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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-11-14 - Orange Coast Pilot,, * I ,.. . ' ers' ,. ' , . • -- • • • • I ---: • ~JJDtingion Beaeli~ • 1 -.u . ' -A 11a1LeiJQ _Poliee .. ' ' • . . . • In a ... t;,·a1~or . .. Jnn~ •snper Cop" ~=-~·===~~~==~·=I--=-~===~= Over CIB1ntQers _ · ID Pay Disp~e ' ,• ,. ...... _ ·~WEDNESDA'f-AETERJ'iOON , NO.Y~MBtR t4, 1973 ' •,' ' VOL. U. NO, ne, J SICTIONS, • l'.\01 1 ' , •• • ' . ' ' ~upervisors Hit Caspers ' Energy Plan I • • > • ' • Tt ustet s · . . ~-Fin~ lrkS .Hli1itingio.n W oifian To -. Provide , ' . ' h1 formation By JfJT.A RV KA "i'E weeke nd, were . lured CO the ·beaches °' n. D91tr ttii.r ....., by.the exceptionally iow tides. Lifeguards at-HUntington Beach say \Yhile many clammers are old hands clamming is a good, cheap \l·ay to . gel food. at the art of digging, "scooping up and ·Mrs. John Hud:ik disagree!, Her clam-measming the litile shellfish, many'Of By JOANNE REYNOLDS ming expedition last Saturday, which in-those on the beach ·were novices. and 01 ... °"''" P'not-ii.n eluded her husband and five children, had tailed to fully infornl themselves Huntln too Be ch · By JACK BROBACK resulted in a citation ·f o r Illegal clam-of the state Fish and Game Depart-g a Union High School Of .. DIBr ""llMf ming t?Xpeditioil last Saturd~)!. fihich ment's rules for taking clams. DiatriCt trustees have .approved giving Boa~ of SUpervi.son Chairman Ronald included her husband and five 'children, l\1rs. Hiida~: IQ;lew she had to have city police all information_ now knowri W. 'Caspers of£ered a U8t of 11 recQm-resulted ih a ~it3tion 'for ille/r:iL clam-a' licedit, Jgi~w · the cla1ns~ niUs~ · be at>out an August conClave of ·schoohneD: · She f 'bl · th t f' · d half · •b · cl' t where ·the· X-rated sex movie "~ meildaUons for county action in the ming. ac~s .. a posSJ e mt a over our11ao , a 1n1,; es 1n 1ame er Thtoet" was screened. . ....... _ _,_ cotild nm as high as Sl51l. and l:.ne'Y she""could only· take JO clams current. en.era crisis ,Lue!tWly-and ran , . "\\'e thbugt:lt ·we· wertf going to get per person. · · ··· " " ' More than 200 persons turned opt into unexpected opposition from other one. nice inexpensive n1e·a1 for our family She. did not realizl!:, however, th,t at Tu~ay ,night's ~ mefling, M05t board members. · of seven,'' said the Huntington Beach she needed a special clam measuring 'vere there because of the ''Deep 'l'Jirilat" Supervisors Ralph Clark, Robert Battin \\'Oman. de\'ice. She used her hand to mea&lre. incident. and Ralph Diedrich, all Democrats, call· · •·\Ve don't have SISO to pay for clams. "'\Ve really thought all our cl'ams \\'Cre The police investigation will reportedly ed Caspers' statement and recom-It's ridiculous." she said. the legal size, and we started to ask attempt to determine if anything illegal mend41itlons "political" Caspers is a · 1 1\'lrs. Hudak and het family.. along -the state parks ranger' jf !hey '"'ere occurred when district administrators Republican. Y.'ilh several hundred others over the (See CLAMMING, Page %) showed the sizzling sex flick at a San I ;:;.;,;..c."":.,,....:::::r'-..:::;:;1~ch1eferred-to-Caspers.'....<Jffering -..-----------------Diego meetini:. as 'ttie ·political speech you m:ide." ---------~~ -OUrlng-ihebOatd n:ieeti:ng,"tlie, maYQn ' Clark agreed an<!fiUid it had all the 'N. ' . t sh . ' rs Ca' l . 4 of both Huntirigton Beach and Fountain • ewpor , oppe . _m Valley. plus others , either MfendOd-or ' JAc;KSON PUSHES BILL condemned trustees for their recent ac- ON ENERGY, Pogo 30 "inferences of motherhood and the American Oag." .. Battin added assent to the other two sueervisors' remarks. C&spers, abvtous1y taken aback at t.l)e' • · . ~ ·-,, ' • , • ·• . ·, partJsan reception ol his recommenda· ' 11r!nCeiS Arlne and P!!_ new busbanp, Capt. Mark Pblllips, leave Lon-lions, pushed hard for acceptance arid ', ·dl>n's Weat!nlnster Abbey following their wedding ce'remony today. llO! eight •of the II suggestions approved, • (St p 4 ) / , \ . but not wiU.OUt some•modiflQltion. ~:, qry,. . age _, ·1 "_ 'The hoard chalmtan pro~: ~!'~ ,, -... --i-· -Limit niaximum .·drivjn,& ·.speed to :~ . .. ·~v • ' ,_ ~ ~ _ 50 miles J>E:r')leur on.,_all.~Y:veh!CJ.ei' ~11'na .·.. 1:.. .._;H'l'~P-·~z,;6-e· · c ·L-n··ge: .. ~~f w~:001f:e?":~:i:~ ~ f ,re111 I II ~ ·«.. fUJ, on__rrecways tiy C01111ty vehicles. Dlec!rjch ... "" , sa1<1 a limit of 50 / mph on freeways ~.;... . · woold nJ!e out use of the freeways . . . • .. . • p D • \ ~ by county vehicles). : mu·. ,. ·e tn".: a· ·y ' r'-!p·· ur:e ·'. ' .. -1'\educe maximum speedlimt to 50 -I Ii , . . .W, , mP:h on county roads. (This was cut ' ' '• ' • I 'bee: -• ' .. _ • .,,. • f • , ~ • ., / _ ,... •. _ ...,.6_ .; ·... out au~ such action requires enact· ~-r., ... ·:. . '"' ,. ' · -.i , • • (See ENERGY, Pase%) ~ , fib\ )ll(il.IMi "SCHRE\BEll;. ,_.. • . '!'he Super iCop plan Rl."?v1'!ed fol m_ ... .. tjz ~". ~ ,!".~"' ·'°""' '"" \ . · f ' ·'tlcketings Inf,~ 'clfy for even the -01<klt • ~<DI lUlllhelm poll~ d.ecicfed' ' ' mi~ vtolanons in an effort to get At' l k B d y !hat •"Offi<\!r Frlend!t' would the people to osk the city to get tjie aC ers rali. e help lnwllihiAg their l\IY dispute :.! police plf,theli ~k•. " ·• , the -cU, .thlA '!S,µt>ecr, Cop.'•r . ' . " The new cours~ Of ·action would Pun.Ill B • K ' .rnbOri 'Oil !'1"~· helm · Poli~ '"officers ·\O 1ISe jJlelr,owa .dlicHli!"l''lii c.>y 1Il \ ansas .lil1MoUia• !ARAV· \IO e111 up 11oPPin&"JMl.O!:ilt8 ·for ~vjilg vipli\klfts ~$Writlni:ffe.)cma·(9r m ·.,Yiplatlooa ,.illd ~11&.<ledl!!fl•.;!11•m. ,<l(f,.,.'!ftll /oilly O\'EftLl.l'ID P~Jt.. Kan. (UPIJ -llUltle city. fOi 30 days -or unUI the a ll'irnlrtg and"nd ·fickc~ · ' A ":!'"._ was ~med iln the chest of Clijo flltl!i't Into what the APA. feels Tha..Offlce1:..Frlendly approach got the a tll·yeal'Old boy by three asaailan!J, ait ''good faith" co~tract talks. , go-ahoad from 100 members of'the 281). police said Tueoday. <JI tliO dlscrttlonary · actio~ by member APA at a •nilly In Peanon' The vtctill..-Rlcbotd P. C..l~hao, wu ' Pairob\oeo .rOllllJ u1 ~ rieal' .halt In Park. But no everyone !bore llknd •lb &:· lrellell'.t'.si.-tee•lllJolon;H~I for !ni!flc! clliltlOn!. the city could IOlle up idea. · . . · a bum thnt measurtd 3 by 311 Inches_ to ' f;a01000 In ·revenue it earns each Several associatiOn n1cn1bers votcxl Calahan told police he lerl home M~· nionth (ro1n payment of ftraffic fines . agal~t the-lax ticketing idea because day night to •alk to a plna parlOr : 1\e il!teat tactic J>y tlie officers, thcy.,..cJalmCd it wotlld lower th.e city's in a near.by shopping center and waa dubbed the~ .PitendlJ" approach, law enforcement standards 1 n d attacked 9f1 'thc way. Two of the •. men la eaoctly tre 'Op(l!l81te Of on altematlve jcopanllu life and property. · held him down whlfe the third pressed Plan of •ctlo!< disclosed '10 d1ya ago The officers orgued that the Officer a glowing object against his -<hest, ··.-the Super Cop idea. ' (S..'l'ICKETS, hp JI . colahan $8)d. ~ • -/ • • . - . ff/ .. . -t fi I ,, • tion in not attempting to fire Supenn: 1 I $4 000 A Bl tendentJack·Roperoverthe incident. ' n ' ' . . rson :a· ze. The incident fi rst hecaine public about one month ago when police cqnfiscated a -videotaped copy of the film from. Shoppers Intent on bargain-hunting piCnt calmly about their business in a Newport Beach department store Tues- day as firemen battled a bizarre $4,000 arson-set fire Involving ·· a display of dresses for leenaged.glrls. . ... The ~:so p.1)1. bla~ ·~·\be .~-~-Penll!'I' Company, H f~·llllli~W quickly ~estroyed 80 long, grlllll1Y-~ cir~ and also caused• ,structural .damage to the ·ttoi-..,e's.Jujilor Dep~ent. ' . A mapnequin on· wlllqb. one of the dresses was ,dtsplayed atop a rack was also des1ri>~ed In the Jlames, lying af- terward .. atnld the charred rubble and l!!'Otesquely resembling a charred body. •• "l~ looked pretty strange,'.! remarked Newport Beach Fire Department Capt. John Kratz, wJ>o was in command of firefighters on the scene. He said busy shopPers appeared curious, but lidded lhSt the mopup opera- Uon by "11J men failed to deter them • dilrlnil'l"" pre-<:hristmas buying. .. Only One lndividual"ippe~red bothered by the · .far'emen's · llOrk and after cyaluating the incident; (;llpt. Kratz said he la an arson suSpect. . He said the man· approached and repeatedly questioned firemen in almost a taunting lone abou~ why they ~ . ciapln1 •P' tl\e' mW ,·e11d "debris artd no( letting store perSon~CI do it.. '(.Investigators said they could rind no e'vidcnce of what caused the sudden b\azc. which triggered a ~prinklet system • 9verhead that prevented the Uanles fronl spreading. '!'he gaily-colortd m er c h and I 1 e, however, was destroyed within minutes _ .... _ .. \'I of the outbreak. "They ·were acetate dresses and th.e names took off pretty quick," Capt. Kratz said today . Heat,, from the swift . fire destroyed any passible clues to . what actually slarted the blaze, bq~,lnvestlga!Qn say ·;t aertalnly. did oot~ar to be natw:~I: "It appeared to ~b< set to do Just exr.ctly w!lat It did.'': ~iie 1 Capt. Krat7. rcmar~ed, explaining the 'location and likelihOOd of swift, heavy da mage. Investigation was contlnuiog today into what capt. Kratz said are uncomfirmed reports"that a whole series of identical fires have been set-in what he called a major Callfornia . department store chain. · THIS.Jt:D-1J REW 100 RESPO NS ES The lawyer appealed to the Daily Pllol He asked ·to have his ad stopped because•lt drew 100 responses. ' ' ' SECRETARY . for Laguna Niguel Law office. Exper 1)ret Du.lies incl: ao~e typ- • '• ,lag . rw51, ~ption ' &. .. t!Jlls'aj\ll · t'IVl!l ·.too.11~r, .. . . ~rt umc.:_ Phone No.) ' Naturally he fouOd the secretary he n<?edcd before canceling the ad . \\lhal is It yoa're looking forJ Probably a Dally Pilot' ad can help you find ii. her, him, whatever. Dial the direct line to result! at the Daily Pilot, IU-5m. ' a low ranking district administrator. At that time. it was learned th!Jt the sex fiJm had been shown at a three-day conference of 46 district ad- ministrators held io San Diego in August. . It was . originally thought that . the· vid~taped version had ~ i:opind ~ -(See X-RATED, l(age I) ' . ·Ordlge Weather C".ontlnued cool, SWlRY weaj]ler is on~-lgenda . for ThurSOay, according 'to the weather service, with higbs at the beaches in the mld.OOS rising to 68 inland. Over· night lows 56-58. -- 11\!o'll " 111!'.\ l ' In Richard Nixo1i 's h0f11etow.n of Whittier -Watergate not· With&tan.ding -the people are still bellind him. S'ee story, Pnge 26.' , .• . \1 -.~ ' -• ' ' s WtdlltSd.ty, Nowtmbtr 14, J;.973 Israel, Egypt Agree To EXchange of POW s Br The Auoc:lated Prest with the agreed transfer of ch~ints ---~1·.,-a-e'and Egypt agreed o start -.-,.--'o;;n"'·the-tairo-SUii"lilgbWB.ftO 11.N. cbanging prisoners of war Thursday peace[eePers. morning. th e International Red Cross Michael Convaire, tho Red Cross announced today. _ representative in lsracl, .said the prisoner The announcement came shortly after exchange would be made by direct nights a U.N. spokes man in Cairo disclosed between Egypt and .Israel. that negotiators for the tw o countries He said the agreement came at a reached an agreement which he describ-meeting on the Egyptian-Israeli cease- ed as a "break-through" in maintaining ftre line between generals of the two , ___ the..Middl.e...East cease-fire. sides. The prisoner exchange. scheduled to -The earlier stalemate on prisone r ex- start at a a.m .. would remove a major change and transfer of checkpoints obstacle in carrying out the U.S.· brought threats from both Egypt and sponsored truce signed Sunday. Israel Israel that threatened to upset the cease- has demanded M agreement on the fire. return of prisoners before it goes lhrougb Premier Golda Meir told the Israeli Issue Beach Trustees Hear Pros , Cons . ~rliameol lbat "not one gram of food w1Uoe ''illow t!Jl'OOl h to lhe wwn- of Suez" and the Egypt.tan army on the opposite bank or the canal if the Egyptians did no1 agreJ to arrangementf"' for the POW exchange. Egypt's semi-official newl;paper. said. Israel risked a resumption ot the war by refusing to give the U.N. peacekeep- ing forCfl control of the hlibway Into Suez until the POW issue i.5-settled fOISi'iel's satisfaction. Both Israeli and U.N. · forces were maintaining checkpoints on the Cairo- &J.ez highway where it Cl"OSSe5 the cease- flre line 60 miles east of Cairo. But Israeli sources were checking all traffic and d.ecid._iog wbll. v!lhlc;IE!ll giul!!.J>l!M-_ Political sources In Tel Aviv said the Israelis apparently were going to retain. this control until they were sure they would· get-·l:iack the 350 Israelis the Egyptians are estimated to have cap- tured in the. October war. From Page J F ro;,. P qel . ' ENE RGY ..• ' meot of an ordinance). 1 I -fnstrucl the D !' r e c o , oe Tr:insportalion to continue maxlmwn tr..; fort to utilize compact, high • mileqe; vehicles tn ·the. coun ty !feel. (This wa st approved after remarks by Clark and, Diedrich that !his was already pollcy. of the county). : -Direct the county bucfatt analyat' and purchasing agent to anilclpatO: significant cost· per gallon tncrtases for: ·-· forlhCOltllnf-YOI" (Thia iJOI tho earner comment that It waa.obvi«iaJ . t -Request the director of Harbors: Beaches and Parks to roexatntbe pla~ and dcveloprnent of any off-roadl vehicl~ facilities within the cowity. (Caspers. referred to the planned Oll road vehicle< facllily al Prima D<!!eoha in ihel soulbeastem part of the county. ClarkJ Diedrich aitd Battin had this modified to require a public hearing beforit lnY. changes are made). . -Establish policy for heating ttm~ perature levels for all county facilities of 65 degree> to 68 desrecs, except Ill medical facilities. Temperatures in medical facilities will be detennin~ -by-the medical director in""Charge based on health requirements. . -Authorize .the Director of Bulldin'g: Services to ana!)'ze all remaintgg facilities' heati'ng and cooling syst~ and develop a plan of energy con· servation. . -Appoint an Interim County oi.J- lions Commltt.e including the """'lr adrninJstratJve officer, directors of plan~ ning, building and safeJy, transporlatlon, or the nearly 200 people who attended its own public hearing in the matter CLAMMING roads and building services to. advt~ TueSday's school board meeting in if the board fails to set a date for • • • the Board or Supervisors on enet8Y. Huntington Beach, seven inxike about a public hearing. UP1 T...,._, related matters. Caspers offered car "Deep Throat" incidents, including two The board did not act on Mrs. Allen's okay," said Mrs. Hudak. Chill•• SiUinn pooling as an example ol whal 1l1t mayors, a student and the president suggestion. "But when he measured ours, 19 of D :I committee could work on. of the district's largest teacher organiza· 1:f i:f f;; the 35 were undersized , and he gave Nude models for art classes at Detroit's Wayne State University have -Wire the Callfarnia CongreJBlonal tion . us a citation for that and for not having begun using space heaters to keep warm since the energy crisis has delegation and President Nixon urging Some backed the board's decision -lo F p J f d th · -1 1 l d -1 h ti g ( 1 ooms immediate Petum to natlooal Day~ . rona age • a measuring.device." she said. orce e un1vers1 y o cu own 1 s ea n o c assr . Savin . -Tim (-'· was' -n -..1 • .k'.. drop the firing proceedings against g e. i1u.:i· ~ ....- Superintendent Jack Roper. Some con-X RATED California Fish and Game authorities neces~ b)'. the opponents but they defuned that action: • • • • and state pro-ks. r angers,_ emphasize it agreed to Jee lf stay in the motion). Jerry Matney, mayor of Hunilngloo is the individual's respon~bility to in-Nix· on Reaffn· -ms Stand Caspers qad also suggested that lil• and "-Scott f F dist 'ct · t but th f'lm'•·owne r th 1 f 1 · • list of enP..rgy conservation ~ Beach ~rge , mayor o oun-r1 .eqwpmen e 1 .-• fonn himself on e rues or c amnung. be forward~ to the citie5. Clark thought ta in Valley, both called for a return Glen Dal ey. reportedly told · board "When the licenses are purchased, ·1 it would be better to have the cities to "sanity and the business of educating members he had been given the tape a fish and game booklet is given out i"oin county official! in stud.ut-the Our Chl·1c1ren " , at a convention in Las ·Ve. gas by a '"'" · which e-'ai'•• all of the rules for clam· energy situation Md what can be done M t I k the portunity to representative of a school aud io-visual Atn ,.., R d • R • t • criticize the press for its coverage of Caspers, who W8' Iii Washington D.C. a ney even oo op . contracting rinn . ming and an Qther types or fishing," egar mg es1gna IOD about it. ,, tile Incident in which the X-rated sex Daley allege<l.ly told board members explained fish and game Inspector . last week on other matters, sald ·after ----movie-was-shown at art athninistrative--~-net-r-emembeF-the salesman..'S--Robert-ff:aneen. -~-...--··~!'fll'fC"With thel!l~tirO:ll~ ~_!~~ in San Diego ~ ~u~~;~. : . _ -~a"m~ ~~Lt~e _co'Epany ~~pres~t~ ....... _ -M~LpeoplE>~ut~.w....,t.11!!-= .. -:WASHJNGTCW. ~~jden~ {R·T~ Of the ·delegation he~ was t'OOvlnced that the -Matney ..tolil tile our-~ppr,t.CJ;,S . ooY.e~ ~ --~~-~a11f~d1~ ·~t.er'!nine .t!mf':" niles, Kra:.a~-=-~~::~. jlit~e· are--·-Ntxon. ..wutef~::~hi '1 s -~atergate. committee. _ _ ,:;:--:-&i~fgf~!1S-4F.r-nat '~ ~ Qlat ing the m~ting they_ ou_ght to . q.u1t ~creenRopeLRg1s ~ ~e !1lmh, whH1ch11 tMook plalnnce always .those wha don't i n f 0 r m Republican congressmeo.. reaffirmed to-Ervin quickly rei· ect~ any ch rationing ol gasolme was ·inevitable. · ~ f stirring the controversy , by pnntmg Jn rs suite at t e a oo_n , ~ · . . · . day that he would not resign or submit . . , SU He said that limiting speed of vebicl9 "rumors'' in their stories. . on ~helter Island, were done on d1Strict ~mselves an~ may receive c1tatio~. voluntarily to im peachment . hmi.ted session. The comm1ttee asked to 50 mph would acoomptish one-third The student who spoke was Adrian equipment. It takes eight . years for the Pismo As part of his new stiategy to meet Nixon Tuesday for a meeting with the or the goal of reducing fuel consumptMlo Oav'is. a senior rro.m Edison High ~I. At the special board meeting which clam to reach legal size, so we must criticism ''head'9n" of bis handling of full commiUee..and Ervin told reporters, by ll,percenl. .... She read a portion of the concJus1on had_ been call~ to adopt ~ormal charg~s protect them the best we can," Kaneen Watergate, some congressmen said Nix· "I'm not going to the White House Caspers also auggested that the to a report on the matter she had agamst Roper m preparation ror a public continued on ·offered to meet with Chairman Sam ·thout the r .tt ,. California Congrmional delegaliall be prepared for her government class. bearing on bis firing, trustees did an · . J. Ervin (0-N.C.) and Vice . Chainn3.n-> WI en ire c:omnu ee. asked to approve tbe Alfi.Un pipelinl. She said the incident has caused em-abrupt about face and dropped the pro-. Kaneen explained that .persoos ~ay ' " The reported Nixon offer to meet He dropped this when Iftlormed that barrassment for parents, teachers and ceedings agaimt the superintendent. either purchase a device lD a sporting only with Ervin and Baker was disputed both houses bad approved legi.slltioll students and as~ed, "Why sho.uld there . ~per made a public apology ,!or the goods or bait and tackle shop, for ap-by another participant. in this morning's to go ahead with the pipeline. He a11o be mor~ taxes if they an: f~1ng to be 1nc1dent and declared the matter resolv-proximately $1, or may make one Seminar Set session. Rep. Louis Frey Jr. CR·Fla.), called for the pumping ol oil in the abused~ su.c h a w~y as this . ed." themselves. The store-bought version is said Ni.Ion offer,ed only to "supply them Elk Hills Naval Ruerve in the Siil Two d1str1ct residents who. appeared The police came into the picture again simply a metal, horseshoe-shaped item, with the information that they want," Joaquin Valley "up to an amoun~ whid1 before .the board took opposite stands earlier this month when they indl.,ted four and a half inches wide. 'Ille clam On Coastl:ne' with _the method wxletermined. would not jeop8nllz.e naUooal security.'~ on the issue. _ they were contiz.,jng their investigation. is -placed in it to see if it is the " Some congressmen who attended the The net result or the board's . aetJen Inge Knox, whose two sons attend Since confiscating the fi lm, HunUngton proper size. . one-hour, 4$.mlnute breakfast meeting Tuesday was that county vehlefe1 <will Marina High School, echoed ~1alney and Beach vice ofiicen bad not intruded Mrs Hudak who feels there has been "As We See the Coastline," the with the President _ his ~ in reduce their speed to SO mph, except SCO!t an~ suppo.r~ed. a return to normal into the matter, saying it was an internal too little publicity about ·this device, final program in ·a symposilD'll f..:..S!!ies of. ~hite .Ho~ q~n-and-~fr=•>:u= :~J:"ZeJ!:~ business 1n ~e d1st~ct. proble~ fo~ tb8 achool distf1Ct. says it would help if signs were placed soonsored bJ· ll'JIW!Perl ·HarOOr .... fWet -~1~ f~ ~v . QOJ me~ber con&ervina energy. AnothC\ ~qia~ ,¥rfJ, l'Yle~~r, A w~. "·. ~ Robe!'} ~inehart, on the beach , particularly during low illllior Leag\le M 0C rrtine Wffi of Cong1tess. __ said x6n pro~sed .. ~ took a different ~f'P1'8Eh. tDlflli J!ne head Oi die · department's·· Vice and tide periods, explaining all of the rules. take place Thursday at UCI. further public actions to allay questwns teachers at Huntington Beach. High Intelligence Unit, annolUlced that he had But Gordon Cribbs, of the state Fish The discussion, to be moderated about Watergate. School deser~e a better leadership than made a (prmal reques t of the board and Game Department disagrees. "With by Newport Beach City C.ouncilman Ther~ was no h_nmedlaJe word .on they are getting. . . to release to him their findings in the all the rules that we have in this country, Carl Kymla, will get under way wm might have raised the resignation At1to Burglar Sought in Mesa "I was a captain tn the Jast bond case. if we had signs posted tellina people at 7:30 p.m. in Room 174 of UCJ's que5tlon at today's meeting, but Rep. campaign and ~pie told me we had He said the department was In-what they cou1d and couldn't do, there computer Science Building. Robert 'I!· McC!ory (R-Il l.), and Rep. t~ many admlRlstrato~. What am I vestigating p05Sible criminal activity wouldn't be room to do anything _ Panelists will be VerLyn Jensen, Tom Railsback (R-111.), both said the go1~g to.tell them n~xt time?" . . within the high school district based especially on the beaches," Cribbs ~id. counsel for the Environmental President vowed not to quit , saying A burglar who may be drtvtng ·a Bill T1zzard, president of the D1stnct on allegations from several unidentified Coalition of Orange County; R. to do so or to submit to impeachment 1960 Ford Falcon station wagon l.s IOUg&t Educators Associatio~ (O~A) .deliv~~ sources. Barry McComic, executive vice would not be in the best Interests of today by Costa Mesa police foll~ a prepared statement Ill "".h1ch he st.ressea His statement pertially supported a .Frona Page J president of Avco Community the nation or future presidents . a complaint filed by a housewife TueS- that no teachers were mvolved in the rernarkmadebyBoardPresidentGeorge Developers; Frank Robin so n, The Senate committee asked Nixon day. · incident. . . Logan afte r the Roper apology. TICKETS member of the Orange County for a meeting with the full seven-member Anita Bernier, 54, of 1763 Ket!WO(tl He said the residents of the distr1~t At the time he said, "The publicized • • • Harbors, Beaches and Parks C.om-panel. Some members, and others, have Place, said soneone used a bent are justified in seeking answers to ~1r incident (the showing of "Deep Throat") mission, and Raymond Watson, said Nixon should appear on Capitol coathanger device to Jimmy the locked questions, but also .stated that no~hing was one of several on which the board Friendly attitude would give driven a president of the Irvine C.ornpany. Hill. Some congressmen at toda y's door of her own green 1980 Ford Falcon shouJ.d interfere w 1th the pursuit of based its decision last Thursday (to license to speed through the city, The Junior League series, "C.om-session said the President told them station wagon parked outside her mme:, educa~ion "-'itirin the district. start proceedings to fire Roper). . . . threatening li"ves and property. munlty 73," is open to the public an appearance there would be difficult The only thing taken was the chrome Doris Allen, spokesma~ f~r the "In my opinion, it was the least s1gruf1· City councilmen in Anaheim have without cha rge. but expres:sed willingness to meet with horn rlng -·valued at about $10 ~ Citizen 's Committee of California, CO!l· cant of all the charges." refused to budge from th eir final offer Ervin and Baker. from the steering wheel. ' demned the board's action and said Jt was learned that Police 'Chief Ear1e to the policemen, which calls · for a 1 1~~==;~~~~~:=:~=~~~=~;;~~~~iij~~~==~~~~;;;,;;;;;; that her organization will be conducting Robitaille had sent a letter to board 6.75 percent pay hike for the first year ,._, members requesting information they and six percent in the second year Bradley Speaks Out- LOS ANGELES (UPf l -Mayor Tom Bradley said Tuesday that Pre.sident Nixon should resign as •·a service to the country'' because the Watergate scandal has crippled his presidency. \Vatergate is "the "-'Orst blot on the fabric of !his country in my memory," Bradley told a high school group. OU.N&I COAST n DAILY PILOT flit or....-'"'' DAll..Y ,.IL.OT, •1111 .... di It tombl...., fht H-PrtU, II fl\IDIJ"*I ll'r t11e Ofl r>Qt Cttll PlilDl!tll"'8 ~y. s.p.. rlll 9!fltlon1 t rt p11bl!111ed, MMday tl'l..uofl Fr!Cly, for CM•t M-, MtWllOrt 8ttdl, l'tvl'lt1nt1tor1 &tK ft/Founi.ln v111ey, ue- 11 .. m, 1~1r..15~1.v.cli '"' s.n ci.....m.r Stn J111n C1p11rr1,,._ A 11119i. •tl~I ..i111on j, p,ll)li1111G $.ll\lr~Y. •nd """"'"'· Tl>I ,.-ll>clllfl p.,j1t\!olll11t pl1nt 11 t i llD W11t e1, S•r"1, Cw!I Meta, C.llt0rt1ll, l'M». Robert N. Wtff l>rnld....i tnd ~h.Mr J1(• R.. Cu•lt Y Yl(t l"rn~! ""' Gt11eft l MINIC• Thom11 K•twil EOiW Tho..,-. A. M urp~i110 Mtl'tt1"9 Edll9f Ch1rl 11 H. Looi llld11r~ ·r. Nell Anl1t1nl "''""'"' f.•l'-" (M!t M"": Jll W111 t.IY Slrwl H _ _, (IMCl'lt U N.,,,,..-1 ._.,._,.. UofllNI e..cfl: m ,_, ... _ Mllftl""Mll'-..<11· 1"1S .. tdl ......,,,. Jan (ltmM\llJJ Jot Noffll I I (Ml\!"' ll:MI Tiii ...... fJt41 Mlo4J21 c......., A.4••111 .. 641-167' ,._ C-.1•1 ,.,.. ..... " UfrlN .... 4fl..WIO ,._ ...,.., °',,. CWllf¥ wne =•"* 140-tlt f cocrrr•'· "'l. °'...,.. c-.t ~""" (-~y. NO lllfwt 100tlti. llM!f•I......_ .. IM>rlfl tMft.,. ., _,_.IHlnl"lh ,_...., ""'' M ,..,,.,111:1f wl!llevt .,_!Of _.. """'*' of '"''""'1 -· """"' tl111 ..... , ... "" OI Clll'I• ,...., (•llfiffn!I '*Vito!• tJ Ul"l'W .. I~ -ltllt< .., !NII tJ.11 ~I ,,.,, 9"1~1*"' II ... INfllMJ. had turned up during their investigation of a two-year contract. .,_ ol "Deep Thro:at" and Telated incidents. Patrolmen are demanding seven per· 1· Sources ha ve indicated that most of cent hikes both years on one-yea r con· the work in the investi gation was done tracts with some fringe benefits not by Deputy County Counsel Spencer offered by the city. Covert who functions as the board's The council said reopening pay negolia· ~ attorney. lions would serve no purpose and would ~ The board's decision, made with be unfair to other city employes who ' trustees Ralph Buaer and Dennis have already agreed on contracts. Mangers ab&ent, came after a brief A meeting had been requested by executive session. th e APA 's attorney with the city Logan made reference to the police manager today to discuss the status request and said, "The conseft.S':'s. of of the pay impasst. the board is that we are not an efficient Association spokesmen said they do investigative agency and it is ~t .our not feel the approach of writing fewer function to investigate alleged crunmaJ tickets will result in disclpliriary action activity· because it is a discretionary action. "Therefore we have decided to instruct But as with the super· Cop Idea, the our counsel, Mr. Covert, to cooperaie APA has vowed to take an Immediate fully with t h e police d!'IJ3rlmenl and f I !'· be ffi to divulge any and all information _he strike vote i any o ut mem r o cers he f in are disciplined. gathered during t ·course 0 our • In another action during the rall y, vest.igation .'' APA members voted not to volunteer Judge Endorses 'Hippie Juror .Jo do security work during off-duty hours at the Anaheim Stadiwn, Anaheim Conventlon Center and Disneyland unleM members are ordered to do It and paid time and a hall. -,. 4 Potmds Stolen SAN RAFAEL (UrlJ -A retired judge has told a pretrial hearlng here he recommended nomln•Uon of a hippie 10 1he grand Jury 1he1 lndlmd the Of 'Strychnine "San Quentin Slx." Sam Gardiner. former presldlrig Jud~· LANCASTER (UPI) -Vandals, a p-ol Marin County 6uperior ())urt, wd b k I to Tu d that Rlck Beban student body parenUy teenagers, who ro e n a es ay u 'or Marlo u cemetery stole more than foilr pounds president at the Co ege • V( r d··,J t chnlri• pllls perhapa think· among t35 per10ns mminated far the 0 = Y ' ry . · n grand Jury. ' Gardiner aa.ld Behan. ~ tlley were narcotics, aherllrs of ctr! because of his long hair and .-.putailon -18 · ---1 d for being a troublemaker wu okayed "Tbe pills are extreme y an~erous for the grand jury ao tht panel 'would and wt!! cause death." the county ea1tth represent 8 cross·sectlon o( Mari n Coun· Department wamcd Tuesday. ty The sheriff's department appealed for Defense auomey Charles Garry spent information from anyone who would help all of Tuesday quilling the former judg<!. In recovery of the pills. and ~aid adulls Garry maiptalns the grand jury that In the area should . warn their, children Indicted the "San Queolln Six" "f' and teenagers agamst any turquoise not properly chosen. color<d pills." · • -- • • OrlN ' ... • Men's Tennis Shirts-6.00 to 9.00 Men's Tennis ShoeHl .95 to 18.95 Adidas-Tretorn-Converse-Purcell Ladies Tennis Shoes-7.95 to 16.95 Aididas-Tretorn-tonverse -.~ ' tad'ies' Teilnis Dresses-16.95_ up Wilson-Dunlop-Davis Bancroft-Yoneyama Tennis Rackets Pemr--Wi!son-Dunlop Tennis Balls-per doz.-7.95 ~-BasketbaU Backboanls-14.95 Basketball-Goals-3.95 & 5.95 Basketballs-5.95-7.95-8.95-12.95-18.95 •• ,, -· • Handball Gloves & Balls Racquetball Racquets Badminton Rackets Ping Pong Paddles & BaNs Croquet Sets Shuffleboard Sets Skateboards Volleyballs-leather-11 .95-13.95-18.95 Volt YoHeyballs-4.25 .to 11 .95 Soccerballs-Leather & Rubber Feotballs-SoftlJallHlasebaUs Speedo Swim Suits & Trunks Acrylic Wannup Sults-21.95 to 34.95 Raleigh Bikes-Parts Tires-Tulis-Repairing ______ ,__ __ .......... --~-...... -i . ' I A Saaday, Wtdoelld11 ud Friday Feature · 01 lbe DOily PUot Goe a probtem1 1'1!etl unite Pat Dunn. Pat wilt cut red tape, !')'f.t the • au1wer1 and ~ ac,ion 11 o u need t o ~1 solv1 fnequt-· tits iti OOV· rn1nwne and business. 31oil 110 u, qutl· tiO'ns to Pol Dunn / A1 Your Seruke, Orat1ge Coa.sl Dall~ Pilot. P.O. Bo: 1560, Costa &lera. <.:a., 926~6. lncludr. 11our &<.1ephone t1umb1r. t • • • 'J/ai1it Hear t Prompts Suit W!LMINGON, Del. (AP) -Mn Hall , 50, says Grtgory Kux. ~I . promi3ed to marry her three limes, 001 backed out each lime at the last moment. Mrs. Hall, a widow, filed aull in Delaware Superior Court cllarg· ing Kux, a bachelor, with bruch ol contract. . She said she spent a lol 'OI lime and money preparing for three weddings. She said she surrered financial loss, mental pa In , mortification . humiliation Rn d wounded pride. • - s DAI LY PILOT 1 Students .Urged To Write Solo1'S Impeachment A.sked WASHINGTON (UP!l · -. Rep. August~ F. Hawkins (D-caliI.), Tuesday introduced a resolution to im~cb ~esi· dent Nixon, bringing to IS the number of such measures introduced since mid· July. GEM TALK TODAY I by ~ J, C. HUMPHRIES l~S!!!IL!l!!Vl!!E~R!'""i!T W I OLD Proj.ectHalted; Developer Sues Coastal Agency Early in Egypt's history, .silver A finn \vhich asserts that it had was actually called ''White Gold ," spent more than $715,000 on a San and was scarcer and more valua-ble than gold. For a short period, Clemente condominium project when the gol d was not even in second place. Cali£ornia Coastal 7.one Conservation Copper ·,vas scarcer and valued Commission stepped in to halt con· n1ore. structio?l named the state agency as ~1any ancient civilizations, in- dcfendant5 Tuesday in Orange County eluding Sumerians, Babylonians Superior Court action. and Hittites used silver, not gold, Aries Development Company states in as the basis of their monetary sys- ils demand ror a writ against the state terns. Silvefr ~as higll_llf value~ alilso ed I f II because o its re tgious slgn 1-that the coastal agency a~ un aw u Y cance The chief dieties of Sumer \Vhen It stopped construction of the 45-· · . · · cl unit coodOmlnlum at Espana del Mar. · and Babylonia m uded a Moon- The a~ion notes that the project had god and goddess,; but there was lhe full approval of 1he clly o1 San no Sun.god, and silver was n.atural- Clemente when «1r1Stn1ctJon ""'*ll halted ly a n1etal of the moon, JUSt as ~ly this ll)ODlb on the grounds Hmt gold was the metal of the sun. the project was siled within 1.000 yards It was not until about 2500 B.C. By GEORGE LF.IDAL Of l~t 01Ur "Hot Sleff · Light Tornont· · . I Few Show Up for UC Irvine Rally They billed it as an .. Impeach the President'' Rally and no one came. Well, hardly anyone. Under gray skies at Iunchtim~ barely so yards from the UC Irvine commons cafeteria, about 300 students showed ~· At 11 a.m. the advertised hour for the rally to begin only a ne'l''~­ sound technfcians setting up microphones and speakers and pamphleteers were in Campus Park. A hour later, y.·hen an array of speakers that was to have included Cong~ Jerome \Valdie, began the audience had sprinkled itself across the slopes. Some dozed, warmed by occasional flickers of sunligh t through the overcast sky. , Others chatted quietly or flitted abotit to visit with..Jriends parked elsewhere on the landscape. Occasionally, disiJlterested applause punctuated a speaker's point. \Vhen asked, however, nearly every hand signaled students' desire for im- peachment of President Nixon. Throughout the early anemoon pro- gram, cyclists and pedestrians criM- cross.ed the park area, seemingly oblivious to the presence or the panel of speakers and the audience. Associated Students of UCI President Armando Banuelos opeied the program observing that it repre!ented student government's role in student advocacy. Ad hoc committees such as the one sponsoring the Impeach NixQn rally were invited to form if students felt the other viewpoint ought to be expressed by a student government-sanctioned organization. Rep. \Valdie could not attend. He sent regrets noting_he_ W.iS.. due.in. \Vashington for an important vote on a bill establishing an "independent" Watergate prosecutor. The jewelry gift that's always appropriate. ArtCarved Diamond Fashion Rings ,, ' • Handcrafted ol 14 -kara t gold. Matched sets in a wide range of styles and . prices. For the· exceptional gift, see our complete ArtCarved collection . Perteet for any occasion, or no occasion at all. They're simply beautiful. Accented with gem diamonds. • J.C. of the mean high Ude line. Iha\ tho Inflow of smelted copper Aries lawyers claim thnt provisions and silver reduced Egyptian val·' I of coastal protccl1on1egislatloo enacted ues of silver and copper relative when Proposition 20 was approved last to gol<I. PO T c ST ES year did not apply to the Espana dcl Today , silver, although worth !Ill NEW R BLVD.. O A M A I Mar development. onlv a fraction of th e value of CONVENIENT TERM S a~"kAm e•;t"•-l -M~•••t c 11-t9• A pretrial hearing at \Vhlch the merlls gold . re1nains in popular usage 17 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION PHONE 541-)401 or ~ll ~ctloo wlll be debited Is awalUng 1 ,lh'.'.r~o::u~gh'..':o'.'.u~t~t'.'.he"...:w'.'.o::ti::d::..· -----''========================== sclUng 1n Superior Court. - • I j I ' • • .f OAILV PILO I t I -1 :Energy Crisis? :It's a Plot RICKY TICKY rounx, It's pretty clear today that we have three members on our Orange Cotmty Board of Supervisors who can spot sinister schemes . b<'hind every bush. 'Ibey even see such plots in the energy crieis. This became evident o n I y yesterday \rhcn our coastal Filth D i s tr i c L Supervisor Ron Caspers, IA'ho serves as chairman of that august body, trotted .out 11 ideas on how our county govern-..,. ment might constrve rue I and power. Now, it shouJd be clear that Caspers didn't come up with a bushel of radical -notions. ADne Weds -Her Soldie~_ ----•·adition-fille~· C~e1·enion~ • . ' Prineess AT ALT{'~ -Viewing Princess Anne and groom Mark Phillips from right (righl to left) are Queen . U .. 1 Tel~• Elizabeth; Queen Mother; Prince Andrew; Princess Margarel; Viscounl Linley and Lord Snowdon. . ' ' .. :Offers ~e~pite i11 Crie~s } ., . .. ~ • ' • , I ' LONDON (AP) -Pril\Ct!SS AMe, th" her husband Pr\nce Phllijrigave ' : oii!Y daughter or Qlletl\ Ellza!>C'!J,, , the brld•,-awny, and _'hot , "'9,t 10~ wed a commoner cavalry ca~today. PrinCe Charles, hclr \o :lhA, who in a televised, tradilio ·fijlod ...-ernot11 , celebrated, h~ 25th hlri!>Cl•Y *.~~ that gave Britons • brief,e.plte lrom · Watching from ~ ,oJllei: liile ••1* economi_c cri~ls anct threils of a.o-oil Peter • and Anne. nlilldf. +'\t h ~ shortage. bridcgrOOm's parents:-4J'M·tkf1r· ·Phltaips The queen and aboJJt 1.800 other guett.s is an execuUye ol one of Jrltelnis Jop looked on in Westmhtster 'Abbey as tbe ·food compani~ " • blonde 23-y~ar-<>ld prlncea pJi!dg~ to AMe was CJaii in a white iilk gowll "lo.ve, cherish and obey.' C.Pt.-Mari-cut-«1-:lhe.-~-Wlth-LJlilh Phillips, 25.. , -F.dwardian colltir ~nd· 'E I i i-.a b ,e) h '-" The wedding was tele~ ~ the sleeves edged with pearls. lfet\ velt"l<'Of world. . ·. white silk nel was held in P1'ce bt a diamond tiara borrow~ from. her ANNE AND Pllll.LIPS SJ>Qke Jn clear, grandmother, Queen M_other Elizabeth. firm tones as they exchanged their vows. Her hair was swep,t back..ffOQl l\,ctnti:r The princess's only sign or emotion came part. ._ . when she trembled slightly ... as -her PIDLLIP&-WORE-the bright· scarlet bridegroom placed the gold wedding' uniform of his regiment, the Queen's band on her finger. , .. Dtagoon,Guards. "Those whom God hath joined together Schoolchildren got o. holiday and more let no man put asunder." intoned Dr. than 45,000 cheering,,nag-waving Britons Michael Ramsey, the Archbishop of lined thi wedding proc!asion ·route on Canterbury. at the end of a brief a sunny, cold day. ceremony identical to the one used in They seemed to be ignoring the St F I Ah t Bl k Anglican weddings throughollt the coun-grumblinas of, some ,Labo~ party ory· a se OU ac s try. lawmakers. w}Jo _had urged that the At the request or Anne and the quee n, wedding be canceled because or Britain's Cleared,· Fr:·da"-: television cameras "'ere stationed to perilous economic state and the possibi1i· Skylab 3 Rocket " f show only the bride's veiled profile. ty of fuel strikes. • s tbn• v • t • F • Anne and Prince Philip. beamed and . T k ff Pl d e g IC nn on ....... e "TlfE PRINCESS insists on at least wa ved to the cheering cri>wds .. tbe : SO ntESE WERE the kinds of steps ll eO UJlJte . .LI. some modicum of privacy,'' the dean Glass Coach took them to th4!! Abbey. iCaspers proposed for our county govern-of the Abbey, the Re\'. Eric Abbot, Phi.lip "·ore lhe uniform of an admiral ~ent. Nothing heart-slopping Uke closing CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI J said before the ceremony. · or-ulC!: ncet. Newspapers have been full of similar tactics. Doing tmngs like cut ting off ,wmeedl!d lights , reducing speeds in coun· ;ty automobiles, and urging the U.S. lgovemment to return to Daylight Saving Time. =· the entire operation and going Countdown for the twice-delayed launch FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. -A bl~ck her husband Sunday e\·ening at gunpoint Only a few guests were able to get "She really looked lovely, as any bride of the Skylab 3 crew on a 00-day record· \1·oman "'ho told police a gang of black in a racial incident and threatened to a close view of lhe bridal couple during should do on her ~·cdding day,'.' said ' : When he finished listing the 11 steps attackers abducted her and her ,.,.·bite kill them. th e ceremony. They included the queen, JeMy Maule, one or the spectators. ,that might be taken, however. the breaking space voyage got under way 1-,;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;o .. m;i'I greeting from three or his four fellow today ·with officials confident the pro~ husband and set him afire 1113de up II supervisors was indeed surprising. . lem-j>lagued Saturn 18 bootser rocket the story, authorities say. · Third District Supervisor Ra Ip h was in good condition. "All this business about abduction and '.Diedrich of Fullerton cracked, "Well, racial incidents \Vas all fabrication." · -~w that you finist}.ed your political The launch -rocket got a top-to-bottom Broward County Sheriff Ed\vard J. Stack •• td ' ;speech. , . .. examination for structural deficiencies said 'I\iesdax. "The couple aren't mar- -"--r--ihm-FrorttrDfstrict Super~tscr Ralph" ··'1'uesda . ---· ___ r1ed. lb1?J..l:l:_ere__eyj_c_t~rl,frQilLtM_if..fil)~rt,~·:...il1--- ,;cia:rk of .Anahejm added that it all Skylab Program Manager 'Villiam c. ment, both are unemployed, they have --.---------------~--1----1---· --~ed--fik~·M"~h~ lhe--Al!'erican;-:-Scbnef~e--are commitling to no' visible means of support ·F]ag and apple pie. . . 1 ch F ........ ,. t 6 ot' A M p•r' 1'11ie -onlf lliliig She told-the truth" f - ~ And then First Di.stnct Supervisor Bob-, aun n;oy 8 '. · · . "' • but , about was that' she drove the victim _ by Batlin of Santa. Ana abruptly leaped ~ _final flight readiness review was to a hOspitai.'• 4:0 the alert in time to grumble agree-scheduled for the boost.er today. fnent with the aforemcntloned Diedrich Aslronaut.s Gerald P. Carr, of Santa >and Clark. Ana, Edward G. Gibson, formerly of ' . s"i n Clemente, and William R. Pogue :. ALL OF TlDS bitter criticism heaped )I~ some simple ideas for turning were supposed to take off last Saturday -plf lights and ti..1tting down gasoline to fly to the eight-room orbiting space :use left our Supervisor Caspers 90rt station on a mission that could la.st -0! sitting there wilh a look of baffled as days if all has gone well after eight !amazement upon his countenance. Cracks in the ii.story tall Saturn -' Why did it happen? r Well, there arc two theories. Ooe is launch maclUne's eight tail fins forced ,that supervisors Diedrich, Clark and posfponement first until Thursday, and ;Battin are creatures of Democratic then other cracks found in rods con· 1 )><>lilies and when Caspers suggested a necting the uvo rocket stages pushed ~rogram, they reacted like Pavlovian the liftoff back another 24 hours. ,canines who just heard the dinnet:,.J.OM:· ~ . ' !. In othc!-wonts, they ·hnm«!!alely :suspected some dark kind of Repu1)1fu .plot. , How shuttitig olf the liohts and sl..,.ing )'Jown traffic galr~ the COP any votes, -:flowever, is unclear. ,, · THEORY TWO JS that the ~upervisorial trio IBW Caspers' proposal .as a speech launching his re-election !campaign. · I How !hutting ell the lights and slowing ;down traffic gets Caspers any votes, !however, is equally uncertain. r So the whole display was amazing •indeed. Clark, Battin and Diedrich e\'en \acted like lbey hadn't heard about peOpie AA"lii are now driving at an economical liO miles per hour. 'Ibey must ha ve been in some remote section of the :gklbe over the last week. : OR l\lA YBE TREY feared some deep )lltcrior motive in the whole program. )f so, that might give you a clue as l o how they think. 1, Anyway, after considerable haggling, they did go along wilh Supervisor Dave Baker and Caspers on eight of the } I energy-saving ideas. .; All you can conclude is Lord help Caspers if he ever excuses himself dur- ing a supervisorial session to go to .the little boys' room . They ma y have him followed to find out \\'hat the plot is. Change of Time Bill Ticks Along WASmNGTON (UP!) -Legislation putting the nation on year-round daylight saVing time -with clocks set an hour later than present standard time ~ has been approved by both the House . and Senate Commerce Committees. The measures, which assume the time change means people •·ill be awake for more daylight hours thus reducing electricity consumption. Was approved Tuesday less than a week after President Ni:ton proposed the move to save c11crgy. Both measures would be mandatory for all states, unless the President ap- proved an exemption for certain areas. Th~ version would be in effect for two years after the b1U is sijlOO; the · Senate bill. through April, 1975. The legislation would require clocks to be set an hour later than the present standard time, which went into effect Oct. 28. The Senate bill also \\'OUld require the deparunents of transponation and interior to make studies to detennine how much energy actually. is saved on daylight saving time. BRYAN KErttPLER. 33, \\'SS beaten and kicked in lhe head, bound1_with- t>lectrical cord. doused with a flammable liquid and set afire, police said. He \Yas listed in se.['ious condition at a hoop ital. Officers Tu~ay arrested Johnny Herald. 31. of Fort Lauderdale, on charges of aggravated assault. Herald told police he ""as drunk and he and Kempler argued about the quality · ol repair work the victim had done on two television sets. Stack said. Police said Kempler, who formerly was an electrician, and Herald had a nmning feud · over the quality of Kempler's television repair v.-ork. Sunday night, Kempler returned t"·o sets to Herald, and police said both men, who had beep drinking. got into a fight. "~le ldmits he got angry 3t Kempler. beat him up and tied him with electrical wire," Stack said. "\Ve don't know who set the victim on fire, bot we are sure there "'ere several other people in the apartment. 0 ffiS. GIRLFRIEND apparently stood by and watched it all happen ," he said. Stack sakl. Kempler's g i r I fr lend , Jeraldine Barfield. 26, told police a gang or t 1 black attackers abducted her and DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dt livtry or th~ Daily PHol 1s guaranttrd M•llll11'·~rid•1' ll l'llll d1I ft'1 ~••• yaur .,a"r •Y l :JO p,m., c•H and y1ur ,CllJ will IN •r•v1n1 i. ytv, C'll• 1r1 Itki n unlll 7:Jt p.m.. S1lvrd1y IMI 5v111Uy: If '(911 ff 1111 r1c1lw1 .,..,,. ctn •v t 1.111. 51111rd1y, tr I 1.m. Sun<l•Y. CJll llld I (8" will ,, '"""'' It Ytll. [ltll •r• lltilll ¥11111 It f ,JI\. T tltphonts MK! Or•nt• [Hft1'1' Art•• ...... •0·4121 ltorl~wnl Hvt1llfltl111 ltlcll IMI Wtllmln•••r ~" Cl1mt!!t., [111i1lr1M loacll. Sa" Ju•" c .. ,iflr•M, Dint '''"'· Stlll~ l .. l llM, lltW"I Nilllll .... ttJ-~ll : Reno Blanketed by Snow N orther1~ California Has Nasty Weathe r- Coatal Weather Mostly l""'"'f todey. \Ynttrtv wl'ICll t ~ IS knoll IOl'llght arid west to nonh- wul 12 to 20 knot• Th11r.O.y. Hlgh today IJPP'r 60s.. Coest11 t~•••irr" ••• "°"' JJ to 17, lnltlld ttfl'IOtrttvrtt r11191 lrorrr Sl 10 10. w111r 1tmpw1llH'• u . S11 n •. ff~·'"· Thi WIONISOAY SKaM ""ltll l t:OI 1.m. •.tt $teond low •:.M p.m. .f ' flV9·fOOI IWtll •m1 • ,,.,o-;1r11e to h••vv WIM chop ,, Ml. 5~!01 1IOnt IM lll•chf1 ... ,, ~/ol>dv tlld or111.ly 111 1111 mol""'lna wr 11 tOl'l'I• c1e•rl1111 In 1111 1f11r1111on. TltUASDAY First 1111111 Finl k>W ....... S.Colld 111911 • .. .. . . Second IOW ~ . sun ltlttt •:1• t .11'1. Mootl l lMI f:ll II.I'll. 1:4' t .m. J,t 6:0t •.m. ,,, It;°' p.m, s.• 7:d p.m . .0.2 hh •:U p.m 11!1 IO:J7 1.m. V.S. S11111111ary A1ln, w!IWI "'Id itlOW Hfloitftcl O\l•r • • • • I .. -. • - ' The vested grey flannel suit is back I ' . Bett• looklng tNn tnr In RHIOl'd• Luxury Worotoda Authoritalive fashion .for Fall '73 with-its wide lapels. subtle shaping and all-important matching vest. Handsomely tailored in Burlington Worsteds fine wool flannel. Part al today's Urbane Renewal "' -A New Era in Civilized Fashion. $140 silverwoods .. ·1 ! • PURE WOOL Tiit Woolm1rll libel le '°"' ... ",.~' ,, qu•lll'f-IHltd p!Od11c!1 mlMM ol tt\fl worh1'1 btll • , , 1'\111 Wool. . " ! I r • • I .. " 45 FASHION ISLAND ... NEWPORT1 CENTER • NEWPORT BEACH . --- I --~~----.. ..:·.-~ ~-·-··-- J I I j ' l • I ' . l • • I I • • I : l I l I • ' ' ' t • • • .. _•·_•d_n_Old_~~·-"-':7-m~~~r ~l4~,~1~97~3-'~~~~~~0:AJ~L:V~Pl~L~0T'.._.Jl~ r'"_.~.;.,_._._._._._.._._._..·._•_._. ... _. ...... .,...;;. ... ...,_.~~;._ ......... !"'"._ ..................... ...; ... .-.-................... "'."'.'.~ ............... _...., . -QUEENIE ' · By Phil lnterlandi '- • O Qir P __ . .........,,_ lt7£1V..Q. .... ~. "Ni.De 0 1dockl Lightal~Camt:t"a! Action!"- 'Purple Heart?' Reagan Cuts · Self - At Turkey Fete SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Gov. Ronald Reagan cut his right·-forefinger-while carving -the golden brown roast turkey •lftl80led to him annuaily by poultry growers b e f o r e Thanksgiving. "Do governors get purple heart!?" Reagan askecf"Tues- day, blotting the slight cut with a paper napkin. "'The to curl around the tip ~ finger. He toid news~e -apparently had his finger on the knife blade. 0 n e -photographer com- mented it was the first unusual occurrence at the an- nual event since Reagan became governor seven years ago. ---. •.xpm-<Ul-bimsell.'.'----REAGAlll.-llEl'LIED~:No. ~REAG~iwio1;y::;;;j~~:.t~~~urt.ys. ..... a-knife4 stroke because of the I wrestled ·wUh them.!! -=-- ) • • --·---. ----···-----·--·-~~-= ---.........;:,~ - --. - • ~ -Snap tl~h . 'n three part • ' I ~- · coordinates hy Lady Arrow Kicky lOQ_fdinates in tbrec .•. ll reallr snappy way to J,'O tb a lun~heon or-an afcer~nJJ.! rhe thcwc.. Jn macvelous fabric. \vashaWe Ulrressn11D of tcxrurcJ Dacron'° polyester; .•l" ShO\vn r,,.o lron1 a group. All av:iila~lc for sizes I 0 co J 6. Top: French cr:1,·ar, rectangle print. Knife ple:i'r, pul l-on skirt., . ' \Xi'hire s round '"ith red and navy print. ~latching tailored • · shirt. ·r,vo pocket shirr iackcr ,,·irh red ground, nav>' " .and \\•hire prior, S:>B Bottom: chocolate and ,,·hit_!! mix ieaturing a solid, knife . plcar, pull-on ski.rt; striped, raflore<l sh irt and a polka dotted, ~· ._... t~v~ .~ket shirr jalkcr, 858 .Blouses Pill~ SANTA ANA SOUTH COA ST PLAZA -.. " cut, continuing to carv~ slices UnUI recently, the Governor of brea~t meat off ttte 30-"''as presented with J i v e , I ~ .~. ~~~ ~=--· ·--=-u~ ~·e.JJE'!~"'-1"'""";;;;;;;;; 1 pouncJ. bird. . turkeys at Thanksgiving. But The Gove~r ~t~ced the the practice was discontinued cut only after bJOOO began because of the disturbanCe the big birds would maJr.e. Republica1i Blasts Ni xon r Pre ss Aides I WASHINGTON (AP) • - I l'n!sldential -Secretary · t Ronald L. ~egler. "a former employe of Disneyland. has 1 manaaed to tum the White House into a Disneyland East,'' Rtp. William J. Scherie (R·lowa), said in his newaeo ter to aNl!tuenl.t Ibis week. The Governor 's slip of the knire could have resulted from .a different carving metOOd he was trying. Instead of cutting the leg off the turkey and carving it separately,_ Reagan was attempting· to snct~tbigh meat frbm the leg while U ·was attached to the bird. THE DISPLA 1"of blood ap. pareplly didn'l dbcotirage !he lunchtime a P:l> e t i t e s ~~o/ Reagan's omoe sta(J. ·'!J1'tt,y eagerly !odd· [lllftsWitll slices from ,.tlie 'three birds provided ·bl', !he Turkey: Growers Ailociatioo. ' Rea!ll)I~ •· smidi!ln or white JDeat from the.knife blade· 11111· popped ii Into hia moulh for the benefit of '• . "· ... • t . * ·::· . .. • . " ... In an extended conunent on an erosion or "national con· fldence in !he Administration.'' Scherle criUclzed President photographers. · 11----------..;;., ____ _ Nixon for continuing "lo rely on the advice of public rela· tioM hu~n. all ol. who1n are Politir.al rather than 111eu:a e xperienced poll~cal advisers on the White House stall. + _Regaraed as a conservative, Scherle, ~frequently crltidJea Admin!stratioo pol· icy, edded : "The chie( character re-~ malnlng, responsible r... nmch of the prese'nt 'Mickey Mouse' activity, Is Rm 1Jegler . . • Gen. AlexaDder Haig, Mxon's cNef ot staff, has a distinguished military record , but In the political · warfare I game,· the general is still a buck private. I "Allbough H.R. Haldeman l and John Ehrlichmann are I gone , their gbosls still haunJ the White House," he said. Coeds l;rked · By Cleanup · Cheesecake HONOLULU (AP) -Liller and ch~ don't mix, at least as far as-university-of .Hawail~ ncemed. Dozens of women students have condemned a university- sponsored poster which Is part of a cleanup drive. The poster shows a cartooB of a bare-. breasted woman dropping her bikini top onto a littered lawn and says, "Come help pick l!P things other people throw away ." Philip W. Koehler, facilities management director for the .university, said, "l was just trying to fit in' with the cleanup theme. More women are throwing away bras every· day." : .. ...,, .... """" ....... m:::w--..... ~-...1 i l Bistori~ First • ! J _ : Sown 01t M ater1iity Leave • i WASHING~;l (AP! -Under the ~le~ a m~ber ! Rep. Y v o n n e Br.aJthwaite of Congress must ask for 1he Burke, (D-Ca1if,), boaals a leave on behalf of his ·col- first In the U.S. C.Ogress -league. Rep. Augustus F. she Is the first ~lljber to Hawkins , ([).Calif.), req\Je5ted get a ma~mlty lea•e. · lha' Mrs: Burke be" allowed Houle SpeQ<r cart Albert, !he ofridal leave. (~a.), gnnu.t lier the " i leave which belln' .Ho¥: l. WHEN REP. H. R. Gl'Olll, I ' REP1 BURKE, 40, who Is l at her. Los Angeles hi>me • awarUn1 the momentary birth : of her first child, plans to ; return to Congress when the l -.... ion convenes in (R·lowa) heard that Albert granted ii,; malemity leave, he commented on the Hooae noOr: "This is a 'ltlstodc flnl In the Hoose of Rep"'""'laUvc•. and r want to exteiid my B ehold dte bold 'golds' .•. highly polished ll)etal adorn· ments by ~{onet, Tamboucine necklace Vo'ith seven rows of chains to adjust as you i~e. $3 Earrings,.Sl !l Bangle, S·IO Fashion Jewelry . " " . . Lil"'"""' -• , ' ' ' l • ' congratulations to b o t h ~ parties, both· to • lhe memberl.__._._._._._._._. ... _______ ...... _. ........ _...ii... .................................... .:._ ...... .:..._i:i.....l. ....................................... ..1 and to the speaker of the Shop Monday thfu Friday, 10: 00 a.m. to 9: 30 p.m. , Bullock'~ Santa Ana , 1 Fashion Square, 2800 N. Main· Strt>er, Sama Ana. Telephone : 547 • 72 l l > anuary: . -\ •I Ill lhe ~I official !elive had been IJ'Bllted to con- House." . • gresal..,.I members only for ' pe"""'8I ftlnesl o( Illness of a flJll!Jy llltmber. Mrs. Burke's husband Is a Saturday, 10:00 a.m:to 6:00 p.m. Bullock's South Coast Plaza, San Diego Freeway at Bristol, Cosra .Mesa, Tel ephone : 556-061 l health care consullanl. . • ---------------· Sunday, 12;00 noon to 5:00 p.m . " • • • • I •• • • •• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Although it once looke~mooth sailing for La· guna Beach's proposed GlenneyW Street parking smic- (ure, the needed ra c11lty met rough seas recently wtth unexpected criticism from some members of the city co uncil. Cou ncilwoman Phyllis Sweeney and Councilman Carl E. Johnson attacked the parking structure as a n1oney lose r nt is projected the facility itself will lose $42.000 yearly) and as benefiting primarily downtown merchants. There are ways of making up the deficit, but one of the fai rest is a method proposed by merchants them- 5elves during the battle against the hourly 20..Cent meter fee . The shopowners sug gested a charge could be levied <ln the gross revenues of businesses beneliting from the structure. At shopp ing centers, the merchants pay for the "free" parki ng provided their customers. In Laguna, merchants could partially subsi dize "low-cost" parking for their custo mers. A combinationo f meter fees and merchant con- tributions could make the Glenneyre structure eco- nomically viable. Preserving San Juan Although only a first step in the completion and implementation of the general plan, a policy statement calling for a population ceiling or. 28.000 by . 1983 adopted by San Juan Cap1Strano City Councrlmen IS significant. . . . The unanimous action by the council puts the city on record as desiring to no more than double its pres· ent population and to retain a 11village:like" atmosphere with-ample open-space. of Parking one of the fastest growing cities in Orange County. So fast , in fact, the city was In danger of loslng Its uniqueness through unchecked growth. The policy stategient was written by consultants Hayworth and Anderson after two months of public hearings. · It includes suggestions for lowering densities from the current 4.5 un!js an acre to 2.5 units aq acre, for building permit quotas lo coordinate growth with public services and for compensation to property own ers whose lands are s_pec:ified as open space. It's a worthy beginning. The action by the council should not be too late lo insure a quality development. Density Dilemma · San Clemente Councilman Arthur Holmes has made a bold suggestion to reduce the densities in the city's most congested of areas. · The councilman emphasized that residents are be' coming alarm"!I at the densities allowed In the R4 (multiple-residential) areas of the city. To correct the dilemma, be bas proposed zoning be amended to allow a minimum unit of 1,200 square feel, rather than 800 square feet. He ll)so suggests major increases in off-street parking requirements. Hobnes ls a member of the South· Coast Regional Z6ne Conservation Commission. Some of his proposals already have been applied to San Clemente projects coming up for approval before that panel. This is an idea that should be approached with some caution. Increasing the minimum apartment size by one half probably would reduce density, but ii would have the opposite effect on cost. And with construction -' 1 ! • -. \;, ..... San Juan Capistrano, long. thought of as a sleepy mission town tucked away in the bills, bas actually been -· -pr.ices continuing--to soar, this could very well have the- side effect of zoning low-income and even moderate- income families right out of town. s ''A LITTLE STIR ALWA.'<> HELPS A GOO!) STEW." --· __ , Nixon Aides Bar Dear --~-'Puttlic~·Penan~~'~ ··-~ WASlilNGTON Dooming t h e melancholy private dialogue between President Nixon's lieutenants and con4 gressional Republicans is total White House rejection of Capitol Hill's deeply felt need for public penance by Ute President. current negotia- tions ostensibly CM:__ cern how much Mr. Nixon .shall open his files to save bis pres- idency. But these talks founder over unstated con-- _gres.siooa I demands that Mr. NW>n somehow (Ollfrmt Congress, perhaps BB a committee witness. with a show of eX'J)iatlon and l'OOtrition. One influential (and p~Nixon) Republican Senator feels Mr. Nixon cannot survive unl ess like 1-Ienry 11, the 12th century King of England who atoned for the murder of St. 1bomas a Becket by being public- ly scourged, be makes public penance. THAT IS anathema !<> the President and ail-bis advisers. Indeed , he is ig- noring advice from his own staff to make considerably less humiliating gestures. Thus, whatever agreements are reached between Republican leaders and the \Vhite House over disclosure of tape recordings and documents, the basic gap \vilt remain unabridged and Republican sentiment for Mr. Nixon's resi gnation will rise. The \Vhite House's understanding of sentiment on Capitol Hill is even murkier today than in calmer times. Mr. Nixon's aides interpreted conservative Sen. Peter Dominick's criticism of the President as reflecting fear about his 1974 reelec- tion campaign in Colorado. In truth, Dominick y,•as saying in public what allllQSt all his colleagues say privately in the Republican cloakroom. REPUBLICAN Senators who still have not uttered a single word critical of /\lr. Nixon say privately he must resign once Rep. Gerald Ford is confirmed ( EVANS· NOVAK J as Vice President. 1be bamge of recom- mendatioos from Capitol Hill are eleventh·hoor effort! to avoid the PrfSidt!lt's' !'11~00: - Sen. William . Brock of Tennessee, a conservative and a Ni.loo loyalist, recently wrote the President a remarkable Jetter ouUlnlng the stepo necessary to save himself -~ public disclosure not only of .tape recordings but of all presidelitial documents bearing on Watergate. Less sweeping requests are now be.Ing negotiated with the White Ho• by Senate Republican leaders. BUT TAPES and documents: will not truly satisfy C o n g r e s s . Many Republicans feel the President should face interrogation from his legislative peers -perhaps by the Senate Watergate committee. one Republican leader in Congress, in public a total supporter of Mr. Nixon, is privately telling the White House the President must testify because be Is "at the end of the road" and no other course re- main.s. The avowed purpose of calling Mr. Nixon to testify: to probe inconsistencies in Mr. Nixon's confusing explanations of Watergate. Beyond the avowed purpose, however, is the Henry II -syn- drome: the feeling Mr. Nixon can survive only by hwnbling himself. It Is here where all hopes sink of agreement between the Pre.sident and coogressional RepublU:ans. 111F THE PRESIDENT has to go up to the Hill, groveling, on his hands and knees, I'd rather see him im4 ~Peached," one senior Nixon aide told us. A middle-level as.si.stant put it this way : "Are we going to .go out crawling on our bellies or are we going to go out swinging ?" Those two presidential as.sistanls are "-Merger of the Month : Irvine Com- pany. and Wilsey & Ham. Next tar- get: Enhancement of Big Sur. BIGGER-BETTER INC. • Gloomy Gut ~ •re satf'llitttll .., ,....._ 11141 " 1Mt tteenurllJ rtflect l'lte 'fftw1 fl flle -•Hr· St'lld YOllr "t ....,, t. G!MmY G11 .. 01l1Y Plltl. soft-liners in the Whi~ House rontext. Naturally, then, the bard-liners -headed by Ric.bard M. Nixon -are unalterably opposed to any act of penance. Indeed, the ~dent ignores cons!derablY more moderate gestures recommended by bis = -owns~. ST~ PROPOSALS !or a frank, private\ discussion of Watergate with Senate ind House Republicans have been gatheriiig dust in the Oval Office for weeks. One adviler, usually a bard-liner, is getting nowhere in urging one ~final try by Mr. Nixon to publicly present his side of the Watergate story. Earnest suggestionl from Capitol Hill, such as Sen. Brock'•, naturally go unanswered. Rathet,-the old White House refrain that Mr. Nixon can save himself by forgeUing Watergate and turning to other matten js sounding again. That may explain cancellation of Mr. Nixon's meeting with his Watergate lawyers in order to deal with the energy crisis. It does explain press secretary Ron Ziegler's reference to the Watergate "foolishness,,_.. -fully reneeting Mr. Nix· on's own view. IN. 11IE SENATE Republican cloakroom, Ziegler's "foolishness" was considered a repudiation of Sen. Barry Goldwater's plea last week t h n t everybody "cool it." It also shows that while Mr. Nixon's congressional SUJ>' porters are down to a precious few, not much has changed at the White House. For the short run, that promises Mr. Nixon 's continued refusal to di splay any weakness, much less resigning as President, even as Republican support grows thinner by the day. ·Foreign Methods BeUe1·? To the Ediror: Re the article: "Catalytic Converters 'On' "in tlie Pilot or Nov. 7. Is this for real? How in the name of sanity can ·such a th ing happen? EPA administrator Russell Train's reasoning is anti-human in its chilling sound. He acknowledges that the devices pose a "significant health problem ... lung cancer and cardiac problems" yet he says delaying requirements "would mean tlm>wing off the entire momefltum of the presen t auto emissions control strategy.'' . THE PARAGRAPH following clearly states· that foreign manufacturers have come up with a sui)erior method. In ·the prestnt cli mate of pollution hysteria It seems that "anything is better thal! nothing at all". It's time we -the "maises" -demand an accounting of the pro's: and con 's of those methods deemed "good. for u;;'' and maybe a return of sanity and good sense will occur. B. M. TRAVIS Park Lawsuit To the Editor: Re: your editorial, Nov. 9, Laguna Main Beach. You refer to ?tfr. Cabriels' Jawsuit Wicks - 'Look, It's euy ••• Mft foot, right foot. ••• MAILBOX Letters from readerS aTe ~lcome. Normally, writers should contJell their n1essages i11 300 words M less. The right to conde11.se Letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. All let- ters musi include signature and mail- ing ad.dress but na1nes .ma1'be wit1i.· held 01i request if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry will not be pub- lished. as 1'irresponsible court action." The validity of this value judgment remaln.s to be seen. QUOTE: " .... delay and rising costs could rnatetially affect park design, a design reached in years of agoniting by several broad·based citizen com· mittees, and by two city COWlcils." The design was not a result of the work of the committee or the council, but, for the most part, was done by the architects and lifeguard department without direction and was sprung upon a shocked and dismayed conunittee and COU11cil with the admoniUon that "you anust approve it or we'll Jose our place in line at the Coastal C.Ommi.s.sion and lose our funding." Quote: "Most certainly It (the lawsuit delay) will mean hi2her construction costs. . . ." Yo\Jr 'i''Most certainly" leaves you no retreat. Cootrarily, ii a C9mmOn sense_and fiscally responsible re-design were the result, ti!e opposi te may be true. If two-allegedly un- necessary buildings were eliminated from the park there could be a cost 11!11uction of $28;,000. (Provable.) QUOTE~ "The action, if ('()fltinued, will bring a [Jood of disappointment and bitterness in Laguna. It truly could kill a fine park and dangerously polarize the community again." I know Of nD one except the building architect (not the park arcbiteet) and the thr~man lifeguard depaitment who favor the total design. Four individual disappointments are not a flood. What is polarization, a diUereoce of opinion? To avoid that we m\.lst have meek followers who ques- hope the men blockln& this project. will change their minds and rerognlze that a park will benefit our environment. BROOKS TOLIVER Look Who's TalklK!J To lhe Edilor: Just look and listen to who is lecturing to u.s about conserving energy -none other than Richard Milhous Nixon. WHAT ABOUT bis (the President's\ nwneroos vacafion jaunts acros,s the coWllr)'? Each and every round trip from Washington to San Clemente 9ll Air Force One occupied only by him and a coiiple of speech writers ~nsU?!Jes no less than 18,000 gallons of fuel ( 120,000 liquid lbs). His last week's trip from Washington w Key Biscayne in crder !<> visit Bebe RebozO also consumed t,000 gallons or 60;000 lbs. of fuel. Mr. President : Talk ,is cheap an<f it's high time you set an n::ample yourself and conserved our scarce fUeJ supply. BE'l"I liiR S11LL: just resign and wt wiit Jet )'OU settle down in 5an Clemente. It will be much easier for you and much better fer u&. BORIS BUZAN Good Old Dat11? To the Editor: The other day I heard a shoc:ting VD report , viz: California has double the VD rate in the nation; Orange County has double the California rate; and Laguna Beach has six times the Orange County rate . Birth. Control Fails When Children Spell Security tion nothing. Lagwums are not like that. QUote: "Such· cutting (of costs) would likely kill the grants which In part make development. . • .pasaible." Ano\ber~ assumption. Though the Feds THE PARAU.EL \Vilh the voting record on Praposition I is strikin~. Obviously there is something atavistic about my habitat. The nineteenth -or is it the eighteenth ? -centui'y is alive and well here. Recently a beach city school superintendent was revealed using school funds f0< a stag party showing, before his school official buddies, ol "Deep Throat." I bad really thought, in my innocence, 'that the ancient and honorable (within limits) institution of the stag party had disaPPW't!d from the social scene. But no. ·we countians or the shoreline preserve it, as a baroque museum piece, along with the ac· companying ·vo. the sb&d0$ of anceslral vigilantism in the Bitch Society, and a tou&ing addiction to ecooomic snake-oil remedies. ~ Too bad I'm on the outs with Chief of Police What.s4his-name; otherwise I'm sure I could sell him on setting up stocks and pillories in the vllla1e square.l For blasphemers. They're a menace. I Californians, San Diego's percipient Neil Morgan tells us, "believe to the verge of fanaticism in bi~tb control and small foreign cars, two articles of faith which must somehow be related." They are indeed. Neil Morgan . ~1oney, as -we <to not ha ve to Be told, doe• funn,y things to the way you think . The fact thot you \vant to hold onto \vhot you make gives a deck$ed cast to· all your opi.n4 ions. The contrary fact or belief th at you're never going to-9COre, no how, gi\.'e.li you n quite eontrary cast of thought. Ill extre1ne terms. money makes royalists and lack or It makes anarchists. 1n the matter or chlldren. 1noney has In recent years bttorne a mighty factor in our aUitudes. This has followed the general affluence or lht? upper middle classes. and some of the ordinary middle cl111, and the ability or man now to 'frustrate efrectlvely the r<produc<l vc .. functl~ns by forms of birth control. ·.·-IN Al.L this kind of thinking, Marin county is a kind of metaphor to me. This Is because I Jived there for three years, and heard more damned selfish and inhuman talk on the bringing ot children lnro the world .. than one could beUeve -and all of this, mark you, from the flowen of our culture, ladles from Smith and seals from Prinoeton, etc. Yet the thinking II 'the same In otht!r plush cautornla suburbs such as \Valnut Creek and Piedmont, San Maleo c o u n t y , C&rmel·Monterey, Santa Darbara, Beverly Hilb, Palm Springs. The Marin mentality sees children negatively. They are a liability. They cost money. Somelhlng like 40 grand 1-0 ge t a boy to coUege age, and maybe another 40 grand to give him a college education. And there are thoSe hordes of black and brown and yeUow and poor white Kids on welfare for whom Mr. and Mrs. Marin personally have to pay. Joe Blow in the: Mission pays, too, but with less a sense of personal Insult. KIDS cost money. nimk of how many Porsches you could have .if .you did not have six or seven kids, only f/le two or less prescribed by the theoreti- cians of the "papulation explosion." You aren't going to lay in a lot of Lafitte IC you have seven brats tearing up the fron t )awn, nor make many trl1>3 !<> Tahiti What the Marin mind cannot UD· derstand is that there are relaUvely few people in the world who look on kids this way. In most cultures a large brood, especially II blessed wttb stout sons, is anything but a liability. Jt is, or is thought to be, a way out o[ poverty. Away from the curious Marin kind of thinking, kids are. an asset, not an economic nuisance. The Ford Foundatlon and the Indian Government found thts out the hard way e few years baCk when they put lots of money and all their •ll)l<rtlse into a big birth ttductlon program In the Punjab. The prnject !ailed dismally. in the village of Khanna, as 'described . . ~ ---•·-bl d by the ---·-•~•· may he obtuse, would they stop the in a reu~ e stu Y ~-.,.t grant because we were asking for Jess Mahmood Mamdanl. , • · The rne&Age : -Nobody ln the village lllO!IOY •• ·ts about ro restrict the size of, bis Quote : "Gabriels should drop bis suit. family unless it pays ro do .O. The The costs are t90 high and the principle brutal truth so far from Marin and querulous." The principle Is that in- Ford Foundation and-offkial ladlan~ .. diyidqals ar!! expecte,d to obey the l~ws ~ governn1ent 'drinking, is . ih&.t for paor • ol the state and therefore tlie stale people; big families do pay, especially should also obey them. How querulous when there is a prospect of emigration ls that? WM. W. LEAK !or the boys and the employable girls. lllAllMOOD MAMDANI show! that, ln · thiJ particular village, which Is to like fannlng villages everywhere, the .only hope for a substanlilll rise In llOCial status 11 ro ~ve a big family <ii 110111. Tbele could mtgrall to the city or 10 tO sea and aeiid bock llOl1le of their earnings. Or they could work the land for their parent.I and so develop some small capital with which to buy more land. Birth control, in such elrcumstances and to such people, is like of(ering Sanskrit leuons ro a sandlot -baseball team. Marin county cannot un,derstand this. Harlem cahoot undertand Marin county. I've lived Jn both plaqe11 and compr<hend each a little. What I know 1;; money has a lgt ro do with whether you are for birth control or nol• ' fiet Started To the Editor: . I wilh 'that the city could hurry Ji!> and gel started on the park at the Main Beech for a few reasons. One Is that all the bare land lookJ pretty 118ly with no grass or anything on It and It hurts the view of the ocean. Another reason is that all the trets that were dooated are probably setting pot bound waiting to bo planted . It would bo sad to see them die. ALSO, my mom says that it will probably cost more lo build lhe park next year than It would this year. Jt doesn't ... m right that a project looked forward ro by so many Lagunans should. be dcl4yed just because of a few. I DAVID A. MUNRO • . I OUllN co;in DAILY PI LOT Robf1'1 N. Weed, PubU.htr Thoma! Ktcvll, Editor Barbara Krelbich Ecllrorlal Page Edlror Tho <dllorW .. -of the Jlolty Pnot .aeeq to-1.nfonn and stimulate rttdtts bY, ~ <in thta pqe diverle •Commentary' on topics iof 1n- trrtct by i)rndlcated oolwnni* t.nd cartooniats, J>y_provktinc a fOnli\ ~ feldert' YltwJ ll)d. by1 ~thls newspaper's optnibn. and ;dN. On ,curtt:nt topics. The ~aJ,opintot. ot ~ Daily PiJoi •ppear only In. tlie edltorW ootumn at the .,._ot._tht paa-e. Opinionl t:>(preacd 111 thii~ umm.tS and et:~ anc1 letttt wrlten a.rethetrbwn .net fx>endoit-. mcnt of lhtlt \ltewt .b1 .'lhe l>&Ur• Piiot "*11d ,,. in!tmL' Wednesday, 'Nov. 14, lll'TS ! I I l ~ ·~ ' ' , I '! ~ •es I 180 in ' !olbl 1 loae . Is. ' M : \that itoda tl\e plan the Ame u I ave a liv to dum the may B far to lxlt tern and .mar per und ofte and ex tific F ti fie cro • t<> :seu ·hav IOm r B Is t ira ma gen • 25 . -·-~; F eno bed ltlO .. ma can the ma prl ' " ·!::! ,,, at .Jar vi dol h fro 1Iu :i OV bl . ' ' .. ;. I !• ' ' r • I 1 • • Wedntsday, NoVt'mbtr 14, 1973 ~Farm Price Snarl : · 1 Needs . Correction i: ' WASHINGTON Americans, •especially the urbanites, get r 1ao Involved In the trends and ' foibles of the Urne1 that they , looe sight of where the action ·is. ; I Man mull eot to live and , ·that is ..mor, the acUon Is 1today -cm the fanns, 1 in the Wl!r.....,, processinl planta and supermarkets ol the world's lifaest !Mumy, American eiarlculture. It can be doubted if the to have lost hundredl or thousands of dollars tn their ~~l! with the wily Russians, !!,lid this Is not the central point. The central point Is that American agriculture I h a a been hit by an explosion of wort'1 demand which, amon.i other things, alplloos off bll! the !IO'ybeans and a quarter of lhe com produced In this country, The puny U.S. Com. , modity Exchange Authority (mcuARD WILSO~ average person working ·for a living today 11 smart enough to be a farmer. 'Mx>se big, dumb, hlrny-bsnded sons of the aoll exist In legend and maybe a few localities. headed by Alex C. Caldwell has confessed its inadequacy to cope with the marketing system after hearings con- ducted by Republican Neal Smith (De m., la.) ventilated the problem. ,. ' .dG1?en11ey western regional carpet warehouse .reduces .. . . . 20,000 yards of -But the 51.lcctSSful modem farmer is required not only to be a scien«nc technologist but to have a sense of in- . temational economic affairs and the workings of a complex .marketing ~ystem the average person docs not begin to understand. The experts are often bafned by the system and fall back on Intuition eind experience rather than scien- tific analysis. NOW A Kl!'ID of continuing crisjs situation ha! been created. Last suminer, .com contracted for de 11 v.e r y couldn't be gotten to market in Chicago because there was no transportation for it and it couldn't have been handled anyway because the receiving facilities weren't adequate . With lour traders holding 90 percent of the contracts re- broadloom remn .ants. FOR EXAMPLE, the scien-quiring delivery of soybeans tlfic farmer today sells his on demand, prices quadrupled, Save 50% to 70·0/o. crop before it Is harvested and the trader-was at the ( to pOOpte who will In tum mercy of another. w ' k 11 f ' h 11 'sell what they do not yet Nol too coovinclng a case - -e· ve ta en a 0 our s Ort ro ·s have for future delivery lo has been made on How this eomeone v;ho v.ill n e v e r hurts the consumer. There is · receive it. one fairlywelldocumented in-• and p"1ec· es and reduced them BafOing. isn't il? Yet this stance that the price of eggs I! the going and necessary was boosted by speculation. practice in a commodity But ltdoesnot takeanexpert drast1"cally for qu1"ck sale' marketing mechanism which io perceive that when prices · • generates an annual business of grains to feed livestock . ·-~ac'-11-~=·-~m~nlu.~ Y,,,.!.~\f["~ · ~="·teee · ~ ·S , __ ··-~;D~t s;'.~~ ~:'°~jlo~ble..or _quaJlru11 pie.ho-tbat,iI>ml'--"-£ • gee I ort SfiiCI( exChange. . -at the supermarket Ill llll!He.i' '~ . 1·•~~ --I""° •~ ~ ~ · · ~· ~ enormOus-bQslness of priee the myriad food and consumer · Federal regulat ion of this prices for beefsteak and for ·Hurr.."'J!· sa· ve! hedging is In the hands of products of wheat, com and \to people who are presenUy soybeans. ID overwhelmed by t h e magni tude of the problem that they are finally. confessing the tru th to Congress. ONE OF 11IE truths is that a few people or entitles, aometimes u fe w as four. can get effective control of the entire Tl\lrket in some major commodity and send prices skyrocketing. · Another truth ls that the 'jnarket is exposed to foreign 'Invasion on a grand.icaJe from. c.overnrnents with billions in f<IOUl'COS to manipulate prices Jor what they want to their own advantage. The American 'conswner gets what is left ,at higher prices. nu;: MAJOR remedy now under conside ration in Congress, aild on which bear- ings are being held, .would create a new independent commodity exchange authori· ty like the SEC for the stock exchanges. The need for this iii lo obvious it scarcely needs to be debated. 'The SEC , has 1700 employes to pol\ce a market one-fourth smaller in dollar volume than the com- modity market now half- bean.dly policed by 16 peo- ple in the department of agriculture. • F.., bol!ftd on on lour lldet; ~ I, I ond. • (axcopt 1 .. m back carpeting) • Sllaga-Plulh-Hl-low-La•ll loop ICUlplll'••f • --_ .. -Indoor-outdoor • Nytona-polyntera • Parfect lor living .,_ badroomo, hdwara. -.. ~-·-I • For • llmlted ttme onlyt -----·---==..,· ===-- • Another fact is that four ,large grain concerns handle virtually all or the multi-bill ion dollar export business, often huddJing secretly with buyers lrom foreign governments in ·huge transactk>ns the U.S. government knows very little GROUP I GROUP II 6x9. • • • • • • • • . .17.88 6x9. • • • •• • • • • • about. - .$27 GOSSIP BUZZES a b o u t overnight millionaires. but the biggest grain exporters claim But this is only a beginning. 'The_,jmplication lies that from this beginning will grow a system of goverrunent and market control inOucnced by consumer and producer in- terests not only for food but other commodiUil such as lumber, plywood, silver, ~ per, and so on. Beyond that greater export control looms. and overall, steadily ad· van clng gover n me nt supervision of the marketing of the necessities of life. --,-gx12 • • • ••• • • • 34.88 9x12 • • • • • • • • • .. $55 :I THE PICK OF Punch I " ,. J, CNILO 6UIOAHCE ·~ ~ ' ; ~If it Wiii discip/iM you nHded, why didn't you ask for It?" Cerih•cth19 UceM• · 1111 0 CHAIN FENCE SAVE ON Cl1AIN LINK FAIRIC, 'paoncT FAMILY, HOME AND Pm 500/o OFF* r:s~~fL:::·-W-A=lDS I C-.. YllMM "'-"" 111C1 •""" tlf ,..,.,., """"""lllttMIK' ,.1v111hM w 1,..... vtwyt.eMtell taric. Wlr1 lt!Wk h 11114' ,. • ._.. .. Mr 1atrl \ ; ,..... ..,,.. .................... tte.; .. llfN ... ., ...... i.. ....... Call,_ ____ ! WOOD AND WIOU•HT llON ALSO AY~IU.11\L .. . \ • • I. • I 12x12 • • • • • • • • • 48.88 12x12 • • • • • • •• • • .$79 12x15 • • •••• • •• 59.88 12x15 • • • • • • • • • • • .$99 GROUP Ill GROUP IV • 6x9 ............ 24.88 2ft.x3ft ... • • • • • 1.59 9x12 .......•. 48.88 12x12 ......... 74.88 .3ft.x5ft .. • • • • • ;3.99 12x.15 ......... 88.88 4ft.x6ft. • • • • • • • 5.99 GROUP V Remnant package sizes 6' to 8'11"x12' & 15 19~99 .. JCPenney . We know what you're looking for. Shop Sundoy noon to 5 p.m. at the follow ing stom: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach {71 4) 1>+4-2313. HUNTINGTON CENTE'R, Hun tington Beach {71 4) 892-7771 • • • • ¥ . .. -·--... "T,-.... DAILY PILOT 1 1 l I .. . ·- . IJ DAILY PILOT ·L. M. Boyff Those Santanas -Are Santa Anas · How rrequently are marriages performed in thil country to unite not just two but more than two citizens to make one famll~ Nobody knows, exactly. But a Callfor· -_.nia .coe<Li.s. qooted_a.uayJlli..sbe_ll!>r5911"ll)'. Is acq_ualnted with five families each comprised o{ between tfiree and nve - matrimonia l mates. On 1his roster of hers, she says, are: 1. A husband with two wives. Z. A wife with three hus- bands. 3. Two husbands with 'three wi ves. 4. A wife wed both to a father and his son. 5. Two wives and two hus- bands married to one another but not just to each other. What's meant by marriag e here came about through.~ it -yourself ce remonies. That group of five, for example, reportedly ate some raw herring in what they regarded as -··a si mple .sacramental 1itual aboard a_. fishing boat several miles out; recited, ''How do I love thee?" in unison to the chartered helms- man: disrobed one another under a new rule that prohibited anybody from putting oni's own hand on one's clothing; and then jumped off the stern togethe. Swimming in con- cert, too , is to be one of their lifetime things, I understand. MASKS Q. "Aren't masquerades illegal?" A. In numerous municipalities, they are. Police frowned ·On that fairly common scene years ago wherflin citizens on the strlds went to and fro in masks. Q. "What do penguins eat besides fish ?" A, Nothing, I'm told, And told further that penguin tastes like polar bear which tastes like shark. Jn real small bites with your~eyes closed . . What is schizophrenia? Listen, please, lo the famous Dr. Karl Menninger on this matter: "I don't believe there is such a disease as schizophrenia ... There are personal- ity d.isorgani;i;ations ... J treat people ror them . . . but schizophrenia to me is just a nice Greek word that some psychiatrists use to sound 11cientlfic and to impress rela· tives ... -Nine-tenths of the people with so-called schiz~ phrenia get well without a hoSpital." Our Language roan contends those three words which have the largest riumber of slana: synonyms, in order, are money, sex and drunkenness. -.. . . / -. ....__ ... __ _ • Check these savings now. In case your list turns out to be bigger than your budget. Pantihose at stock-up savings. Sav~ on slips. ~ Sale 560 ----11---""--~fta!~·-• oid · i~ ;;tCse oo"t~~-ft~~-~omia~-::.,::.:--IJ--t-----------c----X-7 • • called "Santanas"? You know our column motto : "Wrong agamr"-Ari -tmfutable authority. says theY're rightrully named "Santa Anas" for the simple reason. that they blow down the Santa Ana ruver Canyon. ' This seaaon's opinions ... Best television interviewer is Barbara Wa.J~ers •.. Best TV comedy is "MASH" ... Best women's feature on TV is "Dinah's Place" ... Best TV detective remains ~"Colombo" ... Best baseball side- man is Maury Wills ... Best newsman in the field is Gar- rick Utley ... Best ... Wait, doubts arise ... Too many categories, anyhow ... Nevermind. And another definition or t6e uniVersity 11!our-Jetter man" describes the young fellow who writk!s the £olks just once each fall, winter, spring and summer. . SULTRY VOICE -The slower a girl talks, the lower drops the pilch of her voice. "OrdinarilY. Therefore, any girl who tends to screech because she talks too rapidly is advised to whip out a stopwatch in Of(!er to time herself with any reading matter at hand, thus to rehearse a more leisurely conversational pace._ No doubt a-girl's-look!, brains and personality do much to attract a feUow'Sinter- ests at first. But our Love and War man suggests it's her tooe of voice that eventually either keeps said fellow around or drives him away. Approiimately 126 words per minute is' regarded as the best speed to get that highly desirable sultry tone . . A unit of wOod is called a cord. But what is a unit of rough building stone called? Likewise a cord? Correct, a cord of rock is right. Now what is a unit of wine ? A pipe. And a unit of cloth? An ell. Our Language man is collecting redundancies. Like yellow jaundice. Free gratis. Covenant and agree. Consen· sus of opinion. Indigo blue. Any others? Addre ss mail to L. !If. Boud, P.O. Box 1R75, New. port Beach 92600. A CQmfli.lt dmn11 FREE Wl!h tne purch11e ol IYt'Y ffttil or NUh1ie..1 ~•t .... 11111.,...,..~11p1co.i dinner fl V•lll '-ltl•~•: lt nder btt•ded ,,.,1 1tt1~ c;:r;er.ct wilh mi lltd en""· Include• 1p1ghtlll wirn ~110111111 u ac-. IOU•-Oo!IQh g"'Uc b,.ad ..,., your '"°1~t ct 1aup01 u l1d. llle1t11 d,ft.,.1nr1pecllldlftritrc~ ••"~ .... u. Gt1 YQUI' !1va11!1 w~h 11-.e •PP<0p>i1te tolfl>On btlow, , ••••••• OPFE.i 0000 WITH COUPON ONLT ·····--· ... : .... ~ uy ne inner~.... : : ·~~Ei! Get One~FREE! ::~.'~ES i ,__ __ ! -VEAL-PARMfGJANA1~·~1~:~.11. ! 1 Jhis to~po~ Is 1ood fir 1R1 tomP1e11 m11!, '' 1pt clfl1•. 1 I wi1• 1111 p~rch11t ti 1111tlt1r 11t1I 1f ••Mit1lt11t ••lue. I ! OUPd N fl~~"r 1'P tw. COU PON ! ~ ................. l~"'" .. ""•~······"' I ...,.,NYIAWft.ll~IWOl~14~H~r " •, ".•1):-,,, .. ,llfOll:IJCll, ...... f'ltfil!OA>lY:CIOt!O~Cl,.f .. A'H••• 11,~. _•!; ~ ... llUQl _.I NEWPOR· ~ • RT BLVD. f,OUNTAIN A i .'~., I ·1 AkBOR BLVD. ' . . . . ' . .. • ......... -sale 3 for 199 Re-g. 3 tor2.77. All sheer nylon p1ntlhoae, or sheer leg with reinforced panty and toe, nude heel. Choose your favorite fashion shades. Sizes short. aver1ge, lo ng. Queen size pantihose with sheef leg, reinforced panty and toe. In beautiful'· fashion shades. Reg. 3 for 3.77, Sile 3 for 2.99. • .. CPenney We know what you're looking for. . Shop SunClay noon to 5 p.m. at the following stores: 20% off all •a sweaters . Roi. $1, Sale $6.40 100%. acrylic bouclM. long longlh YMti, Iii . back cordigans, puff w ruffle tleevee, pojf)til and embroiderec:f trims, Great color>. s-t,l;~. : FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 6+4-2313. HUNTINGT0N CENTER, Huntington Beoch (714) 892-7771. -' . HARBOR CENTER, Costa Mesa. (714) 646-5021. I • --. j ---. l • • • • • Controversy Still ·Rages On School Book Burning DRAKE, N.D. (AP) -The books have been burned in the high school incinerator, but the controversy over destruction of copies of a best· selling book still rai.O. M~>/e,;Idents Otlhia North Dakota !i>'ln of 600 wish JAAY never 'llilid ol' lhO book •tlllt was -bUmed --· Kur Von· -neg u t '• j, 41Slallghte:rhbuse Five." ' : i. • 11TllEY GOT the books out of the classioo1J11 arid t.bat'a: all we ·asked_/' . said Mrs. Mrs. Duchscherer said of the jncident, ''It's nobody's business in New York , Chicago or Qis,ritarck." ... . ; Sevtl'Y saijl he bad' not rtceinct threatl he would be ~ ,, . • 'fired Or forced to resign. ,. "Buti',the School board has made t ... clear to me that i woutan.'t be rehired next year," he said. * * Official Rehired Wednesday, November 14, 1973 _ Match emu sale! Save 15%on all these gre~t looking coordinates 'You knon• nihat '" e burned? w e burned so111e ·cheap paper.· hacks.' --RIOGEF·fELD,-Conn~(.AP4 1-~----------------,--~~~ Lester Gerber. "Now 1 wish we could just let it die." -The Board of Education has voted to renew school ' UPt ,T•.....,oto 'l'he Drake School Board "'-'"'" -burned three dozen copies of Vonnegut's book last week and ENGLISH TEACHER Bruce Severy Supt. Dr. David Weingast's contract after an earlier decision not to because of a controversial stand he took on .._two books _ dealing with racial topics. ordered the destruction of 60 copies of "Deliverance," by James Dickey, and "Short Story Masterpi~." a n anthology of stories bf Hem- ingway, Faulkner, Steinbeck and others. · Mrs. Gerber was among a group or parents who com· plained about the books because they contained ''obscene language." 1•m E SCHOOL board decid· cd the books were obscene and they were backed up by some of the local clergy," said Mrs. Bruoe Severy, Whose • 1 husband waS teaching from The action, passed by a ~2 margin Monday, entitles Weln- gast to a .new tbree-year cont ract after his current one expires June 30, 1974. Weingast last \vinter op-cover classics," said one posed the board's uns.uccessful school board member who attempts to ban from classes asked not to be named. "You "Soul on tee" by Eldridge know what we bW'ned? \Ve Cleaver and a text book, b urn c d s o me ch ea P "PoliCe, Courts and the Ghct· paperbacks." to." and televisiOn make it sound· like we burned some hard Another woman who .com-,~~~~~~~~~~=li plained ,to the school board If about the books was ,_.lrs. Korcen Duchscherer, whose daughter brought" th~ matter to attention .. • the books. "IF YOU READ this book tK• pl11e• to go for .... ; .. Sale4895 . A. Reg. 57 .95. A polyester doubl~knit spo rtcoat for men. Two butt.on 1s1ngle breasted styling in great looking p.atternl or solids. Si zes-36-46. Sale4895 e . Reg. 57.95 . All wool sportjacke.t f6r men. in plaids or checks. Two button single breasted styling, notch lapel and center: vent. A nice addition to Fall slacks and shirts. Sizes. 36-46. Use yo.ur JC Penney charge card. DAILY PILOT 9 • ' Mrs. Gerber said the books you know it ~an be taken . RNE JEWELRY t====o;~::.:~ ~~_Lmorals'~. the ~~~~:l·" :r1Gio1Wc1.=;,fl_I-_-."!!. ;!,~~~I ::::::::;-... _-;~~~-==-~;__--_-:--- "The neW!papers and raili()" write sue • ' . : • . . ~ ! . 1· j I i • ~ .. 20°/o off-.a.11 ' " me·n's ties i ,, · .i~n stock. ·· r \ " . • Th"itie. Fiil in fillip to a man·s ensemble. To tie ii tOgett)er. r9~ accent. Select an armful • •• from all the mahy fabrics, colors and patterns In our entire stock. Save 20% now. Sale pricu through Sunday I • r I l , ' ., ··r l\ . i. [tf} :, ,, ' ' . r • i t. l t•"; ~ ' L~1)I", : .. :: j 't'· .. .I) ' 5, • •· ' JCPenney We know what you're lppking for. Shop Sunday n~n to 5 p.m. at the ·following stores: . . • FASHION ISLAND, Newport Be•ch 1714) 64+:2313. . HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Be•ch (71«4) 892·7771 " HARBQR CENTER , Ccuto Meso 1714) 646-5021 • • • • -. • - JCPenney · We know what you're looking for. Available at larger Penney stores~ ' · sa1e ·$1s Reg . $18. Men's.slacks styled with Hare.leg, wide belt loops • • and stretch .waistband tor added comfort. Dacron•. polyester doub1eknit In h'andsome heather tones. Wai'st ·sizes 30·42. Sale$17 Reg . $20. Dacrons poly-, eStef .double~nii slacks fo( men. Wide belt loops, llar• leg and western pockets for a great look, Many paOerns 10 choose from in sizes 3Q-42 . Silt prlc.1•ff•~•8'"' Sund1y. .. . ~ Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at the following stores: FASHION . ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 6'44-2313. HUNTING TQN CENTER, Huntingto~ Buch (714) 892·7" r. . .. 7--- .. • ' • • ' ,,'t Jfl PAll.l' PILUI Wtontsday, No¥tmbrr l4, ~'fl) ·----. • •• •' ,1 q 1.1 -Fo1· tl1 e Record _. Marriage Lice11ses Otlier Deatlis SARANAC LAKE. N . Y-_ IUPJ) -Lila Let, 68. a silent screen act ress who co-starred with Rudo lph Valent ino in "Blood and Sarni,'' died Tues· day at Saranac Lake General Hospital. Hollywood gossi p columnists of the era Jinked f\Iiss Lee romanticallv with Valentino as well as Charlie Chaplin. --,,-_., "°""'h lO~ •11d A1111• Mtr~. 1,, botll oi 1vn1 nq1on l••cll. SOVlA·GllEG RY -S101. 21, llo~rt 'r· ?J, •nd Sharon L~•· u, llOlll o We1ll!'lin5! .... WILl(ES-TVCC I -seot. 12, Jtmei J1cob. 11. •lld S11•ll "'""-,,, both of H11nlf11QI'" 911c11, KEA"'NEV·TWYi:ORO -Stot. 22, J1m11 0,, )0, •llCI St rl LVll• it, bolh of C~ll Mt11. LEE·ltlLEY -Slot. 11. H1r11trl, 4(1, of Parclleaue. N. Y .. •1111 M•tlf, ••• Of CO.Ill Met.a. MASTR IGHT..-,,OOllE -Stol. n. John A1tn, 26. of tl11n!lr1cnon aeecll. •nd OIRMe ll"rl-.~0. Ol-NorNllk. FISH£1l.OALTON -kot. 21, Jtlfrev Peul •. 11. 1m1 K1 rt1err.,.. Loul1.e. If, i'nln ,,. w''"'!tmlnstt r. -~ MILLER-SEWARD -Stpl. 71, 0 1mon Jann. 4J, or Commerce. and P11rlc11 c .. ll. of (O•I• Met.I. WIOTE·HAltOING -Stot. 23. a r1111 Gecroe. 211, Ind Andretl. lJ, DOii! 111 Mlll'!!ll'IQ!Ofl. Bet<n. MCNAMAJtA·PERUZl l -5..,i. 24. Oon1ld Wm,, $1, of L101H11 Hiiis tn<I NOl'mil A .• Sl, 9! G1rd1n Grove ' WA,T$0N-HA,LL -S1ot. 2~. w1m1in IC .. •2. 01 "-.Ol'UI 8tll<I!. lfld Gt ll F •• :Jiii, of Hunllngton Bffch. SEOILLO.MC COY -Sep!. 24, Robert 8 .. u . of Anaheim. Ind Donn• Je1n. 18. ol Hun!ln111on BH~h. FERRAllA·VAUGHT -Sip! ll Jo>toh J ack. 19. 1110 Bonnie Cher vi• 74. both ol Sen Juan Caol1.tr1n11· • ESHLEJt·ESHLER -S~!. 14.' 8111v J.. !2. rem1rrl!'d Gr1c1 E . Sol b0111 ol San Clfml!l\11 ' • VTT E~·BITTLES -51DI. 14, Jonn M1ihr1s. 11, of Escondido. iHld M1ureen 0., 21. of Hu11U11gton B••ch. STEVENS·MA(l(AY -Sei:tl 'U Michael L.. ]7, 11111 Claudia o · ia. oom of HunllflllTon Bt1cfl. " FREEMAN·BARR -Seo!, 1!. L1rrv Jt>\'r, 1f, •M Bonnie Jean, 11. bOth of Hlll\t111<1IP11 Beach. NEUMAN·HANSEN -Sf!ol. 25. R~tl ••-r: 1:p. 11"d M1rth1 Lvn,_, JJ, boll! ru,mtlno!Oll 811(1!. MlrHI ·ES"EJO -Sepl, 1S, Flov<1 O'N• I, st, 111t1 Doris A .. 41, botll cl Fou1111i11 Valley. LOUNSll ERV,JOHNSON -Sept, 27, Ron•td E.UQtne. 10. Ind Robert• Anlli..19. bo1fl ot Huntl1111ton !ltacn. TIMPc·WOZNEY -Slot. 2tl Donald R.. 49. Ind M1rv Eme lne. .q, boll! of San ClerTMnJt. PAVNE-W!Ll.IAMS -Sl!t}I: 21. L Oustv. ~. ol G1roen Grove, ind '"'~n A .. l<o. ol Fount•ln Vallev. flCUYK NOALL·SMITH -Sepl ;n 0 ' Fr1nkl111, 11, • oi ~i~i;;::sJ:~ •. •nd ~arblrl Allct . 16. STONE~ANKENAU -Se111. 19. Eow1r<1 S .. Jf. nnd Ei•·a' , Aae,. Sl. boll! of Hunllf!Qlon lle1cll. 8 UCKMAN·CLEVENGER -Stof. 29 Cllarles Del~rr. a~. of Co111 Me$1; llot1ored Orange County Sher- iff's Reserve Sgt. Tom Mackay of G a r d e n Grove has been named 1973 ''Reserve Officer of the Year" by the Soutl)ern California Re- serve L a w Officers 1\ssociation. • Braile Sets Demonstration SANTA ANA -A special demonstration of re a d i n g devices to assist those with extremely poor vision will be offered Thursday end Friday at the Orange County Branch or the Braille Institute of America in Anaheim. Deeision P1'oviding B~il . .. In Mu1·der · Cases. If ought By TOM BARL~Y or , ... D•ll'f Pn. Sl•ff- SANTA ANA -An appeal lo the California Supreme CoUrt against a local appellate court ruling that provides bail for all persons, charged with murder is being prepared to- day by the Orange Cowity District Attorney's office. It will cha11enge a finding f\1onday by the Fourth District Court of Appeals in which three justices agreed that the abolition of capital punishment in California no longer permits a judge to deny bail lo a person charged with a capital offense. That ruling stems from a I rial currently under way in Orange County Superior Court Defendant Michael Kester Remington was freed on $200.000 bail after initially being denied bail pending his tria l on charges of soliciting to commit murder. Remington, 34, is a Fullerton lawyer wbo alleged· ly masterminded .a series of plots to dispose or hostite v.•itnesses and plaintiffs in a number of civil cases by the use of hired kill ers. But judges and 1 e g a I ORANGE COUNTY "court ruling from the Rem· ington case only ~pplies until Jan. 1 when the dea\h penalty initiative passed earlie·r ·this yeor becomes ef[telive At that tlJne. it is pointed out, the term capita! offenses or some equivalent term will again become part&t.tbe state constitution and~ ~ges will again be empowertd) to· denf bail to persons ch8rCti<l with capital offenses. And all judges and lawyers contacted today agreed it is highly unlikely th at an ap- pel\ilte cPurt. ruling that Will be valid ·for only 48 days will immediately lead to freedom scholars tod ay attached little on ·bail for persons facing importance to the local ap-_ ~r charges. pellate court ruling with thE! immediate comment that it still allowed 'judges to set a bail figure. There is nothing to prevent setti~g bail at $1 millicil," one Judge commented. "Cer· Wnly, the de(ense 1Wllld then contest pie setti~ a.S being· too high, but an appellate ~urt would certainly then look into the reasons for my action.·· In 3ny event, other sources commented, the appellate SPORTSWEAR DAIL V !04 MON. • THURS. lO·t W~liff Plua; 17th a11.d '"(Jie, Newport Bc•ch,Cali(omia92660 BE"tl!ESDA, Md. (UPI) - Ru th Elinor Judeflnd , 76. mot her-in-Jaw of former Vice President Spiro T. · Agnew. died Tuesday, one day after suffering a heart attack and stroke in the A g n e w s· suburban Washington home. ar>d Tretfa Dell. 82, ot S11111 An1. JAVEL,OSA·T)DWELL -Seol. 29. Ram+llro Michael, 19. at Weslminster end OellOrlll Lee. 11. al Anaheim. ' LORMIS·KNERR ~ StPI 19. Ttrrv Lee. 26. and Su11n Elalne 19. botn of Hu11llnolan B.e•,h. OAMWIJK·BROWN -Seot. 2f, Ge-oroe Wi!lltr. 10. and O'br• Gav. 19. both of Cas11 Mt••· Tote away big -. OTTING·HR.tBACK -Seot. 29. Jerrv JS. 111 Newaort llMefl Ind Mlcrielf Ch~~s A~G:~~J~,U~~ e;. K~~~!~~.~~~~T~~'·;:~~f~· ~~·n.c!;.1 sav •. n gs 2oorc • ( -. · boll! af COSll MtSt. , , ecullve inanciaJ itor of the KN•GITT·OAvls -Sef>t. '19. Rich1re1 · ----0 Los An'geles T1'me·s and a E.. 311 ef\d Georo•ne Marie, 2s. • both a Hu11t11111ton Beach. veteran observer of th c THOMAS·BELL -SeD1. a .. L1w1s ;;:,:~~~;;~ . Jol!n, S2. of Nr.'Woor! Beach, 1Jld aerospace and railroad in· Enka A., 48. of Garden Grave a bn·-• illness. · JA'~s'sME 'e "Rn1a Marie, 10, of 1r~lne. t:l NI · U NETT -Sep!. ~' Nor· ' • WESTEIN STATE UNIVEISITY COLLEGE . OF 'LAW ·: --,OF ORANGE COUNTY ~ ' CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST LAW·SCHOOL .. · 1 OFFERS A CHOICE pF TWO PROGRAMS OF LAW !iTUDY , • IN 21/, ., J YIAl.S of ,IJU..TIMl I""'...,, 11$-16 ct1StfQOIJI h:i1,1n per ~kj, or •• tH :31/t ., 4 nAls of '•1r.r1Mr d•y, ...nW.,, u we1ket'ld l1w uudy 13 cl1ne1 PIJ', we1k, 3·• hou11 p.r d 111), r • • Y°" "'"'..,.'" Y°"" JUllS DOCTOI jJ.O.) dtlgrN -"~--•,; ' . i:UGIBLE T~lIAKE 'lME - CALIFORNIA tA''~INATIPN WllTI OI PHONE fol· CAT~ A$1l1131!i.. I: z"'';;s: 800' Sout~ lltoOlchunt Anfbim 92f>4 1;14f ~,5~'3 APPLY NOW FOR.TFIE~Pli.ING 1974 _SEMESTER, BEGINNING FEBRUARY 4th -FULL -TIME LAW STUDY PllOGllAM AVAILABLE IN FALL 1914 • ' ~ "J~.-SWDINlS IUeall fOl tllJlilA1~Y' INSUIP m.. t-. ....OYIED fOlt v1n~s '·, Nearly Everyone · Listens · to Lamkrs .. ~ ' j •. FLEMING·SWIGGS -Sep! 19. David _off · . dustries, died Monday after Ooblev, Jr •• -ll· ol Hiintlnoiton' ll••eh, 0 ur ---------,. man Wiiiiam, l!i, of Cos•• Mesa 111<1 ·-----~~·~-.._ ...... _ .. · . ' . .-..... ----~------·•.;------·-___. ... -· ~~~·-· '-....... • ::-.--"""' -,-~ -~ --·1~-~ •. _,...__;..., --llA~R;AA"Msri~~:__~~lll.,-2'1.. -=--~ ...... ·,, ·-.·---. . --=:i.ui-n" ~ • , -·-··~· -· --c ---- · (UP!) -Me1i'JOr•a services -lla&rr wuuam:-··14, ~111f'Je1nn1 A .. -~ :--• -_ w.c::::::::a=-~--__ Were · sched.Uled "today for Bl0~N~:l'o'i5tr~:es~ s;,111. 29, FI • d--~ -®R --'~~~-.. ---=- .. + eorae w .• 37, and Ellllbelh c exs I e Norman Prescott, Bl, general Gouio"',!.t' 6•'' ,r(l"t11 M~a. • ·• _ r h r C d · .H· 10 -Se111. ,9. Tlmothv manager o t e ce apa es L~. '10. 11nd Julia Ann, u . boin • r ·i·••• , l9e3' p I ot Le<1u n1 8e11ch • rom tr'IU '1.0 . resco t JOHN.SON·LENTZ ._ Sent. '19, Pnillia . died Sunday afte r a brief ill-t:~~st,Z~·11.0~1 ~:[~~nst~~i.v. •net _-. nes s HALL·CENICEllO,S -Seot. 30, J1mes · E•ne•t. 22. of Newoon llucn, and SAN FRANCISCO IAP\ ' - International society figure Anj~ .Zabala Howard Van~ derbllt died today at her home here after a fi ve-year battle against caner. She was 69. PALO ALTO (AP) l\·lemorial s e r v i c e s for ~1arshall V. Vlrello. 58, direc- tor of development at Stanford ·University School of Medicine, are scheduled today at First Presbyterian Church. Virello died from a heart attack Saturday in Los Artgeles as he \Vas preparing to go to a football game. Deatf• Notices •Ull9ELLA ,.,ul 8Yrbell1. Re.it1en1 of Laguna Beach: it.year emolovee of Tommv Avr•1 Chev- rolet, Laouna Bl!ICll. Age 63; dale o! death, Novembef 10,. m l. S11rvived Dy ni11;1, Oorolfl•a £1li$, Palos Verdes E1· lale1< brolhc-r, Kurt 81.1r1>ell1, Michigan; 11,~r-!11-law. Bl!rlllt Burt>ella. Culver C!1y. Vllllatton, T/IU!'1d8Y afternoon and e~nh~g. Sheifer L1111un1 8e11cll Morluarv Chaoe!. Grtveslde Jer!flctl. Fdd1y, Ni:>- vember 16, 11 AM , Rost HUis Memnrlal ~•f"k. Wl'!!ttle-r. Sheller Laguna Beach Morluarv. Directors. JONES P aul Jane$ Jr. RHIC!ent ol Lo• Anotl's' dlle pf dt•tll, Novemwr 11. 197]. Surviv· ed b!f so;in. RavDurn, o! Oownev; molhtr. Idell• Jones. Bell; Dro!her, Wr1n Jone,. Chev,,.,ne. Wvomlno; sister. MI r v Wemllsn. Alh1m0<1: lwa or1ndchlldre11. Vl1i1,11on. lodav, WeClntS<lllV, !rorn ~ to ' PM, Pacific View Chaotl. Se<vlces. Thunoav. 10 AM. Pacllic Viti!( Chacel. lnte1rnenl, Pacltlc View Memoroal P1rk. P•cltic Vl1w Mortu1ry, Oirecror1. PYKE C-mHv A. PYkt. Resident ol Mls,lon VTe;o; 011e of deain. Novem~r 1?, 1973. survived bv flut.b~ntl. 09nald .t.. Pv~e; dlUCll\1er. Mrs. Janet E. SlaMhulh; Drottll:r. Frank AOam,on. El Mon"; lhree 1ir1nd,llllt1ren. F~ral serv\ces, ThurM11y, 11 AM. McCormick LIQUn• Beach Cllao11, wltll Rev. Roi.err I.. Bonhall, of SI. Geor~e's Elliscao1I Church, Ltci\lnl Hiils. aflidatino. l11termenl, El Toro Cemele<"lf. McCormick Laoun• 11e1ch Morlu1rv. Olrecrors. ., ARB UCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 4.27 E. 17th St. Costa P..1esa 616-4888 • BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Coron a del 1\Jar 673-9450 Costa Mesa 64.C-24%• • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 .Broadway, Costa 1\tesa LI !-3433 • DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUARIES 17911 Beacla Blvd. Huntington Beach 842-7771 244 Redondo Ave. Long Beach Zll-138-1145 • McCORMICK LAGUNA • BEACH MORTUARY liCNi Laguna Canyoa Rd. 491-9415 •• PACIFIC V!EW MEMORIAL PARK Cf meter)' 1\1ortuary Cllapel 3508 PacUk-View Drive Newport Beach, Celllornle "4-.t7GG ' , • PEEK FAmLY COLONIAL-FUNERAL HOME • 7101 Bol .. Avt. \\'e1tmin1ter SU45ts • S~UTH'S MORnJARY m Mela St. Co;inn1t Marie, 19, of Lake Arrowheld. MILLEll ·ELLISON -Seat. 30. (h,;rle~ 5 .. •7. of Oetroit, Mlcb.. anCI Ruth T ., "9, ol Hunll~ton Be~cfl. KENT-MCCl llllE -Seol. :;o: Rabe-rt W .. 33 .. •nd Jacoueline A .. 29. bOlh Of H11nt11>0lon 8e1ch. WATSON·KUEBLER -Oct. I, Raber! Bol'd. 19, of Sana An• 1tld Jan~! Lee. 17, of Westml111ter. BLAC K·MILLER -Oct. 1, J115e11h LeRoy, 71. of Oan• Poinr, 1od Jtrl Ellen, 25, of Newoort Beach. JAESCHE·M COY -Oct. 1, R1iner RO!ler 2P, Ill ll!IUfll BN(I\, l fld JllYIMI AnR, 20. of S111I• Anl. LAUll:IE·WILSON -Ocl. 1. Angelo. ~ c:~a J~":'r• J el"" 39, boltl HEART-SMITH -Oct. J, J.,,,es T .. 31. ot Newoorl &eatf\, afld Mlrlll• LuA1111! 23. of Gardena. AOAMS-AY LOR -Oct. ], .t.le~1nder H. Jr., 26, amt /Aetody R., 21, bOtl! al Hun!1n<1lon 8cach. 8RAOLEY-WRIG'HT -Ck!. ], Robert Grav Jr.. 30, al Corona del Mar, afld M;>ry Ellen 26, of H111hl•nd. PETERSON·SCHROOER -Oct. '· Joi,t\ C" 61 ~ UQ\1111 BNth, •llf Miry Anrt, 13, of Del11v Beach, Fla. BUCKEL Y·ENGWALL 0<1. S, Gerald R., Jl . .,,nd J111ict 32, both al F01.111t1ln V•lltv. Al(Ell:S-CAWTHON -Oct. $, Cllllrles R;>v, JS, of Tustin, trod ~n.ron Suie~. 31, of Coilil Meu. GARC IA·IRELANO -Oct. S, I.tori J .• n. of La Puente, afld Oebor1h A11n, 18. o! Fou11l&ln Valley. CRITSER·NELSON -Oct. 6, l!:enneth Elwvn. 19. and B11rbar1 Marie, 28, bOTh al westmln•"r. VANDEGRIFT·LETTS Oc1 6, Michael R .• 78, and Lindi Kav, 16. both of Cost• Mei•. URBAN·FIKE -Oc!. 6, Nkk Kiri. ]1, al Huntington Beach, and Jl)llnne Marla. 12. of Garden Grove. ROBERTS·PAULIN -Oct. 6, John Eilrl. )7. and Sharan Let, 25. b+lll1 al We5!mlnster. FONTANA·WURTHMAN -Oct. 6, Tony E. 57. c! Huntlncton Bt'ach, a nd L1verne L.. 45. of Newoorl Beach. TILLOTSON·TILLOTSON -Ocl. 6, Jam~ R.. ~2. remarried Jean Frances. •l. bolh of Co•lil Mes&. PAUL·THOMAS -Oct. 6, Micha~! Ch<1rles Reqlnald, 19, of L1111cton, E11111and, 1nd Ju11t MariL~n Cheroov, 3J, o! NeWO<:lrl Beach. JACKSON·L.ltMBERT Oc! 6, OOl.ICllas Pavt, 21, afld Susan /\~rit, \9, both ct Hunti1111ton Beach. ROD RIGUEZ·DUARTE -O<:I. 6, RuDen, '11, ol HunHnQIOO Beach. and Loretta A., 2!), of Pico-River•. LAROOUE·THOMPSON -Ocl. 6, M1rclal Evan, A, 800 Parl<la Leona. 28. bOlh 11! Hurtllnaton ae.ieh. MASSE·SAWYER -°''· 6. oavld Albert )4. ond Kir~line S .. :n, DOth of Co1ta Meo<l. TUCHSCHER·BURGESS -Ocl. 6, J1mes F .• JS. ot Lonq !!tilth. afld Kllrtn Jane, J1, ot Hyn!lnotvn !leach. POC:HATKO·BENSON --Qcl , 6, Ron~!CI Sron. 19, and Catnerine Marian. 26, Dnlh of Costa Me~J. CROSKELL·LARAMORE -Oct. 1, Robert W., ,S, al Pla'te Ci!v, ·Mo., <lnd Oorls WINIFRED. '>&. OF Newoorl ae.ich. RAMOS·RUI Z -Ocl_ 7. Lortie , 49, 1nd Ernesta F .• 41. both of NewCIOrt 8e1cl!. MARTINEZ·GUAROAOO -Oct. 7, Gerll dTl!orn••· '11. and Merv Teresa, 22. bll!h al WtSlrnlnsler, AVALOS·CORONAOO OCT. 1. rnomas. 19. of Santa Maril. 111d Marla. 3', al Coron• <ltl Mar. /AcLEOO·WAGNER -Oc!. 8, Dvnc'°'n Jr~ JC, and L~lla Do\ore$, 31. bO!ll cl S•n J ua;, Capistrano. SILVA·BRAOLE Y -()et. f, Mich&el Jonn n. of C•"' Meu. 1nd r111rv Ellen, 2], ol Newoort Beach. TIFFANY·'l'OR K -Oct. 9, Richerd Matthew, J7, 11f\d Karen Rae, ?S. bolhol Hunt!llQIOn Beach. TERAN·REYES -Otl. t , EnrlClve Corona. 16, of San Juan (80l~!rano, 100 Mlll!,,.!11 11, at C1ols1r1nc Beach . Lt5TA·ERICKSON -Oct. 10. Louis. 36, 11\d JUI A1bl. 37. !Xiii\ of an Clementf. ZEROUNIAN·OI FABIO -O<:I. IC. H~lCI J.. S9, •nd Ernestl111, 5!. bOlh of Huntltlfllon Beien. WILSON·KLATT -Oct. 10. Jami~ o .. 66. er Loi\<! Beach, and Coriss. 60. Westmln\fer W!ERCYSKl·lltCHAROS -0<:!. 12, F•anc!~ T110m1s. 72, 11N1 J•ne EleulOt, ,5, boll'! of Casi~ Mes<l. CRO.Al·MARTIN-Oct. 1!. Thllll'll~ Leon. 30, a! Llllld Beacl!. and Oon111 R~e. lL of F'ountel11 v1nev. ACl(ROYO·L ARGE -Oct. l?. l(el!h E<1w1rd, ''· ct CO$tl Mest , l flO Rlc~I Lv11n. 17. of La Mir•tlt. HARRIS·MAROELL -O<:!. 1', Cnarl~ H .. ,5, •fld J,,.n, lll. bOtn of Ntwoor1 II etc II . PUBLIC NOTICE SL,.·177 FICTITIO US BUSINESS NAMf: STATI M•NT _ 'Tiit lollowtng e!rMlf'I h dol"" bu9ifleH at : --• . ORANGE FREEWAY ASSOCIATES. 27'91 Cimino C1pls1r1no. L111un• Nl11"'1, c1n~rnl1 mn S, V. HUMlktt, Jr. IGe:rier11-PerMtrl 13'92 Se1w1rd life, ·L1gu"• Nlg1.1tl. c11ucrn11 n6n Thll b11SlMU Is COlldlJCfld by • llm!ltd PotrlMr1hl11, ORANGE l'REEWAY ASSOCIATES 1 C•lllor11l• tlmlled ptrlf'llrtl'llp Sy: S. V. Hu11wt1r, Jr •• Gtfl&rAI P•1t11er llllt 1111em1n1 w11 flllld "'ti" Ille (lll/lltV Clerk Qt Ort119t 1'.'6.H'!fY ooi OOODtr If, lt73. ' .11 .. ~Btadl ··-'P1.1bllf.lltcl Or1ng, Cotsl 1»11r P'llot OftoOw -2~. JI ·111fld Na11tmi.r 1, 14.. ,_ ___________ ,, 1rn Jit30·7l ... ,... • luggage. Sale13.58 Reg. 11.98. 21" Carry On with wipe·qlean vinyl over 3·ply wo od veneer frame. Met al braces. Sale18.38 Reg. 22.11. 26" Pullman ~ with rei nforced zipper clo· sure . Color coordinated i nterior. Sturdy vinyl ex· 1erior. Sole pric:H elf .. tive tlll'OU!fll ~y. u.. ,_ JCP9nney -1111 .. 11. • Sale14.38 Reg. 17.18 JCPenney Flexside• shoulder t ote bag. Wa$Mlble W'iyt ext et"ior. · Sale ·15)198 Reg. 11.te. 24" Pullman ,ii 1v1fllble in fashion colors as are· all tt)e 8bowe pieces. · ------~ JCPenney:-.~. . I We know what you're looklng .f0r.- Avallable lit larger Penney Stores. FASHION ISLAND" Newport Beach (714) 6+,4-231 3. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach (714) 892-7771 . • ' . -- ' .\ " ' ' ' Tree •• .. Sal-e. . ·~. . . ~1~~~-,K~•217.H ~ll-fl·G,_ . proportioned artificial Chtistmes tree Artl•,t.i•.ci•at . in mg ,ree,AmagnltrcentJy that wi ll bring you years Of holiday enjoyf!1,nt..~lt's fU ll 1 natural and easy• . . Ch • -,..· ~·.to.decorate. Features luxurious rlst·m' as moss..g~een needles on full, tapered ... • 1 •• , " · . ~~an~hes. All flame-retard ant. And 11 s simple to set up. Has one-piece \ • branches-. Catnes with stand aiiCf T -trees"! _tGfoand completely •••9111!1.I~ lg wer .instructions. Sa. V, ·e· · Sale 3.599 ·Rq ...... ~ . 71>-lt. Green Mountain King T~. s7 sg Sale319s ~ -t Q Reg. 3$.99. 71>-ft._B!va rian _Pin_e. Si l• pricH 111.ctiv• through SunMf. JGPenney W. ~whet yodre looldtlg'for. , Shop Sunday n~n to 5 P.M. at.the tollowlng sJ0.1'•: ~-·-• ... -... . .... {_. FASl'ilON ISLAND, 'Newport Beach (71 4) 64+231 3. HUNflNGTON CENTER, Huntington · Beac h (714) 892·777 1 . . ' ,_, . ! i . ~- ·• ( Wednesday, No~emt>tr 14, 1973 DA;LY PtLdT' J J • New Amendtnents '. . IRVINE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF L.A W • • County Lobbyi st A purse full .~:OB~nr,~~?~~~~ 1.~ of ~savings. 20~ ................. Battin argued that it was Im· •. off on se"I ected • portant that lobbyists as a ~ANTA ANA -Supervl!Or whole report their complelj\ Robert Battin of:•Santa Ana personal Income In addit!On I ! h&s made a vigorous attempt to n1oney spent entertainJng ' , to get his controversial lob-pe™>ns because the public l• 1. h d ' bylllt law passed but the Board not informed on such matter~, .. • ea t e r g 0 0 . s . Clf Sllperv~rs again del ayed "They do know what pubhc --.-action _ror another week. officials are paid but not what • • WINTER QUARTER ENROLLMENT I' Battin's proposed ordinance is spenJ by lobbyists." in- would require all persons ap-eluding ' their salariei· which pearing before the Board of are part or the remuneration Sue,ervi!lon ot . contacting they receive to influence county officials.and employes legislation," he protested. on legislative matters lo Supervisor Ralph Clark call- register and disclose the ed this requirement "an ex- amount of money they have hibltion of frivolous curiosi ty." spent entertaining the persons He said he would not 'votP contacted. for th'e lobbyist ordinance if it were included. Sale3.20 Re9. $4 e•ch .. B•ronel n•ked embo11ed 1erie1 of line 1oft le•the,, lnclude1 credit photo C•1•, billfold •nd fr•nch coin pur1~. CLASSES ST-ART 0111 DECEMBER 16, .1973 .-•..--itt--'l:UESDA¥...HE offered •d· ditio'nal amendments lo the ordinahce and it was for study of these that approval was delayed for a week. . ~ --1-------- ENTRANCE REQUIREMENTS: t ' '. 'I I' • REGULAR STUDENTS: Two yeers of.college work .with e "C" everllge. Student& with~no previous college work rri~y be edmitted if they ere over 23 yea~s of age and pass en entrance examination. AUDITORS: No entrance requirements,. e-nr.i>J.lment ~s euditor is open to anyone. FULL or PART TIME study programs with DAY, NIGHT or WEEKEND classes available . Graduates receive the LLB. orJ.D. Degree and quallfyfor.!_he California Bar Examination. Scholarships end financialaiels ar e available to vet- reans, senior citizens, public employees and other eligble students. INTERESTING LECTURES TAUGHT BY A DISTINGUISHED FACULTY. THIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO FURTHER YOUR EDUCATION. In the changes,, Battin agreed that all spenaing by registered lobbyists over $25 quarterly should be reported· ra)her than all spending of $50 in a month. He al&0 added a section which would read that if · · ''report! are riot filed or are filed tnaccurately, it would be cause for action in .court by a private •Citizen.· w l1 b penalties, if proven, of three times the amount not reported _2lus___!tto:zie)''S fees for the privaje otlzen. A PROVISION OF the pro- posed law which would require everyone to file a report whether they had spent any money entertaining or not was disapproved by Supc{vlsor Ralph Diedrich. He said this required filing of. a so-called 11negative" teport would cause a lot' of unnecessary work. Battin arg'ued that to leave it out would ·.be allowing lob- byists to police themselves. Deidrich replied that In practice such a rule would require citizens with minor complain~ to file a negative report each time they i'nade such a complaint. Di. V f D SUPERVISOR a.ARK sum- SUPERVISOR R)ed it up. "The intent of Baker said such a i:irovision. the ordinance· is to regulate would leave · the dOOr open lobbyists not the average to """""';ID harass ~·'lie of-. . • . fi~-Pi-.---i~.ists WJi co:n;. r.1hzen, and 1t .should so a>la s or uvu1• • :s~te " stant lawsul~. Battin re.pli~ ta~t week SupervisOr Baker ~t . the lobbyist or public hadtproposed a so-catted coun-' . . . -offi~tal . C9Uld ··recover at~ ... ty Bill of Rights or COde of Reg. $5 each. Baronet latigo series in glove soft leather and harldsome styling. Includes billfold. credit card pholo case and french ccMn purse.. Sale1 .60 Reg. $2 eSch. Our finest vinyl sertes in f6ur st'ftes. Choose any or all to keep your belongings straight. Assorted"fall ~ors. . . • I t-~-l-·-----WRltf..QR..CALL.EOR ,C9_hAPLE.TEl ~QBM~TIOO:N="-.'=-=-===IR_teijimf:eyi;ls;.Fifees]ii;~· Etbll:s which w o ~--~----·---= -o.-~= --=---=-. __ _ -·=-..,,....--,__ __ ........ ___________ -·------. --i)>prB ok·~.d .l~h'--.w·as n~o re·a·I· -~a•s'mwteyl~~1'0•.J~ya1.~sts ewho·m_~':. ---~=--=--~~-· ~--~-"'-=· --_.:::-.:'. -.= .-_ -~-1'---~"--__ ,_ ----~'--"I C"=-~ir-4201 ?am ui oriY~" rs~i··· -20a-· . ifvini, c.nforfiii" 92'664.'''"":~·· .. -.---~ a.. DD Mailing Addreti: •P.O. Box 4307 • Irvine, Ci1. 92664 ~ {714) 83J.OS43 . pro:eJf0:81 from h;arassment ta~cm~mOn this proposal was s•1epriceseffec:tiv•thNSU.-,t " by lawsuit af!d . asked Battin delayed !or lWo weeks to allow ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! if -he were willing to change (ull consideration by board • . • • ·Yes! • I ' it to require a bond by. those ' be tin ch 1 .15 t;; by rP-1nem rs. fi . ~ su awsui r In making his proposal qwr1~ ~~ent of urt feet Baker said "public , concel:n by plaihtiffs if they lose. fof the ethical management ·-a~TTJN WOULD not agree, stating that state law protects officials from tbose ~n~ twboi' have . a feputa~ioll f~ ' fi!!rtli "frivolous auill. · Jn regard to another pro-. . ' . . ... of public affairs is not limited to the activities of lobbyists." His code of ethics would require that all county of· cflcials and managem en t personnel disclose all income ·from outside sources !!fld gratuities received from lob- . JCPenney We know what you're 19c>1Cing for. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M at the followlng 1torea: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 644-2313 . HUNTINGTON CENTER, Hun tin gton Beach (714) 892-7771 • HARBOR CENTER. Costa Mesa (714) 646-5021 . •:'· •·. ·' .. ' Ii:- ;We ·.t . ·, J'' ·t:· '"' .~ .... ':/-1· • ' Historical ' · · -''b'.'.::yi~sis'.:... _ __:_~--------• .__.__..___ ___________ _ I • · · • 'I ' -, ":. · I *~sti,i~t ! r .... ·of freezers ·<.':.'•, • atPenneys. "Wt know what you're looking for. Fast. Come In, pick the model that suits you best. We'll have it home and ... r •• ' working at saving you money. In a day or so. Upright ~ model show; 16 cubic foot capacity features defrost drain, pdWer-on warning light, full width slide-out • basket ahd 5 deep door shelves. 57 x 27\t x 3$" high . White, avocado, gold. 209.95 · •• JCPenney w. kilow wfiitYoU're 1oo119tg far. .. Slrop Sunday noon fo 5 P .M. at the foll owing atorea: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beech (714) 6#.2313. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Btoch (714) 892-7771 . _,... __ ... • Commission., .. To Gather . WESTMINSTER -The newly-created drange County Historical Commission will hold an organizational meeting Thursday al 10 :1~ .p..m. at the Ha Peooey IM, 14041 Beach Blvd., here. .. County Lihrai:jan Harry M. Rowe Jr., who ,will act "as secretary of the commissio~1 said officers will be electei:I and a regular meeting time and place selected. . Howe also suggested a tis~' of objectives of •the con:;i.· mission which members Wllt pass upon Thursday. They ii\; elude: . -To coordinate a n y historical progra!T\!!I of a cOUJi. tywide nature and to act as a coordinating agency among local historical societies where ., ~~ed.· ! • -To identi£y and promote the preaervation of natural &rid archeologlcal p I a c e 1 • structures and objects bf historical importance to Oragge County . 11le new historical organlza· Uon was establilbed by the county Board of Supervisors and the 13 members were named from the various supervisorial dis~lcts. Death Fall Suit· Filed SANTA ANA -A Hom- tingt.on.. !leach woman who . claUTis her;. husband suf(e.red fatal injunes when he was tilown from a six-foot ladde_r in a high wind a year agb has sued his employers for $2 million. ,,, Mrs Mildred E. Hinz names the William Walters Compiny, 711 Pacific Coast Highway, Huntington Beach, •nd ~ sto~'a manager for the fall suffered oo Nov.11, 1972, by -secur1tt'11uard Albert W. Hinz. Mrs. lUnz states her bus· band wai Ordered to ascend the ladder to secure an awnlng despite the atrong winds blo~· ing et \Ile lime. The fall lrom the ladder led ID •his death. the lawsuit states. ( -. • • WARD & HARRINGTON • - LUMBER CO. DOING BUSINESS AS USUAL w.,.i L H•,.i119t•r1 L-ll•r c •. , . T L -'°'°'' .... ,;.,.. M•w,-.rt y ••oil l120_Air••y Av•11••. C••I• M111 T1l1pltor1e: 556-1563 1~,. OJ(,:O '•Er ... , Pau/orirt• ,, -We Don't -:;., ·w.-irt You To Be :In The Dark 0 • > ~z. ~ Boker r- > ~ • -~ • • I .... ! ' I §E ' .. -> ' • Fischer ~ lj i· • • t' • "About What We Are Doing ~ C11,11e,, ! : , I 'istot WHAT'S GOING ON ••• = ~ ~ • ~t .... ·I"' -.c ..... ''" t Wcrtch o,.. Progoess! • > < ' 0 < ' 0 ' ~ NEW COSTA MESA LOCATION! ' < Bristel Despite So•e Set Bac.;s llot Of Our Ow• Maki~g, We Are Happy To Report Progress ~· Our llew Costa Mesa Store Aild lumber Facility. Gralli_ng· Has Bee• Colnpleled. . . Buildiag Penaits Hawe Been Issued ~·d We Hawe The Green li9ht. · llow CoMeS Trenching, And Preparation Of Underground Utilities • • • • lie Eyesores Allowe Groand, Such As. Wires And Poles ••.•• We Will .. ligk! Up To Date, With Eweryth.iag U•derground. Of Course We Will ...... Hawe Decoratiwe ligli,I Si.sndards 1~·oar Parking Area So That You ~at _ · "Sliop At lligkl· I• A Well lighted Area, And It Should Be Almost like D•yii1k1. · Tlli•1s See• Sort Of Slow At The Sito l•t ••• , • All Of A S•dile• wi... Tke U•s•e• lmprove•e•ts Are · Co•pleted We Will Be Dol•1 -Tlil .. s That Yt• Wiii Be Able Ta Walck Wiik h1,ter1si 0• Practlc•lly A Day T • Day Iasis., . l Keep I• Toack With Us At 3120 Airway, Where We Wiii De Oar --Ut•ost Tola•• Care Of You In The Mea•time. . . Tkan•s A1al• for Your Pallt•ce. \ •. I r • • . - . ~% DAILY P}LOT 1tt , Florist ,r Business :r· . ~loo111ing'! By JOYCE L. KENNEDY DEAR J OY'.::E : E\'er since • 1 childhood I have been ln· :( tC'rested in plants. About a '." J year ago I was given a ter· ! • rarium and aft er a while J :~ '5tarted replanting it myself. 1 No\v I am nlaking and sellln,. • l'hem. 1 am 18 and working I am very interested in starting a terrarium shop of any own, although I have not had any special bi o·l o g y courses. I \\'ould like to know What my chances are of getting into this field without much kno\\•ledgc of biology. If there are any courses that you sug· gcst, I "ill surely look into them. Thank you -S.R.H. Charlotte, N .C. UNDER GLASS y o u r dream job appears t o o limited. Why not unbottle your ambition : expand it to include selling other kinds o f ornamental house plants from .,1, hanging baskets of geraniums ., to exotic jungly p I a n t s . Although terrariums are ter· rifically popular now, let's ~ -: (Career Carner J practical. Can you make ~. enough on this si ngle item to keep your cash flou· gree n? Probably not. '· At root, a florist shop is what ,,, you're reaUy talking about opening, even if you handle · onl y grassy green spreads of potted plants: (You need more capital for cut flowers than for plants because you have to keep reordering even if the •. .Llowers aren't s6ld and must -:-.:...-~.!bro~ AWay ... J....., --- --1 ;.. ~-..Jdosl like!JL.yo~~l-"':u:Lliith _ : \ a limited inventory . .But later . •, .. you may want tO' add ~_uch things as herbs for cooRing .• • .. , or aloe vera, said to be good for healing burns ....... r · · or a H~du rope plant for . •' 'tlncommon decor . . . or ." ~·hatever your c u s t o m ers ,,. seem to "''ant. Eventually, ·" you'll need a broad knltwledge of pl:mts to keep your stock ... ., 'healthy, and to an s wer · '" customers' questions. To boost •· sales you may want to lecture ,, 'at garden clubs and other -organizations, or conduct house plant clinics at your _,·• shop. HOW DO YOU GROW SO .. Sl\·IART? By taking courses : ., visi ting plant shops and · .. gardening clubs, and asking questions; embarldng on an extensive self-study reading " program about green things, their care and importance; and by obtaining work ex· perience in a florist shop or nursery. ; . It isn't biology you need to study but ornamental horticulture and floriculture . Olten these . courses ar e av ailable at community and junior colleges. Even an adult ·• education class in house plant gardening u·ould be useful. Botanical gardens offer courses. Equally import3nt is that you gain some business skills, or you'll have healthy plants and a sickly income . You should acquire an un- derstanding of buying. ac· counting, sa lespersonshi p, credit management and other managerial know-how. A YOUNG \\'O~IAN \\'ho operates a plant shop in ~: Brooklyn. N. Y.. said she didn't kno\'' "beans about bwine£.s" \1·hen she started. But she read up on plants at night f'.lr near!)• l\\'O years . while "'·orking as secretary to • · an office n1anagcr to .learn about handlin g money and keeping records. If you decide lo blossom into f I o \\' e r arrangements, you'll need a · knou•ledge of flower design. In addition formal st udy and reading, it would be extremely helpful to lea rn by \VO rking for a florist. ,. If I.'ve told you more than you \\'ant to know about the plant business and you really " ' wan t to limit your efforts to ·l' terrariums . how a-bo u t scouting additional outlets for y-oul' \\'Ork . such as florists and gift shops? F 0 R M 0 RE I~· FOmlATION: An excellent reference book for beginners interested in the f Io r i s t business (including p I a n t ,a' shops ), Js "Starting and Managing A Retail Flo\ver Shop." It's for sale by the SUperintendcnt of Documents. Washington. O.C. 20402 (or Government Printing Office booksture, if there is one in ' • your city). Cost ls f>5 cents. .. . Kids Like To Ask Andy " v ---· r I • BATHROOM TISSUE GOULD BURGESS Lantern ''Satari lite" ••• B10ad flood of fluorescent tight that's bright and safe. No fl ame, ~ fumes or heat! } 1t9~A9o5d. 84 OZ. KING SIZE DRIVE DRIVE DETERGENT Stain lighters gel at the tough stains! 1.29 --Sf ARTER •HABITRAll" . . --nams er . ttt>usE . It's -nature's system . . .. a colorlul. roomy home 1or little pets. They can cl imb, crawl. run, dig, scratch and e•plore. Easr elpanst0n with add-on accessories. DELUXE "HABITRAIL" Hamster HousE Big expandable home for exlra luA. Everything you need from an instruction book to hamster treats. All yo11 supply is the imagination! 12.88 • •. FLORAL NIGHT LIGHT .·LAMP Subdued lighl from a jewel- like bulb. Clas- sic white base topped with a floral arrangement 6.88 DELUXE "FLORAL" ' . Night iight ' Colorful design s of flower arrangements with an on/oil switch. Attra<:tive gift boi. ' 2.79 • f 11x30'' ION~E PILOT.ADVERTISER 4 BOX or 2 1912311'.'.JURK!Y SIZI " Reynolds Y(rap ALUMINUM fQIL REYNOLDS Brown-In-Bag "Corelle" wiotor fml w~i11 TABLEWARE by C1rnln1 .A lfilmJ Place To Shop! 2&-P1EcE Punch Bowl SETS Simple but elegant! Ageless in appeal and adap table to any type of meal. any time of the day. ANCHOI HOCKING "PiilCllS" -. : :i:ry~a!J qt. b9•1, 11 cups, ladle and hooks. 4.66 " ANCHOR HOCKING • "Arlington" Crni.t_ 6 qt. · bo wl with 12 cups, plashc Sm•ll Bowl 3 . 60 or S11cer Paks D1 4· 1 ~~:s and 12 Medium Plate Lar1e Plate l. Dr L.Jr1e Bawl or Stac-Crps . 3.99• . • Olive or cry· 99c ,,---------....... si.r ••. bowl, _ . . pta1e & spoon. . -. DECORATIVE Chip -n' Dip sn 7 OZ FAMILY SIZE Mac leans TOOTHPASH W/Salod for k ' s, .. , Clear ruby 2.59 Hen On Nest Holiday fa-99c vorite 1n Gold or olive. Stoneware MUGS Big IO di. size in assorted designs. Pickle & Relish age ;":;: set "99c Flowe;'vasesA Red Oval B~~.~ Siu. ~~.~~~s U l , 79 a Y~UI CHOICE LIBBEY 2:2.50 Stemware 1or the HOCIDAYS • ... "Citati on" ... Spari.hng crystal with slender invtrted taper stems and lovely graceful bowls. 21 OZ SIU LYSOL _ SPRAY DISINFECTANT ~Elim iutesOdors ~.66 , • ;.;.-·~, 39c ANCHOR HOCKIN.G Beverage sn -. .. P•lljf Attractllle glasses 1n avocad o or laser blu e . , Sil Of 10 12 02. Si11 99c CORNING WARE "Menu-ette" SET :sp!!!_O' lllo" • 1 Pt. C1vered S11c1p11 • 1 ~ Pt. C11ered SJUcepan 12 88 • IY2 i1tch Co't1red Sk illet • ''TRIO'' SE'T COININ' WARE Carnflaw1r Deti&" Practical 1. Jl2 and 1~4 qt. covered saucepans. BOTIU OF JOO Buffer in TABLOS Fast Pa in Relief • • .. I • .. I ' 5 PILOT-ADVERTISER Wed...W01: NMmbtr 14, 1973 . Alka~ 1 :i_oz SIZE • PAKOF36 • PAM • Seltzer • ' Purt V111talle SI"''" ! C11ti11 t1r Cot wart! • T~BLETS • ~ 79~ tvllYDAY ggc: tOW "Kl ~·,<' •. • • •e .. -~- EMPIRE Hot Cy~le 16" Front wleel --·pedal drive'. • Adi~stable bucket noise. EaSr to ... 3.68 seat and motor 9 98 • ~ ~, .. assemble. • ·~ VertiBird Tea .. Set ' 1~ POWEi COPTH ( -I iJ Mattel -Child pilots real copter missions. Spinning 8'' rotors provide air lif1 and drive. Buzz high .•• diYe low! Battery 9 99 ope<aled (no l included ). • MATTEL Tuff Stuff "P11d·A-111ck" .•• Detachable workbench, colDrful bolls, nails . • : screws, tools and 2 7 95 -_..... peoiile. fun for the ~ -preschooler. • MALLORY ~~~~~~1 Batteries "C" Ctll "D" Ctll "IJ." PAK Pl! Of 2 Pill OF 2 Of 4 1.35 1.69 2.35 9-V•lt Battery for P!!n.ble rarl~s 1nd 1 5 Wafl<le Talki8'. · I . "Button" BATTER ~ For Kodak camem and most 55c ~ lnstamatics and Brownies. BOTTUOf 250 -- WOICMISTH -Service lor four will tea pol. Bright 1 98 color combinations for Holiday ~rties. • Sewing Machine BAUER & BLACK Street Hockey the NEw FUN GAMEi 50''. Sticks · Unbrea~able plastic 2 50 blade! • ~:11 79c bounce PICk 59 ()Jrable C plastic ! 15 OZ. SHAMPOO or HAIR COLOR ... -- 10 OZ SIZE • Vaseline INTENSIVE WE LOTION Wlli FR!E laO leds! .... 77c IYllllAY 97' ---tow HKI Tops & Sweaters 100% Acrylic in smartly styled rib pullovers with long sleeves. Mul t i-strip ed or embroidery trim in' 4 47 festive colors .. Sizes S-M-L. 11. • CAPITOL 2 ST AK-PAK Cassettes Durable drawers holding 2 cassettes intl!flock to form a chest of drawers. - l' ' ri!WPOll1' 11.t.e..:-1010 lrvlne, w.tdlft "'" MUNTINeTOM •IACM-AIMllN & lmakllunt MUNTOileTOfl •IAClt-Sllr ....... & Edi""' IL TOlo-l.0'1 RotklltM ROl'd OPEN t AM to 10 PM 7 DAYS A WEEK • Wed_,.y, N"'mbtr 14, 1973 . ..... • • 2i23c .\ • ~· -0 '1 BOX OF 40 . CONTAC Ill COLD CAPSULES Continuous action decongestant capsules. 2.88 CONTAC ' ·-· ..... ,,_ ·-·~· ....... ~. NORTHERN UICTRIC VAPORIZER (lperates 8-10 hours and shuts olf automalically. One gallan s1Le in heat . re sistant plastic. # 1301 3.49 DAILY PILOT J 3 Can You . .s fwallow T~eory? 1• By DR. STEINCROllN Dear Dr. Steincrohn: J've heard of such expression!! as. 1·1 can't swallow lhat," and "What you say gets me right in the gut." They Ol)ly bring out what I think most or my trouble is. It's true in my case that when I get nervous my stomach and int.estlnes let me know it. Isn't it true that nerves have an e£fect on the dige.stive system? I've heard how they can make the heart race and skJp and an that. We all know about nervous headaches. But how about what nerves can do to the gut -ii you'11 pardon the expression? -~tr. 8. COMMENT: Gut i! a perfectly respectable word. II DOCTO.R IN -' -llOR-lHUll-UUUlt--------· 'tfl:E::.HOUS,E z=. ::-~ Heating PAD "Century" ... 3 Positive heats! Removable wash· able !!oral flannel cover. 2 YEAR GUARANTEE! 3.98 ·400 LU. eom1 or 108 CAPSULES I~ OZ. IOMUS SIZE CREST TOOTHPASn • . . . . , refers to our innards -to our· entrails, our intestines. Undoubtedly nerves have an effect. On the stomach, too. That's one good reason why it makes good sense not to sit down to a large meal when one is upset. Emotions affect digestion. This is why angry penons use the expression. "I can't swallow that." The stomach !eels all· brmched up. Food sticb In the throat. "Nerves" also affect the lo~er bowel. The last· four or (our-and·a-llall feet ol Ille gut abo catch It when ~ tions upset a person. It's then that spastic colon symptoms may come on: actual painful cramps, gas , diarrhea, natlM!a and other discomforts. These attacks of "nerves" are usually not 1 l n g i • eplaodes; ll1ey are an IC· cmnUlation of tensioo-fllled days and nights. 'Ibey at last 1dd up to colitis of some form or another. In severe cases, actual ulcerations ol lhe lower gut occur producing a chronic con- dition called ulcerative colilb. So whether the results of 0 nerves" are hyperacldily , stomach or duodenal ulcer, colitis of one form or another, you can understand why an important part o1 lhe treat-ment ia to try to neutralize "baa emotions." This is one reason we prescribe tranqw1izers. What's most essential is to learn to live with less tension. FOR MRS. H.: These words from the president o1 the American Speech and Hearing Association (9030 old ~ Georgetown Road , W8!1>iogton, D.C. 20014): "Parents who are concerned about their child'S-speech and langµage development sbould see a speech pathologist or audiologi!t much earlier than you recommend. '"lbere is extensive evklence that reliable, valid evaluations of hearing can be made within three monlhs of blrlh and !hat speech and langua1e rehabilitation services sboukl begin with some cblldren u early as 2 years of a~." I suggest, Mrs. H., !hat you or your doctor write to tbi.s organization for lnfonnatioo . • Presignups At College Prereglstraltoo for , GQldtn West College's s pr l n g semester Is under way and will continue through January. Officials in the aclmi>slona of. lice emphasize, however, that new students prcr<g!>lerlllg will have the best cholce of classes. Tbe spring term bealnl Feb. 4 and runs lhrough J\llle k Sludents wtrrhlnll to ltjlller may come to the tdmlsslool o[fico, located In the • Com- munity Center bu11ding on campus. . r • ....... , I'" U1 2 Plead . Guilty To Plot SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Wa1dls Lea Copleman, 41, and James H. Gerow Jr., .39, cbarged with plotting to kill the woman's husband, a veteran highway patrolman, changed their pleas Tuesday from innocent to guilty of at- tempted murder. I Wtdntsday, Novtmbtr 14, 1973 Murder Victi1ns UPI T~lt Judge llobtrt W. Cole said he would sentence the couple after considering a probation report Dec. 4. Valerie Janice Lane, left, and Doris Karen Derryw POUCE ARRESTED the berry, both 13 and described as "best of friends," . were found shot to death Monday by shotgun blasts pall Aug. rl a£ter officers in a wooded area near Marysville. Both 7th graders, discovered an alleged plot ot they were from the small community of Olivehurst. ~the woman's husband, There are no leads to the slayings, authorities said ROOald, in the Coplemans• today. Rancho Cordova pet shop. __ ..;... _______________ _ Funeral Rites Held For Hell's Angels • • • • Kids Like To· ASk Andy ·san Diego Ni;xes Cu.tback SAN DIEGO (AP) -Direc-President Nixon's Democratic Council, in hope of bringing relief-in the fuel crisis before the end of the week. there ls any question. thaf we --~----------~· ~~cttotht~~nd th:: ,~;ms~: ~...,, . ~...,,:'_1_0--:0...,,_0_~ i tors of San Diego's clty-o\med us company bave refused, for the moment, to allow any cutbacks in service, and have told general manager Tom Prior to fuid eMl!l!h fuel to keep the buses ruruung. they need," Tunney said. ~ Jack Gilstrap, general ORDER ·~ Tunney said he phoned a key alde to John Love, Nixon administrative energy chief, asking an immediate increase in diesel fuel allocations. manager of the Southern J California Rapid T r a n s i t · 'eautlful Stlc:k-on District, has announced that , .. , Sunday bus service will be YOU RS "They authorized me to do anything I can to get fuel if I h4ve to dig an oil .well," Prior said alter the directors' meeting Tuesday. "Cutting back luel oil lor mass transit would be just about the worst thing that we could do to our transporta ... lion system. I don't think halte<I imme<llately in Los . LABELS Angeles and curtailment of 1'Ie told the meeting that San Diego Transit 'Corp. buses will run out of enough fuel for regular schedules Nov. 25 because of President Nixon's luel-all\""'tion rules. weekly service. will be con- sidered unless RTD 1 s TODAY I altocate<I more diesel fuel. • 11 IF NO MORE fuel is allotted, the buses, which serve San Diego and adjoining cities, Californians Face Cut ill Electricity may be f1!!1ning only duri>tg SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ~ California Edison and San morning and afternoon rush c a t i for n i a n s must im· Diego Gas ~nd -Elcctrie--. · hours Monday through Friday mediately· slash their electric must report to the conunission in _JanuarY, Prior said. -consumption 10 percent or every .15 days on the results But he said he would plead faoe mandatory curtailments. ~f tt\eir extensive edUC4tional the bus line's case for more The state Public UtilitieS and· advertising efforts aimed fuel in San Francisco before Commission sounded t bat at convincing customers to Eugene Standley, r e g i o n a I warning in ordering utility reduce consumption. representative for the U.S. Of-companies to c 0 n v i n c e Plans for the voluntary fice of Oilth and!ueGJasalt, wh~ch customers to v o I u n t a r i l y redu ctions a n d mandatpry oversees e . · __ ocabon reduce power consumption to progr curtailments were submitted In ~·Angeles, Mayor Tom levels 10 percent below those to the PUC on Oct. 15, by B di I phon~ th Wh. of a year ago. · the companies. ra ey te e t.'U e tte "The degree or success Q( iiiiiiiiiiiiii" Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Ordtr For Your1tlf or • Frlt nd· ' May be used on envelopes as return 1ddres1 l_!~els. ·Also very handy •t identificetion laliels for mar~ii19j~rson1l item1-1uelf 1 1 - books, reeords, photos, etc. 'Labels stick on ·glass and may be used for merking home c•nned fqc.;d items. All l•bels •re printed with stylish Vo9ue type on fin e quality whit .. gummed piper. The plot involved a $3 million inheritance which later twned out to be a hoax. lnvestigators said M r s . Copleman told her .husband she was to receive the money but that she made up the story in the hope their mar· riage would Mt be broken up. House and Sen. John Twmcy voluntary participation will be · EL CAJON (AP) -A llell's scooping dirt on the caskets. called the federal fuel alloca-indicative of whether more MINIATui.t:• c1v.c waP I l d d · b tion agency Tuesday in an oLo De~ OLD ouf.7;i.a Ange s ea ~ an hlS rother, restrictive, mandatory curtail-__, Employes Get Free Parking shot to death while returning POLICE SAID there were attempt to stave off the diesel ment procedures will be re--MANNING'S 75 00 I d fuel crisis which cou1d force COLLECTORS from the funeral of another to l motorcyc es an quired," the PUC order said th. 100 . curtailment. of Sunday bus Tu sd 1 SHOP ""'·• member of the motorcycle ano er persons m cars. service. e ay. -.u:;i;. gang, have been given their Some of the bikers said they Bradl'ey said he had talked THE UTILlTIES -Pacific :l:1T'i ~:Os.Iu'J.~VD· O .. _ last ri·tes, Angels-style. came from New York, Ohio with Kenneth Cole, head of Gas & Electr1·c, Southern •9 <4 2 • 9251 1-1 .... "~·"!"'~"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .... ~~~ and Massachusetts, and some -----------------'------'= As spectators .stood on top sa id they belonged to rival o( trucks and behind police clubs who called a temporary barriers, a procession of truce1or the occasion. Holiday Shopping Hours Sundays 10 AM to 6 PM Monday Thru Saturday 9 :30 AM to 9 30 PM bearded Hell's Angels in Mike Varner wa s president LOS ANGELES (AP) denim and leather jackets of the Hell's Angel s San Diego ~ Some 1,500 AtlanUc Richfield streameh on motorcycles to chapter and his brother was .--------------. Co. Office employes will be an El Cajon rnorffiary 'fues- described as a prospective able to park f<?l' .free in con-day foi the funeral of Mike member. While: t r a v e I i n g gested downtown Los Angeles Varner. 28, of El cajon and home from another fllfteral beginning Dec. 1 under a pro-• his brother John, 30, of Santee. in the San Francisco area, gr~m . announced by the oil Then the cvclists lined up they Were shot to death last ._,,. com:Q811y._. _ _ a quarter · mile deep behind 'Vednesday ·after·an ·argument ...,.. . Atlantic · Richfietd·•=satd it . the~::-1.::;.:~~drive,-down· with a l>fil'~patronjn ·1'-fodesto; Sears. WOMEN~S • would provide free parking Interstate 8 to a San~ Diego PoTice, \\'ho had agreed with lO,.-----------~. . spaces as an incentive to e:n-cemetery .. where they tossed .the bikers on arrangements ••• where thn·ft ···s a"lwa· ys -1·n -s·tyle. courage the formation ol car sma ll possessions into the , beforehand, said the funeral pools in light of the energy graves and passed shovels processi on was orderly and " ~ ~, ..... ;:t.,. ..,·,.a.-... .. .. · -· · · ~ated on the Lowe~-Level Crisis. from hand to hand, each no one was arrested. I .GFBEE booklet I California Federal Savings has available a new booklet fun of ideas and helpful suggestions on fashion for you. Written by noted fashion authority, Mr. Blackwell, "Fashion and You " gives the do's and don'ts of how fo look your best, and the latest word on what Is and will be fashionable. U's yours for the asking. Please visit any Calilomla Federal Sav- ings office to g~t your complimentary ~opy. _C&lifomia Federal Savings Aoaheim, 600 N. Euclid Avenue• Costa Mesa, 2700 Harbor Boulevard Orange, 4050 Metropolitan Drive• Tustin, 17832 17111 Street · • .~-i All-Nude Ultra.5heer, run·resistanc nude hee( p2.n1y hose. One size fits pe rso ns 95·150 lbs. Great colors. • • Sears. CQ sta Me sa 3333 Bri1tol St. Phone 540-3333 · ' • • .-. • Washable · Qi1ilted Robes ·( luu" 6 88 •lion 5 88 Acetate tricot robes voith fluffy polyes1er fill. The snap or button front sty les with patch or side seam pockets, lace trim and three·quar!er length sleeves. ~{any robes with or without ga!hcred waist s. Hand wash- ;ible. Pastel colors. Misses' sizes. Antron®III Anti-cling Slip Formal length slip of An1ron" Ill nylo n 1ricot. Nylon lace trim. White. S, f\.-1, L. U•e Sear• Revolving Charse P rices Effective lhru Salurday. Nov. 17 • Decollete P h Bra ( Adds fullness co che bustline, U nderwire supponl, separ • a1es. White .. Si:r:es 34-36A, 32· J6 8. 34-J6C. Buena Park Orange Store ifottn 1 M ... , thr.u S.tunl•1 ' 9130 A.M. to 91SO p.)11(. 8150 La Palma Ave. Phone 828-44QO 2100 N. 'Tu1tin Ave. Phone 637·2100 ' . - S•H•110 A.M. 10 6 r,.11. • \ s tee toll Gr Tu bu. to lie w d ne de I ga St d l r i ' , .. ' ,. ...... •" Murder J'ollSet A.1-17 N(lrcotic~ Agents Nab 10 lnMar.ijuana-8muggling LOS ANGELES-(UPI) - STOCXTON (AP) -Seven· Ten men, lncluding a former tetn victims may be the finat Texas policeman, were ar· toU hl the nation's latest mass rested, and three airplanes murder spree , California and and one boat were seized Arizona authorities say. Tuesday in a l"Ombined federal Detectives continued t 0 and oounty Crackdown on a question defencjf\l\lS WHiie L. majQ!' marijuana smuggling Steelman and Douglas E. ring, authorities said. Gretzler In the Stockton jail Investigators said the ring Tuesday about other crimes, was involved in smuggling but they reported no leads · more than 20 tans ol marl· to now murders. juana into th e United States An Arizona s h e r I f f ' s from 1'-1exico last year and ( BRIEFS ) fii:utenant said three murden which the two defendants described to detedlves may never have taken place. Ho'wever, five other murder vktlms were discovered by detectives acting o n in- formation they said was gathered in interrogations of Steelman and Gretzler. • (J.S. 'Powerless' ·-... ---... ~·· I ' . based Its ooeratlons I n California and Texas. 