie Steelman, the girl first, please? And then you come out with nothing in your hands and both of them up." In spite or these assurances, which Steelman had demanded be broadcaat, it was five minutes and one tear gas shell later before Steelman emerged as lnstnicted, hands up. jail in nearby French camp to be charg. cd in Municipal Court. They were captured Thursday in Sa_gamento, 30 miles no~ of this cen- tral valley rann cooununity, and lx>oked Into the jail on nine count> or murder. Authorities said Steelman and Gretzler might alJio be lJrWd to I double slaying and the disappeoQl!Ce of two othel'll in Arl2ona. Gretzler waa arrest..i in a downtoW. hotel by Sacramento police . armed with shotguns. A short time later officer> hur)ed tear gas Into an apertment, rorc- lng Steelman from the room where he was holed up with a girlfriend. Police said that weapons which might have been used in the alaylngs in the small town of Victor near hen! Wed· nesday· were also found In the hotel. * * * Pr~hation .Report Showed Steelman . - 'Not Violent' • • ' SACRAMENTO (AP/ -fte l1niJ .,..... bollcll,..,n'"' WID!io,Luther Sleelman -1"lft eao llld: "No moJor Pmb- lems Dllle!I llld tile . -'"'" -to be good. ff Tbll1'9day morning the 28-yell'<>ld former mental patltill and dropout lh>m LndJ Hlib School emerged from a shabby white frame -encircled by 1Warma of armed polioe to face mus murder charges. A rew houn later Steelman and Douglas Gretzler, 22, of New Yorlt City, were -~ for lnvestlptlao ot 11 murden. Two victims were a Phoenix, Ariz., oouple slain Oct. :rl and nine per&oJIS in a San Joaquin County home Tuesday night. The tall, slender, 140-pound Steelman wearing a frizzy Afrostyle baln:ut look· Ing dazed and emotion!... as o!Dcen In bullet·proof vests threw him to the grass and seerched him from head to toe. California bad no prlJion record on Gretzler, arrested at a downtown Saeramento hotel 90 minutes earlier. Steebnan's record showed three forgery convictlms and report& of several alleged suicide attempts. "Nothing In our experience with him suggested any personal tendency towanl violence," Philip Guthrie, a Department of Correctiona spokesman, said or Steelman. tempt.." . 7.Upol1 made the ruling In the case oC Dooald mcteraon, w11o waa fired from JU Job u a supply clerk with the Department of Agricwture a11er tt WU Jeamed he bad been discharged from the army hecauae he was a -.uaJ. Kemper Given 'Life' On 8 Counts of Murder Information ' On Assassins SANTA CRUZ (AP) -Edmund Emil Kemper ID WU teatenced to life bn- 1 prlsoament today ftM;' the butchery of • till mother, her best friend and ab coed bltd!lllken. his fantasies. .., cut them up and ate th em and kept the head on a shelf and talked to iL I said some of those things I would bave said if she had been alive, in love with me and she bad been caring of me." Worth $50;0()0 SANTA CRUZ (UPI) -A Superior Kemper'• attorney Jamea Jackson Court Jury Thursdll)' fotmd Edmund E. called the venllct "not Uiii'easonable" Kemper m . a hulking, S.foot-9, 280-but said the legal definition of Insanity ._ OAKLAND (AP) -The rewanl !or pounder guilty of elgbt count> of lint· abould be changed because "there U. Information leading to the amst of de'""' inurder In the slayingll of elgbt no law written that will "'Ver Kemper ... penons Who pnned dolm '8dlool SUp!. women, Including his mother. Man:wi FOlter l'Oll!I to '50,000 as police Kemper who was to be sentenced -trie<t-to ~the 11•!1!muc~~-ad-tumec1·bimoe1bin·and·ploaded-Af " leUen clalml~ ~t f0i'1M lilllliig~--tnaui1y. He U. exempt from a· death OVJe T heater Ordered Sol,d Other achciol olOdalJi wore Under police penalty law that will not go · into effect protection Thuraday alter a letter from IB!til Dell year. Ille "Symblanooo Llbntioo AnnY" Judge Harry E. Brauer told the jury, clabned mponalbllily for the ambush "If I _,, a bit excited, I had some and threatened further ldlllngl. !ear you ""-ht pos.•lbly have arrived The ,....an! !or lnfonnatlon on the at a different vcnlict." He said he ; uaailant>lnltiated by a $10,000 olrer agreed with the decision reached after by Gov. Ronald Rtagan -was lncrea i!ic>\I Six ooun fA dellberatlon. by -$25,000 from the Fon! FoundaUon, Kemper conle.,.. to killing alx hltch- $10,900 from the Oakland City Council hiking ooeds, his mother and ber friend. and $5,000 from an anonymous cltlun. Kemper, who munlered hi! maternal The 111Y•terlouS communique, aent to grudparenll at age 15 and waa In· , 'a San Francisco newapoper and a 1Utullonallsed but later released u J!erteley radio atatloo. aald .. _...,. cured, testified that be had a recurring atlhl" onlen are In efloct aga!MI school 1.inlaly of killing women, eating their olflclala until "political pollce" are i..n.. anl taWni to thelr severed heads. removed from lhe achools. "I ldDed _..,,., .. he aakl, describing ESCONDIDO (UPI) -A theater which showed 1-rated movies was ordered sold Thur><lay by Munldpal Jucfgo Stuart • WillW as ·a coriiliUOn o! three years' probation. Walnut ProperUea, Jnc., Loa Angeleo, was ordered &o tell the "Pussycat Rltz, ',' fined $2(11) and onlered to ....., all operaUono In North San Dit(O Oounty !or tlree ~ The oale muat be to a !Inn which obowt movtea for gmeral audience t'Oll.SumpUon. .. Frld;i.y, November 9, 197) DAILY PrLOT 5 • ~rap-around sound buys Chetge It on your JCPennty ch1rgt e1rd. . :~eu:::E::-N:-:A-:P:::A::R-::K -~"---=sA:-:NT~A-:--:A::".N:-::~==-==-=. 0::-::R:-::A-:-:N:::'.GE__.. Beach at Orangethofpe 3900 SO. Brlatot -No. of So. Cout Plaza . City Dr. at Garden G•°"" Blvd. o,an Dolly t ::tO to t ::tO pm. 8undoy 10 to T 0ptn 10.t p.m. Diiiy 8undoy 1010 I Optn 10.1 p.m. Dolly Sundap 10 to I • 1 • ' t I . i • • • • .. '· ': .,, I ' • • • ' DAD .Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE The Rig ht · to Elect Even the experts would be at a loss to explain why Huntington Beach voters turned down Tuesday's charter change proposals. The measures seemed rather clear and simple, make the city ~ttorney, city clerk and city treasurer appointed officers , not elected. They are sup- posed to be qualified, professional individuals, not poll· ticians. But 56 percent of those marking ballots said "no" to each Item. It wasn't even very close, and there was no real organized opposition, but lots of support. Apparently the people, especially in this time of the Watergate controversy, aren't willing to give up some right they already have -in this case the right to elect certain officials. That feeling ts understandable, but you have to wish the people who are so concerned about honest, efficient government would take the trouble to thorough· ly study the issues before casting a vote. Elections often are decided on instinct, and Tuesday's loss in Hunting. ton Beach was apparently one or those casualties. Wall Va riation It almost seems like a miracle, but In this town of block walls -enough to· make China envious -the Huntington Beach Planning Commission has agreed to allow another !on;n of wan-to appear on-the scene. It wasn't an easy decision of course. Before com· missioners would allow wrought iron fences, they had to have a thorough staff study, and even after planners told commissioners that block walls do not block out much more noise than wrought iron fences, the commis- sion, in typical fashion, still split 4-3, narrowly allowing the newer, esthetically more pleasing form. Don't panic. The city's cement de!enses have not been e<>mpletely breached. The wrought iron fences, narrowly allowed by the commission, won 't be springing up all over town. They were okayed, but only for the ends of cul-de-sacs, the rounded tips of nelghbOrhood streets. Passing motorists will still have their chance to while away the blocks by counting solid walls as they move through the city •treet.s. All-year Guidelines Now that Fountain Valley school board trustees have approved a set of guidelines for beginning and end· ing all-year school, a lot of confusion and bitterness may be cleared up. UnW now, parents on both sides of this emotional issue hav e not known exactly what procedures the di& trict would follow in changing to the "45·15" school year -four nine-week sessions and four three-week optional intersessions. This, unfortunately, has led to splits in both the Plavan and \Vardlow school communities -the two schools currently involved: All-year school is a workable alternative. It involves -a change of lifestyle in-many-instances yet the educa- tional benefits may well compensate fo~ the change. All-year school is one of the most sensitive issues confronting the district. Ultimately, parents must be the on~s to decide. The district, however,.has the obligation to mform parents of the alternatives available as effi· ciently as possible. ' H 'Don 't forget to turn out the lights. There's an energy shortage, too, y'know!' 'F eministic' Dear (;looiny Gus Hopes for PuDIJaek Fro1n ArafJ Lands ' l Qualities I ltre Needed Shah Eyes U.S.-lsrael ·Relations I ' '-------. ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ :0ne reason I am in favor of the lf<imen's Lib movement goes beyO!ld tbe fact that simple justice demands con and equal rights for women. It iS because I believe that the future ol the human race . riaay depend upon a wider and deep-ct acceptance of ·2eministic" quali· ties in our civiliza- t~n. ~To say that men *d women are, :tid should be treat· fl! as, equal, is ~t to say that the t\\1> sexes are ifentical. There are profound differences tt:tween them, not only in terms of flology but in terms of the effective -~e of living. f NOT AU. characteristics are "culture- tbund." Some, I believe, are inherent iO lhe maleness or femaleness ol every ~cies. 'l1le woman's endocrine glands ~m to \\"Ork differently from the n's; her central nervous system may anically respond in a different way. Given this difference , what the "llbera· ' of \\'Omen \vould mean is not ly allowing her equal rights and ~tunities \Vith men, but also in- corporating more of the "feministic" tlaits into the dominant fabric of our i. lture. In all male-dominated cultures of the fast, the "masculine" qualities have Don't you just love His Majesty's sincerity about the energy crisis? Air Force One, helicopters, yachts, golf carts, trips to Camp David, Key Biscayne and' San Clemente. complete with entourage ..• he's beautiful! A. J.S. Gloomy 0111 C-IM!lftl .,.. ~"" llY rNCl«I l lld • Ml -rlly rlfl«f flll ¥1tw1 ot JIM --s..i 'l'Mr ll't ,....., 11 G,_'1' Ou1. D1llY '°llot, been the most prized and sought-for-ag- gressiveness, acquisitiveness and in- dependence. In primitive, pre-industrial societies, these were indeed the traits most required to keep alive and combat nature and defend oneself against ene- mies, personally and tribally. IN OUR MODERN technical, alroost post-industrial society, these same traits are more dangerous than useful, unless t<mpered and modified by t h e "feminine" traits of sympathy and semitivity and the need to nurture rather .. than to conquer. 1'1e goals of women have always been more personalistic and humanistic than those of men . Woman's added status in the coming world could be a tremendous instrument for peace, for more ·humane treatment of one another, for the understanding that preservation of life is more im- portant than the pursuit of trophies. \VOMAN must enter the mainstream of culture not as a man maaque but as herself, with her own unique en- dowment and the special ·contribution she brings to the solution of our problems in living together. To become "equal" with men means not to do everything they do, but to become fully 11e,,.u and fully contributing to mankind's goals. TEHERAN Proof or u . s . "credibility" in pressing Israel lo withdraw from its Arab territories in Egypt and Syria captured in 1967 would modify and possibly' cancel a n t i • American production cutbacks by the oil-rich Arab states, lhe Shah of 'Iran suggested in an P.x- clusive interview. Iran itself, the sec- ond-largest Middle East oil producer, · did not join the pro- duction cutback. As the leader of 32 million non-Arab Moslems with in· timate t i e s to WfShington and correct relations with Moscow, the Shah is by far the most important independent power on the edge of the explosive Middle East. · More to the point, Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi is determined to replace the British as guarantor of lhe most vital waterway in the world today, the Persian Gulf. Without Persian Gulf passage of uncountable oil tankers, the entire economies of Japan and Weste rn Europe would strangle for lack of oil. CONSEQUENTLY, the Shah, handsome at 54 with the sleek assurance of total authority and 32 years in power, is to be carefully listened to. "The United States has always sup- ported the principle of t h e in· admissability of acquiring land by force," he told us in the gold~ed office of his Niavaran Palace high in the hills overlooking his capital. "Israel has no choice but to leave the Arab lands it captured in 1967." But what if that doesn't l'iappen? The Shah, choosing his words carefully, said that Israel could never alone handle j I \ ' ' f ! I lncre<Mes In Welfare Expenditure Should Require Taxpayer Approval . ~ To get on with some needed reforms tiere at Babylon. The ones we were tooling around with in response to dear 1-eader Art Hcsbon's comment that I thould do more than criticize; I should ruggest. , The first column in ihi s now-and-then trimer on be tter overnment dealt ilh taxes. Now that i;i.'c ha\'C ken the dough m !he folks. fair· y and openly, what bout some cost con· 1--~f'Ou?-Jusl-heca e get the money to ' cramento doesn't we can throw it around like con- cttL Right? A major Item in the slnte (and county ) lb'>~ I& public assistance: Welfare and Ith care '<rvlces. About 31 percent" 'f the state's general fund goes for bJlc asslslnncc -12.1 bl!Uon. In most Ue&, •bout 50 percent of the budget !-·'--ii''~ f!!f Wtifare. All·in-alll federel, st•I< local expenditures or welfare in lilomla wlll total about 16 billion ln s-n. TRB SLUE coolltltuUon &a)'S 'public l<'Ucltkm !hill have firSt call on the 1e·s money. It cloem't, not--117. 'tUare Wiii the dog. Even wtth the "'°'°""' of the Reagan admlnlstraUoo, ( RUS WALTON ) there . seems no end in sight to the rise or welfare costs. There is, perhaps, a way to control those costs: set a maximum . Enact a two-part amendment to the State Constitution: .. (Section One ) It Is the stated policy of the pepple of califomfa that in any fiscal year not more lhan (25) percent of the total state general fund revenues shall be expended for public assistance -programs-and thlo-Slnte-J;egtslatnr.-shall control such annual appropriaUons IO as not to exceed that amount for that purpose," .. (SecUon Two) No county shall tn- crease taxation for the puf"POM of In- creased expenditures for p u b l l c assistance progr~ without such being first presented as an increase in the ln1 rate and approved by & ~rity of the electorate in that county." SCREAMS? !fell halfi no fury Die tlii howls that amendment w""l.d • catlffl Some wOUld term the amen&nent un- constitutional. I mean, whoever heArd of the people having a voice In the amount of their money spent for wellaro or Medi.cal? That Is bmsy! Well, It may be bmsy but It Is time lhe taxpayers had more or a say about where their money goes. As it Js now, public schools offer the taxpayer virtually the only opportunity to vote on taxes. And the result is that citizens vote "No" on schools because welfare keeps gnawing at their takehome pay. Another suggestion. G o v e r n m e n t bureaucracy sh(lu!d be put on a business- like basis. With incentives for reducing cost. rather than rewards for expanding budgets. Take a well-run business, for example. A smart manager says to his workers : "[f you can turn out more gldgets for less money, while maintaining quality controls, I'll split the increased profits lth--¥ou " The-worker:a tum to and turn themselves a bonus. YOU CAN'T compute a coot-per-gidget in government, but you can compute lhe cost for most departments for specific functions and services. Why not say to the supervisors and employes In a department or division : 11Your annual budget is $4. mUllon. The projected workload Is X·number of cases (or X man-hours). If you can handle the-worltload-wlth re......-man-hours (or less operating cost), we'll &pilt the aav• ings with you. Half for the taxpayers, and half for a pay locrease for you ." We'd be ahead, and the-state empioyes would make more moneY. As It 11 now, the division chief lnket Increased stature • (and salary) on the number of Indians In his teepee. ( EVANS ·NOVAK J a situation in which the Arabs' ally, the Soviet Union, chose to use its power. Only the U.S. could do that. "But ror what reason?" he asked rhetoricaUy. "One cannot expect the United States to risk destruction of itself and the whole world because Israel \vants to stay in Sinai." The S h a h also came down hard against U.S.