0 Sheriff's narcotics Jlgenls working with the federal drug enforcement bureau arrested seven persons ln the Los Angeles area and three In Texas, where two of the airplanes were seized. Those arrested here, who were booked on Suspicion of income tax evasion, smuggling and possession of marijuana, were: Richard A. Elrod, a Jonner Ft. Worth, Tex., poUce otncer and Vietnam w a r veteran flier; Gary Alan and Rll11dall IV. King, b o t h brothers , or Ma nhattan Beach; Or, Roger Brown, also of Manhattan Beach, and Robert Matthews of Redondo Beach: A 56-foot sailboat. t h e "Allegro," confiscated from its slip in Redondo Beach, belonged to oqe of the King brothers. ~CRAMENTO (AP) - America is powerless to get an accounting or the 1,200 Americans missing in action in Southeast Asia because some congressmen have "lied the nation's hands," Gov. Rooa1d Reagan said TueM!ay. "SometimH Congress gets to p1ayln1( political g•mes and fora:ets what the real game is "' the Republican governor ~id Tuesday during a ceremony in which be was presented with a certlficate of appreciation and POW-MIA blllner. IJIJ I.I. IAG e Coater Sta111 - SAN , DIEGO (AP) -Bel· niilnt Park"• -r.i·year .. ld n. foot rotter eouter will con- tlmie Its stomach-Wrenching plunges !or another 211 yeani, despite prot~ts from ~ residents. the San Diego City Council says. 'ftle council voted 9-(1 Tues· day to take bids for a new 20-year lease on the seacoast amusement park, where hotelman Bill Evans' 2$-year le..., on the city.owned 11111d runs out in January. e Tuition Jlalsed STANFORD (UPI) -Stan· lord Univenity h a • boosted its annual tuition from $3,135 lo $3,375, starting In 1974-75. The Unlverilty'1 boonl ol trust.., 1'1eodaY approved the f!IO ~ alt.er rtjectlng • propooed t1'5 hlb. eFlre'-'"•Set SAN BERNARDINO (UPI) - A bombing believed related to a series of intentionally set fires at mortuaries las!. year caused mioor damage to the chapel ol the Mark B. Shaw 11111rtuary Tueoday. Detectives said someone forced entry into the chapel and planted an lncendiary device. No one was injured. Anonista set fires in f\ve San BernanllnO funeral homes last November and December, police said. A $35,000 reward was posted but there were no arrests. Students Win Cjse SAN IBANCISCO (UPI) - The University of San Fran- cisco has reached an out-cf· court settlement with 10 stUdents who contendM law school tuition fees • w e r e diverted to other univer sity purposes. . In protesting the dlverst0n, the students tlled a $5 million suit, saying I0),000 had be<n diverted !rvm the law sch6ol in the univenlly budget and they had been depriVIJll ol the instNOllon&I quallt1 they had been promised on enroll- ·ment. . The Rev. Wllttam C. Mein· nes. unlvcnlty preslclenl, said eutcession bad been made to the studenll Including In· creasing the • size of_ the faculty, the. amount in the student financial aid program and the number of courses offered- Wi11~ams ApPointed . • • •. s..., ..... ... • , .... ~ ... .w. •· . "' • .. 1 llOlllK ' WIPER .... w Mil --· 60 LI. IAG!I • iii COi CRETE If MIX EA. • ' •POMONA •SANTA ANA .... :I<..~::\: HospllaH:z:ed Liz Taylor Is in S<ripps Clinic in La Jolla for what is described as "a routine a n n u a l phys· ical." ··11·. -'""''' . j1,11t oOil woltr. • 1,,.,.,,, ''""'"' • SAN llR"ARDtNO SAN FkANCISCO (UPI) - ai-n B. Wllllamt, vice presldftlt and regional ad· mlnlstralor or Kall1er Foun- dation Hospitals In Southern. COU!omla, hH been ctw.sen preotdent-elect of the Callfomto Hoepltll Asaocll· lion. Arthur' Jost, execuilvo Reedley, WU inltalled 'as prtaldenL • ll MONTI t21to I . GAIVIY t MOCIO 1•11 .. " • NORWAIK flll5fOHI ll\10. 11 STUOllAIClt "'1116'1 OI If\ lt4NU 6J5 NO. Milli llot $0. lt15T0l U4 01.UtGl SllOW ID. ' .. - • I • WOODLAND HILIS 22•40 VIClOtT llVO. ,,.KIOllllllOM J ... tfOOll 14VMI -----. • GARDINA um ,o, wiint• • ... lft0tM·"41 Alli NO. Ot ICM«"'"' ·t ....... ou ·~· •GARDIN GROVI 12••2 CHAPMAN AVl, -Ml IA\!0-·-.. 1-. tut.NO Of Mf\lllHH50 111 IOUlll tOAll "AtA Ut0 AltOWlllAD • HITTllR HUNTINGTON llACH IJJJS 7100 IOINGlt tU.tOtMM tO. OM1 kOCl llllHl • I tlO(•l lA.'1 Ot Ul.tMk .... , ... - , 11 ,dne1day, NO¥ember 14, \,, j tJAILY PI LOT · Sentenc(pg ·Date ·Set for ·Boooer .... ·TORRANCE (AP) -A Dec. lS sentencing date has been set !or William Ray Bonn<r , accused or killing s e v e n persons in a South Central l..l.ls Angeles shooting spree last Easter. Bonner, ~. entered 8 negotiated plea o! guilty to two murder counts and one assault count Tuesday in Superior Court. Five olhtr murder counlll v.·ere dropped as Bonne r wllhdriw his earlier plea ol not guilty ll11d aol' guilty by reaaon o! Insanity. BoMer pleaded guUty to the firsl degree murder of Raleigh "Butch" Hendef90n, 33, a gas station attendant . SLIMMING RECIPES By Chtf Susan of Weight Watchtn Nov.16-17, 11tol-~ov.11, 12to3:JO South Coast ?taza -- 121M.x121M. CORK PANELS • l'l" thick. • '•ckoot• ol 3. • Ut• •• •·pitt t...rtl; w•H tltc91'; 1001 .,~ ....... BURMESE WALIUT PREFINISliED PANELING 4!1 SHIET • b.1•vMv• W•I""'' Mith •n im,.rtetl _.....,,..,.. • Fvll •i•• 4 h. • I It . .Meta, •..!i!_h w...i teMt wffl •nheftCe eny '""" "9 yevr h•m•. l "x 12"x5FT. J PECKY CEDAR FENCE BOARDS I • ,,~ , ... ltvilclittt rvttic Mltillf N-. thtol ... , •le. OUl RIG. 1.29 ¢ 4 FT. 2"x3 ''x6 FT. REDWOOD LATH FIR STUDS • hc-4i.ti1"tw ''*""'· plcint t\1"9'f 1t•kff, f•nc•1, •IMI "''"Y ,,._. -· • Hff-cH f,.,, 119.1. • M9ny W!Win1 u .... • lvndlel .t SO. ·-;.J...l .J.""-~,. ~~ • nn ~IUNOLE " -· .... l' ANGELS SUPER ONE COAT WALL PAINT • G\lll'Clfll .... -.,e-cMt ,.., .... , •• • Al'lgtlt ,.,, S yeor I"''''"'''· •Over 2,000 c•l•n • cvtl•m mi1td Alli SAVE 1.00 OUl !17 HG. S.97 GAL. Na. 2001 • DAP "KWIK SEAL" CAULK ••••. .i,. 111i.. • White cevltllnt cem,.ulMI f., t11lt, Ille ., wl"4ew • S..h evl 'f"•Nr e1111i dltl OUR 1111¢ RIG . 1.29 II.. • .. ' ·:-..-..-...iii---~·-~ -I- lOlJI MAONOUA ACIOONOM flits MAii LONG llACH 2)171.~TttSl. ...... Olttll, __ ,. Nlll tOIOMt l • CUSTOM FIREPLACE SCREEN I lfatt ,., Mr with ltletk ~·h tcfllfl. • MenV91 pvlh. 0 U1t le SO" wiclth. 2~~: ~4!11 ' • • • .. • AQ ·.UA1LV 0 Pll..OT ••. -Wedneiday, NO\lfmbtr 14, 1q73 ••..nw._•.w . )'IS tf'•~·~·~~· ~· ~ ~. ~ -~1 • Tiii IHI $1111$ IS FILLED WITH DO IT YOURSELF CHRISTMAS GIFTS --*-- ,,.4-.·. NEW 1 STEP DECOUPAGE --*-- CRYSTAL CAST KIT SALE $699_ • lteg. $10 --* ----- MOD PODGE THE I ~ EASY -· DECOUPAG~ ~- ·89 ¢' ·1 Reg. $L29 ~ --*--t"ll:l _.,.i~ '" CANDLE MOLDS UKI SIZE SALE $169• .... ;2.50 • Smoll Sba SALE 99' --*--.... $1 .50 ALL TWO PIECES CANDLE MOLDS --*-- CANDLE WAX 11 LB. SLAB SAVE AT S]89 ---~.--- STOHS 2706 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '""'' .. -0.1, 'Tif ' -o,.. Fri. ,.,., • ~. ••• ' -- • To Russia With Love Nixon Nudges Aetor WASHINGTON CAP) - Actor Chuck Connors, w h o met Soviet pany I ea de r Leonid Brezhnev at the San Clemente summit meeting last summer, says that Presiden• Nixon urged him to accept an Jnvitation to visit the Soviet Union In the· interests of good relations. Connors paid a farewell call on Nixon Monday and said he considered putting off the trip, but Nixon convinced him to go r.ow. I THE PRESIDENT said 1/ "''ould be "a small Indication that the detente was work· ing." Connors said. Brezhnev personally invited Connors to eo,ne to the Soviet Union when they met at the Western White House. Connors said he w a s vacillating about going now because there ~·as a film he could ma.ke, but Nixon chang· ed his mind because of the interest in keeping up cultural ... exchanges and good relations with the· Russian people: ASKED JIOW the President looked, Connors said, "11e ap- peared very well rested and ln very good. spirits." Tho actor said President Nixon was ';kidding around a little bit." They certainly didn 't discus.. politics, but he thought Nixon "looked good." - \ tl~I T11Hllot9 DUTY FOR DETENTE Chuck Connors ANNOUNCEMENT William Anthony Chose, M.D .. onnounc• es the opening of his office fo r tho Gen· erol rroclice of Medicine on 19 Novem· ber, 197 3 ot Son Clemente Medical Plozo, Suitel OI, 653 Comino De L05 Mores, Son Clemente. PHONE: 496-6511 Office Houn 9.12, 7.5 Mond•y thru t'ld•y Try Saturday's News -Q~ .. ·• :6'' . ' ·THE UTILE WHEEL ' , IY .MA~X-. . · -Grc;;;-1o0Ki~9 ~~~;~~rth'"':1"~=""'•'- -slung styling, rHr iacino · 6900 . 'MINNESOTA FATS' 7' POOL TABLE .f OR HOURS OF FAMILY FU Includes two 52 " cues, sixteen 2~" bai ts, 1 triangle, 2 pieces of chalk, 1 bridge head, 1 rule book, 1 {one) 4-player scorer. You get all you need to play the game at a price not to be missed •.. hurry in now for this exceptional Grants holiday val ue! I 7!6 ASSllN •ONTY OMPUTI BARBIE'S8 COUNTRY CAMPER BY MATTEL8 .. Features slide·out door, steering wheel, front w indow, ta.ble, 2 chairs, luggage rack, sleeping bag included . Dollt l!Oi lllclurH<ll ' •• AISllN • ON TV · COM,Lln BIG JIM8 SPORTS CAMPER BYMATIEL" ·Sporting, camping, fishing gear .for Big Jim• and his friends. Side props up for sl~e;ping area, morel fA!T lllLIRI IO!~INONTV NEW! BABY. ALIVE Mouth really moves as she ea:ts her specially prepared food wllh a spoon, and drinks from . her special bottle I Soft, cuddly doll Is 16' tail, comes lully dressed In a disposable diaper. u ... a-·c· """*' Mt INNcle4 • 9" UTILE TOTS LOVE 'Sill Y SAMMY' ' slicks for traction, full front ..... fork for accurate turns, What a value buy! Pu sh along, and he twists his neck about, 'honks' his horn just like a dizzy duck! Rug - ged plast.ic. ....____ Value-packed electr ic train set with a·steam-type lodomotive, freight cars. caboose , oval track layout. . . and a U.l. approved transformer. Complete \vith 34-piece village, it's a hard·lo·beat buy! 7'' , SHIRLEY TEMPLE •DOLL BY IDEAL The same dlmpled darting of lhe lhlrlles that cap- tured everyone's heart, now in the?alt-oew 16''°1" Sfllrley Temple Doll! The 'l lttle girl' look is the same ... swirl of bouncy c:urts. frilly party dress. pretty hair bow. Sht's a real heart stealer .•• take I 2~~SSllNONT.VJ Grants exclusive! SIZZLERS ' ROAD SP_RINT SET BY MATTEL s . You control the aclion ..• chase over and around \\rild, v11nding roads-catch 'n' !lip the 1 other car I.:> \"11n ' Sel includes Sizzler· car in 1 ; m~dern styt1ng. 2 con trols. 2 flippers, 1 . bridge, Goose Pump:"' re charger, colleclors catalog, instructions. 2 pane1s-a isconnl!ct easily tor st orage. ••tu•r"'• 11•1 ift~t~d•' /her l'IOm~ today! ---~--==-----------------------'M::;OS=T'-'IT.::EM:::S:..:A:.;.YAllASLE AT MOST G~A!iT CITY ITOllU -------·-~ the more for your money.swort~ stor~ ANAHEIM HUNTINGfON IEACH EAST FULLERTON SAN CiLEMINTI u....a .......... ,..... •111*unta ..... ..._ ,.,..LWI...._ ........... W.flete .... lfc-Mt•l•trtt" • . MOST ITIMS All AUO AYAILAIU AJ. SAHrA ANA. 2011, 4th St. HUNTINOTOll IUCll, 11601 Melo St. GARDIN OIOYI, illif ~ Uey Ylow 1 I ' ' DO JOU --GIANT OTT fiJ A COMM SlllCl10ll or. • Holld1,y @Pltel for chlielrtn , Adult g1mn In tile S11tiontry 0.-1 I '• W!Mlr ~OOod' W"11 whoi. flmlty ' ' ' I 11 1 • , , ; i ' ' I . • . . ~- -\ \'le:dntsday, Nove:mbtr 14, 1q73 DAILY PILOT fl : I.': )' ~ r I ' ' "'·: ~ . . . ~ . ' ' ' ' ON 'SALE NOW THRU ••• _SAtURDAY,NOVEMBER 17t~ '''LET GRANTS· SUPPLY YOUR THANKSGIVING DINNER!" ANY PURCHASE OF $200 OR MORE IN OUR FURNITURE OR APPLIANCE DEPT. ENTITLES YOU TO A COMPLETE TURKEY DINNER FOR FOUR . OFFER GOOD NOW THAU SUN. NOV. 18th . 'VALUE OF DINNER FOR FOUR. $25.00 ' ·--·--·· ..... -.. ...-. .,, ' ...... -.. 00 -BIG-ON-ECONOMY ..• 10" DIAC. MEAS. COLOR rv SAVI $(1.96 00 19" DIAG. MEAS. SOLID STATE COLOR TV WITH DOORS Single Touch Color for ideal ba lance of color : and tint. 100~~ solid state for longer lite. Pecan 'finish Med iterranean cabinet with doo rs . • Matching TV table ................... 29.96 SOUND SAVINGS OF $2 2 ·22800 ~ ; "":: .-.i.; . --1· . --·- Some of the..'..bes~.,gilts come in small pa ck.ages-ii~ --.otnP.aet~tame yotrea·n ca·rry from room to roomr=- tO enjoy coJor televisiritl anywhere in the house. Twin - antennas: carrying handle; walnu.t griined cabinet. 4-CHANNEI:: MODULAR STEREO •. )(0!¥sell_,X<it!L,~d! Ar,l-FM stereo. aiid 4-Channel r·adio;· bu.ilt-1ii"'! tra'Cr?"~ tape player for stereo and 4-channel : 4 air-suspension speakers and 4 separate • . • GiVe cokJr TV with extra economy! slide volu me controls. · P'lctut" ltlown Oft Kretn 1imvl•lt TV rt ttplio11 • 348!1 ~~lfi~L~~~~C~T~~~OR 1°cX)% solid state circuitry ·means no chissis · . tubes to replace. Single To uch Color means Ideal balance of color and tint with the touch ·ot one button. Twin antennas; handle; wal ... nut grain. ;,....,. lfww'n fft t Utffl tf""'l1\.lt TY NC.,11911 Practicality Is the keynote here-the aqfabed opens to sleep two In full-size comfort ... the fabric Is Scotchgard'· treated to resist soil and stains. The styling Is 'Early · American' with wood trim. Includes cocktall table, 2$top end Ulblea. Room I CCMIOriff. Ulmps not Included. . ' . . ' DO YOU HAVE A CHAAGE! PRICE CUT! .208~Hi~:· I. 5800 .. ELECTRIC DRYER ,PUSH-BUTTON WASHER AND ELECTRIC DRYER Washer . 2 wash-rinse speeds; 3 tempera- tures; permamer:it press protection; soak cycle. • lledric Dryer • 3 temperatures; permanent press cool-down; buzzer reminder. ' 398" 4-PC. SPANISH STYLED LIVl~G ROOM -rlil-Luxuriously long sofa, spa- cious love seat, roomy chai r, and full .. -size ottoman. A fabu lous combination of solid color and ta?estry-prlnt rayon velvet with wood . accents. (Tables, lamps, etc. not Included.) • ~ 3 T~~:s 9900 . K ·2 ·,. . 88 3-PC. SPANISH ~ ' ; ,... ' oH. • •• ·-1 • .MAN-SIZE RECLINER ' . Big and,ioomy with liard· wood frame, plµs %" steel stabilizer rod along front stretcher and through anns. Deeply cuahionOd with wipe- clean supported vinyl up .. holstery in dark colors. ~ ~',4;.Dicke ~-ofAGift ••• 6288 KEYSTONE 60 SECOND IN$TANT PICTURE EYERFLASH" CAMERA Never vse'flash bulbs a .. fnl Buil .. ln ,~ectronlc flash so JOU can take 'inatai:tr photo,.· insl de,. too. F.ully electric ·eye and triplet color corrected glasa lena. UM• ,efarolcl" II, I 07 altd IOI ftlm. 11 44 TABLE SEf KEYSTONE EVERFWH9·10· WITH BUILT-IN ELECTRONIC FLASH · KEYSTONE~145X INSTANT - LOADING CAMERA OUT Massive 24"x60'' cocktail table plus 2 hexagonal commodes; all with double door ·storage space. High . pressure ptasllc tops resist burns, sculls, adds years of beauty. Takes up to 100 'fluh pictures' with tncfudes camera. 126 nch -set of M pen light bttterlos. Kodac<>tor . film cattrldge, Color-<iorracted lens. Magicube and wrist strap .. all EVERFLASH 20, .................. -39" gltt packed! !U.~~E~FLASti 30, ................ :-.... 49" • ~~Mt:'l~SS:,., ~118 morelor your moneysworth store· . . DO YOU IHOW GIANT QT1' HAS · ~lL THE MAJOR APPUANCESt • ~'ANAHEIM ......... -..... UST FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH Y .. L ............ .._.. • .. ....... ..._ .. ,.._ ~ . • ----1t SANTA ANA, 201 I. 4th St. SAN CLE,MENJlr •REFRIGERATORS • FPtEEZERS .. •ft!• lof I • WASHERS AND DRYERS • RANOH ... _ . ..., ... -.. .. I • A'1 Pllttt ' >iJ Hors de Co1nbat , Forn1er White House ~ legal counsel John W. " Dean has been sus- pended from practi c- ing la\v in the District of Columbia by three-~i. j udge panel in U.S. District Court. 1---------. " CreduY,ty ,' On ~lfFOs . - Strained By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI 1 The past fortnight , says Rep. Olis G. Pike, "was one otl<'l! those devastating ti.mes when ': the news came raster thant the .mind CCM,1.ld ,comprehend ." "', Maybe that explilln.s the--- lates~ outbreak of "flying ,, saucer" si&htings. •• . . ' ' ~ BOGGLED'. BY t bewilder~~ ing s1,1ccession •f momentoust" events,, the mind began grop- ing far something mOre com· . monpla'ce -like vehicles from ? ·other planets. · j . ....... _ • .Ww_.i!>:,..the .J!_~le E~t."' -_,:, · : The Agnew a7fa1r. EaCli a on ~ · was enough to leave lbe brain.j reeling! . .. ·- In the .circumstances , it is --: hardly surprising that the sky ~· · became filled with flashing,."· . . .: . • . ~ \GHTeh ~; \> SIDE .. r:-~· •· s pi de r y , multi-colored aP".\ ' pariUons and olber-word!y-~ scinUllations. -~ By. find large, however, }; " th ink aoother Pike comment ~: comes cl011er to the rea.so for the UFO renaissance. '!j "THE P R INCI PAL re·-1\ quiremenl at the present time· ' is to restore some semblance or credibility to the whole' .. " Americ&n s§Stem of ... govern· '": ment," the New Yo r k•1 Democrat said in a recent o1 press release. .., There you1 haye lt,;folk.s -'· the key to the mystery of t where flying saucers come -' from. t 1hey come out of the ' credibility gap. . To arrive at that deduction ·· just ask yourself who it Is~, that keeps telling us that flying saucers don 't exist.,, Why, the Pentagon, of coune.~ AND THE PENTAGON ~1 a .: part of the American.·. government. Or at lea.st it '.i was the last time I checked. ~ Some years ago, the J>en.. ~ tagon set up facilities for In-: ' vesUgating unexplairted aerial .., phenomena. In every inquiry,, that I know of, its findiqgs· with respect to outer apace ~ origin of unidentified flying. objecls were negative. . Assured 9ver and over again that flying saucers were figments, people finally Stop- ped seeinl them .. But ~ were the days when the· govemmfnt enjoye d . a ~ relatively high level of cred~-· . ' ce. ., •. NOW THE SI11JATION ·.lsi. different. Thanks to a series~ of revelations that need DP be reco~te4 here, th: e• government's believability} quotient has been sharply reduced. 4 Many people are thinking~ along this line : if the govern n1enl u·ould lie about Vieln~ and \Vatergate. ·maybe if allot W'!oi. .,playing loose with the ... ~tfu1h abOut UFOs. :.. Then they look up and say > "Hey, there's one now!" #. Pike is right. Restoration'. of govemment credibility. is ~ the paramowit requircmen~ . .. OTHERWISE. F L Y I N G• saucers are going tp pro- liferate .to the polnt where :Ne have a full-scale Mac:tlan· invasion on our hand&. After all , we've got to bave something to believe in: Kids Like To · 1 ·As k Andy •• , ' ..... --• • • 'J8 DAILY PILOT Wednesday, November 14, 1q7j ll'itads Fall Off • . Rohon Leads La Paz By AL.llON LOCKABEV The Long Beach to l a Paz race ground to a slow crawl Tuesday as leaders in the 27· • boat Jleet fell into light weather "holes" off Abreojos Point on the Baja California coast. . The holes \\'ere 'deeper for some than others. Bob Grant's 61 .. foot sloop Robon, from Newport Harbor Yacht ctub, for instance, managed to hang on to the last whispers or the dying northerly and move into the lead on elapsed tirile. Rag.time, the previous leader, found more than her • 1nllcs fron1 Long Beach, while Ragtime logged only 122 mites and was 480 n1ilcs from the sta rt. 808 DEAUCHAMP'S Dorothy 0 recorded a 164-mile day to hang in third place while 13arry Berkus' Class B entry, \Varlock, Long Beach Yacht Club. Jogged 181 miles to move up to second. The best day's run \Yas 193 inUes reco f ded by .the Class D entry Quasar It, co- skippcred by J". \V. \Vright and Bill Conway, LBYC, which boosted her into the Handicap lead. ... Then will start the sometimes sloW beat u~ the inside of the peninsula to the finish at La Paz. HERE ARE: TIJE top five elapsed time leaders 11'ith distan ces front Long Beabh: (1) Hobon. 507: (2) Warlock, 500 : t31 Dorothy 0. 487 : 141 Anitra. 481 ; 15) Ragt ime, 480. Handicap leaders: OVERALL -(I) Quasar 11: (2 ) Ti nsley Light. Henry Grandin Jr., St. !-~Ye : (3) \Varlock. -share of flat air and dropped back to fifth place among the leaders. RObon had a 164-mile d~y's run to place her 507 The fleet \\'as expected to be off r.1agdalcna Bay today ·with the possibility of reaching Cabo San Lucas Thursday. ct.ASS A -(I) Dorothy 0: (21 Tl'lbutc, Holleran. Bia!· tcrman and Lawhorn, LBYC and BYC ; (3) Robon lll. CLASS B ~ (I ) Warlock : (2) Fleetwood, Nichol as J. FRONT RUNNER -Bob Grant's Robon, picked up the last gasps o! a dying northerly to take over. the boat-for·boat lead in the 1,000.mile Long Beach to La Paz race Tuesday. Rabon was sailing off Abreo- jos Point, 507 miles from the start of the race. Pre-- vious leader Ragtime dropped to !i!th place when she apparently found some light-weather holes. I '· ,. j ' ~'T"'· -..J Geib. Chicago YC; ( 3 l ~ ~~~~bird, Allen Pucket t , Intrepid Fund Cup Race Cash, Souglit CLASS C -(I) Tinsley Light ; (2) Panache. _Roderic Park. Richmond YC: (3) · 1 Yellow Jacket. Terry Greene . eve. r~ Fund raising drives are under \vay in San Diego, Ne\v-.. ------CLIP THIS COUPON ------.,. port Beach, San Francisco and Seattle to raise approxi· l mately $750.000 to campaign the Ji.meter yacht Intrepid I S;J>J."ME $52.Q I in the 1974 Al118rica's Cup trials. The kickoff meeting to promote the 'Vest Coast et- (ort was held recently in Seattle by the Seattle Sailing Foundation, a non-profit educational foundation organized I /l.ITT.~S Bi/i.ITER~. I to train young North\~t sailors, to encourage sailing competition locally and internationally, and to preserve historic sailing vessels. _ t THE INTREPID recently was donated to the founda-I BARGAIN coup· ON· I ., tioo by_the syndicate of three West Coast yachtsmen who I . I ~ purchased the. Intrepid . The. yacht is now at San Diego ' ?. where modificatiofls to her hull and fittings are under way t· I Use this coupon and save on the purchase of an Atlas or Chevron Battery at I at Driscoll's Shipyard. · I standard Stations and most Chevron Dealers. Present it and receive: I "i Foundation spokesmen said the campaign \Viii cost · • · $750,000. includ ing her femodification, transportation to the I S5.00 off the station p•1ce or an Atlas "PHD'"'Bat!e11 .$2.00 off the :St~lion' price DI an Atlas "A" Battery East Coast {i:>r the America's Cup trials and to defray , ' $5 oo .off the station prrce of a Cllevron"CP30" Battery SI OOofl the station price of a~ Alliis."K'~Baltery I · f Otte' racing expcns~s [or boat and crj:!w. · -I $3 oo oft !he ~talion price of an Atlas "PA"Bal!ery ·· I .. • Sunny Vynne, chainnan of a specia).committcc to co-~ -4 ~orilinate-the-<~ense.;e{~re~.$1~~~(~1nd:-ha'::<i:f. _"':cif!e~~~~~~SJ:Da~~ariat pa~tic ioat~ng Gne~ o:~~er~:J>.J!.'C~}i s~s !!1~ .,.._ ~ already been donated by 'Vest Coast e-0ntributors. be made by using your Glievron r-faflonar-Traverc-afd. Bu t1get -16ifms-ava1lable:-· ... f. "WE HOPE everyone· on the Wesl Coast \Vho loves I This ~upon good only ror purcliases made during ttte period lrom Oc1ober 1, 1973 tlirough 1 · .,-sailing \Viii feel a par.t of this effort ,'' Vynne sa id. November 30, 1973. Only one coupon may be used lor eacli bane1y purcliased. This coupqn is void I wliere prohibited, taxed or otherwl$e restricted . Cash value 1 /20C. For redemption, mail coupons lo I lnfrepid defended the An1crica's Cup in 1967 ~u1d re-Standard Oil company of Calilorn•a. Western Operations, Inc., P.O. Bok H, Concord, CA 94524. t"ined it in 1970. She was originally designed by Olin 1 T1aclem ark "Alias" Reg. u.s. Pat. Off. A1!as Supply Company. DiSCCXJnts shown above do not apply I ~·· Stephms of New York and underwent extensire modlfica-. .on an a.i11ui1men1 of.an Alias.or Chevron 1>aue1y. •, lions by Britton Chance Jr. in 1970. She has been remO<fi-· ( I ·1 lied b9 Stephens and tank tests have been· recently com· --M'.lllllDST . DIMWI I t plct~isco11 sa id the yacht is expected to be launched soon 1 Standard Stations · Chevron Dealers 1¥J · 1· ~ artcr the Urst of the .vear. L .I I "« ------------------- Super shelves 20%off Free standing Mediterranean un its. All steel , made to last. By Hirsh. Easy lo assemble. 'r,ec:•· · 111 . I i . 'j . ...,; •, 1 3-she!f un~i~t, .,.;..;;;r::::.;::::ll! 12x72x65"h. 23.99 Reg. 29.99 • Boat Ow11ers Urgod Check Fire Exiinguishers ('.oast Guard hoating safety officers are urging all boat owners to check their fire e¥- Ungulshers to. make sure they are in condition and are easily accessible. There are three b as i c categories or fire ex· tinguishi!rs , according to the type of fire it may be' expected to extinguish. The letter indicates the type of fire. "A'' indicates fires of ordinary com busti blc materials; "B" is for gasoline. cil and grease fires; "C'' is for electrical fires . ALL [JB_E e.xtinguishers aboard must bear Coast Guard -and-or Underwriters Laboratory marine type ap- proved labels. The only boats on "'hich fire extinguishers are n~t r e- qyircd are outboard lfss than 26 fe<t in Iengtb, which do not carry pas.sengcrs for hire and are so construettd so that explosive o r inflammable gases cannot be trapped in low spots. Fire extinguishers inust be carried in an· motorboats that have one or more of the following : Closed compartments under thwarts and seats where portable ruel tanks may be stored. DOUBLE BO'ITOMS not sealed to the hull or \Vhich are not completely filled with flotation materials. Closed livin g spa<;es. -----·---- Closed stowage comp.rt• ments In which combustible or llammable materials a r • stored. P.ennanently inslalled fuel tanks. In addition to knowijlg what ty)lCB and how mMy ex· tinguishers y..o_u need on a boat, you should also know how to use them and properly care £or them. ALWAYS CHECK to see that fire extinguishers are located where they are easy to grab and that they ere in proper stowage bracket! and undamaged. c h c c k ex:Llnguisher"S ' rre- quentty to see that there are no broken hoses -or nozzles that .need replacing. People Pleasin' Pizza• Spaghetti .. Salads• Sandwiches •Solt Drinks W° OLD Tll!E llOVIES TOClt .. • 0 1 KAT Ii ""4ACI• IO :ntK C.mMe c..,;.-. 1-_,_. c.,htr- Miuierft ViU.,... ...... c..tw -· 20%off , all lighting f~xtures 14.95andup Inside and out ... wherever you want td' shed a new light on things you'll find , what you wan1 at brilliant savings. Mediterranean, contemporary, tradi- tional, charming Early American. All here and all on sale. dimmer switch · Sale 3.99 Reg.4.99 candelabra bulbs Sale 51¢ Reg. 64¢ ••- 5-shelf unit, 12x24x65"h. 10.39 Reg. 12.99 Chlrgeff Oll-JCP....;-.. cerd. . . I 3-shelf unit, 1 Ox30X30'h. 6.39 Reg. 7.99 BUENA PARK .. • "!.· Workshop li.ght Sale 11.19Reg.13.99 48~ hanging light complete with two 40-watt fluorescent bulbs, chain, switch. 4' cord. UL listed. Sale prices effec1ive •days only. Beach at Orangethorpe . Opon 011ty 9:30 to 9:30 p.m. Simdoy 10 to 7 • ORANGE City Dr. at Garden Grgve Blvd. Open 10·9 p.111. Di·ly Sundoy 10 to-8 • • I \ • ·.SANTAANA 1 ' I j J Help's on Way, Mr. President By JOANNE REYNOLDS Dear President Nixon1 I know you've got'your problems and probably don't want or need any advice, but there are some things I think you ooght to know. -ber that speech you made last week te!llni lis about Ibo energy cr!Jls and _asking everybody to c:onserYe fuel? I don't know how to break this to you, but aome ol those dandy suggesUons aren't working, especially the {!Pes that concern cars. 4 _ A> I recall, you asked everybody to drive no faster than SO mph and you onlered all fed- eral employes in government cara to observe that speed limJL BEING A CONCERNED cltfun and not wishing to have to resort to wood fires for h.eat or cooking, I launched myself into an energy con· aervatioa campaign. Baslcally all that meant was driv· aavNoLDs tng slower. It 'sounds terrific on pa· per, but Mr. President have you ever driven 50 mph on a freeway? Believe me, it's not my. -Your instincts for self pres- ervation keep making you want to drive 65 and )'OU Ond tl)at the only thing on tbe road slower than you Is a fully loaded cement truck. But even more discouraging than the little old ladies ln Nash Ramblers who pass you in a ctOud of exhaust fumes are the federal employes. IN ONE BRIEF sojourn on the San Diego Freeway (while doing a corulErvative 50) J was passed by a car with U.S. Government plates, a Navy car and an entire convoy of about 20 tw1arlne trucks and jeeps. Anyone traveling 50 on the freeways of Southern C&li· ·fomla, other than at rush hour, might as well be riding a bicycie. There may be solutions:- • In Huntingtoo Besch. the city ha.o developed a reli· · able system of slowing down iratfic. This system is so reliable, in fact, that it can be counted on to bring traffic to a screeclllng halt. !l's called road caostructloo. HERE °.111EY WAIT for maJ:imum · traffiC, mualJy dUrtng the summer months and tben tlley shut down one -•-...,--+,.;;;;;;.;;...~ .... ch~ • vard. Jt works like a chann . . Traffic crawl~ along and people get fnl!trated and. some probably quit driving · to t& beach. thus reducing the consumptiQn of flJel and the output of pollutant& Another device yOU might consider in future road oon- 1tructlon Is the return to the ,original freeway. Have you ever _been on the Pasadena Freeway?. It must ha_ve been the first one ever built and you can't. drive faster than 55 mph without leaving the road. If engiDeen were lo re- tµm to that design In building new freeways :iou _,, lave to worry about conse"atioo-minded citizena getting run oll the road by speeding ccnvoys ol -...i.Half loo . trucks. Fa;~i:ly Deatm ·-_ Ove.rwlwlm Boy CHICAGO·(AP) -The first great blow. lo Gary Cohen's young life came three years ago, and ~th w.., l!ard to fathom. His motbet died of cancer. Dismissed •• Teacher R~instated LOS ANGELES !UPI) - A Superior-COW-! Judge Mon· day ordered scllool officials in P~e to reinstate. a teacher ~ in 1970 for using obscene t;;bguage to adult co- workers 'Jn· the s ch o o I ' s business otflce, Judge David A. Thomas ordered the Tamarlsk Elemeqllry sehool to give !llarles ·Rof<n his job bsck. Rogers, ,mo ls now teaching In Japan, Yi~ -.me. his job at Tamarllt an fall-.° t • llOOEllll !fUJl "dllmllled 11IE SECOND c.r us hi n g blow came five months ago. His 15-year-old sister, Janice, accidentally shot herself while handling a gun In the famll)' weapons collection. She was paralyted from her chin down. His father, Philip, 31, l<mely and pained since his wife's death, w.., plunged Into a mood of despair. He went to the hospital every day and often sst by the girl's bedside throughout the night. Blow No. 3 came Friday. Gary walked into hb father's bedroom and round him dead -shot with a weapon from the colletcion. Nearby was a · note telling of his agony since the death of his wife and the accident that crippled his daughter. MONDAY . WAS . Veterans Day and Gary had the day olf from school. He wa1-alone in the basement apartment. Police say he · went to the weapons collection, took down a 12-gauge shotgun, aimed the muzzle at his head and hooked a toe up against the trigger. At the age of IS be sbot himself to death . alter ·oa argUlneql ill the 80LtoRIN spoke palnllllly schoor1 llillJneis, ol!!ce ·wtien· , of ·his ll(alldioo: '"A dllld he col1!1"llileid thatm0ney had doesn't see that .therJ con be been ~•from his check a Mure. He tlllDb tlJo -Id for the · eauromta Teachen disappears wUb oae tragic Assoclallo1i Altllouafl. he was a t." , president of tho r Iv a I Sild a neighbor, PhUlp American Federalloo of Sall!: ''The family hu had Teachers. . just one tragedy alter an· Thomas"' ruled last Sept. 20 Other. One ••. two ... three.,~ that the discharge was im· " proper because the language ....:.---'----------! was not used In front of pupils:. Kids L;ke To Still at issue ls whettier tbe ., school district must p •~Y Rogers back salary. Tholnas A k And said he will take up that mat· S Y ter at a !"1ov. 2.6 hearing. f • . . . • • • - ' • > . ' Wtdnesday1 No-ttmbtr 14, 1973 DAILY PILOT J9 • • Go with a winner. Bag a buy on sale - •• .BUENA PARK -ORANGE BNch II OI0119fthOro• . Opell DdJ 1:111 .. 1:111 p.M. lundeJ 10 ID 7 • • • • City Or. at Garden Grove Blvd. Opell 10-1 ,.,.._ DalJ -JI 10 lo I • I ' •, " ';.. ,',1 ' ' . t . •·. .... : . --------- :• JCPerny 12 3 416 789 0 I ._ ... -~ ... ·--·-- CHARGE IT I• .. I' • • r,; wt th your JC Penney Cnarge Card . II ~ou don ·1 have a charge, just see how las! we can open up y9ur new account. SANTAANA °3900 So. Bristol -No, of So , Coast Plaza Open 10-1 , .... Da., lund•J 10 ... - \ • 20 lµU. Y PILOT ln the Ser vice ~1arine Captain James W. Roach 111, husband o f the fom1er Miss Jeanne M . Schaasfma of Oakwood Apts., Newport Beach, was promoted to his present rank wbl!e serv- ing at the Marine Corps Base at Camp_Pendleton. Coast Guard S e a m a n Thomas D. Mudge, son of Mr. and f\trs. Oscar B. Mudge of 1892 Pammu Lane. Hun- tingt9n Beach, has reported for duty at the Coast Guard Staton at Petalwna. N a v y Co n structionman Recruit Howard L. Smith, son of ~1r. and Mrs. Bob L . Smith of 26011 Via Pera, Mission Viejo, has reported for duty with Naval Mobile Construc- tion Battalion Three at Port Hueneme. N a v y Hospitalman Ap- prentice David E. Wilder, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd E. \Vilder of 19882 Isthmus Lane, 11untington Beach, has com- pleted the ltospital Corps Schoo l at San Diego. Army Private First Class Randall G. Monsell, son of "-1r. and Mrs. Leroy W. Munsell, 6441 Antrim ~ircle, Huntington Beach, received a parachutist badge upon com· pletion of the three-week airborne course at the U.S. Army Infantry School, Ft. Benning, Ga. --- Navy Seaman Recruit Eddie •---T. Ricliards Jr:, husband of the former 1'-1iss Ann Roaze of 5362 Edinger Ave., Hun- tington Beach, graduated from recruit training at the Naval Training Center at San Diego: Navy Airman Recruit Gerald L. \\1lng, son of Mr. and hirs·. Marvin D. Wing of 5173 Elksfords Drive, Irvine. graduated from r e c r. u. i t training at the Naval Tra1ntng Center at San Diego. Navy Fireman Recruit Gary R. Cat.elller, son of Mr. and l\lrs. Robert F. Catellier of 20391 Kelvingrove Lane, Hun- tington Beach, graduated from recruit training at the Naval Training Center at San Diego. Navy Seaman Recruit Mart W. Llle, son of Mr. M. R. Lile of 139 \V. Escalones, San Clemente, graduated from recruit training at the ~aval Training Center at San Diego. Navy Airman Recruit James F Hen n1ngfeld, son of Mr a~d l\1rs. John R. Henning!eld of l8981 Antioch Drive, Jrv1n.e, graduated from r ec ~~ 1 t training at the Naval Tra1n1ng Center at San Diego. Marine Sgt. David 1\-1 . Cra"•ford, son of Mr. and ?>.1rs. Ben F. Crawford of 3172 Chemin de Fer, C.Osta Me~, graduated from ~ Ole Marine Security Guard School here. He will be assigned to a guard detachment at one of . the Am e rican emba ss ies throughout the world. Army Sergeant First Class James. P. McClelland, son of Mr. and Mrs. 11UTVY T. l\icClellan<l, 169 Costa . Mesa Sl Costa Mesa . participated wtth other American and al· lied troops in exercise Reforg- er V-ln Germany,. Sgt. McClelland is regularly .assigned lo Ith C.valry at Ft. RJJey' Kiil. . Navy Ft:reman Apprentice sa.v.. 1, Cott•. son of Mr. and Mrs. DQaald E. Cooke of 151 0J ¥agnolla Westmlmler, puate<f, fro recruit tralnllf at Ille Naval Training C.Oier at San Diego. ' I • Wtdntsday, Novembtr 14, 1973 • NYQUIL COLD MEDICINE 6 fl, oz. BUENA PARK Beach atOmigot~ °"" DollJ ••• t :IO ,... ·-· 10 It 7 • CE PACOL MOUTHWASH 20 fl. 01. . .JCPemey '123 4!8 189 0 9 JrifOO(llll SHOnb! ·-·---·--. CHARGE IT with your JCPenney Charge Card. II you don'! have a charge, just se& how fast we can open up yQur new account. -- City Dr. at G1rden Grove BIVd. °""" 10-tp.111. Deir -re• to t . I .. • . ~ ' t ---------------~----------~. ' ' ! JOHNSON$ _ • I I BABY SHAMPOO 7 fl. oz. I I I I I I I , I I I -------------~----------~ DR. WEST'S TOOTHBRUSH SANTAANA 3900 So . Brit IOI • No. 01,5::.i:," PllZI ClpM -, .... Do44r . ,. .... l " • • I I I I I I • I ' •'I .. ., ,. ... ( ' ,, " ; l f I . ' o'I I I " I ' 7 _J .. I -- . ' .. • ·servioo ··· Navy llciopltalman . Al> prentice Benlll'ette ~ daqlder,i ~Colonel and Mn. JOllijlb E. Hanrath ol 111111 !kmllCbt -tlnctoo lltadl, :flu completed tho lloopltal ·Q>rps School at Grat Lam, m. --•. Navy lleunlD ,11.ecruH -... om.c-. .... ol .. - Mn. ~Y Covlnctoo ol ~ • . AmJp Way· frliluated lnilil """"n 119inlng et the Naval Training.~ ot San Dltgo. -. Marine Pvt. DUlel P. u.-..., ... ol Mn. Betty T. Huntziocer 4' 2450 E1df!1 Ave., Colla lieu, llfl!ll•led from bulc: tialnboc. al .Ille Marine 0orpo Recruit Depot at San Diego. Navy Firemaa II. ecru It FnM s. ~IOI\ ol ilr .. and Mn. 'lllrold R. )Jebmon of 217U ltonlle'*e Line, Jltm. tlniton Beocb, pwluated !rom recrull tralninC· at the !lava! Tralnlns Cente,r.at San Diego. Airmon P~ A. F.ltn, son ol Mn. Delorel J. Harmon of lll02 S. El callllnO Real, San Clemente, has been a.ssicned to Chanute AFB, DL , after completlDi Air Foree • bulc tralning.<'The alnnmihis ,. been UlllJl<C[ to the TecllDlcal Training Ceo>l<r at. awiute for specialized training in aircraft malnt?""""". Airman. Jamt1 s. AM!ord !'lJ! o! Mr. ud ·Mn. MelYID i.: Aabford, nm ~t ia.. HtmWlgton Beach, has -.. lined to Lowry AFll. Colo., af\« CD~ , FCftfJ bolki .'. airman has beeoi aSalp!d to the Tedmlcil ll'fallihfC.Cmtei: ol Lowi7 .... opedollad training in the munfUM!I and -malnlMance!ield. ~ Marine , SocoDcj Ueutenant Pldllp T ... -o, pl 8007 s.a.hon! Drive, Newport Bead!, gaduated !tom the Of. !leer Basic School al the Marine Oorpo o...lopment and Education Command· at QuanUCo, V1. Srotues Vanish 11.0ANO!q:, Va. (AP) - Roeool<e police are looking for two wood nymptis, a dlllcllll prl, 1 leprechaull, two BuCldhas. anc1 the Greek god Pan. TJ>eJ ~ ..... ,.doz. m concrete lewn atatueJ 118 from the lawn of Jolla Atklm, 71, who makel them r.r a Uvlnc at hla home.' I' " ' • • • • • DAILY PILOT· II J· ,- . . Two Newport Beacl1 Road P1·ojects Sidetracked avlS•·brown ·,~.·INFLAllON -FIGHTl-NG SALE! .. • P~c~s Have Go~e ·Up Bu ·t ·we~re , 1 New low price on · Frigidaire Holding the lid oli MAYTAG Blg .20.& cu. ft. refrlterator-freezer, .. - • WASHERS and DRYERS IQOO/o frost·P1oof.r~~~~~~ AS LONG AS SUPPL .Y LASTS! ~~ ' y-'prlGH have gone up-ours , haven't yet. Act right iw•t to . . save. Quantities and models art limltttl. . R or DRYER· MAYTAG ~:1;1 DRYER ~ . . . ferrnlnf.i't ~rts~. rtgular and •ir flu ff cycltl • famous 'M!YIJll H1l<H>f-Heat• -dryint tli"!fna11s ~'hof spots" • large . p0rctlain' enamel clr\lln '4'ith easy to clt1n lint filter • Zinc coated steel ubhWt with tough 1tfYlic. eoamel flniSh.: Mocltl ONLY o"" •1st .. ' . " . BIGGER & BETTER THAN EVER! - · Orange Coast : COiiege 22nd Annual ' t;OOKING . SCHOOL • . LAST CLASS Thurs., Nov. 1 5th at Edwards Newport Cinema-Fashion Island. From 9:30-11 :30 a.m.-DON'T MISS THIS ONEI .FREE MICROWAVE OVEN ~ND PRIZE DRAWING COURTESY DAVIS• BROWN ; ,,, I . Ste Hottle Ec011omlsit C1t'ol Heinz ind S1n<l'y Krogh prep1r1 de&clou1, t1ntl&zing·recipes in sh New Computer R1nge by Frlgid1ir1I ' . MANY FREE .PRIZES! FUN! FOOD! Gins GALORE! • Cost.:M•sa . • l:latbOr :A~ea 411 hst SeventHnth Strni ' ' , Dally 9·9, Saturday 9·~ · , ·":';_" .. 646;1614 . ,f• •, \' ,., I I ' • This Frigidaire Custom Imperial refrlgerator- freezer features a two-shelf 5.94 cu. ft. top freezer that holds up to 208 pounds of food. Full-width door shelves in both sections, plus fu ll y adjustable cantilever shelves in lhe refrigerator section oJfer you flexibility and help you in selecting foods quickly and easily. Tough, easy·t6~clean cabinet ljner re sists stains, has no~ seams' to fr'ap dirt. separate refrigerator ·aniifreezer tempeta ... ·ture controls let you select the.coldne;ss combination you want An'd it's ready for an " .~rh.Jwlomati' li:;g Mak.~.JlOYt-Cl•L.-­ ater-8lexlrLCba!g"---'·-·------l ONLY. SJ6.9'5 ... ClliHftdlwl to~­ ..;Rduty. Tlll l'ttllfllll • T .... Clnl!ICllt. It rtdUces normal housetiold !rash to about one quarter Its oriOinal valwne. Won't operate until you. Insert the 1ocki!1!1 key. PJ!sh button controls, glide-out co11ec· lion drawer; hetds no .spteia.I installation. plugs into-nortnll household ccurtnt See a live COOKING Frigid.ire Trasli Compactor OR Dishwasher YOUR CHOICE only $199 95 l!J ~ . DEMONSTRAtlON by LITION'S Home' Economist Model FPC1J..206TU Frigidaire! Take a cloMr look at this undercounter dllhwaaher. Supor-&ugo wuhlng action, dual detergent~ penHf Md 74>1ade toft food pulverizer. Fits atllndJ ard .24"' cabinet openlnat. Easy·tcHnataJI. S.. why it'• Wl?rth the difference! Saturday, Nov. 17 . . . FROM 12 NooN-4.PM AT BOTH STORES Litton's home economist will show you all the great features of microwave cookin'g. It's fCst, easy, deliciOus and no more messy pots and pans to cleanl With the Litton Micro-Brownerr11, you can pre- pare a tender, juicy steak -searecLbrown and crisp on the outside -;in just 1 Yz minutes in your microwave·bver.! Use the Micro-Browner for steaks • chops,,gr.illed cheese sand.wiches, fried eggs, hash browhs, pancakes, omelets, French toast -and many more· of your favorite foods. []LITTON · Litton Microwave Ovens • Nobody •110w1 111or• about 111iuawo•• conking ltloll litlOfl. Holloocly. ; I ' ~ ~ . .. =! • ~ -.n. We have built our business on soti•· ;wi~m:· fled, loyal cvsto. mers~You mu1t be -•. 1ati1fied or we'll Lt~··~ Delivery and Expert ln~allatlon -make it good. OV4' __ ..,,..._,,, tNIMd ••l*h t1.ii-...... Vt1toll ~ ""' oppliOl'lf4• O«ordinfto foc19ty 1ptdlicoticlft1. • NIWTOLLfRE SERVICE PHONE'NUMID Zlnlth 7.3437 . • I . ' I ' I " i . l l l ' l ' ' f . ,, ' 'I .:. ......: ~~ ' ! • • , .I I I , ,. ,. • - Z2 DAILY PILOT Wf'dntsd.ly, Nowm~ 14, 1973 ~ • • • SALE Mrs. · Onass·is Steels-~ Self to Tumult_ f Edltor's note: Th it I& the th ird in a &tms of articles on £Jle as&a..tsina· tio11 of P resident John F. young -1• who feel th•l way," she wrote. "That ts my prayer." Friends rtl>Ofl t h • t !o!r s . •111 .... -···~ --· K entitdy, it.r implication! , and effecU on tile decade to follow.) By FRED M. WINSHIP Ooassb Is delighted with her children's interest in the world about them. Caroline has worked with a film crew making a-documentary on coal % OFF Our entire stock of DIAMONDS LAST3 DAYS NEW YORK CUP!) -Jac-. queline Kennedy Onassis has learned in the past 10 yea rs one of celebrity's bitterest lesSOM -that it is not a big step from the pedestal lo the pillory. Writing about the late Presl· dent KeMedy after bis 196.1 assassination, lhe former · miners in East Tennessee and ,~John· bas shown a flair for political campaigning among his classmates, even though they are not oC voting age. No stranger lo tragedy, Mrs. First Lady noted with regret. ti Onassis shared this year-her husband's grief over the ac- cidental death of his son and heir, Alexandl"M. It drew them closer together. Onassis' interest in hls stepson, John, bas deepened as a re.suit - a development that could have profound bearing cm the lively boy.. future. ''NoW he is a legend when · ~f-•ti1_ he "'OU.Id have preferred to -' ~ · -be a man." She i& oo less "'* a legend, and a living one, although she would have preferred to .remain a woman. .. • BY NATURE a private person, she always hated as First Lady the feeling that 'He is a rege..ci '"hen he would ha1'e preferred to he a man.' UPI,........ 1968 BOMBSHELL -MARRIAGE TO ONASSIS Admirers Felt Betrayed: 'How Could She?' "JACQUELINE ONASSIS is as happy a woman as anyone I know .11 says a friend whose association goes back to the almost rivals Howard once was, she is nevertheless White House. "She was never Hughes', only provokes such deeply involved io planning a political person nor a social stunts and pushes p r e s s the John F. Kennedy Library person in the sense of Capital speculatioo to new excesses: Society. She is basically did she marry Ari s tot I e in Camtridge, l\lass., v.tiose doplestic and artistic and her Onassis for his money because construction is scheduled 10 current way of life allows her she felt she never had enough begin next year. She wrote to indulge these interests, keep thelr \\'hite H o u s e memories· brtghr.Sbe ls wise enough to know that when one of life's chapters closes another opens and mll.1t be coped with. I think she has coped with more dignity than •Jot of people.giYe be.r~lt for." At !14, she jl_Qe! not regard her life as very different than other women or her economic class who gear their schedules to the activities or their husbands and families . Sym· pathetic letters 'i'-"hich poured in by the hundreds after the nude pictures were pubt!shed l\·ere a great comfort to her. \ !llrs. 0..-11 ~ ~ .. <d in New York,~ fMHte city, r.r -years ad llndt •I least a modicum ol ~ because of tts he>hwn atUtulle t9ward celebrltl11 . She recently loot another round ID her court battlo to .l~ pl10Jogn!pher -Ron-G1141a, I \l'ho bas made a l~otlve (preer tracking her around. , away from her. A f~ 1 court of appeals onler redUCed from 150 to 25 feet the ' ~ Galelll can •-h her .. "BUT 'M NOT &oinc to ' (See KE~Y,_...,.~, . We .Have Wheat You're Looking FOr VELVET FOG. ' HAIRSTYLIN·G 8466 lndlin1poli1 Ave. Hu~tington Beach 536-8829 ~ : ... 1[] _........,o she was "owned'' by her public, that "they'' had the right to judge her or her penchant for silk sheets. But public judgment was in her ravor -indeed she headed the list or most admired v.·omen -until 1968. as a Kennedy: Did she take recentl y that the library can-"She can look back on the Qnassis away from her sister, not replace her slain htisband tragedy of President Ken- Princess Radziwill? Does she "but it can help people \llho nedy's aeath with detachment. buy itenu of clothing by believe 'tis not too late to This is good because her the dozen. and never wear seek a newer world." children ask many questions them? -Does she neglect her j·~~"G~o;o~~G~R~A~NT;.~us~a~lw;a~y~siiiia~bo;;ut~ru~·m~a~nd~~sh;•~lr~ies;.;•o~;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~=: children? '\Till she divorce? Is she the vain. untidy woman pictured tn the book by a OPEN DAILY 10-1 O; SUN. 10-7 In that year the wor1d's most respected widow, the heroine of the New Frontier, married an elderly Greek shipping tycoon whose reputa- tion in business and other af- fairs was at best flamboyant, at worst tarnished. Her ad- -mirers felt betrayed. and the qilestion "How could she?" -~~s ~~af(lined in ~~lie print. former steward on the Onassis yacbt? FRIENDS SAY ?-.I r s . Onassis i5 not unaware that such questions are asked - and answered without regard to fact -but has steeled herself against them and tried to' help her Children, Caroline and John, dp the same. .. ~~~ PARK C!i"'~~!!~'L INCREDIBLE AS· it seems, tile image of the figure in black walk ing bravely behind the bier of John F. Kennedy has been transformed in 1973 into a September mom nude pictured in the I t a i a n "Playmen" magazine and a sensational American weekly newspaper. A pholographcr became a frogman to get the picture of &lrs. Ona.Mis as she sunbathed in what she thought \VM the ir)vacy ol Onassis' Greek island villa . --Mn:-onassts,_own-io?fat,Ctt': cle has not expanded much and her dinner party cats still iaclude s u c h Kennedy-era flffililiars as the Leonard Bemsteins, Paul M e 11 o n s . John Kenneth Galbraiths. &licbael Forrestal, and or course Lee Radziwill . Roosevelt Grier. the foot· ball tackle turned entertainer, recently dropped in to give John Kennedy an autographed copy of hi> book, "Ne.dlepoint for l\-1en." "Hank Wll1on'1 Bick" -Leon Ruuel SHELTER RECORDS Open 01i1iJ 9.30 kl ll:Xl p.m. Open 10-9 p.m. DUy Sunctays 10 IO t ~101o7 . SANTA ANA 3900 So. Elrisiol : ND. of So. Coast Plaza Open 10-9 p.m. ~ Sunday 10 '° 5 Her Inaccessibility, which U she is not as close to the Kennedy family as she ' .. . " •• • • You saw the Barbra Streisand TV SpecW presented by Sinter. Now set th• wonderful Wg!! •sewing m1chlnesl SALES REG. 109.95 FASHION MATE' zig•zag sewing machine wit!; carrying ~se SAVE •lmost$221 Sews all the new stretch and knit fabrics, sews buttonholes, buttons,overedgesand mends. With bob- bin overwind prevention · and the exclusive filrig~• front drop·in bobbin! · OFF REG. PRICE TOUCH & SEW Zig-zag -1119 machine . . . ' with choice of 3 de•igner cabinet• Has 14 built-in stitch;s, including speed basting! Plus th~ exclusive £!.igs:r*pu~h-button front droi;in bobbin, built·in, buttonholer .• Your choice of beautiful cabinets. TheSaratop The Hunt ington SAVE ALMOST s24 699 SAVE 203 OFF ~ SALE '96 !llii GOLDIN POWIRmnter' ·Reg. • upright cl•-119.95 ON ALL SINGER' VACUUM CLEANERS ___ SI cemrs Adjusts fotpatlo,normal pile, high pile, and sha& carpctina. Automitic cord reel, zippered dust bag. • For 1101• ne1r1sl you, 1M the yellow PIV" under SEWING MACHINES. Wt hav• a 'redit pl1.n dr~1nrll 10 1!1 your budse1 and If you wbh, mOf'tthly P1Ytn1nts may bt detttftd·untN ftbruary, l 97•. A sm1.U dtposit wlll hold 1.ny machine unUI O"ktmH. ./ • ' "We're An American Band" -Grand Fun!( CAPITOL RECORDS -Select Best Selling 8-TR. TAPES AND STEREO ALBUM SALE 4-Day1 Only 86 Albums Charge It! 86 T•pes Best selling hit songs in- clude "My Marla" by B.W. Stevenson , "We're An American Band" by Grand Funk plus new releases by Lou Reed , Leon Russel and Jim Croce. Stock u.p now and save. Charge it • AYIU.ble In Record DopL OnlJ ABC RECORDS STEREO TAPES AND ALBUMS ·I-Da ys Oaly -96! Tape1. Pop, rock and sbme classi- cal. Great chance to build library. Album1. S1ereo selections in instru- mental, country and-western. Save • FAMOUS FAVORITES 4-Day• Only 3!!~, G.reat collection of RCA®. Camden• 8-track tapes featuring Glenn Miller, · "Theme From Shaft" and 01her greats. cen•-. ·-'"'~-::;.-~ .. -. --••(IOI MM• ~,,._ '"':..::-------··---- ' l SPECIAL TAPES AND ALBUMS 4-Day1 Only I . Ea. 96 Tapes. Instrumen- tal,. country and western. show tunes and more. Album1. The Su- premes , Johnny Cash, The Tempta- tions and ' ~ore. ·-•A Tr•dttNrk of THE SINGER C0~1PAN Y Cap yritf'll Cl 1973 THE SINGER COMPANY. All Rl,tlb Rnetved Throurtioul tile World. ... --"":;:-... -------........ -== ·-----~If~· --· ...,=- \ • • • ' . I I " , , . • . ' [ ) t ' l I ' I . KENNEDY .. From Page %t I bother her any more." Galla claims. "She's not that bot ' ~~-· a news item .'' ( But ff "Playmen" paid $50,000 for \, f; its nude pho(ograpbs ), Her trip! away '""l' tlle ' city generally are diclllod bf the acbool 1 vacation.! of Caroline, who wiU be 16· Nov. 'rl, and John, who turns U two day& before. Onassis, who i! in New York off and on about six months or tbe year' is ;very much the master of 'hi.! wife's Fifth A"oue apart~ ment when he's lround. He does not sleep at a hotel as has been wid ely reported. European papers also have reported that the OnaMiscs soon will move abroad on a pennanent I.>asis. 1bey have e no such plans. In fact. Mrs. • ~ has just finislled 1 reileCorating her apartment in collaboration with i n t e r i o designer HaTTison Cultra. She loyes her sojourns on OnaS!ls' is~, Skorpios, and the )'acbt Quistina, but is less en- ·lhusiutic about his beach house near Athens and a Paris apartment associated with her blllSband's Maria C a 11 a s period. ONASSIS IS build i ng another home in New York -a penthouse atop his new Olympic Tower, an of rice skyscraper next to S t . Patrick's Ca th e dral. hirs .Onassls isn't sold on giv· ~ ing up her Central Park view ~ farther up Filth Avenue, but 4 her marriage, to the 68--year- oljl Onassis has necwartly e6tailed some compromises aod this could be another one. * * * · Film · Chief t r I \ ' .Charges Censorship BOS'roli<APl -The direc- tor' of a motioil picture on the death ol l'rtJident John F. Kennedy ssya: the refusal of two Boston television sta· Uog., to show ads for the movie 1s.cemorship. David Mlller, llli'Octor of lhe movJe "Executive Aclion", was in Boston Monday to pro- mote the film, based on a theory of a conspiracy to kill Kennedy. · The two TV stations - WBZ-TV (NBC) and WNACJ. TV (CBS) -had had no com- ment on why they have refus- ed to run ads for the movie. Mlller aaid the producers Ill the movie Died a 11.5 mUllon breacll ol agreement suit -salnst NBC for refusing to air the cotnmercials. . . Wtdntsd1y, NOW!mbtr 14, l<J73 DAILY PILOT %3 . . 2 Kennedy Youngste rs Na1·ural-Show No S~ars ... . _ ... ' ' NEW YORK (UPI) - Caroline and John Kennec!y are personable, natural -teen- agers who seem to bear no §C.Jlrs of the tragedy-that. mar- red their childhood 10 years ago. Caroline, who will be 16 on Nov. 'rl, and John, whose 13th birthday is Nov. 25, are learn- lDg to know their murderOO father, President John F. Ken- nedy, better as they grow up and taJk about him with members of the family and older friends . Their mother has kept the late president's memory evergreen for them, recalling often the . happy events h1 th e.Ir two years , IO months and two days in the While House. THE KENNEDY children have had... several surrogate rathers. Sen. F.clward M. Ken: ncdy and New Y o r k stockbroker Murray McBon- nell came closest to providing them with n rather figure prigr to ~1rs. Kennedy's ma~ rlage to Aristotle Onassis. whose aoting mle 'IS' like thal' ol a grandfather. Mrs. Kennedy's main con~ cem ·has been to guard her children !rom being BPoiled t~rough overindulgenee and overexposure. Al the same time, she..tia.t not wa~nled them to Jee! that Ibey are isolated or objects of' undue public curiosity. 'Ibey accept a cer~ ta.in amount of celebrity_ with grace, but John does not like being photograpbed. Mrs. Kennedy has departed frcmr-KennedY'fari\lly· custom by enrolllng her children in non • Catholic schools and schools that draw students from more than one economic clasS, CAROIJNE's..LIFE. as an lllb grader at a boarding school in .Coocord, Mass. is almost normal except for the Secret Service agent who guards her. She lives in a ' dormitory near the Concord Academy, takes a full course ol .studies and sports, and en- 'i<>l" ma!~ wllh lhe girls at Brigham'• Ice Crealn Parlor. She ei:cltes no special interest in the commWlity and has as many friends as anyone at lhe school. She is an attractive blue- eyed blonde with the Kennedy look, quiet like her mother, and stUffiOus. 'She is a cam-era bug and an excellent horsewoman and t e n n I s player, but didn't care for mother helps · him ·wltb .her ballet studies and dropped homework. the classes. When s h e graduates·· frM> Concord !n JOJIN'S TAU. frame hlnta 1975. she will attend Miss that hi• physique will be Uh Porter's SchoOI, ~r mother's his father's. He 1s brunette alma mater. in 1',armington, \ and good looking With 'brown Conn. eyes set far apart. Hts look John is In the fifth grade ls more Bouvier than Ken· a i Manhattan's Collegiate nedy. fie talks sporU a great School and la one of the deal and folio.wed every bit liveliest and most popular and pitch of the recent World members of his class. Fun -Series contest His biggest ln· has often come before work terest In football is the in John's school Career. His Harvard team. • ' "\ ; ' 1-: i,«; . ' ,·. "OUI llST" l ·SHID, 4°tYCU PERMANENT..lRESS WlS!IER ~ _ "UNDER THE COUNTER" SELF-CLEANING F11olur11 cool.down cor• for P•rmon1nl Prl\I fobric1 plu1 'f>K-1 111!· tirog fo r lt!>il gorm1n1S. Mo;ic Cl.on• 1111 cl~n· in; filltr. 6·1tvtl woter ~ltctor. !ltoch cli1p1n- 11r. lXA7 -400, DISHWASHER "Oii llST" S·TIMPllATUll, PERMANENT PRESS GAS DRYER BIG 12.0 CU. FT. 2-DOOR COMBINATION 15811 for Ptrmon1nl Prtu. f.ofurei 5·po1it1on h.ot I itlettor, fOOl·down c0r9 Super storoge door, roomy tw in crispers. Hos fully adjustable temperature control for greater economy and efficiency. leveling legs, 2-eosy·to·empty ice troys, Floating-quiet compressor, Million feolurtl RinM ConditionH Di'f)ln1tr. Ho1 1elf·dtoning filt.r. Duol d•••r;tnf d11pen1er. ln1tollotion not included SXU301. Cvstorn Dry control. Ho1 magnet" door EYT12D . ••lro lor;• lint Krten, full homper door. Charif! Ir ! LXI 7401 . .· Tl-SHELF V STAllD 1111 Stu•dy, wo!nul fini1hsd 1hel•t1. w,,, re<:ord olbum rock. Earen1ion 1hell for 1peoker. UC805. 2-SNELF TY T~ILI 511 Full 1wivtl co1ten; tor ~y portability. Wore mogoi ine roclt ond 1lo•og11 1hetf. UT62A Panascric. AM/FM/FM C-CNAllllEL snno SYSTEM 4-Day• 111•1 On ly . AM/fM,/FM, s ... t(I •OdlO with '"'""",.., ~ii;., 'Y',."'· Ovodr~l'ie•'"' c ... ~,,,, .. AIC. IET -· Wol...,i wood ~E11-'°· ASK ABOUT OUR CREDIT TERMS ·--....... ,__,. ruwna~ lt)ON, .............. .. , .......... -.w11 ----.... ..__ ... --. ............ BATTERY /ELECf RIC 12" DIAGONAL FUN TV 9911 Yo11r Owl'I ··1a~e ·olo11g' 12·•nch diogonol fun TV II ploy1 on bo1te11e1 or hou~ cu"'"' Cleo•, d1orp, hogh contro11 p•Uu•• • £lC odapler op· loonol. 31(37 ncn 18'' ~::;.COLOR h's o bi9 1~" dt0gonol ~, lto111rin; JtCA's AccuColor picturt lube. One ~t VHf hl'le t11ning~ Solid 1ta!t compontl'lll In mony areo1 fo1 m1n1mum moinlenonce probltm1, 1>01 '-to ...... ,._ .... .... ~ ..... ... ._ 'UIDAU MAllHQTT l!IO-ho-'-IW .. , . ...,..... ...... "Ill ...... ·-· , ...... _ • IO. llOlllllOOO IOITOIKI OIAIKI lllttt ....._ • ., , ... ,.,__,,_ UUll '"""' ..... ·-. ... i ,. ......... $t, llUM.~ ·-.. c-..... sn' IMCASTR WI.II I ......... ltlt ... ,_L • ....... , ...... 11un llALTO IMI o....o.I ""-"' .,. .. ,.... ..... ··-·- jfL,Oft ......... , fully o..-3 ~ •t<Ol'd ~~g ... ,_ .. po.gr. 4 1<,-•,,.olo•• .. i'M{FM ...,,,_,,...,, :!1!2015. .,......._ .... ,,..,.,_ ... .-.-.... --.... ~ lOK'WIAtl -m Mtoo-..,•- t '""'" •'- ... __ llVllSIDI llVllSlll -·--nM~,_ ......... -·-SAlllnAllllO SAi RlllAIDO SAITA AH S~1~~~~~GS SIMI VALLEY SO. LOS AIUUS TlotnAlt OAIS TOllAIKI VALlltlA VllTUIA WISTMllSTll "'--,.,.,....,.._ '4:'.::r .,.,_ ... IU01t...W-"' ................. 1tt•-.... b111 ............. ,,,. r:::l!'--.. .... ._...._ ... .......... c-.-.... ·--..... _,__, .. , ....... , ··-. ...... ·-' • ' , • •• < , ' .. , • . . • ' • • ' ' UPI Tll~I One Opinion Wedflttd11-J, Novtmbtt 14, llJ73 DAY w oRK Statewide Emergency Smog ~ Plan Adopted FOR BAKERS? · GENEVA CAP)· -A coo· ference of 62 bakery unlons from 18 countries unanimously called for an end to night work for bakers. One WJion representative said good quality bread stays fresh overnight, and that eating hot bread in lhe morn· ing "does mt justify working at night." SACRAMENTO (AP) -The State Air Resources Board has adopted a statewide air pollu· tlon rmergency plan aimed at sta nd'"11zing smog alert levels throughout California. The board's 3--0 vote came Tuesday in spite of complaints from both Los Angeles and San Bernardi no air pollution CQn trol districts that the • health advisory alert included in the plan was too strict. T HAT S TANDARD , formulated by a statewide panel of doctors, calls for loca l districts to ask residents to voluntarily curtail d rivi n g when smog levels reach a level ha_mperlng the health of at least 10 percent of the population. Alan K. Stater, spokesm&J); for the Los Angeles Qw.nty Air PolluUon Control Dtstrlcl, argued that under 1972 smog levels in that area , such an advi!Ory would have been Issued on 100 days. m; SAW llE fear~ people would not be willing to comply wllh an alert tile)< heard 10 frequenlly. R.R. Brattain, a board member, countered that "as to the argument that 100 notifications a year may just be crying wolf, there'•· also the argu"lent that 100 notifica- tions a year may wake up the people In Loa Angeles to tile fact that they're going to have to do oomethln1.". LOCAL DJSTRii:TS -have unUl April I to adopt specific re&WatiQll5 to COJllply "1 th the statewide plan adopted Tues- day. • That plan establishes thrte alert stages: the health .a. vlsory alert 1 secoed warning stage and a lhtrd emergency phase. Playboy A' Nt1°no . DURBAN, South Alrlca (AP) -A South Alrl- reald<nt Wll fined $Ill for Importing five c:ople1 of Playtioy magulne, which has bffn binned b Y government CtnlOl'I. °"" DAtlY 10.1o;SUN. 10.7 w111; thrv SAT .• NOV. 14 thrv 17, tt7J 3 FLASH CUBES & FILM 1.56 Fun-Pack includ11 3 focal flash cubes and 1 roll 12 exposure colo( GAF® SLIDE'PROJECTOR Still, forward or re :6686 verse ... Pop-up edi·· Charge tor, .4 F3:5 Jen s. Jt ! f ilf!l. 3-PACK MAGI CUBES 97c Focal• ,,.;ogicu bes for newer instant-load and pocket cameras . Charge it. PREPAID PROCESSING 97c Processi ng mailer for 20-exp. slides, regu~ lor and super 8 film. • . ....... • University of Wisco n· sin student m a k e s viewpoint known on two counts. Person was attending rally in SUJ>- port · of impeachment I of Presiden t Nixon. COLOR PRINT MAILER Prepaid ma iler for processing 1.97• 3 W.ys It Cltlr1t·ll 11 I •Ill ~ 12 color printsf.Save! Under Way FLORAL PHOTO ALBUMS F!-:!~.~1!~~ -· Rel1llable·styfe:"CFeatl><rges -. ~ Char • · P _ollution ' Patrol FILM WITH PROCESSING 1 •. 77 Type 135/20 or 126/20 Focal• slide film with processin_g. J FOCAL• SUPER 8 2.5 S\Jper,S·color ~o¥ie fil . · • .I-Days Onlv·. . I" cars have begun palrolling the keep any size pnnts:Sav e. 1 ,s nine-coml!y San Francisco Bay l . ·~-------------------· .. with processing incl uded~ Area in search of vehicles emitting too much smoke. The cars are driven by 12 male and l\VO w o me n member! of the ne wly form · eel Vehicle. Patrol of the Bay Area Air Pollution Control District. < THE UNIT will patrol the nine counties and cite cars, trucks, buses and motoreycl e for emitting vi!lble smoke 'FOCAL "50' . ELECTRONIC ' · FLASH 4-Days Only TELEPHOTO INDEX .AUTO PHOTO LENS ALBUM 4-Daya Only I-Daya Only f over a 1(),.second period. 29 88 1 s1 The cars are orange and white and equipped with two- way radios, red lights and sirens. They are marked "Air Pollution Patrol." Pollution control district of· ficlala said citations wouJd be issued and violators might be forced to pay fines and offer proof of correction. Fines would depend on local court policy. 1 N ADDMON, officials sai d, the inspectors wHI have radio acces~ to master files ot the Department of Motor Vehicles in Sacramento and check for stolen cars or outst&nding warrants before stopping violators. In the case of stolen cars, the unarmed inspectors will not stop the ve hicle bu t re- quest lnstroc tio1ls from the nearest I a w enforcement agency. 0 F F!CIALS ADMITrED that the program would only spot oil smoke and emission of carbonaceous particles. lt would not show the presence of carbon m onox i d e , hydrocarbon and oxides of nitrogen which are invisible. However, officials regarded the vehicle patrol as an im- portant part of the program to reduce air pollution. Smog Hi~ --No Paul Revere SAN DIEGO (AP) -When one of the worst smog attacks in years hit, nobody was work- ing at the Air Pollution . Con- trol District to sound the alarm. THE OXIDENT level reach- ed .24 part per mllllon in downtown San Diego, three time.I higher than the level deemed acceptable by the federal government. That ,..., SalUrday wi lh the polutlon district closed for t h e weekend. E!rondldo record«! ,29 and Oceanside .22. In disclosing this Monday, the county's air ~llution con· trol officer blamed air stagna- tion and a temperature ln· vrrsion I 1 ye r "practically right on the J"llll'd." m E SMOG Al!ATED slight ly SUndoy with .15 part oxldt per mlllioe In San Diego and .ti In Oceonxlde. and skies cleared with cool t>reew Monda)'. Buy on tlmel Credit terms a¥1ll1ble · · . ' Com puter: or man· ual flash. Charge it . Charge It! 35mm SR · T • 101 'CAMERA 4-Day• Only 21 9 f1! Case Complete SLR interchang eability sys t&m, fa st Fl.7 lens, through-the-lens focus ing, viewing. Shutter speeds from B to 111000 seco ~d .Case . Save. ,....cmmu.a: .... PHOTO r«l!JICARDS ] Altow 3""4 wetks fo r deliv• . 25For CO LQ!t 50Fa -~ S597 ::-;,:'t.:"' S)OIB ·-- Fits Pentax·type Cameras. f2.8 \en,, ' Holds pocket insfa· matic or polaroid si11 photos. Charge It! Charge It! 35mm SLR CAMERA 4-Doy1 Only 9 911 With ca .. Hanimex LLC came ra features last Fl.8 lens, shut- ter speed s to 1/1000 second. Built-i n metering system and th ro ugh-the-len s focusing, case. 4-Doy•l 666 Only Clo••1• It! COUl'ON MVIT ACCOW.AN't' OllDllll ····NOVE'Mitrt 1o1:i Y.'i973'"' ································· Lates t 197 4 Model SLR.. Hot Great way to organize. Holds 3 shoe. Improved view finder .Cose. lenses, extra body, etc.Charge 11. , .. __ ... __ •• SAITAAIA '-':::::t' llUfLOWB -,.... . llllA 'Altl USTA M1SA , ... _ tlll UMllll,..., .... , ..... .... "".... .. .,..., .... ..i.. ..... ..... MOITCLAlll ----.... -JAITAR_, U111 f ......... • • • W.ALI , ...... ,__. ... .. ~ •. IO.IOUYWM , ___ .,.. • ' SIMIHWY 111.n.. ..... "'-an .............. -·-IOll••GI . .1 .............. --SO. LOJ AlfBU. 11• ......... ·-- lllUCI 1t lll ........ • .. ... 1N•lll.1 .... .... TlllSAll NU .. _ ... ··"'-,...., • ~· E::ml' I 55-PC. SET CHINA DISHES 4-Day1 Only 88 Charr• It! 8 1och: 10 ~" plates, saucers, desserts, soups, brtad a nd butters, 10 cups; 1 eo.: platter, vegetable bowl, creamer, covered sugar bowl. 45-PC. SET IRONSTONE DINNERWARE 19!!. Only 8 each: 10" and 7". plate.s. 6" cereals, cups, saucers; 1 ea.: 12" platter. 9" serving bowl, c reamer, cov· ered sugar bowl. 20 "· S.t ... 4 ....... ,. .••.• t .t7 50-PC. SET -.STAINLESS FLATWARE -· -111 111.-tt. . ..... .. ... ,,..~ .... ·- .Charg• lrl IASl LOS lllCIUS' .,.. ....... .... . ....... ... · LOllG IUCI ~~- llYllSlll . .......... ·-- IL- 119ya · . tALllCIA ftlTllA · warm •• · , ................. ,,,. .................. , ......... -----.. ............... .. ...... ......, ......... I I I I r t t f • ' WtdnHday, Nowmbtr 14, 1q73 ~ -New Unit Will_seek Sex Data Gregory~s -New Ca111paign-Liquor ... By lJNDA. DEUTSCH years ago and will concentrate , lives like a p er pet u r a I diet since April 1971. llis killing each other." LOS ANGELES (AP) _ on .ooUege dates a~ !i:ct~~e passenger on the Titanic. He's weight has leveled off al jll,,'i~ He haan't decided when he'll Comedian Dick Gregory, who tours. worried about war, poverty, over 100 oounds. and he says gave up food 2i,s years ago the poisons in rood and the be feels healtny "but usually "I REFUSE TO do antldrug corruption of government. nungry. to protest the Vietnam war, ads on radio and TV/' he H1s wife and 10 children. He vo\ved to begin eating From Wire Strvtces is still starving and has given said, "because I will not be who live with him on a 400-once the Vietnam \var ended, up something else -night part of something that puts acre farm in Plymouth, Mass., and did break the rast for ea! again. '\'1th such a doomsaying al· tllude, the strongest thing about Gregory today is that he's funny. Mn. Wllllam 0. Douglu ia club perfonning. down re.efers and drugs but eat raw fruits and vegetables 30 days -eating only rav1 heading a new group which His new crusade ia against doesn't say anything about -nothing else. Jn . case of fru it and \'l'gctablcs -but flt' points to· the n'Jeat hopes to conect fiIKllngs about li'Xfi:, which he says is ~~-g~_d, ~,'m saying they're disaster they can liv.£.... off be_gan aga in because "t he shortage and wheat shQilage se:r ln the fields Of economles 1 ru ing young_sters as fast as nature, he said. same mentality exists in the in rel ation to ·his own fast~ ' . • DAILY PILOT dope. He has bowed out or The <:>omedlan. whose causes Pentagon today tha t created "B)' the tin1c t get ready medicine, genetics, psychiatry .._=,_,~._,.... ___ _, the liquor-serving clubs that have almost overshadowed his GREGQRY, 40, consun1es \'ictna m ... You ca n't say to eat, there ain't gonna be u'' T .. -... and other disciplines and to "'BAH!'" gave him lilil bjg break 15 comedy in recent years. still nothing but fruit jucies, his you have peace if nati ons nre no food left ~" DICK GREGORY 1"!1>1~h them u wldcly ul~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-:-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'-~-'~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,~~~~~~~~~- I poosible. The wife of the U.S. Supreme Court Justice told reporten: "It ii only reieentJy !hilt people have been ~ ti.O to finding out more about ourselvea." She said the inlonnaUon can be used to evaluate sexual behavior that la conditioned by social custom and laws dealing with chUdrcn and family life. 'nte new group b called "aexualldentity." * ~ . . / / . Mayor Ronnie Thom-at Macon, G1. pkt ,,. th a t "prellmlnary ,Jllana" w e r e lielng made for a vl!ll Sunday bJ l'Hsldeat Nlxoo to the Central Georgia city to honor ( PEOPLE ) former CongreMman Carl VIBIOlll on his 90th birthday. Neither 'Ibom!*>ll nor state Reputilican chairman B o b Shaw would conllrm the Nixon trip was dermlte, but Shaw said he wU advised by the White Home that an advance . min .had bieen sent to Macon . _ JgJ~ i!'l<> arrangements f« -;--1~. -.. • • The eldest daughter ol the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy Is getting married S;lturday. K1tbleea ·lteMedf,. ·22, and -·· David Let r.w.....i, 25. will be wed al Jloly Trinity Church In WuhtDcton. A reception follows the ceremony at the Kennedy family's home in McLean, Va. The bride-to-be is a senior at Radcliffe College. Her future husband is working on an American bl!tory doctorate at Harvard. • senate Democratic Leader Mike Muaftd411 order to lower the temperature in the Senate to save•fuel ·produced a chi!ly climale. ft WU IO brisk th al Mansfield quipped he "may co~e up wt~ a~ new J_!?e of bus ..... · ... Joof joilm. Wt week , Mansfield directed that the thermoetats be lowered to 61 degnes ln the Senate. 'V * Sen. Bqll Scolt, (R·Pa. ), a oolltdor ol Chinese art, &aid he piano to nm for re-- election In 1m, but 111e offer of a permanent ambaasa- dorshlp Io Peking could change his mind. "Aa of now, I have every intention oC running," the ,'TS- ycar-old senate m I n o r I t y leader told a group o f Penn.,,ylvanla newsmen. Asked about the China pall, however, he rep11ed. "t•d be very much tempted." Soott added that he doobts he will be oUered the job. * The Senate Judiciary Com· mlttee approved the nomlna- Uon of Gen. Looowd F. Cltop- lfllD Jr., retired Marine C.Orps commandant, to be com- mi..,1orter ol ImmlgraUon and NaturaUuilon. . -, .. A HCUrtty gum! bu been placod · on duly at I h e AncbOrlge home ef former Interior Secretary W a I I e r Bickel alt~ tbe family receiv· ed on anonymous telel>hone threa~ Police said on. of Jllckel's children ~lved the threaten- ing call. Rickel and hi! wife were out' of the at1te at lhe time. ' • A federal Judge baa dlm\lsa· ed a c:OunlmUlt llled by C. Anbolt S m I (~ ' I dalllhter, Carol Smllll 1111...... •lllnll the lntemel Reven'!" s...1 .. , and 11)'1 the two sides are trying to eettle a 12.I million tax lien out of court. The bis flied the lien aialnst lit•. Shannon'• prop- erty Oct. S3, aaytnc Smith, target ol a '311-mllllon lien. tr•Nfetred oome of I b • -y In qUOlllon-to hla daughter. OPIN DAILY 10-10; SUNDAY 10-7 WED.thruSAT.,NOV.14-17, 1973 ~h,,~~1: 3-Woys to Charge It at K mart® J 12·30 CUP INSULATED .PERCO LATOR Char1e It! ,: ;, 10~Zr. .. I EUREKA® UPRIGHT '. 4-Dora 38 8 7 Onlj Cltar1e 11 Pow6rful vacuum gets carpets rf!ally clean. with power-driven 12" beater --·.,rush.4.-...b eaHt·, shak8sr·sweeps.-- ! EKIS - .BUFFEI SKILLET 4-lloy·23se Only Charge It! High-dome i 2" automatic skillet wittr nofi:..Stick c60kiflg surface, snap·away legs and handles for easy cleaning. ·-...-~ ..... , ~O"'lfl>l 11 ·-·.., BUMPERSHOT GAME 4-Do,·• Only 527 1000 ways to ploy the angles with o puck . 2 to-' players. TOT'S HOT CYC LE 38" loog, low t6k•911 of heavy plastic with mog rear wheels. 4-lloY' Potio ltem1 Ne• Ava Ila Ille In Kmart E. lft An9ele1 .51er9 livt Plonh Net Av9iloble in Kmart L.nca1ler Store ... I ·GAL. LIVE PLAllTS SCALLOPED EDGlllG .. Toms, gardenias. golden arbor• Yitoe and Italian ~ypr•'f·• 3 F100 · 7 _C 4~ ~~~nch • ® :;;. .. -. ~l!JllD SIX ' • SAIRllA .. ,.,., ...... "'"'" <ill...i~t.M SAllTA AllA ''::er • Pretty florist tnum1 for loflg kntin9 beauty. Choott from • ¥Oriety of color,, ' . llLULOWll ·--...... -flUllTOI , ................. ... , ..... ~ -CWI -=.. ...... . ' ' ' SAllTAR.-S 11111"1 .......... ' Automatic coffee· maker with serve light. Double-wall insulation. Charge It! AUTOMATIC CAlll OPEllEll Magnetic lid lift. er. Cord retracts CUSTOM ELECTRIC KlllFE 8'' With 9" hollowground stainless steel cutting blades with serrated edges. . ' CASSETTE RECORDER 4-/Jny• 4 4 88 Only . (,"horf!"''·'· . ' . 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"'"' VAIJllCIA VlllTllll .. ,,.,,_ ....... ·"'-"'""""-....... ..,, _ _., MHIOVtA "''''" ... _,__ llVllSIDI .... .... • WIST-Ta ls.Mt ........ ·-. • • • • ·• ~ • • ,• • ••• • D~,lY l'llOT Wrdl!fSdly, Nowmbtr 14, 1973 ~-Do1netown Stil.1 Loyal to Nixon 'I thmk he'll ... , fight the thing ,,., , ..... qgb mul he'll ·" cmne out on top.' ~ . ~ ..,,. tJixon~ ' 'He hasn't done " any11ting. , . I think he'll fight the thing through and he'll come out on top. I haven't talked to anyone in Whjt~ler ~•'Who is against the·President." ·,-;~~· Chamber manager Jerry •' "-flathaway is Jess emphatic. --"I'm sure there are people --here that have some concern about the way things are ;·-,.-'.~ing, includlag myself," he ,._ •. says. "But we are just waiting ,·;.~.1o see what happens ... " . ~::: JN THE CITY of 73,400, ... ,v.i:Jere 60 percent of the voters . ·;·:pre Republic;an, Democratic ,. ··attorney Paul Weil doesn't ~-'Jlnsify him.self a,., a politician ;-;' .although ht is president of .... \he Whittier School Di.strict board of trustees . ,, ..... "I tell my kids that just l'·O.tike Nixon I'm a Whittier "Jawyer who became presi· .,,.-dent," he jokes. -Weil is cautk>ully critical, ~· ~sisttng he's more concerned ~ •wbout preserving t h e in- _,. Jililutlon of the presidency .,.,,..,thin finding Nixon guilty or .... ..il'.1.----~,·~l • ... ~~ ••Jt's not Nixon as an in· -:. • .~vidual that's threatened." he • .?:JI. "It's our ••r or. doing ,. toes; it's the pres1deocy. My .......... ~of the reaction in our community is one or dismay. 1bere has been community pride in lbe President , ~11-thole who ' ...... ,.. him when he u...i here • ' • Whittier Colitl• is jU311y .fl'Olld of hlin, u any college that produ.., a president ;t;;U\4 be." ' ,..,. tAT THB ~WBIJ'iiER College ,J,•~. dr1ma major $!even w1 .. Wtod.s. studying under a tree. ~"~mmelited : "Most people ...,_hero have -ol turn· ed oil on NIJM . They think ""'' kind ol oomlcal to say, • 1 ao to WhitUer. I con become ~ pmidetlt.' But 1 · !arller port of the aludenll dOD'I •""' ~ ... ~ -... ~_. ce I ie 1• Jialdeal, ' r,_,,clt Binder; 1greed. •• ' .,... - NO-I RON AVR IL®· ·TIERS 24-Da'47,.;, . 8Qi<30" 80x36" 34-D•727 Swag '68 x38" , Washable no iron •. " Q@O\Uill~.eile<k1iof;~ Avril b rayon in white, gold, green ' ' or pink. ' •fl.ICf9<l 1'-1 FIBER .. 1· ---GLASS . ·~: PANELS 4-lJa_r~ Onl~· . . , .. _!c!I . . . ~x S4 " " ·. 8 1 I :;.~~ .. Fas h1onglass ~ 1n panels ·made 111ith ,glass yarn~ by PPG Industries. lnc. Green .. Hand washable. •~ No·1ron. 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I • 1 •• • ' I i.J tr4es~ Inc.,, an~ self-li ned with thsU11_l.loO . ,--· cr.,tic=leam._ltalld""8S~~--·--=-~=,--,=I • · fire-safe, wri nkle·reslstant. Sal8'prl~l '7 t' •H"OlnHslt•' ... "°'GIMaf• . ..... . • ... •• . ~: • DACRON• PANELS' ~· O.n l~-E•ch On lr faclt : ~~ ·4.Dnp 1 ·~-D•)211 ,. -52x54 '' .,ft •''" L.--""'"...1.-ll!....,.J Wide, sheer Dacron" p olyester n1no n, \ w ashabl e and wrinkle·resistan't. Oeep I bottom hems. Shoo at Kmart andUYI . r . . ' ... .. 52r 45" Pone!, Eich .......... 1.67 · •Ou l'onl "9g TM FLORAL DACRON"' PANELS '-l'our 337 .. oice Each . Cll 63 " or II" Longrlt Super 6:5"~width odds grociousne11 to windoWJ. Rayo n/Docron•pofyesler batiste. ~,, tlem. Shop now ot I( martJ •Chi "Ol'I Rf9 1 M . FASHIOflGlASS"'•DRAPES 4-Day•5•1 . 4-Day·5'7 Only -l'•ir Only P•lr Or54" Or14" * Mode with gloss ya rns by P~G lndustrifl, Inc. Thermal acrylic foam bocking. No itOf'I, Soltd colors. Charge itt ~lnclu11<-Tl.l '°'(;i911f 1- . 4-P,.y1 Only elwrrf• It --~t:::.;:.• "· ' Thie~. sheared, reversible cotton ter. ry In 2·tone colors. Fringed ends . Washcloth, 12x 12" , ••••••••••••• 51 e • ', ! I . Dehl!<e,wtde.erm pllll>'y in cclttOll cor. 11uroy flll~d wlth'ilon, ~P,q'rc .Pqr:ket 1n each arm o·~ora1d'r' colocs~ IASTLOS.-U a ,,.. _.,........ ..n!' .. , ... .............. ... .... ~ UITllGTOl IUCll llDUSTIY WIUITH LOIG IUCll ' lt lt1 ....... 111 ......... M. 1119"9-.I. --=· ...... .. ....... .............. ..o , OIAIGI OllAlt llALTO llWIHlll ltllllt ,_ IM,lo-..1 ... ................. ....... ~ .... ··-·-·--TllOUSAD OAIS ronua -HUICIA riiiHl 1111 ,, . ........,......, ltl» .......... M. tatnY.--w ,,,.. ............... ._ , .......... ..._........, ·•-It. . ....... ·--·- • •' j ' • DAILY l'tLGT' ~Stringhaan-' Lai· d to Rest l--P\1-BIJ~~~.~~ortCE~~ =~~:: ·=N·=· -~ .=c.:.. . • '-'j ~:::·:: c~°c.':::.:r. re: T._ fol::,: IT=~·~,. dal"8 TM foU~a.:· i!'!!~~~ tWrltM ldloCll ~~~~:~~r!i: ~=-khMI TM• COUHTY OP ...... Mlllffll aa;. •t! Dlttrk l 1116. A.,,.., THE C:l!NTEll 'Oft 'S'rtHOlOGI• 'Ell$0NAI. SEllV1C:E ltEAl..TY, 2W IU O.MO~; TWo .. <:kick ,_,.. t r •• • .,_ \!In 8en!CH NASllVILLE, Tenn. -HWJ. drOda of lens aud COWltry muoic 11an1 gathered around a IUM1 graveside surrounded _by !!oral 'displays Tuesday for · .. burial ~ slaln singer.com· · t.dlan David "Slrln&bean" " Akeman aud bis wife. • Nearby were the graves of --miWiititiwliawl<lns, Cowboy Copas, Randy Hugh.. and Jal'j.An&l!n,.other Grande Ole Qpry ftgures "110 d i e d VlolPly. Hawkins , Copas and Hughes were killed in a 1963 ?Ian• crasll and ~ died ·~ a ear ,~ en route to Ir funeril. AktllWI, the rail·lhln com- {tdian ot ••ffee Haw," Was the "'°t 0pry star to b e 1Jlllllderod. Police ,.llted no · 'leads In the search for the w .... . '-·, \ MOTIC:I °" N~INO OP ,nlTIOM CAI.. C.OUNSEl.INO and T~E Clt'NTEll Viti• CM°'°" Nt'lt90ff '-"""' C•llfol'nl• tflf n" ••Y ol NOVMlbet, ltn 11•Je I vt!d t k I -h ltbo · ,Olt ,•oe.•T• °"#ILL &MD POI fl()tlt MMUUAOI! AND fAMIL'I' couN< ,.,... • • '1.c:1 "' 11d ltnfff: Offlct f!F-Mr. 0 ma e J?'OP e ,ne weal er service sa1d a w ut restStance. llTI111 TllTAMINTAIY ' lll•NG. '"' H.,.. l tvd.. Cot!• M¥Y GWI• 1"11111, ""' VI•!• o.i , .. ·~clc:, Allltt..,, ,.....,111~. laugh and he did just that ," pilot who fiew over the moun-• A "'~ht' £11111 o1MAtl!L1TouT. DKMMd· Meta c.,t~ ~u• Oto.""""'°'''"'"' c.111orn11 "* ,,111,.. un111ed sCftOOI ottrr1d. ua 1.-•·1n repOrlcd the molten -k fllelO r ' . NOTICE ll HllEIY OIVCN tMl J"l'Old C"'*I. )110 """' Ylll'"k Tl'llt "''-II COfMW(IH lly •n l!!o C•lt\"Oll. E11t lr'llM, c1111wr1i. • aa.ld Louis "'Grandpa11 Jones, ~ ·~ ANN'~LIS M _ A J.\CK STOUT hi• flltid i-.in • Pttlllon -'"-·Cott• Mffl, c at11ou11e mM tfl'tkNll 'l'Of«:' httt1t111c.1t1on N1m11 11ew1m didn't &ppear to threaten any n,r-y I ' tor PtoOllll ot Witt tnd frlll' lsMllllA Ed'Wlrd G. J1ml1Mll\, ti') 1tnr9'1 M4fY 0. PllW P~I for trrJ4H"°""Sflrlnll:ler S=I • a reuow "Hee Ha w '' residents ol the sp·-cly lawyer !or Spiro T .• Agnew ol lell91't T•l•IMlllll'Y to tflo ptllllOflllf. ... ...... lopti IMCfl. C11llornl1 "*' llllt at1t.ft'\lnl w .. 111-4 wl1' thl county Twt '~'°" ".....,....... • r• ~· aid f rlfwtnU to wlllcfl It fl'lt6* fOf fvt'lfllr Cll'f'Oll H. 1tlelwinl10n, t $) 11 Clttk ef 0r1noo: C(Junty, Nowrnt1er If, IMl1t1I klloOI• perforiner and A k e m a n ' 8 1 led a · Tuesday s the ormer vice portkvi.ra. 111d Thlt ,,_ 11rno of ""'•"'° ~111 1twc1. "'""~ H 1 11 •. 1m. l"f•c• ,.,..,. .,.. Ott t1te1 Ar the closest friend. ~s 8pok~::·ror the Palmer presktent wUI appl)rently fight~ 1;t",1~000.:.:.. .. W:n ~ = ~:/!1or~,::? •• toMucltd tw 1n P1111u1Ni Dr•noe C011t o.1ty P:S~~ ::.:.;;,,~,...,~ ·~~~¥t::: e~rorts by the Maryland Bar o1 DeH'1mMt Ho. J ot ttld <Mt. ~w°"°"1tM 11tot1111c1r1 otr..r ""•" 1 Nl'lt!T\IMf 14. 11. • Ind o.c.rnt11r 0111r1ct, 1..00 1at111 CMl'f*I, 1i1tt ""'11n.. e Volcqno Flo•v• National Oceanic and Association to have him•• 100 cim c.ni« 0..1""' w.,,. 111 P1"1\1f1111,. 1.1m ,..1.13 c1111orN1 G ., COLD BAY' Alaska (AP) Atmospheric AdministratiOn d'·barred Ille City of S•nt• AIM!. ClllfOl'flll. JMl'l>ld COiien NOTICE 11 HtlEIY 1VfJ11 l t11tt , • liJ • 0.1'4 Novem• s. 1m Thi• ,,.,._, w11 llled •'"' 1111 PVBLIO NotlCE 1111 1t10Yt-M"1M Stl!Oot Dl•l'ri4 "' -Lava cascaded 200 10 'UV\o Observatory said the er'Upt.KNl A ••~-ey Leon ll A Pierson wit.LIAM t . ST JOHN. et1unrv Ctorlt of Ot'•11111• c-tv Oft · Ot•ne• cwn1v. c1tr1ort111, 1etlnt. w -· might continue for weeks !Wf.LI • Couritv Cltrk Noftl'nblr 2. 1•n. PICT TIOUS 11.111 .. ltS ond ttwoueh 11• Goovtn111111 ....... ' feet into the Jtir from -8 215-. sald Tuesday U\at his client 1DWARDS, IDWAIOS • .UMTOM •·tnl1 N~I tTAT•MlWT IW9'NlllM rtlwrld lo It "DISTJl:IC'T", ----·--' • T~pl Gal-h lnte • ol' 1 • ut N trtM ltw. ~lllllfd Or11191 C01st O•llY 'Uot foll 1 1 ctol Dtlll!IH) wlll rlCllW• up to. Wt flOt '-'"' ltlan ··--· · .-..... ..--·-11 M-no-ntlOO&--..eavina: ....,._c .. f.fl•-'-· . .. No¥emw1~ .. 14. .. t1 •. a.-1m ~11,,r_~ _0'!,!1_11 PfftM • "" ""'·~•.!•'"' 11"",-~Jllf 111.tt..~~~-- ( · ) PHNOM PENH -Govern· the bar. He doesn't believe: T111 ti11l 141·7'11 • 1ter11e:MEN'T PUILICATIONS. ,,o. =i::r,•N"' •1 c.Ofttrac:I iti' trio ·~boYt IN SHO, RT roent troops today recaptured be .has to/' He said Agnew ":-'Md ten°"~~., o.iiv ,uot. PUBUC NOTICE kl! w 1"'6 •• Hiii. tvstln. c.u-eto• "'"' bl rct1v..s ~ ,... ·.,i.e. ' . . . ·-""'" -""'""" ..... -~ ..... .. "' _ a key highway junction seven would appear ln the Maryland NO'o'fll'lbef' '· •· 14. an 2411·1> PICTIT~s 1vs111111 . ..,._. Jotln Kw•r1t11n. ,.o. tto-. _. Pllbllcty' ,,.u .. ,IW!ll .• , ""'C foot ~1t. Pavlof in the Aleutian Islands loday,1 the NaUooal Weather Service reported. Jt's the first eruption of the volcano since 1969, t h e weather station in Cold Bay reported. Flames erupting from the mountain cone were visible at the station, 31 miles east ol the volcano. miles south or Phnom Penh Court of AppealJ to plead in ... t••'Yo NOTlClE llAMI l!ATIMIMT 2'7, ,,.,.. Red Hiii. lll\lln. C1lltornl1 Wied tlnw 11111 pl•c.. ' .II"..,_,., Tllt foHOWll\O """ont •r• dolll8 '26'0 • Tl'ler• wUI 119 No d*PO'lt reqlllrtd and a three-mile stretch of bis defense. ~.i~~. '"•" .,,..._1t'TMENTS Tht. b\lllnftt '• (\11\ductH bY •n lt1o tor -.c.t1 &el ot blcl -~ 10 a vital highway runnW, from · 110rr:~~1=~t.-; 1~t;~•1• 1noo Mol\J•dto IOld, *' ~ OlwLOvll .. ,_.o J . l(.,tthMn e.f.N~~ :::".,.'-:"'rt! 1':,.;.'~ C.:~: Phnom P~nh to the set, !ield Notlc• 11 ,..,_. tlwen to 111e credttort ~·,'~'°.:.! ~ 11 "'"'" °' TIM c~ :":-' "~!n'-! wi: ':-'°"".: 0.11. _ -+--. reports said. SeJt, Baker °' SO\lttllrn c111fotfll1 flr11 N111on1t Gold.rich Tr1111 N~ ' m N. Alt• , .. 1t:r.1 .. ., ~ Eec.11 bid """"' cOftftlrrn •ncr " . 911\k. Tr111Sterw. wMtl tKIMnul lclOrlM Ortwe, ...,.rtv HI,., CA to'Jlll "' '·2tlM rt1P0Mlwe to tt. cot1lr1ct dotlltntnt.. 'Ille reports said rebel 1• '"' A.dim• .a..v ... Huntl110ton lffdl. t. Sol Knt " '""'" of ttio ltHI -.,,,... -,., c..,, °'"' Pl~ l!lldl bid 1 llhtll M ~Olnled '"' I 'lhd f th CMW!t\' al' QnnM, $11'19 of Cfl/fomll , I .. ' rv v•• • tl\I 1te11rl1Y r'"""ed to lit the coMKt roops WI rew rom e 11111 1 t111111 tr•,."" 11 1boul to bt lrua .. o. 1, 111 L JIHll s1 .. lo. HOYtmtier 14-21, 211 ....o 0tum1;1tr clocvftwflb ._. .,,. ...,. 1111 11 ,._.,,... lo of Dei Kraham at th T Us G 'f mldt to Jlf1'\I L V1nlrnlfl. Tr1n111ret, ........... CA t<JOIM s. 1m :u71·73 Wbcoll!r•c.ton. , Wn , , e e • t wt-. ""''h'*I ed~r•1 11 ltll A.dllftl S. aObttf Hlncflt IHI Otn1mor1 A~e., Tiie OISTti:ICT ,...,_ tM dtM to ]unction of highway 2 and pro-., A...-. Hvnt11111on 1111el\. c-h· o1 El'lcl•, ~ 91"' PUBLIC NdnCE r.11et -.,. '" llkll w to _... v~·· I ,, 38 and g Or•ntt·· 51119 ol Cel'llornla. .. Onlil K1blktr. 31J s. ll"•CIY Or.. .,,.... lrr19ul•ftllH· or In~ In Ul\;la l'Oµ-.e ovei:n· ll\I properly to bl trtn•ffrrecl 11 Jot•ted ..... ly Hiii•. CA • PKTl'TIOUS IUSIMllSS 111'1' llhb CM'" 1n the blcldlns. ~ ment soldiers moved 1 n F (; lf 111931 Adlm• A.w1111111, Huntlntton Btld't. s. Adi.,,.°"""""• flillnltn.tnc:• Co., NAMI tTAl•MtNT Tht 01sT1tlCT t..s ettennlritll ttN ·rom u Countw of Ottngt, Slllt of C1Utoml1. AH S. F1lri~Awnut, lo1 A.n0tl1s, 'TM fol4oWl1tt~,..,.--4 doll\ll lllltlntAI flMl"ll 11t1v11llnt-ret1 di INI"-~ S11d Pfll'Pll'fY It clnc:rlbed ltt 9"'9fll CA,fGOJ' II' WAf" In thl tocAllltf ,I" wNcft !hi• 11. All 1tock 1n trMlt. llxlurtt. ~fpmet1I TN• IMISlnttt It UN'Mluc.ttd 11'1' l lmlltd 'JEAN'S FASHIONS, 173) Monrowll _.11; It to bl swrtof.~ for '"Mch Ind 1000 wm cl IMI Rettll 11111111111 Portl\lrWl\lp. A.VI Suitt ''l .. Cp'111 Mii.ii C11itornl• C.••1' flJf typt ot --in." 1111..... lo WASIUNGTON (AP) -Sen 11nown 11 Vtnlm1n C1lnl'I'• Sllcp •rtO Sol Ktst, • t1n•r1l ~nn1r 926if • ulC\lll lilt contr1c1: lhffl r•tl\ i re Howard H Baker Jr Vice. 1oc1t9d 11 till A.c11rn1 AYlft\/t, Hvnt1111t0ft Thi• '.!:1-~ w,•t lu~, wllcl\ th• Jttn A. ll•r•. '71 oennr 0r., Cott• on fll• ·•I 1111 DISTllCT otflceo ;Nc1ted , " 1111ch, Counl'I' ot Or1nge, St1I• of C-tv' .... lfk VT ot r.11~•1 ountv Mn• C•tlfCM"nl• '2'26 •t lu«I S1nd COnyon, IHI' tfwlnt, . chairman of the Sen ate c1111orn11. on0,,'!!1~•"•' gli'K•• ...... Thh bvs1ness 11 c.ond1Ktt0 11y 1 11ener11 c111tornl1. C(~f111 ' ,., • ..,. bl obt11'ned on TM-llu(k tr1n1ftr will be con•"'"rntltcl .. • "'"' In shl reqUMI. A ClllP'I' ot """9 r•I• 111111 Watergate committee, says he on or 11t1r tl'I• 111 d•v et 0tcem1>11r, n• s.. '-"' Dr.. 1Mr '1 Ji:n ,. 111,1 bl potted 11 lhl lob 1111. · pJans to talt;e 8 fresh look at 1'71, II Southlrn C1Hlornl1 Flrll N•llOlllll L• ~i:c ~tll .... llil Mal ,ttlU lhl! 1,.temi.it Wll fUed wl01 lht County Tiie lweDOll'O ic:MOll .. of W pl1m · , . 8111k, "" Adlmt Awll'lut. HuntlnglOft Clerk of Orll\OI Covnlv on Nowemblf WIG•• 11 blstd 11111" • "'°"'Int d•v a $5,000·campa1gn contribution ae1ch, COIH'llv ot Or•llfil•· s1111 01 •wi111Md Dr•no• co.st D•llv Piiot, 12 "73 • · o1 1Jogtit ttJ hlutt. T• rite w holld•v •b . ed f rulf 0'1 c111tornl1. Otlobtr ll, •nd NOY•rnb•r 7, ll, 21. ' ,,29111 ond OY•rtl~ work aMU -. It ..tutt e rece1v rom a v I so 11r 11 kllOWll 10 th• lr1ntftrH, lt7l l:lf't.73 Publlthld or11111, co.st OlllV Pliot, 1111'1!1 1iMI OM-fl11f. · ' executive who has admitted 111 1111slMt• n1m11 1nc1 edOJ~ used NOY•mlltt' ''· 11, 21 Ind Dec.em~ 11 .nttl • 1t11nd•ttr'I' .~ "'9'1=0M· · I I · ill I b't' Tr•nlferor for !ht tlv" v11r1 1111 PVBlJC NOTICE s 191l l.SS.13 TJtACTOft • to ,wttom Ille co;,t[l!Ct Ir mvo vemen ID an ega CIOr· p111, 11 dltltr•nt trom 1111 1b0Yt. ••: • 1w1rdld.. ond upon 1nw 1~,lnc;tor porate contribution to Presi~ N-. ,.ICTITIO\ll l\,lllNISS PUBLIC NOTiCE urKIM' hiM •. to ""Y not ... ~ n. --. -, . Jtn'Y L V1nlm1t1 NAMI STATMINT .1110 .pec:ltlod ,.... to tU ~ dent Nixon s camn.a•tm lr1Mf9r.. . 1rnp1oyed • w · 'tt11m In tne • _..,...., The Tennessee R;°puMblican Pllhlllhld Or•noe co.11 0111v ,t1o1 •• ~-Joaow4ne ,.,._ ii c101no 1111'1""' PK'T1T1ous 1u11N1ss o1 "" ciontr~. .. • ~ . ' NOYHntMr 14 1rn :W..73 . l"A.Ul. A.llAN, INC .• 11110D K1!9llt NAME STATIMINT No l)\Odlt" ~y ..,lJ!Oraw hit"" fOI' commented in an interview .a..w .. M111tlrn cllitorlll• mo.1 n.. tolliowlno ~ 1t d0!""1 11111""51 • Pl'lod "" ~lor'IV.fl-(.t111 ..Y. .artw Tuesday after Claude C. Wild PUBUC NOTICE """ All•n t1Un11no1or1. Inc. cc1llfornl1 ••: INST AMT JUNGt.E, 1156 NewP«l ""• ',."',!!.',-..,.""-,_J1111 °'r::-_ CCll'"1Mll'tll0ft), 10700 K1ltll1 A w 1 . , """ "" ,,_, .... Jr, a vice president of Gulf A.nll'ltlm, con I. nt04 e 1wd .. '°''• Mtu. Clllfoml• nur f)ond ""n 111 required prior •~tcvtfeiol lead' ed guilty In fed I rt' PICTITIOUI IUSllllSS ll'lh D\1111\fll II condllCted bv • cor· ltld'ltr'O AntOft Morl1t:1Y. 18SI Newport ol' 11\111 c.Ol'llrld TIM poym.tnl botld p era cou NA.Ml STATIMENT porlliOft ~ lllYd., Co•I• ·,,,_., Celtor"I' 92627 -ihtH M '" -~ '°""' Wf fwtll "' to a charge of consenting to Tiii. followlno perlOlll 1r• dOtng ;.1111 Allln 'H1n1tlnoton, inc. ll'll• 111111""1 11 conducted DY '" In. 1111 cOfttrac:t c1oevm..-.11. • I 000 'but" d bu1lrMs1 '" S/fill\lcl by· f'.ul All1no l"rulclent dlwlduel lr'llr11 Unltlld School Olstrld 3 100, COrl.lM lOn rua e U.S LOMAS GARDENS, 900 la1 'This in.t nl Wit llllcl W'llh 1111 RltMrd Morl1rtw 'GoYll'nlr!I I09rd ' illegally by Gulf from .. r• lom•• o rt..... No. G·IOll, La H1br1, c-ci:::' of °''"' CounlY Oft Thl• 1111"""'' w11 tiled with llw Cou~ty .-v Jol'ln M. ••le.le C1Hfornl1 to6ll . • Cert; ol OrMlllt ceunty on N011t!l\W A.s1llf11tl SuptflnTffldlftl • porate funds: 1. Golclrlct'I s. 1t1st, Inc .. as s. OC.t""".,~1 u. lt1l ""'bllahtd 0..11111 eoa.-o.itt ~•1tot. "Ob . I ha F•~l•x Aw11"1111, Los Anoeln. CA'°°" ''"" ,.,,,.. Nc....mDlr ,,. 21, lt73 )#3.r.i VIOU! y. we ve no way 2. Robllt1 Stem. 373$ Crown Rldllfl Pllbllshecl 0 c I 611ty Pit ' Publl.n,d Of'111111• COiis! D1llv PU01.1.c:..c-.:.;._.;;.·::;c..:..'----'-'--'-- of knowing had no suspicion 0""'· Shtrm•n Ottis. CA. ti.CO 0tto0tr 31 .~-°:Def" 1 14 ;1• NoYemlltr' 1•, 21, » ~nd Dtctmtier -nn "C NOTICl!J "· , • J. Stm Mts1ler. IS.II N. H1ywwlll ' • ' s. ltT.I · ~73 rvu..... . that 1t was anything other A""'"''· Lo. A~ ..... CA 90B4l itn m1.r3 ' !---==----=~"---than.-legal and appropriate " •· H1rry Mldow. s» N, HIVWOl"lll 6 _.....!JC NOTICE NllW"OltT<MltA UNIPln. • A.w1 .. lol A.11D9111. CA. PUBLIC NOTICE rvu · ICMOOL DtlT•ICT · Baker said of the '5,000 Wild Thi• 111111nt .. 11c.Olllluetecfw1 L1rn111c1 ~ __. ,_. .... ..,. ·:·· h . 2 )..._. ,.,,,..,lhlp PICTITIOUS •USINISS NOTICE 'IS. HEltEBY GIVEH. ffllf donated to IS 197 re-e ~·ion ~;Kut .... ner1I porfntr ..... ~ NA.Ml STA"{l.MaNT lht IOlrd "' Ed\lc•llOl'I of .... N.....-i· camJliligD about the same 'This t11ttrnenl w11 flltd with the "OTICI TO C1tl1HTOIS Th• followin9 ptr1on• 111 clol119 Mtll Ul'llfled 'k,_l~Dfstrld efr Or1"" tinle Gulf was contri!Nting to ~~cw. "' Lat ,l,ngtlt6 en oc.tottt~ ~~:~:·:: c~~:;.:r. ~~= w·~~"~~~E APAJtTMeHTS; 111 111. ~'Y;; c:,~t; ·~!: ~~ ~ -~~~ .. ?.J~ ....... ~fl"rt._ -. -· D-IC~ ... ·1_~.'! .. · "•"•"'•."' Attn. TMI COUNTY OJI Ol.AN•• ··~wltW 11.0.0. No • .-...... Slnl• Ana; d•Y ·,ef, :Hw. ·Im• -" '*"' '...... ot --~iat!-a-Tresirtook c01'"AJfO~t.-c•ti~ra:wu-.,._ .... ~:W"':'osi~.,.,. ~~~11:1t.-.k: . . . .;:~~i:~~ict, ,loc•faf • 1 : 1151 at l "l and ,·1· We conclude it 1"9-0C NOTICE IS HEIEIY GIVEN lo lhf GolOrlcll 'Trull No. ~ ii 'wttldt ti-Mlcl·Dldit Wf'f'bfl ,..Uc y 1'1f1M c.rtdltorr. ol !ht 1llo\'9 111mtd ~int Orlw .. !ltY•r1'1 Hm·1, CA t112.10 optntO en#J rlef •1 · · , Was inapproi)riate~ we'll find ,llbtl1htd Or1• Co.1! Dtlly Pllot, 11111 l\:t IWf.otll lllYI~ d1lm1 ,-9tl~lt SOI KHI, t i 1nMlll al the KHI .-.,.Ir ,.,.. fOll Gf'Wrldt 'E'QUl""°"I . some •way Of returnm' g i"t," °',.~r :t\, 1nd N0111mbfr 7, 1•, 2J , llM ,H dKtdtnl 1r1 rtqulrad IC fllt Tru1t No, 1. lit S. J-St., Los AU blcli . 1,1 to bil In ~lftC9 •~ 3lf1 ·73 lhln'I, wltll lht l'l«:Hlll"I' YOUCl'ltl"I, In All811H, CA tOOOol wllll Conditt-lnilrUClt-'1 n d Baker said. ,\=============llht oflk:t of tbl c11r11: ol 111e 1110w1 1tobltt S19'tn, ins,,,_ Rlcltt or1Y1, !ptclflctt!Orl& which' 1,. _ .-. "'• entitled covrt; or lo prtltf'll llltrn. wtth Sheormlfl o.u, CA 9llfli 1" lilt ofllc. Ill W.. •Pirrc:ttutn; A...,1 Gulf also pleaded guilty to IN •MUBll'Y Wo.Khel'1 to 1111 un. sr;.trN11. Gordner, I06l5 .Wllklnl Ave:, ot wld $died 011~1~, 1151' ....o.ntt.t k. th N' -·••'but" K Li'ke T Otnlgntd ti 11'11 otflct, of her tllOr'l'llVI. l" "1111,lfl, CA to02•. A..._ COii• Miii c.tllornll 1 ma ing e lXOll ~1 100 ids 0 ARl\Ullt,_oto(G. lltOWN AND SHEA.MA,N, •.• oMrt Hl;.x... •'1 ·Dtftlmort AYI., E1e"'b104er mvsl' Wbmll ··~·"'°'" and to making· illegal COlr AITCll"lllVI II l1w, '°' SOllth OltYI StrMI, EMl"°'"C.111~ till• In lilt form of 1 C9'rtllltd or ~Mr's UPITllwMte trl.bul1·ons to· two o t h e r . . S""'9 llOO. LM ""'""' c.111orn11 '°°'" Mt'! Ylri• • ..-Atclllton, Paucleft•. c.l\ICll w • llltl "" ..,., tit 11 .... · , Whlcll !• the PIK• of. 11\111~ ol' ltll • C:A ;1lM • · ptrclnl IS~) ot 1111' a"*Nlf ·af Ille ' me hers of r .... -ess who -As· k Andy· ·. ~ In 1n 1Mlfll'I P1rtMnlrt11 ·r n1s Dini•• It undlltltd bY' • LI~ bid midi payiiwe 1o "" • ...,.. "' m ~· • tO t111 11tttt Of Mid' ct«~. wltlll" llld ..,._ ..... ,. · 1twi' ~ u,.i11td Sc1-!.011t11r1. Preaident Nixon plays and siogs Happy Birthday at party for Sen. Wallace F. were presidential candidates fWr' l'l'IOfllttl •11.r tN 11m p11D11c:111on . ... Klftl. A ·..,.," Pl""" A Pfl'fonnmK• lord -Y rie ,....,.'" -_!Be~n~n~e~tt~_'.R~·~~ta~h~)~~~~_l'tu~rn~~~-'!_~·_!~~·~N~i~x~o~n~l~e~n~d~s~s~u!'!'°:r1'.:· _________ ~in~Im".'.'.':_ ______ ,.......:.============ld ~...,1• no11c... -.:..... • Tljl• .+11emon1: wts 11tt0 w1111 rM •' t111 . dltcrtttOft 111 ttio otlltfkt. 1" Tidcles l ·vories • 1 .. ' ' .. ~· ' . ' • ' . ' • "\ ··~ .· .;. ' ; :,• ~ : -~·1 l I ' , ' • ' . ... ' , • I I • • D. OCtoblf' .u. "'" • ~· C...,_ fll, Lm o\flelt!H COlll\h' 1111 ewnt di flllvrl te lnW Im Midi HOPE o . MACAltTNE'f'. Jl(I Oc+ollJI: "" 1973. con~1et, ~ lull _... 11111:"4 ""'" De ft'snot the same old chicken. Break away·from the old Mmburger, piua, fried chicken routine with deliciously different Terlyakl flavored Japanese food. Our menu offers a wide variety to please any member of the famny and at economical prices, too. '- Try our famous char·brolled Terlyaki Chicken, Tempura Shrimp and Vegetlbleo, Torlyokl Burljers, Chlck·A·Bobo on a bamboo skewer and·the las!e-temptlng trtmmlftgs. Have a snack or a compleht meal -coo~ed to Oriental perfection from authenttc J•neae recipes. A perlectway to addv.ri•tY to your weekly menu while keeping your b\tdgtl in line. -•A1tll.I ......... s • ! H ~ '" ~ i • I COITA ....... NOW 2 LOCATIONS TO IEllVE YOU JAPANESE FAST FOOD 310 IE. 11'lfl llr'Mt, COiia MtM MHtOO • .. -e.xecvt!'I• If IM wttl Of DICK1& .\N9 DtCICI~ J.tfYt,. tor111te0 h Mid lctlltl Ofalrkt ill °"-" .ttw I~ Nlmld doctdtfll UM JO;.anlltLY OJI:. County. · · All .. otl •• eaowll AND SM11MAN Loi A .... L.S. CALl,MMrA tmS ·N• lllddtr' ~ WMdnw WI ....... ........... 11 LW ' ' .... ~ ' . '1ftl6 • """"' .. ~ ("5) . -~ ·..ttff .., .... °""' SINlf · , ............, ~1c...t ,Dtlty PUot, 1t1e dele.19' trar tM .-.ilnr "-"°'· f!".=...c ........ ""' '~ :n. Ind WM"'**' 1,,14, 21, lllll09nfflll ........ Mlhli111iwport· fw .--:.. 1'1J , ~ l:219-14 MIN UnlflH • k"9ll , (M&tricf ,......_. "=:.J 0,.,...,, c~st 01Tty tPllot, •. Q11CE ~~ ':C' .:..:'~'~.,,: ....._ Ocfoller 24-Jl, •ndl NIMmllr 7, 14, PUBLJC N bid, ond to w•IVI 1ny1 "lftfWm1~r:,! lt73 nn-13 PtcTITIOUS tU1tN•SI lrr"1tllttlty In ll\Y tlfd i'Ktlwd. . ; PVBIJC NlmCE N ..... STATIMl"l Olltill 1NOY""""" 1'-ltn. > ..,.. NEWJ'ORT ....... ESI\.: . Tht folfowfntl "'"°"" .,. doll'lll bu1lntU UNIFIE!D scHot'.n:. '!MS'Tli:ICT l---~-~-==~~---1 ••:' of °"'"'" Caunty, c111,.,,.. . •OTtcl INVITttfllll ••os . GUILL. II LA N " E N I A. K E " .. av 0or-Her....,-flalltr" . No!ICll 11 ""Illy 9'Ytn ""' IM I041ro LAWSON. 500 'Nirwport Cl!llt• DrlYI, Pure~ "'9fli of lrVIMfl ef 1t11 CMll COt'llf1lllnltv S11llt 655, N-sicrl Bffcil. C11lfornlt ~llCIO , \_ .. Coll• Oillrlcl ol Or•"" C011111v: 12660 PuDlllhtd Of'•nte C0411t ~ "°' C1nlOl'nla. 'fll'ln nce1 ......... bl01 \IP ltk l\lrtlt M. Tuell:\..,., 1515 Mlrnol NGY< 14 llld NOY. 11, 1WJ l.5111·71 to 11:00, 1.fl'I .. MOndlY. Howmlltr' 16. Orlw, Sin Mlrlno. 1973, .i 1111 l"llrctllltlfle DIPf. If .. Id WIVNI W. $Cl'ln'IOldf, 1"7 A.H1ntldt PIJBLIC NO'nCE xtrool -cHttnct loclled 11 1'70 Adlm1 DrtVI, HK!ftlcll Htlfhll AY9ftW, to.11 MHa. C11!foml1, 11 wflldt Colt!\ JI:. MMtc.ay;-·911 LI ~!--~~----~--~~- HIM Mid ~ Yilll bl """'lc.ly OP1MC1 ' llo..t, ,n.dlNI . I 11tl 1nd ,.._. tor: J1m11 C. Mlllll. IN1 ,art Prowntt •ICTITIOVI, I US ... 11 (I) L Mdt C-• 1'1111 tnlom 1"11(9. Newport atKn NAM• STAftMeNT I Incl (11 Concw1 GrltlO "1-. 0 , ltlfftMY i.-., 1151 CIUtomll 'Thi feelowlna Plftol't i. ~flrl tw'""' Mt lllD -19 bl' In actDrdMC.• lollleY1rd, Sin Mlrlno · n : • . Yillh 11\1 I~ 1M Condlllon1 Incl KMMfll M. .. .,.,_ '31' 01kw00d, QElTA llfNTAl CO .... ~ 'fl. l1y, SCl«lfk.tt __ Wlllc1' •r• -en flit l1 C-0. NOwpert· hktl. ~fllnlMI tH6f and ITlll'I' lie · ~ In 1111 olflc.1 llll1 bwlllftl 11 coMUcled bY I ..,._.111 MrL C.,o(yrt ~ • ..,. W ...... , Ill It'll l'Wa-11'11 Atwtl of 111d 1thlol Pl~lp · ~ he<fl, C.11 n.il dlftricf, , ..,. Cofln Jt, MKKIY ™• llutlneu I• condutlwd .., on Eadt WOOor must • wbitllt wlltl 1111 Tilft Sllllln'ltnl ..... flied 11ritll 1M ~ty I~. ·• • . .,. • ild-1 C9ltlltr'1 ~ Clf'flflfd cllt<ll: or CMrk Ill Or•nte Countv on Novornbll' cvlll'l'n Gwblrt lliddlt'I bond rMde 'PIYiblt to 1111 order 12. ltn Thl1 1t1""""t ._. fl1td 'fflt\ "'9 of IN COHf Community Collfoe Dltlrlcl ,.,. County CJlrt Ill Or•nee Ceur!r on Boercl ol' lrinten In .,, 1moun1 not 1'·""1 Nowmllll' ,,, 1'73.. • ~ II» tMn flYll Plf'Ctnl (S"l "' IM PUblllllfd or1noe COISI 011ty Pnot; NA81L.· ••••N • 111m Did IS • QUtrlfllll IMI Thi llldder NOYttnblr 14. 111, • .no Otc.lmbtr Dot.VIOION, JNC. Wiii ontw Into t111 propoMd Clll'llrld $, 1'73 )a>73 4m" Ml<o\l'tfllJr •tw. ~ ' If ffM ·-,. IWlrdtO It lllm, In ,...,... 9Mdl1 CQH, ""' ..,. ...,.,...._"' t.tt11111 to at1ltr Into 'SllC.h PUBLIC Nat1CE A""""". at .LfW • , ·--conlract, the prOCtldl ef 11\1 d!IC:k · • · · ,..,,.,.._ Wiii De f«felted or In "" Clll ol •Llblllfttd or ...... Cout Dtlty P'ltot. 1 bond, 1111 full tum mettvl wlU bl> NO'l;I~· oP SALi N-blr 1 .. '.JI, 21,-'lftlf 1>1'11'11titr forfalted to Miii KllOOI dlstrlc.t. Nolle• 11 l)lrjby' Glwen purwtnl to s. 1971 · '4f0.7l No ·Dkfder m1y wlll\clr1)1' hit bid tor 11etlons SITT ond 307.! of lht Clvllll~-'"----------'-'-' 1 ptflcd of totty-(l'd dl'f' alter ll!t Codi of 1111 $!•"' of Cil!fomll Th• un-PUBU.C NOTJCE ..at1 Ml 1w 11'11 optnh'tll lhlftol dlrtl9ntcl, H1rbor Towing Cotnp.tll'I' win"------''-~-;.:..· -"---'Tiie BOllrd of ln111H1 ,.-,...... tlll "'I 11 public MldJOft, 11 "' Wt1!1 Prlwlltge ot rt]ICllnt 1ny 1nd tU bkt111th' Slf'HI, Ctsll Mffl, C11llCM"nll, II JllOTICI OP U.l8 .•:~ or 10 walv. 111'1' lrregvltrl11ts or 111-111 1.m. on MonO•V· !tit ,.11'1 drf ot Nolle.. 11 l!trttw 111\lfll PU~I to tormel!tlts In 91\T bid or In tlM Dlcldlll8. Nowrnbtr. tm 111t follo'#ll'll cltlcrlbtd MdlOf\1_ 1011 1no 31171 of ff!r-.,.CIWll SffilMd' · prOPOrtY, ta.wit~ Coclt of llw St11• ol' C11lfoNM Ille NORMAN e wAnON Ylll" of Molorcvct•~ . 1972; ~• un11en111ntc1. M1111or T-Jncr Covlplny Stcty llol~ ol lNttets of Molofcvd1: S\llllkll Molotc'l'c.lt JO W'IU .. 11 iot Jl'l'btlt IUdlon, 11 "4 'Wflt 0Ptn' NOY U, ltr.I • 11'00 1 rn, No.: GTIIOl1U2' LklflM No. (51111): 17'11 SlrMI, Cosio Mtu. C1llfonlle, ti Pvbi111'11Ci Orl'llOI c0.11 · 01llY Piiot 1/1 1E"91 CellfOmla 111 •.m. on Mondlv. 1111, ''"' dlY cf N~r 1 14 1m ,,..,,.73 S•ld ult 11 ""' ""' pwpo11 ot wtt11\'h.,. No:Yemller; 1m fhl trol'lowltlll ~ • Hen ot 11"!11 llllcltnlQMd for Stor1o11e prwolrl'r, ta.wll: PUBLIC NOTICE ioe-111tr wllh ~b of ldYer1ls.lf'lll tnd VMr ol cir: 1"11 Man If •cir: uptnlll of Mle.. Mll'<llrf Sed1n1 • 10 Mo. 7f'1CI0076; l ---====-,,=~----1 Oltlcl !hi• l:tl~ d1y ol' N<N'l!l'ltMr, LlanM No.· (St•MI: UJ'T·lli c.1ttor1111 PICTITIOUI IUllNISS ltn. ltrl ' -,-• NIIMI STATIM1MT Eslller Trutlllo , Slkl Mlt It for tflo purpcd f/f ~Int TPll ·fdlOWlno ptrton 11 d0!118 b\ltlnat Publllhell Orlf'IDl COis! Delly Piiot. tlt(I of lht undtrtl91\'H tor T•wlng 11; N~Der .14. 1t73 3fN..1> oM ""''" ~ ~ ceita et JUNIOJI CITIZENS CLOTHIERS. 3'11 ldYlrfts.lnQ 11M ,.,..,,_ 111 Ufl., " "A" SM! l•Kh l tvd., St•I 81.ch. PUBUC NOTICE Dttecf 1'1/1 llth dlly of 1ild1M111tr, .Clllf 927.0 ltn. · '' RfA D.· •Pel~91', 20S AGiie A.YI., PKTITI0\11 IUSIJlll!SI l!tthw Trvllllo , ' 911110i lllll\ll, C1Uf. llAM1 STAT•MINT ,ubllshld Or11191 CMft DlllY: Piiot, 'Tiii• DilllM» I• conouctllO .,., Ill ll\I follow! ""-II 6oil\O b\llll\llJ N~ I.I, 117l ' :.MS-PJ 11nlnc~11td 1ssocl1ll011 otllet' thin 1 11. ftll P•rtnffthlp · ELt!GA.NCE IN ••ON 1620ll M•l'I• PUBUC N0]1~ · ~ l!\11 ~~: .. ~~~r Wit tU9d wllh !tit ¥'!led Court, SI" Jul" C1phtr1no, Clllt .. J----------~-'-'-"- COi/iiiy Cl"k ot OrlllQ• County ,Oft '2J~11:P.Oc~~ 2'20l Mlpllwocd MOTtc• Oii AVAIU1n:tn NOYllfl'lbllr i. 1973 Court. s.n J\1111'1 C1plllr1110o C1UI. OP ..... ""'" alPCNIT . P·2mJ 9'.1•7S Pllf'lllllnt lO S.C:tlorl ttN \dJ ff "'!' Publlthed Or•~· Co•sl D•llv Piiot Thi• bVllna• It (Oflllueltd by • 11mllld 1111"1'111 R.....WO Coot. notice t.1fllt'.tl'Y NOYll'Mllr 1, 14, 21• a,. 1'73 . ~73 .. 1 , gl'lln 11'111 1111 lfllWll r.wt for t111 1--------------l~rlntrs .. p tbc11 ynr 1'12-73 'of OC·IE'A'W tC PUBUC NOTICE ~~'!r~r':~~r •EseARCH ·~sT1T~T.-, • ~•tti4~ ll'llt 111111'1'11'111 Wll flied with lfll 01tlon, It IYllllbl• ., 1111,. fll!ln4lllon t FICTITIOUS IUSt .. ISS COlllllV Cltrll: Ill Orll'lfill CounlY on prlntlptl offlc.e tor ll\9PICtlOlt •'«rtlnf 1 NAMI STA.l•M .. NT NOOVl!l'llltr '.J, Im r19ul1r blflln.u houre frOtTf niM 1.m. lht follow!~ ptrlOnl •rt cloll'IQ ,.·mil 10 IG:llf' p.m. by 1ny c.lfli.t who '""""" t111.iM11 1t· PublllC)td Qr111119 eo.,1 Dtlly ,llol It Wlt111n· llO dlP• 1tt.r ...... ot .. H 1 l m this PIAl!IClt\111\. • $AN'TA s FOIES'T. 21251 4 llu•h•rO OYtmblf ... 21. 21, 1 lllS.73 'TIM tovnd1tl •s p~lnclptl ·om~ " I'. Huntington IHCI!. C1. '2M7 · "·'Im ·-~ -Wr(Tll I(. Chll'IVl9S~ 194' Antl'ltlffl PUBUC NOTI.CE IOCltecf II s ............ St., C'Mlt N\911, Collf. '2Q1 Orlv., H~ IMdl. CaUfof f1l"ll, Jt'"" J. Ch1mnns, )t4' A111htlm tint 1~'7~ •:.u:,:;::~!' ~ SI .. co,11 Mttl, C•lll. t2'27 NOTICE TO CllDtTo•1 T.a : ••u.•NW•T••S: .. , .. Ad"-" H. Clltm!>IS~ U.S ElctOft IUPl!JttOtt COIJltT D,. THI AttwM)' at L1W I SI .. Cott• MIM, C.. fM2• ITA.ll Of' CAll•OltNIA ,Olt 19119 ..... ~ ._ - Thlt llullna:t ii c.oltducl9d lly • t«Mrll TMI COUNTY 0' Olt.All•I I ~I~ '"Wf"'1 ~ Cl ......... ·-J Cll-*t ... A-11• Puelltllld Or"'" Cent Diii"-' :Piiot, Thlt' llllt""~t WIS n~ wllll tlle Etlllt of JEANNE S. II.ICE, Ot(t1Mcl, N~ 14 191' •, 1-~ COU!ltY Cferk of Or-C°""" Ofl NO'TI CE IS HEltEIY GIVEN 10 1111 · cteclltort .. IM ...... lllmed CIKedll'll P'-"C ~·CE• I Nowmtler 2. 191l. ltlat Ill ptnont hl'llfll c.lllmt ... IMI, ----~----·-~-"~-... -•·ltllt the 111d dKldlltt aro requt,_, '° 111er· PIMlll'ped Oranot COii! 0111¥ 'llol tl\lln, wllll tlW nec.swrr ~ in --SL.fl.JM ~'I Nf\Uo!O« 1, 14. II. a,. l97J "'° fllflc.. fll n. dtn: f/f 1119 1110W •teTITIOUI IUltN- PllJUC NOTICE tnllrlM' e'Ml11 II' to pr9ltlll ""'"· Mill NAM• ITA'TIMINT , lht MCH..,.., """"""''' te 1111 -Tllt lollowll'll ..,..,. It ...... llllllMlll ...... at c./I lttc.W. lrlcMlt a. \,opln, ••: . ,tCTITtOU, 1us111•ss '""· 122' No. IJlrOlld'#ft'. '"'"• Al\I, l YON AYENUI' MIOetA.YD. "'"" NAMI ITATIMINT Ca. ~701 wtdc1' It. tllt place of IMI-Camll\O 1 CIPl1lr..... ......,... N .... TIW folttwllll ...-.11 ildlll """*' ot 1"" VlllltrlltMd 1111 Ill IMtl9rS Ptr• Collfotntl ·mn 11: !1lnlnt 1' "ttw Hlllt ol Mid dlCIOflt, 1. • •· ~.,. Jr. _,,,._,II Ot.0 WOIL'D AIT, 1lO Newflort wlthlll fO\lf fl'IOl"lltti Iller lht llrtit 9\IDllc• •lrlMfl, l:Jltll INWtl"lll" &llli l.Af""I Centlf Ori ..... Slltlt No .•• Newport ·tlllft Of,ll\lt notlc.9. NljWtl. C•Hl9ml1 m1t ' '*-ell. c1111:"'60 D1tt11 acwr it. 1913 tn1, MMtt ii •llllw(ttll.., •1~ Henry Vor.1ng, ~ t . OC...n l'POfll, ~ M. ftlt"t. p.1ttntrlllfp, • l1lbM. C.IH, H1 . I~ fit IM wlll l'fOll A""""" A1t0tl1fMI , ' l,11!1 tmlntlt It COftCIUC.tecf 1W In If 1111 ...... JlllTllO dleldttlt I Cll!flrftll lltlll• .......,....,,. ' lndMdllll. •LOCK lllCKNI• • ..,: l. v. """'""· J,.,· I Hent'i' voro11111 LOl'IM. INC. ~-,.,,.. ! llllt lll!lfnlnl wtt tlllld Wlltl tlll Int -......,.., , Thll 111~ W•• ...... _~, flle C.CM.ml'Y Cl.,., o1 0r1noe Caunty on ,..,. ..,,... ca • ..,., COitll\19 t11ir1; flf ~ ~ "' OcloMI' n. 1m. ...._ mo ...... CkloDOI' ''· tm. , .... "'"""' .. ·--' -"'-~ or...,. Cot•! Dlllv Pllolt ,...,.Htlllf Ol'lllfl Ct11f 0.1'1 ,tlot '°'*''""'° Of'.,..._ (Ollt be'.'f ~ ipt~ Oct.., ,.. a1, 1no NOYltlllllr '· , .. Octoblf ~1 atld NoYtrrlW 1. .. "' OC""* ""' ii .. ltftt11111111f' 1. '" tm Jm.n ttn ,,...,, 1tn .... .,.-n.n • ! I ... II DAILY PILOT WtdntSdl)', NO¥ember 14, 197) Newport Technological Firm May Turn: Trash to Cash ' By JOHN ZAUER Of ... .,..,,. Plitt ,, ... Everyone who has ever visited the county dump knows that a sanitary landfill sUnb to high heaven . But to a NewpOrt Beach engineering firm , that stench bu the sweet smell or money. a partial solu tion to the energy crisis. IT'S ALL BASED on the fact that when garbage, paper, ant old tin cans are com- pressed together and begin to decompose, they produce significant amounts of natural gas. never before tried to. prevent !he gas from dlaper sl ng harmlessly into t h e at- mosphere. But with the energy crisis in full s\ving, there is now reason to try to recover it. District No. 2 to Lry to recove r natural gas seeping out or a land fill on the Palos·Verdes peninsula. siphonod off the dccol11jl0sing Palos Verdes landfill, NRG believes. "fi'ive years ago an un- dertaking of this type would not have been feasible," said N R G chairman Don L. Benscoter. that fits the economics or land fill recovery," he said. for gas recovery" he said. The Palos Ve rd e s ex· pcriment wUI nm for ti. months. At the en~ of that time, the Los Angeles District will decide whether the pro- ject is feasible for other dump IF THE PROGRAM doelt work, N R G hopoa ,lo aell the tochnolOIY to Southern C.llfomla Gaa C<>. ' The natural raa colleottd from the dul11j) site """Id not be · pure, accon1in4 I o Benscoter • And NRG Technology Inc. 1--flc--lhlnkB the aUnk may also hold Scientists have Jong known about Ibis, but t@y have Accordingly, NRG of New- pcrt. fBcach has entered into an agreement with Los Angeles Co u n t 'I Sanitation THE INITIAL agreement calls for setting up the .machinery to recover enough natural gas to serve t£\e needs of 2,500 hom es for a, full year. If the experiment is suc- --eessful , that would mean a minimum of I ,000 cubic rcet of gas per minute would be "But today the country ha s a fuel sbor ta_ge of ~wing intensity and naturaf g-as prices __ are rising. N R G h as d ev el o p-e d ani:l demonstrated the technology BENsCm-ER SAYS that the experimen tal collection pro- gram to test thllt teclmology at the PaJos Verdes site could. if successful , be .of broad na- tional signlncancc in develop.. ing new add!Uonal sources of energy. "There are some 1,000 landfil1s in the United States that meet the requirements sl~~t rJgardless or the ~ Angeles decision, the Newport Beach firm would know whe ther Its current technology is feasible, or whether further refinements ate necessary. But a key part or the NR<1 "'°"'' !nvolm a p la n for removing Jrnpuritlts front the gas throogh a prooeso us· ing a natural molecular sieve material t ·1 ' ' !· I ' State Plans Pushed Reinecke Seeki11,g 50 MPH Limit on Speed SACRAMENTO (AP) Re a g an administration of· ficials pushed Tuesday ror s w e e pi n g energy-saving measures including a 50-mile-- an-hour speed limit i n California. LI. Gov. Ed Reinecke said he was se nding telegrams to Assembly Speaker Bob Moret- ti, (D-Van . Nuys), and state Senate President pro tern Jal11e9 Mills (IJ.San Diego), urging them to start oom- mittee meetings immediately m the 50 mph speed limit ..... THAT WOULD speed passage when the legislative session resumes in January, Reinecke said. Gov. Ronald Reagan said a 50 mph speed limit was one of a series of actions tbe state oould take to reduce its consumption of energy. But he cautioned that a 50 mph speed limit should not be allowed to create economic difficulties. "We must make sure we're not creating real problems in the long hauls, for distribution of good.s1" be said. ''l th ink there are many areas where it would apply, like the metropolitan areas during the rush hour," he ad- ded. Reinecke, chairman· of the state's Energy Pliinnlng Coun- cil, predicted at a news con- ference that the nation would have gasoline rationing soon, probably before the end of the year. BE ANNOUNCED a series of recommendalioos from the council for voluntarY action!; by Californians to save fuel and said if they weren't followed mandator y observance would be the next step. ·• The recommendations in- cluded: approve the resumption of offshore oil production. OFFSllORE OIL produ ction has been banned by the lands commiss ion since a January 1969 oil spill dumped gooey crude oil along the Santa Barbara Coast. The state earli~r ordered a reduction of the speed limit on l ,450 miles of California freeway from 70 miles an hour to 6.l effective Dec. 1. Last week, Reinecke said he was skeptiCal about Presi- dent Nixon's proposed 50-mile- an-hour speed limit. He said he thought it would create massive traffic tieups and in· crease pollution. • Profits Up At Rossmoor I - Rossmoor Corp. of Laguna ~~ira:::g of .~:h u:; ~J~fi ~~.:.: .. 0w::n~ -Chr~:"'olet Capr·1ce C1ass·1c. Wh¥ look ~n¥ h'gher~ Sunday rulings m the lamlly "Le~ure World." Tuesday . IC;.. VI' . . : . OU I I . . • · 'J\t Ex · .ti• car. . · · reported record Increases of I Earnings Up """"""'-·.-·~· __._,,:;;;:...,,;;;. ~ ecu _ _y~~ •rchi=~...t"i!~:~i:~ =~~=~ ~-·~~~-air CapriCe CJa.s.sic offersffi3lP,/ C?f the luxuries and fuaturesof cars p!iced much higher. ExecuHve lrulustries Inc., lighUng·· -iJ\cluding the Sept. 30. ., · --,..-.,,.=-' ~-_,_.,,...-" = --pay~? ~ · ~ •-·--· ·-~· -·-------- Anaheim-based motor home hghting on the dome of the Net incoine increased 25:5 manufacturer, reported Tues-state Capitol. percent to $4,425,000 from day that sales for the year -Resumption cf oil drilling $3,527 ,000 fo r the year ended ended Sept. 30 reached $31.09 in st.lite-controlled territory in Sept. JO, 1972. Earnings per milUon compared .to tbe Santa Barbara Otannel share were up 29.l perce.nt , $18,SM~st )'OM, a 68 per· (See related story Page 29). from last year, to $1.42 from cent · Reinecke, a member of the $1.10. Net income oJ $2,089,000 was State Lands Commission said Sales and revenues for the •:; 49 percent higher than in the he would recommend an year just ended w e r e conaponding per1od l a s t emergency meeting of the $78,577,000 compared w i th ' r ' ' -year:. commlssim in December to $55,303,000 for last year . • ON SUNFLOWER B.ETWEEN FAIRVIEW AND BRISTOL • • • I I ••• A PLACE TO NOSE AROUND ... Into ideally unique shops a nd fun places to eat. As you stroll along the old world cobblestone walkways you will pick up the scent of the wonderful variety of foods and good things to eat prepared in the quaintest manner • . . ••• A PLACE TO EXPLORE;fC:::.:=~ "c--_;:. ••• Discover the ups and down s of the Mercantile Building where the glass elevator takes you to any of four floors of stores with no doors. ~.~A PLACE TO BE REAL CRAFrY """""" ... From art to artifacts •. your whimsical tour of the craftiest of shops will provide you with the ultimate in gifts or gift ideas. An individual intrigue awaits you in each specially designed store where ;vou'll find everything: be it something you create or something you-crave. DAILY 10 TO 9, SATURDAY 10 TO 6,' SUNDAY 12 T0,5 ' , , • ' ... ,. •• . • • • . ' . ~tate~rs Oil Drill Bill •seuttled~ WASHINGTON (UPI) - .; The Nixon AdmlnlstraUon has ocuUled Ill own bill for pro- tecttni the Santa Barbara Channel against oil apllls from offshore wells. Mslltant Interior Secretary Stephen Wakefield to Id Congross the Adn)lnlstratlon wantt to take "another hard · look" 11 the plan In light of crlUcal fuel shortages iB both Caltrornia aod the nation. lernaUve Jlnlposal by sen. Alan Cl-anston ( 0-Calil.), be killed. The AdmJnlstration plan called for marketing oil frorri the Navy's Elk H 111 s Petroleum Reserve n ea r Bakerslleld, while derlgnaling untapped oil resources of the channel as a new "~serve." there are ractora, nol present when the decision wai1 first made, which call It Into ques- tion," Wakefield sail{. "It Is on· the basis of these factors that we intend to take another hard look at the Admln1straUon proposal." '''Ould permit continued ex· ploration for oil and gas while banning any new production. TEAGUE SAID oil that Could be extracted "only at extraordinary risk" tO"Uie en- virooment should be kept in reserve. ~'e are still able to preserve today," Teague said. Sen. Lee MetcaU (D-Monl), chairman of the Senate panel, asked for assurances lhat there would he no "blizzard of leasing" .. in the channel if Congress followed ad· ministration advice and did not acl on the blll. Wakefield said no further leases would he granted pen- ding compelUon of the en- • FINANCE Wedntsd1y, N°""'"'' 14, 1973 OA!LY PILOT II . /tlonefl'• Worth Smaller Grocery Bill Achievable By SYLVIA PORTER By now, you've probably heard every role in WAKEFIELD, testifying be· lore the Senate hilnerals, Ma- terials aod Fuels Subcommit- tee, Ulied that both the Ad- mlD!llr>lloo bill alld an al- Even though he asked that no action be taken on the AdministraUon bill, Wakefield insisted "we are n o t repudi&tinf" the or l g i n a I decision to stop oil production In the channel. TllE NEW £actors, he said. 'included the fuel shortage and "improved procedures and technology " that might make it posslble to drill of£shore with less 'chance of massive spi lls such as one that "Should some unforeseen event tip us into fUrlher Im- balance of energy supply and demand in three or five years, tben I think there wlll be no question but that responsi- ble leaders and citizens will be willing to waive en- vironmental safeguards which blackened Santa B a r b a r a beaches In 1969. vironmental study. "--------"' the book for saving money on food shoppi ng. You are probably aware that you can save substantial amounts by "trading down" from high-priced brands and versions of each product to low·priced store brands, less expensive forms of processing and packaging, economy sizes. · -- • • ·: • ' ~ • ' ' * * * "We believe, h:lwever, that Both Cranston and Teague noted that the legislation Tidewater Decision Told The new study, he said, might take a year or more. Highway Patrdl Says BUT I DOUBT if you truly apereclate the do!· tars-and-cents extent of your posStble •avlngs via tbese techmques. And this is particularly so in today's mar• ketplace in wbich Y.OU can find 6,000 to 8,000 dillerent food types and brands from whicb to LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A federal judge has ordered the Phillips Petroleum Co. to sell its interests in the Tidewater <?ii Co., ruling that the acquisi- tion is a violation of antitrust regulations. ufacturing and marketing di- vision. The cranstoo bill, which would put even greater restrictions on offshore oil production. was defended by the Senator and 1'ep. Charles ~f. Teague (R-Calit). Drivers Slowing Up Ferguson gave Phillips 90 days to notify the court of its. specific plans to sell the Tido- water division. r Judge Warren J . ~erguson's decision Tuesday ended a lengthy antitrust suit stem- ming from Phillips' acquisition of Tidewater's western man- The decision means Phillips wi ll have to sell 3,250 service stations, an oil refinery and other facilities purchased in the July, 1966 transaction with Tidewater. The Ca!Uornians said the proposed legislation w o u I d replace oil from channel leases with production from Elk Hills until such time as orfshore production could be shown !o be safe,. SACRAMENTO (AP) - California motorists fn a y already be 1l""'ing down voluntarily to c o n s e r v e gasoline, a survey by the California Jilgbway Patrol shows. "There 'definitely i5 a slow- down with apparently most of it occurring during daylight • ---_,,..,..,,._ I ca1•1a ~eral savings P!'OUdlJ offers . a ~mper crop oJ new high rates. FOR !\000 91! 1191!E: • 7~% ..;__..1.. ... 7.79 % : ...... T...:4tG10,...,... ...,. TieW ' @-'% .,.,---... 6.98% ....... ~2K to10,.... ..... ""' ' 6~ .,.-.--... 6.72% ~ r....1•10,.,... ........ f9!! 1100 91! HOllE: . I 5~% .,.., .. --... 5.92%. --nir.:to••tit& ..... ,. FOR lt()0,000 OR HORE: Ctr111icates ot $100.000or more can eam inlere$t raite$in exceuot 7H%dependin& on terms and amount oldeposlt. balances of Sl,CXX> or more. Eleven ctf'lrer free serviies with any balance! NOTE: Certificate rates above .re offffed for 1 llmlted time only. Indicated yields are earned when in~ FOR ACCOUNTS OF ANY StzE: ii compounded daily mt an tunds and eaminp,. tNtn Jn the aCQ>lll\t to m1turlty. federll f'llUlltions 5X% •• .-................. 5.39% ,,.,;.,,,.,,....,""""''~""""Y '"'"""" .. °"' •.'!. Add or withdraw anytime _.,....n1111 fromcertlfiuteacx:ounls. w1thoutpenalty.Noterms.. • _ ~ . ~ ,,,,.,,.""''',.,a. •. ' Calfot•• redilril s••• 16 Frte Senim Free traveler.. checks. money lJ\d loain As.soci~tion. Assets ~rSl.3 Billion ordefs,notaryservice, trust deed note collection Accounts lnstKed up to S20.(XX) by' an aenrof 1Ni and phol9(l>ples of important documents wllh United States Government. - COMMUNITT EVENTS .. Costa Mesa Office: UCI NEEDS YOUR HELP Controry to common mlaconctplion, UCI IS NOT TOTALLY TAX SUPPORTED. It ratalvoa only 1/3 of 111 operolint funds from stilt toxt1, tho INl•nct comes frOm other 1oor~1, Including privote 11fts. O.t involved thru • .._lrlbullon to Its first •nnu1I fund. ,. ' Cont1ct J°"n M. R•u, Pres. of David lndu1trie1, 541-nlM, or John Spoor, UC! Devolopmtnt 1~24 • AITIST 0, THI MONTH JISSll IAI POWIU OISPL.A.Y IN OUR LOll1 NOV. 11 OEC. 14 '7J " re'fllNllll llotlll'f.1 TllHUnd• " C1U,.ml1n1 1r1 ""' ,,.rtkl,,.n"' In tl!I Wlflftr'fi.I MW world If '''" cr•ll. Mr1, ,,_. ctr11Hy In-. ¥1tn yw It bt<omt 1u1111lnttd wlTh 11111 ••· tll•n1 lllW trill. SlllCI lt6f •hi ltl• Mell I "'" rl!IMn ~ ""' If .,... wlnntf'I tMdttr Ind 1•~l•l1tr 11 IMll'I' llltt lfld netleftll Ct(lntl< 111,.._ Ml'. '"9wtn I• 1 unltVI 1rttn ttnwlnl11t lr"411'*'•' llll'IP"n •t'fln wllll Clfllllft11tr•rr cl1,1111. 2700 Harbor Boulll'llld 546-2300 OPEN SATURDAYS, 9T01, bours," patrol C.pt. H.J. Rug· gles reported Monday. RUGGLES WAS one of seven area pa t r o I com· manders asked by CHP head· quarters to rate the pattern of driving in their areas o\'er the past two weeks. In Oceanside, one officer told Capt. John Putnam volun· tary reductions in speed CIUS• ed a problem. "He was coacblng motori!:b to drive in the slow lanes," P\Jbuun said. Vallejo CHP commander Bruce Emergy said he had noticed a freeway slowdown. "People read newspapers, 17· ten to radios and watch te vision, so they know there i a real shortage. At the same time, by driving slov•er, they save money on gasoline," he said. choose. l How much could your savings amount to? Not long ago New York's Firot ' National City Bank armed two POllTi:• shoppers with identical shopping.. lists. It asked one to compare prices with care and the other simply to pick up any handy version of each item. Result: The comparison shopper "saved" $11.18 by making each choice carefully -spent only $25.12 against $36.30 spent by the non<:om· parison shopper. ASSUMING THIS list represent$ a weekly "marketbasket,'~ over a whole year um would amount to savings of a whopping $581. What's more, the savings _: both In dollars and in percentages -were far more impressive on many items. For instance, the more expensive bottle or mustard cost more than twice as much as the less expensive. one. The more expensive bot- tle of aspirin cost more than four times the amount of the less expensive one. In a large percentage of cases, the explanation for the savings was Hbrand." In other cases.. the explanation was size ot OF mE SEVl!:N, Capts. preparation, loose vs. bag, individual servings vs. R i ch a r d Dr o l e t t e o I quart or bag, the like. The smallest price varia .. Sacramento and L a r r y tions occurred in dairy products. Walkins of Redding reported . no apparent slowilown of HERE IS A chart adapted from City Bank's drt,.rs In their areas. experiment showing you. the high cost of not com· · · • • panson shoppmg. • ---· ~'\':,t.,:e_~~!.:: _ ... ,;QD;;.l®:-PJli!ls..,.-U:e "cost" of not tndinjt freeways :i1lbtt miles pet d0Wlrls'"41 rpercent,~n ..-pound of-mmnalade-1t-- hour effective Dec. 1. On some is 124 percent; on a )lf of mustard 106 percent; on stretches, motorists can a pou~d. of rnarganne 96 percent; on a quart o! legally drive at 70 mph now apple JWCe 86 percent; on frozen peas 85 percent. Eureka CHP commander W. .. The "co~t' of not trading down On a .dozen o. Roberts said .,he not only ~nner rolls is 80 percenl; on three ~unds of on· noticed a -speed reduction ions 76 percent; on a balf-gall.o~ of ice cream 75 when be got out on a freeway . percent; on a quart of tomato 1wce 72 percent; on at 65 mph, "I asked mysel£, eight ounces of instant coffee 66 percent; on a why am I driving this fast! three-pound roast 61 percent So 1 slowed down, too."· The "cost" of not trading dqwn on 10 orangea is 50 percent; on a can of tuna 49 percent; on five' pounds of potatoes 44 percent; on thJM pounds of canned ham 43 percent; on a one-pound loaf of wbjlte b~d 37 percent; on ~ d910D eggs 35 per- cen Financier- .Quits Post . At Golcon~a CHICAGO (API -C. Atnholt Smith, a fund raiser in President Nixon's cam- paigns, has resigned a s chainnan of the board of Golconda Corp., a spoke1man for the company said Tuesday. Goloonda is a diversified corporation. Its holdings in- clude silver mining interests and manufacturing of fast- food service machiDes. The spokesman said Smith's resignation, aocepted 1 a s t week, involved litigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission against Westgate Corp. In Calilornla In con- nection with alleged misap- propriations of assets. THE "COST" OF not trading dpwn on eight ounces of breakfast cereal ls 34 percent; on 12 ounces of potato chips 32 percent; on four rolls of toilet tissue 31 percent; on two pounds of Iamb chops 29 percent; on a quart of mayonnaise 27 per- cent; on five pounds, four ounces of detergent 24 percent Space limitations prohibit more details, but the costs of not trading down fall to a minimum of 10 percent on milk (if you don't buy the gallon vs. the quart sizes). The total savings by careful shopping for this typical list come to a thumping 45 percent. Dentalloy's Earnings Up Dentalloy Inc. o! Costa Mesa, bas announced record sales and earnings for the quarter ended Sept. 30. Revenues for the quarter were $2,392,180, net income after taxes was $96.291, or 2S cents a share. In tbe like im quarter, the company had revenues of $836,197, net in- come after laxe1 of $33,88% and earnings per share of IO cents. For California Resfdents Only GRUBB & ELLIS REALTY FUND IY Minimum Purchase-$5,000 A Real Estate Investment Opportunity A California Limited Partnership Offering These Potenti;il Benefifl • TaxSavingsin'73 • •Tax Sheltered Cash Flow • Mortgage Reduction • Limited Liability • Potential Appreciation • Diversification of Properties ONE HOUR INVESTMENT MEETING TUESDAY-NOY. 20-7:30 P.M. "EWPlllf IEACll E. F. Hulton l Co. loc. ~"-1C.. (714) 644-9111 Space is Limited Offering Circulars will be distributed atthesemin.irs. Call for Reservoitions E. F. Hutton & Co. Inc. 'Nt ..... dhtli.itt • ""' " Mii. "" ""' 11 ... ., .............. ""'· ..................... .. ...,....,. ... tN ,......,. If C..llflltil1, •.,.. JI ,..,..111p _,._a llll _., ...... ti ..... i. tit*......_, ..... twill_.,. t.....Wlt,.," .. $2(1.00I. ..................... --................. ..... h"' .... R0,000: " ........... ""' --......... --......... $\ ................... ........ .............. lt. ......... 11 •• ' ' -· Wtdnt$dl)', November 14, 1973 OVER' THE COUNTER 4 NASO Listings for Tuesday. November 13, 1973 MUTUAL FUNDS I I Nlw Yorll. -FOi· IAT°" I kl.VST°"E': Btllnc. lS.16 lJ.16 •'°""""' 11 I 11$1 ol MOWAll:O; Cust 81 tt.tt lt.tl Com 10.0 10.•I 11ta •M a.itld r.'· 8.1!ft Fd t.t110.s1 Cusl l!ll 1._1:111.SJ SPtc11 11.IOJl.90 . ~tt Gii Mu IHI Gwtll F \J.23 14.'lo ·Cu'I 8' •'.4' t .U SIAIO OR .. : i'UNlll I\ QllOl.-d by 111eme •.n •.111 '"'' Kl 1.12 7.11 Ad Gw •.2S '·" fhl NA!".0 Ill(. S,Pf(ll F" 1.71 I.JO Cusl KJ J ... •.Sl M Inc J.SS 3.99 Sirk Fd n.n 13.'° Cust SI 21.M 2J.'3 Ad '"' 1.tl 1.67 l T....-., EDIE S9 11.6' ]IJ>t Cust Sl 10.tl 11.'7 C"' (..Ip •.!Mi S.00 No-..mber ll, 1t73 Egret Gt U.3' lJ.•J Cusl SJ 7.76 I.SI '"' FdB J.'2 '·'' • •I• Ai.II Ellun Tri 16.02 •.• Cun S4 4.lt ·•.10 Sllcl Ltv •.11 S.1' Advlwr '.31 •.18 Emt<I J.61 l ... Apel\o •.ll J.18 51ECUlllTY POS: 'Attlll Fd l.l l •.Oii EntrQJ 11.U 12.ll Pol••\ l .13 •.08 Equity 3.SO l .9' ·,Attnl In 13.•11'.61 F1!rt10 1.tc •.n Kfli'"' 6.al 6.66 •nv.11 t.SI 1.11 1Al,,.1ur1 •.a t .!l F"m Burt 9.11 t.lt Knk• Gth 1.•1 1.).1 Ullt• I' 1.00 1.61 A.OE Fd •.•s 5.0i Ftd RR' I.SO ... L.nd"'rk 1.01 1.ll SIELICTEO ,OS: AU"11e 11.n 13."8 FIOILITY Ltn~ Fd S.41 S.O Am Sllr 7.tl 7.91 ~tpht Fd 12.•S ll • .O GltOU"; LEX GltOU .. : Opp Fd t,'1 1.61 _;Am(•P F J.01 $.41 Bl'ld dlb t.'l t.76 Cp Ltdr U.6117.11 S9i Shrs ll.04 13.04 Jom 'Birt~ •.n 10.IO C..111•1 11.:sJ U.ll Grwtll •.16 6.13 Stnllntl 10 ... II.II Am OV'!"i t.04 t .M Conlrl t .11 ... Rt\rcft 11.4114.61 Seiltr., F 13.11 U.42 Am IEQ!Y 4.13 J.l"i. Cv SS.:<: 1.1• ••• Llb!y Fd 5.1)1 S.SI SHAlll.HLD Giil" : ..,Ji..M l.X .. RESS Ot1t 6.94 ••· Lilt ln!v 8.ll t.te Com1t l.U 3.% ,.UNOS: Eu1~ t .J8 •.. Lint C•P 1.11 1.11 Enlrpr S.tl 6.'6 C•PUol 1.XI 1.9' Evt<Sl 11.St 11.61 LOOMIS .Flt! Fd •.1' •.Jl • lntom 8.'H t .06 FW!d IS.4' U.11 5AVLIE5 : HMt>r 1.•1 l .l:LI ~ lnvs.lm 1.M 8.61 Pu•lln OJ UI C1p Ov 13.111 13.111 LtQtl L 6.M 7.11 • Sprcl 7.19 I.SI Salem F 4.00 •.37 Mulu•I "·'° U.to P•ce Fd l .Olo I.Bl Sloe-1.60 1.09 l rtM 71.U 25.10 LOllD All: SHl!AllSON FOS : Am Gft~ J.JI i .10 fl"INANCIAL Alfllll 6.M 1.11 APQI'( 11,tl 20.61 ,........, lnilft S.02 S.t9 .. llOGRAMS: Am Bus 1.M J,11 lntom 11.JI 11.11 .Am lnvs.t J.ll S.JI Flft o.,.. •.n •.n Bnd cltb !0,01 10 ... lftWll I.JI 10.•1 A"' Mut 8,10 I.IS F1ft Ind •.lS •.JS Lu111•rn 10.~B lt.•S Sii Oe111 11.19 \l,lt •Ait\N! Gt' 2.1t 2.l't Fin Inc S.lil S.M L"'lhll In O.lil 10.23 Side Fd 6.93 1.60 ANCMOll: Venl •.OS •.OS Mtnntn l .12 4.11 SIGMA l'UNDI: •GRDU .. : h\Fd VI 11.U n.•7 MASS CO: C•P snr 1.34 1.01 · C..pt1l •.•l 4.IS FlllST Frt1m 1.11 l.t S Inv 10.JI 11.21 Fl'ld Inv 7.!1 l.ll INVESTORS: lnclP F 1."3 t.Jt Trs! 1.61 l .ll Grwtfl 1.16 a.SO Dl'c Fct S.ll S.61 M.11l F 11.•t ll.JI Ventur I.It l .'1 " ln<om 1.06 1.14 G<-tll Fc1 7.ff 8.21 MASS FNCL: Smllh B 10.Sl 10,SI V1111ur 8.69 •.Sl IFK..... 1.n 9.0'1 Mil 11.•• 12.H SB l&Gr 10.'6 10.U I WI klt1 11.IJ \J.'9 SIOl:M f 1.10 1.4' MI G U.06 1'.V So GtnF" U.49 ll.M ,.Astrofl 3.t2 •.28 111 Mulli 1.11 1.11 MI O !l.1l lt.lt Sw\I Inv 1.l t 1,!) .._Audt• F 7.11 1.43 Flm Bet 9.81 •.n "'FD U.18 11.•0 s ... lftv Ci 6.12 6.61 Alll FOAUM GftOU": MCO U.IJ 16.l\ Sovr lft 11.41 U.ff OUG+4f0H: 100 Frid 10.66 10.611 Mii•' 1v 1.06 1.06 Sfleelrt •.• , 5.0S F ... no A •.1 1 S.17 101 Frd l .l,1 l .ll M.l llllr 10.ss IO.JS S&.P 1110 t.11 6.81 \ Fu/Id 8 •.t i 1.JI (Olum I .SI l.S1 Mio ""' S.2~ s.n STATE •ND OR .. : .. 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(t l (I) At1CI Fd I.II 1.11 •Bonds!~ i.61 S.10 FAANICLIN N•I l/ldu 10.7110.11 111ve~t 1 3' !_Ji : loll Fctn 9 JI 10 •1 GAOU": NAT Sf.C J'DS: Oc:e1n 1.lS J.JS .-Brown l ll l SS ONTC 7.15 I.fl 81l•ftc 1.t6 t,JS STEIN fllDIE FDS : 8tn!'<m 10.n 10.11 Gw1n Sr 1.•3 '-" 8Cftd 5~ '·'' S,,2 8•1•nt 11 11 ?I.II CALVIN FUNDS: Fr !ftcm 1.86 ?.Ot Olwldn i .J1 3.M .C•Plll 10.JI 10.Sl BuH FI! n .nu.11 VSG•S •.1110.11 p,,1stll •.24 6.ll Sloc:k ll.191S.1t > (1111 Fd 21 II JJ.9l U!ihlie •.11 ).01 lntom •.•I S,M SIS GROU .. : D•• Stir 3 .. J.11 Rtl (19 •.II J.lD s.toc:t Sr •.tl 1.15 Grwlll • 6.l4 6.9S N•tWll •.u10.» R' Eqt1 •2• ••s Gtwlll . 6.S1 7.11 lncom 1.3' t.1' NY Veft 11.0'I 11.lt F~t L!Eo ll.J1 n:u NEW ING L': Smmil •.JJ 10.U , CG 1'"'111 10.1' 10.tti F"d Mt dp t ,i. t.14 Equ11., 11,00 11.48 l tellnl 6.tt 1.M \ C.IP lri" 11.1>1 \) n FUNOJ '"'" G•wtll IO.lS 11.11 S...rvtr,, 10.10 11.IS (Ml SM H." 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Brd s ,., ll.•S 14.10 4 ,10Sl_9N: Gu~fd n I' n ·,, Op JJm l0.2t l1.lS NIU Inv t,lO t .01 ... l'nd Bos .~,. t.01 JIAMILTON OAP!. Op~(ld J.ll 1•1, l)W..(lr I.ti ""'' • fron.Cp SJ.I 1 ... f ul'lfl •11 .. ,, 00o,T,.-,',·',7 ,,7·!! WMhl 11.1113.% : 5111r &lo 1 ll I.OS c.r .. 111 •11 1:11 Tl t ·1 ·"'" UNITED FUNDS: • s.p.(./ 11' I IR lntom ~ 10 e '9 P•r•ml •.I I l.'9 AtCllm 7.16 l.IJ " Cfl'"' Fd 10.1>1 l1.6J 11,,1~1 lQ )t TO.:& P•ul Rt~ 7,12 1.11 Bl'lfl Fa 7 IS t.tt .COLONIAL '"'•rl LV 9 Ol • 01 POISlll F .... 1·'' C6nt fW t .94 10.ft 'FUNDS: Hedbe<J IOI 1"11 Ptn~ "1'11 ' 2.l1 1.0i Con11nc 9.6310,SS Conwr ••11osii Med~ •1l Ptn,. Sii 1•112 Into"' U.1'11.•1 EQu+tr J" J II !'ieflli,I I IO t:M P'llll• Fd 7.~s 1.13 SCtr!nc ··" ,_ ... J'uf'ICI 11ti11 •1 Hl!r*<t 1111 lt It PILOIUM G... Venod ·•11 • ti Cirwlft 01o 6.tl Imp•! Cp t !I 10'.ok C•Pt•I l .Jl J.IS USA.C (I 10:01 10.07 IM.om t 1' 10.1>1 1"1p C.• I '1 s 1b lftcom l .M t.'6 U$ G'llS 10.0f 10.11 "'",~' l~S J.33 Inc !OAm 111' 11°11 Pllorm J.tO-1,63 VALUt LINt PM! (.(II"'" G 11.l' U.l9 111(1 l'.t,m J lot 3·tt Pl ... $1 10.JI 10.1.S V•, L.nt S..•1 •• IS COltllMONW'L.TM t"'"'°" I.It t 50 Pin Trfl J.I! •·• V•I r"e 4,)1 4,19 )'. 'TllU$l" • II! In-,, n 11 >! ·• .. IOf'IEI~ ,0. Lov Gtl'I • J2 •If ) . • n • ·"' PlanE" 7JO l 20 1· i . .,. • 8 I 11 '20 lft.,.rn G I IS l.1S PllNI Fd ll'ti U"0t V•I ~ ,II l .•I ' c 1 'l 1.SI lrt• (o A I) n U.ll PIOll• II 10'1111"ti VAft(f. ,_,. C.O.,. tr •.M 1.11 I"~ G""" 1.0 I.Al P'lt!lllCI t.16 10·)1 SAHOllS: ---"'"'P 8d t 11 0,00 tnv !11(11( 1 l't . .. ... ..,., • '""'" 1.01 l.6f •-tMnp Fd l.1!"7.14 lftY Bo\ 10 ... 11'1 IGnv lf~IJ.J1 V5CPl'l'I 7.tf l ,t1 (on(rd 'a ta IN'llST "111CI Jt()WI. SPICI f .O l 'Ot (Oftl t11v 11'.0011:)0 COUNSlL Grwlll l),li lJ.l• Vnclrlllt ,:.1. •:I' l::'" '\'.: I~ l" "°""" I ll • -,.,,.. E•• n.oo 11. ....,,,nl , .. I '4 ' . ·:11 1! ·"' ..... ~ ... ,,, ... ' ,, .,..,.., ft .II 1 p1I Iv 1 ... J.\\ Pro Fd 1•19 1•10 VIII 10f0 Ill Cl} "'"''°"''WC U.Jl I . •Pl1 Sii I JI •.12 PrOlllOt iO'i iii Vlrl<td I l 1'11 •.01 c .... 0.11 6.Jt '·'° INVIST Gll:OU'; Provo Ci! I ll toe 'o'!l(rt! °' , ... s ... .. •t-11 O!w s.• ),ft IOS Gt~ • " ... """° SIP 10 ,. 11 "21 W•ll t .. '11 I.fl '• 0.U•i l·" . J~ Nt> 101 •U l'uTNi.M .• Wl!.hMu 11.1sn.1• .. ..c>f:v•cltl .n ,;;, •Dl P'I' • , '·'' il'UfllllOS· W.1"'9 IQ 11.2111. 1 111\AV-••I M.ilutl '-'' 10 2" c.on ... r· 10 " 11 I' WILLl,.GTO" ~ltOU"l Stot• 1tJlll.Ofl ~~I¥ 1611·1 GROU"i 1 0.C•t t •I IO,S1 5iti.tt t.)t 10.09 0 lJOl u "«t l1plor tt.ll l4.Jll Ot!w F 9J01ll,t• V,1r Pl., I.Jet t.24 Wiii 11011f l0 I"'" t,)111.7' 'Otll• T • 9' S.tO '"" Rt1 •• Ot J.M lftt t 'l!IO I I• Morqn 11.11 '-" 41 lllVflfl .1.lJ6lJJ IS I: '"V t tJ IO l tllft(W 1.t .,. • ~ C. 1.M '·" Gt•tn •10 •M vi"' 1' 10·0'11· T'V\I 11,.,u.n 1 Dlidl(s , ... It.• Inc:-,, ..... Vo r•o IO JI 11'31 'Mh' 11,16 IJ.IS 1 <Of•"! I II.Oii it.to trM UI _,ct .,. "'"''' , .. ,. ,·11 Wtlllft lo.It 1!.j' ~· OlltY,vso•,. trtt Sh t7'4 14.H Rrttrt 1• ; w'1"'n o,otn. 2 °'~N: Mltll f1 h•I ,-.,. n ,ttu.n ~IK Eo '•Jf t"M W11'1dv 7.20 1 .. 1 I• " l '' •.IS twv .. ..,.. '·" 1 .. s._.11., 1 JJ t'n Wit,t ll'ld J.O<I J.ll °' \.• 1 ~ ft II J .. C w1111 t .11 t .. !t(liu\ f4 '" 1.n Wslld "' l.J7 I.ti '"~d= J!'H1f-!i1~~;:''~t.111:~j"1111•$• '" •.nr=· J::1 ,:1; --,.._ Ml ) J, JMlft "9 1.11 .12 SCUDDlll li:O': ,,,, d•V•°""4. ...,. iit9# G< I ' I ff '°""""' 117'11.11 tnt• l~v IJ U U U ,,.,,..•Mltloll. • . ' . ' • • • • Countries Abandon Singapore"!· Cuts Off ~ ' \-.. . ........ :. U.S. Fuel ·;:;:.. . ., .. '• 2-tier Gold System From Wire 8enictl WASHINGTON -For first time in five years, the ~ United States today Is free to sell gold from Its gove~ rnent stockpile on the opeD market. The opportunity follow s a decision by the United States and six European nations to aban~ the two-tier pric~lng system for gold. SINCE MARO!, 1968, the two-tier system has held the value of government gold to a relatively sleady "o£ficia1" price, now $42.22 an ounce, while allowing the free market price of gold to swing freely with supply and demand. ()pen 1 market gold is now trading near $100 an .ounce. The decision to abandon the system was taken secretly this week at a meeting of central bankers in Ba$el, Switzerland, and announced here Tuesday evening by Federal Reserve Board Chairman Arthur F. Burns. The two-tier system "no longer has any relevance to the actual world," Bm'ns said. "We consider ourselves free to sell gold ... " • ~"'4 urtT.._... ANNOUNCES DECISION Arthur F. Burns However, in obedience.to an International M..-ry Fund guideline, gold purehases by the United Slates are out as long as the free market price-· Is obove the $42.U official price. GOvemmenls hold about $15 blllfoa Jn gold, about half ihe world supply. The threat . that ..... of this might be droppOd on the highly volatile free ntar~et could act to send prices plummeting. • ON mE OTHER hand, economi,st PleJTe A. Rlnlr.et, an adviser to President Nixob, said the U.S. and European governments 0 now r.ecognize that the true price of gold is $100 an ounce. "By a stroke of the pen, the 'United States has in· creased the value of its gold reserves · from $10 billion to $25 l;>illion /' Rinfret said. Bums said MY decision to !e\~J~J!.~ould be made at She's Vgly No. JS U"ITtl ....... He stressed the action in no way changed the legal pro-Jan Pa~er, member #15 of Uglies Unlimited, was hibition a g,a inst gold among_ p1c~eters in front of Ametjcan Airlines tick- ownership by American el office 10 Fort Worth this morning. Jan says citizens except under govern-. Amepcan's regulations discriminate against her be- ment license for artistic -or ~ause sh~'s 'too. ~ippy.' U:g~es Un!imit.ed. is P"?test· professional purposes. 1ng agamst h1nng policies wlilch cliscnrrunate SINGAPORE (UPI) SlngllJlOre, the l>lggest rellnlng centjr:ln Soutbeut Alla,:* cu.t.oll all i~.'b!!f~ ~r~ plies to AmOrlcaa ~·~~ the Paclllc because of 1~· threats ·to 1top spPJJll•!'::r.:, tho Island teJlllbllc, -.lncJ\!llij:; aource1 aaJd today. :·:~ ~.· .. I • ,.., V:i THE FUEL and oil cUt .. ~1~ expected to hit1veue.f1 ot~l U.S. 7th · ne,t, f~~ L plllaes la 1baifabd11llld ~: • ulilts thropul the .Ni:'·"'t~ .Souftr 1~~ and·_ Thailand ,1,.,.m. I · to be hl1; by the• bin .. ff. .-. tal: <lc>llari pay for IJIOlit<Jt;· the fuel used In ~·: , and .v1ernam, and 'aorbe· · . ': . --11 d' . ·-·" m , '"' an . • ... ,. -~ • .- 'Ill<! Philippines aJreodiil; cut ·1>4ck 1ts-1upJ>llea ~. ': forces-by is perCenl-ili4'.i • oomplete cutoll la -~: There have been p:'eSI ~ of the Japanese go~ cutting off jet fuel to ·•· U.S. Afr Force In Japan. ···.~ .• '.;:~ The price of gold fell by against 'ugly human beings.' near record levels on Europe's _...::. __ _:"'-.::_.::_:..::..:..:="'----------- main bullion markets today With Singapore clooecl :ali;tt: source, U.S. forces in·~~ "are runniOg our..:~~ alternatives" for gas ah~.oll( an indUJtry expert here~:·. .. w ....... . ·:-< ..... •. following abandonment of the two-tier gold marketing Weekeitd Action? system. AFTER THE init~l drop,.. gold prices recovered, but only partially. Dealers in London and elsewhere generally predicted prices would tend to drop for a short time at , Layoffs Seen at Lockheed LOS ANGELES (AP ) Lockheed-California Co. has aMOUllced the planned layoff of 2,5IO workers before the end . of the year. with most of them to leave before Christmas, because of . a slowdown ln the production of L-1011 jetliners. A SAUDI Arabian ell~ told Singapore news tft ¢J(:;· "OUr policy Is clear .-"6cj. supplie s of our · oil are to.~ to any 1) .S. military buyeri., : Jackso11 Pushes The' work force reduction. anoounced, Tuesday. amounts to 9 percent of the 29.000 employes of the Lockheed Aircraft Co r p subaldlary Industry sources sald~.th( government of Prime Minl~r. Lee Kuan Yew conta~ted· 'U!e: refrnerie! Monday and qWftlY.' instructed them to atop au~ plyiri& U.S. military D11rk~:~ feast. Bill on Energy . wASIUNGroN 1UP11-n. Yaci<sOOsaid TUesday m .. ~. ,r:~.mplete-Mid~J\~j-i~an ~~~his.if Senate puled today amt sent ing senators to Jimit amend~ ._ __________________________________ •• __ ..., _ _. .. '!!"ij. f to the White Boose a bW re--ments so thf;l legislation can -:- quiring President Nixon to al-be approved this week. Vol.Last~. voi.L.a~t~-.11°'·uu~. • "0'·uu~~-~-u,1 ~ 1vo1.L.at1~~ locate crude oU and petroleum -• •-· c.'ti.t~ 1n 1 "'' ••• Fldlco tuo 12 11\'I -+-1~ _, ,,__ PacNw 1.06 11 u •I .•• ss,. In .lOii ; e•\or,;..;;.: od "EVERY DAY d J MllCp .02D '10 12'•-.. CMtlewd Ill 11 1H-1V. FllMl<O ..,,i l •1'1-VJ .H<lyt1 ~lj 1 5*-'• Pl<Swln .11 1· 91, co•d[•M _ li .n'"" ..... pr acts so that the need.lest we e ay in AAV co .20 20 i:i.-V: C•v•trot1 c11 1 ,0••• .. . Fie Ids f'l~I· ' 11 ~ ..i.oe' E~ ' 10 -'• 11.11 '°'"" 11 1• · V """' ·""· n ,;;;::'"·• _us!~~will .c.et wb. at they need settling the matter, the ~:_~Pl~~:, ~ ~.:;_ "i\ ~~v~ic:C:::: 1! •~'11 • ·• =:l~A,: 1! :::-v. =r:~;-v si. ,; ~~: :; 11•1aFc:1 -0~ 1 • 1to~ ·-~ =~1 ~fi u 7\lt ., ..... Chirhi th -· ·.·..11s M.\1011lrw;I\\ 1 S ~ ··• "•tlr0!.G1d 7 10*-.i.; .11Jrvl$(p!k 74 U -'•" ~IOMl /111> 1 11'•' \•Sid f>•(llic: 10 1'"""·"-·'" g e energy U.1!i • Tlie -greater t•·-shortfa_l_I " sai·d-AO..in!R:,,.sC 10-·1ir!·l -~1•"•' .. ,,,'"--,' s'•• ·•· F1n<1 8 10 ,~0...,_.~ • .111r11nJJ:1nc1 1 1') .• ~1f'ICI,•• !!::d ,1 ~,1·1-·~ ~Prodllc:•' J 1•~""·' 0( 83-3 In:: > Adobe (or '-""' . .IO '-... FlnGe l1 11 Jor111Prd .li 4 2'1-'i-\o~ .-Ir wr "'' 4 J ••• Sldtll"' .JN 6 11 --"\' ,• \I e was . Jackson, chairman of the ~.._ •• ~ ~ '~V:. ~ g::.~ ·C: '~~ ~~ ... F•0t111_12;~ ' n·~ ... "t; Juo1w _·1nc1 1 1'<-', =:r"" ·': ·' :1<,.-i , s,i.• c ,.~ • u1~ .... .,~ WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Henry M. JacksOO (().Wash.), pushing for Senate action on the emergency energy bill, says he hopes the Jtglslation • will he passed by tbe weekend. "Time is of the essence,'' Costa Mesan Wins Travel Film Prize A Costa Mesa widow whose neighborhood fri ends picked up tickets for her attended "Australia -'N e w Zealand Adventure" Tuesday night and r,und up the big winner at the travel film show. Mrs. Edith McTeague of 369 Costa Mesa St. was selected as the one contestant from the Orange Coast audience to compete with other audiences from throughout California for a three-week, expense-paid trip for two to the "Down Under" areas. She will be one of nine com· peting for the grand prize, it was explained by Cliff Dodd, travel service manager for the Australian T r a v e I Com· mission's Southern California office . Dodd a]ong with Kevin C. Sinclair. travel consultant. New Z e a I a n d Government Tourist 0£fice. and Barry Ford of Qantas Airways, Lid.. helped host the show and provided gifts f o r showgoers. An estimated 1,100 virtually filled the tiiain floor of the Newport Harbor High School auditorimn and overflowed in- to the baloony for the show co-sponsored by the Daily Plklt and Orange Co a s t c.ollege's evening division. Aerowl lee I 1:U •·· (.ti 8 Fcl !ilt l 1' ••' F$1 0.1\v wl lt 2h -It II -p1to8:. ".110b 7 1 J~' '. • S\tt"Olnl ·-1 10.0 1' ·' \ lflte " Comm"tt AllHC.1p)k J"ll J"" ••. CllmEp .20 l SI'>+.('; Fs1R11.,1nv 1 S ... K1iwrl .Osl 61 i '/1+ 't ~-l.l'tl t 1,,:=t ~trttH .10 " f 1\.~~\ r1or l ~e. Att!I Op""' 10 " .,, Chl(k Un 5lt ' ·~· .... Fll S&L .... J ,,,.._·~ K.f' lvt• IM J l .•• Pent Ell"" 6 ,,, !tt(l ...... •SL ·= ' , .... , .... -:t:~ J k ed A" 1-'oWI .10 J 5 -v. Olr~tl'll Co 11 hl\IM 1.ttb l U~+ ~ •rw~lll 'fl1 1f J~~.,. '.. llffl, IE!def" l 10'11-·~~ m lrfd -.,. • ac son comment as he A1ti1Pt>1 .oset 1 ,,,._..\Iii ci Ctiv t.M , 1~·~ 'i.tmrt .21b l ,,..._ v. IC•,. Stw 1 • J1•,.:. ~. ,..,"" oi."" 10 21 ... ·~ s,•.,.-,.,'.,. "• 1! ,.,.,: • dr th A~C PrllO ~ • ·~~ ••• C 1 Mt9 wh I flKIWl'PI SI 1S Jl1•+ \fl .C.ul ..... "!'!. 16 ·~~ \o ~ -' ew up e schedule for A•k•~ 1no ... , 2 l'lll+ I\ c;~,.,,,. 33 t~·~ Fi._'""' .n " 311--,~ Ktk...__. 1 »• . . ~:b~,:f\ 1~ 1~ •• -.~ ~~ E11 ; ~1-. :.: : t·••y's debate . on the A1..,.,e1 •. 1• 10 11 -+-ltcir, .. -11:..li 24 •\Iii+"' F1195\lfC. s "+-19 IC--*·• n20~-\. Ptn1rot1•no , ,~··· s'..,.::iilit 11 .~::_. uwi A/••,,,.. .6CI 1 ls>:r.-v. CiunFln _,., 1 ~ '"" ••• FUght Stt., 4 uw-Vt IClllHm A" I 3'f1t-I• ll'tp '°" 1 1 16 .. !;\ s:Vc.o-el t I ,.._ ... emergency legislation. :1~k! -~ '! ~Vt::: gg:~-~ 1l 1tt ::: ~:c:~~~ : ~~ ... :lf=iie '1 1~ _·;;. =;~~;~ IJO •••... r1~ .... ~-1t~·· :·· Wlule it will be at least ~l:=:C:..'i: ~~ ~~+\i ~~~nc:~-~ l ~~t ~ ~~~,:-J l~~·ti :,•,'•,",.."',,.:!t 12,~" .... '.: ~~~ .• f:~ rl i::_:~ ~!..~.~.·,.,': 111• ...... -.-~~ All1!'9A'fl1n 2 3\lo_t-\:. Clirk ~~ 1 1'A ••. Foodfl1m.1 l l l!!-\i 9 " I •·· I St J .-. " I ••.• ~ three years before t h e con· A11n Tlr• ..,_ , ...,, ... .,. CJ••k• G .30 1 •loll + .,. Foro ean » aao .,....,_ .,., 1u11 .. rt co 1 ''.\lo • . . Pk ,:_;!l~ 1~ 1 t ·. ·· w. c.~ .2s • 1." ..... l!-' .. Altled,4.rt!\I, I •Vt ••• Cl•r1l.ton .16 6 1!Wt-~. Fort~llblll. .(I 2--.1 11.llklOkC .50 2 l'lo-'• j:11o ,.,,..IC ,, :..:+·~· S...-E=--= ,Ji 1:, .. ..-u_.; troversial 789-mi. "le A I ask 3 All•ml• Co ' s u. ••• ei.rv CorP u 1''>-l't Fl• St""' 2t 1 u l(fll(,.,. 10" 1' l•W-'• P'-t• S.s )6 j" -lor 1n MJ 4 ro:.n ••• • Ailt( Corp l :i:, ••• Cl•lllf .311b 1 ~"' Fr"'"RIA· 2 JV.::: Klll!'11"9 ·• 11 11 -I ~rTt• lit 11o 0 'i; pi peline can begin pumping Ane< CP"" 6 2~ •... cio~v .05e 20 ,1._ ~ F•.nttN n 1 6 K-t•• 1m1 1 ,,,._ '• ,.ilOM1.1t11 •1 S6' .. -t•1 ~~t', · : ~~··:~~~ AUe<Cp'fl1 I \;i.-\.'o c.Mllnvwts 11 t \1)-1 Frttnffla:40 20 11 -·~ -L.L--• Pin_., .llO l ll -'• •·-•• • ot fr th N rth' Sl fi Ids AJ11rFcl\ .50 I ~"' CwchrMfl 1S 4 •.. F•ll• Indus 1 ·~ v. Lt 8••Qt ITI J 1 ·+ '·lo f'llWV• Alb J 1 -\o !h'"~· .IO 03 11 '...,...,."' . om e 0 ope 1e AITICO Inds! .. SI\ •.. ""'"'• .1D ,, J)r.-'""' Frlgllrortk • " -" l •I•., " .. u "·'-~-Plu•CpAm 11 100:.-•.:. ~~ •• C~.!O M. '~=-~ toward the ""lion's depleted AmHtu ~' 416 IJVi+ h con ... In .1~ ' •\~-\oll Ftl$Ch$ .309 ~ n -\~ !--!".'.~"!' 17 ,,.._ \1 '11111 lndtnt ... ' :.-\"a "f"..,.m nt ,.7 ,,.. Am81 tt'1 .50 I 1~ \l c.oil ln\I Ill( 70 2~;.... '-" Fforiti'1" Air 11 JI.Ii ••• .... -"' ·~ 1 J'4 ••• P111• Gflll) ,.j 1 ... • "',. fuel tanks, the emergency ACnMll•I I , ..... C.Ol1N1U "2 , 12't. Fron\AJr"" ll 2\\i Ul'ldrNI OI 1 l\\ ··· Ply Gemli: J 4•• ..• , • -TT-IJ ~.; Al'llF111.0lb 1 21 \fJ--IAI Coltm.n :_.. 13 10 -·~-· -OG--• ., L•lllWll Sii. 11 •''t ··· PHIMt'fl1s , 11·1 ••• T1d<ftotier S 1\li't.''Jr, energy bilJ could CUt fuel OOR-A F~Ol WI l 2l4-Yo ColltQt .Z2b t n.. .. . (t(ob!"ll In Sit . l 111+ \:. l•,..eo Inc 10 214-'·• Pneum 0.,,. J ''-' + \\ Ttcllrll l"ape S 1\t .:•.,. '... sumption by 2S percent Within z::&r~-::= 1 1?~ 1: ~;::~ .: ~ ~;:! :!, ~:;..,,ftc~t i ;..,_.~~ lt!~:~1~1: J 1~:! ::: ~WJ:.."'"J ~· ~--&t ~=..: 2! lwit~~ lour "eeks Of enactment. Am Intl Pie 2 l~• .. . CoJwMl<:I wt 2 1i-... ~ G«ci• C.Ptp 2• , 1:WO • • • ~'-~c~ ~. 1! ,,•;i:-1-1• ,..1,n.r 61 i5Q 1 + ,,. lM """ C:.. I '"' ;.,, .. , Amlsrii .2'1:1 J 6\.li+ ¥. (ombd CIM'l'I JO Ul'l-1 Gl.,IMOS .:to S 3 -V. ...... P ·• ...., ,. ··• Pothr l!'!Sl' • ' + ~~ l.itfll• lOI. li 14.,.._ ~ • ANlllaA'.lJ -2 6!11-.... tomb !.quip 20 11 -"' Glvnor Sttl 1 )1~-v. LCA (llWU I 1• .. -'• Pf•lrl10ll It ' ~ ... llt. T-..c ...... n. !"~~"' ANlll•B .33 1 •'!lo-14 Cominco 1 3 3'>.(, Gt1rM 24b 10 11'1t+ i.. L•Gr•llC .16 l6 ' -'1 P1'1t\Yml 10 121/t'-\41 T_.."'11 2l S ·•·~· mE SENATE vote of IO ~.~ .. 1.1111 1 J9'7t •.• c.om1AJn 3:1 JO 10'h+ ·;.;, ~ ~1ic.1 t 1~ ... .,__ !-!·,."'~·"'•• ~ 1~\o -~ "'"1 "'° _,, 1 , •. : T,•-c.p • ~~~-~ ...-Ifft .!Od 1• tYJ + "' Coml M ,6Clg ll 1•>1.+ ... .....,, uni AD 1, 10\. ...., ,-"' -• -~ ~ "' Pr11 («p 1 P\i-J... Tend.,,... lft It U Y• (. • to s sent the pipeline measure A ,..1<01.20 10 :n ... ~ Commador , 2.,._.,.. c;.,,E .. Serv :it ' -·~ LA•loC• ""' 20 , •.. PrtnH.1ll .1w ,. ti4i+"' r.-..:wo .. wu. ,.. n -~ to Pre ·d l N" A Prn o~ u 1,,._ v. c .w 11 3 GnlEmp '*' J 2~ '-'" LH e .. 1 .30 1l i1 -u PftllU& .M 4 lO\t>-"' T1• 1"11 c. m ~ .._ SI eD lXOD. AAIRL1 1.IJb 24 10'1o-\'f C::m ~:c i .~~ '.. Gn 1-'ouVw.-7 HI-\Ii" LH N•ll Cp 2 •?o-~I P,ttllr (05 .a1 1\i-,\\ l1Ul•r Crp 15 l • ". Arno the thin '"A Am Rn.,. wt l ,..._ .... Com PS l.'2 ' ,....,_ ·~ Gift lflttrlot" 11 "'"'-" LH ""•nK 14 ,,,,.._ ~ PrHlon .10 l 11\lo-· ... T•lll•oft ""' s ,,_....._ •• I ng 0 r g!. WIC' Am RteGrp tt l~ V. COrr!J)IC Q> 2 P,:,+ '•"' Gtn Ric Inc: J l 'h-'1' 1All~ Pr\\ i ·~• ,., PrmMI .050 1S 1'4-~ "nlrlftnl .109 1 ·~"W• Jackson bill would_ .11-N AmStftl., 41 ... s"'-~ ComPDln .J2 1 1\lo ••• Gn RtM•eftc ll s -tio Ulwrt Tt< 'l S*-"" Prolt• Intl JO ~" Tidwell •• 2 .I ~.,...~ w.ap,;1.. Ano'tftlfW\11 .J\ ,......_.\lo.~• 46 Ill I Gt1191 Ill( t S\lo-t\.li. LA'lltF .Jlv • S l'h •·• Pr0C.T 1.Qio M U.,.._1'1., lllfVUl(lptl 11 J--.-..• President Nixon to implement AMI C.c.J> .CM • 1S'h-~' eomP fnm • J'4 -Gtntsco Ttc: 1 11o:. •.• ~8F .11 " 1•.:.-'·" """°"'Gn .Ill 1 twi-.. 11o TMCM 1...,. 1s ,.,.. _.., Arldrw• Rad" 1 1h •1_. CllKN .ltb 3 1ov.-"\i; Geon 1ndi.il.t 26 1014--> 'h Ll8C.0 Corp 1 "'-'ii f'rro1RIE .w -1s 2~ ••• .Toflhtolm .JS , t 6'11•~"-' ratk>ningprogramsforscarce """"""'M 'l7, _.,..Cone.ref f.lb 1 2..., GtrbffSctn i 61'1-V. Llt1er1.,Ft1J t 1~1; ,...11111111 •24 1 ~l't t"111;:~1£1.:s:r 1«1\G!"'°""">.- f Is '-cl din tin and A 0 lfld Inc. 13 I ••• eonoec Q> 7 p; ••• Gi.nt'fl AOa 1SI 1V....:-IN UllAflfl ·*' 1: s.,.._"' P\1111 Homl l l ......... lO# -~ JO • ~··""'· ' u e • UI u g gaso e AppllldO.t l w.-"' c.onrov Inc 20 )ft ••• Gl.odi .. ,.. 10 l"-V. UtrLJMlll 1 ,,.. ... ~. "'-UGlllt 2 J'-Tpi1I lrol "''·"~· home heating Oil. Aqul11111 .20 21 ~Vo CansOll Ga 35S 1~ •·• Gi.sroc:k Pr ti l ...,_ '4 Uflcpln An'I l 2.\t-t-I\ PwfPt ~ 6 t •·· TOlllPof .10 1 I~+ \'a Bel deba ArlCl..d .Gib l tJvt-!,\ COIH'tftl (p ~1 • -\lo GlenGt .lClt I s... ... ~$ ,OSO • 2 I~ •. • ~ TfM1$Ut .» v sW+'~ .,. ore starting te -Oil ArlrCp!Ar J ...... v. Conl"Mllt'r\ • l\lo•V. GlotitStcut 221. _,.., ~n.,,, )J "'+I\ RtFKtft-;;.,,• 111111o •·· lWA ... WIW..:. ' Ar4us Ill(; 1 1 +1·" CO!llRtt.21 1111:i,r.-'i,I; Gletllllr .IO .111-"o-I.-. UO'lftflk· 2 ~\lo --0~ .. , TP-6"c,. 1 .1--~ the meas·ure,. the Senate was Arkt.G 1..JO ... 21 •• • eoi.tt•• ~ , 2 • • • Gtou<1!.lr E 1 ~ v. Lot"''' 1N1 1 2 ••• ""*' 011 1 »'h-i• 1r,,,.1r .01c1 ll • ~. Ar""e !flt ' ICRfo • ·• Cool!; El .40 S t2\li-'I• Goldbl.tC .3' 6 )\'r+ ..... t..aGenS. .It t I>\+ \.'o .. pd ..... Wl 11 •l\-' \\ Tl't.0.V 411 2 .-..._ • expected to pass and send to Armin C.p ,, 10 -v. (.ooll; '".«lb 1,1 :io•1o~ ~ C.Ok:lft c..,cie " 1•11o-,.. LTV c;11 •h 101 l'h ·--A•lh P•ct9 , s~ ... 41 T1l\Mo .o.b 11 • ,...., • h Wh H Arrow EIKt 14 JV. ,,, CooPlr J .20 2 4\'I .•• Goldln HIM'l'I ' J •·• LW-, ~ t 1~ Y. .Rt., ltlVt' 15 •H-t-'Vt YIA>MI .2:Jb S 2~ ' t e ite oose a bill that "'"LCJ!Sll llo 10 ••• cordOll 1nt1 .. toY...-.,.. o.ociu .1S&1 •, ,.. -MM--:>-11 11ndiisa 1 ,i~ ... ru1«.oeorp • 2ij~•"' uld · d AtwllPdCp lO 2~"' ""-•••·••• 1 ,, -" GoPdrlcll~ 1' l,.,._V. ""c""2vOI. Ji 1V. ... "'"""''"' , , •• '' lllfbodYlll t '•i:· wo requ1re man at or y AHrnlr• ep 14, 13~ ~ C:t (Arp 1 2¥. ... c;o...1drnc""' 112 1v. ••• ""'PSv 1.21 1 1w.-\'I ltlfstlT 1,,.. 1 11 "": ~~ Twrn ,a1,. '° 6 ' allocation of all fuel products ~h1c1011 c. 11 1114-In eouMnM M , 3.,., '.'.'. ~•119' .tt 10SAl1to • '!t ""'*"' ltd 10 .._,.,. 11111Tr 1.m l ,~,._.,... T.,u uriort '' 10,._. AStrt• Inc: t . 3•11 ....... , -, ,, ••• .., Gf•ftd AulO 2 J.,,_"' MtmlW1 .22 ., ''h-V. lil1tfllld 1.68b 11 '" I · ·· from crud O.J t line At lndull • Vi--..,. "" .. .,. GBnit•Mlt e J -._.. M.1111111 Slr1 a ~ -..-U U--."':·'<oo" . e l 0 gaso A1tc!M l.4S&I 1 ~v.. \to g~:=r== 1; 'JYo.: u GreuV .lllb 11 11-\to--"' Mtnsllf .50 l S>rti ••• ::1:~.\~ ~ 11~ ~ UIPCJ-:mb. ,,. t'4 .. ..ii& Designed to ensure that all A11..Cp wts ns 111>-v. en.u .... ...,.. 6 J~-v. Gr•yMf 1011. 1 1 -v. Mlrlflduq I 62 o4li!. •• • 11teninc: .Mb n I!) Ulllon ct M M. 1 AllO't l11 .IO M ~\4 "9elePt.2t 17t1:i:.-i.._GrtMllnd I.-. •.• Mlrll.Conttt l I,_"" ltlmM .IO IO lf~•-"i..\1~12.M 9 20~-~~ sections of the country share A ... s1r11 011 11 nM.+ 1o1. er.st FOtm 2 2:i-Gtt hs "'' 111 •'•' ••• MlrWne Ind 2 2~ ••• Rtpl-'ous . 11 1 J'tt f .,.. N11As111r.0111 " 3111 • .;;,t the •··~en of. fuel sho~·ges Autom e1119 1 •VJ+ Yt OPtnpton 1 lll 11 _·I' GIL-Cl'! .111oi ts7 1!t't-"' Mlnl'lllt H 1 ~ •. • Ati>M1I wb 7 it• "' l.i'df.tlMI WI' ll 1•4 .! uun.1 I WI Aulo R•dlo 2 JV. ••• c.rou 4 "31:1 1 61'1\ • •• GtScott s Sit 2 '"'""" "' Min.ht! IM. 1t ' -v. Rsp/111 Bnk IJ n,-·-Un DollM51 I '"' ··:·· • ll the b•)) -••-' h A"'tpSvc .70 4 '"+9" C-CPSI '~Vt Gf.-Sit 2i 6'4 ,,-;f Mlt.lltld .*3 41 Sl,\-V. lteKColl.GJ 14 ,7 1+'\" UnFOll9!.ln I 1tli .. ~' equa y, I ~ t e A v C Corp . 6 3.,., ,., Clwfll,. .20b 1 7~..,. GREIT 110 <I 10 -\f Ml-11 .30 S 1~-"-Rewtvt Oii 14 t~.:: Uld N•t1 Cp t • ..,. 'i~ House Tue:....13y by 8 n AYllTICP u u ll'I-,,.. -, • °' · · · o 111 err '.• 11 nr.-~ ""''"''.!Ob ' 1~"" R15IM't1t .. 1 A ,. 1111 UnHtll "!'tG 11 .-.• ...,.. ;:11..1 Avondl l.iJe 1 llll>t-\lo rysl•I I '" 11'1'! ... ~Tll .'IO s 12 _ v. Mlullk"o &_ 3 1" •.. fllli1• Msoc:. 11 lloli :·· UldM pl .7t I , .. , .. _,,. overwhelming marni". AV"!( CorpCft J 11~ \lo C$E CP ·* 4 11-.+ 'Ao Gf'P'W C 119 t $'It Miiii in .-1 11 V•-V. RH MldlUI I 4~+ i\ UnPO., .6C11 ..•• ,-:_. --·a--ClllllC Cp .20 6 6"°+ Vt Gtwfl liidi.o 11 ti.-'i,4 MtCWlklfOI, IJ2 6\t-~._ Jlllllll Prllll 47 *--'t USlll( 1.Ub l !11Jo.a 4'.• ~r 50e I 1~ Vt ClllllrA .'n!I 1' 11 -'-OSC fll .Olib 1 1\l , •• McDo{'!llo ;40· 'l 11'~ • 'J\ Rik« Mon 4 p, Ir\ USFllt.r .10. St 10~."t.o• IN ADDMON to rationing. the Jackson bill would lea.d to such energy-saving steps as reduced speed limits, lower thermostats and s h o r t e r school and business OOur.i. In an effort to increase fuel sup- pli_es, the measure would allow the President to tap naval petroleum reserves and order oil and g a s bullling power plants to switch to coal. The House Commerce Com- mittee was scheduled to hold a panel di1CUSSion on 11.milar proposals today. Bncrt1 1:,~ l M>li .•. Cwlltr8 .22rl 2 11»9-\lo G TI Corp 25 l"'+ i.i McKlll'\ C'I I t•;i., ••• RiM•M plA J 11.i. \)SLRI l.19D' ! 16W...~' 8tllQOf'Pwl ·1 l'h+'lt -OD--GUltdsC .40 ) 'lfi-'Ao Ml~ll"'Jf JIO\•-'• Rl .. W~ 1 11 -'Vj U$UfRwt. 1 \'\~.,-: ... Benliler LI 111 24tt-'h 0.,-.20tl 2 J~ 'Al GuUord .Mb 2 J.\llo-Vo ""'dU..l'fl't\ 1 '~• • "' RlllAIOO Mt 1 n -I US ~·~ RI~ 19 )1':-'-o• 8•n~Otll .t0 2 u~ ... '4 0.1• COnlfL 11 IV. ••• GullM 1 ltb 1 16'h Mlcllnc:o .t .)2 11 ... RllCIDnM .llo • ' -I.to u»RMllurn ' J ..... "~ Btrbr• L~ft 1 l.._ l'o 0.I• Doc In 1 2l¥. • •· GuUMIQ wU 1• 1''0 ••' Mldl•G<I" .JC • ) 19i)>-~ Rolllnltcll 1• 211\-· l\ US Red\1(1fl 10 1~· •t. ?"( •••n-lllft n ...... •,,. O.••Prllllct. 1• J~ •... Guucan Mt 3 Ji•~"ii Mtmeo:M 1 n ... •·~· , ••. , 1,. VNITi:K >#Ii.~· 81r...,RG Jk. 1 r.;:::; 'lo o..,.vn .IOO ,. ,._ ~ Gulf R1p;e1 s J~-... ""''cent Ind s •V.-h R:'i.': :;;;; , 9u~ :~ . 2 I • v, _,~-i:~ i B•rr.,Wr ,:n 1 ·~ ... ~ln~nc:' 2% 11~~-V. GulfSoM wt ' U•• ,,., Mttrci GrHt JO JV,-~. Rock• NtU 1 l'A U!'llty 9"'-d I i" • 8•rtell,...d l 1\• •.. Ot•rbnS.,"f 16 olh+·:;_ G111111rmLd • l•'h-'-Mlct>Gtn'C.' 10 .l V.'"t,! Aoveri C•P 1 1th-·;; UnivOlnlh: ' 1 ,;~,, 8•rlll Sil .21 1 l""' •. , OtJ"'r NI'S l • \.: --'M tt--' Mldltnd Gii S 6\"' ~ fllO[IM lnU 2 M~--' ''t UllllV Minon • $ I . I aan.tll"'"' 1.U ,.:.+ 1"' Otllt (.orp II IV. -H.1ncrlft H 2• 2.\11 ••• ::r.:F~im .~ 1:t:: ¥: llollkl1 lntnl 21 ,....,._"'" Uft\~R•' c, " •• ' ' hrwkk 1no t l\lo •. • Otlln H -'O j ,,,. .. ,: .._. "-1'5Mlt .40 1 1 • •• /loll llirel s 12~ • Rou.-.ca 1 µ. t 1.1 u..iw t\.;" ' 1~ LMl11 Pelrt .-C 1"' ... OnTl£r ll:Jb 21~.J. ,,. : ... mlffl,~ .~ • :tt: ~ Mo'::.T rl 1! •lt-"" ROJwnotwf l ll'f ,. Url1lllf 1 IO U t. ' :!',,",!~ ~ >'> j.,_: ~~ OtvPh :19b lS 17'._ '4 "'""" f'ien ll2' 11.._ t'' Mll~,,I £".;/ 2 2•~ 1' Ro•en .U to ll'I-\4 !Mii ~ .41 I II _;._ •• ..' ••, ... w 1 1 r,: .. Otjltn Ml t )'-••• " ...-Milt ~I .10 ~ \~ RoyllF .D • 2\1 ... UV l wt1 Cl ~.-. KOi ,. •.• o. ... IOp Q> IO ,1~ y. MlnShol .fS l lOYI" ··• #Mefl'ICe I 2'.41' 1,:. 'ftOyl P II(.~ t ?, , ... ' _ y' • ...... , BtflStt.1211 • 13 -'Vo OtwA~-ostr m ' ""'' .. ttlrllfld .1J 11 2'\io-t ~ MDl ''f: f 1l·1 •• ._~"" ~1'5 PrfitS ,. ~·+""' -~ -... ., fltntfSldWI 1 '11. ,.,... 1 · l'9"t" Hl>rtttd lill l 2'11 ··~ ~ • .,..... RK \lllf ll'tC: 1• l \o , V•I Dor Inf' 4 4 -~.. • Btnna Cp JS ,,._·~ .,,..JI""'· Db 4 '"-""-..... twr11 Mt C.0 ... , JI~+ ~ Movlcl. ncOI' I ,,._ 1' R"''"ks lrw; 4 ·~ -· 'V•I Sf9ll Mll 1 S T,.....,_. "''fill .S1b 1 .v. .,. 8f:=v: 1:; ~~:: =r ~ -l! 1 ~.-. MD\'11~ ~:, ' f l·.1o-·~ Ru'I Cp..... • ·~-·v; \/•I~ Mtll ,9 • :1~~ Btr91,.1k"w 1J ,.,., ~ 0111•nf .• SS 1S + •,'t Hlnll!lll .ilit .( ·~ ... 14 Mpv!el•blft '1 IV. •.• R,_,1r1H•Y:$~J -+-'4 ~::.,,... :~ , 1:~'-1( ==~~t11 ~ 1~~.,. &::"'~ t I -+: " "-""ns WI. ., 'It:• '4 MPO v1<11o 1• !l-... ~DrltR ·""' i 1 tJ\')-1-,,., v1t"' lll'lll • '" ~ llrtH Corp 1 ~ ','t Di'flr-. .J6 6 I~· .. •• Hiit! ,,,.; .JD ' 4 • "" MPS lnlml 1S 1\t+ " Stf•lrt11 S.y 1 s•,,+ 1.-. V1n00f11 .Ja 24 7~ ,._ Btf'ttl!G .10 t Wt--\.'o 01.,.,iftd wt J ,_ , ...il'lk•1 In .t toi MWtlAln .20 21, Ult •• . $t .lllho"IS,.N 1 10 r"" \lo V•• lft(llf111 l ~""- Blllllhm.C, 1 2'1'1+ .... Dhd .. OPrp J l \11+·;.: H1llt11l.O. I 11\t>-•lo M.:r, ~lftt--:7 ·, ... ~ COrp 1 t~ V. .,,.,11..,,,( 1 I .V. ee""~'l Em ' t + Ill Don-it f'lttro '' -• ~ !?' ~I .4 4 . ~\Ii+ 16 ' -5-ambo\ Rtt 211 1• _ in \ltffltfln c:, -'' ~' itvHU _J.cp ' s .... Donit•r '° 3 1S T ~ G lllCot.P ' I .,.. N 'Atf•lf• l! •It+ ~ UllCMlll ,JO l 1 • VIMI• Co t ,""_ ':4o Sic ,.ft .f7 11 1•Vi+ \Ii °''""" "ep 3 111;:; :!_ siw..... Cp 2 10. ••• JqtkllM,H l.S U--lt•l·l6 $Dlt99Jlf i• • 11._ \.; VllWle•.lrw , u 1,.. ..... lllk•r 1.0I I 2l'lt-'A Dt't"lt1T.Y4b 3 II ; ttllll'leYll Sii -I •'-'+ • ~ W.I Gtll ~ : iO tl l'I+-,-'\ Sno;tO Ut I nnt1 • ,;. ' ~···"' ... , '1' r.\\'-" Br9 \I Sl,4ltr I •ti!+ ~-Orl'flr ...... • IJ\\-; ,.. Hl(IOtronlc t• ·~+ Vt N.-tGn""' • If l~ "' Sff"9"1 I/Id • 2~ ~\ • ~-llC•t , .. 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'7' .,,,,..;,,·, C • l D L • h -'1 Berr+1~ ' ·~-, Elrttl~-12 11!1 •' ~"' Hotllvl "' 1 "'' ' Htstt. 1.tM 2 111--+-·-~--1 • " w-•• , to ts v.11 .... •t 33"'"-t E41lft0 109 17 1~ . • •• Newtot 5'.I ' II ~ ... ' 1 .. . Ob 1 3~"-api Ome ig ~t;IM J.1 1 2'~1111 E•••·rJiv,!• '' .... •;.: HOUSRll .IOf 1 4\1. .•• •••• ... -• fll•I,. t f141i , • W .... rllA , ._ .. loMllC 20 n 1\o"t-* ..... ........ •• Hou'HVs.n • 6H-\i ~UC -•• 11 SI •· St•Cotltllfl u ts -·" WllllOCOOll . 6\~ erMtfttoin ,. l !tlo-1'1 E•UnCo .• 11av, •.. H<Ml(ll!OU '" '3\•-4 NHBALL ·'"''" Se1ltc:trt . 13 •\\-t ~I W.n:HC .11111 I t-..=-iit I --in: "'2~v.E•1fl"ftlgllt 10 1YJ+~ HUMllA1:'l0 l •l~V. .. ~"'° . ._"I'•~ I• SKM11nll It 1 -111 ~C ·°' It~~._ SACRAMENTO (UPI ) -Lt. Gov. Ed Relnecke, chairmsn of Gov. Ronald Reagan,'s Oedgllag Energy Polley Coun- cil, shut off Jhe llgbts on the historic d o m e of the stote C.pltol to conserve power. THE ACTION Tues d.a y night, similar to President Nixon's order to reduce JJgbi;ng at the White Houoe, demonstrated wtiat Rolnecke called the s t a t e ad- m!nlstration's commitment to cut back on the uoe of eJec-· trlclty during the "energy crisis.0 • Acting in his capaC!ty as council chalrplan, Rolnecke, a iloJl"bllcan conlendtr f o r governor. summoned ne.ws- men to the-basement of the capitol and Jl"lled a swi£ch, doosing tbe dome lights. • •• _,,. '' • J•• •> ECICMlll' Cp J 1\lt• \It --· , .... . • "''""' 34 1 S«:·-MI .. '' •' WI -~ to er.:i'l"H M\ 5 ~ \'o E(Od"iL 1 lJ\lo+ .... Hl.ldBrOl""'.10 s •ll:-"ii """""•-'• 2 21~). •1;, s.c"P!titks T( :1;:....·i-i -.11"i'1".M -l 1JV.'1'\ ?\ I t:=,-;" ~L ~ 1• .~ ='°" -11 1!·~:-... ~. ~~~-~ '~ ,; = ~ ::i::~ :~.: ,l,~,"~; tl:t~~;::' j' ;;~.~-=:.:~ · f ,f~·t~, llr•-rC .~ 111"-\.'o EctoCOf'pln 2 ~ ... H'fc:':I lllQ! IS 314 +h "'V;Tlmti.:.IO .-.. 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IC 1 T ·• .. lnttrw•~ (p n l~fl-Iii t .JOit .. !l •!\It ·" SOrt i'fW 2 t -"' Wfleht ~ ltt I .-,;-manager Of the Capitol, SAi Cdn Mtrr!N • S~•l•i. ~~~,:,•=:, 1t :~~ lftvfolCPF"la 10 \tl--OLlr\CAfrUl'I Ii ~l,'t s..MC_JllAO UO U111t-l-"'1.WT(i\lr , ll 1 -i~ I t ~eldrJI 6 n"' •1 ~ iioifrmi ·-~ l \I.' ~ }nvOw,t, IM J ' , • _, ,.__ }S,IE.,,.. .. ,. I 110\'t-\4i W'tll UDCll' ~ ~ t C»Sts 50 cents an hour o klPDn s P'-'+""'F•Kon* 111~~ klv01w•1~J lo •'l't-"' ~c!~ .~.n~ ···~ l"t.•"'lj. '°ii' I'~·~ ~~l. •, ~!' i JI u mil n ate the dOme "11111 ' 2 -"' F1m11, O$t 11 tv.-v. lflYFfllf .ho 1• l ••• ~ ""'"" • · i4'+ ...... -.. , llldl I~ 1\'I , •• flttillOL'\fl Sir If .. Vo lnvAll 1.111! I 11· ,.. ~ =lit , "\~ i_, .: ... : n ~-t'P J 2~ "" Sacramentois most famous ... ~1111.~U> 11 ~.!""' r=:.0Mr1 .. 10Q • 1•" ::: loni<.i lrw::p • 1lt"-;-,~i 2 1 ~-t~ ,, 'j ,.,:.ii . • " I ..-'"4 .to .q 4 '--i!td "--WO 4.\6-. " lr'OllUOl1 Ir s t"-,.. ot 1 ll ... 'fl--r landmark whleh can be secn ~"'~ ,. ,,.._It Fe•l'ftOl!tOI• • 1'"•"' ,,..11i•11M1 ,. , -l: • , .. ;~;: E!ft!. '::..:.·~ 'r ... 1• 'I'"~ for miles at night. c..:ti:'...MT l .J':: \t F111wr .n lo •lit-"' l\C. tfldu .• J t"l-t w w. 1 16'-~! ~ ~ 'I '!,'!:: 1-1 z.t• . '*'• •i'f..'ll l . ~bf'tlMllWI• 6) SYt-.... ITEL (ttp ."".n JM-~. .... 1 • -\.lio n w ... ~_,. 1 • ...., .. , ( . - ,, ' ' . ·,. 1Tbesdaya , Closing Prices ' . ' .. • • • . . ' ·NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE .. , .. . - 1~7; ,- Year's High-Lows Appear Every Saturday ., .. . ' .. . . . ' • • ' 32 DAILY PILOT ', McKay H~ Plans Set All Athlete SS uhsidiZed, Says de Verofitt . 'l . I _,.f For UCLA. LOS ANGELES (AP) -"I know whal we're going to do agaiMt them right now," Southern Cal coach John MclCay said Tuesday or the UCLA game a \\'eek from Saturday. McKay wouldn't elaborate, however, except to say, "We're goi ng to defend the wishbone the way we 've defended it in the past. The peole who defend best get in a defense and play." 'lb< Trojans play Washington at SeaJUe Salunlay but McKay was quizzed mooUy aboul UCLA at his weekly bnmcb willt sports writers. He didn't treat the Bruins as a taboo subject. • . "! think we·d be lying ii we said the players are not looking forward became, basically in relationship to the Rose Bowl, that is the game. Only two teams can win it. NEW YORK (AP ) -Donna de Verona swam In two Olymplc.s, held 18 national and \\'Orld record! and , sht insists, never was an amateur. "There ls no such thing as an amateur In sports," Jhe prelty, blonde tel.,lslOJL commentator and sport& militant, said Joday. "Alt of us are subsidiied In one way or another. "When I was young I was sub,,idlzed by my parents. They sweated to pay for my lessons, six hours .a day . Later I was suboldlz.ed by my club and then by tbe U.S. Olympic Committee. "The word 'amateur ' ls the most abus- Bertelsen Will Play Again st SF "If we boUr win Saturday and t It en we tie , the Bn1lns go to the Rose Bowl," said McKay, pointing out that UCLA woukl be !H-t and Soulltem Cal LONG BEACH (AP) -Coach Chuck 8-1·2. '"I'hey beat Utah and we tied Knox of the U>s Angeles Rams ponders Oklahoma." added McKay. worrisome q""'tions about the San Fran- UCLA, whidl h o s t s 0reeon state Saturday, and use are S-0 in the Pac-8. cisco 49en, the·traditional National Foot· Even if USC and UCLA 1ooe 5aturday ball League for invading the Collseum -o< ooe ol them kloes -the cmlereoce here Swiday. title remains at stake Nov. 24. "Why hasn't their running game been Defending the wishbone h a s n 1 t presented USC unsolvable problems late-going?" Knox was asked Tuesday at Jy. They beat UCLA 24-7 last year and his weekly breakfast with the reporters. gave Oklahoma only one touchdown. "I can't answer that question," \\'SS McKay said he won't make the the reply. "They have the quality football coaching mistake that he said last year players and are capable on any Sunday contributed to the Bruins' touchdown. of beating an"yone." lie bad pulled out a linebacker and inserted a tackle when UCLA marched Might San Francisco, with ~ 3-6.() lo score. record and virtually out of conteDl ion, "We }lave experienced linebackers. If be moi::e rel~ed than, the liUe-cootendipg • , --...:~slra~gizing ~m IJt. unac-_J!~IDll .. 7.;11,;_ = . ··...,_~ .. __ customed positions, you're getting away "Any time San Francisco j>Ia)'fl:OS. from the one thing you have -ex-Angelet, both teams will be up for perience. · lhe game and ready to play. The records "We have to go with the theory that this year won't mean ftry math." we play our game and it'~. either good Will San Francisco be down after enough or.not good ~ugh. " ,, losing three straight? H~ s ai d Jhe TroJans ""' a lO "I do 't 1~ t le bein do defoole -three down linemen and four . n ':"""-. ~ 8f!1 g . wn linebackers -99 percent of the time. nor do I believe in Jinxes. "We'll play our defense. They'll know Knox had named the 49ers by posi!Jon rlght where \\·e are," he said. "We'll and added,-;"When yo~ ha ve play~rs just pla y the game. The challenge ls of the quality I mentioned, anything there." can happen." The coach said Rams halfback Jim Bertelsen, wOOse p u n t returns were a major factor in last Sunday's 29-7 victory over New Orleans, had suffe red· a knee sprain but apparently would be okay to meet the 49ers. * * * Big 10 Coaches Rate Buckeyes Over Michigan CffiCAGO (AP) -Big Ten !oolball coaches, who have painfully avoided making comparilons between ~ Ohio State and No. 4 Michigan, llf" finally breaking down. 'lb< edge? It goes to Ohio State. "I guess what I'm trying to say is I ba~e to give the edge to Ohio State allhough we didn't play Midilgan," Northweslem coadl Jolm Pm! said Tues- day. "Ohio State simply · ha.! n o weaknesses," said Pont. "They are so quick all over, they don't have a slow pe""'1 on the teanc Everybody talks about offensive tackle. Jotm Hicks. Sure, he 's great. But the guy on the other side;, Kurt Schumacher, isn't a bad foot· ball player either." Allhough Michigan plays at Punlue this Saturday and Ohio State takes on Iowa before the l\\'O giants meet, concern in Big Ten country is over the Nov. 24 meeting between the Budte)'tS and the Wolverines. Cal Stoll ol Minneaota, John Janllne of Wisconsin and Bob Blackmail of llliools, all of whom have faced both of the ranking conlerence powera, all leaned toward Ohio State in a series o( telephone interviews. Stoll, whose improving Gophen suf. rered a season-opening 56-7 Joss to Ohio Slate, said "Sure I'd like to play Ohio State again il it didn't count on my won-and-loss record. Ohlo State or Michigan? It'll be 41 helluva game." Six weeks later the Gophers lost to )fichlgan, 34·7. Jardine, whose Badgers lost to Ohio State 24-0 and Michigan 35-& on sue· cessive weeks, said "Off what I've seen, J'd have to give a very slight fidge to Ohio State. The difference lies bi their (Ohio State's) offensive line.'' Blackman, whose Illini gave both teams trouble, said "J've never had 1r team more ready than we were for Ohio Slate. They were simply too good." All of tbe Rams baifbacks were lauded !or outstanding jobo blocking. Alter the Saints bad taken a 7-0 lead, the Rams began rwming fullback Lawrence McQdd~on more with the ballback given lhe job of blocking the weak side linebacker. McCutcheon wound up with 115 yards gained. Koox was asked about the -49er defense which before the seuon was considered one of the best in pro football . ''That ~9ers c1er .... ts still real good. It gave Washington all ti wanted. But a couple of fumbl.es and a couple of interceptions hurt them when the offense was in. Anolher game _John Brodie thn>Ws six lntereeptions. "But their defense bas been playing fine fgc>tball." KnOs: also complimented the defensive units of the Rams, saying, "We have been playing prelty consistent defense and getting better. We sUll must improve but we started with a }'OWlg defensive team. Our front four is playing very 1 very well ." White Selected To Ca ge Board Daily Pilot sports editor Glenn y.rru1e bas been placed on Associated Press' national board of sportswriters who vote on the national rankings of major colltge basketball teams. Sixty men comprise the board and four are from California: t\\·o fTom Lm Angele!, ooe frun San Francisco and White. 'J'wo.b1Uldred-and-til1een univer- sities are in lhe major schools cate· gory, headed by million-time NCAA champion UCLA. Last season UCLA. N o r t h Carolina Si.Ile and Cal State (l.oog Beach ) compriaed lhe final IDp three in the ratings. The !ir91 tm-74 poD-e pre- .season shot -will appear in the Nov. 2S Dally Pilot. ed and hypocritical word In the ·English language.'' Miss de Verona, 26, is one of the most active figures In-the grow!ng move- ment to reform the U.S. Olympic setup. She has spent weeks going back and forth to Washington, D.C., to confer with Sentators John Tunney (0-Catlf.). and Marlow Cook (~Ky.), and Rep. Bob Mathias (R-Calif.), on national sports bills. She was on hand in New York Tuesday when Mathias, decathlon gold medallst in the 1948 and 1952 Games , presented his bill Jo amend Jhe U.S., Olympic ' Charter by giving the tndivtdual athlete greater consideration.· The MaJhias bill mlght be loosely labeled 1be "Alhtetes Bill or Rights Bill.'' ••ft ls &-&ood bill," Donna acknowledg· ed . ··bu1 it only goes part way -as de> most ol Jhese bills -in clearing the atmospheFe and spelling out the rights and privileges of the competitors. "It does not call ror a , sports foun- dation. That is what I wanL That is what most of the aUtlele! want. An agency to promote and oversee sPorts at tbe grass roots as wtll ·rui the in· ternational ·level. "We can turn on fire hydranls In bot weather, but why can't ~ebody chnnde that we are pure • n d uu... rope oft a s•reet and let. ~,I s play aren't. ·, hockey or teMis? Instead a war . ''f think ultimately team 1poka u9 bilil~ two_P.9werCul at)lle bodies be eliminated from the Olyn\plcs. ·'illy hungry for poWer, why ..can'tTWe tiive can have big world cham ploo!hps ·!i:Ot_,_ a federation whose prti:ne ~ is team event!. Then the Olympkl mn ; the wClfilre or tile aJhletes th""'f'lvto." be a true test or men and """"" MJss de Verona said s be nt little who can run, jump, throw and swlm;i!,..3 : di!feronee in the subdizatlon ol aports "OU< counlry should see to It thalll by Communist countries #l4f t be ivery penon who wants to make '.UW,~ subsldlzallon of college athleltS In the Olympie team be gtVfll • fair -·r Uniled SJales. ,, l and nobody aboukl worry about wi.na· "BoU1 get paid because the~ 11re good hls mQMY comes from. :·~: 1:i in some sport," she said. '"l'herefore, "Only then can we have a true ~ I think.. it is ridiculous to c~e the pies." • !• rt! ' Contender For Bowl ... ~ .. . . .. . J .~<\ ;~ , . ., •.:,tr ': ··, "'•' ...... . . • .. •1 ·.~ ... , .... , .. PITI'SBURGH tAP J -The 11111 Panthers, clim bing from rags to rJcbrs ,: in less than one season under Clll9dt •. Johnny Majors, bave become the leo41!ii •• contenden for the Fiesta Bowl ~~ Phoenix. 1•.::i.~;: '"That's the way lt stands right nl:nr.,~.~ John Reid . Fi .. la Bowl dlrectoi;;l,.";!' Tuesday, adding tbat rut •-ould a bid U Jbe Pantbers can defeat wlni•"· Army this Saturday. ·,1o•· Tbe Panlhcn had been consldel.'ed bf>.· the Liberty. Sun and Peach bowli. jlllllll · they lost 31·10 to Notre Dame last ~le. .. ; · Those boy,•ls still have not eatnplet41Jy tossed . Pitt a s I d e in their p1.n., M> · Majors indicaled he wouldn't wait tw·· their invilation. •,l ~ "A bird in the band is •wth i'i!)·· in J.he field , 11 the Pitt coach ~ W!iiii8KM1f·'tie"1Tdg!ifto.llldec.~ fw-a bid .to a more JX'Ol1llnenl bowl ." ... 1~ But Majon didn't want to · spenc1'•!d)< much time talking about the tib;tl':' possibility at his weekly preso "!111' · ference. · :· "I appr<eiate the fact that they (~:: 'Bowl officials) have ahown relatiV~~. good interest," said Majors, " ... _wt· Jbe main objective n0w lo ·IO win Sa!Ur·. d " ••• ay. •' \ A victory over Army would give PuC' a &-3-1 record in its first sea90ft 1nlir" Majors: and insure the Panthen tbett flrs t winning season in a decade. "This team bas come farthe-~qui · than any team rve been .•. with," said Majors, who -bad · Iowa State from a footb&ll tMm ... STOLEN BAL L TR ICK -Spencer Haywood (24) of the Seattle SuperSonics has the ball grabbed out of his '1ands by Phil Jackson of the New York U,I Ttltllll019 Knicks in -National Basketball Association ga me Tuesday night in New York. The Knicks won, 104- 102. a reputation for Jo!lng Into a - I . . ast year. : •..•• ~ '•Nobody Is pteaoed with ·Joer, ., .. , we're disappolnJed wiJlt ·lasl _.,Ilea to Notre Dame." he added, ''but ~~ bave a good football team at Pitt rlllllt: now, and we've developed -)lllltt in Pitt football ." \ ·.~ .... t· Spor ts Cl ipped Short White Benched for UCLA CORVALLIS, Ore. -Sophomore Steve Gervais will start at quarterback against eighth-ranked UCLA Saturday, says Oregon State coach Dee Andros. "Steve was consistent and be moved the ball well," Andros said, referring to Gervais' perfonnance in last week's 13-7 Pacific-8 Conference football loss to Washington State. "I've never seen his passing as pin· point as it was against WSU," Andros said. Gerv2is completed five or eight passes for 84 yards against wstt. Former Newport Harbor High and Orange Coast College star Alvin White, who started at quarterback, was s of 19 for 78 yards. UCLA, 5-0 In the Pac-8. will entertain the Beavers 1-4 in Los Angeles. • S IUpended Lie!ensf? WASHINGTON -The pilot of the plane in which Pittsburg h Pirates base~all star Roberto Clemente died had previously had his commercial license suspended, government records show. According to the Federal Aviation Administration an attempt had been made to revoke the license of Arthur Rivera, but on appeal a judge ordered a 180-day suspensloo rather than permanent loss or license. ' Records show that the suspension waS on Jan. 22, 1972. The license was returned July 21. Clemente died in a crash Dec. 31 of tru,.t ~.ar ~ he new , with Rivera and lhree otller passOhg~rs -io--.in~ ·/1 emergency aide to victims of the ea • quake in Managua, Nicaragua. e K ing Dis appointed NEW YORK -Bi!Ue Jean King said Tuesday she was di~appoinled that Margaret Court and Rosemary Casals might take) up challenges to meet Bobby Riggs on the tennis court. "So far as I'm concerned , the issue is closed," she said at a hmcheon in New York. "I beat him and that 's the end. "It's money and recognition for Margaret and Rosie and they say 'you won $100,00J so who are you to talk,' but I turned him down twice. He forced J1le into it. II e 6 ,173 Tlrkets Left LOS ANGELES -The Los Angeles Rams announced Tuesday that 6,173 tickets remained unsold for their Sunday game against the San Francisco 49ers which indicated a possi bility the game might be televised locally. If a ga1ne sells out 72 hours before kickoff , a new federal law requires the local television. The Colisewn has a 711,281 capacity. The TV decision is made Thurday afternoon with 1 p.m. the deadline for ~ sellout. e LPmon l\'a mf!d MILWAUKEE -The Milwaukee Brewers announced Tuesday that former pitching star Bob Lemon will manage their farm club in the.. e..nc J;Qast League next season. In 13 years with Cleveland, Lemon had seven seasons with 20 or more \'ictories and played in seven con.secutive all-star games, from 1948 through 1954. He man aged the Kansas City Royals from June, 1970, through 1972 and was a coach with the Royals in the past season. e Cot1nor1 in Sem is NOTTINGHAM . England -Jimmy Connors became the first man Tuesday to reach the quarterfinals of a $48,000 international tennis tournament b y defeating Britain's Gerald Battrick, 6-1 , 6-3. Advancing to the second round were Bob Kreiss, Tom Gorman, Patrick Proisy of France and Bjorn Borg of Sweden. Kreiss, who has been a proressional only six weeks, took a 6-3, 6-4 victory over South Africa's Frew f\.fcMillan, and Gorman advanced by defeating Graham Stillwell of Britain, 6-4, 6-3. Proisy edged Yugoslavia's Nikki Pilic 6-4, 7-5 and Nastase beat Jean-Ba ptiste Chanfreau of France, 6-3, 6-4. e AtUs lesGaln HONG KONG -Australia beat Korea 1-0 Tuesday night, winning the right to compete in the World Cup soccer finals at Munidl . The winning goal was kicked by Australia's Jimmy MacKay in the 25th minute of the second ball. Fiesta Bowl offlclab said Pitt ~· to the top ol tbe llst liter t.... dlltt•" possible selections, Houstan and ~:. said they would play In another pnat.,;. ......, gam<, lhe AJtro.Bluebonnlt Boor!;• if uked. ,• .. '..fT1 Tho winner. of t~ Western AJltlMIC Conference tiUe will aerve u boll" m·, the Dec. 21 Fiesta Bowl at Arboiia•· State uruversity. ;;.: Ari7.ma and Ari7.ma Stale will miitf; Nov. 24 In a game which will ~~· determine the WAC cliamplon. . ':. ... ., ··'•' Ump Boiling, :.{:~ Shocked Over'':~'{ I Retirement ., , ... ,,. FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (Al'f:_ "I'm mad , I'm shocked, I'm amaz.ed .~ veteran umpire Frank Umont said ~ he learned h< had reUred from :tl!li> American League. , ., .. \•: "They call it retire, but it ~. like tire to me, '1 Umont, 55, said '1'tx9o!; day. 40Jt's like ~oing to sleep at ~~t and waking up m the morning to . fl116-! you're gone, baby." • ·.:°' Joe Cronin, chairman of the lt'.lll'Del. aM0W1ced Monday that Umont -. among lour veteran nmplres wto :W · retired under the Umpires' Retlmnent Plan. .. Ile said ~ nmpirea had been ~ lo the league and options taken · ild two others. ~ "They say I ftUred.lJ haven't retitM: Jaekson's Goals: .300 Average, 50 DBs Tloey dkln't call me and uk . .;o··-{t I wanted Jo mire," said Umont; wbo served 20 years. '1TheY retire mi'"tir fire me or what.ever you want to' c'll'"' it. No notlee. nothing. I just 8'I' I(: fnrm let~r for 20 years. Tha\'1 unfii.' ing." • "l/.r~1 OAKLAND (AP ) -Reggie Jacl<Jon. winner of the 1'13 American League Most Valuable Player aw1nl , now Is iumlng his tboughJ.s to his baseball future. "There •fl! a lot of things 1 can do that I ha..,,•t done yet. Until I do them. I'm lhort-chang!ng m)'ltlf, the !ana and our team owner:· the sluqlng. 21-yoar .. kl Oakland A•s oulfiekler said Tuesday alter beJng chosen unanimously u the MVP. "I've never baited .300 or hit lO home run.s ln a 1eason. I haven't won two MVP awanla or p~ on ~ world championlhlp teams. ' The -ball Writers Aaodatlon of ilrnerial. with ,,... write,. voling In each American League city, honored Jaebon for a ,....,. In whlclt h< batted .113, bit 32 homers and drove In 117 nms. Earlier, he had been named lhe Most Valuable Player In the World Serles, afler batting .SJO and drivinf in six run8, u the A's beat the New York Meis for a second stralgbt world cham- pionship. • 'lb< Natlona( League MVP will be named next Wedneaday. "f'd bo feeling a lltUe hollow over thiJ awanl II we hadn•t wnn the lllle:· said Jaeboo. He mbsed the Jm Work! Series becau.w al an Injury. BalUmore Or1oles p I t c b e r Jim Palmer, the Cy YO<>llg Award winner. ' was second to Jackson in the MVP 't'Oting, with 172 points to Jackson's perfect 336 score. Kansas City ouUielder Amos Otis was third . Minnesota second baseman Rod carew, Detroit reliever John Hiller and A'• third baseman Sal Bando tied !or fourth. Jacltaon, whose 1973 salary was about $75.000, hinted he would be asking A ·s owner Charles O. Finley for about Oouble that ngure next season. "I expect to sign a one-year contract. f mighl algn a three-year contract, but It would have to apprOlich a half· million dollan," he said. He added, "I'm not going to overpri~ myself," and said he expected Finley "to make a fair offer." ... praised Dick Williams, who as A's ~anager alter the World aying, "He helped me as a man and a ballplayer, and helped make me a winner." ••I'd love to see him come back Jo the club,'' Jackson added , "but I don't think he will." Whoever manages the A 'a next year will have, In Jackson , a player aiming "to fulfill my lllents, play up to the peak of my ability." Jackson, who struuled through some rough times early In lriS major league career, said Tuesday. "I'm al peace with myself." • REGGIE JACKSON Umoot, of Fort Lauderdale, said• Cronin apparently decided to •iiiJ few umpire! with him when he'• Jan. I by Lee MaCPahll aa ' • ' chatnnan. •. ' 1 ;1 "That'• another odd tblnc." ~ said. "Crunin waa out wtll> me R here last spring and told me to • foooe. He said I had anolller illM four yun left. · ~ 'Tm as eapable u 10111e of. the ·111)'1 they've got up l)iere now." ' ~ Umont sakl he ml!lht file a COll\Plainl wilh the Notional Umpires Asaodatloii which meeiJ In Chlc110 later tbla moot){( He said there w!W he "some mcri a<llectJve, -and ldvorl>o, • ~ even a few descripUve nouns" bl6lw he's finlshed. '11u·r .. .. ¥agles' Pride I Je ·~rid Stars ·.it Stake .,. I!.,.' ---Valley_wtll--1>e u rovonfbelmlac favorite to delNI Eatoncla'1 E a g I e s Tllllnday nilbt In Its linal Il'Yllle Leaaue football siune In 1971. IOlh <Ol<het 1110 one word In deocrlblng lhi lllullicn - pride. 111 think )'OU have to respect each tum for mt It can dot._ !or w!>al II bu-·" ~ Ana V~y ce1ch Dick HID-. "You have to prepare on the pride of the youngster. 'Ille pride or a champion bu to be In wtnntns and you bove to stay wttb tl!at particular etUtude as m u c h a1 ~)rtblng." 'Ille Falconi are undefeated tn el&ht gamea, are lop-ranked tn Oranse County and are se- ceod .tn the CIF to St. Paul. lliW>d1 wan Ill !!rat game ot,-dle ...... Friday night aPli!lll MllllOlla and the odds -....,. lmnumowllable !°" coech Jim Hemsley'I Eqlea lo keep from being n111te4 by the powerful Fllea. . "l lll!nk the pme will be kind al IUD," Hemsley says. "We have to ee• .a goal to \ BILL CRUMLEY S.ddlobock ~ Of!onM BRENT Pl!RTRIDGE Golden Wost -Offen1e see· whit n can do against ,.._.,.. them and I'm really looking lot'll1rd to It penonally. "I'm iure the klda are going t~ live If 1 lull llhot. They · hive ~ ~ to ploy a good game inil It lhould be In- ~·" WU 11Y1 Eatanci• bu oome JIMWAHD S.ddlobock -Defon1e MIKE PURCELL Golden Wost -Dofon1e • ·Defense Hurting MS*C WALmJT-If close counted In football, Mt. ·San Antonio College would be M today Instead cl M . 0 FtustraUon ls all we've gotten · out of tboee losaes," says Mounties coach Mal Eaton, whose club is o-4 in South Coast Coriference play after wlmling their first four games and earning a No. 2 rank'lng In thi polb. Ml SAC will try lo salvage a wtnnlng seiJoo Saturday -. Wedntsdif, NO'lembtr 14, 1973 DAICY PILOT 33 . • Freshman QB Leads Cuh·o-- LOS ANGELES -· Coach Al Baldock ta 1 very cautious man despite the fact hiJ Loa Ahgeles City College CUils are in the driver'• seat in the Southern Ca 1 l f orn la Con- ference football • t a n di n g s going into-the final gome · Saturday night wllh Golden West College, here. _ "We were quite lucky to beat Rio Hondo last week," he says. 40 Ally time you beat a iteam Eke that you have · to !J<i lucky. They are a good football team and hadn't lost a conference game in about three years.'' LACC must win against Golden West to gain an outright championship and a spot in the atate Junior college playoffs a week hence. A Golden West victory coupled with a win by Rio Hondo would gtVe I h e Roadrunners the circuit cham- pionship. The o n I y com- bination to put Golden West in lhe playol!a would be a GWC victory and a Rio Hondo (deren.slve tackle) ta a n I defeat by Cypress Saturday outstanding alh1ete." ~ night. What about the CUbs? How Cloes Baldock assess •1we have a freshman Golden West? · quarterback. Vinoe Evans. "It ta one of the best-coach-He's from North Carollno and ed teams in the state and he's done well for U1 aince they execute very well. We he took ovtr," Baldock ad~ can't concentrate on their l'U& mlts. ning or passing game because The CUbs utilize • pair of they-do ooth-equally well. running backs at the Im· "Defenilvely, they seem to portant tailback po s It lo n • have ex c e 11 e n t persoMel. Ralph CUmmings Is a Their kids are very active sophomore and R I c h a r d and quick and Jim Potter Roberson a freshman. .- Consist,ency Newport's Goal In Sunset Finale With HB Rustlers No. 2 Seed , ... night wben. it battles Orange 'lblngs are going so well cluded 289 net yards on the Lent's concern with Hun. In Playoffs ·:; Coast College 11 OCC.. 11 Newport Harbor !Ugh lhese ground. tington Beach boils down to "We have to play de6!nse Hedrick's punts are averag· a res pect ror the Oilerl'I' Golden West College, the ,. again ll we want to win," -daya football coach D 0 n ing 42 yards and the offensive physical strenglh and hard-hit· No. 2 seeded teem, will fare ... says Eaton, trying to pinpoint I.mi's major worry b simply line play of Jeff Kravitz Is 1;na style. h ,__ •-I ... _ "''b the t\ijssion Conference winner w y the club -t 1~ our w..o Sailors ouWt fW1ctioning fully realized when films are "Their only disadvantage is conference pmes by a total at the same pace. scrutlnlz.ed. lack of depth," says Lent. in the first round of the of 17 points. 01. 1 •• · I 1'He didn't Just trap "But they never -give up and Southern Califomla JC water '.:_: "We've 1'-••ed 21 points n,u, eam "" preparmg or ---Jts final 5 t Le Western," says Lent, "he we know they'll be higher than polo playoffs Tue8day at Mt. •'.< In our last three games and unse ague game killed tbem." a kite for us." Sa n1 Coll atW 1011. A tum that oceres Friday night at Huntington n Anto o ege. three touchdowns a game Beach and indications are that • The game is set for 11 :45 ;:J abould win every one." Leot'a Bluejackets will ente!' T • p • G a.m. Mt. SAC ii No. 2 tn scerlng the fracas tn their best ust1n ass1ng ame Meanwhile, OrlllP Coast , In the conf.....,. but No. I phyalcal condition smce the will lace the Mbalon Con. in allowing pdinta. The Moun· seasoo began. . , , ference No. 1 team Frt<lay ties have been hurt by running There are .no changes m T h T t f D"ah} at noon at Mt. SAC tn a =· which 1s .orange ~ ~;,,.,.=ct1ro~e1: oug es or I OS ~~·~r~!:"';.;\]"a= But 1 ~C h 1 hip pointer and quarterback to the SoCal playofls Tueoday, M~. as ts Steve Bukich got the rest be MissiooViejoHlgh'adefense one more than the other," facing Mt. SACina1:15Wt. ·~ we;.:n;:, ho bas bee needed to recover from a will get one of its toughest says Murio. in his second year Grossmont and Chaffey met hobbled ~i;:'~.~ rib aild the~ Charley bone suffered in the testa ol the football season at .. the ,Tustin helm. today at Golden Well lo oettie in . . U>ara game. . We ve had a good season the No. 1 and No. 2 pogiUona '. • l~g juries, still lea.di the "We juat want to maintain Friday night when it hoots and we'd like to end it with in the Ml""'n clrcult. circuit In rushing with 635 comlsteney in...M attack .and Tustin In the Cr e .st v le w a victory .. But Misfjon. Viejo In another quallfying nw.tch ~= ;1i!rt: F~:.~~ keep our errors down," says League finale for l»tb teams. poses a still <:iJ&Uenge to us . Friday at Mt. SAC, Ventura • percent th" k L<nt. Victory ·at Huntington Tustin's Tillers are led by Right now It ta the best team meets CYj>l"ess. The loser cl " wee • Beam will assure the Sailors strong-armed quarteri>ack Jim In the league. ihe OCC game and the Ven-· .. , ---------•Jn "l'OJao.'."l'bey ' -ni've~ct11lltlfii00d ~ and tl>!Y nm wtlh And teVeral of their are Vf!r'f capable." t<!::~cj';le~i:i ~= of at least a tie f9r the leaf.11< 'lf)eBord, a 171).pounder, who '"Mbalon Viejo b very · tura-cypress l9Ja" would °""' ·: • Tjlll ~:'ifie' ~~U--d\ampionalrip:ud-imlr'J 1n1o=a!Pead~ !,lliO-~:.and II bas l!!!'!yun,_"""'1,...wlljJ -~-~ ..Jao-:;. -· the :t . In .: -the CIF 4-A playoffs ·a -week . yards passing, throwing u~ 1ililg.C:~ks~ They~~ve-ap-odvancinir-to...T u.e.s.d 1.7...'.a_o_ __ op ~Ivers belloe. . touchdowns. . ~tstanding d~fe!'31ve .}me and playoffs. -~~~t In Gi~:~ :' ·Every· teem bu an Achilles He's sparked ceach John the defense IS helpec) aloog Uing Beach City College ta 1111 .... lull well the llA ahead cl bis Elgtes in · ~ · yre. s heel somewhere, but it's Mwio's team to a 5-2--1 record, by the fact that the offense seeded No. 1 ln the Dlayo{fs. · · ~e ~wm: lh!s year. becoming increasingly harder quite an improvement from doesn't give·the ball up. H«• •r•,,,. SoCat petr1""1 Ilia 1:30 dllh 11 Santa Ana BOlif'l1landay eveolng. s:=g ,,~.ti ~ n to find it at Newport. The the 1-8 mark of a year ago. "We're just trying to figure n ~~ -ooJ.n-::W, vt. "''"'°". ··1 ~ t em, ~ ~-secondary was accused of DeBord, a senior, had 1,265 out how we can cope with N;· 'p.m. _ '"'lltrloft vt. cvprn1 "!CW bigelt CGDOel1l. of ·c:OGile, ts Ibo..-nmntnr . JOHN. DIXON-,_ JON MARG.HIDRLATTI cl ~ White. He bu blaz-Or1ngo Coast -Off-Or1ngo CO.st :....: o,i.- guaerdge ~~ Shr abet e .being somewhat vulnerable yards last year and seven aJI their power .. 'Ibey'll prob-or ven1111'1 • .~~ ew ty, recenUy,butbacksMarkDuf:. TDs. ablyjmt.nmrightoverus. c!:,s;"'~.'iior.""Mo.~"'·~ hick this week and hopefully fy, Erik !acber and Gavin MurlO illso feels he bis the "'lbelr-·fullhack · ( Guy ,,. -u..o -~ "' ,. lnJ opood and ta 111 outstaod· --=---------....::. ___ ........: __ lnl ·- lhalitttl11 shore up the defense Hedrick have . accounted for three top receivers in the Reeves) Is defmite1y a great .,.A~(:!r. 11ract1t oame. 8 e. a do1en lnterce"""-• I••"' .. tn Jim Goldstone Lon ball player and their tailback ' P·"'· -wi,,,_. irM:Ut ..,.,. '"Second, we ban to atop un--.. .. e Coast bas a -t .,_..... -o-' 7:15 -L_,-. llracMf fMll. '"':~ ..... -""""'· ha ~:~-And the offense bas been .Bruley and Jeff OeWeese -(Ken Robbins) has great a:JO -wrnnen t1rackn "'""" Gory Templetoa In the oecen· cliry -Ibey pw. I'm mare ecacemed about npiplekln -lh thin 00 Soplwmore Backs Start for Trif,ons nummg .............. , ve uie --=.1--..11 .. ..._... by all . __, and ood M •1· '" best •-~-erall In th ~ 1:U _.,...... IOme. seniors. ~ g moves. an , ii.m. -s.m111n11 ....,.. ~ ov e N~ responded with a G-••AD. three are very good for man they ~ very 1:1• -Snn111n.1 "!""'- league and 15 IOOD U ,yw 13 rout of Western which fn,. -"•en and we don't use TV'1Werful" aay.s 11.A.-.i:-'·31 -."""" ~ .-.. tighten Up to _It.op the rush, ·~ rv•• I DlW.No t p.m, -Q1mpl'"""' flfM. Ille tons bomb. 'ftieJ iet Im ball lo him freely on abort Yfl"!ore to 11'out Iii: yords , Under the .......... 'l1len be Is very da(ervul ruiinlng wtlh the W." '!lliOIJw lhlnl Ibo! cencems Hemsley ta the middle ol the linl' nllllling o1 f u 11 b a c k 1' J \·bu r HuUp. 0 He was ~ up the middle 1p1mt Edllon," H em 1 I e y 11;.. .. "He lladn't nm that much In other games." ftjle bu nm !or oru 1,500 y_. db aeuon'and ls one . o(.-lllo lop bocb In the CIF'. He's a junior who may never Pla)I cellq~ football. He's ai.o .q. fl!llllandlnc bueball pro-1ped. . Eltancla'• running game WU oporU<f by Roy Butteling tut -11 tallbock. Quarterblc:t Steve M«lon, San ClemeQte High's Tritons close out the 1973 football campaign Thursday D i g h t against the invading_ Universi· ty Trojans. And tt may be a preview ol ceminl attractions at San Clemente aa the Tritons will field a pair of sophomore run- ning backs in the attsck That situation bu risen with the loss of Steve Obon, who tiad ta.ken Nick Vleisides' place in the San Clemeote backfield • Vleisldes, who scered six touchdowns earlier and led the Tri tons defenae at llnebacker, is lost for the game to a knee JnJury. Trilons to a pair of wins. Now Olson is sidelined with bruised ribs and ti'• 80pbo- more Brien Wood's tum to lead the nmning attack. Wood and sophomore fullback Tom Arona have combined for 99 yards net to date. C.O.ch Allie Seba!! ta non- cemmiltal about his lelm's plans !or University, aimply stating, "We'll tn' to take whatever they'll g{'ve us." If University concentrates too much on the San Clemente running game he'll try IQ spring Joe Janton and Lance Swigart as targets f o r quarterback Dan Dodd. they p8ss well. "I ~ one thing. U our Clerense lm't any better lhlll it baa been the last four gameo, Orange QJut will run up and do1m the field on us. "We need a win badly at this point ,,.., team ta !rustrated and I I'm upeet at the way we've been beetlng ourselves. I think we have the potential lo heat Orange Coast but then I've felt we should have won every game." Palomar Defense Lagging sllll -wllh I leg In- jury, wtn 111r1 orllnlt the F'akOns •. Olson took over and scored three touchdowns a g a i n s t Dana Hilb and sparUd the Also missing from the starting lineup ta middle guard and · ofiensive guard nm SAN MARCOS -The story Murphy, .._.iedly Ill o1 Palomar College's football Vikings Seek to Halt Westminster's Jinx San Clemente will try to sea900 Is· fairly well summed stop the new·lllund University up by the fact that the Comets orrense wtlh Its Arkanau slant · hive scored IS potnll in their defense, but Schaff U1I his last two games, but won only system bu been clamored oae ol those centesta. with the loss of Vlel&ldel at Oooslstency clearly Isn't the linebacker. Comets' loog suit u coach "This defenae ta pred!Clted Maclt Wiebe is quick to point .. ·"Whal Mlrtnl Hl&b's lootball lialn ~ like to do ta upset Wt1tmlllller this week and --oil the 1173 SCllOn .. the;,..,.· In which It atooed for.many pre viou s em- blrfUlrlHrlb. a lot better if we can say we beat them both," says Marina ceach Mike Henigan. out . around llnebackers making "We've played ..,,,,. good about 35 percent o! the tackles games and bad Marina took care of ooe-haU of the domination duo earlier this season when it defeated Anaheim for the first ·ume in 10 seuons. Westminster olrudy bll 10 11UCCeS8lve wins over Martha going I n I o Frlclay's game between the and the loss of Vlelsldes really (a H-21 tosii ~;:,") hurts," says the SC boss. last week was an all-time low, however,'" Wieve says. 0 We 0 We Md never 'beaten ~ 0 r w .. bnllllter -lhb -and JI oitlald make our -seem Laguna Gals Seek Title , • two al Westminster: i.aiUllJl Beach High girls c.~. AV Tops lleGlpn 1ee11 his team bll volleyblll team may be sotng .'·1~ ... ~ 1 obot at ending lhe 'Llona' 1fler lhe CIF championship, alreU, bul odmits it'•. a tall Saturday at Mariha !Ugh ~ ~. "·d V tin" g order. It can get by quarterfinal and JtJ'I 0 '"Like they do every year, semlflnal matches. ., _ WesjJnlni\er has Improved aa J,a1una Bea<;h will play San· :s.nta Ana Valley, Servile the selllOD went oo, and right ta 1.fonlca at 4 j>.m. -and II q~~wport llubor tonttnue now I think they're p~ylng iuccesaful the Artilts team t~ dominate the o f fl c I 1 I as well as any team in the wm qualiry !or a semifinab o.:l.'iile County prep football league," saya Hen I g an. match at &. r111b\p o11er er,t11 ,,.a of ''lbey're r,ist a real oWtond-The cham~p came is dPn-·~ ill( team. • slated for a. ;Jaq)a Ana v~, Villi And Henlgon 1e~ a . Uttle Tickets are priced 11 $1 for II~ IDd oenlarleao El Toro ••pl -lhe dliculilon tum1 • adults and' 50 cestll for cbiJ. "8!11 ·i/ie Giily _..., leamJ to Westminster nmnillC back dreo ...ser u. wltB one ,_ lift. Tcny ~o. Other l e a m '' ceotending 11@ANOll OOIJNTY 'IOP 11 "In a normal chlmplcnblp Salurday 1 re Bellflower, 1'ii!.·!loliMI ·~ 1'111 • ...,.. at w-. A .. Beverly Hll!J, '·s11bop -.. ,..;.m. 'Ana Vollet (f.O) 50 ' cemondo would be ~ CIJ: Montgomery, Burbonk, Mira ~ Servile ($.1-1) O player of lhe yeor," H<nlgon Costa and Santa Fe. 3 Newport Horlior (t·l) 40 oaya. "He's pheoomenal. I lift Laguna Beach Cot lo the i , Anaheim 6-1-1) 19 him becalllO be'• no! just a ·quarters by belting Pomona 1: VIiia Park (f.O) st &ood runner and Pa SI Calhollc, IM, l!-0 and Can- ,._ ~ (W) 33 receiver, ~ blocks woll and yon1 15:-1, IM· al Weelrnlnster 7,. F1JuDta1tt V1llq (t-i) SI be e111 also pw. '· .. -' !Ugn Silturday. • li>c!ldllon ('"1) "14 "No one bu 1topp;ll· him Corona de! Mar was a, . .,Loo A!Qlltol (f.I) U escept ~elm aDll t!>n ellmlnaled In the secend round * ·PadllCI (W) 5 ..... 9CllTle olher fldori fn. by Santa Fe. IM, !~IS, IM, 41' 1 -_.. (7'1), El volved wbeD lbel did. Wo Jllll alla' doleolinC llt1falr, ~I, Toro (7.0). hope to slow him down." IH. • thought we'd be a pretty good team lhb aeason, but an In- jury to our quarterboclc hurt us early in the season. A few other things hive hurt us aince then . u " Palomar will be the closing oppooml for Saddle back Colleae's Ga1'Cbos Saturday night at Mlslloo Viejo Hlgh, and once oratn Saddlebaclt must contend with a team with a poteotially ezploslve offense. Two weeks ago Palomar ran •,:,;;;f~irii.iiti Up 61 points against San I' Bernardino, and it has only been held to lea lhlll three touchdowns twtce in Mbslon Conference play while amass- ing a 4-3 record. Ron Coppe!s, I 6-1, :e, pound quarterback 11 the key man In the Cornell ollmee. He's a Sood !"llllllfr from the option and accurate passer when given the opporlunlty. Injured early in the season, Coppess Js at full strength now, and Palomar Is also get· ting good running fr om halfbacks Derek Scalletl and freshman West Hooey who \ have taken over in .the last lour games. Palomar bis relied on Its Mhlng pme to roll up • points in ill last six game! • • .. I • . '• , ' ' .. ' . • ,• • •l .. . .• . ' . ' . ' . ~- Sea Kings Defense Big Key II •ef e11sive Playei•s of the Week Rematch Worries El Toro Face Jttustangs , . Barons Se~~if.t Dave Holland's Corona del Mar football team has just finished running the gauntlet of the top four teams In the Irvine Ltague. I t ' s un- derstandable if the Sea Kings are now feeling fortunate to have survived. The ~ Kings !fl3rched through those four opponent ... Los Alamitos, Santa Ana Valley, Edison and Fountain Valley like Georgia marched through Sherman. All !our games were losses. and the scoring totals amounted to a 93-21 deficit. Whether they can regroup for one last success against ifagnolia when the teams col- lide Thursday night a t Western High is the big ques- tion facing Corona del Mar this week. "I think U~re's a good chance v.·e can bounce back this week." says Holland. "We're sti ll among the best defensive teams in the league as far as scoring is concerned, and v.-e 'll have that as an in· ccnUve." And Holland feels the Sea Kings will need to play their best defensively to hold down Afagoolia's returning a I I - league running back Monty Bullerdick. "Probably the two best backs jn the league are r.fyron White (San ta Ana Valley) and Bullerdick," says Ho 11 and. "Bullerdick hasn't had the chance to show the statistics he did last year, but he's still one of the best. He'll be playing for a ~e team next year." "He bits the hole well, runs hard and Is ju$t a, tough man _ jq._bdJI~ down.'!_ ' "1be1r ~U'arler!SaCks--:-brry ~ -'Rinde! 8i'iOTOiir Tello -arr! also intty good, they've been able to move the ball against everybody." Concerning his own team, HollaOcl says it'll have tO rely on a running game again thi s week. "We just hoJ>e to go with what we have been doing," says Holland. "Since we lost Gary Guisness, we haven't been able to pass very often. Holland's team suffered no further injuries last week against Fountain Valley, and will go with the same lineup. Jon Terry will be a t quarterback with Brent Ogden and Mike Ferraro in the run- ning back spots. * * Winless MIKE FROST Corona del Mar JOEL PECK Edison HANK MILLER Laguna Beach MARK MERWIN Mis.sion Viejo PAUL FARRIS Costa Mesa JIM PARSONS Estancia ANDRE LOPEZ Marina TIM BROWN Newport Harbor ANDY AVASANI Dant Hills BOB PATISON FoUntain Valley TOM LYLE Mater Dei JIM CORYER University BRAD SKIE El Toro DAVID McBETH Huntington S.1ch . P1·ide Key ' ' For Griffs In Finale Mac Moore ls worried. You wouldn't think a coach of iin unbeaten team, playing 1 club it has already whipped , 3U, and just one win away from a CIF football playoff berth, would have much to be concerned aboul. There are Ol)IY ~bout 300 coaches in the CIF Southern Section who would like to, trade places with him. _ But Moore, whose El Toro High leam batlles-tanyon Thursday night at El Modena High, is concerned. "Canyon turned the ball over the first three times it had it and was behind 2G-O before it got going flH! last time we played," says Moore. 11Besides, the team we play this week isn't the same one we played last time." El Toro, in its first year of existence. has displayed. a strong running game and a tough defense. one of its tOp runners, Clyde Birchard, will not see much action however, as he has suf- fered a mild concussk>n. His spat will be taken by Kevin Urquhart on offense and Martin Moylan on defense. "This is certainly no time for us to ease up," says Moore. "You know a win by Canyon in this game would just make their sea!On. Their defense is vastly improved and they have a good running attack. "I'm sure their k i d s fee l bad about the loss and want to make up for it. I hope none of our players thinks they'll be the same team we Best-ever RecQITd • -Fountain Valley bas never bad a 7-a season record In· football but a victory over Costa Mesa Friday night would give coach B r u c e Pickford's Batons tbeit. best- ever mark at ihat figure. Pickford also knows that Costa Mesa can post Its best· ever mark of $-f with a vic- tor)' aiiil Is ®Qoemed about the -flcl this is a Mustangs home game. "They ate lying there tn the weeds waiting for us and they have three straight Vic- tories under their b e I t , ' ' Pickford says. "Furthermore, they are bringing in a hclioopter at halftime and they are honor- ing the play~rs· dads. They want this one badly." Pickford Isn't plaMing any changes in his starting lineup Friday night on the Newport Harbor JUgh field . "We've moved the ball well this year and I don't feel we have to cbanie anything for this game." - The coach is concerned abou t the pas,, theft ability of Rod Flggalt. Flggatl Is the Mustangs leading interception specialist and has had as many as three in one g&mt. "l can't believe be hai U..t many intercepUom," Pidd'ord says. ''We like to thro.w and he could be a proble11l for US, II ._it What doe> Fwntaln. Valley have to do to conlllln the Mustangs! : , ~ "We have to contaln:·Dennls Delany'• nmoing #n<I Uie posslng ot Stevo ~ Delany Is a slrong ,-rmnJng back with a lot QI poWu and strength, •: 1 "Sharp does a goo4 job throwing and In illeir ~t few games, he has been 'i\ieh a threat U..t lhe draw play lw worked-real well fOf ·them with Dirk Whitaker go~g UJ> the middle for oonsi~rable yardage." ,'.'~ The Fountain Valley ~toach also p-aised the play of ends Figgatt and Bill Valent~. What about the def~? "They have a lot of strength up front and thot *.Jll' lo be their whOie game plAA. "eoota Mesa ls tht': most experienced team ·iii the league with 25 lei!~· Basically they tiji t o overpower you with lb.al front five on defense." •' Few Berths Available In CIF _4-A Playoffs ,, beat 32-6 because they won 't.'' If thls weekend's CIF 4-A battles Notre Dame (3-1) Fri- Canyoo, 2:5 this season, Jost football games go according day night. A win by'.·Notre • to Arlington l.f.O, the same to form, there will be three 0 wotild result fn co-'~-"'-'"··-=gh' ~'" team~Et 'loro,:rlppesl ~ILl!!:large ~ f~. re~-. """ -_ • ~-....., -•_ "-Jasl-.ek.--_ -· _ tlillve flililns_ Ari Upset l chainps--and..Lat•~.)t.lf~- ' -Yms ltad-.--grear,start m the- -Moore Is not-.wayed-b)'-thal-the-4lel.. ReyJ.ellillL CJ!\!!~ another pla)~ff berth. •. 1973 football campaign -run-score. shav(> that number by one. ----,, ning past six foe s before the . "Canyon does a ~~stunt• That's ~ way things stand IRVINE: Santa Ana.b.Valley axe felt at the hands of Santa 1~~ ~ d~ense, ~ says, with just one game remain\ng (&-0) haa won the title and An V II d Costa M " at s ways given us before the CIF playoff com-with a three-way tie fbr sec-a a ey an esa. trouble. We have to look at mittee meets Sunday morning ond among Foar1'1in Valley, Now coach Frank Doretti Ca nyon like a team we've to fill 16 4-A slots. Los Alamitos and ,Jd,ison, ldys he'd just like to sec his never played because they Only three leagues have ho~ for a second place berth Griffihs close out the Cam-certainly ~re-a Jot . different already crowned champs while are remote at best. paign on a winning note. They'll get that chance Fri- day night at Western High when Los Alamitos and Edison close out the season. ''This is our Homccom- ing," says Doretti, "and it's only the third home game we've had this year. We're working on the pr ide angle for this one -we'd like to go out on a winning note." now than 1n the third game of the year when we beat in two circuits, including the Sunset, it appears co-champs are inevitable. thent 1' * * * New Setup ForCanvon ~ Rematch Here is a brief summary of h o w each league otands going Into the final weekend : ANGELUS: St. Paul 14--0) plays Bishop Amat (3-1) while Servile (Z..1-1) meets Mater Del. U form holds and St . Paul and Servite win, Servite (i·l·l) would be a strong C"On- tender for a second place berth. MOORE : MilllkBn ( 4 • 0 ) holds a game lead over Compton (J-1) as both play other foes. Comptm ' (!·I ) ls a prime candidate fo r a sec-- ood p 1 ace berth despite playing w e i k e r pre-league teams like Centennial,, Dom- inguez, Los Angel,. 811<1 San Bemanllno. Loo Alamitoo still had a good shot· at the playoffs prior to Who has the advantage h t t -•'ch h BAY: Santa ?w1onica and last y,·eek but Costa Mesa 1-usl w en wo eams w1u ave SIERRA: J th HI~ (6-0l is in command but Los Altos (~l in league, 7-1 overall) is another solid second place team. I ed --~ oth be! North Torrance ·are tied at about sealed the coffin with Pay ic:oui er once ore SUNSET: Newport Harbor balUe again? !>L Both play weaker op. (5-I) and Antbeim (~I) need a 22-13 upset win . "We do," says Canyon High ponents and an upset to either Id another pl fr J·ust one n'Kft win to gain "We just made a whole football coach Oiarles Wood v.·ou open ayo M~olia Not Do~n - -What once looked to be a promising football season at Magnolia High has now turned sour With six straight losses. Coach Jim Howell is un- derstandably philosophical about it as his team prtpares to cl~e out Thursday night against Qirona del Mar at Artists' Quick Backs Feared by Dana Hills bl.u~dle ar mistakes," says of his rematch with EI Toro spot If both win, both go to lhe playoffs. DorettL "I was afraid of a Thursday night at El Modena the playoffs. WIDTMONr: Santa ~ ($4. mental letdown. I knew-Costa Higti. CHANNEL: Buena (.4-0) Js IJ can do no worse th9.n Lie Mesa was \'ery sowid and "'We have everything to · pl v.ith a One bu1gE over Pioneer tough." gain and nothing to lose. 1 in command with second ace As for FAison Friday night don't think they'll change their San fl.tarcos {3-1) needing an :~-~C:. the two ti~ <!'-0 Doretti says he e~ts his . rn_ethod o( play very much upset to advance . San Marcos ~r--already lost to Buena Thus the prime contenders Ylestem High. "lt has been a tough season of close Josses, and you can only take so much adversity before you start getting down," says Howell. "1t has been a culmination of a JEFF JOHNSON Dana Hills football coach " Tony Leon is a little bit leery of Laguna Beach High, Friday night 's season-ending foe. number of things, and last Westminster week was the crowning blow."---------- "We fear their offensive line and those quick backs. Nobody has physically beaten them this season," says Leon of the 1·7 Artists. "They've just beaten themselves. I'm afraid they'll put it toe:ether against Magnolia, pre-season pick to fight for the top division in the Irvine League. is w1n1ess in six loop contests now after falling to prevlously winless Estancia last \\'eek. Corona del Mar is coming off a stun· ning defeat also. however, and Howell doesn't think his team is ovcrmatched by any mean s. "It looks like we ought to be about equall y-matclled." says Howell. "We're prac- ticing well this week. and it's just a matter of which team can bounce back. " Whichiver team bounces back. it figures to do it w'ith its running game, since that's the key to either attack . This Week's Grid Odds Ram1 over Stn Fr.nc:IKo by 9",i R1l<1•~ ov« Cf11Velalld by 3\lt L!0111 over Chlcjgo by 4'17 S.ln11 CNer Stll ~ by 4\lt Slttltrs over Oeotlvtr bY I Al~• over MJtmt (Fla.) by lO ArirOll CNef AK-Force b'y 6 H1rv1rd over lllM'll by :Mi COIOldo OYt r Oll:lttiotn. s.f•I• by I~ O•rlmoulh OYtrr Cornell bY 6 Cit0fgl1 over Aut>urn ltV I Mls'°'-'l'i over low• s11i. bV I Olclaltonwo ~ ... KfnMI by 12..., Mlchlg•n °""° Pvrdllt" by 1' ArktnY) _,. SMU by • Stanford -~ by M US, <;Their personnel is as good as any other team ln the league, so J think it's really up to the team that makes the least number of mistakes. And both teams are mistake- prone," says Leon. '.1Laguna Is st rongei' physically than we a r e because If.he teams that have literally lx>mbed us have not beaten Laguna badly. "It could be a high-scoring game. The teams that we play have seemed to solve their Cross Coup.try off _ _,1 . roe to try to take advantage since they were able to handle · tor either two or three open ens1ve .,.~ erp.s agamst us. of the Griffins secondary, us easily the first time." lt's pretty 4.ough to shut us "I assume they'll try to ex-El Torn ll.1Xl the first match, CITRUS BELT: Redlands (6-.spots, de~ upon the Def ouL We will score, that I ploit our secondary. We use 32-6. and has rolled to a 7-0 0) will represent this league. Rey League wdown, are know." a zone defense and we don't r~, which should give the Servlte (6-l·l), Campton (7·1) Leo . ho f 1 hi Dot hin .. really think we'll try to con-first·year Chargers an at-Iarge"r;;D~EL~~R;E~Y~: ;C<espi~;;-~(4;;.0~)~an~d~Lo~s;;t;Al;tos;;;;;(;7-;;I;)_;;;;;;;;~ WE can ~t ~mi~ thestun!ver: cen~ate on any of the Edison ber,th 1!' tbe CIF 1-A playoffs. lj th t ha I ed th . receivers We just don't feel We ve made almost 100 S OUR CAR IDLE a ve P agu em 1n • perc nt ch " Wood START HARD? t 1 · we can concentrate too much e anges, says r~ U: ~f'-1 d on Joe Trozell because they of his Comanche3 which have GIVE POOR MILEAGE? CAN HELP II ~ l wBe p ay(e 3vle2ryl have some other fine receivers won two of their last four THE CARBURDOR SHOP we agams . rea a . to go along with him. games. "We started t h e loss), but again we had too "And if Bill Rutherford Is season with a lot of people 1tc1 """'" ac..vD .. COSTA MDA 6CMIN° many turoovers. The defense h Ith 't' . t in lhe wrong posilion. Thatl~~~~~~·~,.~·~,..~-~·"~-~~·~-~~-~·~M~I•~·~~~~ played as good a game as ea y 1 s going o cause . · us some more problems We bas dtanged and 1n the last it has played all. year. We thought Bert Sherron l~ked few weeks our defense bas ~ave Brea 14 pomts m the good at tailback last week really come into its own. • first quarter and that hurt for Edison so we aren't look-• "That defense will have to us. ing past their running game." be tough and we'1l have to "\Ve would love to go out Los Al 's passing game took mount s;ome kind ol. passing with a win. That would give an about face in the Costa attack it we want to stay us a 4·5 record, which is Mesa Joss after quarterback w i t h E 1 To r o . O u r respectable for a second year Mike Olivas had broken Los quarterback. Matt BaumaM, school." says Leon. Dana Hills will make two Al school records against·San-ha:m 't bad much success lineup changes on offense, ta Ani Vall~y. ::a;:.~ but we'll do it moving Bill Springman back The ~!bock will be Mike 10 tbe starting quarterback Pro Results Mason who 1s subbing for ;n. spot and inserting S t e v e jured Craig Muslco. He gained Miklos at split end. Springman , •-14 ._ ..... m' ,._ •~ en' ed ' d Nlttorllf lftMtMM Aa.lll'ltfl J~ J"<L<\ID Ll"-1 LU D• Start at a wi e receiver Bufi.lo 121. All•nl• lU counter spot last week, then •moved ,,._York uw, s.11t1e 102 HJ .... _:..... n..-'-'vt and ~•• Houlton f7, Phll.cltlptllt IJ -.-..03 '-""~ lUUU to quarterback early in the Mllw•llli .. 1111: Portl611d lOO T'·'~ have really -on P'-b 114, Cllk"l'O 11:9 ~ ~ .....,.,.., game. Goloen s1111 121. c1ewl1M 11s 85 linebackers," reports Wood, Delensively, Craig Fulladosa N~:-Q::r 1&~::.1t:,-1•"¥1 "I think if we've shown a Jot Paramount Sports Gver'!lhing. in :Je!!:ni.6 NIW OUHLCW YILLOW AUSTRALIAN TENNIS IAW St.a& CAN 0,, NO LlMff ON .UAfilTITI' (wiltt ~ If J ... 111..M'I~ FOR JllNIOR TENNIS PlAYERS ·ONLY! Howell says Corona drl Mar's is better than it has shown in recent games. "They have three good run- ning backs. Brent Ogden. Steve Behrens and ?iJike F'cr· raro who are about equal in ability. and their quarterbacks didn't look too bad to us." 1rlftl Tech ove Btylo by lO~t UCLA o....,. Ort90ll Sltll bV 2•1\' \\'ill replace Boxer Torres at oen"'N1,'~r°~~:.i°'LPP1 of improvement it 's been be-V11'$11, ~ L EdllOlt 11u llJ/ Los .1.11mltoi an end position. 1• °" • '' v•11(1111.,,.,. 1 cause of those ,two." 1 , McCM1rtt1f re t :v .t, •t. we11"' )'iil;;;;;,;~~~~~;jj~;;;;~"f'"'~"";;;;'';jM~""'";;";"~'~;;·::;;;~;;~jj;;:;::~·~~=:;;;;iji;~{I ) ,., .. ,, '"", A Top Qu1llty WOOD FRAME FREE! Afonty BuJlerdick, a retum- ing all-league selection. is the I Sentinels' leading rusher an I the season and a key to Ille I Magnolia altack. A 5-9, 17$- pounder, Bullerdick has been hampered by injuries and lack of blocking support much of this season. IUT A NIW 71 DATSUN AHD SAVE' AT COST A MESA DATSUN 1141 HAllO• ILYD. C.11. • 540-6410 USC o..er W•lhl1111lon b¥ 25 W11hlngllll'! ll•lt ovtr C1lllorn11 by "' °"'"'" COMt OW!" Mt. SAC tl'f' t Vt Goldin W.st O'lff lACC by \'I Sedfetllell: llYll' Ptlorn1r by '"" Edltor1 OYef' ~lllmltos by 1» !>ervl11! OY•r Meter o.i by 5'h NewPOrt Harbor ov1r Huntington 8Ndl by 17\'I • Mil.Mon Viflo OYf!' T1i1ftn bV 2'1'1 Wt1tmtnster ovtr MtrlN oy ' tnrlt HUil ~ L~n. lffch by • F111mteln Vtllf'I O¥ff COllt Mn.t '"' El Toro Ovtf" Ctn)"Oll by 13'~ Coton. dtl Mar 11'1« 1Mg110111 by '" I SA Vtllty ~ [$11Mlt by 11 5111 Cltmtnft -Ulll¥trMly by " fL) f ;4 ,0, J, Wtlcr1k (E) 10:0.i ~. JOMl !El 10:11, S. Munlllnq !E IO:lJ, ' Pettrlen (L) 10:11, 7. Myl (L) 10;21_, I . Luctro (L) 10:22, t. '"""' 11:) 10:2S, 10. Lundba~ (L) 10:2], I , Af'l\UltJf \El 10;30, It Gul!trrti IJ IO:;io, 3, _Ktbul (l..i lO:lS, 14. Wt•r.rl•dJLl 10:•2. .t.m!tl' tnltv Los Allmlt" \ .. I 1111 ldlttn 1. Vtrt11• (£1 0:40, 1 Marc'"tu fE) 10:43. a, Sll!Clot (LI 10:"8, ~. Sl11'1h'll Ill 10:50, S. Cri11o061 1£ I 10:'4. .. H•Pln !El 10:.st, 1. Srnvtht ~~'p,:~:011:1 •·1,,rMr ,~:.l .... 11'tl11 11 :3:1. ,.,....s .... (di-041 (•I Ln Al•mll'IS 1. Hoo•n 1e1 1t:•1, 1. l,,...,,..11 fEI 'IO:At, 3. A~lfl1Nt IE! JO:'tl c. Abrt"" (El, IO;JO, l· Slllnbtl IL) IO:JJ. I· MlllO'( (E 10:561 7, $1~1•1 IE). J:OS. I. Roehl (£) I :NI 9, W'Plll'! !El 11 :09, 10, Vll'Gtl (I. 11;11. COMING SOON! HOUDAY ROWR RINK OF Olli.NH " • BELLY DANCE CLASSES Give the Lady in Your Life B~U~ Dance Classes for Christmas Gift CortlllctlN Avalltble Tu •• lnl,.. te •hit.., ct... HW 111 ,,..,._ Vid1o ftp• 1qwlpm111t i1 •v•il•blt to r1cord 1fud1nt pro9r111. You lt•rn qulc•lvl Wt h1vt •tctlltnl f11iliti11 •nd 1m1ll cl11111 !m t•l1T1um IOI . CALL NOW: 545-1088 COSTA MESA CUSTOM STRINGING AT OUR REGULAR ,PRICES TOP 9UAUTY NYLON $10.~ GUT, :$14.00 AND UP He.e'1 How It 'Workol v .. """ .. ,.,. ,..,., ""' "'""" .......... """' ........ ,..... ., *-c91p '-""· ..... *'"" ... ",.., "'""""" . Offtr .,...,... Ole. U, Im c HOURS: NI. t TO I MON.; TU~ •• Wl"!D,, THUii:$. & UT. ,,L 6 SUNDAY 11 TO 1 333 E. 17th St,. Costa M- • I ltltlnd Tht lnt.rn1tion•I Hov•• of P•nc1.11I . , I Phone 642-6886 -· " "· ' "· • .; • • " ) r y • e ) ' I) in re I) • • ,. __ ---• r ·~ . . . . . . . . .• -. . . . I .Preparillg Fora War, bsays Gallo . • :itllervlto Hlah coadl <l>uct ,"J Olllo aaya Iha Mater Pel foot· ,ct 2>111 team ~· ia laclni frtday 1 •t llllbt at tile Santa Ana Bowl ~, !Wtll tiear no raomblance to ' t11e ... which w recon1ec1 SPORTr '•11•¥ 1'4-1 nconl thla ........ '1-'·a 0•111'111 lfrlld Mater Del hu "-------.J -a teonl In tile tut two •m ... ~U," 1&)'1 Callo. "Besides, "'-·~ trbe.n we 1et together past "'!:F;i~ aM auper players . "r <.:: dl!ln 't mean very much." • ,:;;. ''.i 0 We expect a war and are r preparinc for one." "l l:· At this point It would appear :-i ,lefvlte hu • little too much .1:~ .power for Mater Del. Girls Net Results For Area 1,-: .1$erVite'B Friars are-6-1·1 on ..-:. •. the aet90l1 and ll they can .· .~Mater Del Mlilf SI. Paul i'-~ Bllbop Amat Iii another : • • .. WI Leacue c 0 n t est, ..... "' It) Tl"ll~ "r' ~ite appears in llne for Novick (Tl dtf~·:.':d !El .a. ' .• CIF ... A playoff berth. K.rtllllf (Tl dtl. DrtYltk IE) 1-2. ~ ' ,''0We're not golna: enywhere Trtlw lTl dtf, t.lfldMY ce11-1. ,,U, we dm't play . like we're P"r"1 ITI °''· Jecoo.on 1e11-2. , • ;~ble ag~ Mater Del," ,;r•utimrt Ill ~~· Hovl•nd !Tl :•" •. ..,, Gallo Of the I o'clock Kr1t1 n J clef. ltlcittrdMll'I ll!J 1.i. ' ' ·~> test. "We're gettlng ready -.. ~ · -an ..... 1 ... -becauH ·Mater Mk:Mllla. owi"""' cer dlf, M •c:ML , -~ .. IU.. Sttrntierw IT) f.1. -· .' ~ ~l could eome out in a co~ v.i.~ Metlttl CEJ dtf. c:rv. .. -•• I cWf olf Hl-nt (Tl N. " -l'"f'te "i ereot eDle and llllm. Tollft Ill cltf. ArMn•Ult. • • ".L~-for.. Tr ..... bly CTI 1-1. ' ~ • McDoMtd. Goforttl (I) dtf. W1tMl'I, . .. , • ··we bti'fe to play our game "•'°"' 1T1 w. . · ' IM*-to control the ball." ,,_, e1...,.r1rnmer !El dlf. s111r. M.I f'f• Y•loff CTI f.!. 5ervtte bu one ol, the lop Yvn. WMdrOI'! !El ..,, F.W, J-_, ... -. •• In Or r.A .. -(T) .. J, ... ---Ca.a a.Dge \.NUlt-......... Vllhy (111 CU SA V1l1ty ty !'ltll Turt Schonert. wt """'' •-~ Am t Sebo rt HonMlfl (Fl Otl. SAV 1·1. aa:aauo~ a , ne Ltwl• IFI Ott. tSAvl 1.2. J« two touchdowns and fSAVl Clff. Smlltl (f l l·S. I ~ H ~rvll'l'I (Fl CS.I. (SAVI I·\. ran or 1wO more. e com· Flnlllf 1F1 °''· ts...v1 •·S. pletfld 15 Of 7.$ na••ts for. IS.l.V) def, G•rcl• IF ), ... ,._.. Hl<'drld'I IF) del. l$AV) 1-1, m ~ .and eight Wtnt to lt11 (F) OM. ($AV) •2. -• ~ n~ G·--f •~ CFJ dtf. !SA\I) 1-5. 90.JIOI' 'Cla.i ~ .. ,-.:_ or Glhrine (Fl lltl. (SAV) .. ,. . 117yuds. ...... .• '. "We throw to Garrtllon for ltodr}IWL Sdlu\U IF) def. ISAYJ . · :eo yards," says G a 11 o ·~ 111tr111111 (Fl dlf. 1SAv1 • ·lacetioQsly "and then give il "'.:. ........ Lutk IFI ...... (SAV) w. ~ 8 nmning back for t b 9 A.oPlf, He11 (F) def, (SAVI t.0. ,...-:.;,:.~!!.-. _ _: •:.ii:;~~ci;r· 1:v1 :twi --~~---·--'" ..._ ... . . .. · ~ ·~....,,q.~.J,UJa•~"!..__. lw""'1elld,~ IFI ctet. !SAY). -c-crumJng-bacu ln.J-Oltn.Xrlcld_...__. -_ .. •t·a Phil Emard, both jtmkn Coltl'Mfl, Steollton IFl e.t. (SAVI • • With Steve Kenlon spelling the ~1.rwtr1t1. Tu11ord !Fl "'· fSAVl '· ·tlt'O on occasion. ..~.°"""" Jo11tMM11'1 (Fl -llY lorlelt. ·~~·":' "Materl>tl bu been playing ~ Vlele in 1n ...,._ ._,. -.~ .... lfOOd defeuerecenUy and that G•rntt (Ml ".,:r.-kott, G. (LI ' ... • worries .UI," N)'I G a 11 O ' "'M..s.w... IMI IM'f, H11hl ft,) t.f. "P1us, tbtJ have what appears Grlmet IMI di!. kotl. s. ILJ \o ~ & real unilled offenR. 't....,_ (Ml def. MlrdMnt ILi · Jim Gardtf can hurt you ,,,.. , .. n1nC ahd Steve Martlndale, the ~'jt11';l,,;t".0:-1:,1 :t,· .. ~ bu a strong :\~:::~"'l:.f,.,. ...... -''1be key · rtaJly lm't the ._,,,., Dllft'llflll IMI *1. W1nitlt, 1)}ayen. tbougb. 'lbe big tbing "':.! ~L! -:.. !Ml llef, Mefcn.nt, la · that tbil game ii the ""· ,....,,.y 11..1 .... ~/. anotl9aal ~ for both teams ,Jn:: lllldlr (LI ..... D1v11, Otvl t '·~ :..a ltillCll. P!a)'en rlae to MeywJ. CA«flr/ (L) o.t. llOMllO. ~ Mlrrl1 IMl·W the OCICllklrl in this ptne and """""'' K-'lon {L) def, ~ '"·t'I -"u vt111 can tbf'ow out McEtl'dlWn Vt\) W. ~ ,..._., I.... Will~, COIWICll IMJ dtf, Hlll rlO. ·'• •tie book." Mrf'fflln CLl H. ' ' • ......... JOl9 lLI dtf. HOUM. ' ' DorNn (Ml M . •:r .... 01!dl. ,.rlllklln IMl #. 0.1.-,, Sn!ltrl (l.) .... '• .. : Ar~ JC, ,....... lltl Ul Mll'tlll ·-IMllOfl {Ml dtf. Ootlll IFI 1-1. Wllt1 (Fl dtf. Fi.hi IMl W. MerNrl IFI Otf. Ttmtl {Ml· M. Meredlltl l!'l def. C:aul-IM) 1.0. ~ (!'I -.t. TIWM'( IMl W. Turtlowl!'lcltf.Joi'(Mll-1. -1.-., y_... (Ml clef, Hotwlt1tl. KH...._ CFI •S. Mom .. Slnlltn (F) "'· ltHln. HIUfl IMJ 1-:Z. $]-41ttdt, H•rwood (!') dtf. ltllfl(. lt!ktllli (M) f.:Z. ll:ledllfllll', Til«Pt 11'1 11 1 t . T~. Wll'l'IOtk IMI W. GerdN!'. LI,,.,.., IF) def. f rltdm•n, W•modl: {MJ W. Ant, tOMY IF) Mf, Lee, Ir-. MittM W, ....... Yletl (1) Ill ...... Gemtt {Ml .=. tivM IE) 1-1. ~ lMI dlt. Drl'IJck !El ••• GrtlNI IMk dlf. Scfllll CEJ W. LlndNY fDf Olf. J~ IMI l •J, ...... Ml lltf. Tr•utmen IE) w. lrpoof9 (Ml dtf, Cll'P'ffO IEl W. - .. ~....i~. Novcmbl.r .. , ..... .... ·-...... 35 OCC Cagers Loaded With Talent, n ·epth --·. Oranp Coast Col I e g e • s tlal,'' &a.)'1 tJvsej who has Cl'unk. and fellow guard is back, but he's beJng pushed tre.shman forward Todd '"''" rouflll OPPCIMfl': c9nir.& ,..,110M. basketball program has · feshloned a not too fashionabl e Bruce Miller (6-1) are both by f\lllerton Collrge .transfer Collins (6-4) of Estancia and ' ~: ~S ~#.I CNnw •ovrM.-.t nouodered for six straight 34-76 record in roUr years iood shooters -as are Bob Manker (6-S). who earned guard Marc Att~y (8-3) or ,,.1.,1 •OU<'ld OIJllOM!lf~ s.n u..~•dlno. seasons -but It Ciaures to at OCC. forwards Rod Snook (M) and AJt.CIF honors at La Habra C'A>rona del h1ar, add to the •:10 o.m.1. ~-~ ) S HI h bef I I f th Plr I ' d h Wto .• Doc:. lt -•I Alo HDIMlo. come alive in 1973-74. "We're deeper than we've Jim. Worthy (6-4 , nook g ore pay ng or . e a es ept . S••·· Dtt . 21 -An1.i.,. v.11w • With lu entire starting bet:!n before eo we~re not hunt· averaged 11.7 Mlnt3 IVoP J)rake University freshman Others ·on the roster include Dec. 1+-• -•1 Ml•• co.tti •-n•· I re ~ l\] IT'fftl, IFl•tl roi;ncl DOllO'*ll i S•n ineup returning and a hlghly-Ing for guys to start. It's outing last year while 1'11ller ~ teaJ1l the flrst hair Qf the freshmen guards Jack tman DleQO cc., o.m.1. touted transfer on hand , the a case of wOO wants to. start tint at a 10.2 ctlp. -•gn..73 campaign. (5-8) from Ne~it llarbor-wte.. '-"'. 1~~·~ ~ .. t"' Fri,. J1n. ii -PllfU , Plr&les not only figure to have the most. Our biijiest strength Worthy didn't beeome a He averaged over 19 points and Rick Rosser (6-2) from wec1 .. J•n. •-•t ctr"''°'• a winner ·but are being labeled is our attitude ... We have a starter until mid season, but a game at Dra~e. Marina and center R ick ~,:;.-.,J~:~.1~,--~~-;~a.~o:ilcf as a legitimate contender for great group ·of ·guys who are averaged over stx points a "Rebounding is our. major Wood w·a rd (6-8) from s..t., Jin. u -Si n DltGOIMM" the So th Co ed h kn d •·t' th' N I Sat .. Jin. ~• -S.nl• Ant• u Coast nference serious about the game." game and was nam t e wea ess an t1 ... s one 1ng ewpor . wttt .. Jin. -n -., P•M!dt~· title. Heading the list of ·retumees team's most improved player'. "'e've got to. do if we are or•• CNat st111t1u1t F•1 ' Ftb. 1 -11 p1..,c .. And OC ' • dm J Wtd Nov 21 Ttll Wtd .. Fi b. ' -Ctrrliot' C coach Herb Livsey is 1).2 guard Tern Crunk, who uvsey readily a its the to be good. t's our biggest S•t.," .,0,:. 2'i" _ ·., u. Tr•d• S•'·· F~. ' -•• M1. s.n Antonio" is as usual optimistic. scored seo· points last season Bucs have the shooting, but questioll/ mark right now,'' Teth. Wiid,. Feo. 1J -Fun.,11111• Tun .. Nov.,, -•I Goldotfl Wtr.I. <,·' Fro. 'lt -•• S•n 0 1'90 "I have no reason to feel (11.4 average)·and Nmed sec-adds that rebounding is the says Livsey. Fri., """'· 311-comoton. ~· negati vely about this team ond team aH-conrerence big question mark: Sophomore guard · Scott s.1., Dtc. 1 -•t uc sant• e 1rb1r1 Wtd., F~. ?O -11 s.n11 A .... JV • oenore1 SOl.ilh COl!ol (ontfNntl hatsoever. It has great poten· honOts. Center Dean Bogdan (6-8) Cameron (6-9\, along with D.c. w -Mli.t e"°" t(llltnamea=:o'~''i'"m="~-~-~~~~,.. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY! s. habla Espana! ~ WEST-MINSTER .. , . SANTA ANA FULLERTON M 15221 BEACH BUD •• P11011E 893-1544~ , ,. 120 t flRSlST. AT CYPRESS• PHOllE 547-7477 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD.• PHONE 871).8700 , t' i i NDAY THl., fllDAT •• 1:30 A.M-t "·"'· ?· . .-.1~10 r-n 1DAY . •:ao A.M-t P.M. .1::u FRIDAY .. •:10 A.M-t P.M. M SATURDAY ,,,., , •••••• 1:10 A.M .--6 P1M • ./ SATURDAY , , •••••••••• 1:10 A,M,-6 P.M. SATUR~AY ••••• •••• ··, 1:30 A.M.--6 '·:· t\° SUNDAY • , , •••• , , ...... t :to .A.M.-1.t' P,M. SUNDAY •• , •• , , • , ••• , • t:OI .t.M,_. P.M. SUN DA • • • • • •••• •. ·• · t :OO A •. M.-4 P. • CORNl:LL TlllWS111U '1"2y NY9i:;.: 7,7J(J,H • 1• 1.11/t-1' • 11 BLACKWAU.8 ll MONTH 5UWllTlr ......... ,_ .. ., ........ , f60-i4 160-15 G60-14 G60-15 ·.; CORNELL "200" TIRE , .. loa. UTJll PIDOIMAHtl 'IGNITION -COIL-S- ..,_ ... "'" .... & oivn ~ lplll'k W quick. -....... fib fWll. 19#.7, CIM¥. lf#.'731 ClvyL Ptod., 1r44.73_.._., •• _. .. FOa 60·3··· 12 VOlT CAllS A10-14 &110-IS __ 11110.1s 18 ~lllll~ 4 PlV NllO N CO~D C18-13 118-14 . ' '78-14 618-IS 618-14 a C>AD MAJ:l.AO GUA•ANtll• nit: Pl P acns OUAa.tJ.f. 111 COtNfll lltll K>1 A SPICllllD HUMlfl Of MONHtS a o.-.1NST All to .-.o 11.-.z.-105 IN NOt---M-•l PA,StNOtt-e.-11: " ., ' • " s-ry. D6eMOl'lll IM) dtf. Mlcll••llt. RUGGED BIKE , Jl10-IS U5(,0,t.MAQf011tl Will If tt•lACfD WITH ,.Q.tA1lD MONTHLY AOJUSTMtHT CMAIOf 1.-.SlO O N l fGUl.-,lt SfLllHO PtlCt Al TIM! Of ,UICHASl. l r t Prep Football I Oldmen Ill f.7. T~r. llldgt (Ml di!. V1t.rqutl, Mitsch IE) H . M<OoNllll. Geforfll IE ) cit!. D1v!t. C. D1vl'" I . W. Sl'Jm, Tdlft CE) dtf. M«Tll. llOIHIM <Ml M. .,..,..,, Eltlll'lltmrntr IEI cle'f, McEMNl'f, Oln'llr'f (Ml f·7, W..t, 'Wtthlf1lll tEl, dtf, K11t, JMICIM (.M) "'· CIF Grid Rankings • • STEEL CARRIER VROCIPEDES CARRIES TWO BICYCLES GttEAT GIFT FOR THE SMALL FRY ,,..,. ,., •• ,. ........,. lo •.•.•• , •••• ,.i •.. , •. foe!> le '"!!"'' ,,.,\It• .... ,.,.1 •• ,., ~ ... , •• "'";n~ i• •• ~, , ... ... ,., ~·· .... (' . , .... .. ...i -·~Ir ,..;..i-,i..,,. MtM '" "toleo _....., ......... , .. ,~ tflol f« hf'8 llN. S,.W• klN _,.,..;i fintth ond Nb!Mr "'"·In •llinllf .,, ... PltaD FHM-s·: .. ,; I I . . 1-==~-1110 .1 s M •uttlOff OI Sl'UI BUY ON CREDIT l7-&1·118~J<l19~:d20.~,. nrt. npt "" t11MltM • MIAVY DUn llAC•WAllJ ~1.H, '-"•" 7Mo1S .,,,.. u 1.111. lt 21~, 21?!., 22!!, 24 .. • llT • -.... 11JMLU.$ -.. 1.••" 1WIH $1tOGUlt.11.I -~y 39Tf1T 44ffl'f '~' MO= '!VMUU ""'""-1-.T•ofu..t .. WI ......... _,,,.. 1::s VW's rororA·s. •.•:s. °"'''• •• ,,.., ,., ...,., onu,..,.,. CAii S.20111J SM111S '.00111$ ·--1s.1.ts')2tsl ,, _ __. !II'/ I ,,Nall ']3ts I SMaN SJ M ~--.::J~' ........... tao..._MSl.lll .. tln·-._..,.,_ TOU• OlD Tld Atclf'nD llMAHUSI °' COMD!ITION.. AU f'•CU PLUS flDllAl IXQll TU • Ol.D l'i•I. • Helpi. -r,.,..;. ,,,.1,.., 1-i •·• • c ....... -i.. ...,,.,., i...i .Wt!._ • SIT N Tout N•I •NO DIM .iout.-.TOll IC> lf<M.ul l>HOCl Al'°"ttl •!l ~'Wtl • All "l$1111t "°"" ""l!Nolllf MUS Uf' tOt AOOllO wttOMt, , •f.llOMAllC COMPl'ISW. ..... u .... kl__.,. "' - "'' ns£ an-111111c rLst 1~ ''' tMlf.l.ll.AltON 31 " .l."~AtAU ""'°"' ,.. .. '' llWIS on _,"' Dll~"O l'll:tHVIC llflt~O • C...,.. II UNO ~· • : • .. ., ' : • .. . : • ' ' , • • 1 I . . 38 DAILY PILOT Wtdntsdu, Nowmbtr 14, 1973 'TONIGHT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS ABC 0 8:00 -Double Feature. A return en- gagement of the critically acclaimed "Brian's Song11 followed by a new thriller, "Trapped." .~ KHJ a 8:00 -"The Ambushers." Dean Mar· tin in his Matt Helm character with Senta Berger and Janice Ru.le Jn this 1967 movie. NBC Iii 3,30 -Elvis: Aloha From Hawaii.' A rerun of the Elvis Presley special from Hawaii with ·? Elvis singing 18 so ngs and two medleys. \ " TV DAILY LOG ~. " ,• Wednesday Evening NOVEMBER 14 ·''oo B 0 0 III III r:lil lill -(}J®J~lmJC!J<~Cll> -~BtNm:1 l ~g~·.,·-... ,.. __ _, (C) (21\) "!Iott ..... Jliflcttrt .... hi ntlr flJ'nl Mt-di_.. (com) '65 -Stl.l•rt Whit· Nn, Sar1h Milts. fD Noc111podp Lodp m Tllrff StMan 1:30 W ® (]) tht;1t1'1 NtrMS Mwlt: (C) {•) "'•Mbit" (1dv) 1 ' -Shirley MaeUine, Mict111J Caine. ~ rn <S <!I> .... : • DidV11 D,lt l ~~h~-ll Seftor1 Jovt11 am Moytrl' Jo•mlf CM111p1Hshl, Wr11tllnt )lp.IHM Llllflllp PtocttM 1:30 0 ~ (})@) (f;) i lfl(ilL I EMt: Aloha frt11 Nanll (R) EM$ Prtslt)' Ptr1orms somt ol hb blUQt hits When hi 1inp II IOllfS ind two medley• in this 1pac11I concert taped in H1w1ii. m---, Q1l $fOftl Sptdll USA vs. West '''° Ge1m1ny Bolin1 Cb1mpion$hips ind the U.S. lntem1tion1I P1irs Roller SkJtin1 Ch1mpionshlp:s. ED,Scsslotl "J1k1 Jones" a:l Nowt11 B WM. CONRAD-CANNON * TV 'S TOP PVT. EYE! j Mtry Srlftin Show : AlldJ 'rfffltll • . ......, .. .,, . lMl1 Easy ; .. , LI Hffl f1•ili• U (lifi ({J)@ C1nno n "Th t Umpin1 Man" Guest Anthon)' Zerbe pl•ys tilt prime susP1Ct in a caun- ler1til stock certilicate rin1 whose escapt from c1ptu1e l!ads ta th1 suspension of Del Lt Jim F1r111ut, :!: Dhlrt n.rtrt ~ --n=-grum. ...... ---11 lo~ti=:~ C.nnon. .ro .. c..mo '· .. i lfltllL I Dt M•• llllidl Sa-. • HELDOVERI MARLON IRANDO "LAST TANGO IN PARIS" + At• F11•t'1 "WHAT DO YOU SAY TO A NAKED LADY?" loth 111 Color IXJ F'Mw..,91 1tL•mot1St. S2S.3526 Tltl KYNIUU U04CISl WONDER WOMEN (POI KUI e THE DOLL L•,,col" •••· .... 1 •• 11 .. ou 12l~DXI -·1'11-·"*"-THI WAY WE WE•t (Ki) •) . ~-~1~1=1;1· .. :•t Mwil: (2trr) "TM $rtlt I• _ · ,l!tJ!•m__(!!ini~ dtspeta~ .aplosttcrCiiPi®J(-·_;·....:'.=c-=H\5~;'1 t:JO m YfOll'lln "Sudden lnf1nl Death Syndrome" The number one killer ol bab11i lod1y is discussed by thrre parents.. 111 of whom 1ost 1 chi!d !o this m1sterious dise1se, crih death. ·:"-posllf" (adw) '61-Tony Curtis. :~ ::::.'MrUnt? • • I &Mel"' .,,. • ~-Mod Squid ;.;;,. (1) I Drea11 tf Junnlt • EuHr1ldl @ Dripd : Tllf fnnch Clltf (~[Ji;) World of S111Yivtl tt) D Primtr Amtr (C) Alro11 IH1tr Show m""'""' 7:30 8 The . New Deline C1m1 C;iss fJliot guests. (3) Ha11n's Herou ([Ila H!eu ail Comt4y/$porb 10:00 II C9 ([)) 00 l!oj1k ~Knockovtr" A tan·car1t diamond rln1 wom br • murder •ictim turns Lt Koj1k's rvvtin1 homicide probe Into the in· wsti11tion of an llMOlved million clol11r b1nk robbe_!l. Gt .... , ....... ,l,·6212 -COPS AND 1011115 !~I PLUS e THE GOOD GUYS & BAD GUYS -if.llHI•'~ ' ' • h-<~ ••••· • ' 611••-I I..&. 111-1 162 GUAt BmtfMMM' , flAU IOI' HIT JESUS CHRIST SUPrRSTAI fWl •• IOOT HILL IPOJ . . . • • • • < Laguna Music ~~ns eheer Opera-Recital Simon Estes brought what this columnist feels is the best <and busiest) bass-baritone In the business to Laguna Beach 111gh School last \veekend and got the kind of reception this ~rand artist always deserve., from an always appreciative Art Colony audience. It was quite a feather In !he cap of the Laguna Beach Community Concerts Associa- tion to get an artist or Estes' caJiber to open their 1973-74 season and the results ob- viously delighted the in- defatigable officers of that ambitious group. Estes cannot begin to meet the demands of opera com- panies around the world who are clamor-.i ing for the services of the Tschai- kO\\'Sky 1'1e- dal winner andsm·al l wonder in the light of the operatic sallies he in~­ cluded in a d e manding ICLll!WEll and wide ranging program. Arias from 'Vagner's "Lohengrin" Mozart's "Mar- riage of Figaro," Gounod 's "Faust" and Boito's "1'1efistofole" will give the music lover a clear indication of this splendid so Io is t' s lremendous f o r c e and versatility. • TOM BARLEY M~sic EJox baritone voice M u s s orgsky's magnifiei!flt '·Song of the Flea" and Rachmaninoff's ten1pestuous and moving Cavatina from "Aleko." Estes sang them both as we have not heard them sung for many e year in a recital that brought him a richly deserved standing ovation. A \\'Ord of praise also for an unidentified accompanist \\'ho did a sterling job at the keyboard in the absence of designated accompanist Paul Liljestrand. * CHORDS AT RANDOM Our picture today is or Dr. Jonah Kliewer, th a t in· defatgable director of music at St. Andrew's Church, Newpart Beach, who will be on the podium this week for the Laguna Concert Chorale's first offering of the young Lulheran Church, 3438t C.lle Portola, Capistrano Beach, i!J the Saturday site and the lasl performance will be Sunday at G e n e v a Presbyterian Church, 24301 El Toro Road. Lag una Hills . All perfonnances are at 8 p.m. An unusually s t r o n g assembly of soloists includes alto Joyce llarrison, soprano Diane Nilley, mezzo.soprano hfarilyn Interlandi. b ass Hobert Randall and tenor Joe \Vood. Pennie 1:osler is the chorale's accompanist. LAGUNA BEACH would ap- pear to be, to use the kids' expression, where it's at these days with the Laguna Beach Chamber Music -Society · off Friday to y,·hat looks on paper to be a mosl auspicious open- ilig to the season . Brilliant Briton NeviUe Mar- riner of SI. Martin's in the Fields fame is bringing his season. Lo h Klie\ver's baton will preside 5 Angeles C a m be r over five soloists and 60 Orchestra to the local high chorale members as the school lhforl ~n 1 8d:30 p.m.kspro-b recently expanded organiza-gram a inc u es \\'Or Y !ion (we once knew then1 as Bach, Chihara and Haydn. the Laguna Festival Chorale\ It '>''ill be one of the last ALL \VER E magnlfirenfl y tackles the awesome likes of local appearances this year executed in solid recital fo " · · I d "d Bach 's .. Magnifjcat'' and r , .. arrmer s s P en 1 Cashion by an artist who -ensemble ~ey •·1'11 soon em Duruf\e's "Requiem." · 1 u · unlike some luminaries in the It 15 the kind of program bark fo r Europe and concerts world Or opera -finds it that .11 b . 1 Of choral in Britain, the fl-'etherlands ielatively easy to adjnst to . wt rrng overs and .\Vest Gennany will in· the more intimate and et music flockmg to the South --~. ----• >'. Coast-and,fortunately, we are elude an ~r.igal?ement ~_the -more deriianding concert hi ll -· given three opportunities to Bath Festival 1n June .. Very • -lmOsphere. ----• -=:joiji~eiru-·MC! bis-dedicat.d . heady wine, _!"evil!<, but you teS' six-part recital-Was charges. · ----dese~·t . ·-.._ absorbi ng from first to last offering but tv,.o of those arias T H E · C 0 M l\f V N I T Y merit special mention from Presbyterian Church, second a writer \vho is more familiar Street at Forest Avenue, than most '>''ith lhe demands Lagllila Beach. will be they place on the bass-Friday's Io ca I e . F'aith EVERYONE'S BOOK IS NOW EVERYONE'S MOTION PICTURE -ROGER WAGNER'S Angeles hfaster Chorale has a lo\'e\y Christmas program on the \\'ay: PLircell's '"Rejoice in the Lord All'l'•ay." Bach's ''Christians Celebrale th is Day" and a group of carols in which the chorale will be joined by the Handbell Choir of the Neighborhood Church of Palos Verdes. Ideal Yule fa re and it's scheduled for 8:30 p.m. Dec. 15. • -' c -fl.. CtNIOUll/ lJ . .. • • 4 1 '• ,. -_,,,, CINFOOM/ l/' .... '"'''·· ... SIAD/UM I . .. .a.tl.li• ..... -, ... --.. SIAD/UM . J ;·~ O. f\•!1U"tl-l •I J•·• ........ , ..... .... .....,. .... .,. "THI WAY WI Wllr ''SOUND 0, MUSIC,. . ... "CHAILOTTl'S WR'" <•I "40 CA.MTS" CM) . .. "IUTTllFLIU AU JIU"' ( .. > "DON'T LDOIC IN THE IA,IMlf\lf" "'Tl.LEI THAT WITN•SS MADfll•S•" "LAST MOUi• ON TH• Ll,T'' I•) "COFFJI" ( IJ ... "THI.MACK" Cll "l!l iCTRA ClollDI IN llUI" IPGJ . .. "THI ounlDt MAH" Their gaal ... assassinatiod. " Novaml'>er 22, 1963 • .. accomplished! BURT lllCl8TEll ROBERT RYMn1 Will BEER ,,. row MO tE'MS,,__ EXECUTIVE _All1JIJIL· __ ~ -. .. • t Pfl)BABLY THE MOST CONTAOVERS1Al FILM OF OUR TIME ~ 1otrto11" OAWJ MIUEA · St...f9ltT '1 DAlTON 1lltlfll80 '-''"llMl'1~V.HEwDOflAUlFREED . c..,,,.... b'T DAH8ESSIE Ml GARY ~Tl ·"""*tor£DWAllDllW'5 ~:~w;~=~PIC~=:LWt:(ll [PGJ~~-.;I S<i<"4 Top Hltl "TH,E BURGLARS" • O Inner 5'K• ''Th• V1nishin1 Grey N•Jrse" Ron 1nd V1lerie Taylor seMch !()/ Gier Nurst sh11b in !~e wders 1round Monlarw 15lancl. V/1ll1•m S!!1!n~r n1r11lts. 0 9 @Q.t lG ~I ~IH!ll!<iEA!~I T II 1 .._ lalrtit P1rHI. Bumper Mor11n ton111llJ tPplies for retirement ind !elms that his lrl•nd, Olficer Nell Groa•n, Is 1lso pl1nnln1 to 11tu1. u .... -...... --'·-~17.1211 There once. was a little book about • seagull ••• JONATHAN LIVINGSTON SEAGULL H• wH no ordinary seagull. And it was no ordinary book. Jonat~an became a few people's favorite. Pretty soon Jonathan was all Americe'1 fa vorite. The sea- gull had become a phenomenon. In a way, he was the. pulse of the 70's. ·------- • • g Me!p Thy N•l1llbtf Ill Bobby G~ldsboro Show ~ Contt11tr1tJon 10) The Hew !'rite II ltl1ht m E~-;itchtd l11 fY' To Ten the Truth .;if r 4 H~H:-wood SqulltS i omm a11tws NIPf C.llllJ bcttl1rlt W1Ul1111 Cnltrhflllll: Sip If Machin• Wit (R) 6 T'lrilis .. Z-I lill Co-.bJ Y1111 tor Hetltll . i fT.\ Storefront • ( 1' (ti) l'oflct SllflHll I0'301T•1oct • EJ Show de W1ltlr MercM 1 €n Olhtf l'tople, other P1lces Q)TbtGhoulG1n1 11:00 3 ~111~= • ftews/Sports ; 1:001J (;:j 'j') /]) So11nJ 1~ CMt TwillPt b1111 · ltrii Kristofferson ind Rit1 Coolid1e 6 ""' Man ~st. · rtin Dltl•llul ShN .· Q QJ (}) 19) ED AdlM·lZ "Cap-To Tin th1 Trvtl !"'t.ap1ortnr 1-h11p;--•n1TY-11ot .c.t-1a1ct---._ provn t!!ier for Officers Malloy and (])Tilt Medk Retd than t1appin1 an eluslw bura:-Alf'rld HitdtoKt Prntrrts l~r. t9 Cl)) Tflits Wist 0 Movl1: (C) {Zhr) ''TIM Fron• Dud" (hor) '67-Dina Andrews, 11:15 UrCin11111 34 " Ann1Polk. l l:l01)('1JCl))({J lteup 91 Rayll ,• " ~ 0 ABC Movie of the Week Weddin1 ol l"rincns Anne 0 ~ @®J m Jellnny Clf10ll 0 Movie: "M11k1J l w1i1111" (com) 'JI-The Mari Brothers. " " :* Spec'! Double Feature ·: "BRIAN'S SONG".,lames :;~ Brolin in ''TRAPPED." 11!1Hll !!l bdi "'"""' Allted" Httcllcoct: Pml1lts ... . " 0 ~(I} nl Double F1ttu" Mo-Movie: (C) "Cold for thl C... rit: (C) (3hr) "lritn11 Son(' (dr1) 1111" (adY) '64-Jelfrer Hunter. '?I-James C.an, Bitlr Det Wil· 12:00 I) C9 CIJ) 00 CIS t..te Morie: li111tS, Jack Warden, 5!1elley F1blres, (C) "Pit•• Don't Eat tilt Oaislts" Jud)' PICI. Tht true-hie story about (com) '60-0oris Day, David Niven. two members of the Chlc110 Bears 00 °"'step Beyond football te1m, one bl1ck ind one B Tllrillti • "' white, Who met IS riYlls Ind ll!W m Mowie; (C) "Port Afrlq111" (1dv) to love e1th otht r as brothers. ,56--P!er Angeti Phil C.rey • •• "lrt.pped" (susp) '73 -James ~Phil Don1huii Shof · Brohn, Susan Clark, Earl Halliman, --. ~ Tammy Hanincton. When h• Is trap. l:OOEJ 0 " 00 PfNs ped in I deD1rtmenl slOfl l'ltrolled · @)@ ED TlfllOffft ·' by vicious 1uard dop. • man must • W1111td Dlld or Al1YI · :• d1vise in1enio11s ways lo olJ!wll t ·30 g Hl&hftr ratrot :~ lllem and makt his ny to Sllety, · . ,..,m ... .,..,-. ... o1 w.• ..,U Dean Martin/Senta Berger l'•lnt." "'Ciptlln FurJ" : "* "THE AMBUSHERS" z,151) Mom'.,., w., '""""(com) .;. -0 MIQion $Modi: (Cl (:Zhr) "'TM '61--hltr Sellers. .=i Ambinllers" (com) '67-0ea n Mat· 1:4011.....W. "'1'1udooJ1" (wes) '50 • .. , tin, Senta 81r1er, Janice Ruic. -W11ter i!ll'lllllJll, M•tlt Windsor . . ~; ;;_ .•. :-~ 1Z:l00t{C) "SI• Sloclinp" (mu1) '57 · :1 Thursday -Fred Ast.ire, Cyd D11rine . . •' :~ 1:00 O (C) "'1llat l•DC:ti er MIM" (com) :;, DAYTIME MO VIES '62-Doris Dar, C1ry Gr1nt :;·). 3 .. m..,.. ·-Uoot" Cond. (dro) : .. j :CIO ~rJJ .,,_, Slit Coel" (mus) '38 ~ft. -M1rlon Br111do, Montromery 'F nlq Lupino. @) {C) -n. Usl .....,. (lfr1} '61 :L .. .JO 0 "'FatMr If 1111 ~t" (corn) '50 -Kif); Ooullu. Roe.It HlldlOll. ;r -SptnClflflCJ'.·Elll•belll T·~· ~J:JO@ 00 (C) .,.,"""""' hi flllltt· : :OO(l)"'nMi Hnfflr" P1rt I (dra) '61 mtrt" (drl) '67-Melvyn DouS11s. ; -f'1ul Ntwm•n. Jatkit Gleason. Anne 8ut1r, h C) ·;i 0 "fly .. Ill .... ,.,., '42 -... 0 ( . .,,,.. '" -· :.-: Richard Carlson, N•llCJ' Keil)'. (•dv) 52 -Grteory P~ Swn •L H1yward. :,,,.;w 8 "W .. llllt Ntll" (dfl) '57 •:JO (_3) $11111 IS lQAM lil'lilll :_. ~ 1Uff!f1J. "WICO" (wts) 52-(Qj(J}) "Mr. DMJ lea flt ltn" .t( Wiffisra Elliott. P1rt I (draJ '36-Gar)' Cooper, .., : .. · KOCE TELEVISION LOG j !OO Hit.., llf Art IC) Lfflort 23 • "Gr9fk Arcfrlffl(IUr•" ;t_ J:• St. G•••lMit -A Frllll(~ Ltt•tY .--fCI speci•l TM _.....11 F<~to '-fOwll 11'1 11• MIMlu !OPI •1 • N1tlon1I HhlOl"ltll Silt. t...t ;M Al M111 lhl'll* !Cl Ln!IO'I I• "l lle Mind of M•11. P1rl IV" /' Ptyd'lology COVfM tor co11t9t CtlOil, LeuoT! ,, "llt11lr.o t ltllOf'" -Tei buf or ttnl? !1 lde>Q111I• l!ou~ng ~lltl Ind Mob!ll, moctvllr or lrldlllOMIJ 7:Jf T ... ~ llMI Ari or Football ICI L-I "Pl!Vrlt<' $~" ... ,., VIPKl Lomb.trdl's numi.r tlf'I• plav: 11'!1 POWer swe<ep. 1100 T -A""• ( ! "Cl"'•lh •:• a1itttrtc '""~ 1c1 ~ GldOfl, •n vnclltlftflll'fd cl\.lmplon -torill1 wttUler" 11 lnt.rvitwt0, 11• •mrN l lrt•I jC) Ccio•lt Mon1!0• rttl1t1 t•llflll lllt I« Cfffm Ind tOCllilff 11\41 1111 lr•lti b (••rtlftQ o1 Wlhln1.'' P•rt V. Lord l'et!tr 'l'ldon ''°"' ,,...., York to f11trodw1 l mp~r11111 • brollle•· 1 11 1111 Dr•m1. • <f l l'lf n. el'M! C• 111t C111lttt CCI • L11-20 ''Cont..,nwr ll'rct.ctlciti; ,,..,.. .. ,. •• '" ll1llllf fUff- OIY. Holllfl'IOlf la, ll )100 p,tn. Ii.JI M.-r llf Mt CCJ Lea. al "Orfftl~H J'ttt Ttot .,_. Cl 111,_ C•tht ICI t 1N Oflf Of A Klfld !Cl "'01\1111 A<:kllt" Plffam'" ber..-~ l'!r •• ,. 111 • .,.,. 1tudl01 ..,. IYllhtflll from !'op fO Cflu.(:111 -" t r• Al MP ltfl•-CC) L•1tooi 16 "Miflcl DI Mtfl, 11'1~ IV" ~'l"Ct!otof¥ courst tor t 011'9• C•llOll. ' "'"''_'_ (l,J SfNSOf "°""' & IVl !ll (2.) ICAMASUTU 111 -Jl.J.J! ~~ ... ~ Dlt>1• flO)'. c .... ,, .... Ofl···-... J·•S•s tllAT lNl'mAlfrtltllNI' nus '°' ltfT JESUS CHllST SUPEISTAI P\US • IOOT Hill fflOI And now everyone's book is everyone's motion p;''"" .. ~ONATHAN LIVINGSTON SEAGULL soars to th@( screen .• So visu ally stunning. So emotion ally moving. So totally exhilarating it is a motion picture to see, and see again. And then see again. "A IEAUTIFUL AND TOUCHING MOYIE! Some perfectly magnificent photography. Its camera work is so stunning that it immed iately establishes a sensitiye teJCtu re for • smple story! The over•ll -flavor anO impact remairr-strild nqopu,poseful,- sweet and •t times heartclutching!" , -Howard Thompson, New York Times - The Only Orange County Engagement THEIMY ,, WEwSZ MUS . ANN·MARG.ARET JEAN LOUIS TRIP<ITIGNANT ANGIE OICICINSON ~ ~ ...... '!''-HELD"l>Yfl .Ill\• ' "A romantle, sfrt1s11 al'ld ll!Of'ougllly enJoyabl• movie."'·flf.•ttlo.---~-OUTlllll MAN" "A romanlic, stylish and thoroughly enjoyable movie." -REX llE!O. Dtlly .... ·Syt'ldkJttd CClh.l'Mitt llllWAY .. _ , • < ' . " l'CllflS ... llASlllfllDtlO&l--Sll(fMI "*"ll!fCJll .ll(lltflllllill·l•ll--l!!li(Y,lllWC(----~--·­ ml(U.,.,.,M:llnlJl ... _lCISl>IU[1j(Qi(iil:lt..,,.,sr116lli01---D·--WIUILU811·-11• ... -...... 15:• ..,._ --111 TIMf NEWPORT CENTIR • .. , w IPOl--=~-=~1 " 'The Way we Were' is irresistible! Acinch to score as the biggest, glossies! romantic blockbusler of the wani ng movie year." BRUCE WILLIAMSON, Pl1yb0y • .; ,. 1 I I I I i --. • • • •• ~ ••••• J • • ........ ., . • •• . . • . ---•. ------- • Wtdntsday, Novtmbtr )4, lq7J DAILY PILOT 3 ., . GQdfather-Part 2 J'our•part Serie.r I 'Knight' a Real Cop .• ' ~Sequel Filmed l:n Secrecy, Without Brando By JAY SllARBtm find her killer before he bands o[ sharp, penetr1tinr looks at both the seamy life and the clannlsh,.argumeniaUV< world of police, a world few really ,see unless they 're In handcuffs, .. ~ ,;< BJ BOB THOMAS •'. "' r .;, f.06 .ANGELES (API -On I ·~· .. ), 1173, a new Malla ~· began on the ilhorea of Lake Tahoe, where >lie Sierra soeJ>ery combined ll!'lljl the gllUedng lacade1 o[ -~e pmbllng casinos. - -It was the beainnlng oc "The. Codfatber, Part 11,'' Para- ( mount11 attempt for an added : ratooll from the moot suc-i ceuful movie of all time. Ltke the Mafia's operations, : the movie waa being made ' in Merecy. Paramount Presl· ! dent Frank Yablan.s bas : ordered no publicity for the ~ duration of fi)ming. This is : an old device, of course, which· : sometimes qeates more ex- citement for a m o v i e • : aomellmes apathy. ' There ls an inevitable let-! down for any movie sequel, MANN THEATRES . 14" UCOID Willi w....,. • 7:10-tilt s.t.,llm. • I :JI• J:IO 1:11. f 1M. t :JO since IUCh lllms are obviout!J aimed at eulllng In m tbe ....,.... of the ·or!atnal. One major element l!iD be lie~ Jn the re<lo ol "Tbo God- father": Mirlon Brando. FRANCIS ·FORD Coppola. who directed and co-authored "The Godfather/' w a·n t e d the famiJJ frml Lu Vegu, the other a naa1>1>11ct w Don eon.one durll!I bis period of elllhliahl'lll hil -.. bead of "" lamil7. Tbo .. stories woUld allemale tllroaghout the picture. JI • Wben <'.oppola finished the acrlpt, be still hoped Uiat -would c:onoent lo quality 1' Bl'IDC!o but without the same aenalUvlty. NEW YORK (AP) -"Sup. in his badge. port Your Local Police," says · RE CONDUCTS his private the poster hanging in BumRtr search while on his regular M°Qrgan's locker. Three words beat in a sleaiy downtown sPf'e.y-painted on the poster arena o[ pimps, junkies and .sum up his Idea of support: hustlers. It's more than a 11Be a Snitch." search. though. It's a farewell 1 J't's one of.. many casually tour. The show's four-part formal is a welcome device. It lets the story and. It! characters evolve at a natural pace, rather than with the phony urgency of most police shows on the tube. Wllea P•.-.-...,t se11911t Bs a1Mlo for • ret•rn, Jae ••de the e.-.••!I .., otter ft eoultln't .eeejlt -n 11drlfon plus 18 peree•t ol tlae 11ro••· De Niro Is taller than Bran- do and his fellow acton say 11111 ho bu the umo sullen ·intensity, He grew up In New York City and started acting at 10 u the cowanlly lion in an acting sohool production of '1The Wlzard of Oz." By 16 be was studying with Stella Adler, Brando's drain;itic cooch in his '8rly career, and be observed al the Actor's Studio, wbtft Brando ODCe participated. The actor appeared in off. Broadway productlooa of "One Nlghl Stands ol a Nolly Passenger," w r l t tea by Shelley Winters. and In "God Wants What Men Want" and "Glamor, Glory and Gold." Like Brando, be has played character roles from the beginning. In touring com- panies, he played a mid· dleaged doctor "in "Genera- tion" and a fortyisb Italian in "Tchin-Tchln.'' Net Wort• Tennis star Billie Je3.11 King guests on the Sonny and Chef Com· edy Hour tonight at 8 o'clock on CBS, Channel 2. realistic to u c h es scattered ''I just love the battle." he about "The Blue Knight," an finally admits when asked by excellent fdur-part mini-series one infonnant, a stripper, why NBC-TV is running this week, he's pushing so hard on the with the second episode airing case. tonight at 10 on Channel•· It's a fascinating battle, full So give It a lry tonidi.t. It isn't a time-waster, by ally means. : 1 You ought to calch this show:1p; ____ ;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~::!:i if you've the time, because it'.s one of ·the few on "TV desperately to have Brando appear in the sequel How would that bO possible, since Brando as Don Corleone died in the first film? • "l"ve got a very simple device for using Marlon," said Coppola during the 1crlpt. writing stages of the second i. film . "I will have two paraUel· stories, one ahowlng MJchaet COrleone in the 1960s, running LI Do NEWPORT 8(ACH f"'11tJ.J<Kt ro llOO ISL[ e>73..Sl50 "SCARECROW" (Rl wlrtl ,_._ H.._.. • Al,_ ... ••• ''THE LAST OF SHEILA" , .... -~ 1884 Newport C o~to Me\o S48· 1 552 (TV. REVIEW ) A MAST£R,1£CE OF TIMILISS IATIR Moll•r•'' "THE WOULD-IE GENTLEMAN" NOW THRO 01.C. 1' AH Tll• Eltf!lfnlt 01 A ~<ell Cem.Oy -l•l'Mlvt Styltl 1111 NIW,ORT, COSTA MESA FOR RESEltVAT\01111, CALL -""°13'• return as Don CorleOOe, this time playing the cbaractier at Brando's own ~ge instead of having to stuff his dieeks with cotton and gray h1s hair, CBS Leads that really Works at trying l!..~:O-=-::~;::::===============~ to honestly depict the attitude and emotions of an ordinary cop on the beat. "From a strictly fin81Clal standpoint, I think Marlon 8hottld do it, H said Coppola. "Ho• elae can an actor pick up two or three million dollars for a few weeb' wcrt?" T.V Ratings --12 of 20 BASED ON THE bestselling novel by Sgt. Joseph Wam- baugh, a Los Angeles UNPORnJNATELY for the DB NIRO~ first film was NEW YORK (AP) _ CBS policeman, the TV version of ,,_..,.._.-.,; S ZIM director, Brando isn't swayed "The Wedding Party, '• programs, led by the top-"Blue Knight" Is a far, far by finmctal luru. He WUD't directed by Brian de Palma, ranked "All in the Family" cry from the c 1 ea n-cul AN 1vv flLM PllESENTATION . t~on dol .. a the -1 and and be played small roles tn sen·es, swept the nali'onal saintliness of "Adam-12." , s iHE MOIT SENSATIONAL IEl'llU O' ANIMATED fllMS £VER SEEN ON THE llLVll ICIE£N , ·~ ~·· ~·• BUCK ROGERS .. ·•".• L .• 1m.E. RAS .. CALS. had ad mitgivinp about the "The Gang That Couldn't television ratings for the week It has William Ho 1 den " Ch1101er 1 first film, which he sometimes Shoot Straight," a Mafia com· ending Nov. 4, A.C. Nielsen perfectly cast as Bumper 7:lO 1 t:lO ._.. 1 ... 1,. referred to as "that gangst2r edy; ''Born to Win," "Bloody ratings figures showed today. Morgan, a sardonic, hard.a.~ suu: THUTll-Hat. ldl.-51'-llti thing." Mama" and "Jennifer on my nails Los Angeles patrolman I . .'::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:-. }..find!' A check of the 20 highest-whose 20 years on the Brando later found social rated evening programs for ed hi content in "The Godfather," De Niro started in Warner the week showed CBS leading downtown beat have hon s • declaring that it showl'd that Brothers' "~fain Streets" as with. 12 followed by NBC with skills to a fine edge while the Mafia was tolirated in a member of a gang of second-five and ABC with three. leaving him an emotionally America because it didn't con-. generation Italians involved in weary man who operates ruct with capatalism. street crimes. That helped The top-rated 20 ?1Jgl'ams, mainly 00 reflex and instinct. Prepare him for the role of according to their rankings Al '", he's the ldnd' o[ cop' Hil 1ttitude toward Para· m· ••-week' Ni '· ~ Don Corleone. Paramount was UJ\': s ieuien survey, ··"-Ase breed is dwindling. He'd mount changed from when he were: "AU in the FaDiily" wia1 actively sought the D 0 n further convinced by h1s (CBS); "Walt Disney," tSan-rather walk a beat than patrol Corleope role. His career was performance in °Bang the ford and Son" and •'O>luinbo". in a car. ks he puts U, "all at a low ebb, and be submitted Drum Slowly," in which he (all NBC)· "'l'h" Waltom" the good bulll come. from to the humiliation of testing adopted the mannensms of · uMaude n 'uM-A-8-H ,, occ8s . walking and talking and look· ••• easily the best movie so far this year. 'HELD OVER hlly ,,._ 4:JO s.t.;s ... Frffl 12:,0 l::,-~816....f.00.J'~{Gl:~ for the role and -'dng for a baseball catcher fr 0 m · ThUlllday N!Bhl Mo~ie" aod ing." _JilUe..more..than.eJpeD""' ~ Georgia. "Ham .Five;O ~ .. (all.,CBS.1' Re smokl" cigars on duly -"NQRTH COUNTRY" . perceiilage of . the prilllts l!n>~'l'!te aC\or Ui!Qliow'-be "ABC Tuesday. M 0 vi e . ;'\~ .-aa:eptFsmall-f.,,eblea .. Vided a hand!lome return When prepared for the h>le. 0 1 ••Mary Tyler Moore," '"SoDoy And he olten=i>ends, 'f-nc:tl "The Godfatber" 90ared ·to traveled to Georgia to gtt &: Cher" "Gun.smoke" "Bob violates, SupreJt¥ Court over JIOO miftion In returns. the right inflection of words. Newhart" and .. ~ .. (all gqidelines for. prob~ble ca~se. But his partldpation was I looked around at clothing CBS); "Dean Martin" (NBC); ~~arch and seizure if he thinks limited to $1.5 million ,' stofts and at the manner of "The. Rookies" and "M3J'CUS its wammted .. --·---1 • .. .._ Ckkt s., ..... - tl'Gl ........... , ............ S.fJI& "Meclt11Niu i ..,_.., ·12a2,.M m\'1•'7-~ ~~.~!~='· "OKLAHOMA CRUDE" !PG) 7 I< 10:4S P.M. : One ldml11lon 1nt111" you up to 6 hours skating fun. ' : ASK ABOUT SPECIAL GROUP RA TE ICE CAPADES CHALET COSTA MESA MESA VERDE SHOPPING CENTER HAllOl ILYD AT ADAMS Tel: 979·1110 ''A .ROMANTIC · BLOCKBUSTER!'' .,.... ............ frwt . O-....•IS2·3't1 Mo"·ll'rl: OP•" •141 Sll•SUfll Optfl 12141 W1d1 M1Ul'1tl ti 2100 whereas Q>polla and pro-dressofthepeople -leven Welby"(ABC l:'!Kojak" ms ·F .IANCEE (Lee dLICef At Ruddy had oo tRlCb learned how·to ~ tobaccOi ' (CBS) and "~-G1'rl W1'th f of i1ic Remick), a college pro essor llmJtation. He followed the pettern Something Extra" (NBC). kids him aboot his "police .•. So When Paramount sought' Marlon 'Brando inrneareh.ing CBS' recently ea n c e i'e 'II discolUlts" and devotion to Brando for a return. be made his roles. Now he faces the "Caluccits Dept.", l'oitlch baS work: "You're my blue knight the company an offer it . awesome c b a 11 en g e of been at the bottom of the in a black and white charger. coorepoldrtedn't thaaccet pthe • .!! •.. '! ".! • dB~~tlngmadea hiscltaracter that ratings since the season • • .you joust and live of! ·~-.. ~ own. began, came in next to last the land." 14111 SENSATIONAL WEEIC. !!XCLUSl\IE OltAHGlr (OUNTY •NeAO•M•NT ,WEEK04YS SAT., SUN. 1:• ,:. 7:30 • t :• S:lt • hJll • t :Jll ' million salary plus IO pen:enl DE NIRO JOINED a cast this time. Last place was oc-''Try roust," be wryly sug· of gnxss receipt.a.. No sale. which included Al PacirlO, cupied . by another recentlj gests, using the police terml..i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;:.;;;;;;;~~~;'.;~ip;;;;;;;:; HOW 00\JLD Paramount Robert Duvall and Diane canceled pt-og1111n, ABC's for hanumelll of aispects. I fmd another actor to follow Keaton from the original film. "Bob&: Ctlrol &: Ted&: Alice..!' 'Ille four shows concern one of. the most famous All are working at ap-Morgan's relucta.Dt decision to performances of all time? prol:imately 10 times their ... ''pull the pin" '-retire - Paramount aolved 111 dllem-previOll.! salaries. Chuck Stars at the end of a week he ma by casting a relative Coppola eipects the shooting begins by fmding the body newcomer u ~ youog !loo of "Godfather, Part 11" to ROCLYWOOD (UP[) of a m..dered prostitute in Corleone. He is Robert De take 16 weeks, with locations Chuck Connors returns to the Los Angeles River. N"U"O, a S.year-old New York-at Lake Tahoe, Las Vegas, movies with a starring role The lady turns out to be er whole lace hu 90ll'le of the Loa: Angeles, Miami, the Car· in "99 and 441100 Dead" Jot one of bis "snitches" -in· to u g b -jawed, lnad-nosed ribean, New York and Sicily. 20th Century-Fox. · formants -and he vows to Brolin •Trapped~ W _ith Dogs By Jt:lll\Y BUClt LOS ANGELES (AP) Here is the situation: )"OU hive been mugged in a deparbnent store restroom and when you come to the store is loclred . fOI" the night. he got the I~ from an in-dog. Ro said they accepted Vandyke beard and muslache, ci~t in Pbilldelphia where all ol the means, but w..., said; "Wl\if with the Middle a Dian became innocently a Httel dubious about the uSe East War and e\rerything else trapped m a store and was of a flaming mop. They felt going on this doesn 't seem killed by dogs. the dog could have found ·a terribly important. Bul it <!<>es "It toot: a long time to way to get around it. say what kind of people we rtle81dl tills, to find a way "This ii the kind of show are. This is okay . RUOTT KASTNER IJ!IStnls CLIFF GORMAN JOSEPH BOLOGNA To get out you simply wolk to the exit, find a guard . or use the telephone, rlgbl? Think again. Tbe telephones are disconnected, there are no human guards in the store and between you and the exit are six ellack dogs trained .. kill. tQ permit the man to escape that everyone second "I don't have any ax to tbe dogs and Uve," said guesses.'' be said. "People will grind. My purpose was to look DeFillua, a longJ.lme writer, say be should have done this at an aspect of our society L-...::.•=---=::·.:~::·::~::......J•-.:::==;:::::;::....,iL-l!!!!!O"""-"""!!....J dlr<ctor former documontary or that. It bad to be valid." today and come up· with a W kda 7 & 8 40 10 15 1bat'• the premise o f "Trapped," an ABC Movie of the Week tonight at 9:!0 on dtannel 7. James Brolin stars as the trapped man. IF IT SOUNDS like a Rollywcod pipe dream, coo- sider that hundred5 of stores aod fac:tories are petrolled every night by attack dogs. Frank DeFililla, who wrote and dire<led the film, said " ''" °"" '""'' ....... .... f941MH! """' .... , ,,,. ..... 111rt1 •:41 Nlftlt11 maker ~ witmer ol two Em-Del'11illa, a big man• .with story that ls. unique and thrill· ff ys: : • : ,,_ .,...,. .,.. r.M. mys and aPeabodyaward. thick. coal-black hair and a Ing. Privately, lam appalled Sat. & Sun. 1.:45,3:30,. ,,.,_..,_...., ''I knew there would be no film's hero to escape each that this exists." "THUi lfAUTS stozyilbe~ed.Andlnreal1·--~~~-~~~~-~-~~~11~~~~~5~:~1~5~,7~&~1~:~~~5~~fOll~A~LONO~~GUN"~~· life be would be killed by UA. City ... '-"' c-r Cl•mt-T...S.y SOe the dogs. My research showed (L.a!IM •. ~ .&een>-0,.11 "'· 21• .. m. these dogs are agilaled In training until they are driven psychotic and will kill m sight. Even the handlers are frightened ol· them and use heavy peddiog and face mub when transporting them to and • from the stores." DeFIL11TA said he talked to many trainers, seeking their reacl1ons to the various means be dovised for the fAr.:11 Y 1\'llN CINrl.IA CINIMA I OIOltH c. scon UOkl ......... Crude" + STIJ\ll McOUllM '' Junier Bonner'' (PG) CIRMA II The Purr l'Ci /1p A nee !Joo Oa~ fun ·~~! - It. li.h "ILICT1t4 OLIDI: tH ILUI" "THI OUTSIDI '-•HH ... i. C ... rl (l"OI """ ,,, "WOfilDlll WOMEN" ..,. ... 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Real sharp. :#VHA687 '73 LTD Squire Station WafjOn • ing, power 1teerlng, pow•r d11c A'''··'""'" f0<t0<y ,;, .,,d;t;~,. s4499 brak•,, pow1r •windows, AM/FM redie, rediel whiteW•ll tires, Brou - gheM interior, - '67 DATSUN 4 Dr Sed 4 cyl .. • speed, radio, heater, rea l good condition, economy special. :#UOK606 • FORD ' r • • . . . . . . , . . ~ ~------ " IJ PILOT·ADVERTlSER N Wtdnesday, Novembtr l'\, 1973 g ~f.1 is G·oose Is ·Fun • t. 8~ ~' CAROL MOORE meat lets all ,of them continue to share -..iy "'" •• •••w the hlpplneu. Not •nrYone baa elk cbaieaubrland "There's no such thing as a bad cook for d~Mondays. o1. a husband'• catch, 11 Mrs. Black ex· ~Bui Groen of Irvine 8¥."hel' plained. "ff• hiDkB the reiults are motlier; Bet\y Black don't consifer it . iv!>nderfUJ.1mmediately because you are a lu.iury. • p.yt1Cl""6na Ill bll ~llemtnt. The !l"fl ,c,ame from a froezer1 coo-' ''And, In GpJ' •-'· ...,·~ been oot tahlln( .~ Willter supply i<>I e)k ,and fn the early' mornlna cold with our g-:t$ Bill Clreen's )>ounty from oWI. guns and lines. It doesn't mailer two , ol liuntlng I and ijsh !be !\Ow we look btcauoe the ~ Is ao Blaclao 14 Enaenada. thrilling.'' ' The '°'1il':..lnioy lite hunting aa mucb ~-Green added , "Football or golf e tbip DNIM>tk. and preparation of tbe 'widows' Jose their roen for an afternoon. ' • ' !'r .. • • "i • '' .. ·,· "'l .. ' .. ' • . • . ,~ .: ,. • ~· \ ' BEA ANDERSON , Editor ·-· • But with bunters you figure a 12-hour drive, a 5-month seuon. • . . and then • comes fishing." Sc> the Mmes. Green and Black go along and _recently rf"bllshed their favorile original recipes; enUUell "How to Cool< Ila ,Goose (and Other Wild Game•)" by )Vlnd',e.t... ~. The book was a family project too, wrltllll by Karen, cooking editor of w-.i ~tdooni magazine, and Betty, who lhoit writes for celebrities, and ~ with cartoons by Bill Green. --. Green deocrtbes the kitchen iesting as a bacchanalian feast : .. "One day we would prepare dove for every course imaginable or we would give a party with three entrees of albacore to see which way our friends preferred. · . "UJ.ckily, we didn't gain weight beca~ meat is protein and we mostly nibbled:" t "All these preliminary marinades are discarded when cooking game," Mrs. . ' Green explained. "The coo~ starts over again with the treated meat, Improvising M4...:@!lclng, much the same as for ckmestic meat." · Mr& B1'ck menllQ!'ed another mistake. "Beginners ·think they can roast out the gaminess. But you 'll miss tbe true flavor if you cook it to death. "People a1lo 'might think our portiono are too aenerous but we're writing from experience. "Most recipes call for two dove breasts per serving. They're the size of chicken livers so we recommend lour to six. Remember, Y®'re' serving excited ap- petites." The authors will prepare this recipe on a Nov. 28 TV appearance on "Philbin & Co." Mni. Black recalled that 1ter house · CJ\EAMED J\AllB!T was being remodeled at the Ume. She t WI'lll MUSHROOMS fed the workers recipes she y.ias develop-2 ra~bljs • .cut up lng and one man came back for lunch 'h cup flour seasoned' with 1i? teaspoon after ~ moved to another job. pepper "We're ecology-minded," she said. 6 tablespoons butter "We're_ recycling our fun into food for ¥• cup diced onions the table. You shouldn't kill . animals 8 large fresh mushrooms, sliced unless .you int.end to eat them." 11!2 tablespoons onion soup mix 'I1te ~q_thors admit serving game to % cup hot chicken bouillon ·guests automatically qualifies you for l 1h cups sour cream a top culinary reputation. Dredge the rabbit pieces in flour. "Friends think you're a gounnet for Place ball the butter in a large frying being so adverlturous. Actually, we rely pan and add onions, saute until soft. quite a bit on convenience foods. T.od..Qy's Push on.kw to the side and brown rab- prepared sauces give marvelous results bit pieces 011 both sides. with game. You just have to ex-Meanwhile, put the other 3 tablespoons periment." f b It o u er in a separate frying pan and Garney tast.e. is the main reluctance aaute the mushrooms ·until golden. toward trying wild meat. JWnove mushrooms with a slotted spoon Mother and daughter claim this is ~ ~dd Utem to rabbit-onion pan. ·Half the fu n of writi ng 11 cookbook an acquired ·tlale or can be eliminated Combine soup mix aoo' bouillon; pour as II fa mily proj ect is sampling results .. by parboiling water fowl with herbs over rabbit pieces. Spoon sour cream for 20 minutes, using an oil-based over all ingredients. Covet pan and sim-·Betty Black offers daughter Ka ren Green i marinade for g.,..., meats or aoaklng mer for I hour or unfil rabbit is tender, 11 bite <?f t he dish they will later ' fish in milk for half an hour ,"to ,pull bastihg occasionally. Serve jn 4: poi;tions II . L . '.......Oii\. llaYoa..Y~.u_don'.LYlllll!.-· _......with..bDLbrown rice ·-----.J.e.qe..,fo i usha.tor~usbands. -.. -~ PERLA MEYERS SHOPS FOR FRESHNESS ' Sea·soned Treats "American appetites are s p o i I e d because consume:l'3 are less conscious ol. seasons and produce prices. 1be fact that 70 percent of the food budget goes for pack1£ed foods and 30 percent for Creshneft Is a disgrace. "Vegt!tables are picked when overgro~ They have great flavor w~ they are smaller." Spea~ from observation is Perla Meyers 'who does her own gardening in ConneCiicut,. Instructs at New York's IntemaUonal Kitchen cooking school and goes to Europe three months a year to keep up oli cuisine techniques. Her contention is to take what you can out of ~ best of nature and make lt your own. Backing up her enthusiasm With plenty of training at COrdon Bleu and Ecole Hoteliere she has written "The Seasonal Kitchen" which translates diverse uses ol fresh t'bOds for the typical American family. "Cooking by the season is so much easier IOI" so tnany women. Not only is •it perfectly normal Wt also you don't ba~e to pay lor processing. "If a fbod iJ out of season, there's little 1'eu!in to i!lOl\ for it or pay high_ prices. Drop lt out oC your mind !llld look fonf&i'd to food that is in season as another adventure for the peJate. 11 Mrs. Meyers also campaigns against reliance on beef .. nd SUJJP.C>sedly premium cuts: • • "Stews · made out or lower quality meats are ao dflldous. have very little waste and cook )y Lhemselves for 3 or 4 houn·to perfect tenderness. , 1'Some.. peop!O'. Pr<!•t... ~nly '4>~ts <i... chicken whld actually are the least nawrtul .1*i. ,A cacciatore tha~ uses every bit of ~ chlcke~ Is ao appeaUng and better fk you." And she 11!-'t "ant children to miss out on apcl!ire to interestlilg foods. "At the Mme. moment !l<)u Introduced a Youncstl!< to a c1r1 ... 1n hamburger you aKtl4' have presented a new vegetable ... fish. n "Seallinll'•.Kl\clteq" is a tiv<ly book both In rben• .,gcestloos and cont~t, red let!ef!N ·GO)-beige pages. ~P'S are con-9Y coded as to price and ease or ~ration an.d •lrernafb"' give ~ks ao ·•It• boosl of coolld<nce as to how bllil"' oerv< finl1~ prl>du<:ts. Cooks wlio speak In .lfrni! ol bcurre manie, ~ sarnl, darliled butter and cronie ltaldle will lnl .,,,.. .at home liut' Ille l1oo1<-~ 1Upplemeotal caleodai' are applicable to everyone. Mrs. Meyers' Cavorlte dessert is a fall oflertna: - < AP PLE MOUSSE WITII APRICOT SAUCE 4 medium apples fMcintosh or other firm cooking apple) peeled, cored and quartend 1h: teaspoon cirulamon v ... cup apricot preserves Pinch nutmeg Pinch grated lemon rind 4 egg yolks 1 teaspooii oornstarch 34 cup sugar 1 If.? cups warm milk 1 tablespoon unflavored gelatin 1h: cup orange juice 1. teaspoon vanilla 1 cup heavy Cream, whipped For the saoce: • I cup apricot preserves 2 tablespoons lemon juice I teaspoon grated lemon rind y, to II cup apricot·brandy 11,\ to 2 tablespoons powdered sugar "'" cup kirsch In a heavy bottom saucepan, combine apples, cinnamon, preserves, nutmeg and rind. Cook over low heat until apples are very sort and mixture mashes easily with · a· fork . Be careful not lo scorch the botrom of. the P,Sn. M soon as apples are done, paSB m.Jrture through a Sieve aDd reserve puree. Jn the top cX. a double boiler, combine egg Yolks. cornstarch and sugar. Beat until mixture is light, fluffy and pale yellow, Add milk and place pan over si~ mering water. Stir constanUy until custard coats spoon. Don't bring mixture to a boil or it wUr curdle. Remove from beat and reserve. Heal gelatln·and orange juice lri. small saucepan. Whisk melted gelatin into still hot custard. Pvur Into clean bowl and chill 2 hours. Whlil:: oecasklllally unUI mixture starts to set. Remove custard from reerta:erator and '1'hlsk in vanilla, apple punt, ~ whip- ped creom. Pout mouaoe intO individual dessert cupo or &1a..; bowl. Chill at least 4 hours. .' . In a sauce pan· combine preserves, ... 'lemon Jllice and ' tlJ\d; brancty and powdered supr. H"t· unUl preoerves are complete!; dlaaolved . .P•SI Uirouch a fine sieve and add kll'lcb. Taste lild odd inore augar or brandy, If needed. Ollll. '-..... oblllocl -· RomarkB: '11111 11uce II dellclou• ol'l!r a variety of fruits, P911ched pears or pooclteci'bananaa or ipple compote ., well as on Jee cream or cre17s. Smooth Sailing If the sportsmen on your Christmas list are more interested in sailing than hunting;.you11 .want to wrap up a copy of "Coobhoanl and ~-.. . . This haridy 200-page ·guide, published by the W<lmen'• Committee of Balboa Yacht Club,__.coY.en everything from plley necessilies to first aid to lluistmis parade ....,kB to' 'racing menuj to advice on bow to prepare the day's abalolle catch. .M if the recipes weren't enticing enough, there are anecdotes by the club's worhlly .yachtsmen about what to do _ .... ,...~ '· ,, ' , .. ~ . "? when you run out of salt ·in Tyrell Bay, Carriacou or what to buy in Brit- tany in midsummer. A flagship among this year's fleet' . of club cookbooks, .. Cookaboard" has sturdy spi{al binding, a clear plastic protective coverigg and .. nautical il- lustrations by Rex Brandt, Paul Darrow, Phil Dike, Bea Riley and Jean MacNab. The book is available for $6.50 at the cl ub and specialty shops in the area. Scattered among the delectables outlin- ed by 100 contributors are such seaworthy "sensibles" as "When beating ) >! ,-..,: ' >. ·1 ' .--~-... ------·--_,,_ -··--··----.----~:._-_.:.,._ • Kitchen water for dishes, droP\in J cew eggs to hard cook at the same 'tmle." More literary spice is added by Lop- sided Stew: "Use any gOod atew recipe . Put-aboard in liquid form and chill in ice chest. Rwt on the same tack for about 4 hours, allowing the stew to solidify. Notice it ls very lop-tided. Heat and serve." Besides the fun there ls plenty of food, for who gets hungrier than sailors on the open sea? Current favorites such as bot sandwiches and frozen casseroles (to pop out for an easy dinner at home • • ' I . j '. I ... port) are just as popular with at-home hostesses. To whet the appetite, imagine younelf cruising back from catalina aboard La Fiesta, feasting on cold fried cbkken. marinated vegetable gamlahes, bean • salod scooped prelb1y Into nfdl cabbage leaf curls, plenty of beveJ111e11 and ice cream baf3 for dessert • • • wat~ an escort of whales Bod !barb! -: ~ COCKTAIL FLAG CRAB MOLD ·. '2 packages (8-ounces each) cream cheese • II pound sharp Cheddar cheese, grafBl I package (3-ounce) Roquefort cheese 1 teaspoon garlic salt -- % teaspoon curry powder 2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce 1 teaspoon paprika 1 tablespoon inayonnalse 1 _!ables~n Jeman_juice _ 1 can (&-ounce) crab meat, drained. • Have all ingredients at room teirt- perature and combine them in orde'r in mixing bowl. Beat with electric rni.J:er. Tum mixture into greaaed ·i..iuart mQJ(I and chill several houn or overnight. Unmold and garnish with' chopP!'<J parsley. Serve with crackers~ ~ DECKHAND'S SAUSAGE AND RICE 1 pound sausage links II bell pepper, diced l onion, diced 2 cups celery, diced 2 cans chicken with rice 9QU.p 1 cup water % teaspoon Worcestershire uuce 1 small can mmhrooms, drained 1 cup rice Grated cheddar cheese Cut sausage in pieces and brown. Add celery, pepper and onion. Cook 10 minutes. Add soup, w a t e r, Worcestershire sauce, mushrooms anil rice. Mix thoroughly and sprinkle grated cheese on top. Do not slit: Cover and cook about 35 minutes. ' JENNIFER'S LIDO II CUJ'CAKES 3 cups flour 1 2 cups sugar II cup cocoa (use more II Instant) 2 teaspoons baking soda 1 teaspoon salt 2 .Ct1RiJ¥&ter .; ~ cup oil 2 tablespoom vinegar 2 teaspoom vanilla FllllDg I package (8-ounces) cream chee3e I egg 'ii cup sugar v. teaspoon salt 1 package (I ounces) chocolate cb1J10 Sift flour, sugar, cocoa, .spda and aa1t. Stir, .don't beat, with a wire '!'bllk. Add water, oil, vinegar and vanilla. Stir some morel In another bowl, combine filling tn• gredients. Fill each muffin tin hall full with cake mixture. Add. a large teaspooa of the Jilling. Fm~remlindtr of cup with cake· mixture . .Bake at S50 degna for 30 minutes. ?.takes S dozen. • •• • • DAILY PtlQT U,IT...._.. Judith Blegen, who sings ·soprano for the New York-Me t, relaxes at home by practicing the violin. Also worked into her heavy schedule is helping out at her husband's hobby shop in Scarsdale. --~ , . Big Sky's No Limit Tall Talent By GAY PAULEY U'I W91'M11'1 et11tlf --N~ YORK (UPI)~ She's-five foot two with eyes. of blue and ba s to stretch to manage that height. On the operatic stage, however, she stands tall a:r~e in the skills of performance. Her name : Judith Blegen. It's also a long slretch for the fonnef cheerleader from Missoula, Mont .• (pop. 29,497) to lyric soprano roles a\ tbe_,. Met. • The diminutive diva is one or the bright new faces with the Metropolli.n .. Opera company and one of the feat\U'~ singers in its firs~time production Of ' . the Berlioz opus "Us Troyens." h UPI's senior editor Frederi~ M. Winship, covering opening night, called Miss Blegen's performance as the 1~ year-old Trojan prince a "delighUul im· personation both v o c a 11 y and ~tically." Miss Blegen put a blond wig over her dark hair for the boy's role. Miss Blegen will continue in the role aS the opera is· repealed t llrough lhe hiet's winter and spring season. She also .will appear in the Mel's production ·of "Der Rosenkavalier." Will such heady success on the world- reoowned stage go to the head of the . girl from the Big Sky cowitry? Hardly. For one thing, there's another star in the Blegen family -_her younger sister, Barbara, a concert pianist. Reaches Higher And for another, there is the strong. conviction Miss Blegen expresses that She wants a "well rounded life" that leaves some time for husband, Peter, A mus ical talent indeed- and son, Thomas Christopher. another form of relaxation - ' That is why for the last three years, is singing nursery so~s at the i;Ip ~ . .l!irlh of her ·!!Oil, abe bas ·---. piano~on, fommyc-c+.~-..,..---'-< sung ooly with U.S., opera oompania . • =mc!~~=!n~tiKie!FIF.'--"'--===-'---·------· --~--. to the Met. She has, howeVei, k$!pt ..... recording dates abroad. "I just won't fill my calendar ~ pletely anymore," said Miss Blegen. "I need two or three months each summer By the time she was 14, she was to be with my family, to refresh' myself, a regular with her church cOOir and to recharge the energy. ''discovered'' by the director who noted "I think that if I don't try to do her ability to sing loud enough to keep everything at once, it'll actually prolong the altos , on pitch. She also was a my career. promising violinist. 111.at vocal career for the girl whose The Blegen sisters stuaied for five rather is a surgeon, whose mother a ' :years at the c~ Imt!_tute in Violinist, began in grade sdlool. She J;'hj)adelphia. Jµditb's a;,.ra teachiir and recalled that she was her school's mentor --was Martial ·singber, then a ·cbef;:rleader ''beeause I could.yell loudei' '· -st,.r at the Met.,,. 1 than anybody else." ' Singlier had' a baodilome SOil, .Peter. " and it was in school that the runence began. \Vhen she was graduated, she ~·ent .,.to Europe on a Fulbright scholarship, studying in Italy and Germany. She worked at Ihc Nurembe<g opera, then moved on for more aeuoning in Vienna. Peter Singher got imp&tient with her wandering around Europe, wmt ·after her, married her and brought her back to the trru ted States. Now. her busblnd runs a hobby shop in Scarsdale. New ·Alternatives Offered for ·Retarded SOMETHING TO BE THANKFUL FOR ... By ALLISON DEERR 01 1111 C»IH' Pllol Slaff Don't wait for Santa C1aus. group residential homes and to\\'ard deinsUtutionalizing ap-fu nds in the rnost successful. plans for more. county mental proxi1nately two-thirds in most produ ctive and least ex- retardation and mental health these fac ilities who do not pensive progran1s. ~ards. and. expanded .. s~ort be long there, major citizen in-Th NARC 11 • the_ 1. 0 b the state, co.unty and city level," he asserted. Work in the political arena . Lobby long and hard. Don't be afraid to get involved. w asllirtltOft -aov.-nariiCf Evans urged parents of the 'retarded at a Nat ionA I I Associatien for th e Retarded convent ion in Anaheim to ';set sites high and loo~ at overall needs." hme or respite care fa c1hhes . volvement, new laws on . e_ · 0 . _proposed is-a program-that-architeetural-bar.r.iers-and -~1n1ng progra1n IS one of Because of the NARC, he said, there is an awareness in the current Admin istration that human d.ignity_i_u e_guired_ for the retarded, in all the various gradations of ability. would fund retarded children education for all bill. these. he said. so parents could afford to keep "People must get involved "The time to voice opinions them at home. in the political arena where about where allocations should Extensive preven tion pro-decisions are made. And peo-go is before the bud get is "N ARC must keep up the awareness among the public and on Capitol Hill. Jf you grams, such as Rubella in-pie can effect these decisions,'' noculations, are uadcr \yay. the governor said . made. not after." Fasse r said. Programming 011 the 113_ ~o~tw~~~ for the retard ed, tional level often cann ot ----------He noted that a few short decades ago there were \\VO alternati ves for the retarded -institutionalizatio n and 1 1 keeping th e child at ho111e. Using the s tate oJ Washington as an example, he discussed the n e w \\'ashington now has 28 COSTS HIGH "It cost about $100,000 to do this state\vide. Con1pare thi s to the '400.000 cost for lifetime institutlooal care for one retarded person," Evans said. Other efforts in c ludin g upgrading state institutions to national standards , working He cited the case of one bill that was,potentlally a step back\\'ard for the retarded . The governor advised an ac- ti ve advocate for the retarded , his cousin, to contact the legislators involved. Wit hin 24 hQurs, every one of the state's 99 represen- tatives had been contacted personally by volunteers and the restrictive measure did 111atch the exact need of each community. Funds and plan- ning are diluted "like pain!ing an auditorium with one quar t of paint. ''The proven programs on the national level, are those Kids Like To Ask Andy most likely to be fund ed on ------------II not pass. ' 1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir "The best birthday present !~ I alternatives. .. ,. Pair to Wed In Januory A Jan. 19 wedding in Melodyland Christia n Center, ~aheim is being planned by Elizabeth Hammack a n d William F. Carnahan. Parents of the ·betrothed are Mr. and Mrs. George Ham- mack of Fountain Valley and we can give ourselves in 1976 is a system that dots 'vhat our fo refathers envisioned ." NATIONAL VIEW Asst. Secreta ry 'of Labor Paul Fasser looked at the na- tional picture and expressed oplim ism that revenue-sharing wo.uld not take funds from vital programs, but rather put the William Jac k Carnahans 1~jpiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiii:-I of Rivers ide. I .. ' ELIZABETH HAMMACK ~1iss Hammack is a graduate of ~luiitington Valley Christian High School, Foun- tain Valley and now attends Azusa Pacific College where her fiance uri§ a' -student'.. He is a graduateliof Cottage Grove High School, Oregon. For the woman who care1... I Do Something Different fur the Holidays! ffllft fl -of J# t. !Id ftOflc ... ble dlffltf'I(•. o.-..+0«> ..,__ kldMduolily 011d lri\pfO'N J'Olll DPPlitON:I .atly & l'IOllltOl1)1 ltt o 1111lq111 •nvli-• lhotwork.1 lot rou. E111o)'. it. "'*",.--.._11 •...t c.11 ••day to. 0 ,OMp!ilftfl'llo"f' -1,., .. I holiday (Ollf .. Hhtd11l1. A l eo11!ilul Wor 10Go .Jolw, Robert Powers (1 Sthool1 IOf WO/flt~ of Al! I\, ... OIANGI 3Town&Co11ntry •~1.am ' I . l .... FRESH TURKEYS I CCAST S:J~ER :l~r.!tET. Wt Dto411fllf Yel.I( 'lll'dl~~I! w1•,.. •• ell• •• v•Ur ,i.1r • 673-3510 U47 I.COAST HWY. ORONA DELl••AR The Practical Wig ow~er knows to Shop at . rllla!Aed /or Wftd EXPERIENCE & SELECT10N ARE ONLY 2 OF THE REASONS YOU GET MORE AT MAlllE'S All Elura Wigs From 3Q to 60°/o Off Re9 ul1r $45.00 C1pl11s l1t11t 1tyl11 .....•. • •• Now Sll.50 Di1c:ontin111d Capl111 1tyl11 ..•..• , . . • . . . • Now $22.50 R uler Ce Elur11 Wi 1 Nn $11.00 ' MEN'S WIGS & TOUPEES F•om $17.47 to $6:i.97 All -Hum'ln Hair Wigs ~ 40·50% OFF Exotic Wi91 I 100% Hum111 Heir. Mechi11e M1d1 Re9ul1r $59.95 ..• , .• Now 01ty SZf.fS Stvl• lnc:l11d1d • Moniqu1 WT91 ! t00% Hum.in Hair, Mechi111 Midi .~rt • C1p. R1.1111l1r $~9 .95 , • , • ::-Now 01ty $Jt.tl Styli lncl11d1d ) . . Hum 1n H1 ir H111d Ti1d Wig\ 100 % ·,Fln1 Huma11 H1lr, H~11d Ti1d for lightweight & comfqit. · Re911lar $99.95 • N.,. Sit.ti Styl• lnclltd1d ' .. ' Mil11Jy Wi91: I 00% Euro pt en T1mir• H11m1n Heir ,~1nd0tl1d comfort ce p ,th1 b111i. R19 .$1110 How $14 Styli l~clll<l.d w ...... ..,.... Wlt ·• "-~ .... ·-··. to~Ytiurl" ... WIG AND BEAUTY SALON 2500 East 17th Street_ 548-3446 Hilgren Square, Costa Mesa • /· HOLIDAY SALE Just in lime for the Holidoys o! greo! sovings to you. PANT SUITS ... ' .. ' ' .... ' ' ' . REG. $50.00 SALE . $24. 99 LADIES SPORTSWEAR TO 50% SEPARATES -JACKETS -SHIRTS-PANTS-SKIRTS GOOD SELECTION OF NATIONALLY KNOWN BRANDS Lingerie SOME GOODIES-SAVE SAVE SAVE I o 0 o Nightwear OFF VAN RAALTE -BARBIZON -LORRAINE -at GREAT SAVINGS -Just right for Xmas Giving. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SAVE UP TO .~ ROBES ... MODELS COATS ..... V3 TO V2 OFF , DRESSES .................... 33V3% TO 50% OFF LONG SLEEVE-SHORT SLEEVE POLYESTER PRINTS AND KNITS ALL NEW FALL PATIERNS AND STYLES j •• LADIES SPORTSWEAR .......... LINGERIE ... . 3404 Via Lido '-Newport Beach .- "One of the Lido Shops" r l ' 'I I " ii .. . . . . . ' . . . ... , . . . ~ ... ... . . . . . - HARMONIOUS COMBINATION DOUBLES TREAT Tasty Trio Br'ewing TASTY TRIO 4 urs com % pounds lr<sh shrimp 6 smoked sausages, pre- cooked Beer lo fill !Olldue pot Husk com and drop In boil· ing water. Cover and boil ap- proximately 5 to 6 minutes. Break each ear in two or three pieces. Shell and devein 2. pounds fresh shrimp. Rinse shrimp and pat dry wiU\ paper1owellng: OJt I ~ed sausages into bile sir.e pieces. f\ Let guests spear shrimp with !endue rorl<; cook in boil· ing beer until blight pink. and spear sausage and cook in bolling beer approzimately I minute. • For 11uu1e: CN:amy Mustard -Sauce , 1 cup sour cream 1 tablespo<¥t P r e p a r e d mustard t tablespoon minced onion ~'.. teaspoon salt 1;1t .. spoon pepper • Vi teaspoon horseradish Co,mblf\e all ingredients in '8ucepln and beat Uioroughly . ~or Nrtmp: Garlic a.uer i; cup melted butter or margarine NEW LOCATION Same Great FREE Cooking School Every Thursday, Oc:t. 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 Tliari $2,000 ' ?iiore exciting and profitable than ever before, the annual Cooking School returns to the Orange Coast" area for its 22nd great year-but in a ne\V location, Edwards Newport Cinema in Newport Center (across from Fashion Island). You're in· 'vited to allend free an'll to compete !or' prizes including a Litton Electronic Oven1 Ainana Radar .. Range, Electr1>-Grill Tabletop Barbecue and more -national brand ,.mes among pri'te" ilems in· elude General Electric, Frigidaire, Oster and oth· ers. Plan ~ow to attend the are81s greatest cook· ' ing school ... Co· Sponsored by Richard's Markets, Lusk Homes, 0<1Vis-8ro,wn Ap- Preffy Pears pli1ncas, Edwards_ Cinema, Southern California I ... _.. -. '11lls deli81Jtful ran dessert ~dison Company, Orange Coast D~ily Pilot, lak .. only minutes. Co,.. and dice fresh pears. CCH1sl Community .Collena District (Orange Toss with ·oeedles• gr•peo and ~- ' OAJL Y PILOT Food Industry Warming Up By l\1ICl1AEL J. CONLON Artech developed the JWI but a spokesman for Art ech did and were a little surprised not with the industry's shiP:" WASHINGTON (UPI ) _ In under a contract with the said It eventually ,...;11 be Wrn· at how much thawed out," ping methods so much 11 '*' n rew year&, perhaps sooner, Army Surgeon General's of· ed out !or every product, at a spokesman said. is with the Jack of sopbi!tlca..: shoppers may be able to tell nee, althou&h the concept for about a penny per unit, with "So now they 're looking at lion of lhe JWI. and three at a glance whether the frozen the indlc-came from lhe a market potential or 810 more secure 1nethods of ship-or four similar devices. food in supermarket cases Gemini spac9fhight program n1illion a year . 1nent. And gr()Ci)ry stores are None of the current l.n- stayed rrozen after it left the wbere..salt chemistry \Yas us ~henJh.e ®vice came oul beginning to realize t h a t dlcators. a spokesman aid. ractory. to solve heat control problems. 18 months ago it \vas warmly deliveries so111etimes sit on is relined enough to tell, for ' A little yello\Y disc on each Currently the IWI .I& being 'embraced by the quick Crozen loading docks and can get instance, how long somethinC package or rrozen Pe as , used only for bulk shlprrients, food people, but then they thnwcd out." ' thawed -or whether It tha• chicken pie or \Yhatever may because it's too expensive to found out they dldn' have The Am erican Frozen Foods ed "enough to make any dif .. do the job. 1 _a..:p_:p..:ly_to_1_· nd_i_v_ld_ua_l_pac_c_ka..:gc.cs_: __ lh_e_oo_nt_ro_l_l_he..:y_lh_o_ug:ch_t_l_he_:y __ Ins_l_it_u_le_sa_id_th_e_:_problcm is ferencc. A partial or even comp1ete -;=========================================:: thaw. or some foods , followed by refreezing. may not be Cul; but for others -such shellfish or dishes usi ng cream sauce -it could cause spoi lage, maki ng the food unusuablc or e v e n dangerous. One firm . Artech Corp. of Falls Church. Va., already is marketing a tha\v indicator ~provid~ ins_!!lnt alert on the history of anYll'07.~n ENJOY TBE RICH FLAVOR OF MJB ANDIOcOFE ·:f. ~ '• ' product that thawed. r:--------------· , ---------------, -·· · 1oc1 Artech recently sold hair a J JOI< million or the devices to the 1 ... Pentagon and is sellin g others -I S1 •·r lOt1 towafd purchJ.,r c-tc. 'bur (u stomtr rnu~t at the rate of about a nlillion I of one <Jn uf ~IJB Cou..::'· P'l' :iny ~airs •~)(. (ou r-on f I a year. (:l ny Sile). ~Ir. Gr cx tr: 'oid it t.n:cJ, rrohihircd • Arlech calls , ... devi·ce !he I Z PleJ~<" rcJo:tm this <Oupnn or restrictt·J. c..,h ,.,lue ~ I .., I 0 at thf' fa,·(' 1·Jlur on one l 1.'.:0 oi one rt-nl. Ct>upon 0 I IWI ·-standing for "Ir· I a. •Jn of ~fJB (fiffer. 'iOu .::ood onlr in 1 ·.~A. and ::a I reversible warmup indicator." I ~ ""ill bf' rrlmbur~td at the CJnid.a.. FQr r r•'!Tlpt re· m I I Ou fa ce value plus 'I" for Jcn1p1u)fl 1n 1·.s A. 1nJ1l n I The size or a dime. the hJn<llin,c:, pro,·ided )'OU (Oupon H• ~IJB Co .. v.o. 0 I l\VI turns from yellow to red I w ~nd <on~umrr-ha1·c <om-Bu'< 11 87, (11n1nn, lo"' C: ir the temperature of the prod· 1. m: plit'\f "'ith 1)1(-tcrntt of 527j2. In (;1na<la mJd "U I . f ed I o,_ 1 hi~ offc-r. \'\'.r "'ill O•ll ' <.oopon..to ~ljli Co .. lH>'" 0 I uct to which it is a fix I "' honor rc:dempt1on1hrou;:h ~" •000. S:I1 nt John. Nt"· Z I ;~~;~---~~:~~~;Tai'!~'!~~~~~.:~;;.-'~!'~~'----' ---'---'------'-·---------..,-,------~-------------------------c, THOUSANDS IF l.S.l.A. ,llAll "A~ 1111111 nMD llOUIST IASJll ..... 19' CIUIY ............ IA. l.S.l.A. UIS" IOYAU .. TOM URKEYS ~.49~ ,. • .-afnut halves. Coast and Golden' Welt Colleg85) THESE ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD ONLY AT THE FOLLOWING STORES Top wtlh a mixture of sour ... ,-1, ... _... ··--····-.-... ·-••'IM'.''"-,,_, ..... _.._ .-..... 1 .. ,,__ ., .. ,_ ....... _ ......... _.,.,,. ... . cr .. m Sweetened to taste. a •:::::1 111~ ... •U-lol"' .... ' .... -'" ••-'""'"''-'•• ....... ~ ...... -... ···-'°'"'''""'"''"' , .. -....... ,_... • .. ,_ ........ _ ... , :,,, .................. .,·~ • .. .. -. ,,_,.,,.,.,:.:l.. __ ·-..... ·n·-· ... , ........ , .. .__ ··-·······--·-... ··-·.. . ... _., __ ,. .. -..... ,. .. _, .... ed t nd a ._ ..... ,_!_ .... •! .. """}"'' .... • .. --.... -.... , ............ _ ....... _,_,,,,, ... __ , __ ,. .. t-·--._ .......... ,.... ··-··· .... __ ,.., Uttle ~at coconu n ::::.:.::::.~"::-.... :;:::,::.~'::"'..::.-.. :::=~.-:::..·.:::::-:::::::~:~;;::::.: -:-;-~·.:::i:i.:::::-:=."~~~~ ... :-=:~··.~.!...,. .. :::.."'::.:~.=.:!"' dash 0,• nurc va nilla extract.1~===~==========:=:::=;:::;:::;:::;:::::11 'r""'9 .. "-'"' •t.oo ...... ,.,,,__ ..... _, ..... -... 0•11-1·1 .... _.. • .......... ,,,..,..,,., .......... u.,,, •1·-.... -·t:::-.h ... -· ,_,,,.,, __ t' • -............. ·•-·to •-... . ... ,.. .. ,.. ..... =. """-*"'--·---·-·-""" ·--( .. ,.;_.::, ...................... . Serve In she.rbct glashes. ··--·-·--• ·----·-~ ·-•io• .. ,,,, __ ,,_.... . ... -.... ·--·-i.o"'""--'M , ......... .,.i,-... . Wo\Ttl YHtllAKIOI ... ·---......... -... ~ ... -............ _.,., ___ _ .............. _ ... ___ , .. -------__ .,. ___ .... • \ • • 4! DAILY PILOT Wtdntsday, Novembtr 14, l97l ' ~ ~ f>,,, l?J· '*:> I' , •. .. .J' "' ., i ~· f " { 1.· .~'• w""'' I . ;scholarship Fund Aided I I I i A scholarship fund-raising lunch· eon agd, fashion show will be pre· sented· by the Laguna Niguel Wom- an's Club Saturday, Nov. J.7, in the Cro>r'! ffouse ~~ur~nt. Cmmnittee members ins~ctlng decor are (left to righ{) the Mmes. Gregg Neibert, Robert Pingatore and James · Tavasci. 'I ·'.:couples Say Vows ' Ce/ebiated iMartins ' :re// Troth i The engagemen't of Karen f aye r.Iartin to Floyd A. Waldron has been announced ~Y her' par~. Mr. and Mrs. reber ?.1artin of Cost.a Mesa. The affianced pair plan lo married Dec. 1 in the Los Angeles Temple. Church of .resus Christ or Latter-da y Saints. l The bride·tcrbe attended \"roy High School, Fullerton,. ~ business college and Orange ~ast College . Iler fiance ,son (lf the Frederick Waldrons of North Hollywood studied at North Hollywood High School, California State University at long Beach End Golden West College. Road Rules For Cyclists Remember, a cyclist also is a driver. The National Safety Council reports the death of a IS..year- old Connecticut boy \vho failed to realize it is just as im· 1 port ant for cyclists to obey traffic... signals as it is for lllOtorists. · a delight/11/ budget salon 1 ii · here ~bea16iif 11l h.air JtyleJ -br:gin. PRICE LIST l••tT• Ol•rts l"tr Lt.11 H1lrl MONDAY THRU THURSDAY FllOAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY PR ICES SLIGHTLY HI GHER J Sh1mpoo ind Set ...................................... $2.50 & up I Permanent Wave ...................................... 7.SO & up Tint .................... _ ...................................... S.SO & op 8lt1ch Touch-up ....................................... -10.50 & 1p ' Fro1tin9 ...................................................... 14.00 & 1p ' Semi Permanent La1hei ......................... , .• 10.00 . I haircuts •t.50 1695 Irvin• Av•. -Costa Mesa Corner of 8. 1·7th St.-Above l1 Cave Restaurant 645-1050 548·9986 °"' ............. , . ..,. LeeWa.rds Bonus._Coupon ~ . WORTH S5.Q0 • Towards Purchase of Any $15.00 or over ARTIFICIAL CHRISTMAS TREES Size111p to 7!: ft. E•;i1r1s Nev. :>O Towards Purchase of Any SEWING BASKET, ' •• ' No ·Sense in Devalued WQr-th· ' "'" . . ' ' and family know that I WOf11 . llavt DEAi! ANN LANDERS: My mother is constantly calling me thoughtless, selfl,.sh, stupid , inconsiderate, etc .• etc. I must be all these things because She says them over and over. Tonight she started to cut me down again. l didn't say anything, but I got so angry I hated her. My anger gave way to tears and suddenly I realized it wasn't n1y mother 1 hated , but fuyself. - .