--Soviet participation in any United Nations force e v e n t u a 1 l y established to guarantee Israel's security behind the old, pre-1967 lines. The two great powers should avoid personal in- volvement he told us. "It might seem practical," he said, "but it is not right for the great powers to take responsibility everywhere. That prevents other countries from doing what they should be doing. It creates a situa- tion where other countries simply choose up sides between lhe great powers and become satellites." The Shah declined to discuss actual U.S. policy in the Middle East today : the times are too sensitive be said. But the general feeling was expressed fortibly to ~ by lesser government offici~ls. 1.t is that Washington's Middle East policy is so muddled that it cannot really be defined. STARTING WITH the Eisenhower ad- ministration's ineXP,lieable withdrawal of the olfer to sell arms to Egypt in 1955 ·and continuing to the present, knowledgeable Iranians call that policy self-destructive at incalculable cost to the U.S. They hope the change implicit in lhe ceasefire is real and that Israel. \\'ilh ironclad guarantees, will pull out of Arab land. Yet, the Shah does not agree that all-out U.S. support of Israel and the consequent Arab appeal for aid to Moscow explain the Soviet Union's grow- ing presence in lhe Eastern MeQiter· . ranean and in Iraq, which has a long border with Iran. TO THE CONTRARY, the Shah noted ' ancient Russian aims for \\'arm-water outlets and recalled that German Kaiser \\'ilhelm nurtured the dream of a railroad from Berlin to Baghdad and Persian Gulf ports. But the Arab-Lsraell struggle has simply handed ~1oscow greater levernge. Given obvious and historic Iranian fear of a strong. unified Arab world , the Shah"s call for U,S. muscle in dealing with· Israel is significant. Iran hu close but informal relations With Israel and most politicians here regard a healthl Israel as a. vital co'unterwelght to ant · Iranian hositiliLy fro1n' such radical Arab' states as Iraq. This Israeli connect ion. never publicly discussed. Is in1port ant to Jran. But lhat calls for a secure lsracl on pre-.1967 borders, not an lsrael whose presence on the Suez Canal enables ·the Arabs to surmount their intense rivalries; not an Israel, in short, that drives the 1 Aral>J close to tlie veey· unity which • someday might.. prove dangerous to the Shah of Iran and his country. What 'Proud' Tradition? To the Editor: This is a note to express my outrage at the caption wxler the picture of the legs of lhe graduates of the Naval Officer Candidate School. .. A Proud Tradition Falls" you wrote. Is the policy of discri.r:ilinatJon prac- ticed in this nation against all those \1•ho are not white males a tradition y,•e should be proud of, or one whose fall we should mourn? WIIEN the ·Naval Officers candidate School stopped its discrimination agajnst men of color, did the newspaper print a picture of black, brown, and yellow male faces i9terspersed among the white, then caption the picture "A Proud Tra- dition Falls"? Of C9t1rse not! Racism is a tradition whose fall we celebrate. But, when capable women from all races break down barriers, like the ones set up by the United States Navy, their legs are photographed, and their struggle is disapproved. SHAME on the DaUy Pilot and may the discrimination against all groups in America who do not fit lhe white male standards of ·~~~~~· ::lJRPHY Anawer To lhe Editor: I have an answer to all our problems. Elect Eric Severeid President I don't think he needs any help, but If he Wfelcs - MAILBOX Lttt1n "-rMdtrt 1r1 wtttonM. Nomi1llr Wrltlfl IJllulll C-.Y fllllr fl'lllllfft lfl at WOl'fl It ltll. Tiii 1191111 ti ClllllMlt Mltt.rl '9 fft Y.U tt lllrniNll 111111 It rt'Mn'llll. All llntn -II 111- ckl!M lllMI""" 8IMI Mlllhlt Milf'ft1, llvl "'"'" m1r Ill Wl'.tllllllll 111 .....,.., K wffkllllt rNtH II ...... ,...,_ , ... ,., Wl'.11 ... Ill ,....1 ....... • does, make Howard K. Smith Vice Presi· dent. BETWEEN them they know all the answen, not only to the present but to the future. But jtm Jn case even they need some help, I nominate the editor of the Daily Pilot to aaaist them. Even God doesn 't know everything these men know. ARTHUR D. GASKIN Dl_.,Ufl To the F.clitor: After reading your editorial against Proposition I I have at long last discovered that .YOU are Democratic paper: That leave.s yoU out of my life as my blood pressure cannot stand reading a dirty Democratic paper. • I am a comparaUvely new &Ubscriber to your sheet but I cao easily gel I fiction writers and poets and those are the things that count. JUST AS he was being tested 11)' : a bWlch of eggheads for some kind ' of teaching credentials, he blew his , stack and started tearing up the papers . and things and running around on a long table. About this time. the students : started tearing up the school and break-: ing windows and burning book; The show ended with this hero-type 1 teacher making violent love to a student '. on a little balcony while the students did in the school (or zoo or insane asylum ) below. NOW TRE redeeming quality of this ' is that a lot of us oldUmen were ' very thankful that we were too dumb for higher eduCation. We just IOWed . our wild oats in ·our dumb, anlmallsUc : ma.Mer without paying tuition. We called: it raising hell; we didn't try to put ' it oil as culture or a revolution for ; greater "things. Of course, If we could have spouted 1 a little poetry or .something about Greek gods, ,or told about fiction writers or \ spoken a bit of Latin, it would still 1 have been hell-raising and there's no ~ redeeming quality for that. · 1 JIM BOLDING• OIANM COAST DAILY PILOT along WlthclUt it Rob~ N. Wctd, Pubii;htt Wilen the boy collects the DUI ilme ... I will c:ance1 my aubo<rlptioo. TIU/IMI ICHllil, Editor E. V. WILKIE Bo1bcra lC~tlbick The Dallv Pilot, an mdlpendent .EcUtoliat Page~dltor , publicatlan tl•d to "° political partv, n.e edltortRI ,JNIC" of 1"1; DollJr. viewtd Propolltiow I GI • """""°r.!Uart Plklf .-. 10 lnloml and llllmullle isltu:. Longtime reader1 ori awari we .-.ters by lftlft!dns: on this ~ hove endoh1d nutncrow Rf:Jn'blican ~(c:ommtntvy"on' tOptcs Ot tn- candidate1 -111 toeU al ~tic trut by .)indicated columni1t1 and ca!ldfd<ltts. Editor ~11. by PfOlil•tng • r..,.m ro.. readen' Y~• anit by Pl'Htflll"8' this · ,, __ .. o• .. D II• newspaper'• optnionai anc1 tcte1.1 on ,...... .. a .,,.,,...,\ topt.,.. n.. -'1· op1nt0ns To Ute Edit«.: of tM Dally Piiot aw!oar on!)' I• IM I •·I-I mlloed It rn-lllYtii'~, -1-edlt«tol 1 cotomn •t ft>o 10p of u.. .. _ ,.._ . -Opinions··-by the CCII-I juat ca.ush~ the end of Uie TV movie. umntlll and ....-1o10 and lo;(.,. It Ji:J~ unlvenlty ( •r a IOO qr a 1WJ'lttrs lft thttr own and no tndoc-se-· • . -"'11 of the studtllta ac\lll1 ~O! 1l!tl vi 1h uke ~ ldkita. "1""'" .... this • ;.'l:t ...,Id ~ ~ • Dolly ;: ~ .. tba..:O~~ :i:! · Fttdar, Nol'elllber 9, 1973 -smm( beoluse . be tnew all about . • I ·.VOL Si lo Sil .aided · ~cope men c The E.Ho of the a sen -stif beca miss Jam a lea and t 1ilen ID di • tk . ,. . f .. ... • c • , • .___,, l • -- Orange Coast . -- ' Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks ' -. ~ • VOL 66, NO~ 313, 4 SECTIONS, 48-PAGES, --~ORANGE CO.UNTY, CALIFQR"lJA _....m.RIDAY NOVEM~ER 9, 1973 N TEN CENTS ~oas Watergate Six Get Sentenced WASHINGTON (UPI) -Judge John J. Slrlca handed light oenteoces today lo six original Wfleilate defendanll who •ided investigators in breaking open the ~cope · of the scandal. Three of the jail men could be free by Chrislmas. The stiffest sentence was given to E. Howard Hunt, the rormer White House employe who admitted being a prime planner of the break·in at Democratic national ·headquarters. Sirlca sentenced· him lo 211 ID eight years in prison and'linOO hlm 110,000: Fpw-' o.thert got minimumJeDtences of one year eoch and the other 18 mgntbs_ • - The final sentences were far diflereat from the inillal sentences given the six and the final sentence given G. Gordon Liddy, the one original defendant who would not talk to Watergate in- vesligators. Sirica gave provisional sentences of up to 45 years to the six in January. Liddy is 1erving a minimum term of slx years, eight months. He abo was fined 1411,000. V·oi~e of Loot Radio Solves Its Own Tlieft By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 "'' Dalh' l'llet lllff A GRUFF VOICE that must have sounded like the wrath of God Himself to four juvenile wrongdoers oolved a Balboa Island theft case Tbursd;1y..,nlght. Newport Beach Fire Department Capt. Ed Hanlon and several of his ·men-from the island station responded to a medical aid call on Agate· Avenue during the dinner hour. The pocket communications rfctio }\e carried was set aside while firemen adininistered oxygep to a young Marine who had reportedly_ imbibed too much fruit of the vine. ' DURING THE PERIOD when Capt. Hanlon wasn't watching his radio and ~obody was watching the household youngsters, the small device disappeared. . . All four youngsters innocently denied kno,vledge of the nuss1ng radio receiver, so the captain went out to his fire truck, supposedly to · see if he'd left it there. Instead, he called Dispatcher Ed McPherson and asked him to bro~tine station check call in. a minute or· two. i\.rsPECTOR ART Morton sai~ today Capt. Hanlon returned to the house and said he just couldn't figure out where he lost his radio -Ulen watched the kids' faces. · · . · Fear and dismay flashed across their faces as Ute gruff ·voice boomed out of a dresser drawer: "KMB 434 .•. testing ••.• 1 --. 2 •.. 3 •.. 4 ... " The captain's lost radlo was retrieved and the kids Were given a stern warning. Police Study Murder Rap, ' On 104-year-old Man Consultant Suggests Rerouting tiy L. PETER KRIEG Of lfle DMlr 'lltt Sta" Newport Beach needs $61 million In ~t improvements, including a second crossing over Upper Newport Bay, to help solve the traffic overload choking the city, a consultant bas recommended. The consultant's report, which took nearly three years to prepare, was released today and also says that Pacific Coast Highway should be dead-ended at both sides of the Santa Ana River. lt says the hlghway should be rerouted to the north as It. crosses Newport Boulevard and should connect with the terminus of the Newport ·Freeway in Costa Mesa then continue westerly into Huntington Beach. · The aecond bay crossing as proposed by the firm of Alan M. Voorhees and Company Of San Difgo and endorsed by a citizens committee, should be kept just to the north of the· existing Coast Highway bridge ahd then should swing north to the intersection of Dover and Westcli!f Drive near the Costa Mesa city limits. The consultant said the $67 million cost would be divided between city taJ:. payen, the state, Orange County and possibly other aources. But, Voarbees said 127 million '!! the coot wtD fall Oil local lapQ!n ml be conceded the city may ba>e diffkulty raising that kind of mooey over the Sirfca explained thot he .W no ln- teatioa Gl .jivinc the men the masimum ...,!....,.. he banded In Jlllllllr)' If they Q>Operated with authorities. ,Fralllc A. Sturgis, Virgilio R. Gonzalez By lin.AllY KAYE -' next 20 to 25 years. O'Rourke is waiting for a medical The plan does DOC Include a recom- and Eupnenlo R. Martlnea -three Of 1111 __, ""' 1t1t1 of the four oo-<:alled "Solditt11" In the An SZ.year-old maa died in Huntington break-in -were giveD. aeotences of Beach eootra1eecent Hospllal this week, one to four years. bl ---· ~-. Since the three bave beeo behind bars possi y •=wtlng ~· a beating with a s!llO by his 1114-year-old roommate. history for Rhode since he left Hanford meodation for a bypass of downtown to deterinine whether be might have Corona del Mar as bad been originally suffered subsequent injuries to the bead proposed. which may have caused his death. Voorhees had initially recommended constructing a sll.·lane expressway on D4:1tr '"" Stiff ,..,, -. NEWJ!ORT. BeACH'S MALKARA . $MITH · AND· MOM Tr1n1l•tion of Turkish Documents Bring SurpriM Turkey Toddler Newport Girl Named After Town By JOHN ZALLER daughter citizenship. j'.JI, j Of llMI Dtllr l"lltt Steff _A letter from the mayor ol the town, '1 When lt-m:inth-old Malkan> Smith Tahsin Eren. said in part: "We ... grnwa up·sbe will go to Turtey. • all <!OePIY -bJ Mr.· ... firs: Sbe -·1 need a ~-Smltlis --- --. I the NeWjiort-Beach toCldler has already wiib41ltlle l.llii'lilitiia -....--, become 1 Turkish citizen. and healtby Ille." And JI she wrltu a letter to a nttle .TIJe mayor lllao aaked tor ~ town nestled In the hllls outside Istanbul of Malkai-a and invlted the Sritltha, Im to say ~ is coming, she can erpect Port Seabourne, to visit Turkey again the townspeople to tum out to greet soon. ' her, perhaps with a modest parade. The Smiths were traveling 9Cl'OSS The reason is simply her name. . Europe in a Volksw1:gen van about four • for nearly 11 IDOlltha, they may be ~Ueo in-Killp-C<JUnty are await. _fi-eecLbefore the yeads ®t •• -:o----.--lng-~-"-repoi-t-from-Omge A spokesman for the Orange County the old pacific coast freeway rigbt-of·way Corotier'SOffice, however, saic:f'Rhode's-between -Hirbor View-Bills-and-old autopsy Indicated 6e iliecnrom a blooa-eorona-del-Mar. In the town of Malkara, population )'l!ars ago. They bad just enterod Turkey 13,000,-Malkara-Smith -JS-considered-on-their -wa)'-fD IatanbuJ-wbea-tbey,--~-1 almost-a...naUve..daugbltr. notioed-lhey..were.zwmtnii-out.of ps..---~HI Beman! L. Bar•, the fourlb member ,, __ lo 4e1«m1ne -Luciano of the Miami-area "Sokllers," recetved _._...,. · Rivas, 104, llhou!d be cbarpd with the a sentence of 18 months to si1 yeara murder of Walter Rhode, a. -stiffer than the other three, apparently 'Ibe uaauJt occurred four months ago because he recruited them for the in a convalescent home in Hanford, mission. ,, miles south of Fresno. James W. A1cCord . along with Hunt Rivas was originally charged with a leader In the planning of the break-in assault wltb a deadly weapon, but Kings and the defendant who lint broke his CoWlty District Attorney John O'Rourke silence to provide evidence to ·the cOurt, saki be decided not to prosecute at was given a one-lo five-year sentence. lhat ~. --.----· Unlike the Ptiiami area men, McCord "Since the death of Rhode , however, has been free on bond since the trial. we are reviewing the charges to see Sirica said it was his iottntlon that if we should charge Rivas with murder," McCord spend at least a year in jail. O'Rourke oald. Lawyers for the defendants asked for "It's a very unusual situation to have leniency, one pleading that the men a 104-year-old man who is able lo commit 'Ille four "Soldiers" and Hunt pleaded a crime of this kind," be added. guilty in January to charges of con- clot resulting from an old injury. Voorhees conceded the report waa "We can't be certain bow old the tailored toward public acceplance and injury is," eipJained the spoke.wan, does . not neee,swi!Y inclu~ 1the ~t "but our investigation showed that Rhode ~cal solutions to the oty s traffic did not have any further injuries." ills. A relative in Huntington Beach moved 1be report says that the recommended Rhode from the Hanford convalescent plan "does not eliminat~ all transporta· home to Pacifica Hospital in Huntington tion deficiencies, but it does present BeaQh and then to the Huntington Beach solutions which are likely to obtain puhlic Convalescent Hospital. ac.ceptance and support necessary for "It may be several weeks before we implemenlatioo." get the full report on Rhode," said A3 a soluUon to the downtown Corona O'Rourke. del Mar traffic crush, the consultant "At that time we'll decide whether calls for limitation of on-street parking to seek an indictment agaimt Rivas. at least on a limited basis and perhaps We understand he is presently in another at all times. . . convalescent home in Tulare." The report says a full-time parking prohibition "will require provision or "When we named our daughter, we Wlth only American. 0utd. and never dreamed that the town would German currency they foond tbomlelves ever do anything for us," says Malkara's in a gaa station' outside Malkari. with 111?,lber, Susan Smith. no way to pay (or the fuel. And they We named her Mali:ara because we had no way to oXnmunicate their prob- were sincerely grateful to the town of Jem. Malkara for the time we were stranded "It was a strange eountry and we there and were able to get help." didn't have any idea what might happen "But it aeems like our friendly rela· I thought we might be ltranded ·ther~ tionship is going to continue," she said. for ever." 1 • That may be an understatement. At that poin~ a young man approocbed In what the. Smith's believe may bave the Smiths, found that he coWd "'°" been a spec1al meeting of the town. municate with them in German, and • council of Malkara, the local officials listened to their pnblem. drafted an official resolution giving their Then with 1 aweeping eesture with his arm, he aaid '·follow IM". and led the Smltho back inlo the hllls toward what turoed out lo be the hear! of Malkara. 8.J)iraey, burglary, bugging and wiretap- ping. McCord and Liddy, like Hunt, a former \Vhite House emplO:ye, were con· victed . • Llddy was rgiven an additional sentence ot 8 to 18 months for refusing to tesWy ~ore a federal grand Jwy. He lllao fa<es contempt of •Congress charges. Hunt's lawyer, Sydner Sachs, told Sirica that Hunt's health is deteriorating and that forcing him to spend any more time in jail might "do further harm ~o him." Airport at Ch .ino Hills Draws ·scAG Oppositinn olf-street parking spaces to replace the on-street spaces" at a cost of up to $8.000 for each ot the 250 spaces. That would put the \,otal cost upwards of 12 million. Other major recommendations that councilmen Monday are expected to refer to the planning commission for public bearings: -Construction of a new interchange . at Pacific Coast Highway and Newport Boulevard (the Arches ) at a cost of IU million. Stocks Plummet; Dow Loses 24.24 NEW YORK (UPI) -Stock prices suffered their worst deeline today in more than 11 years on the New York Stock Exchange amid fears of severe economic dislocations due to the, energy crisis. There the Smiths were Introduced iO the local banker; he Ulol: care GI their · currepcy problem. "'Ibere's no way I could say bow grateful we were," Mrs. Smith says. Wbeo their daughter was born, the Smiths remembered ~ experience in Malkara and named her after the town. It was a name. they considered u.susual, melodic, and feminine. To find out what it meant, . they wrote for information from the town clerk. Orange C.ut Weatller Low clouds and local fog !'llht and early morning bourt, other. · wise sunny Saturday, accofd.ing to the weather service. .IJttJe temperature change. Hlghl at Ute beaches In the lni<M!Os rjalng · tO-· 74 Inland . Overnlgttr lows 56-58. INSIDE TOlti\ l' Southern Californta11 fir! i cJin·ner plauhowe is open Q11d .. tllrivJng in San Clemente. A re· • view o/ ita /ifst production, th• mvsfcal "Oklahoma,'" wili bt, f01tnd in todau'i \V eekencJer tt~tlon. . , Id YMr Stnrlc• i • -Ulllltn t4 ......... ,. .. M. .... I .......... ' '-~ ...... . -" -" --' ...... , ... ' "'-" 't1·2J ""' .... ..,. ,: :t..' ' ..... ~1 J,Wflef........ It ........ '""' . °'"'" C*""' 1 .......... ,,.. tMdl ,__... &II ....,,. , .. ,, T-If -..... -. .,..... ..... 11-11 .... -...... 4 .... , ,, ... . By JACK BROBACK Of .. a.I,, l"ltlt Sl.tf Although citing serious deficiencies in Orange County air transport i;apabilltles, the executive committee of the Se\lthem California Association of Government Thursday tbreW cold wafer on Chino Hills as a protial>le airport site. The SdAG commlttee approved the final draft of ita .Southern C.IUomia RegJonal Airport Systeit) Plan, a fllltl,lltltl 1 project -""" by a consultant. The ldopled report said the pro~ Chino Biils airport would be in cOOfllct wilb ~ plans for a wildlife prfierie ID the 21,000 acre area. SCAp }!.U pnrioully •Pl!] eel lano for tllo> p~e.