~ ~. .. ' ' , .. ... ·1 she put her arms around her and seid, "Don't feel rejided. I love you. u any uat lor linens, poll IDll· -'i>-' p!iance1, china and all lho thhlp • brides like to receive u w~ al{tl.. What we'd really like II CAill. , Please don't think I'm erus. I am jllll -PRAC'rlC~L '> · DEAR PRAC: Du'I toll '°"' "*"' wbal cO ,.Id old wbll NOT le lllll · unla1 Ibey uk. 11'1 bid ._, Moreovtr, from • partly ,..oelli:ol )Illa! At that moment another womap en- tered the powder room. When she saw the two glr'4 embracing sh~ spullered, "I wlsh you Women's Libbers would stay 1n your own bomesl" 1 know parents aren't to blame.,_Ior everything, but it's hard to retain 1tlf· confidence when someone as im~, as your mother is constantly bellt\lbli' you. • Jt would help if the put-downs.~ You · chose to -Ignore that statement. of vlri' .II wou1o1 be , ~IP..._ f bopeyt1doa1laleld10U..-r,dfy'1 ' molber for lbe ~I II ,..._ ._, ":; .f You ... lhllJJ pS 'a'-... -. you won'I be U.Iia Immella!e17. Lottr yoa'll be dellPltd lllal ,.. ud !Mm -.. petlally llloo• ··~· .... , '" currt•t rate of lafJat•1 u e'9drlc balanced by a Httle praise, but pral:le ·""Why ? Don1t you realize what she was (rom her is unheard of. I've stopped 1aylng? How ~uW you al~ow someone trying to share my experiences with ·to put Womens Llbbers m the , same her because she has a way of turning bag with lesblam? the mos t important events in my\ life By just keeping your mouth shut ~ou into trivial matters. . can do an awful lot of damage. Sign ' I'll never stop trying to be more · thlS letter -YOUR SILENCE QUES- thoughtful and considerate, but it's TJONED awfully hard to be your best self when DE~R SILE~CE: Never mlod my your own mother keeps telling you you 're moutlli. Dal.a tbe matter with your worthless. -A NOTHING DAUGHTER eyes? If ~will go to your local DEAR DAUG'1TER: Your Jetter ls a cry for help if I ever beard oat. I hope your mother got the message. newspaper ud check that column (dated Aur. t) .you'll find the woman sAld, "I wls)I y•u Gay Llbbers \\'Ould stay la your owa homes.'' ' Your apologies ,are accepted. ' DEAR ANN LANDERS : Teddy and •U beoler will <Oii ~\•••, 11\t l\ii yean -If you cu afford lo MJ _eap. CONFIDENTIAL TO T E E ,T H ·ON EDGE AND GOING BERSERK: You can't divorce a woman you've been mat· ried to for 35 years tiee.use she moves her lips when she reads. Find out what is REALLY bothering you ond· (lul . \Vilh the problem in a matw'e, ratiOnal manner. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I couldn't believe n1y eyes "-'hen I read youc col- umn last week. You printed a letter from a girl who was depressed dlU'lng a small dinner party and excused herself to go to the powder room and cry. A gal in the group became conCemed after· a while and decided to cheek. When she discovered her friend v.•eeping 1. plah ·to be married during · the Christmas holidays. We v:ill be Jiving with his parents. '11\ey ha\•e a lovely home and everything a person 'would need. ' ANN Landers dis'Cusses tetnage drink- ing -its myths, its realitles. Learn the lads by reading, "Booie and . You -!or 'l'eet1agen ONLY," by Anll Landers. Send 35 cents In coin llDd a long, slamped, self-addresled envelope . I to Ann Landers, P.O. Box lUS, 222 IV. River Dr., Chicago, lll. !OIM. " I How can 1 tactfully let my frieods L"Wards Bonus Coupon . WORTH S3JJ. 0 · Towards Purchase · Towards Purchase of Any of Any $4.99 or over _, 'CHRISTMAS FELT TREE ·SKIRT KIT . OR .FAL~ . t. CE,.TE!l~l,c• · ·KIT '· ... I. !i .. . Leewards Bon~··~ wom'lJIO To~trd8 fUrehl!l!I of' M}'·. ' STAINED OLA8S ORN~MENT' K T Eipll'lfl ...... 30 LeeWai'ds Bonus Coupon WORTHS).00 '(owa~ PurchaMool Any PIN·IT .JEWELRY. KIT 4' H,•ntlntJl•n· Center••Huntlngton Beach ---1 . • . cern., of leach & llllnp~ - Uae ·Y-llaoltAmil'lcir•, Master Cflarto or LH W ... Now L.yawwy ......... M-41y "''" la~11 • ......... ..:.. · Plione. •TOR~ Hou•• , ::.----~' ' 894-3314 .~~~i~,i.'!,, .. ' ~-..... -~ ...... • ' .. 't • '~ ... .. • . I • ' • .. ' ' KAY ,KELLY ' Silver Anchor · ' . . • C~ROL YN MILLIKEN • . • • Service Recog nized ' . Kay Kelly, Clrolyn t.ti'lliken in political campajgn.s both for "Her spirit of s e I f l es S: and Phil Tozer were tn the issues and caOOidates and has dedJ~tion to her fellow man spotlight at tile annual Sliver organized coffees ror can· 'benef"rts not only those s b e Anchor Awards luncheon didates. helps but the helpers, too. ~ spon.Med by the Dolphins, 1•11 yoa're her neighbor, she radiates a ·raith in her beliefs Women's Division of. the brought you a hot casserole which is the epitome of the NewJ)ort Harbor Chamber of the day you moved in. If goodness fowxl when one Commertt. you're her husband, she raised person helps another." 'Jbe three were honored for your children and kept your LOVE AFFAIR community service and Joined house. If you're her com-The third winner, Phil a prestlgk>us list of previous mun.ity, you have benefitted Tozer, is "a man who has Silver Anchor Award winners immeasurably from all the had a Jove affair with Newport which was begun in 1967. things she started," the Beach all his life. He is a AlsO recognized for service awards committee said. humanitarian who never turns was· Mrs. Sallie Fl~g, who FJEW DIRECTOR his back on anyone who needs received ~e _o_rc~kl lady-Of· Mrs. Millikeo, a ronner PIP-his he~.·· the.yea)-~gnaho~. and an fessional social· worker Tozer "115 -B-17 bomber orchld for .. IJµ service to the \specializing in help<>riented pllol. ~ :W:orl<l War.·µ, or~IZll~ .._.( .'It actlvltles1 'l'as a Girl Scoqt 81'1~•ebl h!l •• paycheok bo11ie ~n .. ~ w,~ spec1a r,=, field · <Urec.tOr· when she w~ '6, b.18 . lft 'lO buy ~ lot ~ ls • 1P~• •.tarted, ·raising her tam!ly in Wltli' .N ' jleach, w~ -CM,:~ work wltlt lier. · · '" lbeir.~ place for a home. Jp' -Cnta ID h<r · F0r eight years £he was , He . built a commerdal · .'ll<llf.cct ,llew tYork. . a volunteer worker in a child f!sh!ng' Deel from one . boat '' :MDIBER . • .. ~guidance 'clinic, and for 11 and·1reali.ztd another lifelong ~"""'~"""~ . ~. eari· lbe led the hi sth<iol dream, rJtOtmg Ute Bal.boa l · , 1.lecame i a charter group er ur ·. -.-He m,_; served as a tdtrector mem~ Of •.tiwi ,.N-e·w p 6 rt After moving to" Corona.del of· the"C>Qean PT 0 t.e.ct 1 Ve Harbor11irirvt.C'e Leaiue which Mar in 1967, Mrs. ltfilliken ____ ., • 1• ... board n~!S !ltO Jitnioi Leag.ie. , joined FISH and soon beeame A"""1~!ior\ Ind ,. •· '" ,. d member of Ute Mariltit~tudles U~·league presidency its executive U:ector. · Ins4~e which· •·)> 0rlj'i 0 r 1 in 1~~·vo1unteer Btireau j "FISH volunteers respond to marine scltnee·_..,......_ lor "·a.a tOur~.; She atJI:) was the cry for help from a sick children. r--:-;:::- , aclift In Junior .Ebell and -·per.;on,.Jrom an eldwy person Tozer helped .tart Ute fiNt · was inllnanmtal_ m starting who needs a hot• meal. (rpm Fishing Deroy. Id be n e f I t • •• the Youth Employm~ Ser-a mothet' ,who,,n~. help on retarded cl1ildren, and give> ' · · • · vice. ~ moving, ~llr: said t b e -bis boats to help United Fund ~lso a £ounder ol t.he Balboa W~en I d1~is1on. . d.mpaigns and civic projects. Pbilharmoni~ ~lion and Mrs. Milltkilrs . personal "'lbe deckhands on bil beats an eally sapj>6rter of the oommltment to helpmg otlters are·all his ..... ihe citsiomers Newport Harbor "Art Museurrt, is an inspiration to all w h 0 in his ~ are all . h 1 a llhe hu been involved lo ihe know. her, especially as llhe guests. His spirit of kindness Newport Beach United Fund. has courageously faced very and coocem for everY,Q11e ls M111 ·Ke\11•111S•bee111octiVO, ""'lll\11 health .problems. · known and. respecttd Ille "' . -~ "· ~ ', length and ~urbf,tt;le co,-munity, He lw beet! cillOd the tallest man tri .Balboa." ~ ... .::_ ...... ;.... ... -.. • ' ! ' ' , • ' ·• "' I •'I . '· , • ~ ..... ,.~ ..... ' ' • • ~ ' I• ' • •• . .. f • ; -. ... . . ' .. • ·- ... Coiffures- Run W-ild? A rare 4-poin.t deer . has been ~,o!t~d . if\. · the downtown ·area ot Salem. She is pro- tected, e v ~ n thnugh Ibis is the season for bargain hunters.-Actu- ally she is a manne- quin "standing in front of a ooaf rack: · • ". I 'l1tls Chrl81ma ., For holiday snacks and parties, nothing beat• l CHEESE ~ALL's dlallJlctlve blend of cheHe and ·choice g(Ound nu ls. Toeped with a brlghl red cheny, a 14 oz. CHEESE BA\:t Is only $1.98 ' - Ch••z nii;omm~dcd 'ftbi· · fl«t . . ·ft IH'QN/Q e WESTCLIFF" PLAZA 17tlii ft Im., Ntwpert ... ~ '4J-Of7J ... __..t > I , ' ' • • • ~ .. I . . . WedMSday, November 14, 19.73 • . ' • • • ' . • • I OVE R . $200 ,000 WORTH O F FI NE J EWELRY ROBINSON'S NEWPORT ONLY A JUST-IN-TIME-FOR-CHRISTMAS SALE OF BEAUTIFUL THINGS! GATHEREDFROM ALL ROBINSON'S JEWELRY STOCKS, AND OFFERED ONLY IN NEWPORT. BUT Y<t>U HA VE -. JUST THREE DAYS TO MAKE YOUR • SELECTIONS: THURSDAY, FRIP4Y,. SATURDAY. THE COLLECTI O"N' IS VALUED AT MORE THAN $200,000, -. -. -· ~INCLUDING MANY ONE-OF~A~K1ND-- PIECES. REGULARLY $15 TO $1200 . COME EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION! ROBINSON'S FINE JEWELRY. ·-. • • M•.•Prl. 'TH t s .... "Tlil I s.t. 'TN 6 NEWPORT CENTER 2 FASHION .ISLAND • i ' • · 1 DAILY PILOT Q ;'\ ' • • -. .. , • ' I ' 844-2800 - .. • • • • • • • • DAILY PILOT . • Cheese comes to the holiday table in many shapes: gouda di sc ~ appetizer puffs, herbed ball and sesame bar. Say 'Cheese,' Watch Guests Smile Hot and cold cheese appetite teasers get any party off to a flavorful i;t.art. Best or all, none of them are difficult to prepare. A most outstanding recipe is fGr the Unbelievably Good Cheese Puffs. and there's never any conce'rn· about leftovers. And \\'hat makes lhl'se so desirable -nothing but !he pure and simple basic dalry ingredients of a hot cheese sandwich. Jt's the finesse in which they -go together that turns out the delectable puffs And for the quickest and easiest of all, there is the texture and fl avor contrasting Sesame Cheese Bar. \Vith ideas like these at hand you 'll have no excuse for not go- ing beyond the chips and dip routine; 1 (3-owtce) package crcain cheese I pound Joa! un sliced bread 2 egg \Vhites, beaten Melt butter and cheeses over hot water. Meanwhile cut bread into cubes, about I-inch . .square. UNBELIEVABLY GOOD ~HEESE PUFFS · \Vhen cheese is melted, stir to combine and fold in beaten egg whites. Dip bread cubes 1~ cup butter (L cube). into ctlee$C mixture. Place on 14 pound Monterey -_Jack tray covered witp waxed Place in freczrr. \Vhcn frozen rcn1ove lo plastic bag and store in freezer. Tarragon, onion and dry "''hite wine transform cheese apd butter into a delectable cheese ball. For party oc- casions coat with finely chop- ped parsley and walnuts, llERBED CHEESE BALL To serve. place on baking sheet and bake in 400 deg ree oven 8 to 10 minutes or until cheese buffs begin to bro\vn. Makes about 3 dozen. Measurements for these in-1 cup butter gredienls are a matter of 1 pound Monterey Jack the ~1 cheese, grated taste. \Vhcn party is sma..• 1/4 cup chopped green on.ion do the same thing using a 3-0. uncc pa_Wge or cream ~); .teaspoon t a r r a g on , cnnnbled MAldT IASUT TOUI ,AITY Pt.Ami .. ADQUAmlS POI MIT flSIM OCCASION. A lAIGI 'fAlllTT, WI ALSO TMOI TO YOUI 9'ICIRCATK>NS COHNOISSIUIS CHC»CI, AHO AITPUl ASsommn Of' MAM, TUIUY IOAST lll P AND A OOUIMIM SILICtlON Of TMI MOST POPUi.M CHllSI WtTH YOUI CHOtCl Of POTATO IAlAD 01 COLI SLAW. ~~~~·~~~~ . .. ..... \'\,.,._~ .. EVERY DAY FULL SERVICE ·SEAFOOD!- These melt in your mouth morsels arc ones to make ahead an·d freeze. Then pop them into a hot oven for less than ten minutes and you have hot hors d'oeuvres. Mi!ke plenty because you take them directly 'from.·freezer-te·oven ~ As understudy to the star attraction add a baby wheel of ~,onterey Jack 'cheese and a savory cheese ball coated decOratively with walnuts and par&ley. cticese, shredded.. . _ pap<L._ ~ cheese. . ¥4 cup dry White wine 'SESA.\IE-CllEESE11Aft--• -eboJlll«hvajnuts----+l ~--~--'---•1--""'"--a..:..--.J--I l {S-Ounce) package cream ?.tinced parsley . J s E · '" cheese Beat butter until soft and t.\. • b · 3 tablespoons soy sauce fluffy. Add cheese, onion and · 6.~ 1if r/,. sesame seeds ed. Gradually beat in wine. ' .. ~ Sliced stuffed green olives Divide cheese in half and Chili Appeases Appetites If your dinner table is sur- rounded by a number or grow-- ing teenagers, all or them with blessedly lusty appetites, keep a good supply of chili powder on hand. 2 tablespoons to .s t c d -·goo and beat until hleod· • c.~v\,\ , . A r f $1,t' ~ Prick cheese Y.'ith fork and form each half into a ball. A /_/ ~ ..6 • blanched almonds oil. Add reserved onion and BriOg to boiling point; sprinkle first with half cf soy · Coat ba1ls with walnu ts and ,, 1 / -' ..... Rehydrate onion and garlic garlic; saute for 3 minutes. reduce heat and sinuner un· sauce, then with sesame parsley. Makes 2 balls, about in water for 10 minutes; set Add broth from fish (about covered for 2 minutes stirring seeds. Press in slidttly to hold 1% cups each. aside. 1 cup), bread crumbs. chili occasionally. Pour over fish. in place. Sprinkfe with re-Cheese balls may be frozen, In a Dutch oven or a large powder, paprika and cumin; Garnish 4 portions wit h remaining soy sauce. Garnish Wrap in transparent wrap or This blend or capsicum pe~ pers, cumin, oregano. garlic and salt -sometimes also ground cloves and allspice - is what makes chili con ·carne so popular at school cafeterias and snack bars. lieavy skillet heat 3 table--.. _s_t_ir_w_e_ll_. _______ c.p_ar_s_Ie_y_n_a_ke_s_. ,_·1_d_es_ir_e_d. ___ w_il_h_sl_icc_d_o_liv_e_s_. _____ f_o_il_an_d_lree_ze_. _____ 1 SJXlOOS of the Oil. Add i Chili powder is a convenient and popular seasoning for some of the more eccmmical sources o( protein: dry beans or peas, cornmeal concoctlons, cottage cheese, processe d American cheese, canned tuna. frozen fish sticks, eggs and hamburger. Party Picadillo is a deliciously f I av or e d ham· burger mixture to ser\'e a dozen p:>rtions. It can be lad- led over rice of mashOO potatoes or used lo fill tomatoes, tacos or green pep- pers. It's a great main dish for after-the-game suppers. Fish in Chili Sauce makes about four portions and is an idcal 1nain dish for the family. PARTY PICADILLO , 4 cup instant mlnced onion lh: teaspoon instant minced garlic ~cup water 4 tablespoons olive or salad oil. divided 3 pounds ground lean beef I can (l pound 12 ounce) tomatoes, broken up 2 medium.sized cooking a~ pies. peeled. cored and coarsely chopped 1 ~ cup raisins (optional) 11 cup sliced stuffed olives I tablespoon chili powder 2 teaspoons salt 1 can (.J ow1cc) slivered rehydrated onion and garlic: saute for 2 minutes. Add groWld beef, half at a ti1ne: saute until browned. Add tomatoes, a p p 1 e s . raisins, olives. chili JX)\'.'der and salt. Bring to boiling point. Reduce heat and sim- mer uncovered for 20 minutes, stirring occasiooally. In a small skillet heat re- maining t tablespoon oil. Add almonds and saute for 3 minutes or wttil lightly brown· ed. Stir into beef mixture just before serving. Serve vtith tacos and rice, if desired in 12 portions. FISH FILLETS IN ClllLI SAUCE 2 tablespoons instant minc- ed onion 11~ teaspoon instant minced garlic 2 tablespoons water I C.'hicken bouillon cube J cup boiling water l 'h: pounds fresh or frozen and thawed fi sh fillets 2 tablespoons olive or salad oil . 1 cup soft bread crumbs 1 teaspoon chili powder 1h teaspoon paprika 11, teaspoon ground cumin Rehvdratc onion and garlic in waier for 10 minutes; set aside. In a large skillet dissolve bouillon cube in \Valer. Add fish fillets. Cove r and simmer for 10 minutes or until fi~l'> fl akes easily when tested \Vifl· a fork. Remove fish to a hot platter and keep warm. In a medium skillet hciat Bean Happening Sa\·e !he cooking liquid to add to soup or a sauce. SAVORY GREEN BEA~S I pound snap beans ..,. 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 1~ teaspoon \Vorcestcrshirc sauce 1,~ teaspoon garlic salt Tip beans and wash in cold u·ater; cut into 1-i n ch crosswise diagonal lengths. Tum into a 2-quart saucepan and add_ 1 Ulch boiling water. Boil. CO\'ered, just until beans are tender-crisp -about 10 minutes : drain. Add remaining ingredients and stir until butter melts. f\.!akes 4 servings. • THE FISH MARKO • WITH THIS COUPON I LI. 4 Ol. CORNISH GAME' HENS ....... . .. 109 ,._ il'RliSH IOAMO UIHIOW TROUT ... . .. . .. . 89•·~· Pitt.SH SWORDFISH .. . ..... 1 u " o,_ 11 •·•· t9 '100 '·"'· S.t. 11 hi 5:JO 145 E. Broadway, Costa Mesa "'•Lthink Am • .. YV\: every encan woman . ·should have the opportunity to discover MJB Stuffing Plus." The savory15 minute side dish with a touch of Wild Rice. Stuffing Plus is not an ordinary Stuffing Mix. It is a temptingly seaso ned homem ade style stuffi ng side dish you can cook up in a saucep an. It is inspired by a recipe that has bee n an MJB family tradition for over half a century. Stuffing Plus is a mouthwatering side dish that makes beef, hamburger, fish and poultry taste even better. It is delicious to stuff in green peppers, tomatoes or frankfurters. We think it is the fi~est stuffing side dish that could be-<reated. In fac t, we so believe Stuffing Plu s will turn routine meals into the happy times stuffing was once rcserxed for-\Ve·are putti~g our money on it. • ' ;p Here's 1~ to try either CHICKEN or BEEF Flavor MJB Stuffing Plus. CPH 3402 I 1 '· .. • FINE SELEnlON OF DELICATESSEN ~S -----· FULL SERVICE LIQUOR & WINE DEPT. FHUOIOIS, wms FIOM AIOur~ QIE WHLD IYll WONDlllD WHAf AMOU! ON H.tJim fOI TOUI PAm? WRMlllJ. WI IHYITI TOU TO OUI SPICll. TOU'U ANO A COUITIOUI, KN(.. WITH TOUI llYllAGI SILICTlOh •. COMI It AND Tin HIM. '<INOl Of UQUOI TO MAW 'J MUn SIM llD WN QUOI COUN1ll WMR1 ·LI PIUOW JO Miii YOU 'HAlflrilG TO SIM YOU. ~~~~-·-~~~- -... .. AROUND THE ·wcRLD ~~~~-•,..;..·~~- FINE . SELECTION OF HEALTH FOODS • ""'""' 1t1a • 111MS AVAIL.Alli 'ONLY AT THI• TWO STOllS: I ISO llY• A Yl .. E, · IEWPOIT IEACll . 2975 HAllOI ILVD. COSTA MESA ' . • I '· ' ' i • • Christmas Voices in Tune "Santa's helpers" are beginning to deliver invitations to the annual Voices of Christmas ball which benefits Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian. T he black-tie, $100.a-rouple gala will be Tuesday, Dec. 11 , in the Balboa Bay Club. Mrs. William Lusk, whose hu~banc,t is chainnan, is ready to accept her ipvita- tion. I ' Twice as Wild as any rice offer evern\ade. An excellent opportunity to save on MJB's mosc famou s Wild Rice mixes. 'White&. Wild: 'Brown&. Wild'. Both preferred over ihc other lcoding brands in the latest taste tests. First, becnusc of the MJB blend of herbs and seasonings. Second, because only MJB freeze dries Wild Rice. For uniform , mistake .. proof cooking. For less cooking time. MJB Wild Ri ce mixes cook in 15 minutes. Uncle Ben's and Ricc·a·Roni take abou t 45 minutes. Twice as wild an offer because there is twice the good rcaS<.1n • -• ' 't • • Wednesday, Novtmber 14, iq73 DAILY P!LDT Mo·roscope: Gemini Due . for Change "THURSDAY NOVEMBER 15 By SYDNEY OMARR AltlES (March 2t·AprU 19): you have ls on solid base. ea-, Coprk:om persons could be In picture. What ai> pears to be a disagreement could fall Into lovers' quarrel more to· offer lhan mJCb1 ho apporeot on aurlace. Cloe who achem'8 might ~ "amell .. of money -at your expcue.. Prolecl .. 111n clinches. You wUI be eJveo choice of consolidating _... ~Randing. Ke\f to be sure . lhat what cale(Ol'Y.. . TA!!ll\1S [April 20-May 20): You break loose from restric- tlon. You have more ~hance •confined or handicapped to express yourseli. Welcome makes request. F'ulliU It. What opportwtity for social con· you give wUI be returned, wilh tacts. Give full play to In-dividends. Pla«t may be In tellectual curiosity. One who picture . Restriction , con- seemed out-ol·reach w i 11 llnement Is but temporary. become aa:essible. -LIBRA (Sept ~. 22): GEl\UNI (May 21-June lll): Acoenl Is on hopes, wlsheo. Check delalls before em· You take stepo toward fulllll· barking on any j o u r n e y . ment. Persons you respect pay Relatives, neighbors tend to meaningful compliments. You overlook basics. Oepeoding on are granted opporttmity to put olhers now could be an error, ideas into action. Accept Deal with Aqurlus, Leo and responsibility, Reward is Scorpio individuals. Special highlighled. AQUAJUVS (Jen. »Ftb. 11): TemROrary ~if dlJt to rebound In yaur {av0<. Know it and don't despair. Sqlllarlu, Gemlol penona are in picture. Accent is m c o o p e ration, partpenhip. public relatiom. Popularity rating wUI zoom upward! ~P~tfHm!~ message provides incentive. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): PISCES !Ftb. lf.Mareh llll: You receive benefit of doubt. Peers judge you "innocent.'' One who makes threats docl so out of fear, frustratk>n. Slick to principles -and the fa cts. Don't be swayed' by whlapered promlaes. Insist on collateral. HJghllgbl what ac- tually occurred, oot fantasy. ~..18'""~~~-P'<~~-~'~ CANCER (June 21.July 22): i1ooey picture is. brighter due to Change of procedure. You are able to analyze and come up with answers. Gemini, Virgo persons could figure prominently. One who cooperates with yoU also could provide finances. Finish rather than begin; emphasize accomplishment . Review basics. Take nothing for granted. Round out pic- tw-e. Broaden horizons. Be aware of potential. Find better ways of distribution. Get pro- duct before public. • To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to Jiave their wedding ororles with black and white glossy ~hoto­ graph1 to the DAILY PILOT Women s De· partmen! one week before the wedding. Plcturea received after that time will not be uaed. · For engagement announcements it is Imperative that the atory, also accompanied by a bl>.cli; and white giollY'picture, be sub- mitted six weeka or more before the wedding date; otherwise it will not be published. To help fill requirements on both wed· din« and eogagemeqt stories, forms are available in all the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions will be answered by Women's Section staff members at 6424321. LEO (July ~Aug. 22 ): Lunar cycle promises ad- vancement, cree.Uve activity and more independ~ce. Ques- tion of maniage arises. Mar- ried or single, you may be concerned with cooperati ve ef- fort. a unique kind o r partnership. Deal with Taurus , Libra persons. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): See ctearly, oot through haze of self-deCcplion. One who is SAGITfARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. !1): You have ~p­ portunity to be more m- dependent in thought, actlon. Dynamic individual expresses confidence . Ego gets a boost. News from a distance is oon- slruct ive. Submit plan, con- cept, manuscript. Don't limit yow-self. CA PRICORN !Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Consolidate. Pull in reins -take second look. Survey 1noney situation. You have IF TODAY IS YOUR BIR'l'llDAY ·you hove fine voice, a sweet tooth, a pleasant nature and a ten- dency to be a!lracted to persons who take advantage of you. You made new start this year and you will be on more solid footing in December. Leo , Aquarius, Taurus and &orplo persons ptay major roles in your life. Avoid exceM where eating, drinking enter picture. You will understand. l • We sent Blue Bonnet to Europe . where fo~d experts · ·couldn't teH· 1t from-butter. " ·Now were sending you to the store so you can find out for yourself. Other margarines claim they taste like butter. But only Blue Bonnet proved its honest-t.o-butt.er flavor with Euro- pean food experts. 1 In dish after dish, Blue Bonnet~ Margarine was compared with the best European butter in tough, rigidly controlled side-by-side tests. In cook- fl Everythlng'a better with Blue Bonnet o('I it /l ing, in baking, in sauces, even spread on bread, the experts agreed: "No difference!" Use this money-saving coupon to get yourself a pound of Blue Bonnet Mar- garine. And prove to yourself, in any test you can devise, that Blue Bonnet truly tastes like butter. r . . • ' - • .. , . ' .. . . • ~~4=•-•-~_L'-~-~-'~~~-W-Mn_•~~''~·"~"~'m~brr~l~4,"'--'19~ 1. I DON'T BE MISLED! • t1rt111 tll1t .,nc bttn 1111prd1d .,llt .,., U111r1dt4 e< •I inltritr •uality, Don't be USDA~Grade 'A' OMS Lancaster farms · 1610 22-lbs • . Fla1h.fr_ozen U Salrw1y sells 1ni, USDA Gr14t A Gt\"l lftSJtCl14 Tllfity1. lbnf 1114 llttll 1111 mlslt4. Insist on top qu1lity turtc~ I b !--•-t turktJI 11111 wear tht USDA Gr1d1 A -or shltl4. It's tllt anlr kind w1 1r11r at 0 Tliis Sliielcl S1ftw11. FRESH SWl"'S BUTIERBALL TOM TURKEYS Regular hHh-US Go-vernmeftt Inspected In 2·1b. lolls. Ground Beef '""""m •. SJlt lb. . ,CANNED HAM TURKEYS Y1M1n9 USDA Grade A' Safeway Tom Turkeys 161• 22-lbo. 7 3( USDA Grad• 'A' 16 to '20-lbs. lb. 75c ~~:~: ................... 4 .. ~~~-$6 48 Safeway Ham ·t::r S.!17" Fresh Oyslers ·~· s1" lb. flESH 79· . sw1n·saUTTER8All . 79' HENS USOAGrod1 "A' . ~ HENS USOAGrtid1 'A' S.lo••Y Uodoo 16-)bo. •· · 10.1' ••· .. , .. . MRI.WRIGHT'S McCoy's Beef linkies :.--: 391 Roll Sausage '::::-~! 89• . .. CRAGMONJ lb. PORK CHOPS USDA Choice GrOcle Beef loin Cut - 78 lb. BONELESS ROAST i ~:;~; .............................. lb.9 8 ( ~.:!~":.: ....................... , ... lb~ 129 , Hormel Red label Bacon:.";99• Beef Rib Steak ..!!"~ ...... s1 11 Rath Slic.ed Bacon •":11" Beef Filet Sleak .=:.:=.:.. .. sl" Farmer John Franks .:. ~~ 98' Sirloin Tip Sleak "::::!::: ..S 1" --98 ,.Peef Chuck Roasl ~~ .. as• 7-Bone Roast '7::.'" .. • PARUQ•D . • , STUFFING MIX . BIV8AGI DITmann-·....,__."'-----·- I ~47c CRANBERRY LARGlllZI COCKTAIL ~esc ( ''AA'' IGGI ~~7rzc "'")' tho On. 72' Cr•p Ctit. CHECK THESE HOLIDAY VALUES! • Orange Juice Chiffon Napkins Grapefruit Juice WholeCutYaMs Apple Clcler or Jule• Pie Crust Shells SM.air 11 .... "". Foil Wrap IOtdMn Craft-HH'f')' Ovty ,, .. , 47< 25' loll ~~~=~.~!~!. ~~~~~ ..... ·~:25 ( ~~!~~~!........ ... . . . . ~7': 1 oc MORE HOLIDAY BUYS ' ·-. Reynolds Brown 'N Bag,.:::,.~~ 49* £ BOURBON Uncle Ben's Rice ';'.!.."::"" :.-;: 69* /IP..• ~!~p~:~···& •4 99 Kellogg's Crouettes "'.:::::: :.; 42* ~~, ~-yeors old. lilllJI. .... NesUe's Chocolate Morsels ·~;: 49* 0 VODKA Walnut Browni~ Mix ,,";::'.. ·i:: 81* ~ .s. K 1 ,3 ,9 Town House Ohves :;:-.~:; \:::· 51* ~: .• Jll ao:P~.".'I a~• Zippy Sweet Pickles ·~~·49* Stanton's Gin "''~:...... ...,s4s9 Dream Whip Topping ~-:: 89* St. Elmo's Rum • .;:.;::., .':'! s919 Pumpkin Pie Mix ~"t'. ·t::41* I Vodka or Gin "';;:o;;:.'i' .:;:.. S699 ·~~ Solve your gift problems! ,.,i: ~0-~1 ~ ('I"" . ~it} ORANGI JUICE ~~1 .... --D i~zli,t.tkl:fJ -/.(· '"":.. ... /.~ \.., --. "'· ~?<"">.'·~·r.(-( / i··~·'"'-.::-. ....._---·· . / ~f' '\ I ·~.~ --.::::_-. -,,. --. ·- PUMP Kl N PIES Bel-air Delvxe-40 9 5 C (Mince Pie99'} ,7_'· COOL WHIP Birds Eye Frozen •..ei. 59c Dessert Topping Ctn. STRAWBERRIES 10 ... 39c An Id eal Dessert '~9. Bel -air Buttermilk Waffles ·:..~:· 35• B•l-air S~ced Bel -air Mixed Vegetables .~~ 69• Bel-air Broccoli Spears . "•· 35• Corn -On-The -Cob ':~ ~· 51 1 B I • p ''•mium Ouo~ty 2·1b. 65' e ·31r eaS Fr•1h Garden flovor '119. German Chocolate Cake c.~··• l!r:-11 °' Mateus Rose Wine ... -::,.. , .. s3 19 ~ ~ o•P:"r 0 Andre Pink Champagn e -:~ .. _ s19r~. ·· · · : ;~2·· : ;ng: ~ -~ Gallo Hearty Burgundy ·::..-:.:;:.. s2.. • ~ ---. ~"":·-=-·' ~ . . . , .,. · • SAFEWAV FOR HOLIDAY FIXIN'S! PINIAPPLI _ 't:36C IWllTPIAI lolanl-Packed In It'• Own Julee Town Hou••· Tender 11 .... 24 C And SwHt Toste. C.n ,_.-..,.,,,. FUNK 6 WAGNALLI · 111cYCLOPIDIA '"• .. YOt.UMIS 2-25 •9lft 11.tt Melt 4 9( Como to lafow•y For Y o•r Bo•lllfful Holld•y Gift Flowers And Pl•nt1! BROWN'NllRVI /"\'"'a~~~~~ :.•:;3 9c Cinnamon Rolls .:::.:t:::.. ::; 89* · fl Skylark White Bread -.,..·-=~43* IOnllDRI ,, ... ,,c ... Anti-ptf1pirant Jergen's Lotion Aim Toothpaste NEW CROP ,. . UTS lb. c IHADYLAllJ BUTDR 'AA' ~;~: 83• cr-m ChHIO ..... 43c luctfne-For Holiday Delighh C1n. Lucerne Chi If on Salads ·:: 59• HOLIDAY GOOD BUYS 1 MANDARIN -ORANG,~ 29c Town Hou••-C.n Pie Crust Sticks J::~~ ·:.: 36 ~ Quaker State Mushrooms ·~:·35• AVOCADOS , . . -o,,-:,., ... .. :.. ..... Extra Large Size • ~licately Flavored · •• Crisp Carrots :'(;.': ............ 3~391 • Fresh Broccoli .... ~·~;.: .... 29< Pineapples .=..-Ste Durkee Coconut ................ 39* "_,,,..,, ......... .. Grapefruit ........... ;::?. ........... 19< Oran111 .. 1c1 ::=.8l1 ,, ............ 1S-t7,lt71 .. &. ........... c...,(11t.,tc.t .... )1,__ _ __;, ____________________ ,,_ e 1000 Boyside Dr., Newport Beach • 636 N: COQ,Jt Hwy., -La911na Beach e Wilsoq & Fairwoy, Costa Mesa . I e 211 E. 17th St., Costa Meso e 801 E. El Camino Real, sdn· Clemente e 14417 Culver Dr. at Walnut, Irvine , I e 24 Mona rch ,Bay Plan, So. Laguna e scinta Ana Freeway at lja Pea. Mission vlelo e 2402 Marguerlfa Dr; Parkwciy at Trabllco l. \ " fJ l-1LOi'·ADIJERTISER Wedntsday, Novtmbrr 14, 1973 . -~en, Big Taste I < ' circles there la ter alll'l'OWldod with 1euoned tmpresalve for rice and small glozecl onions. a r II.oner menu than co . . . -' cooked to tender COllj'llS\ HENS per!~ I · / ROASTllll IN F9U. Sman ot ~ lild 111 wlu1e' • · Thaw the hem; season ln-meat, they J ~Uy _pu~ side and out with salt and ~~~~!.ta~ ~··~111 who~ foil pepper, If slufflng the bird>, In su..J'..;..i..:.i. ·the llUe \ ftll cavity with ¥• to II cup bird .!::l~ln 1 mixture. s ... , IVWIQ t.~zen • . poui~rf · '°"" aho~' be Tie legs and tall together def With -PPinC In· and, pulhng neck skin jO ~ck, tacl/i«""erably, In 't b • secure by tw1Sting wlnf .,UPI refr~. ['.' · onto back. Sites· range from 1~ 1 Place eacb bird on ft sqijtre to Ill pounds. lly the time Ibey are ~tod, tho small birds 9(,1 l"'\1114 Of leu, mUe on!~$-~ges~ blrdl can, skillful cantna dowia cen • ,. tum out two ~; ea~ tbeii ~ Iii•• a lbvitlnc mlnlttbro llalf· chi"* served Ill J rtlillll\d of i:ll!I r' I.... ~r.11 ~ lllifttf' ltt-Wint,.__.~ttr· ~~ as .,._,., ·-· may ,lie lillod, ii desired, lllintl .\Ii to 14. ~ fo;...:; Ille liiiu ' • ~ A Favorlt • , I~ Carrots • Make :It .. ' . Judgln( f,.. Ille number of tlmOI reclptt' 'f... Com>! Cake ·•-IS re1lonal cookboolal, thlt desHrl 11· e big favortlt. . ' 'lllls ve,rsJon ·1itth'pinMppll can be '"!.'J!IY with . and . l. • . CAllJIO,i ~ CU1 =lo!.-..... -211 lllldag )iowder · I leUll!Gll =""" , llteuii* of heavy duty foll with a cou· ple of slices each of celery, onion and carrot underneath to prevent the delicate skin from sllck!ni. Place In a oballow pao with foll open. Brush '!Ith a mix· utre of two parta melted but· ter or margarine and one pai:i of dry white '"' rt<! wino. plU. a sprinkling of herbs tr pcultry se..onlttg. Roait In 4ilO degrees F. OYeft basting two or three tiinea until browned, aboot 30 minutea Then close foll I~ 111 merely overlapplnjj ..... pd continue roast1na ~-to 40 minutes for BD!llT, llO ~ for larger blntl, Check al htll " ~ml1 I( juices have cooktd ••ff POUP on a little more ....... ~lier -and wine. Birds art dorll·WM!I legs move eaally. CUI llftd 1emove strings, hr lncllvldual plate serviog, llt•Y '1\'Y be oalte rlilll from 1114 f\l!l -"" Ult· Moea 111 the foU boeom• ~ j hstant, dr:llefOl,111 .. U(!e, •I Ii .,., '1111'l.. .. II cup WllflU i ~eggs • 1 can (I _, crulllod pinOlpplt, drlluml. ·~ . Rllllhs hal l .. 'klY f'9' Every FllllllJ 1 cup finely iralod pared carrot, not packed down (l"V). ¥.a "rcup . · ' (medlmn· · .fme ~' ·) '1 lJne ..etuaro Ide 11111 (I ,-•• , tri I bl' _.llidill)' wUll 'llli > paper; .,._ _,, QnSi ...... 1/1. 'tlU paper' eOlor Vie flour, baklnc.-, dnl!lmtll ud salt. In a mocllum . mixing bowl beat loplher the. IUll1' and com oil. Add eggs, ·one at a time, --well after eaab addltlol\. llilr.!ii pineapple. Add lfour mlxlift altornato- ly wlllj -· about ono-thinl \II a Ulno, blending just until ainooth after each od· ditkn ' Stir Jn walnllll. Turn Into pr...-.,... . BiW: Ill i ....-..i -de~'-llliD me aprin(I back -lilblly tow:bld and a cake leiler' lmertod In center wnes put clean -41) minul"'·'-· P1aqe \:,an an wire rack to cool tor'" 5 · tittnutes. With a small tpat\lla, kM11111 odll•· Turn out on wln rack; remove PIP9t l with another rack turn rtaht alclt up. GilzSI COflll .~t . Cakei For thlo" venlon -tloe cake In the 8 by I Inch pal1 llit ~ tho pan and do nol odct.the·wax piper. Cool baked cake slighUy ln pan while mUlnl 1l11t (..., below ). rl.; Prick w cake all ov,t with a fan _.,, Jlowly pour hot glue )vet lep. Clool in pan. Cut into 1qUlft& . Glaze: ln~amall lljuCtpan, mix toge th , one tbh'd cup sµgar, 3 ta espooaii' lrillk, 3 tablespoons butter ti'd I tableopoon lllltt coriltl . · Bring lo I \oil, t • m a!antly, and boll I n\ titaa. Remove from ht1t Md stir in ~~ teaspoon vanlllt , .. • Shr irup .Qip ... . ' Enough.' Iii.. for I \.Wld medium .rmp ( GQO''' d, shelled ti da~). ' ¥Vcl!l, LOUllJ.A II .l,p mayomalso . J teaspoon curry po.wder Toms Hans ; iiiiiiii"" P.Pimium Toms ·· ....... Gr•d• A-Frozen With Excluslve Dun·Rlte P.GPU~ <OCUNli (.I.voe Avg. wt. 11·22 lbL lb .• 83 Savory Witll b<l•olve .... wt. ~un-Rlt• it·22 lbs. a.ted ~.Y!.b.~89 U.$.D.A. Grade A-Frozen n&lph• w11• ""'"'''· na Oun·Rlle Pr PG-PU~ em.um '~~ ~~ ····1wt. 10-1a -... Hens ... ~89 Relph• Grid• A-Frozen S. avory Witll .. , ... ,.. •••· .... Dun-Rite ,0•12 lbs. Basted ~p~~ ••• 75 All "l\alphs' brand turkeys llOmi with automatic 'pop-up• cool<lng gauges to~·~"' perfe<t roasting. F,.ah-Any 111• ,..k•I• Fresh GNlnl' Beef Lun-bl•d• 1vt toln Pork Chops L••r-1 oz. pkg. UnkSausage Swe•tSmoked -1 lb. pltt.. Iowa Fanns Bacon ..• 88 lb •• 96 ••. e49 ... 1.15 U.S.D.A. o,ade A,-Whole Fresh IOUthern Fryers I0 .• 38 D•Y• Frell'let-1 lb. evg. whole 46 catifomia Frvers ,., • D•Y• Fresh.,-L9J!> Th1gh1 & Drum1tlc:ka 89 California i-ryer Parts ,.. • VO'"\llHly 59 Tun<ey Drums or Wings i• ... Boneless-Fully Cooked 2 29 Luer Mini Ham . 1b. • Dellclou1 nawor Snow Crab Legs lb. 1.89 Western-10 oi.}tr Fresh Oysterl ... , 1.09 Holiday super buys ' Ralphs R8IUlar or COi'llllread GOid• PNmlmn : Mrs~ CUbbison's ICe .Geeam ~i:~:~ .89 Or111ln1 '~-.48 ":..26 Apple, Mince or Pumpkin Pies r·••89 FOIL TURKEY FANS: SUBSTITUTE CORNISH HENS ... --· • • • ' • ' ~ • • , ;, Holiday Bakery .. Holiday Produce 1t..,i.•-D4nnerTrelt f Fir•I ol the S•••on Sunkl1t ' BP.own .,. serve . Naval .. RollS· .7. • ,~ :1~ .39: ; orenues ~,.. .17 ;~:;;~~··~ Fre;~·c~~bem~ ..., ...... , 89~ NewCrop e1ct1 1 .19 < /1 .;t:f ·AID Pies . .... • !?.~~~~~~ ... ,.. Celery ... ·-• J • ~ ' e1ch e19 R1lph•-'=!!hl or D•rk Fl\lit 1;;akes ~.~: 1.98 Fresh Velvety per 25 Red Yams ••.• 24 1:;; ,49 Fresh, Tops R.emoved-1 lb. c:eno '619 ' -Carrots .. ,, .14 ftflf:hs-Otd F••hloned wnite. Bread Rl.,hs-M•pl• Pec:in DaniStl Coffee Cakes .. ,, .75 Ra!ph•-Okl Fashlone.d Cinnamon Swirls •"' .81 Ralph1-Fre•h Biked Mince Pies a· iii~ .89 R•lpha-Ch••se Kuchen Coffee Cakes ••. e76 R11phs-Dellclous Autumn Tea Cakes ••ch e89 Holiday Delicatessen Smooth I )llleh llllPhS. Cream Cheese ......... 37 Swift or Patrick Cud•ht Canned Ham s 1b. 7.39 Ralphs-Aged e Monlh1 1 21 Sharp Cheddar Cheese ••. • Aatph1-0ld Fashioned Egg Nog quirt ,49 ~~~hs-Dairy Fre1h wnipping Cream "•'" .87 A•tphs-Holld1y F•voritl HaHand Hatt Prl"• elfcoetlve Nov. 11 thnc Nov. 111 .. All Ralph• •tore• ...Wbeopea at 8 a.a. Wed. Noy. 111 and will be elooed for '11aank.glru.g. '111 ...... Nov. 1111 Holiday Flowers iiomlioii·1·M~···· .97 Foll Wr•pped with Bow, 6" Potted Mums Beautiful Holld1y Mixed Bouquets Fre•h Cut In A11orted Color1 Gladiolas Foll Wrepped with Bow, 6" Potted Poinsettias Colorful Holiday Bou~et1 Dried Strawnower .... ·1.97 burtc:h bunch each 1.27 1.47 2.97 b•n ... 49 Holiday Spirits landra Vodka ..... ,. 2 99 fifth .. Kentucky Squlfe-11 Proof-S•w• .40 Straight . Bourbon · """ 3. 79 ntth 4 •. 49 · fifth 3;99 II. teaspoon minced onion, scallion (green onion) or shallot ~II teaspoons le111111 Juice ' ' !~ .... ~ minced, .n!Mgo chutney . hoJ.tdayprices M!J 191ether all the ln-gredlli\IJ; cowef'and cblll. . . lowprices . ' are -RALPHS STORES ARE LOCATED AT: 380 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA; 9901 ADAMS BLVD., H~NTINGTON BEACH; 15471 S. BROOKHURST, WESTMINSTER 24167 PASEO OE VALEHCIA, LAGUNA HILLS 17261 17th ST., TUSTIN 401 N. LOARA, ANAHEIM STORE HOURS: 9-10 Dai~, 9·9 Sunday ..._ • .. • •a41hAllV PILOT ,. Wtdnesday, No~mbtr 14, 1973 Soup's On -·-... Jff .... '- ~!:J S pi c i 6 us' Or '"·oel.ic~o -us? ~ By PEGGY BENDET Sometimes the broth is good HONOLULU\ (AP) -If cn<>ugh to serve by Itself. th.ings are a •Jittle leJ!n at But sometimes -like the your house, yo, might con-week I added ma,.o plts - sider making Gerbage Soup. the flavor is a little l!ilrangc Ifs not just cheep, it's free. and Garbage Soup fl best used Garbage Soup ~ls exactlr as a base for something "·hat the name implies. strongly flavored like split ~a It's a broth• made from or ·tentil soup. \'egelilble and meat scra ps After a lean week, when ' you normally ·throw away. the soup isn't strong enough~ It can be nutritious and quite ·either boit it down or return good. ..~ · \t to the pot for another week's And if plaiin br.oth doesn't ~reps. . appeal to yQ(t, Garbage Soup You can make most of your is an excclleti base for many own rules about what you put other soups and for mo.st in il. _ _ r sauces and gravies. It's beJ-l am sque~h.,.atxwt__sim. 1 te f by flir than ·any ~d ply; sc.raW0&4.11e ~--plates , stock. • JT!to tt.e pot lut at .. thc 'Saine • J started · rTiy first .1pot of tfn\e·::r ~o ~~w In ~~ice Garbage Soue severa~fmonths table' scr@f. ·mt Jong 0011lng ago. . . • lime t.akfS ca~ci. any germs. I was g~tti;ng readY,'to throw . As ( ma r .of simple away a big J!-mb lx11t• when ecOno.ut),, y r add any I had an Jm,pulse to see how v-labf'5 or 1 t that could ~uch tu~· I coiild stretch 1fe eaten ~otherw .·But once it. I put 1t on to bQIJ. ..; the radishes bend and the \et-• I'd never start,i ~ ~ tuce dries ·out, they go into pot before·. It seemed lik~ too the pot ., m~ch t;ouble, and, 'I . didn't ·,. You ·can Add herbs and thm~ ~ d have anything to some fruits -clt.rwi are best put 1!11t. . _ but the ~ey is in. modera· I just never realrzed how tion. Salt, too, mu.!l be used 1nuch I throw awa~. very sparinkly. 'Ve had some fnends QVer And some foods shouldn't .go that night, and the snacks into 'lhe pot at albJ once.tbre\v yielded several cµps ol carrot ; in the remaiils ' or ' a tos.!ed peelings, and the core of a green salad. I'm nol sure cauliflower and the end of whether it was the vinegar or a stalk or celery. . the blue cheese trrat did it, b!J t The next day I threw in · that week's soup had a slightly some "'ilted carrot and celery rey wte. , . sticks and what was SLIPposed Now · 1 rnise off the . salad to be another meal, half of before I add it. a ragout that had gone wrbog. Potatoes a r e-lhe onl y Later In t!'t!-w~k, I a?<ted sta,rQi you can use; bread. the heels ot. seyeral .~· nee ·and. pasta ·ab9orb a few sptlgs-;J tJi),'11!. a. b~ the.'.liquid rather_ than.;idding leaf, s:>me rme. iilr m-anything to . it: a ean of flat ~r. ~to Qoack a raw · egg into the seeds and U.. end of , Bl'F° «~ed. ~led soup .. Slowly pepper. . , .' . heat the :~.rt lai~. few It was a f~ frorp Julia ' · inlliules tl1e' egg\ll'ill~1oat lo Child 's basic '. . recije; but the top with <µJr,, .~ties the rtsult. ~ delicious and _ iftached· tb it. · . · " · it "'as n~ ~Je 1? make. Simply Spoon ~t~ Qt, and Keep 1t I si6i~i:1ng through then str~iq. the --birough 'HAWAIIAN ·P~PAYAS , ' ' ' ' R·. • STORE HOt.JRS: MON . .fRI. 10 A.M. lo 9 P.M. SAT. l SUN. 10 A.M. to 7 P.M. r , LARGE CELE·RY • LARGE ARJtCHOKES dinner. Add ~ble leftovers checsic1oth. · as you clean _~~t-~.e. ki~hen. ~ don't kilow ho\v this WO[.kS 11 • _ Tum off. t!Wi.;~u:ncr ; let the . or~ but it does. · #~ .... :3~·1·00 29~A. soup cool and. put ,Jt into the Some people haVe suggest~ refrigerator until th'e next day:--not straining the soup at all, At the end of t~ ''·eek. and ~ing it with the btts strain the . soup throu¢' a ·of ~t ·Wiq. ~~getables in sieve, pre~1ng all of the Ju.ices '-'i(, .... I\;. . • ,. , . out af the vegetables and You could, of .course., -but meats Iha( haven't completely unless you find the P,~t disint.egrated. AnP taste the of a !teBmiog · t>owlful of resulLs. vegetable peelings and fruit App~tlfer Rounded \\1hen you are entertaini!l~ in the arternoon or e\cning pits appelizing, you'd have t~ be .more picky than ·I am about · what :you .put .~ pot. !- ' And that Would defeal't!¥ n11rnt\OU of the soup. •·• •. r-r·--, • iOJdie' and want to serve a snack, . you might enjoy. qtltrin~ an · ~A G d ' interesting combi~tfi)q ; ~resh . • 00 le Bartlett pear ~tl~'w1th a • ·~ · curried cheese l1ill rolled in >. ...... chopped pecans. _\ >: ( A 4 "rl!cjpe-'Crom the 'Sos Pears and curf11'·.!~!1SOning '··.R,rought ;f!P to date. ha ~·e an affinity ·fo~· each · .RALr WAY BARS orher. eup unsirted flour . st ir The cheese ball is a large to ae rate before 1neasur- one, but under refri geration ing . a leftover port!Qn keeps "·ell ~ l teaspooon baking po"·der for serveral ""eks. To orfer ts reaspoon baking soda the remainder at1ractively, 6 tables_poons butter or pack it into a sn1all se rving margarine bo"•I. ·.'.·~ cup gr.anulated sugar . For a trial nm . th e recipe v' cup f1rn1ly packed light mav be easily halved. brow11 suga r eARTI..ETT PEARS \\'ITH 1 egg. scparat~ ,, .'.'1 , CURRIED CHEESE BALL 1.: teaspoon_ vanilla ,..,'!i 6 ounces S"'iss or ~fonterey ~:! ~up sen11·s1re et choe.~~\e Jack cheese. g rat e d pieces \'.~· medium·fine <about 1 1~ On "'ax papaer thoroupty " stir together he flour, baking cupsl . 4 0 u n c c s n'edium-sharp po11'der and baking soda. cheddar cheese, grated In a n1ediurn mi xing ho\\'I n1edium·rine 1 about I cu p' crca1n bu t l c r , granul ated 1 pa ck:igc (8 ounccs 1 crea1n .. sugar and 1't cup of !he brown cheese sugar: add egg .volk and 1 tabl espoon finely grated vinllla;, beat t.o blend. Add onion. pulp and juice flour .yuxture;, blend. . I tablespoon \Vofct.stershire i( Turri ~to a .buttered 8-1nch sauce ·' • , square "~e-pan and pat ~own 2 dashes taba~ce "°' f1rmly aRd .e.venly. Sprinkle 3 teaspoons curry ·p0"1der , ~)¥.. .. ·"1th . chocolate and J cup finely chopped pecan·s ;'... ·~Uy 1~t~ dough. Fresh Bartlett pears ripe .• 111 a small m1x1ng bowl beat and chillrd ' egg "'hife until it hold~ soft In to a mediun1 mixi ng bo"·I peaks: gradually beat in re· turn the cheese ar.d all the malning· ~% cup ~wn suga r seasonings except the curry until ver.,y stiff: spread. ~vcr po~·der; beat until sn1ooth. chocolat~. Beat in . the curry pO\\'dcr Bake 1n a prehea ted 3!>0- a teaspoon at a time. tasting degree oven until golden· as each is added so you can bro"'" -30 minute s. rtare decide how much yfiu 1vant; pan on a "'ire rack and .cool ; the entire amount ca!lt!d fo r cu t info 24 bars. • , . ~ •• produces pungcnf fla vor . A savOry wa.y to ;~aey ~ Stir in 1h cup or the pecan s. frozcrt 'Vegetable. 1~ ~fakes about 2'h cups. GREEN BEANS SVLYI "-'. Chill cheese mi x tu r e . 1 packa ge <9 ounces) cut covered. until firm enough to green beans shape into a large ball: roll 2 slices bacon in remaining ~ cup pecans: J.. ~mall ,ciiton. ·minced (3 If you like, you ma y ga rnish-, •tablespocm\4\ the' top ;tfb, pecan halve1. 1 f 2 t~1 ~tcf¥p " Refrigeratf, COtered, f Ori • Cool: ~~e'._ .ans ~rding ..,veral !KF>'l'or.ovcmlght to <~' 'i· .dlroi!tlM• and allo"' navon .to blend . ': ' • ~ ,Ui;t baCon until S.rYe sf_raliht from li)e I\), tlflin \.i\d crumble. refrigerator •·;1h lhe pears, To the bacon fat add onion cul in we~ witb ~ and llld.ltlr over low 'heat unt!I sle1n st ructu~ removed. · onion ls browned and sli ghtly Eaters will be able to cut ll'il!ed: stir in the catchup : off neat slices ot the cheese add the beans and ba con and ball for topping the wedges reheat brieny. ~fakes 4 small uf pc~r. _ scr\~ngs..:.....-.. . .. ~· ""~"f •f'~-,, • • ... ,,t,;) , , ... ----....,. ·~ .. ~ #f'· u • I,. FANTASTIC OISCOUNh [V!RY DAY -21'=count Bottle SIME-OFF TABLETS .. 150 Foot lt,.g•!i • Ur>w<J~ed r:,, wa.ed JOHNSON'S OENTAL FLOSS , 8·0urce ,4,&<oSQf; PO..der R1~lor "' UnKi rtlld · Ul1RA BAN 5000 •. ANTl-PERSPIRANt; , -• ? 2-0...Xt T..bt TEGRIN MEDICATED SHAMPOO J.7~CNoc. Boltlt ' ·s.·\Allu·weo. , ... .... • .f;o. AU'.lfJAl' DISCOOHT '"" ss· _ . 101 r " 11• 1.24 . '. ~. . . FANTASTIC OISC~UNIS £V£RY DAY ~. t . " '" ~•rA D!SCOOMT ""' 89• 1 'ii' ' I i' .... .. " .. 12 (•pGMtot ' °""' \ ~ &'. KODACDL 'U· " •'" 99• 121X FILM ' . I •• SODOUBLE bisc(I· ' OCEAN SPRAY CRANBEUIES lLB.2·9c PKG. FANTASTIC DISC OU• rs £V£RY DAY •• _,,J_±IJ ' Alf'llll aNI ,-DISCCJl.flt "" l·"""'• """"' BODY All DEODORANT 79• ~~'·· ·r=· T, "'·' I tllAl.l~M •-> '<. ' ";""'~f. .. ,# tr .,}. ~ .. ~··· . ,. l .. ~ ' ~ ' • • • -'f ~ t •• . .,,... "f-' '"r' ·~l~~ . ' ' " .. ~ . . J2.GonOA w ~d 11 H rEsco !RlsH cAN ,, ~ 3 Pot~ SYLVANIA BLUE DOT99c FLASHCUBES, FAHTASTIC u.~:oiJ;lT ~ £V£RY DAY l ·'' 'Give to · ' Christmas Seals ·-'----·-'~ " ',•"''' ' • - " " I " .' • ,,,_,. ,: • • I •' .. ' ., . fA!.j ' At.TIC OISCOUNTS lVlRY OAY -·---·~ .. FIIE' , llT~Ul'I 11111' • , llClflf: ROAST TURKEY '-' ~. -ARriou·R 61iui STAR t Air-· . ~ · FRESH FROZEN -ONEYSl:ICKLL--BONEtEss- LIGHT. AND DARK MEAT . SELF-BASTING ·. TURKEYS 12·0Z. ROLL . JIMMY DEAN --· I . PUREl-PQIK SAUSAGE ' tjOV,•\SllJ '. rus. ffi<u WED • .. • .. I, 16-0..-kw '.' .. ALPHA lfTI .. BLEU CHEESE IRESSINI' • 71'1-0i.w'itt 'Contol'*' ALrHI WI GARLIC DIP 7.S.Oura ContoitW..- AlrHI IETA FRENCH ONION DIP 83~ . 1~T .,.oz:. .. 3 .. 'liOAST BOX . "'i. -'ro,,,; !.;-;)~ '·~·. 98,K: ' "'' L S' · ', /'i'. . UiAG.~. ' 1.~, .. ,• l _:-4·1 a·~ I OZ. PKG.°i • • • ' .:.:::, ALPHA BETA ' · ~12-0ur>ce Bog 69• Atter Dinner· MINTS ' 83• IOcopyrighl 1973 Alpha Bela <;ompany. All rights rts~rlltl/.. -JU __ , .. m • &N.n T.U cau:cn1 • ML TAIMLI nun• u.nv...cn.'WMimtt •,...., .,_, ----. . • . I Wtdnesday, Novtmbtr 14, iq73 OAfL r rtLOT 49 ----'""'-""""'--~-~ • • . . .. -· . . . ~ .. , ALPHA llTA BUTCHtl'S P·llDE lllf STANDING 129 RIB ROAST '~' 11 LEAN 109 GROUND BEEF ' LI CHUCK ROAST °l'~'1'89~ r ] I~ i ~ I!.~. ~ : l ' .. l . 1" T ·BONE STEAK . LL , CHUCK STEAK '~'!' t•t.. \ 37• . . (..i9)sfait"'tiAa'AscH1N11 's;;r RED CHERRIES 13-0unct .lo•• Plo•n 67• • 25• 52• "' 61• 68• " . ' ~ ·•' 60c 55• ' 57• 40• ·49c • '-'. I •• - I. '· ' ' .I \ GO DAILY PILOT Wtdntsday, NO'ttfttbtr 14, 1973 Wtdntsday, Novtmbtr 14, 1973 S PILOT-ADVERTISER 1 FRANKS MORRELL'S YORKSHIRE 1-POUND PACKAGE LB.69C OSCAR MAYER PRODUCTS ' SLICED BACON. ll SUI TH IN SL BACON u« SUI ALL BEEF WINERS . ll Sl.15 ALL MEAT WIENERS l1 SI.ii WITH \Ille..., Cl ---~. THE OEPENQAPLE COOKING TIMER MORE DELICIOUS TURKEY EVERYTIME! SLAB BACON . MOllEll'S PRIDE ... _ ~NY '!ll ·Pl~E -.. 791 U.S.D.A. GRADE 'A' OVEN READY llENS TOMS ~ FRESH ~ROZEN ~10-14 LBS. AVG. 18-22LBS.AVG. c FREIH TURKIYI U.S.D.A. GRADI 'A' VA~CHllS llAND OYIN llAOY ~~~$~VG .. , 7 3 ~ .. !!~L~. AYO. 69l~ Wll-79' C IT~tp~I, ci.11•110 Ill' •1 19 FlllH OYITlll ....... o._ IUM' IOAIT ,._,., · !!1".l!!tll CUT am . 91· '!!! 011 CUT •1 •• 110UND BONI aean.... lliiLUB ITIAlll ....... -..... ""'!!OUN lfGULAI 01 MOT 9 c Tiili. '"•••Nnn ., 3. •vlK IAUIAGl ..... 11.oz. II TIAKI ............... : .. fAIMll JOHN SXINLl'S . 47' lliJ SMOUlbll CUTS ., 39 LINK SAUSAGl ........... a.oz. FAMILY STEAKS ......... . HOIMIL ILACIC LAIEL . THIN SLICED . 99' lTATlt ~· ,...,,~. ueJ .,. SLICED BACON ......... 11.oi. CHUlliiK ITIAKI ........... . MOlll,ll'S YOllC.SHtlf llG.. 01 2-ll . THICK 98(. IQNIWI ... "40\lt.DIJ ' · •121 SLICID BACON ................... ROLLID . IOAS :u. 5i'i~i'D'"ioL«»ci.ti ~~: 6:9· -·1~&C»li.io'A'sT ...... ~ .... -·9-9• ROUND ;sTEAK srt::: .. ::gl s 119 ·BEEF IOllE-IN IO•ELIU POUND u .1ut CERTIFIED IEEF RIB ROAST STITH Hot. 'I' 19' , ITH & 11H 1111 Ill T"li IT" Ill POUND . _ .L!.~IJI __ I STATER llOl '·· CEITlflED c llEF ILAOE CUT POUND .. STA TEI UOS. CllTWllD lllf ST.AICS 01 IOAIT l 'I·~··. 11 SIRLOIN TIP __ ......... u. ., . ~ATEI llOS. CUTtftlD lllJ . •f 79 f CUBE STEAK......................... ,, . •11• T -BONE STEAKS .......... . NO TAILS• WILL TllMMED • CiUAIANnlD ., .3 PORTIRHOUll 1n•• . "· · . · Si ATll llOS. CRTlfll.l..!f. , .,,..,,~ l!p lllLVIN JT••• ... u . · '"'"' ' -•129 STEWING MIA T ..... , LI, ' •• -f.llSM ~-olUOOUS. ANY-1111-'ACCAGI , 88C-' GROUND BllF ... -'·"· . . ., - ~LiiER WtiOR Jlll! .. ARB RRY ..... , .. i:o~g~ NON-SUCH · 36' MINCE MIAT .':°o~~~ ~t;' ,"o'::.!:~ 8 i 51 HAPPY · THAlllSGIVllG TO ALL- •r•n• 1101. MAHm WILL .. CLOHD TMAflltMilYING D.t.Y •. WILS~ P1CKLES r:fE\1 .............................. 22~i LINDSAY PITTED MEDIUM SIZE 3 5c . RIPE OLIVES .............. ci~ AVAK..Ul(NOW AT ALI. ST A Ttl 1105,MAll(lfS c~••~t .. o r.iqOOt<C; 1\ "'•Of r•I• "''!" G•IJ (!Ofl"("!~ •V'll•l ll •t ..... , ~1A, 111 lttx ,. .. <I '. T'<IT •II •lw•>li wH• l°"'t ~· '""''0<!!~ ... ~ .. ~ .... o "'' ... 1lO!\ '"'" ctt f< .. (•!i\ •If t tlOfM•tJ.f 0.. 'll •W•(~•~I~ •t '"' ~alil U Ol. ..... 1· . : HUNTS.MATO ' . 3 7 ( : . Ks TC HU P .............................................. 26s~i ---- • I. STOVE TOP . , 4 4 ( ·STUFFINGS ....... -......... ---.. -~~: 1 ' KRAFT PHILAD,ELPHIA BRAND • 8-0UNCE PACKAGE 3 7 C CREAM CHEESE ..... '!IMPERIAL ' 49c ·1MARGARINE ............. ~-~:: ' ' TIDE • DEAL 'ACICAGI 2 4 9 DETERGENT ......................... ~~.~:~~ CELERY · FRESH CRISP •''--. TENDER STALKS PRICES EFFEC. 7-FULL DAYS• NOV. 15th-21st NABISCO CRACKERI . L-Ltw.. ~ 1od ~ Al""-1 • "'""''°" ... • MIKI • 91 JOHNSTON PIES ' ' 9-INCH ' • ~TON ASSORTIO ' 34· .. REAM PIES .... ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,. I-INCH WITM l'Ol•TOfS .. l'jo Ctll[Alol s•ut [ 31c 0 .. BOY ' 3'7t BIRDS-EYE PEAS __ o.o< BAKED POTATOES_aol' r· w1111 ''"~l o'-110 .. s 3lC l Ou1 .. 1sr · 71 C BIROS-EYE PEAS ____ ,,., SIRLOIN TIPS.-~•·•< ··~os !VI 8 OUNCI 31c l OlO l l!if ' 4'7t PEAS & CREAM SAUCE . CHILI & BEANS .... ,.,. r · WI fi TUllJ:INA TION SIAJOOO 91 C , p ... H FILLETS T ......... u . . 3 l04VI ••Cl4Gl 7r.t OM•IOY IOl(U5 '-'~ ' • $ (1 BRIDGFORD BREAD .. -.. -v PEPPERONI flZZA _.~~ 1 QM I OY A'11 A5SO•uo s111 ~~s~~,l~o!.~~AD ·-8 oz. 'N~ !,~,L~c ~1!!.,f!EAK ~~~~€ "~'° 1 ,REAL WHIP _ ............ ,,,. 3f VEGETABLES .. --.. , ..... ::,. 11:1An MINIATUn ,. j 1 MARSHMALLOWS '0~0.~': ' • MllllHMALLOWS ·:·~~:.. 0' iilllUT BROWNIES~;.~~~6' Mo coH11 • 1·l"OUNO CAN. , • 'il• S. 69 1 . AXWELL nOUSE ....... ~~·1 -A 7630 Edinger Ave., S.nt• AM 14212 Mln11 A.,.., Whlttftr 1730 McFadden Ave., Santa An• Ull Chapman Ave., ~rden Grow .J46I K4ttlS. Awt., Ltt AltMhll ' ' 7S64 W11t Broadway, AMhtim 2360 Norlh Tu~tln Ave., Sant• AN 14MO It. lreffhunt Avt., VffttntlMttr 1175 Baker St., Costa Mew 1800 East Colhns Ave,, Or•nge 11P W11t flliftf•nth It., C.ta MIN 2180 Newporl Blvd., Cost• Mew 1572 W11tml.nst... 81¥d., We1t"!ln1ter *1 l•lftt'P Awtot Hwtlln ... n ...... 14171 Red Hiii Ave., Tu1tln 3430 West Li~oln Ave., AMheim 2603 West S.v'"'""'h It~, ... AM } ' \ -- Wtdntsdar. N"tmblf 14, 197) DAILY PILOT 51 ~~~~~~~~~~~-'<'~ Fall Family Favorites •' • • ' Refrigerator Readied l . Sandy K,...h (left> and C1rol Heinz dip Into the Appetinr Ponclue, r.commend1d for IM hollday1 • r . I t I ' ' ' I t t , BJ CAllOL MOORE ..... _.__ Slndf'KroSh, Orange ~t C<>llege geurmet lnltructo.r, 10X1 Om1 Heinz, Southern Cllllomla Edl>on Co. home tCOllOll\bt, urged fellow cooks to start their Cb r·l at ma a 11Jtocldng'' ol, holiday aida. Fill the freew with ~am pulls for ~i.rtalnlng ~ and maln courses lQ defrost on lat. shopping da)ll. . I Put Into the refrigerator oeveral Jara or fluffy vlnatgreti. dressing to <*' dou· ~e duty on cold salads and hot vegetables. Put extra nutrlUoo into regular foods (eottage lcheese in dl)l8, wheat germ lh meat loaf) to ooanteract holiday sweetness. To inSure. IUClcesa frozen foods , Mrs. Heinz reminded the OCC Cooking Schoel au· dience to use moisture.vapor- proef wrapping paper or bags, shape the po<tage compactly and draw out e1cesa air by insert1llg a straw and sucking. Also, seal the packages Uptly, u&ng a clotheapln on thooe that wjll have repeai.d openings and cloolngs, such u rolls and meat patties. Label packages and freeze ~Pll!'-. ~· Krogll shared secrets ol uaUw sour cream in hot dishes without having it cur- dle. "Have the sour cream at room temperature. Always add tt last after any alcohol (from wine in the dish ) has &immered olf. Adding a little fklUr to the sour cream helps and never let the sauce boil after the soilr cream has been _ .. f l· , KlioWJng that the roasting · and botiilg daya ahead call for 1U1Ch little med spices as aa11. thyme, mace a n ~ cardamom, she !Uggested that t' ,. lrlmds ao in together to buy and diVide up the oeasonin,s. Among the eo&t-saving hints was 1 one-pan Chocolate 'Snack Cake, which costs · 32 cents when made f r om acratda as mmpared to 55 oentl for t b e commer<lal virlety. Its easy preparation ~s it fun for children to dO. I • ·CllDtEN PAPRIKASH 1 chicken bouillon cube '' cup boiling water · i tablespooM butter or margarine ;~ cup cottage cheese \ 1 cup sugar ~ eup cmion, finely chopped % cup mayonnaise 3 tablespoons cocoa 1i\ eup green pepper1 chop-l tablespoon chopped green 't2 teaspoon s_alt l,pedte•~· =pn'ka C1nion 1 teaspoon baking soda ..,.. -............ -t tablespoon minced parsley I teaspoon vanilla 1 tablespoon water 1 teaspoon each dill weed 1 tablespoon vinegar 1 'I• teaspoons sail and beau monde seasoning l cup cold water i'4 cup peeled tomato, cho~ PoUr milk in blender. Add Chocolate chl"pS and chopped ped {l medium ) cottage cheese, cover and nuts, optional, 1 (3.V. pound ) broiler-fryer blend until smooth. Add re-togSelf1thcra 1 Unto'drYan-un'~regraedsedien~ chicken, cut up with skin malhing ingl't'dients and mix. " O" removed Chill at least 2 h®rs before inch square pan. Make three ~ cuP sour cream serving with crisp fr e s h depressioi'l9 Wit?!: spoon ln the- y, cup flour vegef'a:bles. Makes 1 in cups dry l n g r e d i e n t s . Fill v, cup half and half of die. depressions, one each with Dissolve booillcin in boillnt' t butter, vanilla and vinegar. water; reserve. Melt butter CHOCOLATE SNACK CAKE Pour the water over all and in Dutch oven or electric 6 tablespoons margarine or mix well. Sprinkle chips and It's one recipe they wlll pNpare . . at final cooking school Mliion tomorrow. skillet; add onion and green butter, melted nuls over top. Bake for 30 pepper: cook until tender. _ _.:11>~c~ul!lps~fi~o~ur~-----~'o'..3S~mm~· ~u~te:s':.. -----~~~~~~_:~~~~~111111~~~~~111111111111111111111111111111~111111111111111111111111111111~~~~~'_ _________ _ Mix paprika and 1 table-.- spoon water and stir into onion mixture. Add bouillon, salt, tomato and chicken; cover and simmer-over Jo.w---lieat 45 minutes or until fork tender. Remove chicken. Skim fat from chicken broth. mend sour cream and flour: gradually stir in ~ cup of chicken broth. Pour sour cream mixture gradually into broth ; stlning oonstantly. Stir in light cream. Cook C1ver medium heat, stirring con- stantly, until thickened. Do not boil. Add chicken pieces and heat. If desired, serve with noodles. · VINAIGJU:l'l'E DRESSING I egg 1 teaspoon beau monde seasoning y, teaspoon e a e h garlic powder, onion powder, paprika, cracked black pepper 1i2 teaspoon salad her'Qs or dill 1/4 cup tarragon white wine vinegar 1,~ cup grated Parmesan cheese • 1 cup oil Measure all ingredients, ex- cept oil, into blender; cover and mix. With blender run- ning, gradually add oil in a thin stream through hole In lid. Continue blending until oil Is mixed. Chill for flavors to develop. Will keep for a \\1eek. Makes 1 cups. Serve on cooked. chilled artichokes, caulinower, string ~ beans or asparagus or on wedges of lettuce. A good sauce for Mt vegetables, too. DULY DIP 1 tablespoon milk Rambli Ro Richar • (and the finest turkeys, too!} Thanksgiving -a til'ie for the very be st! Richard 's has it all -from the fi nest fresh turkeys, to go urmet relishes and sumptious desserts. Even the pans to cook it all in and flowers fo r the table. ESPECIALLY AT THANKSGIVING YOU 'LL BE GLA D THERE IS A RICHARD'S-WITH AL L THE BEST, PLUS GREAT VALUES AND FRIENDLY SERVICE!!! . . _fll.e:sf . . Richard 's C.tlifornia Grown Fresh Turkeys by Zacky f arms (a variety of sizes) FRESH HE N. AND TOM TURKEYS·. individually boxed Come in and make you r se lecti on of frozen turkeys at competitive prices. Also stu ffe d froze n turkeys, squab, smoked turkeys and pheasa nt. Long Island du ckling, eastern geese, stuffed cornish game hens and boneless turkey roll s. . Richard's 100% Pure ~ork Sausage mlld 1111e seasoning 1.19 lb. Beef Stew tender 1trog.1noff cubn 1.49 lb. Pork Loi n Roast C~nter Cut Chops Th ick Loin ChopS tend1rloin end prop1rly "trimmed Mnder1oln, chops 1.39 lb. 1.69 lb. 1.79 lb. ' COUPONS GOOD NOV. 15·TMRU WEO., NOV. 21 cpr0@ert1 · Hills Bros. c;:offee Case Swayne Golderl Pride Yams Chiffon Lincnso ft Napkins ' lb. 29oi. SO count 93c 3 for $1 39c Snow's New England Clam Oiowder 15 o'I". Ocean Spray Cranberry Sauce whole or Jeltled a 16 O'I", Reynold s Alum inum Foil 12" by2s• Miracle Wh ite First In Fabric Softener 33oi. Uncle Ben's Long Grain & Wi ld Rice Nabisco Ideal Choco late Peanut Butter Bars Schillin&.Pumpkin Pie'Spice eoz. 10oz. 1" or. Johnston's Pies frozen -epple, pumpkin, mine•. 9 oz, Bird's Eye Cool Wh ip frozeri • 9oz, 37c 31c 27c 79c 69c 59c 41 < 89c 59c For New Traditions ... The luxurious w11!1ring between the el1g1n t Ttwdor pl1tes, ungy smells of m1ol1 •1111 breed 1nd gourmet food gift , p1tekltge1.,. Br ing both youi;. list s ..• th.• on• th'1t says gro eery 1tor1 for Than ksgiving ind th• on1 th1t wYI thtn ••th• people I went to 58f'd th ln91 to for Chri1tm ..... from our family to your family , to fr iends end r1latlon1 1nvw hw1. Jiims, jtlli11, ch111e1 Ind h1m1 ..• 1tuffad d•tes . C1t lforni1 1un dried fruits .. , trivet•. cutting bo1rct1; ·111·v1th11rtoV1the!'•to- m1k e th e nlftlnt t11tlat _plftlng fro m 1Yeryone to everybody. 1nywhw1 ... All m1 iti ng c1rton r11Jdy and brigh t pape!' wrapped to bring joy to two peopl• .. , you, becauM you 're giving the very finest food package• and the shopping is env ... You pick out wh it you want from I ditplay p1tk1ge, 1nd undetnNth II the Mme thlng r1.1dy 10 mail. Th• ··o mer peopt1•• 1r1 thl on11 who rec:eive it ... Som11h lng good to eat is 1lw1y1 w1lcome, Marinated Ducklings Marina'.ted Meat Balls or~ng1 wine 11uce chili salwi sauce 8eafo0tL 1.39 lb. 1.19 lb. Thanks Given • By ./EANNE LESEM UPI Food F.clltor NEW ' YORK (UPI) Amlllg I the many things I'll be thirlkful for this year is a family that doem't expect me to l!"pare a 'lbanksglvlng dmner IO large and elaborate that rm too tired to eat it and they're uncomfortable from overeating. Don't get me wrong. I think the ftALive dinner tramtion ls great -provided It's no burden to the cook, her family and theirtguests. Tiie Pi/grtJN who celebrated America'• fint h a r v e st featival comidered 'lbanl!sgiv· in< a Ume for sharing not jual food and drink but also the work of preparing it: For several reasons, we'd be smart to relum to their .trOdltlon this year. A huge meal is bad for our health, the e n e r g y llllorlage, the family budget and')>erbaps lllQllt lmpottanUy, the won\an who(prepares it. E&peclally il abe's a working wile who must shop for groceries lfter doing a lull sbilt's work away ,from home. Oile suburbanite friend, who grew up on a farm .ln Nebraska, favors a covered· dish dhiner for a holiday meal -where there will ~· many psll. I With varlo111 diners con- tribullnU.iihes, the -" 11111 i the cos!lre spre•d around. ' U you pJa/t this kind of meal, lie ...., r suggest quantities .......,./ partieularly for v~ and salada. · Wb1!J • many lefloWI ean be NWotod ....... fully .. uoed ,-!al-IOUP, the 'lllamin 1 lldlers from both rebol Alltl p rolon1ed -•tont& ·I·"' I L UMIUl!td turkt)ll t a k e •-• mlaatea leu cool:ill8 time thaa -eel ...... 'Ibis will -fuel ""'1 If """ oven II lirp """"'1 to hold both I Jilli of llulfing and the bird at the same time. Other!rlae, you might use • ronce-top 1tufflng mix or Ilk I l\lett to bring baked •lulling. An insulated picnic hamper makes a safe carrier for OOt food, but be sure to fill empty spaces around the covered dishes or pans with crumpled newspapers to hold in the heat. U you have no hamper, VrTaP covered casseroles, piping hot, in several layers of newspaper and tape the ends securely. Our Nebraska friend launch- ed a new family tradition at her home three years ago. when she began serving Thanksgiving and Christm·as dinners on the eve of the holidays. Her children, teenag ers at the time, were delighted with the arrang"emenl. On Christmas day, when her daughter was practicing · at home with a rock group, the y0W1gsters ate when they pleased, a meal of homemade soup, homemade bread and dessert, while her son and her husbond went happily off to a bask~tbc\11 game. HOLIDAY TREAT Brussels sprouts and orange salad makes a good substitute for a ~ot vegetable at holiday meals. It's light in flavor and lower in calories than sauced vegetables.· Grate 1 teaspoon peel from a navel orange. Juice the orange, and reserve 3 tables- poons or Juice '°' dressing. cUt a tllin clockwise sUce from the ~..!.'! of two more navel onnges and re.serve slices for garnishes. Remove sect.ions from the two oranges to use in lhe salad. · Blend the peel, Juice, 2 t!lblespoons of salad oil, I teaspoon of sugar and ¥4 teas-l:J. of grou~ ~ in . a Add 2 (!!).ounce) psckages of frozen bnmela-.sprouta, cooked and drained, or I pound of freah ones, cooked and drained, plus tho orange sec- tlom and 2 medium onions, (letled, thinly slite!l 1 and oeparated Into rings. Toss to combine and coat with dressing. Add salt and pepper to taste. Chill, covered , several hours. M"akes 4 se.rv-fop. TURKEY TO THINK ABOUT Do you r11Uy know if it's 1 h.m or 1 tom; ... A1m1rnb1r. Your best buy It the biggest turkey you c1n possibl y find. The 1m.1ller the turkey, the mor1 bon11 antl the 1111 m1at . With• whoppe:r, take au the racks out o1 1h1 oven, put • couple of thicknesses of he1vy 1o ll wllh a rim arou nd In the bottom, put the tu"'•V 11'1 and bike. Use a b11t11r for sucking otf the juice for gr1vy. Use 1 th1rmom11er for 1ureno~1 .,. 185 degrees it the m1glc number. Do n"t rush the c1rving. J..it he or she 111nd for 1t less! 45 minutes. Wh ile 1 turk1y cooks. the juite r1!1.1J 10 !he 5k ln. Dur ing the 45 minutes it 1ink1 b1tk 1n to mike your 1urkey moist th• w1y you love it. And c1rve from !he bfe1st toward the bone, 1cro11 the grain ... be1utlful , big, tender jurc v 1llces of white meet. Fr•z• wh11·1 left ov1r , even th1 bones to m•k• dellclous soup. THERMOMETERS •. , BASTERS KEEP COMPANY WITH ROLLING PINS Jet prop1ll.:I , ber·b•1rlng rolling pins win forever, .. roll Ing pins with cerved out des ign• end •cor.:I In perfect sq uires to roll ind pr111 ou t f1ncv 1ug1r cooki•s Ille• craly. Swfft Limon M1rm1l1de, whol1 whe1t p1s1rv flour. co1r11 bJ:own 1uger, ple111 cookt with co untry t11te1. Th1nlc1g iving Ir comfortable. f1m1ly, old -time. The look from way b1ck th••• com11 vii Ttwdor which could be ptw11r, but ian't. Some more of this lifetime no1t1tgia. Won 't creek. t;/llp or WHt -•v. Us• it In OY1n or 1r11zer. Whole Nts of plates. 11rvlng place•, goblets end tank1rd1. Gon gra11 wi1h f!n• gl"'· baskets, or cider jug1 .•. or a!'I old timl bun wermer, which starts with t squar e of ~fbll you h1at In th• oven . whi ch you put Ir. e balk et with your ho t rolls on top end wrap In 1 New Engl1nd print n1pk.in to keep warm. J , Aict\1rd'1 where th• Tewdtir Is in the Gift Sh op. th• molMHI breld it bakld In the bek•rv, end 111 th• other good th ings 111uvr -~ around. You dn1tve to shop whit• you ... cen do more In one pl1c1 .. , you MY• g&I end you h111e fun. Coupon 9ood 11 /15·1 l/21 One Coupon Pw Adult Customtt Mahi -Mahi Steaks Genuine Finnin Haddie from'Heweil fro m lcetend 98c lb. 1.29 lb. We have a complete selection of exotic seafood Cooked & peeled shrimp, king crab meat, Eastern & Western oysters, smoked fi sh, lobster, oysters and Clams in •shell, cibalone steaks and smoked lox . Place your Pou ltry Orders Early to help us in selecting the size you prefer. Natu ral Swiss Cheese Philadelphia Brand Cream Cheese Pill sb ur y Slice 'n BJkc Cool..ic) Richard's B.B.Q. Pork Loi n Ribs by th• piece · y, lb. 8 oz . sugar or · chocolete chip -16 oz. Yo lb. 88c 43c 49c 1.65 Pears Grapes Lettuce Banana Squash 1Mtr1 fancy Wethington A11WU; frelh plump , red, Emperor g1rd1n·ftelh leaf'r' BOSTON flne for betting, th lclc rTMlted 29c lb. 29c lb. 2 for 29c 7<.lb, Harvest Pie· ... Parkerhouse Dinner Rolls Stollen Coffee Cake Mi nce Pie dozen 16 or. ... Pumpkin Pie ... LIQUOR Richar d's Private Label Vodka 80 proof · fifth Richar d's Priva te Label Kentucky Bourbon 86 proof fifth Castell o Real Rose Win e from Portugal Ja1;;qucs Bonet EKtra Dr y Champagne J acqucs Bonet Cold Du ck RICHARD 'S LIDO 3433 VIA LIDO N.B. fifth fifth fifth Open 9.S Daily, Sun. 9.7 673-6360 , RI CH.I.RD 'S HARBOR VIEW 1660 MACARTHUR N.B. Open 9-8 Daily, Sun. 9.7 644-8660 2.19 83c 1.19 19~ 1.97 3.80 4.75 1.69' 1.99 1.99 Coupon good 11 /115-11 /2 1 One Coupon Ptr Adult Customer l Coupon good 11 /15·11 121 One CoUpOn P1r Adult Customer Coupon good 11/15·11/2t One Caupon Per Adult Customtr RI CHARD 'S OWN 8 oz. I ~cranberries Party I C&H Sugar 1 La.cELLOBAG Cheese Ball . I Powdered, light B' dark brown-1 Lb. FROM RICHARD'S BAKERY ·Hard Sauce WITM TMIS COUPON . I 15( ~~ON 79( . .! f~~:ON 9( D• l)p I' On• Rlch1rd 't P1rtv Ch"M 8111, B 01, -79c I Ol'lt 1 lb. bOll Powde~td or Brown C&M Suger 9c •• WITM f.HIS COUPON 5 oz. 3·9( I - ' ' ' • , §Jl DAILY PILOT Wtd11e$dlr, NC1""1'1ber 14, 1973 GOLD BOND TEN DER AGED BEEF RIB ~~E , 111 . "TENDER·LEE" ROAST I FULLY COOKED . · ' Lii. SHANI( cbu~kA5;;~k·'11~ IUTT H~O«T:ON71 WHOlE Me D 1111 STEAKS • • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • 11.Y PORTION 99~ SLICES l 11. HAM nr.. D SPENCER STEAKS ••••••••.• • • 12ll. . • HOLIDAY SEAFOOD • ' '' ...... ;..: ..... BONELESS D COOKED SHRIMP ••• ~·~:-:· •• 89' Chuck Roast , •. · o WESTERN ovSTERs .·:o:-."!. '1" ROLLED& TIED 'J'i D GIJEEN SHRIMP ••• ::t:"P!'.. 12'.1 Clod Roast • • .... • BREAKFAITTREATs. D BONELESS STEWlllB BEEF ••••••• 'lll D.l.EAll BEEF $HORTRIBS • • • • • • • • 59fi ZACJCY FARMS '"6 LBS. lPruh Roasdn1· Chicken ··~ TEQUILA DON CARLOS !IO' -'4'' QUART HORME L'S CURE 81 or CUDAHY'S HOLIDAY Boneless !laU Ham CRY·O·VAC WRAPPED c~~~i·~ NEW CROP NAVELS &:1 . I MATEUS I ROSt:• I NEW MATEUS WHITE : 'I'' I 25·0Z. I ..._ • ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• . ., . ., . : VODKA : :" SCOTCH : : ''· JANOV-SOo : 1: SCOTS 1\1151' ! " QUART : QUA RT : .:1 '3'' : .·· ,,,, -~·· : 'Ji.# I.: • . '' • ..... , . a· . i j • • ' . . ' . . . ' . ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• . . FRANZIA l Almaden •VI~ RO!'E' o CHI ANTI' • MTN. BUJIGUNDY 0 RllJ .\f.\\'EJN j • MTN. CllADLI S HALF .,.,. I HALF . 1911 GALLON ..._ l GALLON .. ..._ . I .• ·············• ......... ~····· " RUM : : MASSON°0 : RO'\' nt: Lt:o~ :· .: . : • LIGllT on· • • QUART CA RAF.ES • • D,\R K-,.·1..-·r11 • :• \'IN ROSE' ! .... • •• llURGU1'.IDY • •3•• : :• CHABLIS : : : '2'' : • • • . . .... . •••••••••••••••• • • • • • ••••••••••••• MIXES CHRISTIAN L D ·uco11 .............. 11" D S ICE ••• !~~ .•• D SAUS1 GE ·~·.~ 89° " .............. . D LITTLE. FRIERS ••• '.7~.~"'.. 11'' ' .. 0 llr!Frr lllTTlllAUS ----....... ,.... 0 -•SUCKLI WNITI fUIUTS . 0 UHi SHICTIOI Of fllSI TilllKIYS ..... llAll .. llUWNC 9 "'COOl .... TllMAG" IUILYS . . " ~ . .. PLUM P-TENDER-DELICIO US FRES H FROZEN OVEN READY TURKEYS • Grade 'A' Toms • OVEN READY POPPY OR • NORBEST 18-22 LBS. -FARMLAND ... 10-14 LBS. FRESH FROZEN RENS -~~--~-~~~-PLUMP• TENDER o DELICIOUS 'a Fresh 'A' 1 TuRKEYS I 11.S.D.A.-GRADE 'A' ! HENS I TOMS l 10.14 ·&' ! TIJ.2281' I UIS. I j .... I LBS. .... ,. I -·--' _,"""""" &20 I O§CAtMAltl1 ° llt&IJlllAl• '1" IOQUEFORT ••••• •!"; 1 FIAllKS •• :'! ~~ •• ·~ • l<WSOllU$1!o1G 49 I JM<f >.HD(G:lPO 59 BLEU •••••••••• '~ 1 1 AVOCADO DIPS •• .'?'.· f... _.,Ol(UMJ. #.NO Cl«""" 39 I ""1~ 39 1000 ISlAID ~~ b. J CRESCENT ROLLS .'?~ ' CREAM CHEESE • I . .... . .. 2701 -Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa e 13922 Brooklaurst, Garde,i Grove 1308 W. Edinger, Santa A11a I 5858 Warner. Huntington Beads. e 23811 El Tor.~. JI T.oro . ' I • l'I "' .. , f.I ;1 .... ;) t: ,, •• t I l ' ' ., •• ' • ,, • r ,, ' <1 ' ' ,. -· l T • Wrdntsda_v , Nevtmbef 14, 1'173 DAILY PILOT 53 Calories Eliminated th le Easy Way . By BARBARA GIBBONS II ;,'poon fennel Beed Pour peeled tomatoes Into lour, 391 calori., each. chunks sheet. Bake In a preheated, For moro Io w ·ca I Pork JOm ls one of the creat Ga Ih aalt and pepper a pot end chop coarsely with 2 f?reen penpers. seeded and very hot 450-degree oven. favorites send a atamped, self· luxury ~routs .. , never ~"2 !!~ 'f~ waterk·• k • knife. (Or, quick-chop in OVEN·EASY llAWA!IAN cut In squares Bas te with a combination addressed envelope and 25 tough, .aJways tender and r-... e n coo cu por ' your blender jar). Combine PORK KEBABS 3 tablespoons soy aauec of reserved pineapple juice cents-lO SLIM GOURMET 3 in 1'"2·1nch cubes with all I I · ·•1 ts Th read skewers w i t h iuty. Cook: apaghetti in boillng rema n ng 1ngreu en · and soy sauce. Bak~ only until PORK. LAMB ANO LIVER U you've shied away from plted water W1tll tender. Cover and cook over ~ pound lean cooked pork, alternate cubes of meat, pepper i s tender.crunchy. RECIPES, in care ot the Dally thb special treat because you )ii moderate heat for JS minutes. cut in 1"2-inch' cubes pineapple and pepper. Arrange Makes four servings, 2.S8 Pilot, 50 Wes t Shore n-a.11, think pork Is 0 fa ttenlng," con-eanwhUe, prepare sauce: Serve over spaghetti. Serves 1 cup juice-packed plpeapp1e skewers on a nonstick cookie calori es each. N.J. 07871.) sider this: a quarter-pound1-----'--------=_:::_.....:__:_.....:.....:.....:=======.....:...:::.:.....::..:...::::..::.=:..:...:=..:::..::::.:__::_:::..::_:.....:::._ _____ .:_.:_.:.:._ _____________ _ serving of our succulent Slim Gourmet Pork Rout la only 281 calories, while an equiva- lent "'"1llg ol beef 111> roast might be 500 calories .., more. 1bat's because we choose our pork with an eye toward leanness, then we have it trimmed of lat and boned, l')lled and lied. ' Not only does t b I s ell.mlnate the unwanted fringe fat, it makes for easy carv;. inc at tt. dinner table. , Pork, of course, Ls alwayt served well-done, which means there's no supercrucial ove+- watcbing as there would be for a rare roast of beef. (Well· done cooking also means that extra interi or fat is eliminated.) Many supermarkets feature rolled pork loin routs, but doo't laU wbat'S OQ diaplay ; it will pri>l>ably contain more "finge fat" than you wantl 1 Pick out au extn·lean loin (pork doelll't need I a it y marbling for tendemeu) and have It fat·trimmed, cfe.boned, rolled and lied In your order. Tell the meat man you want all the fat rtmoved l (Ask· him to return the bones, they make a good broth base f o r homemade spaghetti sauce!) EASY.SIJ<JNG BONEUlll!I PORK LOIN Ian loill ., porti, trimmed, ..._ boned, rolled Ind tied . !iarllC J19Wder Coarse black -r VONIVALUE ) MEATS _ TABLE KING ...,.. n .. . CJ9! .. T~~-K!YS i i . I ldtr•ll T• T8"1 ·'::.~;:--t• .75 Self luU11 T• VQlll ~t:t>'n~ :v':.~~ .. 75 Slff B11U11 Hta ~,'o~~.~ ~ •.. 79 Jal T _. ·-ouoooo_...., 79 If' Ila"' ,llOZVl IM Ll .-'Yll.WT. LI., TVSOll •lllOI 99 rAOZlM ll,, =~spr1n"'.;.O~lher0ainiliranroyt·-=:J11111-1111-.-.....-::.,.....~-~·-;;~-.. l.O!I with garlic powder, pepper ll•fllddt Tlit:ey 111111 :'~~-4.69 and aoy llbC'e. Place on a rack 1n a ahallow roasting pan. • I Don't ·add any water and don't CQftl'. Insert meat tbermometer. Bake in a slow 32.5-degree oven a ppro:r l ma t ety 40 minutes per powxl, · until tbermom<1er reads I 7 0 degr<es. Remove to · tarvlng board and lllce lblnly. To serve "au jus" (with its owo Jute..), pour all ac- cumllla~ fat from roasting pan. • Pour II cup bbillng water or heated apple juice Into the pan. Stir with i~...i!poon to dlaaolve cooking f""'"ue. Pour OVeT sllcOd pork. ' Each lour<>unce serving of rout port: 281 calories. Serve with umweetened or JOw. calorie applesauce. 'l1Je OIJl1 thing better than roast port is leftover roast port. '!here's so much a creative coot can do wllb it! Trim away any fat and cut the leftover meat in cube!. Squirrel -it away in yolD' freeze< In meakile portions. Bag it In plastic and bring it out for imaginative decaloriled reruns like thc1e : S!WJ.E'f.EASY P011X ALMOND DIN I cup c.lery, lhlnly sliced I red er veen sweet pepper, thinly lllced I pacbge fnnen green beans 1 can (z.otmce) musbrtloms, indudlng liquid 1i1 cup waler 2 teupoona arrowroot or cornstarch ! tabf9poons soy saure '!'< pouDCI lean cooked pork, in cubes t owioes canned water chestnuts, aUced · 2 tabl-whole almonds la a otmUck skillet combine celery, pepper, green. beant and water. C.Over and sunmer fourmlntlles. Combble arrowroot with soy sauce anil slir lnln skWel Add pork cubea, mushrooms and water chestnuts. Cook and stir uncovered until aauee 1immera ', Ind lhlckena and meat ts belted tJmiugh. Garnllb with ofmaocls Ind ~rve immediately. Makes lour ser\oinp, 291 calories each. 1 !~MINUTE PORK AND SPAGBE1'11 ITAUANO 1 coo -(.,.._) Italian peeled -toes 1 can (Manees) tomaln paste • li i....,. poultry -· Ing ' 11e.._oregano For wedtencier Adveftieing Phone TABLE KING; ..;... HEN TURKEYS TO•lll.•.¥)1..'ftf. CINTIA 98 tu1 LI .• ~.lt._69 11111111 Dl~il' Cllll Rallt ,~ .. 1.39 111!11111 Sltwl11 lllf 11111111 F•lly Stuk TA$T[ 1 39 TllEAT LI. , FrlU Perk Chops """ • l'lrk Clll,a Fnlli I.Iii l'lrt - FRESH LOIN PORK ROAST •ll llll .~lNO lOIOllNOCUt ·~ ....... Cl!MTUI "' CIXT[ll "' .. 1.1 u.1.49 ".1.09 ... 1.59 u.1.69 R"' SlicM llCOI 81WM•AITTM111 119 l·~l.PICI. • flrw .11111 llDll S-. ,.,..:_,_ ... 95 J11111 Sii* llCOI "'11':' 1.39 F.,. JIM Bonim HI• "'fl"J~~ •. l .99 In Fn SM•• Roll -:,~r IA.1.09 J-or, Fn Slualgl llllb 'l."t 1.59 SEAFOOD SELECTIONS Clrtl·FrlU Fla' Stich ·;~ .89 Clr'll·Fnlli F11l11M Clli,I ':.of .19 . VONS VALUE PRODUCE Hmlill Pl_,,la ~..::;,. ... .69 11!1 E11penrG11pe1 ~~-.... 29 RH llHll' 1M 8n11 OllHI .... 10 FANCYANJOU PEARS TKWUT ll . I f'9Cf 11111 Y1• mi~ .-.29 frllll O. l!nr cnJ1m. :-::: .29 frlU Crllf Ctllry ~,=. '" 11 ,.. .... ,st ..... ~ ... 2.19 fna' Cll P• 1'n1 "'!lll:I~ .ft FROZEN FOODS • ~L 53 Ctlt., Brti1dtri llnld llollll oL 75 ..... Frlld.. ~: 2.29 E111 w1m11 'l."t .45 JOHNSTON PIES ...... ....,...,. ~11'11.Q. r.IHCI .7 ... Miid Orlllll "Jllcl . __ rtc:ilwl&r.Pm EN t iii Sri\iliirilii •·O?. 25 ~· . "'" 19 ..... WESTWOOD .. ICI! CREAM ~ ~QAl....CTN.t.NrO.fL.AVOlll • ' •'li ....... PORc:i_u,:.~-" 8 1'1'01..U. fWlftY ~. . . . Pllllry LICll'I wt" Skew .. ,:::., .... 18 111 .. M'l.Jdy 111111,.... ·w:;." .41 111111Miil1'nNlft* ~~'( IA., 77 11'11 ... ---..1 ~ Kll'CA!SEllOl.lt OI!. 25 ._. ... OIWI n COf'll "'""""' IA. • ~· •• VONS VALUE ·DELICATESSEN VONS FRESH . 3 tfo~~:;:E~~~ l · So C 01 'll'OHI ASST'O. 43 If 11111 pl OUA.CA.lolOl.I ·" I.OZ, , •·OZ. 33 -. VONS VALUE BAKERY Ilk .. Dluwlllk OlO'll'l~=~.45 H1li41J l1tllr Ceoklll f BROWN 'N SERVE l TWIN ROLLS . OMI00191 I ' . - C&H SUGAR TOM TURKEYS \ VONS VALUE . -GROCERIES WINES & SPllllTS Prt!ICllll Y1• ·~f~ ·35 fM1LLBAOOK Voll.I Ml1111i Niii '1:'.~ .95 t VODKA ""·" , IO '"°°"" ... .,,.,-;;;::.":.;'C;...:;::;..~~:i:;...:. MJB C.1111 'lil~' 2.83 .__.,_., • · Bord111 Ett N11 'tft . 89 K .. 11111 1.*18" ':?c .39 Ora• ni, T1Ppilf ~~f .79 -Lauder's Scalch ·~:t:f ~ ... ~ 11.99 T• ffllll ._ l1dll '¥!_" I .Ill P'""""' 5 ·~-·· • '" .. -"Bl f~ ROYAL VELVET4 2 f SCOTCH ••"·" J M ,llOO' Ml! I >. '&I "r• ••. ?'... . , • • )I .. *'"°' • i ! ! i LiBBYS "'"""""""' 2 . ~~~~!.::~: .... , 1 DIWV(I SCOtcll "~)~~" 1&.91 I ,. . ' -Wllstllri swill ~lctda 61111 TynRI Wiit "'';;::.""' ,....1.91 . 11·ot:""" -a-a::--·-;:-:.;~;::;;:~;:;;;:1-~~ JUI ,Q\I 0 Jriojllllli ER 1111 llh >t~' .59 Kl'lll ~111111'1 Ml lllllllm '~fi .23 6111111 Wiii' CllatilUll ~ .23 f MRS. CUBBISONS 4 STUFFING MIX,... ,t.u,.~~~ -· ,..,_ 69 -. \ D111111i A Sbli l'lcldll 111111 'i=-.33 11111111 811111 SWiil Mll'llil ·:t: .49 . . TASTER'S CHOICEl COFFEE _,_, .. oi..wi • Llpll1 OlllH ~., Mix ,., ·~· .39 UICl1 Ila LllWI 81111 Rici '~i'.~ .87 Dllrkll Fllklli Clcelll :-.1l: .33 Knit M1rlli•ll1w Cr1111 ';'lJ. .29 E11ll l11ad Miik ''ti:" .44 Lll*y P1111,,t1 Jllicl .. •:if'-.39 Biiiy Cncklr I'll Cl'llll lllcll 'i;.W; .33 JERSEY MAID ~~~!~E~ • V·S V1g11Hl1 JllCI ~·!'.:" .49 - f*JFnaKllilllyS-·it: .11 .. STRAIGHT-KY. f B~~J!~.~!!:V:,: PHI Mwoa Wlnll ·~..;;.'"'..::: 1.19 61111 CM~ll1 Bl11C "~..:.r;:::'."""%.H ltlllll Swlll CIJOly .:::=:l~~ ~ 2.0I Malm Ron W111 .1::::'JA~1 I~ 11 .GALLO PINK CHABLIS IW.J'a.M.LON Ill, lmHI lllrplliy ~'il'"'w™ 1.59 AHrl CIN Dack Oll~:MIN( 1.99 M. LAMONT ........ 2. ·a URGUNDY ~-~ ·. -·. ALCOA ALUMINUM FOIL .... fT.OOLL SAVE .21 0.) CRISCO SHORTENING Z •·LI. CAN SAVE 20 fMll. l'fllCl 1.11 • WITM COllll'Oll l.!t r-----i 11,1criY1iiov.1fr011 VQN L-...J ONl~ffilQJSTOW!' ,.._---n..-WM ..... 16•tt ............ -...ie""r"""..,."~~----.. .IW /ff ... tWl'll#!ff~fl/ltU,ICF ~l'll'lWlftO. l •Nl.lftll.lN• n.t.A/HGjl I l •M QllQ.0 (o)Vlollf Ctll51f·UOOfwilaoloo4' __ ,_ c.11 ...... ~ ...... ' ·' 6424321 1D111 Adams Ave., at Braokllurst, Hall-Beacb ~ ___ _,,34881 Doheny Park Drive, ca~strano Beacll 5922 Edinger Ave., at Springltale, Huntington Beach 21082 Beach BIVd,, Huntington Bad • 17950 Ma~Ha, Fountain V ~ ..... I • .. ' ' Laguna HiHs Plaza, El Toro ' l / • 1 ' • ' .. I ' • I . . . . . . -. . . . .... . • . .. .. . .. . . . ;;.J. DAILY PILOT • •· ·There's-one gQod way to .beat infl~tion: - ' Use Mayfairs Low . Discount Prices for ·Y<>ur Holiday· Fixings , .. --c...-~ . ,,,.,,- • • • -·--.. WITM 16.00 PUllCMASE Ofl MOftE ·Par tr Gla§§es ONE 11 OUNCE OR 15 OUNCE "'"" :~;Eri~j EACH !it.~ °!_'] __ •' ' . " . Wave} Ora'nges NEW CROP • LARGE SIZE I Dry Cure I·. Smoked Wams HOFFMAN· SHANK PORTION 6 TO 7 LB. SIZE -OL' FASHIONED O~Y CURE-DEEP SMOKED FLAVOR Ground · GJJeef · FAMILY PAK, 3 LBS. OR MORE LESS )HAN 3 LBS .. 89¢ LB. Wayfair ~est ~uys in 'Produce Crisp Celery · · 2 FOR 211! TENDER RED BAND • J 'Radishes or {jreen · Onions in · · SA.LAO DELIGHT · GARDEN FRESH BUNCHES e.l.UeA.. Ocean 8pray Cranberri.~~G .• 29EA. Sweet ~Ill~ 4 Lesl.00 . 'ml/nuts NEW CROP .5~B AN.JOU PEARS Sweet,Mellow .••••• 41bs.1.00 RED DELICIOUS APPLES Washington Extra Fancy .......•• ,. 4 lbs. 1.00 CRISP CARROTS Tender -Tops Off.,,.,. lb •• 10 BROCCOLI Fresh, Tender .•••• , •• , lb .• 28 BOSTON LETTUCE Salad Oellgit .••••• , , 2 for .29 RED LEAF LETTUCE Garden Fresh ., .•••• 2 for .29 CABBAGE Solid Head .........•. lb .• 10 SPANISH ONIONS U.S. No. 1, .•••• ,,.,, lb .• 15 PAPAYAS Tropical .••••• , ••••• ea •• 39 APRICOTS Canny Scot· 8 oz. Pkg.~ •• ea .• 79 SUN CHOKES Gourmet Oeligtit l lb. _Pkg .•••• , ••• , , • ea •• ~9 ORANGE JUICE Tropicana -100% Pure • 1/2 ga l. Bottle •••••••• ea. ~89 HOUSE PLANTS Assorted Varieties 2 1/4" Pots ......... 3-ifo,. 1.00 SPECIAL HOLIDAY FIXIN 'S LIST "EVERYTHING FOR YOUR HOLIDAY NEEDS" MELAMINE HOLIDAY SERVING KRAFT Marshmallow Cr•m• 70z. ,29 PLATTER 21 Inch ..•...... , 3.99 BETTY CROCKER Pi• Crust Mix EARLY CALIFORNIA LAR GE 11 Oz ........••.•.•••••••• 34 RIPE PITTED OLIVES #300 Can •• 39 STAR QUEEN T.P. StwffH Oli~s BELL BRAND MIXED NUTS 7 Oz ....•.••. , • , • , •., ••• ,69 YilTH PEANUTS 13 Oz ..... , , , , .93 SCHILLING Yanille 4 Oz .• , , •• , .19 CHIFFON DINNER NAPKINS LIPTON Onion Soup 2·Pk .• :: , •• 39 60 Ct. ...••.•.........•• , ,29 MAY FRESH Pot1to Chips· Dip . KRAFT Miniature M1rshm1llows 10 Oz .. Regular 10 1/2 Oz ..••• , .5' 10 1/2 Oz .•..•....•.... , . , .2 1 BORDEN°S E99 Nog 32 Oz . Cen , , .75 BORDEN'S Minct t41fl 28 Oz .••• 69 SEVEN UP -Rttur'nebl•• 2~0z .• ,2f_ BAKER'S Co'conut 16 Qz ...••••. 59 GORTON'S Minced Clams 61/2bz .• r ALCOA Alumirum Foil• Httvy 'May fresh CJce Cream Duty 18 Inch •.•• , . : , , ••• , • , .47 STOVE TOP Stuffing -Chidl:en. Corn Bread 6 Oz. • • , •• , ...... .. CROWN PRINCE Whole O,sters S Oz .•.....••.•...••••••• 15 FLEISCHMANN'S Stick M1rf1r'int 1 Lb, •. , •.•••••• , , , , , , • • .49 l)Jutter Basted 1 Golden Star q'urkeys . ARMOUR BUTTER BASTED TOMS· FROZEN GRADE 'A' • 16 TO 22 LB. SIZE· EN...OY THE FINEST !! (Grade A} PreshWen %rkeys • GRAOE:A' • MAYFRESH -10 TO 14 LB .. SIZE . , •• . ORDER YOUR BIRD EARL y FOR BESt SIZES •. "STRICTt y FRESH!': . . CAfayfair ~est ~uys in CAfeat ~oneless Wams FULLY COOKED 1 no RATH-SOCIETY BRANO . 1/2's'· 3 TO s LB . SIZE • .70LB. 8!l'itac!;2'!}~fRHN AND FLAVORFUL • 95EA CJi'resh t:Leg 'O Pork no SHANK PORTION· EASTERN OOAtlTY -RICH IN FLAVOR e70LB. CF'resJ~M ~Jl!l~~tifll C.IJo~'iffrzP.~ 69LB 'f ~!f./JRA:!~1!1~ T!.£ H!sfeeJ;~ER TODAY .73LB <;_Butter <;_Basted ARMOUR GOLDEN STAR l'S CTJ. '11 ,J. ~ 10TO 14 LB.SIZE . -nen urAeys GRADE 'A'. THE BEST!. LB. Chuck Steaks '7n BEEF· BLADE CUTS -MARINATE FOR BARBECUE el 7LB. '!~~'!,!!R'fMO~~~f!,~! BARBECUE J .78LB <;_Boneless ~eel CJ?oasts 1 110 CHUCK POT ROAST-LEAN AND FLAVORFUL o~0LB. ~1!~~!.IA ~tt!&t.N:xfve_IJ~[~G. .66u.. KRAFT CJ>Jiiladelph ia · Cream Cheese PLAIN 3n 8 OZ. PKG, o 7EA. • SMOKED'PORK CHOPS Deep Smoked F Javor Sliced Thin for Quick. Fry Wotor Added , • , , ..... lb. 1.39 WHOLE FULLY COOKED HAMS Hoffman -Top Quality 12 to 14 Jb. Small Hams •• lb, 1. 18 MONTEREY JAC~ CHEESE . Land 'O Lakes •..•.... lb.1.39 MILD CHEDDAR CHEEEE Land 'O Lakes , •. , •••• lb. 1.39 ARMOUR CANNED HAM Zip Top - S lb ..• , •••• ea. 7.77 BIRD FARM SAUSAGE Sage, MildorHot · 12oz. Rolls Greet for SWffing Mix. , , • ea •• 99 COOKED SHRIMP Cemation 7az.Bags -Frozen !'· for' Cocktails or Salads •• ea .• 99 FRESH OYSTERS Hol iday Treat· Medium Size Great for: Stuffing 10 oz . Jars. , .......... eJ •• 99 ' PIL1.SBURY BISCUITS Sweet Milk or Buttermilk. 8 oz .... , • , •••..•••••• ea .• 14 <Mi~e~ Pryer 'Parts 3 HINOOUARTERS WITH BACK 3 FOREQUARTERS WITH BACK 3 WINGS, 2 GIBLETS AND.NECKS INClllQ.ED "A BUDGET PLEASE~!I" ' U.S.O.A. Food St1(11ps Welcom• ' . • .. f 1 . . .... ~. i Self /Basting ' . .. CJ6itlzg ,·'10m . :Ji.!!!_eys . 16 TO 22 LBcSIZL-FINE DUALITY -FROZEN WHILE THEY LAST • ECONOMICAL AND GOOOI • • I . ' ... ,. ' ... ! . . •w1TH "' ~LE PUllCMASE OF s10.oo,~ MOAE tEXCLUOING PRICE Of Tllfl(EV. DAIRY., TQliACCO~COHOLIC BEVEllACiE PROOUCT$). ~FER GOOD ON.. V NOV. fS'?MllU NOV. ii. With·~t Purchase·Requirernent lb. 57¢ "MAYFAIR'HOLIDAY HEAOOUARTERS'' . WE HAVE A FULL VARIETY OF t<PLIDA' POUL TRY ITEMS ANO HOLIDAY MIOATS. SUCH As.aunERBALL TURKEYS, JR . TURKE)'S, . --GEESE ,'OUCKS, 'CORNfSH·GAME HENS~ETC . --· . ' ''Shop M1yfeir for your Holidey Meets tO' set e Gourmet Table." · u.------------....-i .. <:This weeks ~est'~uys in Grocerie5 ~rden ·'Egg Wog ~~RT .59 · c.Libby 'Pump19.n · 'li! #2 1/2 CAN .,~J CaJ!~duCJN~r~:M~~~ SODA. '., .29.: COLLINS MIX, VODKA Ml~. WINK 2J OZ.f . , Canada 'Dry g ·u1.nine cmiter.'35 · 280Z. 'jel{~fil~[~Ysl! oz. 1 •• 19 'Mrs. Cubbison 'Dressipg ~49 REGULAR, CORN BREAD 13 OZ. • 'Mayfres~E'f:Hr?f !w:l!!"!~J,~1zE .29 'J~t;1!eAS <it~~! SA%'11~!~1Jles -4rn . IN CHEESE SAUCE, WHITE CORN IN BUTTER SAUCE 10 OZ. o · ~ · E-Z Poi/ CJ?oasters 67._. HC'LD UP TO 20 LB. TURKEY· OVAL OR OBLONG EA: o '11ayer ~spirin 100 •• ~BO . CJ?oy~/R CQ~f(fl~i'?fl:P~H~!\'!L. 6 o 99 'Mayfair.WolidajJ C:Wihes . . ALMADEN MOUNTAIN Wines -CHRISTIAN BROTHERS Cheteeu Bur'gW'dy, Cheblis, Claret Le S.llt Fifth .•••. , ••••••• 2.10 Helf Gal •••••• , , ••••••••• 3.11 FRANZIA Vin Rost· O.c:anter' Gal .••.•••..•....•••• ,. 5.33 H11fGal. ••..•..••.•..• ' •• 1.71 GALLO Heerty Burgundy MATE.US Imported PorfU9Ues• Half Gal ..•....••.. , • , • , • 2.69 Wine ... Rose oi-White Fifth .. 1 . 3.11 ITALIAN SWISS COLONY Ruby ANDRE Chempagne or Cold Duct Chablis Half Gal. .• , .••••••• · 2.39 Fifth ,,,: •.. 1 •••••••••••• , 1.99 PAUL MASSONRhiriec.ltltWint . , lntro~ing GALLd Ch.mpa9ne ·- Fifth ••• , : ••• , ••• I .,.\ .. 2125 Ory;Pilit end Cold Duct· Fifth . ; 2:'1t 'Brown IN' Serve:W.olls ' 'Niblets CoEn . ' · 120Z. CAN I• #2 1/2 ' CAN O.Cean 8pray Cranberries y .. STRAINED, W1iQLE-· 16 oz. . ' .. ., 175 IAST- 17th STREIT GOSTA MESA •OPEN ·24 ~.HOURS • ...... -• 1 I -. ' ~ .. i ' • • -. l I • • • • Home News TtJrkey ! Tricks . I t ly OOllOTllY WENCi[ ' . ' ~ . . . . ~ ' ' Wednesdai, November 14, iq73 -NEW STORE HOURS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. i\rup ~ a-Mvllir i Your 'nlanl<sglvln1 turlcey ii to1., to CQll mon 11111 year .:.. problbly about l'!lce 11 fnuch -u 1aat ye&,r. SALE STAR·TS THURSDAY NOV. 15TH AND CONTINUES THROUGH WEDNESDAY, NOV. 21ST SUNDAY INCLUDED CLOSED ALL DAY ' 1 TUrkt)' IW'Oductlon is not ilo.... "' !Kt tb6 lot41 1973 op la erpected to be up ~btlul I Pt"*11 horn 11111 j<tar. ~ But oborlq11 of meat, and ~,.,... prk:M for me a t, f.•'"1tod in a heavier demand for turkey wblch in tum pu1b· ~ prlceo up. -; · 1lle otber cauae ol bltMr urlcay p r I c t • II the skyrecketlnc <Oii ti. •feed, In !Aupt, 1973, turkey .,...,..,. '"'tte O*ylng twice as m.ach ' for feed u tbty paid in •August, 1972. Other costs have b • e n ·creeping up too -labor, , transportatloo, packqing. • 'l11t 'early Novem,b e r ·wholtsala price for turliayl sold in eatloed. lots w111a.f7 C9lll a pound for YOOlll btnl and 57.a cenll a pound for young toms. Tht11e pr'ice1 cur~ rtnUy -to be firm and holding llleady. The price you pay ·at the relail •tort will depend upon the prlclftl policy of the · market. I Some markets may olfer .' their turkey• &t or near cost i as "loas leaders" to entice '. )'Oli to buy tbt rut of your 'l'hl!Wgi~ ''l!lclll5" at tbW I marlctt. i Others m,ay add t h e i r ~ normal .markup and prjccs Ll!'.l!l be 10 to 15 cents a pound 1 bllfjOf uw.-WliOle!ile. · -- I -use of tbt price di!· l ftrtntlat bt!Wttn htM and l toma. your be at ;value wiU ht t11o t1111er 1om1 ""ilhlnc -..i n pounds. !JI ioddllloO -to !elllftl for EXTAA, LAllGE FRESH GRADE "AA" EGGS DOZEN l LB. CARTON SPRINGFIELD !ST QUALITY GRADE ''AA'' a ioWt.. prlct ptr jiowxl, thcat ~ Iarpr bin!• also give you the I moo1 .-i m ~ to t bone and waste. Smaller hens ' b a v 1 lJ"OllC)rtionaUY more I wute llld also ... t more per ~..., I pwDd - At 71 e<nt. a pound , a 3- 0Unct aening of tcan turkay • ,.111 coot about !O centa. '!bat's •lilhtty less than tbt -of a aeryJng of ttomd steak. but a bit '11\0re than the OOlt ol . a ~ of the !tut costly i gnlUl\4 --1 Whet lllould you do II you would llllt to take advanllge ........ COOL WHIP It• t _OI SID 116. lfc IN•fllLD SLICID '• 11 oz., ••. Strawberries 49' 29' of tllt --ng of a larger -------------bird but have too small a family tQ eat this much turkeyt Here are two sug1esUons. One, buy thO tarp frorell turkey and ask tbe butdler to .... it in half. Coot jUll , one half for Thanksgiving and ' llort the otller ball In your 1 ~ene.r for uae at Qirh:tmu or aome other time. alllN 51AMT ~,¢ Vegetable Casseroles~ •a TOUl CHOICE OF YAlllTlft IPllM•PllLD FOIDHOOll LIMA BEANS 19' 11 oz. ..... A ball iurkey Is easier to cook lbanawhoiebl~.Mau1 1 .... .-.......... -. ......... ..._~..._....,...._.....,. ..... dresllDI. 'P-on top ol a piece ol bta'7 atuminwn loll 11P11M•PllLD on yoot ,...llernck and slmp. SWEE ly lay 'tbe turkey on top. T Allow abollt 3 to 4 boura PICKLES .,,..tin( unit (for an a to 12 DOlllld ball) at :125 delf't•· 21 •· ..., 49' THANKSGIVING DAY NOV. 22 Tarnoff VODKA FIFTH Islander Imported Virgin Island RUM QUAIT rom u CIOWN CANADIAN FULL 9UAIT -16.I Pao<>F WHISKEY FOllMOST FIUH -$iUAlT EGG NOG ' $299 s4,, 59' • FRANKLIN DlT TOASnD 59' PEANUTS "' ' ••· '"' l lAPT MINI.A.TUii .MARSHMALLOWS 19' 11!/z OZ. CILLO IAG -II•. 2tc SPl lN•FllLD MANDA.llN ORANGES 4/51 11 OZ. CA.NS • CUBBISONS STUFFING SPRINGFIELD YAMS · ' -29c . SUNSHINE VANILLA WAFERS 11 oz. 5"1MUllLD PINIA.m.I JU ICE II• 46 OZ. CA.Ni LINDSAY MEDIUM PITI£D ~ RIPE OLIVES TALL CANS 3/$1 . CELERY CRISP • EXTRA FANCY LARGE STALKS 1 ORANGES SWEET "N" JUICY 1 CRANBERRIES OCEAN SPRAY 1 Lb •. Package AVOCADOS- LARGE SIZE FRESH DAILY OCEAN SPRAY CRANBERRY . SAUCE , TALL CAN 25( GAIN DETERGENT 'liie -m Idea la to roast the whole turkay, and aa IOOll • rt'~t·~:a.=ii:::.,:'. NORBEST TURKEYS -GRADE "A" SELF BASTING-WITH POP-UP GAUGE or ~ltd into 'meal size , GIANT SIZE 69( ~~~~~·,.>;ii: HEN 1 ... tolll -k. .. tO TO ~:TlONS WE : .w: TURKEYS 14 LBS. c TOM lb TURKEYS 11 TO 22 LllS. Q. I 1"'va I turkay ID my -whldl bu been in thctt olnqt laat Thlnbalvlnl. wm tt a1111 be IOO!I! WI HAVE FULL SELECTION OF FRESH DRESSED TURKEYS, ROASTING CHIX, DUCK GEESE A. It depencla on what you lneen by "Goeld." U you mean BAR M HICKORY ·5MOKED iafe the anner is yes -HAMS If the ~ baa btcll IOlldly · frozen all thll tlmo. Holrever, if you·~· "IOOd tQ eat," · !hen we-......ltl have to say BUTI PART HAM !hat it will be 1 ... OaYllrful, )... · tendtr, and lw juicy lhan It 'W~ have been a GRADE "A" WHOLE BODIED Shank Half FRYING CHICKEN 1 '::. 3 LEGGED FRYERS c lb Prices EJfectlvei Thunday thru Wednesday November 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 Prlc11 IUbiect io 1todt .. -· WE GLADLY ACCIPT , c ea c lb ( pkg c ?Q~ ~ went to have our BAR M • HICKORY SMOKED ·Jl'hankqtvln( dinner at~ TAVERN. 69¢ u.s.D • .\, FOOD COUPONS lb ............. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii---BAR M • llULK S!~Ll BACON 119 PROTEIN ~LEND '.!\IXED WITH lb, GROUND BEEF land wlb be !efVing a IBJ11' , $ \torn tumy. II I rMll It at, [321 delr<es, I would have to 11tt It lli:lle oven about 5:00 HAMS ... m. 'l'Q avoid ltlll. iluld I tl*I la a. Ill _.. oven 19 FARMER JOHN lb SLICED BACON •beferl I "to bed! · WHOLE • HAL, OR QUARTER i A. We lliOftcJy r..,.1011tnd COLUMBIA . ~.n""' ~1u1:::1: - -- -j BACON --~ .= :! :41.: KRAFT PHILADllPHIA 1 1'"1~~111rem':'•i 25 CREAtti ~I s1 • ROAST. c':r<:. 109 BAR M BULK lb. WIENERS 69~b. FARMI R JOHN WIENERS ' ' I t= 11..::S"."::t ~::. CHEESE I ... .... iJ I nted tt fet llP I lltUe later, I WHh tt.r1 cou11en1 "o l!"h1lmum !Hf'~h•t• ~•111lrff. l imit I C!Oldll ltlrt the turkey 1 ll~t· Jl•r C01tlt0n-ot1•coupoft f"'t c11ilomor. Vold •fltr a ~ terripill'lture -W1iilt11t4•v. N ... 11. 1t11. I ltiie 400 dilfiM -tlllll tum -OMLY AT Ml.AIM llAIUT TOP 11,0UND ....•..•.. IOTTOM ROUND .... . SHOU LDER CL OD ... . 12 oz. Lii. 69~a. COSTA MESA PLACENTIA 19th and Placentia 710 W. Cliiiaan It down 1fter an hour or two. - - - - - - - -_. \ .. I --J --I --~--·----• -. - , I .. ff DAILY PILOT AMILER TUMBLEWEEDS GIJl!SS WHA'T. SOOAll Pll!?! MUTT AND JEFF il '1 j , /Ji I J i .. ! I j • WEU...JONES, BUSINESS LOOKS GOOO! I SEE ,_,,.. OUR. NEW TELLER IS QUITE PoPUL..AR! TH~ D15JN!'£CTAHT Wl.L ~ELP rnE. 6Ctt> 6EllAIS F161if mo BAD £8t,llS ~ TlW Wf Cf' ltl!R'SJ '--·---·•·' NANCY MY 00Y FR IEND PLANS TO STUDY LAW W'HEN HE GROWS UP WHAT DOES 'YOUR WORTHLESS 00Y FRIEND PLAN TO DO'? YES. SI ~. EVER SINCE HE MISTAK'.ENLV GAVE SOMEBODY tl30 TOO MUCH ONCE! !'LL HAVE YOU KNOW THAT RIGHT NOW HE'S STUDYING- MEDICINE PEANUTS ..,., ..... ~ ... ._. ...... ,~. • • • • • .. . . .. . . by Doug Wildey by Tom K. Rya11 ~QOKiO '1'.>UR ~AURf!Sr PICK llt1flWS . .· ....... -f'lft,tt by Al Smith by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller ·-- DOOLEY'S WORLD MOM H,J.D ANarHH! ACCID~NT IN ll-11> CAR Tl>P,J.Y SHE SAID SH E WAS POI.UNG IN'f'O 1).IE. SUl'JiR.<Wi'KilT" PARKING LOT .... SALLY BANANAS • " GORDO MOON MULLINS ... CERTAINLY A LOT OF FUS~ IN nlE GoVERNMENT OVE"R l'HOSE "TAPES .. ' .... -.... -~ .... -- ANIMAL CRACKERS WEU..,EMMA·· IT'S 1.11<'.E' A COl<TEST·· otlE" · "TE'AM AGAINST THE OTHER ... ' I • ' i ' .. l j by Charles M. Schulz TODAY'S CBDSSWDID PUZZLE ==~,,-----~::. ·:,;:.;' =.: • Z /,\INUS'?ll ·- ACROSS -46 Recite Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: 1 Pub products 48 Sp1ings up 5 Two limes SO Greek teller 10 School 51 Cordage sub)ec1: l1ber lnlormat 53 Ce1tain guns 14' Overwhelm· 57 Observing rng craving thti rules 15 Wears: 2 61 Touch words ilgainsl 16 Arabi;in 62 Capable of father producing 17 Believing in 64 Ancient Asian th• inevitable 65 lrregula1ly 19 Adh11sive notched subs1ance 66 F1onch t I A T K 0 L 20 Hive doubts islands ii bout 67 One who 21 Garage ser-does: Sufh:it vice cars 68 Splits "'23 Ontario and 69 "Too bid!" D '" 10 Small 39 Defense org. 11enerator 40 Deletions 11 Qualified 43 Penetrate Supenor DOWN 12 Comprehensive again 25 Regret 1 Hitchcock, 26 Agree e t 1l 29 Ultimate 2 Hawaiian 34 Salta: feast trio <t5 Citizen army 13 Shades 47 New York 18 Se ahead of a1hl11te 22 Relatives 49 Rate : Lati l"t M.cliclo1 3 ,A,djective 35 Part~ally: endings Prefix 4 Holding 24' Jews, e.g. 52 Th1tii1: 26 Former 2 words Turkish coin 53 Machine 37 Rich llly9f c1ke devices 27 Comedienne pafls. 38 Supporting S Mott d811Se 39 Contends. 6 Squande1 41 Unde1stood 1 Fanatic: .42 ···-nous: Sulhx ConlldentiaUy 8 Electrical « Brain canal device 4'5 The dishes 9 Repeat aervt!d perlormanct Judy···-· 54 Help 28 Piece of fabric 55 Without 30 " ... Je roil" clothing 31 Pleads wi1h 56 Dry: Var. 32 Do penance 58 Satisfy 33 •· .•. ··pray" 59 Iris layer 36 G1eek 60 Minus , goddess 63 Not: F1ench ' ' l • ':t" ' 7 • ' \JI; " II " ll ,. ~ " ... ~ "' " " . ., . -r.· " ,, '• - ~ ll " . 2S i;. .; " ~"~ " ,, " I·•! " " " ll lJ ~ " " " . " " \j ' .. "' w .. .. " ' .. " ,. ,-, .... .. m :;; ' -• " " ;.;. -~ rr .. .. 57 " " ~ M ,. l"I'" . .. " .~· -. " - • . . I • JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH ! • • • l'. tANOE~fANO . ]:llA'5 YOlAN~2: 8Jt0Tl-IEIZ Affe:NO~ 1' 1'R:OGltE~$1VE ~HOOJ..? • •. WMAT IS A PltO<&Re:~IVI!' ?'HOOL, :X: RA\' I I by Harold Le Doux THESE FLOW!:RS JUST CAME fOR '10U1 MISS SPENCER! by Mell ti'~ AN l'XP1S1t1MEN'f IN Clt~AT/VE RE?T .... by Chester Gould • \, . . I • ' • by Roger Bradfield • • by Gus Arriola • by ROCJer Bohn l In Step With Good . Eating • By JOHNA BLINN .,me nice, sweet whipped ELAINE JOYCE'S I\ tablespoon flour about 20 minutes (or until BEVJl:RLY .HILLS _ "Out . cream cheese and good&lotch CHICKEN PAPRIKASll Z tablespooDI water ~~ _,!r~]:..._ to form ure ii like I Nell Simon com-~amont•." Is my idea of a real I broiler-fryer ch l ck en' I\ cup dairy~ cream -·-w= ·- "• I""'"" bo tzl\lbs 1 t~ chopped a -pule; stir '91-o edy," .. ,. blonde, beautiful "My mother is l!lmurlan we•·~ .. 8 u · pa(lley, opllo""1 clileken1)11prika mlsture. Cook Elaine joyoe, Her hulblnd, and a fabulous cook" Elaine 3 tablespoons salad oll (or Rinse chicken, pat dry. CUI 5-lninutet longer, stlrrlnf. Bobby Van, qrees. said. ' margarine} chicken into 16 or 18 piece!, Add yam aeam; heal jult • Their collYtl'llUon ls I bar· 111 make her chicken l cup coarsely chopped set aside. unW a er v Ing temperatµre rage 9f .c Ommen t I• in-parikash. It's 90lllethlog me oolOn Heat oil (or flllartarine) In (~!Jnl eour cream will mab ~ klbitJllli: In short,. creamed ch I c k en· with 3 leoS!XlOl\S paprika large sklllet; saute onion until lt ~). an ~I <arnes off homanode dumpliogs. We · 1 % teaspoons salt transparent: add c b l c k e n • Ser\.e ' at" -ovoi' 4 l'Ol'- Jike ~ ~.Ion. dumplings are hard to make Freshly ground pepper to Cook chicken slowly until lions of ~ buttered noodles Bot~ Jove lo tit good food because you have to reallt taste golden. Add paprika, salt, pep-or with homemsde dumplings In lllCh•dl......, places ,as New beat the dough, and that kills About % cup liquid (water per and liquid, mix welt on the side. Garnish with Wtdnesday, Novtmbfr 14, 1973 DAILY PILOT §1 • .. rythl"' lncludlftf •tint hrllalM ......... ~ Van"!uatlle ...... - .' York's "2l" and Sardl's, the your arnu:. or chicken stock ) !.Cover, coOt Olver low heat parsley. ~vuym!.ondao, thecomu1-=-~~~~~~~~~_:.__:.__:.__:.__:._~~~--==-''--~~~~-:~-=~'--~-:::=:---::-:-~~~~~--:::=::-~~~~--:=:-~~~~~~~~~~~- Meslcan food siluld and the local'im. P'ii:lor. , 'Ille' ,pair ~ and work In New York and Ca!Uornia. Jn Caltlontia, they often dine In little out-of-the-way restau- rantJ, "Food tells me an awful Jot about a person. Most peo- ple I like love good food. "A triebd ·lntroduced me to a f1bu1ou1 Jtttle ~ h l n e s e restatirant eelled 11ng Ho In Holli-wood. "Thi food Is fantiptic, especially their Mand a r In duck, spicy beef and Peking pancakes -· they ,look like a huge 90ll Jnrtlll1 -filled with MQl>Shu port< (pork shreds mind with scrambled <Iii and exotic Chinese U. gr<d!ents such IS cloud Ws and tiger lily buds\. "Our ""friend allO ~ ~ to a ~ Swi ss restaurant. 'Ibero you Iring along a botlle of wine and ~ only -25 Pf'lPle. 'lbe Slriu food .ls spedaCUlar! "ta1MtaD11CM1wn••xcs"D:11 lllMI.•.,.,..• MIO..WaMUllTCMTil°"""'IT9Mf COP"l'•tetn' c 1m &.UCIC'I' noa•&. 1MC.. AU. aieoKn ••IP't'eO YOUNG TURKEYS USDA Grade A at ••• SHOP EARLY All STORES WILL BE CLOSED THANKSGIVING DA y NOVEMBER 2Ziid .._ NCI PMl'1• Ma WM' b _,..,. ........ ,,_,, --Wiii ~ ,.., --, ... 1m-. "My lawyer in New York takes me to a great Korean restaurant In Manhattan call- ed the Arlrang. So If seems moot people I like have very good looil tastes. TURKEYS U.S.D.A. GRADE A .......... 59c ·9 -H""63C8 ~ m~:: . ....~:·· . ~ LI. JIOUMM LI. "I'm constantly looking for relta.Ul'llltl that serve great hors d'oellvm'. That's what I .mJoy al;>out Europe· Al· lhe'8a"'1 thet 'bl"'r11m~(.--.:•al _ · cart stack4<1 with three tall troys of terr1fic 11tU1i When I eat that alonl wtlh French bread' and wine, l p crazy!'' "Bolll>Y 10ves soy kind of bnld or rolll," ElaJne•11ld. \ , ,. , ' . ..... NmlYIAYAl&.AMllNltOIUtHUH.MOON,NOVUMIR1mt. COMPLITf llUcnoN Of HOL ... AY POULtl'f, , • DUCKS. ...... CAPONI. nunlli TUIKIYI. OAMI MDII. nc. "Brood 1s my downfall, II I ever' stop dancing, it will • be because of bread. rn pro1> . SWP CHEESE ·~ ~ io: ,,Kaiser roll !!,~ ..... ~..!,91i~,.. t In .....,. ... '""· ......... l24l OIOO<t I" Low Everyd ay Pr iced Fres h Deli Items: . thelr'llill lor'good ascu llYU SWiii ' .. DlllUQUE HAii _ 5C:.'•" food Bo!Jby and Elaine stay umomo .............. 1'1",.. I .-................. .. ~=~~ ~ .. ~~ .. ~ .... 3C:.'•" ~IE,.!,.~!! ..... : . .i,':031' ~ ~ "' be aired ~ .. ~~ .. ~ .. s~•to" ~=·~·c·~-~~~s .. '""'"' 57' '-'II 11 weren' !or donclng ' U1U11A 1111 C1EISE , PWIUIY llSCllll ..-.l5' andlorElaJne.l'dbe~. -·-~ ... 11 -·UllA-..... ozr•• . l'!)1es like Cannon!" • • ........... ~ -..-, . ? -' ·~ ' "Elalne .and I have ' If'!&! ume ·to(!!thos'.• We love , eoch otller anil we'ra •trJ ll""Vl' aDd blppi.h • "NobdclY 'belleves the way we ttve. It's tmentty. I don't la1mo who 11 nuUler. I -Bobby'• more neurotic! He likes bis pizza wiJl! a botUe FROZEN FOODS JOHNSTON PIES. ................. ~1:99' -·-MINCE PIE ... -............. := 1.05 BIRDSEY£ TOPPING. ... ~ .. '.':'m-.:: 59' REAL WHIP MPPING ...... , .... 'J: 39' BIRDS EYE VEGETABLES,,'l',I'; 31' M& l'Wl.(111)1111, fW&l'OfAIOll Wiii ~ WtUCl, SWIFT BUTIERBALL YOUNG TURKEYS USDA GRADE A -75c. -z9c el;AOIA , ~A • ~·:. ~ --~' ~. . :1-. ~:.. ·------_..,_ ._I:!. HARVEST DAY & BU1TERIW1 ,. ,,,. YOUNG TURKEYS "" SMALL SIZES • UNDER 18-UIS.......... L>. !;~.il!~: ~!E~~ "111 ~~~~~tE~.K. ....... 12' ~~1!~~.2~5.~ ····" 1 •1 !'!~~~~2,!~ ..... ca 1" ~.1!.~~ .......... La 139 !~!.!!!'nm .. cal 61 ~~~~ ... ~T-~~~ ........ 111 CUBE $TEAK 1 '' ........ : ............. _._u ~~!!..,~~2! .. ca39• ~~~~~ ....... --· • DAIRY PRODUCTS LADY LEE SOUR <!REAM..:.m\'11:29' REDDI WHIP TOPPING., .... J'::: 67' LADY LEE BUTTER ........... ~.'='8: 83' PARKAY MARGARINE. ..... , .. !'J: 43' KNUDSEN ORANGElUICE .... ~:89' PET FOODS • RIB ROAST -··LARGE ENO--BEEF-,,. -·"'°'"~' S J 19 M»IOeo u GROUND BEEF 1 " IXTllA Lli1' ...•••••.•.• ",.La ~.~~!~U.S.~~ .... ,,. SLICED BACON 1 ot L.AO't Lia ....... ,., .. ~ ... FRESH HOLIDAY PRODU CE ~~.!~2?!'..-1 :13 CTlllMo ,._,...,_., FILIWS, WALNUTS. AtMOHDS, MIXID, • ~~C!~..!,~.!'....,.11• BULK1NUTS 6Jc IRAZfl.,PECANS •• , ••• .,................ t ., 1la.. I ~ --t ~~~.~~~HcHIS ............. ~ .. ; .. ~ ... 11:. . ~P!o~,~~.~~ ........ ~ ..... 10 ~ 71c OllCX YOUI: WCXY l'llOeUCI ~flam Ya. HOLIDAY PIUIT AND VICHTAl&I ... DI AT &OW IYDYQAY PltCll. OUA~NTmD TO • ntl f&Wi 4.HD nNm taUAun AVA~ • m of c:twnpogne. . u~ ;:Jng we like to eat II. . mull be--taneous: whatever we feel like at that particular momenl fW1MM~'f_i. _ -• SCHIUING BKW> .. , ...... ~:: 54' PACKAGED GOODS CANNED FOODS Lucky is ...... ..... ORLEANS OYSTERS. .............. :: 'SJ' LIGHT MEAT TUNA .... :".~:'.: 45' 0 We like our qutet momenta. fllD. We talk and read a lot. Elaine ii 1 great cool<. I love her chlctterl papriWh. "I make spicy beef and a thing c!alled Matsoh · Brie (mal2illl ~iicrambled wtth egp). serv "1th •PPI• sauce and ..... ... , 'l'ha~ wtlh En<;l.in_g's ' ' N.ut it-ious . I \ ' ·~ ~. ' ' (1 ~ ,llitritioUldeswt for hi!> inell• for a couple. S'11J1'FBP. BAKED APPLES " 4 bUill( apples , 11 cup firmly padte<! light brown sugar · . I\ teupOIJll cinnamon ·11 cup raltlns or cut-up pit- ted dales I tablespooDI !i"e~ chopped -·walnuts • t teospaonl golden corn oil , marprine . Waab apples ;·and core '•l-1 throllgh to bottom; 'pare akin, about I Inch deep, l1rom aroUnd sltll) ends of , 1·~ 1pp1..f 1 pmi1 end up, In • lba1Jow blklfti dish into ~'lllllch thq just flt, Mli: brown 9l1gar and cl,n- namon · spoM I ' tablespoons of the iugar m!xtUre, I tables- -of the raisins Ind I l'.o ..._. of the nutJ lllto "the l et11ter csvtty of eadl.~pple: top eadl wtlh II-· tollspoon marprlne. .. ' .. 'Pour wller lo about v .. lnch ~ l11lo biking dloh. flake ~ i)ncoYered In a pr!hoaiod< llO<legroe oven, ' , ocC.mnany, until er .:.i. about IO minutes. "1erve winn 0r cold. Suriday is' ·FDDBAY . , '" ... ,,,,, ----- -.c•a-. BRIDGFORD BREAD ....... ~:"; 80' RANBERRY:-SAUC ·, S:.:· 2.' ~" 1HICAI .;, ' ... PLANTER'S NU'!L-'\'l'l.~95' STEERO BOUILLON .. --.~•J'I: 36' -· DIQlal Ol -POULTRY-sEAsDNING.-.. ::'I.: 24' PUMPKIN PIE SPICE._ .. ,::'.: 43' SCHIUING 'VANILLA ......... =91' PRESERVES ............ ~~: 65' LOG CABIN SYRUP. ........... ::=79' ~ , COMPUTE a CORONET ONION RINGS.,. .... ::l 38' CANNED FOODS _..OCEAN SPRAY ..... ~~::t79' ... LIBBY'S PUMPKIN .......... ~J! 25' Lucky ofllrs you \l"Y onHIDp , l*ki'V, DOWNYFLAKE WAFFLES. ....... :.~ 17' WELCH'S DRINK ....... ~~,: 30' :IJl·lifiji(.J9.1•11ty ·• ct"PLASTIC WRAe ......... ,.._ 25 . VILLA PAPER PLATES ..... ~a°ll;99' · DOWNY SOITTNER ......... :,1.45 IVORY SOAP. ........... .,.-..!t..: 40' . --75' MR. CLEA.N ........................ 11\ COMET CLEANSER ............... ~J:28' GI AJAX CLEAl4SER Gon tow"" loot lo ""'°"' •-2 2 C 1toln1 ol'ld ff9CIM from 1lnk1, etc. ft.AlnC 17.0:&CAN •••• ••••••••·••••••••••••••••••• \ ail.AJAX ~~u~ .. ~~~-~-~~.~!. ........ 6 7 c . , t 11 tt I I ii· . r:~~~~~D 1· VITAMIN 'i , 1 l, YITAMIW-C , 3·6c 1• 1U;11ra .... -~. -;",';; 100 MG, IOI'• ........ ' I . VITAMIN I • 2'' VITAMIN C 71 C 200 IU, 111'1 • • ... • • • • • • I 25G MG, 111'1 •••••••• . . ' -MULTI ... il6C VITAMIN C · J 46 mAM•, 1wa • • • • • , 211 Mt,•• ........ . MULTI J 47 YITUllll t , I 06 YJTAMns, m's • • •. • ~ . •MG, 100'1 • • • • • • • • • .. I ' . ~ :y~~~· .. : .. ~6' ='=~J.., ......... 23' •MULTI YITAlllllS I SI· llllOll IUYOI 95c W/llOll, 2W• .. .. • .. • YIT. C.111Ml,100'a .. . .. ~~=1:. •• -: ... 1'' ur::~.:~ ......... 65 c 'GlllD • 92c YITAMill 1-12 • 73c CllWllllS, 100'1 ..... • n • 100'1 •••••••.. 11iera'1 A ._ YM ..... .,,_ cNoty .... -7119.LlN&MlWW. 111 so. nA11 CIUlll •wa. -·-2111U-·"· --1 .. llCl.ll181' 11tnao'MM'- , ...... lllCI ...... ~•1•--· lMlllUACSAA .. --Sin CAM -AT JI fU ,._ ~-.._... .. -, ..LawtulAYml ........ ___ ,,_, -............ WI I• ___ .... 'IJW'll unwn -·--"·- DISCOllllT SUPOMAllm IN OUMI coum YOSllYIYGI -•allClltmm ~. ~ • JS3 YITMlll D 131 ' .,_,.IUCI '""1111111m1 mm ..... ............ ..... ,., __ _ ---·•A& fl" LE SUEUR PEAS ............... :;:: 33' ... MEXICORN ..................... :;:: 2S' K E Y BUY llllHiop Mopping. tMld 111MH111p llYilpl . You ..,,, time troubla • AND money, every time you shop at LUCKY. ENAME~ OVAL ROASTERS .Get r~ for th. hoNdays. Root I• fo1t•rood browna btitt«b.cou .. 11 obaor01 Mot. Two 1!1M, ....... 99c llOA1111 • " • ' ~~~~ ....... 247 ENA.MEL OPEN ROAST. PAN kl.al for 'oo•tlno meota"' or f~I: \' 19 browns lotter, oDtort>. t.ot,,.,.,, ••• , , , a ttGlnl••• pins p!UI lodng cord. TURKEY BASTER Dutoble unbrtokable nylon boiler, ~ . sac /' MEAT THERMOMETER 76• C £nclt81*1WOf1t t.IMOt, fowt. COOKIE SHE~ TEFL1JN 12" x II"· Mo...., duty quality. 'COOKIE ·SHEET 11". 16~ 111•, 197 doublti Teflon coating. CANDY THERMOMETER _..KRAn DRESSING. ....... ~::::: 63~ _..HEINZ PICKLES ..... -.. ~:.;69' ... STUFFED OLIVES ..... ~:~;r ... MAYONNAISE. ............... ":: 75' l11\11J;i+i1JF1Qi;li EW l!OUllBON ........... '::".=:'.:5.22 EARLY TIMES. ......... ~~:'llt6.49 JiM BEAM .......... : .......... !l."':::Sj9 SCOTCH WHISKY. ..... ~.~:::l:5.55 CLUNY SCOTCH ...... ~'.':'.:::t6.59 SCORESBY SCOTCH. .. ~~= 5.77 GOLD SEAL VODKA ....... :0::7'.29 KAMCHATKA VODKA ... :O:B.99 SMIRNOFF VODKA.,-..... ~0::5.09 GORDON'S GIN ............. ~::0:5.75 PINK CHABLIS WINE ... :::.':':.l 1.55 GAUD RHINE WINE. .... , ... ~.::t2.39 MATEUS ROSE WINE ......... ~.':3.19 s11• • MUIC COVER SHB.F UMNB ' AU'f, COi.Oft 72c ·_ ROASTING PAN W/RACK ~:---. _99c NUT CRACKER =~""' 47c 90ty to ute. LIBBEY STEMWARE 193 -'"---............... ~sf,. . . . . 11.. an, •IP'• ...... . .,'-s....-'-"'.__ ______ ""'-----"-i.----------------~-' l • ,/ ' ' ' . .. . . . ., ............. ,.; ' ....... "'''"'" .... ··-·. ,,..,, ~~--··· ...... 58 DAIL V PILOT Wtdnesday, N0vtmbtr 14, 1973 W!dntsday, Nowmbtr 14, 1973 PILOT ·ADVERTISER J 0 1 DAYS OF SPECIALS Values for Super Shoppers! POULTRY 49 DRESSING .c Cubhison·!' A.JI-Purpose or Com 1:1 oz. Rice for Stuffing . 49e \J..J.13. \\"bite or Hrmvn y,·ith .. vi!d-?i oz. Spiced Peaches . . 39e l>el :\l(J nte in l\o. :1o:l gluss~ Margarine • . . • • . 49e hnperial .. ""-1 pound cartbn. RIPE OtlVES S & \V, • .E;xt.ra larj:!"e-pitted-No. JOO ---· Marshmallows · : : : 19e Cam pfire miniaiure.i.; ... 10 12 i1z. pkg . ( Springfield Mixers 1 ge l :luh S()(la . (;ingt'r .A.It-, 1"onic-:!8 oz. . Sweet Pickles . . . 65e Stuffed Olives . . . sge Spen<'t·r ... C~uec11 oli\·es in 10 oz,.jar SNACK 53 CRACKERS c !\ahi!o!Ct)s • .". <"ho'ice of ._.-arieties'. Mixed Nuts • • • . . sge Planter'r-o. \\•ith peanuts-13 oz. can Heavy Duty Foil . . 49e Heynotd ·~ ... hi;.: 18 in ch \\·idth! Folger's Coffee •. 91 e ()ne p11und ran l:~b. can ..• :!.631 Chiffon Napkins • . 29e Deluxe ... soft and luxurious! 50 ct. pkg. Flour GOLD MEDAL 1'hey're back! Those s.....:eet juicy piJ\k-meated breakfast gems you love to serv e! But be sure tO get enough! Fresh Pineapple •••... 19c •. Sweet and .juicy .•. rushed here from .Hawaii! Red Grapes . . . • . . . . . 29c •. S \veet! J<~irm, fl a vorful -·cause they're fresh! \\'hen you ,,·ant. to be sure .... when you par1icularly cfl re that everythir.ig is the best that it can possibly be ..• that's the time to look fi rst to F:I Rancho~ There is a differe nce! Anjou Pears •••••• Juicy and S\veet •.. fine'fot a salad! Brown Onions · . ·• . . . . U.S. /lo. l qualityC'S to your dressing ; •. 2 i. •. 29C . I ' ,, •.I· ., ,· .. PRICES · · IN EFFECT ; ·.I ' -_.,....., . 7 DAYS! ~-,~·~ •+ fresh Toms fresh Hens . 1.'i " El RANCHO'S • . . THE FINEST! . . Q 18 to 26 LB. AVERAGE. • • • • • • • • • Ji El RANCHO'S . • • THE FINEST 7 n I 10 to 16 LB. AVERAGE ••••••••• / iJ 11 'fou 'll never find finer q uality •• , lhe pick of the fl ock, raised in nearb;.1 San Fernando Valley and rushed to us to in sure freshness! Here's the turkey you'll Se"iVe.with pride! (Jumbo Toms ... 26 lbs .. and up ••• 79c lb.) NO"BEST 59c TOMS 1ROllll . 1b. \Vith 'fender Timer! Grade "A"! NORBEST 65< HENS fROZEll lb. \·Vith ,Te>n der Timer! Grade "A" 5 lb. bag •••••• 19c Boneless Ham Hormers fam ous Cure 81 .. $229 \\'hole or half • • . ffl. Roa·sting Chickens J-'resh! Califo rn ia grown. 79( 5 to 7 lbs. in size •· Fresh Oysters ..• s1 29 Eastern 8 oz. jR r (Western ..• 99c) Cooked Shrimp ..• sl 99 • }'or cocktails, they're just ri ght~ TURKEY BREASTS Grade "A''! \\.oith rib cage portion LEGS & THIGHS 69!. Rich dark meat from Grade "A'' birds. \\"he11 you ,,·ant 10 he sure that the bakery will be the best -choose Gold 1\•ledal HALIBUT $ 20,;9. STEAKS • FILLET of SOLE fl!Slt! Cranberry Sauce 25c Center Cut to afford niore value! Sliced Bacon . . • . s 1°9 • Mild flavor the folks will welcome'. ()cea n Spray ... the one that's as t radit iona l as turkey! Strained or ""·hole· 15 oz. El Rancho's ranch style! Fruit Cocktail ...... 25< Pork Sausage •••• s1°9 •. El Rancho's old fa shioned style'. It belong:-: on th~ menu ... in a fruit cup, a molded salad! Springfield-No. :303 can Ground Beef • . • • • s 129 •. Princella Yams .... 29~ Extra Leafi ••• Bulk or patties! . , .. . ~ ..... • RED YAMS < ' ' '194. U.S. No. 1 quality • sweet and butt ' ! FRESH ~s ~· ; BROt·coLI •. ~· ~-I' .• ' ,, '* Garden fresh , .. all green .,, . tend,r! Delicatessen. Specials! 1 . BLUE ~~l~ESING 45~ Flatter vour salads! Bob's 9 oz. size' , Roquefort llR!SSltlC • • • 59e \Vith real Itoquefort! Bob's • '. , 8 ounCe Crescent Rolls • • . 35e Pillsbury.!s~re&cty..:to h_ak~} 8 oz. • t .Cheese · Spreads ~ . 49e J>en &. Quill-Jelapena. Pimen to-7·~z., Shrimp Cocktai,I . . 33e l.ascco. in -I oun~e ser\'ing g:la~:-~ , Herring Snack ... gge . Lascco in \\.ine or Sou~ Cream-12 oi. CANNED $659 HAM Sib.can ·. Ra th?s "'f ender 'n' Mild''-lean, tend~r~ --·-=-----'------ -...., . ~-·- ,Holitlpy, ,Spirits! MATEO~'.~ WINE • Choose Rose or \\'hit e! fi fth Mouton Cadet ••. s3'9 • Baron Phillipe de l~uthschitd. a fifth Gallo Wine .•••• s2~9 Hearty Burgundy, Chablis Blanc-I,~ g~I. Almaden :Mt .... s3~s Burj?undy. Claret. Chablis, Rhine-1 i gf\t. r:xtra IJry nr'l'ink ... filth t. Vodka llOl.DIYTMS •.••..•••••• s111 Hot tied fur ~:I Hancho! half.ga llon ·' Brandy C11111sn111 ~s ....••.•. ~5&.s ' After the n1emorable meal'. 5th Cutty Sark • .. . • s 16!9 Save 2.00 on fine r-ocotch! half-g-a llon . . ' ., '~ ' SAVE $1.00 •. ·• .1 ; , , . CANADIAN •.. $,499 WHISKEY_· . ~. ~ El Rancho"11-smoOth, meQqw! quart"' . ' Frozen FaaJI ORANGE JUICE 23~ .. Sunkist concentrate-6 oz. (12 oz .• 4ib.) \11' .. Broccoli: Spears1 ,~·~ · 2· c •Bi rdseye garden flavor!.. iO (}J:\ • ( l 'he e~y Way lo be sure that they'll be sweet and flavorful! Big No. 21-·:? ,can. I '' ' • • ' renderloin .s ·1 •• of PORK •· • Price.<r in effect 1"hur. throuJ(li Wed . Nov. /.\.Nov. 21', 1· ,t1pen daily 9 to 9 .'iunda.v JO tn 7 :r No xofes to dealer.Of •. } .' ~' .. ' Green · Beans'.' .•.• ; ~ . 25e -Sugar ~~~~~R~~ •••••••••• 21 c 'fnu'll be usinx a lot (Ji it in the days ahead-stock up now~ C & ,H-1 lb. pkgs . Dinner Rolls ........ 39c l'ackaxe or twelve ... Brown 'n' Serve rolls from Golden Krust ••• serve 'em pipinit hot! , . B II GRADE "AA" . 79( u . er SPRINGFIELD • • • • • • • • • • . ' ~·resh buiter, with the pure s"·eet. flavor that a lways makes it somet hing special~ 1 lb. ctn. SCllUllC'S PMilf llASllllC ..• II 11. tin ••• 231 WY.Qlf O¥IJI a.LUU ... II IL .... , ••• 9 8 c I • I r • I " . . .. ~ Lean! From grain-fed Eastern pork! Rack of LAMB Oven Ready ••. U.s.o:A. Choice lamb Sirloin Tip S J 19 ROAST •· U.S .D,A. Choice beef-'-boneless, rolled! , • Bird IJl,.,fl!n~l\.~ryJe,<l'. fu~9. o•. · _ ~etite Peas .• : • . • · 5:$e C & ~V •.• tiny, tender. 20 oz. bag Johnston Pies • • • !le Apple, Mince •or. Pumpkin -...: 9 inch .f. J Cool Whip ·~ •••.•• 41c Birdseye dessert topping! 9 o:i. ICE CREAM I .. ·89 ' _ .... _. '. • . • . ~~J2 PILOT.ADVERTISER W«lntldO)', NOYembff 14, 1973 Wtdntiday, Novtmbtf 14, 1973 DAILY PILOT 5li ) ) l ,, " •' • • " J ' MIWON $$$ VIEW Best view In Lusk Harbor View Hills. 'l1tls lovely home llU out on a point with a forever 18Q• ocean and catallna view. SHARP 4 bedroom, famlly1 room, 3 baths, 3 car garage, pool with auto~tlc equipment -everything for indoor and oUtdoor Uvlng at Its best! Open Sat. & Sun. -1-5 P.M .. C.D.M. }'or more information call now-673-8850. PRESTIGE BY THE SEA JUST OFf THE WATER Walk to boat slip. 3500 SQ. FT. Tree high par· queted entry. Lush Indoor garden. Glgantlc liv- ing room. WA~ OF GLASS. Extravagant, \\'ell planned kitchen. Formal dining. Entertainer'• family room. Spira] staircase. FOUR ROOM 1.tASTER SUITE. Balconies in and OUL Two cell- ing high fireplaces. Hee.led ocean sized pool. Custom decklnt. PRICED 1'0 SELL Just listed!! ,_Call now.196J..6767. · WE FOUND ONE! PricOO in the 50's in CORONA DEL ltfAR. Th~ family bedrooms, t\\'O ~ths plus a great family room v.·ith a firc(?lace. Excellent, location - walkint: dlstance 'tO be&ch. Olli 673.8550. MESA VERi)F,4 BEDROOM PEACH 53/4°/o ASSUMABLE LOAN Fine Executive home loaded with features: • 4 spactoua bedrooms • Formal dlnlng room e Exquls.ltcly decorated throughout e Really nice landscaping w:lth producing fruit -e 5%% ASSUMABLE LOAN e Ttansfen'ed OWTier sez "!\'lovl! it for $46,950!!" call 546-2313 for inspection KISS YOUR LANDLORD GOODBYE And become one! 2 bedroom home p1us an in· • rome tlillt above large 40uble garage. 1 block from ..Jiewport' Beil ch Yaclitlng lanes. Great buy "luat re\ll!ced to '64,950. 646-nll. , ' 5 GIANT BEDROOMS CUSTOM POOL • • NEW~B&\C:B ' )700 .... ' . . . :nn . • I EXECUTIVE LIVING SPANISH SfYLE Spanish red tile roof. Two story. Thi'«! car garage. 2600 sq. ft. WAILED FROr>.'T COURT· YARD. Spanish tile entry. Den tor Dad. Arched flreplac;e. Beautiful bookcases. Step down living. Forina1 dining. Country kitchen. Walk in pantry. Large faniily room. TWO FIREPLACES. Walls of glass. 'l\vo covered patios. One mile to beach. Owner transferred. ?.lust hurry! 963--6767. ARE YOU IN THE HOME STRETCH? If you'rt 1tretching the limit to mike your pr*Hnt home 1ccommod1te your growing f1mlly, T~ Reil E1t1ter1 have 1 solution for yout We Invite you to come Into one of our Six loc1I offices and inspect our tremendous exclusive selec· t ion of homes for 11le. Remember we are the lergest locally owned . Real Est11te firm with over 100 prof1ssion1l1 to hel~ you every step of the way. Please drop by, 'we will be happy to answer any_ of your question1. <._,,y~~ FORCED SALE-8112 °/o LOAN NEW POOL-NEW PAINT SELLER TRANSFERRED - Forced to 5ell ! New $6,00J pool -loads of decking! New paint in & out! Sweeping curved driveway: Covered enu·y. Giant living room overlooking pool. Cozy formal fireplace. Huge kitchen .:.... lots of cupboards. Queen slzc bed'rooms. Walk ,tp schools and s hop- ping. ~1UST SELL! Take advantage. NO QUALI- FYING to assume V.A. loan. 847-6010. ''BA YCREST" -WALK TO BACK BAY- Charming 4 bedroom, banquet din'ing room - t'v~ wann fireplacC'S,' gourmet klt.che'n. Larg~ qualiiy home. Possible to "assume Joan - $75,ooo. cau 646-7111. $1695 TOTAL ~PWN. , REDUCED--$1,000!·-. -__ -P-RICEILM SEl,L! · . ___ __ BEST BUY . LIKE N~ M.OME . $3$ ·• month. eu.-ve<1. "'?ve. Gracious .e~-IN MESA DEL MAR 1pww try. Elbow room hv1n&\ 4 family sized Owner says SELL IT! Price slashed to ~ms. Convehlence '~t~hen. Formal ASSUME 61/3 O/o . ed dine. EnormOllS COYcrect~ patiO. Park like $40,500 for: qwck sale. Sweeping curv grounds. Recreatiort cenier. $1695 buya it Immacula te 3 bedroom one story home with premll.un grade carpeting and \\'8.ll coverings, garden patio, shake roof, sprinklers· front le back. Walk to all schools, shopping and transportation. ' A super sharp home, Priced at $36,500. Ii super terms. Better hurry, Ci.JI 546-2313. drive to wide ceramic tile entry. Garden all. Take advantage. Calf 963-6767:· kitchen. Oversized living room vie\\'S mani- cured grounds. FOUR family size bed- rooms. Quiet cul-de-sac location. Room for 1 big motor home. Take advantage -call now 847-6010. BRING NO MONEY FIXER-$31,900 No down -No costs to veterans. Low doWn -Low costs to anyone. A real value. ~rtftt mop and broom -SAVE-THOU- SANDS. Huge livtng room. Big famlly _J!90m. ,four kingslze bedrooms. Famlly!'slu throughout. At this super low price it'll go fast. Act now -call 847-6010. $244 MO. TOTAi: PAYMENTS ASSUME 7°/o VA · NO QUALIFYING. Anyone can assume. Full low price Just $33,000! Spacious fam- ily home. 12 X 22 entert.ahvnent room. Big bedrooms. Cheery homemaker kitchen. Good neighborhood. CaJI now to see. 847- 6010. OVERSIZED POOL & VIEW CORONA DEL MAR Just listed in Irvine Terrace. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, spacious Jiving room with . .fire· place-. Gorgeous ~haded patio. Warm and 1unny family room and kitchen with corner fireplace, overlooking patio and pool. Do your own decorating! First time offered -call 673-8550. THREE IS A CROWD in this case it's Jncome! Largl! 2 bedroom. triplex. All with private patl9S. Buy and rent in super Costa Mesa location. $53,500. can 646-7111. POLYNESIAN TWO STORY 2400 sq. fL circular dr:lve. Gorgeous stone facing. Dramatic entrY. Ankle deep shag. Country 11izcd living room. Fun time family room. Formal dlnlng. Chefs dream kitchen. 5 fam11Y sized bedrooms. Wall of glass to acre ol•pa.Uo. JUST USTED! Priced to liiiiiiij~s'-eU. ~e ~vantage. Call 963-6767. ,. ~·'f Fountain Valley. 5 gtant bedrooms. 3 baths, dou-'* li"'l" n!;'>'; bin•))( ~~-llvtn&· room. Wall fo-Woll' 1Jr.Pia°", mlm>red· ""111. '11Uil! enter-. tabunent foom With bdi'. Lots of paneling. Great ~ct area •. Elttironlc lighting thrOµghout. 'super yai-d. Call iiow or never! 842-2535. ALMOST . NEWPORT HEIGHTS Nl\YPORT 3 bcdroo~, large PatlO and boat sterage. $37 ,9.?0 first time on market. Fast posses- sion. call quick 641). 7171. RATED "G" For a GREAT buy. 3 Bedrooms f.ait Side, Costa ~1esa $25,UOO. Call now 61S.TI7l. BRAND NEW DUPLEX OLD CORONA DEL MAR It's almost finished ~t floor plan - 3 bedroo~ unit + \2 bedroom upper unit. So. ot highway in .Corona del l\tar. l'l'ear beach, school, and park. Excel- lent investment. Call 673-&'>50. OCEAN BLVD. OLD COllONA DEL MAR Beautiful old Spanish home on double lot large enough for the largest family. Spec- tacular view only steps to the beach. Take a look at this faoulous home and then give us a call. 673-8550. "WHAT A BONUS" 625 Sq. FL Bonus Rm \vilh plumbing for bar oL' bath! Room fol' 2 pool tables. 4 bedroom, 2 bath, fine shag car. J:w!llng through-out. e<>vered patio with built-in gas bar- becue. convenience location for schools, sho~ ping, & aCCC'SS. $4(1,950. Call 546-231J. BACK BAY ONE STORY CONDOMINIUM With 3 gC>nerous size bedrooms, 2 full baths, abundant closet and storage spacC>, huge living room \\"Lth raised hearth fire- place, and large private patio. Prestigious back bay location, manicured grounds, vel- vet puj,ting green, 2 secluded swimming pools lfnd converucnt location. Call now 546-2313. ASSUME 71/4 °/o LOAN 2 STORY CUSTOM .POOL ONLY $39,950! Har9 tQ\.believe .., 2 stpry barpin. Tremen. • • doos n.?ig'tiborhood. Huge llVtng room • Ranch 1t,yle k.ltch'en. SEPARATE STUDY. Gigantic bonus room. King size bedroorm. Entertainers cabal)a with sparkling cust.om pool. Yours for a lifetime of value -only $39,950. Take advantage. can today - 842-2535. 2 STORY-VACANT $21,950 There's more! FiSt possession! LoW pay- ments. Great location. Bullet proof shag. Comfort kitchen. Dramatic brick walL Parklike surroundings. ·Association main- tained -value pecked bargain. $2,250 buys! Call fast -842-2535. ZERO DOLLARS TOTAL MOVE IN CO.ST!! Absolutely correct Use your VA eligibility nO'lv and enjoy the gourmet kitchen. Sepa- rate den. King size bedrooms. 'I\vin patios. Ex tra wide OOe.t and calnper gate, Co n- veniently located. Once In a Jlfetiriie chance · only $29,950! flun')'! Call 842-2535. CHEAPER THAN RENT $201.00 TOTAL $201.00 Is all you pay. J(jtchen with a vieo.v. Formal dining. Brick fireplace. Texas sized living room. Family ,sized bedrooms. Red brick patio. Huge lot. $201 .00 TOTAL PAY~tENT. HUITY. Call now. 963-6767, LA CUESTA '2 STOH · NEAR OCEAN Assume approx. $290 hlO. total payments. ·So new: it> sparkles! 'fWo..story double door entry. Step down ;tO elegant living, formal dlnini. Super family roal'Jl with \\'Cl bftr. FOUR bedrooms. HUGE n1aster suite. THREE FULL BATHS. Larg- l!st lot in prime area! Call right now to see! 841-6010. South Huntington Beach. \Vnlk to beach, schools and ShoP.Plng. nle entry. Step down living rootn -1nwtve1 family room v.-lth \\"'t bar. Fomlal dine, huge garden kltch<'n. fa.inily size pent.ry. Enormous master suite with 20 feet of C'IOliet. 3 patios, />al'kllke yards, pro(essionall,y land- scaped. Cal now -842-2535. • BlJNTINGTON BEA(;B 17tJI ._....._ • . 141.ftll· 6014 w-or Avt. ' 147~10 (;ORON/\ DEL MAR nz M•1 .. 111 •n.auo SOUTH OF THE BORDER SPANISH ARCHES! Hea\'y Spanish. Curved drive. 2500 sq. ft. !\1ag- niflcent entry. Huge family room. Adobe fire-. place. \Vet bar. Curved staircase with landing. Cbllosal mAsler suite. Vaulted ceilings. Large bright kitchen. r orn1al dine. TI1rcc separate Pfl- lios. Professiont\lly landscaped. \Valk to beach. O\\'n('r transf('JTcd. J-IURRY! 96.}6767, A TOUCH OF COUNTRY Yet very close in -NPWport big lret'S, large~ yard.,, Load, or room In this 3 bedroom home. Raise ~hlckens & have fresh eggs. $31,950. 646- 7171. . i-o~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.' . l"OSH ! POSH! MESA VERDE POSH 2300 sq. ft. of sheer elegance •. POSH location steps from ?.iesa Verde-Countcy O ub POSH pool, jacuzzi, brick planters and dcckinc, built in BJ!Q POSH decor of lus h carpets, drapes, papers, ap- pointments, 2 flt'Cplaces. POSH convenience of sprinklered landscaping, front encloscd1 patio, hidea.\\.·ay 11ervice yard. PUSH 546-2313 to see v.1lat POSH IS! MEXICAN VILLA NEAR BEACH Jog to beach. Prestige neighborhood. Private 014 villa cour.t.yard. .Tile. entry. 'f'onnal ~banquet~ room. Garden kitchen. Giant fiesta room with adobe fireplace. Secluded study \Ylth oval hearth fireplace. 'l\vi.,tlng ata.lrcase. Huge master suite. Adjoining dressing Mom. Park-like yard witJJ massive covered patio -Seller transferred. Call now -842·2535. MESA VERDE REPUBLIC ON THE · HILi:. This beauti[ul executive home has been taste- fully redecorated throughout, 4 bedrooms and over•2400 squiu:e feet. Huge family room with \\-et bar and fireplace. Formal dining. \Von't last at $63,950. Call 546·2313 today. CUSTOM BUILT CORONA DEL MAR No ,qthcr home like It. E.xtfa feo tutu galatt. Huge Uvlng.roorn v.•ith ocean view. Drt'!om kitch- en. Huge faml.ly room wllh separate sewing ~ room. Cozy study with bullt-'ln desks and dar k. room. 4 bedrooma. Oversized gvagc. Storage for trailer or boat. can llS 67a.8550. \ INVESTMENTS 2790 ............. w. iol Cothl ........... , .. • ' • • I '' ' .. . . • • 4 I ::..---------------------------------------------------------------------------------' . .. .; . ' : l : . • • .. ' ' . ' ' ' . ' ' 1 " " ! ' 'I' ~. -'!_ . . . ' ' ' I· ·~ , . . • ' • ' • . . . . . , • • . . l . . t . . :· . . . l . . • , . . . . ' , . , , , ' , , ~· ' ' . ' ' ' • . . . . . . ' . . r . . . . . . • . . ' . • • ,, i . ' . • • I ' . . . • I I I ,' I Look around your house and garage and you11 prob· ably discover you have a mountain of merchandise you could sell ~ all kinds of goodies that you just don't use much any more. Wouldn't you really rather have money?Okay.Tomovethat mountain, just caD _a friendly acl·visor at the DAILY PILOT. Use the direct line. ' L' I 'f I Don't just . ·sit there . your on small fortune ••• ELL IT! , • • • ' Thousands of ready-to-buy want ad r e a d e rs are "shopping" the ads in the DAILY PILOT every day. And it may su!'Prise you h~w many of them are eager to buy just what you have to sell. Want to give it a try? Get with the Orange Coast area newspaper with "response abm+y" ••• the one that can_ move your mountain of merchandise. ... _ .. _ - Advertise in the Orange Coast Newspaper with Response Ability . Classified Ad Line . 642-5678 .. I . . ........ -....... ___ ~ I -(- ' 1. ' I j ' /' . - ,. I \ l I ! l ! • I . .. • < • • • . , c1assifiedlND. ~x Advertising ~ • .____..,..._1or_,. __ Jl11! I l • AN ....., c.llMlfkttlM , , 1• IS!ltelfY .,.,_ ._ "'9wJ -· ....... ...... ~ .. .. -...... ..... """"' .. .. , ...... ........ .. -. _.., ca.htr•• IMdll CM!"' P1111 c ........ 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Mllllt./'Strtlc9 ........ ,t..JOJ l lllb/Mwtlt ................. "4 ...... ,._,. .............. "' Offkit "'-"' . .. .. .. ... ..... lttllt/Oltltw ........ , .. ... ....... llllllll ... . • .. . . '.. . .tu '""'""' .. ., . . . . . .. . . ...,. l!tnott .. ...... .1.. UJ It'"'•".... .... ..... s.11 .................... "' ..... l lllJl/DKh ............. tit ...... ....,am ............ tn Mileilll•::= •• ........ "" ... ..."' '"'"' .• '" .•.. tl! ~=--m ~~I'--_'.fransport_•_tlon __ l[i ~ .. T'Mllblll MwrtM ...... ~....._ .. •• IM ·I~ __ Pe_n_o_n•_l•--~I ~ Ath Ir......,,.,.. ......... m ,_ll .............. .. Skill Cllllc • , •• •·•••• , •• U11 Trevtl ........... ••••••·••••·•• $41 Atrcr"" •. c""'""' leltl::':iJi'"'"' .. m ey,lff. a111... . ...... n1 1""11c C1r1 ··•··· ............ nt MIMlt """" , • , ......... tU Mtttr Mtrllft 1119/lttflt ...... ,. J4f Trt llWt. Tn•lf ............... f4J Trslltr9t UllUty ...•. , ........ MJ ..... 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One Call Service Fast Credit Approval DAILY PILOT fJl M.;ti.W Ii°"'"'' ioo ~ • , • I?~ • 14'> P,,1)0llllh ••• , , , , , , , S1S • ~ P,11 afld s..wi~ , • • , • • UC • 199 •to! (\toll G.n9lul •••• , \)O • t99 -....ol • • • . • • • • • • • 300 • ""' $cl\t.ok oNi ""''""''-••• ~1S • i,q9 S...•il:" i;ind ~If\ • , , . 600 · 6" lo°"'90Jll:;!I-.•• • , , , , qis 0 ~(f Hovw;' '°' Sok-•••••• 100 • n• l.o-1 .. fOl.lnd ••••••• ~ • :!J.l' Mo~dv:w~ •• ' ••••• '°°. 149 ~~~~~~~~~~G~t~n~•~ro~1::::::::::~G~e;n~e~r!•[1::::::::::::i~G~tn~e;r~a~I::::::~ -•«S. ]~ ( Hot.W forS* Gsneral ERRORS. Advtrtls•rs should check their ada dally & rtpcrt 1rror1 lmmedl1t1ly. The DAILY PILOT onumH lltblllty for tht first ln9'rrect lnstrtlonl 'enly. ~~ General ~ General WESLEY N . TAYLOR CO. REALTORS since 1946 CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX-4149,500 Outstanding style & quality are evident in this most attractive new dupl~x. Lge 2 story, 2 BR. FR owner's unit + 2 B<trm rental. ''Our 28th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 Generel VIEW FROM THE TOP General LET'S TALK TURKEY Outstanding Newport Beach if you're looking for a r;~. Duplex. 0 w n er f1exible, port Beach n re.p.ly 6 may cam 2nd . T.D. or doon to the }".ith M exchange or -. One 4 I excellerrt m /winte r bedroom and one 2 bedroom. OUered f o r $82.500. Call Co I we 11 646-0555 . ... '11!;!, ......... OCEAN ·VIEW I-lard to believe but only $30,900 full pri~. Sit on your deck, watch the boats & en· joy the gOOd life. 846<13M. HUNTll'GON HARB0UR. l\EAllY $1800 00\YN -Buys new beautiful 3 br 1 yr oJd trnvnhouse in Sanclpointe - burnt orange shags -Va· cant too! Hurry! B k r 54&--00?l Have something yoµ want to sell! Classilied ads do it wpt • call NOW 642-5678. General rental record in the $84,500 range with a min. of only 10';0 down and super terms CALL US \\'e"re ready to talk 644-7211 r.Jn NIGEl l\AILEY & ASSOCIATES EVER STOLEN A DUPLl<X Try· this: tv.•o · 2 bedroom units -double garage in· co'me or $3750 per year • Asking $35,950. Try your own price , ()wner says SELL! cCall Red Carpet, Realtors, 64S..8080. BUY A BARGAIN! Liquidation forces sale ()f 3 BR, 2 BA, Newport Hghts home, ga8 Bl, fireplace, fam rm. 15x30 H&F Pool, 8Y.t% fin avail. All oHers will be considered. CaU Realtor for info. 64.5-6646 .. WESTCLIFF NEW LISTING Newport Beach value opportunity. 4 bed- room or 3 plus den, 3 full baths. Family -kitchen. Patio, Pool-size yard. Call to see. $62,500. . OCEAN FRONT CONDOMINIUM On a lovely private Laguna beach. 2 pools, tennis, beautiful grounds. 2 bedroom, 2 baths, walk on the ocean front. It's spotless at $58,950. NEW CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX On e block to Big Co rona. 3 bedrooms, 3 bath lower unit; priva te entrance to 2 bed- room, 2 bath upper unit. $127,950. · GIVE THIS A LOOK 4 bedroom with view in BlUffs. Invites com- parison. As clean and livable as they come. Now priced to sell a t $72,000. aAYCREST $82,500 Enjoy family life to the fullest in this home designed with "in-laws" in mind. 2 family rooms, 2 fireplaces, 3 baths, 4 bedrooms. Must see. FINEST DANA POINT LOCATION Prime R2 lot 75' x 135'. Lovely grounds first street above Marina. Custom 1 bed· room 1 bath home with room to add on. Owner anxious. $74,950. IRREPLACEABLE TRIPLEX Main bay view location with pier, sandy beach. Two 3 bedroom, 2 baths. One 2 bed- room, 2 bath unit. Good depreciation and user potential. $270,000. MILLION$$$ BAYVIEW Original Balboa bayfront on two SO loot lots; pier and beach. 8 bedr<Jiim, 3 baths, off street parking. Charming fun house. Lot value at $225,000. A COZY CUTE HOME Exclusive Baycrest : $68,000. Owner's loss, · -your gain. Must sell. 3 bedroom,2V. .. bath, breakfast bar, family room and nice patio. Room for boat. ESTABLISHED ls the feeling you have when you view thls large rambling Baycrest lot. Spacious 3 bedroom home with many custom features. Call now! $89,500. INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY 4 plex in West Newport Beach. Step's to the ocean and chaMel. Compare, then buy. $122,500. ' _._ 644·1766 Coldwell, Banker .......... 1161 Son Jooquin Hiiis Rd., N.B. -· IN THE BACK BAY -4 bedroom single story in a country·like setting with a New- port Beach address plus Mariners, Ensign and Harbor for schools! City lights for a view, lots of trees and only $66,500 for a price. A listing of Bert Reedy. UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 645-6500 1649 We1tcliff Drive, Newport Beach EASY LIVING NICE 3 BEDROOM -All bltns, dble gar., clubhouse & pool Co ndominium , excellent lo- cation. Vacant -move in quic k. Owner will· help with financing . .Asking $24,500. Cott,: 540·1151 ; NEWPORT HEIGHTS JUST LISTED -FANTASTIC BARGAIN - Large 3 Bedroom. famil y room, prime Heights location. Owner transferred -Must sell ! His loss -Your gain. $52,500. CALL 540;1151 ERITAGE; REALTORS Gener el General ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;·~~;;;;; General General ~iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l ~*'-'-'B~ES-T-B-UY-S-*- PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES Linda Isle Waterfront Cusiom 4-bdrm., 4'h bath home on lagoon. Fully equipped island kitchen, waterfront family room, billiard room. . ..... $250,000 For Complete Information On All Homes ·& Lots, Plea11 Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr .. Suito 1, N.B. 675-6161 General EASTSIDE HOME+ TRIPLEX COUNTRY sm1NG - situated on a large l30x150 lot wilh towering shade trees, a comfortable 3 BR . 2 BA · home with den and front porch for your rocker Flus separated away from the house a ·b'fplex with income potential or $440/nef.' only $69.950 fo·r all CALL 644-nll /Jn NIGEl l\AllEY & ASSIJCIATES General CORONA DEL MAR canyon & ocean view $86,500 Beautiful 2 bdrm., 2 bath home with dining rm., lower level family room & patio. R·2 Land permits charige to duplex. Lower lewl has sep. entrance & bath, fol'I splendid teen's apt. PLEASE CALL 675-3000 m 11.u · ,\ llt:.\r ll 12 APARTMENTS OCEANVIEW Lag Bch Lot $8500 Canyon Lake Lot ACREAGE 2 BR Duplex $~'.~:0 5.77 acres located on Pacific Coast High\vay \vith 180 dc>g. 0<·eanvh?\\'. Owner 1vill fi. n<ince with 80'/~ lst TD. S';O int. Present zoning R·lA. 1-~ull price just $65,000 Newport ., Fairview 646-1111 Beech Home $59,500'. 7 Inc Units $59,500 Beach Duplex $76,500 · Call now for details. . 64Z..1711 1797 Orange Ave., C.~f.: ' "--"'· : \J'lll~~; ~2l Rambling Rancho ~ Country 4 bdrm. Low do'!lm (1nytimt) or no down G.I.! Hns:3 baths. PV stoqe firepla~. Covered patio. Dining rra., built-ins, dishwas b e t . Sprinklers front & rear. Fountain & rus h lri.g waterfall. $31,750. 540-tm DIVORCE TARBELL, Realtors~ SPACIOUS ! FORCES SALE Large 2-Story---h~me · with Lovely 4 bdi'nf. & tamuy·m . · forlnal~i:lining, separate den home on nice quiet strffl: & famUy, double fireplace, blt-ins, \V/brkfst. bar, F.A. modem convenient ·kllehen heal, tzi>lc, cov. 1llitio. Ni~ & prime residential loca· ly landscaped. Terrific Joe, tion. Could be a 4 or 5 in Me11a dcl Mar. : Bedroom • 564.950. Ploo"' MORGAN REAL TY: call for appointment 673-6642 67>6459 545-8421 SouthCo Realtors. PUBLIC AUCTION · NEW DUPLEX STATE OF CALIF. : \Valk to beach. Spacious 3 Residences in Corona dcl Ptf).r & A BR. units: elec. frplcs., WATCH FOR OUR BIG Ap 2 baths, encl. garage, 11un-NOV. 18 : deck & patio. $89,950. Mr . W•1t 620-3708 • Call: 673-3663 642-6963 Eves TO be moved large ranch style exec. hoose. Can iie split in l¥/O. po). r:r by 21<9 Orange, c . . 675-TI88 (eves 673-1337). 1 • associated BROKERS-REAL TORS 1C2<; W Balbaa 671·166} COUNTRY GENTLEMAN OCEAN VIEW ' Owner will aell ()f exchange down for fewer units. Notify us if you have 2"'6 units and want to increase your . posiUon. Good Costa Mesa IN THE CITY I $25,950. Circular street b! fine homes. 3 be(irooms fh. eluding guest facility. C>Jtn kitchP.n and party room . Entertainers patio. Breath- taking view. Agt. G45-03C9r location. 0 ft e r e d for Beautiful 2'200 l'lq ft custom $172,800. home. Has huge rnaster Call COLWELL 646-0555 suite + 3 Br & 2~ Ba. Sep- oflnJa !J:J~~ Lac henmye r R.~<iltor * 59'x290'·LOT * C-1 ZONE $32,500 E·Z TERMS * 4 Bedroolfl. home fhuge master BR) + family room + den, 3 baths, many ex· tras. Quiet street. $58, 700 * C·2 Zone • Harbor Blvd. 100 x 300, access to adjoin· ing street, $175,000. Walker&lee -IA~ ILTAll MISSION VIEJO, sharp 3 BR., 2 ba. Barcelona honu!'. Custom drapes, patio. Fortin Co., Rll.nl. _ Q'.12·5000 "\Veed it & lteap" From treasures to trash Turn them into cash CAu. Daily Pilot Cj)UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 Need tr•nsport•tfon r f or Cl:iMirird Ad ACTION Call A Doily ,llot Ad·•isor '42·5618 arate rec. house & plenty of room to build a pool & tennis court on the 1 ~ acre lot • lots ot trees • David Bourke, Rltr 546-9950 .. 4 Bedrooms, 41h Baths .: pool room, pier & slip '• $250.000 * 673-7784 ~ MACNAB IRVINE TURTLEROCK COND()....l52,400 Plan #2: 3 BR/LR around atrium. Prime location on park! Martha Macnab 642-8235. (t43) POPULAR PORTOFINO Lg. Ho me for low price. 3 BR's, 3 ba ths, comfortable covered patio. 2000+ sq. ft. $68,900. J oyce Edlund 642-8235. (t44) "THE SIMPLE LIFE" Lush, comfortable 3 BR, single level Bluffs condominium. View! Highly upgraded. $68,500. Helen Wood 644-6200. (122) EVER POPULAR PALERMO Attrac1ively priced for quick sale. Lovely : .4 BR home in Harbor View. Only $73,950. · Charles Arnold 642-8235. (t45) HARBOR VIEW MONTEGO Accept on carefree living ac ross from pools & park. Low Main!. landscaping fo r many leisure hours. 4 BR's, l·story. $69,900. Joyce Ed.\und 642-8235. (t46) . SPACIOUS BAYFRONT DUPLEX 3BR's up, 2BR dow n . ..Attractive units of- fering excellent View . Lg. stone fire places -sun deck-intercom-BBQ-dishwasher. Price incl. pier & slip. $225,000. P. John- ston/ J . Smith 642-8235. (t35) "AND THEN THERE WERE NONE "• Possibly the last re1naining View lot on Galaxy Dr., Dover Shores. 97x174x78x147. $89,500. Amy Gaston 642-8235. (147) FABULOUS VIEW-POUNDING SURF Privacy o! China Cove -Multi-level w/ elevator. 3 BR's& 2 baths. Shower & dress- ing room for beach. New cpts., drps, & newly painted & paneled. $143,000. B. Mor- phy /?. Johnston 1142-8235. (139) [Irvine 1-bo _ _, __ t DI Dover Drlw "''""'' IM' M1cArthur M•·l 200 Newport ... ch, Calltomla t21U -· ' I -· • ' ·- .. . . -". ...-. .. .. . .....-. . . ~ ' ,,,,...;;";;";;i''r'-·_~L_o_r ___ r.:;;;;;;:;;W;red_n_esd.:.:"'::·_N.:.:'.:.:".:.:•:..:b•_r "14<"';!1:0:97:3.::-:.------::;:::::::;-----.....,r:::=,.,...=,..,.,=--...,..,....,.;-,:-7-;---:----:-T.---.,, N-14, 1973 PILOT·AOVEATJSU 14 -Gen•r•I Genoral Gonor•I Gonorol Coron• del •r untlngton BoKh L19uno BM<h :.:.::=~.; ...... ;;;;;iillNCh~~.;.:;...--;-J;i;;!Oil.10il1HotiOm_;;,1---'_"ii1 WALK-TO NEW GOLF COURSE ~EW $500,000 RECREATION CENTER _Eojoy the new life style and live carelree In this 2 bedroom 2 bath (large master suite) air co~dit~oning, luxurious ~arpeting, drapes, electric kitchen with bullt-m barbeque. Din- ing area plus a breakfast nook. Covered patio \Vi th panoramic view, 24 hour Security Guard. All rytaintenance., free in the new adult com- munity of Costa del Sol in beautiful Mission Viejo. $42,900 Full Price La Paz: Real Estate 130-0700 CHARMING TOWNHOUSE VACANT nus OttAND OPENING Ramb1i,,. • Bdrm. Juat m, OLDE Newport Boy Towort 2 STORY SECLUDED UNIT -featuring 2 to beach. Alllun>• 1% VA HOUSE 1 I< 2 BEDROOM bedrooms , 2 baths, oversized patio & beauti-BROA.DMOOR ll .... With ne>dblo . down. BELONGS 'lO CONDOM;!NlllM HOMES !ul carpets & rlnt. Spacious grounds with L<J lmfll 8lory, < BR ll""'1ll l306 mo. pa)'I It all! Pro!. \,,.. A BYGONE ERA l!a)olront Ho- beautiful pool landscaping. Lots of trees, ~= v:~ xl:tg~:;;:se Ln. ~:::i, ~~~car:; he:'it~ ~~;~ ~lt ::':tty Highrise ocean breeze in quiet adult only comm.1nity. thruout. Painten Just lefu at.ake fencing. A SHORT Steel a: concrete constrUctlon Perfect location near Newport Back Bay. H11&< ltolaled......,. aulto. WALK TO THE lll::ACH. l'llvateBalconl•• Pri~ed only $36.500. , ~""' use at Jlus, mu. RUSTIC EXTERIOR OF 2 prage spaces rer unit. aive bride tlrtplaet, &ow"· BOARD & BAT 1-E, Rool top lundtck COMPANY OWNED AND VACANT met kitchen. SUBMIT YOUR SECLUDED RED BRICK Unusual Opportunity to PW' MUST SELL THIS WPORT BE DOWN PAYMl:N'I'l 11 Bkr-PATIO. cb&le Bayfront .Property1 ln NE ACH -2 5 BR, 3 BA, Meaa de! Mar, owner 962-Mll. Spacious "OLDE OAKEN" Newport Beach. Story Cape Cod home. A terrific value fea· 30 x JS cov. patio, superb Irvin• style llv. rm., hA1 WOOD 310 Fernando Rd,. N.B. For Solo l:lf GREENLEAF \ ~ private S star adult ~ riiunlty, 1750 ~ttler A~ C.M. haa t.Vallli.ble a 2 Key West in beaut. <»M. just like new. 646- 9 ant to 6 pm. MOBILE •Home-Bud&!tr ti fllndO In parli nr 'be~ Newi>t .Deb. 64i-2?41~" 60-3!7JI. luring 4 huge bedrms, den, lge. heated pool, ioterlar. 2300 Sq. Ft. $45,800. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I PANELED WALLS. OPEN 675-8551 separatelaundryareaandmuch,muchmore! 11g90;:.cM!': Realty •PLAY BALL ... ~~RCEJ1~~& .''BIACHGIVEAWAY" I 2500 Sq. Ft. of living in a beautiful setting. Since 1958 * 547711 g« out the popcorn and aet· WITH WOODEN MANTLE. Hard to find! Deluxe 4 . l[i Priced only $67,200. Call for complete details. after 6 PM Call 557-41:117 ue by the hearth tn the coun-Heavy pile carpeting & beFooms. 3 baths, family try kitchen. BeautilUl 4 CUit.om window coverma.. beach home. Open beams, Acr119t for ••le 1H ~,~?"' HERITAGE ~880 Open Eves. SUPER Sharp Ha I e c re at bdnn. traditional home near thru-out. Wei\ des!ifted 2 2 flrtplacea, gigantic family I ;..c;;;...:~;;....;... ____ H Home. 4 BR, 1\.9 BA. vWage green and pool. 0wn. bdrm. Door plan, serViced room. Steps to the water 595 ACRE "'Ol'king ciutlt $34,250. 10% down. Open er ti·ansferred a.od aaking by central bath. from this prime peninsula ranch in the S le r ri House. By Owner. Call for $49,500. Olde fashioned "KOPF£R location. Price b right at 1'~oothills, 45 min ~ l :~::'.:;'""""""""""":::::-""""""""""""i~~~k=====~~~======1 ~a~pp~t.~540-9542~~~~~~ CALL 552-7500 KETI'LE" kitchen, ha a JT9,900. Must sell now! Sacrarnt.nto, 2 sept. houa Genorol Gonorol WESTCLIFF OWNER WALLS OF PUMPKIN l;RUBB & ELLIS CO. out buildings, creek, Spa 2 Br 2 B 1-d VISION PINE PANELING, FORG· 675-7080 mine, can be split, General -Gener1-1 480c.Shady b &J.5o28~ Y · ED COPPER Hoo o acre, $840 acre. Paul Halel * JIALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * r. h . • red h1'll ABOVE RANGE 4 BR 'IOWNHS IN rnE, ii544-iiliii4400...iiiiiiiiii .... "'I REALTORS ~ ~ ·• Huntington Btac REFRIGERATOR&. BLUFFS I• OCEANFRONT NEWPORT HEIGHTS \VASl-1/DRYER lNCLUD-2~~ BA, tireplac~. wet bar, OCEAN side, Laguna Betcll D I $155 000 ' R d d 1 S · h 3 OPEN HOUSE REALTY RE,,\LTORS ED. This charming nurt.ic pool facili~les. at Crown Point. Avail nowi up ex '' · · ' · e uce . parus 16651 ARBOR CIRCLE Univ. Park Center, 'Irvine olde house is typical for 1 Blk. to CdM High School 2 Bf, Mint· cond, $30,000. Duplex .... $175,000! BR., 2 ba. split-level. HUNTINGTON BEACH "'hlch this seaside com· $54,500-MODEL OPEN _ $48 mo aseeasment ln· Triplex .... $225,000! Extra lge. lot. Owner 'SAT & SUN. 12•5 YOU'LL LOVE IT! ! ma u.~REALity is s"'LEEPElamedR;' i1tor's Alao one 5 =-~~en at . eludes Taxes. Bia 49~11.: /1«4ttleS~~ : ~ AND ASSOCIATES • REALTORS 2 OF A KIND Identical 2 BR. duple~es, side by side, clos·e to everything! One has a·n extra room off the patio !or room or office. A NEW LISTING of Dorothy Nelson. Asking $74,500 and $73,500. CALL 644-7270 WE CAN HELP YOU BUY, SELL, OR TRADE ·A HOME . ANYPLACE IN THE NATION b ,, •. ~~~~ NEWPORT HEIGHTS Lovely 5 Bedroom family home, 3 Baths, Ulil· 'ity room, Separate dfn with bookshelves, Large living room with fireplace, Huge back yard with two enormous trees. PRICED AT ONLY $59,500! . FOR SHOWING -CALL JOSH WIGHT G7S.70GO ~~e::~bmit ~.i~4~~: Huntington B•ach's Walnut Square Condo, super only 835 AMIGOS WAY 96 ACRES in Oranges tn1 Most Popular upgraded, 2 BR & den "A" $49 500 FULL PRICE *&14-2991• come NET 60M-70M Now UNUSUAl FIND Luxurious d up le x. Owner's unit 5 BR. + 3 BR rental. Secluded Newport Island. Call for further informa· lion. 673-7420. IMMED. POSSESS. 3 BR., 2 ba. Comp. redec. New carpets .. Frplc. Shady yard. $36, 750 -10% down 556-8800 * BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * 4 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU 1NEED A FAMILY HOME General CITY HIDEAWAY! Unusual, distinctive retreat in lhe heart of Costa Mesa. 3 Bedroom custon1ized horue. Secluded pa t i o , vegetable garden & fruit trees! U you are bored with routine, see this. $37,000. loan. ASSUMABLE 7% VA LOAN. • COATS . & 'WALLACE C' Rl:lU. TORS 962-4454 WILL TRADE * 4000 naval, model grove for income property. * '56 T-Bird + cash, C4 car lot, garage, oUi~ SGV for beach property. BKR 675-fi712 or 548-8796 2 Bdrm condo., desirable Model. Better than ne1v, LOWER ON. PYMT. FAST P'OSSESS. at 00"/o ot potential Rltr; ground level floor plan. 11iii quality carpets, shultel's 0 K Harbor Vie1v Carmel model. 