· U.. Cl the an.. IDlls area aJ an opeu space pre91r,. lo also an adopted . policy GI the Orange County Board of, Supervisors. The SCAQ report aaid preoent major alrporta, principally Loi Aogcles lntema· tional and OntariO International could be used lo meet Increased travel demands lo at least 191tl. But It added, '"In lbe decade to 1990 demllld,may exceed capacity of ex~tlng airports by up ID ~ million annual .,._ra ""l!llrJne new facilities at loclltklnl to be leleciOd later. ''ThL-i lll'IOul doflctend!!L are antlcptted In · Oranp, Venlura and western Riven.Ide COunty' areas," Ute report added. The Chino Hllll alrpod, propoood by a "°'1)0ratlon ·-by Reg Wood of Sula Alia bu -e,ndoraed by the , .._ _________ _. ,city ol A ..... -~ ~--- / I ' sidering a joint powers agreement to fiaance the venture. All nothem Orange County cilies oppose the airport plan. Leaving the way open for 10lving future air transport pfoblems locally, the SCAG report stated that the decision for any future airports anywhere in the region shouJd be made at the local level. Orange County Airport which is cur~ rently sei;ving about 1.2 m i 11 i o n passengers a year should be able to handle two million by 1900, the report stated. However, no future ezpansion of the airport was recommended with the traffic leveling oU at the two million figure. $2,000 in Loo.t Taken by Thief A young buslneu firm vice president lost nearly 12,000 In peroonal,belongings le> a buJ'glar wbo broke into his West Newport condomlnlum home, lt was discovered Thuradq. Investigators were contacted when J. Michael t,mml's brolller stopped by the residence at 4424 W. Coast Highway and dlsOOVerlil Ille tii'eak-ln. The victim returned home and calculated his lou at $1,955, including televiskmt •tereo, coat, ring, aeveral half-gallon oottles of liquor ml an an· lique bank fashioned llke an organ artncler with a aiGake)'. -ElimiDation of Coast Highway park- ing from Dover Drive to· Newport Boulevard, either part-time or full :ime. -Construct.ion of a "relatively lO\V (See TRAFFIC, Page !I The Dow Jones: industrial average plunged 24.H point. -!he worst single drop since a loss of 34.11:; points. on May 28, 1962. . Tttmowr was moderate, totaling abouf 17,500,000 shares, compared with Thursday's 19,650,000 shares. Within a few weeks they received a sheath GI document. from Turtey, but they were unable to tramlate them. However, .after·their plight wu revealed (~. TURllEY, Pqe I) CURRENT COAST HIGHWAY WOULD IND IN CUL DE SAC IN THIS CONFIGURATION Traffft Would Be Rorouttd on N.,. Highway Forthor lnl1nd on Wut / l ) - N Friday. NO\'t,,..btr Q, l91J ... 2 DAl l1' PILOI -------- 198 Years Marines Cel.ebrate Birthday By WILIAM SCHREIBER 01 tl'M O•llr Pllol 11111 Gallapt U.S. ti.tarlnes tltrough 198 years or Corps history were hOnorcd In a splash of cdlol's an"d --patriotism Friday at El Toro lltarlne Corps Air Station. Full c;iress unifonns, flashing sabers, John Philip Sousa marches una a stan- ding-room-only crowd on the base runway heralded the Marine birthday with a pageant believed to be the first or Its kind at El Toro. A booming, 13-gll:n salute -which frightened some young children to tears -greeted the flags of each squadron as they paraded in front of the crowd. Among honorees during the celebration were the oldest and the youngest Marines at the base. Q>I. Walter Redmond, 55, and Pvt. Harold Kirkman, 17, marched in review shoulder to shoulder to a march played by tbe Third Marine Aircraft band. The pageant included a display of 1'-1arlne corps uniforms down through history with narration of the Corps' famous battles. Uniforms included the green and red outflt of American Revolution h1arines, the plumed hat unifonn of the Indian and Mexican wars and the plain blue of the American Civil War. The :98th birthday celebration included feisUvitles marking-the 31st anniversary of the founding of the Third Marine Aircraft Wing, which makes up El Toro 's Marine contingent. Highlighting the pageant was a real life re-enactment of the raising of the flag atop a nigged peak on Iwo Jtma Session Called durln~ World War II. Durmg the cue.monies comments Were ofrered by base commanding generals JI. F. ~lill and\\'. R. Quinn. llill. a majoi-general, said the an- niversary t'is ·ctlebrated In memory of those brave A1arines \.\'ho so richly cn- do\l:cd our corps v.•ith laurels and tradi· tion as a renlinder that we are the guardian of all t~t lhey have rought and died for." Hill said that ''for the first time In many years our country is not in· volved in armed conflict. It is a time not only to enjoy the v.·arm comradeship of our fellow Marines , but to reflect briefly on where v.•e are going." HiU said professionalism and loyalty \\•ill still be the byv.'ords of the l\1arine Corps in peace as \\'C11-as war. The role of U.S. I\'larineS' in 1he Viet· nam conflict \\'as played up during the celebration with prominent mention of each sqadron's battle field activities and history during that war. Atop each squadron flag, fluttered bat- tle ribbons and unit citations gathered through years of combat, some stret- ching as far back as the First World War. The crowd waa reminded In several of the talks, of the men who are stll missing in action afte r the Southeast Asia war and of those who served Jong terms as prisoners of war. ' The Ceremonies were ended with the cutting of ·a huge, two-tiered birthday cake by the commanding generals. The oldest and youngest Marines got the first two slices. • TRAFFIC .•. pronle" brld8' to ,.ploce ljle em/Ing Coast fflibWllJI bridge over Newport Bay at a C<N!t of "-~ mlll1on. -Widening Coast Highway to six Janes from Dover Drive to MacArthur Booltvarcl. -Widen SUperlor Avenue oo tht el:-. !sting alignment lo a four-lane divided road. -Wklen 15th Street to JDfil'llnes between Superior and NewpotfBoutevard then extend it westerly to intersect with !he proposed re-routed Coast Highway. -Widen Irvine Avenue to four lanes from 15th Street to Clif! Drive. -Widen Jamboree Road from four to six lanes:. -Widen MacArthur Boulevard to 1lx lanes. -Widen Ford Road to four or six lanes. -Construc t University Drive from Tustin A venue to the Corona del Mar -Freeway link at a cost-of $4.4 million. -Widen New MacArthur Boulevard from Pacific View Drive to Ford Road and extend it across old l\1acArthur Boulevard to Pacific Coast Higb\vay below Newport Center. -\Video Newport Boulevard from Coast Highway to 30th Street to six lanes. -\Viden Balboa Boulevard between 33rd and 44th Streets. There are also two project8 reom- mended within the Costa Mesa city limits. One calls on Costa Mesa to continue University Drive (Del Mar Avenue ) between Tustin Avenue and the Newport Freeway. The cost would be $2.3 million. Another projed calls on Costa Mesa lo build 17th s1 .... t lo connect wilh the Newport Freeway on the West and to widen it easterly to Orange Avenue. Israeli Snag Threatening Tui:Ki;~: ~ Peace Accord ill Mideast in the Daily Pilot Tuesday, lbe Stn.lths found themselves delug~ by 30 separ8te . offers of help. As the transl ating work was done they were surprl!ed to fmd out the great Interest the Turks took 1n their By United Press International Although Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger today announced Israeli and Egyptian acceptance of a six-point truce plan that would lead to a formal peace conference, a last minute disagree- ment developed in Israel and the Cabinet met in emergency session to study the snags. An Israeli spokeSman said the govern- ment would issue a communique later on Kissinger 's compromise solution. But in the meantime there was no official comment on his announcement whlch apparently took Prime Minister Golda Meir by surprise. She canceled a sched· uled television appearance. withdrew. They did. -Syrian troops on the northem front repeatedly opened Ure at Israeli patrols wi th small arnis and sporadic artillery fire during a three-hour span during the morning. Israel answered v.·ith small arms fire and no casualties were reported. daughter. · "We have been told by Turkish people who called us that it is ei:traordirtary for this type of thing to happen," said l\1rs. Smith. "They say if we return to Turkey, while these officials are still in office they probably· would close down the shops for the day and give us a parade." J Harte~us ,Def ense Lawyer Takes Stand, Rips Woman • .J 1 ........... ~~ ~. • I • I .. .... . Ultfl .. ;--• I CCMlllllCftOM TO .MMIO•ll~ ,._ ___ , ,-~§---....... · ....... . • THIS IS WHAT NEW UPPER NEWPORT IAY CROSSING WOULD LOOK LIKE Bridge Would Supplomont Old Bock Boy Bridge "" CoHi H19hwoy ... • -. .... RELCX:::.O COAST ~=·i·=·~~~.,·~· ~·:·:·::·~~~· ~·::·:·:·::·:::·~y··:···••lj :;.< ~~~------------~~!~------~~~~~ :: .,; l f~ ----------------------'---'·· . HAS THIS FIFTH AVENUE ROUTE BECOME MISSING LINK IN TltAfflC PLAN? Expro11woy Along Old Coost FrHwoy Routo Throueh Coron• dtl Mo< Submtrvtd In Ropert Fifth Avenue Bypass · Dead Neivport City Manager Denies Coun.cil 'Directive' -The consultant doing the Newport Beach traffic study erased his reoom- mendation for a Filth Avenue bypass through Q>rona del Mar after a top-level meeUng with city olliciab, Including two · councilman, City Manager !lObert L. Wynn confirmed today. Wynn denied reports that lhe coun- cilmen had issued "a directive" that the controversial downtown bypass be stricken. Among those attending the meeting were Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis, Coun- cilman John ·store and William Agee, chairman of the Citizens' Transportation Plan Advisory Committee. "All we did is ask them if there \.\'asn't some way you can word the report so it doesn't polarize the pro- bypass and anti-bypass people ~ much," Wynn said. Wynn said there were several other changes made by the COlllUltant between the preliminary draft and the final draft of the report that was made public today. Wynn said the preliminary draft of the report was given to only a limited number of persQfl!. Even some city distribuled had been ~ailed. Other changes made as a i<ault of that meeting •. WYJti, oaljl, UW>lvod the Jl!Oposed alJgnlne)it ol a leCOod bridge crossing' Upper Newport Bay, and the term.inWI of the Newport Freeway, among otben, Wynn u1d. He said the conaultant Initially recom- mended the bridge further to the north and also recommended swinging the Newpott Frteway ocroaa the West Newport oil fields into Huntington Beach. -The report MW calls far a serond bridge just above the present bridge and calls for the freeway to tenninate about at !he Newport Beach-Costa htesa city limits. Wynn said there were a number ol private meetings where things were brought up outside of Agee's committee, which has been working nearly three years guiding preparation ol the 18$,000 sludy. He pointed out that the final report does list the Filth Avenue bypass u an "alternate that wu eliminated because or lack of public support ." a recommendation on the Fifth Aftflue bypa..sj when 1 motion to endorte it failed cn a tie (3-3) vole. Committee members Roland Lon- drlgan, Wllllam Dootson and Robert . Milum had voted yes. Alee. Dick Clucas and Wally Koch Wied no. Ape mu.eel to accept a proxy "yea" vote from . Woody Linton. Wynn Hid the coosultant rJahtfully len out the bypua recommendation btcause ho wu charged with recom- mending the best "acceptable IOluUobl." "He didn't recommend an elevated lreeway •cross the dty and !hot would be the best solution," Wynn said. However, in the or1cinal drift, the · consultant bad recommended tbe bypus, aaytng: "It is the consullant's ""ponslbWty lo select and recommend opl1r.m which are the mo1t pradlcal altemo,.. lmn a l«lmlcal approach. "Tbe pnlboble publlo lllpport I« ~ recommended Gpllona will be 1111eed by the committee." Israeli sources said the hitches in- volved Israeli control or inspection rigbts to supplies reaching both the sumxmdtd Egyptian 3rd Army and the city ol Sue>,-and_ibe_ lifting_of the Egypcian By TOM BARLEY \\'as responsible for Utat condition. . councilmen were oot .sOOwn copies of He said the second bay croulng was left in as a recommendation, even th>ugh it lacks public support, because the cilizerai' committee voted to support it. Tbe consultant then proceeded to reeommend a 1111'-lane eipnuway be built from the intel"Hdlon ol <lout Highway and MAcAnhur Boulevltd, out· the old Pacific Coast Fretwoy rJcht~f-' way, to COMect with the ,..localed Coast Hlgbwoy '°"lb ol Corona de! Mar. t---,,.ockade_of _theJ!lb El-mandeb Stra!t at the entrance to the Red Sea. The Kissinger communique contained no mention of the lilting of the blockade, 301Pelhing that government sources said Israel demanded, and received, in negoti ations on the settlement. lt also provided for checkiflg supplies for the 3rd Army but not for the city of Suez. Even as the lsraeli government was making its decision, the military com- mand reported three incidents on the cease-fire lines: -A plane on a reconnaissance mission along the Egyptian front was shot down by a SAM missile. The command would not say il it was in Arab air space but said the two crewmen bailed out into Egyptian territory and their names were given to the Red Cross. Egypt said two Lsraeli Phantom's. \\'ere shot down. -Elements of the Egyptian 3rd Army moved westward during the night from positions on the east bank of the Suez canal. Israeli troops noted the movement al dawn and warned U.N. observers they could open fire ualess the Egyptians ORAN•I COAST • DAILY PILOT Th i Orl/'lfl Coll! DAILY PILOT, wlltl Vl'flld l h comlllned lht NfW$-PrtU, It PUblllhtd br Ille 0,,,n.pe CO.II Pu1111l!'llf>9 Company, St~ r111 11Hll9nf> •r• Put>IWHG. Manil•r 111rovgh Frld•r. fOr Cotti Mell, N~ 81K11. Hunllngton Btldl/Founttln V•llt'I', l.19- Btl'dl, lrvlM/SldolMllCk 11'!11 S.n Cltmtrill/ Stn J..,.n Capf1tr-A 1k19l1 l'tO lon•I lldltlon 11 "'tlllt"9CI S.!unNy1 incl Sundf'l'f, Tri. Ji'lnclPll P11bll11'1!ng p!Mll II •I llO Wnl 811' $1rHI, Cftt• Mts1, Clllforftt., 11'26. Rob1rt N. w,,~ Prtiidffll Ind PUOl!tfltr J•c• R. C11rl1v Viet Prnid'tfll •l'ld aen.11 #Mnt;tr Thom•• Ktt¥ll • E•flOr Of ttlt D1llr Plitt S!11f LQS ANGELES -Defense attorney Yatthew Kurilich took the witness stand b.imseU today in a surprise maneuver aimed at aiding his client, Dr. Ebbe Hartelius of El Toro. Kurilicb was attempting to convince the state Board of Afedlcal Examiners that charges filed against Dr. Hartelius were manufactured by the physician's forme r mistress, Reba Vaughn. "It's the best way 1 know of getting the true story across ," the trial lawyer said. "I came to know Reba Vaughn better than most men and I want this com- mittee to see the real character of this mentally unstable woman." KuriUch told the three physicians who must rule on Hartelius' guilt or innocence that his efforts to help Hartelius, 50, in his first of three Orange C.Ounty Superior Court trials were constantly hampered by the physician's infatuation for his blonde lover. Kurilich's characterization of the shapely 31-year-old prosecution v.itness included an off the stand demonstration of the way in which Mrs. Vaughn stood, legs apart and anns akimbo, outside the county courthouse at the time Kurilich was driving Hartellus to the building. "lie made me stop the car and he ran to\vards her 1ike a squirrel," Kurillch said. -"I told him time after time to stay away from that woman but he just wouldn't listen." Kurilich's efforts at mimicry, including his impersonation of Mrs. Vaughn's pro- nounced Tennesssee accent, brought strenuous objections from the proseru- tion . Kurilich told the committee that hfrs. Vaughn admitted to him in his office that she had worked with the district attorney 's office to convict Hartelius with the promise that she \\.·ould be rd_e·ased from the state Norco facility If she cooperated. ~1rs. Vaughn was committed there in 1969 as a narcotics addict. She has testified that repeated injecUons by llartelius during their long association She has also testified In the current it. hearing and in Superior r.ourt lha~ "I don 't even have a copy of it now," The citlzeos • committee failed to make Harte1Jus beat and kicked her, perfOfiiled Wynn said. Other sources sa1d all copies abortions on her and that he sold--'--~-;iiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiliiii;;;;jjjjjiiiiiiiilm;;;jiiiiijjjj9;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;:;;;;;~~~ narcotics to a felon on the run from I criminal charges filed in another state. lt has also been testified that Hartelius similarlly drugged the late Wanda 1'-telendrez, 29, of Costa ~tesa to the point that she stayed in bed all day and neglected her young family . Kurilich labeled Hartellus as "a jackass" and said his client's continued infatuation for hi! mistress torpedoed many of his efforts to prove Hartelius' innocence. Kurlllch told the committee that while Mrs. Vaughn was comforting Hanelius and assuring the sllver·halred physician that she loved him , she was calling Kurilich at the lawyer's office and describing Hartelius as a "whining, spineless, sniveling cur." Hartelius said Mrs. Vaughn hid police investigators in a bedroom closet at her Costa Mesa home and that they taped Harteliu.s' conversations with her in a bid to "hang something on him." Kurllich said Orange County Deputy District Attorney Al Novick took no .. 1.-en to Mn. Vaughn while she was hospitaliz- ed and made a pass at her in her hospital room. ''She threw the telephone at him," Kurlllch told the astonished committee. Kurilich \\'BS reprimanded for making references to Dally Pilot accounts of a Hartelius trial in apparent support of his attack on Mrs. Vaughn1s integrity. His references to the newspaper and a reporte r who was present In .the hear- ing room were struck from the record on the Instructions of state hearing of- ficer John A. Wllld. "It Isn't just Hartelius who ls afraid of Mrs. Vaughn," Kurilich said at c>11e point. "I think we're all afraid of her. She is a vengeful, vindictive woman who is capable o( doing anything to. '·get her way.'' • / •. Henredon's Folio 11 ' .. ., ,.. ~ ·.~J, ·.~·1c 1 ·\.' A 1p1rklint MW collec.tion f11turh19 tup1rb c.r•ftsm1n1hip, qual ity ancl styling .. Truly • Hen· r•don trade merlc. View thl1 ••ceptional collec. t ion now 1t any of Ted von Hem1rt '1 three fine 1tore1. ; {·~:· .. ;'. ,. ''"~-.. •• • • Tho111•1 A--:--MUtphi•r•- M.,1•olril. Ed11Df ---· --.----.-* Willd will later today aet a dale for what will be the ninth three-day hearing Into charges of moral turpltude and unprofessional conduct agaJnst Hartelltis -1Vho praclioes medicine at 2345 ]:_._Coast Highway, Corona de! ~tar. L Peter Krie; H9Wllllft 8f.ct. City tdllDf · Nn,.,t IHcll Offfc9> J))J N•wport lo11l11111rd Mtili"9 AJdr•tn P.O. l or 1175, 9266) °""'"""" 0$11 Mn.: HO Wnl 11'1' $1rttf L..-•••di: m Forni ""'""" H""llf'910t1 l•Kll: 11115 l•Kl'I 80v!tnf11 "" C'9rMnl1 : llJ North El Ctmlno R .. I T .. .,.._ f714t '4J-4JJI C.....,A~MJ·&6n Ctrl'l'ltht, lt1J. Or•,_. C...i Pllbtlthlnt ctrf!Hflr . Nt fltwl •IOtlH. lthntr1llonl., -.11...,111 l!'lll!llf er •~1,1mtt1h "''""" ~' w ~ wr"*'t ~pett11 Pl!" mlt1lwl " ~ll't'f'ltlll ...,.,. ..... Olli ....... MW •I Coate Mk.I. c.1-,i11. ~llltltll " tffr .. r a.u l!tllltllft'I "' """ ti.It -lfil+l'I ""llllff fh>ll"*1i.r. a.M _....~. Hospital Figute Inco1Tectly Na1ned The two slate lawyers assigned to the hearing are irlSlsllng that Hartelius' llconsed be revoked . '111ey have rejected au possibility of a deal involving a lesser penalty. Hartelius has been cleared in three Mrs. Jane Jack Identified as a "con-Orange County trials of charges of arson, valescent hospital administrator" in a fraud and bribery. The state hea.ring Thursday article dealing with the Dr. is now in its third year. Ebbe l·lartelius trial was incorrectly Kurilich today said Mrs. Vaughn told related to a C.Osta Mesa hospital. him that Mrs. Melendrez-took-~ Spokesman for Q>mprthensive Care Jong before she knew. Hartellus arid Corporation of Newport Beach said lodaY admitted to him that she had never ~·lrs. Jack has not been emp loyed by / Seen ltar1ellus give the attractive nurst'a the flnn for more than a year, and aide an injection. never wa• employed al the Cofla Mesa Mrs. Melendrti' 'mOthtt lllt 1olllfkd c•r• facllily referred to in the Thunday that Hartellua C0111iantly vlsllod her story. daughter and gave her narcotic 1n- Thc Daily Pilot regrets ttie error. jcctlons. • DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-K>.RAS1AN ~lt INTERIORS WUIDAYS & SATUllDAYI 9t00 le liJO l'ltlDA T 'TIL 9i0t t. NEWPORT HACH e to,..; S.M•Y 12°11101 ... , , 1111 WEITCLIFJ Oil... ..MOIO I I LA8UNA IEACH·e 1<1 NOITH CO~IT HWY. 10, .. hM•Y 12°l 1JOI 4t4-1511 TORRANCi e 21 .. t HAWIHOINI IL¥D. 111.un I . ~ ,, ta • ! • • •• ' . •• .. ; : .. .. . : .. .. -. • ! . .. .. ~ ; I ' • . • • . . ' ! • ' . ' l I ' ~ ' I l • I ! I I • . ' -• .. un OU or y NI d IU ~ r.eWs Media .. Asks Laws ' I I For Notes ,l i:.orANGELES CUPJl -' Rep ruen· " tallv• of lhe news media told an assembly judiciary subcommlttee Thtmt- :, day that moro and more reportera are • being ordered to tum over · their un- publlsbed material to iuthoriUes. William Niese, assistant g en e·r a 1 colllllltl ~or .lhe Los Aneeie. Times, told the 1Ubcommittee bearing on newsmen'• privilep that the Tlmet Is now handling "dozens" of subpoenas ordering that unpubl!Jbed notes be slirrendered to author!Uea.,._ __ _ "Lilt from the media tliJJ . • . specter of being dragged Into court every time you write about a controverslal subject.'' [ .... , ... N_E_~_s _B_RI_E_Fs_, __.) Niese said, urging the legislators to draft a law protecting newsmen from 1uch legal actions. . VllaUa Tlm.,.Delta Managing Editor Rm Elnlloll said smaller newspaperS do not have a legal staff capable of handling the various s u b p o e n a s . "Fighting these threats to a free press can jeopanlize the e<onomlc health of 111118.ll newspapers, 11 he said. HShould we lie down and play · dead and not cover the story?" e 4 Held ha H11rder1 • BELL GARDENS (UPI) -Four Califonlla men were arrested Thursday and charged with murder and armed robbery in COMection with . the< Las V~gas. Nev. deaths of two men who ...,.. fatally ~ during an apj>arent robbery a!tempt. · PoUce sakl autbOrltles from Nevada : .. would arrive to arrange for the ex- ! : trad!Uon of David R. Bergeron, 23: ; : Eugene E. Stubblefield, 46; Robert W. : • .Beman, 49, all of Bell Garden.!, and : ~'Morley R. Chrl.9Uan,. 30, Bell. . . . ( ' .- SUSPECT CAPTURED IN 'EXECUTION' MURDERS OF ' IN LODI Will ie SIHlman, 28, Handcuffod After lltl"9 Flushed From House ' Extra Security Placed On Two Murder Suspect,s • STOCKTON (UPI) -San Joaquin County Sheriff's Deputies adopted extra security measures today for the ar- raignment of two suspects in the massacre or nine persons in the dream home of a country grocer. Willie L. Steelman, 28, an admitted heroin user, ex-mental patient and parolee, and Douglas E: Gretzler, 22, New York City, were to be escorted here under Qeavy guard from the cowity v -* * Disc Jockey Aids Police jail in nearby French camp to be cbarg· ed in Municipal Court. They were captured Thursday tn Sacramento, 30 miles north of this cen- tral valley farm community, and booked into the jail on nine counts of murder. Authorities said ~IJllan and Gretzler might al.so be linked to a double ataytng and the disappearance of two others in Arizona. Gretzler was amsted In a downtown hotel by Sacramento ·polloo armed with sho!gun>. A abort time later officers burled tear gu into an apartmen~ forc- ing Steelman from the room where be was holed up with a girllrielld. Police said that We8j)0111 wblclt might have been used" In the ataytngs In tbe small town of Vidor near bett Wed· nesday were alJo fOIUld In the hotel. : ! • 111 ... 1-.1ater rrlal : : LOS ANGLELES (UPI) -carter B. In Captm·e : : Gordon, 14, was ol'lered Thursday to * -tr * Probation Report ! · stand trial for manslaughter and felony SACRAMENTO APl _ Disc jockey : ; drunl< driving In connection with a Robert WUliams hardly skipped 8 beat : : motorcycle accident involving actor when he interrupted the rock music ; :J~ey. . for a special news bulletin - a bulletin j ; of Woodland Hllls, ls ch~e:1 aimed al one person. Showed Steelman 'Not Violent' I [.with driving bl' automol\11• Into S ey 1 "Willie Steelman you're listening .• ..-C,cle Ill ~ c.a,..t Rold ~t'" Willi 'd, In 1 ~ j •• ,... &.BtOG(• m~c•1<J-W. . . ~eai":l'Jm. ta cooKzAl'.f'M~· . f,0.S: ;It, wa1 ltllled IC<:JC1ent, • Iii --'-"~ -"'• ual "'' • ' ·, ~11111!.tbo actor loot a leg aid arm. w ch ""''"...-.In ~ '1"°"' m c SACRAMENTO (AP) -The.final pro- ! J.' ·i· .· ' and r-rorm ...mlmf.' . bation report .. ·wuu. 1'11hB ~ r• Jtmwent A:ppofftted His m-e was fr'Pm S8CMIJ1)«lto three yeerw ago' Aid: "No moJor prob- • ' · . police to ZS.year-old Willie Steelman. !ems -llld the pmgnosll _,,ed ! :. SAN DIF.GO (AP) -Dr. Allen J. sought In tbe staying Of nine perS008 to be good." · l • ftet>olbY, ~. of ln8truction al Sin ln a tiny San Joaquln Valley hamlet ThU1'9day , morning the ZS.year<>ld • · 3-Oty COllegl!, will become presldelll 'l\lesday night. He ha4 holed up Jn former mental pottent and ~ from : of san Dteao City ColleP, Jan. !. . a nn<1own apartment l;liluse Tl.iisday Lodi High School emerged lroin. a ahabby ; ~. 43, was chosen by commuruty with a girl and a -gun,-ww\ng-not~ lo!se encircled by IW11'1111 i 'oolke• truatoes '11nlrsday to nn the to be taken alive. of armedjiOlfce IC>face mua lliUl'der - • job nested by Dr. Rex Gorton, who "Whal ls going to happen, oopelully, charges. i "resigned Jan. 26 ,to head • new two-year is that the girl will oome out . first A few hours later Steelman and ~ college. Gorton s last year at the ihat you are y,·ith and you "'ill follow Douglas Gretzler, 22, of New York City, :-~town. campus was marked by a her out with your hands up," Wtlliams were booked for invesUgation of 11 ~ 11t~in at his office. said u a breezy rock tune played in murders. the background. Two victims were a Phoenix, Ariz., j e Death Trial ~et BAKERSFIELD (AP) - A l Babenfleld physician has lost his bid for dfsni""I ol an lndlctment ot eolidt- { otlan to oommitt murder by orde<1ng ... ' ygen llalt oil to an Infant who 11rVived i an abortion. • ~ Dr. Xavier Ramirel. -59,· a fonner i head of the OOU!lty'• Planned Parmthood • Alloclation, refwled ·to enter a plea i alter the motion was denied Thursday. ~ SUperior Court Judgt P. R. Borton 3 Mtered an innocent plea for him and j set trial for next March l. ' e H-1eil'llal Ruling ; SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -U.S. i District Judge Allonso J. Zirpoli ruled ' ThurSdaY .the lederal government cannot • fire a hmDoaexual · llOlely because his : employlnml might cause "public con· ~ tempt." Zfrpol1 made the ruling In the case · ol I>miald lllcketson, who was fired i 'from bis job as a suwty clerlc with ; the Department of Agriculture alter it ., wu teamed he had been dlsdlarged ~ from the anny beca,use he was a •' bolJ:lQeeXUal. ) "And, uh, things w1ll not be thrown couple slain Ocl. 2:1 and nine penons at )'OU and things Uke that," Williams In a San Joaquin County home Tuesday added. nlghl WllllalM referred to a cordon of police, · The tall, slender, 140-pound steelman anned wilh shotguns and wearing flak wearing a frizzy Alrostyle hairtut look· jacke(i, around the nm-down, two-story Ing dazed and emotionless u olllc:en apartment house where Steelman had In buUet-proof vests threw him to the sought refuge . A Jittery auxiliary of grass and seorched him from bead to two do2eo reporters and pbotograpbers toe. stood or crouched next to police cars C&lifomla had M prison record on and the CCllO'ete pillars of a nearby GreWer, aJTeSted at a downtown freeway. sacramento 1""'1 90 minutes earlier. "Willie steelman, the girl fint, please? Steelman'• record showed t b re e And then you come out with nothing forgery convictloos and reports of in.your hands and both of them up." several ·&11eged suicide attempts. In spite of these assurances, which "Nothing in our experience with him Steelman bad demanded be broadcast, suggested any pemnal la>dency toward it was five minutes and one tear gas violence," Philip Guthrie, a Department shell later before Steelman emerged as of CorrectioM spokesman, said of Instructed, hands up. Steelman. Kemper Given 'Life' On 8 Counts of Murder . < • • j Inf ormatiOn SANTA CRUZ (AP) -Edmuad Emil his fantasiea. "I cut lhem up and ate ; , Kemper Ill "" sentenced to !Ue lm· them and kept the head on a shelf 1 prisHmelil today for the butchery of and talked to it. I said some of those ! On Assassins bis mother, her besi friend and 1lx things I would have aaid 11 she bad coed bltcbbllcers. been alive, In love with me and she j had been caring of me." i Worth $50,0()0 eo:5~~'!J:l~ ~;:ri~-C:U:~~~~er. .. ta:.= I • ~ • -: ~ ~-· · • ~ "'ll\ilk1ngr 6-loot'9;-290-Hut iiild the legal dellnlUon of lnsanlt9 OAKLAND (AP) -~ rewaiil l or pounder, guilty of eight counts or first· should be changed because "there Is lnlonnaUon leading to the arrest of degree mul'lcr in the slaying• of eight no law written that will cover Kemper." persons who gunned down School supt. women, Including his mother. • Marcus Fosttr ~~to $.i0,000 _as_ police __Kemm who was to be sentenced trted to ttetermlnO tHeiiiOOUclty-or--~ay bad tumedliliiiielfln anifjjleaded -Jl,J:.,.,--.:n-fh-eater lettors .clalmln& credltlor the killing. ·. munlly. He is exempt from a death JrJ. VV.,.;;. Other school"olflclatS 'weni bnder police ' penalty la• 'that will not go Into effect prolactlon, 'll1ursday alter a letter from unW ner1 year. · O de d S 1.J Ille .. ~ UbeNlion Mmy" Judge ~ Brauer told the jury, r re Ow l clalme4r r..po1111blllty for the ambush "U 1 ...., .II. bit excited, 1 had some and thn&tened further klllinp. fear you might ~bly bav .. arrived 'Ille reward for Information on the at a different verdict." He said he aaailanll-lnltlated by a $10,000 offer agreed with the decision '"8Ched alter , by Gov. Ronald Reagan -wu lnqoosed almost six hours ol deliberation . l' by $25,000 from the Ford FoundaUon, Kemper confcssetl to killing six fiitch· flO,llOO from the Oakland City C.Uncll hiking ooecls, his m~ and her lr!ml. I and '5 000 from an anonymous cltlun. Kemper, Who murdered his maternal The 'mysterious oommµnlque, aent to grandparents at age 15 and was in- • a San Franci.CO new1paper and a 1Ututlonalized but later released as Bel1<eley rad!O station, said "shoot-on· ~. teaUfled lhal he had a rte1!!Tl~g • lljght" ~ are In el!eat aplilst school fantasy ol killing women, eating their 1 olftclall unUI "poUtlcil poll<e" arc bodies and talking to !heir severed heads. ; -removed from the schools. "I killed aomeon•," he aald, describing -. ·1 ESCONDIDO (UPI) -A theater which showed x-rated movies was ordered sold Thursday by Munlclpal Judge Stusrt Wilson as a condition of three yeani' probation. Walnut Properties, Inc .. Lo• Angeles, was ordered to ..U the ''Pussycat Rill," fined $200 and ordered to cease all operati... In North 5an Jliego County for .three yean. The aa1e· muat be to a llrm Milch abowa movlet for ....,ral audience consumplton. · . --' Frid ay, No'ltn1btr 9, 1973 DAILY PILOT 5 • Ctwg• Hon your JCP•nn1y ch1rg1 cerd. • BUENA P.ARK • eOllCh at OrangotllOrpO CJil!lll Dilly l :IO to t :IO p.m. luftdly 10 to T SANTA ANA - . ·ORANGE -__,, 3900 So. Briltof • No. of So. Coast Plaza City Or. at Gardon Orov.t Blvd. Open 10-t p,m. Dally S.--, 10 to f 'bpon 10-1 p.m. Diiiy SIJndoyl 10 to I I' -/ • 8 DARY l»ROT EDITORIAL PAGE • Questionable -Decisio ...... • The Newport Beach. Planning Commission bas made a highly questionable decision in recommending that apartment density zoiiing be revoked for the three high· nse apartment sites in NewJiort Center. In arriving at their recommendation, planning, com- missioners seemed to be acting on' the assumption that all apartments, no matter where they are located, are bad for the city. • Such a general assumption is without planning merit or foundation. The apartments proposed in Newport Center would be located near the Marriott Hotel and the Pacific Mutual Life Insurance building. So from an esthetic point of view, there should be no problem with a 245-unit ~artment complex. From the standpoint of traffic, Newport Center bas been designed with very broad streets to accommodate considerably more development than it now has. The •P,artments would not overburden these .streets; in fact • city planners estimate that they would generate fewer car-trips per day than comparably-sized medical or office buildings -which are the alternatives to apai:tments. In their apparent desire to kill all future apartments everywhere, planning commissioners have failed to give enough consideration to the fundamental plaMing d .. cision or whether apartments constitute a good, com- patible use of the area. When the councilmen consider the planning commis- sion action later this month, they should reverse it or send it back .to the commission for better evaluation. Timely Control In what now appears to be a very far-sighted move, Newport Beach councilmen have adopted Limits on how rnucp money city council candidates can spend -and accept -in their election campaigns. They set a 25 cent-per-voter spending lin1it -which will figure out to be about $9,500 next year -and said no contribution of more than $200 can be accepted from a single source . This ordinance fails to deal with the problem of compel)sating for the obvious advantage the incumbent -itas ;-rated by some pOliticill:1rs as-worth several thousand dollars in funds . But it is a good start, and can be im- proved with experience. • • • Almost every other city in Orange County, and county supervisors themselves, are now tatking seriously about adopting such an ordinance. They should. And Newport Beach councilmen should be applauded for doing it before anybody told them they had to. 'Don't forget to turn out the lights. There's ~ energy shortage, too, y'know!' 'F eministic' -~ -Qualities_ Are Needed ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ . One reason I am in favor of the Women's Lib riiovement goes be~ the fact that simple justice demands full and equal rights for· women. It is because I believe that tbe future of the human race may depend upon a wider and deep:- er acceptance of "femini!tic" quali- ties in our civiliza- tion. To say that men Dear Gloomy Gus Don't you just love His Majesty's sincerity about the energy crisis? Air Force One, helicopters, yachts, golf carts, trips to CamP. David, Key Biscayne and San Clemente, complete with entourage ... he's beautiful! A. J. s. 01-r Gn com!MllTll .,.. ....... lttM .,. rHOtrt alld .S. "'91 --rltr nf'9ct 1'le ..,.... 01 !he _..,.,._ ...., rwr Hf _....,, I• oi-r ou .. DallY Pilot. • been tbe most priud and ooogbl-lor-<ig· gressiveness , acquisitiveness and in- dependence. In priiililive, pre-Industrial societies, these were indeed the traits most required to keep alive and combat nature and defend oneself again.rt ene- mies, personally and tribally. and women are, and-should-be-l<ea1 <-----" ed as, equal, is IN OUR MODERN technical, almost post-industrial society, these same traits \"---are-more-dangerous than useful, unless tompered and modified by t h e "feminine" traits of sympathy and sensitivity and the need to nurture rather than to conquer. '"1e goals of women have always been more personalistic and humanistic than those of men. not to say that the two sexes are identical. There are profound differences between them, not only in tef!Jll of biology but in 1erms of the effective mode of living. Woman's added status in the coming world could be a tremendous instrument for peace, for more hlllnane treatment of one another, for the understanding that preservation of life is more im- portant than the pursuit of trophies. N • • Hopes for P11llfJae:k Fro111 Arab Lands Sh.ah Eyes U.S.-lsrae.l Relations U . S . -[ J up sides between the great powers and "credibility" in pressing Israel to btcome satellites." withdraw from its Arab Ierritories in EVANS• NOVAK The Shah declined to discuss actual U.S. policy in the Middle Easl today : Egypt and Syria · captured in 1967 would the times are too sensitive he said. modify and possibly cancel a n t i -But the general feeling was expressed American production cutbacks by the ·i 1. · h'ch lb A b • II forc'1bly to us by I••••r governmenl a s1 ua ton in w 1 e ra s a y, ~ oil-rich Arab states, the Shah of Iran th s . u . bose orr·10·1als It Is that Washington's M'iddle e ov1et ruon, c to use its power. · suggested in an ex-Only the U.S. could do that. East policy is so muddled that it cannot elusive interview. "But for· what reason?" he asked really be defined. Iran itself, the sec-rh · n On ond-largest Middle etonca y. " e cannot expect the STARTING wrm the Eisenhower ad· United States to risk destruction of itself ministration's inexplicable withdrawal of East oil producer, d th h I Id I an e w o e wor because Israe the oiler to sell arms to Egypt in did not join tfie pro-wants lo stay in Sinai." 19SS and contiouing to the · present, duction cutback. Th s • h al do ha d e ~ a so came wn r knowledgeable Iranians call that po~ As the leader of ·against U.S.-SOviet participation in any self-destructive at incalculable cosf~fu 32 million non-Arab United Nations force event u a I l y the U.S. 'Ibey liope the change imi)licit Moslems w i th in· established to guarantee Israel's security in the ceasefire is real and that Israel. timate ties to behind the old. pre-1967 lines. 