64~14-0 ""at'S new. Freshly Painted thruout. Super location. An· ' ' 3 BR 2 b l 't rm ,. xi OWNER " a., ami Y •• Cemetery ~'ith tastefully paneled and ous O\Vner says "Submit \VIU. HELP FINANCE Iota of ext~as. Price reduced mirrored living room, plush any offer." S.12.500. Call Phil MISSION REAL TY to $68,950 including land _L_o_t,;;•/c,C_ry~pto----'-56.1 wallpapered dining area, McGowan, fi4S.8400. 985 So Coast Hwy 1 .. ~ ... 8 CORBIN-MARTIN TWO cemetery lots t 'n ~~~~.caro':i:siz:d ci:~ 7 Tit 9 Ph~e (714) 4M..o73J'" REAL TORS 644-7662 \Vesbninster Memo r la l area, near schools, walking V. E. Howanl & Co. MUST sell, lr'Ont row, Million Park. Reasonable $ S 00 • distance to Huntington ... r-. ......,_ EDGEWATER dollar View, brand new, 4 536-2976 Center, Swimming pool and BR, 2% ba, Newport Crest, Commtrclal many park areas. Asking ComfyCOzy-Condo TT COUNTRY SE"M'ING • 2 lot 3ll>. plan 5, $88,500. or Property 151 only $24,495 call today 01>.-net transferred, mu 8 t bdrm, ?en, utilltY: rm, lanai, 3BR condo, w/'J6' Boat slip, ___ ..:..,._:. ____ ;...I 847-3005. see!! 2 Br, 2 BA, plus den, 2 frplcs. Vu ot Hills $43,900. ~v'e~idc, ~l.SOO~o::;-:ke ol~ NEWPORT BEACH , secluded patio, best loca-PRIME COMMERCIAL (4500 fer. Owner, TI4-682-7424 Prime Bayfront Siie CONDO SPECIALISTS! tion! ! Just listed & Hot! sq. ft .) plus a 3 bdnn, 2 ba CANYON CABANA for boat f'e'Pairs & sales Have one to sell! We can $32,500. CALL 645-8400 house, & parking Jot. Locate Bill Gn.indy Rltr. 67!HJ161 do it! Wanna buy one? near Potlcry Shack $250,000. Easy living home. Great 1WO adjoining income ~ 'Ve've gottem! One or two ~.,.,,!:'!?&l.!!21/J.l!!:IJN!Ln!L"!,I deck space. Open beams. pertieS, center Colta Meaa. stories, 2·4 Bedrooms, in V. E. LVd & Co. LEASE OPTION this all 3 Br, 2 Ba. View from n... r ~:mt>/642-6560 all areas. Beat the interest .... r-........ \\lood & Glass 3 bdrm. den, living room & master Br. ""'ne · rate. Good assumable loans ==----....:::.::_.JI ho1nc. $1500. Option deposit, Fireplace, \Va1k to !SChools Condominiums available. Our salesmen are -~=~~~~--1 $~00 per ino. Xlnt. Vu. &: shopping. 0Wne1·s are for sole. 160 Jx>nded. Best protection for ONLY $34,900 $64,500. an.,;lous. $64,000. ________ .;..;I you 1vhen selling or listing for a 4 BR, fam rm home, OPEN HOUSE DUIT NOW your home or income prop-located on a quiet cuJ-de-sac l350 S. Coast Hwy., SUNDAY 12-4 DON'T WAIT FOR erty .. Call: near green belt leading to Laguna Beach 494-8536 669 Bonita, The Bluffs. -PRICES TO RIS larwin realty inc. park. Decorator drop" & GRUBB & ELLIS CO E 1 cpts, wallpaper. Paneled PEG ALLEN • S21,00'.1 tor these spacious 968-4405 (24 hrs) gar. with work bench. $184 500 675-7080 2 BR, 11> BA &dolt condo<. • .Equal Housing:J)ppty._ .BOB--OLSON REALTY Emerafd ·Ba;. ?o.1arvclous BLUFFS TBJ·LEVEL CON-C>olcaoflocarioosstillavaU. 9~1 346-2018 wknds fam. home: s-BR, 3 ha.' DO. 3 br .. 2 'ba, . cathedral. able. A! low as $390 doWrl • ~ ULTIMATE -OJll\IER'SITY~PARK den, !am-. rm .. wo'rk rm.; tieam ceilings, pooh-walking to~move In. wltlt<·iDl-<llo.l Be the first to occupy this lovely patio. 3 gar. distance to s~hls, churches. PE\YS all. 836-al6 Agent. INDOOR & OUTDOOR charming new honle. 3 BR, . $185,000 East Bluff Village & tennis LIVING. The ultimate In 2 BA, den, family room. A Emerald Bay. Dram at I c club. $52,500. By owner. Aft OCEAN side. Laguna Beach Spanish styling. 2 Patios, stone·s throw to recreation cust. home. Panoramic 7pm, 6#-0987 at Cro'1 Point;., Avail now, screened atrium, formal din· center, swimming pools, coast view. 4 BR. (27' mstr. PENULTIMATE 3 Br, lfJt cond, $30,000. ing, sep office + much, sch~ls & parks. ste .. w/frpl.). den, wet bar, Super Unda Isle family & -~mo. aasesament tn- much more! Real California $59,500 * 673-3ln foS81l st~ frplc. En~ hall entertainment home. Sail up elude '.I'p:es. Bkr 493-3811. living. 1.•guna Bt•ch w/tounla!n .. 2 P a t 1 o s , to your door. Imagine! !!!!"'!!'~~ ... ~~!!!•I fl 642·8011 • . Pattison Investment Co., R•altors HEIGHTS Corona del Mar I' Owner will finance. $195,000. Denison Assoc., NEWPORT RMERA BOUNDWS $55,000 673-7311 Gracious ! Br, 211 Ba, !pl. _ . • • • Immac. view home. 3 BR.. ..:;:;:....:.;;::....,.,-,,------,:-f 2 I ed f6%-4471 ( ,.,.L) 546-1103 ... beauty! Tastefully re-2 ha. 30 ft. !iv .. h""" frpl. Harbor Vu Somerset fl1n rm, car gar. rnm · .._-5 br 3 ba :z trpl -· ........ Poss. $32,000. Finantjng ...._ ------------------------... ~~.-.cw Beautiful, spacious 2 slory modeled 4 bdnn. home. din. rm. Owner will finance • · ca, '"' ..,_,.-avail. To inspect c &I I General General home 0~ quiet ~Hlae 1jiljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimjil street with towenng trees HARBOR VIEW HILLS r'/o LOAN 1-~amily rooni, ~mplete with 10!}5 N. Coast Hwy. ~P H!=r:: ~Wt. vi~ 642-9062. A VA I I I l wet bar. Beautiful concrete Laguna Beach 714: 494-7578 • 1 • • ~ .. ~EWPO---~------JI and that secluded feeling. Walk to all schools. Huge bdnns, large baths, dining room, and 3 car garage. Pride of ownership home in a. most desirable area. Bonus is the low interest GI Joan of 7!4 % that can be assumed by anyone. 646-7TI1 Open eves. ssume oan w pym so patio, completely enclosed Prii:e · · $81,500. Owner '" RT ..... .,. .. t 3 Br, ~ Splendid view of Harbor and $238 per mo. Ne1vly dee-for your privacy & COii· Laguna Hills "'499-~ll°'OI="". ----~= Ba, plan 3, nu It vacant. WE'RE #J MICHAEL EVANS, OFFICE MANAGER, DISPLAYS COMPU.TER PRINT OUT OF LOCAL AREA FOREST E. OLSON LIST- INGS SOLD WITHIN THE FIRST 30 DAYS OF MARKETING. EVANS SAYS IT IS TH~~YPE OF 'DYNAMIC ·MERCHAN- DISING WHICH ENABLED COSTA MESA TO CAPTURE THE TOP PERCENT OF PRODUCTION AWARD. LIKE OUR RADIO & T.V. ADS SAY : WHEN YOU UST WITH FOREST OLSON, BE PREPARED TO MOYE FAST! FOREST E. OLSON 11,, REALTORS mt HARBOR BLVD "'5-0303 • oceanfromthiscustombuilt orated 3 BR. 2 BA home. tentment 159500 BLUFFS, lmma-·late 4 BR Xlnt finandng. Pri ced Bae•-to Elem School. walk . . ' · ASSUME J-J. LOAN .... ··-" mark o home. Can be 2. 3, 4, or 5 ....,. ~ 2 BA. Owner has purchased wrutt el. w n • r. bedroom due to fiexible floor to all shops. Big back yard I No tncrea11e • no qualiflea· the 61"":i-8731. · plan. Pool size yard. This w/boat gate. Bike to beach! 'Q f,/IH, tion. Laguna Hills oondo-~his ~~mat~ sell beaotifol home 1s in top. Oor very best buy. Call now. REAL ESt'A'l'e mlnlwn. Sharp duplex model ~'-'-7"~"'-'=-Duplox11/Unlts notch t'Ondition for a buyer $31,500. ftl 3 BR, 2 ~· Central heat & Newport Heights Ille 162 t1'ho \\'Mts perfection. Call RED CARPET, REALTORS . ll!IO Glenneyre St. atr conditioning. Includes --------'-"'I 67~722.i. 536-8836 open 'Iii 9 PM 494-9473 549-0316 carpeting, draperies, minor A KING sm GREENTREE ·Wardrobes, electric garage Duplex A Triplex units under SPYGLASS HILL * FREE LIST View Forever door opener, pool facilities & HOME, 12 ROOMS: 4 BR, construction. Frplc's. beam Sweeping ocean Catalina Ir: much more. $29,900. 2u. li!Batty' ~~lae .~atiorm. •,rm~, cell. From $63,500. Builder. Walker &Lee Tradewlnds Model 7300 C Plan Y:ith beautiful view and four bedroom plus family room and dining room. Pro- fessionally landscaped and upgraded interior. Better than nev.'. Call 67fr72'15. city lights vieW trom ... ,_CAPRI REALTY 6#-7525 "" w..u,. ., • 646-4414 1..u... ottlct! or den. Lge living lllAL CITA'I Gov't repossessed homes, beautiful 3 bdrm. Gorgeous Laguna Nl9utl rm w/charming frplc. Lge. Income Property 166 some have pools, some no master suite. Spacious liv-kitchen w/all bltns. All down pymt. various areas ing rm with beamed ceilina: GOLF counc home large lot custom built \.\'/many extras. 2 BEACH DUPLEXIS Eq& 0 ·al·pymH 0 tsua' i·ngNo-Opoblpo1g;_t1Wlon1.~es D&. bal1 conyrm. FI r eL-p-1-a c e-. 3 BpedR +-study, beaut land Aaldng $68,500. }1/J•/. LOANS ·•• .., 1nng . u x ury sea , many extras. CA.LL 6• •••·2414 ..... HERBERT HA\VKINS personified 1 $59,500. $74,500. 495-4029. 9 ~~ 1 nAT'S RIGHT! 2 Duplex• WATERFRONT SPECIAL Lovely New Orleans Style REALTORS * 963·5681 494-8003 ... • ts lldt by side. Walk to I"""""'""'""'""'"""'"""" I TARBELL, Realtors Lido lslo-#1. beach. Can be sold together -home-· Vi'ith-spJit.Jevel brick ~..-::;,. IEA 1'Y or separately. TAKE OVER VA--fHA 1920 So. Coast Hwy., L.B. PRIME N••r fttwport P••t orrlc• EXIsrJNG 'PAo/o WANS. patio overlooking canal in Ne1vport Shores. Just listed -This 2-story 3 Bedroom has chalm all Hs own. lo.lust see to ·appreciate! Only $69,500. NORTH LAGUNA Lido Opportunity Newport ShorH S.11 buy in town at 138.000 French Country charm, with For small family, about tO ;o.::.;;_~;.;_;::.;::.;::___ each BE FIRSI' TO SEE! Repossessions. Latest prices. WM. McCABE beamed cell's. & planked be completed, all new 2 !LOCK TO OCEAN Call today! fioors & a full ocean view bdrm., fa mi I Y rm.; 2-Sty. 3 BR., 2 baths. Newly create a calm aecludcd at'. Z-stories. Character already decor. in & out, incl. new mosphere in ihis 2 bdrm., in. You choose your own carpets & drapes. PETE BARRETI -REALTOR-CORONA DEL MAR 642·5200 !' Block to heh, 2 8l0ry -;:::::::::::::::;:::i:::;:::::::::=:;:::~ 1 channer, ocean view R-1, ~ $70,00'.I. Call 675-2936 owner. FOURPLEX.l,I Aho C.d.M. R·2. 2 Be. 2 Ba, REALTY 8740 WARNER A VE. FOUNTAIN VALLEY * 842-4405 * BY (hvner. 2 bl.ks to beach, 2 ~ty. formal din rm, sep fam rm, 2400 sq ft, crpts, custom drps. Assume 7% loan, pmts $325. mo. $49,000. move in condition. New kit· \Yell-maintained units, near chen. 675-2936. WVELY ne1v Spy g I ass $4001 dn. Owner will help home, for sale or lease op-finance. 8 3 3 -11 0 3 or tion by owner, 2 BR, den, ~963-!088"'-="-· ------ shopping & freeway. Lo\v vacancy !actor. Two· 2 bedrooms, two-1 Bedrooms, each with enclosed garage. lOo/o down. Full price $55,000. co: rs . WALLACE many xtras. Prof, Indscped, Tenni!I _ & club & pool. 644-2696 eves. CUTE COrona de! J\lar, 2 Br, on comer lot. Nu paint inside & out. Deck, trplc, $52,500. Red Carpet, REPOSSESSIONS :·or Information and location ol these FHA & VA homes, contact· KASABIAN 2 bath + artist's studio, decor. i79,500 $45.900 E""'rald Terr. home. CAYWOOD REALTY ' 19 :f'tli1.NER ASSOC. * 548-1290 * llll> N. Coast Hwy., Laguna Santa Ana 494-lln -~*~$198,500 * LICENSED & OPERATING DOES your dream ot a home 4 BDRMS. Plus maid's. 4 Ba. REsr HOME -on oak at the beach l.nciude a quiet E 1 e g an c e pel'llOnl!ied! shaded avenue. Lovely 1.n· a e c I u de d neighborhood Brand new. Call today! teriors & close to town. which ts in easy walicini GEnM1---All applianet>s & 4 ton a/c distance to beach & shop-stay, income n1 a k es ping,. a minimum ot upkeep, ll>·F Tustin Ave., N.B. payments asking $37,500. and a traditional home with REALTORS 6424623 Bkr 546--0022. trplc, all new kitchen, & BEST BUY LIDO ,:S.:::::...:;J:::..::::::;C,--,..1 ~t -- guest apt? If so, call owner. 3 BA, 4 BR +. Bay View. n uan •e • rano 494-5256 88' to bch. <'5 Via Lido HORSE PROPERTY REALTORS -~5~415--44141- (0pen Evonlnss) COMMERCIAL INCOME Nord. $137,500. 615-7414 Bkr. 2 Br house on t hillside acre, LOVELY home & income ATTRAC So~ista Home for One of Laguna's most pro-4 BR, Fam., 3% BA. pool. fenced for horses $38,500. on 49' R-2 lot. So. of J-lwy. sale by owfier, 4 BR, Beaut, minent downtown corner $l(llJ,500! 25% dwn, Call HB, (n4) RHI Estate 912-6644 -· $89,500. By Owner. Prine $42.500 fin avail, 842-3l35 locations, adjacent to pro-BRITI'INGHAM REALTY !JSS.3563. ouly 673-4169 11-4 pm, or 673-9919 posed new Shopping Mall. *61""::r-Ol23* Owy $188,000. NICHOLS N Be $49,900 Wow.' It's a breeze .•. sell Your 1 BLK to heh. 3 bl'., $29,950 Real Estate, ~ South twport •ch Items with t'a.Se, use Daily 842-0091, eves 5 3 6 -4 5 5 8 Coast Highway, Laguna THE BLUFFS =PU='=' Class===lfied=·::,642-56==:18.==l..:B=KR=.=====.:..=-==1220=·==== I WATERFRONT PIER & FLOAT . $94,500 BROKER 833-07'0 0v~~~d~~:;?'~ $©\\~}\-~ t-~S • ·.;~.~ s~~:" .. i~!' ~r.,?'ra That Intriguing Wora Game with a Chuckle 60' BAYFRONT BR.,~ bath townhome) is ------E~it91 ll'r CLAY a. POU:AN Pier,. A slip, 3 Br, 3 Ba well untler the market & ls ' ~-'-~;;;:;~'v,,_, + iUelt-Would }'OU believe your opportunity to take ad-O Roal'fOl'IQ• S.ttm of th• "' $159,500. Call De n tao n -;;;:;,;;;;;;;;:;;;;::;;; vantage of a "Special sit· four scrombled words be· Assoc. 673-7311 • ua tion." we urge YoU to call low to form four simpl• words. 2345 ARALIA • Ealtbluft 3 Mobile Home J9n tod•y? I T A M. R 0 M I Br + lamily rm.' Ono of 12x54 REA~~~TBLUF~11331 I' I I II' 'I ~e n~b:!icl'°miW'.1s~~ INHIOH~AND,CAllF. . . . . L . _ 644-5199. . ' ' SA N BERNARDINO BLUFFS 3 BR. 2 BA Harbor COUNTY. LOVELY 10 VIEW CONDO I S O R U E I ' lfighlands Home By Owner. x20 COVERED PORCH ~~~~~7.'~i~~~e~~ 1 Principals On1y. '89.500. WITH OUTDOOR RUG. lngs k wallpapers. 3 BRs., .. I I I I I fi46.5302 ALSO COVERED CAR· 2\1 baths. totmal dining . . . . · · UDO !SE -O.armll>a. 3 PQRT. NICELY LANO. room. VacMt, with lmmed· I I Bl\. 3 BA .. DR. l&e.,p,Uo, SCAPID MODERN late occupan~sslble. Re-S E TA E ! 111· '° ''· 1oc:-119.soo. MOBILE PARK Cdu:'°dF •• nowCal~'ll:JJW . ....._ I' I I' I The price of glue·h11 sky. Ds:mr.:. lleps to beach. 54'L "135 ...b.• 6 •• -•••r . l'Ol;keted. The reeson: The big Need! paint Ir fix-up $53,000 """ mT• pm Realtors 640-0020 ---------. demand for -steaks. Property House &fZ.3850 rorison r< • r & INVE!m!ENTS (714) 17U500 905 E. EUCLID FULLER'ION THE BWFPS 6 UNITS 16 UNITS $8500 IACH. Tnte. 18 unlla • t... bulldqs. Only l8500 JI"~ unit. U% 1pendable.f Central locatlotl. Hurry • call tod.f¥• .. 54'oltall INVESTMENT DIV!SlOll " . r~-~ THE REAi 1 !~~fAl_[RS "NEW LISTING" I H E T N 0 S I it'!t NEWPORT Shorn homo, 3 1lEW 2 l!R. 1 BA, living 3 BMroom home with tan·7 1 I I' I I' A Com i... th• dl11<kfo qi>OfN • Br,2Ba.$41,900, BYO'fmlr'. nn. Adult park "N/Drivate: tastic view. Many custom V by 1ft11ftg tn tM-m1taing Word~ 645'-4599 or GC-:2563· btactt • $16,500. ~. -.s~umrs, Eu&akle. One S features. Good t c rm 1 • • • · • • · • you dtv91op frOl'll lfWP No. 3 btlow. TRADE Ntwp0rt. Be a c h CABANA 12x33, m&hof. int. BR., Two l.wrnt. 5 $78,000. Prop. for OUt-ot·Town Prop. COit $5000, wUt teU $800. ,CuutL $8,000 Ann u •,I GRUBB & ELLIS co. :• 'tER:~[.sNUM&ERED I' 1• I'. I' I' I' I' I' r I ' Bia. TH/673-:ltl68 U-1!10V<. -°""''!OM MILLER 175-7080 . , . .• . • . . . _ • DUPU>X nr DC!''" 162,'ll:JJ 1'><31' , AMERICAN Mobile REAL'IOR , MHlll ~:':~:.!.~·~ i) ~~~f8LE fO!I I I I I j I I I!· I Mllea =.,R<altor ~~':iJ'.1.G" <'Olld. ~ ~"~"ail°"G":..':"1~': Tu Don't (Ive •i> Gi ~ BARGAIN. Udo "'l'1'fl'<>I>! Prtnc -· See 181 E. :n.t ~J.M;.iiy"~h SCRAM0 LiTS ANSWERS IN CWSIACAnON. 818 ''L&tro "tn •-81 put. Dbl -· ...,._ St. Eitlde c.w ... ..a _...;;;;.=="-'=--------------------'---'----....:.---1 . .:0'°'-!Sbor:::~·:!.-=::::ltl~,;~ -=!!''--· pool. -· flll.!:?111 OWMr, ea..1980 • I I I I I f • J PlLOT-AOVERTlSER roporty I Wfdl'ltSday, Novtmbtr 14, 1973 Wtdnnd1y, NOVtmbtr 14, 1~7:3 OAILY PILOT nturn. m . lOS iluplexe11 ·.;:;P.;.t .. ;;..;.F..;u.;.r..c"''-----'3"'""60 Apt. u1lne11 ouse1 Furnish l~~~~;;;;~'";;·;...._.:30.:.:5 1 ;.;.:ou.:-=_;U;;.nc...u;.r_n.;.. __ _ Opportunity 200 Balboo t1l1nd C1pi1tr1no BMch Huntington Baoch :.:;:;:::;:.:...=.;;;;;;;.:;;;_.....:c::c1 F u rn. or Unfurn. US Newport Beach Huntln!!ton Beoch Coron1 del Mir 8 Units • Beach Red Tiie Roof. * Gift Shor!: 'lt Cl;.:;;;IARM=IN~G°'l~BR-. -2-ea-.1 IIBl=""":."-dd-.,.'--.-io.-,-.. -du-pl--..1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; * F OwneFoodr rflllT "4' Out oome. fl1>1., lovely patio. prlv, 2 Bit, 2 HA, 2 potkle. UNDER NEW >-OR LEASE. Brand new No,.port 8Mch LOW WEEKLY RATES Harbor Vltw llome WM'H LRC Z BR, 2 Bi\. Newport 'E XM:Utlve 5u1t•I ~-2\fi b1oclca to til'lellt htac:hl OCEAN VJE\VI Six monlha old. AJl twc:i bedroom w1'11, 2 atory ~h. J!:arns 9~~ on down. Extremr:ly 11horp. Call toda7 •. ut •k• Furn., yrly. $530 niootb h'plc, sm. 345&2 A Vi• MANAGEMENT * Smorgesbord \Yllllam Wlnton Cawlna 400--192~. 2 BR. Bll·ina. Newly dee· VIEW! 1'tona.co model. 3 .stiom. Nu crpt'g. S250 1mo 121 Yorktown Blvd. bedrOOms or 2 • den, 2 yrl.y. $72J wln1<1r. ~18-4802 Beach Blvd, 1u Yorkto"A'n re~~r:-, 111en1y-ot ptn1tb1a Rt-a.I Eetate '75-.3331 Coron• del Mir oraltd. End IAl'J\i"· Bfau· * CoffH Shop BALBOA lalond Charming 3 Ulul 14ndlcaping. 1.ra pill)' be.lb, luxurious carpeU lie ="'-=o...--==~~"-'- othtt ~up.anded reaturH. Apt1. Furn. 360 5~11 Set.ts 21 BR, 2 story. Nicely fum, $285 2 Bf't, bltM, bl.a stone &1-e, u chlld'1 dream. Close RIVIERA REAL TY $530 per mo. Including sum· trph.·. bcu.nu, a:anF. yard. ~)di:np~~'Om~. IChOOls. Sttps to private tennis STUDIOS & 1 BR's. court, twlrnnthi,g pool. eti:. S.lboa l1l1nd e Full kitchen TOWNHOUSE 2 Br, fireplace, pool, prlv&te piUOt, c.'Ontlncntal break· fast. !Wacloua a;round1, near ahowtr.r :t. nne beach. Flir· nlsh'-d or unfurnilhl!d, fropl srio. O>rona de! Mar, -1600 U'IVEST~ DIVISION 149 Broad\~._-~M. n1cr 1974 642·22'22, M()..0995 $325 • ~ 3 BR, yard, patio, Call ...... . 642·7007 64$-5609 Ev91, or &w-m. Iota of light & air. '""- Thia NEW home will be • Healed pool completed sometime In Dec. BAClt l adult, $150 mo. e Laundty facilities pleue phone now. It will \11lnter. utlls. paid, no pets. e Free utilitioa ' e Auto Patia Ston:i $23M " ESTATE HS • • 1-lrdw Store $'QOM Year. • Uquor Lie. on IUl.le --~·rrrliE REl\Ll ---·----' I • Yat'da&e Store. Inv + I ==R:;EO~C~A'rRP:;ET=:.==-1 e Uquo• Store $25M + .,,.;, I HOLLAND BUSINESS 64$.4110 SALES ~-I . EXCLUSIVES OwnBottlo W•tobor R 1 out• I your own tt e water $33,950. Two 2 bdr. 1 ba. route, "'ill train If quallned. on a lot, 10% Down. Income Best Orange Co. area avail. I $3,750. Yearly now Md ren11 \I/Ill adjust route slze to need ralsln"°. Great low $ tit your needs. Earn $1500 I t1nt time inve.tor atlrtcr }M'r nlo. Potential unlimited l ~:;_ Beach Tr I p 1 ex . ~.lv~ta~~~an~:~er., 964 Lowest priced lrlpltK In (714J 5.12-6501 Newport Beach and. ~ block , to baach. G"'at tor Jn. BE THE BOSS I ~1bnent, appreciation Md Nifty lake-out rest. Busy owner use too. Westside center. Low rtnt, : $52,950. 1''ourplex. Only 2 lefl "o1.1ell t"Qulpped , Speclalltle11 \ ot these 2 bdr. t ba. chlc:kl'n & pins. $28,000. I fourplexc!I. Lll"1' Down. Wiii University Realty , 1ell oontract u r con· 3001 E. Csl. l-h\'Y. 673-6510 I ventlonal. Rrnt11 on way to Investment $600. per month. Opportunity 220 • $59,850. 1'"ourplex. 2 bdr. l ba. i =.'~nr~~~~o;~ *Sliver Bullion* conventional. 999 + FINE BARS 835-8300 ! $175,000. Ea.stside 12 Units. Money to L01n 240 I Attractive complex with ~ pool. Two owner apts. Walk· NEED CASll? $1,000, or up to J l.ng dlsllnce to shopping and SJ,000, $10,000 and ntore. j bus services. Remember Avco Thrift for I $63.000. Eutside. 4 house• a Real Estate Loan, Uppn. on a large lot. 10';{, dovm, approval, u~ the money 1 10% 2nd, 80~'o first conunit· how<?ver you like, AIM> ask I ment recelV«I. Incom~ about our unsecured pcr- $'7,956. and M!ntl l'!'lY below aorml loans. I market. Eacb house has • O\\'n carage & yard. AVCO THRIFT I For detaUed lnfonnal ion on 620 Ne\\"port Center Dr. these and other units< Call Suitf' 101 Don Bcnnan. Broker and Ne\\'port Beach unit speciaJ\Jit, !led Carpet, 833-3440 Realton 979-2S50 2 6 2 9 1 -:-.,-==~-=---- H"bo' Blvd c .... M•.. 1st TD Loans 24 UNITS UP TO 90% + POOL 8'4% INTEREST 52"5•0001 2 d TD L ans 2 ~ory • 24 unlt "P•l'ln><nt n 0 1 plos awlmmlng pool !. \V c 11 locatf"d. U)':r., cap. r11tc~ Over i $l500 spend11blf'! ·roke ad· vantage · ('all OOI'!'. ' 5'46-1690 INVESTt11ENT DIVISION "II. I I ' r I • - THE REiil ESTATERS SENSATIONAL FIXER ~ acre Orange A\'t'., C.lool. l house11, gara~s. 11hed all rented PLUS huge be11med ex~ home. 5 BR. block lowest rates Or1ng• Co. Sottler Mtg. 'Co. 642-1171 545-0611 Serving Harbor area 24 yrs. DON'T BORROW- 'TIL YOU CALL USI Borrow on your. home equity for any· good purpose. Serv. Ing Los Ang@les County for over al years and NOW in Orange C.Ounty! SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. CTI4) 556-0106 4500 Campua Drive. N.B. Mortgages, Trust Deeds 260 away. ?i-1ove in 2 halvei; ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; maklJlg 2 more house11. All ! plans supp11ed. Sched. int" PUT YOUR MONEY $680. Prln 0 .. 1,, 139,000. TO WORK FOR YOUI 1 T r" de for ('Omn1t'rcW.I. Earn 10% or n1ore on well - ' 6~7m (CVt!!: fl73·13311. ~ul't'd 2nd Trus1 Deeds on (3) 4-PLEXES in im. $49,950 Orange County reAl ~tate. 1 t ach. $6.100 dn. I nc SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. $600/mo. 842-3546, 496-8895. CTI4i 5.56-0106 , lndu1trl1I Prorrty 161 4000 Compua Dr., N.B. 3500 SQ. F'T INDUSTRIAL 35'1i> disc well-secured 1st BLOG. on lrg Io t. Good TD w/$63. 568 bal; pay!I \V, Side of CM Joe. offlcea S&tO mo incl 1~"'1 int; all cpted & drped $78,500 due 1978, Bx 3 Apple Valley, wkdays fl42..l601 . wkends Cn 714-242-3144. 551-1'52 Loll for S.11 170 S125 • Nt'.v 3 + Fam Rm, I '!!~"'!!!!!!!!!!l!l!!!!~~~l'!' B•lbo1 Ponln1ula exceptionally n!t~. ""'"°' RENT WITH OPTION BAYFRONT 3 BORMS 4 V1ew llms. FainUy townh0u.11e1. l, 2, 3 Ii BA11lS. Pio<. n .. t. Wl;iter NU-VIEW RENTALS 4 BR. fl'5 & ''l" or ycsrty. 673-203D. m..4030 or 49+3'J48 • WHY RENT? Coron• del Mir BEAUT I.FULL y remodeled $1500 down buys thl" 2 BR, ----------1 home. New thruout, So. of 1~ &. fllln. to-.1."nhouse. UtC 3 br, 2 bn. hnmac. llwy. 3 Br, 2 Btl. + hu11e * Total 1187 per mo. * I und & St.ADE REAL TY Gar. pi&llO. $<125 n1 o . M. l')' roon1 ganH! roo1n. 963-4543 or 968-1798 aft. 6 pm 67S.-.1776 or 644--0611 400 Jasmine. S400 mo. D P I t ,6;:13-::,o:l658o=. ~-~--$ LANDLORDS $ IOI 0 n 1ENCWSED rt i 0' sur-Let us Tell! UR propcr1.ll!B. DELUXE Tr8.ller w I t h rounded by BR. 2 BA, \Ve servlt·c all the beach cabanll. 1440 sq. ft ., 4 BR, den, dbl frplc, Nr. Bia; Citie!I & inland OrAnge Co. 3 BA. XJnt kllcben. 50' from Corona. $350 mo. yrly. FEE FREE Snve nme k $$ l ~, milt beat'h on beautlful Agt/o\vner, 673--2058, eves. $ Ai.A RENTALS $ cove, Privlte Club w/heated 675--4020. Newport & Bay, CM 642-8383 pbol. Tennl1 rourt1. Dan a 1B . .::RAN:.:..,::O=n-e_w_3~B-r.~2-\l~ba NU PAINT ntRU..QUT Point. Rental Nov. 15 to unit w/frplc & blt-lns. 1650 Sharp 4 Br, 1% Ba, gas ~fly .t;>. $3,000 or $550 month· sq. ft. of ch.arm & a 11uper blll\ll, 2 car gar, fenced yrd. ly. Jnq, 213-&5-2345. Ext 261. neighborhood to boot. $385. $270 mo. Eves. 962-5319. Lido Isle ,o,6T.l-~29'l5~c.· -.,..-.,.--...,-...,--3 BR, family nn, lrplc, 1% R.QOhlY one bedroom duplex ba. crpts & drps, bltna, WrNTER leas~. beaut. So. unit O.Cl'OBI from park and children & pets ok. $295. baylront bonu•; 4 BR. S tennis • corner separate en· 536-7006 ba., beaut. furn. Sandy trance • gar11.ge $2'15/mo. beach. P1er ,le. Ooat $1650 ~7211 Agt. \VALK to bead1, 2 BR & den, Mo 1..::;:...,===-~.,....~~ diial\vasher, 2 car gar, big Biii ·G rundJ Rltr. 675-6161 NEAR ne\v 3 BR, 3 baths, yard, No pets. 968·2365. • R trpl., patio: b 1 t -Ins 2 1 d RUSTIC CHARME dbhwshr. Xlnt! $450 Month 3 BR, BA on cu · C·sac Darling 2 hr 2 ba, beam Scenic Properties 6~5726 nr schools & b e a c h · cl, nu shai & drp, fpl.. Wntr SHARP 3 BR, fam. rnt; $285/mo. CaJI 846-3410. $.lSO, 673·2227, 213/793-0427. view, nice ya.rd; lease. Irvine HoulM Unfurn. 305 Avail. tmmed. Re a 1 tor General ,::61;;:3-c.:2222:::0~---~-= 3 BR. + bonwi, 2~ ba. $425 .:..:;.:;.;.;.;;. _______ ll % BLKS. to beach; 2 BR 3 BR .• 2 baths ..•.•• , ... $450 ALA JlENTALS 2 Ba. Child v•elcome! Patio 2 BR., 1% baths .••••• S~ & yard. $325 Mo/yrly. 2 BR. + den, 2 ba ....• $430 BOYD Realtors 675-59:l> 2 BR., 2 baths .......... $325 wt ~ll:Zf ... SllYICf SPYGLASS Hill, 2 BR. den, f fiit HOUSES lease or sale Avail mid Nov. Ans Tennis, pool privl., $500 mo. I J DUrli. 644-2696 eves . NEWPOIT&IAY,C.M.'42·1U3 LOVELY 2 Br, 1 Ba., frplc, _ beam ceilings patio, gar, 3 Br., 2 ba.., incl. gdnr .• $335 "Jl11l1 'I11·lld. ---'l ll'nllu r be to your advantqe, tts Avail 11117. 6r.;....:f>l3 • Free Un{'lli dnptl have not be e n l FURN tlpl very t•leitn, e T.V. & maid eerv. avail. .elected & It's pouible '-''t elderly people ye a r I y • Ba.r·B-Que could ()rder them mutually 615--0343 • Phone scrvic-e to your ta.ate. $600 pr month. "B""lbo='-=p~~1 -~1---le 1 Mile to IX'('on 644-4687. • 1 en nsu • ftfE'N, mall bcRt'h hotel. FOR LEASE: Brand Ne\\' $35 WEEK &. UP Roon\s $21.50 pt>r wk. A1,lic. :~u~y~~i':,~t;Y ~t~~ • SJllcPlna: Rooms $% per n1onth. ~ 7056. ranUiy Room, i~ 0 r ma I • llousekeeplng Room& Huntington H1rbour Dining room 3 car garaie • Ocean View Apta on CUl-de-aa'c. Overlooklni BALBOA INN the Golf Course. YeR1'iy 105 Main Street Lease $950. mo. ALL 675-8740 BRAND NE\V EXPENSIVE BACHELOR npt by UK'! FURNITURE. Call After 6 \\'a ter. $i50. mo incl util. PM 644-5382 Call 645-5TI4 SUPER new fOW" bedroom c~.-,-t-.-M~,-.. ----- Harbor View Homes Phase1---------- lll. Pool & tennis pr!Vl!cgea. Caso de Oro PORTOFINO •••• $590 p/mo MONTEGO •• , ••. $545 p/mo ALL UTILITIES PAID Will have all the amenities Compare berore you rent lnchle1ing custom draperies, Custom designed, leaturing: & plush carpeting through-• Spa.ck>u~ ki.tchcn 1vith in- out. Ready in December . cl 1rect hgh!111g reserve now. • Scoj')<lrnte di n'c arC\t CAPRI REALTY 644-7525 e Home-likr sto!'agc URGENT / lmmac 3 Br fan1 • Pt·\\'ate p..1.liO!I . rm, HarOOr View Home. • Closed i:::i ragt' 11·. storni;:c $430/mo Ph: 644.6863 or • M.arble pulln1an · • K1ng.sz Bdrn1s 644-7515. • Pool • Barbeques . sur. San CltnMnte rounded ,1·ith plush land- scaping 908 BUENA Vista, on clifl Adults, No Pets view deck & paUo. Large l BDRrtI. $185. 2 BR 2 BA + fam rm. 36S W. Wi.!soo 642-1911 Very modem 2 car gar 6:!6-:1835, 623-3167. . $30 WEEk & UP :---,.,~------e Studio & 1 BR AJjt1. Tustin e TV & ?i.fald Service Avail. e Phone SeMce -Hid. Pool $375. BRAND new 3 BR, e Childrwt & Pet Seetion 2 BA house. C~ts, drps, 2376 Ne\\'port Blvd., CWl bltns. ,Gardener 1ncld. No 548-9755 or 66-3967 pels. ~12. (Ad good for $5 on rent) * LARGE 1 & 2 BR * $150. & UP Qu iet & i;ccludc<I 2 Br. 2 BH. 1"urn or u11t un1, h<'ated 1-.ool . Ni·. bt'ar h & sh0ppin£:. \\'amer IQ Al ionquln. go by lloard \\'alk •Sho pp 1ng Cent er to end of Algonquin, turn right ~1 bloc-k lo 1160"1 Sell Cirelf', Peyton ~111 nor. f\tanagt>l' No. 53. 8~$105 Lagun1 Beach I.RC. inod. dO'ol.11tO"'n studio apt. l''um. CloSl' lo main heh. Re-spOn. Adult. Lse. $160. 494-5420. Clf,\Rf.11NC 1 Br. on OC(>an. $200 incl. util. 0 pp Albertson's. 729 Gaviota. 4M-1719. EITIC. & Deluxe from $50 & $75 \vk. Pool, maid, ph, ldry, Village Inn, 494-9"36 Newport 8e•ch "EXTRA SHARP" 3 bedrooms, 2 bath condo in most desirable section (lf Park Lido. Large pool & plenly (lf parking. Furn. $3.'"iO. month. GRUBB & ELLIS CO. 675-7080 Houses Furn. or $35 per 'ol.'k & up. l BR. 64<·2611. ' 3 BR, below hwy, r~e re.trig, heam ooll1ng.s, frp , aar. sundeck avail 12/1 , $2K.;. 673--1418 eves o"T' wkencls DELUXE 10\\'llh~. 3 br, 2\-i ba. l"rpl(', dshwshr, w!v.' C!1ll, l~fi blks to bch. Yr i<"he. 673-71.2'l, Costa Meu ADULTS 2 Bedrooms, with carpel'• drapes, built·in.!l & enclosed garage; 11wimn1lng pool. At11·acllve St>lling with Lot!! of tret's! $1!0 P<'r 1footh Sec: 2311 Jo::ldcn Ave. or Call ~1anaJ.,'t'r 645-5780 HARBOR J?EALTORS SINCE 194·1 673-4400 WILSON GARDENS Beautiful grounds, quiet 2 BR TownhouscH, ~ii h1t1h8, crpta, drps, blt·lns, t•loscd pati06. Pool. $162.50/rtiO. Adults, /'I(<> pell. 2% blks \V. of Hfll'bor Blvd. On \Vil~n. C ~ 11 646-2846. BAC1f Unit $3."l/$115 HB to $295 mo./yearly 673-7079 ~~ln-pd. Sngls. 3BR. 2BA, gar, $350 mo, RIGH:¥~: 1 hr $140 furn nr 6ffi Narcissus Unfurn. 310 2 Br & hach's. Color TV. "SINCE 1946" · ...... ~-nu 01 maid serv, pool. THE 1st \\o'estern Bank Bldg. General ~-.....,.. .tliit MESA, 415 N. Newport *NICE, <'lean 1 BR garden apls. t.rrILS PAID. llt1ohair cpls & drps, D/W, bltn oven & l'Zl.ngc, natural wood cabinets, heated pool, closed garages. \Valk to Moppln£. 1 pre-schooler OK. From $IBO. &12-8378 lx'ach,, uUI pd . No\v. "'673-8775 or 642-5290 University Park, Irvine 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 l BR, 1 BA Furn $200 Blvd. NB. 646-9681 Days 552 .. 7000 Nights 2 BR 1 ba unf N 151 E. 21st St. CM 1r OCEANFRONT 1r PRIVATE pool 2 br $175 now 3 BR, 2 ba. clean, spacious, sm cmplx, furn & utll pd. patio, gar. $425/mo. Yrly LOTA Room 2 hr. $225, nu lease. 644-()Gll ~ wall ppr, green gr&lis, fried. . h 2 BR., 1 bath ...•• 1 .•••• $315 dra '• ~::_ y ,_~w$250c8"p, * 646-1666 * 3 BR, 2 BA 1325 Winter 51-yjli-.. ""· =v•. '~· · l~~~~~!!!!O!"!"!!!!PI' BR, 2 BA $275 Ye.,-ly. .. rra 1 --3 BR .. 2 ba,, unf. new carp, 9 Small Adult Complex In Lush WORKSHOP 3 br, lam $29'5 3 BR, 2 % BA, So. of wy. 2 BR, 2 ba, den, a e •• $275 frplc, nu paint, garngc. 11ugc 1 yr. old \V/FP, beam 3 BR., 21,a ba .• , , • $385/400 ON Hill 3 br 2 ba $310 vu clng, Lg. vu. $3l5 675-6900. 3 BR., 2 baths .••••• $400/425 S. Laguna, allappli'11, ~vi ... " Br, 3 Ba. adults, no ,pets. 4 Bf.l., 3 baths · •• •• .. •·· t:'ZS SLIP & pool 3 br, DR 3 Ba 1.RaAe $350. 424 Poinsel1in .. 4 BR .. 2~~ bathll,· •• • $450/475 $450, 2 fp'!!, all appll's, look 675-5218, 558-9683 5 BR,-3"'ba, N'pt--Bch,-•~$57S drapes, decor , yr:ly. $325. $125/MO. Dix. mob. hrn., 6'7>2383 67>2M9 83S-l4 1 Forest Setting. Located, 5 3 BR., ~ ba. Oceanfront. con1pl. furn. 11td. pool. Min. from Beach & }l"Wy. Furn.; Wlllter $325. . Adult cpl, no pets 4 Groovy Pad. Furn studio. $90 2 BR, 2 ,BA $235. Gas & Wtr 2 BR., 2 ba. fun), winter Season's, 2359 NC' w port utll pd. Pd. . $300. Blvd., 54s-fil32. -Cnlifs Lrgest Renl.._I Af{!:Y •· 11.4 E. 20th ~ .. c_.M._ *ELM GARDENS. POOL1r-Homefinder.s ~1-9641 543-0lS7 or fi4&:4095 out ut your Ol'l'n Joke C r..1-CALL 552-7500 11ANY More, larger, smaller. oata ~&a associated e Adults Poolside $150 Up. LU>.'URY Bay View 2 Br, e TR6PI~AL ~L e . eAlso Children's Section 2 Ba. 1200 sq. ft. 2 bale's, 2 BR, 1i,s Ba. Spiral alrc!le, WhRt do you need????? Call BACH 1-louse $12.l fUl'Jl. utU VISION ALA Rentals 642..&383 paid, sml. pet ok. BROK ER:S -qE AL 1 Olfo; 1C1~ W Balha " 1>7 1 llotJ lTI·E. 22nd St. CM 642-3645 pool, slip. Lse $525/Sel\? frplc , bJlnl, lrg encl patiO, lllNTAL.t ~*Apto. COM.r'Y 2 br tri $165 a\'l serious students & pet ok. GREEN Thu.mb 2 br $175 · nice lawn, tncd v.•/gar. GARDEN Plol 2 br $225. single on lot, child/pet. • * 141•0111 * FRUIT Trees 3 "' $215. fncd '-~ •a for pet & kids. Now. w.11u. COITA ... _ GRACIOUS 3 br 2 Ba S310. $120 · Super Bachelor E/slde All appli's, trp, bring fam. "o1.•/pool. tum. All util pd. BACK Bay 4 br, 2 ba S.375 $120 · I Br, itlove, crpu;, ~rdnr, all xtras, nent livin'. drp11, l'11rpon. H.B. ALA Rentals 642-8383 $175 · 2 Br hoo11e \\' gar, crptK, drpg, lnC'l. 01ildi-cn Sharp 3 BR, 1 BA, dbl. ok. garage, pool. Quiet 1m · F11mily honie! 3 br strfft, J(vall. now. $250 house "'/gal', lrg yrd fol' per month. Call Dive kids & pets. Stove. crpts, H It R I E t t ' drpa. tr ISi• 1a s •. e, \\le Also 11nvr F'urnb;hed S40-11SI Bach. 1, 2, 3 br Apts. LANDLORDS FREE LANDLORDS! EASTSIOE 18l"(l:C 2 BR, 2 BA, hUii! family rm., frplc, Irg. yard., 258 Santa habel $285 per mo. 546--7945 or \\'e Speclallle In Neo.vport 642-2639 1 Br l.rg, $160 & Sl.50. Tcr· _644-< __ 7_44 ___ ~~-f,ned yrd. Gas & wtr pd. ~~"'""l"!"""l'"'""'""'"" race. Ideal for bachelors. 1 BEDROO~t. pool, blk to ~548-~-ll~68~~~-~~-. S.lboa lst.ncf Adu1ts. 1993 Ot u r ch . beach. Yearly $155. Single ALL elee 2 br, 1 ba, 1 548-9633. adult. Call 64&-2696 child ok. No pet.a. $175 mo. REALTY REALTORS NEW Balboa I 1 l and LGE 2 BR luxury apt. SEASHORE 2 & 3 BR. 120 Albert No. 7, O f Univ. Parle Center, Irvine Bayfront, Spectaeular view, Bl~ quiet ' heated pool, From $200 per month ,-'-~~cc·--.,,----..,.; 4BR, . ~· .Liv Rm, den, Adult~. 111 00 Po m o n a . Property House 642-3857 1100 Viet.aria, 2 new a~ 2 BR Condo ••••• $225 Mo/lse sep duung, kitchen, fam rm, 645-728!1 1rg pvt. lio8 2 BR Condo ••.•• $245 Mo/lse inc.Ids in of pier, Sub lease ' OCEANFRONT 2 BR. 2 BR~':,; a:ar., t 1du.;£ J BR Home ..... $295 mo/lse _ will accept ttal!i. offer. NICE 1 br dptx. Quiet. Sep GARAGE. $240 YEARLY. 675-2749_. •am. pe or 3 BR Home ..... $300 mo/lse Avail Dec 1, 675.8512 or by garages. Employed adult 645-8908, eves & weekends. 3 BR Home ••••• $325 mo/lse 675-8519 • over ?.Cl, no pets. 548-1021 S•n ~lemente LRG I br, bltns, CID, refrig, 4 BR Home •.••. $300 mo/lse Condominiums C0~1PLETELY furn I BR. pool, lndry. Adib!, no IM*· 4 BR Home ..... $425 mo/lse U I 320 $130. 131 Flower St.,CM. OCEANFRONT~ 1 BR, SINo45.5~ .... ~te Vista ~ RANCl1 REALTY 551-2000 n urn. Adults. no pets. 646-7883 redec, pool, vie-A'. No · , ~. 1 e red hill FOR lrasc. bl'llUl 3BR. 2BA, Bick Biy . $175 2 BR, 1% ba, patio, childrrn, no pets, $165., * EXTRA 11'1 1 or 2 & l'!'/lo\'cly yard & lrg: patio. garagt', crpts, . 492-2684. Heated pool. Frol)'l $].«;. f'nclsd RV stor~ge, crpts, BEAUT. 4 BR. 3 BA, + call SJl.8731 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Mature adults, m peta. utr ' drps, bll111s, $.115 1nclds park · lam. rm.. 2-car gar. & 2 BR furn apt utll pd $175 1-"----------Monrovlli': 645--0926. & pool privl, 552-8058 patio, overlooking beaut. mo ' ' B1lboa lsl•nd ... SPACIOUS new 2 Br, 2 Jtia, NEW 3 Br, 2 Ba, bltns, pool. Xlnt cond. Harbor lli · 548-0019 bllnl, drps, carpeting, PQQI, trash compactor. c r r. t s, District. $375. mo. C 11 I I 1 BR A f . cd $l2S NEW 2 BR, frpl., all elec frplc, gar. Adults, 'no P41. drps, comm park/poo. Nr 548-12i6 before 9 or alt. : pt, unus_h · bit-Ins. Garage. $Z75 Mo. 3'l6 W. Bay St., C.M. •! UC! 833 8447 4 P M mo incl. util. Suitable lor yearly. Broker 675-6700 · · · · Bachelor. 646-1809. I :CT.=-":~,-'"""'~~-LARGE 1 Br. Pool. 3 BR, 2 BA, crpts, drps, Huntington Beach Dana Point &lboe Peninsula shops. Ad1ts, no ,P',,,"-,.,,;~ I bllrui. 2 car attached gar. utll pd. 1884 4" $295/MO. 837-9115 ·I br , washer, dryer, stove, BEAM ceiling, 1 br, shag 548-(1336. ,:~: TURn..E Rock, 4 BR, 2% ~· N! nu crpt. drps, LIVE in the all new Dana crpt,. L bik to bay & beach. 'A-STUNNING 2 Br, 2 ·la Ba, 3 car gar. $450. Irnmed. palllt. $1&5. 5.12-9565 aft 6:30 Polnt Harbor at t h e Singles. $185 644--0997 Garden Apt. Pool. RfC. Beach • Corona de! Mar e l:M0cES=='A""'o"'EL"'°"""M')""'"R::---::-3""ar"'. &. La.gunR . Our Rental Ser-"Olalet .. Mee home great vice .Is F'REE tt1 You! Try !k:hoois." Ava. 1 Dec'. $290. Nu.V1e"o1.•' "'""" "-""< -·•· f J k ~-•· CDM BAYFRONT NU·VIEW RENTALS ";;cfu' ;...';' K'.'[61, ac ~. SO' x 100' YRchtman's COve 1 673-40.10 or 494--3248 3 BR $215. Fruit trees. Work· ro make, buy or sell a Trust Deed, any amount, anytime, ph: 638-5015 ~la· jesUc Mortgage C.O posseulon. 545--0630. wkdays. beautiful MARINA INN Capistrano Heach llln· $175. no W. 18th, CK.. Laguna Be•ch Irvine Motel. 34902 Del Obispo St. NU been lived . 2 1 & 2 BR. SJ.35..$155. Stove, 2 BR. 2 BA 'VALNUT <496-2353). K ft ch en• Ef. br' 2"b:_r w/1g deck 1;ar ref, crpt/drps,! htd po61. lot. Owner 111udrlenly trnns-11 &j FANTASTIC OCEAN VIF.W shop. Fncd yrd for kids/pets. fen'ed • Anxious. Loan csn ._... ,-4 BR. beaut. Jndsc:pd, cov Calif'• Lrgcst Rental Agcy be 11ubofliin1tcd. Submit any ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiil (l'\tlo overlooking ocean. 5 Homtfinders 541-9641 offer. $129,500. Call 645-8400. • ntin. trom S.D. Frv.'y, San 1 r.it. HoUHS furnished 300 C11•1ncntf'. S.150/mo. won't 3 BR P us lrg !am m1, L.asr• ~or 493-7227 new crpts, drps, freshly V. [. llcMard & Co. · . · painted inside and out, lrg: .,. I:-...... Gener•I I ~R. House, $110 utll pd, fncd ya.rd. Family, 00 pets. r ========= ::;::--;::~;;;"";:~:;-:::::I Kid~/pets. Also 1 BR $265. 547-6791. I· Sn1all, but n1ob1le CM. & 3 BR. Fan1 CLEAN & spacious 3 Br. 1~ Out of St1te Prop. 178 ild/pet La· rn1, util pd, $180, Hntg. Bch. '-·· F~~ yd · Agt Fee 919-8430 l>(l, P• .. ~ , stv, crpts, gunn. OLDER modl'rn Nebr. hon1f' $200 • 1 BR. Nicely furn. for Calif, proroerty. $5000 1'"rplc, pool, garage, vle\v! trade pay diff. 554-1481 LagUna . owner. $235 • Channing 1 BR. frplc, R"I E.'.te Wented 184 p!?Ol. gar. Corona del Mar. NU-VIEW RENTALS PRIVATE party \\'11.nts 3 or 4 BR house In HB or F.V. Call 968-0888 ---------- 6734030 or · 494-32.is $ LANDLORDS $ Let US rent UR properties. \Ve service all the beach Cities & Inland Orange Co. 1'"EE FREE. Savt' Time & $$ $ ALA RENTALS $ Ne"'port & Bay, C~t 642-8.183 B1lbo1 lsl•nd · · drps. Water pd. Nr. Wilson 3 BR, F11m Rm, . walk lo School. Kids OK. $275 mo, beach, $180 util pd . 557-3850 547-7531. Kids/pets. Also 2 BR, ""7="'""'--==c....,~--, ~tarting $130. Vacant. Agt. QUAINT 2 B~. w/lrg yard, Fee-. 9'f9..8430 unfurn, $225 mo. 2 3 4 Avocado St., Costa Mesa. B1lbo1 Island Call 642-8584 Gene Felder OIAR.MING CAPE COD 2 BR, crpt, drps, encl gar, 4 Br & den. 2 Ba., frplc, adult cpl, no pets. no 5mall yd . & pe.tlo. &.Indeck. chldm .. n 75. 5 4 8-8 l 51' Yearly. 675-760-1. c548-~-14~05·-----~- 81lbo1 Penln1ul1 3 BR, 1% Ba, crpt,. frplc, ----------1 lg fenced yd w/patiO. Nr 2 BR cottage nr Bay S.C. Plaza. $300. m o • adult;, no pet~. S'IV/Ref'. _64_2--0445~---·----~­ nu crpt, $18:i mo. Yrly, Take A Look! 2 Br. $175. Gar. 673-1178. Fncd yrd. Kids/pets ok. lu1in1ss Opportunity 200 FANTASTIC 3 Br, 2 Ba, B B ca.Jif's Lrge&t Rental Agcy All bltn!I. watl"rfront on Lit· •aeon ay Homefinder1 547-9641 ?1-fAN or \\'Ollll'ln mnture w/ tic Island. Avail to July, FOR Lease. Yearly. 2 3 BEDROOM. 2''11 bath managenient ability, take $.~/nlO. Ca\l eves, 67l--Oll5. lk'<lroo111 house. Refs. l'l'q. Townhouse. Family t"OOm, over the detal111 & manage YEARLY or unrurn 1 or Avnll Jan. 15th. 673-551l . fireplace, pool. $325/MO. a business. $10,000 req. 2 BR, full yrd, Stops to cnll today 6f2-{i678, 645-ti610. •.;55&-;;;;1~350"'=============.:..:~""~'=·='='ss=-;"='~··c'i6=<.>-00GS==·=·~"'-lN:""=·=';'=·;·;~··=•= .. ='=P=1':~=·=•="="="='1''3'""'a~n,-hoc-u-,,,--w~11~,~p1~,.-,,.,lrt1 1• yrd nu paint 2 kids ok $275 • 642-5583 3 BR, tam rm, avail Nov. 19, $2-15 mo, $50 securtty, Sl&-1459. IMMEDIATE occupancy. 4 Br, 3 8&. $32S. 83M341 eves. BKR D1n1 Point CHAR~1ING home. 2 BR. 1n11.rn rm. 1v/w c:rpl!. drp!I, minute IO beRCh & marina, $260. mo. ~7220. Fount1tn Viney Sl65 . 1 BR near beach, big fenced yard. child/pct wel· cmne! $210 • 2 Br ocean view apt, lrg deck. sntl pet ok. $.110 • 3 Br, 2~' ba, new crpt.5, drps, de<'k. Beaut. ocean view! MANY c:YnlERS AVAIL! NU-VIEW RENTALS 673·4030 or 494-3248 OCF.ANF.RONT . Pool, luxur. ious brand new 4 Bdrm, 3 bath, right (ln sand & aurf. \\rood, glliSR & rock. A Dream House. $1200/MO. Yrly. 714-494--0615. $800 LEASE. year l,y, choice location on t.ldo Isle, l BR, den, din are11., bltns, 2 BA, . 2 Cplt's, huge private patio, top eond.. 64l-9224 o r 6#-0050 CHARMING 3 BR. ~1 BA, OR, lg. J>l'ilO, nr. club & hC'h. S 5 2-s--mo. yr. I~. 640-8146. SQUARE. •=fMO. Av-" flctencles le. Apartments. ! 1 ·1-.... • • Adult.a, no pets. 645-8965 ... ..,..., a.u Heated pool, direct dial pr1\1a e ...... ,. rm, ocean Nov. 25th. Call 551-1008 phones, television, sauna view. $250. mo. 493-9676 2 BR, triplex, quiet st. bltlll, ~i"'a°'R;..::;condo="""m=inl=um"'"', "w'°.i-nu-t1 bath, I au n d r y factlltics, NEW deluxe 2 br, 2 ba, ~4~~ Scott Pl. Square, Irvine, pool, $220 meeting room, close to San frpl., 2 patios. $225/mo. mo, tmmed occup., 644-5398 Clemente & Laguna Bearh. 34592 Via Catlilina. 496-1924. $150. 2 hr, ~le st~;1beam Come .Play In. our 2 BR, 2 Ba, erpts, drps, celling. ~ Wa ~ ace _L•..;9._u_n_1_N_l_,,9'-uo_1 ____ I sportfishmg, shopping & bltlns, dishwasher, in the 646-924.1 or 64&-8882 restaurants. $60 v.-eek & l!P· Palisades $3:1). 642-1155. LRG 2 BR. bltns. d&llwhr. FOR rent or lease, 3 BR 2 ba. upstain on ninth hole $350/$400 mo. 547-9517 or 49'Hi009 Bring this ad & receive ' adult&, no pets. $1'10. 7ll $5 off on first week's rent. Corona dtl Mir Shalimar Drive. 642-5168 NEW & beautiful 2 Br, l Ba. Huge master Br, be11.m clngs, tree top view. $300. mo. 673-1658 NEWISH 2 BRJ 2 BA. No children or dogs. Swedish trplc, cov patio. $250/mo. 615-5120. LRG 2BR, bltins, crpts, drpe:, 1 child ok, SlSO month. "._ 646-9210 2 BR, bl!M. >hag crptg, '-'> paint, encl patio, nr act:. $165/MO. 551--0350 - NE\V lge deluxe 2 Br. GoOd loc. No pets. Adult• ontY. 2028 Fullerton. 644-1869 $125 • LRG. 1 BR. Quiet area. Water pct Bkr. 675-5800 • I ' 'O• - ' .. . . -" .. . . ... Wtd"'1day, Novembtr 14, 1973 1;:1::.:...:::::::.::.:.::..---= I ?P~•::..· ,.::::n::,fu::!r;::.n::..· __ _;3=:1!R~oo~m!!• ____ _;400~ Offiu Rtnlol DELUXE Newport BHch ROOMS U) \\'k UV W/ktt $30 \\'k u11 apl~. Childrtn & pct secl on. 2376 Ne,vport Blvd .. Cftt 548-9755, t>IS-3967 ... Ptraon1ll 530 C.rp•11t1r · ;;.;~~~~~=-~10;1H;;•;·p;Yl;;;•;n;t;;;;;~;;;;1 .._ · PIHftr, Pill~., Rtpolr 1''Ul.l..Y LICENSED ~VOOD\VOR.KING t c & ch er * PATCli PL.ASt.EJUNG * ASSEfl.ffiLERS. 30 hr wk • SPIRJTUA.µST * will do custom woodwork, All typc11. Free et;ll1nates l..adic¥ over 2:5. 11 .so pef CLERICAL APARTMENTS ,\Ir O:md • f'rplc's • 3 Swim· mt"" Pool5 • Jl~alth Spa - Term!$ Qiuns 4 Gyn1 itnd BiC1ard Roo.sn. 1 BR, Fron1 $1;!0 j BR. & Dtn F1'0n1 $195 2 BR .. hvm $210 2 BR . Twnhses F1'0m S250 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE RESORT LIVING FROM $155 FURN BR.. Kllch prtvl., lll3ture cn1ployed \\'OnlM. bet. 10:30 11m or aJt 8 pm PRESTIGE OFFICES Fountain Valley, BcauU· rut new buildina:. around rtoo1·, 3,000 equa.re feet, "ill divide inlo smaller otUces. 50c per square foot, includes carpets. drape!!, all utWttes. Ja.irl· tor scn1eo. Call ?i-far!J.yn Stoval.I <n4l 832-SMO. Spiritual rtadl!'ll' 10 am-10 ca.bll)Cl3, paneJi111, fum. & cy1 54()-6823 bl'.I to 11tart. Apply 9-U:XI ALL pm. Advice on all mattert anUq. & ttpnlr. reu. Stevt', PlumDtng All ,t Gotd~nf1. Maa:lc Wand, , 1 312 N. 1:.1 Camino Real, "548-~:,11;,;<:L=--,,=-==--1'-''--'-"'------9'W \V. 17th St., C.r.I. s t1 n Clemente, 492--9136, • CUSTOM BUILDER L.A. OTIS PLUl>IBlN~ ASSISTANT Man a Ce r POSITIONS 492--6034. Rcn1odelln(t, pti.tiol, or what Ren1odels & Repain. \Yater Trainee!!,~ CoUntcr Clrls~ PROBLEl\J Preinancy. Co~ have )'OU. J'ay Gilbert. beaters. dl!poaa!t, turnacea, 1'"'ry Cooks. l)ayt, Nitea. ; + !ldcllf, ayn1pathetic Licensed & insured. Lie; dshwasbts. 64:M263 MIC Ii Ota\leyd tlilftJ open. Full 0 ·* prrgn.ancy coungeling. Abor-J.ll.287852. &&11!.6. BIA. Con1plete Plumbing • p/tlme. Apply Jack lb 1 oo < I.ion & o.doptions rcl. NEW, rtmodcl, ~r: frante Servi~. Uc. 2m94. 'nle Box, 583 E. 17th St,, 0 APCARE 64M<L'i$ & finish, St~. orflees tc AJC PLUMBING ~C.::;M~·:,,-_,..~-~---1 ALCQHOUCS Anonymous. homes, etc, Lice n s e d . Repair Ii: Contractlng Auto Strvlce Dept. ~fen. ,._ ' )*00 Harbor Blvd., C.~I. (7141 557-8020 OPEN EVERYDAY 9,00-5,30 Great R<X•n-atkin: Sv.•lmming,l,.:-~-::;:~·:;·=--,-,.,-,-­ M.unas, 2 h('allh clubs, 11Md LACl.JNA llllhc aduJt home, \'Olleyball tennis tc1uils pro fttrnt!lhed bcdroonl, $GS. mo. .t-pt'O stiOr & fi~e 11.'$.'lOns, Ctlll ~7 & AM or 8 billiards, lndoOr KOlf t.lrivingl,!,P;M'===,,.----,,- rnnaC". oolor TV theatre, ele. GENTLEMEN. master gan1 perty roo1n. bcdrtn. re.Jrtg, TV, linen • r.o. Box i.m, Costa Afeiia. cu~oM WOODWORK PL•nt.•DJNG REPAUt • New car prep men. ' PhOnc 542.7217 or "'rhe 962-1961. Llrense No. 286660. 642--1643 eUno Mechanlct FREE "' • N~'l.Qjob loo small • Uted car dept. Jnedlanica D~~~~ciJ:.neUng, C:,~~S ••60-3128** Bu11lnest ls excellent, and . ' . • 1 • . .. ~,,2 BR . 1 ba & 3 br, 11; · . . • Vic Pacific Cst l-1\\y/Beach F'un Act!,•1thtll: Full·flme ac1!. Bh· SJ6-.8518 • .., ba. bltn range, drp:;, crpl, pool clubr1n, c:Arport. 2212 College Ave. 646 ·6 032. • , Under new n1g'lllent 0 ; ,; , 0.n• Point . vity dlreL1or. oon1plimcntaryl .;:_:::.o.· ""'""';::.,.--.---Sunday bl'unch. \Veekend S.~mo & up incl uul. Sha_re BBQ, Partle~. Ti·ips. Lee-bayfront home •• klt & pnv. tures. bcaoh. 673,....90.U. Gue1t Home Beautiful i\portments: Sln· --'-------- glf:'S, 1 & 2 bt>drootn!J. fur· COME '!i-ei.' ha\'e your parenl nished ~r Wl{Ul'tlish~d. Rents cartel for 8Jil you would do f1'0fl\ $1a;:i. Sorry, no pc!s 01· _ Un1e pern1itting. &12-9278 t'hildren. ltlodC"ls open daiJy R I I I Sh 430 l(g) Jnck Bergman 846-949-0 Nq,vport Beach Chev)' Lott _, ,.,.... Roofing dealel' mu!fl add 5 Une s· CASH '"$ . * ALL TYPES * medtanlet1, new car prep 1 Big & Small Telev11lon Rep•ir meµ. and tuted car dept. F und (f,... ad1) 550 ___ ..:5.16-=l,,648:::., ___ "ro""Lo'"1t-T_V_R_epe.;...tr_,-.-,-,.-,,-• .1. qir;e:h11inl~, al\ but the lattei· , l Rtnt1it 445 ° · C1irpet Servi~ reatlOl\8.ble, ntoSt tn hon1e. must \,lave GM expe:rlenc~. Penonnef Ag1ftcy 1'"0UNO: Mixed Shep. & H B NB Big growth opportunity In -f omCE <>n Ne,vport Blvd. Samoyed, male, aboul 6 JOHN'S C&rpol &. Uphol11tery Free esUnu1.te, C, I . . • nr w. fncilitles. fh the heart . I 968-2783. COUNTY AIRPORT nrcu. ' ' PANORAMIC OCEAN · , -VIE\\'. l.rg 3 BR, 2 BA, 21' !iv rm, bltn kitchen. 2 Unit bldg, l yr <>Id. $310/AtO. Adults. 493-75.'l7. COTE clean 1 br apt.. Uppel', Avail Dec 1st. refer, $175. mo. 49'1-62W IO to r. en • s o ire OAKWOOD GARDEN APARTMENTS YOUNG business "·on1an fl."e 25 desires to share apt \vith same. Would a1so consider renting a room in private home. Rtleren ces ex. changtd. Please phone 1'1iss Stall ;u7-:-iooo E.x 403. If not in please leave message. Ava.II. <>n lease. Parlia:::f.l mo old: 'vhite & sand col· Dt'l Shanipoo tl"OO: Scotch· &-C.M. Bert a !emote, <>f the boqminrr OltANCE 833-9178 fum, carpeted, air/co . ored. Vic. S.E. Santa Ana. gaql (Soil ~tefan:tam.s). Tile See service mgr. now! , pm'king.-Approx. 1000 sq, 545-8015. Degreasers & all color ~;:_------,--H d ch I t IL ~250/mo. \Varehouse also FOUND box <>f tools, 2 pairs brightenel'!I & 10 minute CERAMIC TILE Nt\V & M:~~i!:_tr &. e j~~.:rtt ALL BE,AUTl,FU"' avail. Ideal for contractor. of hoots & a chair vicinity bleach for \vh.lte carpets. remodel. Free est. Sm jobs blvda. Newiaort: B ca c h ~O'~ Q.RANGEL~WPT 548-2616. Baker St.. Costa Mesa. Save your money by saving welcome. 536-2426. ~. , • BCH & F'/JHlun ISL. }'OR lease all or part of Please call & identify. in~ exl.ra trlp.s .. \Vill clean ,;;.=:;::::;..::::..='°"'--AUTO 2800 sq. fl. divided into lrg 646-186.l living rm., dinmg rm .. & Top Soil studios, perfect . for F~.N-D-,~S~n-,al-1-p-up_p_v_, -.-,--,-vn hall $15. Any m1. $7.50, -'"---------Ne'v Cnr lmi)('lrts nee<ls tx· ALL FEES' PAID BY EMPLOYERS , , CUTE, clean 1 BR apt. U(). per. Avail Dec. lst, Reis .. $175. mo. 49-4-6220 Ntwport Beach North Irvine & 16th 645-0SSO h 1 s or " v couch $10. Chair $5. 15 )1'3. * QUALITY * perlence. re earsa space, mu IC '"/black nose Vic. Victoria exp. is what counls not * MULCl-i & TOP SOIL * e Strvice Writtr art \\·01·~ shop, across the & Continental, C.M. 2580 method. I do 11iorlc n1yselr. ~930 SL~GLE car garage for rent st. from Ne\\']Xlrl Center. Santa Ana Ave., C.~f. Good re!. 531--0101. e Lube Min Bonda, Exp. w/ $700 Assurity, Fidollly Newport Beach South S 2 o /in onth. Huntington (II 523-3028 FOUND palTOI type bird • Mechanic 16th •t Irvine Beach. Call 9 7 9 -1O7 o, "THE 1'·itc~ory " ~as a h-g neiir Springdale & Heil, Cement, Concrete 1.'op 1vngt's &. 1:0. benefits . VILLA YORBA 642 SllO 6..iS.2687. shop aviul. Sl8:1/n10. In H B 846-!854. Please call ~iiiiEimioloili."*l' Phone 646-9.100, 540-9467 7R/142-'622 • \VANTED: ~ialt> 25 + to Cannery Village 425 30th St., &. id~tify. CEMENT & IDock \V<>rk. Typist, lo ltnd iu• 2 R 1 1 blk NB. 673-9600 or 642-8520. . Walls, patios, :ddey,·alks, AUTO GENE·RATOR ...,.,,. 1, 2 & 3 Br. Unfurn. share B du~ ex. . LITILE young, yello\v kit· etc By hr <>r job 646-6915 I 702 ' Planner, Vlniety!· refrig, util incl. Moderate Equal Housing Opportunity bch . .$125 + ~~ ulil. Al, $115/UP. NU sto1es, of[ices, ten white chin stoninch & • •· ' Job W anted, Femi• STARTER , , tnconte • Applications \Vel· i ~~~==~==~~ l·-"'6"7>-4~22~8~·------indiv air & befit, elevators, feei . Vic Hill P1. & Santa CEMENT: Patio, drives, REBUILDER RecePfionii t I fSOO come. * 2 WEEKS FREE * 2 GIRLS need 1 girl, 21·28 17301 Beach, HB, 842-2834 Isabel, C.M. 5-18-7488. \valks·Rcpairs, sa'v & PU:ASANT, mature lady, PeniOnnel, Xln't ......... 1.i ... remove. Free est. 544-8998 unencumbered, seeking TOP PAY, PER~f. EXPER. ~.1v"l6 Huntington Beach .-' Stc'y, R.E. $650 Escrows, FUTURE! Vista del Mesa !o share 3 Br apt. Nr. ~ach Industrial Rental 450 F ND : Seller/Retriever? position rui c o·m pan ion . 3621 \\' l t s s A Adm'.! Atilittnl .... $75 Off 1st l\1o's Rent. Brand 1n NB. 3100 n10. 6'1!)....61').). -;:;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;j ·lml. \\•/flea collar. Vic. 14th DRIVEWAYS -SlDE\VALKS driver, to over 60 lady or · s t., · 1 .-v new deluxe 1 & 2 Br garden ADULT CARDEN HOMES \\'ANTED, male to :;ihare .• St H B 536-0735 (taking Patios. Jess An z a I d u a, 1 Ul · d ----------1 Poise, Good Skills ' apts. Frplc's, dsh\\·hr's, etc. JR VINE AVE. AT MESA large 4 Br house & utjlities. NOW LEASING 10' pou;,cf). . 979-9699· ~=~:t~~~ !'inm0k~· re&: :x. AVON MAKES Clai,ni Examiner $700 Walk to beaches & !'ihop'g. )love i121 ~·.0<'posils only H.B. $90 per month. 962-8668 Huntinnton Beach \\'HITE & 81'0\\'n \Vhlp=t Contractor changed. 837-8270. C~lRISTMAS THE SF.ASON A id & H & "' No pets. $175 & Up. 536-2647, uo..••rootn • ,,~ TO BE JOU.Y cc ent .i..uc 536-0036. 8282 Atlanta Ave. $220 2 GUYS \viii share 3 Br. NEW M-1 greyhound . Vic. Chrisenta NEED help ut home? We E t "E\V 2 Br w ter pd Crpl. Day & Night Security, Pool. Home w/pool r area S.A. 940 Sq. Ft. & UP Dr., M.V. s:l0--0786. CUS~l\I BUil..QER have aides, nu rs.cs, ~nc~~i:1~~~~e~~ta~:~: Comm'I 0.1k $700 '' . a . , Fountains. Rec. Bldg. I\'/ •Ray 5.J7-4139* 1-lamilton S: Neu;land St. GOLDEN Lab mix. 3 mo., Rem<>deluig. patios, or what house kprs, co1npa1uons. in your spare tin1e. Call: Fire & Casualty ilrps, stove, garb. displ, priv exer('ise rm, billiards, cot-YOUNG traight male needs 960-1970 male, ind on Marina Ave., have you. Ja,y Gi!Dcrt. H 0 ni e ma ~er s Upjohn 540-7011 WE NEED EXPER. pat, gar, \\'Sh/dry hoOkup, TV E A h 1. h f Balboa !·'and. 67'"763. licensed & insured. Lie·, "'7 "~I. ~""~·="'"""--,-,---,.. \\'kd ft or . a. pt. as c is · male or emale to share ~ ,)'"Q ,,.. .._., ;:; ~. ~~7i%. :~ioo2 ys a \\'asher, refrig, shag cpt & 2 br bch hsc. NB 673-48.')1 1140 SQ FT & UP FND: Male tabby cat, grey, BJ-287852. 64G-115S i\.lATURE \\'01nan, Practical ~B~~mE,~R ntreeded 1hY INSURANCE PERSONNEL • . R 1 pn patio m· deek. 545-4855. SHARE my 2 BR apt. '.•.' btk NEW M 1 blk & tan stti~.i Vic. nr. GERWICK & SON Nursing 01· cai;e for children 1'"cc,.h•-'•d" °"'"11 ansp. Llolr CLEAN. qwet 2 B , near Y -l"'" Bidg..Con.U:. Addlt_& Rcn1od for paren1$ on vacation. • nios. e new bldg. Wtr, gas pd. Child Bl...CX:K to beach. & ba_y. 2 Br., r:a~h. "'stuis blks fron1 82 :<-i>20thash·e wiring. Npt High. 548-3075. State Lie. Bl-114321 963-4452. ~~~epalting,. Ref's req'd. MANY MORE ~ , , OK, no pen;. ;155 & $160. l ha trpl 1 N 1,.:::::::::c,,=-'=O:...-~-7 \\'. . Costa Mesa DALMATION 673-0041 549-2170 ......-vuvo ~ CAREER M2-lG52. 1; d~r. ~a_~:J3°&1~~~: SINGLE / couple share 2 3 door's otf PlaC{)ntln Vic Green Valley JACI< T u1 . Jobi Wanted, M & F 704 BABYSITTER wanted, my OPPORTUNITIEi: ' •! Groovy Bache\ol'!I pud. $130. Yrly $250 Mo bedroom house .$80 monlh, f<2"02· 1"'2.\UND~~mN1. 96H514. remod. :dd~TI'c ~-i P::OOI2'. ho~, 4 <laya week. 9anr ' 1 , ~·. All util pc1:wlk bch. Call: ·6n.3663 642.2253 Eve~. plus utilities. 548-8022 "" . evl's . .nu· FOUND: White Cockapoo, My Way Co. 815-3105. COUPLE, Domestic, Ex· ipm, 15mo <>Id ch l Id, -let Our 20 Years. Of ,., Calif's Lrgcst Rent<\l._A~cy 435 * COSTA MESA * puppy cli p; vie. Ogle St., cel\ent local references. 962-0717 aft 1 pm or anytime Pr0f•1aai-.al .Expe tt Homeflnders -"f.1641 Girages for kent • 1300-17~7400 sq. ft. Private Costa Mesa. 645-2944. Gardening < $1000. Far East Agency, wkends. l'l .... ...., h .r 18 •.-,, eWALK TO BEACH MINI WAREHOUSES offices. Plenty of parking. FOUND: Dog mixecJ golden GARDENER of 22 yrs ex (213) 387-5196. BABYSITTER lite house-PRl~t"'VCO\f WlttlThlt Rcat.ly for occupahcy. sll()rt hair, Vic; Temple , · • Help W•nttd, M & F 710 keeping ~1y house, Mon-'1"' •• orpot• on Brand ne-.v 1, 2 & 3 BR. Car· STORAGE C. ROBERT NA1'TRtSS Hitl11; Laguna 494-4737 per. \\lxl ls ~no\vledgeable Fri, 7:3().5, Infant, Mafure A"l9·\\'esteriy Pla,.. .pets, drapes. blt·ins. No J\1ove·in or Jl;Jovc-put RLT .' ' . ' • & proud ol his work seeks --..~~..._ v. 0 m .n n f w m 16lh st. 817-3957 charges. Fron1 ~7.50 per (osta Mesa · 979-6571 FND: ~1an1ese. cat -G~en-4 or 5 add maint joQs. ~-.-v--•-----~ans:~rtaiion. ~J ~1~m Suite 2fll Ne"'I>0rt Beach · . ..;wJLK To--a·EJ(CR -ARtr-NEWPORT--o~tlr.-· ~~.._ 0• J.ree . ..t.1:act •. Irvme::.ru:ea...::Call. -George~Man1 1\t:t-ouno1 · 1o SlitK 1acAtth~ltt.hl-c-2r8~ &. 3 BR. Carpets, APARTMENTS llanullon .~ ?\.;\\'lan.-J St., JIB 4001 BIRCH, NB to .identify. 5.'il-2970. * 549-2015 it AC',COunt/Cost to $l$ BAB YS I TTER, J it e . drapes, bltins. 308 ·16th St. Bachelor l or 2 Bedrooins ALLSPACE 3600 sq. ~I. J5c per sq ft UNO blaclt male cat. PR01'~ESSIONAL gardener ' Sr. Chemist to $16K housekeeping ·Daily'. p/t,l::iP:iic;i";":::;:::C';';' ;iF;ior:::;:::D;''"';';·';'°;"';;! 536-8:>48 or 847·3957. and TO\ITihouses 960-1970 ~IO\\' going rate. It. n1fg, Green eyes. Clubhouse Ave., irce \\"Ork, Prun in g: Teleprocessing, 360/BAL Chvn car. 3" older children, I r $19-i 50 0 9 D ·1 \\·hS!e. strg. Baumgardner Newport Beach. 6~9 sprinklers, clC"nnup jobs, Programmer $121': Call M·F, 8-:>P~1 &l,l-9'2-12 : • DOG RUN · l'. · pen ·6 ai ,Y $25 for 10 x 20. $40 for 541-5032. FND Sian.tese Cat J a 11 d !'i cap i n g . Grorge, ~1arketing Secretary to $700 BABYSITTER. 11oosekl'C'~r. Cl.ERK I 2 B $•~• r-i!d~s pool • Spa ·Pools Tennis 12 x 28 w/10 x 11 high door. 1300 Sq f M "'" ~ooo Lo •-C -' $700 '-1· t ,.., r, '"""h·i·d~o"k "s·4:, .,.,.,; Across fron1 Fashion Island \V. Costa f\fesa. 494-1763 , t. -1 space Cannery Village area ~~. 11.n ~rv. oun1>1r own lransportal"'n, ive in •RErlO'. gar, c 1 • -.ww, at Jantboree.on San JoacJUlll w/front office, lge rear 673-8800 EUROPEAN Gardener. Sec'y/Dictaphone IO $625 or liC'e <>ut. 6'!0-0166 eves • 84i-4504. Hills Road. Office Rent•1 .. 440 door $180 mo. 1793 \Vhittier, . ~ · Payiitryp.isVPvt. 675.ofroO. ' CM. "'"5033 d•v"·. "'" -YO_ UNG. fe1na_ le Calico cat_, 1a1ntenance -Landscaping. Club 1600+, BABYSITTER .. cd •,· NEW APT', adults. ""IS, 1.~ 1714) u•1900 "'"..---.."' V"11rvo.:u M i d T~ Removal Vcrv "ant my 'CLERK •· -NE W 011· · · f eve" v1c. agno 1a & A Anis, '" • , FJC Bkkpr/0··-tarv -·• " , . patio/f£>nced yd, t stO"''· ~VESTCLIFF, iovely freshly auorneys, insurance or RE H.B. <11-8), 546--0483. l'easona e. eves. Jr Landscaper to $600 nie or c'i" ys, · • ·l ml.. ·to bch. 2 Br. huge ice, partihon or "' " bl &42-5329 -"=•" '" -ho I 3 bo 124 PM 1 • ., . ed 2 b I S: O 800 r.1-1 1m sq. fl. 786 Newton . COMPLETE LA\VN ~'y/Purchasi.ng lo $600 Call 11.U 4, v.w-9624. ·~ $220. 846-Jl66. paint r, 1 ba upper deve opers. 360/11 . \\Tay, CM. $200/mo. Lease. IRISH setter, male._ Vic. SERVICE a rk . S550 EXP Bab . l t / Lt . ...._ 2 BR. crpls, drps, bllns, w/frplc. Crpts & drps, bltn Sq. Ft. incl util, A/C & Call 6~5-285(), 8-6. Nev.'()Ort & 20th 962-3959. Ins~ance e _ · Y s 1 er · P(>rter offers p e r'l!1an en 1 ~ rt N h . hi & range. Lrg gar. Prefer janitorial service. Np t RENT 600 sq. ft. SlOO/'IO. Lost SSS c'LE!OANW _ANDUPS ~~?<?1E39 Typist lo 3550 Hott!!elretpcr 5 days week, employment, ruiid vac&Uon ~ carpo · r. s P g. sc · person OV<'r 40 "'·ho likes Beach Airport area. .,. ~" Rceept!Type ~ ~ AM. Rl'f!>. CM area. aftl'r 6 mono:.-plus 1 week ._ fnvy. $165. l child ok, No quiet & refined atmosphere MULLAN REALTY, 3400 ~4 Randolp~, _CM. (Sh<>p REWARD_, lost in Vic: 17th AN\ AND AU. Gardening, Back Ole ~Iechcol $425+ 5'16-l488 paid time oU at Oiristmas !:' pets. 646-3786: 54.:H1760. $Z10. 673-1664. Irvine. ;>40--2960 No. 9) Call 61:>--all6. St. & Orange Ave., CM ., Trash Hauling. Complete Acctng . Clrk Tme/Ty~ $400 BABYSI'l'fER-DayUme Company Pftid·llfc, bosf,ltal: ~ LGE 2 BR, 11 ~ Ba Studio. SfPS to bch, lrg mod, 2 FIRST t'month rent free. 800 SQ Ft. office, furn or Year old Fem Irish setter Service. Glen 530-3240 or MR~hlmsts s.,.51) hr E\'es. Responsible lady. i'IUrglcal, 1nl'dical, and den· t Encl f.J1~· ri,ntant sZ~4.t~o br, trple, Ix-am cC"I. all bl! Deluxe oflices nr airpol'L unfurn, cpts, drps, N.B. SS5. puppy, found please contact 894-2312 Office Boy/Man "2·25 hr Refert:nces pref. 6#-5937 tat .bernllill and also educa· ,•,' *pc*ts'. Br. ·""''mo 0 ,· i"nt. c'~,:1 ins, $2'L \vinter $21;> yrly l, 2 & 3 Rm. spaces tron1 &16-;172.-1 Sue, 646--0897. 221 Cabrillo D & 1'.1 GARDENING ~ ~ BABYSITTER. part 11nie. 00~! assistanct': Ex~llent ,,., ~ "'"~' Newport Crest ~·Br 3 bh. $135 per mo. J anitorial Storage 455 St., Ci\IL Lawn mainlcnance & gen'l CCD\IV"ES•"rc .... irv Lake Park atta Call vrork1ng ~\11ons Bnd ·.. garage. Chi\rl & sn1all pet ok pool/tennis crts, $ 3 7 5 scl'VicC" & antple parkinJ?:. LOST Al M 1 t clean-up. Very reasonable. ..>UV S\... J"\\,JU""t'-I 536--0721 gt'O\Vth potC"nnal. JL• 833-2840 af ' cma ' ' e gray, JERRI· WHITIE~10RE 0 .ice gir r<'q or records ma n aiement ::! $150. 847-814fl. \Vinlcr $47:i • ....ly, 642-3490 8.t1-3223 Bef. noon or STORAGE bu•"id,·ng $ 3 o 1· ie as ,·1 &-a amu e3. Dennis -645-6498 CALL TRISH HOPKINS BACK 11. · 1 "d f Openlilgs aval1aCl.e in <>Ur 2 BR, 1 BA. Bit-ins, cpts, NPT J.fgts .• 2 BR, 2 BA I. noon. n1onthly. 275 Flower, C.l\f. yrs, 80 bs, Name Siska, Exper. Amer. Gardener 488 E 17111 St. (at Irvine) C)I OB/GYN ofc. Send resume department, for an in· '". drps. 64 1 ,~~ ~~.,be1;.3c6h $175 $250 Bllns, crpts. drps, nr. Pn"y-... Offt'ces 646-9136 FV or urrounding area, Afo. Ma.int., Tree trim, Suite 22_. 642_1470 to P.O. Box 3992, Long divkiual . ,,tp operate •;. ; mo. 5-....................... · fl arbor Hi Sehl. Gas & \vtr u1s Rentals W1nted 460 Re \Va rd/TI4--962""907 or Lindscape . 552-8101 7 Beach. 90800 reprod~ tQulpmenL ~; 1 BR. Fireplace. 4 blocks pd, Ph 646-2723 eves orcon1monentrancetolthru:> TI4-968-4928. G IS ~ BARTENDER -FEi\1ALE Hea~ll!tlat,f n v<>lv ed . t: to beach. Gas paid. 415 15th 6'16-7382 days. ofrices. Harbor & BakC"t' TEACl lING studio b i g LOST: altered, black male en~ra · trvice1 Experienced. Apply in per.ion Three ~lb:s t'Xperience .. , . St, Huntington Beach. San Clemente 11rea, Costa· Mesa. For in· enough C for dh\'IOM Grand 1\laruc cat (oo tail). Ans. "THINGS" by Moose. Gen'! ACCOUNTING betwttn 11 an1 & 4 pm. re4'uired. -/ • • $!50-l BR 1 ----------1 form1:1tion ('all 515-8'124, pianos. orona e ar area to "Bump." San J uan Hills Mr. l\.fl\flnan, Holiday Jim, A...,..,: ~·r :~: .... .... :: ... ·:: .... ·~ '• ' · ;nu crp ~. garage. NE\V 2 BR, l l.:. Ba, ocean SoulhCo Realtors. J. B. i\.liddleton, 673-4520, Go 1 f Course area Carpenti'Y, Repairs, Plum-CLERK 3131 Bristol C t A>f """' 1,.,blks to to~·n. 5 blks lo ,_ !•!!!!!~~~~~~~~ _654 Via Lido Nord, Newrvnt SJC 49,__::.,~~ bing. EI e c . Remodeling ' os a esa. ftEIJEC .ch 5,5 7th SI H B view. Top area, super ...,. J""....,., "A2 =13 BEA'-o~ •--1-" L . Baacti .. , deluxe, adults, $200., EXEC. SUITE Beach. . • SNOOPY sml :Fem, Blue-; r . 2 Yrs A/P & AIR exper. wl;;;;; fotlo=tn'; .;::;_ ~ -. I ;•;g;~;";•;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;I i49~2f,-22&1~!;_· -------!Large Ocean Vie\V office & SANT A H.e1ghts, a Br. 3 Ba. point Siamese \\•/blue collar au •ng Good general accountlng p/llme. 792 Cf'nter St, Costa BU&JNESS • SYSTE~IS I• Apf·S recept. area in Union Bank frple, td1~ J111, :a~ ~·~ "'/rhinestones & ID tag, LOCAL nioving & hauling background. Type 50 w.p.ni. M~a. 64)-0531 lnll Armstrong Avenuf' EDGEWATER Fu'r' n, or Unfurn. 370 .,h.idJg~!.'e\\']Xlrl Center. Avail nu crp s _ · _ rps, 11 :r•u disappeared 11-5 ( r o nt b t d t Larg tru k Heavy work toad. 10 key BOAT p · t ~i . Irvine Industrlal Complex t 2 Bdrm, 2 ba. North end. ..... f2131 535-0a14 alt 6 PM, \\'estcliff area. Call 646-4ll9 Y s u en . e c . adder. am ~r-.. a1ntenance Santa.Ana.. Calif .. 92705 Vu. 3.,?68. per n10. Adults Balboll Peninsul1i Mr. McFarland, 644-9440 ~1~21~3~1~3~73-~2966~-~~~~~IWST Catherwood, lg 1 yr ~7~rry. 534-1846 or ~isJ.xpenencl'd. Phone An equeij] .. mpoio~o·rmtllunlty nl 01'~FICE Space nr. Orange 1 I · h "-M" h Call For Appl. ,,~~ o y, ... ma e ris .x-lter. IC • GET RID OF UNSJGlrrLY Industrial Relations BOOKKEEPER I sccretaryl"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!! .. 1 * * * * * 2 BR apts. Ye a r l y. Co. Airport \VIV i e \V. I 11•1 rags. Vk. of >lth & Newpor t TRASH & DEBRIS. $12 for oonstruction company.1' CLE' RK TYPIST 01eerful l B<lnn. $200. per Peninsula. 1 blk Bay & C.ilrpeting, drapei:, air, 460 · Personal• '!3-,1:~· .. 7Re6 ward97;. ~a7111 anytime Lo AD. CO LLEG E (714} 494-9401 Apply nt 17581 Irvine Blvd., G t •·-· sal f mo. No pets. Beach. New d cc or. sq. ft. at 41c per Sq, 'Ft. . -,,. """:.>.> or .....al . STUDENT, ~ s ·1 lM Tusf rea 1 ..... mg ary or * * * * * $2'25.-$255. Achilts. 1310 W. 556-8530 or S45-59~ TELO IC ui e · in. 11h8.rp indiv. w/avg typing Spac. 2 bdrm. in Nol1h. enrl. Balboa. 642-4568 or 675-3457 DESK space available $50 LOST !\tale Bro\vn long hair YARD. garage clean-ups, N BUSBOYS WANTED & Ute ex-per. Xln't1 Oppor No "lcp<, Adul<s o11ly·. ~225. 530 puppy, black nose, black remove dirt. ivy, driveways, INDUSTRIES A i 400 M i S lo dv ;o ~ ~ Costa Mesa n10. \Viii provide furniture Personals around eyes. Rewal'd, Lost PP Y a n I. r 8 ancement. per n10. al S5 nio. Ans,vering service ---------11/10, 648-1423 slumps, grading. 847-~ Balboa'. arter 6 pni Jason Be1t Agency * * * * * THE EXCITING available. 17875 Beach Blvd. LIF'E qR D.EATH . _ LOST A-tale Irish Sr-tter, 32 IT. FURNITURE Van lagurwi Beach BUSBOY, Eves. 5:30-10:'.Ul, 17400 Brookhurst, F. Vly. l Bdrn1, close in. Adulli:. no PALM MESA APTS. lbu1tington Beach. 6.fl-4321 Let oui: babies hve. Foi al· \Vcaring choke collar & fie for local turn hauls & gen'! 6 Days, Must be over 17. Suite 213 963-677~ pets .................. Sl60. f\'lfNliTES 'fO NPT. BCH. 1617 WESTCLIF·F-NB tc1Tiat1ves 10 ,\BORTION, Ii p' a hauling. 548-1862, 557-2736. Equal Oppor. Employer Amelia'!!, 673-6580 cr,K, EXPER. II Lil.E LINE "1 "22 2' co ar. ease call S ck 1350 So. Coast H\1ry .. ,,,,.,,. Fl!RN. OR UNFURN. mxJ. 1200, 720, 54-0 sq. ft. ca 1 :>.J • ..., , ., 64:>-8748/~8-9774 KIPLOADER & dump tru CARPENTl.1t fixer wanted,. Good y. Apply in person Lagtma 494--3o Unbelievably l~e apts., 55c per sq ft. Ample prk'g. hl's. , , . . Lost gray, tan & \vhlte tabby \\·ork. Concrete, a.spha1t, ACCOUNTING CLERK Exchange rent free home Crown House Restaui'ant, ~ugC" pool , Jacuzr.1. C"lect bit· Util. Baumgardnet". 54.1·50.12. ALON~. WH~ ·. \Vritc Miss cat. Lg. green eyes, Harbor sawing, breaking. 846-7110. Fee Paid 1 year for part time pat· corner Pae. Coast HWf •• & 2 & 3 BR, ocean view, New. ins, shag ctpls, drps, sauna OFFICE /be ff 1 . Ranch,. Clas.~1bed Ad No. 'v"u Homes area. $25 • Housecle1ining Mnjor corp. seeks sharp 1n-ching 2.halves ot Jge ~me Clown Valley Prkwy. $UO to $llj. 494--2339 or etc. Adults, no pc!s. 565 SQ ~ F auh~ u I ~1: 10_, Daily Pilot, P.O. &;ix re\\lard. 675-5923 or .,,1329 div w/good figure aptitude nlO'VtMi to lot. Matenals 32802 Pacific <:out Hwy. 494-3383' SINGLES 1''ro1n $150 . • as ion . s a 1560, Costa Mesa, Cahf. ll'tV"" for groy,.·th spot. Co. pakt fur.Glshed. · 67r'7l88, (eve Laguna. Niguel I B'EDRi\1. :From $16.i $42.l per mo. Professionally 92626 WST Reward, b Ion de vacation, hoUdays, n1ed & 613--1337) M "'sa Verde 2 BEDRM. From $185 decorated &10-ll20 sCi-1ooL 1 h 49 ~"II" Cocker Spaniel named life, retirement & stock O~CEN ,:=;,,,SU;;;S:,E"°nu ___ m_era_,t-ors-. "'12""'.10 CdOOaysK.••kgra. Cove.~ld ·be""ne"h1·, ... 6. Unfurn Apts Avail front $10 OFFICE space for rent. • eac er ' a ' Gregory, JD tag. Vic tions! Call Burt Long, ho ct f Sa J ,,,.. ~ • HOME ATMOSPHERE -to $15 LESS. L.arlies pref'd. Call i\.Irs. \65 lbs, lon.ley need gal nr Newport PiC"r, 642-1802 833-2700 Al I" J bs per · ur. 1 y 0 .n uan Alao, p/Ume larich help, Dix 2 & 3 Br, $l70 up. You're rlgh1, lhey'rc undC"r· Parsons, 644-7570 my age, sincere, start nu · Dennis .& o:::nis Perso~ei capiatrano. Approximatcly llam-2pm. Appl)r i_n"pel'Son, Rental Ofc, 3095 J\.1ace Ave. life inarriage mipded. PO LOST \\'hile CO:Ck·a-poo type 25 enumerators 8:re needed Jack,ln The Box 1205 Baker rl-IS--l034 prirC<!! Jj()l 1\1esa Dr. :~oo SQ. FT. Box 1148 GC club dog. Short hair, red collar, Agency <>f Irvine, 2082 to oonduct a. special census, St 01 15 blks fron1 Ne\\•port Blvd.J Crpls, drps. $95. n10. Costa Ans. 10 Barney. 17th & San~ f\flchelson Dr. between Nov 27 & Dec s.1..=::·:..· ='------- 546-9860 Mf'~a. 646-2130 BEST J\.1ASSAGE IN N.B. ta Ana Avf'. Vic. 645-8180. ACCOUNTING Appncants must be <>vet' 18 COOK, f/limc. will train. M!ssion Viejo * C1\SA VICTORIA * SUITE next lo Liquor Store 3·100 Irvine Avf'. Suite 1A0~1B LOST: \Vh ite Female Afghan roMPLE.IE CLEANING No Experihnce Required; yrs old l able lo work Convalescent host> It a I, I. z & 3 BR. Furn & Unf. & Restaurant. Lrg 1000 sq. (at Bristol) Open 8 h. Hound . Vic. Pacific & Vic· \Vindows, Floors. Rugs , Train at Full Salary, at leasl 6 hrs per rtav. ~&lcc:l--05:..:;:.:93::;·~~---'-~ Carpets, drapes, O/\V, TV r1. S275. 846-1323. Ann . toria, Cl\1. IH2-3848. Paint. Free est 64;;.-3716. Benefits.'. M/F, 18-34 ~~ ;1n J~~ fapistr(:':'O• COOK·l''RY Cook Expcf. See .: '-· 2 BR. cpts & drps, Pvt. i.: Los ,\liso 'Villa. Rec. privil. :: $210 830-9569 ': Newport Beach ·. . :· --. -. ., • ' .. • • • ' ' OCEANFRONT darling new 1 BR. Spil'al slalrs 10 loft BR. Ingle Nook. '~-et bar, cpts. drps. D/\V, Ydy/67;'}-1536. NE\V 3 BR. 2 BA apt. Bltns. frplc, laundry. \~ blk ocean. S350. Day!'i 9m-.3165: Sat & Sun, 6..ia--0232 LARGE 2 BR, 2 BA, cpts. drps, D/\\', bllns, 5225 mo. _lldull~. no pets. Nr. Hoag H~p1lal. 612-.:1* ~:A~IBJ.UFF ,\11rar. 2 IlJ:., 2 B:i , r rpls, rtrps, h•plc, :! ~IJJll C<l.l'flO'i. $.100/1110. : f~ll-0079. • t OCEAN Vic,v, >'<'arly 2 Br, I Ba. duplC"x. SZ-JO. 644-6i80 • or 642-3639 PLEX 3 br 2'btl RD bltns, btk to bch. xtra 1rg. Nle-e f.t!C!. Yr rocind t-827.i.t33,? Y ttnlaJ .. 2 BR. ¥1/f;,M, $275/rno. C1\LL fii3..GG.to ant. Pool, etc. 525 Victoria B . R f I 445 1 Business Rental 445 LOST grtty Poodle, Vic Heil Interviews No1v aseo e anto, 1ty 'T'om or J im, House of Pan· SI. at Harbor, Ci\.1. 642-89701 :r.u~s~>~n~es~s~~e~nia~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil &. RR tracks N. llB Ans HOUSECLEANING Call Army Opportuntics Hall, SJC. 493--1171 cakes, 329 E. l7th St, C~t Ask about our special "1\:love Salurdays only. No Tran!lp. (714) 645-1163 in AllO\\'ance. to Charley 847-2278. $2.50 Hr .. Rt'l!a. 642-5299 CHRISTMAS COOK· for child day care LOST ' d. di d 0 ADULT fJl'(!f'd for , 11 t l' center. Year round. 5 how's I Br unf. & Bach. furn. Pool. a ies amon mega Masonry manuf. technical & manual JO ' &15-6.1 Crpls, drps. sto\'e, ref1·ig. M Ac NA B gold \\Tisi "'atch. Reward! ;,;:::;:.;c;.::..J<------dexterity· 'desirable. Will BS day, $2. an hr. -70 Adults, J1() pets. S97 Ci'nter * 673-3838 * AIL types of · brick block train. Please phone , • C 0 P Y W R IT E R ~Trade St. Apt. 2, C.M. 548·6130. ~fALL honey rolored fem. & slumpstone work. Free 548-5435 or 548-f211. MEN&: WOMEN ~soclation for Seryl ce H , w/ black n1uzzle. Sh<>rt est. 963-1855. SALES 13usine&1 needs c:opyWriter unhngton lleoch I RV IN E hair. 64&-&122 p liDVERTISING SALES to handle public relations aintinv a , It lidver,tlsin&". Probably DELUXE adult po o I s id e l _;P~•;iP":.::,'h:.:•::ntiint::?.---I Male & temale' 4 Great op-CUSTQl,4.ER SERVICE part-t!me. Send reirume & garden bungalo,v, nr ocean, 1-Mdfloplirs I~ mport, .. 1!'!!;'...tor, ... ~~dwkistrl_:! financial l't!Qulremen·ta to frpl, lrg patio, 6 pools, PROF. walloovertnf state ._...... ..,,.,..,._, ,,. Now Aecepthtg applications po ft~w 1748 Sa An sauna. tennis. 846-0259. lie. No. 279514, Insur., all more, depending on ex· for· full time & part time · ' UAM ' nta a, Also.1 B,. From ll?ii. -STUDIO_OfLOF.E l.(;E_SPAi:E types ol poper. 714' 1 ~pe!!'ri~e,.nce~. !!64![!:;..363~~L~~~ pot;ll!oni. Day• & evening ~':!'~i.:::OL .~ua! Oppir. CARDEN A.pis. 2 & t br, fo r lease in exceptional building in Desion &4z.:,4.186. l: schedules available, '· I ~ Accountl-PROF \"all · SI ii AIDE, Pi'e·SchciOI, ~ew1i>fr ..--;:-.._ ---::. •. ~ -* C(:>IJNTER GUU.. IOil' dry fu1•n & unfuni. xo ehildren Plaza, Newport Center. Structure"" P aza ··• · .v oovcnng. • c. n -h !190 H '°P'I AEly In Pm-Min clcM.. i"• p'lt\nt, o.s'1tmbli ..... , I 19822 B kl I . • no 279514, ins, oll """"'S of ocac • · r. .,..,,. " ' 0 ·• ·• ~::pas.rt Bea~:' iurs • provide a stim ulating & informal cnv1-ACCOUNTING & paper. 71•11812-4~.",,,,,.. c&lcclh!8>1:..:::::;;;,·~~~~~-D SM ND'S ~~~ :rec~~~in0~ ;f1j ron1nent for design professional & busi· TAX SERVICES PROF, paintel\ honest \\'Ork, AN OHIO OIL co. <>He-rs NEWPORT lrain. 6 d8.Yfl. Apply ln Bachelor Furn $205 ness executive. Suites available from 400 ReosonalJI<'. ca I I (114) rcas. lnt /e.X'I, free C"Stimnte. PLENTY OF ·l\lONEY plus 2 BR Unfurn. $235 sq. (t. to 3600 sq. ft . Page Noll 642-2757. fi7:>.66i6, 11.sk t01.· ftlck. nets. 548.2759, 642.3913. cash bonuses, tr inge . J)O. 3 Ftt§hion Islnnd -) B benefit., to malurc In-CHRISTMAS ~ VIC\\'. \'early lease. (t41 •bytlttlng STORE FRONTS, ROOMS & dlvidua( in beach orea. u .. ted Pool. Adult> Only. INDUSTRIAL SPACE FOR LEASE BABYSIT my home doy-8~ia~lir764~· RegardlcH of expeticnce, ' LAS BR I SAS APTS. Quality air-conditioned office, 3000 sq. ft. nights-weekend. By hour doy al>' mail A. F, Read, Pres., DEPARTMENT STORE Sfil5Ca!Riverl •• !':!,~,NB . wi·lh· 2400 sq. ft. warehouse (part of larger or weekly play room-fenced HI QUALITY, LOW $ American Lubriceli<o r.eo., "SANTAS" .,....."'1W yard. ·Near F.ader-School Uc, tns, RN e 542-1701 Box 696, Dayton, Ohlo ~. Son Cltmtn.. l>ldg.) with separa te a11dress, identity & -*W•llptptr H•nger* ANSWERING atn'lce NElEDEDNOW parking. Choice Irvine Industr ial Complex MO'IllER of 2 would Uk• earl ~bko &IJl.%449 ~l•~ 6opr.,;.;,k•~nd d';g $167.50 month. we train & LOVELY OCEAN Vu. or. location. Page Noll 612-2757 •. (142) Jo bahY<t 1-2 chl\Oren. Fen-INT/EXT PAINTING ~,1 , ·-·na s, provide '°'tumea •t no tee. N. &ach. 'I, 2 or 3 BR. oed yard, tnf'all. Nr NpL . .,.0._,"' rw" • ..._.. • Apply~ Pme, Long Bench. no pets , 1541 Buena Vi&lo, 1.NDUSTRIAL•COMMERCIAL Dt\'ISION HJlll. &IHS47. F"" Ell J>m ....,.,u ANSWERING Service, Dex-!2L1l 43U971 collect. pel'llOn. , . flVE PQJNT CLEANERS 111&11 Mioln , SI., •HD * M7-2411G * P/tl.,.., APP.lY tn~ Sntcli ~ No. 1 .23115 E. Cotlt 11'1')' .• ()iron.a d~l fl.thr, ciUf. Equal Oppor. ,Empl.,,,r S.Clem. 49H370. [ • I -I BABYSITTING -in my INT/EXT PAINTING ibie hn, lnclud,. wtmdl. WESTERN GIRL ~I-C::i ._..,, for .. -400kln• IMne Mee•.,.. ...... ,~. ' "' hOtJse. day or nlaht, loving t¥: Wallpaper S.16-7887 ~~~~~la: ~ neccise. SANTA DIVISION 1 ,. £.-.....,"" _ "'V' "' • ciu-e, Ira lncd yrd, 642--5299. Plaster Pitch R•p•lr · · · An ·equal opp1.y, employer , .• .___ •• , "i Ctrptn .. r ' ' -ASSEMBLERS • DENTAL AJiS)ITTANT man, _,..., 1'~cnt. "r. 901 Dover Dtlve• 142•2.757 QUALITY plaslotlng . a I I Cnpaslto' Mlg need• female . CLERK TYPIST For Petloi!on"'t, I/time. priv. 5*-122.f.' &12-0227 Carptnlry, electrical, plum.IJ.. types ~stucco, Sp3n\1h electronics MM!mbltri. No Catik>lt exp. prerd. C ol Expari'dcd dutk!1, oppor. Thelulest~wtn .1heWest.l Newpor.t Be1ch,calllorn[1 12663 Ina, fix-it.•·" B •y<IU'ly. 1extun!;add. W~11U3rclean exper nec.smy. F~• G S83 W. l91h SJ.,°"' E<'per, nee. l\unl. B<h • . • .a DtD¥ Pilot Oa•~Uied !!!!!!!!!!! Home Repair,' &l~·l'M53. &. nice Job. m..50U 11i.y11. Start at $1.80. 1 Mm. ~1162-=661=1.,.,.._ ___ _ ' . ..., ' ' ' I I, • i ' ' 1. t -.. ~,;,c;..:;;.:;;;;.::;;!,;::;.:::.;.~:.;.;::!:;.;.;.;::;::::!!,.:::;!!.!.!.!.:'.. c=;..;.;·=='---'..;.:..-'--'.:..:. : .tt ~.:' ':ce.:W::;•:;n;:l::ed:::•~.;:_:...;..:; I :.:::•;rP:..W:.:.:•:.:.nl:.:•.:d,~M.::..:&:..f:....:,7;.1 0: I He 1 p W tn , M & I" 710 ;.;.;c,;....c.;;,"-"';..:."-"'~..;..;.; Delivery-Sunday Only ' . .GF llA~ 1 PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE- QUIRES tHE USE OF A LARGE STATlON WAGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR. HARRY SEE~'li, ~WEST BAY STREET COSTA • MESA,. llELEPHONE 642-4321 FOR lP- PO"INTJilENT. £MPl.OY1'1£N'J\ OFf'ERED JANITOR. p/Un1(!. ~t e I a MINIATURE n1u ch In l !I t P/TIME SALES Male, &nuill Ute n11orf oo. Verde Conv. T!osplt111, 661 tM\lnt>e ~·antt'd. ti-tin 3 )'t'I \Vot•k 1 ve/~·k. Party sales 1leedl rellabl~ f It i m <! Center St., CM 51~ e.-.:per. on 11n1all equlpn1e11t. exr,r. helpful. Should earn employe. Oppor. lo grow JANJTOR· J>flfl. time.&: full Must bu r!hle 10 N"ad blue JlS /party. ~~3100, lofr. Ula:· w/co. Min, exper. n!q'd. time. ~enoo pttferred, print & mtk~s. 548--5219. al°"'· m-2290, Jim CI; o • • 5'11~ MODELS. MODELS ....... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ....... "''ffkday1. JOBS 1 tud ?iJOOEt.S E~EC. SECRe'fARY Plti.1ie ~~ 1i0'SJ. Snelnt~ WOM'EN, Mnl Fee Paid $TOO ..... IWI Cnll -2258 \\'ANTED FOR FALL l ....., . 0~~ ' & WINTER ~~g ,!= t've= JUNIOR.SALESMAN: FASllIONS.CA LLFORAPT! Xln't beoclits. Abo }~ee Po. Eam 1»$40 per week "A'Ol'k· 675-8i'12 sitioos. Call £Uy Ellis, UV afl:tt scbool and Satur. AMERICAN BEAtrrJF.S PORTRAIT ARTIST 556-8500, Control Career Em· da,y1 se.Ulog new sub!ICrl~ ~10DEl..S ACADEa.1Y Equ•I Opportunity Employer ploywenl -· HOO tlooa '"'the DAILY PILOT. 3100 NEWPORT BLVD NB 1 ;.'-';;.,,~",;,.,::;;,;~-4~;...,,~==~~~--~~~-l-'"""'"'j'"'~BIEv~d.t,;i;N;i.B~.iCi;--~ ~~t~~ =de ro: MOTOR ROUTE Thanksgivbw It Ouistma1 openings for talented por· lni.it Rrttst able lo do quick profile sketches In pastels. H1I ' WJ~.,ci, Ml F 710 Help Wanted, M &. F 710 EXECUTIVES liveries or eoUectina. Opel). \Ve have nn opcnin~ ·for a, $15,000 to $75,000 ln1:5 In Costa Me$3, 1''ountain mQtor route cwTier 1n ~utb 'DE -~ 0FC. MGR. Send resume or call TODAY Valley and South Huntlngton Laguna • Laguna Nigi1el l>ent • sPlicr&.1.1.st • n Ce d s Dlshw•1h1r1 NM<Mc:I , . lot . conlidentlal NO' COST Beach Appl)r now by calling NDvember l i;t. Please call DISNEYLAND Real E•tate Licenslrig Let us pay hall of· rour II· t.:f'n.1!1111: re<r. \\11th ou1· spon· sorship $75.00 \\'ill pay for YoUr llChoo.tlna t h r o u a h Lun1hleau ft.l'al E11a1 e SchOol and get you llef>nsed ht A.(nerica's areat!'n bus- lnC'8s • Real Eslah~. RESTAURANT QLLY ~1alnlt'ntince l\l fl n \Vanted, G da.vt1 ~·k. lnqu.i1·v In ~rso!'I, Rusly J>tilican, 213.'l W, <»a.st Hwy., N.B. Robinson's Fashion Island Now Hirin9 Far Christmas All Areas + Security SALESJ>~:Rst>N. t>xper In notall gift 1t0&-e, [){lys, eve" & wkend1. 1t1u.lt have re(lf. Buggs Inlernatk>nal, .2013 \YettcllU Dr .. N.B. ' SEAMSTRESS FUii time, Mt-n &t ladles pr- rnen1s, Call for '•ppt, Clo\vn CICM{ll"", 1)41·2512. Sec'y Exec. $IOO Larger Than Lif1f : ree Paid ~ This position offen cballerig,e & re•rionslbillty ln a lP· u1ioo1 lK'tling! ?tl9Jor eo~ll benefits. C&ll Kim Cl , 833-2700. Aliw Fee , Dennhs & Dennis Personriel Ageney of lt'vlne, 2082 Mlc·hel!\On Or. ' 80ffi~ne 'vho enjoys work· ANCIENT MARINER executive lntervlcw. St8-ib Harry Seely, 642-4321 for fn. Plea11e Call I .. , q JW"/P'Jbllc. to,.haqdle bUS)' 06.Y le N\..+.t , EXECUTIVE-SERVICES, . 1 ... Equ.liiijii;;i.Oiipii'°'iii;iiEmiiiipiiloyiier"-f~ation and appointmf'.nt. <714) 533-4456, ext 6i8 ott. stmtind & typing nee. 260T W. eoa.J"itwy INC. • Equal Op(>orlunlty EnlpJoy. ~tonday thru Saturday !Not• • Bch. Sal. open. N..,,.... Beach &16-o:m 888 N. Main, Sant~ Ana LANDSCAPING -~""'·~------10 AM.4 PM VIDEO TRAIN ING \\1bllc you uro studying for your l\cen11a )'OU can ava il YQW'S('lf ol our rontinuous field lrainln.1: an<t Jd.\n Lum- bleau·Qouglas E d \V a r d a Video Training COUl'<J('S. This s uperb modem training Is available to an,y licensre cic. siring lo join our g1~1\'irtg 01'gnnlzation. Due to our rx· pu.nsion we have 011c11ings throughout Orange County. Colwell Properties, Inc. (serving all or Orange Couulyl CALL 833· 1.931 AJ}ply In person 1~5 No. 2 Fashipn 1111., NB Equal Oppor. Employel' SECRETARY Need for apt leasing d.,t. Previous secretarial exprr. AUTO SALESM~EN desired. F"J time. Mu5t be ' " ~l ~-', Apply 3 pm·S pm l\.1on-Fri Cn4l 547·962-. NEED someone to mow the Equal Oppor. En1ployer __ lawn. Must have own la\vn I..,,,;,,.,.,,;.;.,,.,...;..;.,.,. DENTAL Receptlon;st for ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"""'"""'"""'~FABRIC CUTTER, no exp. HORTICULTURAL mow'"-Seal Bch. !213) Ort~anjJc office ·in Hun-DlSltWASHER, I/time. G:in-nee. Irvine area. Ask lor 431_2260 PO\VER l\1achine Opr, exper. fu)g\On. Jkaeh I .fountain vale11eent Hospital. Patricia, 541}..3684 I ~=:::;;:o..-~-----Male or fem. for se"A'ing of REAL ESTATE SALESMEN Earn up to Valley 'erea. Sl'lould be ex· 642-0593 FEMALE SALES CLERK EST NITE ROOM CLERK heavy weigh! 1natting. perienced in all ~phaJe.s, DOMESTIC Help Geo.-a<> ""'"' t'-~ wknds. Spirits & P CONTROL \V/exper. Apply in person, Colgun Manuf. 1733 R. "111on-__ , R li ' .... -_.. "''"" Del w bb N rt 1 rovla Ave .. Costa l\1esa . -..al')' open. · &p es con· Allen Byland Agency, l06-B. SlUff, %!014 Del ,Prado, e s e\vpo er nn, ~f!.dentlal. 979-1400 E. lGth St., S.A. 547--0395. Dana. Point bfarma 49J-.8m. 1107 J amboree Rd., N.B. PR01'~ESSIONAL telepllone 85% DISH Up C 0 0 K • Exrerminator, exper. in pesU· sol icitor to ,~·m·k h'Om O\Vn * -DONUT Shop nltc shift age FUU.. lime service station clde~. rodenticldes, herbi· NOTE 1 home. Top 1.."0mmii1sions. COUNTER . GIRLS Pref. ,.... Ar.. In pe•~"n Mr. 0o' n"t, attentlant, c•per pre f • I I & -I I 1' t h •·~ "184 mature api\llcants. Ca ll J35E.17thS·-,. CM. Uniforms furnh1hcd. Apply c(cs . other tox ic c1em· Reil Estate Salesman ecp one o:iav-J SpaghelU Bender 645-0651 • · /Jil ., 261TI • -p cnls: Knowledge of bu~!~ lf vnu have a license or want REAL EST ;;;l·.t: SALES WWhoyrkWoFrokr FTohre LBeessst? 53&-38.iG ' ' DRAPERY · installer, cust Uruon ff.n. ~ a:t. horticulture & plant ldenlifi· 01~; see Peg Bolinger fo1· SUCCESS CAREER exp., M.Jary, 5 day week, 83~43;1 Crlsanta. 1tiV. cntlo~ essential .. l\l~t be confidential interview. Red :-:ew or experienced. Join the YOURSELF! Olshwaahf'r \VantOO \Veekends Off Call ilz.@3, DRAFTSMAN , DES~NER OrafiJman urgently needed lo do bonrd wo1·k for our new multi nllllion dollar fn· cllity In the Irvine ~ustrlal Complex. Background must include 2-5 yenrs of drafling or design experiepce tn the mcchan1cel or faciHUes field.. Excellent salary, v."'Clr1dni: condltlons & bene· fihi. Interested a[)plicants should call Mrs.• Ellen. Young. for appointment, (7141 556-7001. _MCGAW Non Smoker, intervlemi,l ,iiii;;iiii~· .. -iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I fa01lhar \V/p\ant d,isca.ses & co-t '91-1161 \Vorld's i .. _..,..,t and fastest lj their control -..-•., • _.6~a * ORANGE CO. OR SAN hfon-F'rt 4:30-5:30 p. m. G£HCDIL LABORERS s. growing resale organlm.Uon DIEGO CO. OF1'~1CES \Vlndo1v Des~ 3737 Birch '-"M DISNEYLAND Nurses Aides 7-3 with a neh\'<>1·k of over 500 Call Ed Kasabian St., N .e. S49-l061 ollices and become a DRIVERS member of our Millklnaire 962-6644 CROSS-COUNTRY Skllltd & Un1kllled Part·time. Insel'ters tor 1i1ail· Cl ub. Mu1ti-ml1Uon dollar l ~R-cce-pt-lo_n_;,,----,-0-l500~ No s..,_,.i .. 1 lie. _,·u,ed. Temporary Employn1ent ( rtease Call room al the Rdvertiseedlng lplrogi:am. ~I Lanai Beaglel ~-·-• A I ti 30 AM Mon-Fri 714} 53344.56, ext 678 guarant cell!Wlg SC.11<N . ·• l\.1acG1-egor Yacht Corp. PPY : ' Monday thni Saturday DAILY PILOT, Excellent sales training, Sought by prominent at· 1631 Placentia, C.M. MANPOWER, INC, 10 AM-4 PM 330 w. Bay St. Please call 542-5689. torney. Meet & greet in1· DRUGSTORE Clerk, must Costa Mesa. R.£. LICENSEE portant clients in elite set· be exp'd, good hours, good Equal Oppor. _Employer Apply in Person. See George * ting. Allraclive in rl Iv. pay, Bushard's Phannacy, 0 Arauz between 9·11:30 AM. SOllght . Fun office \1•/great 244 rortst, Laguna, 494-014.'l 1"¢e~:'~~-1~~':;,~iaJ Moo;: Personnel Counsellor tci manage on premises sn;iall ~-~~; ge~~~i!'I Lit ~~~~~ Electro mechanical training. Center St. CM 5'18-5585 'Ve have an imincdiate open· unit complex \vilh pool, and Personnel Ageney ol Irvin(', No exper necesMry. Good ' '\\V EN•'f'ORCEMENT ing in our o.wn office tor show to sell. F1't.>c apt. und 208'1 Michelson Dl'. Jxtnefits, i:::ood voorklng con· . '-: . . . . someone looking !or retter performance bonus. Also ---------- ditions. Hrs . 7an1-3:30pm $2. No E.-.:per1ence Required, than average earnings as bonus if sold. 642·2221 (lnsg. RECEPTIONIST for busy tir to start. Apply at 12.SlG 4-18 W. 19th St.reel' 'I'nun.At Full Salary. \Veil as job satisfaction. 646-9666) Bkr. Costa l\lcsa, Chiropractic Logan St, OJsta fdesa. or Costa Mesa 645-2043 Benefits. r.ttF, lli-34 Prefer saJcs· 'Oriented, self REAL ESTATE ofc. Exper. pref'd, "'ill call 540--0982 ,723 N. An1thelm Blvd. IntervleOA•s Now . . disciplined ind iv. \Vho en-SALESMEN train. 646-Q;)J.6 ELECTRONIC TECH Anaheim 774-8000 Call Army O~rtumties ;&ys a challenge. Exper. \\'hy not work in the hottest RECEPT I Typ i s t, ror 0--~ ... , dig>'tal & -alog (7l 4) S4a-llSl helpf"I. H h'l I l I' 5 d -·•·~--· L Ir_ area • untington Beach • arc l ec ura irm. ays circuitry. Diversified ~i>rk GENERAL OFFICE ega ~c'yTrainee Jason Best Agency Fountain Valley. Let us "'k, Co. ben. call for in· load in prod. testing ol In· ~fust Know invoicing & be X1n'l oppor. for bright indiv. 17400 Brookhurst, F. Vly. train you. Call Phil J\;Jc. -teIVle'v &K-8270 strumentation: . good typlst. Good figure a~ w/avg skills & desire to Suite 113 963~775 Namee, VIILAGE REAL ---------- Advanced Kinetics. t oe. titude. Perm. }""/time days. learn. \Vill train as pvt lo.! ESTATE, 963-4$7. RECEPTIONIST wanted . !-""OR SALES & LEASING attractive & good w/publie. SELL IN BOO~IING IRVINE "fyping req'd, min 60 w.p.m . COUNTRY! Ne"•port Beach &:e Personnel ?t1anag:cr Chevy.. dealer \\'ill add 3 Balboa Bay Club e~pel'icnced ron1bo salC!!· 1221 W. f'.oast H\vy., N.B. men. For new and used sales nnd ielllling. Excellenr SECRETARY-EXEC. pny plan and growth oppol'· Shrthnd, Ty~ & several lunity in ne\\' lacl!ities in yrs. exp. nee. to handle the hea.11 of thf' !RVINE this challenging position fqr INDUSTRIAL COl\IPLEX. dental SP<"Cialist Dent<•! ort. Sec Sn!es J\lI,,<T. no11·! I IO\\"ard f'Xpcr/not nl'.'C. but n1ust en· Chevrolet. l\1aeArthur & jQy working \V/publlc. Sal. .Ja1uboree Bl\•ds., NC1\·po11 Opt>n. Hunt &h. 714: 962-6671 lleal=ti. 83.l-O.tl,;. Sec'y1, 8ookkeepfir1 SALES ladies arc you bored Come To Our New Ofcs \\·/your job? \Ve p ay No Charge To You hosteSs to hao,,:e parties. Llz Reinders Agency Invite 3 rou11les Into your 4020 Birch Stref't home & ('arn up io SlOO. Suite 1()4, NB 833-8190 \Ve have pcnn anent posi· Established 1965 tions for hostess to assist ====~""'~'7-""""' our 1-eps in demonstrating SEC'Y. needed immed.·S/JI, a l'e\~lutionary nu product. typlng w/general office ex· Apply in person 1508 s. per to handle variety of Grand, S.A. 10 Al\1 & 3 duties '°" sml growth Co. p.in. l\.1on·Fri. Challenging position tor self 'starter. Contact Mr. SALESl\ifEN \1'antcd for Pay l\1organ $17-9'117. TV, National Marketing Co. fltcn Sr \\'Onlcn part tinle SECRETARY, PE>rmanent & full tirne. Dnys, e\'e!I 01. pa rt thne, Mature ..... ·onian knd N wiU1 Cilablished f a m n y \V s. 1 o f'xper nee. Training provided. Short pref. S/H l'L"Q., H.B. qall houl's, high pay. l\fanage--I =cbe='=t 0:'=•=·~2.='842-40500--~---;-..,.,.,, ment training, al!iO avail. SECR.ETAllY, personal, 1'~C. Call Ben Kittay, 492-99?.0. Bkkpr, dictation & type. One SALESJ\'lAN & rwtanagei', girl ofc., 213 Ocean 4Ve .. insle & fem. $825 & up Laguna Beach, 4!M-7815. n1onthly g u a r a n, if' SECRETARY • !Agal; GQod qualified. No ex per. necess. typing skills. Orange CpUn- Mr. ~ (213) 770-8543. ' ty Ali-port area. $S50 per IJ)(). 833-9031. 1231 Victoria_. CM Apply In person, 2940 11ec'y for attorney. Lite ofc. ~·t .,i::tvt;t up ·t¥ s h . .,. Sou1.tw.rn_CaliIQm~ Optical 646-7!65 Coll CM e"""'r helpful. Great List 1t m classified, Ship Have something yoo want to Co., El Toro. Call "Mr r "--.,·i·,.ed I .... ege Ave., · · -..-to Shore Re8"1ts• "'"-~ oell' C1--~11ed ads do "t Lew' 00•1•= -Equal Oppor. Employer starting sal & co. paid · ~-...,,,., · u.=-i 1 I ts, o.>U-.......,, Have somellung you want to sell? Classified. ·ads do it -Labciratorles Division ol AmcricaJ) ELECTRONICS Girl Fri, Buena Pk to $750 benefits. Recreationel Recreational R1cr1atlona1 Recreational Recreatlon11 Hospital Supply Corp. No Experience Required; F/C Bkkpr, F. Vly · $700 Jason Best Agency: Vehicles 956 Vehicles 956 Vehicles 956 Ve~icles 956 Vehlcl11 956 ---.....;.. --"--1821=-bengley-Avevo--"Tra1n·At-=Full..:s&la1"Y.-· Receptionist ----:o._$50({ -1t1.00'"P~~ F. X.IY.. .. -11~~;;.~;;;~;;;;;;:;;;i;~~~;-~;;iii~•iiiii~ij~ijliilii-iil--· I Jl'\1i1lt!. Calif. 9'1705 Benefits. Jtf/F, 18-34 • Sales Secretary to .SGSO Suite 113 96!"'~115 Equal Oppor. Employer m/f Interviews Now Girl Fri (Orange) to ~ • Call Army -Opportunities Personnel Sec'y to $600 MACHINISTS i~ ' ' It's a breeze ...... u )'OW' m<> ...,_U63 Exec. Sec'y L.A. to $700 items with ease, use Daily File Supe1vlsor $500 Pilol,C~ 642-5678. Need a "Pad""! Pta00t an ad! Claims Examlner to $650 Engine Lathe ---i.. ---- - - - -----Program l\1gr $22K UWVV CWlJlWWWPL~ Electronic Components Product Line l\1anager $20K Data Cbmmunlcations Ociign Engr (mech) . to $14K Cost Accnt ft1anuf. to $12K Call Jeannie Sist'O Grinder ID & OD Gear Machinist For an eel In Wom1n·s \'i'orld Call Mtry Beth 642~71, ext. 330 & Sid Hoffman NEWPORT Personnel Agency 8l3 .Dover Dr., N. B. 642-3870 Gear Grinding Exper. essen. Shaping & I-lobbing exper, desirable. All-Time Great! 9253 SIZES 1ov..1sv. ,, 1lf ,..j..., 1lf~i' ... Gln9ham· Coverlet! Handy .Ari>und the Hollse'!' Have A Knack W /a Ham· n1er A Paint Brush? Make lt Work For You! Long term assigrunenlB for versatile girls NO\V before Christmas. • Office a Overload 3723 BIRCH ST. NEWPORT BEACH . 557-0061 Steady day shift "'Ork In a fine, modern plant. Please Apply At YARD. NEWPORT' 3324 W. Warner Ave. Stnla Ana 545-7154 Equal. Oppor. Employer m/f MAIL CLERK Do your like variety? Great spot lh fi'Vlne. Learn & earn. Call Ann Christie, 5.:l6-S505, Control Cal'e('r Employment HELP Wanted for beautiful Agency, 3400 Jrvine Blvd., supper club. We need exper. N.B. cocktail "''a It r ess e s. MAINTENANCE waitresses, oyster barman, MECHANIC d ishwasher. Female ap. plicp.nls mu.st be attractive First or 2nd shift position & natural looking. Apply with leading MFG of plastic i t Klamet Intemational, pl'Oducts1or ttie food service 1100 W. (bast Hwy, N.B. indd ~':r· 5 yrs general in· As. for Erle. 645-2679. Wiu"'-' maintenam.oe exper. Hydrolic e.~per, lathE'1i · Hospitality Hostess milling machines & some Service knowledge of injection mold· Is looking for \\i>men to Ing necessary. ~lease apply \\"elcome &. Interview new at Cambro Mfg., 7601 Clay, residents. Sales or adver· H.B. 847-3531. An Equal tislng exper. helpful. Must 1 ~OO'p'-'pC'ly'--'E"m"'p"lo:eyc.:•~r.~~~ have car & typewriter. Maintenance Man Nites a47-3095. Eves &_ wknds, Must be:-tamillar. wJ plun1b- IW6-9004. Ing, electrical & gen'I car· HOUSEKEEPER pentry. Hotel exper. necess. care of ho me & 3 children. See ,Pe~nnel Manager, 2 to 6 pm.. l\1on-Fri, Own B1lb0a Bay Club transpoJ1at10n. Turtlerock 1221 w. Coast-Hwy·. N.B. area. 979-3942 or 83J...3893 · ' aft 6 pm. Man1pm1nt Trne $525 HOUSEKEEPER lligbsctiool Grad. Cle8nc"' . WESTCLIFF Personnel Agency (~lark 111 Ccntel') 542-8836 2 da)lll a week Laguna Niguel 496-0958 Enchant mom and baby HOUSEKEEPER W',lnted. No 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. \Vlth a crisp, g Ing ha in smoking, must dnve. Live Marketing Trainee coverl et! •°"iiit.ii6ii73-iiiil8iilii7,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio I To $12,IXXl Appllque · baby's fawrite INSPECI'OR Major corp seeks career pets ou gingham. then, mot!Vftted indlv. for dealer It's the A LL . T r~·t EI Epa\'8.te into blocks with GAGE rep position. X'ln'l oppor. !or GREAT shirt.dress, looking bands In Same color a1 pets. MBA. Un1imlted advance- even grearer with a curved Easy Pattern 7223: nine INSPECTOR ment &: all maJO· r benefits. ·~e and -a./SMh. NO \valst ...... tifs, coverlet directions. , ea I ,,,,.. ... -.3 ..... I Sam Rider, 83J..2700, seam -\lo"hlp it 1 u P ~EVF.NTl'·l"ll't; CF..N'1'8 0 ....... 1...: · in f 5 'l Dennis & Dennis Personnel straightaway In a knit. for each 1>1.ttern -add 25 '""l .... "'8 m . !{ Yl'.:'.:.gen· """ency of Irvine, 2082 Printed Pattern' 925.l: 1Hall cents for each pettem lot gage inspect10n Ii cadbra· I"& Slies 10\.l, U~,;· 14'A, 16~~. Air Atatl and Special Handl· t1on exper., and the. ability "Ml~che::;::l::'°"'::.:.:;Do:r. ___ _ ts'~ Slzcl<l'ii (bust 3TJ tak'N ing; otberwitt thlrd~au to.v.'Or~ 19 a am~ '8&e,lab_ MARRIED person over 21 3 , a:nts 45-inch. deUvery will take three w/a min of supeMSJOn .•• lso CAI' &. phone necc?U. $125 Y , \\'eeks or more Send to requires a comprehensive y,·k. to start. 8:9-t--«)OO, 8£V!:1"1'\.·t1tE a:Nn Allee Stooks the DAILY "'~rking knowledge of MIVC MASSA -~--~ .ac11 .. ttc'1), --add !' PJLCJ1,_ 105,' Needleeralt ~-A ""IWrtmonl>. GE TECH. cents !or each pattern for Dept., ·sox 163; Oltiehel• SI dy d hlli k . TRAINEE Air tifail and Special Handb Slatkin, Ne\v York, N.Y. ~a · ay Ii '"°r in a Young lady (18·28\ "'·anted PILOT. 4.U, Paltern Dept., 1001l 'Prlnffit\nt: Addrelt line, moclel'n plant. for legitin1ate !ull Un1e pos \. 1 the vi.. th'~ cl11.ss ... , "p t*-· w 't-. ' Pleue Apply At lion. No exp. nee. \Ve send d~ive~ ~ill w:"'·three ~:£;01.~' 1"2! ·YARD NEWPORT to school, earn "'hlle leam. \\'ttkl or mort Send to Free 332 W A Apply in person 1'11'\Y aft. or Marian Martin, °" DAILY ~ ~· etc. S 4 W.Anar~!71~:· eve. 2930 W. Cst. HWJ., :132 Wnt 'l#h SL, N"" ' _.. ....._ -•nt1 • -.,. Newport Beach. ~~ ~.x. 10011. Prtnt ·Ba.lie, fancy knots.. pat~ Equal Oppor. Emi>loyer m/f MECHANICS 'Jll ~-. wltb $1 N Ex . R Ired _ __. _,.. tfl tams. . .00; o penenct ~equin ; ~· ~ ·~·-·-~ --l'llfl' TralnAtF\lllSataey, SEE MORE Qalck ....,,, by, l>!Puml I'll~ INSURANCE '1llLW Beneflt5. M/F, IB-34 Md chooll tm& $1.00. Interviews Now ~· ~ tram • :: ·C. ,, .. ,, 1'lllilaat Gift .._. No exp nee., earn While ~ Call Anny Opportunities ~ .. ..!:_ Calllof. All St:"" th&ll l!IO &lftl _ • team, port time, ..., 6 1714) ~ll63 •ioaiY !Oc. ~ AIPn ..._ • ~· hl!J time when qualio l\1ECHANIC -exper. or wU1 JNSTAN't SEWING BOOK uw ' train in front end work • ..., '°1111• ,..., ~ f.·~, a'!ll ~ . !IOc. Fwtn lntUnn« c .... p Runt. Bch. 841.-1 '!:,_.,_ ~ASRIOll iloo!ioili,.,_&11-EdLtnl•M0-1834 MESSENGER Girl -Allp,.. Jf'I..,,,...,... i: 50c noons Qnly. ~Just have own 1 BOOK :.. ·ftunt1i'edl of ~It J1Mt 1 .. 1g patt1m1. "Make Room l'oT Daddy" .car. Mlh~agc " alloWance. f.uhkln tacts. SL 50c. , • , clean out tbe prap Cell Mt. Sulii,•an 833--1390 "Weed ft a Reap'' :.-Qmlt ""*" I • ••• tum that Junk mto cuh for appointment. r • BRAND NEW 1974 PERRIS VALLEY BRAND NEW 1973 ESCAPADE 20' 19'" COMPLETELY SELF CONTAINED \c -c: Cl~::)• !=ii -- SERIAL f $.l480.950 .. $ 00 J ' ~ J' 00 l" '' I ' ' " ' ~ ' ' , I -' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ;-.r .. ' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ~~~~~ ....... ~~~~··6·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--s BRAND NEW 1974 ELDORADO . MOTOR HOME 24' Compltf1ly 1e lf c:onta in•d. 1leep1 6, roof air, d11h air, 9en1r,1or, AM/FM with t epe deck, EVERYTHING IS STANDARD -THE EXTRAS ARE INCLUDED. SER. ,,_5475 BRAND NEW 1973 SPORTSCOACH 25' $ ' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY .. . ' Comp!et1lv 1elf con· t1ined, 9en1r1tor, roof •ir, d11h air, AM/FM with tape deck, • Strltl i l14i ":6 ; J ~-~,!:;;;::;::.. __ ...:::..::::~---------..!!IM~M~E,2D~IA~T~E!.,2D!E,!;L~IV!_!E;,,!R~Y~----~· , -BRAND NEW 1974 PERRIS VALLEY .18 FOOT TRAVEl TRAILER BRAND NEW 1974 PERRIS VALLEY 1973 FORD BUBBLE TOP SPORTSMAN CONVERSION -.· . •• v.e. t ulo. tr'"'" power dttri119, sto .... , ice boll', : 12 FOOT TRAVEL TRAILER $ 7 9 5 t ic. (No. 61902 ) li1t Prict $7000.00. Di1cou11f· ' ~ od 55395 : FrQm trtUtlffa '° trub q.U.. tor T11di:;'• Uwbls , wltb a Dally ptk)t Cl.wined Tho futect drlw In the Wtst. Turn them Into -cuJI 14. Call ~ ..:.· ,:_• ~··~D~al!!lly~PU~ot_!Cl::!;!l!!!Sl!!!Wed~lli.;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;:::~l • • • -- • • , . I ·" .. .... "" '~ .. .. .. ,. ·~ , ' ., .. • • 1973 Wtdnt$d•y, N~embtt 14, 197l \J!..~~~~"""'""""·_-r:;;,~~~~;;~ii.-,,.;;,,:;p~wrr1:::0:-:1::ed:;-,-.M"&i'FC,7;>1no7'Hw11i:p'\Wu1:::n:;t::ed:r,"1Mnc;F;;,7;;10lliH;;;,:;;lp;;WW.1n::<1t:ed:i,-:i.lirl&liFi""7ii1~6;;F:;:u;;rn;;;ir;:tu:;;r:;•-'--:-1iii1iio'FFU:ur;;n;'ii11iiiuir:rel--;-.110Mlsce I•-• SECRETARY Land develo;pm"nt nnn !H!('k!I &ecfttary '"/kno"'·lrdie ol ~al Eslate OocumentaUon le tnJUtcUon•. Subltantlnl expe:r. tn ti Id ot ft..£ .. law uc etCf'OW ,. neceulty. Typ. tng ~ w.p.m. ac<·ur ... te. Sh helpful, but not necHS. Xln't -wof'ktng mnchi. A: co. bene- ftL"I. ~ mume It Mliu-y hlJtory lO! THE IRVINE CO 500 Newport Center Dr. Newport Beach. Ca. 92663 Attn: Barbara Fielder NO PllONE CALL.S PLEASE t:qual Op)'.lOl". Employer m/f SECRETARY To ,.,,. Asr;t. Superintendent Bminess Support Servi~ lrvino Unified School District Appllee.Uons. reliun1e!I & ref- ~rences must be receil1cd in the Office of Personne:I Ser· vices, 14600 Sand Ca,n,YOn. E. Irvine, Ca. ~. Prior to November 2Clth. Equal Oppor. Employer m/f ,,. SECURITY OFFICERS NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY Thanksgiving & Christmas Wort< Successful appli<'~u1ts ithould meet the follo\1·ing requirr:n11·11t.~: -'-Min. age 23 -Height 6' or near -Day or night availability essential DISNEYIAND Plea.c.e Call 1714) 533-4'156. ext 6i8 hlonday Ihm Suturduy 10 A.'1-1 Pl\l Equal Oppor. Employer TELLER T0\\1 TRUCKDRJVER ~'ANTED Rece111. j; & NOTE TELLER Expr:tk'nt,-ed pl'f'fl'rrcd but l.hrntpl1t of!.lce upcr not 1.r\ll ll'Ain. Top pay &: (rln~ nee.. 1111' Lyph~. send Exper. Only benefits. Shell $1.atloo, 17th re5umt \Vrltr clR.UUU!d ad App~l:~ F=~ To &. Jrvlnc, N.a. No. 9S7. Dally PUot, P.O. Personnel D<'P"rtment * TYPISTS * ~1560, Colt• Mtl4, Calli. Set'\l1'hy Parlfic BHnk n-i-:ter for \\'llO \VANTS TU \YORK? 381 FOrtJI, LMg. ~ ~--·· 0""~ A CAB•. a ten1porary job ''"' .. .., today CllOOSE your hours, work MODEL HOME FURNITURE SALE Furnllure, lamps, accessories from the Cal- lforn.ia Homes models in Irvine: featuring such quality brands at Thomasville, Brandt, Prestige, etc. To be sold at savings ol up to 80%. All sales final. Merchandise as is, \vhere is. Jnttn"'·s: 9-12 for yourself, be Your own \\'e Need All boss. !\fen or women. Can Sat, Nov. 17th, NOON to 5 PM otnce Skills be 1lll;:htJy handlc111pped. M TEMPO'S F.qunl Oppor. Employer Ne a t-Oean Appearance. Sun. Nov. 19th, 10 A.M. to S P. . 1':1ale & Jo~emalc Vts. retired. Age 25 to 70. On Walnut, just off 5'int1 An1 Frwy, Western Girl Inc. Supplement your income. betwffn Culver & Jeffrty. TEritPO olfrn; "truly unlqut· 4667 ~racArthur Blvd. Drive a cab 6 hrs or more al!!!!~""""""""""""!!!!!!!!!!!!""""""""""""""!!!!~ & 1\m(' ~vini; opp011unily Newport Beach day. Apply In person, A I' 802 c It 810 for $killed . • . . . 5't0·0325 Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th PP iances _. -"-'"--"-'°------ KEYPUNCH ...!-.T1al Oppor. En1ploycr St., O:>sta Mesa. FREIGHT DAh1AG€ SALE EXEC Tl'nk desk $300. nu SECRETARIES YOUNG \\'oman to "rork New Hotpolnt rel rt g • l'I, naug. reclillt'r $15, Droxcl \\lho '''IUH dignified & URGENTLY cashier&: phone. Z.3 days dlsh\vashen & range s , 9-dr dress. $75, 11.nliq. solid slimu.luUng Jong or !ihort per v.'k, Good appear. \va.shel'li & dryeJ.'s, factory maple :>-<tr. chest $50, Dial-A.J ob! ANTIQUES: A merlcan. Chinese. Ew'optll!l. l>io- 1ur'i•11, IU'\p&, hall t~, h!lll 11C&t, aewing ruactu.ne, an- di.l'OOll, ChlM cablntt , bulcher liloolic. dt.'!Ok•, presa; back chairs, tables, etc. ~todem dinlre table, 8 eamo- hllck ch1.1ln, alum. table, glass top, 4 cMln. Kil. ped. table. coffee table, PO\\"tt tool, Hammond organ, SkytiJl:ht, power n'erlal. MG-4656. sru Kina• Rd. NB Golf Membership IR.VINE COAST COUNTRY CLUB tc>l'll\ ass1gnn1en!i; _ fC\\' deJ>('ndablllty & xlnt refs warranty. Raleigh 3-sp \\'Omen's bike days. <.-ouplc \VL>ek~ or few NEEDED rcq'd. No studPnts please. BEACH CITY APPLIANCE $30, nu rubber bo8t, dbl Original charter membership 111on1hs _ )'OU decide! No11· l'\ln. Adanis, 644·7575. CdM, 362:\ \V. Warner, SA 545--0780 paddle $50. fiT.h132'1 or no 1ransfer fee. (714) you run . . . . . 9:3().6. 2002 N. Tustin, Orru1ge 644-2'li'O 494-7264. APPLY BY PHONE YOUNG m•n or woman 998-5656 2PIEJCE F'rilitwood ChlM N~O""'L"l~E,_----- Cult 540-44:,0 & Lt>t us kno11· (25} Trainee 1v/oulstandlng pel'90nality. DOUBLE oven, cook top Buffet Cablnet, very good ••••••• \11\at your Ek.ills arc. No Exper pre('d for exclusive ran~c. dish11iasher. all arc cond. $235 or beat oftrr. I BUY" .,._ 6'"'-1. .. nN'd to come in ~r!Klnnlly · A bl mens shop. vn-uo"'u· avocado & a matchinr set. 1->-0J.:J untli 11'c have the 'Just right' ssem ers YOUNG h1EN, neat. to ll'Ork: All ~gldaire brand. Good EAfofES chair, 2 mos. old. Good. late model furniture & ~pot for you! 1'ves &· \Vknds. Age 17 to cond1t1on .• 557-2010 after 12 $350. 8 ft. green couch & appliances or sell for you!! NEVER A FEE AT TE\IPO. 19. $1.65 hr + bonuses, No noon $135 for all or 11•1ll matching loveseat S 1 o o, MASTERS AUCTION SERVIcE Station tf e 1 P Temnn Temporary Help VOLT E>.-n. needed. Call alt 11 seU separately. fH4-6.192 or 64{).3316. 2ll75J,, Newport. C~f 64&8686 v.·an1cd. days. Good v.·ages. r·~ I I I p I '' 839 IJ97• -• 6 Sund Apply in pt'r60n, 300 E. 17th I ns an ersonne am. Mrs. Page, 586-1'150 \\'llJRLPOOL 1vasher or LIVING mom chairs, gold -.. rui. or ay St, Costa l'\fesa. ---------· Temporary Service KenmoN! elec. dr)'('r. S50 & gl'een $30. t'llCh. Go Id Behlnil Tony's Bldg. 1.tat'l. Sh A d 3S·'8 Carnpus Dr., Suite 100 I ~~~~~~~~~~! each. Frigidaire wash<'r $65 lPaf accent tabJ c $35 , BARN siding for interior & s:a~I~fust~·cx~~p~ op roun Ner~.iu!:~~~. En1p~~i4l 11~1 ~;;~:7~~Jdelivecy. ~l8. ~~~ro~u:~An~a~:1:J 19th & Nc1vport, C~1 Metdlanclse V 12' orange sectional. $100 & t V hrnp SERVICE Sta. Full time Start1'ng to work? "iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii~IKELVINATOR commerriat gam(' table & chairs $100. 4n1 ~l ~, l~gb"'ters' """ \VAITRESSES day-& evening • frC<.'Zl'l' chest type 3.'f' high Avon bnttles. 551·-IT.16. ""'-"""' -"oon 1 ' days. Musl be exper. Art.'O I 'f 1 "· 1 t hy 43,. 11,lde by 31 .. <le<.'Jl S. Coast lh\y-, Laguna SECRETARY ]9th & Newport, C~l Returning to work? !o<Jl ls -1nu!'; ....., as. exper. Antiques 800 $100. ~ ~". 812 Beach. Prt!f. hut nol necessary o;i•.r-u""" Garage Sale ::::::;::::,.==-~-- 1 srATISTICAL TYPisr co~ PPER.TONE dbl \Ve are looking for n lop i\PPLY 10 AM-6 P11 GOING OUT OF Rent Washers/Dryers oven, notch secretary to learn the Receptionist, Why grab the lst r.1on.-F1·i. S NESS SACRrFJCE i:ood Christmas range, $200. Ampeg B·l'>N. ad biz. If you ta kc 2 yrs exp or equivalent. 1-.lust job you find? COLONY KITCHE!'l BU I 32. Wk. 1'"'ull maint. gitt itt.•nls, all new. Ex-$350. 1971 h1ozrite guitar. shorthand, type fast & ac· have prior training In typing 271'12 ortC'ga Hwy. Con1plete l·leArnoce lhru * 639-1+'02 * pensive nletal detectors, elec., hollow body, $.."00 .• curately & 1vould like a financial statements, good Be a T~Girl or a T-Man San Juan Capistrano . CHRISTMAS Building' Materials 806 niarine radio, CB radio, div· lncls. hard\\•aad case. 12 challenge. Reply Clasiritted telephone voice nee. Orange & try many different 493-1848 · Quilts, ouk & \\'alnut furn., · ing equip., depth recorder, string guitar $45. 545-2553 Ad no. 964 cfo Da.ily Piiot, County Airport area, lovely assignments in varied \\'iutrcss, Experienced je\\·e!ry. Clk,t'd rt.~ Mon. • Surplus. Building as1ronon1icnl !C'lesrope, elec any hour. P .. o. Box 1560, Co6ta Ml?sa, oUiccs, good fringe benefits. f' Id bef d 'd Lun(·h & Dinner Antiques r ntertors MATERIAL -lOOO's ot NE\V n1arine l~ad, truck or jeep cAc..UTO:=cc,,ocA'OTJ=c=-"G°""'A""R,-,A"'G~E Ca .........., Sal,,...., commensurate with 1e s ore you ec1 e ~,,_ •• "" Coa~l Hwy Cd~! I be 1 " ::r-. ~J e BLUE DOLPHIN e ...,..~ .-.. " 1 ITEl'\fS! Doors, um r, PY-11·inch, AC/DC po11 .. con1bo. IX)()R OPENER. Finest l!!!~!!!!"""""!!!T!""I!"""""' I ability. 833--0li.Sl what you want. :t15Ei Via Lido, N.B. !-"RENCH 1800 Oiina Closet. wood. alum sheetirlg, mold-TV 1~.i.dlo, Im. & other ntisc kno11-n brand. Reg. $2CKI. Secretary r1 nH STENOGRAPHEP. !\'EVER A FEE Beveled & stained glass. Ing, windows, etc. sporting goods. Eves &: Special $1.l'9.95 ins ta 11 t'd Here is ..... , .. chance to begin No Experience Required; \VAITRESS \\'anted, Exp'd, $750 * 642·:i~I BUILDERS SURPLUS 1\·knds, 962-42&1. 1,1:/5 yr guar. 893'-3571 or ,_ T At >'·II Sal nood hours. Ca.rmel's 628 fa~nating nc1v career. rain u ary. .. App.liances 802 2406 So. Ate.in St., S.A. PACKING Thurs. niust sell ~1415 \v.,th des: ..... to learn & av" Benefits. ~T/F. J.S.34 1l N. Coast !fwy .. Laguna. Mon •L-· Sat1"5 .:::::..::=------..... ., uu·u ,,.. grt'l'n erib, n1 ft It res s , •••••••••• typing company 11111 !'rain Inrervir\\'S Now -(J ~.1 \VANTED n1ature exper. FRIGIDAIRE v.•nshcr $2a. n4: 546-1037 feeding tahlr, pJay pen, in Real Esta.le E scrow field . Call Army Opportunities m 21U DtiP.t Dr. 11·oman as cornb. fry cook Philco refrigerator, defrosts Cameras & niisc. 963-1064. NE\\' ~1agie Chef !\l1C'f'0\\1l\'e Xln't starling salary. Sh <TI4l 645-1163 LJ & sand11·iC'h mak('r in · If S25 646--0829 Ch'l.'n. Lists for $400, ScU I LI ff' Man lr•llM • UJ.lJft Laguna Hills area. No Sat. itse · · Equipment 808 10 F~ULY garage Sale, helptu . le o lt:e expc.r. TE AC H E R' Pre-school, . KE'.N~IORE elect drver, xlnl'--'-'-------Name ii -.. -·v• ~t It. >'-'-below l\'holesale $250. J ... n •-st Agency N rt ,,_ h $' ~ h Sun or Holidays. Hrs. 7:30--·J 1 ..... ..v '' * 89'183'l * Ptr t'11·po ,,.,ar · -·"" r. cond, re<.'Ond motor call aft BOLEX 8mm reDex movie & Sat, &krr. Coslll l\1esa. "' • 17400 Brookhurst. 1'". Vly. 3-6 P~1. &10-8820. 3:30 5.'>2-0045· 5 536-1231 camera. $450 or make otter. Suite 213 ~m TELETYPIST, WIRE TRUCK DRIVER \VANTED man \vith car for REFRIGERATOR, good <.-on-5 lenses zoom. 64~1 k b k k N E · R · d morning newspaper route •~curt'ty Gua rds Large stoc ro er see s o ,'(..,,..1el1<'e ec1u1re ; diU'o" runs 11·ell looks ~• F 'I ~ 810 ~ .--· dcliverly. Vic. Bolsa Chica · • ~,,.,.... urn1 ura SHAG CARPET, 12'-.' 3", Need full or p/lime, 21. yrs intliv. w/11tock brokerage Train At Full Sal11ry, & Warner Ave. Phone Call 551-54i6. ·'"'- or older. UnUomui & equlr-exper. to keep busy Hnes in Benefits. hI/F, 18-34 84&-2'777 F-U-L~L--8,-1-,.m-au-·c-K~'c_n_m_o_re_'ROUND oak table, $WO. or yt'Uow & green tones, never Household Goods 814 HERCULON or velvet sofa &. Jovescats, roff tbl sets, lamps, u5ed for display only Parific· Construction Co. 5.J8.!ltl83. ' PILOT-A0'4ERT1SER SOI.JD walnut lctfhff t.op 11tucllo de1k, perf<.-ct tor llY-lnJ room or dttl. Coat $l9'7, Sacrlfioo $ZO. -Antique p e de 1 ta I dttuer/chest, rare NM. S 200-\Y11 In u t w)rnarble top round lamp t11ble. Loull XIV StSO. - Winchcrtt!r eerblne 4 4 nut.KJlLinl, 80J'l'a.ln $50. - Perfect cond t1.utumt1 bale mink rt.ole, O>it $1400. SacrlOee $3!0. -Sta1 00m plant ·5ft. 1pread. ptrlect $150. Cu.I.I 673-T'.l95 aft. 5. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS h-1armot -Rouse -Tease - Honest -HOitSEAfEAT The price of elue has I!~· rocketed. The l'C&IOn: The big demand ' for lIORSEt hfEAT Rleakic. Ml1e1ll1neou1 Wonted 120 ORIENTAL RUGS \Viii llllY 5 to l!Y.ti more than your h\ght'Jrt otter, Shah N Shah, ml S, Main. S.A. ~7-1212. \Vanted: young newlyweds need neat OLD !um, nir pictures, dmpes & thingA for Isl house 645-8154 \Y ANTED romplete o r bl'uken ~t ot pattm mkrs 11·ood chisels. Call anyUme, 645''19!l6. \\'ANTED: Used \\raterbed \vllh frame. Under f15. Ca11 Lindo. 5-16-4478. \\'ANTED medium lo large size "WONDER 110RSE". Reasonnhle. Call 492-8919 *\VANTED•* 2 WHEEL tmLITY TRAILER 493--1149 WANTED TO BUY LIONEL OR AMERICAN FL.YER TH.AlNS. 837-96&5. Muslcal Instruments 121 ment furn. Life inli & ho!!-ope~ol~i:t· Start S:?OO· Call Jntervlf'\VS Now h 11 d t $50 best offer used, 552-8415 or 557-5033 pltallzation aUer 90 dayl!. l'\1lki \\h1te, 54().6055, Coastal Call Army Opportunilies \VJ\NTED live·in housekeer-\i·as rr. · ('avy u Y-· e 9624862 e . J I 115 J{qt "& vac pay. $2 hr. !illlrl· PerliOnnc-1 _Agency, 2790 (714\ 66-1163 er !or 2 aduHs. ?t-Iust~be 1n Call 53G-7181.. . . ewe ry ln-gpay.-Anah<'l!li -&" Cosla -tlarbor-Blvd .. (li\.f;---You dorft need a gun lo -good healtl\,--free~to ·t.raYf>i; ·W~ge\VC'JOd-gas-stove~ ll'ith COPPER boiler; oak-'lcc!J?x DI~\MONOs~ Opals. Gold l\.tesa area. Apply Cosla Fat Profit is altain~ when "Drnw Fast" \Vhcn )'OU lop salary. Refer. required griddle. S45. Good condition. sldcbo.il'd. ~re6".:~ 7'''/mir· ·w11 tch<'s, Cocktail r ings & RENT FOR ONLY $3 OR BUY \VITll NCYl'HlNG 00\VN. Orun1, PA's, A1ik~s .. Gui11u-s. 1\n1ps, Roc-<>ra;ans j & Pi!llll'>S, Kil brands. I No agr Jiniif, no pP.rent net'Cl-1 {'(I. OPJo:N NIGIITS -TILL 9. SAT. TIL 5:30, SUN. 12·5. l Now TWO Convenient 1 Locations to Servi Yovl FULLERTON MUSIC •~R Sale 2 Jb. do.,.,11 mun1m)' 18191 Euclid, Fountain Valley 11leeplng bag, 89" •X 34:!... ·l Blk.-N. San' -Dlfgo Frwy. Keeps you wann to 10 & Euclid. I MesaWhite f'ront,3Cl88Ilris· you sell through result-get· place an ad in the DaUy 499-3418· CallS.57·2673· ror, gd con j l S. o1hc-r fine jewelry. Pri ply, tol Ave .. Costa r.1esa. ting Daily Pilot Classified Pilot \\/ant Ads! Call now Daily Pilot Want Ads have Any day is the H£ST DAY to * SOrA & LOVESEAT * niust sacriJict'. 838-5595. Equal Oppor. Employl'r Ads. 612-5678 -642-5678. bargains 1alore. ru11 an ad! Don't delay. . Nl'ver used ~!49. Miscellaneous 811 980 980 Rt;'('<l1·d playrr S25. 968-7910 ~-980~-m~~w 980~-~---------------------S' COUCH, 6' couch, 2 seat A1ECHANICS tools $400. Air Compressor one HP $1i0 call ~8-8541 '74 TRANS AM'S IN STOCK AND READY FOR louw,:e c-hair. Royal blue. Furn. 892-ll96 eves 81\BY furniture st·veral piet..~s. Excellent condition 842-1160 SOFA Bed $30, 1'1atching chair SlO, Ow.ir $5, 2 large area rugs SZi each. 644-4TI7 7' BLUE Green Couch. $20, 192.J Anahe.im Ave., C.~1. Call 548-3736 3 R00l\1S nice [urn. Xlnt cond. Reasonable, call aft 5 Pl\1., 54&-475:"i. 7 PC bdnn set, French J..ouis IV salin.,.,uod. Xlnt cond. $600. 613-2191. 8' SOFA. Bl'O\\'n !enther·likc vinyl. Good condition. $150. ~. GOLF clubs & equip. SOc to SW. Work bench &: shelves $10. 84~. 2 GAS 29.000 BTU \\'all fu11iaces. I year old. $JO t'ACh. 675-5362. DISCOUNTS on new Carpet, Drapes, Floor coverings. Chll evenings, ~ CARPET lll "I ,ds be,.. wool, used, $1. pn-yard. Gl&-6507 AUNK STOLE, large, $250 or lx'st ofJer. Silvergrcy. 6/:r.1047 EDISON baby crib, wooden hi-chair & port-a-crib. All in good cond. 637-31 n Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 degrees. Xlnt. cond., $40. e 557-4136 e . 1 . Linda. 5-W-4478. 122 N. !!arbor r·ullerton NEW IB?.1 ExecutivP • 871-JIOS. typcWTitcr & Ye 11 o 1" l YR Old Lud\lt•lg drum set, fiberglass umbrella v.·14 5 drums It. 2 symbol!li chrs. Both bt'low cost. Rogers seat. Xlnt cond. 548-8814 Aft. 5:~. !).!S-6429 \VET suit and tv.'O Judo GE's. Everything in ex· cellent 1.'00diUon. Phone 55~18. REfRIG, din. rm, china, rolor TV, lamps, end tables, sofa le love seat, maple· beds. dressers 645-7285. METAL detectors for sale or rent, Compass & v.ii.ite's Collectnr's S 11 ow case s:rr9'7·14 l)ESK $)2j couch & loveseat $W. nfrig $~ or take bst offr can between 3 & 6 Pl'\1. 5-l.S-4095. IRVINE Coast Country Club me:mben;hip for s a I e . S.ifHtlffi Eves/wkends. Autos, Imported 970 Office F urnlture/ Equip. 124 EXEC S\VVL ClRS Sl5l2S Sec chn: $8/2.t Desb $31/90 Pierce 867 W. 19, Ot' 642-34-08 Pienos/Otg1n1 826 PIANO WANTED. \Vll..L CO ANYWHERE. P.O. BOX 1685 STUDIO CITY. C1UJF'. LO\\'ERY Dr1;"an do u b t t- k<.'yboard, $350. 557-3108 llammond Qrr:a.n AIOO. $1500. Call ;..q,s-?~. Autos, Imported IMMEDIATE DELIVERY OWNERS REPORT UP TO 35 MILES PER GALLON VISIT OUR NEW LEASE DEPARTMENT-NOW OPEN!! Ask About Our MONEY BACK Lease Plan :!.,!, !~.~"' ~~~~ ..... """'"' $2985 co11d itio11. !020EAF) 70 CADILLAC Coup• De Vil:e. Full power, •ir, vi11yl loeded. 42.000 ma,,. 1508EVAJ :~.~·'· ~.~!.~~~ .. ~~~~"'' ... $3'995 IKJYISS ) '69 DODGE CHARGER H.T, Feclory eir, vi"yl top, co111ole, winy! buc· k.,1 1ea1,, 1367BKC l '67 MUSTANG VI , aulom•lic tran1mi~1io;in, radoo, heater. Mu1t 1t• to app1eci11!e . IUK M'l40) Sf50 $AVE 1973 SUBARU AIR CONDITIONED Radio - Tinted Glass -Bu cket Seats, Both Reclin- ing -Whitewalls -4 Spd. Trans. -Quadr12ont1I 4 Cyl. Eng ine -Plus Much More. 52999 lt55JRII THE RIGHT. CAR AT THE RIGHT TIME AT THE RIGHT PRICE '69 Datsun 2• Roadster Con•., 5 spd. l291ABT! f1295 · '71 MAZDA R·X~2 4 spd, radio, heater, whitewall tire~•· rotary en- gine~ (5•i 899 ,. .. ), .. • -, _! '67 CAMARO '69 FIREBIRD $AVE '68 ·Olds Vista Cruiser '69 Pontiac Executive HT · ' 4 1peed, 1 ~dio, ~••ler. powt1 1tetrir>9. !UQC•90J Convertible. \II, 1uton•,.Ht. 11ir. power deer· in9·br1k•s-window,, tilt wheel. IZLX53b ) STATION WAGON E•cellent condition, power sleerin9, r•dio, eir <onJition• ,,,, '"''··1·09·9 ~. • -------""-- -. .. ' - • • IV u IV Pl • Us 11 H . IV f I • .fJJ PllDT·ADVEATISEA Wtdnt!dO)', Novtmbtt 14, 1973 Wtdfltsd.ty, Novembtr 14, 1973 DAILi/ PILOT Plono• O n1 826 llolh, Power 906 Boots, Soll 909 Campers, Solo/ Ront 920 ·• PIANOS [ ,..... "v... ] S OA~:g~NT rNTRoDucroRY SPECIAL ·~d.00=. C:,:1~~: -!,,:: tor Homes ruck1 9 , :.;::;:::.:.,. ____ ...:.:= Solo/Roni 940 1.:.:;:::.:._ ___ ...:.;;;: -anr.a • ORGANS · " SAVE $2300 olfor. <94 .. 5.16. -=.:.:::SA::::.L-t.S-• .....:.:.:: *SPECIAL* • R . V. S t a a to Yach I or More on• New 31 fool C I B'k FULLERTON MUSIC 3 Llno1, 2 Tlme1, $2.00 llrok,..ago. New Uhllllt.-. 1974 Model Cruising •loop. ye ts, ' ts 925 Our Newest Loc•tlon OeJo"event ' ~. ;:inau 1'1ode:m, Faat and Able. A Scooters Id F ,.,_ Val or Larae: Power or Sail. \Ve Proper v h ~-·~ 1 .....;;.;.;.:;.;;..;.. __ ..-.. __ ; ;~fsE; *Of the Week lB191Eucl r ounlAW ie)IFQUNDblackm•catll'teJl Have 'nlem All. io'or tn-thet>em:r!fs~1 ~ft~~ *BICYCLES* 1 tpk. No~ o San. Olqo Free-eyes i:eulle, cannot keep. form11.tlon or lo ma.ke an North Sea. "'~-Allucted to OlRISTMAS LAYA\YA YS WIY at EucUd. Saved from · the pound, appt. lo see bolts ln the '""''n• 110 llOlJ)S ANY BIKE 557-4116 673-GM9 even!,.a, 714149J.~l0l. Uoydg Standard.a ol llbtht.'St · EXPLORER .. , HUNTINGTON BEAC H Is f $5 . .., Quality Afaltrlall By l>roud New Il&llan 10 sp. , ••• $59.95 Renta ram FREE TO cooo HOME an Saber-Craft. like new. DutCh Craftamen. Aa low Suntour Eq Colol .... $89.9'1 OLD ENGlJSH SHEEP· l~ft. hardtop, Qievy 4-cyl A> Nlsblki 10 IP .... from $99.9'1 1========"'- • Pl not I Grondi DOG 6 mo. old. 536-3301, 114 hp In & out. iAKE $21,fOO SAlLAWAY U"<I bikes ...... All TYPcs * FOR RENT * ''"''"\"I\' i-l/tlO(ol H< •,I I, I ''• t\ll\( Ol a . aftt'r 5:30. OVER PAYMENTS. CaU Includes E~tne. Jib and Beach Bicycles, 806 E. Balboa 1973 EL DORADO Mptor--rsew i~n~ ~ '1 Weclts old 0'4=.r man l\ft. $ wkdy. 956-2764. MalnsaU, OOuble Lllellne1, Blvd., Balboa 675-7282 home, 18-ft., tape deck, T.V., \\ltlrU=-Grand Stnua Shtpbcrd pup. Fm1. Nd1 19' m:1.1.aoy, deep V, Go To Sea Package anti * BICYCLES * sell<Ondalned, sleeps 4. Call Upri&ht plano .......... $69 fenced yd. ~2464 aft 6 runabout w/100 hp Johnson, Pt1uch More. The Magnlll· Raleigh RecordL .. $!)9.95 1t.ft. 5. 9:16-7764. \Veaver Spinet ,,, ,,,,,, $145 pm. power tilt, tully equipped, cent. \Vbile SUppHes Last 20'-25' MOI'OR Ho n1 l' a, Player pianos •• .'. from $999 PLEASE 2-T· mo male ktt· Mall 'I, trailer included. *CONTEST 31 * OlllCr models from $64.95. superior, uretinie & Open e 20 Grandi in atock, New-tem need good home. llave .~968-315;::;~7~. =,,...,~~~= Open 10 A?t1 Til Dark Peugeot in all sizes & colors. Road. K€'n Welsh, 639-2981. Used end rebullt. 'J>riced shots. 552--034.1. •72 SKlPJACK 20' Open 225 Nov. 15 thru Sw:i., Nov. 18 Ch r l • t mas la Y -a-\\°I. y 1 •Dale's ~1otor Home Rmtals ~ 1395 Yamaha Knabe OMC SIS t · 1 Or By Appointment. Slip !A CYCLE WORKS LTD ..., & Ml I J•vnt • -5 mixed puppies. Very small. ' ' r al er • Newport Arches Marina l82'l Newport Blvd., Costa '73 ~26' 1\1.H. n s -Muon -Hamlin -Wur-To li:OOd home. xlnt.,undcr 100 hours, $6.500. !Behlod "'~nunela Bank) -Mesa. 548-S?S3 Free mi!('g 9 Ill 9, 83.'i--0900 lltzer -Slorcy & Clarie -Call 546-6689 494-7001 ....., KaN-~ -StK~~~ -Cac bblle FREE adorable apricot fem. '73 ENGLISH Dory & trailer. llolland Yac~ewport 1973 SPORTSTER $1700 R.ecr!:~al Wv~:i~tntal ~•1 •• ::: "~~ k-..c..! e Cockapoo. Has all shots. 40 hp, E\'lnrude $1300. Atany 714-64 ll,COO miles. Stock. Bureau. (TI4) 842-9922 -Ba 1.n ... n -""'uc e ... '6 -892--6131 extra.s. Daya 642-6002 Eves. flO Price firm. Sohmer. ~ii!i!!!!l ;~642g;'-33~2~4;.,· =;-;..-'-"=:; Boats, Sllps/Doclc:a * 543-3&9l * '72 Shasta niolor home. • 0 1n1 --..:..~=.:...::'--~ I c:omp. i-;ell cont. \Vintcl.' rcn-r9 ~ K&M Seasport. 18'. Inboard. * SUP nr 0.ly Hall for HODAJU 125, sll'l't't & dirt tal. 979--0379 100 to ehoo!'ie from I htl and..,... j "L.J Fiberglass hu11 w/ll'lr. ~ rent. Will take up to 28' bike. Owne:r. transferred. 1.:=-=-=""----- N£'.'W, Used and Tradc·Ins . . n gal. gag tanks. Ughts, horn. boat. $40. mo. 673-8143 eve1. -Must sell or lake over Trailers, Tr1vel 945 C)ptigan '" '' •• •••• ··" •• $99 $1500 64&-3358 35' boat w/l/J' off shore moor-payment.ti. 2 mos. old. ,,..~ I'' ARISl'OCRAT travel Hammond w/rhythm '' $69:1 , • Ing off Lido Jsle. 642,5005 842-84-:::c~l:::,2 ,,,..,~=-=~~ ~ ' Kimba11 Swinger •••• • •• $195 C1t1 852 BcMt1, Sill 909 ~ tl'ailer L'Omptcte w/cabana. \Vurlttxer 3 keyboard •• $1195 or 66-8122 '72 HONDA CL :GO, Like Good cond. $550. 846-<618. Lowrey Holiday ..... ••• $495 BURMESE KITTENS WANT to Ren1· 2.S-27' Sail Bo1ts, Speed & Ski 911 new. Only llX> nliles. Auto Servic&, Parts 949 Conn Caprice •••.••.•.• $.195 CFA REGISTERED. $50 UP Boat, l or 2 d~ys a month, Alway& kept in garage. $595, Thomat A·l Splnet ••••. $179 •537-4744* year around, Dana Point, IS' Unlimited Ski Bolit c83=!f-:.,:::8306::,c.·~=-~--c REPLACEMENT & aux- •lammond-llaldwin-conn r>-1 ill _,83,,,tc:--0:::169::::..· ------331 Chevy Engine, two 4 Bar-'70 HUSKY 400, xlnt cond, illary gas tanks, pick-ups, \Vurliuer-Lov.Tey-Kimball ~ ;::; 13' GAFF-RIGGED 86 sq ft rels, All Aircraft Fittings, ;600 or bst oUr 4 whl drives. vans & nlotor Yamaha.......c;Wbranscn e PUPPY WORLD e sail, Roomy, 1 mo old, Halcraft quick change V * 642--5901 * homes. 892-8314 FULLERTON MU~IC, En a: 1 is h B"lu 11 Dog s, 1ifust sell. All.k.illi $675, work Drive, Adjustable Tr Im 1969 BRIDGESTONE 100 TT FOR Sale four cylinder Jeep 12'.? N. Harbor. Fullerton Ollhuahuas, Tiny Poodles, 526-5568. Plate, Ir! stacks, Tamdem or fiat track eng needs Eugine $75. Some extra 171·1805 I Amer. Esk l Sp t t z} 'H ~O=B:.:l:::E:::l:..G_Sai_'t--169--1 h Axle Nieson Trailer, Speed work $100. 54g.4338 aft 5. parts, call a42-5967 after 6 hrs: 0,....., Nights 'tit 9 Dobennnn, Pit Bulls, Bull ' no. • ' w t high 90's, SEE IT TO BE· TRlmlPl·I '"' 650 . low ~~~~~~~~~ Sa • ,-l ···30 Su 12 • T('rrier C.oekapoo Irish dolly, full cvr, $147a. Call LIEVE IT. ABSOLUTELY . "'" .,.. -cc:, • pnl. t. ti ,J. • n. ·:> ' . ' , , Lombardi days 962-8891 IMMACULATE. (GW899GJ f1.1iles on rebuilt cog. $495 FACTORY S..ttcr. 100 MIXED PUPS.. ~·t'S18 ' fi •~ •~ '70 CAPRICE COUPE (Pl831 $2399 '72 DODGE Vi TON PICKUP !7'733.1Ll $3299 '61 FORD WAGON IYID2G6l $2999 '73 NOVA COUPE (2091-ICU) $2999 '72 MALIBU COUPE (1'58) $3099 '61 vW CAMPER tXYG8771 $1999 GROTH CHEVROLET Stud Seivlre Moat Breech. eves .,_. · Origlna.I Coat over $71XX>.OO rm . ....,.,.'UUQ, I§] CLEARANCE Open Eves: 531-5027 19 FT. Lightning w/traller Sale Priced at $3695. ·n HONDA 350CL. pvt party. Autos for hie ~ 18211 BEACH BLVD e ARTISAN 2-man church FREE TO GOOD HOME & sails, Xlnt cond. S950 Call SEA & SUN R. V. Mu11t see to appreciate. 847-6087 549.3331 model. Waa. $9600. Now. OlJ) ENGl..ISH SHEEP-1..:::B<::c1.J6=1:cO _____ "1425=:..· :::55""1·"1218:;=,·~---HUNTINGTON BEACH $5750. DOG 6 mo. old. SJ6.....'.00l CAL 20 No. 1001, xlnt cond, 17555 Beach Blvd., Hunt. Bch. '66 Honda 303 Scrambler Trucks 962 '63 FORD VAN • ARTISAN Z.man !heater after 5: :Kl. make offer or trade for !~~~~842'06~~75~~~ $225. 642-Q>n after 5. Mags & chrome \\'he£'!s. model ~th band box and SCHNAUZERS • Hold for motor home. 613-1933. Ask !or Brian '62 CHEVY PU 1h ton Good $400. 8 Prier firm ~#:t: ~.as $'1500. Now, Olrlstmas. Shots, terms, 16' Glen·L catamaran Jr-'l •n HONDA 750, low miles, body & runs good. SLick, * 543-3691 * e AUSTIN P1pe OTlrcl1l z. stud serv. Bn-.8182; 52'2-&56 jltra1Jfr· ~29twied & T.............. xlnt cond67~i7 !• ~~~~NAL 1,-t '65 DODGE VAN. Runs good. n1an. 12 r&nks, pl.a).ing aft 5 astC.AL320. . . t ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~ •=HONDA CL.. rcblt eng, ton pickup, air co nd. ~\8~,1'64~ of!er. Call in V1sta. $3750. * OOBIES, 5 wks, AKC, race eqwp • I ~ Walteo lift gate. 962-3294. ""'=~==----•NEWPORT Pipe organ, 2-show quality, temperament xlnt concl C S I /R t 920 good cond., $400. 645--7683 '69 Jo'ORD I ton, many ex· man. 6 ran.,, only 10 ""'· bred, xlnt color & markln"'s. 846--9289 ampers, 1 • en aft 3 pm. '73 F250 Ford Ranger 4x4. ._ 34 IYVl ii \Vll Id ~= ,.. Pvt <v =o ·~ 1 ..:=~cc::::..----~l-many xtras $4295. 536-6388 .... s. ....,,,.. m es. I ac· o • _,.,,,, · pty . .ur:r.iu;J, VICI'ORY Zl' Daysallor ~~ C.UIPER shell, icebox & '12 125 DK\V, runs x nt., cept trade. 644-6457 • Empty c_onsoll$. . keys, LABRAOOR, black, 3 'Yf'· Interest:. $450. Outbrd. Inex. table, sleeps 3, $350. Call down pipe, new hub, must aft 4· ·49 STUDEBAKER p u pedals, chunes ~ kit.s. AKC, fem. exc. retriever, pensive boat slip. 673--8456. aft 6 Mon thru Thurs., see to apprec. MS-5417. 169 DATSUN PU. Red. Xlnl classic. Good cond. $300. or NEWPORT ORGAN watch. dog & friend. Shots, HOBIE 14 w/traller. anytime, Fr 1 ·Sat.Sun, 1..:,6::.:9:..;Y:::AM..::!:A!::HA=.-'o"'r"RT:::,:B:..!KE= cond. Nu trans, f.IOO. Call best offer. 548-1025. ~~:..:·=~s as n';~;;,;~100 =an ~~rfi~ N~Pad"! l'IM.'e a.n ad! * ~~;r * \~:>~1ephant Dime-A-Line Claulfied Ada •••.•• MZ-5678. tong u · you like! Adult.s Short hair puppy. 5 mos., Autos New ~ no Autos, New ftO Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 welcome to attend Tuesday good mark1"&", 1 m a r t , ' nl&ht at 7:30 Pl-of. \Ve want 968-24.'\3. . ~ ever)'9ne to learn to play AKC English s pr t n a: er the Orpn1-Tom Diett?rich -. _ in charie &n-285L Coast SptU'!iel .Need good home, f.1uslc Newport Blvd. at $50. or offer ~7613 . . '61 EL CAMINO, auto iran..· TOP DOLLAR PAID PIS, radio, heater. vinyl IMMEDIATELY 1op, 507 V·8, alass eamP"" ron AU. f'OltElCN CA.RS 11he-U. 89-1·4123 eves or Call or t.'Ome w to ~ us. MIM121, ext 361 dftYI. '73 CHEVY Van.· 5,500 ml, V..S au10, p/brks, p/s, a/c, steel odlal:s &: mags. $1350. sr...sm V1n1 '73 CHEV VAN BUBBLE TOP 963 V·8. unheard.of \."llUC (QBZ· tm>. $3919 GUSTAFSON Uncoin·?o.fl'rcury 16800 Beach ~t \Varner Huntington Bt-srh 842·&*1 * (213) 592..5544 "Home of the Vikltie'' '72 DODGE Sportsman Van 3i8 cu In. aulo r/h tp/dlc cptcd: 2 tone body, ').I ton' xlnt cond. Only $2Th0. 8!M-{1!2(J '65 Dodgo Window Van Good ni PChanicnl cond. ?<.loke mr an offer. 'Call 645-69ZT. '6.l F'ord Econoline :>UJ>f'r van, Run~ good, nu tires, $j{)(), or besl offer. Af!cr 6p1n, 817--0506 ·71 DODGE conlempo camper van. raised roof, f\111 equip!, sac (or ha.I due. $2890. Ph: &15--0856 '68 OODGJ<:: \•an. 6 1·yl 3 i:;p 54,000 n1i. good roncl best offer. R3S-466S afl 6Pi\I 3 1110: old •73 Che\'Y 10 \'an. 5600 n1i . i\1any xtras. ln1n1nc l'Ond. 675-5722. NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Cout JI~ .• N.B. 642-'405 TOP CASH for clean late model and trucks! Howard Chevrolef ]if&cArthur and Jamboree Newport Beach 833-0555 Autos, lmporlod , ALFA ROMEO *ALFA ROMEO Best dl'al always! Berlinas fl'orn $.1m (Ser. #0288). "r.?'11 & '73'1, Co1nple1e ~· lccllon JIO\.\'. Buy or lease from Jim P•rkfnson'a [h\1rl1 ]hnpurt~;, +~ ' "''' "' I < ~ • t..I rl ~ 64:'>-&IOO or AUSTIN HEALEY '67 AUSTIN Healey 3'.m. \Vhitc. wire \\'heels,. Prl. Pty. $1500. !ltjl=<ll5 AUSTIN AMERICA 1966 \\'lNOO\V Chevy, $900. '69 AUSTIN America wl'n big 6, l'l'l.-e nt rebll. XII"&. auto trans & engine. Good hucket sea. 714-492-1610. <"Ond. $500. 645--4327 l>.ulos Wontod 961 BMW 1 -------~l ~:~r"e~~~ CREVIER BMW II your car is extra C:ean, Sales e Service • Lcasinl sec u.<1 first. 20M \V. Ist., S.A. 835-l!n BAUER BUICK USED BMW'S 2925 Harbor Blvd. Costa l\Jesa 979.2500 171 BAVARIA WE HOY '70 2aoo-cs COUPE It1PORTEO AUTOS '69 2002 BEST PRICES PAIDI '69 1600 Doon Lowl1 Imports '61 2002 1.961t Harbor. C.M. 646-931X! '67 2000 CA COUPE Need a "Pad"? Place an ad! Call 642-5678. Autos, New 980 -"- -Any day ls the BEST DAY to run an ad! Don't d~la.)' •. Autos, New 9IO Hamor. CM. PEMBROKE Welsh Corgi. ll wks. AKC, PIANOS -ORGANS Call ,.._.928 New le Used. Great selection. T ..CUP Tiny Toy Puppies, Cbmpetttive prlces. (}pt-11 AKC, Poodle or York.ies, Eves. A Sundays, The best Stud Sl'rvlct>, 534-5248. deals are alway• nt: . POODLE white miniAture W.Uichs Music City "female. 'ShotB & """"' to ... PARKING LOT SALE ••• South Coast Plua 540-2830 (COOCI home. $15, 979--2789 FOR U!ase or sale Silky BUY a player piano tot Terrier · female. Ca 11 Oui1tma1. Good &election 832-9422 or 644-Gl78 from $UOO to $l:Dl. David S"J'UD SERvtCE . Tu'o year T, Dupree Player Pianos, old \l.'eimaraner. CH Ii: 2MOD Grace Ln., CM Field CH. 5-11·5838. 856 * CONN ORGANS * Horso1 • Immediate delivery ---------11 e Lowest prices LOVABLE Stra\\·berry Roan, GOULD MUSIC CO. 5 yr, mare. Gentle, well 2045 N. hl&in, SA 547-000 trained, % Tennessee walk. HAMMOND Spinet Organ, Sound & smooth. Call $.lCll :m ~ Rd., Newport ~61:>-"'-'!"-9'3"'-. ------11 Bead!.. SORREL QJI. mare, 8 yn, &z-4656 15.3 hands, stock potential, Old H•rcfwood Piano ~~ trails. Exp'd rider. $ZlO * Phone 642· Tm BLACK quarter hors<', mare. S.wl"I Machlno1 121 ~d. Askl ... 1600. Call HEAVY duty portable Singer sewing machine. $37. Call :>!>11193 8 yr old pony. Best offer. 833--0712 c-ing Goods 830 ntOROUGHBRED . lil a re , 1 . ...-:.:__' '...;;.______ for sale-best offer or will KNEISSL Blue SIRI'I 170,1 !le! ... !!!' Ex~p!'d!!rid!!!!e~r.~64.J.~!121~1~11 72.73 with Solomon 50'l blnd-1~ ingw. Only used half a I --11~1 """"'· Xln'I cond. 91!f-33U -~ b .,. after 6 pm .l'·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~"~~:11 SKIS &. boot3, m('n's, goodl I rondltlon. Also F.ki equip. a_. n.-. I , 900 Call dayg, 979-3198. -ts, vwner• NEW &. used di~ equl~ '72 GI.AS.5PAR OJtlas 1600. ment SACRIFICE. Call 130 hp. Volvo-1 /0. VnMOn Eves & wknd.! 962-4283. trlr & canvasses Fully TV, Radio, HIFI, equlpt. $3250. - l;;;;s; .. ;';;";::;:;::;;136;;;;l '69 4!llP Evinrode, Big Twin, .FJect start, recent major overhaul, xlnt cond, 642-2833 RENTACOLOR 16' OUTBOARD, 35 hp. Evinrude, 2 gas tanQ, Ille Now brings you a full line of jackets, Everything needed brand new color television to go. 6'1!>-&736. receivers from 12'' to 25" n--M I I with a l'Omplete lree in -ts,. • nt. ho nl e service program Service 902 starting from $12."5 per ---------11 monU1 Minimunl Jen.~ 12 SAU.OR, 24 yrs. old. Speaks n1rui ~ A nev.• set every Spanlsh. ~1aint. backiround. ye~; • J( you have good Race-Cruise-Ready. Ma.l'k credit can Anaheim 991-1551 675-5964, 673-6288 or visit showroom at 22t> N. IS )'OUl' bottom dirtyT Hull Crescent Way, Anaheim, Ca. cleaning for 30c per water line ft. &t5-13'J) lz'"EN ... ITH!!!!!!!!R~CA!!!!&!!l!ISy~lv"a"oi"'a l BOAT Ownen, tired ot hi TV I: ~tereos, priced J~ malnt. cost? ~bing I: than the discollnten, With 3 monthly mjce. 6~13~: yr. picture tubes. 1 yr .,...,. llolh/Mlrlno & l!'l'Vlce. AJI available Equip. . 904 models in &tock &. on - display. '13 models pliced VHF radio, CB radio, depth 10 clear. Cash 90 ptan or recordfto, elec. head, new terms to 36 mos. ABC O>lor & used diving equip., jet TV, 9021 Atlanta, or 19046 powered sleigh for dlwn B r o o khursl, ilWltlrutton or for fun Eves/wkndl Beach, 968-3329 or 962-5559. 962--1283 • PttOVING le-must ~-.3-SMAH;~c.,::; __ ::: • ..,,~.-cy""t.-· ""G,-l'l\Y--,lnd""''b·ll old set l•/guar/Po1netr marine engine. G~at for Tuner Marantz A m P • be.y or sailboat. MS-3.J&l Ampe.' cassette player $280 Bo 1 p 906 646--MOO 1 1, ower STEREO, Pana I on i c, 28' LUHRS '68, Fiybrklge. AM/FM l'adlo, 3 IP d Full coven. Many extras. turntable, headlet, 2 mo. ~. 551-M.33. $115. ~1064. 14' WHALER type boat. f<blp, Poi,.U..tene !Wed, '[I $ZG. 613-18SI, 5.1&-2001. ,,. ,. 'IW WIU. -Nowpoct IIeadl I'-------' ll"'P'l'IY lor Boal. n4/673-2058 or Eve!. 675-5481 3 Llnoo, 2 Tl""''• $2.00 12' FIBERGLASS w/17\i • b.p. motor & cM rack, ldnt TIGER tern kltten, fnd cond. $19?. ~16 • itarvlng: must find home, l958 ~IC 18' Cbr\I Oon- Vf'ry, very lovnble 962-8644. llncnta1 nmabout. No ena F'EM Doberman gentle gd $350. MS-2592. w/chlldren, 2 yn., needs '1~6=FIBER.,;:;:..;::=o1,...w-°'0"1B=--=50' 11 o. lll)Od homf'. 9'79-04f;l. llorlM! JOhMOn w/traJ)er. CUTE Pekapoo, ma I e, I $675 89'7-4537. )T, old1 brown, IE white. ,.... .. ~Pl'ED will wd Ill C\lte. 5t7«>12 ~~ • ~ -f -- Dick Johnson, Vice Presilent All 1973 MODELS REMAINING WILL BE SOLD AT INVOICE OR NEAR INVOICE! A SPECIAL SECTION HAS BEEN SET ASIDE A~O LOADED WITH 1973 CARS ... Lincoln-Continentals-- 1973 e DEMONSTRATORS • EXECUTIVE CARS • • • e BRAND NEW ... FANTASTIC SELECTION • • • SAVE HUNDREDS OF bOLLARS! MERCURYS 1973 . Demos -Executives -New Comets. • • Montegos ... Margquis ' HwTy For Yorn· Choice ••• Today! • • ''Oran-at Count~'J: Family oJ Fine Car.s 1' • • • Jf~e Of '!'he New Cit , , • .. ,. ..... 2'ewdi' l!ome Of '111e New Cat , • • "G..U.. r-c:Jo•• 2626 HARBOR Bl VD. Of ~ARS Cost• Mo11 • 5~5630 ' . .. ·- ... .. • • ~ •• $ •' .. ·~ I ... . ... :~ . ... =~ ~ ·~ ·.• :~ ·~ -~ ~ -•• . , .. .,. --•• ,., .;; ., ., I :..-· I • =~ ' .. : : . • • ... ·.· . ,• . , . . . . ... .. .· ·' • • • =· -- ~ I • I ,// I • 1 I I I -- ·--.~. 18 DA1L.f PIL.OT Wtdnesday, Nowmbtt 14, 1973 "'""""" _.., 14, 1973 PILOT ·ADVE~TISER %0 • Autos, mported 970 Autos, Import 70 Autos. Imported ~~~~~~~~ 970 Autos, lmpomd 70 Autos, Imported 91t AuloJ, I mporied ! ' TOYOTA 970 I AufM, lmpo 970 Allfot, -.u.... • BMW CRICKET • ( ORANGE COUNTY 'S OLDEST '71 CRICKET. AulOm.fttlc 1MUlsrnls."M>n. radio, ~tff, lO'A' n\UC$. C883E.i'Wl. $1195. & Excellent aelcctlon of Pn>· price re-evaluo.Oon n1odels. DEMO $ALE &\LES-SERVIC&LE.i\SlNG OVERSEAS 'l>ELI\TERY THEOOORE ROBINS FORD 2060 H(U'hOr J~lvd., CO!liltl J\lei;a 642-0010 DATSUN ROY CA~ER, Inc. • Cos<•,::.~:· 1 b St.546-4144 BARWICK IMPORTS Bi\f\\' •72 Bava'.rfa-,-4~ 33375 C&n,'Llno C.11.pl1trano air cond, AMJ,FM, greca-88.n Juan C.aplstrano 1973 DATSUNS ALL MODELS IN STOCK It •• ooo 1 ••~ La :-!'"·3375 or &U-1315 "' an, v., m , f1<W'N r-~ "'· "'6-S2<0 oves "'2•2l00. '69~ DATSUN I CAPRI PICK UP _ 1---------4 !!peed, radio, h<.>nlrr & nc\v CLASS+ ECONOMY It ti1·c11. <ZUS2021 . 1\ ni('e tllr. J-lappy 1973 Cnprl 011•ner nlust sell car ! It hns everything · Red w/black luxury interior. 4-sJ>f!('d, 2000 eng. Al\t rrr-.1 cn1·. 83 J.2(}1K) $1295 MASERATI '68 ~1ASERATI very clf'tln, good cond. MWJl -.ell. Call 644-Ml!6 MAZDA * Mndo '73 Rotary * $66 MONTH 36 MONTHS OPEN LEASE \\lilt accept trade·inl CALL MR. rRY 842- H u nt. Beach MAZDA MERCEDES BENZ 50~.USED MERCEDES -. ON DISPLAY Sharp New Car MERCEDES IENZ JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS MERCEDES BENZ Atrl'HORIZED SAL.ES A SERVICE . Jim Slemons VOLVO ' IUICK 'FORD ~~~~~~~-1 NEW .PEUGEOT ·19 .TOYOTA tond Cnilaer •74 VOLVO'S ' m Sl<tLARK. loode<I, lull '13FORPll....,.,..rsu 4x4 (961AnY) $19 9 5 , I Powtt. air, vtnyl top, OlatMu W~. ·Driven DEALER Tb<Odore Robin> Fonl .. 2060 HERE NOW boa~ blue. ortce<1 to .. u ,,,_ Air, '"l\J.wr· Coinpl.ete SaJei and Sttvi~ Harbor Blvd., eo.ta Meaa. lmmedfal De.II $249$.: 962-6181 10132 ~ ov. ..=-. 18 50 .c<>mp4L'8 on <!l•Pl•y. S<:HllllO. On All •Moc1ei:"'· • 0.y Cllr.AHBD.ILLAC ~ ·~~RAND 1'>rino So PACIFIC MOTOR TRIUMPH SAVE I ON REMAINING am/fin ate...r.. Ale, .PEUGEOT IMPORTS 19511 .TR 3. now <Jlllin<, 28 73~:~=~0~.~ • 1 CADIWCS r.~rJ.,, L~~ Imports PEUGEOT /SUBARU ml gal. Good L~nd. 1350. -~ L.UIM ·n FORD L'ro 2 cir,. {\Ve're top buyer for any 15.57 W. Uncoln Ave., Clll 551-l218. VftlVft O · C ty' P\\1", air.-stereo -AM """1 Me=des ll<nJ.). Anaheim 5l1-82lO VOLKSWAGEN IU~IU l'Clll~ oun s XI .. -$2200. or 0 N.;,11~~ . SAAB '71 VW IUS 19116 Harbor. C.M. &lG-!003 Larw.st 5electlon .::'RD Lm Seda __ Autos. Used 990 All iiii0clel1 Ii Colors cond l lUll 111, ENTFlR FROM MacARTHUR-* SAAB 4 speed. zadlq, heat1r, cw;-" ,,..y . 'E!. DORADO top 'x1nt :J'weJima '72 S50 SL. Jo mlleegl!f beauty. Best deal ahvays. cOmplete tOni ~Int & m,.g . wheels ,CLASS +. EC,.,t.f ~, •. ,I ,I . ~ DE' V1ui:S &ti~ to; . Come look or call Udo selection now. Buy or lease with wide oval tlrel. (00} Happy l973 Capri 0~·!9Uf1 ~ETWOOD BROUGJ-tUts .-="-:=;,·.,.....~...,,,,.---, Shores Motel, 673-8800, Apt bwn . CYV). A nice dlt .. car! sell ·car! It.bu evtfYt~ •' COUP~ -SED~S-'n FORD 3fa \Vgn, ro $2'J9 5 Red f l black luxl!'l' lid•!' / """""RTS • ~ mll... Xlnt · Jim Parkinson'• , · lor, 4'•peed, 200!> ..... AMI Wide ,.1;--i.;,;~ colors -ll360."i<'U119. MG 831·2040 495-4949 fl.I stereo radio, air, etc. Choice of interion '69 Galax,)' 500 4 dr '68 VW Bus, '70 eng, new ~!;:. .. ~ fo~~l~~ CTapestr)' & fUll leathtt) sit. Pit pb,rlairlldzltl ~68 l\1GB, wil<e whls, new valve job & tuned, New t d 1 ,1 Atk.111 $3500 Factory air condlUonlng Ori& owner. 979-6743 paint, runs good. $ll50. tires, SH'8g rtJk & curtain.!, ;_7~&15~an~~·5:30 i. g · Fullpower-cholceol: '69 FORD Ltd sta. 61J...4334 or 675-8600. Xlnt cbnd. MllSt sell, $1400, o:u • ,,,.nu: Cruise Control 39 ooo mi' Sl.585. OPEL .~~~CC· '----'0"''---"645-6=-~= 67>-U)15 ' AMa , Stereo AM/FM radio ~1 •• --------'71 We1tfali• Camnar Truck opener more ~,.;;;;<-o=::.=::-t: ~tereo radio, ail', l'tc. Only '71 240 Z Cusl. pnt, AP.'1/fl.I, 1 • 3!!00 mill's. Buy a "IW\\'" 8 Irk, alr, 1nags, splrs, lo I ' car for $700 less than at a n1i. X.lnt t.'Ond. 673-1768 a ft dealet'~!. Asking $3500. ~'-· ------- !15!·81'1 alt 5,30 pm. -FORD Trade-ins Coml119 In Evory Day Ask About Our Unique UHd M•rc8des lea1e '61 OPEL Kadeue L Sta. TO.~OTA Lo miles. nr. new c~. •tl ~REMUN t '!X", a/c, All in ~ate ~dition ·~,L~~~~,~~ Wag. Disc brakes, radio, ~---'-'----AM/FM stereo. Not a pop-p/s," radio~. ~ket seat1, Nabers Cadillac 10 pass. iam 830-0811 lop rack. Ex. cond. Ne\V JUST ARRIVED up. lo\v mi. 3 spd( very sporty, At.mfORJZED DEALER •69 FORD FAIRLANE valve job, new Oan1e red •74 TOYOTAS $2350 * 5!16-1575 $1795, 492Y· 2600 "'""HSTARBOA MESAR BL., p is, .AUTO, ale, 'Pd acrylic laquer paint job: V\V '69 Bue. 31,000 miles. ....v 847 2933 ·n CAPRT, 200 cc, R&ll. rad. --------t ires, xln't corn:!. alt. 5:30, 642·-1290, 586-00.38. CORTINA '70 CORTINA, s l ig ht ly dam.aged. Parts or all. flfake Offer! 642·8936 eves. CRICKET · '72 ·CRICKET 4 DOOR Auto n1 a I i c tra nsn1ission, radio, hl'ater & radiul tires. (9401'~NF1 . A nice dh'. car! $1495 1968 FORD CORTINA. Ex· ceplionally C 'I ea n, un- believable gas l'COnomy, S-10-9362. JENSEN JENSEN INTERCEPTOR LARGE SELECTION OF COLORS I i l\1EDIATE DELIVERY FULL SERVICE OEPARTMENT Plens House of Imports 6862 ~1anchester, Buena Park on the Santa Ana Ff"l't'Y 523-ml NOW OPEN l\Iu st sell! $850 or best o!ler. New Models • New Colors Xlnt cond. $1100. Call BUICK 540-9100 Open Sundfty =-=-=---~--fllH. Call Taylor at 962-1715. SAVE$ ON REMAINING 552-75:.13 --------1·72 Cadillac Coupe De Ville. . JEEP1 ...f ~ '68 OPEL "'/'70 eng. Needs 13's & DE.J.\lOS 1969 VW BUS 'TI ELECTRA sedlin. Fact. Gold w/white vinyl top, • # trans. ....-ark. Good tires. w ;Jolding bunk. air full pwr vinyl top, Fully equip., lo ml, st~ '73 JEEP CJ5 · ~ am/Im stereo. i m mac . cond. 545-1397 or 847-700I fWl roJI cqe. Clble I PORSCHE '61 V.\V. Big surui., reblt rond. 42,~ ml, $333'3. call '73 CAD SDV, like nu, ~ etc. 'MU1t -aell Belt·~o"' ~· S.100 or best offer. 645-7506. flt.41l LfW• $1395 Ca ll 556-8657 tilt' "'hi , powe'r door lock, belted radial llre11. Top Under warranty. lleai:I JOYOJA eng, new tire!!, Al\l/nt, 546-4155 (Sys, 673-MM nl&:hts ml, 'fully equip. Pvt. pty 637·12TJ. , • Mission Vie lo Imports •68 912 LO\V LO\V miles, good gas pi. $450. 497-1275. & w~kend11. . $6250/or ofr. 644-7311 eve. 197~ .• 4-wtil' ·:cldVt. ~ ~,.p ff''ll'•l'in"' immac, 28MPG Sell or take 1966 Harbor, C.l\1. 646-9300 VOLVO "r.l SK¥LARK. ·Yellow. PIS, ~1010. 1·5. wa.Peer. LoiidOO. A!°" MERCEDES' BENZ economy car tn trade, LEASE •74 TOYOTA 1200 --------·I P/B, air, 12 mo. old. Ask· ·70 S.D. Fully loaded x1nt p /11, p/b,fir. ~1084. at · & 962-8640 <:=Ila &«Ion ..• Cot 30 •n VOLVO 141. Fae. air, ;ng ~ firm. C 21 ~) cond. Make oU"· Call MAVERICK " ' Co FIAT '73 9f4 1.7, only llXXJ mi. mile!! per gallon ... Only xlnt cond in &: oul Gets 723--01136 days. As&k f'?'r Mik1 1e 497-1132. • : I Sa &Sa · J Id 4n•=·•<> .,,,.,. 36 tmllea 5411191 or ea~name · no. ae · , mo ete le!ii rv1ce mo o , xtras .,..-.. mi .......,..... mo. n1os, ope;, grea ge. -Eves· (71J) $73-4003 NB 1968 COUPE <k' VIiie, full 70, 2 dr. reblt, green, cl Visit U1 Soon At or 494-1533 end lease. days, 979-4078 eves & ' · ' po .... -er & all extras. $900 air cond, tMpe deck 28701 Marguerile Park\\'BY '70 1911Sl 5sp am/fm mags wkends. 1967 CAil. fo~ the Ye&r. · M4'-6180 or 64)-3639 Cash 4~1719 J\1ission Viejo 495·1700 l\1ich . recarro seuts. 9-5 '69 VOLVO, l.J4S, AM/FM, GS-400 il.illung $900, Clean '70 CAOl.Ll...AC conv gd .-• <USE AVERY PWY. EXIT) 557-3550-S. Stuart A/C, steel radials, new & Hurry! ·968-T.187 cond, classic. model, $2.!0'J ~IJ~UI'( ~: ··-· 1-2MO 495-4949 NEWPORT IMPORTS "While Elepuarits" over-' 'v_o_u_d_o_n·-, -.... --a-gu-n-to brakes. 4 spd, S 1 6 9 S. ~69 SK\'t,ARK custom 2 dr,. days 3 83.\-2640 ' tf running your house? Turn "Draw Fast" when you 49'2-7883 !ilr. conj'I, pl, pb ~ cond. •71 Coupe DeVille : • 1964, MERCURY :A:. .. ' i Fat Profit is altained when you sell through result-get. 3100 \V. Coast Hwy., N.B. them into "cash" ..• sell place an ad in the Daily 'GS VOLVO, 142 S, \\'hilc, Pri Pty, $1400. 846-3J6G Loaded $2995. Private Party • Xlnt. Eves 5.JS..4326 t• •· them thru a Daily Pilot Pilot Want Ads! Call now "·68'""ro=vOT=A-. ~Good~~ru-o-ni-r'li' an:. good tires, stick, $1150. The faslest drn"."' In the ~est ' 536;79(XI htust' sell •n t.larqull 1~~ classified ad! -642-5618. cond. New battery, recent Pr1 Pty 499-4070 •.. a Dally Pilot Oasslfled ,.ed alto 1tJ Ford stactah Autos, New 980 980 tuneup $190. Call 646--0416. Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 CAMARO wag 556-1326. ~ ting Daily Pllot C1assllied 642-9405 Autos. New 980 ~A-u"'to-,-. "°N'ew----,,~. YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED CHEVROLET · DEALER SERVING THE ENTIRE HARBOR AREA FOR OVER llcYEARS .. -·---Try Our ,.ewes+ at Connell !Chevrolet lease the "CONNELLEASE" Way., s .. Jerry Perkins, LUsing Manager II , ALL REMAINING 1973 DEMONSTRATORS; LEAR- ., • • ~ -,,... '73 ;cHEVELLl SS • $3984 '73 CAPRICE 2 l>oor $3899 _!73 CHEVT Spomvan 'I• Ton $3599 Lo aded 11260 I I 458452 I Loedod 1145 ) 11056551 Loaded 1453 1 I I 186891 '73 CAPRICE Estato Wogon $4382 '73 IMPALA 2 Door $3582 '73 EL CAMINO $3433 Loaded 11 3311 1207856 1 Loaded 115671 112 7689) Loaded I 686 I 1423614) I '73 IMPALA 4 Door $3658 '73 CAPRICE 4 Door $4353 '73 CAPRICE .4 Door $4256 Loeded 1105) 11033941 Loaded 1249) I 114358 1 Loaded 1771) 11642621 '73 IMPALA 2 Door $3558 '73 IMPALA 2 Door $3578 '73 CAPRICE 2 Door $4089 Loaded 1112 1 11036 511 Loaded 1257) 11159771 Loaded 17751 11649561 '73 IMPALA 2 Door $3784 '73 CAPRICE 2 Door $3999 '73' CAPR1cr 2 Door $3992 Loaded 112111045111 Loaded I 307 I 111 9205 ) Loaded 19411 1179328 1 '73 CAPRICE 2 Door $4271 '73 MONTE CARLO $3758 '73 CHEVELLE Laguna Wogon $4301 Loaded I 137) I 105502 1 Loaded 13 76 1 1412 743 ) Loaded 17561 1427092) I '73 CAPRICE 4 Door $3995 '73 CHEVELLE LAGUNA 4 Door $3478 '73 CHE.YELLE W09oa $3784 Loaded 1141 1 1106062 1 Loadad 13861 1413655 1 Loaded 11252) 1459379 ) 5 Yr./50,000 Mile Warranty Available at nominal fee. Par.ts & Labor on drive tr~in. . ' ALL HAVE AIR CONDITIONING. Some with FULL POWER READY· FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY .... . ) • • --------1'10 MONTECO · w.,.., 111P> '67 CAMARO. Automatic, stereo, tr1f packQu, $lfDCl radio, healer, Air cond., B/B $850, cash f4!"5215i ; pov.-cr steering. (UNB406). . · J j 11285.THEODORE" MUSTANG ~-: ROBINS FORD ·n MUS'fAl"G. AVtoriuiJlc, 2060 Harbor Blvd., radio, healer, air Coil' .. Costa. Mesa 64Z-0010 ·power steering. -. (417EAJ):. CAMARO ~ '70, air, p/1, ~-THE-ODORE ·· ~= a/trans, R&H, Michelin · ' ~. tire" 557-9'94. / . ~Bi\ZS FORD .: : , 1967 CA MARO, 2 DR Hrdtp. ,.__ >l bor> Bl~~ .. r\: Very Sharp! Low mileage. \.Alei;;'-l~'.;c'¥"°"=0.-":0:~~~ 11 200. C.ll 841..G'f. '67 . M\J~'ANG,., r;«ll , CHEVROLET p/s, air qind; ~ .. , Io., mll~qe, '"!Jl,, aild. ------,-·--1 ~ EYes & w•tn4i:. '69CHEVIMPALAd.JSTOM G'IJ..8636 pr wo rll:'da"'~ 2 Door Hardtop. 350 VB, SZ3-tno. .,, ·aU to mat i.c l~smlakxl, • \\'E'Vr; 'Cd'f :\ JlO"'t'r steenng, tmted ilass ONE 'fOO J\·J;\NY ~ com pl et~. Strato • b 11 ck e 1 n sell • Mir.dang 1tfact¢;J, seats, vinyl top. Fftciar)' air '69,• 351 engine, air, p<!ltr, cond. Will sell Im' Kelly a wo, etc; Ji'eln cond. $.la., ~~~k who I e aa I e' 49:.J..:2112.r ~ "1 ,64 OiEVY Van w/'&81 ;.6;;1-';M'°u"'~""AN'"v;o-;Co;;:::nv::,11::,-tr.:c, Catnaro eng, · ntriL bed, tape deCk, ?full cond. cabinets, US n:taP. n,.,t b\11. Sac..,~ ~ seats, nllJs good $JJ01i c:ii' 'II , MUSl'ANG M~ best offer. 557-9118 Special, Needs work bu ·n MONTE Carifr ~.OOJ mi, ly S27S. 615-3758 ~ "!1n'-=--"':""' R .. c.,,.·~ D~'QSaitPBI a ir \:Uuu, mag wrus, .-•J•l-.,.;--".:....'-'""'--<f~ I flnn no trade. 64$-3034 da.y1 846-53)1 pm '61 CA!>IARO SS 396, Xlnt GMC TRUCKS Ji"· cood Mu" oee lo · •P' HON"'li.'" ~"RS ; predate, A1any xtru..Lost U """ • ;ob, must .. u. 11600 or ""' UNIVERSITY otr. 8'17-3626 2850 Harbor Blvd.' "Tl MONTE Carlo. Pnl\'er: Ollila _ air, vlnyl1. roof, lo miles, 'G!l OLDS Cutlass, &d· $2900. \\ill tnke trade. mast aac. $Ufl0 or 963-1059. oUr. .. •• '13 Impala ~tom Cpe. Like MS-23ll ~: new. U> m_1, loaded. Cost ,65 OLDS 88 I 1,. "io $4900. Leavmc for Orient. • P 5• P .., Sac $3495 4•3702 trant; radio, heater, c:=. • ' good "'nd. 84<H91l l '65 • IMPALA Oean, aut,! pm. p/i, )>lb, ale, 327 eng, g(l(f(ll:,10=:, "o"'w=s-cu=n"'.,-:•°"Su=± trans car 64&-0668 • • · stereo tape deck, ale. 1971 EL CAMINO p/1, p/b, JIO""er, lo mi. Xlnt alt, new tirt'I, 350 v~. $2125. 644-5185. $2275. ~. 6 l62, bet '69 TORONAOO good 8 & S, 637-7158 alt 6. tlon, tape cieCk, A~ FOR sale -'62 Otcv I mpala alr.·6TJ~. xlnt tnmsp car gd running .-,.---=p"'~l"'NT=o=--.-1-1 cond,. $350 -Cl" btt oUr. PH 5.16-9902 or 536-7639 1--------111- 1970 IMPALA 350 eng air ·n-PINTO. 4 5peed_._ power, chen). rond., be1~ mission, radio, Mater. wholesale 494-2210 DIJ\1). $1395. ' THEODORE oo.i O!EV. Impala CUst. ROBINS FORD Sport Cpe, a/cood etc. Top cond. $850. 846-3192. 2060 Harbor Blvd.. '7Q NO'(:A. 34 000 nu. Good.i;Co;;;•:;:ta~M;o<Sa~==...:;~ cond: Must Sell! $1500/besl '72 'Pinto RunaboUt, al> oiler. 644-8338 • 979-1838. 4-spd. a/c, lo miles, . '65 CHEVY 2 d:r "'ai: claSl!lc cond. $2150 830-0817 . · nee&i;. work, 677iJ22 or "12 PINTO RUNABO~, 642--5180 n1I, $1100. 494-2231 ~)' '67 rn.EVY Bel Air New 833-l4J7 ••. paint, good tires, 546-3626 '73 Sq_ulft \\1at,'On. 4. CONTIN. ENTAL w/m ... , •wt rack, cond. Call 551-0647. • 1~ . '13 a>NTlNENTAL Mark • PLYMOUTH .· IV, Stiver ·P.tlit. CJ:anbel'J')' vtk>ur int., Atake Offer, '69 RoadnQ)lm'. Good 49S-3U3 . If~ body •'Oltt. COUGAR .. 9'19-1856 bets. 611 0012 • . . • . · . . t,ONTIAC. .il ·:...c:ow.n ~~· ;!7.·.:ff. ~ roNT. Catalino,~ ty furniture, den, diJilna' rm book, $2250. Clean A H ... &: bedroom. 554-2744 private party, 008-'ll87. -DODGE OMll.ER· U1J...DQDGE CRESl'WOOD '5iL. NASit . Ket~lltan STATION . WAGON,' fully 'mner: lit :a.non . ~uipped includlna ~ 66-7649 . r 51'.M .. di"' brakes, power 81..,..,,, . T~ID fActory air, AMlti\I slcreo, ~ _, tUt ateering· wheel, haaa..: r , rack." LesS lhan 19,000 actul.J '86 T-Brtult dJo.ilt ~ mllcs. Asidnr 12 s 00 . •~ ii'""\ •<l'll(hanl<: -· . • All _.r, ,oll ·"'.O!!<\ '13 DODGE Dart Sport! , .... l'llQ. -..U~ 10,000 mi, 340 en,. am/fm 'IS T·Blrd, new .. tbs llCJ'Ol1. ma.... 139iJo or 1lraUo. -ohal>lo. nearest ofr, f!5'7-408'7 aft 5. otttr. ~~u '''' im DODGE O.DI Spumn. "IV1'·BIRO. lllDY oqu1 V-3. Auto. lZ1 W.B. H.D. aold{ ona . owner. Suspena. Oean. 123 5 0 'l-=536-=. 637=·==-.--+ -. VIG~ FORD ;. ,, yEGA.' 4 = '89 LTD Sta."a . full ~· Jtt.""" er. -r. 43,7tl0 nit. <an<l. ElV). .......,;. ;!ti !!!I!!· $1485. • _....... <ii "lf.u.AXIE ' 5C10, Rons ' •ROltlNt fORD pt. Orig owntt. :IOlll H-Blvd., ' 1 i646-8514 Cotlt Meia r • I I h • \• 11 I ! .. I • ' ! I. I I •• l FINAL '73 CLEARANC·E SALE! 1: :· · '36.,000· .MIL·E WARRANTY AVAILABL~ !I :·,. ------------------------... i-------------------------1' :f :Att· NEW 1974 BRAND -NEW 1973 CUTLASS S. ii ·-·o-··MEG. ··A· ; i ' I ' r '.: "JULLY _EQUIPPED . -. _, " ' ~ : ' '. .. :~ .si:., ' ' . ·., ' ' : ;. f .. } l 77 ': .... ____ lllJ!!llmm ___ ....,.,..._lllJ!!llmm ........... ---'. ; $177 ~~~~ For 48 months on -approved A.NNUAL O/o ' JI I_ , ' PAYMENT credit, incl. ,tax ... _.J ie_enu,_ ' ' u' TE - '. -. ; ·s·7212 . MoriT,AHLLY 2 . ' . $367 .36 d!!ferred payment inc . ,. ' ' -, ' , PAYMENT all finance \=haRJeS. 