'lbe two with ironclad guarantees, will pull out Washington and correct relations with great po~·ers should avoid personal in· of Arab land. Moscow, the Shah is by far the most volvemcnt he told us. Yet, the Shah does not agree that important independent power on the edge .. "It . lll:ight ~m practical," he said, alk>ut U.S. support of Israel and the of the explosive Middle East. but 1t is not nght for the great powers consequent Arab appeal for aid to More to the point, Shah Mohammed to tak~ responsibility e~ecywbere. That--Moscow explain the Soviet Union's grow· Rei.a Pahlevi is detenliliiOO 10-rejili"°ce"'"-~p"°revents olller counlneS: fiOiilOoiilg what ing presence in the Eastern Mediter· the British as guarantor of the most they should be doing. It creates a situa· ranean and in Iraq, which bas a long vital Waterway in the world today, the lion where other countries simply choose border with Iran. Persian Gulf. Without Persian Gulf TEHERAN Proof of TO THE CONTRARY. the Shah noted ancient Russian aims ror warm-water outlets and. retalled that German Kaiser \VUhelm nurtured the ~ream of a railroad from Berlin to' Baghdad and Penian Gulf ports. But the Anlb-1.sneli stniggle has simply handed Moscow greater leverage. Given obvious and historic Iranian fear of a strong. unified Arab world, the Shah's c.all for U.S. muscle in dealing with Israel is significant. Iran has cloSe but informal ri!1ations with Israel and most politicians he.ri!:' re'g:al'd a be&lthy Israel as·a'"1tal couoterweight to ant._ Iranian hositility from '&Uch radical Arab states as fraq . This Israeli coMcction, never pubtidy discussed, is important to Iran. But that calls for a secure lsrael on pre-1917 border.;, not an Israel whose presence on the Suez CanaJ enables the Arabs to .surmount their~intense rivalries; not an Israel, in short, that drives the Arabs close to the very unlty which someday might prove dangerous to the Shah of Iran and bis country. passage of uncountable oil tankers, the entire economies of Japan and Western Europe would strangle for lack of oil. CONSEQUENTLY, !he Shah, handsome at 54 with the sleek assurance of total authority and 32 years in power, is to be carefully listened to. What 'Proud' T·radition? To the Editor: fiction writers and poets and those art the things iha! count. ' " • j NOT AU. characteristics are "culture- bound." Some, I believe, are inherent in the maleness or femaleness of every species. The woman's endocrine glands seem to work differently from the man 's; her central nervous system may organically respond in a dillerent way. Given this difference, what the "libera· tion " of women Ytould mean is not ·simply allowing her equal rights and apportwtlties "'ith men, but also in- corporating more of the "femlnistic " traits into the dominant fabric of our culture. WOMAN mUBt enter the mainsl:ream of culture not · as a man manque but as herself, with her own wtiqu~ en· dowment and the special contribution sbe brings to tbe solution of our problems in living together. To become "equal" with men means not to do everything they do, but to become fully ber.iel! and fully contributing to mankind's goals. "The United States has alw ays sup- ported the principle of t h e in- admissability of acquiring land by force," he told us in the gold-chased office of his Niavaran Palace high in the hills o~erlooking his capital. "Israel has no choice but to leave the Arab lands it captured in 1967." But what if that doesn't happen? The Shah, choosing his WJ>rds carefully, said that Israel could never alone handle This is a note to express my outrage at the caption under the picture of the legs of the graduates of the Naval Officer Candidate School. "A Proud Tradition Falls" you wrote. ls the policy of discrimination prac- ticed in this nation against all those who are not white mi.les a tradition we should be proud o , or one whose fall we should mourn? MAILBOX · Latten ff'WM fMIHn •r• • .._. fll-•Ur .,...,.. llMIWf _...., *"r _.._.. Ill • _., 91' .... TM rttftl M alldMM lttltn to flt INCi If° alf .... I• NM1 ti _..... AU 1ttttn _, ... clWI ~ .... IMlllll ......... Mt llll'Mt nllY M ............ ~I If Mfflcllll1 ....... II JUST AS he was being tested by a bunch of eggheads for some kind ' of teaching credentials, he blew his ; stack and started tearing up the papers and things and running around on a· long table. About this time, the students started tearing up the school and break- ing windows and burning books. In all male-dominated cu1tures of the past, the "masculine" qualities have Increases In Wrelfare Expenditure Should Require Taxpayer Approval To get on with some needed reforms here at Babylon. 1be ones we were fooling around with in response to dear reader Art Heslxm's comment that I should do more than criticize; I should suggesl Tbe first column in thls now-and-then primer on b etter govermnent dealt with Wes. Now that ~·e have taken the dough Crom the lolks. fair· ly and openly, what aboutaomc cost con· trots? Just because we get the money to Sacramento doesn'L Jl'lf.aD we can throw it aroWld like con· fe tU. Rlghj? A major lltnl In the stale (and county) budge\ Is public asslstaoce: Welfare and Mlth care servicea. Aboul 31 pereent Pt the stat.e's g~ral fund goes for ipubllc aaslstallCl' -$2.l billion. In most ~Ues, about SO percent of the·budget eoes for weUare. Al~io-ail, federal, stato • and local upendi1ures for welf•.re In catifomia wi ii total abou! '6 billiDn in lt'f>.74. Tlltl STATE constllutlon says public edueotlon shall bave lirll call on tbe people's money. It doe.m'~ not really. Welfare wap the dog . Even with the relorrns ol ii.l, Reagan administration, J ( ...... _R_u_s_w._:A_i.:_:ro_N __ J there seems no end in sight . to the rise of welfare costs. There is, perhaps, a way to control those costs: set a maximum. Enact a two-part amendment to the State Constitution : "(Seclion One) It is the stated' policy of the people of California that in .any fisca l yea r not more than (25 ) percent of the total state general fund revenues slialf be eipenQed-Jor public assistance programs and the-State Legislature shall conlrol such 8Mual appropriations so as not to ucecd that amount for that J>C,l;l'po.9e ... •(Section Two) No county shall in- crease taraUon for the pw-pose of ln- crea.ed expenditures for p u b Ii c assistance programa without such being first presented as an increase in the tax rato and approved by & majority of the electorate ln that county." SCREAMS? Hell hath no fury like the howls that amendment would cause! Some would term the amendment un· constitutional. I mean, · whoever heard or the people having a voice ln the amount of thelr ·money spent tor Wellare_ or Medi-Cal? That Is heresy! Well, It may be heresy llilt It Is lime the taipayers had more of a say about where their money goes. As it is now , public schools offer the taxpayer virtually the only opportunity to vote on taxes. And the result Is that citizens vote "No" on schools because welfare keeps gnawing at their takehome pay. Another suggestion. Go v e r n m e n t bureaucracy shc.uld be put on a business- like basis. With incentives for reducing cost. rather than rewards for expanding budgets. Take a well-run business, for example. A smart manager says to his ~'Orkers: "lf you can turn out more gidgels for less money, while maintaining quality control s, l'll split the increased profits with you." The workers tum to and tum lhemselves a bonus:- YOU CAN'T compute a cost·per-gidget in govet))ment, but you can compute the cost ~for -most departments for specific functions and services. Why oot say to the suporvlsors and employes In a department or division: , "Your annual budget ls $4 mUUon. The projected workload Is X number of cases (or X man-hours ) . .II you can handle the workload with fewer man-hours (or , less operating coll!), we11 split the sav· ings with you. Half for the taxpayers, and half for a pay Increase .for you." We'd be. ahead, and the stale employes wouJd make more money. As It Is noW, fhe dlvlilon ohieUakeJ Jncreased stature (and aaiary) on the number .of !ndiaM In his teepee. WHEN the Naval Officers Candidate School stopped its discrimination against men of color, did the newspaper print a picture of black, brown, and yellow male faces interspened among the while, then caption the picture "A Proud Tra· dilion Falls"? Of course not! Racism is a tradition whose fall we celebrate. But, when capable women from all races break down barriers, like the ones set up by the United St.ates Navy, their legs are photographed, and their struggle is disapproved. SHAAIE on the Daily Pilot and may the discrimination against all groups in America who do not fit the white male standards of "normalcy''· fall. MARILYN MURPHY TO the Editor: I have an answer to all our problems. Elect Eric Severeid President. I don't think he need! any help, but ii he .... ,..,. ,_,,. Wiii .... Ill """''--· does, make Howard K. Smith Vice Presi· dent. BFl'WEEN them -they know all the amwers, not only to the present but to the future. But just in case even they need some help, I nominato !be editor ol the Daily Pilol to assist them. Even God doesn't know everything these men know. ARTHUR D. GASKIN Dueo.,erg To the Editor: Alter reading your editorial against Proposition I 11 havt at loog last discovered tha you are Democratic paper. niat leaves you out ol my life as my blood pressure cannot stand reading a dirty Democratic paper. I am a c:omparaUvely new subscriber to your al!eet but I cao easily get The show ended with this hero-type teacher making violent love to a student on a little balcony while the students did in the school (or :zoo or I.mane asylum) below. NOW TH& redeeming quality of this is that a lot of us oldtimers werer very thankfµI that we .~ere too dumb for higher. education. we just sowed our wild oat!: in our dumb, animalistic manner without paying tuition. We called it raising hell: !fe dldn:t try to put it off as culture or a revolution for greater things. ·Of course, if we could have spouted a little poetry or something about Greek gods, or told about ffetion writers or spoken · a bit of Latin, it would still have been hell-railing and there's no redeeming quality for that. JIM BOLDING OIANM COAST DAILY PILOT along without it. . Robm•N., w .. d. NU.Jwr When the boy c:Ollecta the· ¥'t time · --! will cancel my llUllocripUon. ==-1--c-'Thomo• Kul/JJ,_Ed=l0to~~'--+ , E. V. WILKIE 8<1Tb<Im Krdbich Wle!kS Tiie Dally Pilot, 011 indeP<ndtnt publication tied to no political party, viewed Proposition 'l as o non-partisan tssue. Longtime reader• ore aware we houe 0endorsed numeroui Republican oondida.U.t -a.s weU GI Democratic candidates. Editor 6ooll 0111 D•f• To lhe Eilltor: -J. I almoot misled il After my bath, ' I just caught tbe end of tbe TV mo~le. It was a 111lversity (or a JOO or a n1'1d11ou8e). All ol. the students acted like ~rill( Jdlota. Tlim. WU !1Ji' ooe heT.iype teailler that acted • ust Ith tbe lllSdmll. You tlOllld tell he wu snwt bebuae be' lme1' all about t .Editorial Page Editor 'I'be editorial ~"'9' of 1ht Dt.Uy Pilot ,Mtks to inform and stJmuJate' rttadm .by prnontlJW on tbll PICt divmiie fcornmtntlr,V ·on tuples Of tn. -st by .i;ndlcated colwn-and cutoonista, by ~ a forum for .... a .... v1ew1 onc1 by ..-!nr 111i. newspaper·• opt~ • idttl on cymnt topics. '!110 edltorlal opJlllono -QLIM Dall)-Pllot.lJll'Olt..Olll¥ In the _ edttori&l co&umn' at the 1Dp or. the ----• ... dbythe .... ........ ll!d W1pOllllta '&rd .tttt ... ~ wrlttn are their wn l.hd no mtone- mcnt of 1Mlr vi""' bl' 'the Dally Pl\o< """111111. - Frit14y, November 9, 1m ' • I • l J . to aid s me T E . em pl 'of mo fro six ·W ve up LI lo fr of a sl w h s· ~ le • p' r v 0 I s • ' • -, . • -• .. ----~ .. , ) Orange·· C~!!_i~ Today's Final N.Y. ·Stocks • VOL. 66, NO. 313, <4 SECTIONS, <48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1973 c TEN CENTS ' • son. esa I r Watergate Six Get &_n_tenced WASHINGTON (UPI) -Judge John J . Sirlca banded light sentences today to six original Watergate defendants 0 wOO aided investigators in breaking open the scope of the scandal. Three of the jail men could be free by Christmas. The stiffest sentence was given to E. Howard Hunt, the former White House employe who admltted I!elng a prime planner of the break-in at Democratic national headquarters. Sirica sentenced him to 211 to eight years In prison and fined him 110.000: Four others got minimum sentences 'of one year each and 'the other 18 months . The final sentences were far different from the initial sentences given the six and the final sentence given G. Gordon Liddy, the one original defendant ·who would not talk to Watergate in· vestigators. Sirica give provisional sentences of up to 45 yean to the six in January. Liddy ls serving a minimum term of six years,-eight months. He also was fined '40,000. Slrica explained tllal ho bad no Jn.. tmtion of giving the mm &be wz'•rn ' llel1lmces be ......... ln .l!llllr1 ti thlj' cooperated With ·--. Frank A. Sturgis, Vlrglllo R. Gomalei and Eugenenio R. Mltlinez -three or the four ~lled .. Soldlen.. In the break-in -y,·ere given aeotences of one to tour years. Since the three have been behind bars, for nearly-11 months, they mai !ll> freed before the year ii out. Bernard L Barker, the fourth member of the Miami-area "Soldiers," received a sentence of 18 months to six yean --stiffer than the other three, apparently because he recruited them for the misalon. James W. McCord, alon1 with Hunt a leader in the planning of the break-in and the defendant who flrzl broke bis silence tO provide evidence to the court, was given a one-to five-ye.ar sentence. Unlike the Miami area men, Ml'Cord has been free on bond since the trial. Sirtca said it was hll intention that ?\1cCord spend at least a year in jail. Lawyers for the defendants asked for leniency, one pleading that the men 1l1e four "Soldiers .. and Hunt pleaded guilty in January to charges of con- spiracy, burglary. bugging and wiretap- piJll. McCord and Liddy, like Hunt, a former White House employe, were con· victed. Uddy was given an additional sentence of 8 to 18 months for refusing to testify before a federal grand jury. He also f&COI cootempt of COOgres.s charges. Hunt's lawyer, Sydner Sachs, told lo Sirl<a that Hunt'• health Is detertoraung and that forcing him to speod any more time in jail might 1'do further harm to him." Oraage Weaq.er Voi~e of Loot Radio Solves Its Own, Theft ~y ARTHUR R. VINSEL 0 1 .. E*fy ...... ,,.,. -A GRUFF VOICE that must have sounded like the wrath of God Himself to four juvenile wrongdoers solved a Balboa Island theft case Thursday night. Newp.Qrt~partment Cajt~Ed Hanlon and •everal of his men from the island station respon ed-to a meeiic·a1 aid call on Agate Avenue during the dinner hour: The pocket communications radio he carried was set aside \vhile firemen administered oxygen to a young Marine who had reportedly imbibed too much fruit of the vine. • DURING THE PERIOD when Capt. Hanlon wasn't watching bis radio and nob6dy was watching the household youngsters, the small device disappeared. Ali four youngsters innocenUy denied kilowledge of the missing . radio receiver, so the captain went out to his fire truck, supposedly to see if he'd left it there. . Instead, he called Dispakher· Ed McPherson and asked him to broadcast ·a routine station cheek call in a minute or two. INSPECTOR ART Morton said today Capt. Hanlon returned to "the house and said he just couldn'~figure out where he lost his radio -then watched the kids' faces. -Fe.ar ind· dismay flashed across their faces as the gruff voice boomed out of a dresser drawer: "'KMB 434 ... testing .•. I .••. 2 ... 3 ... 4 ... '' The captain's lost radio was retrieved and the kids were given a stern warning. Hartelius Defense Lawyer . ,- Takes ,Stand, Rips Wo:than By . TOM BARLEY Of -. Deltr .... Sleff LOS ANGELES -Defense atto~ey A1atlhew Kurilich took the witness sland. bimselLtoday_in a. surprise maneuver aimed aL aiding bis client, Dr. Ebbe tfarteUus of El Toro. Kurilich was attempting to convince the state Board of Medical Eu.miners that charges filed against Dr. Hartellus were manufactl.D"ed by the physician's former mistress, Reba Vaughn. "It's the best way I know of getting the true story acros.s," the trial lawyer laid. "I came to koow Reba Vaughn better than most men »cf. I want tbis com·. mittee lO ~ tlie real character of this menta lly unstable woman ." Kurilicb told the three physicians who must rule on Hartellus' guilt or innocence that his efforts to help Hartelius, 50, in his first pf three Orange County Superior Court trials were constantly hampered by the physician's infatuation for his blonde lover. Kurillch's characterization of the shapely 31-year--old prosecution witness included an off the stand demonstration of the wry In which Mrs. Vaughn stood, Iep apart and anns althnbo, outside the county coortbouse at the time Kurillch was driving Hartell111 to the building. "He made me stop the .car and he ran towards her like 1 squirrel," KW'llich sakl. "l told him time after time to stay away from that· woman but he just wouldn't llaten." Kudlich's efforts at mimicry, including his imperaOnation of Mrs. ,Vaughn's p~ noWlced Teru>eSMee accent, brought strenuous objections from the prosecu- tion. . Kurilich told the committee that A1rs. Vaughn odmilted lo him In his olflcc that she bad worked with lbe district attorney's office to convict Hartelius Die• of Beating with the promise that she would be released. .from the state Norco facility if she cooperated. Mrs. Vaughn was committed there in 1969 as a narcotics addict. She bas testilied-that-repeated-lnjections--by Hartelius during their long association was responsible fOr that condition. · She has also testified in the current hearing and in Superior Court that Hartelius beat and kicked her, performed abortions oa her and that he sold narcotics to a felon on the run from criminal charges filed in another state. It has also been testified that Hartelius similarily drugged the late Wanda Melendrez, 29, of Costa Mesa to the point that she stayed In bed all day and neglected her young family. Kurilicb labeled Hartelius as "a jackass" and said his client's continued infatuation for his mistress torpedoed many of his efforts tG prove Hartelius ' innocence. Kurilich told tlie oom1nittee that while lf1rs. Vaughn was comforting Hartelius and assuring the silver-haired physician (See HARTELIUS, Page II Hospital Figure Incorrectl y N~ed Mn. Jane Jack identified as a ''con· valescent hospital administrator·• in a Thursday article dealing with the Dr. Ebbe Hartelius trial was incorrectly related to a Costa Mesa hospital. · -Spokesman for Comprehensive Care Corporation of ~ewport Beach said today Mrs. Jack has not been employed by the firm for more than a year, and never was employed at the Costa Mesa care facility referred to in the Thursday story. The Daily Pilot regrets the error. Committee ' . Also Raps Billboards By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI or 1t11 0111., ''"t 11~ A new look for COsta Mesa has been proposed by a top level committee which believes city hall ought to start the job. by tearing down all billboards, eliminating all illegal display signs, and passing a stiff new sign ordinance. 'The recommendation, just issued by Mayor Jack Hammett's specially ap- pointed Sign Ordinance Coaunittee, is on its way to the COsta Mesa City Coun(:il with a request for acticrt Members of the committee, composed of local businessmen and representatives of homeowner groups, were unanimous on the first two points but split H on the ordinance. City councilmen had given them· a draft· venion of the contrOversial sign Jaw 12 weeks ago with the instruction to analyze and revise it The homeowners and businessmen became deeply divided on the sign issue and were unable to reach any com- promises on the ordinance leading to a unanimous resolutioo. Both sides . agreed that the recom· mendation was passed Wednesday night only because more homeowners than businessmen were present at the com- mJ!tee meeting. "The homeowners just had a better attendance record.