14.35°/o ~--. ., . • • LOADED Including. AIR COND. (117062 1 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ' .NO~ 1 O.LDS -DEALER IN1 ORANGE '-' COUNTY, ' . GIVEN WITH PURCHASE OF i ANY CUSTOM VAN THIS WEEK! 111' l' ;. . • .j • '· ' .. ,, • • ' . ·, i . ' T,AKE .. ' ' . I :·:'. -~•u•· ~ ;·-... ,I l ~ ... j 1 ' -- j I < .\ Ii: ·~ -Roi c E . Electr• .. nit wheel, vinyl roof, iir cond., : i ... _ . . lull power. IYPK5 20 l ~.S. Tilt whl., \.inyl roof stereo, full power, air, loa4ed. IZMU77 I ) Ml i.111 cl11. pmt $41 Nl•I m.. ''"'· uKI. l11r, lie., • •M u11"f1111 dlft, t j C C . I I . I I L d Ill 1ppr. c;~,i for ,. "'"' n.f"1'MI 11rmt. IM'k• •1114.tt illcl. ,Ml .. lk. oupe. ru1se con ro, v1ny roo , o• -_ _,,.. r ) • d f II · · (2 19E"0 J AMHUAL. "E•C£NTAGI! RATI' )UJ'Ji. 11177 cflll "'-""9 f\&'1~ e , u power, ~1r. ..,... ··· ' · , ' . ' ' ·• .' \ 'I .'{ .--. ' ' . ,. •t '. .. ' ,., '' I' •' 1~ '. . ' ' ' I -- -!• ·t; - --I ' . ' . • . _,wr fHAkK YOU • -. • FOi M~ICING us . . . . N·o .. 1 IN ORANGE-C<>UltTY HONDA CAR ·SALES-;fOlt"fHE-P,~T • 6 MONTHS ., •• AND•NOW •.. NO. 1 .HINDA -- DEALER ,. IN AMERICA! (Sept._ J-974-S-ales Figures-I • Wt win •-n to 1orv1 you to IH bftt of our ablllt.y .... .... ''WE APPRECIATE YOUR I USINESS " . ' $4Z . - -· --~z .~ --~Jhone -Us . Now_il_Eo~A .-. ~- ~~~~~~~~~~--~-~~---' . . '68 ~~~~;~p:!s,.~~~~.~lull $5 7Z 5 Minute Credit Chetk ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--1 . 6-1-COo~•D••St. A9u8tom•t··,, power $7 7 7 If you are new in the state e If you·owe on your present .. car e If you have little or no credit. 5teering. !VH0716 ) I 68 fl~:y ~:::.~~IZWY624 1 $677--P-HONE-540-9640 1-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----~ '6 7 T ·BIRP $9·17 Let us tailor your financing to your personal needs . Power end a ir condition ing . IWOG447 1 ·.~ ·. SEE-:ouR -HUGE SELECTION '69 ~.~~;~. ~~~!~~.E.,,,o,d . $877 radio. I 109638 ) ' Weather Proof Special Complete Undersea! Job .. ---·-------4'--... -----I s19 7? ~~~E . Any Model Oldsmobile SERVICE & PARTS DEPT. OPEN MOM.·SAT. 7:30-5:30 For Complett lody & Motal l t pair Stnlcft Cal 540-lt65 ,., -. ,.._ I ... -- • ' " _., i " ' ' , .... \ • ' , . . ~ • . . ... •. :-. ~· ' ~ .· ' ~ .. .. . .. .. .. ., .. • >. • . • ' . ' • < •• • • . . • . · ., -. :~ - ' .. • • . . • DAIL V PJLOT Wod-, --14, 1973 • \ 11 ALL'73S MUST •• 1\lln" Srr,·iut• DP• p11rln11•111 \\rl• ('ttn1t•s 11nd llon11r1'i ""!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I 1111 t·hr~ ... lt•r (' u r• "": pornliun \·t·hit•lt•s '70 FORD TORINO Hardtop. VS , a utomatic, radio, heafltt, power 1lee•- in9 & br•k11, WSW. air con- ditioning. 12278Ql! '69 SUNBEAM SEDAN 4 speed tr•n1mi11ion, r.1dio, he .. ter. bucket 1••h. <:on· sole. l'1348QK I '68 TOYOTA CORONA 2Door hardtop. '4 speed, •11- dio and hea•er, while 1id1 wall ti•e1. l XD8098 I s995 '68 CHEVROLET 2DOOR HARDTOP VI , •ulOm•tic, r•dio, he<tler, .1ir condition inq, 1007HFRJ s995 '69 PLYMOUTH WAGON Suburb1n. VI, .1ulom1lit. ra- dio. h1 •ler, .while w1lt1, roof ,,,k, !YHE2441 '70 PLYMOUTH DUSTER 6 cylinder e ng ine , '1t1nd1rd tr1 n1mi11ion, radio, h11!1r, while side w1ll lir11. 9678EJ I Smart Buyers • • • Now Is The Time To Act On Real Savings ••• And We Mean Savings On llt•quirin &! S1•r' i1·•• n 11d \\'11rr:in1~· \\ork. llP J,:"urdl1•,;s t•1'\\ht•rt• (':ir \\ns • l'urt•hn,.t•d. \\1• ll onttr .'tlus11•r ('h ur¢t•, H unk• .\111 t.•ri1•nrd. ('11rlt• Hlnnt•ht• •. \n1••ri· t•nn '-.xprt•!"s ,\ttd Dint•rs ('lub., •• Carry New Factory Warranty. i......-- BRAND NEW 1973 FURY CUSTOM WAGON BRAND NEW 1973 TOWN & COUNTRY WAGON '70 FIAT SPIDER Standard lran1miu ion, r1dio, h11lrr. 11:1 8l8Zll s995 '67 MUSTANG VI, e ulomalic tr1n1mi11ion, t•d io, he•ter, vinyl top. I tl8AQF l s995 '68 RAMBLER AMERICAN S1d 1n. Economical 6 cylinder engin e, lland1rd lr1n1mi1- 1ion. radio and h1at1r. IWWR.814) '68 DODGE COIONET 440 VI, •utom•tic, t•dio, he•ter, power 1teetin9, WSW, •ir cond., vinyl top. IXIY]65 I sa95 '70 MAVERICK 6 cylinder, 1t•11d,rd . h1n1- mi11ion , radio, heater, ~inyl top, d•1rome window lr1m11, (729 BHJI '69 v.w. FASTIACI • s1.ncl1rd tr1n1mi11iol'I, heet- .,, l715HEW J --_, ... --·, tj I Wednesday, Novembrr 14, 197.l PI LOT·ADVERTISER 22 BRAND NEW '73 INTERNATIONAL ,SCOUT OFF MANUFACTURE~'S . STICKER PRICE ..... $5744.11 America's leading rec- reational vehicles from the leading lntemation- al Truck dealer • · BRAND NEW '73 TRAVEL ALL s.n.r •lHOHOCHl71"1 (o'scou~t) $ OFF MANUFACTURER'S STICKER PRICE .... $6608.81 A t I a s Chryslw Plymouth now has facilities for serv- ice on ALL MOTOR HOMES regardless of size, by exper- ienced motor home mech- anics! WARRANTY work on International and D o d g e trvck chassis . J I • • -- BRAND NEW 1974 DART ORDER TOllAY ~2~66 s73 DOWN s7.3 MONTH $71 h tot•I Jn. pymt. $7) i1 tot•I mo. pymt. i11tl. i•i, lie., I ,U c•'irvi119 ch1 r911 on •ppr. cr•dit for •2 mo1. Dtferred pymt. price $3139 incl. !1x & lie. ANNUAL PER- CENTAGE RATE 10.15%. ~,BRAND NEW : 1974 . DODGE ·. STATION WAGON .. IWL45GAAI 143441 Immediate Delivery CUSTOM VANS by COURTESY HUGE SELECTION READY FOR Immediate Delivery Brand New '74 B-100 VAN ·· FULLY FACTORY E9UIPPED ORDER TODAY $ FULL PRICE 583 ··· s93 MO. $11 i1 tot1I dn. pymt. $13 is fot•l 'mo. pymt. incl. t1w, lie., I 11 11 c1rryinq cll11rg111 on 11ppr. crtdit for 42 mot. D1f1rr1cl pymt. pric11 $1569 i11cl. t1x I lie. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 11,65%. . ' .. . Wednesday, November 14, 1973 OAJILY PlLOT CHARGER $2766 (Wl 2 IG4GI 024071 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY sa5 DOWN sa5 MONTH . $85 is totel dn. pymf. $85 h lotel Tno. pyml. inc l. t111, lie., & 111 c1rryin9 charges on •ppr. credit for ~2 mos. D1f1rr11d pvmt. price $3655 incl . t•• & lie. ANNUAL PER- CENTAGE RATE 13.18•,;, HERE NOW! The All New 19,74 DODGE ''BAJA.'' 4 WHEEL DRIVE l. ~'I • • •• LARGEST SELECTION ,, ., , \'!;I~ ~IMMEDIATE ·DELIVERY ···:~:·\ '.OVER STOCKED WITH NEW CAR TRADE-INS • • • CALL • ~ : • FREE CREDIT CHECK -- If you •• new in ·callforn1a • If you o~e on your ·cs • · If you are new on your job e If you have little or no credit e Drive home today in the car of your choice. Ex- amples of our many ways tol tlnance: Crocker Batik • Union Bank • Security Pacific • laak of Amerlco • U11ted California Bank • Crysler Credit e Fireside Tlorl~ • '. ?1 V.EGA : Fully factory ' : •.~\J>ped . ~·~(789 BMB) ' · >'72 VEGA RadiO, heater, fully fictory equipp.d. (06Q EIX) _\_ . ' • $ '72~DODGE WAGON YB. au_tomatic, air cond., , I . .J powers nr1n9, AM.B.i radio, cruise control. 134 EKG) $ ; '69 COUGAR CPE. Automatic, • ; power .steering. : (XSJl462) ., . . · .: VB, Laundau roof,. ' radio, h.eater. ., (YOY771) . · / $ '65 GRAND PlllX · Full power, eir conditionin9 1 vinyl top. (STA 391) s '71 PONTIAC ·~~ Bonneville. VB, 1utomatici power steering,· radio, -- healer. (029 DME) ··72 CHARGER .. VB, power steering, air conditioning, bucket seals, vinyl top. (627 FOP) $ '69 TOYOTA Fully factory equipped (WND969) $ .. '72 DODGE PICKUP VS'!-automatic, radio, heater. (91050L) , __ '69 ·FORD GALAXl.E VB; automatic, ~ ~'''"-steering_ and • br1kes, air cond . (ZMY 14B) ;$ '69 CHRYSLER JOO ., Full 'power, factory air, vinyl lop. (YXC 348) $ 169 IMPERIAL . Full power, factory air, vinyl roof. (YPV 129) $ '70 FORD MAVERICK Fully factory equipped. .(ZLF "\39) -· . • -- $ • -< 'J AN [1lt1.(1 • ' "-' J,,(t • '"t <;- \ -_, - ' .. • ·-.. iZ DAILY PILOT Wfdnttday, Novembtf 14, 1973 BRAND NEW . '73 CUSTOM UNCH WAGON J • FULL PRICE IMMEDIAIE._DELIVERY . v-a, auto. trans.. factory air conditioning, pawer steerinr,i, radio, heater, tfnted.~lass. delUktbumpergp. Ser. No.3Jn519097 '73 THUNDERBIRD D!!£0 CLOWUJ LOADED ya, auto. trans., VS, auto. factory air, leather Inter., opera window, am/tm radio, vinyl roof, power windowi-~ats, brakes, steeri{'g, ~::::§~ , tinted glass. :... (3J87A130234) . IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $ 'BRAND NEW '74 LTD 2 DOOR HARDT~P FULL PRICE ORDER YOURS TODAY '71 PINTO 2 Dr. ""speed, radio, heater. l icense No. (ISODJE) '70 -TOYOTA MK 11 .4 speed. radio, fleater. License No. (0.WBLS) '71 CHEV. Pickup V-8, stick &hift, ready to go. License No. 17634.JJ) ' . '71 FORD F-250 2!i Ton Pickup, slick shift, deluxe tulone. Nice one. License No. (22075K) '65 MUSTANG GT V-1, s.lick shift, radio, heater._Hurry for this one. Ucens.e No. CVIX907) '70 TOYOTA Wgn. vs, auto. trans., power steering, pawer (disc) brakes. heater Deluxe carpeting. $1069 $4 88 · J.uto. tr~l\S., air r;ond., radio, helter, rebuilt engine. l<llfOF) • '69 DATSUN Pickup A~ racno, heater (552HOF) . I I ' $138 8 • • . .. UAND NIW '74 PINTO 2 .. OOR TOTAL .DOWN Tm!Cllll"'ll~Gl.•idln.&ic. Dlllrrfdplfll. )l'lrtilcl •• ~ dllr1M,.. »n... ii ano.1&. u .•. ltm • . 9Vlllll trDt cnw '°'" •· UND'73c-.m& NEW , ' . FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $ Heatw,Whlttnllnr., tlnledglus. ..... cown. toolktt,an.,.._,... Ser, Na. SGTAllA22151 BOTH UNITS 1o~:J,:'· '73 CHEV. WAGON CAPRICE 9 PASSENGER, v.a, auto. trans.. factory a ir, pc>\ftr steering, just like new. 1751HRX) ~3417, '71 DC)DGE Polara V-8, auto. trans .• factory air conditioning, power steering, radlO, heater, tinted glass. License No.T603CVC> $]489 ·~ ~ -· - '71 FORD Van ShOrtlt Stick Shift, rare find. (22941A) '72 RANCHERO Sq. V-1, auto. trans .• factory air conditioning, power steering, radio, heater, vinyl roof, tinted glau. License No. (9S6EJBI $3279 . '71 TOYOTA Corolla WGN,.A ·Speed. radio, heller, bl'i9Jltired fln!th-Np. I KE21103041) · -'12 MAVERICK Auto. trans., radio. heater. L/Ceo5e: No. (901EIV) ..... '68 PONT. EXECUTIVE WGN .. Vt, auto. trans... f.ctory ._;r condltiooing, pe1liftf' stHrlng, radio, f'lffter. Lken1e No, fb>FLZ) , . Wedrtesday, Ncniembfr ~4, 1973 • I 1 . PILOT·A?,VERTISER .Ii( • 1 ~ , ~-FORD , NCl<.uP 'lllUCK I FULL . . PRICE ORDER YOURS TODAY Full sized llyllSldt ~y. Reidy to go·to work. IUND '74 MAValCK ~ NEW FULL PRICE ORDER YOURS NOW Big ~ engine. heliler, ---·-... , bells, pedded clalll • .1 ..... T ' ..., '73 IURRR YAN DISCOUNT FROfl\ SUGGESTED LIST IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ' '69 DODGE-van ...... ,,..,,._Doi.--finish. Lk:enal No. C'76GCJ ' • ~ Auto. trans custom-.S• tires. (E1~GHR9260r) \ _$1579 ~ . . • '6,9-VW Sqback Auto. trans... radio, heater. Nlc.9 llttJe.gas saver.' -UCense....NO. ZRA2l4 -. . '72 VEGA Htchbk. Stick shift, rldfo. heattt, Ht.MW. Lk:enM No. ,( .. llfON) '69 TR·6 Roa~ster. 4 speed, radio, heater. Reidy to Raltyt. '-kense No. (VSH051~ ,. 168 iFOtp F-250 -• 'I ' $1.779 , I ' . •• I • 1 I ,. I I \ --. ' J 1 1~· ' ' ' •• San Clemente Capistrano \ • EDITION • • • • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks ' . VOL. 66, NO. l 18, 5 SECTIONS, 88 PAGE~ ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA --wEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1973 TEN CENTS Anaheim Police Drop By WILLIAM SOHREIBER Of ..._ Dlll't l"Het Sttff Dissident Anaheim policemen decided Tuesday that "Officer Friendly" would be more help in winning their pay dispute with the. city than "Super Cop." Memben of ·the Anaheim Pollet Association {APA) voted to ease up on writing tickets for moving violations in the City for 30 days or until the city enters into what the APA feels are "good faith" contract talks. Jf the . discretionary action by patrolmen results in a near halt in traffic citatlorui, the city could lose up to $30,000 in revenue it earns each month from ·payment Of !traffic fines. 'nle latest tactic by the officers, dJbbed the "Officer Friendly" approach, is exactly tre opposite of an alternative plan of action dJsclosed 10 days ago -the Super Cop idea. · The Sqper Cop plan provided for mass licketings in the city for even the most minor violationa in an effort to get the people to ask the city to get the police off their backs. The new course of action would permlt officers to use their own discretion in stopping motorists for moving violation,, and then letting them oil with only a warning and no ticket. The Officer F.riendly .approach got the go-ahead from 100 members of the ~ member APA at a rally ln Pearson Park. ·But not everyone there liked the idea. Several association members voted against 'he lax ticketiQg idei:a because they claimed it would lower the city's • lXOll '8u:r)er law enforcement standards and jeopardize life and property. The officers argued that the Officer Friendly attitude would give drivers a II~ to speed through the city, threatening lives and property, City councilmen in Anaheim have refused to budge Lrom their final offer to the policemen, whlch calls for a 6.75 percent pay hike for the first year and six percent .In the second year of a two--year contract. Patrolmen ale demanding seven per- Cop' cent hikes both years on one-year con- tracts with some fringe benefits not offered by the city. The council said reopening pay negotia- tions would serve no purpose and \li'Ould be unfair to other city employes who have already agreed on contracts.· A meeting had been requested by the APA 's attorney with the city manager today to discuss the status. of the pay impasse. Association spokesmen said they do not feel the approach of writing fewer tickets will result ln disciplinary action because ii is a discretionary action. But as with the Super Cop Idea, the APA has vowed to take an immediate strike vote if any of its member officers are disciplined. In another action during the rally. APA members voted not to volunteer to do security work during of£-duty hours at the Anaheim Stadium , Anaheim Convention Center and Disneyland unless members are ordered to do it and paid ·; time and a hair. Tells GOP Solons J I ' Th.at He's Not. uitting THEY'LL IE RIDING ,TO AID HIKERS ON 50-MIL! TREK Dole K1wor1t1nl, left, John F1llou Don Their Booh taguna'SExpliirer Post Schedules 50-mile Hike · The Laguna Beach Search and Rescue 'The hike Is open to all comers with fiXplorer Post 717 will hold its 9th Annual no age or sex descrimination. Fee is •mile hike Saturday through Laguna 12. Medals will be given to hikers who "'ach1 SOuth Laguna. Laguna Niguel, finish the courte, within 18 hours. Starting ~Ion Viejo Md El Toro. '1iin¢ is anytime between 5 a.m. and The so miles are spread along a two 9 a.m. ~turday. urse beg\nning at SSS Glenneyre Mem_bel'! or ... the explorer post will lo Laguml Beach. The 10Ute goe! patrol the hike route and will carry . Cout J.nkhway to Crown Valley first aid supplies and water. '11ley'll 'PmWar,thei:r~up4o-Moulton-Par-kw•y ----alao-h-a-v..e ndio commwtications witb- pc1 :pu1' Llon-O>untiy' Salarl and·Sand the starting point. Canyon Road and back to Laguna on The explorer post is sponsored by f;aguna canyon IR<>ad. SL Mary 's Episcopal Church. Record for the lengthy trek is a time Further infonnation Is available by Just under seven hours and was set calling .John Fallou at 494-1648 or Dale ™t year. ' Kawaratanl at 494-4903. ' ' ' Eqtansion in Viejo ·( County Pla~µers to Study . ' Mission Hospital Appeal ' s; JAN WORm and what It costa to maintain the lacillty. 0 fM Deity .. li.t Steff The area is served by the overlapping ;· 'A proposal for a 56-bed exPansio~ service aree bf South Coast Community ·It Mission Community Hospital in Hospital, San Clemente General Hospital, M~lon Viejo will be presented lo the and Mission Community. ' fooilllle1 revtnw..,,i of the Orange A fourth hoopital, the 150-bed Sad· County Health Planning C 0 u n c 1 I dleback Commll!!ily Hospital in Laguna (OCllPC) Thursday. llil1', will also -scrve the aq,a. It wu The-meeting Is at 730 p.m. at the scheduled to open last summer but bu Cotta Mesa City CouncU Chamber, 71 hit a .. aeries of construction, financial Fair Drive. &rid admlnlJlrallve inags and is atill 'lbe appllctlion for a »bed psychiatric unopened. unit and a 3f.bed intermedlate care 1( Mission's application Is approyed, .facility, la e1ptded lo draw protesta the fa cility wlU have 289 bedl. The lf<!tn at lwt one neighboring hospital, planned expansion would cost $512,000, South Coast Community ln South 4guna.' and according to hoSpltal apokesmen , A county master plan of heallh care would complele the conslructlon pre> 1'5t year concluded that an ovefbeddtng 1 gram of the th~yeaH>ld ·facWty. ;1ltW1tlon eriata In the southern hall Bernard carr, admlniatrator of South of the C0\11111. Coul Communltr said he and oilier OVerbeddtng m,.as th&t' there are representaU-o lib hoapltal will attend 1lgni!lcalllly more -beds available in the meeting lo protest the Mission 're- hospltaia lliln sre being med. Thia In-quest. creuea per patient cost because It He said a two-page letter h&d been wlclens i the raUO between whet the sent lo the OCHPC 1ptlllng out ob- hospltal l.s paid to support Ila s•rvlces (See HOSPITAL, Pase l) • > .. • . . . . Death Case • Deliberated ' Aq OrenP COunty Superior Court jury filed back into the jury room '°'" the fout!lt day today in another bid lo reach a yeritict in the second murder trial of former Marine Mark Allen Johnson o1 San Clejllellte .... Judge Raymond Thompson ordered continued cieuberations 1\iesday night alter the ]llllel returned lo bis courtroom to advise him that they had not yet reached a verdict. Johnson, 22, is accused of the killing on June-161 1970, o~ his-pregnant Wife, Connie, 22. It is a11eged that he struck her with a bar stool and then stabbed her alter the couple quarreled in their apartment •t 116 Monterey Lane. Johnson was cmvicted of s e c o n d degree murder in his first trial two years. ago. He serYed two yean of hia sentence of five years to life and was then returned for a second trial when the Fourth District Court of A~ peals overturned that verdict. 'n>e appellate court ruled in a divided opinion that Judge William Murray erred when ~allowed the prosecution to present to the jury audio and visual -tapertn:en while he arrested JoMson was under the influence of a truth drug. Johnson has denied the killing in both trials. He claims that he found his . wife's nude body on the bed when he returned Crom duty at El Toro Marine Corps f.lr Station. * * * Judge Thompson Has Two Juries In Deliberation Judge Raymond Thompson, Orange County Superior Court's longest serving Jurist, doesn't believe In allowing deadlocked juries to tie down his courtroom. He has 'completed enotber trial while the Mari Johnson jury has been deballng thciasues behind locked doOrs. But that jury also is now dellbenUng. And the veteran juriat has had to send them off to another court's jury room while he sends for yet another trial. He bad ooly one plea to offer lodar, to preaJding Judge Bruce SUmner. "Don t send me a case carrying the name ·of Johnson jut~ now." His first Jury Is trying to reach a verdict lo the criminal case of Mark Allen Johnson. His second jury Is trying to reach a verdict 1n the cl\'ll acUon filed by Vivian Johooon of HunUnglon Beach against a_ local fUpermarket. Coort olllciaia amued by Judge Thompeon's dtlemrria are ccrt.aln of one thing. Ir lie completes a third jury trial without venllctf In the eviler trials, It wilnie the first Ume In local court history that •· judge hat bad thrte juries deliberating. -• ' • ' ' ' E . w ~, rvm on -t --~ Meet Sans Committee WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ President Nixon, tmder que~tioniqg by 1 5 !!epq!>llcan coogrmmen; reaffirmed t .. day that he would not 11.si.gn _or -!U!Jmit voluntarily to Jmpeachmcnt. -k pait.>of his new strategy to meet criticism "head-on" of his handling of . Water&att, some congressmen said Nix- on offered tO meet with· Chairman Sam J., Ervin (D-N.C.), and Vice Chairman Howard H. Baker (R-Tenn.), or the SetU1te Watergate ·committee. Ervin quickly rejected any such liinite<f session. The committee asked Nixon Tuesday-for a meeting with the full committee and Ervtn told reporten, "I'm not going to the White House · without the entire committee." The reparted Nixon offer to meet only with Ervln and Baker was disputed by anolher participant in this morning's session. Rep. Louis Frey Jr. (R-Fla.), ~ 1 , 6 , • _.,..,. sa!d Nixon offered only to "supply them .,. ,,... aeff ,.... with the information that they want," Parents ·uonored . . . with the method undetermined. ~ ~ Some congressmen who attended the ~an Clem~nte High School_ football .players will honor their parelils one-hour, 4~minute breakfast meeting in a. spec.1al cerel!lony befoi:e the .same Friday night agai~ Uni-with the President -his second in v~rs1ty. High. During ~he ,t.hird annual Moms and Oads night, par-a series of White House question-and- ents will go o~to~the field and the players will pre·sent ttieir mbthers answer sessions for every GOP member With orchid cor,83.ges. Shown pinning a corsage on Ills mother' is of Congress -said Nixon promised Triton ASB Ptestdent Bo~ Shep~rd,.who also plays starting' Of!eD~Vtf further public actions to allay questions tackle on ~he team. Looking on ts Bob's•father Clair a teacher at the about Watergate. . school~ ~ -' --'-----~----'""',,...,w.as__no.Jrrunediate word on Cleme11te High Students Renew 'Open Campus' Bid Capistrano Unified School Distri c t trustees Monday for initial action. The board heard the ·proposal last mooth but agreed not to ac.t. until n1ore who might have rai sed the resignation ouestion at today's meeting, but Rep. Robert W. McClory (R·lll.). and Rep. Tom Railsback (R-Ul.1. both said the President vowed not to quit, saying to do so or to submit to impeachment would not be in the best interests of the nation ..or future_ presidents. 1 The Senate committee asked Nixon 1 for a meeting with the full seven-member paneJ. Some members, and others. have said Nixon should appear on Capitol Hill. Some congressmen at today's session said the Presiden t told them an appearance there· would be dlfficult but expressed willingness to meet with Ervin and Baker. San Clemente High School students will renew their bid for open campus privileges that would allow them to leave achoo! grounds during free periods and lunch. data could be gathered. District officials . ~-----------­ have Vpiced conceins over open campus bu t praise'the studen t erforts supporting The P!Oposal will be studied at a special meeting at the school tonight during which administtators, several school board members, city police and parents will comment. Lloda Csstlllo, student chainnan of tt.e school open campus committee, said the plan Ii due to go before the THIS AD DREW 100 RESPONSES The lawyer appealed to the Daily Piiot. He asked lo have bis ad •lopped because It drew 100 responses. SECRETARY for Laguna Niguel Law office. Exper pref. Duties incle. some t~ Ing flllng,. reccplioo & transcribing'.· Will consider part Ume. (Phone No.) Naturally he found 'the secretary he needed before canceling-the ad, What la it you're looking for ? Probably a Dally Piiot ad can help you find ii, her, him; whatever. Dial the direct line lo r~ulta at the Daily Piiot, 142-567& • • it. ' The plan to be reviewed tonight allows students. to leave campu$ at Junctl or during scheduled open periods on foot or bicycle but not in motor vehicles. "Students apprehended leaving the (See STUDENTS, Page ll Burglars Tal\:e Antique Jewell')' Antique jewelry valQed by the owners at $625 was . stolen Tuelday night by burglars who broke into a San Juan Gapistrano home, Orange County Sher- iff's o£6cers said. •Deputies said intruders removed the screen front the upstairs bedroom win- dow nt the ho1nc of Claude Ellis Milligan, 40, of 30822 Calle Chueca to enter the premises. Officers said lhe jewelry was taken from the n1aster bedroom. The ~tilligan family was on a boa.ting trip at the time of the theft. , Orange Coast Weather Continued cool, sWtny weather is on the agenda for Thurlday, according to the weatlJer service, with highs al the beaches in the mid-60s rising lo 68 inland. Over. night lows 56-58. l'\~ll•F TOi i \ ,, In Richard Nixon's hometown oj Whittier -Watergate not- withstanding -the people ore stiU behlnd hin1. See story, Page 26. •, ' / ' 2 ..... 1t.. • PILOT Wfdntsday, Nowmbrr 14, 197.3 OellY Piiot lt1ff Pholo UFOs Landing? San Ju~ • Dump Is sue Continued Ol!icials lrom San . Jnan CaPtstrano and Orange County"'l\lesday held another session in an attempt to resolve • bitter dispute over · access to the new Prlina Descha duinp. But despite the reported· "Iran~" nature of the ta.lb, no solution bas yet come about in the ~le1surro.J.11'1Cling·. the county's preferm:e of Orteg' Highway as the sole access route to. the new dump in a canyon east of San Juan. And the matter next wlD come up for irUtial open diSculsion before county superviWJ__on Tuesday. · · · City Manager Donald Weidner - a delegate to Tuesday's se88ion -said the issue was "fully explored" at the meeting. On the other side of the table were Fifth District Stl.pervisor Ronald Caspers and County Road Department head Ted McConVille. Se minar et , On Coastl ine • "M We See the Coastline," the nnal program in a symposium sponsored by the NeWJ)Ol't llal1... Juniol" League and tie Irvine wtU take' place Thursday at UC!. The discussion, to be moderated by Newport Beach City Councilman Cari Kymla, will get wider way at 1:30 p.m. in Room 174 pl u9•s computer science bulldfpg. • • .• ~~lists will be VerL),'n Je~n, counsel {OJ" the Envll.onmental Coalition ol Orange _Coqnty: R. Barcy McComlc, eleC)!Uve vice president ol· · Avco ··· Con\!llunlty ... Developers ; Frank Rob lo a on , member of the Qtaaae. county Harbors, Beaches and :P"i.rks Com- mission, aod Raym~ Watson, · president ol the Irvine ComPMX. The J unior League~~. "Qi~l· 11\Unity 73," Is open to the public without charge. 500 Nuclear " .. Plants Said 2 Mideast . • • Nations Set· l ) POW Trade: l By ·The Associated Press larael and Egypt ~greild to atart ex~ changing prisoners of war Thursday morning, the International Red Cros.I announced today. · 'nle aMouneement 'ci(rne shortly 1ftet ... _a U.N ... SJlC!~ll!IPlllll.:.i!I .~ dlodoae4 that negotiators for the two countrie~ reached an agreement which be . descrlh! ed as a ''break-through'.' in mamtainlng the Middle East cease-lire. , The prisoner exchange, scheduled to start at 8 a.m., would remove a majoD obstacle In carrying out the U.S.! sponsored truce signed Sunday. !¥•fl has demanded an agreement on Uie return of prisoners before it goes through with the agreed transfer of checlcpoin1s on the Cairo-Suez highway to U.N; peacekeepers. Michael COnvaire, the Red Cron representative in Israel, said the prboner exchange would be made by direct Iligtit.t: between Egypt and Israel. Looking for. all _the world like landed UFOs or golf ball s on a t1tan1 c scale, these domes dominate the hilly TRW Systems test installation at .the end of of Avenida Pico in San Clemente. A TRW official • • said the domes are used to house radar antennae for extensive -and secret -testing. The facility is also used by TRW as a test site for small rocket and missile engines. "They (the count~ delegates) promised that they would corripletely reveiw their data on the p~ject in advance of Tuesday's board session, but other than that, nothing new came from the meeting," Weidner said. Fuel Ans1ver San Juan has angrily opposed plans -· to use Ortega !or the drmnp traffic, SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The United He said the agreement came at a meeting on the Egyptian-tsraeli cea.s& fire line between generals of the two sides. 1 The earlier stalemate an prisone r el · change and transfer of checkpoints brought threats lrom both Egypt alld Israel that threatened to Upllet the ~eut­ fire. San{Iemente's Planners From Pqe 1 HOSPITAL asserting further that its suggests ion States could become completely self- for use of a new road using a different sufficient in fuel for electrical needs rou te was arbitrarily rejected by McCon- by 1990 if It built 500 nuclear power vil le. The battle-reached a point two weeks plants, a leading atomic e n ergy Premier Golda Meir told the Israeli parliament that "not one gram of foOd will be allowed through to the town of Suez" and the Egyptian army on • • • ago when San Juan unanimously rescind-spokesman says . ed its earlier endorsement of the Prima Construction of these plants with 1,000 jeetions to the plan. De ha sec project. County officials inslst megawatt capacity each would more - "It is incumbent upon the health plan-they are lacm· g a sev ·s1 • ere en s m than double the nation's current 400,000 ning council to see that only already disposal along the South Coast and have megawatt total of installed generating approved beds be allocated for needed stressed that the new site must be Study Parlcing Proposals the opposl!e bank of the canal if ·the Egyptians did not agree to arrangements for the POW exchange. • !\1ajor new proposals to' increase the off street parking requirements in San Clemente's multiple·residential zones will receive an airing during a hearing tonight before plannlhg cOmmissiofiers. The city-fui.tia(ed }iropasals would , opened within a .,,ear. capacity, John W. Simpson, president E ed change the ~urrent 1.5-space-per-unit uses,' he said. " Sett} l ' The entity which holds the key to of the American Nuclear Society said em, ell y , figure to an even two spaces. It also Spokesmen for San Clemente General the pu,u.le over access is the Slate Tuesday. would require that at least half the Hospital said they have no plahs to Division of Highwaya, which administe-Sim told nf s d Parking spaces be ""vered. '0 ~ a n-CO ·-ce at I D b' '" s d I t' th th_e winding, 00-w stretches ol Ortega the IOCl""'e"ty•s conven';'.:_ tha~t ' su"ch a Il 81Ja 8Il The move -which grew 'out of several en a represen a 1ve to e. meeting , ..... ,v ""'' ___ _ study sessions between city councilmen or to either protest or support the ap-. Highway. · . goal wpuld require an investment of . • ' and commissioners -h~s been·,under plication. · And .that agency. has steadfasUy held at ieast $700 billion, a 0 streamlining'' Be -L--Disp ~ C l · --"------, 'Srtrdy'""S!Jfenar~ year.-: . -· -Bemard,_...lngram; presi~ent-of<--t .. IR! __ _;;to~a;;;ttm~~~Je of_.1P:'P.rov_e_ip~l5 91lljM_ -ol~r~·guJations-and-a-«>mrnitment~-8\!D: · ut@-- QllSU talltS S et . Growing serious congestion m the board ol Saddlehack Hospital said he !6r reali~en" aiid wiaenlilg Iii 1976. of national priorities equal to that given _ city's high-density sections sparked the , . . , • But the .hme could be extended even ·the moon landing. · BOth ·d ·in the Dana Strand dl~ proposal. Already, developers and ~as~ t ~ure if his h~sp1ta_1 would react. rar~e: Wlless San Juan .can assist in Simpson aai.i the Nixon administration . s1 es •· 45,000 . Lim;t' realtors have assailed the proposals. If 1~ is approved it will affect us," 0.btatning the necessary nght-of-way in failed to appreciate fully the immediate continued to talk settlement today w_IQI " The matter is at the top of a lengthy he said. hme. . . potential of nuclear powe r, which he Orange County SUpe.ri« Court aclian agenda set by the commission at its Stanley Matek, executive director of ~us far the ~ity bas required some called the fastest available meam to in the controversy held over until Ma:r F D C 7:30 session. the OCHPC. said he has sent a letter dechcatioi:i of slri~ al~ng the road as realize the President's goal of U.S. da . ~ .' OT ana, apo Other items include: to the 20-member facilities review board construction steadily increases along selt~sufficieocy in energy. rt that time Judge James ft. -Continued· deliberation on the use recommending that the :.ipplication, if Ortega. He said that in bis Nov 1 energy ' • The private consulting firm hired by the County of Orange to develop a new general plan for Capistrano Beach and Dana Point this week formally recommended a maximum population of 45,000. And, further, the consultants suggested stiff rules covering grading in an ef[prt to retain the communities' hill sides. The recommendations calling for a major decrease in population comes fron1 the firm of Danielian, Moon, Sam- pieri and Ilg (DMSI). The T«cm1· mendation.s came -after -a major quls- tionnaire project which sampled local opinion..and. concerns on the issue of future develogment. L Under the present plan, population in lhe two communities · could swell to an ultimate sum of 65,000. The new Pr~ posals recommend a decrease by 20,000 persons. In the preliminary plan sent to county officials, DMSI recommends these goals: -Retentibn of an uncongested, semirural ;character extant into the two communities: "not allowing the area to become subject to urban sprawl." -Enhancement and preservation of the natw·al surroundings. -Discouraging "'°f mass grading and allowing o n I y a density of 3.5 units per acre in hillside areas. Conventional townhouse development on graded pads should be discouraged. -Close investigation of hiUside sites before development, particularly those prone to earth slippage or those wi th ';environm ental value.'' -Strict regulation of development on the flood plain. -Retention of green areas. -Development of a rapid-transit system along the San Diegb Freeway with high-density development taking place along that corridor. OIANCiE COAST IC DAILY PILOT Tilt Or111111 Coa1t OAIL Y PILOT, wllll ~•th 1 1, cl:lmblned lh~ N•W1·Prn1, 11 11Ublllhtd bl' Ille Or1n11e Co!lf PllbllM!"f C.Om~nv. Sepe t•~ edl!lon1 ere 1111011$.hed, Maroci.v lllrough Frldc1y, lor Co111 MtM, Hirwpart a,1cn, Hllfllington Bt'"'ll/F°""!otin ValllV l,.llJUnt 8t1ch, lrvlntf$addleb<9t k 1.w S•n C"mentwt Stn Ju.,, C1pl1lr1110. A i lng!1 r"l!ioroll Oldl11on i• pYltlilll"OI S.!11rd1y1 1rio Sunc:itYI. T!>e prln<:IMl PYlll ifl!!ng p!1nt !1 11 llll Wttt 81y Slrfft, Co1t1 Mut,. C•lf!Omll, fli2'1. Rob.rt N. W11d l>rn1C11nl •lld PuOll1htr J1e.~ R. C111l1v Vk e Prnldenl otlld Gton1r11 .V..nllffl' Thotr111 k11vil Editor Tho1t111 A. MurJltin• MtMOing Editor Ch1rl11 H. loot Ridl1rd P. Nill "ulrllnl Mt"'llll'l9 Edltori S..C ......... OMce 105 North El Cimino R~1I, 92672 °"* OHfca C11t1 M"1: llO WtSI t1y Slrlf! Hl'WPOrt 8llCll: J:llJ HtWflOf"! lwln1ro Hltn!"-"" B~dl : 1111S 9tltl'I loulw1rd l..toUN 8"<:11: 2# Ftrfff AYe!M,11 1 .. ., .... (7,41 '42-4121 c.a..HSM A"""'ld11t 641-1671 S. Cl....,. All D.,•••••1: ,.,.,.... 492 ... 420 (OIP'f'ritlftl, ~fl), Ol<I... C:0.11 l"vMltlllftt ;:-:i.~-· 10,,.,..... ~"""'· m.,.,,,,...._ ..,.,., br ,.... "' HVlr!!"""'°'l'I Mrtlrl ml1110.. "'•:;: ~~ tPf<:ltl Plr· •,ec"" t llU 001l90t ,.kl ti C.itt MfM •'•lorn11, killole/lff~ .._ Cl • -•n1y; to." ,.,.11 U !$ "'°""'11-""' 12.u llnl•~llllnt 1J 41 l'llOfl•ltl!)'. I "llllf.,., variance which bas been in operation approved, ~bould convert existing beds . "\\'.e. le3:rne~ Tuesday tha t the state speech Nixon neglected. to Provide any Walsworth m~t dedde, if 8 •!Uemfit for years, allowing mining and manufac-to the desired uses, and not add .new is ngid 10 its schedule and to not overall program with specific goals and hasn't been reached, tr the litl&•ll!n turing at the Crestlite Aggregate ones. expect any change at all," Weidner t'arget dates. ls to be resolved by court or Jury PoBtponed a bearing on the issue three "1 suggested three alternatives, rather said. trial ti th I des · _... than r"""""" d d ·a1 " M tek The dump controversy, which McCon-· met us ar, pite r.i .,...,ng protestll ...... u.,.ll1:ell en,i ' a aaid. ville has attemp'ted to charact-'-as Jud End ~ ,action ln the I~ ~ by the plant's neighbors. The citizens "M1ss1on has contributed to the overbed-... ...., ge OrSeS has I been "-u~ · ,-d" ·t · overblown, has caused some ol the dispute. ao ar uuu~ . assert that the •plant's noise and dust mg s1 uation in the south county." coostitute a nuisance. 1 The recommendaUons of the facilities harshest words ever heard from the discussion of pre-trial iSSJet by la~ -A request for a use permit to allow ~ panel, a group of private citizens present city council. 'H • • • J ' for the eowtty and the Chandler.aha ma• the oepning of a fish market at 211 appa1nted by the OCHPC, are reviewed Caspers' interest in the mat ter was tppte UTOT CCrPofatim ~4lfld 213 S. El pamino ReaL Jack Har· by the whole heallJl council which may aroused more than a month ago ~en , · , ,,, 'ngton ii the l!PPlicant. 1 reverse the recommendation. . Councilman Edwll!d Clitrmak augg..uid I SAN' lAF L (UPf) '" ~tired J114!ie Waliwor1h called a ~ .@t '1 -Perusal ot. a ten tative tract map The council's recommendation is then in open se.ssion 'that "the ~bUiclal be one point to go with lawyers el botti I d d to th "grabbed by the nape ol the neck and judge has told a pretrial hearing here s1"des to v1·ew the Dana Strand beach. '. lhowing 12 condominiums on one-third orwar e · e state's Advisory Health acre located at 409 Arenoso Lane. A Council. dragge~ down to San Juan for a fil'3t-he recommended nomination of a hippie The county argues t h 1 t the pubffc partnership~ known as Bahia Aren0so La~t year, a request by Mission Com· hand glimpse or the problem." .. to the grand jury that indicted the use of the beach over the years bas is the applicant. muruty for an 89-bed nursing unit w a s "San Quenti~ Six." . . . given it prescriptive rights to the ~.a -Consideration ot revised site plans approved by ·the facilities review board. Club Sam ~~ner, former .pres1d1ng JUd~e which override any! plans the Chandl~ !or three major condonimium projects But that decision was by the council. Raising Funds of Marin County Supenor Court, said Sherman group might have for Iii" which have won city and state approval But a loophole in the state Jaw allowed Tuesday that Rick Beban, student body oceanfront terrain. a !or construction in the Palisades. The the hospital to build the 119-bed-unit F 01• Historical Unit president at the Coliege ol Marin, was The lawsuit is almoot Identical In '11.s McKeon Development Company, Grant anyway. The on1y catch is that the among 135 persons nominated for the arguments to that flled by the coubty Company of California and Alison alm~t complete project does not qualify grand jury. Gardiner said Behan, against the Lagunp Niguel Ccrporat(on Development Company are the three for aid from MediCal or Medicaid. The San Clemente Hlslorlcal Society because of his Jong hai r aod reputation when public access to Salt Creek .Be•Ch applicants. A 3.8-acre park is includel:l George Ollendorf, administrator of will get a monetary boost for its for being a troublemaker, was okayed was threatened four years ago. "· in Ille new plans submitted by the three Mission Community, said be believes the preservation efforts from special fund-for the grand jury so the panel would Sources close to the current di.spate firms. application is justified because the raising party Friday at 7:30 sponsored represent a cross·section of Marin Cowr have commented that It may be resolt~ overbedding is in acute (crisis medical) by the Junior Woman's Club. ty. ~ along the lines of the Salt Creek 98t- beds. The evening will take place at the DefeMe attorney Charles Garry spent tlement. That rontroversy ended when "Overbedding hasn't hit us yet," Olien· home of Marion Moon, 1208 Buena Vista, all of Tuesday quizzing the fonner judge. Avco Development OrpOration, .Ue- dorf said, "We've been rWUling at a and will cost $3 per person or $5.50 Garry maintains the grand jury th_at cessors in the area to the Lagtma Niguel Fro111 Page 1 consistent 80 percent occupancy. All per couple. Reservations can be made indicted the "San Quentin Sil.'' was CorporaUon, reached an agreement~ • • • we're doing is trying to provide services by calling 492·8270. not properly chosen. the county. '- for our area. At this time, there are '. STUDENTS cam pus by motor vehicles, or walking to vehicles off campus for the purpose of driving, riding in or sitting ... will be disciplined under the same policy as a truant," the proposal reads. The policy stipulates that open periods are only those which appear on a student's schedule as ' ' u n a s s i g n e d classes" and do not include small seminar-type classes where students work on individual projects somewhere on campus. Considerable attention is also given to smoking off campus with the general guideHne that smoking would be pro- hibited "within one block of San Clemente High School." The policy also has a provision putting the empty hills and fields around the school off limits during school hours. If the school board adopts the policy in its current form , they would hear an evaluation of the ogen campus at the end of the month ' for the first three months. . The evaluations, which Miss Castillo said could result in revocation of the privilege if they come out poorly, will include several key elements including: -Frequency of student tardiness and truancies. _.,... -Violations regarding use of motor vehicles. -Frequency and seriou sness of prob- lems caused by students at local busi· nesses during schooJ hours. -Smoking violations near the school. -Use or narcotics and alcohol during the school day. -Violations of rules prohibiting access to the fields and hills around the school. -Parent concerns. Miss castillo said much of t he responsiblllty for making such a plan work rests on the students themselves. She said they will be responsible for getting , back to scheduled classes on time . "If the board moves this along at the me<ting Monday, final action could be token by Dec. 3," said Miss Castillo. noting that a new hamburger stand near the school on Avenida Pico opens for business Dec. 1. ( -1 I v not enough psychiatric beds or in· termediate care facilities." Malek said that though the statistics do not show overbedding in psychiatric units and intermediate care an ex- amination of existing faciliti es' for these shows them at less than 50 percent occupancy. Ollendorf said be expects resistance to the proposal. j'All we can do is present our case," he said. "\Ve can't worry about what anybody else is doing.'', Border Patrol's Order to Strip B,rings Lawsuit SAN DIEGO (AP) -A woman says border inspectors ordered her stripped and searched after finding Chicano movement posters and literature in the trunk of her car. Roberta Baca, 28, of San Diego told a federal judge Tuesday the search was unconstitutional because inspectors had po cause to believe she had com· milted a crime. Mrs. Baca has filed a $40,000 civil suit against the customs inspectors in connection wi!h the search at the San Ysidro border crossing in January 1912. At the time, she was married to Herman Baca, head of the Mexican~Amerlcan Political Association here. ClIBtoms inspector Jack W a It er s testified he ordered the strip acarch because Mrs. Baca appeared nervous as she drove past the checkpoint. "Her hand shook ... the haS< ol her throal w .. pulsating," Walters said. Annetta Lohman, the officer who ex- amined Mrs. Baca in a nearby staUon, testified the woman was nervous but didn't resist the search, and no con~ traband was found. Both Walttrs and Mrs. Lohman art defendants in the suit. i • . . OPEN ' .. ' 538 CENTER STREET-COSTA MESA 646-1919 CIOSID SUNDAY Men's Tennis Shirts-6.00 to 9.00 Men's Tennis Shoes--8.95 to 18.95 Adidas-Tretorn-Converse-Purcell Ladies Tennis Shoes-7.95 to 16.95 Aididas-Tretorn-toDYerse ~ Ladies' Tennis"Diisse~l&.95 up ) Wilson-Dunlop-Davis / Bancroft-Yoneyama Tennis Rackets Penn--Wllson-Dunlop Tennis Balls-Jer doz.-7.95 Basketball Backlmrds-14.95 Basketball Goals-3.95 & 5.95 Basketllalls-5.95-7.95-8.95· 12.95-18.95 I ( Handball Gloves & BaUs Racquetball Racquets Badminton Rackets Ping Pong Paddles & Bans Croquet Sets Shuffleboard Sets Skateboards Yolleyballs-Leather-11 .95-13.95-18.95 Volt Yolleyballs--4.25 to 11.95 Soccerballs-Leather & Rubber Foatballs-Softllalls--liiillS Speedo Swim Suits Ii Trunks AcryOc Wannup Suits-21.95 to 34.95 Raleigh Bikes-Parts Tires-~ ubes-Repairlng f \ ' 1 , . ' ' ' 1• ,. '. I I ( ' • •'<( "' ' • Wednesday's <;losing Prices • I WtdneMliy, Novtmber li, 1~73 SC DAILY PILOT 31 NEw YORK stocK EXCHANGE Year's High-Lows Appear Every Saturday NEW YORK (UPJ) -Gloom over \be. enero crisis and Its probable effects on the nation's econ· omy pulled stocks sharply lower for the fourth con· secutive session on the New York Stock Exchange Wednesday. Trading was active. The Dow Jones industrial average plummeted 21.15 points to 869.88. The da y'• decline was Intel'" rupter only briefly as some selective bargain bunt· ing occurred in the early going. One factor that could have weighed heavily on the market, analysts said, was a remark by Com· merce Secretary Frederick Dent that if the public doesn"t sharply curtail its energy use, a recession could occur. 1 • 32 U"'u .. ( PH.O I Wfdntsday, NOYtmbtt 14, 1971 McKay Has Plans Set · All Athletes Subsidized, Says de Veron~• Charter by giving lhe individual athlete hot wtalher, but why can't somebody charade that we are pure ; n d .iJ. Fo r UCLA LOS ANGELES (AP) -"I know wbot we 're going to do against them right n01.v," Southern Cal coach John McKay said Tuesday or the UCLA game ·a wttlt from ·Saturday. McKay wouldn't elaborate, however, except to say, ''We're going to defend the wishbone the way we've defended it in the pasl 'lbe peole who defend best get in a defense and play.'' The Trojans play Washington at Seattle Saturday but P.1cKay was quiz:zed mostly about UCLA at his weekly brunch with -sports writen. He didn't treat the Bruins as a taboo subject. "I think we'd be lying if we said the players are not looking forward because, basically in relationship to the Rose Bowl, that is the game. Only two teams can win it. NEW YORK CAP) -Donna do Verona swam fn two Olymplca, held II national and ""-arid records and, she insists. never was an amateur. "-Ther~ Is no such thing as an amateur In sports," the pretty, blonde television commentator. and sports militant, said today. "All of us are subsidized in one way or another. "When I was young I was subsidized by my parents. They sweated to pay l .. w!rsltid~.r'~ ~i -cr.m da,.Y~d ~~ by the U.S. Olympic Committee. 11Tbe word 'amateur' Js the most abus-- Bertelsen Will Play Against SF ''H we both win Saturday and t he n we tie, the Bruins go to the Rose Bowl." said McKay, pointing out that UCLA would be 9-1-1 and Southern Cal LONG BEACH (AP) -Coach Chuck 8-1-2. '.'They beat Utah and we Ued Knox of the U>s Angeles Rams ponders Oklahoma," added McKay. worrisome questions about the San Fran-UCLA, "1lich h o s t s Oregon State Saturday, and use are 5-0 in the Pac--8. cisco 49ers, the tra41tional National Foot- Even if USC and UCLA lose Saturday ball League for invading the Coliseum -oc one o! them loses -the cooler.nee here SUnday. title remain! at stake Nov. 24.. "Why hasn't their nmning game ~n De.fending the wishbone h a s n ' t Tuesda presented USC W\SOlvable problem! late-going?" Knox was asked Y at !y. They beat UCLA 24-7 !aat year and his weekly breakfast with the r<porters. gave Oklahoma only one touchdown. "I can't answer that question," was McKay said he won't make the the reply. '"Ibey have the quality football coaching mistake that he said last yeiir players and are capable on any Sunday contributed to lhe Brui~' touchd~. of beating anyone." He had pulled out a linebacker and inserted a tack!~ when UCLA marched Might ·San Francisco, with a 3-6-0 to score. record and virtually out or contention, "We" have experienced linebackers. lf be more relaxed than the tltJe..<:ontend.ing <d and hypocrltioal word in the English language.'' '-tlss de Verona. 26, is one or the most acti ve figures ln the growing mo\'e- ment to refonn the U.S. Olympic setup. She has spent weeks going back and forth to Washington, D.C., to confer with Sentators John Tunney (D.Calit ), and Marlow Cook (0-Ky.), and Rep. Bob Mathias (ft.Calif.), on national sports bills. She was on hand in New '\'ork Tuesday Wheii ·MatblaS. 'decathton···gold medalist in the 1948 and 1952 Games, presented his bill to amend the U.S. Olym pic greater consi deration. rope of{ a · 1treet and le~ klds ptay1 aren't. The Mathias bill might be loosely h k nnl , •--ead or , "! think ultimately team sports ~ labeled the I< Athletes Bill of Rights Bill." oc ey or te s. .u~t ' . a war . "It Is & good bill," DoMa acknowledg-between two powerful athl~t1c bodies be el.lm.lnated from the Olympics. , ed, "but it only goes......part way _ as hungry for power, why c~ t we have oan have big world champk>nshpe ... do most ol these bill$ -In clearing a federation whoso prime concerii Is learn event.. Then the O!ymplcl Clll the atmosphere and spelling out the the welfare or the athletes themselves." be a true test of men and women rights' nnd privileges of the competitors. Miss de Verona said s h•e sees little who can run, jump, throw and swtm. ·.'"''. "It Qoes not call tor a sports ·fowi· difference in the subdizatlon ol sports "Our country should see. to It th8t ;i?~ dation. That is what I want. That ~ by Coounun.ist countries Ind 1 h ~ every person who wants lb tnak'e tlleWJ / what most of the athletes want. An subsldlzaUon or college athletes in Ul:f! . Olympic team be given a fair dm.(.'; agency to promote and oversee sports United Stp;tes. and nobod.y shou.kl worry about whlN: '~' at tbe ·grass -root. =·weu---..·the-·in-· "Bolh get·ynid'"because lhey-are -good · ···his· money· comes from. -'"\1'".' /.> ternational level. in some sport," she said. "Therefore, 110nly then can we have a true ~· "We can tum on fire hydrants ln I think It Is ridiculous to continue the pies.'' ·!·~.";;'. Pitt ·'"!• ;1• Le ~ .. ,-),• a ,i"~ -·· 1•\1 .... Contender For Bowl ,,{ .. , ' -:r:' ... j .. ::! ' ~.1 ... ' :• .:i·· ......... ~~ ' ..... ,,· ·: :" ~ .. ··.~·j PITl'SBURGH (AP) -The -m_, Panthers, climbing from rags to n= •.-· in less than one seuon W'lde.r .~ .. ' Johnny Majon, have become the lei • ·.,~A ' conteaden for the Fi~ta Bowl .,ln ~·I',._ i i Phoenix. :•: .. ,· ~ "That's the way Jt stand! tight nowi.":.:~.~ John Reid, Fiesta Bowl dlr<dor, llf!ll.'.-":1 Tuesday, adding that Pitt woold ~· a bid If the Panther1 can defeat ~-~ • Army this Saturday. .-.•• · I The Panthers had been comi""'4.·)yo·,' the Liberty, Sun and Pead> bowls 1111!!«::' they*' 31-10 to Notre Dame 1alt weeJt,--.. r:r .. ·Those bOwis still have nol coonplet81t' \ to.ssed 'Pitt a s 1 de in their pllns, ',~ r.•: Majors iildlcated he. wouldn't walt .fW.·a-· their invitation. ,,.,rr;:· "A bird in the band la worth •• .,. you start slrategizlng to get in unac-·Rams; 7-2? custorned-posiUons; you!re .getlina-8"ay_ "Any-tlme-San-Ft-......plays.J.:..__--L. from the One thing you have -U· Ang~es. both teams will be up for In the field,'.' the Pitt coadl ..,,uOdf . _w~ed.11,be l!llibl--C!l!lll<hr~~· perience. the game and ready to play. 'I1ie records "We have to go with the theoey that this year won't mean very much." we play our game and it's either good Will San Francisco be down after enough or not good enough." losing three slralght? He s a i d the Trojans me a "50" defense _ three down linemen and four "I don't look at any team being down linebackers -99 percent of the time. nor do l believe. in jinxes." "we·n play our defense. They'll know Knox had named the 49ers by position right where we are," he said. "We'll and added, "When you have players just play the game. The challenge is of the quality I mentioned, anything there." can happen." * * * , Big 10 Coaches Rate Buckeyes Over Michigan CHICAGO (AP) -Big Ten football coaches, who liave painfully avoided making comparisons between tol>'fanked Ohio State and No. 4 Jdlchlgan, are finally breaking down. '!be edge? It goes to.Ohio State. "I guess what. I'm trying to say is I have. tO giVe the edge to Ohio State although · we didn't play Jdlcbigan .'' Northw<stern coach John l'llrrt said Tues- day. "Ohio State simply bas n o wea~." said Pont. "They are so quick all over, they don't have a slow person on the team. Everybody talks about offensive tackle. John Hicks. Sure, he's gfeat. But the guy on the other side, Kurt Schumacher, isn't a bad foot- ball player either." Although Michigan plays at Pun!ue this Saturday and Ohio State takes on Iowa before the two giants meet, concern in Big Ten country is over the Nov. 24 meellhg between the Buckeyes and the Wolverine!'!. Cal Stoll of Minnesota, John Janflne of Wisconsin and Bob Blackman of Jllinois, all of whom have factd both of the ranking conference Powers, all leaned toward Ohio State in a series of telephone interviews. Stoll, w1-improving Gopliers suf- fered a seasoo-openlng ~7 loss to Ohio State, said "Sure I'd like to phly Ohio State again if it didn't count on my v.·on-and-loss record. OhJo State or Michigan? It'll be a helluva game." Six weelc!! later the Gophers Iott to ~1ichigan, 34-7. Jardine. whose Badgers Jost to Ohio Stale 24--0 and Michigan 35-6 on suc- cessive Y.'eeks, said "Off what I've Jeen, I'd have to give a very sligllt edge to Ohio StBte:-The difference Jiel in their (Ohio State's) offensive line." Blackman, whose Illini gave both teams Lrouble, said "I've never bid a team more ready than we were for Ohio State. They were simply too good." The coach said Rams halfback Jim Bertelsen, whlse p u n t returns were a major factor in last Sunday's 29-7 victory over New Orleam, had suffered a knee sprain but apparently would be okay to meet the 49ers. All of the Rams halfbacks were lauded for outstanding jobs blocking. After the Saints had taken a 7--0 lead . the Rams began running fullback Lawrence McCu~ more with the halfback given the job of blocking the weak side linebacker. McCutcheon wound up with 115 yards gained. Knox was asked about the 49er defense which before the season was considered ooe of the best in pro football . ''That 49ers def..,.. Is sUU real good. It gave Washington all it wanted. But a couple of fwnbles and a couple of interceptions hurt tbem'when the offense was in. Another game JoJ\,n Brodie throws six interceptions. "But their defense has been playing fine football." Knox also complimented the defensive units of the Raw, saying, "We have been playing pretty consistent defense and getting better. We still mU!t improve but we started with a yotmg defensive team. Our front four is playing very. very well ." White Selected To Cage Board Daily Pilot sports editor GleM White has been placed on Associated Press' national board of sportswrlten who vote on the national rankings of major college basketball teams. Sixty men comprise tht boJrd and four are from catifomia : iv.-o from I..cs Angeles, one from San Francisco and White. Two-hundred-and-sl.1teen univcr· sities are in the major schoOl:s cale· gory, headed by million-time NCAA C'hampion UCLA. Last season UCLA , North C.rolina State and Cal Slate !Long Beach) comprised the final top three in the ratings. ' The fll'>I 1973-74 poll-a prc- season shot .::..... will appear in the Nov. 25 Daily Pilot. · STOLEN BALL TRICK -Spencer Haywood (24) o! the Seattle SuperSonics has !he ball grabbed out o! his hands by Phil Jac~son of the New York Knicks in National Basketball Association game Tuesday night in New York . The Knicks won , 104- 102. Sports Clipped Short White ·Benched for UCLA League next season. for a bid to a more.promtnmt bowl. • .. ,,,. But Majors dldn~ Willi to _.i icfll•~• mud> --talking about the tiolll••· . possibility at hi> weekly preoo __ ,, · ference. :.r. .. :~ "!appreciate the fact that they (~': . Jio.i oificials) ·have shown relaU'!dl":;, good Interest ," said Majors, " . , --~" the main objective now is to win Sit*· . day." · · ""7- A victory ...,. Army would giv~~)' '. a ~l record in its first leUOll ' · : .. • Majors and Insure the Panlllen lll!if.' · ! first wimlng seuon In a decade. : ~ •.• · "'Ibis team bas come fwtber ~-· than any team l'w been 7 ' ?~ .. : • with," said Majors, Whl> bad a.if .. ~ lowa State from a football &eel Wjl\' ~·, 1 a rflllltatioo tor -. into ~ ~ . \ last year. .,•.;.:• 1 "Nobody is pltMed with looimc. ~'.< \ we're disappointed with Jut week'•.• . .'• to Notre Dame," he added, 0but.:•:.i~ have a good football team at Pitt rlft) . now, and we've developed IOIDI ~ · lnPitf tbalf " •• ' t 00 • -•,.J'\\',~·. Fiesta Bowl officials said Pitt lllO'lod'~-I 1 to the top d the lilt alter -•• 7 possilile selectkms, HOUiton and 'l\Uaei,1,"\ said they would play In another l*llO,'' ,,,_. game, the .utro-81-llowl.•i • · if asked. .: .... ;,:;"' OORV ALLIS, Ore. -Sophomore Steve Gervais will start at quarterback against eighth-ranked UCLA Saturday, says Oregon State coach Dee Andros. emergency aide to victims of the earth- quake in Managua, Nicaragua . Jn 13 years with had seven sea.sons Tho winner of the Western Al!llol!IY Conf""nce title wilt aerve u boot .Jq•. the Dec. 21 Fiesta Bowl at -:i Cleveland , Lemon State University. . ;1,:~· .. "Steve was consistent and he moved the ball v.·ell," Andros said , referring to Gervais' perfonnance in last week 's 13·7 Pacific-8 Conference football loss to Washington State. ··r ve never see n his passing as pin- point as it was against WSU, '' Andros said. Gervais completed five of eight passes for 84 ya rds against WSU. Former Newport Harbor High and Orange Coast College star Alvin White, who started at quarterback, \\8S Ii of 19 for 78 yards. UCLA, 5-0 in the Pac-8, will entertain the Beavers 14 in Los Angeles. e SupelMled Lkense WASHING TON -The pilot of the plane in which Pittsburgh Pirates baseball star Roberto Clemente died had previously had his commercial license suspended, government records show. According to the Federal Aviation Administration an attempt had been made to revoke the license of Arthur Rivera, but on appeal a judge ordered a tro-day .suspension rather than ,..pen:nanent Joss 9f license. Records show that the suspension was on Jan. 22, 19'111. The license WllS returned July 21. Clemente died In a crash Dec. 31 of that year as he fiew with Rivera and three other passengers to bring • e King Disappointed NEW YORK - Billie Jean King said Tuesday she was disappointed that Margaret Court and Rosemary Casals might take up challenges lo meet Bobby Riggs on the tennis court. "So far as I'm concerned, the issue Is closed," she said at a lwicheon in New York. "I beat him and that's the end. "It's money and recognition for Margaret and Rosie and they say 'you won $100.000 so who are you to talk ,' but l turned him down twice. He forced me into it." e 6 ,173 Tlr kets Lef t LOS ANGELES -The Los Angeles Rams announ ced Tuesday that 6,173 tickels remained unsold for their Sunday game against the San Francisco 49ers which indicated a possibility the game might be televised locally. Jr a game sells out 72 hours before kickoff, a ne\V federa l law requires the local television. The Coliseum has a 79,281 capacity. The 'TV decision is made Thurday afternoon with l p.m. the deadline-for a sellout. -e IA!mon Named MILWAUKEE -The Milwaukee Brewen announced Tuesday that former pilchinll star Bob Lemon will manage their farm club In the Pacific Coast ...._ ~ .. " with 20 or more victories and played in seven consecutive all-star games, !rom 1948 through 1954:. He managed the Kansas City Royal s from June, 1970, through 1972 and was a coach with the Royals in the past season. e Co1n1ors in Senals NO'ITINGHAM, England -Jimmy Connors became the first man Tuesday to reach the quarterfinals of a '48,000 international tennis tournament b y defeating Britain's Gerald Battrick, 6-1 , 6-3. Advancing to the second round were Bob Kreiss, Tom Gorman, Patrick Proisy of France and Bjorn Borg of Sweden . Kreiss, who ha s been a professional only six weeks, took a 6-3, 6-4 victory over South Africa's Frew McMillan, and Gorman advanced by de£eating Graham Stillwell of Britain, 6-4, 6-3 . Proisy edged Yugoslavia's Nikki Pilic 6-4, 7.5 and Nastase beat Jean-Baptiste Chanfrcau of France. 6-3, 6-4. e Aussie• Gain l~ONG KONG -Australia beat Korea 1-0 Tuesday night, winning the right to compete in the World Cup soccer finals at MunJch. The winning goal was ki cked by Australia's Jimmy MacKay in the 25th minute or the second haU. Arizono and AriJono State w111 _.:.' Nov. 24 in a game which will ~ly 1:· detennine the WAC champion. ;:·=~· .. . . Ump Boiling· .:.~"'~'·' ' ,. •!(-. ' . ' ,·: \ .. s Shocked Over .. ·~;· Retirement ~ -.;J FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP)'~i. "I'm mad, I'm shocked, I'm amazed," veteran umpire Frank Umont la!d ~ he learned he had reUred from.~,~~·'. American League. '.1'"1~~·~ "They call it retire, but it 90U11411.r~· like II.re to 111e," Umont, 56, said ~<';1' day. "It's like goiDlt to sleep at JUtht~:l and waking up in lhe morning to .l,,.,.: •. 11 you're gone, baby." • :.;" Joe CrOnln, chalnnan of the l~ef aMounced Monday that Umont ~···' among four vetenin umpires •ho. 1!14:~:·1 rettred under the Umpires' RetlremMtt Plan. ::ft,"' . He said three umplreo'hod been · • to the league and oj>t!ons t • two others. "They say I retired. 1 hami't .......ii.i They didn't call me and au ";&?"V I wanted to retire," sakl Umont, trbp Ja~kson's Goals: .300 Average, 50 HRs -served 20 years. "'Ibey rttlre me'"'# ... flfe me or whlitevtr you want to -~t.:i~ it . No notlce, nothlni-I just pto,r~ ~', fonn letier for 20 yeus. That's a~1:. ing." !.,lf.;J,:1 · OAKLAND (AP) -Reggie Jackl!On, wiMer of the 1973 American League Most Valuable Player award , now Is turning his thouihlS to his baseball fujure, "There are a lot of things I can do that I haven't done yel UnUI ! do them, I'm sho<t-changing myaett, the fans and our teom owner," the sl11111fnr. %7-ye&M>!d Oakland A'• outfielder said Tuesday an.r being chooen unal\lmously a1 the MVP. u1•ve never batted .300 or hit 50 home runs in a season. I haven 't won two MVP awards or played on three .,.rid championlhlp leJUNI." The llaoebal! Write" Aloeci1tion oC America, with two wrttm voting in each American League city, honored Jacbon for a 1euon in which he batted .293, hit 3Z llOlners and drove in 117 runs. Earlier, be !lad been named the Most Valuable Player In the World Serl.,, ofter betting .310 and driving in six runs, as tbe A11 beat the New York Meta !or 1 second 1tralgh1 world cham- pionship. The Natiooal League MVP will be named next Wednesday. "I'd be feeling a little hollow over thJs award if we hadn't won the title," said JackJOn. He m!Jaed the 1172 World Serlu because ol an injury. Bahimore Or!olet p It ch e r Jim Palmer, the Cy Vowi1 Award winner. ' r ' was second to Jackson in the P.fVP voting, with 172 point! to Jackaon's ptrfect 336 •core. Kansas City ouUielder Amoo Otis was third. Minnesota second baseman Rod carew, Detroit reliever John Bliler and A's third baseman Sal Bando tied £or fourth. Jackson. whose. 1973 salary was about 175,000, hinted he would be asking A's owner Charles 0. Finley for about double that figure next season. "I ezpect to sign a one-year contract. I might sign a three-yf!ar contract, but ii wouJd have to approach a half· million dollars/' he said. He added, "l'm'Mt going lo ovcryrico myself," and sold be expected Finley ''to make a fair offer." .. Jackson praised Dick Williams, who res:lgzied as A 1s manager after the World Series, saying, "He helped me as a man and a ballplayer, and helped make me a winner." "I'd love to soo him come ba ck to the club," Jackson added, "but I don't think he will.'' Whoever manages the A's next year wlll Have, In Jackson, a player aiming "to fulfill my talent., play up to the peak of my nbllity. '' Jack!on , who struggled through some rot1if1 tj mes early in his major lc•gue career, aak1 Tuesday. "I'm at peace With mYoeif." REGG IE J ACKSON Umont, or Fort La!"l!!<f•le, said !Iii'/ Cronin 1ppar:enUy dei:ided to ta1111.1'';, f few umpires with him when be'o · Jan. I by tee MaePa!JU u . . ~ chainnan. • uy· 1 , "That'• another odd thJnc," ' . said. "Cronin was out with me · •"!t here last 1prin1( and told me to 1111( !' !OOM. He aid I had ~ ~{ fOur yean left. _,i1 ~ "I'm as Cafllble U 1'9'1!e ol the ·11111 { they've gol up there now," !J'f ! timont said he ml!lht Iii• a ooftlplolill ! With the Nationo! •Umpires AMoclol!bn ~ which meelS in Chlc•r• liter lhlJ mohlh ••. He uld there wll tie ':aome mOre.~ adject!Vfj -and adVeiltol ~"; eVfrt· a 'tiff dt.lcrtptlve nouna' w.9 '11-1~ ., he's~· ,: ~·'!" ' \' ,..,. .. ' "' ' .. ' :·· :· ... ... . · . •• .• .,. r ,i If.' , .. ... . ' .. ,•• .. •• , :• .. .. .... . .. . • .. ... .~; •: . .. ~ 1, ~:1 ' :~ , " " I '. f " • " ... ,. .... 1 .. " ... ·:·1 .. .. •. ·'' ·:'l. ., ... ,,. •.. , .• :11 ... .. I ·: .. '· ' ' r:;. ·' ~. A: I , ,. " '" .. f •• • ' ' • ~.' r . ,, ~ .. ; .. " . ) I -. --... • J • Laguna Dea~h EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 66, NO. 318 , S SECTIO.NS, 88 PAGES QRANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ·....---WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBE' 14, !973 --TEN CENTS .. --··eo ---H·e-alth· · P·lanners • Eye Hospital Expansion Presi,dent T_ells.£.OP He'll Stay • : WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Mion, under · questioning bf· 7 s· 8epubtlcan _cOngressmen, rea!finned to-- day that he would not resign or submit voluntarily to impeachment. As part o_r his new strategy to meet . criticism "head-on" 9J hi~ ltandling of --· Walfrgate._soffia:-COngressmen .sfi_cl Nii.:. • on offered to meet .with Chairman Sam J. Ervin (0..N.C.), ~d Vice Chairman Howard H. Baker (R-Tenn.), of the Senate Watergate corhmittee. • • • Ervin quickly rejected any such limited session. The committee asked Jiixon Tuesday for a meeting with the full committee and Ervin told. reporters, • '1J•tn not going to the White House ~lthout the entire committee." The -reported Nixoo offer to meet only with Ervin and Baker was disputed by ~ parlicl"111 in !Jill-llll!ruliig's 11<sstoo. Rep. Louis r .. y Jr. 1R-P'la .), said Nixon offered only to "supply them with the information that they want," with the method undt&ermlnel. Some congressmea who attended the --· ----. with the .~~t -bll -In a wiet of White House questlciHnd- answer sesaiona for every GOP member of Conllf"'S -sald Nixon promised further public actionl to allay questionl about Watergate. Partisan Furor ~reets Caspers' Energy Proposal . . By JACK. BR OBA CK Of flM ~Hy ,.I ... 1'9ff · Board of Supervison Chairman Ronald W. Caspm offered a list ol 11 recom· · mendailons for county actlon in the current energy crisis Tuesday and ran loin unexpected opposition from other board members. Supe"laor' Ralph Clark, Robert Battin and Ralph Diedrich, all Democrats, call- ed Caspers' statement and recom- ntendatlons "political" caspers ls a jlepubtlcan. Diedrich referred to Caspers' offering as "the political speech you made." Clark agreed and said It bad all the JACKSON PUSHES BILL ON ENERGY, Pogt 30 ''inferences of motherhood and the American nag." , Bat{in added assent to the other two Jupervisors' retnarks. CaSpen, ObVioosly taken aback at the .;(See ENERGY PROPOSALS, Pa1e I) Oraage «:out Weatller Continued cool, sunny weather Is on the agenda for Tbunday, aCcording to the weather aervlce, with highs at the bea~he• In the • n>id-llll 'tislng ·in Ill 'tlllahd. Over· night Iowa ·56-61. 11\'l'llU·~ 'l'OJI •\" In Richo~i:z:on'1 hometoWJ1. of Whlttl -Wai.raat• not, wllll.ff01ldlfl -tht J)<ople ore 1fia bth,lnd him. Sec 11ory, Pagr 26. . • I ,, 'fwr llhfce I . ~· " ' M. IM t 1IMn11t 14-IJ ~ c ...... c.... 11 =..... st·7' .~a ....,... ''" .. , ,...... :tl-l1 """ l,.itflfftl 41 Mo'rit• ,.,, MlflMtl '""' )I H•1t11111I Ntwl 4.1' Or•·n• c-1y 1 .. u .,,.,19 ''"" " '"'" J2.JJ Dr. llllMtt1111 11 S!K9t M•rlllh ..,1 T ... ,111.. M Tll .. I'" J6.17 w .. .,. ' ""' "'"' ,..,. ,.... THIY'LL II IUQl!IO TO AID f:!1Kllli Dlli Ill-MILi TRli< 1 !>.lo K1worot1nl, loft, John Pallou bon Their 110ot1 Laguna'.s Explnrer Post Schedules 50-mile Hike . The Laguna Beach Search and Rescue The hike is open to aU comers with Explorer Post '117 will bold Its 9th Annual no age or sex descririli.nation. Fee ts ~· hike Saturday thn!ugb Lagllll8 $2. Medalll will be given to hiker. who Beal!ti~ south Laguna, QigunaN1gue1-. fllllslfthe-coune w1tbin·1s hourr.Startlng Mission Viejo and El Toro. · time is anytime between 5 a.m. and The· sir miles are spread along a two 9 a.m. Saturday. lap coqhe beginning at 8S5 Glenneyre Members of the explorer post will Street in .i,aguna Beach. The route, goes. patrol the hike route and will carry down Coa.it "'Highway 1o Crown Valley first aid supplies and water. They11 Parkway, then , up to Moulton Parkway also h a v e radio communicaUons with and past Lion Country Safari and Sm!, .the starting point. _ Canyon Road and back to Laguna on The explorer poet is sponsored by Laguna Canyon Road. St._Mary'1 Episcopal Chri. Record for the lengthy trek is a Ume Further lnforn:uition-is available by just under seven hours and was · set calling John Plitlou at 494-1646 or Dale last year. Kawaratanl at 494-4903. Lawyer Kennedy Cleared Of Six Charges in Laguna . . Attorney Michael • Kennedy has been cleared of charges . that he iDterfeared with Laguna Beach officers. 11ttempting to arrest on federal ·"'arrants a major figure in the Brotherhood of Eternal Love conspiracy cases. KeMedy wns cleared last week in !he Laguna Niguel Municipal Court of Spiritu~ l&cture Set in Laguna Spiritual Research Amclalel o f Laguna Beach will present a lecture on t h 'e three levels of consck>usnes.t during a meeting o.t 8 p.m. Friday at the Women's Club, 288 St. Ann's Drive. Guest speakers are \Vayne Guth rie and Bella Kar lshti directors or .... the F'ellO\VShip or Universal Guidance of 1"" Angeles. According to lhc Splrilual Research Associates, analyais ol the three levels caq lead to removal or obsessions. possessions end blocks, which "control the flO\Y ·of the~armlc pattern thus ena bling one 'to move upward from the br1gJc lower, elemental self Into the Judge Blair ·Parnette a(te11 four counts of 'interfearing .. wlth '.ollicen and .. two counts of disturbing the peaCe were dismissed by the judge.. • Judge Barnette ruled that KeMedy had been denied due Pfocess of law because the complaints against him were not broug~t until seven· we~ks after the March 9 arrest of Michael Boyde Randall at Kennedy's ocean front borne. Randall , then free on bail, ,.,.as sought on a federal warrant alleging falsjllcation of a passport. He was subsequenUy released and has fied the area. Kennedy contended -that c h a r g e s against him were not brought until Ran- dall fled and that they were in retaliation for the skiJ><>ut of Randall. Pollce alleged that Kennedy had slam- med and locked the fesldence doorJ. offictr111 fa ces .. and that as they w e apprehending . Randall, Kennedy at- tempted to interfere. Omcc.-a also alleged tbul Kennedy follo\\'ed police ·into the street where Randnll '•'as t.'lken to squad cars and cursed at them . Volcano H.um.bling l'W ..... .,. 11 ....... ,. . " .... .....,. ·~' WtmH':t ,....,. Jt-91 w., ... """' ~·' • higher conaclousriea and onward to the splrilual Ood-self ror Culfillmcnt.'' MEZCALA, Medco (UPI) -Smoke and steam pouring .out of rtcsh ·cracks in the earth accompanied by un- derground rumplingJ.aparked lean Tues· d•y that a new vo!CanO may be forming near thll town oc the road to Acapulco. --- • Viejo Plea . Expected to Draw Gripes By JAN WORTH 0t tflt DlllY Piiot l lllH A proposal for a 56-bed expansion at Mission Community Hospital in Mission Vie}o will be presented to the facilities review board of the Orange County Heatth Planning C o u n c i 1 (OCHPC) Thursday. The meeting is al 730 p.m. at the ~ta i:::~ City, Council Cham.her, .77 ~ application, for ~ 2G-bed pSycbi~trlC urut and a ~ intermediate care facility, is expected to draw protestl from at least one neighboring hospital, South Coast Community in South Laguna. A S:OWlty master plan of health care last year concluded that an overbedding situation exists in the southern half of the county. Overbedding means that there are significantly more beds available In hospitals -than are belng-Uled. This in- creases per patient cost because it wicja the ralio belWee!I · ~! · the hospital ts paid to suppori Its aervices and what it ~ts to maintain the facility . The area ts served by the overlapping service areu of South Coist Community Hospital, San Pem~te General HOIPitat, and Mission Commiln!ty. A IQurtb "°'1'1til, ibl! IJO.bOd Sad· dleback Comnwhlty lfusplla!. in Laguna Hill.s:, will also 9E!rYe the area. It was scheduled to open last summer but has hit a series of construction, financial • and administrative snags and 1.s still unopened. · - t • : .t Princess Anne and her Jlew hu•band, Capt. Mark Phillips, leave Lon· don's Westminster Ab~y tollowtng t)leir wedding ceremony today. (Story, ,Page 4.) . - Council's Actio11 Tonight Decides. Main Beach Fate · U Mission's application is app~ved, the facility will have 2.89 beds. The planried e.i:pansion would cost '512,000, and according to hospital spokesmen wou.Jd complete t be construction pro- gram of the three-year-old facility. Bernard Carr, administrator of South T-he 1mmecuate fllture of the Laguha Court is scheduled for the I a w s u i t Coast <;ommunity, s!id he and other Beach Main Beach Park will be shaped on Dec. 6. • representatives of bis hospital will .attend largely by _decisions reguir~ · of t~e Originally Gabriels said he was the meeting to protest the Mission re-tjty council tonight and implemented fighting the case against the Main Beach -quest. -b)Libe...counciLwithin..w.eets. -c;;c:---lPc'ark~ "on principle" in an attempt to He said a two-page letter ·had been That was the view today by City force the coUtal cOmmissiOiis----W (See HOSPITAL. Page %) MMBger Al Thea! who noted that major evaluate EIRs on projects they consider pressures were mounting to complete for Permit. County Approves T en.nis Club ·in Lagun.a Canyon Final approval by the Orange County Planning Commission has been received for a $200.000 private tennis club in Laguna Canyon just south of the in- tersect!On of-Laguna Canyon and EI Toro Road!. A pre-groui'ldbreaking celebration and display of models for the proposed Laguna Racquet Club will be held lrom 4 to 6 p.m. Sunday at Mission Bank in Laguna Beach. lnitlally, four tennis courts, four indoor handball courts, racquet ball court.o and a clubhouse will be built. Future ex- pansion will add three additional tennis courts, a pool, jacuzzi, sauna, lockers and recreation area with pool table, juice bar and other games. Construction is due to slart in late December or early January. Completion of the first phase is due in spring, said Tim Adams, club director and presl· (See TENNIS, Poge I) THIS AD DREW 100 RESPONSES The lawyer appealed to the Daily Pilo~ He asked in bavo bis ad stopped because it drew 100 re!pOnses. SECRETARY for Laguna Nlsuel Law office. Exper r.rer. Duties inct. some ~ ng filing, . rec;eption & trnnscribing. \Vill consider p~rt time. (Phone No.I • Naturally he foond the SCCl'(!tary he needed belore canceling the ad. What is it you're ·looking for? Probably a Daily Pilot ad can help you find It, her. him, whatever. Dial the direct line to results at the Dally Pilot. 11!2-567~ • ~ ·sale ol bonds financing the Main However, be recently has lndlc.ated Beach, Park development. ije said th he is using the lawsuit as a liver ci~ ,is. en.t.erbig a stJiSOnal unfavorable to force the city to modify Main Beach ~ m311lc~t. . , , Park plara. itbsolirte i:teadUne-for ·Tesolution of the Gabriela wants-the city to .n:nlo,ve g'O'·or· no-gO d.!tislon for development buildings including the lifeguard facility,' cit .the .park by t~is summer is Jan. a sµn _ ~bade, restrooms and concession 7 .at which ~e the bids for construction gazebo from t6e park. 8( the park would expire. If construction on the park is not ALlawsuit by resident John Gabrlels initiated within a time frame outlined bas delayed-a co~pleted bond sale and by the city, development could be start of construction both of whiCh were delayed even if the lawsuit is resolved scheduled for Dec. 5. l)ecause the council has been loath to The lawsuit contends that the city's allow building on the beach during the environmeptal impact report was not busy summer season. properly reviewed by the South Coast 'niis would be the-second year-long Regional Zone Conservation Commission delay for the park originally scheduled and the State Coastal Cooservatlon Com-to have been, completed by June 1973. ~OQl , High construq_tion bids forced the first A hearing in Orange County Superior postponement. * '* * * * U.S. Funds for Beach Project Not Endan.gered Federal and county grants fundin g $563.0llO of the developmenl.ot the..Maip ~ch Park In Llguna Beach are not enaangeroo by a short-term deJaY tn con.struction of the park . Contrary to a sl.aternent issued recenUy by the offlce of Fiflh District Supervisor Ronald · I\'. Casper., the grants 'could.•nOt be lost throug~ a year· long delay. T.wo federat grantl funding S-463.000 of the park c0st Uplre ln 1971 and 197'. A county revenue sliarlng granf oJ $100,000 would be good for two years. Terry Brandt, administrative aide sakl today, Tiie giant monies wltl be paid on com· pletion of the work. Therefore. the city is forced to seek lntenncdinte bond financing.~or the development. • Lo.~ bid for park de•elopmcnt win be $744,0llO offered by Mancran. some $120,000 more lban the city estimates for construction, If the city allo'!s the , Initial low .l>idder to revise upward Ill bid becaU'le of a $78,000 "clerical • mistake." n e federal grants are . tied to the presently approved desigJi' of the park. i\lajor rJianges in that design would fe9Uire a review by the granting agen-- ciC's. Bra ndt said. . ' The county morley lJ not specifically 9ect to a partj_~lar design and ap.- parently \\'Ould be carried over through any ~ible design change. ' Relations Severed GABERONE. Botawana (AP) Bots"'ana announced Tlre!dl)' It •Yel"ed diplomatic relations with Israel 1be announctmeot by Presklent Slr Bentle Khama·s offlc6 brought to 28 the:.,._ of Arncan nal!Om that bave ...., relations with the Jewllh state. . ·> . r ~ DAILY PIL01 LB • 'Su~·~ps: Called Off In Anaheim . ' - Seminar Set • • • • On -Codstline "A.s We Set the Coastline," the final program ln a symJ>OSJ\llD SOOMOred by the Newport llartior !unlor League and UC Irvine wUI take place Thuraday at uei. The discussion, to be model'lted by Newport Beach City CoUDcllman 2 Mideast .. Natiohs '.Sel : • ' POWTrade l ' Carl Kymla, will get Jlnd<r way . By WILLLUI Scm1EJBEa at 7:30 p.m. In Room 17t.a!1JCl'a By Tile Asso<lafed 'Pre11 • ot tt1t DMW , ... •• --CCDputer science bullding:-Israel and Egypt agreed to start exi Dissident Anaheim poUcemm ·decided Panelists wW be VerLyn Jensen,• changing prisoners of war. 'fhursda)t Tuesday that "Officer FrlendlY" would counsel !Qr the Environmental morning, the International Red Cr0$4 be more help tn ~inning their.. pay ~e CoaUtlon of -0rans• ·County ; R. 8~~:1~~~ci~ent ca~e shor1Uf ~~ ""thJb 'f than "Suoer CoR" Barry McCOmlc, eUNlive_ vice .a U.N spokesman"111-Calro discJ • _ .. 1UMtm~!Y. cif iht 'ADahebn ·-.Pollee ····praldent -of .-Avco ·~CoiJununity. that negotiators for the two countrlu_ Developers; Frank .I! o b i n s o o , AS!oclation (APA) yoted Ip -UJL member of th~, •Otait&o Oltmty reached an agreemenJ w]lich he descrlb: lJFOs Landing? Looking fo r all the world like landed UFOs or golf balls on a titanic scale, theSe domes dominate the hilly TRW Systems test installation at the e,nd Of of Avenida Pico in San Clemente. A TRW official Dally ,lltl Stnt "'ole said the domes are used to house radar antennae for extensive -and secret -testing. The facility is also used by TRW as a test site for small rocket and missile engines. on writing tickets for moviDC vtOllUonS Harbors, Beaches and Parks C.om-ed as a "break-through'' in maintaininq in the city for 30 dan or until the mission, and Raymond. Wat.son, the Middle East 'cease-fire. city enters into what the APA feels president or the Irviile Company. The prisoner exchange, scheduled to are "good faith " contract talks. The Junior League series, "Com· start at 8 a.m., would remove a-major If the discretionary action by munity 73," is op8h to the public obstacle in carrying out the U.S( patrolmen results in Ii nelr halt in without charge. _ sponsored truce signed Sunday. Israel traffic citations, the city COUld Jose up bas demanded an agreement on the to $30 000 in revenue It earns · each return of prisoners before it goes through month 'trom payment of ftraffic fines. with the agreed transfer of checkpoint& The latest tactic by the officers, Fr. !>tit P .. e l on the Cairo-Suez highway to U.N. dubbed the "Officer Friendly" approach, peacekeepers. is exactly tre opposite of an altematlve HOSPITAL Michael COnvaire, the Red Cross plan of action disclosed 10 days ago . • • • representative in Israel, said the prisoner -the Super Cop id ea. exchange would be made by direCt flights The Super Cop plan provided for mass sent to the OCl(PC spelling oat ob-between Egypt and Israel. ticketings in the city fi>r even· the most jeetlons to the pl.in. He said the agreement came at a minor violations ln an effort to get ... meeting on the Egyptian-Israeli cease, the people to ask the city to get the "It Is incumbenf upon the heal~ P~ fire line between generals of the twe police off their backs. ning council-to-see thal-only_:already sides. TJJe new roune 1>f action would permit approved beds be allocated for needed The earlier stalemate on prisoner ex- officers to use their own discretion in uses," he said. change · and transfer of checkpointa stopping motorbts for moving violations Spokesmen for San Clemente General brought threats from both Egypt and and then letting them off with only Israel that threatened 'to upset the eeas~ a warning and no ticket. Hospital said. they have po plans to fire. Family Slapped The Officer Friendly approach got the send a representaUve to the meeting Premier Golda Meir told the Israeli go-ahead from 100 members or the 260-or to either protest or support the ap-parliament that "not one gram of food From Pagel ENERGY PROPOSALS • • • member APA at a rally in Pearson plication. will be allowed through to the town W ;th B;g f;1,e Park. But not everyone there liked the Bernard lrigrim, president of the of Suez" and the Egyptian army m partisan reception of his rectimmenda· tions, pushed hard for acceptance and got eight of the 11 suggestions approved, but' not without some modilication, " " " " idea. the opposite bank of the canal if the caspers had also suggested that his Several association members voted board of 8addleback Hospital, said he Egyptians did not agree to arrangements list of energy conservation measures F C'...... • against the lax ticketing idea because wasn't sure if his hospital would react. for the POW exchange. be forwarded to the cities. Clark thought Or mm ming Ibey claimed it' would lower the <ity's "U It Is_ approved it will affect us," ' Egypt's semi .. !!icial newspaper said it wou1d be better to have the cities . .. d I I · keel r of the · m· -··ty offici·als m' ·studm"n tbe law enforcement standards a n he aald. srae ns a resump ion war The board chainnan proposed: -Limit maximum driving speed JO "'""'' ..... ~ Bv HILARY KAYE jeopardize life and property. by refusing to give the U.N. peacekeep-energy situation and what can be done OJ "'• o.u,. .. not si.tt The officers argued that the Officer StanJey Matek, executive director of iilg force control of the .highway into to bout ii the OCHPC, said he has sent a Jett.er led a · Lifeguards at Huntington Beach say Friendly attitude wou1d give drivers a to the 20-member raclJities· review board Suez until the POW issue is se(t SO miles pe~ hour on all county. veh~cles I~=· ;.ix:,::: !:a!!~~~~; clamming is a good, cheap way to license .to .speed through the city, recommending that the application, lf to Israel's satisfaction. eThxc~pt during '!emedergency s1tudra~1~ns. confe"rring with the .slate Congressional . get food . UttCieattenmg livllme,, and .proAnabperty" h . approved, should" ~vert existing beds . i { is was ~odi i to e_xcept i~g delegation he was Convinced that the •Mrs. Jolm Hudatdjsagrees. Het clam-Y counc en m . e~ ave to the desired uses, aiil:l not add new '·· . . -W' .. .• on·lreeways.by_ceunty _vebides..Diednch__....~ls-a-real-lhing-and-thal--mJng-~lon1"~4·rwhJffi'm' :---rel~ I . . .... I · -9'DOS~-~~ ". --Ga~ ·rden· erS 4 n-----' 'd li · 50 h I · · · of lin · 't bl ·"""" " to the po Icemen which ~ or a "I ested three alt mati the ua sai a mit of mp on reeways ·rationing ga.so e was mev1 ~ e. tluded her husband and fiv child 6 75 ~-·t h"k 1 th fi t sugg e ves, ra r Id I t r th f He said. that Ii ml ting speed of vehicles e, ren, · r-< ......... · pay 1 e or e 11"8 year than recommend denial·" . Matek said. ~ou ru e ou use o e reeways h ·"d lish '"' d resulted in a citation f o r illegal clam and six percent in the second year "M' · has trib ted't the ~-· b t h. 1 I to 50 JllP wo'tl accomp ooe·uur . . . . -w10n oon u o ove.-1A:1.1--Y coun Y ve ic ~s · . Of the go~l of reducing fuel conswnption~ nung expedition last Saturday, wiuch of a two-ye~ contract. . ding si tuation in the south COWltY.''. .• -Reduce maxunum speed_ limt to 50 by 15 percent. . included her husband and five children, Pat~lmen are demanding seven per-'the recommendation• of the facilities mph on county roa~s. (Thi~ was cut Caspers also suggested that . the resulted in a citation for ille l clam-cent hikf;S both years. on one-year con-review panel, a group of. private citizens out because such action requires enact-California Congressional delegation be mlng She f . ~ tracts with some fringe benefits not appointed by the OCHPC, are reviewed Modification On Noise Law ment of an ordinance). asked to approve the AJaskan pipeline. · aces a possible fine that offered by the city. by the whole health oouncil which may -Instruct. the ~ire ct.or ol He dropped trus when informed that rould nm as high as $150. . The council said reopening pay negotia-reverBe the recommendatioo. Professional gardeners packed the Transpor~~on to continue .maxunll:'" ef-both houses had approved legislation "W~ thought ~e were going to get lions wo.uld serve no ~e and would The council's recommendation is then Board of Supervisors hearing room TueS: fort_ to u.tilize oornpact, high • ~Ieage to go ahead with the pipeline. He also one, ruce inexpensive meal for our family be unfair to other e1ty employes who forwarded to the state's Advisory HeaJth day and won a modification of· the: vehicles m the county fl eet. (This was called for the pumping or oil in the of seven," said the Hwitington Beach have already agreed on contracts. Cowicil. approved after remarks by Clark and Elk Hills Naval Relel'Ve in the San woman. A meeting bad been requested by Last year 8 request by Mission Com-Orange Cowity noise control ordinance .. Diedrich that this was already policy Joaquin Valley uup to an amount which ~iwe don't have $150 to pay for clams. the AP.A's attorney with the city munity for 'an 89--0ed nursing unit wa s Power lawn .mowers and other noisy of UM: county). wou1d not jeopardize national security." It's ridiculous," she said. manag~ today to discuss the status approved by the facilities review board. landtcaping equipment tan be operated -Direct th.e Ct1unty budget ~n~lyst The net result of the board's action Mrs H d k d h 1 mil 1 of the pay impasse. But that decision was by the cowicil. bttween 7 a.m. and 8 p.m. on every and purchasing agent to anticipate Tuesday was that COWJty vehicles will with 'seve':.ar h:dred e~the~ ~~era ~h! Association spokesmen said they do But a loophoiei in the state law allowed day except Sunday, supervisors . a~ significant cos t per gallon increases for reduce their speed to 50 mph, except weekend, were lured to the beaches not feel the approach of writing fewer the impltal to build the ~-unit in adopting an amendment to the no~ forthcoming Y.ear. (Thi~ got the same on freeways and that county officials by the exceptionally low tides. tickets will result in disciplinary action anyway. Tbt:. only catch is ~t the 1lrif .. ,,.1 comment that 1t was obvious). will start studies on other methods of While many clarruners art old hands because i\is a discretionary action. ti, llm.Olt coniPl PfO~idgea ft11 qualify 1'te ~ardeners Bnd landlcipers were -Request the director or Harbors; rving energy. '1!. at the ~ Qf digging, scooping up and • • • · " ( ~ lif..lltt !1'ni le.I cir'Mld!ca!d. bacbd by Dr. Jotm ·Philo, directer Beaches and Parks to rpuam1ne JI~ t~ measm;tllg the little shellfish, many of ' George Ollendorf, administrator of of the Orange County Hearth Depart: an~ .d~velop~~nt of 11\iyi~ftroad v~W}e ~ those on the beach were novices, and From Page 1 Mission Community, said he believes the ment, who wrote the original no~ facilities within the county. (Casi>:ers had failed to fully inform themselves lfpplication is justified because the regulating measure. referred to the planned of! road vehicle Newport Estate of the state Fish and Game Depart-TENNIS. overbedcting ts in' acute (crisis medical) The amendment aloo applies to prop. facility at Prima Desecha in the ment's rules for taking clams. • • • beds. ~ · erty owners who have their own mow.ers. southeastern part of the county. Clark, Mrs. Hudak knew she had to have "Overbedding hasn't hit us yet," Ollen-Two weeks ago, the board adopted. Diedrich and Battin had this modified MIS' m'' anagenlent a licenre, knew the clams must be dent of Health Spas Inc. dorf said. "We've been nmning at a an amendment sponsored by Supervlsot to require a public hearing before any over four and a half inches in diameter Memberships are $200 for the first consistent 80 percent occupancy. All Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton wbiclt pro:. changes are made). and knew she could only take 10 clams SO persons to join, $300 for the next we 're doing is trying to provide services hibited the operation of home m~ -Establish policy for heating tern· Rulin St d per person. 25 pers:ins and MOO for the next 25 for our area. At this time, there are tenance equipment except between t perature levels for all county facilities g 8ll S She did not realize, however, that persons. Monthly fees are $25 per person not enough P5YChiatric beds or in-a.m. and 8 p.m. on Saturdays, 8unday. of 65 degr~s to 68 degrees, except in she needed a special clam measuring or $35 per family. Membership is limited termediate care facilities." and holidays. , medical P.i.cilities. .Temperatures. in A former Fresno banker has lm.1 his . device. She used her band to measure. to 30 persons per available court. Matek said that though the slatistics The gardeners protested the SaturdaY medical facilities wdl be de temuned appeal cf a ruling that he mismanaged "We really thought all our clams were Participating in the project with do not show overbed~ in psychiatric and holidays ban arguing that the by the medical director in charge based the muJti-million dollar estate of the late the legal size, and we started to ask Adams are Art Wahl, director of tennis units and intennediite care, an ex· elimination of the early work hour! on health requirements. th late ks ·r th and Laguna Beach High School tennis amination of. e:risUng facilities for these would cut their income by up to 2$ -Authorize the Director of Building George Capron of Newport Beach. ok~y~" said~s. J::~ 1 ey were coach; and Mike Yessls, Cal State shows them at Jess than 50 percent percent. • Services to analyze all remaining The 5th District Court of Appeal Tues· "But when he measured ours, 19, of Fullerton physical education instructor occupency. They Pointed out that most holidays facilities' heating and cooling systems day in Fresno upheld the Superior Court the 35 were undersized, and he gave and club director of handball and racquet/ Ollendorf said he expects resistance now fall on Monday, a regular work and develop a plan of ene rgy con· action in which Albert Shipley Jr. was us a citation for that and for not having ball . to the proposal. "All we can do is day for them and that 8aturday work servation. ordered to paw $4l4,609 to C8pron's a measuring device," she said . Further inlormation ls avaUable by present our case," be said. "We can't was important as most gardeners work -Appoint an interim . County Opera· California Fish and Game authorities calling 4.94-4000. wony about what anybody else is doing.'• six days a week. , lions Committee including the coWJty estate. d 1·1~~;;~~~~;;-:::::::~============::::=iiiiiijiiiliiimiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiij administrative officer, directors of plan· Shipley, i nephew of capron by mar· an state parks rangers, emphasize it is the individual's responsibility to in· niilg, building and safety, transportati?n, riage, pied no contest in October of form himself on the rules for clamming. roads and building services to advise 1972 to charges of stealing from the "When the licenses are purchased , the Board of Supervisors on energy related matters. Caspers offered ca r eslate of the one-time professional a fish and game booklet is given out I 1 f h t th baseball player and real eslate investor. which explains all of the rules for clam· poo ing as an exa mp e 0 "'' a e ming and all other types of fishing," committee could work on. Shipley had been conservator of -wi·re the California Congressional d b explained fish and game Inspector Capron's funds, but was remove Y Robert Kaneen. delegation and President Nixon urging Superior Court Judge Matt Goldstein, Most people out clamming know the immediate return to national Daylight . ed ho char ed rt of th rules, Kaneen mam' tam· ed, but there are Saving Time. (This was called un· now ret1r , w g pa e necessary by the opponents but they holdings had been misappropriated. always those who don't in I o rm eed t I t ·t t · th mot' on) During the 1960s capron's fortune was themselves and may receive citations. agr o e 1 s ay in e 1 • "It takes .;ght years for the p15· mo OIAN•t COAST DAILY PILOT llle Or1"11;9 CO.It OAILY PILOT ... 11t1 W!\icll 11 Combfrltd tl'le N-Pr•u . 15 PtlbllM'lad II~ the Ortrioe CO.•t PlltltlJhlnQ' COtnptn~. Stp,i. rite edJllOnl ere pt,1bUltlld, MOl'ldlJ tl\""'911 Friday. fOI' CO.II M-. N1wPOrj l!•c~. H11t11Jr1111on . IMCll/Fovn111" Vl llty, LIQUl'll 81ac1>, trv(m1/SlddJ1blck,elld S.n·C:l1men1,1 $.In Juan <'fpl1lr1no. A 1Jrigle rr;ilon.JI 9di\0, 11 P\IDI~ SllUl'dlYI Ind ~ndlrt­ flle prlncl~I llUblWtlng Pll"' II ., m Wt$!' l1y S11ttl, COiie Meu, C.llfonill, nut. Ro bert N. Weed President 11111 PllbUtne• J1ck R. Cvrlty YH:t Prt!lklent enGI a-r1t Ml~ 1'11011111 k•1¥i/ Ecfltot Tlto1n11 A. M~rphi111 M1m11"'9 l!lltv Ch1r1,, H, Loo• lic~arcf P. Nill ,t,ultllfll Mtri.tlnt Elil11I0!'1 L..t ....... OM.. 222 Fore1t A¥t11u1 1i'alli119 Addr111: ,,0 , lo• 6"4 t2•&Z ..__ Co1t1 Mn1: m wnt ••Y'Slf'MI Htwoorl lfttll: UlJ Newport leWltYtrt H111t1"'91on 8e1dl: 11'15 11'-tfl lovllvert ill'! CIHl'lt11t1 1 305 Nori~ El C1mf1111 iltMI , ........ f714 1 M2 .... J11 a.Hied .......... 641·1671 ........... "" . .,. ....... : Ttlep .... 4f4-f4U ,...,..Joh!, 1911, Ol'l llCN '°'•' ....., .... ,,.. Ctr!'IM~Y. Ne M .. I t!Orllt, IU111tr1tlen1, •ltwltl lftlltt• ,,.. tldYert....,_tl """""' ""' be rlJClrOllutW Wlll'IOlll N*lll Ptr· rMalon Of COPJ•+ofit -· kcond· ~I.IQ Mil ... Hid .t C*tl Mtfl. c.ll10ml1. Su'*°'ll'li611 .,, C.l'rl>tf' SIM Pl'IOllllllYJ br ""*II N,lS f!MIMfl~1 Mllit«Y _...., .. OM -W,., figured at more than $.12 million. That .... was when he was being sued for divorce clam to reach legal size, so we must by his wife of 54 years, Ednah. protect them the best .we can," Kaneen Capron died in Fresno in October continued. of 1972. He was 86. Kaneen explained \bp.t persons may Prior to his dea th, he had substantial either purchase a devtce in a sporting land holdings in Orange County including goods or bait and taclde ; ~p. for ap- Jand in Newport Beach, ~ta Mesa proximately $1, or. rRUl), make one and what is now Laguna Niguel. themselves. The store-bougfl~ version is Capron purchased 5,000 Costa Mesa simply a metal, horseshoe-shaped item, acres at $100 an acre during the four and a half inches wide. The clam depression and 20 years Jater sold it is placed in it to see if it is the to the state at $5,000 an acre for con-.· proper size. struction of Fairview State Hospital. Mrs. Hudak, who feels there has been Before their divorce iri 1966, the too JitUe publicity about this device, Caprons resided at 2600 Bayshore Drive, says it would help if signs were placed Newport Beach... on the beach, particularly during low Mrs. Capron, who died in 1967, received tide periods, explaining all or the rules. a $16 tnillion divorce settlement after she told t he coort Ibey livod frugally. ''I never knew there was so.much money in the world,'' she testified ifter learning of her husband's investments. Before turning to real estate, Qapron played baseball [or the Seattle Indians of the old Padfic Northwest League.· J Barry Backs Nixon ANGELES (AP) -"I've always ed the President," sen. Barry ter, (R·Ariz.), declared Tuesday In suggesting the nation "cool It" on talk that Nixon should resign or be impeached. "'"1ere's no way he can be impeached and there Is no senslbl• reason for him to resign -he's oot guilty of anything," Goldwater told a news C'Onfertnce here. • Police Probing. Two Burglaries Two burglaries ol private residences were reported Tuesday to Laguna Beach police. Stella M. LePez of 1583 S. Coast Highway told officers that jewelry and other personal belongings worth $655 were taken from her apartment. Police reported no evidence of forced entry . Todd Coonrad of 862 Summit Drive reported the theft of $300 war.th .I sporting equipment I n cl u d I n g a surfboard, wet suit, and skiing gear, and loss of stereo equipment. Entry to. the residence was gained through on unlocked door. • ~ O'IN ' .. ' 538 CENTER STREET-COSTA MESA·....,,.646-1919 Cl.OllD SUNDAY Men's Tennis Sllirts-i.00 to 9.00 Men's Tennls ·~.95 to 18.95 Adidas-Tretom-Converse-Purcell ladies Tennis Shoes-7.95 to 16.95 Aididas-Tretom-Converse Ladies' -Tennis Dresses-16.95 up Wilson--Dunlo~Yis Bancroft-Yoneym Tennis Rackets Penn--Wllsan-Dunlop Tennis Balls-per doz.-7.95 Basketba!I Backbaanls-14.95 BasketbaD G~.95 & 5.95 Basketllalb-5.95-7 .95-8.95-12.95-18:95 4 . ( I I Handball Gloves & Balls I Racquetball Racquets Badminton Rackets Ping Pong Paddles & Balls Croquet Sets Shuffleboard Sets Skateboards Yolleyllalls-leatller-11.9~ 13.95-18.95 Volt Yolleyballs-4.25 to 11.15 SoccerbaUs-leatller & Rubber FootbaOs-SoftllaHs-Baseballs Speado SWim Suits & Trunks Acrylic Warmup Sults-21.95 ta 34.95 Raleigh Bikes-Parts .Tirls-Tps-lepairlnl • I I l • . · ·Sadd.lebaek ' . . . ~ . • VOL'. 6~{~0. 318, 5 SECTIONS, 88 PAGES / . . .. : 11 .. • OUNGE COU"ifY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1973 ~ : ----. -. Today"s ·Ftnal N.Y. Stoeks . TEN CENTS Tobacco B~ars _IJgly Head at llni High . . . . .. . . By JOHN ZAU.ER Of tfll Otllr Plllf ,..,. The age.old proble'm of students smok· ing in rest rooms is rearing its head at Un1venlty High School and no one is qu1te sure what to do about It. Principal Victor B. Sherreltt would like to keep all student smokers out of the rest rooms, but be says he can't spare t:.~ manpower to patrol the rest rooms continuously. Some members of the Irvine Unified . School Boord would like to permit student.I to go off campus to smoke, but that would require· a policy change to allow all atudents·to ·leave campus. ~ And a majority of 1tudents. most of whom do not smQke, would like to see a smoking lounge created ·so their peers wouldn't pollute the re.st rooms, according to ,lCbool officials. But this approach is fOi'bidden by state law. The amoldng dllemrria wu raised' Mon-- day when .ichoot trustees acknowledged ' .. - nportS that aome non .. moi.i.ng 1tudents avoki the z:es~ roorn1 entirely because they are qffended by the dense cigarette smoke tbtre.-.. "There's a· vacant lot next door to the school1" ·su~gested Trustee Norman Glnsberg.c "Couldn't we)nlt some cans over there and quietly encourage the students: do their smoking oVer there?" Trustee R. Dean Otsoo objected. "Anything r.e do to allow smoking 'will be interpreted~ti saying that sriloking Hospital Plans Eyed County Board Studies Viejo Expansion --:B;JAN WORTH ----laStYCaf..coDCflidedih8fan over ot tM o.nr l'lwt s11H situation exists: Jn the southern , A proposal for a 56-bed expansion of the eot.1nly. at (\li!Sion Community Ho.spital in Ovcrbcddil}g means thlt there are dmg-scliidiilei!.l<FOjien 1ast~iilm~ \Iii !iii, half hit a series of ' construction, financial and adminlstratlve snags and is still unopened . h-fission Viejo will be presented to the signiriC'antly 'n1ore '600s availi.Me in _ facilities review board of the Orange hospitals than are being used. This inM County Health Planning Co u n c 11 creases per patient cost because It (OCHPC) Thursday. -widens ' the ratio between what the Jbe meeting is at 7:30 p.m. at the hospital ls paid to support its services Cq)ta Mesa City Council Qia1nber, 77 and what it costs to maintain the facility. Ffir Drive. The ar.ea is served by the overlapping The application, for a 20-bed ~ychlatric service are'u ·of South cOast Community unit "and a 36-bed intennediate care Hospital1 San Clemente General Hospital: faCllity, Is exp'.ected to draw protests und ·Mission Communltf. fl'Om at least one neighboring hospital, ~ fourth hospital, ·ttie 150-bed Sad· South Coast Co1nn1unily in South Laguna. dleback Community Hospital In Laguna A county master-plan Of health care Hills, willM also serve the area. It was Charges were pending today against an Irvine business executive whose car was involved ln a Wrong-way headon collision that destroyed both late model sedans and injured himself and another driver Tuesday night. Silvano M. DiDonado1 36, of Yucaipa, 1nd Sandra B. Rlchardsn , 26, of 2311 Elden Ave., Costa Mesa, were both taken to Mercy General Hospital in Santa Ana after the crash. .DiDonado was treated for multiple ~uts. there after being pried from the Councilwoman Left Official Sans 'Retorque' It was a technical dilculsk>a-of the merits of copper a~d afunµru~m. house wiring which led Irvine Councilwoman G,brlelle Pryor to uk her questtoo. .:During the cUscussion reference wu made s e v e r a I times to the pressure or torque electricians must apply to a wii-lng screw connection w h e n aluminum conductors are U8ed. . Too much-torque, it wu argued, could damage aluminum wire, creating· a hazardous connection. .~A Kaiser Aluminum C o ri\ p a n y representative appeared at the podium bn>ndishlng samples of aluminum w)rlll( and challenging oouncilmen to test their strell(th. · Then, Mrs. Pryor /'sked her, technical question. "How big ls a torque?" she asked. . . THIS A.D QREW wreckage of biJ.· car, wtiile ~· Mfs. Rlchardlon was transferred to Orange County Medical Center. Nunes tbert said she ts In good con- dition today, despite ' SU!ferillg cuts; bculaes IJld a fracliired left leg. Officer Harry -.11opn oaid witneS!eS conrirmed that DiDooado 'w~ heading eastbound on w~bound lanes· of MacArthur Boulevard near the Newport Freeway when .the 10 a.m. accident oc-- curred. DiDonado, owner. of Adapt Corporation at 30t Dyer Road,reportedly told~OffiC<r Hogan he ~ad taken a medication pmcrtbed forpiiill ear11er· 1n the·day. ··· He WU detOinod 00.IUJPlctoo qi <frivin(I while IDtoxicated, police ~kl. but was rei.ueci without belnc booted pending a blood··'test to determine drug and alcohol content at the time of the ac- cident. . -PollcO said Mn. Richardson's 1970 car ai\d the 1171 oedan driven by .DIDooado were..mall(led beyond · repair In the headon crash. Driver Ha111i~g Livestock Killed • • • • 4~ ~ • • • . "". .. SAN DIMAS WJ'I) -A catUe truck loaded with 53 Arizona cow• went ·out of . ccintro1 oD ~. downgrade ;of the San Bernardino Freeway and overturned, kill- ing the ·driver and Injuring thO "relief driver whl was sleeping. The truck, on a ·downgrade of the westbound Creeway, went off the road Tuesday IJld acrosa a creek bed, toppling the cab and both trailers. ;Y' Killed was Clarence Smith, a, · Men-dota. ~,,. • If MisSion's -appUCition is approved, the fa cility will tmve 2C9 beds. The planned expansion ·would cost $512,000, and according to hospital spokesmen woulji complete t he construction pro- lfam of the three-year-old facility. Bernard Carr, administrator of South Coast CommWlity, said he and other representatlvea,of his hospital will att.end the meeting to protest the· Mission re-- quest • He said a twe>page .letter bad been (See HOSPITAL, Page %) .. , I ,. ~ , Okay ·t y 1rviili ', Of _ "ViUage Plan Se.e'ms ·A111uted .. A. village plan .for the Turtle Rock area. appeared beaded for Irvine city appro•al early today after indicati~ that the Irvine <;ompaoy would _,>«tee to demands of the ~unity ~atlon leader>hip. • . .Councilmen· continued ·'action on the plan1 and · the pub)iC·hearing sllggestin_g. however, that .a· "consensus" on zoning ls near. James TaylQr, dli'ector of planning administration for the Irvine Company. ' outlined details of conditions the oom· pany would agree to if the city okays the l,4QO.acre planned community. These include: -The company agrees to make pro- visions .for a second roadway access point to Turtle RQCk pr:tor to the next phase of development. . -A fourth access point may be added to -the plan if need for the extra village entrance i5 shown as development pro- ceeds. -Noise attuation on all new con- structiiln iilll meet current City stand- ards and the c o m p a n '/ will "parti· cipate" with the city ·in cutting road noise affecting existing homeS along OJ.Iver Drive and Bonita Cany6n Road. • -Considering •ctual population per hQusing unit figw-eS resulting lrom the e~'• oUicial census, the projected .,0p"1¥Uon ·.;r Turtle lioct would be from 13,llOO to 13,too persons based Oil )he stipulated mai\jtnum number.of.Jlwelllng Wiiis approved by the citY In llif r.onlng. T& company has JJ,en criticized ror iocreislng,the futUre ~pulaUon of Turtle RockJrorrU2,oeo-:petsons In the current zone pla? ooverfiie LIOO ,acres.J9 15,llOO maaln11un ·Jn· the new 1,ftlO.acre plan. , '.!'>flor. noted that the actual density increase between the two plans Is only .Ill unll.o yet .acn from 3.48 ·dwe01ng· Units . per acre in the current . zoning ' . (~ ~GJ>:, Page %) is okay, when1 ln fact , smoking Is bad for health. I think }'e have · a responsibility to discourage smoking in whatever ways we can." Trustee Sharon Sircello tt!ponded that "l'~ more concerned about the majority of students. some of whom may stay away from the rest rooms all day because they're made sick by the smoke. "That's not healthy either," she pointed out. -· She suggested th•t nin~ ~of the ten rest rooms on c a m p u s be lal:ieled "positively no smoking," but that the tenth be left unlabeled. "That way we might get at least some of our rest rooms free from smokers," she suggested. , . tn discussing the problem, trustees agreed that smoking is unhealthy, but they also expressed doubt that there is anything the district could do to prevent sutdents from takiilg ~ i.he hitbil . ._ • .. - , uwe feel that smoking is definitely bad for health and we try to gulde atudents in making the appropriate. choiee about it," said Sherreltt. "But in the end, the choice ls up to the student and his parents," he said. Sherreitt said that an effort to legalize smoking on campus has never been successful in Uie state Legislature, but he said he Celt there was growing support (See TOBACCO, Page %) Judgec'~Rti!es O:tt Ou.ster . . ()f. Prober AL VANDER SCHAN$ ·' J : .. • M ,.. • ., MADISON ANO MAIN " ,.~.. .M 0 • ; -, -. -. Narrows 'Down to F.tjur Irvine city councilmen ag1·eed on selec· lion of four design concepls fJr a city seal and vo~d to pay each firm ~300 for efforts to date . Each of the firms i.nviled lo compete for the city contracf for desQ;n Qi "a finished seal was tOld "hy in°'-pOrate design featu res of the Winfung' citizen entry in a city seal coni.e~ ~eld more than a year ago. / Two of those §el{cted . early today met those cr~fta and represented graphically Jile rour areas of interest Irvine of(ers residents: business and industry, agriculture, education and open space .• r . . .. set in the city .standards~ a fll"m spokesman iaid, because orne.rs such as the chamber or commerce -will ·pro- mote ... tho~ themes at no cost to the city. -Willis Advertising·Graphlcs of Hemet entered 81 geometrl~ design reaturlng four "rotating" lower case 'letter "I" characters and abstract symt.ols in col· ors representing the desired amemues or Irvine. • ' · Britain Lowers Its ThermostatS The' four finns whose work waS purchased by the city will be further studied by Councilmen prior to awarding of a final design choice and contract. LONDON (AP ) -Britain's' neon The firms are : advertising algns went dark · today and · -Al Vander Schans of Irvine 1 whose thermostits·Were lowefed In offi~ and design features four medallions the artist suggests might be used by the city factories_ under an emerg~cy govern- for awards for excellence in architecture Jhent program to conserve fuel. or outstanding scholastic achievement Prime Mini1ttei 'Edward H e at h ' S by students, for example. Conservative 'goverilnent ' 01'.'der.tcf the -M~dlson and . Mai!J of. Irvine, whose measure Tuesday ·a.fter proclaiming one-color rendenng in hght and dark · ~ green also Included the four themes slate of emergency because coal minerl but· plaCed them on· a single shield·llke -.#·and power ,engineers are threatening <::.. abstractk>n repre~nting the strength of to reduce supplies coal and electiiclty. munidpal govetnmeot. . The state of emergency wu ac- -Mark Hild Inc., Irvine , entered a companied · by. credit-squeezing tactics seaJ,.symbolizing the. power of govern· to protect the pound 1(el'l~ -in, \he - m~t by use of the eagle. 'lbe design wake of Britain's •orsti balaiiCe of did oot incorporate the four element;! pay!pE11ts deficit in history. . .......,.,..... ·--- From. Wire Services WASHING TON -Federal Judge Gerhard A. G ... 11 ruled that Acting Attoqiet General Robert H. Bork acted illeg•lly in firing Archibald Cox: as specfat Watergate prosecutor. t The ruling followed a hearing in which 1t was made clear that Cox, who returned to his •job at the Harvard University Law ~ after being fired Oct. 20, does not want the job back. · · Gesell· liisilecf the ruling on a au.it brought by a .Ralph Nader-bacl<ed group .whlcli cooleotetl 6n constltilttonal grounds the . firing of ' Cclx by Bork ·the night o( Oct. 20. . AttomOy C.-'al•Elllol L. ll\ChOrdlon arld '1Je1>u1Y-1Auomey · General . wunlin D. RuCkelshaus bOth · had refused an order by President Nixon to carry out ' thellllmfual. "'aitd Richardson resigned nnd Ruckellbaus was fired . Bork, then solidto~ ~ .. carrled Out the order. . Gooell o~ irlumeiita by the Jusllf•· ~t that the cue 11u made mc:iot by Cox's publl.c statement tha~ l)e did not~ want the job back. ''.The dlsclw'ge of Mr. (:oX"precipitated- a wldesnrcad.. concern. if not lack ot. conqden&, In lbe aC:tministration · <i Justice." Gesell said In his ruling. · Ges~ll r;.etused to issue an ,injunction to prohibit Cox's succesaor, Leon Jawo,rski. from taking anY ,.action which \Vould. iaterfere with Cox's re~ to the ~job. But the judge said he was rulihg on wheUier the ffrihg was lawfUI, even ·thOugh Co.I does Dot ' .want the. job back. , ' Following the hearliig, ·ti Nader at- torney. Alan Morrisoq, said he believed one effect of the ruling that the Cox firln~ was illegal was lo serve noUce on the President lhat JawQrski could not be summarily fired . 'Morrison said the ruling in' effect would give Jaworski "job security." GeselI"'ruled that Nader did not have standing to file the suit but the members of Congress did. 'nJe suit originally was b r o u g h t by Nader, the consumer advocate, but was later joined Jn by three members of Congress seeking to have Cox reinstated a.s special prosecutor. The members of Congress who joined in the suit Were Sen. Frank E. MOii CD-Utah), and Reys. Bella · S. Abztl( (D-N. Y.), and Jerome '!· Waldie (D- Calll.). . In another development U.S. District .<See nRING, Pqe %) ' Cout · Weather . ' )OO RESPONSES l -• Tbe lawyer appeoled to the Dally Puei. He uked. to bave his ad •topped Mission Viejo Traffic Plans OK'd . I _ QJllJim!l>d .CQ!ll , sunny wealber . is on the ag~nda for. Thursday, according to the weather service, with highs •• the beaches In the mid-&Os rising to 81 inland. Over-- rlight ·lows 56-$8, t' . ..:1 :•1 10!1\l" In Riehord Nizoft's hometown of· Whittier -WateTaate 11ot.. withstanding -· the people are still behind him. See st-OrM, Pao• 26. ~u drew IOO'reopmiid. ' ' SECRETARY for Lquna , Niguel Law offi~ Exper ' pref. Dullea Incl. some typ. Ing ·filing, ...... " . tr ... C(tblng. Will consider :; .part !Imo. (Pbo!ie No.) ' '· --. Naturall1-be · IOI.Rid the oecrelary he rie«led betor. 'tot\d!Ung the ad. What Lo It yoo're lookiff for! Probobly a {)Jlly Pilot od COD help yoo flnd (t, ~. him, whatever. Dial the direct line to results 11 the Dally Pllol, llWfll. I .• : !!Jr\ s~e. ch•~ o1 (opecial MlA!oo Viejo traffic committee, got u111nlmous approval from the Oranie County Board of Supervisors Tlleld•Y for· three recommendations ai~ed at sillylng trrilfic probloms In that area. The, <lommlttee. recomended: · -'Illat the Road Department begin prellmlnary, design llld engineering st1ldleS for 1111 arlerl~I acceu ~Jong the Oood 'cbanne1 bet,...,, Jeronimo Road and Qlr\IOnta Qr!~. -Based on the studies, the Road -e.~ 'ls . to -are an en· vlroamental Impact report on the proj- ect. -The Road Department is to remove ·the one-way only barrier at Cordillera Drive and Jel'onlmo with appropriate before and after ttafflc counts. It ts to ho. W1dcrstood tha t this action Is to detCrmlne If slgnlficant additional throulh trafllc is generated on Chrlsanta !irlvt. 1hO traf!lc problem In· Mission Viejo ourfaced oever1l mohtlis ago lf'hen a i large group of residents living !!Outh of Jeronimo Road protested thal their n1nding streets were being used as speedways to reach the Mission \'lejo Shopping Center 011 l..<1 Paz R~d at Chrlsa nlR Drive, The-county Road Oeparllnent &Urveyed the situation , including lroHic coun1s Which showed lhe residential streets being used heavily by through tmlfic. 'llte department proposed c\oslng three or' the ~ at their intersection with ' ( . I Jeronimo and the otiglnal pratestor:i agreed. ... ........ No sooner had the streets been closed than a larger group o! rcs.iden ts living t.oth nort h and south-of Jeronimo Rood protested Uic closing and thrCatenc.d reca ll of Supi;rvisor Ronald Caspers for his p::irtlcipallor\ In the closure. Housewives and .children ickeled the cl0.1ed slreets and Caspers "'acted by appalntlng the special traffic comodtttt to try to come up with a solution satlslactory to all. l ' I • .. • lJFOs Landin91 Looking for all the world like landed UFOs or golf balls on a titanic scale, these domes dominate the hilly TRW Systems test installation at the end of of Avenida Pico in San Clemente. A TRW official FromPagrJ ENERGY PROPOSALS • • • •• said the domes are used to house radar antennae for extensive -and secret -testing. The facility is also used by TRW as a test site for small rocket and missile engines. • 'Super ·Gops' Called Off In Anaheim • Seminar Set On -Codstline 0 As We See the c:oastllne," the final program In a syml>0$!\"11 ..........S by the Newpott har!>or !unlor League and UC Irvine will take place Thursday at I/Cl, The discussion, In be moderated 2 Mideast , . : Nations Set POW Trade ) ' by Newport Beach City CoUDCl!man 1 --Carl Kymla, will get under way ' 1 •• , p By WILLIAM SCllllEmEK ,.at 7:30 p.m. In Room 17',ol Ucl'• By The Aloac •-r.,, · Of ,... DM" '"" ...., computer science bulldtng.' Jsrael and Egypt agreed to start ei~ Dlsaklent Anshel!'l\ po~rqen ·decided Panelists wW be VerLyn Jensen,, changing prisoners of war Thursda)I: Tuesday that "Orficer Frteodly" woWd counsel for the Environmental morning, the lntemallo~al Rod Cross be more help ]ii "!INililg fberr piy dbJiUl! Coalition of Oranp County; R. • anThno:~!~:",;,ent ca Me sho(tly ~le: Blarry McComic, executive Ylce "' with the clfy than ''5uli!" Cop." __ ..__ prttidenl ol Avco ...!.CotJimunlty-a U.N. spokesman In Coiro disc! . Members of the :babeim l!UilC9 Developers; Frank 8_o bin 100 , that negotiators for the two countri~ A!s>ciallon (APA) yot..i It· -up member or th' ~ Couoty reached an agreement which he descrll>' on writing tickets !or movilll violaU... Harbors, Beaches 11111 Parks Com· ed as a "break-through " In malntairilo~ In the city for 30 days or until the mission, and Raymond WaLSon, the Middle East cease-fire. city enters into what the APA feels president of the IrviD• Company. The prisoner exchange, scheduled to are "good faith " contract talks. The Junior League series, "Com-start at 8 a.m., would remove a major' If the discretlonSry ·action by munity 73," is ,opao to the public obstacle in carrying out the U.S( patrolmen results ln a neat halt in without charge. sponsored truce signed Sunday. Israel traffic citations, the city o:>Wd lose up bas demanded an agreement OD the to $30,000 in revenue it eems each return of prisoners before it goes through month from payment of ftraffic fines. with the agreed transfer of checkpointa The latest tactic by the officers, FroM p--l on the Cairo-Suez highway to U.N. dubbed the "Officer Friendly" approach, -.-· peacekeepers. is exactly tre opposite of an aJternaUve HOSPITAL Michael Convaire, the Red Cross plan · of action disclosed 10 .days ago · . • • • representative in Israel, said the prisoner -the Super COp idea. exchange would be made by direct flights The Super Cop plan provided for mass sent to the OCH.PC spelling oat ol>. between Egypt and Israel. ticketings in the city for even the most .. He said the agreement came at a minor violations in an effort to get jectlons to the plal;I. meeting on the Egyptian-Israeli eease- the ~pie to ask the city to get the "It Is incumbenJ upon the health plan-fire line between generals of the tw• police olf lbelr backs. nlng cowcil to see that only already sides. The new course iJf action would permit approved beds be allocated for needed The earlier stalemate on prisoner ex· officers to use their own discretion in . uses, .. he said. change and transfer of checkpoinll stopping motorists for moving violations Spokesmen for San Clemente General brought threats from both Egypt and and th~ letting tbem .off .:«ith on1y Israel that threatened to upset the ceasi-. nd .. k t Hospital '8ld they have DO plans In r· a wanung a no u.c e . U"e. Family Slapped The Officer Friendly approach got the send a representative to the meeting Premier Golda Meir told the Israeli go-ahead from 100 members of the 260-or to either protest or support the ap. parliament that "not one gram of fOOll member APA at a rally in Pearson pllCaUon. will be allowed through to the town W ith n:g Fi11e Park. But not everyone there liked the Bernerd bigniin, president of the of Suez" and the Egyptian army Oil that his " idea. -the opposite bank of the canal U the partisan reception of his recommenda· Caspers had also suggt;sted Several association members voted board of Saddleback Hoapita1, said he Egyptians did not agree to arrangemenll tions, pushed hard for acceptance ~ list of energy conse~ahon measures F C' _ • against the lu ticketing idea because wasn't sure If his hospital would react. for the POW exchange. got eight of the 11 suggestions approved, be forwarded to tbe cities. Clark ~~bt Or Wm ming they claimed II would low.r the city's "ll It ls approved ii will atreet us," Egypt's semi .. friclal newspaper said but not "thout odif r it. would be bett~r to have the c1hes , la enfotcem""t standards and he ··'d , Israel risked a resumption ol the war WI some m ica ion. join county offictals in studyIQg the · w . · ··T". 11&1 • el th -• The board chainnan proposed : 't ti d what be d By HILARY KAYE Jeopardu.e life~ property. Stanley Malek executive director of ~Y r using to give e U.N .. pea1.~tt:P'" -Limit maximum driving speed to ::Utp'u s1 ua on an can one Of"" c.a11y P11or stett 'The officers argued that the Officer the OCHPC said be has sent a letter mg force· control of ~e hJ8hway into 50 .1 h lJ t h'cl Caspe~s who was tn Washington D c Lifeguards at Huntington Beach say Friendly attitude would give drivers a to the'20-m~mber factllties review board Suez until the POW mue i5 seUled mt es pe~ our on a coun Y. ve .1 es last weet:' on other matters said afie; clamming is a good, cheap way to license to speed through tJu; ·city, recoffimendlng that the application, if to Israel's satisfaction. exc~pt during .. eme~gency situa~io.ns. conffirri!)g with the state cOngresslonal get food. . _ ~ • . ~eatenµi~ lives and property_. : approv,ed, should convert existing beds . ('Ibis was modified to except ~~rfg delegation be was .convinced that -tlte Mrs. John Hudak disagrees. Her clam-• City ~uncllmen In Anabe~hl have. to the desired u5es,.-afid 001 add new . ~ ........ ~ -· • ~n_freeW.!Y_!.l! coun~e~-eoerg)Urisl,s-~~~d J!l":t.:~mu.g;.XJ)eaifr1111.;fa'i'f~tuiJa?."WliiC!Hi?---=i°i~-c~:i.,,'0"lu~Qrcal':'ro'l!!'~ -- --'-·-~f.dener..s-w fil said a limit of 50 mph on freeways rfltiooing of gasoline was inevitable. u.•<> .,.... ~u i.;u "I suggested three alternatives, rat.her would J'l.l}e out use of the freeways He said that limiting1speed of vehicles eluded her husband and five children, 6.75 percent pay hike for the first year than recommend denial," Matek said. by county vehicles). -Reduce maximum speed limt to 50 mph on county roads. (This was cut out because such action requires enact· ment of an ordinance). · -Instruct the D i r e c t o r of Transportation to continue maximum ef- fort to utilize oompact, high -mileage vehicles in the county Oeet. (This was approved after remarks by Clark and Diedrich that lliis was already policy of the county). -Direct the county budget analyst and purchasing agent to anticipate significant cost per gallon increases for forthcoming year. (This got the same comment that it was obvious). -Request the director Of Harbors, Beaches and Parks to reexamineJp)an and development or 'l\iy1Gfl.Toad vtp~e facilities within the county. (Caspers referred to the Jllanned off road vehicle facility at Pruna Desecha in the sou theastern part of the county. Clark, Diedricll and Battin had this modified to require a public hearing before any changes are made). -Establish policy for heating tem- perature levels for all county facilities of 65 degrees to 68 degrees, except in medical facilities. Temperatures in medical facilities will be detennined by the medical director in charge based on health requirements. -Authorize the Director of Building Services to analyze all remaining facilities' heating and cooling systems and develop a plan of energy con· servation. -Appoint an interim County Opera· tions Qimmittee including the coWltY administrative officer, directors of plan· ning, building and safety, transportation, roads and building services to advise the Board of Supervisors on energy related matters. Caspers offered car pooling as an example of '~:hat the committee could .work on. -Wire !he Ciilifornia Congressional delegation and President Nixon urging immediate return to national Daylight Saving Ti me. (This wa:i called un· necessary by the opponents but they agreed to Jet it stay in the motion). OIAN•I COAST Lil DAILY PILOT The Orenoe C.11 DAILY Pl LOT, wilt! wtilcll 11 Comblflotd Ille HIWl-Prtu, 11 Pllllllll'ltd br flle Or•l!CI• C0.1! Publl.nlnt Cllnlpllny, StN· r•t. fdJ1ion. ••• publll.fltd, Mon.hr ltl•o..,,11 Frid1r, fllr Coll• NllH, hlt"Jlfl1 l t•Cll, H1111tl11C1ton · llHC11/Foun111n v11 .. r, Llg11111 eue11, ll"Ylntlkddlt!Mct Ind S•n Cl1m11nto1 S..n JM1n C"1pl1tr1no. A 1l1191t •ovlonar d l1lotl II PtJtlllllled S.IMn:ll.,.. Ind Silnd1rs. tl11 JM'lnclPlll PllblWIJno Pltnl 11 11 JJ3 Wtst· ll•Y Strut, C111l1 Mtw, C.lltv<nlt, ""»· Rob1rt N. Weff Prtaide!'! tMI PllOIW..r .., J.~. c~1-. \tlct l'rwsldent 1nll O..tr Nl•llQtf' Thom•• Ketvll Ealtor Tho11111 A. M11rphh1• """ .... '"' !.tiler Ch1rl11 H. L.01 ~lch1ftf '· N•ll ,t.ullllfll Mll\lflfll Et~ ..,_ __ 2Jl f,,.,. "'••11111 M1ili119 Addr1111 ,,0. ••• '"· '2•s2 --CG1•• Mn11 m Wttt hr'SI....,. Hewrittl IHCll~ llJ.I N..._i """'¥tl'f HlllKir'lolln fltKltl 17'7f llMdl ...,......,.. J.n Cltnlenrt; JIJ Hlrlll 1!1 C1rnlM ll:Mt ftil ... •M C714J M2-4JJI ClrlMfflM Adfttfl&19t 642·1671 ~ IHc• "" •• ,.1 ...... 1 r • ..,..._ 4t4-t4M C...,..'9111, 1•1i. Ortnot C..I ,..,ltlllnf C'"'""r, Nt ....,. '"""'· llli.lftt-. 11111110r!t!I IMftft Ir .. _,__,. Wtlrl ll'llY Ill r~.O Wlll'lllrl N*lll W • "'"'"" ., llNYl'llfll """"· "'°""' tltU _, ... Nlf .i C..I• Mesi, Ollltrfllt. illMcrlf!llfl "' arrtw GM l'MlllMY1 bf IMll U,IJ -'llff't INIWWY ......... ""' l!'llMlll¥. to 50 mph would accomplish one-third resulted in a citation f o r illegal clam-and six percent in the second year "Mission has contributed to the overbed- of. the goal of reducing fuel oonsumption ming expedition last Saturday, which of a two-year contract. ding situation in the 90Uth county." Modification by IS percent. 'iricluded her husband and five children, Patrolmen' are dema.oding seven per-The recommendation• of the facilities Caspers also suggested that the resulted in a citation for illegl clam· cent hikes both years OD one-year ~ review panel, a group of private citizens On Noise Law California Congressional delegation be tracts with some fringe benefits not appointed by the OCHPC, are reviewed asked to approve the Alaskan pipeline. ming. She faces a possible fine that offered by the city. by the whole health council which may He dropped this wben Informed that could run as high as $150. The council said reopening pay oqotia· revene the recommendatloo. Professional gardeners paclied the both houses had approved legislation · "We thought we were going to get lions would serve no purpose and would 'Ibe council's l'«.'Ommendatlm is then Board of Supervisors bearing room Tues';- to go ahead with the pipeline. He also one, nice inexpensive meal for our family be Wlfair to other city employes who forwarded to tbe state's Advisory Health day and won a modification of the called for the pumping of oil in the ol seven," said the Huntington Beach have already agreed on contracts. 4 Council. . l"\p,,, ..... e County nolse control ordinance .. Elk Hills Naval Relel'Ve in the San woman. A meeting had been requested by Last year. a request by Mission Com-"''et.U6 Joaquin Val~ "up to an amount which ::. .. We doo't have $150 to pay for clams. the APA's attorney with the city munity for an 89-bed nursing unit w 1 s Power lawn mowen and other noisy woukl not j~rdize national serurity." lt's ridiculous," she said. manager today to discuss the status appi-oved by the faCl.litles review board. landStaplng equipment can be operated The net result of the board's action Mrs. Hudak and her family , along of the pay impasse. But that decision was by the council. bttween 7 a.m. and 8 p.m. on every Tuesday was that axmty vehicles will with several hundred others over the Association spokesmen said they do But 1 loopbolfl" in the state Jaw. allowed day except Sunday, supervisors. a&~ reduce their speed to 50 mph, except weekend, were lured to the beaches not feel the approach of writing fewer the hospital to build the ~-unit in a~pting an amendment · to ttie riol~ o~ freeways ~nd that county officials by the exceptionally low tides. tickets will result in disciplinary action anyway. 3nly · catch is tilat the 'law .. ,, • will sla;l't studies on other methods of While many clammers ar~ old hands because iL Is a discretionary action. ~t cp · PrOJe¢. ,dpa ~qualify 1'le l•rdentrs lind 1and1eapen were servmg eRllfBY· ~ . at tbe p,rt of djgging, scooping up and ' ', • " • ·, t . I ' l!>il'altr fiW!i iCal or Mtdlclld. backed by Dr. John Philp, director '!' · measur,µig the little shellfish, many of F-P••-l George Ollendorf, administrator of of the Orange County Health Depe.rt~ Newport Estate Mismanagement Ruling Stands A fonner Fresno banker bas 1~1 his appeal of a ruling that he mismanaged the mulli·million dollar estate of the )ate George Capron of Newport Beach. The 5th District Court of Appeal Tues· day in Fresno upheld the Superior Court action in which Albert Shipley Jr. was ordered In paw 1111,609 In Copron's estate. Shipley, a nephew of Gapron by mar· riage, pied no contest in October of 1972 to charges of stealing from the estate of the one-time professional baseball player and real estate Investor. Shipley had been conservator of Capron's funds, but was removed by Superior Court Judge Matt Goldstein, now retired, who charged part of the holdings had been misappropriated . During the 1960s Capron's fortune was figured at more than $32 million. That was when he was being sued for divorce by his wife of 54 years, Ednah. Capron died in Fresno in October of 1972. He wa.5 86. Prior to his dea th, he had substantial land holdings in Orange County including land in Newport Beach. Costa Mesa and what is now Laguna Niguel. Capron purchased 5,000 Costa Mesa acres at $100 an acre during the depression and 20 years later. sold Jt to lhe state at $5,000 an acre for con- struction of Fairview State Hospital. Before their divorce In 1966, the Caprons resided at 2600 Bay.shore Drive, Newport Beach. J\frs. Capron, who died in 1967, received a SIG million divorce settlement after she told th e court they lived frugally. "I never knew there was so much money in the "''Orld ," she testified after learning of her husband's investments. Before turning 1o real eatate, oapron played baseball ror the SeatUe lndlans of the old Pacific Northwest League. Barry Backs Nixon LOS ANGELES (A P) -"I've always supported the President ," Sen. Barry Goldwater, (R·Ariz,), deo\ared Tuesda,y ln suggesting lhe nation "cool it" on talk that Nixon should resign or be Impeached. "There's no way he can be Impeached and there b no sensible ream for him to resign -he's not guilty or anything," Goldwater told a DtwS conference here. those on the beach were novices, and • v••• -u.:; Mission Community, said he believes the ment, wh'o wrote the original no~ had failed to fully inform themselves application is justified because the regulating measure. of the state Fish and Game Depart-TENNIS' overbeddlng is in acute (crisis medlcaJ ) 1'le ameodmeot also applies to prop-ment's r.u.Jes for taking clams. • • • beds. · erty owners who have their own mowers. Mrs. Hudak knew she had to have "Overbedding basl't hit us yet," Olien-Two weeks ago, the board adopted. a license, knew the clams must be dent of Health Spas Inc. dorf said. "We've been running at a an amendment sponsored by Supervlsot over four and a half inches in diameter Memberships are $200 for the fll"st coosistent 80 percent occupancy: All Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton which pro: and knew she could only take 10 clams 50 persons to join, $300 for the next we're doing ls trying to provide services hibitefJ. the operation of home ma~ per person. 25 persons and MOO for the next 25 for our area. Al this time, there are tenance equipment except between t She did not realize, however, that persoos. Monthly fees are $25 per person not enough psychiatric beds or ~ a.m. and 8 p.m. on Saturdays, SUnday• she needed 8 special clam measuring or $35 per family. Membership is limited termed.iate care facilities." and holidays. device. She used her hand to measure. to 30 persons per available court. Malek said that though the statistics The gardeners protested the SiaturdaY "We really thought all our clams were Participating in the project with do not show overbedding in psychiatric and holidays ban arguing IRat the! the-legal size. and we !tarted to ask AdarM are Art Wahl, director of tennis units and intennediate care, an ex· elimination of the early work houri the state parks ranger if they were and Laguna Beach High School tennis amination ol existing facilities for these would cut their income by up to 2S okay," said Mrs. Hudak. coach; and Mike Yessls, Cal State shows them at less than SO percent percent. . "But when he measur~d ours. 19 or Fullerton ptiyslcaJ educalioo instructor occupancy. They pointed out that most holidayli the 35 were undersized, and he gave and club director of handball and racquet , Ollendorf said be expecls resistance now fall on Monday, a regular work us a citation for that and for not having ball. to the proposal. "All we can do is day for them and that Saturday worl( a measuring device," she said. Further information Is available by present our case," he said. "We can't was imp:>rtant as most gardeners work California Fish and Game authorities _ca1liln~gi;;;494-4;;;;;000~. i~~~-.:====worry==a=boo=t=wha==' =•n=ybod==y=e=lse=is=d=o=lng=.'=' ==s=i•=d=ay=s=a=w=ee=k=. i'iiiiliiiiiiliiiliimiifj·· and state parks rangers, emphasize it is the individual's res)JOnsibility to In· form himsell on the rules for clanuning. "When the licenses are purchased, a fish and game book1et is given out which explains all of the rules for clam- ming and all other types of fishing ," e:i:plained fish and game Inspector Robert Kaneen. Most people out clanuning know the rules, Kaneen maintained, but there are always those who don't inform themselves and may receive citations. "[t takes eight years for the Pismo clam to reach legal size, so we must protect them the best we can," Kaneen continued. Kaneen explained ljlpl persons may either purchase a devt~ 111 a sporting goods or bait and tackJe , tbop1 for ap- proximately $1 , or · max make one themselves. The store-boug~t verslon is simply a metal, horseshoe-shaped item, four and a half inches wide. The clam is placed in it to see if il is the proper size. Mrs. Hudak, who feels there has been too JitUe publicity about this device, says it would help if signs were placed on the beach, parti~ly ~urine low1 .... tide periOds, explaining all of the rules . Police Probing Two Burgl~ries Two burglaries of private residencea wort! reported Tueoday In Laguna Beach police. Stella M. LePei of 1583 S. Coast Highway told officers that jewelry and other personal belongings worth 1655 were taken from her apartment. Police reported no evidence of forced entry. Todd Coonrad of 862 Summit Drive reported the thert of 131111 worth ,f sporting equipment l n c I u d I n g a surfboard, wet suit, and skiing geilr, and loss of stereo equipment. Entry lo !be residence was gained through an un\ocltod door. OPIN ' ... Men's Tennis S.irts-fi.00 to 9.0d Men's Tennis-~.95 to 18.95 Adidas-Tretom-Conme-Purcell . -udies Tennis Shoes-7.95 to 16.95 Aidilas-fretom--Converse Lalies' Tenlis Dnsses-16.95 up Wil~nlop-Davis Bancroft-Yoneyama Tennis Rackets Penn-WHsaHlunlop • T enlis BaAs-per doz.-7,95 Basketball Backboards-14.95 Baskatban Goals-3.95 & 5.95 ' . Baskelllall$-5,95-7 .95-8.95-12.95-18.95 • • Handball Gloves & Balls Racquetball Racquets Badminton Rackets Ping Pong -Paddles & Balls Croquet Sets Shuffleboard Sets .- Skateboards YalleybaHs-leatller-11.95-13.95-18.95 Voit YDlleyballs-4.25 to 11.95 SoccerbaRs-leatller & Rubber FootbaDs-SaftllaHs-Baseballs Speedo Swim SUits & Trunks Acrylic Warmup SUits-21.95 to 34.95 Raleigh Bikls-hrts Tlres-T~ • J '• \ I I I \ I I • ., • . ~ ' • •. • I • ·Saddlehaek· ' . . Today's ·Fina l N.Y. Stocks vo~. 66.· N'o. 1 ! a. s sEcnoNs, ae PAGES- ·' . ORANGE COUNTV,CALIFORNIA . . . -WEDNESOAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1973 ... .. -' ' --. ~~-TEN CENTS . · '• .. ' Tobacco Bears lfgly Head at Ifni High . . -. By JOHN ZALLER Of ttMi O.llr Piiot St.., The age-old problem of students smok~ ing in rest rooms is rearing Its head at University High School and no one ls qulte sure wbaf to do about it. Principal Victor B. Sherreltl would like to keep all student smokers out ot the rest rotms, but he says he can't spare (.,, manpower to patrol the rest rooms continuously. Some members of the lrvifie Unified • e .. School Board would like to permit studenta. to go off campus to smoke , but that would require •• pollcy 'change to allow all studenl9·to ·teave campus. .. And a majority of 1tudent!. most of whom dq not amQke, would like to see a smoking lounge created ·so lheir peers wouldn't Pollute the re.st rooms, according to acbool officials. But this approach Is forbidden by state law. ' The arnoldng dllemnia was raised Mon-- day when school trustees acknowledgeil I . - ;, reportl that aome non•moking atudents avoid the. mt rooms enUrely because they are 9ffended by the dense cigarette smoke there. • "There's a vacant lot next door to the school," suqested tee Nonnan Glnsberg ...... 'COiilffil't we~pu some ns over there and quietly encourage the students do their smokhig over there?" Trustee R. Dean Olson objected. 11 Anything r.e do to aJ)ow smoking will be interpreted·ti saying that sffioking • Ls okay, when, in fact, smoking is bad rest roow on ca mpu s be labeled for health. t think )¥e have a "positively no smoking," but that the responsibility to discourage smoking in tenth be left unlabeled. · whatev!!r ways we can." "That way we might get at least Trustee Sharon Sircello responded tba.t some of our rest rooms free from "I'm more concerned about the majority smokers," she suggested. of-studen . some-or-wtmm-ma stay-ln--discusstng-the--problem-;-trustees away from the rest rooms all day agreed that smoking is unhealthy, but because they're made sick by the smoke. they also expressed doubt that there "That's not healthy either/' she is anything the district couJd do to pointed out. prevent sutdents from taking up:" the She suggested that nint. ~of the ten · Jtabit. :: - 1r1n (} ox " . ·-----· ·----·------------------------~---------···-----. . Hospital Pl3.ns Eyed Count y. .Board S.t'!_~i e~ Viejo ~~J!a ":s ~o ~ _ 13-st year concluded that an overbedding achedWed to' open Jut summer but has By JAN WORTH or ttM o.Hr Piiot 11.tt _. A proposal for a 56-bed exp3 nsion at U11ssion Community Hospital in M~ion Viejo will be presented to the faci lities review board of tfie Orange County Heallh PlaMing c 0 u D c 11 lOCHPC/ Thursday. ,:'he meeUng is at 7:30 p.m. at the Cqsta Mesa City Council Chan1ber, n Ftir Drive. '.Hie application, for a 20.bed psychiatric unit and a 36-bed inlermedi1te care faCllity, ls exPected to draw protests frOm at least one neighboring .hospital , South Coast Community in S(>uth Laguna. A county master plan of health care situation exists in the southern hall hit a aeries of construction, financial of the county. and adml.nl!tratlve snags and is still Overbcdding means that there are unopened: sign ificantly n1orc beds availi.ble in If Miaiion's application is approved. hospitals than are being used. 'I1ilil in-the facility will have-!&9 bed!. The crease! per pattcht cost because it planned e1panslon ·would cost $512,000. wideru: the. ratio between what the and according to hospital spokesmen hospital is paid to support its services woulil complete t he construction pro- and what it costs to ma lntain the facility. gram of the three-year~ld fa cil ity. The area,is served by the overlapping Bem&rd Carr, administrator of South service areas of South COast Community Coast Community, said he and other Ho!pltal, San Clemente General Hospital: representatives of hiJ hospital will attend and Mission Commtmlty. the meeting to protest the Mission re- A fourth hospital, the 150-bed Sad~ quest. dleback Community Hospital in Laguna . He said a two--page .letter had been Hills, will~ also serve the area. It was (See HOSPITAL, Plge !) · ' 1' .. / l' ' ~1. ~.i1i-:t . ~ :~j ·~'.~"' W rong:way~~Cr~fi'~fhjtires ,. . -~~ ~ Ok ay "lJ y .rv~jie · . . Pair; Cha1·ges Prepared Charges were pending today against 1n Irvine business uecutlve whose car was Involved in a wrong-way headon collision .that destroyed both late model sedans and injured himself and another driver Tuesday night. Silvano M. DiDonado, 36, of Yucaipa, and Sandra B. RichardSI!., 2fi, 'of 2311 Elden Ave., Costa Mesa, were both taken to Mercy General Hospital In Santa Ana after the crash. .DlOonado was treated for multiple cats. there after being pried from the Council woman Left Official • Sans 'Reto~que' It was a technical discusskm of the merits .of copper atid atuoynt;1m· house wjrlng which led Irvine Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryor to ask he.r questim. :buring the discllssion reference was made s e v e r a I times to the pressure or torque electrlclins must apply to a wiring screw connection w h e n alumiiium conductors are used. Too much-torque, it was argued, could damage aluminum wire, creating-a llaiardous COMection. ,.-A Kaiser Alumlnum Co ,n p an y represeritative appeared at ·the'"Podluin brandishing samples of aluminum wlrin& and challenging couocllmeu to test their strength. · Then, Mrs. Pryor asked her technical question. / 0 How 1:4" ii a torque?" ahe ask~. ' wreckage of ~· car, while Mrs. RichardloD. wu transferred to Orange Counly Medical-Center. Nuraes there Said she ls in good con- dition today, despite iuffertng cuts; brullel and I lracliaed left leg. Officer-Harry . llopn. said -witnesses confllllled thal DIDooado was heading eastbound on w~bound lanea· of MacArthW' BouJeyard near the Neiwport Freeway when .the 10 a.qi. accident OC· curred. DiDonado, '-OWDer of Adapt CorporaUon at 301 Dyer Road,·treportedly· told Officer Hogan he tJad ·taken a medication prescribed 'tor pain earlier'in the day. He wu det8ined on suspicion cif driving while inlolicaled. !lollce said, bu! wu reloued w,ithout being booked pending a blood -·test to determine drug and aleol>ol coo~t at the lime of the ac· cldent. J . ··Police &aid Mn,1 Ricbar&on'1 197tl car and the 1971 sedan driven by DiDonado were mangled beyond repair in the beadon crash .. Driver Hauling Li¥~t.~~ Killed . SAN DIMAS (UP!) -A cattle truck loaded with-53 Arizona cows went out of cc:io.trol on ·• downgrade :at the San ~ Freeway and ov•rtuniec!.,k!U. Ing the ·driver and Jttjurin1 thO 'relief driver who was sleeping. The lrucX, oo a ·downgrade of the westbound freeway, went off the road TUe!day and acrou a creek bed, toppling. t~ cab llJd.rboth trailers. ; .. ~- Killed WIS Clarence Smith, M, Men- dofa. ·,... . ()f _ ViUage Plan Se~~s J1s~ted A village plan for the Turtle Rock area. appeared headed for Irvine city appro•al early today after indlcatiooa that the Irvine Company would .>f(ee to demands of the community ftSIOCiation leadership. , · • Counctlmen continued '8ctlon on the plan and -tl>i! pul?)lc"hearing suggesting. however, tha~ .. a' "cooseMUS" on zoning is near. James Taylor, dli'ector of planning administration for the Irvine Company. outlined details of conditions the oom· pany would agree to if the city okays the 1,400-acre plaMed community. These include : -The company agrees to make pro- visions .for a secoDd roadway access point to Turtle llQck ptjor to the next phase of developmeuL . -A fourth access point may be added to ·the plan if need foe the extra village entrance Ls shown as development pro- ceeds. -Noise attuatkm on all new con-muct!on will mee\ current city stand· anb and the c o m p a n y will "parti- cipate" with the dtr in cutting road nolse affecting 9:isung homes along O.Jlver Drive and Bonita Canyon· Road. . --Considering •dual population per hQluing wilt figures resulting from the tjly's official . ceruus. . the projected populaUon o~ Turtle Rock would be from 13,000 to 1.3,too persons based on. the stlpul!led ma~lmum nllll)ber .of dwelling units approved by the dty in th{ zoning. TM company -~as ~ · criticized for increuing, the !utyre poyuiatlon of Turtle Rock,.fron\.Jl,000 pe(sons Jn the Cl!!T~nt .zone pla~ COverlil.i 1,100 acres~ to 15,000 mazlnuun ,in the new 1,400-acre plan. , ~lor. noted that .\he actual density increase between the two plans Is only ,15-unlta :Jiff ·l<i'e !rain 3.18 dwelling units · pet ~ in the" current ·zoning . (~ VILLAGJ!:, Page Z) • AL VANDER SCHANS -•. MADISON 1'NO MAIN '" _,, ·~ ~ . . ~ -. Narrows .Down ,tO ·Four . . Irvine city councilmen agreed on sele<:- lion or four design conce pts fvr a city seal and voted to pay each firm ~300 for efforts to date. Each al the firms invited to compe_J.e for the city contracf for dest~gn o a finished seal \Y&s tdld l~1 in rate design features of the winftln citizen entry in. a c!ty seal con~~ ~eld more than a year ago. ,,,. / Two of those ~lected early today met those cr~ria and represented graphically the four areas of Interest lrvtne oft.er! residents : business and industry tfl:griculture, education and open space. -_,:f · The' four firms whose work: was purchased by the city will be further studied by councilmen prior to a\varding of a final design choice and contract. The fmm are: · -Al Vander SChans of Irvine, whose design features four medallions the artist suggests might be used ~Y the city for awards for excellence in architecture or outstanding scholastic achievement by students, for example. -Madison and Main of Iryine, whose one-color rendering in light and dai:.k ueen al30 Included the !our themes but placed them on· a single· shield·like abstraction representing the strength of munl<.ipal government. -Mark Hild Inc., Irvine, entered a seal symbolizil18 the. po~ -1ov.mr ........ ment by use of the eagle. 'I1le design did not incorporate the four elements .. se t In the city standards;. a firm spokesman laid, because OUlel's such as the chamber of commerce ·,rill · pr<r- mote thos:? themes at no cost to the city. -Willis Advertising-Graphics of Hemet entered a, geometric design featuring four "rotating" lower case 'letter "I" characters and abStract symbols-in col· ors representing the desired amenities of Irvine. · Britain Lowers I ts Thermostat.4J .. LONDON (AP ) ._ Britain's neon advertising 1lg11.1 went dark today and thermostits·were lowered tn offices and factories. under an emergencr govern· ment program tO coMerve fuel. Prime Mln1$ter 'Edward He a~ h 'S Conservative goverilment ' Ordered the measure Tuesday ·after prpclalmlns a state of ..emerjency becau!l e coel miners ·and power .engineers art threatening to reduce supplies coal and electficlty. The state . of emergency was ac- companied by. credit.squeezing tactics Io prolect the pound' 1(erling-ilh the wake of Britain'S worst balaOCe Of paymmts deficit in history. THIS A.D DREW l OO RES PO NS E$ . -; The lawye~ 'appealed to the Dally -Pilot. He asked to have hi> ad stowed btcaus6 It drew 100• reaporiiet. ' ~~ss~on _Vi~jo_ Traffic Plans · ·O~'~ •. &i;CRETARY lor Laguna . , · Ni&Uel Law olllce. Exper • • C"''· Duties Incl. 90ITle tw ~ ng filing, recepUm I< • : transcribing. Will consider • -. .part Umc;.~Phone No.) · '· NaturauY ·be found the oecretary he nttded before ~C111"'1lnl the ad. What ia It yoo're looldog !or! Probably a ~Uy Pilot ad. cat\ help yoo Qnd It, her, him, whatever. Dial the direct line -to resulto 11 lhe Dally Pilot, MUm. I : ~rt ~.,.Cha~ oi .-apecial Minton Viejo traffic commltlee, got Ul\lnlmous approval from the Oranae County Board ol Supervisors Tueacloy for three recommendations aimed at soMng ,trlll!lc problems in that area. The commltlee . recomended : · -That the Road Department bagin prellminar)' • design and engineering stu~ ror an arter~I •e<;eas !!olll the flood ' cbam)d between Jeronimo Rood and Chrllatita Ort~. -Bued on the sludi<S, the Rotd .. Qipai;tmtni l! . to~ -are an en. vtromnental impact 1<port on the pro} eel. -Tl>e Rolld Department Is to remove 'the oo .. way only barrier at Cordlllera Drive nod Jetonlmo with appropriate .before and after traffic counts. It Is to ba Wld•rllood that this action ts to determine II slgn~icaot additional through tramc Is generated on CbrilBllta Drl... . rhe ttartlc problem in' Mlsalon Viejo surl1,.ced oeverai months ag~ when a 0 • large group of residents living South or Jeronimo Road protested that their \\'lnding streets "'ere being ustd as speed\\·ays to reach the Mission \'lejo Shopping dnter on La Pnz I~~d al Chrisanta Drive. The. county Road Oe~rtnient surveyed the situation, Including lrorrlc counts which showed lhe residential streets being used heavily by through u·alltc. The departmenI p_roposed closing three of the It.reel! at their intersccUOn with ' . Jeronimo and ~ t~ ~otiglnal P.rntestor! agreed. ... .. "'· -No sooner had the Street s bee.a closed lhnn a larger group of resklcnts living t.oth 'north and south.·ol Jeronimo Rood protesled tbc closini and thrCatem.'<I recall or Su~lsor Ronald Casper~for his p~rticipatlon In the closure.-, l-lous2wives and children picketed the clo.kd Streets and Caspers reacted by nppointing the spec;:lal traffic ~mlldtttt to try to come up with a llolutlon satislactory IO an. • I "We feel that smoking is definitely bad for health and we try to guide students in malting the appropriate choke about it," said Sherreltt. "But ln the end, the choice ls up to the student and his parents," be ·said:------- Sherreitt said that an effort to legalize smoking on campus has never been J successful in Uie state Legislature, but he said he felt there was growing support (See TOBACCO, Page !) Judge:_, Rules On Ouster ... ·- FrODl Wire Servi~ · W ASHINGTpN -Feoeral Judge. Gerhard A. Gesell ruJed that Acting Attoriief General Robert H. Bork acted illegally in firing Archibald Q:lx as spec(al Watergate prosecutor. . The ruling followed a hearing in which It was made clear that Cox, who returned. to his 1ob at the Harvard University Law Sc;bool alter being fired Oct. 20, does not want the job back. . · Geseir illiled' the rulJng on a IU!t brought by 1 .Ralph Nader-backed sroup .whlcli contested iln constitutional groundt the . firing · of ' Cdr· by Bork · tile ntghl of Oct. 20. .littonioy Gaeta!' ElliOI L. ~ arid 'Del>u•f l,i;ilorner · G..eral . William D. Ruckelshaus bOth · had refused an order ~ Pre.sjdent , Nixon to carry out • ttiel!liffiissal, ·and Richardson resigned nnd' Ruckellbaus was fired. Botk, then solicitor gener,1. carried out the .order. Gl!len-mrT!lltol-&riumenti · bY ·u;e Juitl~o. Depo(lment that the case wu madecrnool-by Cox's pubHc •statement that·~e did nol want the job back. "'Ille discharge of Mr. Co:c precipitated a widespread concern. il not lack of. conf~t?ncc, in the idministratioo · of justice,'' GestJI said in his ruling. • Gesell i:efused to issue an ,inilDlctfon to prohibit Cox1s succesaor, Leon Jaworski. from taking an~ action which would. interfer~ with . <:ox's returning to the ~job. Bui the judge aaid he was rullhg on· wtiether the fii'ihg was lawful, even· tho'.ugh Cox does ' i>ot .want the. job baCI[~ 1 , ' Following the hearing, ·a Nader it· tomey. Alan Morrison . said he believed one effect of the ruling that the Cox firin~ was Illegal was to serve notice on the P,resident that JawQrski could not be summarily fired. Morrison said the ruling in effect would give Jaworski "job security." Gese!J"ruled that ~ader did not have standing to flie the suit but the members of Congress did. 1be suit originally was b r o u g h t by Nader, the consumer advocate, but was later· joined ln by three members of Congress seeking to have Cox reinstated as special prosecutor. . The members of Congress who joined in tlle suit were Sen. Frank E. ?t!ou (D-Utab), and ~-Bella ·s. Abzuc (D-N.Y.), and Jerome Jl. Waldie (!). Calif.). In another development U.S. District .<See FIRING, Pqe !) Coat Weitther - C.Ontln• <.'001, sunny weather is on the agenda -fdf. Thursday, according to the v.·eatber service, with highs al. the beadles in the mid.fies rising to 81 In.land. Over· riia:ht · lows 56-SS. l 'l~l!'I 10 11\\ . In R·ichatd Nizon't hometown of Wl~ittier -Wot8rpate not- withttanding -· the people ore still behind him. See story, JJage 26. , I J: .. ~u.'f ttlL01 IS Wtdnttday, NMf'lbtr 141 1973 ' ltl i d east P act Red Cross Bares Prisoner Accord By-'l'be Assodated Prus· Israel and Egypt agreed to start ex- ~hanging prisoners of war Thursday morning, the International Red Cross announced today, The annowicement came shortly after a U.N. spokesman in C.lro dilclosed that negotiators for the two countries reached an agreement which he describ- ed as If "break-through" in maintaining the Middle East cease-fire. The prisoner exchange, scheduled to start at 8 a.m., would remove a cpajor obstacle in carrying out the U.S.· sponso red truce signed Swxtay. Israel has demanded an agreement on the -retiiillOf-.prtsODers &!lore It goes throuill With the agreed transfer of checkpoints From Page l HOSPITAL • • • . sent to the OCHPC spelling out ob- jections to. the plan. on tbe C.iro-&11• -highway to-U.N. peacekeepers. Mlehael Convalre, tbe Red Cross representative ln Israel, said the prisoner exchange would be made by direct flights between Egypt and Israel. lie said the agreement . came at a meeting on the Egyptian·Israell cease. flre line between generals of the two sides. ' The earlier stalemate on prisoner ex· change and transfer of checkpoints brought tbreata from both Egypt and Israel that ttu'eatened to upset the cease-- fire . . Premier Golda Meir told tbe Israeli pail ament tha t ''not one gram orfOOO--.- will be allowed through to the town of Suez" and the Egyptian army on the opposite bank of the canal if the Egyptians did not agree to arrangements for the POW exchange. Egypt's semi-officlal newspaper said Israel risked a resumption ol the war by refusing to give the U.N. peacekeep- ing force control of the highway into Suez until the POW issue is settled to Israel's satisfaction. • D•llY Plitt Stiff Piie!• ,- • A ddresses Council Planner ·Breaks' ' • • . I I ) lrvine --~Tradition ·t . --1n1lne City Planning Comm!uklller --"For a c fyw hich liU prided Ilse!! Gary Dalzell shatteled an Irvine tradl-on Its fairness to applicants. and Ill tion Tdesday night by addrtsalng the citizens we are a~alle<l at tbe fact City Councll oll . u;o.. Turlte &ck ion• !hat !he City Coun · Y19Uld alkror ltsell plan. The conurilut!ft la!l,montb...,..ld to get one side of e Plannini comy not ag ... gn t1>e pWi ~l~~~y ~on viewpoint ~:the Turtle ' RocK lO the City CounCil. •• • )""·~.-." • plan," Taylor aald. ·~' :-"· ; 'Irvine Mayor John ]!urton recognized Mayor Burton shot back that tber~ Dalzell during the pubUc"beiring. was no intention to allow only one sidq Burton observed'tbat PriviQ'tisly 1 city to voice its views. : aitorney.. rullnP· have~ born-Dalzell was the only commissioner mlsaioners from att~ .. ~e o Un CI l to ask to speak' to the council, Burto~ .meetjngi-1'tllere matt.,.•llli other body told Taylor. , might 'fifer review art p,lng discussed, Taylor n,oted tJ1at the comnussictn · The ruling ·la d.slsned to prevent tbe deadlocked on the Turtle Rock plan _.r,..,ss,,_,lh,,,_,WJY. ~lal: !CUon agalns 'Ille.. J OJL <l<nied....the onln&-only fi!f !h.L , ci.Y on ihe groiiilcf ~that memben of Irvine Company requested denial. A either body prejudged tM , evidence speedier appeal to the councll is possible before it has been preseht«l ·tully-beforc with a denial of a zoning application. · • their own body. · -' "There were three members of the City Attorney James Erlckaon >said planning commission who felt as corri- he dlscouraged Dal1ell'S ~~ce missioner Dalzell did," Taylor observed, before the council but oka~ it Since "and, there were three others who the , zoning ·plan hearing 1$ .. ,•qUasi· didn 't want to change the initial ap. legislatlve" not gulU!i-judicial Jn nature. plication." James Taylor; director . of planning "According to City Attorney Erickson', administration for the trvtn8 Company, Dalzell was only to have represent"4 objected to .1.Dalzell's appearance, sug-his .own views and not those of the "It is Incumbent upon the hesltb plan- ning cowicil to see that only already apProved beds be allocated for needed uses," he said. Both Israeli and U.N. forces were maintaining checkpoints on the Cairo- Suez: highway where it crosses the cease-ti fire line SO miles east of Cairo. But \...... Jsraeli sources were checking all traffic THEY'LL BE RIDING TO AID HIKERS ON 50.MILE TREK Dale Kawaratani, left, J ohn Fallou Don Their Booh gesting.ilit'.!.!'iinprece.dented" in_company commission. zoning rel.i!itlons 'with cities. Nevertheless , Dalzell responded to council _q~t~~qs and swke for ,tlie pla.Jt ning oomm1Ss1on as a whole on issues Spokesmen for San Clemente General Hospital said they have oo plans to send ' a representative to the meeting or to either protest or support the ap- plication. Bernard Ingram, president of the hoard of Saddleback Hospital, said he wasn't sure if his hospital would react. "If it is apptoved ii will affect us," he said. Stanley Malek, executive director qf the-OCHPC, said he has sent a letter and deciding what vehicles could pass. Political sources in Tel Aviv said the Israelis apparently were going to retain this control until they were sure they would get back the 350 Israelis the Egyptians are estimated to have cap- tured in the October war. Citizens Submit to the 20-member facilities review board p ti• ti• lo Get recommending that the •pplicaUon, If -e On ' . approved, sholild convert exisUng .be<DJ · • • . • lo the desired uses, and not add new •· T:... t Studi d ones. J.llpU e "£ suggested three alternatives, rather · ~~ !ecommend ~enial," Matek said. ~-one citizens wm· are serving Miss1~n h~s c_ontr1buted to the overbed· 00 general plan advisory conunittees ding s1tuat1on m the south county." . The recommendations of the facilities Tuesday night petitioned councllmen for review panel, a group of private citizens renewed study of citiien input "ignored" appoinled by the OCHPC, are reviewed in the Wilsey and Ham draft of the by the whole health coun,cil which may city plan. · re~rse co~::C~:°::!=~~ilon ls then Juanita Moe represented the group forwanled to Jhe state's Advisory Heslth u a whole and Introduced speakers Council. from each of the six general plan com- Last year, a request by Mission C.Omt mittees.wltb .concerns over their pof1ions munity for an 89-bed nursing unJt w a S i. of the j.llan. . approved by the facilities review board. Some of the CXflCetnl oootinue to con- But that decision was by the COWlcil. fiict. But a loophole in the state Jaw allowed Robert West, a former city planning the hospital to build tbe 119-beOOnit oommilsloner and spoltelnian fa< the anyway. The only cal.Ch is that the housing cornm:lttee obeervec! thit the almosl complete project does not qualify desires of the circulation commlttee for for aid from Medical or Medicaid. rapid transit might not be supported George Ollendorf, administrator of by populatton and economics committee Mission CommWlity, said he belleVes the calls for Jowered popuJaUoos for the applicatim. is justified 'bec:ause the overall city. overbeclding Is In acute (crisis m~cal) . lp.,...00 bouslng densiUea m1l!bl Jl1"8lt beds. Irvine ••won•t get that raplcl transit "Overbedding hasn't bit us yet," Ollen-station it wants,'' West observed. dorf said. "We've been running at a Fonner planning commissioner Mrs. consistent 80 percent occupancy. Alt Ellen Freund of Turtle Rock drew loud we're doing is trying to provide services applause when she asked for "speci~l for our area. At this time, there are consideration of the existing city" m not enough psychiatric beds or in· solving planning problem differences. termediate care facilities," She hopes those differences are re90lved Matek said that though the statistics prior to December adoption of the do not show overbeddlng in psychiatric $170,000 Wilsey and Ham portion of the units and intermediate care, an ex-city's $200,000 plarmlng eipense to date. amination of existing facilities for these . She oblerved that platming for the shows them at less than 50 percent present city depends on tax base and occupancy. open space on land not yet annexed Ollendorf said he eq>ects resistance by the city of Irvine. to the proposal . "All we can do is '"l'here ia no guarantee we can annex present our case," he sald. "We can't these areas. Without them this plan worry about what anybody else Is doing.'' produces an Irvine, especlally a central Plane Crash 'Hoax' TORRANCE (AP) - A hoax telephone call caused fire and Coast Guard rescue equipment to start to roll Tuesday night when a "l\fajor Chase" reported a small plane down in the ocean off Marineland. The FAA duty officer said the hoai:er te lephoned a number of different agen- cies. OUN•I COAST • DAILY PILOT Tti. Or•• C-1 DAil Y l"llOT, wllll whtcll l1 c.rr!bl'*' ~ "'•-"'1' .. 1, " Pllbll"*I ..., "" or..,.. Co.11 P111>1ldllrltr c...,..ny. Stfi.t. rite m11ioftl ,,, ll\lblllllld, MM!d1r thrwoit FrlH'f. for COSl1 Mnt, Newport l ffCfl. Hunllroglon le.cll/Founrtln V1ll1r, LI"""" tMcfl, lt"tlMfS«llllebKk and ltn CltfM!llt l lefl Ju'" C1pl11!'1na. " 1lt19l1 ,...,1on11 9dlllofl is llUOllll!ld Stturd•I" tnd Sllnd1·11 .. tti. Pf'lm:lpel PVblldllllf pllnl II 11 llll w.,,1 l •Y Sll'MI, Cotlt M ... , Ctlltotnlt, t::lliH. Rob•rt N, w,,~ ,.rotldlnt •1111 PUOlltl'ltt J1c• R. Curl•y Vk• l",..lld.,,I 11111 0.-tl Ml"'"1' lllotn11 K•••ll e-r'°' Thom11 A. M111pll/111 Mt!lffll\ll Edlfof Ch1i4•1 M. Looi Rltfi•r~ '· Ni ll "-Mll!tM Mtlllllnt fdlfon Cotl• M.,,1~ »er Wttl • .., Strfft Newfl0'1 ltt<~: »» N9WP1rt '°"""''"' l"._ llt~dl: m F~t AWllUI HUflt""'loll llff<fl: 1111S 11 .. d! loul-rf ... n (llmtfllf; JDS N~tlll I I Ctrnltle ttHI T...,..• fn41 641-4111 C'-""4 A4"rtht11 641 .. &71 s. e.._... "'' ..,..,.,.,: , ........ 4ft.44Jt CMl'l'l'lflll, lt1.). Oru"' C:0.11 l"\ltlll9'11nf CMICM!IY. Ht -Ii.tin, H1111tr1t• ..:111orl1f _,,_,, «" Nvlflltll'IWl'llt fltr9lll _,, ... ,....II(.. """*" .-111 ,.... '""llo<. ol C°"'lfiht 9-, . hetflill Cllts ... ,... N ici II C.ti MfN,, C.11.,.11, $11Metl~ltn br Urrltr lt.f.S -flllY1 "' N lt SJ.IS "*'"""'! mtllltl'Y llHll11tl*'t· ..... ~. Irvine, enshrining Southern California stucco sprawl. Most of Orange Ciounly got to look that way for nothing," Mrs. Freund said. "Let's not look that way for $170,000," she said. Mrs. Norrisa Brandt of the urban design committee Said little of the in· formation developed by that group was included in the preliminary general plan draft. Other speakers included Charles Huegy of the population and economics study oonunittee: Dr. Irwin Alber of the en- vironmental quality committee and Joe Bali of the circulation committee. All four f o r m e r planning com· missioners including former cbalinnan Wayne Clark and commissioner Wesley Marx, signed the petition. Members of the bike trailf committee and 26 members of the original citizens advisory committees which w e r e established by the city council shortly alter citybood also signed' Mo ther of You ng Getty Gets Call ROME (UP!) -The motber of the missing J. Paul Getty tll has recei ved a telephone call from the youth's self· styled kidnapers saying he ls alive and well, her attorney said. Lawyer Giovanni lacovooi said Tues- da y lhe caller told Gall Harris that "Paul Is alive and well ." He said she requested proof and the caller agreed to rurrUsb it. She then dictated five questions which only tbe 17-year .. ld grandson of tbe American oil billionaire could answer, lacovoni said. The caller hung up wltbout replying and without mentionina ransom, the at· tomey said. related to -the testimony presented on Laguna's Explorer Post ... Schedules 50-mile Hike From Pagel VILLAGE ... to 3.57 in the new plan. Additionally the city ls to gaI,J 321 acres of natural open SJM!ce in th4" form of-undeveloped hillsides apd. ridge lines. traffic circulation, air pollution, density, roadway access and population. · For example, Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryor asked, "Did the Planning Com;. mission study air JKlllution as noted in the final environmental impact report?" · "The commission didn't have the data to adequately ·evaluate the air pollution impacts suggested," Daltell said. · The Laguna Beach Search and Rescue~ Explorer Post 717 will hold its 9th Annual 50-l]lile _hike ~turday through Laguna Beach, South Laguna,. Laguna Niguel, . Mission Viejo and El·Toro. The 50 miles are-spread along a two lap course beginning at 855 Glenneyre Street in Laguna Beach, The route goes down Coast Highway to Crown Valley Parkway, then up to Moulton Parkway and past Lion Country Safari and Sand canyon Road and back to Laguna on Laguna Canyon Road. Student Charged With Molesting Irvine Children A palr of ·Irvine p01lcemen were en route back to the Orange Coast from Davis to4~Y with a young Univ,ersity of CaliiorDia law student arrested there on a warrant charging eight counts of child motestfng. Gene Ambert , 21, was taken into Custody Monday outside tbe UC Davis Jaw study hall ' by campuS police on a $10,000 bail arrest warrant. Investigators say the alleged incidents whieh led to his being Charged assertedly occurred during July and August while Ambert was baby sitting for three boys 8 to 11 years old. Detective Sgt. Keith Carpenter and Detective Bob LeMert drove up Tuesday to take the suspect into custody and return him for arraignment in Harbor Judicial District Court. F rom Page l FIRING ... . Court Judge John J. Sirica said today that President Nixon can make his Watergate tapes or any other related material public at any lime. ' But Sirica said he wlll not accept the additional recordings and materials that the President offefed Monday because the court does not want to "become a depository of non-eubpoenaed matters." "If the President thiriks it 8dVisable to waive any privilege and make tapes or other material public,. h~. of course, is free to do so at any lime," Sirica said in a memorandum.. Nixon aides indicated that Sirica's onler that_ tbe tapes be produced for his review made Jt impossible for the White House to release the infonnation they contain. On Monday Nixon offered to supply tbe court with unsubpoenaed reconllngs of two conVenations he had with then· Whlta Hou..e counsel John W. Dean Ill on April 16. The President said tbese conversationa "covered much of ·the same subject matter" as a conversation of the day before. -That April IS talk with Nixon, the White House said, was not recorded because an unattended machine ran out of tape. It was one of two subpoenaed tonversallons that the White House said went unrecorded. Barry Backs Nixon WS ANGELES (AP) -"I've always supported tbe President," Sen. Barry Goldwater, (R-Artz.), declared Tuesday ln auggestlng the nation "cool it" on talk that Nixon should resign or be; Impeached. "There's ~ way he can be lmpeaehed and there ~ no sensible reason for him to resign -he'S nOt guilty_ of snytblng," Goldwater told a news conference here. Record for the lengthy trek is a time just under. seven hours and was set last year. The hike ·-is open to ,au cOmers . with no age or sex des,criminiltion. Fee is $2. Medals will be given to bikers Who finish the course wiUtln 18 hours. Starting time is anytime between 5 a.m. ·and 9 a.m. Saturday. Members of the explorer post will patrol the hike route and will carry first aid supplies and water. They'll also h a v e radio commwtications with the starting point. The explorer post is sponsored by SI. Mary's Episcopal Chureh. Further information is available by calling John Fallou at 494-1646 or Dale Kawaratani at 49M903. From Page J. TOBACCO ... for it. A designated smoking area, he pointed out, would have the advantage of isolating the s111okers from the non· smoke rs who are offended by cigarette smoke. + A recent poll of 1,000 University High School students showed 800 -supported creation of a smoking room. Sherreitt said that since only a minority of students smoke, the poll should be in- terpreted as a sign that , students are definitely annoyed by the smoking that occurs in rest rooms. Sherreitt said the school now has a policy of coWlseling students when they are caught smokJng on cam pus for the first time. Repeat offenders, be said, n1ay be suspended from cmsse... Sherreitt said until state law is chang- ed, the school will have no choice but to continue :.hl.s policy. Councilmen E. Ray Quigley Jr. and William Fischbach raised questions about how the land would be rriaintained and whether the city should properly assume the burden of. maintenance. Councilfnan Ray Quigley was con-, cerned about p0tential fiie · dangers related to the Wldeveloped slopes. Councilman Fischbach wondered why the density was being increased to gain the open space in the first place. Taylor reminded him that current zoning allows for development whlcb would require massive grading of the hillsides, grading the city discolll'aged last year when the company came to the city for directi6n in renewed thinking about the Turtle &ck Village. Fischbach also asked why the 117-acre Lutheran College site wa.s included in the !one text calculations of density. Taylor said it was no t included in the company's statistics, but had been in· eluded by staff~ Taylor agreed . adding the &creage distorts ~istical comparisorw between the present piing and that which is proposed. Arts Bus Boost Asked -in irvfue Expansion of Irvine's special arts bus to include group transportation to athletic events and rock concerts was encouraged rece n tly by Irvine Com- mWlity Services commissioners. They urged city councilmen to conSider expanding the service. Curren Uy, the service Involves bus trips to down.town Los A n g e 1 e s performances of the mu'sical "Lorelei" or events at the Mw:ic Center. . C.Ommlssioners suggested that fonna· tion of a non-profit corporation might encourage growth of the program. Dalzell did observe another city at. tomey directive related to his usual council appearance. He 'was told to leave the hearing on conclusion of his remarks and Was observed by Erickson to ha* done so. Dalzell, a resident of Turtle. Rock, has been t~ advocate of the expression of "Turtle Power" In hearings on tbe village plan before the commission. Dalzell continues to oppose lhe zone plan. Four-car Crash Seriously Hurts Irvine Woman ; . , ' . . . A young Irvine woman suffered major inj!Jfles !fuesday in a spectacular {our, car acddent that snarled traffic during rush hour at busy MacArthur Boulevard and Red Hill Avenue. · Evangeline N'.cola.ides, 18, of 3701 Parkview Lane, 1.s listed in satisfactory condllipn today at Tustin Community Hoopttal, llursea said. · /. Miss Nicolaides was tetnporarily tra}>' pcd in the wreckage of her small forelga car after it was struck broadside by a second one and careened into twt more. , Police 'said she was westbound on MacArthur lloolevard· when the lniUal 8 a.m. colliaion occurred With an east~ bound car driven by Joseph Jones, 75, of San Marino, which was turning left. • The impact caused Miss Nlcolaidea'S car to skid in an arc, striking vehicleS driven by Karen H. Acosta, 35, of 1361 l Willamette Drive, Westminster, and Raul -->.. Solis, 40, of 16952 Fairfield Circle; Huntington Beach. • I . • ! ~?'~ . ,_ ·s]ae!'EN~T~ER~S~T~R~E~ET:?!'-"""'!C!."!O~S!!!:T!!"!A!""!:"M~E~S~A-6~4~6-iii1~9~19~·:""'.i:""::,o ... , .....,,.,....~'"""'""'""" ........ ..., .. !SJSll ........... ~ ............................. ...., ........ ,;;;.; .. .. Men's Tennis Shirts-6.00 to 9.00 I Men's Tennis Shoes--8.95 to 18.95 · Adldas-TretorH:onversi-Purcell Ladies Tennis Shoes-7.95 to 16.95 Aid'nlas-Tretorn-.-tonversa Ladies' Tennis Dresses-16:95 up 1 Wilson-Dunlop-Davis Bancroft-Yoneyama Tennis Rackets Penn-Wilson-Dunlop Tennis Balls-per doz.-7.95 Basketball Backboards-1 4.95 Basketball Goais-3.95 & 5.95 Basketballs-5.95-7.95-8.95-12.95-18.95 Handball Gloves & Balls Racquetball Racquets Badminton Rackets Ping Pong Paddles & Bans Croquet Sets _sbuffleboanl Sets • Skateboards VolleybaHH.eatber-11.95-13.95-18.95 Vtilt YDlleybaOr-4.2510 11.95 Soccerballs=-1.eather & Rubber Footba{ls-Softballs-Basebafts S(llldo Swim Suits & Trvnb Acryk Wamlup Suits-2 1.95 to 34.95 .. . f!aleigh Blk8$-farts Tie? Tlibes-:.Repalrill! - 1--------------------..---------- ' " • • ,.. i ~ • • • a DAII.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • • Citizens Further evidence that Irvine ls lo be a unique city came this week witli expre..WM of.citizen concern over the city's general plan. As citizens in other cities up and down the state of Calllomta work lo meet an extended state deadline for general plan adoption, it appears few general pllM have stirred as much intense Interest as Irvine's. Apalhy marks the general plan process in most cities. In Irvine, doz.ens who have been working on the plan have banded together to make known certain of their concema they feel have been Ignored by the gen- eral plan consultants in their draft proposing ·• city of 550,000 on 100 squsre miles. When the general plan process began, city council· men opted for "citizen vision" not the (!_!}!_~ of a_alngle man. -----------4 - It is appropriate then that those who question the preliminary draft make their viewpoints known, and that the council listen and amend the plan if necessary. . , Noise in Utopia Planning will not guarantee utoplL Ask residents of University Park who have for some time put up with noises emanating from theJr master-planned neighborhood shopping center. Deliveries of groceries to the convenient super· market at bedtime is anything but convenient to a would·be sleeper whose home backs up to the loading dock and attendant noise. The experiences of those residents contributed to changes in city law which promise to enhance plan· Sp~ak Up ' nlng and site.selection of !u.lure neighborhood shop- ping_centers, . But what of University Park! Cooperation -between UnlversllY Community As· soclation and the Irvine Company -bas resulted i~ a promising end to a majority of the problems of notSe and bicycle safe!>' in Ille ~L · Attractively Ianmcaped berms costlne $12,000 will be provided by the Irvine Company ., part of the pro- gram which will also improve drainage and lessen the bike trail climb. , . It's a promlslng solution. _ Mee!!!!g_ Yon!!i NeedL --I--' Data rele&Md last week suggests Irvine youth would 1upport.1 city-1'1!11 teen cellltr, Of 1, 700 intermediate and high school students responding lo a city survey, 320 said they used the pilot center at Irvine School last summer. Another 310 said they wouldn't participate in a teen center. And, the remalnlng· l,100 'expressed view- points in between. The largest number, 795, said they didn't even know a center was being provided. City officla!J sre continuing to study the Idea and that appears wise. Few cities anywhere have enjoyed permanent lll!Ppolf"for iUcliCenters. Schools or private agencies most often appear to meet the needs of youth. Perhaps the city of Irvine might benefit by exam· ining the successful joint ventures of Harbor Area cities and school district with the various national youth organizations as a more realistic way of encouraging profeS6ionally staffed activities youth will support. SB • ! .., Nixon. Aides Bar Dear ·.Gloomy Gus Foreign Methods Better? .'Public ·Penance' WASIUNOTON Dooming the• ,.--------....,.-...,] melancholy private dialogue bet"'·een ( President Nixon's lieutenants and con· EVANS• NOVAK , aressk>nal Republicans ls toU.l \\'bite ... ________ ...... ..__.,._ Howe rejection of Capitol Hill's dee!>IY felt need for public penance by the President. Olrrent negoLia· lions ostensibly - ctrn how much Mr. Nixon shall open bis flies to save his pres- idency. But thes.; talks founder over unstated con- ,,....1ona1 demandl I h a I Mr. NlxPn somehow oonfroot °""""'"' ~ ., a "'!mmittee wllnlll, with a iboW of expiatlon_and cmtrltiC!ll one lttluenUaJ (and P""NlxonJ Ropubllcan Senator feell Mr. Nixon -airvlve '"'1eat lib Henry If, the 12th century Kine ol England who a-.! for the murder of Sl 1boDlll a Becket by beln( publlo- Iy tooUrJed, be ...U. public pen••ce THAT 1!1 anatboma to the Preoldeot and all hla advltoro. Indeed, be II lg· noring adYlce from his own lllaff to make contldenbly ,.., humiliating gestures. Thul, wbltever agreementl are reached bei-n Republican leader> and the Wlllle HOUie OYer dllCiooUl't ol tape reconllng1 and document.., the basic gap will remain unabridged a n d Republican aentim111t for Mr. Nixon's ruignatlon will rise. The White HOU!t's undentandlna ol Jentlment on capitol Hill 11 even murkl~ today than in calmer tlnfet. Mr. Nllon'I aides interpreted conservative Sen. Ptter Dominick's critici.!lm of the President a• reflecUng rear about his lf74 reelec- tion campelgn In Colorado. In truth, Dominick was saying in public what almOiSt all bis collequei aay privately in the Republican cloakroom. REPUBLICAN senator• who 1Ull have not uttered a single word criUcaJ of Mr. Nlxm say privately he mull realsn once Hep. Gerald rord ls conflnned BUT TAPES and c1ocumont1 will nol lruly HUtly Con J r e 11 • Many R<pubUcans feel the Prelklent llbould face Interrogation from hla lepla~ve peert -perhapt by the Senate Watergate committee. <me Republican leader In Concmt. In public a total -rl<r of Mr' Nlxoo, II privately telling the White -the Pr<lldent · lllllll teoU!y because be II "•I the end ~ the told" a.od DO ~ "°'1rle re- mainl. 'Ibo avow.cl lJllJ1>0IO of calling Mr. Nixon to telllfy: to probe - Jn Mr. Nixon's coofullps •xplanaUona ol Watergate. Boyond the avowed purpo1e, bowt!ver, 11 the Henry U l)'.!l· drune: the feeJlnC Mr. Nlxoo can lllrvlve only by bwnhlini blmaelf. It II here wWe all boP.1 tlnk of a,reement between the Prilldmt and ....,....1ona1 Republicans. "IF THE PRESIDENT hu to go up to the IWI, .,...,.11n11, on his hands and im., I'd ntber .. him Im-peached," one oenlor ,r;1xm llde told us. A middle-level ...Utant put It this way: "Are we aoina to go out crawllnfi on cur bellies or are we &oiog to 10 out twingin&!" 'l'bo!e two prttldetltial ualatanlt are • Merger of the Month: Irvine Com- pany and Wilsey & Ham. Next tar· get : Enhancement of Big Sur. • BlGGER·BE1TER INC. oi-r 0.. MNEll•h •re ..... 1"911 II, ,...,.,.. lllMI " • -..rUr nflltt ''" ritws ., nit _,,,... lflllll nw "' ~ " .._., .... DellY ,llet. IOft·llbers in the White HOU5e context. Na111rally, tben, the hard-liners -headed by Richard M. Nixon -are unalterably · -' to any act of penance. Indeed, the !'Nlldent ignores considerably more moderate gestures recommended by his OWll ltaff. rl'An' PROPOSALS for a frank, private d:ilcualon of Watergate with Senate and Houae Republicans have been gathering · cluat In the Oval Office for -·One-· usually a bard-liner, II pttlng nowhere In urging one final try by Mr. Nixon to publicly preoent hla tide of the Watergate story, Earnest ..,..-from Capitol IWI, such as Sen. Brock's, D1turally go llllanswered. Rather, the old ·White Houoe relrain that Mr. N1xlxl can save himleli by forgetting Watergate and turnfng to other matten it IOUDding again. 1hat may expla.Ln cancellation of Mr. Nixon's meeting 'fritb Ills Waterg~le lawyers In order to de;ll with the energy crisll. It does explain press secrelAry Ron Zil!gler's reference to the Watergate "foollahness,'' fully reflecting Mr. Nix· on'a own view. JN 111E SENATE Republican cloakroom, Ziegler1s "foolishness" was CIODlidered a repudiation of Sen. Barry Goldwater's plea last week t h n t everybody "cool it." It also shows that whUe Mr. Nixon's congressional sup- porters are down to a precious ,few, not ft1Ucb has changed at the White Houae. .For the short run. that promise!! Mr. Nilon's rontinued refusal to display any weakness, much less resigning as President, even as Republican suppoct grows thinner by )he day . , .Smog Control and Sa~ity To the Editor: Re the article: 11catalftiC Converters 'On'" in the Pilot of Nov. 7~ Is this for real? How iri the name of sanity can such a thing happen? EPA administrator Russell Train's reasoning is anti·human in its chilling SOWld. He acknowledges that the devices pose a "significant health problem ... lung cancer and cardiac problems'' yet he says delaying requirements "would mean throwing off the entire momentum of the present auto emissions control strategy." THE PARAGRAPH following clearly states that foreign manufacturers have come up with a superior method. In the present climate of pollution hysteria it seems that "anything is better than nothing at all". Ifs time we -the "masses" -demand an accounting of the prb's and con's of those methods deemed 11good for us'' and maybe a return of sanity and good sense will occur. B. M. TRAVIS Not Ghoulish To the Editor: In re8pOllSe to the letter to the editor about the Occult in Literature class, Wicks - "took. it's euy ••• l.rt foot, tight foot. •• • MAILBOX Letters from readers are welcome. Ncmnally, writers should convey their 111essages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letter• to fit ipace or eliminate libel is reserved. All let- ters must include signature and mail- ing address but names may be wi£h- held 01i reque1t if sujfi~nt rea1on is appare1Lt. Poetry toilL not be pub· li.shed. 1 am one or 1'.trs. "Brubaker's students and I would like to infonn B. W. Davis that this class is an elecUve. No one is forced to take lL The prQject on the gallows is not ghoulish; itJs merely a reflection of history. We stud.led the Salem Wilch Triall In our history cl...., and no one seemed to' object. JUST BECAUSE we are students doesn't mean our minds are going to be warped by education. What with the current political problems and the energy crisis, I don't think our minds can be considered too hnmature. May I also remind you that this achool has more classes that prepare us for the future than you know about. I would suggest that B. W. Davis read up on the occult and the classes taught at this school before any more lJTat.ioDal stat.ements are made. LISA MONACO, Corona del Mar High School Lost Letter• To the F.dl.tor: I don't think it Js too early fCf' this Christmas message as J hesitate to begin my Christmas cards early again thia year. !'VE HEARD of Christmas cards being lost. but I never thought ii would happen to me, but it" did. My Chriltnias Jetters -not "dittos" -are one ol the most important and time-consummg parts ol. my Christmas to relatives and ftienda I otherwise never see. country? Each and every round trip from \Vashlngton to San Clemente on Air Force One occupied only by b1m and a ·couple of speech writers consumes no less than 18,000 gallon! of fuel (120,000 liquid lbs!. His last week's trip from Washington to Key Biscayne in «der to visit Bkbe Rebozo alJO consumed . 9,000 gallons or 60,000 lbs. of fuel. Mr. President: Talk· ls cheap and It's hlgh Ume you aet an example yourself and conurved our scarce fuel supply. 1 BETTER STILL: just resJgn and wt \vill let you settle down in San Clemente. It will be much easier for you and much better f<r us. BORls BUZAN Good Ol.cl Da111'! To the Editor:· The other day I board a shocking VD report, vb: California has doUble the VD rate In the nattoo; Orange County has double the C'alilornla rate: and Laguna Beach has six times the Orange County rate. THE PARALLEL wltb the voting record on Proposllion l II llrlklna. Obviously there ls something 1tavtstrc about my habitat. The nlnoteeot.h -or is it the eighteenth? -century ii alive and well here. Recently a beach city school superintendent was revealed ualng !lchool fundl for a stag party -g. before his achoo! officlal buddl.., o! "Deep Throll" I had rHllJ thauaht in my innocence, that the ancimt :nd honorable (within limll!) institution ol the stag par1y had disappeared from the social scene. But no. We countlaos of the shoreline preserve it, as a baroque museum piect, along with the ac- companying Vb, the shades of ancestral vigilantism in the Birch Society, and a touching addiction to economic snake-oil remedies. Too bad I'm at the outs with Chief ot Police What.s-hls·name ; otberwl.se I'm sure I could sell him on setting up stocks and pUlorie9 In the village square. For blasphemers. They're a menace. DAVID A. MUNRO Pleaefl To the. Editor: Birth C.ontrol Fails When Children Spell Security Last year, I maUed my first group of cards and letters (mosUy all out of state, oome local) on the 5th ol December after first separating them as to out of state and local, checking zip code and return address. All 48 were lost. The next group ol cards, without letters, mosUy local, were mailed on the 10th. They were not lost. J was very pleued to see the article by Dr. Paul D. Authur questioning IJDlted States policy toward Israel. At long , last the voices or reason and compassion are being heard. My congratulations to . the Dally Pilot for having the oourage' to print it. Californians, San Dleao'• percipient Nell Morgan tells us, 11belleve to the verge of. fanaticism in birth control and small foreign can, two arUcla o{ faith which must 10mebow be related.'' They a .. Indeed, N!U Mqrpn. Mooey, as we do aot have *° be flmctloal l>Y fonm ol blrlh control. . • IN ALL this kind of tblnkln(, Marin COUD11 11 a kind o1 metaphor to me. Mr. and Mrs. Marin personally.have to pay. Joe Blow In the Mission pays, too, but with less a ...,.. •!J"'IODal Insult. told, doe• funny things to the way )'OU think. The fact that you want to bold onto what ·you make (Ives a -.S cul to all your•. Ions. The contrary fact or belief that 1ou're never going to BCOre, no how, • , -'lbll Ix beca111t I Uved then for three _ yem, and beard more damned oellllh and lnltwnan tall: on the brJnP>a ol children Into tho world than one could -be1lne -ad all of lllja. !Wk ,.., UDS cost money. Think of bow many Poncbel you could have JI . y<>Q· did not have six or seven kida, only the two or less prescribed by the theoreU· claDt of the "populaUon explo&lon." You ...,,•1 JOing to lay In a lot of Lafitte if you have seven brau tearing up the ftoont lawn, nor make JDIQy trips to TahlU. (lvet you a quite contrary cast of thougllt. ln extrema tenne, money makes royalists and lack of It makes anarchilts. In the matter of children, money has In recent year1 become a mighty factor In our attitudol. 'lbll bat followed the 1ener•l arouence of the upper middle cl-. and ..... or the ordinary middle c1... """ the abiUty of man now to llustrate eUecUvely the reproducUve Whal. tbe Marin mind caonot un-donlancf II that ~ an relaUvely few people In the -Id who look on fn1111 8mflll llld pnll """' i'IU'llon. . kldJ this w11. In mos\ cultureo " 1111' etc Yet the tblnklnf 11 the 11me In brood, especlaUy U blesaed w11h lfaut ·othtt pl~ California tuburtis 1uch as soos, 11 aoythlng but a liabWty. It 111 Walnul Ct'eek and Piedmont, San Mateo or Is thought to be, a way out ot county, Canno~Mooterey, Santi poverty. Away from the curtou1 Marin Barbara, Beverly Hlllt, Pahu Springs. kfnd of thinking, ldd& an an wet, The MMtn mentallly ..., children not sn economic nulsaoce. negaUvely. They are a liability. Tbey The Ford 1'-and the ll1dlan coo money. Somethlna Uko 40 crand Government found this out the bani to J•l a boy to coll•a• as~, and maybe way a. few years back when they put anolher 40 crane! to &I•• rum a collep loll of -r and Ill thefr oxpen!oe education. And theft are ti-hordes Into a big birth reduction J>?Ogram in of black and brown and yellow and the Punjab. The project !siled diJmaJly """' the -of .... ttalllft, - poor while ltldl on wcl!are for whom in the village of Khanna, u described In a remarkable study by the sociologist Mahmood Mamdanl. The message: Nobody In the vUlage i.. about-to restrict the slxe of lill' family unlen It pays lo do ao. Tbe ' brutaJ trutb, so far from Marin and !;onl F.ouodation and olflclal illdlan government .. lnking, is that for poor people, big families do pay, espectally when there Is a prospect of emigration for the boys aod the employable girt.. MAHMOOD MAMDANI shows that In th1x particular vWage, whicb i.s IO lib tamung villages everywhere, ~ only bopo_ lot a 1ubstantial rise In IOclaJ 1111111 It to have a big family of tom. n-could mtcrate to the clty or go to oea and send back some of their oamlngs. Or they could work tho land for tbelr parents: and so develop some small capital with whlcb to buy more land. Birth control, in such circumstances and lo such people, Is like offering Sanskrit leuons to a sandlot boaeball tum. Marin COWlty cannot understand thia:. Jlarlem cannot uodertand Marin county. I've lived in both places, and comprehend each a little. Whit I know ls, money has a lot to do· with whether you are for birth control or not. • THE SAD PART is my aunt died three months after Christmas. I found cut later she had been wondering why I never wrote her a Christmas letter which she had alwQYs looked fcrward to. Now U the postal service can give me and others advice of what more we can do, it would be appreciated. Hope, this leltcr gell to you. BARBARA CRIPPEN Look Who'• Talldllf To the Editor: Just look and listen to who 11 lectuting to us about conserving energy -none other than Richard Milhous Nixon. WHAT ABOUT his (the Presldcnl's) nwnerous vacation jaunts across the Q11otes lleloa Nill, chlldblr1h educator at Calif. symposium -"Women want to deliver their own baby: their feeling t~. 'Please, doctor, I'd rathtr do It myself.' " MARUI GRAUBE : ·' OUM .. COAIT DAILY PILOT Robm N. IVud, i'ul>U.htr Thoma.r Keftril, Editor Borbara Kr-elbich Editorial Poge Editor ,... tditorW ·-ol tho Daily Pilot .kekJ to lnfonn and 1timulat• readen by ~ on this Nf dtm'll:Jf:."Ommc:ntary ·on loplce o( 1r.. , ...... by -·<d <OlllnUlllla and cartoonista, b)' pt'OYktirc a fONm foe" rnden' vlcwt and by preeentq thl1 ftfWfPlJllT'I ... and idtu on aimnt topics. 1be editorial ~ of ... o.u, Pilot ·-Oliy In .,,. ttlltori&I cotumn' at the 1dp d "'°' -· OpinlcM ...... by ......... wnnilll and cartoontN and letW ) wrtten are their own and no ...... , I mmt ol 1httr vlfWI "" 'tM ~ Ptlot-bt- Wednesday, Nov. 14; 1973 • I _._ .. _·"-"'~"'·~'·-~~~~·~m~~~r_l~4~·~1~97~)~~~~~~~0~A~fl~Y~P~IL~O~T~5 ,.. .............. ~ ........................ ..:. ........................................... :""'~ .... .;.,.. .......................... ...., QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi I . ' ••Nine o'dock! Light.al camera! Action!" 'Purple Heart?' - Reagan Cuts Self At Turkey Fete SACRAMENTO fUPI) - Gov. Ronald Reagan cut his right forefinger ~11ile carving the golden brown roast turkey presented to him annually by poultry growers b c f o r e 'Thanksgiving. "Do governors get purple hearts?" Reagan «1sked Tues- day, blotting th~ slight cut with "a pcwer napkin. "The expert cut him:sel.f." REAGAN · HARDLY missed a knife stroke because of the cut, continuing to carve slices of breast meat off the 30- pound bird. The Governor noticed the cut only after blood began Republican Blasts Nixon Press Aides WASHINGTON (API Presidential . press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler. "a former employe of Disneyland. has managed to tum the White House into a Disneyland East," Rep. William J. Scheele (It-Iowa), said in his newslet- ter to constituents this week . In an extended comment on · an erosion of "national con- to curl around the tip of his finger. He told ne\IJsme n he apparently had his finger on the knife blade. 0 n e photographer com- mented it \\•as lhe fi rst unusual occurrence at the an- nual event since Reagan became governor seven years ago. REAGAN 1REPLJED, ~'No, it isn't. The first few years I didn't try to cut the 1urkeys. 1 wrestled with them." Until recently, the Governor was presented with I i v e turkeys at Thanksgiving. But the practice \VaS discontinued because of the disturbance the big birds would make . The Governor's slip of the knife could have resulted from a different carving method he was trying. Instead of cutting the leg off the turkey and carving it separately, ~eagan \Vas attempting to slice thigh meat from the leg \l'hile it was attached to the bird. · _.._· THE DISPLAY of blood air parently didn't discourage the lunchtime a ppet i t es of Reagan's of.(ic.e staff. They eagerly loai:led: plates \vith slices from, the· three birds provided tiy. the T u r k e y Growers ~;ition. Reagan pl:ucked a s~. , · of white ·meat from the)Iµfe' blade and popped it in'.fo 'his mouth for the benefit or • , .. , .. ,. ~4 -1·p -.. . .. .... . . •• ' :t. \ fidence in the Administration." Scherle criticized President <U-#* Nixon for >!i.'j'. m photographers. 1------------------------------ "#;~ c o n t inuing "to rely on the advice of public rela· tions men, all of ""no1n are politir.a l rather th<J.n t1t:eL11t e xperienced political advisers on the White House staff. Regarded as a conservative, Scherle, who f r eq uentl y criticizes Administration pol- icy, -added: ';The chief character re- maining, r~ponsi.ble for much of the present \Mickey Mouse' activity, is Ron Ziegler ... Gen. Alexander Haig, Nixon's chief of staff. has a distinguished mHitary record. but in the political v.·arfare game, the general is still a buck private. "Althou gh H.R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichmann are gone. their ghosts still haunt the White House," he said. Coeds Irked ·By Clean~p . Cheesecake HONOLUW (AP) -Litter and cheesecake don't mix, at least as far as University of Hawaii coeds are concerned. Dozens of women students have C<lndemned a unive rsity- sponsored poster which is part of a cleanu p drive. The: P9Sler shO\VS a cartoon of a bare- breasted \\'Oman dropping her bikini top onto a littered lawn and says, "Come help pick up ttpngs other people throw 3\Vay." Philip W. Koehler. facilities · mana gement director for the university. said , "I was just trying to fit in with the cleanup theme. !\fore women are throwing away bras every- day." Histori~ First Solon. 01i Maternity Leave .,.,, ASITTNGTOl'l -1 A Pf Rep. Y v o n n e Braithwaite Burke, (0-Calif.), boasts a first in the U.S. Congress - she is the first . member to get a maternity leave. . House Speaker Carl Albey!, ([}-Okla.), granted .her the leave which began Nov. 1. REP. BURKE, 40, who is at Iler Im Angeles home • awaiting the momentary bii:th of her flfSt child, plans to • rettan to C.Ongress when the secood session convenes in , -January. Jn the past .,officiQI leave had been granted to con· ~lonal members only for penooal illnea ,.. Illness of • famlly member. ' B ehold rhe bold 'golds'.:. highly polished metal adorn- menrs by ]\lonet. Tambourine • , •. f ,. ,. \ ' ' • •• . n!f:> dash in three part , <lpll ~T < -~ 0 ...,.. .,.. . ... . -~;1 c~o ~jn~tes by. Lady Arrow • • -. . l · Kicky coordinates in rhcee •• --~ really snappy way to So. ' ro' a Jun~heon or. an ~frernqon..a,t the thearre.Jr\_ma1ryclous . " ----... _.. -fabric, \Vashab le Ultressa~ Of mxtµr eJ Dacron® polyCster:---... . ' .,. · Sllov.'n nvo fron1 a group. AIL available for sizes 10 to 16. ~ . " ' ,/ .:.... • :' 'Top:-French era var, rectangle prjnr. Knife pleat, puli-0n skin_ . ' -,.,. . ' wb~ce grou nd \\'ith red and ~11vyprinr. ~atchfng tailored ~. .. '11: shirt. Two pocket shirr jacker .Wit h reel grouOd,.navy ------.... . , .,,J~ 1·and "'hire print, 858 ~· .. " ;. ',. ·Bottom: chocolate and \Vl1ite 'mix featuring a soliel, l"nifc .. . ,, pleat, pull·on skirt; srtipcd, tailored shire and a polka dotted, , ·...!'.~ -rwopJdce~ shirr-jackcr,-858--'--------~-_ Blouses Plus SANTA ANA SOUTH COAST PLAZA ' , . ' . "' ' t .. ) I " • • • • -- I ·--.. .. -· ' Huntington-Beaeh Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks • VOL. 66,,NO. 318, 5 SECTIO,NS, 88 PAGES , ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1973 TEN CENTS County Approves Mile Square Patk Additions Plans !or creallon ol 111 acres ot Supervl.oors, a. II.I mfillon coirtract to ;rolling meadows, pine groves and two begin the final d<!Velopment phase at •mall-lakes were glyen_pn)l!slonal ait~_,the"' f!O&ional 2!".k ~"-\11 be s!anedc by trovaJ Tuesday for addltlon to Mile ale spring, ici.'Williig to Ra pli-HU<!lori, fquare Park In Fountain Valley. chief of develol""t!lt for the harbora, The unanimoul ondonement of the beaches and 'parks department. mul~-milllm>dotiar Pl'Oiect came from The IU nilllion 1' contained In this the Qrange County Harbors, Beacl\es year's budget aod ii>quld repr~l .)O and Parb Commission. -pem,ot to 60 perceot fl/ the tqtal <91t u ~Jibe~ by the county Board ·of ol the project, H~ lndiciite4:! • ' Regal Wedding . Princess Anne and her new husband, Capt. Mark Phillips, leave ·Lon· do11's Westminster Abbey following their wedding ceremony !Oday. (Story, Page 4.) . l' . ,, ' Fed eral Court Declares · . . .~.~ Dismissal Not Legal : From Wire Servlets " WASHING TON 1;r-Fecieral Judge ~erhard A. Gesell ruled that Acting 4ttorney General Robert H. Bork acted Ulegally In firing Archibald Cox as ~al Watergale. proseaitor. (Related ifm:ies, Page S.) · • . • !" The ruling followed .a hear111g in ~h1ch A was made clear that Cox, who relui'ned lo his Job at the Harv'ard University Law School after being fired Oct. 20, ' ' or .. ge doOS not want tbeiob back. Gesell issued the rulihg on a suit brought by a Ralph Nader-backed group whiCh 'mntested on constitutional grounds the. firing pf Cox by Bork the night .of Oct. 20. ~ . Attorney General Elliot L. Rl<liardloo and Deputy Attorney General~iam D' Ruckelsbaus ·both had rt an (\l'der by President/Nixon to· c out •lie dixmlssal, ind· Rldiard9on igned Ind Ruck1!labaus wls 'fired. -~k, then solicitor 1en.eral,. carried out the.order. Gesell overruled arguments bf the JnsUce Department that the ClSe was made moot by Cox's pubUc sjllement that he did not want the Job back. "The discharge of Mr. Cox pre<Jpltated Weather -. a widespread concern, j f not.Jae~ of Continuocl cool, .;;..Y ~~ther conf14"'1C'!, In the admlnlstJ:~tioo . 9! is 00 the agenda for 'lbunday, -' justife." Gesell said in bi.Sruling. Gesell based his rUllng that Cox was according to the weather oervlce,_ 1 fired Wqally 111 the ground that Itich- with ,hlgj>s at the ~ches In the ardloa --a ,..Watlon sta!Jnc that mid-(111 rising lo 61 Wand. Over: Cox oOold be fired only for ccilnmlttlng nijht lows 56-58, (See FIRING, Pqo I)· -~Jl\'S I Dl<l,.'l'OUAY _ l1i Richard Nb:on'1 home&oton of Whittier -Walergatl nol- wllhslanding -the people are 1dU behind him. s.. 1torv, Westminster Woman • Poae 26. "' YWf ""'" ' .. 9Mfl... 11 L.M. -I ~ ... ,. ~ c.,.-'' a..tttllll •n, ·-. ·-.. o.. ...... ,. ........ ,... 1'-1 ,_ ... :::;:=,.. ...... -:1 •• ' Ill .. 9'"* S1'1 j . ' Dies' After Accident. BAKERSFIELD (UPI) -Evelyn Scofield, 60. of Westminster, 'died Ties· day fn)lll lnjorles suflered bl ID Oct. 27 auto acddant In which her husbend waa killed. Sito had been ~Ing treatmeot at san Joaquin Hoepltal litft. n.e Callfomia l!lgbway PalQll ~Id .,. waa ~ In a car drlftri by her inioband, Roland, 61, which _, out ol control on Calllomla 41 ... r here and ovtttorned. Plans presented to commissioners Major activities in the new section suiting firm of VTN of Irvine, Com. showed that the temainder of Mile · of the park, which will border on Edinger missioners were most concerned about Sguare Park development will emphasize Avenue and Euclid .Street. will ·be pie-the proposed archery range. a natUra ruSliC.ttieiDe-:--------,,jcking, -w a I k In g;-playgrounds and-..tArcher-y is a-very specialized sport.:.'.. Un1ike earlier phaJes of parks con-fishing . said commissioner Frank Manzo, "I'm strucUon, this one will rely heavily on It will also have three specialty not sure we should devote so large unclipped grasses, artificially built hllb, fea tures - a model boats pond, a model an .area to just one activity." and heavy tree plantings to cr~ate the airplane flying area, and a 14--acre The arch@ry area would consist cf impression of undisturbed natural set-archery range. a standard l arge( range and a "roving ting. In discussing plans drafted by the con-archery course." School Findin gs The roviog course "'·outd be laid out similar to a golf course so that the archer would walk through a se ries of nat~raL.obstacles picking oU staUco- ary targets as he went. "Th.i! is the only archery course plan-. ned in the county," said Ken Sampson, director of the harbor!, beaches and parks department. "l think one facility I or this type is justified." i Police to Get 'Throat' By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tht D•llY l'lltt Sttff Huntington Beach Union High School District trustees have approved giving city police all informaticn now known about an August conclave of schoolmen where the X-rated sex movie "Deep 'lbroat'' was screened~ _ More than 200 person$ turned out at Tuesday night's board meeting. Most were there because of th8 "Deep Throat" Incident. Psychiatric Wards Sought By 1Jospital$ Two Huntingtoo Beach hospitals will make hick 'nlursdliy befort the Orange County .H~lth Planl)ing Council's fcicility review committee, for approval of new paychlatrlc care facilities. " ~ b)i ' j>acwca Hospital to spend $500,IXMl On a ~bed acute psychiatric care , unit to their 18792 Delaware Street iacllity is expected to draw tbe most discussion before the health planners. Pacifica officials claim the new facili- ty. whiCh would bring.the total capacity ol the hospital ·to more than 11111 beds, will provide easy comrnurtity access, meet demands of growing population and bring social benefits to the Im· mediate area. The other bid will be made by Hun- tington Intercommunity Hospital, which wants to eliminate 19 beds in their pediatrics wing and convert them lO o-chlldren's montal health unit. After a review of lhe proposal, which would be an utension of the hospital's experimental Children's Mental Health prograni, the health planning council staff recommended approval of the re- quest. The primary concern in both cases deals with an apparent low. occue~cy rate in similar mental health facilities in the county. · Staff studies ol the Pacifica proposal indicate that while the immediate com- munity would benefit from the new facil- Jty, there is a countywide surplus of acute mental care beds which is expect- ed to continue for five years. -Recommendations have._ been made to the health planners in the past that some of the acute care beds be turned over to serve health care needs. 'lbe Pacifica plan WB! met with mixed reactiom from the health planning staff, whlc:b baa p~ted several possible alternatives for the Health council to take. Whatever choice Js made will be !See MENTAL. Pogo I) lJniform 'Bidder'. To School Board -Says 'Ntr Thanks' - Seal Beach nosldent cathleen Finn almost became the unwilling 'owner of 100 wornout band uniforms f r o m Westminster High School In what school officials 111 1pparent1J was a prank. The unifonn.s were put on sale as obooleto equipment tall month and two bfdg -. received. One, of $500 was recelved from 30meone who signed the name Cathleen Finn. The other, for ll~, was froin a Pllll Han¥Jl. "Mrs. Finn responded rather quickly when she received our letter Informing her-obe wu the high bidder," said Bob Martin~ uelltlnt-superintendent for business of the Huntington Beach Union High SchoOl Diltrl<I. Dlstrlct trustees, who were to ·finalize the sale Tuesday were told ol the altua· tioo, '#blch left them with the cptkin of acctpllng Hansen's bid or trylnc to aell lhe unllwml ...,. other time. TllOy dcelded to try again later. > ' The police Investigation will reportedly attempt to determine if anything illegal occurred when dlstrict administrators . showed the sizzling sex flick at a San Diego meeting. During the board meeting, the mayors of both Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley, plus others, either defended or condemned trustees for their recent ac- tion in not attempting to fire Superin- tendent Jack Roper over the incident. Tbe incident first became public about one month ago when police confiscated a video~pe<t copy of the film from a low ranking district administrator. At that time, it was learned that the sex film had been shown at a thretHl:ay conference of 46 district ad- rriin.istrators held in San Diego in August. It was originally thought that the vM:leotaped version had been copied on 'diS.trict. eqWpment but the film 's owner, Glen Daley, reportedly told board members he· had been given th~ tape Cla1n111er Cla1nor Fi ne Irks Huntingto1'-·lJ7 omaii Bv HU.ARY KAYE Of "" Dtll"t l'lllt ..... Lifeguards at Huntiqgton , Beach say clamming is a good, cheap way to get food. · Mn. John Hucfail .n..agrees."ller clam-· ming expe<!ition last Saturday,•which in· eluded her husband and five children, reiulted ln a citation f o r Wiegat Clam- ming expedltibn last Saturday, wbteh inclu<led her husband and five children, resulted in a citaUon . for illeal clam. ming. She faces a possible fme that could run as high as $150. "We thought we were going to get one, nice inexpensive meal for our family o£ seven," said the Huntington Beach woman. 1. "\Ye don't have $150 to pay for clams. It's ridiculous," she said. Mrs. Hudak and her family, along with several hundred others over the weekend, were lured to the beaches by the exceptionally low tides. Wllile many clammers ar~old hands at the art .of digging, scoopmg up and m.easuring the little shelllish, many o't-J those on the beach were novices, and had failed to fully inform themselves of the state Fish and Game Depart- ment's rules for taking claill.1 . Mrs. Hudak knew she had to have a license, knew the clams must be over four and a half inches in diameter and knew she could only take 10 clams per person . She did not realize, however , that she needed a special clam measuring device. She used her band to measure. "We really thought all our clams were the legal size, and we started to ask the state parks ranger If they were okay," said Mrs. Hudak. "But when he measured ours, 19 of the 35 were undersized, and he gave us a citation for that and for not having a measuring device/' she said. California Fish and Game authorities and state parks rangers, empha size it is the individual's responsibility to in- form himsell on the rules for clamming. "When lhe licenses are purchased. a fish and game booklet is given out which ,explains all of the rules for clam- ming and all other types of fishing," explained fish and game Inspector ROOert Kaneen. Most people out clamming know the rules, Kaneen maintained, .but lhere are always those who don't i n f o r m themselves and may receive citations. ."It takes eight years for the f>ismo clam to reach legal size. 90"' we must prctect them the best we can," Kaneen continued. Kaneen exp1'11\ed that persons may either purchase a .device In a sporting goods or bait and tackle shop, for al>" proximately ,1, or m~y make one themselves . .The store-bought version is simply a metal, horseshoe-shaped item, four and a half inches wide. The clam is placed In It to seo If II Is the Pl'Oper size. Mrs . Hudak, who feels there bu been too lltue publicity about this devli:e, says it wWld help n signs were placed on the beach, particularly durlna: low tide perioda, explaining all of the niles. But Gordon Cribbs, of the state Fish and Game Department disagrees. 11Wltb all the rules that •\i.'e have In thls eowttry, If we had ligns Jl0$ted lellinJ< people what they could and couldn't do, there wouldn't be room to do anything - especially on the beaches," Cribbs said. Dtflt' '"" '''" .... ,. SIZING CLAM -If it fits in- side horseshoe device attached to clamming fork, you'd bet· ter put it back. First Snow Of S~ason • 'Falls in Reno RENO (AP) -The first ·snow of the season hit t~eno area overnight and left up lo a foot In• the nearby Sierra. The National Weather Service reported one inch overnight at the Reno 1Dtern1- tional Airport, while two inches fell in Carson City and six inche! at Virginia City.' t -Snow fall was generally lilh.f or nones- Jstent ln other areas of tbe state. with Ely. Auslln and Owyhei all f.pomng a trace. No snow fell io' Elko. In the Lake Tahoe · Basin. snowfall amounts Included eight Inches at Incline VIiiage and 13 Indies on Mt. Rose. In · the high Sierra. Norden on Interstate 90 had 16 ln<:he! of new snow. leaving 21 inches on the , ground. while Echo Summit bad ti inches for a total of ti. . The National Weather Ser v Ice predicted continuing mow ahowe" todny, tonlghl and Thursdo y. < .I ~ at a Convention in Las Vegas by a rep~ei-itative. of a school audio-visual contracting Jirm. Daley allegedly toid board members he does not remeibber the salesman's name nor the com"P,imy he repr~nted. Trustees said they did detennine that screenings of . .the film , which .took place in Roper's st.lite at' the Half . MOO!' IM ori Shelter Island., were dont on d1Strlct (See X·ilATEJY, Page I) * * -tr 'Deep Throat' School Meet Attraction. Of the nearly 2tJll people wbo attended 'I'Ue!Kfay'a • sdtooJ board meeting in Huntlngtoo Beach, seven spoke about "Deep Throat'' incidents, including two !l\8l'Ol'I, a lludeol and lbe presldeol ol the dlatrict'1 larilest teacher organlxa· lion.. . Some bacied the board's decision to drop the . firing proceedings against SUperintendent Jack Roper. Some con- demned that:..acUon. Jerry Matney, mayor of Huntington Beach and George Scott, mayer of Foun- tain Valley, both called for a return tG "sanity aild the business of educating our children." Matney even took the opportunity to criticize the press for its coverage of the incident in which the X-rated sex movie was shown at an administrative conference in San Diego in August. -Matney . toid , the fqur reporters cm"er- ing the meeting Ibey ought to quit · stirring the controversy, by printing "nnoors" in their stories. The student who spoke was Adrian Davis, a senior from Edison High School. She read a portion of the~ conclusion to a report on the matter she had prepared for her government class. She said the incident has caused cm. barrassment for parents, teachers and students and asked, "Why should there be more taxes if they are going to be abused in such a way as this?" Two district residents who appeared before the board took opposite stands on the issue. Inge Knox, whose two sons attend Marina High School, echoed Matney and Scott and supported a return to normal business in the di!trict. Another woman, Mrs. Tyler Brinker, took a difierent approach. "Our fine teachers at Huntington Beach High School aeserve a better l~adership than they are gettin,g. .. [ was a captain in the last bond campaign and people told 'tne we had too many administrators. What am I going lO tell them next time?" -Bill Tizzard, president of the District Educators Association (DEA) delivered a prepared statement in which he stressed tha t no teachers were involved in the incident. Huaid the residents of the district ~arel!lllified in steklng answers to lheir - !See THROAT, Page IJ THIS AD DREW 100 RESPONSES The Jawye~ appealed to the Daily Pilot. He asked to bave bis ad stopped because tt drew tllll rexponse3. SECRETARY for Laguna Niguel Law office. Exper pre!. lluUes Incl. some typ-J IOI filing, receptiGll • tr>nscrlbing. WllJ consider part Ume. (Phone No.) Naturally be found the secretary needed before canceling tbe ad. What l! It you're looking for? Probably a Dally Pilot ad can help you 11111 II, her, him, whalever. OW the '1lred .. to results at the Dally Pilot. 84.2-. - ..... " ' Utand 11 Longer' Fountain V al'ley Coed Attacks 'Crowded Conditions' llltbora M1tthew1 pl'"* to graduate Jl'Om Fountain Valley H1gh SChool In l11111uary. 1 Tuesday night sht1 told trustees or the Huntington Beach Union Hlgh School District she decided to graduate early because crowded conditiona ha\'e made the school so Intolerable "I can't stand lt there any longer." Miss Matthews confronted trustees at thelr meeting Tuesday night with a Fund Raising Con1pared to 'Extortion' From Wire Senrices WASlnNGTON -The chainnan of Ashland Oil Co., who has admitted mak· Ing an illegal $100,000 cash contri bution to President Nixon's re-election cam- paign, testified today that campaign fund raising in America borders on extortion. Orin E. Atkins told the Senate Watergate committee current tund·rais· ing methods should be abandoned in (avor of public financing or political campaigns. Atkins said fonner Co m m e r c e Secretary f\.faurice H. Stana telephoned him in early 1972 and asked for a $100,000 contribution to the Nixon cam- paign and a $10,000 advertisement in a Republican brochure. Stans never ask· ed. specifically for a corporate con· tributicri or made any threats o: prom· lises, At.kans said. "l felt more or less obligated," Atkins said. "We were not seeking any privilege Dr benefit because only a small amount of our business i!1 with the government. '"We wanted to assure ourselves a forum, a calling card to get us in the door to .make. our point ·or . view heard In the exeoutlve branch." · Committee chairman ' Sam J. Erxin Ir. (J>.N.C.), asked /ltklns if he would agree that Hthe method of raising campaign contribution! borders on ex· tortion." "Very much so," Atkins said. Atkins, whose firm was fined $5,000 and who peJ'.sonally was' fined $1,000 for making an illegal corporate con- lribution , said: "There was never any doubt in my ,mind where the money was going to come from. I know wba~ ( bad in the bank, and it didn't come anywhere close to that ($100,000 )." Corporations are not allowed to make political contributions. It was originally aMounced by former Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox' office that Nixon's personal lawyer Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach solicited the contribution, but Atklna taid it was Stans. Kalmbach's name bas been mentioned in connection with two other corporate contributions. Huntington's Edison Plant Hearing Slated The regional coastal commission will conduct a public hearing Feb. 4 on the proposed $310 million expans ion of Southern California Edison's Huntington Beach power plant. Edison officials applied Oct. 17, follow- lng a city approval of the project, for a pennlt from the South Coast Regional 7.one Conservation Commission. The commission has pennit control within 1,000 yards of the coastline under the 1972 coastal zone act. Environmentalists opposini,: the project contend that Edison's permit application is incomplete and should be sent back to the company for more information. If they win their argument, commission planners may delay the scheduled hear· ing. The Feb. 4 meeting will be in the Long Beach Harbor District head- quarters, 92S Harbor Plaza Drive. OIANal COAST M• DAILY PILOT Tll• Ol"ll'l9• CO.ti OAILV 'ILOT wit!! wlllcil 11 tomlll*·""• N•Wl·,rtH, It PUllllll!fd ~ "" °'..,.. c .. o 'llbl'"'"" CMl9f11v. s.,.. rel• •Uklfll 1r1 pl>bll11MO, ,,.,....,., tll!Wlf\ l'rlohr. for COii• Mtu, Nt'Wl!Orl l•tdl, HU11tfnoton 8•M;hl ll0\ll'l!lln v11i.,, L1g11M ... ell, 1 .... 1n1t S..dldltlM(l and S.n Cl1rn1n!I/ llfl Jutft C111hlr1110. A 1111111• NflDl\ll td!lllln It pulllllMd S.t11rcllY1 I nd ~Vlo ll'lf "'lncflMI ptlbll1llll'l9 pl111! It 11 U0 W"I ••r SlrMI, CCKll Mtll, C1lllornl1, .,.,.. Mf\11i1 p . w •• d ,. rftllh.nt .. "" ''11&llt111r- J 1 , 6i I . Curl1y Vkt Pmllltftt ....i lilMrtl M11111w Titoti.11 Keevil Edlfl.t Tho11111 A. Murphi~t M-.ln. Efltor 01rl11 H. L..1 l1:!1he14 '· N&ll AMl11111l ,,,,_lllflnt Eclllert Te1rv Ce•ille ... , °''"" c-ry lclltor Hwtktl• lleecll Oflb 17171 le11h leul1•1r4 f111ilint. A'4r1tu P.O. le• 7t0, 92641 --L"""" htdl: :m Ptrhl Alltrlllt C..!1 Mftl: nt WMl 8tp l"MI H---1 a.tcfl: IW NIWPO'f llOltlMYM 1411 °"'*"": JU fiflfltl ti (amine Alll' ,.,,,.,., C714) '42-4)Jt. Cl•llfW .W.•tklll• '41;-1671 ,.,.....,. ...... c_,..~, .. Mf.1121 ~""'· tt n, Or-.. CO..t '""'tltt!lrol ~,.. Nt ,..... ,..,.,, lllwlrttlotll, ....,.,... _,... ... """"~ lttt•lll _., .. ,_.,....... """""' ..... ,.,... ...... If ...,,llM ....... • ..... clMI --... ti C:.lt .... Ct!...,.... auaua~ M' Ql'f'IW a.M MIJltlll'f1 w _... u.11 -"''" IJ'llfb?' ........... _..... series of questions dealing with the use of tax money aod the failure of the district to pw tiri bond llaues. "I also want. to know why you aent letters home to our parents saylng registration went well when it didn't," she asked. Board president George Logan t o I d the coed that some of her questions could be answered by Glen Dysinger, Open Space asslltant supertntmtent for planning and m1Mgement. , "Some ol them, like the q..,ttooo •bout bond llliura1 we just doni hive answers for, 0 he aaded. •~1 don't think younallze how rid.Jculous It is over there," she replied., "You don't have to sit in a trailer with 50 other kids for a government class that you have to take to graduate. Do you know I Just go! my book ror that class this week?" Trullte.I l)'mpalhlztd with Ml!s Ma~ thews and other district residen!J who talked to them about crowdiJJg u they wrestled with declslons on a tax override Issue. In a report presented by fmandal COIUiUltant.a Stone and Younrberg, a ten-tative limelable for the eTectioo a o d construcuon or one or two high schools was outlined. It calls for the election to be held on June S, 1974, In CODjuncUoo with the state's prllnary elecUoo.. Planners Fret If \he override pasltl, c:onstrucllon will begin the following March, wlth opening date for the new school set !or September 1917. The delay between the election and beglMing or construction is the time needed tq have building plans drawn, contracts Jet-and-the-financing set._up, the Stone and Youngberg representative said. State Deadline Dysinger noted that at I.hat time, the estimated enrollment in the distrlel wtll be 21,340. Current enrollment ia 18,500 in the district's five high schools. By Dec. 31, Huntington Beach, along with other California cities, is supposed to finish an open space and con· servation element to its general plan. City plaru)ers have revealed, however , that they can't mee t the state deadline -at least not legally. PlaMing Director Ken Reynolds in· From Page 1 X-RATED • • • equipmenL At the special board meeting which had been called to adopt formal charges against Roper in preparation for a public hearing on his firing, trustees did an abrupt .!!bout face and dropped the pro- ceedings against the superintendent. Roper made a public apology for the incident and declared the matter "resol•·· ed." The police came into the picture again earlier this month when they indicated they were contit..;ing their invest igation. Since confiscating the film , Huntington Beach vice officers had not intruded into the matter, saying it was an internal problem for the school district. A week ago, Lt. Robert Rinehart. head of the department's Vice and Intelligence Unit, announced that he had made a formal request of the board to release to him their findings in the ca.se. He said the department was in- vestigating ' possible criminal activity within the nigh school district based on allegations from several unidentified sowi:es. His statement partially s1.:pported a remark made by Board President George Logan after !he Roper apology. At the time he said, "The publicized incident (!lie showing of "Deep Throat") was one of several on which the board baaed i!J deCWon last Thursday (lo start proceedings to fire Roper). "In my opinion, it was the least signifi· cant of all the charges." It was learn~ that Police Chier Earle Robitaille had' sent a. letter to b o a r d members requesting information they had turned up during their investigation of "Deep Throat" and related incidents. Sources have indicated that most of the v.'Ork in the investigation was done by Deputy County Counsel Spencer Covert who functions as the board's attorney. 1be board's decision, made with trustees Ralph Buaer and Dennis Mangers absent, came after a brief executive session. Logan made reference to the police request ·and said, "The consensus of the board is that we are not an efficient investigative agency and it is not our function to investigate alleged criminal activity. "Therefore we have decided to instruct our counsel, Mr. Covert, to cooperate fully with t h e ·police department and to divulge any and all information he ga thered during the course of our in· vestigation.'' From Page 1 THROAT ..• questions, but also stated that no thing should interfere w i t h the pursuit of education within the district. , Do~s Allen, spokesman for the Citizen's Committee of Califo rn ia, con- demned the bo~rd's action and said that her organiMtlon will be conducting its own public hearing in the matter if the board fails to set a date · for a public hearing. The board did not act on ~{rs. Allen's suggestion. Kids Perception Tests Approved /I pilot program to test and remedy problems in perception among elcmen· tary school c.bildttn was approved Tues- day nigh! by !he HunUngton Beach Cily &:hool Board trustees. The program will be dir<cted by students at Cal State Long Beach, who will work with 50 child ren at Kettler School. The Motor Assessment Pilot Program· (MAP) will deal wilh children having coordination, perception and balance problems, and will seek to cor- rect the trouble through a plaMed pro- gram . There will be no addllional expense · to the district, other than the time used to carry oul MAP. formed cily councilmen this week that there won 't be an environmental impact report (EJR} with the open space ele- ment. An EIR is required both by state law and city code. The city attorney's of fice is cur- , rently \vorking on a solution to what planners admit is a serious dilemma, but so far, a solution bas not been offered . The assistant superintendent presented a report on the distri.ct's crowding factor - a device for m~asuring the amount of classroom space on each campus per student -and .stated that 900 new students can be expected in the district next fall . From Page 1 The open space and conservation ele-FIRJNI' meat is one of several new additiQns V • • • ' the state Legislature has dcmiinded as "extraordinary improprieties" or by mu- a part of each city's general 'plan of tual ag reement that the Watergate in· development. vestigation was completed. Chilly Sitting Nude models for art classes at Detroit's Wayne State University have begun using -space heaters to keep warm since the energy crisis has forced the uriiversity to cut down its heating of classrooms. • , · In Huntington Beach, the open space Gesell turned down a Justice Depart- element will identify all parks, rivers, ment argument that Bork had as much flood channels, earthquake faults, bluffs, authority to abolish that regulation and beaches, archeological sites, historic and fire CoJ: as Richardson bad to issue it. landmark sites, significant geographic Gesell said such regulations have the Democratic Action Group :, f • formations and other open space force of law and cannot, be abolished characteristics, including oil' fields and except through full legal procedure. farms. • Gesell refused to issue. an injunction The plan must not only list these to' prohibit Cox's successor, Leon items, but show which ones the city Jaworski, from taking any action which Urges Rejection o_f Ford · . ~ants to preserve and outline exactly would interfere with Cox's returning to . how it will preserve them. the job. But the judge said he wa.s . WASHINGTON CAP ) -The liberal "The open space plan is itself an ruling on whether the firing was lawful, Americans for Democratic Action today credibility ha! been so irretrievably damaged that even member! of bis ~ environmental impact report," suggests even though Cox does not want the urged rejection of Vice President· senior planner Ed Selich. "But our legal job back. · designate Gerald R. Ford, calling him hangup COmes WI.th !he c1'ty code which Following the hearhur, a. Nader at· -a po' litician with a poor civil-righls requires publiC bearings on impact tomey. Alan Morrison, said he believed reports." one effect of the ruling that the Cox record and no experience in foreign Selich says the state doesn't requ ire firing was illegal was to serte· notice affairs. a public hearing but the city does, on the President that Jaworski could Irr testimony prepared for Senate Rules and there isn't sufficient lime remaining not be summarily fired . Committee hearings on the nomination, to follow the city's procedure and still /\-1orrison said the ruling in effect would ADA Vice Chairman Joseph L. Rauh meet the state deadline. give Jaworski "job security." If city procedures are followed, the Gesell ruled that Nader did not have Jr. said roro is unsuitable for the open space element, complete with im-standing to file the auit but lbe members pre1~ency and that hj,a coofinnation pact report, could be ready by Jan. of Congress did. would mam it more dilllcult to impeach 21. three weeks late, expl ains Selich. The suit originally was brought by Presklent Nixon. The penalty for tardiness is a pro-Nader, the consumer advocate, but was own party are calling on him to resign ,'1 Mrs. Abzug said. Clarence Mitchell , Washington director of the Nationa l Association for the Advancement of Colored People, told the committee Ford "has a narrow gauge approach to civil righl!." Seminar Set On Coastline hibition on the issuance of any building later joined in by three members of Rauh told the panel: permits until the open space plan is Congress seeking to have C.ox-reinstated ~To~ who say that.Congress must ..... .J. _ 1 submitted to the state. as special prosecutor. act ai ~e to oonfinn Mr. Ford as "Al We See the C.O.ltline,tt the Some councilmen indicated they felt The members of Congress wbo joined a preccqlltion or rresiden~ Nb;on's flnal pto&ram in • symposium that might be a desireable situation, In the suit were Sen. Frank E. Moss resl&nauoll or impeachment, ADA gives sponsored by the Newport Harbor but City Attorney Don Bonfa warned (0.Utah), and Reps. Bella S. Abzug this answer : We do not believe our JunJor League and UC Irvine will them Monday· night they could be open (O.N. Y.), and Jerome R. Waldie (D-nation ls bounded on the east by Richard take place 'Ibur.iday at UCI. · for lawsuits if the planning department Calif.). Nixon and on the west by Gerald Ford. The discussion, to be moderated failed in its normal function . In another development' U.S. District "Our sights go beyond these two to ~by Newport Beach City Councilman But if a plan is subnUtted without Court Judge John J . Sirica said today a man or woman who, as president Carl Kymla, will get under way an. impact report, as required_ by city that President Nixon can make his of the United Stat.es, will bind up the at '1:30 p.rn. in Room 174 of UCl 's rode , the threat of lawsuits is also pre,s.. Watetgare~tapes or any Otbet tellled nation's wounds at homecmct-rriisl:ore,---t--pute:r 9Cienc:e bulidingr.-.----1--- ent. material public at any time. nie White it to Its place of honor abroad." Panelists will be VerLyn Jensen,' The requirement for the open space House said it was considering methods Rep. Bella Abzug (0.N.Y.), w-ged counsel · for the Envirorunental element was first establi shed by the of doingJso. postpon~ment of action on Ford's Coalition of Orange County ; R. Legislature in 1970. Since then, the But Sirica said be will not accept ncminatioa until (1) the House decides Barry McComlc, executive vice deadline has been shifted I 0 u r the additional recordings and materials whether President Nixon .should be im· president of Avco Community times because few cities could comply. that the President offered Monday peached and (2) Congress consider! Developers; Frank Robinson , "Some cities are submitting their because the court does not want to legia:lation calling a special election member of the Orange County outline of parks and calling it an open "become a depository of norHubpoenaed should the presidency and vice presiden-Harbors, Beaches and Parks Com- peaceplan,'' observes Selich. "We feel matters,'' cy be vacant at the same time. mission, and Raymond Watson, the are more options open to the "J{ the President thinks it advisable "It .is totally inappropriate for the president of the Irvine C.ompany. nd we're trying to do the best lo 'Waive any privilege and make tapes Congress to expedite the confirmation The Junior League series, "Com· ob 1po ·ble with limited staff." or other material public, he, of coune process on a nomination submitted by munity 73,'' is open to the public ~ st ch the city's preliminary plan is free to do so at any time," Siri~ a President who is the subject of a wit hout charge. d by the state on a technlcall· said in a memorandum. serious impeachment inquiry and whose ty. here was nothing wron g with the Jlr-;;"';.~.::--:::~~;;;;;~?:ii=====!::=~~~~~~~i~=~~~~!!J~~~:ii~~~~i basic plan, says Selich, but it did not include an outline of th e procedures the city intended to follow from the preliminary to the final plan. From Pafle 1 ' MENTAt ... sent to the state Advisory Health Council for action. The county beal th panel can either approve the Pacifica addition with the understanding that it will be coordinated with other such facilities ser,ving the comm unity. It can also deny the faclllty because of poss ible overbedding of pS'ychlatric care patients and overlapping responsi bilities with the Huntington Inlerconfmunity, Westminster Hospital and Fountain Valley Hospital. A third alternative, to hold over the propoaal for 20 days ..., get feedback from other facilities providing such service, has also been offered . Huntington lntercommunity's proposal should be greeted with less apprehension because of a staff f1ndlng !hat not enough attention bas been given in the county to inpatient health care for dtildren. In the text of their report, plaMing staffers recommend the establishment of a ta'k .force on children's mental trealth services to coordinate and Im· prove such program..1. A third 00.pital, Mission Community In Mission Viejo, will also bid for ap- proval of ~ acute psychiatric care beds and 30 lnlennedlete care beds. The health council staff has pm<nied the same recommeodaUons on the pro- posal as those for the Pacmca addlllon. The facilities review committee will meet at 7 p.m. In the Cotta M ... city councl1 chambers. 1/ Men's Tennis Shirts-6.00 to 9.00 Men's Tennis Shoes-8.95 to 18.95 Adidas-TretorH:onverse-furcell -Ladies Tennis Shoes-7.95 to 16.95 Aididas-TretorHollverse Ladies' Tennis Dresses-16.95 up · WHsoo--llunlop-llaYis Bancroft-Ygyama Temis Rackets Pe~Wll~nlap Tennis Bals-per doz.-7.95 BasketllaH Backboanls-14.95 Basketball Goals-3.95 Ii 5.95 Bask~.95-7.9S8.95-12.95-18.95 ' • HandbaO Gloves & Balls Racquetball Racquets Badminton Rackets Ping Pong Paddles & Balls Croquet Sets · Shuffleboard Sets Skatellllards Yolleybals-leather-11.95-13.95-18.95 Yolt.!M-RH.25 to ~l95 Saccerbals-leather & Rubber Faetballs-Softballs-BasebaHs Speedo Swim SuHs & Trunks AcryHc Wannup Sults-21.95 to 34.95 Raleigll Bikes-Parts Tm-Tubes-Repalrinf , .. ' -. -----· • Wtdntsd.tJ, Novtmbtr 14, 1973 H DAILY PILOT 3 • I ~At Your !·$ervice GOP SOlons uestion Nixon . • ! A Sanday, Wedal'llday and Friday , : Ftatart : Of the Dilly Pilot ! ( Got o· probtttm? Then write 1 Po~ ~~nn. Pat ·~~,.~!, ~~~ • • (lnJWCft ond ' , . ~ , oct1on u o u , n11d to :.1 tolve intqui· ' ties· fl\ gov- Parbsan · ernment. and • busine1s. Mail 1 ,. : . gi~,~·.~ ~~i: Energy Bid i Youf Service ()range . Coa&C , : Dail)! Pilot, ~.o. Bo• )~On;Cosl4 By JAcK BROBACK • 1 Meta. c.:a .. 92626. \Jm"lUdt uour or'" o.11r r11tt s11u : rr.itphont number. Board or Supervit:ors Chainnan Ronald _f'f.!r Water Skie r s . W. Caspers olfcred a list of u recom· : DEAR PAT : I Mve a really deep meffifitions or iSf\in a-ctiori'""'tn _,the tnterest in water skiitlg and I want current energy criliis 'Tuesday and ran to !Ind a club. I'm 14, a~ pretty good into unexpected opposition from other qn a single. l ski year-round, exc<ipt board members. \Vhen th ere arc iceb:'rgs floating around. Supervisors Ralph Clark. Robert Battin Maybe you can find a club for me and Ralph Diedrich, all Democrats, caU- by next summer. ed. Caspers' statement and recom- K. W., Costa ~ltsa mendations "politic@t.~· Caspers is a You won't have to wait until nex t Republican. aummer to jola a club. Lance <>Us. Diedrich referred to Caspers' offering coordinator of stude nt activities at as "the political sjieech you made." University lligh .School, is contacting: Clark agreed and said it bad all the tou about the URS clnb, now In its "inferences of moU:terhood and the fOurth season with %00 on-campus and American flag." &O off-campus members. Battin added assen\ to the other two C'o11re1•1t. Ove .. Orc 11lt supervisors' remarks. ' Caspers, obviously tak~n aback at the DEAR PAT: The newspapers have partisan reception of his recommenda- carried many stories lately about satan tions, pushed hard for acceptance and worship, human sacrifice and other ac· got eight of the 11 suggestions approved, livities related to the occult. Young but not without some modification people usually are involved. There were TI1e board chainnan proposed : · t"'·o recent stories in the Daily Pilot -Llmit maximum driving speed to about classes concerning the occult being 50 miles per hour on all county 1vehicles taught in high schools -one in New except during emergency situations. Jlampshire and the other in Corona (This was modified to except ariving del Mar. 1 've been told there is an on freeways by county vehicles. Diedrich occult literature class rit Fountain Valley said a limit of SO mph on freeways High School too. l'd like to know i( would rule out use of .the frjways this is true and how many other .county by counry vehicles). ' \ • ·.~.;> \, ~ t·.·'"'~· · ... ~':t~0* ~'.\:':° .... ,,,.--':;" ';.{'. ''':,' .... ~"" ·f>:;.,;:· i, t ' O•HY Pl .. I Stllt Plloto UC IRVINE STUDENTS SIGN IMPEACH NIXON PETITIONS AT 'RALLY' Sign1turet Support Impeachment Resolution of Rep. Jerome Waldie Who Canceled Talk 800 Attend 'lmpeacl1 Nixon' Rally at Irvine UC Irvine Students Ask Letters for Impeachment high schools arc offering classes 0£ this -R·educc maximum speed limt to 50 tvnP. How can bJnccrned citizens make mph on county ·roads. (This wa·s cut They billed It as 8!l "'Impeach the .. l'-Charges the ACI.U believes require their disapproval known ? out because such action requires enact"-President'' Rally and no one came. \Vell: A 0 F t I \ ' ll r • impeachment of Nixon include : By GEORGE LEIDAL Of Ille OlllY Pilot $t8" . ., oun a n a ey 1nent c an ordinance). hardly anyone. • F I I ·valley lllgh 0 -hool offers 1 t 1 the o · r Besides urging representatives to im--lfis "perso.nal authorizatiOn or the oun a n ""' -ns rue 1 rector o Under gray skies at lunchtime barely an etactive literature course, "Probing Transportation to continue maximum el-peach President Nixon, UC Irvine 'Hustori plan' for political surveillance tbe Unknown:· to i.unlor and senior fort to utilize compact, high . mileage 50 yards from the UC Irvine commons students Tuesday ,verc ·told to \Vrile bY~ such methods as burglary, wiretap. students. The FVHS curriculu m de~rt-vehicles in the county neet. '""'"· is was cafeteriai about 300 students showed up. ping , eavesdripping, mail covers and hi .u.u letters calling for Congress to set a ment will explain all aspects of t s At It a.m. the advertised hour fo r spying on civilians by the military and class to you, if you visit the sc~ool. JACKSON PUSHES BILL the rally to begin only a newsman. special election. the CIA.'· A. list of bigh schools io the county ON ENERGY. p199 30 sound technicians setting up microphones Underground radio commentator . -The establishmcnl of the \Vhil e i'J being mailed to you by the Orange William \Vinter was the only speaker House "plumbers" unit · 'opera ting County F..ducatlo n Department. No cur· approved after remarks by Clark and and speakers and pamphleteers were or several to discuss alternatives to outside the restraints of law and engag· rlculum· list for ind ividual bigb scbool1: Diedrich that this was already policy in Campus Park. the Nixon presidency if an impeachment ing in burglary. illegal wiretaps, espicr k available from the ffUnty. '11te btst of the county). A hour Jater, when an array of drive led to a Senate trial and removal nage and perjury," Agran said. way to express your coTicern would be -Direct the county budtet analyst s~akers that was to have included from office. -The secret recording of telephpne to write to tile eurricllum clt~tnt and purchasing agent to antidpptt Congl'8!1man ~erome Waldie, began the Winter suggested pressure to impeach and other conversations in hia office 41f each high school, !ltate yo.ir opinion significant cost -per gallon jncreases for h along with calls for a s~cial election wit~t ad\<lsing j>artlciPants. ' .r -cult literature classes and 1-utre audience had sprinkled itself across t e should be felt before Congres" acts on ..:lt.fsurpation of the warm'""; .... powers --.. forthcoming year. (This got' the same 1 .... _._.16 'if such a class if belng offe'ted., ~ comment that it was obvious) •. ' s opes. the confinnation or House Minority of Congress as evidenced by unauthoriz· Bopk Pi~ku_e -Request. tht director of Harbors, Some dozed. warmed by occasional Leader Gerald Ford's appointment as ed bombing of Cambodia, and the con· DEAT PAT: \Ve have aCcUmilllted Beachel and.-P.•rks -to ~et;ne .,.pllD _!li~in or sunlight through the overcast vi?,C~:'1itas the alltOOrJty r~·ght now b:~~~go~a!fds {!!~~eQl°'m:i~)r~r ~:~ m.ny. hard cover and paperback boolts and. development of any off· d vehic1~ sky.' yeau.. . 1 faci\ities ' 'thin the I (C& ~ to call a sp;icial elecUoh if ·th the 1;, as well as lot:i. of Readers Digests. wt coun y. spers others chatted quietly or flitted about presidency and the vice presidency are -Interference in the administration ~-, anv organi1.au·on have use £or these referred to the planned off '°'d vehicle to v1·s1·1 w1·1h ~ends parked else1vhere " 1"· ·d ' r · t' · I d-!he fl f hi h ~ · d. facility at Prima Desecha in the ui vacant, ,,inter sa1 . o JUS ice inc u 1ng o er o a g books and magazines, or must I y;pose the on the landscape. Others addressing students Tuesday federal post to the presiding judge in f them" sou astern part of the county. Clark. y.•ere American Civil Liberties Union the Pentagon Papers trial and in· 0 . w. J .. La~ma V•ach DiOOrich and Battin had this modified Occasionally. disinterested applause I r . •·-~ t · bl. h ·· be! ed k attorney Larry Agran, 1i1artin Hall of er erence 1n the FBI \Vatergate probe. Tb. ~ange County l\tedlcal Center o reqwre a pu 1c eanng ore any punctual a spea er's Point. 1 h Th Oclobe .. 11 f . ~ . • rd changes are made). nn..-k d h 1 . Los Ange es v•ho represented t e Peace -e r massacre irmgs of widll pick op your paperbac .. aod ba I "'ICl1 as e , owever. near Y every Action Council of southern California. \Vatergare S........,ial Prosecutor Arch1'bald -Establish policy for hea ing tern· " ...... co '3;-Catt-Mn;---€iaudb1a-Slta,•neo,,-,.per=a<>tu'"re"'le'"v"'er.rsLro~-i!, '-a.Tinr..count-"'C.:y;::;lla:,,cil,;,1;:;11;:es,.--Jband signaled studentL desh:eJ.or im-and.11.CLcomparatiYe___culture pcofessOr Cox and Deputy Attorney G en e r a J '33-9313. ext. 409, before !:30 P·~· any of 65 degrees to 68 degrees , except in pei!Chrnegt of President Nixon. Carlos Munoz. Wjiliam Ruckelshaus and the for weekday to make arrangements. '11te medical facilities. Temperatures in 11troughout the early afternoon pro-1'-tiinoi said-a recenf dircCtlVe from resignation of Attorney Geileral -Elliot RcoenadvaelrsesceDnllgesllbomwlelsl ·b<bydlsetlrtlbbaerted n .• ~ medical facilities will be detennined gram, cyclists and pedestrians criss-the chancellor's office warning about Richardson. -by the med'cal di to fn ha based 1 facuJty involvement in political causes Agran warned that students would be Volunteer Acllo. Ce nter. _ Avocado 1 rec r c rge crossed the park area. seeming Y d h. k " · · " 1 Id lh 1 · h · " I .wi on health requirements. li . th f 1 promptc 1m to spea as citizen . o a 1mpeac ment 1s o o St., Costa Mesa, or the Volunteer Bureau A tho · he ob 'vtous to e presence o the pane Munoz said the viewpoints be expressed dangerous" a course for the country of -· Orange-~-.. •ty, lit'" s•--.... _. -u nze t Director of Buildin---g of speakers and the audience. h. d tho f the lo pursue. ,_.. ............ "' _.,.'" Services to analyze all remaining were 1s own an not se o Ave., Gardea Grove, If you deliver diem facilities' heating and cooling &ystems · Associated Students of UCl President university, or the comparative culture "America ·is a strong nation. Not younelf. and develop a plan of tnergy con· Armando Banuelos opened the program program faculty. because of Richard Nixon, but in spite WI h Si i servation. oblervQlg that it represented student Munoz centered his remarks on the of him . America is strong. We can Snle t Ollt P government's role in student advocacy. U.S. involvement in Latin Aml!rican na-and will survive an impeachment," DEAR PAT: ~ty son recently bought -Appojnt an interim County Opera-Ad hoc committees such as the one lions . He concluded that unless President Agran said. f · t rty for tions Committee including tbe .. county a used car rom a pr1va e pa sponsoring the Impeach Nixon rally were Nixon is impeached, the facts in the Hall confined. his remarks to concern cash. The Costa Mesa Department of administrative officer, directors of plan-·1nv1·ted to fonn if· students !ell the d Ce I f 11· lh Pr ·d • r I h . h·er's ning, building and safety, transpottation, IT'l' an ntra nte 1geocc Agency over e es1 ent s abuse o power. l\1otor Vebic es gave 1m a cas I other vie\\,,.....,iot ought to be expressed involvements in Chile \\'ill not be brought "His taking Congress' 'var making · F ks 1 t roads and building services to , advise · t"" temporary receipt. our wee coula e~. the Board of Supervisors on energy by a student govcrnment·sanctioned out. powers away is the most dangerous he had a buyer for this car, budl h. dnht related matters. Caspers offered car organiiation. "Resignation of the President. \Viii only of the charges to be considered in an sell it because the OMV to1 1m e pooling as an example or what the Rep. Waldie could not attend. He sent serve" to hide the facts," Munoz argued . impeachment proceeding." Hall said. needed the pink slip. Jn, ip_vest!g_a~}.; committee could work oil. , regrets noting he was due in Washington ACLU spckesman Agran listed the He criticized the deceplicn of Congress l find that a 6-to-10 week "'..a!Ung ~.1~ . -Wire the Califorbia Qingretsional b.11 "hig h crimes and misdemeanors" he and likened Nixon 's recent actions to • President Vow s He'll NotResig.n \VASHINGTON (UPl l -President · Nixon , uitdcr questioning by 7 5 Republi can congressmen. reaffirmed to· day that he "''ould nol resign or submit • vo luntarily to impcach1nenl. As part or his new st rategy to meet crilicism ··bead~n·_.:._or his handling oL \Vatergate. some congressmen said Nir- on offered to meet \vith Chairman Sanl J . Ervin (Q..N.C.). and Vice Chairm:in HoY.'ard ll. Baker (R·Tenn.l, or the · Senate Watergale committee. Ervin quickly rejected any such limited session. The committee asked • Nixon Tuesday for a meeting with the full committee and Ervin told reporters. "I'm not going to the White House: \~'ithout the entire committee." The reported Nixon offer to meet on ly with Ervin and Baker was disputed by another participant in this morning'!! session. Rep. Louis Frey Jr. (R·Fla.\, said Nixon offered only lo "supply them · \Vith the information that they want ." ~'ith the method undetermined. Some congressmeri who attended lhe one-hour. 45--minute breakfast 1neeting , with the President -his second in a series of While House question-and-· answer sessions for every GOP member ' of Congress -said Nixon promised further public actions to allay question:f · about Watergate. '· Another participant, Rep. Lamar Baker (R-Tenn.), said, "I'm sure in • my .mind t~at he i~ willing to meet ., \vith Sens. Ervin and Baker and J did " not get the impJ-essiOJl ·-that he .would .. be unwilling to meet with thti lull com- mittee under irlformal conditions.•· •• At a si.mila'r. session for some GOP· senators Tuesday, Sen. Edward W.- Brooke fR-Mass. ), told Nixon he should ' resign. Brooke said the President was "very gracious" in rejecting the advice. . "He said he understood my statement· was not made with malice . . . but he said that would be an easy way: out, and be was not going to tak~ · •t •l I~ I • ' ''I f ) l • Bradley Speaks Out 1 LOS AJ><GELES (UPI) -Mayor Tom.: Bradley said Tuesday that. ~.resident;( Nixon tsbould :~ ·as "I iOiTtCe to . !he cotmtry" ~ the Watergate·. scandal has {rippled his presidency.~ Watergate is Jthe worst blot on the . fabric of lhY! country in my memory.'' Bradley told a high school group. :" . . -I ai11 -fteCiFi·~-+-~ Prompts Suit ' I WJLMJNGON, Del. (AP) -Ann Hall, SO, says Gregory Kux, 51, promised to marry"her three times. but backed out each time at the last moment. Mrs. Hall, a widow, tiled suit in Delaware Superior Court charg· ing Kux, a bachelor. with breach of contract. She said she spent a lot of time and money preparing for three \veddings. She said she suffered financial loss, mental pain . mortification. humiliaticn a n d wounded pride. .. ' is nonnal for processing Che pitlk st.ip. -for an important vote on a 1 thoughl support the need for iln· those of Hitler prior to \Vorld \Var \Vhy should an owner be penalized ~~~g~~~e 3:e~u:::e:i®n~tr:!~10"0 ury~i~~ establishing an "independent" Watergate peachment proceedings. IL bccall'e Or Prolonged red lape? o 1 ip g prosecutor. I jiiii;~;,i;;i;;i;;i;;i;i,;ii;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilr=============~~=====~======i -~1L1 .. cerodna.TbdetC:~: ~:~~ ~ ~ 't~ra~8:ts ~lfi ~~ Illa.,~.~··_·.. TG' EM TAL···Knrr. I~' :'\'our ~ was ~ D orme ·, e 1 agreed fo let it Slay in the motioo]!:.,J-. "~ d w ~ Mesa OMV advises yoll1' !"!' to-'1.. Caspers had also suggosted I bis \.ritf enefS in a blll of sale to the new piifclluer, list or energy coaservation ures who will then pay transfer and other be forwarded to the cities. Clark thought required lees to tllt OMV and keep ii would be better to have !he cities Modification The jewelry gift that's alway~ appropriate. his bill of sale receipt la the car. When join county officials in studying the ~ ~ your son receives the piak slip, he energy situation and wha t can W done fl TODAY ~I." must endorRe It over to tbe new owner. about it. On Noise La\V 1be normal pink slip processing time Caspers, who was in Washington D.C. , I -· Is six weeks and tbe D:\tV ~ays it last week on other matters, saicf after by -is trying to cut this down. conferring with the state COngressional ProfesSional gardeners packed the Tr11 T/1is lll e tl1od delegation he.,., .. convinced !bat the Board or Supervisors bearing room Tues· DEAR PAT: After reading your spray energy crisis is a real thing and that day and won a modification of the lfi""!ll!l!1!'!iiii.ii~ .. ~~!!ii!to!!l!I'!~ starch method or dry cleaning stuffed rationing of gasoline was inevitable. Orange County noise control ordinance . tOys.' I thought your readers might like He said that limiting speed of vehicles Power lawn mowers and other noisy Early in Egypt's history! silver , ito hear about my no-fail technique. 10 50 mph would accomplish one-third landscaping equipment can be operated was actually called "White Gold," ~Search the toy for large "finishing of the goal of reducing fuel rorisumption between 7 a.m. and 8 p.m. on every and \Vas scarcer and more valua· - stitches" made by the manufacturer • by 15 percent. day vi:.cept SUnday, supervisors agreed ble than gold. For a short period, d d th k Caspers also suggested that the ado · · · d I " -usually foun aroun c nee area. caJUornia Congressional delegation be in pllng an amendment to the noise gold was not even m secon p ace. Clip -1hese and remove all--Stul&g 1: • ....-•~ •• the Al ~i.oA ... 1""1.... .law.. • _ Copper ,.was -~car.cer and valued maten·a1. Wash the loy pelt 1·n warm as11.eu w approye as-n P.,... '"'· The rd d J nd ~ -H d d hi h · 1 d h ga eners an a scapers were more. -· . (never hot) Sudsy Water by hand Or In e roppe t s w en 1n orme t at ba~ed b Dr John Phil d. to · ·1· · · both hou h d ed I I I . ~ Y • p, tree r Many ancient c1v1 1zat1ons, m- a washer's delicate cycle. Rince pelt hesed5 .•th heapp~v li egH· s atiol n o[ the Oruge COunty H~l~h Dcp~rt· eluding Sumerians. Babylonians ·In warm waler unt1·1 ll's clear. Press, · to go a a Wl t pipe ne. e a so ment who wrot th g nal se -lied f the · r ·1 · the • e e ori 1 001 • and Hittites used silver, not gold, Or Ca-fully r1'ng out water. Don't put ca or pumping 0 01 in regulating measu-" Elk Hill N J R · th s "· . as Ute basis of their monetary sys· l·n heated dryer. Air dry or place pell s ava eserve in e an The ---~--1 I I 1 Joaquin Valley "nn to an a~•••! ••hich .. u~l\Uln:ll a so 3.PP tes 0 pro~ terns. Silver was highly valued aJso inside out in the sun to dry. Restufr ld ....__ rd-:r t· 'j'-'ur1"i .. erty owners who have the ir own mowers. ·be 1 ·i 1. ·. ·gnil· wit h original material Or new shredded wou not ~a ize na tona sec y. Two weeks ago, the board adopted cause 0 1 5 r~ l~tous 51 1 • h k nd nulf Tbe...net result o!...the-board's action an amendment sponsore·d by Supervisor cance. The ch. le~ d1el1e s of Sumer ·foam. restltch-t a nee area a Tu-~·y was thal co1111ty veh1·ctcs wi'JI d Bab I I d d M ·th b h H .... ~ld glue ·~11 ~ Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton which pro. an Y onia me u e a oons Up WI Q ruS ~ °"""'" w• reduce their Speed IO 50 mph, exccst od d dd b th N I nln .. lvenl 0 St (led hlblted .lhe operalion ol home 1!181·n· g an.Jo ess,; ut ere was · ever use c ea g o u on fr~ays and that county offlcla s d 1 t I up with a brush. llouseho.ld glue will will start studies 011 other met~ of tenance equipment except between 9 no Sun·g , an s1 ver was na ura • restick loose felt eyesl and nose, etc. rvi a.m. and a p.m. on Saturdays, Sundays ly a metal of the moon , just as Never use cleaning solvent on stufJed consc ng ene rgy. and holidays. • go1d was the metal of the sun. 1oys. This is very dangeroll! for children The gardeners prolesled the Saturday It was not until about 2500 B.C. due to allergios and inhalalion of I hm \ k d and holidays ban arguing that the that the inflow of smelted coppQr dangerouo residue vapors lelt in stu((ing , mpeaC Cllt 1 S C elimination of lhe early work boun and silver reduced Egyptian val· materials. would cut their Income by u~ to 25 ues of silver and copper relative L. B., Hllllllagloll Beach ' WASHINGTON (UPll !\ • P · perctnl to gold. Your m•th<Jd tak., more time, bwt Augus1us F. Hawkins (D-OllU.), Tue.oclay They pointed nut that mosl holidays Today silver, although worth tbe toys mast be much cleaner Ura• Introduced a resolution to impeach Presi· now fall on Monday, a regular work only a fraction or the value of ArtCarved Diamond Fashion .Rings sl Hand cratled of 14·karalgold. Matched sets in'8 wide range of styles and prices. For lhe' exceptional gift. see our complete ArtCarved collect ion. J.C. Perteet for any occasion, or no occasion at all. They 're s imply beautiful. Accented wit h gem· diarrionds.. , 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVENIENT "'TERMS --4I 11 YE.Ails IN lHE SAME LOCAT110N a-nkAmeri~•rd -M•1l1r C1t1r .. PHONE s••·l401 .. when Uiey ire spray..gtareh cleaned. dent Nixon, brlfi8ing to 15 the number day . for the.m and that Saturday work: gotd1 remains in popular usage 'Tbanb r.r lettlnc everyone btw aboul or such meuurea introduced •Ince mid· w'" 1"'1JOl'lant as ll)06t gardeners wt>rlttJ ·::•rn~u.'!.gh::o:u::t..'.t:he:_:w:_::o::_:rl:::d:... -----'========================~::::! ·u·. July. six days " week. - • > ' \ -" • 4 DAil Y PllOl I WtdM:Sdty, NCNtmbtr 14, .1q73 Prin~ess Anne Weds Der Soldie~ • with Tom '8'phine ~·.:··.·;~; .. Energy Cri sis? It's a Plot RICKY TICKY POLITJX , It's pretty clear today that we have three members on our Orange County Board of Supervisors ~no can spot sinister ..s_chemcs behind every bush. They even see such plots in the energy crisis. This became evident o n 1 y yesterday When our coastal Fifth D i s t r i c t ~upervisor Ron Caspers, who serves as chairman 1 of that august body, trotted out 11 ideas on how our county govem- Olent might conserve fuel and poWer. , : Now, it should be clear that Caspers ~idn't come up vl'ith a bu shel or radical 1>0tions. 1 Newspapers have been full of similar tactics. Doing things like cutting <>ff iinneeded lights, reducing speeds in cowi- (y automobiles, and urging the U.S. govemment to return to Daylight Saving Time. • • I SO 111F.SE WERE the kinds of steps ~aspcrs propased for our county govern· ment. Nothing heart·stopping like closing do"11 the entire" operation and going Aome. : When he finished listing the 11 steps 01at might be taken, however, the greeting from three or his four fellow ""pel"Visors \vas indeed surprising. :·Third District Supervisor R a I p h l>iedrich of Ful,lerton cracked, "Well, J?OW that you finished your political ~h ... " ' . • Then Fourth District Supervisor Ra1ph Clark of Anaheim added that it all binded like "1.fotherhood, lhe American flag and apple pie ... " ' And then First District Supervisor Bob- ijy Battin of Santa Ana abruptly leaped Ip the alert in time to grumble agrce- ipent Y.-ith the aforementioned Diedrich fnd Clark. I. l ALL OF THJS bitter criticism heaped pon some simple ideas for turning drf ligh ts and cutting down gasoline 4se left our Supervisor Caspers sort 4f sitting there with a k>ok of baffled jmazement upon his co~tenance. : \Vhy did it happen? ,r.; .,. t• We!J, there are two theories. One is at supervisors Diedrich, Clark and attin are creatures of Democrati c s and when Caspers suggested a m, they reacted bite Pavlovia n s who just heard the dinner gong. ; In other words, they immediately 1U!pected some dark kind of Republican plol. · How shutting off the lights and slowing down traffi c gains the GOP any votes, v r is unclear. • THEORY TWO IS that th e supervisorial trio saw Caspers ' pro-posal as a speech launching his re-election campaign. ; How shut41lg oU the ligtits and slowing ~O\Vn traffic gets Caspers any votes, l owever, is equally uncertain. : So the whole display was amazing indeed. Clark, Battin and Diedrich even acted like they hadn't heard about people who are now driving at an economical 50 miles per hour. They must have been in some remote section or the globe over the last week. ' OR 1.IAYBE THEY feared some deep Ulterior motive in the whole program. tr so, that might give yoll a clue as to how they think. Anyway, a£ter considerable haggling, they did go along "'ith Supervisor Dave Baker and Caspers on eight or the l I energy-saving ideaS. All you · can conclude is Lord help Caspers if he ever excuses himself dur· ifig a supervisorial session to go to (he little boys' room . I They may have h.im followed to find Out v.·hat the plot is. AT ALTAR -Viewing Princess Anne and groom Mark Phillips from right (right to left) are Queen U,I TtfttMll Elizabeth; Queen Mother; Prince Andrew: Princess ?ifargaret; Viscount Linley and Lord Snowdon. Sk y lab 3 Rocket Cleared; Fri<lay, • • Tak eoff Plan1ied CAPE CANAVERAL !UP fl Countdown for the twice-delayed launch of the Skylab 3 cre\v on a so.day record· breaking space voyage got under \Vay today v.·lth officials conlident the, prob- Je1n·plagued Saturn 18 bootscr rocket was in good condition. The· launch rocket . got a ·top·tO-bottom examination for struc.lural ·deficiencies Tuesday. Skylab Program r..1anager \Villiarn C. Schneider said. "we are committing to launch Friday" at 6:01 A.J\J. PST, but a final flight readiness re view wa!!i scheduled for the booster today. Astronauts Gerald P. Carr, of Santa Ana, Edward G. Gibson, for1nerly of San Clelnente, and William R. Pogue "·ere supposed to take off lasl Saturday to fly to the· eight·room orbiting space station on a . mission that could last 85 days if l!llJ has gone well after eight Cracks in the 22--story tan Saturn launch machine's eight tail fins forced postponement first until 'Thursday, and then other cracks fou nd in rods con- necting the two rocket stages pushed the liftoff back another 24 hollNi. Sto1·y False About Blacks Settit1g Victitn 011 ~~e FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. -A black \\"Oman who told police a f:.ang of. black attackers abducted her and her white husband and set hi nt afire made up the story. authorities say. "All th.is business aboul abduction and racial incidents "'as all fabrication," Broward County Sherilf f,d1\·ard J, Stack said Tuesdar. "The couple aren't mar- ried. they \\'ere evicted fr01n their apart- 1ncnt. both are uneffiployed, they have no visible me{lns of support. "'The only thing she told the tru th about \vas that she dro\·e > t.tJe: . .....Yictim to a hospital .·· '• BRYAN KE~fPLER. 3J, v.•as beaten and kicked in !he head, bound with electrical cord. doused v.ith a flammable liquid and set afire, police said. He was listed in serious condition at a hospital. , Oflicers Tucsdav arrested Johnny Herald, 31, of Fort Lauderdale, on charges of aggravated assault. Herald told pollce he v.·as drunk and he and Ken1pler argued about the quality of repai r \\0ork the \•iclin1 had done on two tele,'islon sets. Stack said. . ~Police Said Kempler. "·ho formerly ~ an electrician. and Hera ld had a rwining\ feud over the quality ci Kemp!CA's telev ision repair \\"Ork. Sunday her husband SUJ}day C\'ening at gunpoint in a raci al incident and threatened to kill them. • night, Kem pler returned two sets to Ch f T• Herald an<J police said bQth men, v.•ho ange 0 rme bad b<e!I drinking. got into a fighl. "He admits he got angry at Kempler. "ll T" k AJ beat h.im up and tied hin1 v.·Hh electrical IIC s ong wire." Stack said. "We don 't know who =~-,.~1-thr-"Victinron--fire;-but--Y;e-a,~-tt1------ WA$HINGTON (UPl) _: Legislation sure there v.·ere severti l other people putting the nation on year·ro und da ylight in the apartment. saYing time -\\'ith clocks set an hour later than present standard time - has been. approved by both the House and Senate Commerce Committees. The measures, which assume th"' time change means people ·will be awak e Cor more daylight hours: thus reducing electricity consumption. was approved Tuesday less than a week after President Nixon proposed the moYe to save energy. Both measures v.·ould be mandatory for all states, unless the President ap- proved an exemption for certain areas. The House version "'·ould be in eflect for t\l.·o years after the bill is signed ; the Senate biU, through April, 1975. The legisl ation would require clocks lo be set an hour later than ttie present standard time, which went into effect Oct. UI. !!I The Senate bil l also would require the departments of transpo rta lion and interior to make studies to determine h~\f much energy actually is .saved on daylight saving time. "llJS GIB LF RIE!'\D apparenll.1' stocd by and watched it all happen,'' he said. Stack said Kempler's g i r I fr i end . Jeraldine Barfield, 26. told police a gang of 11 black attackers abducted her and DAILY PILOT DELIV ERY SERVICE Oehvery of the Daily Pilot is guaranteed Mt"dl V·l'rldl " JI ftll dt "ol ~.~. ''"' tllNt oy l ;Jf •·"'·• tl U l"d ,..,, co•y wlll •• '""tnl It r•11. CIHI .,, •i-•" ""'it 7:H '·"'· S•IV~•Y • .,, S11naty: u r•w ft .,., rrct lYt y..,r ttJY '' t •·'"· ll!urdly. t r I •·"'· Sund1v. tl!I 1r,d I c••Y will bt •r•111M It you. C1111 1r1 ll~tn •nhl IO '·"'· Telephones Miii Oron1t Cou"'' Art•• N1r1nw111 Hu~tln•t•n 111cn i nd WtS1"'1"11tr Sin Ctt,..tnlt, C••i•I""' l11cn. 5iln Ju•n C•t;ilriM, 01n1 '•Int. souln L•tunl, L19un1 N•tlltl !~ Reno Blanketed by Snow Nortlier1i California Has Nast y Weather • fh11°toot 1wtll 1nd • mo!ll•1l1 lo MIY'f wl'ld thop ti Ml . Skftl t lOl\f tt'lt bllChft wtfl ttoucty ll'HI dt'Filfy In lht momlnc:t wllh '°'"' Clfttlna In the 1tltr,_.. "'utn ol 1n1 11orl11W11ttrn c:tu•"•• 01 the n1tlon toc11v. ~• 11nH1ion1bl1 mlldne.u Javortd mo11 1r11s from Ille Pleln1 to tl'!e Atttnllt. A 1r1.,.!e•1' adv!1ary w11 11oslti:I ,.,.. t~• mounl1Jn1 ol llfl•lllfo111em Clllf0f'nl1 bf'CIVH ol locally PlelY'!' S/'IOW orlfllno ano blowln~ In 1111IY \'inch. lleno. N•v., "''' bl1nk1rld wn~ an IMh 111 ,now. Rtln cilrnr.t'1td tentr,11 C1l1!ornf'1 • .rMI crrln!e end Yt<v lkll'll l llOW crotr1c1 wl<NIY l(IUfr~ ,, •• \ fr0!'1 lht r>Ol'lho•n Pl1t111 ICrOU lhl Gr11I LllrU ano In!<) M•'nt. 4 NOYtm!Mr httl WIVI "'lrt'r\111 T1~11. Wlln~ rtcord1 In w111trn t-tln. The !...,_....... n!t 11 I I Amnr lllo, lj 11 Lvbboctr •rid ll 11 N.ldllnd on llHd•Y. T1mner1111,..,.. Mklf'• d"""' ·~ ire,,., 7J ;n atrm1rc'()-N;Oo.--fo-N-- 11 Mltml, F11. · Coastcd W"afhe r Mostty sunny tod•'f'. Wffftrfv wl"'lh I 10 u kllOlt tflnl9111 uld ...,." to norftl. ...eJI 11 lo lG lrNb Tlll#rsdly. i'lltfl lodl'I ~"' ..,. co.1111 t1mrier1•11rtt ••"II• ff~ $1 to '1. lnlW ffm!llr1tvrtt fM\ff from 'l to 70. W1l1r lt'"'Cllr1111re '5, S1111. itl •Nlll. l'ld P• WIONl:SOAY St<Ol'ld n1an It :01 1.m, • o Stcand low •;>t '·"" ... THUllSOAY First hlOl'I "'"' ""' .... SlcOtld "''"' . " •. .-.. ,.. I :43 1.11'1. ),, a:Ot 1.m. 2.t "'°' p.m. l.4 ,.,J '·"'· ... , 45 FASHION ISLAND Tradition-filled Ceremony I ·. .i ~~~~s.~~P,~t~ ~~:Z;: ~I only daughter of Quee1 Elizaboth ff , tho bnde away. and '1ti" ild<et oon 1 \l'ed a commoner cavalry captain today Prince Charles, heir W \be tbrOoe who ~ in a televl!<d , tradition.filled ceremony celebrated hil 25th blrtbclaY lollay.' •\ 1 economic cri sis and th reats of an oil Petef and Ann e' • PhUU"' t Jl e that gave Britons a brief respite from Watching fl'911\ t~ other lidt "~ shortage. ' bridegroom 's parents. 'll>e eldet Pbllll The queen and about }>800 other euesta ls an· execut~ve of one ot~ Brtta¥a'• ~pl lciolted on in Westminster Abbey .as the lood comparues. l blonde 23·year-old prtnCess pledged to Anne was clad in e wJtite sl1~ .gown~ "love, cherish and obey" Capt. Afark cut on the princess line with a 'high~ Phillips , 25. . , Edwardian collar and EI i .z abet 1' an~ The wedding "'as televised around the sleeves edged with pearls. Her ·v'tll, o~ world. \vhite silk net was held in place byf a diamond tiara borrowed from her• grandmother ~n Mother EliZabeth.1 Her hair was swept 6acK rorn a cen~ parl. ' .• :_ __ ., ANNE AND PHIUJPS SPQke in glear, firm tones as they exahanged their vows. The princess's only siln of emotion came when she trembled slightly as her bridegroom placed the gold wedding band on her finger. 1 "Those whom God h8th joined together let no man put asltnd~r," intoned Dr. Mi chael Ramse~·. the Archbishop of Ca nterbury.1 at the end of a bri~f ceremony identical to the one used tn Anglican weddings throughout the coun- try. At..the request of Anne and the queen . television cameras "'efe stationed to show only the bride's veiled profile. ''THE PRIKCESS insists on at least some modicum of pr ivacy," the dean of the Abbey, the Rev. Eric Abbot . said before the ceremony. Only a few guests were able to get a close view of the bridal couple during tjie ceremony. They included .the queen, PlllLLIPS WOl\E !he bright scarlet uniform oC bis regiment, the Queen's Dragoon Guards. Schoolchildren got·a holiday and more than .'5.000 cheering, flag·waving Britons lined the wedding procession route on a sunny, cold day. · They seemed to be ignoring the grumblings of 50me -t-&bor party 1$.wmakers, who had urge4 that the wedding be canceled because or Britain's perilous economic state and the posslbili· ty of rue! strikes. Anne and Prince Pbilip beamed and waved to the cheering crowd$ as the Glass ~eoach took them to the Altbey. Philip "'ore the uniform of an adrrtiral of the neet. "She really ldoked lovely, u any bride 'bould do on her wedding day," $aid Jenny Maule, one of the spectators. The vested grey flannel suit is bac~ ' Beltlf looking thin'"' In . RHfonl" lu1ury Worlltdi Aulhorltative fash ion for Fall '73 with its wide la pels, subtle shaping and all-important -· -matchi ng-11est.J:iaadsQJ]lel y r I I ta ilored in Burlingl on orste<lffineweo!Jla1AA<>1---+-- Part ot today's Urbane • Aenewal .. '-ANew Era in Civilized Fashion . $140 silverwoods .. . .... NEWPORT CENTER • • • "UAll WOOL Ttle WH1111•1ll Id.ti.( le ftl\lf l tllllll!CI OI q111l!lyo4Mted "°°'1(tt 111edeotU!f~rlC1'1 ''" • , • ~11 Woot. NEWPORT BEACH • V .S. S11n1111ar11 1111~, w!fld Ind tnow "r1llltd llYtr tlll'I IU11n 1~11 1 m. Moon l lltl t;t) p.m. 11ti •:s1 '·'" 'L--------------------------------------~~-~-.. St'1 10 ~l1 •."'· 11 ·- I • / ' ' I I I ' - ( ' • ' • ' • l 1 DARY PH..OT EDITORIAL PAGE The Last Wet . Winter? The "old town" se<:tion of Huntington Boacll auf· fers a peculiar rredlcament every time the winter rain comes-much o it is under water. Huge lakes form, the largest coverinN up to five acres with a depth or 10 feet. From the sky, 'old town" looks like a slice of Wisconsin. City councilmen have now indlcated~y intend to solve that problem by building a $2' million 'storm drain· age system-a long·needed -project. To do it, they'll have to form a special assessment district so landowners In the affected area can pay the bill. Before the district is formed , however, hearmgs will be held. Such an idea failed once before because a number or homeowners didn't · want to pay the price. This time. some of those homeowners, pnncipally in the southern portion of "old town," have been left out to avoid a re- peal wrormance. The proposed district now cove.rs_5~1l0 acres generally bounded by Memphis Street, Main St.re.I, Beach Boulevard and the Southern Pacific Railroad. If such a district isn't fanned, the area will con· tinue to suffer a winter drenching and as public works officials predicl, there will be property damage from flooding. It seems clear this ought to be the last wet winter spent in "old town." Teen Band Boosters The Fountain Valley High School Marching Band has a problem. The 106·member band would like to be a 200.member band, but it is faced with a critical short· age :---there are more volunteers than there are uni· form s. In addition, the uniforms that the Baron band now uses are falling apart from old age. So the students decided to do something about their problem and raise the money they need for enough new uniforms for everybody. It is not a small task the teenagers have tackled. ' . The 200 new unllorms will coat about $8,000. To date the studenta have staged a car raffle whieh netted them $2,200, which means they still have a long way to go. But the band members do not geem to mind. They are full of enthusiasm and making plans for more fund raising eventa. The musicians are not asking the, taxpayers to fund the uniforms out of scbool funds so local residents ought to be more than willing to support the young people's efforts to solve their problem on their own. Home-grown Desert Children at Golden View School will soon be able to visit •· desert,~rfo"'st, grassland.r, or walk along a stream -just by·•tepping into the acbciol's backyard. The Huntington._Beach ac)lool bas developed an in· novative, enviromnental 11laboratory>' that allows first~ band Instruction about the environment and different habitata. For instance, instead of traveling many miles to see and study desert habitat, or viewing desert slides, Gold· en .View children have an opportunity to spend part of their school day observing tortoises, lizards and diller· ent types of cactus in a sandy environment. The Student Environmental Learning Facility, called SELF, has come about through the efforts of staff and. parents at G~lden View.· Many houra were spent begmmng the proiect, with parents, teachers and chil- dren working on weekends and after school to construct the pond and stream. Now, 100 natural science students from Cal State Long Beach come to the SELF to complete the natural habitats, and teach the children about the environment. Ocean View School District, by way of Golden View's SELF, has again provjded students with a unique, valuable learning tool. -H Foreigta Jtletliods Better "! Nixon Aides Bar 'Public Penance' . Dear Glopmy Gus ·Smog Control and Sanity' Re Gus Nov. 9, here's two more: To the Editor: His Majesty loves to work in front Re the article: "catalytic Converters 'On' "in the Pilot of Nov. 7. \VASHlNGTON -Dooming th e ( ) ~ aairro:::ti~g S:, ::m=t~~ Is this for real? How in the name melancholy private dialogue between his fr . f of sanity can such a tbinfi happen'. EV'ANS No~T .&. u · dog is a aid o ~eUcopters so President Nixon 's lieutenants and con· • 'T J'l.A. EPA administrator Russe 1 Tr-ain's it has a private limousine to drive gressional Republicans is total White · to cam· Da ·d• M B reasoning is aoti.Jiuman in its chilling --p VJ. •• dH knoled thahd . House rejection of Capitol I-Jill's deeply SOW1 . e ac w ges t t e ev1ces d 1 I' b the ......., ... can•"'•'• an .-i~ .., pose a "significant health problem •.• felt nee or pub 1c penance Y \ as Vice Pre!ident. The barrage of recom-~"*"""" • _i:,~ ~ :: lung cancer and cardiac problems" yet -President. mendations from Capitol ID.U. are ,.... • ...., o.. °"" ,... he says delaying requirements "would OuTent negutia· eleventh-hour efforis to avoid the mean throwing off the entire momentum lions ost1!J15ib\y ron· President's resign1.tlon. of the present auto emissions control ,.,.cem hoW much ~11 . Sen. Willlnm Brock of Ttanesaee, a . 11>ft-~ in the White House context. strategy." Nixon shall open hi! _p>nsUvauve and a Nlun \oyallst, Naturally, then, the bard-linen -headed THE PARAGRAPH following clearly files to save his pres-recentIY Wrote''" .the PNlidft · ....... by Ricbard M. Nl1on -are unalterably states that foreign manufacturers have idency. But these kabl I 11-•-•"-~ ....... · h hod ,, MAILBOX Letters from readers are welcome. Normall'I/, writers should convey their 111essage1 in 300 words or less. The right to rcondense letters to fit space or elim'-ate libel i3 reserved. AU let- ters m'Ult itlClude signature and maila ing ad41ess but names may be with- held on request if sufficient reason is appare1tt. Poetry wilt not be pub- lis hed. talks founder over remar e etter outUWNg Wllll 9!")1111' oppoeed to any act of penance. Indeed, come up wit a superior met . Jn necetsary to u.ve himlelf -•1-91-....... .._..a1..1A..-t • 'de bl lhe pl'W!Ol climate of pollution hysteria U n s tated con-. ' --~ -~· ignores COllSl ra y more pubhc dlJclosure not only Of tape it seems that "anything is better than Diego, the need for such a conference country? Each and every round trip from Washington to San Clemente on Air Force One occupied only by hlm and a couple of speech writen consumes no less than 18.000 gallons of fuel (120,@ liquid lbs). His last week's trip from Washing ton to Key Biscayne in <rd.er to visit Bebe Rebozo also consumed. 9,000 gallons or 60,000 lbs. of fuel. Mr. President: Talk is cheap and it's high time you set an examp)e yourself and co_nserved OW' sc~ ~ supply. ' BE'l"I EK S'nLL: just resign aad wt will let you settle down ln San Clemente. It will be much easier for you and much better fer us. ,. BORIS DUZAN ' lgressional dem·ands recordings b'ut of all pra:ldential moderate gestures recommended. by h1I nothing at all". It's time we -the to be held out of town instead of in that Mr. Nlxnn •· documents bearing on Watergate. Leu own l&aff. "masses" -demand an accounting of Huntil]gton Beach should be investigated. somehow coofront Congress. perhaps R' sweeping requests are now being , the pro's and con's of those methods _L AM PARTICULARLY incensed m' To the Editor: . a <;'O~mlttee-wUne~~;--with-a~w-:of-nqotiated-with-the White -House by STAFF PROPOSA~ for a frank_. deemed "good-for-us!!--and-maybe a a'--'"-exp1ahon and contr1t1on. One 1nnuential Sena.ttle~pu~brnli~caunLl~ea~d~e,,rs,,_. _____ prt:vattaliafssion of Watergate with return of sanity and good sense will view of the fact that OOe of rity -fri!nds The other day I heard a ·-au.,, ...... & ~--<·and pro-"Nixon~publica n Senator f~ls . Senate and House Republltans-have·bbtteenn~-OCI=,---:,---:~-'--==-'==--'==-='--who-is a-teacber_Jn_the HunUngWn VD report, ,vii: cal~fomia bas double Mr. NiJton cannot survive unless like BUT TAPES and documenll v.iD not gatherin& dust in the Oval Office for B. f\1 TRAVIS Beach Union High School District ~e-VDTate-m-the-nabon:-()range-CoantY.•---' Henry lf, lhe 12th centUrv Kffig Ol truly satisfy c Ong r 9·1 s . Many wt:elt 0ne-adv1aer, usually a hard-liner. often told me the teachers are always has double the ~IUo_rIDa rate; and England who atoned for the murder Republicans feel the President should is getting nowhere in urging one ~I I ncen.sed short of money for claSS"OOm sUpplies -Laguna Beach has six times the Orange of SL 'Illomaa a Becket by being public-race interrogation from bis legislative try by Mr. Nixon to publicly present and books. I say let's keep the money C.ounty rate. ly scourged, be Mai.es publi c penanCe. peers _ perhaps by lhe Senate his side of the Watergate story. Earnest To the F..ditor: in town preferably in the classroom. 111E PARALLEL with the voting Watergate committee. One Republican suggestions frun Capitol Hill, such as \Vith $3,600 down the drain for a My teacher friend told me yesterday record on ProPQSitioo 1 is strikllig. TIIAT ts anathema to the President and all his advisers. Indeed, he is ig· noring advice from his own staff to make considerably less hwniliating gestures. Thus, whatever agreements are reached between Republican leaders and the White House over disclosure of tape recordings and documents, the basic gap will umal.n Wlabridged a n d Republican sentiment for Mt. Nixon's resignation wUI rise. leader in Congress, in public a total Sen. Brock's, naturall,y go unanswered. conference of the Huntington Beach that one administr4Jor who attended Obviously there is something atavmic supporter of Mr. Nlxon, is privately Rather, the old White House refrain Union High School administrators in San the conference said there was nothing about my habitat. 1be nineteenth -or telling the White Houae the President that Mr. Niml can save himself by accomplished that couldn't be done in is it the eighteenth? -century ls alive must testify because he Is "at the end forgetUna Watergate and turning to other a conference room at the school except and ¥.'ell here. Recently a beach tjt.y of the road" and no other course re-matters is IOUDdlng again. That may Wfcks showing of the film "Deep 11troat" which school superintendent was revealed using mains. explain" cancellation of t.-tr. Nixon's Supt. Jack Roper tossed off as "poor 9::hool funds for a sta.g party showing,' The avowed purpose of call in• Mr._ meeting with his Watergate lawyers judgment" .... indeed! before his school official buddies, or Nixon to testily: to probe lllconsiiltncie. Jn order to deal with the energy "Deep Throat." I had really thought in Mr. Nixon's confusing uplanations crisis. Jt does explain press secretary WE TAXPAYERS pay this rtlan over in my innocence, that the ancient :Dd of Watergate. Beyond the avowed Ron Ziegler's reference to the Watergate $34,000 a year for that kind of judgment! honorable (within limits) institution o( purpose, however, ii the Henry U syn.. "foolishness,'' fully reflecting ~Ir. Nix· ' MRS. RAY HAR11..E'i the stag party had disappeared from tAe The While House's understanding of sentiment on Capitol Hill is even. murkier today than in calmer times. Mr. Nixon's aides interpreted conservative Sen. Peter Dominick's et'iticism or tbe President as reOecting fear about bis 1974 reelec- tion campaign in C.Olorado. In truth, Dominick was saying in public what almost all his colleagues' say privately in the Republican cloakroom. dri>me: tbe feeling Mr. Nlson can survive oo~s own view. social scene. But no. We countians of only by humbllJ1i bl!Dlelf. It 11 here Sul'fer 'Hooked' the shoreline preserve it, as a baroque ., where all hopes a1nk ol agreement IN THE SENATE Rep u b I i ca n museum piece, along with the ac- between the President aid ccmgresaiooal cloakroom, Ziegler's "foolishness" was To !fl.e Editor: companying VD, the shades of an~al Republicans. considered 8 repudiation of Sen. Barry J~L the other day I was surfing vigilantism in the Birch Society, cdl a REPUBLfCAN Senators who still have not uttered a single word critical of ti.tr. Nlxon say privately he must resign once Rep. Gerald li'ord is confirmed . . "IF 'n!E PRESIDENT has to go up to the Hill, groveling, oa his hands ai1d knees, I'd rather tee him Im· pfached," one eenlor Nixon aide told us. A middle-level wbtant put It this way: "Ate we going to go out crawling on our bellies or are we going to go out swinging?" . Those two preaidential IS!lstaols are Goldwater's plea last week t h ;: t _ \vitlt a ·friend ol mine at the Huntington touching addiction to economic snake-oil everybody "cool it." It also sbov.·s that ~ Pier when he \Vas "hooked'~ re~ies. while Mr. Nixon's congressional sup-a fnshennan. The twet-barbed Too bad I'm oo the outs V.'ith Chief porters are down to a precious few, e~ed. itsel£ in his kne'e and required of Police Whats-bis·name; otherwise I'm not much bas changed at the White i~iate med ical atteotioo. sure I could sell blm on setting up Hoose. For the short run, that promises 'llli~ { QUICK glance at the fisherman stocks and pillories in the village square. Mr. Nixoo's continued refusal to display revealed that he was rather unconcerned For blasphemers. They're a menace. any "~akness, much less resigning as 'LoOk, It's eay •• .lttft fooC. about the whole affair !or he casu>lly DAVID A. MUNRO President, even as Republican support • ht foot. , re--threaded another hook and cast out grows thinner by the day . ng •• awn. P leu ecl suggest an ordinance be established To the Editor: Birih. Control Fails When Children Spell Security p*""tlng pier f!Jhlng clo.1tr than !Oil yards outside the surf line. And if this p~es to be dlfflcult to enforce because otef·changes in tide, swell sb:e, etc., per.haps a stationary line or demareation , mlirked by a feature of the pier, itself, &li\Jd be es'!abliJhed. r wU very pleased to see the article by Dr. Paul D. Authur questioning Uoiled Statea.. policy toward Israel. At loog last the voices or reason and compassion are being heard. My congratulations to . the Daily Pilot for having the courq; to print it. d calllornians, San Diego's ~lplent ~ Neil Morgan tells us, "believe to the . CHARLES McCABE~ verge of fanaticism in birth control and small foreign cars, two articles . of faith which must aomehow be ' related." They '" Indeed, Neil Mors•n. 1-Jtmetloas l>l'. forma or birth controL Money, as we do not have to be IN AIL this kind of thinkloi. Morin told, dOC! funny county ls a kind ol melaphor to me things to the way )·ou _,. •• beca I Ii ed ••--I three. think. The fact that 'w.:1 .. U.90 v UR:nl or you want to hold ysars, and beard more damned oelliJh onto what you make and lnh1tman tall: on the brllllinl of gives a decided dllldrm .Into the world Jhan ooe could cast to Iii your opln-believe -and Iii of tltil, marlt JOU, ions. Tfie contrary from the lloftn of '* culluno, lldloo !act or belle! thot from Smltb anti 1enta from Prlnct~ you're never got?g etc. Yet the 'thlnklnc Is the same ~ to score, no ho .v, olher pllllh C.lilornia aubu.bs such as give• you a qutlc contrary cast of thought. . Walnut Cre<k and Piedmont, San Mateo Jn extreme terms, money makes royalists c 0 u n t y, Cannel-Mooterey, Sant.a and lack of It makeJ anarchists. Barbara, Beverly Hills, Palm Springs. In the matter of children, m)'ney has The Morin mentality ..., children in recent years become a mighty factor nega,Uvely. They ani a Uablllty. 'llley In our atutudes. This has followed the cost money. Something like 40 grand geoeral amuence of the upper middle to get a boy to colle11 age, and maybe classes and some of the ordinary middle another 40 grand to 81ve blm a college • educaUon. And .lhero are those hordes cl851, and the ability of man now to of .black snd brown and yellow and ltustralo elfccUveiy the reproductive poor while kids on welfare !or whom I ' . Mr. and P.lrs. Marin personally have to pay. Joe Blow in the Mission pays. too, but with 1-, a '""" or personal Insult. KIDS cost money. Think of how many Poncbes you could have if yo11 did not have six or seven kids, only the two or less prescribed by the lheoreU· clam of the "population explosion." You attn'!' going to lay in a Jot of Lafitte if you have seven brats tearing up the front 1a,.,,, nor make many trips to TabiU. Wbat the Marin min4 cannot un· derlland ls that there are reialively few people in the world who look .. kids thls way. In most cullarlll a largo brood, especially JI bleS!<d with stout sons, Is anything but a liability. II Is, or is thought to be, a way out of poverty. Away lrom the curious Marin kind or thinking, kids are'11r wet, nol an economic nuisance. The Ford Foundotlon and the lndian Government found this out the hard way a lew years back when they put lots cf money and all their upertlse into a big birth reduction program In the Punjab. Tut project railed dismolly in the village OI Khanna, IS de~ in a remarkable study by the soclologl!t Mahmood Mamdani. The message: Nobody Jn the village ls about to restrict the size of bl< family unless it pays to do ao. The brutal truth, so far from Marin and Ford FoundaUon and official Indian government thinklng, is that for poor people, big famlli,. do pay, especially when there ts a prospect of emigration for the boys and the employable girls. MAHMOOD MAMDANI shows !hot ID this particular village, which ls so hke fanning villqes everywhere, tbe only hope for a subltaolial rile Jn IOclal 1Jatu1 ta to have a big family of aoos. 'l'beae coui~ migrate to the city or go to sea and send hack some of their earnings. Or they could work the land for their parenil and so develop some 1mall capital with which to buy more land. Birth coqtrol, In such cireumstances and to such people, Is like ollerlng Sanskrit !wons to ai sandlot baMlhall team. Marin county cannot understand this. Harlem cannot undertand Marin county. I've llved ln both places, and comprehend each a little. What I know Is, money has a lot to do with whether you are for birth control or not. GRANTED, both parties have equal right to avail themselves of the joy of ocean involvement. for neither one is innately "better." But neither party has the right nor should they be allowed .~ Impinge on the per""!"l_sa!etY, ~! _ , tbe other in their own zest for recreation. GREGG RELYEA < Look Who's TalkillfJ To the Editor: Just look and Usten to who ls lecturing to us about. conserving energy -none olher than Richard Milhous N Ison. WHAT 'AllOUT hts (the President's) numerous •vacation jawits across the , Quotes "We didn't want to uJ"Ot all t.hooe peo- ple (paUcnts) who mitlht drop dead ol shock ,\' -Tbomu w. llrowtt, director or compliance coordination and policy ol the Food and Drug Administration, saying the agency plans to keep Sl!el'Ct some future recalls of defective aod potentially deadly medical devices and drugs. MARIS GRAue, ~ OUM .. COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. \Vttd, Pubfisiltt Thomas Kttvif, Editor Barbara Krtibfc1' Editorial Page Editor The edltori&l ,.,...., ot . ..,.. Dat!y _, __ .. Pi.lot 'Setks to lnfonn and stim'ulat• reM:ltts by prnentinc on thla Pll• diverJe•commtnt&ty ·on topics '"of ln- tttest by .)'ndicated columnllts and cartoonists. by ~J111 a fOl'\lm lot' rti.dera' vtews and by ptfflen.UDC this newsp1iper'1 opinklnt and ~u en CUf'T"tnt t~. ~ edltwlal opinlonl ol the O.lly Piiot appou ooJ,Y tn tht 't<thorlal column at thlt 10p ol the pact. Opinm. ~xpmull'd by the l'Ol- umrdab and ct.rtooGiatl: and Jett_. writers att their orwn and no ed.i.,.. 1 i mcnt ol.1hrir W.. by the ~ ! Pilot -Id be -; . Wedncsdll)', Nov. 14, 1973 ' -·-·'-''~l'<i'-'il!