~' said costa ~esa Ad-Planniq Chief Arnold F. lti!lnala, one ol the archited> ol the n• ordinance. • fltialiolm Brown, chainnan of the oom- ~. said the diamebic oppoeitioa of' the two facticm does not change the fact that the majoTity of the com· mittee voted for the ordinance. Diii)' ·P_,.,.,......., •ldlaM ......... . ' MAJ. GEN. HOMER S. HILL OBSERVE$ CORPS'OBJRTHDAY Hi1toric•lly Attired Troops Add Color to El Tor" Affa ir ' , But whet.her the vote means anything will have to be decided by the mayor, he said. 0 '.J'he very nature of the com· _mitfee made~ obvious problems. Everyone had an axe to grind." M • The-=-Oi'dinance_ calls" for a general a ... 10 .. iliOl reduction in signing all over C0Sf8-M"'es"'a---. -~ ~ L~ Hailed and· the phasing out of older signs not complying with the newer standards. Members of the city council had asked ·for the new ordinance early this yer but referred the draft lo the commilt for study after it became apparent that segments of the business coaun\µlity objected to its stringency. At their Nov. 19 meeting councilmen will have to decide wbelher the ordinance should be studied further or adopted. An emergency slin. ordinance in effect for most of this year is scheduled to run out Nov. 21. Should councU members decide not to adopt the ordinance during the November meeting, the emergency ordinance will have to be renewed. There is speculation among informed city hall sources that the city council wilt delay action on the ordinance until after the April 1974 councilmanic elec- tion to avoid making the sigos a political issue. One of the t'OIDmittee members who voted for adoption of the ordinance said he was afraid the ordinance would be delayed Until after the election. "It would seem rather sad to have it shelved. l think it should be pushed through and made an election isiue," said committee member Mike Wills. Tu date the only city councilman to back the ordinance has been Dominic Raciti . • • Mayor Hammett last month took ste~ to initiate one part of the committee's recommendation. He vowed a tough cam· · paign against signs which have been (See SIGNS, Page %) Devil Dogs Have 198tli Birtliday By WILIDI SCHREIBER Of !flt D911'( l'llot 1-.tf Gallant U.S. Marines through 198 years of eoips_... history were honored in a splash of colors and patriotism Friday at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. Full dress unifonns, flashing sabers, John Philip Sousa marches and a stan- ding-room-only crowd on the base ru nway heralded the Marine birthday with a pageant believed to be the first of its kinlht El Toro. A booming, 13-gun salute -which frightened some young children to tears -greeted the flags of each squadron as they paraded in front of the crowd. Among honorees. during the celebration were the oldest and the youngest Marines at the base. Col. Walter Redmond, 55, and Pvt. Harold Kirkman, 17, marched in review shoulder to ahoulder to a marcb played by the Third Marine Aircraft band. The pageant included a display of Marine Corps uniforms dawn through history with . narration of the Corps' famous batUes. Uniforins included the green and red outfit of American Revolution Marines, the plumed hat uniform of the Indian and Mexican wars and the plain blue of the Ameri can Civil War. The :.98th birthday celebration included festivities marking the 31st anniversary of the founding of the Thi.rd Marine Aircraft Wing, which makes up El Toro's f\.1arine contingent. nam connict was played up during the celebration with prominent mention of each sqadri>n's battle "field ·· acti"'1ties and history during that·war. Atop each squadron flag, fluttered. bal ... tie tibbons and unit citations gathered throukh years of combat, some stret· ching as far baclt as the First World War. The crowd was reminded in several of the talks, of U1e men who are st.II missing in action arter the -Southeast Asla war and of those who served long te rms as prisoners of war. The ceremonies were ended with Qle cutting of a huge, two-tiered birthday cake by the commanding generals. The oldest and youngest Marines got the first two slices. Stocks ·Plummet; . Dow Loses· 24.24 · NEW YORK (UPI) -St.Ck prices· suffered their worst decline today in more than 11 years on the New York Stock Elchange amid fears of severe. economic dislocations due to the energy crisis. The Dow Jones industrial average plunged 24.24 points -the worst single droP since a loss of 34.95 points on May 28, 1962. Low clouds and Jodi fog nigh! 1nd early morning hours. other~ wise sunny Saturda,y. according to the weather service-: Uttle temperalu~ change. High& at the beaches in the mld-60. ri1ing to 74 inland. onrni1ht iowa &&-58. -lNSIDE-TOD.\-V -- Man, 104, Kills Room.mate? Highlighting the pageant was a real life re-enactment of the raising of the flag atop a rugged peak on lwo Jima during World War JI. Turnover·was moderate, totaling about 17,500,000 shares, compared with Thursday's 19,6SO,OOO shares. During the ceremonies comments \vere offered by base commanding generals M NY Soutliern California's f i " I llhmer playho .. ,__is Opell cm -=--BY HILAll'l'-IA'l'E thriving in San Ctrmentt. A ,.,. ( 6t "" .,..,. , .... ,,_.. Ilk~ of i~ flral PT~)'Cllon, th.. An a-,..Mld man died In Hunlln1too musical . Okfah"!"", """ bt Beach Coovalesceut llospilal this week, ' found in today• Wtekender possibly resulllnB rrom a healing with ttction. a llhoe by hla 1114-yeaM>ld roommate. - •• , Autllarlllee In !IJnl• County are awai~ .::.. T~~ 1! ..._., ,.... f, ing till Clloner'I ~ from Orange 1tt1t111 i• ..,...... .._ • 4 QoUDtJ to detennbtt whether lA.tcl!Jl'IO ~':'· '•, =.!......, ~ Rlvaa, 10&. sboulll be C!harled with · the =:-"-: ,... w n.a munfer of \VaJttr Rhode, a. °""'" -. ';::..... '":: 1be assault occurred four months ago :=..., ~:_ : = ~ tn a convalescent home ln Hanford, 1111191c1 ,..._ ,._... ..... u-11 30 mi)et IOUtb of Fresno. ~-z_:-, ,,._,., ,; = :--~· RlYU WU orig1QaUy charpd with "" • wauit with a deadly, weapon, but K!np L_:::=..=:.:._.....::.....::=j ·-°""'11 Dlllrtct-Au.mey Jolin O'Roail<e _ • . ' -said he decided not to -prosecute al that time. 0 Since the death of Rhode, however, we are reviewing the charges to see if we should charge_ Rivas with murder," O'Rourke said. "It's a very unusual situation to have a \IK-ye8Mld man wbo la able to commil a crime of thla kind," ho added. , O'Raurke is wa1un1 tor a medical history for Rhode since he lelt Hanford to determine whether he might bave au!fered subsequent injuries to the head which may ha.., caused his death. A spokesman tor the Orange County Coroner'• Office, however, aaid Rhode's lulopoy lndielttd he died from a lililod clot resulting from an old injury:. "We can't be certain how old the inj1,1ry is," explained the 8pokesman , '1but our investigalion showed that Rhode dld not have any further injuries." . A relatlve in Huntington Beach moved Rhode from the Hanford convalescent home to Pacilica llqopilal In Huntington Beacb and then trr lhe lliml)llgton Beach Coovalucent Hospllak "It may be several ~ before we get !hi full nport on Rhode," said o·~. 'At Illa\ lime, we'll decide whe!her It seolf an Indictment agaiqst Rivas. We ondenland he la presenUy In another convalescent home In 'More.:· .. II . F. Hill and W. R. Qulnil. . . eS3 llS tO HUI, a major imralt sa~d tbe an· - 111Vl!mry "Ire< leiHn-memoFy-ol----V • · 1:-D those brave Marines who "' richly en-I' 01' P a rH. non s dowed our corps with laurels and tradl· Uon as a reminder that we are the guardian or all that they have fought and died for." · Hill said that 11 for lht first lime in many years our .country· Is not in- volved in armed conflict. Jl Is a tinle not only to enjoy the warm comradeship ol our lellow Marines, but to reflect brleDy on where wt are going.:• 1i111 said profeasionaliSm ind loyalty will' still ])j! the bywords ol the Marine Corps in peace as well as war. The role. of U.S. Marines in the Viet· ., Costa Mesa Cily manager Fred Sorsabal and Finance Director Robert Oman will be in r-{ew York City next Mondny througb Wedne!Clay to obtain financing for the park bond l!soe. Their night IS expected to culminate in a lower interest rate for the. $3.9 million issues. a measure which could have Costa Meai taxpayers money over the 31).year bond repayment period. 1 The bonds, when sold, wIII pun:bue 70 acres or park land for tbe mt a( local residents. .. • ' • - I 4 ... AI L. 'I' Pit {)1 Ne!vport Sttrdy Coast Highway Dead End Sought By L. PETER KRI EG Of 1M O.lll' f'llot Stitt Newport Beach needs $07 million in street improvements, including a second crossing over Upper Newport Bay, to llelp solve the traffic overload choking the city, a consultant has recommended. The consultant's report, which took nearly three years to prepare, v.·as released today and also says lhat Pacific Coast Highway should be dead-ended at both sides of the Santa Ana River. Jt says the highway should be rerouted to the north as it crosses Newport lroulevard and should connect with the terminus of the Newport Freeway in Costa Mesa then contmue westerly into Huntington Beach. The second bay crossing as proposed by the firm of Alan M. Voorhees and Company of San Diego and endorsed by a citizens committee, should be kept just to. the north of the existing Coast Highway bridge and then should swing north to the intersection of Dover and Westcliff Drive near the Costa Mesa city limits. Tbe consultant said the $67 million cost would be divided between city tax- payers, the state, Orange County and possibly other sources. But, Voorhees said $27 million of the cost will f11ll on local taxpayers and he conceded the city may have dif[iculty raising that kind of money over the next 20 to 25 years. · The plan does not include a recom- mendation for a bypass of downtown Corona de! Mar as bad been originally proposed. Voorhees· had initially recommended constructing a six-lane expressway on the old pacific coast freeway rigbt~f-way TONIGHT FOOTBALL -Costa Mesa vs. Los Alamitos, OCC LeBard Field, 8 p.m. Estancia vs. Magnolia, Davidson Field, 8 p.m. "DAMES AT SEA" -OCC Drama Dept. Auditorium, '3 p.m. THANKSGIVING DANCE -Depart- ment of Leisure Services hosts dance for exceptional young adults. Community Recreation C.enter, 7-9 p.m. OCC LECTURES -'1The Restless Land" (Geology ol Orange County), Science Lecture 1, 7-9 p.m. "Skiing, a Winter Way of Life," Science Hall 7:~9:30·p.m~ UCl ART EXlilBIT -Works of four Chicano-artists, F-ine Aris Village Art Gallery, Nov . 10-Dec. 9. Preview tonight, 7:30 p.m. UCI CONCERT -UCI University Orchestra, Fine Arts Village Theatre, Nov. 9 and 10, 8 p. m. Admission $1. SATURDAY, NOV. IO PANCAKE BREAKFAST -Estancia Boosters benefit, Cafeteria 7-11 a.m. Adults $1.50, children 75 cents. OCC LECTURE -Basic Tax Prac- lllloner Institute, cosponsored b Y Internal Revenue Service, Science Hall, 8 a.m.·5 p.m. Tuition $10. L!BRARY STORY HOUR Films for all ages. 10 :30 a.m. MESA VERDE LIBRARY -Films for children. 2·3 p.m. ESTANCIA ADOBE -State Historical Landmark. Adams and Mesa Verde Drive West. Sat. & Su n., 1·5 p.m. FOOTBALL -OCC at Cerritos, 7:30 p.m. Newport Harbor vs. \Vestern , Davidson Field, 8 p.1n. "THE FIFTH VICTIM" -OCC Drama Dept.. Audilorium . 8 p.m. "ONCE IN A LIFETIME" -Costa i\fesa High production, Lyceum, 8 p.m. Adults $1.50, Students $1. OU.Hal COAST CM DAILY PILOT T"9 Or..,.. Coett OAIL.Y l"ILOT, wlltl ~~ 11 COll'lblMll "'-,....,..,.,_ II llWlhlled _,. !111 Ot'lll{>e C.01" Pllbll1~lr19 ComiNny, 5tPI'• .... •111on1 ••• pUbilJPl«I, Mondi'I' ""fWfl'I Frl01y, tor Cotti M"9, HIWl*t llNdl. M11nll"OIOn luo:ll/Fount11ft \11111'1'1 L19W1.1 llNCll, lr...ln1/h«Jl1D1clr. 8fld S.n Clemenhlf Sin Juan Capl'1r1no, A 11"911 "'111~1 ldltbn 11 M iis .... ._lllrlUyl Ind SUl'!dlys. Tiw prlflc!Pl'I l!Ubl11111n9 Jtllnt 11 11 DI) Wal .. l' $trtel. C•t1 M111, Cal~ '1'2'. Rob1rt N. W11J ,., .. IClffll •nd 1'~111\fr J1clr R. C11rl1., \Ik e l'r111c18il ....i Gelllt1I M1~ Tho"'•' K11vll Editor Tho11111 A. M11rphint M_,'"9 Editor ... between 1-farbor View Hills and old Corona del Mar. Voorhees .. 'Onceded the report was • tailored toward public acceptance and does not necessarily include the best technical solutions to the city's traffic ills. The report says that the recommended plan "does not eliminate all transporta- tion de(iciencies, but it does present solutions which are likely to obtain puJ\ic acceptance and support necessary for implementation.'' As a solution to the downtown Corona del ~tar traffic crush, the consultant calls for limitation of on:street parking at least on a limited basis and perhaps at all times. The report says a full-time parking prohibition "will require provision of off-street parking spaces to replace the on-street spaces" at a cost or up to $8,000 for each of the 250 spaces. That would put the total cost upwards of 12 million. Other major recommendations that councilmen Monday are expected to.refer to the planning commission for public bearings : -Construction of a new interchange at Pacific Coast Highway and Newport Boulevard (the Arches) at a cost of $1.5 million. -Elimination of C.oast Highway park- ing from Dover Drive to Newport Boulevard, either part-time or full :ime. -Construc_tion of a "relatively low profile" bridge to replace the existing Coast Highway bridge over Newport Bay at a cost of $0.5 million. -Widening Cioast Highway to six lanes from Dover Drive to MacArthur Boulevard. -Widen .Superior Avenue on tht! ex- isting alignment to a foor-lane divided road. -Widen 15th Street to four lanes between Superior and Newport Boulevard then extend it westerly to intersect with. the proposed re-routed Coast High\vay. -Widen Irvine Avenue to four lanes from 15th Street to Cliff Drive. -Widen Jamboree Road from four to six lanes. -Widen MacArthur Boulevard to six lanes. -Widen Ford Road to four or six lanes. -Construct University Drive from Tustin Avenue to the Corona del Mar Freeway link at a cost of $4.4 million. -Widen New MacArthur Boulevard from PaCific View Drive to Ford Road and extend it across old l\tacArthur Boulevard to Pacific Coast Highway below Newport Center. -Widen Newport Boulevard from Goast Highway to. 30th Street to six lanes. --.\V.iden Balboa~Boulevard between 33rd and 44th Streets. There are also two projects reom~ mended within the Costa l\tesa city limits. One calls on Costa Mesa to continue University Drive (Del Mar · Avenue) between Tustin Avenue and the Newport Freeway. The cost would be $2.3 million. Xnother project calls on Costa Mesa to build 17th Street to connect with the Newport Freeway on the West and to widen it easterly to Orange Avenue. Anaheim Police Question Final Wage Offers Anaheim police promised today to turn from picketing to ticketing if their pay package isn't sweetened by a City Coun- cil which views its offer as "final." Police. their wives and children con- tinued picketing city haII in protest of the city's 6.75 pe rcent pay raises ac- cepted by other city personnel. Attorney Steven Solomon . representing the police, said if the picketing fails to get re·sults. officers will initiate a campaign of strict law enforcement giv· ing tickets to persons in traffic situatioos which in less inflationary times might result in a mere warning . Councilmen meanwhile skipped a scheduled Thursday negotiating session with police and may next Tuesday vote to ignore requ ests ror reopened talks on the police pay package. 11.layor Jack Dutton and Councilmen Calvin Pebley and Mark Stephenson have made it clear they feel a fair final oUer has been made to the police. The 278-member Anaheim Police Association has not-yet threatened fQ._ strike. I~---1-CfttrlH H,-loH RicA.r4 r. Nill _HoweYer...uldkeJOOte.woul<ibe taken U leaders were disciplined because of their part in the pay hassle, an APA spokesman said. A11l1t1nl Matlltlnt Edltor1 c ......... Offtc.e lJO W11t l1y Stt.1t M1ili~9 AJdr1•1i·,.o . loa 1560, '2616 °"'"' ..... .. N"'"fllrt e..tfl: »» N ...... hl;....,_NI L..-IMC'I! t7t ltor-' A-Hvnlin9 .... tNO: 11'11 ltldl .......,,~ a.it ,.._,.: lff NOrlfl I.I C:..mlM R .. I , .. .,.... (7t•I 642-4121 Cl• 1WW A4M1tlila1 HW671 Clrf'tllfll, 1m. 0r..... ~ l'\llllltli ... ~.,. Ne ....... ....... lllvttfll ..... ld!Mrlll INfttr W tlf\'tffi.ei-fl lllrtlfl nwr "' ~ wl"-t .,_111 Pt" fO!h ... If dlltt"IOM ~· ..... dl.M ........ Nil ltt c.tl Mew, c.11t11nti.. ~-.., Gn'ltt a ... ~t _,. INll U,tt "*'*'"' ll'lllltllry ,.~a ... _._, Solomon is said to favor the "super cop'' stepup or citizen citations over atiy walkout by police. However, [)('tective Chet Barry, APA -president., sugAcsted the ".super a:ip" tactic was not being considered. Thursday's picketing )"as pcfacaful. At issue in the dispute is a pay package which would cost the dty ol Anaheim an additional $260,000 a year, city personnel chiel Gary McRae said. The highest paid A~elm policeman would be paid 11,176 a month undor the city's offer. Present top salary Is l t,149 a month. • ' • Mesa Jewel Shop-Hit ' .... ' For$11,100 A sharply dreaed Lalin man wflo talked in Jeweler11 terms marched into a Costa Mesa gem shop 'lbur.iday with • .sa caliber revolver in hls 1ttache cue. «nd robbed the ownen ol nearly $11,000 worth of merchandise. · Sven II. Schroder, ff, owner o! Schroder'• Jeweler's, 283 E. 17th St .. and his Wile Tove, 38, were alone tn the store about 4:30 p.m., when the bandit entered. ' ,, " CURRENT ci>AST HIGHWAY WOULD-END IN euL DE SAC IN THIS CONFIGURATION Traffic Would Be Rerouted ,on New Highwi y Ferther lnlend on Witt Schroder told police he nrst noticed the man's appearance, which included a shiny-textured dark suit and a stingy- brim hat, which is 80mewhat WJu:sual Southern Calll6mla"'lltire. fie then noticed a .38 revolver pulled from the man's briefcase, just as his wire emerged from the back room where she bad been working, Schroder told police. F,.om Pa9e 1 HARTELIUS. • • that she loved him , she was calling Ku rilich at the lawyer':; office and describing Hartetius as a "whining, spineless, sniveling cur.". . Hartelius said Mrs. Vaughn hid police investigators in a bedroom closet at her C.Osta Mesa home and that they taped Hartelius' conversations with her in a bid to "hang something on him." Kurilich said Orange County Deputy District Attorney Al Novick took flowers to Mrs. Vaughn while she was hospitaliz- ed and made a pass at her in her hospital room. "She threw the telephone at him," Kurilich told the astonished committee. Kurilich was reprimanded for making references to Daily Pilot accounts of a Hartelius trial in apparent support of his attack on Mrs. Vaughn's integrity. His references to the newspaper and a reportei who was present In the hear- ing room were· struck from the record on the instructions of stale bearing of: ficer John A. Willd. "It isn't just Hartelius who is a£raid or ?.frs. Vaughn," Kurilich said at one point. "I think we 're all afraid of her. She is a vengeful, vindictive woman who is capable of doing anything to get her way." Willd will later today set a date for what will be the ninth three-day hearing into charges of moral turpitude ana unprofessional conduct against Har telius who practices medicine at 2345 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. The two state lawyers assigned to the hearing are insisting that Hartelius' licensed be revoked. 'Ibey have rejected all possibility of a deal involving a lesser penalty. Hartelius has been cleared in thi;e Orange County trials of charges of arson, fra ud and bribery. Tbe atate hearing is now in its third year. Kurilich today said Mrs. Vaughn told him that Mrs. Melendrez took drugs long before she knew HarteliU$ and admitted to him tmi.t she had never ~ Hartelius give the -altrilctive Dune's aide an injection. Mrs. Melendrez' mother has testified that Hartelius constan tly visited her daughter and gave her narcotic ilk jections. .: Police Seeking Kn.ife-wielding Ba1idits in Mesa A pair or young bandits, one of whom terrorized teenaged emploYes of a Costa !desa coffee shop with a hunting knife in a $500 armed robbery is sought by police today. No one was injured during the holdup at Dick Church's Restaurant, 2689 Newport Blvd., shortly before midnight Wednesday but the victims were threatened with a throat-slitting spree. Chris Poitevin, 16, and Jim Keating. 17, said they were on the floor cleaning after closing up when the knife-wielder burst through the open back door. Poitevin told investigators th a t waitress Patty Martin, 18, had mentioned be!ore closing that two suspicious men "'ere loitering around toward the rear of the parking area. The robbery occurred just after other employes had left and the young restaurant workers said the door had been left open because a co-worker \\.·as arriving soon to pick th em up. Investigators were told the youths were forced to lie on the floor after the bandit made Keating show him the safe which had been left open while the other bandit stood as a lookoul. The cafe was ransacked in a further search for money before the robber tore out telephone wires to preverit a call to police and fled Into the Jli&bt. Airport at Ch .ino Hilb; .. Get back in there and he won't get hurt," the bandit 111apped to Mn . Schroder; who then went and hid in Draws SCAG Opposition the small shop's restroom. · Schroder told Patrolman John C. White that the gunman then motioned lo displa)' cases of men's and women's wedding ringo and ordered him to band !hem over. By JACK BROBACK Of ltl9 Diiiy f'lllt Sl•ff Although citing serious deficiencies In Orange County air transport capabilities, the executive committee of the Southern California Association of Government thursday threw cold water on Chino Hills as a probable airport site. The SCAG committee approved the fmal draft of its Southern Californl'a Regional Airport System Plan, a $700,000 project prepared by a consu1tant. The adopted report said~lbe .proposed Front Page l SIGNS. • • erected illegally and without city pennits. The recommendation to tid Costa ~tesa of billbards is likely to encounter some opposition from the council. This year councilmen Robe.rt M. \Yilson, Alvin Pinkley and Vice Mayor Jordan voted in favor of three double-sid- ed billboards on Newport f;loulevard. Raciti voted against the boards and Hammett was .absent when the vote was taken. Show~rs Forecast SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The weatherman is caning for partly cloudy skies, gusty winds and some rain over Northern California Saturday. A chance of showers is forecast from about Mt. Shasta northward, the U.S. Weather Service said. Chino Hills airport would be In C(lnfilct with propooed plam !or a wildllle preserve in the 25,000 acre ai;ea. SCAG bas previously approved plans for the preserve. Use of the Chino Hills area as an open space preserve is also an adopted policy ol the Orange County Boan! ol Supervisors. The SCAG report said present major airpora, principally Los Angeles Interna- tional and Ontario International could be used to meet in~ued travel demands to at least 1980. .. But it added, "in the decade to 1990 demand inay exceed cap{lcity of exi.!tin~ · airports by . up to 32 million annual passengers requiring new facilities "at locations to be selected later. "The most seriotJS d.eficiencies are anticpated in Orange, Ventura and western Riverside County areas," the report added. The Chino Hills airport, proposed by a corporation headed by Reg Wood of Santa Ana bas been endorsed by the city of Anaheim which is presently con- sidering a joint powers agreement to ft1ance the venture. All nothern Orange County cities oppose the airport plan. Leaving the way open for solving future air transport problems locally, the SCAG report stated that the decision for any future airports anywhere in the regioo should be made at the local level. Orange County Airport wblch Is cur- rently serving about U m 1111 o n pas,,engers a year sho.utd be abJe to handle two million by 1980, the . report stated. However, no future expansion of the airport was recommended with the traffic le'vellng off at the two million figure. The victim said the olJVe-complexloned bandit swiftly picked out about 30 specific ring sets he wanted and referred to the diamond as stones, a tenn the general public rarely uses. He also ordered Schroder to give him the mo.st expensive watches and fled wltb four timepieces valued at $500, in addition to $200 in cash from the ollice till. Schroder said the bandit then ordered bolb he and his wile to renaln in the back room and fled from the atoro, escaping without a trace. 1nvestlsator1 theorti.e be had a car wailing but t,he Schroders heanl nothlni · due to busy afternoon rush hour traffic outside on 17th street. 'Ibe victims aa1d the gunman was rompletely calm and cool tbrougbout the lioldup. -.Turtles, lnsects,- Rats 011 Cosmos . • MOSCOW (UPI) -'!be SOVlet Union's Cosmos ll05 satellite, launched IO d1y1 • ago to test reaction of 1aboratory animals to space omdltlons, Is ca?11'lng white •ls. turtlea, lnsec1'I and fungi, a Rual1an health oHldal aald today. Writing in the Soviet newapaper Prav- da, Deputy Public Jlealth Minister Avotilt Burnazyan aald the anlmals wID belp In InvesUgoting the role o! gravity In the !uncUnln& ol llvlng organlsma and the origin and blolO£lcal rbythml. The initial Soviet report on the Cosmos launching did not specify .the type ol · anlmals carried. Henredon's Folio 11 A sparkling new collection featurin9 1uperb cr4,ft1men1hip, quality 11nd 1tyling. Truly e Hen· redon trade merk. View this exceptlonel collec- tion now 11t 11ny of Ted von Hemert'1 three fine stores. Top-Ma1ijuana-- Haul Reported TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -Two tons or marijuana were seized here and six persons arrested In the largest mari- juana haul In Arizona history, stat~ narcotics agents said. A dozen agents ol the ·Department of Publle Safety raided a Tucson home ThursdB9 where five arrests we"'-mode and most or the marijuana wu telt.ed, olietals said. • The raid wu tel up seven! hours earlier, when agenll w•tchlng the ·borne arrested a man u he drove aw1y. DREXEL-HER ITAGE-HENREDON-W OODMARK-KARAS1AN I IN.TEI I 0 RS WllllDATS I SATUIDATS f:OO le llJO FllDA T 'TIL f:OO • NEWPORl IEACH • 1727 WlSTCllf,. Ol.. t42·20SO -10,.. SuM•v ll·ltlOJ I LA6UNA-IEACM ·-I_ ; 141 NO•lH COAST HWY. ' • co,.,..,11,..,•y 12.11101 ••i·•l11 tORRANCE • ' 11Mt HAWIHOllHI IL'ID. 111·1 27' I • I • . . • • .. • i l ! • l i ! • ' : i ' ' ~ • l . ! ' ' • ! i I i l l ' • -' • . • . • • • • • • • . I • • • • . • • • • ! • • • • • • ' • ' • • • . ! I ' ~ I ·-I ! I I .. 0 y d I d h .. • ewsMedia -. sksLaws For Notes LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Rep,....n- tatlves of the ..,.. medla told an .,..mbly Judiciary subcommltt,. Tbun- day that more and more reporters are being onlered to tum over tbelr ..,. published material to authorities. William Niese, assistant' gen er a 1 counae1 for the Los Angeles nm... told the 1Ubcommlttee bearing on newsmen's privilege lhet the Times Is now handling 11dozens11 of subpoenas ordering that unpubllsbed notes be.. surrendered to ,, . A.utbodtiet. ' 11Llft from the .media this ..• specter of behig dragged lntA court every time you write about a controvenial subject," ( NEWS BRIEFS J . . • . SUSPECT CAPTURED IN 'EXECUTION' MURDERS OF 9 IN LODI Willie SIHlman, 28, H1ndcuffed After Being Flushed F""" House ~::a"~~ ~·n!:.::~ .. : Extra Securi~y Phreed auch legal actlolll. . Vlaa11a nmes-Della Managing Editor 0 ~ M de s Ron EffiSIOii salasmalleniewspapers--n-WO ur . r uspelf>ts do not bave a legal staff capable of · b handling the various s u b p o e n a s . "Fighting the!e threats to a tree press can jeopardize the economic health of small newspapers," he said, "Should • we Jie down and play dead and not cover the story?" e '1 Held ha /tl11rderH STOCKTON (U PI) -San Joaquin County Sheriff's Deputies adopted extra security measures today for the ar- raignment of t"·o suspects in the massacre of nine persons in the dream home of a country grocer. WiUie L. Steelman, 28, an admitted heroin user, ex-mental patient mid parolee, and DQuglas. J;;. Gretzler, 22, New York City, were to be escorted here under heavy guard from the county jail in nearby French Camp to be charg. ed in Municipal Court. They were captured Tbursday In Sacriµnento, 30 miles north of thi5 cen· tral valley farm community, and booked into the jail on nine counts of murder. Authorities said Steelman and Gretzler mlgbl aim be Unted lo 1 dooble slaying and the disappearance of two others in Arizona. BELL GARDENS (UPI) -Four California men were arrested Thursday and charged with murder and armed robbery in connection with the Las Vegas, Nev. deaths of two men who were fahilly lhot during an apparent -tI "k "k robbery att.mpt ·- • Police aaJd •ulhorlties from Nevada Di"sc · Jock~ -ey· ; "ould arrive to arrange for the ex· : tradition of David R. Bergeron, 23; : Eugene E. Stubblefield. j6; Robert W. Aid p Ii Gretzler was lllTHled In a downtown hotel by Sacramento police armed with • shotguns. A ~ time later ol!loers hurled tear gas into an apartmen4 lon:- lng Steelman from the niom where he was holed up with a girllrtend. . 4 Beman, 49, all of Bell Gardens, and • • .; Morley R. Christian, "· Bell. ' S 0 ce . , l • !tf-•••1191ater rrlal ,1 LO& ANGLELES <UPu -earter e. In C~pture Gordon, 31, wu onlered Tbursday to _ j stand trial for manslaughter and felony SACRAMENTO APl _ Disc jockey dnmt drlvlng In conn<ction with a Robert Williams hardly sldpped a beat , motorcycle accldent involving actor when he interrupted the rock music i '":..., ~-Woo41and lllllB, la charged for a special news bulletin -'.a bulletin • aimed at one penon. ; wltll drtdllg bll 1iiloQq,lle llllo Sloey's , . ""WUlle Steelman; Y..,•re lllt<ning, Poliefl said that ,._. which might have been used In 1he slaylngs In the small town of Victor near bere Wed- nesday were also fowid In the hotel. * * * Probation Report Showed Steelman 'N ' Violent' 'j er'~~ a."'-'~ _c~-.; = rjgbt!" Wllllarns :iiln a cool, swinging ,,_ -""eel , .. Iii. _.,. t \loloe t""'cal ol r • statlaa KZAP-FM, '._ .. , wu ~ ,1n 11 •-~en ........ '.!:...a1119-w ...... ''-'-llllllle SA~',........('nl-Tbtllnal'pr~ ! 1114 lbe actor IOI!. a leg and an ann. ""'"" • ...,.. ""'" ...... v~•v ~ ~ 1 and free.-~· ' ~ bltim repiJrt Oil WUll8 Luther -n .l e ·President Appofnted His -••.' .... •from ;Sacrammto ttiree ymrw •II" aald; "No ~.pn>b-pollce 1o 2'-)'0lr-<>!<I wuur Steelman, 1.... noted and the _.,.i. aeemec1 ; SAN DIEGO (AP) -Dr. Allen J · sought In the slayhw o! nine persms to be l')Od." , Reposhy, •dean ol Instruction at San In a tiny San J0adbln Valley hamlet Thursday . momiog 1he 2&-)'W'<J!d • Jooo City College, will beoome prealdes>t Tuesday rllgiil. He ~d )loled op in former mental paUent and dropoot from l ol San~ City-College Ja!L I. -~~=apart?De$t-__.'"'1nday-Lodl-llJal> School-ernupl.from a piaii>y Repaslly, 43,.was chosen by community •ith a girl and a' gun vowing not white lnme house eodrcled by swanns ' j eoU.Ce trusteea Tbursday to fill the to be taken alive. ' of armed police lo lace mass murder , Job vacated by Dr. Rex Gorton, wto "What Is going to happen, hopefully, charges. resigned Jan. 2S ,to head a new lwo-year is that the girl will come out ftrst A few hours later Steelman and college. Gorton s last year at the that you are with and you will follow Douglas Gretzler, 22, of New York City, ; downtown campus was marked by 3 her out with your bands up " Williams were booked for investigation of 11 j sit-in at his office. said as a breezy rock nu.; played in murders. • D -•fl r-•-• S•t the beckground. Two victims were a Phoenix, Arlt., ; ~ "-~ "And, uh, things will not be thrown couple slain Oct. ZZ and nine persons ~ BAKERSFIELD (AP) - A at you and things like that," Williams in a San Joaquin County home Tuesday ! Babersfield physician has lost his bid added . nighl tor -·-o1 811 tnd!ctment of 80llcit· WUliams referred to a cordon or police, The tall, slender, Ito-pound steebnan ot1oo to commit! munler by order1llg ... anned with shotguns and wearing flak wearing a frizzy Alrootyle haircut look· YI"' slalt oil IO an Infant who survived jackets. around the run<lown. two-story ~ .dned and emolioolesa u olftcers an abor!lon. apartment house where Steebnan bad In bullet-proof vests threw him IO the Dr. xavter Ramtrei, 59. a former sought refuge. A jittery auxiliary of grass and aearcbed him from bead to bead or 1he county's Planned .Parenthood two dO<Zen reporters and pholOgrapl>ers toe. AllOclation, refused to enter a plea stood or aouched next to police cars Califomla had no prison reoord. on • alter 1he motlm was denied Tbursday. and the coocrel<> plllars of a nearby Gretzler, a1T08led at a downtown : Superior Qmrt J udge P. R. Bortoo freeway. Sacramento bole! llO mimltes wiler. : entered 411 innoc'ent plea !or him and "Willie Stetlman, the girl first, please? Steelman'• reoonl sl>owod three : set trial for next March 4. ·And then you come out with nothing forgery convictions and reports of in your hands and both of them up." several alleged suicide attempt!. In spite of these assurances, which uNothing in our experience with him SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -U.S. , District Judge Alfonso J. Zirpoli ruled • Thunday the federal government cannot ; lire • i..no1 .. ual sOlely because his Steelman had demanded be broedcast, suggestod any penonal tendency towanl it was five minutes and one tear gas violence," Philip Guthrie, a Department shell later be.fore Steelman emerged as of C:Orrectlons spokesman. said of Instructed, hands up. Stee . emjilO)mftll migbt cause "public con- i.!mpt." . 7Jrpoll made the rulli\g In 1he case ! cl. Donald lilckerson, who was fired : from bll job .. • •ltllP\J clerk with • thO Deportment of Agrlciilture alter tt l WU 1eemed he bad bem discharged • ' trom the anny becawse he was a i -.uaL Kemper Gi ·en 'Life' On 8-Counts of Murder : Information I On Assassins ' . SANT A CRUZ (AP) -Edmund Emli Kemper Ill wu 1entenced to We Im· · prlsonmea& today ror ~e butchery of bis motlier. her bes& friend and 111 coed bltcbblken. 1 Worth $50 000 SANTA CRUZ (UPI) -A superior : ' C..urt Jury Tbursday found Edmund E. II> Kemper III, a hulking, &-!oot-9, 230-1 OAKLAND (AP) -Tbe rewanl !or pounder, guilty of eight counla of fll'St· j lnformallan INdlnll lo the arrest of 11egiee munler In the alayinp of eight persOl1I who gunned down Sd1ool SUpt. ln•'udl • h" -ther 1 "-·· ·roa.r.lliieto l&O;OOO ·..-pouce :women, "' ·"• 11 ~~ -• -· =-'"_"_ Kemper, who was. to be sentencw l tried 16 determine the IUthentlclty of today, had turned bimul! In and pleaded • lettora clalmlnl oredlt for the llilllng. · l11111Dit7. He Is exempt "from a death ! Otlier "lldloof Ollldals w.re -Poll<• peDalty law that will not go Into effect , ~ Thursday ofter 1 letter from until nut year. " I tile "srm-Liberation Anny" Judge Harry E. Brauer told the fury, -claimed ""pOnS!blllty for 1he ambulb. "" I eeem a bit exciltd, I had some 1nd lhrettened further' kUHnp. · 1.,';, you mli!ht pmlbly have arrived l Tbe mrard for · lnfonnltlon on the 'at a different \ienllct." He said he I a111ll1ntt-lnltla~ by a $1Q,llllO offer · agre.d with the declli!>o reached allcr !>)'Gov. Rot>ald Reagan -wu Increased almost six hou,_;.i deliberatkln. 6Y-·sir,ooo-irom lhe-Ford~~tlon,--Kemper con!esaeit t9· killlng •II hllch· I $t0,0DO lrom 1he Ookland City COuncil hiking coeds, his rnothtr and her ![!eod. and $5,llllO !tom an 1nonymous cltlun. ,,Kemper, wbo murdered his maternal I Tbe myltertous communique, sent to grandporenls at age 15 and was 10-· 1 San Francisco OOWlfJlper and a ot!tuU-IUed but later released as l Betteley radlo station, aaJd "lbook>n-cured, testllled 'that bO bad a recurriog l light" orders are In ollect agal~ achoo! lantuy of kUllng women, eating their l olflclals unUl "poUUeal Pollet" are bodlel and talkln& to their severed beads. :. 1emmd from the lld1oolJ. "I llillod aomeooe,'' be llld, tlescrlblnt his fantasies. "I cut them up and ate them and kept the head on a · shell and talked lo It. I ll1d aome of thole things I would have oaid II she bad been alive, In Jove with me and she had been caring or me." Kemper's attorney Jamn Jacbon called the verdict "not unreuooable" but llid the legal definition of Insanity should be changed --"there Is no law wrltt~ that wW a>ver Kemper.'' Movie Theater .., Ordered Sold ESCONDIDO (UPI) -A theater which showed 1..,.ted m0v1 .. was ordered 90ld Thursday by Munldpal Ju~e ~tuart Wilson 81 a condition ol three -years• robatlon. Walnut Properties, Inc., Los Angeles, was onlered lo oell the "Pussycat Ritz,'' fined $IOO and ordered to cease all operaUono In North san lltego County for thn!e )'W'!. Tlie Ille must be lo a lli:m whldl 1liowi DIO'llel for fl"Mlrll audlen\'e consumptloo. • ·-·-·· ,, .. -··· ........ ' . ' " ' • Friday, Nowmbtr 9, 19~3 DAILY PILOT $ Wrap-around sound buys I Chafge II on your JCPtnnty cherge cerd. DENA PAR -sAt4TA AN A---~,eAANGE - • . lloach at O<ongothorpo Open Dally l ;IO ID t :IO pJll. S.-, 10 to 7 3900 So. ll<11to1 • No. of So. COHI Pfua City Or. at Gatdtf1 Grov.o BNd. Open 10.t p.m. Dally S.-, 10 to I 0pon 10.1 p.m. Dolly Suftdoyo 10 IO t • • -• . . . .. ' . • • • • DAJJ,y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Nature vs. Progress Nature has once again been forced to yield to "prog· ress" in Costa Mesa where the construction of an in- dusllial complex demanded the destruction of nearly 100 trees. 