~·-N_~_•_m_~_,_1_4~._,q_1_J~~~~~~~O~A~ll~Y~P~ILlP~T_.!!a r-~~~~~~~~~ .... ~~~~.;...;..~~~~~~~~~~....;;;_~~~~~~~~~~~~·~l~~-:~~.,..~~~~~--::':"'~~~~~~~., By Phil rnterlan~I • . I QUEENIE ••Nine o'clock! Lights! Camera! Action!•• ' 'Purple Heart?' Reagan Cuts Self At Turkey Fete SACRAMEl\'TO (UPI) - Gov. Ronald Reagan cut his right forefinger while carving the goli:ien'bro\\'n roast turkey presented to him aMuaily 'bY poultry growers b e f o r e Thanksgiving. .. "Do governors get purple hearts?" Reagan asked Tues- day, blotting the slight cut . with a-j)aper napkin. •:The expert cut himself." REAGAN HARDLY missed a knife stroke because of the cut, continuing to carve slices oC breast meat off the 30- pound bird. The Governor nOticed the cut only after blood began ·to curl around the tip of his finger. He told newsmen he apparently had his finger on the knife blade. 0 n e photographer com- mented it was the first WJusual occurrence at the an- nual event since Reagan became governor seven yeru\ ago . REAGAN REPLJEO, "No, it isn't. The first few years I didn't. try to cut the turkeys. l wrestled with them ." pntil recently, the Governor \\'as presented with I i v e turkeys at Thanksgiving. But the practice was discontinued because of the disturbance the big birds would make. Republica11 Blasts Nixon Press Ames· The Governor's slip of the knife could have resulted from a different carving method he \•:as trying. Instead of cutting the leg off the turkey and carving it separately. Reagan was attemp1ing to slice lbigh meat jrolJ) thi; leg while it -was attached to the 'bird. , ~ . . WASHINGTON (AP) mE DISPLAY Ill blood ap- • ' .. ' • ' ~ . .. t ... ' ' ' ·' ' Presidential press Secretary 11arently didn't disPourage ,the Ronald L. Ziegler, •·a former lunchtime a p p e·'i i t e s of employe of Disneyland. has Reagan's office staff. They managed to tum the White eagerly loaded J)la\es with House into a Disneyland slices from the three birds East." Rep. William J. Scherle provided by .the ~-Turkey (R·Iowa), said in his ne,vslel· Growers Association. 1----Jer-t.o-consf:ituents this_ w.eek. -~R~e,,,a~u~ked E.lmidg,.in'J.1.--~ . ... ; • , .. ' , .. ,, .. .... '1'; ·;ffel : • ;--. . i I ' \ ' Jn an extended comment on of white. meat from the knife M erosion or-"national con· blade .and popped it into his . fidence in the Administration.'' mouth for the benefit of Scherle criticized President photographers. 1--------------------ID--\ • ,,,,,,,_,_, Nixon for cont inu!ng -~ "to rely on the advice of public rela· lions men, all of "tio1n pre politir.a\ rather than z1•0LE• e xperienced political advisers on the \\'hite House staff. Regarded as a conservative. Scherle, who frequentlv criticizes Administration pol· icy. added: "The chief character re· maining, respon sible for mu ch or the present 'tifickey titouse' activity, is Ron Ziegler . . . Crl!n. Alexander Haig; Nixo11·s chief of staff. has a distinguished military record, but in the political \\·arrarc game, the genera l is still a buck private. "Although H.R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichmann are gone, their ghosts still haunt the \\'hi te House," he said. Coeds Irked By Cleanup Cheesecake • HONOLULU (.APl -Liller and cheesecake don't mix, at least as far as University of lia"·aii coeds are concerned. Dozens of \\·omen students have condemned a university· sponsored·postcr which is part of a cleanup drive. The poster sho\VS a cartoon of a bare- brea sted woman dropping her bikini top onto a littered lav.'11 and says. "Come help pick up things other people throw a\11ay." Philip \V. Koehler, facilities management director for the university, said, "I was just trying to fit in with the cleanup theme. !\1ore women are throwing away bras every· day:" Hi sto1·i~ First Solon on Jllatern.ity Leave WASHINGTON (API Rep. Y v on n e Braithwaite Burke. (D-Calif. ), boast$ a first in the U.S. Congress - she is the first member to get a maternity leave .. House Speaker Carl Albert, (I>-Okla. l, granted her lhe t leave which began Nov. 1. Under the rules, a member of Congress must ask for the leave on behalf of his col· league. Rep. Augustus F. Hawkins, (D-Calif.). requested thal Mrs. Burke be allowed the official leave. -- \\11EN REP. H. R. Gross, (R·l<l"''a), heard that A1bert granted the maternity leave. he commented on the House floor : ! "This is a historic first in J the House of Representatives, B ehold the bold 'golds'. .. highly polished metal adorn- ments by 1'-.foner. Tambourine necklace \\'ith seven rows of chains to adjust as you ~ike, 835 Ear~gs, 810 Bangle, 810 fasb~n Je\relry 1~, • . ' • • ' ;. ' •. \ . . 'ti if ' . ' ( 7 ._....,.~ , .. :S..nflP dash in three par~ ~ ' . ' . . . cdordi.nates rby Lady Arro·w Kicky <:oor4inates jn three .•. a 'reall y snappy 'fl~lX Wt go to a Jun~bc_On Qr an afterriQQ.rt (;it'. the rheatre,1 I?' maf~elbus fabric, 'vashable UJc ressa* of tex.rured Dacron® polyester. . . ' Sbo\vn ~'O from a group. All avail:i~Je for sizes 10 .ro 16. Top: French cravat, rectangle pr·fof .. Knife plear; pull-on skier. White ground '''ith 'red al'\d navy print. Match'ing tailored· shire. Two pocket shire jacker '''ich red ground, navy ': and \Vbite prinr, S58 Bottom: chocolate and \\1hitc n1ix featuring a solid1 knife J)leat, pull·on skirt; striped, tailored shirt and a polka. Jotted,. t\VO pocket shire jacker, $58 Blouses Plu.s SANTA ANA SOUTH COAST PLAZA • "' • , • f\. , ' '. ' '···· '· ~' ... . , • • REP. BURKE. 4-0. who is at her Los Angeles home ~ awaiting the momentary bi rth t or· her fir.st child. pla ns to return to Congress v.•hen the second session con\·enes in January. Jn the past <lfficial 1eave had been granted to con- gressional members onlt for pen<inal illness or illness of and I want to extend my .... congratulations to both • .,. ,.. • "L-•· --~---------....1 -1 parties, both to the member -· · • ~~~~~.the speaker ol the Shop Monday thtu Friday, 10:0.0 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. , Bullock's Santa Ana, I Fashi~n Square'. 2800 N. Main Street, Santa na, Teleph?n~: .. ~47-72\ ~ a famHy member. Mrs. Burke's husband is a • Saturday, 10 :00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Bullock's Souch Coast Plaza, San Diego 'Freeway al Brisco!, Costa Mesa, Telephone:. 556-0611 health care consultant. · ' """'""-"-r -·..,."'""-""~i..;....;;..:;a:::n:::.-..._.a::.:. Sunday, 12: 00 noon co S : 00 p.m. ·• , ' ) ')· I I I r I KAY KELLY CAROLYN MILLIKEN Silver Anchor Service~Recog n 1ied . Kay Kelly, C8rolyn ~1itliken in political campaigns both for "Her spirit of a e 1 ft e 1 s and Phil Tozer were tn the issues and candidates and has dedication to her fellow man spotlight at the annual Silver organized coffees for can· benefits oot ooly those s he Anchor Awards I u n ch eo n didates. ~rs.~ 8~1!:1l:h~ ~li~ ·~ sponsored by the Dolphins,· "If you're her neighbor, she Women's Division of the brought you a hot casserole; which is the epitome of the Newport Harbor Chamber of the day you moved in. If goodn_ess found when one Commerce. you're her husband, she raised person helps another." 'Ibe three were honored for your c'hildrcn and kept.your LOV·E--AFFAIR· • community service and joined house. If you're her eo:m· The third winner, Phil a prestigious list of previous munity, you have bcnefitted Tozer, is "a man who has Silver Anchor Award winners immeasurably from all· the had a love affair with Newport which y,·as begun in 1967. things she started,'' the Beach all hia life. He is a Also recognized for· service awatds committee said. humanitarian who never turns was Mrs. Sallie Fleming, who FIELD DIRECTOR his back on anyone who~ received the Orchid 1adyo(lf· Mrs 1!filliken a former pro-his help." . · the-year designition..and; an fessiorial m3t worker :,_Toru:r was a &-17 bomber orchid for !)er· service to the '.specializing in help<>riented pilol d~ W'!'1'1 War II, organization. activities was a Girl Scout and ~t .bis paycheck home Mrs.Kel!T, wflose -speeially--li Id dmlctor·when she -1"ar· .. l0-hiil,wife -fo.buy -a .Jot .. m · is "~!tbIDR, ttarted~'~ ... r:ising· her· family in Whit~ J(ewport Beach, which wu fi~ld.r..ofiml~ wort with tier. .iieir~ place for a home. the ~~Red Cross in her For adtt years she was ,He. ,built . a oom~ert:ial home s~t\!of·New York. ·a voluntetf: worker in a chil'1 ~. ~eet from o~~ boat cRAJ\tER'.:MEMBER guidance ~linic,. ~and !or ·11 a'4 realized ·~lher hfe~ After m0'tliig, t~ BaJ~a~~n years -~e ted _the high school ~&n,restoririg the. ~J)oa 1951' ·she ~~me 8• ctfarter group Ul.her_ ~urPt-_ -· :. "~h~"served as' a director nlenlber of1,lhe Newpo rt Afle'. mov111g to Coro~a.d~l ofL'u;e ~·ean frotect'ive Harbor Service League, which ~t~r 1n 1967, 0}1rs. Milliken ~atlim ·and ,'lS ' .a :'board now is fbe ~Wlior League. ~incd FI~H a.i:1d' soon became miflli>E!r of the Marine Studies Undttber league presidency 1~ executive director. · Ins6tufe ' WhJch 1 p on·s ors in 1960, the Volunteer .Bureau "FISH volunte:ers respond. to ma.line science ~ for was founded . , She also was th e cry ror help from a sick children. ~ ~ .; • active in Juni9r Ebe.II and person. from an el~erly person Tozer helped start the fnt was instrumenj.al in starting who needs a hot meaJ, from Fishing Derby ·to~ be 0 e fit t~e Youth Employment Ser· a m~lher who,,~eed!. heJp on "retarded children, and 'gives vice. • movmg day. said th e his boats to help United Fund ,. . Also a.founder of the.Balboa Women's division. .·campaigns and civic projects -' Philharmonic Association and "~frs. Millilren's . personal "The <lee~ on hia boa.is an early supporter of the ~ml_tme~t t? h~lp111g others are .u his IOlll; the cuStoinln Newport Harbor Art ~1useun(, 1s an lllSp1ratM>D to all w h o in bis business are all h i s she has been invol.ved in t.bc know her, es~y as she gueStt. His splrlt of' ktndneSS Newport Beach United F\J~. has_ coorageousl~ faced very and CQD~ for everyQDe is Mrs. Kelly_ has .been adive 'lU10US beallh problems. known· Ind · reSpected 1he " . . "'L ' " l ' ' . ' -f':AT~· 0T>Y!!~Ji~l, btcdmt lht slim trim flll'SOft thlt you' would like to be. Ochlnex h11 been usecl 1 successltllly b)' 1hOus1nds 1a O¥er tlll country for r• years. G11· rid of 1xce11 r11 ind iliY• longet.· Odrlnex It· 1 llny ttbltt tnd usllr swtUowed:tontalns no dtAftftMJI dru11. No 1t1rvln1.1 Ht SPtCitl exe1clst1. Odrlnex. Plan cos.it Sl,Z, tnd lh1 llr1• 1eonomy size $5,25. r1 You rnmt lost qly flt or Y'Ollf mOntY wilt bl"lttundtd, No qutsllons 11ktd. Accepl no substllutes. SOid with n11t 1u1rtntee lrti le~ ~dth 11 lhe com· muni 'Ho liU _ .. ca'lled • the t t· maa jn"Ba}boa.""" · ' • I ' ' Coiffures ~ ' t-' • ~ Run Wild?.: .; A rare 4-point deer 1 has j>een spott)d in the <loWlltown lrea of . Salem. She 1~ pro-. , . tected1 · e v e·n·'lbou'gb this is the season for bargain \lunters. Actu· ' ally sh~ Is a manne-, ' quin :Si.nding hi front • • of a 'ooit .rack. ' . .. • Give.A · Hickoq Fuma. ~~ -This GhrillmM · For fioliaay-snacl<s' ana patties, nothln·g beeta • CHEESE B/\LL's distincli¥• blend of ch-and choice ground nuts. Toppeawllh a-bright' nod cherry, a ~4 oz. CHEESE BALL Is only $1 .98 Cheese Balls arc Not Ilccommendoa' far Malling. •c·ct•~ .... ,,.,., :JI' •, .. DF'DNIO WESTCLIFF PLAZA 17tti ......... """"' .... It 642:.otJJ " . . . • ' . 1 . . ~· ( . .. ~ . . . . . . . . • • ' I ' 8VER $200,000 WORTH OF FINE JEWELRY ELRY ROBINSON'S NEWPORT ONLY 253 TO 503 OFF A J-UST-IN~TIME-FOR-CHRISTMAS SALE OF BEAUTIFUL THINGS! • GATHERED FROM ALL ROBINSON 'S JEWELRY STOCKS, AND OFFERED ON·LY IN NEWPORT. BUT YOU HAVE • .JUST 'FHREE DAYS TO MAKE YOUR SELECTIONS: THURSDAY, FRI.PAY, SATURDAY. THE COLLECTION IS VALUED-AT MORE'."'THAN $2 00 ,000 , . . INCLUDING MANY ONE-OF -A-KIND PIECES. REGULARLY $15 TO $1200. COME EARLY FOR BEST· SELECTION! ROBINSON 'S FINE JEWELRY . I I .... :.P:f'f. 'T11 t s ... 'Tll I s.t. 'TH 6 2 FASHION.ISLAND THRIFTY °""'· "" Ol'ift1l!,,.T \lflff(\ NEWPORT CENTER • .-' l • • • • • • • ' ~· , : t , ) ... • 644-2800 • ., • • • r Cheese comes to -the holiday table in many shapes: gouda disc, appetizer puffs, herbed ball and sesame bar. "\ Say 'Cheese,' Wa ·tch Guests Smile Hot and cold cheese appetite and there's never any concern teasers get any party off to about leftovers . .a flavorful start. Best of all, An~ what makes these so rione of them are difficult to desirable -nothing but the prepare. A most outstanding pure and simple basic dairy recipe is for the Unbelievably -ingredients of a hot cheese Good Cheese Puffs. sandwich. It's the finesse in TheSE: melt in your mouth which they go together that morsels are ones to make turns out the delectable pUffs ahead and freeze. Then pop Ai understudy to the star them into a OOt oven for less attraction add a baby wheel than' ten minutes and you have of Monterey Jack cheese and hot · hors d'oeuvres. h-fake a savory cheese ball coated plenty ·because you take them decqratlv.ell' with walnut! and directly from fret:!zer to 'oven parsley. And for the quickest and easiest of all, there is the texture and flavor contrasting Sesame Cheese: Bar. With ideas like these at hand you'll have no excuse for not ~ ing beyood the chips and dip· routine. UN~ABLY GOOD ESE PUFFS 'h cup b<Itler (I cube) 1/4 . pound M~terey Jack cheese, shredded I (3--0unce) package cream Place in freezer. When Tarragon, onion and dry cheese frozen ren1ove to plastic bag white wine trwfonn cheese 1 pound loaf unsliced bread and store in freezer . and butler into a delectable To l bak·ng cheese ball. For party oc-2 egg whites, beaten .. sheet :Jebakea~~ ~~ d~ casions coat with finelY chop. Melt butter and cheeses oven 8 to 10 minutes or until ped parsley and walnuts. Over ~t water. Meanwhile_ cut cheese buffs begin to brown. HERDED rmr1rm BALL bread mto cubes, about 1-mch Makes atx>ut 3 dozen. "~ square. Measurements for these iJl.o 1 cup. butter · When cheese is melted, stir gredients are a matter of 1 l"!:!:!-gr~~ Jack to combine and fold in beaten taste. When the party is small ""~ egg v.'hites. Dip bread cubes ·do the same thing using a l/, cup ~ green onion into cheese mixture. Place on 3-ounce package of cream lh teaspoon t arr a g on • tray. ,__cdvered_ with.,.~.J1axt•L ... ~e. · crumbled = "'°"'0 • ·-~ --'kcup dry-ollite wine -·• paper. SESAME ·CllEESE BAR.. Cllopped walnuts 1 (8-0unce ) package cream Minced parsley cheese · Beal butler until soil and :J tablespoons soy sauce fluffy. Add cheese, onion and 2 tablespoons t o a s t e d tarragon and beat until blend- sesame seeds ed. Gradually. beat in wine. Sliced stuffed green olives Divide cbees.e in ball and ·chili Appeases Appetites , If your dinner table is sur· rounded by a number of grow- ing teenagers, all of them with blessedly lusty appetites, keep a good supply of chili powder on hand. Prick cheese with fork and !orm each half into a ball. blanched almonds oil. Add reserved onion and Bring to boiling point; sprinkle first v.ilh ha.If of soy Coat balls with walnuts and Rehydrate onion and garlic garlic; saute for 3 minutes. reduce heat and sinuner un-. sauce, then with sesame parsley. Makes 2 balls, about in water for 10 minutes; set Add broth from fish (about covered for 2 minutes stirring seeds. Press in sliditly to hold 1% cups each. aside. 1 cup), bread crumbs, chili occasionally. Pour over fish. in place. Sprinkfe with re-Cheese balls may be frozen . In a Dutch oven or a large powder, paprika and cumin; Garnish 4 portions. with remaining soy sauce. Garnish Wrap in transparent wrap or This blend of capsicum pcir- pers, cumin, oregano, garlic and salt -sometimes also ground cloves and allspice - is what makes chili con came so popular at school cafeterias and snack bars. heavy skillet heat 3 table--stir well. parsley Oakes. if desired. with sliced olives. foil and freeze . spoons ol 11/e oil. Add1--------------------------------'-----I rehydrated onion and garlic; Chili powder is a convenient and po~ar seasooing for some of the more economical sour<1!S ol protein : dry beans or peas, cornmeal cmcoctions, cottage cheese, processed American cheese, c a n n e d tuna, frozen fish sticks, eggs and hamburger. Party Picadillo is a deliciously r I av ore d ham- burger mixture to serve a dozen portions. It can be lad- )~ over rice of m~ potatoes or used to fill tomatoes, tacos or green pep- pers. It's a great main dish for after-the-game suppers. Fish in Chili Sauce makes about four portions and is an ideal 1nain dish for the family. PARTY PICADILLO .i~ cup instant minced onion 112 teaspoon instant minced garlic ~·. cup u'ater 4 tabl espoons olive or salad oil. divided 3 pounds ground lean beef 1 ca n ( l pound 12 ounce) toma toes. broken up 2 medium-si1.ed cooking ap- ples. peeled , cored and coarsely chopped 112 cup raisin s {optional) '~ cup sliced stuffed olives 1 tablespoon chili powder 2 teaspaons salt 1 can (4 ounce) slivered saute for 2 minutes. Add growld beef, half at a time; saute until browned. Add tomatoes, ap pl es , raisins, olives. chili powder and salt. Bring to boiling point. Reduce heat and sim- mer uncovered for 1.0 minutes, stirring occasionally. In a small skillet heal re· maining 1 tablespoon,oil. Add almonds and saute for 3 minutes or until lightly brown· ed. Stir into beef mixture just before serving. Serve with tacos and rice, if desired in 12 portions. FISH FllLETS IN CHILI SAUCE 2 tablesJlOO!lS instant minc- ed onion y, l"3SJlOOl1 instant minced garlic 2 tablesixions water 1 dli.cken bouillon cube 1 cup boiling water Ill pounds fresh or frozen and thawed fish fillets 2 tablespoons olive or salad oil 1 cup soft bread crumbs 1 teaspoon chili powder 1f.i teaspoon paprika 1,4 teaspoon ground cumin Hehvdratc onion and garlic in waie.r for IO minutes; set aside. In a large skillet dissolve bouillon cube in water. Add fish fillets. Cover and simmer for 10 minutes or until fish flakes easily when tested ~1ith a fork. Remove fish to a hot platter and keep warm. In a medium .skillet heat Bean Happening Save the cooking liquid to add to soup or a sauce. SAVORY GREEN BEANS I pound snap beans 2 tablespoons butter or margarine ~2 teaspoon \Vorcestershire sauce lf4 teaspoon garlic salt Tip beans and u·ash in cold u·ater ; cut into 1 -i n ch crosswise diagonal lengths. Tum into a 2-quart saucepan and add l inch boiling water. Boil, covered; just Wltil beans are tender-crisp -about 10 minutes; drain. Add remaining ingredients and stir until butter melts. ~iakes 4 servings. THE FISH MARKO (D•' ol) (I•• I •11) WITH THIS COUPON I P..I. 4 01. C:MNISM (11· I "~ GAME HEfllS ........................ 109 .. . (D• ~) f'lllSN IOAHO RAINtoW (I> -<I} TROUT . ,~ .. 89• ... I> ·••I) f'AS:IN SWORDFISH ........................ 199 LI . Ii> •I) o,_ 11 0.111. te 6:00 '·'!'· s.t. 11 te l:JO ''11) ~ '11) 145 E. Broadway, Costa Mesa I• ·<!) .&..!..:..:.·.:.•i...!:..:..:..!.A.._L.=_.t._d. ==-=•=A===-==•=--- ''We think . Ameri ~ can woman should have the opportunity to discover ...,, MJB Stuffing Plus." The savory 15 minute side dish with a touch of Wild Rice. ·- 1& Oooc: ('r )c·· , . ~· .. , """(.. ... , ... , . . , ~· .,. '"( . \·{' , ., \·~-, "I' f \·f \ ( ·. . , ·-· . ·,.,.,.·...,,,·,,_,I· '.,,,-·,_-·...,, ... ·-.,/\ '. ,,,-\ .... .,'"-''>,,," 1-.--------~------·,----==::::;;:;._J I ' • • . . . 1 • I , + ' I ' . ' ... \. • ~ ..... ,~ s1.•, ' MAblT IASllT, YOUI ,AllY ft.Ami HIADQUAITRS flOI Mh' llSTM OCCASION. A LAlOI YAlll1Y, WI ALSO TAIL.GI TO YOUI SPIQACA110NS CONNOISSIUIS CHOtCI, AND Aimil ASIOltM8ff Of HAM, TUlm, IOAST .... AND A OOUIMm SILKTION Qll THI MOST POPUW CHllSI wmt YOUI CHOfCI Of POTATO SALAD OICOUSlAW. 1filt,_ LIVE MAINE LOBSTER "" '6 M~~; . .l~ . EVERY DAY FULL SERVICE ··_ SEAFtlOJ)!. -~ . ·' t FINE SELEniON OF DELICATESSEN REMS FULL SERVICE LIQUOR & WINE DEPT. FOi UGIHS, W•S , FIOM AIOIND TIE WHLD IVll WOPal8 WHAT AMOUNTS »e ICINOS Of UQUOI: TO MAVI ON twe fOI YOUI PAITYl 01 If YOU MUn SUYI DD WM WlfMIHP. WI tNVITI YOU TO OUI SPIQAI. SllYtCI UQUOtl COUN1ll Wlftll YOU'Ll Ne A COUllTIOUS, KHOWLIDOIAIU PIUOW TO HUI YOU WITM TOUI llYl.IAQI SlllCTtONS. HFI WAITING 10 111¥1 YOU. COMI IN AND TIST HtM. -... : AROUND TIE WORLD ~~~~~-··~~~~- FINE SELECTION OF HEALTH FOODS ITIMS AVAii.Aili ONLY AT 1111• TWO S10DSi 1150 11¥111 AVml, lllWPOIT llACI 2975 IA-1 ILYD. STA s .. a .... _ .. I • ' • ( I 1' 1 ' I • • ! Today's Final "'N. Y. Stocks ' -VOL. 66, NO.' ?18, 6 SE<;TIONS, ~1°'4 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1973 N TEN CENTS I . . ·- I By )IUD! NIEDmUIKI Of "' Delrr """' IJ'-H If you are an accident lcoldDfl fer a place to happen, make It happen at Davidson Field Friday night: · With three Ore trucD, an ambulance, a helicopter· ahd police officers in squad cars and on rqotorcycln concentrated all in ope~ pJace, you couldn't pick a better spot. 1' .'(hey will be staOOing by for a show by "theCosta Mes.a High SchOQI Marching foEaseVp On Ticket$ By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Ot ... O.llY ...... Stiff r ~ )>etween hajves ol lhe football i41De with Fountain Valley. ~i a riot is not expected, according 10: band_ditectDr Earl Treichel, a 34-year- old' Cecil B. DeMllle-type who has orCbestr&teei the sirens and red llglib of. ~~rt Beach'• Ure aQll police def;~ts. into a spectacula r called "E~ergency Services in.A ction." ."l~~!!R ~an ~xciting ahow," Treichel· pron;JS... "Newport Beach Is bringing ,. . out just about every type of equipment it has ... The sh0w starts out with a fire truck spraying chemical foam all over the north end of the field. "It will di.Sintegrate,'' Treichel assured. "When I first hea~ about this fOam I had visions of the whole football team going into ihe whlte stuff and never returning." Then there will be a demonstration of the fire department's snorkel unJt, a sit-atory ~evice u'sed by fir~men to Dlalident' Anaheim policetnen decided Tuesday that"'"Offlcer Friendly" would · ~more..helJ>,.ln wlnolng.thelr.Jl<iy..di>'1lll!L..._ with the city· than· "Super Cop." 'Members of the Anaheim Police Aaodatloh (APA) voted to ease up on writing tickets for moving violations in the city for 30 days or until the city enters Into what lhe APA feels are "good faith" contract lalks. If · the dltcretlonary action by patrolmen re;1u,lts io a~ near halt in traffic citaUons. the city could lose up to .-ooo )JI revenue it earns each moath trom payment ol ftralllc fines. :Iii< lalelll ,tactic 'h; ·jlit officers, dubbed the "Olflco. Friendly'! apprMC!I, is exactly tre oppoahe ·of. an alternative plan of action cllldooed. Ill days ago -the Super <4 -· . -. l ·::'Ille ,Super ~ ',i.tn P!'ovi<led fflr mua Uckctlhp Iii Ille dty Iii-mn tlie - minor YloladOlll In 811 -to get the pe<lple to · lik die dty • to &et the ~llce off their lilcu. ';!be new ooune, of action would permit qlfiC!'rt to use ttielr own dlscret!On In 1ti:ipping motorlail for moving vk>laUons arid then lelttng them off with only ·a warning and no ticket. · Tbe Officer FritndJY approach got the eo-ahead from 100 members ot the 260- mj!mber APA 1t a rally in Pearson Pfrk. But not everyone there liked the Mlea. Several association members voted agaiJll t the IO ticketing idea becaUM th~y claimed It would lower the city's law <enforcement standards a o d jeoparillze l~e and property. IIbe officers argued that the Officer Friendlf attitude would give drivers a lll"'llS< to ·~ through the city, threat~qg uv .. and property. City councilmen in ADahelm have mused lo budge from their final offer to the pollcemen, which calls for a e.i5 percent pay bike (or the llrsl y•ar afid sl1 .1per~t. in the second year of a ,two-)'Ul\ contract. Patrolmil!li are demanding seven per· cent hitee ~ years on one-year con- tracts w1th aome fringe benefits not bffUed by the dty. . The counal 111d ~penlng pay negotia· Uons would aerve DO purpose and would be unfair 14 other city cmployes wbo hive already agreed on coatract.s. - A meeting had been requested by \f)e APA'• •attorney with tbe city erianager today to discuss the statua 'If the pay lmpaase. Alaoclatlon •J!Okesmen aald they do not feel the 'approach ol -tiUng fewer Uckets will result In disciplinary. action beca05e It Is a d.iscrctiooai'y adloo. • But as with the Super Cop .Jdea, . the APA ha! voWed tO' take" ari lmmedia"' •trike vote u any of tis member olficert are disciplined. , . . . . In another action durin& the rally, APA membeia voted-not to volunteer to do aecurily work during off-duty houn· at the Anaheim Stadium, Anabelm Convention Center and Disneyland unless membei:s are ordered to do It and paid time and a ball. THIS AD DREW . ...., -. 100 RESPONSES -·The la#)ltr i ppea1ed• to ihe Daily filol. He asked , li~vo lib ad ~ b«auoe It drew 100 res~. . ..:. .. r ~ $CllETARY !or" Laguna Ntcftl Law-•ofllct, Eiper •· pn!I. llulleJ t.Ct. aome cyp. i"I flljng. receptloo It' tranoorlbq, )'IUI consider '"' Plitt time,' (Pbaht No,) , . . . Naturally be found tbe ucretary be netded before ...,..Ung tie id, What , ii ft }'OU're looklnc for~ ~blbly a )'all}'. Pilot ad C8ll help you !Ind II, her, ~m. whltner. ~I the dkect line to r6oulli Ill the Dally Piiot, ~ ' • ' . . . ' i:tOflal Wedding UP'I Tlf.,,,.... Princess Anne and her new hu':>band, Capt. Mark Phillips, leave Lon· don's Westminster Abbey following their wedding ceremony· today. (Story, Page 4.1 • ' Rl(inners Loaded Down, • 1 . >. To Meet in Afwrnoon Blaming it 'on th~ "sheer volume" of woik, Ne)VJ>Ort Beach planning com· mtsaioncrs Thursday will begin their reaUJar meetings and public hearings lb mid-.alt~moon. da this week are a series of proposed zone changes I&beled "hoasekeeping" measures by the city staff. They would , estfbli!h planned com- munity zones on properties to bring ~ay's session, and an future ~$., will begin at 3:30 p.m. In 'city•.haIJ: · zoqfng intp_;ooqferm.a~ with the new general ~11\11-' , ' • <li>ih.rii.Wionen 'will take a dinner b~\ a.bout 5 p.m. and will reconvene af_'l.R·l"t to continue their bllSincss. '~iltant Community Development Oi.cector James Hew1cker explained the -reasons for the change. He said m~eUngs of the commission have regularly· been 1asting longer than the 11:30 p.m. curl•'< they set 1.,.,.. the_mselves more than a year ago. Ana,. he Hid , the commission hu· beeii . Q'teeUng every week so it simply cai\'t fit addiUonal meetings into ita ICl!edille: ' · "We've been golng as late as mid- night." ·Hewtcker sakl, "and still been unatile to complete the work. Now, with the pressu.res to complete the general plan'; We'v,, had to start meeting every week " '7:M.. fleceMlty for afternoon miti~ings ~ad· illO been talked about by Newport B"(flCb city councilmen, but so far they hllve bilked at the Idea. SQ.me .officials polnt out that It i!t 1nrlot0l'lvenlence for the public to attend meetings in the aftemoon. Others say ll 1a just as lncoovenlent for members of the public to alt in council chambers un~I afler midnight Mooday'1 ~tty council meeting ended oborUy alter mldnlglll. On the plaMers' initial afternoon agen- ' A propos&I condominium development (See PLANNERS, Pafe· I) Ciiy Council Backs Nixon. ' 1be seven-member N e w p o r t Beach City Council bas voted unan- imodsiy tosupport President Nixon during' the 'domestic crisis" caused by Wattrgate-related mailers. Tbe council ret0lutlon said no evidence proving the President 's 1u1Jt has been bro)lght forward and added "polltlcal advantage lhquld not be IOUfht at the expense of encouraging doubt and Su.!piclon toward the nation's highest office." The c.vuncil also said members of the news media~ whom the Prestden.t attacked during his last news conference, ;1hould "place greater emphasis on poelUve, fac- tual, and balanced reporting.'~ Tbe rtt0lution, 'PIS$ed •r.tllnday, WU lllg(etted by ~ Paul Ryclcoff of Balboa la~ I douse fires in tall buildings and get cats out of trees. 'lbat's when Treichel figures an ac- cident will happen. Someone is sure to fall out of the snorkel buc~et, be thinks. "And tben the helicopter will descend from the sky and train its lights on the poor, injured fireman who is running around in a daze, and the ambulance and police will rush to the accident, and they'll pick him up and roar off with sirens and lights." I Treichel saya he might jU4l have his band strike up a few appropriate tunes if everything turns out• according to his vision. These would be tunes like "Light ltfy Fire,'' the theme from Hawaii Five-0, and rhaybe "Up, Up and Away" while the choi>Per is whirling around. His band is in sharp form , having won 10 trophies in recent competition "It's an amazing record because we have never wan a trophy in the 13-year history of the school/' he say,s. The Pt.1ustang Band has won trophies every time out this year. including awards at the Newport Lobster Bake Parade, !he Los Angeles County Fair, the Fountain Valley Halloween Parade, and contests in San Bernardino and Glendale. 1 There will be a fiery finale to Treichel's halftime extravaganza. Drum "majorette Donna Harold will perform with a £laming baton as a fire truck roars up and puts the flames out with CC>-2. \ Judge Rules iri Cox Firing r Dismissal Illegal From Wire Services WASHINGTON -Federal Judge Gerhard A. Gesell ruled that Acting Attorney General Robert H. Bork acted i!legally in firing Archibald Cox as special Waterga.te prosecutor. (Related stort'es, Page 3.) ' ~The ruling rolloWed a hearing, in Wliich it was made clear that Cox, who returned to his job at the Harvard University Law School after being fired Oct. 20, does not want the job back. Welfare Aide Blasts Law.s As '0'1tdat~d' By JOIDi ZAl,LBR Of .. DlolfT ,.,, ... ,,... An Orange County welfare officer ~t­ tackei:I the nation's welfare 18w8 Tuesday as being outdated, terribly unfair, and sometimes "destructive'' to thousands of needy families. "Our welfare, laws date back to 1935 with the original SOCial Security Act," said John Foster, director of welfare programs in coastal and ~tral Orange County. "They badly need lo be rewritten, but since C.OOgress turned down the Nixon administration reform package, t don't see much hope for improvement in the near future." Foster especially attacked one welfare provision that makes it possible for an elderly person living alone to draw a higher monthly welfare payment than some small families. "That's completely cr~zy,'' Foster charged, "but the Legislalure got 1be idea that a single, elderly person was a good type of person who should be given mqre money. "But somehow the Legislature seemed to think that a welfar:e family, which may have illegitimate children or a divorce, is not as good and shouldn't get quite t~ same money," Foster said. Foster alSo complained bitterly about laws that require a married man to leave his family in order to make his wife and children ·eligible for welfare payments. "If the man is living with his family, there's no way the family can collect any mon ey -whether the man is employed or not," Foster said. "But the minute the man leaves, the• family is eligibl e for aid. So we've got a situation where a man may be (See WELFARE, Page 11 • Gesell issued the ruling on a suit Gesell o.verruled arguments by the brought by a Ralph Nader-backed group Justice Department that the case was which contested on constitutional grounds n\ade moot...J>y Cox's public statement the firing of Cox by Bork the night that he did not want the job back. of Oct. 20. • "The discharge of Mr. Cox precipitated Atforney General Elliot L. Richardson a wides"pread concern, if not lack of and Deputy Attorney General William confidence, in the ad ministration of -n. -Ru cKelShaus -ootnliad-·reruSed-.iif--jlistice. '' Gesell· safd iii liiS'fuhng.-· order by President Nixon to carry out · Gesell based his ruling that Cox waii: the dismissal, and Richardson resigned fired illegally on the ground that Rich- and Ruckelshaus was: ·fired. Botk, then ardson issued a regulation stating that solicitor general, carried out the order. {See FIRING, Page-%) Cla111111er Clamor ' .. ·'F~ 'Irks lf up,tington Woman . ,t\ ~ '1:, . .. By JIILAllY'KAYE Of "" Dloll't P'llol ,,.., Llfeguards at Huntington Beach say 'cliimming is a good, cheap way to · get lood. Mrs. John Hudak disagrees. Her clarq.· ming expedition last Salurday, which in.- eluded her husband and Uve children, resulted in a citation f o r illegal clam· ming expedition last Saturday , whi ch included her husba nd and five childfP.n, resulted in a citation fdr illegl clam- ming. She faces a possible fine that could run a.11 high as $150. I "We thought we were going lo ~et one, nice inexpensive mel'll for our family ot seven," said the Huntington Beach · woman. ... k "'"'"""'......_ Deil't "'"' ,,.., P'llot• SIZfNG CLAM '-U it fits in· side horseshoe dev.ice attached to clamming fork, you'd bet- ter )lUt It back. "We don't have $150 to pay for clams. It's ridiculous," she said. Mrs: Hudak and her famil y. along v.i th several hundred others over lbe \veekend, were lured to the beaches by the exceptionally low tides. While many clammers are old hands at the art of digging, scooping up and measuring the little shellfish, many of those on the beach were novices, 3nd had fail ed to fully inform themselves of the state Fish and Game Depart· ment's rules for taking clams. Mrs. Hudak knew she had to have a license, knew the clams must be over four and a half Inches in diameter and knew she could only take 10 clams per person. She did not realize. however. that she needed a special clam measuring device. She used her hand to measure. "We really thought all our clams were the legal size, and we started to ask the state parks · ranger if they were okay," said Mrs. lludak. "But when he measured ours, 19 of the 35 were undersized, and he gave us a citation for that and for no t having a measuring device," she said. Beacl1 Trustees to Give California Fish and Game authorities and state parks rangers, emphasize it tS.e CLAMMING, Page II Coast - Police Film Information . By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tll9 0.ll't P'llot Stiff HWltington Beach Union High School District trustees have approved giving city police all information now known about an August conclave of schoolmen where the X-rated sex movie "Deep Throat" was screened. More than 200 penom turned out at Tuesday night's board ri'leeting. Mo3t were there because. of U., "Deep ThrOit" lnckieot. The police investigation •1 0 reportedly allempt lo dctermioe U aJ\)'thlng Jllegal occurred when district admlnislraton showed the sizzling sex flick at a San Diego meeting. i During the board meetins, the mayort of bolh Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley, plus others, either defended or condemned trustees for their recent ac- Uon In not ettemptiog ·1o fire Superln· tcndent J•ck Roper over the Incident. The incident first became public about • one month ago when police confiscated a videotaped copy of the film from a low ranking district adminl.strator. '1.1. that Ume, it was learned that the sex film had been shown at a three-day 'conference of 46 district ad· ministrators held in Saft Diego in August. IL was originally tlJouCllt that the videotaped version bad been copied on dfstrict equipment but tbe film 's owner. Gle n Daley, reportedly told board members he hall l>Oen given the tape at a convention In Las Vegas by a rep.r:esentative of a school audio-visual contracting finn. Daley .allegedly told board members ht does not remember the aalesn1lln·s name nor the company he represcntccl: Truslees aal~ they did det•nnlne that screentn&• of the lllm, which took place In Roptr's suite It the Half Moon IM !See X·RATED, Pll' II • Orange Weather Continood ,...cool, suMy , weather is on the agenda for Thursday, according to the weather service, with highs at the beaches in the mid.(i()s rising to 68 inland. Over- night lows 56-58, I '\Sllfi· ' O l t \ \" I n Richard Nixon's hometown of \YJ1itt fer --Watergate IJOt. 1tiithstanding -tht people are stilt behind him. See 1torv. f'o ge 26. Al YMr l'"ltt ) ... 11"' II L,M. ••~ I Calll•rlll• 14>11 C•rMr '"'"' 12 Ct1,tlll.. ff.n c~mlc1 M Cros•wtr• M DNllll Ntllct• It •M......... • Mnl" ..,, Mvttuit ..... a ffaHIMlll Me1n t.11 Or•"" C-"1' 1•11 l~lvlll hmr !t ,,..,.. »41 °'· l tellltrtll• ,, lltdl ..,,....,,, #o11 Efl"ltMI P'•H t-1 Tt\tY.... ,M• 'illanct J:WI , ... "'-..... 1• .......... ,. tM ....... ic. tl·ll ) Tl>tllt,.. ...,, """'"' . Wff!w'1 Htwt ,._. Wtrttl ......_ '-IJ • • • • ~ O"'ll 'r PILOI • WtdntsdQ", Novrmbtr 14, l97J --- Unit Fails .To Suppo11 ' Boat Tax The Joint Harbor Committee refused Tuesday to support a proposed tax on -au Ne\l.'l)()rt Beach b o a t owners with pri\•ate slips as a nieans of financing pump-out facilities for sewage holdlng tanks. The committee had been requested to support a fee or tax on boat& in private slips by a coalition of operators from Newport Harbor's marinas. The marine operators, who are re- quired to provide pump-Out racllilles for their customers by J{lll. 1, said that their facilities house only SS percent of the boats in the harbor. The remaining 45 percent of the boats, they claim, might continue to dump sewage in the bay unless a public agency imposes a tax to finance pump-out facilities for boats in private slips. Committee members showed little sympathy for the request. "You're asking government to step in and I'm not sure that the government has any business in this pro~em," said Carl Kymla , a Newport Beach City coun- cilman who represents the city on the committee. '!I. think. that someone who keeps his boat in a private slip in front of his borne will be Jess likely to dump his sewage anyway ," said Frank Robinson, \Vho represents the county Harbor Com- mission on the committee. OCC Hoinecoming Royalt y "'"'"""'""""'' The Joint Harbor Committee advises the city and the county Harbor Com- mission on matters related to Newport Harbor. One of these students may be named king and another queen during the 1973 Orange Coast College Homecoming Saturday night when the Pirates host Mt.. San Antonio College. King candidates 3re Ric Case (left) and .Dennis. Sheehan. Queen candidates are (bottom from left) Carol Davis, Eileen Leonardi, Joyce. Wirth and (top from left) Carmen Ballaca.r, Becky Cookson; and Barbara Nelson. Not shown are. q~een candidate Adele St. Leger and king candidate Alan Ben-ven1st1. F rom Page 1 X-RATED ... Newport Shoppers Calm on Shelter Island , were done on district _.equil)mebl. • At the special poarit meeting wliicn-1 --1$71-ftfi(J .A ----n~h . had been called to adopt format charges ll ~"UV' TSOn a -,;;rn,- aga1nat &per In preparation for a public ' 4'1V hearing on his firing, trustees did an abrupt about face and dropped the pro-. . . -ceedings against the superintendent. . Shoppe.rs intent on bargat~·hllllti~g r.em~rked, explaining the location and Roper made a public apology for the v.ent calmly about their business in hkeh~ of swift, heavy damage. incident and declared the matter "resol•·4 a Newport Beach department sto re Tues-Investigation was continuing today into ed." day as firc!"en . battl~d a biza.~re $4,000 what Capt. Kratz said are uncom{irmed The police came into the picture again arson-set fire mvolvmg a display of reports that a whole series of identical earlier this month when they indicated dresses for teenaged girls. fires have been set in what he called they were conllr . ..;ing their investigation. The 2:30 p.m. blaze at the J .C. Penney a ~ajor California departm'ent store . Since confJBCating the film, Huntington Company. 24 Fashion Island, quickly cha.in. Beach vice officers had not Intruded destroyed 80 long, granny-style dresses lnto the matter, saying it was an internal and also caused structural damage to problem for the school d!strlct. the store's Junior Department. A week ago, Lt. Robert Rinehart, A mannequin on which one of the head of the department's Vice and dresses was displayed atop a rack was lnteUigence Unit, announced that he bad also destroyed in the flames, lying af. made a formal request of the board terward amid the charred rubble and to release to him their findings in the grotesquely resembllng a charred body. case. "I~ looked pretty strange," remarked He said the department was in· Newport Beach Fire Department Capt. vestigating possible criminal activttr John Kratz, who was in comman<'l of within the high school district based firefighters on the scene. on allegations from several unidentified He said busy shoppers appeared sources. curious, but added that the mopup opera- His statement partially supported a lion by hls men faUed to deter them remark made by Board President Gej>rge during the pre-Christmas buying. Logan after the Roper apology. Only one individual appeared bothered At the time he said, ''The publicized by the firemen's work and after incident (the showing of "Deep Throat") evaluaUng the incident, Capt. Kratz said was one of several on which the board he is an arson suspect. based its decision last Thursday (to He said the man approached and start proceedings to fire Roper). repeatedly questioned firemen in almost "In my opinion, it was the least signifi-a taunting tone about why they were cant of all the charges." cleaning up the mess and debris and It was learned that Police Chief Earle not letting store persoMel do it. Robitaille had sent a letter to b o a rd Investigators said they could find no members requesting information they evidence of what caused the sudden had turned up during their investigation blaze, whlch triggered a sprinkler system of "Deep 'Throat" and related incidents. overhead that prevented the flames from Sources have indicated that most of spreading. the work in the investigation was done The g a 11 y colored mercllandise, by Deput.y County Counsel Spencer however, was destroyed within minutes Covert who functions as the board's of the outbreak. attorney. "They were acetate dresses and the P olice Luncheon Set J\tore than 300 persons are expected to attend the third annual Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce Police A11.·ards luncheon Thursday at noon at the Newporter Inn. California Attorney General Evelle Younger will be the speaker. ORAN•I CO.AST • DAILY PILOT Tht Otano• CN1r DAILY I'll.OT, willl will(ll Is c-lned !tit H-~t°""' ~ ~.tltd bY tht Ortr>gt CN1! l>Wlllflirotl COfl'lllt11)'. """· rett .Oitiot11 ••• Jlllllllllled, "4tnll•r 111,..... Ftlclty, flft Cot!t MIM, Ntwpfrl &tt<ll, lf1.tntinglo!I ltte11/Fo1111111n Vlllr(, Ltturot llHCh, lr...lnt /5tcldltblclt ~ Stn Cltmentt/ 5tn J 114111 C..plllr-A. tlntlt rf$,kN!tl lol;ti!IOn b pi.till,~ ... S4t11rd1y1 Ind Suntlt yl. Tiit Pt"it'll;iotl M l•llolrlf oltnl r, ti lllll Wt1! Bty Sllfft, C0tt1 "'°"'• Ctlifomll, fU2'. Ro litrl N. W.td Pr111<11nt 1nd ro.J.111111r J1ck R. Cvrlt)' Vo<.e f"rt1icltnl 11111 Gt11tttl MfMttr Tht1R11 Kt1•il Ed1191' Tho'"'' A, Murph1nt ""Mtl111 1:.1 .... L l'tftr Kri•t HIWPOrt htdl C1T1 ldttw N...,.,. .._. OMt. J JJ J Newport l111l1¥1nil M1 llb19 .t;dd11111 l'.O. lo• 1171, t266J ....... _ Cot!t Mfttr a» wttt .. , Sll'Mt l.tt"""t Jtadi: ttl l'trMI AYlllllt Mllflllfltlerl ltWI! 1717j t•dl ....... .,.. S.n Cit"""'-' Jiii Mtr1fl II ttfl'llnt AMI , .. .,.._ 111•• Ml.o4Jn Cl-m.4 .A.""'91 .. '42·1611 COP'/'•lelo•. 1m. Or•11t1 C.tt "-llttllt•tr (O"*ft¥, Ht -'""'"• ll!wtftllllls. Wltorlll l!Wlttt' ., "'""'1~11 llfrtlll Fiiiy IN ~-wl"*'I IMlll ..... ll'lllllaol ti °"''""' ,...,.... . S-.W .dtll _,.._ NII 11 t.lt JMM, Ctllfffillt. Mtcr!Mle!'I ltr c~rltt' n.41 -'I'll" .. 1'1111 tJ.IJ "'llllli'fl 11'16111wy tntlflttl•fll llM PN!lfrl•r. ( flames took off pretty quick," Capt. Kratz said today. Heat from the swift fire destroyed any possible clues to what actually started the blaze, but investigators say it certainly did not appear to be natural. "It appeared to be set to do just exactly what it did," Fire Capt. Kratz From Pagel CLAMMING. • • is the individual's responsibility to In· form himself on the rules for clamming. "When the licenses are purchased, a fish and game booklet is given out which explains all of the rules for clam- ming and all other types of fishing," explained fish and game Inspector Robert Kaneen. Most people out clamming know the rules, Kaneen maintained, but there are always those who don 't info r m themSelves and may receive citations. "It takes eight years for the Pismo clam to reach legal size, so we must protect them the best ,,,.e can," Kaneen continued. Kaneen e1plained that persons may either purchase a device In a sporting goods or bait and tackle shop, for ap- pro1imately $1, or may make one themselves. The store-bought version is simply a mt?tal, horseshoe-shaped item, four and f haU Inches wide. The clam Is placed In It to see if It Is the proper size. Mrs. Hudak. who feels there has been too little publicity about this devJce, says It would help if signs were placed on the beach, particularly during low Ude periods, e:rplaining all of the rule~. But Gordon Cribbs, of the state Fish alld Game Department disagrees. "With all the rules that we have In this country, If ~~ had algns posted t•lllng people v.·hat thty could and couldn't do, there ""'1idn't Ile room to do anything - especially on Ille beaches," Cribbs said. • F rom Pagel FIRI NG .. ~ Cox gJUld ~ fired only for committing "extraordinary improprieties" or b)· mu· tual agreement that 1he Watergate in- vestigation was completed. Gesell turned down a Justice Depart.· ment argument that Bof'k had as much authority to abolish that regulation and · fire Cox as Rlcl::rardson had to issue it. Gesell said such regulations have the force of law and cannot be abolished except through run legal procedure. Gesell refused to issue an lnjtmction to prohibit Cox's successor Leon Jawors~i, from taking any actio~ which woul~ interfere with Cox's returning to the. Job. But the judge said he was ruling on whether the fi ring was lawful even though Cox does not want th~ job. back. Following the hearing, a Nader at- torney, Alan Morrison. said he believed o.n~ effect of the niling that the Cox f1r1ng was illegal was to serve notice on the President that Jaworski could not be summarily fired. Morrison said the ruling in effect would give Jaworski "job security." Gesell ruled that Nader did not have standing to file the suit but the members of Congress~ The suit · ally was brought by Nader,. t.he nsumer advocate, but was later J01ned in by three members of Congress seeking to have Cox reinstated as specia l prosecutor. The members of Congress who joined in the suit were Sen. Frank E. Moss CO.Utah ), and Reps. Bella s. Abrug (D-N.Y.), and Jerome R. Waldie (D- Calif.). In another development U.S. District Court Judge John J. Sirica said today that President Nixon can make his Water~ate tapes or any other related matenal public at any time. The White House said it was considering methods of doing so. But ~i~ca said he will not accept the add1t1onal recordings and materials that the President offered Monday because the court does not want to "become a depository or non-subpoenaed matters." "IJ the President thinks it advisable lo waive any privilege and make tapes ?r other material public, he, of course, 1s free to ·do so at any time" Sirica said in a memorandum. 1 From Page 1 PLANNERS . • • In lhe Irvine Company's Big 'Canyon development will be reviewed at 7 p.m. Commissioners will review the Udo l!lc Women's Club use pcnnlt for night tights at the Via Jucar tennls oourta at 7;30 p.m. and then will review plans to expand the parking lot at the Del Taco R'5taurant, 2t0t Bristol St. A proposal by Mitchell R. Teemlcy or Buena Park to establiab a school at 2411 E .. t eoa.t Highway, Corona del Mar, will also be before (.'Om-mlsslonera. Mideast Pact Red Cross Bares Prisoner Accord By The A1•oclated Pres1 Israel al)d Egypt agreed to start ex- changing prisoners of war Thursday morning, the International Red Cross announced today. · The announcement came 1hortly after a U.N, spokesman In Cairo dlldooed that negotiators for the two countries reached an agreement which be deter!!> ed as a "break·through" In malntalninl the Middle East cease-fire. The prisoner exCbange, scheduled to start at a a.m., wouJd remove a major obstacle in carrying out the U.S.- sponsored truce signed Sunday. Israel has demanded an agreement on the return of prisoners before it goes through with the agreed transfer of cbeckpoint' on the Cairo-Suez highway to U.N. peacekeepers. Michael Convaire, the Red Cross representative in Israel, said the prboner exchange would be made by direct fllgbts between Egypt and Israel. He said the agreement came at a meeting on the Egyptian·lsraeli cease- fire Une between generals of the two sides. . The earlier stalemate on prisoner ex-. change and transfer of cbeckpolnt.a brought threats from both Egypt and .Israel that threatened to upeet the cease- fire. Premier Golda Meir told the lsrae!l parllament that "not one gram or food will be allowed through lo the to!l'D of_ Suez'' aQCI the EgypUan anny on the opposite bank of the canal If the Egyptians did not agree to arrangements for the POW exchange. Egypt's semi-official newspaper aald Israel rtsked a resumption ol the war by refuslng"to give the U.N. peacekeep- ing force control of the highway Into Suez unlll the POW Issue is seWed to lsra~·s satisfaction. Both Israeli and U.N. forces were maintaining checkpoints on the Cilro- Suez highway where it «:rosaea: the cease- fire line 60 mllea east of C8iro. But Israeli sources were checking all traffic and decldlng what vehlclt1 could pus. PollUcal source. In Tel Aviv said 1he Israelis apparently were going to retain this control until they were sure they would get back the 3!0 Israelis the Egyptians are esUmated to hlVe cap- lurod In the Oclober war. -- Democratic Action Group Urge s Rejection of Ford Mitcllell mtnUoned what be deacribed u Ford 's votes bi weaken the 1970 Voting Rights Act and the 1918 F1lr Housing AC! and aupporl of 11Qllbu.'1ng • Seminar Set • On Coastline ,. 0 As We See the r.oastUne 11 the final program ill 0 aymPo.JIDD ,_ by tho Newport l!arbor !unlor Lcllue ud UC Irvine will take place "hursday at UCI. 'n!O dlacusslon, to be moderaled by Ne!J>Orl Beach City Councilman cart KYmla, will get under way at 7:30 p.m. In RoOm t74 of UCl's computer acience bulldlng. Panellsta will be VerLyil Jensen, counsel for the ·Environmental Coalition of Orange County; R, Barry McComJc, ~titlve vlce president ol Avco Community Developers; Frank Ro bin 1 on, member of the Orange County Harbors, Beaches and Parks Com- mission, and ' Raymond Watson, president of the Irvine Company. The Junior Uague series, "Com· munlty 73," is open to the public without charge. Frotn Page 1 I ~ WELFARE ..• encouraged to leave his family in order to get them more money. "11bere's no excuse for that kind of. law, but that's the way our welfare laws now are written," he said. Foster made his remarka at the "Com; munity 73," symposium spomored by the_Newport Harbor Junlor_l;ea&Jle and UC Irvine. Foster looked at weUare from the point of view or 1he pubUc, which pays for the 'welfare program. "I 1hink the public tonds to look on welfare as handouts for the laz:Y, in which social workers give away whatever amount ol money Ibey feel like giving," Foster said. . Foster said this was "completely un- true," since welfare officers must.follow extremely Ugbl rules. WASITTNGTON (AP) -The llheral Americans for Democratic Action today urged rejection of Vice President- designate Gerald R. Ford, .calling him a polit!cian with a· poor clvil·rtgbts He polnled out that the welfare rolls In 1he county have declined st.eldlly over 1he past two }'ears, a fact be amendments In 19?2. said ts refiteled In a •10 million bud&el -recont-..and-no-experjence in foreign affairs. _ _T¢ay'!_!i_earlng ts ... peeled to be eut this year to '89 million. the last by the-. RWes---COffimltree.--F.oster said jt was aim untrue that __ welfare helps only people from fii3il --ln testimony prepared for Senate Rules Committee hearings on the nomination, ADA Vice Chairman Joseph L. Raub Jr. said Ford ls unsuitable for the presidency and that his conflmlalion would make it more difficult to impeach President Nixon. Rauh told the panel: "To those who say that Congress must act at once to confirm_ Mr. Ford as a precondition of President Nixon'• resignation or impeadunent. ADA gives this answer: We do not believe our nation is boWlded on the east by RJchard Nixon and on the west by Gerald Ford. "Our sights gG beyood these two to a man or woman who, as president of the United States, will bind up the nation's wounds at home and restore it to its place of honor abroad." Rep. Bella Abzug (0.N.Y.), urged postponement of action on Ford's nomination until ( 1) the 'Hou..e decides whether President Nixon should be lm· peached and (2) Congress C0111lders legislation calling a special election should the presidency and vice presiden- cy be vacant at the same time~ "It Is · totally inappropriate for the Congress to expedlte the confinnation process on a nomination submitted by a President who is the subject of a serious impeachment inquiry and whole credibility bas been so irretrievably damaged that even members of his own party are calling on him to resign,'' Mn. Abzug said. · Clarence Mitchell, Washington director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, told the committee Ford "has a narrow gauge approach to civil rights." Chairman l!oward W. Cannon l.0.Nev.), mlnoriti ... In Orange County, be aatd, has wd the nomination could be referred welfare recipients are 75 percent white, to full Senate next week. M percent Mexican-American, and one The House Judiciary Committee opens percent black. heartugs on the nomination 'lbunday and has promised to report to the Home by Dtc. 6. 11ie Rules Commi ttee seems certain to approve the oominaiion. Cannon said last week 1he committee ttJteled eviden<:e offered agalnal Ford (R·Mlcb.), by former lobbyist Robert N. Winter- Berger. Belon today'a hearing, w I n t e r. Jleraer'1 affidavit wu 1he only onU·Ford evidence oHtred the panel. Child Skeleton Found in Yard • INGLEWOOD (UPI) -Acting on an anonymoua telephon• Up, lncltWood police have unearthed the skeletal re- malna of a amal1 child from the liaCty1rd or a vacant boUle. AutboriUes ,..,,. lnv,.Ugatlng today the poaibility of a CODl1<ction with 1he dlaappearan<:e Jut year of &.year-old Alicia Ann McCoy, who wu Jut 1tt11 In front of her houst, localed a block from where the body was found. County Coroner's officials could DOt immediately determine the age, aex, or cause of death, but said Tueaday the child bad been dead for more than a year. Huntington's Edison Plant Hearing Slated The reglaoal coulnl ""'1lmlsllon will conduct a public beaJjng Feb, 4 ~ oa the propooed '310 million expanalon of Southern Ca!Uomla EdilOn's 1!111Ungton Beach power plant. Edlaoo officials applied Oct. t7, follow· ing a city approval of the project, for a pennll from the South Coast Rtgional 1.one Con.servaUon Commlaslon. The commiaslon bas pennll control within 1,000 yards of the coasUlne under the 1972 coastal zone act. Environmentalists oppoaln~ the project contend that F.dison's permit appllcaUon Is lncompltte and should he 11t11I beck to the company for more information. If they win their argument, commllslon planners may delay the scheduled hear- ing. The Feb. I meeting will be in th• Long Beach Harbor District head· quarters, 92.5 Harbor Plaza Drive. • • F;0m0-...... ~~·""':'~~~~~~~iiiii!j~!!.i!!ii!ii;;;i~;;_;;:;;;;;;;...,.._,..J ,0:;'~ 538 CENTER STREET-COSTA MESA 646-1919 :'it: ~~~......,,,...., ... .,.,.,. .................................................... a;.-......;-. ... Men's Tennis Sblrts-6.00 to. 9.00 Men's Tennis Sboes-8.95 to 18.95 Adidas-TretorHonverse-Purcell Ladies Tennis Sbo~7.95 to 16.95 Aididas-Tretom-Converse Ladies' Tennis Dresses-16.95 up Wilson-DunloHIYis Bancroft-Yoneyama TelUlis Rackets Penn--WHsan4unlap Tns Bans-per daz.-7.95. BasketbaU ~kbilardS-: 14.95 Basketba~ Goals-3.95 & 5.95 ' BasketbaHs-5.9 5-7.95-8.95-12.9~ 18.95 ,, I •• Handball Gloves & eans Racquetball Racquets .. inton Rackets Piit Pong Paddles & Bans Croquet Sets Shuffleboal'd Sets Skateboards Valleybals-leather-11.95-13.95-1°8.95 Yait Ylllleybaffr-4.25 ta 11.95 Soccnans-teatber & Ralllle r Feotblls-Saftllals-8asebls Speedo SWlm Suits & Trulis Aciyllc Warmup Sults-21.95 ta ~4.95 Ralelgll Bikes-P1rts Tires-Tubes-Repairiit I • I DAD.Y :PILoT EDITORIAL PAGE Tr-a-ff ic T_inkering The ink on the Alan M. Voorhees traffic study ls barely dry and already there is evidence that there has been political tinkering with It. Newport Beach City Manager Robert L. Wynn con- finned Friday that several changes were made at a private meeting attended by the mayor, one other coun- cilman and the chairman of the citizens' committee that guided preparation of the study. , Two Members of that citizens' panel have subse· quently criticized the fact th~t the select group of city officials was privy to a preliminary draft of the docu· ment and u<1ed the opportunity to order -or at least suggest -those changes. The major change seems to revolve around the highly controversial bypass of downtown Corona del Mar. Voorhees originally recommended that a Coast High- way bypass be built on the former Pacilic Coast Free- way route along Fifth Avenue, just above old Corona del Mar. and just below llarbor View Hills. But the residents living along that strip of open space are violently opposed to such an idea. One of those residents is William Agee, chairman of the citizens' com- mittee and now chairman of the city's planning com- mi ssion. Voorhees apparently was told that, because of oppo- sition, the bypass would "not be acceptable to the pub- lic" and therefore should be canned. So, he now is recommending that parking be ban- -~~Q.J!ll Q•!l Hi ghway lhrough CorOllil de! Mar as the next best alternative. \Ve're not too sure how popular that's going to be, either. It's been proposed. before and produced loud wails from Corona del Mar businessmen. But wh at's worse, it won't solve the problem. Ac- cording to Voohees' own statistics, the roadway still will be short o! capacity by 18,000 cars per day. Commlttee -membeT Robert )Ulum put it very well when he explained -why he had supported the Filth Avenue bypass Instead of the proposal to ban parking . "Both proposals had problems/' Milum said, "but the difference is, one' of them solves the traUic prob- lem, the other one doesn't." ·' City Manager Wynn said the suggestion to Voor- hees to take out the Fifth Avenue recommendation was made so as not to ·"polarize'' the community. He pointed out that the report stlll .mentlons the bypass and calls it the best "teclutical solution" to the problem. Well, from all of the Voorhees findings It's the only '1solution." There are other ways to cut down traffic congestion t~!I\:' Corona de! Mar a liltle bit, but none of them wlll e · ate it. Newport Beach cannot afford to pass up the op- portunity to utilize that vacant right-of-way for some kind of road that will provtde traffic relief. It doesn't matter if the road's called an expressway, scenic high· way, connector o~ alley. It's ~ot to get that through traffic out of downtown Corona de! Mar: There are those who will say that connecting the Corona de! Mar Freeway to the Coast Highway down- coast from Corona de! Mar will solve the problem. That doesn't seem likely. The people driving along the coast apoarenUy want to stay along the coas~ or else they'd be driving on the San ·Diego Freeway to begin with. Presumably, all this will come out during the coun;e or the upcoming-public hearings -to be-conducted by planning commissioners and city councilmen. It may come up sooner if one traffic committee member goes through with his threat to demand another meeting . of t~at panel to review the changes he says were made 1n the report without citizen committee concurrence. Nixon Aide's Bar D_ear Gloomy -Gus Foreign Methods Better? .. . --'Pulilic Penance' WASJ!INGTON Dooming the melancholy private dialogue between President Nixon's lieutenants and con- gressional Republicans is total While House rejection of Capitol llill's deeply felt need for public penance by the President. QuTent negotia- tions ostensibly con· cern how much Mr. Nixon shall open his files to save his pres· idency. But these talks rounder over unstated co~ grcssiooal demands that A1r. Nixon somehow confront Congress, perhaps "~ a committee witness, with a show of expiation and cmtrltion. One influential (and pro-Nixon) Republican Senator feels Mr. Nixon cannot survive un1eu like Henry ll. the 12th century King of England v.·ho atoned for the murder of St. 1bomu a Becket by beina: public- ly scourged, be makes public penance. THAT JS analhema to the President . and all hiJ advise.rs. Indeed. he is ig· noring advice from his o'"'n staff to make conalderably less humiliating gestures. Thus, whatever agreements are reached between Republican leaders and the White House over disclosure of tape recordings and documents, the basic gap will remain Wlabrid[(ed a n d Republican senlimelit for Mr. Nixon's resignation will rise. The White House's understanding of sentiment on Capitol Hill is even murkier today than in calmer times. Mr. Nixon's aides interpreted conservative Sen. Peter Dominick's criticism of lbe President as reflecting rear about his 1974 reelec- tion campaign in Colorado,.-In truth, Dominick \YR! saying in public what almost all his colleagues (say privately in. the Republican cloakroom. REPUBLICAN Senators who still have not uttered a single word critical of ~1r. Nix:on say privately he must reslp once Rep. Gerald Ford is confirmed ( EVANS·NOVAK) as Vice President. '!be barTBgt of .....,,. mendatioos from · Capitol IUD • are eleventh-hour efforts to avoid the ,Preoldent's resignation. ·.. S.. William ht of TemetRe, a conRrvaUVe and a Ni1an loY~· recently '°"wrote the Prtlldent a rel!lllrkable letter outlining tht ltepl necessary to save himaelf -at~ public diaelosure not only Of tape 1-ecordings but of all presidential documents .bearing on Watergate. Less sweeping requests are now being negotiated with the White Houle by Senate Republican leaden. BUT TAPES and documenlJ will DOI truly satisfy C o n g r e s 1 . Many Republicans feel the Preatdent should face interrogation from h1s legislative peers -perhaps by the Senate Watergate coqunittee. One Republican leader in Congress, in public a total supporter of Mr. Nlxoo, ls privately telling the White Hou!< the Presideot must testify because he ls "at the end of Uie road" and no other (.'()!JDC re-- maim. 'The avowed purpose of calling t.1r. Nixon to testify: to probe inconsistenclel in Mr. Nlxon 's confusing u:plaoationl of Watergate. Beybnd the avowed purpose, however, is lhe Henry 11 syn- drome: the feeling Mr. Nixon can surVive Clllly by humbling hlmseU. It ls here wbe<e all hopea alnk Of agreement between the Pruldeot and C<11grelliol1al Republicans. "IF 111E PRESIDENT has to go up to the Hill, groveling, on his bands and knees, I'd1 rather aee hlm im- peached," one senior Nixon aide told us. Aj mJdd1e-level assistant put It this way: "Are we going to go out crawling on our bellies or are we golng to go out swinging?" · Those two presidential assistants are How much longer before the wreck· Ing ball knocks down the Balboa Bay Club's Chinese wan which sits on dtt O. e. pO)ilic) land ? B.·A.G. G~ on ~tfttt art sullnlitttlll WY ....... .., .. Mf --rlty l'tfl«I tlte ~YI-. ft lflfl ........... StM Ytllf '9f ~ t. e-..w .... D1ltr Pitt. aoft,llners In the White House context. Natwally~theii, the hard-liners = lieailed by~ Rich8rd M. Nixon ....:. are unalterably oppoeed to any act of penance. Indeed, the President ignores considerably more moderate gestures' recommended by his own staff. 'STAFF PROPOSAL'! for a frank, privi.te dllculsion of Watergate with Senate and Houae Republicans have been gatherinc dust In the Oval Office for -ka. Ono--. usually a bani-liner. is getting nowhere in urging ooe final try by Mr. Nixon to publicly pre!ent hi! side of the Watergate story. Earnest augestlolll from Capitol Jilli,, such as Sen. Brock's, ftlturally go unanswered. Rather, the old White House refrain thi.t Mr. Nixcm can save himseU by forgeUing Watereate and turning to other matters is aounding again. That may explaln cancellation of Mr. Nixon's meeting .with bis Wa',.··1ate lawyers in order to deal with the energy Crisis. It does explain press secretary Ron Z1eg1er's reference to the: Watergate "foolishness," fully renecting Mr. Nix· on's own view. IN THE SENATE Republican cloakroom, Ziegler's "foolishness" was considered a repudiation of Sen. Barry Goldwater's plea last week th 11 t everybody "cool it." It also shows that while Mr. NiJ.on's oongressional sup- porters are down to a precious fe1v, not much has dlanged at the White House. For the short nm, that promises t.fr. Nixon's continued refusal to display any weakness, much less resigning as President, even as Republican support grows thinner by the day. SniQg CQn~rol ~ntl _ S!!nity To ~he Editor: Re the article: "Catalytic Converters 'On' "in the Pilot of Nov. 7. Is this ror real? How in the name of sanity can such a thing happen? EPA admirtlstralor Russell Traih's reasoning is anf.!-hUman in its chilling SOWld. H'e ackoowledges that the devices pose a "significant health problem . . . lung cancer and cardiac problems" yet he says delaying requirements "would mean throwing off the entire momentum of. the present auto emissions control strategy." THE PARAGRAPH following clearly states that foreign manufacturers have come up with a superior method. ln the present climate of pollution hysteria it seems that "anylhing is better than nothing at all". It's time we -the "masses" -demand an accOO.nting of the pro's and con's ol those methods deemed "good for us" and maybe a return of sanity and good sense will occur. B. M. TRAVIS Net Glaoulbh To the Editor: In response to the letter to the editor about the Occult in Literature class, Wlrks - 'Look, it's euy ••• kdt foot, right foot. •• , MAILBOX Letters from. readers are welcome. NormalltJ, writers should convey their '1Lessages in 300 words or Uss. The right to condense letters to fit space or elimfnate libel U reserved. AU let· ters must include signature and mail· ing address but na?Ms may be with· held on request if aufficient reason fs apparent. Poetry will not be pub- lislied. I afn one or Mrs. Brubaker's students and I would like to infonn B. w.1 Davis that this class is an elective. No one ls forced to take it. The project on lbe gallows is not ghoulish; it is merely a' reflection of history. We studied the Salem 'Witch Trials in our history classes aDd no one seemed to object. JUST BEC.j.USE we · are lludel11J doesn't mean our ~ are going to be warped by education. What with the current political problems and the energy crisis, I don't think our minds . can be considered too immature . May I also remind you that this school has more classes that prepare us for the future than you know about. l would suggest that B. W. Davis read up 00 the occult and the classes taught at this school before any more irrational statements are made. LISA MONACO, Corona de! Mar High School Traffic HaztJrrl To the Editor: A serious hazard elists on Newport Beach streeta and highways, which can be and definitely should be corrected. The hazard has to do with the concrete islands which have been con.Yructed to divide streets and also to direct traffic into left lurn lanes at intersections. from \V.ashington to San Clemente on Air Force One occupied only by him and a couple of speech writers conswnes no less than 18,000 gallons of fuel l120,000 liquid lbs). His last week's trip from \Vashington to Key Biscayne in order to vi.sil Bebe Rebozo also consumed 9,000 gallons or 60,000 lbs. of fuel. Mr. President: Talk is cheap and it's high time you set an example yourself and conserved our scarce fuel supply. BETTER STlLL: just resign and we will let you settle down in.San Clemente. 1l will be much easier for you and much better for LI!. -. BORIS BUZAN Good Old Da111? To the Editor: . The other day I heard a shocking VD report, vtz: CaU!ornla bas double tile VD rate in the nation; Orange County has double the California rate;' and Laguna Beach has six times the Orange County rate. TllE PARAILEL witb the voting record on Proposition 1 Is striktn~. Obviously there is something atavistic about my habitat. The nineteenth -or is It the eighteenth? -century is alive and well here. ·Recently a beach city school superintendent was revealed. using s::hoot funds for a stag party showing, before his school official buddies, of "Deep Throat." I had really thought, in my innocence, that the ancient and honorable (within limits) institution of the stag party had disappeared· from tho social scene. But no. We countiam of the shoreline preserve it, as a baroque museum piece, along with the ac- companying VD, the shades of anceetral vigilantism in the Birch Society, and a touching addicUon to economic snake-oil remedies. Too bad I'm on the outs with Chief of Police Whats-his-name; otherwise I'm sure l could sell him on setting up stocks and pillories in the village square. Foe blasphemers. They're a me~. DAVID A. MUNRO Pfeuell To the Editor: Birth. Control Fails When· Children Spell Security THESE ISLANDS are t e r r i b I y hazardous at night as they are almost impossible to see until one ls a short distance away, and then it is to0 late to swerve. This happened to my wile last week. She ran into the island at night, blew lhe front tire and badly dented the front wheel Fortunately, we have a large car so it did not turn over. The tow truck operator who changed the wheel eaid he had to tow a car two weeks ago which was involved in the same acclde.nt when the driver did not see the island. I was very pleased to see the article by Dr. Paul D. Authur questioolng United States policy toward Israel. At long last the voices of reason and compassion are being heard. My congratulations to the Daily Pilot for having the courage to print it.. ..:; Californians, San Diego's percipient Neil Morgnn tells us, "believe to the verge of fru.:11 .1:1: .. u in birth control •nd small fur1::1g11 <.:ani, two articles of faith whirh '1Ust somehow be related." They arc indeed, Neil Morgan. Money. RS Wl.l dQ not have to be told, do<!s fuMy things lo the wfly you think. The fact thal you \Vant to hold onto what you make gt ves a decided • cast to all your opill-- ions. The contrary fact or belief that you 're never going to score, no ho~v. aives you fl quite contrary cast of thought. In cxtren1e terms, mOA<lY makes royalists and lack of it makes anarchists. In the matter or children, moncY has In tteent years become a mighty factor In our atutudes. This has followed the 1eneral allluence of the upper middle dasses, and aome of the ordinary middle class, and the ability of man now to • frustrate effedivtly the rcproducdve I functions by forms ol birth control. , -. .. .. ... IN ALL this kind of thinking, Marin county II a kind of metaphor lo me. Tb!! is becauae I lived there for three years, and heard more damned ,.llllb and Inhuman talk on the brlngin1 of children Into the world than one could believe -and all of thls, mark you, fnlm the llowen of our Cll!tun, lldlff from Smith and ,..ta ti.m. Princtton, etc. Yet u.O lhtnlilni II the same In other plush California suburbs such as Walnut Creek and Piedmont, San Mateo c o u n t y , 1 Carmel·Monterey, Santa Barbar11, Beverly Hills, Palm Springs. The Marin mentality ,... chlldnm ne1adve!y. They are a liability. They cost money. Something like 40 fP'and to ge) 1 boy to college 1ge< and maybe another 40 grand to give hlln a college edUcatlon. And · there are thote bonlos of -black and brown and yellow and poor white kids on welfare ror whom Mr. and Mrs. Marin pcnona.Uy have to pa~. Joe Blow in the ll!ls!lon pays, too, but with less a sense of peraonal · Insult. KIDS cost money. Think of how many Pouches you cou1.i.. have If you did not have six or seven kids, only the two or less prescribed by the theoreti- cians of the "population explosion." You aren't going to lay In 1 lot of Lafitte tr you have seven brats tearlna up the front lawn, nor make many trips to TahlU. What the Marin mind cannot un- . deratand Is that there are relatively few people In the world wbo look on kids this~-In most cultures a Iarae brood, e ally If blellS<cf with stout sons, Is anything but a liability. It ~. or is thought io be. a way out of poverty. Away from the curious Marin kind of thinking, kids are an asset, not an economic nuisance. The Ford Foundation and the Indian Government found this out the hard way a few years back when they put Iota of money and all their e•pcrtbe Into a big birth reduction prosram In the Punjab. The project !ailed dismally In the village of Khanna, as deacrlbed In a remarkable study by the sociologist Mahmood Mamdani. The message: Nobody la the village is about IO restrict the me of hi1 family unless it pays to do so. Tbe brutal truth, so far from Marin · and Ford FQURdation a.nd official Indian government thinking, is that for poor people, big families do pay, especially when there ls a prospect of emigration for the boys and the employable girls. MAHMOOD MAMDANI sboon !bot, In this particular village, which Is so lib fannlng villages everywhere, the only hope for a 1ubstanUal rise in IOClal status Is to have a big family o! """'· Tbese could mlgrate to tbe city or go to ,.a and send baci; some of their earnings. Or they could work the land ror their parents and so develop some small capita.I with .which to buy more land. Birth control, In such circumstances and lo such people, is Uke offering Sanskrit lessons to a sandlot buebatt team. Marin county caMot undentand this. Harlem cannot undertand Marin county. I've lived In both places, and comprehend each a little. What l know is, money has a lot to do with whether you are !or birth control or ool. ' The problem Is that these Islands are made of concrete as is the street and they caMot be diilinguished at night. The sol ution is lo make them visible with rtfiectors (6r luminous paint). Reflectors should be placed at tbe stast of these Islands so oncoming traffic will see them. They should be placed every hundred fett or so Along the side of the Islands. They ~-oukl also be placed at the end of the Islands at lntenectlons so cars turning corners will not run Into th<:.m . , These illsnds are a real menace to night driving. BEN J. HELPHAND Look Who's Telhlng To the Eclltor: Just look and listen to who is lecturing to ua aboul conserving energy -none other than Richard Milhous Nixon. WHAT ABOUT his (the President's) numerous vacation jaWlls across the country? Each and every round trip ,. MARIS GRAUBEi OIANet COAST DAILY PILOT Robtr1 N. \Vetd, PubU.thtr Thomas Keevll, Editor Barbara Kreibich Edltoriol Page Editor The <ditorlal ,.,.,. "' .... Dolly Pilot .Wkti to lnhrm and stim.i&te ftaderl by ~ on thla pqe divet91!:iComm•ntary• on fop.it'I ol in. trtt1t by t:)'ndkated columnllts and c&rtoonistl, by pr"OYfdtrw a f«urd fOr readtra' vlrN• and by prftt'nllnc thls nCWIPIPfl''• oplnlool 11.nd 1dtu on curnnt.iopics. The edllo.-lal opWona of the Dalb' l>uot appear O('ly tn·the editorial column at the top ot the pq«. Opinlona, v:pttucd by the cal-. utnrri1t1 and cartoonJst• and lttft'r wrlfft's U't thdr own and no t'lidoi n • mmt or th<"lr vk:wt t)y .,,_ Dt.ll)' Pltotwhouldbe- Wednesd-y, Nov. 14, l,P7S • ·- • • r • _ .. _ ... _.....,~~·c.....""'~m-""c::....:1~·~· ~19~73=--~~~.----'o=•~IL=V~P~IL=O~T~S ,... ... ..:; ............... ~ ............................................................................... ~~---i'~----------------"':'.---:-------------, ~ ,. I I QUEENIE By Phil lnterla ndi [ -· ••Nkte o'clock! Lights! Camera! Action !" • 'Purple Heart?' Reagan Cuts_ Self At Turkey Fete SACRAMENTO (UPI) -to curl around the tip or his Gov, Ronald Reagan cut his finger. He told newsmen he right forefinger while carving apparently had his finge r on the golden brown roast turkey the knife blade. presented to him aMuaily by • One photographer com· poultry growers ·before mented it \Vas the first Thanksgiving. unusual occurrence at the an· "Do governors get purple nual event since Reagan hearts?" Reagan asked Tues-became 'govetnor seven years day, blotting the slight cut ago: with a paper Da'pkin. "The -expert-cut himself:-U--• REAGAN-REPLI ED, "No, il isn't. The fii'st few years I didn't try to cut the tur'iteys. I wrestled with them." REAGAN HARDLY missed a knife stroke because or the cut, continuing to carve slices of breast meat off the 30- pound bird. The Governor noticed the cut only after blood began Republican Blasts Nixon Press Aides" WASHINGTON (AP\ Presidential -press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, "a former emp\O)'e of Disneyland. ha s managed to tum the White House into a Disneyland East," Rep, \Villiam J. Scherle (R-Iowa), said in his newsjel- ter to constituents this week. In an extended comment on an erosion of "national con- fidence in the Administration.•' Scherle criticized President Nixon for t continu!ng "to rely on the advice of public rela· tions men, all of \\•horn are politi~al rather than z11E0La1t e xperienq!d poUUcal advisers on the White House staff. Regarded as a conservative, Scherle. who fr e qu ent l y criticizes Administration pol- icy, added: ·~The chief character re- maining. responsible for much of the present '111ickcy 1.touse' actlvtty, is Ron Ziegler ... Gen. Alexander ltaig, Nixon's chief or staff. has a distinguished military record. but in lhe political v.1arfare game, the general is still a buck private. "Although H.R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichmann are gone. their ghosts still haunt the \\'bite J:louse," he said. Until recently. the Governor \\'as presented \Vith Ii v e turkeys at Thanksgiving. But the practice \\'as discontinued because of the disturbance the big birds would maJ.:e. The Governor's slip or the knife could have resulted from a different carving method he \\'as trying. Instead of cutting the leg oft the turkey and carving it separately. Reagan was attempting to slice thigh meat . ft'om the~ leg ""hile it was attached to the bird. THE DISPLAY of blood ap- parently didn't discourage the lunchtime a p p etites of Reagan's office staff. They eagerly loaded plates \\ith slices from the three birds provided by the T u r k e y Growers Association. Reagan plucked a smidgin of white meat from the knife blade and popped it iilto his mouth for the benefit of photographers. Coeds Irked By Clea11t1p Cheesecake HONOLULU (AP) -Litter and cheesecake don't mix , at least as far as University of Jiawaii coeds are concerned. Dozens of w·omen students have condemned a university- sponsored poster which is part of a cleanup dri ve. The poster shows a cartoon of a barc- breasted v.·oman dropping her bikini top onto a littered lawn and says, "Come help pick up things other people throw a\Vay." Philip \V. Koehler . fa cilities management director for the un iversity, said, "I was just tryillg to fit in with the cleanup theme. ~fore women are throwing away bras every- day." Histo1·ie First Solon 01i Maternity Leave WASHINGTON (API Rep. Y v o n n e Braithwaite Burke. (D-Calif.), boasts a fll'Sl in !he U.S. Congress - she is the first member to get a maternity leave. House Speaker Carl Albert, (D-!)kla .), granted her lhe le~ve which began Nov. 1. Under the rules, a member of Congress must ask for the leave on behalf or his col- league. Rep. Augustus F. Hawkins, (D-Calif.), requested that P¥1rs. Burke be allowed the official leave. WHEN REP . H. R. Gross. (R-Jowa ), heard that Albert granted the maternity leave •. he commented on the House floor : ' I / ' ' . ',., Be~old the bold 'go lds' ... highly polished metal ado rn - you like, $35 Earrings, 810 Bangle, SlO ' Fashion Je,velry '\ • • .~ . \ • ' { ' ' • , I i Sn~p dash· in th~ee , par~ coordinate.s by Lad y Arrow Kicky coordinates jn three •• , a rt"ally snappy \Vay co go co a luncheon ot 11n afternoon .at. the theatr~n maneJ01.1s . fab ric, washable Ulcrcssa® of textured Dacron® polyester. Sho\vn cv,ro fro1n a group. All available i or sizes 10 to 16. • Top: French cravat, r,ecrangle print. Knife plent, pull-on skirr. \'(Thitc ground wich red and navy print. Matching tailored shire. T'''O 1~ket shirr jackec "'irh red ground1 navy and \\0hicc print, 858 Bottom : chocolacc and '"hire mix feacuring a solid, knife pleat, J>Uli -on skirtj si.ripcd, railored shire and a polka dotted, t\\'O pocket shire jacker, ·S5 Bloust"S Plus . SANTA ANA SOUTH COAST PLA ZA • r REP. BURKE, 40, who is at her l<ls Angeles home awaiting the momentary birth 0£ lier first child , plans to return to O>ngress when the second session convenes in January. In !he pas! official leave had be.n granted to coo- ~lona I members only for J>m911• I Illness or illness or • family member. • "This is a historic first in the House of Represtntati\'es, and I want to extend my con~atulafions to bot h1i__ .... ,_,_,_,,_,,..,_,_,_,_.,;. __ ,_,,..,..,.;:11~ ......... ...r~ ............... ,..; ... ,..,.. ... _,_, ... U,..,....:il.& parties, both to the member 1 • and to the speaker of the Shop Monday.rhru Friday,-tO~OO a.m. to 9: 30 p.m. , Bullock's Santa Ana, 1 Fashion Square, 2800 N. Main Street, Santa Ana, Telephone : -· . he M 1 nlh. Burke's husband is a Saturday, 10:00 a.m. ro 6:00 p.m. Bullock's South Coast Plaza, San 'Diego Fr~ay; at Bristol, Costa Mesa, Telephone: a care consultant. ,. _______ r:._:..w,.......,--. Sunday, 12 :00 noon to 5:00 p.m. \ ~. . ·, • 'I r .. I • .. ' .. • • ' • ~-. .,. .. . ' ·.jf~· • • 547.7211 556-0611 ' f • --· - • Today's Final • N.y . -~toeks • 1VOL'. "6, 1:10. 318, 7 SECTIONS, 1004 PAG,ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1<4, 1973 c TEN CENTS Co8ta Mesa H~llt11ne-a \Beal Specla~ular ~ I_ 7 By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Ot .. p.llY,.... ..... IC you are an · accident looking for a place to happen, mat4!! lt happen at Davldaon Field Friday night. -~-thieelli<-tni:u, an Biiioolance, a helicopter and poltce ·Officers in squad Cars and on motorcycles concentrated all in one place, you couldn't pick a b;etter; spot. They will be standing by tor a .. show by the Costa Mesa ·High School Mafdllng Policemen ·To Ease Up tJn Tickets By WILLIAM sck!IEIBER Of~ o.11r ,. ... ,..., Dissident Anaheim policemen decided Tuesday that "Officer Friendly" would t>e more help ln wiruilng· thelr pay dispute . with the cily 'than "Super Cop." 1 __ ._• _· ,.,Mern_beis of · the Anlheim POiice A...ctatlon · (APA)· voted .to ease up , on writing ticket& for moving violations in the city for 30 days or unUI the city .enters into .what the APA (eels are "good faith" contract talks, U lhe discretionary action by ' patrolmen results in • near haJt in traffic citatibns, the 'city cou1d lose up to '30,000 In revenue it earns each month from payment of ftrafflc fines. The latest tactic by the olllcers, dubbed the "Officer Friendly" approach, ; ls exactly tre opposite of an alternative plan of action. ~Jscloeed 10 days ago -the Super Cop .ideL · . The SUptr Cop pion provided for mass tkketinp in lhe city, for even the ,most- mllior vlolallons In llll effort to 1et :he. people to • the ~ty ·to let the pillce olf their lildtl, 'The new cburte ul licllclll WoU!d permit officers to use ,theJr oWn cliscreUon ln stopping motoru.ta for moving violation.! and then letlinl them oU with olily a warning and no tickel The cifflcer Friendly 1pproacb got the g~ahead from 100 members of. ·the 260- member APA at a rally in Pearson "Park. But not everyone there liked the Idea. Several asaoc.latloo members voted ag4lnst the lax ticketing Idea because they claimed it Would lower the city's law enforcement standard.1 a n d jeopon!W. life and property. -'lbe officers areued that the Offiet:r ~·riendly attitude wou\d give drivers a ~cense to speed through the city, threatening lives and property. City COWlcilmen in Anaheim have refused to budge from their final offer ~ the policemen, which calls for a t6. 75 percent pay hike for the tint )'t!ar and llx pen:ent in the aecond year of a two-year contract. Pllrolmen 'are demanding ~ven per- cent blka both yeart on one--year con- tractl With some. binge benefits not offehcfby ·the City. The oouncil uld roopenlng pay negotla· 111>111 would Rl'\'e no purpoee and would I!< Ull,falr to olhe( cjty employes wbo have alrtady agreed on ,coob:acls. • A )neetlng had been requested by the A!'A's attorney with the city manager today to discuss the status or lht'pay Impasse. Aaoclatlon apokeamen said they do not feel the approach of wilting fewer tlcketl will reoult Jn dllclpllnary action because ii 11 a discretionary action. , But u with th< Super Cop Idea, the /\PA has v,owed to take. an Jmmedlale 1irike wte U any of Ill member officers ire dlsctplloed. • • -Jn .another acUoa during1 the rally, APA members voted not to volunteer to 'do ie<iurltf work during qlf-duty boun .. 1 tj1e • An«helm Slodlum, 'Mabelm Convention cen1er and llllneyland unle5S mem~ · ar~ ordered to do It and paid iime and a half. TH{S l DDREW .Joo -RESPONSES ,,,. •lawyer ~W.11ed 1o the P•llY P)Jot, lfe ulletl to have bil ad slopped be<luae It dJ;ew .11111 res~. sF.CJRJJ:fi.a'1 ·tor "'"'-' • ·NfPii Law olflce. Exper . ·pref. oou.. Incl. some typ- • , Int fUlnl, raqolptlon & • : tr~lnf. \Vlfi conslde. • ' Jiah.thlM. (~ No.\ " . ' Naturally 'lie fOuatl \(it secretory be needed before cllncellnc the ad, 'What ii. )~ffOU'R • loo.kJiic•' !or! Probal!IY A D•lly , Pllol ad i!oi help JOU IJni( It, her, him, whatover. ·Dllf the dlrac:t line lo r..Wta II the Dlllf Pilot. 142-lm. • Band betwte11 halves ol lhe football g-With Fountain Valley. rco '. riot ia....not expected, aceording to baucYdlrector Earl Treichel, a M-year- old· Ceeil-'B. DeMllle-t w~ bas. ortbeltrated the sirens and red lights of -:N'ewporr Beach's fire and police departments into a .spectacular called "F;~g~gcy Services in Action.'' -'.!ll Will be an exciting Show," Treichel pfP_in]iei:. "NewPort Beach is .briPging out just about every type of equipment u has." 1be show starts out With a fire truck spraying cbei;nical foam all over the north end of field. "It will disinte rate '' Treichel assurett. "When I first heard about this foam I had visions of the whole football team going into the v.·hite stuff and neVer returning." Then there will be a demonstration of the . fire d~pa.rtm!nt's snorkel unit, a six-story: devi~ used by firemen to ' douse fires in tall buildings and get cats out of trees. That 's when Treichel figures an ac- cident will happen. Someone i.s sure to fall out of the snorkel bucket , he thin!<>._ _ ~ ___ ~-~ "And then the helicopter will descend from the sky and train its lights on the poor, injured fireman who is ruMing arowxt in a daze, and the ambulance and police will rush to the accident, and they 'll pick him up and roar off with sirens and lights." Treichel says he might just have his The 1'fustang Band has won traphies band strike up a few appropriate tunes every time out this year. including if everything turns out according to awards al the Newport Lobster Ba~e hi · · The Id be t l"k Parade, the Los Angeles County Fair, s v1s1on. se wou unes 1 e the Fountain Valley Halloween Parade. _:_·~~!._ 1'1y_~r!J ''_ u~ them~ from...Hawaii_and-contests -in San Bernardino and-- Five-0. and maybe "Up, Up and Away'' Glendale. while the chopper is whirling around . There will be a fiery finale to His band is in sharp form, having Treichel's halftime extravaganza. Drun1 woo 10 trophies in recent competition majorette DoMa Harold will perform "It's an amazing record because we v.·ith a flaming baton as a lire truck have never Y•on a trophy in the 13-year roars up and puts the flames out v.·ith history o( the school ," he says. C0-2. Judge Rules ift Cox Firing Dismissal .Illegal From Wire Services \VASHINGTON -Ferieral Judge . Gerhard A. Gesell ruJed . that Acting Attorne)'. General Robert H. Bork acted illegall y· in firing Archibald Cox as special Watergate ·prosecutor. (Related stories, Page 3.) . The ruling !oltowed a hearing in wbich it was ll'lade -clear that C:Ox, who returned -to his job ,at · lhe Harv.ard University Law School after being fired Oct. 20, does not want the job back. Welfare Aide Blasts Laws As 'Outdated' ' By JOHN ZALLER ot Hie O.Ur l"llet Slaff An Orange County welfare officer at- tacked the nation's welfare laWs Tuesday as being outdated, terribly. unfair ,_filld sometimes "destructive" to thousands of needy families. "Our welfare laws date back to 1935 with the original Social Security Act," , said John Foster, director of welfare ~ programs in coastal and central Orange County. i[i;Uial · Weddi1ag "Princess Anne and hef new hu~band, Capt. 11-fark Phillips, leave Lon- d9p's .. West.minster Abbey following their wedding ceremony today . . (~tary, Page 4.) • . -'· "t.. ~ .. ' .tJil' Executive Likens Can;tp!ligns, Extortion From Wlre Services was going to come from . J know what I had in the bank. and it didn't come anywhere close to that ($100,000). '' Corpofalions are not allowed to make political contributions. "They badly need to be rewritten , but since Congress turned down the · Nixon administration reform package, I don 't see much hope for improvement in the near future ." Foster especially attacked one welfare provision that makes it possible for an elderly person living alone to draw a higher monthly welfare payment than some small families. "That's completely crazy," Foster charged , "but the Legis18ture got the idea that a single, elderly person was a good type of person who should be given mor~ money. ~ "But somehow the Legislature seemed to think that a welfare family, which may have illegitirfiate children or a divorce, is not as good and shouldn't get quite the same money," Foster said. Foster also complained bitterly about laws that require a married man to leave his fcimily in order to make his wife and children eligible for welfare payments. "ll the man is living with his family, there's no way the fa"mily can collect any money - whether tbe man is employed or not ," Foster said. "But the minute the man leaves, the fan1il y is eligible for aid. So we've got a situation where a man may be (See WELFARE, Page I) Gesell iss ued the ruiing od a suit brought by a Ralph Nader-backed group which contes ted on constitutional grounds the firing of Cox by Bork the night of Oct. 20. - Attorney General Elliot L. Richa_rdson and Deputy Attorney General William D. Ruckelshaus both had refused 1 an order by ·President Nixon to carry out the dismissal , and Richarclson resign~ and Ruckelshaus was fired . Bork, then solici~or general, carried out the order. Gesell overruled arguments by the Justice Department that the case v.·as made moot by Cox's public statement that Ile did not want the job back. "The discharge of Mr. ·Cox precipitated a widespread concern, if not lack of confidence, in the administration ot justice," Gesell said in his ruling, G.~sell based his ruling that Cox wai .fired illega»y-on:. the.-ground that Rich- ardson issued a regulation stating. that \See FIRING, Page ZI Cla111111er Clamor Fine Irks Hu1iti ngton W oma1 i ' O.llr !"lift .Staff l"Mle SIZING CLAM -If it lits in· side horseshoe device attached lo clamming fork, you'd bet· ter put it back. By IDLARY KAVE °' .,.. 0e1tr l"lht s .. tt Lifeguard! at Huntington Beach say clamming ia a good, cheap way to get food. Mrs . John Hudak disagrees. Her clam. ·ming expedition last Saturday, which in- cluded her husband and five children, resulted in a citation f o r illegal clam- ming. She facta: a possible fine that ' could run as higb as $150. "We · thought we were going to get one, nice inexpensive meid for our family of seven,'' said the Huntington Beach woman. "\Ve don't have $150 to pay for clams. It's ridiculous ," she sa id. Mrs. Hudak and her famil y, along with .several hundred others over the weekend, were lured to the beaches by the exceptionally low tides. While many clammers are ·old hands at the art of digging, scooping up and measW"ing the little shellfish, many of those on the be_ach were novices, and had failed to fully inform themselves O:f the state Fish and Game Depart· ment's rules for taking clams. Mrs. Hudak knew she had to have a license, knew the clams must ba over four and a half inches in diameter and knew she could only take 10 clams per person. She did not realize, however, that she needed a special clam measuring device. She used her hand to measure. "We really thought all our clams were the legal siu, and we started to ask the state parks ranger if they were okay," said J\.trs. IIudak. "But when he measW'ed ours. 19 of the 35 were undersized, and he gave us a citation for ihat and for not having a measuring device," she said. WASHINGTON -The chairmnn of Ashl~ Oil C:O., who has admitted mak· in'g an illegal $100,000 cash contribution to President Nixon's re-election cam· ~gn, testified today that campaign fund r8lstng in America boi:ders on extortion . ·Orin E. Atkins t01d the Senate WaterM~ committee curr!!l't Cood-rai~· iqg,··JP,ethtida should be abandoned 1n favOi-~.of. ·pu~iic· financing of political , campalgns. It was originally announced by former Watergate prosecutoc Archibald Cox' office that Nixon's personal lawyer Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach soUcllt!d the contribution, but "-tkins said it was Stans. Kalmbach 's name has been mentionefJ in connection with two other oorporatt contributions. Beach Trustees to Give California Fish and Game authorities and state parks rangers, emphasize it (See CLAMMING, Page ZI Orliage Coast Al~ said Cormer Commerce 5eaeJary Maurice H. Stans telephoned him to early 1972 a~ asked for a $11»,000 oontrlbution to the Nixon cam- paign · and a., $101000 advertisement in a Rtjiubllcan brochure. Stans never ask· ed .peciijcally for a corpi>rate co~­ ~.ril>ut@I ·O;r .m,ade any threats o: prOm· u•, ·Mbns siUd. _"J feJt more or less obligated," Atkins said.· \'We were not seeking any prlvilt!ge or benefit bec,ause only a small amount of o~ limineos Is with the' iovemment. ''We wanted to assure -ourselves a forum, a calling card to gel us In t&Q. d6cx' to make our point of view beald in the .e.xecuUve branch." Committee chairman Sam J, Ervin Jr, .(l).!l.C.), uked Atkins If he ~ould aillft \)lat "the method of raising camnaln ~lributlons borders on ex· tortJQn<!.. I •11yery rpuch so," Atkins said. ',\ll<Jns, who!e firm was lined $5,000 and who per10nally was lined 11.000 rw 'making an illegal corpOnlle con- tribution. laid: "There was never any doubt ln my mind where the money I • r Mes a Scou.ts Coflect Papers Don't throw this newspaper away. Don't use it to start the Yiood in the fireplace, and dort't wro.p the garbage in It. You could make a lot of Cub Scouts -liappy and do .something to ea9e the newsprint shortage by taking It and all lhe other pepers around your house to Killybrooke School Frlday.aoa Saturday. The papers should be tied or bl'oilght lo \he scbool in sbopplng bags. Hours of the CUb Scout Pack 139 peper dr~e are between 2 p.m. ind 5 p.m. Friday and 8 a.m. and 2 p.m. 'Sat~y . If you htive but can't get them to all Janie Muller, l*Sno. . • : • -~ ' Police Film In fo r mation_ By JOANNE REYNOLDS -Of the o.llr 1"11.i Steff lluntington Beach Union High School District trustees have approved giving city Police all information now known about an August conclave of schoolmen where the X·rated sex: movie "Deep Throat" was screened. More than 200 persons turned out at Tuesday night's board meeting. Most were there because of the "Detp Throat" lncidenl · • Th e Police Investigation will reportedly atteropt to determlne it anything illeg~l Occurred when distrjct administrators showed the Sizzling sex Tiick at a San Diego meeting. , During the board meeting, the mayors of both Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley. plus others, either defended or condemned trustees for their recent-ac- tion in not attempting to fire Saperln- tendcnt Jack Roper over the incident The incident first became public about J • one month ago wben police tCOilfiscated a videotaped copy ·of the film from a low ranking district administrator. Al that Ume. it was learned that the sex film had been shown at a three-day conference of 48 di!lrict ad- ministrators held in San Diego in August It was originally thought that the videotaped version had been copied on district equipment but the ftlm 's owner. Glen Daley, reportedly told board members he had been given the tape at a convention in Las Vegas by a representative ot a school audlo-visual contracting flrm. ' Daley allegedl y told boanl me~rs he does not remember the salesman's name nor the company he represented. Trustees said they did detennine that screenlng.o of the film, which took place in Roper's suite at ·the Half Moon Im on Shelter Island, were done. on district equipment. • I ... Weathe r CQntinued cool, sunny weather is on the agenda for Thursday, according to the weather service, with hlgbs at the beaches in the mid-60s rising to 68 inland. Over· night lows 56-58. 1'"'11 •1 ' '10" \l' In Richard Ni.xo-n's hornetoua1 of Wh ittler -\V"tergate not- withstanding -the people are sti!l behind him. See stor~, Page 26. Al Twr ..,,,.H t ....... 11 L..M. tlYlll I c.....,.. 14-lJ C.,_ CW!llt If Cl .... llet ,._n C-'CI . N c,.._.. .. OMlfl Netlt.. 11 1'"'9ffll ,,.. '"' f'IMl!q n.11 ~ftltlt_.,. It -.. 111 IN l«"Jc. .. ,, -- ·, • ' ' - lt DAILY PlLOl Wflfqesd1.1, November 14, 197.1 TONIGHT COAST COMMUNITY C 0 L L E G E BOARD -Regular meeting, 1370 Adams, 8 p.m. "DARK OF THE MOON " -Estancia High Drama Dept. Forun1, Nov. 14, 16. 17. 8 p.m. Admission $2. UC! COMMUNITY LECTURE SERIES -,.Surgical Safari in East Atr1ca ," Science Lecture Hall , 8 p.m. UCI LECTURES -"'lbe Classic Cinema'' series, Science Lecture Hall, 8 p.m. "F.ducation to ~1eet the Future" series, Rm. 100, Social Science Hall 7-10 p.m. Admission $5.50. UCI ORAMA -"Cycles," pre5ented by Survival Theater, Fine Arts Village Concert Hall , 8 p.m. through Sat. Admission $1. THURSDAY,• NOV. 15 COOKING SCHOOL -E d w a r l s Cinema Theater Fashion Island, 9:30 a.m. COSTA MESA SENIOR CITIZENS - Community Recreation Center, 1~3 p.m. FOOTBALL -Estancia vs . Santa Ana , Valley, Santa Ana Bow, 8 p.m ... GLORIA NEWMAN DANCE THE· ATER -Demonstration, OCC Audito- rium, 7:30. No charge. OCC LECTURE -Family Estate Planning -Eastbluff E I em en tar y School, 7:30-9:30 p.m. "COMMUNITY '73" -Serles of sym· pos.iums sponsored by Junior League_ of Newport Harbor, Room 174 Computer Science Building, UCI, 7:30 p.m. f'ro111 Pflfle 1 WELFARE .. o I encouraged to leave his family in order to get them more money. '"l'here's no excuse for that kind or law, but that's the way our welfare laws now are written," he said. Foster made his remarks at the "Com- munity 73," symposium spoMOred by the Newport ~arbor JW1ior League_ and 11c Irvine. · Fo~t~ IQQlc;ed. at welfare from the point of view of the public, which pays for ·the welfare program. "I think the public tends to look on "'·etfare as handouts for the lazy, in which social workers give away whatever amount ol money they fe<l like giving," Foster said. Foster said this was "completely W1· true," since welfare officers must follow extremely tight rules. He pointed out that the welfare rolls in the county have declined steadily over the past ttA-·o years, a fact he said is reflected in a $10 million budget 'cut this year to '69 million. Foster said it was also untrue that welfare helps onJy people Crom racial minorities. In Orange County, he said, welfare recipients are 75 per.cent white, it percent Melican-American, and one percent black. Auto Burglar Sought in Mesa A burglar who may be driving a 1960 Ford Falcon station wagon is sought today by Costa Mesa police following a complaint filed by a housewife Tues· day. Anita Bernier, 54, of 1763 Kenwood Place, said soneone used a bent coathanger device to jimmy the locked door of her own green 1960 Ford Falcon station wagon parked outside her home. The only thing taken was the chrome horn ring -valued at about $10 - from the steering wheel. 5 Hostages Released STRATHMORE "(AP ) -A Strathmore youth alleged ly held five persons hostage Tuesday and threatened to kill them before throwing out his weapon and surrendering to Tulare County deputies. A relative qlled deputies to report Billy Joe Creekmore, 19, was "upset and threatened to kill someone" when he left her house armed \vlth a shotgWJ. ou111•1c0An ... DAILY PILOT Tlte Or•ne• eo.11 DAILY ,,LOT, wllfll wtltdl ii comlllMll ltle ...... ,,. .... i. "'*'"'*' w Ille Ore .... C.0.11 hbllih"lnt C°""*'1. iepa. rei. eollllool• •r• Pllbl~. ~' llw'Wlll Frl4•y, ror COtt• MltM, Newpeort lfK!I, H1111llrcftn 8eKll/fl-11tn V•ller, L-.uM BNCfl, lr•lmol~letltdl; end SM C""""'l•f SIR Ju.n Cepl$1••"'-A •11111• '"'1-1 ftfl!lon 11 Pllbll•'*' lel""'•n and 5\Hlll1ya. 1111 Pl'iM!IWll PUbt!elllnf pt1nl 11 11 UI Wet! ••Y Sir"'· Cell• M•w. C.llftmll, nl». lt1ii1rt N. W1etl ,,..111..,. ... l"vlll!lllfl' J1ck It. Curl1r "'"" '""IMflj.,.. ~•l.M-..r Tho"''' ic •• ,a l!dl.., Th11,111 A. Mut,../111 ~'"' lllltw Ch1rl•1 H. l101 lt.ich1"'1 P, Nell An l1t111t Mllllflfll Ellfen Mideast P11et Red Cross Bares Prisoner Accord By 1'11e Alsoclattd Prt11 lsrael and Egyp t agreed to start ex· changing prisoners ol war Thursday morning, the International Red Cross announced today. The &Mouncement came shortly arter a U.N. spokesman In Cairo dlsclOled that negotiators for the two countries reached an agreement which he de,,cr4b- ed as a "break-through" ln malntalninp the Middle East cease-fire. The prisoner exchange, scheduled to start at a a.m., would remove a major obstacle in carrying out the U.S.· sponsored truce signed Sunday. Israel has demanded an agreement on the return of prilonen before it goes through with the agrted transfer of checkpoint• on the Cairo-Suez highway to U .N. peac,keepers. Mi¢hael Convaire, the Red Cross representative in Israel, said the pri9Q(ler exchange would be made by direct flights between Egypt and Israel. He said the agreement came at a meeting on the ·Egyptian-Israeli cease- fire line between generals of the two sides. The earlier stalemate on prisoner ex- • change· and transfer or checkpoin ts brought threats from both Egypt and Israel that threatened to upset the cease- fire. Premier Golda Meir told the Lvaell parliament that 11not one gram of food will__be ~allo.wed. through to the town of Sl!_ez" and the EgypUan army on. the opposite bank of the canal U the Egyptians did not agree to arrangements for the POW exchange. Egypt's semi-official newspaper said Israel risked a resumption oi. · the war by refusing to give the U.N. peat:ekeep- ing force control ol the biihway Into Suez until the POW Issue Is settled to Israel's satisfaction. Both Israeli and U.N. forces were maintaining checkpoints on the Cairo- Suez highway where it croues the cease- fire line 60 iniles ea.Jt of Cairo. But Israeli sources Wtre ·clietiliil'lll traffic and deciding what vehicles could pass. Political source.s in Tel Aviv sald the Israelis apparently were going. to retain this control until they were sure they would get back the 350 Israelis the Egyptians are estimated to bave cap- tured in the October war. Japan Visit Kissinger Eyes Fuel Crisis TOKYO (UPI) -Secretary of Slale Henry Kissinger arrived from China today and got first-hand reports of the world oil crisis in this nation which imports more than 99 percent of the oi l it uses, most of it from the Middle East. ~ Kissinger, who worked out a Middle East truce accord in a visit to five Arab capitals and improved relations with China during his visit to Peking, had a long day today: a di rect flight from Peking to Tokyo. A two-hour. conference with Japanese Foreign Minister Ma· sayoshi Ohira and a vi~it tonJght to a Japanes~ geisha ,house. Shortly after arrival he plu nged into talks""WitH Ohira at the foreign ministry. Ki ssinger is scheduled to have an hour.Jong talk with Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka Thutsday. Officials said Kissin~er and Ohira spent the bulk of their meet· ing discussing the oil cnsis triggered by the 1.-fiddle East war. Wrong-way Crash Injures Pair; Charges Prepared Charges were pending today against an Irvine business executive whose car was ·involved in a wrong-way beadon collision that destroyed both late· model sedans and injured himself and another driver Tuesday night. Silvano M. DIDonado, 36, of Yucaipa, and Sandra B. Richardson, IS, ol :z:lll Elden Ave., Costa Mesa, were both taken to ?.1ercy General Hospital In Santa Ana after the crash. DiDonado was treated for multiple cuts there after being pried from the wreckage of his car, while Mrs. R.ichar~n was transferred to Orange County Medical Center. Nurses there said she Is ln good con- dition today, despite suffering cuts, bruises and a fractured left leg. From Page 1 CLAMMING. •• is the individual's responsibility to in· form himself on the rules for clamming. Ofrlcer Harry Hogan said witnesses confirmed that DIDonado was heading eastbound on westbound lanes of MacArthur Boulevard near the Newport Freeway when the 10 a.m. accident oc- curred. DiDonado, owner of Adapt Corporation at 301 Dyer Road, reportedly told Officer Hogan he had taken a medication pre.scribed for pain earlier in the day. He was detained on suspicion of driving whlle intoxicated, police said, but was released without being booked pending a blood test to detennine drug and alcohol content at the time or the ac- cident. Police said Mrs. Rlcharchon's 1970 car and the 1973 sedan driven by DiDonado were mangled beyond repair in the headon crash. f'rom Pflfle 1 FIRING ••. O.ltr '"" .,.,. ,..... OCC Homecoming Royalty One of these s!ug,ent§ may be named king and another queen during the 1973 Orange Coast College Homecoming Saturday night when the Pirates host Mt. San Antonio College. King candidates are Ric Case Oeft) and Dennis Sheehan. Queen candidates are (bottom lrom- left) Carol Davis, Eileen Leonardi, Joyce Wirth and (top from left) Carmen Baltacar, Becky Cookson, and Barbara Nelson. Not 6hown are queen candidate Adele St. Leger and king candidate Alan .Ben· venisti. Democratic Action Group Urg~s Rejection ·9£ F~r.d "WASHINGTON (AP ) The liberal Americans for Democratic Action tOday urged rejection ol Vice President- designate Gerald R. Ford, calling him a politician with a poor civil-rights record and no experience in foreign affairs. In testimony prepared for Senate Rules Committee hearings on the nomination, ADA Vice Chairman Joseph L. Rauh Jr. said Ford is unsuitable for the presid~ncy and that his conrumation would make it more difficult to impeach President Nixon. Rauh told the panel : "To thoSe who say that Congre!S must act at once to confirm Mr, Ford as a precondition of President Nixon's resignation or impeachment, ADA gives lhls aMwer : We do not believe our nation is bounded on the east by Richard Nb:on and on the west by Gerald Forci. "Our sights go beyond these two to a man or woman who\ -~ president of the United States, will bind up the nation's wounds at home and restore it to its place of honor abroad." Rep. ll<Ua Abzug CD-N. Y.), tlfged poi tponement of action on Ford's nomination until (1) the House decides whether President Nixon should be im· peached and (2) Congress considers legtslatlon calling a special election should the presidency and vice presiden· cy be vacant at the same time. "It is totally inappropriate for the Congress lo expedite the confii-mation process on a nomination submitted by a President who is the subject of a serious impeachment inquiry and whose • ) credibility has been so irretrievably damaged that even members of his own party are ealling on him to resign," lllrs. Abzug said. Clarence Mitchell, Washington director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, told the committee Ford "has a narrow gauge approach to civil rights.,. Mitchell mentioned what be described as Ford's votes to weaken the 1970 Voting Righls Act and the 1918 Fair Housing Act ·and support of anlibusing amendments in 1972. Builders Supply . Hit by Burglar A thief who seemed to know just what he wanted has stolen *2,710 worth of merchandise from a Costa Mesa elec- tronics firm, the own'f told police Tues· day. Jerry Wooter. operator of Sea Coast Builders' Supply, 1651 Placentia Ave., said he found that 80 car radio transmit· te~s . for automatic garage doors were DUS!lng Crom his warehollle. The victim told Officer Rob Flathers the thief also stole the corresponding garage door radio receiver WlJts, without wh ich the other Items would be worthless except as scrap metal. No evidence of forced entry could be fowid and poUce classified the crime therefore as s grand theft. U.S., China To ·Broaden Relations By U.ELEN THO.MAS TOKYQ (UP I) -Tho United Stat.S and Chinn today agreed to expand llalsoa\ offices In Washington and Pelting, ex· change experls and artbts an<! "speed trede in an acceleration 'br the momeu. tum Iowan! eventual fftabll3hmcnt ol diplomatic relaUons. But their Joint communique, issued here following the four-day visit of Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger to China, indicated the question of Taiwan remained the major stumbling block to establishing embassies in Washington and Peking. Chinese leaders "reiterated that the normalization of relations between China and the United States can be realized only on the basis of confirming the p~nciple of one China," the document said. Ranking American officials said however, that the Chinese statement represented a subtle ad~ance which could lead to a possible breakthrough in the P_Ush lo establish formal dJplomaUe rela· t1ons.· They said it requires the United States lo recognize the principle of "one China " a principle the two nations will explo~e for its delicate nuances. In talks between Kissinger and Premier Chou En-lai of. ficials said the slight shift in the Cbi~ese approach "made no specific demands for any specific action." Officials said the communique ts a "surface statemen t" which they "e1pect and ~pe will permit a definite evolution toward normalization of relations." There was speculation the United Stales and China may be able to finesse the question of Taiwan, home of the Nationalist Chinese government. The number of U.S. troops on Taiwan is progressiv:ely being r· e d u c e d . Spokesmen said today 3,000 of the 9,000 men there-now would be withdrawn by the .. end of the year. "·The lwo sides agreed that in present . circumstances it Is of particular im· portance to maintain frequent con tad· al authoritative levels in order to ex· change views and, while not negotiating on behalf of third parties, to engage in concrete consultations of mutual con· cem," the communique said. Seminar Set On Coastli1ie '' M We See the <:.oasUine '' the final program in a symPoslum sponsored· by the Newport !!arbor Junior League and UC Irvine v.·ill take place Thursday at UCJ. The discussion , to be moderated by Newport Beach City Councilman Carl Kymla, will get under' way at 7:30 p.m. in Room 174 or UCl's computer science buliding. Panelists will be VerLyn Jensen, counsel for the Environmental Coalition of Orange County: R. Barry A1cComJc, executlve vice president of Avco Community Developers; Frank R o b In s o n , member of the Orange County Harbors, Beaches and Parks Com· mi!s~on, and Raymond Watson, president of the Irvine Company. The Junior League series, "Com· munity 73," ls open to the public without charge. "When the licenses are purchased, a flah and game booklet Is given out which explains all of the rules for clam· ming and all other types of fishing," explained fish and game Inspector Robert Kane<n. Cox could be fired only for committing "extraordinary impropl1eties" or by mu- t481 agreement that the Watergate in· " • Most people out cJarruning know the rules, Kaneen maintained, but there are always those who don't Inform themselves and may receive citations. "lt takes e.ight years for the Pismo clam to reach legal size, so we rnu.5t protect them the best we can," Kaneen continued. Kaneen explained that persons may either purchase a device in a sporting goods or bait and tackle shop, for ap- proximately $1, or may make one themselves. The store-bought version is simply a metal, horseshoe-shaped Item, four and a half inches wide. The clam is placed in it to see if it is the proper size. . Mrs. Hudak, who feels there has been too little publicity about this device, says it would help if signs were placed on the beach, particularly during low Ude periods, explaining all of the rules. But .Gordon Cribbs, of the state ~ish and Game Departmenl disagrees. "With all the rules that we have in this COWltry, U we had signs posted telling people what they could and couldn't do, there tA-'ouldn't be room to do anything - especially on the beaches," Cribbs said. vestigatlon was completed. Ge5ell turned down a Justice Depa.rt· ment argument that Bork had u much t~ authority to abolish that regulation and ~"'-'0-,-,. fire Cox as Richardson bad to Issue it. t .. , Gesell said such regulations have the force of law and cannot be abolished ·except through full legal procedure. Men's Tennis Shirts-6.0IJ. to 9.00 Gesell reru..ed to issue an injunction to prohibit Cox's successor, Leon Jaworski, from taking any action which would interfere with Cox's returning to the job. But the judge said he was ruling on whether the firing was lawful , even though Cox does not want the ·job-. Following t6e hearinR, a Nader at- torney. Alan Morrison, said he believed one effect of the ru1lng that the Cox firing was illegal was to serve notice on the President that Jaworski could Men's Tennis Shoes-8.95 to 18.95 Adidas-Tretom-Converse--Purcell Ladies Tennis Shoes-7.95 to t6.95 not be summarily fired. Morrlso~ said the ruling In effect would give Jaworski '4job security." GeseU ruled that Nader did not have standing to rue the suit but the members ol Congress did. Aidid~Tretom-Converse Handball Gloves · & BaHs Racquetball Racquets Badminton Rackets Ping Pong Paddles & Balls Croquet Sets Shuffleboard Sets Skateboards JJO Witt 11, Sh-11t . , The suit originally waa b r o u g h t by Nader, the coruJumer advocate, but was liter jolneil In by th... members or Congreaa ,..!ting to have Cox "'Instated • ladies' Tennis Dresses-) 6.95 up Wilson-Dunlop-Davis Bancroft-Yoneyama Tennis Rackets Perm--Wilson-Dunlop Jenni$ Balls-per doz.-7.95 YolleybaUs-leather-11 .95-13.95-18.95 Yott Yolleybaffs-:4.25 to 11.95 SoccerbaUs-leather & Rubbe£ FoatbaUs-Us-Baseballs M1ili11t A44r111 1'P',O. l •1 11601 t26J6 , --""""" htdl: JUI Newpltf ....,....IN ~ 111C11: m """' "'-H!,11\1""'""' 1.-cll: 1111S •11e11 leulevt,.. $11'1 C"""""': .JM ~ I I Clfflllll -Ml Tlf1p•t• 171 41 Ml ... Jll Cl•UW Alwrl') I MZ.1671 """·'· ltn, °''""' c..... l"Wlllll ... ...... , llJ'. He Mwl tWle$, IHWIT'lllenl, .. "'"' -"" .. ......i..-.. ..... -· ............... """""" .,..1111 ..... rlllt•lell ~I -· ~ CllM ...... NII " C.... --.. C.11"'""" . Mlla'lrliltl!i " ~ ..... -'lllYI IW N it A .ti """"'"'' ll'llll9Wr .. ,w,..11 .... , """ """""'. 6 Handball Courts Mulled by Trustees Coast Community College District trtmees meet al 8 o'clock toni11ht to discuss a joint venture with the city of Costa Mesa for the construction of si» handball couna. The m .. tlng Is scheduled for district ..headquarters, J360 Adams Ave., Costa Mesa . Also on the agenda Is a proposal to trpand district odmlnlstratlve officts. • as special prosecutor. The members 'of eon,..... who joined In the ault were Sen. Frank E. Moss (D-Ulah), and Repa. B<lla S . .Abzug (D-N.Y.), and Jerome R. Waldie (D- CSlll.). Basketball Backboards-14.95 Basketball Goals-3.95 & 5.95 ' Basketballs-5.95-7 .95-8.95-12.95-18.95 Speedo S m SUits & Trunks Acrylic Wannup Suits-21.95 to 34.95 Raleilb Bikes-Parts Tires-Tubes-Repairing In another development U.S. Dlatrlct Court JudJe John J. Slrlca aald today that Prestdtnt Nixon can make his Wate1'8ate t1ph or any other relaltd materiel public at any Ume. 'nte Whlle Hooae said It WU OONlderlng rnelhodl Mdolng~. IP~..--......,. .. ,...,......,..,.,C"""-. ... _..-. .. ,... .... .,.. .. .., ... _,, .. ...,.,..._..., .. ._ .. ..,g ' \ . ' • • 6 D A D .Y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Well-kept , Secret Orie of the least known aspects of local govern· men! was brought into the open last week when the peoplll_oLCosta_Mesa_finally_eJei:ted someone to serve on the-water board and on the sanitary board. The election was the first since 1962 in the Costa Mesa County Water District and the first since 19~6 ln the Costa Mesa Sanitary DistricL The fact -these offices 1 were electable was given no circulation by those in power -and the Daily Pilot let down on its responsi- bility to dig up that fact and publish it. We have been told that there have been no elec--tions since then because there~have not been any candi· dates. The fact_is that many candidates have been inter· ested but did not file because the filing deadline was not publicized. The districts in question stayed on the technical side of the law by postin g notices in the post offices and by publishing the date in the legal sections of news- papers. · " Because potential candidates missed the filing deadline, the incumbents were always, "appointed in Jieu of election." And that is why there had been no elec~ tion in more than a decade until someone finally man· aged to get his papers in on time. We have no quarrel with those incumbents who were returned to office. All of them are-experienced men who have served and undoubtedly will continue to serve their di stricts well. We do take issue with the nonchalance with which the information was treated. And we find the Daily Pilot remiss in not giving wide circulation to the expirations of terms and the possibility of elections. Fortunately, steps have been taken by the Board of Supervi sors to see that this does not occur again. At the suggestion of Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers1 the board adopted a policy which requires the Registrar of Voters to issue press releases at least 15 days in n<lvaJ\ce of fillng deadlines. This policy will-m0·s=u=re-tbe voter's awareness or vacancies ID special assessment districts and give them the opportunity of particip~Ung ht the election both as candidate and as voter. • For our -part, we pledge to distribute that-infor· mation ·so l6Clil government is not necessarily a sell· perpetuating operation. Pool Priorities As owner of the Harbor Area's only Olympic-sized swimming pool, the Newport-Mesa Unified School Dis- trict has a delicate problem on its hands. Eight ajmming_grou~s .l!'anU~.Y.se th§_Jl!lol eit!W'_ for competition or for practice, but it's available only a relatively fe w hours a day. Faced with this difficulty, the school board has said an effort should be made to accommodate every- one who wants to use the pool, even if that means some groups are forced to double up on their pool time. Unfortunately, It seems that multiple-scheduling may not resolve the wot problem entirely, and if it won't the trustees are going to l)e forced to adopt some pnonties. As we see it, those priorities should allow the school district which paid $350,000 toward the cost of the pool, to have unchallenged first right !!> its use. Next should come the Newpc5rt Beach -Recreation Department, which donated $87,000 toward pool costs. Alter these two priorities have been met, other group~ could be given use of the pool. c Nixon Aides Bar Dear Gloomy Foreign Methods Better: 'Public_ Penance~-+---· Gus ____ _ Smog . Control and Sanity .Re Gus No\•. 9, here's t"'O more: ·~-1~"'1m~t~:------·-----,.-----------..-·country:EaCh -and ·every round trip from \Vasfiington ·to Sari ·ctemente on· Air Force One occupied only by him and a couple of speech writers <;onsumes no less than 18,000 gallons of fuel (120,000 liquid lbs). His last week's trfp from Washington to Key Biscayne in order to visit Bebe Rebozo also consumed 9,000 gallons or 60,000 lbs. of fuel. WASHINGTON -Dooming t h e melancholy private dialogue between President NiXon's lieutenants and con· gressional Rep'ublicans is total White House rejection of Capitol Hill's ~eeply felt need for public penance ·by the President. ( EV'ANS·NOVAK) as Vice President. The barrage of rtcom- mendations from Capitol lUU are eleventh-hour efforts to avoid the President's' resignation. Sen . William Brock of Tennessee, a Current negotia- tions ostensibly con- cern how much Mr. Nixon shall open his files to save his pre s· idency. But these talks founder over unst.ated con- gressional demands that ~fr. Nixon • F ronservative and a Nixon loyalist, 1-.-_ recently "1'0te the President a -C-remarkable letter outlining the steps necessary to save himself -streSsing public disclosure not only of ~pe recordings but of au pre.si~Iial document& bearinf on Watergate. Less sweeping requests are now being negotiated with the White House by Senate Republican leaders. -ehow conlrOOt Congress, perbaps ., a committee witness, with a show of expiation and contrition. One influential (and pro-Nixon) Republican senator feels 1'fr. Nixon cannot survl\'e unless like Henry II, the 12th century King of England who atoned for the murder of St. Thomas a Becket by being public- ly scourged, he makes public penance. TllAT IS anathema to the President and all his advisers. Indeed, he is ig· noring advice from hls o"'·n staff to make considerably less humillating gestures. Thus, whatever agreements are reached be tween Republican leaders and the White House over disclosure of tape recordings and documents, the basic gap will remain wiabridged a n d Republican sentiment for Mr. Nixon's resignation \Viii rise. The White House 's understanding of sentiment on Capitol Hill is even m\ll'kier today than in calmer times. Mr. Nixon's aides interpreted conservative Sen. Peter Dominick's criticism of the President as reflecting fear about his 1974 reelec- tion campaign in Colorado. In truth, Dominick w..as saying in public wh at almost all/liis colleagues say privately in the Republican cloakroom. REPUBLICAN Senators who still have not ultered a single word critical of Mr. Nixon say privately he must rtsign once Rep. Gerald 1''ord is confirmed BUT TAPES and documents will not truly satisfy C o n g r e s s . Many Republicans feel the President should face interrogation from bis legislative peers -perl!aps by the-S.nate Watergate committee. one Republican leader in Congress, in public a total supporter of Mr. Nixon, ls privately telling the White House the President must testify because he is "at the end of the road" and no other course re- mains. The avowed purpose of calling ~tr. Nixon to testify: to probe inconsistencies in Mr. Nixon's confusing explanaUons of Watergate. Beyond the avowed purpose, however, is the Henry II syn- drome: the feeling Mr. Nixon can survive only by humbling himself. ll is here where all hopes sink of agreement between the President and congres,,lonal Republicans. "IF mE PRESIDENT has to go up to the Hill, groveling, on his hands and knees, I'd rather see him im· peached,'' one senior NiX:on· aide told us. A middle-level assistant put it this way: "Are we going to go out crawling on our bellies or are we going to go out swinging?" Those two presidential assistanls are His Majesty loves to \Vork in front of a roaring fire, so he turns up the air conditioning to compensate; his dog is afraid or heliropters so it has a private limousine to drive to Camp David! hf. B. 01-y 0111 um-tt •rt H bmllltf b'f ,......., Hcl cit N I llt(ffnlilY rtlkd lllt vlN I ef lfl• ,, ..... ,.r, Stllllll Ytllr ,., ..... 11 Gl-Y Gut, 0111'1' P'"-1, soft-liners in the White House context. Naturally, then, the hard-liners -headed by Richard M. Nixon -are unalterably opposed to any act of penance. Indeed, the President ignores considerably more moderate gestures recommended, by bis oWl! stall. STAFF PROPOSAIS for a frank, private discussion of ·Watergate with Senate and House Republicafls have been gathering dust in the Oval Office for weeks. Cine adviser, usually a hard-liner, is getting nowhere in urging one final try by Mr. Nl1on to publicly present his side-of-the Watergate story, Earnest suggeatlclllJ from Capitbl HUI, such as Sen. Brock's, naturally go unanswered. Rather, the old White House refrain that· Mr. Nixoo can save him.sell by forgetting Watergate and turning to other matters is sounding again. That may explain cancellation of Prtr. Nixon's meeting with his Watergate lawyers in order to deal with the energy crisis. It does explain press secretary Ron Zies:Jer's reference to the Watergate "foolishiless," fully reflecting Prtr. Nix- on's own view. nf THE SENATE Rep u blican cloakroom, Ziegler's "foolisJUless" was comidered a repudiation of Sen. Barry Goldwater's plea last week th u t everybody "cool it." It also shows that while Mr. Nixon's congressional sup- porters are doY.n to a precious few, not much has changed at the White House. For the short run , that promises Mr. Nixon's continued refusal to display any weakness, much less reslgnJng as President, even as Republican support grows tbilmer by lhe day. Re the article: 1'Catalytic Converters 'On' " in the Pilot of Nov. 7. ts th.is for real? How in the name of sanity can such a thing happen? EPA administrator Russell Train's i"easoning is anti-human in its chilling sound. He acknowledges that the devices pose a "significant health problem ... lung cancer and cardiac problems" yet he says delaying requirements "would mean tiJrowing off the entire momentum of the present auto emissions control strategy."· THE PARAGRAPH following clearly states that foreign manufacturers have come up with a superior method. Jn ' the present climate of pollution hysteria it seems that "anything is better than nothing at all". It's time we -the "masses" -demand an accounting of the pro's and con's of those methods deemed "good for us" and maybe a return oI ,sanity and good sense will occur. B. M. TRAVIS Helphig Hands To the Editor: I would like to express my many thanks again to the gentlemen who came to my rescue when a fire broke out lfieks 'Look, it's easy ••• Jeft foot, right foot ... ' Birth. Control Fails When Children Spell Security Californians, san Diego's percipient Neil Morgan tells us, "believe to the verge of fanaticism In birth control and smaU foreign cars,• two arUcles or faith whiq_h must somehow be related." They are indeed, Nell Morgan. MOney, as we do not have to bt told, doe• funny things to the way you n think. The fact that you want to hold ,;:;. onto what you make ~ gives a decided • cast to all youf opin· ~ ions. The contrary fact or belief that • you're never going to scor;e, _J]O ho~\', , gives you a quite contrary cast of thought. In extreme terms, mOney makes royalists and lack of it makes anarchists. In the matter of children. money has Jn reeent years become a mighty factor in our attitudes. This -has followed the • general arnucncc of the upper middle classes, and some of the ordinary tnlddle 1 clw, and the ability of man now to frust rate effectively the reproductive (CHARLES McCABE) !unctions by forms of birth control. IN ALL this kind of thinking, Mari n county is a kind of metaphor to me. This is because 1 lived there for three years, and heard more damned selfish and blbu1rum talk on the bringing of children Into the world than one could believe -and all of this, mark you, from the ·Ooweri of our culture, ladiea from Smith and gents from Princoton, etc. Yet the Ibinklng is the same In other plush California suburbs such as Walnut Creek and Piedmont, San Mateo c o u n t y, C&nnel·Monterey, Santa Barbara, Beverly HUii, Palm Springs. The Marin mentality ... , children negatively. They are a liability. They cost money. Something Ul<e 411 grand to gel a boy to college age1 and maybe another 40 grand to give bim a college education. 'And there are those hordes or black and brown and )'ellow and poor white kids on welfare for whom ' Mr. and Mrs. htarin personally have in a remarkable study by the sociologist to "pay. Joe Blow in the Mission pays, Mahmood Mamdani. too, but vi'ith less a sense of personal . The message : N?OOdY Jn the village in.suit' is about to restrict the slze of hil · . -family wlleu -it pays to do so.-The KIDS . cost money. Think of how many brutal truth, so iar from Marin and Porsches you could have lf you did Ford Foundation and official Indian not have six or seven kids, only the government thinking, is that for poor two or less prescribed by the theoreti· people, big families do pay, especially clans of-the ''populafiob exploalon."·You when lhere is a ~ct of emi~auon aren't going to le.y in a lot of Lafitte for the boys and the employable gals. if you have seven brals tearing up MAHMOOD MAMDANI how that I the front lawn, nor make many trips this particular village, which l~ so itk: to Tahiti. . larmmg villages everywhere, the only What the Marin mind cannot un-hope for a substantial rise in social derltand ls . tbat there are relatively status is to bave a big family of sons. few people 10 the world who look on These could migrate to the city or kids this way. In most cultures a large so to sea and send back some of their brood, especially ll blessed with stoul earnings. Or they could work the land sons, ls anything b~t a liability. It is, for their {>_8rents and so develop some or is thought to be, a way out of small capital with which to buy 'llON! poverty. Away from the curious Marin land kind of thinking, ,kids are an l!set, Btrth control, In such cil'cumstances not an econo~lc nwsance. and to such people, ls like offering The Ford Foundation and the lndlan Sanskrit lessons to a sandlot baseball Government found this out the hard team. Marin county cannot understand way a few years back when they ~t this. llarlem 'cannot undertand Marin lots of money and all their experu_s~ county. I've liv~ in both places, and Into a big birth ·rectucUon Jll'Oil'am In comprehend each a lliile. What I know the Punjab. Tho project t'ailed dismally is, money has a lot to do with whether in U1e village of Khanna, as dt9cribed you are ror blrth control or not. ., I MAILBOX Letters from readers 'are welcome. Nor·mally, writers sllould convey thetr 1nessages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or elimi'nate libel is reserved. All let· · • ters must include sign.ature and mail- ing address but names may be with- 1ield on request if sufficient reaso1i is .apparent. Poe try will not be pub- lished. under the hood of my car. This happened on Saturday, Oct. 'l1, on 19th Sl.re€t in the Stater Bros. Parking area, Without tbeir help my car might have been a total loss as there wasn't time to call the Fire Department. They risked their Jives and gave of their time so generously to help a total stranger in distress. Whoever and wherever you are, gentlemen, I am deeply grateful to all of you. - LORRAINE JONES Jtlisses Trees To the Editor: Your recent comment on the cuttiilg of trees was most graUfying. '!'!JO LATE to belp us when the judge caj.led them a nuisance. (He later qualified his statement). Neighbors and even fo lks in the Harbor Shopping Center miss our trees. For us, the trees screened out traffic noise, gave wind shield and also was a cover fot" the unsighUy Jot west of u,,. KEEP UP your comments. We can be city dwellers, but we don't have to live In a concrete jungle~ CLAY AND DORA MAE ELLIS Lost Letters To the Editor: I don't think it iS too early for this Christmas mes<iage as I hesitate to begin my Christmas cards early again this year. I'VE HEARD of Christmas cards being lost, but I never thought it \lrould happen to me, but it did. My Christmas letters -not "dittos" -are one of the most impartant and timH'Onsuming parts of my Christmas to relaUves and friends l otherwise never see. Last year, I mailed my first group of cards and letters (mostly all out of state, some local) on the Sth of December after first separating them as to out of state and local, checking tip code and return address. All 48 were lost. The next group of cards, without letters,· mostly local, were mailed on th~ 10th. They were not lost. THE SAD PART is my aunt, died three months after Christmas. I found out later she had been wondering why I never wrote< her a Christmas letter which she had al\\'8Y!I looked for"'·ard to. Now if the posl31 service can give me and others advice of what more ~·e can '. It would be appreclat.cd. Hope thi~ letter gets to you. BARBARA CRIPPEN Look Who's TalklHfl To the Editor: Just look and Usten to who Is k!cturlng to us about conservtng energy -none other than Richard htJlhous Nixon. WHAT ABOUT his (the Presldenl'S) I numerous ,vacation jaunts across the Mr. President: Talk is cheap and it's high tin1e you set an example yourself and conserved our scarce fuel supply. BETTER STILL: just resign 8nd we will let you set tle down in San Clemente. lt will be much easier for you. and much better for us. BORIS BUZAN Good Old Dav•? To the· Editor: The other day 1 heard a shocking VD report, viz : California has double the VD rate in the nation ; Orange County has double the California rate: , and Laguna Beach bas six times the Orange COtmty rate. mE PARALLEL wllh tl!e voting record on Proposition 1 is striking. Obviously there Is something atavistic about my habitat. The nineteenth -or is it the eighteenth? -century i!: alive and well here. Recently a beach cfty school superintendent was revealed Ulfng school funds for a stag party shlwfilg, before his school official buddies, of "Deep Throat." I had really tbougbtl in my innocence, that the ancient :i honorable (within limll8) institution ' the stag party had disappeared from social scene. But no. \Ve countians the shoreline preserve it, as a museum piece, along with the companying VD, the shades or a vigilantism in the Birch Society, touching add!ctlon to economic s remedies. Too bad I'm on the outs with Chief of Police Whats·hls-name; otherwise I'm sure I 'ceiuld sell him on setting up · stocks and pillories in the village square. ( For blasphe mers. They're a menace. ' DAVID A. MUNRO . . Pleased , To the Editor: I was very pleased to see the article by Dr. Paul D. Authur questioning United States policy toward Israel. At long last the voices of reason and compas&on are being heard, My congratulations tG the Daily Pilot for having the courage~ to print it. • MARIS GRAUBE DAILY PILOT Robert N. W ced, Publisher Thomas Kttvil, Edit01' Barbara Kreibich Editorial Page Editor The edHorlal ,pagv ot 11\e' DaJiy Pilot ·setk9 to infonn and stlmulat~ readers by presenting on this Pfl&e diverse •t'Oll\mentary ' on topicl oL in- tn-est by ~ndicaled collmlllila and cattooni1ts, by provldlne a fOnlm for rt1tdtt1' views and by prttclllln& tttls newapaper't opiNons a.nd Sdt4ls on current topics. The editorial ~ ot 11\e Daily Pilot appear onl)" in the fldltotial column at the 10p Of tht. pqe, Oplnlor.:s ex(tttUfd by·the (.'Of. umnlata and cartoonlst4 and letter wrlttts are th~lr own and no~ · mtnl of their vitwt by ·the ~ Pilot Sloukt be tnlff't'fd. Wednesday, No•. 14, 1973 ' _·_·~~""'~~-·-"-°"~m-°"~1_4~,_1_97_3~~~~~~~0-A~IL~Y~P~IL~O~T_,,5 ..,,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,.....: .... ,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...~',...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,.....;,,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...~~,...,...,...,...,...,..."",...,..._..-..-.-... ., QUEENIE " By Phil lnterlandi I •'Nine o'dock! Lights! camera! Action!" '>Purple Heart?' Reagan Cuts Self • At Turkey Fete SACRA~fENTO (UPI\ -to curl around the tip or his Gov. Ronald Reagan cut his finger. He told ne\\rsmen he right forennger while carving apparently had his finger on the golden brown roast turkey the knife blade. presented to him annuaily by One photographer com- poultry growers be! ore mented it was the first Thanksgiving. unusual occurrence at the an- "Do governors ge t purple nual event since Reagan hearts?" Reagan -asked Tues-became governor seven _years day, blotting the slight cut ago. '1'ith a paper napkin. "The , expert cut himself." REAGAN REPLIED, "No. it isn't. The first fe\v yea rs _,. 1-o-~~=v• AmN""lrARDL-"'•""hti'·· ss-cd"".'-"'f ~i!ldn'rtry'tO cut. the-furkeys:- a ·.knife stroke because of the l \vrestled with fhem." cut, continuing to· carve slices uritil recently, the Governor of t;lrtast meat off the 30-v.•as presen1ed ,\•ith J i v e pound bird. turkeys at Thanksgiving. But 'I1le Governor noliced the the practice \\'as discon1inued cut ooly after blood began because of the disturbance the big birds would make. Republica1i Blasts Nixo1i Press Aides WASHINGTON (AP ) Presidential press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler. "a former employe of Disneyland, has managed to tum the White House ~nto a Disneyland East," Rep. William J. Scherle (R-Iowa), said in his newslet- ter to constituents this week. The f.ovemor's slip of the knife could have resulted from a different carving method he \vas tr.ving. In stead or cutting the leg off the turkey and carving i1 separately, Reagan was attempting to slice thigh n1eat fron1 the leg while it was auachcd to the bird. THE DISPLAY of blood ap- pil.reritly di<!n't discourage the lunchtime ap p etites or Reagan's office staff. They eagerly loaded ,plates with slices from the 'three birds provided . by the T u r k e y G110we rs Association. Reagan plucked a smidgin or white meat from the kni fe blade and popped it into his mouth for the benefit of f • •. l .. . ~' i: "'t : ! ' ' \ i ' • ' ' I S~ap dash in t~ree part coqrdiaates by Lady Arrow Kicky coordjnates in three .. , a really snappy 'vuy to go to a luncheo n or an afternoon at the theatre. Jn marvelous Jabric, "'asl1ablc Ulttessa18 _of tcxcureillacron~ polyester. Sho,vn tv.'o fro1n a group. All available for sjzes 10 to 16. 10p: French cravat, rectangle prior. Knife pleat, pull-0n,skirr. \'V'hice ground "-'ith red and navy print. M:itching tailored shi rr. Two pocket shirr jacker ,,·irh red groun~, navy and '"hite prjnr, 858 Bottom: chocolate and \Vhitc n1ix featu ring a solid, knife 11lear, pull-on skirt; striped, raiiored~hirr and a polka dotted, J·- t\VO pocket shire jJcket, 858 -~.nlouses-Plu SANTA ANA SOUTH COAST PLAZA .. " ;': "• rJ[: ) ' ' .. . In an extended comment on an erosion or "national coo- fidence in the Administration,'' Scherle criticized -PresiClent photographers. 1-........................................................................ -1 !!>-~ , Nixon for continuing . "to rely on the advice of public rela- tions m~n, all of whon1 are politir.al rather than 1110L111: e xperienccd po1ftlca1 advisers on the \Vhitc House staff. Regarded as a conservative. Scherle. \\'ho f req u en t I v criticizes Administration pol- icy, added: "The chicr character re- maining. responsible for much of the present 'l\.fickey l\.fouse' activity, is Ron Ziegler ... Gen. Alexander ltaig, Ni.xon's chief ot staff. has a distinguished miritary record. but in the political warfare game, the general is still a buck private. "Although H.R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichmann are gone. their ghosts still haunt the \\'hite House," he said. Coeds Irked By Cleanup f..heesecake HONOLULU (AP ) -Litter and cheesecake don't mix. at least as far as University of lla1,·aii coeds ai·e concerned. Dozens of \romen st udents llave condemned a university- sponsored poster 'vhich is part of a cleanup drive. The poster sho'vs a cartoon of a bare. breasted woman droppin g her bikini top onto a littered la\\'t'l and says, "Come help pick up things other people throw a1,•ay." Ph ilip \V. Koehler, fa cilitirs management director for the university, said, "I was just trying to fit in with the cleanup theme. fi1ore "·omen are thro1ving a1vay bras every- day." B ehold rhe bold ·solds' ... hishly polished meral adorn- n1ents by ]\{oner. Tambourine , ---.... necklace "-'i1h seven ro."'S /;·;~" , of chains to adjusr :is ;/_4 you like, 835 11 1 Earrings, SIO Bangle, SIO , ' Fashion j e\velry ·. ~ Histori~ First Solo1i 01i Mater_nit y Leave \\1ASITINGTON (API Rep. Y l' on n e Braithwaite Burke. (0.Calir.), boasts a first in the U.S. C.ongress - she is the first member to get a maternity leave. House Speaker Carl Albert, (().OkJa . ), granted her the leave v.·hich began Nov. t. ftEP. BURKE, 40, who is at her Los Angeles home awaiting lhe momentary birth of her first child, plans to return to Congress when the second session convenes in January. • In the past official leave had been grantt'd to con- gressional members only ror peraonal illness or illness of a family member. Under the rules, a member ()f Congress must ask for the leave on beh3Jf of his co l- league. Rep. Augustus F.1 Ha\\' kins, (D-Calif. ). requested that l\trs. Burke be allo\red the official leave. 1 \\'llEN REP. H. R. Gross, <R·lowa). heard that Albert granted the matrrnily leave. he commented on the House floor : / "1'his is a hi storic firs t in the House or Represcntath•cs, and I want to extend my • congratulativns to both ................ --.... ..-.................................... .-.. parties, both to the member and to the speaker of the Shop Monday thru Friday, 10:00 a.m. co 9:30 p.m. , House." Mrs. Burke's husband is a Sacurday, 10:00 a.m. co 6:00 p.m. health care consultant. Sunday, 12:00 noon co 5:00 p.m. ' •' Bullock's Santa Ana, 1 "Fasliion Square, 2800 N. Main Screec, Sama An a, Telephone: 547-7211 r Bullock's South Coast Plaza, San Diego Freeway at Brisco!, Cosca Mesa, Telep~on~: 556-0611 .. • • < h • t