1 The circumstances leading to the bulldozing of Uie eucalyptus and pine trees on the westside are ac· companied by a classical case of misunderstanding and general lack of communication Involving residents of the Ocean View Park tract, the developers and members of the Costa Mesa City Council. Effective communication among the protagonists might not have saved the trees. But there is a possibility that some could have been saved and there is definite indication that the hostility which now efuts could have been avoided. The misunderstanding began when the residents bought their homes without checking .on the zoning of . surrounding land. The property al\.. which the 1 trees stood was always zoned man·utacturlUi, which means that the developers would have wanted to clear them eventually. · Source of the misunderstanding was the Costa Mesa general plan which showed the area in question reserved as residential land. It was nqt made clear by city offi· cials that the plan is a zoning goal and not necessarily in agreemeqt with existing zoning. When it became known that the industrial project was being planned, the homeowners organized to keep it out. The trees suddenly became a coroll:µy issue and the homeowners pleaded to have them Jeri standing. So did the citY councilmen, who while in agree· ment with the developers lo retain the M·l zoning, urged the developers to plan around some of the trees and thought they had won that concession. Apparently they were not talking about the trees which were responsible for the bulk of the homeowner fury -the eucalyptus trees along Center Street. Nol< one of the property owners has come out with the revelation that the eucalyptus trees were in the middle of a street right.of-way and that the eventual 'F eministic' Qualities ·.· Are Needed ~YDNEY J.HARBI~ One reason I am in favor of the Women's Llb movem~nt goes beyond the fact that simple justice demands full and equal rights for women. It is because I believe that the future of the human race may depend upon a wider and deep- er acceptance of .. feminisUc" quali· ties in our ..civili.za· tion. To say that men and women are. and should be treat· ed as, equal, is oot to say that the two sexes are identical. There are profound differences between them, not only in terms of biology but in term s of the effective mode of living. NOT ALL characteristics are "culture- bound." Some, I believ e. are inherent in the maleness or femaleness of every species. The woman's endocrine glands seem to work differently from the man's; her central nervous system may organically .respond in a different way. Given this difference, what the "libera· tion" or women "'ould mean Ls not simply allowing her equal rights and opportunities with men, but also in· corporating more of the "ferninistic" traits into the dominant fabric of our culture. In all male-dominated cultures ~ the past , the "masculine" qualities have Dear Gloomy Gus Don't you just love His Majesty's sincerity about the energy crisis? Air Force One, helicopters, yachts, golf carts, bips to Camp David, Key Biscayne and San Clemente. complete with entourage ... he's beautiful ! A. J. S. Gl-'I' Ow c..-tt an """'Uttf h' ,.....,.. 1M1 M lllft -rll'I' rtffect the ¥1... 9f tM _.._.... SeM 'I'-"' _.... 111 OltMIJ G'"-Dlll'I' Pllef, been the most prized and sought-for-ag- gressiveness, acquisi.tiveness and ~ dependence. In prim\tlve, pre-Industrial societJes, these were indeed the traits most required to keep alive and combat nature and defepd oneself against ene· mies, personally and tribally. IN OUR MODERN technical, almost JKISt-industrial society, these same traits are more dangero..., Uwt useful, unless tempered and modl!led by t h e "feminine" traits of sympathy and sensitivity and the need to nurture rather than to conquer. The goals of women have always been more personalistic and humanistic than those of men. Woman's added status in the coming world could be a tremendous instrument for peace, for more humane treatment of one another, for the understanding that preservation of life is more im· portant (han the pursuit of trophies. WOMAN must enter the mainstream of culture not as a man manque but as hetself, with her own unique en· dowment and the s~cial contribution she brings to the solution of our problems in living together. To become "equal" v.i th men means not to do everything they do. but to become fully henel! and fully contributing to mankind's goals. developm.ent of his acreage was conti ngent on that street being widened to clty standards, thereby eliminating the trees. Added to th.is was the disclosure that· the trees were infested with termites and their trunks rotted to such a degree that they threatened to fall Into the back· yards of residents on Parkhill Drive. Had all of these !acts been made known before a single tree was felled, a few of those trees outside the street easement might have been saved and the bitter feelings between homeowners, developers and city coun· cil avoided. Chance to Unload Buoyed up by the s uccessful conclusion of the first part of-their Cleanup Spree in--1973, the women .of the Costa ?.Iesa Beautification Committee are continuing lheir campaign against unsightly trash and debris. Phase II of the spree begins Saturday and is de· signed to strike a blow against hard-to-dispose items such as dilapidated wa shing machines, burned-out hot water heaters, rusted engine blocks, and unneeded con- struction materials stored on private property. The committee hopes to encourage residepts to get rid of their backyard ju nk by establishing neighbor· hood collection centers where the items may be taken for ·subsequent disposal at the county dump. There will be 16 such collection centers in Costa ri.1esa for the corning months, each o~n for one d;i.y. Since the cleanup campaign was launched early in 1973, the Beautification Commi ttee has been eminently sucressful in clearing refuse from empty lots and city streets. Through the effort, about 250,000 pounds of trash were hauled off to the dump. With the cooperation of Costa ltesa residents, Phase II of the campaign could be even more successful in improving the appearance of the city. c 'Don't forget to turn out the lights. There's an energy shortage, too, y'know!' Hopes for PuUfJack fi'ro1n Arab Lauds . . . ~ ,Shah Eyes U.S.-Israel · Relation-s . . • TE HER AN Proof of U.S. "credibility " in pressing Israel to withdraw from its Arab territories in Egypt and Syria captured in 1967 would modify and ~ibly. cancel a n t i ~ American production cutbacks by the oil-rlch Arab states, the Shah of Iran suggested in an ex· clusive interview. Iran itself, the sec· ond-largesl Middle East oil producer, did not join the pl'D* duction cutback. As the leader of 32 million non-Arab Moslems w i t h in· timate t i e s 10 Washington and correct relations with Moscow, the Shah is by far the most important independent power on the edge of the explosive Middle East. More to the point, Shah Mohammed Reza Pah1evi is determined to replace the British as guarantor of the most vital waterway in the world today, the Persian Gulf. Without Persian Gulf passage of uncountable oil tankers, the entire economies of Japan and Western Europe wou1d strangle fof lack of oil. CONSEQUENT LY, the Shah, handsome at 54 with the sleek assurance of total authority and 32 years in power, is to be carefully listened to. "The United States has always sup- ported the principle of t h e in· admissability of acquiring land by force," he told us in the gold-chased office of his Niavaran Palace high in the hills overlookin·g his capital. "Israel has no choice but to leave the Arab lands it captured in 1967." But what if that doesn't happen? The Shah, choosing his words carefully, said that Israel could never alone handle ( EVANS·NOVAK J a situation in which the Arabs' ally, the Soviet· Union, chose to use its power. Only the U.S. could do that. "But for • what reason ?" he asked rhetorically. "One cannot expect the United States to risk destruction of itself and the whole world because Israel wants to stay in Sinai." The S h a h also came down hard against U.S.-Soviet participation in any United Nations force event u a 11 y es tablished to guarantee Israel's security behind the old, pre-1967 lines. The two great powers should avoid personal in· volvement he told us. "It might seem practical," he said, "but it is not right for the great powers to take responsibility everywhere. That prevents other countries from doing what they should be doing. It creates a situa· tion wb~e other countries simply choose up sides between the great powers and become satelUtes." The Shah declined to discuss actual U.S. policy in the Middle East today: the times are too sensitive he said. But the general feelJ,ng was expressed forcibly to us by lesser government officials. It lk that Washington's Middle Ea.st policy is so muddled that it cannot really be defined. • TO THE CONTR,\l!Y, the Shah noted ancient Russian aims for warm-water 1 outlets and recalled that German Kaiser ~ Wilhelm nurtured' the dream of a railroad from Berlin to Baghdad and Persian Gulf ports. But the Arab-Israeli struggle has si mply handed Mosoow greater leverage. Given obvious and histor1c Iranian fear of a strong, unified Arab world, the STAR11NG WITH the Eisenhower ad· Shah's call for U.S. muscle in dealing ministration'• inexplicable withdrawal of with lsrael ls slgnJ(icant. Iran has clolle 1 the offer to aell arms to Egypt in but infonnal relations with Israel and 1955 and continqing to the Presf:'ll.11;1; mo!lt polll!qtaps here' rega~ a ~ knowledgeable lraeJ:ans call that policy Isrpel as a vital. counterweight to anu .. self-Oest~e at incalculable cost to . Iranian hositiUty from st.icb radical Arab the U.S. 'Ibey hope the change implicit states as Iraq. in the ceasefJre is real and that Israel, Th.is Israeli connection, never publicly with ironclad. guarantees, wiJI pull out discussed, is important to Iran. But of Arab Janet that calls for a secure Israel on pre-1967 , Yet, the Shah does not agree that borders, not an Israel whose presence all-out U.S: support of Israel and the on the Suez Canal enables the Arabs : consequent Arab appeal for aid. to to surmount their intense rivalries; not 1 Moscow explain the Soviet Union's grow-an Israel. in abort, that drive;s the ing presence in the Eastern h!editer· Arabs close to the very wllty which I ranean and in Iraq, wbicb has a Jong someday might prove dangerous to the border with Iran. Shah of Iran and his country. • What 'Proud' Tradition? To the Editor: This is a oote to express my outrage at the caption under the picture of the legs of the graduates of' the Naval Officer Candidate School. "A Proud Tradition Falis" you"'Wrote. ls the policy of discrimination prac- ticed in this nation against all those ""'ho are not white males a tradition we should be proOO of, or one whose fall we should mourn? MAILBOX Left..., tr.... ,.....,._ •r. wetc-. Nenn111J wrllllrt """" __., -..r -..... Ill »t werft er ..... TIM rl•lll N ~ ltlfftf'I .. fff _. w 9111'11111111 llMI I• ,.._.,.,, A.II lllflllrl "'"' lrt-cl• MIN!wf9 1M ,...,..... ........, 11ut 111me1 -............ ,...., tf Mffldetlt ,..._ b ffHr111t. l"MlrY w+ll Mt lie llUMlllled. • fiction writers and poets and thole are 1 the things that count. ' JUST AS he was being tested by 1 a bunch of eggheads for some kind of teaching credentials, he blew his I stack and started tearing up the papers I • and things and running around on • Jong table. About this time, the atudents started tearing up the school and break·! ing windows and bw;ning books. , Increases In W1elfare Expenditure Should Require 11axpayer Approval \\'HEN the Naval Officers Candidate School stopped its discrimina_tion_agains_t men of color, did the newspaper print a picture of black, brown, and yellow male faces interspersed among the wh.ite, then ca ption the picture "A Proud Tra· dition Falls"? Of course not! Racism is a tradition whose fall we celebrate. But, when capable women from all races break down barriers, like the ones set up by tilt United States Navy, their legs are photographed, and thei r struggle is disapproved. does, make Howard K. Smith Vice Presi-.. dent. BETWEEN them they know all the ar..w-ers, not only to the present but to the future. But just in cue even they need some help, I nominate the editor ol the Daily Pilot to lllist them. Evm God doesn't know everything these men know. The show ended with, this hero-type teacher making violent Jette to a student on a little 12alcony while the studentsl did in the school {or zoo or insane asylwn) below. 1 . NOW THE redeeming quality o! this Is that a lot of us oklUmers were • very thankful that we were too dumb l for higher education. We just 10wed ' our..,.wild oats in our dutnb, animalistic mabner Without paying tuition. We called It ralsinJ bell ; we didn't try ID put it off as culture or a revolution for 1 greater things. , , • To get on with some needed reforms here atAlabyron. The ones we were fooling around with in response to dear reader Art Hes}>on's comment that f should do more than criticize; I should suggest. The first column in this now-and-then primer on b e tter government dealt with taxes. Now tbat we have takon lhe dou gh from the folks, fair· ly and openly, what 1bout some-cost con- trols'! Just because we ge the money to Sacremento doesn'l melll we can throw il around like con- lettl. RJihtT A major item In the state (and county) budget Is public ... t.stance : WeUare and llealth care oervtces. About 31 percent of the · state's general fund goes for public a"11tance -$2.l billion. In most counti .. , abj>ut 50 percent of the budget -,... for.wol!are.-All~n-oll. !eder-al, state add local expenditures for welfare in C.llfomla wiU total about $11 billion in lm-'14. nu: SfATE O)llStiluUon says pubHc .-...U00 shall have first call on the llOOlllo'• money. It doesn 't, not really. ~=='·tlt.re._wags the dog . El'en witb the .. rorms or lhe Reagan administration, ' . ( RUSWA LTON J there seems no end in sight to the rise of welfare costs. There is, perhaps, a way to control lhose costs: set a maximwn. Enact a tw~part amendment to the State Constitution : • "(Section One) It is the stated policy of the people of califomia that in any fisca1 year not irtclre than (2.5) percent of the total slate general fund revenues shall be expended for public assistance programs and the Slate Legislature shall control such annual appropriations ao as oot to exceed that amount for that purpose." "(Section Two) No county shall In· crease taxation for the purpose of in· creased expenditures for p u b 11 c as.'iistance programs without such being first presented as an Increase in the tax rata;and approved--l>y " majority of the elei:torate in that county." SCREAMS? Hell hath 1oo fury like the howls U\at amendment would cause! Some would , term the. amendment un, constJtutlonat I mean, whoever heard of the people having 1 vojce In the amount. or their money spent for welfare 0t Medi.COi! That t.s heresy! Well, .Jl may be h<r•sy but It i• tihle the taxpayers had more of a say about where their money goes. As it is now, public schools offer the taxpayer virtually the only opportunity to vote on taxes. And the result is that citizens vote "No" on schools because welfare keeps gnawing at their takehome pay. Another suggestion . G o v e r n m e n t bureaucracy shc,uld be put on a business.- like basis. With incentives for reducing cost:. rather than rewards for expanding budgets. Take a well·run business, for example. A smart manager says to his workers: "If you can turn out more gidgets for less money, while maintaining quality controls, J 'U split the increased profits with you." The workers tum to and turn tbemaelves a bonus. YOU CAN'T compute a cosl·per-gldgel In government, but you can compute the cost for most departmenll for specific !unctions and services. Why not say to the supervisors and employes in a department or division: "Your ·annual budge! i. f4 million. ;I'he projeded wolkload 11 X number or cases (or x man-ho\!W..Jf you can hanale the workload ·with rewor marf.houn (or less ope,aUng cost), we'll split the sav· lngs wltli~you. Half .!or the -taxpayen, and hall !or a pay lnerease ror you." We 'd be ahead, and the rtate employet would make more money. As It ls now, the division chief takes increased stature ~ -~ry) oa .!h,11 number of lndJaM In hi. teepee . SHAME ·on the Daily Pilot and may the discrimination against all groups in America who do not fit the white male standards of "normalcy" fall . MARILYN MURPHY A 111w er To the Editor: I have an answer to all our problems. Elect Eric Severeid President. I don't think he needs any, help, but if he Wicks -·- --~--- AllTllUR D. GASKIN Dlsco"el'fl To the Editor: · Mter reading your editorial against Proposition I I havt al long last discovered that y0t1 are' Democratic paper. That leaves you out of my life as my blood pressure cannot stand reading a dirty Democratic paper. I am a comparatively new ~bscriber to your sheet but I can wily get along without It. When the boy collects tbe nen time I will cancel ID)' subocriplloo. E. V. WILKIE Th• Dailu Plto~ cm tndependrnl publicaUon tied to "" polltkol Jl0."1/. vf•w•d Propost«on l os a non-parluan f.stMt. Longtime reader• ar1 awart. wt have mdor1td n"'7Nf"OUI Rtpublico.n COfldldate• -a1 wcfl os o.,..cratic candfdatu. Editor 6oot1 Oif D•f• To the t.dlior : ' I almOll mbMd ii. Alter my bath, I Juat cauat>t the encl of the TV movie. IL wu 1 Ulllvenlty (or 1 "'° or t \nadbOale I. AD .ol the stud<tt!f acted· llQ blltbel1nl -'!be.. .... this. ..,. bero-lfpe teol that acted ~ Ith tho aludmll. OU could tell be .... llllUI --all about " Of course, if we could have apouted 1 a little poetry or 90t'!1ething about Greek gods, or told about flclloo writers or spoken a bit of Lati n, It would still have been hell·raislhg and there's no redeeming qualily rOr thai.. ~ I JIM BOLDING I ou-.co.uy DAILY PILOT .ROb•rl N. W•ed, PwbU.latt ThO!ltGI Kr•vil, E~ltor , ·Bllt'l>ara Krdbl~ ~Edltorlai PaQr Editor 1bt ~al ,Oqe ot the Dtib: Pilot ·:teekil to infonn and ltimul&te · re~. by ~-on this N• dlVUWiqot!l-Merrtuy 'on IOplcs 0( tn. • · · t ..... t by•.;..tlcated <Olamntsts and cartoonilts, by provktinr a forum for m.dtn' vftwl and tiy pttHntlf1i 11\la netrspt.ptt'1 oplJdool and ideu on c:ur'rtftt •ca. ~ elttoriaJ; Ol>inb• ol lbeJloli>' Pilot -ar~onty tn u.. editorial column at the-top of .-.. pq:e. Opinjonl expreeerd by the 'c4. umni&ta and Cltklonllts and i.tltr" . writerf l1't their OWD· and ro endone-· """' ol -YltQ .... u.. llaU, PlJoC ... Id "' .,,.,... Frid•Y· November 9, 1973 " . 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